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\

Change FTC or KU) i1 Nixon Advised
~::=~
W, VL (UP()
~
-.barinp-

it - · 111111111 llllllhe
oeedaa of a.eolel'. T be

.... I!P
aalll

itiiiiPI..-1 1;lridp woulcl Unk u. s. 30 "'
Cillo RlvOr Weill Vlrlbda,and Qlli&gt; II.
"Tbt ..., lhlll wo - ....
bridll
Cboolel' IIIII
l'.ut LIYei!IOOI, a.lo, a Weot Ia to detmnlno the top of the

"'!:=.

Vlrlbdalload Cilmmlalkm apok. roek," Cblef Harry Slophooo of
11le brldao division of 11le Weill
....... llld lodiJ,
Tho aile Cl( the new brtd&amp;o, Vlrstnfa Rood ('&lt;Hilllllalllon llld.
-~ Cl(amlloabove •"TbJ.a Is so we ean make a pre.
tho brldilo ordered clooed be- llmlaary · - of the &lt;011
..... Cl( Ita unaafe &lt;OOIIItlon of buDding the jJI.era. etc. n
lui apriaa, Is ICI'Ois the south-

Nation

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·(~hUD-1)

tolklna Ia 1onns

of units atlOO
per cent otreogth.
Nixon took die occasion to
urp llaDol apln to undertaloo
noaotlallona truly leedl,. to
cea•Uoa of hoatllhlea.
Referrtrw to the over-all
eutbaek Cl( 60,000 U.S. troops 1&gt;1
Dec. 15 the President said in a
written statement, "the time
for meeniJII(ul negotiatloos has
therefore arrived."
He added: "I realize that it is
difficult to cmunwlicate acrosa
the su1f of the yeers of War.
But the time tea come to enl
thl.a war.
"Let history record that at
thla critical manent, both aides
turned their .facea toward peace
ntber than toward eonlliet and

war."

Sewerage

Jiggled
P AHUTE MESA, Nev. (UPO A new hydrogen weapon, believed
to be one of the most powerful
attlmiuile warheads ever test-ed was touched oa underground
tnday, swaying hlgb- rise gambUrw resorts in. Las Vegas and
j1ggling seismogra.Phs coast to
ccast.
The uoderground theflll()fllclear explosion, described by

military experts u "a future
weapon very Important to American security,•• carved a cavern almost 700 teet in diameter
and dii!Pla&lt;ed 10 million tons of
roek,
A red frame shack cortaining
triggering devices jumped 30 teet

into tlle air at shot time as the
100- footlnatrumentpoekagewas
detonated 3,800 teet beneath the

earth's surface.
The "bargain basement deto(CGN!IIIed !rem I)
nadon," budgeted at onb $3 mil·
111 ~ re4Ulatlon nolice om.cer lion, was viewed by reporters on
lhlrts for Honry Werey. Couo. television monlton 12,00~feet
dlman Don CoiUns llloled that a from · grourd zero. A rolliJW" 1,~
Jfll'b' elolhing allowance shoulcl 500 - foot hlgb hUI acted as a
be set up for the ofllcers. How. shield between the viewing point
and the detonatloo site but the
eJer. 110 action was taken.
- d &lt; , wbowaspro..at,re. shock came as an abrt4}t jolt at
porteclthat 200
have boon that distance.
moiled UJ1IIag reoldeots to pa,y
dollniWII waler 111111 sewage
bills. The deadllae for ~
lhese' two billa, aeoordlng to the
lalellllollolalloa pasoed by eoundl, Ia lhe l.lth of aaeb IDOIItb.
A payroll error made Ia t b e
eho&lt;k of Mra. Edith Slsaoo, a po.
Uce dlapa:teher. was discussed.

·-r•

Raiders

Kill24

· ·e·

cuPO .., Aape&lt;lal.fOI)C)I'I ... )lld It ... 1110
Uno to Prea- Nixon - eitber ei1INe lhe leodOrllhlp of lhe
- . i l Trldo cc.d.fasiCNI ~ a-.'lta)lriorliiH&lt;!irabollah
the 55--y..-..old qency. '14 0ft.n the qeney hu 11emed ~
eon&lt;,eriled wi11l Protectintt ·...,.,.utors of an onterPriae prae-.
tldrw; deception laitwr dan· thtoonaurilera." a apeelal C'CIIDDliasiCNI said Motiiii.Y Ia a -·UIIIl r~ .., 1110.FI'C,
Nlxm hod requeated tile Amerlean Bar Asooetatlon's...,..
mlaslon to.atully the FTC to ree&lt;11111110nddlangesla the IIIOIItY.
formed before WOI'Id War I to ldmlnlater antitrust and trade
resuJad-.
The spedal tciiUnluloo's ""ort to the Pre-nt uld the
FTC's Cailure to J1]aa and Its procedural delays 11are abed aa
serious today as at IIQ' time in the agency's-hbtory."
The f1IDO&lt;t uld FTC's tanur.. to aUoellla •1111Ullb funds
lor &lt;OOIUIIIor proteetlon, "partleularb' aplaat looaBied fraiMI
' and deeepllon, far antlmerpr enforeep10nt, monitorqoftalse
adverdslac and far tc~~~Pillnee PfGil'llllO, hive aappod the
FTC'a etrectlwnet• in critical are&amp;L" The report concluded, ·
''it e.... does not occur, there wlll be no substantial purpose
to be senod b,y Ito eontl- exlllleoce."

wASHiNG'roN

~ thet Melp COurCj&lt; Common Pleas Ju&lt;lao JCJitn.C.
Bacon was inJured Ia a motor&lt;:yele accident Monday ~parent.
lyareuot.unded.
His Hoeor, who eammutes daii.Y !rem his home Ia Anti- .
qulty to his COJI'thouse offlee by cyde, was· ~to hiVe
been 4lpped olthil vehicle oo Fast Main st., In the ar• of the
sewenge llne&amp; Installation.
HOwever' Holzer Hospital Medical Center inf.iaWpolts aa1d
the JOOge ts ID IOD[I conditloo after his admlsalon Mon:tay at
1:20 p.m. lor treetment of a blood elotln a leg. The hOSPital
hod no record of the eondltlon hi~ been eaused 1&gt;1 an aeet·
dent, nor waa there any record rl an investigation of an acct..
deri. on ftle at Pomeroy town lalL

Probing

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S.leel·.: ·v~o!u,r . ·

MANNINGTON, W, Vo. (UPI)
-Volunteers reenter the Mannington No. 9 mine today to
deal with 'waf~gb waler and
a roek taU thet temporarily
has stalled a seareb tor the 78
bodleo loeked in the lab)'rlatb
for Dine months.

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ekong Delta Friends Shot
U.S. Copter Gunships Error

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Flvo ,...... and 12 men •ere · troops •era pJantlng an uploo Wounded.
wounded.
alve cleYb:~ll)pareDtly a mloe
Communist losna were lm11 boppaoed IIOir Bac !Aeu, I . - ...... the charge ndeiOnlted ' known In the boWing that
provinelal eapllal . 120 mllos frCID an unkiKMII cauao." An Oared Tuesday In the northern
aouthWeat ~ Sallon-OM ot. the laveltlpUon ls under w a 1• · coastal w.lley where more than
•orot llll' aeeidellll ~ ~~~&lt;~~&lt;eamea aaid.
1,000 North Vletnomeae 111111 80
b)' U.S. IPOkaiiDOD this year.
~illeld aetlvlty Tuesday u.s. troop• died In llgbUng
"The 111CI4tnlla bei111Jiaveeti- a~ today •as reported Ugbt, during Au&amp;uot, communiques
pted," the announcemanl. all&lt;!- wltb OYirnlgbt guerriUa roekol oald.
"'l'hero 1111 oo reported ground aDd 1110111ir atlaeka kUiq Dlno
Twenty-five miles dorm the
eollllet with the eiiOIIIY and . elvUians 111111 •OIIII!fnK 2t. A South OIIIB Seo eoost, guerrilla
there !lore no (South VI- reauraonee of l!gbtii1IJ In 1110 ....,.ra slammed 12 mortar
meso Arlnj&lt;) or \J,S. casual- Que Son Valley eoat AmeriCan rounds Into Blm Son during the
ties."
troopa1 two diU and 21 night, ldlllrv ahc ctvUians ard
~-n llld helleGptarl
evoeuoted ' lhe - b ' •0011111ed elvlllano to holpllalo.
·
SAIGON (IJPI) - Two U.S. Army helleopters eolllded In
lt waa 0111 of two
war.
,.
lll&amp;ht today just soutll of So..... klllilw an 12 Amerleana
aeeldenta ...,.,...... lodiJ, In .a
abeord. The eollislm oeeurred abooll5 miles south of il1e eapdelayed fOI)C)I'I, biliidqujirlers
llal and IDYO!ved a UHI cOI!ID1811d llelleopter and an AHI holluld ~ U.S. soldiers •ere
eopler gunshljl, Amerlean miUtary sources aald. The eolll..
kUiod old 10 ware . - e d Ia
10. oeeurred In the Mekong Dalla.
an eip~ 33 "!Ilea ,oorlhweol
of Silla.IMI. last ~ · •
Tha , _ , _ , . . llld lhe

PLANT
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NOW!
SPRING BLOOMING BUlBS
PLANT BULBS NOll' FOR BEAUTY IN THE SPRING. SPRING GARDENS
ARE CREATED IN AUTII/.IN. SEPTEMBER AND OCTOBER ARE THE
MONTHS, TO .PLANT ~ULBS· ALTHOUGH PLANTING IS POSSIBLE .
UNTIL THE GROUND FREEZES. CHOOSE YOUR FLOII'ER BULBS
NOI' FROM THE BIG SELECTION OF TULIPS, CROCUS, DAFFODILS,

wounding 13 Ut one of a dm.en
overnight sheDqo.
The .., Que Son light!,.
llared 32 miles lOUth of Do
N1111J with troopers of the U.S.
!96th Light Infantry Brigade
runnllli Into d111-in North
Vietnamese troops whlle on a
aweep T u e s d a y morni~,
spokeamen said.
calllrc ln alr strikes and
artillery onto the guerrilla
position, the Amerlcans
sUenced the realstaoce but
!ound no North Vietnamese
bndias. One U. S. trooper qs
killed and six were •ounded.
At dusk, the !96th aoldlero
ran into another entrenched
band of Hanoi soldiers, spokesmen said. The Americana
forced them to withdraw but
again found 1lo bodies whlle
losing one kUiecl and 15
wounded.

U.S.

~rters

deaerlbed

ftghtlrw across South
Vietnam genenll.y as llaht,

grouOO

with · 23 North VIetnamese
soldiers rf()OI1ed slain northest
of Sa igoo Ill another fi&amp;ht In
which no · Ame1'lcans were ·
kUied.
Of the 12 overnight Viet eo,.
and North Vietnamese mortar
aOO. rocket attacks against
allied towns and basu, ab:
caused casualties or damage,
acconlllli to allied heedquar·
ters.
U.S. B52 bombers, tn Ove
Overnight missions, bombarded
suspected Conummist troqJ
co~ntratl~s,

1\CJPI.v

areas,

staglag bi ~~cs and WeapoN

.POsitions 11\-1 three sections ot.
South VleiiBin. Military 'Pokesmen said 450 tona or buDbs
were dfwped, with DO intorma~
tlon avaUable on damage.

NARCISSUS, HYACINTHS, ANEMONES, !lUSCAR! AND OTHERS.
t6,

T"" teams went Ia Monday
evening to set up ccmmunica·
Ilana after the Initial .1111ir Cl(
recovery crews, totaling 19

Royal .... Saleet - · will
meet Wednoodly, Sepl. 17, at
7:30 p.m. at the MaiCNIIe Temple Ia Pomeroy, All eoropaniOOB
111111 llr k11lgbta are lmlted. Ro-

men. probed the mine for

fresiUnonla will be oerved.

rour

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Du.tch ,lloWer::·

SEEDING PLANNED
(UPI) ltlrritiDO
Holly moved closer IDdl1 to a
dole with a ebomleal oeecHng
trealmOIIL Waather selentllls
hava been plated on llert for
poaolble seeding of the lllorm
u It moves within range Cl( 1111111
baled a1rcran Ia l'llerto Rleo
Wednesday or Thursday.

LODGE TO MEET
Boowor111 Couodl No.

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MIAMI

Stalled

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hours.

That was the first attempt to
tilll · traces of the missirw
workers since last Nov. 24, lour
days after eJP}oatoos and fires
seared ita 100 mile&amp; of tunnels.
The mine later wu sealed
•hen the !Ires bur..ld out Cl(

:~:'!r. =~~~T!l

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THE HIGII&amp;!IT RANK Ia the Bob Seoula of Amerlea """ ...,..red ...... Glen T. CriSP Tuesday
lllabt in a bonllre IIPted eeremoiiY held at Forest Aeroo Park near RIJtland. Crisp is the llrst
member of Lt111Jsvllle 1'r&lt;Q1 239 to beCCIIIe an Eagle SeouL With the new Easle Seoul are his par.
ents, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Crisp, lalw•ville, alii ~ Cbe right. James Council, scoutmaster of the
~r&lt;q&gt;. Cri!ll Is a !969 gncluate of Melga lligh SehoOI.

seeldng a dlYOree from Jo,yee
Alii Dalley, 00·grounda ofllfOII

or
broadening Cl( the program, ootlng that addlllooal eiaoaeo, work.._, tri1D8j1CirialloD possibly a
dla!IIOide team, 111111 olher &amp;ervloea need to be earrled out on a

more exteulve hula. Ollldren
wbo eamat alland sebool c:ould
aleo be trllnod lhe pro.
lf&amp;m if I110DIJ' were avallable
for more teoebera, Kelly report..

"It does. 300 a month·more."

penalty.
In I110iher contempt Cl( eourt
bearil1g, Ia 1110 .... of Eldora

MeCormlek n. Wlllanl MeC«.
mid&lt;, the dol1Di1111 PD'&amp;od himsal! of possible........,.. ebarlea II¥ l11ll&lt;lns two ~ Pll·
...... fill' • mlmr eblld. art lhe
defendant alao drft a wamlna

WHEN YOU VISIT , PARK FREE

from lhe eourt that lhe

he mlaiOI a

next-

Clnd---

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be IIIII be

.- - t o the
bDUIO tor 60 do11,

A eue dllllllaoed Motliii.Y WU
thai· of ~ p; •Tyler,
vo, Fraacla 1!.. !J'J{er, tlhleb was

-.u.

anactiGII!aradhor.._

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"People who say electric' heat is expensive just haven't checked Into it." ··
Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Warnement ol Tiffin, Ohio compared, "Our houae
is 70 years old and we switched 10 electric heat 2 years ago. Our
electric bill.Is now $39 a month.on.a bUdget plan and that's tor
heating, cooking, clothes drying, water heating, lights- .
everything we have Is electric. We compared cos! to our
old fuel and eleclrlc billa an\1 eleqtric'heat Is running
about i!O¢ more a 111.onth and there's no !1C)mparlson
in cQIIllort." Compare th,,cost of •lectric lf'&amp;at
,,
tor your home. Get a tr~ ll!llimtte.lrom uspr
yoitr Rllddy ISIIowalt ~niel!d~ De,iler.
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&lt;'· .:·•..
""'j

.
The city of Istanbul, Tur·
key, lleo· partly Ia Europe
and partly In Aala.

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BELF ASr 1 Northern Ireland
(UPI) - Pollee tnday assigned aeeurlt;y guards to proteet
a vlalllng llallan soeeer team
from an ouuaw army at Protestant v1g1Jantes wbo ~

-v.

"I bave heard eo rwnors I bavo loll later ell Ia
lhe - e 1111ac," he ao14.
Spee. 4 Joe Sopi«M, Zl, of

Son

Joae, Calif., aald ...
n6letlon -'to.
..

•on.e-. -poop. 'liLli. ~

ire Diit- ~--..1'

over yat
· · """~~ ·.~.c
•-Qaee we leave, I etn U..
a yaar then ... will be bact ...
tt wW be ...... llban .,..... bl
aald.
5\&gt;0e. 4 Tarr:1 of

W!natoa.&amp;llem, N,C~ a . - .
man at l'l11l Bal, qreed.

llft-

tened to massacre them.

The threat lsaued 1&gt;1 ao Illegal poramllllary foree kDown
as the Ulster Volunteer Foree

•q lhlak (Nix&lt;ll1) lhoeld wafted
UDtll the
imprvves,,. BuJe said. "11 Ia
ll!)iDg to leave •
here~"
~

Alrnum

lot .. Nl

Mlebael -

ZlODSVille, Ind., Aid ft wu
too aarb' to predlet tho o«eot
of the withdrawal- "I It bl1llp
_.,., II lo 1 ...... tldq, 1111t
only time IIIII tell."
Spee, t Robert L~Uon of l1ldiA&gt;,
Ca!U. said lhe n6lctloD ...... but1n1111dbe...u.rlflt
elreetedmon~

"Mult!Pb' It b)' 10 IIIII It
would be nice, 11 he llld.

Kelly outlined the need I

mty 111111 extreme eruelt;v. Married Nov. 3, 1868 II
Wise, w. va., the couple has no
eblldren. The plalnllfl also asks
the eourt to reatore tbe defOIM).
ant to ber former name ol Joyce
Am Ro81lter.
~ ev!deoee hurd II a Moodi.Y bearil1g Ia the .... of Elizabeth Jmklna va, Joe Jenldna,
645 Flflll Ave., the defendant
lolled to appear 111111 was found
guilty of c:oolei11Pt of eourt for
tanure ID pa,y oupport for a mlaor eblld. The eourt ordered that
the defendant be arre- and
be bfOIIIIII to eourt to pay lhe

FINANCE YOUR NEW CAR
WITH ALOW-COST CITIZENS
NATIONAL AUTO
LOAN
'I

too much."
Uoder bla narmal IGJr Ill
clul;y, Carroll llld hi IIIII Ill
out of the Army
He
woulcl .... that u .. loll
aarb'.
Slee. t Jim Aaebellllllr, Zl,
of Glea Bomle, lid., uld-.
was opoadatlon tbot bla 1011t,
the lnrd llrlpdt,
waa abwl tow&gt; IMHne.

Drew Webster Post

molntolned.

negleet of

FOR YOUR MONEY

, •, .

Teacher Employed
For Rutland Class

Is Filed

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118W tenolooa Jato the
BriUsh miUtary -cekeeplng
elfori bere just aa agreement
had been reached to , remove
-eeably sll Roman Catholic
barricades.
The
militant Protestant
· threat that sent pollee selirry.
log to Belt'ast's oval stadium
waa directed against. the lloma
soccer team, which was to play
Belfast's Newtonard.s club lat..
the eommunJty school with II
er lodiJ.
ehlldren enrolled. With the present financial income, this ia tbe
most 1l1t11ber of pupils wbo ean
be tralaad under the program,
he aold. However, the state Ia Jn..
allllag thet too elassrooma be

Petition

MORE

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pumped

Divorce

GET

Gls' Opinion
About Home
C.Oming Mixed

·vw.w. ·ulin)

MEIGS THEATIE

'.,

the Pmneroy First lloptlot Olureb, seerotar)' • treuurer.

SAIGON (UP~! - Amerlt111
soldiers in South Vlelnun
-rally tended IDdiJ to take
iD stride Prealdent Nlxm's
Bl'IIOUDCement that 35,000 more
troops Will be withdrawn.
Some aald they had beeome
jaded 1&gt;1 speculation 111111 the
amouneement left them flat.
others said it was an unwiae
_!pgfe and a few even said they
boped they ....ld oot be I1110I1g
the troops learlng Vlelnun.
"Wben I w&gt; home, I want to
pi out of the Army and U I
left now, I woold not," aald
Spee. t Edward C&amp;rroll, 24, of
Larebmont, N.Y. "The mala
tlilniiJ for rile to pi Cut cit' 1M
Army. 1 c1o ao1 flad

Elbe'rfelds In Pomeroy

Mra. SlaiCII hadbeenabeentfrom
ber *~lao for a obort period 111111
SAIGON (UPI)- A bond of
paJn&gt;ll doduetlons had been made
200 North Vletramese raiders
011 1111 111&amp;17 abe woulcl have re- stormed Into a mrthern ...,,._
.. ..-.. . ., ... llbe' workell ' a fUll bWi11lg)it 1l1i! liiUed 24 ~;:w.;
_ . . , Council ....... to ...
-all but three of them ch1Uans week.
tbat the error is corrected.
WiUiam Pork, dlstrlet ma,...
A ._,. from lhe poUoo pen. -allied mUltary headquarters
said t.oday.
ger
(or the U.S. Bur•u of
lkmiUnd tru-1 was read sillThe attack Into Mal Linh, a Mines, sald the discovery ot ·
Ins that payment Is oow due IIIII village 8S mUes southwest of water was upresenttrv more
waroed that the vUJap woulcl
Da Nang, len 170 homes very serious problems.'" He
lole nveaae from (lOYWIIIIlllll
destroyed am another six said It would hove to be
u payment Ia not made. VIetnamese. elvllians •ounded, removed before the sareh
Atteqdlmg the sesaloo were
accorc:U.ng to the announcement. could reswne.
.,_. LtP&gt;', CouneUmea LeaMilitary spokesmen said the
The water was found at the
lie Fultz, Don Collins, Bob 111- North Vietlamese troops e&amp;site or a rock fall, presumably
aall, l!o7 Reuter 111111 FrllllkllD
eaped witlloul apparent eaoual- caused b)' one of the tJund&amp;.
Rizor, - ~ Clerk .r.,.. Walton.
ties. It was their ttlird such roua 8ll)losions that wracked
nld aplaot a village In tlie the mine last November. The
DOI1hem war zone in a week. search team also reported there
Three ot the slain defenJen was a heavy concentration of
ol Mat um were South metbane-abool 28 per eent of
TONIGHT, SEPT. 16
Vletlameae mWt:Jamen.
the mine atmoBPhere-at the
h was the costliest Viet cong spot,
or North Vletnunese attack
"HELLO DOWN THERE" reported lodiJ, C&lt;lmmunlquos
Technicolor
said ground llgbtlng remalaed
Tany Randall
at ueurrent low levels'" across
Janet Leigh
South Vleuam.
In Soi&amp;on, the aetlng U.S.
PLUS
Ambasudor to South Vietnam
"A FINE PAIR"
held a last-miMe session with
Roc~ Hudson
President Nguyen Van Thlau
Claudio Cardinale
today before the Wblte Howoe
announcement of more u.s.
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.
troop eutl&gt;aeka in Vlatoam.
Lewis Dalley, Pa1rlot star Rt.,
filed a peUUoo MondaY in Gallla
Coun1J Common Pleu Court

PICI'IJREil ARE NEW OmCERS of 1110 lfolp Co 11
Minllllerlal Aasoetatlon wl1o IIIII be Ia olllee for 1110 year. Fnln left ID r~ are 1110 Rov, loiAry lllller, paO( the Middleport afurch ot the Nuare111, Jrelidellti the Bft'.
Max Dooahue, .1111slor of H - l01IIed ~~~ a..rthla dl.,rt, vice president, and the Rov. - . t Kubn, puklr of ·

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At 56% of Quota
Membership of Dr.,. Weblller
!'Oat 39, Amorlean Legion, has

raaehed 17t for 1970, or 46 per
01111 of fill quota.
This was reported MoDday
nlabt w11ea the poll met Ia f0111ed.
lar aeolllon at the poot bome Ia
Ken SWeeney, Cillo University,
Pomeroy with Don i11111nel, eom.
direetor oflhe Obla vafi'l' Mool- 1111D11er, Ia ebargo.
lal llelord!1llm Evaluotloa 1m11.
The quota for the 1870 yaer
IDd James P. Wldte, Columbus, Ia 312 111111 the pelll II attellqlt.
.....U.e &lt;!lreetor of lhe Oblo q to eonclodo Its membereblp
' Allaodatlon .. .a.tordod a.u. di.Y 1&gt;1 Veterans Day, Nov. 11.
dnli, ~ • • • 0.,.. may be malted to Drew

...ou...

A barbee11o fund

5 wltiii!Db V•.... ..-c~~o~r.
man IIIII Gb......,, au, Qrl 1111
111111 1-lle "-oU plaeod •lilt

OOI1l111IUM. ''·

Cutl ..,illd .. tho . , . . ,
Dlatrlet Fall ConfoawD b

Mlddl.n 111,
V........,llld Flw1l1 vs•at 't

&amp;l11dq Ia

......

•1•

re..- Drew Webolel'
1111 aeula CUeJ aald a.
par Iaiii biil
M.llll~IN
lla .............. ...
Wfbller Poll 39, P. O. Bal d l • •, . _ Tile
tol, Pomeroy, or may be ll'r· benbl,l&gt; ..,... a
., to any pelll oll!cer.
tho dilui s'i

Wblta pol- out 1lllllhe flrlll
' 11eJ1 to be aeCOiupl!lllad Ia pro.
IDIIIIDIIhe tax 18¥11a
J'lana were made for a..._ lob
ltllton of a elll-o' eommlltee. to be held "" Seb1rdlol'. Sepl,
lloedvlaod
~. at the poiiiiMHne, T h e - ' ~=:
Ia tar poll 11IOD1berl, emllaey tho

a..- .

re1a1ac -

Jeet- ~ely •tar Oat.

*"'
••'!I

""••ioiiR 11111.

members 111111 their 8110ZIIt, IIIII
Ia tar ........ cmb'· Goerp IW'. . IIIII bla ~· IIIII Y!dollllllc lllllnO"''IupzrlaWW
b e - ~l,o Soliloooi,IW.
CUel IIIII l!b&amp; Cll_. wwa.

--.....
~or tl.olliitr.
!lssOtsel·na
' ...

�Anybody Home?
,.

't

'

'

~·

Dall,y s.m~no1
.

one exception, is the archaic concept of

..piDdl'' (extreme cruelty, adultery, "indignities" and so

oa) ..E~ for

law, are for the most part a reproach to a civilized nation.
The adversll')' system, whereby plaintiff and defendant
.and their lawyers do verbal batlle in C&lt;Jurt, with the truth
the hoped-for winner, may be the best system for most
.typeo of litigation.
In divorce eases, however, it more often than not com·
pounds the anguish and bitterness that already exist between the contending parties.
Most divorces, of course, do not go as far as a court trial.
The·batlle takes place behind tbe closed doors of attorneys'
ofllces, where they and their clients dicker over the terms
of the setllement and over who shall be the "guilty" party
aDd: wbo tbe "innocent."
Chlldren are often the pawns, with visitation privileges
traded off against alimony payments.
'Dle court in most instances routinely ratifies the agree.
meat reached. and grants tbe divorce, while the law maiDtains tbe fl_Otion thal: no agreement was made in consideratloa of a divorce.
California has the highest divorce rate of the 50 slates. It
now has one of the best divorce laws, though the latter fact
uy have no beneficial effect on the former.
For Ut• who advocate taking divorce preliminaries out
of tile hinds of lawyers entirely and turmng them over to
panels of buman relations professionals, the new law does
not go far enough. But at least a litue common sense and
compaoolon have been Introduced In an area where they
are defPOrately needed.
It II to be hoped that It Is the beginning of a trend.

·'

By RAY CROMLEY, NEA Washintto• Correspondent

en~

oc::,r ~\.y 1~tr~J~~~

~illdnotthcbange

ul~~good

wer~ aussw~ ""'ill

.th~

Door Holen:
lll,ybe wr family acts silly,
bat ,.. enlo1 each olber. M3 hua.

for dinner, and recommend a
good motel. Discourage the "regBut be~ause YLL Is peren- ulars" by telling them your doe~
nially short or lunda, it m u s t tor ••insists" you take it easier, and that means ••no more
charge $1 p e r A stsmped envelope will bring visitors for a while."
Then, take a trill and relax.
70U a onei)llge resume, but if
You've
earned the rest. - H.
your club Ia read,y to go on a
This
column
Is dedicated to
young people's teLeJt»one service, Pd suggest you send a dol- family living, so U you're hav-

biDd wrestles with the kids, we
p1Q ....... pmes, There's
aiWI!'O IIODie oort ol happy commotion at our bouse, and someUmea It overflow• to the lar.n
'llllere we haVe Wiler flpta snd
.,..,_ endo up getting soak. lar for total

-·

Tho kids tldnk all thla Ia great,
aDd 10 do we. But here is the
problem: I've been ooticing late.
II a few ~ looka from nolt!h-

llon -

I

~

'

•

oloo a

few roundabwt

remarkJ eueh u '"What do you
do lor au aacore?'•
llonell, Holen, we aron't show.
lac air. We illl have tun being
11111,7. llJ bolblnd tells me 1
· -IIWI .......,. about what a
1f.., .;tlabt lllllahbors thinl&lt;, but
- SIIOU!ll WE OR SHOULDN'T
WE.CHANGE?
DMr

s\voswc:

Y• ~ listen to your hus.
-1-B.
Delr ·Holal:

CCiuJJ )'OU atve u1 the address
at YCXITII I.JFE LINE, so that
"" IIIQ IIIII more detailed infor.
lllltla!l ·• how to otart a teeD
·a eniee in our town'/
We ...... 1l1at -people need
a ~ wllen. they can jiCIUr
• lllllr problem• anonymouo'11. lid our loeal woman's club
'
'
like to atart suc:b a tele-

tel--

...... ~-oellngcm- ·KRS. J.P.
. P:
· la, YOUTH LIFE
OF TOWN AND
WOMEN'S
SacraPloue

-·

14

how.to'• informa-

ing kid trouble or juat plain
lmlble, let Holen help YOU. file
will aiao welcome your o w n

Good luck! - H.
OUr Iaiii chick has fiown, but amusing experiences. Address
we aren't lonely\ How could we Holen Boltelln care of this newsbe with all the relatives who descend 011 us each vacation time?
They now give as their reason,
._You mu.et really be at loose
ands, raUiing around In that
house all alone,,. So of cwrse
they come In hoarda to "cheer
us up." (When our ebildren were
still home, they had other excuses, like it's so lovely for
our kldalo got topther.'')
Take Iaiii night: We expected
dinner for two, and we ended up
feeding 12i Which meant we had
to run out and buy atesks - and
you know what TIIAT cloes to a
limited budaotl Oh yea, they all
drink, but no one thlnka to briog
a bottle.
Thoae wbo couldn't crowd Into
wr guelt room and tha living
room eweh slept on the lawn.
AJvtblng to avoid motel billa.
They make our boose thalr
heldquarters, then tal&lt;o air to
violt frlenda, Iori alwa;ya return
II meal time.
Tblo Is the sbth II&lt;WP of hop.
PI vacationer• we've had in two
_ . , and I'm lick of I~ Yet
...
I ~·t bo rude to relatives. kow
dil I pt It acrooo that I no lone·
or .118111 to_.., froelodgl!p
food, 1aaodr7 and maid ~erviee'

-r.

Green Hereto
Tbe Special Forces men,

wearers of the Green Beret

first saw action behind Com~
munist lines late in 1952 and
in 1953 as part of a guerrilla
group k n o w n as UNPIK
(United Nations Partisan Infantry Korea). The Special
Forces ador,!ed the green
beret as a d stlnctlve type of
insignia.
Last Important Act
Andrew Johnson's · last
important act as prestdent
of the United States was the
proclamation on Christmas
Day, 1868, of complete
pardon to
'who had been
concerned
the secession.

th~

~or~~~as~ool:; !:,"~:!J~t~~lca~ se':!::~l~the!Red
~~
.t;
~a':."nf'

0~

Tho··-1.•~
""tt§P..,

.

a~

.QRLD ALMANAC
.
~"ACTS

Say not, "Wh~ toere the
fiJTTIIer days better thatl
these?" For it il not from
wisdom that 110u ..k thu.Keel. 1:10.
o

o

•

This is a world of action,
and not for moplngancldroning.-Charles Dlckeno, Engllsh novelist.

But they who roo1t for t1tc
Lord shall r e,. e,. their
strength, they sh611 mot11lt

An example of brotherhood In the ~e of rulliig
prejudice Wai set In the

up with wings llke eag!fs
they shall run and not bt
weary, they sh411 !DOlle and

!938 Olympics, The World
Almanac recalls. ·CompetIng under tha ahadow of
Hitler's racll!l commenltJ,
Jesse OWens captured four
gold medals Ia the Gamea.
A:t the end of tha competition, Lut2 Limg, tha German who flntabet!, second in
the broad jump, smiled, put
his arm around the black
man who bad· beaten him
and walked
!he, Ilia·
dium field In !lilt view ·of
the Fuhrer.
'

not faint.-lsaia" 4Jl:31.
•

0

0

All things come to him
who waits - provided he
knows what .be is waiting
for.-Woodrow Wilson 28th
U.S. president.
'

Q-How 14rye it 4 b4le of

cotton?

-

AmlriCIII 1M...

11J United Preao ~
~ ..

.a-- . . .

.w

Four Hiuer, SF
Blanks Braves
.

'.

·

No · . doq)ll

beeJi

you've

·

readlnl the statlstln shoW·
ing that crime of an 'Jdnds

· ;

''\ '

~:

:i

prenllt~6t.lf

~our

.~tll4k

f~l

tak~
~o':!wpr::.""rtJu:'f!:l't;.;
minute

effect.
~ ~o¥erap
f~·

~"rifbllelnt!iP·1~t- -

~1t\~~
o'a:v.Q•tlci~
y~ur IJI~. loO:JI,g camv....illiil~~·1~:

:"'~~u~~:-:a=
'
=
~ur
~r=~OJ10:u
~
!(:
If
totaii .• I,OOO • . · ·y;
t'~glar.

;

hi'!/? a price you entertain
a
One way
do t h I a II
through a 'homeowners"
policy • .This la the one that
grouP s several different
lfpes of coverage needed by
homeowners and tenants and
includes
insurance
peraonal
property
that'sonatolen.

Items
Since a gnod 35riim eam-' '
era and attachments witt \Jse ;·
up about 50 per cent of that, ,.
.YOU cion see the amount 11 r

Protecting yourself through
homeowners c;,verage 1.•
practical If the basic cover~ge .of the poUcy Is . l,arge
enough, and If you aren t at·
temptlog to cover some eopeciany valuable ttema.
The amount of haole coverage Ia Important because
this 11 what C&lt;JDtroiJ the
amount of .personal property
insurance. U1U8,UY. 50 per
cent of the cove..ge oil the
dwelling Is allotted to personal property protection.
This means that if you
have your dwelling illsmed
for •17,500, the m.azlmum
C&lt;Jverage on furniture; fur·
nlahlngs and personal ,be·
longings Ia t8,750.
Soullds liie quite a hit,
doesn't 1!1 ~ It Is. Yop
might ii!ive a IOUIIh time replaciq It ~cit ttiat amount
of monioy; but ljriu're 110t
likely to have to.· ·
But
worth of

limit for lou by theft of
jewelry, watcbes, neddaces,·
aild furs. And there Is a JIM .
limit on mOney, com c~
lions and hanknotes.
_,, ,
Of course, Umlta on :cold; , ~ : .
caoh and securttlel· Ull't.tie.- ''" );
in,creased ,tbii&gt;ugh· ~t
o. an additloilal premi'!JD:
If ytiu
~~ · Your off· .
premlaes eover'ge .II b!ade:·•, ·: •Y
quate, yout oti,.J"~matly•:• '""-:
is what's called a "per-.1 . ' •
articles Onater." ,This II a, ., ,,,
policy that covers only ape- .w·:•;..
.clf!ed articles for 8pe9lfilji 1. \J

~

an

·

minimal

5 ~1

·

~.".;'hi~:

·The 'seC&lt;Jnd gap ·
·
with
items
the po Yafix. .otha~gr!:;i.;
II ,"· .
There's

,un

amounts.

, · . / ~". .

· · · &lt;v

This Week's

Cnllege Games

zo

zz

Co mpet•t•on L ack•ng
House Co m..n•ttee 1J ld

tm!~s.
·~

4~barlh
~Jope:-:heh.tleh-to · ~·ill4" '9klahuma-WIIli~'Jll•tt'
;;&amp;~:7-·
~ ·-:~
l~'l··'
!!'·~Tet!hv !·M~!e.t!1B1•

marke~

y..,,

BowL~

~oo

aerft. .:- ··'4~.: j •••,.

-'

'\

Q-How mG)av - · • in
tlu! UniOn do 110t celebrvrie
· t1tc birtlu!Gv of Geprge
W&lt;llhl11Qto711
• . , , , ·.•
. N. A...!Nto - , Ollaboma
.a a d'' • . :l"ij;,li;,~.
evada .
·•, .. .,\.. . . ' . 1 ,_ ·1

.,

•"

::' ....

PLUMBING
HEATING

za,

All· Time SEOAL Standings

PANEL IN
SPECIALS

NEW I

GAS HEATER

....,..1'01

AUTUMN
PLANK

SALE

Less 5\

Ut~u1

Cash &amp; Carry

"VENTED"
'

Q-How , 14ryt ·ti New
,. York Citr(s Cmlrlli Pc'*?
A-Central Put, ·atrelehing from 58th 't o lloila Street,
cODtains 840

~·~

Ar~---- 1

. '

·'!

~,:.

lltlloal-·''·~::!
, ~'l!.~l~
. reco~•·-":!~e~·~;be
ANTHONY

_..,.......
.

anguralion CfT0111011V in a
W!"t•-draW!I earticule1
, . A-WoodroW Wilaoa in

.. Will.

i

Beautiful. light 2-tone

paneling, full

Q-Who tDCII llu tat U.S.
prelldent to ·ride td hit in-

..

.
So loQe ••:vw•reaneaqiNII'k,

RICHARD PUTNAM PIIATT

A-Each hale welchs about
500 pounds, lncludlilg pack·
a.,.g.

we - • take advantage llko
IIIIa? -, BROKE: BACK AND
BIJDGI)T

acr-·

QUICK QUIZ

trlpa:

Door BB llld B:

.y CARLTON SMITH and

irl~~~~

BERRY'S

eopee~lf llinco we go on

.,

·.

0

ices. Wllen relatives turn up tmexpectedly, 11118110SI they go out

,.~\

II not only on ·the increue
· · '7 reluctant North V!etnameoe cadre or an enraged Viet Coal
but actually hoomtnl In
"
commander In the south could be brought to heel by a comsome categories.
·
·
rna~ in the name of Ho. Orders from a joint !eaderablp in
One of these "£1'owth" sit·
Hano1 will not have quite the same effect. Morale will be
uatlons isln tha'bllrglarizln•
11
aorders
little lower. There will be more tendency to queltlon
of house s ..
--•
.,. apartmen •·
Prall
111111111
·.
.
.
Attscts against dwellings
As With Mao Tse-tung m China, men followed Ho despite
are at a new high up 14 per
.
his mistakes, because he seemed Invincible. Ho had sur·
cent on an annuai haala
' · 1'' •.
1
vtved defeats that seemed certain disaster and this brought
A1
ltlze
•,
.!
.. ''"''
the conviction, however had things were, ibat somehow Ho
fa apt vale'~
n, you re
tha~- ~ertaln ·specific
.items ',,
again would win In tbe end. His successors will not have
or
In pi"ve='
don I get
protect!OII. .. ,&gt;'·rehspecdt.
About all yfu
do"is
The
you
per ' .
0
a even greater strength In International com·
stall better locks and tee
i
·
· •
":.'!"ism. Brezhnev might pressure !lo. but he could not
. tights burning.
P
,
But If you can't do much
the'•
0
'll!'.rde. . .. almiolt:illllblllfiabl 1 o.
c
•v .•. "".IG
' " '" 11111rDPtJ
'Wl;llt\iMIIJ!lgo bls owJt&lt;·Way despite his
6t;uch
. 't "''""''CU do•J!I!II•ihlagllo-..t
Peking for arms' Hill 8
s
pennl'nce on• oocow • · ' '·
beilil
Withd he ·,;· leavo,IQ1JO
i(
to what Russia Red
be m.o re.
_ . ols. YO!U . C8J! •.llllllfll
··,

II!IC~ptlb~·.
0~:0kf!:g and Moscow almost certainly will
m~l..
re&amp;":"!n~a~::~ie~~~~~~n
~a~~~·
c~~~
f.:f'b.;"~!~.:,
bodlans who hate communism and fear and despise Ho"s structure necessary for :\~~dp~~ti~&lt;"} comm"'lt
aggression In Laos and the south, who, nevertheless, had a cated guerrilla war.
.
·
a comp ·
~~e.'!srnt
!p
theh Ho of h1story. the man they believe
These Hanoi weaknesses may not show u lmmedlatel
. u e rene .
But there most certainly will be a I
:f. . 1:;
In th1fs sense, Ho's death has e~oded the emotional thrust North Vietnam's ability to control s...t.o;.~~~ort!tlonand
for uru Yl~ North and South V1etnam. Hanoi's ties with northern Thailand.
.
• os
tho.:':ands n Cambodia, Laos and Thailand have been
we ened. .
. .
.
Wi

you'll get hit up for free servcomplete, stepoby-atap booklet on
organization, maintenance, fl.
naneing, eounaelor.tralning, etc.

Minimiz.e,s Burglary b~3~

Reds' Viet Influence Will Erode

•

IS NO!' IMPORTANT

.

MAJOR HOOPLE- PEGS TWO BIG UPSETS
IERS
HOOS
SEES WILDCATS CLAWING

'

A. Ho,meowner's .Policy·

RAY CRDML.EY
IHect of Ho Chi Minh's Death .

Even withm the orgamzation ' thmgs will be dilferent . A

NEIGHBORS THINK"

'

Grandiose Beginning

ay e azardOUS , , ,

....t:"l':.~wf~~~ SIJit
~for
aicoho!,"3i per :O~~':/"~:~"Jn~Jn~~1 ~m
blood 'tt.,s:ai ~\!:;d1:,; ';"r ~t,"!. ail't"hol level tn the
•
or
ca on.

'~j

.

W. L. Pel.
Eall
hla throW waa olf tha target
ble
pia¥
bY
gOttlng
LeFebvre
Woodward,
who
threw
one
pia¥·
w. L. Pel. GB X.adtla)On ,, 101 4e •• J
Jim Brewer. 6-6, aot ,credit
·i. .' .SAN . DIEGO, Calif. (lJPI)
Tho wins Tuosdoy nlitlt - e
Jol"' down to 61'11 bue, but ani . Parllar scored tha wiDIIng Now York • • 89 58 .eos
or out at .tha plate.
Dolloll • • . . M M .ltl
for
both
victories
In
rellof.
llo
: . Tho Cl!lclmatl Redo, with little raJrly llltlollo"ble to a erowd
run.
Bench
tried
to
maka
It
a
goo.,
~,
~.
88A.I'I1
4
BoilkiG .... .. ?f . • .
pitched one !illi.. In tha 1tra1
, .•ilt)lbollaiDI loft, mo.. hare. to- of 37,706 paid.
.........
• • 77 72 .$17 Ill
.idlht to toke on their thl%d
Wea Park01' droVe to all three pmo ani !our In tha nlgbteop. · ----------------~---;------------- 91. iAJula • • • 71 68 ,53'1 10
Nolao took I IOuilh loll ID tha
- Yari! ,,, , ?i ,'li .til
KUBERSKI TO CELTS
Plltabllqll • • 78 81 ;131 11
alnllbt Callfonda leoJII.
runa for tha Dodprs In tha
a...Joad • ; , $e to .HI M
ftrll
pme
~ he pw I(&gt; only
BOSTON
(UPI)
Steve
Philadelphia
••
58
88
.401
10
In llaa Uan • wtek•a time a&amp;CCJDd RIJlWI·
Weot .
Kuborakl, who pasaod I(&gt; hlo -..oai ... 48 101 .m·Cl2
tha Reds hove loat two pmol
"I oald bofore the diU&gt;l&amp;- alx hits.
W. L Pel.
n..l sauon of elfllblllcy at
Well
lo tha ' Son Francisco Glallla and h - we're ruml.. out of to- , In tho nlilrteatJ tha Reds &amp;01
89 58 .eos
.W, L. Pel. GB ·
!lndley to try out for pro boll,
two to tbe Loa A~w:elea Do:lg- morrows, u he aatd. .. Th011 two Cjulck rut11 off atartar Joe
Ooldancl
•
•
•
•
79 68 .6:17 10
Moellar
In
the'
ftrst
on
Tueadoy ai&amp;Md a contract with Son Frao • • . 82 66 .5M
ei'L
were two big winl - two ~
Collforllla
•
.
.
.. 83
25
singles bY Pate Role, lldlbY ,
the Boaton (:atlca for the 19GII- Lot -"'Plas •. 81 66 .151 I!!
Lo11 of a doubleheader Tueo- balie..bly bli wins."
Cll,y •• 62 85 .02 27
70 season. Kuborakl was a . Atlaata . . • . 82 67 .560 I!! dl1 l'lfl'l. 2.-1 and 3-2, to the
Parker got his lJnporlant Tolan ani Tony Perez.
Chi••••. 60 87 .to8 H
The
Redi
hall
taken
a
1.0
cemr
with
·a
23.4
avarago
at
Clnclaoltl
...
79
67
.Ml
2
puohod the Redo down RBI'a In tha ftrst inniJW, tha
Soaltle
.•••••
58 89 .385 Sl
lead
Into
the ninth Iiiii!.. of tha
Bradley last aeoson.
lfoullon • • •• 75 71 .514 6
~· ~ place In the Natloral alxth ani In the 12th with a
X- CIIDebod Dlv. TWo
opener alter Alex Johnaon sinSon
Dio80
•••
47
101
.318·
35
Leque'o Western Division. The hlaoa - loldod alngie thot won
Tueadi;Y'O Re_,lta
cleo ani Bench doobled In the
PEITIGIIEW UNDER KNIFE
· · Glirtl1_are on top of tha cllvt.- · tha pme.
~·Re­
olihtb.
But
with
one
out
In
tha
Cblcaaosllootroal4
- - li Ookll!ld 3
·PHILADELPHIA (UPI) - .
,fl.., 1IUh tha Dodpro ani Atlat&gt;. In the Drat pmo, tha ninth, Nolan relaxed, loading
Chi 7 Calif 4, Ill
Gary Pettigrew, vvteran de- Pitts 9 l'blla 5
ta ~·"'" OJ1eollalf pme bocl&lt;. Dodpra trailed 1·0 with one
fense tackle of tha Philadelphia N, Y. at st. Lou., ppl., rain Chi 3 Calif 2, 2nd
Jbi!,.Mal._ wUi go for his out Io the bottom of the nhith tha baaaa.
Kanaao C1V 2 Soaltle 1
Wayne GI'~U8t'r took over oo
Eagles,
underwent
aurpry Lot Ang 2 Cln 1, 111
11th wJII aplnst four ds!eoll but sl ..lea bY Wlllle Davia and
tha help he needad• aa he posted Tuesday for a torn llpment In L.A. 3 Cln 2, 2nd, 12 Inns
Ill'
VITO
STELLINO
B e l - l WaehO
tho
mound
ani
tile
tylng
run
1
toolabt ro... tha Reds. Alan Sao- Len Gabrielson, a c...,lo of
UPI~Wrlter
N. Y. 7 Detroit 6, 13 laol.
his
45th
ahulwL
his rliht ...... Pettigrew Son Diogo 8 Houatoo 1
)Orbio {7-13) will pitch for tha walk• h i - out by Gar)" came in.
Reliever
Jim
·
Brewer
got
Juan
Marichal
h&amp;s
won
The wlnDlrw: nm came in
Cl..eland 5 2
Injured tha ...,. In a p.......,.aon Son Fran 2 Atlulla 0
Padr.., A single pmo hero Nolan ani an error by catchar
whep Jim LeFebvre hit a ahorp everything for the San Franeie- credit r... boll! vlctori8• "as tha game ap~t Washi11!10D last TodsJ'a - l e Pllehera
W•
- l e Plt&lt;hera
Thur!MIQ night will
Johnny Bench pva them tha
(Ali Times IDI')
,, from the
(All Times IDI') ·
sr!""'der to shortstop wocxb: co Giants the last seven years Dodgers OWOilt I'Jai!"
· tha Reds' tour In tha state.
JOIDO.
Rods. "In tha flrat ....,.,, all-star SUnday IDd will SPOnd three
Olkland
(Odom 15.5) II Kaaexcept a pe11111nt.
Fblladelpbla ( Jolmoon 6-12) at
weeks In a eaat foil- bY a
The hll]l!-kickl.. rlghthanler, eatche"r Jciuu1Y Bench made a . minimum fl. tbree weeks of Chicago (Jenklna 19-14), 2:38 p . AO Cll,y (!looker 4-13), 8:38 p.
who his chalked "' 189 major throwing error to let in the rehabmtauon.
m.
m.
league victories, averaged al· winning run In tha olnth hwng.
Collforllla (Murpby 9-14) II
Houatoo (llterltar 19-10) al Sea
; most 24 victories a season rrcm In the second pme, Pedro CHARLEY JOHNSON DEAD
V
I - (Chlnce 5-3), I p. m.
Franclaco (Perry 17-13), 4 p.m.
1963 to 1968 but the Giants Ramos, the Reds' third pitcher.
SOatlle (BrUnet 8-12 an4
NEW YORK (UPI) - Charley
New York (Kooiman 1t-8) II
Lockwood
tl.jJ) at Chlcaao(W,..
haveri't won a polUiaRt since came on in the 12th ard Johnston, a boxiD8 manqer (SioaomaD 10-17), 8 p.
1962 when he was 18-11 and couldn't get a man out as the and promoter for over 50 years, m.
·~ and 1-'), 2, 7
Jack Son!ord poced the club Dodgers iooded the bases lo set died Tuesdoy at tha age of 74.
Pittsburgh (Elllo 9-11!) at st. p.m.
tho stsge for . a pme-wlnnl~ 11o was tha manager for Archie Louis (Ta;ylor 7-3), 9 p.m.
Cleveland (Paul 5.9) 11 n..
with a 24-7 mork.
Miami (0,) !!, Dayton 14
But Marichal, who h&amp;s been alngie by Woa Parkar.
troll
(Kllkem:' 5.5), 9 p.m.
Moore, tho formar light has·
Clnclaoltl (Maloney 10-f) al
ly ·MA.IOI. AMOS B. HOOPLE
Hoastan 30, norlda %8
DUly
WUllams
hit
a
two-run
Walhlnalm
(Cox 12.5) at New
vywoight champion, ani SaniY Son. Diego (Stmtort~ 7.13), 11
Florida St. 11, ~ichlta St. 16
overohadowod by Sanly Koufax
Upset Champion
homer
in
the
first
iMine
and
York (Neraon 15-15), 8 p.m.
Georgia 18, Tu1811e 7
ani Bob Gibson deaplte ail his
p.m.
Saddler, a top !Untharwelght
'
touched off a two--run Ortl'l with
Georlla
Teeh
11,
SMU
10
victories
ard
has
never
won
the
Holtlmore (llardln 6-5) al
AtiiUIIa
(SI!Jne
12-8)
at
Lot
· · Egad, friends! The Hoople
a
single
to
pace
the
CUba
to
the
·
llllnolo
!!,
Wan.
State
15
Cy
YOIIIIB
award;
now
has
the
An&amp;eles
(1lminl
13-10)
11
p.m.
(]lacY 11.2), 7:38 p.m.
System hl\s done It again!
GILBERT SIGNS RANGER
portuntty to carry tho Giants victory over Montreal. It was
Ore1on State 9, Iowa 1
Tborods1's
Games
Thursda,y's
Games
011
... Your favorite correspond·
Kenlucky 28, Indiana 20
only
the Cuba' second win in PACT
Ookland
II
Kan
City,
twl
N.
Y.at~oal,night
Rutgen 21, Lafayette 7
down the otretch run. He turned
KITCHENER, Ont. (lJPI)"ent has proved once more
the
laat
13
pmes
but
moved
CaJUornla
at
Vlmeoota
Fblladalpbla
at
Chicago
LSU 17, Texas A&amp;M 15
In one of ~ key victories of
his title as Upset Champinn
Rocl Gilbert, the New York
It not a fabrication-urnCl.,eland II Detroit
So. Illinois !II, ""uiiVille Zl
his career Tuesday night when them within lour games of the Ra~ers' secoOO leadlng scorer Pilla at st. Louis
Mets,
who
were
rained
out,
in
Mlcblgan 33, Vanderbilt 13
he pitched a !our-blUer to give
WuhiJitiiOII II N. Y., Di8hl
' lrumpb!
last season, agreed to terms for Cln at Son Diego, night
Mltb. St. 28, WallhiDII!olliZ
the Gillnts a 2-0 victory over the Eastern Olvlalon.
Beltlmore
al Booton, night
Atlanta
at
Loo
Ang,
night
· Last week, you'll remernthe
new season Tuesday,
Joae Pagan and AI Oliver hit
Miss. :IZ, MemPhis !!late 16
tha Atlanta Braves ard aole
. her. I predicted startling up(Only
pmea
schoollled)
bringing to eight the number of Houston at Son Fraoctsco
Miss. State 39, "RlcbutODd 11
possession of first place in the homers aM rookie John Jeter
Mt victories for .the Air
oignod players with the NatiOI&gt;Mls1ourl 28, Air Force Z4
Force Faicona over 'Southern
PeDD Slate 41, Navy u
tangled Western Division race. set up two runs with a triple to al Hockay League Club.
Methodill and the Wake ForSVFFERS liEAD INJURY
Cryotal Quer
Soalbern Cal38, Nebraska 20
The victory gave tile Giants load the Plrotes palll tha Fblla.
eat Deacons over hiJibly-reKathy
J. Clonch, 2 0 set Kansas In a night enN.C. St. 19, No. Carolina 17
the lead at 82-66 with a .554 Bob Moose went 8 1-3 innlngo to
garded North Carolini Slate.
danghter ol Mr. snd Mra. SaD.
The Shah of Iran, in cele·
The final scores showed tha
gagement at Lubbock. In an·
No. Texao St. 40, S.W. La. 18
percentage and dropped the boost his record to 11-3.
lord E. Clonch, 331 SecNate Colbort hit his 22rd bratlng his coronation. treed
FaiC&lt;Jns winning, 211-22. and
other extremely close game,
Notre Dame '21 • NorlllwellBravas to third at .550, OJ1eollall
homer alii rookie Ron Slocum thousands of prisoners, proODd, Vldclleport, was - tile Deacons getting tiu1 nod, The Hoople System pegs the
~era
u.14 ~.J..Kenl State!!
pme hock at 81.67. The Los
10
0
vided free weddings and
to Holzer Medlcol Center, Flrll
:IZ-21-har-rumph.
hit
hla
first
to
back
up
Tommie
Red Raiders to trIumph,
Rlee 16, YMI 7
~les Dedgero moved Into
gave Hfe insurance to newAve., at 3:15 p.m. TUeldQ' wltll 1
Sisk's
seven-hit
pitching
as
the
Our o.vet-an percentage for
24-22.
Sonth Carolina %5 Dake
aecord place, also one-half hock
Ill'
United
Preas
International
born babies.
a bead injury • file WOI injured
the opening day card was a
Most of the major powers
So. Mia• 34, S.E. Lii.
at .551 on an 81-66 mark by Padres beat the Astros.
(Saturdsy}
wban a seoond story porch railllupendous .818, with nine
see action this week, with
Staaford 30, San Joae St. 8
sweeping a doubleheader from
ldlaml at Daytoll (N)
0
correct s el ec lions, two the si)Otlllht focused on the Syra&lt;ase M, Iowa State 21
Ing pve WI!' llld she !ell.
the Cincinnati Rods 2.-1 ani 3-2
o o
Villanova at Toleclo (N)
miiJI88 and a tie in the 12 Housfon-F'Iorlda, Michigan Teoa. Z'l UT Cbattaaooga II
In 12
The two tosses
m • j o t collegiate claobes- State-Washington, Penn
PnrdueM,
TCU
17
" "
"
State-Navy, Notre DameTexaaTeehZ4,Kanaaa2?
dropped Cincinnati two games
Kent State at Ohio Unlverllity
1
kaffbffl .
So much for history, now fornla-Nebrasta
Northwestern, Southern Cali·
bacl&lt;.
(MAC)
'
ontotheweekahead.
Purdue- VUlanova3%,ToledoZ1
Except for a 14-10 mark In
.
o
UtohSts.teatBowllngGreen
. Federallawforbidsdefac·
Watch for a DOW ray of TCU T.,. as-Cailfmua and
UCLA
u .. ..U61, . Mari•hal'• records a!nce
n
. Findlay at Beldwln-Wallace (N) mg U.S. ,COlDS, but It ts legal &gt;
"l Wah 9,
-, · :i "" tH:I;biNe·I!W,suPerl&gt;- 25o8,'21J ,
. ·· · ·
I ·I - . , .. , , ·: ..UI .
"; California State (ftl
80 mooy
tl!l! Blue Grass•'eCIUlltry•· as ''" lilgs. ltr!- h 'df :t1181e"Pllir• " .• CJemooa u;,
· , . 8, 221-1• 25'6 ani 26-9, Buf'slnce
WASHINGTON
(UPO- Rep, ' John J. Nevin, a
· Cenlre at·KeQyon
,
. J!lhmfY.:Ray,
e:r-N.D.successdsfeb-:. ihga,
the flliwlessHoople
"'
·
.........
._.,, ;, . " .•f '
live .-.~h,lllakeaa
tern foreoees
'vlctory tor systha
neoo a.... ~,,....,. • ·,
tho -· GIBnts
haven't won'··the Benjamin s, Rosenthal; !}.N.Y., vice presldi!lit
for · ford, aald Marleltll at wesu•w- (Plj
· . ··
..
ful· ~ 11 beatbtWI . at .. team iiiuned first.
Oldahoma 28, Wllconaln 8
peliliint · 'i.nl hove finiShed chOrgod Tueoday big carmakers there Is a· need for specific MI. UniOh at Rocha•
-,
itentticky. I predict Ray's
Now go on with tha foreWyomog 24, Arizona 1$
aeconl lour straight yeara. he's control the automobile 11111rket advartlsl.. ground rules, but he Otterbaln at &amp;lll'llloballa (Pa.)
WUdcall will claw their way cast:
Athena 38 Nolaonvlllo-York 0 baen faulted for not carrying so tightly there Is "a lack of defended tbe practice of posting Welt Liberty at Mllaklngum (N)
to a 28-:lll declaion over fa. Arizona St. Z'l MlueMia Z4
G Ill 11 28 w 11 hi 12
the club in tho Koufax or mean!ll:ful compedtioo."
msnufacturers' S"81!ested retail Ecllnboro st. at OhloNortltern(N)
0 1
1
...
••
Ironton
Gibson
fashion.
Rosenthal.
chairman
o!
the
prices
on automobiles. ~v•w,.
0• • """"
. ored Indiana of the Big
.
. 'o•
.,._,_ ••
•
, . 26 Logan 12 •
•-•••- y Ollllgalown stale at Westero Dll •
V
Depoootiable
Ten.
.
Army~~ New Mesko 13
Jachon 2.C Meigs 16
But things could be different House consumer subC'ommittee, else "'would be impractical and
nois
The Air Force Falcons AullurDII,WikeForell11
Aloxand0&lt;22 Eaatorn20
lhh aeoson. Marichallost four told the opening of Federal would lead to coosiderable xavteratBull'alo
Dealer Far
were
week Kansas
but Itflyin&amp;
will high
be a last
dlfferenl
Utah St.State
33, ZS, Bylor IZ18
Symmoa Valloy 50
straight in mldseaoon ani his Trade Commisalon haorings on con!ualon in the mar ket, " he WUllam " "·-·
_ , at ctn~-~
ltor)" this Saturday as Dan Colo. St. U.lll, Brigham
Hannan Traco 0
19·10 record isn't one of his auto price advertising practices testified.
Tvlor al Blullloo (N)
Devine's Missouri muscleYeuq U
Kyger Creek 48 Sot~thern 6
besL But he's rattled off five that deception was widespread.
The commissioo's reason for Wilmington at Ander!Mil (Ind.)
AND
men apply the shackles at Batlolo w, Xavier ~
Harth Gallla U
victories in his last six otsrts
"The terms ard conditions tha tn..st!gation, It said, was to Tampa at Akrm (N)
ColumDta. In a rugged bat- TeiU U, Callforn~ li
Southwestern 0
since Aug. 24th ard he's now under
whlcll
the average determine the necessity for a Detianee at Adriln, Mich. (N)
tle, Missouri will prevail, Wm. &amp; Mary 41, Cfil!:lnnatl7
Wahoma 13 Duval12
tossed hock-to-bock shutouts American purchases an auto- trade regulatlonsrule- -which
MAC - Mid-American Con!er28-24!
CoJcate
a..t:,. U. 0
Coal Grovo 24 Rack Hill 1(
against two contenling clubs, mobile are dictated to him In a would hove almost the force of
ence.
Look for Texas Tech to up- Colora4• 3$, Tllsa IZ
Oak Hill 20 Ironton St. Joo 6 the Redo ani Droves, in the market place cloodod bY law --to regulate car price N - D - • night game.
PadiOIOUth East 28
last live days whllo allow!~ a monopoly ani dulled by a lack advertising.
Ports. MotH Da.-.e 6
total .of five hits.
of meaniretul competition,"
The commission is acting on
PortiNuth 14 Lovan, W. Va.
In other games, Pittsburgh Rosenthal said.
complaints auto makers may
6
beat Philadelphia 9-5, (ldcago
Unless we are prepared to have "gimmicked" new car
Pt. Pleasant 2A Huntington U. . topped Montreal 5-4, San Diego proceed rrom these hearings to prices by deleting equipment or
SOUTIIEASTERN OHIO An!LETIC LEAGUE
drubbed Houston S..l aiMl the a stUdy of how monopolies by
redeslgnatlrw equipment
ALL-TIME FOOTBALL STANDINGS (1925-1968)
New Yl)fk-St. Loots game was affect deceptive price policies that once was ••standard" as
TEAM
WON LOST TIED YEARS x.PCT.
rained out.
aOO control of the automotive "optional 11 • then charging the
THE DAILY SEN11NEL
ll£\'OO'ED TO MERUI' OJI'
Por!IIIIOU!h (1925) (1) . • • • . • • • 14
3
0
3 (1)
, 824
In the American . League. market, we shall ourselves ,be consumer over and above the
M£J(lS.M4SON o\JIE.A
IIJCHUDS. OWtN, PUBl.ISHE.R
Minnesota drubbed Oakland . ll- part or these deceptive praeti· baste whiele price ror the
~· (1981) (1) . . . . . . ...... 9
3
1
2
.731
c.,...r 'hrmhW. ~
Jackaoo (19%5) (12) ••••.•.• , 172 89
18 u
.626
3, Clevelaml nipped Boston :;...2, ces.••
alleRed extra equipment.
I'IIIII!IM&lt;I dl!b' ucept S.umt.riQ'l'tl!o~\ol
V.. llll' PllbllthlfW CGIJI!Min)', UO Mo!dlude st.,
Athanl (192$ (9) ••••.•••••• 169 99
14 u (2)
.624
Chicago
swept
a
doubleheader
•
•
llmiii$~~~~W.·.~.~~
..
~.
~mi&lt;WWWWl~-,.~~~ifi
1'1111111'01, Ohio, U'Nt. lwtl•n Oll'let Pbolt
Lopn (19%5) (7) ••. ,. •••••• 199 102
u ..
.618
Hl-2151, Edi!Grlall'hllnl 9124157.
from Call forn!a 7-4 IDd 3-2,
5ee9rd tlut p~~~..,.,a~du.--ror.Oiolo.
Gollftlolls (192$ (6) ••• •• •••• 180 116
16 44
.575
Kanaaa City nipped Seattle 2.-1,
N&amp;d-.J IIII.....U.I• ne......-.'1• lllltlno
tni.O.I!I.&amp;hlr, 1~&lt;:., 12 bll1hiSI., Nell Ylri
1roa1on (1t25l &lt;ll ...•••.•.• H
u
a
6 (3)
.1164
Baltimore blanked Waahil8ton
ctQ, Mill' Yorll.
ilew (1921) &lt;o&gt; •••...• 20 21
a 10 (4)
.489
!ldl~~ nan: o.u....no bJ arrl•
1.0 and New York topped
•t.r. ...uablt 4S c_..t pu w-.lq - , . , L~
(1928) &lt;ll • • . • • . • • 107 138
21 to (5)
.tilt
1.0 in 13 Innings.
lllftiiH 11 tilt Dad,y s.nti,.l OfllH, flltt. Sb
Vldll1eport (1929l (9) ••••••• 108 134
10 38 (6)
.us .....U.t.liL?O. nr.. maalll., - . - . . , ~~&amp;aeu Detroit
A ruo • acortng single bY llal
. . . . . .,. CUTiv Mnlol lllllll..uMial 0..
Wallaton (1925l (6) •••• , ••••• 121 1$5
18 4t
, M2 .....all
ILIO. lr ..0: 0.. ,._ 111.10 lb
Lenior In tha seconl Inning IDd
_..,,fi.U,.TIIrM ..... ti,IML~
Nelaoovilla (19%5) (O) ••.•. , , • 44 2211 · 12 t2 ('I) - .181
wuue Maya' run-scoring dcluble
Nelaomiii&lt;&gt;-York (1961) (0) •.•••• I
12
0
2
,1111 """ \ldllllel s.IIJ n.-.......
In tha fifth gave Mar!el!al all
·..;.: q ,c

"'liP "'

• M B H

' ~bloe

.

car-

WASHINGTON (NEAl
In World War. II this reporter wao assigned by tbe U.S.
Army to work m ~n organization in contact with Ho Chi
lilY an means, look out for that crazy driver-but kee an
Minh in tbe war wtth Japan. In the years Since, these old
eye on that careless pedestrinn' too ·
P
contacts
have been continued.
Fr
thi
1
·
th"
Pedestrian deaths account for a sizable 18 per cent of the
om , s very persona expenence,
IS reporter be·
more than 50,000 traffic fatalities In the United State
h
lieves Ho s death will have a profound ellect on the future
year.
' eac
of the war I~ Vietnam, on the place of North Vietnam in
According t'
purl b
.
.
the Commurust world and on tbe future of communism in
Hlgbwa Safe~ a
bY th! UmverSI~ of Michigan
Southeast Asia.
a'11
mvolvlng
Much has been made of the ar$ument that Hanoi's Comweather, under artificial lighting
!n
::=st rulferHs
thetr plans and their purpose
asphalt road.
'
use o o s ea ·
The Institute studied 286 pedestrian deaths In Detroit and
But this is not the point.
rt was .found that 106 of the vicor had, are irreplaceable. France with·
ci'GII
•••$'Mt 'o!tinde•.,
the •.. r r· ' 0
Is n o t - N&lt;lr-IS'-WithoufStaliit '
tl
Th
.'Allothet'102
crossing at lntersecBrttaln without Churcblll. nor India without Gandhi.
'
ono. e
were wallcing or standing m the roadway.
Tbe new Hanoi rulers may be close disciples. They may
factor most commooly associaw...
hold
sume Ideology. But they are not Ho.

£t1~Wayne~County.

.•.

Dodpr,

America's .divorce laws, as an outgrowth of the common

.J mo:~ln::itute,

..

o ••- • ·· ·-· 17,1969
·. ~

lnnl•.

lncllrable insanity, the only ground in Caiit OI'Dia wm be Irreconcilable differences-In other words
the recocnllloa that some marriages simply have not
worted al&gt;d cannot be made to work and that there Is not
necenarily one wholly guilty party and one wholly Innocent
PH17 to every marriage breakd.Wn.
The very word div"'l'e wm be replaced on the records
by "d.iuolUtlOD of marriage."
AlimonY, oae of the worst rackets fostered by divorce
laws, will be determined by considering a woman's age
earDIIII ablllty and the duration of the marriage.
'
Abo gone will be a lucrative source of income for private
Investigators. Their reports wUi no longer be permitted as
evidenCe.

pede~

Middlooort--i'(lll..w,

•

Marichal Tosses

nar•a ·d nt.

Ji:

,.
! Vl '

..at

~orala Gov. Ronald Reagan, an alleged "reaction·
lligned one of the most liberal r,teces of legis Ia·
ti.. In U. area-divorce law-ever to be p aced on a gover-

Walkmg

.'

Ntd:IGIIal

Ill')',"· luu

b~ for

.
.

'

odgers ,Nip Reds Twiee-,2-1, 3-2

'

Big Step Forward
In Divorce Laws
0.,

,'

I.

"~

,..;..

35 000 BTU

30,UUU IITU

. AT

only

EFORI
..
.

.

'

'.:
'\.

'

'69:UD

Wit~ $;foty Val ..
and
Thormoatat

WHITE COHCORD----4· 1 ~...r
MEDIUM CONCORD---OHL Y.

3.65

LATEX EXTERIO- PAINT

-

For wood or

extwlor flni'sltes

AND JYPE GAS

YOU NIID.

14u thick.

.

til.
.'

3. 99·.
.

ROOF or lAIN PAINT
Red
Gallon

4 50

·~ .•

�.,
'

'l'aDnollm

'

.

~

'

.

who Wilil Ia 196R1 hll
1111 namo'"' It twice atrOad)&lt;,elll
~~ to
Ia U70 to bl'lr.
the troillrY home ror aoodo
·
Tho cll. .xolthewaakandtour'
noy Ia Oklahoma ...,, Sunllay '
21
wlolt, 1
ror alii
hlvllw
about 8:30 p.m. after HOIIal'd heel
lho ~ match Ia dot• ted Suraaak the aecond time
I lho·ioutlowomrn US. Open table in 1 aenutioral match In thlloe·
wNilo tournament Solllnlay alii era' round the double ellmiDa·
~ ~&amp;I Oklahama Clb'. Tanne- tton play.
hill w... lt 111 coins Wllleleeted In
TamehUl, who had put Howartt
• a ~ or players led b;y in the losers' bracket earlier, had
Jack R-.rd, lit, Loa Angeles, to baat hbo ogaln to win It alL
_ . . . _ In the 196&amp; u.
The first game of the three of
S. Open, alii SUra oak ol'lllaUalll,
20, a BoolaD Collop sluden4 for- five match went to Howard. 21·
mer All·AIIan Junior chenv!on. 11. But then lt went the other way
TullehW i1 the U.S.'s current a a the Meigs High senior won 21·
No. 2 ra*'d pla)'er in men's ~ 13, 21-13 and 21-1&amp; In a display
en ainglea, JavttW been rumer· of accurate forehall:l and back·
\C) to Dal Joon lAe, Cleveland, tn hall:! smashes. A big crowd pve
' "'" 1969 notlaial OJIOD at san him.a standi~ ovation.
Tamehlll also won the men's
: ~, Franetsco lut May. Lee and Tandoubles
event playing with a 17·
:·.•Dihw were ext the tour- manu.
S. team that ._ted Ia the year-old Oklahoma City yooth,
1 world tour~entat Mooich, Ger· and was runnerup in mixed doubles.
' - · lall aprlng.
Upcoming tourney action for
The Oklaholne Clcy Table TenU.t aponsored the Sec- top players is the national team
nis
Open, pial~ bor- championships in Detroit in mid......... fmD t11e1r oouslneo!Tex· November.
Tryouts for the Ohio team will
ao to lho Iouth In lhelr trophy
purchaabw policy. 1bey went for be held at the Columbus Table
lho biB tblor. Its coot- probably TeMis Court, 2464 Cleveland
·~esale'' was reported at Ave., the weekend or Oct. 4-5.
Favored to defend Ohio's nationluot Wlllor poo.
II Ia oo bli !hat even lhe Oka· al championship are repeaters
homans decided to'keep it in bu- or the team from last year .. Da1
o!Doao for awblle. They ruled that Joon Lee, Tannehill, and Don
It wiD ba retired Into peraonal Lyons, 30, of Dayton, and a Courth
player to be settled upon in the
OW•~·•hll only attar naviag been
tryouts.
won three times W one player.

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'7::"::~~~hllh

tioall

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POINT'PLEASANT
'
.. - A rea~
nauon •• a&lt;:eepted and a reP1actmal!l appolalod at the m-. N&amp;IIOlllll

f

Toeildly illaht
Ralrden, a member ol
the planntiw comml-, r-ated tbatthe COUI'Iaccep! hloreo~
lllUon from the commlllee.
' The three membert · Ot the

Gec!t'il'

Ger~ch

court, 'Lawrence

In our town, aome of lbt .
people who 110 around :In

Jr.,

preoldeat, Clarenee AdkiM and
ElVin E. Wedp · accepted the
reaiBilatloo elll ~pointed carroll' ShlM o1 lAm! to 1111 tha va-

cancy.

•

the beat circles belong to the
Rotary Club,

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· ; .. :'. Their eddreu - Mr. and Mro. J, B. Crocl&lt;areU, MSTSFE; FPO

&gt;' ltiliuJ., Waoh. 98780

• t~··. ,

1s

. . -eat

;I
lliRI;. J, B. CROCKARELL, THE FORMER DONNA GAUL, and
..,. " ' ehiWnn, Debln, Jim alii Jeffrey, made a visit here recettb"
~ 'will! retillveoln the Cheater or.- In all probobUIIJf lhel11t ,... ror
' I! *'atlhree Y•re. Soon now ahe Joins her hu&amp;bard In Jl!liiiL
/.

The 'court accepted a check In
the amount of~,310 reboburaeTreaaon
the only crime
meot fmD the Federal A&gt;iatlon ·
clearly
defined
by the U.S.
Agency f&lt;M' the local al1110rt exConsUtution.
•
pansion.

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·Sh ower

BIGGEST IN 'n1E WORLD - II may ba the blgeot trophy
in the world at that, but whether lt Is or not. it seemed so to
John Tannehill, 17, Middleport. He won it last weekend in Okla-

,

bmna Clty b;y sweeping - undefeated -lhe Southwest Open
table tennis tournament. The trophy, 34 inclles high and 21.
inches wide, must be won three times to be reti.Hd. JOOn has

wonitnric~

,-----------~--------------------------------------------------~~

••

111!1'1Mva for llawaU toattelllthebanki!raconvenUon there. lofr,

1

Gas·

I
. GETTING MAIL REALLY "makea the diU'" for Mrs. J, W. Daw-

8011i 84, and almoat completoty badrast now.

UCin

Mro. Dawson woo recently hospltallzecl but Is """ !IOiile !&gt;ftter
alii at botlte. JuaiiiiAI Bachtel goes up several t101111 a week to be
with her molher who for many yean wlaterod In Mldllleport.
Her eddreaa, If you'd like ID oenda ca~ of chaer,, II 3900 Grand
Ctntra1 Aw., VIenna, W. Vo.

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Three of 36 great new Buicks.
Three of the finest Buicks ever.
Built with all the care and craftsmanship possible.

WEDNESDAY
i IIOSWOR111 COtJNCIL, llo1al
aid Select Masons, state .....,.

.

time In several years, B ulck Is
Estate Wagon
series. Mounted on a 124-lnch wheelbase
l:ly a 455 cubic
engine, this model contains many of the· iide
features of
Buick's Electra models, yet has been engineered for Increased
capaclty and
gre&amp;ter passenger comfort. The wood grain applique and vinyl top are optional

'"•·h''"'"

equipment.
Nowond~r Buick a.vners will keep on buying Buicks. Buicks are automobiles you can believe in

'

Grange, Nagorski Top Vote

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Tho ....._. aeleciA&gt;d an earcy.
..., oll.t!Die lqU8d and a
~ lfllad to commemorate

,.,...n

tilt 100111 -ar1117 cl college

..
I

I
I
b
I

lin I •

wa._ IIGuble Trouble

Napnld, . prabobl,y the ~
co'l4cl• alar who could have
,..... wltlt the bast on both
..,.,.. 111111 - · waa picked
at lho tackla position a n d
mlaaed a •"¥~"""'• ballot b;y

-- ·lll!l-·
Oo--

Oilier o i l - t.am

cl the
are ends
Buu le
cl Mlehlpn
.... Daa cl Alaboma;
tacl&lt;1t Fnr* "Bndlll'" Kloard
ol -..lwi; ....... Jbo
Plrker ol Ohio elll Bob
- l d p ol T _ , . _ center
Mil Rula cl WuM.... State;

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T..

.·,., Ill

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alii

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\

·. ( I

•lii.W

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Ma

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8 p.m. at the Oldo
"'""" .~"Po o111ce. Mra. Allard
. ~will-~ h - . .

ANNUAL DINNER meetiDI
TWia cilf ~· Wednaedav.
1 p.m. &amp;I Maoi1n Restaurant.
THIJIIBI)AY

, 'ROCK SPRINGS l1eUer H CJUb,' 1:11 p. ilL Tbureday, lithe
c1 Mri. WIUiam G.,...,.

.IMmo

lire. John

GoOtt

10U1

p..

the

. . , i1n1ram, e111 Mra, William FGI&lt;

IMI'otlte contelt.
·• '. lilliJiU:PORT CIIIIJI can.or.
tat1... 18&amp;1... 'lburll!la,y, 7:3011.IIL CCIIUODbla' Gu ol Oblo ofllee.

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MASON, W. YA,
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·w:-•·

MASON FU.RN
HI!RMAM GRATE

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SPECIAL SAVINGS
GOOD FURNITURE
AND APPLIANCES

773-5592

.

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weekend here with their srelll- . " ,
.,., lite olllce ol the Ol)lo P - r
to.1 MrL AIOOli'CI PraU will be f~ l-'.\:·,f!'A4r:1-lf.t. ~4- ·
wpa~ ..~~\ .·,j\ ··~ .,.- 1 ~.,..
•
tll.iteso.
•
llr,
,IIIII
Mrl.
VlcliJao
Gaul
alii
'
' Weclneodly
c ,SYRACtlSE
.T IIIIID,
1111, VIctor, Jr, cl Garden Clt,y,
.,omimakara' Clllb, Wodile.odl¥,
lllob. liave baen ·her• vloltlng
il, ftrat-JiiOfiiOW 111- .Mr.
elll. Mr1. :J. M. Gaul elll
... at municipal Nrk; proJect.
claagbter, VIcki, &amp;mmer Road,
out yearbooks, allrla·ao
VIctOr II oillployod at
a. m., palluck lunch •ell lltint- lllllllor,
PIJmootlt,
Mlclt.lllldaltcmdalllllrt
g OW)I table service, .,...,,...,
ochoill at the· Haoory Ford Unl.
' ·'~ b;y Agnes White a o·d
varalt,y In Dearborn.
Slack, hostea&amp;oai oil IIIII ~ ,'A. Gaul, aatU.
ljoalcaro w.el.......
,
at tho Glenville Teachoro
:PAST PRESIDENTS, Auxiliary at Draw Webster Poat 39, Amer- Collep, Glanrillo, w, Ve. elll
1 · , ...c- 8 OJ. m. Weclne"""· · , bor Dlllco, Larey Clay, who at.
can _,....... .
..._ - · Henry Ford Ulllvoralt,y 11
at the cl Mro. George Moio- ~ Mich.,- opeut the put

,. : 'WINDING TIWLGardenCiub,

'

Erllle

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reve~:n. '

NOW IN FULL SWING

cl
Berwan-

.. No•••
ol 9llllllord•
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and vlctorlea In the Sugar and
Oldo Stale from 1954-56,
Grange, the man responsible Cotton Bowls,
Nevers made alLAmerica
for !living pro football a aholln
honors
in 192S as a fullback.
the arm following hla fabllClUI
collei!lsle career, made all. His ereatell day came Ia the
Amelca honora Ia 1928.:14.:15. 1925 Roae Bowl game when he
The 170-IICJWICI back had the gained 114 yarda In a loolns
quarterback position eveo though cauae ogainll Notre Demo and
Oct. 1&amp;, 1924 agalnll Mlcbigan outplned the famed Foor
When he acored flvetoucbllowns Horsemen In the lrtsh beck.
and paaaed for a oh1h Ia a 39-14 field.
Kinard foll..,ed Nagurskl In
Dllnl victor)', Foor cl Ills TD',
came In the llrst 12 mlnutea tne balloting_ The MIBBiaolpplan
and he ruahed for 402 yards In pi!U'ed !rom 1935 to 1937 and
the conte!t. He scored 31 was known for hls love for
tooehdowna while wearing an contact.
Sulfrldge, allhoutlll weli!lllng
Dllnolo -orm.
.only
185 pounds, possessed a
Naaou'ald, It 217 pounds,
mode aii.Amertea honora In lightning cheree ana earned all1929 as a tackle. The Mime~ America llonors for the Vola 11'1
tan, who never ployed hll!l1 1940. Parker waa an Allachool footl&gt;oll, alao pi!U'od America In 1956 and won the
fullback for tile Golden Go- OUtlaDd Troplly u the natloo'.
best ·1ntertor lineman wblle
Phers.
leedlng the lllc~ea ID a 9.0.0
The Trul,v Great Onea
Be.._.,, cltea described record and a victory In the
as the player uwho would do Rose Bowl.
Heln helped Washln,&lt;:lon Stale
more things Ia football thao
get
1ato the Roae Bowlin 1930anyone else, •• won the first
lall Ume the Couprs have
lleloman Trot&gt;h11a 1935, •
lleuih was picked at the vlalted the famed Paaadene
quarterback poaltlo oven lhoutlll gridiron,
Ooalerbaan capmred a II.
the TCU 10'8&amp;1 played the
lallback poallloa. He wao a America honors three years In
COIIIOIIIUI oil-America In 1938, a row at MlcllliiOJI- 1925.27.
Huston possessed speed, ex.
Slingln' Sam completod 274 cl
594 paaaea for 3,437 yards an!l cellent movea elll great hondo
44l touchdowns wblle the Horned whleh earned hbo all-America
Fraga pOitod a '17-5.2 record rocotlllftlon Ia 1934.

""' ......
"""'"'JJ1Jllaullll
Cllrlllllll,

Mr. IIIIi!' ' lll'l, Poter Vanlcta
.., Newtoo llf&amp;hlancl, Maoe. wore
rtcolll vllltorl cl her mother,
Mrs. Olon GeOhelmer and' oth.

er relatl~s.
TIDe elll Todd Nibert, cllll.
til,, 7:30 p. m. Weclneedly.
' '
clren
'c l· Mr. elll Mre. Pete NlWINDING TRAIL Guclen Club
bOrt
cl G*lllpoUa, apont t h e
WIU meet &amp;I 8 p. on. Weclneodly

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·Meditation Give(J1on
The amual forget - me • not
lBie oi the Dlublod Amort'*'
yeterans WUl be conducted on
tl.e llr80II c1 PomeiQ)o e111
Mlcldleport Friday and s.tur.
diU'.
· Membero cl the auxiliary c1
tile I'Vmero.Y D.A.V, wUI oell
tile forgeW!Ie.aoto Withal! pro.
cooda ID 110 toward BUpport cl
bolpl.tala tor veterana. Mr1.
Ethel Thomas Ia chairman r1.
the sale In Pomeroy, and Mr&amp;
Helen Kemody Ia llle MlddlePirt lBie cbolrman.
Both Mayor C. 0, Flaher cl
Middleport and Mayor Chari••
Logar cl Pomeroy haa pro.
claimed Friday ana slturdl,y

as "Forget.me...not Days."

'
Santa Claus Is a town
in
Spencer County, Ind. Every
Christmas, millions of cards
and packages are mailed
from Its post office for the
sake of the postmark.

YotOwtltTtYIWIIIfTt

SHOP AT BAKERS

It's ConvenienU

No Press11re - Gimmicks or False Advertising. We Can Give You Brand Name
Furniture At The Right Price, Beckecl By
Good Service!

COME AS YOU ARE!

BAIER FURNITURE

SAVINGS CO.

MIDQLEI'OitT, OHIO

JHE

FARMERS BANI

•••

POMEROY, OHIO

~tea~
1clencOL !lie lo 1 registered medical technician.
dd•ecor~:a~tlng~th~e~ho~me:·_ _-:--~Ecll~son~~llob~a~tette~r~.-----~G~an~g~e:s·~-------~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
l
Alii come Sulllay, Maxine CC.to Gaskill elll hUiband, Charles, ;..
!dill• vice preoldent o1 the Wellston banlc

Juiclc's New Luxury Estate Wagon

JowiJih

VIJ' for cystic nbroala children llll'\0 chapaau, 11-om2 to 5 p.m.,
tlle&lt;'8. Plan• ware mode ID lelll ,.. Sopl. ,'28. ·P)ane were made
caldo e111 1&lt;rapbooko at Cbrlot- for a llltl to bi preoenled to
cl-ecla- ·the .....,... elll her le .. eremaa time. A
tloo from the hoopltal officials loire 111 thti memben who will
... read.
bi ~tile recoptkin.
Mrs. llulll lL Thorntoo, chaAname waojireaelitedfor parlpeau, presllled at ·llle -ua&amp;
'alii lire. Ell- Searls,
with Mro, Powell, polivtor mem- cbalrman fO&lt; lllrll4!1 scholarber, IIIIIIOUIICing lho next pouvior shlpa, JM&gt;ted thehhe II pllllllllng
for !lee. 7 alii 8 at the Fort alullll raloiall pi'ojoct. llwaovotllayea Hoiel In Columllua. A od to · .....,.. lhe -ua&amp; lllllrt
school cllutructlon will be held from the tblrd t.fondor IDthellrst
on Dec. 7' following a &amp;Itch MIJ&gt;- Mooola, oleach 111011111.
,
per, alllllle pouvtor wiD be held
A rtlm.D'IIilP male ·~• announced for Oct. 8 elll 4 Ia lhe COurt
the mol'lllnl f~lowlng.
It was noted that the nation-. St. t.dldlnli formerl,v occul&gt;lod
at aecreiAiire hal rea~ed elll b;y P1dlllp Slaten. WIJ'O a n d
thll a new appointment will be means proJect&amp; lncllllle the lBie
made. Tho Meigs Solon recelv. of Christmas card&amp;, pecans, dish
clotb&amp;, greeting eards, knives,
flag pins, elll carlcly.
The traveling prize was won
b;y Mrs, 8mnel. Mra. Searla won
Glleala In adcllll,.. to those tile door prize, The oct. 6 meet.
named were Mre. T, A. Hewet. q wiU ba held at the home of
aon, Mrs. George E. Morrt&amp;, Mrs. Rhoda Hackett •
llrs. Francia Ander BOn, Mra.
Refreahments were served by
W~ Swisher, Mrs,
Keltb the hostess to those named and
Rlgp, Mra. Robert Jaoobs, lllra, Mrs. Pearl Knaw, Mrs. Ferne
Allen Elberfeltl, Mra. Pamela Cheesebrew, Mrs. Myrtle WalkMcClanahan, MilS Loulaa John- er, Mrs, Eunice Brinker, Mrs.
ooa, Miss BeckY Neaae, M r a. Marie Boyd, Mrs, Julia Hyaell,
Merlin Tracy.
and Mrs. Gla&lt;lys Mowrey.
Othen presenting gifts to Miss
Hewelaon were Mra. WUllam
Devout Hindus believe they
Glbba, Mra. WUIIam Downie, go directly to heaven l! their
Mrs. Robert Elberfeld, and Mrs. ashes are cast into the

G'rven M'rss Hewet son

' , ,,· THURSDAYCAPTAINSTEVECOATSLEAVESforay•rlliVIet.
· .,..., an ·aulinmenl which he requested when he entered the U. S.
Mrl, WUUam Anderaoo enterAm .Au;. L
lalned &amp;Jodai afternoon at ber
. ' ·· Steve took a month's training at lhe Sam Houlton Medical Army Rtferalde Drive, Pomeroy, home
:~ center, P'aatllw (rom thfre on Sept. 4. Hta wile ancl two 1on1 were with a per10111l shower honoring
·_., thtre with him but alnce have moved to Troy, MO:, to be near her Mles Join RewetiOI'I, brlde-eleet
cl Jo1m A)fred Anderson.
In VletiUI, Steve wUI be dlvldllli hlo time between the neld
Games were pl8j1odwltllprlzea
'oihd , hoapiiAIL He completed Ilia Internship at Doetora' HoapiiAIIIn baing WIRl 111 1\lra. Marvin Spen.
: Colll!pbul on Jul,y 1.
cer, and Mra. Lloyd Wrtl!llt.
.'
MeanwhUe, his sister, Olristine, ancl her hust.ncl, Dr. Ruaaell Mra. Jamea O'Brienwonthedoor
: ~,... 're J«titw settled at Laurel, Md. 'nr. Mcintyre next week prize, Refreshments were serv.
'"~'iii teaehq ln .tile Proteolant Dept. of the Clthollc Ulllveralb' ol od !rom a table eentered wilh a
Alhrtca. Quiotlne hao alreedy enrolled at the Unlvera~Q- of Mary- pink and white allier centerpiece.
·'1 Janll tor certain courses In education leadiqJ to her certtflcatton. to Rose arr.ngerntnts were uaed In

'• P....111a.

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.

eel an laYitltlon from J.Graln
C&lt;uiiQ' »f, f9r· a ~)Ilion honllo&amp;I"W II 0.. orflls lloizel SllDI cl canton,

_lhlp,

The
ceded thai' ...... Mlilt ... the
~ Iaiiie cl .......... Umlla

IJW .. 111e1raaon CCioJnb' Court

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IsA~pted
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or

B,y STEVE SIILANICH
UPI a:.orta Writer
NEW· YORK (IJPO - llaruld'
•'Jted" Gnaae, the fabled
GallqoiJW Ghost from Dllnols,
alii ladl-ble Bronko Na.
l'b'lld cl ~qou~-. superstars
ol the plden 1920s, were
the lap vote &amp;Iller• Ia baUollng
for lba - r a aU.tlme college
f.,...U team· .......,ed today.
~. apeed, elualveDBH elll ..,.ral know.llow
. - bltn a alt.
Amerlc:a, wu
the
on 1 ;y
unanlmnu ebolce on the u..
man IQI!Id picked by llle
F-.1 Writero Aaaoelatlon or

-

welfare ebali',..... repOrted . on
cards and dlmea sent ID the Na.

,._t:

i

Fund. Drive Set ·

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Wlelltnd
hlire.

vliWRs. t1Je1r famlUeB .

~ Mta. llarry. sidlor
rellirno11 "' er~ roe.aa;.
Mr.

otter vllltlntl 11..:&lt;1
Mabtl WOlle.~..

will! ......

,... 'l!: ., ,

"' · •'

Mt, lllcl Mta. DPic! Mew
e111 famli1 hive roturnod to New•
ali&lt; a11er a riolt 'hmi with tlttlr
parenla, ""· .... """· Charlel

£ol&lt;ew. J\uneror,, uc1

lfr. e111

Mre. llarv.., ~lioolaa, IIUIIand,
f!etlt Am rtiUined to Newark .
wltll lioi'· pa.- a . . . .., • .
rialt here wltll bor llriOidl&gt;ar-

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17, 1~9·

nain Mail Call
:Is 1n Fifth Season
.IJUir oC Amerlea'of1Doiii)'OW1(! Foree unita, and tn ground un1t8
wW ljiOIId ai1olher lonely throughout South Vlelllam a ri d
~~~ In South Vlolnam. TbaUand who pus them 1D the
TliQ . do DOt 101 policy. They get servicemen. Tbe men enjoy thie
loaol1. theJ IIW8IIt, they bleed, f'tlenclly tellers or 11111110rt and
ud !llli\v wW die. A cheerfUl cheerfUl Christmas greetlnp.

Cllilibnu IHOdog !rom a
lltraalw meana far more to them

lball,... mlll!lrtallze.

Tblo Ia the ftflb Christmas
card

,lll'lilram for Vlolnam Mall

Call, a noo.proftt corporati011
that baa forwarded ·hundreds or
-•nd• oC Christmas greetlap 1D coordllla1Dralnhosp!l4ls,
~, OD lbipl at ~. in A i r

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The '-New :federalism" as propoled b~ - N i x o n !a aimed 11 reverSing the trendo1overcenlrallzadon oC government
Ill WaohlngtDn. For nearly
40 years tbe Federal government
has taken on more and more rethe Deeds of
oponolh!llt11D our poople.
'-.be problem," Mr. Nixon told
tbe na.tlon's pernors at UJeir
recent Western conterence, ••has
not a lade of good lntendons
and not merely a lack of money.
- s inherlted 001 of the
11130' s proved 001 of date in the
JNO'a; structures put together
ln the 1930's broko clown under
the load oC the 1960's. Overly
ceatrallzed, over .. ~reauerati­
dzed, the Fedsral QJvemment
bU become UDtesponsive as weU
u :IDefftcient.,
The fiow ol money to Washl!lllal clurlllg the llepres Blon and
World War D bae continued uncluriDg moot ol the postwar era. "Yet far from solvID&amp; our problema," the Presldeat poiDted out, •auJese expendllllres have reoped a harvest
ol clls.,.Uotactlon, frustraU011,
aad bltte?- division. ft
1bo Nlml domosdc Blrategy
II clear cut. He ls calllllg lor
a mull1ve eooperatm ~~
pR eaatrol, ~~aDd au~

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Many have written expressing
81JPreelaUon for the thoughUUL
words d. encouragement.
Write a cheerful note of support on several Christma&amp; cards
tods.y. This non .profit corporation will see that they reach
lonely Wt brave Americans
somewhere in the sniper infested swamps and fismtng bills or

dividuals doing, caring, sharing.

This challenge is to the states,
cities, towns, communities, and
most of all, to the people themselves."
The U. S. Constitution calls
for a clear separation 0( powers, establishing three separate
branches oC government for the
Executive, Legislative, and Ju.
dlclal !uncUons. In this co-.
the Constitution requires the
Chief ~cutive "from time to
time giv~ the Congress information of the state ot the Union and

recommend to their consideration such measures as he shall
jlldge necessary and expedient."
Mr. Nixon has made his recommendations as Chief Executive
and placed the legislative respon-

.cites. wm-.
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1110MAS CLOSSER

, ,. , WASHINGTON ~I) . - Sel!o
· · Henry ' M. Jackson. D-Waan.,
told the Senate Tuellday not to
take "the unneCeasary risk'' .
delaying dewiopmeni of aa
advanced supersonic bomber• .
Jack801l, a member . ot· the
Senate Anned Ser1icea c..,;.
mlttee, said plana lor tho plano
are geared ''to the threat as we
see it about th~ years frQIIII

District Job
Thomas A. Closser, assistant

sll)ertntendent oC water an:l sewage ror Yorkville, Ohio, has accepted the position or technical
aide with the Buckeye Hills-Hocking Valley Regional Development
District. Gerald G. McComb, exdoes not use stamps on the envelopes. The box or package is ecutive director for the devel~
broken open and each Christ- ment district, a.nnOUilced the hirmas card is placed In a differ- ing of Closser at the district exent box and each box ls air mail- ecutive board ard councl1 meeted to a different address in ing Monday in Marietta.
Closser comes to the district
Vietnam or Thailand. Make check
well
Q.181iried in community d&amp;or money order payable to Vietnam Mall Call, Int.lntheamount velopmenl, having served for the
oC 10 cents tor each Christmas past three years in the additioncard In your package. Address al capacity or coordinator of
an envelope to VietDam . MaD community development in York·
Call, Inc. and place a stamp on ville where h.e was born ard
it. Place Ule check or money or- reared. He has attended seminars
der in the envelope and stick it on urban renewal~ federal housing and oth.ers related to developto the loP of the pack&amp;ge.
December lst is the deadline ment.
At the regional level, Closser
for malllng Otristmas cards to
Vietnam Mail Call, Inc. How. will be aidil'€ Milton Murphy,
ever, they should be mailed as community affairs coordinator,
soon as posslble so they will not in assisting cities arrl villages
be I'Jeld up in a last minute rush. il'\ projects requiring federal alii
state runding in Athens, Belmont.
Start malllllg now.
Hocking,
Meigs, Monroe, MorThis is an ideal CI'Jristmas
gan,
Noble,
Perry and Washingproject for clubs, schools, scout
ton.
Closser
and hhl wife, l.Qref...
troops, veterans groups, c o lIeges, chUrches, andotiherorgan.. ta, will be moving to Marietta
izations as well as ramllies and sooo.
llldlviduals. Help ls needed, and
will be very muci'J appreciated.
Birthday Greeting.
t 11 e

frarneworli of separaUon of Federal powers. He bas not assumed
the roleofChle!Leglslalor.Rather he has sought to work in part..

BLOUSEs· ~·
Voluoo to $3.99, roll
ol.ov_e mtldolo ' 't n '•lid • ·

.colon ·

ond , prlntoc!
lorno. Slzoa 32 to 40.

·$.

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ialo 1970 with dalp: dtanp. •ad Jmprove..... lot' ..........ace, eomfort. cOnvenienee ... ufetJ'. Gnrule
M111taa1

p1

lh......,.....,.

_(..,)ott- a_.,...
Loadao.. ly!e Yi•JI ,..r, duol
.... .a4le J111f 11, aluminum ~ker panel moldlnp, and hound~­
~ I'Jhl
llath I (botaom) 11 lOUP.. in loob and pufertsn·ee whll llll:rk...eeented aluminum rotker panel moldlap,
......,. rdi' IIIWer ltaek panel •ppliq~~e. du.. neln1 mlrron and
,._.... aew' ISI"foar~l V-8 a• the atandard powu plud. All

i'.,..

................... have hi!lh-baek bueket ,MIItl •• ttadanl.

lade~

what beer
i' all qbout
'

-

Brief typ1 prl~
··eatton ""''• tw

olrl•, ,, ... 4 to I"-

NOll''

LAOI~ I'IEt ~ALL

DRESS
COATS

'•

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.
NElW8, N
, .,tes· ·.
rol,IK (ljPO-QU;o~
II~\ llna!"ft ~re
' .

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Volu.. to u.Z.50 ••• fflll
ttlmtned, new feh str,Une,
••lid coler. and· p okla,
•t•ndecl folwlea with oc..

Extenalon

"''"""' llq Fox, Cll!lon, preunted

99

99 ·
MI$Sg' ~OiiLON

.CREW SOX

SAME DAY
SERVICE
lnAt9-0utAI5

m tho opoa!nc

.1

I

·;.~

.

·

.'

'" " 1D raise thls larp oum. Beoldea the larp c:ontrlbullou 1rl
·:tile ftre .....,._ for -~~~ Cll tho truck, It baa aloo¢.
;'draoed lire hose and a opeclal fiolllltralnor.
'
:\ ' "lboae Yolllllleer ftremon Who l!lvo so freely oC their Ume do' . . . . the belli ln ~nt, and ealiOCially our lf&amp;lltude for their
· ••~ceo tO thair 00 11111111111\Y.
•. .
,
·'' THE NEW I i S GROCERY STORE lo New Havm naiiJ adds a
llil. Jo the colllllliiiiiQ&gt;. 1be larp Ulllrt _ . urd llabt , ..low pre. .
:~calod ateel brUd!ng with the red brick !rorrt wUI be QPeOlo
. !ll'!prblt~ P October I.
.
'!~&lt;'. Goorp ·Cl\'c!e oC Aohlancl, ~ ., wW be the IIJ&amp;!IIIPI"; Aaalltant
~'""""" lo t:.rl Gudner, Now llavon, urd Pat Slalrley oC Becklvi ·- maaaaor.
.
.
, ¥c'·}VIIIIam K. Marrrball, Now Haven, bae -*t a bualoeu on·
,
. Drift where be will sell TV, - · and radloo. lolr.
,
.. wUl also do repair Jobe on TV ole.
,., l'VT, E..2 RI!VNA c. KING m, oon oC lo!r. and lolrL RemO Jarrr;
~. oC New liavoa, . bae completed hll beBlc tralrrlDI from Fort
Kilot, kentuch:r. Pvt. Klq: bae aol1fllllld to Fort Sam Houo.
f!l!r. Tona. lor trahrlng u a medical eorpaman. He II a grad.
~ oC Walrama IIIah School snc1 the llDIIed .. Jutl-

llill,

LotdiiVIII~, ~.

1 '\'

'

I' ' ,. ., .

lllrr h u - . WlUlam(BOI)Marohalllo a sophomore atMarJhall
um18rol!l.
Mr. urr1 lolrL Curds McilaJ&gt;.
lei 1ialled over the weekend with
tliolr
urd ramUy, lolr.
and 11rJ. s.mey Sounder&amp; and,
thre&lt;i chlldren. •
~· and. Nii. WlJ!ram Slrud&lt;
of PrlncetOil, N.
J., mlled liol' m-.., Mrs. T.
J. 'Rpn ard wllh loQoo Elllabeth
Ryaa at Mfoon. 1be ~e.,.
rolltc!thelr sonatFunnari~
1...,,&lt;1!outh Clroll...
- .
.
E11i1 Zerkle, oon of jlr." ard
lolro. Orarley Zerkle, Newllavon,
lo a tallent at CobeU.Holntin&amp;ton
RoellaL The tlrreoyotroldchUd
became ·won Saturday momltW.
Mr. urd lolrs. BIU 1bmiraa,
Maoon; lolr. am Mrs. Richard
Plckeal,lillddleporl;au..rdedthe
!wreral olarolallve,GeoqeWll!lam (Bill) Plckena at Beltlmore,
Mel.
lolr. Pickens reportedly dled
suddenly of a heert attack on a
plano enroote to Plttoburgh.

daUrfrter

•"'1 ,oon. llaa!!.'

p.Ocollll ~e p~Yalled
11re trl..,.r 1urnec1 out to be
ln the oincN ~ UrelaJrd. Proof, lolrod'ra~ Jiaao. whose ' boso,
\hOI ll · ~ori't
In the Sidney Selwltz, l'pre&amp;ldent Of a
~ .., ~ IO'hst aimed at fir.m u.t• whQieoales
.,1111!11• till lflrloo, ~stdeservltW llneo, 11re _.,.r of two put
ot. ouch 1 . lrl!&gt;'-whUe the hor leellrw,• Into verse ln 'about
oecrO!Ul' *!to l ~led htm 10 mtnutea.
,
..catloned for !reo ln Puerto
Ill tile poem she covo'10'1 the
Rleo.
many Jlde• of her boss,
~ .-at, sponaored Ill' Gal lncludq:
FridaY , Services In&lt;&gt; ard a
"All day, at dlctaUon, he's on
radio ...,. urd -ork, drew the speedy side.
entrl!IS !rcn aecretlrloa from
"AI 4:5~. thoo&amp;b he's on the
Now York to Sen ~cloco. creepy side."
The atatlc between haeaea alii
She said he's on the low aide
their helperi -renli.Y Is when a raloe ls due BDil oo the
noll"""lcle.l
cold alde wlren prolJQ to duo,
Oti:Jer secretaries eave these
reasons for wanttllfi to - t h e

. IN· 0118ERVANCE OF CONsrmJTION WEEK, SepUmber 17·, , merdranto. oC New lleY81 are Nliiollled 1r1 dllpley the Amerlean Fjag. 1be IJQioorlrrl lo tile Ladleo Arnrllloey oC Blrrlth
Ciir!&gt;bart Poll ilto. .
· .. lifa. !ilbfl 'SmWr, preolderrl oC the orpaloatlon, baa 1r0ea ap*'Died 1D servo .., ,.__,_.._ Bonlee - · lire repro~clallot 5 Patrick and Mrs.
.IM
Ryan have returned to Mason,
Hilled · the lnrop at ari IIXIICUIIvo bosrd maetiDg at the llalllel followbw hla discharge !rom the

--""""Y

llr!onili,a atarleatoa.

service. They had been reslcllrw
near Fort Hood, Texas, where
Sp~ 5 Ryan wao stationed. AI
the present tlme they are resld1111 wl!h hto parents, Mr. am
,IJii""tW;-• :Mro, llll!rlr. ~. Mn. 'lllelma Copebul, Mra. lolro, Edward ~an.
.l'red lloalh, llro. Sadie Warth, lolra. Jack Grueaer, lira. Mar.
The Jr. OUAM TraveU1111 Leabl' llitft, ilro. Evtrett Roolh, Mrl• Hel• Kuw. lolr., Bob guo -led at Glenciale, w. Vs.,
~L ,Mia ~. Mro. Mar7 .iumuler and lta.llllfl oa SUnday. The team represent.

_. At . a .,bUalrietJ meGUna: af the 1tGUP. they voted to~· 0111
l!utlirou 'lird CillO aoclal meeling aach month. AI the reoent meetllrr.' ;11111- 'Mae ~, WBI awarded the. door prize. Retreahrnoall
hottooaeo Kadr1ooa. Rooah aed llellll . ~. At-

Plano lor holllai the 0cL 2.
of ·the IMp Cowrl&gt;
Cooacll ol Panorts and Teachera were made ..,rlllg ~ reclri
maetiDg oC the Solem Center
P.T.A.
Nlll'ed chalrmso and..:..W.rmao to prepare lor the meeting
were lolro. Cotherllle Colwell and
Mn. Emmopoe Simms. Other
member• wlll be aoked to donate
toward the refrerrlunenta and 1D
a1Bllll In aerring and wlth other pllaaes o1 hoaU,. the meet-

~

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COLliM!!VS (UPI) ~ ,T h e

.

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ha...,...,..

=-h~::.~:.~.:.:
Will Host Countv
Meet
K. Marahall,
Ha·
J

· :e".!.

Fl1111 cotton lcnlt ......., tw•
piece In new f11ll collll'l ..4
· pott-"•· GHII loc.ill111 ......
ot iludget prlcea.

FROM

cllv-

Wllliain
New
ven aJil With Mr. and.lolrJ. ftd&gt;.
. Dll, YOU KNOW 1'HAT the Maaon Volunteer Fire lleportment el'll Jrimi!l Roooh, Mason.
paid .12,000 m Its •15,000 ftre lruck purchaled In J11111017,
Karen · wUI graduate In two
'&gt;'it!""' 1b:\l lo oome record - Julll lOti to . - poop1e cao WHka from St. Mary's School oC
'," "· The Ladle• Awdllano ol Ma"'"' bae roallJ worbd In help. Pnc:llcal Nursl,. ln HurriiJwtoo.

DRESSES ,.

tor. llnlnpa.

11!•

t~

,Chimpalpe

. , ~ o1 t-Il achieve.
meats hl&amp;f!lfaltled all'-ampreoenledbylolrs.OllvePage.Bemleo Gomes told ol the 4-11 club
wvrk and Lolo Rupe oarrated a
rmre ol garments made by the
slrt•. The club me-ra also
presented a skit &lt;x1 4-11 acU11Ilea.
Presenting the bo.Y• 4-11 club
~ was Larry Momgomeroy.
lllahUlllrt• of hls trlp to Wuhlrriloo, D. C. for a c!Uzenahlp .
1111ort couroe were given Ill' Rlc1&lt;J Pierce. Kenneth lblia told
oC his rrtoy at tire Junior leoderahlp camp, and .Beech Coop- ·
er aoBlllled Ill' David lllltchell
gave a !lrat ald demonlllraUon
oa artl!lclal reop!radon.
lbllll al80 told about b l s

-

project. urd dron he and
Pierce Wked '"' . groom!Jre
equipment urd teehniQUOs used.
Prize money for art exhlolta
at the Melli• C&lt;rorncy Fair was
cllotrlbrled by llro. Rd&gt;erta WUsoo. Robert SWick, awarded the
cub ocoot &lt;barter, thlnked
the P. T .A, for sponsorlllg the
pack. M;o. Alma Smith expreso· ed ljlprecladon to the unit lor
providing luncheon Iran.
Durinl the meeting CCIIDicted
Ill' lolro. Catherille lllltcheU, Mro.
WUaon ,_cedthalllxthgrado
llludents can be Ill the band and
can rent lllatruments. !ire tJrank..
ed the P.T.A. lor the drapeo
for the auditorium and tllo bllncla
lor the claurooms aloog the
road.

,

A feature ol the mooting ,...

~~~~~~tidY,
makes

forgolbll,
mistakes, insists on
hatting Into JD.Y systems • , • so
I'm c0111&gt;letely at sea. And to
make It even worse, 1 work
wlth hlm all day and opend
most nights wlth hlm. you see,
. 1 married 1110 gey."
· "The Lord gave me Only o.., .
pair of hondo, b u t they ain't
enough lor all tho demands of
boiJOB at home, and boss eo at
work. Please aend them all raat
•.• 1D the moon or Maro, 1 care
not where. Onl.Y get theni•out out of my halr."

Wi&amp;om Announcing
Birth of a Son

, , &gt;;!~·&gt;

. ,

.state H~ Dopa..-t wu, , ,
. ,; _ .o
10 opoir 1o ~r~.m¢ tG!fay lbout . • I,avl~
17 mHos ollnter!lalehll!hW~•
-' ., .

1!

ro MN!t

l~ Soanmlt and '"""I• ·
Ues eoounc about 419.4 milllori, !
1'110)' lnclllle 10.5 mUeo ol
lnterlllate 271 In Medl!B and
'
Sommlt coundea ard e. 7 mUes
oC lnteratate 277 ln Soanml!
Cowrt&gt;, which lo the AkrOn ti)..
,....
~:.W~.it.W.Y/.&amp;i.::@:?"&amp;

'

• All rlillred •·•~ ia
COI!rrb' ;llft•IaviiH

In Uio .... 111chl. ':=~
terll,llllildiipart, Fr

• ,-t,_.,;,:

m.
lolra,
111001111,

thO Ohl4l
. . . wiU '.

pO.e of

a Jlolcs, Cooai!J

Firat lady Winer
Winner of the first Indl·
anapoHs spe«&lt;way liiJO.mlle

auto race was Ray Harroun.
On May so, 1911, he drove

hia Marmon Wasp an

aver~

age of 74.6 miles per hour
for the six-hoUr, 52:tMl-minute rlde and gained the '10,000 prize.

tiro· 12 i:lru!ldea Ia
Olilo airoal!¥ have ClotpterL
. .. . ,...... Qlllrl
'
Quicksand ln ltseH doN,.
not have the ability to draw
a peroon 1D his clealb, lib

though

one can drowrr

becoming engulfed ill

Jjy

lbli · ·

water-ufurated s a n d, ~e&gt; '
cor41Dg 1o Ore Encyclopudla
Britannica.

~~is wriHen ••• "'eQI.I~ifwl

~lgss ~rln~s hgffiness

Your"'""'"
of hljlpintu
await at you, Aslrlllld
&amp;t.Jtion. Scandinavian de&amp;ign
.Z2·ounce bevo1age glo...,
.,., ,,.,. witlr each $3.00
purclrase of Ashland
gasoline. These beautiful

glasses match tire !6
and 9·ounce glasses
offered p_
reviowly. Stop in
at ,..,, participating

Ashland Dealer•s todaj•.

lolr. and Mrs. Robert WUson,
Middleport, are announcing tbe

the recognttlon of teaehero and
new famUios. Tho treuurer'o birth of a son on September tO
report shoWed a balance of $35.- at Holzer Medical Center. The
lnlam weighed 8 pounda .and 13
9S. Tho fourth grade w&lt;111 the attendsnc:e bomer. The newP.T.A. ounces am has been na.med Joaol!lcoro were lntrocUcod by eph Anthoey.
Grarq,arerta are Mr. am Mra.
Mrs. Mitchell.
Joseph
Lish, Mason, and Mr. all!
The pledge 1rl the Oag and the
National Antlrem opened t h e ML·a. Joseph E. Wilson, MiddlemeeUng. lolro. VIvian Pierce pre- port. Great..grandparentsare Mr.
sented devotions uslllg scripture alii Mrs. L. E. Piersall, Point
Pleasant, Mr. ard Mrs.. Joseoh
from Proverbs.
V.
WUoon and lolrs. L. M. Boice
Ro!reshments were served!oian of Middleport.
lowillg the meetlllg.

Watch Arte Jo/rnson

on NBC TV's
''Laugh·ln''

ASHLAND OIL &amp; REFINING cOMPANY

,-----------------------_:~------------------------------- ,

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,~- ~~~ =-~~:::=
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'

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the (orpildia. · eaco 'l'oNII. . BIU StuJ!il&gt;, lletr)o
~· ""*'~ ~~ ~~III,QI-, C.; Trltllley •. TbtF were Rai- Miller, Ruosell C'apehart. ) .
. · , IIQe)l, ~ ·
.J - Clrapmaa; treuurAcctiii1Pinylng their husbands
llfl·
'f-!'11; arara~. anc1 lilritual, Jriu ' I ' - ; 11o1- were lolra, lllrrry MIUer and Mrs.
glalhJ, Comlaltleo, Lorelti'.......,.l.aor1 Wilda V•a ......; flrb. Ru11all W
~ sao- and ·~ Jim-; llemberllblp, . lleleo
Jr. OVAM League Bowls
Silfllt;11lcha,rd Oli~!aPr;·:-&lt; .
at tho MIICOI BowUnll Center on
the Cllrfat IJDIIed -~~ Clllrch Octmer 5 urd 12 at 11 a.m.
doYollol!ali.
the ....... the teacher&amp; Ia. .
lollu Elaine Cortwrislrt, Cllf.
. themselveo ird the ....-.. Ill tuirr ·~ their!....,.
1011, urd Orarlotte Clevencor,
· Afterwards the ~ riat 1rl tho ·~· claasNow lllrven, lave enroUed atGallli&gt;.olla Boslness Se)loo~
lolro. Helea Barker, Cllllon, ls
r......,nliDg !rom ourgery at the
Plea- Valley Hoapllal.
Mra, Anne Rotrrnan, Cllft011,
Ia 111111QII her daughter, lolrL
(;ladyo Wolfe at llarileti, OhiO:
Roy llofbaaa, on a thlrt,y - di.Y'
leave !rom tho army, ts 'viBlUrw
t,ta ,IIUOrrts, ~. and Mrs. EmU
~ ln PL Ploaii&amp;DI. llof!milli rilll leove la the
future

Jltl••·

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Tho

'""""""'Durfrrc,
iii

ONEDAY ONLY

CINCINNATI (UPO - Uvestock:
cattle: 350. Calvee: 100.
Slaughter steers aOO heiiers
slow, stead,y to instances SO
cents lower, cows slow, weak
to 50 cents lower, bulls about
steadY.
Choice 950..1100 lbsteersyield
grade 2-3 2&amp;.28.50, mixed good
and choice 27.50-28, good 25.5027. 75, ei'Joice 750-900 lb heifer•
yleld grade 2-3 26.56-27.50, nlll
good and choice 26-26.50, g o o d
23-26, utility am commercial
cows 19.51)..21.50, cutter 17-20,
commercial and good bulls over
!ODD lb 24.5().26.50, vealers
steady, choice 3S-42, good 32-38,
300-350 lb choice slaughter
calves 26-34.
Hogs: 900 Barrows and ,gilts
40 cents higher, active.
U. S. 1-3 206-240 lb barrm¥s
and gilts 28.25, 2-3 246-260 lbs
25. "n-26.25, ..... steadY 1D 2.;
cents lower, 1-3 300-400lb22.'n24. 2-3 40~00 lb. 22.5().22. 75,
600-'IDD ro. 21. 75-~2.50, bOars 2550 cent• higher at 18.75-19.50.
Sheep: 200. Slaughter lambs
an:l ewes steady, choice aod
prime 9MIO lb sprlllg lambs 2628, cui) 1D good ewes 5-10.

00-'

· PANtiES

!';'jlii

Markllt !feport

polO
\ 1·

GIR,!..S' COTTON PRINT

SHIRT
FINISHING

Mr and Mr

. ,

pre-

.. ,.,

recuperaUon in Australia ror s1x
clays, and returned 1D his A I r
Baae at Bien Hoa. SUnday. He
will be stationed ln Okinawa alter Nov. 1 for 18 months. Jus.
Us Is a graduate of Eaatem Hlgll
School, class of 1967.

Received by Phone

• •. ,

By ,(lAY PAULEY
. .
NEW
·
;•
·
·
,\•
J
a oecrela, C..,oral urd , Mr::fl. Arllji GoJ,. ry · 4t her' rl&amp;bt !"1111 - would
ford and,, IUI. Grei;'!flo!aOI...; lllrml•IA!' t!l" bol,oloraJolrrno;~
W•. VL,1iolll!!_.... ,the ...,.....,:• .• ;
'
,
..
·
with .~~. lolr. aird ·lolra, . , · '·women~s :
.
,
,
"· '
1 Y(IU~ ~h,
Mr. ard lolra. Orerrter ~
Siberia? , • • . ,
and ~14\ d Mclloon,llr!0, ,11· · A.swer: · ~ pt..cy
sltsd·IIO ~wlthlolr.~llra, · 1\l&lt;h secretarlu exist, lnclllllrw
~ION ,
lo!aoon Coiu11Y Achlov_.- Dar· Ia · acl)lo!liled' lor o.,mu J'lllll&lt;a.
two · ~ reel ao
·B, at the 4-11 camp at ~.1'1!0-..ll'~llarY•III." ~;,llr, ~· ~~Kenneth. ~ •tronc!Y obout It ilat they'd
-~ c. E. Erwin,
~ I!'* coam;y- and p Ill Rocherrter,. PL vlll~ write a IICIDiraU,. esi&amp;J', Jetler
lllkora CGuacll. 1be event wUl be poduck. Reclatrllloll WID oom- ltd ,Qeentlr' ;;dth Mr. and Mra. or poein oa the "whJ"-m:l
at 9:16 Lm.
'
lid! llouih In Mllon. 1be ~ alan their nomeol
· lfra. Audrey J. Emery, Coorrr1iY
Agant, attoniJod ~ el'll w.ro bert 1D enroU their · AU thlo time 1 tlroulbt
ca._. at Cedar Lakeo aloog with 11!11 JlaUie Jor- •• at Marllall Uniftralty.
Mn. c. E. Erwin, Mra, Laureae Lawla, Mra. Rq Fox,
llf: ·indlolrL WIUiamManhall
Matilda Nobt,, lolro. Olio Ranclolllh urr1 lolro. Jill Foremaa.

·,

Given our ·dangerous aid
unpredictable world situation
and given the unabated Soviet
adwnces in nuclear offensive
and defensive systems, laee no
point in taking the unneceasary
risk (or not bulldirw tt.)"
Sen. George McGovern. .!)..
S.D.,
sald
he antlctPaled
"strong s14Jport'" for hts
amendment to stop the Air
Force !rom coOOuetlng rullscale
development ol tho $15 bUUoo
bomber. He said he had no
intention or withdrawing the
amendment. But arter loslrw
fights to defer ti'Je antlbaUisUc
missile system, a new aircraft
carder and a giant cargo plane,
few anticipated a turn or the
tide in the eight-week battle to
cut the $20 billion deiense
procurement bill.
Uberty Bell
Since 1854. the Liberty Bell
has rested in the hall of Phil·
adelphia's Old Statehouse on
a 13-sided pedestal, each
side representing one of the
original 13 ·colonies.

·

': tO

01

eroy,

1-

'
\'

Vrew

now."

Closser Takes

'·

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&gt;·

..

Potentiad '··

Bab k
0
•
•·. scar
coo
ot Tuppers Pl&amp;ns received a
·!Mephone call !rom their !osnershlp~
the
Coogreas
oon, A-lC Ray E. Justll
sibilitY on, F,j&gt;ngres&amp;.
ward
m.nati~
I!Dll&amp;.1bls
·..-.,g
birthday greetings to
ptesident Nixon Is thus trying
. same Jllj!IOiopby " n.,., helng lolr. llabcock.
carried ln1D his relationship wlth
Air
J
and
other levels o1. govemment.
man us11 s 1s on re111
state and local govemmenta
now have the chance to aasume their proper role. It Is
lmperaUve that they respond to
thla chaUeoge. Only through positive action at all levels oC goy.
emment ~ we assure that the
needs of all oor people can be
met eft'ecUvely, eftieiently and
economically.

'

,.

·:Mason Area , .:·J1oss.es, Bewatej; Y#ur SecretarieS··

•

Sooth Vletoam. start w I t .,
Dear Fellow American. Tell a
little aboot y0U1'14tl!, 11&gt;1r ram.
li.Y, and report • l!Ulo cheortul news. Request a reply it TOQ
wlsh. Sign your nome and com.
plele address. Address the envelope: To A Fallow Amerlclll;
VIetnam Mall Call, Inc., P. O.
Box 3104, Colirm!Ns, Georgia
31903. Enclose ID cents Ill each
envelope to help with expenses
ol Ute corporation.
Unllmited numbers of cards
mey be mailed to V.M.C. without
rear of two earda going to the

to PI uper., operate within

',;'
·

same man. Wben mailing a large
nwrtber of Chriatmas eards, address the envelopes same as
above but mail all In one box or
package ln order to save your.
sel! money on postage. Do n o t
place stamps on envelopes to be
mailed In boxes or packages, onl)'
on the box or package. V.M.C.
at the levels of goovemment closest to the people - the states
and locai!Ues. "Washlllglon will
no longer go it alooe," Mr. Nixon told the governors. uwash ..
IDglon will no longerdlctatewlthoot consulting, This poses a new
challenge to the states - not
only to administer programs;
not ooly to employ resources, b.it
to choose the things for which
they should be employed. The
new federaHsm also recognizes
the role ol the people - of in-

... . .

:·'

PORTRAIT SPECIAL FOR EVERYONE
c~lodul, ...,•• 1111·~ 1'1100
ehlne •o•h••lo · 1'0111~­

"'11• ilrlghten
In yo~ hC'IMo

a"V ' ,o.,.. .

· ~aid 16"

tar Vlotnaia.

VInyl

lolrs.

GYM BAGS

Q't

w.

.

'

-r

cart llarmoa ard l'amlly

1ioltl,. relatives at

~

o C - aretho

Tarli!J,

Pluo 50¢ Camera F-compiiN ·at •25
GENUINE FULL COLOR PORTRAITS!
SATISFACTION GUARANTEES .,. your ,...;.y ..fundod.
FOR ALL AGES! Bobies, children, !ldults
.Group photographed 111 on odditlonal choi'Qt.
LIMITED OFFER I ON! per subjtct, one per. family•

~OU~IN~~~~----~----~

PRESTIGE
HOUSE OF' COLOR
. . NATIO"AL r
PHOTOGRAPHERS .

BOYS' GYM SHOES

".

illll OXFORDS.·
...WO
'

Ruschel's
"

Variety Store
POMEROY

FIID.Y, IIPT. 19

.,,

Footwoar Savings At ·
.,

.

' .

(

. Bliick .. " wh~o
wtfh h!Nvy ~noWM
~ --·•••IS: ~t ,. .

OUR PHOTOGRAPHER
·WILL IE AT

114 E. MAIN

~/,"

'

~i'

i,.,_, ' ,

...,·'

'

'"

Introducing the totally new
Supreme from Oldsmobile.
Tt.1910
Machine
that delivers elegance
in a trim MW size.

Imagine you cruising around town in
this sleek beauty. P1oud?-you'd better
believe it. This trim new personal
size Supreme lets you move up to
Olds elegance without leaving the
· low·price field.llul then, that's
your secret-a secret luxuriously
hidden under that formal new roof
and elegant lines. And there's Rocket
V-8 action that won't quit-thanks
to another Oldsmobile exclusive:
unique Positive Valve Rotators.
Ct!tlass Supime-&lt;&gt;ne of 29 Olds
chines Inviting you
• Escape
to make your scape. Oldiii!Oblle:
'·' .-cape from J11e ordkllUJ.

-~; ' o:l ·~ ·n to
,\(1 ( ~

A
t ,)q

�,,i~'

,.

,.

.. ,,

.

'

~~'

__

;

\

.- , '

., ,

'

)?f'l'r.

~- , ,r

'

:.t~q,_

:f,.
''

Need::Something~.i~ ··
WASIIII\G:I'ON,

~ ..;:' llo,_

lllllilt/ !W
uq ~~.r V.S.
. .. ·- :;::~=:,~
llouM
V~nl IIIII 1roop
lot 4M,p

lni
~111e''' -·tiiO
wllbdr~wala•
Ill lr7lal to ~ lfoaol

21,000. Allor It It

Qooopf,

-""

iUh "" .

II . - ..poet mllml!«&lt; U.S. ~ ~ oi Me,OOO~Oil&lt;!tllionll

-ai~ni' ln

llehUo Solerelar7 NeiYin R.
Lllnl ' eollod. - · ~ to dolall
wl!lcll ...U. will be lllvolved In
the latelll doclalon to )lUll 3:&gt;,000
troopo out br Doc. 15,
The wl1hclrawal &lt;' 3:&gt;,000 lain
oMI+ino to a pre'llout cut Ill

"*"·

'

~m$.'$.~$!WW.=I
The - ' · ~ .,_
... Alflicl Molhodlll ~ .
IIIII be · held Clil' ~. . IUiolll SqJoool II 10130 IIIII
......... AW-IIIIIbo
bald at 12:30.

1be _ _ __.,.. IIIII

. ,'

'mESE ARE THE PROSPECTIVE new members of Ohio

GrOve CJI.y 1111!1
local Weal. Tho plbllcla wei-

.

INFLATION B~ATERS!... Our Best Buys Always Save

ner in Pcmeroy. They are, tront row, left to right, Barbara
Flelda, Pam O'Laughlin, Becky Nease; back row, left to right,
Jeanette 1.1tomas. Sally IQJels, Donna Stewart and Janice Meea.

Phebe Says:

FURR1 .LRIVER NEWS J

•

~oney

You

PRODrTCE BUY!

·',

FRESH

GREEN BEANS
.2 lb. 39~

GAUGES- Gallipolis,12.4and
12.2 rwming 2 feet oirollers;Pt.
Pleasant, 23,98; Pomeroy·Ma-

'

son, 20:40i Hinton, 0. 67 stat.;
Kanawha Falls, 2. 97 rising; Charleston 17.98 stat. LoOOon, Mar·
met. and Winfield, are on the silL
BOAT MOVEMENTS:
GALLIPOUS LOCKS - Semel
down 8:55 m.: QuE!'en CltydO'Nn
10:35 p. m.; lfdiana down 1:05
a. m.; Susan Lane up 4:15 a. m.;
Elgerclitt up 5:30 a. m. i Peace
up 6 a. rn.; Onward up 8 a. m.;
Charles K. ~ S:55 a. m.
KANAWHA RIVER - London.
Solvay down 6: 20 a. m.; Marmet,
Alan R. Merrill down 1:30 a.m.;
Winfield, W. R Shaver, Jr 1.1&gt;
5:05p.m.; Lelia C. ~earerdf)Wn
9:45p.m.; Ouachita up 10 p. m.;
Jeifenon lCl 12:45 a. m. i Mt.
State down 1:15 a.m.; EssoWt:~st
Virginia 1.1) 3:35a.m.; Jenny A.
Green up 6 a. m.; Edward S.
Bosworth down 6:40a.m.; H. E.
Bowles down 6:45 a. m.

'

.
. ~

Beginning

staUOIIRIO, a aludent station,
i8 a carrierwaveltatloPanddoet
not need ,U, FCC pormlttobroadeast. However. ·lill personnel will
-be required to pass the F CC examlnation for a tbird-elass perm11 that will aJ1aW tl!em 1o an1111111100 and operate the e&lt;tlllp.

Paul D.

up

HOSE

Schroeder ~lained that e. cab1e has been installed rrom til!:!
broedcaal - . 1o the top of
Holnr Hall. 'lbe cable runs
through all the dorms.
A llpalls JB&amp;&amp;ed through the

· cable, and any radio within 100
loot will pick 11 up at 15.80onlhe

Laura

I
I

.,

'' '

.,,
',,"
' -~

•
I

Gardner, sophomore. BucyrUs, Is the station
JIIIDIIW; Howard Hudson, senior, Rostlle, New Jersey, is the
Lee

- - - · and

LeRo~

SUNNYBROOK

pairs

for .

8

cans
for

•••••••

Ritlot na...... to

~ ~;

JERZEE CAN

.
.
6cans
1
00
MILK..............~ for • ·
'

Sl

-

.N·
.

'

WHOLE KERNEL
AHD
CR!AMSTYLE

COR _ •...•..•....
HUNTS TOMATO

GOLD MEDAL
ALL PURPOSE

. . -·

. . .

3
9/t
.~·••••~•••••••••~~!. . . "

.la.LY

~

BOLD

!0 oz.

..............

t4uLo39~
~·..
.
. .

Kas!IIY,

assistant pro_sram mi"AllfllrS,·

I
,I

PHEBE SAYS:

I

I

•

You'll Like Our
Meat Department
.
.

Excellent Quality, Exp.-1 Cuttina, Fin~ E'atlna
.

·u·,.- ·s... D-A
~

-

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.

CHOICE QUALITY '
-~,
CHOICE
-.
LEAN and MEATY ·
.

' .

"f

BEEF STJW M:EAT

q.

lb.

I
'J

.'

~- ( ' 1

Tho ja1ka be!llD Jaa. 19.

Ken Har11elson• 1 tllr'..-nm tiebraakl• hiiDer In the olghil!
loolni lllled tile ~s to their
triUIIIIlh over the Red Sox
desp.lte Rlco Petrocelll'• 39th.
of the . .aon.
lldlby Cox' aacrlftce

t;tomer

Ill' with
the 18101 ftDed and one out In
tho 13th Jnnlni drove In Jerry
Kenney with the Yankees'
winning nm.
- Walt

WUllam 1

hit

three

aiOBloa and a clcublo In eight
appearances, drove in two runs
and scored anothar In the White
Sox' aweep.
Wally llunker pltehed a four··
biller and ''-"~ a 1·1 de
with 1 l'liiMICorirc ,dUle lD the
eighth Inning to Win his 11th

Airmen's Wives Play

l

•

,,

mont.
"But.

of course, they wD1 be
received II the deloption, • he

said. 'Itle Coamumlsts oever
have • reported tho fate of the

men

misalnl

over

North

the
3NIL

.,.,.,..... Ill ID
. . - ; lllo Willie llaut ,lold
!flllo_.........,NboaloU
Ill far troop~-~ Ill all, ....

_.,._--a
rl&amp;ld

wi-...J achadula
be Oarrtaot ..
nprdleu
&lt;' lllo
aotlau lilllo
-aide.

The_ ............. _
..... In ... l'lrlllllb, .......
ae11 .,
._ad llll1ll;r It Soadh
- l o ......,.
the war.
"'
The ~ JOOIU.e paiS

-. " n,...

VI--

Vleu.m lrom oilbt months lo
tour years.
The wEe~ Mra. Bomle
CIIIICHIIbll ..... JIJWalkers are a double dlnpr,
strwlooon. wife o1 Copt. J~
was Gill. Crle1htou W.
not only do they risk their own
SiOBleton; Mro. Joy Jolfrey,
Allnml' .._.t .mtor lola
utoty, but they also cause trlf·
wile
of
c.pL
Robert
Jollrey,
PARIS {IJPI)-1be wives of ·communlsta' a........_n vUJa
. . - Yltlt to WutJin)llm IIIII
fie jams and vehicle collisions.
arxl Mrs. Paula Harkneaa, wife
tour American alnnen downed Tuesday.
Soadh
TRln1 the time to cross only
over ,North Vietlam pla,yed
No time or date waa set for of Coi&gt;L Greg llarkneoa, Ill of
maid"' - " In IIJwrvolnl
at corners may mun snl• your
eards in their_.. hotel rooms the ~meetl~. The tour women,. Dallas; and Mro. Andy MrEI·
lloelr&lt;oolbol-'&gt;lll(r,
life and the llvts of others.
Aplnat 111 lldt uneortoi!Q,
today
and waited lor a who ftow to Paris Sunday, In an hanon, wlfo of Maj. Michael
Oeboreh White, Clu TecloniCII
Hialt School, Detooit. Mic111pn.
ltDDmOill rrun HanOi omclals
effort to learn the fate or their McElha11011, of Fort Worlband In 1loo - I t OIQ' ....
drew this prlto winnlnl poster In
...... by - llaaal -..t •
who il!ey ' - will uy whether huabands, ·wore scheduled 1o folloored lholr policy of maid"'
no
cOD'IJrlent.
··
the
1M
School
Trlff\c
Safety
their hulbaD:ls are dead or apend only a week In lhe French
COII1IIl"llibll, 1loo ~
Poster Conlelt.
A apokesman for them said:
alive.
•111ltal belore returning home
feelt ... Uul!4d ''The girls stlU have the same
flU into a pattern ol Unllmtted
1be Haml delegation ap-eed to Texu
to a meeting after tJie women · A North Vietnamese opokes- optimism they had when tbey
OCIIII:Ottlaut •
, paid a surpri"P. visit to the man Mid the women could not came to Paris. ..
·------------------------------------------------------------------------------------•

Cards, Wait and Wait

v........ ,. .... -

u.s.

Mr. Hobstetter

.Cridli!l/l@tJP!!e&amp;etm71:§ the
irit
.
of tke eventies!

.oiuontitloa

- It Gladly Accept Ftel,
.

i

ll·! ... ~{oo~ s~l~ ·-·

Prtc!IS
E(li:tlve
sept. '
.. . .
.
',,,
Open liOn. tiWil Sat. 9 to 9
:

CLOSEo- .. -

IUND.YS

..

pq. 29~ .

-_ICE ...... ,••... 3~~ 89e

liiASPBIIIIY - ,

\'

conference ce•r.

Orioles.

pmolor, lhe~~

Rcmald E. Wllli•ms

·Uc

booii

Chicke1 DinMr lolls

)m].or, East Orwell, Ohio, are the

.• -

onlY riUI of tho and went
8 2.3 iminc,s to wit. hia 19th
pme aplnat aix loaNs ror the

~

RI!G. 39c HOLSUM -

McCioaiQr, sophomore, · Clncin~

;.,

alowled In tile

dlo . .

Unintatr- Jli'Oml'""' .. ......
er c1oe1a1an In Au/illll, dlo Wblio
""'"" IIIII lime did nat tot a·
opeclllc date for turlher retlaw'.
~ II tal4 troop woul4 .,.. omdor Cllldln_,
.

••T••You, WE L·, ..,.

patties

'

LIBBY'S

In Jollie -

dlo _..,.,

5TH onol

CONTADINA TOMATO

SOUP

1'!._

..

•

Nlxcll -~ Cllllcl. · cut,
.
•; toe,OIO

bu.

%lb.

OLEO

TOMATO

4:50 a. m.; John J.

nat!, Ohio, IIIII Elmer

In the Natlooal IAquo, San
Francisco blanked Allanla, 2-0,
Chleaav. niPPed Montreal, H,
Plitaburgh defeated PhlladoJ..
phla, 9-4, and the Loa A~We~o•
swept · a doubleheoder 11'001
Clnclnnad 2-1 and 3-2.

McNally

l~lb.

tD:ri~t~ ·::~t' .;;4,

most every day. The lobby
is so much mare comfortable than the office.

JD em the air.

2
WAFERS~····· _

· ~------------

7:25

dial. uA "dummy load'"atopllol- Woods lll 4p. m.;Etna-Louiavtlle
zer Hall Will absorb any excess down 8:10 p, m.; AshlaOO up 10:50
power.
p.m.; Valvollnedown11:35p.m.;
The College has owned the Explorer down 2:10 a. m.
equipment for three years, altholl&amp;h It waa uaed !or !he first
We go to the bank allime laal aprtng. At present a

,.._cad before , Radio RIO can

_

All si z.es, good colors.

William II. Zimmer down 6:25 a.
m.; Lock 21, Philip Spornup4:25
a.m.; RaymnndThorpedown6:30 ·
a. m.; Green~.~) Locks, Theresa
8eley down 10:30 p. m.; Franklin
B. down 10:40 P.m.; Alton Zephyr l() 2:35 a. tn.i A. P: Boxleyup
3:40 a. m.; Steel Cl!l)per down
6:25 a. m.; Frances M. Houglanrl
down 7:30 a. m.; Meldahl Locks,
J. S. Lewis lql3:20 p.m.; Elisha

modulatlog transformer must be

FIRESIDE VANILLA

Sl
........
---·-··
·

3

· Rowe up 5:10 a. m. i Belle vine
Locks, 0 . F. Shearer down 4:05 .
a. m. i Miss Luclcy up 4:50 a. m. i

1110111.

I
I
I

LADIES NYLON

m.; S. M. Jenks up 5:45 a.m.:
J .~k 16, Ba:vou LaReine~ 2:20a.
m.; Lock 17, A. \1, Cr1ss down
9:15 p, m.; John Pushak down
11:20 p. m.; Polly R pt&gt; 1:35
A. M.: steel Pioneer down 2:20
a. m.; Jeffboat down 3:50 a. m.;

·at
acad.
the

r.-,

Dove

'

eye Stall· ~.~&gt; 3:35p.m.; Helen S.

Gl'and c
RIO wUl
, A," · · •
the beginning d Dex,i Week,
cording to A. B. Sc.hroeder,
v11or aDd chief engineer for

when doe Twins boot 1 h o
Oakland Athlelloa, 11-3. - ·The
v1e1ary belloooocl tho Twllll'
Woatern Dlvlllloo lJ!Id owf tho
Athlodes to 10 aamia and
reduced their migle dtloellnch!rw monhor to tlx.
Tho Boltlmore Olold dofello.
ed tho Wasblowtm S...tora, I·
0, the Clevellnll :Indiana beat
tho -.n Red sox, 6-2, the
Now York
doWIIed tho
Detroit Tiaora, 7-6, In 13
IIIII••• tho aucaav Whllo Sox
swept the california AIWeJa, 7-4
and 3-2, and the I{Jnaas Clfll
Rcyals od&amp;ed tho Seattle Pllola,
2·1, 1n other AL games.

be received by oll!dals wllen
they called oo tile vUia becauae
they did not have an 111po1nt. ·

•

omo RIVER - Look 14, Buck-

Bro:i~~··i.
b~ !.~0 ~~~:;~:~up
· Rio
·""'"-~ .,.ni;;. J?OHIIY1loiirney -. doom

'

in hla won t h e
ol tho last rum.IIIIJebrow now Ia
', ~ tho hlghoot seooon
.., yeora. Tho Twins'
haa driven jll
II fewer t._o tho
1x!ta1 IInce Ted
Vern stePhens of
Red, Sox oado
;;~i;w,15? II\ 194~.
u• .
wboled the 1ealliiO
,In 1962 but 111.11 out lo
llantlo In tho MVP
hit hl~ . 44th homer end
ID ill,... · runa Tueoday

.
antmg

P.

Radio RIO

Writer
oii'O&lt;:ent y..,.s 11
l!da winter, ~oo
of tho MIMeaola ·
..._r of
IAacuo'a Most
~ward.
lih!&gt; led the AL In

.

Eta P)JI Ooapter o! Beta Sigma Phi Sorority who stlended the
11111!111 ruah party 1~esday night at the home ol Vikl&lt;i Gloeck-

..~~~

F~ from

OUR AIIEHICAIIIIEIIITMlE wu 1loo- TUoadll oQbt . . . lllo *"-' 1'11111 Pol'\7 ollllllo
Eta Phi Chlu&gt;lor of 11o1a Silllll" Phi SOroriQ-was hold at tile . _ of Villkl Gl,..loner 011 p...,.roy'a
Mulberry Halgljto. Coolumbw eorrled oot the lllemelllll wlnnora from loll to rllltt wora carollfc.
cullough 81 the "weathered'' Statue ot LibertY; COieen,Oblirpr •• BenJamlD FraakllD; Silly~
gels as Pooahonlaalllll Janice ~s as Harriet Boechar SliMe.

\

''"

By FRED DOWN

feature tho Uhrlll Brolbert
from a.DII&lt;Oihe, tile Oorlll¥

I

......
br
IJDIIko 111o llrti whlllhwal · Wblioo -

PrtiYiat

--------------

, - - MrirleoUtiO!tS,11oe a... lildWin . Will~ In

i

g.,, tt· d o • •
return. .

'
.,

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FROZEN FOODS

7he elegantlY spirited1970 Cadillac

MORTON'S

FRUIT -PIES
-

The brilliant new 1970 Cadillac is styled to reflect the quality ollife in the
spirited seventies. Its striking new beauty suggests the tempo of people
on .the move. Richly tailored appointnlents welcome you to a new era of
Cadillac taste and elegan·c;.e. Sparkling performance iiwites you to ·ex~

Cadillac models, you' ll discover new ideas attuned to the spirited
seventies. You may choose a new radio that will seek out your favorite
AM~ FM or stereo-only station. The aerial is neatly concealed in the
windshield. This year, Cadillac engineers have again made sure that the

rience an entirely neW dimension of motoring pleasure. In all ele\len

Cadillac ride continues to be the most enjoyable in motoring history.

.

·-

.

�..
cliY

dto!l&gt;' i

3-o1

•

. O!al
election
- -·-·,
tlle lrat ocliool lilentf,Jooao to

·.

•olllew

A. FRANKLIN . CASTO
PATROL GRADUATE - A
gradUite ar 111o recent ll3rd
class a! tho Slate lllglnqjr
Patrol Academy Ia A. Franklin Casto of lancaster, who
has been 'assigned to the GaJ..
llpolla Patrol Poal C&amp;oto, 23,
a 1964 ..-adualo of Wobsmr
Springs, W. Va., hlgt, school.
aorved f..,- years In tho United states Air Force. He was
also a doiJUty shorilf In Webfilter County, W, Va. Caato Ia
married ani has one child, a
son, A. FrankllD casta, Jr.
He began his duties this week

at tho local po&amp;t.

r

be clel'•led lD tla otalil'o ~
tal IInce 1836,
M ·m.aure lOIII by @I 111&gt;coUnt ot u;tn tot7;t8T.
· Sdlool ollll'~ had wanHid tbo
loauo'o defeat W&lt;llld result In
double ....... at 14 · - ·
and mrcrowdllW at otherL
Cllf SdJools !qlt Dr, llardd
H, E1bJbw said ~ ·111• "dioop.
.
' ·
&amp;

Sgt. Knopp of
NG Unit Dies

Both the 1970 Pontiac GTO (lop) and leMans combii&gt;e sports car design and big
car luxury. Both are equipped with many standard sefety features Including side
guard door beams for added occupant protection. The GTO Is offered In a conver·
tlble and two-door hardtop. The leMans is available as a two-door coupe, two-door
hardtop, four-door Sedan, four-door bardtop and a station wagon. All 1970 Pontiacs
go on sale September 18.

· Partlll C!earlal Jo lhf IIOI:tiJ
and . . _........ In the IKIUIIJ
toaigJlt. Cooler. LOW will be moat.
l,y In the 50s lD the to low
601 In the 8IIINiDe IKIUIIJ. Fair
and cool Thursday.

wW ~r on '"'Ibis Morning," a television show seen

mllh ltlO 9 o. m. over Cbannel 13. 1
Oo W~ evening, October 8, a prosram is planned by the
~·vol1mteeratt

group at the Melgt High School auditorbltl in Middle-port. Sea. Ooldey Collin• has oon!lrmed his appearance at that proaram wlllcl1 will be open to the IJUblic.

SPEAIIING OF THE RELIABILITY oftoda,y'steet&gt;qers, Mrs. Eula J... Walta, East Letart, has some nice things to oay.
MrL Walle recently permitted a large born on her property to
be uHd lbr a novel 16th birthday alllllvers&amp;l')' !l6l1)' f&lt;r her gr&amp;nll·
........,., Dobbie Norris. Following the party, Mrs. Wolfe comments:
''Who it It that 1811 we caa't trust our young t;een..qera?
"111111111113' a little fear I had wllen I conaented to Debbie having
• party at the born.
.. Ji'rldQ' evening came ani a tlower co\'8l'ed truck was driven
Jato tlle born. It was the Blue Velvet gr...,, George alld Gal')' Norris,
lllke ~ Ronlie Brinker and BUI Franclo. Aller equipment
wu uaiOided, electrie cord a all in ,place ard Instruments set '1), it
lloPn to look as If It woold be an o...W. to be enjoyed by tho cCIIl·
munll)' u well ao toeo-asoro. All you had to do was raise a "'ndow
and you coold hear music anllaiJI(IIor by 45 teen-qera,
"Tbey wen a very niee bunch of ldda. I did not hear a bad word
all even1ns aDd the 'no amok:llw' signa were up. They were pn their

-eat

been wltb the 3864th NotlDnal
Guard unit 20 years, lie was an
artillery
repolrman.
The Diatrict COurt of A~o
lie
also
served omrlng the Betconvened today In the Meigs Coun.
t,y courthouse at Pomeroy. Tho liD criela. Sst. Knopp waa a
Judsos loaued - decisloo thla member of lbe Clltlllll United
mornlns, dismissing an sctlon Methodist Cbui-ch and a poll pre.
!Jled by Jean E, Cooke aplnat sldent and member of tbe WahaKemeth D. Cooke lD regard to ma Alumni Asaoclallon. He waa
the compatabllil;y of a sopara. preceded In death by his father,
Carl Clarance Knopp, In 1853. ·
t!onagr&amp;lrvlvora Include hla wife,
The judges are Gordm B. Gray,
Pllyllia
Meier Knopp; - aoo,
Homer E. Abele and Earl E..
Charles r,UJip;hiamolllor.~
~
EVa lreM. liuiipp,' Mucili:; olle
allier, Elleen ~
HEW ON DRUG CHARGE
a D d a brother, Andrew Carl
CLEVELAND (UP[) - Tbroe
Knopp, of Columbus.
suborbon Cleveland Boigllta
F1menl aervl.. s will be held
roommates were to .appeu- in
Friday at 1:80 p.m. at the Cllf.
Mllnlclpal COurt today m drug
11111
Mltbodlot Clllrdlwltb
c11argea !ollowtns tho seizure of
tbo llaY. Mrs. Borlllca Wllllder
an oallmaled •16,000 worth (I(
ollldallag. lll1llar7 rilaa will
haablab and other drugs. bo llOIIIIb:ted by theN_,..
..... they lalir&lt;epted • $10,000 Iced (I( hublllh at CJiml• Guard 3664 Liglt Co. ~ IIII;Y ..U at tho Fo.
land Ho)Jk!Do Airport which arsJe~&lt;~~g Fuaeral 11oma 3 JIrived an 1 lligJlt from oaJdand, m.
on Thursday, Burial will be
C81if.
In Klrkllnd Memorial GardenL .

owu and DOt a clp.rette stub did 1 see In the barn or parking lot.
u A big barrel was used to collect any paper plates, rapkins and
10 forth. I wao amazed the next morning. I did not !IIIII allY paper

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terns an

'col·

on; TW.., place
OJIPOIO R&lt;h -

.. .,f /

In tlle Nov, 4 pnora1 ele&lt;:ll•
Also In northern O!Jio- Eal'l
'Martin won tlle Roc(QI

,.,., ....

"'"'""
~
c...,.~ • .- s 7.99.:

e

F•ll Slips
IIIH
Slips • aa•y Doll' Pilimll
'

LIIINMM-..dn~r

. on ,u,...r•ln

Sizu 34 ' to 40
in now loll col·
ort,
patterns,
llyling.
Rev.

$5.99.

u-

We are pl"sed . to
nounco that

-··

'

"Gn-

·

MR. K. L BYRD

10~

FRESH BATIERIES
ONE·HALF PRICE

~~~E~~~~~~l:·~:"'5~~;.~
min

OHIO DRIVERS WIN
DENVER,
Colorado (VI'[)
platea, JQ(dno ani other waste paper hohlnl the hay bales alld on1.v
Drivers from Ohio won two na.. new teacber, Mro. Ednrd
two pop boWel were missing out of the cases.
tlDnal chami&gt;lonshipa and t h o Crooko of Mlddi0J1011, and Mrs.
''Wbat....,... ot~ bunch coold beat that?
overall 111ate team tropby at the Norman Woods, aaalst:aat, will
-'1 _.to SlY 'thad~ you' to the gi'OLI) - come again. ••
321111 annual National Truck Rood- be held In tbe Rutland clasoroom
WednoodOJ.
1111S. F. LEONA STORY, a former reside.. of MeJ&amp;a COunty, is eo, lt was BllllOWlCed toda,y.
Ill ....... Slle'a conllned to the Cedaro of Lebo non HOSj)ltol at Miami,
LOCAL TEMPS
Fla., and 'IIOIIJd approclato ~"" !riODiocal !rionls. Mrs. story el&gt;The temporalllre lD downtown
- t h o hoopltol Friday and will undergo sureery.
IIlLO TEMPS
l'llmoroy at 11 o.m. Wednoad!q
NEW YORK (UP[) - T b o
A PEACE CORPS PLACEMENT teal wUI be given SaturdaJ' at was 76 degrees . - r . . _
biglleat
lemllernluro I"OIJQrl8d
llldea.
l:JO p. 111. at the Athena Pool Olllce, 11 Weal StlmiMll! A.._
TualldaY
bJ" tlle u. s.
Tho measures aeneral aptitude and ablllt,y to learn a Ia,..
8111"81111,
acludlng
Howell a n d
.....,, DDt 'edueatloa. or achievement. Those taking the noo-competiDuring World War I, the
tift tat lllUII till out an appllcatlm to prooent to the tester before u.s. government operated Alub, ,... 100 dQrets at eo..
tho nation's rallroadB. Oper· tulia, TaL TIIIIOJ'o lolr was 31
bel!W tested. Ibeae aJ11)1lcatims are available at IllY post omce.
ation . lasted from Jan. 1, deane&amp; at Poeatello,-.
OIDOANS ARE DRINKING MORE and amoldng less, according to 1918 until March 1. 1920.
helM taa ft&amp;urea roloaoed by state Troaourer John D. Herbert.
CJaantte excise tax re\lenues sbtwr adeeUneo!4.6 per cent dur-

opportun-

lty - Here is yOur chance

try tho ntwell and lin•
Bottone Hoorlng Aido •.
you hesitat~ to uH o
i...~ir•o oid for loar of bestored at, this latest
li~~;~~~": comfortable,
"'
model 1110y be
answr to. your pror_e~•·

His
and

ten something out ot: ·
But he also has some nice
things to say about Cali·
fornia.
"There's no place else in
the country that comes close
in terms of action, in terms
of ideas floating around, to
'what a university should be.
You have to know what's go.
ing on in the world because
you can't walk on campus
without somebody sticking
something In front of you.
What we're~doing is good for
the university because the
university is part of society,
and society's got to change."
Ray Willsey, who is the
head football coach at California and himself a graduate of the school, has a serious problem in recruiting
football players.
" Mom and dad have some
qualms about their kid going lo Cal:' confesses Ray,
whose oft'ices are in modernistic Eshleman Hall, one
noor above the Associated
Students of the University of
California. Ray, whose hair

•
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•

COnON TERRY
WASH CLOTHS

invites you to coine in for
a lr.. electronic htarl1111
test, and demonstration of
new Beltono t!oarlng Aids. If you are a hearing aid
No obligQtian.
user and c01ne in during

1be Melgo COunty Commun.
!If School for ~ llelarded Cldldren wUI resume ,...,:.
Jar clasaeo Thursday,
An orientodm soasloo fortlle

revolution comes, you'll be
first against the waU.' There
is no respect."
The student body president
last year at California was
Charles Palmer, who was
recently elected president of
the National Students As·
sociatlon. His parents arc
Callfornta graduates. He
started as a bi&lt;H:hemlstry
major and switcheft" to the
social sciences. He wears
a thick black mustache. He
predicts racism will be the
next great disruptive issue in
the universities. He says :
"The Third World students
I Mexican-Americans, orientals, blacks) aren't buying
that paternalistic crap about
be nice to the white society
and you can get your degree
and leave.
'"Five years ago, the kids
were idealistic. I think you
could ciassl!y this bunch as
being awfully cynicaL I can
lhink of only three classes
within the formal university
structure that I've re_a_I_IY got·

•'• '""'""'

.,;...,Iem

Sessions Thursday

.

"ft just shows we accept
American ideas," says Dave.
11
Around bere, we're
unique.'"
· _
YAF is a conservative
campus organization. (In
Berkeley, organizations pro·
Uferate like sideburns-also
U..ted are Campus Friends
of the Passover, Little Sis·
ters of the Golden Guard.)
It was founded in 1960 at the
Connecticut home of William
Buckley Jr. At the time Dave
VanSciver was '"a Kennedy
type-mostly because I was
Catholic." The Y AF chapter
at Calllomia has 15 paid
members and 15 others who
are active, in a student body
of 27,000.
"We're the outcasts, for
sure," admits Dave, "and I
think it's true at a lot of the
major universities. This is
just a llheral campus. On
this campus, conservatism
is meshed with Naziism.
When you're sitting at a
table in the Dining Com·
mons, you're told, 'When the

· ,..tne.rJ Cohn,

Beltana trolnod conoultant
will be at .Ur ljlacial oil
day hooring old conoultation. If you hove a h..rilltl

Herlhey has "outlived h11 use..

ben they're of the end o# o po1licetmc1n's clu&amp;."-Conn Hol/inon orresled, above, of Cors Sather Gate.

Connon qu1llty,
thirsty cotton
· t~ lbGtht...

MR. K. L B,YRD

a- Will Resume

f·:

apartment a r e festooned
with radlcll! posters. He' a
burly and was a. footbaU
player at San Francisco
State untu he transferred to
California in· 1964, ~ year ·
of FSM, ilnd decided "those ·
guya,were too big." He has
taught it Cal, baa been president of the Amertcan Federation of Teachers local aud
has a feUowshlp for advanced
'trtudy in anthropology. His ..
father w a s a well·known
labor lawyer. COM baa been
arrested on campus.
"The university," he says,
''Is not really related to what
most young kids are concerned with. Students have
started to Involve themoelv., lD human processes,
TheY have started to con~ themselves with ·social
iSsues, For an undergraduate, the university u not
very satisfactory in terms of
education. The only time the
admlnlstratlon e v e r sees
them is wben they're at the
end of a pollceman's club or
gaa or something like that."

w·

BERKELEY: Where It All
Began • • • and How

Sh:ot 8 to 18 In llnoH
casuol C4ll' c•t• In

YOII Choice

LIBBY HOTEL
Gallipolis, Ohio
LASAUE HOTEL
Jt!lddleport, ~lo .

I

;r,, only time the administration l!'fet sees (students) is

BetMIIUcan maF Pi1mBrY

TO HOLD FREE HEARING AID
CONSULTATION
WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 17
IHUISDAY, SEPT._Ja .
t~ l·1t:lollr· '::-f

Mo...,

!ulllesa" a n d should roslin,
Sen. Stephen 111. Young, 80, aald
Tuesday lD an outburot aplnat
the aging pneral.

Fine cotton
knit dr•nea,
nt•f"'llt'at•

YOieo ln'the primary oleclicm...

Thoy

•'

YGI:-'i

He"ri g Aid
Counselor

He enUated lD the National

YOUNG ON "AGE''

tl,
"':":~
$L1 mUllall boild lo.Uo
a ..., .,..,.,,....
·
Nicholas Dlmberlo and J(!l!r
C. YOMih racelved the -

•ltlro all;.,,.,

•-ns

WASIIINGTON (UP[) - Seloc.
tift Sorvlco Director Lewis B.

'

.

colwa.

In Session Today

'fUdJie"•~

wood Plue

Clac....

..

Iu·

fl.
while lD · tho

lncumbelt llollald B.' PaMartln Ia UDO!IIclall,y tiMl ~n~;Yor olnca no Demooratic ...
LODGE TO MEET
dldate med r.r the olllcL Ill
Middleport Lodge 368. F&amp;AN C1Jair1n Fall• Repltiloan G.
will hold a apodal lllH!iJia Sil- Froderlck Loderer nn urclay, Sept. 20 at 7r30 Jl-DI. when opposition for _.,. and 110 the Follow crafi o1ocno wUI be tiled m tho Damocratic ticket.
conferred. - .......,.. wUI be
Voters In Newark defeated llr
served.
more thail a 2-1 margin a poNd 8,5 miD odlool q&gt;on~ .
levy.
WU.L CAMPAIGN SATIJIIDAY
Tho !slue wUI be i&gt;UI bock em
Southern Athltlle llo&lt;loteto wUI
tla
Nov. 4 ballot..
'
be -cllna • door • to • door
Funrll would have been uo0\1
.._..., tbraU8II tho local School Dlotrlet all tiQo Sot. to. lner•ao teacl1ara' aalarlu,
rellall- school .bullcllnp and P81
urcllly ael1lntl Booller mamlJer.
lor other -~ . -..
ahips.

Guard Nov. 29, 1M8 and had

VNDER THE DIRECTION of Paul Gerard, the Volunteero for VOle
19 prosram Is moving !uJl _.t ahead 10 acquaint vows with aspect&amp; of IClWOl"IDa the legal vodng ap in Ohio lO 19. Ohio votero will
on the m•sure at the Nov. 4 olecllon.
1v, . Fridu mbrnlac, repreeentatlores of 1Jle program to reduce, the

,

(WEATHER REpoRTj ~ Wlcldl«e, a oubur'l&gt; •

MASON, W, Va. - Sid Sst,
Cbarleo Franklin Knopp, 39, died
Tuesday of an
hoar! attack "fiiiUe
school at Now
Cumberland Army Depot, Now
Cumberland, Pa,

Court of Appeals

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.. IF PERFECT
.:Girls' Fl•neleHe ·

o fret
you
hearirill aid
oat of batttr•
loo at half.price, Limit .
one set to a customer. If
can't come in, call
home appointment. No
; fGJJ

GOWNS •

Siz11 4 io .141 ~olid.­
coiO.o with ftow:ored ·

Reserve OHicer Training Corps units, which have come in for some of the heG¥iest fire
in radical student protests, are concentrated in tho campus-thick Northeast, Midwest
and South. Now York ond Ponnsylwania hawe tho most ~nits, 26 each, followed by Texos,
:U, and Ohio, 19. Puerto Rico has '"" ond Alasko and Howaii one occh.-

Out with the Bath Water

Is cUpped short, ride• the
elevators will&gt; hippie types
coming in from n e a r b y
Sproul Plaza, which has
been called a living daily
performance of "Hair"
every noon.
B.ut football is still a major
endeavor here, and 8,000
students showed up at the
Greek Theatre rally before
the Stanford game.
''Student disorders repre·
sent a threat to intellectual

74.5 per cent negative.

" To he fair to the people
who've written,'' says Samp·
son, "they're not nuts. AI·
most all are signed. WeU over
half are reasoned letters."
He hesitates when you ask
him why he involves himself
in student activism.
'My hesitancy is that
when you ask a psychologist
anything, he has to go back
into 10,000 years of history,
intra· psychic phenomena.
The best answer: it seems to
he right, the goals of tho
students, t h e complaints.
They're the kind of aims for
a university, for a society
that I have."

and academic values. They

represent a threat to the
notion that the university

should erist for the .•ake of

a disinterested search for

knowledge. A lot of student

di3orders insist on violations
of academic freedom . You
go in and f}ust up a profes-

sor's class or stage a disrunt·

ive demonstration in a building and it makes it impossi·
ble to teach a class. Along
with all t~ idealism and

search for reform, there is

a real hostihty and meanness of spirit in a lot of
these kids."

John Searle , professor of
. philollophy, . who s_aid llie
above, ascrllies thoor hostility lo the following pressing
issues: the war in Vietnam,
racism, continued pollution
of the environment and at·
mosphere, continued existence of poverty. He calls
the , growth of student radi·
calism a national problem .
As with most of !be faculty
at California, he sees a pos•
itive side.
"They have called into
question the assumptions
we have about the univers··
ity," says Prof. Searle.
"They gave us tremendous
leverage for reform. There
is also an expression of true
fact that students are much
more interested in the quality of their education, more
eager and more concerned.
about the course and what
they're learning."
Some of tho faculty march
hand-in-hand with the students. One of them is Edward E. Sampson, professor
of psychology, a young outwardly mlld-mimnered man
who dresses sedately. He
was one of the fa&lt;!ulty who
sponsored Eldridge Cleaver
as a lecturer at California,
a move vetoo:l by tho re·
gents of the university. He
saves aU the letters he has
received lor his position. Six·
teen per cent were positive,

The third leg of Calllorn·
ia's educational tripod (students, faculty, administration) is rooted in Dwinelle
Hall, tucked into the middle
of the Berkeley campus.
Here is administration. Robert L. Johnson, the vice·
chancellor for s t u d e n t
affairs, came to the university little more than a year
ago, just in time to see several student eru~;&gt;tions .
He's an am1able, pipe·
smoking man who worked
in the national public health
program and now wOnders
about the scale of our insti·
tutions of higher education.
He has a daughter who goes
to a little school in the Mid·
west with an enrollment of
under 1,000.
"Let's say 10 per cent of
them march on the chancellor's office," Johnson poses
the thou g hi. "That's 100.
Quite a difference from 10
per cent of 27,000.
"Is an institution like
Berkeley or Michigan or
Wisconsin or Minnesota, is
that a practical way for
hi iller education? I'm not at
alf sure."
·
"All kinds of wonderful

things {Jo on for students.
It's a great pluralistic place.
Its pluralism is also connected with a ~igh dewee of

incoherence. Individual stu·
dents tend to get bewildered
by the variety and richness
of the place and get lost.
Berkeley is the ptace for the

highly motivated student
who is welL-disciplined and
knows clearly what he wants
to do. The focutty is so good

and once the student has
been identified by a faculty

member, he can erpect en.
enormous amount of iftd£.
vidUill attentioft. Btrlut.t/

can be dilastrou. for a stu. ·
dent who isn~ tike this-1101
sure of himself, eanlr &lt;IU-

tracted."
This came From Dr. Wil-

liam Bouwsma, who wu
also a vlce-chnllcellor of tbe
university last year and now
has left California to become
a Harvard professor again.
"It's so stimulating there,"
he says, "it becomes poUIIr.ally erosive, exhaustive I
left because I became so
involved with Berkeley I had
to get out from under and
move to another place iD
order tojel back to my OWD
work an tho teaching I can
do for the next :Ill years."
Carl Scborske, an o t be r
popular history profes110r,
also left after last sprlag to
join ~ fiK!Uity at Prlncetoa
University,
With all the turbuleDCe,
California stU! attracta a
record enrollment and fiDe
faculty. The question relllllinf.; , Wby &gt;lboukblt lbave
boeu .S.rkol,ey,8Jld.. MtiJ~q,
its sister school, the- ;lJall.
versity of California at Loo
Angeles (jUJt aa big ,l'ftll
rampant), where student liDrest has been most volcantcT
Prof Schorske olfers one
answer : "In an age where
there are two crisis centen
in society all over, the city
ghetto and the university,
California Is a cily univonity close to one of the great
ghettoa. California Is a
hopped-up microcosm of the
U.S. with aU tho volalillty
that implles in an era when
the United States is itself
explosive."
It can he said that what
has happened at the Unlver·
sity of California at Berke.
ley these last five years Is a
reflection of social tranaltion, with aU its awkwardness, in this tountry. Despite
unrest, even violence, it is a
vigorous, significant school,
and not simply a hotbed of
kookism .
"We should look at unJ.
versities as a forecast of
what's going to bappen :Ill or
30 years from now," sa~
vice..,hancellor Johnson. ' If
we really bellve In an order·
ly way for change, the university Is the best place.
"It's an oxcltlng place to
be-if you can maintain your

sanity."

.

w-..

... Jab' and Aupst deJPlte a recerK three-cent pack increase. Howewr, the tt.te otrlcial reportl ~beer and wine exdu tax reve- • lhaw an increase with beer revenue 14) 5.6 per cent and wioe
.,._ 1CI 2U per cent during July and Auluat.

N~s... in

Briefs

(C&lt;JnllmHJd frcm I)
ro&lt; ~ and _...,Jtly assumes tlat ha hqHid to do ao - If he had
aat dllerocllteol SoY!et communlam by
her father. "Krusbcbo• wao lllllblelo J01 hio way with tho !l6l1)' RPil&amp;r&amp;lua, • ohe aayo. ·
"Too molc11 had to be amaahed. He wa1 alrald to do It In the end he
,.111 1br 1L Tho _...tu got rid of hllll.. ...

THE STUDENT EXPLOSION
Enrollment in Millions

7M

'

ljou are in.viteJ to vi.w • •
The
~t!w ·

Buif~ks . and'
..=··Q ..
..

-.ww

Cbaqlns -

oxtnmo

Pomerot' bas tJled
lUll lor divorce !rom SI8!Jhon K.
IIIIIOloriCOl, GolllpJ!Io, In JWp
CouoiiY Conunoa Pl.. Ccurt.
'lloopllllllll!alksn.......,(J(
bel' maidlnllllni(J(Jiu ,,,, ....
lleadeiiOD,

~'{,;J&gt;

,.

'.

2M

' •'

I

•

'
i''

•' '

•

'

~1M

ai.A&amp;ttNAR
~u'r&lt;) ~o.
,'
POMEIOY·, · .OfiQ .. !·;~:'

IIOIIect (I( -

..._

,18.'.,\·
&lt;)!

•

'·

. '59

•'

,'

3M

.

cru~. Sandra L.

•·,

'

4M

' . I,

1970 '

Septem~r

College Enrollment

5M

PontJac$

DIVORCE ASKED
and

6M

---·

Total fall Enrollment

'62

'63

'64 . '65

'66

'67

�'l
• ·\.

•.

• '

r'

;y'

1.,

Sentinti) .~Pomel"OJ, , Ol,- 11, 1969 '
'

'

~-··.J~·

'

,,

·.

.~

.

·I

.

'
•

·:Busy
.......,
........-ObI o

I

Get YOI!r

'

_the ___ _

IIOdtrahiDIIDrlobo,"

lllloilla

eu, Glllclala

told

here

TU11a.., at . . . . . . of the

-.1 'l'cloDaiO FoiiiiYol.
... UIQ'ro lilt - " " I lor

: "'

Alnildcan Flali
Pleceotwllk
Dim• Kill re ·

.._, lila .... droJ&gt;OUI8 out .,
ICII&amp;l - . . we doll'l pye
-

ea. .

c:op,ripl, TH Xr- Co.. IH!l
•• ...."~ .... ril-l lo

cdh.. , w;t 1'u ·tbem 1D a
~ on. ··~· and tuob
haw ..
bird bullae
or
Ald. ''11ley
dnlli Cllll ot:/Mbiiol ond wloo up

!

·...-.« of '!a dilcldeal ..,.~e~;y

e~~nelves" and
caold bo oolved by voca-

ena&amp;e

.flw

_.,........,.
~

It

.

..W.. lbe ~.~ bave
llltNng et.. to do the!' tum to

22C

...... never bad a Job."
Ill urled ol!lclala ul1111s sub.

Chop
Whole Picnics

lb.

lb.

Bo.l

USDA CHOICE Teoo•r•F

r:k ·~. Lo·in'

49c

Beef Ribs

lb.

89c

.Green Beans

/n 1111 frHZII Clu
'

'1-lb.

cmw

Arrest Made

Jll- ill

• ·•llepd "jullice-

tor.oole'' -

TueldaJ -

west llde men cl•hned they
1)1114 her ~ to !Ia trafllc
~I ill Mualcblel Court.
. . . . . Court balllfr 1111·
IIIOIId A. -~~~~ ond Mrs.
lidlWIIb, - - ul A l - l
Oncla Clh, are under iDVea..

Fruit Pies

Greer FNfstt11

12 ::; 99c 3 2~::· 89c

Knpr Amelita•

S6eed Cheese

~- 69c

KNpr Brand

Cion. Buns 4

1\1 ....
uu·

Kropr !%

I.Jb.

en a.

29e

llllilorla&amp; HI-No

LowfatMilk

Bread

01'

5-oo •

Cooking BarR4 ,...... $1
16-o:• .

1:!-ol. l!lo)

:~ 89e

Pi1..za
JlkJ.
&amp;rnlf!r Fmen
Onion Rinrs 3 ;:. $1.
AU Flann
lee Milk 2 ~~:~· $1

Yalll$v

"

II)

._.,of hll .....

ltlllotl&amp;le.

~.~ • .....,

IT STARTED AT Berkeley In 1984. RebeUious student oplrlt was transformed from pranks to oemetblag more oerlouo iD a "free apeecb move·
meat" led by Mario Savio, lop left. Since then, eampuoes across lbe naUon have been plagued with violence, slt.Jns and student take-oven mumy
In pretest ol the war In Vletuam, ROTC and lnoulflelent oludenl ropresentoUon ill school administration. Mark Rudd, top right, led demoastra-

Uono at New York'o Columbia Unlverolly where he was ehalrman of tho Sludento for a Democratic SOClely (SDS).

"~,&gt;~1\P.'

',),O&lt;·~~

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We're probably the only

', ;~n~• :l't!1ucr

... 59e

l~'llla~hdilff !

r

lou

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Deter.-...11'1111

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,"1

force lbe· cwv adminlstr•· -" t
of 1
·
. lion ~,~·~tiiaeJrt 6oily:··u;&lt;;,un~" he~ k,!'!li~
Is
.sit dOWJi ~ •••~~over b- .of ,. e surro~g clUes of
.
WhAi\ ,....,•--•" pro . · . Cleveland, Cleveland Heights
.. lems. ,r.•·: a "'"""'on 1s and University Heights
..
·
reached· ·J. am illformed of
It and 1. pass this lllforma·
Each of lbe 32 lnsUtulion on to' my men.
.Ilona mating up the CWR
·
&lt;
complex Is assessed so much
"As a law enforcement toward our annual budget
• otflcer, I don't .alwaY• agree &lt;•.ooo this year). We are
, , wllb ~· adfulnlstraUon's • answerable only to a nine·
d!&gt;clslou, but
beve to member boanl, the momlOok at lbe en results. We
bero of which are pfedomlluive had no violence as yet nanUy buaillessmen ilbd civic

3-11&gt;.

Bat,ei

01

ALL IS C.\LM at the outi
rises over il solitary aliiboat anchored iD lbo St.
PeterohurrtFla.) Junior
Yacht Baoln.
.

ll.

.

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~

Silver Dust 4-1~.... 89c

On""

·~....,Jt9t

•

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"'Our new ~ne: Monte Carlo
'

110-

Tissue

4 !::.$1

_r_
.
Pies

2 ::· $1

Butter

~~~·-~·~

!

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an

. . . Ill

mUDications" am 0 n g hiJ

Th

•
e residents of one
dormllory rewired tbe elevalor In their building so
that they could control It
from their room, briDging It
to their Roor and keeping It
there at their convenience.
• A student made a copy
of a m a s t e r toy which
opened most of the doors in
several buildings. "He had a
nice little business going,
He had extra copies made
for 35 cents apiece and sold
them to other studenta for
, 1 each... Mlcballkl recaUs .
"These stud en t • didn't
commit any crImes," he
quietly points out. "There
was no mallcloua Intent. The
· elevator and the loclted doors
were simply cballenges to be
met and beaten-a way to
break lbe monotony of study
and classes."
·
But an Is not fun and
games at CWR aud environs.
People do break illto build·
ings, ldrls do get assaulted,
cars do get stolen, students
d0 t dr k d 11 b1
ge
un aomeone
an g ill· Qc
•
casionally,
the
University Circle area gets
angryy enough and kills somebodY.
But this Is what Michalski
and his Greenles are paid
(or.

Knpr Rei- a er.e•l'e•llll

U. 8. '-No. I, Frello

Fl...... 2~. Dildo lbe latest

Flllldl alld hi paid Mra.
•• •"' tiS to !Ia a trafllc
tliloot bt -b' 1868. Allbou&amp;b be
!!U :11 trllftc arreata,

'

it'

.

'.:'ActuaRy, Case has a
fairly stable student body.
Ninety per cent of what un- rest we have had on campus
came from outside aJitators
.,W trBDBients.'' be says,
explaining that lbe area has
attracted covens of hippies
and a smaU, but sometimes
. violent, squadron of Hell's
' Angell motorcyclists.
One reason, according to
Michalski, for the I'Olallve
peace Case bu enjoyed to
date Is the "exceUent com·

loaders. We wei'O 111'1!ated ...,,
cause the University Circle
area was and Is expUuling
.and the JIC!Iice f01ce1 from
oui'roundlilg are a I simply
could dQt ·guarantee auftl·
clent security.••
·

Pineapple 31·•..:::.- $1

FRES.H KA~E

- - and common
---!orhll.
m- SeltZ, 25, IDd JameJ

~it.

~.'

Coffee

uw..

Y,ltanln P~

;'

,,....•

49c

Sweet 'boll SlleM

Kn~er

....... .

li-pL

~.

loave•

... - - of flaiDg caleB In

peond Ill .... paid • fiDe,
but hi alld be knew llllllliDI

'

Saobon

Juiee

M•rle Slll"llCt. Pepperoll A:
(Choeoe

a

......r ,....

1:1-0l.

ltroJtr Frflll CoiiOJO

Cheese

$1

7.... CbOW Mo.. t Chop Slley
.u..rted .......

Cloue

••lid, -

c-t """"'"showSelaop- .

\".

/

·~· $1.39

Peache·s

tlpdae 1., uolatant COIIDI;y
. . - - Frmda E. SWoeney.
ul • munlcble1
""""' ....... .... Mra. Sebwah,

.... alld Jln. Scbwah told
Ida,· "DDID't .. to ClOIIrt, 1111
11111 pill tllo mo... when he
_,Jalnod 111ou1 an Incident
1lllkh ..-red ill Morcb 1968.
11o Aid bo pold Mra. Schwab
to . .
uta ·~ar­
nat t11o1 ..-red on Morch 19
~ bo bod 11 JB"oviOUa
tnlllc '"""... but lbal two
~ two pollceiiiOD
to bll )looae wUb a warnat lor bll arreat.

Fllctr'a · IIIICI.M

Vegetole '

BUCKBERRY t BOYSENBERRY

..

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.,Cherries 3 •-1:;.!.... 89c

-.. -Ia.

BANQUET APPLI!. PE.tCU,
CUSTARD, CBERR~.

°

Kropr BTP

De~rgent

BALlARD

CLEVELAND (UPO - Mra.
AUce Sebwol&gt;, q10r1ltor ul a
• • 11111 cafe, Wll further tm.

Owly USDA CROICI!
Grodo IIHI Ill ued lor
Tfll4fny - tlsat•a wlty

59c

CbloaaUoioll

Solurdl1.

·,

'

..
·w~~ Grajoflado lam .. • · ·
Grape Jelly 4 ~'$1

Ita and - · will be JudCed

'.

.

-

Coffee

..

'' ....
'

·.~
'·

11'1 ............ tfllller
It liN.. IIIII ol Ill

Ce.U•r CIC

Loin Pork Chops

lb.

'

.;

7941

an

For Justice

·'

114 slked

T....to biked IJDoda and
pndlela will be Jud&amp;od Thuradi,J ond
o111or tomato OJdll1&gt;.

'

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tit,d~·!'

USD., CBOICI! Teoderay
St;orl Rit'!ll Clf Jkot4 or BI\Q

..., Tue..-r

In Racket

•.

Boi6nr Beef lh. 39c
Rollfwood Slyle
Spare Ribs lb. 79e
....... Bnod
Sliced Bacon lb. 89c

lo'nslt or Smoked

be apJaJned,

'lbo follivll .Is bold eocb .)Wr
tD ._.. A I - r W, llvillp.
.1a1 IIIIo dovelcpod the flrat 00.
m.Uc tomato on a farm bere
ID lbe mlol-18001.
The o1x-&lt;1ay event got uiOierwUb the ~ng
of diQioJs ond exblblta and the
llltrl*etioD ul randlilates for
lbe lllu ToDIIto FeiiiiYII. The
- - t o b e _ .......
and aooaod dllriDg ceremonlea
II a dan&lt;e Frfda1 n11bt.

enforcechlrged
peace In a
a r e a of
East Side domsprawling Case
University
, au academic comof n e a r I y 10,000
Ullder8ra4uata and graduate
aludeDts.
. Five h o s pit a Is, t~
i'JI1useums, two high schools,
a number of cburchea and a
· residential area also fall
Ullder lbe · juriBtllcUon of
.M1!Jhalakl and his "Greenlei" (a aobrlquet tacked on
. tile force by !ocala because
. of tile omcors'. green unl'forms llld green and white
cruisers),
"We haven't bed too much
trouble wilb demonstrators "
'the c:hlef I'Oporta. "Laat May
, aome atudents took over a
'icouple of buildings, but 11
... nothing oom:rared to
what b ·
' ··• ·
a PPe n
a1 some
P· other unlvers!Ues. There are
:. IIOiile SDSers on campus, but
, · they don't give us much
' trouble. In lact, they are
so democratic .that they can't
seem to agree on what lbeir
goals are. If they ever get
orgaolzed, we could hive
some I'Oal trouble,

' .l

•,! \!

Neck BOnes 1~.'59¢
USDA O.olco THdorar
'
Rib -Steaks lh. $1.2"9

Rih Pork

Work For rr•
''lloD't tbiDk ul Y&lt;lUI' db' ••
a · bedroom commuaitJ,.. be
aold. ''llo DOl dopeiOI on IOII\8o
e1.. .to do 110111elblng for
~ Aaract Industry.
Gel oat ond wwk for lt. •
IQIOdes aeld the cltl llhould
''leU, merchlndlae aod market"

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..

'

11

'"!be Tomo1o Festival II only

,,..

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--UDif1.

a Qlllbol u1 the ef!orl needed
to pill 1111s eommunH;y toptlt.

I ~

'

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·'Roast..-~

·'

......., .U, of Coltpilbus to make
dempts to altract more IDduo117 to ond croa1e more lobo ill

ottract more IndUstry.

.h
~\1. • :,

··.

Rib Roast

chtJ dllabedllftl», n he Ald.
"111111 ul lnvalved In dil-

-1o

,;~;1.

Tenderay
E-Z Carv

IQIOdea

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lillliilld.«
workiDI."
called the problem a

~

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1111111 - - ·

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i'11!dki

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"-M, A.

, ,.,,
;

on campiJI. ,
.
"Another ficiOr ls' t~~at my·
ol!lcers hive, an extremely ,
· • good rel.ai!Oillhlp\ w I t h till · ,
per ce~t of .~ stQ!ient body,
·I n.c I u ell n g lnoot of . thO
SDSers. We hive .a young
force-not oae of th, men
Is over 40, Tile ltudents
know us and they- a(ciept bl .
In fact, they have Insisted )
that no other lew enforoe·
ment agency be brought In
in ease of real trouble.u
Michalak! admits that his
force p r o b a b I y couldn't
handle a real outbreak and
that be woulil call for help
If a sltuallon got out of con·
trol. "I'll go along wllb lbe
students up to a point," be
says, "but If b1g trouble
starta, well, the decision to
call in outside help bas been
left up to me."
Student lmagluatlon, not
student unrest, has 'kept the
22 GI'Oenles assigned lo the
campus lntemal :security
force busy:

•• ' '

8c SIZE ASPIRIN

KROGER BRAND

Variety Br,e.ad
3:!.-:!~ 89c
Folly B•-••

•rwin Rolls 3 ll'i.......... $1
A...nftiKrtJH
4 ,,.;...,,
Donuts
...,... $1
~

Coffee Cakes •::;: 39c
PlAIR TOP VALUI! RTAMPR!

Bayer
s~c·

100-et.
bottle

-·~·Ir

'

,,· .··?Oiir big One::,C8Priee·
·~ ~

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· .Our tough Qne: Chevelle SS 396

•

tires. new colors, new trim.
NPw headaches for
priced cars.
Chevelle 396. ·

Jerge.ns

i

11rJ l.ollol

-.. t.,....

1:o. 99t

Jergens

$1.17 SIR ToDin T.... .,,

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Toward

, ,

e.-: 99e.

Bath Oil
. . Size Hele•

/.

;s-belt€~d·

$U7 Size Lolln

$Ut Slat

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13--. .

~

Hair Spray 2' .: ,.~ $1 ·:, ,;
••

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Induction Hood to help

Wlll'lliMo

ne

PoJi....o

ievr,fllet dealer's.

Pllto ·llrilloJ

.... ' "'~
· '' Exp.
11:.~

'

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ililfiirs.t:keilps us fir;$t., .~

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·Ore, talll:s with ~ulonal
181 reaearehera and .allldeilla

ohow.

'·

But ev.en the tfu:e!lt ol· ~
G&lt;!bbard cootinues Tbii Jn•
uncontrollable b~J~t of aex · atitute
!olllided by the · lite ,
activity aenda liJrvo"" nel- .
Alfted
C.
KIDHY WhoH "SeX•
lies Into hysterict. In this
ual
Behavior
In the Human
'case, With ail estlmalad 8.25
Malo"
(1M7)
aild "Sexual
million y 0 u n. men ud
Behavior in the, HI!IDan Fewomen In IIIIIVeraiUel thll
year, the wonted one• include parents, legislators
end the studenla themselves.
' Ia the Claos of "IU or '73 on
the brink cif a se~ual revolu·
· Uon! II aex relevant to

campus unrest?
P a u I G&lt;!bhard, current

beaa 01

1·ne

Inst.u.u'e

1or

Sex

Research on the Indiana Unl·
verslty campus in Blooming·.

male" (1953) shook up ad·
ulta.
"Wbat we see Is 11 con·
ttnuation cif trends/' pya
Gebllard, "Each lil!l'!r•ttan
has more premarttal inter·
courl8 than before aDd J!Mre

is no rei.soft to assume this.

isn't continuing."
He feels it Is significant
that factual Information· Is
baing gathered slowly on

•

study, of a generation ago as
a baoe. K!Daey's earlY ·r eport
shmd 50.6 per cent cif col·
lege men and %1 per cent of
college women had. engaged
in premartial s01ual lnler'
courl8. GeneraUy the flaure

· painelvill-.

Rcidicalism Spreads But
Students Lack Heroes, Goals
not in college."
lence, these middle-range rely JIUCfllOSSAT
formers leave tantall2ingly
Their survey brackets 12.8
vague bow they w o u I d
WASIUNGTON-(NEA)per
cent of college youth In
achieve their purposes.
As the 1968-'10 school year
the revolutionary·r a d I c a I
-dawns, America's college
Many of the students who · category and another 39.3
students seem to- lurve-ln
worked for McCarthy last
per cent as refonners. That
the immediate future-wide
year think they can work
leaves 47.9 per cent as modopportunities to deal o u r
within the ~&lt;system" for a
erates and conservatives.
poUtioal life hard negative
particular candidate when
Such measurements notblows but little chance for
they judge it may promote
withstanding,
it is stiR diffi.
constructive effect.
a cause they espouse, then
to
demonstrate
thet "re·
cult
pull back to avoid commit·
If the turbulence on the
formers"
can
be
permanent·
ment to the "political procampuses t h 1 s time aply ''radicalized''-shaken out
cess."
proaches or ex c e e d s last
of their basically centrist
year's levels, the dam holdIn the view of Richard
viewpoints-by the activities
ing back restrictlve action
Scammon, well-known elec· of their more militant brelb·
against disruptive students
tions expert, young adults
ren on campus.
is likely to burst in Congress
thus postured "really don't
Gallup ftnds that just 28 of
and many state legislatures.
count for much" in U.S. poe
v
e r y 100 students have
litical life. He adds:
Major party professionals
demonstrated for one cause
think that, for the moment
"If they bring numbers
or another. Even among
at least, "the steam is out"
and enthusiasm to it, they
demonstrators, only a relaof direct student participacan affect the process. Their
tive few are said to support
tion in politics as the young
'new politics' is most effecthe tactics, as distinguished
p e o p 1 e flounder without
tive when it's the 'old poll·
from the goals, of the mill·
a hero and without clear tics_' They did all the things
tants.
goals.
for McCarthy in New Hamp·
Seven of every 10 students
shire last year that the old
An important June Gallup
say
they would have some
politicians are supposed to
poll study of college trends
interest
in working either
do.
showed that many sludents
for the federal Vista pro"But those who pull away
then did have a new herogram (a kind of domestic
from the process are just
Sen. Edward Kennedy cif
Peace Corps) or the Peace
young political winos.
MassacbuseUe. But be was
Corps itself.
They're about as impox:_tant
stricken from the 1972 lists
A Roper Research Associ·
as some Bowery bum
by the events surrounding
ales
study of college seniors
slumped over the curb in
bis automobile accident in
indicates
IIIII oae in Ill with
New York on a Sunday
July. And st~Qenis have no
serioUs
•
e
ilbiigb
"'loubts about
morning."
·
ready substltliWr"' ·
U.S. institutions to believe
Many students who keep
Their !968 b e r o, Sen .
that a fundamental (revoluthemselves apart from revoEugene McCarthy of Minne·
tionary) overhaul is needed.
lutionaries and lesser radisola, merely put the cap on
their post-campaign dis!Uu- cals on campus nevertheless
That mesbes with the For·
slonment with bim when he express sympathy with their . tune survey showing 12.8 per
announced in midsummer goals. Though talking ncn·
cent of students in the revothat he would not seek Sen· · violence, a good number say
lutionary and radic{jl cate·
ate re-election in 1970. He quietly but firmly that the
gories.
ha• been a virtual political "end justifies the means."
dropout since hts defeat for
Gallup says four in 10 be·
the Democratic presidential lieve students who break
uomiDation.
laws should not be expelled
from
school.
The one political image
Blr Roek Callll1 Molllllabl
now faintly perceived as
In a June survey, FortUDe
Big Roek Candy Mountain,
hopeful IS that of big· magazine asserts:
near Ellsinore, Utah, is a
chested, toughly aggressive
lemon-colored b Ill, dotted
"The ideas that have kept
Sen. Harold Hughes of Iowa. ·
with evergreens, which looks
Though some young people colleges in turmoil . . . are
like an enormous mound cif
In and around the colleges spreading b e y o n d radical
candy.
Minerals in the soil
students to the rest of Amer·
are baC!Jinlng to talk him up,
give
it
its
yellow color.
lean youth, including thooe
be II unknown nationally and
would have a difficult time
building uaeful identity even
with t b e i r most frenzied
help.
Neither major party has
a stroog immediate prospect
cif capturing the allegiance
of the restless college young.
The Gallup report finds the
treud oo campus "strongly
toward the left" and away
from the Republicans. But
tbe Democrats have lagged
in preparing a hospitable
haven.
Hups, Sen. George McGovern (S.D.), and a few
cif·their fellow reformers in
the Democratic party talk
ol proposilig arbitrary appointment of atnne young
people to future national
con v·e n tl on delegations.
ITbelr studies have shown
that atudents and y o u n g
lldidts w o u I d often be
"swamped out" in the fuller
use cif democratic selection
methodJ the students demand. They are too easily
outvoted by older adults .

~ ~

•

$ 99

LADIES'

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eel tlnp vown in Pink, Blue and
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Your choice of Nylon or Corduroy with zip
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0
'OLEOMARGARIN-E • .. ~

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BIG 3 MEAT SPEr.IALS!
)' S11oktd ·Callie
. . eu••h•y
..
•

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.

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Retail Value
$1.05
tOSIUnt/IUT.

.

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f;EE.
'

59~
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12
•

GLEEM TOOTH PASTE

C'RISC 0-------~--~-3!· ·
•

.

(

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tlOTII/IIf
IIUT.

6.75 oz.
FAMILY SIZE

~LUE BONNET

LONGHORN

Retail Value $4.50

Retail
Value
$5.00

'

.

99

$

01·

DRI

•

Choose from flare and straight le;
pants in Denim Prinh, f:lucci Prints, In·
dian or Floral Prin1s. Avoilable ol10 in
10lid colon with saucy sash at waist.
Sizes 8 to 18.

live, BrO\O'n, Red

TWINPITTID

NNERS

tlO'flllll(; /11111.

BOYS' JACKETS

72 .. 104

MORTON
FROZEN

flOTIIIItf/111'1.

$399

Retail
Value
$29.95

DAIRY BUYS

Retail Yaluo ta $9.00

s.;,.,

stylet. Sic., 5, M, l.

Retail Value
$2.50

"

Rotan Valvo $5.00

NYLON

to compr.t. th.e dtcor CM' en·
hoft«&lt; any room in yo~~~ houa.
No pod n-tory .. .

~~~·· GoO''

All permanent preu fabric with soil
releoSI\ finidt. A11ortment of ploid1
or solid colqrs in the newest 1hode1
for fall . Size• 29 to 42.

LADIES'

SLEEP

RUG

DRUMSTICKS
·and·
let WEAl
SANDWICHES
II IN PACKAGE

IY DICKIE

htal Value $1.99

Lvlurioul '-'" backed nyloll 'POCe dy.d room 1i1e rug

·CdnnedPof

.,'

...

••

ov ,..

NYLON

TJCO

.

$'1 00

ROOM SIZE

PINEAPPLE

leftw ard-le,&gt;oing ,
the pollster or

-

•- :;

1 1h'x11 'h'

CHES

The uindependents" are

' .;

• Co .. .

SLACKS

~n of fall'• - " lhadn
and cola~ In clla:c. of ,.lor
or butHon do~~&lt;n «:~liar IIIOdeh.
A.M perma...m P'"'" . . . ~
IIHd ironhg ... l'taids or ~ids
. . . Sins S, M, l, Xt.

tlOJ'IIIB
/11111.

26••·
btl.

The Gallup study of this
June discloaes that 44 per
cent cif coUege students conalder themselves independenll, while only 211 per cent
1111ang the general voting
' jJUDbC so rate themselves.

..

in sexuality: students

..
&lt;.! .'.'

MIN'S IVY

SPORT
SHIRTS

Boy1-' flannel pajCimos in auorted
prints, 1i~e1 6 to 16 and boys' ftan·
nel1ld·type pojamo1 with hit cufh
ond neck in ouorted colol"l . . .
li~e• 6 to 16 and 3 to 8.

Heavyweight, unlined, rug·
god ·wearing CPO shirt in
assorted solid colon only.
In boys' si1es 5, M, l.

""

MIN'S

PAJAMAS

CPO SHIRT
u

SEPT. 21, Wlti QUANTITIES

YS'

WOOL

__
......
...........

'

Evary pollster's gauge of
student altitudes indicates,
In lOllY event, that increasIDJIY they are holding aloof
from the major parties. For
at least tbe last three yean,
I b e I r self-Identification as
jjlndependentl" has come
through strongly,

'

especially among women,
and the West Coast campua·
, es , are the most liberal. A
Seventeen magazine survey
also showed girls from the
Far West leadinC in premarital activity.
/ '
The Playboy surveY related sexual activity with participation in campus demonstrations. Its summary was
tbat ''an increase in morality
has accompanied the in·
creaP~P

Y1TO 7 .•• PRICES I EFFECT NOW .

='u~~~ ~ents

is up for this generaflon,

'

home· of "\he

Gaton, II a conaervatlve · some privacy.
don't acrea111 or
community, lhe feelJ, and
ords. So flir complaints .in
-· ·
· · cif atwtents
Muae · nieetinga inv~ve •'Ill·
terference of privacy:' Tbts
oil-ampUl led cilder res!·
meaJill some Jllrla want to
dinta to call a row of stu·
walk around Iii tbalr. bras
clinrt-ftlled apartmilats, "SID
and m hair .rollers wlt~MNt
Clty~'." '1. .
'
.
stumbling into a man ID thlo
hall."
'
T~ M". apartment uvinlll
'
Loalle Ullman, a recent
·.. Ii'a Dice to have friends
SkidMore graduate, aars,
11 More freedom as refteetea
over for weeundi and you
by op8a dorms ' and coed
are tree to talk at long as
houainl may Increase the
yoll want to. We bOr;row !10)11'
and butlar and have eom· . drive tor academic freedom,
to mate things relevant to
munal meals and learn to
our
. environment. It may·
reapect our neighbOrs."'

,.w"
••.'
•
I .

-

,.
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.• :...

40Z.

170%.

AQUA VELVA
AFTER SHAVE

SCOPE

88~

56~

........ $! ...

letaiiValue
19•

.1 60L

STYLE

HAIR SPRAY

COSIIITit

IIIH.

LYSOLEXTRAVAGANZA

sa~
....u

14.5 oz.

JERGENS
LOTION

99•

IeiaH Value $1.59

COSMITIC . .T.
210L

LYSOL

'

Gn RIADY
. . POil PALL
. HOUSICLIANING

DEODORIZING

12 oz.

LYSQL

39t

LIQUID

56•
......y_
••••

'

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·· tiODOiliDs
.,.

AN!!

RatGII Value
65c

61t

RetaiiVa...
91c

.. ,

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a,.. ~.O!jER ;DOUGHJY :

NEW 'vo11k-1·~ EAI~

..•.

•the surface, P'r.1~ Zappa
and George. Wald lion'! have
much In '"'1'liiiOD.' , Zappa,
the za~~ Ht~d 'Mot~r of 1M
1 t.tlltheh; of) nv,entton, looks
'-Jute- tlje sleteol~pe ol a hip·
.~ pie, "·I!'~ICIJ7'be more. or ,less
, '.Is: Wald looks more like the
kil!d of JUY, Wh0' ,4ollvers
blology.' lel:!ures at Harvard.
wh)ch he
. ,·,does.
· But deep, do'Wn in1ld~.
wh..e lt ·really cO\lnts, Zappa
and Wal\1 march to Ute beat
of the aaine drummer ~ probably Ringo Starr, at that).
They're both genuine, lob
per cent campus folk heroes,
two of the ultrahip people
whom todn's stqdents re·
vere, ldenllfy with and are
infiuencetl by.
To ftud oilt Just woo the '
youth of Amerka is turned
on by, Youth Dynamics con·
dueled a speciaJ survey for
NEA and ·asked guys and
gdl&amp; on calripuSe's as diverse
as City College of New York
and the University of Texas
to ftll us hi. on who's hot on
the superhero list tllese

·"

/

lOOtS

BEN PEARSON

3 to 9 power variable
scope . . . 32 mm objective lens . . . standard crosshairs .. . One
piece tube . . Weather
and fog proof . · · ·
" Permo-Our" high gloss
finish .

29.99
RnAIL
VALUE

HUNTING
ARROWS

fully. fleece lined With molded

. ffaction 10tft,. ~ond Qre de- ·
· tign.d fo.r maxi"!'Ufl' t:omf~
ond warmth In any weothtr.

A&amp;,o,_.•siz'n.
IIBILVALUI .• II.fS..

$

HUNTING SOCKS .

Top quality hunting socb of 60% NylOn and .
40% Wool. Jlirovldes e~etro woi'mth 1ft colde1t

..

WITHCASI

sa••

poet, p lo!!;. "'""""''

pool,, -~ pcwUod
~··•h&lt;•nl
h ~•odPll""
, __
001 ··

RnAIL
VALUI
$13.95

..

SPOtTS
DEPT.

SNm
DEPT.

KENT

FOOTBALL OUTFIT

HAT

baeb.

practical, jane~ 1tyle duck
ihunting cop in auorted si~es ... Colors ,
OtiYe, Red, and Orange. ,

students - ·male and fe-

DAISY

B. B. GUN· $

499
_,

SPOIJS
IIIP1'.

WOOL PLAID

InAIL VALUI

$1.95

. HUNTINGwiOrSHIRT
. . ;_

$597

58#
~

68~

SPOI1'S
DEPT.

$366

lnAtL
VAi.UI

RETAIL VALUE

RETAIL VALUE $B.95

GUN CASE

Vjnyl gun co11. with flof?
and tie string for eosy closin g.

$1 .29

14"

68~

SPOilS DEPT.

lnAILVALUI

''·"'

'

LUSTRO·W~RE PLASTIC

OUTDOOR
BROOM

PIOCTIR &amp; GAMBLE

44 QUART

GIANT SIZE

DASH·

$122

OR

RETAIL VALUE $2.19

ROUND

WASTE
BASKET
• EASY TO CLEAN

'

CHEER

SCRUB BRUSH

CHOICE

56(

93~
EACH

RETAIL VALUE 98'
HASIIO

NURSE
KIT

Jfii'J'TEL

NEWBORN
THUMBELINA

"HOT WHEELS" SUPER C8ARGE

$118

DOLL

RETAIL
VALUE

TOY

$1.9B

DEPT.
HASIIO

An irr&amp;sis.tible, 9"
foam stuffed doll with
vinyl heod . Just pull
her string and she'll
turn and twist like a
real baby.

TOY

DEn.

·

II SIIIN " to ••• J.YIU·
OLJS CAl Cllltl COtii..L
AIIISIIC iiiSISIS IY Ill••

m•u.

Any child can cr-ate hi' o,.n or fol-

low th pattern• ln the bOoklet. It's
eosyl Just place paper under· hinged~
frome ond insert o ring. With pen '
one of the holts, turn ring-it al-

.II----•

woys stays in ploce. Many Woy$ to
make circles, lquol't'l, faclh or animals, using different ~lng1 or the

99J,

BUBBLE GUM BANK

bar.

"

IOOCOUNT

REIAIL
VALUE

$1.98

.

.,..¥

!:.;.~r!M'-.·~~

.

ltrAIL YALUI $2.79

IDEAL

.,

4.4:
IACH

11/ou

111)

'

'

Hess, a ;.- Gemiln novelist,
wi'ote ~·· lcit:or things &lt;il ·in·
· tere~l. to Y'!\!111, nader1 thesa.
day-. His i 1f?ai Glasperlen·
spiel," written i~ 11145, deals
, with a utopian fantaay on
',_tile philo.iophy of withdrawal
from,.''the world, · ·Ho alao
,autbored· "~ ,steppenwoil''
In •1927 ot·deal.!l wltll tba'confuslon of - modern life and
: still makes greot reading),
· There's a .rock group called
Steppenwolf. · 1
·
Castaneda Is llie autbor of
a tome •bout Don Juan, a
Yaqui Indian who dreamed
up a ''way .'of .knowledge"
.' while munching on p1anis in
Arizona, while Farina, by
far one of the most revered
ftgures on campus, is the
late brother·in-law ol Joan
Baez and ·'tbe subject of
some of her. most moving
: wi'itings and comments.
Robert Downey, who , put
together "Putney Swope,"
the witty up.witll-black·folks
r flick, is tabbed as a superhero on tbe way up, while
Peter Fonda is busting
through , thanks to "Easy
Rider."
But by far and away the
most talked about figures,
the survey shows, are Zappa

"

· UL TS, CAMP AND CLOTHES
and Wald .
Wald was making his ws.y
through life with a lot of sue·
cess (he won a Nobel Prize,
for medicine and physiology,
in 1967J and not too much

fan fate until last March,
when he delivered a speech
on "A Generation in Search
of a Future" . to 1,500 students and scientists at MIT.
Now he's hailed as the
patron saint of the young,
"The next Dr. Spoek," according to the survey crowd,
and for good reason. ·
A typical Waldism goes
like this :
"I think this whole genera·

'
'
lion of students is beset with and todair's
students seem to
a profOund uneasiness and I be tuned'.in to whatlllo self.
don't think they have quite proclaimed oracle of rock
deftned its souree. I llllnk I
has to say.
understand tbe reasons for
who seems to lab
their uneasiness even better lifeZappa,
w!tll
a
grain of salt (be' a
than they do, What's more, been a c c-u
s e d of putting
I share their uneasiness."
down ,everything), is a llmi
As for Zappa, a frequent
believer tbat "good people
lecturer on campuses around come in all kinds of personal
the country (he doesn't have · packaging," which may oz.
a Nobel Prize, but he:s all plain why he looks nothing
for peace} , his role as a so- at all like George Wald.
cial worker through music
One tblil• they do have in
has made him something of common,
"Though, Is that
a giant in his field.
tbey're both over JQ. But, of
"The only way you can course, tbay both know all
fight for survival is through about H~ann Hess.
social outrage," Zappa says,

...,,

._ •.:·· C'AP'N JOHN'S F-ACL F-ISR' SALE/

Stab . . . ...... RtOZIN OCEAN I'HCH, COD OA
Whiti•z Fillets • • •·
lew .Yttk ltri, Stell ...., FIOZIN
....... St.b . . . ... '!'' H.... Fillets . . . :.!'It
E1111~ C.t .... • . . ..... FAOZIN
Filllb ••• ::
··. F..... Fryw 11'1111 • • ..gc C.HiP
88EAOED COD OA I'HCH
C.nith ._ ~ • • • • :: 7t Fish Perlita • • • • ~~

=·
..
..

Pork
•
JUST HEAT AND EAT
Fish Sticks • • • • • :: 5t Porkllli•ieiOIII "":::- .. Jt
READY TO EAT
F111h l,al'll'i.. ~ .....
Shri•• Cockbil • • I= '1" lirloi1 Pork Cho,. • • ....
SOUTH AFIIICAN
lortder T1i11 • • • :; '1" Sl,.rior Slillll lacon ::: I"
88EAOED HADDOCK. FL011NDSt 01 SOlE
S•H••• . . Pill • 5 'I"
Fish Portiea •• •• ~~ '1··
::.:.

=
,...,,.,..,. ...,.

aea-

W.... lt ander a IOa.l tunic
for
Declt ij 01\l ~th
' neck ·' chains olild .a shOrt,
swinglnf skirt for ev'lllnp, ·
,~'""'rdlng to ,a recent aut; •
vey , 1M coUele frel1unan
market for wtarlng ·oppanl
IDW!JPII8mWion.
.
Wbeft.' one cll'OUP spends
that ·much - . y on clolbes
It seems onlY Ottin' It shciuld
dictate
,
. ·faihfon.

.w.

.

·sar

JANE PARKER

..........

Fret!ch IIIII • • • •

DAWN FAESH MUSHROOM

ST0C« UPI

tIN \44C.n•y
l•n .
STICI
IIIley ••

,.,i.. . s.::. '1·

$799

lnA~VALUI
JI2.9S ..

' .

days. '
Some campus heroes who
Hnished flllih on the list are
- Eldridge Cleaver !"He'll
need all tba ice he can ftnd
. to keep his soul cool· · In
Cuba," one C(:NY cond volunteered I. BOb · Dylan, &lt;;he
Guevara, the Rev. William
Sloan Coffin, John Len~ .
Norman MaUer,,Janls Jdjllin
lone Dt lbe iew, females to
crack tile lineup), Arlo G~lh·
rle, Robert Kennedy, Dustin
H o II m an, Muhammad Ali
ud Bobby, s.,ie! (tbe Black
· Pantbar leader), all of whom
are pre\ty predictable.
But, to see how your generations are gapping, try 011
A r t h u r C. Cllirke, Laura
Nyro, Car I o s Castaneda,
Hermann Hess and Richard
· Farjna.
know all five, you
coul rap with · Zappa and
come away fairly undam.
aged I no 'mean trick).
For those' not Iii the kilow,
Clarke, wiio Is !U, wrote
-' '2001" and . Is, as one Ohio
State junior puts it, "the literary genius of the future, "
which m8y or may not make

I

.well, 'loci, oiJd ii!'Coinl . lo )ie.
accotdlnl to lhe kldo:,ln lha
·~noW';;(J'ono ,• OI the, )lottltst
iilniers Iii lilt country In the
neirt tbree montlls. She'o the
•flo: .Toni Mitchell." 18)' tile
W~y; kn~ who Joni Mitchell

!·
' ·-•~- '
hippie lasaes with llloir long
dr..,.. llld llrJDp, of beads
had a. hand iD tbe nvival .of
tbe peasllll loot.
A versl'!ll oj tbe I~ gnat
eoat,· POC!I' bOy ,I IWUier 8Jid
pants, long a ·tamruar sight
!ll'ound Hme Amerieu universllles1 wore shown !II '!"W
recently m tbe llaUowed;IUills
of St. Launnt'i PAris ulon.
No one can ar&amp;Ue iliat 1M
untsex fashliln ....,,, long
before it was dubbed l!Y ·Its
Intriguing aallle, .was·played
on campus. And thoH long
woolen scarves ·that wore
once worn for comfort and
cOlor accents at univmilles
In cold climates an now
fashion "otatus" symbols all
over the lOt.
.~T.?!~.~Ihe fashlona that
fllter tbrough the
unl••er•tlty
to 1M secre-

.. women 011 a
ers and
~:!'~~
lbey
can
fit
or
fde
fur
WorQ 011
chlldten.
!ipanlsb nav~r.
FOrtunately far gnater
BJ&amp;, fringed llld printed
tb8ll !be aping . of kids by· . plano 'hawla wl!l dress up
lieeri the IDDuenee •l"!'.ttl,el a blaCi slip-type
fashions on·young , .dresaes...
•
slnc:e the
.The mul....t iD leathera ajmple ~: m~e Iabrie trtmmld .With,
a sin~ lake curly lamb Will keep tba
off ljlilillklr1ed --.. ·.
. Gjr ·
Plaid pa/111 -'iJd CIPil or
. pooch... of brijJit blaQelin(
WIJl t1ltn 'UJ! IJ! Ji!'otqolaoi ..
· The·ainall knilted'eai&gt;e ~
lhli !oni, v-*t sweater of
tba '3011 are lillct to olay for
a while.
Doli't ·overlook.· tba jump.
.aul""'tbe Ptrfe!;t baae for

$J49

RETAIL VALUE

.. MJ), •·-"'~ro t l ~ '~. Y.rY

'

'

'

1q08re has

•DURABLE
• SANIT,t.RY.

SPECIAL

TOY DEPT.

have nvoluUonlzed
' ·the fashion business. One recent example: The shapely
• lep of coedo ud 1M hearty
approval of tbeir young men
.were key factor• in tbe unJ.
Yersal ancllasliqg
of
that little clotb
known aa 1M
When one's . next
11111'0 45 or
a
aild pantyhose .
1\er loot :Ill

Ita, fear

RETAIL
VALUE
91c

49~

:· male -

w,·

- ~i)j.' G un ilng ar"CosuOI
80% w o~ l
shirt in plaids features long ta1l and twm
pockets. Sizes 14 to 17.

RnAIL
VALUE
$1.69

College Students Set
'Now' FashiontSce~e
,
NEW YORK - (NEA) America's more than eight
million con,ge atudents may
like to llllnt they inftuence
whal goes on 'in politics but
tban's no argumant llloy
have .a very loud volc' In
deciding what goes on our

lnAILVALUI
$1.50

Lightweight, low·cost
model. Daisy "big gun"
quality and construction ,

- ~-·-"'.

~:-

'
ly HELEN HENNESSY

CAMP AXE
I

l Of&gt; q-~ ................
~oo&gt;il1 po.U.d. • """"·
... !.d. ""'lit .. ,.., f&lt;OvO h
~[o~;, ho4 ..... li;,ll .,_

;

I'

$29.95

DEPT.

~

~0"1'

'

RUAIL
YALUr

weolher.

SNITS
DEPT.

..

$ 99

o~

SPORTS DEPT.

'

•~&gt;

~

SPORTS

$1.15

--

,,

booh with moccolin VGnip are

3 to 9 RIFLE SCOPE

HUNTING BOW

Black Peorsonite fibergla u limb1 lamina ted agoin't light
wood core 5trip5 and the beautifully g roins~ Frtito ha~dl~.
odd to the rich sha rp oppaa ronce of thl$ bo;o"'. Bu•l.':tn
forward s.tablizer design gives this po pular bow •tntob•hty
and ease of shooting heavy a rrows a t long range.

-~.b

Tht11 'sub r:ero hdt ln'liulottd

PRECISE

BEN PEARSON

,I

.

.

."' .

.~·
.
tba' *-year-old Mailer tlie'
&lt;li~&amp;rlil'y genius. o( lh~ past.

a

Bi6:t'fen/onCQmpus

•'

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SNITS
DEPT.

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'TOM LEWIS, water well drUI1111, Letart, W. Va. Pliooe 891&gt;-

tAJlOU

'

9-5-3otc

3 802.

-----------VACANCY lor tWo elder13' -

.

pie, Prefer prhaiO paid 110-

•AQZ

]967 CHEVROLEi' --

'

. $1895

HT Cpe. Ltiw milwa;e, au~. tr~s., _PS, rad1o, wh1te . .
exterior finish with block v1nyl mter1or trim.

WI'.IIT

1967 POHTio\C -

•1ou

·~K7

•ena
tKII

-:--$1895

Le Mani HT Cpe. Local owner, low . m1le~ge, 3.~
V.ij ·en;., std. trans., radio,' heater~ gold flnuh With
blaak vi·nyl roof.

U.nta. Phone Maoon, 77S-118S.
lll-8tlc

1965 DODGE

----

·~

.IU87

dnctnnati Airport
•I

'

Branded Dangerous
CINCINNATI (IJPO - The Airline P:llats Association has branded the Greater Cincinnati Airport
in nearby F1orence, Ky. "danger-

ous.,.
•

1 ' "'

'

In a survey of airpoy t s due for
release later this year , lhe association said ·the airport has a
dropoft at the

~nd

of the primary

runway.
.. From the air at night a ir-

field lights and lights oownbelow

RUMMAGE SALE 231 Mill
street, Middleport, Fry building. starting noon Thursday
and Friday.
9-17-3tc

eWEll EVES. 8:00 P.M.
POMEROY, OHIO

the field terw:l to run together
giving the pUot the feeli ng he is
higher than he really is," thereport said.
The airport management de-nied any optical Ulus ion problem.
The association said it released the preliminafy fi ndings
earl,y because of the air di saster . wANTED by Oct. 1st, woman
as companion for elderly lain lniiana a week ago that killed
dy. Small salary. Call Vinton
83 persons.
388-8481.
9-17-3tc

Chevrolet Impala V-8, 4 -

speed. Phone 992-6547.
·
9-17-3tc

---- - --------=

Wanted To Buy .

M. D. Miller, Rt. t, l'llmotQr,
pltOne 992..6i71.
1-.26-Uc
----· ----- - ~--

For Rent
TRAILER LOTS, Bob's Mabile
C&lt;Airt, ~t-racuoe, OhlomState

Rt. 124, Phooo 992-2951.
8-11-tfc

--:----- - ---- - .•THREE RoOM

BARBS
By PHIL PASTORET
An old·timer is a person

who recalls w h e n every
well-equipped home had at
least one set of dominoes
on hand.

There's nothing more delicious on a scorching after-

---- ------ FEMALE, Housekeeper and baby sitter, live iri~ care for

STORAGE SPACE, rent ror.boats
or automobiles, etc, Phone 992s chool age chlldren. Phone
2798, or see Dick Seyler, Kerr
992-2485 or 992.3223 after 6
St. , Pomeroy.
p. m.

- - -i- - - - - - - - - - -

Employment Wanted
REMODELING AND general car-

. 9-16-6tc

-- - -. -~--. --...,.
"
·

People with t1me on
their hands should get
their watch bands

aa;usted.

9-11'-611&gt;

!l-ls-.3tc

pentry work, also painting.
Greg Roush1 phone 992-5039,

noon than a big glass of
lemonade at the county fair .

apartment. com-

pletely mOO.ern with built.-ln
kitchen, wall oven am tabletop
unit; stainleB&amp; steel sink with
disposal unit, large bolb 81111
large closets. Nicely dec·
orated. Coli 992-2278 lor appointment alter 2 p. m.
11-22-tlc

PHONE 882-2962

2

B E DROO~

mobile home. M
an:l G Food Market, 3 miJes
south of Middleport,

9-17-3tc
- - - - - -- -- - - - -FURNISHED lhree room oport,.
• . , ...
ljr ~·

"'"""""'- DUIIII.
.._.....,.u~..,eel, 507
Mill SL, ..........,..

Pels For Sale

Ph- 992-2792.

s.n«c

-------------

FEMALE CAIHt"4, 9 mo. Male
pug, 4 mo. Both champion sir!FOUR ROOM furnished aparlo
ed. Scottie&amp;, wires, poodles,
ment, lath, adults arll ret.,r ..,
cockers, Ireland Road Kennels.
encea, lltlh: Mulberry Aw.
Phone 667.3555, Coolville.

9-11-llt&lt;

Phono 992-6698.

For Sale

r.obe.. tablets 81111 E-\'OifOI'a-

CHINA CABINETS. """"' llblt..
old &lt;loeb, etc. Write or coil

TWO CARRIERS
NEEDED
IN
MASON

REDUCE---------SAFE and Iaiii " I t h
t!On pllla. Neloon Dntll-

I96a fORD V-II automatlc,1966

----- - -------He IP· Wanted ·

lN.T. Pue
Pua PMI . P•
0penlni!Kd-.K

PoMeroy Motor Co.
sale or Trade

and llllllrnllhod
.
9-11-GOip TWO BEDROOM bcima, IIYIIW
apartmentL Cloae ' to tchool.
room, dlninl room, hall 111!11 ,
~ 992-5434.
.1~1Wc . REST AURANT equipment. SWeone bedi'OCD ~. 784
Brow110U Ave., !tlldd1eport. Ph.
Yllltft C~R
den soft lee cream machine
992-9961
or
992-3005.
.
·~ :
and other Items. R1one 992- .
2838 or 992-2429.
..
SPECIAL SALE - 1964 Ford
9-l2-6tc
Galaxle 5110-xl, 2 door hard
_ .... _ _ _ _ _ _: A__ _ _ _
arid
Service
top 1 bucket seats, V-8, autoBE KIND,. Be Gentle, to ~
matic transmission, excele&gt;111enslve carpet. Clean with
lent condition, extra clean,
lllue LUstre. Rent electric
$795. Coli alter 5 p.m. Phone STEAK BURGER $. 98 lb., Jowl
'~r $L MloR BargainPOIIE~Y ·
742-3656.
9-17~c
iand.
sliced 3 lb. $1.39, bolopa 2
9-15-lltc
lb. $1.09, 5lb. tomaweo$.39,
. FOR HIRE, lle&lt;N ·~ water
1960 BUICK 4-door, good rur.o
5 lb, sweet potatoes $.39, 10
line, ceaapoal' drain• 4 to 12 '
nlng condition; power steerFLUFFY SOIT and bright are
lb. potatoes $.49, 56 oz. Jelwide. Paul Anlerlon, Malon,
ing and brakes. Excellent
carpeu eleanod with Blue Lusly $. 99, green beans 2 lb.
W.
VL Pliooe 773oS78&amp;work car. can 742-3656.
tre. Rent el~ctrlc shampooer
$.39. M and G Food -ket,
3:l0 or 949-3915, llaelno.
9-17-6tc
$1. Biker Furniture.
3 mL south ol MlddleporL
4-29;t/c
il-15-lltc
9-17-31p
•
1968, 4-DOOR FiAT sedan. Coli
c. c. BRADFORD, AUCTIONEE\1
949-3D25.
.c,oA.L, wMP, egg, ltoker, mine
CCJqlote Serolco
9-11-lltc
run. Excelsior satt· Works,
PhoDO 949-3821
2 TOY TERRIERS, one female,
EIBt Main SL, Pomeroy. P Rae!.., Ohio
one male. Call after 5 p.m.,
992-3891.
8-13-Uc
CriU Bra4fDrd
7 Llbercy Lone. Phone 99267
PONTIAC
....
$2595
5669.
BonnaYIIIo 9 pau , Sta. Wagon.
On• co~efvl ownot, Power lteer9-17-3tc
REMOVE EXCESS body Ould wllb READY-MIX CONCRE')l: dellvlng, Powot braket. Alita. trant.
An ••captlonal cor.
Fiuldex tablets. Only $1.89 at
erod right lofOUl'project. Put
ROYAL pqrtable typewriter a!¥1
Nelson Drug.
and easy. Free ellimatea. Ph.
coae, $So. Phone 992-229D al9-ll-3otp
992-3284, Gqleln Road7-Mix
67
FORD
........
$2i95
9-17-ltc
ter 5 p,m.
GGiu•l• 500 VB 2 dr. Hord Top.
Co., Mlddleport, Ohio.
Factory air conditlonod, Low
EARLY
AMERICAN
stereo,
AM,
'6-30-Uc
111ii!Nt••
Beautiful
b"*\landy
SEIGLER OIL heater, eight
with belg1 Ylnyl top. 390 c;u, In,
FM radio, 4 speed changer, 4 - - - - - - - - - - - - - llllfilln•, Cn~l•amallc tront. Poroom size; also air compresspeaker oound IIJitem. Bolance
_ , 1 t...,lng &amp;
brak••· Extra
sor. Phone Olester 985-3529.
1horp, on11 IIWMf C(J/1 , .
due. $83.62 or budget termo SEWING MACIIINES, Repair
9-17-311&gt;
available, call 992-3352.
oerolee, aU makeo. 992-22114.
66
MERCURY .... $1495
9-12-Stc
Montei"Gy Custom Canv. Coupa.
The Fabric !hlp. Pcmero,r.
FOUR ADJOINING lots on W.
----- - - - -----Llh now flnhh In llghl blua
Authorized SilWer Soles and
flni1h and whlto top. PS,
Main st., Pomeroy, 200 ft.
SOLID STATE stereo. 1969 walPB ond Crul .. matlc Mtnf.
Sonlca.
Well&gt;upeDSeliiGI'L
front, 100 ft. deep, containnut 1 te~ conaoltpw1tli 4 speak-1111 ono We building, 50 x sg, . ..
:.: ..e-~,..,..~~~ •tht.. •..
BLAETTNARS
_
tJWO
story,.
ppetwo,..
stDI'Y
~'
~tr:!ila1aocedue$6t.EI'Orbud:'~
.. . · ·
.
lUlCK:1;;, POHTiol.~
.
frame,
both
rented.
Former·
get
teruis
a\'ailable.
can
992SEPTIC
tanks
GMC TRUCKS
1y Grueser Body Workj, 9923362,
9-12-Btc
SenltaUon. Stewart, Ohio. I'll.
POMEROY
2D53.
9-17-3tc
_ _ _ _ __ _ ___ __ _ _
882-31135.
1961 CHEVROLETimpola,$125,
2-12-tlc
Real Estate Fat: Sale
SMALL Westinghouse refrigerPhone 247-2161.
9-12-Stc
ator' 1 fuel on furnace for
RODNEY DOWNING

--------------

AUto si18s------.,- - ·

c..q,IJta F•·Eiill
Bril•

--------------

BlAEfTNAit'S
IN

-------- - -----

·,.'

preseats

LOCAL REPORTS
DAILY

Al

·7:50 A.M.

-------------

--------- -----

- -------------

WIPO

IIIFORMAnH
NEWS

1Z NOON

-3 P.M •.
AND
4:30 P.M.

--------------

l&lt;eeoing Meigs
Gallic and ·
Mason Area
Informed As
'
Well As

~erloined

MD KtiO/.tti FDrU:r CAH
BiEACH CX1R WAll'S,

;

L!GAL .NOTICE

- ---------

---

smaU traDer; eKcellent con-

...·'&gt;·

""""""""
""""""""

~fAll&gt;'

-------------

acu.., Lar:.';;.,7,..";.t';;; ~:,;; ln-:-S-11-a;:;.;--------

.

GOOD 2-year old 1'1!11, did ahear
18 lb. Victor Genheimer, Rt.
2, Pomeioy. .
9-17--3tp

-

.- - - -

~~~ugbp.~p~ter~ss-tiia
9-l A..~
-23 ;:--sv-Lv_ANIA
_ __tabl-e -mcx~e-1~

For Sale
RAT TERRIER PUPPIES. Female, $20 each. I'll. 949-2739.

HO.'•.STET_TEl
. :REALTY .

.

,.

...,_0 "OBSTI!TTER B k

_____ ________ _
.

POTATOES. Charles

HU!OD, Portland.

water.

---- ·

, ..

-------

L-IGAL "OTICI
01 TMEMT
NOTICI OP Urt N
.
C.eoMo.2D,1U
1 , .., 0 of I"HNtt ...,.., 0..

e.....

Notlw I• r..b)' tlv.n thot

r~:·~~~;~$1:::~1;:;:
4
4

. F.,~"',,'. of" £~";;.o":;_r::t
• •

1::

sh~ ~~~ ~~~~d

c....tl, IGte of L•lilanllin "OWrto
..
to fllo
'thol• olalrns with 10ltl fhluclor't
within leur,.:.ntht.
.
Dated this 11th ~ of S.pto""
It• 1969.

Pick )'OUr 01111, bl&amp;
juicy No. I, $2 bu. 581etet, 7
ljrpea, 12 111 dull cla,ys, .

APPLES -

1111 day Seturdayl 81111 &amp;lntlajoa,
LaWion'l Orehards, State'·
Route 143 m tho AIJpalochlan
!Ughwo,y. Ph. 698.294().

9-15-Gtc

---------.- ----

___ __ ____

hlot

11\ell•

lo

C•nty~

blgh

$1500. .

sa•

•Plod ll'IIIIJilla"""' uiii!IJ all

9-11-Gtp

--------..,..;----

BEAGLe'P\)i'~ -~ 843-2478.
.

T,.oohlp,

1outh 74 4..,.., 3D mln~OI wut
~fetJ · thtM;t_ south U ...

1ft ~lon 1•; th.~'•.

21~·~··.;::;. ~-~..t
=~0
utos ..,, 363 •• _., il:hllnee ~... .
;:,;~:~1~·J.ia.t$'

W.1t680 fHt

""*·!tf the,._,
_..,. ~
11
'-"311
""
fMtl liMine. ftafth-.28 ...,.•• .

alont tho
-•

.t60

·ASSOCIATES

992·3325

SYRACUSE 9-14-81&lt;. .

-------------- .

oio••• ••• ..,,. .

fout Months.

1w,.o...,
•••••
. . ~~

Doto4 .. ,, 61h ' &lt;~or ot

1969.

s.,..,..

Q~
I'I.Y· CROSSWORD
-~- .-.~

Dear P\XIlel'OY pa,mber ol Ccmmerce:

';5 BhiJ.Ck
ftl,fn Or

2B.TtDnlp
29. Pluno
keys
Ud. I

Nomlredrv and re4lectlng your officers for another term is
commendation for a .iob · well~one. A salute to Bill Grueser, presi-

JO. Doc!·
trines1

dent; Jack Carsey, vice presklent1 and Marge JloCiner, secretary-

·

{ \VUria up

r

..

7.Cheatd
tcolloq.l
R. Gttl'lll
niCkM.IIJe

9. Haunll
11. Twilled
CabriCli'J

1

"'
ndnut.....,, 90 fMt tw
oo&lt;tl- 11.,.1 thnce narth 290 . ·
....,,
I
•feet olol'lll.th. Mctlon lrMoJ m.nco

u~.

Olitrlch'a

relatlve

i9. An1lo-

Sax011
lettf,r
20. Paper

meMute

22. Negative
23. Spoken
:zt. Epoch

''

Mail' Call
TODAY'S QUESTioN
H.t jumps to four hearts fA'W
yoUr three clubs. What do

do now?

treasurer.

32. Tav.·
:u. Wind

inatm·
ment
$ . Sem- .
bla.RC"t!

THE DDCTDR SAYS

Y"Wnla) ·• -'•••·er

36. Landowner '' ·
I SICOL I .

Many Body Functions
Controlled
by Hormones
'

:17. Entitled
.f. 1. Spo.rtaJJ

qtwen

..-o:""l!""lr:-

JI~Ko

o••·

Alfiii"I'YW::.•.,

.::C.

(101 1-e •••

--------------------

m00111 of Ute
all revolvo

)"OU

Answer TOUMNW

A. Buckeye

"'' olOO INti thiMe aeuth 1011

olt••

I•••

--------------

. metal ·bed, . 5 ,FOd. Urea, •·.:
ttlleal ' - " " tmdltlon. Ph.
m-6850 5 p.m.

Lo'&lt;oon

Olti01 In Seoti.Oftl .
14 and 20.1 hflnnl~ • a.ROint on
the -•• 'l1t111 of .Siietfot1 ••• olu
,.,. •••• u.... of "S.etiOII 20; .. the
southrnst corner of the ~. W.
Cornoll 38 act• IOt1 thoru:o •,_.
·olt
325 foetJ ,.,.,_., ~·•outh 420 .
to · tht c.•et ol o road; thence

___ _

AWNIIIIlS, ..... _., • ad : KIRBY VACMJMo ~leiO wltb
wlndowl, ..,..., . . . . . . .
eleanl111 toola and poUihor.
Rtmo like now, "9 cash or
blow• ani boll - - a. .
..OrWblte,oaleonpre- •
terms available. . PhOM 992
2685.
11-16-etc
u... FO&lt; 11:~:·-•·JllOIII
Olarloo Ulie, Ibn'""" V, V,
~-- and Sajt, Inc. ..loll&lt;

'. - ---------:-----:
. 19112 GMC V-6 '10 loo truck, 4 ..

ostoto Ml,. sltuaiM

.,.,,.~od .. !-II•-•

Full.!!,~ -RUR::.~ 5~,1ath,psfur-

-- - -----~----

. ~ 11-14-lltp

lola above

'""'

.iliroMOBILE Jnauruce-·been
........ ;..0 ~ , _ 1 .,.,,. __.:_ .
.......,......,. WII
LUO
~.,_ _ _ . ator't llrAnw? can 992.29&amp;e.
8-tS..uc

"':''.~··~i

fHt; to thl'
Of lao11lftftlnt,
....
l
nl"'
five
"'""'
In 11ctlon
MIDDLEPORT- 5 romns, ..th.
1•
ond
12."'•
RNI
'
'"
"ctlon
20.
'
T D•"•GE. 1989 Zl.,_.,.:....
"'"
1
PAIN
lU'Ufo'
II!!-~
furnace, prqe. Level lot.
• .17.25 ~~··..,. •
Iewing machines. still in ori$4,000.00
Tho P'Cir-t of •••• ,_ltlon Is '"
giaal cartont. No attachments RT. 124 - 3 bedrooms, . bath.
P~O.:t.o;~r:, .... Couttty •lehiiiMihN'I of. tt. rttht•, '""
~od 11 our conlrols are
....ta ond lie~ of tho dlit.M•nt• 1
.-.. •
wall to wall carpetinc, 3 rooms
ontl thclt ,.eltiiiiMI be oilthorb.,
bullt In. Sews with lor 2 neepaneled..
gas forced -air .lurn9/11 9/2-t 10/1 3tc
anrd ...,.,.. 10 soU the et~~JM lno
______ ..;.____________
....If In 11hl..
tHf Ht*'• te Per
die. mak.. "-..w...o.a.ol•t sew
•
!lUI:'""'"' .,. '
ace. Nice baaement. Garage,
c•t• an4 ....,,. HeoNI111 to ttw
on buttons, monograms,. and
:J4
$21 000 00
LIGAL NOTICE
afimltea In auch · c•"• "tned• oM
blind hem Jtitch.
0
P-IMTu•NT
Q.::O!c::l.=rt:i.:."'"ol _ll•trlprtce $38.50 or E--Z m.,,... ....,
Jace, panellnc. Fireplace. 2ac-..
NOTICI p A rv
""" .
The P'fSCMII Hri.t
MefttlonM
tenns. Phone 992-2685.
•
"
c.
..
No.
::11,156
wlfl
further
toke
n.tlc•
thot thr
rea. $6. 000•
.
. 1 ,.... ef Welt• PNnla e,.,r,., llaY, Men ...._ ,_,.. cllfefldont
~""' , a t 6--6te
.,.....
POMEROY- 6 roQ.ll; bath,p• . ·o.c......
· •• sail petltlan ·. M that t!tey 01e
1,1.; ·
~·
""'"ultH to irRJWII th• 10M 1ft fill
furnace, ~~ ll~ ~ ~ NDtlct.. Ia ..... ~,. five~ ''~ot : · !Jiilf~ tt.-'··J,- .·.Hy •I MoveNw,
ELECTROWX SW0&lt;11er - cmofit$lace. $9$00. .
' , · · Foaok Ep,..ly0 Jo, of Coblo C:.Ook,. .1969.•
plete with attachm~, paint.
·
~~~~
w.
v.. ho• ' " " duly •rP•Inlad
.._
$
Eucutor of tho E•tat• o Woltlll'
J•.rce A. - •1•· ·
IPI'8Y. conMdnder, thrHWBY MIDDLEPORT ....,. rooms, Ull. '
levellut,fencecL. 1-t,OQO.
Fronk E,..•lv. deCna.d..
·tsf
tlto
bogs. Full ciBh price onl,y $3L
:t.l-'
O
·"'
Roc Ina, · Ohio, Reu" 2:, · ~•It•
t::'nef
•
Terms ava~ Phone 992-.. HELEN •• VIRGIL. lEAF RD c~.. _ ...,,,. .,. nt. •••
•
4
191 ,_1o-1!-a.i
2685.
11-18-lltc

Q.. 6-3lp
-- ------------

miniature, $75andup.-oervlce ani grooming. Ph- It$.
5443. .:...
11-c

" . .'

I

with otand.GootiCO!illtion.•o. ' '"' • n
. • 10 ••
85-4108 Cbe ter
Phone 9
•
B •1
PO.,:EJiOY - · 4 rOoms, ·tath, 2

POODLE PUPPIES. AKC T o 1

.

o• .

-------------

994 "'342 .,,

ICANAUGA, .OHIO

WlNTER

-- -

. U ot
Clarinet,
ONE CONN·
exce
e
_......
coodltlon, $75. Gontact
.,._,

SMITH AUTO tAI.I..;

.

-

.

~

1968 HONDA 350. Phone 9923324,
il-17-6tc
-

pi~

of blrc:h ~ta, _,....,. o
close~ lf8Ce1 garage, reerea-

tlon room, ~:111 water, PS.
electricity, wall io wall carpet
oC 11·•- - .
Mila! ne
. to-....
u• " ' • • • ....precl&amp;ti. ~ afk!r 5 p. m. .
!or ....
•n.....l~ 992-227°
.,...• ......,,L
a.
. ·9-kfc

---------..- - -:--- -

~~--

SPACIOUS 7 ROOM home, l'h
acres land, ;so toOt t.rontage •• Sta•• n-•- 1.,_.. to. fW.o...

TROMBONE, $77, fillle $150.
Phone 992-6348.
9-17-31p

-

AND~

- - ilraUr

dition; 275 pl. oU tank wilb
logo ani fittings. Ph- 9923139.
9-17-311&gt;

made her

llot:I~S ! YOU MAY
~WIBf:R. IN PfACE!

t&lt;IMG fJOOlA IS
TO Bf F'RfSfRVfD
AS ,q 1-iOO.TAGE,
WA!mUCI&lt;S.

&lt;&gt;ft,ci:

7~

f.

8oth wlnenble
WI!SI: Nortll EMI s..tll
1.
Put l'f'

Radio &amp; healer.

take to auction on percentage
basis, Call Jim Adams, Auctioneer, Rutland, Ohio. Ph.one
742-4461.
9-9-12tc

4tu

•n
.KQI1086

440 Coronet. 4 Door. Local owned car. V..S eng., .
automati'! trans., p. steering &amp; brok"'s. Color: white . .

--=-----------I WILL pick up mer charxlise ani

•A
._Qua

.QII'U

. 10~

$995

..

-

By WAYNE G. BRAHDSTADT, M.D.
Many of the body's func·
tions are controlled by chem·
ica1 rather ttlan nervous sig·
nals. The former are bor·
mones. a. term that means
rousing or setting in motion.
Although we usually think of
them as coming from ttle
glands of internal secretion
i s~reting directly into your
b_lood stream) •.recent studies

•

have shown that they maY

also arise from such non·
glandular tissues as bone
marrow and brain.
Some hssues produce, not
a single tlormone , but two or
more. Althougtl each of the
hormones has its own special
field of activity, they do not
act inde~ndently but ~ore

~!D!OOID~®II.J
•

...

_it.l.-1 , _

I I &lt; • F Nfll"riN("ltu,,"'ll()ll,l l

Unscraml- lhette four Jumble'
ont leur to eam squ•re, to
form fc. .r ordinary wOrda.
14'!

~ nearly like a wen-tunea-or~

chestra. When one gland ·
plays slightly off-key (~!C-.
re tes too much or too little'
of a given bonn one) , a per· ·
son suffers from a hormonal
imbalance. This term is applied most often to the mas·
culinizing effect on a woman .
or too much male hormone
or the femjnizing effect on a
man of too'mucl\ female hor·
mone . We all normally carry
a delicate balance of both
kinds.
..\.reader has asked

whether remov.al of her uterus would correct a hormonal
imbalance but she failed to
say · wbt!ther sbe hac! too
much or too little of which!
hormone. Since the so-called

sex hormODes
by the o:t~=~·
and, to-,

adrenals
moval of
not
. but

mono
One

...

would
imbalance,
eontrolle&lt;l ill·
~eficieDI bot·

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'SD;s. T~rns Sec-reti·ve,
But Still Packs:',a Punch

lr TOM TIEDE

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at 7,500. II has loose mem·
NEW YORK-&lt;NEAI-In . bersblp that may go as Jfigb
as 1110,000.
the 11,1111111er of 11162 a group
0 rlglnally, the group was
o1 a oludents from a dozen
eollere .campuses met in
open, candid and co.operatPortliUl'Oll, Mich., to organive. Now It Is closed, tight·
be a youtbful polltical-social . ltpped
and secret. lis three
1 r o.u p which proclaimed:
top
leaders,
two men and a
•"We are the people of this
woman,
refuse
any but what
generation-looting uncomaides
call
"friendly"
phone
fortably at the world we incalls.
"Enemy"
calls
are
herit"
those from newsmen. "We
don't give interviews to
Tbe g r o u p was named
newspaper pigs," says one
SDS (students for a Demyoung
man entering the
ocratic Society 1•
locked d 0 0 rs of the SDS
National headquarters
That wu seven years ago.
in Chicago. "Buzz off. We
·Today the founders of the
1
only hold press conferences."
gn;lup _have matured uncomfortably close to the estab·
This kind of aloofness, say
llsbment age of JO.
SDS members, is a pay-back
What began as a handful
for what the group hierarchy
of loWly unknown young·
considers bad press. They
Biers, each with a haodful of
feel growing public resentvariously known theories,
ment of SDS is directly atluliR since become the center
tributable to news media
of a nationwide movement
"lies."
which FBI Director J. Edgar
Some think the principal
1:1oover says has "an almost
reason for the SDS clam-up
passionate desire to destroy.
is survival; there have been
to annlbllate, to tear down."
recent indications that the
Today, SDS has some 300
national group is splintering
chapters in colleges and
seriously.
higb schools. It has a hard·
SDS is now comprised of
core membership estimated
two main power groups- 1)
the National Organization,
which is the most prominent
and clings to the traditional

TONIGHT AND THURSDAY
SEPT. 17-18
NOT OPEN
FRIDAY THRU TUESDAY
SEPT. 19-23
"WHERE EAGLES
DARE"
(T ochnlcolor)
Richard Burton

Clint Eastwood

SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.

against the W!lll--,.") has
formed, which . advoca'such thinp Is "klllbJg plge"
(pollee) , "'-··· of like·.·...
"""'"""
•
lions and cells have de·
veloped in many parts of the
nation.
Group leaders ·refuse to

communicate w t t h each
other. Rumors of open war
circulate often. The SDS

·

Image,whichoncewaafalrly
good, then became fairly
feared, is now fairly humill~
ated . Says a New York University member: "The publie reads about aU this blck·
ering and It says, ah-ha, and·
it figures we young punks
have been rediiCed to calllng
each other names."
_
SDS has troubles, yes, but
it remains, as the 1989-70
school year opens, a ·solid,
potent punch. Because de·
spite what adults think of It
It· continues to appeal to•
youth.
Early this year the Danlet
Yankelovich polling fl r m
sampled 723 college students
concerning t h e i r attitudes
toward contemporary issues,
The firm says 64 per cent

· '
·beJieved \'premarital sex Ill
not .a mciral lsoue, only II
per · cent conlldered rellcJon'' r
very Important .••,.. u
• ......, ""
cent
~ 1eve d patrio
' uper
,
very
orlal!t ,Blld only 1m
18
per con tell money Is very
Important.
·
In essence, theae beliefs .

. fit well with SDS philosophy.

As college admlnlstrators
have tried to point out, the
m01t algelflc81lt aspect of
SDS Ill not Its purpose, but
Its effectiveness. And Its ef.
fectlveness lies in the repeat·
edly 4emonstraled ablllty to
organlze and move many
times its membership
against any issue It wishes.
And what about this school
year1 ROTC seems likely aa ,
a target again; univerolty
defense contracts may be
vulnerab"; "progressive Ja.
borites" and "Crazies" seem
to be thinking more violence.
But nobody knows. And, as
several educators have cau·
~- this summer, II would
be unwise to 'either over- or
underestimate even a splin·
tered SDS.

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dents select sports, speciall
and old movies as their tele·

vision viewing favorites.
"A sports event is the No.I
big event in dormitories."

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says BriiCe Schultz, a gradu·
ale student at New York
University. A journalism
major at tbe lJniverslty of
Wisconsin prior to his N.Y.U.
studies, Schultz said every.
one showed up ln the TV
lounge to watch the big Sun·
day allernoon football
games.
Students interviewed ad·
milled they liked specials,
but to varying degrees.
"They are o~ shallow
and not as fear~ as they
could be, but they are get·
ling gutsy," Schult&gt; suld.
"Most times though, they
pull hack before the ConclU·
sion and don't COllie to grips.
I notice, too, on ·shows like
Meet the Press, th~t some of
the interviewers l'i!act with
awe to the penon ·they are
interviewing. The reporter
_•!"':l·a-h!!JIII&gt;
,"~­
. ~!r"~_a_bere
m "' we 11-reporter-a6""""
talk-lo·lhe·vlce·presldentialcandldate attitude. He can
gel so caught up in this he
forgets to ask tough ques·
tions."
Film festivals of old W. C.
Fields, Mae Wesi or Lloyd
Nolan (yes, Lloyd Nolan)
movies are considered kicky.
Anything that's campy can

Chevrolet put it all together.
Solid gentlemanly ~;omfort without
bombaa.t. Sailplane silan~;e.
Computer•selected eoil springs for a
ride that glides.
Yet Mo:nte ~arlo's handling leaves
you fe-:hng l1ke anything but a fifth
whwl. A taut 116" wheelbase and a
track .five feet wide go where pointed.

Standard is a_n instrument Panel

·with the rare Ioo~ of hand-rubbed
burled elm.
And Astro Venti lotion.
Even power dise brakes, fiberglass•
belted tires and higher intensity

headlights.
Notl,ing 1 s mi!lsing.
Nothing ex~;ept the fat you find on
fat ~;ars at fat prkes.
Monte Carlo.
The only ear in its field. Period.
Putting you first, keeps us first.

Prec11ely.
And powerfully: a 350-~;:uhie-inch
VB is. basic. (Order .,n up to a 4S.f)

for the
Sea
from
Caravelle•

·-ror-Now ••• two

bJ IULOVA

lllllllber of lila lan!UJ.

Water resistant to a depth of

6661oet Rotatable elapoed
limo indicator. 17 j..,..
precision movement. stainless

stoel tose. luminous dial.
Waterprooi strap. .Grut1ilt
'or all tbe sports in your life.

It is our gre~t pleasure
to personal! . invite you to see
The C evrolet '70s
in our sh · room starting
Thursday, S tember 18th

.

How is Pre-Registration Doing
For this Class, Mr. Professor?

get a college autllence, at
vored series. Rowan and
lea•t while the fad lasts.
Martin'• Laugh-ln waa third.
Thuo Babnan and The Ad·
Does TV Uve up to Its po.
dams Family were must col· tential?
answer Is no
lege vieWing during tbe•llrst but withThe
reservationo.
few months they were tele· assumes the audience 'is"lia
east.
Hille le11 lntelll&amp;ent than 11
Among female students,
f eall Y Is,'' Schullz says.
Dart Shadows Is a must.
."lbe old wunam Pooiell"Girls sit and watch and )'Ilk Myrna LoY fllmlr had SUbUe·
It up," a •tuclent reported.
ty. Wily ean•t we have
Patricia Coullhiln of Paterson State College in New
Jersey, however, speakbu! ·
for three roommates
herself, says they watch specials: NET Playhouse, CBS
Playhouse and occasllmally,
Mike Douglss.
"I think the children of
this generation are 1110 taken

... Slllp•at Just

in by what TV offers," she

MADISON, Wla. OJPll- E&gt;perbnentalnldaaiJWareplamted
at t11o Utdverslt;y ol Wlsconaln thlo ran. It's a)lin the lnlmiat
of •etence, of c:ourae.
Dr. Elliot Dick, aasoeille proteuor of pre....U.,. medlciM,
aDd Dr. ~J. D'Ale11io, anasaistantprofeuor, wuttod•
tarmlDe the role ol klastrw tn the liPreading oi eommoa cold vlrua••· They plan to aak for wlmtteera who will be IJI,veo the
v1rua. Than the partlclpolllo - bllod!olded - will kill for ono
to two miMe I&gt;Ortoda.
uor coui-ae, anor~J~~~ity is Important becauae our object:l.ve
ta to see it direct contact with scmeone liPread• ~;:00;1 viruses."
heaald.

St.IDUety UJ lltU&amp;tlou C:ODl•
mOtivated' by es~tica. 1 :·
edtes? They may hfve had a woulcl have more •- ~ .;
lower level of eclucaliDD In PfOI!'aml. BUt I'U bve.
I··
the daf* of tbe POweU-Loy
adllilt.
I'd
probably be m ' ·~
8Im1, too.,;
·
"
~a~bym.,. " "t
:-;
· Jerry stelnhart 1~s up
NO!I' aa to this~ beinl ·::
the feelings of eon.p stu- . u accurate .• .. • ~ Nte•·:; ~·
dents_~ W'ell wlieD ha 1s
For every 55,000 telt;lalon &lt;
astecl what ·be .t'ould do if ' unlls, .Nielsell JIOUI ,0118 omit, , ::
he were the bon ol TV. "It T be
are. tppro,z~ma'i;rf ~
would dePend oil ~motlva1,300 lastlluU0111 Of ~~- ,,
Uons. Ill w"" m · afiJd to Ielrnbig In lila Ulilled ii:ili. ··
,make ·money, I WOtlld conWe ta1Dd to1hnit ~
-~"' '..
tinue ...H as it Ill. If .1·. were
studellts.
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roldtd to further 1111ure no ooe meets each otMr."
Dtck was asked why the klaalqr will bellmlteclto two mil&gt;utea. "The whole thtac could be lhot ifwe didn't," he aa1d. "It
could_10 on all nilb&amp;."

LDI
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CHICAGO (UPI) - Valerie

Rlct~llllt ·b ·~tst•••ti; Ylll11l

2 Vehicles
- Demolished kUled

Pen::y waa murdered three

)'Olf8180~·

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• J., '

of tho,. Is Jerry Stein·

AAI1.
F!J!~:!\·~
Nt,1t ~~r
:t'Ola;l' ,. ac;e.,~p.

In llWtuQIII,
··~
at Sl. Pel-

"I watch anytlllng that's
on," he says. Then he adds
to prove his tongue was pari
way in his cheek, u8ut

serials."
Steinhart adds, "Televtalon
is not geered to the Amerl·
can inteUeclual. It's geared
for the majority of lower and
mIddle class blue-collar
workers and In that sense 1
think It definitely cloes its ·

is r.v•nlble.-

~ · Pollee

e11e aid leads adD eCJDe lit.

·

·•

s1
· ·
·
RiiUI• SaiHrlca ·
51~~:~
: !~ ."~ ·······~: t • • • • • ••• •• • • • ~ • "- ~ • • • •• • • .$3.19 •••• SAL I S%69
Sl
•••
~
$3.95. ~ ·MLil $.3.19
•• 0. I I

••••••••• 0 •••

0

~~~~::; ~ ' •.••.. ·•·••· .. ., •••••... ·· ··••• · ···• ·• .$~.95 ....$A:L.'$5,19 ,.
11 · =
·-···········•·······················•$7.t5
....SALE $5.39 _,,,
SI~E:
~~
'~
$1t95 .. -SAL I $10..19

B: ., ..............
•
.
•
•
.....
..
·-·
.....
. . •. .
· •• ·'' '' ··' •• ·•• •• •• •• • •• .$21.50. ·•SALE S2t:95

51

Sl~:: : . 2•' . 1::.".••••••••••
'.' • " • '" '·"

Sf

star Trek also appealed to

·the more conven6imal stu-

' ·" ' : ' •-• " • • ' • • .. • " .. $:1U5 .. ·SALI $32.95
$50..95 ••• $A.LE . . 9$

I • • • • • • •. • • -• • • • • • • • • • • • 0 • •

Z•ES 42·x 66 •••••• •••••••••••••.•••• .••• -••••••••••• $'1~.95.~ .SALE $10:ft

R~, ·Rutt

lolor ..... arown, Avocado, GOld,

dents, ranking behind Mls·
sion: lmposolble aa the lli·

.:'.r ~;,""

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/U{Jt Received! .

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.(~loni•l . -ir,ta '·

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Lump, Stoker

United Preas littornaUonal

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' CC~UIIJI1US- FREDEWCK J. SIMON, city direetor ofpubltc
a1x yeara, realped, ettective Dec. 31. Simon waa
·~~~:.~~~~Involved ln1111 lnveatisstlonby the 1ttmal Hev&gt;t
of allo&amp;ed pmiJ1loc payof!o, bnt elooe aaiociales ~~~~
·ltio•:ln-tio!oltlon had II&lt;JthiJw to do wilb his res~ He will reto hla real estate buslneBS aiMI lsw practice.
, •'If the investigation ·was of coneem to him, he would not lave
noianed.'' a friend ol Sinton aald. "He would have lliaYed rather
·ill'al&gt; open hlmaalf to charges of resisnltW .,...er a clOIII. Simon Ia
. n4!,.thll kiJd ol a Person." Dlroctor Sbnoo Is a brother olll'!"'er
Sinton of P'"!'eroy.
·.~~;,· .. th Jlielnamese ttl de~"end .;:-.:-on
~
J'
~·
.. SAIGON - U, S. HEADQUAR'IERS SAID TODAY It was turnltW
. ' the de!ense of Saigon lo the South Vietnamese. Tho Saigon llliciIaiii week took their hoavi'eot lOBse• in a year lo virtually aoi1W

'"

d&gt;

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T...ur• lrilhw ~u 1 ·' ·'
..... ' fooOol.hooo...
...... •...~..,,. ~ t

Nr\"' O.ol; ..... · ·
. ••e. ,.,.rlnt.t~ •"
•r.tilt4. · · ~c.,.,....
hool&lt;o4 ......~.. '.
1

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way,
w~ tec,etved laeeratiOillol
bla held,ll'lllll and beck. He was

Bid by Jacobs

· John T. (Jad() DorlltOY, resl.
dent .,..._r with the Well Vir.
ldnla State Road Commt..lon,
~ that the flnll
j1llue or con~~tuctlon ot 1he new
•u mllllm alio River replsco,
1110111 llrld88 bOtween Kanaup
and ._1011 will begin la!o
next week. The weather willlna,
It eould be COII'Ipleled by Dec.

I.
Paving ot the roodway of the
brldgo, providing the w.-r
remllna favorable, will require
· ~roolmalely two nmlha,

I ' will be two and ooe-ltalt
be!ore all work Is ......
Jll~ oo the new lour • lsne
otruolul'e wldch will replace the
Ul.tl!led Silver Brldgo, wldch eol.

..

=.::.~

16 1967
•
,kllllog
'!be oonereto on the bridge
will be bl'QI8ht br truek
liD the enda ot the stru&lt;ture and

which belllllln JUDe.
Minor sfeel work lo underway
on the median and curb lor 111o

complet8 Its work here aome.
time next week.
The brldp, lloenll8111111ned.
will have a ooncrete bor.
rter and 1mb jpiU'(i, wldch 1s a

new bridge. Allied Struttural
Steel COOIIru1Y o! Hammond, Ind.
.1o the comraetor for 111o 8\11101'- curb, He- that oonereQI wlU
lllruclure.
be on the end 11J181111 and a _ .
Robert lloenlg, IUPOrinta1dent borrler In the center fllllll,
oo the proJect for Allled strue.
Pruently, workmen ant plac.
lul'al Steel, aald. Tue..W that log the !orma on the out,.
the lui sfeel lor Ute cea!er bor, oide edgos ('( the IJIIII and mOt.
rlor Is expeded here lhla week. al lllay-bl-i)lace fortN on the
Three truck loads of_. are IDIIide.Thlnorklsbeingdoneal·
'"'route to the &lt;oostructlon lite, Jllllllneoully on tMllh aldeo ot '
be aclded.
the river In --ttonforpour..
According to Hoenig, workmen 1n11 ot 1he ..,;;;,;:;;.·
11111 have 15 pieces or sfeel to
Metal slay-bl.place !orms be.
.....ct and "a little bolting oo top log uoed ontheprojectoreheltev..
,yet.» He added that Allled sltould ed to be a first lor a llrld88 pro.

Cou,rt

·;;; n.;J stop T.-:Mb.'~ ·

,;~

M·

arti·al
.

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omtge
·
· ·· ·

~~~.:oto~a:.~
~-.
15 -~-

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s·IX

·· · · .. ·

the bridge.

·

"' Canton,

.',..ul
'

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w-..w.

-..in
- ··- w.Commts-·

or

s.

tinlla, ollleara said.

a.ambora.

Joel for Ute stole Road Commts.
a1on 111 Weal Vlr&amp;lnlo. llor..The !orma -~
have In uae lhr&lt;RI&amp;baullllo
......,. oa1y 1n , _ Molnwhlle, stole Road cu..
mlaalon olllclalo ant """'"'
llheM In 1m1 a..,.wtloa for a
"loedor" routs 01110 the o ow
hrtdp .., Ute Wellt VlriiiDialldo
or the river, 'l'bomu lll(rllunt
or the SRC ..-J1 1t11ac1 that
aome16-alntbearea are belog PlrchUed IIIli
Dllllt be v-~~ br ~ 1J
lleador11011~ will";...... ~
lakeD .. ll1o road proJoot.
but uae or the lchool will be !Ill'•
1111111 ~ ~ •
,_,

:::ooooo:::::.:v~d~
hill&gt;
""!'!I for ,.,

1q

All - 1 lor the -structure
SAIGON OJPO - Six o! 111o eight U. S. ~Ia! Forces men who
is up and a touch up coat of haw been umer Lnvestigation in the alleged murder of a Vietnamese
red lead Jlalnt Is helns BI1PIIed Nalioral will be court martlaled, the Army IJUIOU11eed ~­
'lhli awllcatim will be follow.
The decision was amouneed at a news conference in Saigon arXI
a two-mooth

lnvestissllon

whtch attracted

.........

.lrutldlng

_. ____ -~ .... tbe

,...L~--...
-*
.. ..i ·llll
. ·-··:.
oitPrllaoi!!7 or"F.m
tiiO ~·
From all

worldwide h - .

Jn-

101111- ............ -

vall.

Harmony

........

Marred

In Dixie
WILLlANSBUIIG, VL (111'0
-Good humored • ....._.
That was Ute 35111 - ' -

SWUtern Govemoro ~
But It llllQ' have .._....-.
Maryload Is l'8IIDI'IId ......
to from ll1o 17. . .
Ol'l!lnlzalldl,' Goorals eo.. later .._Ill, """""'&amp;'&amp;e-en.dteoll,
- ··
.... c t - -Utal
. -I b
e
formed.

-'•IPld

Thedeal "' Ita In lltJiabllllnl

aver the OlllllrGm'olalliuallll ot
cbll- to.....,._ ........ to
achlove racial - . . . -

eDmmittees
·. ~~,~t1 . Vote
'

'

1.,

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'

into lite beclqJnutd ..... -

-•u-.--.

- . marino , . _ ....
IIIClearpoww.

-.rrom--

~--

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._........,
-'-"--..
......,,
,. ......__
--t4-.
Maryload ... Rusooll - -

"' Delawaft- bro1qjJtt -

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wtlb Goo. wtmrap .............
roiOialllta lldW to Ill

.,

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- - Kooro ot Wall

a . _ .......
111104 ~?
Goo

AI¥

lila '

I, •1

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tnme-.Jdbellliltrlllonew
hrtdp betoro the end of tbe 1llJ'

lir a
a
r11aluda iltilai

rV.il'

o!ler •

-nothlll&gt;01101111t.

If

Qlio,

~ ~-~~•• !eadof al~ followed

~ o!lldal.l recall

-

,.,..""';.."~"" ,·~ ~~ ~"'... .., "~ U curreat.b' .......
Ute enotraet Ill Ute option or.
!ered br the SRC.

G
B
::~=~-:
r ·e -e n . erets
According liD DorlltOY, a 14.W..
Zs.Jay &lt;l1ll'inli&gt;Orilxl Is !:Niir·

Wlii'UJ

Is Accepted

PRICE 10 CENTS

---------=-

linea.
IIIID wUI be placed, Doraey disAmoog those charged in the ease was Col. ROOert Rheault, 43, of
telom to Veterans Memorial H..,.
olooed.
VinYard
Haven. Mass., former e111UD81Mlor ofall U, S. ~Ia! Forces
pllal br the Raclno emerseney
oquad whore he refused treatErection or the stool - - (Green Beret) lroq&gt;s In Vletmm.
structure
was eolnpleted In recment. Wataoa was charpd with
Bids ot the Jacobe COal co.,
Rheault was ordered held on
ord-breaklnt
time, accordlnil to
drlvbw whlle lnloxlcotod.
llutlaDd, lor lwnp and charges
of murder and con- These two were Sgt. Alvin L
Terry Lee Brewer, 23, POI't- cool ...... accepted br the Malp eoostructlon olllclals,lttook less spiracy to cOmmit murder. Also Smith, 41, Naples, Fla., and
1m1 11eu1o 1, wa• 111o drlwr of COUtltl COIIImlaalotnera Tue~. than two nmlha for this project, beld on the same charges:
CWO Edward M. Boyle, 26,
a car which was wrecked at 3:56 · The eommlallkrn IIIIIOIIIICed It
- Maj. David E. Crew, 33, New York CU~··
Cedar Rapids, lowL
Tho Investigation Involved the
P· m. at lbe lntorsectlon o!Routo will receive bids for piiOIIne
YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio (UPI)
12t and COUtiQ'liGid 26.
and dlaael fllel until 9 a.m. Oil
- Ma,i, Thomss C, Mlddlelon alleged murder of a Vletra-Ohio ia headed tor ""moruAeeordlng to the sherlf!'s re- Tue&amp;eW. Ssptomber atl.
Jr., 29, Jefferson. S.C.
mel!le Mtioml In the Nha 'fralw
mertal problems" because of
port, Bnwer wu travolltW eoat
The received DOtlc:e that
- ~L LelaiMI J, Brumley, .fuea, 188 miles northeast of
the N1zon Adminlatra.tlon'a re011 11eu1o !2t when hla vahlcle prisoner&amp; In the ~ 1101'1&lt;26, Duncan, Okla.
Saigon aiMI MBr the Cambodian
cent cutback on construction,
lt~lono for three dsyo oo the be!tlelleld.
.
went Jell o1 center and skidded will coli$! a dayoUeetlve
-Capt. Robert F. Maracso, border, last JlDle 20, allegedly
accordltW to Slate IDgtnray Dt- 29, Bloom1ield, N.J.
The announcement that the ll2nd Airborne Dtvlalon'o 31'd Br1- 90 feet before aoi1W over an..,.. JIIBIII'J 1,. 19'10. ..lion
for refusing an assignment.
rector P. E. Masheter. u1 do
guardirfl Saigon, would be pulled oulln Prealdanl Nixon's b e - Into a lold wbero 11 - .._tolbe-orthewet.
- ~L Budge E. WU!iams,
Defense attorneys for the
not like the cutback aiMilthlnk 27, Athena, Ga.
IGtdlra•ralJ&gt;Iap meant the rtllloval'!fthe ooly U, S. unit stiD .Immved praceeded _...tfnalely 100 raet
Green
Berets have described
!are do!ttrtmonl to · - t h •
it' a the wroJW way to light in4e!ense of the eopltaL It woUld leave the job to the SWUt Vlelo more before slctJplnc.
IIDill
at ~r
The Army said the charges the aUeged victim as a North
flation," Ma!hetor said WedpirH, who loot S29 inen l!llled ls!t week.
, Bre...,. wu 1e1om br prt- 0o1t Lake bold
aplnat two other Green Berets Vietnamese double apnt emnesday.
aUto
to Votorana - . a t Hoi- . . . tbe
Ute
Involved were beq "held In ptoyed by the U.S. Central
'imaen~ wi~ dhsap,ointed
,
.
pita! .w bon be Is confined abeyance" pendi!W the trial. lnlelllsenee Agency (CIA).
·pARIS - NORTH VIETNAM !JAS SAlQ ITS91!1clalo wllllliHI
Dick Kerr, Sr~
Ouniln4
lrdurlel. He will be ......... relatlvel of the 1,3JB u
Hr;icem~n missing
eoptlve·ln exCoolin _ . for rood,_ Dab Clorlt. ... Cia'k lfirtha
·
(Conllllledon~ 1:!)'
·
·
'
'

... 'r,

'

.

'

·' 0

~ tJ)

1q job Is Melbourae Brolhen

retigru safely .director pod

0 •••• 0 •• 0 •• 0 0 ••

have 'lotor-

Yiawed more then 10,000 perMiil. A three-man team of
atato pollee still Is oo Ute

By

"Most college-age people
lind television quite borin&amp;,"
Miss Coughlin saya. "We
wall:h Johnny Canon sometimes, but talk sbows are
growing too common and
everyone Is trying to do the
same thing:.''
Bruce s:.\hult&gt; spent some
time alter his graduation
from Wlsconlln Hvln.l In a
communal situation wfth hlp.
· pies.
"Thelr~lthing waa star
Trek. An
g with a futurIstic loo and a mind-ex·
panding, re Ia z In c, Flash
Gordon air will appeal to
hippies."
"

"N~"- . DI~~·
·
"
.

Keep• Us
Firsl

II',

.-o.ooo

'fvbu"'r" lioalcltll rug.
Thi.l nylOn '!II · haa
brilll.,t, colon cind
the Cololliol pat10rn

POMEROY MOTOR COMPANY
E. MAIN ST. POMEROY, OHIO

·.••,1,

!amiiJ~s
home.
'' ·
. - KenlLworth
A
t'Mlrd 1a ..,.

"Smithliold" · nyljln
OYOl
~oaYywoiight

DOt

,•

FAVORS AND
REFRESHMENTS

On SepL 18, 1966, 8001eone
the deil&amp;htor ol-n.
Oaarlta It Percy, RJU., in
her 111otairB bedrOIIIl .ol the

._.,,.. l'titltc

"

C0t1tt ~ tU...

~1&gt; " I&lt; 0

New Bridge Could be Ready
By Dec. 1, Weather Willing

-

say&amp;.

On~

'1be bUndt'olda wW prevent later cootact among partici·
We will evon lead the oui&gt;Jocto dolm ll1o ole,.tor bllnd-

poDia.

~·

ana -

Kills Pair

Firll-

d

o()

~ &gt;$-

Lightning·

Pulling You

..

----------------------------------~~----------------·------------------------------~
~ ~
VO~. XXII NO. 106
POMEROY-MIDbLEPORT. Of·IIO
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, i- o/~/~. ~

job."

Two

~'¢ ··
\ ~ ~t,h
'

··:..
. '..:

By JOAN CROSBY
NEW YORII.-\NEAIWhat follows Is at least as
accurate as a Neilsen Report
(one unit for every 55,000
TV units).
College and university stu-

. .t

O..,oled To The lnleN!III Of The Meip·MaiOR Areo

"student power" philosophy;

Z) the Progressive Laborites,
which is smaller, noisier and
is struggling to incorporate
a revolutionary "worker-student" alliaDce.
Within these main units,
more splintering is happen·
lng. Something called the
"Crazies" has emerged,
which is totally anarchistic.
Something else known as the
"Mothers" (from "Up

1e

\
~.~
en

.

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