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The Newark Advocate from Newark, Ohio • 7

The Newark Advocate from Newark, Ohio • 7

Location:
Newark, Ohio
Issue Date:
Page:
7
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Ntwark (0.) Advocati Saturday, lin. 2, I ST I COURT Capital notes Senate may seek confirmations There are reporta that the! The attorney general's office object to confirmation hearings. get it. I don't believe in asking them employs 135 full-time lawyers The post went to Rep. Lloyd George Kerns of Raymond al johlo Senate may force ome jof John J.

GUUgan's jcabinet. appointees to undergo (senators) to rubber-stamp the and hires others freqently for specific taks. governor's choices or pro though Netzley was vice chair manager, Columbus, to Hanna coniirmauon neanngs. grams." O. Penrod, 32, TV talent, Gran- Although such hearings are Rep.

Robert E. Netzley, of Gilligan said he felt the Sen ville. routine on a national level, the ate had duty In the area. He Arthur M. Hampshire, 65, MARRIAGE LICENSES APPLIED FOR 1 Keith A.

Hay hurst, is U. S. Army, 572 Chelsea to Debra S. Vaiea, 18, Rt. 2.

Lanny R. Bailey, worker, Columbus, to Joyce A. Laura, a Republican conservative, was by tradition, in line Ohio Senate usually confirms man during the last session. The committee chairman in the 108th was Rep. Ralph Fisher of Wooster, defeated In the Nov.

election. House leaders, sources contend, balked at naming Netzley because of his political philosophy. highway engineer, 44 N. Cedar added that he didn't believe any of the appointees he has named such appointments with little to become House Finance Com to Nellie V. Culver, 68, sell- fanfare.

A 'V, mittee chairman next week to date would run into trouble. employed, 44 N. Cedar St. Sen. Michael Maloney.

R-7 when the 109th General Assem I think," said Maloney. Kirby, 22, secretary, Johnstown. Paul L. Mobley, 41, Mill bly convenes, but he did not Cincinnati, is the chief backer 20 S. 24th Delores John R.

Van Orman, 35, auto "that hearings would be beneficial, not only to the Senate '4 of confirmation hearties. He A. Luther, 35, laborer, 74; W. parts manager, Johnstown, to said it is not because Demo and to the people of Ohio, but Main St Naomi Kathleen Sullivan, 23, crats are coming in or because tne administration." Thomas E. dis Johnstown.

he has any ill feeling toward Republicans will have a 20-13 trict secretary, 127 Andover Daniel J. Hughes, 19, carpen Chamber sees GNP increase any of Gilligan's appointees. majority in the Senate during ter, Rt. 2, to Jacqueline Grif Apt. Heath, to Crystal E.

"I have been arguing for 4 the next two years. They held Brown, 31, sales clerk, 945 fith, 18, secretary, 507 E.Main hearines for more than a vear a zi-iz margin in the 108th Gen Welshview Dr. St. eral Assembly. William Henry Spivey, 26, Clarence R.

Rhoades, 39, Maloney said. "I think the Senate should fullfill its traditional ended. WASHINGTON (AP) The U. S. Chamber of Commerce physics research 14 S.

press operator, 71, Day to His forecast would put the role of advise and consent' George Twyford, Franklin predicts the gross national prod triuion a year Marybelle Parker, 23, 718 Mc Kinley Ave. GNP at $1.05 from now. Buena Vista to Lillian D. Byrd, 21, bookkeeper, 414 Henderson Ave. County Democratic 1 chairman Maloney noted that the officials, for the most Dart.

uct will increase by 7 per cent in the new year, but more than and mayor of Reynoldsburg, is David W. Nutter, 25, material 5r 1 The Chamber report was Is will be responsible for spending reportedly in line for a top po handler, 24. Spring to Betty half the rise will be a result of S7 billion over the next two sition in tne office of Atty. sued as the Labor Department announced Thursday that inflation. W.

Breece, 29, packer, 97 Meridian St. years. elect William J. Brown. In a year-end report, Dr.

Carl "I would like to know some Douglas A. Evans, 22, insur Twyford, a lawyer, may be sale prices rose one-tenth of one per cent in December and 2.3 Touching a pig on New Year's Eve is good luck in Hungary where Budapest restaurant parties sometimes turn into a wild scramble when a live pig, is turned loose at midnight. background on these people oth ance agent, 425 Mt Vernon H. Madden, chief economist for the Chamber, estimated the real namea Brown's first assistant, Democratic sources said. per cent during the year, er than what you get from a to Carolyn S.

Snowden, 22, Rt. 2. biography," he said. "I would Lloyd R. Forrest, 46, sales increase in national output Brown, 30, will take over the state's largest law office with only three years experience as would amount to 3 per cent, Wary European despots once bought Venetian crystal goblets In the vain belief that they shat like to know their philosophy of financing government." Gilligan has said he does not compared with no real growth an attorney.

during the calendar year Just 4 SALONS tered at a drop of poison. BEAUTY SALONS To Serve You I Remember, I Remember' The Lively Look is your hair exhausted? Fashion for old years Then this three-times-more protein 'perm is for you. It'll give your hair instant vitality and luster. By Minnie Hite Moody BnnmBn.nB' the whole distance to school. 17.50 HELENE CURTIS Proteine Salon Wave 9.95 In case my hands chapped, she applied mutton tallow.

A child wore the same wool dress to school from Thanks giving to April, all day every day, relying on c.ean under Mon. "fl20.00 Tues. Frosting Wed- 13.45 wear once a week (donned Sunday morning) to make her "smell nice" and remain sani tary. These children were not underprivileged we were all the same kind, local kids, preachers'' little ones, college We sell and service fashion wigs Specials Available and Only 1 An Appointment Not Always Necessary professors' children, and the missionary children from the Fannie Doane Home. We did very well, as can now be torcycle rider was shot to death In the Atlanta proved by some years of adult SOUTHGATE 344-2800 EASTLAND 345-2228 Ga.

hippie district. Police say they may drop PLAZA CENTER 366-2700 SOUTHGATE CORNERS 344,9540 SPEC. 4 ROBERT W. T'SOUVAS, a young soldier already charged with murder in the alleged My Lai massacre, talks with newsmen performance. Which adds up to my belief that clothes don' charges today against most if not aU of the 17, AP after being freed on bond in Atlanta, Ga.

He make the child. I won't worry too much about the kids of the Owned and Operated by Steppes Beautician, Inc. was arrested along with 16 others after a mo- present. grown, and from all reports my grandchildren are behaving themselves. There happens to be a code of dress at the school Patty attends.

Tom, now a college senior, dispensed with his beard since the course he is taking demands a semester of practice teaching. Personally, I should not care to return to the styles of my early childhood which had dresses dragging the ground. At the bottom the skirts were equipped with a variety of plush sewed to a skirt on the inner side of the hem and served as dust-brush. When it had accumulated enough dust to shake out, a woman hung her skirt on the clothesline and let the dust blow away. An alternative was a whiskbroom, applied with energy.

As a final resort the tape was removed, washed, and reapplied, or if it already had done its best by a series of skirts, the time had come for new tape. Remember, dry cleaning was at a premium i-the home method of dousing a garment in gasoline often had fearful consequences. When I was in high school In the handsome old 12-g a building on Granger Street, whose spires and gables and chimneys stood in striking contrast to the fiat-roofed new Granville High School now a fact in the region older citizens call Goodrich's Swamp, a girl of teenage possessed a lean wardrobe as compared with what girls to today possessand the middy blouses and baggy serge skirts we wore then would be scorned by today's youthful miss, even though she wears hair straight as a board and wouldn't have been caught dead in the hairribbons and curls which were the only vanity we could afford. I was a married woman (albeit of high school age, still) when I acquired my first lipstick. Cold cream kept our hands and faces 'from chapping; talcum powder prevented or concealed shiny noses.

We owned a "good" dress for Sundays, special occasions, and the Friday afternoon "exercises" to which our mothers were invited and at which we "spoke pieces." We had a makeshift basketball team this was for boys which played- its games in the old brick GFC building now the Granville Inn annex. Girls weren't encouraged to go there to watch. There were no seats for spectators, though a bench or two was provided, and a few very brave parents attended, bringing along folding chairs. To go a century farter back in this matter of dressing for education, there is that old Welsh Hills story of the boy who had no shoes at all, but must go to school through the snow. What he did was to heat a plank, run as fast as he could with the plank in his arms, put it down, stand aboard it a moment to relieve the Icy ache in his feet and protect them from freezing; pickup the plank, make another dash, stand again on the cooling plank, and at last arrive at the school where he could dry his feet by the fire and restore them to life.

There, too, the plank warmed all day in order to be ready for his desperate dash home. As a child, going to school in zero weather, Grandma heated thread-spools for me, which then were placed in my mittens keeping my hands warm AT.HOK1E-- here OB THINGS HAETO FASHION FOR OLD YEARS Far be It from me to take part in the hassle about proper dress. Too many voices already sing the sour note of disapproval, and too many oth- ers join In to make liberal noises along such lines as the sooner we all go nude, the better. The most I intend to say is that my heart aches for those girls who would be beautiful to gaze upon if they weren't all garbed like vagabonds. Most girls are truly lovely at just about one stage of life from perhaps 15 to 20 which of course is a ploy of Mother Nature's and a biological fact.

don't know who dreamed up the style of flirty jeans, ugly jacket, dirty hair and bare an- kles bare feet, too, if the temperature is anywhere above freezing. This will pass, as all ugly phases of fashion in the game of fol-low-the-leader, eventually we tire of what we've been wear-. ing and turn to something new. But by that time the girls who have made themselves unattractive because "that's what everybody is wearing," will have gone the way of generations of pretty girls and will be pushing strollers, wiping applesauce off baby faces, and rassling the budget. Mother Nature maneuvers to win, come The Pill or whatever.

Living as I do on the edge of Granville, I get the backlash of local opinion on such subjects as dress for school, and the thing that scares me is that these people who 'apparently care the most are afraid to speak out. "Put something in your column," they tell me. "I've got kids in school and I dont dare tell I think they go to school looking like the dickens. Don't tell me to go the superintendent or principal or to the parents who hae the say about running things. It would come back on me and my kids.

I'm just chicken, I guess, but I can't take a chance." All I can do is repeat for the thousandth time that "I Remember" is not a column of controversy but of, in the main, peaceful recollection. I have no wish to act as a catalyst. My own children are The Land Of Legend Is One Of The Greatest Growth Areas In And You're A Big Part of This Growth! TELL OUR OVER 99,000 READERS ABOUT YOUR COMPANY ITS PLANS FOR 1971 CI OUR AT OUR S0UIHGATE STORE ROGRESS Ml fit, THIS EDITION IS FULL OF FACTS OF LOCAL AND NATIONAL IMPORTANCE Throughout the year The Advocate presents progress reports on the surging growth of this continuing story of one of the nation's most active business and industrial areas. The Advocate Progress Edition has es- tablished itself as a carefully edited, accurately pointed digest of the year's achievements. Your firm is part of this consider the importance of being represented in this special effort to emphasize the part you have played in its growth! Helpful Civic Informa tion to acquaint you with Publication Date: Saturday, Jan.

23rd Copy Deadline Jan. 16th your new community Call the Welcome Wag- on Hostess so that she SANDY SAAD may visit you. MRS. HAROIO HAYES PHONE 344-4932 MRS. HENRY STEMM PHONI 3644927 CALL THE ADVOCATE ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT 345-4053.

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About The Newark Advocate Archive

Pages Available:
807,699
Years Available:
1882-2024