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The Daily Reporter from Dover, Ohio • Page 9

Location:
Dover, Ohio
Issue Date:
Page:
9
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Hints From Heloise Coffee Cans Multi-Useful By Cruse Dear Helotee: I found a very good use for the 1-pound coffee cans with the new plastic tops: I covered them with adhesive- backed plastic paper in a pattern to match my kitchen colors. Each can is labeled with a marKer to show what it contains. These make an attractive addition to your kitchen shelves. I use them for rice, grfta, brown sugar, macaroni, starch, etc My shelves look lovely, neat and orderly now that ai my containers match. After you have a good supply of these cans fixed up, save the extra plastic lids to put on the bottom ot each canister! This keeps the canister from rusting on your shelves! Keep your hints coming, we love you.

Essie Home Dear Essie: I love you too, gal, and thanks for passing this hint along. Heloise LETTER OF LAUGHTER? N01 Dear Heloise: At the end of each day when I bathe my little boy, I sit on the edge of the bathtub with my feet in the water! This surely saves my back while bathing him because I do not have to kneel and bend over and he is much easier to wash. By this time of the day, my feet just love this soaking. Anne Evans Dear Heloise: When baking a chocolate cake I dust my cake pans with a mixture of part cocoa and four instead of only flour, which tends to leave a white powder on fche Jill Polka Feted At Bridal Shower Jill Polka, bride-elect of Walter Davis, both of New Philadelphia, was pest of honor at a bridal shower given Friday in the home of Mrs. Robert Grinder of 1335 Kaderly St.

NW, New Philadelphia. A crepe paper wedding cake centered the table where gifts placed. Wedding bells were suspended over the table by yellow and white crepe paper streamers. Game prizes were awarded Mrs. Julius Polka, Mrs.

Chuck Ervin and Joanne Fattibene, who presented them to the guest of honor. Others attending were Mrs. Marion Davis, Mrs. Raymond Reichman, Mrs. G.

Crowthers, Mrs. David Bell, Mrs. John Spittle, Grace Totsch, Mrs. Richard Totsch, Mrs. Robert Totsch, Mrs.

John Harmon, Mrs. R. Hostetler, Hazel Smith, Mrs. Joe Sutek, Mrs. John Murray, Mrs.

Carl Polka, Linda Urfer and Glenda Barker. Joanne Fattibene and Linda Urfer assisted Mrs. Grinder when cake, coffee and tea were served. cake. I cannot taste the mixture and no white fUrn is left on the cake.

Marjorte Hwmas Dear Hetofee: We have aluminum screens in our home. They slide into hinges on one side and swing open from the inside of the house. Each fall, I buy SO feet of inexpensive plastic fflffi. I pull these screens into the house, cover them with plastic film, tape each corner with plastic tape, and return all of the screens to their proper places. These make perfect storm windows.

There is some difference between expensive storm windows and my storm windows. When I find a hint like this which saves money, it is one of the things that makes raising 8 children a challenge and an advantage I wouldn't miss! Naturally I am a Heloise fen No signature Who is whose fan? You just made me one of yours, and thanks a million. Hetofee Dear Heloise: When I buy toys for our children (ail pre-school age) I always remove the strings and cords that come on them. These have proven dangerous to my older children. Please notify other mothers before their child loses a finger.

Mother Dear Heloise: Someone wanted to know how to rejuvenate chintz. I ironed mine with the right side down on a sheet of waxed paper, tt adds shine and body to it. Mrs. F. H.

Hershberger Once your chintz has become limp it's sure worth a try. We tried it and tt does act as a smoother for this fabric. After all, they do put tallow in some of the starches that we cook, don't they? The contents listed on some starches say so! I suggest that you never use bleach on chintz. Though the manufacturers do not tell you this, after inquiring from cloth- tag Manufacturers, they tell me it should never be done. Heloise Heloise welcomes all mail, especially household hints which she can pass on to readers as space permits.

However, because of the tremendous volume of mail she receives daily, Heloise is unable to answer all individual letters. She will answer readers' questions in your letters to The Daily Reporter. (Copyright 1964, King Features Syndicate, Inc.) Jet Pilot Dies In House Crash SUPERIOR, Wis. (AP)-Lawrence Nordlund watched in horror Sunday as an Air Force jet fighter sliced through his home where his wife was working in -the kitchen. The house and the plane, which crashed in a valley beyond, erupted in flame.

Nordlund found his wife, Julieann, 45, in the basement and carried her out before the house was consumed. Capt. Kenneth C. Kite, 33, pilot of the F106B fighter inter- from nearby Duluth (Minn.) Air Force Base, was Wled. His passenger, Col Earl L.

Bastian, 45, the deputy base commander was burned slightly but parachuted safely. Mrs. Nordlund was in serious condition in a Superior hospi- tal. She suffered fractures and first and second-degree burns. Nordlund was in his yard and was not hurt.

Kite and Bastian were on a flight to Tyndall Air Force Base in Florida. Cause of the crash was not known. Kite is a native of Shelbyville, Bastian of Scranton, Pa, Vandals Slash Bags Tom Smith, manager of Al's Value Center at 210 Wooster reported to Dover police this morning that someone bad (lashed between 50 and 100 bags of peat moss which were stacked behind the store sometime last Bight. Police report that the vandal or vandals slashed the fides and top the large stack. No damage estimate has been set.

FROM PC. 1 campaign licks. Although he does not intend to attack Glenn personally, Young said, he does plan to ask what committees Glenn might seek if he is elected to the Senate. Young said he is on both the Senate Aeronautical and Space Sciences and the Armed Services committees, which Glenn might prefer due to his background. Glenn, if elected, "would have to start at the bottom of such committees," Young said.

Glenn had planned to start his Senate drive today, but the mild concussion he suffered last week scrambled his plans. U. S. Marine Corps officials advised Glenn that if he were still in the hospital on his scheduled retirement he would risk loss of disability pay should he not put off the retirement. Doctors told the former astronaut, America's pioneer orbital space hero, he was not ready to leave the hospital.

Glenn still complains of dizziness when he moves around in his room at Grant Hospital in Columbus, although he is reported in good condition and progressing well. Glenn therefore decided to delay his retirement. Marine retirement orders are effective only on the first of a month. So campaigning by 42-year-old political tyro, if it does start April 1, must be compressed into a 34-day span before the May 5 Ohio primary elections. Glenn cannot, he says, disclose his opinions on major issues until he is out of the service because of Federal Hatch Act restrictions.

Meanwhile, sources close to Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy saw that the attorney general was not responsible for Glenn's decision to enter the primary and try to retire Young. These sources give this account: Last September Robert Kennedy suggested to Glenn that the astronaut become a candidate for the Senate, but Glenn replied he intended to stay in the space program.

After President John F. Kennedy was assassinated, Glenn changed his mind and decided to run. Glenn then went to the attorney general an told him of his decision and Kennedy did not encourage him but left it up to Glenn. Young had been a strong supporter of most programs put before Congress by President Kennedy. In discussing this, Young said: "I supported the Kennedy program and I do support the program and policies of President Johnson." The comet of 1811, largest ever observed, had a head with a diameter of 1,225,000 miles.

Jumping Yell Kills 'Chutist' LANSING, Mich. (AP)-Professional parachutist Richard Welsh shouted his familiar "Yeow" an instant after he leaped from a plane at 3,000 feet Sunday. Moments later, he lay dead on the ground below. His parachute had failed to open. The shout conceivably might have brought his fate.

Frank Judge, a flier; David Monroe, pilot of the plane and Robert McDonald, a 'chute jumper', agreed Welsh lacked a pocket for his ripcord handle, called a "D-ring." "The ring was supposed to be in a little pocket of his rig," Judge said, "but Welsh had no pocket, so he held the handle in his mouth. "When he yelled, the D-ring flew out of his mouth and over his shoulder," Judge said. Welsh, dead when witnesses reached him, had made the jump on his 29th birthday. "He of all people," said Monroe, referring to Welsh holding the D-ring in his teeth, "should have known that was very, very, very wrong." FROM PC. 1 -AUSTRIAN- least five children.

The plane carried a crew of eight. "It is horrible," said an Alpine rescue service member, "Arms, legs and heads are strewn about in the debris. I don't see how we could ever identify the victims." Tape-recorded messages between the pilot, 40-year-old Capt. E. Williams, and the Innsbruck Control Tower roused suspicions that the plane's altimeters were defective.

Williams gave his altitude as 10,000 feet, which would have been well above the peaks. Dr. Leopold Koehler of the Austrian Civil Aviation Office said Williams, described as one of Eagle's veteran plots, was given a detailed weather report and told that airport visibility was above international safety limits. "Apparently the pilot was prepared to land because he did not inform the control tower of any intention to divert to an alternate airport," Koehler said. Officials at the Innsbruck tower said radio messages from the plane showed the pilot "had everything ready for a landing and then suddenly veered off course." "The plane's landing gear was down and the pilot was obviously planning to fly a downward leg to come in for the landing," the officials said.

"Why he suddenly veered off the landing pattern is not yet known." Weather Outlook COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)-Official Weather Bureau summary of Ohio's weather: Mild drj weather prevailed in Ohio Sunday. Afternoon temperatures reached the 40s in Cleveland, Toledo and Youngstown and the 50s in Dayton, Columbus and Marietta, while the highest reported was 61 at Cincinnati. Fair weather continued Sunday night in the northern counties, but a band of showers moved eastward across the central and southern sections. Cloudiness over Ohio was forecast to be variable today with little temperature change. However, low pressure moving northeast across Louisiana and Mississippi today could possibly bring rain into portions of Southern and Central Ohio tonight and Tuesday.

Some temperatures early today were Columbus 35, Cleveland 37, Cincinnati 46 and Marietta 44. OHIO FIVE DAY FORECASTS NORTHERN will average six to ten degrees above normal. Normal high 40-41. normal low 22-26. Little change until colder Wednesday or Thursday, warmer again Friday or Saturday.

Rain late Tuesday or Wednesday, again near end of week, totaling one-half to locally one inch. Page 9, TTic Daily Reporter, Dover, Ohio Monday, March 2,1964 Nc'town Ministers Plan For Holy Week' By Mrs. Sally Dnffy Telephone HY 8-7839 NEWCOMERSTOWN Plans for Holy Week services were made when the Ministerial Assn. met Friday in St. Paul's Lutheran Church.

On March 24, the film, "Martin Luther" will be shown in Trinity Methodist Church and on March 25, Rev. Ward Holder will preach in community services in the BUB Church. Communion will be observed in individual churches March 26. Continuous services will be held Good Friday from noon to 3 p.m. in St.

Paul's Lutheran Church, entitled "Gethsemene to Calvary." Speakers and topics are: Rev. Fred Wakeling, "The Garden of Gethsemene;" Rev. Clare St. John, Ecclesiastical Trial;" Rev. William Hewitt, "The Courtyard:" Rev.

Donald Albert, "The Temple;" Rev. Edward Eshelman, "The Civil Trial;" Rev. O.E. Ghere. "The Road to Calvary;" Rev.

Clifford Sutton, "Calvary," and Rev. Paul Baxter, closing. Easter Sunrise services will be held in each church. Rev. Wakeling and Rev.

Holder will be in charge of publicity for Holy Week services. The April meeting of the Ministerial Assn. will be in Trinity Methodist Church. A total of 325 women were tested in Sunday's PAP test clinic sponsored by Jaycee Wives. Participating doctors were Dr.

W. R. Agricola, Dr. R. L.

McCulley and Dr. Myron Saturskl. Assisting the doctors were Mrs. Earl Reed, Mrs. Don Zeigler, Mrs.

Francis Haver, Mrs. James Lehman, Mrs. James Baker, Mrs. Bill Wiggins and Jane Weaver. Union Hospital staff members aiding in the program were Dr.

Robert Hastedt, pathologist, and Hester Johnson and Karen Hurst, lab technicians. Seven members of the I.A.H. Class of Wolf-Salem Methodist Church and 3 advisors toured the Dover radio station Saturday. Peggy Maxwell of the station conducted the tour, telling about opportunities in the radio field. She also explained (he station's financial and commercial operation.

Following the tour, the class met in the church for a sack lunch and project work. Mrs. Bernice Little of RD 1, was taken to her home from Coshocton Memorial Hospital in the Ourant ambulance Saturday. Clark Bryant of RD 1, was taken to Coshocton Hospital Saturday, also in the Ourant ambulance. Area residents, who have moved into new homes recently, are: Ruth Richcreek to S.

River Terry Christman from 667 Wood Ave. to RD 1, West Lafayette; Virginia Ames from E. State Road to 546 Railroad and Raymond Newell to a new location on RD 1, Isletta. Quick Draw Game Takes Boy's Life CLEVELAND "We were practicing quick draws. We were going 'bang, but then my gun went off," Theodore Dyer told police remorsefully in explaining how he shot and killed his friend.

Dyer, 14, ran nut of the house after shooting Frank Borsos 13, Saturday night, police said. But a few hours later he returned to the house where he lives with his grandparents. The boy was hold in Juvenile Detention Home pending a determination whether charges will be filed. CoMiE The city of Palermo on Sicily renamed four streets, two squares and 20 local scholarships after the late President Kennedy. 000 "Now fashion's pet heels are little ones!" $8.99 to $10.99 Sizes to 11 ATo Widths Low stacks and Ripple ruhh wl with brae 7 dim, tapcri-d mid-low stacks with right from casual, to lailor hours! A.i evil in Mademoiselle, Daily 9:30 a.m.

to Moutlay and Friday until 9 p.m. Misses Costume Dress $17,95 In Beige Or Blue As Illustrated Textured look 7un- ior Costume Dress in Navy or quoise $17.95. As illustrated. St' Gloom, Begone! Costume Dresses Have Arrived at Aren't You Glad You'll Soon Be Wearing Spring Lovelies Like These? 9 30 a Until 9 p.rn. 233 WEST THIRD STRUT II Size Costume Dress In Biege Or $17.95.

Illustrated.

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About The Daily Reporter Archive

Pages Available:
194,329
Years Available:
1933-1977