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The Weirton Daily Times from Weirton, West Virginia • Page 2

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Weirton, West Virginia
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Welrfon Daily Times, Weflnesdav, Jufy 12,1 Deaths And Funerals Darmelio jOarmelio, of 309 N. lOlh died at 11 pm. Tuesday In Welrton General Hospital after a hospiUUtaBon of two weeks. He had been In failing health three yiars. Ht was born Nov.

JO, In Italy, son of the late Michael and Maria Abbonlzio Darmelio. Mr. DarmeUo was a retired milk delivery man of the old Dairy Co. and a member of St. Pauls Roman Catholic Church.

was married to Carmella Darmelio in Welrton In 1925. She died In 1964. Surviving are one son, Phillip Jr. of Follansbee; two daughters, Mrs. Frank (Irene) Rafacz, with whom he made his home, and Mrs.

Henry (Virginia) Ciotti, both of Welrton; three brothers In Italy, md six grandchildren. Friends may call at the Presley-Schwerha Funeral Home Thursday and Friday from 2 to 4 7 to 9 p.m. The wake service will be held there Friday at 7 p.m. Mass of Resurrection will be celebrated Saturday at 10 a.ra. in Church with Rev.

Fr. Francis Moore as celebrant. Burial will be made in St. Pauls Cemetery. Mrs.

Mabel L. Murray NEW CUMBERLAND Mrs. Mabel Lena Murray, 82, of 1000 Ridge New Cumberland, died Tuesday at home. A daughter of Benton and Delia Friend Cecil, she was born in Cameron, W. May 25, 1890.

Her husband, Robert Bruce Murray, died in 1954. Mrs. Murray was a member of the Newell Christian Church, WSCS of Nessley Chapel, Newell Rebekah Lodge and Elwood Farms Woman's Club. She is survived by two sons, William B. of New Cumberland and Robert B.

of Palestine, W. three brothers, Howard Cecil of East Liverpool, Wiley Cecil of Moundsville and Jesse Cecil of Monroeville, six grandchildren and one great grandchild. Friends may call at the Fields Funeral Home today after 7 p.m. and on Thursday. Funeral services will be held at the funeral home Friday at 1 p.m.

with Rev. Russell Lowther of- Mating. Burial will be made in Union Cemetery, New a chester. GREETINGS. Boris Spassky (LEFT) ol Moscow shakes hands with Bobby Fischer of New York City at the Laugardalsholl Hall in Reykjavik, Iceland, yesterday as Fischer arrived for the opening oi the World Chess Championship.

Fischer's antics aroused the Americans stationed at an air base to express resentment against him, Icelanders also.don't like him. Wellsburg PlansToBuy Fire Truck Mrs. Margaret Bauer WELLSBURG Friends of Mrs. Margaret Huddy Bauer, 'ormer Wellsburg resident, may call today from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 All Mavromatis All Mavromatis, 78, of 3019 (rear) Main died Tuesday in p.m. at the Chambers Funeral Welrton General Hospital.

where services will be Mr. Mavromatis, a MohanV Thursday at 10:30 a.m. medan by faith, was a retired chef. He was born In Greece. There are no known survivors.

Friends may call at the Greco- Hertnlck Funeral Home today from 7 to 9 p.m. Funeral services wfil be held there Thursday at 11 a.m. with Major Cecil Sellers of (he Salvation Army officiating. Burial will follow in Three Springs.Cemetery. Thomas E.

Ree Thomas E. Reed, 73, of 1236 Hanlln Way, Sled at 7:10 a.m. today at Weirton General Hos- piUI. He was born May 22, 1899, in Carnegie, son of the late Samuel W. and Margaret Allen Reed, and retired In February, 1965, from the Strip Steel Department of Weirton Steel Division.

Mr. Reed was a past president of fte Weirton Steel 25-Year Club and former officer and honorary member of the Strip Steel Credit Union. He was also a member of the: Moose Lodge and Eagles Aerie. SKvMag are his wife, Winifred Marray Reed; one son, TbMM Jr. of Toronto; one r7imtli.ii.i.

(Leslie) Margaret Martin of Weir ton; one sister. Mat Laura Reed of Car- rtegte; five grandchildren and one 'great grandchild. Friends, may call at the Greco- Jrtertaick FWiera! Home Thurs- amf Friday from 2 to 4 and 7 arrangements are Mrs. Bauer, 77, died Monday in Valley Haven Nursing Home, Beech Bottom. She was born in West Virginia, Nov.

22,1894, daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Huddy. She was a retired employe of the Brooke dounty Board of Education. Her husband Frank died in 1971.

Surviving are one niece, Mrs. Margaret Outward of Cadiz, Ohio, and one foster daughter, Mrs. Maxine Lattin of Beverly, Rev. William Norris will officiate atserviccs, and burial will be made in Franklin Cemetery. Frank Sedastic Jr.

GLEN ELLYN, III. Frank Sedastic 9, son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Sedastic Sr. of Glen Ellyn, died Tuesday in the Glen Ellyn Hospital.

He is survived by his parents; a sister Jennifer, and grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. William Hlnchee of Weirton. Funeral arrangements are incomplete. Mr.

and Mrs. Frank Sedastic tiave resided in Glen Ellyn one month, coming from Pittsburgh. Mr. Sedastic is manager of the Brooks Brothers Store in Glen Ellyn. Catherine Kirlangitis STEUBENVILLE Mrs.

Catherine KSrlangitis, 62, of 3315 Steubenville, diotathecbiorne Tuesday p.m. SSe was born in Steubenville, Feb. 4V1910, daughter of the late Cfiartes and Annie Johnson Aroick. Mrs. Kiriungitls was former rnamger of the old Olympic and Rex Theaters In Steubenville and a member of Holy Trinity Greek Orthodox chnrch.

Surviving are her husband Jama; one sister, Mrs. E. (Jean) Shaldey of Steubenville, and one brother, Charles Amick, also of Steubenville. Friends may call at the Mc- Gave-ChandJer-MUls Funeral Home today from 7 to 9 p.m. and Thursday from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.

Funeral services will be held Friday at 2 p.m. In the McCIave Chapel with Rev. Fr. James Demitras officiating. Burla! will be made in Union Cemetery.

John B. Roefaro NEW CUMBERLAND John B. Roefaro, 61, of 111 Chester New Cumberland, died Tuesday afternoon in Weirton General Hospital after a two-month hospitailzation. He was born July 23, 1910, in qharleroi, son of the late Thonus and Marie Roefaro. Mr.

Roefaro, a butcher by trade, and a former Hancock County deputy sheriff for 10 years. Roefaro was a member of Immaculate Conception Roman Catholic Church. Surviving are his wife, Ann Burskey Roefaro; one daughter, Mrs. William (Eleanor) Straight ot New Cumberland; three sisters, Miss Laura Roefaro of Pittsburgh, Mrs. Theresa Itasarski of Munhall, and Mrs.

Florence Recallini of Monongahela, one brother, Tom of Pittsburgh; and two grandchildren. One son preceded him in death Friends may call at the Fields Funeral Home today after 7 pirn, and on Thursday. Rosary devotions will be held there Thursday at 7:38 p.m. by the Altar and Rosary Society. Funeral will be held Friday at 10 a.m.

in Immaculate Conception Church with Rev. Fr. Uo R. FohJ celebrant. Interment iwUJ be made In New Cumberland Cemetery.

Rites Held For Boyce CHESTER Funeral services and burial were held Tuesday in East Liverpool for David G. Boyce, 65, of 1010 Neptune Chester. Mr. Boyce, president of the former Barker China Co. of Chester, died Sunday in East Liverpool City Hospital after an Illness.

A lifetime resident of the East Liverpool-Chester area, Mr. Boyce served with the navy in World War II and was graduated from Mt. Union College fh Alliance, Ohio, and Western Reserve Law School in Cleveland. He passed the Ohio bar examination in 1031 but never practiced law. He was a board member of City Hospital and a member of East Liverpool First United Methodist Church, Chester American Legion and East Liverpool Rotary Club.

In addition, he was a member of the East Liverpool Chamber of Commerce, vice president of the First Federal Savings and Loan Association of East Liverpool and a member of the Board of Trustees at Mt. Union College. Surviving are his wife, Katharine Shrontz Boyce; one daughter, Mrs. Victor (Sally) Domencehi of Elkhart, one sister, Mrs. Francis (Rachel) Lang of East Liverpool; three brothers, Robert E.

and C. Eugene, both of Chester, and Richard of Alexandria, and three grandchildren. Services were held at the Davvson Funeral Home in East Liverpool with Rev. Lawrence Crawford officiating. Burial was made in RIverview Cemetery.

Memorial donations may be made to the American Cancer Society or to the East Liverpool City Hospital Expansion Fund. Grant Approved For Panhandle WASHINGTON U.S. Senators Jennings Randolph and Robert C. Byrd announced approval Tuesday of Grants totaling $387,323 to provide funding for six components oi West Virginia's effort to provide children's mental health ser vices. Included was a grant of $79,358 to identify children whose needs are not being met early in life.

The staff will also be involved In educational programs and training of agency personnel with respect to emotional needs of children. Sen. Randolph said this phase of theproject will include Brooke, Hancock, Marshall, Ohio 'and counties. ended its two-week cease-fire Sunday. The first of an expected 50,000 Protestants marched from the Carlisle Circus rallying point near Belfast's Crumlin Road Jail.

They were commemorating the July 1, 1690, Battle of the Boyne, which established Protestant domination over Roman Catholics in the north of Ireland. Boy Killed Police said a Catholic youth of 15 was shot to death today by a group of men who burst into his Belfast home. Earlier, police found the body of a man of about 25 in a small stream in Belfast. He lad been shot in the head. InPortadown, a predominantly Protestant town about 25 miles southwest of Belfast, gunmen killed a 20-year-old youth as he stood with his father on a street corner.

Parade Rerouted In Belfast, organizers agreed to a government order to reroute today's parade away from the city's major Catholic districts, hoping to avoid sectarian clashes which have erupted during similar, marches in past years. In the capital's Protestant areas street bonfires blazed through the night. Protestants drank beer, sang and danced around the flames in another traditional celebration of the 1690 victory of William of Orange's Violence Continues Protestants Hold Parade In Belfast BELFAST (UPI)-With blaring brass bands and fluttering Union Jacks, thousands of Protestants moved off today in Iheir biggest march of the year. As they assembled, fresh violence brought renewed threats of civil war in Northern Ireland. Police said seven persons were killed today and Tuesday, bringing to 13 the number of persons killed in Ulster since the Irish Republican Army (IRA) Protestant forces over the Catholic army of King James II.

Soldier Slain British soldier was slain Tuesday by a sniper's bullet as he helped clear rubble of a bombed flower shop in Londonderry, the army said. A 17-year-old Catholic youth died of gunshot wounds in a Belfast hospital, Army sources said he was apparently involved in a battle between snipers firing from the Catholic Ballymurphy and Protestant Springmartin areas of Belfast. The hooded and gagged body of a man in his 20s was found in a field near Belfast's mainly Protestant Carlisle Circus area, and the last of three Protestant men found shot in a burning car in the city last week died. The others perished earlier. Thearmysaid most of the 1,400 troop reinforcements earmarked for Northern Ireland earlier this week have arrived.

When all reach the province there will be about 17,000 soldiers in the territory, the most since British forces arrived in 1969 to put down sectarian strife. Stockyard Razed In Parkersburg A Va. (UPI) --A late afternoon fire fed by tons of hay levelled a stockyard not far from downtown in this Ohio River city Tuesday, causing $200,000 damage and killing 15 cattle. Brought under control within an hour, the intense heat blackened three fire trucks, seared the wall of an adjacent mattress factory and sent nine firefighters to the hospital. None was admitted following treatment.

Fischer Trapped In Chess Duel REYKJAVIK, Iceland (UPI) --Caught in a hopelessly drawn game, temperamental American challenger Bobby Fischer took a chance to bring some life into his itrst world chess championship game. In that moment, soft-spoken and mild-mannered Boris Spassky proved why he is the world champion in the noblest of games. He immediately pounced on Fischer's bishop--left trapped a a i one of the Russian's pawns--and the game turned distinctly in Spassky's favor. Spassky asked for adjournment after 40 moves and 4'4 hours play. When the two resume the game the first in their $250,000, 24- game world match --Spassky has a bishop and three pawns against Fischer's five pawns.

Play resumes at 5 p.m. (1 p.m. EOT). Most experts assembled here seemed to agree that Spassky has a chance to win, while Fischer should be happy if he salvages a draw. But nobody has come up with an explanation why the American chess genius went straight into what appeared to be a Russian trap.

"He took a chance to win a chance," said Danish grandmaster Jens Eneveoldsen. 'We will never know until Fischer tells us--if he does," said another international grandmaster. Fischer obviously was displeased with his game. After the adjournment he angrily demanded a meeting with the Icelandic organizers to complain against what he described as the noisy audience. Some 3,000 Icelanders and foreign chess enthusiasts had packed into the Lagardur Hall for the opening thriller.

But most knowledgable observers said they felt the audience was more quiet than is normal at top chess games. Kennedy Continues To Back Off McGovern Considering 5 For Vice Presidency MIAMI BEACH George McGovern, his own nomination in the bag, today was reported eyeing five possible running-mates including reluctant Sen. Edward M. Kennedy of Massachusetts. Sen.

Abraham A. Ribicoff of Connecticut, a Jew, also was on the list of possibilities supplied to newsmen by Frank Mankiewicz, McGovern's senior adviser. Kennedy, vacationing at Cape Cod, continued to insist he was not running. He appeared almost to have locked Die door, even to a specific request by the presidential nominee. Ribicoff also said he did not want second place on the ticket.

However, some political observers here considered him a good prospect in terms of what kind ol Jury Returns $500 Verdict NEW CUMBERLAND A Hancock Circuit Court petit jury returned a $500 verdict yesterday in favor of the plaintiffs in a civil action heard before Judge James G. McCiure in Circuit Court. The jury deliberated three hours. The case lasted two days. Walter Stewart and Margaret Stewart, 287 Colliers a Weirton, sued Barone Realty Service over terms in a contract.

The work involved landscaping and some interior work In the home. Plaintiffs sought $854.72. Counsel for the plaintiffs was Raymond Hinerntan while John Barone was counsel for the realty firm. Jurors were: Edith Hamilton, Mrs, Frank Krzys, Anna Sulton, help McGovern needs. Lacks Jewish Support By most estimates, apparently! including his own, the South Dakota senator lacks the Jewish support he might require to carry such pivotal states as New York and California.

Doubts have been expressed among Jews about McGovern's past commitment to support continued arms aid for Israel in her contest with Soviet-backed Arab states. Sen. Mike Gravel of Alaska, former Massachusetts Gov. Endicott Peabody, and a New York certified public accountant named Stanley Arnold were seeking the Democratic vice presidential nomination. They were not given much chance.

None of them on Mankiewicz' list of possibles which included, besides Kennedy and i i Sens. Thomas Eagleton of Missouri and Philip A. Hart of Michigan, and Florida Gov. Reubin Askew, who delivered the convention keynote speech Tuesday night. In another conversation with newsmen, Mankiewicz tossed in the name of Leonard Woodcock president of the United Auto Workers and one of the few unior leaders supporting McGovern llibicoff For Muskie Ribicoff, in disavowing his own interest in the No.

2 spot, said i should be awarded to Sen. Ed mund S. Muskie of Maine, the party's vice presidential can didate with Hubert Humphrey in 1968. Muskie said he did not wan to try it again. However, he die not slain the door.

WELLSBURG Three recommendations were offered to City Council at its meeting Tuesday night by Councilman Donald O'Connell, a i a of the capital improvements committee appointed by Mayor J. Hubert MeCracken to update the fire department. First of the recommendations asked that all money left in the city budget at the end of the fiscal year be placed in a special fund tor purchase of a pumper for the fire department. Secondly, the committee recommended that Council investigate the possibility of raising new funds through a utilities i The other recommendation Concerned purchase of a new fire ruck, which had been discussed city officials and members of he fire department in terms of in $80,000 expenditure. Since the uggestcd cost was considered 00 high by both groups, the committee suggested turning the matter over to the County Court or consideration.

Comprising the committee are Mrs. John Sperlazza and the Rev. Mr. William Norris, representing he citizens of Wellsburg; Tom Cipolelti and Tom Zurbach, small business, and lenry Rithner III and James riurphy, representing industry. 1 meeting with the Follansbee apital improvements committee, which has 13 members, vas suggested as a means of solving their common problems.

Councilman O'Connell reported meeting with the Suburban Water Co. will be held Thursday, July 13, 7:30 p.m. in the City Building to discuss possibility of mrchasing the water company the city. Lose Parking Lot Mayor MeCracken informed council the city will be losing its lot at the rear of the Wellsburg National Sank, since the bank had purchased the property for construction of a Irive-in banking facility. City Solicitor Tom McCarthy asked council to investigate the possibility of obtaining federal funds provide city parking lots.

Council granted a request by the Chamber of Commerce to wrmit a group of young people raveling through the city to sing Tuesday, Aug. 8, from 2 to 3 p.m in front of the City Building, Progress being made on plans or the proposed new sewage reatment plant was discussed, and City Solicitor McCarthy said ic is staying "on top" of the situation and all required applications have been filed. He said he will be able to make a more complete report a i 'easibility studies have been re turned by Alden Stillson As sociates. Their report, he said, is due Aug. 1.

CouncHmen Donald O'Connel! and Donald Lizon reported on federal funds being made available to flood victims who report damages to property or possessions, or expenses incurred as a result of the flooding, They asked residents to submit pictures for use in a documentary requirec for proof of flood damage. A meeting has been scheduled foi Friday, July 14, in the Office of Emergency Preparedness, Wheeling Municipal Building, to nelp those needing aid in filling out applications for flood relief Police Raise Sought Members of the police department were present to confront Council with a pay raise request which has been in the "study" phase for two months. Council noted no salary hike for policemen had been included in the budget submitted to the state, and pointed out the city has no money to grant a raise. Members agreed some way will have to be found to obtain funds for the pay raise and promised to "come up with something" at its next meet- N.Y. Stock Market (11:15 A.M.

Listings) United Press International I Stack Air i HVi Lud A Row A i a Can 30 A Cl Am 9 Vi Arm co Sleel JO 1 2 9 li CPC mil i Coca Cola UiV-- Col Gas 28'A Con a a 2 Copperweld Steel 2 4 'A -KV( Dow i a 9 1 1 1 a a Foods -1- Gen 7 4 i 25 a 7 i Vi Gt A I Vi Oil 74V. ng a IBM 397 I Tel A Tel MU-f a 1 7 Joy 47'. i 32 oaer 7 i a Ind a SO a i a Sleel i Weil No Am 01 Corp Owen III iV4 Pan Am ISVi Penn 21Vi a 4 i a 84V'i Po a i PPG md Sears Sid Oil a i Std Oil Ind Sid ON NJ Std Oil Ohio 45.. a 31V4 a A A i 3 5 i i a i 4.5'/«-- i a UVi US Sleel Weii a UV4 i i a Xerox Cp Delegates (Continued From Page 1) penthouse. None of the five are avowed McGovernites.

The senator asked a liberal, Wisconsin Gov. Patrick J. Lucey, to join them. Also invited were Govs. John C.

West of South Carolina, Dale Bumpers of Arkansas, Jimmy Carter of Georgia and Reubin Askew of Florida-- whose performance as keynoter McGovern praised. All five Southern governors on the list have been mentioned by McGovern camp as potential rujjning-mates. On that question, McGovern kept his own counsel, but his staff said the senator would submit only one name to the convention after'he consults with Edward M. Kennedy and other party leaders. Kennedy continued to scorn the vice presidential nomination.

Muskie Helps Unity Move Sen. Edmund Muskie helped McGovern's unity move with a warm 'endorsement Tuesday after pulling out of his own hopeless race, a victim of McGovern's mastery of the primary system. Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey withdrew first, but significantly did not endorse McGovern despite his own inclination to rid the Democrats of their fratricidal tendencies.

"The temperature of a number of people is slightly high," a relaxed Humphrey told reporters in explaining why he was waiting. "I don't believe you ought to start talking to people about going to the dance or to the ball while they've got a fever." Humphrey and Muskie's withdrawal from the race left George C. Wallace and Jackson as McGovern's chief rivals but four other candidates are to be put in nomination tonight-- Rep. Shirley Chisholm of New York; Rep. Wilbur D.

Mills of Arkansas; former Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy of Minnesota and former Gov. Terry Sanford of North Carolina. The vice presidential nomination will be made Thursday at the spoken Vietnam dove; former Massachusetts Gov.

Endicott Peabody; and Stanley Arnold, a Mew York accountant and ausiness consultant-- said they would fight it out with McGovern's choice, just on principle. Fails to Sway Delegates McGovern's olive branch did not extend to Wallace, whose dramatic 15-minute appearance before the convention from a wheelchair failed to sway the delegates from their convictions on the platform. Some black delegates booed arid held up defiant clenched fists as Wallace called compulsory busing "asinine." After he was carried and wheeled away, the delegates by a loud voice vote decided to retain the party platform's endorsement of busing as a useful tool toward a desirable end. But the i view prevailed in convention votes which defeated platform plank proposals a i legalized abortion, proclaiming the rights of homosexuals, and calling for tax reform considerably more Ifar-reaching than anything McGovern has backed. In a platform debate stretching deep into this morning, a voice vote which was tough to measure defeated tax reform proposals offered by lame duck Sen.

Fred R. Harris of Oklahoma. He advocated the abolishment of all tax loopholes including those a ones i help homeowners, borrowers and the aged as well as those which benefit oil tycoons and Wall Street investors. Stork Notes Ohio Valley Hospital Mr. and Mrs.

Clarence Presley of 114 Comet Mingo Junction, a son, July 11. Mr. and Mrs. John Pinkerton of RD 1, Johnson Ridge Road, Toronto, a son, July 12. "E- Dick Laughlin, representing industry and the Chamber of Commerce, spoke on a bill under consideration by the Congress to retard erosion along the Ohio River.

Laughlin expressed a lesire to work with the city on a plan of this nature. March 17 is observed as St. Patrick's Day, marking the anniversary of his death, not his birth. 'Coalition Of Protest' Askew Delivers Keynote Address Of Democrats MIAMIBEACH (UPI)-Saying Uiat America is at "the dawn of maturing," keynote speaker Gov. Reubin Askew called on the hope at last that all Americans will understand the failure of violence as a way of promoting or of resisting Democratic party Tuesday night Americans, Askew said, are totead a "coalition of protest" i i "a system a clean up the sins of government bigness.

Firing the Democratic convention crowd to repeated cheers and applause, the Florida governor said "the 'time has seems to have lined all the power of big government, big business, big agriculture, big money and even big labor against them when the business lunch of steak and martinis Li tax deductible, come when we must stop talking jbut the working man's lunch of about an American dream, and Isalami and cheese is not." start listening lo the dreams of Americans." Despite a "thunder of discontent," Askew said, Americans need "someone to tell them that it's all worthwhile; someone who understands that their moment of William Crlsswcll, Joseph i(jut nann.Ot be allowed to grow Bursky, Otlia Gunion, James Into an age of despair." Hinchec, Thomas a Askew said that "we're coming Donald Mason, Wayne Kigcr, to the down of the maturing of that Democrats can "There is indeed a new coalition in this country," Askew said, "a coalition of protest, It Includes black and white, young and old, North and South, right and left, some of the rich, most of Uic poor, and millions of overtaxed and overcharged middle- Income Americans as well." we can stand by that leader, whoever he or she might be." He called for an end to "dollar democracy and government by the few," and elimination of 'those secret documents and secret meetings which only serve to protect the politician." "We can fight the battle for tax reform as it's never been fought before, and let others talk of waiting till next year," Askew said. He said the party must lead a fight for "decent health and medical care" for everyone, for restoration of competitive private enterprise, and for the day when every citizen "has a rea chance to make it in everydny business." session. Three declared vice residential candidates Sen. Hike Gravel of Alaska, an out- Parkerburg Doctor, 83, Dies A W. Va.

I One of the state's most prominent physicians, Dr. Thomas Harris of Parkers- 5urg, died Tuesday night at his lome following a lengthy illness. He was 83. Harris was listed in "Who's Who in America" and was a nationally known surgeon. He was active in civic a a i throughout the state, was a ihilanthropist and participated Democratic Party politics on the state level.

Harris graduated from West Virginia University in 1910 and Nad been a member of the old WVU Board of Governors. He graduated from Jefferson Mcdi- ealCollege in Philadelphia in 1912 and held honorary doctorate degrees from WVU and Marietta College of Ohio. He was a surgeon in the U.S. Army from 1917-1919 and had served as chief surgeon at St. Joseph's Hospital here for man years.

He had been retired from the past 10 years. He is survived by his wife Elizabeth, two daughters anc seven grandchildren. Funera arrangements were incomplete Drug Funding Meeting Set Godfrey Frankcl of the Nar colics Rehabilitation Branch the National Institute of Mcnta Health will discuss fedcra funding programsat a meeting icome Americans as wen Wc ca detI caU! ourselves to the Weirtcn Drug Commission icome Americans as wen. the pursuit of responsive gov- The meetinc will be held The handsome Floridian said crnmrnt nffor IHP I a Donald Mason, Waynn Kiger, to the dawn of the maturlns of that Democrats can "gfve this usuhe pra of nolit cs 1 Roxtcr Talc and Lyle Torrancc, America a day when there's coalition of protest a leader, and Lfore," Askew said actin St. John Medical Center Mr.

and Mrs. Howard Wcstfall lr. of Itl8 Ross Steubenville, a laughter, July 11. Mr. and Mrs.

Gordon VTerryman of Unionport, Ohio, a July 11. Mi Washington Hospital and Mrs. Patrick J. Whalen of 45 Dinsmore Burgettstown, a daughter, July 3. Mr.

and Mrs. Joseph Pescho of 2, Avclla, a daughter, July 4. Mr. and Mrs. D.

Wayne Jeffrey of RD 4, Burgettstown, a son, Inly 6. Mr. and Mrs, Charles Plcska of RD 2, Avella, a son, July 7. Democratic (Continned From Page 1) secure and defensible steps should be taken to establish regular diplomatic relations with China; relations with Cuba should be re-, examined, People and the government -Public business should be transacted publicly, freedom of information; total overhaul of financing elections; regulation of lobbyists; universal voter registration by postcard. Freeblesi Send for Milnol's free cookbook and recipe folders.

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About The Weirton Daily Times Archive

Pages Available:
121,793
Years Available:
1955-1977