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The Piqua Daily Call from Piqua, Ohio • Page 10

Location:
Piqua, Ohio
Issue Date:
Page:
10
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

PIOUA DAILY CALL Friday, September 20, 1974 BUDGET HEARING-Roy Ash (left) director of the Office of Management and Budget, confers with Rap. Elford Cederberg, prior to testifying before the new House Budget Committee Thursday. Ash said Congress will get a $20 billion package of Hospital News Piqua Births: Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie Curtner, 1513 Forrest, a girl at p.m.

Thursday. Admissions: Kimberly, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Cornell, 122W- Springfield, St. Paris.

John Lee, 339 Weber. Mrs. Judd C. Zimmerman, 5765 Thomas Road, Ludlow Falls. Mrs.

Keith Ostendorf, Funerals Mrs. Alta M. Dieringer Mrs. Alta M. Dieringer, 66, of 122'A W.

Auglaize, Wapakoneta, died at 6:35 p.m. Thursday in Piqua Memorial Hospital where she had been a patient one month. She had been ill six months. Born March 17, 1908, in Huron, she was a daughter of John and Dora Schillinger Jones. She was married in 1929 to OUie Dieringer, who survives her.

Also surviving her is a son, William 1800 Amherst; four grandchildren, two sisters, Mrs. Delia Knight, West Baden Springs, and Mrs. Agnes Blevins, Huron, and a brother, Glen, West Baden Springs, Ind. She was employed by the Westinghouse Corp. for over 25 years and was a member of St.

Joseph Catholic Church in Wapakoneta, Sodality, and Christian Mothers of the Church. Funeral mass will be said at 10 a.m. Monday in St. Joseph Church by the Rev. Clement B.

Ault. Burial will be in the church cemetery. Friends may call at the Heinl, Long, and Folk Funeral Home, Wapakoneta, from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Sunday. Rosary will be recited at 7:30 p.m.

Sunday in the funeral home. Ford Asks (Concluded From Page One) budget estimates, will be sent to Congress in the next few weeks. There also will be additional requests as required to control federal spending and promote an orderly execution of federal programs, the White House said. Under the new law, the funds Ford wants to rescind must be spent unless Congress passes legislation within 45 days endorsing the President's request. Funds the President wants deferred may be withheld unless either house of Congress enacts a resolution that they be spent.

However, funds may not be proposed for deferral beyond the end of the current fiscal year. If further deferral is proposed for the next fiscal year, a new message must be transmitted at that time. Latest Price (Concluded From Page One) fresh fruits increased instead of declining seasonally. Nearly all other food items continued to rise, including cereal and bakery products, processed fruits and vegetables, sugar and sweets, nonalcoholic beverages and partially prepared foods. The government said Ihe big rise in nonfood items was due mostly to higher clothing prices, which usually decline in August.

Used car prices also rose but at a "considerably smaller" rate than In recent months while the price of new cars Increased slightly instead of declining as they usually do at the end of the model year. Roosevelt. Roger Lawson 1018 Park. Berman Besecker, Rt. 2, Greenville.

Mrs. Oral Agenbroad, 1106 S. Main. Earl Black, 224 Poplar, St. Paris.

Mrs. Dessa Snapp, 1041 Boone. Mrs. Hugh Wright, 106 Lynn, Russia. Dismissals: Pamela, daughter of Mr.

and Mrs. Richard Elliott; Thomas Risenbeck, Douglas Niswonger, Mrs. Delores Bolden, Walter Goode, James Brown, Mrs. Ralph Helman, Minnie Stein, Mrs. Bessie Clay, Admiral Hitter, Keith Helke.

Dettmer General Births: Mr. and Mrs. Glen Smith, 8170 Mill Road, Troy, a girl at 7 a.m. today. Admissions: Mrs.

Letta Anthony, Rt. 1, Conover. Mrs. Francis DeLaet, Rt. 6, Sidney.

Mrs. Roy Reineke, 519 Campbell, Sidney. Mrs. Albert O'Reyeo, 627 Philadelphia, Dayton. Mrs.

John M. Whitmer, 707 N. Center, Versailles. Mrs. Charles Miller, 482 Mayfield, Troy.

Ida Thompson, 115 S. Main, Covington. Mrs. Loywayne Walters, 200 S. High, Covington.

Michael, son of Mr. and Mrs. Michael Mencsik, 211 S. Market, Troy. Melissa, daughters of Mr.

and Mrs. Donald Burns, 7385 Perry Road, Covington. Dismissals: Mrs. Ganger, Mrs. Howard John Dill, Irvin Schock, Dean, son of Mr.

and Mrs. Bruce Powell; Mrs. Anthony L. Jackson and daughter, Mrs. Harold Wintrow and daughter.

Troy Stbuder Births: Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Tullis, S.R. 721, Laura, a girl at 2:23 a.m. today.

Admissions: Mrs. Mary McCoy, 1031 Frontiere, Troy. Ronald, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Lacy, 1547 Henley Road, Troy.

Kimberly, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Lacy, 1547 Henley Herbert May, Troy. Jefferson D. Lisles, 36 Blmwood, Troy.

Thomas Harmon, 7330 Meadow, Tipp City. Mrs. Raymond Connard, 508 Michigan, Troy. Mrs. Morris D.

Bashore, S.C.R. 25-A, Troy. Dora Perry, 4455 Casstown-Clark Road, Casstown. John Poling, 1617 Broadway. Mrs.

Margaret Trucksis, 239 Crawford, Troy. Richard Shumm, 102 Dorset, Troy. Drayton Carr, 104 Elm, Troy. Dismissals: Mrs. James Barnett, Stanley Bowers, Mrs.

Audrey Frings, Mrs. Cecil Cogaugh, Maurice Myers. HOMEOWNERS POLICY DONLEEPER 773-8518 3rd SAVINGS I LOAN BUILDING JISViN, WAYNE ST. PIOUA, OHIO Stale Farm Fin ano Casna 1 Company proposed reductions and postponements of spending by the end' of this week. (AP Wirephoto) Money Won't (Concluded From Page One) changing their names to get gas and electricity, children starving on Indian reservations, and old people eating cat food and putting off medical care.

The delegates told the government that the young, old, sick and poor are already paying a higher price for inflation and they need more money now to bring them up to where they were before the economy careened out of control. They warned that cutting HEW spending would aggravate crime, health, unemployment, and other social problems for years and perhaps even decades to come. To finance higher HEW spending, many groups suggested tax revision to plug loopholes benefiting millionaires, investors, the oil industry and big corporations. They said this would bring in another billion to $30 billion to the treasury. "Tax reform is an absolute must," said Albert Shanker, new president of- the American Federation of Teachers.

A coalition of groups proposed that, while social services spending not be trimmed, all other federal programs and particularly the defense budget, should be examined for possible savings. Prosecutor's Aide Freed By Court John Boyd Benning, secret service officer for the Miami County Prosecutor's office, was released with a warning from the Newport, Ky. Municipal Court this morning, according to Municipal Court Judge Murphy. Benning was arrested Saturday in Newport on charges of disorderly conduct and being drunk in a public place. Judge Murphy "submitted on the charge" after Benning entered a of not guilty, according to the Newport Police Court Clerk.

Judge Murphy explained, "It was not an outright dismissal. It falls in the category of a warning." Milk Subsidy Price Boost Proposed WASHINGTON (AP) The Agriculture Department today proposed a boost of up to 13 per cent in minimum prices paid to farmers for milk produced for bottling under federal marketing orders. Officials said the proposal was offered as a way to help financially distressed dairy farmers who say rising costs are threatening to drive them out of business. A hearing will be held Oct. 8 in Rosemont, 111., near Chicago to gather comments from producers, milk dealers and consumers, the department said.

Indian Tribe Declares War BONNERS FERRY, Idaho (AP) Northern Idaho's 67-member Kootenai Indian tribe braced for a confrontation today with state and local law enforcement Kootenai tribal members planned to erect roadblocks on the region's four major roadways in an effort to secure at least part of 1.6 million acres in Idaho and Montana which they lost in 1855. State and local authorities said they would arrest anyone manning a roadblock. On Thursday evening, a 33-car convoy of marked Idaho State Police vehicles moved into Bonners Ferry. Tribal spokesman Douglas Wheaton pledged that no Indian would provoke violence. He said no one manning road-, blocks would be armed.

He added, however, that if fired upon, the Kootenais would secure weapons. The Kootenai said their plan was designed to force immediate negotiation of their first treaty with the federal government. The plan called for roadblocks to collect 10-cent tolls from cars traveling on highways crossing the Canadian border and connecting Montana and Idaho. The Indian band had given the federal government until midnight on Thursday to meet its demands of face a declaration of war. Tribal leaders characterized their declaration of war on the United States as the last chance for their band's survival.

Bureau of Indian Affairs Commissioner Morris Thompson told the tribe by telegram that its demands involved complex issues touching a variety of federal and state agencies. He said the bureau's area director, Francis Br'seoe, would be sent from Portland, on Wednesday to open talks. But the tribe refused to postpone its war declaration. Businessmen In India Fight Starvation, BANKURA, India (AP) The businessmen of Bankura are waging a quiet battle against starvation among destitute local laborers and thousands of landless peasants driven into town by hunger. They are operating kitchens that dispense curd bread and lentil soup free or at reduced prices to more than 20,000 persons a day.

And they are opening more kitchens in nearby towns. Landless farmhands and their families are quitting their rural mud homes in this district. 160 miles northwest of Calcutta. They crowd the buses or lurch along in the dust with bundles on their heads and babies in their arms. Thin brown arms stab at the bread spread on flat leaves for the hungry in the middle of central Bankura Street.

Several thousand squat in lines for the dole, making shrill cries for more when the man with the soup'bucket passes. Mothers stick food into their babies' mouths. Children eat in quick handfuls. Old men eat in stunned silence. "It's been six months since we had any work or food," said 32-year-old Mondandra Mandal, who walked 24 miles from his village.

"There was farming in the village, but the plants have died because there is no rain." The chance to find jobs is bleak until the fall rice harvest at the end of October. With government food stocks inadequate and prices on the open market out of reach, businessmen say the food situation will be desperate unless help comes fast. The government has contracted to buy nearly 2 million tons of food grains through December, much of it from the United Slates. Indian envoys are reported urgently seeking U.S. help to more.

ALWAYS WELCOME PIQUA MANOR Phone 773-0040 SALE FABRIC LABOR Jht iilita. Juruititrr II! MAIN 5T PHONE 778-0300 FOR SHOP-AT-HOME SERVICE FORECAST figuffft Show Low Umil Saturday Mofnina. Precipitation NoP Injical.d- C.ntujl CHANCE OF SHOWERS-Take your umbrella to the football game tonight. The Vandalia Weather Bureau forecasts a chance of showers or thundershowers this afternoon and evening, probably clearing later tonight. The high today should be near 70, with a low in the mid-40's tonight.

Saturday should be sunny with a high in local For.cail the upper 60's. Chances of rain are 50 per cent today, 30 per cent tonight and 10 per cent Saturday. Warm weather and sunny skies are forecast today for the Pacific coast and Rocky Mountain states. East of the Rockies partly- cloudy 'skies are expected for most areas. Juvenile Judge Asks Students To Conduct Delinquency Survey TROY Juvenile Court Judge James O'Donnell Thursday asked juvenile members of his Youth Services Study Committee (YSSC) to conduct a survey among high school students on juvenile delinquency.

O'Donnell asked them to determine student opinions on the causes of delinquency and possible solutions to the problems. In the monthly meeting of YSSC at the county safety building, O'Donnell asked members to conduct the survey in the county's nine high schools. Two students from each school have been appointed to YSSC. The survey will probably be conducted in a little more than a month. asked the students to prepare the survey at the next meeting, which is in October.

again expressed concern over the poor attendance of the adult YSSC members. While 13 of 18 high school students were at the meeting, there were only two of the ap-' proximately 21 adults on the committee. He said that poor attendance by; adults doesn't mean an end to the' committee, and that if he has to, he will' rely on the student members. Ford To Visit South Korea WASHINGTON (AP) President; Ford will visit South Korea for an 1 overnight stay Nov. 22-23 following his trip to Japan, the White House announced today.

The President is making the visit at the invitation of Korea's President Park Chung Hee, whose wife was killed in a recent assassination attempt on Park. Ford will arrive in Seoul on the morning of Nov. 22 and depart the following morning. BANK THE EASY WAY JUST DRIVE IN! Our drive-in window is a quick and easy way to bank. No parking problems no long lines same courteous service.

So, drive in today and be on your way again a little Branch Office Open Every Saturday Your friend in "MONEY" ways. BORDER CITY SAVINGS Dili. i LOAN ASSN, tR JB wnnlz? 300 W. High St. 138 N.

Sunset.

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About The Piqua Daily Call Archive

Pages Available:
291,244
Years Available:
1883-1977