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The Holland Evening Sentinel from Holland, Michigan • Page 4

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Holland, Michigan
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4
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fKGE POUR THE HOLLAND, MICHIGAN, EVENING SENTINEL MONDAY, JULY 3, 1972 The Holland Evening Sentinel Published every afternoon except Sunday by The Switlncl Printing Co. Office. 54-50 West Eighth Street. Holland. Michigan.

W. A. Butler Editor and Publisher Telephone News Items 392-2314 Advertising Business Office Phone 392-2311 Subscriptions 392-2311 The publisher shall not be liable for any error or errors in printing any advertising unless a proof of euch advertising shall have been obtained by advertiser and returned by him In time for correction with such errors or corrections noted plainly thereon; and in such case it publisher's liability shall not exceed such a portion of the entire cost of such advertisement as the space occupied by the error bears to the whole space occupied by such advertisement. Member American Newspaper Publishers Association. Michigan League of Home Dallies.

Bureau of Advertising and Inland Daily Press Association Second Class postage paid at Holland, Michigan. 49423. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION By Carrier in Holland or in any town where The Sentinel carrier service, 55 cents a wees. motor route 60 cents a week. 10 cents per copy.

By mafl in Ottawa and AUefian counties, 52200 for year. $12.00 for six months. $6.75 for three months. Kent, Muskcgon, Van Buren. Kalamazoo and Barry Counties.

$25.00 per year, $15-00 for six months. $9.00 for three months, $4 00 for one month, $1.00 for one week. Outside of these counties, $35.00 per year, 519.00 for six months, $11.00 for three months. S5.00 for one month payable in advance U.S.A. and possessions.

No refund on circulation. All subscribers moving from the country to the city will be credited at the rate of 55 cents per week for the amount due them. Subscribers will confer a favor by reporting promptly any irregularity in delivering xvhether by mail or by carrier. Call before 5:30 p.m. Monday through Friday, Saturday by 1 p.m.

Monday, July 3,1972 Fourth of July Thoughts Press Comment GUN LAW UNJAMMED A page-one bank-robbery photo in the local Boston papers made a superb if coincidental advertisement for an adjacent news event, passage of Sen. Birch Bayh's handgun control bill. The photo, taken by a concealed camera, showed a bandit pressing to the bank president's neck a handgun of the type Senator Bayh's bill would outlaw. Senator Bayh, presented his case for follow-up action by the full Senate later this summer. In our view, passage of the Bayh bill ending the sale of coricealable or cheap handguns is the least that Congress can with good conscience do.

The public should note that there are sterner options including the licensing of all handguns and long guns, the registration of gun owners, a freeze on the sale of all handguns of whatever type--which also should be considered. Nonetheless, the decision of the Senate Judiciary Committee to release the Bayh bill, which it had embcgged for a year, is a sign that prospects of better gun control are improving. --The Christian Science Monitor It's the nation's birthday. It is a. great nation, stretching for some three thousand miles between two oceans, crisscrossed by great mountains, winding rivers, and stretching plains.

It is a nation richly blessed with natural resources, and with the potential to feed a population far" beyond its present numbers. It has factories that can spew put goods in abundance. And it has people with hundreds of skills and the ambition nation. of a young yet this nation is criticized as being mean, worthless, crass in its -attitude toward men, and worthy only of dissolution. We take exception.

Of course the nation isn't perfect. Of coarse it has its share of evil. Bot then we didn't expect to find anywhere on this earth even the beginnings of a mfllenium. And we expect that even if the institutions of the nation are changed, the people who must run these institutions would do little more in the way of perfection than has been done. We expect we will always have to live with a The Sentinel Files TEN YEAKS AGO A community barbecue with a new twist was being planned by the Holland Jaycees.

Besides being merely delicious and a i i -the Jaycee- sponsored "Project Windmill" Barbecue, slated for July 24 in the Civic Center parking 'ot, Science Institute Foundation being held Summer on the certain amount of meanness, will be primarily informative, crassness, and sadness. Dr. Robert C. Yates, pro- But in this nation there is fessor of mathematics at the also the other side of man, the University of South Florida, potential for greatness. We have Tampa, is one of the that too.

The nation has those lecturers at the National who seek the good of others, who do work hard to make this a better world, who do want freedom in the best sense, and who do take seriously the principles that went into the founding of this nation. These people are found in a thousand villages, cities, and metropolitan areas. They live in simple homes, work, serve, and build. They worship in the thousands of places that dot our countryside and sit on the corners of our great cities. And they do all this quietly and modestly.

Tuesday is the nation's birthday. We rejoice with our fellow- citizens in the privilege of being a nart of a great people and nation. Purpose of Independence Hope College Campus. At least five persons in Ottawa County were injured by fireworks during tfie Independence Day celebration. None was injured seriously.

Kiiz Feature foe, 1972. World nxmd. Your Money's Worth By Sylvlt Porter On July 25 at the Big League All Star game eight boys, age in Atlanta. 9 to 12, will "It's the story of my I broke up with him yesterday and today he's got a new sports car!" Dear Abby by Abigail Van Buren compete In the finals of the an nual Pitch, Hit and Throw baseball competition. Decked out in the uniforms of their favorite teams, the would be Scavers, Robinsons and Johnny Benches will step up to throw the ball for distance and accuracy, pitch for accuracy, hit for distance.

These eight represent the winners out of hundreds of thousands who started months ago in district competitions by having their parents pick up entry blanks at service stations of the sponsor, Phillips Petroleum. The four best will get trophies and will be introduced on tv bafore the adult All Stars take over. Another perennial requiring a wholly different kind of skill is the Singer World Stylemaker Contest. In this one, about 90,000 girls, age 10 to 15, each ANN LANDERS fey Ann year compete in categories making three age outfits for themselves, competitive advancing up the ladder until the 'As Independence Bay 1972 approaches, it is well to recall that the Fourth of July means more than shooting off a few. fireworks.

It marks the point nearly two centuries ago the United States began to shape its destiny as an independent nation. This year, as we commemorate independence, many are asking whether we are worthy of the freedom we have enjoyed all these years, thanks to the fortitude and ness of our forefathers. To them, independence a building a strong nation where individual freedom, under law, the right of property and other basic liberties, could thrive and grow. They applied their independence to these purposes with fruitful results. If the nation is now drifting and divided, there can be but one reason.

The premises upon which independence was won have been weakened. Some are ashamed of the strength of our nation. Others question its laws, its economic system and the institutions under which it has become strong. They use the independence granted to them nearly 200 years ago to turn the nation away from the principles on which it was founded and upon which it depends for its continued existence. Those who are grateful for the opportunities and freedom this country has given them should stand up and be counted on Independence Day this year.

SEVENTEEN YEARS AGO In a communication to City Council the Holland Planning Commission which has been studying public library needs in Holland city recommended that the Library Board work closely with the Board of Education to incorporate a new city public library into the plan of the new high school. Audred Petroelje and his brother Wayne have worked up quite a Sentinel business in Zeeland. Audred who will be 19 years old next week is "retiring" after delivering Sentinels almost eight years loping his route from 51 back in 1947 to 115 customers at present. Wayne, 11, has been a Sentinel carrier since the first of the customers. year with 51 Q--0--O--O--O--O--Q--Q Lesson of the Flood (Guest Editorial) Now that the torrential rains have ended over the vast area devastated by floods resulting from the tropical storm Agnes, the enormous job of cleaning up, assessing and repairing the great damage, and trying to help the numerous victims has finally begun.

The nation has been told by its chief meteorologist, Dr. Robert S. White, that this last week's flooding "is the most extensive in the country's history." In Richmond, Harrisburg, Wilkes- Barre, Elmira, Corning and hundreds of other badly hit communities there will be no disposition to quarrel with this evaluation. The number of dead is well over 100 and damage estimates mount toward the $2-billio3 mark. President Nixon and the governors of the states most seriously affected have moved swiftly to try to mobilize all possible material and personnel to aid the victims of this historic disaster.

The dead con- not be brought to life, but those whose homes, businesses or jobs were swept away can be assisted to make a new start. But even as the vast recovery effort gets underway, the lessons of this cataclysm must be studied. How effective were the monitoring and warning services in the flooded areas, and how can they be improved where they were inadequate? Is further research required and along what directions, to permit meteorologists to give earlier warnings to those in the paths of possible floods? Every major flood disaster emphasizes one lesson which is, however, regularly forgotten and Ignored: the danger of building industries and communities on the flood plains of rivers. Dams and other water control projects can provide protection but only op to A numerous human huge amounts of imit, and tragic experience has demonstrated that from time time that limit will be exceeded. Then torrents of water will pour over the tops of the lighest dams, some dams will reak, and aeings and property will be in dire peril.

Fundamentally the problem is one of land use planning, and of rational consideration of the risks as well as the advantages of different areas for human habitation. It is a social problem. Complex hydrological, topological and statistical factors are involved, but the knowledge and the warnings of the specialists are normally ignored by land developers and legislators alike. The time to begin applying the expensive lesson is now, and the places to begin are precisely in the areas which have been devastated most recently. Past expierence suggests that the rebuilding now getting underway will simply put new structures new homes, stores, factories, etc.

in the same places they were before, thus re-creating the vulnerability that existed before and assuring other similar catastrophes in the future. Bigger and more expensive dams are not the answer. The real need in to break the pattern, to abandon the dangerous flood plains and to resettle people, their homes and their places of work on safer, higher ground where the flood waters did not come even at the height of the fury that Agnes unleashed. --The New York Times TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO Furniture "builders will continue at boom velocity--as far as Holland is concerned--for the rest of the year at least. Charles H.

Kirehen president of West Michigan Furniture Co. said it would take this long to catch up on current orders. The bargaining unit of Bonn Aluminum plant II, on strike since April 1, has submitted to management a new proposal asking for three days of continuous bargaining for the purpose of settling all issues in dispute. "There is a deplorable shortage of textbooks, paper, pencils and other educational supplies in Germany," said Prof. Chris De Young, former local educator recently returned from Germany.

De Young, formerly of Zeeland and a Hope graduate, at present is administrative dean at Illinois State Normal University at Normal, HI. DEAR ABBY: I am a married woman, age 49, but physically I am like a girl of 20. My doctor tells me that I have absolutely nothing to worry about insofar as getting pregnant is concerned. He says the oldest woman he has known to get pregnant was 47, and that was very unusual. Abby, I'm afraid to let my guard down because my family is grown and the last thing I want at this time of my life is another baby.

What do you or your readers know about this? The medical books tell me nothing. My doctor thinks I am foolish for worrying. WORRIED SPITLESS DEAR WORRIED: Although the chances of becoming pregnant at age 47 are greatly reduced, it is by no means impossible. My doctor tells me that he has heard of a woman bearing a child at age 52, so keep your guard up, lady. DEAR ABBY: Something in your column caused me to recall something I hadn't thought of in years.

Perhaps it's worth sharing: Many years ago, when potato chips were first on the market, they weren't available in our small town, so my mother would order them from the big city near us for special occasions. She had ordered some for her bridge luncheon, but they did not arrive on time, so as a joke mother sliced raw potatoes, and put a few on each plate. When the plates came back to the kitchen, there wasn't a potato slice to be seen. But for weeks afterwards we kept finding them in flowerpots, vases and under the sofa cushions. JEAN P.

IN MONTANA DEAR JEAN: There's nothing new under the sun. People are still doing it. DEAR ABBY: I am going with a wonderful guy, and we are talking about getting married, but a problem has come up He says that before we get married he would like to go out with some other girls just to see what it's like. He says it's not that he doesn't love me, but he would just like to have a little variety before he settles down. .1 suppose I should be glad that my guy is so honest with me about this, but I am by nature a jealous person, and I don't want to even think about my guy being with another girl.

What do you think? UNCERTAIN DEAR UNCERTAIN: A man sufficiently mature for marriage would neither announce his intentions to go out with other girls, nor ask for his financee's permission. His idea could be good, but discussing it with you is adolescent. CONFIDENTIAL TO SQUARE SHOOTER IN KENOSHA, I agree it's noble to go by "the old rule" never hit a man when he's down. (He may get back up again.) super seamstresses get a trip to Europe or cash. A recent Singer winner used designs by Yves St.

Laurent. Still a third annual, sponsored by Eastman Kodak, is the Teenage Movie Award in which adolescents enter 8 or 16 mm films they have made. A recent 18 year old winner produced a 28-minute ecology film contrasting the grim squalor of New York's Hell's Kitchen with restful country scenes. What makes contests such as these so appealing? "A chance to win a dream," says an executive of D. L.

Blair a sales promotion firm which organizes hundreds of contests a year. "For adults, the dream is, say, in cash. But kids may be excited by a free bicycle or football or the chance to meet their heroes. Offer them a ticket to the Super Bowl and they'll rip apart the supermarket for you." Dear Ana I've been writing to a young man who is stationed in Germany. I have never met him but he is a friend of nay cousin who is also stationed there.

According to my cousin, this fellow is tops. We have been corresponding for five months and he sounds like my kind of man. We have exchanged snapshots, poetry and small gifts. My aunt came to visit last week and my mom mentioned my "mail-order romance." Auntie asked if she could see a sample of my friend's handwriting because, according to her, handwriting can tell more about a person than months of face-to-face conversation. "A person can fool you by being a good actor, but his handwriting tells the real story," she announced with a tone of finality that has always made me dislike her.

I reluctantly showed Auntie three paragraphs of a recent letter. She bsllowed, "Drop him. The way he dots his 'i's' shows he is impatient. The Style of his 'm' indicates he is caustic and sharp-tongued. He does not close his 'o's' at the top, which means he is talkative, shallow, and probably a bore." I was crestfallen and annoyed.

Is there anything to what she says? I am very upset--Need To Know in Jacksonville. Dear Jack: Handwriting ana lysis is more of a parlor game (and a business) than a science. It is not possible to analyze a person's personality or character by examining his handwriting. I have made this statement before and the results have been incredible. Thousands of letters from indignant band- writing "experts" poured in-nearly every one typewritten! Dear Ann Landers: I see by your new picture that there is something shiny on your left shoulder that looks like a hearing aid receiver.

You've been frank enough to tell your readers that you can't read without glasses, but your teeth are your pin, the center of which is hce-PresMential seal a gift from Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey on my 60th birthday. Ann: My husband and I work in the same building and have lunch together nearly every day in the building's cafe- USria. For several weeks now a certain secretary manages to be right behind my husband and she is full of small talk.

She leans on him, suggests certain dishes, discourages others and has entirely too much to say. I asked my husband who she is and he says he doesn't know her name or where she works. I believe him but she still makes me uneasy. I feel like a hypocrite being pleasant to this mealy mouthed broad. She really spoils my appetite.

Should I stop being sweet and two- faced, and tell her The ideal solu- to find another place to eat. If this is not convenient make up your mind to keep smiling or you might create a problem where none exists. Dear Irked: ion would be (Copyright, 1972 Publishers Hall Syndicate) Gov. Ford Regains Weight HOUSTON (UPD--Gov. Wendell Ford of Kentucky kept up his solid diet Sunday, regaining weight and strength following last week's abdominal surgery.

MOOI ROOFING EAVES TROUGH SIDING 26 E. 6th St. Phone 392-3826 Over 50 Ysars Keeping Holland Dry Problems? Trust Abby. For a personal reply, write to Abby, Box 69700, L. Calif.

90069 and enclose a stamped, addressed envelope. (Copyright 1972 by Chicago News Inc.) gan's 23rd District, which includes Ottawa, Allegan, and Van Buren counties and Yankee Springs township in a County.) REP. A S. FARNS-f WORTH, State Capitol, Lansing, 48933. (Rep.

Farnswortb represents Michigan's 55th District which takes in Holland City and the townships of James- and Jamestown, a small part of Zeeland and part of Allegan County.) REP. I J. DE STIGTER, State Capitol, Lan- The Declaration of Independence is tificate. America's birth ocr- sing, Mich. 48933.

Stigter represents Write Your Congressmen THE HON. PHILIP A. HART U. S. Senator, Senate Office BuilGing, Washington, D.

C. 20510. THE HON. GRIFFIN, U. S.

Senator, 6221 Senate Office Building, Washington, D. C. 20510. THE HON. GUY VANDER JAGT, Member of Congress, 1211 Longworth.

House Office Building, Washington, D. C. 20515. (Cong. Vander Jagt rep-' resents Michigan's Ninth District which includes a a County.) THE HON.

A HUTCHINSON, Member of Congress, 417 Cannon House Office Building, Washington, D. C. 20515. (Cong. Hutchinson represents Michigan's Fourth District i includes AUegan County.) SEN.

GARY BYKER, State Capitol, Lansing, 48933. (Sen. Bykcr represents Michi- (Rep. De Michigan's 95th District which takes in all of Ottawa County except Holland city, the townships of Zeeland town and Zeeland.) REP. BELA E.

KENNEDY, State Capitol, Lansing, 48933. (Rep. Kennedy represents Michigan's 54th District which takes in Van Buren County and part of Allegan County.) One of America's cherished traditions is the right of every citizen to write his representatives in Congress and the State Legislature expressing his opinion on issues facing his nation and state. Facts From The Almanac By United Press International Today is Monday, July 3, the 185th day of 1972, with 181 to follow. The moon is in its last quarter.

The morning stars are Venus and Saturn. The evening stars are Mercury, Mars and Jupiter. Those born on this date are under the sign of Cancer. American author John Mason Brown was born July 3, 1900. On this day in history: In 1775 George Washington assumed command of the Continental Army at Cambridge, Mass.

In 1819 the Bank of Savings in New York City opened, it was the first of its kind. The first 80 depositors banked a total of $200,307. In 1892 workers at the Carnegie Steel Co. in Homestead, Pa. struck.

Before the strike ended, seven guards and 11 strikers and spectators had themselves and others free. Eisenhower. The Bible is a rock on which our republic stands Jackson. To be a good patriot a man mast coasider his countrymen as God's creatures and himself as accountable for his actions toward them. Berkeley.

Only a people strong in godliness is strong enough to overcome tyranny and mako True religion affords government its truest support. -Washington. Write Your Councilman Write Your Councilman: Care of City Hall, Holland, Mich. 49423. L.

W. LAMB Jr. mayor. ELMER WISSINK, councilman-at-large. AL KLEIS councilman-air large.

LOUIS HALLACY first ward. JOHN R. BLOEMENDAAL, second ward. DONALD D. OOSTERBAAN, third ward.

ROBERT J. DYKSTRA, fourth ward. MORRIS PEERBOLT, fifth been killed. In 1950 American troops faced North Koreans in battle for the first time. A thought for the day: French novelist Anatole France said, "People who have no weaknesses are is no way to take advantage of them." "Recognition, that's the great thing," says a vice president of another top sales promotion outfit, Advertising Distributors of America.

"Send a boy to the West Coast to be a batboy for a day with his dream team. Let him travel with a circus for a week. Those are the kind of prizes that draw overwhelming responses." While anti business attitudes among the young are growing alarmingly and while they demand a fundamental, not a band aid approach by business many corporations have found the contest a way to make friends among the young and to win them (and their families) as future customers and em- ployes. And whatever the specific motivation of the company, the fact is business as a whole spends millions of dollars every year giving away scholarships, trips to Europe, free rock concerts, visits with the greats of baseball or football, an endless list of merchandise and a awards. And whatever the specific motivations of the kid entering the contest, the fact is that the alert youngster and his or her family can have fun and a crack at some real benefits.

But in view of the shady record and highly questionable prize structures of once popular contests, how can you be sure you're getting into a clean deal and have a fair chance? --Do not enter a contest in which the rules are not absolutely clear, forthright and unequivocal. As an illustration, rules should read: "We will award 85 prizes (described with their value) if you will do this. --Do follow the instructions to the letter. If the instructions say typewritten, typewrite; if printed, print. Elimate any reason for your entry to be discarded.

--Do not make it hard for the judges to handle your entry. Be legible and neat. --Do look for competitions which take the trouble to announce who the winners are. Check out previous winners. --Do not be put off a game or competition simply bacause it's regional.

It merely means the sponsor's goal is regional and the participation won't be as great as in a national contest. --Do own. Now, how about your hearing? Is that an aid or not? NUNUVMYBIZZNIZZ Dear Nun: IJy hearing is still pretty good. So far I can hear just about everything I want to. That "shiny thing" is a gold BROWER AWNING SAIES Vinyl Fiberglass Roll up Aluminum Sidings Porch enclosures 257 E.

32ND Ph. 396-6047 Free De Witt Roofing Vern De Witt 772-6160 2614 112th Ave. Holland RIEMERSMA ROOFING JIM RIEMERSMA Reefing Contractor Insulation "There's more to roofing than just nailing shingles." 2770 MARY AVE. 496-4364 look for contests that ward. HAZEN L.

sixth ward. VAN KAMPEN, May Run as Write-In BOSTON (UPD--Rep. John G. Schmltz, recently defeated in a primary election, says he might run on a third party ticket or conduct a write- in campaign for re-election. Boat Blast Injures Four ST.

JOSEPH (UPD Four South Bend, residents were injured and burned, one seriously, Sunday night when an explosion occurred aboard a 25- foot cabin cruiser in St. Joseph River. Three of them, Jack Markin, 44, owner of the boat, his son, Martin, 11, and Robert Grady, 43, were treated in Memorial Hospital at St. Joseph and released. The fourth, Charles Lavine, 24, was reported in good condition in the same hospital.

Berrien County Sheriff's officers said Markin was practicing docking when his engine offer many small prizes and that are of relatively short duration and do, if you arc allowed to do so, submit more than one entry. Increase your mathematical chances of winning as much as you can. --And do, if you're in doubt about the validity of- any contest, check with your local consumer protection agency or the Better Business Bureau. (Copyright 1972 Field Enterprises. Inc.) Michigan in Washington WASHINGTON "Togetherness" is not an outmoded word to describe what happened when the Democrats struggled to find a platform at least acceptable to the Presidential contenders for the nomination.

The platform committee rejected proposals from the Far Right and the Far Left. The George McGovern and Hubert Humphrey forces were more pleased than the Wallace supporters, yet they had their oay-so and considerable ence. McGovern called the resulting platform "forward looking" and others fearing radicalism called is "respectably liberal." Spokesman for the wounded Gov. Wallace were especially upset by the platform committee's refusal to oppose school busing. As sent to the convention, the platform promises a tough crackdown on illegal traffickers in narcotic drugs; jobs for all and income "substanially above the poverty level;" adequate defense trimmed of fat; crackdown on crime; improved education; bettering of relations abroad; help for the cities; amnesty for draft dodgers "after appropriate conditions when the war is ended." Where "togetherness" breaks down will offer the excitement for those watching the television coverage of the Democratic convention, July 9-15 at Miami Beach.

Nearly a dozen rejected issues will be debated on the floor of the convention and Wallace threatens to rewrite the platform at Miami. Some young McGovern supporters are annoyed that McGovern's defense cuts and Share-the-Wealth proposals were not included. (The platform committee endorsed the Mills Mansfield tax reform and called for "quicker" repeal of the most unjustified tax loopholes.) Members of Congress were surprised that for the first time the platfrom propose an end to the congressional seniority system! BAKKER ROOFING Eaves Trough Down Spouts Free Estimates No Job Too Big or Tee "Small PHONE 392-3241 METAL MINERAL DETECTORS by WHITE'S ELECTRONICS 525 Ritey 392-5692 Crisis Intervention SUICIDE PREVENTION CALL 396-HELP DAY OR NIGHT ROOFING 125 Howard Ave. ALUMINUM SIDING Holland Ready Roofing Co. Ph.

392-9051 Eves. 396-6734 OLD NEWS PRINTERr LETTERPRESS and OFFSET Dealir far MOORE BUSINESS FORMS, RUBBER STAMPS Harmon Bat, Owner 74 W. 8th Holland 396-4653 OFF Imprinted CHRISTMAS CARDS 'Til Labor Day Browse through our albums in air conditioned comfort in our Balcony Shop. lir The 'Thoughtfulness Shop Downtown Holland stopped. As he attempted to restart it, an explosion followed.

The occupant? plunged into the water and swam ashore. The accident occurred at, the Whispering Willows Marina south of Joseph. Code Ordered AUGUSTA, Maine (UPI- Gov. Kenneth M. Curtis says he has ordered Code of Fair for the entire- executive branch of the state government.

REGISTRATION NOTICE For GENERAL PRIMARY ELECTION to bo hold on TUESDAY, AUGUST 8, 1972 Notice it hereby given that In conformity with tho "Michigan Election Law," I the undersigned Clerk, will receive for registration the name of any legal voter in Port Sheldon Township not aleardy registered who may APPLY TO ME PERSONALLY for such registration. Notice Is hereby flivtn that will be at Port Sheldon Township Offices, 16201 Port Sheldon Street, Wednesday Evenings from 7 9 P.M. and at my home 16514 Blair Street, on Saturday, July 1, from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. and FRIDAY.

JULY 7, LAST DAY from o'clock until ocleck p.m. for the purpose of REVIEWING the REGISTRATION and REGISTERING such of the qualified In said TOWNSHIP SHAH PROPERLY apply therefore. Karen I. Robinson fort Sheldon Township Clerk SPAPJtRl.

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About The Holland Evening Sentinel Archive

Pages Available:
100,038
Years Available:
1948-1976