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Daily Republican-Register from Mount Carmel, Illinois • 11

Location:
Mount Carmel, Illinois
Issue Date:
Page:
11
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

v- Wednesday, Oclobf 27, 1 882 Page Eleven Dally Republican Register, ML Carina), Illinois tor consideration lor the Woman guilty of child abuse MCHS Hall of Famo nominations opened MCHS Hal of Fmw. TMr eddreee la foNoenK Pttone. i Th4f eccoaftpllelweerrts are IoBowsj II additional Information about the above candidate la needed, you may contact ma a follow: Pharf Akbar Esker, 29, a Pakisli-nian national, was convicted in July of child abuse and sentenced to five years in prison. The boy, weighing only 32 pounds, was found unconscious on the basement floor when fire broke out April 18 at the house occupied by Esker and Mrs. Kocevski.

Esker and the boy's mother were visiting friends in Peoria, 111., at the time of the. fire, authorities said. Custody of the boy, who was hospitalized for nearly two weeks while recovering from malnutrition, was later awarded to his father, who lives in West Germany. COLUMBIA, Mo. (AP) A Cape Girardeau woman witt be sentenced Dec.

13 on child-abuse charges stemming from the imprisonment of her son in a basement for three months. Olgica Kocevski, 27, entered the a guilty plea Monday before Circuit Judge Frank Conley of Boone County. The case, involving the confine-Vent of Dejan Kocevski, 7, was transferred here from Cape Girardeau County on change of venue because of pretrial publicity. Psychiatric examinations had been ordered for Mrs. Kocevski, who was also charged with child abandoftnent in the case.

School or must have been employed by District 348 (not necessarily a graduate). 1 Persons must have been out of high school at least four years before qualifying, except teachers, coaches or band instructors. 3. Coaches and band instructors must have been out of their coaching and band instructing duties four years or more. 4.

Candidates achievements, with the exception of coaches and band instructors, must go beyond the high school leveL 5. Candidates must receive four of the committee member votes. 6. Names may be submitted yearly on new candidates. Nominations are again being accepted for the Mt Cannel High School Ban of Fame, committee members have announced.

The honor, which was created last rear in light of the school's centennial celebration saw the induction of 37 members. Anyone desiring to nominate a candidate may do so, by filling out the form which will be provided in the Daily Republican Register. It witt be another five years before an induction wUl take place. Following are the criteria for admittance to the Hall of Fame: 1. Persons must have attended Mt.

Carnal High you hava a family mambor or an acquaintance that you would like to nominate, pleat tubmrt thalr nam and accomplishment. Pteeae Ratum Thl Form To: HALL OF FAME COMMITTEE Mt Carnal High School 201 Pear Streat MtCermel, Illinois 62863 Ptoas return thl form on or before December 3, 1 982. Albanese convicted of another murder Chrysler workers reject strike at the average $9.07 an hour until a new contract is reached, Stepp said. That is about $2.60 an hour behind wages of autoworkers cy Fraser said must be rectified in the upcoming talks. Talks wiU resume "immediately after the holidays," Fraser said.

A date has not ed in a tentative contract reached Sept 16 which workers rejected by a 7-3 margin. The tentative pact tied wage increases to quarterly profits beginning in December and reinstated cost-of-living allowances one of the concessions workers have made since 1979 to save the financially ailing No. 3 automaker. Workers' wages witt remain "We are gratified," Thomas Miner, Chrysler vice president of Industrial relations, said in a statement- "We believe a strike against the company would have had serious- consequences and would have jeopardized the at General Motors Corp. and Ford Motor Co.

adiscrepan- been set IRS cu rtails hotline WAUKEGAN, 111. (AP) -Businessman Charles Albanese, 45, already under a sentence of death for the poisoning of three family members with arsenic, has been convicted of murder in the arsenic killing of his mother-in-law. Albanese showed no visible reaction when the Lake County jury read its verdict Tuesday. He was charged with poisoning Mary Mueller, 69, who died in August 1980 in a Waukegan hospital of arsenic poisoning. He had been convicted earlier and sentenced to death for the arsenic-poisoning murders of his father, Michael Albanese 69; his wife's grandmother, Mary Lambert, 89, and the attempted murder of his brother, Michael Albanese 36.

Michael, who recovered from the poisoning, testified at his brother's trial. Prosecutors contended that Albanese undertook the poisonings to gain control and inheritance of the family business, Allied Die Casting. They also said Albanese was deeply in debt before his wife, Virginia, gained a $72,000 inheritance after the deaths of Mrs. Mueller and Mrs. Lambert.

In an unsuccessful motion for a directed verdict, defense attorney Richard Kelly termed evidence against Albanese "completely He said Mrs. Albanese, who has not been charged, also had access to the arsenic her husband had in his possession. Albanese had contended, at various times, that either his brother or a random killer was responsible for the WASHINGTON (AP)-The Internal Revenue Service said Tuesday that the toll-free telephone "hot line" that the House panel that oversees the IRS budget, and his Senate counterpart, Sen. James Abd-nor, want the hot-line service continued. Thym Smith, chief spokesman for IRS, said the agency will rely on volunteers, libraries and the news media to provide tax-return assistance to the public, especially for elderly and lower-income Americans who for the election campaign.

Committee aides said, however, that the IRS programs will be a priority when Congress reconvenes Nov. 29. It is quite likely that Congress will order IRS to restore the full telephone program, said Aubrey A. Gunnels of the House Appropriations Committee staff. Gunnels said Rep.

Edward Roybal, chairman of DETROIT (AP) Chrysler Corp. workers who voted overwhelmingly against striking for an immediate pay raise should "do better in January" at the bargaining table, says the bead of the United Auto Workers. "It was the correct decision given all the circumstances," said UAW President Douglas A. Fraser after rank-and-file workers voted Tuesday by more than a 2-1 margin against hitting picket lines, during the holiday season. Union leaders called the one-day referendum after Chrysler workers overwhelmingly rejected a proposed contract, negotiated in September, that included no immediate wage increase, although it was the first contract in three years that did not ask workers for concessions.

"I believe that we dan do better in January than we did in September," Fraser said at a news conference Tuesday night. Official results of the referendum, which asked autoworkers to choose between striking and working under terms of a contract that expired Sept 15, were 25,056 to 11,589 against a strike, or 68.4 percent to 31.6 percent, the UAW said. cannot afford to hire professionals to prepare their returns. IRS last year fielded 45 million taxpayer questions, 36 million of them via telephone. The Reagan administration imposed the cutbacks over the behind-the-scenes objections of IRS Commissioner Roscoe Egger.

In a letter to a superior late last year, Egger expressed fear that the cutback in telephone assistance might produce "a significant decline in voluntary compliance and a concurrent decline in revenues." jobs of all Chrysler employees." Workers were worried about going through the Thanksgiving and Christmas holidays without jobs, local UAW officials said. "It's already hard times for them" because of the depressed economy and poor auto sates, said Charles Thornton, president of Local 961 in Detroit, after the vote. Chrysler's 43,200 working VS. autoworkers, plus many of the 40,000 on indefinite layoff were eligible to vote. Miner had warned earlier that a walkout could be "ruinous" and would cripple the company.

Fraser had called the prospect of a strike "horrifying." Analysts had estimated that a strike would have hurt the company within a couple of weeks. A second round of contract talks collapsed Oct' 18 when? Chrysler said it could not af- ford worker demands for an immediate pay raise. The first round of talks end Want Ads Get Results! Public television ratings climb answered nearly 36 million -taxpayer questions last year will not accept inquiries' on how to file a return after Oct. 31. Beginning Nov.

1, the hot line will be used only for such clerical questions as why a refund check has not been received. The IRS announced the cutback earlier this year in an effort to reduce costs, but the decision was widely assailed in Congress as one that would cost tiie government more tivin it would save. The House and Senate Appropriations committees have directed JRS to, continue the telephone service and other taxpayer-assistance programs, but Congress failed to act on the committees' recommendations before adjourning CLASSIFIEDS CONTINUED PADGETT TREE a Shrub Ser vice is the place to call for your professional tree and landscape needs. No job too large, no job too small. All modern equipment A locally owned business for over 20 years.

Fully licensed and insured. 262-5851. WASHINGTON (AP) -Public television's prime-time programs are attracting 50 percent more viewers this fall than last year, the Public Broadcasting Service says. The non-commercial network said Tuesday that over night figures in five markets measured by the A.C. Nielsen Co.

showed the' average prime-time rating for the first 10 days of the fall season was 3.3, up from the 2.2 average posted for the first 10 days of the 1981 premieres. HUSKIE-BILT CORPORA- CMPLETE HON Business machinery JAMIUWAL or and Thrive Center Buildings. Ray Gregory, R.R. 3, Box 119, Fairfield, IL 62837. have your carpets, upholstery, walls, garages, basements, gutters or windows cleaned call Carroll's Cleaning Service at 262-5854.

1 RETAIN DON Wjj BIRLEY 7S AS WABASH COUNTY TREASURER rpable-CwperatJve-Experienced (Prid St Man 01 On Netty) MCDONALD'S HAS A NEW WAY FOR YOU TO "TREAT" YOUR TRICK OR TREATERS THIS YEAR! NOTICE TO ADVERTISERS It is the policy of the Daily Republican-Register that we be responsible for only one incorrect insertion of an ad. Please check your ad to make sure it is correct. If it isn't, please call our office by 9:00 a.m. the day after the incorrect insertion so that we can correct it. THER0N ARNOLD Lot 18 Cherry St Est.

PHONE 262-8938 Nsw has Elsctrolux sweepers. Sales service. Bags shampoo. JALIOIVEEC GIFT CERTIFICATES GOOD FOR A FREE REGULAR SIZE SOFT DRINK! WABASH COUNTY Nr StMtM Wke RON NEWSUM SILHOUETTE LACE New Lace Like Plastic With Hundreds Of Uses For The Home. Colorful Easy To Clean Long Wearing Many Colors To Choose DlecoVar My PHONEME AT 282-81 13 "84.

Ad PbW tof Wow ftwwmw CLEAR FLEXIBLE PLASTIC STORM WINDOW KITS Fits Windows Up To Sheets To Pkg. With Framing Strips And Nails. Reg. 93' Value SINGER SEWING Machine Service, all other brands, in the home. Mt.

Carmel Furniture, 262-8471. WINTER'S COMINQI Is your chimney ready? Call Thomas Chimney Sweep today. 854-2752, Osne. CHIMNEYS CLEANED at a reasonable rate. Call B-Safe Chimney Sweeps, (812) 385-5586.

EXHAUST PRO 1231 Cherry. Phone 262-4370. ipating Sr-id'a in Princeton. lEXXEXISaiKEEPES CS23TK3STI53I COMPLETE REMODELING AND CONSTRUCTION WORK "Old Fftorfl Wtti Haw Mmi" KMLBEMENCH RAY KEEKS 1M-2421 Ml 1411 ordering From. Reg'.

$1.77 Yd. Value $if 09 NOW rl YARD 66 SOTTDi PKG. SO. 198- ONLY fpirea nunt thlfl OO0 McDonald's 47670 receive I FREE regular size Halloween COME JOIN JIappy at. WcDonaldsl 'V'." HALLOWEEN SPECIALI BIG PICTURE POP SUCKERS DU7.1 DUM POPS COUPONS ARE AVAILABLE IN Refl.

19 Value 1 0 Flavors 1 01 To Package Reg. $2.29 Value Reg. $6.84 Value BOX OF IS i A BOOKLET OF 20 COUPONS 57 HALLOWEEN $-1 13 $43 SPECIAL! I PKQ. CXLY PURCHASE YOUR COUPONS NOW! BE SURE AND ASK ABOUT OUR LAY-A-WAY PLAN. A DEPOSIT DOWN WILL HOLD ANY, ITEM UNTIL CHRISTMAS WITH NO CARRYING CHARGES." AND LET'S MOVE IN A NEW DIRECTION! ELECT nODERT S.

REDFIint -STATE SENATOR 54th DISTRICT- 1. OPPOSED TO GUN CONTROL 2. OPPOSED TO ANY CONSOLIDATION OF TOWNSHIP AND COUNTY QOVERNVEN1. A GREAT CONSERVATIVE SPOKESMAN 'The Bight Man The Right Time(V $0 AT McDonald's mm MT. CARMEL tWMaW!" WWMCTItV kCauaTHUttTMi Shop 4 Ways: Cash, Lay-A-Way, VISA, Master Card' ft.

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About Daily Republican-Register Archive

Pages Available:
386,167
Years Available:
1901-2009