The Chickasha Daily Express (Chickasha, Okla.), Vol. 81, No. 310, Ed. 1 Wednesday, March 6, 1974 Page: 16 of 20
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Chickasha Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
1
By Bruce Biossat
WASHINGTON (NEA)
1
9
SWIFT’S PREMIUM PROTEN BEEF
A
s
75
A
*17
CAMELOT PURE VEGETABLE
d
\
c
A
1
SHANK PORTION
\
C
Smoke
A69
Chunk Tuna jf 47*
4
A
Ha
%
15
EShould youexperienceabadeggwithin seven days
Ewom puhase Humpty will replace that one "ih
$>2
!)
}
4
18 99'
b
2
y
€
0
1
99
LB.
224 4359
2243707
PACKAGES
71 1 Michigan
GREEN STALKS
r
4 JI
I
U.S.MI CALIFORNIA
FRESH RADISHES OR
<
5 w *100
supermarkets
It
SAVE
8C
SAVE
11C
SAVE
12 FOR 1 EGG GUARANTEE
GRIFFIN
um
—SIXTEEN THE CHICKASHA DAILY EXPRESS, Wednesday, March 6, 1974
Democrats Are Not Faced With Jackson Vs. Kennedy Campaign. . . Yet
A Salad
Favorite
3-LB.
CAN
s
s
SAVE
3c
I Card •
‘ 63739
P Ebeitort
i ‘10.
Chuck
Steak
2LB
PKG
11
C
Wilson Cerlilied l2 Lb Pkg $2 17]
Sliced Bacon................
Oscar Mayer Reg or All Reel
Skinless Wieners........
Swift Premium Reg or Hol Sausage
Brown & Serve...........
ROOEO
Sliced Bacon................
WILSON CERTIFIED WHOLE OR HALF
Boneless Ham..............
WILSON CERTIFIED
Smoked Pork Chops...
WILSON CERTIFIED
Smoked Sausage
SWIFT PREMIUM
Skinless Franks.
WILSON CERTIFIED
Sliced Bologna....
WILSON CERTIFIED ROLL
Pork Sausage.......
TENNESSEE PRIDE
Pork Sausage.......
WILSON CERTIFIED CHUNK
Braunschweiger..
ME
Or
Sav
M
SAL
Fr
Sav
Sh
' CW.
105946
M Searcy
‘10.
c
(
F
t
‛E
R
INCOME TAX
$4 ond Up
Certified Tax Service
Allan Huffines
SAVE 4C ON CAMELOT
Instant Potatoes
SAVE ON CAMELOT ALL GREEN
Cut Asparagus
SAVE 4C ON CAMELOT
Apple Sauce.....
SAVE 3C ON CAMELOT
Fancy Spinach
SAVE ON CAMELOT
Tomato Sauce.
SAVE 3C ON CAMELOT CUT
Green Beans
SAVE 2c ON CAMELOT WHOLE KERNEL
Golden Com
SAVE 5C ON CAMELOT _____
Whole Tomatoes
RANCH'N RAIL
Sliced Bacon
TEXAS RUBY RED GREEN STALKS
Grapefruit„.„O «69c Crisp Celery
telephone to this key base of democratic contribu-
tors.. .confirm the sense that the Kennedy campaign has
begun, even if for tactical reasons it remains unannounced
for another year or more."
COLORADO RED A eq U S MI CALIFORNIA FRESH RADISHES OR
Rome Apples ...4 Ji Fresh Carrots 26 39' Green Onions...2.29,
S
G
a9
Shortening
ALLPURPOSE __ Am6m
Camelot FlourS7e
h
It
C
<
The excised portion of that paragraph indicates that calls
have gone back and forth between the Californians and Ken-
nedy. aide Paul Kirk, and former aide David Burke. The
proper thing to say is that there have been calls, yes, but that
they have absolutely nothing of the significance ascribed to
them by the initial New York Times account. Kennedy and
his aides not only practice the normal political courtesies,
but have a built-in habit of ' keeping in touch" everywhere.
Lastly, the notion ascribed to Willens that if Kennedy does
not act quickly Jackson will have the 1976 nomination sewed
up is patent nonsense. Intervening before that decision is
laken more than two years from now are the 1974 elections, a
1974 party-issue convention and some 23 primaries.
' PER POUND
ON LARGE
T FAMILY SIZE
Return To
(HWITH HUMPTY'S OWN
— You probably thought quality was gone forever, but not true. It's
Ma 1208
AVE
IOC
where freshness abounds .
VINE RIPENED SLICERS j
Tomatoes A
218.8229
!
1
A
rest of his family, and the publics view of the 1969 Chappa-
quiddick episode could conceivably change his mind. He
would love the battle.
The first Times account - "Kennedy is running" - was so
badly garbled it even trapped the follow-up reporter in er-
ror Curiously. it did not evoke the flood of other reporters'
telephone calls w inch usually pour in after what looks like a
hard-kerneled Kennedy political story.
fhe stated source of the initial account was one Harold
Willens, California real estate man, who had lunched with
Kennedy in Washington Feb. 6.
Willens earlier had told a Kennedy aide Jackson's forays
were "making him nervous."
Bui the anti-Jackson tone of his remarks as set down in the
first Times piece annoyed Kennedy, who viewed them as
divisive for the party. Willens and his friends raised millions
for Eugene McCarthy in 1968 and Sen. (Jeorge McGovern in
AA LARGE SIZE SWEET
• ••••EA 290 Tangerines
188139
195109
MEA
Af
CAN
Gr
SAVI
To
SAVE
Or
4
18 89
185123
1972, and naturally see Jackson as unacceptably conserva-
tive.
Part of what Willens said was badly misrepresented and it
was here that the follow-up reporter himself was misled.
The first story indicated Willens had told at least two
wealthy California industrialists, Max Palevsky and Miles
Rubin, that Kennedy was running.
The second reporter got from Willens the word that this
impression of his coversation with Kennedy was "over-
drawn." But the reporter accepted the idea Willens had told
his friends something highly encouraging about Kennedy's
intentions. In fact, as Willens later telephoned to a Kennedy
aide, he had not even talked to Palevsky and Rubin nor tried
to spread the notion anywhere else that Kennedy's can-
didacy was set.
Probably even worse misguidance in the first Times story
comes from the assertion that “constant ministrations by
IS 99'
188189
‛ Fa
BONUS PACK SPECIALlTZ
JP'
SWIFT PREMIUM
PROTEN
Arm Swiss
Steak
$118
78
LILY GRADE A
Large Eggs
ooz 77c
LILY GRADE A
Med. Eggs,
ooz 69c
188116
$2559
KOSHER CURED
Claussen
Pickles
*£ 88C
"h
\
>
-48
Our Daring Guarantee
N for any roason you or*
Do vatisfied with any Came
Poduct, return the unused PD
lion, and well give you I
“Ome size national brand °
/our choice -
Or it you prefer, well giw•
you your money bock
M 83,
/• •
3 te'
2
FRESHSEIg—
odtmnbqce2
l ro-Israel Sen Henry M Jackson's frequent forays into
California s big-contributor Jewish communitv have set off
conflicting reports over the prospect Sen Edward Kennedy
might be involved in countering moves bent toward the 1976
Democratic presidential nomination.
On successive days, the New York Times printed con-
tradictory stories - the first saying Kennedy is already run-
ning. the second that it is “extremely unlikely" he will run
Party leaders with their antennas raised high must surelv be
bewildered.
First off, just for the record, the second item is closer to the
present truth Kennedy is indeed not disposed to run but he
is keeping the door open. To tell inquiring political visitors
he is holding ott decision until late 1975 is not really uncan
did. as the second Times account indicated, since-altered
circumstances involving his crippled 12-vear-old son the
Oscar Mayer
Reg or All Beef
Sliced
Bologna
s 68'
see, why so many people believe in Humpty’s Camelot Quality.
ALL GRINDS 1-LB
Camelot Cofiee99*,
1k 95'
SAVORY
Skinless
Franks
s 69'
eg
WI GLADLY
ACCEPT
USDA
820) STAMPS
LARGE SWEET CALIF. NAVEL
Oranges
68
RODEO TABLE TRIMMED
Quarter
Pork Loin
2098
16.0z, 4,
I CAN UU
15 DZ 47,
PKG. I •
,'h 20‘
802 37C
CAN • ■
1602 26'
I CAN EU
169 22,
CAN E=
WILSON SLICED
Lunch
Meat
:sr RQ,.,
■Pirtle . | 6 0Z
iKlChmiVV PKG
D)c
1760% Cl
FURNITURE CO.
Your Authorized •
Dealer
ft SAAE
eE SERVICE
410 Chickasha Ave.
Chickasha
GREEN MABEET STREE
dsgc9
MOST
STORES
OPEN
24
HOURS
___
End Of Line
For Moving
Firm Owner
WASHINGTON i UPI) - “If
the labor unions ever run the
country," she said, "well all I
can say is God help America."
Uien Marie Shultz cried.
It had been a tough 32 weeks
for Mrs. Shultz, 63-year-old
owner of a small, Waukegan,
Ill., moving firm.
Thirteen of her 14 trucks
have been repossessed by the
bank. She estimates she is
losing up to $28,000 a month on
a business that grossed $268,000
in 1972. She is tired and
confused and angry.
Marie Shultz is fighting the
Teamsters. Specifically, she is
fighting Teamsters Local 705,
which she said has ordered a
strike against her firm because
the local demanded she sign a
new contract without first
negotiating it.
She didn’t sign.
Still Marching
That was 32 weeks ago and
the pickets—six of her former
employes—are still marching.
So Mrs. Shultz came to
Washington, for 10 days she has
walked from agency to agency,
appealing for help. She has
talked to dozens of bureaucrats.
She has talked to senators and
congressmen.
Her briefcase is bulging with
lists of places she has been,
names of people she has been
passed on to, along with
pictures of her 2-year-old
grandson, "who was going to
have this (the firm) some
day.”
“I've walked 30 miles, I
know," she said wearily. "I've
walked because I can’t afford
taxis or buses. I borrowed the
money to get here and now I
have to go home because I
don't have enough to pay for
another night at my hotel."
It is hard not to feel
compassion for the woman as
she talks of a business she has
put "my heart into" for 28
years.
In 1946 she bought three
panel trucks and together with
her new husband, Louis, they
delivered goods to 10 grocery
stores at 25 cents a delivery.
The fledgling firm of Merchant
Moving and Storage grossed
$6,000 the first month.
Powerful Union
Now her husband is in
Florida. He is dying. And
Merchant Moving and Storage
is floundering under the weight
of a powerful labor union.
Mrs. Shultz recalled the
major part of the firm’s work-
90 per cent—was moving
household goods for the milita-
ry. Now her one truck (under
lease) cannot even get on a
military base, much less move
any goods to or from it.
How does she get by, she was
asked.
"My creditors are being
beautiful,” she replied, trying
to smile and dabbing at tears
at the same time. “They’re
staying away from me. My
credit was ace high before all
this happened.”
She had a two-word assess-
ment of her mission to
Washington: "People listened."
But she was not sure her
pilgrimage will result in any
changes in Local 705's policies.
“I'm afraid this will go on until
I'm dead, " she said
3859
AZ,34
2g 11 ’
SWIFT PREMIUM
PROTEN
Rib
Steak
5118
»----------------
CENTER CUT RIB
Pork
Chops
$128
—————$
FISHER BOY FROZEN
Fish
Sticks
802 QQc
PKG Qq
FRESH CUT
Fryer
Breasts
wt 7Q
# -0
■ / 0000000200000000000000000
78 AOUBLK YOUR MONEY BACK 8
Ke.E U MEAT GUARANTEE g
K 8 =g we guarantee compiote §
hN = customer satisfactios •• all our si
D Mill NRWNI completoly S
C satised (fer MT reasoa) we •*
y - rofund twice the perchew pico 5
s 500000000000000000000000000005
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Drew, Charles C. The Chickasha Daily Express (Chickasha, Okla.), Vol. 81, No. 310, Ed. 1 Wednesday, March 6, 1974, newspaper, March 6, 1974; Chickasha, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1867012/m1/16/: accessed December 12, 2025), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.