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Marysville Journal-Tribune from Marysville, Ohio • 2

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Marysville, Ohio
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2
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1 JOURNAL- TRIBUNE Monday, October, 2, 1972 Marysville 207-211 N. Main Marysville, Ohio W. E. Behrens and Publisher Mrs. W.

E. Behrens Paul Fisher Managing Editor TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTIONS One year to subscribers by mail in Union County Six months to subscribers by mail in Union County 8.00 Three months to subscribers by mail in Union County 6.00 One year subscribers by carrier, payable in advance, 26.00 Per week to subscribers by carrier .50 cents One year subscribers by mail in Ohio 16.00 One year to subscribers by mail outside Ohio 19.00 Single copy 10 cents Combining the Semi- Weekly Union 1 County Journal established in 1874 and the Marysville Evening Tribune established in 1849. Re entered at the Post Office in Marysville, Ohio Second class postage paid at Marysville, Ohio Published daily except Saturday, Sunday and Holidays. Member of Associated Press, The Ohio Newspaper Services, Inland Daily Press Association, National Advertising Representative: AMERICAN NEWSPAPER REPRESENTATIVE INC. Atlanta- Angeles- -New York State Cleveland (Continued from Page 1) scribed on the -other -hand as pragmatic and cooperative in seeking a genuine solution to problems facing American and overseas economic policy.

There is no doubt, the experts say, that there was a lack of direction as well as divisions of responsibility, interagency rivalry and not enough emphasis on economic policy in State. The most-promising foreignservice officers fought to stay put of the economic sections. Local Stocks (As of 11 a.m.) Ill. Cent. Pfd.

BancOhio Columbia Gas Dayton Goodyear ITE Imp. Corp. .39 ITT United Telecom Wallace-Murray Ohio Water Service NAR Bordens (Continued from Page 1) represents striking garbage collectors and street repairmen. Local 39 of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, which had called a strike for this morning, said Sunday it is willing to listen some more and voted to withdraw its planned strike action. Meanwhile, operating Engineers Local 589 voted 109-29 Sunday to accept a city offer to pay in full by June 1 back wage increases that had been promised by the previous city administration but were never paid.

The contract also provides improved hospitalization and life insurance benefits. Pointing to the growing accumulation of trash and garbage in the city, Perk said he planned to ask a court injunction to halt the three-dayold strike by garbage collectors and street repairmen. Perk estimated that at least 1,500 tons of garbage has gone uncollected since Laborers Union Local 1099 went on strike. Transparent Plastic To Or Outside! NAILS Inside PLASTIC WITH AND STORM WINDOW KIT McAULIFFE'S 232 N. Main St.

Phone 642-2891 WE HAVE THE GENUINE LASTING WARP WINDOW MATERIALS All Only WINDOW MATERIALS Wide 36" Run. FLEX-0-GLASS Run. Ft Only GLASS-0-NET Run, Ft. Only WYR-O-GLASS Run. Only SCREEN-GLASS Run.

Only FLEX-O-PANE BRANDED ON THE EDGE MEANS SATISFACTION GUARANTEED GUGEL HARDWARE Fifth Plum Phone 642-1871 WE HAVE THE GENUINE Shatterproof Flexible Warps Long-Lasting FLEX OF GLASS Clear) ONLY -36 inches 364 wide- Lin. Ft. (Crystal Also in 48" widths Storm Deers and Bern, Poultry Protects wells Chair Covers, Windows. Porch and Meg House behind stoves, Garment Begs, Enclosures. Windows.

sinks, tables. Shower Curtains. CUT WITH SHEARS TACK ON- -EASY TO SEAL OR SEW. Marysville Lumber Co. 335 S.

Main. Phone 642-2045 HOLD IN HEAT, KEEP OUT COLD! Just Over Windows. FLEXIBLE PLASTIC CRYSTAL CLEAR Warp's ONLY 36 Run ft. So Easy to 3 ft. wide install Anyone GENUINE FLEX-0-GLASS Also in Can Do It is far stronger 1 ft.

widths ethylene--it's the only So Inexpensive Anyone the Look name for plastic window material Can Afford It on Warp's the branded for GUARANTEED Warp Bros. Chicago 60651 edge protection. 2 FULL Pioneers in Plastics Since 1924 your AT YOUR HARDWARE, LUMBER BUILDING SUPPLY STORE Service Held Today For Lisle Cross Funeral service was held today in the Mackey Funeral Home in Mt. Victory for Lisle C. Cross, a resident of Incor Hotel, Magnetic Springs, who died Friday at Jane Case Hospital, Delaware.

He was 76. Born in Marysville Dec. 2, 1895, he was a member of Mt. Victory United Methodist Church and Hardin County Trotting Association and was a veteran of World War I. Before his retirement, he was an account for C.

K. Elliott Mt. Victory and at Wright Patterson Air Force Base. Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. Charles (Margaret) Scott of Worthington; and Mrs.

Eugene (Julia) Saunders, Delaware; two sons, James of Denver, Lisle of Marysville, and Jerry of Kenton; 16 grandchildren and four great-grandchildren and four sisters. Burial was made in Milford Center Cemetery with the Rev. Floyd Jepsen officiating. Pulitzer "See those grave mounds?" Elias asked as we waited under the trees for a ferry to cross a river where a bridge had been destroyed. About 100 yards away, buffalo grazed quietly around the heaps of earth.

"They're antiaircraft pits with the muzzles down," Elias said. "Let a plane come over and they'll stick up their snoots and blast away. And those things are difficult to spot in pictures. It would take a very expert and very lucky PI (photo interpreter) to see them." The discovery of the flak sites and the industrious people were possibly predictable enough. Enough American planes get shot down each week to adequately suggest the extent of the antiaircraft fire.

And "people power" has long been known as North Vietnam's. most important commodity. What was mindbending to the freed pilots was the extent of North Vietnam's visible supply chain. From the time we left the outskirts of Hanoi at 4 a.m. one morning to our return at 8 p.m.

the next night we constantly encountered vehicle convoys, rows of stacked ammunition alongside the roadsides and gasoline drums. These were stretched out along the 180 miles we drove, and other foreign visitors in Hanoi at the time attested they saw similar scenes on different roads. During daylight the vehicles were casually parked under the inevitable line of trees at roadside. On some long, straight stretches of highway we counted as many as 40 trucks. They seemed extremely vulnerable, but Charles commented, "We could never see those things from the air.

And the moment someone comes down to get a better look them blam, man." -This simple roadside cover hid ammunition caches up to 000 cases in size, according to my fast counts from the moving automobile. Particularly noticeable were concentrations of supplies at bombed-out railway crossings. In the evenings as the trucks began to move south loaded with supplies, the whole operation reminded me of a huge glacier forcing itself slowly but surely down a mountain valley. Reflecting on the scenes one evening at a rest house in Ninh Binh province, Gartley said, "I used to fly over this place and it seemed uninhabited. But look, it is teeming with life." Gartley later said, "All the pilots really have for targets are the cities, the bridges and the railways.

Yet the North Vietnamese move out from the cities and use these back (Continued from Page 1) enlightened me. BOWLING BUSINESS MEN Standings: Watkins Sohio 18- No Names 16-8; JournalTribune 11-13; Norm Smith Dodge 11-13; Union Rural Electric 9-15; Henry Boats 7-17. High ind. series, Lou Kestella 558; high ind. Lou Kestella, 211; high team game, Watkins 1081; high team series, Watkins 3032.

Schedule for Oct. 3: Henry vs Electric; Dodge vs No Names; Journal-Tribune VS Watkins. Watkins Products See Don Graham 1 mile S. on Rt. 38 642-8125 Free Delivery Warplanes (Continued from Page 1) Communist-led action fell to its lowest level since the start of the offensive last March 30.

Striking in an arc ranging from 60 miles north of Saigon to 20 miles east and 40 miles southeast, Communist-led forces heavily shelled a government ranger unit, attacked a convoy moving on a secondary highway and blew up a fuel tank and pipeline. Moving south into the Mekong Delta, the Communists cut Highway 4, the rice supply line to Saigon, by blowing up a small bridge 15 miles southeast of Can Tho, the capital of the delta. Can Tho is 80 miles below Saigon. U.S. B52 bombers kept up their raids in the Saigon region, hitting within 17 to 30 miles of the capital against troop positions and staging areas.

Hien said the bodies of 40 enemy soldiers were found only 17 miles east of Saigon after a B52 raid Sunday. In Cambodia, government troops Sunday cleared Highway 2 all the way down to Takeo, 40 miles south of Phnom Penh, but Communist troops again cut, Route 5, Cambodia's vital "Rice Road," the high command reported Monday. Command spokesman Maj. Chang Song said an airborne brigade from Phnom Penh linked with the defenders of besieged government positions along an 18-mile strip of Highway 2 beginning at Samrong Yong, lifting the pressure and clearing the road at least to military traffic. Kleindienst (Continued from Page 1) President, the figure was 90 per cent.

Southern schools "are more integrated. than in any i major city in the North," he added. Kleindienst said need for prison statistics show that 75 per cent of the persons released from their cells will be arrested for another felony within two years. That is making criminals more hardened rather than rehabilitating them, he said. By NEIL BIBLER Associated Press Writer CLEVELAND (AP) -Gov.

John J. Gilligan says he plans no major tax changes in the next year because he wants "to get the waste and water" out of what he calls a bureaucracyridden state government. Speaking to the Associated Press Society of Ohio Sunday, governor bemoaned briefly the legislature's refusal to give him what he says he needs to dissolve the sticky problems besetting state government. He wanted authority to eliminate some boards and make some other changes by executive order. But on taxes, the thrust of his second address to the AP member editors and publishers since he became governor, Gilligan said he wants to correct what he sees as some inequities in the existing state income tax law.

He also wants defeat of the proposed constitutional amendment he says is being billed as a test of voter attitudes on the income tax but actually has hidden within it a flat-rate tax. Once that flat-rate tax is imbedded in the state constitution, the governor said, it will be far harder to change it back to the graduated type the state has already than it would be to keep it now. When Gilligan proposed a state income tax in early 1971, he said, Ohioans opposed it by a margin of four or five to one. Recently, 56 per cent said they believe the graduated income tax is fairer than either a property tax or a sales tax, he said. Gilligan's comments about governmental bureaucracy came largely in response to questions.

Rather than seeking major revenue changes, he said, "we need time to crank down this vast bureaucratic monstrosity." He said the state has 176 boards and that "it took us seven months to find out where they were" after he took office. The encrustation produces incredible situations, he said, citing as an example the lack of a state inventory two years ago and the contradictory aid payments to the elderly. A aging woman living alone "out in the real world," he said, may get an average of $65 a week The meeting of the Ohio Associated Press newspaper executives opened with Prof. John Behrens discussing of efforts of journalism education. Behrens is a nephew of W.

E. Behrens publisher of the Journal-Tribune. He took over here this past summer at the Journal-Tribune when Paul Fisher managing editor was on vacation. Fisher attended the AP meetings held at the Hollenden House in Cleveland, 0. Behrens is coordinator of journalism studies at the Utica, (N.Y.) College of Syracuse University.

LEGAL NOTICES STATEMENT REQUIRED BY THE (ACT OF OCTOBER 23, 1962; SECTION 4369 TITLE 39 UNITED CODE) SHOWING THE OWNERSHIP, MANAGEMENT AND CIRCULATION OF Marysville Journal-Tribune Published daily except Saturday and Sunday al 207 N. Main Marysville, Ohio 43040 for Sept. 30, 1972. 6. The names and addresses of the publisher, editor, managing editor, business managers are: Publisher, W.

E. Behrens, Marysville, Ohio. Editor, Mrs. W. E.

Behrens, Marysville, Ohio Managing Editor, Paul Fisher, Marysville, Ohio The owner is: (If owned by a corporation, its name and address must be stated and also immediately thereunder the names and addresses of stockholders owning or holding per cent or more of total of stock. If not owned by a corporation, the names and addresses of the individual owner must be given. If owned by a partnership or other unincorporated firm, its nature and address, as well as that of each individual member must be given.) A. Total No. Copies Printed (Net Press Run) B.

Paid Circulation 1. Sales through dealers and carriers, street vendors and counter sales 2. Mail subscriptions. C. Total Paid Circulation D.

Free Distribution (including samples) by mail, carrier or other means 2. Copies Distributed to News Agents, but not sold E. Total Distribution (Sum of and D) F. Office Use, Left-Over, Unaccounted, Spoiled After Print. ing G.

Total (Sum of F--should equal net press run shown in A 1 certify that the statements plete. LEGAL NOTICE IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS OF UNION COUNTY, OHIO Case No. 21392 Kathryn Clevenger Union County Treasurer, PLAINTIFF VSFred Thompson, Lillie C. Thompson A. B.

Ebright and the unknown heirs, devisees, legatees, administrators, executors and assigns of Fred Thompson, Lillie C. Thompson and A. B. Ebright, deceased DEFENDANTS The unknown heirs, devisees, legatees, administrators, executors and assigns of Fred Thompson, Lillie C. Thompson and A.

B. Ebright, deceased, whose names and residences are unknown, will take notice that on the 14th day of September, 1972, the Plaintiff, Kathryn Clevenger, Union County Treasurer, filed her complaint against them in the of Common Pleas of Union County, Ohio, the same being Case No. 21392 in said Court, for the foreclosure of certain real estate in said Complaint described, TO WIT: Being in the line of A. B. Ebright at a corner A.

A. Johnson and John Murphy S. 612 6 deg. 47 50-100 poles to a stake in the center of the road, thence West with said road 15 feet to a stake, thence North 6 6 deg. 47 50-100 poles to a stake in the line of A.

B. Ebright, thence East with said line 15 feet to the place of beginning. The prayer of said Complaint is for foreclosure of unredeemed delinquent land tax on said real estate and for other equitable relief. Said Defendants are required to answer said Complaint on or before the 7th day of November, 1972 or judgment will be taken against them. Kathryn Clevenger, Union County Treasurer By: Richard E.

Parrott 9-18-3M TO THE LETTERS EDITOR GOP Chairman Commends Band Editor, Journal-Tribune: You may know that the Marysville High School band performed on the occasion of the visit to Columbus of Vice President Agnew last week. The Vice President was scheduled to speak to the crowd which greeted him at the Statehouse and arrived somewhat behind schedule. While the crowd was waiting the Marysville band had an opportunity to perform for a somewhat longer period of time than was expected. I want you to know how much all of us appreciated the fine performance of the band. The Marysville High School young people made a great hit with the crowd and with the Vice President and we were delighted to have them with us.

The people of Marysvilleand especially the parents of the band members can be mighty proud of the very fine organization. Sincerely, John S. Andrews, Chairman Ohio Republican Party Landmark Goes Beatley's-on-the-Lake Hotel, a landmark at Indian Lake, will be razed soon to provide Beatley's Holiday Harbor with additional mobile home sites. The Indian Lake summer resort hotel was started 51 years ago by the late Jack Beatley. When you need a New Ford Your best bet is Jim Hurst BOB CHAPMAN FORD Plain City 873-4643 Marysville 642-9141 LEGAL NOTICES Marysville Newspapers, Marysville, Ohio Mrs.

W. E. Behrens, Marysville, Ohio; W. E. Marysville; David G.

Behrens, Marysville; Julienne C. Sekardi, Crystal Lake, Illinois; Mary K. Gray, Hamilton, Ohio; 8. The known bondholders mort. gagees, and other security holders owning or holding 1 per cent or more of total amount of bonds, mortgages, or other securities are: (If there are none, so state.) Union County Federal Savings Loan Marysville, Ohio.

9. Paragraphs 7 and 8 include, in cases where the stockholder or security holder appears upon the book of the company as trustee or in fiducairy relation, the name person or corporation otherne for whom such trustee is acting; also the statements in the two paragraphs show the affiant's full knowledge and belief as to the cir. cumstances and conditions under which stockholders security holders who do not appear upon the books of the company as trustees, hold stock and securities in a capacity other than that of a bona fide owner. Single Issue Average No. Copies Nearest To Each Issue During Filing Date Preceding 12 Months 5126 5496 2856 3348 2140 2056 4996 5404 42 28 36 24 5064 5456 52 40 5126 5496 made by me above are correct and com- W.

E. Behrens, Publisher LEGAL NOTICE IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS OF UNION COUNTY, OHIO Case No. 21391 Kathryn Clevenger Union County Treasurer PLAINTIFF -VSBen Clem and the unknown heirs, devisees, legatees, administrators, executors and assigns of Ben Clem, deceased DEFENDANTS The unknown heirs, devisees, legatees, administrators, executors and assigns of Ben Clem, deceased, whose names and residences are unknown, will take notice that on the 14th day of September, 1972, the Plaintiff, Kathryn Clevenger, Union plaint against them in the Court of County a Treasurer, filed her comCommon Pleas of Union County, Ohio, the same being Case No. 21391 in said Court, for the foreclosure of certain real estate and in said Complaint described, TO WIT: Being all that part Out-lot Number Six (6) in said Village and bounded on the North by an alley, on the East by the West line of Out Number Seven (7), on the South by the South line of V. M.

Survey No. 5127 and on the West by. lands of Lucy A. Lucas. Also, all that part of Out-lot Number Seven (7) in said Village and bounded on the North by an alley, on the East by KenningtonMillers and bounded to said Village, on the South by the South line of V.

M. Survey No. 5127, and on the West the East line of Outtot No. Six (6). The prayer of said Complaint is for foreclosure of unredeemed delinquent land tax on said real estate and for other equitable relief.

Said Defendants are required to' answer said Complaint on or before 7th day of November, 1972 or judgment will be taken, against them. Kathryn Clevenger, Union County Treasurer By: Richard E. Parrott 9-18-3M NOTICE OF ELECTION ON TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF THE TEN MILL LIMITATION Notice is hereby given that in pursuance of a Resolution of the Board of County Commissioners of the County of Union, Ohio, passed on be submitted to a vote of the the 19th day of June, 1972, there people. of said County of Union at a General Election to be held in the County of Union, Ohio, at the regular places of voting therein, on Tuesday, the 7th day of November, the question of levying, in excess of the ten mill limitation, for the benefit of The Board of Health of Union County for the purpose of Current Operating Expenses. Said tax being: a renewal of an existing tax of five-tenths (.5) mills to run for ten (10) years at a rate not exceeding .5, mills for each one dollar of valuation, which amounts to five cents for each one hundred dollars valuation, for ten years.

The Polls for said Election will be open at 6:30 o'clock A.M. and remain open until 6:30 o'clock P.M. Eastern Standard Time of said day. By order of the Board of Elections, of Union County, Ohio. Eugene Rausch, Chairman Jack Scott, Clerk Dated September 27, 1972 10-2-4M Read The Classifieds For Items You Want Read The Classifieds For Items You Want CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS 1.

Chief 4. Virus 8. Tenet 11. Hawaiian baking pit 12. Siouan 13.

Sticky stuff 14. Uninteresting 16. Versus 18. Dawn goddess 20. Make amends 21.

Satisfy 23. Mucilage Leftovers 28. Recede 30: Bone 31. Baa 32. Banquet 34.

Italian river 35. Boring 36. Neophyte 37. Overlook 39. Hatchet 40.

Spunky 42. Romaine 44. Philanthropy 47. Comparative conjunction 50. French assent -51.

Drip 53. Utilize 54. Hankering 55. Sailors' patron saint 56. Hallucinatory drug ABASH SAUCE OPIATE ATTAR BOSTON OBEY SE WAN TOM SPOT AMO IDOL AMA RIM CEDE LAX MAYS LEM ALD Us SMUT TARGET IVIES ORLANA NEARS SMARTY GALES SOLUTION OF YESTERDAY'S PUZZLE DOWN 6.

Vicious 1. Leather elephant 2. Space suit 7. Shameful 3. Christmas 8.

Slighted 4. Proceed 9. Call for help 5. Timetable 10. Witty saying abbreviation 15.

Pilot's record 17. 5 10 19. 21. 413 22. 24.

15 26. 18 19 20 27. 29. 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 31. 33.

28 29 30 31 34. 37. 32 33 34 35 38. 36 37 38 39 41. 40 HI 142 43 43.

44. 44 45 46 147 48 49 45. 46. 50 51 52 53 48. 56 49.

54 55 Par time 28 min. AP Newsfeatures 10-2 52. Oh levision HIGHLIGHTS MONDAY MORNING 6:00 a.m. 4 -Sunrise Sem 10 -Sacred Heart 6:15 a.m. 10-Farm Time 6:30 a.m.

4-Today 10-School Scene 7:00 a.m. 4-Today 6-News, wea, spts 10 News 7:30 a.m. 6-Romper Room 8:00 a.m. 6-Jeff Collie 10-Capt Kangaroo 8:30 a.m. 6-Zoo Revue 9:00 a.m.

4-Paul Dixon 6 Concentration 10-Friendly Jet 9:30 a.m. 6-Jeopardy 10:00 a.m. 6 calls 10-Jokers Wild 10:30 a.m. 4-Phil Donahue 10-Price is Right 11:00 a.m. 6-Love, American 10-Gambit 11:30 a.m.

4-H'wood Squares 6-Bewitched 10-Love of Life MONDAY AFTERNOON 12:00 1 Noon 4-50-50 Club 6-Password 10-News, wea, spts 12:30 p.m. 6-Split Second 10-Search for 1:00 p.m. 6-All My Children 10- Green Acres 1:30 p.m. 4-Three on Match 6-Lets Make Deal 10-World Turns 2:00 p.m. 4-Days of Lives 6-Mike Douglas 10-Guiding Light 2:30 p.m.

4-Doctors 10-Edge of Night 3:00 p.m. 4-Another World 6-Gen Hospital 10-Love is Many 3:30 p.m. 4-Peyton Place 6-One Life to Live 10-Secret Storm 4:00 p.m. 4-Merv Griffin 2:30 6-Flintstones 4-Doctors 10-Movie 10-Edge of Night "Yes Sir, That's 3:00 p.m. My Baby" Donald 4-Another World O'Connor 6-Gen.

Hospital 4:30 p.m. 10-Love is Many 6-I Love Lucy 3:30 p.m. 5:00 p.m. 4-Peyton Place 4-Ponderosa 6 One Life to Live 6-Daniel Boone 10 Secret Storm TUESDAY 4:00 p.m. MORNING 4-Merv Griffin 6:00 a.m.

6-Flintstones 4 -Sunrise Sem 10-Movie 10-Sacred Heart Shrike" June 6:15 a.m. Allyson 10-Farmtime 4:30 p.m. 6:30 a.m. 6-I Love Lucy 4- Today 5:00 p.m. 10-Concern 4-Ponderosa Moment 6- -Daniel Boone 7:00 a.m.

TUESDAY 4. -Today EVENING 6-News, wea, spts 10-News 6:00 p.m. 7:30 4-News, wea, a.m. spts 6 Romper Room 6- Truth, Conseq 8:00 a.m. 10-News, wea, spts 6- -Jeff's Collie 6:30 p.m.

4-News 10-Capt. Kangaroo a.m. 6-News 8:30 Zoo Revue 10-News 6 9:00 a.m. 7:00 p.m. 4-Paul Dixon 4-Beat the Clock 6 Concentration 6-News, wea, spts 10-Friendly Jct.

10 -News, wea, spts 9:30 a.m. 7:30 p.m. 4-Drs. on Call 10:00 6-To 6-Jeopardy Tell Truth a.m. 6-Cols 6 Calls 10-Price is Right10-Jokers Wild 8:00 p.m.

10:30 a.m. 4-Bonanza 4-Phil Donahue 6-Temperatures 10-Price is Right Rising 11:00 a.m. 10 Maude 6-Love American 8:30 p.m. 10 Gambit 6-Movie 11:30 a.m. "Playmates" 4-H'wood Squares Doug McClure 6-Bewitched 10-Hawaii Five-0 10-Love of Life 9:00 p.m.

TUESDAY 4-Bold Ones AFTERNOON 9:30 p.m. 12:00 Noon 10-Movie 4-50-50 Club "Footsteps" 6-Passwoed Richard Crenna 10 -News, wea, spts 10:00 p.m. 12:30 p.m. 4-First Tuesday 6-Split Second 6-Marcus Welby 10 Search for 11:00 p.m. 1:00 4-News, wea, p.m.

6-All My Children 6-News, wea, spts 10 -Green Acres 10-News, wea, spts 1:30 p.m. 11:30 p.m. 4-Three on Match 4-Johnny Carson 6-Lets Make Deal 6-Dick Cavett 10-World Turns 10-Movie 2:00 p.m. "Les Miserables" 4-Days of Lives, Michael Rennie 6-Mike Douglas 1:00 a.m. 10 -Guiding Light 4-Your Health NOTICE We're Moving 2, 1972 New Location: Corner E.

Fourth N. Cherry Sts. presently Stan's Welding Service Due to the increase of our John Deere line of products available for 1973, we are in need of additional floor space. Also for customer convenience we will have much better parking facilities. Stop in and check.

over our 1973 stock we have on hand and find out more about the products available at your John Deere Dealer in the very near future. Bicycles -high rise, speeds, 5 speeds, 10 speeds, electric chain saws, edgers 3 trimmers, shop and hand tools, work gloves, John Deere toys. Monday thru Friday HOURS: Saturday 4-8 p.m. 8:30 a.m. 4 p.m.

CLOSED WEDNESDAY EVENING THROUGH FEBRUARY HORCH TRACTOR SALES John Deere Lawn Garden Equipment JOHN DEERE 717 E. Fourth St. Phone 642-9008 JOHN DEERE Pigeonhole Adroit Mind You and me Book palm Mythical river Good purchase Russet pear Fly high Jumble Thorn apple Toper Eight furlongs Synagogue Demure Tint Yellow tuber Burro Man's nickname Boxing term.

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About Marysville Journal-Tribune Archive

Pages Available:
330,391
Years Available:
1898-2017