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Lancaster Eagle-Gazette from Lancaster, Ohio • 5
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Lancaster Eagle-Gazette from Lancaster, Ohio • 5

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Lancaster, Ohio
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5
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Lancaster Eagle-Gazette, Monday, October 30, 19955 OBITUARIES ON THIS DAY Home. William Anderson The family suggests contributions be made to the Billy Anderson Memorial Fund in care of National City Bank, Walnut Road, Buckeye Lake. Arrangements are by Halteman-Fett Dyer Funeral Home, Lancaster. and John Hayes of Fort Myers, and Linda and Curtis Taylor of Creedmore, N.C.; four grandsons; four granddaughters; two great-grandsons; two great-granddaughters; a sister, Pearl Fortner of Ashville and several nieces and nephews. He was preceded in death by two brothers, Glenn and Enos Fausnaugh; and his parents, Isaac and Rosa Haines Fausnaugh.

Funeral service will be at 10:30 a.m. Tuesday at Frank Smith Eui-neral Home chapel with the Rev1 Chip Koch officiating. Burial will follow in Maple Grove Cemetery. Friends may call from 6 to 9 p.m. today at the funeral home.

Men Fausnaugh Allen C. Fausnaugh, 84, Tallahassee, formerly of Bexley, died Friday, Oct 27, 1995, at Tallahassee Memorial Hospital Extended Care. He was a mechanic at COTA for 35 years, a World War II Navy veteran and a member of Mills Memorial United Methodist Church. Fausnaugh is survived by his wife, Grace Fausnaugh of Tallahassee; two daughters and sons-in-law, Sharon 30 YEARS AGO Robert Meinhard and Raymond Giles represented the Lancaster Area Chamber of Commerce on the 55-member Ohio Trade Mission to Europe. In its homecoming game, Carroll High School's football team topped Adena 22-8.

Charlotte Bevelhymer was named homecoming queen. 40 YEARS AGO Fairfield County Sheriff's Office deputies investigated vandalism where a telephone pole was laid across Oakland Stoutsville Road. It caused a car to blow out two tires, but the driver was uninjured. A burglar, attempting to break into a Rushville woman's home through her basement, was scared off the premises after the woman heard him breaking in and screamed for help. An alerted neighbor summoned Delmer Frost, village marshal.

Heart to heart. Looking back 10 YEARS AGO It was announced Lancaster would become state capital for one day, with Gov. Richard Celeste and several cabinet members scheduled to stay here Nov. 21 and 22. Fairfield County Commissioners approved a new health insurance plan for county employees that could save the county between $75,000 and $160,000 a year but could increase health-related costs to some employees.

20 YEARS AGO City administrators met in Columbus for a formal hearing reviewing complaints of pollution problems resulting from water passing through a Hocking Township landfill. Sue Rhein and Brenda Murray gave piano performances at the Ohio Federation of Music Clubs' 56th annual convention in Cleveland. TODAY IN HISTORY The Associated Press Today is Monday, Oct. 30, the 303rd day of 1995. There are 62 'days left in the year.

Today's Highlight in History: Fifty years ago, on Oct. 30, 1945, the U.S. government announced the end of shoe rationing. On this date: In 1735, the second president of the United States, John Hand in hand. Ralph Beatty Ralph E.

Beatty, 57, Lancaster, died Sunday, Oct. 29, 1995, at his residence. Arrangements are being made by Frank E. Smith Funeral MOUNT CARMEL llu HEALTH 4 Mind to mind. Adams, was born in Braintree, Mass.

In 1938, the radio play that panicked the nation, "The War of the Worlds," starring Orson Welles, aired on CBS. V. In 1944, the Martha Graham ballet "Appalachian Spring," with music by Aaron Copland, premiered at the Library of Congress, with Graham in a leading role. In 1953, Gen. George C.

Marshall was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. Dr. Albert Schweitzer received the Peace Prize for 1952. In 1961, the Soviet Party Congress unanimously approved a resolution ordering the removal of Josef Stalin's body from Lenin's tomb. In 1972, 45 people were killed an Illinois Central Gulf commuter train collided with another train in Chicago's South ISide.

In Muhammad Ali knocked out George Foreman in the eighth round of a 15-round bout in Kinshasa, Zaire, to regain his world heavyweight title. In 1975, the New York Daily William R. "Billy" Anderson 27, Buckeye Lake, passed away Saturday, Oct 28, 1995, at his residence. He was a 1989 graduate of Lake-wood High School, Hebron, and attended Newark Woodside School and Joy Acres Church of God. He was a participant and the torch-lighter in the Special Olympics; participated in Alumni Basketball Sports; was a members of the Army 211th Maintenance Battalion, Newark; and was a member of the Buckeye Lake Fraternal Order of Ea- gles Aerie 2801.

Anderson is survived by his motn-er and special friend, Nellie Bachman and Allen Bellus; father and stepmother, William R. (Gloria) Anderson; sister, Jackie (Johnnie) Louder-milk; all of Buckeye Lake; a half-brother, John Anderson; three stepbrothers; a stepsister; and grandparents, John and Mary Bullock of Lancaster and Dollie and Chuck Terrill of Zanesville. He was preceded in death by his grandfather, William Westenhouser. Funeral service will be at 1 p.m., Wednesday at Joy Acres Church of God, with the Rev. Robert Rauch officiating.

Burial will be at Maple Grove Cemetery. Friends may call from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Tuesday at Brucker-Kishler Funeral Home, Newark, where the Fraternal Order of Eagles will conduct services at 7 p.m. The family will receive friends two hours prior to services at the church Wednesday. PASSING SCENE IVIcKgg CHATTANOOGA, Tenn.

(AP) O.D. McKee, founder of the bakery that produces the famous "Little Debbie" snacks, died Friday. He was 90. In 1935, McKee used his car as collateral to buy a bakery in Chattanooga. Soon afterward, he made changes to his oatmeal cookie formula to make it softer.

He put two of his soft cookies together with a fluffy filling in between and sold the creme pies for a nickel. He sold his bakery in 1951 and nine years later decided to market his snack cakes in a family pack. McKee produced a picture of granddaughter Debra, and the "Little Debbie" icon was born. Today, McKee Foods Corp. is the largest private employer in the Chattanooga area with more than 5,000 workers.

Fairfield County United Way Campaign Report Fairfield County Education Service Center Don Fogg, Inc. Sitterly Vandervoort Derflinger-Jones Insurance Agency, Inc. The Fairview General Sherman Jr. High School South Elementary Sanderson Elementary Stanbery Freshman School Child Support Enforcement Agency Lancaster City Schools Transportation Tallmadge Elementary School Fairfield Federal Savings Loan Edwards Edwards Taylor Team of Dealerships Bob-Boyd Ford Lancaster City Schools -Education Service Center Fairfield Career Center Value City Department Store American General Bloom Carroll Local Schools Amanda Clearcreek Schools NCOT Accounting Consulting Medill Elementary School JC Penney Ohio Valley Trading Exchange Tansky's Automart Big Bear Margo Tool Technology, Inc. Prudential Wyman Cleaners, Inc.

Lancaster High School Jim Fox State Farm Insurance Fairfield Imaging Give Hope See It Grow. Designate Fairfield County Space provided by the Lancaster Eagle-Gazette News ran the headline "Ford to City: Drop Dead" a day after President Ford said he would veto any proposed federal bailout of New York City. In 1979, President Carter announced his choice of federal appeals judge Shirley Hufstedler to head the newly created Department of Education. Ten years ago: The launch of the space shuttle Challenger was witnessed by the schoolteacher scheduled to fly aboard the spacecraft the following January, Christa McAuliffe of New Hampshire. Five years ago: The Iraqi News Agency quoted Saddam Hussein as saying Iraq was making final preparations for war and that he expected an attack by the United States and its allies within days.

In the Persian Gulf, 10 American sailors died when a steam pipe ruptured aboard the USS Iwo Ji-ma; in Saudi Arabia, a Marine was killed in an accident while driving in the desert. One year ago: Pope John Paul II named 30 new cardinals, including the archbishops of Baltimore and Detroit and the first from Sarajevo, Bosnia-Herzegovina and two former East-bloc states, Albania and Belarus. Today's Birthdays: Movie director Louis Malle i 63. Movie director Claude Lelouch is 58. Rock singer Grace Slick is 56.

Actor Henry Winkler is 50. Actor Harry Hamlin is 44. Thought for Today: "There are things that are known and things that are unknown; in between are doors." Anonymous. 405 N. Columbus 653-0652 St.

BORING-SHERIDAN of Thorn ville 246-6334 BORING-SHERIDAN of Hebron 928-5391 tJjyC? have joined together, because we believe that the health-care system of the future is a partnership for life. Together, we've become the Mount Carmel Health System. To deliver care wherever you need it. The way health care should be delivered. PARKING While visiting the Frank E.

Smith Funeral Home, we invite you to use the connecting indoor visiting garage. Were More Than Just A Business. One on one. f- SHERIDAN ill FUNERAL HOME 222 S. Columbus 6534633 Since 1903 SNYDER-SHERIDAN of Bremen 5694155 SHERIDAN of Baltimore 862-4200 fig- i I Til Medicines May Decrease Stuttering aft" -Ml- J)A Good health is everything.

Stuttering is a speech problem that affects millions of people. This condition almost always begins in early childhood, except for acquired stuttering which typically follows a stroke or head trauma In an adult. Stuttering is more common in males than females at every age and is found in all cultures, races, and languages. Physicians may refer stuttering problems to speech therapists or other specialists for nondrug treatments. Therapists often focus on reshaping speech sounds and patterns through behavior modification.

No one medication has been proven effective for all cases of stuttering. However, some medicines have shown promise. Tranquilizers may help stuttering by reducing speech anxiety. Medicines in this category include alprazolam (Xanax) and haloperidol Haldol). According to a report In the American Journal of Psychiatry, Haloperidol Is more effective than placebo, usually must be taken indefinitely to maintain Improved speech, and may have bothersome side effects.

Calcium channel blockers such as verapamil Calan) may help. It is thought that verapamil may reduce spasms in the vocal cords. Antidepressants such as clomipramine (Anafranil) and fluoxetine Prozac) may work due to their effect on repetitive behaviors such as obsessive compulsive disorders. MOUNT CARMEL HEALTH SYSTEM "Me Spirit of Life" 1518 E. Main Lancaster 687-1122 f'avid lharmacy.

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