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The Journal News from Hamilton, Ohio • Page 7

Publication:
The Journal Newsi
Location:
Hamilton, Ohio
Issue Date:
Page:
7
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Federal officials confused? Sunday, February 17,1974 Journal-News. Hamilton. Ohio Fort Hamilton Hughes Friday, Feb. 15 Hayden Abbott, 313 Laurel; James.Antrican, 14 Allen Circle; Raymond Baker, Rte. 2, Harrison; Kendra Banks, 5000 Oriole, Ross; Betty Beatson, 4075 Philip Byrd, 1909 Hill, Middletown.

Berthe Capo, 20 Pinecrest; Cathy Chambers, 12 Viola; Linda Colwell, 6531 Stockton; Louise Cox, 1082 Hayes; Lucinda Depew, 7 Hurm; Linda Diesh, 4160 Hamilton- Trenton; Stella Evans; 2395 W. Columbus. Steve Douglas Hayes, 28 Glencross; Mary Htnkle, 356 Vintage; Teresa Heusley, 644 Main; Hazel Huffman, 1003 Harrison, Harrison; Lucille House, 112 Crowthers; Claude Johnson, Rte. 5, Connersville, Ind. Lester Johnson, 1224 Lincoln; Lillian Kappel, 920 Sherman; Debbie Kaiser, 6961 Curtis Way, Florence, Dorthea Keifer, 719 Maple; Heather Knapp, 1591 Smith; Euleen Lawson, 48 Talawanda Ct.

Mary Jane Long, 5283 Patricia; Mary Matthews, 530 Ridgelawn; Micheal Mitchell, 925 Fourteenth, Middletown; Marci Morris, Rte. 4, Harrison; Charlene Murray, 425 Millville; Irene McCool, 1995 Dixie. Anne Naddeo, 23104 Arthur, St. Clair Shores, Catherine Overly, 1001 Brough; Darrell Payne, 108 Kumler, Seven Mile; Lisa Puckett, 170 Algonquin; Alice Pursley, 2307 Bella Vista. Dorothy Rector, 1551 Park; Ethel Rupp, 1436 N.

a i Sandra Schulte, 102? Laurel; Mary Sick, 3131 Mickey Singleton, 5030 Algonquin; Laurie Straus, 418 N. Poplar, Oxford. Nita Tompkins, 6547 a a Joseph Turley, 3865 Oxford State; Dale Ulrich, 786 Rte. I 63, Lebanon; Phyllis 2091 Princeton; Jerry Wall, 127 Franklin; Geneva Wilson, 4410 Layhigh; Rhonda Wyrick, 1391 Windward, Mason. Saturday, Feb.

16 Mayme 170 Crowthers; Elsie Baker, 4 Commerce; Stanley Barrett, 5000 Oriole, Ross; Robert 728 McGuffey, Oxford; Rita Bowman, 145 Retta; Etta Burns 16 S. Thirteenth. Eugene Childers, 2654 Arbor, Norwood; Murtle Cole, 1068 S. Eleventh; Geneva Cramer, 6193 Liberty-Fairfield; Donald Depew, 726 Ridgelawn; Loretta' Estes, 3232 Wayne Madison, Trenton; Gladys Fink, 980 N. E.

Hanson, 16 i a a i i Hawthorne, 1403 Maple; Kenneth Hochdanner, 625 Stafford; Sylvia Hubbard, 2304 Bender; Joey Isaacs, 6486 Dixie; Virgil Geffreis, 761 Forest. Thomas Johnson, 656 Glenway; Minnie Kelley, 87 Union; Edward Kennedy, :421 Scott, Oxford; Sandra Celling, 8261 Free Short Pike, Camden; Ray Moore, 2841 Millville; Shane North, 1497 Exeter. Judith Nortman, 6250 Joyce, Cincinnati; Bobby McGinnis, 1627 Edison; Euma Philbeck 569 Kennedy, Trenton; Joe Ross, 5390 Garner; Wanda Schuh, 1020 Woodbine; Betty Simpson, 6396 Canastota. Lolita Singer, Rte. 2, Harrison; Patricia Stand, 2342 Millville-Oxford; Lamonda Steele 5729 Gray; Emerson Unzicker, 1885 Harris; Peggy Watson, 531 N.

David Whitaker, 907 Main; Patricia Wysong, 501 Elaine. MercyHospifal Elliott Adams, 125 Lane; Pearl Barnes, 4706 Celadon; Sam Belcher, 407 Pierson, Trenton; Mrs. Nikolai Belaef, 5588 Lindenwood; Elaine Bowling, 738 Sycamore. Jeffrey Bradbury, YM- CA; Donna Bruewer, 6200 River; Mrs. Vestus Cald- vell, 7529 Barrett, West Chester; David Carter, 4102 Crystal, Sharonville; Curtis E.

Cast, 619 Prytania. Norman D. Coombs, 445 Hyde Park. Leroy i Doehlamn, 786 Symmes; Mrs. Euigene Doughman, 2099 Tobert; Owen Embry, 309 N.

10th; David Evans 5140 Middletown. Derek W. Garrett, 1715 Vizedom; Mrs. Ronald Horb, 1190 Bishop; Andrew Jackson, 2772 Hamilton' Mason; Mrs. Leroy Jones, 719 Walnut; Willis Jones, 320 E.

Vine, Oxford. Ursula Langenbucker, 1230 High; Mrs. Ray W. Lenhart, 11 Camelot; i Constance Lyons, 824 Brook wood; Mrs. John i Marcuro, 78 Rose Lea; Jeanne Michaels, 1532 Colony Terrace.

Mrs. John Mullins, 1075 Azel; George Needham, 315 Fair; Robert M. Ogilvie, 5085 E. Scioto; Daniel Pabst, 561 Main; Mrs. Donald Pearson.

2243 Hamilton-Cleves. Mrs. A'rtur Reece, 8338 Harrison, Cleves; Mrs; Lloyd Scarborough, 5393 Mississippi; Melvin Schultz, 12 Martin; Samuel D. Shie, 317 Ross; Timothy Smith, 306 Kerry, Trenton. Mrs.

James Stephens, 1686 Hogue; Steven Paul Swain, 969 Millville; P.G. Thompson, 562 Symmes; Jack R. Vaughn, 1064 S. 11th; Rhonda D. Walden, 623 Belle; Mrs.

Marvin Whitaker, 756 Vinnedge. Ohio gas cuts In error, utilities chief Turk says Obituaries CLEVELAND, Ohio AP)-Ohio Public Utilities Commission Chairman Edmund Turk says the Federal Energy Office may have had some wrong information when it ordered a 2 per cent cut in Ohio's for not contacting the state before the decision was made. I e-a a i see bickering between cabinet mem Instead of conclusive data, we receive vague reports which are mittee he was losing of Sohio's high prices. He said his nearest competitor was selling gasoline 3.7 cents a gallon cheaper than he was. "How can I explain the difference in price to my customers?" Weiddig died Joese Lang, 65, 5430 0)ea Dixie Highway, Fairfield, died at Mercy Hospital Friday at 9:30 p.m.

Turk told a hearing of the often more confusing than asked. "Why doesn't Sohio Tnfnrim- anri insular illuminating." Turk said, drop five cents Senate Interior and Insular Affairs Committee'Friday the energy office's decision may have resulted from some misplaced decimal points. Turk said state officials i i er gallon and keep com- Gov. John J. Gilhgan told Mrs.

AAotzer Joseph Lang Mrs. Evelyn C. Motzer, 63, 37 Holmes Court, Saturday at 6:30 a.m. at Hammon-Husnes Hospital. She leaves her husband He was born in Sasharh a db "or" aasoacn a Ida the committee Ohio may go to court to contest the allocation reduction.

A federal official who was at the officials an criticized them Richard C. Donaldson, vice president and general counsel of Sohio, answered that question for the committee, saying Sohio has to pass along higher crude oil costs to slay in business. 926 to one sister and one brother. Funeral arrangements i 1930 he married are incomplete at the Cahiil Holland in Hamilton. and Sons Funeral Home, 229 Dayton St.

The family Mr. Lang retired in 1969 as requests friends and a tool and dye craftsman for relatives donate to the Fisher Body. American Cancer Society, the American Respiratory He leaves his wife Ida Society or any other charity Lang, Hamilton, and one in her memory. Solzhenitsyn worried man, hostess claims corrected. U.S.

Sen. Howard Metzen- -baum, D-Ohio, presided over the hearing. Standard Oil Co. dealer James L. Weiddig of Ashtabula told the com- Secref Service still guarding Spiro Agnew WASHINGTON (AP) A Saturday the Secret Service brother and three sisters, all of Germany.

Private services will be held at the Klaus-Weigel Funeral Home, Elvin Ave. and N. Tuesday at the convenience of the family. PageA-7 Demos rue transport proposals WASHINGTON (AP) 4 A a congressional Democrats said Saturday President Nixon's transportation proposals may indicate helpful changes in policy but fall short of "a massive, broad- based assault on our nation's basic transportation problems." The proposed Transportation Assistance Act, said Rep. John J.

McFall, D- "has been billed as a big-money. recommendation. However, it does not provide the big infusion of funds that it seems to imply-" "The act would simply rearrange funds and in some cases cities and states would come up with less than they thought they had," he said. McFall is the House Democratic whip and was selected by the party Treasury Department will continue to guard follow in'the leadership inWh'chambers a a former Vice President Spiro Hillside Chapel, Cincinnati. 1 cnamDers ZURICH, Switzerland (AP) Alexander Solzhenitsyn is a worried man, his hostess said Saturday.

Mrs. Fritz Heeb, wife of i Swiss laywer, told a visitor that the exiled Russian writer was an undemanding house books and newspapers piled guest, but added, "He is high on a night table and constantly worried." She chest of drawers, didn't elaborate. shirtsleeves talking with his German publisher, Rudolph StreitScherz. A visitor to the apartment said Solzhenitsyn occupies a small, modestly furnished back bedroom decorated in light green wallpaper. The visitor said Solzhenitsyn left The Nobel Prize-winning author has been living with the Heebs si nee.

he arrived from Germany on Friday. He left their modest third- floor apartment only once during the day 'to shop in downtown Zurich. He was asked if he knew when he would be seeing his wife and sons, who are still in the Soviet Union and want to join him abroad. "I just haven't got the desire to he replied. "I really can't do it." The writer had his eyes checked for a new pair of reading glasses in the city.

He also stopped in a stationery shop to buy ball point peris, a box of pencils and six small paper note pads. Heeb and Solzhenitsyn walked to the attorney's office. The' Russian emerged about an hour later, carrying a new black tape recorder and a red attache case, apparently gifts. Solzhenitsyn spent part'of the afternoon on the balcony of the Heeb apartment in his In Moscow, Soviet Premier Alexei N. Kosygin said he wasn't interested in the case of Solzhenitsyn, who was arrested Tuesday, stripped of his Soviet citizenship and expelled from the country Wednesday.

His expulsion came after weeks of Soviet attacks for his new book about Stalinist labor camps, "Gulag Archipelago." Approached while he was waiting at a Moscow railway station for the arrival of President Urho Kekkonen of Finland on Friday, Kosygin said: "Do you believe that I'm only thinking of Solzhenitsyn and only 'occupied by him? I'm not interested in the case." Kosygin confirmed that Solzhenitsyn's family would be allowed to join him, hut could not say if his papers and archives could be sent to him. Asked about the latter, he said, "It is difficult for me to say. You know we have special or- ganizations for that." Secret Service guards Simon; move 'justified' WASHINGON (AP) Federal energy chief William E. Simon has been assigned Secret Service bodyguards, the Treasury Department and Federal Energy Office confirmed Saturday. Officials would not say why the protection had been assigned to Simon but Charles Arnold, a Treasury spokesman, said, "Draw your own conclusions." Asked if Simon had been threatened, cannot tell you.

We do not comment on threats." "It's been determined by the Treasury that its justified," he said. "Otherwise we wouldn't have it." The Treasury Department supervises the Secret Service. Jack Warner, a Secret Service spokesman, said the protection had been assigned to Simon last Monday. Simon began a vacation in Florida Wednesday. The guards accompanied him on a commercial jetliner flight, the energy office said, but would not comment on his location in Florida.

"He wanted the phone to be quiet and he wanted to be alone and get a rest," said one energy office spokesman. "You're not going to get anything specific because there have been security problems." A reporter checking further learned of the Secret Service detail for Simon. "The action was taken because of the controversial nature of his Federal Energy Office duties," said Acting Director of Information Pete 'Secretary of the Treasury George Shultz dire cted that a guard be assigned." T. Agnew until President Nixon orders the protection ended. The spokesman said that to his knowledge the Treasury had not yet received a letter in which the General Accounting Office said it would not allow any more payments for Agnew's Secret Service contingent as of Monday.

No visitation is planned. The family requests friends donate to the Heart Fund in his memory. to deliver a radio response to Nixon's Saturday. address last ARK 895-4488 BUYING CARPET? BROADLOOM SELLS CARPET "Samples Brought 7o Your Home" Carpet Clbamng" 2 Stores -868-2563 or 892-8276 591 Main St. orCthtRigdofi Sears "Where portrait photography has become an art." Could you change a furnace Utter for an elderly person who can't affo'rd to hire it done? Phone ARK 895-4488 Your child's portrait 2 ways! BOTH FOR ONLY NOTICE ALL HAMILTON BANKS WILL OBSERVE THE PRESIDENTS DAY (LEGAL HOLIDAY) MONDAY, FEBRUARY 18,1974 You get an 8x10 color portrait PLUS a silver-like metal portrait charm NO BUSINESS TRANSACTED This Week Only Offer Good Thru Feb.

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Pages Available:
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Years Available:
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