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•

. Lemey Welcomed Upon Return th~twoev'!~rs:S.;. planned by Potluck Dinner
0 Rutland, Rock Springs Charges
the wscs with Mrs. Faye Sau· Is Enjoyed by
twy members of congrega· J. Lemley at the Rutland er, president, serving as c)lair·
··••--· of the Rutland and Rock [Methodist Church social rooms man.
. ' Church Class

~Dally Sentinel, PonierGy·:Middleport, 0., July 5, 1968

About
MiddJeport
·

.r!~~~ ~:":!:': Jun~

D • - . h I F St t
OVIS 0 aug ters n our a es
For Summer Studies and Activities

The four daughters of'Dr. IDd
Mrs. J. J. Davis, Ash-st, Middleport, are attending schools
and wo.rl&lt;shop-• in as
many
states Ibis sumr.~er.
Charlene, a student at I he
Rhode Island School of Design,
;, attending the summer sessioo at Ohio University In Alb·
ens while her sister, Diana is
studyng at a Speech and Ora·

:::
.:.
cl\ndren

and Mrs. VJi'gll RoUib of Weat

::d~l;:~ :~· ~

rna Institute at West Virginia
Unlverslly in Morgantown, for
three weeks. She was • taken
there_ by Mr. and Mrs. Hayman
Barmt&gt;.
Another daughter, Elaine, li
auending a summer seJDinar
on aoclal studies and related
subjects on the CHSSI program
at De Pauw University . at
Greencastle, lodlana. She was
taken there by her father.
Joyee Davis is again atteod·
Jiig the eight :week course of
the brterlochen Music Camp at
Interlochen Michigan. She at·
tended the' camp last year
where she was an outstapdlng
student. She waa taken there
by Mrs. Davis and Mlsa carol
Bachtel. They were accompan·
led as far as Fostoria by the
former's mother, Mrs. H. E.
Bush, who visited there with
Mr. and Ms. Joe Wedge.
Dr. and Mrs. Davis
will
spend the next several weeks
In a quiet home

Clark and
all ot Tup
pers Plains; Mr. ~ Mrs. Lar
ry Roush and daughter, WI&amp;
ter Haven, Fla.; Mr. and Mrl
Frank Sisson and
children
Mr and Mrs Denzil Goegle~
Mr. and Mr; Floyd Spence
p ·
. ~ and Mrs. Rol&gt;
,;m;ro~f ·and ehlldren of Che&amp;
~
the host and hosteu
M' ad Mrs Virgil Roush
r. an
·
8011, Don_._ _ __

Methodist Churches at-[ on Thursday. Rev. Lemley Is A potluck supper was enJoy-~
a reception for Rev. c. returning for his thifd year at ed at 7 p.m. with grace by Rev · A 6:30 potluck dinner at
Lemley. The refreshment table home of Mrs. Ben
·
was centered with a hu g e preceded the regular
cake decorated in pink a n d of the Happy Harvesters
Mrs. Della Carnahan
bas
green with lettering, "Welcome of the Federated church
been rel~ased · from Bucyrus
Back." The cake was flanked Iday evening_ Rev. Wilbur
Community Hospital and 18 at
with green candles. The cake 1 rin asked grace.
the home of her son, Delbert
FOR YOUR SHOPPING COMFO'RTI
was served with ice cream at
R 'b 1
.d t 1 Carnahan at Mentor, Olllo.
the close of the meal.
Mrs. Henry ~~ e' p~esi_ en' Leo Ken~edy, Jr . received
was m charge ol the usm~ss his degree m educaiio~ at R10
Vernon Weber was master of . sessiOn. Chalfman for serving Grande in June and will teach
eeremonies for the program , dinners to the Lions club were In the Meigs Local School sy·
that mcluded congregatiOnal 1 named and mclude, July 6, Mrs_ stem this fall. He is a graduate
Cl b
_
s
inging
with
Mrs.
Jacob
Schill·
Neutzling;
July
13,
Mrs.
Phil
of
Middleport
High
School
Sew-Rite
U
MIDDLEPORT, 0.
ing, pianist; expressiOns ol ap- Meinhart; July 20, Mrs. Louis resides on Beech St. with
Meetl Recently
~iii!:iii!:iii!:iii!:iii!:iii!:ii:::::::ii:::::::iii!:ii:::::::iii!:iiii:iiiiii:iiiii!:i::ii===~ preciation of the miniSter's re-- Reibel: July 27, Mrs .. Fred Des- wife and son, Tony.
The Sew • Rile Sewing_ club
i
tum by Edgar Abbott for Rock sauer, Mrs. Max Memhart and Mr. and Mrs. Gary Ault
met receptly at their c I U b
Springs and Mrs. Everett Col· Mrs. Benta Wolfe ; and August son. Todd, Springfield,.
room wltlr)tr~. Ronald Brownwell for the Rutland charge, 3, Mrs. L B. Weed,
the holiday here with his
lng as !los~,
and so~~~· "W~~ Should He Love A round robin card and a , ents, Mr. and Mrs. William
. Mrs. Elza j)l)more Jr., P~
Me So! and Th~. Best Thmgs gift was sent to Mrs.
Clara i and family.
Mr . and Mrs. E. W. Agre of
Bided at a shOrt business se..
m Life are Free,_ by Vern?n Karr who is 111 in
Veterans The Rev. Dale Van Meter
Morris Plains, N. J . who spent
slon. Mrs. Harold Hood, pres!·
I Weber, accompanied by
his -~ Memorial Hospital. Plans were Norman Van Meter were
several days with her parents,
dent, was reported m Holzer
daughter , Donna.
made for serving refreshments ed here due to the death of
Mr. and Mrs. Ben Salser of Oak
Hospital for observation. Plan•
YOU CAN
Highlight of the
program I at the Guild meeting, July 27. brother, FranciS Van Meter. Grove and her sister and brower~ d1s~ussed lor the annual
the presentation of a mon- Games were played with priz· While here they called on thelf ther-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Hil·
family picnic, the date to be
:yastree of $107.50 to Rev . and es awarded to '&gt;Irs. Henry Rei· aunt, Mrs. Charles McNamee _ ton Wolfe , Racine, spent an
announced. Plan~ were
also
M Lemley The ciosmg pray· bel Mrs. Phil Williamson, Mrs. Cindy White, daughter of Mr. evening with her aunt, Mrs. spent Sunday at Bidwell with discussed for an ICe cream socer"~as give~ by Rev. Lemiey.[De~sauer and Mrs. Wolfe. and Mrs. Willi~m White, Wash- Robert Warner.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Saunders ial. The traveling prize was
.
Homemade ice cream and cake ington, D. C., IS the summer Mrs. Philip Felger and daugh. and family and Mrs . Ernest awarded to Mrs. Don Mullen.
Chairmen were Mrs. Hichard were served by the hostesses, guest of her grandparents, Mr. ter, Evelyn of Toledo visited carpenter, and attended a A dessert course was served
Lucas and Denms
Weber, Mrs. Neutzling and Mrs. Har· and Mrs. Carl Gilmore.
Saturday evening, with Mrs. birthday dinner honoring Mrs. by the hostess to the above nan&gt;chairs ; Mrs. Vernon Weber, ry Canterbury.
Mr _ and Mrs. Robert McEI- Jed Webster Sr.
Carpenter. A decorated cake ed and Mrs. Wilham Gaddis,
FOR AUTO LOANS .. I•
flowers and Mrs. John Colwell
hinny of Jeffersonville, I n d. Mr. and Mrs. George Korn Jr. and home made ice cream were Mrs. Donald Collins, Mrs. Tom
and Miss Linda Stafford, hevspent the weekend here at their of Columbus were holiday week· served with a turkey dinner.
Gr11eser, Mrs. Raymond Baity,
That "new car feeling" is hard
erages.
KridRrs
are
Hostl
home
in
Middleport
and
with
end
guests
of
their
parents,
Mr.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Homer
Walter
Mrs. Charles Hoffman,
Mrs.
to beat, but easy to get,i"uur
friends
and
relatives.
and
Mrs_
George
Korn
Sr.
and
and
Melinda
and
Suella
of
ToEdward
Wells.
Mrs.
Donald
quick, easy Auto Loan gives you
At Sunday Dinnf'r
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Coats, Mrs. John Thomas.
ledo are the guests of her moth- McKnight and Mrs.
Willard
the money at the lowest rates,
Winchster,
Ind.,
and
Miss
Wan·
Miss
Ramora
Boice
of
Dayl&lt;'n
ed
Mrs.
John
Smith.
Boyer.
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Krl·
W.- UII
-.
with payments to fit your budda Coats, Indianapolis, In d. spent the weekend with her pa"· Mr. and Mrs. Russell Krider
entertained with a
get. Then you just walk out and .
TONIGHT
P.ICNIC PLANNED
holiday weekend ents, Dr. and Mrs . R. E. Boice. and granddaughter, Jeneen
Sunday at their home in Syra- spent the
"TICKLE ME 4'
buy your car for cash! We cerden
cuse. Guests were, Mr . and with Mrs. Robert Coats and Miss Joyce Williamson of Searls of Findlay were weekeod Oommiltee memb~rs.
Elvis Presley
tainly make buying a new car
Julie Adams Mrs. Clyde Raines and Karen son, Stephen Coats.
Columbus spent the holiday guests of his parents, Mr. and mothers and parents of Cub
(COLOR)
easy, don't we?
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Davenport weekend with her mother, Mrs. Mrs. Raymond Krider.
Scout Pack 248, met recently at
and Penny Sue of Elsmere, Ky.:
-andand
son,
Micky
visited
in
BeckGeorgia
WiJJiamson
and
other
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Clyde
Raines
the DAV hail for a planning
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Vic
Pecora
and
"HlGH WlND IN JAMAICA"
and Karen and Penny Sue, Els- session. Plans were made for
Peggy and Mike and Kathy ley, W. Va. recently with Mr. relatives.
Anthony Quinn
(Color)
and Mrs. R. L. Zeigler and lam· Mrs. Clyde Jones has return- mere, Ky. and Peggy Pecora the annual picnic to be held
Lahr of Columbus; Mr.
ily, and Mrs. Harriett Daven- ed home after a visit with rela· and Kathy Lahr of Columbus, Sunday, July 10 at Forked Run
Mrs. Bernest Bruch and
WED.-THUR.-FRI.
bert, MI. Vernon; and Mr.
port.
Uves in New Brighton, Pa.
were weekend guests of Mr . Lake at 4 p.m. Those attend·
July 6-7-8
Mrs.
John
Krider
and
Joelta
Recent
guests
of
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Cecil
Chapman
and
Mrs.
and Mrs. Raymond Krider.
ing are to take meat and anoth'WHAT'S NEW PUSSY CAT'
Peter Sellers
and John of Long Bottom.
Mrs. Homer Jones, South Third Harry Shroads of New Brighton, Monday afternoon guests of er dish. Table service
and
Peter O'Toole
Calling in the
afternoon Ave, were Mr. and Mrs. Mar- Pa. and Mrs. Blanche Blowers Mr. and Mrs . Raymond Krider drink will be provided by the
(Color)
were Elsworth Dill, C he s t e r vin Myers and son, and John- of Wadsworth, Ohio were boll· were Mr. and Mrs. Philip Skeen Pack. Ail den mothers,
Cub
-andWE PAY 4% ON SAVINGS
Road:
and Mrs. Robert Lark· ny DeMain of Columbus.
"THE REWARD"
day weekend guests of Mr. and and Mrs. Elaine Rowle~ of Sccuts and those who will he
Yvette Minieux
ins nnd Roberta IDd Jerry and Mrs. Lillian Steil! _Is a pa· Mrs. Guy Rusaeil aod Mrs. Rjpley, w. Va., Mrs. Ben Rain· eight years of age by SeptemMEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORP
{Color)
Mrs. Carl Fitch, Long Bottom. tient at Holzer Hosp1tal m
Clyde Jones.
t$ Elsmere, Ky., and Mr. and ber aod their parents are invitlipolis.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Rein! ~s. Bernest Bruch and Del· ed to attend.
Mrs. Charles McNamee Is
hart and family of Jackson sJ!j!ll\ bert, MI. Vernon.
patient at Holzer Hospitsl
the holiday weekend with their
Miss Martha Genheimer of
ARRIVES FOR VISIT
Gallipolis._ Mrs. C. H. Wise
parents, Mrs. WU!iam Reinhart Columbus was the weekeud Marine Lance Corporal Stan·
Mrs. Cecil Bradhory are
and Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Brown. guest of he!' aunt, Misses Ada ley R. Lemley, w_ho spent 15
her.
_
Tommy, Bruce and Paul Reed and Lucretia Genheimer.
months at Chu Le1, Viet N~m,
Mr. and Mrs. C. H. WISe, Jr. are speoding three weeks at Mrs. Robert Warner, Mrs. arrived last week for a Ylsll
of Waverly sped! the holiday Nag's Head, N.C. with their ·Elsie Roush Misses Luretia with his parents, Mr. aod Mrs.
weekend here with relatives in- aunt, Mrs. Mae Meadows.
and Ada Geiilieimer and guest, Har~ld W. Lemley, and fa'"!ly.
eluding Mrs. Charles McNamee Fred crow and Ted Reed were Miss Martha Genhelmer enjoy· He will report to Cherry Pomt,
and Mr. C. H. Wise Sr. and In Charleston, W. Va. Friday, ed a picnic Sunday, at Forked N. C. on August I, for
1ls
Miss Ruth Wise.
to m~t Mra, Crow who arrived I.Run=~La~k~e.~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~m~o~n~ths;;_d;;;u;;Otyi..iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~
Miss Marianne Woodgerd, by plant after a visit at Nag's
Oolumbus, spent the weekend Head, N.C.
with her parents, Mr. aod Mrs. Misses Leda Mae and RoberHarald Woodgerd.
ta Kraeuter spent the holiday
Mr. and Mrs. Wallale Long weekend at Cedar Point
and son, Jim, Cleveland, were
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Seba and
recent guests of Miss Nina (!lr. and Mrs. Glen 0. Pratt and
we've found 1
RusselL
son Greg of Indianapolis, Ind.
Weeuend guests of Mr. and and Mr. and Mrs. Albert HedinMrs. William Slater and Mrs. ger of Logan, W. Va. were holi·
Fred Cabeen were Mr. and day weekend guests of Mr. and
Afew pennies 1
Mrs. Hanley Cone and dangh· Mrs. John Seho aod family.
ter, Vicky; Joe Cabeen and Mrs. Mary Whlppel returned
i
for
Miss Mary Ambro; and Mr. and Sunday, to the home of her
Mrs . Thomas Watkins and son daughter and son-in-law, Mr.
of Columbus.
and Mrs. John Goell Jr., after
Mrs. John Parsons and cl&gt;ll· a three wee~s visit with rela·
dren, Jeff and Julie of Colum· lives In Columbus.
wAlla••
n pu•
bus have spent the past week Mr. and Mrs. Joha Prunty
CHOOSE FROM THESE:
here with her parents, Mr . and and family of Columbus were
Mrs. Ralph Gilmore.
They Sunday gueats of Mr. and Mrs.
were joined for the
holiday John Goett Jr., and Tommy.
weekend by Mr. Parsons.
Mr. and Mrs. Philip Rmoat
Mr. and Mrs. Henry N u II, and son Philip returoed to their
WOMENS
Crooksville, spent the holiday home,
Monday morn
weekeod with her father, Mr. log, after a weekend visit with
Clarence Clark.
her mother, Mra. Dessle PatMr. and Mrs. Richard
terson.
and daughter, Lora, Belpre,
Mrs. Dessle Patterson and
tted over the weekend
a-ts, Mr. and Mrs. ~hUip Rex·
LOAFER- OXFORDS
their parents, Mr. and Mrs. roat and Philip were Sunday dinWilbur Harm!ng and family
ner guests of Delbert and Ted
Mrs. Max Roller.
Patterson, Great Bend.
Bridget Goble entertained
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Moore and
with a swimming party at
granddaughter, Usa Kay Jell,
home Friday In honor of her Mr. and Mrs. Geoffrey Wilson
booseguest, Cindy Smith of
and Kelly and Terri of Pomeroy
S.N-M Widths
Upolis. Refreshments of brown- and Verne Davis, Middleport,
WHILE IT'S STILL SUMMERI
les, punch and polato
were served during the after· Goble with the party.
eLinLE HEELS
eFLATS
eSTACKS
noon. T!Iose attending were
Discontinued Styles
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Luckey·
ya
Ohlinger,
Mary
KraW8Czyn,
doo
of Huntington, W. Va. viseHI HEELS
eMID HEELS
and Barbara Anthony and Brid- Ited over the bollday weekend
get. She was alllliated by Mrl. with their parents, Mr. aDd Mrs.
James Brewington, Middleport,
PRICES FROM
and Mr. and Mrs. Luckeydoo of
New Haven.
Wilbur Hanning baa been returned to his bome Ill Bradbury
THIS WEEKS SPECIAL!
LAST TIME TONIGHT
from University Hospital In &lt;Jo.
lumbaJ where he has been a
"INSIDE DAISY &lt;:LOVIR"
.
.
.
BONES r
WlllTES PASTELS
CTechnlcolqr)
WOMENS &amp; CHILDRENS
patleDI fer the past week fo r
NowaitiDrl
No
wiabin,l
Como
Ia
and
.,_
Natalie Wood
cOo aU
IIUfgery. Jte Is recuperating
1lodd1 Ill w
your 1.- todll}'. We'll put that moot W.WIIIy
18tlsfactorily at home.
ColorCIcarpet
In )'OUr boma far u little u • ,., dollan dcnnl.
Julia Fleming of Lowen,
ADd ..'U uraup far mod..t montbl,y ~
Ohio, IDd Mr. and Mrs. George
Wodnotdoy 1nd Thundoy
July 6-7
Mosley of Mal!ksburs,
were
plomwd to ouit you. Vlolt ua now far eompiete
NOTDPIN
Priced For S1le At_ $2.95 • $3.9S • $4.95
recent auests of Mr. and Mn.
iletaiia Clll thil COIIVaDant, lnaapouin W1,1 to
William King. Miss Fleming II
Discontinued Styles
Friday and s.turtloy
-.ioJ 1118 iwalr)' ol LM uarpot wblle ;vou pq.
the Deputy G1'811d Matroo of
July..,
"THI HIROIS 0 ..
District 25, Order of the EastTIUMARK"
ern Star and Mr. and Mra. King
-Tecbnlcolor&lt;Klrk Doullu lllchold HarriJ are worthy matron and wor·
thy pa!On of Ev1111ellne ChapFMtu2ND FLOOR ter, OES.
SUNDAY, MONDAY
Mrs. LUUan McGhee visited
•J~I-:lf:~t.'
ncently In Belle, W. ~~- with
•A PATCH 0.. ILUI"
relatives and allo In Flatwoods,
81d1181 J'ollier · -rb•ten Ky., with her sisters, Mrs.
l-----Sh-eiiJ..-"-..J· Ida NeU.
. __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..,._ _ •
'

NOW AIR CONDITIONED
RALL'S BEN FRANKLIN

Ar

d
oun
About

Pomeroy

e

ENJOY COOKour

':t

LEAN ON US

uasoh Drive-In

Though our budgefs sman
way

to carpet our home with ease.
day
Is au lllat we pay

SALE BEGINS WEDNESDAY JULY 6 •• 9 A.M.

HUSH PUPPIES

~!.';; ____ SALE$,.88
u~

h•••••

FAMOUS NAME SHOES
• WILLIAMS
e MISS AMERICA
• HUSH PUPPY
• ROBIN HOOD
• KEDS
e ENDICOn JOHNSON

~wleES

Cinelnoatl,

eKEDEnES

SALI ••• Of Hot Weather Shoes

MEIGS THEATRE

-..-

CANVAS
pr. $1.99

O~FORDS

2 pr. $3.85

KEDS - KEDEmS

THE SH E B
MIDDLEPORT, OH'IO

I'

-

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

at y

•

enttne
•

\

and

··lialiQnal

•

llae

WORLD

'j}f.'

�.,

.

'
I

''

'

'I

\

1

..tHE DAilY SENTINR

.;

~Voice

-

'Moybe It's Safer ·Over There!"

o.f

DI!VOTED TO INTEREST 01'
MEIGS-MASON AREA
Richard S. Owen, Publisher
Chesler Tannehill, Editor

Published every afternoon ( exoep1
Saturday) and Sunday by The Ohio Val
PubUahine Company, 110 Meohanl&lt;
Pomeroy, Ohio 45768. Bllilne11 01
992-2156. Editorial phone
Entered as aeoond olu&amp; mailing mallet
at the poot offioe at Pomeroy, Ohio.
National advertlaine representative
Boltlnelll Kimball, Inc., 343 Lexingtom
Ave., fl(ew York City, New York.
Sublerlptlon rates Delivered by car
r rler wbere IVIllable, 85 cents per week
one year In 1dvance at the Daily Senti
nel office $18.20; six months, $9.10
three months $3.90. l!y Motor Route
where carrier service not available om
month fl .30. By mail one year $10.00.
SII months, $5.25; Three month&amp;, $3.00

Why Not Us?
'~. ANOTHER July 4th has come and gone,

It has been a great manv years since
we have had a real celebration locally.
One writer has recently suggested that it
was a big mistake to take the fire crack·
tr out of the holiday observance It is
true that there were some casualties con·
necttd with the shooting off of explosives, but the day remained bright for
the vast majority of individuals who got a
,thrill out of creatmg some noise to shake
:jbe calm of the community. In place of
' t.he (!recracker we have substituted the
massicre on the highways, which is more
lethaUhan that created by the so-called
dangehtus practice of the booming 4th.
. It is true that most of the injuries in
th~ Boomin&amp; 4lh days came to childreni ~ingers, hand», and eyes suffering dam·
a'ge J.t6'fltinction It is well that the
l, "SaMV9,Qii!th". ru tt:;&lt; today Theb tl?rotb·
1em
•
• aps , Is 1o 1ear n 1o su s Itu e
r so
' ' for the former noise that in·
r spi
' celebrating spirit

f

w li{less we are getting too sophisti·
· cated_ J~d,ay to thrill to the sight of mar·
_ cbing units , which in the early days in·
~·- cludiMI . tlle community band, and some
! umts from out of our counties that includ: ed oll9~fa!llflUS coon skin band , as it was
i cal¥!14-'lw;l! Dufour and hi s fellow mari cheli'il!l~de many events complete with a
reailitic Impression of the Spirit of 1776.
towns w~re bedecked with bunting
l. som~thin~ that has almost disappeared
except, (@' rare occasions. There was a
profu;\Clii1-0f flags ol every size, and not
tlle •IBinlllin~ that was observed on dis·
play I(~I!JI~.

j

I

It Is S\Jtely not asking too mu ch for
citizens to participate m a real observ·
ance. We watched with interest the pa·
radt!i and observance that took place in
the suburban city of Columbus, Upper
Arlington on the holiday. Starting on a
tmall scale back in the 1930's that event
hJa become . the annual and major com·
munity effort of Arhngton. We could not
hel,p l!ut note;t'he enthusiasm of past
cbaitniall- arid directors of the event as
'f.hey were interviewed at the microphone
,ner the conclusion of the parade, wh1eh
was only a part of the general celebra·
tiQn. They expressed th e fee im~ that
~ey were keeping alive the spin! that
'brought lffedom to our country, and
seem satisfied that thev were engaged in
' a worthwhile endeavor We could do the
.'tame thmg here with a wi sely arranged
.-:provam and over the years add to the
·-utractlons that would bring thousands to
ciilr community with little or no effort.

1
'·
I

\

)

George Hamilton's
taking
flyina lessons . His llrl bird
Lynda was liven a traditional
SpaniSh bridal outfit in Toled9
(So"' cue( Come fly with me)
. . Kim Novak's lively depart·
ed huoband Richard
Johnson
awltched to London High Socie·
ty witb socialite •
actress
Suzann8"Leigh .. Kim's vocabulary now is considered t h e
most colorful in H'wood s10ce
Carole Lombard's, Jean Har·
low's and Lauren Bacall's . .
Joel McCrea and Frances Dee
were reported dining happily a·
gam together at the King Hen·
ri IV after o happy Westche..
t@ol' (N.Y. reunion weekend
They wer~ wed there 32 year1
ago .
Michael Zwerm quit as presl~
dent of Capitol Steel - to travel to RosSJa playing trombone
wrlh Earl Fatha Hrnes
Seven Arts suspended Sue Lyen by
the neck of her contract for refu sing
the upcoming I I 1m
4 'Young" .
Sue's a cnUc? . __
Jackie Kennedy bought h e r
dress for lhe wedding of her
half-Sister Janet Auchincioss
rrom Some couturier Valentino . London's Daily Mall reports SOviet dress designers are
needling frocks comparable to
what's worn in the "wildly af·
fluent American suburbs" and
''Fifth Ave. shops" The Rllll6ki counterpart of Balendago •
Norrell is Vyachesiav Zailsov
and Womer.'s Wear Daily report&amp; the Reds will export h1s
Mescow
fashions to Bt itam.
least justly to be expected ol
New
York fa shiOn fQlk are
all those whose members may
come up m lhe great lottery
of warfare.

1etting as secretive as Paris:
Women' 'I. Wear Dally bad te
hire a room at the elegant old
Plaza Hotel and spied oo new
hats desianed for Bergdorf •
Goodman. ri[!ht across
l he
street from the erand old roomlng boose
l'rench designer
Cardin started out to revolulionize men's lashlen• and touk
seven floors of a Paris build·
ing bot the demand wasn't up
to the plans and the
seven
floors have shrunk to three . .
Which is rather a triumph for
quieter genllemen's clothes
Batman's Shea Sta&lt;lium flop
wouldn't hove eat an at all except that star Adam West guaranleed carpenters' pay even ao
they were •larllng to pull down
the slage they'd just built
Young composer Burt Bacharach Jr. already has nine separate records a-&amp;pln of his "Allle" theme song, tho' the film
basn't even been released here
yet. .. Louis Armstrong's like-

Capitol Comment, Events
By William

White

wolmded character called Decker whose case frustrated a
series of honest medicfil. Decker was wholly unlettered; and
m th1s sense he was the precise
opposite uf
today 's
young inteilecl\llll pseudo-paCI·
ftst He had never read any
book, not even a speller. Bul
m the d~ ~ per sense he was o11e
with them .

WASHINGTON - On I he
turning calendar Independenl'e
Day falls yet again, but
to
many Amer1cans, partJcularlv
young Ameri cans, it wtll ' be a

date called July 4th.
So advanced ha5o become the
hberat1on of the new genera·
tion that we rnuy rount ourselves lucky d the
hohday
passes w!UlotJt , at worst, demands for 1Lo; outnght abolitiOn
as a symbol of "war hysteria"
or, at best, strel!l demonstratwns agamsl It as tm otfens1ve
hangover from an unregener-

When the medics would ask
h1m what was the matter With

Decker would simply
sadly turn hi5 head away and
multer mto hiS pilluw ' I wanta go home ." Hu~ View of lhe
then rather important .struggle
agamst a man 11amed. Hitler
wa~ Simply no v1ew at all.

buu, old

ate past.
Sttll , no doub't Independence
Day will surv1ve for yet
a

whlle. Patnolism wtll not in
truth have died 50 years from
now , any more than m truth 1t
has d1ed now For what IB now
gravely ~u·k among many of
our male teen-agers IS not love
of country as such. The 1llness
Js more one Clf a malnutrition
of their sense of humor and
proportion.
What we need to be warned
about now is not In•!
our
youngsters w!ll r e lu ~~ to h~ht
for Cotls.t1tution and for country . never have they refused
when old Uncle Sam has firmly ••ught them by the neck and
oa•d to Utero that they Simply
must What we should worry about instead is not so much
their persistent tendency
to
weep so often at life as their
IDSIStent UnWillingness to JauJh
at it, 1n any way or at 1 n y
t1me.
Draft--card burnmgs
could
in oo circumstances ever force
a pl~asant spectacle , but they
could form a tolerable one if
only the rebels really believed
m the1r cause, whatever it is,
and were ready and willina: to
suffer pain and peril for
it.
Tbe saddest truth I• that they
have no case, for or agumst
anythmg much. They
JUSt
want, most of them , to he len
alone.
In th1s oolummst's
distant
days in the poor bloody infantry. lhe hospital ward
wao
wonderfully enlivened by tile
long presence in it of an un-

s.

1

So 1t is really w1tb many of
today's male demonstrators against the dr•ll. (As to the
guls, never mmd; they are m
a diUerent category and always
have been ) Jt IS not that many
boys s1de w1tb the C&lt;lmmumstJ
in Vtet Nam. It is ,
simply,
that they wanta \SIC)
stay
home.
The enormous d1ffen~nee 11
that when old Decker would ISsue b1s nightly pronouncement
oi his one desire, the men m
the
beds around b1m would
shout wltb uncomplicated laughter. Today 's Deckers
evoke
among too many of their contemporaries netther companionable (and compassionate) lau·
ghter nor scornful gulfaw. They
don't see the new Deckers as
pthably madequate men
whu
should, or course, never have
been in the Army m the first
place. They see th• new Deck·
ers as hero1 c and inhmtely w1se
symbols of resistance to a buliymg world.
They h&lt;tve, most sadly
at
all , no instmce for the absurd;
no talent for the belly laugh
wh1cb , so far as one knows, always heretofore has sustained men in the1r hours of unwel·
come but sbll accepted danger
and of unwanted but st1l1 accomplished sacni1ce.
Gallantry rs perhaps a big,
pompous word and maybe one
rarely deserved . But a robust
sense of the ndiculous is at

THE ALMANAC

By Untied PreRs lnlernatloual
Today is Wednesday , July 6,
the !87th day of 1966 wr1h 1711lo
follow.
The moon is between Its full
phase and last quarter.
By Wayne G. BrandstaOt, M.D.
The mornmg stars are Venus
Although pohomyelitJs vac·
and Saturn.
ci ne can be g1ven lll any time
There are no evemng slars.
of the year , 1t •is rarely g1ven
John Paul Jones, found er 11f
m the summer and 1utumn
the American Navy was born
1 t11e polio season I beca use
it
on this day in 1747.
the ch1ld should fail to develop
On thiS day In history ·
his immunity in time and comes
In l699. the notorious pirate,
down w1th the disease, someCapt.
William Kidd . was se1zed
one is sure to blame the vacIn Boston ond deported to
cine.
It IS especially important 00 England
In 1885, bacteriologist L8u~s
see tilat ali children belw ..n
Pa11teur inoculated the first
the ages of 2 months and
6
years get th1s protection The humah being . . . a boy who
had been badly bitten by on
oral combmed ,JWiccme agamst
all three ol !he prevalent poiio- Infected dog. The boy did oot
mye!JtJs strams has been prov- develop any infection .
In 1933, an All-Star baseball
ed lo be safe It will give the
game
wao played for the first
cluld 1mmumty w1thin a week
t1me. The American League
alter It IS tak en If a chi ld had
his init1al pol1o vaccine during defeated the National League,
h1s hnt year of life a booster 4-2 In Chicago.
In !959, Ruasia orbited two
dose Just before he enters eledogs
and a rabbit in a space
mentary school Is recammendcapsule.
ed. No further boosters
are
A thought for the dayneeded unless an epidemic
threatens the community. If 1 American statesman Damel
thoroughgoing immunization pro- Webster : HThere is nothmg se
gram has been carried out, th11 powerful as truth . .. and often
nothing so strange."
19 not hkely to occur.

JOCJOR

SAYS

Q - Is o hot cereal really
better for a child than a cold
cereal? Are pancakes
made
with ane egg more nutritious
than a bowl of oold oereal just
because they are more filling?
Is dry milk (reconstituted ) as
nutntious as whole
f resh
milk ?
A - OUnce for ounce the
cold cereals are as nutnt10us
as the hot ~ut 1l takes a larger
volume to make an
ounce.
More Important than the temperaure of the cereal is how
appealing 1t 1s to you r cb1ld
R~member , too, that wheat and
oats are richer m vitamms and
minerals than corn and rice
The pancakes are more nu-

Hado's They'll Do It Every Time

®

A130UT HER OWN ESKI!v'DS
AT flOME" ~ER HUSBAND'S &amp;EN
EATit-15 CANNED BI.UBBER SINCE
SHE. 60T ~IM lD \OLUNIEER

FOR MATRIMONY .. •

Body Temperalore Dropo
During hibernation, commonly known as winter sleep, some
animals endure prolonged periods ol &lt;'Old. The body temperature does not conform to that
of the air and may go down to a
few degrees above freezing, ac·
cording to the Encyclopaedia
Britannica.
Nathan Hale, American patriot. was executed as a spy by
U1e _British on Sept. 22, 1776.
tnhous , not only because they
are more filling but also ~&gt;~!cause of lhat egg you put 1n
them. PQwdered whnie milk is
as nutritious as fresh milk but
since it Is mere expenstve, ~~
chief advantage io that in Ihe
~ry state it needs no refrigeration and can be uaed in places
where fresh m1lk is not available. There are also mochf1ed
milk powders (not
whole
milk' but they should be used
only on the advice 'of your doctor.

•

Get fast Actiaft with

WAMT·ADS
~ AAIPA 1MT 7tP

/Nl5.

l51 """M~

PHI L.A.,

ro

boy
has had alopecia areata since
September. The only comment
our doctor made was thai the
hardest thing lor mom a n d
dod was not to worry lbout •t.
Isn't there anything we can da
lor this condition?
A - Your doetor Is right.
Patchy baldn..s may persist
for sevenl months but eventullly the hair cernes back unless
the disease ex~tnd&amp; to all tho
hair. mclnding even the ey..
brows and eyelashes.
Meanwhile massage, supplementary
Yitamin 8 complex and expos.
ure of the Involved areas to tht
aun fll' a sun lamp to produce a
mdd burn but no bli&amp;ters may
... htlplul.

ness in H'wood's Wa:t Mused
muat be 1 dandy . . . hll will
Loollle says the ICUlptor "eouehl
even the llltle things lilly 1
wife would notice," bot lddt
with a 1mlle, "I still ean tell
the real one."
"Sad era paulng - thl bll
old Bdwy. Paramount Theatre,
which so many great awlnl
bands erupted kids Into Its al•
les to ]itterbng and swoon no•
carries on it&amp; marquee the 11..
tie of Its !IDaI attraeUon: "Pub.
lie Auction ol Contents July
. . . Westinghouse Broadcastlnf
bought 7-Up franchises In New
Haven ond Puerto Rloo and 11
carbonatill(l cash to bottle up
more elsewhere . . . The FCC
poyold qui! ts ll&amp;tenlng to red
hot testimony in L.A., and here
In the East, a witness has di,_
1ppeared . . . Famed decorator
Ellen Lehman McCluskey's d&amp;tlghter Maureen McCiu&amp;key'l
working at Warner Bros.' N. Y.
celluloid factory.

The Meigs Legion

~bit

sing!~.

~t

Name Eight
•

AL Hur1ers
1F J

or u1y 12

to

I

55

u

han~ forth~
CrooJ~./Employees

~

(7~)

,Ra~e :tHorses

i.

trent. Rldht end heeter

,ower stHri"L whlttweR

BERArS WOHLU .

llr11.

·63 Chevrolet
'

'

lol Alro. 4 Dr . 6 cyl.

Stendercl trent. W.. lte wall
th-.s.

Race 1.
Egg and
SpoooLe!arl.
Brenda
Roush,
lmogee's- QueeJI Bee, Cherie
Williams, Pomeroy: 2. Sirstine,
Jim Sommer, w
' •de; and
3. Jim Hancock.
:lias, Letart.
_
Bareb~ck €lass IPorues oniy)
- t Fri.tz. I;'aJJ!a Workmlm,
Crown City; 2 Prmce, Nathan
Yonker,_Letart; and 3. Naughty
Boy, Diane Guthrie: Coolville.
Barrel Race tPomes ·. ooly)
t Smol!ey, Jerry Lewis, Le:~;=2~. P,rtnre, Nathan Yonker,
and 3. Beauty, Frank
Mason.
:-1 .. Johnny Sor·
LU&lt;!IIIe Leifheit, Pomeroy;
Joe •. Slll!rry lndes~d,
and .S. Jm~ee s

~

T~sday

R lb
ant York
if.l)
New

vs.
at Bunning

8:05 p.m.

AUanta at Housto&amp;-Jay i&amp;-4)
vs. Farrell (3-5), 9:30 p.m.
Cinclntjatl at Los
Pappas (7-5) vs. Osteen (10-6),
11 p m.
'11umdsy'1 Gam01
New York at Philadelphia
Pittsburgh at Chicago
Atlanta at Loa Allgeleo, night
Cincinnati at So FrancisCO
(Only games scheduled)
,
BR~O TO F~
CIUCAGO (11Pt) -Ernie
Brogllo, a 1111ame wlmier
1960, was sent to Tacoma of
Pacific Coast ·L!3agua
by the Chicago Cubs.

Cherie Williams,
Brogllo,
acquind
=;a;,...,..._,.,...,...,...iiiiiiiiiiil
Louis
Iwo yean
ago, from
had a
record and I 8.38 earned
IIVerage this year.

Dod~crs.

l

Mr"'

loot/llf fot MMtiJillf lit

--

6fnk

Wad rlnyf,.

·

·

·

Mlnllesota beat CJeveJa,iuf l!ld llllly nm in
California dewoed 1leirtlt by wbeu Jim ·
Identical f.3 sooree. Cbi'eaao moved to

~as rained out at WaabiJill!on. lloaeboro'a

~.,.U..
Le{~
~.~, ;, on J
sing!~:"~
llle..

· · •

borne on a llingle' by · Jt
Kennedy. The wiD·, lefl
celebraleil
11\i[!h J
ahead of his IINltl (28-8) pa
when be didn't wlil ills 1$
deciSion until July 11.
Jacuoa Gets WID
LitUe AI J , a - . Uml
league-leading
&amp;aD t!&gt;rllllClsc»
two singles 88 be eQIIst!ld
eighth victory
losses. The oli!)\ : ;
I
tallied after an
mid
baseman Jerry

_ , In Flnl
The Pirate&amp; staked Fryman;
to a pair of unearned runs ln
the first mning and Jldded to it
In the sixth on Willie Stargell's
single, Jose Pagan's RBI
double and Donn Clendenon'&amp;
1Zih bomer belore the rains
came In the top ef the seventh.
The win, Fryman's seventh
ogainst three lesses, left the
surging Plratea 1111 games
behind the Blumplng first place
Giants.
Koufax (15-4) sent Cincinnati
to Its seventh defeat In a row
wlill his 38th career shutout
and In doing so took o~er the
h!ad among active National
League pitchers lor most
abatouts. Robin RobertB, who
was released by Houston on
Sunday, had held the lead with

~

lefi~Jander

t'

to:.
Nl'""

~

unearned-

~!i'c~ l'i:-!
·
.0 _ •

~

1

{,1;,~

'r~~·~~

KC Tourney Ope~s Tonig
. ht

Pre~ent

--:;:.======:::::-

i'

~.m.,

w·

~~arged ~lth

o~,~,,born~rs
~

Sllpslopslap!

powe11 Leads Baron Attack
In ll-0 pony Le ague In

year'~

Bra,v,~

I'

-~mpires_ ~•r l!'~

ca~e ,

~~~~ague

~orklng

gam~s

!

=====...;;=..::;.========~

With

"'I

.. APPLIAN£ES
...

TENNIS SHOES

Reds Outlast
Indians m'

19-13 WiJi

Roush's Shoe Store

..

1 1

,~"~·~ ~~~~r~:~~~;l,~:::::,.,

The Reds and the Indians
joyed a sluglest Tuesday
aooo ill a make-up Boys
gue game at Middleport
Reds w· · 19-11 but '
authil
lrull..;s, 15-13.
Home runs were . hil by
Clonch and Hysell of the
Red&gt; hitters · were Cooke
triple and slng!e, Clonch a
ble and two sfugles with
homer McKinney and eoc,ru-an I
both alngles, Hyaell two 111n!!les,
wtth bls homer and Acree
single.
'
For the Indians

b~

Air Conditioners ~~------~c.
~-----·
C3HnEST
,.

FREEZERS

~~ l.•=dou~hiJe:and:~=~:~~
double,

6« Our lsttnliw CollmiM of BULOVA Wa!M
FfOI!t $24.16

tlliiUr HU.llo

·:··.:.:.j\1·,, ..
· "1

-

:ar~r ~ll!more C~nd

nearly l50 entries in the
English Pleasure -:- Sunny, Mino 4 Cleveland 3, nighl
16 I B_etty
classes,
and a ' good crowd
Harrison, Galhpohs: 2. Chi at Wash ' ppd .. wet grnds
was on
event.
'! Jill, Lawrence Parsons,
Pt. California 4 Detroit 3, Right
Pleasant, and 3. Gmger, west- (Only games scheduled)
The Kyger
.
today extended thanks to 1l'e Parsons, Pl. Pleasant
Wednesday's Probable
Nethercutt, Naples, Ky., Western Pleasure Pony, (Rid· Bos{Statonrtiqat NThneew"yorEDTk )
judge for the event, and to \ er 16 and under)
L Naughty
Parsons of New Havea, Boy, Diana Guthrre. Coolville; Santiago
and
2. Son, Kathy Moryan , HarrJ. (1-2), 9 p.m. vs. Ford (0-4)
served as ringmaster.
1\n,other
sonv 11
nd 3 p ·
N th
Bouten (1-3)
v
horse show is planIe a
. rmce, a an Kansas City at Baltimore
!or the fall, and It will be Yonker, Letart.
-Liildblad (3-4) and Stafford,
at night. By that
time
Western Pleasure
Horse p.m. (0-2) vs. Bunker &lt;8-4) IJJld
will be mstalled at the (Full mane and tail) _
Ev- Barber i9- ) or Short (l·O)
1
2
"' \erectf.l.and bleachers will ans Son, Bob Ridge. Jackson: Minnesota at
"'
2. lmogee's Queen Bee, Cheryl Pascual (ll- ) vs. Siebert !9- )
3
5 (6-Z), I .
Williams, Pomeroy; and
3. or McDowell
Scott's Comanche Duke B•erly
Calif .
t
Jackson.
·
' (H) v:rn:ils:a
Flag Race - L Dusty, Wil· Chicago at
·liam Greer; New Haven; 2. Buzhardt t3-5) and
only) - Shorty, John Rl&lt;'luJrds, Pt Plea- vs. ortega (6-7) and
William Greer, New sant; and 3. Dixie, Ed Roush, mick t&amp;-7), &amp; p.m.
Ed
Roosh, Letart.
Th•raday's Gamet
Western Pleasure Horse Detroit at Minnesota, night
(Clipped ma,ne and tall) - 1. Chicago at Washington, rughl •
Poca lnda, Scott Bierly,
Boston al New York, m[!ht
son; 2. Sirstine, Jim Sommer, (Only games scheduled)
South Sdie ; and 3. Hank's Bud·
National Leape
dy, Dick Roach, Gallipolis.
W. L. Pet.
Roadster Pooy - l, McGee, sam Francisco 50 32 .610
Bob Greer, New Haven; 2.
Pitlsbur[!h
_
47 32 595
Black Drum Major, Ike
Los Angeles 44 34 _564 4
Clifton, and 3. Red Lady, Jim· Philadelphia 44 36 550 • 5
my Hoffman, Letart.
Houston
43 38 .531
Bareback Class (Horses only) St Louis
38 40 .487 10
- I. Judy Ed Roush Letart· cinclllll&amp;tl
36 42 . 462 12
2.
Hank's
'Buddy
Dick
Roach
38
45 .458
63 Chevrolet
Gallipolis;
and
Evans
Soo:
York
:
lei Al19 2 Dr. I cyUndot",
33 44 429
Ridge,
Jackson.
Chicago
Aula. Trans. Radio and
54 308 24
hello•, Whltowoll tlm.
Run and Ride (Porues only)
Tllesday's24 Resali.
- t Beauty, Frank Zuspan, Pittsburgh Chicago
h2 Ford Gal. 500
0
8
t dr. I eyl. At Trons.. P.
Mason; 2. Silver Beauty, Bill St Louia 3 Sa• Fri'ndsco' 1
slNrJIJI, rHia and heater
Tuttie, Pomeroy; and 3. Prince, Phila 3 New York 1 night
64 Galexie XL
R. McFarl,nd, New Haven.
Atlanta 9 Houston 4; nl[!ht
Stake Race (Horses only) - Los Ang 1 C'mclnnatl
CoiiYirtlfllL 8 cyHncltr,
•uto triM., power , ...,.
l Dusty, William Greer, New Wetlnesday'l Probable
lno. pOwer •r•ket end
Haven
: 2. Shorty, John Rich(All 11mea EDT)
wlntiOwli, raclio a hnttr
ards,
Pt
Pleasant;
and
3.
Db:·
Pittsburgh
at
. Ed R h Le
64 Ford Falrlene
Je, .
ous , tart
(6-2) vs. Ellsworth (3-11), 2
580. 2 Dr. Hardtop, 1 cyt.
P1okup Race (Pollie&amp; . only) p.m.
lndor, Radio &amp; hutor
Whlt. .all ttrot,
'
- L :Iidflower,BeCathy Fogle- st. Louis at Sa•
song,
ason; 2. auty, Frank Stallard (1-S) vs. Bolin (5-5),
64 Ford Gelaxie
580. 4 Dr. 8 eyllnclor, auto.
Zuspan, Mason; and 3. Rockett; p.m.

~·

~

~Jr&lt;~l\

Larry . JackiOII liEII'Iaed .
demination over ihe Meta wheo
he beat them for the !5th time
without a lo...Hh. Philadelphia
righthander 9
New York
on sit hits, ba~ ni..hJt runs
wtlb a sixth· ' I dOUble and
scored the last iiin.'' •
1 ' 'il.
45
The Dodgers gave Sandy bis ndJoethTorre's
boigmhethr
- _
a
ree runs , n: .T ' e
boosted !be
past Hou,_
ton. Dave Nicholson slammed I
pair ol homers..
t!Je Astros
and Jim Wynn
!Dark the
1 lirsl time IOI!J',
bave
ment • ro und.'" g ou t tb'" week·· I been
hit
In
Oll"'
·CBPle
al
tho
Astrodome Den~!!~ ·Lemaster
Wednesday - 6:15p.m., Adda- (6-5) scatt~red ei h't hill for
ville Jets vs . Gallipolis Tigers; the win.
g
7:30 p.m., Middleport Yankees .
va. Pt. Pleasant Fruth's Phar·
m · d 8 30
P
acy, an · p.m • omeroy
Painting again? Get the
Yankees vs. Pt. Plea!lJ!nt Ki·
waDis.
right equipment look
under PAINTS in the
I
"Sudden Sam" McDowell,
Thursday •• 6:15 p.m., Galli- :
YELLOW PAGES. Where
currently 6-2. Richert, 8-B with
polis Red Sox vs. Harrisonville
your fingers.tlo 1/ltt
lhe ninth place Senators. and
Bombers; 7:30
Gallipolis
walking.
· ·
Stottiemyre, who has a 7-91
Indians vs.8 30
Middleport Senarecord through the first hal( of
tors ; and ' p.m., Pt. Pleasthis season are repea!fr9 !rom
ant Pure Oil vs. Cottageville
last
America• League! G_ene Powell, Middleport Bar·' the Barons. HIS second
Dodger&amp;.
.
1
AD-Star squad. McDowell a8 Ions Pony baseball team out-' when he led oil the fifth. "'" I Frida - &amp; IS
M'ddl
I
•
.
.
w , fielder • catcher, made
m the •IXth drove m
Y
p.m.,
ehis
slTuesday evenmg for a lot opof smgie
two more runs.
; port Braves vs. Pomeroy Tigruurth loss '" the last five All· early season lrustral!oo with Meanwhile the Barons took ers ; 7:30 p.m, Pt. Pleasant
Star games wbiie
JD Ihis bat
advantage of Bachtel'• wildness Reds vs . Cheshire
Rediegs;
relief and Richert pitched two
_
_ to mount tlleir 11 runs on 8 tot· and 8·30 p m., wmner of the
innings ol scoreless reiiel _a A top Little .League hitter 81 of ooly six hitB, Po&gt;*'ll's AddaviUe Jets vs. GaUipolia TI·
year ago but Stottlernyre d1d last year who m hve
three and singles by Jim Warn- gers meets Bullalo, W. Va.
sot appear Ill the game.
thiS season had only two hitB er, Pal Archer, and second-sack· Saturday - 6:15 p.m., Pt.
Just two others among the I untJI last evenmg, Powell un· er Steve Oiler Bachtel walked Pleasant Dunlop Tires vs. Porn·
eight ranking American League 1loaded lwo homers and
1 9 batters, !anned 9, hit aobody. eroy Jets; 7:30p.m., winner of
pitchers have won previous 1smgie m four tr•ps to the plate, Tannehill !anned 14, walked Middleport Yankees vs.
Pl
reeiechon II the Ail-Star squad. drove m five rons and score&lt;! nobody, hit Robody, aave up two Pleasant Fruth's Pharmacy
Bell pitched a total of three Ithree hrmself. m the Barons singles, to George Lawrence I meets the Cottageville Yankees:
innings and bad a' 6.00 earned, 11:0 whitewash of Southern at leadmg all the second, and to , and 8:30 p.m. , Middleport In·
run average m the two 1960 Middleport
Ab Proffitt with two gone In dians vs. Cheshire Tigers.
games while Kaat was oamed His first came In the third the 7th.
~ !be squad In. 1962 though he with two on to signal a five ruo , _ Lawreace was erased stealing I
did not see action.
burst that broke a pitching duel \,. the second mmng. Owens
In picking tw• members of between Ronme Bachtel
of was safe on ao error in the '
the !Jldmn staff and one each Souther• and John Tannehill of sixth but Woody Hall hit into 1
f~m the lront-runmng Orioles, - ··a aouble play, and so going
Tigers, Yankees, senators, Ath- International Lea,pe Standlllgs l inlo the 7th, Tan110hW bad lao- •
lellcs and hiS own Twms , Mele By United Press latemationtl i ed only the re~ulatmn 18 bat· I
ehoose a stall that ranges 10
' ters. Prolfltt's smgle put 22 tot·
age from Hunter's 20 years to Col b
W. L. Pel. GB 1al batters, one over the mini- I
the veteran Bell's 29 but which
cum us
43 32 .573
mum, to the Southerl plate.
aveTages under 25 years to Ro hester
41 38 .519 4
Thursday the Barons go to
make II one ol the youngest the Jacksonville
38 36 .514 41&gt; Pomeroy and Eastern "
at I
American League
had em- Toronto
oji) 38 .513 41'. Southern.
ployed In recent season s.
~0\~d~0
39. 39 .5110
51&gt;
Soulbern
0011 000 0- 0 2
4
McLaJh, w1th a 12-3 record, is u a
38 39
- !H 6
Barons
005 t23 x -116
38 41
,•
the le~gue's top winner while' ~~~hm~nd
.48! 7
Bachtel and Lawrence, Prel-l I
32 46 4
Barbers 9-2 lllldway record, in Y acu, e
- 10 1211 1fill (8) . Tannehill and Floyd,
1,Po._wiiiiell"-tiiii7~).=====-add1hon to bemg the best start
Tueoday• 1 Results
in h1s seven-season major Toronto 4 Rochester 3
11
league career, Is the top Syracuse4 Buffalo 3
percentage pace on Mele s Jacksonville 4 Richmond 2
stafL
I
(Only games scheduled)
For All The Famlly
Bell currently Is H while 1- rookie
. 1es. Mood.ISpaogh two
I~ Hunter is ~ aod Kaat 1wo smg
·
swgles. Warner four singles,
Halley a single and
double,
Manley a single.
Reds
5111 (10) 3-t9 13
Ind
0011 722
11 15
yse an
e.
Mlddt"""rt 0
•
paugh Mulieu (4) and
-..- ' '
'

~~~:~can

\lnlnl~

~on

~_hits.

southpa~s.

• K
150 Take Part In Yger
Creek Horse Show Sunday

days, and the expense 1• nol
too bad, as the wort -ll dont
over an exteodell-perlod
ol
tirnt
For wometl with real mou•
tache problems It Is a permanent blea&amp;llli: The electrle
needle kill&amp; tile roots and lt'l
- HAffi TODAY, GONE TOMORROW
BOSSY WOMEN llllllJ:. HER
Dear Helen.
I have just linished beaulioians sohool, and have losl r•
spect for a lot of women wbQ
come to a school llkt ours.
We do balr far !011 thaa hall
price because we're eettil1c ez.
pertence, but before we'ro .._
lowed lo work on eustomert,
we koow how to operate.
Yet these females order Ul
around aa If we were llupld.
They teD us how to thampoo,
how mucb ''set'' to Wle. how
to comb, and they make IIi do
these things over a1d over bocause they are just sure wo
""n't set It right. They Ifill
the combs away from Ul and
ruin all our work wllh their
pushing and proddiD(I. They ev•
en tell us where to place ucb
ruller, even wben wo KNOW
they're wrong.
They 're getUng a bartaln.
Why don't they keep thell: bl&amp;
mouths shut? - BEAUTICIAN
TO BE
P.S. Tell 'em, Helen.
Dear B.T.B.Yoo already did a lint job
of telling 'ern. I'll only add :
Ladies : student beaullclana
are human and also a llttlt ..,..
vous. Lel their teachers give
instructions - you'll get a bOo
tor "do " if YOU don't! -11.
PERSONAL TO "DECORA.
TOR: A !rilly caoopy bed attracts more dust than
hu1o
banda. Don 't be surprised if
yours fight&amp; hack with 1 niehl
shirt and lace mghl cap. - H.
This column is dedicated to
family hvin1, so il you're hav•
ing kid truubie or just plata
trouble, let Hel"" help YOU,
She will also welcome your
own amURinl experiences, Address Helen Bottel in care at
, th1s newspaper_

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Hits, But Dodgers Win Tilt,· ~01

Bill

J

2~.

k--by Hel•• llottel--'

Dear Helen:
Concerning your answer to
"Moustache Minnie,'' l want to
say you are doing electrolysis
pradltioners a disfavor when
you say uHalr removal by elec-tricity is expensive and 1101 ai·
ways 100 per cent effective.''
'' ~'W and Improved method&amp;
t
very 1atisfactory
these

Werry,

I

HELEN HELP US!

- H.

ID~k I-~~

bi~

--~------~~---2- Dally Sentinel, Pomeroy-Middleport, 0., July e, 1988

CASE OF THE
DISAPPEARING HUSBAND
Dear Helen :
Each time I have a
baby
U's the same.
My husband disappears.
The first time it happened he
sa1d he was going out for some
aroeeries. He came back two
weeks later - ofter neighbors
had gotten me to the hospital
and home again - and acted
as •I he hadn't been A.W.O.L.,
pretending.
All he said was, "You've lost
we1ght since 1 saw you last."
No explanation, just a shrug,
and " I'm home, so forget it.''
He acted scared.
This trme, he took our Utile
girl to my mother's, and never
came back. I took a taxi to the
hospitaL
Again he returned,
two weeks later. I had somebody c~ll his office and they
said he was on vacation.
He's just wonderful to U8 oth·
er times . He won't talk about
Ulese "vacations." I think they
bother him so much he can't.
I think he can't help II. I nev·
er mention them to him, bot I
wisii I could.
They bother me so much 1
never 1..1 really secure. Will
he disappear at every criSIS m
our lives? - T.R.W.
Dear T:
Only an expert could diagoose your husband's problem
and, hopefully, cure him ol Ibis
compulsive fear of cblid birth.
Perhaps your tamliy doctor can
persuade him he needs help in
understanding iumself. Insist
that he go in for a check-up.
Sometimes a wife obeys too
blindh . not reall!ing, "I don't
want to talk about II" really
means , "I've got to talk about
it, bot I can't find the words."

baseball later also saw moumd duty lor

e~y
F~eld

_j

e, ltee-4

tea'!l, made Wellston Ita oillth jMeigs as the romp was re- Swan, 11, homer and
single:
Dave Wliite, a atngle; Flowers, 1
straight VIciim 'flresday even- 1corded.
lng as !be local crew marlted I Wellston failed to et a single Ia home rua; Eddie Baer, a
UPI Sporll
I ball lllarted 10 thnes, abtwa
1
up 1JJI
23-3 victory , at
until the SJ!V'!'Dib
lrame double and single; Bill Moore,
Eveo. thtu[!h 8aldy Xoufao II &amp;even cemplete games and b1s
Bacqlel
rn Masoa.
wheR three runs were tallied a pair o1 singles, and Bob SUer, 1
))alfway to 30 wtna, Woody r....,.t strlng of goose eggs has
0
Melgs jUmped out in front oo a triple by Ed Jacobs, a
,
[
FrymaB rate&amp; as the Natlooal lowered his earned run average
8
qulcldy with five rUJ18 oa four smgle by Ratliff, a base on The next pme for the Meig&amp;l
League's hottest hurler.
to a clul&gt;-leadina 2.33.
hits in the fir&amp;t innlng and add· balls, and a batter hll by 1 • team will be In touraament
The Dodger wonder was
On Bol Streak
ed 11 more on nine hit&amp; in the wild pitch.
play at llamdel thi&amp; coming :
get up
effective when he needed lt Fryman has been practically
18
second frame.
,
Leadmg tbe hittlllg lor the Saturday,
t a. m. ud if 'I
Tuesday night as he bested untoucilable lhe la&amp;l two week&amp;.
Gary Stobart started
for :wlnaers were Buddy Moore two winning, at Athens at 2 p. m.
Cincinnati's Jim Maloney 1-&amp; On June 26, he allowed
the looal crew and pitched
I singles and double in lour lr I'll against Athens.
I
lor his ISth victory bot lacked Philadelphia just three hils and
less. ball imtll John VIckers re- to the plate, and Stobart With I By inRings:
his razor-abarp edge, giving up faced only 29 batten ill a 1,.0
lieved him in the fourth (rame. i two doubles and a ngte for a Wellston
0011 0011 3- 3 : 2
10 bits and fanning "only" victory. Last Friday night, he
1IMeigs
!lave White and John Flowers perfect day at bat51
5tll)l 2441 x-23 20 1
eight
yielded a leadoff infield alngle
.
Other Mel(!s hitters
were ! Rapp, Calvbl 13) and Bragg. ,
Fryman, a relative unknown to New York's Ron Hunt and
BREWER INKS CONTRAcr George Sauer and Lenny vu Stobart (WP),
Vickers (4),
at the start ol the 1966 then retired the next 27 men in
' CLEVELAND (UP!) - T be Meter , each a pair of singles; White (5), Flowers (1) and wercampaign, registered his. third order.
\(Cleveland Browns
Tuesday ·
- - --·- · -- ry, Swu (5).
•
strwght shutout for the Pirate&amp; Even a 45 minute raiR cMay
s•gned veteran end John BrewBOLD KEY TRIUMPHS
BOSTON (UP!) -Eight pitch· when he blankea Chlooge
failed It dampen Frymall
er to a 1966 contract and an· COLUMBUS (UP!) - Bold
ers, fiv e of whom are All-Star
But even
more
as he ran hia ocereless
RC&gt;Uoced plans to switch him to Key, owned by George Conner,
game rookies, were named amazmg IS t!oat over the stnng lnrung streak to 27 and halted
a lmebacker thiS season.
Columbus, won the featured $2,·
today by American League of 27 zeros, Fryma? has Bon SIJJIII's hitting skem at 28
Coach Blanton Colller said 0011 three-year-old illvilational
Manager Sam Mele to his allowed a total of oHly ""' bits. games.
he would move Brewer to that pace Tuesday ru~hl at Scioto
mound stall lor the annual All· _The pndgy lefty, who played I~ other National Letigue
slOt
to provide
addJtJonal lDowos.
Star game against the National h1s first game of professiOnal acllon, St. Louis defeatl!d San
strength, srnce lmeb:Icker Ga- ' The wn of 1953 Little Brown
League at st. Loui• next baseball last Ju_ly , d1d _not get Francisco 3-1, Atlanta topped
len F1ss plans to reure at the :Jug winner Keystoner took the I
Tuesday
I bJS
.ntbal startmg assignment Houston H and Phlladelphla
end of the season.
1lead at the hail . mile polr
Th
.
for Pittsburgh until May 13 and heat New York 3-t.
Defensive back Tom Gunnoe, !win hiS second race of the year
e Oight-man staff, com- he responded w1th a shutout I In the America• League
who led the Continental League by
lengths in a hfetirne re- By Uaftfd Preos loternatlonal posed equally ol right banders over the
Overall, he i Boston dumped New York 7-1:
last sea&amp;On with 11 interceptions cord ol 2:04 1-5.
American League
and
was headed by
while playmg w1tb the Char· I The pre-race favorite
paid
w L pt
ranking Amcn cao League winjestOR, w. Va' team. also Sign. $4.60, $3.20, and $2.40. Fair 1-. Baltimore
.G;g
ner Denny McLain of Detroit
ed a new oontract With the dian paid $4.60 and $3 and Dan- Detroit
46 32 .590 7\1 and included Cleveland's Sam
llrowos.
I dy Diller paid $3 to show.
Cleveland
45 33 .577 81&gt; McDowell and Gary Bell, Jim
--· · ------- ·
California
43 :rr .saa
Kaat of Minlll'sota MelliStottle-1
1111 myre ol New 'vork, Pete : The Eighth Aruma!
Chicago
37 40 .4tll16
Kyger will be Beb Burchett, "-••
R n t f W hi gt
Ste
c
"""&amp;
Minnesota
37 4~ .463 171&gt; IC er 0
as n on,
ve Creek Tournament lor Little Hemsley. and Guy Guinther.
New York 34 trl .447 181&gt;
off
JIID Leaguers will get underway to- Forty learns are entered in lhe
Kansas City 35 41 .443 19
un er 0
ansas I\y. All· mght at 6: t5 at the recreation annual tvent. The Middleport
Wasl!lngton
33 47 .413 21\1 nouncem~t of Ali-Star M~na- area across from the Kyger Yankees are 196.\
defending
Boston
30 51 .370 25 ger Mele s pdchmg selections Creek power plant on Rt 7 champions
The big horse Sunday at the.New Haven: and 3. Star, Brend b th
ff
'
•
·
Kyger Creek &lt;:rnployees Club da Roush, Letart.
Tuesdly'o Reoults
was rna e Y e o Ice ol south of Cheshire.
I Here is \be schedule for the
Recreation Area
attracted
Boston 7 New York 1
League
Joe
___
tournament first four Dights of the touros·

r

Q - OUr lt-y0or-&lt;&gt;ld

REQIIRED RERDIR'

~Y le11~11fl, Pomeroy-Middleport, 0., July

Jack O'Briau

;i

and area residents are slipping back
. Into the humdrum of their daily work,
and when one looks back on the hohdav
.• It was nothing more for most residenis
•· than another long weekend. Then
• : abould be some way that this lethargy
· could be broken, and the most patriotIc date· on the American calendar be one
• · o( real meamng to the old and younger
generation alike. We know that the older
generation harks back tu the days when
.. they got really excited with the dawn of
the 4tb. They rose bright and early and
found events to keep them busy through·
out the holiday season.

oadway

"•

I DOOR

�.,

.

'
I

''

'

'I

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1

..tHE DAilY SENTINR

.;

~Voice

-

'Moybe It's Safer ·Over There!"

o.f

DI!VOTED TO INTEREST 01'
MEIGS-MASON AREA
Richard S. Owen, Publisher
Chesler Tannehill, Editor

Published every afternoon ( exoep1
Saturday) and Sunday by The Ohio Val
PubUahine Company, 110 Meohanl&lt;
Pomeroy, Ohio 45768. Bllilne11 01
992-2156. Editorial phone
Entered as aeoond olu&amp; mailing mallet
at the poot offioe at Pomeroy, Ohio.
National advertlaine representative
Boltlnelll Kimball, Inc., 343 Lexingtom
Ave., fl(ew York City, New York.
Sublerlptlon rates Delivered by car
r rler wbere IVIllable, 85 cents per week
one year In 1dvance at the Daily Senti
nel office $18.20; six months, $9.10
three months $3.90. l!y Motor Route
where carrier service not available om
month fl .30. By mail one year $10.00.
SII months, $5.25; Three month&amp;, $3.00

Why Not Us?
'~. ANOTHER July 4th has come and gone,

It has been a great manv years since
we have had a real celebration locally.
One writer has recently suggested that it
was a big mistake to take the fire crack·
tr out of the holiday observance It is
true that there were some casualties con·
necttd with the shooting off of explosives, but the day remained bright for
the vast majority of individuals who got a
,thrill out of creatmg some noise to shake
:jbe calm of the community. In place of
' t.he (!recracker we have substituted the
massicre on the highways, which is more
lethaUhan that created by the so-called
dangehtus practice of the booming 4th.
. It is true that most of the injuries in
th~ Boomin&amp; 4lh days came to childreni ~ingers, hand», and eyes suffering dam·
a'ge J.t6'fltinction It is well that the
l, "SaMV9,Qii!th". ru tt:;&lt; today Theb tl?rotb·
1em
•
• aps , Is 1o 1ear n 1o su s Itu e
r so
' ' for the former noise that in·
r spi
' celebrating spirit

f

w li{less we are getting too sophisti·
· cated_ J~d,ay to thrill to the sight of mar·
_ cbing units , which in the early days in·
~·- cludiMI . tlle community band, and some
! umts from out of our counties that includ: ed oll9~fa!llflUS coon skin band , as it was
i cal¥!14-'lw;l! Dufour and hi s fellow mari cheli'il!l~de many events complete with a
reailitic Impression of the Spirit of 1776.
towns w~re bedecked with bunting
l. som~thin~ that has almost disappeared
except, (@' rare occasions. There was a
profu;\Clii1-0f flags ol every size, and not
tlle •IBinlllin~ that was observed on dis·
play I(~I!JI~.

j

I

It Is S\Jtely not asking too mu ch for
citizens to participate m a real observ·
ance. We watched with interest the pa·
radt!i and observance that took place in
the suburban city of Columbus, Upper
Arlington on the holiday. Starting on a
tmall scale back in the 1930's that event
hJa become . the annual and major com·
munity effort of Arhngton. We could not
hel,p l!ut note;t'he enthusiasm of past
cbaitniall- arid directors of the event as
'f.hey were interviewed at the microphone
,ner the conclusion of the parade, wh1eh
was only a part of the general celebra·
tiQn. They expressed th e fee im~ that
~ey were keeping alive the spin! that
'brought lffedom to our country, and
seem satisfied that thev were engaged in
' a worthwhile endeavor We could do the
.'tame thmg here with a wi sely arranged
.-:provam and over the years add to the
·-utractlons that would bring thousands to
ciilr community with little or no effort.

1
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George Hamilton's
taking
flyina lessons . His llrl bird
Lynda was liven a traditional
SpaniSh bridal outfit in Toled9
(So"' cue( Come fly with me)
. . Kim Novak's lively depart·
ed huoband Richard
Johnson
awltched to London High Socie·
ty witb socialite •
actress
Suzann8"Leigh .. Kim's vocabulary now is considered t h e
most colorful in H'wood s10ce
Carole Lombard's, Jean Har·
low's and Lauren Bacall's . .
Joel McCrea and Frances Dee
were reported dining happily a·
gam together at the King Hen·
ri IV after o happy Westche..
t@ol' (N.Y. reunion weekend
They wer~ wed there 32 year1
ago .
Michael Zwerm quit as presl~
dent of Capitol Steel - to travel to RosSJa playing trombone
wrlh Earl Fatha Hrnes
Seven Arts suspended Sue Lyen by
the neck of her contract for refu sing
the upcoming I I 1m
4 'Young" .
Sue's a cnUc? . __
Jackie Kennedy bought h e r
dress for lhe wedding of her
half-Sister Janet Auchincioss
rrom Some couturier Valentino . London's Daily Mall reports SOviet dress designers are
needling frocks comparable to
what's worn in the "wildly af·
fluent American suburbs" and
''Fifth Ave. shops" The Rllll6ki counterpart of Balendago •
Norrell is Vyachesiav Zailsov
and Womer.'s Wear Daily report&amp; the Reds will export h1s
Mescow
fashions to Bt itam.
least justly to be expected ol
New
York fa shiOn fQlk are
all those whose members may
come up m lhe great lottery
of warfare.

1etting as secretive as Paris:
Women' 'I. Wear Dally bad te
hire a room at the elegant old
Plaza Hotel and spied oo new
hats desianed for Bergdorf •
Goodman. ri[!ht across
l he
street from the erand old roomlng boose
l'rench designer
Cardin started out to revolulionize men's lashlen• and touk
seven floors of a Paris build·
ing bot the demand wasn't up
to the plans and the
seven
floors have shrunk to three . .
Which is rather a triumph for
quieter genllemen's clothes
Batman's Shea Sta&lt;lium flop
wouldn't hove eat an at all except that star Adam West guaranleed carpenters' pay even ao
they were •larllng to pull down
the slage they'd just built
Young composer Burt Bacharach Jr. already has nine separate records a-&amp;pln of his "Allle" theme song, tho' the film
basn't even been released here
yet. .. Louis Armstrong's like-

Capitol Comment, Events
By William

White

wolmded character called Decker whose case frustrated a
series of honest medicfil. Decker was wholly unlettered; and
m th1s sense he was the precise
opposite uf
today 's
young inteilecl\llll pseudo-paCI·
ftst He had never read any
book, not even a speller. Bul
m the d~ ~ per sense he was o11e
with them .

WASHINGTON - On I he
turning calendar Independenl'e
Day falls yet again, but
to
many Amer1cans, partJcularlv
young Ameri cans, it wtll ' be a

date called July 4th.
So advanced ha5o become the
hberat1on of the new genera·
tion that we rnuy rount ourselves lucky d the
hohday
passes w!UlotJt , at worst, demands for 1Lo; outnght abolitiOn
as a symbol of "war hysteria"
or, at best, strel!l demonstratwns agamsl It as tm otfens1ve
hangover from an unregener-

When the medics would ask
h1m what was the matter With

Decker would simply
sadly turn hi5 head away and
multer mto hiS pilluw ' I wanta go home ." Hu~ View of lhe
then rather important .struggle
agamst a man 11amed. Hitler
wa~ Simply no v1ew at all.

buu, old

ate past.
Sttll , no doub't Independence
Day will surv1ve for yet
a

whlle. Patnolism wtll not in
truth have died 50 years from
now , any more than m truth 1t
has d1ed now For what IB now
gravely ~u·k among many of
our male teen-agers IS not love
of country as such. The 1llness
Js more one Clf a malnutrition
of their sense of humor and
proportion.
What we need to be warned
about now is not In•!
our
youngsters w!ll r e lu ~~ to h~ht
for Cotls.t1tution and for country . never have they refused
when old Uncle Sam has firmly ••ught them by the neck and
oa•d to Utero that they Simply
must What we should worry about instead is not so much
their persistent tendency
to
weep so often at life as their
IDSIStent UnWillingness to JauJh
at it, 1n any way or at 1 n y
t1me.
Draft--card burnmgs
could
in oo circumstances ever force
a pl~asant spectacle , but they
could form a tolerable one if
only the rebels really believed
m the1r cause, whatever it is,
and were ready and willina: to
suffer pain and peril for
it.
Tbe saddest truth I• that they
have no case, for or agumst
anythmg much. They
JUSt
want, most of them , to he len
alone.
In th1s oolummst's
distant
days in the poor bloody infantry. lhe hospital ward
wao
wonderfully enlivened by tile
long presence in it of an un-

s.

1

So 1t is really w1tb many of
today's male demonstrators against the dr•ll. (As to the
guls, never mmd; they are m
a diUerent category and always
have been ) Jt IS not that many
boys s1de w1tb the C&lt;lmmumstJ
in Vtet Nam. It is ,
simply,
that they wanta \SIC)
stay
home.
The enormous d1ffen~nee 11
that when old Decker would ISsue b1s nightly pronouncement
oi his one desire, the men m
the
beds around b1m would
shout wltb uncomplicated laughter. Today 's Deckers
evoke
among too many of their contemporaries netther companionable (and compassionate) lau·
ghter nor scornful gulfaw. They
don't see the new Deckers as
pthably madequate men
whu
should, or course, never have
been in the Army m the first
place. They see th• new Deck·
ers as hero1 c and inhmtely w1se
symbols of resistance to a buliymg world.
They h&lt;tve, most sadly
at
all , no instmce for the absurd;
no talent for the belly laugh
wh1cb , so far as one knows, always heretofore has sustained men in the1r hours of unwel·
come but sbll accepted danger
and of unwanted but st1l1 accomplished sacni1ce.
Gallantry rs perhaps a big,
pompous word and maybe one
rarely deserved . But a robust
sense of the ndiculous is at

THE ALMANAC

By Untied PreRs lnlernatloual
Today is Wednesday , July 6,
the !87th day of 1966 wr1h 1711lo
follow.
The moon is between Its full
phase and last quarter.
By Wayne G. BrandstaOt, M.D.
The mornmg stars are Venus
Although pohomyelitJs vac·
and Saturn.
ci ne can be g1ven lll any time
There are no evemng slars.
of the year , 1t •is rarely g1ven
John Paul Jones, found er 11f
m the summer and 1utumn
the American Navy was born
1 t11e polio season I beca use
it
on this day in 1747.
the ch1ld should fail to develop
On thiS day In history ·
his immunity in time and comes
In l699. the notorious pirate,
down w1th the disease, someCapt.
William Kidd . was se1zed
one is sure to blame the vacIn Boston ond deported to
cine.
It IS especially important 00 England
In 1885, bacteriologist L8u~s
see tilat ali children belw ..n
Pa11teur inoculated the first
the ages of 2 months and
6
years get th1s protection The humah being . . . a boy who
had been badly bitten by on
oral combmed ,JWiccme agamst
all three ol !he prevalent poiio- Infected dog. The boy did oot
mye!JtJs strams has been prov- develop any infection .
In 1933, an All-Star baseball
ed lo be safe It will give the
game
wao played for the first
cluld 1mmumty w1thin a week
t1me. The American League
alter It IS tak en If a chi ld had
his init1al pol1o vaccine during defeated the National League,
h1s hnt year of life a booster 4-2 In Chicago.
In !959, Ruasia orbited two
dose Just before he enters eledogs
and a rabbit in a space
mentary school Is recammendcapsule.
ed. No further boosters
are
A thought for the dayneeded unless an epidemic
threatens the community. If 1 American statesman Damel
thoroughgoing immunization pro- Webster : HThere is nothmg se
gram has been carried out, th11 powerful as truth . .. and often
nothing so strange."
19 not hkely to occur.

JOCJOR

SAYS

Q - Is o hot cereal really
better for a child than a cold
cereal? Are pancakes
made
with ane egg more nutritious
than a bowl of oold oereal just
because they are more filling?
Is dry milk (reconstituted ) as
nutntious as whole
f resh
milk ?
A - OUnce for ounce the
cold cereals are as nutnt10us
as the hot ~ut 1l takes a larger
volume to make an
ounce.
More Important than the temperaure of the cereal is how
appealing 1t 1s to you r cb1ld
R~member , too, that wheat and
oats are richer m vitamms and
minerals than corn and rice
The pancakes are more nu-

Hado's They'll Do It Every Time

®

A130UT HER OWN ESKI!v'DS
AT flOME" ~ER HUSBAND'S &amp;EN
EATit-15 CANNED BI.UBBER SINCE
SHE. 60T ~IM lD \OLUNIEER

FOR MATRIMONY .. •

Body Temperalore Dropo
During hibernation, commonly known as winter sleep, some
animals endure prolonged periods ol &lt;'Old. The body temperature does not conform to that
of the air and may go down to a
few degrees above freezing, ac·
cording to the Encyclopaedia
Britannica.
Nathan Hale, American patriot. was executed as a spy by
U1e _British on Sept. 22, 1776.
tnhous , not only because they
are more filling but also ~&gt;~!cause of lhat egg you put 1n
them. PQwdered whnie milk is
as nutritious as fresh milk but
since it Is mere expenstve, ~~
chief advantage io that in Ihe
~ry state it needs no refrigeration and can be uaed in places
where fresh m1lk is not available. There are also mochf1ed
milk powders (not
whole
milk' but they should be used
only on the advice 'of your doctor.

•

Get fast Actiaft with

WAMT·ADS
~ AAIPA 1MT 7tP

/Nl5.

l51 """M~

PHI L.A.,

ro

boy
has had alopecia areata since
September. The only comment
our doctor made was thai the
hardest thing lor mom a n d
dod was not to worry lbout •t.
Isn't there anything we can da
lor this condition?
A - Your doetor Is right.
Patchy baldn..s may persist
for sevenl months but eventullly the hair cernes back unless
the disease ex~tnd&amp; to all tho
hair. mclnding even the ey..
brows and eyelashes.
Meanwhile massage, supplementary
Yitamin 8 complex and expos.
ure of the Involved areas to tht
aun fll' a sun lamp to produce a
mdd burn but no bli&amp;ters may
... htlplul.

ness in H'wood's Wa:t Mused
muat be 1 dandy . . . hll will
Loollle says the ICUlptor "eouehl
even the llltle things lilly 1
wife would notice," bot lddt
with a 1mlle, "I still ean tell
the real one."
"Sad era paulng - thl bll
old Bdwy. Paramount Theatre,
which so many great awlnl
bands erupted kids Into Its al•
les to ]itterbng and swoon no•
carries on it&amp; marquee the 11..
tie of Its !IDaI attraeUon: "Pub.
lie Auction ol Contents July
. . . Westinghouse Broadcastlnf
bought 7-Up franchises In New
Haven ond Puerto Rloo and 11
carbonatill(l cash to bottle up
more elsewhere . . . The FCC
poyold qui! ts ll&amp;tenlng to red
hot testimony in L.A., and here
In the East, a witness has di,_
1ppeared . . . Famed decorator
Ellen Lehman McCluskey's d&amp;tlghter Maureen McCiu&amp;key'l
working at Warner Bros.' N. Y.
celluloid factory.

The Meigs Legion

~bit

sing!~.

~t

Name Eight
•

AL Hur1ers
1F J

or u1y 12

to

I

55

u

han~ forth~
CrooJ~./Employees

~

(7~)

,Ra~e :tHorses

i.

trent. Rldht end heeter

,ower stHri"L whlttweR

BERArS WOHLU .

llr11.

·63 Chevrolet
'

'

lol Alro. 4 Dr . 6 cyl.

Stendercl trent. W.. lte wall
th-.s.

Race 1.
Egg and
SpoooLe!arl.
Brenda
Roush,
lmogee's- QueeJI Bee, Cherie
Williams, Pomeroy: 2. Sirstine,
Jim Sommer, w
' •de; and
3. Jim Hancock.
:lias, Letart.
_
Bareb~ck €lass IPorues oniy)
- t Fri.tz. I;'aJJ!a Workmlm,
Crown City; 2 Prmce, Nathan
Yonker,_Letart; and 3. Naughty
Boy, Diane Guthrie: Coolville.
Barrel Race tPomes ·. ooly)
t Smol!ey, Jerry Lewis, Le:~;=2~. P,rtnre, Nathan Yonker,
and 3. Beauty, Frank
Mason.
:-1 .. Johnny Sor·
LU&lt;!IIIe Leifheit, Pomeroy;
Joe •. Slll!rry lndes~d,
and .S. Jm~ee s

~

T~sday

R lb
ant York
if.l)
New

vs.
at Bunning

8:05 p.m.

AUanta at Housto&amp;-Jay i&amp;-4)
vs. Farrell (3-5), 9:30 p.m.
Cinclntjatl at Los
Pappas (7-5) vs. Osteen (10-6),
11 p m.
'11umdsy'1 Gam01
New York at Philadelphia
Pittsburgh at Chicago
Atlanta at Loa Allgeleo, night
Cincinnati at So FrancisCO
(Only games scheduled)
,
BR~O TO F~
CIUCAGO (11Pt) -Ernie
Brogllo, a 1111ame wlmier
1960, was sent to Tacoma of
Pacific Coast ·L!3agua
by the Chicago Cubs.

Cherie Williams,
Brogllo,
acquind
=;a;,...,..._,.,...,...,...iiiiiiiiiiil
Louis
Iwo yean
ago, from
had a
record and I 8.38 earned
IIVerage this year.

Dod~crs.

l

Mr"'

loot/llf fot MMtiJillf lit

--

6fnk

Wad rlnyf,.

·

·

·

Mlnllesota beat CJeveJa,iuf l!ld llllly nm in
California dewoed 1leirtlt by wbeu Jim ·
Identical f.3 sooree. Cbi'eaao moved to

~as rained out at WaabiJill!on. lloaeboro'a

~.,.U..
Le{~
~.~, ;, on J
sing!~:"~
llle..

· · •

borne on a llingle' by · Jt
Kennedy. The wiD·, lefl
celebraleil
11\i[!h J
ahead of his IINltl (28-8) pa
when be didn't wlil ills 1$
deciSion until July 11.
Jacuoa Gets WID
LitUe AI J , a - . Uml
league-leading
&amp;aD t!&gt;rllllClsc»
two singles 88 be eQIIst!ld
eighth victory
losses. The oli!)\ : ;
I
tallied after an
mid
baseman Jerry

_ , In Flnl
The Pirate&amp; staked Fryman;
to a pair of unearned runs ln
the first mning and Jldded to it
In the sixth on Willie Stargell's
single, Jose Pagan's RBI
double and Donn Clendenon'&amp;
1Zih bomer belore the rains
came In the top ef the seventh.
The win, Fryman's seventh
ogainst three lesses, left the
surging Plratea 1111 games
behind the Blumplng first place
Giants.
Koufax (15-4) sent Cincinnati
to Its seventh defeat In a row
wlill his 38th career shutout
and In doing so took o~er the
h!ad among active National
League pitchers lor most
abatouts. Robin RobertB, who
was released by Houston on
Sunday, had held the lead with

~

lefi~Jander

t'

to:.
Nl'""

~

unearned-

~!i'c~ l'i:-!
·
.0 _ •

~

1

{,1;,~

'r~~·~~

KC Tourney Ope~s Tonig
. ht

Pre~ent

--:;:.======:::::-

i'

~.m.,

w·

~~arged ~lth

o~,~,,born~rs
~

Sllpslopslap!

powe11 Leads Baron Attack
In ll-0 pony Le ague In

year'~

Bra,v,~

I'

-~mpires_ ~•r l!'~

ca~e ,

~~~~ague

~orklng

gam~s

!

=====...;;=..::;.========~

With

"'I

.. APPLIAN£ES
...

TENNIS SHOES

Reds Outlast
Indians m'

19-13 WiJi

Roush's Shoe Store

..

1 1

,~"~·~ ~~~~r~:~~~;l,~:::::,.,

The Reds and the Indians
joyed a sluglest Tuesday
aooo ill a make-up Boys
gue game at Middleport
Reds w· · 19-11 but '
authil
lrull..;s, 15-13.
Home runs were . hil by
Clonch and Hysell of the
Red&gt; hitters · were Cooke
triple and slng!e, Clonch a
ble and two sfugles with
homer McKinney and eoc,ru-an I
both alngles, Hyaell two 111n!!les,
wtth bls homer and Acree
single.
'
For the Indians

b~

Air Conditioners ~~------~c.
~-----·
C3HnEST
,.

FREEZERS

~~ l.•=dou~hiJe:and:~=~:~~
double,

6« Our lsttnliw CollmiM of BULOVA Wa!M
FfOI!t $24.16

tlliiUr HU.llo

·:··.:.:.j\1·,, ..
· "1

-

:ar~r ~ll!more C~nd

nearly l50 entries in the
English Pleasure -:- Sunny, Mino 4 Cleveland 3, nighl
16 I B_etty
classes,
and a ' good crowd
Harrison, Galhpohs: 2. Chi at Wash ' ppd .. wet grnds
was on
event.
'! Jill, Lawrence Parsons,
Pt. California 4 Detroit 3, Right
Pleasant, and 3. Gmger, west- (Only games scheduled)
The Kyger
.
today extended thanks to 1l'e Parsons, Pl. Pleasant
Wednesday's Probable
Nethercutt, Naples, Ky., Western Pleasure Pony, (Rid· Bos{Statonrtiqat NThneew"yorEDTk )
judge for the event, and to \ er 16 and under)
L Naughty
Parsons of New Havea, Boy, Diana Guthrre. Coolville; Santiago
and
2. Son, Kathy Moryan , HarrJ. (1-2), 9 p.m. vs. Ford (0-4)
served as ringmaster.
1\n,other
sonv 11
nd 3 p ·
N th
Bouten (1-3)
v
horse show is planIe a
. rmce, a an Kansas City at Baltimore
!or the fall, and It will be Yonker, Letart.
-Liildblad (3-4) and Stafford,
at night. By that
time
Western Pleasure
Horse p.m. (0-2) vs. Bunker &lt;8-4) IJJld
will be mstalled at the (Full mane and tail) _
Ev- Barber i9- ) or Short (l·O)
1
2
"' \erectf.l.and bleachers will ans Son, Bob Ridge. Jackson: Minnesota at
"'
2. lmogee's Queen Bee, Cheryl Pascual (ll- ) vs. Siebert !9- )
3
5 (6-Z), I .
Williams, Pomeroy; and
3. or McDowell
Scott's Comanche Duke B•erly
Calif .
t
Jackson.
·
' (H) v:rn:ils:a
Flag Race - L Dusty, Wil· Chicago at
·liam Greer; New Haven; 2. Buzhardt t3-5) and
only) - Shorty, John Rl&lt;'luJrds, Pt Plea- vs. ortega (6-7) and
William Greer, New sant; and 3. Dixie, Ed Roush, mick t&amp;-7), &amp; p.m.
Ed
Roosh, Letart.
Th•raday's Gamet
Western Pleasure Horse Detroit at Minnesota, night
(Clipped ma,ne and tall) - 1. Chicago at Washington, rughl •
Poca lnda, Scott Bierly,
Boston al New York, m[!ht
son; 2. Sirstine, Jim Sommer, (Only games scheduled)
South Sdie ; and 3. Hank's Bud·
National Leape
dy, Dick Roach, Gallipolis.
W. L. Pet.
Roadster Pooy - l, McGee, sam Francisco 50 32 .610
Bob Greer, New Haven; 2.
Pitlsbur[!h
_
47 32 595
Black Drum Major, Ike
Los Angeles 44 34 _564 4
Clifton, and 3. Red Lady, Jim· Philadelphia 44 36 550 • 5
my Hoffman, Letart.
Houston
43 38 .531
Bareback Class (Horses only) St Louis
38 40 .487 10
- I. Judy Ed Roush Letart· cinclllll&amp;tl
36 42 . 462 12
2.
Hank's
'Buddy
Dick
Roach
38
45 .458
63 Chevrolet
Gallipolis;
and
Evans
Soo:
York
:
lei Al19 2 Dr. I cyUndot",
33 44 429
Ridge,
Jackson.
Chicago
Aula. Trans. Radio and
54 308 24
hello•, Whltowoll tlm.
Run and Ride (Porues only)
Tllesday's24 Resali.
- t Beauty, Frank Zuspan, Pittsburgh Chicago
h2 Ford Gal. 500
0
8
t dr. I eyl. At Trons.. P.
Mason; 2. Silver Beauty, Bill St Louia 3 Sa• Fri'ndsco' 1
slNrJIJI, rHia and heater
Tuttie, Pomeroy; and 3. Prince, Phila 3 New York 1 night
64 Galexie XL
R. McFarl,nd, New Haven.
Atlanta 9 Houston 4; nl[!ht
Stake Race (Horses only) - Los Ang 1 C'mclnnatl
CoiiYirtlfllL 8 cyHncltr,
•uto triM., power , ...,.
l Dusty, William Greer, New Wetlnesday'l Probable
lno. pOwer •r•ket end
Haven
: 2. Shorty, John Rich(All 11mea EDT)
wlntiOwli, raclio a hnttr
ards,
Pt
Pleasant;
and
3.
Db:·
Pittsburgh
at
. Ed R h Le
64 Ford Falrlene
Je, .
ous , tart
(6-2) vs. Ellsworth (3-11), 2
580. 2 Dr. Hardtop, 1 cyt.
P1okup Race (Pollie&amp; . only) p.m.
lndor, Radio &amp; hutor
Whlt. .all ttrot,
'
- L :Iidflower,BeCathy Fogle- st. Louis at Sa•
song,
ason; 2. auty, Frank Stallard (1-S) vs. Bolin (5-5),
64 Ford Gelaxie
580. 4 Dr. 8 eyllnclor, auto.
Zuspan, Mason; and 3. Rockett; p.m.

~·

~

~Jr&lt;~l\

Larry . JackiOII liEII'Iaed .
demination over ihe Meta wheo
he beat them for the !5th time
without a lo...Hh. Philadelphia
righthander 9
New York
on sit hits, ba~ ni..hJt runs
wtlb a sixth· ' I dOUble and
scored the last iiin.'' •
1 ' 'il.
45
The Dodgers gave Sandy bis ndJoethTorre's
boigmhethr
- _
a
ree runs , n: .T ' e
boosted !be
past Hou,_
ton. Dave Nicholson slammed I
pair ol homers..
t!Je Astros
and Jim Wynn
!Dark the
1 lirsl time IOI!J',
bave
ment • ro und.'" g ou t tb'" week·· I been
hit
In
Oll"'
·CBPle
al
tho
Astrodome Den~!!~ ·Lemaster
Wednesday - 6:15p.m., Adda- (6-5) scatt~red ei h't hill for
ville Jets vs . Gallipolis Tigers; the win.
g
7:30 p.m., Middleport Yankees .
va. Pt. Pleasant Fruth's Phar·
m · d 8 30
P
acy, an · p.m • omeroy
Painting again? Get the
Yankees vs. Pt. Plea!lJ!nt Ki·
waDis.
right equipment look
under PAINTS in the
I
"Sudden Sam" McDowell,
Thursday •• 6:15 p.m., Galli- :
YELLOW PAGES. Where
currently 6-2. Richert, 8-B with
polis Red Sox vs. Harrisonville
your fingers.tlo 1/ltt
lhe ninth place Senators. and
Bombers; 7:30
Gallipolis
walking.
· ·
Stottiemyre, who has a 7-91
Indians vs.8 30
Middleport Senarecord through the first hal( of
tors ; and ' p.m., Pt. Pleasthis season are repea!fr9 !rom
ant Pure Oil vs. Cottageville
last
America• League! G_ene Powell, Middleport Bar·' the Barons. HIS second
Dodger&amp;.
.
1
AD-Star squad. McDowell a8 Ions Pony baseball team out-' when he led oil the fifth. "'" I Frida - &amp; IS
M'ddl
I
•
.
.
w , fielder • catcher, made
m the •IXth drove m
Y
p.m.,
ehis
slTuesday evenmg for a lot opof smgie
two more runs.
; port Braves vs. Pomeroy Tigruurth loss '" the last five All· early season lrustral!oo with Meanwhile the Barons took ers ; 7:30 p.m, Pt. Pleasant
Star games wbiie
JD Ihis bat
advantage of Bachtel'• wildness Reds vs . Cheshire
Rediegs;
relief and Richert pitched two
_
_ to mount tlleir 11 runs on 8 tot· and 8·30 p m., wmner of the
innings ol scoreless reiiel _a A top Little .League hitter 81 of ooly six hitB, Po&gt;*'ll's AddaviUe Jets vs. GaUipolia TI·
year ago but Stottlernyre d1d last year who m hve
three and singles by Jim Warn- gers meets Bullalo, W. Va.
sot appear Ill the game.
thiS season had only two hitB er, Pal Archer, and second-sack· Saturday - 6:15 p.m., Pt.
Just two others among the I untJI last evenmg, Powell un· er Steve Oiler Bachtel walked Pleasant Dunlop Tires vs. Porn·
eight ranking American League 1loaded lwo homers and
1 9 batters, !anned 9, hit aobody. eroy Jets; 7:30p.m., winner of
pitchers have won previous 1smgie m four tr•ps to the plate, Tannehill !anned 14, walked Middleport Yankees vs.
Pl
reeiechon II the Ail-Star squad. drove m five rons and score&lt;! nobody, hit Robody, aave up two Pleasant Fruth's Pharmacy
Bell pitched a total of three Ithree hrmself. m the Barons singles, to George Lawrence I meets the Cottageville Yankees:
innings and bad a' 6.00 earned, 11:0 whitewash of Southern at leadmg all the second, and to , and 8:30 p.m. , Middleport In·
run average m the two 1960 Middleport
Ab Proffitt with two gone In dians vs. Cheshire Tigers.
games while Kaat was oamed His first came In the third the 7th.
~ !be squad In. 1962 though he with two on to signal a five ruo , _ Lawreace was erased stealing I
did not see action.
burst that broke a pitching duel \,. the second mmng. Owens
In picking tw• members of between Ronme Bachtel
of was safe on ao error in the '
the !Jldmn staff and one each Souther• and John Tannehill of sixth but Woody Hall hit into 1
f~m the lront-runmng Orioles, - ··a aouble play, and so going
Tigers, Yankees, senators, Ath- International Lea,pe Standlllgs l inlo the 7th, Tan110hW bad lao- •
lellcs and hiS own Twms , Mele By United Press latemationtl i ed only the re~ulatmn 18 bat· I
ehoose a stall that ranges 10
' ters. Prolfltt's smgle put 22 tot·
age from Hunter's 20 years to Col b
W. L. Pel. GB 1al batters, one over the mini- I
the veteran Bell's 29 but which
cum us
43 32 .573
mum, to the Southerl plate.
aveTages under 25 years to Ro hester
41 38 .519 4
Thursday the Barons go to
make II one ol the youngest the Jacksonville
38 36 .514 41&gt; Pomeroy and Eastern "
at I
American League
had em- Toronto
oji) 38 .513 41'. Southern.
ployed In recent season s.
~0\~d~0
39. 39 .5110
51&gt;
Soulbern
0011 000 0- 0 2
4
McLaJh, w1th a 12-3 record, is u a
38 39
- !H 6
Barons
005 t23 x -116
38 41
,•
the le~gue's top winner while' ~~~hm~nd
.48! 7
Bachtel and Lawrence, Prel-l I
32 46 4
Barbers 9-2 lllldway record, in Y acu, e
- 10 1211 1fill (8) . Tannehill and Floyd,
1,Po._wiiiiell"-tiiii7~).=====-add1hon to bemg the best start
Tueoday• 1 Results
in h1s seven-season major Toronto 4 Rochester 3
11
league career, Is the top Syracuse4 Buffalo 3
percentage pace on Mele s Jacksonville 4 Richmond 2
stafL
I
(Only games scheduled)
For All The Famlly
Bell currently Is H while 1- rookie
. 1es. Mood.ISpaogh two
I~ Hunter is ~ aod Kaat 1wo smg
·
swgles. Warner four singles,
Halley a single and
double,
Manley a single.
Reds
5111 (10) 3-t9 13
Ind
0011 722
11 15
yse an
e.
Mlddt"""rt 0
•
paugh Mulieu (4) and
-..- ' '
'

~~~:~can

\lnlnl~

~on

~_hits.

southpa~s.

• K
150 Take Part In Yger
Creek Horse Show Sunday

days, and the expense 1• nol
too bad, as the wort -ll dont
over an exteodell-perlod
ol
tirnt
For wometl with real mou•
tache problems It Is a permanent blea&amp;llli: The electrle
needle kill&amp; tile roots and lt'l
- HAffi TODAY, GONE TOMORROW
BOSSY WOMEN llllllJ:. HER
Dear Helen.
I have just linished beaulioians sohool, and have losl r•
spect for a lot of women wbQ
come to a school llkt ours.
We do balr far !011 thaa hall
price because we're eettil1c ez.
pertence, but before we'ro .._
lowed lo work on eustomert,
we koow how to operate.
Yet these females order Ul
around aa If we were llupld.
They teD us how to thampoo,
how mucb ''set'' to Wle. how
to comb, and they make IIi do
these things over a1d over bocause they are just sure wo
""n't set It right. They Ifill
the combs away from Ul and
ruin all our work wllh their
pushing and proddiD(I. They ev•
en tell us where to place ucb
ruller, even wben wo KNOW
they're wrong.
They 're getUng a bartaln.
Why don't they keep thell: bl&amp;
mouths shut? - BEAUTICIAN
TO BE
P.S. Tell 'em, Helen.
Dear B.T.B.Yoo already did a lint job
of telling 'ern. I'll only add :
Ladies : student beaullclana
are human and also a llttlt ..,..
vous. Lel their teachers give
instructions - you'll get a bOo
tor "do " if YOU don't! -11.
PERSONAL TO "DECORA.
TOR: A !rilly caoopy bed attracts more dust than
hu1o
banda. Don 't be surprised if
yours fight&amp; hack with 1 niehl
shirt and lace mghl cap. - H.
This column is dedicated to
family hvin1, so il you're hav•
ing kid truubie or just plata
trouble, let Hel"" help YOU,
She will also welcome your
own amURinl experiences, Address Helen Bottel in care at
, th1s newspaper_

\

l/1:-

Hits, But Dodgers Win Tilt,· ~01

Bill

J

2~.

k--by Hel•• llottel--'

Dear Helen:
Concerning your answer to
"Moustache Minnie,'' l want to
say you are doing electrolysis
pradltioners a disfavor when
you say uHalr removal by elec-tricity is expensive and 1101 ai·
ways 100 per cent effective.''
'' ~'W and Improved method&amp;
t
very 1atisfactory
these

Werry,

I

HELEN HELP US!

- H.

ID~k I-~~

bi~

--~------~~---2- Dally Sentinel, Pomeroy-Middleport, 0., July e, 1988

CASE OF THE
DISAPPEARING HUSBAND
Dear Helen :
Each time I have a
baby
U's the same.
My husband disappears.
The first time it happened he
sa1d he was going out for some
aroeeries. He came back two
weeks later - ofter neighbors
had gotten me to the hospital
and home again - and acted
as •I he hadn't been A.W.O.L.,
pretending.
All he said was, "You've lost
we1ght since 1 saw you last."
No explanation, just a shrug,
and " I'm home, so forget it.''
He acted scared.
This trme, he took our Utile
girl to my mother's, and never
came back. I took a taxi to the
hospitaL
Again he returned,
two weeks later. I had somebody c~ll his office and they
said he was on vacation.
He's just wonderful to U8 oth·
er times . He won't talk about
Ulese "vacations." I think they
bother him so much he can't.
I think he can't help II. I nev·
er mention them to him, bot I
wisii I could.
They bother me so much 1
never 1..1 really secure. Will
he disappear at every criSIS m
our lives? - T.R.W.
Dear T:
Only an expert could diagoose your husband's problem
and, hopefully, cure him ol Ibis
compulsive fear of cblid birth.
Perhaps your tamliy doctor can
persuade him he needs help in
understanding iumself. Insist
that he go in for a check-up.
Sometimes a wife obeys too
blindh . not reall!ing, "I don't
want to talk about II" really
means , "I've got to talk about
it, bot I can't find the words."

baseball later also saw moumd duty lor

e~y
F~eld

_j

e, ltee-4

tea'!l, made Wellston Ita oillth jMeigs as the romp was re- Swan, 11, homer and
single:
Dave Wliite, a atngle; Flowers, 1
straight VIciim 'flresday even- 1corded.
lng as !be local crew marlted I Wellston failed to et a single Ia home rua; Eddie Baer, a
UPI Sporll
I ball lllarted 10 thnes, abtwa
1
up 1JJI
23-3 victory , at
until the SJ!V'!'Dib
lrame double and single; Bill Moore,
Eveo. thtu[!h 8aldy Xoufao II &amp;even cemplete games and b1s
Bacqlel
rn Masoa.
wheR three runs were tallied a pair o1 singles, and Bob SUer, 1
))alfway to 30 wtna, Woody r....,.t strlng of goose eggs has
0
Melgs jUmped out in front oo a triple by Ed Jacobs, a
,
[
FrymaB rate&amp; as the Natlooal lowered his earned run average
8
qulcldy with five rUJ18 oa four smgle by Ratliff, a base on The next pme for the Meig&amp;l
League's hottest hurler.
to a clul&gt;-leadina 2.33.
hits in the fir&amp;t innlng and add· balls, and a batter hll by 1 • team will be In touraament
The Dodger wonder was
On Bol Streak
ed 11 more on nine hit&amp; in the wild pitch.
play at llamdel thi&amp; coming :
get up
effective when he needed lt Fryman has been practically
18
second frame.
,
Leadmg tbe hittlllg lor the Saturday,
t a. m. ud if 'I
Tuesday night as he bested untoucilable lhe la&amp;l two week&amp;.
Gary Stobart started
for :wlnaers were Buddy Moore two winning, at Athens at 2 p. m.
Cincinnati's Jim Maloney 1-&amp; On June 26, he allowed
the looal crew and pitched
I singles and double in lour lr I'll against Athens.
I
lor his ISth victory bot lacked Philadelphia just three hils and
less. ball imtll John VIckers re- to the plate, and Stobart With I By inRings:
his razor-abarp edge, giving up faced only 29 batten ill a 1,.0
lieved him in the fourth (rame. i two doubles and a ngte for a Wellston
0011 0011 3- 3 : 2
10 bits and fanning "only" victory. Last Friday night, he
1IMeigs
!lave White and John Flowers perfect day at bat51
5tll)l 2441 x-23 20 1
eight
yielded a leadoff infield alngle
.
Other Mel(!s hitters
were ! Rapp, Calvbl 13) and Bragg. ,
Fryman, a relative unknown to New York's Ron Hunt and
BREWER INKS CONTRAcr George Sauer and Lenny vu Stobart (WP),
Vickers (4),
at the start ol the 1966 then retired the next 27 men in
' CLEVELAND (UP!) - T be Meter , each a pair of singles; White (5), Flowers (1) and wercampaign, registered his. third order.
\(Cleveland Browns
Tuesday ·
- - --·- · -- ry, Swu (5).
•
strwght shutout for the Pirate&amp; Even a 45 minute raiR cMay
s•gned veteran end John BrewBOLD KEY TRIUMPHS
BOSTON (UP!) -Eight pitch· when he blankea Chlooge
failed It dampen Frymall
er to a 1966 contract and an· COLUMBUS (UP!) - Bold
ers, fiv e of whom are All-Star
But even
more
as he ran hia ocereless
RC&gt;Uoced plans to switch him to Key, owned by George Conner,
game rookies, were named amazmg IS t!oat over the stnng lnrung streak to 27 and halted
a lmebacker thiS season.
Columbus, won the featured $2,·
today by American League of 27 zeros, Fryma? has Bon SIJJIII's hitting skem at 28
Coach Blanton Colller said 0011 three-year-old illvilational
Manager Sam Mele to his allowed a total of oHly ""' bits. games.
he would move Brewer to that pace Tuesday ru~hl at Scioto
mound stall lor the annual All· _The pndgy lefty, who played I~ other National Letigue
slOt
to provide
addJtJonal lDowos.
Star game against the National h1s first game of professiOnal acllon, St. Louis defeatl!d San
strength, srnce lmeb:Icker Ga- ' The wn of 1953 Little Brown
League at st. Loui• next baseball last Ju_ly , d1d _not get Francisco 3-1, Atlanta topped
len F1ss plans to reure at the :Jug winner Keystoner took the I
Tuesday
I bJS
.ntbal startmg assignment Houston H and Phlladelphla
end of the season.
1lead at the hail . mile polr
Th
.
for Pittsburgh until May 13 and heat New York 3-t.
Defensive back Tom Gunnoe, !win hiS second race of the year
e Oight-man staff, com- he responded w1th a shutout I In the America• League
who led the Continental League by
lengths in a hfetirne re- By Uaftfd Preos loternatlonal posed equally ol right banders over the
Overall, he i Boston dumped New York 7-1:
last sea&amp;On with 11 interceptions cord ol 2:04 1-5.
American League
and
was headed by
while playmg w1tb the Char· I The pre-race favorite
paid
w L pt
ranking Amcn cao League winjestOR, w. Va' team. also Sign. $4.60, $3.20, and $2.40. Fair 1-. Baltimore
.G;g
ner Denny McLain of Detroit
ed a new oontract With the dian paid $4.60 and $3 and Dan- Detroit
46 32 .590 7\1 and included Cleveland's Sam
llrowos.
I dy Diller paid $3 to show.
Cleveland
45 33 .577 81&gt; McDowell and Gary Bell, Jim
--· · ------- ·
California
43 :rr .saa
Kaat of Minlll'sota MelliStottle-1
1111 myre ol New 'vork, Pete : The Eighth Aruma!
Chicago
37 40 .4tll16
Kyger will be Beb Burchett, "-••
R n t f W hi gt
Ste
c
"""&amp;
Minnesota
37 4~ .463 171&gt; IC er 0
as n on,
ve Creek Tournament lor Little Hemsley. and Guy Guinther.
New York 34 trl .447 181&gt;
off
JIID Leaguers will get underway to- Forty learns are entered in lhe
Kansas City 35 41 .443 19
un er 0
ansas I\y. All· mght at 6: t5 at the recreation annual tvent. The Middleport
Wasl!lngton
33 47 .413 21\1 nouncem~t of Ali-Star M~na- area across from the Kyger Yankees are 196.\
defending
Boston
30 51 .370 25 ger Mele s pdchmg selections Creek power plant on Rt 7 champions
The big horse Sunday at the.New Haven: and 3. Star, Brend b th
ff
'
•
·
Kyger Creek &lt;:rnployees Club da Roush, Letart.
Tuesdly'o Reoults
was rna e Y e o Ice ol south of Cheshire.
I Here is \be schedule for the
Recreation Area
attracted
Boston 7 New York 1
League
Joe
___
tournament first four Dights of the touros·

r

Q - OUr lt-y0or-&lt;&gt;ld

REQIIRED RERDIR'

~Y le11~11fl, Pomeroy-Middleport, 0., July

Jack O'Briau

;i

and area residents are slipping back
. Into the humdrum of their daily work,
and when one looks back on the hohdav
.• It was nothing more for most residenis
•· than another long weekend. Then
• : abould be some way that this lethargy
· could be broken, and the most patriotIc date· on the American calendar be one
• · o( real meamng to the old and younger
generation alike. We know that the older
generation harks back tu the days when
.. they got really excited with the dawn of
the 4tb. They rose bright and early and
found events to keep them busy through·
out the holiday season.

oadway

"•

I DOOR

�·'

'

•

.
,.

TINY S

LOCATIONS
TO SERVE YOU

WI! RESERVe THE .
. RIGHT TO LIMIT
QUANTITY

•

•

~OODLAND

.

~

-·

....'

\

WOWl .WH·T·

•

.'

..

'

.

..

TINY'S BARGAIN LAND

:t .

t

-S A V ·I -N G S !~ _-

-

.

.

'

'l CONVENIENT

.

'

'

.,

.

TBNDERBEST ·

c

'

'

Kanauga, 0.

Middleport, 0. . ·

T-BONE

LB.

..LE

34c

ICOTT TOW!LS
JUMBO R O L L - - - -

29c: ·

CUTIIITI
WAX PAnl - - - -

24c '

BABY POODI -'-' - -

KING
SIZE _ _ __
TIDE _

I

)

3 ,.,29c

NEW DISPENSINC SIZE

BROMO
SELTZER

$pt

IlLLO
ALL PL.\VOIIS - - - -

69c
..,.9c ·

· PAPER

PILLSBURY OR BALLAIIO
IIICUITS---

-G·
~' ,!1!1

t
.,
\

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·...r . •,
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BONUS BUY
'

FOODLAND

. SHORTENING' ·
''YOU'LL LOOK TWICE WHEN YOU START SHOP'

. PRICES ON OVER 4000 NAME-BRAND ITEMS GUAR· \

EVEREST .

c

lb.

PING AT FOODLAND WHERE EVERYDAY LOW

NEW ITEMS

OF BATMAN TOYS

c
v•rd

rJAIR
SPRAY

.

( r ' CANS

NEW SHIPMENT ·

FLASHLIGHT for
BAnERIES

TIMEX
WATCHES

REG.
$1.07

OFF

c

MINERAL
OIL

MOTOR OIL

can

o/o

MENS
WOMEN I

c

PT.
IOnLE

ANTEE YOU CASH SAVINGS OF UP TO 20% ON
YOUR TOTAL FOOD BILLI"

1._,

2

EVERREADY

SUDDEN BEAUTY

I.

4:..! .00

FOR LONG LASTING
RELIEF. REG. 49c

'o"\e

'

PIE FILLING

c

VANQUISH, 2for,

· Ao'£·

SNOoBOL
BOWL C L E A N E R - - -

CHERRY

Sl11

CONTAC

C ---------4

MUSSELMAN'S

9 oi.

SKIN CREAM

NAIIICO
CII4CKIU - - -

. BONUS BUY

39

"' ... 31c

DOWNIY
3201. _ _ _ __

c

4lb.

DUNCAN
HINIS CAKE MIX ...._
· ----.~-

HI.C
fRUIT D R I N K S - - -

------4~~----­

PARKAY

16c

GIRIIRUTRAINID

SIRLOIN

c

CAM,IIWI
V!G. ·B!IP S O U P - - -

CAN

,.

•..:f• .

'tt~

r==1

PEPPERS

BONUS BUY

~-

and

NESCAFE

.

CUCUMBE.RS.

INSTAN·T ·

COFFEE

each

'

r

l:

/

'

.

c

· ' ': SHOE
'

.

ONIONS

' '
.
.

l .9c
I

~

... .. .. . -·-- · -1' .. . .

"-..•·c '' "'"

_,, __ ,, . .., - - - ·• '"'"' ,.. ____ _ ,. _....•• ,.. ... ~-

· •· .... --..~ .....

·'

DEPT.·
FOR
.
...

WHOLE. FAMILY'
..
'

·N·r:··'·s·- ·

',&gt;I
-.

'

I.

,,

..

'~-f

·-·~

.

\\~;.

'·'·' ·, "

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;""""·
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. ·
'

.,

.

. .·'
'

'

I

-~

'
•

'
f

100

TABlETS ~-­

. PLUS· 30
I

f

-..• - ... . .

FOAM 1101.\E
PERMANAMENT

COMP~ETE .

YELLOW GLOBE

lb.bag

PUSH--BUTTON

SUPER BALL
FOI

6oz.

J

.•

· - 4 --...-..--..__._.._ _ _ _ _ _

l

'

,._ _,_ _ ,"· ~ -·- • -• ·• · ·--···~ ··; · · · • · •··· ·

• · • · ·- ~·--·· • ·"·· - ··--

FRJ~ ,

,

�·'

'

•

.
,.

TINY S

LOCATIONS
TO SERVE YOU

WI! RESERVe THE .
. RIGHT TO LIMIT
QUANTITY

•

•

~OODLAND

.

~

-·

....'

\

WOWl .WH·T·

•

.'

..

'

.

..

TINY'S BARGAIN LAND

:t .

t

-S A V ·I -N G S !~ _-

-

.

.

'

'l CONVENIENT

.

'

'

.,

.

TBNDERBEST ·

c

'

'

Kanauga, 0.

Middleport, 0. . ·

T-BONE

LB.

..LE

34c

ICOTT TOW!LS
JUMBO R O L L - - - -

29c: ·

CUTIIITI
WAX PAnl - - - -

24c '

BABY POODI -'-' - -

KING
SIZE _ _ __
TIDE _

I

)

3 ,.,29c

NEW DISPENSINC SIZE

BROMO
SELTZER

$pt

IlLLO
ALL PL.\VOIIS - - - -

69c
..,.9c ·

· PAPER

PILLSBURY OR BALLAIIO
IIICUITS---

-G·
~' ,!1!1

t
.,
\

'

'

·...r . •,
.-··

BONUS BUY
'

FOODLAND

. SHORTENING' ·
''YOU'LL LOOK TWICE WHEN YOU START SHOP'

. PRICES ON OVER 4000 NAME-BRAND ITEMS GUAR· \

EVEREST .

c

lb.

PING AT FOODLAND WHERE EVERYDAY LOW

NEW ITEMS

OF BATMAN TOYS

c
v•rd

rJAIR
SPRAY

.

( r ' CANS

NEW SHIPMENT ·

FLASHLIGHT for
BAnERIES

TIMEX
WATCHES

REG.
$1.07

OFF

c

MINERAL
OIL

MOTOR OIL

can

o/o

MENS
WOMEN I

c

PT.
IOnLE

ANTEE YOU CASH SAVINGS OF UP TO 20% ON
YOUR TOTAL FOOD BILLI"

1._,

2

EVERREADY

SUDDEN BEAUTY

I.

4:..! .00

FOR LONG LASTING
RELIEF. REG. 49c

'o"\e

'

PIE FILLING

c

VANQUISH, 2for,

· Ao'£·

SNOoBOL
BOWL C L E A N E R - - -

CHERRY

Sl11

CONTAC

C ---------4

MUSSELMAN'S

9 oi.

SKIN CREAM

NAIIICO
CII4CKIU - - -

. BONUS BUY

39

"' ... 31c

DOWNIY
3201. _ _ _ __

c

4lb.

DUNCAN
HINIS CAKE MIX ...._
· ----.~-

HI.C
fRUIT D R I N K S - - -

------4~~----­

PARKAY

16c

GIRIIRUTRAINID

SIRLOIN

c

CAM,IIWI
V!G. ·B!IP S O U P - - -

CAN

,.

•..:f• .

'tt~

r==1

PEPPERS

BONUS BUY

~-

and

NESCAFE

.

CUCUMBE.RS.

INSTAN·T ·

COFFEE

each

'

r

l:

/

'

.

c

· ' ': SHOE
'

.

ONIONS

' '
.
.

l .9c
I

~

... .. .. . -·-- · -1' .. . .

"-..•·c '' "'"

_,, __ ,, . .., - - - ·• '"'"' ,.. ____ _ ,. _....•• ,.. ... ~-

· •· .... --..~ .....

·'

DEPT.·
FOR
.
...

WHOLE. FAMILY'
..
'

·N·r:··'·s·- ·

',&gt;I
-.

'

I.

,,

..

'~-f

·-·~

.

\\~;.

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. ·
'

.,

.

. .·'
'

'

I

-~

'
•

'
f

100

TABlETS ~-­

. PLUS· 30
I

f

-..• - ... . .

FOAM 1101.\E
PERMANAMENT

COMP~ETE .

YELLOW GLOBE

lb.bag

PUSH--BUTTON

SUPER BALL
FOI

6oz.

J

.•

· - 4 --...-..--..__._.._ _ _ _ _ _

l

'

,._ _,_ _ ,"· ~ -·- • -• ·• · ·--···~ ··; · · · • · •··· ·

• · • · ·- ~·--·· • ·"·· - ··--

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~~~~Pll:m~ero=y~-M'Iddleport,- 0., 1uly e. .ISM-

irAYNEIJ IN vfln. !'AM

· Marilla LIDH_· eolparat

110n, Anoll Cross, Bomut Gfllfjj ry B: HayDU, 11111 of llr.
andMikeNicbolson.
Mn.Basll _L.Hayneaof
SNOWDENS ltE'WRN
port, lo 'servlil&amp; with
Mr. a_nd Mra. Robert SIIOW· Base Squadron b at Cbu
den and Bob, Lynn, fNemary, VII Nam.
Todd and L«ee- bave returned ·
'
"""_ _ _ _ __._ from a campln8 trip to Windy -· - . .. ,....
Hill Beach, s. c. On the way
SBOWER HELD
they camped in ~ mountains ·
•
.
~ ~Y
of Virginia, and at 'Nq's Head ·
inmi_iigeto Mr.
on the North Carolina coast.
will be solemn- Upon their relunl, they were
on JulY 17, was honored visited by her sister, Mr. and
-"'"'"" bridal abower on Toes· Mrs. Herman Welch and dau- Mr. and Mn. Clyde
June 28, at the Rotiand ghters, of Circleville, wbo left and Mrs. Pennant of Ravena:E~ Church aocial room. for a week's visit to Key Wesl, WOOd, w. VI., visited Mr.
were Mrs. Bernice Fla. The 'li'elchea
returned Mrs. WllliiiJll Ables and
Mn. Beatrice Smith, to spend the Fourtll of July hoi· Mt. and Mrs. NeiSOII PinkerMn. Avaneli Geor1e, and Miss iday.
lnltpn of East Liverpool. Mr.
Judf ~"1._
PERSONALS
and Mrs. Hayes McMurry and
~ room was dkorated with Mr. and Mrs. Homer Park· Mina Pickena, local, called o1
. iuspended plllk pompoms and er aQd Suzy were Sunday · dill- Mr. and Mrs. Dillon Taylor.
wedding bells. The gift table ned guesls of bls brother, Mr. Mr. and Mrs. Lewrence Bush
. ,, was_co~ered . la white with pl•k and Mrs. Howard Parker, April and daUBhter, Connie, Racine
: · and white a•d pmk streamers and Aaron, at the Parker home Route, Mr. Roy Bush, local,
1 · ~aped .fr"'!' the edges, and a at Long Boliom·.
and granddaUBhter, Iris Pigott,
jiiDk ttiiSti&lt;- . umbrella comple- Mr. and Mra. Robert Cans· Loftl Bottom, and Sue Bush,
menling the theme. The buffet day and Sabra were business Athens. visited Rev. and Mrs.
table was also covered in white, visitors in Columbus on Satur· John Busch.
feeturing small floral carria~· day.
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Powell of
ea, from wh1ch was serv&lt;'d
Mr. and Mn. John MontgQIII· Florida visited his father, Mr.
!be beautifully decorated wh•te ery were busineas visitors in Co- Slmey, Powell and other rela·
eake, ~ink .punl;h . .sandwiches, lumbus recently. Their daUih- lives.
c:offee, and rnints. Favors of rirt&gt; ter, Melanie stayed with her Mrs. Marie Lawrence fell
tied in pink net with white ot· grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Car· last week at her home alld
In rlbbo• were placed on .:arh los Snowden and Jeff.
broke her right wrist.
plate.
Mr. Bob Nelson visited with Mr. and Mrs. Ted Bailey of
Games were enjoyed
wlth his family , Mrs. Isabelle Nel- Indiana are visiting her mothMrs. Charles Eskew. Mrs. Aile- · son and Vickie, Pam and Cully er , Mrs. Louise Van Meter and
ara Wtll, Mrs. Joan Stewart, from his employment in Kentuc- Nicki. Ted has a broken foot,
: and Mrs . Jeanette Davis win· , ky la st weekend.
suffered while at his work.
aing prizes. Mrs. Stewart also Mr. and Mrs. John Haley and Mr and Mrs. Bobby Joe
won the door prize.
family hsve moved into the Wolf and family of Racine Kt ..
Others attending or sending Bill Dean property on Salem , Mr. Simey Powel~ Lawrence
1
lifts were : Mrs. Jerry BhlcJ{ Street.
Johnston, Mr. and Mrs. Homer
lnd Tammy, Mrs. Donna Nel- Mr. and Mrs. James Thomas Icenhower called on Mr. ami
I!JII, &lt;Mrs. Marie Birchfield, Mrs. I and family of Columbus. · · Mrs. Maywood Johnston
Faye Sauer Mrs. Imogene Dean, ed with their parents, Mr.
Mr. and Mrs. Morris Teaford
Saundra and Teresa, Mrs. Paul- Mrs . Floyd Thomas and ~r. and children visited Mr. and
ine Tillis, Mrs. Charles Eskew and Mrs. Clair Taylor last week- Mrs. Lawrenre Johnston
and Janet. Mrs. Lee Hysell and end. Tbey came especially for family.
Ll., Mrs. lva Howell, Mn . . the 50th Wedding Anniversary
Mrs. Mary Kerns called on
1
" Jack , Stafford and Linda. Mrs. Celebration of the Floyd
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Icenhower.
Marjorie Grueser. Mrs. Marie ases. Their son, John, remain- Mrs. Elva Dailey ol Stive~~~oBisbop, Mrs. Pearl Little, Mrs ., ed
here this week with his ville, Mrs. Lottie Sheffield of
Barbara Van Meter, Mrs. Thel-:grandparents.
Syracuse visited Mr. and Mrs.
ma Hy~\1 Mrs. Frances Jmbo- j Mr. and Mr~. Robert Hill of carl Autherson.
4en, L1lly and Charlotte. Mrs. Dayton, spent the weekend here Cindy Lou carroll returned
MOdred Lucas , Julia and Jane, at their home on Salem Street. home arter visiting in Colum·
Mrs~ Ann Lemley, Mrs. Judy
Miss Brenda Turner, who
bus. Mrs. Wanda Donnelson reSnowden, Mrs. Joan May,
wmployed for the summer
turned home with the childen
!lusiln Theobald. Mrs.
Columbus. spent tlle
and Mrs. Weldon Donnelson af·
Colwell, !drs. Rosalie
with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. ter vi&lt;&gt;iting her mother, Mrs.
r Mn. Goldie Grahm, Mrs.
Wayne Turner.
Minnie CarroU for two weeks.
cla Denison11 M![J. Pearl
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Garner. Mr. and Mrs. Loonard Cour·
!lay and Sabn. '-~" - Janet
Jr. and Becky , nave
sin of East Livl!l'J&gt;BOI, spell a
. ris, ,M,.c ~ce ·Colwell.
from Syracuse to the
weekend with Mr. ud Mrs.
Bari1ara Cqtt~nll. Mrs.
Wise property 01 Salem
Charlie Carroll.
~aN~or of P~ltlt 'Pleasant.
Mr. Gllnler is instrumental
Mr. Charles Carroll returned
sic lnatructor iR Ole RuUa!ld to his work at &lt;lolumbus. He
'lbei't Thompson, Jo and
~ of Letart, W. Va.,
Schools. Mra. Garner'• sister is bad beeo Wider a doctor' o care
¥artaret Schllling, Miss
carinl for Becll:y while sbe ia for a week .
HyMII; Mrs. Beulah Grate
leeching emediel readinR in
-MaJ Jobnston
Mrs.
the oummer Jtead-Start Provam.
IIOISQIJITO MAIIOOT
'!e1metl, I Mra. James Dennil of
MOSCOW (UP!) -Soviet
ville. Is vi!liting her dau&amp;hter, Antarctic esploma have 1
Mr. 8nd Mrs. Tom Marti•
mosquito for a mascot, the
daughters.
official aews BIORCJ' Taos said
If, Mrs.
Mr. Isaac Ta)llor is a
Saturday. Tass described the
. ailli Nic!JD!aon, Mrs.
at Veterans' Memorial Hospitsl. mosquito ao the first one 01 the
Ill Wellef;·
Ethel
Antarctic continent and said no
~ : Mra;-- Ani' Webster, Mrs. ACE PAYS OFF
one knows exactly ~ o w it got
DeDiel S~l'1.1 ¥'s. Jon
RENO, Nev. (UPII -Spoa- 1111
:~e~re.~;;;;;;;::;;;;;;;;::;;;;;;;;::;;::;;;;;;::;;;;;iiOiiiii
lin. 'Twila J!YftD, Mnl.
sors of the Nugget
It
ar-t. Mrs. Melva
tourRament didn't know
. . Brenda, Mn. Audrey Pa~ they were getting in for when
- . . Mnl. Jerry Tillis
they offered any bole-in-one
Mro. Myrville Brown, shooter a new car and his
lin. Esther Black, Mrs.
wei1ht iR silver.
•Joril
Edna
Roland Quimby, a
NOW IN PROGRESS!
Mrs. ·
Mre. .
cap~ from Modesto,
FamOfJI Brancls-Bucttet
aced tbe 224-yard 16th bole
Priced

·Notes

o:d Town Flats
Soefety Notes·

t8li:~

i

'1"1if.ts Broug_ht

..,

'"

'

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~~

I

!IIi,_llenUnel, l'llmemy•Midtlleport, 0 .,_iuly 8,

..

'ib!M 1111 .;,.,..., . . tout lint wttli • Ill uif .. .
Perso
-· nal. ,.Kin
· . g,Ca.,pt.ores .latuldl'f
.core.~""~
ao~t., ~ ~ rt~Pf'lt~n ~~~~ e1 h.:·
lbe tlcbt 11,1 "ff I•••"""1!' I!Oya ud.0111 ...,.. • .' J ·' '
·,,:·..
FOw
.~..+hl""' h, - Club~ IIVIWphited \ AifJ'Dd!•ilul~to· D!D c
Mrs. CIIU'I!Dce Jble, ~isoll,
.. ' ~e ery first place tlt!M.
lit tile ......,.atlall ._. Delbll1 '
ud· ber daughter and falnlly, .
• •
,
Ras*ell .S' Harold Rusoell ol
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Moore and Trt"
· le m" State
In addition. to Larry title, Wesl ColwDbla: 'W. -.va. Ud ~ ',,
oons, Syracuse, have returned
MCKmuey of Pomeroy ·Nancy Ob!IDPr tl Noli .moil,.,.

"'

0

M
. aso

F
- or"F'••ghters
In -VI'et Nam

&lt;

l

.
!rom vlsltln8 wltb ~~. !hie's
. won the nUII'reskleat Fret Sly: 'W , VI . .
, ,.. . -'1
MASON- 'Jb• Mason Home da &amp;Iller and famlly Mr aad 'NEW HAVEN - L8nTy
le tnJphy wbeR .he
·_, '·.
.) .
'
Demonatralion Club members
~ter Russell ~t cbtcalo o1 the Lemanhaw Atchery
.ec•re of m"l· Wlmda IQI!I'IIlol
.
· •f
.-'
brou&amp;hl gifts for tbe boys in Bel&amp;hls Illinois
of
Haven. added anoltherl1 1088 to wli\. the first pii.Ce II• Firat volunteer liN' !It~·",
Viet Nam whea they met •
Mr
Mrs. Earl JohnSOII arch""l title to his already
tie In C Claas, Free.
WO' IMit II _ll!e, United Sta. ..
Tuesday eveninll at the bonia !If ad
will risit with them list of successes wben be
men's division. Two _ln1ltb¥s formed In 1'15S II
HoiiJ,
Mra. MstUda Noble in 1\luoa. Ids
k nd
the W.V.A.A. State
An auction sale was eloo helil ~e ~sh Letart Rt. I. Cb,amPlonship in the Barebowi. .
as a means of earablg J!llllli!J 111 1 po.llent at tbe Holzer Ho&amp;- division, Sunday _at Charleston,
for tho organlzalioa,
·
W. Va.
8 total score of
The president, Mra. DorolbJ (lltiL
lie
Cartwright, conducted thl Jesaon on, "Food Arouad lbe lei 11 land Is divided Into to out-distance hi.l neareat
_
World" with mllllben parllo- UDioll, each with iLl
own petitor by. 15 points. Larry now
ONLT
ipating. In the busllleM meet.- CIOIIIIItutioo and local govenl- bas the distinction of winning
ing during wh!c• tho preelded, menl.
aD four top State archery
tH.GO-· -·
11 was ·announced that county
The W.V .A.A. State Open
Connnlolll ·
Ttnll
.
council will be held on July 12, Roach, Mrs. DoDRa -Tullob, Mn. Closed Cbampionshlp In th
starling at 10 a.m. at Krodel Cartwright, Mrs. Ruth Dudding, the Open BBam in 1965: e
Park with the afternoon portion Mrs. John McDaniel, Mrs. John V.A.A. Stl!le Indoor
of the day's program devoted to 1\oach,- Ms. Donna Tulloh, Mra. ship in hoih 1965 and 1966,
FURNITURI CO.
the International Tea.
Johe Marllball, two guesls, Mra. now the WVAA State Target
MASON. W. VA.
Attending the mee«ng were C. B. Thompson, Mrs. Blanche Championship.
Mra. Catherine Swotzel, Mra. Caallt_..d the bosteSB, Mrs. After 10 long hours i1M90
Bessie Hudson, Mrs. Lawrence Nob!W
IIJ'8" temperature and

~-· :rfl~~e .

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~

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Brian

~

1I U I1

:w-. .

I RAW=

~~~~and~-~Ra~ncly~~R~uae~~ll~belb~~N~.=J~.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;·:;.~.J~:·.

~ot

New

QUIDIL

I I

I

Reg. 89cSia

c

~aut

Regular
79c Sia

SOFT NYLONHAt}:
SUP
.

Brasa finlab le~&amp;. 3 posit!'* grill ,_
heat eontrol. 13-lncil

eLACE TBIMMED
.. ELASTIC WAIST
·.
e SMAIL-MEDIU,.r-LARGE

1'3-INCH
GRII,L TOP

•

SHREDDED FOAM FILLED

Bed Pillows
NON-ALLERGIC

GENUINE BROOM STRAW 5-TII

STRAW HOUSEHOLD
BROOMS
NON-mCK - EASY TO CLEAN - STURDY
1000.4 ACRYLIC

'\CE SHELLS

ALUMINUM

9! in. Fry Pan

eSOIJD COLORS
eziPPERED BACK

.....

ALUMINUM HOUSEWARES

.77

SELECT FROM 6 POPULAR ITEMS ..••
e 7-Cup Percolator
e3 Pc. Sauce Pan Set
e4 Qt. Covarecl S•&amp;~•.o P•n
e3-qt. Coverecl Sauce P~n '
e'2 Qt. Whistling
TH Kettle

Newest On The Market
\

,·

TAPE~D

NO-IRON
JEANS

e FWY GUARANTEED ·•

. LODEN e BLUE
BLACK
50% Polyester, 50% Cotton

"DIXIE"
GLOSS

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FRlE

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WALL
PAINT

•.99

PAIR

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''PAINT PAN
-. and~ ROLLER.
SET :
· With 9-ilt~Roller

2-PC.HT
·- '

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'

ESTIMATES

"VVCTOR"
VINYL LATEX

HOUSE
PAINT .

1

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MARKET

Und.l'l'w~;

1

To Gi.,e Y

SAVINGS FOR

IJ(J

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l1l:

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., ,. .

Personalized, Courtepus Se,..;ket
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JULY 7- 8- 9

Right reserved to limit qilaotltiel.

'

Open 81o 8-Mon. ThrulSat.

"

ef'ul·l'alu Summer Cooler

5TH &amp; PEARL STS.- RACINE
"T il e Slur&lt; Willi A HarL"

Stokely's

St'Ciety Notes

8,

·..

Co!n~ar· at $~ .5,? '..

IIZE!i 2t to 38

,. ,. _, .. _

,..

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-

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Iter,

,·

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ORANGE-PINE4PPLE

-

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D 1·1N K
46 oz. can • - - •

, .:_

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• -- - - - - · - - - - · - -'"' - - - · · - --- - - · - · - -..

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21 c

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30 o,t;1~~ '.

Fairmont Rich

·,- ~qmtJr.

HOMOGENIZED MILK -

gal.

79c

CHEESE

Pillsbury Buttermilk

BISCUITS
OLEO
Homllltad Brond

SOLID _ _

11 ..". 89c
5 99c

Family Sile Package

lb.

For Outings- Economy PackiiJt

PAPER PLATES

. t'!6J'l..i

COTTAGE

Everydoy Low Prict'-'-.Gradt A

pkg.S9c

_ _ 1(10

: . (/,

Morton's Fruit Filled

VAN CAMP'S

)~ ·.

Bl:lf'b
liw t •

$

PORK &amp; BEANS
5 $1.00

3 FOR

NO. 2
CANS

Apple- Cherry- Peach

Rich Texlurecl For Fin~~t Pies

STOKELY'S PUMPKIN _No.c!~' 1 Oc
• f'ul·l' alu Produee Buu ·

Gold Model Elbow

2 ~:. 39c

MACARONI

U. S. No. 1 Red

Taotft Better Thon Fr•h Perkodl

FOLGERS

,::; $1.29

INSTANT

COFFEE

POTATOES

· - - - - - t•r

8 lnnar Pochgu For Fresh..-

ZESTA CRACKERS

lb.3SC

box

'l .

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Anllf Fl'ft Dell,.ery

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Ful-Valu

/aroe,

MEN &amp; TEEN-AGERS

If you pbn to build, remodel or rep~~lr come see us and save now!

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elch

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Compare At $3.99

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. . .., ...... -

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TEFLON COATED

e HAND WASHABLE

MASON
W.VA.
Phone n3-5554 Colloci-

• •

BIG ENOUGH
Serve
SMALL ENOUGH . . .

RACINE

LEADERS

Reg. $1.59

(Construction Grade)

_ . , _ . _ .... _

c

ALL
METAL

" SPECIAL
SALE
PRICE

,1,~r

- - - -· · · -

&amp;rill for plcnle or 'l'ilp'DI
.'

Tbt' ldeal

'

dlamettr pm ·

aurface. Eztra sturdJ eoulrlldiOL ·

c

Mlddlopwt, 0.

MATERIALS
COMPANY

•

I'

I

BEAUTIFUL

CARLOAD

left on June 24 for basi&lt;'·
at Great Lakes. nu.
were enjoyed fol
• out-door picnic. Gue,t J
""'''"'• Miss Corter, ~•thY·
Jim Barrett, Joe Br&lt;r
Sandy Tucker, Becky Hll·
Ron Blaclt, Giorll Thomll'

'

Detroit
1100 1100 211)... 3 7 0
Chance, Rojas (8), Burdette
t81 and Rndgers; McLain,' By Clara Phibipo
,
Sparma &lt;71 Monbouqu~tte ,9) The vacation church ochool l
and Freeh..;. WP-Chance (7-ll). held by the Methodist and Pres·
LP-McLain (12-1). HRa·Adcock byterlan Churches will be held 1
(10th), Northrup (8th).
July 18, through 25tll.
__
Past matrons Club met recently with Mrs. Grace Colwell,
elu· at Wash., ppd ., wet gds.
Only game• oebeduled
A public sale was held Salur·
NatloDal Leal••
day al tile home of Charley
Pitts
:JJO 003 100- 6 13 2 Gray.
ChiL·ago
000 000 000- 0 3 2· Jtmmy ;:,trau:.uau.g11 is emFryman (7·3). and Gonder; ployed witll the Telephone Co;
Faul Hendley {6) Jenkins t9) at Logan.
1nd Boccabella. LP-Faul ll·4) . Mrs. Allee Raine• and Joe
HR-Ciendenon 112th).
Ruggles are assiating with classes at Howden SchooL
lt Louia 110 1100 oto- 3 7 2 Grand Inspection of Eastern
&gt;an Fraa 010 1100 000- 1 2 1 Star was held recently at Wilton
Jackson (8-6) and McCarver: High School auditorium.
Herbel, Linzy (9) and Haller. Strawsbaugb Reunion
was
LP·Herbel (:1-1) . HR·McCarver held Sunday at the Ernest Ma·
14\h).
,
jor home.
Mr. and Mrs. Max Hall were
New York 001 1100 000- 1 6 llre&lt;·en!•guests of their son-in-law
Philo
1100 003 oox- 3 5 0 and daulhter' Mr. and Mrs.
Hepler Hamilton (8) Gard- Richard Lillie Ashville.
oer 17) ;,.,d Grote: Jacksoo (6- ' Mr: and Mrs. Ley Sayre,
71 and Uecker. LP·Hepler ll·ll. lllunt.mgton W. Va . was guest of
_
relabves over the weekend.
Mr. and Mrs. Milford Long
and Ronnie Columbus, spent the
weekend at their trailer home
here.
B~ United Pre" lnteraatloaal
Mr. and Mrs. Glen Arnold,
NatioaaJ Lea1u~
! Rio Grande, were called to KanG. AB. R. H. Pet. ' sas recently by lhe death of Mr.
Alou, Pitt
71270 38 911 .333 Arnold's brother-in-law.
SlarBII. Pill 70 251 45 83 .323 : William Mahafley who suffer·
~lmnte, Pitt 74 309 42 99 .320 ed a stroke at his home recen~
Morgan, Hou 68 251 34 110 .319 ly is being cared for at Holzer
; arty , All
76 234 31 ,. 11 .318 1Hospital. His condition il serl·
lanto, Chi
71 251 42 79 .315 ous.
Mien, Phil
60 213 52 67 .315 i Mrs . Ora Jones has been reCepede, StL ~ 193 23 o9 .306 turned home from Holzer HosAiou, All
83 359 53 109 .301 i pita! where she was a medical
Helms, Cio 114 251 28 76 .303 pallent.
America• Leo1u•
i Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Harlsook
G, AB. R. H. Pel, i enlerlained Sunday with a lamSnyder, Bat 62 181 38 61 .337 : lly dinner at their home In VinKaline, Del 1111247 Ill 79 .320 ton.
f.Rbsn, Bal 79 286 63 811 .311 1 Mrs. Eugene Campbell was
Oliva, Minn 78 ~ 48 94 .310 ·with her parents Mr. and Mrs .
lalmon, Cle 62 210 29 65 .310 Charles Campbell Sr., at Iron·
8.Rbsn, Bill 81330 53 ll8 .m 1 ton over the weekend.
Rchrdl, Cal 70 256 40 76 .:1111 1 Mr. and Mrs. Homer Hart·
Powell, Bat 75 257 fl 11 .296 sook and childrJll!- Columbua,
Crdenl, Col 73 265 M 77 .291 were recent Bui•ts of ber par·
liehem, Cal 66 1711 19 52 .2tl enls Mr. and Mrs. John ShUiing_
Home Ruas .
Several Wilkesville men and
N • I I• a al Lea1ue:
boys ore working at Wild Cal
Uraves 25: Alle11, Phillie , Hart, Hollow which Is being improv·
Giants and TOrre, Braves 20; ed by the Wild Cat Hollow Co.,
:ta.rsell 1 Pirates 29.
which purchased several hun·
American League: F. Robin· dred ~cres recenUy . There will
;on, Orioles ZO : Scott, Red Sax be camping, swimming, bootlftl
18; Kaiine, Tigers 17; Powell and maybe an air strip built.
ond R Robinson, Orlolos, 1 Geor1e Jones Is a medical paColavito, Indiana and Oliva, ·!lent al Holler Hospital.
rwins 16.
Mr. and . Mra. Junior Suavely
Rani Balled 111
1 were recent ~Utsls of hia parN alton al Le...,.: Aaron, enls , Mr. and Mrs.
McCoy
1
!raves M: White, Phlllies IS; 1 Snavely.
\lien, Pbtitte&amp; 54: Slaflell, I Mn. Floyd . Davis Is visiting
Pirates 53; Mays, Gianta 52.
~latlves m P1tlsburgh aiJ!! Bal·
A01erkaa Leag~e: B. Robin- Itunore.
,,
1011, Orioles 118: Powell, Orioles
- - ,.- - i6: Scot~ Red Sas 52; F. I
7 AT ARROWHEAD
'lobinsoo, Orioles 50; KeUne, Seven members of Boy Scout
li1ers 41.
·
1Troop 249 spent ,last week at
Pll&lt;;hinl
. i Camp Arrowhead.
Attending
Nalloaal
Llapo: Perr 1were Benny WriBhl, Dlnny
JlanJI 12-1: Knowlea, Pbilll~ ; Hood, Joe Welker, Marty
ond 'tuellar, ~1tr01 6-1; Kou-! VaUBbD, To~y Vau&amp;hn, Joo DiJ..
'ax, 1 Dodgen 15-3; Mariehal,! lard, John Ash and Scol!t Mas&gt;iants 13-1.
Melvin Hood. Boys compte~
Aqmicu Lei&amp;JII: I. MiliF 1illl the m~ swim were Danny
lnd Watt, Ori~ 6-1; Barbei', ;Hood and Tony Vaughn. AU .IIJe
lrlo"' and $111ford, An&amp;~il .. . boyl ~ted enJ•Yinll fhem.
l; MCN~, Orloltli 7-:1,
' ' 1Hlvq,.
.
-

Just Unloaded!

Street on hme 22.

~ 1100- •

I

1

THE SHOE BOX

.Hogg &amp; Zuspan

.,_.,.,•lllllCUOtL

4

DI:.:.•.o.:n.,:. :. :.R.t·:._::4•:_:0.::ak~H.::l=l l:. ;_:M_:_r.::'·:.:..:.W.::ic::k:::li:::ne:_:•:::nd~inf:an~t_:d~a:ug!.'h:te~r.:_.!d~o~w"'n'-Il iD\~&amp;:~4G~a:"m~·

lild&amp;1 ff /J•

WiJkesvil}e

'

.

Hr·Ctii-~ot~:i;wn--

I

lambJH, IINOI fOLAt lfTUAL ICJIMR
AiNcn ~ Jl•riOII •ha•1 6D,... ~~~~ U

;

Jfili

I

GILLETTE.
STAINLESS STE.EL
BLADES

iiiiiiiii.:.O;;::;;;;::;;;;::;;;;:;;;_==J

DILLON HONORED .
;::;;::;:·ft,;;;:. Jean Carter • away party for Wlllls
... ...... has enllJtocl ill lbe
!iJ Navy, at the home of ber
Mr. and Mrs. Bill CIF·

I D ( !11

NATIONAL LEAGUE LINE SCORES

""100 COUNT

-'

~
-

1

(Au• .,....,.,..,..,

l

•

1

United Preso International ' Atlanta
013 020 031)... 9 10 1
Ameriean League
IHoustoa 010 120 000- 4 8 2
Boston
041 1100 101- 7 13 21 Lemaster t6-5) ond Torre ·
New York 001 1100 0011-- I 50 Cuellar, Latman (6), Taylor t8i
Brandon &lt;1·2) and Ryau; and Bateman. LP-Cuetiar (6-1).
Taihot, Womack (4). Ramos HRs-Nicholson 2 (7th and 8th),
(6), Hamilton (t) and Gibbs.!
LP-Talbol (7-41). HRs-Smith !Torre (20th! . Wynn (14tlll.
t6tll), Petrocelli (14th),
Cincl
000 1100 000- 0 10 2
Los Ani
010 1100 OOx- 1 5 o
Minn
001· 100 200- 4 8 0 i ,,Maloney, McCool t1 ) and
: Jeve
201 000 000- 3 7 0 , Pavletich ; Koufax n5-3l and
Merritt, Cimino 17 ) and IRoseboro. LP-Maloney (9-4).
Nixon, Zimmerman (8) ; Kelley, I
Radatz 17) and Crandall, Azcue ' - - - - - - - - - 181. WP-Merritt (H). LP· I
Kelley (Z. 4). HRs . Colavito I
:J61h), Hinton (2nd).

BAYER ASPIRIN

Shoe Sale

1

I 0

PrW6aSDRPRISEAISWtl1Un

YUIU'IIIJ'•

1

:·m·:

B~

SUMMER

l

I

Now arranretho elrded letlerl
to form the autprlu anawer, aa
1
j=~=~===~==~:t_:•:::u!!;aetted by the above cartoon..

MASON

Mra. ·

the Washoe coursese.,::~:~h
Suzy, and Mrs. He weighs 2114 p
•'
and Candi.
adds up to $4,828 at $17 a
FROM TRIP
I pound.
.
Everett Turn- 1
,, . w bd De~•bie, of Langsville!] r
ILD.,...accompanied by
Miss
·
. -~ Canaday, have retur~&gt; !
"' ad frl&gt;m a trip to the east coaot I
. and ....Uih New England. They I
;, . vlslted Harper's Ferry. 1'1'. Va ..
''.·• AflBIIIk&gt; City,.)'lew Jersey where
i• -lbey -walked on the Boardwalk.
-,;:and Coldwell, N. J., the hoi!Ie of
• Grover Cleveland. They then 1
II)Oiored to the New England I
" vltalell,
~wing the
Mark I
; _Twain Houatlin H~ford , Conn..
· ::· Pd
the HArriet Beecher Stowe !'
'
,_tBome In Lit -- htleld. Conn. In :
~~jfassachusetts. they went
to
. Jaiom. site ol the
witch
.,..
and the House of Tile SevGables, and to Plymouth.
of Plymout!J Rock ud the
n. In Booton, they
Old lronokleo, the Paul Jle. .
Home, Old North Clturoh.
ii.illbr Hill, the Mi•gternaa
and the Milts Standish
In Jlwlbury , Masa., the
visited tile John Alden
before traveling to
On the return lrlp
L"!:~~-at Valley Forp, !

r

River News

f·

I U I 1 1,~
I(SjG I I I I

3 ROOMS

Hosp'ital News

':r, .

I MOE.C'l' ·~-=--

·~-

~
~~

~~/::nzo~7,~~30a. ~~-:E~~:; , WoH Pen
Soc"etv N tes

Wllllom R. Morris, Ironton·
Horrey P. McCumber, well-·
Daflt Oft lfkstl t '
ston; Mrs. George W. Jones,
up 21, 5:35 a.m .; Alice down
~1..o~ m;t•.' ',
.
_ _ _ Wilkesville; Evan H. Hughes,
21, 6:50a.m.; Jefferson down
llr.lllll'·llrs. TOCJ • W , . .
. '
Rt. 3, Oak Hill; Mrs. Mary F
.
22, 5:30 a.m.; Orco
down
PJtly, Scajl,'_~ Kim, fit, . . . .
Holzer Hospital:
Visiting ' Gahm, Jackson· Mrs. Hershel Gauge readblp:
GaUipolll ,23, 5 p.m. : Andrew Calboun up
I J 0
Mrs. Georp Wlfll'l',
houra 1-4 and 7-8 p.m.
Par- Longfellow, Jackson.
Dam 12.1, 11. 9, runninllll'z leet ;Greenup 6:20p.m. ; Heleo R.
Richerd, iDd ~· lllil!f4'n
IIIII only on Pediatrics Ward.
Birth
on rollers, Pomeroy-Mason out, up Greenu 9·10
. So
and Mr•. Dlle Waraer iild
AdmloaloDo
. Mrs. Franklin W. Mullins, Rt. Pt. Pleasant 24.09, Hintoo 0.118 1ern down PGr~enu:·~.J. p
Mlsa Jo Smith ,visited with ~am~~y; ware . SundaY, ,~-·
Mrs. AnnaL. Sievers, &gt;II 3, Jackson, son, 11:28 a. m. atatlonary, Kanawha Falls_ 2.25 iRavenswood down Gr.;.nup .lo:: Mr. and Mrs. ·M4itrY
Miller visitors of
and'iiri! i~
Second Ave.; Joseph F. Keiser, ' TUesday; Mrs. John E. Me- falllftl, Charleston 18.112 riSing. ' 05 p.m.; Steel Ranger
do,;n and daUBhlers Sunday after- man Warner and Mark
508 Maple Dr.; 'Mrs. Oliver Graw, Pt. Pleasant, slln 5:08 p. London, Marmet and Wmfield . Greenup 3'40 am · Pamela u I noon.
The Teiin-alc
Meadaws, Rt. 2, Gallipolis;
m.,
Tuesday.
'
dBoaamls
Mwere
on
the
Sills.
'
down
Gr..;,up
.~·
.
m
.
Pen-~
i
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Geor1e
War·
Cburch
tf Ci\rlat '1\lld· born~
· .• "
·
ovements:
· 'IU • ·,
•r ·
.
.
Hobert B. Brumfield. RL I,
Discharges
Obi Rl
T't d
syl vania down Greenup 7 30 a · ner, Marg1e, R1chard. and Gor· made ice croom at tr.. ''bo I ·'
.t
M R
o ver - 1 an own 13
·
·
·
nd
t".a ~ 7~·
, ~·
. Ste Tr d
Herman of Mr. a Mrs. - •'f. ·J.,ill)lien'·
Crown C1 y; rs. obert H. Rober! w. Baylor, Mrs. Har- 6_30
4• m.: Luther Herdman down Mel- don, Mr. and Mrs .
1
Roach, Rt. I, Crown City; Eli old R. Bush, Linda s. Finley, 7:15 a.',:;··. Ha~ ~ :; ~p :.- 1dahl 5:35p.m.; Illinois up Mel- Warner, and Mark , and Mr. and of Hemlock Grove.'·.p,.~~ lt.-'"'1
C. Lambert, Sr., Rt. I. Thur- Mrs. Elmer v. Hart,
Mrs. 7:40
Cottory Y
P 14 • dahl 6:15 p.m.: Esso West Vir- Mrs. Eugene Thompson, Gina, tending were: Charlojll!, JloD; "
man: Mrs. John E. McGrew, Wayne E. Hilburn. Mrs. Rich· 1j,15 · _,;;_, w.z 0 d~!:',"~ °P2:5D ginia down Meldahl 6:50 p.m.: and Cindy atiended the Wal' nle: David and Cheryl · LalJ&gt;.!:'.''
Pt. Pleasant: Alber! E. Gm· ard D. James, Farrell Niday, a.m.; PEdeana Bosworth ~ 16 Valvohne up Meldahl 10:35 p. ner Reunlun at Mr and Mrs. ben. Martll•. and Dl!!!&lt;ie War·~·~
ther, Cllf~n; S~n~ra Riffle, Rt. ,Chauncey Rothgeb .
Howard 1 a.m. ; Jenks up 16 , 3 i .m.: m.; Z1mmer up Meldahl 1:15
ner, Jo Sm1th, Guy Snr~ent, ~~
I, West Columbia, Mrs, George : Roush.. Mrs. v1oia Rumfield, Flag Ship down 16 , 3,45 a.m.: a.m : Polly R. up Meldahl 5:10 down London 1:35 a.m.; W. H. Bobby, Billy, Bil! , )fc~,":.'.;
Stantial, PI Pleasant:
Mrs. , Mrs . Lillian ste1rr, Mrs. Victor Onward down IS, 4, 48 a.m.: a.m.
•Shaver, Jr ., up Wmfield 5:10 , Charldene and Ches~r. -~i"B&lt;:·~
James L. Hart. Rt . I, Letart; J Youftl , Jr., Mrs. Jefferson N. James Durant down 11 5.25 1 G8 Ill li D
Ipm.; Ch ickasaw down Winfield Linda Reeves, JenneJi CUmingi, "::
Mrs. Abbie . Chattin, Clifton: Baker and infant daughter, Mrs. m.: Walter Williamso~ ~p ~· D
pod• am - . Peggy 8 p.m.; Chris Jr. down Winfield Dick Sargent, Sharolj_'TI.~th;· "
Mrs. Etllel R1fe . Rt. I, Dexter; 1PaulS. Coyan and infant son 6 . 15 am . St Mar
•
Bowney
_own 8 p.m., Franklm 10:25 p.m.; Mr. Chris down Tiger Collins, Ron :$p!llli, Jr/t-"·
M
Will d MN I'
Ok M
·
·
' . . .... .
ysup 18 ' . up 11 ·20p.m.: Jim Houg·W ' fld 10 ·25
All
R G
Be l · ,~
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rs.
ar
c erm,
a
rs . Arcllle Gillman and mfant 5:30a.m.; E. P. Jones down land u 12 ·40
.
ml~
.
p.m,.;
en . rover, very ·t' ~ '_ ? ~
-· · •_·
Hill; Mrs. Lawrence C. Jar· son, Mrs. Roger E. Halley and 18 5_50 am . Beaver u
~- · a.m • Mark East- Memll down Winfield 2:20 a. Housh, Mrs. Helen
n, '56; '··
19 1
rell. Ashland, Ky.; Mrs. I.eroy ,infunt son, Mrs. Steve Kearns 4:JO ·a .m.; Elgerdifl upp 19• ~~wu: 8 _· ;; a.m.: Elisha Woods m .; Knox down Winfield 3:45 Evelyn Thoma, Jl!r. ,ii'!Jf, MJ'..?"'
E. Spearry, Wellston ; James and infant son, Mrs. Paul G. S:2S a.m .: Valley Transporte~ 1down 9_-05 : :·· Sally
Polk . ~.m.; Moun tam State up Win· Gene Lambert, and :f4· . 11 ,~_ncta· - Helen Z.
, !•up
A J Pat· Kaaaw· ba .R1ver
fieldWinfield
4:2D am:
H. E. Bowles Mrs
Eugene
S a m.
JSy Mn.
Charley D, · ' ·· ... ,

I

1

wendi.

1968-7

When You Compare-- We Gain A Customer/ Check Out Meat Buysl

,

.------For Summer

Heat 1nd Eatl

Outings!

Dubuque
CANNED
PICNICS

SKINLESS
WIENERS

3! 149

Our Own-,ll aa'd
Several Varietle•
To

Choa18

From

LUNCH
MEATS

,.

GROU~·o

.
,_

BEE'f·.. ·.' ··.
.;round fresh ~·c
times dally.

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~~~~Pll:m~ero=y~-M'Iddleport,- 0., 1uly e. .ISM-

irAYNEIJ IN vfln. !'AM

· Marilla LIDH_· eolparat

110n, Anoll Cross, Bomut Gfllfjj ry B: HayDU, 11111 of llr.
andMikeNicbolson.
Mn.Basll _L.Hayneaof
SNOWDENS ltE'WRN
port, lo 'servlil&amp; with
Mr. a_nd Mra. Robert SIIOW· Base Squadron b at Cbu
den and Bob, Lynn, fNemary, VII Nam.
Todd and L«ee- bave returned ·
'
"""_ _ _ _ __._ from a campln8 trip to Windy -· - . .. ,....
Hill Beach, s. c. On the way
SBOWER HELD
they camped in ~ mountains ·
•
.
~ ~Y
of Virginia, and at 'Nq's Head ·
inmi_iigeto Mr.
on the North Carolina coast.
will be solemn- Upon their relunl, they were
on JulY 17, was honored visited by her sister, Mr. and
-"'"'"" bridal abower on Toes· Mrs. Herman Welch and dau- Mr. and Mn. Clyde
June 28, at the Rotiand ghters, of Circleville, wbo left and Mrs. Pennant of Ravena:E~ Church aocial room. for a week's visit to Key Wesl, WOOd, w. VI., visited Mr.
were Mrs. Bernice Fla. The 'li'elchea
returned Mrs. WllliiiJll Ables and
Mn. Beatrice Smith, to spend the Fourtll of July hoi· Mt. and Mrs. NeiSOII PinkerMn. Avaneli Geor1e, and Miss iday.
lnltpn of East Liverpool. Mr.
Judf ~"1._
PERSONALS
and Mrs. Hayes McMurry and
~ room was dkorated with Mr. and Mrs. Homer Park· Mina Pickena, local, called o1
. iuspended plllk pompoms and er aQd Suzy were Sunday · dill- Mr. and Mrs. Dillon Taylor.
wedding bells. The gift table ned guesls of bls brother, Mr. Mr. and Mrs. Lewrence Bush
. ,, was_co~ered . la white with pl•k and Mrs. Howard Parker, April and daUBhter, Connie, Racine
: · and white a•d pmk streamers and Aaron, at the Parker home Route, Mr. Roy Bush, local,
1 · ~aped .fr"'!' the edges, and a at Long Boliom·.
and granddaUBhter, Iris Pigott,
jiiDk ttiiSti&lt;- . umbrella comple- Mr. and Mra. Robert Cans· Loftl Bottom, and Sue Bush,
menling the theme. The buffet day and Sabra were business Athens. visited Rev. and Mrs.
table was also covered in white, visitors in Columbus on Satur· John Busch.
feeturing small floral carria~· day.
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Powell of
ea, from wh1ch was serv&lt;'d
Mr. and Mn. John MontgQIII· Florida visited his father, Mr.
!be beautifully decorated wh•te ery were busineas visitors in Co- Slmey, Powell and other rela·
eake, ~ink .punl;h . .sandwiches, lumbus recently. Their daUih- lives.
c:offee, and rnints. Favors of rirt&gt; ter, Melanie stayed with her Mrs. Marie Lawrence fell
tied in pink net with white ot· grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Car· last week at her home alld
In rlbbo• were placed on .:arh los Snowden and Jeff.
broke her right wrist.
plate.
Mr. Bob Nelson visited with Mr. and Mrs. Ted Bailey of
Games were enjoyed
wlth his family , Mrs. Isabelle Nel- Indiana are visiting her mothMrs. Charles Eskew. Mrs. Aile- · son and Vickie, Pam and Cully er , Mrs. Louise Van Meter and
ara Wtll, Mrs. Joan Stewart, from his employment in Kentuc- Nicki. Ted has a broken foot,
: and Mrs . Jeanette Davis win· , ky la st weekend.
suffered while at his work.
aing prizes. Mrs. Stewart also Mr. and Mrs. John Haley and Mr and Mrs. Bobby Joe
won the door prize.
family hsve moved into the Wolf and family of Racine Kt ..
Others attending or sending Bill Dean property on Salem , Mr. Simey Powel~ Lawrence
1
lifts were : Mrs. Jerry BhlcJ{ Street.
Johnston, Mr. and Mrs. Homer
lnd Tammy, Mrs. Donna Nel- Mr. and Mrs. James Thomas Icenhower called on Mr. ami
I!JII, &lt;Mrs. Marie Birchfield, Mrs. I and family of Columbus. · · Mrs. Maywood Johnston
Faye Sauer Mrs. Imogene Dean, ed with their parents, Mr.
Mr. and Mrs. Morris Teaford
Saundra and Teresa, Mrs. Paul- Mrs . Floyd Thomas and ~r. and children visited Mr. and
ine Tillis, Mrs. Charles Eskew and Mrs. Clair Taylor last week- Mrs. Lawrenre Johnston
and Janet. Mrs. Lee Hysell and end. Tbey came especially for family.
Ll., Mrs. lva Howell, Mn . . the 50th Wedding Anniversary
Mrs. Mary Kerns called on
1
" Jack , Stafford and Linda. Mrs. Celebration of the Floyd
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Icenhower.
Marjorie Grueser. Mrs. Marie ases. Their son, John, remain- Mrs. Elva Dailey ol Stive~~~oBisbop, Mrs. Pearl Little, Mrs ., ed
here this week with his ville, Mrs. Lottie Sheffield of
Barbara Van Meter, Mrs. Thel-:grandparents.
Syracuse visited Mr. and Mrs.
ma Hy~\1 Mrs. Frances Jmbo- j Mr. and Mr~. Robert Hill of carl Autherson.
4en, L1lly and Charlotte. Mrs. Dayton, spent the weekend here Cindy Lou carroll returned
MOdred Lucas , Julia and Jane, at their home on Salem Street. home arter visiting in Colum·
Mrs~ Ann Lemley, Mrs. Judy
Miss Brenda Turner, who
bus. Mrs. Wanda Donnelson reSnowden, Mrs. Joan May,
wmployed for the summer
turned home with the childen
!lusiln Theobald. Mrs.
Columbus. spent tlle
and Mrs. Weldon Donnelson af·
Colwell, !drs. Rosalie
with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. ter vi&lt;&gt;iting her mother, Mrs.
r Mn. Goldie Grahm, Mrs.
Wayne Turner.
Minnie CarroU for two weeks.
cla Denison11 M![J. Pearl
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Garner. Mr. and Mrs. Loonard Cour·
!lay and Sabn. '-~" - Janet
Jr. and Becky , nave
sin of East Livl!l'J&gt;BOI, spell a
. ris, ,M,.c ~ce ·Colwell.
from Syracuse to the
weekend with Mr. ud Mrs.
Bari1ara Cqtt~nll. Mrs.
Wise property 01 Salem
Charlie Carroll.
~aN~or of P~ltlt 'Pleasant.
Mr. Gllnler is instrumental
Mr. Charles Carroll returned
sic lnatructor iR Ole RuUa!ld to his work at &lt;lolumbus. He
'lbei't Thompson, Jo and
~ of Letart, W. Va.,
Schools. Mra. Garner'• sister is bad beeo Wider a doctor' o care
¥artaret Schllling, Miss
carinl for Becll:y while sbe ia for a week .
HyMII; Mrs. Beulah Grate
leeching emediel readinR in
-MaJ Jobnston
Mrs.
the oummer Jtead-Start Provam.
IIOISQIJITO MAIIOOT
'!e1metl, I Mra. James Dennil of
MOSCOW (UP!) -Soviet
ville. Is vi!liting her dau&amp;hter, Antarctic esploma have 1
Mr. 8nd Mrs. Tom Marti•
mosquito for a mascot, the
daughters.
official aews BIORCJ' Taos said
If, Mrs.
Mr. Isaac Ta)llor is a
Saturday. Tass described the
. ailli Nic!JD!aon, Mrs.
at Veterans' Memorial Hospitsl. mosquito ao the first one 01 the
Ill Wellef;·
Ethel
Antarctic continent and said no
~ : Mra;-- Ani' Webster, Mrs. ACE PAYS OFF
one knows exactly ~ o w it got
DeDiel S~l'1.1 ¥'s. Jon
RENO, Nev. (UPII -Spoa- 1111
:~e~re.~;;;;;;;::;;;;;;;;::;;;;;;;;::;;::;;;;;;::;;;;;iiOiiiii
lin. 'Twila J!YftD, Mnl.
sors of the Nugget
It
ar-t. Mrs. Melva
tourRament didn't know
. . Brenda, Mn. Audrey Pa~ they were getting in for when
- . . Mnl. Jerry Tillis
they offered any bole-in-one
Mro. Myrville Brown, shooter a new car and his
lin. Esther Black, Mrs.
wei1ht iR silver.
•Joril
Edna
Roland Quimby, a
NOW IN PROGRESS!
Mrs. ·
Mre. .
cap~ from Modesto,
FamOfJI Brancls-Bucttet
aced tbe 224-yard 16th bole
Priced

·Notes

o:d Town Flats
Soefety Notes·

t8li:~

i

'1"1if.ts Broug_ht

..,

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'

,. '

l''
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~~

I

!IIi,_llenUnel, l'llmemy•Midtlleport, 0 .,_iuly 8,

..

'ib!M 1111 .;,.,..., . . tout lint wttli • Ill uif .. .
Perso
-· nal. ,.Kin
· . g,Ca.,pt.ores .latuldl'f
.core.~""~
ao~t., ~ ~ rt~Pf'lt~n ~~~~ e1 h.:·
lbe tlcbt 11,1 "ff I•••"""1!' I!Oya ud.0111 ...,.. • .' J ·' '
·,,:·..
FOw
.~..+hl""' h, - Club~ IIVIWphited \ AifJ'Dd!•ilul~to· D!D c
Mrs. CIIU'I!Dce Jble, ~isoll,
.. ' ~e ery first place tlt!M.
lit tile ......,.atlall ._. Delbll1 '
ud· ber daughter and falnlly, .
• •
,
Ras*ell .S' Harold Rusoell ol
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Moore and Trt"
· le m" State
In addition. to Larry title, Wesl ColwDbla: 'W. -.va. Ud ~ ',,
oons, Syracuse, have returned
MCKmuey of Pomeroy ·Nancy Ob!IDPr tl Noli .moil,.,.

"'

0

M
. aso

F
- or"F'••ghters
In -VI'et Nam

&lt;

l

.
!rom vlsltln8 wltb ~~. !hie's
. won the nUII'reskleat Fret Sly: 'W , VI . .
, ,.. . -'1
MASON- 'Jb• Mason Home da &amp;Iller and famlly Mr aad 'NEW HAVEN - L8nTy
le tnJphy wbeR .he
·_, '·.
.) .
'
Demonatralion Club members
~ter Russell ~t cbtcalo o1 the Lemanhaw Atchery
.ec•re of m"l· Wlmda IQI!I'IIlol
.
· •f
.-'
brou&amp;hl gifts for tbe boys in Bel&amp;hls Illinois
of
Haven. added anoltherl1 1088 to wli\. the first pii.Ce II• Firat volunteer liN' !It~·",
Viet Nam whea they met •
Mr
Mrs. Earl JohnSOII arch""l title to his already
tie In C Claas, Free.
WO' IMit II _ll!e, United Sta. ..
Tuesday eveninll at the bonia !If ad
will risit with them list of successes wben be
men's division. Two _ln1ltb¥s formed In 1'15S II
HoiiJ,
Mra. MstUda Noble in 1\luoa. Ids
k nd
the W.V.A.A. State
An auction sale was eloo helil ~e ~sh Letart Rt. I. Cb,amPlonship in the Barebowi. .
as a means of earablg J!llllli!J 111 1 po.llent at tbe Holzer Ho&amp;- division, Sunday _at Charleston,
for tho organlzalioa,
·
W. Va.
8 total score of
The president, Mra. DorolbJ (lltiL
lie
Cartwright, conducted thl Jesaon on, "Food Arouad lbe lei 11 land Is divided Into to out-distance hi.l neareat
_
World" with mllllben parllo- UDioll, each with iLl
own petitor by. 15 points. Larry now
ONLT
ipating. In the busllleM meet.- CIOIIIIItutioo and local govenl- bas the distinction of winning
ing during wh!c• tho preelded, menl.
aD four top State archery
tH.GO-· -·
11 was ·announced that county
The W.V .A.A. State Open
Connnlolll ·
Ttnll
.
council will be held on July 12, Roach, Mrs. DoDRa -Tullob, Mn. Closed Cbampionshlp In th
starling at 10 a.m. at Krodel Cartwright, Mrs. Ruth Dudding, the Open BBam in 1965: e
Park with the afternoon portion Mrs. John McDaniel, Mrs. John V.A.A. Stl!le Indoor
of the day's program devoted to 1\oach,- Ms. Donna Tulloh, Mra. ship in hoih 1965 and 1966,
FURNITURI CO.
the International Tea.
Johe Marllball, two guesls, Mra. now the WVAA State Target
MASON. W. VA.
Attending the mee«ng were C. B. Thompson, Mrs. Blanche Championship.
Mra. Catherine Swotzel, Mra. Caallt_..d the bosteSB, Mrs. After 10 long hours i1M90
Bessie Hudson, Mrs. Lawrence Nob!W
IIJ'8" temperature and

~-· :rfl~~e .

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~

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Brian

~

1I U I1

:w-. .

I RAW=

~~~~and~-~Ra~ncly~~R~uae~~ll~belb~~N~.=J~.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;·:;.~.J~:·.

~ot

New

QUIDIL

I I

I

Reg. 89cSia

c

~aut

Regular
79c Sia

SOFT NYLONHAt}:
SUP
.

Brasa finlab le~&amp;. 3 posit!'* grill ,_
heat eontrol. 13-lncil

eLACE TBIMMED
.. ELASTIC WAIST
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e SMAIL-MEDIU,.r-LARGE

1'3-INCH
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Bed Pillows
NON-ALLERGIC

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e 7-Cup Percolator
e3 Pc. Sauce Pan Set
e4 Qt. Covarecl S•&amp;~•.o P•n
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e'2 Qt. Whistling
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ef'ul·l'alu Summer Cooler

5TH &amp; PEARL STS.- RACINE
"T il e Slur&lt; Willi A HarL"

Stokely's

St'Ciety Notes

8,

·..

Co!n~ar· at $~ .5,? '..

IIZE!i 2t to 38

,. ,. _, .. _

,..

~ •~ ~ ., -- - • ~ - ~ ~ -··•·~ ··-

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'!1- .--,.L.w:r...-. ':.· ·.-.•'"·"" · '. ,,~ - ··~·-- oo.o·~··-·-·-·-·---...

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21 c

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30 o,t;1~~ '.

Fairmont Rich

·,- ~qmtJr.

HOMOGENIZED MILK -

gal.

79c

CHEESE

Pillsbury Buttermilk

BISCUITS
OLEO
Homllltad Brond

SOLID _ _

11 ..". 89c
5 99c

Family Sile Package

lb.

For Outings- Economy PackiiJt

PAPER PLATES

. t'!6J'l..i

COTTAGE

Everydoy Low Prict'-'-.Gradt A

pkg.S9c

_ _ 1(10

: . (/,

Morton's Fruit Filled

VAN CAMP'S

)~ ·.

Bl:lf'b
liw t •

$

PORK &amp; BEANS
5 $1.00

3 FOR

NO. 2
CANS

Apple- Cherry- Peach

Rich Texlurecl For Fin~~t Pies

STOKELY'S PUMPKIN _No.c!~' 1 Oc
• f'ul·l' alu Produee Buu ·

Gold Model Elbow

2 ~:. 39c

MACARONI

U. S. No. 1 Red

Taotft Better Thon Fr•h Perkodl

FOLGERS

,::; $1.29

INSTANT

COFFEE

POTATOES

· - - - - - t•r

8 lnnar Pochgu For Fresh..-

ZESTA CRACKERS

lb.3SC

box

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W.VA.
Phone n3-5554 Colloci-

• •

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Serve
SMALL ENOUGH . . .

RACINE

LEADERS

Reg. $1.59

(Construction Grade)

_ . , _ . _ .... _

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METAL

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PRICE

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&amp;rill for plcnle or 'l'ilp'DI
.'

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MATERIALS
COMPANY

•

I'

I

BEAUTIFUL

CARLOAD

left on June 24 for basi&lt;'·
at Great Lakes. nu.
were enjoyed fol
• out-door picnic. Gue,t J
""'''"'• Miss Corter, ~•thY·
Jim Barrett, Joe Br&lt;r
Sandy Tucker, Becky Hll·
Ron Blaclt, Giorll Thomll'

'

Detroit
1100 1100 211)... 3 7 0
Chance, Rojas (8), Burdette
t81 and Rndgers; McLain,' By Clara Phibipo
,
Sparma &lt;71 Monbouqu~tte ,9) The vacation church ochool l
and Freeh..;. WP-Chance (7-ll). held by the Methodist and Pres·
LP-McLain (12-1). HRa·Adcock byterlan Churches will be held 1
(10th), Northrup (8th).
July 18, through 25tll.
__
Past matrons Club met recently with Mrs. Grace Colwell,
elu· at Wash., ppd ., wet gds.
Only game• oebeduled
A public sale was held Salur·
NatloDal Leal••
day al tile home of Charley
Pitts
:JJO 003 100- 6 13 2 Gray.
ChiL·ago
000 000 000- 0 3 2· Jtmmy ;:,trau:.uau.g11 is emFryman (7·3). and Gonder; ployed witll the Telephone Co;
Faul Hendley {6) Jenkins t9) at Logan.
1nd Boccabella. LP-Faul ll·4) . Mrs. Allee Raine• and Joe
HR-Ciendenon 112th).
Ruggles are assiating with classes at Howden SchooL
lt Louia 110 1100 oto- 3 7 2 Grand Inspection of Eastern
&gt;an Fraa 010 1100 000- 1 2 1 Star was held recently at Wilton
Jackson (8-6) and McCarver: High School auditorium.
Herbel, Linzy (9) and Haller. Strawsbaugb Reunion
was
LP·Herbel (:1-1) . HR·McCarver held Sunday at the Ernest Ma·
14\h).
,
jor home.
Mr. and Mrs. Max Hall were
New York 001 1100 000- 1 6 llre&lt;·en!•guests of their son-in-law
Philo
1100 003 oox- 3 5 0 and daulhter' Mr. and Mrs.
Hepler Hamilton (8) Gard- Richard Lillie Ashville.
oer 17) ;,.,d Grote: Jacksoo (6- ' Mr: and Mrs. Ley Sayre,
71 and Uecker. LP·Hepler ll·ll. lllunt.mgton W. Va . was guest of
_
relabves over the weekend.
Mr. and Mrs. Milford Long
and Ronnie Columbus, spent the
weekend at their trailer home
here.
B~ United Pre" lnteraatloaal
Mr. and Mrs. Glen Arnold,
NatioaaJ Lea1u~
! Rio Grande, were called to KanG. AB. R. H. Pet. ' sas recently by lhe death of Mr.
Alou, Pitt
71270 38 911 .333 Arnold's brother-in-law.
SlarBII. Pill 70 251 45 83 .323 : William Mahafley who suffer·
~lmnte, Pitt 74 309 42 99 .320 ed a stroke at his home recen~
Morgan, Hou 68 251 34 110 .319 ly is being cared for at Holzer
; arty , All
76 234 31 ,. 11 .318 1Hospital. His condition il serl·
lanto, Chi
71 251 42 79 .315 ous.
Mien, Phil
60 213 52 67 .315 i Mrs . Ora Jones has been reCepede, StL ~ 193 23 o9 .306 turned home from Holzer HosAiou, All
83 359 53 109 .301 i pita! where she was a medical
Helms, Cio 114 251 28 76 .303 pallent.
America• Leo1u•
i Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Harlsook
G, AB. R. H. Pel, i enlerlained Sunday with a lamSnyder, Bat 62 181 38 61 .337 : lly dinner at their home In VinKaline, Del 1111247 Ill 79 .320 ton.
f.Rbsn, Bal 79 286 63 811 .311 1 Mrs. Eugene Campbell was
Oliva, Minn 78 ~ 48 94 .310 ·with her parents Mr. and Mrs .
lalmon, Cle 62 210 29 65 .310 Charles Campbell Sr., at Iron·
8.Rbsn, Bill 81330 53 ll8 .m 1 ton over the weekend.
Rchrdl, Cal 70 256 40 76 .:1111 1 Mr. and Mrs. Homer Hart·
Powell, Bat 75 257 fl 11 .296 sook and childrJll!- Columbua,
Crdenl, Col 73 265 M 77 .291 were recent Bui•ts of ber par·
liehem, Cal 66 1711 19 52 .2tl enls Mr. and Mrs. John ShUiing_
Home Ruas .
Several Wilkesville men and
N • I I• a al Lea1ue:
boys ore working at Wild Cal
Uraves 25: Alle11, Phillie , Hart, Hollow which Is being improv·
Giants and TOrre, Braves 20; ed by the Wild Cat Hollow Co.,
:ta.rsell 1 Pirates 29.
which purchased several hun·
American League: F. Robin· dred ~cres recenUy . There will
;on, Orioles ZO : Scott, Red Sax be camping, swimming, bootlftl
18; Kaiine, Tigers 17; Powell and maybe an air strip built.
ond R Robinson, Orlolos, 1 Geor1e Jones Is a medical paColavito, Indiana and Oliva, ·!lent al Holler Hospital.
rwins 16.
Mr. and . Mra. Junior Suavely
Rani Balled 111
1 were recent ~Utsls of hia parN alton al Le...,.: Aaron, enls , Mr. and Mrs.
McCoy
1
!raves M: White, Phlllies IS; 1 Snavely.
\lien, Pbtitte&amp; 54: Slaflell, I Mn. Floyd . Davis Is visiting
Pirates 53; Mays, Gianta 52.
~latlves m P1tlsburgh aiJ!! Bal·
A01erkaa Leag~e: B. Robin- Itunore.
,,
1011, Orioles 118: Powell, Orioles
- - ,.- - i6: Scot~ Red Sas 52; F. I
7 AT ARROWHEAD
'lobinsoo, Orioles 50; KeUne, Seven members of Boy Scout
li1ers 41.
·
1Troop 249 spent ,last week at
Pll&lt;;hinl
. i Camp Arrowhead.
Attending
Nalloaal
Llapo: Perr 1were Benny WriBhl, Dlnny
JlanJI 12-1: Knowlea, Pbilll~ ; Hood, Joe Welker, Marty
ond 'tuellar, ~1tr01 6-1; Kou-! VaUBbD, To~y Vau&amp;hn, Joo DiJ..
'ax, 1 Dodgen 15-3; Mariehal,! lard, John Ash and Scol!t Mas&gt;iants 13-1.
Melvin Hood. Boys compte~
Aqmicu Lei&amp;JII: I. MiliF 1illl the m~ swim were Danny
lnd Watt, Ori~ 6-1; Barbei', ;Hood and Tony Vaughn. AU .IIJe
lrlo"' and $111ford, An&amp;~il .. . boyl ~ted enJ•Yinll fhem.
l; MCN~, Orloltli 7-:1,
' ' 1Hlvq,.
.
-

Just Unloaded!

Street on hme 22.

~ 1100- •

I

1

THE SHOE BOX

.Hogg &amp; Zuspan

.,_.,.,•lllllCUOtL

4

DI:.:.•.o.:n.,:. :. :.R.t·:._::4•:_:0.::ak~H.::l=l l:. ;_:M_:_r.::'·:.:..:.W.::ic::k:::li:::ne:_:•:::nd~inf:an~t_:d~a:ug!.'h:te~r.:_.!d~o~w"'n'-Il iD\~&amp;:~4G~a:"m~·

lild&amp;1 ff /J•

WiJkesvil}e

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lambJH, IINOI fOLAt lfTUAL ICJIMR
AiNcn ~ Jl•riOII •ha•1 6D,... ~~~~ U

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GILLETTE.
STAINLESS STE.EL
BLADES

iiiiiiiii.:.O;;::;;;;::;;;;::;;;;:;;;_==J

DILLON HONORED .
;::;;::;:·ft,;;;:. Jean Carter • away party for Wlllls
... ...... has enllJtocl ill lbe
!iJ Navy, at the home of ber
Mr. and Mrs. Bill CIF·

I D ( !11

NATIONAL LEAGUE LINE SCORES

""100 COUNT

-'

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-

1

(Au• .,....,.,..,..,

l

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1

United Preso International ' Atlanta
013 020 031)... 9 10 1
Ameriean League
IHoustoa 010 120 000- 4 8 2
Boston
041 1100 101- 7 13 21 Lemaster t6-5) ond Torre ·
New York 001 1100 0011-- I 50 Cuellar, Latman (6), Taylor t8i
Brandon &lt;1·2) and Ryau; and Bateman. LP-Cuetiar (6-1).
Taihot, Womack (4). Ramos HRs-Nicholson 2 (7th and 8th),
(6), Hamilton (t) and Gibbs.!
LP-Talbol (7-41). HRs-Smith !Torre (20th! . Wynn (14tlll.
t6tll), Petrocelli (14th),
Cincl
000 1100 000- 0 10 2
Los Ani
010 1100 OOx- 1 5 o
Minn
001· 100 200- 4 8 0 i ,,Maloney, McCool t1 ) and
: Jeve
201 000 000- 3 7 0 , Pavletich ; Koufax n5-3l and
Merritt, Cimino 17 ) and IRoseboro. LP-Maloney (9-4).
Nixon, Zimmerman (8) ; Kelley, I
Radatz 17) and Crandall, Azcue ' - - - - - - - - - 181. WP-Merritt (H). LP· I
Kelley (Z. 4). HRs . Colavito I
:J61h), Hinton (2nd).

BAYER ASPIRIN

Shoe Sale

1

I 0

PrW6aSDRPRISEAISWtl1Un

YUIU'IIIJ'•

1

:·m·:

B~

SUMMER

l

I

Now arranretho elrded letlerl
to form the autprlu anawer, aa
1
j=~=~===~==~:t_:•:::u!!;aetted by the above cartoon..

MASON

Mra. ·

the Washoe coursese.,::~:~h
Suzy, and Mrs. He weighs 2114 p
•'
and Candi.
adds up to $4,828 at $17 a
FROM TRIP
I pound.
.
Everett Turn- 1
,, . w bd De~•bie, of Langsville!] r
ILD.,...accompanied by
Miss
·
. -~ Canaday, have retur~&gt; !
"' ad frl&gt;m a trip to the east coaot I
. and ....Uih New England. They I
;, . vlslted Harper's Ferry. 1'1'. Va ..
''.·• AflBIIIk&gt; City,.)'lew Jersey where
i• -lbey -walked on the Boardwalk.
-,;:and Coldwell, N. J., the hoi!Ie of
• Grover Cleveland. They then 1
II)Oiored to the New England I
" vltalell,
~wing the
Mark I
; _Twain Houatlin H~ford , Conn..
· ::· Pd
the HArriet Beecher Stowe !'
'
,_tBome In Lit -- htleld. Conn. In :
~~jfassachusetts. they went
to
. Jaiom. site ol the
witch
.,..
and the House of Tile SevGables, and to Plymouth.
of Plymout!J Rock ud the
n. In Booton, they
Old lronokleo, the Paul Jle. .
Home, Old North Clturoh.
ii.illbr Hill, the Mi•gternaa
and the Milts Standish
In Jlwlbury , Masa., the
visited tile John Alden
before traveling to
On the return lrlp
L"!:~~-at Valley Forp, !

r

River News

f·

I U I 1 1,~
I(SjG I I I I

3 ROOMS

Hosp'ital News

':r, .

I MOE.C'l' ·~-=--

·~-

~
~~

~~/::nzo~7,~~30a. ~~-:E~~:; , WoH Pen
Soc"etv N tes

Wllllom R. Morris, Ironton·
Horrey P. McCumber, well-·
Daflt Oft lfkstl t '
ston; Mrs. George W. Jones,
up 21, 5:35 a.m .; Alice down
~1..o~ m;t•.' ',
.
_ _ _ Wilkesville; Evan H. Hughes,
21, 6:50a.m.; Jefferson down
llr.lllll'·llrs. TOCJ • W , . .
. '
Rt. 3, Oak Hill; Mrs. Mary F
.
22, 5:30 a.m.; Orco
down
PJtly, Scajl,'_~ Kim, fit, . . . .
Holzer Hospital:
Visiting ' Gahm, Jackson· Mrs. Hershel Gauge readblp:
GaUipolll ,23, 5 p.m. : Andrew Calboun up
I J 0
Mrs. Georp Wlfll'l',
houra 1-4 and 7-8 p.m.
Par- Longfellow, Jackson.
Dam 12.1, 11. 9, runninllll'z leet ;Greenup 6:20p.m. ; Heleo R.
Richerd, iDd ~· lllil!f4'n
IIIII only on Pediatrics Ward.
Birth
on rollers, Pomeroy-Mason out, up Greenu 9·10
. So
and Mr•. Dlle Waraer iild
AdmloaloDo
. Mrs. Franklin W. Mullins, Rt. Pt. Pleasant 24.09, Hintoo 0.118 1ern down PGr~enu:·~.J. p
Mlsa Jo Smith ,visited with ~am~~y; ware . SundaY, ,~-·
Mrs. AnnaL. Sievers, &gt;II 3, Jackson, son, 11:28 a. m. atatlonary, Kanawha Falls_ 2.25 iRavenswood down Gr.;.nup .lo:: Mr. and Mrs. ·M4itrY
Miller visitors of
and'iiri! i~
Second Ave.; Joseph F. Keiser, ' TUesday; Mrs. John E. Me- falllftl, Charleston 18.112 riSing. ' 05 p.m.; Steel Ranger
do,;n and daUBhlers Sunday after- man Warner and Mark
508 Maple Dr.; 'Mrs. Oliver Graw, Pt. Pleasant, slln 5:08 p. London, Marmet and Wmfield . Greenup 3'40 am · Pamela u I noon.
The Teiin-alc
Meadaws, Rt. 2, Gallipolis;
m.,
Tuesday.
'
dBoaamls
Mwere
on
the
Sills.
'
down
Gr..;,up
.~·
.
m
.
Pen-~
i
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Geor1e
War·
Cburch
tf Ci\rlat '1\lld· born~
· .• "
·
ovements:
· 'IU • ·,
•r ·
.
.
Hobert B. Brumfield. RL I,
Discharges
Obi Rl
T't d
syl vania down Greenup 7 30 a · ner, Marg1e, R1chard. and Gor· made ice croom at tr.. ''bo I ·'
.t
M R
o ver - 1 an own 13
·
·
·
nd
t".a ~ 7~·
, ~·
. Ste Tr d
Herman of Mr. a Mrs. - •'f. ·J.,ill)lien'·
Crown C1 y; rs. obert H. Rober! w. Baylor, Mrs. Har- 6_30
4• m.: Luther Herdman down Mel- don, Mr. and Mrs .
1
Roach, Rt. I, Crown City; Eli old R. Bush, Linda s. Finley, 7:15 a.',:;··. Ha~ ~ :; ~p :.- 1dahl 5:35p.m.; Illinois up Mel- Warner, and Mark , and Mr. and of Hemlock Grove.'·.p,.~~ lt.-'"'1
C. Lambert, Sr., Rt. I. Thur- Mrs. Elmer v. Hart,
Mrs. 7:40
Cottory Y
P 14 • dahl 6:15 p.m.: Esso West Vir- Mrs. Eugene Thompson, Gina, tending were: Charlojll!, JloD; "
man: Mrs. John E. McGrew, Wayne E. Hilburn. Mrs. Rich· 1j,15 · _,;;_, w.z 0 d~!:',"~ °P2:5D ginia down Meldahl 6:50 p.m.: and Cindy atiended the Wal' nle: David and Cheryl · LalJ&gt;.!:'.''
Pt. Pleasant: Alber! E. Gm· ard D. James, Farrell Niday, a.m.; PEdeana Bosworth ~ 16 Valvohne up Meldahl 10:35 p. ner Reunlun at Mr and Mrs. ben. Martll•. and Dl!!!&lt;ie War·~·~
ther, Cllf~n; S~n~ra Riffle, Rt. ,Chauncey Rothgeb .
Howard 1 a.m. ; Jenks up 16 , 3 i .m.: m.; Z1mmer up Meldahl 1:15
ner, Jo Sm1th, Guy Snr~ent, ~~
I, West Columbia, Mrs, George : Roush.. Mrs. v1oia Rumfield, Flag Ship down 16 , 3,45 a.m.: a.m : Polly R. up Meldahl 5:10 down London 1:35 a.m.; W. H. Bobby, Billy, Bil! , )fc~,":.'.;
Stantial, PI Pleasant:
Mrs. , Mrs . Lillian ste1rr, Mrs. Victor Onward down IS, 4, 48 a.m.: a.m.
•Shaver, Jr ., up Wmfield 5:10 , Charldene and Ches~r. -~i"B&lt;:·~
James L. Hart. Rt . I, Letart; J Youftl , Jr., Mrs. Jefferson N. James Durant down 11 5.25 1 G8 Ill li D
Ipm.; Ch ickasaw down Winfield Linda Reeves, JenneJi CUmingi, "::
Mrs. Abbie . Chattin, Clifton: Baker and infant daughter, Mrs. m.: Walter Williamso~ ~p ~· D
pod• am - . Peggy 8 p.m.; Chris Jr. down Winfield Dick Sargent, Sharolj_'TI.~th;· "
Mrs. Etllel R1fe . Rt. I, Dexter; 1PaulS. Coyan and infant son 6 . 15 am . St Mar
•
Bowney
_own 8 p.m., Franklm 10:25 p.m.; Mr. Chris down Tiger Collins, Ron :$p!llli, Jr/t-"·
M
Will d MN I'
Ok M
·
·
' . . .... .
ysup 18 ' . up 11 ·20p.m.: Jim Houg·W ' fld 10 ·25
All
R G
Be l · ,~
'· . -,....:
rs.
ar
c erm,
a
rs . Arcllle Gillman and mfant 5:30a.m.; E. P. Jones down land u 12 ·40
.
ml~
.
p.m,.;
en . rover, very ·t' ~ '_ ? ~
-· · •_·
Hill; Mrs. Lawrence C. Jar· son, Mrs. Roger E. Halley and 18 5_50 am . Beaver u
~- · a.m • Mark East- Memll down Winfield 2:20 a. Housh, Mrs. Helen
n, '56; '··
19 1
rell. Ashland, Ky.; Mrs. I.eroy ,infunt son, Mrs. Steve Kearns 4:JO ·a .m.; Elgerdifl upp 19• ~~wu: 8 _· ;; a.m.: Elisha Woods m .; Knox down Winfield 3:45 Evelyn Thoma, Jl!r. ,ii'!Jf, MJ'..?"'
E. Spearry, Wellston ; James and infant son, Mrs. Paul G. S:2S a.m .: Valley Transporte~ 1down 9_-05 : :·· Sally
Polk . ~.m.; Moun tam State up Win· Gene Lambert, and :f4· . 11 ,~_ncta· - Helen Z.
, !•up
A J Pat· Kaaaw· ba .R1ver
fieldWinfield
4:2D am:
H. E. Bowles Mrs
Eugene
S a m.
JSy Mn.
Charley D, · ' ·· ... ,

I

1

wendi.

1968-7

When You Compare-- We Gain A Customer/ Check Out Meat Buysl

,

.------For Summer

Heat 1nd Eatl

Outings!

Dubuque
CANNED
PICNICS

SKINLESS
WIENERS

3! 149

Our Own-,ll aa'd
Several Varietle•
To

Choa18

From

LUNCH
MEATS

,.

GROU~·o

.
,_

BEE'f·.. ·.' ··.
.;round fresh ~·c
times dally.

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.'

Office Romances
-Ignite
Senate
Probe
.

~JDNGTON !UP!) -Sen. Iyou?"

~"Was that after Terry Golden Federal Judge M. Joseph Blumenfeld and I was hoping
Thomas J. Dodd's heisted "Yes, sir."
Ibad been discharged?" be was 1Blumenfeld, Dodd's former law that . • • (it) would be
attempt to break up a pair o1ll "Are you and Mr. Boyd asked. No reason was given for ipartners, telephoned the sena.lstraightened out," Dodd said.
office · romances apparently planning to marry?" the the dismissal during testimony. tor and told him, "everybody
A month after Boyd'a deparlgnited;, the powder train of ! attorney asked. But beiore Mrs. "It was the weekend follow- · Connecticut seems to know' ture, he and Mrs. Carpenter
evenl8 ~at piunged him Into a Carpenter could answer, com- lng • •. " O'Hare repl~.
about the disloyalty of some of I managed to obtain a key and
Senalfl mvestcgatcon. .
:mlttee Chairman John c. : "And Terry Golden was your your employes but you. And entered Dodd's' office and
The charges ~f m11Conduct Stennis, D-Miss., interjected girl frlendsb"
you had better know about it." i began removing documents,
whtch brought on the Senate that it was "a rather personal "Yes, sir, and still is," said The judge said Mrs. Boyd bad taking them to her apartment
Ethics Committee's inquiry question," and the matter was O'Hare.
come to see him "and we had jto be copied.
were leveled by columnists : dropped.
i
Not Ciear
quite an emotional and hysterl· Later, Boyd turned the copies
Drew Pearson and Jack Ander-1 At anotber point, while being The testimony did not ma!ce f&amp;l meeting."
over to Pearson and Anderson.
son. But lhey were essentially cros!Hlxamlned about the remo- it clear just when Dodd found Soon alter, Dodd fired Mrs. By the fail of 1965 O'Hare and
the work of four young people val of t!Je documents, O'Hore out about Mrs. Carpenter and Carpenter. He also dismissed Miss Golden were also In on it.
in love.
conceded that he might have Boyd, who was then still Boyd, but later changed his ITbe senes of columns that led
1
It was they, all former 11lken a paper "here and there" , married. There were indica- mind and kept him on the , to the Investigation began early
employes, who remo""d from before, but tha.t he didn't lions that it came in late t964 payroll until May, 1965. "I was in 1966.
the Connecticut senator's files remove any large number until I~
that, Indirectly, it came upset about the meeting
----about 4,000 documents, some of , mid .October, 1965.
from the th~ Mrs. Boyd.
bel ween Mrs. Boyd and
I
which Pearson and Anderson I - - ··· -·
liDS
IOD
used in accusing Dodd of acting I
as an errand boy for a foreign !
agent and of diverting to hts 1
IDllSm
own pocket money intended lor
".. in his reelectioo campaign.
Linked in the intra-office 1·
0
Intrigue are James P. Boyd, a
WASHINGTON (UPil - The
37-year-old divorced father of 11
Johnson
administration is sound·
four and one time top aide to
ing
a
cautious
note of optimism
Dodd. and Mrs. Marjories '
about
the
progress
of the anti·
Carpenter, 28, a petite blonde I
Communist
war
in
South
Viet
divorcee who once worked as a
Nam.
Dodd secretary: and Michael
The President and his mili·
O'Hare, :JO, the senator's I
and civilian advisers are
Refresh skin now ana protect complexion with bath oils
former office manager, and i
and moisturizers during summer month•. When only
shapely redhead Terry Golden, ·I
the impression that the
shower is available, rub bath oil into skin llrst.
war against the V~et Cong guer· - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - 23, another- former secretary.
rillas and their
Communist
Whispers Of Romance
Racine E-R Squad
Whispers flf office romance
allies from ,North Viet
Nam I
were abroad on Capitol Hill
taken a definite turn for i
Called Out Twice
WASHINGTON ~ · tiJ!iPtJBU.
even before the ethics committhe better.
I
can policy group surgelted too
tee opened its sensational
u. s. military leaders have
The Raiine emergency sqhad day that thoae p6l!UIIq lht
public he•rmgs last month, and
begun to say that the United ·
was summoned at 5·45 p.m. nation's waterirjjt
forced
1
later testimony seemed to
States is winning the war, al· i WEST COLUMBIA - Claude Tuesday for Mark · Parsons, to pay "in direct j*oportlln"
conlirm them.
i
though they cMefully. refram , R. Van Maire, 41, died Tuesday age 4, of Antiquity, Tne young-Ito bow much U easlllll deal
Mrs. Carpenter, who told the I
from makcng any
bmetable I at his residence in West Colum- ster was rushed to Holzer
up the water.
committee she was divorced in ~·
prediCI!on.
.
.
bia, W. Va., after a 210 year ·
where he was admitted.
1963, was asked by Dodd's
The Chcef Executlv~ pomted illness.
was reported the child
The proposal - el oevthe way Tuesday durmg
an •
't
era!
In
a
position
paper
en wUattorney, "you had a social I·: x..
1 1
open-air news conference at his Born January 28, 1925,
Th 01 0d Zl ro~11 a.
er managemeat, prepared far
rel'atlonshlp with Mr. Boyd
Texas ranch, He declined to · West Columbia, he was
e squa was 80
the high-level Repnbftr•• COOl'•
since 1963, have you not?"
BACK INTEREST-Maybe It's what's up front that counts but Baby Jane Hoizer ·left
9 ' 30 p.m. for Ray .WoHe, dinatiDg cemmlotee bJIIII lull:
assess
the
military
progress
bel
son
of
the
late
Howard
D.
Van
at
''Yes, sir,'' she replied.
and Elsa MartineUI seem to share the view that It's what 'in back !hat attracts. 'B.Ib
17• of Letart Falls~-· w~o
yond praising the efforts
of Maire and Mrs. Julia
force 00 state 81111 1oea1 gov.
"And he is Important to I Ja.ne sho":ed off her backless dress at an after-theater banq~ret in New York willie
M1ss Marlmelll displayed her more subdued outfit in Cannes.
the men in the field and mak· Van Maire, West Columbia.
havmg severe pams m his
ernment, headed bJ bmer Rep.
lng it clear he felt any soft
.
.
..
and was unconsccous. WoHe
spots in the picture were on the Survcvors m addchon
to admitted at Holzer hospital
Robert Taft Jr., B-OIIID.
home front
his mother, are four
medical treatment.
Brown Completes
·
David, Arnold and Wilbur,
I ConUnued From Page One)
Institute Course
McCoyServieet
of West Columbia, and Anclre~•l
of Clifton; two sisters,
Huntington Getting
DC8 Jet Takes on
To be Thunday
Anna L. Johnson, West
New Health Center
Shepherding Craft
hia, and Mrs. Deborah
PT. PLEASANT - Puneral
1
LOS ANGELES (UP!) - A Vienna, W. Va.
WASHINGTON &lt;UP!) services for a-ge· A. B. MllUnited Air Lines (DC8)
jet Mr. Van Matre was ~
grants ·totaling $494,155 to
Coy, 63, Glenwood, d be CO!Io
developed engine trouble mid· her of the West Columbca EUB nance construction of a
dueled at 2 p.m. (J!lS'l\) ,:J.'iuln.
way across the Pacific Ocean Church where funeral servcces nity mental health center
day at the Goodbopp jJaptist
from Hawail to Los Angeles will be conducted Friday. at 2 Huntington, W. Va., were
Church, In Gallla !!JII!I!!r, bJ till
today and the Coast Guard sent P· m. Rev. Lester Lane will be nounced here Tuesday.
Rev. Raymond Dilllla. Burial
a plane to shepherd the strick· officiating. Burial will be in The National Institutes of will he in Goodhope Cemetery.
en craft.
the Graham Cemetery. Friends Health of the U. S. p u b J i c Friends may ;~ from 1-8
A Coast Guard spokesman may call anyhme at the resc- Health Service approved an p.m. (EDT) wediiifclar 111 the
oaid the flight had just reach- dence after 3 P· m. Thursday. award of $376,793, while a $117,· Crow-Russell Fu!le!'al Home.
ed the mid-Pacific Ocean sla362 grant was approved by the Calling hours afUI'!~p:m. W~
lion November, a cutter, when BEAR RULES
Appalachian. Regiooal Commis- nesday will be at tJie homl of
the captain radioed that he had TRENTON Ill J (UP!) _ 11, smn, according to U. S. Rep. Herbert Capper II lcotlown,
5
shut down one of the four jet
. th 1a' t. ·k .ll b
Arch Moore Jr., (R-W. Va.)
OhiG.
.
agamsewo1aear
1
engmes.
New Jersey -but only if it's
HIT AND SKIPPED
natiVe-horn resident.
. .
.
State Fish and Game
Pomeroy police mvestigated a lor Lester G. McNamara .
miShap a 4:30 p. m. Tue~day th di fn
lion Tuesda when he
on Sycamore-st when an umden- .e s 1 c
Y•
tilled car or truck backed Into du~tssed a case ag~am~~s~t~t:w~~o
'k Fatr Lawn, N.J.,
8 vehlcIe owned by J hn Aet • who shot and killed a
be M 29
JUMB().10CKEY- Actor er, 24, Pomeroy, causmg front anaray.
eodd
b
Gene Barry was thf big
ama e.
Although McNamara had
winner In a series of races
recently fined a farmer $20 for
at the Elephant Jockey
WEATHER
shootJng
a 230-pound
Clull, Sydney, Australia.
Barry Is shown in tbv vieThunderstorm~ eadlng north bear, he said the Hmiaiayanr
tory parade which climaxed this evening and all but ••· which either escaped from
lr-------~---------""'1.
the ctiirily event.
treme aoutb late lonlght. Low New York state park or
·.I II a
15-72 sooth. Thursday falr, a circus-was an "exotic
• IIUle cooler.
·
aot protecred by state law.

in !

1

OPEN FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY
8:30 TO 8:30
SWIFT'S PIEMIUM U. S. GOVT. INSPECTED

HUCK ROAST
CHOICE CENTER CUT

Adm• • l rat•

Has 0p1•

Ab ut Winning

I'

lb.
SWIFT'S PREMIUM U. S. GOVT. INSPECT£

SLICED
BACON

'

)

I

I

I

•

I

I

I

I

FISH
STICKS

1-lb.auc

LEAN·MI[D
I

I

I

$1
ENGLISH
3
CUT ROAST

SWIFT'S PREMIUM U. $, GOVT.INSPECTED

TASTE·O·SEA

I

I

I

I

I

PKG.

il

a-oz.

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

PKGS.

I

~

MIX OR Mi\'n'll

BLUE STAR
FROZEN DINNERS

11-ox.Jgc
2

GROUND CHUCK

PKGS.

I

I

yi~

I

I

I

I

lb.

Beans &amp; Franks - Macaroni &amp; Cheese
Corned Beef Hash - Spaghetti &amp; Meat Balls

2 75c
PKGS.

YOUR
CHOICE

I

BLUE STAR
FROZEN DINNERS

BRAUNSCHWEIGER IJHUBS (8-oz.)
S~11WICH SPREAD CHUBS (8-oz.)
HAM SUU CHUBS (6-oz.)

GROUND BEEF

I

~H " I'IO'\

SWIFT'S PREMIUM U. S. GOVT. INSPECTED

SWIFT'S PREMIUM U. S. GOVT. INSPECTED

f - Chicken - Meat Laaf
Salisbury Sleuk - Turkey

"un 1('11

I

s·gc

39CPKG.

•

j.

Mr. Van Matre
n·Ies Tuesday

Je·

1

.

I

GARDEN OF BARGAINS
CAI·IDl FIINCN FRIED

SWIFT'S

VIENNA SAUSAGE

• • 1

llSYMONOAY

LIQUID DETERGENT

, ,

5
3

4 ....

Can'

(Sc ofO

B1ls.

A;•·
Sue

• I I I I I I I I I I I I I I

OIL MONTE

$'1 PORI I BEANS
..'
$1 HARVARD BEETS
liBBY'S

I ... .

29c

CATSUP ............ ,4 ~~.~-

s1
79c
PEANUT BUnER
TOMATOES
6 $1
FRUIT COCKTAIL •••• 3N~;:;· $1
BIG TOP

2

10c OFF

I I I I I

28·••·
Jar

SNOW FLOSS

•••~•••••~

I I

STOULY'I

32·0'-

RINSO

BLUE

ROBSONS

MA IROWII

POTATOES •••••••••.10 :~~!~ s1 STRAWBERRY PRESERVES

303
Can'

BAT MAN &amp; ROBIN MUGS

29c

I

•

•••

•

STOKELY'S WHOLE

UNPEELED APRICOTS

I

I I

I

It-or.
lor

8

4

Cant

16-oL

..

BUSH'S

(IQ

Jon
303

10 '1
5 C1n1 $1
STOKitY'I
TOMATO JUICE
10 ''"' $1
ELBERTA PEACHES •••••• 3N:~:~ •1
BAT MAN &amp; ROBIN GLASSES
19•.
RED KIDNEY BEANS
&lt;$'

300

C.lll

301

I II

•

l·oz.

I I

I

I 0

F&amp;P

°

.' •

lit:\

on u \H n

Pork Shoulder • • •

lli:\OIIH\HII

GREEN GIANT

PILLSBURY

LEAF SPINACH
BABY PEAS ;. buttersa••·
SPEARS

10-0I.
pkgs.

Sukarno Takes

,
I

14-...

4

1

CAKE MIX

Pinef!pple

DEVILS FOOD - YELLOW - WHITE

$

FRENCH FRIED

Potatoes
Dolly Madison

"GARDEN DEW'' FRESH PRODUCE
CAROLINA NEW WHITE

POTATOES

\

CALIFORNIA VALENCIA

49c
39c

'

ORANGES
GRAPES :T~ST~ T~EA~
RED GRAPES
LG. SIZE

I I I I I I I I I I I

."

\J

'

.....
•

..
if

'

..,.

.\ i
..

~
~

DOZ.

NEW JUICY WHITE SEEDLESS

t

I I I I I I I

SALAD

c

20·1b.
BAG

LL

NEW ;CROP

f.IEWY FRESH

I I I I II II • • ·- -Ll...

~

29c

29~

BOYS

CORRECTION

SWIM SUITS

(TO OUR TUESDAY SALE ADV.)

DRESSING

WOMENS
Glrlt Seenuclcer

LADIES

SHORTS

GOWNS
*1·98 h ~·98

::",x __ 59c

JUST RECEtVEDI

NEW StUPMENT ••• SHORTS &amp; BLOUSES

·RAC1NE DEPT. STORE
RA.C.INl, Q.

QT.

JAR _ _

NEW

POTATOES·

.39c '10 a=. 49c

HUSH PUPPIES
Reg. Price
$9.99 _ _ _ SALE
TUESDAY'S AD

s

.88

HAD REG. PRICE AT $6.99

T~E · SH.OE BO~
MIDDLEPOR1', 0.

With Barbecue Sauce
ltSCUITI I AQY .IOAI.il.

Cookies:

WAID.CROSS
RAQNE, _

�,i

' '

,.

.

,.,_

'

--

·"

-'?.. •••

.~

.1WO
~

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' ·~,

·~
·
'•'•;,
"

.'

Office Romances
-Ignite
Senate
Probe
.

~JDNGTON !UP!) -Sen. Iyou?"

~"Was that after Terry Golden Federal Judge M. Joseph Blumenfeld and I was hoping
Thomas J. Dodd's heisted "Yes, sir."
Ibad been discharged?" be was 1Blumenfeld, Dodd's former law that . • • (it) would be
attempt to break up a pair o1ll "Are you and Mr. Boyd asked. No reason was given for ipartners, telephoned the sena.lstraightened out," Dodd said.
office · romances apparently planning to marry?" the the dismissal during testimony. tor and told him, "everybody
A month after Boyd'a deparlgnited;, the powder train of ! attorney asked. But beiore Mrs. "It was the weekend follow- · Connecticut seems to know' ture, he and Mrs. Carpenter
evenl8 ~at piunged him Into a Carpenter could answer, com- lng • •. " O'Hare repl~.
about the disloyalty of some of I managed to obtain a key and
Senalfl mvestcgatcon. .
:mlttee Chairman John c. : "And Terry Golden was your your employes but you. And entered Dodd's' office and
The charges ~f m11Conduct Stennis, D-Miss., interjected girl frlendsb"
you had better know about it." i began removing documents,
whtch brought on the Senate that it was "a rather personal "Yes, sir, and still is," said The judge said Mrs. Boyd bad taking them to her apartment
Ethics Committee's inquiry question," and the matter was O'Hare.
come to see him "and we had jto be copied.
were leveled by columnists : dropped.
i
Not Ciear
quite an emotional and hysterl· Later, Boyd turned the copies
Drew Pearson and Jack Ander-1 At anotber point, while being The testimony did not ma!ce f&amp;l meeting."
over to Pearson and Anderson.
son. But lhey were essentially cros!Hlxamlned about the remo- it clear just when Dodd found Soon alter, Dodd fired Mrs. By the fail of 1965 O'Hare and
the work of four young people val of t!Je documents, O'Hore out about Mrs. Carpenter and Carpenter. He also dismissed Miss Golden were also In on it.
in love.
conceded that he might have Boyd, who was then still Boyd, but later changed his ITbe senes of columns that led
1
It was they, all former 11lken a paper "here and there" , married. There were indica- mind and kept him on the , to the Investigation began early
employes, who remo""d from before, but tha.t he didn't lions that it came in late t964 payroll until May, 1965. "I was in 1966.
the Connecticut senator's files remove any large number until I~
that, Indirectly, it came upset about the meeting
----about 4,000 documents, some of , mid .October, 1965.
from the th~ Mrs. Boyd.
bel ween Mrs. Boyd and
I
which Pearson and Anderson I - - ··· -·
liDS
IOD
used in accusing Dodd of acting I
as an errand boy for a foreign !
agent and of diverting to hts 1
IDllSm
own pocket money intended lor
".. in his reelectioo campaign.
Linked in the intra-office 1·
0
Intrigue are James P. Boyd, a
WASHINGTON (UPil - The
37-year-old divorced father of 11
Johnson
administration is sound·
four and one time top aide to
ing
a
cautious
note of optimism
Dodd. and Mrs. Marjories '
about
the
progress
of the anti·
Carpenter, 28, a petite blonde I
Communist
war
in
South
Viet
divorcee who once worked as a
Nam.
Dodd secretary: and Michael
The President and his mili·
O'Hare, :JO, the senator's I
and civilian advisers are
Refresh skin now ana protect complexion with bath oils
former office manager, and i
and moisturizers during summer month•. When only
shapely redhead Terry Golden, ·I
the impression that the
shower is available, rub bath oil into skin llrst.
war against the V~et Cong guer· - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - 23, another- former secretary.
rillas and their
Communist
Whispers Of Romance
Racine E-R Squad
Whispers flf office romance
allies from ,North Viet
Nam I
were abroad on Capitol Hill
taken a definite turn for i
Called Out Twice
WASHINGTON ~ · tiJ!iPtJBU.
even before the ethics committhe better.
I
can policy group surgelted too
tee opened its sensational
u. s. military leaders have
The Raiine emergency sqhad day that thoae p6l!UIIq lht
public he•rmgs last month, and
begun to say that the United ·
was summoned at 5·45 p.m. nation's waterirjjt
forced
1
later testimony seemed to
States is winning the war, al· i WEST COLUMBIA - Claude Tuesday for Mark · Parsons, to pay "in direct j*oportlln"
conlirm them.
i
though they cMefully. refram , R. Van Maire, 41, died Tuesday age 4, of Antiquity, Tne young-Ito bow much U easlllll deal
Mrs. Carpenter, who told the I
from makcng any
bmetable I at his residence in West Colum- ster was rushed to Holzer
up the water.
committee she was divorced in ~·
prediCI!on.
.
.
bia, W. Va., after a 210 year ·
where he was admitted.
1963, was asked by Dodd's
The Chcef Executlv~ pomted illness.
was reported the child
The proposal - el oevthe way Tuesday durmg
an •
't
era!
In
a
position
paper
en wUattorney, "you had a social I·: x..
1 1
open-air news conference at his Born January 28, 1925,
Th 01 0d Zl ro~11 a.
er managemeat, prepared far
rel'atlonshlp with Mr. Boyd
Texas ranch, He declined to · West Columbia, he was
e squa was 80
the high-level Repnbftr•• COOl'•
since 1963, have you not?"
BACK INTEREST-Maybe It's what's up front that counts but Baby Jane Hoizer ·left
9 ' 30 p.m. for Ray .WoHe, dinatiDg cemmlotee bJIIII lull:
assess
the
military
progress
bel
son
of
the
late
Howard
D.
Van
at
''Yes, sir,'' she replied.
and Elsa MartineUI seem to share the view that It's what 'in back !hat attracts. 'B.Ib
17• of Letart Falls~-· w~o
yond praising the efforts
of Maire and Mrs. Julia
force 00 state 81111 1oea1 gov.
"And he is Important to I Ja.ne sho":ed off her backless dress at an after-theater banq~ret in New York willie
M1ss Marlmelll displayed her more subdued outfit in Cannes.
the men in the field and mak· Van Maire, West Columbia.
havmg severe pams m his
ernment, headed bJ bmer Rep.
lng it clear he felt any soft
.
.
..
and was unconsccous. WoHe
spots in the picture were on the Survcvors m addchon
to admitted at Holzer hospital
Robert Taft Jr., B-OIIID.
home front
his mother, are four
medical treatment.
Brown Completes
·
David, Arnold and Wilbur,
I ConUnued From Page One)
Institute Course
McCoyServieet
of West Columbia, and Anclre~•l
of Clifton; two sisters,
Huntington Getting
DC8 Jet Takes on
To be Thunday
Anna L. Johnson, West
New Health Center
Shepherding Craft
hia, and Mrs. Deborah
PT. PLEASANT - Puneral
1
LOS ANGELES (UP!) - A Vienna, W. Va.
WASHINGTON &lt;UP!) services for a-ge· A. B. MllUnited Air Lines (DC8)
jet Mr. Van Matre was ~
grants ·totaling $494,155 to
Coy, 63, Glenwood, d be CO!Io
developed engine trouble mid· her of the West Columbca EUB nance construction of a
dueled at 2 p.m. (J!lS'l\) ,:J.'iuln.
way across the Pacific Ocean Church where funeral servcces nity mental health center
day at the Goodbopp jJaptist
from Hawail to Los Angeles will be conducted Friday. at 2 Huntington, W. Va., were
Church, In Gallla !!JII!I!!r, bJ till
today and the Coast Guard sent P· m. Rev. Lester Lane will be nounced here Tuesday.
Rev. Raymond Dilllla. Burial
a plane to shepherd the strick· officiating. Burial will be in The National Institutes of will he in Goodhope Cemetery.
en craft.
the Graham Cemetery. Friends Health of the U. S. p u b J i c Friends may ;~ from 1-8
A Coast Guard spokesman may call anyhme at the resc- Health Service approved an p.m. (EDT) wediiifclar 111 the
oaid the flight had just reach- dence after 3 P· m. Thursday. award of $376,793, while a $117,· Crow-Russell Fu!le!'al Home.
ed the mid-Pacific Ocean sla362 grant was approved by the Calling hours afUI'!~p:m. W~
lion November, a cutter, when BEAR RULES
Appalachian. Regiooal Commis- nesday will be at tJie homl of
the captain radioed that he had TRENTON Ill J (UP!) _ 11, smn, according to U. S. Rep. Herbert Capper II lcotlown,
5
shut down one of the four jet
. th 1a' t. ·k .ll b
Arch Moore Jr., (R-W. Va.)
OhiG.
.
agamsewo1aear
1
engmes.
New Jersey -but only if it's
HIT AND SKIPPED
natiVe-horn resident.
. .
.
State Fish and Game
Pomeroy police mvestigated a lor Lester G. McNamara .
miShap a 4:30 p. m. Tue~day th di fn
lion Tuesda when he
on Sycamore-st when an umden- .e s 1 c
Y•
tilled car or truck backed Into du~tssed a case ag~am~~s~t~t:w~~o
'k Fatr Lawn, N.J.,
8 vehlcIe owned by J hn Aet • who shot and killed a
be M 29
JUMB().10CKEY- Actor er, 24, Pomeroy, causmg front anaray.
eodd
b
Gene Barry was thf big
ama e.
Although McNamara had
winner In a series of races
recently fined a farmer $20 for
at the Elephant Jockey
WEATHER
shootJng
a 230-pound
Clull, Sydney, Australia.
Barry Is shown in tbv vieThunderstorm~ eadlng north bear, he said the Hmiaiayanr
tory parade which climaxed this evening and all but ••· which either escaped from
lr-------~---------""'1.
the ctiirily event.
treme aoutb late lonlght. Low New York state park or
·.I II a
15-72 sooth. Thursday falr, a circus-was an "exotic
• IIUle cooler.
·
aot protecred by state law.

in !

1

OPEN FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY
8:30 TO 8:30
SWIFT'S PIEMIUM U. S. GOVT. INSPECTED

HUCK ROAST
CHOICE CENTER CUT

Adm• • l rat•

Has 0p1•

Ab ut Winning

I'

lb.
SWIFT'S PREMIUM U. S. GOVT. INSPECT£

SLICED
BACON

'

)

I

I

I

•

I

I

I

I

FISH
STICKS

1-lb.auc

LEAN·MI[D
I

I

I

$1
ENGLISH
3
CUT ROAST

SWIFT'S PREMIUM U. $, GOVT.INSPECTED

TASTE·O·SEA

I

I

I

I

I

PKG.

il

a-oz.

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

PKGS.

I

~

MIX OR Mi\'n'll

BLUE STAR
FROZEN DINNERS

11-ox.Jgc
2

GROUND CHUCK

PKGS.

I

I

yi~

I

I

I

I

lb.

Beans &amp; Franks - Macaroni &amp; Cheese
Corned Beef Hash - Spaghetti &amp; Meat Balls

2 75c
PKGS.

YOUR
CHOICE

I

BLUE STAR
FROZEN DINNERS

BRAUNSCHWEIGER IJHUBS (8-oz.)
S~11WICH SPREAD CHUBS (8-oz.)
HAM SUU CHUBS (6-oz.)

GROUND BEEF

I

~H " I'IO'\

SWIFT'S PREMIUM U. S. GOVT. INSPECTED

SWIFT'S PREMIUM U. S. GOVT. INSPECTED

f - Chicken - Meat Laaf
Salisbury Sleuk - Turkey

"un 1('11

I

s·gc

39CPKG.

•

j.

Mr. Van Matre
n·Ies Tuesday

Je·

1

.

I

GARDEN OF BARGAINS
CAI·IDl FIINCN FRIED

SWIFT'S

VIENNA SAUSAGE

• • 1

llSYMONOAY

LIQUID DETERGENT

, ,

5
3

4 ....

Can'

(Sc ofO

B1ls.

A;•·
Sue

• I I I I I I I I I I I I I I

OIL MONTE

$'1 PORI I BEANS
..'
$1 HARVARD BEETS
liBBY'S

I ... .

29c

CATSUP ............ ,4 ~~.~-

s1
79c
PEANUT BUnER
TOMATOES
6 $1
FRUIT COCKTAIL •••• 3N~;:;· $1
BIG TOP

2

10c OFF

I I I I I

28·••·
Jar

SNOW FLOSS

•••~•••••~

I I

STOULY'I

32·0'-

RINSO

BLUE

ROBSONS

MA IROWII

POTATOES •••••••••.10 :~~!~ s1 STRAWBERRY PRESERVES

303
Can'

BAT MAN &amp; ROBIN MUGS

29c

I

•

•••

•

STOKELY'S WHOLE

UNPEELED APRICOTS

I

I I

I

It-or.
lor

8

4

Cant

16-oL

..

BUSH'S

(IQ

Jon
303

10 '1
5 C1n1 $1
STOKitY'I
TOMATO JUICE
10 ''"' $1
ELBERTA PEACHES •••••• 3N:~:~ •1
BAT MAN &amp; ROBIN GLASSES
19•.
RED KIDNEY BEANS
&lt;$'

300

C.lll

301

I II

•

l·oz.

I I

I

I 0

F&amp;P

°

.' •

lit:\

on u \H n

Pork Shoulder • • •

lli:\OIIH\HII

GREEN GIANT

PILLSBURY

LEAF SPINACH
BABY PEAS ;. buttersa••·
SPEARS

10-0I.
pkgs.

Sukarno Takes

,
I

14-...

4

1

CAKE MIX

Pinef!pple

DEVILS FOOD - YELLOW - WHITE

$

FRENCH FRIED

Potatoes
Dolly Madison

"GARDEN DEW'' FRESH PRODUCE
CAROLINA NEW WHITE

POTATOES

\

CALIFORNIA VALENCIA

49c
39c

'

ORANGES
GRAPES :T~ST~ T~EA~
RED GRAPES
LG. SIZE

I I I I I I I I I I I

."

\J

'

.....
•

..
if

'

..,.

.\ i
..

~
~

DOZ.

NEW JUICY WHITE SEEDLESS

t

I I I I I I I

SALAD

c

20·1b.
BAG

LL

NEW ;CROP

f.IEWY FRESH

I I I I II II • • ·- -Ll...

~

29c

29~

BOYS

CORRECTION

SWIM SUITS

(TO OUR TUESDAY SALE ADV.)

DRESSING

WOMENS
Glrlt Seenuclcer

LADIES

SHORTS

GOWNS
*1·98 h ~·98

::",x __ 59c

JUST RECEtVEDI

NEW StUPMENT ••• SHORTS &amp; BLOUSES

·RAC1NE DEPT. STORE
RA.C.INl, Q.

QT.

JAR _ _

NEW

POTATOES·

.39c '10 a=. 49c

HUSH PUPPIES
Reg. Price
$9.99 _ _ _ SALE
TUESDAY'S AD

s

.88

HAD REG. PRICE AT $6.99

T~E · SH.OE BO~
MIDDLEPOR1', 0.

With Barbecue Sauce
ltSCUITI I AQY .IOAI.il.

Cookies:

WAID.CROSS
RAQNE, _

�•· .
.I

)

'r

1116 6

~~~~~a.~ ~~:~:~;::!&lt;::~eym:J

• Board
as IronJnP'
rl

.
•.~ YQRit
-In theiCald'!'ell, vtce president of Na~ 1\ iiWI d~ys when Mama tlo•ol Starch and Chemical
~Dtd's shirts instead of Corp., said m a recent inter·
~- ....
aa.....
!'"""'•
m to the I• undry , view.
"if' always dipped the collars "Starch Is made from corn,
•ipla MD o1 ~llreb to give them ltaplo:a, potatoes aod wheat. It
.~ lin
. 1 h·"
k
·
d f
hu b t
'Jlll
1 ou too .
I also IS rna e rom sorg m u
II" 11 was a long lime ago not often, as you hlve to use
•"" ... h h
ed 1orwa rd a com b'me. "
...,J'!! as .mov
il a subotanee with many use- In 1965. the corn otarch lndutlpl Pfllperlies beyond the iron-1 try In tho. ~nited States pro.
Iiiii IIIlard.
duced 2.6 billion pound• of corn
Slarcb is used to make paper Istarch, an increase of 2.4 .bll·
atron&amp;l!r, " ~ ,liCfdlllve and as lion pounds over tho previOUS
• blbder u well as a glue.
year.
· ·· Slarcb now lakes the slicki- In addition to National Starch
Gill ol caramel candy.
and Chemical Corp., major pro.
: ,''II ~-·~ s!rongesl films\ ducero of corn star~h are C~rn
·· ••
~'1\eS,"· Dr. Carlyle Products Co., American-Maize
•
&lt; •• '

..,N

°

!

'1

'

Parl~lorly

elferllve 1o
proleet your hair from
ou111•er grime Is ·Ibis cool
yellow silk wrap-•p hlghligbltd . by softly draped
tu&lt;k framing &amp;b• lace aDd
IIM:kllc.

"Super-Right" Quality

CHUCK
SEil·SERVICE,
PRE·PACIAGED MEATS
t
CAN BEA
•

BLADE

CUT

LUNCH MEAT

59c

39c

CAP'N JOHN FROZEN

Fine Grocery Features!

a

'

I
I

I'
'

''
I

I

.,•._

ANN PAGE

ANN PAGE

Barbecue Sauce

Salad Dressing

28-oz.

18-oz.
bottle

49c

JJc

1'12-qt.
(ar

7 3c
I

IULTANA-STRAWIIIRRY

ANN PAIIE-GROUND

Black Pepper · · 4-oz. can 35c Preserves ··· · · · 2!-lb. far 98c
ANN PAGI..OUit FIN IIT

A&amp;P ALL flUTTER

Pound Cake · · 12-oz. pkg. 59c
CONCENTRATED

lemonade · · · · 6-oz. can 1Oc

';~L89c

DRUM~TICKS

lb.

FIIIZIR QUEEN FROZEN

---~(t

Frozen Food Features!

J

lb. 65c

Chicken legs · · · · · ·· · lb. 49c
Chicken Breast · ·· · ·· lb. 59c
BULK FROZEN
Halibut Fillets · · · ··· · · lb. 49c
CAP'N JOHN FROZEN
Scallops ·· · · 12-oz. pkg. 69c

COIIYIUGHTCIItM, THE Gft!AT ATLANTIC&amp;. ..ACifiC TEA CO .• tNC.

well-developed in fiower-visil·
ing insects, sucb as butterflies
and bees. Bees &lt;11n readily be
trained to come to a particular
J'Yl""!i~ FIRSTS
Icolor for food, according to the
the first vice Encyclopaedia Britannica.
. become president ,
'
I
death of a preSI-~
·
tr~ldent to be mar- First Incumbent U. S. pr~i­
'ln ytfl_ce: first presi· dent to travel to a
fore~gn
."hom Impeach- t'Ountry was Theodore Roosewere iotroduc- velt, who visited Panama in

69c ·

lb.

Round Bone Roast · · lb. 49c
Beef Roast .... · .. ·.. lb. 49c
Stewing Beef ·· · · · · · · lb. 69c
Beefliver .. · .. ·.. .. .. lb. 49c

Iotti•

or. Color sense is especially

5 VARIETIES

leef Steaks · · 1-lb. pkg. 89c Breaded Perch 2-lb. pkg. 99c

Ia this a rood reason for shopping A&amp;P? It's one of many.

CREAM PIES

lb. 59c

Boneless Chuck

PORK ROAST

TURKEY

We think we have the answer.
We have a policy.
We put the best side down.
The side you don't see ill guaranteed to be eJual to
tr better than the side you can see.

COLOR CONSCIOUS .. . 1
Insects are conscious or col·

lb.

Chuck Steak · · · · · · · · lb. 49c Rib Steaks ·i~~.- in' · · · lb. 99c
Steaks · · lb. $1.69
Shoulder Steak · · · ·· · lb. 59c Delmonlca
SUPER-RIGHT SKINLISS
Grtund Chuck · ·· · ··· · lb. 65c Wieners · ·· ··· l-Ib. pkg. 65c

It'll a problem ... a problem we've given a lo; of thought.

MORTON- FROZEN

\

READY FOR THE GRILLE

f

Simple! u ABC.
Effective! No mort gamble.
Fair and square! Sure because "We Care.''

c

WELL
TRIMMED

SUPER-RIGHT

Pork Steeb

You can M the top side of the meat but not the bottom.

So y011 wonder.

__

,...
."...

BUTT STYLE

lb.

The 11teak ltoks good, but il the bottom all bone and fat?

Kennedy is
Expert Rider

·

Meats 1

OUII OWN

Paprika ··· ·· ·· · 4-oz. can 35c Tea Bags · · Pkg. of 48- SSe
ANN PAGI..OUII FINEST

Orange Drink ·:· · 2 cans 59c

'I

Italian Dressing 8-oz. btl. 29c Instant Milk 12-qt. pkg. 1.09
2-lb., t-oz.con

Hl-C IMITATION-9-oL cons

I'

WHITIHOUSI-NON·FAT

SULTANA-In Tomato Sauco

AlP BRAND

Pork &amp;Beans .. · .... · can 29c Instant CoffH 10-oz.jar 1.09
A&amp;P IRANO

SULTANA BRAND

Plain Olives • lSi-oz. jar 79c Charcoal ··· ·· · 20 lb. bag 99c

Jane· Parker Favorites!

2

...

Fruits and Vegetables!

--l"#.
....t
!"
'-.....

JANE PARKER SANDWICH CREME

Cookies · · · ··· ll-lb. pkg. 39c

MADE WITH BUTTERMILK

JANI PJ,RKIR PINEAPPLI OR

Enriched Bread

lemon Pies · · · · · ·· · each 49c

4

JAN I PARKER IROWN

Sugcir Buns .. · .. ·.. pkg. 35c

..

1-lb.
~

1ooves

89c

CALIFORNIA-PLUMJ OR

CALIFORNIA

Seedless Grapes ·· · · · · lb. 29c

N
.
..
ow we have "'edware and ' Involved In submitting
opeo_ seasoo on American ; OW R claims to the
physicla•s and. surgeons. The ! government lor
m"?lcos are bemg ca't as the for money already paid to
bao guys who wear the black I physicians or surgeons
hats and represent the anti response to direct billing.
soc1al elements at th~ shoot-out There I!! oot much doubt
up the gulch It lSD t fair.
the AMA action somewhat
_llore speCifically, the physi- reflected resentment of the
Clans and surgeons are being medical profession .against the
accused of penalizing old-age !henry of Medicare. But more
pahe•ts , '" an expression of l is involved thaa mere
their own dissatisfaction with ment. 11 cannot he showu
the theory and pracllce of conclusively that the
Medicare.
1are wrong in seeking
The m~taat compltint against[ maintain the maximum
lhe medical profe•slon is that patieot relationship evea to the
the American Medical Assocla- extent ol continuiag Instead of
tw• 1.11. recem: convention voted abandoning . the practice of
to advise its members to adopt direct bllliag to paUenls and
• procedure freely permitted direct payment to doctors.
by the Medicare act in billing The medical profession is
their older patients.
likely to get the henelil of
Congress chose to allow tbe doubt on that because the
dol!loro an optioo in rendering politics ol the situation
is
their bills. They may bill the loaded against Olem.
The
older patient directly or the p•ysirians and surgeons will he
medicos, themselves, may sub- lucky, it must be remembered,
mit their charges to the federal if they escape blame for all
government for compensation. bugs and other weaknesses in
AMA voled to bill directly and the Medicare program includthe chorus of protest arose and in8 the weakness built into it
otill Is soaring.
by the politicians themselves.
It i• argued that the older The politicians built in a
men and women
will be weakness by over-selling and
confused, befuddled and frus- under-explaining to the older
lr ated by the paper
work folks what they actually should

~

-- ·

_'

::.•.-:a~·~ -:mi: ~~~c~:d•agrl:1

U:e
!eal.::.per
made by politiCians to propel Busy physlci81UI figure they
medicare through Copgress.
would Reed another office
If Tim Is disappointed iR any employe to do the paper work.
of bls emergency demands, he Federal Medicare provides no
expect aod the llket, llinlla· Is not likely to blame the compeasation lor such added
OR reallullo• of their politicians, Tim Is too naive cosl8.
.
These limllaUo118 con- !l&lt;lHtically to do.that. Old Tim
slst of the shortage of medical, will blame the hospitals, cuss But Congress. did give the
hoapl181 and techRical person- tne doctors and build up more mediCal professiOn !he op.lloa ofl
plus the .polellllal shortage popular resentment against the assummg those costa of paperof hospital ana nunlng borne dedicated men and women in work or escap~ng some of
beds for care of the oldsters. the medical proleoston.
them. The med~cs chose ~
Whe• the Hon. Timothy
.
.
less cosily optwn for which
As for direct b!lll~, doctor to they no~ are being aet up by
Tugbutton, aged 67• now hollers! paUent, old Tim s regular usually Impartial edl_to~ wrtfor emergencytallreatm~nt, ~ d?"tor, a perceptive, compas- lers a_nd by the poliUCiana as
doctor, .a hospi room, round lsmnate, skllllul man,, already potenl!al enemies. of the com::~~~ ':'lal nurses, the, old Ih~s explamed to Tim that moo maR, espec!Bily the old
•
peel to get em d1rect b!lhng Will save a ones.
'

Boundaries Set for ASC'
darles of eadl oommunlty withIn , the county where electiolll
of ASC epmmunlty commitwlll be held 811 Aug. !0. Tht
electlom will be by mail with
ballotJ being malle-d to "eligible
voten July 29.
,·
llolmdarlu of I he YarillUs
communJU"" wf!ere commitlee!l
will be elected are toW118blp
boundaries of eadl townablp:
Addlsen, Chellbire, Clay, Gr-.
field, GuyaR, Harrlao~, Huntlngton, MOJrglltl, Onto, Perry,
Racc11011, Sprillgfleld and Walnut. The f9wnsbiJls of GaillpoIts and Green will be joined aRd
will elect 1 10mbmed commit-

~

tee.

tee,

T. DeWiit JenkiM, Superinlendent t1 Speed, announced 10day that IIIe Harness Racing
Program at the 11166, Jackson
County Fair would offer Ohio
1-id'semen the largest purses
ever in the history of the lllth
vear old lair.
Jenl,ins said that for t h e
lirsl time the Jackson Counlv
Fair would present to the raC.
lng fans four elasses in t b e
Jhio Colt Stakes. He added
lilere weuld he a two year old
!rot, 1 two year old pace, 1
:hree year old trot, and a three
rear old ~ce. The Ohio colts
• ill be racing lor an estimated
&gt;urse of $1,775 In each race.
Joe Kisor, Ra~'lllSecretary,
was enthusiaalic Wrua remarks
1tating that this WI!! •tlie"li..st
Racing Pfi~01 ever to be
oresenled ill ':f&gt;ftl&lt;son County.
-- - " .. ·

The number of entries Is
er than anticipated, Kisor said.
The Race Secretary added
that to date over one hnr1dredj
tWo and three year old coll8
have been staked in the Jack·
son County Colt Stak... The
Jackson County Fair is a
her of the Southern Ohio Fairs
Racing Circle which
es many Southern and
eastern Ohio counties, Kisor added.
In additi011 t. the toll !!lakes,
three night progra1118 under the
lights at the Jacksoa County
Fairground will present races
for IIOR·Winnel'l! of $15,000, no~t­
wtoner1 ol $4,000 and noa-winnara ol $1,000 iD both the
.and pace classification, JeJtl&lt;inll
said.
The Speed Committee
which Pres Turner of Jacltsea,
Wendell Willis ol Wellston
· EYID Davis of Oak Hill, In
addition to Jenkins and Kisor,
have arranged again for parimutuel betting includiRg
daily double.

~, ~
~y ~ltlllated·~·~ -~ · II!.

_,l""in---

rar-

a

lmditioo: .---

Nonnan Rockwell paints the cover for your

ew

s
It's 1tere, it's FREE
-·and pacUd witll gifts!

Galllpolit, Ohio,
SALEs REPORT or
Ol:io Valley Livestock Co.
HOGS - 175 to 220 lbs. 24 to
26; 220 to 250 lbs. 25 to
:W;
Light 24 to 26; Fat Sows 16 to
18; Stags 12 to 18; Boars 12 to
18; Sows and Pigs 75 to 150;
Shoats 10 to 22.
CATTLE - Steers 18 to 24:
Heifers 16 to 23 ; Baby
Beef
The ferret a domestic 2b to 25; Fat Cows 14 to 20
llreed of the' wild polecat,
II in danger of extinction Canners 12 to 16; Bulls 18 to 22;
iD lhe United States be- Milk Cows 100 to 200.
cause the ·prairie dog, ita
VEAL CALVES - Tops 28.·
1118111 ~~Puree of food, has 80: SecoRds :i2 to 25; Medium
almOit disappeared. Fer- 20 to 22: Com. &amp; Hvs. 20 to 28;
rets bavt~ been used since
the days of the Romans iD Culls 16 to 20.
SHEEP - Ewes aad LID8. 5
destroying rata and other
vermill and :111 driving ·rib- to 10; Stock Elves S to 10; Fat
bits fro m their liuii-OWa. Sheep 4 to 10: Culls 1 to
5
The femt's llold OD quarry Bucks 4 to 10 Fat Wethers 5
Is u obalinale u a bull· to 10.
;
doe'I.
LAMBS - Tops 23 Seconds
eh............ll..nlai
II to 22; Light Wta. 16 m 20;
Common 15 to 18.

Spartfillg 1ritlt idea&amp; is
dUB breocl-.w Top Value StamP8
GiA Ca~ From its &lt;rigi•"'l
_ . paiDtiog by ~ Rockwell,
al through its 17% pages •••
paclred with O¥er 3,000 giftai

New famoas bralld

From
1'lluMwick pool ta ble8 to Sony
portable television. From. Jade
~ toiletries for men to Chips 'n
Twitls dodUnc for children.
RallieS.

New 1lillds Ill gifts. New kits and
materials for Dobbyists, new helps
b do-it-youraelfers, dotbea 'a
pdcete b te.fngers. (Te say
r&gt;tlair:g of ears IIGd racewa)'ll for
s6ot raciag fans.)
Ia aiMri, here's more reasoo than
_ . t. 1111w Top Value Stamps!

,.Gel

;yow free catalog now c::_ ·

Oranges or lemons 10 for 59c

Tasty Do1ry Selections!
ANN PAGE CORN OIL

MILD-TASTY

Margarine 3 - l-Ib. pkgs. $1.

Longhorn Cheese
lb.

Blutbtr~lts · ·· ·· · · · pints 49c

A&amp;P RIAL CUAM

Topping · · · · · · 7-oz. can 49c

69c

MARVEL VANIUA

Ice Cream • Gal. carton $1.09
-

Ul

MORE FOR YOUR MONEY AT A&amp;P!
. .

~

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.

..
.· ..
.
.
flirt 111e01 mueh lo the woman who •pends
Ia die 1811. s-th on • •P••Ial body eream
aad Jean• 1 subUe Chantilly Kent &amp;o go
.

ltliawr wear.

.

PLAID STAMPS TOO!

PLAY

\

J.

CLIP OR COPY THESE Flll SLIPS

BONUSrr::~=wa=w

BING

I"RIZ • • LIP

. ""'

AT YOUR A&amp;PI
NOTICE-Our IONUS BINGO 1•1111 ends July 16. ao.
NUS BINGO prlu Slips Pro.
gr1m No. 11 m1y Ill"""""
ed for cuh prl.. through
July 23, 1966.

.

.

,, '
{

,,. '
,,·

"

'.

.

. '.'

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· ,. . .
· ·, •. , lliaoe :wt..·
'file Chairnlan rem!DJed
~~=.,..~=:-~ ·$'~'
JQ!l'l lhal the el~ .u I
fl
. . .
whlcl iioo;
~lbreeeo~- a tbe ~
'lo a4 •n:o1: '
two ~les for e8eb ~ JDiDlsterl llcd7• · 'J'be•l'fllrrne,il~o •l&gt; ·.
mimlty. Tbe cha~; . ,ICe 1118)' be
lllll!er,"'iiiimlj ·. ·r~t "':
cihali'IIWI, and !bird · ~ ~- PerM!!!~&lt; ilol '· ti • , ;
membe+ of the elecied , AIIC 11p1 volfnC ap wile ·• ·· b · ,,! ,
COIIUjllttee will also ~· u ebarge et the ~ oper• ·
delelales to ~ Cllllllty _.. IlGas 0111111 111u,e fanB: Itt ~ '""
venliQ.n to he held 80011 iben- .., eligible to Wtie · m IIIII' ela&gt; •. ,,
after, where Iannen will be Uoas. Eligibility to" WD' ~ fl" ,; .
eiec:ted to fill vacancilll ,.. IIIII to hold Glflce as a eoJIIIIIIIIet• , , ,
ASC county commiltee. TIM aJ. maa _ nelrulrlcled bf re&amp; -.
18
female committee will 1erve
o1 race, eol«';•ti'INJd;w ~ .. "
108
, .,, ,. .... ,., ,
81 alteraate delegate. It . the llaul orJciD.
'
;;.a
'"
!: ' ~
'"

tlonnaa RDck...a .K _.k. Tile _ , 1• and ..,_ doe&amp; I::...e
Dl8do l:io
Aftricao:
I
:Joy
evideo:i i:: ll:io: ooigiDal ..,...,. iii·•-.Uo:: foJr Top YiWe ~

CALifORNIA IUNKJJT

fRESH

.; '

'66 Jackson Fair Program

·'

PEACHES

~· ~V~;
,

J. Melvla Gll!Jert,
Alrltultural Stabllllallolf· ~ lllcll·
Cooservallon County
,

Largest Purse Offered in

--

GEORGIA

Nectarines .. · ...... · lb. 29c

.~

· "".

Doctors Unfairly Cast as 'The Bad Guys'
In Sh00t out Up•the•GUIC·h WJt• hMedicare

K

ROAST

1906.

The National Win~

than 25 planb in the United I
•
d
1 1 ld ·~d•e
c s 1 d 11 • ~
and
1
DODGE CITY Kan (UPli - fl Avery of Kansas brought hill reconstructe par o o "" • by the Santa Fe Railroad from Dodge lty a ur ay
States angredd overs~as food sup- 'I A herd of l~ngho~ ,attJe o~n saddle and joined trail City w•• the final Item for the Topeka stood on the track In reminder of the earlier era,
pUes In
lenl8 or
• le~- wrangled by a band of Texas boss Charles Schremer on trail hands, who planned to
' -- - -____· ==-=.-.::::--;:;-;;;t,;;;;;-rii;
tiles, paper and pharmaceutl·l cowboys rumbled through hiS· horseback at the bead of the return to Texas Sunday With
a go
Halley and Jnu of l'loral City,
cats.
'
.
I toric Front Street S~turday, parade.
steers unsold at auction.
on
u
Fla., Danny Newman of J...eet.
c 0 m pan y statistiCS show [ echoing the sounds of a century And instead of dusty streeUi, The troil drlvf .... the Idea[ Mrs. Mae Spears, whOJ has burg, Fla .. grandson of Mn.
the cowboys herded the catUe ol the Texas Lon horn Breed· been housegpest &gt;I her mother, Spears, M,r. and Mrs. Clarenct
more than 40 per cent of Its ago.
sales were from products de- l
over lour and m-lane thorougb.
g
Mrs Elvira Barcus has return- Roush and Fay~. and Mr. and
veto&gt; 1 Within the past five I The d'ive, which started last fares for mu&lt;h of the route ers Assoclal1on. sed t t
ed ~ her hom• ac~mpanied by Mrs Earl Wilfong and grandyears.
I Sunday in San Antonio, Tex., through town which Included a Tru&lt;hka wetlre u t t oth rawnsay. her mother M~ Elvira Barcus son. SteYe ol Vinton.
·
·
mosth o fl e lap Visitors at • the home ol M r s· Mrs. William (Minny) Blrcor
...
National
Stare~ has spen t was 111
ce1ebra t'1on of the t ITSt stop at Boot Hill. Marshal fport t Te eat e 'th
1
about $25 million since 1!1110, catUe drive tOO years ago from Ramon House, wearing chaps rom elxas, ~kl et '"~odge • Spears and her mother were field, 8 former Kanauga resJ.
mainly on expansion to meet Texas to the railhead al Dodge and carrying ,,, shuolers rn•l from A lusd. ~ 'da., 0
al
1 Mr and Mrs Earl Pletcher dent Is 8 medical patient
od
1 ·
.
C1ty covere rrl ay.
· ·
·
•
.
the demand for Its pr ucts. t C1ty.
the Texan&lt; at the outskirts ol 1
ld
d
the . cattle and VIcky Mr. and Mrs . Bill Blanchard Valley hospital, Find·
has earmarked an additional The modern longhorns, nearly town
d 0h en •-~ys,l d d t th Jewell and Ladora ali of Co- lay Those wishing to
aend
'll
t
1
d
100 f th
ere
met
with
·
woul
ave ~n 08 e 8 · e
$11 ml ton or expans on ur· [
o em, w
. Sa d
I ht 'I d f
hlpment Easl An tumbus and Mrs Spears· dau- cards ll'ay send them to room
ing the next two years.
" much greater fanfore . than A celebrahon tur ay n_ g ral roa odor s
. b . bl ghter Mr. and Mrs. Emmell 317.
Adv for Wedne 1 PMS July • their ancestors.__ Gov~_Wilham ~~_e Long_Branch !~_ooa_ m a_1_110__111 el_locomotive,_ roug _
·

I

Has M0dern uses

. '

Herd of Longhorns Rumble Through Dodge

•

.

~ur dollar's wotth 1110re ·when YOiJ shpp ¢
til;~ .store that gi~s Top Value .S(ip/Jp~

�•· .
.I

)

'r

1116 6

~~~~~a.~ ~~:~:~;::!&lt;::~eym:J

• Board
as IronJnP'
rl

.
•.~ YQRit
-In theiCald'!'ell, vtce president of Na~ 1\ iiWI d~ys when Mama tlo•ol Starch and Chemical
~Dtd's shirts instead of Corp., said m a recent inter·
~- ....
aa.....
!'"""'•
m to the I• undry , view.
"if' always dipped the collars "Starch Is made from corn,
•ipla MD o1 ~llreb to give them ltaplo:a, potatoes aod wheat. It
.~ lin
. 1 h·"
k
·
d f
hu b t
'Jlll
1 ou too .
I also IS rna e rom sorg m u
II" 11 was a long lime ago not often, as you hlve to use
•"" ... h h
ed 1orwa rd a com b'me. "
...,J'!! as .mov
il a subotanee with many use- In 1965. the corn otarch lndutlpl Pfllperlies beyond the iron-1 try In tho. ~nited States pro.
Iiiii IIIlard.
duced 2.6 billion pound• of corn
Slarcb is used to make paper Istarch, an increase of 2.4 .bll·
atron&amp;l!r, " ~ ,liCfdlllve and as lion pounds over tho previOUS
• blbder u well as a glue.
year.
· ·· Slarcb now lakes the slicki- In addition to National Starch
Gill ol caramel candy.
and Chemical Corp., major pro.
: ,''II ~-·~ s!rongesl films\ ducero of corn star~h are C~rn
·· ••
~'1\eS,"· Dr. Carlyle Products Co., American-Maize
•
&lt; •• '

..,N

°

!

'1

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Parl~lorly

elferllve 1o
proleet your hair from
ou111•er grime Is ·Ibis cool
yellow silk wrap-•p hlghligbltd . by softly draped
tu&lt;k framing &amp;b• lace aDd
IIM:kllc.

"Super-Right" Quality

CHUCK
SEil·SERVICE,
PRE·PACIAGED MEATS
t
CAN BEA
•

BLADE

CUT

LUNCH MEAT

59c

39c

CAP'N JOHN FROZEN

Fine Grocery Features!

a

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.,•._

ANN PAGE

ANN PAGE

Barbecue Sauce

Salad Dressing

28-oz.

18-oz.
bottle

49c

JJc

1'12-qt.
(ar

7 3c
I

IULTANA-STRAWIIIRRY

ANN PAIIE-GROUND

Black Pepper · · 4-oz. can 35c Preserves ··· · · · 2!-lb. far 98c
ANN PAGI..OUit FIN IIT

A&amp;P ALL flUTTER

Pound Cake · · 12-oz. pkg. 59c
CONCENTRATED

lemonade · · · · 6-oz. can 1Oc

';~L89c

DRUM~TICKS

lb.

FIIIZIR QUEEN FROZEN

---~(t

Frozen Food Features!

J

lb. 65c

Chicken legs · · · · · ·· · lb. 49c
Chicken Breast · ·· · ·· lb. 59c
BULK FROZEN
Halibut Fillets · · · ··· · · lb. 49c
CAP'N JOHN FROZEN
Scallops ·· · · 12-oz. pkg. 69c

COIIYIUGHTCIItM, THE Gft!AT ATLANTIC&amp;. ..ACifiC TEA CO .• tNC.

well-developed in fiower-visil·
ing insects, sucb as butterflies
and bees. Bees &lt;11n readily be
trained to come to a particular
J'Yl""!i~ FIRSTS
Icolor for food, according to the
the first vice Encyclopaedia Britannica.
. become president ,
'
I
death of a preSI-~
·
tr~ldent to be mar- First Incumbent U. S. pr~i­
'ln ytfl_ce: first presi· dent to travel to a
fore~gn
."hom Impeach- t'Ountry was Theodore Roosewere iotroduc- velt, who visited Panama in

69c ·

lb.

Round Bone Roast · · lb. 49c
Beef Roast .... · .. ·.. lb. 49c
Stewing Beef ·· · · · · · · lb. 69c
Beefliver .. · .. ·.. .. .. lb. 49c

Iotti•

or. Color sense is especially

5 VARIETIES

leef Steaks · · 1-lb. pkg. 89c Breaded Perch 2-lb. pkg. 99c

Ia this a rood reason for shopping A&amp;P? It's one of many.

CREAM PIES

lb. 59c

Boneless Chuck

PORK ROAST

TURKEY

We think we have the answer.
We have a policy.
We put the best side down.
The side you don't see ill guaranteed to be eJual to
tr better than the side you can see.

COLOR CONSCIOUS .. . 1
Insects are conscious or col·

lb.

Chuck Steak · · · · · · · · lb. 49c Rib Steaks ·i~~.- in' · · · lb. 99c
Steaks · · lb. $1.69
Shoulder Steak · · · ·· · lb. 59c Delmonlca
SUPER-RIGHT SKINLISS
Grtund Chuck · ·· · ··· · lb. 65c Wieners · ·· ··· l-Ib. pkg. 65c

It'll a problem ... a problem we've given a lo; of thought.

MORTON- FROZEN

\

READY FOR THE GRILLE

f

Simple! u ABC.
Effective! No mort gamble.
Fair and square! Sure because "We Care.''

c

WELL
TRIMMED

SUPER-RIGHT

Pork Steeb

You can M the top side of the meat but not the bottom.

So y011 wonder.

__

,...
."...

BUTT STYLE

lb.

The 11teak ltoks good, but il the bottom all bone and fat?

Kennedy is
Expert Rider

·

Meats 1

OUII OWN

Paprika ··· ·· ·· · 4-oz. can 35c Tea Bags · · Pkg. of 48- SSe
ANN PAGI..OUII FINEST

Orange Drink ·:· · 2 cans 59c

'I

Italian Dressing 8-oz. btl. 29c Instant Milk 12-qt. pkg. 1.09
2-lb., t-oz.con

Hl-C IMITATION-9-oL cons

I'

WHITIHOUSI-NON·FAT

SULTANA-In Tomato Sauco

AlP BRAND

Pork &amp;Beans .. · .... · can 29c Instant CoffH 10-oz.jar 1.09
A&amp;P IRANO

SULTANA BRAND

Plain Olives • lSi-oz. jar 79c Charcoal ··· ·· · 20 lb. bag 99c

Jane· Parker Favorites!

2

...

Fruits and Vegetables!

--l"#.
....t
!"
'-.....

JANE PARKER SANDWICH CREME

Cookies · · · ··· ll-lb. pkg. 39c

MADE WITH BUTTERMILK

JANI PJ,RKIR PINEAPPLI OR

Enriched Bread

lemon Pies · · · · · ·· · each 49c

4

JAN I PARKER IROWN

Sugcir Buns .. · .. ·.. pkg. 35c

..

1-lb.
~

1ooves

89c

CALIFORNIA-PLUMJ OR

CALIFORNIA

Seedless Grapes ·· · · · · lb. 29c

N
.
..
ow we have "'edware and ' Involved In submitting
opeo_ seasoo on American ; OW R claims to the
physicla•s and. surgeons. The ! government lor
m"?lcos are bemg ca't as the for money already paid to
bao guys who wear the black I physicians or surgeons
hats and represent the anti response to direct billing.
soc1al elements at th~ shoot-out There I!! oot much doubt
up the gulch It lSD t fair.
the AMA action somewhat
_llore speCifically, the physi- reflected resentment of the
Clans and surgeons are being medical profession .against the
accused of penalizing old-age !henry of Medicare. But more
pahe•ts , '" an expression of l is involved thaa mere
their own dissatisfaction with ment. 11 cannot he showu
the theory and pracllce of conclusively that the
Medicare.
1are wrong in seeking
The m~taat compltint against[ maintain the maximum
lhe medical profe•slon is that patieot relationship evea to the
the American Medical Assocla- extent ol continuiag Instead of
tw• 1.11. recem: convention voted abandoning . the practice of
to advise its members to adopt direct bllliag to paUenls and
• procedure freely permitted direct payment to doctors.
by the Medicare act in billing The medical profession is
their older patients.
likely to get the henelil of
Congress chose to allow tbe doubt on that because the
dol!loro an optioo in rendering politics ol the situation
is
their bills. They may bill the loaded against Olem.
The
older patient directly or the p•ysirians and surgeons will he
medicos, themselves, may sub- lucky, it must be remembered,
mit their charges to the federal if they escape blame for all
government for compensation. bugs and other weaknesses in
AMA voled to bill directly and the Medicare program includthe chorus of protest arose and in8 the weakness built into it
otill Is soaring.
by the politicians themselves.
It i• argued that the older The politicians built in a
men and women
will be weakness by over-selling and
confused, befuddled and frus- under-explaining to the older
lr ated by the paper
work folks what they actually should

~

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::.•.-:a~·~ -:mi: ~~~c~:d•agrl:1

U:e
!eal.::.per
made by politiCians to propel Busy physlci81UI figure they
medicare through Copgress.
would Reed another office
If Tim Is disappointed iR any employe to do the paper work.
of bls emergency demands, he Federal Medicare provides no
expect aod the llket, llinlla· Is not likely to blame the compeasation lor such added
OR reallullo• of their politicians, Tim Is too naive cosl8.
.
These limllaUo118 con- !l&lt;lHtically to do.that. Old Tim
slst of the shortage of medical, will blame the hospitals, cuss But Congress. did give the
hoapl181 and techRical person- tne doctors and build up more mediCal professiOn !he op.lloa ofl
plus the .polellllal shortage popular resentment against the assummg those costa of paperof hospital ana nunlng borne dedicated men and women in work or escap~ng some of
beds for care of the oldsters. the medical proleoston.
them. The med~cs chose ~
Whe• the Hon. Timothy
.
.
less cosily optwn for which
As for direct b!lll~, doctor to they no~ are being aet up by
Tugbutton, aged 67• now hollers! paUent, old Tim s regular usually Impartial edl_to~ wrtfor emergencytallreatm~nt, ~ d?"tor, a perceptive, compas- lers a_nd by the poliUCiana as
doctor, .a hospi room, round lsmnate, skllllul man,, already potenl!al enemies. of the com::~~~ ':'lal nurses, the, old Ih~s explamed to Tim that moo maR, espec!Bily the old
•
peel to get em d1rect b!lhng Will save a ones.
'

Boundaries Set for ASC'
darles of eadl oommunlty withIn , the county where electiolll
of ASC epmmunlty commitwlll be held 811 Aug. !0. Tht
electlom will be by mail with
ballotJ being malle-d to "eligible
voten July 29.
,·
llolmdarlu of I he YarillUs
communJU"" wf!ere commitlee!l
will be elected are toW118blp
boundaries of eadl townablp:
Addlsen, Chellbire, Clay, Gr-.
field, GuyaR, Harrlao~, Huntlngton, MOJrglltl, Onto, Perry,
Racc11011, Sprillgfleld and Walnut. The f9wnsbiJls of GaillpoIts and Green will be joined aRd
will elect 1 10mbmed commit-

~

tee.

tee,

T. DeWiit JenkiM, Superinlendent t1 Speed, announced 10day that IIIe Harness Racing
Program at the 11166, Jackson
County Fair would offer Ohio
1-id'semen the largest purses
ever in the history of the lllth
vear old lair.
Jenl,ins said that for t h e
lirsl time the Jackson Counlv
Fair would present to the raC.
lng fans four elasses in t b e
Jhio Colt Stakes. He added
lilere weuld he a two year old
!rot, 1 two year old pace, 1
:hree year old trot, and a three
rear old ~ce. The Ohio colts
• ill be racing lor an estimated
&gt;urse of $1,775 In each race.
Joe Kisor, Ra~'lllSecretary,
was enthusiaalic Wrua remarks
1tating that this WI!! •tlie"li..st
Racing Pfi~01 ever to be
oresenled ill ':f&gt;ftl&lt;son County.
-- - " .. ·

The number of entries Is
er than anticipated, Kisor said.
The Race Secretary added
that to date over one hnr1dredj
tWo and three year old coll8
have been staked in the Jack·
son County Colt Stak... The
Jackson County Fair is a
her of the Southern Ohio Fairs
Racing Circle which
es many Southern and
eastern Ohio counties, Kisor added.
In additi011 t. the toll !!lakes,
three night progra1118 under the
lights at the Jacksoa County
Fairground will present races
for IIOR·Winnel'l! of $15,000, no~t­
wtoner1 ol $4,000 and noa-winnara ol $1,000 iD both the
.and pace classification, JeJtl&lt;inll
said.
The Speed Committee
which Pres Turner of Jacltsea,
Wendell Willis ol Wellston
· EYID Davis of Oak Hill, In
addition to Jenkins and Kisor,
have arranged again for parimutuel betting includiRg
daily double.

~, ~
~y ~ltlllated·~·~ -~ · II!.

_,l""in---

rar-

a

lmditioo: .---

Nonnan Rockwell paints the cover for your

ew

s
It's 1tere, it's FREE
-·and pacUd witll gifts!

Galllpolit, Ohio,
SALEs REPORT or
Ol:io Valley Livestock Co.
HOGS - 175 to 220 lbs. 24 to
26; 220 to 250 lbs. 25 to
:W;
Light 24 to 26; Fat Sows 16 to
18; Stags 12 to 18; Boars 12 to
18; Sows and Pigs 75 to 150;
Shoats 10 to 22.
CATTLE - Steers 18 to 24:
Heifers 16 to 23 ; Baby
Beef
The ferret a domestic 2b to 25; Fat Cows 14 to 20
llreed of the' wild polecat,
II in danger of extinction Canners 12 to 16; Bulls 18 to 22;
iD lhe United States be- Milk Cows 100 to 200.
cause the ·prairie dog, ita
VEAL CALVES - Tops 28.·
1118111 ~~Puree of food, has 80: SecoRds :i2 to 25; Medium
almOit disappeared. Fer- 20 to 22: Com. &amp; Hvs. 20 to 28;
rets bavt~ been used since
the days of the Romans iD Culls 16 to 20.
SHEEP - Ewes aad LID8. 5
destroying rata and other
vermill and :111 driving ·rib- to 10; Stock Elves S to 10; Fat
bits fro m their liuii-OWa. Sheep 4 to 10: Culls 1 to
5
The femt's llold OD quarry Bucks 4 to 10 Fat Wethers 5
Is u obalinale u a bull· to 10.
;
doe'I.
LAMBS - Tops 23 Seconds
eh............ll..nlai
II to 22; Light Wta. 16 m 20;
Common 15 to 18.

Spartfillg 1ritlt idea&amp; is
dUB breocl-.w Top Value StamP8
GiA Ca~ From its &lt;rigi•"'l
_ . paiDtiog by ~ Rockwell,
al through its 17% pages •••
paclred with O¥er 3,000 giftai

New famoas bralld

From
1'lluMwick pool ta ble8 to Sony
portable television. From. Jade
~ toiletries for men to Chips 'n
Twitls dodUnc for children.
RallieS.

New 1lillds Ill gifts. New kits and
materials for Dobbyists, new helps
b do-it-youraelfers, dotbea 'a
pdcete b te.fngers. (Te say
r&gt;tlair:g of ears IIGd racewa)'ll for
s6ot raciag fans.)
Ia aiMri, here's more reasoo than
_ . t. 1111w Top Value Stamps!

,.Gel

;yow free catalog now c::_ ·

Oranges or lemons 10 for 59c

Tasty Do1ry Selections!
ANN PAGE CORN OIL

MILD-TASTY

Margarine 3 - l-Ib. pkgs. $1.

Longhorn Cheese
lb.

Blutbtr~lts · ·· ·· · · · pints 49c

A&amp;P RIAL CUAM

Topping · · · · · · 7-oz. can 49c

69c

MARVEL VANIUA

Ice Cream • Gal. carton $1.09
-

Ul

MORE FOR YOUR MONEY AT A&amp;P!
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flirt 111e01 mueh lo the woman who •pends
Ia die 1811. s-th on • •P••Ial body eream
aad Jean• 1 subUe Chantilly Kent &amp;o go
.

ltliawr wear.

.

PLAID STAMPS TOO!

PLAY

\

J.

CLIP OR COPY THESE Flll SLIPS

BONUSrr::~=wa=w

BING

I"RIZ • • LIP

. ""'

AT YOUR A&amp;PI
NOTICE-Our IONUS BINGO 1•1111 ends July 16. ao.
NUS BINGO prlu Slips Pro.
gr1m No. 11 m1y Ill"""""
ed for cuh prl.. through
July 23, 1966.

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· ,. . .
· ·, •. , lliaoe :wt..·
'file Chairnlan rem!DJed
~~=.,..~=:-~ ·$'~'
JQ!l'l lhal the el~ .u I
fl
. . .
whlcl iioo;
~lbreeeo~- a tbe ~
'lo a4 •n:o1: '
two ~les for e8eb ~ JDiDlsterl llcd7• · 'J'be•l'fllrrne,il~o •l&gt; ·.
mimlty. Tbe cha~; . ,ICe 1118)' be
lllll!er,"'iiiimlj ·. ·r~t "':
cihali'IIWI, and !bird · ~ ~- PerM!!!~&lt; ilol '· ti • , ;
membe+ of the elecied , AIIC 11p1 volfnC ap wile ·• ·· b · ,,! ,
COIIUjllttee will also ~· u ebarge et the ~ oper• ·
delelales to ~ Cllllllty _.. IlGas 0111111 111u,e fanB: Itt ~ '""
venliQ.n to he held 80011 iben- .., eligible to Wtie · m IIIII' ela&gt; •. ,,
after, where Iannen will be Uoas. Eligibility to" WD' ~ fl" ,; .
eiec:ted to fill vacancilll ,.. IIIII to hold Glflce as a eoJIIIIIIIIet• , , ,
ASC county commiltee. TIM aJ. maa _ nelrulrlcled bf re&amp; -.
18
female committee will 1erve
o1 race, eol«';•ti'INJd;w ~ .. "
108
, .,, ,. .... ,., ,
81 alteraate delegate. It . the llaul orJciD.
'
;;.a
'"
!: ' ~
'"

tlonnaa RDck...a .K _.k. Tile _ , 1• and ..,_ doe&amp; I::...e
Dl8do l:io
Aftricao:
I
:Joy
evideo:i i:: ll:io: ooigiDal ..,...,. iii·•-.Uo:: foJr Top YiWe ~

CALifORNIA IUNKJJT

fRESH

.; '

'66 Jackson Fair Program

·'

PEACHES

~· ~V~;
,

J. Melvla Gll!Jert,
Alrltultural Stabllllallolf· ~ lllcll·
Cooservallon County
,

Largest Purse Offered in

--

GEORGIA

Nectarines .. · ...... · lb. 29c

.~

· "".

Doctors Unfairly Cast as 'The Bad Guys'
In Sh00t out Up•the•GUIC·h WJt• hMedicare

K

ROAST

1906.

The National Win~

than 25 planb in the United I
•
d
1 1 ld ·~d•e
c s 1 d 11 • ~
and
1
DODGE CITY Kan (UPli - fl Avery of Kansas brought hill reconstructe par o o "" • by the Santa Fe Railroad from Dodge lty a ur ay
States angredd overs~as food sup- 'I A herd of l~ngho~ ,attJe o~n saddle and joined trail City w•• the final Item for the Topeka stood on the track In reminder of the earlier era,
pUes In
lenl8 or
• le~- wrangled by a band of Texas boss Charles Schremer on trail hands, who planned to
' -- - -____· ==-=.-.::::--;:;-;;;t,;;;;;-rii;
tiles, paper and pharmaceutl·l cowboys rumbled through hiS· horseback at the bead of the return to Texas Sunday With
a go
Halley and Jnu of l'loral City,
cats.
'
.
I toric Front Street S~turday, parade.
steers unsold at auction.
on
u
Fla., Danny Newman of J...eet.
c 0 m pan y statistiCS show [ echoing the sounds of a century And instead of dusty streeUi, The troil drlvf .... the Idea[ Mrs. Mae Spears, whOJ has burg, Fla .. grandson of Mn.
the cowboys herded the catUe ol the Texas Lon horn Breed· been housegpest &gt;I her mother, Spears, M,r. and Mrs. Clarenct
more than 40 per cent of Its ago.
sales were from products de- l
over lour and m-lane thorougb.
g
Mrs Elvira Barcus has return- Roush and Fay~. and Mr. and
veto&gt; 1 Within the past five I The d'ive, which started last fares for mu&lt;h of the route ers Assoclal1on. sed t t
ed ~ her hom• ac~mpanied by Mrs Earl Wilfong and grandyears.
I Sunday in San Antonio, Tex., through town which Included a Tru&lt;hka wetlre u t t oth rawnsay. her mother M~ Elvira Barcus son. SteYe ol Vinton.
·
·
mosth o fl e lap Visitors at • the home ol M r s· Mrs. William (Minny) Blrcor
...
National
Stare~ has spen t was 111
ce1ebra t'1on of the t ITSt stop at Boot Hill. Marshal fport t Te eat e 'th
1
about $25 million since 1!1110, catUe drive tOO years ago from Ramon House, wearing chaps rom elxas, ~kl et '"~odge • Spears and her mother were field, 8 former Kanauga resJ.
mainly on expansion to meet Texas to the railhead al Dodge and carrying ,,, shuolers rn•l from A lusd. ~ 'da., 0
al
1 Mr and Mrs Earl Pletcher dent Is 8 medical patient
od
1 ·
.
C1ty covere rrl ay.
· ·
·
•
.
the demand for Its pr ucts. t C1ty.
the Texan&lt; at the outskirts ol 1
ld
d
the . cattle and VIcky Mr. and Mrs . Bill Blanchard Valley hospital, Find·
has earmarked an additional The modern longhorns, nearly town
d 0h en •-~ys,l d d t th Jewell and Ladora ali of Co- lay Those wishing to
aend
'll
t
1
d
100 f th
ere
met
with
·
woul
ave ~n 08 e 8 · e
$11 ml ton or expans on ur· [
o em, w
. Sa d
I ht 'I d f
hlpment Easl An tumbus and Mrs Spears· dau- cards ll'ay send them to room
ing the next two years.
" much greater fanfore . than A celebrahon tur ay n_ g ral roa odor s
. b . bl ghter Mr. and Mrs. Emmell 317.
Adv for Wedne 1 PMS July • their ancestors.__ Gov~_Wilham ~~_e Long_Branch !~_ooa_ m a_1_110__111 el_locomotive,_ roug _
·

I

Has M0dern uses

. '

Herd of Longhorns Rumble Through Dodge

•

.

~ur dollar's wotth 1110re ·when YOiJ shpp ¢
til;~ .store that gi~s Top Value .S(ip/Jp~

�•

-·

&gt;

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••

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o. o~u~y t, 11 was Cllsclosell secret pollee.
-- ·- · nlam or out or !tar of persoDSI1.2.;;.---1'-L
' ------------~
just how high the opposition Control of the secret pollee loss of lnfiueDCe, could lbrow •
)
·
· .
• '
went.
puts a man in any Commw;llst the who!~ complicated mecha· !dent of parllament.
pared Ill 2,181 for Bro~ Olhe
In the sub-tropical atmos· state In a posilion about as nisni out of balance..
'
names, lilted from eighth "
)&gt;here of Bl·lonl Island,
powerful as he can hold. By use The result could be economic TOP TEN
tenth, were Davis, Rodri&amp;Uel
•y
-slvt step ud of the party were hindering the favorite Adriatic vacation spot ,of wire taps and othw- modern 1 cris1s and wide1pread unemploy- NEW YORK (UPI) -In New and Sch_w_ar_tz_._ _
1 1 Ibis
1
U go 8 a" •1
II
pro..1 to wh1ch all members ol the spy devices, the IDlpllcation . ment.
1
~~~s~::moet: ambitious oil agreed to help.
reforms and to him at par Y1Contra! committee hod been was ,llmt the two bad not, And tn Yugosravta there York,_ 11 may he barde: keeping FREE BORN .
reform plans· II postponed payment on purge.
'summoned, Tito disclosed the hesitated at blackman to ' already hu been wldeBJI!'I'ad up ~~th the Smiths, Bl'oWII8, NEW ORLEANS (UPil _
aweepmg tile East debts of $17 mllhon and I In February, President Tltoiouster from .all party posts of Iachieve their ends.
·
!dislocation caused by nalng WW•ams, Johnaonl, MUiers or ''It's on the house"
~
ComJ11!111illt bloc
arranged credits worth $40 himself took up the cudgels. the man who had been rated Their efforts ranged frolJI Iprices and loss of jobs amODg/ Cohens than It 11 with. the R
d c WU
_,.;. tr
1~~
1 ~
·
.was- to crea~ an million for Yugoslav purchMea Addressing the party Centr~ second only to h•mself and his blocking legislation to perinit unskilled lqbor.
Jones. Thw-e IPP&amp;reDIJY ~ m:y:o~thern 80; ·
1111 Bowfe
.•~ based on competition of equipment and macbiDery Committee, he declared the e possible successor.
jomt enterprises with foreign I For Tito, lbe action meant Imore of them.
tal when Mh Ma:tre
·. f ·Ud proflll, and e•entually to for transport and a&amp;rieulture. were those Communists who Fallen from the plnrracle was companies down to Interference !hat only one remains of the The New Yortr Telephone Co. '
to" h
th hUd
1original three "Tilovics" (tittle Isaid that m the new Manhattan pve birth
""'wtab!Wl 11. bard currency But within less than SIX favored the reforms only and VIce President Aleksandar Ran- with factory management
er 11 c
convertible in the West
months, it_ was apparent that actually "worked .In a way that kovlc whose earlier resignation . American economists observ· ' Titosl closest to him Milovan director issued today tile abovij " 11 '8 chllnotdrevery 11bornomnn W~•o ba,
·
·
n ' the vice presidency also mg these efforts at reform 1Djlms, a former deputy
•
17 !tal , en
" The United States, whlcb Is I someone ~•• dragging hi• feet. was contr ary t0 t h
e l
,'?'Pl em -efrom
pre- oamea, rted·
II
m order, are boa
WUIIOn said none
1
· \'Uioalavia's leadins trading 1 In January, Yeijko Vlabovic, latlon of the reform.
was disclosed. Down with him 1 have w-Mned that any fool· mler, Is In the ninth of a 13- thos~ which most frequently
P ' - - - -.. .c. ·
1
' • partner and does wbat it can to · a leading YugOBiav Ideologist, He said such anti-reform also went his own righthand dragging along the line, either 1year
prison sentence lor Iappear.
MoUU"t wrote his overturE
: •: ·enoourage the Eastern bloc's took to the alr to \!&amp;rn that elements existed even in the man, Svetlslav Stefanovlc, until by those opposing lt as 8 ' criticizing the regime. Remain- Smith wu comfortably at the "Don Glovannj," lll full acort
~- llldependence of Moscow, saw "many" conservative members "leading bodies" .of the party. last year head of Yugoslav Ideparture from Marxist.-Leni·ltng Is lldvard Klrdelj, pres- top wlth 3,8()1 listings, aom- at one silting,

I

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SAN FRANCISCO tUPI 1 ~
?•tel' '.l'lmolly, a bald, 82-y.ar·
&gt;ld bl!lheklr, never Attended
:olllfl-liul be of!Am leaches
here.
·
T-y I! a self·mM·le
l!'holat OD ...,the origin and
me8111ag of words. · Hie lm;&gt;W·
ledge Is, IOillbt by professors,
llstorlana and lawyers.
Hthe l~henhllhe"'love ffalr'd'
wi wo..... w
was 2t an
~at on his bact ln a bospital
recovertna frOm tuberculosis..
"Tbal's when I ·really got

111

1

~)· ~f ~ •'

Appears 1o Couri
meaning but thinkS It
However, he doeS get SOme resemblanCe to its
flllancia! reward for · laking ~~~a~e.

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ararted on my studieS. All I had anatomy ll:!'!d for sitting_ and

have

education," he said.
Stopped Being A ·Dope
"I grew up with a ·bunch o.f
roughnecks-a word, by !ht!
way, that comes from the hlgh
knitted sweaters they wore
Well, I had the lime in tho
hospital to begin collertl1i
word&amp;, to stop being suc'l a
dope~ "
·
·
After explaining that "dope"'
comes from a Dutch word
meaning that section of the

Tamony pointed to !IP&gt;ro;,s of
soap boxes In hts· 13-room
home.
The bOxes hold more than 8
million examples oi American
usage.
·
Coll ectiDI!f thTe word.s was a~
avoca11on o amooy' or, •
he puts 11,
~~~~~t:~
Ia 00r o1 1ove.
s
came from real estate,_da f1elted
iu whlcb Tamony di qui
well balcme relirlDg.

::anlli

He said· lbe

of camp

earlier describe an ez&amp;ggerated dJ&amp;of ability wu lboul

One word that receot!y went pion."
"'In ancient tlmes the chief
Tamony took the stand when warrior of an army would go
an entertainer sued a television down to a plain, or campus,
network for using the word.
and face the chief warrior, or
He testified that "hootenan- champion, of a rival army "'
oy" was In use long bef?re tbe "There they would give each
sbowman or the network used olber the once over, yell and ia
it.
general try 1o impr... . each
An example of Tamony's other," Tamony said.
~elective work is the word "CoUege yells today are an
'camp,"' which recently started example of Ibis. Cuaius Clay is
sweeping acrou tile COWltry.
an even better eun1ple. He
Tamony stressed that he atlll 'camped·· Liston out of the Utle
hasn't pinned down the current wllb hll pre-fight bravado."

to go on was my hlgb school not thinking, the blapectaeled to court was "'hootenanny"

•:a

In

the early da)'!l of talking
pictures when many Eog)l.sh
actors came over to the U~~
Slates.
,
"Many were eftenllnate and
exaagerated their movelll8llla,"
he 1atd. Camp Willi used 1ro
describe their exaggeraiiOIII
and then anyone effeminate." '

~W

0 K

P&amp;u.Jt

II..
~~
flllll that u lbe

suCc:esafully lei!
leUl ol the DoW"""'Iirl
trial averqe, a fll}l
1ea41ng to a retesliDC 01
levll may .-Jt. r:
,Tbe
po111t is penetrated,- ~=~~ Bm-eau loc. ..,. lbe lollg tern
he'tw'Today'~•-use ls ":'m::~ the market lboul411*t
lfllltl · ~ 1111
'*la . lot
een .... two. Ill lliJIPOl1 around 811 anil it
- . liljiJ c111p11e
ll8ed 1o mean an ezaggeralloD 111 tum Ia pierced, the
Jt
lllwever.
or an ImpresSive lbow llboul 4»&gt;lkk fill to 140.
. 1 1 toOt!' eaal
'l'be analyst believes lhlt 1111
1101blng."

-.a ..,-term
'*•··

\

·-~~~

' 1,3

'-

AT KROGER

•

NEW TOP VALUE CATALOG • • • •

I '

100 BONUS TOP VALUE STAMPS .....
USDA

Ktottr lltlf.tr Dr;,

.

~

.

can

Full Cut- Bone In

I

I

''

.IIJZ'
cans

[

No•

USDA Choice Tenderay

• • • • • •

JOOEXTRA
Top Value Stampa

50 FREE TOP VALUI!
STAMPS with Coupon and

$6.00 or more Purcho£ -

PurchiM Of . ..

Exp, 7/t/IM

with IIIlo -

.,_.

"· o. No. nm

2 LB. OR MORE
BONELESS ROAST

Round Steak

I

.39

2-lb.

CHOICE

\I

Peaches

Coffee
r'/

:

-1•.

'

I,

I

81

.,

.
\
. Man,
does
use
to
Baen,_
. elo.r ..,.reter ,.,1 amony,.no_, •c0n·ege
Pill
dead
··OfteJJ Expounds there on Word Meanings =~r~·:r;: ~·: wo: fro~ ~:~~; ~= 7;: ::
.

Cleared for Yug OSIavS' Re(0rm Move

..

t'

lA
'
,.

lt.fllllt 11£ Ur

.......-'!""~~-·· ··~
7tw llarlitt,r pia« for planninJ malll

Thrifty Brand

~

...

tlontlno Rump or

Full Cut

Morton Frozen

Cream Pies

Stainless Steel

Sauce Pan
••ch

lb.

Stokely
14-oz.
·pkgs.

Catsup

Sirloin Steak

fb.

U-oz.

bottle
• • • • • • • • ••

Ground
Round --------

88c

lb.

89c

Potted Meat

--·· 9 ':: $1

giant

200-ct.
rolla

Tenderay Boston

.... 89c

·l-o1.

I
I

Skim Milk...•. ~ •. Ill pl. 39e
K._

Pork &amp; Beans •.• 4 ~ $1

Twin Popa ------

111111'1' Vlf., Chic. NIIOilla, CNom of Chic.,

Soup --·-----··· 5 No~~ $1

1 Full Book
Extra Top Value

K,..,.,

....... SliM

AIIM , .... .,

11 !Ilk

""*'"

Cheese • _.... ......

~::

Whole

Rolled
Roast

Hi-Nu Milk . _.-- _·" ..~.19c

Avlllllall

Hel111

\J

this coupon and purcha11 t1

-

$49.9! Briggs &amp; Stralfolt
3V. H. P. LAWNMOWIIt
Exp. 7/9/et.

TOP VALUE STAMPS
this coupon and purdiiM of
2 • 1-oz Jars
KROGER DRESSINGS
Exp. 7/9/66

;I.

Lun&lt;h Meat

Ice Cream

T-Bone Steak

49c

Tenderay lb.

TOP VALUE ITAMPS

with IIIII

c.._

llill ....... of

2 lb. ""'"'
KROGER SALTINIS
Exp. "9/M

I

I

I

I

!::·

1
I

49c

""'""' Steak ..... .. . . Bucket

·-

Biscuits

Soup

I

I

......, ShoiU.
I

e e •

I

.

Bean$·------· 5 No...!'$1
; lltbly Rod Kldnow
Beans _________ 1No..:: $1
Com __________ 4 ::.s1

Ctulllry -

SolociH Vatlolr

Cookie Sale ...• 4 ...., $1

'

Ajax

~=t 59c

• • •

............
Glo Coat .,. •.•.• ":; 69e
Collnlry

Bread

$1.09

&amp;edless

_

Pure Lard _-. _. . . 4 !it 69c
...........
Cod --- --. -. ~ --- 2 .':;,. $1.15
I

Grapes

loavt~a

Ham •... __ •..• _ . . •. $1.29
~

Kansas City Steak ..... $1.79
\

e e

111.

blly.

'

No.1
cans

99c

Hrer•ll•'• or Armour's

Cu.be Steaks .. __

12 =sl

.09

ltnNIIfe lulk Sliced lollid
lb.

• • •

•

Tropi-Cal-0 Law-C1Iorie

FRUIT DRINKS

lh.'

••••••
Orange
Grapo

61-oz.

Punch

Pidtwla Gr..,.,.•

Onn ....rod

juga

Donuts --·;·--- ..... 19e
Country Onn Llyar

4t

Cakes __ .. _•_•• "·· 49e
Lllterinl

Toothpaste 4 r.· ,:;~• 73e

Hair Spray
7-oz.
can

3

"lb.
can

Frah Ripe
•'

Peaches'

0

..
.,
'I

·sa' C

·,

)

I

.

J

•
'

;

I

39c

Tailless

49e

Heinz Tomato

Kntw Geld F......,

50 EXTRA

¥2 gal.
I

~!"\-··

Picnics

lb.

Stamps

TOP VALUE STAMPI

t'l I
i

I

Vienna Sausage 4

Kroger ~~~ Flavort

Rib Steak ......... 9?c
Rib Steak .........~89c

.._
Hytr•dt

1500

1

Smoked

Towels

Quart Sauce Pan
epch 88c
·

Tlndoray a--In

1hrHty .....,.

Scott White &amp;
'Assorted Colors
Trond Stalnleu

Tip Roast •••••• ··- 99c

.

I

•

Endive' . ,••.• ~ · · . ... 19e

..

.. .........,....,,_: . :.: .-la_.,. :
~"-· .
•,.., ·~ ~
·~

•,

TOP VAI.UE ITAMI'I
wllll .... ... ,..ct . . .
Jlk.,...,.K_ ·
PRIIH GROUND MIAT
Erp. 7/1/M

�•

-·

&gt;

'

••

..

..

...

-

. ...,

·,

o. o~u~y t, 11 was Cllsclosell secret pollee.
-- ·- · nlam or out or !tar of persoDSI1.2.;;.---1'-L
' ------------~
just how high the opposition Control of the secret pollee loss of lnfiueDCe, could lbrow •
)
·
· .
• '
went.
puts a man in any Commw;llst the who!~ complicated mecha· !dent of parllament.
pared Ill 2,181 for Bro~ Olhe
In the sub-tropical atmos· state In a posilion about as nisni out of balance..
'
names, lilted from eighth "
)&gt;here of Bl·lonl Island,
powerful as he can hold. By use The result could be economic TOP TEN
tenth, were Davis, Rodri&amp;Uel
•y
-slvt step ud of the party were hindering the favorite Adriatic vacation spot ,of wire taps and othw- modern 1 cris1s and wide1pread unemploy- NEW YORK (UPI) -In New and Sch_w_ar_tz_._ _
1 1 Ibis
1
U go 8 a" •1
II
pro..1 to wh1ch all members ol the spy devices, the IDlpllcation . ment.
1
~~~s~::moet: ambitious oil agreed to help.
reforms and to him at par Y1Contra! committee hod been was ,llmt the two bad not, And tn Yugosravta there York,_ 11 may he barde: keeping FREE BORN .
reform plans· II postponed payment on purge.
'summoned, Tito disclosed the hesitated at blackman to ' already hu been wldeBJI!'I'ad up ~~th the Smiths, Bl'oWII8, NEW ORLEANS (UPil _
aweepmg tile East debts of $17 mllhon and I In February, President Tltoiouster from .all party posts of Iachieve their ends.
·
!dislocation caused by nalng WW•ams, Johnaonl, MUiers or ''It's on the house"
~
ComJ11!111illt bloc
arranged credits worth $40 himself took up the cudgels. the man who had been rated Their efforts ranged frolJI Iprices and loss of jobs amODg/ Cohens than It 11 with. the R
d c WU
_,.;. tr
1~~
1 ~
·
.was- to crea~ an million for Yugoslav purchMea Addressing the party Centr~ second only to h•mself and his blocking legislation to perinit unskilled lqbor.
Jones. Thw-e IPP&amp;reDIJY ~ m:y:o~thern 80; ·
1111 Bowfe
.•~ based on competition of equipment and macbiDery Committee, he declared the e possible successor.
jomt enterprises with foreign I For Tito, lbe action meant Imore of them.
tal when Mh Ma:tre
·. f ·Ud proflll, and e•entually to for transport and a&amp;rieulture. were those Communists who Fallen from the plnrracle was companies down to Interference !hat only one remains of the The New Yortr Telephone Co. '
to" h
th hUd
1original three "Tilovics" (tittle Isaid that m the new Manhattan pve birth
""'wtab!Wl 11. bard currency But within less than SIX favored the reforms only and VIce President Aleksandar Ran- with factory management
er 11 c
convertible in the West
months, it_ was apparent that actually "worked .In a way that kovlc whose earlier resignation . American economists observ· ' Titosl closest to him Milovan director issued today tile abovij " 11 '8 chllnotdrevery 11bornomnn W~•o ba,
·
·
n ' the vice presidency also mg these efforts at reform 1Djlms, a former deputy
•
17 !tal , en
" The United States, whlcb Is I someone ~•• dragging hi• feet. was contr ary t0 t h
e l
,'?'Pl em -efrom
pre- oamea, rted·
II
m order, are boa
WUIIOn said none
1
· \'Uioalavia's leadins trading 1 In January, Yeijko Vlabovic, latlon of the reform.
was disclosed. Down with him 1 have w-Mned that any fool· mler, Is In the ninth of a 13- thos~ which most frequently
P ' - - - -.. .c. ·
1
' • partner and does wbat it can to · a leading YugOBiav Ideologist, He said such anti-reform also went his own righthand dragging along the line, either 1year
prison sentence lor Iappear.
MoUU"t wrote his overturE
: •: ·enoourage the Eastern bloc's took to the alr to \!&amp;rn that elements existed even in the man, Svetlslav Stefanovlc, until by those opposing lt as 8 ' criticizing the regime. Remain- Smith wu comfortably at the "Don Glovannj," lll full acort
~- llldependence of Moscow, saw "many" conservative members "leading bodies" .of the party. last year head of Yugoslav Ideparture from Marxist.-Leni·ltng Is lldvard Klrdelj, pres- top wlth 3,8()1 listings, aom- at one silting,

I

:

.

SAN FRANCISCO tUPI 1 ~
?•tel' '.l'lmolly, a bald, 82-y.ar·
&gt;ld bl!lheklr, never Attended
:olllfl-liul be of!Am leaches
here.
·
T-y I! a self·mM·le
l!'holat OD ...,the origin and
me8111ag of words. · Hie lm;&gt;W·
ledge Is, IOillbt by professors,
llstorlana and lawyers.
Hthe l~henhllhe"'love ffalr'd'
wi wo..... w
was 2t an
~at on his bact ln a bospital
recovertna frOm tuberculosis..
"Tbal's when I ·really got

111

1

~)· ~f ~ •'

Appears 1o Couri
meaning but thinkS It
However, he doeS get SOme resemblanCe to its
flllancia! reward for · laking ~~~a~e.

'

I

I

a

I

~

\

'

ararted on my studieS. All I had anatomy ll:!'!d for sitting_ and

have

education," he said.
Stopped Being A ·Dope
"I grew up with a ·bunch o.f
roughnecks-a word, by !ht!
way, that comes from the hlgh
knitted sweaters they wore
Well, I had the lime in tho
hospital to begin collertl1i
word&amp;, to stop being suc'l a
dope~ "
·
·
After explaining that "dope"'
comes from a Dutch word
meaning that section of the

Tamony pointed to !IP&gt;ro;,s of
soap boxes In hts· 13-room
home.
The bOxes hold more than 8
million examples oi American
usage.
·
Coll ectiDI!f thTe word.s was a~
avoca11on o amooy' or, •
he puts 11,
~~~~~t:~
Ia 00r o1 1ove.
s
came from real estate,_da f1elted
iu whlcb Tamony di qui
well balcme relirlDg.

::anlli

He said· lbe

of camp

earlier describe an ez&amp;ggerated dJ&amp;of ability wu lboul

One word that receot!y went pion."
"'In ancient tlmes the chief
Tamony took the stand when warrior of an army would go
an entertainer sued a television down to a plain, or campus,
network for using the word.
and face the chief warrior, or
He testified that "hootenan- champion, of a rival army "'
oy" was In use long bef?re tbe "There they would give each
sbowman or the network used olber the once over, yell and ia
it.
general try 1o impr... . each
An example of Tamony's other," Tamony said.
~elective work is the word "CoUege yells today are an
'camp,"' which recently started example of Ibis. Cuaius Clay is
sweeping acrou tile COWltry.
an even better eun1ple. He
Tamony stressed that he atlll 'camped·· Liston out of the Utle
hasn't pinned down the current wllb hll pre-fight bravado."

to go on was my hlgb school not thinking, the blapectaeled to court was "'hootenanny"

•:a

In

the early da)'!l of talking
pictures when many Eog)l.sh
actors came over to the U~~
Slates.
,
"Many were eftenllnate and
exaagerated their movelll8llla,"
he 1atd. Camp Willi used 1ro
describe their exaggeraiiOIII
and then anyone effeminate." '

~W

0 K

P&amp;u.Jt

II..
~~
flllll that u lbe

suCc:esafully lei!
leUl ol the DoW"""'Iirl
trial averqe, a fll}l
1ea41ng to a retesliDC 01
levll may .-Jt. r:
,Tbe
po111t is penetrated,- ~=~~ Bm-eau loc. ..,. lbe lollg tern
he'tw'Today'~•-use ls ":'m::~ the market lboul411*t
lfllltl · ~ 1111
'*la . lot
een .... two. Ill lliJIPOl1 around 811 anil it
- . liljiJ c111p11e
ll8ed 1o mean an ezaggeralloD 111 tum Ia pierced, the
Jt
lllwever.
or an ImpresSive lbow llboul 4»&gt;lkk fill to 140.
. 1 1 toOt!' eaal
'l'be analyst believes lhlt 1111
1101blng."

-.a ..,-term
'*•··

\

·-~~~

' 1,3

'-

AT KROGER

•

NEW TOP VALUE CATALOG • • • •

I '

100 BONUS TOP VALUE STAMPS .....
USDA

Ktottr lltlf.tr Dr;,

.

~

.

can

Full Cut- Bone In

I

I

''

.IIJZ'
cans

[

No•

USDA Choice Tenderay

• • • • • •

JOOEXTRA
Top Value Stampa

50 FREE TOP VALUI!
STAMPS with Coupon and

$6.00 or more Purcho£ -

PurchiM Of . ..

Exp, 7/t/IM

with IIIlo -

.,_.

"· o. No. nm

2 LB. OR MORE
BONELESS ROAST

Round Steak

I

.39

2-lb.

CHOICE

\I

Peaches

Coffee
r'/

:

-1•.

'

I,

I

81

.,

.
\
. Man,
does
use
to
Baen,_
. elo.r ..,.reter ,.,1 amony,.no_, •c0n·ege
Pill
dead
··OfteJJ Expounds there on Word Meanings =~r~·:r;: ~·: wo: fro~ ~:~~; ~= 7;: ::
.

Cleared for Yug OSIavS' Re(0rm Move

..

t'

lA
'
,.

lt.fllllt 11£ Ur

.......-'!""~~-·· ··~
7tw llarlitt,r pia« for planninJ malll

Thrifty Brand

~

...

tlontlno Rump or

Full Cut

Morton Frozen

Cream Pies

Stainless Steel

Sauce Pan
••ch

lb.

Stokely
14-oz.
·pkgs.

Catsup

Sirloin Steak

fb.

U-oz.

bottle
• • • • • • • • ••

Ground
Round --------

88c

lb.

89c

Potted Meat

--·· 9 ':: $1

giant

200-ct.
rolla

Tenderay Boston

.... 89c

·l-o1.

I
I

Skim Milk...•. ~ •. Ill pl. 39e
K._

Pork &amp; Beans •.• 4 ~ $1

Twin Popa ------

111111'1' Vlf., Chic. NIIOilla, CNom of Chic.,

Soup --·-----··· 5 No~~ $1

1 Full Book
Extra Top Value

K,..,.,

....... SliM

AIIM , .... .,

11 !Ilk

""*'"

Cheese • _.... ......

~::

Whole

Rolled
Roast

Hi-Nu Milk . _.-- _·" ..~.19c

Avlllllall

Hel111

\J

this coupon and purcha11 t1

-

$49.9! Briggs &amp; Stralfolt
3V. H. P. LAWNMOWIIt
Exp. 7/9/et.

TOP VALUE STAMPS
this coupon and purdiiM of
2 • 1-oz Jars
KROGER DRESSINGS
Exp. 7/9/66

;I.

Lun&lt;h Meat

Ice Cream

T-Bone Steak

49c

Tenderay lb.

TOP VALUE ITAMPS

with IIIII

c.._

llill ....... of

2 lb. ""'"'
KROGER SALTINIS
Exp. "9/M

I

I

I

I

!::·

1
I

49c

""'""' Steak ..... .. . . Bucket

·-

Biscuits

Soup

I

I

......, ShoiU.
I

e e •

I

.

Bean$·------· 5 No...!'$1
; lltbly Rod Kldnow
Beans _________ 1No..:: $1
Com __________ 4 ::.s1

Ctulllry -

SolociH Vatlolr

Cookie Sale ...• 4 ...., $1

'

Ajax

~=t 59c

• • •

............
Glo Coat .,. •.•.• ":; 69e
Collnlry

Bread

$1.09

&amp;edless

_

Pure Lard _-. _. . . 4 !it 69c
...........
Cod --- --. -. ~ --- 2 .':;,. $1.15
I

Grapes

loavt~a

Ham •... __ •..• _ . . •. $1.29
~

Kansas City Steak ..... $1.79
\

e e

111.

blly.

'

No.1
cans

99c

Hrer•ll•'• or Armour's

Cu.be Steaks .. __

12 =sl

.09

ltnNIIfe lulk Sliced lollid
lb.

• • •

•

Tropi-Cal-0 Law-C1Iorie

FRUIT DRINKS

lh.'

••••••
Orange
Grapo

61-oz.

Punch

Pidtwla Gr..,.,.•

Onn ....rod

juga

Donuts --·;·--- ..... 19e
Country Onn Llyar

4t

Cakes __ .. _•_•• "·· 49e
Lllterinl

Toothpaste 4 r.· ,:;~• 73e

Hair Spray
7-oz.
can

3

"lb.
can

Frah Ripe
•'

Peaches'

0

..
.,
'I

·sa' C

·,

)

I

.

J

•
'

;

I

39c

Tailless

49e

Heinz Tomato

Kntw Geld F......,

50 EXTRA

¥2 gal.
I

~!"\-··

Picnics

lb.

Stamps

TOP VALUE STAMPI

t'l I
i

I

Vienna Sausage 4

Kroger ~~~ Flavort

Rib Steak ......... 9?c
Rib Steak .........~89c

.._
Hytr•dt

1500

1

Smoked

Towels

Quart Sauce Pan
epch 88c
·

Tlndoray a--In

1hrHty .....,.

Scott White &amp;
'Assorted Colors
Trond Stalnleu

Tip Roast •••••• ··- 99c

.

I

•

Endive' . ,••.• ~ · · . ... 19e

..

.. .........,....,,_: . :.: .-la_.,. :
~"-· .
•,.., ·~ ~
·~

•,

TOP VAI.UE ITAMI'I
wllll .... ... ,..ct . . .
Jlk.,...,.K_ ·
PRIIH GROUND MIAT
Erp. 7/1/M

�J

·,

'

. :. :J

'

DORA BELLE AN' ~~e:

,,'

VOU TOOK
TH'WORDS
RIGHTOIIT
OFMV

HAWK BAKER

1

~~Xtra Cash The.Want
·liZ\ t S:IIS

Ad Way

'FOR
S0ti!O
STATION

eExpert BusiDeu Counsel·
Ung ·To _Insure Your

IO&lt;&gt;dti~

'

Std. trano.

Pomeroy Motor Co.

MOUTH!!

JIWIU litllJ, JllatDtllf
for Plalnttff
1. B. (Y.Brtm.
1

••Jmt.11.10..,1el. ... ,

SOCIAL
..

CAtENOARt

(Before M.y htl
· aocolveOno"I'_.W_
Camplni ot Royal Oak Pork

BIG BEND
TRAILER SALES

~

OPEN EVES. 9:00P.M.

..--_--'&gt;'

ftt.o ...,,

1UY A TRAILER

Auto Sales

BUilDING
MATERIAL

l'iJ\

Ennlnt• and Satu';C'•Y

~:: ~~~le=·~J:23~~~G~a~lll~po~l~lt,:O~.
Allor 6:GO P.M.

buildingwindows,
material,beams. REGISTERED
Treeiol
ber, doors,
Pups. Prli:o all
eooa
----i.Pomf1.i.iioo"-'.;.Mo=tor=Co•.=7=1iiiiil can afford. Call .~70 or
•
oee o~ · Gralulili at
Sugar Run lllll.
n 4tp
USED

1964 CORYAIR Delux• 2 Dr. R..Iuced to ...... $995
Turquoise flnilh, ~ lalerior, 100&lt;1 tiroo, ndlo, ~eater.

Metropolitan Moton

SUccess.
Phono GaRipolll 446'3742

11 -~-~~----,

Gar HITCHED!

SEUING OUT

e2 USED CARS LEFT
e PARTS for OUTBOARD
ePre•ent De~ler Retiring
MOTORS
el"'ne Otlportunily For Mao eBOATS &amp; MOTORS
Who Wants Tg Own Ria
eBOAT PAINT
OWu Business.
eTOOLS
ePiid TrairUol Program
S..At
(S Week&gt;)

Motor Co.

1962 BUICK lnvicta Conv. Reduced to . ; .... $1495
Alltomatie traDJ. Power .atewtn.or. White linilb, reel luted or.
Radk&gt; and heal«. EJotn IODd W.W. tires.
·
1964 CHEV. Bi.U,ne 4 Dr. Reduced to ...... $1595
G"'f fiDisb, vinyl interior, 3:1'1 ..,_ Ill. tniloo. Powailldo,

LA5r NIGHT AN'

IN MIDDLEPORT, O.

P01ue1oy

~ OIIIUTT

'LOPED OFF

I L I S.rvictl

i. f -· .. . _: .

ROUTE 124

•1 IIDII. . .
YOU I-1EIJ HAVE

('LEAIJIIJG,
CUSWJG.

KEPT li~ VJO,...EN
PRISOIJERS 1"-l

SWEE-PING,

THE 1-\01.1E FOR

I&lt;IAI:HIIJG,
IRo/VIfJG

YEARS!

1HAT3 NOT m.tE!

AIJD I DOfJ'T WMJT
TO HEAR l&gt;m MOR£

GASULINI ALLEY

DR I'll
TAK.E AVJA't
YOOR KITCH€/J

A8lOT IT/

PRIVILEG~f

e SALES e
e RENTALS e
eCamplna Equlp-nt•

ROUSH &amp; LYONS
Camping Trailen
Horton St.
--

how we

Ma-.

W. Yo.
773-5611

'I',.,..,, Ill-'

are loae'
'
Syracuse, 0. Ph. 992-3990.

HONDA

..

8y ART SANSOM

1 PO MOT WASil DISHes!

\

ROOM HOUSE, Hartford, W.
Va. Pb. 1182-2368.
7 3 61p

-;- THAT'S WHAT I - ."'\

YOO WASil 01SH6S
-NOT N.F:-tOV!

7 6 6tc

----Notice

....

II ONI OI'THI

SIPJLD. ~AV6 SAID!

\

.,
llr C:HESTII . . . . .

N\

IIICIIT PI\)PLIJ . CALL

DICK RAWLINGS

bwlings Honda Sales
WY 2-2151

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

AND HIS FRIENDS

By MERRILL BLOSSER
I l'D &amp;UTE"- SEE THE

c,6,MP OoCroRl

SOME.THING MLlSf Bf W~ONG WITH ME.

COMING IOONI

~ Ol'llooh111

........

To

PIZZA

.,....OurDrl¥•1•

AT

J

m GREATEn

LITTLI! ORPHAN ANNII!

ly

WH£W!

r .. 12" .._ __75o .. 1.10
Doul

Gas.
llnCIIerl, Ill .. •MaiD
~0).

••

, •Ids!

~w

7HAN~S.

. _.... Ca...,.Out ........
CALL WY s.9tOI

leo .
,

. ~1i11r

HAROLD ' ~'· '

, ,,

FIOOLESTJCKS!
THINK I t.vArfrEO
THEM 'G"TOR6'

T'EAT 'J!IjJ TWO?

MIST&amp;R/

Pick up At G. &amp; G. CAJII
Ill W. MAIN

I'OMIIOY

AUCTIONEER
COMPLETE SALES
MANAGEMENT
Writ., JilooQo or Contoct

JIM CARNAHAN
RACINI. OHIO

EXPERIENCED

WHEB
ALIGNMENT

Meigs

ABBIE AND SLATS

Property
Transfers

and

IRAKI SERVIa
IDle Alignment Shop
Phanof92.H76
l'omeroy

Wllllam Everett Colllnl,
Unlted States of America,
roronirb' Grueaer llod:1
.Atre, Salisbury. .
Woru
"'i~:i~l Edna Duffy, dec., lo E. J.
;
Duffy, Edward P. Duffy, Rita
Reflrl2-l Bamm, Alfidavir lot Transfer,
Pbotlel Pomeroy.
E. J. Duffy, dec .. to Edward
~idiiiieii;r~~~~ P. Duffy, Rita Hamm, Affidavit
' 1
Gf Traasfer, Pomeroy.
flee. all makee.
Rita Hamm, William
P.
1be Fabric Sbop, l'omeNJ llamm, Edward P.
Duffy,
Aatborlzed Slager Sales
James Duffy, to Sybil Eber•
.......
':IItie b&amp;&lt;b, Loll 8 aad 12, Pomeroy.
Sybil Ebersacll, 1o Edward
P. Duffy, James Duffy, Loll I
and 12, Pomeroy.
Everelt R. Hayes, Helea C.
:'.:"~ Unlted Slates, E811.

W. Morn II.

·-- -

-·* 4' •

an

'W

-~-·

and Ena
ta. Dun
Of. Cubic

7

......

s.:-"' lrf-HHH~ a+-+-+-+--1
DOW!f

-

EXPE*IENCED

l.at;p-

15~

D AILY Cllnl"llQVVDDi- H1 a's llew te .watllk
&amp;lt~-DLB&amp;&amp;ltB

•o•era••ow

1o
One

to..........

letter~---· Ja - - . p i e A

btU-L'a,Xflwtllo-O'a,-=-.·-

:r:.~,day*:.::'.::!.a:..="'e~ '
.&amp;

WKII

c..n' a

q ;r

'rVIIBBX ' B8K8V

lt'rYBB

X

I!CIJCNCOO: 'l'ZA~
1111 IQIIOa.UI'I.\o-

______ ,..,._loU
'J9

DO-IT-YOU~ELF

'~u ov

ALIGNMENT

,_..

Mr. ud Mrs. Bill Brant

YvOIIIU!, missiolllll'ies "lo Rod• ll
will

.NOW OPEN.

· WHB

iii

..4/.:- •- S--L

be apeaklili at
CAR WASH . Ia,the Africa,
Bradford Cburch of Cbrill,

IN MASON, W•. VA.

QGLW88KPGLXI. LB~ B'r 'rVXBRII
WB ' Y:I:BT :1: LW:I:WPII.-YPB:I:IO
Y I 6V"a O.J'PC-"' '!'RUB
AliOVI: ....... TO DOUB'l' .AlfD
lllillUIL 1111 Ul'I.UWNO

,

Mil1ionariet

Sunday morning ud ...niDI,
July 10.
The Branll wiD be lbarilg
their uperieDces of five YWI

LOOK FOR GRAND .
OPENING SOON/ ·· 11 ''""' with lhe 181lm Ia the
Zambezle Valley aDd the aew·
Jy established' laltoloa in Hlppump
po Valley. BID and Jackie are
tie lank. .
on
a year•a furlough. Slides wlll
leptl&lt; Tank Cleauer.
be presenre-d 4JUriD1 lbe .....
llllrt J'arm Bureau.
ill llll'lcee.
' liOio

and

IRAKE SDVIa

Blaettn'ars
_ ., . _ .
.,., r 21 "''"

,_,.,

Jii!~:!!:=:w~:l

Jolla V. Hetzer, 'l'rusles, Pbyl·
Ill Hetzer, to Edna K. Stewari,
.25 A., OliVe.
Bird Buras, Mildred
lo,·Frank Bowman, Macle Bow36 Acres, Rullaad.
Ge.rtrude Smltb Mitchell to
Opba W. OffuU, Ruth IL Off.
uu, 4 Acres, Cbesler.
Val Well to Ala A. Hostiu,
e A..-es, Orange Twp.
Pearl Jacobi, Tina K. JIII:Ohl,
Ollford c. J8&lt;0'01, Mildred M.
J111:0bt, to Slate of Ohio, Court

GIVE DINNER
Mr. and Mrs. Allell Elclllllg.
er eaterlalned wllb 1 fam111
dbmor over the weekelld
ai
their home, Mulberry Heiehls.
Guests were Mr. and Mre. David McGhee, Colwnbua; Mr.
and Mrs. Mas Eicllln&amp;er 8ld
Becky, and Mr. and !ln. Paul
Eicblnger and Paule June 8ld
Tamara.
---FOX DIES
DETROIT (UP)) -Ervl•
(Pete) Fox, star oolflelder for
lhret porma111 wt.ninc Detroit
Tiger teams died Toeaday at
the age of 5:, from cancar.
Fox, who played If major
lesgue aeaOOIIS in the ll's and
40's coinpiling a .Z98 baWDs

IT'~ A LOM6 WAY

1'0 TlPPERAt'l...•

J
l

'

'X=~~~L~==~~~~--~~~~----~

•:.age, bad been iU ~r !liNe

1

· .

LAWN TENNIII---N~ T ,;;.111
l
"'"rvR ' "' es (Ill' I Larry Klllg·el Alllambra, Clllt',:
husband " Wlmbledell· ClbluDploR BUlle ,J~ Kils, wu
!~eateR In lbe MCOIId .read oC
the Welsh OpeD ,LaWD• 'l'ania
cbampk&gt;ublpe Tuelday . ill
BirloR Geoff Bluotl, _U,,M:

BUGS BUNNY

DID YA GIVS

WES'llJIURY,. 'N,Y: . (UPU -

Delmar Herbert Whaley,
Noble Vjctory, !llf,U.S. hopeful
E. Whaley, to Sbell~ WIJa. II Satunlay • • • fll!,lllll
ley,. Herbert EugeM Wlialey, Jnlmlillloaal Trot ,t RDIIivall
Acres 8lld 1 Acres, BedfOrd. Racewlf,. •
tba ..,• ...,.._
.
. No•. I pPallloll ~· Pla'fllr

'

.,.

a.e.ta; ·

of 8J.
tn,drew
Wirullr
e tba1 JIGIL
rN1
·JUt
1ear,
~·oNo.'

'
"

'Vou don't auppOH Eddy Jlmaon Ia foolllh 111f1U11o to be
-.c!nl!aylnc whh 11oOH hallvolnatory dovp? H• 10&amp;1111111
,. 'liMptlrll'lll tn11t 111m Willi a lim'"
·
-- - ~----- ~- ~.

'

A replica of the Slllut It
LibertJ, •flflb the 111M of 111
ll'lclnal. lllelda II 1111 1 pan
All.
.
I

By RAIJIH H!IMDAHL
-- . ., ,. .
YEI!!IEL~ AdiOOO
iC~UBIIJN1 ?

1D ladles tiolles, ·, JlGiemlr)'
Casali a1 Saa Franc11ct wu •
Order EasemA!RJ; Salisbury.
llrat round · 'Vietor over II.
Eber G. GriH!ey, Duel M. Moran af Arpnllna, 1-l, 1-L
Grindley, to Syracuaa
u...
INTERNATIONAL TROT
ltl:,d Cburcb, lac., Loll,

TO UNDERGO
Curtis
w'oife, SURGDYWill
ed rllbllo your
F..t andergo surgery -at the OolumaDd easy. Free ·
bus University iloBplll1 W~
Pbone IIIM284,
Goeg1eiJI day. He Ia expected wbe tbers
Ready·MD Co., Mlddleporl, .lwo or three weieb ~ani.
Ollio.
. ... Ill 1111 ' NODI mrMber II m.

JJ

I. '

.

t.. """·"'' -~ .loi~ ·..
,JI~&gt;I.'l~'!IJ,o' t4l f

''.

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.... ·

--- --- --- -

�J

·,

'

. :. :J

'

DORA BELLE AN' ~~e:

,,'

VOU TOOK
TH'WORDS
RIGHTOIIT
OFMV

HAWK BAKER

1

~~Xtra Cash The.Want
·liZ\ t S:IIS

Ad Way

'FOR
S0ti!O
STATION

eExpert BusiDeu Counsel·
Ung ·To _Insure Your

IO&lt;&gt;dti~

'

Std. trano.

Pomeroy Motor Co.

MOUTH!!

JIWIU litllJ, JllatDtllf
for Plalnttff
1. B. (Y.Brtm.
1

••Jmt.11.10..,1el. ... ,

SOCIAL
..

CAtENOARt

(Before M.y htl
· aocolveOno"I'_.W_
Camplni ot Royal Oak Pork

BIG BEND
TRAILER SALES

~

OPEN EVES. 9:00P.M.

..--_--'&gt;'

ftt.o ...,,

1UY A TRAILER

Auto Sales

BUilDING
MATERIAL

l'iJ\

Ennlnt• and Satu';C'•Y

~:: ~~~le=·~J:23~~~G~a~lll~po~l~lt,:O~.
Allor 6:GO P.M.

buildingwindows,
material,beams. REGISTERED
Treeiol
ber, doors,
Pups. Prli:o all
eooa
----i.Pomf1.i.iioo"-'.;.Mo=tor=Co•.=7=1iiiiil can afford. Call .~70 or
•
oee o~ · Gralulili at
Sugar Run lllll.
n 4tp
USED

1964 CORYAIR Delux• 2 Dr. R..Iuced to ...... $995
Turquoise flnilh, ~ lalerior, 100&lt;1 tiroo, ndlo, ~eater.

Metropolitan Moton

SUccess.
Phono GaRipolll 446'3742

11 -~-~~----,

Gar HITCHED!

SEUING OUT

e2 USED CARS LEFT
e PARTS for OUTBOARD
ePre•ent De~ler Retiring
MOTORS
el"'ne Otlportunily For Mao eBOATS &amp; MOTORS
Who Wants Tg Own Ria
eBOAT PAINT
OWu Business.
eTOOLS
ePiid TrairUol Program
S..At
(S Week&gt;)

Motor Co.

1962 BUICK lnvicta Conv. Reduced to . ; .... $1495
Alltomatie traDJ. Power .atewtn.or. White linilb, reel luted or.
Radk&gt; and heal«. EJotn IODd W.W. tires.
·
1964 CHEV. Bi.U,ne 4 Dr. Reduced to ...... $1595
G"'f fiDisb, vinyl interior, 3:1'1 ..,_ Ill. tniloo. Powailldo,

LA5r NIGHT AN'

IN MIDDLEPORT, O.

P01ue1oy

~ OIIIUTT

'LOPED OFF

I L I S.rvictl

i. f -· .. . _: .

ROUTE 124

•1 IIDII. . .
YOU I-1EIJ HAVE

('LEAIJIIJG,
CUSWJG.

KEPT li~ VJO,...EN
PRISOIJERS 1"-l

SWEE-PING,

THE 1-\01.1E FOR

I&lt;IAI:HIIJG,
IRo/VIfJG

YEARS!

1HAT3 NOT m.tE!

AIJD I DOfJ'T WMJT
TO HEAR l&gt;m MOR£

GASULINI ALLEY

DR I'll
TAK.E AVJA't
YOOR KITCH€/J

A8lOT IT/

PRIVILEG~f

e SALES e
e RENTALS e
eCamplna Equlp-nt•

ROUSH &amp; LYONS
Camping Trailen
Horton St.
--

how we

Ma-.

W. Yo.
773-5611

'I',.,..,, Ill-'

are loae'
'
Syracuse, 0. Ph. 992-3990.

HONDA

..

8y ART SANSOM

1 PO MOT WASil DISHes!

\

ROOM HOUSE, Hartford, W.
Va. Pb. 1182-2368.
7 3 61p

-;- THAT'S WHAT I - ."'\

YOO WASil 01SH6S
-NOT N.F:-tOV!

7 6 6tc

----Notice

....

II ONI OI'THI

SIPJLD. ~AV6 SAID!

\

.,
llr C:HESTII . . . . .

N\

IIICIIT PI\)PLIJ . CALL

DICK RAWLINGS

bwlings Honda Sales
WY 2-2151

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

AND HIS FRIENDS

By MERRILL BLOSSER
I l'D &amp;UTE"- SEE THE

c,6,MP OoCroRl

SOME.THING MLlSf Bf W~ONG WITH ME.

COMING IOONI

~ Ol'llooh111

........

To

PIZZA

.,....OurDrl¥•1•

AT

J

m GREATEn

LITTLI! ORPHAN ANNII!

ly

WH£W!

r .. 12" .._ __75o .. 1.10
Doul

Gas.
llnCIIerl, Ill .. •MaiD
~0).

••

, •Ids!

~w

7HAN~S.

. _.... Ca...,.Out ........
CALL WY s.9tOI

leo .
,

. ~1i11r

HAROLD ' ~'· '

, ,,

FIOOLESTJCKS!
THINK I t.vArfrEO
THEM 'G"TOR6'

T'EAT 'J!IjJ TWO?

MIST&amp;R/

Pick up At G. &amp; G. CAJII
Ill W. MAIN

I'OMIIOY

AUCTIONEER
COMPLETE SALES
MANAGEMENT
Writ., JilooQo or Contoct

JIM CARNAHAN
RACINI. OHIO

EXPERIENCED

WHEB
ALIGNMENT

Meigs

ABBIE AND SLATS

Property
Transfers

and

IRAKI SERVIa
IDle Alignment Shop
Phanof92.H76
l'omeroy

Wllllam Everett Colllnl,
Unlted States of America,
roronirb' Grueaer llod:1
.Atre, Salisbury. .
Woru
"'i~:i~l Edna Duffy, dec., lo E. J.
;
Duffy, Edward P. Duffy, Rita
Reflrl2-l Bamm, Alfidavir lot Transfer,
Pbotlel Pomeroy.
E. J. Duffy, dec .. to Edward
~idiiiieii;r~~~~ P. Duffy, Rita Hamm, Affidavit
' 1
Gf Traasfer, Pomeroy.
flee. all makee.
Rita Hamm, William
P.
1be Fabric Sbop, l'omeNJ llamm, Edward P.
Duffy,
Aatborlzed Slager Sales
James Duffy, to Sybil Eber•
.......
':IItie b&amp;&lt;b, Loll 8 aad 12, Pomeroy.
Sybil Ebersacll, 1o Edward
P. Duffy, James Duffy, Loll I
and 12, Pomeroy.
Everelt R. Hayes, Helea C.
:'.:"~ Unlted Slates, E811.

W. Morn II.

·-- -

-·* 4' •

an

'W

-~-·

and Ena
ta. Dun
Of. Cubic

7

......

s.:-"' lrf-HHH~ a+-+-+-+--1
DOW!f

-

EXPE*IENCED

l.at;p-

15~

D AILY Cllnl"llQVVDDi- H1 a's llew te .watllk
&amp;lt~-DLB&amp;&amp;ltB

•o•era••ow

1o
One

to..........

letter~---· Ja - - . p i e A

btU-L'a,Xflwtllo-O'a,-=-.·-

:r:.~,day*:.::'.::!.a:..="'e~ '
.&amp;

WKII

c..n' a

q ;r

'rVIIBBX ' B8K8V

lt'rYBB

X

I!CIJCNCOO: 'l'ZA~
1111 IQIIOa.UI'I.\o-

______ ,..,._loU
'J9

DO-IT-YOU~ELF

'~u ov

ALIGNMENT

,_..

Mr. ud Mrs. Bill Brant

YvOIIIU!, missiolllll'ies "lo Rod• ll
will

.NOW OPEN.

· WHB

iii

..4/.:- •- S--L

be apeaklili at
CAR WASH . Ia,the Africa,
Bradford Cburch of Cbrill,

IN MASON, W•. VA.

QGLW88KPGLXI. LB~ B'r 'rVXBRII
WB ' Y:I:BT :1: LW:I:WPII.-YPB:I:IO
Y I 6V"a O.J'PC-"' '!'RUB
AliOVI: ....... TO DOUB'l' .AlfD
lllillUIL 1111 Ul'I.UWNO

,

Mil1ionariet

Sunday morning ud ...niDI,
July 10.
The Branll wiD be lbarilg
their uperieDces of five YWI

LOOK FOR GRAND .
OPENING SOON/ ·· 11 ''""' with lhe 181lm Ia the
Zambezle Valley aDd the aew·
Jy established' laltoloa in Hlppump
po Valley. BID and Jackie are
tie lank. .
on
a year•a furlough. Slides wlll
leptl&lt; Tank Cleauer.
be presenre-d 4JUriD1 lbe .....
llllrt J'arm Bureau.
ill llll'lcee.
' liOio

and

IRAKE SDVIa

Blaettn'ars
_ ., . _ .
.,., r 21 "''"

,_,.,

Jii!~:!!:=:w~:l

Jolla V. Hetzer, 'l'rusles, Pbyl·
Ill Hetzer, to Edna K. Stewari,
.25 A., OliVe.
Bird Buras, Mildred
lo,·Frank Bowman, Macle Bow36 Acres, Rullaad.
Ge.rtrude Smltb Mitchell to
Opba W. OffuU, Ruth IL Off.
uu, 4 Acres, Cbesler.
Val Well to Ala A. Hostiu,
e A..-es, Orange Twp.
Pearl Jacobi, Tina K. JIII:Ohl,
Ollford c. J8&lt;0'01, Mildred M.
J111:0bt, to Slate of Ohio, Court

GIVE DINNER
Mr. and Mrs. Allell Elclllllg.
er eaterlalned wllb 1 fam111
dbmor over the weekelld
ai
their home, Mulberry Heiehls.
Guests were Mr. and Mre. David McGhee, Colwnbua; Mr.
and Mrs. Mas Eicllln&amp;er 8ld
Becky, and Mr. and !ln. Paul
Eicblnger and Paule June 8ld
Tamara.
---FOX DIES
DETROIT (UP)) -Ervl•
(Pete) Fox, star oolflelder for
lhret porma111 wt.ninc Detroit
Tiger teams died Toeaday at
the age of 5:, from cancar.
Fox, who played If major
lesgue aeaOOIIS in the ll's and
40's coinpiling a .Z98 baWDs

IT'~ A LOM6 WAY

1'0 TlPPERAt'l...•

J
l

'

'X=~~~L~==~~~~--~~~~----~

•:.age, bad been iU ~r !liNe

1

· .

LAWN TENNIII---N~ T ,;;.111
l
"'"rvR ' "' es (Ill' I Larry Klllg·el Alllambra, Clllt',:
husband " Wlmbledell· ClbluDploR BUlle ,J~ Kils, wu
!~eateR In lbe MCOIId .read oC
the Welsh OpeD ,LaWD• 'l'ania
cbampk&gt;ublpe Tuelday . ill
BirloR Geoff Bluotl, _U,,M:

BUGS BUNNY

DID YA GIVS

WES'llJIURY,. 'N,Y: . (UPU -

Delmar Herbert Whaley,
Noble Vjctory, !llf,U.S. hopeful
E. Whaley, to Sbell~ WIJa. II Satunlay • • • fll!,lllll
ley,. Herbert EugeM Wlialey, Jnlmlillloaal Trot ,t RDIIivall
Acres 8lld 1 Acres, BedfOrd. Racewlf,. •
tba ..,• ...,.._
.
. No•. I pPallloll ~· Pla'fllr

'

.,.

a.e.ta; ·

of 8J.
tn,drew
Wirullr
e tba1 JIGIL
rN1
·JUt
1ear,
~·oNo.'

'
"

'Vou don't auppOH Eddy Jlmaon Ia foolllh 111f1U11o to be
-.c!nl!aylnc whh 11oOH hallvolnatory dovp? H• 10&amp;1111111
,. 'liMptlrll'lll tn11t 111m Willi a lim'"
·
-- - ~----- ~- ~.

'

A replica of the Slllut It
LibertJ, •flflb the 111M of 111
ll'lclnal. lllelda II 1111 1 pan
All.
.
I

By RAIJIH H!IMDAHL
-- . ., ,. .
YEI!!IEL~ AdiOOO
iC~UBIIJN1 ?

1D ladles tiolles, ·, JlGiemlr)'
Casali a1 Saa Franc11ct wu •
Order EasemA!RJ; Salisbury.
llrat round · 'Vietor over II.
Eber G. GriH!ey, Duel M. Moran af Arpnllna, 1-l, 1-L
Grindley, to Syracuaa
u...
INTERNATIONAL TROT
ltl:,d Cburcb, lac., Loll,

TO UNDERGO
Curtis
w'oife, SURGDYWill
ed rllbllo your
F..t andergo surgery -at the OolumaDd easy. Free ·
bus University iloBplll1 W~
Pbone IIIM284,
Goeg1eiJI day. He Ia expected wbe tbers
Ready·MD Co., Mlddleporl, .lwo or three weieb ~ani.
Ollio.
. ... Ill 1111 ' NODI mrMber II m.

JJ

I. '

.

t.. """·"'' -~ .loi~ ·..
,JI~&gt;I.'l~'!IJ,o' t4l f

''.

"'

.... ·

--- --- --- -

�I

'

-

(

'

VIEW
, !.

--

_''' ,

B(')~~rS Smash Remains of Oif

Around and

eat hers Make the Fuss

SAIGON (UPII -U.S. Navy
bombers returned to North Viet
Nam'a btuest oil depot just
two miles _oulslde the port of
Ha1phonc today and smashed
what wss tell of it.
One A4 Skyhawk was shot
down by ground fire but the
p!lot was rescued, spokesmen
88ld.

Two other planes, 0111 a iw()o
mao bomber, were downed by
ground fire Wednesday In other
action and all three men were
missing, offiCiaia disclosed.
The raids on the oU
installation along the south
bank of tbe Cua Cam River
was a return engagement &lt;or
the racility first smashed In the

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

allaclul JaM 29 tbat llso hit
tile outaklrls ol nearby Hanoi.
llepol't Giant FlrebaU

Smoke boDed four miles lniD
the air over the dockside area
and pilots reported a gigantic
llrebaU set off by a secondary
uplosion.
The United States stepped up
lis air strlkes-310 In three

e

l'8COI'IHetUnc days-as the
milltary pressed home PresIdent Johnson's vow to punish
North Viet Nam until II is
ready to talk peace.
The awesome display of air
might coincided with apparent
new diplomatic efforts to start
a Viet Nam peace offensive
Brldsh Prime Minister Ha·

•

at y

rold Wilson in London disclosed
he would go to Moscow as well
as Washington this month for
lalks,
Undersecr&lt;tary
of State
George Ball in Wasblngton said
Wednesday there were signs of
some "war-weariness" in North

Viet Nam and Vice President
Hubert Humphrey said in Los

Angek!a there were "flickering"
bits of evidence Hanoi might he
interested in a solution to the
conflict.
Handled Big Supplies
The bombs on the oil depot
which bad handled 95 per ceu&amp;
of all North Viet N~'s
petroleum imports undel'SI'Ored
the diplomatic pressure.

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

J ,
•

Tbe
aircraft

"

•

~

I

•

;j•f/•
'
"'~' 'f 1,~- . I

' hal ..
styhllia'
'
clrrler ~·lta:a ._

Ia broad dayllpt at l p.lll.jll "
e.m. EDT).
,
- · .
AU bomb, wert ' 1111, .. . ·
~pokeSIIUIII rell9fled.
- 'tildef,.,' ,,l'llt
'I'lley aald ..
·"tbat ouly U..,. ,tdpa "
,.
the outer ~ of tlla'pott 1111&amp;
none was al lbe pi~. ' ,

•

enttne

De11oted To The Interet,. 01 Tlut Meigs-Muon .4rM
VOL XVIII

NO. 56

POMEROY -MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

THURSDAY, JULY 7, 1966

\

Springfield Firm Will Build

fM CENTS

Hanoi

TONIGHT &amp; THURSDAY
NOT OPEN
Friday and Saturdey
July 1,11

, "THE HEROES OF
TELEMARK"

- Techlllcolor
Kirk Douglas Richard !Jnrn"
ftaaturetta
SUNDAY, MONDAY
ond TUESDAY

political aupport" -

uA PATCH OF BLUE"
Sidney PothPr
Shelly Wmtcrs

1 means-Ill

In Opposition
On War Policy

ALBERT COX

Cox Purchases
Cuclder Realty
On Court-St
Comofsote w ,l/1 CusiOtTI/Zed
Ro/1 Abuur S1or•d f

MasoN
Dtoive·ln
W. VA ,

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

TONIGHT thru FRI.

Ad•••lral~

'WHAT'S NEW PUSSY CAT'
Peter Sellers

The RANDALL Model TKC3010 Series
"Instant-Play" 23" Portable TV
(23" ove rall d1agonal. 282 sq. ms vtewable area)
•
•
•
•

• ln.slllnl 1'1.-, ·operation
tnstunl p1 r t u re m.!taol sound
Advam ed Q 23' fiO""'u re "&gt;t•rv ~; 23 000 volt hon :w ntal chiUI8111
All new L1ght ed !':lhde Rule Tumng------eus~ 98 tunmg a rad1o
Super hixh M&amp;ln J -s lu~e IF amphher "'1th .. ,C'f'rl1onal semuhvll)'
for sparkling p11 lurt s h EH Plii"S•, and df't1il
• Pre&lt;:-I '&gt; IOn -(Ta(tt&gt;rl \ HF ''-'"P''r Soop"" I unt-r wtth pre-Mt fioe
tunmg
tran !lJ~torllt'd .! " lwt'd UHI tuner
• Adm1ral wide-unr:lf' l3" St o•t&gt;ll.ond p ill ••re tube--mo..-ie-&amp;quate
scre~.&gt; n alurmni iPd for c r t~P lor 1gh tPr pi ctures
• Bmlt -tn dqJult- t .. l.. sr o1m -&lt;Il l &lt; nnn
Admtral qwabty apeWr

• Tont&gt; Nmtrol

l'ull I

1

I

(Jn

Off 'volume Control

C h01 c,. nf I"' ' d••(• illu r •ulors on ~ lim metal cabioe\1.
Mode l TKC ,OJ / \, olrl" ' gnunt'd lirush
Mode l Tl\.C ..;.tJl , \bpi. ~.,r wn ed firush
19 '~" ho gh :llo

Y. o.:ll" ! J

0 •

dl:"':'jJ.

$16995

COMPLETE

WITH BASE

BUDGET SHOP
2 TWIN SIZE

• Hollywood Beds
•Sof• Beds - - - - - -

I

2 PCE.

(

• Living Room Suites

1.

2 PCE.
SEE THE NEW '67 MODELS ON DISPLAY

•Bedroom Suites _ _ $99

Baker Furniture

DEN OUR RADIO &amp; T.V.
Phone 985-3308

INII!Iillnc

economic support Ill dilliullve

July 12·13·14

Chester, 0.

IN MIDDLEPORT, 0.

Elberfeld• Invite you to stop fn 1t our 3rd floor furniture d.tplrtment. We hiVe 1

l~rge

~

seledion of E1rly American - Traditional -

Modern •nd French Provindal Two Piece Living Room Suites and
Sofas. Sale prices now In effect 10 hurry In and purchase that new
suite you have h1d your eye on.

material, IHIBIIcaJ
means and uperta Netnary
for the riclorloua rep•l!dm ,Gf
the American &amp;giJleSIIIGD •• • "
As !0011 . . lbe deleplel jet
through with .,.autet IIIII
strategy, they tumed flo euber
JftSSlng problem.
: ECODOmle dl!eualioDI 1lltllll
' the Council of Mutual JkoDomo
I ie Aasistanl'l! (Comec~~~~)-llw
Communist eommcm llllllrettbe same stste C0UDC11 bullciiDa
began a few minutes later II
where the Warsaw Plet talkl
were held. AD lop leaden cl
the eight Oun!!cop Mllaal

wee

presenl

First Aid
Course will
Be Offered

'.

-...-

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