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The News-Messenger from Fremont, Ohio • 10
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The News-Messenger from Fremont, Ohio • 10

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

10 The News-Messenger, Fremont, Tuesday, Oct. 18, 1977 Hospital reports 1 Deaths I 'lf Mrs. Carrie Swope Mrs. Emma Apling Fremont filtration plant reported that just past midnight the temperature had fallen to 24 degrees. The highest temperature registered Monday was 55 degrees at 5 p.m.

At 8 a.m. today mercury had risen to 40 degrees. There was no record of any rainfall. EXTENDED OUTLOOK: Fair Thursday and Friday. A chance of showers Saturday.

Highs In the upper 50s Thursday and low 60s Friday through Saturday. Lows in the upper 30s and lower 40s. MEMORIAL Admissions Surgical Mrs. Harold Laird, Yingllng Road; Lloyd, 9, son of Mr. and Mrs.

Lloyd Homier Carbon Street; Mrs. Joseph Cook, Cemetery Road; Emery Bloom, Helena; Mrs. George Myreholt, Gibsonburg. Medical Myron Bloom, Bloom Road; Mrs. Carrol Suter, Carbon Street; Mrs.

Sylvester Asperger, St. Joseph's Street; Joseph, 2, son of Mr. and Mrs. Michael Mutchler, Oak Lane; Ohio By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS It will take more than Monday's record low tem- PORT CLINTON Emma Apling, 86, 206 Toussaint died Monday afternoon in Magruder Hospital after an illness of several months. Mrs.

Apling, widow of William who died in 1970, was a member of the LaPointe United Methodist Church. Services are pending at the Crasser Funeral Home, Oak Harbor. Mrs. Bessie Jackson CASTALIA Services for Bessie Jackson, 84, Colonial Manor, formerly of Castalia, were held Monday at the Frey-Groff Funeral Home, Sandusky. Burial was in Olive Cemetery, Harrisburg.

Mrs. Jackson, widow of Elmer, died Friday night in Sandusky Memorial Hospital. Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. Agnes Gowitzka, Castalia, and Mrs. Charlotte Henk, Bellevue; two sisters, and Look: whos here sville; Mrs.

Marie Nor-man, Clyde; Everett 10 son of Mr. and Mrs. Everett Myers; Clyde. Discharges Charles AlgeS Street; Jennifer Fisher, Oak, Harbor Road; Mrs. David Klotz, Everett Road; Mrs.

Keith Nowels and son, Arrowhead Road; Marc A. Roosen, Tiffin Street; Harold Billow, Gibsonburg; Mrs. Michael Miller, Helena; Mrs. Katie Reed, Clyde; Raul Torres, sGenoa. Occupancy report Designed capacity all patients 210; today's census 138.

TIFFIN MERCY Admissions Teresa Perkins, Bett-sville. -v. BELLEVUE CITY Discharges Carol Szakovits and Joan Vinson, both Fremont; Shell! Tyler, Brian Farrar, and William Spencer, all Clyde. FOSTORIACITY Admissions Mrs. Vernon L.

tPat terson, Risingsun. Discharges v. Richard L. Banks, and Lois A. Dalton, both Risingsun.

MAGRUDER -Admissions Oscar L. Teagarden, Michael Burbach, both Oak Harbor, and Robert Mizike, Genoa, -ft Carlton Huf ford, West State Street; Mrs. Robert Brooks, White Avenue; Oliver Gschwind, State Route 412; Harold Geesey, East State Street; Frederick Krassow, Sixth Street; Ryan, 2 son of Mr. and Mrs. Gary Lowe, Court Street; Kara, 5 wks, daughter of Mr, and Mrs.

Jeff Mangette, Edwards Drive; Mrs. Rafael Gonzalez, Moore Street; Wallace Heminger, Locust Street; Mrs. Fred Wilson, Whittlesey Streets Mrs. Juanita Claar, Woodville; Mrs. Charles Myers, Gibsonburg; Lloyd Mutchler, Bur goon; Clarence Nowak, Lindsey; Howard Kistler, Clyde Scott, 11, son of Mr.

and Mrs. Marvin Boyd, Bett- School entered Thieves broke Into York School, U. S. Route 20, early this morning and ransacked the clerk's office in search of money, Sandusky sheriffs deputies reported. Entry was made by breaking a glass window in a northeast corner door, deputies stated.

The cafeteria was also entered and the milk cooler was found open with a portable radio left inside. It was undetermined if anything was missing. peratures over mucn oi unio 10 convince weainer experts we are headed for a repeat of last winter, according to the man evaluating the outlook for the coming months. "We'll be watching the temperatures and weather patterns until late November before we make any definitive predictions about the coming winter," according to Donald Gilman, who heads the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's 1 long-range prediction group in Washington. I Gilman said his group already has forecast a cooler month than normal through mid-November in most areas east of the Rocky Mountains.

Monday morning underscored that prediction. An influx of cold air set six records in Ohio, led by Toledo's 21 and Cincinnati's 23. Those readings were the lowest ever in those cities this early in the fall. Records also fell in Findlay, with 24; Dayton, at 25, i and in Columbus and Mansfield with 26. WAYNE Carrie M.

Swope, 88, 150 W. Strong died Monday at 1 p.m. in Wood County Hospital, Bowling Green. She had been ill two months. Mrs.

Swope, a member of St. Paul's Lutheran Church, New Rochester, was a native of Pem-berville. She was born Dec. 13, 1888, to the late Frederick and Mary (Beck) Kaseman. She and Robert Swope were married in Pemberville, Feb.

20, 1912. He died in 1966. Also preceding her was one daughter and one granddaughter. Surviving are a son, Wllber, Wayne; one grandson, Dennis Wagner, Bradner, and a brother, Henry W. Kaseman, Gibsonburg.

Services will be held Thursday at 1:30 p.m. In the church with burial in Bradner Cemetery. Visitation at the Barndf Funeral Home is Wednesday from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. VernDay WILLARD Services for Vern (Bill) Day, 79, native' of Willard, were held today with burial in Greenwich Cemetery. Mr.

Day, a retired employe of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, died Sunday in Good Samaritan Hospital, Sandusky. Survivors are two sons, Ronald L. Bellevue, and Ralph, Norwalk, five daughters, including Mrs. Ralph (Velma) Bellevue; 31 grandchildren; eight great Mrs. Ellen Gleba TIFFIN' Ellen M.

Gleba, 55, 100 Olive retired supervisor for the' Ohio Bell Telephone died Monday at 8:35 a.m. in Mercy Hospital. Her illness was short. She was born in Tiffin, July 13, 1922, to the late Gerald and Winnifred (Schipper) Glick. She and Robert Gleba were married June 2, 1946, and he survives.

Also surviving are a daughter, Patricia Ann, at home, and two brothers, Eugene and Thomas Schipper, both Tiffin. She was a member of St. Mary's Catholic Church, its Altar and Rosary Society, and the American Legion Auxiliary. Funeral mass will be Thursday at 9:30 a.m. in the church with burial in the Seneca Memory Gardens.

Friends may call at the Hoffmann Memorial Wednesday from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Memorials may be made to the Diabetic Association. Finley S. Snowden CASTALIA Services for Finley S. Snowden, 80, 312 S.

Washington will be Wednesday at 10:30 a.m. at Charles J. Andres' Sons Funeral Home, Sandusky. Burial will be in Sand Hill Cemetery. Mr.

Snowden, a retired carpenter and a veteran of World War was a member of the Veterans of Foreign Wars Post, Bellevue. Surviving are his widow, the former Harriet Prentis; a son, Bellevue; two daughters, Mrs. Albert (Mary) Strack, Sandusky, and Mrs. Donald (Marjorie) Drummond, Castalia; 10 grandchildren; eight great-grandchildren, and National l'x "IV I v.r. pM Vk Oct.

14 Mr. and Mrs. Jose Villalon, P.O. Box 513, Port Clinton, a daughter in Magruder Hopital, Port Clinton. Oct.

15 Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Nietfeld, 725 Madison Port Clinton, a daughter in Magruder Hospital.Port Clinton. Oct. 17 Mr.

and Mrs. B.W. Tischler of Findlay, formerly of Fremont, are parents of their third son, David Lee born in Toledo Hospital. Grandparents are Mrs. Harriet Jenkins and Mr.

and Mrs. B.H. Tischler of Fremont. Oct; 17 Mr. and Mrs.

G. Michael Rospert, 210 W. Rlverview, Woodville, a son, Anthony John in Flower Hospital, Sylvania. Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.

George Rospert, Woodville, and Mr. and Mrs. Jim Gray, Pem one brother. Mrs. Ethel Allan NORWALK Ethel M.

Allan, 8 3, 43 Marshall former Bellevue resident, died Sunday in Fisher Titus Memorial Hospital after a brief illness. She was the widow of William Allan, who died in 1973., i'iUj Survivors are' three daughters; a son, Charles, Bellevue; 16 grandchildren; 12 greatgrandchildren; six sisters and one brother. Visitation is today until 9 p.m. at the Heaston-'Gerber Funeral Home where services will be PROFESSIONAL FURNITURE CLEANING grandchildren, and three sisters. to have your furniture cleaned professionally.

SPARKIE-BRITE Wednesday at 1:30 p.m. CiOlirt neWS Burial w111 be Woodlawn Cemetery. berville. Oct. 18 Mr.

and Mrs. Thomas Nahm, 863 County Road 204, a son at 6:40 a.m. in Memorial Hosptial. 332-2202 'FALL TURNS TO WINTER. A crust of wet snow covers fall foliage at Hazletpn, Monday after a storm dumped more than a foot of snow in inland areas of Pennsylvania and New York, and drenched coastal areas from Virginia to New England.

In the Hazleton area, hundreds of motorists were stranded as branches weighed down by snow, snapped power lines. (AP Laserphoto) By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS It was cold enough today in the South and the mid-Atlantic states to break low temperature records in several cities. Savannah, reported a reading of 40 degrees and it was 32 in Tallahassee, Fla. Elsewhere, there were light scattered showers over northern Maine and a few showers from northern Minnesota across the northern and lower Great Lakes region. The low temperature this morning was 20 degrees in Gunnison, Colorado.

Yesterday's high reading was 102 in Gila Bend, Ariz. The colder weather pattern was forecast for much of the nation today, Marriages dissolved Powers The marriage of Shirley J. Powers, 125 Laurel Court, Fremont, and Thomas P. Powers, 1323 McPherson Roadway, has been dissolved in Sandusky County Common Pleas Court. A separation agreement was approved.

Wyse The marriage of Carolyn S. Wyse, 1160 N. County Road 232, Fremont, and Herbert D. Wyse, same address, has been dissolved in Sandusky County Common Pleas Court. A separation agreement was approved.

Griffin The marriage of Meribeth Griffin, 1011 Hayes Fremont, and William T. Griffin, 6615 County Road 191, Bellevue, has been dissolved in Sandusky County Common Pleas Court. A separation agreement was approved. Schlarb The marriage of Susan D. Schlarb, 740, County Road 212, Fremont, and William R.

Schlarb, same address, has been dissolved in Sandusky County Common Pleas Court. A separation agreement was approved. Buying prices Fremont buying prices Wheat ,...2.03 Ear 1.57 Shell 1.59 Oats 1.25 Soybeans 4.67 COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Direct, hogs (Fed-State): Barrows and gilts $1 higher, demand good. U.S. 1-2, 200-230 lbs.

country points, mostly 43, few at 43.25, plants, 43.50-44. U.S. 1-3, 200-230 lbs. country points 42.75-43, plants, 43.25-43.75. U.S.

230-250 lbs. country points, plants, 42.50-43.50. Receipts Monday: Actuals 8100, today's estimates 5500. Cattle, from Columbus Producers Livestock Cooperative Association, uneven-f 1 lower. Slaughter steers and yearlings, choice good 36-42.

Bulls market steady, 35.50 and down. Cows market lower, 26.50 and down. Veal calves steady-2 higher, choice and prime 40-6. Sheep and lambs uneven, weak-3 higher, old sheep 16.75 and down. Around about Fremont one stepdaughter.

Friends may call at the funeral home today Until 9 p.m. $2 million borrowed for project PORT CLINTON The Ottawa County Commissioners Monday borrowed $2 million for the proposed courthouse addition project. The commissioners borrowed $1 million from both the American and Port Clinton National Banks during the regular commission meetingThe money was placed in a courthouse addition fund. Advertising for bids on the proposed addition has begun, but without any additional parking provisions. Plans for a parking lot were dropped as the result of a protest by residents opposed to seeing the courthouse's greenery and trees removed to make way for the lot.

The commissioners say the courthouse project will not cost taxpayers any additional money since the loans will be repaid through the present piggyback tax. However, when the county builds a new jail, something the grand jury has recommended for some time more strongly on each occasion, taxes will have to be raised, they said. A committee still is working on plans for a new jail. The commissioners noted that there is a small chance the county still could receive more federal public works money than the $176,000 approved for the project B5i AN "IN-SERVICE Day" will be observed Monday, Oct. 24 at St.

Joseph Central Catholic High School. Teachers will be working on a project concerning course descriptions and revisions. Teachers will also be available during the day for consultation with parents. Any parent who wishes to see a specific teacher should call the school to make an appointment before Thursday at 2:30 p.m. No regular classes will be in session on that Monday.

THE CITY OF FRE-mont's hours for Trick-or-Treat will be from 6 to 7:30 p.m. Monday, Oct. 31, according to Mayor Richard Maier. Two hurt in crash Two women were injured in a one-car accident on State Route 19, south of U.S. Route 20, late Monday afternoon.

Lelah J. Lachner, 20, 526 E. State was treated at Memorial Hospital for bruised knees and Carol E. Beekman, 30, 337 Sandusky was treated for a head injury following the accident. Both women were passengers in a car driven by Teresa J.

Lachner, 21, 526 E. State that was northbound, according to the Fremont Post of the Ohio State Patrol. The accident happened when the car was rounding a curve and one of the driver's children, a passenger, grabbed the wheel, troopers report. The car went off the road, drive through a fence and struck a tree. WE CAN HELP YOU FINANCE IT Save energy and we'll save you some dough! We'll.

give you lower rates on home improvement loans, when the home improvements you plan to make have to do with saving energy like adding insulation, or installing solar' heating! Get ALL the facts soon! Service-Conveuience-Friendliness HOWARD ACKERMAN, 1026 Everett Road, Fremont, was transferred Monday to St. Vincent Hospital, Toledo, from Memorial Hospital. FREMONT FIREMEN quickly doused a fire in a mattress at the home of Mrs. Bernie Wheeler, 301 Middle Monday afternoon and then left. Firemen did not report the location of the matress; they were on the scene only three minutes.

A BOY'S BLUE HAND-painted 10-speed bicycle with a blue seat was recovered by Fremont police from weeds by the Norfolk and Western Railroad tracks near the intersection of Park and Hayes avenues Monday night. The bicycle was placed in the property room at the old city hall. AMSDEN LOGWOOD, 50, Dayton, was treated then released for head injuries and bruises to the right shoulder at Fremont Memorial Hospital following a 3:16 a.m. accident today at the 89 mile post of the Ohio Turnpike, featuring BARRE GUILD, II 1 Different Sty lei CUSTOM-BUILT FURNITURE Urns For Flowers Select handsome solid-stock hard Personalized Designing woods oak, maple, cherry 53 I a as well as pine and other soft iwooas. REPRESENTATIVES Fremont Sherman Weishelt, Clyde Harold Kramer Gibsonburg Bess Runion Antique restoration, furniture npalr available the hospital reports.

Call for appointment 419-638-4713 Evenings Ja3 mm Samsenl Hpn FREDERICK'S 1 SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION 300 CROGHAN ST. DOWNTOWN FREMONT PHONE 334-8955 fl nil II I MONUMENT AL HAUCK. CRAFTSMAN "Ijp "SERVING SANDUSKY COUNTY AREA SINCE 1899" 2378 W. State Fremont ROUTE 51 GENOA Phon: 855-8316 Six Miles West of Fremont on U.S. Helena.

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