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std!nol. ~y-Mltldleport,

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o., Thuroday, Sop~ 5, 1968

· c~E - The Cheohlro
B~lt Cbureh Salurda.y celebra~l Ita 80th Amlversary ol
......tee to the Cheshire communl1;y. The present bulldingwas
a reault 0( the persistent, concerned efforts of many people
ol the area.
Before the present edh1ce was
compl- the Bapl1111 congregation In what used ID be the

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Anniversary Saturday

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Cheshire Academy building. no aioog the Ohio River In Cronl ol
Cheshire High School buUdlng the building, and a guard had to
replaced the Academy buUdlng be pootod at nlgtrt to keep the
door Crom ruining the Crashly
some yeara ago.
The ground Cor the Cheshire made brick.
Some or those who helped .....
Baptist Church was donated by
cure
money ror the construction
William Boice, who had a clear
In
1888
were Daniel and Joseph
vision of the need Cor a Baptist
Mauck,
Jacob
COUghenour, Jeasi.e
church here. Some of the preWalker, and U.eflrstpastor, Rev.
sent members remember hearing of how the bricks were made William Fulton. The belfry was
built by William Good. Thootalned glass wtnOOws were pat in

JPCA -Will Meet Sept. 14

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The rarmer - owned ,Jackson
Procklction Credit Anoclation
..UI hold Its 34th amual meeting
Saturday, Sept, 14 at Canter's
Cave. 'l11e JNil'k will open at 10
a.m. with lunch sened from 11
a.m. to 1:30 p.m.
Lunch will be followed by a
short business meetlnj: and election of one director. Candidates
nominated are incumbent Frank

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Herrell of Lawrence CoWJty and
Sam Lewl11 ot Meigs County. John
Everage, assistant vice presf.
dent ot the Louisville, Kentucky
Bank, will be the guest speaker.
As or June 30, the Jackson

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P.C.A. had 2,759 stockholdero
and $7,808,947ln loans outstanding 1n Athens, Adams, Gallia,
Hocking, Lawrence, Meigs, Pike,
Ross, Scioto, andVlntoncountiee.

The 62nd.
Curtis reu~
ion was held recently at Poco
Field, Heath, with 110 relatives

and friends present.
Atterding were Mrs. Hazel
Curtis, Mr. aM Mrs. Perry Cur-

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tis, Miss Sardra Curtis, Mrs.
Marilyn Pooler, Reedsville; Mr.
and Mrs. Onotl'io Monago and
sons, Me. aM Mrs. Perry W. Curtis, Akron; Mr. and Mrs. John
· Palmer, Hariett and MarilynPalmer, YoWJgstown; Ann Kerns,
Mr. and Mrs. John Muska, Mr.
and Mrs. John Newell, Columbus,
and Mrs. Frank Catanzaro, Cincinnlti.

"M';'ddl;~~;t... :
iiPersona/ Notes !l·

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Mrs. Susie Harris and Mrs.
Fred Gibbs, , Jr. 100 daughter,
Trtna and Venida, visited r~
cently with relatives at Fort
CAmpbell, Ky. From tnere they
went to Nashville, Tenn., where
they saw Virginia Graham who
was narrating a scyle show in a
department store.

MrL William Ault, daughters,
Kay and Merri, were recent visitors in Waverly with Mr. and
Mrs. C. H. Whe, Jr.
Danny Fink of Cheshire, a jwl-

ior at Meigs High School, became
Ill Tuesday night and was taken
to Holzer Hospital where he was
admitted for treatment.
Sam Scruggs, Cheshire, R o y

Briggs, Galllpolio, and P, K.

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Russell. Pomeroy, of the Ohio
Valley Electric Corp,, Kyger
Creek, joined by Harry McGuf'fin, Dave Hargraves, N. ll Humphreys, and Keith Morgan, awnmer employes, were among those

HA

who attended a meeting at t h e
Piketon plant this past ...(eek.

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Mr. arxl Mrs. Pearl Van Cooney
am son, Mike, MiddJeport, aoo
Mr. and Mrs, Jimmy Van Cooney
or Columbus are vhttlng at Fort
Eustis, Va., with Sgt. and Mr!l,
Robert Caruthers.

TONJGHT, SEPT. .5
NOT OPEN

Mrs. D. H. Rob110n was hostess Tuesday night for a meetIng ol the Loyal Palo Claso of

FRIDAY &amp; SAWRDAY

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Fabian - MimiJ' Fanner

niE WILD RACERS"
(Teehnlcolor)
AND
''DID YOU HEAR THE ONE
ABOUT THE TRAVEUNG
SALESLADY'?"
,
(Teehnicolor)
Phyllis Diller - Bob Denver
SHOW STARTS 7 P. M.
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TONIGHT, SEPT. 5

b

J..... Coburn
"WATERHOLE NO, 3"

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the Middleport Cmrch ol Chrlol

SEPT. 6 &amp; 7

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Hostess when
Closs Meets

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Mrs. Robson 1s

(Teehnlcolor)
AND
_ , . Voe.lackie DeShallnOn
"C'MON, LET'S UVE

'FRIDAY, SAWRDAY
AND SUNDAY
SEPT, 6-7 8
J...., Wayne - Robert hlltehtnn
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AND
5DMl &amp; Cher
" ~ "GOOD TittES"

ing !rom Uness.

Thank you notes were read
from Lula Mae ~vey of Athens, a . former member oC the
class, for flowers sent during
her recent hospitalization, Mrs.
&amp;lsan Rawlings and Mrs~ Searls.
The traveling prize donated by
Mrs. Allen Jenkinson was awarded to Mlsa Frances Roush, who
also won the. guest prize. Mrs.
RobiiOI'I's devotJonal program ln.
eluded "Walking In God' a Changing Sea11011s,. and "He Walk&amp; with

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A dessert cwraewas served by
the hostess. 9le rave favors of
mte podf, ~ were hllso
Hysell, Mrs. Edgar Reynold&amp;,
Mrs. Rawlings, Mlaa Nina Rua ~
eeU, Mrs. Audre.Y Frwt, Mro.
· Mary BaUv, Mrs. Poad RIIYDDlds, Mia• Hawley, Mr... Grace
Pratt, Mr1. Jenkinson, and Mi11
Rouah.

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Sport Shirts
mue.

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2.49

Now the convenience and practical use or pre1111,nent pren at
~ular prices..

blouses, skirts, jumpers, sweaters, car coats.. Just the Y~ry
items she needs. A compfete
range of sizes in 3 to 6x, 7 to
14 and the chubby sizes Slh to
14lh . Come in now and see ror

F1JLL SIZE FLAT OR F1TIED . , , . , . . •.. , ..... $3.89
TWIN SIZE FLAT OR FITIED . , .• , , . ••.. , .. , .$3-59
42" BY 36" PILLOW CASES .. ,. , . , , , .. , .. , , PR. $1.99

Slacks For The Small Fry
LIWe boys sizes 3 to7.Dreaoorpla,y olack1ln-a D111 laleetl'"'
or stripes and colora. Most 1111 are permanent prll-. Saloct
your noedl right - ·
.

yourselt

MENS- YOUIIG MENS
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,Jal.i.i.

Lontl alee., shirta In sizes 6 ID 18. Solid colors and
Topered with button down Ivy style collars. All exira aooci

Muslin Sheets

We feature a complete -stock of
girls dresses, coats, coordinated
sportswear, separate slacks,

Stadium
Casual
Slacks

1.95

..

2.95

Gftd

I made or 50percentPolyes-

Ready To Wear Department

1 ter, 50 per cent cotton. Soil

of Back To College Needs
In Wearing Apparel
A beautiful selection o! women's
coats, knit suits, wool suits,
skirts,
jackets,
sweaters,
blouses, slack suits, jumpers,
car coats, all weather coats,
robes, dusters. Come in and let
us help you with your selections.
Sizes £or Junior Petites, Regular
Juniors a.'hd Misses sizes. This
season's top fashions are on dis.
play in Elberrelds Ready to Wear

Department on the Second Floor.

Odorleaa, non-lnllarnmable, colorleao. lo!othproor all wcicJiou
clothing, CIU1&gt;ets, "'holstery, bi&amp;DketL E!teetlve,·eaayiDIIPPlf:

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release

1.35 PINTS····· ·-- • • • • • • ·····-·SALE 50t .
2.55 QUARTS··- - • • • • • • • • • • ····SALE 1.00
4.95 HALF G~~LONS -.._ • • - - • • • • - • SA.LE Z.l!f,l .
6.95 GALLONS-----·-·-··-·~-- ·SALE..3.00

finish. Tapered

I legs, cuCCed, boll loops, A
I good selection or solid col-

1I on. Sizes 29
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to 42 wai&amp;t.

5.95

RCA Color TtiiYislon
Get your 1969 RCA color TV. set ....,, EnJOy the new aQ . ;:·
programs, Erlioy World Series In color. '111o fotOIIall ~ &lt;
Slq&gt; In the music department oo the 2nd floor. see iD tho-noit· ··
1969 RCA color ••~ There are some exeollent l'aiueo niiiDa .
your selection.
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Elberfelds
I · LIGHTW~GHT PORTABLE COLOR··.· •••.• ·299.95 ' ::
·Are Headquarters
1 BIG SCREEH cqHSOLE TY SET--· • ·-. -.-- 499.9-·
For HANES
I 18" DIAGONAL 180 5Q: IN. TABLE MODEL
.. ,.,.. •'
UNDERWEAR 1· coLO.R tv ~ET--- ------ --;- •• -.,- --. 3St:ts:
I 23 INCH DI~GOHAL 295 SQ. IH. COLOR TV
. .·
FOR MEN II WITH AUTOMATIC FINE TUHING.-.-. ••
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AND BOYS
And Many. Many Other S~lal BI!J~ Row ~; ·

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Berkshire Hosiery Sale

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OUR BEST SELLING BETTER HOSIERY

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Sheer, Mesh. Agilon Stretch, Walking Sheer, Evening "or Dress
Sheer, Full Fashioned, Action Wear Pantyhose.
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REG.
Rl'r..
REG.
REG.
REG.

$1.35 ... SALE $1.09 ... , ..•...•.••• 3 PAIRS $3.25
$1.50 ... SALE$1.19 ... ... ...... . .. 3 PAIRS$3.55
$1.75 ... SALE$1.39 ... , ........... 3 PAIRS$4.15
$3.00 ... PANTY HOSE ... , .,.,, , . , , . , SALE $2.39
$3.95 ... SUPPORT STOCKINGS .. ,., .... SALE $3.19

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Cruoh or Antiquo
Black,
Chilli.

Tarnished

Patent.
Brass,

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Cotton Elastic
leg Briefs

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Women's Sizes 5. 8.

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2.00 •• 2.98 1
49e
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·.Size 7Zx90 · .

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D-4.95

Look At This Line Of

Electric Fan Values
Al these sale prices on these weU known and most practical
fans. Buy for now and Cor the years ahead.

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HANES

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20 INCH WESTINGHOUSE PORTABLE WINDOW FANS.
High capacity 3 speed fan&amp;. Mamally reversible and
can be used Cor intake or exhaust •• , •• • , • • , .SALE •28.00

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1~---------------------------Young Men's $7,50 Permanent Press Trim Cut C&amp;tual .
I Slacks. Sizes 28 to38waioL .......... , ••••• SALE $5,00
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I Men's Full Cut Broadcloth P&amp;iamaa. In sizes A, B, C, D.
I ~t Sl;)'le •••••••.•••••••• , ••••••• • •••• ,, .P, 95
I
I Young Men' o Spurs, slim lit western style Jeane In sizes

GENERAL ELECTIUC 12" OSCILLATING FANs.
New high-velocity, 5 element blades. Protoetlvo grill
for added safety.•••••••• , •• • ••••••••.• SALE $22.00

. ROSE BOUQUET - .nora! Rose prbt on .
· white. Colors: pink, !l"id !)lue.

SLEIIPCRAFT

· ..,.., ,Dicra

Yourw Mon's 'IUrtle Neck sl.lpowr awutera. Sllu amaU.
medium, large. 100 per ~ont
vlrsln di4MIIII orloia.
Washable. •••••••.••••••••••••••••••• .$10.95
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Men' a Lontl Sloe., white clreao ohirtO: ·~~~~Iron. Mper
cent dacroa, 35 per cent collot1, swle 1,4 1!' ~1.; •.,;8$
blued8nlm'~
29 to 44 • • • • • .................

f!" .

.w Pillows"

100 coat "DIICI'OII" POiy..l.r FllroriiiL Coal aitopltW.
alloqlc, odorlesi, mlldf'l!' proaL N'"' -~ ih!I.Y•
llu1(y. nalohed ilze 21 X 27. All COwritw 'l l; blue Or .
pink lllripe.
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11011

4.29 '. o..;,
v.

29 to 38 waiaL .• .••••••• , ••• , • , ••••• , ·; .... N,98

Men'• FuU eut SanCortHd

GENERAL ELECTIUC ALL PURPOSE FANS.
Safety design case. Tilts to any angle. Versatile. Use
It anywhere• .", .•.••••.•.•••••.•• , •••• , SALE P!.OO

ARISTOCRAT - 100 per cent .CCrllon.
Colora: antique gold. wjllte,plnk,mosaareetl.
wodpjrood bl...

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LAiiY CLAIRE - Solid color, yoar · modlum wetghL Colon: white, lt. plpk, moos
green, iredaeWO!Id blue, dat!odU ~0.., wry
J&gt;l!ik, lllllquo aoJd.

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20 INCH REVERSIBLE GENERAL ELECTIUC WINDOW FANS. . ·I
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5 element blades, electrically reversible, 3 speed
I
mo!Dr .• , ....... ..... , ...... , .. , ... , SALE $28.1!0

5'.\'~yloll BI~Jtl. ·~

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YOU'LL FIND A COMPLETE SELECTION OF SIZES AND
STYLES IN TilE BUSY MEN'S AND BOYS' DEPARTMENT ON
1
Strelch ever Sheer elastic, machine waahable,' nylon lace c~s
I ELBERFELDS 1ST FLOOR. TEE SIIIRTS, BRIEFS, UNDERfully lined with cottoJL Hold their shape and yours.
1 SIDRTS, ATilLE TIC SIDRTS, UNJON SUITS. SIZES FROM TilE
SMALLEST BOYS SIZE 3 TO EXTRA LARGE MEN (SIZE 54),
NOW IS A GOOD TIME FOR YOU TO SELECT YOUR NEEDS
· - - - - - - 1 IN RANES UNDERWEAR FOR TilE MEN AND BOYS IN YOUR
I FAMILY.

A,B,C,-3. 95

A •¥.

SIJ!'ER-TIIEIW. - .,illttflo\llor, yoar fruad
meidlum welch~· Coldra: P., aillqluo .sfd,
~ blpe, moao

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Playtex Living Bras

'R-I" &lt;j't) ~· -·

Sleepcr•ft TherdtalJtlllttt ·.

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-;~~~~~~;~;~--,---;UN~;~u;.----1

Shoulder Bags

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JUST REi::E.IV!D

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SAIGON (UPI)- An enormous
explosion rocked the predominantly Chinese Cholon sector or
Sai&amp;On tonight, lntllctlng hOI vy
casualties ln a ctty fearing a
VIet COlli! attack at any time.
li.S. troopo killed 114 guorrUIao and captured !34 suopO&lt;ts
on the approaches to Saigon.
U.S. mtll1ary opokesmeo Slid
"ao far there are 13 conO.nned
kUied and sn u - n number
· woullled" in the eJPloalon whlct
ohoOI&lt; moll o1 the ell)' or
Saigon, Another 15 to 20 persons
were believed triPped In the
rubble.
There were no report11 llnmediateb that any Americans
were kll!od or wounded In the

camps believed set up Cor
another attack on the city.

Whether the ell(lloslou was
part oC tho preparation Cor the
eJPected asu.ult on Saigon was
not clear and U.S. spokesmen

Dev~led To The lnlerea,.Of 17ae Meip· Ma110n Area

FIVE CENTS

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1968

Speaking of Schools-No. 56

Launch New Meigs Local Programs
problems 1n sdtoOI we set up atrack. Each English course has small class of 20 In .grade sev.
a semester ol literature in a en and one ol 20 In grade eight
largo claos ol aboUt 40 and the to help them catch up so they
otber semester 1n a small comwon't drop out.
pasltlou elaos ol aboUt 20.
GUIDANCE - There Is a CUll
SPECIAL EDUCATION - We time guidance persoo In the iun·
have apeclal ellleatlon classes
lor high school and another In
at rour levels, according to age. tho oenlor high ochool ID help
These are age 7-10, age 10·13,
students wlro have problema and
age 13-16, and age 16.20. There w1ro ml8hl quit because ot them.
ue seven sections of special
LANGUAGE - On a trial pilot
education Including two In the baelo we will be trying so m o
juniQt high ocltoOI and two In
oral ~sh in grades one-two-the high ochool.
three tn a couple of schools.
ucATCH'UP"' CLASSES IlEAL TH - GUIDANCE In
For students who have had some

Grade Ton - All grade 10 students meet as OOe clan (mer
200) with a team ol halC a dooen teachers the first period e~­
ery day. During the first semester they will have a broad exposure to health as it involves
them, their school, comnnmi.C;t,
nation, and world. We frill us.:.

BY GEORGE HARGRAVES, JB.
91pt., Meigs Local Schoolo
In this column I will attempt
to describe brleCI)' some &lt;1 file
LOCAL BAND _ AD instrumental group made up of Meigs and Mason youths, named ,.Brand
new program&amp; we are trying
x" has won honors in three area contests recentlY, two "battles of the bands" at Royal Olk
ID have .!'Ol'k Cor uo In the sysP~k this summer, and another In Gallipolis. The "Bruxl X" band has al&amp;O made benefit appeartem thla year. In Culuro columns
area, acene ol IMJIIIerous Viet I ..Ul try ID deserlbo them In
ances at Lakin State Hospital aJX1 the Zaleski Youth C&amp;mP· Members or the gr&lt;q&gt; are, left to
many audio-Visual aids and outCong terrorist incidents. U.S. more detail. This Is just a thUmb
fore ound, Charlie Olvera, Harry Garnes, Somy Bennett and Lynnie Tennant. and John
side perSOIUI in this coorse. Durand South Vietnameae rescue nail sketch.
right,
ndgrG
Arnold In the background. The band is playing Cor a dance Ill Eaotern Hlgll U&gt;7. uspan a
ary
,
ing the second semester we will
teams rushed to the scene
ENGLJSII 9-12 - There are
n!.gbt
follCMing
the Eagles .. Hannan Trace game. - SenUnel Phot.o.
have a course in guidance each
within mlooteo.
two sets, or tracks, o1 Engltah
day, This will involve learning
The eliJ)Iolion destroyed I clauea. Students who 'are colabout themselves, their communVietnamese !'!(ormation olllce lege bound are In one track.
ity and their own potential Cor the
building and a restaurant next · Tboee wile are not In college
Cuture In oducatloo In job opdoor. It followed a series of prep eourseo are In a separate
portunities and In personal deterrorist attack&amp; earlltr thll
velopment. 'l1lls course has credweek and a wll'llirW by National
it but no grade.
Pollee Director Col. Tren Van
CONTEMPORARY World Af.
11at that communist - d •
(airs- We have two high school
were slipping 1niD file , dey for
The survey consists of three
sections of this course which
:an u ln11ide attack tbis month."
Jntei'Yiewers will begin visits
use a weekly news magazine as 1D 50 Meigs COUnty homeo MOO- parts, including:
W h I I e South Vietnamese
Home interviews, conducted by
a text to Btudy the contemportroops skirmished with smaller
day as a part ol the nationwide
a
dietarY interviewer in which
ary world. This class bas credit
VIet COng units on the outer
research program, uEvaluation
she
obtains a two.day rood Inbut no grade and should be a
fringe&amp; of Saigon, U.S. troops
o1 Nutritional Status oC Pre - take record, as well a&amp; sociovery interesting one.
fought two sharp bottles in
By United Preso lnternatiooal
school Children in the United economic and related informaPRAGUE
(\JPOCzechosl&lt;&gt;ELEMENTARY Reading - A
attacks on Communist base
JACKSON, MISS. - THE AJ,L-WIUTE EXECUTIVE commlttee
States."
tloo.
of the Mlsatssippi '-regular" Democratl, with the backing of Gov. vak Communist party chief new phonics supplement will be
Meigs Cowrty is one or two
A comprehensive physical exJohn Bell wnuama, reJecied the rx&gt;mtneoo or bulb maJor national Alexander Dubcek today swn· used in grades one-two-three. In Soulhoaotem Ohio - the oth- amination by a pediatrician, and
partie&amp; Thuroriay and tbrew Its support ID preoldentlal candidate maned the run central commit- This lo a widely used and very er being VInton - In the study a medical hls!Dry collected by
tee or the nation's Communist successful program. Also In which has been made pouible a nurse, at no cost to the famGeorge Wallace.
,
Williams said he concurred ••fully'' in the committee s aeUon party to discuss the agonizingb grades one-two-three we will be by a Children' B Bureau grant ily.
and gave Ids peraoml eulorsement to the former Alabama governor • slOW" withdrawal of Soviet trying out several new basic to Children's Hospital Research
reading series. This fits well with Foundation in Columbus .
Samples &lt;1 blood and urine
prodlctlnB Wallace would carry hllsliostppl by 1 heavylllll'gin In the troops from the capital.
Dubcek, looking weary after the county-wide otudy of basic
will
be collected for extensive
Pre-&amp;ehoOl children have been
'
November election.
days or leading his country back readers wldeh will soon begin. selected throush&lt;JUI the natloo laboratory studies also at no
GROUPING - In the junior for the study. !!election hao nolh- C.ot ID the parllclpant.
COLUIIIBUS - JOliN W, BRICKER, WHO celebrated hlo 75th to Soviet-style "normalization"
on· time bQnowed .from the high school we have set up lng to do with economic status.
~iriiJdt,y toclaf, pniDIMCI oowsme• he
.1101 lllrouah polltlckl~~~o
The study will be beneficial,
"I'D be out t1Jrou1b tirO state mlkinl . . . chea Cor Dick Nlxor Kremlin, was !allowed to the seventh and eighth grade group Ten or the children selected will
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~ students whom teachers have
It
is made clear, because, by
central
committee
building
by
a
· • poraa, metudlng t " o and the other c:~Midatea," the former Ohio govermr, U.S. lf&amp;nltor carload or men who apparently recommended as being able to be in FOmeroy and 10 In Mlddle- determining the nutritional stslpo~ The remaining 30 will be
aar1 Republican for the vice presldeDcy In i944 ssld.
eJi!ldroo, were lnlured when
were bodyguards. "nleir M.tiona- Jl10'le ahead a little raster. These from the rest of the county. us of pre-school children, a batlrjven by Georae A, ftlllllv,
two classes will be having the
CLEVELAND - "IF HEALTH CARE COSTS cootlnuo to rise llty could not be determined.
st; and Thomas E, Daley, 30,
A
small
group
of
about
40
new math program and some
bcJ!11 o1 Rt. I, Reedevllle, col- modleal care mQ soon be prload out of the roach ol moot American
science. We hope these
well-wisbers
awaited
him
at
the
u.dad on a curve oC SUtcesa Rd., families," Democratic senatorial DOIDinee John GW.igan uld here doors and set Dubcek to smiling new
students will benefit !rom thJA
· oiiiJI-Ionllls ol a mile east ol
~llllpn told a news conference "Medieal acl.enoo can ew-e what with a nosegay of flowers as he acceleration and justify t h e
Rf. 7, at 5 p.m. TJmoday.
brushed pasL He was accompa· conftdence placed in them by
Tho State Highway l'atrollden- ails us, but lt &lt;:Ill leave us ftnanclal crip,lleL'' T1te average dally
nlod by Natlonal Assembly their fOrmer teachers. 'I'hi s is
tllled the lnlured as Henalv and coat for hospltallzadon ia now $52.70, he saJd, j•twice what lt was
Preaident
Josef Sm.rkovsky and our nr st try ln this area or
Daley, and these poaaengers In 10 yeers .., and more than twice the median groso dally eernlngs presidium member Gustavo grouping outside the elementary
tirO respoctlve earo, Delores of Ohio worker&amp;. n
Husak. Only Thursday, Husak school and we will watch it with
To celebrate the union or the
'116nalv, 29, Sandra Jlenelv, 9,
publicly
promised the Increa- interest.
A
STRIKE
THREAT
AVERTED,
PIIILADELPIDA'Spubllc
oehoolo
former Methodist ard Evangeli·
~ea Dalv, 26, and steven DaADMINISTRATION - Several
singly restive Czechoslovaks
lor, 6, treated for cuts and were open todlf tor 290,000 student&amp;. Teacher walkouts closed their leaders wovld never new administrative devices have cal United Brethren Church of
T..,pers Plains, a union service
. bruise&amp; at St. Joseph Jtoapltal, achoola 1n other dtleo. On1,y H houra boCore a threoteeed strike,
consenl to a return of reprea. been used ror the first time to
has been scheduled for this SunI'Ubersburll. W.va., aarlroleae- the PhUadelphla FederaUoo or Teochers and the oehool board qreod
set a better and smoother orThursday
on
a
tw0ooye&amp;r cortract tor 12,500 teachers. The union won sive Stalinism.
day.
orl:'
These comment&amp; were ad- ganizational pattern in the inDr. calvin Rodeherrer, S\C)t.
The petrol dtedDaleyiD Me1p pay lnereoses ranaillll fr'"" $600 ID $1,200.
dreosed
ID a naUm settling mark- ternal workings or the school
WAVERLY, Mirm. (UPO- RuThousands or school chUdreD across the nation were having an
of the Portsmouth District or the
COWitl' COUrt Sept. 6 on a d1arge
ec;Uy lnto ua mood or .panl.c" this year - especially at the bebert
H. Humphrey, still days
extended vaca.Uon aa teachers atnack or boycotted classes after
o4 driving left ol center.
and gloom over rumored purges, ginning oC the school year.
away
!rom the formal opening
the
scheduled
reopenlaa:
of
acOOola..
Teachers
want
more
money,
· Another accident occurred In
NEWS
AND
NOTES
My
press
censorstdp
and
the
seemof
his
presidential campaign, baa
Moles COUTIIJ at 3:55p.m. 'l'huro- better worl&lt;lng conditions and 1 greater II.Y aboUt school polleleo.
hat is oft to our bus drivers
Ingly endless occupetlon.
ror
the
first time launched a
diJ on Rl. 7, o8ven.tenlhl &lt;1 a
The mood wao heightened ID- whe so quickly and efriclanthard.hltllng
atlack oo Richard
mile 10081 ol Rt. 33. .No one waa
.
M. Nixon and the Republican
ia)!red and no charlO 10a1llled.
WASIIINGTON - A RABDER IJNE IN RESPONSE to Russia's day by word Crom Czechoslo- Jy learned their new routes. The
candidate's ability to achieve
The polrol ssld MarPI:'I Sta- mllltai'Y moves In Eurq~e IIIJPOOf0(1 to be ohoi&gt;lll8 "' toda9 In the vak MW&amp;men, kept out ol I h e hat Is also olf ID our cu-al
Uospitalman 2 ~ C James A.
q, 51, Uttle llocklnl. ~ ll s. government. DofoniO SOcrotal')' Clark M. CIIIJord oet tho tone pres&amp; by the censors, that SO- staff for the Cine condition our
peace in Vietnam.
llbOUr, .o1Mrlod roundinB a curve
the deelaratioo pion&amp; would move ah-..1 oo antiballistic mla- viet • Instigated demonstrations butldlnga are In at the start o1 MUier, ~;on ot the Rev. and Mrs.
Humphrey labeled Nixon "a
111 the . wet hi&amp;lrWR1· The voblcle ane developnent, aubatantlal u.s. military force&amp; would ,rematn In woold seep the nation this week- tlrls year. And those first fine Audrey Miller of Middleport, Is
cold war warrior. 11
Humphrey bruS(Jiely dlamis ...
: _. olf the rl8hl side &lt;1 the Europe, NATe itratelll' would be IJIOroughly reviewed and &amp;lJOTIIIral tlglrterllnl! the occupetloo re- meals our cooks turned out were stationed at DeNang, Vietnam.
certainly a bargain lor 20 c:ents.
Hospllalman Miller, who has
ed a suggestioo that Nlxor. bad
·llltliwtal. atruek - mall box- policy dealing with the Ruoalans fl:om a position o!lltrerlllh would gime.
been in Vietnam for the past
see you at the game!
a better chance to settle t b •
ea, and over an emballkme"'- be followed.
VETERANS MEMORIAL
three
months,
Is a U.S. Navy
most unpopular war in the naThere was minor clam&amp;P to the ·
HOSPITAL
corpsman in the field with the
tion's history because NID:a
FRANKFORT, KY. - A. B. HAPPY CHANDLER, wboae poUAdmissions - Jessie White,
Third Marine Division. He had
was not associated with the adtleal
fortulloa
hive
dwindled
since
he
twice
oemt&gt;led
the
aovernor's
Rntland;
Peggy anv, H a r tbeen stationed al the hospital
The
mall
·
belnnged to
ministration.
the Jel!ora Coal CO., Rogers manrrlnn hero, thinks George Wallace will carry Kenblck¥ - and
at Portsmouth, VL, prior to a
ford.
"No, I don't agree with that
Jei!MI and Lewll SmiiiL
possibly the aatloa. "I thillk the Conner Alabaml BDvernOI' ..Ul carDlocl1arges - Clifford llall,
3G-day leave with his parents
at all,'' Humphrey toldrep&gt;rterl
ry KentuckY," Chandler Aid 'lburlday, '•aad I think It's highly pol- Bett;y Stewart,
and assignment to VIetnam.
of the Mi.meapolls airport 011.
stble he'll wiD the whole thlrw,."
During his leave, Hospi.talman
his arrival Thu.rsdi.Y nlght. for l
Chindlor, a portly ~ar.Ud who also baa served as baseball MARRIAGE APPLICATION
Miller was married to the ronnlas~ brief root before openlne
Robert Ray CUster, Jr., 19,
•
•
C&lt;llllml1a- · and ll. S. sti•tor, Ia being mentioned as a poaslble
er Brenda Fae Blevins of Portsthe
campaign Monday.
rmm1JW mate b' Wallaee. "'111at'l just I nunori' he Ald. "I've Ballo, W, Va., college otudent,
mouth.
She
resides
in
Ports-u1
have every bit as &amp;004 a
hoord It, 1M 1 didn't .s tart it. rm oot rurmlng Cor anythlqJ - or and Diana J.,ynn Crlswoll, 21,
mouth wtth her parents.
chance,
maybe a good deal bethllddleporl, nurse.
from IJIYihiDI, either,"
..~ ...
ter
.
ln
the
meantime, I am hlpe- ·
Harold C. Doster, pastor &lt;1
. l 'PT. PLEASANT- Bill Doml&gt;MEIGl
GENERAL
HOSPITAL
Cui
the
pr.,enl
admlnlatraliotl
,
Ill the P&lt;IIDI Ploaathe Christian Cburches at 11omAdmissions - None.
can end the war.''
waatbe aueat

Dubcek in
Session to
Ease Fear

·6 Hurt in

Of2 Cars

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Fair In the sooth tonl&amp;lt IIICI
portly cloudy In the north. and a
little .cooler with a low of 50
to 55. Mostly IIWIIIJ' and little
chaiii!O In temperature Soturdal·

Collison

'

I

a1 )'

rj'

Weather

six others wounded," Minh saJd.
oa(d Its cauoe wao not knoWn. It told him they arrested one "Police told me there must
ahatlorod a wide area, heavll.Y suspect, but it waB not known have been at least 20 more still
damegtrw
shops near the immediately If he Wlro a traPped ln there."
member or the Viet c:orw..
Moot of the dead and wounded
destroyed bulldlrws.
"1 saw them pul1 at least
UPl television cameraman
appeared to be Chinese.
Tran oat Minh said autboritiel eight dead out, and there were

News .•. in Briefs

Berlou Mothproofer

J Permanent Press slackS"

Come To Elberfelds Busy

Me."

A UTTLE"

"EL DORADO''

Pra.Yer by hllss Mildred Hawle.Y opened the meotlns. and Miss
MAbel Hysell presided at the
brief business session. Miss
Hawley explained the revised
midweek prayer service ot the
church. Mrs. Helen Batey, Mrs.
Leo Searl&amp;, and Mro. Holen Carpenter were reported lmprov-

Boys Permanent Press

INTRODUCTORY CANNON MONTICELLO NO-I ROll

til

•'

~aigon Rocked by Explosion

ere

•

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•

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

' VOL XXI NO. 95

to Akron

Dependable Buoter Brown Quality. L&lt;q Wf'81'lng 100 per cent
premium ahrink resistant cotton. White and pasteis. 2 thru 4.

and See Our Complete Stock

e-

The mOi.etary unit ol Albania
Is the lek. Flv~ ICil8i one U, S.
dollar.

!!-.. •

.a

Wearing Apparel

Earl Davis, Mr. 100 Mrs. How·

Linda COst and Carol Williamson.

.lfl&amp;!lii8JrU'
- ·tile

I

ing, Kirk, Kell.Y and Kip, Wellsville; Mr. and Mrs. Charles Cw-d.s, Christopher, Ricky Rathburn,
Daytonj Mr. and Mrs. Randy Terzls, Kathleen, Nicholette, and
Timothy, Alel&lt;llndria, Ky.; Mr.
and Mrs. Hubert Johnson aOO
Earl, Alexandrlai Mr. and Mrs.

quartet "The Expression" i~
eluding Dale Johnson, Bill Smith,

•hal:•

lister Brown Girls .Ptiltles

Elijah Johnson, Bradnor; Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Johnson, Miss
Bonnie Linda Johnson, Paul Johnson, RisingSunj Mrs. Ina Sanford,
Johnstownj Mr. and Mrs. Hobart
Newell, Miss Sheila Newell, Elmer Newell, Chester; Mr. and
Mrs. Olin Reynolds, Steve, Parkersburg, W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs.
John Brewer, Miss Myra Hath·
burn, Otway; Mr. an1 Mrs. Clint
Wat:"rs, Ralph Wagers, East Liverpool.
Mr. aM Mrs. Robert Wilson
and Kristine; Mrs. Janet Dowl-

ard Johnson ard son. Mr. and
Mrs. Dan Wright, Brian, Carl
Blackstone, Mrs. Ada mackstone, Mrs. Elinor Davis, Gary
Davis, Granvtlle; Mr. and Mrs.
Douglas Bissell, Brlan, Michael
and Royce, T~rs Plains.
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Curtis, Mr.
and Mrs. Perle Arxlerson, Mr.
ard Mrs. Kenneth Johnson, Dale,
Dean, and Brice; Mr. and Mrs.
Don Smith, Miss Tamera Smith,
BW Smit14 Linda Cost, Carol
Wtlllamson, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph .,
Bowman, Elmer and Billy Swank,
Miss Judy Swank, Miss S a II y
Swank, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
O'NeUI, Tonny, Peggy and Molly, Mr. and Mrs. Elsworth Crispin, Dana Johnson and the hostess, Moille E. Pullins, all of
Newark.
Music was furnished by a

Now You Know

·--·---·- ·-~

of Girls Back To School

62nd Curtis Reunion Held
Recently
at
Poco
Field
annual

iiltno•• tow

r----------------------------------------------------------------.,.~
nit '
_________ Make_ Ellie~~~~ ln. Ponteroy Your Shopping Center-Open Friday and Satur•ay
_____ .:, ____._______

counties.

ror reservations berore September 7.

H0 m·e ·

1n ttio . COJilmuniiJ 11 iaviiiil 'tu · From 'Eastern Trip
per~ ':'II" came• · Into CUII.let
In 11. ,
, · ·. ' ·
with, lta,~n"!'shiP. If one"""'"" .
.o( 1110 day .IIIU
lllr. and Mrs. Kemelh Jlllvia
to ~ Ill(~ he ,Y&lt;Ill lind the opepins worship ~rvt"' ·w ,.,.. sona, Roeerandi!Ddnv,haVe
thai the , lileatil~l tradition or IO:~O· a,m.
aueit ~- . '1-ei!U'IIod home rrom a trip ID
lalutlng 1!!1 Aliterloan andChrle- er, Di', Chorleo Weed, will~. ~ the eolll ooast who~ thv vllittlan flap tl atlll obeerved In a AI 1:30 p.m.· the new buiiOtln . rolitltves and Cri.bJo In Baldsy wileD these values seem ID board In Crunt ol the dttach will · tlmoro and Frederick. Md., and
be In a flux.
be dudleated.
Wallhinglon, D.C.
,
Some ol .the former pastors
And the afternoon will he1pent
'11110' aleo attended a '!Jdtbsll
were Reverend&amp; - . , , Llllh, Inspecting an exhibit of Church eanie In Baltimore botwtMl the
g,errltt, Moore, Crabtree, Nate, Bibles, old pictures and momen- BIJ-,.,' Orioloe and the BoiSprouse, Reed, Dlekerson, .Hiclt- IDes, and In renewing old friend- . ton l!ed Soi. Roser his retuntocl
man, Rlgss, Barker, PhiWps, shljJo.
to hla classes at OhiQ Technical
Able1, lltgglnbolham, Zondsl,
The evening eervtce, Btartlns COllqe In COlUmbus.
POmeroy, llammer, Llmnan, at 6:30 p.m., will be 111 old
R~turn
Woods, Newkirk, HOover and the fashioned service with evoi')'OIIO
laat pastor, Rev. Warren Zlnn. Invited ID elrosa In lhslr grandMr. and ""'"· ·Erroll CoriiW
The prooent pastor Ia Rev.Dav!d parert1' cJo!hee and place them- and
J!uBb, Akron, returned
selves back In time to 1888, bOmo 9mda.r allor .P,~ a
Sodzlol.

also lmown 11 the BOj)dst Lluks.
Each of these grou_ps haalnvest.

See Our Beautiful Selection

dit at reasonable rates. All members who are interested should
contact their local field office

warm, chrio~~~n

into being. In 1960 came the
organization of the COuples CIOO,

Through June 30, 1968, the Jack ·
son AIAOciation disbursed $4,~
804,814 in new fllnds in these 11
The Jackaon AasociaUon was
formed In 1934 to provide short
and Intermediate-term rarm cre-

'

.,

~· t1me, 01rort w reli&gt;ur.t;ea to.· ; . n.. W!.oto .... o1 s.tur&lt;~aJ "- · F ·t..
al~ flle ·J&gt;~ Qf lilt .ct.ilrCJI.·, ~ 7 W.ii"~~o uMCitoeeli . UOVI$ Omlrr.
This clalreh .ltln · ~ • brUt! lhl1 ru;WvoriOI')'.'Ev~ ..

later.
\
.The eirl¥hiatoryotthlo church
If thread.IIOro, owtns to .tho ioo•
ol· the oatclal J'O&lt;lOl'!la In a lire.
But lli&gt;ine ot the c:oniresaUon
ltlll remember a Cow oltheearl.Y
poatora calling by "one horse
power" metbod.
Iii JIIIU4l'1 and FobrutU')' of
1920 the church hod ID au1pend
eenleeo duo ID an epidemic o1
lnfiuenza. But by 1935 the addition !D . the back ol the building
wao completed. Then tho terrible flood or 1937 Invaded the
atrueture.
Iii 1943 the Adath hllsslnoary
Guild was organized and in 19t6
Boy Seoul Troop No. 206 came

:.Q~kire Baptists to Celebrate
f]h:~rch 's

••

I.

., '

.•

'!••

.' i

ear•

Miller Placed
At DeNang Post

with

or

.....

Doster in

Executive

Neutral line
T~

·IS Promised

for- ibe ngr"er week1J

ot the local Klwan!a
Jutalghl.

"""

Dean Post

•
3 Charges··Face·d Drtver

~~urq&gt;a oo the lep and hlp. Both
A W0DW1. no jailed ~.. men ware re~od alter treat,.
c1a:r and lined. lodt.Y on.'Cirerpa mont.
oi DWI, ao
Ucenae,
The .
Powell

hit a dick spot on the road,
eroulns the hlghwa;r, and ill&gt;'
1f0bW Into a .lllteh. There wu
~Jdmatebo $175 damage to
tile ear and PowoD wao cited to
Jilvonllo court on a charge ol
fallllri to . _ on the right hall

~:~.=.'::;
Plains In the late 1950s haa boon

Jllltled executive clean at Allee
Uoyd COllqe, In Pl(lpa Paaeea,
Kl'

'ae ..UI dlroet academic plaiiproarlllllllln8 and ldmlnlltrdfon &lt;1 the 50-year.old coorlleational ~· whim baa
the
J&gt;illvldod Jeaclerlhiporllcatioator
'l'bocl6t&gt;U't*"\""""ummoned· A~Pa~achian -people , since
lit Uo59
ID· 1 mtllhoi&gt; on 1918.
.
·
· 1 wbore FriDDoller wao Cottnerl:r uolam
.
the
Col-'
. pro lident &lt;JI
.In Walll
~ II

or

n1ng

roar!-.

..

-

Discharges -

None.

Catholic High School for Sale
·
The Dloee se ol Steubollvllle
11 cllrerln8 for lale Ita high
school ,.PJOLifA Q m. Route 7~ ill
llblre
C~ ~re tir a brlek building built In 1961, IllUMed. '"'
8b&lt;Jrt• 17 aeroa. 'l1le llu!ld1nii
,... deaiKMd 1o aecouw.....

·180 .,.._,
~~ &lt;JI tiie
ao ,,..~Q ol

COmmercial kllchen, 505; s!Dr •
~. ~. and COrridors, IDilet
rooma, shoWer rooms, mecbaft..
leal rooms, otc., not included.
Jamel JtoUern, reproseotatln
&lt;J1 \too aio.t Rev. Jolon Kin&amp; IIIII•·
slo, Bishop, eald the bulldlnB
cordjl be used for a tJiralDi or
relit 1lome, alllcea, 1isl' .......
tru~ depll1, uaai1
coder, or for' other

Additional data can be ..,.alned
onSin"!,"'thest. stnreture - a CGilSidef&amp;ble oul1a:r In CUDrll,
It Is ,pte natural t1ut the er II . - o·to &lt;1- &lt;JIb
proport;y It I jual

'

laid.,.,.lll'tliiAd
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"Frankly, ._, Don't Know' Where to
.Put My MoneyL~'

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,&gt;,

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~ . reaction in support of the
of eago pollee-and by eneaslon, In aupport
,,# pollcemea eveey:where-has follawed In
t" the WIake of atorles of unnecessary brulalit;y

emp oyed ill putting down the antiwar anti·
:."~the,, demonotrators who boped io dis......
Democratic convention.
ADyone reading accounts of the obscene
and often malicious antics of some elements
amoog a varied mlzture of restless youths
can only conclude that they asked for, 11 not
Ill of them deserved, what they got.
One Important thing must be kept in mind
however.
'
No matter bow se r I o u s 1y they are pro-

'

LOVESICK STUDENTS ABE
HIS PROBLEM
Dear Hallll:
I teach ;mJar high mstb, ~
am PnJ1&gt;ab1¥ PIS to hive the
same kind of trouble this year
thlt I had in the past.
. Girl stuilas llllnk tbtY are In
love 1lith me, espeollily one
ol thim. Last year she wrote
me 1111J1Y love notes, and eYen
c:amt ID my 1&gt;oye on weekllllla.
01 the last day ot school sbe
wu ci:rtn11 and she and another
llirl tnli- on kissing me good.

voked, policemen are neither trained nor
equipped nor legally constituted to act as
judge and
of anyone. No matter how
satisfying I may be to see a filth-shoutiog,
filth-throwing youth having his head cracked,
once we become accustomed to the Idea of
allowing the police to mete out summary
punishment, without benefit of arrest, trial or
coovlcUon, to anyone-much less indiserlminately, as It was done in Chicago-we have
taken a basic step toward dismantling the
very democracy we are trying to protect.
In the final analysis, the pollee in Cblcago
simply blew their cool. And that Is exactly
what the demonstrators wanted them to do.

lury

and lnickortnl.
. I am 28 years old, blq1pUy
Or 1lll,)'be II' I another WOIIIID.
married with two children. I He meets a 1at af them Ill 1111
.1r7 to llugh off or tsnore these 110rk. I could ' - It II•. Tlio ·
llrls, but you don't kno1l 1o&gt;1r I could fight!
perliS!alllhQ 0111 bel
All I kno1l Ia Fm lolinl 111J
Wbal's the best lilY t1o hsndlo bull&gt;and, and I don't thlnll 111J
. them?- ,TEACHEB
"lacks" hive ii\Ythlna ID dn witb
Dear Teacher:
it. ·I'm 1111'111, Iovins, lfllte
• . . With .autioo, re'"'""• and loaldnl, nUt, snd I've tried to
ll1lpalhf for junior high school be WMierstandl•&amp; but n\y 1111~
hero IIOI'Ihip,
plclona are driving me 11114 I
Moat 11JUD1 male teachers face hole mylai! for them, but I Clll't
thlo problem. Perhaps a few abut them out. Wbalever c:an 1
will write in and tell US lo&gt;lr the7 do? - S, W,
Judie it. PI-? - H.
Dear S:
Dear Holen:
Your best ' - Is a 1001 dla.
When my !lance and I were cuaslon with your doctor. I
In college, lkoew he IIU!rfends leU you whore th11 wiDI~Itlad.
with a row ''fairlY nice !ellcnra," but 8lltlinl your fear• out ta
but I thought he was just being _ , 1111Q' help dllsolVO thelll democrilic, and not J)Uttlng down or lbo1l you 1o&gt;1r to face them.
men who - e dlf!erent.
-H.
!liked theM bnys too. 'l'IIQ"re Dear Helen:
to talk to - and sate. 1Jb
A wltUe back 1 lldY 1lho lllcnanother lirl,lrfead.
ed horlai! ••Bo" told ,.,...'lobe
E'tf1'7111ins nne ror 10 dllllked being cliled ''YIKIDII
elY'' by clerko. b laid If lt'l ·
to be !latterin81t mt,..,
Its mark, as It meana lnstncen

Pay-TV---The Hot Potato
subscnption television-makers of the neces·
sary equipment, entrepreneurs and othersflrst began pressing the Federal Communications Commission for permission to set up
an ellpenmental system. A pilot station was
finally authorized for Hartford Conn in

1962.
'
.,
In the meantime, innumerable congressional and FCC bearings and a favorable
U.S. Court of Appeals ruling on a challenge
to pay-TV's legallty have failed to budge the
Idea fro~ Jts one..,lty _ellperimental status.
~ndmg ~pon which ax you grind, subscrtption television is either a complement or
a threat . to existing commercial television.
The National Association of Broadcasters
charges that it would eventually destroy free
television, though it hasn't done so yet in
Hartford where for the past six years subscnhers have been enjoying such commercial-free box-office attractions as Drst-nm

,,

lllioi!'"*

lm~ul-1.. ,', . ,
he'd IJI,f, dDilo .1 irled ;ID
enUee him, that r~ 111Ft: hla .
pride before, and ! didn't ,...U, I
111111 him. A1ld he'd-lak. ilfr fllr . ·
the clw, or Hid '11'1 Iota,
niero's ..,. malt lrftllll be 111 ·
with a lot. The oilier day I iaw
somebody wblQerlnalbout - . ,

Was

bye.

,I

' Like the locusts, the 17-year-old hassle
over pay-TV has popped into view again.
It h~s been that long since supporters of

yesro Iller ww """" marrliol.
Then my hulband fiJrne4 eqld
and started making Ill ~ of
excuses. Of e!H he'd aet lOY.•
IJW Juot before wo hid 1D ao aal
for dinner or llil1lletldna.

lmew It

movies, Broadway plays and other special
features at an average expenditure of about
,1.25 a week per famlly.
Also, nationwide pay-TV would be governed by stringent FCC rules. For instance,
It would only he permitted in cities which already have four commercial stations in op.
eration. It would not he permiUed to televise
any sports event that had been regularly
televised in the community.
After 17 years, the Impatience of the payTV people is understandable. What they are
now asking .is simply that Congress either

outlaw subscription television completely

wm

r.a.

DDCTDRIB MAILBAG meant

WASHINGTON NDTEBDDK

'·
'.,i"
i

Hiram Grant? That's Our
Illustrious Ulysses S. ,

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By NOEL GROVE
NEA Staff Correspondent
WASHINGTON- (NEA)-A
man named Daly hopes to

brmg a group of newsmen

(

''

!

into Chicago to study the
causes of urban riots and the
problems of inner city life.
And lest such an announce·
ment begin a stampede by
the Fourth Es~ in the opposite dlrection~,.lt ·should he
mentioned that this Is a Daly
named Charles, not Dick.
The program Is to he sponsored by· the University of
Chicago's Center for Policy
Studies. Grants will he
awarded, explained Charles
U. Daly, director of the center, to bring journalists to the
~versity as •• associates," to
audit courses dealing with urban problems and work directly in urban projects.
Center's new program
which hegins Jan. 2, is d.,:
signed to help scholars under' stand the problems of the
working reporter and to help
the reporter understand the
msny-sided problems of the
urbaD areas.
Lab periods for the newsmen, It might be added, will
not he nearly as hazardous as
those held recently in Lincoln
Park, with blue-coated feUows

of another "Daley." Journal·
lstic heads will be filled, It is
hoped, not cracked.

•••

AMONG' THE numerous
other events that have given
this election year uniqueness,
It could also go down as the
year of the matchless middle

JWDes. Consider Milhous, Ho--

''!

ratio and Slxtus for the gentlemen Nixon, Humphrey and
Muslde.
In the face of those, the
middle handle ofT be od ore
for Spiro Agoew comes off almost bland. He might have
topped them all had his Immigrant father not caught the

Hado's
JIIMJA-..
WS"TIWIIIS,
5LOIWI!I.~...

ru. TRI' AN~

DO" 60011 JOe
, . HOU6E

American flair for brevity and

Voice along Broadway
BY JACK O'BRIAN
NEW YORK - After all those
years as Jack E. Leonard, that
Nasty McNtce Guy will make the
name legal: his right name Is
Loonard Lobltsky .. • We stated
here more than four months ago
that COlumbia u. Pres. Gr!Q'son Kirk positively would resign ,.during August" ... The
Chock Full O'Nutawaltress, Melva Harvey, terribly burned when
a propane gas tank exploded and
wao hurled a Whole block awa,y
where she worked, """ stU! crlIleal ao we typed orr to press·
and th ...... ·
'
o~. •t was a tragetQr
perpetrated elsewhere, Chock
Full O'Nuta owuer BUl Black
ordered all the billa sent to him,
piuo help for her family (Mro.
Harvey has three children and a
illaband In the Army).
Paris' poor tourism cbii!IPed
Its movie boxof!ices 30 perceut

changed the family name
from Anagnostopoulos.
But none of them can match
the middle name merry-goround that plagued one of the
most we 11-k n ow n men in
American history. Ulysses S.
Gr1111t was aclually born HI~
ram Ulysses Grant .and car-•·
ried that name unW he applied for admission to West
Point.
He didn't care for the wa
his initials Uned up m.u.G.f.
so on his application to his
congressman, he simply reversed the "H" and "U." But
when he reported in at Welt
Point, they told him no such
cadet was eapected, although
a mysses
Grant was. The ... But one ol its few hits Is an
congressman had further llallan Western starring Gilbert
messed things up by mistaiJ. Ilnland, "I'U Go, I'll KUI Him,
enly changing the ''H'' to "S. •• ru Be Back'' ..• Johnny BrasBy then the name was in cia (one of the hlgheol-jlold show.
academy records, so Grant biz dance team Braoda &amp; Tybee)
was stuck with it. His fellow haa a whole new career aa a
cadets started calling him movl~ gangster· he' a r - great
"Uncle Sam" Grant, a nick- in Sieve Mc~een's "Bullltt,
name that s~uck with him for
Doris Duke hi• recorded· a
th~ rehast of hisG lifte. .
whole album with a Jazz group;
errta{l~. ran sJJD.ply h~d OWJll her own reeordlng lltudioof
more political savvy than hlS·
torlans give him credit for course, In Sommerville, N.J.;
when he changed the initial~ built II for $100,000 ten years
back in his youth. After Ill, ago when plantS! Joe castro was
when you're a candidate for her jazz favorite; Dori1 paid
the preside;JJCY of the United $10,000 for a series of jazz reStates, with initials of U. S. cordlngo at the AUanUc label'•
and the nickname of Uncle studios for castro and never
Sam, how can you lose?
let them be released .•• "She hatea
0
0
0
heing the richest woman In the
With the establishment of world, n a friend reported to us.
the New York-Moscow airline
flights this summer, Washiug- "She would ratherbethegreateat
ton pundits are posing the fol- jazz .Pianist but is too sby ... car.
lowing question: If Russians edtotry.n
Gent claiming he his the late
really have the classless society they claim, why, on gun-moll Virginia Hill's mem.
their M o s c ow-to-New-York olrs called publishers but hlo
flights do they have first-class manner seared 'em otl'; the Mafw
and tourist sectiODI?
Ia doesn't care - one of ita
own elders oaered his mern.
olrs but the mllltoo hi asked
was deemed his 1lnai atlemJI!ed

s.

..

holdup.
Crazy Joe Gallo or the Bklyn.
netherworld iB glad he never
told even his wtle where he's
stashed eight hours of tapes (on
which he spiUed everything he
knew) before he was hustled oa
to do his seven-to.J5ln the pokey
... She married one or Joe's old
buddies .•. The tapes explain

Commonest Ulcers
Occur in Duodenum

Joey's been beaten up HV·
eraJ timBs in jail - but never u
attempt to kiD him, because then
the tapeo would turn up In of!l.
dal hands ... Mafia's top bank
robber wao turned In by tho
Msfla Itself - b&lt;icause I!OIIIIJ'·
boy gotwireo crossed and struck
up a few banko friendly to The
why

Boys.

. BRUCE BIDSBAT

Choice: Peaceful Dissent
Or Violence of Radicals?
NEA

ly IIUC£ IIOSSAT
Washington Correspondent

By

WAYNE

Q-Wbal are the symptoms
of a stomach ulcer? Are X
rays necessary for the diagnosis?
A-The commonest peptic
ulcers are located just beyond
the outlet of the stomach in
the duodenu!D. The symptoms
vary but, in most persnns, the
ulcer causes a gnawing aensation that is located with U.e
liP .o!..9.P.~ G!lif!r ill ~m!dllne
. bei.W~eP. . Ute lower $Bel ~ . the
breast bone (stetrilim) aild
the navel. This distress usually comes on two or three
hours after a meal and i9 relieved by drinking milk or taking an antacid.
When the ulcer is located in
the stomach Itself the symptoms are not so clear..,ut.
Most vlcUms don't have any
. symptoms and some have
nausea, or cramping pains that
are more diffuse than those
of a duodenal ulcer. Taking
food, Instead of relieving the
pain, may aggravate it. The
diagnosis Is not always easy
to make and X rays, ·t aken
after swallowing a barium
meal, are usually requested
to help confirm the diagnosis.

CHICAGO (NEA)
Truly innocent young antiwar demO!!Jirators, and the sympathetic Democratic delegates and ~s who gave them siiCh
emotion&amp;! support at the party's convention, face a very tough
declsJoa m the days IIDmediately ahead.
They have to determine just how far they want to go In
allymg themselves with radical activists commiUed to violence.
The militants who sought and gained a bloody confrontation
with police at the Democrats' Chicago headquarter• hotel
area pronuse that In the unfolding fall campaign they, will
mount ":1110 to 3110 Chicagos" to harass Vice President Hum·
Q-1 wu operated on for a
phrey and other party olfice-seekers. ·
duodenal ulcer. My doc to I'
says tha~ If I need to take
Chicago may find some comfort in this forecast, since it was
aspirin for a headache, 1
clearly an irrelevant target for the confrontation cadres.
should take Maalox or baking
Their real target is the political establishmen~wherever It
soda at the same Ume. What
shows itself In convention or party rally or candidate's motordo you think?
cade.
A-Siace aspirin Irritates
But there is no comfort for the S)'lllpathlzera, whether they
the stomach and duodenum It
were among the demonstrators in Grant Park or whether they
labored in the hotel across the street for Senators Eugene
Mc~y or George McGovern.
IIAII'IIIS
Ia llleJr 11lldentandobte horror at U.e vlalble e:~ee~- of
some Cbleaco poDcemen, the aympallllzen largely blocked
By PHIL PASTORET
oat U.e ady provecattve acta of the more acJretslve demoa·
straton. ftey tiJereby buill themselves a diiiCei'Otll lrap.
Iron comprises about .004
per cent of lha average adult
The prediction of "more Chicagos" means that the lnitlaUve
body "~~~ as compared
in violence rests with the leftist militants since no one can
with a conoiderably larger
forecast with utter assurance how thf. ponCe will react in San
quantity of lead in the feet
Francisco, Seattle, Kansas City, Minneapolis, St. Louis,
of
most of ua.
Detroit, Philadelphia, Baltimore, New York or Boston during
0
•
0
Humphrey campaign swings.
There'•
a
preat
dJihr·
The more innocent demonstrators and their Uberal S)'lll·
ence
betiDe.,.
taking dri...
pathlzers have, then, a clearer choice tllan they were able to
itiQ 1t100111 and in ltarnillg
perceive through the battle dust at Chicago. Are they Just
from
tlltm. '
for dlllsent or are they for bombarding police with rocb, bot~
tles, acid, human filth, golf balls Impregnated with nlils and
potatoes laced with razor bladea?
'
Up to now they have been quite cowardly in refulillg to
draw a strong Uno between legitimate, peaceful dissent and
the blebJy visible excesses of the radleal acUvists.
Tile ..._ Ia simple: They IIDd It dllfle.U to pull UJGDe
One of our
tiJe pale ot deceHy WbO Ia ltrlldBC II the llrtol CJie
J . •-II•IUbrey odmi•Jalralloa ud the n-elve ]MIIIU· artist frlead
eal ayllem-lirelt they tiJemlf!!vea wut to hi{ io Jtm.
bruall!ng
wort.
Republican conservatives frustrabld over years of rule by
0
0
•
"big government" Democrats bad\411e aame dlf!lcuJtY in
first thitiQ to tJ41.
spurning aJIIance with John Birchers and other radical rightCOIIIII fa I 0 f!l .e dlsc01111t
Ists who resorted to extremist attaclr:. A friend is aomeone
lloi'U II the alleged ldllingt
who helps you ~stroy your enemy. ·The frlend'a methodl
·
on IMIIe .,' of the IIMn!lla•may aometlmes be glossed over.
.
diH
' ·~ ,
I '.
The Democratic llllerals were horrified •t the. ~- But
If they accept the esceaaes of the racllt:alleft, If they penilt
in pretending that Cblcago was merely a story of POllee brutality, they wm be deep in the same tr~ 10111e GOP COllier·
vaUves made for themselves.
11 111 aot ....111 for the Uberalo lad ...,.
file ,
dem-ton Ia Grlllll Put to ~feu Clle ~. Af!!,..._.
eeaee of their dl...,lll, Wilen yoa litUe ~ .. . •liNii '
wllo opealy -llvlelea&amp; confroalatlu ~ faliolrlty,yow pi;.
tarred wltiJ the blacllllruiJ.
:..1.•· •
·' • .
For a long Ume, many Uberais and .~ated tough ai!Uelit '
young folk have he!&gt;II.IIBbly talking P~¥:lar:I;8Jile ."~!1l!illlJR,"
while radicals have . been scoring. cliejlp ~.'eo!lfronliUI!I\'·t YIC·
torles on the campiLses. But toppliilg · th8, ay._ is ; ~et
than steaUng the dean's cigaro.
'r
• ·;
\
Chicago had the first smell of real r,vallltli&gt;n .. The
tants have to decide soon whaiher thal is What 'they ielilly

..

":l::'

· n.

or

UPI~Wrller

••
A warning to the unollopeetlng
"" sports fan: Tonight's San Diego.
•' Cincinnati football game is for
!""' real,

.... II nothing else, the American
•. ; Football League is dllferent.
How I!WIY bther IJfO(osslonal
-· 1ports leagues open their

~

,'

l'

oer

iiiiKIY

by an111ertas -

belni

11'1
cliled "Gran,.
,

Ali I meant 1188, don't dial a
would be better to use one of clerk for trylq - albeit .....
the pain renevers that does
misauldedly - to ""' ....
not contain aspirin.
tomel'l at ease. IJ ''YIKIDII J.a. .
Q-Tbree ye111 aco I had a ell" make• you cr!Dp INiead
bleediag duodenol ulcer. Is lt af l8ll8h, • f811 "Solm;rl" Ia
advisable to have an annual your conversation will br!Qe 111m.
X-ray examination to see
back to ''Midune.n - R. ·
whelher It has come back? Is
Thla column Is dedi- tp '
intestinal or stomach gas refamll,y
!lYing, so II you're baYlated to !Jf caused by a peptic
Inc kid trouble or Jull plain
ulcer?
· ~:..UIIieu :you have failed IIGuble,~ let HeljjoHtllsl" ft:ill.
· fO'elilllblate the cause·of your ·h ·wiii"'allld' Welootlle"tCWt ilWa
ulcer or unless you have a reaxparlencea. · A~ .
turn of your ulcet symptoms, Helen In care o1 tlJI'..
I would not advise an X-ray
examination. Time enough to
do this wben you get the ulcer
type of distress.
Most intestinal and stomach
gas Is swallowed air. Some Is
the reault of fermentaUon of
the food you eat. Neither is
telated to or caused by an
ulcer.

I"'"•'•

By VITO STELLINO
\)PI ~s Writer
It was an off da.Y ,lor 18 of the

0

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e.-.

..

··

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'
,.,

•
•

"

HOUSTON (UPI)- The JnternsUonal Golf Sponsors Assoclalion pia,yed Ita cards dose to
the chest toda,y. Neither the
PGA nor the dlosldent Pro
Golfers Assoclatlon know who
had the support of the men who
provide the money behind the $5
million tournament tour.
But bath IIJ'IIUI)I begged lor
BUiJPOrl Thursda¥.
Max Elbin, president or the
PGA, urged the sponsors to
unite behind his established
organization and Sam Gates, a
New York auorney representing
the •APG, asked the sponsors to
handle the tournaments for hl.s
pi1Q'01S.
An eight-man ~atform committee headed by Ansus Mairs
cl st. Paul, Mlm., was named
to atuey the situation and bring
recommendaUona before the
association toda,y at the llnal
do1 ol the spedal meeting.

•.

,

TOP

I.OOR

HIS
Curl•• Suit&amp;,
Sport Caatt, Topcoall
Arrow Shirt•
Rugbp and Purlton
Sportowear
Shapolp Shlrtt
Hubbard Slackt
Jochy Undorwoar
Levi's Casual Wear

Remember counting tile
number of carl in a .....,..
ing freiabt train
~o~~,
ing counl even before mklo.
p as sa g e? SymJIIIthlzltii
with this frustrated detlre
fpr know!edJie, The Wor14
·1
Almanac notes that in llll'li ·.'
traills operated I)J ·· ~
m or rlilrnadl averapit . ·
70. cars and a caboolt'~

ancr

rrer,t

increase of 22.9 eari

HERS
Catalina
Jantzen
Candp Junior
Betfy Rose Coati,
Suits, Car Coats
Flnnit Glrdloo
FasclnOtion Haslerr
Berkshire Half Sizn

SamSCIIIite and Airway LUIIIP

·

•••r Hantlbaes and Billfolds

---------------------------BAHR CLOTHIERS
The Store With Fashion
Middleport, 0.
.2nd Ave.

,
0'

"

Major

·1' ·• •

'

foor
clubs, Denver pioJI
Qakiand at Portllllld, Ore.,
Miami Is at home apinlt
AUants ()&gt;IFL) and New York
opiJOIOS
Delroil ()&gt;IFL) at

fashiun honont today. Come see our
culloclir•n •&gt;f new fa111hinn colon for thil
KeaMon. Luxurious 80% Orion"'
acrylic. 20% wool for topa in noiron performance and comfort.
Stick your neck out in a tur-

the Wimbledon semi..finals, led
5-7, 11~. 6-1, 2.:! against the
Aussle, who heat him for the
Utle here last year when the
Nationals were an all ..amateur
affair .
"I l10J&gt;O Graelmm: makes It,"
· said A~ "i have 10 piiQ' the
wilmer, . b~t I want Clark because thlt'U mean the United
states will be guaranteed ooe
man In the final - him or me.

tle for top fashion award.

with three pmes tonight and
four Saturdq. 'l'onllllt. Mlnno·
sola battlea New Orlean• at
Shreveport, La., st. Louis Is at
Chicaao and Los Angeles pi!Q'S
host to San Francisco.
1be New York Glant1 battle
Pillladelplda at Prlnc:oton, N.J.,
Saturday atternooo, wblle at
nlglt, Pittsburgh meets Wash·
lnJton at Norfolk. VL, Green
Bl¥ is at Clovaland and
BaiUmore vialts Dallas In a
natlonally !eiovloed game.

flrst pitcher In the American
League to win more titan 26
elnce 1944 when Hal Nowhouoer
won 29 for the Tigers. McLain,
who's been pitching deoptte an
aching ohoulder, ts l!gured to '
get five more starts after
tonight as all he his to do in hia
last six starts Is to break even
to win 30.
Gerry McNertney's seventh
IMing two-run single paced
Chicago past Washtngton and
gave the victory to rookie Gerry
Nyman, who's now 2..0 sinCe
being called up !rom the
minors. Nyman pitched seven
lnntngs of three-lilt ball and
Hoyt Wilhelm then started tho
eighth. Aller retiring lou·
straight betters and then giving
up a one..(IUt single in the nlnth ,
to 11m Cullen, Wilhelm gave
WIQ' to Gary Peters who retired
the final two batters to
oomplete the four-llltter.

$'8.011

DOWNIE-GROSS
Pomeroy

Main St.

STANDINGS

Major League Standings

:Amateurs Cop Semi· Final Berths
.. FORFSI' HILLS, N.Y. (UP0 C•ark Graebner of New York
: - So the proe were going to his a loot In tho door and could
make It three out of four semimurder the amateurs?
final
berths for the dazzling young
Two amateurs - fl!tb-seeded
Arthur Ashe ol Richmond, Va., men who had not yet sl&amp;ned pro
.. and eight seeded Tom Okkor of contracts.
Graebner held a ,2-l lead In
•,M!f!, N!l11!ori11114,- ;81rOiflll,lll!ve
aets
and was 2-a11 In· lhe l'l\ll'lh
" ·llral&gt;bed two ,of,rlhe •four alcto·in
.rl.an
his inatch.wilh fourth-Seed• Abe..- ..mi-&amp;als of the $100,000
pro
John Newcomhe of Aus.
ed
• U.S. Open temis champiooships
traila
was
halted by darkness
and not a elngle pro Is In there
Thursda¥. The 24-year.old DaWhat's more, seventb seeded vis Cupper, who like Ashe made

!eiovlsed nattonaiiJr.
As for the AFL's remalntni

'

League

man committee com~sed of Wellston at Vinton Coun1;y
three representaUves each from Harinan Trace at Eaatem
the pros, the sponsors and the Kyger Creek at Fairland
PGA.
North Gsllla at Soothem Local
Elbin said II the sponsors Haman, W, Va., at Southwestunite behlrid the PGA It could
om
persuade most of the tourSATURDAY'S GAMES
nament pliQ'ers to r"maln with Pt. Pleasant at Parkersburg
the PGA,
South

FOR F A L L "68

over freight trains in 1112t! ·:
AD averag~ of 41.5 ""'.
were loaded and 28 weri
empty.

York

-as he's led the Tlgl!rsin their
drive for their ftrst peMant
since 1945. McLain did hive
four doJs rest between Tiger
starts at the All.'itar break but
did pitch two imings In the Allstar game.
McLain, who won his 27th
SUnda,y, was doe to start
Thursda¥ but since the Tigero
were ldle, he gut an extra day's
rest until tonight.
In the only pme 'lbursda¥
night, Chicago edged Washing.
ton, 2.1, before a small crowd of
1,154 In D.C. Stadium In
Washington.
McLain Is attempting to
become the major league's first
30.game wlmer since Dizzy
Dean In 1934 and the American
League's tirst since Lefty Grove
won 31 In 1933.
The last pitcher to win 28
games was Robin Roberts In
1952 and McLeln Is alreaqy the

FiGirr POSrPONED
OA~LAND, C&amp;llf. (t!PI)-Jinl
GUmore's bout with the au
forced his polllj)onemeat 111irl•
da.Y of a scheduled 10-nJIIIICI
light with Colllomil holv y w e I g h t champion llenr7
Clark.

Arrow Wtrl• Trneler
Turtleaeck I,... bit
Turtles win by a neck in the race to.Y~P

VictoryTonight:~~;;;

20 major league team• Thurs· McLain.
McLain, shooting for his 28th
da,y and the guy who needed the
rest tho most was Denny victory tonight when the Tiger&amp;
boat the Minnesota Twins, got
four da.Y• rest between slartB
lor tho first time since May
beeauae the Tigers were idle
1'hursda¥.
In the first six weeks of the
season, McLain had four cloys
rest four times and even had
five doJs rest between starts
Mairs would not name the twice.
committee members.
But since Mey 25, the armHe said the aponsors ap. weary righthander has pitched
parentl,y were rea&lt;!Y to unite consistently with just three da.Y•
and hope they could be t h e rest- eleept the three times he
catalyst which would precipitate started with only two da,ys rest
peace in the leagues of big Ume
golf,
"
Only six members of the
TOMGIIT'S GAMES
sponsors group were absent. Huntington High at Gallipolis
Thirt.v-llve tournaments on the Athto~s at Marietta
$5.6 million tour were represent~ Coal Grove at Ceredo-Kenova
ed at the meeting.
COshocton at lrontoo
Mairs ssid the sponsors, oak Hill at Jackson
players and PGA obould unite to Morgan at Logan
run the tour. And, while Elbin Meigs at Wahama
agrees with this, he wants the Warren Local at Nelsonville PGA to have a veto over a nine-

moves to Houston'• Astrociorlle
Moncll1 night for 1 closh
between the Oller1 and Kansas
CU;y. Ail three prnes will he

conclustoo In December.
CtnclmaU beat Pittsburgh af
the NFL, 111-3, and New York ot
the AFL, 13~, in !to last two
outings to !lnlsh Its exhibition
cBftiJIIlgn '(rith a 2~ record;
The AFL'a quiWike openln&amp;
weekend CMI!mles bdo1 sf.
ternoon st Bul!alo where the
Bills entertain Boston and
'

Pro Golf Associations
'Beg 01 ng F0 r suppo r t

Q-Whal Ia meant by the
term "ruptured ulcer with
adynamic UeWi"?
A-Wbea a peptic ulcer rupture•, this is a surgical emer·
gency. One result of the rupluno may be a cessation of all
peristaltic waves Ia your in·
teatines. This Is adynamic
Deus.

an:

The Bengais, like all other
club.
The passing comblnatloo of DrS! year tesms In recentyears,
Jolm Hadl to Lance Alworth is are expected to go nowhere, but
again expected to spark San an improving, otronse, led by
Dte10'1 attack. The Chargers rookie quarterback Dewey Warposted a 3..2 mark In exhibition ren of Tennessee, and the
play, ineluding an impresaive coac:htng of Paul Brown, might
35-13 victory over tho Loa be able to provide tho club with
Angeles Rams ol tho National a rictory or two before the
season oomos to a mercllW
League.

. McLain Seel{s 28th

IIY·" Beaiiyl What's 1111'0111 with
"Jladame''? - uso..
'

Dear SO:

eea&amp;Ons on the IIBIDe weekend
that four of their clubs are stili
engaged In exhibition pill)"/
Trying not to confuse the
hsue any further, the Bengali·
Chargers twilight clash at San
Dieao kicko ott the AFL'sllinlh
season In a contest J!lt!lni a
Western Division contender
against pro • football's ~west

By United Press Jnternatlonal
American League
W. L. Pct. GB
Detroit ...... 89 :&gt;2 .631
Baltimore .... 81 60 . 57 4 8
Booton ' .. ' ..76 6:&gt; .539 13
Cleveland ....76 68 .528 14 1h
Oakland . . . . . 71 71 .500 I8'h
New York .... 70 70 .500 18'h
Minnesota .... 67 74 .47:&gt; 22
California .... 61 81 .430 28 1h
Chic:aao . .... 60 82 .423 291,&lt;,
Washington ... 56 84 .400 32'h
Thursday's Results
Chicago 2 Wash 1, night
Only game scheduled
Today's Probable Pitchers
All Times EDT
Washtngton (Haman 9-3) at New- ·
Yo'rk (Stottlemyre 18-11), 8 p.m.
Chicago (!lor len 10-12) at Ba' Umore (Hardin 17-10), 8 p.m.
Minnesota (Kaat 12-10) at Detroit (McLain 27 .5), 8 p.m.
Cleveland (Williams 11~) at
oakland (Odom 13~). 11 p.m.
Boston (Lonborg 5..5) at Callfonda (Messeramith 2..0), 11 p.

Notional League
W. L. Pct. GB
st. Loolo . . . . 89 52 .631
San Fran .... ,7:; 65 .536 13'h
Cinclmati .... 72 65 .526 15
ChiCIIBQ ..... 74 69 .517 16
Atlanta . . . . . 71 71 ,:;oo 181h
Pittsburgh . . . 68 72 .486 20'h
Philadelphia , ,65 75 .464 231h
Houston . . . . . 64 77 4:&gt;4 25
New York .... 65 79 .451 2511.!
Loa Angeles .. 61 79 .436 27 1h
TOOrsday's Results
No Games Scheduled
Friday's Probable Pitchers
All Times EDT
Philadelphia (Wloo 8-12) at Chi·
cago (!lando 15-ll), 1:30 p.m.
I;ouston (WUson 12-13) at Atl.,rt,; ' (Jarvi's i4~. diiht,'

a,os

p.m .
San Francisco (Martchal 24-7
and Bolin 7-4) at st. Louis (Carl-

ton 12~ and Hughes 2.:!) 2, 6:30p.m.
Los Angeles (Singer 10-15 and
Moeller 041) at Cinctnaatl (Cion·
Inger 5-' and Arri&amp;O JJ.7) 2,
:&gt;:30 p.m.
Now York (McAndrew 1-') at
Pittsburgh (Blass !3.5), 8:05 p.

It's possible, but not probable
that the U.s. could place three
men in the semis since sixthseeded pro Dennis Hal oton of
Bakersfield, Cali!., s t i II II m.
uallveu and fa&lt;:~ a quarterSaturday's Games
llnal against third-seeded Ken Cleveland at Oakland, twilight m.
Rosewall of Australia.
Chicago at Baltimore
Saturday's Games
Okker. a 24·yea.r-old Duteh- Boston at Call!, night
Houston at Atlanta
man who Is called an amateur, Minnesota at Detrol~ night
SF at St. Lools
thougl1 be's pi!Q'ing for prize Wash at New York, night
Philadelphia at Chicago
money under the current, cockNY at Pittsburgh, night
eyed International rules, simLA at ClnclnnaU, night
ply wore out 40-year.oid Pan· DORNHOEFER WINNER
MANCHESTER, VI. (UPO- with a seoond stralghl 72 for a
cho Gonzalez of Malibu, Call!.,
.Gr.ry DornhoeCer of the Pill- 144 total . The Chicago Black
in the first men'• quarter-final
'laclelpbla Flyers retained his 1!4wks, led by Brian McDonThursda¥, 14-16, 6~, 10-ll, 6-3.
title Tburoday in the Nstlonal ald's 146, won the team trophy
Then, Ashe knocked over 16thseeded Cllf! Drysdale of South Hockey League golf tournament wtth a 602.
Africa, earUer victor over top..
aeeded Rod Laver, by soaring
blo 27th victory In a row, 8--10,
6~. 9-7, 6-4.
In women's singles, top-seeded Billie Jean King ot Berkeley,
Calli., ns scheduled in a semiOHIO'S NEWEST FAD!
final against Mil seeded Mario
Bueno or Brazil with the winner 11011!1 Into the llnal.
Sixth so ailed Vir1dnia Wode af
England gained the llnal 111ars.
diJ' with .• siasblng 7-li, 1-1
victoey aver British pro AID
Haydon Jones.

MINI BIKE

'

•••••••••••
•••
•••
••
•
t

MEIGS COUNTY'S ONLY AGENT

(Save cabinet space)

..

. lodeiC:-2·211-2~
H.P • .
.
'

i.-e

nOilJilm. ·.

want.

G. BRANDSTADT, M.D.

pralH. I qreel A1ld I dgnot
think you lhould 111111 lhll

bolter lhsn

The Dally Sontlnol, PomcrO&gt;'·Middleport, o., FrldoJ, Sept. 6, 1968

By STU CAMEN

me.

once and for all, or give it the chance to sue·
ceed or fail on its own merits in the homes
of the nation.
The decision lies with the House Interstate
and Foreign Commerce Committee, Rep.
Harley 0. Staggers, chairman. The West Vir·
ginia Democrat has indicated that the committee
once again postpone action.
Pay-TV is, apparently, just too hot to
handle-but not to mishandle.

-

Cincinnati Bengals Open At San Diego

uSee eBy Helen Botiel

Police Cannot Be Judge and Jury
·c:A,. 1wave

~

,,

with a $3.0Q.purchase of Ashland Gasoline

157.95
1.84.:00.
.

These AvoCado G(eer. mugs are heat·resistant, Fire--king wa~
· and
designed to fit ort top Of each 6ther for convenient stacking- save
bif1et ,J
space. And you'll like their clean good looks on the table, too . se· the
mugs for coffee; 1~ • .l)ot !)hocolate or milk .
'
' .
,,
•

.

'

·,

- .

'

Start
'$3 .00

· cine ,
;l

to ·

. th&lt;!

~

l!FJ, e i "9fl1plete
r

.

11e1 With every
., Of ''Ashland ,&lt;iasoline you get .
·i'nUQ·
'Just drive '; n
,sta,~ · disJ:11aving ·

· ,.

FJ:Iee.

' '"

•

"•l

�'

~-

'

"\

z-

..

"Frankly, ._, Don't Know' Where to
.Put My MoneyL~'

'
l'

,&gt;,

'

~.

~

J

~ . reaction in support of the
of eago pollee-and by eneaslon, In aupport
,,# pollcemea eveey:where-has follawed In
t" the WIake of atorles of unnecessary brulalit;y

emp oyed ill putting down the antiwar anti·
:."~the,, demonotrators who boped io dis......
Democratic convention.
ADyone reading accounts of the obscene
and often malicious antics of some elements
amoog a varied mlzture of restless youths
can only conclude that they asked for, 11 not
Ill of them deserved, what they got.
One Important thing must be kept in mind
however.
'
No matter bow se r I o u s 1y they are pro-

'

LOVESICK STUDENTS ABE
HIS PROBLEM
Dear Hallll:
I teach ;mJar high mstb, ~
am PnJ1&gt;ab1¥ PIS to hive the
same kind of trouble this year
thlt I had in the past.
. Girl stuilas llllnk tbtY are In
love 1lith me, espeollily one
ol thim. Last year she wrote
me 1111J1Y love notes, and eYen
c:amt ID my 1&gt;oye on weekllllla.
01 the last day ot school sbe
wu ci:rtn11 and she and another
llirl tnli- on kissing me good.

voked, policemen are neither trained nor
equipped nor legally constituted to act as
judge and
of anyone. No matter how
satisfying I may be to see a filth-shoutiog,
filth-throwing youth having his head cracked,
once we become accustomed to the Idea of
allowing the police to mete out summary
punishment, without benefit of arrest, trial or
coovlcUon, to anyone-much less indiserlminately, as It was done in Chicago-we have
taken a basic step toward dismantling the
very democracy we are trying to protect.
In the final analysis, the pollee in Cblcago
simply blew their cool. And that Is exactly
what the demonstrators wanted them to do.

lury

and lnickortnl.
. I am 28 years old, blq1pUy
Or 1lll,)'be II' I another WOIIIID.
married with two children. I He meets a 1at af them Ill 1111
.1r7 to llugh off or tsnore these 110rk. I could ' - It II•. Tlio ·
llrls, but you don't kno1l 1o&gt;1r I could fight!
perliS!alllhQ 0111 bel
All I kno1l Ia Fm lolinl 111J
Wbal's the best lilY t1o hsndlo bull&gt;and, and I don't thlnll 111J
. them?- ,TEACHEB
"lacks" hive ii\Ythlna ID dn witb
Dear Teacher:
it. ·I'm 1111'111, Iovins, lfllte
• . . With .autioo, re'"'""• and loaldnl, nUt, snd I've tried to
ll1lpalhf for junior high school be WMierstandl•&amp; but n\y 1111~
hero IIOI'Ihip,
plclona are driving me 11114 I
Moat 11JUD1 male teachers face hole mylai! for them, but I Clll't
thlo problem. Perhaps a few abut them out. Wbalever c:an 1
will write in and tell US lo&gt;lr the7 do? - S, W,
Judie it. PI-? - H.
Dear S:
Dear Holen:
Your best ' - Is a 1001 dla.
When my !lance and I were cuaslon with your doctor. I
In college, lkoew he IIU!rfends leU you whore th11 wiDI~Itlad.
with a row ''fairlY nice !ellcnra," but 8lltlinl your fear• out ta
but I thought he was just being _ , 1111Q' help dllsolVO thelll democrilic, and not J)Uttlng down or lbo1l you 1o&gt;1r to face them.
men who - e dlf!erent.
-H.
!liked theM bnys too. 'l'IIQ"re Dear Helen:
to talk to - and sate. 1Jb
A wltUe back 1 lldY 1lho lllcnanother lirl,lrfead.
ed horlai! ••Bo" told ,.,...'lobe
E'tf1'7111ins nne ror 10 dllllked being cliled ''YIKIDII
elY'' by clerko. b laid If lt'l ·
to be !latterin81t mt,..,
Its mark, as It meana lnstncen

Pay-TV---The Hot Potato
subscnption television-makers of the neces·
sary equipment, entrepreneurs and othersflrst began pressing the Federal Communications Commission for permission to set up
an ellpenmental system. A pilot station was
finally authorized for Hartford Conn in

1962.
'
.,
In the meantime, innumerable congressional and FCC bearings and a favorable
U.S. Court of Appeals ruling on a challenge
to pay-TV's legallty have failed to budge the
Idea fro~ Jts one..,lty _ellperimental status.
~ndmg ~pon which ax you grind, subscrtption television is either a complement or
a threat . to existing commercial television.
The National Association of Broadcasters
charges that it would eventually destroy free
television, though it hasn't done so yet in
Hartford where for the past six years subscnhers have been enjoying such commercial-free box-office attractions as Drst-nm

,,

lllioi!'"*

lm~ul-1.. ,', . ,
he'd IJI,f, dDilo .1 irled ;ID
enUee him, that r~ 111Ft: hla .
pride before, and ! didn't ,...U, I
111111 him. A1ld he'd-lak. ilfr fllr . ·
the clw, or Hid '11'1 Iota,
niero's ..,. malt lrftllll be 111 ·
with a lot. The oilier day I iaw
somebody wblQerlnalbout - . ,

Was

bye.

,I

' Like the locusts, the 17-year-old hassle
over pay-TV has popped into view again.
It h~s been that long since supporters of

yesro Iller ww """" marrliol.
Then my hulband fiJrne4 eqld
and started making Ill ~ of
excuses. Of e!H he'd aet lOY.•
IJW Juot before wo hid 1D ao aal
for dinner or llil1lletldna.

lmew It

movies, Broadway plays and other special
features at an average expenditure of about
,1.25 a week per famlly.
Also, nationwide pay-TV would be governed by stringent FCC rules. For instance,
It would only he permitted in cities which already have four commercial stations in op.
eration. It would not he permiUed to televise
any sports event that had been regularly
televised in the community.
After 17 years, the Impatience of the payTV people is understandable. What they are
now asking .is simply that Congress either

outlaw subscription television completely

wm

r.a.

DDCTDRIB MAILBAG meant

WASHINGTON NDTEBDDK

'·
'.,i"
i

Hiram Grant? That's Our
Illustrious Ulysses S. ,

'
'

By NOEL GROVE
NEA Staff Correspondent
WASHINGTON- (NEA)-A
man named Daly hopes to

brmg a group of newsmen

(

''

!

into Chicago to study the
causes of urban riots and the
problems of inner city life.
And lest such an announce·
ment begin a stampede by
the Fourth Es~ in the opposite dlrection~,.lt ·should he
mentioned that this Is a Daly
named Charles, not Dick.
The program Is to he sponsored by· the University of
Chicago's Center for Policy
Studies. Grants will he
awarded, explained Charles
U. Daly, director of the center, to bring journalists to the
~versity as •• associates," to
audit courses dealing with urban problems and work directly in urban projects.
Center's new program
which hegins Jan. 2, is d.,:
signed to help scholars under' stand the problems of the
working reporter and to help
the reporter understand the
msny-sided problems of the
urbaD areas.
Lab periods for the newsmen, It might be added, will
not he nearly as hazardous as
those held recently in Lincoln
Park, with blue-coated feUows

of another "Daley." Journal·
lstic heads will be filled, It is
hoped, not cracked.

•••

AMONG' THE numerous
other events that have given
this election year uniqueness,
It could also go down as the
year of the matchless middle

JWDes. Consider Milhous, Ho--

''!

ratio and Slxtus for the gentlemen Nixon, Humphrey and
Muslde.
In the face of those, the
middle handle ofT be od ore
for Spiro Agoew comes off almost bland. He might have
topped them all had his Immigrant father not caught the

Hado's
JIIMJA-..
WS"TIWIIIS,
5LOIWI!I.~...

ru. TRI' AN~

DO" 60011 JOe
, . HOU6E

American flair for brevity and

Voice along Broadway
BY JACK O'BRIAN
NEW YORK - After all those
years as Jack E. Leonard, that
Nasty McNtce Guy will make the
name legal: his right name Is
Loonard Lobltsky .. • We stated
here more than four months ago
that COlumbia u. Pres. Gr!Q'son Kirk positively would resign ,.during August" ... The
Chock Full O'Nutawaltress, Melva Harvey, terribly burned when
a propane gas tank exploded and
wao hurled a Whole block awa,y
where she worked, """ stU! crlIleal ao we typed orr to press·
and th ...... ·
'
o~. •t was a tragetQr
perpetrated elsewhere, Chock
Full O'Nuta owuer BUl Black
ordered all the billa sent to him,
piuo help for her family (Mro.
Harvey has three children and a
illaband In the Army).
Paris' poor tourism cbii!IPed
Its movie boxof!ices 30 perceut

changed the family name
from Anagnostopoulos.
But none of them can match
the middle name merry-goround that plagued one of the
most we 11-k n ow n men in
American history. Ulysses S.
Gr1111t was aclually born HI~
ram Ulysses Grant .and car-•·
ried that name unW he applied for admission to West
Point.
He didn't care for the wa
his initials Uned up m.u.G.f.
so on his application to his
congressman, he simply reversed the "H" and "U." But
when he reported in at Welt
Point, they told him no such
cadet was eapected, although
a mysses
Grant was. The ... But one ol its few hits Is an
congressman had further llallan Western starring Gilbert
messed things up by mistaiJ. Ilnland, "I'U Go, I'll KUI Him,
enly changing the ''H'' to "S. •• ru Be Back'' ..• Johnny BrasBy then the name was in cia (one of the hlgheol-jlold show.
academy records, so Grant biz dance team Braoda &amp; Tybee)
was stuck with it. His fellow haa a whole new career aa a
cadets started calling him movl~ gangster· he' a r - great
"Uncle Sam" Grant, a nick- in Sieve Mc~een's "Bullltt,
name that s~uck with him for
Doris Duke hi• recorded· a
th~ rehast of hisG lifte. .
whole album with a Jazz group;
errta{l~. ran sJJD.ply h~d OWJll her own reeordlng lltudioof
more political savvy than hlS·
torlans give him credit for course, In Sommerville, N.J.;
when he changed the initial~ built II for $100,000 ten years
back in his youth. After Ill, ago when plantS! Joe castro was
when you're a candidate for her jazz favorite; Dori1 paid
the preside;JJCY of the United $10,000 for a series of jazz reStates, with initials of U. S. cordlngo at the AUanUc label'•
and the nickname of Uncle studios for castro and never
Sam, how can you lose?
let them be released .•• "She hatea
0
0
0
heing the richest woman In the
With the establishment of world, n a friend reported to us.
the New York-Moscow airline
flights this summer, Washiug- "She would ratherbethegreateat
ton pundits are posing the fol- jazz .Pianist but is too sby ... car.
lowing question: If Russians edtotry.n
Gent claiming he his the late
really have the classless society they claim, why, on gun-moll Virginia Hill's mem.
their M o s c ow-to-New-York olrs called publishers but hlo
flights do they have first-class manner seared 'em otl'; the Mafw
and tourist sectiODI?
Ia doesn't care - one of ita
own elders oaered his mern.
olrs but the mllltoo hi asked
was deemed his 1lnai atlemJI!ed

s.

..

holdup.
Crazy Joe Gallo or the Bklyn.
netherworld iB glad he never
told even his wtle where he's
stashed eight hours of tapes (on
which he spiUed everything he
knew) before he was hustled oa
to do his seven-to.J5ln the pokey
... She married one or Joe's old
buddies .•. The tapes explain

Commonest Ulcers
Occur in Duodenum

Joey's been beaten up HV·
eraJ timBs in jail - but never u
attempt to kiD him, because then
the tapeo would turn up In of!l.
dal hands ... Mafia's top bank
robber wao turned In by tho
Msfla Itself - b&lt;icause I!OIIIIJ'·
boy gotwireo crossed and struck
up a few banko friendly to The
why

Boys.

. BRUCE BIDSBAT

Choice: Peaceful Dissent
Or Violence of Radicals?
NEA

ly IIUC£ IIOSSAT
Washington Correspondent

By

WAYNE

Q-Wbal are the symptoms
of a stomach ulcer? Are X
rays necessary for the diagnosis?
A-The commonest peptic
ulcers are located just beyond
the outlet of the stomach in
the duodenu!D. The symptoms
vary but, in most persnns, the
ulcer causes a gnawing aensation that is located with U.e
liP .o!..9.P.~ G!lif!r ill ~m!dllne
. bei.W~eP. . Ute lower $Bel ~ . the
breast bone (stetrilim) aild
the navel. This distress usually comes on two or three
hours after a meal and i9 relieved by drinking milk or taking an antacid.
When the ulcer is located in
the stomach Itself the symptoms are not so clear..,ut.
Most vlcUms don't have any
. symptoms and some have
nausea, or cramping pains that
are more diffuse than those
of a duodenal ulcer. Taking
food, Instead of relieving the
pain, may aggravate it. The
diagnosis Is not always easy
to make and X rays, ·t aken
after swallowing a barium
meal, are usually requested
to help confirm the diagnosis.

CHICAGO (NEA)
Truly innocent young antiwar demO!!Jirators, and the sympathetic Democratic delegates and ~s who gave them siiCh
emotion&amp;! support at the party's convention, face a very tough
declsJoa m the days IIDmediately ahead.
They have to determine just how far they want to go In
allymg themselves with radical activists commiUed to violence.
The militants who sought and gained a bloody confrontation
with police at the Democrats' Chicago headquarter• hotel
area pronuse that In the unfolding fall campaign they, will
mount ":1110 to 3110 Chicagos" to harass Vice President Hum·
Q-1 wu operated on for a
phrey and other party olfice-seekers. ·
duodenal ulcer. My doc to I'
says tha~ If I need to take
Chicago may find some comfort in this forecast, since it was
aspirin for a headache, 1
clearly an irrelevant target for the confrontation cadres.
should take Maalox or baking
Their real target is the political establishmen~wherever It
soda at the same Ume. What
shows itself In convention or party rally or candidate's motordo you think?
cade.
A-Siace aspirin Irritates
But there is no comfort for the S)'lllpathlzera, whether they
the stomach and duodenum It
were among the demonstrators in Grant Park or whether they
labored in the hotel across the street for Senators Eugene
Mc~y or George McGovern.
IIAII'IIIS
Ia llleJr 11lldentandobte horror at U.e vlalble e:~ee~- of
some Cbleaco poDcemen, the aympallllzen largely blocked
By PHIL PASTORET
oat U.e ady provecattve acta of the more acJretslve demoa·
straton. ftey tiJereby buill themselves a diiiCei'Otll lrap.
Iron comprises about .004
per cent of lha average adult
The prediction of "more Chicagos" means that the lnitlaUve
body "~~~ as compared
in violence rests with the leftist militants since no one can
with a conoiderably larger
forecast with utter assurance how thf. ponCe will react in San
quantity of lead in the feet
Francisco, Seattle, Kansas City, Minneapolis, St. Louis,
of
most of ua.
Detroit, Philadelphia, Baltimore, New York or Boston during
0
•
0
Humphrey campaign swings.
There'•
a
preat
dJihr·
The more innocent demonstrators and their Uberal S)'lll·
ence
betiDe.,.
taking dri...
pathlzers have, then, a clearer choice tllan they were able to
itiQ 1t100111 and in ltarnillg
perceive through the battle dust at Chicago. Are they Just
from
tlltm. '
for dlllsent or are they for bombarding police with rocb, bot~
tles, acid, human filth, golf balls Impregnated with nlils and
potatoes laced with razor bladea?
'
Up to now they have been quite cowardly in refulillg to
draw a strong Uno between legitimate, peaceful dissent and
the blebJy visible excesses of the radleal acUvists.
Tile ..._ Ia simple: They IIDd It dllfle.U to pull UJGDe
One of our
tiJe pale ot deceHy WbO Ia ltrlldBC II the llrtol CJie
J . •-II•IUbrey odmi•Jalralloa ud the n-elve ]MIIIU· artist frlead
eal ayllem-lirelt they tiJemlf!!vea wut to hi{ io Jtm.
bruall!ng
wort.
Republican conservatives frustrabld over years of rule by
0
0
•
"big government" Democrats bad\411e aame dlf!lcuJtY in
first thitiQ to tJ41.
spurning aJIIance with John Birchers and other radical rightCOIIIII fa I 0 f!l .e dlsc01111t
Ists who resorted to extremist attaclr:. A friend is aomeone
lloi'U II the alleged ldllingt
who helps you ~stroy your enemy. ·The frlend'a methodl
·
on IMIIe .,' of the IIMn!lla•may aometlmes be glossed over.
.
diH
' ·~ ,
I '.
The Democratic llllerals were horrified •t the. ~- But
If they accept the esceaaes of the racllt:alleft, If they penilt
in pretending that Cblcago was merely a story of POllee brutality, they wm be deep in the same tr~ 10111e GOP COllier·
vaUves made for themselves.
11 111 aot ....111 for the Uberalo lad ...,.
file ,
dem-ton Ia Grlllll Put to ~feu Clle ~. Af!!,..._.
eeaee of their dl...,lll, Wilen yoa litUe ~ .. . •liNii '
wllo opealy -llvlelea&amp; confroalatlu ~ faliolrlty,yow pi;.
tarred wltiJ the blacllllruiJ.
:..1.•· •
·' • .
For a long Ume, many Uberais and .~ated tough ai!Uelit '
young folk have he!&gt;II.IIBbly talking P~¥:lar:I;8Jile ."~!1l!illlJR,"
while radicals have . been scoring. cliejlp ~.'eo!lfronliUI!I\'·t YIC·
torles on the campiLses. But toppliilg · th8, ay._ is ; ~et
than steaUng the dean's cigaro.
'r
• ·;
\
Chicago had the first smell of real r,vallltli&gt;n .. The
tants have to decide soon whaiher thal is What 'they ielilly

..

":l::'

· n.

or

UPI~Wrller

••
A warning to the unollopeetlng
"" sports fan: Tonight's San Diego.
•' Cincinnati football game is for
!""' real,

.... II nothing else, the American
•. ; Football League is dllferent.
How I!WIY bther IJfO(osslonal
-· 1ports leagues open their

~

,'

l'

oer

iiiiKIY

by an111ertas -

belni

11'1
cliled "Gran,.
,

Ali I meant 1188, don't dial a
would be better to use one of clerk for trylq - albeit .....
the pain renevers that does
misauldedly - to ""' ....
not contain aspirin.
tomel'l at ease. IJ ''YIKIDII J.a. .
Q-Tbree ye111 aco I had a ell" make• you cr!Dp INiead
bleediag duodenol ulcer. Is lt af l8ll8h, • f811 "Solm;rl" Ia
advisable to have an annual your conversation will br!Qe 111m.
X-ray examination to see
back to ''Midune.n - R. ·
whelher It has come back? Is
Thla column Is dedi- tp '
intestinal or stomach gas refamll,y
!lYing, so II you're baYlated to !Jf caused by a peptic
Inc kid trouble or Jull plain
ulcer?
· ~:..UIIieu :you have failed IIGuble,~ let HeljjoHtllsl" ft:ill.
· fO'elilllblate the cause·of your ·h ·wiii"'allld' Welootlle"tCWt ilWa
ulcer or unless you have a reaxparlencea. · A~ .
turn of your ulcet symptoms, Helen In care o1 tlJI'..
I would not advise an X-ray
examination. Time enough to
do this wben you get the ulcer
type of distress.
Most intestinal and stomach
gas Is swallowed air. Some Is
the reault of fermentaUon of
the food you eat. Neither is
telated to or caused by an
ulcer.

I"'"•'•

By VITO STELLINO
\)PI ~s Writer
It was an off da.Y ,lor 18 of the

0

'

e.-.

..

··

·'

'
,.,

•
•

"

HOUSTON (UPI)- The JnternsUonal Golf Sponsors Assoclalion pia,yed Ita cards dose to
the chest toda,y. Neither the
PGA nor the dlosldent Pro
Golfers Assoclatlon know who
had the support of the men who
provide the money behind the $5
million tournament tour.
But bath IIJ'IIUI)I begged lor
BUiJPOrl Thursda¥.
Max Elbin, president or the
PGA, urged the sponsors to
unite behind his established
organization and Sam Gates, a
New York auorney representing
the •APG, asked the sponsors to
handle the tournaments for hl.s
pi1Q'01S.
An eight-man ~atform committee headed by Ansus Mairs
cl st. Paul, Mlm., was named
to atuey the situation and bring
recommendaUona before the
association toda,y at the llnal
do1 ol the spedal meeting.

•.

,

TOP

I.OOR

HIS
Curl•• Suit&amp;,
Sport Caatt, Topcoall
Arrow Shirt•
Rugbp and Purlton
Sportowear
Shapolp Shlrtt
Hubbard Slackt
Jochy Undorwoar
Levi's Casual Wear

Remember counting tile
number of carl in a .....,..
ing freiabt train
~o~~,
ing counl even before mklo.
p as sa g e? SymJIIIthlzltii
with this frustrated detlre
fpr know!edJie, The Wor14
·1
Almanac notes that in llll'li ·.'
traills operated I)J ·· ~
m or rlilrnadl averapit . ·
70. cars and a caboolt'~

ancr

rrer,t

increase of 22.9 eari

HERS
Catalina
Jantzen
Candp Junior
Betfy Rose Coati,
Suits, Car Coats
Flnnit Glrdloo
FasclnOtion Haslerr
Berkshire Half Sizn

SamSCIIIite and Airway LUIIIP

·

•••r Hantlbaes and Billfolds

---------------------------BAHR CLOTHIERS
The Store With Fashion
Middleport, 0.
.2nd Ave.

,
0'

"

Major

·1' ·• •

'

foor
clubs, Denver pioJI
Qakiand at Portllllld, Ore.,
Miami Is at home apinlt
AUants ()&gt;IFL) and New York
opiJOIOS
Delroil ()&gt;IFL) at

fashiun honont today. Come see our
culloclir•n •&gt;f new fa111hinn colon for thil
KeaMon. Luxurious 80% Orion"'
acrylic. 20% wool for topa in noiron performance and comfort.
Stick your neck out in a tur-

the Wimbledon semi..finals, led
5-7, 11~. 6-1, 2.:! against the
Aussle, who heat him for the
Utle here last year when the
Nationals were an all ..amateur
affair .
"I l10J&gt;O Graelmm: makes It,"
· said A~ "i have 10 piiQ' the
wilmer, . b~t I want Clark because thlt'U mean the United
states will be guaranteed ooe
man In the final - him or me.

tle for top fashion award.

with three pmes tonight and
four Saturdq. 'l'onllllt. Mlnno·
sola battlea New Orlean• at
Shreveport, La., st. Louis Is at
Chicaao and Los Angeles pi!Q'S
host to San Francisco.
1be New York Glant1 battle
Pillladelplda at Prlnc:oton, N.J.,
Saturday atternooo, wblle at
nlglt, Pittsburgh meets Wash·
lnJton at Norfolk. VL, Green
Bl¥ is at Clovaland and
BaiUmore vialts Dallas In a
natlonally !eiovloed game.

flrst pitcher In the American
League to win more titan 26
elnce 1944 when Hal Nowhouoer
won 29 for the Tigers. McLain,
who's been pitching deoptte an
aching ohoulder, ts l!gured to '
get five more starts after
tonight as all he his to do in hia
last six starts Is to break even
to win 30.
Gerry McNertney's seventh
IMing two-run single paced
Chicago past Washtngton and
gave the victory to rookie Gerry
Nyman, who's now 2..0 sinCe
being called up !rom the
minors. Nyman pitched seven
lnntngs of three-lilt ball and
Hoyt Wilhelm then started tho
eighth. Aller retiring lou·
straight betters and then giving
up a one..(IUt single in the nlnth ,
to 11m Cullen, Wilhelm gave
WIQ' to Gary Peters who retired
the final two batters to
oomplete the four-llltter.

$'8.011

DOWNIE-GROSS
Pomeroy

Main St.

STANDINGS

Major League Standings

:Amateurs Cop Semi· Final Berths
.. FORFSI' HILLS, N.Y. (UP0 C•ark Graebner of New York
: - So the proe were going to his a loot In tho door and could
make It three out of four semimurder the amateurs?
final
berths for the dazzling young
Two amateurs - fl!tb-seeded
Arthur Ashe ol Richmond, Va., men who had not yet sl&amp;ned pro
.. and eight seeded Tom Okkor of contracts.
Graebner held a ,2-l lead In
•,M!f!, N!l11!ori11114,- ;81rOiflll,lll!ve
aets
and was 2-a11 In· lhe l'l\ll'lh
" ·llral&gt;bed two ,of,rlhe •four alcto·in
.rl.an
his inatch.wilh fourth-Seed• Abe..- ..mi-&amp;als of the $100,000
pro
John Newcomhe of Aus.
ed
• U.S. Open temis champiooships
traila
was
halted by darkness
and not a elngle pro Is In there
Thursda¥. The 24-year.old DaWhat's more, seventb seeded vis Cupper, who like Ashe made

!eiovlsed nattonaiiJr.
As for the AFL's remalntni

'

League

man committee com~sed of Wellston at Vinton Coun1;y
three representaUves each from Harinan Trace at Eaatem
the pros, the sponsors and the Kyger Creek at Fairland
PGA.
North Gsllla at Soothem Local
Elbin said II the sponsors Haman, W, Va., at Southwestunite behlrid the PGA It could
om
persuade most of the tourSATURDAY'S GAMES
nament pliQ'ers to r"maln with Pt. Pleasant at Parkersburg
the PGA,
South

FOR F A L L "68

over freight trains in 1112t! ·:
AD averag~ of 41.5 ""'.
were loaded and 28 weri
empty.

York

-as he's led the Tlgl!rsin their
drive for their ftrst peMant
since 1945. McLain did hive
four doJs rest between Tiger
starts at the All.'itar break but
did pitch two imings In the Allstar game.
McLain, who won his 27th
SUnda,y, was doe to start
Thursda¥ but since the Tigero
were ldle, he gut an extra day's
rest until tonight.
In the only pme 'lbursda¥
night, Chicago edged Washing.
ton, 2.1, before a small crowd of
1,154 In D.C. Stadium In
Washington.
McLain Is attempting to
become the major league's first
30.game wlmer since Dizzy
Dean In 1934 and the American
League's tirst since Lefty Grove
won 31 In 1933.
The last pitcher to win 28
games was Robin Roberts In
1952 and McLeln Is alreaqy the

FiGirr POSrPONED
OA~LAND, C&amp;llf. (t!PI)-Jinl
GUmore's bout with the au
forced his polllj)onemeat 111irl•
da.Y of a scheduled 10-nJIIIICI
light with Colllomil holv y w e I g h t champion llenr7
Clark.

Arrow Wtrl• Trneler
Turtleaeck I,... bit
Turtles win by a neck in the race to.Y~P

VictoryTonight:~~;;;

20 major league team• Thurs· McLain.
McLain, shooting for his 28th
da,y and the guy who needed the
rest tho most was Denny victory tonight when the Tiger&amp;
boat the Minnesota Twins, got
four da.Y• rest between slartB
lor tho first time since May
beeauae the Tigers were idle
1'hursda¥.
In the first six weeks of the
season, McLain had four cloys
rest four times and even had
five doJs rest between starts
Mairs would not name the twice.
committee members.
But since Mey 25, the armHe said the aponsors ap. weary righthander has pitched
parentl,y were rea&lt;!Y to unite consistently with just three da.Y•
and hope they could be t h e rest- eleept the three times he
catalyst which would precipitate started with only two da,ys rest
peace in the leagues of big Ume
golf,
"
Only six members of the
TOMGIIT'S GAMES
sponsors group were absent. Huntington High at Gallipolis
Thirt.v-llve tournaments on the Athto~s at Marietta
$5.6 million tour were represent~ Coal Grove at Ceredo-Kenova
ed at the meeting.
COshocton at lrontoo
Mairs ssid the sponsors, oak Hill at Jackson
players and PGA obould unite to Morgan at Logan
run the tour. And, while Elbin Meigs at Wahama
agrees with this, he wants the Warren Local at Nelsonville PGA to have a veto over a nine-

moves to Houston'• Astrociorlle
Moncll1 night for 1 closh
between the Oller1 and Kansas
CU;y. Ail three prnes will he

conclustoo In December.
CtnclmaU beat Pittsburgh af
the NFL, 111-3, and New York ot
the AFL, 13~, in !to last two
outings to !lnlsh Its exhibition
cBftiJIIlgn '(rith a 2~ record;
The AFL'a quiWike openln&amp;
weekend CMI!mles bdo1 sf.
ternoon st Bul!alo where the
Bills entertain Boston and
'

Pro Golf Associations
'Beg 01 ng F0 r suppo r t

Q-Whal Ia meant by the
term "ruptured ulcer with
adynamic UeWi"?
A-Wbea a peptic ulcer rupture•, this is a surgical emer·
gency. One result of the rupluno may be a cessation of all
peristaltic waves Ia your in·
teatines. This Is adynamic
Deus.

an:

The Bengais, like all other
club.
The passing comblnatloo of DrS! year tesms In recentyears,
Jolm Hadl to Lance Alworth is are expected to go nowhere, but
again expected to spark San an improving, otronse, led by
Dte10'1 attack. The Chargers rookie quarterback Dewey Warposted a 3..2 mark In exhibition ren of Tennessee, and the
play, ineluding an impresaive coac:htng of Paul Brown, might
35-13 victory over tho Loa be able to provide tho club with
Angeles Rams ol tho National a rictory or two before the
season oomos to a mercllW
League.

. McLain Seel{s 28th

IIY·" Beaiiyl What's 1111'0111 with
"Jladame''? - uso..
'

Dear SO:

eea&amp;Ons on the IIBIDe weekend
that four of their clubs are stili
engaged In exhibition pill)"/
Trying not to confuse the
hsue any further, the Bengali·
Chargers twilight clash at San
Dieao kicko ott the AFL'sllinlh
season In a contest J!lt!lni a
Western Division contender
against pro • football's ~west

By United Press Jnternatlonal
American League
W. L. Pct. GB
Detroit ...... 89 :&gt;2 .631
Baltimore .... 81 60 . 57 4 8
Booton ' .. ' ..76 6:&gt; .539 13
Cleveland ....76 68 .528 14 1h
Oakland . . . . . 71 71 .500 I8'h
New York .... 70 70 .500 18'h
Minnesota .... 67 74 .47:&gt; 22
California .... 61 81 .430 28 1h
Chic:aao . .... 60 82 .423 291,&lt;,
Washington ... 56 84 .400 32'h
Thursday's Results
Chicago 2 Wash 1, night
Only game scheduled
Today's Probable Pitchers
All Times EDT
Washtngton (Haman 9-3) at New- ·
Yo'rk (Stottlemyre 18-11), 8 p.m.
Chicago (!lor len 10-12) at Ba' Umore (Hardin 17-10), 8 p.m.
Minnesota (Kaat 12-10) at Detroit (McLain 27 .5), 8 p.m.
Cleveland (Williams 11~) at
oakland (Odom 13~). 11 p.m.
Boston (Lonborg 5..5) at Callfonda (Messeramith 2..0), 11 p.

Notional League
W. L. Pct. GB
st. Loolo . . . . 89 52 .631
San Fran .... ,7:; 65 .536 13'h
Cinclmati .... 72 65 .526 15
ChiCIIBQ ..... 74 69 .517 16
Atlanta . . . . . 71 71 ,:;oo 181h
Pittsburgh . . . 68 72 .486 20'h
Philadelphia , ,65 75 .464 231h
Houston . . . . . 64 77 4:&gt;4 25
New York .... 65 79 .451 2511.!
Loa Angeles .. 61 79 .436 27 1h
TOOrsday's Results
No Games Scheduled
Friday's Probable Pitchers
All Times EDT
Philadelphia (Wloo 8-12) at Chi·
cago (!lando 15-ll), 1:30 p.m.
I;ouston (WUson 12-13) at Atl.,rt,; ' (Jarvi's i4~. diiht,'

a,os

p.m .
San Francisco (Martchal 24-7
and Bolin 7-4) at st. Louis (Carl-

ton 12~ and Hughes 2.:!) 2, 6:30p.m.
Los Angeles (Singer 10-15 and
Moeller 041) at Cinctnaatl (Cion·
Inger 5-' and Arri&amp;O JJ.7) 2,
:&gt;:30 p.m.
Now York (McAndrew 1-') at
Pittsburgh (Blass !3.5), 8:05 p.

It's possible, but not probable
that the U.s. could place three
men in the semis since sixthseeded pro Dennis Hal oton of
Bakersfield, Cali!., s t i II II m.
uallveu and fa&lt;:~ a quarterSaturday's Games
llnal against third-seeded Ken Cleveland at Oakland, twilight m.
Rosewall of Australia.
Chicago at Baltimore
Saturday's Games
Okker. a 24·yea.r-old Duteh- Boston at Call!, night
Houston at Atlanta
man who Is called an amateur, Minnesota at Detrol~ night
SF at St. Lools
thougl1 be's pi!Q'ing for prize Wash at New York, night
Philadelphia at Chicago
money under the current, cockNY at Pittsburgh, night
eyed International rules, simLA at ClnclnnaU, night
ply wore out 40-year.oid Pan· DORNHOEFER WINNER
MANCHESTER, VI. (UPO- with a seoond stralghl 72 for a
cho Gonzalez of Malibu, Call!.,
.Gr.ry DornhoeCer of the Pill- 144 total . The Chicago Black
in the first men'• quarter-final
'laclelpbla Flyers retained his 1!4wks, led by Brian McDonThursda¥, 14-16, 6~, 10-ll, 6-3.
title Tburoday in the Nstlonal ald's 146, won the team trophy
Then, Ashe knocked over 16thseeded Cllf! Drysdale of South Hockey League golf tournament wtth a 602.
Africa, earUer victor over top..
aeeded Rod Laver, by soaring
blo 27th victory In a row, 8--10,
6~. 9-7, 6-4.
In women's singles, top-seeded Billie Jean King ot Berkeley,
Calli., ns scheduled in a semiOHIO'S NEWEST FAD!
final against Mil seeded Mario
Bueno or Brazil with the winner 11011!1 Into the llnal.
Sixth so ailed Vir1dnia Wode af
England gained the llnal 111ars.
diJ' with .• siasblng 7-li, 1-1
victoey aver British pro AID
Haydon Jones.

MINI BIKE

'

•••••••••••
•••
•••
••
•
t

MEIGS COUNTY'S ONLY AGENT

(Save cabinet space)

..

. lodeiC:-2·211-2~
H.P • .
.
'

i.-e

nOilJilm. ·.

want.

G. BRANDSTADT, M.D.

pralH. I qreel A1ld I dgnot
think you lhould 111111 lhll

bolter lhsn

The Dally Sontlnol, PomcrO&gt;'·Middleport, o., FrldoJ, Sept. 6, 1968

By STU CAMEN

me.

once and for all, or give it the chance to sue·
ceed or fail on its own merits in the homes
of the nation.
The decision lies with the House Interstate
and Foreign Commerce Committee, Rep.
Harley 0. Staggers, chairman. The West Vir·
ginia Democrat has indicated that the committee
once again postpone action.
Pay-TV is, apparently, just too hot to
handle-but not to mishandle.

-

Cincinnati Bengals Open At San Diego

uSee eBy Helen Botiel

Police Cannot Be Judge and Jury
·c:A,. 1wave

~

,,

with a $3.0Q.purchase of Ashland Gasoline

157.95
1.84.:00.
.

These AvoCado G(eer. mugs are heat·resistant, Fire--king wa~
· and
designed to fit ort top Of each 6ther for convenient stacking- save
bif1et ,J
space. And you'll like their clean good looks on the table, too . se· the
mugs for coffee; 1~ • .l)ot !)hocolate or milk .
'
' .
,,
•

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'

·,

- .

'

Start
'$3 .00

· cine ,
;l

to ·

. th&lt;!

~

l!FJ, e i "9fl1plete
r

.

11e1 With every
., Of ''Ashland ,&lt;iasoline you get .
·i'nUQ·
'Just drive '; n
,sta,~ · disJ:11aving ·

· ,.

FJ:Iee.

' '"

•

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,

;' .~ ·.~ :r1l!. Dalg

Sollllnel, POmeroy-Mllklleport, o., t'ri&lt;IQ', sept.

e,

iu8

·r.·Wrapup: the Midwest

·

.

..,....,. ®

team, whlcb bQulo one ol
collep foolllall'a moot exc11ln8
pl11era In Leroy Ke)'ol, a
lllrOI1t! 'chall-r lor the
Helaman Trophy, wu the
natlm'a aeomd nioat potent
ollenalve team laot
Thla ....., he baa the aame
IJI&amp;flerl&gt;ack, Mike Pldppa, with
an ouldod year ol experience
from a stellar IOI)homore
aeaam, lhe aame Mlback,
Perry Wllllama, a power runner
and flaah)r blocker, plua Ke)'oa,
wbo can do lll)1ldng 011 ol!enae
and wbo plqa In 1118 defenalvo
baeldleld In loulh eltuatlorul. All
three were all conference last
year.
The BoUennakerl lost some
bocllea up h'ont, but MOIIOIIIalpf
plqa platooor footboll m oftenJe ud defense, eo he'll
have lettermen on hand In
numbers and aome big hlshiY
IIJuted aophomores aa well. I! he
ean ftnd a liood op!U end,
l'unlle might be a alrOnll
cballengor for the nlllonal

year.

.,

~ GUARANTEED

480 A MONTH
NEED 4 MEN

No experience necessary to work in Meigs County
and surrounding area with representive of large
Eastern electric manufacturing co. We will train
those men selected by an unbiased significant
aptitude test. Those hired must be able to start
'•' !

''
. ··•II

l

Immediately.

'i

crown.

interviews Monday, September 9, 11 a.m. to 8 p.m.

Jrlsb va. Boilermakers
Notre Dame, which faces
Purdue In tile aeoond pme o1
the season ior each team, could
give the Bollermakers thelr
loulhost test, and perhapa burll
the l'unlle bubble too. cnech
Ara Paraoghlan, thougll he bad
hea\'Y losses in his defensive
unl~ atlll baa the makings ol a
·loulh offense with Tom
Hanratcy and Coley O'Brien atlll
available at quarterback and
Jim Se,ymour at spill end.
In addltlcin tho Irish have Jeff
Zimmerman, Ed Ziegler and
Bob GladlOUJ&lt; for riiJIIIIng
atrength. Tho biggest defenolve
rebuilding must come in the
backfield, but defensive coach
Johmy Rq . haa oome burly
veterans for the line and
llnebacldng opotl and potentially good sophomores as welt
Jndlana, a cinderella team
lall year which shared tile big
ten title with Purdue and

at Shamrock Motel, Room 15.

Major Lea8Ue Leaders

Chew the BEST in the ·

NEW FOIL P'ACK

..,

"Sure Sign of Quality"

By United Press Jnternatlonal
N.Umal Lea8Ue
G. AB R. H. Pet.
Roae, Cln 124 520 82 181 .348
Alou, Pit 125 469 49 lo8 .337
Jillion, Cln !If :;oll.s7 164 .324
Alou, Alia 139 518 64 180 ,311
McCvy, SF 126 434 69 129 .297
Staub, !lou 140 515 49 153 .297
Millan, Atla
128 489 41 145 .297
Flood, St.Ll32 553 66 163 .295
Jones, NY 128 438 54 130 .297
Bockrt, Chll41 587 86 172 .293
American Leque
G, AB R. H. Pet.
Yotrakl, Boa
136 461 75 134 .291
Oliva, Min 12~ 470 54 136 .289

Ublndr, Min

•FHds
•Seeds
• Fertilizers

Sugar Run Flour Mills
Phone 992-2115

Mulberry Ave.

Pomeroy, Ohio

'717'•' Rugged Cutterhead Keepa
You (Jwpping Fme-AlwaJI!

130 488 52 138 .283
Andrws, Bos
126 458 67 129 .282
DaviUo, Cal
133 491 4li 188 .281
Cater, Oak 127 424 38 119 .281
Horton, Det130 461 511 129 .280
Carew, Min
109 403 43 113 .280
F. Hwd, Was
137 521 70 145 .278
Harrlan, Bos
129 459 72 127 .277
Home Runs
.. Nallmal LeaiUO: McCove)', Son
Fran 32; Allen, 1'1111 and Bonka,
Chi 28; 1L Aaroo, At! 26; Williams, Chi 24.
American League: F. H o ward, Wash 39; Harrollm, Boa
33; Horton, Det 31; Jackaon, Oak
26; Powell, Ball and Freahan,
Dot21.
Runs Batted In
National League: Mc:Covey, San

Fran 88; Santo, Chi 86j Wllllams, Chi 84; Perez, Cln 80;
Allen, Ph1l 77.
AmerlcBD Leap: HarreliOII,
Boa 1011 F. Howord, WBBII 9;
Northrup, Del 80; Powell, Ball
78; Horton, D« 73.
Pltddlq)
Nallonal Lea!Pio: M&amp;rlohal,
Son Fran 24-7; Kline, Pitt 11-1;
GlbiOII, St. L. 2~ Blau, Pitt
13-.1; Wuhbunl, St.L. tu.
Amorlc:.ID Leaaue: McLain, Del
27 ..1; McNally, . Bait 19.&amp;, Culp,
Boa 11..1; Elloworth, Boa 1114;
Tlant, Cleve 19.41.

Mlnne- to earn a RollO' Bolfl
trip, could prOVo .thai It bad
more than luck In i967. T11e
Hooliers IIIII ba\'e 4JIIl'IOI'hack
Harry Gonao and flanker Jade
Butc:her as well U IIIDIOI'OUI
big ...,811
UnOmen. Coach
JobMY Pont believe• doifh and

................,,.

MAC Leaders

May Okay Post
Season Jn •te

-st

J W H S •th

Dies Thursday

daY·

FIGHT RESIJLTS
• By United Preas JDeroatlonel
LOS ANGELES (IJPI) - Bustor Matllla, 220'h , Grand Rapldo, Mich., ~ Amos
Lincoln, 209'h , Los Angelos (10).

vlalted his parenta, Mr.andMra.
Earl Johnion over tho weekend.
He returned to Naahvllle, by
plane from u.nlngton.

VISITS PARENTS

MASON - Mike Johnson, a
atudont at lhe Notional Auto Dl&amp;ael Colleae at Naahvillo, Tam.,

w••

:::S~~e~=Dt~~:.: •HEATING ' . .

. Neftller t,em hal II cllnched
yet, but with the Cards .Jeadlnl
lbo. Notional LoqUe Ill' · 13\'z
pmes llld the Tlgera leadlnl
the American Loa&amp;ull )If alglt
pmea, they're
the inoll
llkely ehnlcea to make the an11111 duaie.
'l1lo grGUI1d rulea for t h e
aeries aleo were worked out at
a meeting held In Ed&lt;ert'a olllco.
'!be llrll two pmes will be
played In the National Lfalple
Clb' Oet. 2 and 3 with Oct. 4
an oil for travel.
Gamsa In tile American Leaguo cJey will be pll1ed Oct. 5,
8 and 7th, 1t neceJaary, they
will be plqed Ocl • .9 and 10 In
tho National Leape clt,y.

e PLUMBING·
e ROOFINC

aht va. George E. and Barbara
L. Harper; erocllt Bureau of Pl.
Pleaaant, aaenl for Holzer Hoipita! FOWidatlon, ria awarded
Wlmenlln the amoont of $375
asa1nat Cbarlea WUUa HlU and
Jo Am Bill, andJuclgmenlln tbe
amount ol $1,599.72 agalnotMargarpt Virginia Ball Colle)'. Default judgmenl was granted tile

llsurecl

u·w1s
IN Mill WY 2-DN

416 Main St.

e Wot., Pipe

•Triple Treek

St.,flll Wln4o••

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eUT &amp;111ft IAII
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aew fall

proarams.

Charcoal black stripple finish.
6" Oval Speaker.

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Jamel A, Rhodes ol approved
ln.Ututlonal
prolocta.

tralritna

=entof
Jad&lt;OOO'I tralnlni c - r WU
the Udrd larpat Ill Ohio.

under provlllionl o1 the Manpower nevotopment and Triln1ng (MDTA).,In Ohio Wring fiaea1 1968 whiCh ouded J\110 30
(1968)·
IJiatltutlonal jab trainlng ..;,..aes wore approved tor
8 849 trainees briDIIns tho tocoorooa
1,116 olnce tho

20

w

~

Tat\ LaUDC
' hes
&lt;::ampsaiun for
-e--

S_upreme

to -

. '!be roailltl of a llll'Ve)' CCIII·
cmctocl .-.g 61 parctal ol
thoae wbo complotecl tnlnlng
revealed that four ooit ol five
- a (or BO.t percont)were
able to obtain employ1llent following their training or ,.,_
tralnlni for a jab under tile
provilliona of MDT A.
that under
"One can llfely uy
Udo program there aro lhwlands of per...,, """ba\'emade employable wbo olherwlae
would have to be on welfare or

52

_..., ·-• ...,.-

59
. CHEVROLET

........,

$~00

•Trl!!lo .Oo ot ... - ...·---'~

~

I

.... and~· Even. More&gt; ~
·;,.)

j

~ ~'*"• s2s:ao w111 .. all...,. on tt* raph i•
· metlhhny J.wlrua,..leul!lraM. 01' lilt raplm ·'
f ,f .
,............ ~l.. --~ .,....... which !I ..... , .
.

.

r

(

•'

67 Olds F-85 Club Cpa. • • • • • • -- • • • • ·$2495

352 V8 motor, auto. trans., P.S., white over blue, witb
blue interior.

64 Olds Starfire Coupe·· - • • • • • • • • • • $1395
Now. Nationwide Insurance will
guarantee renewal of auto in·
suranc:e for five years (after each
policy is in effect 60 days). To
qualify. just pay the premiums
and have a valid license for every
driving member of ynur famil) .

La•-

Chlel Jus-

Taltwaa)ll'eby 3,235
938 ; and he

.

.

'

Full power, dark green finish, matching LnL, ndlo and
wheel discs.

64 Ford Fairlane 500 2 Dr.·····-···· ·$1095
V8, auto., radio, W·s-W tires, burgundy finish with belle
vin.vl bucket seats.

Ask me about it.

65 Olds Cutlass Con. • • • • • • • • • • • • • -$1495

Ken Williams

alao endors-the Cleve-

V8 motor, auto., P.S., blue with matchiq irL, radk,.
w-s-w tires, wheel discs.

. P. J. ·Pauley

Bar- Aasod-

WILLIAMS
••• PAULEY

after re--

cel.ving a favorable vote ol 1,-

60 Olds 4 Door___"" _________ $295
VS, auto.

62 Chrysler 4 Door. _________$295

NATIONWIDE

V8, auto.

KARR' &amp;VAN ZANDT
GMAC FINANCtNG

992·5342

OUR

:.'::=:::':~~:

·:

4 DOOR SEDAN, 6 CYL
.- '
AUTO. TRANS.

lema can be prevented by checkIng baollng OQIIpment for prop.,. uljuatmen~ proper ventilation. lifo eomectionl and proper operotlon ol llfetr abut oil devices,.. ho added.
"Anf hoatlnll 8J)pllanco ean
get out ol ~-and should

~~:':Gl=::·~
Inspected regularly/'

be ehe&lt;ktd amually. V - car·

""

GETTING
GREATER

65 Chevrolet

$895 67 Buick

$2,795

$1,495 67 Buick

$2,395

Wlldca4 4 dr. Hardtop. One local.....,., Now Buick Trade-ln.
Not much more than lf2 original cost. Superb conditicn

!llallbu 2 dr. Harcltop. A real "creompufr'lnslde and out. A&gt;JI.omatle ll'lift. Papular Cbevelle Madel on 115" wheelbase.

Grand Sport. 2 Dr. Hardtq&gt;. 400 cu. Inch engine, 4 apd. trana.
New Buick trade ln. One local owner. Extra sharp.

65 Buick

$2,395 66 Mustang

$1,995

66 Pontiac

$2, 195 65 Buick

$1,995

Riviera 2 dr. llardtop. Air c:GIIIilt!Cllled. Buick' a lineal and beat
and thlo en lo extra nice. Fully equipped.

.

V8 Faot Bock 2 dr. Hordtop. New Pontiac trad,._in from ...,.,._
al owner. 4 spd. Irani. Shows best of care.

Bomovllle 2 dr. llardloP. New Poollac trade-In friJID one caretuii!O'nor. Ori8inall&gt;lack finish llka - ·

Chlol Fllher --thefol1owlioi check not to auure lifo,,
ofllcltnl ..,...IIIla d. - · ~

~...a::,w i•. 64 Dodge
_ ir

Wlldeat Custom, 2 dr. Hardtop. '1111s bas one of thellooot lnterlors ol any Buick. It Is beiUiiM 1111 white finish will&gt; black
morklde interior. One caroMioeal owner.

$1,495

$995 65 Chevrolet

Chovalle V8 Station Wagon. Owned )If local teacher. Extra nice
Inside and out.

GT 2 dr llardloP. Shup red llnlah with 1111 vbl11 bucket lnterlw. - a extra good eare b' modeL

there Ia a d - ..,..
eniDI! 11\th cep Ill die ~

. - tile vtnt PIPe. be oun

the - I a cleir !1.debrla.
- Be lUre tloe cb'm)ll,f Ia ·
clean. BJoi!r IIDMika Into the dfl!l- .
~.:~8
· ·111 iDaU IUl'Oit.ll · LaSabte I' ;&amp;, ........ OWDid by .,.eGtcour ...dllnicL Ps. PB
II

IHI,T.

!'1
...
..' I,

;,'
·~·, .:

'•

\
'

V8· Falrlaoo 500 2 dr. llardloP. !prllliJW black flnlah with red
vbl11 ....olatery. Exeoptlonal.

. )

/ ' .

1\

,,

~1fi~i . 63~.F,rd·
· ~~

$895

$895 63 Ford

63

.

.-

-

·~

CI.EARAIICE/

64 Ford

··

.

. ..

-· ..........

DEALS ARE

s79

'

· -

GREAT

5

'

_

Fill' flaca!l&amp;68 die lltiD&gt;IIW')'
Included 38 tnlnlng projoc:ta.
10
Amalll them wero Jad&lt;oon,
couraoa, tnlnlng 4,110 peraooa,
cooling 118,105,6161nalioWanCoa,
$2,551,1811 Ill ""'callonal coot,
totalljl,863,802.
Golllj&gt;olla, one courn, 15
tr-'-' co-"·• •••,440 In ello!raneeo, and •u,~68_ In odoca-

Market Report

Gallon

.

• •

65 Ford LTD4 Dr. H.T. ·····-······ $1595..

their
OQdpment
and
necooaary
ropolra Inspected
made.
uMU¥ home heat:irll prab-

.

..

and $4,646,981 for ·

209 to 181 In a poll by that Bar
Aasoclallon of 1111 practicing lawyero 1n Cuyahoga countY. Chief
Juatlce Taft served as State ROll2141. 2nd
resentaUve rrom CuyahOga Courtn. nun lrom N•tlonwide is on your side.
ey In 1933 and 1934, as )ll'Oildent of the ii1aker Helgbts Board
of Education in 1942, and was
elected to an unexpired term in
the United States Senate In 1946.
Chiol Juatlce Taft loa graGIate of Cleveland Hel&amp;)ltl High
Scbool, of Amherst College,
where he was ele~ to the
ocholarahip fraternlb' Pili Beta
Kappa, anc1 of Harvard Law
GALLIPOLIS, OlUQ,
School wbere he was on the Law
Saturday, Aug. 31, 1968
Review. He holdohonoraryi.L:D.
SALES REPORT of
degreaa !rom Amherst College
Ohio Vll11ey Uveotock Co.
and from Baldwtn-Wallace ColHOGS - 175 to 220 lbs. 19 lege and lo prooenlly oo tho Exto 20; 220 to 250 lbs. 19 to 20; _ . Ofl!!!lve !;!w&lt;;ll of_lh• COllierLight 18 to 20; Fat sows •H to once ·d Cblef· Juatlceo ·ot ·.tht - " '
16; stago 12 to 16; Boaro 12 to United States.
15; sowa and Plga 65 to 100;
-5to16.
CATILE - Stoero 20 to 26.50; Helfera 18 to 23; ~ Beef
20 to 27; Fat CoWl 14 to 18;
camera 12 to 16; Bulla 18 to
22.50; Milk cows 100 to 200.
VEAL CALVES - Tops 35.26; 5ecmds 30 to 3MO; MedAlthoUgh cold weather 11110 may
Ium 25 to 32; Com. and Hva.
be several weeks away, Midh to 28; CUlls 20 to 24.
SHEEP - Ewoa and Lms. 5 dleport Fire Chief Bob Flahor
to 10; Stock Ewes 5 to 10; Fat today urged areo reoldenta to
make lllelr amual llfety chock
~ 5 to 10; CUlls I to 5;
d.
homo healing ecpdpment now.
Bucks 4 to 8; Fat Wethero 5
"Competent lnopectioo ol furto 10..
LAMBS - Topo 23; Stccndo naces, water heaters, inclner·
18 to 22; Light Wte. 16 to 20; atora and room hellera should CUatonl 2 dr. oedan. 6 eyL std. trans. Orlglnallliht blue finDOt be tMt oft," Chief Fllber
Common 14 to 16.
aald. "Plumber• and beating C'CIIl· ish, like new.
trociora normally are bualut
As of Jan. 1, 1968, there ....,... tho flrll cold weather hlta,
were 10.6
automobUes
reglotered In Great Britain.

mnnon

'

m

All OUT SALE ON NEW and USED CARS

SPEC I L'

.

,.. _ ..
· ·· ..............

............... - .. ...... -·

Employment Service a, reported
to Gov rnor Rhocloa "ODe ol
e
·
tlio
1 tile hllb
cent
reoiOOI or
per
&amp;II" of jobs louud for lheae peo1
s the fi.i:t that ..._ - •
P e wa
wny .,.._
trolned for a opeclflc jab and
not placed In tralnlllll just for
the like of training ...

• 1 ~&gt;clolion

atlon

fl:"eal

~ !aeiiWea.

refereno1 Ohio Bar

Taft

11 ·

Court:;;...:"":~. O:."!;,.ecl.;,

2oth year oo tile &amp;!promo Court
and hla slxlh year aa Chief JusUco, Thursday opened hia campalgn for re-eloi:tlon as Chief
Jn•tfce.
Ill the ncent

JU

aald lhll total
lor

Be Made Now

.

oxcoedod the JackiCII

year 1IU $10,208,342, which In·
eluded tl,681,361 for allowance a

Safety Oteeks

. Electric Water Hecitir

management, glvon In

Gold flDiah with matchirc vinyl Int., V8, auto., P.S., racllo,
14,000 actual miles. One owner. New Olds trade.

Chief Justice Kingsley A. Taft,
wbo Ia 65 and now aervlna hi s

up-.5:40 a.m.; Racine LOcks, Elgerellll down 7 p.m.; W, H. ·
9110Yer Jr. up 5 a.m.; Greenup
Locka, IDinols don 8 p.m.; F.
H. Jomotoo and Chllperm down
S p.m.; Rav~nswood up 10:15
p.m.; Etna-Louiavllle up 1:15 a.
m.; Warren llougland .down I
a.m.; Valley Transporter down
1 a.m.; Meldahl Locka, Steve
Click down 10:30 p.m.; Cotion Queen down 11:30 p.m.; Robert G. West up 2:45 a.m.; John
Lelkl Dean down 6:30a.m. ·

·

FISher Urges

992-3635

'

Parto-Soloa-Sorvlco

Geal ldaad
Goat Island, whleh separates the Am or! can lind
Horsellboe )'aDs of Niagara
Flllll, cot Ita name from the
fact that John staadman, a
British colonist, raised goatl
there In the IBtb century.

'

YALlfl~· ·~

Yoor 4-C Dealot Por
Pam &amp; lnolutrlal Equl-ot

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

.,

HARRY MILLER

. ,

POMI!IiOY.'

1

;

Associated Radio and TV.
MAIN Sf,

·'

a;m.j Alton Zephyr down
Lm.j Lock 22, Peggy Downey

•

·:. '·.:' :_, :A'$1{ir'u~~: ,~, OettiJiSI ·.

THOMPSON TRACTOR SALES
992-5101

'

449.95

'&lt;~~!'~;,~w'f""M!f'~~· .

.1.

.'

trained, with CO!IIporablo fill""•

....·_pro•lo•ci•ol•t•ho•38•._ __

..We Locka, Foremost up

:·I

i

Fallin Line Fer
Allis-Chalmers lith Us

12:20 a.m.; Polly R. don I..
m.; Helen z. up 4: a.m.j ·.Mt.
state up 5 a.m.; Fori Doarl&gt;om
up 5:20 a.m.·, Alan R. Merrill
down S:30 a.m.; Prlnc:l)llo down
7 a.m.,· Franklin B. down 7:15
a.m.; JetrerBOII up 7:30 a,m,
omo RIVER - Lock 14, Jeff. 50
Steel R
- boat up 4: p,m.j
anll"f up 6:15p.m.; Unlveraal 011er up 8:25 p.m.; Lock 15, Qaeen
Cl1;y up 2:15 a.m.; OVEC down
7 a.m.·, Lock 16, NatloDII cl&gt;wn
2:25 a.m.; New Martinsville up
5:15 a.m.; Look 17, St. Maeya
don 1:30 a."'; Eastern down
a.m.; Charles K. down 4:25 a.
m.; Bedtjord up 6:45a.m.

Wayae, 1, ef Savuaall, Ga.,
111riaJet lo IIIIeR a eohl.

............. 40&gt;

e R.Y SPRAY

e Camp leN Bath•

=A~Hka:'wER

Jailer aeem1 lo 'be relrea'lq rnm elvllha'l" Mull

ELECTRIC III~TER HEATERS

Arounclnte"""
eflYIAIT
etA.'IW.a

Gl-;

· !llEARLf:BURIED Ill and
llid pau, 11111 parklal

Cl!'olt W1rt01 l\llowoo,o.--'211.00

Roof P•lnt 3.25 pl.

don, Marmet, and Winfield, are
.., tho .UI.

Fcifurlout·

1969
'MODELS

~-

See Us Fer Your 11ai1J Fall Needs

and 13.5 riiJIIIIng 7 loot of roll·
Pt.
24.10; POmoroy-Mason, 20.50; · JllntOO; uo

Cbe'oael&gt;~, .
~Infant

•
Ro1M oJ tr...

Pt. PIHsont, W. Yo.

kstlmal collo, totaiJng $31,769

Galllpollo,

Ball and 1nfa11t aoo, Mrs. DonBOAT MovEMENTS:
aid
Mra. WOllam
GALLIPOLIS LOCKS _ liarQ, Famm
II!Uilrtar, Vf'1Jordalll)oWn .12 :0Sa.m.;BayMrs. Donala E. (lclheeio. Bleb- '"' La Role doom 2:35 a.m.;
ard··
·!lira. MOille. G, Gor- Elilha WOOd doom 3:10 a.m.;
dol&gt;, VI!Ua Hartillf; Sr.,llreama Titan don 4:15a.m.; J. S. Lewllonaker, WUllaln E. Hurley, I
8 30
Mrs. Carl E. Jamoo and Infant s
_ Londoll,
daqhter, Mra.BayLeJnle)',Mro. H. E. Bowleaup &amp;:40 a.m.; Mar, Edpr J, Martin, Mrs. Larry
-•·
~ m
met, J ..~ Green -"" 8 p. .;
Joi!D C, Vroman,
~ 1140
!!aolna;
..,...., Mrl. M1
M. V, PariiOOB, Mra. Wllllaln pey. Le lla C• ~,oarer
-""
: p•
,..._eport;
IS Donna.
too, Mra. Georll" W. Sextoo, m.; Winfield, Dunean Brucedown
Hauck, l'Omtror. Yra. Jeolie LawrODCO v.
M r a.
8 :25 p.m.; E'Doaua Bosworth
~. - - Rt 2 Racine; Mra. Lawrence
Mra. Frank don 9:30 p.m.; SOlve)' down
u.rman A. Ander- Rav•o- IL Zerkle, Henry Dceo, Mrl. 10 ,30 p.m.; David Vld&lt;ers up
wood; ROII"f W, Bl')'llt. lrOIIIon; AIIOD Lambert.
ll:IO P·"'; Morrio llarve)' down

StEAK
..
'HOUSE

SPECIAL OFFER

Fibre

I'Ortar,

Births
Mra. Ronald W• Twyman, ..Rl
1 Vlnteol, oon, 12:36 a.m. Frl-

6202 BK Can1urlon Seri..-Contempo•••Y

.

GAUGES _

TAILE COLOR TV

• lnt•rfor Vlnrl La•••
arwll!na ...l

I.

l
c
R
p(-Rtv
....E1111 1 1 N"'!!E~W~S-j"
Tackson Vocationa enter an r:s)~
:.:)~::
1
1~9 J
b Tr •
c~:;8 :~:a··~= In~ ~~~~.:;:~.t
,.,L.
d ln
· . 11\.rum
· b·er oif J4~:0
atnees .anci. .CloV-elan•d•wi•th•8•,50.~per_
oro;
Pleasant,
~ nlr
~I
111
:·;=.=.~~;~~~!: ~u:,:.;;:O::,!
"!,!:\, ~.s:~ ~ ~r::., lhe
BIG PUSH IS QN

968
1

116 SCREEN .

far Raaflnt

ExtorhN'

c.

Plea"'::l',!::~e~"'

&lt;IQ'; Mra. Wullaln

lboulh 84.; Joim B. Rlllle, 49 Ce... St.; Julllll A, Fallen, Rt 2
'!'atrk&gt;t; The R... Earl V. Cre.,_., Not1hop; Mra. Robert
II. MecOJo, JlldWell; Mrl. Bonlid L, 'rWymNI, Rl' I Vlldl&gt;u;
Mra• .~ ~~. Fome.1'0¥; Mra. R1cbad K. F...,...,
l'olnero)-; Levi E. Aoldbl, Rt.
t i'olntt'QJ; lloOiar&lt;l
Smith,

'PHIL CO

It Ia estimated that a coin
struck of nlcll:el baa an average Ufe of SO yearo.

Scrvbbobla Paint.

'

_

4

\

McGowan Visits in

S.~ni-Gion

••

Pl.
FridaY.
Harold D. Arthur,,Mra. Char' Mra. CArl Aake1&lt;. 128 Porll- lea F. Balle)', Mrs. Wllllaln. L.

:::::::::::::=:::::::::::

ower to their Indictments,
Schoclulod to enter their pleaa
m Sept. 9 at 9:30 Lm. were
Harold R. Ruaaell, Holen Wll"'"'· Fqe Jeffers and Frecler- ·
lck Moumlng.
Herman Lee Boles, illdlcted
for eocaplng from the &lt;OIIIII;Y
jail, will appear .. Sept. 12.
IUs eaae bas been tranaferrecl
to juvenile court !rom circuit
c:ouri.
Mary Joan Trippetl and Jooeph Trippetl will eoch enter their
plea m Sept. 13 at 8:30 a.m.
Coort capias was Ia'""" fill'
Wille_ l'lloljljl _and Wter . La!'ey

t:oally ToUt
If a motorist were to drive
over aD the toll roada, IICI'OIO
1111 the taD bridges and through
all the toll I U D D e Ia In the
United states, he would pay a
total of $164.90 In tons.

'

IICII.

e A.lumlnotlon Paint

e

lloilpital:'~lliiinl~h1&gt;uro

IS AS LOW AS ....................... ..

court capias• were issued tor
two wbo fll11ed to appear to on-

-nte.

• •,

T l NC
EWS

Your dl1111011d ~liP will pia
,.. • llfotlma of pl-ro , , •
lopoclllll ~p ~·. ~ ..

Leu 'fr&amp;de.ln

•

se.Unel, Pl&gt;m•...,-M

Friday Sept 8

..

.,. ' .. ''

.

unroe,
v. unroe,

REPAIR SEIVICE:,

September term ol Mason Coun1;y Circuit C&lt;&gt;uri appeared In
court 'l'hur,.iay morning and

Tonuny McGowan,
a IIOI1ior at the Unlvera!Qo o1
Notre Dame, and aeveral other
collop
toured Huslia,
Finland and Denmark Uda summer. During July McGowan attended the Unlverott,y of Mlcl!lpn.
Tomm,y II the aoo ol Dr. and
Mrs. Thomaa McGowan ol MaSUt. The McGowans' daulhter,
Kay, Ia a aophonloreatSt. Mar)' a
School at Notre Dame.

llklleport 0

DIAMONDS
ABBA .TOY
J.I'ORBVBB

the nine
perama
TueadaY
by tile
grandlndli:tod
jUry ol t h e

MASON -

. ·". , . ,. '· ..

..... -

c.

-FOR- ·

TIFFIN CREDIT FodNSTANT
CREDIT
JEWELERS

PT. PLEASANT - Seven of

Foreign Countries

·' ' ' ,,-

'

TIFFIN CREDIT JEWELERS

'"

, . • '. 1

Uri. "Mary F. Chlmell, Jack-

Seven of Nine
Show in Court

R.lfOe, ., ' . '

. . ., •...,.

amount

*

Ucketl.

to

ollonalvo Uno, but quarierllad&lt;
could be a p!'dllem, and aome
1011homores wtn have to come
thi'OOI!h In akUied politlono.

.

In Judgments

NEW YORK (UPI)- Baaeball
Commlslioner Wllllllll D. Eck• ert made it ol!lclal Thuraday:
'!be Detroit Tigert and tile St.
LCJule Cardinali were li•en the
&amp;G-ai&gt;eld to print World ,sertes

flllcknell will be - · but
races a problem 1(1 butl"'ow the
center of the ollenilve lloe.
Mimeaota'a Mlrray Warmalh
..Did 1u'u IDI'Pt 10 . . . lllo...
abould ~vo a lltrOOPr oll"'!!f
with -rt tllllbacklnl from
beth Jim Carier and Barry
Mayer and pethapl 1 11a!llarterbackilll with
gen. Eq&gt;erlence overll11 8hou~d
be aoocl, oxoapl at tackle, and
depth may be lhe SOPhert'
bllll!lll _.,..
Ohio State'l WoodY iiiQ'el
could have hla bell dub In
aeveral - · With I bell ol
VI
clauy sophomore• to fill out hia
returnlni forcea. One of two
rookie a, Rex Kem or Ron
COLVMBUS (IJPQ- Mid AmerMaclejowakl, ml&amp;)lt be the !&lt;111 Collference (MAC) ol!lclals
atar1ln8 !~~arterl&gt;ack. iiiQ'el may oll8j' an Invitation )If t h e
expects to ba•e more speod and Southoro Collferenoo for tho leamore depth and perhaps his guo champions to meet In the
boll runnlnl pme In oome TIIJIPrlne Bowl thlo _,..,
time.
Questfons ooncerned minor lsMI&lt;hlgan, Mlchlpn State and aueo ouch as hotel acco~­
NorthWeltern cou1cl be the dona, )ll'actlce fac:llltles and olhchaiiOJIII'Irl tor a llrll or pme arrangements.
dlvlalm finish. J1uD11 Elllott'a
"OUr ol!lce bao boon lnatructWolverlnes have one ol the Big ed to obtain the anaworo to all .
Ten' • finest rlul'lers in Ron the q.~estious and relate them to
Jo!moon, and tho ol!enao could the athletic dlreclors ao they
get a boool from . sophomore ma.v brief their representative
cparterbacka Bill Berutt1 and presidelltl," Jamea said.
Don Moorehead.
'!be )ll'olidonto must vote apState Laoko Depth
proval before a MAC team can
Michigan Stale . and Dully pari:lclpate.
Dauprty -&lt;Is better &lt;IW'·
A deadline of Sept. 17 waa set
torbaoklng, probably from Bill for the decillion.
Feraco, and the delenae should
The MAC Includes Bowling
be strong. But the ollenlive line Green (Ohio), Kent, Marshll11,
baan't jelled. the otrenalve Miami, Ohio Unlverlib', Toledo
baoklleld bas been uncertain, and Wellem Michigan unlYerliand Dauahorw need• depth tloo.
almoll everywhere. NorthWeotem's Alex Agase expects to
ohow a lllrollger defenoe with
•
•
•
mi
hlo llnobackora all returning
with tough men up rrm\.
Ol!enslvely he'll have to ftnd a
!~~arlerback,
but ahould get
PT. PLEASANT - John W.
good
rumlng from
Chico H. Smith, 55, of 23o7 Jackom
Kurzawskl and Bob Olson.
Avenue, died flllte 181expei:todA move Into the first dlvlolon
ly Thurada.v ooon of a heart atfor Iowa, Dllnols or Wisconsin tack. He become Ill While at
MJUld have to rank as an upaet
In the Big Ten. '!be mini, In work at the Marlette ManufacJim Valek's •ec:ond seaaon, haa . turing and ~aa dead on arrival.·
experience, but .nu give · -·"·llliPieaiOJIIValley Uoopltal; •
size and speed
moat of its
He was born ln pt, Pleasant
OIJI)IXIentl. Depth will be a 00 A)ll'll 15, 1913, a son of tile
problem and InJuries could late William Finley and Mary
destroy whatever hopes the dub &amp;loan Deem Smith. He wao a
bas.
veteran of World War n and a
Iowa might surprise wtth an member of the Plpellttero LGexploolve ollenae baaed on eal 521 of Huntington.
:iuvlvtng are hi• wife, Ethel
quarterbeck Ed Podolak and
end AI Bream and wlnil&gt;ack Akers Smith; a allier, Mra. &amp;1Barcy CJ;ee•. ~ wtll be ·~- McKay, Los Angalee; and
good, which led coach Ray two brother•, Howard, or pt,
Nagel to switch from a wide- Pleaaant, and Raymond Smith,
tackle lix to a 5.: with a rover. of Charlellion.
Many aophomorea will get Into
Funeral service wtll be held
ai:tlon
Saturday In the Crow - Huosell
Wtl~sln's Johnny Coatta Funeral Home with the R e v.
heads Into his aeeood aoaom Galton Boyle, Jr., ol!lclatlng.
with a new ollenao, the otralglt Burial will be In Lone Oak cemT, and a llhllled defeoae. He hal etory. Friend&amp; 1!1.\1' eall at the
more clepth and a etronger funeral home after I p.m. Frl-

~'~~~

Twentieth Stroot Bank In t ~~·
o1 $2, 79UO Bialnot !z.
G. Greer and Judgment bi die .t
mount of $186.10 agal(lll ~
lea J. and Genevieve DIIIUIOl!An order was aioo OlllerQ
PT. PLEASANT - Several plaelng J.yle Moore, PI._,I:l.~J
~ o1 •J·-lt •-'- n1 ba
ant, on three ye&amp;rs PJ'1IUUIUUtt
~rs
,.._..e
ve Moore was found . gullb' b7 II
boon alsnod )If the Coun·
ey Circuit Court ond enlorod In petit jury tor tho lei!)I)IOOia
the ol!lce of the Clreult Court. aault on a Lake CountY, Ohl4
Default judgment waa award- dep&gt;l,y aherlff.
;
eel to tho plalnlilf In the amount
"
o1 $316.4li 1n the civil ai:tlon Or
Hundr.e ds of Cbrlsbnaa &lt;Ill"
~• Bank ol Pt. Pleaaant ols were written In Englan4
~-eo
between 1400 and lllol'
-:
YB. George L. Greane; Judsmenl '
-- 1n tlio o1 $2,uo.ts
IAwi• Repair Service·

Cardinals,
Tigers Get
Series Nod

.,\ This is No Year to Poo Poo Purdue
But II won't be tr13' year for
cmcAGO (UPQ- Thla will be
.,. year fill' ' hopeful Midwest the BUermakero to I'Oo I'Oo
1 football
teama to resort to Notre Dime, Minnesota, India· AmOI Alollso lltall!'s old slogan, na or Ohio &amp;:ate either.
Jack Molleokopf's I'IIJ'Gie
' I'Oo I'Oo l'lu·me.

.IL..Jers
s~~uned
~n:u

....

..•
.·-...
...

\

.,.

,·r
.
...
·
.
·
.
$895 .63
~.· ~d di--'o6ed11Jicoc*llllc~;
~
........'(
. . . ,,

. ...

•• )tf'

~ f.·..., .; .. ' '• ,..~-- :,

·!~.\'

~"!.,"£-."~·

~

... '

•

• •:

Shopril

,

Ra111~ler

000 4 dr, .-..Now P

.., •

- .. /..a:-1, ~·...._·
y ''!- 'UV"•
-~·
.•·.

••

,f

.-'.;,' •' .
·.'
)

~~~··
,;;

-

Uaclrado-lnin..lacai...-.A!l
'
~..

...

~

,.

�'

I

,

;' .~ ·.~ :r1l!. Dalg

Sollllnel, POmeroy-Mllklleport, o., t'ri&lt;IQ', sept.

e,

iu8

·r.·Wrapup: the Midwest

·

.

..,....,. ®

team, whlcb bQulo one ol
collep foolllall'a moot exc11ln8
pl11era In Leroy Ke)'ol, a
lllrOI1t! 'chall-r lor the
Helaman Trophy, wu the
natlm'a aeomd nioat potent
ollenalve team laot
Thla ....., he baa the aame
IJI&amp;flerl&gt;ack, Mike Pldppa, with
an ouldod year ol experience
from a stellar IOI)homore
aeaam, lhe aame Mlback,
Perry Wllllama, a power runner
and flaah)r blocker, plua Ke)'oa,
wbo can do lll)1ldng 011 ol!enae
and wbo plqa In 1118 defenalvo
baeldleld In loulh eltuatlorul. All
three were all conference last
year.
The BoUennakerl lost some
bocllea up h'ont, but MOIIOIIIalpf
plqa platooor footboll m oftenJe ud defense, eo he'll
have lettermen on hand In
numbers and aome big hlshiY
IIJuted aophomores aa well. I! he
ean ftnd a liood op!U end,
l'unlle might be a alrOnll
cballengor for the nlllonal

year.

.,

~ GUARANTEED

480 A MONTH
NEED 4 MEN

No experience necessary to work in Meigs County
and surrounding area with representive of large
Eastern electric manufacturing co. We will train
those men selected by an unbiased significant
aptitude test. Those hired must be able to start
'•' !

''
. ··•II

l

Immediately.

'i

crown.

interviews Monday, September 9, 11 a.m. to 8 p.m.

Jrlsb va. Boilermakers
Notre Dame, which faces
Purdue In tile aeoond pme o1
the season ior each team, could
give the Bollermakers thelr
loulhost test, and perhapa burll
the l'unlle bubble too. cnech
Ara Paraoghlan, thougll he bad
hea\'Y losses in his defensive
unl~ atlll baa the makings ol a
·loulh offense with Tom
Hanratcy and Coley O'Brien atlll
available at quarterback and
Jim Se,ymour at spill end.
In addltlcin tho Irish have Jeff
Zimmerman, Ed Ziegler and
Bob GladlOUJ&lt; for riiJIIIIng
atrength. Tho biggest defenolve
rebuilding must come in the
backfield, but defensive coach
Johmy Rq . haa oome burly
veterans for the line and
llnebacldng opotl and potentially good sophomores as welt
Jndlana, a cinderella team
lall year which shared tile big
ten title with Purdue and

at Shamrock Motel, Room 15.

Major Lea8Ue Leaders

Chew the BEST in the ·

NEW FOIL P'ACK

..,

"Sure Sign of Quality"

By United Press Jnternatlonal
N.Umal Lea8Ue
G. AB R. H. Pet.
Roae, Cln 124 520 82 181 .348
Alou, Pit 125 469 49 lo8 .337
Jillion, Cln !If :;oll.s7 164 .324
Alou, Alia 139 518 64 180 ,311
McCvy, SF 126 434 69 129 .297
Staub, !lou 140 515 49 153 .297
Millan, Atla
128 489 41 145 .297
Flood, St.Ll32 553 66 163 .295
Jones, NY 128 438 54 130 .297
Bockrt, Chll41 587 86 172 .293
American Leque
G, AB R. H. Pet.
Yotrakl, Boa
136 461 75 134 .291
Oliva, Min 12~ 470 54 136 .289

Ublndr, Min

•FHds
•Seeds
• Fertilizers

Sugar Run Flour Mills
Phone 992-2115

Mulberry Ave.

Pomeroy, Ohio

'717'•' Rugged Cutterhead Keepa
You (Jwpping Fme-AlwaJI!

130 488 52 138 .283
Andrws, Bos
126 458 67 129 .282
DaviUo, Cal
133 491 4li 188 .281
Cater, Oak 127 424 38 119 .281
Horton, Det130 461 511 129 .280
Carew, Min
109 403 43 113 .280
F. Hwd, Was
137 521 70 145 .278
Harrlan, Bos
129 459 72 127 .277
Home Runs
.. Nallmal LeaiUO: McCove)', Son
Fran 32; Allen, 1'1111 and Bonka,
Chi 28; 1L Aaroo, At! 26; Williams, Chi 24.
American League: F. H o ward, Wash 39; Harrollm, Boa
33; Horton, Det 31; Jackaon, Oak
26; Powell, Ball and Freahan,
Dot21.
Runs Batted In
National League: Mc:Covey, San

Fran 88; Santo, Chi 86j Wllllams, Chi 84; Perez, Cln 80;
Allen, Ph1l 77.
AmerlcBD Leap: HarreliOII,
Boa 1011 F. Howord, WBBII 9;
Northrup, Del 80; Powell, Ball
78; Horton, D« 73.
Pltddlq)
Nallonal Lea!Pio: M&amp;rlohal,
Son Fran 24-7; Kline, Pitt 11-1;
GlbiOII, St. L. 2~ Blau, Pitt
13-.1; Wuhbunl, St.L. tu.
Amorlc:.ID Leaaue: McLain, Del
27 ..1; McNally, . Bait 19.&amp;, Culp,
Boa 11..1; Elloworth, Boa 1114;
Tlant, Cleve 19.41.

Mlnne- to earn a RollO' Bolfl
trip, could prOVo .thai It bad
more than luck In i967. T11e
Hooliers IIIII ba\'e 4JIIl'IOI'hack
Harry Gonao and flanker Jade
Butc:her as well U IIIDIOI'OUI
big ...,811
UnOmen. Coach
JobMY Pont believe• doifh and

................,,.

MAC Leaders

May Okay Post
Season Jn •te

-st

J W H S •th

Dies Thursday

daY·

FIGHT RESIJLTS
• By United Preas JDeroatlonel
LOS ANGELES (IJPI) - Bustor Matllla, 220'h , Grand Rapldo, Mich., ~ Amos
Lincoln, 209'h , Los Angelos (10).

vlalted his parenta, Mr.andMra.
Earl Johnion over tho weekend.
He returned to Naahvllle, by
plane from u.nlngton.

VISITS PARENTS

MASON - Mike Johnson, a
atudont at lhe Notional Auto Dl&amp;ael Colleae at Naahvillo, Tam.,

w••

:::S~~e~=Dt~~:.: •HEATING ' . .

. Neftller t,em hal II cllnched
yet, but with the Cards .Jeadlnl
lbo. Notional LoqUe Ill' · 13\'z
pmes llld the Tlgera leadlnl
the American Loa&amp;ull )If alglt
pmea, they're
the inoll
llkely ehnlcea to make the an11111 duaie.
'l1lo grGUI1d rulea for t h e
aeries aleo were worked out at
a meeting held In Ed&lt;ert'a olllco.
'!be llrll two pmes will be
played In the National Lfalple
Clb' Oet. 2 and 3 with Oct. 4
an oil for travel.
Gamsa In tile American Leaguo cJey will be pll1ed Oct. 5,
8 and 7th, 1t neceJaary, they
will be plqed Ocl • .9 and 10 In
tho National Leape clt,y.

e PLUMBING·
e ROOFINC

aht va. George E. and Barbara
L. Harper; erocllt Bureau of Pl.
Pleaaant, aaenl for Holzer Hoipita! FOWidatlon, ria awarded
Wlmenlln the amoont of $375
asa1nat Cbarlea WUUa HlU and
Jo Am Bill, andJuclgmenlln tbe
amount ol $1,599.72 agalnotMargarpt Virginia Ball Colle)'. Default judgmenl was granted tile

llsurecl

u·w1s
IN Mill WY 2-DN

416 Main St.

e Wot., Pipe

•Triple Treek

St.,flll Wln4o••

1

eUT &amp;111ft IAII
eDISNECTAm . - : · ·
.AJID AcoiiPQRLiNE CffDD

FIKtwe

...

Be r11dy

, for the
aew fall

proarams.

Charcoal black stripple finish.
6" Oval Speaker.

22J,i:"hilh, Jdt~Wide, :p~~'deep; 4"cup

naember.~.''·.~~~o":::~N~:.O

illllftl it

I!A"Y

)'OV

to

OWD

G1) Rt.;w aOLLAIID
;ALSO ASUPPLY OF FARIIIAGONS

Follin Line Taolor

·~

·

8

Jamel A, Rhodes ol approved
ln.Ututlonal
prolocta.

tralritna

=entof
Jad&lt;OOO'I tralnlni c - r WU
the Udrd larpat Ill Ohio.

under provlllionl o1 the Manpower nevotopment and Triln1ng (MDTA).,In Ohio Wring fiaea1 1968 whiCh ouded J\110 30
(1968)·
IJiatltutlonal jab trainlng ..;,..aes wore approved tor
8 849 trainees briDIIns tho tocoorooa
1,116 olnce tho

20

w

~

Tat\ LaUDC
' hes
&lt;::ampsaiun for
-e--

S_upreme

to -

. '!be roailltl of a llll'Ve)' CCIII·
cmctocl .-.g 61 parctal ol
thoae wbo complotecl tnlnlng
revealed that four ooit ol five
- a (or BO.t percont)were
able to obtain employ1llent following their training or ,.,_
tralnlni for a jab under tile
provilliona of MDT A.
that under
"One can llfely uy
Udo program there aro lhwlands of per...,, """ba\'emade employable wbo olherwlae
would have to be on welfare or

52

_..., ·-• ...,.-

59
. CHEVROLET

........,

$~00

•Trl!!lo .Oo ot ... - ...·---'~

~

I

.... and~· Even. More&gt; ~
·;,.)

j

~ ~'*"• s2s:ao w111 .. all...,. on tt* raph i•
· metlhhny J.wlrua,..leul!lraM. 01' lilt raplm ·'
f ,f .
,............ ~l.. --~ .,....... which !I ..... , .
.

.

r

(

•'

67 Olds F-85 Club Cpa. • • • • • • -- • • • • ·$2495

352 V8 motor, auto. trans., P.S., white over blue, witb
blue interior.

64 Olds Starfire Coupe·· - • • • • • • • • • • $1395
Now. Nationwide Insurance will
guarantee renewal of auto in·
suranc:e for five years (after each
policy is in effect 60 days). To
qualify. just pay the premiums
and have a valid license for every
driving member of ynur famil) .

La•-

Chlel Jus-

Taltwaa)ll'eby 3,235
938 ; and he

.

.

'

Full power, dark green finish, matching LnL, ndlo and
wheel discs.

64 Ford Fairlane 500 2 Dr.·····-···· ·$1095
V8, auto., radio, W·s-W tires, burgundy finish with belle
vin.vl bucket seats.

Ask me about it.

65 Olds Cutlass Con. • • • • • • • • • • • • • -$1495

Ken Williams

alao endors-the Cleve-

V8 motor, auto., P.S., blue with matchiq irL, radk,.
w-s-w tires, wheel discs.

. P. J. ·Pauley

Bar- Aasod-

WILLIAMS
••• PAULEY

after re--

cel.ving a favorable vote ol 1,-

60 Olds 4 Door___"" _________ $295
VS, auto.

62 Chrysler 4 Door. _________$295

NATIONWIDE

V8, auto.

KARR' &amp;VAN ZANDT
GMAC FINANCtNG

992·5342

OUR

:.'::=:::':~~:

·:

4 DOOR SEDAN, 6 CYL
.- '
AUTO. TRANS.

lema can be prevented by checkIng baollng OQIIpment for prop.,. uljuatmen~ proper ventilation. lifo eomectionl and proper operotlon ol llfetr abut oil devices,.. ho added.
"Anf hoatlnll 8J)pllanco ean
get out ol ~-and should

~~:':Gl=::·~
Inspected regularly/'

be ehe&lt;ktd amually. V - car·

""

GETTING
GREATER

65 Chevrolet

$895 67 Buick

$2,795

$1,495 67 Buick

$2,395

Wlldca4 4 dr. Hardtop. One local.....,., Now Buick Trade-ln.
Not much more than lf2 original cost. Superb conditicn

!llallbu 2 dr. Harcltop. A real "creompufr'lnslde and out. A&gt;JI.omatle ll'lift. Papular Cbevelle Madel on 115" wheelbase.

Grand Sport. 2 Dr. Hardtq&gt;. 400 cu. Inch engine, 4 apd. trana.
New Buick trade ln. One local owner. Extra sharp.

65 Buick

$2,395 66 Mustang

$1,995

66 Pontiac

$2, 195 65 Buick

$1,995

Riviera 2 dr. llardtop. Air c:GIIIilt!Cllled. Buick' a lineal and beat
and thlo en lo extra nice. Fully equipped.

.

V8 Faot Bock 2 dr. Hordtop. New Pontiac trad,._in from ...,.,._
al owner. 4 spd. Irani. Shows best of care.

Bomovllle 2 dr. llardloP. New Poollac trade-In friJID one caretuii!O'nor. Ori8inall&gt;lack finish llka - ·

Chlol Fllher --thefol1owlioi check not to auure lifo,,
ofllcltnl ..,...IIIla d. - · ~

~...a::,w i•. 64 Dodge
_ ir

Wlldeat Custom, 2 dr. Hardtop. '1111s bas one of thellooot lnterlors ol any Buick. It Is beiUiiM 1111 white finish will&gt; black
morklde interior. One caroMioeal owner.

$1,495

$995 65 Chevrolet

Chovalle V8 Station Wagon. Owned )If local teacher. Extra nice
Inside and out.

GT 2 dr llardloP. Shup red llnlah with 1111 vbl11 bucket lnterlw. - a extra good eare b' modeL

there Ia a d - ..,..
eniDI! 11\th cep Ill die ~

. - tile vtnt PIPe. be oun

the - I a cleir !1.debrla.
- Be lUre tloe cb'm)ll,f Ia ·
clean. BJoi!r IIDMika Into the dfl!l- .
~.:~8
· ·111 iDaU IUl'Oit.ll · LaSabte I' ;&amp;, ........ OWDid by .,.eGtcour ...dllnicL Ps. PB
II

IHI,T.

!'1
...
..' I,

;,'
·~·, .:

'•

\
'

V8· Falrlaoo 500 2 dr. llardloP. !prllliJW black flnlah with red
vbl11 ....olatery. Exeoptlonal.

. )

/ ' .

1\

,,

~1fi~i . 63~.F,rd·
· ~~

$895

$895 63 Ford

63

.

.-

-

·~

CI.EARAIICE/

64 Ford

··

.

. ..

-· ..........

DEALS ARE

s79

'

· -

GREAT

5

'

_

Fill' flaca!l&amp;68 die lltiD&gt;IIW')'
Included 38 tnlnlng projoc:ta.
10
Amalll them wero Jad&lt;oon,
couraoa, tnlnlng 4,110 peraooa,
cooling 118,105,6161nalioWanCoa,
$2,551,1811 Ill ""'callonal coot,
totalljl,863,802.
Golllj&gt;olla, one courn, 15
tr-'-' co-"·• •••,440 In ello!raneeo, and •u,~68_ In odoca-

Market Report

Gallon

.

• •

65 Ford LTD4 Dr. H.T. ·····-······ $1595..

their
OQdpment
and
necooaary
ropolra Inspected
made.
uMU¥ home heat:irll prab-

.

..

and $4,646,981 for ·

209 to 181 In a poll by that Bar
Aasoclallon of 1111 practicing lawyero 1n Cuyahoga countY. Chief
Juatlce Taft served as State ROll2141. 2nd
resentaUve rrom CuyahOga Courtn. nun lrom N•tlonwide is on your side.
ey In 1933 and 1934, as )ll'Oildent of the ii1aker Helgbts Board
of Education in 1942, and was
elected to an unexpired term in
the United States Senate In 1946.
Chiol Juatlce Taft loa graGIate of Cleveland Hel&amp;)ltl High
Scbool, of Amherst College,
where he was ele~ to the
ocholarahip fraternlb' Pili Beta
Kappa, anc1 of Harvard Law
GALLIPOLIS, OlUQ,
School wbere he was on the Law
Saturday, Aug. 31, 1968
Review. He holdohonoraryi.L:D.
SALES REPORT of
degreaa !rom Amherst College
Ohio Vll11ey Uveotock Co.
and from Baldwtn-Wallace ColHOGS - 175 to 220 lbs. 19 lege and lo prooenlly oo tho Exto 20; 220 to 250 lbs. 19 to 20; _ . Ofl!!!lve !;!w&lt;;ll of_lh• COllierLight 18 to 20; Fat sows •H to once ·d Cblef· Juatlceo ·ot ·.tht - " '
16; stago 12 to 16; Boaro 12 to United States.
15; sowa and Plga 65 to 100;
-5to16.
CATILE - Stoero 20 to 26.50; Helfera 18 to 23; ~ Beef
20 to 27; Fat CoWl 14 to 18;
camera 12 to 16; Bulla 18 to
22.50; Milk cows 100 to 200.
VEAL CALVES - Tops 35.26; 5ecmds 30 to 3MO; MedAlthoUgh cold weather 11110 may
Ium 25 to 32; Com. and Hva.
be several weeks away, Midh to 28; CUlls 20 to 24.
SHEEP - Ewoa and Lms. 5 dleport Fire Chief Bob Flahor
to 10; Stock Ewes 5 to 10; Fat today urged areo reoldenta to
make lllelr amual llfety chock
~ 5 to 10; CUlls I to 5;
d.
homo healing ecpdpment now.
Bucks 4 to 8; Fat Wethero 5
"Competent lnopectioo ol furto 10..
LAMBS - Topo 23; Stccndo naces, water heaters, inclner·
18 to 22; Light Wte. 16 to 20; atora and room hellera should CUatonl 2 dr. oedan. 6 eyL std. trans. Orlglnallliht blue finDOt be tMt oft," Chief Fllber
Common 14 to 16.
aald. "Plumber• and beating C'CIIl· ish, like new.
trociora normally are bualut
As of Jan. 1, 1968, there ....,... tho flrll cold weather hlta,
were 10.6
automobUes
reglotered In Great Britain.

mnnon

'

m

All OUT SALE ON NEW and USED CARS

SPEC I L'

.

,.. _ ..
· ·· ..............

............... - .. ...... -·

Employment Service a, reported
to Gov rnor Rhocloa "ODe ol
e
·
tlio
1 tile hllb
cent
reoiOOI or
per
&amp;II" of jobs louud for lheae peo1
s the fi.i:t that ..._ - •
P e wa
wny .,.._
trolned for a opeclflc jab and
not placed In tralnlllll just for
the like of training ...

• 1 ~&gt;clolion

atlon

fl:"eal

~ !aeiiWea.

refereno1 Ohio Bar

Taft

11 ·

Court:;;...:"":~. O:."!;,.ecl.;,

2oth year oo tile &amp;!promo Court
and hla slxlh year aa Chief JusUco, Thursday opened hia campalgn for re-eloi:tlon as Chief
Jn•tfce.
Ill the ncent

JU

aald lhll total
lor

Be Made Now

.

oxcoedod the JackiCII

year 1IU $10,208,342, which In·
eluded tl,681,361 for allowance a

Safety Oteeks

. Electric Water Hecitir

management, glvon In

Gold flDiah with matchirc vinyl Int., V8, auto., P.S., racllo,
14,000 actual miles. One owner. New Olds trade.

Chief Justice Kingsley A. Taft,
wbo Ia 65 and now aervlna hi s

up-.5:40 a.m.; Racine LOcks, Elgerellll down 7 p.m.; W, H. ·
9110Yer Jr. up 5 a.m.; Greenup
Locka, IDinols don 8 p.m.; F.
H. Jomotoo and Chllperm down
S p.m.; Rav~nswood up 10:15
p.m.; Etna-Louiavllle up 1:15 a.
m.; Warren llougland .down I
a.m.; Valley Transporter down
1 a.m.; Meldahl Locka, Steve
Click down 10:30 p.m.; Cotion Queen down 11:30 p.m.; Robert G. West up 2:45 a.m.; John
Lelkl Dean down 6:30a.m. ·

·

FISher Urges

992-3635

'

Parto-Soloa-Sorvlco

Geal ldaad
Goat Island, whleh separates the Am or! can lind
Horsellboe )'aDs of Niagara
Flllll, cot Ita name from the
fact that John staadman, a
British colonist, raised goatl
there In the IBtb century.

'

YALlfl~· ·~

Yoor 4-C Dealot Por
Pam &amp; lnolutrlal Equl-ot

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

.,

HARRY MILLER

. ,

POMI!IiOY.'

1

;

Associated Radio and TV.
MAIN Sf,

·'

a;m.j Alton Zephyr down
Lm.j Lock 22, Peggy Downey

•

·:. '·.:' :_, :A'$1{ir'u~~: ,~, OettiJiSI ·.

THOMPSON TRACTOR SALES
992-5101

'

449.95

'&lt;~~!'~;,~w'f""M!f'~~· .

.1.

.'

trained, with CO!IIporablo fill""•

....·_pro•lo•ci•ol•t•ho•38•._ __

..We Locka, Foremost up

:·I

i

Fallin Line Fer
Allis-Chalmers lith Us

12:20 a.m.; Polly R. don I..
m.; Helen z. up 4: a.m.j ·.Mt.
state up 5 a.m.; Fori Doarl&gt;om
up 5:20 a.m.·, Alan R. Merrill
down S:30 a.m.; Prlnc:l)llo down
7 a.m.,· Franklin B. down 7:15
a.m.; JetrerBOII up 7:30 a,m,
omo RIVER - Lock 14, Jeff. 50
Steel R
- boat up 4: p,m.j
anll"f up 6:15p.m.; Unlveraal 011er up 8:25 p.m.; Lock 15, Qaeen
Cl1;y up 2:15 a.m.; OVEC down
7 a.m.·, Lock 16, NatloDII cl&gt;wn
2:25 a.m.; New Martinsville up
5:15 a.m.; Look 17, St. Maeya
don 1:30 a."'; Eastern down
a.m.; Charles K. down 4:25 a.
m.; Bedtjord up 6:45a.m.

Wayae, 1, ef Savuaall, Ga.,
111riaJet lo IIIIeR a eohl.

............. 40&gt;

e R.Y SPRAY

e Camp leN Bath•

=A~Hka:'wER

Jailer aeem1 lo 'be relrea'lq rnm elvllha'l" Mull

ELECTRIC III~TER HEATERS

Arounclnte"""
eflYIAIT
etA.'IW.a

Gl-;

· !llEARLf:BURIED Ill and
llid pau, 11111 parklal

Cl!'olt W1rt01 l\llowoo,o.--'211.00

Roof P•lnt 3.25 pl.

don, Marmet, and Winfield, are
.., tho .UI.

Fcifurlout·

1969
'MODELS

~-

See Us Fer Your 11ai1J Fall Needs

and 13.5 riiJIIIIng 7 loot of roll·
Pt.
24.10; POmoroy-Mason, 20.50; · JllntOO; uo

Cbe'oael&gt;~, .
~Infant

•
Ro1M oJ tr...

Pt. PIHsont, W. Yo.

kstlmal collo, totaiJng $31,769

Galllpollo,

Ball and 1nfa11t aoo, Mrs. DonBOAT MovEMENTS:
aid
Mra. WOllam
GALLIPOLIS LOCKS _ liarQ, Famm
II!Uilrtar, Vf'1Jordalll)oWn .12 :0Sa.m.;BayMrs. Donala E. (lclheeio. Bleb- '"' La Role doom 2:35 a.m.;
ard··
·!lira. MOille. G, Gor- Elilha WOOd doom 3:10 a.m.;
dol&gt;, VI!Ua Hartillf; Sr.,llreama Titan don 4:15a.m.; J. S. Lewllonaker, WUllaln E. Hurley, I
8 30
Mrs. Carl E. Jamoo and Infant s
_ Londoll,
daqhter, Mra.BayLeJnle)',Mro. H. E. Bowleaup &amp;:40 a.m.; Mar, Edpr J, Martin, Mrs. Larry
-•·
~ m
met, J ..~ Green -"" 8 p. .;
Joi!D C, Vroman,
~ 1140
!!aolna;
..,...., Mrl. M1
M. V, PariiOOB, Mra. Wllllaln pey. Le lla C• ~,oarer
-""
: p•
,..._eport;
IS Donna.
too, Mra. Georll" W. Sextoo, m.; Winfield, Dunean Brucedown
Hauck, l'Omtror. Yra. Jeolie LawrODCO v.
M r a.
8 :25 p.m.; E'Doaua Bosworth
~. - - Rt 2 Racine; Mra. Lawrence
Mra. Frank don 9:30 p.m.; SOlve)' down
u.rman A. Ander- Rav•o- IL Zerkle, Henry Dceo, Mrl. 10 ,30 p.m.; David Vld&lt;ers up
wood; ROII"f W, Bl')'llt. lrOIIIon; AIIOD Lambert.
ll:IO P·"'; Morrio llarve)' down

StEAK
..
'HOUSE

SPECIAL OFFER

Fibre

I'Ortar,

Births
Mra. Ronald W• Twyman, ..Rl
1 Vlnteol, oon, 12:36 a.m. Frl-

6202 BK Can1urlon Seri..-Contempo•••Y

.

GAUGES _

TAILE COLOR TV

• lnt•rfor Vlnrl La•••
arwll!na ...l

I.

l
c
R
p(-Rtv
....E1111 1 1 N"'!!E~W~S-j"
Tackson Vocationa enter an r:s)~
:.:)~::
1
1~9 J
b Tr •
c~:;8 :~:a··~= In~ ~~~~.:;:~.t
,.,L.
d ln
· . 11\.rum
· b·er oif J4~:0
atnees .anci. .CloV-elan•d•wi•th•8•,50.~per_
oro;
Pleasant,
~ nlr
~I
111
:·;=.=.~~;~~~!: ~u:,:.;;:O::,!
"!,!:\, ~.s:~ ~ ~r::., lhe
BIG PUSH IS QN

968
1

116 SCREEN .

far Raaflnt

ExtorhN'

c.

Plea"'::l',!::~e~"'

&lt;IQ'; Mra. Wullaln

lboulh 84.; Joim B. Rlllle, 49 Ce... St.; Julllll A, Fallen, Rt 2
'!'atrk&gt;t; The R... Earl V. Cre.,_., Not1hop; Mra. Robert
II. MecOJo, JlldWell; Mrl. Bonlid L, 'rWymNI, Rl' I Vlldl&gt;u;
Mra• .~ ~~. Fome.1'0¥; Mra. R1cbad K. F...,...,
l'olnero)-; Levi E. Aoldbl, Rt.
t i'olntt'QJ; lloOiar&lt;l
Smith,

'PHIL CO

It Ia estimated that a coin
struck of nlcll:el baa an average Ufe of SO yearo.

Scrvbbobla Paint.

'

_

4

\

McGowan Visits in

S.~ni-Gion

••

Pl.
FridaY.
Harold D. Arthur,,Mra. Char' Mra. CArl Aake1&lt;. 128 Porll- lea F. Balle)', Mrs. Wllllaln. L.

:::::::::::::=:::::::::::

ower to their Indictments,
Schoclulod to enter their pleaa
m Sept. 9 at 9:30 Lm. were
Harold R. Ruaaell, Holen Wll"'"'· Fqe Jeffers and Frecler- ·
lck Moumlng.
Herman Lee Boles, illdlcted
for eocaplng from the &lt;OIIIII;Y
jail, will appear .. Sept. 12.
IUs eaae bas been tranaferrecl
to juvenile court !rom circuit
c:ouri.
Mary Joan Trippetl and Jooeph Trippetl will eoch enter their
plea m Sept. 13 at 8:30 a.m.
Coort capias was Ia'""" fill'
Wille_ l'lloljljl _and Wter . La!'ey

t:oally ToUt
If a motorist were to drive
over aD the toll roada, IICI'OIO
1111 the taD bridges and through
all the toll I U D D e Ia In the
United states, he would pay a
total of $164.90 In tons.

'

IICII.

e A.lumlnotlon Paint

e

lloilpital:'~lliiinl~h1&gt;uro

IS AS LOW AS ....................... ..

court capias• were issued tor
two wbo fll11ed to appear to on-

-nte.

• •,

T l NC
EWS

Your dl1111011d ~liP will pia
,.. • llfotlma of pl-ro , , •
lopoclllll ~p ~·. ~ ..

Leu 'fr&amp;de.ln

•

se.Unel, Pl&gt;m•...,-M

Friday Sept 8

..

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.

unroe,
v. unroe,

REPAIR SEIVICE:,

September term ol Mason Coun1;y Circuit C&lt;&gt;uri appeared In
court 'l'hur,.iay morning and

Tonuny McGowan,
a IIOI1ior at the Unlvera!Qo o1
Notre Dame, and aeveral other
collop
toured Huslia,
Finland and Denmark Uda summer. During July McGowan attended the Unlverott,y of Mlcl!lpn.
Tomm,y II the aoo ol Dr. and
Mrs. Thomaa McGowan ol MaSUt. The McGowans' daulhter,
Kay, Ia a aophonloreatSt. Mar)' a
School at Notre Dame.

llklleport 0

DIAMONDS
ABBA .TOY
J.I'ORBVBB

the nine
perama
TueadaY
by tile
grandlndli:tod
jUry ol t h e

MASON -

. ·". , . ,. '· ..

..... -

c.

-FOR- ·

TIFFIN CREDIT FodNSTANT
CREDIT
JEWELERS

PT. PLEASANT - Seven of

Foreign Countries

·' ' ' ,,-

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TIFFIN CREDIT JEWELERS

'"

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Uri. "Mary F. Chlmell, Jack-

Seven of Nine
Show in Court

R.lfOe, ., ' . '

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amount

*

Ucketl.

to

ollonalvo Uno, but quarierllad&lt;
could be a p!'dllem, and aome
1011homores wtn have to come
thi'OOI!h In akUied politlono.

.

In Judgments

NEW YORK (UPI)- Baaeball
Commlslioner Wllllllll D. Eck• ert made it ol!lclal Thuraday:
'!be Detroit Tigert and tile St.
LCJule Cardinali were li•en the
&amp;G-ai&gt;eld to print World ,sertes

flllcknell will be - · but
races a problem 1(1 butl"'ow the
center of the ollenilve lloe.
Mimeaota'a Mlrray Warmalh
..Did 1u'u IDI'Pt 10 . . . lllo...
abould ~vo a lltrOOPr oll"'!!f
with -rt tllllbacklnl from
beth Jim Carier and Barry
Mayer and pethapl 1 11a!llarterbackilll with
gen. Eq&gt;erlence overll11 8hou~d
be aoocl, oxoapl at tackle, and
depth may be lhe SOPhert'
bllll!lll _.,..
Ohio State'l WoodY iiiQ'el
could have hla bell dub In
aeveral - · With I bell ol
VI
clauy sophomore• to fill out hia
returnlni forcea. One of two
rookie a, Rex Kem or Ron
COLVMBUS (IJPQ- Mid AmerMaclejowakl, ml&amp;)lt be the !&lt;111 Collference (MAC) ol!lclals
atar1ln8 !~~arterl&gt;ack. iiiQ'el may oll8j' an Invitation )If t h e
expects to ba•e more speod and Southoro Collferenoo for tho leamore depth and perhaps his guo champions to meet In the
boll runnlnl pme In oome TIIJIPrlne Bowl thlo _,..,
time.
Questfons ooncerned minor lsMI&lt;hlgan, Mlchlpn State and aueo ouch as hotel acco~­
NorthWeltern cou1cl be the dona, )ll'actlce fac:llltles and olhchaiiOJIII'Irl tor a llrll or pme arrangements.
dlvlalm finish. J1uD11 Elllott'a
"OUr ol!lce bao boon lnatructWolverlnes have one ol the Big ed to obtain the anaworo to all .
Ten' • finest rlul'lers in Ron the q.~estious and relate them to
Jo!moon, and tho ol!enao could the athletic dlreclors ao they
get a boool from . sophomore ma.v brief their representative
cparterbacka Bill Berutt1 and presidelltl," Jamea said.
Don Moorehead.
'!be )ll'olidonto must vote apState Laoko Depth
proval before a MAC team can
Michigan Stale . and Dully pari:lclpate.
Dauprty -&lt;Is better &lt;IW'·
A deadline of Sept. 17 waa set
torbaoklng, probably from Bill for the decillion.
Feraco, and the delenae should
The MAC Includes Bowling
be strong. But the ollenlive line Green (Ohio), Kent, Marshll11,
baan't jelled. the otrenalve Miami, Ohio Unlverlib', Toledo
baoklleld bas been uncertain, and Wellem Michigan unlYerliand Dauahorw need• depth tloo.
almoll everywhere. NorthWeotem's Alex Agase expects to
ohow a lllrollger defenoe with
•
•
•
mi
hlo llnobackora all returning
with tough men up rrm\.
Ol!enslvely he'll have to ftnd a
!~~arlerback,
but ahould get
PT. PLEASANT - John W.
good
rumlng from
Chico H. Smith, 55, of 23o7 Jackom
Kurzawskl and Bob Olson.
Avenue, died flllte 181expei:todA move Into the first dlvlolon
ly Thurada.v ooon of a heart atfor Iowa, Dllnols or Wisconsin tack. He become Ill While at
MJUld have to rank as an upaet
In the Big Ten. '!be mini, In work at the Marlette ManufacJim Valek's •ec:ond seaaon, haa . turing and ~aa dead on arrival.·
experience, but .nu give · -·"·llliPieaiOJIIValley Uoopltal; •
size and speed
moat of its
He was born ln pt, Pleasant
OIJI)IXIentl. Depth will be a 00 A)ll'll 15, 1913, a son of tile
problem and InJuries could late William Finley and Mary
destroy whatever hopes the dub &amp;loan Deem Smith. He wao a
bas.
veteran of World War n and a
Iowa might surprise wtth an member of the Plpellttero LGexploolve ollenae baaed on eal 521 of Huntington.
:iuvlvtng are hi• wife, Ethel
quarterbeck Ed Podolak and
end AI Bream and wlnil&gt;ack Akers Smith; a allier, Mra. &amp;1Barcy CJ;ee•. ~ wtll be ·~- McKay, Los Angalee; and
good, which led coach Ray two brother•, Howard, or pt,
Nagel to switch from a wide- Pleaaant, and Raymond Smith,
tackle lix to a 5.: with a rover. of Charlellion.
Many aophomorea will get Into
Funeral service wtll be held
ai:tlon
Saturday In the Crow - Huosell
Wtl~sln's Johnny Coatta Funeral Home with the R e v.
heads Into his aeeood aoaom Galton Boyle, Jr., ol!lclatlng.
with a new ollenao, the otralglt Burial will be In Lone Oak cemT, and a llhllled defeoae. He hal etory. Friend&amp; 1!1.\1' eall at the
more clepth and a etronger funeral home after I p.m. Frl-

~'~~~

Twentieth Stroot Bank In t ~~·
o1 $2, 79UO Bialnot !z.
G. Greer and Judgment bi die .t
mount of $186.10 agal(lll ~
lea J. and Genevieve DIIIUIOl!An order was aioo OlllerQ
PT. PLEASANT - Several plaelng J.yle Moore, PI._,I:l.~J
~ o1 •J·-lt •-'- n1 ba
ant, on three ye&amp;rs PJ'1IUUIUUtt
~rs
,.._..e
ve Moore was found . gullb' b7 II
boon alsnod )If the Coun·
ey Circuit Court ond enlorod In petit jury tor tho lei!)I)IOOia
the ol!lce of the Clreult Court. aault on a Lake CountY, Ohl4
Default judgment waa award- dep&gt;l,y aherlff.
;
eel to tho plalnlilf In the amount
"
o1 $316.4li 1n the civil ai:tlon Or
Hundr.e ds of Cbrlsbnaa &lt;Ill"
~• Bank ol Pt. Pleaaant ols were written In Englan4
~-eo
between 1400 and lllol'
-:
YB. George L. Greane; Judsmenl '
-- 1n tlio o1 $2,uo.ts
IAwi• Repair Service·

Cardinals,
Tigers Get
Series Nod

.,\ This is No Year to Poo Poo Purdue
But II won't be tr13' year for
cmcAGO (UPQ- Thla will be
.,. year fill' ' hopeful Midwest the BUermakero to I'Oo I'Oo
1 football
teama to resort to Notre Dime, Minnesota, India· AmOI Alollso lltall!'s old slogan, na or Ohio &amp;:ate either.
Jack Molleokopf's I'IIJ'Gie
' I'Oo I'Oo l'lu·me.

.IL..Jers
s~~uned
~n:u

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...

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$895 .63
~.· ~d di--'o6ed11Jicoc*llllc~;
~
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~ f.·..., .; .. ' '• ,..~-- :,

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~"!.,"£-."~·

~

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•

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Shopril

,

Ra111~ler

000 4 dr, .-..Now P

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- .. /..a:-1, ~·...._·
y ''!- 'UV"•
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Uaclrado-lnin..lacai...-.A!l
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6 .,. '111~ Dalll Sentinel, A&gt;meroy-Middleport,

o.,

t
fi
D
f1 zrec ory or
' A
Ch h

I

Frlclajo, Sept. 6 1968

.$::X:!:::=:::::::=::::;-.:;:=::::::;:~:;.~:·:::·:::::···:::·~»·-·: :-:·:::::·:.:•::¥~0:::::.:::·:·:-.~
v.;·.' a. m,,• ""'ddl-rt
- . . .....
. . . ........
'"··:r:~
M.J
..._

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~
.nnueroy
Momlrw Worship, 10:45 a, m.;
Prayer
meetirw, 7:30 p. m.
Methodist YOUib FellowBhljJ Sun·

.::
®
·1·

6
:t;,
7~3om~-s~~~~~
meeu.w,.
ot

;L
, ~@!;~~~~@':':&lt;~»=·=·=·!;!,!:,~,:,x,x!~:-,~J :::s:::!i~:~s~:
·'· ALFRED METHODIST Pearl

j·:A. Caito, paltor. -School

.,.t 9:30, u.,.d Dllllnl!or, ~pt.
Worship se"lceo at 10:45 with
the Rev. Casto. Wedne!da.Y evenln,g prS¥er services at 7:45.
...
~ CHRISTIAN SCIENCE Services
~It 315 Main st., Pt. Pleasant,
::Sundays 11 a. Rl.i Wednesdays
8 p, m. All welcome.

month,

_6 P. m,; WSCS second Monday ol

a. m.; &amp;hJa¥ Scln:tl 10·30 a.~- ele, second Th\D'sdlly afternoon.
Youth &amp;ervlce, Sunday; &amp;:30
- ~hoir practice, 1 p.m. Wedfiell ..

P:

m.; ~ every SundaY, 7
ay.
P.m.
..
UNITED FAITH CHURCH of
THE RUTLAND COMMUNITY Nease Settlement, Sunday School

Church - Rev, AmosTlllia,pas- Superintendent, Roy Johnson.
tor. SUnd&amp;)' School, 9:30 a.m.;

YouU. meeting, 6:30, Sunday.

Worship servfce, 11 a.m.; ~
ert Searles, Sunday School So-perintendent; ·Wednesda,y prayer

sYRACUSE F1RST UNITED
PRESBYTERIAN - Rev. Linam
H. Stebbins, pastor. Worship, 9

meeting, 7:30 p,m, Young Peo-..
:~
pies Fellowship Sunday, 7 p.m.;
:·
Sunday night worship, 7:30.
: LOTI RIDGE UNITED METHTHl': DANVILLE WESLEY AN
~ OOIST- Worstrip,ftrsUndthlrd CHURCH- Charles Dozer, pas: Sundays of each month, 10:45 L
tor; Adra SWick, Surxlay School
: m.; secorkl arkl fourth Suoo.ya, Superintendent. Sunda.y School,
~ 7:30 p. m. Surd8J.' School, 9:45 9:30 a. m.; Worship service,
~ L m. Christian EOOeavor, third lO::JO a. ~· Youlh and Junior
::saturday of each month.
youth serVIce, 6:45 p. m. Eve...:
ni'* worship, 7:30. Prayer and
~- ·
praise, Wednesda_y, 7:30.

a. m. Sunday School, 10 a. m.;
Bible Study and pra.yer nrvlce,

t

,.

ftrst Sunday

~

LAUREL CLIFF FREEMETHOm!' CHURCH _ Sunday School
9:30 a. m., morning worshiP,
10:10 L m., evening worshjp,
7:30 p. m.; Wednesday, Christian Youth Crusader a, 6:30p.m.
and prayer meeting, 7:30 p.m.
""""
·
tl
7 p.
~ Th ur~, c 00 1r pra.c ce,
~ m. R. Eugene GUl, pastor; Phil

UNITED FAITH CHURCHNease Sottioment - Robert E.
~lth, Sr., pa.st:or. Sun~ School
S\l'lerintendent Kenneth Matson.
Sunday School. 9:30 a. m.; WOI'o
shiP service, 10:30 a. m. and
7:30 p. m. each Sunday. MJ&lt;I-week
prayer meet.ing, Wednesday, 7:30

w~~ay,

7 p. m.
POMEROY FIRST BAP'!1STCarver William&amp;, pastnr. John
Wlle&amp; Slnlay School Sqperln-

ter.tert. Sumay School, 9:80 a.

m.; Mornirw worship, 10:30 a.
m.; BYF, 6 p, m, Bible study,
Wednesda.y, 7 p, m.; Choir prac ..
tlce, 8:30 p. m, Wednesda.y,
MT, UNION BAPTIST- Rev,
Cecil Cox, pastor. Sunday S.bool
superintendent, Larry Clark.
Stmday School,. 9:45 a.m.;Sund.r
evening worship, 7:30; Wednesda;y pra;yer and Bible study, 7:30
p. m.

TIIlrsday, Fred E. Smith, lay..
leader. Youlh Fellowship, 7:30
p. m. Sunday,

MT.
HERMON
'UNITED
BRETHREN IN CHRIST - Rov.
Menzel Smith, pastor. Sunday
School, 9:30a.m.; Russell ~D­
eer, SttJt.i Alfred Wolfe, asslst-.
anL Morning Sermon 11 L m.,
eveniog sermon. 7:30p.m., alfer..
natirw each Sunday. Class meetlrw 11 a.m., alternatlrw Sunday
mornings. David Holter, c; l a s s
leader. Christian EMeavor, 7:30
p. m. every other SurJ:fay eveni.Jw. Jean Sexson, presldenL
Prayer meeting, 7:30 p. m. every
Wednesday. Board meeting, 7:30
p. m., first Monday of month.

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Mason Area

News, Notes

Gajllaln Nelsoo Re11101da of Morning worship, 11 a. m. EvonAie:xandrla. va. visited h jJJ_ gellsUc. service, .7:30-p_., m .. Blble
mother, Mra. Ca'dlertne SWatzel study aM prayer se~ce, Wednesday, 1':30 p, m, Chester· Tenand brother. Norman, over the nant, pastor. Phone 773-5;133.
weekend.
. CARLETON CHURCH -Kingo~
Miss Alma Duttiing, a pa.Uent
at the Thomas Memorial Hos- bury Road. SUIIlay SchGlol, 9:30
pllal, South Charleston, Is re- L m., Ralph Carl. &amp;IlL Worship
•~• .. 1m
service. 10:30 a. m. ond 7:30 p,
portod as s 1 "61~
proved
.1
Mrs. Mary Nagle and .Mrs. m. alternately. rrayer meeuf1!:,
Wednesday, 7:30p.m,
Wlnlred Mamlng of
Mas v1 !ted the! oiM~ston,
HEATH ME:l'HODIST CHURCH
s.
a
r
o.....r and _Middleport. Rev. Max Donahue,
brotber..fn-law, Dr. and Mrs. paator, Jack Bechtle, Church
~mos B. McGowan.
School Supt. Church School, 9:30
· and Mrs. James Loyd a. m · Worship service 10·30
and family or Marion, Indiana
·'
'
•
spent a three week vacation visRUTLAND CHURCH OF THE
ttfng her brother and sister-in~ NAZARENE - Rev. Lloyd D.
law, Mr. and Mrs. CUrtis Me- Grimm, Jr., pastor. s ~ n day
Daniel and family at Jenkins- School, 9:30 L m.; morrung wortown, Pa.; her sister and Cam- ship, 10:30 L m.; yoong peo;Ples
Uy, Mr. and Mrll. &amp;anley Saun. service, 7:30p.m.; evangehsUc
ders and family at Columbus, ser~ces, 7:30 p. m. Wedne&amp;day
and Mrs. Loyd's parents, Mr. everung service, 7:30 p. m.

J.
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j
.,I

and Mrs. CUrtis McDaniel, Sr.
and other relaUves in the area.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Jetforo and daughter of Bellaire,
Ohio vi&amp;ited over the weekend
with Miss ~lla Gress.
Mrs. Ople Cobb ia spending a
week visiting In Charlestoo.
Mr. and Mrs. Edwin ltouah or
Cllarleaton visited aver t h e
weekend with his pareato, Mr.
and Mro. Johnn_y Rouall, New
Haven.
Mlao Kelly McCallister &lt;1 the
Rellab!iltBdoo Center at Institute, W. Va. visited over t h e
wwkend with Mrs, Demlo Duddill&amp; Mrl. Juanlt. Ward 11JC1

Mrs. Gardner

.........,,, a patient at Thomaa
iloaJI!tal, SOUib Cbar-

...,_Jal
1.-,

Corall cu live out ol water
OIIJ¥·fl'l'-.tllol1
of time.
•',-

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BE1liEL UNITED
METHODIST- Worship, s~ond
and fourth Sunday, 10:30 L m.;
first and third Sundays, 7:30p.m.
Sunday School, 9:30 L m. Yooth
Fellowship, 6 p. m. each SUnday
at TI.C)pers Plains United Meth~
dist Church.

38 Report for
Physical Exams
PT. PLEASANT - Thlr\Y
eight _persona registered at the
local draft board lett Wednesda.Y by chartered bua for pre~
Induction ph,yolcal examination•
at Aahland, Ky.
RfllOrllng were Larry T. Adkins, Jolumle R. Barnette, Ray
P. Boswell, I..arry T. Ball, James
R. Fleldo, Howard E. Patterson,

Dies Thursday
PT. PLEASANT- Mrs. Margaret Lynn Garmer, 76, ol2603
Llnc:oln AVO!&gt;Je, died Thuratiay
at her home,
She wao the daughter o( the
late George and Mary Ellen Rodgers Davis. Her bullband, WOllam, J&gt;l'eceded her In death In
1966.
~rvivlng are two daughlero,
Mrs. JoSOI&gt;hlne Thornton, at
home, and Mra. A. D. Nutter or

eight grandchildren.
Funeral service will be held
&amp;~~~day 2 p.m. In the Chapmallwuc:ox.., MortUary with the Rov.
Charles Frum ol!ldatlng. Burial
will be In Lone Ook cemetery.
Friends ma.v call at the mortuary lifter t p.m. Frlclajo.
.•

',\
7 -

.

•

THE Rt!l'LAND 'METOODIST
CHURCH • Rov, C. J. IAmloy,
pi.ltor. Church SChool, 9:30a.m.;
worship servlce, 10:30 a. m.
RACINE ME1110DIST :- W.
Dale McClUrg, pastor. SurMlll
School, 9:30 a.m.; Worship 11erv·
4

ice, 10:30 a. m.; JUnior choir
praetlce, We&amp;lesday, 3J20 p. m.i

Senior choir practtee, 'J1wraday,

GJ·llnrkl.url luVI'Ii lo li~h. S..~rl'lly, l think hl' lik"~ to U.lk ubullt it l•[Uillly as w.~ll. Ht: sJ~tnd!l hu0111
wltll hl6 friend11 WI'I,'Uing the !11'0~ :tnrlt~mH .. r "llnJ.(Iing." Tht other day I o~erhea1d a len !{thy t'Ontru~rs)'
abuu\. Uw i~Ct~t Jllat't' loll~. t;rumlrhlllt•nrkd the whuh: matWr with the~ wurd11 of wit ar.d wiMdom, "If
you uk me, the best 8JM!t tu /Ish i~ oot tJiu1~ whet't: the li~h IU't--J&gt;O ld'M w:t u!Jin~e!"
This !l)ledal bl'ltn&lt;l ur humor gn:11tly appm1.led u. 11ll !Jf his friend~ 11nd it remaint•l in my minrl long
after they h11.d left. It 111.'f:med tilllnHW"r tho~~e n11.ture l!oVel'l! who d11.im th11.t thl!y t:ll.fl wonhiJI &lt;;uti out uf
doorM ll.fl wt:H all in chtll'l.'h, ~'u1· tt:rtainly, the hL"'It ~IK•t tu wurshiJI (_d,.-/ i~ wh•m: IOIJ!I is.
'
Won1hiJ1 melllnM not rmly m1omt•nb .. r ;oduration an&lt;IJll'lli~ liut aiNU lhiJUJChl~ t:hannek..-1 tnw11rd God.
The Chur'Ch has the l1vin.l( J!l't"'"twe &lt;of t.he l.111'd 11n•l in~Jlit-e~ llpiritulll lh&lt;oul(hts thnmgh hymn, prayer
11nd litany.
Yes, lhe l1e~l JII:K~: lo lift UJt th~: h~:&lt;~rt i11 in thl' huuse ,r C1KI
(;... , ... ~, 0~&lt;1 ~ ..., . , ~ -·~'"""!

SYRACl5E CHURCH OF TRE
NAZARENE -&amp;v, A. E. Miller,
paotor. Robert Stewart, Sunday
S.bool Supt. SWlday Scbool,
classes for all agel, 9:30 a.m.;
Momlrw Worohlp, 10:30 a.m.;
NYPS Sunday 6:30 p.m.; Evangellotlc Service Sunday 7:30 p.
m.; MidWeek Prayer meetl!lf
Wedneoday 7:30 p.m.; Mloolonary Mooting oec:ood Wedneoday
of ~b month 7:30p.m.
.EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN
CHRIST - Eldon R. Blake, pastor. SundaY Scbool, 10 a. m.,
Winnie Hol&amp;fnger, supt. Mo~
11ermoo, 11 a. m. ~ aervclo Chrlotlan ED!eavor, 7:30 p.
m•• Mrs. 4Yd&amp; Chevalier, pl'elli"'
delL Sow service and oermon,

Mrs. Homer llolter, selected
as one or two ootat.andlng gar.
denera in Region 11, Ohio Association of Garden Clubs, wu
presented a certltlcale and a
planter during Wedneode,y night'•
meeting of the WUdwood Garden

ztmla11 in a clrUtwoOd container.
Blue ribbons for &amp;rr'I"&amp;Omtllls
oxblblled at the moetlng wtol to
Mro. Homer Holter, Mrs. Ken

Club.

ribbonl tor apecimen11 were awarded to Mrs. Ecllton Hollon,
Mr1. 1-UrJm Fisher, 111d M r 1.
Homer Holter.
Ideo. Mlltoo lloudaobell re:
vieWed the book, 11The Gl017 of

The meeting was held at the
home ot Mrs. Dwight Milhoan

wltll Mrs. Wald Windon ao tile
aslilltlrw hostess. Plans were
made for a therapy program to
be presented at the Gallipolis

&amp;ate -

... Oct. 2t and

a &lt;OIIIJilUIIIcatlon regarding the
program was read from the hospital therapist.
Mrs. Karl Grueser, president,
opened the meeting with t h e
pledge to the flag. Several po.
ems, ~~erlpture from the Psalma
and j)l'ayor were Included In the
dovotlona presented by Mri. Clllford PhllliPII. In response to roll
call members gave a gardener' a
review - the do's and don't' a·
prdenlng.
Featured on the program was
a ~onstratton onarranglngred

,o;.., ""· lu , "'"'~"" Vo

''

or

before polling. Pllllta llhould not
bo polled too deepll and should
be kept out ol &lt;llrecl sunlight.
Tlpo on

f!lll'denlni

In Septem-

Nease, Mrs. u. S. Nelle, Mra. ber were given by Mra. Neaae
Ecllion Hollon, Mro, Denver Hol- wbo ~~~&amp;~ested plant!Dt&lt; bulbs for
ter and Mrs. Vernon Neaoe.Biue oprlng blooms, putting Madonna

a Tree, u b1 B. K. Boom and
H. Klelan. 9te noted that troeo
ban a crown at the top, while
shrubs haYe a crown near the
boll&lt;&gt;m, and emphaa12od the extreme care necessary in pruning treea. ~aklng
growth
'characteristics~ Mrs. Houdaahelt
commented on the varloua patterns.
Mrs. U. S. Nease used, 11 How

IDles

1!1

the ground with dirt

two taehea above the crown, and
eontlmting the spraying and dullIng program o( . lhlngo In
bloom.
A dessert course waa aervad
b.f• the hostess. Mro. Kenneth
Harris """ the door prize.

Contribution

or

Made by Class

A monthly oontrlbuUOh I o r
eventual
purchese of the BodCuttinga, •• as her topic. 91.e uld
to lnaert a leaf culling In damp ford School ptoper\y, which will
vermlcullle and let It remain bo convertod Into a ....ch camp,

to !lart Atrtean Vtoleta I r o m

there until the culllni hao rotted and leaves otar1 8ppeariDg

wao pledged lining a meeting ol
the Golden RuleClass&lt;1theA&gt;meroy Clllrch of Christ.
Meeting at the clllrch paroooage with Mr. and . Mro. Robert
Woods as holta, the cla1111 also

Mrs. Parker Installed
D of A Vice Councilor .

voted to

p~rchaae

a junior choir

robe. Mrl. Harold &amp;nlth, president, -.cledthemeetlngwhich

Berllla Parker was lnslaDed

S~t. ~or~ w:rshlp: 10 :3~r~

service, 7:30 p, m., sec:orl! and
fourth Sundays.
BETHANY UNITED ME1li0DIST CHURCH - Rel', Paul A.
SeUets, pastor. Mornirw worship, 9:30 L m.; Sunday School,
10:30 a. m. mythe Thetas, SUpt.
Youth Fellowship, 6:30 p. m.
CARMEL UNITED METHODIST CHURCH "- ·. Rov. Paul A.
Sellers, pastor. Sunday School,
9: 30 a. m.; Wayne Roush, ~t.
Morning worship, 10:30 a. m.,
secon:::l an:::l !ourthSundaysofeach
month.
Evening evangelistic
service, 8 p. m. seccmi and
third Sunday each month.

The Dally S®tlnel, A&gt;meroy-Middloporl, 0., Friday, Sept, 8, 1968

Regional Recognition Won
As Outstanding Garden~r

With th.e hope It wW, In some measure, toster and help sustain that wbich ta good Jn tamt1y
and community llfe, thlsfeaturelsapolllloredbythe bualneaaftrms &amp;lid orgaadiat!ona whoae names
appear below. 1

opened wlthJ&gt;I'ayerbyMr. Woodo.
Mr11. Gene Eskew was at the organ for hymn alnglng.
A Bible quiz wao led by Mro.
Louis Osborne and Mro. Elwood
Bowers had other entertainment
for the group. Prlzes were won
by Mrs. Smith, Mrs. Eskew, and
Mr. Woodo.
Rofreohmtlllo were served.b.Y
the ho!-1&amp; tothosenamedanc:IMra.
Walter Kemecly, Jr., Mrs. Denver Kapple, and Judy, Roberta
and Donald Wands.

Netlle Royea for plc:IOip.
The picnic of the past

as otce councllor by Margaret
counseldenabel, d~ state cou·~ ellors ot Dtltriet 13 was andlor, at a ll'"'tlng of ~~- noun&lt;od for Sop!. 15 at the Clotus Coundl17, Dauahtert &lt;1 Am- tan Park In Martella. Aloo anerlca, Moolday night at the IOOF DOUIIcod was a meetlngofthepast
hall.
·
c:ouncllors of Theodorus Coundl
During the mee11ng prealded 17 to be held on Sop!. 12 at tile
over by Dalla Staltl, oouncllor, home of FAna Reibel.
the charter WBB draped lor LeA report wao g(Yen ·by Mrs.
ana La Brun ol Baltimore, Md.:" Haye11 on the recent state sea~
wbo oervod u national .c:ound- sl011 held In Columbus. 9te oblor, 1940 - a, and as tress- sened that Mia a Laura Laurer &lt;1 the ••ttmal home, 1946- Baltanux of Clnclnnl.ti Is tile
is
58, and Ellzabetll QdniiD, atate new alate ooundlor and that her
eecretar1 aod a p1.1t atate coun- motto Ia ••Work Topther,'' her
!lDO..
alopn, "Remember tha Goldeo
Piau were made for a rum- R1ite," and her goal, to keep
mage aalo to . bo ·held OcL 3..&gt; down suspension, and to rememandlhoHhevingrummagetooon- ber the home for the aged and
: trl- are asked to contact MrL orphano. A mora complete re- &amp;~~~day haa been designated ao
· Stahl, Mrs.. Seidenabel, or Mn. port on the state meeting will ''Back to Sehool Day" at the

Sunday

HEINER'S BAKERY

HOYT'S SOHIO SERVICE

l'

... .

PHONE 992-3284

MIDDLEPORT

l

LYONS MARKET

GOF.GLEIN READY-MIX CO."

11

·
·
E ''"'~··

MEMBER OF THE BIG 3"

GENERAL MERCHANDISE
TUPPERS PLAINS
PH. 667-3280

. .. ·-··~«,.,00. JD'flillsd~.Ak.a.~l!ll!llQl
~eport C.!!"~M"! . t~!..~,..
meet1ns
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BOGGS EQUIPMENT

TINY'S FOODLAND

SALES - ALLIS CHALMBERS - SERVICE
FARM- INDUSTRIAL- LAWN- GARDEN
TUPPERS PLAINS

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R. H. RAWLINGS SONS CO.
ORIO'S OLDEST DODGE DEALER
MIDDLEPORT, ORIO

OHIO VALLEY BAKING CO.
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ATHENS,·O,
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•uac Gl¥el' oewlrl Oar larp
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oi . . . . OIU'd. . . . .
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•117

WILLIS ANTHONY

LEIVING COAL COMPANY

PLUMBING AND HEATING
992-2550
240 LINCOLN ST.

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MIDDLEPORT

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ARNOLD'S SOHIO SfRVIQ

SWIMMING

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LOWEST PRICES
Ill THE AREA

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ATHENS RD.
POMEROY, 0. 99Z-1098
A FRIENDLY PLACE TO BUY

FAMILY RECREATION

: Calendar·:
FRIDAY
SOUTHERN BAND Boostero k&gt;
sponaor dance Friday following
ftrst home Cootball game with
North Galla at the Jr. High
School; "The Next In Une" to
furniah music.
BIG AFTER Footboll Game
dance paJ'\Y will be held at the
Wahama High School auditorium
followlog the Wahama • Marauders football game. Dancing Crom
9:30 p. m. to midnight. The Ja,ys
wUl emcee.

LEGAR

,

Monument Co.

.

pr .;,..,.,1 r Non-1 a
.MDrluMnt Co.

· ·~
•.'" 1::-

,.

21 Y•or• ~XJ*I·~
0..1•• W. L..llf', Ownet·
O,en 94 W'~lrSurlllleya &amp; Ev•ni"'Ja

,260 W, Moln

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

tho next
of the c:ouncll. aa£3.
It wao noted that Grace stace · '!11e observance wiD be held
remains a patient at the Kimes at the 9:30 a.m: &amp;~~~day ocbool
SATUIWAY
Convalescent Home, Alheas, that hour and all children of school
RIGH
SCHOOL
danceparly Sat.Winona Cook II lU at home, and age attondlng wiD be preoenled
urday,
Pomeroy
Junior H lg h
that Edith Heines Ia much lm- a gift, Teacher&amp; will aloo bo
auditorium
from
8:30
to 11:30 p.
J&gt;l'OVod. Mra. Hayes wu con- recognized. George Hargrave&amp;,
graltllaled on a new gnndallll, ~ ol the Meigs LO- m. Jays will emcee.
born ·to Mr. and Mrs. WWiam cal School District, will speak
HOMEMADE ICE CREAM soHa.ves. It wao reported that Et- briefly lining the service.
cial. S&amp;Ddwiches also, at st. Paul
Lutheran Church, beginning at
Ia Lemley's 1011 rei! 18Yeral feet
11 L m. Saturday,
while painting oo the A&gt;meroy
brlclp, but escaped serkluo InSUNDAY
jury.
ANNUAL HOMECOMING at tile
Rock Springs United Methodist
1be Rev. Arthur D. Barham, . Church, Sunday; blsket dinner at
a retlrod minister, Is serving noon, followed by a program beas IIUPPil mlnlller lor tho A&gt;m- ginning at 1:15 p, m.
ANNUAL HOMECOMING at
ero,r First Bapllot Church.
1be Rev. Mr. Barham, who the l..atWsvllle Church Sunday.
palllorod a . dalrch In Newark Basket dinner at 12 noon; spec30 years, wiD serve tho local tal singing at 2 p, m. Open to
church .lrill tho pulpit II ffilod public,
by a fUll-limo mlnlller. The Rev.
MONDAY
Mr. Barham hal been speaker
MEIGS SALON 110, 8 and 40,
Mra. RQmoDd IOoea, Mrl. at the clllrch for tile past two meeting 6:30 p, m. Monday. home
'111omas Darlll, and Mrs. Joho &amp;~~~days.
of EUDice Brinker, Bas han Road..
Vroman were holtea~ea for a
CHUIICH COUNCIL, Sl Paul
meellng &lt;ll tile Auxiliary &lt;1 the
ARRIVE FOR VISIT
Lutberan Church, Monlly, 8 p.m..
Middleport F I r e DoparWenl
MASON - Muter ~. Daold at tbe ehureb..
Weclnelday tdiitt II lboliremea'l Crockelt olthe Air Corps, Mrs.
POMEROY GARDEN CLUB,
head41w'ters at vlllap hall.
Crocketl, and
t:ldldron ol Monda.v, 2 p. m. at the home of
cameo l!eH plOJod .mini·the Frankfort, GertDatiY arr!Yod here Mra. Harvey Van Vranken.
oodal wenllli:
the
prize m w.meoc~e,y· evening for a vtalt REGULAR MEETING, Meigs
was Ill Mu. Darst. The irllh ber mOUler, Mrs. Lee Rlcl&gt;- Cha&amp;ller DAV, 6:30 p.m., bmch
. -110a ""od I dellerl ardnl IIJCI with Mr. and lolrL pre 1
buslneaa se&amp;ston at
others, 11lere were lira• Ruaaall Copehart. Miller ~. 7:30 p.m. Veterans &lt;1 all wars
E. ~eJ(Inloy, Mro. James Crodletl hal roasallnod lo. lnvllod; Jaeob TuJIIer, coiiiiiiiDIIDonlels, Mrl. · Robert McEihln- aa Air Bua In TexaL
er.
117, · Mro. Bob B,yar, and lllrL

rison B. Roe, Ray E. Hoffman,
R"" E. Hollman, Dale 0. Birchfield, Charles R. Leport, Robert
L. Patterson, ldichael L. Cornell, James W. Hazlett, Larry A,
Stephens, Ronald L, Bartoo,
Charles R. Long, Tlmoti\Y L.
Bl&amp;sell, Leonard W. Lee, Jr.,
Bllll R. CO&lt;hran, LewlaF. Cape.
hart, Jr., Steven R, Dorenber-

a, Appt.
,

,

Pe!Mf'o;

iour

..a dl¥&gt;r

:una:

c:our•.
o.

NOI'IIllll w~~rla.A

~EN ,F~NKLIN' STORE

.

MillS Nancy Cross, niece ot
the bridegroom, will be tho Dower girl, and Phillip Thompson,
brother of the bride, will lx'
tho rlitg bearer·
Guests will be registered by
Mrs. Ronnie Black and assist-.
lng at tile reception which will
!ollow the ceremony In t ·h e
church soetal rooms will be Mrs.
Emerson Jone1 and Mrs. Rob-

ert Haley.

ENDS EUROPEAN TOUR
MASON
Mrs. Mary E.
Capehart, MallOn, guidance counselor at Wahama High Scbool,
has returned from a six and onehalt week European tour which
covered 10,000 miles with mem.
bers of the NaUonal Association
of Sbtdent Councils, and faculty
advisors. !ile returned &amp;mda,y
evening by jel ID Kennedy Airport and Crom there to Dulles
Airport and on to Charleston.
The Niagara River, which

connects Lakes Erie and On·
tario, flows north.

turned from a week' 1 vacatloa ln
Florida.
Mra. Myrna Malg Jordao Utd
daughter of Columbuo were weekend gueatl of her parenta, Mr.
and Mrs. Bradford 1\leag.

Mrs. Lee Kraua•

Concerned about the plight ol
the people o( the . Appalacldan
area In Kentucky, she cOIIectecl
and several
oupervtsed
dllllrlbution
ol
too&amp; the
of clothing
and
household articles avor the past

aev.eral years.

Folmers Announce
Birth August 29th
Ide. and Mrs. William Folmer of New Haven, W. Va., are
llllllOWlclng the birth of their
first child, a son, named Mlchael Todd, Aug. 29 at St. Jo..
Hph Hospital, Parkersburg.
Va. The Infant weighed eight
pounds, three ounces.
Mr. and Mrs. Laland Kirby
o( New Haven, and Mr. and Mrs.
George Folmer of Pomeroy,
Route 3 are the granclporento.
Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Cumlng, ham , Pomeroy, Route 3, are
greal-i!randplrenls.

'111e celebraUon was oponoorod by the People's Joomal, a Ioc:ol newopaper at Boonville. EDtertatnment was provided by
Hank WOllam a, Jr.
Attending tram the area were

Mu. Krauu• llJJblnd IDCI .-.,
Bobby; her bnJthor and

Capehart, of Mu:::ll; ~ II.C.
and bnllher~~aw. Mr. and lira.
Frod IIA&gt;MdJawn, " " - • ...
a niece, Mro. Dlano Salt f/1. C.
lumbuo.
'

FLOWERS
FOR ALL OCCASIONS :

,~~~~~~~~~~
- . ..........
Y7.1. •~.,

NIGHT_,,

1)11

Poml!roy Flo- Shop
w. M•ln
lrULLARD

Introducing

w.

TO SPEAK SUNDAY
Dr. Lester Roush o! GaUipolis will be the guest speaker at
the 10:30 a.m. &amp;mda.Y service
at tile ldiddleport First Unllod
Presbyterian Church.

Complete Line Of
School Supplies
DICTIONARIES
NOTEBOOKS
SLIDE RULES
And Otho• Supplioo

CJIU!!&lt;;li, AND OFF1CE SUPP~
MJilllLEPORT, 0.

992-2U!

i'

'',i

,

'

,. ,

. ,,
...

...

I

.

to

POMEROY

Grand To Give, Great To Own
Wyler lncaftex thrives on heavy ·duty wear, while its styllnJ
shines at the smartest affair. The inside secret on it1l pradsion
performi!II)Ce: the exclusive lncaftex balance wheel, IUiranteed
against shock for life-replaced ffill. it ever broken.
For men: Wyler makes handsome watches that are guaranteed
waterproof as Ions as crystal is intact. genuine parts ultd.
Starting at $29.95. Wyler offer$ uncompromising qub~ty. out·
standing value.
See our Wyler speclllll, today.

e

Ordinary balance whetl
- rigid spo~es rtla~
shocks stral1bt to wilal
bBhtnct m~chanism.

~ler lntafleJ balance ~
wheel G·I-V-[ -S with
lhock ... '111ranlnd lor
life a1'mst damage

MIDDLEPORT
BOOK STORE
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

Every one of these
()8 Fords must be
sold. Now!

I/ .

/~

. S.~i YOUR • • •

_,,. MOTOROtA .DEALER
.;- -••• - ' •. 1i

POMEROY

Como ~--low Multang ~
can go. Opliona reduCed, too.

••

ger, Roy L, Mccarty, Bruce M.
Nlberl, Buddy E. Kearno, E1za
R. Taylor, La......... E. Sldonotrlc:ker, ldichael L. llndpra,

.

·.

and Ewell L. Turley.

A soft-shelled crab is one
which has very reeeully lllod
ils shell and has not bacl Ume
for the new one 1o harden.

' ,.

'

"

al•·

tn.Ja:w, Mr. and Mrs. Jtutllll

Big stocka mean you get a big choice 01
belt-NIIIng Multangs, Torino&amp;, wagons
•ncl Fool LTO'o. Immediate dollwuy. And
111o pricol of tho ""''I Come on Inwe'"' dealing.

HliiteiHI lbr tbe &lt;J.IIHIOIIng 'IIIU be Mrs. B,yer, ifrL
Jlem'll · Long, and Mrs. L1m

'

ATrEND TRE ~CH OF YOUR.,CiiQJCJ;;

Black.

and Dana I!olln of Akron """'
Labor Day 1111est1 of Mrs. Welby Whaley. n.., aloo vlllled
with Mr. and Mrs, Dana Howell.
Mr. and Mrs. Cllf!ord PhilUps spent the hoilclajo weeketid
In Bellefootalne visiting Mr. and
Mro. WUIIam Nea10 and fam.
Uy. 'l11o Phllllpo recootl.1 r&amp;-

MASON -

(Belty Copehart) rormerll &lt;1 Ma1011, now ol Howland CorDers,
.Ohio, waa hooored at a eelebraUoo In - ' l l e , Ky., SIDclajo when aile W&amp;l COmrnlloiCIIlod a Kmbu:ky Colonel, Stepherd
&lt;1 the HWs, Hmorary Colonel
ot the State Pollee, and Admlr.al &lt;1 WatentliYS &lt;1the Natural
ReiOOI'ceo IJeilt.

At Village Hall

MlDDLEPoRT BOOK STORE

REXALL ·DRUGS
WE FILL ALL DOCTOR'S PRESCIUI'TIONS
~M
POMEROY, (1,

ter

Mra. Sam Bolln of AUtena,

For Appalachian Concern8

MEIGS COUNTY WOMEN'S
~'llllm .. ,'l'emP!I'I)!)«! , .u~
A&gt;meroy U n I t e d Methodist
Church, 7:30 Friday evening.

~-

Clarke, Harry D, Grimm, Robert M. Becket!, James G. Hoi!.
man, Robert M, Schultz, Mare
Weaver, OUs R. VanMatre, Har-

ceremony at 2:30 o'clock In the
Middleport Clurch of Chrlsl A
halr-bour &lt;1 ooptlal muolc will
he j)l'esented by Ides. Rex 9tenefleld, organist, and Mr. Vernon Weber, vocalist.
Miss Beverly Thompson, sisof the bride, wlll 11erve a11
maid of bonor and the brldoomaida wtU be Miss Debbie King,
Miss Diane Holliday and M11111
Sterry Lambert.
Attendlng the bridegroom wiu
bOhlsbrother, Mr.ArthurCross
of Athena, aa best man. Usher&amp;
wiD be Mr. David Ashley, Ide.
Fllis My era, and Mr. R o n n l e

}
(.fersonal Notes.:]

Auxiliary Meets
Cllt/iiiQ 'Crilfllll
ti 011r ()wll... ··

... -..
....no,._-...
.,... _...,
..

Lincoln -

ROYAb OAK PARK

::·'·s~~,i~'l"''''·'':::,,,,,,,,,,·r:::

·Completed plans are being
lllllOIIIIcod lor the &amp;ulclajo open.
church wedding of Miu Glorla
Thompson and Mr. Ancll Croos.
The Rov. Raullln Moyer will
read vows of the double ring

JPomeroy...

Honors Glven Mrs.. KrauSS;. ·

At Church Service

BAKERS OF HOI.SUM BREAD
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

MIDDLEPORT, ORIO

.PRODUCERS AND DISTRIBUTORS
OF RIGH GRADE COAL
WEST COLUMBIA, W, VA.

Mro. Jolin Vromaa enterod I!olxor lloopltal 11urode,y .,.S wu
achedUied for &amp;urpry thla morn~
lng. Ror graadson, Jolin, " Ill
11ta¥ with bla uncle and aunt, Mr,
and Mrs. James BrawingtDn, W..ln&amp; her hoopltallzallon.
Mrs . .tames Buchanan, ·whoremaiDs a patient at {16lzer Hoapltal, undorwaatJiddfllonal omorgency 1111rgery Tuooclajo.
Mr. and Mro. Thomao Darst
and 1011, Crall, will spend t h e
weekend In Vernon vlelllng Ide. and Mrs. Richard Weir.
Greguey HQea, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Cllf!ord Hoyos, spent
the past week In Columbus vlolllng his uncle and aunt, Mr. and
Mrs. Russell Balnum. They took
him 1D the stale ralr. Gregory
was relurnod home Monday by hlo
reladves and remained tor a
short vlalt with Mr. and Mra.
Ha,vea and other relatives. other
recent visitor&amp; ol Mr, aDd Mrs.
Ha.ves wore Mrs. Loring Taylor
and Mill Effie Pi-Ice of St. Albans, and Mr. and Mrs. Charle11
Wooda, Mro. Nina Robln801l and
Mrs. Clara Follrod ol Alfrod.
Mark and JeMifer Gwalclow•IIY have returnod to their home
near Cleveland following a preocbool visit herewith their great.
grandmother, Mr11. Harry Mill&amp;,
and grandplrents, Mr. and Mrs.
Russell Mills. Their tather,
Leonard Gwalclowlllly, c:ame for
the children.

Announce
Plans for
Wedding

~r===:::::=::::: =:=:::::=:!;!;!;!;:;::=:=::;:;:;:;:;::=:=::;:;:;::===t~

Pastor To Speak

RAY RIGGS, INC.

MARK V STORE

Special

Day for Nazarenes

WEST MAIN ST.
POMEROY ,0,
SUPPORT THE CHURCH OF YOUR CHOICE

BAKERS OF GOOD BREAD
HUNTINGTON, W. VA.

U NI T E D

METHODLST - Rov. WerlleU
Stutler, ]:8stor. Sunday School,
9 L m.; Kenneth Wlggena, Soc&gt;l
Worshlp serYice, 10 L m.

Russell K. McDaniel, Jesse D.

Dalo.
011 Moadal, while In Charloa- JaduDrvilta. Fla.; one 1011, wn •
.tun, Mrs. Dudding, Mra. Ward !lam L., ol Point Pleasant, and
aad 1011 visited Miss A I m a

MINERSVILLE

SOUTH

P.m.

7:30 p, m. Rustler Claso
meeting, rourth Friday &lt;1 oath
monljl at 6 p, m, Wnloyan Sorv·
cle Guild, fourth Monday &lt;1 eacb
month, 7:30 p, m.; JUnior HIP.
a. m.; Worshl,p, 10:25 a. m, MYF, 4:30 »- m. each SundloYi
Youth choir rehearsal, Monday, Senior Htgh MYF, 5:30 p. m.,
6:30 p, m. Mrs, Marvin Burt, each Sunday.
director; Sonlor choir roheorsal,
PORTLAND METHODIST Thursday, 7:30p.m., Mrll. Paul Rev. W, Dale McClurg, pastor.
Neue, director. Thursday, all Sunday Scmoi, 9:SO a. m,, Wordll3, Busy Bee qullting party In ihfp service, 7:30 p. m.
church aoc:lal room.
OAK GROVE METHODIST RUTLAND
CHURCH
OF W. Dale McClurg, paotor. Sunday
CI!RlST - ~ w, Carter, pas- Scbool, 10:30 a. m,; Worship
tor. Sunday School, 9:30 a, m.; service, 9:30 a. m., first and
Communion and worship service. third Sund.B.Y each mor6.
10:30 a. m,; Prayer mootiQ!,
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIS!' Thursda,y, 7:10p.m. V, lL Bra- Pomeroy - Harrt&amp;onville Road.
loy, SUpt.
Eugene Underwood, PIIIDr• Ke,_
CHESTER ~E:l'HODIST Ctuu"ge ' nell! Grover, SIJnday School ~
- Rev. Pearl A.. Casto, pastor. ~ School, 9:30 a.m.; WorCHE8TEih Worship, 9 a, m.; shiP service, 10:30 a. m. &amp;Jnr!Q
Suuda.y School, 10 a. m.i Mrl. eveni~ service, 7 p. m. Prayer·
Waid Spencer, Supt. FLAT- 11\beting, Thursday, 7:30 p. m.
WOOD5: Clurch School, Sunday,
11 a.m., John Bally, SUjJI. Wor·
ST, -JOHN'S LUTIIERAN-IIrl·
ship service alternates wltll Al· an El1!01, pulor, MorniJJII - ·
tred and Flatwoods. Services ship, 9 a. m.; s.n:tay Sehool,
Sunday mornlrw or evening, ot 10:30 a. m,
each week.
ST. PAUL'S LUTHERAN -32
GRACE EPISCOPAL- E. Main E. Socood St., .-eroy. Smday
St., Pomeroy- Sunday. ~1, 10 a.m.;Worship&amp;ervice
aervlee, 10:30 a. m. wUh IY- 11 a. m.
leadera.
I
SY RACliSE UNITED METROSEVENTH DAY ADVE~T DLST CHURCH - Rev. Paul A.
Ch~h - Pcmeroy, Mul rry Sellers, pastor. SW1daY School,
Be Qui 8 me
He,glrto Road, oorth ol \' ram 9·30
Memorial Hospital. Phillip Gager, pastor. Wednesday, 7 : 30 p. m.. first ahl third Sundays each m., Bible Study and prayer meet- m nth.
E ·•-tl
lng. Saturday: Sabbath School,
o
ve, .....'6 evange11 a c

J

I

School, 9:30 a.m.; WorebJp Jel"V•
lee, iO:SO a. m.; Evenllw worah!p, 7:30 p. m. ~er and
Praise service, 111ursdiy, 7:30

POMEROY TRINITY UNITED
CHURCH OF CHRIST •• Rov. W.
H. Porrto, pastor, Patrick D,
Wood, Supt. Smday Sdtool, 9:15

SUTTON MEI'HODJST - Rev,
W.
Dale McClurg, pastor, Sun&amp;t&gt;t.
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST- day School, 10:30 a. m,; Worship
DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRIST
Norman McCain, &amp;uperll'lterdent., Service, 9:30 a. m., second am
"-Ronnie Russell, pastor. Nor-Services
at 9:30 a. m. fourth Sunda.y eaeh month.
man c. Will, SliP~ Sunday SchooL Preach!rw,weekly
tint and "thlrdSunday
~ 9:30 L ·m.; Worship service.
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE
of month by Charles Russell at
I. 10:30 a. m, Christian Endeavor
Herbert
NAZARENE
- Rev.
9:30 a. m.
Sunday evening,
BRADFORD CHURCH
OF Grate, pastor. Worship service,
RACINE FIRST CHURCH OF
. CHRIST -Charles Russell, pal- 11 a. m. and 7:30p.m, Sunda_y.
TRE NAZARENE -Sunday School
tor. Richard Gilkey, Supt. Sun- Sunda,y School, 9:30 a.m. Rict.9:30 a. m.; Mondng Worship,
day School, 9:30 a. m.i Mornl~ ard Barton, Supt., Charles Bis~ 10:30 a. m.; Emllrw WorshiP,
Worship, 10:30 a. m.; Eveni~ sell, assistantsupL Prayer meet~ 7:30 p. m. Prayer services, 7:30
worship, 7 p.m. Wednesday Bible ing, Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
i! p, m. W~aday. Sunday Scbool
study, 7:30 p.. m.
S.rtntendenl, Pauline McClinRt:QRGANIZED CHURCH OF'
HARRISONVILLE PRESBYtock. Partor. Rev, Morris M.
Jesus Chriat of Latter D a y TEIUAN - Mrs. Norma Lee,
~ Wolte.
~ TUPPERS PLAINS UNITED Saints, Portland - Racine Road. Suncla.Y School &amp;c&gt;erintendent.
Sunday Schoo~ 9:30 L m.; Mom· Sunday School, 9:30 L m. SUJlMETHODlST- M..-niogWorshlp
ing Worship, 10:30 a.m. Sunday day servrce, 8 p. m., the Rev.
9:30 L m. at !ormer EUB buildevening
service at 1. Wednosday Max . Donahue of Middleport
trw. E&gt;Panded Sunday School sesewning prayer service, 7:30. speaking,
sion !or nursery to grade six
Pastor, Elder Frederick J. Stochildren at former Methodist anJEROV All'S WITNEllS&amp;'l, Lor·
bart.
"
10:30 a. m.; Worship, 9:30 a. m.
I ne:xat 9:30 L m., Mrs.J ames
ry Carnahan, presidiJVmlnister.
F1RST UNITED PRESBYTER·
BRADBURY
C
H
U
R
C
H
OF
Stout, children's ~erlntendent.
Sunda,y: Bible lecture, 9:30a.m.;
IAN
CHURCH _
ldiddleport,
CHRIST
James
H.
Smith,
Pas~nda.v Church School, adults and
WW:h Tower atud,y, 10:30 a. m,i
Guest
Minister,
James
Buchanyouth, 10:30 L m; jamior high, tor. Slllld.al' School, 9: 30 L m. ; Wedneoday: Bible study, 7 p, m,
an,
Sunday
School
s~rintensenior high and you~ adults Supt. Glen Evans. Church ser- Tburoday: Ministry ocbool, 7 p,
dent. Sulllay School, 9:30 a.m.
,..#lOOt in rormer Methodist Church vices, 10:30 a.m.; evening, 7:30 m. Service meeting, 8 p. m.
Worship Service, 10:30 a.m.
for Sunday Church School. Boyd p.m.; Wednesday, Prayer serMAS&lt;JN CHURCH OF CHRISTChoir practice, 7:30 p.m. WedHackney, youth SIQ)erintendent; Yices, 7:30p.m.
Miller st. - Eversoo Weekley,
post high cl&amp;ll and oau1ar adult&amp;.
pastor. Bible study clas&amp;eii,SUn- neatlay.
ASBURY
UNITED METHOmeetlog lli'!Dhner !1m bullillng,
GRAHAM UNITED METHO- day, 10 a.m. Worship and preachHobart VIneyard, S!lll Adult BI- DISI" CHURCH- Preaching, 9,. ing, 10:55 a. m.; Su:od83 evening
DJST, Syracuse - Re'¥. WertJell
ble Clan part,y,last MondQ each 30 a.m., Firlt and Second :im- service, 7:30,
BlbJe
study
Stutler, pastor. Sl.U'Miay School,
month. Youill Fellowship each da,ya of each month; Third and classes, Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. _ 10 L m.; ClrroU Norris, Supt.
Sunday• 6 p, m. in tormer Meth- Fourth &amp;mdaya each month, WorWorship service, 11 a.m.; MVF
MORNING
STAR UNITED
odist building. llistrict youth rt.I. ship aenrice at 7:30 p.m.; Wed6 p. m. Sunday. Prayer meeting
METHODIST CHURCH - Rov.
11 first Monday oloach month.
Wednesday, R p. m.
neoclajo evenings at 7,30, Prayer
William Airson, pastor; J o h n
LET ART UNITED METHO- and Bible aludy.
POMEROY CHURCH OF THE
Jhle, Sll!t.; Roy Van Meter, Asst.
DlSI" CHURCH - First and Soc- .
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION S\Vl &amp;lnday School. 9:45 L m.;
NAZARENE- Corner Unionand
and &amp;lndays J&gt;l'eachlng, 8 p.m.; -Bald Koobs, Portiand-Buhan
CHESTER CHURCH OF GOO.: Mulberry. Rov. Cllde V. HenderThird and Fourth &amp;lndays, &amp;Ill· Road. Rev. E. J. GriMih,pastor. The Rev, ChesterBryant,pastor.
son, pastor. Sunday Schoci, 9:30
day SchoollO a.m., Worship ser- Sunday School, 9,30 L m.; Hog· SunJay School, 11:30 a. m.; WarL m.; Raymond Walburn, Supt.
vice 11 a.m.; Tuesday evening&amp; er WUCred, S~t. Surday worahip ship service, 11 a. m.; Evenl.ng
Morning worship, 10:30 a. m.;
at 8 p.m., PrayerandBfble&amp;'bldy.
service, 7:30 p. m. Prayer meet- worship, 7:30p.m. Prayer serv- Evening Service, 7:30 p. m. ~
i~ Tuesday, 7:30 p. m., Mil- ice, Tuesday, 7:SO p. m. Youth
week service, Wednesday, 7:30
ford Frederick, class leader. Service, Thurada.y, 7;30 p. m. p.m.
Youth Fellowship, Friday, 7:30p. Monthly s!Jws, first Saturday &lt;1
FOREST RUN UNITED METHm. Ernest Deeter, leaderi Rog- each month.
ODLST - Ro&gt;. Wendell G. Stut.er Wilfred, Jr., presidert.
HEMLOCK GROVE Chrlotlan
MAS&lt;JN ASSEMBLY CHlJRCH Church - James Qui&amp;enberry, ler, pastor. Worship service, 9
OF GOD - Second SL, Muon, pallor; Roy Whaley, supt. Com- L m. i Sunday School:. 10 L m.
W, Va. Sunday Scbool, IU a,m; munion am ~rahJp servl&lt;:e, 9:30 Mrs. Fred Nease, &amp;c»t.
P. m.

8;20. MJ.d ..'I'IMk .Pn.,Yer meet ..
.Jng~ Wednesda;y, ?:SO »• m., "ra.
Mule Holst~, clua leader.
POMEROY LOWER
LIGirl'
Cbun:h - Harril&lt;lnvllle Rood Rev, Roy Ta.vli&gt;r, pastor, Nan!
Hartman, S. S. SUpt.
Sunday

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6 .,. '111~ Dalll Sentinel, A&gt;meroy-Middleport,

o.,

t
fi
D
f1 zrec ory or
' A
Ch h

I

Frlclajo, Sept. 6 1968

.$::X:!:::=:::::::=::::;-.:;:=::::::;:~:;.~:·:::·:::::···:::·~»·-·: :-:·:::::·:.:•::¥~0:::::.:::·:·:-.~
v.;·.' a. m,,• ""'ddl-rt
- . . .....
. . . ........
'"··:r:~
M.J
..._

•

I

~
.nnueroy
Momlrw Worship, 10:45 a, m.;
Prayer
meetirw, 7:30 p. m.
Methodist YOUib FellowBhljJ Sun·

.::
®
·1·

6
:t;,
7~3om~-s~~~~~
meeu.w,.
ot

;L
, ~@!;~~~~@':':&lt;~»=·=·=·!;!,!:,~,:,x,x!~:-,~J :::s:::!i~:~s~:
·'· ALFRED METHODIST Pearl

j·:A. Caito, paltor. -School

.,.t 9:30, u.,.d Dllllnl!or, ~pt.
Worship se"lceo at 10:45 with
the Rev. Casto. Wedne!da.Y evenln,g prS¥er services at 7:45.
...
~ CHRISTIAN SCIENCE Services
~It 315 Main st., Pt. Pleasant,
::Sundays 11 a. Rl.i Wednesdays
8 p, m. All welcome.

month,

_6 P. m,; WSCS second Monday ol

a. m.; &amp;hJa¥ Scln:tl 10·30 a.~- ele, second Th\D'sdlly afternoon.
Youth &amp;ervlce, Sunday; &amp;:30
- ~hoir practice, 1 p.m. Wedfiell ..

P:

m.; ~ every SundaY, 7
ay.
P.m.
..
UNITED FAITH CHURCH of
THE RUTLAND COMMUNITY Nease Settlement, Sunday School

Church - Rev, AmosTlllia,pas- Superintendent, Roy Johnson.
tor. SUnd&amp;)' School, 9:30 a.m.;

YouU. meeting, 6:30, Sunday.

Worship servfce, 11 a.m.; ~
ert Searles, Sunday School So-perintendent; ·Wednesda,y prayer

sYRACUSE F1RST UNITED
PRESBYTERIAN - Rev. Linam
H. Stebbins, pastor. Worship, 9

meeting, 7:30 p,m, Young Peo-..
:~
pies Fellowship Sunday, 7 p.m.;
:·
Sunday night worship, 7:30.
: LOTI RIDGE UNITED METHTHl': DANVILLE WESLEY AN
~ OOIST- Worstrip,ftrsUndthlrd CHURCH- Charles Dozer, pas: Sundays of each month, 10:45 L
tor; Adra SWick, Surxlay School
: m.; secorkl arkl fourth Suoo.ya, Superintendent. Sunda.y School,
~ 7:30 p. m. Surd8J.' School, 9:45 9:30 a. m.; Worship service,
~ L m. Christian EOOeavor, third lO::JO a. ~· Youlh and Junior
::saturday of each month.
youth serVIce, 6:45 p. m. Eve...:
ni'* worship, 7:30. Prayer and
~- ·
praise, Wednesda_y, 7:30.

a. m. Sunday School, 10 a. m.;
Bible Study and pra.yer nrvlce,

t

,.

ftrst Sunday

~

LAUREL CLIFF FREEMETHOm!' CHURCH _ Sunday School
9:30 a. m., morning worshiP,
10:10 L m., evening worshjp,
7:30 p. m.; Wednesday, Christian Youth Crusader a, 6:30p.m.
and prayer meeting, 7:30 p.m.
""""
·
tl
7 p.
~ Th ur~, c 00 1r pra.c ce,
~ m. R. Eugene GUl, pastor; Phil

UNITED FAITH CHURCHNease Sottioment - Robert E.
~lth, Sr., pa.st:or. Sun~ School
S\l'lerintendent Kenneth Matson.
Sunday School. 9:30 a. m.; WOI'o
shiP service, 10:30 a. m. and
7:30 p. m. each Sunday. MJ&lt;I-week
prayer meet.ing, Wednesday, 7:30

w~~ay,

7 p. m.
POMEROY FIRST BAP'!1STCarver William&amp;, pastnr. John
Wlle&amp; Slnlay School Sqperln-

ter.tert. Sumay School, 9:80 a.

m.; Mornirw worship, 10:30 a.
m.; BYF, 6 p, m, Bible study,
Wednesda.y, 7 p, m.; Choir prac ..
tlce, 8:30 p. m, Wednesda.y,
MT, UNION BAPTIST- Rev,
Cecil Cox, pastor. Sunday S.bool
superintendent, Larry Clark.
Stmday School,. 9:45 a.m.;Sund.r
evening worship, 7:30; Wednesda;y pra;yer and Bible study, 7:30
p. m.

TIIlrsday, Fred E. Smith, lay..
leader. Youlh Fellowship, 7:30
p. m. Sunday,

MT.
HERMON
'UNITED
BRETHREN IN CHRIST - Rov.
Menzel Smith, pastor. Sunday
School, 9:30a.m.; Russell ~D­
eer, SttJt.i Alfred Wolfe, asslst-.
anL Morning Sermon 11 L m.,
eveniog sermon. 7:30p.m., alfer..
natirw each Sunday. Class meetlrw 11 a.m., alternatlrw Sunday
mornings. David Holter, c; l a s s
leader. Christian EMeavor, 7:30
p. m. every other SurJ:fay eveni.Jw. Jean Sexson, presldenL
Prayer meeting, 7:30 p. m. every
Wednesday. Board meeting, 7:30
p. m., first Monday of month.

. . 'IV....

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Mason Area

News, Notes

Gajllaln Nelsoo Re11101da of Morning worship, 11 a. m. EvonAie:xandrla. va. visited h jJJ_ gellsUc. service, .7:30-p_., m .. Blble
mother, Mra. Ca'dlertne SWatzel study aM prayer se~ce, Wednesday, 1':30 p, m, Chester· Tenand brother. Norman, over the nant, pastor. Phone 773-5;133.
weekend.
. CARLETON CHURCH -Kingo~
Miss Alma Duttiing, a pa.Uent
at the Thomas Memorial Hos- bury Road. SUIIlay SchGlol, 9:30
pllal, South Charleston, Is re- L m., Ralph Carl. &amp;IlL Worship
•~• .. 1m
service. 10:30 a. m. ond 7:30 p,
portod as s 1 "61~
proved
.1
Mrs. Mary Nagle and .Mrs. m. alternately. rrayer meeuf1!:,
Wednesday, 7:30p.m,
Wlnlred Mamlng of
Mas v1 !ted the! oiM~ston,
HEATH ME:l'HODIST CHURCH
s.
a
r
o.....r and _Middleport. Rev. Max Donahue,
brotber..fn-law, Dr. and Mrs. paator, Jack Bechtle, Church
~mos B. McGowan.
School Supt. Church School, 9:30
· and Mrs. James Loyd a. m · Worship service 10·30
and family or Marion, Indiana
·'
'
•
spent a three week vacation visRUTLAND CHURCH OF THE
ttfng her brother and sister-in~ NAZARENE - Rev. Lloyd D.
law, Mr. and Mrs. CUrtis Me- Grimm, Jr., pastor. s ~ n day
Daniel and family at Jenkins- School, 9:30 L m.; morrung wortown, Pa.; her sister and Cam- ship, 10:30 L m.; yoong peo;Ples
Uy, Mr. and Mrll. &amp;anley Saun. service, 7:30p.m.; evangehsUc
ders and family at Columbus, ser~ces, 7:30 p. m. Wedne&amp;day
and Mrs. Loyd's parents, Mr. everung service, 7:30 p. m.

J.
;

j
.,I

and Mrs. CUrtis McDaniel, Sr.
and other relaUves in the area.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Jetforo and daughter of Bellaire,
Ohio vi&amp;ited over the weekend
with Miss ~lla Gress.
Mrs. Ople Cobb ia spending a
week visiting In Charlestoo.
Mr. and Mrs. Edwin ltouah or
Cllarleaton visited aver t h e
weekend with his pareato, Mr.
and Mro. Johnn_y Rouall, New
Haven.
Mlao Kelly McCallister &lt;1 the
Rellab!iltBdoo Center at Institute, W. Va. visited over t h e
wwkend with Mrs, Demlo Duddill&amp; Mrl. Juanlt. Ward 11JC1

Mrs. Gardner

.........,,, a patient at Thomaa
iloaJI!tal, SOUib Cbar-

...,_Jal
1.-,

Corall cu live out ol water
OIIJ¥·fl'l'-.tllol1
of time.
•',-

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BE1liEL UNITED
METHODIST- Worship, s~ond
and fourth Sunday, 10:30 L m.;
first and third Sundays, 7:30p.m.
Sunday School, 9:30 L m. Yooth
Fellowship, 6 p. m. each SUnday
at TI.C)pers Plains United Meth~
dist Church.

38 Report for
Physical Exams
PT. PLEASANT - Thlr\Y
eight _persona registered at the
local draft board lett Wednesda.Y by chartered bua for pre~
Induction ph,yolcal examination•
at Aahland, Ky.
RfllOrllng were Larry T. Adkins, Jolumle R. Barnette, Ray
P. Boswell, I..arry T. Ball, James
R. Fleldo, Howard E. Patterson,

Dies Thursday
PT. PLEASANT- Mrs. Margaret Lynn Garmer, 76, ol2603
Llnc:oln AVO!&gt;Je, died Thuratiay
at her home,
She wao the daughter o( the
late George and Mary Ellen Rodgers Davis. Her bullband, WOllam, J&gt;l'eceded her In death In
1966.
~rvivlng are two daughlero,
Mrs. JoSOI&gt;hlne Thornton, at
home, and Mra. A. D. Nutter or

eight grandchildren.
Funeral service will be held
&amp;~~~day 2 p.m. In the Chapmallwuc:ox.., MortUary with the Rov.
Charles Frum ol!ldatlng. Burial
will be In Lone Ook cemetery.
Friends ma.v call at the mortuary lifter t p.m. Frlclajo.
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THE Rt!l'LAND 'METOODIST
CHURCH • Rov, C. J. IAmloy,
pi.ltor. Church SChool, 9:30a.m.;
worship servlce, 10:30 a. m.
RACINE ME1110DIST :- W.
Dale McClUrg, pastor. SurMlll
School, 9:30 a.m.; Worship 11erv·
4

ice, 10:30 a. m.; JUnior choir
praetlce, We&amp;lesday, 3J20 p. m.i

Senior choir practtee, 'J1wraday,

GJ·llnrkl.url luVI'Ii lo li~h. S..~rl'lly, l think hl' lik"~ to U.lk ubullt it l•[Uillly as w.~ll. Ht: sJ~tnd!l hu0111
wltll hl6 friend11 WI'I,'Uing the !11'0~ :tnrlt~mH .. r "llnJ.(Iing." Tht other day I o~erhea1d a len !{thy t'Ontru~rs)'
abuu\. Uw i~Ct~t Jllat't' loll~. t;rumlrhlllt•nrkd the whuh: matWr with the~ wurd11 of wit ar.d wiMdom, "If
you uk me, the best 8JM!t tu /Ish i~ oot tJiu1~ whet't: the li~h IU't--J&gt;O ld'M w:t u!Jin~e!"
This !l)ledal bl'ltn&lt;l ur humor gn:11tly appm1.led u. 11ll !Jf his friend~ 11nd it remaint•l in my minrl long
after they h11.d left. It 111.'f:med tilllnHW"r tho~~e n11.ture l!oVel'l! who d11.im th11.t thl!y t:ll.fl wonhiJI &lt;;uti out uf
doorM ll.fl wt:H all in chtll'l.'h, ~'u1· tt:rtainly, the hL"'It ~IK•t tu wurshiJI (_d,.-/ i~ wh•m: IOIJ!I is.
'
Won1hiJ1 melllnM not rmly m1omt•nb .. r ;oduration an&lt;IJll'lli~ liut aiNU lhiJUJChl~ t:hannek..-1 tnw11rd God.
The Chur'Ch has the l1vin.l( J!l't"'"twe &lt;of t.he l.111'd 11n•l in~Jlit-e~ llpiritulll lh&lt;oul(hts thnmgh hymn, prayer
11nd litany.
Yes, lhe l1e~l JII:K~: lo lift UJt th~: h~:&lt;~rt i11 in thl' huuse ,r C1KI
(;... , ... ~, 0~&lt;1 ~ ..., . , ~ -·~'"""!

SYRACl5E CHURCH OF TRE
NAZARENE -&amp;v, A. E. Miller,
paotor. Robert Stewart, Sunday
S.bool Supt. SWlday Scbool,
classes for all agel, 9:30 a.m.;
Momlrw Worohlp, 10:30 a.m.;
NYPS Sunday 6:30 p.m.; Evangellotlc Service Sunday 7:30 p.
m.; MidWeek Prayer meetl!lf
Wedneoday 7:30 p.m.; Mloolonary Mooting oec:ood Wedneoday
of ~b month 7:30p.m.
.EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN
CHRIST - Eldon R. Blake, pastor. SundaY Scbool, 10 a. m.,
Winnie Hol&amp;fnger, supt. Mo~
11ermoo, 11 a. m. ~ aervclo Chrlotlan ED!eavor, 7:30 p.
m•• Mrs. 4Yd&amp; Chevalier, pl'elli"'
delL Sow service and oermon,

Mrs. Homer llolter, selected
as one or two ootat.andlng gar.
denera in Region 11, Ohio Association of Garden Clubs, wu
presented a certltlcale and a
planter during Wedneode,y night'•
meeting of the WUdwood Garden

ztmla11 in a clrUtwoOd container.
Blue ribbons for &amp;rr'I"&amp;Omtllls
oxblblled at the moetlng wtol to
Mro. Homer Holter, Mrs. Ken

Club.

ribbonl tor apecimen11 were awarded to Mrs. Ecllton Hollon,
Mr1. 1-UrJm Fisher, 111d M r 1.
Homer Holter.
Ideo. Mlltoo lloudaobell re:
vieWed the book, 11The Gl017 of

The meeting was held at the
home ot Mrs. Dwight Milhoan

wltll Mrs. Wald Windon ao tile
aslilltlrw hostess. Plans were
made for a therapy program to
be presented at the Gallipolis

&amp;ate -

... Oct. 2t and

a &lt;OIIIJilUIIIcatlon regarding the
program was read from the hospital therapist.
Mrs. Karl Grueser, president,
opened the meeting with t h e
pledge to the flag. Several po.
ems, ~~erlpture from the Psalma
and j)l'ayor were Included In the
dovotlona presented by Mri. Clllford PhllliPII. In response to roll
call members gave a gardener' a
review - the do's and don't' a·
prdenlng.
Featured on the program was
a ~onstratton onarranglngred

,o;.., ""· lu , "'"'~"" Vo

''

or

before polling. Pllllta llhould not
bo polled too deepll and should
be kept out ol &lt;llrecl sunlight.
Tlpo on

f!lll'denlni

In Septem-

Nease, Mrs. u. S. Nelle, Mra. ber were given by Mra. Neaae
Ecllion Hollon, Mro, Denver Hol- wbo ~~~&amp;~ested plant!Dt&lt; bulbs for
ter and Mrs. Vernon Neaoe.Biue oprlng blooms, putting Madonna

a Tree, u b1 B. K. Boom and
H. Klelan. 9te noted that troeo
ban a crown at the top, while
shrubs haYe a crown near the
boll&lt;&gt;m, and emphaa12od the extreme care necessary in pruning treea. ~aklng
growth
'characteristics~ Mrs. Houdaahelt
commented on the varloua patterns.
Mrs. U. S. Nease used, 11 How

IDles

1!1

the ground with dirt

two taehea above the crown, and
eontlmting the spraying and dullIng program o( . lhlngo In
bloom.
A dessert course waa aervad
b.f• the hostess. Mro. Kenneth
Harris """ the door prize.

Contribution

or

Made by Class

A monthly oontrlbuUOh I o r
eventual
purchese of the BodCuttinga, •• as her topic. 91.e uld
to lnaert a leaf culling In damp ford School ptoper\y, which will
vermlcullle and let It remain bo convertod Into a ....ch camp,

to !lart Atrtean Vtoleta I r o m

there until the culllni hao rotted and leaves otar1 8ppeariDg

wao pledged lining a meeting ol
the Golden RuleClass&lt;1theA&gt;meroy Clllrch of Christ.
Meeting at the clllrch paroooage with Mr. and . Mro. Robert
Woods as holta, the cla1111 also

Mrs. Parker Installed
D of A Vice Councilor .

voted to

p~rchaae

a junior choir

robe. Mrl. Harold &amp;nlth, president, -.cledthemeetlngwhich

Berllla Parker was lnslaDed

S~t. ~or~ w:rshlp: 10 :3~r~

service, 7:30 p, m., sec:orl! and
fourth Sundays.
BETHANY UNITED ME1li0DIST CHURCH - Rel', Paul A.
SeUets, pastor. Mornirw worship, 9:30 L m.; Sunday School,
10:30 a. m. mythe Thetas, SUpt.
Youth Fellowship, 6:30 p. m.
CARMEL UNITED METHODIST CHURCH "- ·. Rov. Paul A.
Sellers, pastor. Sunday School,
9: 30 a. m.; Wayne Roush, ~t.
Morning worship, 10:30 a. m.,
secon:::l an:::l !ourthSundaysofeach
month.
Evening evangelistic
service, 8 p. m. seccmi and
third Sunday each month.

The Dally S®tlnel, A&gt;meroy-Middloporl, 0., Friday, Sept, 8, 1968

Regional Recognition Won
As Outstanding Garden~r

With th.e hope It wW, In some measure, toster and help sustain that wbich ta good Jn tamt1y
and community llfe, thlsfeaturelsapolllloredbythe bualneaaftrms &amp;lid orgaadiat!ona whoae names
appear below. 1

opened wlthJ&gt;I'ayerbyMr. Woodo.
Mr11. Gene Eskew was at the organ for hymn alnglng.
A Bible quiz wao led by Mro.
Louis Osborne and Mro. Elwood
Bowers had other entertainment
for the group. Prlzes were won
by Mrs. Smith, Mrs. Eskew, and
Mr. Woodo.
Rofreohmtlllo were served.b.Y
the ho!-1&amp; tothosenamedanc:IMra.
Walter Kemecly, Jr., Mrs. Denver Kapple, and Judy, Roberta
and Donald Wands.

Netlle Royea for plc:IOip.
The picnic of the past

as otce councllor by Margaret
counseldenabel, d~ state cou·~ ellors ot Dtltriet 13 was andlor, at a ll'"'tlng of ~~- noun&lt;od for Sop!. 15 at the Clotus Coundl17, Dauahtert &lt;1 Am- tan Park In Martella. Aloo anerlca, Moolday night at the IOOF DOUIIcod was a meetlngofthepast
hall.
·
c:ouncllors of Theodorus Coundl
During the mee11ng prealded 17 to be held on Sop!. 12 at tile
over by Dalla Staltl, oouncllor, home of FAna Reibel.
the charter WBB draped lor LeA report wao g(Yen ·by Mrs.
ana La Brun ol Baltimore, Md.:" Haye11 on the recent state sea~
wbo oervod u national .c:ound- sl011 held In Columbus. 9te oblor, 1940 - a, and as tress- sened that Mia a Laura Laurer &lt;1 the ••ttmal home, 1946- Baltanux of Clnclnnl.ti Is tile
is
58, and Ellzabetll QdniiD, atate new alate ooundlor and that her
eecretar1 aod a p1.1t atate coun- motto Ia ••Work Topther,'' her
!lDO..
alopn, "Remember tha Goldeo
Piau were made for a rum- R1ite," and her goal, to keep
mage aalo to . bo ·held OcL 3..&gt; down suspension, and to rememandlhoHhevingrummagetooon- ber the home for the aged and
: trl- are asked to contact MrL orphano. A mora complete re- &amp;~~~day haa been designated ao
· Stahl, Mrs.. Seidenabel, or Mn. port on the state meeting will ''Back to Sehool Day" at the

Sunday

HEINER'S BAKERY

HOYT'S SOHIO SERVICE

l'

... .

PHONE 992-3284

MIDDLEPORT

l

LYONS MARKET

GOF.GLEIN READY-MIX CO."

11

·
·
E ''"'~··

MEMBER OF THE BIG 3"

GENERAL MERCHANDISE
TUPPERS PLAINS
PH. 667-3280

. .. ·-··~«,.,00. JD'flillsd~.Ak.a.~l!ll!llQl
~eport C.!!"~M"! . t~!..~,..
meet1ns
...

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t/ttie IJe
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·
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BOGGS EQUIPMENT

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FARM- INDUSTRIAL- LAWN- GARDEN
TUPPERS PLAINS

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R. H. RAWLINGS SONS CO.
ORIO'S OLDEST DODGE DEALER
MIDDLEPORT, ORIO

OHIO VALLEY BAKING CO.
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•uac Gl¥el' oewlrl Oar larp
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oi . . . . OIU'd. . . . .
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•117

WILLIS ANTHONY

LEIVING COAL COMPANY

PLUMBING AND HEATING
992-2550
240 LINCOLN ST.

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MIDDLEPORT

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ARNOLD'S SOHIO SfRVIQ

SWIMMING

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LOWEST PRICES
Ill THE AREA

..

'· ·.-

ATHENS RD.
POMEROY, 0. 99Z-1098
A FRIENDLY PLACE TO BUY

FAMILY RECREATION

: Calendar·:
FRIDAY
SOUTHERN BAND Boostero k&gt;
sponaor dance Friday following
ftrst home Cootball game with
North Galla at the Jr. High
School; "The Next In Une" to
furniah music.
BIG AFTER Footboll Game
dance paJ'\Y will be held at the
Wahama High School auditorium
followlog the Wahama • Marauders football game. Dancing Crom
9:30 p. m. to midnight. The Ja,ys
wUl emcee.

LEGAR

,

Monument Co.

.

pr .;,..,.,1 r Non-1 a
.MDrluMnt Co.

· ·~
•.'" 1::-

,.

21 Y•or• ~XJ*I·~
0..1•• W. L..llf', Ownet·
O,en 94 W'~lrSurlllleya &amp; Ev•ni"'Ja

,260 W, Moln

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

tho next
of the c:ouncll. aa£3.
It wao noted that Grace stace · '!11e observance wiD be held
remains a patient at the Kimes at the 9:30 a.m: &amp;~~~day ocbool
SATUIWAY
Convalescent Home, Alheas, that hour and all children of school
RIGH
SCHOOL
danceparly Sat.Winona Cook II lU at home, and age attondlng wiD be preoenled
urday,
Pomeroy
Junior H lg h
that Edith Heines Ia much lm- a gift, Teacher&amp; will aloo bo
auditorium
from
8:30
to 11:30 p.
J&gt;l'OVod. Mra. Hayes wu con- recognized. George Hargrave&amp;,
graltllaled on a new gnndallll, ~ ol the Meigs LO- m. Jays will emcee.
born ·to Mr. and Mrs. WWiam cal School District, will speak
HOMEMADE ICE CREAM soHa.ves. It wao reported that Et- briefly lining the service.
cial. S&amp;Ddwiches also, at st. Paul
Lutheran Church, beginning at
Ia Lemley's 1011 rei! 18Yeral feet
11 L m. Saturday,
while painting oo the A&gt;meroy
brlclp, but escaped serkluo InSUNDAY
jury.
ANNUAL HOMECOMING at tile
Rock Springs United Methodist
1be Rev. Arthur D. Barham, . Church, Sunday; blsket dinner at
a retlrod minister, Is serving noon, followed by a program beas IIUPPil mlnlller lor tho A&gt;m- ginning at 1:15 p, m.
ANNUAL HOMECOMING at
ero,r First Bapllot Church.
1be Rev. Mr. Barham, who the l..atWsvllle Church Sunday.
palllorod a . dalrch In Newark Basket dinner at 12 noon; spec30 years, wiD serve tho local tal singing at 2 p, m. Open to
church .lrill tho pulpit II ffilod public,
by a fUll-limo mlnlller. The Rev.
MONDAY
Mr. Barham hal been speaker
MEIGS SALON 110, 8 and 40,
Mra. RQmoDd IOoea, Mrl. at the clllrch for tile past two meeting 6:30 p, m. Monday. home
'111omas Darlll, and Mrs. Joho &amp;~~~days.
of EUDice Brinker, Bas han Road..
Vroman were holtea~ea for a
CHUIICH COUNCIL, Sl Paul
meellng &lt;ll tile Auxiliary &lt;1 the
ARRIVE FOR VISIT
Lutberan Church, Monlly, 8 p.m..
Middleport F I r e DoparWenl
MASON - Muter ~. Daold at tbe ehureb..
Weclnelday tdiitt II lboliremea'l Crockelt olthe Air Corps, Mrs.
POMEROY GARDEN CLUB,
head41w'ters at vlllap hall.
Crocketl, and
t:ldldron ol Monda.v, 2 p. m. at the home of
cameo l!eH plOJod .mini·the Frankfort, GertDatiY arr!Yod here Mra. Harvey Van Vranken.
oodal wenllli:
the
prize m w.meoc~e,y· evening for a vtalt REGULAR MEETING, Meigs
was Ill Mu. Darst. The irllh ber mOUler, Mrs. Lee Rlcl&gt;- Cha&amp;ller DAV, 6:30 p.m., bmch
. -110a ""od I dellerl ardnl IIJCI with Mr. and lolrL pre 1
buslneaa se&amp;ston at
others, 11lere were lira• Ruaaall Copehart. Miller ~. 7:30 p.m. Veterans &lt;1 all wars
E. ~eJ(Inloy, Mro. James Crodletl hal roasallnod lo. lnvllod; Jaeob TuJIIer, coiiiiiiiDIIDonlels, Mrl. · Robert McEihln- aa Air Bua In TexaL
er.
117, · Mro. Bob B,yar, and lllrL

rison B. Roe, Ray E. Hoffman,
R"" E. Hollman, Dale 0. Birchfield, Charles R. Leport, Robert
L. Patterson, ldichael L. Cornell, James W. Hazlett, Larry A,
Stephens, Ronald L, Bartoo,
Charles R. Long, Tlmoti\Y L.
Bl&amp;sell, Leonard W. Lee, Jr.,
Bllll R. CO&lt;hran, LewlaF. Cape.
hart, Jr., Steven R, Dorenber-

a, Appt.
,

,

Pe!Mf'o;

iour

..a dl¥&gt;r

:una:

c:our•.
o.

NOI'IIllll w~~rla.A

~EN ,F~NKLIN' STORE

.

MillS Nancy Cross, niece ot
the bridegroom, will be tho Dower girl, and Phillip Thompson,
brother of the bride, will lx'
tho rlitg bearer·
Guests will be registered by
Mrs. Ronnie Black and assist-.
lng at tile reception which will
!ollow the ceremony In t ·h e
church soetal rooms will be Mrs.
Emerson Jone1 and Mrs. Rob-

ert Haley.

ENDS EUROPEAN TOUR
MASON
Mrs. Mary E.
Capehart, MallOn, guidance counselor at Wahama High Scbool,
has returned from a six and onehalt week European tour which
covered 10,000 miles with mem.
bers of the NaUonal Association
of Sbtdent Councils, and faculty
advisors. !ile returned &amp;mda,y
evening by jel ID Kennedy Airport and Crom there to Dulles
Airport and on to Charleston.
The Niagara River, which

connects Lakes Erie and On·
tario, flows north.

turned from a week' 1 vacatloa ln
Florida.
Mra. Myrna Malg Jordao Utd
daughter of Columbuo were weekend gueatl of her parenta, Mr.
and Mrs. Bradford 1\leag.

Mrs. Lee Kraua•

Concerned about the plight ol
the people o( the . Appalacldan
area In Kentucky, she cOIIectecl
and several
oupervtsed
dllllrlbution
ol
too&amp; the
of clothing
and
household articles avor the past

aev.eral years.

Folmers Announce
Birth August 29th
Ide. and Mrs. William Folmer of New Haven, W. Va., are
llllllOWlclng the birth of their
first child, a son, named Mlchael Todd, Aug. 29 at St. Jo..
Hph Hospital, Parkersburg.
Va. The Infant weighed eight
pounds, three ounces.
Mr. and Mrs. Laland Kirby
o( New Haven, and Mr. and Mrs.
George Folmer of Pomeroy,
Route 3 are the granclporento.
Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Cumlng, ham , Pomeroy, Route 3, are
greal-i!randplrenls.

'111e celebraUon was oponoorod by the People's Joomal, a Ioc:ol newopaper at Boonville. EDtertatnment was provided by
Hank WOllam a, Jr.
Attending tram the area were

Mu. Krauu• llJJblnd IDCI .-.,
Bobby; her bnJthor and

Capehart, of Mu:::ll; ~ II.C.
and bnllher~~aw. Mr. and lira.
Frod IIA&gt;MdJawn, " " - • ...
a niece, Mro. Dlano Salt f/1. C.
lumbuo.
'

FLOWERS
FOR ALL OCCASIONS :

,~~~~~~~~~~
- . ..........
Y7.1. •~.,

NIGHT_,,

1)11

Poml!roy Flo- Shop
w. M•ln
lrULLARD

Introducing

w.

TO SPEAK SUNDAY
Dr. Lester Roush o! GaUipolis will be the guest speaker at
the 10:30 a.m. &amp;mda.Y service
at tile ldiddleport First Unllod
Presbyterian Church.

Complete Line Of
School Supplies
DICTIONARIES
NOTEBOOKS
SLIDE RULES
And Otho• Supplioo

CJIU!!&lt;;li, AND OFF1CE SUPP~
MJilllLEPORT, 0.

992-2U!

i'

'',i

,

'

,. ,

. ,,
...

...

I

.

to

POMEROY

Grand To Give, Great To Own
Wyler lncaftex thrives on heavy ·duty wear, while its styllnJ
shines at the smartest affair. The inside secret on it1l pradsion
performi!II)Ce: the exclusive lncaftex balance wheel, IUiranteed
against shock for life-replaced ffill. it ever broken.
For men: Wyler makes handsome watches that are guaranteed
waterproof as Ions as crystal is intact. genuine parts ultd.
Starting at $29.95. Wyler offer$ uncompromising qub~ty. out·
standing value.
See our Wyler speclllll, today.

e

Ordinary balance whetl
- rigid spo~es rtla~
shocks stral1bt to wilal
bBhtnct m~chanism.

~ler lntafleJ balance ~
wheel G·I-V-[ -S with
lhock ... '111ranlnd lor
life a1'mst damage

MIDDLEPORT
BOOK STORE
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

Every one of these
()8 Fords must be
sold. Now!

I/ .

/~

. S.~i YOUR • • •

_,,. MOTOROtA .DEALER
.;- -••• - ' •. 1i

POMEROY

Como ~--low Multang ~
can go. Opliona reduCed, too.

••

ger, Roy L, Mccarty, Bruce M.
Nlberl, Buddy E. Kearno, E1za
R. Taylor, La......... E. Sldonotrlc:ker, ldichael L. llndpra,

.

·.

and Ewell L. Turley.

A soft-shelled crab is one
which has very reeeully lllod
ils shell and has not bacl Ume
for the new one 1o harden.

' ,.

'

"

al•·

tn.Ja:w, Mr. and Mrs. Jtutllll

Big stocka mean you get a big choice 01
belt-NIIIng Multangs, Torino&amp;, wagons
•ncl Fool LTO'o. Immediate dollwuy. And
111o pricol of tho ""''I Come on Inwe'"' dealing.

HliiteiHI lbr tbe &lt;J.IIHIOIIng 'IIIU be Mrs. B,yer, ifrL
Jlem'll · Long, and Mrs. L1m

'

ATrEND TRE ~CH OF YOUR.,CiiQJCJ;;

Black.

and Dana I!olln of Akron """'
Labor Day 1111est1 of Mrs. Welby Whaley. n.., aloo vlllled
with Mr. and Mrs, Dana Howell.
Mr. and Mrs. Cllf!ord PhilUps spent the hoilclajo weeketid
In Bellefootalne visiting Mr. and
Mro. WUIIam Nea10 and fam.
Uy. 'l11o Phllllpo recootl.1 r&amp;-

MASON -

(Belty Copehart) rormerll &lt;1 Ma1011, now ol Howland CorDers,
.Ohio, waa hooored at a eelebraUoo In - ' l l e , Ky., SIDclajo when aile W&amp;l COmrnlloiCIIlod a Kmbu:ky Colonel, Stepherd
&lt;1 the HWs, Hmorary Colonel
ot the State Pollee, and Admlr.al &lt;1 WatentliYS &lt;1the Natural
ReiOOI'ceo IJeilt.

At Village Hall

MlDDLEPoRT BOOK STORE

REXALL ·DRUGS
WE FILL ALL DOCTOR'S PRESCIUI'TIONS
~M
POMEROY, (1,

ter

Mra. Sam Bolln of AUtena,

For Appalachian Concern8

MEIGS COUNTY WOMEN'S
~'llllm .. ,'l'emP!I'I)!)«! , .u~
A&gt;meroy U n I t e d Methodist
Church, 7:30 Friday evening.

~-

Clarke, Harry D, Grimm, Robert M. Becket!, James G. Hoi!.
man, Robert M, Schultz, Mare
Weaver, OUs R. VanMatre, Har-

ceremony at 2:30 o'clock In the
Middleport Clurch of Chrlsl A
halr-bour &lt;1 ooptlal muolc will
he j)l'esented by Ides. Rex 9tenefleld, organist, and Mr. Vernon Weber, vocalist.
Miss Beverly Thompson, sisof the bride, wlll 11erve a11
maid of bonor and the brldoomaida wtU be Miss Debbie King,
Miss Diane Holliday and M11111
Sterry Lambert.
Attendlng the bridegroom wiu
bOhlsbrother, Mr.ArthurCross
of Athena, aa best man. Usher&amp;
wiD be Mr. David Ashley, Ide.
Fllis My era, and Mr. R o n n l e

}
(.fersonal Notes.:]

Auxiliary Meets
Cllt/iiiQ 'Crilfllll
ti 011r ()wll... ··

... -..
....no,._-...
.,... _...,
..

Lincoln -

ROYAb OAK PARK

::·'·s~~,i~'l"''''·'':::,,,,,,,,,,·r:::

·Completed plans are being
lllllOIIIIcod lor the &amp;ulclajo open.
church wedding of Miu Glorla
Thompson and Mr. Ancll Croos.
The Rov. Raullln Moyer will
read vows of the double ring

JPomeroy...

Honors Glven Mrs.. KrauSS;. ·

At Church Service

BAKERS OF HOI.SUM BREAD
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

MIDDLEPORT, ORIO

.PRODUCERS AND DISTRIBUTORS
OF RIGH GRADE COAL
WEST COLUMBIA, W, VA.

Mro. Jolin Vromaa enterod I!olxor lloopltal 11urode,y .,.S wu
achedUied for &amp;urpry thla morn~
lng. Ror graadson, Jolin, " Ill
11ta¥ with bla uncle and aunt, Mr,
and Mrs. James BrawingtDn, W..ln&amp; her hoopltallzallon.
Mrs . .tames Buchanan, ·whoremaiDs a patient at {16lzer Hoapltal, undorwaatJiddfllonal omorgency 1111rgery Tuooclajo.
Mr. and Mro. Thomao Darst
and 1011, Crall, will spend t h e
weekend In Vernon vlelllng Ide. and Mrs. Richard Weir.
Greguey HQea, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Cllf!ord Hoyos, spent
the past week In Columbus vlolllng his uncle and aunt, Mr. and
Mrs. Russell Balnum. They took
him 1D the stale ralr. Gregory
was relurnod home Monday by hlo
reladves and remained tor a
short vlalt with Mr. and Mra.
Ha,vea and other relatives. other
recent visitor&amp; ol Mr, aDd Mrs.
Ha.ves wore Mrs. Loring Taylor
and Mill Effie Pi-Ice of St. Albans, and Mr. and Mrs. Charle11
Wooda, Mro. Nina Robln801l and
Mrs. Clara Follrod ol Alfrod.
Mark and JeMifer Gwalclow•IIY have returnod to their home
near Cleveland following a preocbool visit herewith their great.
grandmother, Mr11. Harry Mill&amp;,
and grandplrents, Mr. and Mrs.
Russell Mills. Their tather,
Leonard Gwalclowlllly, c:ame for
the children.

Announce
Plans for
Wedding

~r===:::::=::::: =:=:::::=:!;!;!;!;:;::=:=::;:;:;:;:;::=:=::;:;:;::===t~

Pastor To Speak

RAY RIGGS, INC.

MARK V STORE

Special

Day for Nazarenes

WEST MAIN ST.
POMEROY ,0,
SUPPORT THE CHURCH OF YOUR CHOICE

BAKERS OF GOOD BREAD
HUNTINGTON, W. VA.

U NI T E D

METHODLST - Rov. WerlleU
Stutler, ]:8stor. Sunday School,
9 L m.; Kenneth Wlggena, Soc&gt;l
Worshlp serYice, 10 L m.

Russell K. McDaniel, Jesse D.

Dalo.
011 Moadal, while In Charloa- JaduDrvilta. Fla.; one 1011, wn •
.tun, Mrs. Dudding, Mra. Ward !lam L., ol Point Pleasant, and
aad 1011 visited Miss A I m a

MINERSVILLE

SOUTH

P.m.

7:30 p, m. Rustler Claso
meeting, rourth Friday &lt;1 oath
monljl at 6 p, m, Wnloyan Sorv·
cle Guild, fourth Monday &lt;1 eacb
month, 7:30 p, m.; JUnior HIP.
a. m.; Worshl,p, 10:25 a. m, MYF, 4:30 »- m. each SundloYi
Youth choir rehearsal, Monday, Senior Htgh MYF, 5:30 p. m.,
6:30 p, m. Mrs, Marvin Burt, each Sunday.
director; Sonlor choir roheorsal,
PORTLAND METHODIST Thursday, 7:30p.m., Mrll. Paul Rev. W, Dale McClurg, pastor.
Neue, director. Thursday, all Sunday Scmoi, 9:SO a. m,, Wordll3, Busy Bee qullting party In ihfp service, 7:30 p. m.
church aoc:lal room.
OAK GROVE METHODIST RUTLAND
CHURCH
OF W. Dale McClurg, paotor. Sunday
CI!RlST - ~ w, Carter, pas- Scbool, 10:30 a. m,; Worship
tor. Sunday School, 9:30 a, m.; service, 9:30 a. m., first and
Communion and worship service. third Sund.B.Y each mor6.
10:30 a. m,; Prayer mootiQ!,
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIS!' Thursda,y, 7:10p.m. V, lL Bra- Pomeroy - Harrt&amp;onville Road.
loy, SUpt.
Eugene Underwood, PIIIDr• Ke,_
CHESTER ~E:l'HODIST Ctuu"ge ' nell! Grover, SIJnday School ~
- Rev. Pearl A.. Casto, pastor. ~ School, 9:30 a.m.; WorCHE8TEih Worship, 9 a, m.; shiP service, 10:30 a. m. &amp;Jnr!Q
Suuda.y School, 10 a. m.i Mrl. eveni~ service, 7 p. m. Prayer·
Waid Spencer, Supt. FLAT- 11\beting, Thursday, 7:30 p. m.
WOOD5: Clurch School, Sunday,
11 a.m., John Bally, SUjJI. Wor·
ST, -JOHN'S LUTIIERAN-IIrl·
ship service alternates wltll Al· an El1!01, pulor, MorniJJII - ·
tred and Flatwoods. Services ship, 9 a. m.; s.n:tay Sehool,
Sunday mornlrw or evening, ot 10:30 a. m,
each week.
ST. PAUL'S LUTHERAN -32
GRACE EPISCOPAL- E. Main E. Socood St., .-eroy. Smday
St., Pomeroy- Sunday. ~1, 10 a.m.;Worship&amp;ervice
aervlee, 10:30 a. m. wUh IY- 11 a. m.
leadera.
I
SY RACliSE UNITED METROSEVENTH DAY ADVE~T DLST CHURCH - Rev. Paul A.
Ch~h - Pcmeroy, Mul rry Sellers, pastor. SW1daY School,
Be Qui 8 me
He,glrto Road, oorth ol \' ram 9·30
Memorial Hospital. Phillip Gager, pastor. Wednesday, 7 : 30 p. m.. first ahl third Sundays each m., Bible Study and prayer meet- m nth.
E ·•-tl
lng. Saturday: Sabbath School,
o
ve, .....'6 evange11 a c

J

I

School, 9:30 a.m.; WorebJp Jel"V•
lee, iO:SO a. m.; Evenllw worah!p, 7:30 p. m. ~er and
Praise service, 111ursdiy, 7:30

POMEROY TRINITY UNITED
CHURCH OF CHRIST •• Rov. W.
H. Porrto, pastor, Patrick D,
Wood, Supt. Smday Sdtool, 9:15

SUTTON MEI'HODJST - Rev,
W.
Dale McClurg, pastor, Sun&amp;t&gt;t.
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST- day School, 10:30 a. m,; Worship
DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRIST
Norman McCain, &amp;uperll'lterdent., Service, 9:30 a. m., second am
"-Ronnie Russell, pastor. Nor-Services
at 9:30 a. m. fourth Sunda.y eaeh month.
man c. Will, SliP~ Sunday SchooL Preach!rw,weekly
tint and "thlrdSunday
~ 9:30 L ·m.; Worship service.
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE
of month by Charles Russell at
I. 10:30 a. m, Christian Endeavor
Herbert
NAZARENE
- Rev.
9:30 a. m.
Sunday evening,
BRADFORD CHURCH
OF Grate, pastor. Worship service,
RACINE FIRST CHURCH OF
. CHRIST -Charles Russell, pal- 11 a. m. and 7:30p.m, Sunda_y.
TRE NAZARENE -Sunday School
tor. Richard Gilkey, Supt. Sun- Sunda,y School, 9:30 a.m. Rict.9:30 a. m.; Mondng Worship,
day School, 9:30 a. m.i Mornl~ ard Barton, Supt., Charles Bis~ 10:30 a. m.; Emllrw WorshiP,
Worship, 10:30 a. m.; Eveni~ sell, assistantsupL Prayer meet~ 7:30 p. m. Prayer services, 7:30
worship, 7 p.m. Wednesday Bible ing, Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
i! p, m. W~aday. Sunday Scbool
study, 7:30 p.. m.
S.rtntendenl, Pauline McClinRt:QRGANIZED CHURCH OF'
HARRISONVILLE PRESBYtock. Partor. Rev, Morris M.
Jesus Chriat of Latter D a y TEIUAN - Mrs. Norma Lee,
~ Wolte.
~ TUPPERS PLAINS UNITED Saints, Portland - Racine Road. Suncla.Y School &amp;c&gt;erintendent.
Sunday Schoo~ 9:30 L m.; Mom· Sunday School, 9:30 L m. SUJlMETHODlST- M..-niogWorshlp
ing Worship, 10:30 a.m. Sunday day servrce, 8 p. m., the Rev.
9:30 L m. at !ormer EUB buildevening
service at 1. Wednosday Max . Donahue of Middleport
trw. E&gt;Panded Sunday School sesewning prayer service, 7:30. speaking,
sion !or nursery to grade six
Pastor, Elder Frederick J. Stochildren at former Methodist anJEROV All'S WITNEllS&amp;'l, Lor·
bart.
"
10:30 a. m.; Worship, 9:30 a. m.
I ne:xat 9:30 L m., Mrs.J ames
ry Carnahan, presidiJVmlnister.
F1RST UNITED PRESBYTER·
BRADBURY
C
H
U
R
C
H
OF
Stout, children's ~erlntendent.
Sunda,y: Bible lecture, 9:30a.m.;
IAN
CHURCH _
ldiddleport,
CHRIST
James
H.
Smith,
Pas~nda.v Church School, adults and
WW:h Tower atud,y, 10:30 a. m,i
Guest
Minister,
James
Buchanyouth, 10:30 L m; jamior high, tor. Slllld.al' School, 9: 30 L m. ; Wedneoday: Bible study, 7 p, m,
an,
Sunday
School
s~rintensenior high and you~ adults Supt. Glen Evans. Church ser- Tburoday: Ministry ocbool, 7 p,
dent. Sulllay School, 9:30 a.m.
,..#lOOt in rormer Methodist Church vices, 10:30 a.m.; evening, 7:30 m. Service meeting, 8 p. m.
Worship Service, 10:30 a.m.
for Sunday Church School. Boyd p.m.; Wednesday, Prayer serMAS&lt;JN CHURCH OF CHRISTChoir practice, 7:30 p.m. WedHackney, youth SIQ)erintendent; Yices, 7:30p.m.
Miller st. - Eversoo Weekley,
post high cl&amp;ll and oau1ar adult&amp;.
pastor. Bible study clas&amp;eii,SUn- neatlay.
ASBURY
UNITED METHOmeetlog lli'!Dhner !1m bullillng,
GRAHAM UNITED METHO- day, 10 a.m. Worship and preachHobart VIneyard, S!lll Adult BI- DISI" CHURCH- Preaching, 9,. ing, 10:55 a. m.; Su:od83 evening
DJST, Syracuse - Re'¥. WertJell
ble Clan part,y,last MondQ each 30 a.m., Firlt and Second :im- service, 7:30,
BlbJe
study
Stutler, pastor. Sl.U'Miay School,
month. Youill Fellowship each da,ya of each month; Third and classes, Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. _ 10 L m.; ClrroU Norris, Supt.
Sunday• 6 p, m. in tormer Meth- Fourth &amp;mdaya each month, WorWorship service, 11 a.m.; MVF
MORNING
STAR UNITED
odist building. llistrict youth rt.I. ship aenrice at 7:30 p.m.; Wed6 p. m. Sunday. Prayer meeting
METHODIST CHURCH - Rov.
11 first Monday oloach month.
Wednesday, R p. m.
neoclajo evenings at 7,30, Prayer
William Airson, pastor; J o h n
LET ART UNITED METHO- and Bible aludy.
POMEROY CHURCH OF THE
Jhle, Sll!t.; Roy Van Meter, Asst.
DlSI" CHURCH - First and Soc- .
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION S\Vl &amp;lnday School. 9:45 L m.;
NAZARENE- Corner Unionand
and &amp;lndays J&gt;l'eachlng, 8 p.m.; -Bald Koobs, Portiand-Buhan
CHESTER CHURCH OF GOO.: Mulberry. Rov. Cllde V. HenderThird and Fourth &amp;lndays, &amp;Ill· Road. Rev. E. J. GriMih,pastor. The Rev, ChesterBryant,pastor.
son, pastor. Sunday Schoci, 9:30
day SchoollO a.m., Worship ser- Sunday School, 9,30 L m.; Hog· SunJay School, 11:30 a. m.; WarL m.; Raymond Walburn, Supt.
vice 11 a.m.; Tuesday evening&amp; er WUCred, S~t. Surday worahip ship service, 11 a. m.; Evenl.ng
Morning worship, 10:30 a. m.;
at 8 p.m., PrayerandBfble&amp;'bldy.
service, 7:30 p. m. Prayer meet- worship, 7:30p.m. Prayer serv- Evening Service, 7:30 p. m. ~
i~ Tuesday, 7:30 p. m., Mil- ice, Tuesday, 7:SO p. m. Youth
week service, Wednesday, 7:30
ford Frederick, class leader. Service, Thurada.y, 7;30 p. m. p.m.
Youth Fellowship, Friday, 7:30p. Monthly s!Jws, first Saturday &lt;1
FOREST RUN UNITED METHm. Ernest Deeter, leaderi Rog- each month.
ODLST - Ro&gt;. Wendell G. Stut.er Wilfred, Jr., presidert.
HEMLOCK GROVE Chrlotlan
MAS&lt;JN ASSEMBLY CHlJRCH Church - James Qui&amp;enberry, ler, pastor. Worship service, 9
OF GOD - Second SL, Muon, pallor; Roy Whaley, supt. Com- L m. i Sunday School:. 10 L m.
W, Va. Sunday Scbool, IU a,m; munion am ~rahJp servl&lt;:e, 9:30 Mrs. Fred Nease, &amp;c»t.
P. m.

8;20. MJ.d ..'I'IMk .Pn.,Yer meet ..
.Jng~ Wednesda;y, ?:SO »• m., "ra.
Mule Holst~, clua leader.
POMEROY LOWER
LIGirl'
Cbun:h - Harril&lt;lnvllle Rood Rev, Roy Ta.vli&gt;r, pastor, Nan!
Hartman, S. S. SUpt.
Sunday

.

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~'.A 'LITILE

_
......,

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'HOMEWORK' WatcJtfug&gt;W~t''· Ads Br~g T,~p Grade Result;$

C.••.• •

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11 c-. .... W.f\111 ••• ....c......
II
,
U ,., .... DIUI~Jd . . M~ . .
. . . . . Mill wtltlln II ...,._
CAID OP THAfiiCI &amp; OIITUAIY
1 ..... fiM' It ...... Mttltftol.... Ia.

.®

WANTED.I

2 SIGNS 'Pomeroy

Motor Co.

OP

QttAUTY

show litUe wear. 4 door.
66 CIIEVELLE . , , . . . . . . . . . ... , , .. , .. , , . ,$199~
4 door HT, local owner, low mileage car, belgl ftnish wttb
mate~

Interior, w-s-w, like new, V8, auto.

trans., P.S.,

radio and heater,
66 CHEVELLE . , . . . . . . , . , .... , , . , . , , .• $2095
SS 396 HT coupe, 4 speed trans., Positractlon. Wide oW
tires, red Interior, White 1lniah. Radioan:t beater. Real perfonmane~
.

ltl.lltD ADI

'

........... c:...... ,.. ....

IIW

I.

OPPICii NOVRI

'

C•rd ot Thank•

I'OMEIIOY, OHIO

THE FAMILY of Gall Manuel
Haupin wish~s

.

I

, l r

' \i
·~:

';

express

sincere thanks lo all toooe
who sent food, flowers and
cards ; thanks also lo the WILL DO ...ewing at bomL
zippers.
pockets, pegging.
pallbearers IIJld all those who
hemming,
alterations, el&lt;.
expressed their kindness and
Mrs.
Freddie
Thabet, Mason,
II)'Dipathy ill any way during
Phone 'm-5651.
4-30-tfc
our bereavement.
Husband, Roy; daughler,
HAPPY HOUR, Shenang Springs
Judy, cwu. llrothl!l"S and
Nile Club, 5 lo 8 p.m. Monsisters.
H-ltp
day thru Friday. Ladles night
every Friday.
u.tfc

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&lt;' ·•

""

•'

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'

·,_1'

In Memory

IN LOVING memory of Cbarles
C. Reed who passed away
seven years ago loday, on
Sept. 6, 1961.

NOW OPEN from 10 A.M. to 10
P.M. the S&amp;W Drive In on
the by-pass Rt. 7. Soft Ice
cream, good food, specials on
Monday and Thursday.
Sometimes Its hard to under8-4-Mtt
stand
These things that have to be;
W•11ted To Buy
But God In His wisdom has
SENG. diggers, ginseng $32 lb.,
a plao
snake root $4.50 lb., Col. Seal
Beyond our power lo see.
$2.25 lb. Bill Bailey, Reecbvllle.
~
Sadly missed by Mrs.

Reed and daughlers,
.Enna Cleland and

ANTIQUES. furnlture, dishes,
ml!eeUaneous. Mrs. Howard
Lol8 McCsln.
H-Ue
Cecll, 1100 W. Main St., Pomeroy.
l.ZS.tfc
IN LOVING memory of my
dear husband and our dear
Daddy who passed away one GIRL'S bicycle, Engllsh type
preferred. Pbcme 949-:1273.
year loday, Sepl. 6, 1967.

~

The way is rough, my God,
Help Wanted
And I am, Ob so weary,
SOMEONE
lo WOlit In yard aod
But I have fallb,
For thou the aame hast trnd
garden. Write Cyntllia LollAlone in patha most dreary.
bing, 379 Park St., Middle,.. ~keahort the journey, Lord,
port.
0-6-3le
• For I am ob so lonely.
And I bave faith
snJDENT REPORTERS wantThat one beneath the sword
ed fur Marauders, Eagles,
For wbom my heart yearns
Tornado, White Falcon foot.
&lt;Illy,
hall games lo keep complete
We mlsll you our loved ooe.
game statlslles and compose
game reports Friday nights
Sadly missed by wife 8lld
through early November, Prefamlllea, Paul's, Betty's
fer one In each school. Call
and Jame;.
H-ltp
The Dally Sentinel. Phone
9112-2156 days or Cbealer Tan·
nehill, 992-3311, evenings.

.

LDSt and hund
FOUND, ebann bracelet near
Rizer Oil Co .. ill Pomeroy.
Pbane i9UI97.
~

.

Lost
ONE LARGE stud pony, black.
Pbone 992-2158.
9+31&lt;

Notice
IWI SHOOT Sunday, Sept. 8.
Racllle-Basban Road. Spon·
aored by Racine Fire Dept.
Hlms, bacon, and 1&gt; bog.
~

BAND EVERY Friday from I
p.m. to 2 a.m. Best band In
the area. Shenang Springs
NU. Club.
l-i.1le
TilE MEIGS County Fish and
Gorne Assn., will bave a very
Important meeting Friday at
7:!0 p.m. at the Second Ward
Fire Houae. All members are
urged lo attend.
l+3te

NO Tlm!PASSING or lnmtlnc
on my property. Addle R.
Jllrlon, Rt. I, Racine, Ohio.

~

CAR BOPS. apply in periOD at
Crow'a steak House, Pomeroy,
l4lf&lt;:
FUlL TIME and part time
work. Phone 11112-9913. U«p

TOY LADIES earn t2$.00 an
evening demonstrating loya
and gifts. No Investment, col·
or catalog. Car and pbone
necessary. Wrl 1111' ........
necessary. Write Toy Ladles
Party Plan, Jor...town, Pannsylvanla.
~

For Sale or Trade
1967 MUSTANG, 1-eylinder, 1speed, 11611 (l!evrolet Caprice,
aolomaUc, [lOWI!l' l!eerlng and
hrakeo, flnaoclng avallabl!,
pbane 119UM7 after 5 phone
lli'U7411.
7-31-tfc
STORE ~ for aale
or trade for house trailer. M
• G Food Market. three mne.
S01IIb of Mlddleprt on Rt. 7.
~

H&amp;p

For lint
l!:FFICIBNCY two bedroom
lurnllbal aparlment, Pl-.
11112 11.
t-1-lllc

and unfundsbel
THERE wllJ be a gun 11boot nJRNISIIED
.... lmalls. Cloae to ldlaoL
Sunday, Seplembe• t. belllnnlng at ·noon at the Forked
Ran Sportsman Club. Every·

-llweleomo.

I

j'
,.·•

~I&lt;

Phone 11112 5tl',

141-IJ.llc

TJWLJ!:R SPACE, aU utlllllel
available. Inquire 151 llulber.
ry llfllr I or I p.m. 1Jrlta P.
o. a... as Powaa), s.a.«e

I WilL not 1&gt;o ros[lllllllble IU'
11111 debto olheZ' than my own.
Ballle Hobertson, S)tacw. P'liiiNJl!IIBD GARAGE l)llrlOldo.
t+3lp
011 JJr Ja BDl. UIDIIIel
paid; dill CIIIJ. Phone BAND l'rldly and Saturday at

-·

Jd'• Club ... llanisonvllle
~-~
Rd. off Rl. 7, Gayle Mellon- TIIllltK BOOIIlandsbed l)llrlUI and bll Driller's Coomtrr
llli!IIC, !lllaal • 5111. ~ .
lllalle.
l+3te
~ LOTS. Bob'• llldllll
BAND ._, l'rldly
eo..t, l)i&amp;alib, ado Cll state
).111. to I a.m.
Rl. IJt, Pbone .....1.
B!alllp Nlte Club.
•n-~~~c

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ROUND WOOD
ALL SPECIES

67 CIIEV, BEL AIR,,, , . .... , , , , , . , , .•..•. $2395
Less than 16,000 miles by local owner, V8 engine, Power~ ,
glide trans., radio. ivory over blue flnllh. White W'all tlrea

.......... ...
Motor Co.
""...................
..... ,...............". Pomeroy
OPEN EVES. 1:00 P.M.
~

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t ,... ..., ..................
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, :• .. ~ '1110 Dall,r ~. A&gt;meroy-Mlddl"l"'rt, 0., Frlc11,1, 5o)lt. 6, 1988

Ma•l,.um Dlamotor 10 tn.
'Minimum Dlamotor 2 .ln.
Minimum LOftGth ~ fHt

ss.oo

. Call Pomeroy

For Sale

PHONE 992-2094

10 OLIVER trac!or mowing
macblne and
eulllvaloro
~ tJO, I&gt; lon GMC 1956
good shape $200.00. G. A.
Deem, Racine, Ohio. t+3le

cuse, on Rt. 124 out of blsh
water. Lovely view of river.
Phone-.
~

...
•
"

ServiCe

5 1GHf-l SURE
LiKEW&amp;E

'

All'68's Red!!Ced

PP.INCESS-WT

69 MODIS

INKIWIODV .
AFrallME-

AVAILABLE

SOON ' .

.....

F'9J11 tho t.orlooit truclt or
Bull4&gt;oar . Radiator To ThO
fmollest H-r ~

ILAETTNARS '

Hockllvor( Ohio '
PHONE

PH. 98:1-2143

66N370

Long For

111E BORN LOSER

Food •••

-

Sill. ROOM house, oath, fum.
ished or unfurnished, in Syra-

UPEIIEIKE~

Scllwarztl

WEEKENDS ONLY · ·
»tic
TRAILER SPACE, ready to
hook up, private, plenty of
It PT. SKJFIF, 3.6 molor, OITI,
TODD' for eblldren to play.
phone JM9..1m,
U«e
Phone 992-390f.
8-14-lfc
FIVE ROOMS, bath, furnlahed
apartment, 1\f &amp; G Markel,
three miles south of M1ddleporl on R.t. 7.
9+3tp

s:~ss

SALES AND SERVICE

-GIJAtAHI&amp;D-

7 ROOMS AND BATH, !.VI
ACRES. QUARTER MILE
FURNISHED TWO BEDROOM
FROM POMEROY COfiPOR.
APARTMENT,
Mldc!!epor1,
ATION
LIMml.
CALL
pbone 19Z-#14.
U.UC

For lent

EYINIUDE .

Wheel Alignment

PER TON

614~2-2181

1\XPERT

You' J J
find ii: here! Your fno·
rite fooda aerYed juat the
.ny you like the•. A.Jnya
fut, friendly aenice.
1 ike Mother eooked?

Bring the fo~nll)' hare on
Sunda)'. Treat them to
our Broastad Chick•n.

BAILEY'S RESTAURANT

GOOD rent In the &lt;OUDiry, sli
rooms and bath, three bed· NINE ROOM bouse, one and a
hall bath, desirable location
218 E. Moln
Phono 992-9974
Pa11oroy
rooms, large basement, play
In
Middleport. Near schools.'
room aod garage, bas oll
O.llr 5:30 A.M. "'8:30 P.M.-Suoolay 7:00"' 7:00
Call 992-5498.
~
beat and is lDaulated, drilled
weU and spring bouse, large
......... Opportunlly
garden and 50 acres of fen- 110 ACRE farm, good 1-room
. f;or !iale
houae,
large
barn,
.
40
acres
eed pasture for a pony or &lt;11'11
tlllable, balance pasture and 2 STORY house lD Racine, 8 EXTRA INCOME OPPORTIJN.
H desired,
bus lllopa
tlmher.
One mOe off 121, Ml·
ITY. Rellable man or woman,
I'OOl!lll, bath, large poreb, ga.
at the door. l .: cated lu a
nen.vllle,
Ohio. Pbone 992no selling, re!Dl and collect
rage, workshop, basement,
quiet, peaceful &gt;Uey a few
-.utc
from new type coin operated
gas heat, sbade, Ideal locaminutes drive !: om RadDe. 6633.
dispensers
in YOUr area. Betion
liB'
children.
See
WUlle
Call Esther West, 94P-211D.
SIX
KNIFE
com
chopper
$250;
come
0111'
dlstrlhutor. Must
Davis
or
Phone
9$31123.
H4le
nay biller $400. Pbime
have car, references, ta50 to .
~tp
9411-2783.
~p
11950 cash Investment, .....,.
S ROOM furn1sbed aparlmellt,
ad
by equipment and lnVOD·
111811 STEREO, lovely walnut
front and back entrance, all
SOLID
STATE
atereo,
191111
tory, Ten hours weetly can
console with AM and FM raeonvenlen&lt;es, upataln, back
walnut console model, raai1\
net ..ceDent lneome. For
dio,
aulomsllc
noattng
turn
porch. Pbone 992-3134, ~·
equipped, with ~ aut.·
personal Interview, write, Jn.
table. Take over paym.nts of
matlc changer, 4-ipealter
eluding pllone number, lo Cal$$.110 per month or pay bal·
Pets For Sale
sound system. Pay only
Ton !kJpply Company, Inc.,
aoce due, f!OUI. Th1a ..t
SCHNAUZERS, Codters, Pood· $77.33, or monthly payments.
11110
Bryao Ave., Lexlnglo:l,
sold much blsher. Tty II bt
lea and WesUes 'While ScotCall 992-3218.
l-Ute
your home, Call 9JI2.2836,
Kentucky 405CII.
liMp
Ilea', also breeding atook.
Barkaroo Kennels, Coolville, EARLY AMERICAN atereo,
.. ~, ~ :0. 46723.
8-~
·lovely maple flnlah, with Jn. 10 PAYMENTS of $5 or ttl
slaot on radio, AM &amp; FM, te..b. Muat sell 19118 sewing
speed ebaoger, dual volume
Insurance
machine. FuDy equipped 1o
control. Balance of $9U12, or
AUTOMOBILE )Maranee beet
zig sag, make bulloabolea,
montflly payments of tl.
eancelled? Lost your operataew on huttoos, etc. s months
or's Ueense? Call JI9S.2!11111.
Phone 992-32tB.
U«e
old. Call WJ-2836.
H4le
I II flo
SEWING MACHINE: Thla aew. 1968 $CIIIJLT Mobile Home, GEo. IIOII8TE'l'I'EI llnbr
POMEROY - 1~ Acres, 6
lng maeblne designed espeFor Sale
brand new, 1%150, two bedrooms, 3 bedrooms, storm
cially
1o
meet
all
your
aew:
GENTLE MARE PONY a n d
rooms, wfl1 sell or trade In
doors and wlndows. Front
lng
requirements
lor
maoy
colt, clleap. Vernon Weber,
on good property. S. D. Jlu&amp;.
porch, bi&gt;wnenl.
years. Makes beautiful dekirk, M6 Plum Street, ~ POMEROY - S story brlet on
RuOand. Pllone 74UG,
signs. Selw em butrons, etc. ' · dlapori.
8-ll«&lt;!
~
East Main. Very reeP01!eNe.
Pay only f45.96, or monthly
II
ACRES - U acres of botpa)'lllents. Call 992-3218 and 441 INCH Sorrel Pony, 7 years
MALE BASSET bouDd p u p 1.
tom, 2 barns, one lor lbeep.
(ISk for free demonstration.
Phone 9IS ms, Matgaet
old, $50.110. See at Jato Lee's
Large bouse of a 1'001111, II&gt;
~
Groce, Laag Bottom. 810«e II·
pasture at Racine, Oblo.
baths, lUll basement, pordtes,
2nd
houaa of 6 1'001111, BuildBRACE youraa1f for a tbrlll I~ STORY home, S beohooma,
Ing
lots
and minerals,
the l1rst time you 1180 111ue
bath, uUUty room, storm
IIEUI:N
..
\'IRiliL TEAJ'ORD
Lustre. Rent electric obaJn. doors, and windows, sldln&amp;
lusiMII Services
two car garage, garden spot,
pooer ., .......... Furniture
··~
drU1ad well, two c1stema, RADIO AND 'IV REPAIR, boule ASliOCil'i'E
calls, antama, sale and fD.
plus several olheZ' features.
stallallon.
John Harrison, '101
GRAVELY tradlr wlltl moll I.ocatad on nice 1ol apprulBroadway
St., llldcllaport,
malely 1I&gt; mllel from RutaU.clunenls, Pbone ~~Uta.
pllone
tn-2521.
7-lt-Uc
LEGAL NOTICE
land on tile Rutlanli-Jrarrl.
aoovD1e Road, Phone 7tJ.
1.1~ INOTICI
;Q
011 PLUS COUIIT
CVRTiliS
breeding li!ltlce ol IN TMI
...
..l«e
MIIOI COUNTY, 01110
1963 TRlUMPR llcmnavllle moZl dllferent bNecll, ealtle llrNo. 14...,
loreycle, Phone a...ter •
ea or 4 lineds of 8081 ...,..,
SPECIAL STEREO, 1961 Early
1350 or - at Newell'• 8unJ
II)' Cllllng Parter 11112-DS!, J'o.
American llereo radio com000.
..• ....,
l1181'0J or l&amp;'l.ml Ooolvllle.
bination. lleautUul solld state
unit with 4 opeed changer.
ANTIQUF.'I, cut glqs, fln1.
Pay balance ol tll9. 12 or 111&lt;11&gt;o
lure, pbone 992-2747. U«e
c. c. IIJW)POJID
thly payments ol ... Also
AUCnONBER
bave ftptll!l11'11 llereo lu
CORNER END table, mallotnJnut eablnet, c apeaker
ewr'*
8a ••
11111, excellenl
condition.
... ..
I
IOIIDd
oyltem,
•
opeed
dual
Phone JI9S.2W after 7 p.m.
OUCBI . . . .
Yolume control. llalance of
1-Utp
I,tllll or 1111111thly paymenls
• l tic
of • • Pbone lft.Dll, t-l«c
10 • 110· Sears fnDer 811111nB,
snow loading kit. $140. Brand
AIR OONMnoNJNG ltofrl&amp;ll'new. Ph- 11112 21108 or 11112- JI'NE ROOII - . c1ooo to a!IOII avlee. Jact's Befrlt"""'· hoaplla1 and school lu
:ztrl.
M-4le
. .llon, New Jra-. 110111
.._Of, Pbone flll.ll1l.
BZJL
' I lfo
FIVE ROOM: boule, ,bath, 12
acm. Sell on land c:wlud. ta RAIIBLER lu good .,.: IIBADY • IIIX
dell9Write Boo ei8C, 1u care of
end rfald to , _ projd.
dHIIII,
Pboae
IIIIUI'll.
The Dally Sentinel, Pomeroy,
t-l«c r.t and ...,, Free 1111N«p
malies. Pbone • tlaeiJelu Ralldy • llbt Oo., MMilJe,
POODLE
PUPPIES,
AltC
TOJ
NICE PONIES, your ehoke of
I • UD
miniature. m and ap. Stu4 port, Ohio.
10 head, flO. Eotey Hill, J&gt;o.

•EEK AND MEEK

.

t;L'(

sce:r-l!lRV !

....,,.!

"'"""P

' lti;;rEst~~~e ~le· ~ ;

HOBSTETT!I
REALTY

"Farley Ia tha Intellectual typ,_,-ou kntiW,

no HX

Tho A!mllllc

app.,.JI '
cllacovarod tha North Pole

a..

By Unltad Pres• lnternotlonll
montha aorllar- APril 6, 19Cit&gt;
Todl1 Ia Fridiy, Sept. 6, the '"Atbouaht ttr tha c!Q: Fr8ncb
2501b~ . or_1968 w!1h 116 t&lt;&gt; .• pbJiooop!'!lr_ IIIJlae Paa.Cilll "'""'
l'otJGIP.!!I' v " "
- .. ' · · ~·~ tliif'ltith, qat
.. The moon Ia
cinly by the i&gt;Oraon, but by
1be mOI'nilli star ts Mara.
heart."
·
The ,..,.,. stars are Saturn
aod

run.

it..

v......

On thla dQin history:
in 1620 -149 Pu,rtms aet sail

lrom Entlland for tho New

LEGAL NOTICE

World.
In 19QI President McKinley
wu shot aod crltlcllly wiiWidad
In Bul1alo, N, Y. He dtod on
Sept. 14
In 1909 word waa received
that Admiral Robert P81I7 hid

-

• ••. ,._..

e.Mtc

m•-cum:

••.ate

•••

•

I

.......

Jllel"')'.

Phone •

•' 1-Wtc

HalpWam.d

some. and
11111ta.

w•

~··
u aPboae
11e

AKC Goldea IWrliriw JAIRI•
Ill Alb Sl, MlddJeporl. MO.
fa&amp;
DlNIIEBEC Pofolneo, Ollrles
Bl1biD,
Zit:

w

alii'ACT
.FAYElUM'Y
•••••lrtrO•

••

Deaerll cover about onellllb of tile earlb's laad sur·
face.
'

.

N. W.
OPTOMRIIST

O.D. .
'

OJ'nCE HotJIIIi 9:811 TO 12·, 2 TO~ (Cl.&lt;m: AT NOOII'ON:
'1'1ltJII&amp;) - EAST cobRT ST., POIIERoY .

·

�.

,

...

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'

'

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~'.A 'LITILE

_
......,

.._......
"""' .......
..

'HOMEWORK' WatcJtfug&gt;W~t''· Ads Br~g T,~p Grade Result;$

C.••.• •

......... ' .....

......
....
... ,.......
................ ..,....,..
...........
..

&amp; C..:wlltM

, .... llllltll t .... ..,
Dej- ~ .,. . . . .' "
~

,_'"'""'"'~"'

IMII

''tl. 'tM flllllll:l• n

wHI _.

..".._ ,
....... ,...w•......
..,..•• ...........

.. ,

Rfi .... ..,.IIM• ...

1r1:hrr1K1
..

li:allea.

p.,

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........... ...,. ...,.. ........

---

............ c...,..

7Jc

.

11 c-. .... W.f\111 ••• ....c......
II
,
U ,., .... DIUI~Jd . . M~ . .
. . . . . Mill wtltlln II ...,._
CAID OP THAfiiCI &amp; OIITUAIY
1 ..... fiM' It ...... Mttltftol.... Ia.

.®

WANTED.I

2 SIGNS 'Pomeroy

Motor Co.

OP

QttAUTY

show litUe wear. 4 door.
66 CIIEVELLE . , , . . . . . . . . . ... , , .. , .. , , . ,$199~
4 door HT, local owner, low mileage car, belgl ftnish wttb
mate~

Interior, w-s-w, like new, V8, auto.

trans., P.S.,

radio and heater,
66 CHEVELLE . , . . . . . . , . , .... , , . , . , , .• $2095
SS 396 HT coupe, 4 speed trans., Positractlon. Wide oW
tires, red Interior, White 1lniah. Radioan:t beater. Real perfonmane~
.

ltl.lltD ADI

'

........... c:...... ,.. ....

IIW

I.

OPPICii NOVRI

'

C•rd ot Thank•

I'OMEIIOY, OHIO

THE FAMILY of Gall Manuel
Haupin wish~s

.

I

, l r

' \i
·~:

';

express

sincere thanks lo all toooe
who sent food, flowers and
cards ; thanks also lo the WILL DO ...ewing at bomL
zippers.
pockets, pegging.
pallbearers IIJld all those who
hemming,
alterations, el&lt;.
expressed their kindness and
Mrs.
Freddie
Thabet, Mason,
II)'Dipathy ill any way during
Phone 'm-5651.
4-30-tfc
our bereavement.
Husband, Roy; daughler,
HAPPY HOUR, Shenang Springs
Judy, cwu. llrothl!l"S and
Nile Club, 5 lo 8 p.m. Monsisters.
H-ltp
day thru Friday. Ladles night
every Friday.
u.tfc

'

&lt;' ·•

""

•'

'
'

·,_1'

In Memory

IN LOVING memory of Cbarles
C. Reed who passed away
seven years ago loday, on
Sept. 6, 1961.

NOW OPEN from 10 A.M. to 10
P.M. the S&amp;W Drive In on
the by-pass Rt. 7. Soft Ice
cream, good food, specials on
Monday and Thursday.
Sometimes Its hard to under8-4-Mtt
stand
These things that have to be;
W•11ted To Buy
But God In His wisdom has
SENG. diggers, ginseng $32 lb.,
a plao
snake root $4.50 lb., Col. Seal
Beyond our power lo see.
$2.25 lb. Bill Bailey, Reecbvllle.
~
Sadly missed by Mrs.

Reed and daughlers,
.Enna Cleland and

ANTIQUES. furnlture, dishes,
ml!eeUaneous. Mrs. Howard
Lol8 McCsln.
H-Ue
Cecll, 1100 W. Main St., Pomeroy.
l.ZS.tfc
IN LOVING memory of my
dear husband and our dear
Daddy who passed away one GIRL'S bicycle, Engllsh type
preferred. Pbcme 949-:1273.
year loday, Sepl. 6, 1967.

~

The way is rough, my God,
Help Wanted
And I am, Ob so weary,
SOMEONE
lo WOlit In yard aod
But I have fallb,
For thou the aame hast trnd
garden. Write Cyntllia LollAlone in patha most dreary.
bing, 379 Park St., Middle,.. ~keahort the journey, Lord,
port.
0-6-3le
• For I am ob so lonely.
And I bave faith
snJDENT REPORTERS wantThat one beneath the sword
ed fur Marauders, Eagles,
For wbom my heart yearns
Tornado, White Falcon foot.
&lt;Illy,
hall games lo keep complete
We mlsll you our loved ooe.
game statlslles and compose
game reports Friday nights
Sadly missed by wife 8lld
through early November, Prefamlllea, Paul's, Betty's
fer one In each school. Call
and Jame;.
H-ltp
The Dally Sentinel. Phone
9112-2156 days or Cbealer Tan·
nehill, 992-3311, evenings.

.

LDSt and hund
FOUND, ebann bracelet near
Rizer Oil Co .. ill Pomeroy.
Pbane i9UI97.
~

.

Lost
ONE LARGE stud pony, black.
Pbone 992-2158.
9+31&lt;

Notice
IWI SHOOT Sunday, Sept. 8.
Racllle-Basban Road. Spon·
aored by Racine Fire Dept.
Hlms, bacon, and 1&gt; bog.
~

BAND EVERY Friday from I
p.m. to 2 a.m. Best band In
the area. Shenang Springs
NU. Club.
l-i.1le
TilE MEIGS County Fish and
Gorne Assn., will bave a very
Important meeting Friday at
7:!0 p.m. at the Second Ward
Fire Houae. All members are
urged lo attend.
l+3te

NO Tlm!PASSING or lnmtlnc
on my property. Addle R.
Jllrlon, Rt. I, Racine, Ohio.

~

CAR BOPS. apply in periOD at
Crow'a steak House, Pomeroy,
l4lf&lt;:
FUlL TIME and part time
work. Phone 11112-9913. U«p

TOY LADIES earn t2$.00 an
evening demonstrating loya
and gifts. No Investment, col·
or catalog. Car and pbone
necessary. Wrl 1111' ........
necessary. Write Toy Ladles
Party Plan, Jor...town, Pannsylvanla.
~

For Sale or Trade
1967 MUSTANG, 1-eylinder, 1speed, 11611 (l!evrolet Caprice,
aolomaUc, [lOWI!l' l!eerlng and
hrakeo, flnaoclng avallabl!,
pbane 119UM7 after 5 phone
lli'U7411.
7-31-tfc
STORE ~ for aale
or trade for house trailer. M
• G Food Market. three mne.
S01IIb of Mlddleprt on Rt. 7.
~

H&amp;p

For lint
l!:FFICIBNCY two bedroom
lurnllbal aparlment, Pl-.
11112 11.
t-1-lllc

and unfundsbel
THERE wllJ be a gun 11boot nJRNISIIED
.... lmalls. Cloae to ldlaoL
Sunday, Seplembe• t. belllnnlng at ·noon at the Forked
Ran Sportsman Club. Every·

-llweleomo.

I

j'
,.·•

~I&lt;

Phone 11112 5tl',

141-IJ.llc

TJWLJ!:R SPACE, aU utlllllel
available. Inquire 151 llulber.
ry llfllr I or I p.m. 1Jrlta P.
o. a... as Powaa), s.a.«e

I WilL not 1&gt;o ros[lllllllble IU'
11111 debto olheZ' than my own.
Ballle Hobertson, S)tacw. P'liiiNJl!IIBD GARAGE l)llrlOldo.
t+3lp
011 JJr Ja BDl. UIDIIIel
paid; dill CIIIJ. Phone BAND l'rldly and Saturday at

-·

Jd'• Club ... llanisonvllle
~-~
Rd. off Rl. 7, Gayle Mellon- TIIllltK BOOIIlandsbed l)llrlUI and bll Driller's Coomtrr
llli!IIC, !lllaal • 5111. ~ .
lllalle.
l+3te
~ LOTS. Bob'• llldllll
BAND ._, l'rldly
eo..t, l)i&amp;alib, ado Cll state
).111. to I a.m.
Rl. IJt, Pbone .....1.
B!alllp Nlte Club.
•n-~~~c

'

-

i

ROUND WOOD
ALL SPECIES

67 CIIEV, BEL AIR,,, , . .... , , , , , . , , .•..•. $2395
Less than 16,000 miles by local owner, V8 engine, Power~ ,
glide trans., radio. ivory over blue flnllh. White W'all tlrea

.......... ...
Motor Co.
""...................
..... ,...............". Pomeroy
OPEN EVES. 1:00 P.M.
~

..

..

t ,... ..., ..................
-

·' .

'

, :• .. ~ '1110 Dall,r ~. A&gt;meroy-Mlddl"l"'rt, 0., Frlc11,1, 5o)lt. 6, 1988

Ma•l,.um Dlamotor 10 tn.
'Minimum Dlamotor 2 .ln.
Minimum LOftGth ~ fHt

ss.oo

. Call Pomeroy

For Sale

PHONE 992-2094

10 OLIVER trac!or mowing
macblne and
eulllvaloro
~ tJO, I&gt; lon GMC 1956
good shape $200.00. G. A.
Deem, Racine, Ohio. t+3le

cuse, on Rt. 124 out of blsh
water. Lovely view of river.
Phone-.
~

...
•
"

ServiCe

5 1GHf-l SURE
LiKEW&amp;E

'

All'68's Red!!Ced

PP.INCESS-WT

69 MODIS

INKIWIODV .
AFrallME-

AVAILABLE

SOON ' .

.....

F'9J11 tho t.orlooit truclt or
Bull4&gt;oar . Radiator To ThO
fmollest H-r ~

ILAETTNARS '

Hockllvor( Ohio '
PHONE

PH. 98:1-2143

66N370

Long For

111E BORN LOSER

Food •••

-

Sill. ROOM house, oath, fum.
ished or unfurnished, in Syra-

UPEIIEIKE~

Scllwarztl

WEEKENDS ONLY · ·
»tic
TRAILER SPACE, ready to
hook up, private, plenty of
It PT. SKJFIF, 3.6 molor, OITI,
TODD' for eblldren to play.
phone JM9..1m,
U«e
Phone 992-390f.
8-14-lfc
FIVE ROOMS, bath, furnlahed
apartment, 1\f &amp; G Markel,
three miles south of M1ddleporl on R.t. 7.
9+3tp

s:~ss

SALES AND SERVICE

-GIJAtAHI&amp;D-

7 ROOMS AND BATH, !.VI
ACRES. QUARTER MILE
FURNISHED TWO BEDROOM
FROM POMEROY COfiPOR.
APARTMENT,
Mldc!!epor1,
ATION
LIMml.
CALL
pbone 19Z-#14.
U.UC

For lent

EYINIUDE .

Wheel Alignment

PER TON

614~2-2181

1\XPERT

You' J J
find ii: here! Your fno·
rite fooda aerYed juat the
.ny you like the•. A.Jnya
fut, friendly aenice.
1 ike Mother eooked?

Bring the fo~nll)' hare on
Sunda)'. Treat them to
our Broastad Chick•n.

BAILEY'S RESTAURANT

GOOD rent In the &lt;OUDiry, sli
rooms and bath, three bed· NINE ROOM bouse, one and a
hall bath, desirable location
218 E. Moln
Phono 992-9974
Pa11oroy
rooms, large basement, play
In
Middleport. Near schools.'
room aod garage, bas oll
O.llr 5:30 A.M. "'8:30 P.M.-Suoolay 7:00"' 7:00
Call 992-5498.
~
beat and is lDaulated, drilled
weU and spring bouse, large
......... Opportunlly
garden and 50 acres of fen- 110 ACRE farm, good 1-room
. f;or !iale
houae,
large
barn,
.
40
acres
eed pasture for a pony or &lt;11'11
tlllable, balance pasture and 2 STORY house lD Racine, 8 EXTRA INCOME OPPORTIJN.
H desired,
bus lllopa
tlmher.
One mOe off 121, Ml·
ITY. Rellable man or woman,
I'OOl!lll, bath, large poreb, ga.
at the door. l .: cated lu a
nen.vllle,
Ohio. Pbone 992no selling, re!Dl and collect
rage, workshop, basement,
quiet, peaceful &gt;Uey a few
-.utc
from new type coin operated
gas heat, sbade, Ideal locaminutes drive !: om RadDe. 6633.
dispensers
in YOUr area. Betion
liB'
children.
See
WUlle
Call Esther West, 94P-211D.
SIX
KNIFE
com
chopper
$250;
come
0111'
dlstrlhutor. Must
Davis
or
Phone
9$31123.
H4le
nay biller $400. Pbime
have car, references, ta50 to .
~tp
9411-2783.
~p
11950 cash Investment, .....,.
S ROOM furn1sbed aparlmellt,
ad
by equipment and lnVOD·
111811 STEREO, lovely walnut
front and back entrance, all
SOLID
STATE
atereo,
191111
tory, Ten hours weetly can
console with AM and FM raeonvenlen&lt;es, upataln, back
walnut console model, raai1\
net ..ceDent lneome. For
dio,
aulomsllc
noattng
turn
porch. Pbone 992-3134, ~·
equipped, with ~ aut.·
personal Interview, write, Jn.
table. Take over paym.nts of
matlc changer, 4-ipealter
eluding pllone number, lo Cal$$.110 per month or pay bal·
Pets For Sale
sound system. Pay only
Ton !kJpply Company, Inc.,
aoce due, f!OUI. Th1a ..t
SCHNAUZERS, Codters, Pood· $77.33, or monthly payments.
11110
Bryao Ave., Lexlnglo:l,
sold much blsher. Tty II bt
lea and WesUes 'While ScotCall 992-3218.
l-Ute
your home, Call 9JI2.2836,
Kentucky 405CII.
liMp
Ilea', also breeding atook.
Barkaroo Kennels, Coolville, EARLY AMERICAN atereo,
.. ~, ~ :0. 46723.
8-~
·lovely maple flnlah, with Jn. 10 PAYMENTS of $5 or ttl
slaot on radio, AM &amp; FM, te..b. Muat sell 19118 sewing
speed ebaoger, dual volume
Insurance
machine. FuDy equipped 1o
control. Balance of $9U12, or
AUTOMOBILE )Maranee beet
zig sag, make bulloabolea,
montflly payments of tl.
eancelled? Lost your operataew on huttoos, etc. s months
or's Ueense? Call JI9S.2!11111.
Phone 992-32tB.
U«e
old. Call WJ-2836.
H4le
I II flo
SEWING MACHINE: Thla aew. 1968 $CIIIJLT Mobile Home, GEo. IIOII8TE'l'I'EI llnbr
POMEROY - 1~ Acres, 6
lng maeblne designed espeFor Sale
brand new, 1%150, two bedrooms, 3 bedrooms, storm
cially
1o
meet
all
your
aew:
GENTLE MARE PONY a n d
rooms, wfl1 sell or trade In
doors and wlndows. Front
lng
requirements
lor
maoy
colt, clleap. Vernon Weber,
on good property. S. D. Jlu&amp;.
porch, bi&gt;wnenl.
years. Makes beautiful dekirk, M6 Plum Street, ~ POMEROY - S story brlet on
RuOand. Pllone 74UG,
signs. Selw em butrons, etc. ' · dlapori.
8-ll«&lt;!
~
East Main. Very reeP01!eNe.
Pay only f45.96, or monthly
II
ACRES - U acres of botpa)'lllents. Call 992-3218 and 441 INCH Sorrel Pony, 7 years
MALE BASSET bouDd p u p 1.
tom, 2 barns, one lor lbeep.
(ISk for free demonstration.
Phone 9IS ms, Matgaet
old, $50.110. See at Jato Lee's
Large bouse of a 1'001111, II&gt;
~
Groce, Laag Bottom. 810«e II·
pasture at Racine, Oblo.
baths, lUll basement, pordtes,
2nd
houaa of 6 1'001111, BuildBRACE youraa1f for a tbrlll I~ STORY home, S beohooma,
Ing
lots
and minerals,
the l1rst time you 1180 111ue
bath, uUUty room, storm
IIEUI:N
..
\'IRiliL TEAJ'ORD
Lustre. Rent electric obaJn. doors, and windows, sldln&amp;
lusiMII Services
two car garage, garden spot,
pooer ., .......... Furniture
··~
drU1ad well, two c1stema, RADIO AND 'IV REPAIR, boule ASliOCil'i'E
calls, antama, sale and fD.
plus several olheZ' features.
stallallon.
John Harrison, '101
GRAVELY tradlr wlltl moll I.ocatad on nice 1ol apprulBroadway
St., llldcllaport,
malely 1I&gt; mllel from RutaU.clunenls, Pbone ~~Uta.
pllone
tn-2521.
7-lt-Uc
LEGAL NOTICE
land on tile Rutlanli-Jrarrl.
aoovD1e Road, Phone 7tJ.
1.1~ INOTICI
;Q
011 PLUS COUIIT
CVRTiliS
breeding li!ltlce ol IN TMI
...
..l«e
MIIOI COUNTY, 01110
1963 TRlUMPR llcmnavllle moZl dllferent bNecll, ealtle llrNo. 14...,
loreycle, Phone a...ter •
ea or 4 lineds of 8081 ...,..,
SPECIAL STEREO, 1961 Early
1350 or - at Newell'• 8unJ
II)' Cllllng Parter 11112-DS!, J'o.
American llereo radio com000.
..• ....,
l1181'0J or l&amp;'l.ml Ooolvllle.
bination. lleautUul solld state
unit with 4 opeed changer.
ANTIQUF.'I, cut glqs, fln1.
Pay balance ol tll9. 12 or 111&lt;11&gt;o
lure, pbone 992-2747. U«e
c. c. IIJW)POJID
thly payments ol ... Also
AUCnONBER
bave ftptll!l11'11 llereo lu
CORNER END table, mallotnJnut eablnet, c apeaker
ewr'*
8a ••
11111, excellenl
condition.
... ..
I
IOIIDd
oyltem,
•
opeed
dual
Phone JI9S.2W after 7 p.m.
OUCBI . . . .
Yolume control. llalance of
1-Utp
I,tllll or 1111111thly paymenls
• l tic
of • • Pbone lft.Dll, t-l«c
10 • 110· Sears fnDer 811111nB,
snow loading kit. $140. Brand
AIR OONMnoNJNG ltofrl&amp;ll'new. Ph- 11112 21108 or 11112- JI'NE ROOII - . c1ooo to a!IOII avlee. Jact's Befrlt"""'· hoaplla1 and school lu
:ztrl.
M-4le
. .llon, New Jra-. 110111
.._Of, Pbone flll.ll1l.
BZJL
' I lfo
FIVE ROOM: boule, ,bath, 12
acm. Sell on land c:wlud. ta RAIIBLER lu good .,.: IIBADY • IIIX
dell9Write Boo ei8C, 1u care of
end rfald to , _ projd.
dHIIII,
Pboae
IIIIUI'll.
The Dally Sentinel, Pomeroy,
t-l«c r.t and ...,, Free 1111N«p
malies. Pbone • tlaeiJelu Ralldy • llbt Oo., MMilJe,
POODLE
PUPPIES,
AltC
TOJ
NICE PONIES, your ehoke of
I • UD
miniature. m and ap. Stu4 port, Ohio.
10 head, flO. Eotey Hill, J&gt;o.

•EEK AND MEEK

.

t;L'(

sce:r-l!lRV !

....,,.!

"'"""P

' lti;;rEst~~~e ~le· ~ ;

HOBSTETT!I
REALTY

"Farley Ia tha Intellectual typ,_,-ou kntiW,

no HX

Tho A!mllllc

app.,.JI '
cllacovarod tha North Pole

a..

By Unltad Pres• lnternotlonll
montha aorllar- APril 6, 19Cit&gt;
Todl1 Ia Fridiy, Sept. 6, the '"Atbouaht ttr tha c!Q: Fr8ncb
2501b~ . or_1968 w!1h 116 t&lt;&gt; .• pbJiooop!'!lr_ IIIJlae Paa.Cilll "'""'
l'otJGIP.!!I' v " "
- .. ' · · ~·~ tliif'ltith, qat
.. The moon Ia
cinly by the i&gt;Oraon, but by
1be mOI'nilli star ts Mara.
heart."
·
The ,..,.,. stars are Saturn
aod

run.

it..

v......

On thla dQin history:
in 1620 -149 Pu,rtms aet sail

lrom Entlland for tho New

LEGAL NOTICE

World.
In 19QI President McKinley
wu shot aod crltlcllly wiiWidad
In Bul1alo, N, Y. He dtod on
Sept. 14
In 1909 word waa received
that Admiral Robert P81I7 hid

-

• ••. ,._..

e.Mtc

m•-cum:

••.ate

•••

•

I

.......

Jllel"')'.

Phone •

•' 1-Wtc

HalpWam.d

some. and
11111ta.

w•

~··
u aPboae
11e

AKC Goldea IWrliriw JAIRI•
Ill Alb Sl, MlddJeporl. MO.
fa&amp;
DlNIIEBEC Pofolneo, Ollrles
Bl1biD,
Zit:

w

alii'ACT
.FAYElUM'Y
•••••lrtrO•

••

Deaerll cover about onellllb of tile earlb's laad sur·
face.
'

.

N. W.
OPTOMRIIST

O.D. .
'

OJ'nCE HotJIIIi 9:811 TO 12·, 2 TO~ (Cl.&lt;m: AT NOOII'ON:
'1'1ltJII&amp;) - EAST cobRT ST., POIIERoY .

·

�'

"·

. The Dally

s.;..u.,.,,.l'll!neroY-Mlcldleport, o., }'rll!lf,

'

'

Sept 6, 1868

· ·ksen Jokes · of Threats
W.\SHINGTON (UP()

~~~~ at

•
I
!

·l

_

I

the hindi o1 an
11111Bin was 1at0cl, Senate
Repul)llean leader Everett M
Dlrkoen tOld law 'olllo:ers .. j
' - he wait8 'till the Crost
eome1 IUid the barn swallows
are JP\8."
n.io did the 74-year-old
orator nonpareil or the Senate
.
b ro sh II,IU intermittent threllts
on his
over the last 8 •
months.
lX
Dirksen lightly related the
clrcumstan
to
ces
newsmen
Thursday, revealing that he has
been constantly under ard b
the Secret Service ~I
~
local policemen 'since ':e
threats began last spring.
Dirksen, who adopted a fright·
wig hairstyle long berore the
hippies and once wanted to be

yre

f

'
I

!,

. i,t
.
,,1

;i

~~

'-

;,

...

l

·\'I
\

! ,'
''tfi
"
'1

actor, described three
opecl!lc death threats reported
by authorities, the last on Aug.
24, two days before the
Democratic convention opened.

'
SepL6-7-8

·',,

Wayne - Robert Mitchum
"EL DORADO"

·'&lt;
'

AND
Sonny &amp; Cher
'"GOOD TIMES"

.'

.MEIGS 1HEA11£
TOmGHT AND SATURDAY
Sept. 6 - 7
Fabian • Mlmsy Farmer
"THE WILD RACERS"
(Technicolor)
AND
"DID YOU HEAR TilE ONE
ABOUT THE TRAVEUNG
SALESLADY?"
(Technicolor)
Phyllls Diller - Bob Denver
SUN. - MON. - TUES.
Sept. 8-9-10
Elvlo Presley in
SPEEDWAY
(Technlcolor)
Elvis Presley, Nancy Sinatra
FEATURETTE:
Down The Hatch
Jerkey Turkey
Sweet Mouoe Story of LUe
18 there a Doctor in the House?
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.

·.f
i2~~·'.
I.,,· .

.

'

,, 'J
~

.·~

' \'il

,r;,
\&lt;

•'•

·'

'

7

'I """ •-sed to have been
~";sslnated In lllJI oftlo:e," be
'
He said polloe deteetlves, the
sheriff's force, the ·FBI and
:r~-~e- all _guarded him
&lt;UI.IIU.IfSliJ'ol

to have him met

by . : e r · oftlcera when he
arnv
In Chicago the following
Monday.
The
ards
gu
followed him
throughout the · w~ ~ring a
series of lliinois camPaign
appearances, Dil'ksen said and
at one
lnl h8 sked
'
po
a
them to
lay
when he was sche&lt;hled
to vtsJt a small coontry town.
ju~Bu~x~:/01~~ 'Y: have
about It sir "' Dirkse~ said !Yij'"
He ..;ld ~lice told him ...;uldbe assassins knew th
1
e exac

?'f

during the week that
he left Decatur on a charter
fUghl to Chicagv.
The guardo, he sold, 'left him
last Tlwrsda,Y when he told

,,

. '

~w YORK (U~ ~ Mllik;ta• Pin• ·•,.,. relnvi~

d oelt empl~ '1*'..,11 are

·'

\

th""""' awl!¥ penolon , _ ,
be011116 tbey.Of\litl; are unaware
d a federal proiramor aH too

dlslnterestad Ill taking adVarQ&amp;e

.

.

.

'

'

·

·

eo., Set

True blllo were returned aplnst the following:
Marlin E. Johnaon, 311, Gaillpolls; Jack Price, 27, Rt. I (Jol.
llpolls; Gl&lt;m Hawldno, 28,
~old, and Marlin F, James,
38, Lower River Rd., ~11 for I1Cil-

Our

Special
Grtup of
Wo••~

Dresses

•

YOUNG PEOPLE WANT THE
BEST RIGHT NOW; THAT IS
A "FULL·SERVICE" BANK! '
Some young people write a lot of checks;
some wnte few-we. have checking accounts
for both! Our bankmg by mail and drive-in
bankmg servtces are great conveniences·
great time savers, too! Our loans-for abso:
lutely any worthwhile purpose-are quickly
ava1lable, clearly stated, and yours at help·
fully-low bank rates. Every banking service
you really need is right here! Shouldn't you
bank here ... and now?
·

Hea~-duty

Y.t hp. ntotor-

BACK T~
SCHOOL
.DRESSES

fall colora. Slzeo 3 to 6x and 7 to It

Is A Must

In Every

GALLIPOiJS - Wanda War- car struek a perked car owned
LOla F, Napier, of 505 l\tal!·
ren.· 34, of 2145 Eastern Ave., by
nolla
Dr. There was minor dam·
lllftjred minor InJuries when she
age to U, rlglt rroitt fender.
·,.. ·~ck b.Y a car at 10:35
Cars driven by VIrgie Houck, ·
p.iit on Eastern Ave., above
58, of IO Old Fori Trail andRob·Smllliiro St., Ill one of three
HeJ,ornon ol Bidwell were In~cclolent• . Frjday, according to

Girls

Wardro••

,•,

duu~le knit acetate with
complementary braid skimming to hemline. Note

llARTFOI\0

accenting 11ide button df•tail 011 collar.

i.iii. warriofliif.

Choose several Jumpers for her
!rom wr wide selection. Tailored

-

of all wool flaDnelo, plaid tweed a,
bond.iJ kallo, dacron 8lld cottm

New otyles arrtvi!W each day from 1q&gt; manufacturers _ 0811
pack knit dre&amp;Oes and sulll, beoutlful Goral print jeraey 1
crepes, all wool Oanaels, wool tweeds, matte jerseys, )lilt
dress you Mod we have In this outStaDdl!W gr...,, Dreoseo ror
jwd.or petites, regular juniors, mlsseaiDII half sizes. All D8W
ran ohadeo.

.u;

LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature In Pomeroy's
downtown buslne88 district at
ll:22 a.m. toda¥ wao 68 degrees

from. Sizes 3 to 6s--' 7 to 14.

SWEATERS

Ready To Wear Depart·
...

\Ulder sunny skies.

...
...

'

ment and See Our

HELP BACKFffiES
ATHENS (UPI) - Motorist S.
Fytaa• car struck and injured
Evangholla Papazoglou. Fytas
helped her into the car and begen the trip to a hospital. His
car collideci with another~ Miss
Papazoglou was killed.

Outstandin1 Group of
Womens Sweaters

• Larce self-lndexina Wrinpr
Assembty;.

aleeve V aetk

• Trlple-action ollilator pt1

chanol

dothes cteaner-taltlr~

allpovers~

jacketa,

ohert

I

9J!11:.•
e6

t

aleeve I.Upovera, sleeve-

• Four easy·rollina c..ters.

or

less shella, turtle neclta.
Yw 1111110 It, we have lt.
F1at kalla 8lld bulky.
Slzeo 34 to 40 and 40 to 46.

em;

.

~l'flLllll

,_

"

rfl.w
~ I' 0

;•",.

Nlir Is the P!r:fect1jme to IIJir Mens and Boys
Sweaters ·
·
. '·

WNATIONAL BANK
I'I

Member Federal Reserve System
Member FDIC

J

1

All Accountoln•urod Up To $15,000 Under
The Fod&lt;rol Depo.illnsur.,_, Corporotlon
-' '· paid on Cerlilicates of Deposit
Multiples of $1,000.00

in

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHTS 5:00 to 7:00

1

INGELS

RARE NOTE II ttruct II)'
Berol Kaloer·~kt of Potadalll, Eallt Germaay, wlto

FURNITURE
992·2635
Mlddlepolt, Ohio

laberlled IIIII lnullp.Cl!letL
u extremely rare Oae·
olriliJed woodta laslrumeat

•

j

ltttailor callora anti button

· • - · Mllors. Monr atylu
••,..-•-'with lo111 tall. Many
whll..prncl collar styles
· In ' fa. liar cuts. ,
)

4,95

whleh waa popjl(ar ,Ia lhe
lata eealuey, '

l

ocoullng. Mr. Whitley attends
·
.
· the Msln St. Baptist Church.
tune, ll!e band moved tlu'&lt;lu81lln·
lrlCIIte l&gt;"'dslon marchlntJWhlch
llicluded pill •WbeeJo,. 'l'he •'W"
lreiUJ I 1
wa• formed in oaluletothelrblgll
scbool and 1the baildsmen plll;)'ed
lbe alma , . . . and the fight

~=~~r;:"' ~

Discontinued ·

, ,,,r,,,,

C.r

,.

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·,: ~·truci' ·

''

Weather
Increasing cloudiness l n d
warmer Sunday night with a
chance of showers in north-west
portions of the state. Monday
party cloudy anchrann with shaW·
ers.

GALLIPOLIS-PT. PLEASANT

'

PRICE 10 CENTS

.

Belt Credited For Life

Court Receives 2
p

Graveside Service

Is Held Tuesday

.

Sheets Takes Over lJ$ Lancaster Principal

'

A llfo.Jons ro&amp;ldent of Che· fall. She roslined her pesttloiiOI
shiro, he received hio ba&lt;be· medical and surgical nurslni IDlor of edence degree Ill elomen- atructor of tho Holi.e r'o Scbool
larl' and seCOIIdarY O&lt;tJcatlon d Norling on August 16. ld r ••'
from R!IJ Grande Celloae 1a i.ess mteets gi:'ad""" from the IIJl'l•
lnl achool Ill 1953 and tt!celved
with a mQ!r II) oocla1
and
a minor In Eagilsh. Jn 1980 bere- har B. S. in llducatloo Ill I951
o:eived h!ald. A. In edllcattooallld· !rom Ohio state Unlveroit;r.
Frldoy, August, 30, the9toettmlnlotrallon from Marshall
es
wen glva~ a ourprloe fareUlllver~.
,. He 11' a member d well part¥ at their home. Ai-

otuc!l••

the,Wahaln&amp;

Phi, ~~ ~ • •
~:l:~~o11dro. Allen Rlgllea,
rispol'l- IUUo todiq.
"'·~
Jl
Mr. and Mrs. Brtas

·'· Fr•' Thtt ·:

other paraphernalia .

orr

uatA&lt;!da-

''-~"
''

.

and suitable chairs and

GALLIPOLIS - One pony wao killed and another !nlured when
struck by a car at 4:40 L m. saturday on Rl 35, iwrt 200 feet eaot
orR~ 588, at Rodney, the state HighwSJ Patrol reported.
OMcers said the two animals ran onto the hiS:hwaY lnto the path .
of a westboun(l c.a r driven by Thomas A. Deck, 53, Wellston. There
was modente damage to the car. No charge was ftled. The ponies
were owned by Garland Lear or Rodney. The pa~'i~ollpted a
one car accldellt M ~:40 p.m. FrldiY on Bob J.Iccoti'rJc:l. Dd.~onu­
tenth of a mile south of R~ 35. No one was 11\lured and no charge
was filed.
'
O!llcero said that Robert L. the rosd and was hit by the moWood, 30, Rl 1 (Jolllpolls, head- torcycle . There was minor darned north, went off the right side age to the cycle. No charge was
ol the road, went over the bank filed.
An accident at 6:45 p.m. Frtand hit a pole. Tbere was moderate damage to the car and ap. doy 011 Rt. 7, one and six - tenths
parently no damage to the pole. miles north or &amp;zccess Rd,, In
The patrol charsed OrvlUe G. Meil!l' COUnty, Involved a pickMullens, Jr., 2I, Huntington, W. up truck operated by Robert F.
va., with driving while lntoxi- Gulley, 27, Monticello, Ky., and
cated after an accident at 3:45 a car driven by Floyd E. Sbultz.t
SINKING FRAME - Workers and equiPment of tho AI Johnson Constnlcllon Compony Salw'doy
began
sinking the ilrol of lour frames for tile co!lerdams at the oow Gallipolis-Pl. Pleaeant
p.m. Frtday on Rt 7 In Che- 71, Rsedsvllle.
Gulley had pulled
on the
shire,
Bridge site. Ed Goza, project superintendent for the construction company, said the 50 x 100 feet
frame weighs 222 ton. Six hoists, each of 5040P capacity, a 120 ton crene, two tug boats, IID118r·
Mullens suttered a minor cut right side or the road at t h e
ous
employees of the construction company and the U. S. Coast Guard were needed to begin sir*but was not treated. He waslodg- junction of His. 7 and 681 to
ed 111 the city jail lor a hearing walt on tra!flc. Shultz pulled
lng the frame. 'The Al Jolmsoo company is under contract to the state of West Virginia. Drl~ of
Monday In Galllpolls Manlcipal onto the rosd to turn left and
the frame below the water is ell:peeted to be completed Monday.
Court, or tmtil he posts bond pulled Into the path ol the pick·
for the hearing.
up truck, the report said.
The patrol said that Reginald
No one was injur¢. There
Legg, 27, Pl. Pleasant, · w a s • wa~ moderate damage to both
headed north on Rl. 7 and had vehlcloo.
stopped at the tra!flc light In
The patrol cited . Shultz to
POMEROY - A seat bell was dose to the edge.
There was an estimated $800
Cheshire. Behind him, Mullens Meigs Count;r Court Sept. 13 credited by Meigs County Sher·
to
$1,000 damage to the truck.
!ailed to stop and his car struck m a charge of Improper start 111 Robert C. Harlenbaoh with
took
wreckers about rive hours
It
the hack of tho Lagg car. There from a stopped pooitioo.
saving the life of a West Unto
remove
the truck. No injurLAKE HOPE- The Ohio
was moderate damage to both
Ion man involved In an accident
ies or arrest were reported. Valley Chapter and the Hocking
csro.
Di•VOrce etitiolll!
Frldoy afternoon.
Valley Chapter or the Ohio SoMullens was also charged with
Sherllf llarteobach said Wilclet;r of Pro!esalooal E}&gt;gineer•
lallute to stop within the assurPOMEROY - Two divorce ac- liam Charles Kimble, 25, was
will meet jointly lor dimOT st
ed elear distance.
tlons in which gross nepect of driving a truck, with digthe Lake Hope LOdge Wodnesduty and extreme cruelty a r e ger equipment mrunted lXI the
charged were filed Friday in the bed, that went over a 35 ft. emdoy, Sept. II, at 7:30p.m.
CYCLIST HURT
Robert Patridge, chairman d
Meigs
CouJib&lt;
Common
Pleas
ROBERT D, BANKS, 13, a
bankment.
RUTLAND - Members of the the Prolesslonal &amp;zrveyors d
Court.
paosenger on a motorcyc:le rtdThe vehicle, owned by thellarRutlarll Legion held graveside Ohio, and Harry Rolfe, P. S.,
Clltiord E. Brown, Rutland,
den by his father, Jack Banko,
rla·MCBarneY Celllj)IIIIY of Jackservices
Tuesday for Thomas both ol the Ohio Fuel Gao Comoeeks
a
divorce
Crmn
Virgie
B.
38, ChiUlc:olbe, aul!ered a min·
son, Mich., apparently went off
Brown,
also
ol
Rutland,
and
Shar·
McCieon
Stover, 23, or New pany, will be present to dlseuaa
or cut and a log illiiii'Y In an
the rosd when part ol Cewtl;)'
on S. Salaer~ Pomeroy, seeks
Marshfield, at the Standish Cem- deed descriptionS as prusented
Hoed 14 collapsed, cme.tenth of
at 9:40 p.m. Frldoy a divorce !rom Larry E. Sal- a mOe oorth of the Klngahary etery near Dexter. stover wa.s In the highly ..-ated book liiiiY haVe
oo ldt. Tabor Rd., one and twoser, also ol Pomeroy. The P~
tenthe miles soulhnot ol vin.
Road. Kimble wao attempting to killed in an Athens councy motor- put together on this ...,Ject. Th1a
tift' in the latter case seeks cusIs expected to be ol lntereot to
PI" another truck when he got cycle acctdenl
1m.
tody of one minor child.
the attorneys iu the area.
The patrol said a calf ran onto
Patridge and Rolfe slate Ia

11QidEROY - MelP Counl;y
)l'a!Wiia ~ · llllroduo:ed t h. llletlfi
Robert c. Hartenbllc~ said
White Falcon, · the ochool maeSallltdaJ
the fllnd ID
1110
. ODd pre80111ed the natll&gt;ltal
L.

1..,.~ -

adecp~te

a new conference table for U1e
jUry room, and have the room
kept clear of obstruction• 8lld

month•· He lo apln active In• ,.~Fcldent

.

Jn pie • ..,.; o:eroJII9lile• the

All per111ona,nt pr•••· Solid
caiOfl, one, two and three
trocll strip.., plaldl, wlnr
..Aw PGM paHarna.

"

-.

RUTLAND

Serving Me1gs County for over 96 years

I

Pic'-___ v.und ,

SPORT ·SH
You'll lllc• th. fin• qwltty
of thla aat·..:tlon of ahlrta
ln alus amall, medium,
l•rp oncl axtra lar11·

Bands Ente"ta:n
,

Fine Quality LOlli Sleeve

~!* POMEROY

AtAgel6

BandinTljuanaJlode

For

All the new IAll style• 8lld
coloro. Cardlpal, loq
oleeve sllpowro, loq

ruged Bora·Werner
transmission.

1:n

blend. MOIQ' oty1os to chaooe

Come To Elberfelds

..... .,. .ey
Was Eagle

alltl

at 5:20 p.m. Friday.
Follce said the Hoock c a r
backed intO the Hersman car,
wbleh waa parked. There was no
damage to the Houck car and
lftl hit when she ranacrosa minor damage to the left rear
lender olthe parked car.
Ave., in rront of a car
Another hitsldp accident was
1by Helen w. Slrons, 60,
.1,
reported
at 6:30 p.m. Frldoy oo
2 Galllpollo. There was no
Second
Ave.,
In front or the
'
ID the car. No cbarge
Sho!Jper&amp; Mart. An unldentlflod
PT. PLEASANT - John Whitfllid,
car struck a parked car owned ley, Jr., 105 Pleasant st., who
Tho three accldel'l• brought
by Laura M. Swisher of Rt. I joined the Boy Scouts at age
~ &lt;\IY'S accl- lola1 to 269
12 In 1929 and became an Eagle
In tho first 250 doya of the year, Bidwell, There was damage ID
the left r - fender d the Swlah· Scout at age 16, to tile MGM
The flrstac:cldeDiraportedwaa
"Scouter of the Week."
at:ll:30 p.m. Frldoy st Fourth er car.
In Ward, W. Va., he held the
8lld stiie where an unlclentlf1ed
postUons of Jr. Asst. Scoutmaster, Aast. scoutmaster, a n d
scoutmaster, and served as
ac:outmaster Ill Cedar Grove, W.
va. In 1964 he became scoutmaster ol Troop 2~1 which Is now
· BY PAT HOUCK . , The majorettes were featured the largest explorer post in the
WoLLIPOLIS - A.. ~ Ill a flag routine as'thebandplay- MGM District.
He io serving now as B o y
1988.a&amp; ~npollo Ac:ad· ed, ;'The LOnolyBull."Thol968·
69
majorettes
are
Joon
F
o~r
d,
Scoot
roundtable commlsaloner
~ Hlab marching band captur·
Shelley
Lintala,
Cristy
Davto,
and
as
distrlel camping chair·
·lbe happY spirit of the Tl·
adler,
Billy
&amp;ze
Dalley,
Cathy
man. Ills wife, Pauline, through
jul1ll Qrus aa thll;)' presented
the years, has supported him In
a lively half..tlme ·shoW Friday and &amp;loan WWis.
The halftime &amp;hoW woo c u I IIC&lt;IUIIng.
il!ghl on Memorial Field.
short
by the r~ of the plo,yHe is emploYed by Kaiser A·
· Lad by Dave Dorham, drUm
ort
ID
the field, It Ia the euo- tunUnum Co., in Ravenswood as
mi,jor, the - b l u e and white
mtn marched to the center of tom the !llltermen to present a maintenance elaetrl.clan.
after sutierlng a heart
ihe field, where they lined up the Alma Mater 11 a finale but InJohn,
NOV.,
1967, remolned active
lhlt
was
enminated
by
tho
Ume
1D rour rronto raelnt! the home
lll
ICOUtinB
by telaphoning olhaide and presented. "The Grllt ahortage,
or oailuler&amp;&lt; of meetings while
~eto." ·
confined to his house for o I x
ankie and lacon both knee•. She reto go to a doctor, at tho
reported.
W•r•••· according to po·
an

Mwe&gt;er, the board of Gallla
CouJib&lt; Commloliloner• fllnllsh

THREE SECTIONS

'·~

Pony Killed
In Accident

:Woman Runs
lnto Street

AJu1nper

or

gery,
Merrill Wilcoxen WBll !oroman
of the grand jury which vloliad
the Gallia eounzy jail before
adjournmelll and r....sovorytldng
In order.
Grand jurors recommended,

.ternol Ave., and struck the side
Followi!W the bruoh with the
ot the police ~ruiser which was Pomeroy cruiser, Lee went oYOJ"
headed northwest on Butternut the rilbt curb to hit a concrete
Ave. driven by Patrolman George pole, and then turned over. By
Hicks.
this lime, Deputy Sheri!! Beoglo
Lee wis being rollowed by De9- also was cJoslrc In on the Lee
uty Sheriff Robert Beegle whO car.
had radioed Pomeroy Police and
The Lee vehicle was demoliahe
asked them to s~ Lee ror quea. ed and Lee was arrested rcr drlv·
tionlng because the car he was ing whUe lntoxicoled.
driving was damaged

ttttint

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 1968

~ ~V~Q~~~-~J~N~Q~,~J=2~----------------P~O=ME==RO=Y--W=D=D=LE=P=O=R~T______.

Mens anil Young Mens

'

-~

32 PAGES

·,
for ui&gt; 'l ~, :0 c.• telooding the
OQ.uillme.: ~0
.astbloodmobUe
viOll
,
The next boord meeting will he
Oct. 3 at the hospital.

Mso Brower, Z&amp;, Cleveland, all on two counts
for-

'

/)evoted To The Grealer Ml}ldle Ohio Valley

plaido, atrlpeo, florala, ehocka and palaleya. AU ea11 care fib.

H~:TTY

POMEROY _ The Pomeroy
Police Department cruiser was
damaged, another vehicle was
demolished and a clriver was arrested oncharaesofdrivtngwhUe
intoxicated 11 the result of an
accident on Butternut Ave., at
2:30 L m. Saturday.
, ~o.
Pomeroy Pollee said a car
y~.'Neose, blood program
driven by Clarence Lee, 22, Pomw
· chalr!4'pald a concentrated eirort la:~ to secure more eroy, was lep of center on But.-

.

.... t ?:

Bottue

Pomeroy Cruiser Damaged

tmts

Lindbergh, once salc1 - "Lost
time was like a nzn In a stocktna, it always got worse."

A wide chalco of lllbrlco Ia lollds,

•
'
blood donors, The next bloodm&lt;&gt;btle was set lor Oc~ 28811dthtrl
will be another ¥tstt 011 Dec:. 30.
He exterded thanko to Boy Scout
Troops 242 and 248 of PomeroY

+

Thoughts

Slllos to pleose ha. -

rico. All -

POMEROY - Planni!W I~ a
lund drive to be held thloiAll was
begun Thursday night b)l directors o1 the Meigs Chaplor or the
American Red Cross.
Meeting st verersns Memor111 Hoopltal, October IS was set
as tile kickoff date for the anilllal
, ran drive. A special session was
plannod ·&amp;t which time solicitors
and chairmen will be named. The
ca...,aign In rural areas will be
catried out by mail.
An S.O.S. campaign was held
receotly, Ill' the chapter to raise
!undo needed to &lt;011tll'llle chapter

ilil Jell doobleheeder).

•'

POMEROY

William L. carpenter, 21, Vlnilln; Roscoe Ward, 20, VInton, and
John Vano:e, 37, Rl 2 Bidwell,
all for assault with intent to kill.
Vladimir Mlohelf, 45, Ma88llion, and Slgmood A. Marcus, 56,
Massillon, both for fraud, and
Paul E. Fao:emlre, 29, Rt. I
Gallipolis, forgery.
Eiza Cline McComas, 23, Hunt-

American author Anne Morrow

(VIItY ttMJH OUAI.m)

• Hup 12~b. capacity tOr
family.alze folds

JETS •ONE-TWO' PUNCH - Former Gallipollo Little Leaguer Dave Roberto, left, racked 111
nlgllt 11 Jet stadium as the Columbus Jeto -ned JacksonvUle 5-I In the flrol
, . ...... of a doubleheader. Battery mate MaiV\Y Sazwullien, right, wu three lor three at the plate,
~ r ~Udlite a fourth lnnlnB two.nm homer. Big Dave Is now I~ Thlt's the pwst wins a pitcher baa
• , •. prot!Uo:ed In the 14-year history or the Jets. Provtwa high wao 16 b)l Charleo (WIIamlliJI) Douglas
I&amp; 1958 and by Joe Gibbon the follawlnl year. The Jets opllta dwbloheader Frldoy night, losing
tlio nlghlclj) 6-1 but took over flrot place from the Toledo Mudheno b)l 011&amp;-half game, (See Page 19

of GIRLS

Pooler Wins Rating

You pt the• dtlluu
Norp YHQ faiiiUrwsl

oupport.

h!·~ 18th win FridaY

'6, Cleveland, and

~-:&gt;

0

lnl to one court oftlefal.

'

"&lt;I Michael Oravetz, 18,
1ogs, Md., fraud;
•vis, 32, Gallipolis;

,. /

The four-dBY sesaI on was one

•, ·

vlng a concsaled weapon;
'latero, 20, Jersey City,

0

or the longest 011 record, accord-

~=-----------------------~~~~~----~------~~------------------

Jr., 23, Gallipolis, both ~tvJ.J
with non-suPPOrt; VIrgil r
en, 45, Rt. 1 Gallipolis,
jorle Hunt, 37, Rt. I Ga. 0
both aasault with intenl II. iS'
Carl Mann, 57, Rt. 1 Galllpo. &lt;'{&gt;

d
p
all
;;
~~ r
Re Cross lans F - I' · ~&lt;~?:.
·ive
~ 0,.. ·'0.·o

jurors oxamjned 48 wit-

"

Beautiful Group

WRINGER
WASHER

to=
::a:~.:~~~.=~

.

BIG SELECTIONS! WELL KNOWN BRANDS WEARING APPAREL FOR YOUR FAMILY AND FURNISHINGS
FOR YOUR HOME.

tngton, w. Va., Warner !d. Craddolph, 32, Celumbul, brealdni
and onterlllg.
Nobillowerereturnodaplnst:
Arthur W, Drummand, 47, Rt.
I Bidwell, and Fred Facemire,

GALUPOLlli - Tho Septomber term grand Jury of Gallia
County ComniOO Pleal COUrt returned 23. lndlctmente,lnc:llidins
nine IIOCJel lJidlclmeltl,lllafour
daY seooilln that ended Frldoy af-

;;

In Miss America Rankings

'

r

.

·

.

player-ftmmcedrsUrommrt~

-vEIQ

,

or

OPEN SATURDAY
UNIIL 9
El..rf.elds _Dfllrtlileilt Stor·tin Pollltrly· . .

~

23 Indictments Returned by Jury

'l1le

¥PI•~f3peryear

oil~ pe1111. For P!'IIIY ~··Ute lll,..ance corn· )'Oii )!lrUCIJI!lle, plus ,an lnn!ll.
exAJI1Ple, If you lillke $12,000 JIIIIY, Cl)fnv..lliiBthJJ,S.Treu- 1110111: , idvl.qey tee
'h ot l
per ,)'0111'; you ean set aBide $1,- 1117 retlremri lliocx!le bolida de· per cent af tho billance In the ;,
.
.
200 , toward retlroJDODt 8lld de- · ~~~ned for 11111 opeolfle purpo~ AuKL
duet the fUll 1111C111111J rrom ywr (3) perchaslniiiiUIIIli fund lharoo
'

UnclertheK~th·

nine-year-Old daughter, Cathy,
will have a special Interest in
the Miss America Pageant on
television Saturday night.
A distant cousin of theirs is
Miss Kentucky, Janet Sue Hatfield, who is proving to be one
or the most popular contestants.
Janet, an 18-year..old ash blonde
from Jeffertown, Ky., said, ''The
first question the girls ask is U
rm one of thefeudingllatfields."
lnlernatl011al League standings
An expert on the legendary
By United Pre" International
Pvl, Don F. Pooler, son of
Hatfield-McCoy reud, she eagerW. L. Pel. Gil
Mr.
and Mrs. D. C. Pooler, 1340
ly tells this story:
Toledo
BI
62 .566
.. My great-great~great- lOicle M1U St., Middleport, has been
Cplwnbus
79 6I .564 'II
awarded the military rating of
Rochester
75 67. •528 5'h
power generation specialist and
Jsck1011vllle
72 68 .514 7'11
DIVORCE ASKED
received his diploma for !IUC 71 73 .493 10'11
A petition for divorce has been cess!ulty completing that course ~racuse
69 74 .483 12
filed in Meigs Coonty common In th~ department or mechanical LooisvUle
64 80 .444 17%
pleas court by Albert E. Park- and technical e(Jiipment at the Buffalo
. 58_ 84 .408 22%
er, RD 3, Pomeroy, against Mary United States Army Engineer Rlclunond
ThursdaJ''s ReSU!isA. Parker, charging gross ne- School at Fort Belvoir, Va. Poolglect o£ wty and extreme cruel- er is a 1967 graduate of Micktle- Toledo at Rochester (poatponod,
rain)
ty. No minor children are inport Hl8h School,
~racuse
13 BuJralo 3
volved.
Columbus 7 Jackson 4 (lot, 12
In Memory
Innings)
at Columbus (2nd,
Jacksooville
IN LOVING memory of my
cancelled,
rain)
dear husband and our dear
Daddy, Waid Kimes, who pass~ Richmond at Louisville (postponed, rsln)
ed away one year today, Sepl
6, 1967.
WALK TO FREEDOM
The way Is rough, my God,
HONG KONG (IJPI) - Three
And I am, ·oh so weary,
young Communist Chinese, aged
But I have faith,
.
16 1D 24, walked 60 miles from
For thou the same hast trod
their hometown of Tungkun to
Alone in paths most dreary.
escape across the Sino-British
Make short the journey, Lord,
border at ~taukol! early toFor I am ob so lonely.
doy, police said.
And I have faith
That one beneath the sword
TAKES COUNCIL SEAT
For whom my heart yearns
CINCINNATI (UPI)- WUllatn
only.
J. Chenault, 40, a Negro, wu
We miss you our loved one.
sworn In Thuroday as Cincinnati's lone Democratic councilSadly missed by wife a¢
man to serv_e out the lmexplred
families, Paul's, Betty's
term of John J. GUllgan Willi
and Jamc.;
~ltp
December 1969.

earvlce,

"""'"""" c1n

·

l ·~

...

.

,.a 10 P,. eent of yoor atDili . o\'*-rellrOIIIOII! pan (!) lllili&gt;J!II
0111'M4illcomo. lip·to f2,500,1nto uiJ ror a opedll fnje d ~IJ
lower · • red~ ~· and awt .i tu ' ~ael or rlll~ent lllclome

od of .nor"' 8lld (3) . a
tal! 011 111on11 you .lahe out m
retlromeill than on a s1m1lal'
imount ~ *olde wllbllul Ill of the icl.
ubder the Keo8h Ael you ean

Jo I

RECORD LONG SESSION.ENDS
.

Ill'\~ I8UIJlll u~. ~

ror laXC
rr.o ~ over • pen- .

~ ~=

INIOIRIGier

,..

/,

. , ;• .

·~

.

of II, ac~rdblg to WaBhiDgtoa
them, •'Look, J 4bl't need you 8lld banldng alfle!alo.
any more."
Lateot U.S. Labor Department
Abool a moolh before that, figureo shoW about 7.26,..1lllon
Dirksen said, the sherllf of
...
-·~- comty, Va., : : e:pl:::
nearbY •J.A.IIUI.IV,II
lmocked on his door one night workers.
and told him, "'There's a man
ers Act In Ioree slno:e Jan. 1
who wants 10 blow your head 1963, all of them coilld
off ..,
the same laX advlllllpa u cor·
&lt;~J didn't want anybody to pur ate employes oovored tiy emblow m.Y head oft because the
flowers were in bloom and they
pension plans.
need me," he said. ••J told him
''But millions of them, probathat whoeYer Urls creature is, 1 bl,y because they havea't heard
' - he waits till the frost about the act, are ml011lng a
comes and the barn swallows chance to build laX - sheltered
are gone.,
pensions,., said a ' New York
banker.
To .,..uf)' f~ Keogh Act Retirement Plan, the only bailie
rOQilroment to that your Income
be derived from performances
of perBOnal services i.e. OOctors,
lawyer&amp;, beauticians, plumbers,
was Devil Anse Hatneld, the one Oorlsts, farmers, artists, eab
who started It all in I820 over drivers, free lance writers and
the marking of a hog. Flfteen storekeepers.
members of the two ramilles
&amp;lch a plan oft'ers three mawere killed before It ended In jor laX advantage&amp;: (l) an In·
1860."
come tax deduction olch y Chester Curry who is on the you contribute to the fund, (2)
executive staff ot the Foote Min- tho prlvUege of putting your moneral Co. in New Haven, takes a ey In a tax • exempt trus~, in
lot or good - natured "ribbing" which all Olll1llnra and realized
regarding his middle name "'Hatfield."

l

i.

..

,.

See Our

' ,•f

'

moment

.

1\D,lli~ns ~~sing ~Pensi;on M6ney· · ·.· ~ln:r~ ~~J.·
'

Hatfield Descendent High
NEW HAVEN Mr. and
Mrs . Chester H. Curry and their

I

'',• ,

'

an

,

' I.

';

'IJ:,~··~·=-:·~~~~~~~~~

' C1G.&lt;7 ,· . . .

Jolin RutliiU, Mn.
v-·"'.J;',~.l and iiauahler ~
. '- JaDs
' Mr~ J~ •

their book lhst the AthenS ColDlY Tax mapa are excellent. a
!act of Interest ID COIIIII;r 011111-

neers.
Since deed description and IU
maps both are of mutual Interest .to attorneYS and OllldnOtrl,
all attorneys and all OlllllnOtr•Of
tile area ue Invited.
Lake Hope is 12 mllOI
east of !l.eArtiNr, Zalatlld,
Ill VInton County,

Wot:k Party Held

'

'

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