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The Salem News from Salem, Ohio • Page 5

Publication:
The Salem Newsi
Location:
Salem, Ohio
Issue Date:
Page:
5
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

I Here and There About Town 3 Forfeit Bonds Three men, arrested over the weekend by police, forfeited bonds of $45 each in Mayor T. Emerson court on charges of disorderly conduct and intoxication. Posting bonds of $25 each on the disorderly charge and $20 for intoxication were Peter R. Murdock, 23, of 876 Homewood Gary Ormes, 19, of 744 N. Lincoln, and Richard E.

Royle, 21, of 484 E. 5th St. Earl A. McClellan 37, of 244 Park Ave. forfeited a $25 bond in court on an assault and battery charge filed by Dana J.

Boyce. Fined on 2 Charges Ormond W. Long, 43, of 488 Columbia St. was fined a total of $45 and costs in Mayor T. Emerson court on two charges.

Long drew a fine of $25 and costs for discharging a firearm in the city limits after pleading He also was fined an additional $20 and costs after pleading guilty to an intoxication charge. Tax Violator Fined Ted F. Cassinger, 22, of 416 S. Broadway was fined $25 and costs by Mayor T. Emerson Smith after pleading guilty to a charge that he failed to pay the city income tax.

The charge was filed by In come Tax Administrator AnA- thony Brelih who said Cassinger did not pay the tax that was due in 1969 and 1970 and failed to file a return for 1971. the second to be prosecuted for evasion of the city income tax. USA Belfast Continued from Page One) sight of neighboring Roman Catholic districts and the UDA had agreed. 99 per cent of the barricades are where we wanted the UDA men said. The UDA took over all police duties inside the barricaded areas, which its men patrolled in two trucks hijacked from the regular police.

Outside the barricades, police were keeping an eye open for Gusty Spence, convicted murderer and Shankill hero who was kidnaped Sunday night while on parole from jail to attend his daughter's wedding. They acfmitted they hold little hope of finding him. Spence, 39, is the former head of the Ulster Volunteer Force, a banned Protestant counterpart to the IRA. He was jailed for life in 1966 for the murder of a Catholic barman. His kidnaping immediately evoked two theories: Either Gusty had been by his own side and was safe and well behind the barricades, or he had been captured by the IRA, in which case his life expectancy would be short.

A spokesman at UDA headquarters emphatically denied that his organization was behind the liberation. Soyuz Meets Apollo Sometime in 1975, if all goes according to schedule, dramatic evidence of the new cooperation between the earth's two greatest powers will take place 166 miles above the surface with the rendezvous and docking of an American Apollo spacecraft and a Soviet Soyuz. NASA models for the joint project approved at the Moscow Summit show, above, Soyuz and Apollo linked by a Docking Module (knobbed structure at center). Below, the airlock permitting American and Soviet crews to pass between spacecraft. Lower end has docking mechanism compatible with Apollo, upper end with Soyuz.

Capture latches on the spacecraft grasp and lock onto airlock. Left, Apollo and right, Soyuz model. THE SALEM NEWS 5 Tuesday, July 4,1972 Four Persons Injured In Road Mishaps Two Salem women were treated and released at Salem Com- munitv Hospital East after a one-car accident at noon Monday on Rt 62 in Canfield Ruth Quinn, 40, of N. Ellsworth Ave. suffered a forehead bruise, while Pauline Quinn, 35, of 448 E.

Perry St. received abrasions of the lower lip. Neither the Canfield post of the Ohio Highway Patrol nor Canfield police could provide additional details. A Lake Milton man and his son were injured Monday at 9:40 a in a one-car accident ion Rt. 18 (Mahoning Ave at the junction of Turner Road.

Richard Cousins and his son Richard. 12, apparently refused hospital treatment. The younger Cousins suffered severe facial cuts. According to the Canfield post ol the Highway Patrol, Cousins was eastbound on Rt. 18 when he was forced off the right side of the road by a passing car and struck two poles The driver of the other car could not be identified.

Not Leaalized In United States Ohio Road Toll Once-a-Month Contraceptive Remains at 18 Pills a ken by Latin Women Fischer Continued from Page Onei censorship. He the room was of illiterate people, how do you Associated Press Writer get them to take a pill every ATLANTA, Ga. Once single day? a month, when the moon is full, monthly pill, then, is a thousands of women in Mexico great boon for them But how and Chile take an oral con- do you explain to them that ed 39 strictions in move-by-move and By The Associated Press July 4 holiday traffic death count remained at 18 through Monday, giving rise ho(0 rf grwsome by toku the state Department ot High- way Safety wont be met. ol Slater made his offer after The department has est.mat- the Man(lic chess i io dle on Ohio ting out on time Inspector Michael Tampas says! carrier told me that hotels or motels who over-! their planes were bom con- charge can be fined up $590 sistently delayed by reason of after a special hearing, flying the head tax collection and re- Internal Revenue Service fusal processes, from 20 mm- public information officer Hol- Ihe sponsors announced re-jutes to an hour and 25 minutes, ger Euringer of Jacksonville of people refused says South Florida motel and to pay the tax, upon which re- hotel operators have been fusal most carriers asked the warned they cannot charge passenger to fill out and sign a -summer conventjon gUesls win- special form. Philadelphia citv officials tu rates- As tor the hot dog, it will cost, traceptive developed by a Geor- they should fake the pill on the ways before the end of the 102- they would make clear gia doctor who says it is 90 to 25th day of their menstrual hour holiday.

gate Wii, would have that stiif lines 35 cents inside Convention Hall. 93 ifdwfawiTwith the tvran tell them to take it Thc last recordod dealh amounted to considerable sums Penalties await those who A nearby restaurant says its It does away with the tyran- them totate.it curred in Toledo Sunday when for both Fischer and Spassky leluse 93 eenls But But airline i DEE-LICIOUS! HAVE A SAFE HOLIDAY! ny of taking a pill 365 days 3 year and reduces it to 12 times a said Dr. Robert B. HkJ1 In? mZ Thll Harry was because the match could last as But airline representatives first month is hazardous for as Greenblatt of Augusta devel-jstill getting pregnant. But when .25 he "taM oper of the once-a-month pill.

the bodv regulates itself to the tne uiniur 10 receive wh izo countries are getting pill, then it becomes an(l the loser plus 30 0 rcli ef the advantage of it said Greenblatt said. began Friday per cent for each of the income One official said uniters Greenblatt, chairman of the en- pill contains both estro- af m- midnight from sale of television and pho- refusing to pay tne tax will eludes french fries. docrinology department of the gen, which has a protracted ef Medical College of Georgia, feet so that it acts to prevent being used extensively for the next Mexico and Chile. and progesterone, which insur-i probabiy will be about 10 es a period in the current years before the Food and Drug Administration allows it During latter stages of devel Tuesday. June (Continued from Page One) in this the researcher opment several years ago, the! vvould tographic rights.

told they are subject to fines of private enrichment of not 'css not rnore the pot could be used to up the an(J imprisonment ol winner's prize to $156.000, with not than 30 days nor more the remainder of his funds go- 90. He said the city wii ing to boost thc share, track down and prosecute anv- He said another alternative one refuses to pay. be to add the entire The airlines, who are fightin; on record. The other cold June 1912, when a total of $208,125. said in a telephone interview, monthly pill prevented preg- not an ideal birth control nancy in all 138 trials in 40 ninrninpv.

u.pr„ pill, about 90 to 95 per cent I Georgia women. were noted and in and has some side Most of his patients. Green- 1u4- 1 effects. blatt said, weie 7 a satisfactory one. with not having to remember to particularly for underdeveloped take a pill a day.

Damage is difficult to assess, Greenblatt said. few had side effects such says Copeland, but June was example, say in Thailand or as bleeding and nausea. But of the poorest on rec- April 19 upholding the use and $130.000 to the cut for the new levy in court, are not Tax now held responsible ting the colle tee (Continued from Page One) Hof Dogs (Continued from Page Taiwan, or in any country no medicine in the where you have great massesi world that's he added. Vie! ord for hay harvests due the service charges in Hamp- 24 hours a day. and the s-rist combination of wet weather, be- and Evansville, Ind.

authority will function 18 hours low normal temperatures and As for the situation at a day with its lack of sunshine. delphia. the ATA vice president service. Very little hay was for public affairs, Warren But tht. cornmission will during the last half of the Martin described it as un- de armed with anything more month, he reports, since it ram- godly than the p()Wer ot' jX! ed 15 days in June.

Average head-tax collection temperatures are needed with problems, combined with the By JANET STAIHAR The security agent wheeled! sunshinc and several days heavy holiday traffic, jammed Associated Press Writer I Wallace to a' curb corner in without rain to straighten tmngs he ermtnal area with SILVER SPRING, Md. (API front of the hospital so that ou(. long mes of passengers in front Alabama Gov. George q.I photographers could take pic-j HaIv Pm cc Wrteni- tnroc a raintaii ot as incnes saici. airline reported that 3.59 inches above normal.

none of their planes were get- Wallace Leaves Hospital For 4-Hour Dinner Outing 12 Special Subscription FAMILY OFFER Unlimited Ambulance Service For One Year This offer qood for any area within 12 miles of Salem, including Lisbon, Leetoma, Columbiana and Damascus! $5 extra for next of kin in same dwelling. $15 for convalescent patient in nursing home. CLIP THIS COUPON AND MAIL TO: GOLD CROSS Ambulance Service 383 N. Lincoln Salem, Ohio 44460 0 NAME ADDRESS CITY Age of dependents under 18 yrs. of age Expiration date July 6, 1972 GOLD CROSS AMBULANCE SERVICE 383 N.

Lincoln Salem Phone 337 3441 (Continued from Page One) ment counteroffensive. Enemy activity also appeared' to be building around Song Be, a provincial capital 75 miles Wallace left Holy Cross Hospi- tures. Wallace smiled yf UI a northeast of Saigon. Sources tal Monday for a four-hour out- waved, saluted and raised two wrufn fingers in a sign. No news-j men were allowed to talk toj him.

Photographers and newsmen, were stationed behind a barricade in a parking lot, about 50 feet from where Wallace en -1 tered near the back of the I building. Wallace appeared slightlv Saigon said a Soviet-made 130mm gun ing to eat an early dinner at his had been moved into position home in nearby by the North Vietnamese and: Bethesda, Md. was firing on the city 35 miles it was the second time that northeast of Loc. another Wallace had left the hospital provincial capital that has since he was wounded at a po- come under attack. A newiRtical rally.

North Vietnamese unit of sev-i The recuperating governor eral thousand men was report- left the hospital with his wife, ed in the area. i Cornelia, for the home of Dr. In the air war over North Joseph Schanno, who has been tanned and he did not look ab- Vietnam, American planes heading the medical team normally thin, pounded the Uong Bi power treating Wallace's gunshot Roy Smith, a spokesman for plant 10 miles northeast of Hai- wounds. the campaign staff phong for the second time in Wallace, dressed in brown here, said Wallace is less than six weeks. The U.S.

slacks and a white short- very sleeved shirt, waved from the He said the governor dined back seat of a limousine when Sunday night in Mrs. In a delayed report, the com- he returned to the hospital. hotel room a few mand said a U.S. Navy A7 was; Mrs. Wallace emerged from drive from the hospital, lost over the North on June 18 the car first and a security offi- Wallace's press aides had not and the pilot is missing.

cer then lifted Wallace into a wheelchair. Thanks Command said the facility was heavily damaged In railroad parlance, gandy dancers are section men who work on the roadbed. rbmmtearcen E. State St. 332-4401 W.

RAY PEARCE RAY J. GREENISEN Directors leroy a. denny Age a XV- Services 2:30 p.m. Wednesday dm j- I rrrr I Arbaugh-Pearce Funeral Home Calling hours 7-9 Tuesday evening. mentioned the Sunday outing until Monday afternoon.

Wallace will leave Holy Cross Friday morning, stopping over in Alabama before going to the Democratic National Convention in Miami Beach. 10U EAST STATE OHIO RUSSELL C. LOUDON TAMES M. GIFFIN OWNftS mtionu aJCTO WnWW WASHINGTONVILLE EVENT The the Committee will operate a refreshment stand at the fireworks display to be put on by the Washingtonville VFW tonight on its property. The profits will go to build a place for thc bell and possibly into a fund to be used in renovating the village hall.

PROTECTION ON BIKES ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) At least five police officers bicycle their way through high crime areas in the city. The bicycles are those recovered by police and never cla'm- ed by owners. (j Thinking of a New Home Getting Your Excavating Scheduled? Phone 337-3764 Building and Excavating Since 1956 TUESDAY TIPS Question: Do you prefer aluminum over vinyl siding? Answer: No, a great deal depends on the individual taste. Here are a few ideas to consider: We have used both sidings many times and our experience has taught us how to handle each product.

Our personal preference is vinyl siding because we feel it is a longer lasting product, but there is one maior disad vantage to vinyl and that is, it does not apply as nicely as aluminum, Thc iob doesn't look quite as good. Even though vinyl costs a little more and doesn't look as good as aluminum, we still prefer vinyl. Each product certainly has its application. Aluminum is long lasting and durable also; therefore, our advice is to consider both products to fit your individual tastes and needs. What Are Your Building Problems? If Ready When He Comes.

Your News Carrier is a busy lad schoolworlc to keep up with, homework to do and daily good service for his customers. Then arrives the time when he makes his collections in order to pay for his papers and secure his profit for the week. Needless to say, his favorite customers are those who make it unnecessary for him to make several calls to collect. To these, his extra special thanks! THE SALEM 161 N. Lincoln Ave.

Salem, Ohio.

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About The Salem News Archive

Pages Available:
228,531
Years Available:
1906-1977