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

Location:
Weirton, West Virginia
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Welrtdn ba My Thursday, July 13, tun Deaths And Funerali Georgt Ltllch U.eorge Liliflh, 51, of 216 died today at 7:30 a.m. In WtfrMrt (tartfil Hospital after an illness of weeks WM born In Junction Oct. 9, mi, ion el Ute Nick and Sbtu VlMHc Ulich. He i coal inspector at the Wetrton Ice A Coal C6. and number of Holy Serbian Eastern Orthodwr Chwtfe of Mr.

with DM U. S. Mr Corp. AtriAf World War H.alao serving Umeaiapriaonw wir In Gernwny. He tfie Purple Heart and oak leaf cluster and was a member of the Caterpillar Club.

Surviving are Me wife, Rose out Janet, at Nick Mike and Eli, all of Wetrton, and two MM. Carl (Rose) KfankOvitch and Mrs, Fred (Mildred) Weir ton. Klsovlch, both of Kenneth H. Norman Kenneth Harrison Norman, 50 of 29J Brdokvlew died.Wednesday at his home. He had been in failing health for one year.

A Weirton native, Mr. Norman wu born to and Mae Norman Dec. 29, 1921. He wu married in IM3 In Welrton to the former Margaret VirfinU Sehumaeker. A veteran of World War II, was a conductor in tht SUel Works Transportation DaparU of Welrton Dtvkion and member of St.

floman Catholic Church in Follansbee and the Welrton Stee: 25-Year Club. Surviving (Kathleen) Mrs. Paul Wife) two Anthony DiPietrantonio and (Patricia) are his Friends may call at tho Greco- Hertnick Funeral Hftmt today from 7 to 9 p.m. and Frlday-from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Memorial prayer aervtces will be held there Friday at p.m.

Kuneril wrvlccs will held Saturday at 2 p.m, in the funeral home with Rev. Dr. Nedjelko Grguxevieh officiating. Phillip Darmelle Friends of PhUllp Darmelfo may call at the Preiley-Sohwer. both Welrton; two sons, David Gary of Welrton and Kenneth at home; one half-brother, Oakley Hopkins of Morgantown; three half-sisters, Mrs, Qtorgina Doafti of Waterford, Ohio, Mrs, Marguerite Baker of Marietta, Ohio, and Mrs.

Margaret Griffiths of Allison Park, and sit grandchildren. will be received at the Kunefal Homa loday from 7 to 9 pjn. and Friday from 2 and 7 to 9 p.m. Rosary devotiflna will be conducted Friday at p.m. Mass of Resurrection villl be celebrated Saturday Wake will be held there Friday at 7 p.m.

Rtwrreetion be held Saturday at 10 a.m. in St, Paula Roman Catholic Church by Rev. Fr. Francis Moore. Burnt will made in St.

Pauls Cemetery. Thomas E. Funeral for Thomas EC. Read will be conducted turdiy at 12 noon In St. Pauls ftoman Catholic Church hy Htv.

ft. Philip BsHvoulelr. Interment will be made tit Paula Cemetery. may call at tht Oreco- Hertnick Funeral Home today Friday from 3 to 4 and 7 to 9 nave'resided in Glen Ellyn ona p.m. Clifton FOUANSBEE CiUton M.

64, of 872 Mahan Une, FolUnabte, died Wednesday at "p.m. while working at the Whee. lta rb, ttf ibuud to natural causes, He born Feb. as, 1812, In Follanrtee, Wji 6f the Clark Maude luught Byen. Mr, Bytra a'inember of Vioist Stnt Byers, died July Moore, Interment will In Highland Hills VIernorial Gardens with military rites by the American Legion of FOUansbee.

The family requested memorial donations be senl to the American Cancer Society. Frank Sevastict Jr. GLBN BLLYN, lu. Frank SevasHca Of Mr. and Mrs.

Frank Kevmtics Sr. of Glen Ellyn, died Tuesday in the KUyn He is survived by his parents; a tlcter Jennifer, and grahd- Mr. and Mrt, Eugene Hlnchee of WeiftOn. Mr. and Mrs.

Frank Sevastlcs LEFTISTS MEET MCOOVKBN. the lobby Mi. 8, MeGwera's Mlel ta Miami Beach was jammed win leftist)art radtealt denaidlcg khH abMri ke IMS changed his position litnes suet at Vieluu tad tat reform, McOaveri came Mwi from kls address the He repealed his pilltM ike Istuei. Controls, Pressure Eased Poland's Farms Thriving Again WARSAW (UPl)-lt took an it-miner and i profit motive to et Polish farms moving again But the result it more food for al Poles and happier farmers, When Edward Olerek, took ver as leader of the Communist party In December, 970, the nation's agriculture' economy was a He- wceh 1966 and 1970 real Income Poland's 0,9 million private attners had by 4 per cent, Slate interference had made arming so unprofitable that armers cared more tor feeding lerrtselves than tht 317 million and food ihortaget oupled with government-imposed price hikes triggered riott month, coming from Pittsburgh ta Aland's Baltic that Mr. Sevasttcs is manager of the swe QoiriUlka from Brooks Brothers Store In Glen wer Ellyn.

John 6. ROafaro NEW CUMBERLAND friends of John ft. Roefafo may today. Rosary devotions will be conducted there today at by the Altar and Rosary lociety of Immaculate Conception Parish. Funeral Masi will be held Mffltt oni eWpdaujfiWr, aVtty Sttti of Sfenbettvllle; two Frank and Qrtvjr, Ueipk of AD mm, arid Danny (ftoi-othy) (adiy from 9 fM.

and Friday from 2 to 4 and at 3 p.m. lit the home with Rev. Runaell D. Ji'eHy ftev. Piul i.

filial win be made irt SI, JMiha Cemetery. 0. Fletcher Fletcher, 6f Earl 0. MWdlewurne, died Wednesday it Slstefsville OtMtnl Hospital. Mr.

Fletcher a reared carpenter and a veteran tl World War Surviving are his wife, tonic Smith Pletchtjf! three IMS; one three daugfilersi one (iliitr, Mfa. Zelma WinWc of New Cumbetkndt tnd one Pf lends may call after 7 p.m, today at the Goodwin Funeral Home, MMdlebourne, where ser- victi will be held bitut-dty at i p.m. fntermertt will be made in Glen Haven Memory Oardens, Paden City. WE CARE Funeral Home HUMAtNSTRCfcT PHONE 7W2I9 GRECO B1RECTOH 'riday at 10 a.m. in Immaculate Roman datholic Jiurch.

Rev. Fr. Uo R. Fohl Will be celebrant and Interment will be made in New Cumberland cemetery. Senior Citizens Elect Officers WELLSBURG in meeting held at the Enter Gierek, WhOi --Abolished the average per cent food price Increases decreed by Gomulka, --Imposed two-year price freeze on all food products, --Made farming more proflta ble for the farmeri.

"Olerek did more in months (0 revive the agricultural economy than Gomulka did In 14 years," said a veteran observer of the Polish economic scene. Ironically, Gomulka had been hailed by his contemporaries as the "Healer oE Polish Agriculture." He begin work as eowherder, while Gierek began as miner, Never Let up Although Qomulka ended collectivization, he never let up on the private farmer. "Qomulka tried to 'encourage armers towards collectivisation by erosion," a Western diplomat of yieid Uflt MHldMt; Prices Raised Farmers were forced to accept government contracts as the only of getting state-controlled supplies of coal. Qlerek began by raising prices paid by the government for milk and livestock, making their production profitable again, on Miss LOrrauio Olinski, director an 1 he abolished compulsory Of the dourtty program for senior deliveries, and on May 1 ended Citizens, showed a Wild, Wonderful Rudolph flodgera of Weilsburg second vice preildent, Gladys utten Sinclair of Wells burg, eeerttury-treajufer, A total of 42 paid members was reported, Dues for the year are now payable Sinclair. to Mrs.

Litten ginla." film titled West Vlr- The group meets at the Sal vation Army Building each Thursday at 1 p.m, Membership Is open to all Wellsbufg area residents who are 65 yews old ind over. The group participates lft trips, etufts, tfiveiogues, moviss and Rames. Probe Ordered In Boone Voting CHARIKSTON, (UPl) --A bevy of changes on Borne County voting in the May 6 primary resulted lr inffrrm stion icing placed in the hands of the prOiecutlng attorney and he S. district attorney for Southern West Virginia. Information on alleged vote buying was Cheated by in- vestigstor dispatched by Secretary of State John 0.

Rockefeller tv. The five days of probing prompted Rockefeller to forward information on vote buying aJleglttens. Clairns of wrongdoing In five Other categories Were nt sub' ilanliated by the secretary of rtale's Office. tflM naws canferenee here Wednesday Die other ullegatloni Swiuded Unlawful holding arid delaying et ballots afur ubulitiftn, IM proper traniportttion of preolnct ralllffed ballon alter voting, failure to maintain integrity of voting areas by election Officials arid Improper destruction of unused ballots nstead of returning Ihcm lo the county clerk. (Cotitimtd Fra Pale I by the control lower that the ransom was ready and the hijacker permitted it to land again, The money was delivered io a specified place On the runway and One passenger left the jetliner to pick it up.

Then the passengers Were released. The hijacker Indicated he wished ta fly north from Oklahoma City saying "he wouldn't need much fuel." state control ever saies of coal. The Gierek regime also abandoned the dogma of self' sufficiency In grain, By Import big more grain and fodder, the new leadership succeeded In flral stopping tht decrease In animal production, then itlmulktlng It. Farmers Owa La Ml As a result of parliamentary leglilatlon, about one million farmers who cultivated farms without valid proper ty rights are now owneri, AH private farm era and their families have been Included In the national health service, "Many of the changes are philosophically contrary to Com. munlst economics," a U.S.

official said. But according to government itallttlci, they have worked, ta January and February the government purchased from the farmers 4 per cent more livestock, 11 per cent more milk and 9 per cent more eggs than in the same months of 1971. Ail thfe meant more money for the farmers--retail sales rn rural areas have risen 11.6 per cent In 12 months--inrt more to eat for the city dweller. Marly Poles remain skeptical. Some express fears that the present policy is a temporary forced upon the party by thl food shortage that helped topple Gomulka.

'On east occasions it seemed the situation Would finally take a turn for the better and bring--if not an era of plenty--at least a period ol sufficiency," said Prof. Stefan Plenlazek, agricultural one Of experts. Poland's 'But the hopes and enthusiasm Of the nation died. slowly and gradually Nor Is the farming community itself unaware of possible reversals. Interviewed by the newspaper a group Of fanners the fear that the Officials will again think out something that will slow down the good changes." One straw in the wind may be While Gierek currently is concentrating on helping private farming, he continues to strengthen existing state farms, too.

Stork Notes Mr. and Frank lannl Of 21S Falrvlew Welrton, a daughter, July 12, Mr. and MM, Robert (Ulley of 90S May Road, Follansbee, a SMI, July 12. (Milt Valley Ml', and Douglas F. Hellock of Apt.

133 Reichart WlMlersvllie, twin sons, July 12. Mr. and Mrs. William M. CaafteU of RD 2.

BanUm Hldge Road, Wlntersvllle, a daughter, July 13, St. Medical Ceater Mr, and Mrs, John Best of wett, a MM, July 12, Mr. and Mrs, John Jonts of AD 1, Road, Mlngo Junction, a son, July 13. KUewkere Mr, and MM, Carl McQuillan of a daughter, July In Wheeling HotpiUl. Mr.

and Mrs, Btl fiamhart of WeUaburg, a daughter, July In Wheeling Hospital. Me. and Mrs. Kenneth of a daughter, July in Wheeling Hoapltal, Mr. and Mrs.

Michael Tomasovlch of Brlarcreil, 'J. Atlanta, a son, July 7. Mrs. TorrtMovJeh Is the former Nancy Moore, daughter Of Mr. and Mr).

Raymond Moore of Jndberg Way, and her husband the son of Mr. and Mrs. utichael Torrtasovich Sr. of 116 Clara St. Dock I Continued From Page 1).

more than a year of talks, Mverjl jtrike threiM by the ILWU and a two-day Work stoppage this week. 1LWU regional director Hobttt McBlrath said union meetings to discuss ratification "Wil probably be held late next week, Earlier tMe longshoremen and ndUstry agreed on wages. The had wot) aft 32-oenl hourly wage increase, However recent talks Failed to and the frustrated by the long delay, shut down ports throughout the islands Monday and Tuesday, Stop-work meet, uigs were held to explain state of and tO LEAVE PRISON DANBUKY, tonn. (ItPl)- Joseph N. DePaola, convicted in 1971 of conspiring ta arrange llegal loans from the pension 1 'und of (his International Barbers and Beauticians Union Of which was president.

Is ejpwted to the workers were back on "the job Tuesday right. dov. John A. Burns, who canceled his trip to the Democratic National Convention to keep an eye on the talks, uid "the negoHk-tions on final terms were marked by tne public interest shown by both parties. the sorest issue was believed be the industry's desire to iodify the work week guarantees for fteighbof ongshoi-emen.

89, released from ttanbury Monday, became balancing Hawaii's eligible nt parole May 4 and his men wiui available work on- was approved by the portum'ties as well as wage erteral Parole Board in guarantees that insure steady Washington. income for men In the industry." ALL MAFilES ARE CUTE, but In easel It's up to be, In this caCe wolves. According to Ike were caught by (he "Wolf Hunting Brlgode of i not to kiww what a Sofvoto Fischer Wants Cameras Banm rUCYKJAVK, kelaiul (UPl) --Bobby Fischer, already one Isame down in his drive for the world chess championship, today ktenM 10 walk out t)M second match with btleholder Boris Spassky unless all televialan cameras ire removed from DM hill, Fischer's demand! were presented by Fred Cramer, a vice the ClMM nteetattf wittl of the Urnatlonal CMH Federation (FIDE), the kelandk and UJ, companies owning the television rights to the match, chess sources said. the the match, Lotliar Schmid, sale rfMhef Will tht Mtond game by default If he not turn up (or the adwdulwi 9 (i p.m. KDT) lUft today, Schmid also uid will not keep from the first two rows of setts in the hall as they did during the first game on Fischer's request.

The M-year-dld New Yorker walked out for 35 minutes Wednesday to protest two television cameras hidden above We stage where the players sit a the chess board for their championship match, scheduled to fun matirmim of 24 Flood Victims To Receive Aid CHARLESTON, W.Va. (UPl) The t. S. Office Emergency Preparedness (OEP) announced Wednesday telephone numbers (or persons seeking federal aid because of the flooding from Tropical Storm Agnes. The OEP iatd persons in Hancock, Brooke, Ohio, Marshall and Wettel counties ihould telephone: ttMlM, M1-337B or 453.

S311. For Morgan, Berkley, Jefferson, Hampshire and Hardy counties the number Is 267-2911. For Greenbrler and Monroe counties the number Is 53S-3HO. For Monongalla, Birbour and Preitofi counties, the number IE 3 Accidents Occur In Brooke WELLSBORO City police reported there were no injuries in three accidents Investigated yesterday. Homer Dever, 73, of 1321 Wellesley Steubenville, wa cited tor failure ta yield the right of way In a two-oar accident at 12th and Charles Sta.

at 12:11 p.m. Jack R. Fletcher, 19, of 2216 Oiarles was the driver of the Other car. Damage to both cars was estimated at 12,540, A two-car accident occurred at 1:02 p.m. at 9th and Charles Sis.

Mark J. Frisco, of RfJ 1, WeUtburg, was cited for failure to yield the right of way. The driver of the second car was Sue E. Llndsey, 130 Hillweat Drive, WellSburg. Damage was estimated IJS5.

Oletirt At Tredway, 20, of RD 2, Wensbtu-g, was cited for failure to yield the right of way at 2:12 p.m. Pergi J. Bnsell, 17, of 601 Logan Mlngo Junction, was Me oVii bin the driver of the other car. Damage was estimated at $1,200. JOINS NIXON WASHINGTON (UPl)-Harry S.

Memmlng has Joined the Committee for the reelection of Niton as special assistant to campaign director Ciirk M. Maearegor. He is the son of Arthur S. Klerrtmlng, President Eisenhower's secretary of health, education and welfare, NOW TIE THIS. Sy Cohen of New Windsor, N.

a delegate (0 fte Democratic national convention, wears a tie that speaks for Itaelf. He dMn't make any speeches but got a lol of attention. N.Y. Stock Market (11:15 A.M. Listings) United Press International I I prices: ACF Ini Air Alltfh Allis Chalm Alcfla Afner Airi American Can Cyan Am EICC Am MMArs Am TIT Aniclnut Armco Sfi ttib Slttl aostnj tiratn Chrysler etci cn C4PIIH Con Edtsort C.6IU Nil All Cefl Sum A Cdnl Can CPC Inll Crani Del Edisan Diartl Inll DuPont East Air Lines Firestone Gen Oynm Gen Gen Gen Motors OTt 4 i a a (Sull flif tN8 Inl lilt NICkel In! Tel i Til Jones Lauih Joy Mlo Slock 4 4 .1., 1 4f TI 3 i i i UVi "4 4 4 1 1 .1.1 14'A 11V.

.1, 3 2 1, 33J.i4--V4 JHi- 4 5 1 1 I', MOnsanf Murphy Nalional Steel Nat A i a i Olit No Am Rack IK Phillips Polaroid PPO ind Procter Gambit! RCA Republic Met Sear Roebuck perry Rand Std Oil 5td Oil NJ sfd on Sfhftfe Swill Cd Traiu A UAL Inc so. 41' 3P 15 7 ii' 20' IS 1 40. 42. HI M. 21' in Union en-bide 4 Uniled Air 341 UTD Grinds US Steel wesitrn union Wesling Eluc Whetl i 30.

White Molor 141, Wirtn Dx wedi wdrih .333 Xii-ftx Cor-p jPlant Damage In Half Moor 4. VI I'l 1 Hi 1t Vi 4 -f .1.1 I'j i ed rilt(6 latrofct Mimr MOM .3, ZULU ART SHOWN NEW YORK (UPl)-The Zulu king, Zwelilmirti Goodwill Kacy- pnan Bhekuzulu, Wednesday introduced a large collection of African art and handcrafts on exhibition at the New York Hilton, Accompanied by his queen, SlbOnglle, and others the potentate of Zuiuland will remain In New Vork for six days before visiting Ixis Angeles and then Tokyo. Weirton police reporlcd two cases of vandalism at the Davies Can where a strike has been In progress several weeks. A security guard at the plant in the Half Moon Addition discovered a spotlight and two glass door panea were broken with a BE gun. The guard reported the vandalism Wednesday at 10:45 p.m.

At 1:50 a.m. today two more windows and a sh'ing of lights were also broken. Approximately 30 workers at the plant have set up picket lines i negogations are being made For a new contract between officials of the plant and the lithography Photngraphy Engravers Industrial Association International Onion. He Appreciates Vour Prompt My Newspaper Bill is The EASIEST One to Pay No Check to Write, No Stamps to Buy, No Letter to Moil, My Carrier-Boy's Call Does It AIL" the many pleasing features included in your, earner's home-delivery newspaper service, tho'con- venience of his "easy payment" collection cnlls. REGULARLY on collection day he calls at your honlD for the money, hands you (He change Und murks youi- paid.

Thus he relieves you of all the downs involved when paying other household bills, No chock to write, no stamp In buy, no letlcr lo mull I His one call does it nil! ANOTHER point which helps lo make paying hllh'a pleasure is that he brings you So much for youf money, liach day's exciting news, Interesting pictures, thrilling features, and latest news for thrifty shoppers! All of which, added to his tlrrte-and-inohcy-sHVlnE service, makes your daily newspaper the nlggesl bargain a sinmi aiirh CHII buy. THE WEIRTON TIMES.

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About The Weirton Daily Times Archive

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