Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive

Gazette News-Current from Xenia, Ohio • Page 5

Location:
Xenia, Ohio
Issue Date:
Page:
5
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

OBITVAR1ES Services Set Saturday For Howard Suter Of Beaver BEAVERCREEK Services for Howard (Bill) Suter, 49, of 3124 Grange Hall owner of Dayton Roof Truss will be held Saturday at 1:30 p.m. at Meyer and Boehmer Funeral Hpnw, 1733 Brown Dayton, with burial in Valley i Memorial. Gardens on Val 1 Kd. Friends may call at the funeral home today from 4 to 9 p.m. Mr.

Suter died Thursday. He was a member of Taii Chapter No. 239, RStAM; Wright Council No. 96, RSM, and -Nathaniel Greene Commandery, No. 81, Knights Templar.

Alpha Lodge No. 729, RAM, will hold services tonight at 7:30. Survivors include his widow, Edna two daughters, Mrs. Ten-y (Donna) Temple and Mrs. Robert (Barbara) i nish of Beavercreek; one son, Howard Suter Jr.

of two sisters, Mrs. Ted (Betty) Schwetzler of Dayton and Mrs. a (Catherine) Reehl of Phoenix, one brother, Frank Suter of Dayton; and seven grandchildren. Mrs. Margaret Vance WASHINGTON C.H.

Services for Mrs. Margaret Vance, 50, wife of David Vance of State near Bloomingburg, and mother of two Spring Valley men, will be held Saturday at 2 p.m. at the Parrett Funeral Home with burial in Bloomingburg Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home this evening. Mrs.

Vance died Wednesday at 5:40 p.m. at Mt. Logan Sanatorium, Chillicothe, where she had been a patient about a month. Born near Dayton, she had lived in Fayette County the last 12 years. Her first husband, Roy Engle, preceded her in death.

Surviving are five including Eugene and Charles Engle of Spring Valley; grandchildren and a sister. Mt. Sterling, 0. (Hoyne, Third BUMGARDNER Mrs. Sarah 83, of 27 E.

Bruce yesterday; funeral Sunday in Harrisville W.Va. (Raiquel, Harrisville, W.Va.). BURKHART, infant daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Kelly Burkhart, of 2514 Nordic yesterday; funeral 10 a.m.

tomorrow, Evergreen Cemet (Dayton Riesinger). BURRIS, Robert 56, of 1700 Wesleyan yesterday; 9 a.m. tomorrow Morris Sons, Dayton). CECIL, Mrs. Alma Bleck, 73, of 1221 Sharon Wednes day; funeral 11 a.m.

tomorrow, Beavertown EUB Church Son). DAYTON DEATHS ABBOTT, William 42, formerly of Dayton, yesterday hi GREENE COUNTY'S 1966 ACCIDENT RECORD: ACCIDENTS FATALITIES INJURED 2,422 26 1,066 Hnwrln kr CkW Hlikwur rulrol, Follcc, Bktrlff OTHER OBITS LONDON Brain, a leading figure in the British medical profession and an authority on -mental illness died Thursday. He was 71. Lord Brain, an eminent neurologist, and a medical consultant of the late Sir Winston Churchill, served as president of the Royal College of Physicians from 1950 to 1957. CLEVELAND (UPI) -Henry A.

Rocker, 84, a prominent Jewish leader here and a noteu attorney for nearly 60 years, died Thursday in Mount Sinai Hospital. He was president of the Jewish Community Federation, 1945:1953, and was president for 23 years of the Cleveland Heights Park Synagogue, the largest conservative Jewish congregation in the Unitec States. VATICAN CITY (UPI) Pietro. Cardinal Ciriaci died today aged 81. The Rome-born cardinal hat been ailing for some time with a kidney disorder.

On Wednesday Pope Paul VI paid a 20- minute call on the cardinal an( his family at Ciriaci's residence near the Vatican. The cardinal was prefect the Sacred Congregation of the Council and head of a commis sion for the reform of the code of canon law. WILBERFORCB A grant of to Central 'State University by the U.S. Depart- nent of Health, Education and Welfare to help in construction costs of a proposed CSU business administration Central State, said the grant Fourth Youth Held In BE Of Bundy Hall At CSU Day, A fourth Middletown uth has been arrested in the Dec. It wi 17 burglary of Bundy Hall, Cen- curity tral State University, and hree arrested earlier by State Highway Patrol today were ordered held to the grand ury.

Latest arrest resulting from ihe patrol's investigation came Thursday night when a 17-year- old Middletown boy was taken into custody. He later a released to his family pending disposition of his case in Juvenile Court. Meanwhile, three Middletown youths maintained nnoceot pleas at preliminary searings in Xenia Municipal Court today. Ordered held to he grand jury for breaking and entering were i llip E. Hammond, Robert A.

Reed and Larry J. Sullivan, all 18. Municipal Judge Joseph L. Hagler Jr. continued their bond at $1,500 apiece.

Patrolmen still are seeking others believed involved in the break-in, which reportedly netted loot including a television set, typewriter and blank checks. None of the loot a been a patrol spokesman said today. There also was an apparent attempt to open a safe in an office, but the intruders reportedly fled the scene of the approach of campus security guards before opening the safe. It was one of the campus se- officials, a who provided the first lead in the case when he obtained the license number ol an auto spotted on campus. XENIA DAILY GAZETTE Friday, December 1W Central State Gets $105,480 Grant has.been announced by Rep.

Clarence J. Brown Jr. of Ohio Seventh District. Harry G. Johns, director of physical plant 'services China Threat With H-Bomb HONG KONG (UPI) Key military sources here today predicted Red would be able to hit most of Asia--and Russia--with a missile-borne hydrogen bomb by the end of 1967.

They also said Red China should be able to post a nuclear missile threat to the United States well ahead of the 1970-75 period predicted in the past by U.S. Defense Department officials. Acceleration of nuclear testing and of technology arid assistance drawbacks were 'viewed by the comprises about one tenth of estimated construction costs of he proposed three story milding. The building will house account i laboratories, offices, faculty offices, seminar rooms, lounges and a number of classrooms. Central State will advert i for bids on the building project in February, and it is ioped that groundbreaking will take place in April.

Target date for completion drawn from Red 1 China's fifth explosion of an atomic device. Wednesday's blast was the Peking government's seconc atomic test in eight weeks and the this year. sources as conclusions to be of construction is Septemb 1968, or 18 months after ground is broken. Business administration offices of CSU now are located on the second floor of Bundy areas of the campus. In a related item of interest i this area, Congressm a rown said Wittenberg Univer- ty at Springfield was granted 200,333 for construction of a ew science building under the' federal action.

The Jamestown Radar Site pertonntl wishes to think everyone who so (en- donated to our Mopt-rtinllf project. With their jtnertms donations we were able to furnish clothlnj, food, furniture ind lifts to six families conslstini of 37 children and 13 adults. ADA Stand WASHINGTON (UPI) The liberal Americans for Democratic Action (ADA) wants both President Johnson and Soviet Premier Alexei N. Kosygin to prevent deployment of antiballistic missile systems in America and Russia. Anxious To Take Reins Reagan's Inauguration Minute After Midnight By NORMAN KEMPSTER SACRAMENTO, Calif.

(UPI) --Ronald Reagan, the good guy in hundreds of movies and television shows, takes over the starring role Monday in the real life drama of governing the nation's most populous state. Reagan. 55, a Republican, will take the oath of office as California's 33rd governor at earliest moment authorized by. the state Constitution. About 12 hours later, the Democratic controlled legislature will convene for what may be the longest session in state history.

Between them, Reagan and the lawmakers will be faced with problems ranging from a budget deficit of $350 million or more to racial strife on streets and from a growing property taxpayers' revolt to student demonstrations at the University of California. Reagan says he is sure he can RONALD REAGAN legislature in spite of partisan differences. But Democratic Assembly Speaker Jesse M. Unruh, probably the most powerful legislator, has adopted Bail For Wortham MOSCOW (UPI) The U.S. Embassy has been told unofficially it should offer 20,000 rubles bail $22,222.22 for a young American sentenced to three years in a labor camp for black marketeering, it was reported today.

The American is Buel Ray Wortham, 25, ot North Little Rock, who was sentenced to three years for illegally exchanging dollars for rubles on the Leningrad black market and for stealing a statuette of a Russian bear from his hotel room. A companion, Craddock M. Gilmour 24, of Salt Lake City, was fined 1,000 rubles $1,111.11. He has since paid the fine and left the country. The suggestion of bail for Wortham came from his Soviet lawyer with the knowledge and apparent approval of the Soviet Foreign Ministry.

The suggestion was described by informed sources as "highly unusual." There was no immediate indication what the suggestion meant. Wortham filed an appeal this week agnmsl his sentence. The appeal is not expected to be heard for about 20 days. a wait-and-see attitude toward the new administration. Unruh said the Democratic lawmakers probably would not propose a program of their own as ah alternative to Reagan's "Creative Society" plan.

But he said the legislature would look long and hard at bills advocated by the administration. Reagan's decision to hold his inauguration in the middle of the night is unprecedented in California, The Constitution sets the first Monday in January as inauguration day and lets the incoming governor pick the tune. All previous governors have selected daylight hours but Reagan decided to take over as soon as possible. Only a few invited guests, plus newsmen and television crews, will be on hand for the taking. Reagan will deliver his inaugural address at 11 a.m.

Jan. 5. By choosing the unusual inaugural time, Reagan avoided competition with football bowl games for television coverage. The toughest decisions facing the new administration and legislature are financial. If California is to continue spending in the manner to which it has become billion this fiscal year--it needs more revenue.

Estimates of the gap between spending and income for the fiscal year that will begin July 1 range from $350 million to $70P million. Although he insisted he had not yet made up his mind, the governor-elect said an increase in the 4 per cent sales tax was likely. 11 More Ohio Municipalities COLUMBUS (UPI) The stale will start 1967 with 11 more municipalities under the charter form of government than there were at the start of this year. Secretary of Stale Ted W. Brown said voter approval accounts for the increase to a total of 135 municipalities functioning under this form.

PEOPLES SAVINGS NOW PAYS SEASONAL DIVIDENDS WINTER DIVIDENDS PAYABLE DEC. 31st SPRING DIVIDENDS PAYABLE MARCH 31st SUMMER DIVIDENDS PAYABLE JUNE 30th FALL DIVIDENDS PAYABLE SEPT. 30th --CURRENT RATE-- PER ANNUM COMPOUNDED EACH 3 MONTHS MONEY AVAILABLE FOR HOME LOANS SAVINGS DEPOSITED BY THE 10th OF JANUARY EARN DIVIDENDS MARCH 31st SAMS UKUBtl TO $15,000 DV THE F.S. Lit. PEOPLES SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION 25 GREENE ST, XENIA, OHIO.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

About Gazette News-Current Archive

Pages Available:
206,315
Years Available:
1882-2017