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Violence. Lives--and Grows--in Mainstream

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Ell!ToJiS I NOTE: 11m

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· a lJl'l !lliatoei'ollller, wu · kept ........wns with lh&lt;\ JIOCJII•
! :~: ...,. Son. Robert F. who were, holdlns ~m.
.
. ·W"'i" he was shot · The 1111!' was yoiUug. ' Bot I
, oatly

tOcii,y at ·tile Ambosllldor · doo't know what he woo

Halo!. )lore Ia ~~ atocy.
•

He

Ill' RON BENNETI

row hands, then walked directly
behiJd the podium, through
"""" curtalna that led 11&gt; a
hlllwO)' Into a kitchen areL
It ~~- 11 If he might be
,olng toward an e""'eyes'
entraDce.

soomed

TV ....

(Continued from Page I)
ln!ormed &lt;i the dread!ul
lmmodlste aftermath by renms
of videOtaPe. There also were
The man next to me was shot.
eyewitnesses. And one report
I think he was lhot In the heed.
had II that when Kenned.Y was
I &amp;at 1111 and started shooUng
shot, and was on the l)l'OOJid In
pictures. Kennedy "" _on the shod&lt; wltb crowds mUIIng
lloar bl-1111 from the top of
aroond him, he looked up and
the heed. He was whispering U&gt;
said: u1s eveJ1hod,Y safe?'

....obody.

There was lhe report of a

His wife came ln. She told
·~ oo get back end give
Kennedy ll&lt;lllO air.
After shooting pictures of
Kennedy, I ran to the suspect.
He hid a dark complexlorL He

suspect being seized. And then,

as thO Initial shock began to

wear 111: slightly, one remem·
berad how only mlmtes before
Kemedy had been happy,
buoyant mi energetic in his
nationally televleed v I c t o r Y
statement, discussing serious
Issues but also joking with weDwishers. And one suddenly was
depressed beyond words.

had on a sweat sh.lrt and jeans.
He put up a big Rght whUe

Revival Announeed

The report was that Kerme·

A )'ooGI revival is In progreso
st tho Church o! Christ In
ChriSI!an U n I o n, Hartford,
throolll&gt; June 9, at 7:30 p.m.
each evening and 2 p.m. 011 the
flna) dl,.v; Rev. Herman Stewart Amanda, wUI be loader or
a aooafolll on JUne 9.

dy's wife, Ethel, had been calm
after the shooting. And It
seemed that only yesterday one
bad heard the same words on
television about JaCCJ.~ellne Ken-

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. PT. PLEASANT - The 196809 ofllcoro Of tho Pdnt PlossJO)'cees wore l!ll.noa'
ant
at coremonles hold cllrln&amp; a baJ&gt;.
quo! at tho Ploaaant Point RoJOrl
Mondly JUal¢.
The lnatlWns ofllcer wasJack
Soyre, vice prooldent ol Reclon
4. Tlki111 A~~~eewereJimTO)'Jar,
president; Bllll!ockenberr)', IDternal vlee preslilenl; Mike Whao
len, external nee preoldenl; John

Famous Quartet Here
The !amoos Wilson FamUy
Qlartet &lt;i Johnaon Clt:y, Tlllft.,
will present a special program
of music and inspiration at 8
o'clock tonight at the Church of
Christ In Middlcpon •
The WUson Qlartet has b...,
In the Gospel Singing field since
1957. It has been featured on lts
own television program In Johnson CU;v, Teon., and are also
regular participant&amp; on the nation wide Revival Fires Television production of Joplin, Missouri. The family appears almost every night In ~spel eoncerts or revivals throughout the
United States.
The Wilson Family records tor
Crusade Records. 0. D. Wilson, Sherrill and JoDavid are~
ordained ministers; 0, D. has
preached tor over 30 years a-

ares

mong tho Now Testament Church• s ot the Restoration Movement.
This ls a ••One Night Revival.,
and Is open oo tho publle. A
treo-wUI offering wUI be received.
PLAN FAMILY OUTING
The Twin Clt:y iluine Club
wUI hold a !amlb ootlng at camden Park In ltmtlngton, !lmdO)',
June 9. Members end their tamDies and Invited guestswUlloave
!rom the A &amp; P parking lot ho
Mlddlepon at 9 a.m.
VETERANS MEMORIAL
".,
HOSPITAL
Admissions - Dane Young,
Harrisonville; Katie Hill, Raclne;
MU!ord Eden, Stadyslds.
Discharges- John Groce, Rmald Grimm, Jolm Adams, Dallas
Gibbs, Della Stahl, Orville Arms,

samaeu, secretary, And 1'11.4

Degree

Reeeivee
Dallas. Memphis. Los
William Barnhart.
Angeles. You ~;it there and look
Michael E. Winebrenner, sm
at the television acreen, and cameraman; Irwin stroll , 17,
o! !llr. end Mrs. Da,. B. Wb.,.
and Mrs. Elbuboth Evans.
say: What's wrong with us?
Schrade told aides who rushed MEIGS GENERAL HOSPITAL brenner, Syracuse, was oneof370
Admissions
- Alice Johnson, graduates receiving degrees at
'
to his side: uHelp Bobby help
Middleport; Edith Rice Pomeroy; the 107th anmal ...,.....,ement
Bobby."
FHA TO MEET
Kennedy's press secretary, Thomas Weber, Chester; Robert of capital University, Columbus,
The RoUllld F11 A Chapter will
June 3, in the downtown Vetel'llll
Frank Manciewicz, gave a more Cornell, Portland.
meet Wecltesday at 5:30 p. m.,
Discharges - Douglas Circle. MemorW A..titorium.
detailed report on the senator's
(Continued !rom Page 1)
June 5, at the h1Jh school. Mem- '
Speaker was Dr. B. D. Thomaa,
bers are to wear school clothes emerge With newa ~ tbe condition following the operaretiring president of Batelle
and nat. sport clothes.
OFFlCE TO CLOSE
encouraging outlook until 6:30 tlon.
MemorW Institute. Dr.Harold L.
Manctewicz said Kennedy had
The Jackson Production Credit
a.m. PDT.
L. Yocb.un, president cf the wo..
Astronaut John Glem, who been returned to the intensive otfice In Pomeroy will be closed
has been campaigning with care room
and that his June 11, 12 and 13, so that wom- versUy, conducted theJune2bac·
Kennedy, was ooe o1 those who condition was "extremely critl¥ en employes can attend a semi~ calaureate service in alumni
gymnasium on the campua.
ar to be held in Columbus.
stood in grief-stricken silence tn cal."
TONIGHT AND THURSDAY
a hospital corridor. sen. Ed"The vital signs remain about
JUDO 5 - 6, NOT OPEN
ward Kennedy ot Massachusetts as they were except he is now
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
now oo Los Angeles In an Air breathing on his own which he
'THE GLORY STOMPERS
Force plane from San Francisco was oot prior to surgi!ry. All
', "' · ' (TOelll!icolOT)
aDd hurried Ul tho hooplial io be but one fragment or the 'bollol
Dennis Hopper, Jody McCrea
with hla brother.
has been removed !rom the
PLUS
In Colorado Springs, VIce head injury, There is still one
TEN UTTLE INDIANS
President Hoben H. IIUmpiu'ey bullet apparentb somewhere In
Huah O'Brien, Shirley Eaton
relossed a statement at the Air the hack &lt;i his nock althoogll
Delivery of new· phone books caDs wUI be made by dialing
SHOW STARTS, 7 P.M.
Force Academy.
UllJ is not regarded as a major to Pomeroy area phone users ••1•' ahead of the area code ltd
"Our hopes and pr13era are problem.
starts early next week and will the out-of-town number. Other
with
Senator
Kennedy
and
those
••Senator
Kennedy lost a be completed before the switch calls, such as person to penon.
•
others who have been victims of conalderable alll(llnt of blood aa to expanded direct distance dial· credit cll'd anll collect, rtqtdre
ttmN
this dreadfUl act f1 violence,'' a result or the bullet which ing (EDDD) oo June 16,
the accell code uo" (zero) be.! IJ "
entered and passed througfl the
he Ill
Instructions tor using the new lore dlall118 aroa code and the
TONIGHT-THU.-FHI.
Humphrey and
MeCartlly mastoid bone on tho rlgl&gt;t side EDDD service are detailed In the called party's number.
JIJNE5-6-7
auspended their campaign actl~ at his head and some c1. the directory's introductory pages.
Eatallllshment of EDDD Is a
DOUBLE FEATURE
vltles loading up Ul the Chicago !ragmonts or bullet and bone EDDD enables cuslOmers to dial major Jllfl o! a current •900,Winner of 5 Academ&gt; Awudsl eCI'IVention where the three went toward the brain stem.
all cypes of long distance calls ooo service improvement pr~
WHO'S AFRAID OF VIRGINIA were prepared to baWe tor the
'"In addition to the damage direct.
gram. It will oot a!fect phone
WOOLF?
Democrati~ nomination tor the . done by the bullet, 1here may
Included in the book Bnd mak- rates, he &amp;lid.
EI-TO)'Ior
presidency.
have boon Impairment or the ing the switch to EDDD are c(llloo
Also oo be acdvatedwithEDDD
Rkhard Burton
Wounded as they stood beslds blood supply U&gt; the ml~raln munities of Pmneroy, Middl~ is a new mtcrOft'sve facUlty alt.PLUS
KeMedy were Paul Schrade, a whi&lt;:h doctors say controls or at port, Letart Falls, PorUard, Ra- uated on Breezy Helpta HOI.
Peter Sellers
CIO¥AFL union ofticial; Ira lea&amp;t governs certain vital signs cine and Rutland.
It &lt;ontains Intricate radl&lt;l equiP'THE BOBO
Goldstein, 19, a radio newsman; including the eye track, the
Robert L. Keatley of Athena, ment which relays calla to the
Bdtt Eklaod-Rossano Brazzl William Wetsel, 30, a television level ot consciousness and district commercial manager, long di1tance center In Athono.
indirectly the Wking processes. urges .phone users to check dl~
Keatley said any customer not
..The doctors said the next 12 rectory Instructions before call- receiving a new pb0110 book by
U&gt; 36 hours will be a very ing long distance on June 16, Saturday, J·ono 15, ohould caU the
crtUcal period. His coodiUon Is
He said station • to - station business offlce here Monday• .
Usted as extremely critical."
~lice Chief Reddin said the
By Miss America
gunman had been offered an
l!ld
. ConllliOIItal
attorney but that he made no
response.
ByU~
The pollee station was guarded by police with plsU&gt;ls, riDes
and anyone entering the building was searched twice.
Bend Regiiiii
PtwU&gt;graphers asked If they ·
June 21,
23
B/ United Preas lntemallonal
could get a picture of tho
WILBERFORCE,
OHIO - THE ADMINrBTRATION building at
gunman
end
a
pollee
aide,
You'll find a style just right for yoo in our
Wllber!orce
Univerolt;y,
a prl\11te unlwrolt;y predcmlnantly Nagro
obvlooob recalling the shooting
wide selection of styles and colors.
or Leo Harvey Oswald by Jack with ari enrollment ot nearly 600, waa reportec2 oeclf'iecl by a group
Rllby, in the Dallas pollee or students today. Green CGwlt;\' Sherll! Rosaell Bradley adnaed
GoY. James A. Rhodes' offtce that the bu11dirw waa "occupied by
alal/00, said:
unknown.
uNo one is going to get within atudenta" but the llllDlber
Pomeroy a thousand reet of him ..,
M.in St.
John McElroy, chief eucutlw Ullataat to ~ea, aald the
sheri!! had not req110sted NaUonal Guardsmen be called...,. lindley,
under Ohio law, would have oo make the r-ot olnee tho unlvorolv
is not a state instltutlCIL
nedy.

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New Directories Tell All

About Using New EDDD

DrlvL-In

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SUMMER CASUALS

News ... in BriefS

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elected by tho North PolntPiossenl PTA with Rlehlrd Tattenon
elected president.
Serving with Tatteroon will be
Mrs. Cllvln Mellanlel, vleopre..
ldent; Mrs. steve Hayman, secretary, and Mrs. J. T. Sauer,
treasurer.
Durin&amp; the business sesaioo
of tbe meeUng It wos a,_.,.ed
that • total &lt;i $535 had beeo
made rrcm theamual ~rt.. Carnival spon....ed by tho ,,_.

Four Forfeit

Pitchford.
out-going omeers wore orod In a CllldlaD&amp;I&gt;t coremotiY
whieh ,lncluded a brio! hlsU&gt;cy of
tbelr letlvltios as JO)'ceoL
Bob Roberta lnll'OdoC:ed ofllcWo lilted at tho main table and '
Miss Mason COUJitlr,CariKqley,
.... introduced by Bob Cocl&gt;ran. Dan Jobnocin made the Introduction &lt;i the JO)'c- ofll.
cera.
Cortl!lcates or merit for IJUI..

lan

stemlng dub work were presented to Doul llinlar and Dave
Poore. Charles Zahenaur 1111!1
llll!led JO)'coe of tho Jolontll and

Traffic Bonds

Bob Cocl&gt;na ....
Man.

IIJPCIInled Key

a taker at the narcotic •jbaahISh." Tbe word was brought to
Europe by Crusaders returning
!rom Syria.

PT. PLEASANT - Mloble Alii
ADhrllht Martin, 69; H....ioll, .
Tueodt,y ... HolfeHtooPIW.
A !ormer ownor of tliil Martift
Funeral Home II Atleo, W. VC..
olio was born Auaull ZO,Ii8a,

dol"-•

May Report
.Re1--ft...l By

Mao ·'lberift'

lkvoted To The

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VOL. XX/ lNO. 31

"nlirf

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m.

SIIIINI!tt
•••0111

a .....,_

.,

TilliE:£ FINED
1breo

dol-• lined Tlleo-

of --

Raebel SberldiD, - - · f5
and coots, uall'ed cloar dlotanee; l.arey Brolm, l'llmtl07,
flO a coltl,
Uon, and Joll&gt; SQre. I'Ortland,
~ and colll, poalllq en a doable 7aU011 Uno. ·

rtdd••• _...

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MAK!lii0-QPNA'I10N - Paid easel, president of Jhe,P,omoroy H1iJ! Sc~~Jll Aos~latloo the Pill
rlllhl, presenti a check lor $100 In behalf of the Alwnni Ass~tatlon to .
oct Morc&lt;M", general chairman of the Jllelgo CooiiV Citizens
holarahlp Foundation, known aa 't0ollars tor Scholars." The
gaitllation awards scholarships to Meigs youths in need of
'
s to pill'BIIO training beyond high school.

,e.,.,

ANGELES (UPI)--Son. win In the nation's biggest
Robert F. Kermedy ls dead
presidential preference vote was
Struck down by an assas~Jln's the zenith of Kermedy's march
bullet at a moment of victory, toward lhe White House.
Kennedy died at 1:44 a.m. PDT
Keme&lt;\Y was the same age as
in Good Samaritan Hospital.
his brother was when he
The senator will be buried iii campaigned successfully for the
Arlington National Cemetery, presidency eight years ago, and
probably beside his brother, the he was a member of the
late President John F. Kennedy Cabinet when John F. Kemedy
who also died at the hands of an was slain in Dallas, Nov. 22,
assal!lsin four and a half years 1963.
ago,
Proclaiming this "a time of
At Kennedy's bedside when tragecty and lost," President
death came were his wife, Johnson declared &amp;mday a
Ethel, mother of their 10 national day of mourning for
children who is expecting an Ule slain senator. He ordered a
11th ·late this year, and presldentla1 jet to carry the
Jacqueline Kennedy, widow or body !roll\, Los Angeles U&gt; New
the late President.
York City.
The tousle-haired senator, 42,
Ken ned y'a widow, Ethel,
was the third of four brothers of faced the tragedy with the same
tho Ill-starred lamlb to die a sU&gt;ic courage thai bore JaCIJIOvtolent death. OJUy the YOWl- line Kennedy through the cruel
gest, Sen. Edward M. Kelllledy days !ollowing tho assasslnatioo
of Massachusetts, is left to of the President in 1963.
carry the politieal banner of the
Three of·the senator's eldest
Kennedy clan.
children were flown to KenneWins Primary
dy' s bedside In a presidential
Thii'·Hillo)!&gt;r died a IIWo more jet lrom their Vlrglnls home.
tban . 2~ houra aftoJ:Jo...... sllot.. Tho)' . •rrtreol! · al · tha - llolpllal-down In the kitchen corridor of about two boors be!ore their
a hotel where he had jUbllantl,y lather• •. death In the !IIIII noor '
proclaimed victory In Tuesday's lntenolve care unit.
California primary election. The
Pierre Salinger, who had

§
fanatic's Hate for Israel

usually friendly immigrant but rae I.
Mayor Sam Yort,y of Los ~
he proCessed a long standing hatred of the Jewish state or Is-- geles reported at a news confer~
ence Wednesday that an entry
In Sirhan's diary l•sl month said
"Kennedy has to be assassinated
before June 5, 1968." That date
was the tlrst aMiversary of the
start of the slx~y war in the
Middle East
Yorty said the diary also contained C&lt;llltnent&amp; criticizing Kennedy and such phrases as
'·
.. Long live Nasser, •• a reference
to Gamal Abdel Nasser. president of the United Arab Republic
and dominant figure amOng the
Arab nations in conflict with Israel.
By United Press lnter,.tional
When police arrested Sirhan
NOR,FOI.K, VA. - THE NUCLEAR SUBMARINE Sccrploo, now
euly
Wodnesday morning he had
CIIDclUly presumed loat with all 99 hands, may have been the victim
a
,22
caliber pistol. and witOf lnl&lt;eurato charta.
MUG .SHOT of tbo ousped
nesses said he had just used it
· This was tho theory dsveloped at a !ormal illjulry here by In the shooting of Robert
U&gt; PUI!ll&gt; l bullet deep into KenClndr. George R. Parloh WodnesdO)' ao Na&gt;y olllt:laloln Washlllll- Kenaedy wao tatea by Los
Aagoles
poUee.
eDdy's
brain.
too aorrowtully re:movAd the Scorpi.Qp trom the jjmluln(' llat
Neighbors
said he was a high
aad pronounced It "lost In the depths of tho AU~." 011 coorse at
school graduate who had atf.el».
laot eontaet, It Is believed U&gt; have hit an under101 peak.or ridge In Autos Collide on
hurrying bome.
·
ed Paoadena Cllll CoUeae.
John H. Weidner Jr., owiler ot
SAIGON - 'THE UNITED STATES LAST WEEK suHared 4;308
n
1_o
the health !ood sl&lt;lro, said StrVlolqlm War caauaiUos, lncl..ti~ both dead and woonded, tho groat,.
c081o ee I
han told him he had oo Roo Jor1
IIUIIber fpr any week of tha war, U. S. mUltary ·IQ&gt;d&lt;esmon said
A minor accident 011 tho !lYra- dan ao a cldld ao&gt;l had -n Jews
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cuoe post olllce lot InvolVing kill members or his !amlly,
li - ,&lt;. llaJ..y of theDI fett In !J81lU~ In Bnd aroond Saigon where gov- two vehicles was reported by
"He was nataciUzonancldldn't
' · ~ent, ~ toda,y crushad the last remaining major pockets o1 the sherlfl's department.
like the United States," Wekl' ,~Iii Coug resla\lllce, kiUins 161 ,COinmonlsta. AUted lorcea c..,. A vehicle driven by Oacar ner said. •You had U&gt; he car...
. li.!led U&gt; ll1iard aplnsl several mOre COJnmWllst battallono which lloberteon, '63, ~acuse, backed lui not U&gt; walk oo his !eet He
:1.. S. lDt,olllpnce sources oald were atlemitllnli oolnll1tral8 the c't lnUl a car operated by Emma M. wanted yoo U&gt; nspect him Intel;, , .Ia!. The ~sualey tOtal laot .week Included 438 Amerteans killed and Hayman, ilfracuoo. There was toctually."
• c1a.mage 1o the rtglrt rear Iandor
JuaUce ))eperUnent records In
, :. 1,870',l'OIIIilodo the opokeam~ said.
'
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ot tho HO)'man car and minor WaahlllltOn • showed Slrhaa •wu
wASI!JN!l'l'ON ., SE!N. II~BtHT F. KE~'S ~h I'U!~ 393'(/ ~ 00 tile bumper w: tho , one or a famlb or olght Jordl"'
up lor ~ontelitl"" betwee~ ~1&lt;;9 l&gt;rooldept Hubert II. ~dotn.,.. vehicle. Roben,son 1aas admltlejl U&gt; the United Slatea
, Soil.,_£yP,. J. MaCarth{~ l the Dll!lt rot; It!• Qei1i0' ~· ,elilil ·on a charge &lt;i 1m• . tor •p e . . - residence. None
noml•Uon. Jual, llow tliey wiU be diltrlbu*:~•· !~~~
no over •tUrauzed.
ol·!'fetora. Stine, for ~tanee, ,wW. UDter • . · : \~~/.• :· J·
,
uncommitted.
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LOS ANGELES (UPI) - SlrtJ,n a Sirhan, says a woman
IIIlo worked with him In a health
·food store, is honest, goodheart.
ed and a M.rd worker, but .. a
tultlc when it carne to discussion of religloo and poliUcs."
The owner or the sh·q, where
S\rhan worked until Ajlrll sata

"You had to be careful not to
walk on his teet. He wanted you
to respect him intellectually."
Sirhan, 24, a native of Jordan. is under arr~st II" the ac-cused assassin of Sen. Robert
F. Kennedy, D-N.· Y,
By all accounts, Sirhan is an
lntelligent, articulate and un-

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~~Aba:la:·..~·~s~..~h~--i:iS~;·.;. •.wtmtwm.umm;wi&amp;~••
didn't
either.
ole
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(UP!) .,- ,Ethel

wile or tho
Ul

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oo Sl Patrick's Cathedral In
New York City Friday U&gt; lie In
state for two hours- from 8
a.m. to 10 a.m. - the following
morning. !b)rtly after noon
Saturdoy, the body will be
placed aboard a train lor burial
In Arllnglon Cemetery wtsldo
the nation's capital.
Red-F.fed
Grim-laced and red~ed from

lack of sleep, Solinger eald upward !rom the lids o! hla
head near his ear.
A aooond llhot atruek him Ill
the sltouldsr and within ae-.
he lapaed lnUl unoonaclouon the conereto Door In lila
assassinated dvU rtllhts loader. hotel kltch011. !Ua •opecled
Kerme&lt;IY oul!ered Irreparable assassin was lltlbcUdJ 'lllckb'
brain damage from a .22-callber by Kelllledy aldss but n a t bollet that lodged In his five other pel"80D8 were WVUDd(COnUnued 111 Page 1J
midbrain. The bullet eoorsed
among !rlends accompanying
the body and !amlly on tho
presidential jet Dlllht U&gt; New
York City wnoid be Mro. Martin
Luther King Jr., widow ot the

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LOAN CUISING - The above group participated Wednes- FHA Director; Lindsey Ly .... , Water District Preoldelt; Milday in closilll: loans totallng$1,655,000 trom the Farmers Hm1e ton Roosh, Coont;y FHA Dlrecl&lt;lr; Ralph Vorhees, Asst State
Administration to the Tuwers Plains ~ Chester Water Dis- FHA Director; Standi~. John T, Wolfe, Racine lklne-Natlonal
trict. The Joan will assist in j:OOstructitl'l of tho largest rural Bank; Claude Quillen, Sieco, Inc. Englneersi Delmar Bauua.
wster system in the United States. It wiD serve Eastern Meigs water district board member; Theodore T. Reed, Jr., The
County aOO a part of Athens County. Taking part were repr~ Farmers Bank &amp; Slvinga Co. i Edison Hobstetter, Pooteroy
sentatives oC banks who will be the depositors of funda, engirP National Ba.nk; Eldon Gaul, waterdistrictboardmember; Fnnk
eer firm officials, water district board members and FHA of· W, Porter, Jr., legal counsel tor water district arxl Jdtn Hill,
ficera. Front row, from left, are James T. McDorman, state Sieco, Inc. e~neer. - Sentinel Photo.

COLUMBUS (UP0 - All
schecklled state-wlds meetlngo
ot the Democratic party in
Ohio have boon caneelled !or
tfle remainder of the week,
Eugene P. O'Grady, chairman
ot the Ohio Democratic Exec.
olive Committee, said UldO)',

The semina.r lor Democra.
tic legl&amp;lative candidates, set
lor FrldO)' and Soturdoy In
Columbus, has been reachecNled lor June 21 and 22.

••I

.~ '

'

served as press aide to the late
President Kennedy and was
active in the senator's campaign, announced the funeral
plans at the hospital, He said
some plans still were being
formulated but added, "1
suspect the senator will be
buried in the plot" of his
brother.
Kennedy's body will be taken

ffi

'•

i
'

. FIVE CENTS

News ... in BriefS

nlllll In the court
roy Ma!'or Chari•• Lepr wore

dl,)'

Of The Meii{I'-Mason Area
THURSDAY. JUNE 6, 1968

LOS

ca-.

,,

Inter~"

en tine

!liMy, warm UldO)' and FrldO)'. High UldO)' In BOa, exeopt
low 90 extreme &gt;OUth. Fair, mUd
1onl&amp;bt, low In 60s oortlllow 701
sooth.

Sen. Robert F. Kennedy is Dead

1932. She Wll a Dlfm)&gt;er of ille
naulbtor• ot Alllerle!a Lodct and
tile Zion lltr!ittot Cburcb.
~~ ·~·
SUrvlvl111 are lbree . . - . ,
Mta. Gertrude Irvin, · s...tholdli;
MrL Gent- Low, Henderaoi;
Mrs. Rllberta wauo,
0:;
~ grandchUdren; 2 !""~
children and oevenl' niece~ IIi!
nophns ~ .lo Garlaod
ADbrl&amp;l&gt;t reared by•. Mrs. 111r.;
tin; 1110 olotero, Ill~ Elizabeth
ADbrl&amp;l&gt;t, ~ 0., l.tro;
~ Smith, MlumhaD, PL, ~
... brother, Ral»b E. Allbrilbt.
~ortllup, Ohio.
.
Two senleeo wW be c~
td, the lint at 11 I. m.
dly In the Crowoll~qsolli"Uhhttl
Home with tbo Ray; lllrey Mlliii'
ollltlltiDII and !be soeondat2P. ui; '
ThurfdOI' In the Lincoln ~
Cburdl _.. Nortbllp with h
Rev. Honrd Klllln&amp;....,nh OlllclatiDg. Burial wiU be In the HOuck
C&amp;motery at Nortlut&gt;. ·Frlenda
may caU at the IUnarll halne a£
or ~ p. m. We!fnosdl;y.

Windshield Broken

Weather

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

:~~ea::·~~~::.of: .

•-"'011;

they ... riot f~
Others
agreed
that
the
and only two 1"'1
Laat ;rear in America, iome
&gt;;600 persons died of gunshot preoccupaUoo with 1!11111 and Can Y&lt;JU lmagll,
wounds. In Britain there were violence ml&amp;l&gt;t be almost an would have been
AbrahamiiCM:I 11
lower than 30, In Bslglum !ewer American phenomenon.
Clalma
Love
Ytolence
than 12, in Frence fewer than
streos oo miter\
Dr. David Abrahamsen, a vloloneo.
20, according to Sen. Joseph
pernor the Lemberg Center
-~wrre ~! melting pot.
1'1dlnP, D-Md.
Hit's insane/' he said, "You lor the Study of Vlolonee at we're a iSunDecl pressure
!alk about if.e good old pi&lt;lnoer Brandola Univerolt;y, said Amer- ..,.ller, Our "!'doV II not built
deY• . • . buj we don't live In the icans not only coodone violence, oo tho restraints or !amlly or
elaaa, It's built on auece~a. I
old pi"'r.'",r dO)'s when every- ''We Jove it."
uwe love to fight. The ,.. don't have I~ you're
body's "'vigilante end you shoat
!rontlor dO)'s lliade the gun frustrated.
therit up. •
'"Frultratlon. The •et oorae
ur thidl. we•ve got to come to manly," he said. 14 ln France

a1 y

The word aasassln derives
from the Arabie uhashishln,"

IJ

our senses." .

bear them rut.

•

Now You Know

Foor
forfollod
boodo and threo others wore !!Dod Tueada.Y night 1n tbe c:ourt Ill
Mlddloperl Mayor C. 0. Fllher.
.
ForfeitlntJbcDis wore Clrll4.
Smith, 29, Columbul, fiG, ..,ea~~
ing tires; James D• .-..., 21,
Marlat&amp;, $1)0, driYinl In a """'
prous 1t111111ot; Bleherd F,
B ·I"
'·
Clark, 26, Akron, $18.70, -d.··
POINT PLEASANT - Muoo
Ing, and John M. Ferryman, 21,
'
CGwlt;y She~ Georp E. Jobn~rlnglleld, $18,70, opoodlng.
l'l!lod ""'" J:t¥df ·~ 71, - ·Ma nhUid tbo ·utivl1;y .... Given Rmaiader
~·
Mlitiltepori. $15 azi8 illilil, cll'lv- poi! or his •plriment tor the
•••
,,
month
or
Mal'
ohowlng
the
doIna Whno under
John
'
PT. PU!.ISANT - Tbe llsL. ~ 22, Middleport, $10 P1111itent members trawled 670S
and COlli, slop IQI violallon, mUes In the Une of du1;J; lnvootl- partmenl or ·Motor Vehlcleo li
and Ralph Oller, t3, Vinton, .10 pted 1.3 acddetlla roaul~ In Cborleaton, W. Va., .,\o remt..S:
and costa, reddesa operatlan. persCIIII iDJu17 oo !lw persons Ina 'motortata tllat Uee~ae r... "'
with six drivaro arteated and hiclea muot be purchased' 'tltli
Pf&lt;lPOrll' dlmqe oatlmaled at IDOIIth and tho depar!ment' hiJ
. _ e d hours l o r - Pill":
.7250.
Tho departmoot made 20 mls- cha101 In CborlooiiXI. Mondl7• "-"•
to a p. m.: Tueadli1
A wlndlhleld waa broken I!! a-nor ll'ieots; six felony ar-. s.ao a.
tbe only accident Tueodt,y ln- rests; lovestlpted two breaking li1l'qh fi'ldO)' - 8:30 .. ~i lf
vootlpted by the Golllp!lio ~II, and ontorlrws: received 17 war- t:SO p. jn. - Closed
State Hlalnrll' Patrol.
tiil'
rente and served IS (one from SUIIdO)' aad holldayo,
red In Melia Cclunfl. No one tha month be!orel; served u laot three lilturdO)'~ In J - -'
15th, 22nd and 29th, when IIIey
.... injured.
eourt - " of both crlmtr.l
Bruee E. lleKIIvoy, 23, Port- and civil actlooa; tranaferredooe will be lrlltl 8:30 .. Dl. to
land, wao driW\g oauth on Rt. priiODOr and booked 57 persons 12 ,_,
1, two.Untlls of a mOe llll'tll &lt;i In the COUJJV JaD,
1'uppero Plains, aU:50p.m. llben
a pou!ni traetor.vallorlllwed
a rock and struck tho wlndahleld.

:::::::~=::::;;;:;;;:~.:;::::.~BI~g

Chapman-Canaday Shoe Store

Mrs.

~ PT. PU!.ISANT - . Olllcars Watklns, treasurer. Directors bl'l&amp;ht. ·Her busbond. lltJbert 1!. '
lor the next sehool )'elf haw been Don Noll, Daw Poore and Har- Mait!n precoded hot lb d -·111

Kennedy

'
.

lnUl a cool, gulltleao t'Oullne &lt;i

0.

OUt OOC(Oty make~ possible IUCh 1111gb widssproad belief that
murder and violence?" aaked violence 11 not an occaslCila.l
!'resident Johnson In amounc- Isolated tragedy, but Is lning the -lntment of a hlih- grained- perhapa lrreverslbblevel commission U&gt; llody In the !ahrlc of American ll!o.
violence In America- '"thil tra... Black power advoeate H. Rap
gl.c phenomenon."
Brown sBid it several mouths
· These niell all spoke Wedlles; ago:
day' in the nush ot diabelief that
·~tolenee Is aa American · as
swept the natioo after the. cherry pie. ••
assassination attempt upon Son.
POI'ehologlots,
oocto!oglot1,
Hobert F. KelllfedY,. They apoko . educsoors, hlotorlans, clergyIn sorrow, but they spoke with men replying U&gt; a · UP! survey
reason and restraint.
seemed to agree,
They expressed the lncreaAnd IOJlte atatlatles seemed to

WU.OO Family Quortet

I

.r
,·1'&gt;

I

disposing 'or problems · by
disposing or the people who
cau.se the problema," said
Alben BiilldUra, •a paychologlst
and professor at iitan!ord
University.
national lUe," llild Arthur
"I don't weep often, but
!fcllloslnger Jr., the Pulitzer . Ulday, In thlo b,auu!ul sunshine,
·P$o winning hisU&gt;rtan end an I wept lor my eounlry that has
aids. U&gt; tbe late Proslden(JOhn dscllned ao much In Its morliley
F. Kennody,
' and aplrltuallty," said evanse.
,
list BUb Graham.
uThe wh&lt;,1le culture has
"What in the nature of our
changed the vlolenee syndrome people and the envtromneat or

s.on,

"'*"

There were a lot or

,\ '

DoNALD G, COHEN
United ProlllnternaUoool
,
"We ,are a vlolent.people with
a violent hlsU&gt;ry, and the
lnotlnct lor Vloion~ has •pod
Into the bloodstream' 'II oor

Sl3lug.,

panicky.

I

By

out, the flllbulance came and
Ulok Kelllledy oot. Kelll1edy was
lying on his bock. A e&lt;q&gt;le or
- ' • were holding his

• - ' " lollowlng.
I heard 10111e thlngo that
f 1 o u n d e d like tlreenckers.
l'l&lt;lple started yelling and feU
to the IJ'QIIId. I feU down, too.

l
ii

I

people tried oo ~ him ..,
Bul others sbouted, "Gel him
oot, get him to jail."
After they carried the oupect

·•

LOS ANQELES (UPI)- KennedY RniJhod speaking, shook a

lI

t6ll Fi~e ·

,

lion- , Kelllledy , ·WI~, b1ug 11\ere. . He

I
0:

.

C:ey
.....
~

For

-·
~-

Baptists Tum
For Justice
ACCEPTING CHECKS - Llndao,)o LI'&lt;JOs, prealdelt or tho
Toppers Plains- Chester Watar District, aceepta ehocks 11'1111
James T. McDorman, left, State Farmers Home Admlnlstra..
tlon Director, and Milton Roush,. Couuty FHA s..,.-vtsor I for
the F11A 's loan portions ward CUlltructlon of tho rural water
ayotem In Meigs and Allie"" counties. The chock lor the Melp
sectloo was $987,000 and lor Athens Goou~Qo, fGSB,OOO. - Son-

Uno!

PllotQ.

Bridge Work
Bids Received
CHARLESTON, W. VL (UP!)
- Firms lrom Indiana and Mlllnesolll submitted low bids Wodnesd~Qr lor construction of tour
piers and two abutments fo: 111
Ohio River bridge ot Point Ploao-

ant.
The State Road Commlullll

said Allied Strocturli Stooi'l:o.,
Hammmd Ind., tlll&gt;mltted aa
estimate of $112,290 for oneplor
and tile Ohio ahutmont and •12t.·
329 for another pier and !be
Weot VIrginia abulment.
AI Johnooo Coootructloa Co.,
!llmoapolis, Mlm., bid •1,311,.
160 lor the two piero to 'be
erected In the Ohio Rlvor• .AI·
Uod was the _...m low 11111dsr oarUer this week '!'" ,

,.

tlmate&amp; were opened Cl1 lltnle- ' ;"

tural llteel for
·
The SRC wiU a.tr
_..,.cheo U&gt; the Well VIQIDia
lids &lt;i lila brldp '"' Jllla 1L

Marine Tom UDd .

.

�'

.

...

'.

.,

~~~iildcU.onoo., TllllrlldiJ,Juno 6, 1988

! .

.

'

\,

"'

' '

l.·

• '

TaBing

1'ill MelP ~ adlaol taoio- 11 PI'O\'fdtns tile oi!Jor servleea Jl!;l'elt, BI!.IY : 11ort&lt;1, r~·
Parker -arll:Uidtl.r Ja'ckaa. • ~·(
;rs '!Ill ailencl i IO.,....k '1)\!• ~~· will be ljaoded.
COLUMBUS (lii'O Tho oslcl Wedllesdi\Y tile -rat D.c., train staUon.
"VI fedora! trliiilng PI'Ofl'8111. ·• . . N~'fall..,.l4ditlonalliJ)Oiclal
brelkdcnm of law 8lld order In
The period ended In 1901 .when
,.cation II ~ ~' odu~itn· elais Will ' be !orln.ed
IJalted - · be relllrnlng lhat ume period resembln tho
Prealdent WilHam McKIDley
·-.u;; thla ..nuner. ·
In ·lllalgi CountY, Bowen laid.
.. Ule - · conditione()(
Ule lote 1800s In view fll t h e eurrent ....Utl.ons In tile coon- was killed by an American.IJom
· Mello ~Octiii!IJ ~ HOwever; he foporll lho Title
aaaasolnollon ()( Son. Robert try.
l'llll all anarchist.
"' SOhoolo ~ Boli.n alld VI Pt'oJram &lt;( ira!Jibol spaCial
Koomeolf, according to Dr, lUIGrimm noted the 1881aoaeoslMcKlnlo,y's death cauaod t h e
the· 19 leocbeu wlil be Ml&lt;lllod edileatlon teachers la·belng carmar Grimm, a Capital' Unlvor- oation &lt;( President Jam~s Ger- se&lt;ret service to be BSBII!DOd as
lo .,....... ~ wl1b leo~ rlod out to qusJlty more teachIIIY hlllory pe()(esi!Ol'.
fteld dramatized tile turmoil bo&lt;lfguards lor !Uture U.S. presIng !Itt alow 1eomV
era lor pesl~ wl!en tile·mmGrimm, the chairman of the that was to follow. Ga1;ield waa Idents.
lllellllvoralt,yduNaeadt·lilo(n. ~ o! claalos lo conslclerobi.Y
lllllvertlt,y'a history department, shot to deall! In a Waohlngton,
Other violent OC&lt;UreOces cllr. l!Ji. During llll·lilleniood. aaem- tn...,.sed.
.. '·
'.
tns \he period, as noted by
. • lnar will be held II which time
Teachlrs Who will' be altelld·
Grimm, were \he Ha,ymarket
Despite the cance1111111 of the Memorial JloJ! parade In Rutlaati tile 10
will dliCUaothe ln8 the aunmer senlon at OhiO
Square rlota, the Betlll...., due to tile weather, Rutland Pnst 467, Ameri~an Legion, went alleecl probl111111 ()( llo
1eomor tn Un!versllr lnelqde Ellen Wirth,
Steel slrlke 8lld \he Pullman w!\h Ito aervices at cemeteries as p l · Melga Cout!Q' and the t,ypO ()(
Sc8!ly Thelma Cl!lli•
atrlke•
Fourteen members and six o!llcers vialted tile Miles. Wr~Pt. pnigam Wblch might btae!lt him bell MJrgarlt Ello Le'olls ~
Tho pe()(essor asld \he coun- Danville, Salem center, Standish, and Midway Comstarioo ,,. ..,. _ moat. The -w!lllhMdevtlCIP
Wllllain·==~·~K:Me:.~-.• .•• • • •
try retumod to more normal ducted services after ft'hlch they were aened 1 eldcktD ~ at · a caa"M ~ lltUcb' tor the \low
coodltlons lhroush the strong lhe post hall by auxiliary members.
·
learftll" l!nd tile IIOeOia8rl' tulia
leaderllhlp &lt;( Pres!- TheoPON·A
Modod by l.eaellll"• In tho fteld
dore Roosevelt.
SPENDING A FEW days In Pnllleroy to visit !ormer nil-a ot spadal pcitllll.
Tile commission's recommet~­
COLUMBUS (VPl) - The
and classmate• Is Lawrence Edgar Lewis, Cohunbu&amp;
Moel!ng thla WNk, tile MO!p
Ohio Crime Commission callod datlons wlll be presented to lhe
The soo o! the late Addison and Orllla Leiria, he Ia ooe of a...n Cout!Q' lkiord of FAtcaUm en-.v lor moJor changes In legislature next year.
children and bas a twin sister, Florence, who Is -uvtow In San mrodldo an-enlw!tiiOhlo
Other RecommendatJons
Ohio polletes, Including an enDiego, Callt
, Unlverslt,y ·» provide a director
Other recommendations called
try Ill tile state iniD the law en.
The lamlly lived on what was
CHARLEs KNIGHT, 800 o!Mr. for tlte Title VIJII'OIP'am aa wall
for wire • topping uoder court
forcement lleld.
Dutch Lane and later became and Mrs. Howard Knlgh~ near
In a reDQrt to Gov. James A. jurisdiction, medical treatment
Liberty Ave. lawrence ottend&lt;Jd Chester, Is one ot 14 Ohio Unl·
Rhodes, !he commission sald of chronic dntnks, more unJschool
at COtlport 8lld tile former •erslt,y students who have been
the state "DMlst aasume an ac- formi!J In I!I'antlng probatloo,
Central School In Pomeroy. He named to plan and eoonllnato
revisJon of the bond system, Imtive role in law enforcement.''
recalls that he am his sister activtUes tor the unlversU;y's
- (Contlnuod lr&lt;111 Pip' I)
The eommissJoo recommend- proved salary scalt~a for enwere recelvedlntotheMlddleport homecomlrv weekend neil Oct
ed a creetloo &lt;( a bl.partiaan, forcement ofltcers and better
Presbyterian Church In 1913 24 _ 26. Selection was announced ed, me serloo!llJ.
lie ... awartby Srhan
nlne-&lt;nember Ohio Crime Com- rehabilitation of prisooers.
when they were six years ald. by Robert M. Ruday, assistant
In remarks to the oomrnlsalon
mlsaioft with the same powers
Blahara
Slrhlii, 21, a Jofdanlan
Lawrence has resided in CO- director of student affairs.
Two juveniles were taken into
Saxbe took issue with sheriffs
~ a grand jury and the crearefu&amp;oe
Who waa held lllder
lumbus, Buc,vrus and Detroit
custody
late
Wedneedoy
night
IIIII
who
are
fighting
the
state's
enttlm of a division of criminal
tight securiiY guard In Los
early this morning after a break- since leaving Pomeroy. For the
LONG TIME COUNTY board Anploa Codnt,y Jail Dvo mUoa
" i
justice Ln the attorney general's ry into the law eofor cement
past 38 years, he has been em&lt;(!Ice to help the commission field, which has been tradition. Ing and entering aiSmlth'sHonda ployed as a butcher by n Colum- of education secretary, Mra. wu.. from the bolpltal w11ere Keanemo sargent, s~llod \he l c e df diad. II was not dladoaed
ally reserved for local author- and Fiat Sales at Kanaup.
8lld localautborlties.
bus
packing
comp1ny.
...
One was apprehended by Pete
cream and cake this week when whether Sirhan wao ln!ormod
The cnmmlsslon, headed by ities.
The
Lewis
family
resided
in
Smith, who surprised the two
\he board met. The oceaslon?
14 The state has no role In law
Alt,y, Gen. WOllam B. Sube,
the "old Seyfried proper()'" and The birt!Jday anniversary of her lmmedlatei.Y of \he senator's
youth
during
the
B&amp;E
and
lhe
otJ&gt;.
called lor a modernization of enforcement except in trafl'ic,
dea\h.
Lawrence recalls friends such
/t. team ()( ... ,.,..........
the entire state aystem c1 crime but patterns ~ crime a r e er, who ran, waspickedupinMid- as Frances SchoU, Neva Davis, brother, Harold Rwsh, a memdleport
by
the
Gallia
Count,y
Shorber
o!the
bmrd.
prevention and of desltns with changing and spreading," Saxplckecl all but a tiny !ragmeat
Dave Jackson ai'KI Leona Kohl.
be sald. "We are oot trytns to ter s Department
crime 8lld crimlnsls.
()( the bullet from K-ed)''•
Lewis has two children - a
Both
boys,
ooe
16
and
the
other
OFf1ClALS
OF
Drew
Webater
put
any
of
\hose
local
&lt;(!leers
The 25.member commission
brain In a four.IJour operiucn. .
son living in Memphis, Tenn.,
made no recommendations for out ol business. Instead we are 17, will be returned to their r&amp;o- and a daughter in Cohunbus. In Poat 39, American Legloo - the But, the oenator'a condl1lon
1JU1 controllqlslatlon In lhe r&amp;- trying to help them by bringing spective counties for prosecution the near future he wi11 be visl~ organiution responsible tor the clw!&amp;ed Utile \hl'llUgh the 1111'
in juvenile courts. The 16-year.
bulletin board or servicemen near 8lld rdgbl until be !lnally
·~
porl bUt urged mandstory lm- all law enforcement closer toing his sister, Florence, In San \he lllalga Coonty Courthouse old
is
from
Lorain
and
the
17prlaonment ol. any person who gether, to )rovide better tools
Diego, an.d hls son in Memphi~ report they have access only to suecwnbed.
year.oJd o! MlddleporL
has a gun In his pessesslon auch as central laboratories
"lie wu nat able to OU!Id
Entry to tile Smith firm was
names of servicemen entering the back up tissue after the tnuma
while commlttlns a mlsdemeon- and help to coroners to mention
II!RS. ZUELEUA SMITH wUI arme;d forces after Jan. 3, 1964.
gained by takl!w broken glusout
a few of the 1tdngs we need."
or.
of lui lll&amp;ht and the JIOII'eery ·
or a cracked wirx:low, reaching observe open house ather trailer Those who entered he!Ore that
home from 4 to 8 p. m. Saturday time IIIII served at least!OOdays IIIla morning," asld FroB&lt;
\hrough andunlocklngthewlndow '
Manldewicz, Keraed;r'a preas
0
fl
S
Nothing was reported missing. • ond Sunday. The gleaming trailer !rom \he Jan. 3, 1946, date are
TM man of the hour wantl hi• wateh to
secrelory Who made lhe &lt;(llclal
/
Deputies said both boys admit- stands on W. Main st., Pomeroy, oot ovallable lor listing, but are
keep bini potted on tht date u .well u
By llnllod Press lntematlonsl
spesldng o! violencotfn Ameri- ted the B&amp;E. They had hitch- where the Smith home ft'as lo- ellglble. Names of such servlc~ death IIIKIUicemeat.
tbc ~e. Juat a glance ttlla you allKenn""'' aon, Joseph, 16,
LOS ANGELES- Fronk Man- CO:
hiked to Gallipolis and slq&gt;pedat cated before it was razed.
men are to be sent to the post at was at his bedside with hla
and tells .Nl abOut you. Wear the
klewtez, Sea Hobert F. Kenne.
"We are a violent people With \he Skyline Lanes bowling alley
PomerO)'. Meantime, relatives molher and aunt.
Bulova wonder watch that k~p
d,y's press secretary, telling ~ a violent history, and the The Jiyear~d who got • .;.
or such servicemen are exterl1ed
Named For Brolllar
tile senator's death:
Instinct lor violence has seoped when a shot was fired thembed
·you from wonduin&amp;.
apologies. It Is a situation beyond
Joseph, named for Kamt&lt;l1'•
•1fe was oot able to build into the bloodstream of our back to Middl~rt where he was
control of the post
fslher 8lld tile - · eldest
back up tlsa~e atter the trauma national life."
picked up.
brolher Who wa·o klllod In a
()( los! night and the surgery
craah In D!repe dllrlng
plane
President
WASillNGTON lhla morning. •
World War II, Informed the two
Johnson, calling '"' Americans ::::::~~~::::~:::::::::~:::::::::~:::::::::::::~:::....:~·::=::-;{~·
•
MASON
·~
An
1a.bole
mlnl·
'
ather
. ~ Kllld.., ~7,
MASON - Dallas B. QJbbs,
• LOS ANGELES-J&lt;Ibn 11. to cUrb violence:
IIIII Robert Jr., 13, Who wvro
uLet us, tor God's sake,' abire gol! course has been 32, Hartford, passed away ear·
.;
Wlitdner, proprietor of a hsalth
(Continued !rom p, ge I)
el
sewl!ere
In
the
boapltal.
completed
here
across
the
resolve
to
live
under
the
law."
ly
today
In
Cabeii-Hontlngton
Hos.
rood llore wl!ere Sirhan Blshlra
'
lncludtns kllltnss, physical asAlso at lila bedside wu
highway from the Pnmeroy - pltal to become \he \hird !atall·
Srhan 110J'ked, doscriblng wily
saults, verbal aasaultl and Kemeoll''• brother, EdWard; hll IMIIAISAIO« "At:"
lllaoon bridge 8lld wlll be open ty ri the one - car accident m
-17 jtwels. Aula·
he thought the accused assassin
harmful
pr.mts.
IIIIUC. Waterproof•.
staters, · Mrs. Sleilllen Smith
\hls Friday at 6 p.m.
lhot Sen. Robert F, Kennedy:
Mlll St., jus! inside \he Middleswe., second hind,
Youth Exposed
Clltll'lr window.
IIIII PliriJ&gt;la Lawford, and his
The course, to be known as port corporation llmlts, on May
Ml lhlnl&lt; he did lhls for hll
Applltid ...Urs, hi·
"The most Impressionable brolller4n..law and .........,
Vista
Miniature
Golf
Course,
111111011 dill Ud
GAUGES - Gslllpolls, 1.2.1
COI.Iltry, not necessarily this
31.
membera
ol.
~ nation, tbe
hnds, SIIIIIIIU
eountry. ,,
Is owned by VIrgil Lewis, Dot8lld 23.9 rW111n8 44 teet of ron.
Gibbs, who reported]y suffer- youth of Amerleo, can often be !DOMliOf. StopheR Smllb, 8lld
llttl
t71..
' ,'
ers; Pl. Pleasant, 25.60; Pome~ tle FerguiOD, Carrie Lewis ed a fractured frontal alnus and found viewing cartoons wl!ere MII!I'. WilHam McCormack &lt;(
Whtntyou know what rnakes a watch ~ ~iei, you'llgi~ :a Bulcwa
and Danny Kerns, parbters.
NEW YORK- Artlllr Sdllesln- roy-l\lason, 24.20; Hinton, 2.10
dlalocalod hlp, had been trJIII&amp;.. violence Is being perpetrated at St. Pllrick's CoiiJedral In Naw
pr Jr., Pullt2or Prize winning falling; Kanswha Falls, &gt;.60 fallferred from Veterans Memorial about \he rate ()( me vloleat York.
Hospital to tile Huntington hoa. incident every 50 seconds," Otto
blllorlan IIIII an aide to tile late Ing; Charleston, 19.30 rising;
When aakod for the eauae ()( death, Manklew!cz
.'
Prelldont John F. Kennedy, London, nmnlng one hall-loot of
pltal June 4.
Court St.
Pomeroy
asld.
replied: "I llon't to talk
roUers; Marmet, running three·
The other victims in the crash
Schlesinger, a close hiend ol. lbout that.,,
fourths c:l a loot; and Winfield,
were David M. Fields, 20, POme- Robert KennedY, spoke Wednesronnlng 4 teet.
roy, reported the driver d the day at commencemll'lt exercicar lhat struck a llone wall ses for . 48 doctors! grawates at
near the top o! .Middleport Hill," tho Clcy Universlcy ()( New
and Georgia L. PUllins, 39, Mid· York.
dleport.
He callllfl lhe American
Also injured in the crash were people "tile moot lri!IIU&gt;bw on
. Vernon Rizer, 18, Hartford, who thla p)anet...
was taken to Holzer Hoapilal
"We are a frlgtd:enin,g people
8lld later transferred to a Co- beeause we have alrea&lt;IY In tlda
lumbus hospital; Jemy Jlysell, de..W, murdered the two of our
33, Mlddlepert, a petlent at Hol- citizens (President Kemeoll' IIIII
zer Hospital, end Ray Junior Dr. Martin Lutller KID&amp; Jr.)
Roush, 19, Rt. 2, Racine, who was
Who pr&amp;-emlnently - r e
treated and relealllld by Veterano the -ld 18 \he embocllmluls
Memorial Hoapilal. Rizer earli- ()( American Idealism- and beer """ reported In rritlcal COD- caose last lll&amp;ht - trted to
dltion.
murder a third.
Gibbs' bo&lt;IY was taken to FOlie"II fa almost as If a primsl
oms Funeral Home In Maaon curse has been fixed oo our
where arrangements are pendlns. nation, We are a violent people
a violent bllk&gt;ry' 8lld the
Instinct for viol011ce bao soaped
DIVORCE SOUGHT
A petition lor dlVO&lt;ce has been Into \he bloodstream ()( our
Died In lllalgs Councy COOU!Ion natlonalltfe."
there
Pleas Court by YYOilJIO Marie
Wells,
Rt. 1, Long Bottmn,
ru10n moJW and moJW
againat John R. Wella, same ad- 1
dress. The plaintiff charges
pe!lpl.skop at VIllage
gross nedecl o! dut;y and .,._
TRAINS ROLLING
'
treme cruelty. No minor chilPARIS (UPX) - Trains and dren are tnvolved.
Phannlcy. ~pt and
· subways rolled again ard buses
returned to Paris streets -.v
.complete p~ptlon
SQUAD CALLED
The Sweetwt Things
ti .
set the wheels of the strUi~
The Pomeroy emergency oquad
Mrvlce
JWasonable
French economy WrniJW answered 1 call Wodnesclay to \he
. .
slo•wly alter 19 days altho most Rollin Dill hmte oo Kerr st.,
disastrous tleup in the nation's !rom where Mrs. DUl, who had b&amp;0!11'
59N. 2nd Aye,
,.
.
.
'
history,
come
Ul,
waa
taken
to
111e
Ewlllg
Vf2.5S60
•.
,j\.
•. ,.. '
PRESENTS
ootabllabmont where she wu
MIDDLEPORT
11
•'
·'
trons!erred to an ambulance and
'"·
' '
Parts of the Appian Way, removed to Holzer Hospllal.
' .
1rtiCI'l~
.' .
2,IJOO.y e a r • o I d Roman hl&amp;h·
.
. ·f ·. ,
.
"
,\
way, are still In use today.

•do!

,...,...'Ill

"'-cher•

Commission Urges

alcnr

y_,,

Ba.;.,,

Enforcement Powers.

llery lmpprtant Pop!

Juveniles
Are Held

'

I'

InB&amp;E

\

\I

~·

.i

\-'

Qu

,.,'It.-

'

,.

..

•

.:r
·"

tes 0 Kennedy' Death

.

,f 'I

'1

1

.violence '

..
...

Still Blocked

Yltt,

Dudley's ftorld

PLEASANT

.p,a.ls
..

In big"

it low
flnt .order of bullnan

.·'-' ui .. y;u, ntxt

THE INK SPOTS

,lPPE.ARING JUNE 22 OM.Y
DINE e DANCE e ENJOY
~~~~.

RESERVATIONS ACCEPTED NON
PHONE

67~1611

. PLEASAN'l.POINT RESORT

.

·'·· Jli~ncu

THEOCYOTI:P
DAlLY
SENTINEL
·ro INn!IPJ' tw'
MEIG!iollill.o\.Q AU:A
IIICHAIDII, OWDI.I'\IILMIEI
t:IWI•III'TIIIIMNII.&amp;allr
Fullliiii!M dill)- --at !;atwflt 11f 'n..

.

eil•lpiiW•a

•C.nc~J Tuft

• CamltiCifll ·

......

;·

Plu• AV1rlety of Chell-.
TOMATO PlANI'S

r.tl-1 111h...U.I.. rlpftJIIII..IIte V...
un~lll.(:tllu"-•, IK.. u
a.. ,...
Yllrll Cltr, Nn Ywk,
Soi&gt;l&lt;riglltn t ... t: Dllltel'lll 1tiJ Cll'"t'
will,_ •t~llalilk :q ~-.. 1111' . . -1 - , _
~ lhlllfl ...... llllb litollJIIII Ollet,. . . . . .
!lilx !I!Or.u.&amp;, $S.IU, nr.. ....... tuL ..
. . _ lloooU: ..........,....
~

E•• 41•

-m. ..

Ullll,

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,M

Ohio! ~· ~•ltl' Nllltt~lrw~.ne~
lil., ~. Ohio, ut•. •••-• 01'"
P~ouM H)-list,~~~~ 1'1MM .WilT,
lilo:ond rlala liD~ MW 11 ~.

abll: 0... ""-h fi,M. It MaUl 0. ,_.
IIUII. !111 .._..~ tLJ$. '"'"'...........
SilhtrljHloll ,..,~• llld .... . . , .,.......

... ... .., .. , .. .
'

.-.

MIDWAY MARKET

•

'

I

'

'

•

••• ' 4 • '

'• .

I

-

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•

I

ihii·N·,\TI

BIIYI pitching wbo can hold the

(UPO - Johnny
. \hinka tho Cincinnati
'R.,ts are abl!"l ready to string
1!&gt;~\!',!f
-.!' .!~w _victories.

o\hor
lenoe
with
acore

·
.
E

!de eatcher~aoptlmism
·lnim · the three· hitter eel.

' Nnlan. pitched Wodnesdll,)'
· .
a't·llje Redo buried IIJ•
IiF•'f~ 10~.
i'~Gary end Jim Maloney
~~:!" take their regular
t;§JI:;Ind George Culver and
~rry Arrigo pitching aooc1 bsll;
wt're /r:~ ~ wln ~- lot of
"'"eo, ' prell!Cted Bench.
.
'10ut 'hltlero are going to he .
re relaxed knowing we got
.. . . . . . . .

loom. They won't eJqJOr·
the preosure !bat eomes
knowing you've got to "
a lot of runo,'' Bench add.

Nolan, sidelined lhe ftrst alx
weeks of \he seasoo wl1h arm
trouble, limited \he Phlladelohla
Phllllea to three hits I" alx !!!·
nlnga In hla seaeondebut laotFr1day when he notched hlo !!ret
victory.
· , Second COOsocut!ve Win
He made It two In a row
Wednesday lll&amp;ht 8lld will try ·
lor number three next· Monday

. Af.ant4'

against the CUba In Chicago.
Belore heading lor the Wlnd;y
Gli.Y, the Heda have a weekend
date wl\h \he 91. Lollis Cm:dlnal•
aj Crosley Field beginning Fri.
day lll&amp;ht, wileD Maloney will
-~ \)lck Hughes.
•T&lt;XIY Pore• 8lld Lee May
aoekod homera ao the Redo, expl.,ung lor sb: In the D!thlnnlnS,
po!mded three Brave hurlers for
12 ' hits willie taalng Phil Nlek.
ro; will! hla fourth loss against
five victories.
111ay . was a lost.mlnute replacement at ftrst baoelor Fred
WhlUield.

SL .

Some 15 minute• \x.ro..., the
game Whlllleld otru$ a match
In tile cl.ubhouse. A piece ()(
phosphoruo iiew IJ!td hls right
eye, stlcldng on t"!J pupll. He
was treated by DC I/OI!sld Lyle
lllld. It later
~cod hi
would be sldellnod &amp;!least lor
several do,ys,
•
.
Another eye exam!jJation wao
scheduled today, • -J.
1
Famed Six,
Nolan struck out' six arid
walked two going the I'OOlle
Wednesday night. - ··
'
"I was really proull of him,"
asld Rod pitChing eoach Mtil
Harder. u'I'he game hal to help
Gary In a lot of wayi. II will Clo

'

"*"

1
Nolan Continues Comeback ::-:~::. ~ :ide~c: :~
~

''

, By VqO SJ'El,LINO
i HI.!'! ~rt• Wrlt.r
Gali"Nolorl, a star at" 18 and
a IIOI'O.armod c,JeotlClll mark at
19, fl now .makln&amp;: a .. eomebock" at'lhe age ot20.
Nolan 1111ddfnl.y developed iniD
one jlf- the moot surprising
pltci)Oro In lho Natlonlt League
last- -MaSDD as a teen-apr. Lees
than a year alter hll «raduatlon
lrof!!, hlst! acbool, Nolan worked
hlo ,wq .~ jhe Rods' otarilnS
rotaJfoll laat,Apr!l 8lld went oo
to ~oi" a U.S record while
pltcblng more lnntnso than lll\1'
oilier Rod plteher- 227.
But Nolan came &lt;1oom with a
oor~ arm In oprin£ training, II'~
sidelines for sb: weeks at \he
rtait ()( the 8lld his
career seemed In Jeopardy.
II now !Dilks Uke Nolan, who
turned 20 on MJIJ' 27, Is on \he
way, back. Ho pitched a three·
hit : l)lllout lor hla second
strallllli :Vjctory In his IOcond
atart Frldo.Y lll&amp;ht a• the
ClnOimatt Roda poo.uided the
Atlanta Braves 10~.
Soine·Bsd Moments
"I ftgared I was too yaung to
be w.-shed . '«) &amp;I a major
leaauvr,'• Nolan grimed, ft 1 dld
worr,y a bl~ thoufll&gt;, Enough to
start aev!ng m,y 1D011417. I put a
lot In the bank during lhooe
weeks I waa idle, But rm as

Dies Thursday •

Peace Parley

"

_.,_

B,y United Press lntotnatlonsl
American League

Goessler Jewelry Stort

I

-.........

Standings

River Gauges

'\

.... ~ ......

Dallas Gibbs

t

~·ff:. !_
. J.

You've Got a
with
Time and Date Watches
byBulova

.

' I ' .

·)

Kennedy :•

~ ,.,

~~d~Win,~·pre,pare For

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l.'

....

...

·,:.

.

Meig.~: Tef.!~ll,ers

Returning?

'j•

~('• .

\ f·'. '

.\

___...~

D
· t:

e

Bsl

W. "L,
' :':• . \Ill 19
·, ·2· 21
.sq 22
26. 25
25 26
23 26
2S 28

cnnftdent as ever oow."
Elsewhere In the National
League,
New York edged
91fcago 4.:.!, Philadelphia beat
san Francisco 2.. 1, Loa Angele1
nipped p(ttsburgh 2.1 In 10
tnntnss, and st. Louis beat
Houalon 3.1 lor Ita elghlh
straight victory.
Tony Perez droVe in four runs
for the Redl to take Over th8
National League RBI lead with
34 In \he rout o1 AUanta. Perez
had a two-run single during the
slx-run !lflh lnnln8 'ami a tworun homer In U•e sixth Inning.
Lee MJIJ' &amp;lao homered lor the
Rods.
Win Elgh\h straight
· l)rlando Cepeda singled l.,me
Curl Flood with the tle.IJresldng
run In the elgh\h lnnln8 oa the
Cords opened up a 2'h game
lead In the race by extending

YankeeS ffi
•
17·I Victory

Pet. GB

.jW ...

,58C! ·2'h

Cl land
.577 ~
MhljBo' ee•aola
,510 6
Bo....
.490 7
Oakland
.~9 8
New York
.451 9
Calltorn!a
2~ 29 .142 9'h
Chlca!ll&gt;
21 28 .429 10
Waoidnetort
21 29 .420 I01h
~ Wednelday'1ReJU1ts
Cl~ellllld 1, Chicago 0, night
Washington 3 Oakland I, night
Jlalttmore 7 California I, lll&amp;ht
New York 7 Minnesota 2, night
Detiolt 5 Boston 4, night
Triday'a Probable Pitchers
(AII1'1meo EDT)
Ditrolr · (!t)&amp;rml 4~ at
BOalon (Stanee 2-1), 1:30 p.m.
,·..M!Meooti (Boawell 4~ at
Nlllr York (Talbot 0-6), 2 p.m,
Chleago ll'lsher 1-3) at
Clnellllld (Slobert 6-4), 7:30

p.fit.

Oaklllllll

'
:.L~
~Uorn!a

2~

(llobaon

con.p. ....,,

at
8:o5

5-5) at
· Baltimore (llrabellder 4.2), 8
(Brunet

p,lJ!.
· :·
Frldar'• Game.a
ciavellllld at DeiJOf~ nlllltt
~dirt at Wallh 2, twl..Ught

~and at Bslt ~· twl-nlght
Clllf
.. at New Yoi'k' 2, twi&lt;tlght
CI~J- at BoatonJ.IIl&amp;ht
)

Nalltlllal

i::e.... '

I!'; L, Pet. GB

so

21 .588

25 21 .&gt;43 2'h
rr 24 .529 a
Franclaeo 27 , 25 ,511 . 3W
Angil!ea
2,8· 26 •U9 3\l
25 24 .510 I
25 .500 flh
27, .Mil 7
21 ,Gil 8\'l

.2'1

.tl3 3\l

lhelr wtm!ng streak to elght.longeot In lhe NL tbls seaeon.
LorrY Jaster went eight lnntnss
to gel the victory.
cteOn Jones' second double ol
the goine highlighted a thre&amp;nm llf\h Inning as \he Meta
beat the Cubs. Tom Seaver, who
left tho game In tho eighth aller
complalning of a muscle spasm
In hls 11e!t aide, got the win.
WoodY Fryman scattered six
hits to·bpost his record to 8-4 as
Philadelphia nipped San Francisco. Qaylor Percy. 6-3, gave
up two runs In \he first ton~
one urlea;rned. Wlllle Mays hlt
his loth homer loading off the
second for the Giants' only run.
MJIJ'O now has &gt;71 homers in his
career.
Loa Angeles scored an unearned In the 10111 IMina to nip
Pittsburgh. Wes Parker singled
with Zoilo Versalles oo first
base 8lld two aut to slort the
wiMing PiliJ'• Blll Singer
allowed six hits to get the win
while AI McBel!' gave up the
same number of hlts and took
the Joss.

PRAYERS OFFERED
The Yankees jumped Into the . KIAMESHA l A K E, N, Y,
lead in Middleport Hoys' League (UPI)- Heavyweights Joe Fraplay Wednesday evening, sport- zler and Manuel Ramos, both or
lng a 2..0 record at the end oC whom are preparing Cor their
\he first week with a 17·1 romp t!Ue fight In Madlsoo !ljuare
over the Braves called after 4 Garden on June 24, took time
Innings on the 10-nin rule.
out Wednestla.v to orav for the
Terry Pickens' opened 011 the critically wounded Sen. Robert
mound Cor the winners, gave up F. Kennedy.
a Orst luning single to Bachner,
Frazier, who · shar~s part o!
got a nosebleed in \he second ,\he heavyweight t!Uo .wi\h
Inning and was replaced by RoJ&gt;. Jimmy Ellis, prayed In \he
,ble Harrla. :,Hart;la.oi'Jlfr:!~ middle · ()(, .\he · ring. at \he
ball OnlshJ~, up~
sl,_ COOcord ·- t while R~mos, IIJ4r··
gle In tli8 iourth 'ii;'M,' · averi MWI!an ·· champion, · did tha
porL
same at his · Gro8tln8er's
Yank hitters were Steve Pick- train!.. base.
ens three singles, Da\oe Tyree
two triples and a single, chris
Fight Results
Miller two singles, Terry Plcft..
117
United
Press International
ena and Woocly Call each a sinTOKYO (VPX) - ! Flghttns Hagle, and Keith Little a single 8lld
rada,
126, Tokyo, outpointed
3-rtm homer in the second inning.
The Redlegs lb't evening also Dwlght Hawkins, 124, Loa
defeated the Indians 15-a In an- Angeles (10).
---1
other game called alter !oor ln.
LAS
VEGAS,
Ne&gt;. (UPI)ning&amp;. No details were disclosed,
Peter
Gonzales,
129,
San Diego,
Yankees
930 5-17 12 0
C~lf., declsloned Rene Maclss,
Braves
010 x- 1 2 1
128, Los Angeles (10).
T. Plckena, R. Harris (2) and
Call. s. lavender and Lowery.
REGINA, Sask. (UPO
George Chuvalo, Toronto, outpolnlod Jean Claude Roy,
Montreal (t2). Heav'iolgtJts.

fa strong enough lor nln~ Innings."
·
Harder and Reds , MBQuger
Dave Brlatol checked wi\h Nolan from 1he seventh ' lnnilt_g on
about his arm cond!ti&lt;lt.
14 He was tired," said Hamler,
"But o111er than that, he felt all
right."
11 1 figured holding him down
to 110 pltches," said ar:lstol,
"but he finished the gam e with
111."

Pirates Get
'

7 in Fifth
The Pirates scored '&amp;Ill their
runs in the nru-. inning Wednes-day while defeating \he Tigers
1-4 in a Pomeroy Boys' League
game.
Andy Vaughan had pit~hed a
two-hit shutout fur Edgar Abbott's Tigers for tour innings
but the Pirates erupted in the
fifth. Vaughan walked four bat-.
ters aOO the Pirates got three
hits good lor 7 runs.
J. D. Story, who relinved Mdy English on \he hill, · pllched
strong Cor the winner• ;ard also
produced a three-run d•ouble In
the fifth. Other Pirate hitters
were Danny Stone a double

"nd

single arxl Mike Nesselroad and
Sarver each a single.
Tiger hitters were Bill Mar·
shaD a pair or singles and C.
MarshaJI and Andy Vaughan a
single each.
[flglish pitched th(J first Coor
innings Cor the Pirntes before
being relie~d by !jlory.·CO,..

bined \hey'11£JN&lt;! "Yilllcr lssl!ed
eight walks. C. MarsHall relieved
Vaughan in the firth and between
them they struck &lt;kit eight and
walked six.
A stsndout play o! the game was
when Danny Stone 1!118de an oot.

standing play at :;hortstop for
George Nesselroad''s Pirates.
Tigers
20 0 400 - 4 4 I
OO·O07x - 1 5 0
Pirates
Vaughan, Mars.hall (5), and
White. English, ~;tory (4) and
Nesselroad.

Redlegs P1ate

Roberts 'Hurls Thr~~·
muer:...
" -.,
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The nln\h annual Kyget CroOk Little League Toomament
will begin on Jul1 6. All teams lnll!rostod In playi!JIIn tile
tournament this year must send ln the team n1111e and team

roster no later than JWie 20•
Team name and team rosters s~ould be sent to Bill lllobbord, Ohio Valley Electrle COrporation, P. 0. Box 81, Galli·
poll&amp;, Ohio, 45631.
No teams wUI be accepted 'alter June 20, according to
Hubbard.
I
:·:~;;;;;;;~,-:;:;::::::::::;::;::::::::·:·::::::o·:::·:·:·:·::;...;-:·;-;-;::*:~;;::~:::;::::~::;:.;:;:=:::;::-=::::;;x::;:-«;:;:-~&lt;

:~..;:::;~;.;:!·~::;:;:~;:::::-;::;.;.:;:;:; ~~:;:~: ~:;::::.;.:::~::..;.;.:=:.?.:*:::::.:::::«::?$:::»~::::~:;:;:::&lt;:+

,,

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Orioles' JohnsOJl
Hits Grand Slam
UP! ~rts Writer
Dave Johnson's call for a
"medlc" was waved aft by a
toul!h ex-Marine Who knows the
value o( oombat..tested men.
D-llliJ' plus 24 years !lnd.o
B~tlmore Oriole Manager Hank
Bauer In another kind of battle,
where the stakes are hlgh and a
sustained attack could mean
another American League pennant to the grizzled veteran.
Bauer aclmowledged Johnson's plight, created when the
Baltimore second baseman was
hlt on the hand tn a recent
Bolton series and Injured tt
further doring the fourth Inning
Wodneaday night when be tagged
Csll!orn!a's Roger Repoz trying
to stretch a 1ingle into a dooble.
But the situation was critical.
The Orioles had 1he bases
4oaded \he next lmtns and
Johnson was up. He leaned
toward the dugout and asked
Bauer if he wanted somebody to
pinch hlt lor him. The
Baltimore manager shrugged
him off and Johnson proiJllt]y
bellod the ball Into the right
field seats for the Cirst grand
slam homer ol his career. It
helped beat California 7-1.
Stengel's Rules
'~1 had to tell Bauer I was
hurting," Johnson e·xplalned.
"Last year I got into the
doghouae when r tried to hide •
back injury. Bauer told me at
the time that he was a stengel
disciple and Casey couldn't
stand It if a guy plliJ'ed wl\h an
injury and didn't report it."
Johnson's homer was his

COI.UMllUS (UPI) - t'o,r· a!tn ~'wltli ,
mer Columbul Cetltral IIIith
Jim •O'Toole
·· '
School athlete Dave Roberta felt tile Bravos'
II)IOd.
In the series !lnale
1,
"I had m,y best ,.. tile
year tonight," oc!d \he JO!•
1
AMjllllCANS COMPE'It • '·'
pltehar Who a~ • lhre&amp;CARDIFF, " Wa!os- ·.,roPJ&gt;hlt JIIAtllJUI over U.,
Amerlcana" split their ~
Braves In ~matlonal J.o"4"" Wednesday at the Qat~ .•
action Wedllesclay nlghl.· ·
Roberta, who played-bueboll q.unt,y lawn tennis ~
lhlpl.
IIIII baaketball at tho local high
Tom Edel!soo ()( Bi~,
ae~; waa bockod up by a sinCall!, advanced to tile" lliinldft.
s!• run In \he elgiJth Inning ato by boating Len llrllie:l'·
' &lt;II
tits! proved to be the margin of
Auatralla 8~, 6-1. Blll'l')'m !oat
v!c:ll&gt;ry In \he I~ game.
to Dave Smith ()( Auotrslla 6~,
· The run eame when Chris
CaMlzzaro singled home Manny 1~. 1-0 wileD he Jill! clurlnc tho
lhlrd sol.
Ssngutllen In a baseHoaded oltuatlon.
Tho wln kept Columbus In lho LARGE PAYOFF
tltlck ()( lho International
BOSTON (UPl) &amp;dfolk
League pennant race, Just one Downs psld off on a $1,059
p.mo behind the league~eadlng perfects W e d n e 1 d a. y whea
Tuledo Mud Hens, Who disposed Friendly Ghost 8lld B!zcocho
()( ~racuae 3..2 In Ulnntnsa at ran one-two in the fifth race.
Toledo.
The wlmer psld $77.00, 23.10
Frank Kreutzer was the loser 8lld 11.60. Blzcocho psld $1UO
In \he a!falr, dropping his sea- 8lld 8.60.

Rl-

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\

117 GARY KALE

'

MeLaln Wlna Nlntlt
Denny McLain won hlo nlnlh
game against a single loao aa he
received three Innings of hitless
relief rrom Daryl PatteriOD.
Detroit gained the vielor7 wl!en
Boston's sure-baDded shortstop
Rico PetroeellJ threw away a
sevenlh -Inning dooble pill,)'
grounder 8lld allowed Dick
McAullffe to score all the way
from first.
Jose Cardona! broke wt o! a
one-lor.27 slump with a secondInning single to bring home
Cleveland catcher Duke Simi
wl\h the only run of the game.
Chleago, plagued by one-run
lo1ses this &amp;eaiOfl, waa limited
to six hlto sl Stan WU!Iams
picked up his !ourih victory of
1he year.
Frank Howard, Washington's
Paul BunyaneSCJie s I u g g e r,
drove in all the Senators' runs
against Oakland wlth a two-run
homer, hls 21st 8lld a single.
Howard also doubled to raise
his batting average to .3&gt;9.
CarnUo Pascual benefited from
the Howard fireworks, wim1ng
his !lith game agalnsl three
losses.
Joe Pepitone, hitting .464 wlth
men on base since hls return to
the Yankse lineup on May 25,
drove In six runs with a I!I'nnd
slam homer and a triple.
Harmon Klllebrew and Tony
Oliva hit back~-baek homen
in the fifth liming tor Millleaota' s only runs. Mel St:otUemyre
railed his record to 7-4 and
Dean
Chance's mark was
lowered to 4-7.

-...

U0/7.00

$17.45

1

13

lltll:hflll plla
Utrod ...
11 tiM aiel tlrt

!

fourth of the season and kept

second place Baltimore 21h
games behind Detroit in \he
standtnss. Curt Molton also
homered for the Orloles as Jim
Hardin pitched a stroni five.
hitter for hie seventh win in
nine decl&amp;ions. The Oriole
righthander, who was 8-3 with
Baltimore last suason, threw
only 10 breaking pitches for
strikes as he ·famed eight
batters. Tom Satrlano spelled
his shutout with a seventhiming homer.
Detroit edged Boston S-4,
Cleveland nipped Chicago 1-0,
Washington rapped Oakland 3-1
and New York roulod Minnesota
7-2 in other American League
kames.

All-Stars ®

.

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.. ·,·,· . · '

How VITAMIN B-2
guards your health!
"'Oh.

ol~

here romn a

«:OU•

pie of live onetl"

Four in J?ifth

·,

:~

·,

A blg !ourih )Ming gave the
Redlegs a 7..3 wln over the An..
gals In the op entng game ()(
International League standings
117 United Press lnlemational Pomeroy Pee ll'ee League plliJ'
W L'. Pet. GB Tueaday,
With the s«~re 2-1 at the end
Toledo
27 19 : .587
&lt;( 4¥.1 lnnlnga, ~ne Redlega came
Columbus
21 15 .583 I
Loulovllle
23 18 .561 l'h up wl\h lour 111111 to put \he
game on lee In spite of a sixth
Rochester
21 17 .553 2
frame
threat by the Angels.
Butrelo
22 22 :500 4
Getllng hila for lhe Redlegs
Richmond
19 25 1432 7
were
T13lor, two doubles; A.
lacksoovlllo 19 26 :422 7'h
Seth,
\hree
slnules, 8lld B. Seth
liiYracuse
15 25 .375 9
8lld B. Browning, eaeh a single.
Wedne~•• Results
For
the Angels, Coodt, Harrio,
Toledo 3 liiYraeuae 2, night, 11
Sml\h
8lld Souhll&gt;¥ singled.
Innings,
Tll,71or
!amedl 14 lor the Rods
Buffalo 6 Rocbeater I, night (at
while Smith struck out eigiJt lor
Nlagoro Fallo)
the
Angels. Th&lt;' Mots won the
Columbus 1 RlcluJI&lt;md 0, lll&amp;ht
ather
game by a !or!elt when
l.oll!svllle 1; Jacksonville 0,
Raelne !ailed 1&lt;1 Deld a team.
night

~..:
:

Father'• Day Useful Gifts All D1d1
Will Appreciate ....

SPORT &amp; DRESS
SHIRTS by

ARROW

..."

This vitamin prevents eyes from be·
coming sensitive to light and helps to keep
the •kin in a healthy condition. It works
together wi1h the other 8 vitamins.

ASI ABOUT OUR
SPECIAL ON VIT AIINS

OPEN DAILY
1:00AM te .10:00 PM

AL

Sundoy 10:30 AM

Oj~l

SPORT IINITS
and GOLF
SIURTS. CotW,.s, Banlon &amp;
Decton !o&lt; hls
fun In \he

PAIRI
BOATING
PICNICS
SWDOIIING
CAMmiG

RERMUDA
SHORTS
Plaids, checksJ
IIIII solid col·
ora.' ' Perman-

flS!IINn

REI:REJmilN
7

erit,...oa.

1"

ST!IAW HATS,
SPORTHA'CS
IIIII CAP!j
bN'ortla
'

FATHERS DAY· JUNE 16

to 12:30 PM ollll

SLACKS

5:00 te 9:00 PM

Perma-Presa, dacron and
wool woralecl. II.Y J aymar
and H - . The best in
alae~• and be deserves It

Wayne Swisher, Ho..,ld Lohoo, Charlet Persinger
ond Kennoth McCullough are your friendly phar-

mocl51o ot Swisher llld LohM Rexall Drugs. They
SOCKS IIIII JIFFY SUPPERS BY~
JOCKEY IJllibERWEAR
BILLFOLDS
AND JEWELRY
MEN'S GIFTS BY
SWANK
l\lllN•s TOILETRIES
BY J,\ljE EAST

11aw low proscription pricM and prompt .........

ond discount drug prl&lt;*i Mven doyo a week. Let
liS serve you for oil your pnl!cription orid
noecls.

~·

q
•

i

�'

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...

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~~~iildcU.onoo., TllllrlldiJ,Juno 6, 1988

! .

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l.·

• '

TaBing

1'ill MelP ~ adlaol taoio- 11 PI'O\'fdtns tile oi!Jor servleea Jl!;l'elt, BI!.IY : 11ort&lt;1, r~·
Parker -arll:Uidtl.r Ja'ckaa. • ~·(
;rs '!Ill ailencl i IO.,....k '1)\!• ~~· will be ljaoded.
COLUMBUS (lii'O Tho oslcl Wedllesdi\Y tile -rat D.c., train staUon.
"VI fedora! trliiilng PI'Ofl'8111. ·• . . N~'fall..,.l4ditlonalliJ)Oiclal
brelkdcnm of law 8lld order In
The period ended In 1901 .when
,.cation II ~ ~' odu~itn· elais Will ' be !orln.ed
IJalted - · be relllrnlng lhat ume period resembln tho
Prealdent WilHam McKIDley
·-.u;; thla ..nuner. ·
In ·lllalgi CountY, Bowen laid.
.. Ule - · conditione()(
Ule lote 1800s In view fll t h e eurrent ....Utl.ons In tile coon- was killed by an American.IJom
· Mello ~Octiii!IJ ~ HOwever; he foporll lho Title
aaaasolnollon ()( Son. Robert try.
l'llll all anarchist.
"' SOhoolo ~ Boli.n alld VI Pt'oJram &lt;( ira!Jibol spaCial
Koomeolf, according to Dr, lUIGrimm noted the 1881aoaeoslMcKlnlo,y's death cauaod t h e
the· 19 leocbeu wlil be Ml&lt;lllod edileatlon teachers la·belng carmar Grimm, a Capital' Unlvor- oation &lt;( President Jam~s Ger- se&lt;ret service to be BSBII!DOd as
lo .,....... ~ wl1b leo~ rlod out to qusJlty more teachIIIY hlllory pe()(esi!Ol'.
fteld dramatized tile turmoil bo&lt;lfguards lor !Uture U.S. presIng !Itt alow 1eomV
era lor pesl~ wl!en tile·mmGrimm, the chairman of the that was to follow. Ga1;ield waa Idents.
lllellllvoralt,yduNaeadt·lilo(n. ~ o! claalos lo conslclerobi.Y
lllllvertlt,y'a history department, shot to deall! In a Waohlngton,
Other violent OC&lt;UreOces cllr. l!Ji. During llll·lilleniood. aaem- tn...,.sed.
.. '·
'.
tns \he period, as noted by
. • lnar will be held II which time
Teachlrs Who will' be altelld·
Grimm, were \he Ha,ymarket
Despite the cance1111111 of the Memorial JloJ! parade In Rutlaati tile 10
will dliCUaothe ln8 the aunmer senlon at OhiO
Square rlota, the Betlll...., due to tile weather, Rutland Pnst 467, Ameri~an Legion, went alleecl probl111111 ()( llo
1eomor tn Un!versllr lnelqde Ellen Wirth,
Steel slrlke 8lld \he Pullman w!\h Ito aervices at cemeteries as p l · Melga Cout!Q' and the t,ypO ()(
Sc8!ly Thelma Cl!lli•
atrlke•
Fourteen members and six o!llcers vialted tile Miles. Wr~Pt. pnigam Wblch might btae!lt him bell MJrgarlt Ello Le'olls ~
Tho pe()(essor asld \he coun- Danville, Salem center, Standish, and Midway Comstarioo ,,. ..,. _ moat. The -w!lllhMdevtlCIP
Wllllain·==~·~K:Me:.~-.• .•• • • •
try retumod to more normal ducted services after ft'hlch they were aened 1 eldcktD ~ at · a caa"M ~ lltUcb' tor the \low
coodltlons lhroush the strong lhe post hall by auxiliary members.
·
learftll" l!nd tile IIOeOia8rl' tulia
leaderllhlp &lt;( Pres!- TheoPON·A
Modod by l.eaellll"• In tho fteld
dore Roosevelt.
SPENDING A FEW days In Pnllleroy to visit !ormer nil-a ot spadal pcitllll.
Tile commission's recommet~­
COLUMBUS (VPl) - The
and classmate• Is Lawrence Edgar Lewis, Cohunbu&amp;
Moel!ng thla WNk, tile MO!p
Ohio Crime Commission callod datlons wlll be presented to lhe
The soo o! the late Addison and Orllla Leiria, he Ia ooe of a...n Cout!Q' lkiord of FAtcaUm en-.v lor moJor changes In legislature next year.
children and bas a twin sister, Florence, who Is -uvtow In San mrodldo an-enlw!tiiOhlo
Other RecommendatJons
Ohio polletes, Including an enDiego, Callt
, Unlverslt,y ·» provide a director
Other recommendations called
try Ill tile state iniD the law en.
The lamlly lived on what was
CHARLEs KNIGHT, 800 o!Mr. for tlte Title VIJII'OIP'am aa wall
for wire • topping uoder court
forcement lleld.
Dutch Lane and later became and Mrs. Howard Knlgh~ near
In a reDQrt to Gov. James A. jurisdiction, medical treatment
Liberty Ave. lawrence ottend&lt;Jd Chester, Is one ot 14 Ohio Unl·
Rhodes, !he commission sald of chronic dntnks, more unJschool
at COtlport 8lld tile former •erslt,y students who have been
the state "DMlst aasume an ac- formi!J In I!I'antlng probatloo,
Central School In Pomeroy. He named to plan and eoonllnato
revisJon of the bond system, Imtive role in law enforcement.''
recalls that he am his sister activtUes tor the unlversU;y's
- (Contlnuod lr&lt;111 Pip' I)
The eommissJoo recommend- proved salary scalt~a for enwere recelvedlntotheMlddleport homecomlrv weekend neil Oct
ed a creetloo &lt;( a bl.partiaan, forcement ofltcers and better
Presbyterian Church In 1913 24 _ 26. Selection was announced ed, me serloo!llJ.
lie ... awartby Srhan
nlne-&lt;nember Ohio Crime Com- rehabilitation of prisooers.
when they were six years ald. by Robert M. Ruday, assistant
In remarks to the oomrnlsalon
mlsaioft with the same powers
Blahara
Slrhlii, 21, a Jofdanlan
Lawrence has resided in CO- director of student affairs.
Two juveniles were taken into
Saxbe took issue with sheriffs
~ a grand jury and the crearefu&amp;oe
Who waa held lllder
lumbus, Buc,vrus and Detroit
custody
late
Wedneedoy
night
IIIII
who
are
fighting
the
state's
enttlm of a division of criminal
tight securiiY guard In Los
early this morning after a break- since leaving Pomeroy. For the
LONG TIME COUNTY board Anploa Codnt,y Jail Dvo mUoa
" i
justice Ln the attorney general's ry into the law eofor cement
past 38 years, he has been em&lt;(!Ice to help the commission field, which has been tradition. Ing and entering aiSmlth'sHonda ployed as a butcher by n Colum- of education secretary, Mra. wu.. from the bolpltal w11ere Keanemo sargent, s~llod \he l c e df diad. II was not dladoaed
ally reserved for local author- and Fiat Sales at Kanaup.
8lld localautborlties.
bus
packing
comp1ny.
...
One was apprehended by Pete
cream and cake this week when whether Sirhan wao ln!ormod
The cnmmlsslon, headed by ities.
The
Lewis
family
resided
in
Smith, who surprised the two
\he board met. The oceaslon?
14 The state has no role In law
Alt,y, Gen. WOllam B. Sube,
the "old Seyfried proper()'" and The birt!Jday anniversary of her lmmedlatei.Y of \he senator's
youth
during
the
B&amp;E
and
lhe
otJ&gt;.
called lor a modernization of enforcement except in trafl'ic,
dea\h.
Lawrence recalls friends such
/t. team ()( ... ,.,..........
the entire state aystem c1 crime but patterns ~ crime a r e er, who ran, waspickedupinMid- as Frances SchoU, Neva Davis, brother, Harold Rwsh, a memdleport
by
the
Gallia
Count,y
Shorber
o!the
bmrd.
prevention and of desltns with changing and spreading," Saxplckecl all but a tiny !ragmeat
Dave Jackson ai'KI Leona Kohl.
be sald. "We are oot trytns to ter s Department
crime 8lld crimlnsls.
()( the bullet from K-ed)''•
Lewis has two children - a
Both
boys,
ooe
16
and
the
other
OFf1ClALS
OF
Drew
Webater
put
any
of
\hose
local
&lt;(!leers
The 25.member commission
brain In a four.IJour operiucn. .
son living in Memphis, Tenn.,
made no recommendations for out ol business. Instead we are 17, will be returned to their r&amp;o- and a daughter in Cohunbus. In Poat 39, American Legloo - the But, the oenator'a condl1lon
1JU1 controllqlslatlon In lhe r&amp;- trying to help them by bringing spective counties for prosecution the near future he wi11 be visl~ organiution responsible tor the clw!&amp;ed Utile \hl'llUgh the 1111'
in juvenile courts. The 16-year.
bulletin board or servicemen near 8lld rdgbl until be !lnally
·~
porl bUt urged mandstory lm- all law enforcement closer toing his sister, Florence, In San \he lllalga Coonty Courthouse old
is
from
Lorain
and
the
17prlaonment ol. any person who gether, to )rovide better tools
Diego, an.d hls son in Memphi~ report they have access only to suecwnbed.
year.oJd o! MlddleporL
has a gun In his pessesslon auch as central laboratories
"lie wu nat able to OU!Id
Entry to tile Smith firm was
names of servicemen entering the back up tissue after the tnuma
while commlttlns a mlsdemeon- and help to coroners to mention
II!RS. ZUELEUA SMITH wUI arme;d forces after Jan. 3, 1964.
gained by takl!w broken glusout
a few of the 1tdngs we need."
or.
of lui lll&amp;ht and the JIOII'eery ·
or a cracked wirx:low, reaching observe open house ather trailer Those who entered he!Ore that
home from 4 to 8 p. m. Saturday time IIIII served at least!OOdays IIIla morning," asld FroB&lt;
\hrough andunlocklngthewlndow '
Manldewicz, Keraed;r'a preas
0
fl
S
Nothing was reported missing. • ond Sunday. The gleaming trailer !rom \he Jan. 3, 1946, date are
TM man of the hour wantl hi• wateh to
secrelory Who made lhe &lt;(llclal
/
Deputies said both boys admit- stands on W. Main st., Pomeroy, oot ovallable lor listing, but are
keep bini potted on tht date u .well u
By llnllod Press lntematlonsl
spesldng o! violencotfn Ameri- ted the B&amp;E. They had hitch- where the Smith home ft'as lo- ellglble. Names of such servlc~ death IIIKIUicemeat.
tbc ~e. Juat a glance ttlla you allKenn""'' aon, Joseph, 16,
LOS ANGELES- Fronk Man- CO:
hiked to Gallipolis and slq&gt;pedat cated before it was razed.
men are to be sent to the post at was at his bedside with hla
and tells .Nl abOut you. Wear the
klewtez, Sea Hobert F. Kenne.
"We are a violent people With \he Skyline Lanes bowling alley
PomerO)'. Meantime, relatives molher and aunt.
Bulova wonder watch that k~p
d,y's press secretary, telling ~ a violent history, and the The Jiyear~d who got • .;.
or such servicemen are exterl1ed
Named For Brolllar
tile senator's death:
Instinct lor violence has seoped when a shot was fired thembed
·you from wonduin&amp;.
apologies. It Is a situation beyond
Joseph, named for Kamt&lt;l1'•
•1fe was oot able to build into the bloodstream of our back to Middl~rt where he was
control of the post
fslher 8lld tile - · eldest
back up tlsa~e atter the trauma national life."
picked up.
brolher Who wa·o klllod In a
()( los! night and the surgery
craah In D!repe dllrlng
plane
President
WASillNGTON lhla morning. •
World War II, Informed the two
Johnson, calling '"' Americans ::::::~~~::::~:::::::::~:::::::::~:::::::::::::~:::....:~·::=::-;{~·
•
MASON
·~
An
1a.bole
mlnl·
'
ather
. ~ Kllld.., ~7,
MASON - Dallas B. QJbbs,
• LOS ANGELES-J&lt;Ibn 11. to cUrb violence:
IIIII Robert Jr., 13, Who wvro
uLet us, tor God's sake,' abire gol! course has been 32, Hartford, passed away ear·
.;
Wlitdner, proprietor of a hsalth
(Continued !rom p, ge I)
el
sewl!ere
In
the
boapltal.
completed
here
across
the
resolve
to
live
under
the
law."
ly
today
In
Cabeii-Hontlngton
Hos.
rood llore wl!ere Sirhan Blshlra
'
lncludtns kllltnss, physical asAlso at lila bedside wu
highway from the Pnmeroy - pltal to become \he \hird !atall·
Srhan 110J'ked, doscriblng wily
saults, verbal aasaultl and Kemeoll''• brother, EdWard; hll IMIIAISAIO« "At:"
lllaoon bridge 8lld wlll be open ty ri the one - car accident m
-17 jtwels. Aula·
he thought the accused assassin
harmful
pr.mts.
IIIIUC. Waterproof•.
staters, · Mrs. Sleilllen Smith
\hls Friday at 6 p.m.
lhot Sen. Robert F, Kennedy:
Mlll St., jus! inside \he Middleswe., second hind,
Youth Exposed
Clltll'lr window.
IIIII PliriJ&gt;la Lawford, and his
The course, to be known as port corporation llmlts, on May
Ml lhlnl&lt; he did lhls for hll
Applltid ...Urs, hi·
"The most Impressionable brolller4n..law and .........,
Vista
Miniature
Golf
Course,
111111011 dill Ud
GAUGES - Gslllpolls, 1.2.1
COI.Iltry, not necessarily this
31.
membera
ol.
~ nation, tbe
hnds, SIIIIIIIU
eountry. ,,
Is owned by VIrgil Lewis, Dot8lld 23.9 rW111n8 44 teet of ron.
Gibbs, who reported]y suffer- youth of Amerleo, can often be !DOMliOf. StopheR Smllb, 8lld
llttl
t71..
' ,'
ers; Pl. Pleasant, 25.60; Pome~ tle FerguiOD, Carrie Lewis ed a fractured frontal alnus and found viewing cartoons wl!ere MII!I'. WilHam McCormack &lt;(
Whtntyou know what rnakes a watch ~ ~iei, you'llgi~ :a Bulcwa
and Danny Kerns, parbters.
NEW YORK- Artlllr Sdllesln- roy-l\lason, 24.20; Hinton, 2.10
dlalocalod hlp, had been trJIII&amp;.. violence Is being perpetrated at St. Pllrick's CoiiJedral In Naw
pr Jr., Pullt2or Prize winning falling; Kanswha Falls, &gt;.60 fallferred from Veterans Memorial about \he rate ()( me vloleat York.
Hospital to tile Huntington hoa. incident every 50 seconds," Otto
blllorlan IIIII an aide to tile late Ing; Charleston, 19.30 rising;
When aakod for the eauae ()( death, Manklew!cz
.'
Prelldont John F. Kennedy, London, nmnlng one hall-loot of
pltal June 4.
Court St.
Pomeroy
asld.
replied: "I llon't to talk
roUers; Marmet, running three·
The other victims in the crash
Schlesinger, a close hiend ol. lbout that.,,
fourths c:l a loot; and Winfield,
were David M. Fields, 20, POme- Robert KennedY, spoke Wednesronnlng 4 teet.
roy, reported the driver d the day at commencemll'lt exercicar lhat struck a llone wall ses for . 48 doctors! grawates at
near the top o! .Middleport Hill," tho Clcy Universlcy ()( New
and Georgia L. PUllins, 39, Mid· York.
dleport.
He callllfl lhe American
Also injured in the crash were people "tile moot lri!IIU&gt;bw on
. Vernon Rizer, 18, Hartford, who thla p)anet...
was taken to Holzer Hoapilal
"We are a frlgtd:enin,g people
8lld later transferred to a Co- beeause we have alrea&lt;IY In tlda
lumbus hospital; Jemy Jlysell, de..W, murdered the two of our
33, Mlddlepert, a petlent at Hol- citizens (President Kemeoll' IIIII
zer Hospital, end Ray Junior Dr. Martin Lutller KID&amp; Jr.)
Roush, 19, Rt. 2, Racine, who was
Who pr&amp;-emlnently - r e
treated and relealllld by Veterano the -ld 18 \he embocllmluls
Memorial Hoapilal. Rizer earli- ()( American Idealism- and beer """ reported In rritlcal COD- caose last lll&amp;ht - trted to
dltion.
murder a third.
Gibbs' bo&lt;IY was taken to FOlie"II fa almost as If a primsl
oms Funeral Home In Maaon curse has been fixed oo our
where arrangements are pendlns. nation, We are a violent people
a violent bllk&gt;ry' 8lld the
Instinct for viol011ce bao soaped
DIVORCE SOUGHT
A petition lor dlVO&lt;ce has been Into \he bloodstream ()( our
Died In lllalgs Councy COOU!Ion natlonalltfe."
there
Pleas Court by YYOilJIO Marie
Wells,
Rt. 1, Long Bottmn,
ru10n moJW and moJW
againat John R. Wella, same ad- 1
dress. The plaintiff charges
pe!lpl.skop at VIllage
gross nedecl o! dut;y and .,._
TRAINS ROLLING
'
treme cruelty. No minor chilPARIS (UPX) - Trains and dren are tnvolved.
Phannlcy. ~pt and
· subways rolled again ard buses
returned to Paris streets -.v
.complete p~ptlon
SQUAD CALLED
The Sweetwt Things
ti .
set the wheels of the strUi~
The Pomeroy emergency oquad
Mrvlce
JWasonable
French economy WrniJW answered 1 call Wodnesclay to \he
. .
slo•wly alter 19 days altho most Rollin Dill hmte oo Kerr st.,
disastrous tleup in the nation's !rom where Mrs. DUl, who had b&amp;0!11'
59N. 2nd Aye,
,.
.
.
'
history,
come
Ul,
waa
taken
to
111e
Ewlllg
Vf2.5S60
•.
,j\.
•. ,.. '
PRESENTS
ootabllabmont where she wu
MIDDLEPORT
11
•'
·'
trons!erred to an ambulance and
'"·
' '
Parts of the Appian Way, removed to Holzer Hospllal.
' .
1rtiCI'l~
.' .
2,IJOO.y e a r • o I d Roman hl&amp;h·
.
. ·f ·. ,
.
"
,\
way, are still In use today.

•do!

,...,...'Ill

"'-cher•

Commission Urges

alcnr

y_,,

Ba.;.,,

Enforcement Powers.

llery lmpprtant Pop!

Juveniles
Are Held

'

I'

InB&amp;E

\

\I

~·

.i

\-'

Qu

,.,'It.-

'

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.:r
·"

tes 0 Kennedy' Death

.

,f 'I

'1

1

.violence '

..
...

Still Blocked

Yltt,

Dudley's ftorld

PLEASANT

.p,a.ls
..

In big"

it low
flnt .order of bullnan

.·'-' ui .. y;u, ntxt

THE INK SPOTS

,lPPE.ARING JUNE 22 OM.Y
DINE e DANCE e ENJOY
~~~~.

RESERVATIONS ACCEPTED NON
PHONE

67~1611

. PLEASAN'l.POINT RESORT

.

·'·· Jli~ncu

THEOCYOTI:P
DAlLY
SENTINEL
·ro INn!IPJ' tw'
MEIG!iollill.o\.Q AU:A
IIICHAIDII, OWDI.I'\IILMIEI
t:IWI•III'TIIIIMNII.&amp;allr
Fullliiii!M dill)- --at !;atwflt 11f 'n..

.

eil•lpiiW•a

•C.nc~J Tuft

• CamltiCifll ·

......

;·

Plu• AV1rlety of Chell-.
TOMATO PlANI'S

r.tl-1 111h...U.I.. rlpftJIIII..IIte V...
un~lll.(:tllu"-•, IK.. u
a.. ,...
Yllrll Cltr, Nn Ywk,
Soi&gt;l&lt;riglltn t ... t: Dllltel'lll 1tiJ Cll'"t'
will,_ •t~llalilk :q ~-.. 1111' . . -1 - , _
~ lhlllfl ...... llllb litollJIIII Ollet,. . . . . .
!lilx !I!Or.u.&amp;, $S.IU, nr.. ....... tuL ..
. . _ lloooU: ..........,....
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Ullll,

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Ohio! ~· ~•ltl' Nllltt~lrw~.ne~
lil., ~. Ohio, ut•. •••-• 01'"
P~ouM H)-list,~~~~ 1'1MM .WilT,
lilo:ond rlala liD~ MW 11 ~.

abll: 0... ""-h fi,M. It MaUl 0. ,_.
IIUII. !111 .._..~ tLJ$. '"'"'...........
SilhtrljHloll ,..,~• llld .... . . , .,.......

... ... .., .. , .. .
'

.-.

MIDWAY MARKET

•

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I

'

'

•

••• ' 4 • '

'• .

I

-

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•

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ihii·N·,\TI

BIIYI pitching wbo can hold the

(UPO - Johnny
. \hinka tho Cincinnati
'R.,ts are abl!"l ready to string
1!&gt;~\!',!f
-.!' .!~w _victories.

o\hor
lenoe
with
acore

·
.
E

!de eatcher~aoptlmism
·lnim · the three· hitter eel.

' Nnlan. pitched Wodnesdll,)'
· .
a't·llje Redo buried IIJ•
IiF•'f~ 10~.
i'~Gary end Jim Maloney
~~:!" take their regular
t;§JI:;Ind George Culver and
~rry Arrigo pitching aooc1 bsll;
wt're /r:~ ~ wln ~- lot of
"'"eo, ' prell!Cted Bench.
.
'10ut 'hltlero are going to he .
re relaxed knowing we got
.. . . . . . . .

loom. They won't eJqJOr·
the preosure !bat eomes
knowing you've got to "
a lot of runo,'' Bench add.

Nolan, sidelined lhe ftrst alx
weeks of \he seasoo wl1h arm
trouble, limited \he Phlladelohla
Phllllea to three hits I" alx !!!·
nlnga In hla seaeondebut laotFr1day when he notched hlo !!ret
victory.
· , Second COOsocut!ve Win
He made It two In a row
Wednesday lll&amp;ht 8lld will try ·
lor number three next· Monday

. Af.ant4'

against the CUba In Chicago.
Belore heading lor the Wlnd;y
Gli.Y, the Heda have a weekend
date wl\h \he 91. Lollis Cm:dlnal•
aj Crosley Field beginning Fri.
day lll&amp;ht, wileD Maloney will
-~ \)lck Hughes.
•T&lt;XIY Pore• 8lld Lee May
aoekod homera ao the Redo, expl.,ung lor sb: In the D!thlnnlnS,
po!mded three Brave hurlers for
12 ' hits willie taalng Phil Nlek.
ro; will! hla fourth loss against
five victories.
111ay . was a lost.mlnute replacement at ftrst baoelor Fred
WhlUield.

SL .

Some 15 minute• \x.ro..., the
game Whlllleld otru$ a match
In tile cl.ubhouse. A piece ()(
phosphoruo iiew IJ!td hls right
eye, stlcldng on t"!J pupll. He
was treated by DC I/OI!sld Lyle
lllld. It later
~cod hi
would be sldellnod &amp;!least lor
several do,ys,
•
.
Another eye exam!jJation wao
scheduled today, • -J.
1
Famed Six,
Nolan struck out' six arid
walked two going the I'OOlle
Wednesday night. - ··
'
"I was really proull of him,"
asld Rod pitChing eoach Mtil
Harder. u'I'he game hal to help
Gary In a lot of wayi. II will Clo

'

"*"

1
Nolan Continues Comeback ::-:~::. ~ :ide~c: :~
~

''

, By VqO SJ'El,LINO
i HI.!'! ~rt• Wrlt.r
Gali"Nolorl, a star at" 18 and
a IIOI'O.armod c,JeotlClll mark at
19, fl now .makln&amp;: a .. eomebock" at'lhe age ot20.
Nolan 1111ddfnl.y developed iniD
one jlf- the moot surprising
pltci)Oro In lho Natlonlt League
last- -MaSDD as a teen-apr. Lees
than a year alter hll «raduatlon
lrof!!, hlst! acbool, Nolan worked
hlo ,wq .~ jhe Rods' otarilnS
rotaJfoll laat,Apr!l 8lld went oo
to ~oi" a U.S record while
pltcblng more lnntnso than lll\1'
oilier Rod plteher- 227.
But Nolan came &lt;1oom with a
oor~ arm In oprin£ training, II'~
sidelines for sb: weeks at \he
rtait ()( the 8lld his
career seemed In Jeopardy.
II now !Dilks Uke Nolan, who
turned 20 on MJIJ' 27, Is on \he
way, back. Ho pitched a three·
hit : l)lllout lor hla second
strallllli :Vjctory In his IOcond
atart Frldo.Y lll&amp;ht a• the
ClnOimatt Roda poo.uided the
Atlanta Braves 10~.
Soine·Bsd Moments
"I ftgared I was too yaung to
be w.-shed . '«) &amp;I a major
leaauvr,'• Nolan grimed, ft 1 dld
worr,y a bl~ thoufll&gt;, Enough to
start aev!ng m,y 1D011417. I put a
lot In the bank during lhooe
weeks I waa idle, But rm as

Dies Thursday •

Peace Parley

"

_.,_

B,y United Press lntotnatlonsl
American League

Goessler Jewelry Stort

I

-.........

Standings

River Gauges

'\

.... ~ ......

Dallas Gibbs

t

~·ff:. !_
. J.

You've Got a
with
Time and Date Watches
byBulova

.

' I ' .

·)

Kennedy :•

~ ,.,

~~d~Win,~·pre,pare For

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.

Meig.~: Tef.!~ll,ers

Returning?

'j•

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D
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Bsl

W. "L,
' :':• . \Ill 19
·, ·2· 21
.sq 22
26. 25
25 26
23 26
2S 28

cnnftdent as ever oow."
Elsewhere In the National
League,
New York edged
91fcago 4.:.!, Philadelphia beat
san Francisco 2.. 1, Loa Angele1
nipped p(ttsburgh 2.1 In 10
tnntnss, and st. Louis beat
Houalon 3.1 lor Ita elghlh
straight victory.
Tony Perez droVe in four runs
for the Redl to take Over th8
National League RBI lead with
34 In \he rout o1 AUanta. Perez
had a two-run single during the
slx-run !lflh lnnln8 'ami a tworun homer In U•e sixth Inning.
Lee MJIJ' &amp;lao homered lor the
Rods.
Win Elgh\h straight
· l)rlando Cepeda singled l.,me
Curl Flood with the tle.IJresldng
run In the elgh\h lnnln8 oa the
Cords opened up a 2'h game
lead In the race by extending

YankeeS ffi
•
17·I Victory

Pet. GB

.jW ...

,58C! ·2'h

Cl land
.577 ~
MhljBo' ee•aola
,510 6
Bo....
.490 7
Oakland
.~9 8
New York
.451 9
Calltorn!a
2~ 29 .142 9'h
Chlca!ll&gt;
21 28 .429 10
Waoidnetort
21 29 .420 I01h
~ Wednelday'1ReJU1ts
Cl~ellllld 1, Chicago 0, night
Washington 3 Oakland I, night
Jlalttmore 7 California I, lll&amp;ht
New York 7 Minnesota 2, night
Detiolt 5 Boston 4, night
Triday'a Probable Pitchers
(AII1'1meo EDT)
Ditrolr · (!t)&amp;rml 4~ at
BOalon (Stanee 2-1), 1:30 p.m.
,·..M!Meooti (Boawell 4~ at
Nlllr York (Talbot 0-6), 2 p.m,
Chleago ll'lsher 1-3) at
Clnellllld (Slobert 6-4), 7:30

p.fit.

Oaklllllll

'
:.L~
~Uorn!a

2~

(llobaon

con.p. ....,,

at
8:o5

5-5) at
· Baltimore (llrabellder 4.2), 8
(Brunet

p,lJ!.
· :·
Frldar'• Game.a
ciavellllld at DeiJOf~ nlllltt
~dirt at Wallh 2, twl..Ught

~and at Bslt ~· twl-nlght
Clllf
.. at New Yoi'k' 2, twi&lt;tlght
CI~J- at BoatonJ.IIl&amp;ht
)

Nalltlllal

i::e.... '

I!'; L, Pet. GB

so

21 .588

25 21 .&gt;43 2'h
rr 24 .529 a
Franclaeo 27 , 25 ,511 . 3W
Angil!ea
2,8· 26 •U9 3\l
25 24 .510 I
25 .500 flh
27, .Mil 7
21 ,Gil 8\'l

.2'1

.tl3 3\l

lhelr wtm!ng streak to elght.longeot In lhe NL tbls seaeon.
LorrY Jaster went eight lnntnss
to gel the victory.
cteOn Jones' second double ol
the goine highlighted a thre&amp;nm llf\h Inning as \he Meta
beat the Cubs. Tom Seaver, who
left tho game In tho eighth aller
complalning of a muscle spasm
In hls 11e!t aide, got the win.
WoodY Fryman scattered six
hits to·bpost his record to 8-4 as
Philadelphia nipped San Francisco. Qaylor Percy. 6-3, gave
up two runs In \he first ton~
one urlea;rned. Wlllle Mays hlt
his loth homer loading off the
second for the Giants' only run.
MJIJ'O now has &gt;71 homers in his
career.
Loa Angeles scored an unearned In the 10111 IMina to nip
Pittsburgh. Wes Parker singled
with Zoilo Versalles oo first
base 8lld two aut to slort the
wiMing PiliJ'• Blll Singer
allowed six hits to get the win
while AI McBel!' gave up the
same number of hlts and took
the Joss.

PRAYERS OFFERED
The Yankees jumped Into the . KIAMESHA l A K E, N, Y,
lead in Middleport Hoys' League (UPI)- Heavyweights Joe Fraplay Wednesday evening, sport- zler and Manuel Ramos, both or
lng a 2..0 record at the end oC whom are preparing Cor their
\he first week with a 17·1 romp t!Ue fight In Madlsoo !ljuare
over the Braves called after 4 Garden on June 24, took time
Innings on the 10-nin rule.
out Wednestla.v to orav for the
Terry Pickens' opened 011 the critically wounded Sen. Robert
mound Cor the winners, gave up F. Kennedy.
a Orst luning single to Bachner,
Frazier, who · shar~s part o!
got a nosebleed in \he second ,\he heavyweight t!Uo .wi\h
Inning and was replaced by RoJ&gt;. Jimmy Ellis, prayed In \he
,ble Harrla. :,Hart;la.oi'Jlfr:!~ middle · ()(, .\he · ring. at \he
ball OnlshJ~, up~
sl,_ COOcord ·- t while R~mos, IIJ4r··
gle In tli8 iourth 'ii;'M,' · averi MWI!an ·· champion, · did tha
porL
same at his · Gro8tln8er's
Yank hitters were Steve Pick- train!.. base.
ens three singles, Da\oe Tyree
two triples and a single, chris
Fight Results
Miller two singles, Terry Plcft..
117
United
Press International
ena and Woocly Call each a sinTOKYO (VPX) - ! Flghttns Hagle, and Keith Little a single 8lld
rada,
126, Tokyo, outpointed
3-rtm homer in the second inning.
The Redlegs lb't evening also Dwlght Hawkins, 124, Loa
defeated the Indians 15-a In an- Angeles (10).
---1
other game called alter !oor ln.
LAS
VEGAS,
Ne&gt;. (UPI)ning&amp;. No details were disclosed,
Peter
Gonzales,
129,
San Diego,
Yankees
930 5-17 12 0
C~lf., declsloned Rene Maclss,
Braves
010 x- 1 2 1
128, Los Angeles (10).
T. Plckena, R. Harris (2) and
Call. s. lavender and Lowery.
REGINA, Sask. (UPO
George Chuvalo, Toronto, outpolnlod Jean Claude Roy,
Montreal (t2). Heav'iolgtJts.

fa strong enough lor nln~ Innings."
·
Harder and Reds , MBQuger
Dave Brlatol checked wi\h Nolan from 1he seventh ' lnnilt_g on
about his arm cond!ti&lt;lt.
14 He was tired," said Hamler,
"But o111er than that, he felt all
right."
11 1 figured holding him down
to 110 pltches," said ar:lstol,
"but he finished the gam e with
111."

Pirates Get
'

7 in Fifth
The Pirates scored '&amp;Ill their
runs in the nru-. inning Wednes-day while defeating \he Tigers
1-4 in a Pomeroy Boys' League
game.
Andy Vaughan had pit~hed a
two-hit shutout fur Edgar Abbott's Tigers for tour innings
but the Pirates erupted in the
fifth. Vaughan walked four bat-.
ters aOO the Pirates got three
hits good lor 7 runs.
J. D. Story, who relinved Mdy English on \he hill, · pllched
strong Cor the winner• ;ard also
produced a three-run d•ouble In
the fifth. Other Pirate hitters
were Danny Stone a double

"nd

single arxl Mike Nesselroad and
Sarver each a single.
Tiger hitters were Bill Mar·
shaD a pair or singles and C.
MarshaJI and Andy Vaughan a
single each.
[flglish pitched th(J first Coor
innings Cor the Pirntes before
being relie~d by !jlory.·CO,..

bined \hey'11£JN&lt;! "Yilllcr lssl!ed
eight walks. C. MarsHall relieved
Vaughan in the firth and between
them they struck &lt;kit eight and
walked six.
A stsndout play o! the game was
when Danny Stone 1!118de an oot.

standing play at :;hortstop for
George Nesselroad''s Pirates.
Tigers
20 0 400 - 4 4 I
OO·O07x - 1 5 0
Pirates
Vaughan, Mars.hall (5), and
White. English, ~;tory (4) and
Nesselroad.

Redlegs P1ate

Roberts 'Hurls Thr~~·
muer:...
" -.,
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The nln\h annual Kyget CroOk Little League Toomament
will begin on Jul1 6. All teams lnll!rostod In playi!JIIn tile
tournament this year must send ln the team n1111e and team

roster no later than JWie 20•
Team name and team rosters s~ould be sent to Bill lllobbord, Ohio Valley Electrle COrporation, P. 0. Box 81, Galli·
poll&amp;, Ohio, 45631.
No teams wUI be accepted 'alter June 20, according to
Hubbard.
I
:·:~;;;;;;;~,-:;:;::::::::::;::;::::::::·:·::::::o·:::·:·:·:·::;...;-:·;-;-;::*:~;;::~:::;::::~::;:.;:;:=:::;::-=::::;;x::;:-«;:;:-~&lt;

:~..;:::;~;.;:!·~::;:;:~;:::::-;::;.;.:;:;:; ~~:;:~: ~:;::::.;.:::~::..;.;.:=:.?.:*:::::.:::::«::?$:::»~::::~:;:;:::&lt;:+

,,

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Orioles' JohnsOJl
Hits Grand Slam
UP! ~rts Writer
Dave Johnson's call for a
"medlc" was waved aft by a
toul!h ex-Marine Who knows the
value o( oombat..tested men.
D-llliJ' plus 24 years !lnd.o
B~tlmore Oriole Manager Hank
Bauer In another kind of battle,
where the stakes are hlgh and a
sustained attack could mean
another American League pennant to the grizzled veteran.
Bauer aclmowledged Johnson's plight, created when the
Baltimore second baseman was
hlt on the hand tn a recent
Bolton series and Injured tt
further doring the fourth Inning
Wodneaday night when be tagged
Csll!orn!a's Roger Repoz trying
to stretch a 1ingle into a dooble.
But the situation was critical.
The Orioles had 1he bases
4oaded \he next lmtns and
Johnson was up. He leaned
toward the dugout and asked
Bauer if he wanted somebody to
pinch hlt lor him. The
Baltimore manager shrugged
him off and Johnson proiJllt]y
bellod the ball Into the right
field seats for the Cirst grand
slam homer ol his career. It
helped beat California 7-1.
Stengel's Rules
'~1 had to tell Bauer I was
hurting," Johnson e·xplalned.
"Last year I got into the
doghouae when r tried to hide •
back injury. Bauer told me at
the time that he was a stengel
disciple and Casey couldn't
stand It if a guy plliJ'ed wl\h an
injury and didn't report it."
Johnson's homer was his

COI.UMllUS (UPI) - t'o,r· a!tn ~'wltli ,
mer Columbul Cetltral IIIith
Jim •O'Toole
·· '
School athlete Dave Roberta felt tile Bravos'
II)IOd.
In the series !lnale
1,
"I had m,y best ,.. tile
year tonight," oc!d \he JO!•
1
AMjllllCANS COMPE'It • '·'
pltehar Who a~ • lhre&amp;CARDIFF, " Wa!os- ·.,roPJ&gt;hlt JIIAtllJUI over U.,
Amerlcana" split their ~
Braves In ~matlonal J.o"4"" Wednesday at the Qat~ .•
action Wedllesclay nlghl.· ·
Roberta, who played-bueboll q.unt,y lawn tennis ~
lhlpl.
IIIII baaketball at tho local high
Tom Edel!soo ()( Bi~,
ae~; waa bockod up by a sinCall!, advanced to tile" lliinldft.
s!• run In \he elgiJth Inning ato by boating Len llrllie:l'·
' &lt;II
tits! proved to be the margin of
Auatralla 8~, 6-1. Blll'l')'m !oat
v!c:ll&gt;ry In \he I~ game.
to Dave Smith ()( Auotrslla 6~,
· The run eame when Chris
CaMlzzaro singled home Manny 1~. 1-0 wileD he Jill! clurlnc tho
lhlrd sol.
Ssngutllen In a baseHoaded oltuatlon.
Tho wln kept Columbus In lho LARGE PAYOFF
tltlck ()( lho International
BOSTON (UPl) &amp;dfolk
League pennant race, Just one Downs psld off on a $1,059
p.mo behind the league~eadlng perfects W e d n e 1 d a. y whea
Tuledo Mud Hens, Who disposed Friendly Ghost 8lld B!zcocho
()( ~racuae 3..2 In Ulnntnsa at ran one-two in the fifth race.
Toledo.
The wlmer psld $77.00, 23.10
Frank Kreutzer was the loser 8lld 11.60. Blzcocho psld $1UO
In \he a!falr, dropping his sea- 8lld 8.60.

Rl-

'j.

\

117 GARY KALE

'

MeLaln Wlna Nlntlt
Denny McLain won hlo nlnlh
game against a single loao aa he
received three Innings of hitless
relief rrom Daryl PatteriOD.
Detroit gained the vielor7 wl!en
Boston's sure-baDded shortstop
Rico PetroeellJ threw away a
sevenlh -Inning dooble pill,)'
grounder 8lld allowed Dick
McAullffe to score all the way
from first.
Jose Cardona! broke wt o! a
one-lor.27 slump with a secondInning single to bring home
Cleveland catcher Duke Simi
wl\h the only run of the game.
Chleago, plagued by one-run
lo1ses this &amp;eaiOfl, waa limited
to six hlto sl Stan WU!Iams
picked up his !ourih victory of
1he year.
Frank Howard, Washington's
Paul BunyaneSCJie s I u g g e r,
drove in all the Senators' runs
against Oakland wlth a two-run
homer, hls 21st 8lld a single.
Howard also doubled to raise
his batting average to .3&gt;9.
CarnUo Pascual benefited from
the Howard fireworks, wim1ng
his !lith game agalnsl three
losses.
Joe Pepitone, hitting .464 wlth
men on base since hls return to
the Yankse lineup on May 25,
drove In six runs with a I!I'nnd
slam homer and a triple.
Harmon Klllebrew and Tony
Oliva hit back~-baek homen
in the fifth liming tor Millleaota' s only runs. Mel St:otUemyre
railed his record to 7-4 and
Dean
Chance's mark was
lowered to 4-7.

-...

U0/7.00

$17.45

1

13

lltll:hflll plla
Utrod ...
11 tiM aiel tlrt

!

fourth of the season and kept

second place Baltimore 21h
games behind Detroit in \he
standtnss. Curt Molton also
homered for the Orloles as Jim
Hardin pitched a stroni five.
hitter for hie seventh win in
nine decl&amp;ions. The Oriole
righthander, who was 8-3 with
Baltimore last suason, threw
only 10 breaking pitches for
strikes as he ·famed eight
batters. Tom Satrlano spelled
his shutout with a seventhiming homer.
Detroit edged Boston S-4,
Cleveland nipped Chicago 1-0,
Washington rapped Oakland 3-1
and New York roulod Minnesota
7-2 in other American League
kames.

All-Stars ®

.

:. :·

...·

.. ·,·,· . · '

How VITAMIN B-2
guards your health!
"'Oh.

ol~

here romn a

«:OU•

pie of live onetl"

Four in J?ifth

·,

:~

·,

A blg !ourih )Ming gave the
Redlegs a 7..3 wln over the An..
gals In the op entng game ()(
International League standings
117 United Press lnlemational Pomeroy Pee ll'ee League plliJ'
W L'. Pet. GB Tueaday,
With the s«~re 2-1 at the end
Toledo
27 19 : .587
&lt;( 4¥.1 lnnlnga, ~ne Redlega came
Columbus
21 15 .583 I
Loulovllle
23 18 .561 l'h up wl\h lour 111111 to put \he
game on lee In spite of a sixth
Rochester
21 17 .553 2
frame
threat by the Angels.
Butrelo
22 22 :500 4
Getllng hila for lhe Redlegs
Richmond
19 25 1432 7
were
T13lor, two doubles; A.
lacksoovlllo 19 26 :422 7'h
Seth,
\hree
slnules, 8lld B. Seth
liiYracuse
15 25 .375 9
8lld B. Browning, eaeh a single.
Wedne~•• Results
For
the Angels, Coodt, Harrio,
Toledo 3 liiYraeuae 2, night, 11
Sml\h
8lld Souhll&gt;¥ singled.
Innings,
Tll,71or
!amedl 14 lor the Rods
Buffalo 6 Rocbeater I, night (at
while Smith struck out eigiJt lor
Nlagoro Fallo)
the
Angels. Th&lt;' Mots won the
Columbus 1 RlcluJI&lt;md 0, lll&amp;ht
ather
game by a !or!elt when
l.oll!svllle 1; Jacksonville 0,
Raelne !ailed 1&lt;1 Deld a team.
night

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:

Father'• Day Useful Gifts All D1d1
Will Appreciate ....

SPORT &amp; DRESS
SHIRTS by

ARROW

..."

This vitamin prevents eyes from be·
coming sensitive to light and helps to keep
the •kin in a healthy condition. It works
together wi1h the other 8 vitamins.

ASI ABOUT OUR
SPECIAL ON VIT AIINS

OPEN DAILY
1:00AM te .10:00 PM

AL

Sundoy 10:30 AM

Oj~l

SPORT IINITS
and GOLF
SIURTS. CotW,.s, Banlon &amp;
Decton !o&lt; hls
fun In \he

PAIRI
BOATING
PICNICS
SWDOIIING
CAMmiG

RERMUDA
SHORTS
Plaids, checksJ
IIIII solid col·
ora.' ' Perman-

flS!IINn

REI:REJmilN
7

erit,...oa.

1"

ST!IAW HATS,
SPORTHA'CS
IIIII CAP!j
bN'ortla
'

FATHERS DAY· JUNE 16

to 12:30 PM ollll

SLACKS

5:00 te 9:00 PM

Perma-Presa, dacron and
wool woralecl. II.Y J aymar
and H - . The best in
alae~• and be deserves It

Wayne Swisher, Ho..,ld Lohoo, Charlet Persinger
ond Kennoth McCullough are your friendly phar-

mocl51o ot Swisher llld LohM Rexall Drugs. They
SOCKS IIIII JIFFY SUPPERS BY~
JOCKEY IJllibERWEAR
BILLFOLDS
AND JEWELRY
MEN'S GIFTS BY
SWANK
l\lllN•s TOILETRIES
BY J,\ljE EAST

11aw low proscription pricM and prompt .........

ond discount drug prl&lt;*i Mven doyo a week. Let
liS serve you for oil your pnl!cription orid
noecls.

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. Bus~ td Pick· Up P~p(ff,,
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UOLZER ·HOSI~TAL - VisitIng Houn 2-4 ani 7-8 p.
Parents onQ&lt; on Pediatrics Ward!
ADMISSIONS
Mrs. Rol&gt;ert E. Woods, GaUlpolls; Mrs. Jnseph W. Clark, Rt.
2, Gallipolis; Jeffrey L. Zerkle,
Cheshire; Robert L. Saxon, Jr.,
Gallipolis; Mar shaD L. King, Eureka Star Rt.; Admiral D. saJ..
laz, Pt. Pleaslnti Ronald G. Mara
tin, Rt. 1 Letart; Mrs. Pearl C.
Jacobs, Rl 2Pomeroyj Mrs. Rol.:
lin 0. DUI, Pomeroy; Mrs. Uoyd
W. Roush, RL 1 Racine; Mrs.

m.

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7 Scouts

Held by Service Guild

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PT. PLEASANT - The flnoi
meeting or the year of the Christ
Episcopal Church Service Guild
wss hsld Wednesday, I p.m. in
tho p&amp;rlsh hou ...
LWlthaon holtesses were Mrs.
Norman Simkins, Mrs Elizabeth
KrYder and Mrs. Wylie Minton.
Mln Juliet Smith, outgoing
president, during the business
session and Mrs. Gail Faires
led the devotlooo. The group
gave a prayer of healing Cor Sen.
~ ltobert Kemedy and prayer for
· the country in Ulis time oC tu.r. moll.
Two books, " Understanding the
. New Testament," and "Under: standlng the Old Testament,"
· wore donated by the group lo the
church library in memory of
, deceased rectors.
Mrs. Milton Miller read sev Interesting and amuslnll
from the 1902 secretary
~lllo church guUd whose
at that time was Mrs.
•
Beale Smith, with Mrs.
: J. S. !ipencar president and Mrs.
Thomas, vice-president.

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itv"enia

The guild members voted to
sponsor two children to the summer camp - Camp Kindlichf o r underprivileged, retarded
chlldl·en to be held In July at the
Mason County 4-H Csmp at iblthoide.
Miss Smith reminded the group
of the Episcopal Church Women
picnic meeting to be held on June
19.
FolWwing the business session
Miss Smith presented the president's gavel to Mrs. Homer Martin, Sr. , who will assume the
dutlet. of president when the group
convenes again in September.
Attending the luncheon meeting yesterday were Mrs. D. N,
Connors, Mrs. Anora Ingraham,

Mrs. Doc:klee Foran, Mrs. J. J.
Lovell, Mrs. Harold Sovervi1le,
Mrs. Gall Faires, Miss Smith,
Mrs. Elza .. ftartln , Mrs. Tom
Walters, Mrs. W, S, Hyre, Mrs.

·s. 0..1111;
Martin, Sr.7·

Lucy " lilol'~llllltl,"llrs.

helm, Mrs. Homer
Mrs. Milton Miller, Mrs. William Wells and UJe hostesses.

~Rowan, Martin

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Daring and Fresh

By VERNON SCOTT
~ UPI Hollywood Corresponlent
~ HOLLYWOOD (UPO - Two
• men turned television around
: thia saaaon with a mid-winter
~ r 'Placement show advertised as

.a''-"•

•' Tbe men are the comedy
.: ::_~of Dan Rowan arxl Dick

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··: Together they changed the
:tace of the tube ill!tantly.
·: Partners lor 15 years, the
::team knowa where it's at aoo
~how to go get It They appeal tn
:!.an age brackets ani both sexes.
~ Their hour long "Laugh-In" is
once irreverent. slapstick,
~:Z~qJhilticated, double entendre,
~:Mrirw and, moat hnportantlJ,
:as fresh 11 a aallor on his first
~horoleave.
·~ Their patois has become part
the ~- "Sock it to
:Jne," "Heah come de judge"
'lind "'I'll drlr1k to that."
:•.
BI,Booot
.. Not onQ&lt; did their show give
a tremeDdous boost in
rau-..J lt won four Emm,ys
the recent Televhion Acade-

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presidentations- unheard of
for a mid-season replacement.
Dan and Dick, like mQ5t
comedians (excepting Bob
HqJe) are unfunny away from
the cameras.
At Martin's house the other
day, the partners admitted the
future appears bright with the
show renewed for next season.
They also summed up their
differences.
"Dick is a swinging single
man who likes the ladies,'' Dan
said. "I might add the ladles

~

Sherman I. Leeey, JaoksOil;)iro.
J'15eph C\lml~, Stewaft;
Mrs. Earl fl. Plummer; Jac!&lt;son; Mrs. Aim~ S. lll'oi!O. !roo-

ton; Awry WJIIiani•, Jackson.
lllRTHS
-Mrs. Harold W. · RusseU, Qek

PT. PLEASANT - Seven
scoots from Point Pleasant will
Charles Hayman, Southern
be among ,the 30 scouters from
Local
sChool District superlJloo
the Huntington Tri-State Area
tendent,
announces that mem~
Scout Council to Ill&gt; to the Philmont Scout Ranch and Explorer bers of the 1967-68 Southern
Base at Cimarron, Nel¥ Mexi- High School Bani ani incoming rreshmen band students are
co, this summer.
The seven receiving the honor to meet at the high school at
are Steve SJmerville and Steve 7:30 p. m. Monlay to make arWUson from Troop 259; Mike rangements for the summer
Lelkarl from Troop 261 and Gary program. Graduating seniors
are also asked to attend.
Cotton, Greg Adkins, Larry
Wright, and Jim Barney from
Explorer Post 261. Accompany.
lng the boys will he Kan Lelkarl,
advisor of Post 261. Mr. Leikarl is one of three guest adult
leaders selected by the COllncll.
T_he local group will leave
from Huntington oo July 6 by
PT. PLEASANT - The Fort
bus to qrlcsgo and then by train Rsndolph Society, Children of
to New Mexico. They will re- the American Revolution, will
tum on July 23.
present the program for FrlPhilmont Scout Ranch is a 137,. day's meeting of the COlonel
221 acre tract near Cimarron Charles Lewis Chapter, Daughwhich is owned and operated by ters ol the American Revolution,
the Boy Scouts of America as a at the Mansion House beglMing
camp for older Scouts and Ex- at 2 p.m. wijh Mrs. Charles
plorers.
Proffitt, regent, presiding.
During tl1is trip 12 days will
Highlighting t h e anernoon
be spent hlklngandcampingalong meeting will be the Installation
rugged mountain trails. Activl- of officers for the coming year.
ties include hiking, mountain
Hostesses f o r the meetlng
climbing, fishing, conservation, were Mrs. Eldridge Sauer, Mrs.
moskeet gold panning, archae- Grant Stanley, Mrs. Hugo Juhology, horseback riding, and ling, Mrs. Dallas Wilfong. Mrs.
training In various scout ~lis. J. A Rodgers, Mrs. Gertrude
~ ·~\!; ~ th~ ;;il'*da.l'RI'di· Miss Erma Bar-

Children Will

Give Program

wDrslOp"'=lth~or~M- ? ~. ·~~~
em,y in COiorad(ffor a da,y.
Final preparations for the Philmont outing will be made ftlls
weekend at Camp Arrowhead nodded agreement
when the seven chosen members
"Me," MartJn continued, "I
and the remaining 30 boys of the like to be out every night, going
troop attend Camp Arrowhead. to parties, mixing with people,
laughing it up with other

comedians aOO having a ball."
like him as weU."
On The Prowl
"Dan is a family man/' Dick
"He also does a lot of crulsire
said, as if his partner was ill around with the ladles," Dan
uHe likes to go home every added. ~"It's the same way when
nJght to his wife and on we're out on ftle road. I take
weekends sail his boat"
my wife with me, but Dlck is
Rowan puffed on his pipe arwJ always on tl:le prowl."

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AI\)' ·resjc~Jn!of~dlslrlctha"'
lng qileall!"'•. ~nt,w iQ ~
prqrram.l lo, aa!&lt;ed to . tole~

the high school:

... .

O!ARL.,. E. CARROLL

'

THOMAS GRINSI'EAD

CML ACTION F1LED
PT. PLEASANT - A civil aotlon has been ftled In tho qlllce
of the Circuit Clerk styled Household f'lnance .Corp. of BelPre vo.
Ralph E. ani Nudlth A ( Noel of
New Haven. The action c«Jcerns
non • payment of a promissory

Sevealf

Yea~·

·•

Capllvllf

At one Ume ROIJ!e ceasQ!I
to be capital of• tile CalhoiUi
world. In 1309 !be' papllll!OOrt ·
to
was· removed from
Avign011, France. Thls
was known as tile "'10 yean'
captivity."
,

Rome
P8f1oi!

note.

•

Sporn Men are Retired

NEW HAVEN - Thomas 0.
Grinstead, coal sampler st the
Philip ~ Plant, retired J)me
1 a!tAor completing eight years
or company service. He wa(l rtrat
employed as a janitor at th PhilIp ~ Plant of the CeT!al
Operating Company March 21,
1960 and was promoted tO his
present position of coal sampler
last January 1,
A native ot New Haven, he attended Graham DistriCt Jllgh
School ani was formercy employed by the New Haven Mill,
General Cheml cal Company lllld
the &amp;Jperlor Porcelain~-Grinstead says he IIXpects to
do a let of ftshlnllln lito retirement as he has not been getting
Ida share of llshlnll In the pool.
He also expects to do a let ol
gardening and to see a lnt of
basebalL
He is a member of the l.AItheran Church, the Junior Or·
der of United American Mechanics, the New Haven Fire Department, Is active as a coach and
manager In UWe league basea
ball and tal&lt;es an active part In
town afl'alrs, having served as
mayor of the town of New Ha- I
ven.
He and hls wife, Ada, have
six children, Mrs. Anna Mae
McFarland, Mrs. !h&gt;Jby Lenora Duncan and WOllam 'Thomas Grinstead, all of New Haven: Mrs. BettY Lou Rice of
PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL Booneville, Ind.; Paul Joe GrinADMITfEb: Glen Lawson, MI- stead of Belpre, and Robert Grin·
nersville, c.\i i VIrgil Williams, stead, who Is staUoned at Fort
Robertsb11rg;\ Mn. Donald Hum- Gordon, Gs. He and his wife exphre,ys, Pl. Ple..ant; Roy HOI, pect to live here.
,
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Pl. ~=
Ohlln&amp;er
New
· veil· - 1, ddle
,
·••
HAVEN - Charles E.
shljt oporstlng engineer
ll&gt;om Plant, retired
alterC.mptotlngmorethan
veaLra wllb tlie .blllpll\)'.
llrll ,mptoyed by the
em;:tr.al the age of 17 as
a
11/. the Wlndoor Plant
of the \Beet:h Bottom Po w e r
Companty, :IIJWBr, Yi. Va. While
there h·~.. e.came a boiler room
man, bJ ine operator and assistant 1
room foreman. On
June I, 1949 he transferred to
the PhU lp ' Sporn Plant of the
Central
arsting Company as
an a~sif
shut operatlng engineer a lwa~ to his
present
siti~ shaft operatIng eng!
October I, 1952,
His r' rement plana Include
golf, hunjilng and fishing. In order to clo this year-&lt;U'OUild, he
plana to
five mmths each
year In 1 lorida but to retain Ids
home her .
Garrol. was born in Middlebourn, W~ · ·Va., and 8ttended the
near by !pleassrit Valley School,
He neverj has had a lost time
Injury wit~ the company.
He Is •ill]ombor of tho Church
of Christ : ail&lt;! he and Ids wile
Holan ho~e one daugl!ter, Mrs.
Jnan Corpel'l of Baltimore, Md.,
and a sdn, Gersld, of Charleston, W. \ Ia., and two grandchildren .

Knit &amp; Permanent Pnst

Dl!lCHARGl . : Leslie Nichols,
New Haven; i"'ger Blankenship,
The Middleport Business and
Gallipolis Fo~rY; Mrs. Leroy
Professional Women's Club will
Simpkins and 11011. MaBon; Mark
meet Tuesday, June II, at 6:30
Sokol, Now Ha·ven.
p.m. at the MaFUn Restaurant
BmTH: Mr. land Mrs. Charles
lor
dlmer and a bustneas meet.
Litchfield, A~~e Grove a 11011.
lng. The program will be pre'.
;.
sented at the Columbia Gas &lt;1
Ohlo office alter dinner.
VISIT IN POMEROY
Mr. arid Mr ~- Bruce SchoU
and family of Alt•. Vernon were
weekend aueata .i!fiMra. Frances
Scholl, COUrt st.,., 1 Pomeroy, re-

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ment.

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Thlsweek, leaders of th~ Poor
PeOples campaign stated thst If
Congress baa not met their domanda prior to the Republican
lllld Democrat Conventions, they
wlll movo tholractlvllles to those
convem!Ons.
Partldjlanta In the Poor Peoptos Campalf!ll justlly this har-

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SLACKS

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TO

LIVINGSTON'S

MENS GIFT SETS

BULK

BILLFOLDS BY LORD
BUXTON .... $4.00 up

u ....

QUAUTY SEEDS .
· ' 1! .1rl

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Field 1ncl

J..boretory T..ted

ONION SETS
SToP IN AT ..
ClfA!~J!~DWARE
LOCUST ST., MIDDLEPORT

'

LITTLE GIRLS
SPRING DRESS

one who has observ.

.. Obviously, the goyemment
can !live money to the poor. Jn.
deed It gives money to the poor
now in the various forms or weJ ..
fare, but several olthosewhoare
in charge of welfare programs
say the total progrsm Is a total
Cailure. If there are, say 100,000
people who are poor, there are
100,000 difterent reasun:s •. But
When the Federal Government
comes to deal with their poverty,

-----------. 1o I(JIJIJI..

\.

Kermit
Has Plannetl

Aa

ed the government of the u. S.
In action for a!Jout 25 years, I
would say, with some reluctance,
I believe they're coming to the
wrong place. I do not believe the
answer to their problems'lles in
Washington at all."
Mr. Brinkley conllmles, say.
lng:

ALSO ·

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by tallylnll aroun~'ti.e
cry thst they .. havo J&gt;een neglect· ed by Coolll"l'o• and tho J!8110Jl.
Yet, the Federal peinl!ninl
has and II ,lll'!indlnll bllllono of
dollars to oupport oome 100 programs aimed at 'Uslstlng !Ito
poor.
- Almost 113 bllllm hos been
expended lor low • rent public
bouslng.
- A $4 bUllon hao been apent
on urban renewal.
- And $67 million has been
authorized for rent sepplement
progrsms.
- A grand total o!$140billlon
has been spent since 1960.
Even In lids time of critical
economic problems, the Departmont of Hooolng and Urban Do- ·
velopment antlclj1ates that 1Dtal
eXjlOildltures. for present Federa1 programs for urban soclal and
eommlllliflr development will exeeed $37 bUlloo In 1969.
· But despite this tremendous
outpouring of mmey, the nation
remslns faced wltlttheveryproblems 1he~ prOgrams were designed to alleviate. Members ol
Congress havo repeatedly warned the Administration thst Ita
answers tor welfare, housing,
urban development and poverty
were not in themselves the anawer. Members of congress have
consistently urged that the Admlnlstratlnn revlelv these progrsma and ellmlnalethemismanagement and Inequities that exist.
The Congress cautioned the Administration as to the ·consequeuces.
The consequences have arrived. Resurrection Clcy and the
Poor People's Campaign are
some ol those coo&amp;eCJ.Ienees. The
Poor People's Campaign vividly
underscores the fact the! the
solve poverty and l"elated problems. And herein lies the great.
est tragedy for those psrtlclj1atlng in the Csmpslgn. ft Is best
summed up, I believe, by news
commentator David Brinkley who
exld:

GARDEN SEED

.For Ladies Only!

Voice

By Cl..-e~ Miller · .

Federal Government alone cannot

AlSO

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p;,._ ~ssment

. The lobbyiilg performance of
tile Poor Peoples Csmpalgn to
date Ia uneven. Jn oome ln&amp;tancea, its leaders have been reasonllblo and persuasive. In other In&amp;tanceo, however, they havobeen
lhocldngty rude. The lmpresalon Is growing In Washington
tllat In a desire for Immediate
reaulta, the Poor Peap)ea CampalpwlllulUmately be domlnatld by the militants. In this
event, the Poor Peoples csmpalgn will ~~ a campaign
of graduaiiYOscalatlng harass-

I·

AND PLAIDS

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• '" 'haril~ta in the Poor
( 1 ~·· c.nipall!l haye been
tn
Waahlnllt9n "'vera! week a..They
.
' . ll'v• preiiOntO\Ithelr demands, In·
"!udlng (I} masalve new p r o.!fams to provide j(lbs and hous·
' ~. (2) a ,.arenteed annual In·
• j'oolne, and (3) liberalization of
· · ,o!fllara programs and rogul&amp;.
c:i tlons, to Members. of Congress,
U.. Cabinet and other high gov.
'irnment olrlclals.
Every American has the rlgbt
Ill come to the Nation's Capital
to talk to leglolatlve and execulive o!llctals - to present pet!llano, picket, demonstrate or
ltBreh - as long as he conducts
111111101! In an orderly and lawful

I

SOLIDS, STRIPES

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~:\Vashington.:••·

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eently.

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fspend

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way.

ller

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·~tc~epo

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~~ ~ ·- The illlb Sellt!nol, Pomeroy-Middleport, 0., 'l'hul-aday,June ~, 1 !1&lt;&gt;~

··

tween 8 aiid 8:30a.m.' Uch~.,. . -.
lng. Claoies; wlitch l'W Btlrl ~
8:30 ... m, .each ~~ .
·bel!n
FrldBY, aU at . t1Hi&lt; h~scllod.

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M:r;.

Of Point
Going West

Year's Final Meeting

..

Hill, daughter, .3:56· p. m. Wed1
nesday. ·
DISCHARGES
Mrs. Wllllam C. .Aeili:er,Oscar
J. Bastianl, Ra.vmonl BeD, Keith
A Bentz, Mrs. Jamea w. Bland,
William C. lloard, Mrs. Milton
E. Brewer, Mrs. Harvey F. COllins, Mrs. Char1es B. Cornwell
Mrs. Virgil H. Edwards, Mrs. J{
Thomas EUiott, Henry ll Euler
Mrs. Richard L. Fetty,
Frances Gardner, Mrs. Dmal.d
ll Hicks, Mrs. f&gt;nna E. Hortm,
Mlchoel W, Lance, Mrs. William
Maynard, Mrs. Helen M. Mltte,._
thai, Gary L. Rui\YOO, Michael
E. Runyon, Oeatus 0. Winter,
Mrs. Jack D. Zirkle and Mrs.
BUI R. Goble.

· ·

· Bus&amp;bi lo pick \IP, students en' rolled .111 t1!e Title l swrift\er prO.
' . gram of Southern LOcal $chool
District wl!l make general runs
dtrOU¥h the enUre district, Ro1i. ert Ashley, program director,
announces.
The general runs to the areai
of the district will be made ~.

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Father's Dey, June16

SOmething Spedal For POP'

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Dll ROBERT ERVIN
The Parkersburg, W. VL,
chapter of the F\JIIGospel Businessmen's Fellowship International will hold a rally at the
Chancellor H~ in Parkersburg ani Dr. Rol&gt;ert Ervin,
A"lstant Dean at Oral Roberts Universit.Y, is one of the
speakers on June 28 - 29. For
information contact The Plrkersburg
the Full
Gospel
Fellowship, Box 1674 Parkersbur.,

Meigs

Property
Tr sfers

•II~·~~ ·WISTiiN FLYER

"W..tl oil ,..

Rill"

Thoughts
For it il not the herrrer~ of
!he law who are rlghteo!U be·
fore God, but the doert of the
law who will be juoti/Ud.Rom&lt;~ns

2:13.

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The world Is divided Into
people who do tbinp and
people who get the credit.
Try, If you can, to belong to
the first class. - Dwight
Morrow, American diplomat.

DEAlER

Souad'o Speed

James D. Adams, Jr., Gdn.,
l Adams, to Dolores
J. Sh~s, 5.21 Acres, Salisbury.
James D. Adams, Jr., Inez
Wemmer, Jesse Wemmer, Katherine Lares, Imogene Bell and
Lawrence Bell to Dolores J.
9teeta, 5:21 Acres, Salisbury.
Howard A. Wilson, Rachel A,
WUaon to Charles D. Wilson and
YVonne Wilson, Lots, Middleport.
Charles D. WUson and Yvonne
Wilson to Carl 0. Manley lllldl!etty Jean Manley, Lots, Middlepori.
Willie w. Wise and MarJorie
Wise to Delmar Clark and Betty Clark, 2 Acres, Salisbury.
Lester Wiloon, dec. , to Ellen
B. Wilson, Lots, Pomeroy.
Sidney W. Durst and Dorothy
Durst to McDonough Co., 90 Acres, Lebanon.
Marvin McGuire and Betty McGuire to Robert E. Smith, Jr.,
5.6 Acres, Sallabury.
Howard C. Smith and Ju(ly
Smith to Robert C. Hlll and Etta
Mae HUI, 9.8 Acres, ·&amp;rtton.
Peyton J. Dudley and Dl Anne
Dudley to Helen K, Weider, Lots,
Middleport.
Helen K. Welder to Peyton J.
Dudley, Lots, Middleport. ·
Richard D. Seyler to Marilee
Seyler, Lots, Pomeroy.
Mabel Hayes to Esta Brlckles,
Lots, Pomeroy, ·
Racine Horne Bank to Racine
Home National Bank, Deed of
Correction, Racine.
ijaclne Home NaUonal Bank to
Corl J. Horky, Betsy E. Horky,
lots, Racine .
~cine Home National Bank to
Clifford J. Bachner, carolyn v.
Bachner, lots, Raclne.
Jack R. Coleman, Marcella
Coleman to James r. Aroold,
lot, Middleport.
Rue Tuckerman, Gall Miller,
Althea Miller, Mabel WaddeD
to James F. Aroold,lotll, Mlddl&amp;port
Delbert C. Brlckles to Violet
Eliza

Sound travels about 1,100

Your Home Owned Family Store

feet per second. When oent
by wireless, it takes the speed
of etec:tric waves, about 188,·
000 miles per second.

. DON illd EDNA·

MIDDL!PORT, OHIO

· · Oo.tmers

IT'S JUSt PLAI ''HORII•SINSI"
..
to shop ·w her• you ..saxe.... .
.,,. ,.

...~ 39~

.... 1.25

lllraJONG •••
SUDOENSUMM

BRONZTAN
PACUGE OF 4

.... .1;50

UNGU

Ttl FIRST MAN'S
HAIR UGirrEND:· •

87~

.REG. ··.· 49

ICE·O- :

IY QAaOL •••

SUNTAN LOTION
ONi.Y

.

REG.
$2.2$

NE

1.8

FULL
.,

LINE OF

M. Brickles, Divorce Decree,

Scipio.

It T1ke1 Three
TO Get Mlrried
·~ The Bride I

'The Grooml
•nd

orlst

SALE
1/3 OFF

-o.·-...
-·~01-·
.,
...........
·~.
Y,ALLEY LUMBER &amp; SUPPLY CO.
·'

POllY FLINDERS

NANNETTE AND
CINDERELLA

DOOR
. . PRIZES

school's .out!

. Three10.00
' '
Gift Certificates

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4.99

wm

I'

PLAY CLOTHES BY----- ~-BONE

98C AND UP

~

Juno Wendorf, to Raclna Gao
and Service Co., rlcht of way,
Strtton.
T~ L. PoweiJ0 Vlckey D.
Powell to KaWte, 1\!argarel Kawle, l acre, Ortnp.
ChlrUe Stone to Marvin Stone,
?2 aer!'•• Rutland.

BY ...•••.•

HI BROW

0.

way,~

SIZE 2/fO 12

IT'S SUMMER TIME

923 S. 3RD AVE. - 99~2709 -

Ama May curlston to Th11111s
G. WUiiami, Frances L. Wil•
llama, IU, Pomeroy.
Charles Rolli Henlersoo, Mar·
tha Hendaroon ~ Ohio River
sand Gcavel McDonough eo., porceb, Lebanon.
Thclllas G. Beeile to Bacino
Gaa and Service Co., rlcht of

I'
NANNlTTf, CINDERELLA,
'
ROB ROY, STRfrCHINI AND
BIUY THE KJD ...... SIZI2to,l,

l

A.~•ppenlng At ....

bo

,, t1ur111a:

~~-

""11· .Rqlitor

·j Mie 3 . houl'o onQ&lt;, No

\) ......__

DoOr
p~:~ 111wn away at 9 p.
L
Plan to attendl
' ''
;
., ~
Pill'•~· .

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New York

...

House

·'

we can - c t U will try to doal

wtlb .u of them In pretcy much
tho same way, for Unlnllllratlta

na_..,, -

~ atblrwlM,

JtifT.,m not an nt lQio • - :

'.......

. lli'.
•··~ li!. ~dudll\f;
·a;,

·~ &lt;I!

lbe

"II '1lliulil bo

to

itt• Federal' ~rnmant had
- • to ond povor\Y In Amtort'i

REG. $1.B

.6-12 SPlAY
.,., .
.

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. Bus~ td Pick· Up P~p(ff,,
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UOLZER ·HOSI~TAL - VisitIng Houn 2-4 ani 7-8 p.
Parents onQ&lt; on Pediatrics Ward!
ADMISSIONS
Mrs. Rol&gt;ert E. Woods, GaUlpolls; Mrs. Jnseph W. Clark, Rt.
2, Gallipolis; Jeffrey L. Zerkle,
Cheshire; Robert L. Saxon, Jr.,
Gallipolis; Mar shaD L. King, Eureka Star Rt.; Admiral D. saJ..
laz, Pt. Pleaslnti Ronald G. Mara
tin, Rt. 1 Letart; Mrs. Pearl C.
Jacobs, Rl 2Pomeroyj Mrs. Rol.:
lin 0. DUI, Pomeroy; Mrs. Uoyd
W. Roush, RL 1 Racine; Mrs.

m.

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7 Scouts

Held by Service Guild

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PT. PLEASANT - The flnoi
meeting or the year of the Christ
Episcopal Church Service Guild
wss hsld Wednesday, I p.m. in
tho p&amp;rlsh hou ...
LWlthaon holtesses were Mrs.
Norman Simkins, Mrs Elizabeth
KrYder and Mrs. Wylie Minton.
Mln Juliet Smith, outgoing
president, during the business
session and Mrs. Gail Faires
led the devotlooo. The group
gave a prayer of healing Cor Sen.
~ ltobert Kemedy and prayer for
· the country in Ulis time oC tu.r. moll.
Two books, " Understanding the
. New Testament," and "Under: standlng the Old Testament,"
· wore donated by the group lo the
church library in memory of
, deceased rectors.
Mrs. Milton Miller read sev Interesting and amuslnll
from the 1902 secretary
~lllo church guUd whose
at that time was Mrs.
•
Beale Smith, with Mrs.
: J. S. !ipencar president and Mrs.
Thomas, vice-president.

.•

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r\

If

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!

itv"enia

The guild members voted to
sponsor two children to the summer camp - Camp Kindlichf o r underprivileged, retarded
chlldl·en to be held In July at the
Mason County 4-H Csmp at iblthoide.
Miss Smith reminded the group
of the Episcopal Church Women
picnic meeting to be held on June
19.
FolWwing the business session
Miss Smith presented the president's gavel to Mrs. Homer Martin, Sr. , who will assume the
dutlet. of president when the group
convenes again in September.
Attending the luncheon meeting yesterday were Mrs. D. N,
Connors, Mrs. Anora Ingraham,

Mrs. Doc:klee Foran, Mrs. J. J.
Lovell, Mrs. Harold Sovervi1le,
Mrs. Gall Faires, Miss Smith,
Mrs. Elza .. ftartln , Mrs. Tom
Walters, Mrs. W, S, Hyre, Mrs.

·s. 0..1111;
Martin, Sr.7·

Lucy " lilol'~llllltl,"llrs.

helm, Mrs. Homer
Mrs. Milton Miller, Mrs. William Wells and UJe hostesses.

~Rowan, Martin

.,
)

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~•;

Daring and Fresh

By VERNON SCOTT
~ UPI Hollywood Corresponlent
~ HOLLYWOOD (UPO - Two
• men turned television around
: thia saaaon with a mid-winter
~ r 'Placement show advertised as

.a''-"•

•' Tbe men are the comedy
.: ::_~of Dan Rowan arxl Dick

.

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·:at

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··: Together they changed the
:tace of the tube ill!tantly.
·: Partners lor 15 years, the
::team knowa where it's at aoo
~how to go get It They appeal tn
:!.an age brackets ani both sexes.
~ Their hour long "Laugh-In" is
once irreverent. slapstick,
~:Z~qJhilticated, double entendre,
~:Mrirw and, moat hnportantlJ,
:as fresh 11 a aallor on his first
~horoleave.
·~ Their patois has become part
the ~- "Sock it to
:Jne," "Heah come de judge"
'lind "'I'll drlr1k to that."
:•.
BI,Booot
.. Not onQ&lt; did their show give
a tremeDdous boost in
rau-..J lt won four Emm,ys
the recent Televhion Acade-

I r "'r
"

I

presidentations- unheard of
for a mid-season replacement.
Dan and Dick, like mQ5t
comedians (excepting Bob
HqJe) are unfunny away from
the cameras.
At Martin's house the other
day, the partners admitted the
future appears bright with the
show renewed for next season.
They also summed up their
differences.
"Dick is a swinging single
man who likes the ladies,'' Dan
said. "I might add the ladles

~

Sherman I. Leeey, JaoksOil;)iro.
J'15eph C\lml~, Stewaft;
Mrs. Earl fl. Plummer; Jac!&lt;son; Mrs. Aim~ S. lll'oi!O. !roo-

ton; Awry WJIIiani•, Jackson.
lllRTHS
-Mrs. Harold W. · RusseU, Qek

PT. PLEASANT - Seven
scoots from Point Pleasant will
Charles Hayman, Southern
be among ,the 30 scouters from
Local
sChool District superlJloo
the Huntington Tri-State Area
tendent,
announces that mem~
Scout Council to Ill&gt; to the Philmont Scout Ranch and Explorer bers of the 1967-68 Southern
Base at Cimarron, Nel¥ Mexi- High School Bani ani incoming rreshmen band students are
co, this summer.
The seven receiving the honor to meet at the high school at
are Steve SJmerville and Steve 7:30 p. m. Monlay to make arWUson from Troop 259; Mike rangements for the summer
Lelkarl from Troop 261 and Gary program. Graduating seniors
are also asked to attend.
Cotton, Greg Adkins, Larry
Wright, and Jim Barney from
Explorer Post 261. Accompany.
lng the boys will he Kan Lelkarl,
advisor of Post 261. Mr. Leikarl is one of three guest adult
leaders selected by the COllncll.
T_he local group will leave
from Huntington oo July 6 by
PT. PLEASANT - The Fort
bus to qrlcsgo and then by train Rsndolph Society, Children of
to New Mexico. They will re- the American Revolution, will
tum on July 23.
present the program for FrlPhilmont Scout Ranch is a 137,. day's meeting of the COlonel
221 acre tract near Cimarron Charles Lewis Chapter, Daughwhich is owned and operated by ters ol the American Revolution,
the Boy Scouts of America as a at the Mansion House beglMing
camp for older Scouts and Ex- at 2 p.m. wijh Mrs. Charles
plorers.
Proffitt, regent, presiding.
During tl1is trip 12 days will
Highlighting t h e anernoon
be spent hlklngandcampingalong meeting will be the Installation
rugged mountain trails. Activl- of officers for the coming year.
ties include hiking, mountain
Hostesses f o r the meetlng
climbing, fishing, conservation, were Mrs. Eldridge Sauer, Mrs.
moskeet gold panning, archae- Grant Stanley, Mrs. Hugo Juhology, horseback riding, and ling, Mrs. Dallas Wilfong. Mrs.
training In various scout ~lis. J. A Rodgers, Mrs. Gertrude
~ ·~\!; ~ th~ ;;il'*da.l'RI'di· Miss Erma Bar-

Children Will

Give Program

wDrslOp"'=lth~or~M- ? ~. ·~~~
em,y in COiorad(ffor a da,y.
Final preparations for the Philmont outing will be made ftlls
weekend at Camp Arrowhead nodded agreement
when the seven chosen members
"Me," MartJn continued, "I
and the remaining 30 boys of the like to be out every night, going
troop attend Camp Arrowhead. to parties, mixing with people,
laughing it up with other

comedians aOO having a ball."
like him as weU."
On The Prowl
"Dan is a family man/' Dick
"He also does a lot of crulsire
said, as if his partner was ill around with the ladles," Dan
uHe likes to go home every added. ~"It's the same way when
nJght to his wife and on we're out on ftle road. I take
weekends sail his boat"
my wife with me, but Dlck is
Rowan puffed on his pipe arwJ always on tl:le prowl."

·

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H' I'

nl

w\it

AI\)' ·resjc~Jn!of~dlslrlctha"'
lng qileall!"'•. ~nt,w iQ ~
prqrram.l lo, aa!&lt;ed to . tole~

the high school:

... .

O!ARL.,. E. CARROLL

'

THOMAS GRINSI'EAD

CML ACTION F1LED
PT. PLEASANT - A civil aotlon has been ftled In tho qlllce
of the Circuit Clerk styled Household f'lnance .Corp. of BelPre vo.
Ralph E. ani Nudlth A ( Noel of
New Haven. The action c«Jcerns
non • payment of a promissory

Sevealf

Yea~·

·•

Capllvllf

At one Ume ROIJ!e ceasQ!I
to be capital of• tile CalhoiUi
world. In 1309 !be' papllll!OOrt ·
to
was· removed from
Avign011, France. Thls
was known as tile "'10 yean'
captivity."
,

Rome
P8f1oi!

note.

•

Sporn Men are Retired

NEW HAVEN - Thomas 0.
Grinstead, coal sampler st the
Philip ~ Plant, retired J)me
1 a!tAor completing eight years
or company service. He wa(l rtrat
employed as a janitor at th PhilIp ~ Plant of the CeT!al
Operating Company March 21,
1960 and was promoted tO his
present position of coal sampler
last January 1,
A native ot New Haven, he attended Graham DistriCt Jllgh
School ani was formercy employed by the New Haven Mill,
General Cheml cal Company lllld
the &amp;Jperlor Porcelain~-Grinstead says he IIXpects to
do a let of ftshlnllln lito retirement as he has not been getting
Ida share of llshlnll In the pool.
He also expects to do a let ol
gardening and to see a lnt of
basebalL
He is a member of the l.AItheran Church, the Junior Or·
der of United American Mechanics, the New Haven Fire Department, Is active as a coach and
manager In UWe league basea
ball and tal&lt;es an active part In
town afl'alrs, having served as
mayor of the town of New Ha- I
ven.
He and hls wife, Ada, have
six children, Mrs. Anna Mae
McFarland, Mrs. !h&gt;Jby Lenora Duncan and WOllam 'Thomas Grinstead, all of New Haven: Mrs. BettY Lou Rice of
PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL Booneville, Ind.; Paul Joe GrinADMITfEb: Glen Lawson, MI- stead of Belpre, and Robert Grin·
nersville, c.\i i VIrgil Williams, stead, who Is staUoned at Fort
Robertsb11rg;\ Mn. Donald Hum- Gordon, Gs. He and his wife exphre,ys, Pl. Ple..ant; Roy HOI, pect to live here.
,
'
~
Pl. ~=
Ohlln&amp;er
New
· veil· - 1, ddle
,
·••
HAVEN - Charles E.
shljt oporstlng engineer
ll&gt;om Plant, retired
alterC.mptotlngmorethan
veaLra wllb tlie .blllpll\)'.
llrll ,mptoyed by the
em;:tr.al the age of 17 as
a
11/. the Wlndoor Plant
of the \Beet:h Bottom Po w e r
Companty, :IIJWBr, Yi. Va. While
there h·~.. e.came a boiler room
man, bJ ine operator and assistant 1
room foreman. On
June I, 1949 he transferred to
the PhU lp ' Sporn Plant of the
Central
arsting Company as
an a~sif
shut operatlng engineer a lwa~ to his
present
siti~ shaft operatIng eng!
October I, 1952,
His r' rement plana Include
golf, hunjilng and fishing. In order to clo this year-&lt;U'OUild, he
plana to
five mmths each
year In 1 lorida but to retain Ids
home her .
Garrol. was born in Middlebourn, W~ · ·Va., and 8ttended the
near by !pleassrit Valley School,
He neverj has had a lost time
Injury wit~ the company.
He Is •ill]ombor of tho Church
of Christ : ail&lt;! he and Ids wile
Holan ho~e one daugl!ter, Mrs.
Jnan Corpel'l of Baltimore, Md.,
and a sdn, Gersld, of Charleston, W. \ Ia., and two grandchildren .

Knit &amp; Permanent Pnst

Dl!lCHARGl . : Leslie Nichols,
New Haven; i"'ger Blankenship,
The Middleport Business and
Gallipolis Fo~rY; Mrs. Leroy
Professional Women's Club will
Simpkins and 11011. MaBon; Mark
meet Tuesday, June II, at 6:30
Sokol, Now Ha·ven.
p.m. at the MaFUn Restaurant
BmTH: Mr. land Mrs. Charles
lor
dlmer and a bustneas meet.
Litchfield, A~~e Grove a 11011.
lng. The program will be pre'.
;.
sented at the Columbia Gas &lt;1
Ohlo office alter dinner.
VISIT IN POMEROY
Mr. arid Mr ~- Bruce SchoU
and family of Alt•. Vernon were
weekend aueata .i!fiMra. Frances
Scholl, COUrt st.,., 1 Pomeroy, re-

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SHIRTS

':~;~lb

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ment.

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Thlsweek, leaders of th~ Poor
PeOples campaign stated thst If
Congress baa not met their domanda prior to the Republican
lllld Democrat Conventions, they
wlll movo tholractlvllles to those
convem!Ons.
Partldjlanta In the Poor Peoptos Campalf!ll justlly this har-

I
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SLACKS

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TO

LIVINGSTON'S

MENS GIFT SETS

BULK

BILLFOLDS BY LORD
BUXTON .... $4.00 up

u ....

QUAUTY SEEDS .
· ' 1! .1rl

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Field 1ncl

J..boretory T..ted

ONION SETS
SToP IN AT ..
ClfA!~J!~DWARE
LOCUST ST., MIDDLEPORT

'

LITTLE GIRLS
SPRING DRESS

one who has observ.

.. Obviously, the goyemment
can !live money to the poor. Jn.
deed It gives money to the poor
now in the various forms or weJ ..
fare, but several olthosewhoare
in charge of welfare programs
say the total progrsm Is a total
Cailure. If there are, say 100,000
people who are poor, there are
100,000 difterent reasun:s •. But
When the Federal Government
comes to deal with their poverty,

-----------. 1o I(JIJIJI..

\.

Kermit
Has Plannetl

Aa

ed the government of the u. S.
In action for a!Jout 25 years, I
would say, with some reluctance,
I believe they're coming to the
wrong place. I do not believe the
answer to their problems'lles in
Washington at all."
Mr. Brinkley conllmles, say.
lng:

ALSO ·

' :

by tallylnll aroun~'ti.e
cry thst they .. havo J&gt;een neglect· ed by Coolll"l'o• and tho J!8110Jl.
Yet, the Federal peinl!ninl
has and II ,lll'!indlnll bllllono of
dollars to oupport oome 100 programs aimed at 'Uslstlng !Ito
poor.
- Almost 113 bllllm hos been
expended lor low • rent public
bouslng.
- A $4 bUllon hao been apent
on urban renewal.
- And $67 million has been
authorized for rent sepplement
progrsms.
- A grand total o!$140billlon
has been spent since 1960.
Even In lids time of critical
economic problems, the Departmont of Hooolng and Urban Do- ·
velopment antlclj1ates that 1Dtal
eXjlOildltures. for present Federa1 programs for urban soclal and
eommlllliflr development will exeeed $37 bUlloo In 1969.
· But despite this tremendous
outpouring of mmey, the nation
remslns faced wltlttheveryproblems 1he~ prOgrams were designed to alleviate. Members ol
Congress havo repeatedly warned the Administration thst Ita
answers tor welfare, housing,
urban development and poverty
were not in themselves the anawer. Members of congress have
consistently urged that the Admlnlstratlnn revlelv these progrsma and ellmlnalethemismanagement and Inequities that exist.
The Congress cautioned the Administration as to the ·consequeuces.
The consequences have arrived. Resurrection Clcy and the
Poor People's Campaign are
some ol those coo&amp;eCJ.Ienees. The
Poor People's Campaign vividly
underscores the fact the! the
solve poverty and l"elated problems. And herein lies the great.
est tragedy for those psrtlclj1atlng in the Csmpslgn. ft Is best
summed up, I believe, by news
commentator David Brinkley who
exld:

GARDEN SEED

.For Ladies Only!

Voice

By Cl..-e~ Miller · .

Federal Government alone cannot

AlSO

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p;,._ ~ssment

. The lobbyiilg performance of
tile Poor Peoples Csmpalgn to
date Ia uneven. Jn oome ln&amp;tancea, its leaders have been reasonllblo and persuasive. In other In&amp;tanceo, however, they havobeen
lhocldngty rude. The lmpresalon Is growing In Washington
tllat In a desire for Immediate
reaulta, the Poor Peap)ea CampalpwlllulUmately be domlnatld by the militants. In this
event, the Poor Peoples csmpalgn will ~~ a campaign
of graduaiiYOscalatlng harass-

I·

AND PLAIDS

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• '" 'haril~ta in the Poor
( 1 ~·· c.nipall!l haye been
tn
Waahlnllt9n "'vera! week a..They
.
' . ll'v• preiiOntO\Ithelr demands, In·
"!udlng (I} masalve new p r o.!fams to provide j(lbs and hous·
' ~. (2) a ,.arenteed annual In·
• j'oolne, and (3) liberalization of
· · ,o!fllara programs and rogul&amp;.
c:i tlons, to Members. of Congress,
U.. Cabinet and other high gov.
'irnment olrlclals.
Every American has the rlgbt
Ill come to the Nation's Capital
to talk to leglolatlve and execulive o!llctals - to present pet!llano, picket, demonstrate or
ltBreh - as long as he conducts
111111101! In an orderly and lawful

I

SOLIDS, STRIPES

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~:\Vashington.:••·

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eently.

J

r t{

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fspend

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if

way.

ller

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·~tc~epo

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~~ ~ ·- The illlb Sellt!nol, Pomeroy-Middleport, 0., 'l'hul-aday,June ~, 1 !1&lt;&gt;~

··

tween 8 aiid 8:30a.m.' Uch~.,. . -.
lng. Claoies; wlitch l'W Btlrl ~
8:30 ... m, .each ~~ .
·bel!n
FrldBY, aU at . t1Hi&lt; h~scllod.

'

M:r;.

Of Point
Going West

Year's Final Meeting

..

Hill, daughter, .3:56· p. m. Wed1
nesday. ·
DISCHARGES
Mrs. Wllllam C. .Aeili:er,Oscar
J. Bastianl, Ra.vmonl BeD, Keith
A Bentz, Mrs. Jamea w. Bland,
William C. lloard, Mrs. Milton
E. Brewer, Mrs. Harvey F. COllins, Mrs. Char1es B. Cornwell
Mrs. Virgil H. Edwards, Mrs. J{
Thomas EUiott, Henry ll Euler
Mrs. Richard L. Fetty,
Frances Gardner, Mrs. Dmal.d
ll Hicks, Mrs. f&gt;nna E. Hortm,
Mlchoel W, Lance, Mrs. William
Maynard, Mrs. Helen M. Mltte,._
thai, Gary L. Rui\YOO, Michael
E. Runyon, Oeatus 0. Winter,
Mrs. Jack D. Zirkle and Mrs.
BUI R. Goble.

· ·

· Bus&amp;bi lo pick \IP, students en' rolled .111 t1!e Title l swrift\er prO.
' . gram of Southern LOcal $chool
District wl!l make general runs
dtrOU¥h the enUre district, Ro1i. ert Ashley, program director,
announces.
The general runs to the areai
of the district will be made ~.

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Father's Dey, June16

SOmething Spedal For POP'

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Dll ROBERT ERVIN
The Parkersburg, W. VL,
chapter of the F\JIIGospel Businessmen's Fellowship International will hold a rally at the
Chancellor H~ in Parkersburg ani Dr. Rol&gt;ert Ervin,
A"lstant Dean at Oral Roberts Universit.Y, is one of the
speakers on June 28 - 29. For
information contact The Plrkersburg
the Full
Gospel
Fellowship, Box 1674 Parkersbur.,

Meigs

Property
Tr sfers

•II~·~~ ·WISTiiN FLYER

"W..tl oil ,..

Rill"

Thoughts
For it il not the herrrer~ of
!he law who are rlghteo!U be·
fore God, but the doert of the
law who will be juoti/Ud.Rom&lt;~ns

2:13.

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The world Is divided Into
people who do tbinp and
people who get the credit.
Try, If you can, to belong to
the first class. - Dwight
Morrow, American diplomat.

DEAlER

Souad'o Speed

James D. Adams, Jr., Gdn.,
l Adams, to Dolores
J. Sh~s, 5.21 Acres, Salisbury.
James D. Adams, Jr., Inez
Wemmer, Jesse Wemmer, Katherine Lares, Imogene Bell and
Lawrence Bell to Dolores J.
9teeta, 5:21 Acres, Salisbury.
Howard A. Wilson, Rachel A,
WUaon to Charles D. Wilson and
YVonne Wilson, Lots, Middleport.
Charles D. WUson and Yvonne
Wilson to Carl 0. Manley lllldl!etty Jean Manley, Lots, Middlepori.
Willie w. Wise and MarJorie
Wise to Delmar Clark and Betty Clark, 2 Acres, Salisbury.
Lester Wiloon, dec. , to Ellen
B. Wilson, Lots, Pomeroy.
Sidney W. Durst and Dorothy
Durst to McDonough Co., 90 Acres, Lebanon.
Marvin McGuire and Betty McGuire to Robert E. Smith, Jr.,
5.6 Acres, Sallabury.
Howard C. Smith and Ju(ly
Smith to Robert C. Hlll and Etta
Mae HUI, 9.8 Acres, ·&amp;rtton.
Peyton J. Dudley and Dl Anne
Dudley to Helen K, Weider, Lots,
Middleport.
Helen K. Welder to Peyton J.
Dudley, Lots, Middleport. ·
Richard D. Seyler to Marilee
Seyler, Lots, Pomeroy.
Mabel Hayes to Esta Brlckles,
Lots, Pomeroy, ·
Racine Horne Bank to Racine
Home National Bank, Deed of
Correction, Racine.
ijaclne Home NaUonal Bank to
Corl J. Horky, Betsy E. Horky,
lots, Racine .
~cine Home National Bank to
Clifford J. Bachner, carolyn v.
Bachner, lots, Raclne.
Jack R. Coleman, Marcella
Coleman to James r. Aroold,
lot, Middleport.
Rue Tuckerman, Gall Miller,
Althea Miller, Mabel WaddeD
to James F. Aroold,lotll, Mlddl&amp;port
Delbert C. Brlckles to Violet
Eliza

Sound travels about 1,100

Your Home Owned Family Store

feet per second. When oent
by wireless, it takes the speed
of etec:tric waves, about 188,·
000 miles per second.

. DON illd EDNA·

MIDDL!PORT, OHIO

· · Oo.tmers

IT'S JUSt PLAI ''HORII•SINSI"
..
to shop ·w her• you ..saxe.... .
.,,. ,.

...~ 39~

.... 1.25

lllraJONG •••
SUDOENSUMM

BRONZTAN
PACUGE OF 4

.... .1;50

UNGU

Ttl FIRST MAN'S
HAIR UGirrEND:· •

87~

.REG. ··.· 49

ICE·O- :

IY QAaOL •••

SUNTAN LOTION
ONi.Y

.

REG.
$2.2$

NE

1.8

FULL
.,

LINE OF

M. Brickles, Divorce Decree,

Scipio.

It T1ke1 Three
TO Get Mlrried
·~ The Bride I

'The Grooml
•nd

orlst

SALE
1/3 OFF

-o.·-...
-·~01-·
.,
...........
·~.
Y,ALLEY LUMBER &amp; SUPPLY CO.
·'

POllY FLINDERS

NANNETTE AND
CINDERELLA

DOOR
. . PRIZES

school's .out!

. Three10.00
' '
Gift Certificates

I

I

I

' I

4.99

wm

I'

PLAY CLOTHES BY----- ~-BONE

98C AND UP

~

Juno Wendorf, to Raclna Gao
and Service Co., rlcht of way,
Strtton.
T~ L. PoweiJ0 Vlckey D.
Powell to KaWte, 1\!argarel Kawle, l acre, Ortnp.
ChlrUe Stone to Marvin Stone,
?2 aer!'•• Rutland.

BY ...•••.•

HI BROW

0.

way,~

SIZE 2/fO 12

IT'S SUMMER TIME

923 S. 3RD AVE. - 99~2709 -

Ama May curlston to Th11111s
G. WUiiami, Frances L. Wil•
llama, IU, Pomeroy.
Charles Rolli Henlersoo, Mar·
tha Hendaroon ~ Ohio River
sand Gcavel McDonough eo., porceb, Lebanon.
Thclllas G. Beeile to Bacino
Gaa and Service Co., rlcht of

I'
NANNlTTf, CINDERELLA,
'
ROB ROY, STRfrCHINI AND
BIUY THE KJD ...... SIZI2to,l,

l

A.~•ppenlng At ....

bo

,, t1ur111a:

~~-

""11· .Rqlitor

·j Mie 3 . houl'o onQ&lt;, No

\) ......__

DoOr
p~:~ 111wn away at 9 p.
L
Plan to attendl
' ''
;
., ~
Pill'•~· .

1

'

New York

...

House

·'

we can - c t U will try to doal

wtlb .u of them In pretcy much
tho same way, for Unlnllllratlta

na_..,, -

~ atblrwlM,

JtifT.,m not an nt lQio • - :

'.......

. lli'.
•··~ li!. ~dudll\f;
·a;,

·~ &lt;I!

lbe

"II '1lliulil bo

to

itt• Federal' ~rnmant had
- • to ond povor\Y In Amtort'i

REG. $1.B

.6-12 SPlAY
.,., .
.

'

..

,

�'.

...
'

.
•

'

Mri-B~·Hc;;;"ic,

Pomeroy Garderi Club'

· ·
.
Mrs. ROy Betziq;:: was host to evening, June 3. Throughout her
A dewtional period was I.ed by
the membel'&amp; alii gueatli &lt;"f the ltome w~re ft1II\V Qower arrange.. Mrs. Fred mae~:tnar, prestdent,
V()meroy Garden Club at h e r ments o( dlstlncUve des~ and and the scripture was Psalm 1.
· ·ome on Mulberry A\le., Monday great beau.'ty.
··
Mrs. Blaettnor told. of the closeh
ness ota -'""'en, nowers and God.
.... •·

0
luck
P
A lovely cluster there."

t

Her theme:
"To culttva a garden is to
walk with. God. God planted the
first garden · and He must have
uThy word is like a garden,
loved
man very much lor by the
Lord,
"
description it WIS very boaUu·
With nowors bright and lair:
M.
How
the
unhersal
heart
o!
And everyme who seeks may
man blesses noweF&amp;. They are
wreathed round the ~racUe. the
marriage altar and the tomb.
11 Flowers have an expression
Helen Bottel
or countenance as much as men
Dear Fool:
or animals. Some seem to smile;
You didn't say, but I pther
some are sad andpensive;others
you•d juat as 80011 break up wlth
again are plain, honest and up1 •Siren-ella." Her plans for you
right, like the broed!aced sW&gt;don't exactly jlbo wlth the "good
Rower and the hollyhock.
guy" image.
.
"To own a bit of ground, to ·
• So apologize, tell her you "can
scratch it with a hoe, to plant
Meigs Cooney homemakers are seeds aOO watch the renewal of
no longer trust yourself alone
with her," and she'd better find Invited to participate in a special life - this Is the commonest dea nicer guy. You might even im- '••women's World'' TV series light of the race, the most sa tispcy yoo've discussed the situa- which started this week over factory thing a man can do.
tion with your father, but her Channel 20, Athens, according to
"Flowers cannot be monq~parents ••will ne\ler know about Miss Margaret Griffiths, County olized. The poor can have them as
Extension Agent, Home El"onom- much as the rich and it takes no
the wine."
bl other words, be a gentle- ics.
beauty.
This series, scheduled at 8 p.
man and let her down easy. And if
"Can we conceive what humanshe ~'TlLL tries a smear, well, m. Monday e\·ening, was designed lty would be if it did not know the
most or the mud 8he throws will particularly with young home~
makers with families in mind.
land on her. - H.
There will be 16 one--half hour
Helen:
'ANOUA'lD'I
You are nothing but an old programs in the schedule. The
Iogie wlth a big mouth, Pll bot first two deal with what you
II I started an "Up With Steady- should know about credit and
ing" club, rd get more mem- dollars aod cents for security.
Study guides are available withbers. But no one would know,
cause I don't have my mouth out charge from the Meigs Coun• • • 111111111
bouncing around the newspapers. ty Extension Office for clubs or
I hate you old people who flop individuals deciding to particiyour long skirts and frizzy hair pate in the series.
our way. Keep out of the teen
world, you're not wanted! A n d
/01._ ....
watch your skirts - they might QUICK QUIZ
get stomped on - by usl
Q-What event first served
Pll bet you're too chicken to
IIUioTl', ,._

Helen Help

Us..• sy
YOUTH ASKED FOR IT!
Thi&amp; column is (or young people, their problems and pleasures. their troubles and run. As
with the rest of Helen Help Us!,
tt welcoiT.es laughs but won't
dodge a serious question with a
brush.()tl".
Send your teenage questions to
YOUTH ASKED FOR IT, care of
Helen Help US! this newspaper.
THIS GUY WAS LED ASTRAY!
Dear Helen:
I have been going with this
glrl for abc:MJ.t a year, and all she
wants to do is neck. Every time
I turn around l get one planted
smack on the kisser. I doo't
mind so much but the other night
she sneaked out some blackberry
wine from the house, and well
- rm told I got too !risky. Nothing serious, but she's pretty mad
•t me . . 51Je says, but I don't
think she Is, really.
I have a "good guy in the white
hat" Image, and I don't want her
1preading thb around, especially since it might get back to my
parents who would kill me.
U I apologize, it might happen
again - heck, rm not THAT
good. If I say it's her fault, she'll
smear me to get even. So what

Women's

WORLD ALMANAC
FACTS

World

TV Series on

Channel '20'

'

'

ior High School girls against
'•Stamp OUt steadying." and Helen. - JADE AND K. K.
Dear J and K,
Don't blame me for your unpopuluit;y wlth boys, sweeties.
Few SJJSI would rlskl!lllng steady
with girls who might stomp 'em.

-,If~

The e\lening star isJupiter.
On this day in history:
ln 1816, 10 inches of snow fell

~~

notice to the w o r l d that
America had beeome a global

.
'J

,,
\'

4.

'
~.1

~~-

Ar "''ho global cruise of
President Theodore Roosevelt's "Great White Fleet"
!rom 1907 to 1909. The presi·
dent dispatched 16 battleships
from Hampton Roads, Va., on
Dec. 16, 1907, lor the first
round·the-world cruise of an
American fleet.

~.,.,

ADVICE:

(

·rs~~''i~T'

1:·

.

Next lime you

EBERSBA(H
HARDWARE

_, -ICOHOMY

QUIDU.Y DRIU
TO AFULL GLOSS

,.. woa--.

Sl ON"S. ~ :\

haven't alept because

and you can't eat because

your kitchen is so hot and you
e

EXTRA

SPECIAL

is so hot and some idiot

PORK
!NECK BON

MARKET

b

1 00

c

grins at you and says:
control your temper

Ground Beef.____
Bacon Ends. 3 1.00

.

SUCED

Eggs, _____________ _

.

QTS.

lb.

Tlltn w.lch him tum pnl

ft2·5192

1.00

Bread ----------- 5 LOAVES ·
'

ADAMS or HOlSUM

I

.oo

•

'

CARNAnON or PET
fini~hcd !u 111.1!~h Wltlnul
Phi len M;~giCI,lur• Pi.:turc Tuht.:

furniture . • Cttl(tr Tunina

f-:yc • New
• St•l1\l Stale Si,nlll S)'stcm
• 26,000 Volt l'olnr Pil111 {nul ( "hHsb • IUumioalcd VU F lJHF ( 'h:~n·
nd lndicato~ • '•·mch Ova l ~r!Cakcr • Tone CurUtnl
DIMt.N~ONS : H·.29 1 . ," , W J .P1•.", 0 .19": 4" cup

fOREMAN &amp;ABBOTT

Milk.••••••••••••••• 3
SHOP OUR

J.

calli

SO~,
'

AND VEGETABLE BAll

FRESH CORN, GREEN BEANS, TOMATOES, NEW
CROP FLORIDA ORANGES 1nd GRAPEFRUIT, CU.
CUMBERS 1nd GREEN ONIONS, NEW RED &amp; WHITE
•

MIDDUPOIT, O.

.

:VI

.

I

.·.

THURSDAY
THURSDAY, June 6, Me 1 g s
County YOUIII! llepubllcan&amp; armual
rain or sldno piCnic at 6:30p.m.
at Mioo"" !lllrley Beegle's home In
Racine: bring lawn chllr, table
aervlce and covered dish,
CATHOLIC WOMEN'S Club,
Slcred Heart Church, 6:30 p,
m. Thursday at the home O!
Mrs. George Hackett, Sr., for
potluck dlmer.
PAST CHIEFS, ~olla Temple, 7:30 Thuridai rugiit "at the
home o! Mrs. Gladys CUckler.
LAUREL ~IJFF ·~!i4r Health
Club, 7:30 Tlwraday night, homo
· o1 Mto. Ernest Powall; Mrs.
Jllbea Gllmore, co-hosteu.
. FRIDAY
Ho\PPY 'HARVESTERS Clau,
Trl'nU;y United Church or Chria4
6:30 Friday night at tho home
ot hoatesa,
Ada Holter,
Chester 'RGid; pauo s"""r and
come-as-yciu-ere party.
OUTSIDE bANCE parf1 Fri.
day.Jd&amp;ht. PI:Jmeroy leiJ!Is.court,
8:30 ,ui 11:30 p.m. The J,Ya
will emcee: In ·caae or raiD, the
dance will be lnolde the fome.
roy j\tlllor hlllh auditorium,
·
.,; "'- ·
,; ~l!IERO'I' CliAPTER 186, Or·
der ol .the Eas~rn star, lnspec.
Uon, .....
..... ,, 7:45 p. m., Pom,....,.
eroy Muonle Temple; Mrs. COra
Webb, ·dOpubo grand matron ol
DLatrlct 25, Inspecting omcer.

Mr•.

vlotl tb •MltiP.,'I;JIIIp!,, i')11)lan · &amp; .i'tlette lnclutlecl e pra.v,e~ by
Sitters, . m~ Tuesday .J&gt;ilht · M~o.• Lemley, an eWOII!' by Mrs.
at the MldclleP.tt ~11
. Koraee McE\lhlnnDY, and opeclal
Other dlitinSUtiliedaueaiopre- muolc, "!low GNat Thou Art"
oented by Mrs. llareld I,emlio-, and "Be,yond the &amp;maer• by Mra.
nloot excellent chief, were Mrs. Noutzl~ at _the plano. Draping
Mabel Wood o1 tbo , Wllkonllle the etuirter wero Mra. Nad!an
temple; Edith Ruollt!ll, 1 past Blass, managsr; Mrs. Maxine
cliotrttl d~ and ;. meinber Owen, moot excellent aenlor, and
o1 Melia TOJ!Ijlle, and Mrs. tom Mrs. Karl Owed, most excellent
Hood, Mn. Nettle Hayoa and jlll\lor.
Mrs. Ma•garet Seldenable, reJ&gt;In a roqueat !rom Mra. Agnes
resenting Magnolia Temple, Woodward, grand aeillor or the
Pomeroy.
stata organization, tho Meigs
Higbllglrto or tile meeting in- Temple was asked to servo as
eluded the lnslalliUon or two tho host 111\lt lor the district
officers, 8 memorial aenice for eonventlob on Oct, 1. Members
Mra. Marie Burdette, and the were also Invited to attend inoxempli!tcatlon or rituallatle opectlon at the Wilkesville Tem.
work by tho o!lleers. Installed · pie Frida,y night when Marie
by Mrs. Elizabeth Allmanaaslat. Weisoner, grand chle!, will be
ed by Mra. Calh Bahr, grand the inspecting otrtcer.
chle!, and Mrs, Rlehard Bailey,
A communication !rom the
grand manager, were Mrs.Cb'de grand chief was read In which
Andrew•, outer guard, and Mr8.

Charles Souers Hosts
, ,sundoy
For·. Recep fiOn

9\e announced the prand Temple
aeaaion to bo bold at the Slatler·
Hilton Hotel In Cl.eveland, Sept.
11-14. In her letter she also anDOUneed the outstanding PYthlan
tlster lor the year, Mrs. Mlllle
Keller, woo observed hor !DOth
birthday.
A sliver offering wu contrl·
buted to tho Medina llome !ortbe
Aged and a contribution was made
to the Meigs County unit or the
American Cancer Soclet;y.
Sevent;y-one slck vlslts tllrlng
the past month were reported by
the members and It was noted
that $74 had been uaed for ·chartt;y work, Reported Ill were Mrs.
Peter Slece, a petlont at Holzer
Hospital, and Mrs. Lemley'adaughter-ln-law, woo is also hoepltallzed. A~tlonal knives were
o11tlered lor )ale by the temple
upon the request of Mrs. Karl
Owen, a member ol the ways
and meana committee.
Mrs. Hall thank&amp;! the temple

'

..'

. •

f

••• on

everything

AT
HIPDEN
MAGIC
•
.HAIR SPRAY

,

.

KODAK ·.
104 -INSTAMMIC OUTFh
REG. $19·" ......... ..

$1.99 VALUE

POLAROID SWINGER

~:::::~s:
..:.~::e~:~~::
changes made by the grand chle!

$19.95 VAWE

8

$16~

in the ritual and concluded her

comments to the members with
a pOem. On behal! or the temple,
\ .... Mrs. Biggs presented her with
a cor•age of money.
,
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Sauer
Out-of-town guests here for the
Also hooored during Ule meetentertained on Surday, May 26, reception were Mr. and Mrs. ing was Mrs. Russell, longtime
with a reception honoring their James llliporth, Sr. of Lynn, member or the temple. ~e will
son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mass.; Mr. and Mrs. K-enneth be mo\llng to Rosemont, Pa. , in
Mrs. Jamea Nelson Wingworth, Lawson of Columbus; Robert Ben- the near future. Mrs. Lemley
lr., o!Pala Alto, CaUC.
line, Miss AmeWaltersandM1ss presented a aift to ~r from
Mrs. llllngworth is the former Ghmy Walters of Coalrain; Mr. tlle temple.
Elizabeth Ann (SaUy) Sauer. The
A silent auction was held iilrcouple was married May 18 at and MrB. Len Gwiadmvsky or lng the concluding social boor.
Lake Tahoe arxl remained there CleveJarkl; Mrs. Florence Sneller Refreshments were served by
a week bolore coming to Middle- ol Gallipolis; Miss Margaret Mrs. Neutzllng, Mrs. Allman,
port.
Stiuer, Miss MadelynneSauerand and Mrs. Phllip Meinhart. Apink
Relatives, former classmates Miss Virginia Sauer, all of Day. and white color scheme was carof Mrs. Dlingworth, and friends ton; Mr. and Mrs. ·n. W. Welker ried out with an arrangement
of the Sauer funily were guests and daughters, GahaMa, and Mr. of pink rosebuds on the table.
at the reception held at tho Brow~&gt;- and Mrs. Ed Glaze, Chesterlanci
ell Ave., Mldtlleport, home of Mr.
Mr. and Mrs. Wlngworth after
and Mrs. Sauer.
visiting here severaldayswentto
An arrangement of spring flow- Boston, Mass., to visit relatives
ers ftanktd by carklelabra center- betore returning to California.
ed the refreshment table, Mrs. The couple will reside at Pala
Ollngworth's sister, Mrs. D. W. Alto.
Welker o! Gahanna, presided at Mr. and Mrs, Wingworth are
the silver cdftee service,
emplo.yed by United Air Llnes.

Easiest Way
to Lovelier
Rooms

HEAD &amp; SHOULDERS
YOUR

PONDS
DREAM FLOWER TALC

69e

Reg.9Bc

CHOICE

LOTION
LARGE JAI
FAMILY TUBE

4-0UNCE
$2.25 VALUE

1.5'1

Members ~- Welcomed . ·
Mra. T. G. HUldore and Mrs.
Donald Lisle were we.lcomed is
new members when the Woman's
Society of Christian Service of
the syracuse Metho!list Church
met Tuesday ntght at the home
of Mrs. WllUam Elehinnr.
"The Africans s8ek New ldeiP
tl'b'" waa the pr01fam theme
presented by Mrs·. oma Winebrenner. Miss Marcia Karr used
"Fhlli of Public WOI'ship" is

her devoo&lt;llll topic. She read
scripture from Isaiah and Ephestans, and then related events leadlng to lsslah's call to speclal
service.

She. SJIOke or. the flrat step in
preparaUon Cor service as a view
of the Lord, the &amp;Monel. a view
of himself, and the third, a cleanslng trom sin. Effective service
requires adynamic urge to serve,
Miss Karr concluded. She read
poems entitled "Thank God lor
'
- - - - - - - - - '1 ·America" and .. World Peace."
!Irs. Eichinger served a salad
BAKE SALE .by Woman's So- course Iollowi:v a brief bull·
clety ol Chrladan Service, Minerovllle'Methodiot Church, Sat. rleos session cond""ted by Mrs.
Jobn Sou,..., preoldent
urclay, June 8, at the Hines build1ng in Minersville; homemode
bread, plea, cakes, arxt cookie.,
at !0 Lm.

POM!;JI!&gt;'I'-. BOWLING Lanlos1 •
blnquot, ~es Club, begiMlng
MONDAY
6:30 p. m. Frltlay;.clinnor at ?:lS
HEATH METHODIST WSCS
muale by Allan Lee Klt\lo
picnic, potluck, Moftday. June 10•.
at 6 p. m., home oCMrs. Bernard
SATIJRDAY
·
Fulto; msat and bovet:IIO !ur·
.
THE MIDDLEPoRT Bois' Lea· , nlollad by tho hoatesaes. Bring
pe oponOors teen daneo par. table service. In case or rlln
If Saturday, Mlltileport·· .Com. meet In clwrch besement. AI\\'
munlf;f park;.8130 p.m, The Jayo person neodirw tranaP.ortadon,
to 0111- .
·
·
e~ll Mrs. Nan Moore.

Commencement
Is on Sunday

Q- TIPS
98c VALUE

FAMILY SIZE
REG. 95c EA.

NOW

COME ON IN •.•
US SHOW YOU All
THE NEW COLORS IN

ER

commencement exercises tor
the dally vocation Bible &amp;ehool
o! the Portland Methodist Church
wlll be held at 8 p, m. Sunday at
the church.
'Allout 40 clilldren o! the communlt,y are enrolled In the ruble
WALL PAINT ·
school. Mr1. Ruth Ebenbech Ia
director, Mrs. Thelma Cozart,
the devotiOIIII leader, and Mrs.
Sltlrlef Johnson, the song and
program leader.
telchlrv the c~sses ue Mra. .
· Eberabach, the beginners; Jean
Schuler, the primary children;
and Mrs. Johnson and Mrs. Elva
Dalley, the junipro. Helpan are 1nd LEATHER Sut~PL'rl
Zana Midtlleswart, Evel,yn Fore- Ph, 992.2774 ...........,

•

E

2.15 QUART

BRW HDWEo

whole-house Gas air conditioning
.
.
for just $14 a month and

.

.

man,Bobble
Charlene
Evans,
ind
C...art,
Lori T&amp;wyna
Mldtll&amp;- • • - - - - - - - - '
BWafl and Jane Allen.

not even make a down payment.

Oleo·-------~------7

C..rlisle ConternpO-ra'y

"

while you ~xplain to him
you're going to can the
Gas Company and order

79~

MIX OR MATCH
CHOCOLATE MILK, SWEET MILK,
BUTIERMILK.

?''
•

''

lb.

•

canlfstand hardlya'~ythi'~g
because your whole house .

,, , , , :

Co/endoril

"

your bedr~om is so hot

LB.

tkfasteteraft
GollectioiL·

Genuine vcnt...:r'&gt;

lb. ~c

...

SIEA

PHILCO

&amp;511 WA

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America's finest expression of grace, beauty and
quality in Color TV cabinetry

~

alief,, a Momorlal Day woekeed
In Lo\lisvllle, Ky., with
bro(her,;ln.l~ny and sl&amp;ter,
and MtL.l,_B. Manhall.
p~·c. Larry WOes haste turned
to~falt&lt;orReed HospltalatW•)IhD. C., !ollowinl t144ay
'lll'l&lt;llf8~. here with hlo parents,
~.u;.- Mrs. Orval Wiles and
~
'
o! Mrs. LUllan Pierce
Is Mro. Holen Rolph o! Hunting·
1
ton, W. VL
Marvin McKelvey returned to
Marshall Uillversit;y, Huntington,
Tuesday alter apendiog a week
here with hla parents, Mr. and
Mrs. William A. McKelvey, am.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Johnson and
sons.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Ebor!bach and son, David, Mlneravtlle,
were Memorlal Day guests o!
Mr. and Mrs. Ted Roberts at
Oatrander.
Mr. and MI:•· ~Norman Roush
and children and Mrs. Nadlne

2.05

Ill TOUGH·
NUS •• ,_,

PKG.I.OO

'

.. PEANur

QUAil'

USDA CHOICE

into France on D-Oay.

I

Speellll

Weekend ~t.te8ts of Mr. aOO
Mrs. Thereon Johnson were Mr.
and Mrs. Ken Koillcek ancldaughtera, Nancy and Sheryl, or Avon.
Mr. and Mrs. Konicek came especially tor the Racine alumni
banquet.

Eisenhower sent allied tr(q)s

I1

,CU!IJ

'

[9~~\ettiei!iltl and Mi'~ lltJas . · zelda
o1 Wllkelvllle, &lt;!1*" · 11t1ri Neu\zllng,· orpnlil.
· · ihe thanked the temple lor asreturned 'i;uestia.v nlgi.l irtct ~~e$, made~ an ol!lclal . The memorlaiJOrvlceror MrL lllllance tllrlng l!le past year.

GAliON

..W-..Iii•

power?

in New England to start what
was known as 'jThe year in
which there was no summer."
In 1933, a motion picture
drive-In, the nrst of its klrw::l,
was q~ened in Camden, N.J.
In 1944 the greatest invasion
In history began as General

.,

•

'·

~.,. Tt;;dt(j~ifJs
Pythic;m
Sisters
'lr.lt

6'8

---------------------------J

an:l. Veru s.

.!&lt;"~ '

rangement. '

.

ONI.f

I 41

'(I

Mr&amp;. Botdrw, pi,'OII'IIIi chairman, BhoWed OAGC ljldoa on
" 1·1ower Atnll81"-'" ·Tho lt&gt;stru&lt;&gt;Uvo slltiea pOinted out th~
gotjd pOinta 'as well &amp;I 1!10 bad In
maldrw a lioa!diJitl1y llllaneed ar·

'"*,./II

!
!

.:~~

:

di:Y. ,_ ta.'"al,6 ~clO!&gt;l'o

1

•

Officio/. Visitation Made

..,

:.e~.·:::;::~.~~~!:~
o! Mr. and Mrs. Harold Roush.

Q-Where is Mark Twain
NOTE ·ro .. PRO-S.O.S." buried?
~~
Open All Doy Thu-nday
Yes a lew "SiampOUtSteadylng''
A- In the E 1m ira, N.Y .,
11ltll,
buttons are lett rrom the last Woodlawn Cemell!ry.
Mol" St.
Pomeroy
CQtMII, lOlii,
re.()J'der. Those who wouJd ••rathQ-What author developed
er mix than match" (for the
IIC'ICUI, - - · I:IC.
his
abirity as a .wnter U:htlt
present) may get theln by sandserving
a
term
m a pe~Hen·
ing lO cents and a stamped, saJf.
alklreaaed envelope lor each but- tiaTJI?
A-W. s. Porter, better
C~t. John Paul Jones
-kin
to
lli\LEN
BO'M'EL'S
S06
knownas
o. Henry.
\ ~ the only 'CooUnental
CLUB, BOX 9997, Sacramento,
I navaJ Officer tO be VOted 8
Calilornia, 95823.
gold medal by Congress.
The World Almanac notes. Dear Helen:
3
Jones never held rank
An answer to Kathy, the Leap
higher than captain in the
I
(We Are Not Open On Sunaays)
Year scribe: Well saidl
1
American Navy, but lhe
Now, Cor Leap Year as seen
Russians made him a rear·
from the ma1e angle: Fellas, if
admiral in 1788 in their war
a glrl asks you out on a Leap
against the Turks.
Year date, by all means, don't
park, and don't ugo in for a
The Almanac
By United Press International nightcap" afterwards. Am.
Today is Thursday, June 6, member the girl woo kiddingly
aaka you to marry her - means
the !58th day or !968 with 208 to
I
I
It!
!ollow.
1
OpenEvervWeekD•y9:00to7:00 . 1
How do I know'? Pm engaged.
The moon is between ita flrst
- STU.L SURPRISED
Soturday Til 9
1
quarter and Ml stage.
The morni~ stars are saturn
: E. MAIN ST.
. 99Z·3975
POMEROY I
e
e

f

•

or c;arPm,:'• ·Nura•ey Thur ..

Hysell, Mrs. Harold Brown a n d
Mrs. Richard Jones were named
to plan the menu and contact the
members.

•••

L

':,··

I

June 1st.
Final pliUlS were made for a
picnic at the homeofMrs. Walter
Grueser, July lsl Mrs. Homer

~~Y!_2_!!!&gt;_!fL ~_l!_f!_Y_o_l!_~!!l!!_I!,_B_!LL!

\

tour

7"' The Dail~ Sentinel, Pomerox·Mlddleport. 0., Tlllrsday,June 6, t9G3

nature
"

1'he
t1f0U11
wW
-""
'
I
.

"The lnilnlte has wriUen its,
The clW&gt; presented a alii of
name on the heavens in shining coin 11111 to lin. Charles Per·
stars, and on the earth ln tender singer, a 11111. prealdont ot the
Oow•rs."
club. Mr, and Mn. Perslnpr
Mrs. maettnar concloded by are movlrw to Clearweter, f1L,
reading "A Girl' a Broken thelasl oC JIIIIL
Dream" trom the May Issue of
Tbo members and auest were
the Guidepost
Invited to the dining room l'or roA report was given on there- !re&amp;hmOIIII. The table na • .,..
giooal meeting on May 20th at tered wlth a beauti!ul arrangethe Pomeroy elementary schcxC\
Mrs. AlbertPool,Marietta,pres· '\
ident of the Ohio Asaoclation of
Garden Clubs, spoke o! the dll·
rerent projects each club should
recognize am particlpate in.
Mrs. Clair Karr noted that 19
table arrangements were made
for the Pomeroy Al~nl Banquet,

POICH
FLOOI

And now, why don't you go chew
on a bar of soap? - H.

:t t' .,

.

n.owen? It these did not exist,
would oureharaeter,orracultles,
our s~nse of thebeautitul,.our~p.
tltude tor h&amp;Winess, be quite the
sanoo?

FLOOI-CUAID
EIAIEL

print this, too. We are two Jun.

do I do? - FOOL

!'

ANOTHER GOOD VALUE

FROM
lAIII'S aQDGit SHQP

:~~~Y,!~· '"p$

VASELINE

100 COUNT

39c VAWE
NOW

26C

SCOPE
LARGE SIZE
REG.
$1.15

NOW

REG.
$1.49

BEACH
BALL
49c VALUE

NOW19e

�'.

...
'

.
•

'

Mri-B~·Hc;;;"ic,

Pomeroy Garderi Club'

· ·
.
Mrs. ROy Betziq;:: was host to evening, June 3. Throughout her
A dewtional period was I.ed by
the membel'&amp; alii gueatli &lt;"f the ltome w~re ft1II\V Qower arrange.. Mrs. Fred mae~:tnar, prestdent,
V()meroy Garden Club at h e r ments o( dlstlncUve des~ and and the scripture was Psalm 1.
· ·ome on Mulberry A\le., Monday great beau.'ty.
··
Mrs. Blaettnor told. of the closeh
ness ota -'""'en, nowers and God.
.... •·

0
luck
P
A lovely cluster there."

t

Her theme:
"To culttva a garden is to
walk with. God. God planted the
first garden · and He must have
uThy word is like a garden,
loved
man very much lor by the
Lord,
"
description it WIS very boaUu·
With nowors bright and lair:
M.
How
the
unhersal
heart
o!
And everyme who seeks may
man blesses noweF&amp;. They are
wreathed round the ~racUe. the
marriage altar and the tomb.
11 Flowers have an expression
Helen Bottel
or countenance as much as men
Dear Fool:
or animals. Some seem to smile;
You didn't say, but I pther
some are sad andpensive;others
you•d juat as 80011 break up wlth
again are plain, honest and up1 •Siren-ella." Her plans for you
right, like the broed!aced sW&gt;don't exactly jlbo wlth the "good
Rower and the hollyhock.
guy" image.
.
"To own a bit of ground, to ·
• So apologize, tell her you "can
scratch it with a hoe, to plant
Meigs Cooney homemakers are seeds aOO watch the renewal of
no longer trust yourself alone
with her," and she'd better find Invited to participate in a special life - this Is the commonest dea nicer guy. You might even im- '••women's World'' TV series light of the race, the most sa tispcy yoo've discussed the situa- which started this week over factory thing a man can do.
tion with your father, but her Channel 20, Athens, according to
"Flowers cannot be monq~parents ••will ne\ler know about Miss Margaret Griffiths, County olized. The poor can have them as
Extension Agent, Home El"onom- much as the rich and it takes no
the wine."
bl other words, be a gentle- ics.
beauty.
This series, scheduled at 8 p.
man and let her down easy. And if
"Can we conceive what humanshe ~'TlLL tries a smear, well, m. Monday e\·ening, was designed lty would be if it did not know the
most or the mud 8he throws will particularly with young home~
makers with families in mind.
land on her. - H.
There will be 16 one--half hour
Helen:
'ANOUA'lD'I
You are nothing but an old programs in the schedule. The
Iogie wlth a big mouth, Pll bot first two deal with what you
II I started an "Up With Steady- should know about credit and
ing" club, rd get more mem- dollars aod cents for security.
Study guides are available withbers. But no one would know,
cause I don't have my mouth out charge from the Meigs Coun• • • 111111111
bouncing around the newspapers. ty Extension Office for clubs or
I hate you old people who flop individuals deciding to particiyour long skirts and frizzy hair pate in the series.
our way. Keep out of the teen
world, you're not wanted! A n d
/01._ ....
watch your skirts - they might QUICK QUIZ
get stomped on - by usl
Q-What event first served
Pll bet you're too chicken to
IIUioTl', ,._

Helen Help

Us..• sy
YOUTH ASKED FOR IT!
Thi&amp; column is (or young people, their problems and pleasures. their troubles and run. As
with the rest of Helen Help Us!,
tt welcoiT.es laughs but won't
dodge a serious question with a
brush.()tl".
Send your teenage questions to
YOUTH ASKED FOR IT, care of
Helen Help US! this newspaper.
THIS GUY WAS LED ASTRAY!
Dear Helen:
I have been going with this
glrl for abc:MJ.t a year, and all she
wants to do is neck. Every time
I turn around l get one planted
smack on the kisser. I doo't
mind so much but the other night
she sneaked out some blackberry
wine from the house, and well
- rm told I got too !risky. Nothing serious, but she's pretty mad
•t me . . 51Je says, but I don't
think she Is, really.
I have a "good guy in the white
hat" Image, and I don't want her
1preading thb around, especially since it might get back to my
parents who would kill me.
U I apologize, it might happen
again - heck, rm not THAT
good. If I say it's her fault, she'll
smear me to get even. So what

Women's

WORLD ALMANAC
FACTS

World

TV Series on

Channel '20'

'

'

ior High School girls against
'•Stamp OUt steadying." and Helen. - JADE AND K. K.
Dear J and K,
Don't blame me for your unpopuluit;y wlth boys, sweeties.
Few SJJSI would rlskl!lllng steady
with girls who might stomp 'em.

-,If~

The e\lening star isJupiter.
On this day in history:
ln 1816, 10 inches of snow fell

~~

notice to the w o r l d that
America had beeome a global

.
'J

,,
\'

4.

'
~.1

~~-

Ar "''ho global cruise of
President Theodore Roosevelt's "Great White Fleet"
!rom 1907 to 1909. The presi·
dent dispatched 16 battleships
from Hampton Roads, Va., on
Dec. 16, 1907, lor the first
round·the-world cruise of an
American fleet.

~.,.,

ADVICE:

(

·rs~~''i~T'

1:·

.

Next lime you

EBERSBA(H
HARDWARE

_, -ICOHOMY

QUIDU.Y DRIU
TO AFULL GLOSS

,.. woa--.

Sl ON"S. ~ :\

haven't alept because

and you can't eat because

your kitchen is so hot and you
e

EXTRA

SPECIAL

is so hot and some idiot

PORK
!NECK BON

MARKET

b

1 00

c

grins at you and says:
control your temper

Ground Beef.____
Bacon Ends. 3 1.00

.

SUCED

Eggs, _____________ _

.

QTS.

lb.

Tlltn w.lch him tum pnl

ft2·5192

1.00

Bread ----------- 5 LOAVES ·
'

ADAMS or HOlSUM

I

.oo

•

'

CARNAnON or PET
fini~hcd !u 111.1!~h Wltlnul
Phi len M;~giCI,lur• Pi.:turc Tuht.:

furniture . • Cttl(tr Tunina

f-:yc • New
• St•l1\l Stale Si,nlll S)'stcm
• 26,000 Volt l'olnr Pil111 {nul ( "hHsb • IUumioalcd VU F lJHF ( 'h:~n·
nd lndicato~ • '•·mch Ova l ~r!Cakcr • Tone CurUtnl
DIMt.N~ONS : H·.29 1 . ," , W J .P1•.", 0 .19": 4" cup

fOREMAN &amp;ABBOTT

Milk.••••••••••••••• 3
SHOP OUR

J.

calli

SO~,
'

AND VEGETABLE BAll

FRESH CORN, GREEN BEANS, TOMATOES, NEW
CROP FLORIDA ORANGES 1nd GRAPEFRUIT, CU.
CUMBERS 1nd GREEN ONIONS, NEW RED &amp; WHITE
•

MIDDUPOIT, O.

.

:VI

.

I

.·.

THURSDAY
THURSDAY, June 6, Me 1 g s
County YOUIII! llepubllcan&amp; armual
rain or sldno piCnic at 6:30p.m.
at Mioo"" !lllrley Beegle's home In
Racine: bring lawn chllr, table
aervlce and covered dish,
CATHOLIC WOMEN'S Club,
Slcred Heart Church, 6:30 p,
m. Thursday at the home O!
Mrs. George Hackett, Sr., for
potluck dlmer.
PAST CHIEFS, ~olla Temple, 7:30 Thuridai rugiit "at the
home o! Mrs. Gladys CUckler.
LAUREL ~IJFF ·~!i4r Health
Club, 7:30 Tlwraday night, homo
· o1 Mto. Ernest Powall; Mrs.
Jllbea Gllmore, co-hosteu.
. FRIDAY
Ho\PPY 'HARVESTERS Clau,
Trl'nU;y United Church or Chria4
6:30 Friday night at tho home
ot hoatesa,
Ada Holter,
Chester 'RGid; pauo s"""r and
come-as-yciu-ere party.
OUTSIDE bANCE parf1 Fri.
day.Jd&amp;ht. PI:Jmeroy leiJ!Is.court,
8:30 ,ui 11:30 p.m. The J,Ya
will emcee: In ·caae or raiD, the
dance will be lnolde the fome.
roy j\tlllor hlllh auditorium,
·
.,; "'- ·
,; ~l!IERO'I' CliAPTER 186, Or·
der ol .the Eas~rn star, lnspec.
Uon, .....
..... ,, 7:45 p. m., Pom,....,.
eroy Muonle Temple; Mrs. COra
Webb, ·dOpubo grand matron ol
DLatrlct 25, Inspecting omcer.

Mr•.

vlotl tb •MltiP.,'I;JIIIp!,, i')11)lan · &amp; .i'tlette lnclutlecl e pra.v,e~ by
Sitters, . m~ Tuesday .J&gt;ilht · M~o.• Lemley, an eWOII!' by Mrs.
at the MldclleP.tt ~11
. Koraee McE\lhlnnDY, and opeclal
Other dlitinSUtiliedaueaiopre- muolc, "!low GNat Thou Art"
oented by Mrs. llareld I,emlio-, and "Be,yond the &amp;maer• by Mra.
nloot excellent chief, were Mrs. Noutzl~ at _the plano. Draping
Mabel Wood o1 tbo , Wllkonllle the etuirter wero Mra. Nad!an
temple; Edith Ruollt!ll, 1 past Blass, managsr; Mrs. Maxine
cliotrttl d~ and ;. meinber Owen, moot excellent aenlor, and
o1 Melia TOJ!Ijlle, and Mrs. tom Mrs. Karl Owed, most excellent
Hood, Mn. Nettle Hayoa and jlll\lor.
Mrs. Ma•garet Seldenable, reJ&gt;In a roqueat !rom Mra. Agnes
resenting Magnolia Temple, Woodward, grand aeillor or the
Pomeroy.
stata organization, tho Meigs
Higbllglrto or tile meeting in- Temple was asked to servo as
eluded the lnslalliUon or two tho host 111\lt lor the district
officers, 8 memorial aenice for eonventlob on Oct, 1. Members
Mra. Marie Burdette, and the were also Invited to attend inoxempli!tcatlon or rituallatle opectlon at the Wilkesville Tem.
work by tho o!lleers. Installed · pie Frida,y night when Marie
by Mrs. Elizabeth Allmanaaslat. Weisoner, grand chle!, will be
ed by Mra. Calh Bahr, grand the inspecting otrtcer.
chle!, and Mrs, Rlehard Bailey,
A communication !rom the
grand manager, were Mrs.Cb'de grand chief was read In which
Andrew•, outer guard, and Mr8.

Charles Souers Hosts
, ,sundoy
For·. Recep fiOn

9\e announced the prand Temple
aeaaion to bo bold at the Slatler·
Hilton Hotel In Cl.eveland, Sept.
11-14. In her letter she also anDOUneed the outstanding PYthlan
tlster lor the year, Mrs. Mlllle
Keller, woo observed hor !DOth
birthday.
A sliver offering wu contrl·
buted to tho Medina llome !ortbe
Aged and a contribution was made
to the Meigs County unit or the
American Cancer Soclet;y.
Sevent;y-one slck vlslts tllrlng
the past month were reported by
the members and It was noted
that $74 had been uaed for ·chartt;y work, Reported Ill were Mrs.
Peter Slece, a petlont at Holzer
Hospital, and Mrs. Lemley'adaughter-ln-law, woo is also hoepltallzed. A~tlonal knives were
o11tlered lor )ale by the temple
upon the request of Mrs. Karl
Owen, a member ol the ways
and meana committee.
Mrs. Hall thank&amp;! the temple

'

..'

. •

f

••• on

everything

AT
HIPDEN
MAGIC
•
.HAIR SPRAY

,

.

KODAK ·.
104 -INSTAMMIC OUTFh
REG. $19·" ......... ..

$1.99 VALUE

POLAROID SWINGER

~:::::~s:
..:.~::e~:~~::
changes made by the grand chle!

$19.95 VAWE

8

$16~

in the ritual and concluded her

comments to the members with
a pOem. On behal! or the temple,
\ .... Mrs. Biggs presented her with
a cor•age of money.
,
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Sauer
Out-of-town guests here for the
Also hooored during Ule meetentertained on Surday, May 26, reception were Mr. and Mrs. ing was Mrs. Russell, longtime
with a reception honoring their James llliporth, Sr. of Lynn, member or the temple. ~e will
son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mass.; Mr. and Mrs. K-enneth be mo\llng to Rosemont, Pa. , in
Mrs. Jamea Nelson Wingworth, Lawson of Columbus; Robert Ben- the near future. Mrs. Lemley
lr., o!Pala Alto, CaUC.
line, Miss AmeWaltersandM1ss presented a aift to ~r from
Mrs. llllngworth is the former Ghmy Walters of Coalrain; Mr. tlle temple.
Elizabeth Ann (SaUy) Sauer. The
A silent auction was held iilrcouple was married May 18 at and MrB. Len Gwiadmvsky or lng the concluding social boor.
Lake Tahoe arxl remained there CleveJarkl; Mrs. Florence Sneller Refreshments were served by
a week bolore coming to Middle- ol Gallipolis; Miss Margaret Mrs. Neutzllng, Mrs. Allman,
port.
Stiuer, Miss MadelynneSauerand and Mrs. Phllip Meinhart. Apink
Relatives, former classmates Miss Virginia Sauer, all of Day. and white color scheme was carof Mrs. Dlingworth, and friends ton; Mr. and Mrs. ·n. W. Welker ried out with an arrangement
of the Sauer funily were guests and daughters, GahaMa, and Mr. of pink rosebuds on the table.
at the reception held at tho Brow~&gt;- and Mrs. Ed Glaze, Chesterlanci
ell Ave., Mldtlleport, home of Mr.
Mr. and Mrs. Wlngworth after
and Mrs. Sauer.
visiting here severaldayswentto
An arrangement of spring flow- Boston, Mass., to visit relatives
ers ftanktd by carklelabra center- betore returning to California.
ed the refreshment table, Mrs. The couple will reside at Pala
Ollngworth's sister, Mrs. D. W. Alto.
Welker o! Gahanna, presided at Mr. and Mrs, Wingworth are
the silver cdftee service,
emplo.yed by United Air Llnes.

Easiest Way
to Lovelier
Rooms

HEAD &amp; SHOULDERS
YOUR

PONDS
DREAM FLOWER TALC

69e

Reg.9Bc

CHOICE

LOTION
LARGE JAI
FAMILY TUBE

4-0UNCE
$2.25 VALUE

1.5'1

Members ~- Welcomed . ·
Mra. T. G. HUldore and Mrs.
Donald Lisle were we.lcomed is
new members when the Woman's
Society of Christian Service of
the syracuse Metho!list Church
met Tuesday ntght at the home
of Mrs. WllUam Elehinnr.
"The Africans s8ek New ldeiP
tl'b'" waa the pr01fam theme
presented by Mrs·. oma Winebrenner. Miss Marcia Karr used
"Fhlli of Public WOI'ship" is

her devoo&lt;llll topic. She read
scripture from Isaiah and Ephestans, and then related events leadlng to lsslah's call to speclal
service.

She. SJIOke or. the flrat step in
preparaUon Cor service as a view
of the Lord, the &amp;Monel. a view
of himself, and the third, a cleanslng trom sin. Effective service
requires adynamic urge to serve,
Miss Karr concluded. She read
poems entitled "Thank God lor
'
- - - - - - - - - '1 ·America" and .. World Peace."
!Irs. Eichinger served a salad
BAKE SALE .by Woman's So- course Iollowi:v a brief bull·
clety ol Chrladan Service, Minerovllle'Methodiot Church, Sat. rleos session cond""ted by Mrs.
Jobn Sou,..., preoldent
urclay, June 8, at the Hines build1ng in Minersville; homemode
bread, plea, cakes, arxt cookie.,
at !0 Lm.

POM!;JI!&gt;'I'-. BOWLING Lanlos1 •
blnquot, ~es Club, begiMlng
MONDAY
6:30 p. m. Frltlay;.clinnor at ?:lS
HEATH METHODIST WSCS
muale by Allan Lee Klt\lo
picnic, potluck, Moftday. June 10•.
at 6 p. m., home oCMrs. Bernard
SATIJRDAY
·
Fulto; msat and bovet:IIO !ur·
.
THE MIDDLEPoRT Bois' Lea· , nlollad by tho hoatesaes. Bring
pe oponOors teen daneo par. table service. In case or rlln
If Saturday, Mlltileport·· .Com. meet In clwrch besement. AI\\'
munlf;f park;.8130 p.m, The Jayo person neodirw tranaP.ortadon,
to 0111- .
·
·
e~ll Mrs. Nan Moore.

Commencement
Is on Sunday

Q- TIPS
98c VALUE

FAMILY SIZE
REG. 95c EA.

NOW

COME ON IN •.•
US SHOW YOU All
THE NEW COLORS IN

ER

commencement exercises tor
the dally vocation Bible &amp;ehool
o! the Portland Methodist Church
wlll be held at 8 p, m. Sunday at
the church.
'Allout 40 clilldren o! the communlt,y are enrolled In the ruble
WALL PAINT ·
school. Mr1. Ruth Ebenbech Ia
director, Mrs. Thelma Cozart,
the devotiOIIII leader, and Mrs.
Sltlrlef Johnson, the song and
program leader.
telchlrv the c~sses ue Mra. .
· Eberabach, the beginners; Jean
Schuler, the primary children;
and Mrs. Johnson and Mrs. Elva
Dalley, the junipro. Helpan are 1nd LEATHER Sut~PL'rl
Zana Midtlleswart, Evel,yn Fore- Ph, 992.2774 ...........,

•

E

2.15 QUART

BRW HDWEo

whole-house Gas air conditioning
.
.
for just $14 a month and

.

.

man,Bobble
Charlene
Evans,
ind
C...art,
Lori T&amp;wyna
Mldtll&amp;- • • - - - - - - - - '
BWafl and Jane Allen.

not even make a down payment.

Oleo·-------~------7

C..rlisle ConternpO-ra'y

"

while you ~xplain to him
you're going to can the
Gas Company and order

79~

MIX OR MATCH
CHOCOLATE MILK, SWEET MILK,
BUTIERMILK.

?''
•

''

lb.

•

canlfstand hardlya'~ythi'~g
because your whole house .

,, , , , :

Co/endoril

"

your bedr~om is so hot

LB.

tkfasteteraft
GollectioiL·

Genuine vcnt...:r'&gt;

lb. ~c

...

SIEA

PHILCO

&amp;511 WA

IU111R
SNACKS

DM,.....U,,

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quality in Color TV cabinetry

~

alief,, a Momorlal Day woekeed
In Lo\lisvllle, Ky., with
bro(her,;ln.l~ny and sl&amp;ter,
and MtL.l,_B. Manhall.
p~·c. Larry WOes haste turned
to~falt&lt;orReed HospltalatW•)IhD. C., !ollowinl t144ay
'lll'l&lt;llf8~. here with hlo parents,
~.u;.- Mrs. Orval Wiles and
~
'
o! Mrs. LUllan Pierce
Is Mro. Holen Rolph o! Hunting·
1
ton, W. VL
Marvin McKelvey returned to
Marshall Uillversit;y, Huntington,
Tuesday alter apendiog a week
here with hla parents, Mr. and
Mrs. William A. McKelvey, am.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Johnson and
sons.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Ebor!bach and son, David, Mlneravtlle,
were Memorlal Day guests o!
Mr. and Mrs. Ted Roberts at
Oatrander.
Mr. and MI:•· ~Norman Roush
and children and Mrs. Nadlne

2.05

Ill TOUGH·
NUS •• ,_,

PKG.I.OO

'

.. PEANur

QUAil'

USDA CHOICE

into France on D-Oay.

I

Speellll

Weekend ~t.te8ts of Mr. aOO
Mrs. Thereon Johnson were Mr.
and Mrs. Ken Koillcek ancldaughtera, Nancy and Sheryl, or Avon.
Mr. and Mrs. Konicek came especially tor the Racine alumni
banquet.

Eisenhower sent allied tr(q)s

I1

,CU!IJ

'

[9~~\ettiei!iltl and Mi'~ lltJas . · zelda
o1 Wllkelvllle, &lt;!1*" · 11t1ri Neu\zllng,· orpnlil.
· · ihe thanked the temple lor asreturned 'i;uestia.v nlgi.l irtct ~~e$, made~ an ol!lclal . The memorlaiJOrvlceror MrL lllllance tllrlng l!le past year.

GAliON

..W-..Iii•

power?

in New England to start what
was known as 'jThe year in
which there was no summer."
In 1933, a motion picture
drive-In, the nrst of its klrw::l,
was q~ened in Camden, N.J.
In 1944 the greatest invasion
In history began as General

.,

•

'·

~.,. Tt;;dt(j~ifJs
Pythic;m
Sisters
'lr.lt

6'8

---------------------------J

an:l. Veru s.

.!&lt;"~ '

rangement. '

.

ONI.f

I 41

'(I

Mr&amp;. Botdrw, pi,'OII'IIIi chairman, BhoWed OAGC ljldoa on
" 1·1ower Atnll81"-'" ·Tho lt&gt;stru&lt;&gt;Uvo slltiea pOinted out th~
gotjd pOinta 'as well &amp;I 1!10 bad In
maldrw a lioa!diJitl1y llllaneed ar·

'"*,./II

!
!

.:~~

:

di:Y. ,_ ta.'"al,6 ~clO!&gt;l'o

1

•

Officio/. Visitation Made

..,

:.e~.·:::;::~.~~~!:~
o! Mr. and Mrs. Harold Roush.

Q-Where is Mark Twain
NOTE ·ro .. PRO-S.O.S." buried?
~~
Open All Doy Thu-nday
Yes a lew "SiampOUtSteadylng''
A- In the E 1m ira, N.Y .,
11ltll,
buttons are lett rrom the last Woodlawn Cemell!ry.
Mol" St.
Pomeroy
CQtMII, lOlii,
re.()J'der. Those who wouJd ••rathQ-What author developed
er mix than match" (for the
IIC'ICUI, - - · I:IC.
his
abirity as a .wnter U:htlt
present) may get theln by sandserving
a
term
m a pe~Hen·
ing lO cents and a stamped, saJf.
alklreaaed envelope lor each but- tiaTJI?
A-W. s. Porter, better
C~t. John Paul Jones
-kin
to
lli\LEN
BO'M'EL'S
S06
knownas
o. Henry.
\ ~ the only 'CooUnental
CLUB, BOX 9997, Sacramento,
I navaJ Officer tO be VOted 8
Calilornia, 95823.
gold medal by Congress.
The World Almanac notes. Dear Helen:
3
Jones never held rank
An answer to Kathy, the Leap
higher than captain in the
I
(We Are Not Open On Sunaays)
Year scribe: Well saidl
1
American Navy, but lhe
Now, Cor Leap Year as seen
Russians made him a rear·
from the ma1e angle: Fellas, if
admiral in 1788 in their war
a glrl asks you out on a Leap
against the Turks.
Year date, by all means, don't
park, and don't ugo in for a
The Almanac
By United Press International nightcap" afterwards. Am.
Today is Thursday, June 6, member the girl woo kiddingly
aaka you to marry her - means
the !58th day or !968 with 208 to
I
I
It!
!ollow.
1
OpenEvervWeekD•y9:00to7:00 . 1
How do I know'? Pm engaged.
The moon is between ita flrst
- STU.L SURPRISED
Soturday Til 9
1
quarter and Ml stage.
The morni~ stars are saturn
: E. MAIN ST.
. 99Z·3975
POMEROY I
e
e

f

•

or c;arPm,:'• ·Nura•ey Thur ..

Hysell, Mrs. Harold Brown a n d
Mrs. Richard Jones were named
to plan the menu and contact the
members.

•••

L

':,··

I

June 1st.
Final pliUlS were made for a
picnic at the homeofMrs. Walter
Grueser, July lsl Mrs. Homer

~~Y!_2_!!!&gt;_!fL ~_l!_f!_Y_o_l!_~!!l!!_I!,_B_!LL!

\

tour

7"' The Dail~ Sentinel, Pomerox·Mlddleport. 0., Tlllrsday,June 6, t9G3

nature
"

1'he
t1f0U11
wW
-""
'
I
.

"The lnilnlte has wriUen its,
The clW&gt; presented a alii of
name on the heavens in shining coin 11111 to lin. Charles Per·
stars, and on the earth ln tender singer, a 11111. prealdont ot the
Oow•rs."
club. Mr, and Mn. Perslnpr
Mrs. maettnar concloded by are movlrw to Clearweter, f1L,
reading "A Girl' a Broken thelasl oC JIIIIL
Dream" trom the May Issue of
Tbo members and auest were
the Guidepost
Invited to the dining room l'or roA report was given on there- !re&amp;hmOIIII. The table na • .,..
giooal meeting on May 20th at tered wlth a beauti!ul arrangethe Pomeroy elementary schcxC\
Mrs. AlbertPool,Marietta,pres· '\
ident of the Ohio Asaoclation of
Garden Clubs, spoke o! the dll·
rerent projects each club should
recognize am particlpate in.
Mrs. Clair Karr noted that 19
table arrangements were made
for the Pomeroy Al~nl Banquet,

POICH
FLOOI

And now, why don't you go chew
on a bar of soap? - H.

:t t' .,

.

n.owen? It these did not exist,
would oureharaeter,orracultles,
our s~nse of thebeautitul,.our~p.
tltude tor h&amp;Winess, be quite the
sanoo?

FLOOI-CUAID
EIAIEL

print this, too. We are two Jun.

do I do? - FOOL

!'

ANOTHER GOOD VALUE

FROM
lAIII'S aQDGit SHQP

:~~~Y,!~· '"p$

VASELINE

100 COUNT

39c VAWE
NOW

26C

SCOPE
LARGE SIZE
REG.
$1.15

NOW

REG.
$1.49

BEACH
BALL
49c VALUE

NOW19e

�'

'

"I

· ··.. g\
MEWORK' Watel!ing·. Want Ad.s ··a·
.• .\l'lp·
~.

•

A

HeipWam.cl

••"'' A•
INPOQ&amp;AITON
DIADLtWI

...
,...

J Ill·•· DIY ......... ,_llcoiHMII
.......,. .... 11... ' .....

c............

c.r,.......

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

WMI H.,..,.... •HI f '""· fflr

......,..,
,......... ,.. "'"'
rttNt
IHULATIOIIII

.. Nft ...

111'1 .............
............. TIM •lltMr will Nf

.............. w ...,. "''" ....

'"'"'net

lfiMf'HOII,

llATII

,...

fiN' WIM ldll . .rYkl
I ttllfl ,_w.td 11M lllllrt .....
MlftiMUM Chn•.. Uc

II

c.- ,., '""' ,.,.. c.,....

·-~

tift
ll Clfttl " ' WMlll llll ClftNCUII ....
IIIMrtlenl.
..

tt ,., c.M D5tco.at

Mil

Mill

..... ldl paid •'"''" 1f dtp.
ea.•D oF THANKI 6 OIITUAIY
II.JI ftlr If witN mii'IIII'IVfl'l · II.
tiiiiiHttnll wtrf lc.
ILIND ADI

AMHitMI Uc CMf'll

'*

APer•

fl...-.wf, OPPICI MOURI
1:11 1 ,M. to t 1H p.m. DillY
.,11 • ·• "' 11:t1 MMII hturdiY

Notice
WILL DO sewing in my boo&gt;!.
Ma&amp;e anythlllg. Mrs. Carolyn
LewiS, Phone WZ-2271. o.6-3tc
!lAND EVERY Friday from 9
p.m. to 2 a.m. Best band in

the area. Shenang Springs
Nile Club.
~

1\'I.U. CARE lor elderly women
in my home. Phone 742-0711ii.
&amp;-Hlp
THE MEIGS County Fish and
Game Assn. will meet '!bursday, Jone 6 at 7:30 p.m. at
the Pomeroy Gon Cl'!l&gt;. All
members and officer'! a r e
urged to attend this important meeting.
~
SHOOTING MATCH Sunday,
June 9, noon to f. Hams, bacon, baU of hog. Shotguns only, Rutland American Legion

Home.

~

JIM ADAMS Auction every Fr~
day at Rutland will start at
7 p.m. Instead of 7:30 p.m.
Jlm Adama, Auctloneer.
&amp;+41c

''

TERMITES SWARMING' '!bey .,.., re-productlves, not
your worker colony. Free lnapectlons and Information on
crawl space dangera. No
salesman, tow overllead, 511
per cent !8vingll, AIUed Pest
Control, Pomeroy,
Ohio.
Phone 1192-5669 evenings.
~

WILL DO aewlng at home zippel'll, pockets, pegging,
hemming, alterations, etc.
Ml'll. Freddie Thabet, Mason,
Phone T/3-.11151.
4-30-tfc

HAPPY HOUR, Shenang Springe
Nile Clob, 5 to 8 p.m. Mollday lhru Friday. Ladles night
every Friday.
Ullc

WANTED

CASH FOR

Antlqulil. BID
1lamm, Middleport. Ohio.
5-INOic

Wanted To Lease
FARMS In Meigs or Muon
County for oH and gas. Write
to Olaweva Oll and G a 1
Corp., 50S CuUer St., Marietta,
0.
Hf.!Jip

Wanted To Buy
ANTIQUES, furntlure, dlohes,
miscellan09W1. Mrs. Howard
Cecll, 8110 W. Main St.. Pome10)'.
1-25-tfc

For Sale or Trade
JAGUAR for farm tractor. M
• G Food Martel, Rl. 7, MiddlepoJ1,
6-Wtp

STORE EQUIPMENT lor bouse
lraller. M ' G Markel, Rt. 7,
MlddleJXIrl,
~
1118 OLDS, ta, 4 speed, phone
MH'III.
l+ltc

Female Help Wanted
WAITRESS, FUlL or pari
ur..e; a1 to 40; night lhllt.
No ezperlence neeesaary. Ap.
ply ln person, Blue Tartan..

"""'

TRADE COOR
MIAMI (UPO- Defensive end
Ed Cook or the Miami Dolphino
was tradod Wedneodoy lo the
Olkland Rlldero lor an undi sdOIOd draft cbolee.
\
'Cook, a 6-lootA inch, 25{). JP.IDIIer, prevloutiY played five
.)'llrl with the . New 'lork Jets
8d another· tMJ seasons with
~ Denver Bruu:oa.

C;;!•: fnr the year J912 does
1t mjn&amp; ''· ...lc appear on thP

Uberty nlcl&lt;eo.

'RULK.
~.

INFORMATION
NEWS

Roo.----

er, carpeted living room and
TWO BEDROOM trailer. M ·&amp;
blue kitchen. Contact W. C. APPALOSSA STUD aervlce. By
G Market, Rt. 7, Middleport.
appointment, phone 992-6112.
Spencer near the Mt. Herman
8-5-3\p
5-lf..:!Mp
Church, or phone Chester 9853553.
ll+3tp
C. C. BRADFORD
For Sale
AUC'I1oNEE11
THREE ACRES, 5 room house, PURE CLOVER hay ; was not
Complete Servlt!o
new roof, bam, cellar, two
In high water; 18 acres to cut
Write,
Pllone or Cootacl
cisterns and furniture $4500.
In field. Priced right. J. M.
Crttt
Bradford
Phone 742-5613.
5-IS-3Mp
Gaul, Sumner Road. Phone
RadDe. o.to
Chester IIJI5.3832.
6-4-Stp
S I t!c
1957 PLYMOUTH Station Wagon, 'automatic transmission, THREE PIECE Modem Walnut
good condition. Can be seen
bedroom aulte with night 18·
LIOAL NOTICI
at Lou's Ashland, or call II!IZble, one chaise lounge; one
ORDINANCE NO. 380
2039.
5-2Utp
cooco kitchen step stool with AN o•DINANCI TO AUTIIOI;Ih
bact, .,. thfte way table TMI - IMPLOYMINT o• I~ICI ..\.
COUNI!L TO PIILI'AII AND IU·
LARGE HOUSE in Ractn., 9
lamp - 1711 Inches taD. Ph. PUYIII "ROCI!DINOI TO AUTH·
rooms. one third aere Jot,
OIIZI TMI IIIUANCI OF BONDI
TO FINANCII: THI COlT OF A IAN·
good location, 135110. Phone
-·
ll+3tp ITAlY IIWIRA.I IYITIM.
BE JT O"''DAINI:D bJ tbe Council
949-3752.
5-29-12tc '55 CHEVY - $55, phooe' II!IZot the VlUace of POIUI'OJ, Jletp
5210.
6-4-Stp County , Ohio:
SeeUon 1. Tblt the Jaw flrm ot
HOME GROWN tomato plants
Squire, Sanden • DempltJ of CleYefOr garden use: Early Val- FOR BETI'ER cleaning, to Jand, Ohio, be employed bJ tllll vu.
ta,e U IPHIII eotui.HI fOJ" the pur.
Iant, Hines , 1350, Big Red,
keep col0r11 gleaming, u s e POM of prepartac and IUpenitlD.I the
PI'Oeeelllnp of thlt VUJaH required
Delicious, and Improved MexBlue Lustre carpet cleaner. for the Luuanee of bond..l to fllwlct
Ican. Alao cabbage and peptile cod of con.lltruetlnllt' a &amp;lnllai'J'
Rent electric shampooer
"""'" antun f01t the Vlllap,
per plants. Thomas Hayman,
Bater Furniture.
II+Btc
S.c:Uon 2. That for the MI'Yic:u 10
ko be HDCie-red, &amp;&amp;l.d finn th.u bt
Syracuse, 0.
5-M-12tc

•1.

1957 CHEVROLET body and
motor. Phone 843-2777. 6+3tc
19M CORVETTE convertible.

new transmission,

power

BANANAS, !Oc lb., mllk 'l9c a
galloo, bologna 3 lb. fl.39,
eggs 3'&lt;lozen II!Jc. Jowl sliced
3 lb. II!Jc. Dutch Standard
paint $3.59. M • G Market,
Rl. 7, Middleport.
~
'55 CHEVROLET TRUCK, new

8 ply tires with 8 foot utility
bed. Ideal for plumbel'll, pain..
ters or carpenters. J o h n
Krawsezyn, Mlddleport, phone
II!IZ-2717. "
&amp;-5-3tc

paid ftuonable compenuU011., not
tG Dr.41ed M.OOO and t.o ba apprond
by Count11. plua the 001t of lont dlt·
tuM llelepb.one e.U.. ~ll'llb llld
other out-of.poeket tu:pen•ea. Com·
penuUon aball be paid from the pro.
ceeda of wch bonda when lalued, or
otherwlla from tile General rw.t.
Section 3. Thta ordlnante abaU taM
effect IDd be 1D fane from llDill
::.fter the earllelt )lft'tod atlowe4 bJ

.......

.

l&lt;eeping Meigs
Gallia and
Mason Area
Informed As
Well As
Entertained

Alteat: Una

June

1-13

r.

Scboen1411t, C1en.
1te

.... Will a. Cancelletl
Thtl ltturUy lftfllftl D\1• T•
TM tt11t. Ave.._.." Ctnvtll-

O~r

t._ et L.,.lll. atM.

f t WILt. NAYI A PICIM
IALI WIDNIIOAY
IVWNIN•, JUNI l!t'.

Knctts Community
Auction lam

,

.-'

~·

o j

'

•

Rock
Springs

of Eddie Abbott and Bob Blackston ard consisted of two' skits
entitled ' 1Sow' Sam" and "HapPY Henery... Announcement was
made that the new o1Iicen '·•ould
take over at the next meeting to
be held on June 2nd. They are
as follows: President. Connie
Radford; Vice preaident, Bob

Blacks tom secretary, Mary Lou

Sherry BlachsbxL

Program chairman, Tom Balli

1,.

Alfred
Social Notes

HOBSTETTER
REALTY

s,r-.

SUnd.,.

UJ'

,
J'
l('t' ·•:" f ·"'~
,,

·. ·

I'U. RUN HOME AN'

GIT HIM RIGHT NOW

. '' : -~ ,'. !

.

.

·&gt;I . ,;; ,'',

....

.

.

~

.

IRING NEW
'L'IFE TO
YOUR
CARPETING

TIRES
GUAIIANTEED REPAIRED

ASSORTED AlJJUSfMENT
TillES

AU. SIZES

. '-

jfo ""'

Rl'li'H tfte arif:lllll '-•lit' of
CIUIIId ill J~~~ 0W11 ft~llll br Yon llrMir
drJ·IOim 1111tt1011. N~ mull. Na Lilt. No

$12.00

!41,,

......
......." .......
,., ..,..,.
••flfl
c.•·

Ollar, UH IUCI tl!&amp; Nlllll

pltu tax each

~

CLYDE KUHN
TUPPERS PLAINS, 0.
PHQJ':IE 667·3682

IMeltll
·

Mltle

l~t~lttl

It,

t

l

CIHnlll

p_.ny
CALL COOLYIU.I ttNia

=~~tlte~

Larpll Tn&gt;:ln1r:l
Radiator
To · The
Heater c,re. .

BLAEfTNARS · ·

PH. 99~2ua
Affi CONDITIONING Refr!ger..
atlon service. Jaclr'a Refrllerallon, New Haven. hone
88%-20'19.
4 • tfc

Pomll'&lt;!Y .

SAVE SPACE

FREE STOU&amp;E
MOTH PROOFING

READY • MIX COIICTI!Io dellv· SEWING . MACHINES, rep~lr
ered right to YGID' proJect.
service, aD mates. WY IFast and euy, Jl'ne filii. 22M. 1be Jl'obrlc Sbop, I'Dmmates. Phone ~. Goer- eroy, Authorlled Singer 8alas
leln Ready - Mix Co., Middleand Service. We . sbarpen
port, Ohio.
I SO tfc Sclam.
l4l4lr

AIC CLEANEIS ...
Maoon. W. VL

SLIGH THREATENED
10 HARM WENDY
IF 'Jl.IE TRUTl-l
WERE lOl.D.

A«0r iOMY 1e&gt;
OETEPJWNEO 10
CLEAR SILlY"S
~MEWml @

'·

THESOIOOL

EYlNRUDE
tiALI!8 AND SERVICE

AUTHORmEI&gt; .

BEGINNERS
SPECIAL
$295.00
RED FISH BOAT

fiRESTON. DLC 100
NEW TREAD-ILIICKWALL

5.55

MASTERCRAFT
liAILER

Scflwaml Marine

-GUARANI'EEO..

,POMEROY HOME AND AUTO
Barred From Parliament
Roman Catholics were
barred from holding seats ln
Great llritain's Parliament
until 1829, when the CaOtolic
Emancipation Act was passed
allowing t he m to become
members.

The regular meeting of t h e
Rock Springs Youth Fellowship
was held Sunday evening at the
church.
,
The meeting was in charge of
Ule president, Sharon Brawley,
and opeMd with proyer by Rev.
Lemley. the scripture waa read ·
by the counselor, Mrs. H u g h
Bearhs.
Members answt;Jred roll call
by qooting a Bible verse.
Group sl~ was led by Mary

Lou Radford. The treasurer's
report was given b)&gt;cKathy ~
bott.. The program was in charge

•I

'

.•

lii.VIN&amp;V!I

.Y·1ce·.S. ,. ,. . .

I I

Hockin_g~r:tt ~hio

I

PRONB.,._

THIID I Ol.fVI

AssIstant Program chairman.
steering, JXIWer brakes, facLI9A&amp;. IIO'r'ICI
Eddie
AbboUi Recreatlooal chairNcmCI
OF
AJI'tlOIHITMINT
tory hardtop lnchided. Tinted
c.......
man.,
Connie
Radford; Aa&amp;iatant
glass, AM&amp;FM radto, $2350.
lttaN ., JeiMI L. Martf11, DeaMad.
chairman, Judy
NoUee t. b.enbJ liMA l:llat Can Recreational
Phone II!IZ-200'1 alter 5 p.m.
Beerle of RaeiM , Ohio, hu been
STRAWBERRIES.
fOe
a
hot.
Radford;
Netrs
reporter, Mrs.
dUb' IPPCJ1Dted Jtuwtrb of tJM ....
8 6-43tp
Roy W. Proffitt, Portland. tate of J•me~ L. lllutln, deee.ued, Bearha.
Jate of SUlton ToWDifljp, Kelp
PhoM ~3-~M.
~ Couat,. Ohlo.
The meetl"' was closed with
1957 GMC half-ton pickup; also
Cndtton IN nqllind to IDe 1111tr the_MYF benedicUoo alter which
two year old small horse. Ph.
c:lalmt With ukl flducl&amp;r7 Wlthl.a four
gameo were concluct.ed by Mary
moothl.
74HI!S.
~e SAVE 130 or more on alumlnmn
Dateel
tht.
tlh
Clq
of .luae, lla.
Lou Radl'ord.
• boats. All sizes 10-IJ.13-14
r. B. O'BAJDf
Probate .JUdie of •lid tout;,
loot. Cell II!IZ-2147, or 992-6258. liUll 1-l.J.It
TWO NICE re-condllloned up.
•
Alma Slrar!z led the program
5-1Nillc
'"right pianos; cherry flnlsh.
on
"Amerleoos Abroad" wilh
Call Rutland Furniture 742- ONE OLIVER tractor 70, with
several scripture readings and
cultlvatol'll and mower. Good
4211 .
ll+!tc
the
program read by member&amp;,
Bllape. Marvin Miller, Salem
In
turn,
and toJlowed by discuS*
Center.
~
1968 ZIG ZAG portable, slight-'
sion. The hostess served rely used : does everything with.
during the -•ocial
freshmerts
out attachments : In good con- THREE PURE bred short horn
hour. The next meeting will be
dition. $5.9! per month, or bulls. Phone W'lil:esville 66$held Jwte 18th at the home or
full price of $49.80. For free fNf alter 8 p.m. Hollis R.
Sunday School attendance on Ahi18 swartz with Genevtew
Grate.
~ May 26 was 58 witll $15.27 of.
home demonstration, ean 992Guthrie as progt'llll1leader,
Cering. Worship services were
2836.
II+Btc
Sundaf guests o! Mr. and Mrs.
held at 10:45 a. m. with Vere Hobort 5wartz wer. Mr. ond Mrs.
Real Estate For Sale
Swartz, lay - leader, Worship Wald Swartz of Athena, Mr. and
STEREO RADIO rnmblnatlon ;
services were held Sunday eve- Mrs. Cerild Swartz and lamll,y
repossessed : beautiful cab~
lng at 7:45 with Rev. C. N. of Marietta and Mr. and Mrs.
net, like new. Balance due
Watson
of Tuppers Plains, due to Harold Swartz and famt(J' ol
187, or make payments ol
the
absence
o( Rev. casto.
WUttamstown, W. Vs.
15.14 per month. Phone 992The
WSCS
held
its
regular
several local tamUies attencl2836.
II+Btc GEO. HOBBI'E'I'I'ER - f1r*F
meeting last Tuesday evening, ed the llaccalaureate and ComPOMEROY - 5 Rooma, modem May 21, at the home of lliOia
TWO AIR conditioners, washer
bath, paneling, lull basement Taylor with an attendance ot 12 mencement exercl.es at t h e
Eutorn Hlah School. Pa~ Sarand dryer, dinette set, IIO!a
wlth garage, above floods.
members and two visitors.
gent
and Joyce Van Meter of this
couch, two lounge chalra, one 37 ACRE FARM - 20 tractor
•The meeting In charge of Nel- .... graduatod.
auto stereo unit and tapes.
tlllahle, clean. good fence~, 8 lie Parker, preaident, opened by
I&gt;Cr. and Mrs. Clair Follrad
D. A. Milam, 1194 Pearl St.,
room home, modern bath, singing "Count You.rmessl~WJ,"
and
Mrs. Ntns Robinson and
MlddieJXIrl, Phone 99U505.
barn, and other buildings. MI- followed by prayer by Grace Clara Folll'&lt;ld ithuoled the 1\t8-6-flp
nerals.
SWartz. During the bustnen neral of their · uncle, OttO
HELEN aiHI VIRGO. TEAFORD meeting, the changes in omcers Staldera, at Parkersburg.
MOTOII BOAT, %5 hp motor.
Asoodl!ft - .....
and program year were anMr. and Mra. Otto Swartz of
M ' G Food Market, Rt. '
nounced a.g6:ln (these chaflles to Shade recently vlatled Claro Foil·
«*"
Middleport.
8-Htp
8-1-11&lt; take place June 1). '111e MW llot rod and NIM Robinson. '· ·
of rest home patients Wll di!Jioo
Mr. and Mrs. Dole Kul!ri aid
trlbuted.
Family
Nlgbt
ldoa
was
14 FOOT GALVANIZED boat
family of Llitle HocldJW ""'! Mr.
'"•nrence
with oars and life Jackets; 4 AllroMOBD.E Insurance bee1 discussed but no aetlon taken. and !&gt;Irs. Mike WUttamo and
Fidler's Day ldeaa wert alto
pes1011ger. f60. John Kra,..
eanceHed? Lost your operat- dlacussed. The gelatin alluallcn daughtor or Belpre .....t a ...~­
end with their pai'onla, Mr. and i
oezyn, Middleport, Phone II!IZor's Ilcenoe? Call II!IZ-211e8.
and
rug
making
ll'd
otller
lund
Mrs.
MOlani Slrtf.u and attend- .
J717.
S+lte
I II lfc
raising plans were discussed. ed church here,

I

1 ,

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment

Radford; treasurer, Kathy Abo
_
bott;
song leader, Sharon BrawCIIABLI'B W. LDlAJl
ley; representative to the board,
Paued: June 3. 11118.

.......

VOR&amp;

.,

,resents

LOCAL REPORTS
DAILY
AT
7:SO A.M.
12 NOON
3 P.M.
AND
4:30 P.M.

I

Busi. n~ess&gt;~

WMPO

'

'

/

9'a_~

LADY to stay nlgbiB with elder. POODLE PUPPIES, AKC Toy
miniature, $75 and up. Stud
ly lady lD Racine. Call 941service and grooming. Phooe
2965 or 94&amp;-3234
S+lte
19U443.
II I tfc

For Trade

ForS.Ie

LADY lor boUeW«k,, coot, Uve 1866 CHEVY Corvalr; like new,
ln or out, pbone -.1, - . fiJOO. Phone IIIIMIIII. e.utc
tact 0. illDdy over lJberly
Pi'"RTILIZBRS
'lbealre, llllddleport lor inter- . 11161 FORD, ~. 6-eyllnder,
. . . !.ave you time &amp; money. We
can supply mixed fertilizer&amp; a.
view.
&amp;Ute
standard lransmlsslon. -~lll
strai(Cht mat~rials you need....,...or
apply them for yo,u. Call today•
sell chelop. Excellent eoridJ..
lion. Robert Hlll, Racine. Ph.
Auction
949-MII.
6-Ntp
CONSIGNMENT Sale: Complete
Une of farm machloery and
992-2181
household llema. June 15 start- TWO BEDROOM ho,me, bath
665 . 11
flll.l
basement,
garage:
Twoing at noon. Sldehll1 aucllon
year"lid home Jn Syracuae.
Jack W, Caney, Mgr.
on Leo Morris farm, Rutland,
Phone
992-U21.
HHOic
Ohio. Anyone wishing to sell
any item at the sale caU 742Real Estate For Slile
4648 or 742·5817. Not respon- FOUR BEDROOM home on 1Jn.
coin Hill, Pomeroy ; recently
O'BRIEN AND CROW
sible for accidents. Lunch will
remodeled. Large lot: $1.1,11115.
REALTY COMPANY
be served. Terms of sale Call
Lee
Seyler,~
BASIIAN
- I story frame, 1
Cash.
114-atc
6 -S-etc
rooma, 4 bedrooms, bath.
plenty garden space. A buy at
Wanted To Rent
MAPLE STEREO radlo, 11168
$1.100. 00.
SMALL FARM or hoy ooe on
Early American stereo radio MIDDLEPORT- I atory frame,
land contract. Phone II!IZ-5820. combination. Beautllui solid 2 bedrooms, part bath, nice
6-Ntc
state unit with 4-speed chang. lot. 11,9'15.00.
er. Take over payments of f6 POMEROY - 2 story frame, 4
For Rent
per month or balance f99.98.
bedrooma, 2 baths, basement.
TRAILER SPACE, any size, all
Alao, lovely walnut COpiOle
Ideal for large family. $6,900.
utilities, large corner lot, in
with 4 speaker BOUnd system,
WANT TO SEUT
town. John Fultz, MiddleJXIrt,
f speed dual volume control
LIST W1T11 US
Ohio. Phone 992-2319. 0-6-3\c
with AM &amp; FM radio, Pay
HENRY CLELAND
balance fll8.09 or payments
Ollke - lfUIIt
PLENTY of space for one traDof $5 per month. Call !192-3211,
er with all facilities. In Syra.
l-Ute
cuse. Call 992-3904. 4-18-tfc
ZIG ZAG.OMATIC: Well known
Business Services
FURNISHED and unfurnished
make sewing ma&lt;htne has
RADIO &amp; TV repair, reasonapartments. Close to school.
many features . Makes buttonable prices. Antenna &amp; BoosPhone 992-5143.
10-18-tfc
holes, darns, mends, without
ter servi~. John Harrison,
attachments. Sews on a 11
701 Broadway St., Middleport,
LARGE five room and ~alb
types of fabrics. Free home
Uhio. Phone 992-2522, open
apartment, newly derortttF: r1,
demonstration. Pay balance of
evenings.
6-5-301c
furnace heat, Pomeroy.
$42.!18 or monthly payments.
Phone 9fl2-5307.
~- ;-tfc
Call 992-3218.
8-2-6tc
CURTISS
"DAffiY BEEF"
TRAILER SPACE, all utilities STRAWBERRIES for sale. Bl~
breeding service. Call Leland
available. Inquire 156 MulberParker, Pomeroy residence
ly HUI, Ractn..
~1-6tc
ry after 3 or 5 p.m. Write P.
!19Z-226f or call station Tup0. Box 425 Pomeroy, 5-29-tfc 50 r 10, TWO BEDROOM trailpers Plains 007-3251. 6 Uotc

i

"SiaJ:Iag Nadoa"

EEK AND

GASOLINE ALLEY
DO I .'SAY YOU'REO
'THf. 'LISSOR' ~ TWO ~VIl~
OR
. '!HE 'LISiU.E'"
.

&gt;keezix ha~ hi5

folder,
Now
on to

C.med ~r
Orlgloally, a corn wao aliy
amaH eubatanee, especlally a
seed or k~mel. When lieol
was laid ID brine to cure, It
waa apriDkled wiOt ~oms of
coane salt. The orocesa came
to be known ••
the

The Welsh people are 'caned
the uslnging nation" beCause
It is as natural lor Otem· to
slng as it Is lor moat people
to talk. Their famous singing
festivals, I h e Eiateddloda,
have a history of many
beef.
centuries.
.·

the
&gt;ale!

~pe!

No contact~Nina!

Hurr~.
Nina~ We're

Drive on'

awful I~
late I

·'corning" .

...,.,.......,.f
JN Iiii&lt;W'TlNQ

"""""""" '1'0 .

m; JAO&lt;I;T?

.

---·-··· .

Get AcqUcli,n ted
[ '

MONTH at POMEROY MOTOR CO.
r------------------~--

1
I
I

1918 CHEVY 11 .NOYA COUPE
w:

TORQUE DRIVE TRANS., W,
TIRES, BACK-liP LAMPS, SEAT BELTS, EXT.
DECOR GROUP, INTERIOR GROUP, PADDED DASH AND VISORS, PB RADIO, F"R
FLOOR MATS, UNDERSEAL. DELIVERED PRICE; t2,60L3S, PLUS TAX.

I
I
I
I

GET ACQUAINTED
PltiCE .•.......••.•

2295~00

··-----r----------------6

P0~~!E ~R~~~~~~ ~~p ~!!~~!PADDED

I.

..

DASII AND' VISORS, ELECTRIC CLOCK, BLACR F1NIIJH, UNDERSEAL. DELIV·
ERED PRICE, $3,025,20•.

~

I

GET ACQUAINTED

1606.67

!... .,,..,......P.Rh:E••·•·,.·.,·••·.·.·.·.·,.·.,'.·,,·••••••,P•••oo•~· .. ~ ..,~,.,,•••;r:

· ·alltgbl[B~;;~~~c
1lnocnimble lhoilePu-Jumblu,
oM leiter 10 each oquare, w
form' ·~our ordlnu)' word1.

VDOE ..

·

TAKE 'EM
FroM. "fl.('
DTI,~Q SlOE
TH'

,,,,_..,_ n.r,..._,,..,.,
.• .-+': ......... ........

Ample Selection Of All Moclelil, ManyWhh Alr-Cond~lnt

Pr~ and ~Are-Better ·
.

"

'

At Pomeroy Motor ('4 And
I DOI&gt;I'T EVa; ifflOW

WE WILL. NOT BE UNDERSOLD!!

WHO ULA 15 ...

.. .
~

H
\

11$b IN NOW FOI A

BETTER DEAU ··
P:tlll~•roy)} ·
}.

.

· ~ • · Yout Chevy ~~let

.

. .. ,

B

)

�'

'

"I

· ··.. g\
MEWORK' Watel!ing·. Want Ad.s ··a·
.• .\l'lp·
~.

•

A

HeipWam.cl

••"'' A•
INPOQ&amp;AITON
DIADLtWI

...
,...

J Ill·•· DIY ......... ,_llcoiHMII
.......,. .... 11... ' .....

c............

c.r,.......

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

WMI H.,..,.... •HI f '""· fflr

......,..,
,......... ,.. "'"'
rttNt
IHULATIOIIII

.. Nft ...

111'1 .............
............. TIM •lltMr will Nf

.............. w ...,. "''" ....

'"'"'net

lfiMf'HOII,

llATII

,...

fiN' WIM ldll . .rYkl
I ttllfl ,_w.td 11M lllllrt .....
MlftiMUM Chn•.. Uc

II

c.- ,., '""' ,.,.. c.,....

·-~

tift
ll Clfttl " ' WMlll llll ClftNCUII ....
IIIMrtlenl.
..

tt ,., c.M D5tco.at

Mil

Mill

..... ldl paid •'"''" 1f dtp.
ea.•D oF THANKI 6 OIITUAIY
II.JI ftlr If witN mii'IIII'IVfl'l · II.
tiiiiiHttnll wtrf lc.
ILIND ADI

AMHitMI Uc CMf'll

'*

APer•

fl...-.wf, OPPICI MOURI
1:11 1 ,M. to t 1H p.m. DillY
.,11 • ·• "' 11:t1 MMII hturdiY

Notice
WILL DO sewing in my boo&gt;!.
Ma&amp;e anythlllg. Mrs. Carolyn
LewiS, Phone WZ-2271. o.6-3tc
!lAND EVERY Friday from 9
p.m. to 2 a.m. Best band in

the area. Shenang Springs
Nile Club.
~

1\'I.U. CARE lor elderly women
in my home. Phone 742-0711ii.
&amp;-Hlp
THE MEIGS County Fish and
Game Assn. will meet '!bursday, Jone 6 at 7:30 p.m. at
the Pomeroy Gon Cl'!l&gt;. All
members and officer'! a r e
urged to attend this important meeting.
~
SHOOTING MATCH Sunday,
June 9, noon to f. Hams, bacon, baU of hog. Shotguns only, Rutland American Legion

Home.

~

JIM ADAMS Auction every Fr~
day at Rutland will start at
7 p.m. Instead of 7:30 p.m.
Jlm Adama, Auctloneer.
&amp;+41c

''

TERMITES SWARMING' '!bey .,.., re-productlves, not
your worker colony. Free lnapectlons and Information on
crawl space dangera. No
salesman, tow overllead, 511
per cent !8vingll, AIUed Pest
Control, Pomeroy,
Ohio.
Phone 1192-5669 evenings.
~

WILL DO aewlng at home zippel'll, pockets, pegging,
hemming, alterations, etc.
Ml'll. Freddie Thabet, Mason,
Phone T/3-.11151.
4-30-tfc

HAPPY HOUR, Shenang Springe
Nile Clob, 5 to 8 p.m. Mollday lhru Friday. Ladles night
every Friday.
Ullc

WANTED

CASH FOR

Antlqulil. BID
1lamm, Middleport. Ohio.
5-INOic

Wanted To Lease
FARMS In Meigs or Muon
County for oH and gas. Write
to Olaweva Oll and G a 1
Corp., 50S CuUer St., Marietta,
0.
Hf.!Jip

Wanted To Buy
ANTIQUES, furntlure, dlohes,
miscellan09W1. Mrs. Howard
Cecll, 8110 W. Main St.. Pome10)'.
1-25-tfc

For Sale or Trade
JAGUAR for farm tractor. M
• G Food Martel, Rl. 7, MiddlepoJ1,
6-Wtp

STORE EQUIPMENT lor bouse
lraller. M ' G Markel, Rt. 7,
MlddleJXIrl,
~
1118 OLDS, ta, 4 speed, phone
MH'III.
l+ltc

Female Help Wanted
WAITRESS, FUlL or pari
ur..e; a1 to 40; night lhllt.
No ezperlence neeesaary. Ap.
ply ln person, Blue Tartan..

"""'

TRADE COOR
MIAMI (UPO- Defensive end
Ed Cook or the Miami Dolphino
was tradod Wedneodoy lo the
Olkland Rlldero lor an undi sdOIOd draft cbolee.
\
'Cook, a 6-lootA inch, 25{). JP.IDIIer, prevloutiY played five
.)'llrl with the . New 'lork Jets
8d another· tMJ seasons with
~ Denver Bruu:oa.

C;;!•: fnr the year J912 does
1t mjn&amp; ''· ...lc appear on thP

Uberty nlcl&lt;eo.

'RULK.
~.

INFORMATION
NEWS

Roo.----

er, carpeted living room and
TWO BEDROOM trailer. M ·&amp;
blue kitchen. Contact W. C. APPALOSSA STUD aervlce. By
G Market, Rt. 7, Middleport.
appointment, phone 992-6112.
Spencer near the Mt. Herman
8-5-3\p
5-lf..:!Mp
Church, or phone Chester 9853553.
ll+3tp
C. C. BRADFORD
For Sale
AUC'I1oNEE11
THREE ACRES, 5 room house, PURE CLOVER hay ; was not
Complete Servlt!o
new roof, bam, cellar, two
In high water; 18 acres to cut
Write,
Pllone or Cootacl
cisterns and furniture $4500.
In field. Priced right. J. M.
Crttt
Bradford
Phone 742-5613.
5-IS-3Mp
Gaul, Sumner Road. Phone
RadDe. o.to
Chester IIJI5.3832.
6-4-Stp
S I t!c
1957 PLYMOUTH Station Wagon, 'automatic transmission, THREE PIECE Modem Walnut
good condition. Can be seen
bedroom aulte with night 18·
LIOAL NOTICI
at Lou's Ashland, or call II!IZble, one chaise lounge; one
ORDINANCE NO. 380
2039.
5-2Utp
cooco kitchen step stool with AN o•DINANCI TO AUTIIOI;Ih
bact, .,. thfte way table TMI - IMPLOYMINT o• I~ICI ..\.
COUNI!L TO PIILI'AII AND IU·
LARGE HOUSE in Ractn., 9
lamp - 1711 Inches taD. Ph. PUYIII "ROCI!DINOI TO AUTH·
rooms. one third aere Jot,
OIIZI TMI IIIUANCI OF BONDI
TO FINANCII: THI COlT OF A IAN·
good location, 135110. Phone
-·
ll+3tp ITAlY IIWIRA.I IYITIM.
BE JT O"''DAINI:D bJ tbe Council
949-3752.
5-29-12tc '55 CHEVY - $55, phooe' II!IZot the VlUace of POIUI'OJ, Jletp
5210.
6-4-Stp County , Ohio:
SeeUon 1. Tblt the Jaw flrm ot
HOME GROWN tomato plants
Squire, Sanden • DempltJ of CleYefOr garden use: Early Val- FOR BETI'ER cleaning, to Jand, Ohio, be employed bJ tllll vu.
ta,e U IPHIII eotui.HI fOJ" the pur.
Iant, Hines , 1350, Big Red,
keep col0r11 gleaming, u s e POM of prepartac and IUpenitlD.I the
PI'Oeeelllnp of thlt VUJaH required
Delicious, and Improved MexBlue Lustre carpet cleaner. for the Luuanee of bond..l to fllwlct
Ican. Alao cabbage and peptile cod of con.lltruetlnllt' a &amp;lnllai'J'
Rent electric shampooer
"""'" antun f01t the Vlllap,
per plants. Thomas Hayman,
Bater Furniture.
II+Btc
S.c:Uon 2. That for the MI'Yic:u 10
ko be HDCie-red, &amp;&amp;l.d finn th.u bt
Syracuse, 0.
5-M-12tc

•1.

1957 CHEVROLET body and
motor. Phone 843-2777. 6+3tc
19M CORVETTE convertible.

new transmission,

power

BANANAS, !Oc lb., mllk 'l9c a
galloo, bologna 3 lb. fl.39,
eggs 3'&lt;lozen II!Jc. Jowl sliced
3 lb. II!Jc. Dutch Standard
paint $3.59. M • G Market,
Rl. 7, Middleport.
~
'55 CHEVROLET TRUCK, new

8 ply tires with 8 foot utility
bed. Ideal for plumbel'll, pain..
ters or carpenters. J o h n
Krawsezyn, Mlddleport, phone
II!IZ-2717. "
&amp;-5-3tc

paid ftuonable compenuU011., not
tG Dr.41ed M.OOO and t.o ba apprond
by Count11. plua the 001t of lont dlt·
tuM llelepb.one e.U.. ~ll'llb llld
other out-of.poeket tu:pen•ea. Com·
penuUon aball be paid from the pro.
ceeda of wch bonda when lalued, or
otherwlla from tile General rw.t.
Section 3. Thta ordlnante abaU taM
effect IDd be 1D fane from llDill
::.fter the earllelt )lft'tod atlowe4 bJ

.......

.

l&lt;eeping Meigs
Gallia and
Mason Area
Informed As
Well As
Entertained

Alteat: Una

June

1-13

r.

Scboen1411t, C1en.
1te

.... Will a. Cancelletl
Thtl ltturUy lftfllftl D\1• T•
TM tt11t. Ave.._.." Ctnvtll-

O~r

t._ et L.,.lll. atM.

f t WILt. NAYI A PICIM
IALI WIDNIIOAY
IVWNIN•, JUNI l!t'.

Knctts Community
Auction lam

,

.-'

~·

o j

'

•

Rock
Springs

of Eddie Abbott and Bob Blackston ard consisted of two' skits
entitled ' 1Sow' Sam" and "HapPY Henery... Announcement was
made that the new o1Iicen '·•ould
take over at the next meeting to
be held on June 2nd. They are
as follows: President. Connie
Radford; Vice preaident, Bob

Blacks tom secretary, Mary Lou

Sherry BlachsbxL

Program chairman, Tom Balli

1,.

Alfred
Social Notes

HOBSTETTER
REALTY

s,r-.

SUnd.,.

UJ'

,
J'
l('t' ·•:" f ·"'~
,,

·. ·

I'U. RUN HOME AN'

GIT HIM RIGHT NOW

. '' : -~ ,'. !

.

.

·&gt;I . ,;; ,'',

....

.

.

~

.

IRING NEW
'L'IFE TO
YOUR
CARPETING

TIRES
GUAIIANTEED REPAIRED

ASSORTED AlJJUSfMENT
TillES

AU. SIZES

. '-

jfo ""'

Rl'li'H tfte arif:lllll '-•lit' of
CIUIIId ill J~~~ 0W11 ft~llll br Yon llrMir
drJ·IOim 1111tt1011. N~ mull. Na Lilt. No

$12.00

!41,,

......
......." .......
,., ..,..,.
••flfl
c.•·

Ollar, UH IUCI tl!&amp; Nlllll

pltu tax each

~

CLYDE KUHN
TUPPERS PLAINS, 0.
PHQJ':IE 667·3682

IMeltll
·

Mltle

l~t~lttl

It,

t

l

CIHnlll

p_.ny
CALL COOLYIU.I ttNia

=~~tlte~

Larpll Tn&gt;:ln1r:l
Radiator
To · The
Heater c,re. .

BLAEfTNARS · ·

PH. 99~2ua
Affi CONDITIONING Refr!ger..
atlon service. Jaclr'a Refrllerallon, New Haven. hone
88%-20'19.
4 • tfc

Pomll'&lt;!Y .

SAVE SPACE

FREE STOU&amp;E
MOTH PROOFING

READY • MIX COIICTI!Io dellv· SEWING . MACHINES, rep~lr
ered right to YGID' proJect.
service, aD mates. WY IFast and euy, Jl'ne filii. 22M. 1be Jl'obrlc Sbop, I'Dmmates. Phone ~. Goer- eroy, Authorlled Singer 8alas
leln Ready - Mix Co., Middleand Service. We . sbarpen
port, Ohio.
I SO tfc Sclam.
l4l4lr

AIC CLEANEIS ...
Maoon. W. VL

SLIGH THREATENED
10 HARM WENDY
IF 'Jl.IE TRUTl-l
WERE lOl.D.

A«0r iOMY 1e&gt;
OETEPJWNEO 10
CLEAR SILlY"S
~MEWml @

'·

THESOIOOL

EYlNRUDE
tiALI!8 AND SERVICE

AUTHORmEI&gt; .

BEGINNERS
SPECIAL
$295.00
RED FISH BOAT

fiRESTON. DLC 100
NEW TREAD-ILIICKWALL

5.55

MASTERCRAFT
liAILER

Scflwaml Marine

-GUARANI'EEO..

,POMEROY HOME AND AUTO
Barred From Parliament
Roman Catholics were
barred from holding seats ln
Great llritain's Parliament
until 1829, when the CaOtolic
Emancipation Act was passed
allowing t he m to become
members.

The regular meeting of t h e
Rock Springs Youth Fellowship
was held Sunday evening at the
church.
,
The meeting was in charge of
Ule president, Sharon Brawley,
and opeMd with proyer by Rev.
Lemley. the scripture waa read ·
by the counselor, Mrs. H u g h
Bearhs.
Members answt;Jred roll call
by qooting a Bible verse.
Group sl~ was led by Mary

Lou Radford. The treasurer's
report was given b)&gt;cKathy ~
bott.. The program was in charge

•I

'

.•

lii.VIN&amp;V!I

.Y·1ce·.S. ,. ,. . .

I I

Hockin_g~r:tt ~hio

I

PRONB.,._

THIID I Ol.fVI

AssIstant Program chairman.
steering, JXIWer brakes, facLI9A&amp;. IIO'r'ICI
Eddie
AbboUi Recreatlooal chairNcmCI
OF
AJI'tlOIHITMINT
tory hardtop lnchided. Tinted
c.......
man.,
Connie
Radford; Aa&amp;iatant
glass, AM&amp;FM radto, $2350.
lttaN ., JeiMI L. Martf11, DeaMad.
chairman, Judy
NoUee t. b.enbJ liMA l:llat Can Recreational
Phone II!IZ-200'1 alter 5 p.m.
Beerle of RaeiM , Ohio, hu been
STRAWBERRIES.
fOe
a
hot.
Radford;
Netrs
reporter, Mrs.
dUb' IPPCJ1Dted Jtuwtrb of tJM ....
8 6-43tp
Roy W. Proffitt, Portland. tate of J•me~ L. lllutln, deee.ued, Bearha.
Jate of SUlton ToWDifljp, Kelp
PhoM ~3-~M.
~ Couat,. Ohlo.
The meetl"' was closed with
1957 GMC half-ton pickup; also
Cndtton IN nqllind to IDe 1111tr the_MYF benedicUoo alter which
two year old small horse. Ph.
c:lalmt With ukl flducl&amp;r7 Wlthl.a four
gameo were concluct.ed by Mary
moothl.
74HI!S.
~e SAVE 130 or more on alumlnmn
Dateel
tht.
tlh
Clq
of .luae, lla.
Lou Radl'ord.
• boats. All sizes 10-IJ.13-14
r. B. O'BAJDf
Probate .JUdie of •lid tout;,
loot. Cell II!IZ-2147, or 992-6258. liUll 1-l.J.It
TWO NICE re-condllloned up.
•
Alma Slrar!z led the program
5-1Nillc
'"right pianos; cherry flnlsh.
on
"Amerleoos Abroad" wilh
Call Rutland Furniture 742- ONE OLIVER tractor 70, with
several scripture readings and
cultlvatol'll and mower. Good
4211 .
ll+!tc
the
program read by member&amp;,
Bllape. Marvin Miller, Salem
In
turn,
and toJlowed by discuS*
Center.
~
1968 ZIG ZAG portable, slight-'
sion. The hostess served rely used : does everything with.
during the -•ocial
freshmerts
out attachments : In good con- THREE PURE bred short horn
hour. The next meeting will be
dition. $5.9! per month, or bulls. Phone W'lil:esville 66$held Jwte 18th at the home or
full price of $49.80. For free fNf alter 8 p.m. Hollis R.
Sunday School attendance on Ahi18 swartz with Genevtew
Grate.
~ May 26 was 58 witll $15.27 of.
home demonstration, ean 992Guthrie as progt'llll1leader,
Cering. Worship services were
2836.
II+Btc
Sundaf guests o! Mr. and Mrs.
held at 10:45 a. m. with Vere Hobort 5wartz wer. Mr. ond Mrs.
Real Estate For Sale
Swartz, lay - leader, Worship Wald Swartz of Athena, Mr. and
STEREO RADIO rnmblnatlon ;
services were held Sunday eve- Mrs. Cerild Swartz and lamll,y
repossessed : beautiful cab~
lng at 7:45 with Rev. C. N. of Marietta and Mr. and Mrs.
net, like new. Balance due
Watson
of Tuppers Plains, due to Harold Swartz and famt(J' ol
187, or make payments ol
the
absence
o( Rev. casto.
WUttamstown, W. Vs.
15.14 per month. Phone 992The
WSCS
held
its
regular
several local tamUies attencl2836.
II+Btc GEO. HOBBI'E'I'I'ER - f1r*F
meeting last Tuesday evening, ed the llaccalaureate and ComPOMEROY - 5 Rooma, modem May 21, at the home of lliOia
TWO AIR conditioners, washer
bath, paneling, lull basement Taylor with an attendance ot 12 mencement exercl.es at t h e
Eutorn Hlah School. Pa~ Sarand dryer, dinette set, IIO!a
wlth garage, above floods.
members and two visitors.
gent
and Joyce Van Meter of this
couch, two lounge chalra, one 37 ACRE FARM - 20 tractor
•The meeting In charge of Nel- .... graduatod.
auto stereo unit and tapes.
tlllahle, clean. good fence~, 8 lie Parker, preaident, opened by
I&gt;Cr. and Mrs. Clair Follrad
D. A. Milam, 1194 Pearl St.,
room home, modern bath, singing "Count You.rmessl~WJ,"
and
Mrs. Ntns Robinson and
MlddieJXIrl, Phone 99U505.
barn, and other buildings. MI- followed by prayer by Grace Clara Folll'&lt;ld ithuoled the 1\t8-6-flp
nerals.
SWartz. During the bustnen neral of their · uncle, OttO
HELEN aiHI VIRGO. TEAFORD meeting, the changes in omcers Staldera, at Parkersburg.
MOTOII BOAT, %5 hp motor.
Asoodl!ft - .....
and program year were anMr. and Mra. Otto Swartz of
M ' G Food Market, Rt. '
nounced a.g6:ln (these chaflles to Shade recently vlatled Claro Foil·
«*"
Middleport.
8-Htp
8-1-11&lt; take place June 1). '111e MW llot rod and NIM Robinson. '· ·
of rest home patients Wll di!Jioo
Mr. and Mrs. Dole Kul!ri aid
trlbuted.
Family
Nlgbt
ldoa
was
14 FOOT GALVANIZED boat
family of Llitle HocldJW ""'! Mr.
'"•nrence
with oars and life Jackets; 4 AllroMOBD.E Insurance bee1 discussed but no aetlon taken. and !&gt;Irs. Mike WUttamo and
Fidler's Day ldeaa wert alto
pes1011ger. f60. John Kra,..
eanceHed? Lost your operat- dlacussed. The gelatin alluallcn daughtor or Belpre .....t a ...~­
end with their pai'onla, Mr. and i
oezyn, Middleport, Phone II!IZor's Ilcenoe? Call II!IZ-211e8.
and
rug
making
ll'd
otller
lund
Mrs.
MOlani Slrtf.u and attend- .
J717.
S+lte
I II lfc
raising plans were discussed. ed church here,

I

1 ,

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment

Radford; treasurer, Kathy Abo
_
bott;
song leader, Sharon BrawCIIABLI'B W. LDlAJl
ley; representative to the board,
Paued: June 3. 11118.

.......

VOR&amp;

.,

,resents

LOCAL REPORTS
DAILY
AT
7:SO A.M.
12 NOON
3 P.M.
AND
4:30 P.M.

I

Busi. n~ess&gt;~

WMPO

'

'

/

9'a_~

LADY to stay nlgbiB with elder. POODLE PUPPIES, AKC Toy
miniature, $75 and up. Stud
ly lady lD Racine. Call 941service and grooming. Phooe
2965 or 94&amp;-3234
S+lte
19U443.
II I tfc

For Trade

ForS.Ie

LADY lor boUeW«k,, coot, Uve 1866 CHEVY Corvalr; like new,
ln or out, pbone -.1, - . fiJOO. Phone IIIIMIIII. e.utc
tact 0. illDdy over lJberly
Pi'"RTILIZBRS
'lbealre, llllddleport lor inter- . 11161 FORD, ~. 6-eyllnder,
. . . !.ave you time &amp; money. We
can supply mixed fertilizer&amp; a.
view.
&amp;Ute
standard lransmlsslon. -~lll
strai(Cht mat~rials you need....,...or
apply them for yo,u. Call today•
sell chelop. Excellent eoridJ..
lion. Robert Hlll, Racine. Ph.
Auction
949-MII.
6-Ntp
CONSIGNMENT Sale: Complete
Une of farm machloery and
992-2181
household llema. June 15 start- TWO BEDROOM ho,me, bath
665 . 11
flll.l
basement,
garage:
Twoing at noon. Sldehll1 aucllon
year"lid home Jn Syracuae.
Jack W, Caney, Mgr.
on Leo Morris farm, Rutland,
Phone
992-U21.
HHOic
Ohio. Anyone wishing to sell
any item at the sale caU 742Real Estate For Slile
4648 or 742·5817. Not respon- FOUR BEDROOM home on 1Jn.
coin Hill, Pomeroy ; recently
O'BRIEN AND CROW
sible for accidents. Lunch will
remodeled. Large lot: $1.1,11115.
REALTY COMPANY
be served. Terms of sale Call
Lee
Seyler,~
BASIIAN
- I story frame, 1
Cash.
114-atc
6 -S-etc
rooma, 4 bedrooms, bath.
plenty garden space. A buy at
Wanted To Rent
MAPLE STEREO radlo, 11168
$1.100. 00.
SMALL FARM or hoy ooe on
Early American stereo radio MIDDLEPORT- I atory frame,
land contract. Phone II!IZ-5820. combination. Beautllui solid 2 bedrooms, part bath, nice
6-Ntc
state unit with 4-speed chang. lot. 11,9'15.00.
er. Take over payments of f6 POMEROY - 2 story frame, 4
For Rent
per month or balance f99.98.
bedrooma, 2 baths, basement.
TRAILER SPACE, any size, all
Alao, lovely walnut COpiOle
Ideal for large family. $6,900.
utilities, large corner lot, in
with 4 speaker BOUnd system,
WANT TO SEUT
town. John Fultz, MiddleJXIrt,
f speed dual volume control
LIST W1T11 US
Ohio. Phone 992-2319. 0-6-3\c
with AM &amp; FM radio, Pay
HENRY CLELAND
balance fll8.09 or payments
Ollke - lfUIIt
PLENTY of space for one traDof $5 per month. Call !192-3211,
er with all facilities. In Syra.
l-Ute
cuse. Call 992-3904. 4-18-tfc
ZIG ZAG.OMATIC: Well known
Business Services
FURNISHED and unfurnished
make sewing ma&lt;htne has
RADIO &amp; TV repair, reasonapartments. Close to school.
many features . Makes buttonable prices. Antenna &amp; BoosPhone 992-5143.
10-18-tfc
holes, darns, mends, without
ter servi~. John Harrison,
attachments. Sews on a 11
701 Broadway St., Middleport,
LARGE five room and ~alb
types of fabrics. Free home
Uhio. Phone 992-2522, open
apartment, newly derortttF: r1,
demonstration. Pay balance of
evenings.
6-5-301c
furnace heat, Pomeroy.
$42.!18 or monthly payments.
Phone 9fl2-5307.
~- ;-tfc
Call 992-3218.
8-2-6tc
CURTISS
"DAffiY BEEF"
TRAILER SPACE, all utilities STRAWBERRIES for sale. Bl~
breeding service. Call Leland
available. Inquire 156 MulberParker, Pomeroy residence
ly HUI, Ractn..
~1-6tc
ry after 3 or 5 p.m. Write P.
!19Z-226f or call station Tup0. Box 425 Pomeroy, 5-29-tfc 50 r 10, TWO BEDROOM trailpers Plains 007-3251. 6 Uotc

i

"SiaJ:Iag Nadoa"

EEK AND

GASOLINE ALLEY
DO I .'SAY YOU'REO
'THf. 'LISSOR' ~ TWO ~VIl~
OR
. '!HE 'LISiU.E'"
.

&gt;keezix ha~ hi5

folder,
Now
on to

C.med ~r
Orlgloally, a corn wao aliy
amaH eubatanee, especlally a
seed or k~mel. When lieol
was laid ID brine to cure, It
waa apriDkled wiOt ~oms of
coane salt. The orocesa came
to be known ••
the

The Welsh people are 'caned
the uslnging nation" beCause
It is as natural lor Otem· to
slng as it Is lor moat people
to talk. Their famous singing
festivals, I h e Eiateddloda,
have a history of many
beef.
centuries.
.·

the
&gt;ale!

~pe!

No contact~Nina!

Hurr~.
Nina~ We're

Drive on'

awful I~
late I

·'corning" .

...,.,.......,.f
JN Iiii&lt;W'TlNQ

"""""""" '1'0 .

m; JAO&lt;I;T?

.

---·-··· .

Get AcqUcli,n ted
[ '

MONTH at POMEROY MOTOR CO.
r------------------~--

1
I
I

1918 CHEVY 11 .NOYA COUPE
w:

TORQUE DRIVE TRANS., W,
TIRES, BACK-liP LAMPS, SEAT BELTS, EXT.
DECOR GROUP, INTERIOR GROUP, PADDED DASH AND VISORS, PB RADIO, F"R
FLOOR MATS, UNDERSEAL. DELIVERED PRICE; t2,60L3S, PLUS TAX.

I
I
I
I

GET ACQUAINTED
PltiCE .•.......••.•

2295~00

··-----r----------------6

P0~~!E ~R~~~~~~ ~~p ~!!~~!PADDED

I.

..

DASII AND' VISORS, ELECTRIC CLOCK, BLACR F1NIIJH, UNDERSEAL. DELIV·
ERED PRICE, $3,025,20•.

~

I

GET ACQUAINTED

1606.67

!... .,,..,......P.Rh:E••·•·,.·.,·••·.·.·.·.·,.·.,'.·,,·••••••,P•••oo•~· .. ~ ..,~,.,,•••;r:

· ·alltgbl[B~;;~~~c
1lnocnimble lhoilePu-Jumblu,
oM leiter 10 each oquare, w
form' ·~our ordlnu)' word1.

VDOE ..

·

TAKE 'EM
FroM. "fl.('
DTI,~Q SlOE
TH'

,,,,_..,_ n.r,..._,,..,.,
.• .-+': ......... ........

Ample Selection Of All Moclelil, ManyWhh Alr-Cond~lnt

Pr~ and ~Are-Better ·
.

"

'

At Pomeroy Motor ('4 And
I DOI&gt;I'T EVa; ifflOW

WE WILL. NOT BE UNDERSOLD!!

WHO ULA 15 ...

.. .
~

H
\

11$b IN NOW FOI A

BETTER DEAU ··
P:tlll~•roy)} ·
}.

.

· ~ • · Yout Chevy ~~let

.

. .. ,

B

)

�.

). 'I

'

..

"

1
'

•

Now You Know
'

'

at y

Streamers of naming hydrogen known as solar prominences
Qare from the sun to distances
of 250,000 miles or more moving
at up to speeds ot 250 mnea a
secord.

'

I
'

\' .-1

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

Mostly sWII\Y, warm todlf lllld
saturday. High todl1 In BOund
low BOa. Fair, mUd l!mlibt. low
in 60&amp; north, low 70s IOUih.

~g~ct
I

IJevoted To 1'lw lnterNI8 Of The Meigo-MtuOn Area

VOL. XXI NO. 32

Weather

.. .
0-.·~ .'! ~ '0
'1 tf.r eS 0
~

FRIDAY, JUNE 7, 1968

~~
- ~~
· ~·=-------~------~~~~~~~~--------------~~~~~~-------~

i

r: ,....

°

FIVE CENTS '

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

-Thousands Say Farewell to Bobby Kennedy
l'trfecf hllll'l I 11ft

T-hreaten Sirhan

A aub'OII .
..

...

Mens

Slteve

: ·: :

'

\

prefolded center
to close slim

······'

·' ·'· ...

Banlon Sport Shirts

ton. Long tail,
expertly lllilored.

Sllpover style with short aleevea - Solid coloro - Very .
onartly acyled. Easy tD wash. An appreclaiOclllllt.

'Recreation
Leaders
Appointed

5. 91 and 6. 95 ·
. : BE SURE TO SEE ALL THE OTHER STYLES IN MEN'S
: KNIT SPORT SHIRTS IN ALL SIZES. ~- 95, ~. 95, $4, 95.

SALEI

...
....

' .•

lens Dress
Slacks

1.

Wtmbley

..
·.•.

Mens
Sale $5.77
Dress Sluks
$7.95 Mens
Sale $6.37
Dress Slacks
$8.95 Mens
5•1• $7.27
Dress Slacks
$9.95Mens
Dress Slacks ..

::
··

,.

::

I I

eaRl.

Wiener RG:last

ry Phalin IJ&amp;ilted with the parw
ty. RouiKI-robin cards were 1ert
to Keith Bailey, convalesci._ at

NOT OPEN

pi tal.
Attendirw- the wiener

r~at

1

ari:anaed tor your

:.•

Finest q,..Uif steel b)" Queen
~cy, · m ..,.ldm a pocket
knlfl1, pen knlfl1o hunting or

trill, Lara Phalin. Janie and Helena Wyatt, Debbie Bailey, Ricky
Couch, Kelly Then&amp;, Beth Me-

Knillht, George Thompson and
Anna, Jim and John Wiles.

You'll ljl1d a complelll
of ocyles and 1ft oil silos 1ft the
Men's DeporUnent at Elberfelda.
T-shirts - Brlela - Mtcl-l.elllh
brier. - Athletic UndershlrtiAihlleUc Shorts In gripper lront
boxer waist cypeo - Unlm
sulta.
SlQ:I 1ft and select your Dad's
t'lvorlte acyle and please him
with a pit or Hanes Unclerwdr
!rom Elberfeldo.

."
·
.
,

Select the cc&gt;oyour Dod Ukea best. ·.
.: .... :: :·: .

A81ft of Work Clot.ln1·
'

·
.

Select work clolhoa !Or him IIIII yGU"re auro to pleese. Over•
alla, carpenter a or .Pilnters averalla;matchedwork 1ult.s, sld't
sleeve work ablrtl, eov8nlla, work beltl, ausl)81dera, work
caps, alovea.

YOU'LL FINil A mG SELECTION fN ALL SIZES' AND N.\TIONALLY KNOWN BRANDS '!11AT LOOK AND WEAR SO
WElL. SELECT YOURS NOWI
'

Sale Prices on
Summer Porch and
·Lawn furniture

Buy Your

Open House
Is Tuesday

•••New

Lawnmower.

·· cedar 11bles and benchea, foldiJW chairs,
:· "'lngs and other&amp;. And oil II aale prleeL

irO.....

2nd. Floor Fumiture Depatln ..nt

"""cb

HAS U HORSEfOWb( BBIGGS AND S'TRATTON,I!:NGINI!EZ SPIN REG:OIL STARTER - T STYLE CHROME HANDLE

- 'l'IJRBO AC110N lliSCHARGE.
VERY. WELL MADE.\
.
~

Walk

··.·. .

:::
\ '

WHO'S AFRAID OF VIIIGINI
WOOLF?
ElluNtll Taylor
Rlelard Burton

Select solid colora, checkl or
coloriUI plaid pettemL Sileo
211 tD 42 walaL

2. 95 •ncl a- 95

lr PHIL PASTORET

·: .

• • •

PLUS

___ ..,.._____ _
Po1.or Sellers
11IE BOBO ·· ·

Britt Eldnd·Rolu.no Brazzl

Whrn ohe call.! vou a
drone imleod of "honey, •
the honeii"'&lt;JJ'' ir _,..

..

'

·:

..

We wouldn't say our neW..
&gt;or drank too much at tbe

So\T\IllllAY, JUNE 8

.

FEATURE

Jtrr1 Lewla

..

'

•

a1rs

Shorts

..·:·

Jet travel Is wonderful. You
ran fly tc San Francisco in
the time It takes your luggage to get to Albany.

Fathers··llyialel
'

'.

Spea~ing

•'

.!It tl!• 3rd, Floor ·Fu~iture Dlpart,Jne.ni yQU ca~ DAD a ~om.fort.a&amp;lt:'8erltlitit or' KrHbl..- Qlolr ...
R6c~ Loilngers -· ~~~~~ ...
!:wh.r•l Rockers
- Platf011Jt1t~kn
lt.
\.naits. i ·

Dey

GIFT ~ _.

·
:
select your FaIller's DlY cordi ·
1rom the ftne aelecUon 1D the
NoliCXI&amp; Department on the
Flrot Floor. Select Grandad
cards,-

· Make your pit ID Did pretcy
and neat with Hallmark Gill
Wrapping - r lllll rillbeq.
Make your aeltdlont eerJ.y
and be roadr .., Stlnla7, ·
16.

,Vf

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'"'"'

llrlldorld&lt; Craw!Grd

,

more popular than Son. Robert

HIU.
Regarded as a team pll)"er
(Bobby was a loner) Ted heads
judiciary subcommittees on the
aging and on refugees. He has
made the problems of the
refugees of the war in Vietnam
hla major concern.

o\Jthough al!able, smiling and
easy-mannered in the Senatemore so than either of his
brothers- Ted has avoided tbe
llmellllhL At lhe beslnnilll he
waa very cooaclous of being the
Prealdent'a yourwer brother. He
lo still the youJ1Kest member Of
the Senate and remembers.

By George Hargraves, 9Jpt.
Melp Local School Dlatrlet

11 wal 1 greet pleaaure lor me

150 ···attend the grcuncl.brealdnl
cereiiJDIIY. This was CJIIte aood
...,slclerina: the fact that we had

1"l&gt;e 1!'9"' blcl..p!. Doli ll, building.
·•
Culll\ftlt, Gilford w. Turlq,Jolll
As tbe llrat 11rth wuturnJd
A. lllaell, IIQnald E. Wllllanlo, JOU ooold hear the dlatanl ·narold s. Braclen, Jr•.• and Jill' Ill iractora ao 11M.). bepn work
I• ' Pro!!ltt.. 'l'hlrt,y- au. J.o.. '"' tioo lfldlng ol the site. Thlo

·'.

"

ollted •• [lrealiY In tlila project.

ProiecutiDa · A~ Bernard

[lram and l&lt;hool district.
Another porOCXI illlo- neolved
juat public . pralao waa R lc b
Jonea, Hlo llldcJeActl Ill lhlt ciatrlot tn tla oorb' cltJa, hi• help
and 0111alderlllo!l of our edorto
to """(~ the dlllrlet tm~n~ tho.
!!rat critical :voan andhla .....
Ullled tnler;alln ~ prognu
liJm u ~.~ell•

Fultz hal pven uoi!M Joploaolstaneo wllenevor we havo'Mideel It and rocilo~U. Hlall""'''¢ea.~'"' 1111'1 toiot tO FOrt Sjea ilr&amp;dtne phaie IJ tnOYinl ol0111 ,M adVIct hal ilao- Ill eroot
~lor prHnlkelloD 1110'11· well ..... wl.lh n.. 1ar11 ~ o,Biolltl~. ~ ,
Ciil ~-. '""two,flronll•at•lhi!IIIIIWII•
Rep.'!'*IJIII·'wolrir and se o.
', ',· .
, ,
· Ill earth. I will ~--nKIOI( ~It ' Oa!&lt;ltif. 'CC&gt;Illno· bata;,df:llo lit!&gt;ri
· ~1\GE·, A11,UCATIO!I , r~a1'11111i: TtdawlD~IIM.JII\h ~~ ·· ~·~·~ ~
~~!cone .Jolflr"l II, ;"'it, u
~ .19!11!'1V! ·~ ~
· ; '"""" jjle
ttl!).,~., ol ,qr ll&lt;bi'lg)ldllllrlet.. .
l!Utllildo m~•t and,~ •• nll!dlY·~:.,...a.tal ·. . .~"'ijir 1 ~ b&amp;Yt
on JlOI!I:fll •&gt;' Aed ,_,,~;'.i board mem_SueDIIloo,~riiMill;ul..:
, : ~,WoJ\r.re ~~~·!'_,. , ~ flioo:.~ ~Uinta~ bero wonl p'&amp; and dill!ne

1

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~.

·~;f!'-· .;_~

r,
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~ '

... '

·ct/1tl!

,.It,

·~

mm

,,
...,
""P

..-1 •

•

to

~.

{

I

'.
I

APC to Bu ;ld 11\..Tew
Plant
., ~
rDower
~
..,

CHARLFSI'ON _ Construction

It was Ted who told them ol
the assa8sirw.tlon ln Dallas. An:l
It was Ted who had tD tell lllem
of the assassination in Los
Angeles.

ated power plant tn Putnam Coon-

ney and former legislator. For
is to begin fn mid~uly. It tbe past six years he has been
was amouneed here Thurada.r a diree!Dr ol AEP.
evening by Donald C. C o o k,
Grooncbrealdng ceremonies
president of Amerlean FJ.ectric
Power co., and Us subsidiary,
Appalachian Power.
The plant will be located on
the Kanawha RJver 22 mlles
northwest o1 Charleston, three
miles north o1 Scary and OJlllOt;y

Bloodiest
Attack of

.•'!_te ~&lt;f.: ... ~.~ ~, ,

P'irit · WU.l have
generating units capable or
proclJcing 8(J(),000ldlowattseach.
Name of the facUlty will be the
JnltfaliJ' the

two

Dallas Gibbs
Dies Thursday
Funeral serv1ces Cor Dallas
B. Gibbs, 32, Hartford, who died
Thursday morning in C&amp;bel H~
tington Hospital, the third (atalit.Y of a one-car accident in Mi~
dleport on May 31, will be held
Slturdl!" at 1:30 p.m. at the
FoglesOng Funeral Home with

Meigs Declared
Disaster Area
Federal old wlll be asked lor
leases to fanners following rerent rains according to actioo
Ioken by the Meigs Coon\)' Disaster COJnmlttee Monday at
Meigs ASCS Office.
It was reecrnmended that Meigs
be declued 1 dlauter count;y in
regard tD low inrerestloanslrom
ffiA and ld:litiqral ACP tunds
tD assist Ianners with certain
practieeo, where they suffered
dlmlge on crop land due to hoi'l' rolna and aoodlng.
It was estimated that 5oolarmora aull"ered eroslm, loss o1
hay, corn and amall grains 11•
reotlng opproxln!ateb' 1o,ooo
acres. The reeommendlllion was

hall or thla dllllrlct. I have been
1ft school work lor almost two
clecodeo andleansayCJII!folrankb' that Malts LOw has beoo
iorlllnlle tD havo line, dedleated,
hanl • worldng board meni&gt;era.
We look tor word ID - e d
p...,.ela llldor their lllddanee. · lllldemttteetoandthethelllateetlcll~ther ....,.Iaiii
8
1 00
Moar olhoro wwo
w11o
"'
hod 11o1po4 aur·olfortl. Wo tbeo* eommltteo wiD be reported when
11tem !or ,11telr poll &amp;HI-.. a rep!J to reeol~ •
.-1• look torwetd to their ...,..
liiiPed help and~ A
I'OS11CAS'reR NAM£11
~cl!llol ..atrlclll _jiiOPlelllilll&gt; WASHINGTON (UPO- Preaibelo~adlao~-OWiet .. IIMIII dent JOMion aent to lhe Solllle
have IJOIICI ,pitiPII
have ihe 1bursdl1 the IDle 'ol R*rt
IJOIICI )/lloP!o in4 n ,.,. work- ~ •• ~.' lJhlo,, lur canllrdlq fD b!dl,d lfii.'IJOIICI dlatrlel. ~1\onii:POtiiMI..I'I

tilera

'7

'¥•

~·

John E. Amos Plant, 1ft honor ol for the first two units are sched..

ot a $200 million steam-gener- Mr. Amoa, a Charlo- at!Dr- uled lor July 18.

He is survived by one son,
Like Robert, Edward welt tD
Harvard and then to the Richard Allan, and a daughter,
Unlversicy o[ VIrginia Law Michell, both of Cleveland; his
SchooL Ted had to work harder father, Frankie Lester Gibbs,
to get good grades than Ids Hart!ordi his mother, Frances
Brinker Gibbs, Hartford; two
brothers did.
brothers, Lester a n d James,
He probably Is a better Hartford, and one sister, Bett;y
Jane McNamara, RD, Letart.
athlete than they were.
Friends will be received at
Of the four sons, Ted waa the funeral heme !rom 7 to 9
probably closest tD the parents, p.m. Fridl)".
especially to his mother, Rose.

. ..&amp;
land a nana.·. On every occasion !JUbll&lt; recosnltlon lor their great
they have ...,~ ·Whatever and time-eonBUIIIIng eltorts 1ft
we needed, thq were able to ob- the post and 1ft the preeenl oobe-

''
·I

on Capitol

• PROVIDfNG ENTERTAINMENT - The Impacts, 1 bond mode ,.. rl. Eastern lltllh School
students who have provided music at diMer functioo s ln the coun"cy tor the past several years.
will perrorm Monday m,ht at the 25th annual dinner meeting ol the Meigs County Soil and Water
Conservation District at 7:19p.m. in the Pomeroy Junior Higtl. auditorium. The muslcianJ, who work
in several modern musical forms, from lett. are Jean Whitehead, Kirk Cheva1ler, Tom Karr,
Rick Buckley ard Tim Gurnpl - Sentinel Photo.

the Rev. David Fields otftciat-.
ing. Burial will be in Greham
Cemetery.
Mr. Gibbs was born August
16, 1935 in Letart, W. VL He
served in the armed forces and
was a machine operator by trade.

of Schools-No. 44

.

,;•r' ' •

community cookout, but we
do .wonder why be tried to
barbecue' the soup.

,

.

.
'

treahman senator should- qui•
b' and dlmdently, Because ol
thla IJXI his diligent wnrk, he Ia

F. Kennedy e"Ver was

jll ..., our board members tum · tD postpone It ooce and the taln. II was and Ia a aood feelIndUcted IDtD the atmed loreoo !he llrst bit ol ground lut Frl- iround waa cother IOIIIY·
lng tD be oble tD JlUI&gt;Udy thank
at Fort HoyeaiD-COlurnbuiTuoa- dly. 11 marked the ceremonial
We we.-. partleularb' pleesed .these two aonthmoo !Or their
diJ, tho Mo\111 Qloml;)' Solecllve belllmiDI o1 tho long-awolled eon- tD have m our platlorm aoYerol lolenae lntereat ID and valuaService ollleo r1110rted todl,. lllrucllon phase of our hlllh oehool oon.. dlool poroma ,.,., have u- ble aenlce to DIU\ belldint pro-

'

\'

Teddy," turned 36 on George
Washlng!Dn's last blrthdl)". He
is a respected and liked
member of the U.S.. senate.
He was elected to the Senate
in 1962 to tll1 the same seat his
brother, John, had given up for
the presidency. In 1964, despite
a cloae brush with death In a
pllane crash, he weD reelection
lnr a full u.rm b)" on
overwhelming margin.
In tbe Senate, he has behaved
as th'"' ealabllslunent thinks a
'1

Six Melli ....,.cy men were

: ""'"' siyi~-Pncf~~
ndW
on t1ie chli!1·VOU
.·
.
'..
'

PLUS
11IE TEXICAN
Alldlo Jluti1h7

Six
Inducted Tu~y

.'

11IE BIG Wlii'H
(Color)"

UleiiJii lUeD are
"' ~ \U1 , .
--'-'-

I'

I

'

on midtown streets in muggy heat for a glimpse of the undraped
mahogany caskel Hooor guard teams at COW', famUy aOO friends,
stood vigiJ for 30 minutes at a time.
Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, only survivor of the four Kennedy
brothers, sat alone at the 6:00 a.m. (EDT) Mass, the first of eight
said for the assassinated senator during the ~. Two hours later
Robert F. Kennedy Jr., 14, joined an honor guard team that inch~
ed television personality Jack Parr.
Young Kervtedy alternated Jersey and her three children
between clenching his list and kept the nlght.-long vlgil.
running his fingers gently over , 011 want my ehildren to learn
the top ot his father's colflrL that P80l)le must obey rules,"
Occasionally he glanced up at she said. "I want them to aee
the thousands pas slog, weeping, what happens when they don't. u
crossing themselves, even beiKiEveryone referred to the serP
ing quickly to kiss the bier.
ator as Bobby, even the priests
in the service of the Mass for
campaign Buttons
He saw mourners l'l'ho wore the dead Gary Solitro, 21, of
KeMed.Y campaign buttons with Philadelphia, put lt simply: uyou
black crepe attached. He saw hate to lose a man like Bobby."
young .tourists with knapsacks
In Vatican Cicy, Pope Paul VI
on thelr backs. He heard the offered Mas! for the repose o(
shuffle o( a multitude or feet 011 the soul or the 42-year-&lt;lld
the cathedral's marble floor, senator slain Wednesday in Los
Ill• deep throb ol the organ, and Angeles. The pontil! celebrated
the gentle sound or sobbing.
the Mass in his prhate chapel,
"Oh, God, what have they with only his two secretaries
done to you," one woman cried looking oJL
Loudly as she knelt in the llght
But lt wa.11 1n St. Patrick's
of taU tapers to press her lips that the sorrow of the nation
to the caskellid.
was most dramatically demon"Lamb ol G~,
,.... who take s strated.
away the sins of the world,
The Mass for the dead in
grant us peace," intoned a Kennedy's memory began at 6
priest:
a.m., at an altar some distance
As brilliant sunlight poured Crom the caskel As the
through the cathedral's lofty mourners passed by the bier,
stained glass windows to ~ voice of a priest could be
replace the duslcy candle glow, heard.
the line leogthened . lrom Filth
"Let us Prl!" that God wiU
Avenue to ~son_ ~nd _Park, bl68&amp; BQ\&gt;l&gt;l'tlitll!~, tha.\..fu\'1
Avenues.
will bless
8 iiil'Oii • . .
Mourners fumeled lntD the
"Let us Prl!" that God will
midtown area by train, subway, give
the Kennec:b
CamD.y
car and chartered bus, O.lling courage to endure this tryi~
Park Aveme's flowered bor- time , •. " .
dered walks eight abreasL
The bronze doors were swung
Hundreds had waited through- q1en at sunrise to permit
out the night for St. Patrick's hundreds of mourners who
bronze doors to swing opeq at otood vigil throughout the night
sunrise. All about them ~e to enter fm a 5:30 a.m., Mass
reminders of the nation's grl~ lor the dead.
- the Rags run up to haU start,
It was one of eight Masses
the crepe-draped photographs in today for the senator, slain like
Fit'th Avenue store windows, the his brother. President Johns r .
tribute of a few cut flowers Kennedy, by an assassin's
carried by some of the bulleL
mourners.
Damned by s001e as "a
Mrs. Mary Am camp of New
(Continued on page 10)

Reach Important Begjnning Point

g., .

I

Hallmark
F1ther's Dey Clrds

NF
, ORK (UPI) - Passing Robert F. Kennedy"&amp; dosed
comn at .he rate ol5,000 an hour, 1 day-long procession of mourn.
ers said a sad and often tearful farewell to the senator they knew
es Bobby as he lay in state at saint Patrick's Cathedral.
The great and the humble, 10111e lugging shopping bags and
others carrying cameras, stood patlently in line for nearly a mUe

Ted Will Try to Pick Up the Torch

59.95 ·

!

New ol!set printing racUIUes
am the area'! mo.11t modern
newspaper plant w111 be on disploy Tuesdl1 m,ht when the Ohio
Valley Publishing Co. conducts
its open house between 1 and 9
p.m.
By United ProBS lnternaUonal
The comJ811Y's ne" J)llnt Is
Ted Is the only one Jell.
located at 825 Third Ave., Gal· •
01 Ambassador Joseph P.
llpolla.
Kennedy's tour sons, his hope!
Publisher Richard S. OWen 1~&gt;­ lor whom were unlimited, onb
vlte• the ptJbllc tD attend Tues- the YOOJlKOSt- Sen. Edward M.
day's •n house and "see hoW Ke11118dy, [)..Mass.- survives.
rour dilly and Swidoy newapopera ' Two havo been murdered by
.. are printed.*' Th~re will be prtz-. aBIIfiBins lnd the third died I
os and relreshmenta.
hero In World War IL
A apecial maga:dne section
Now ll lalla tD Ted tD plctow
·will describe the ol!sel (cold the t&lt;&gt;rch ao tragically knocked
· t y p e) operation In Sunla,y's trom the honda ol his three
Tlmea- SoaUnel.
older brothers. Being a Kenn&amp;The new block structure, which cb. am the son of a man who
contains 8,600 square ·feet ol expects nothing less, he is sure
floor space, was bullt last ~ tD try.
mor. Woril was completed 1ft Nt&gt;Ted, who hates 1A&gt; be called
'V8111btr with the IDitallatlm of
tho CCllllpany's now thre....mt,
24-pogo OIPIIelcy .Gou Urbanite
atlut web led preaa • .
" .. Membenolt!II&lt;DIIIjlll\l''rvartoua deporim.,., 11111 o~n
J1lant operations 'II&gt;Mioi!Dra.

Crowds Wait in Line
Nearly a Mile Long

Son of a Man Who Expects Nothing Less

ludMimetlc21" Rotary MoWer

MENS

IIA R II S

JUNE~-7

I

Q

For flthtrs Dly

... •.•.•.

Sheridan, Jeonle and Jill Cot-

I!OUBLE FEAnJRE
WIDner of 5 Aeodemy Awarda

DOOJiLE

Pocket
Knives

..

Sale 3.15

were Christina, Anita and Marla

.
TONIGHT·FRL

I

realb' pleeoe Dod will•fl
pit that'&amp; practical IJXI
· needed. S..ve Creemo, Tooth
Paste, After Shave Lotlam,
Razor Blade~, ~ora, Tal·
Pow4er' Hair Lotlona
Cnlma. StA&gt;p In - All :

Tour Offered
At Twilight

t3.95

tient at Veterlnl Memorial HQ5.o

FJUDAY AND SATUHDAY
TilE GLORY S'fOMPERS
(Teelmlcolor)
Demla "-&gt;"• Jocly McCrea
PLUS
TEN LITTLE fNDIANS
HUll&gt; O'Brien, Slllrley Ea!Dn
SHOW S'T ARTS, 7 P.M.

I

.··' '.....

FATHER'S DAY COSMETIC
AND TOILETRY GIFTS

Bu1 Summer ftlmlturo lor Did on his llo7. C'-lao ·' - ' •

,•

o ••• , •• o •••••• o • o •

·····== ....

··'·

Sizes 29 to 38 waist measure.
50 per cent Fortrel Polyester 50 per cent Combed Cotton. Permanent press - Soll release Popular r.st back style. SoUd
colors.

home after bellll hoapltalbed,
and Mrs. ouver Michael, • p&amp;-

1'0iiiGIIT' JUNE 6

•

.··:.·
·.·.
·..
:::

Fast Back
.letns

A wi'lomer roast was held Tuesdl!" at the heme ol Mr. and Mra.
Orval Wiles for the nursery, kh~
clergarten, prlmlry and junior
clasaes of the Pmneroy First }•.
Blptlat Clairch.
·.·.
Mra. Tbome Cottrill, Mrs.
WUliam Sberlda.n and Mn. Terw ::

other Men's Pajamas ••••

::~!: l:::~~;,,!~:~;:!::JI~~n:s:hlng::kni::~:~,~~~~~~~~-

Young Mens $4.95
Perm1nent Press

Held Tuesday

2.95

ua•erw••r

·::.:. ·'·. '.:::.:: .

:·:

: and petiOrna.

Han••

Sizes omall (14-14 1h neck),
medium (1:&gt;-JS'h neck), large
i6-16'h neck) and extra large
(17-17"h neck). Solid c&lt;&gt;lors,
plaid•, stripes ·ani checka.
T~red IJXI 11011 tapered
scyles. Wldelljlreod or buttDn-down collars.

·:

tile

SIZES A, B, C and D. Select hla correct ot.. tn
Men'•
: Department - Firat Floor. Full cut lor mulmum eomtorL
: AdJustable gr~R)tlr, ....,r WllaL Colt ocyle top. Smart lltj&lt;lea

....

2.95

Plllla tor IDipecUon tD be
hold F~ n1J11t at 7:45 p. m.
were .Dade when Pomeroy ChiP..,. 186, Order ol lite Ea.otern
Star, mt\ Tuosdl1 niilht It tbe
i'lllnero)' Masonic Temple.
Mra. con Webb. deputy griiXI
matron of Diatriet 25, wu preson! lor a p&lt;e-IDipecUon viaiL She
will be tbe Inspecting olllcer.
lllthryD Jc.dan IJXI Jomea
Soullby, worll1j&lt; matrm and
wortiiY potrm, hid charge or the
moedng wllleb lnclllled dnJJIIlK
or lhe cbortor lor • past grud
'llltrOII, llaniot ReiD. lnldolim
wu •liiiiUDCed ror J u1y.
A 11111 '"' Halmln Hlllll'a pictun, "Liatrt ot the World," wu
P"" b)" Mra. Webb. Refreal&gt;_ , wore oerwd lollool111 the
meollng by Marjorie cr... and
Corolyo 'lbomu, with Nell
Gro..o, Knlllht, and Ulo
Volilek 11 contrlbutlllK hoot-

·· Mens.Palamas

1..50 and
3.00

Sport
Shirt

.Be on Friday

-::•:.··

Ready-tied ties and Foor
in Hands, too. A big &amp;election. Patterns and solid
colors. Free gift box with
each tie.

Give D1d A

·-Reception to

aelecUon ol leather&amp;, colora ud etJles that' a a1D'e to plea~e.

• F1ther's D1y Giving

Brain Had
Extensive
Damage

Two &amp;rracu&amp;a men were named tD head committee• managIng the munictj!al park program,
town counell cleclded ThursdlQ'
nii!IJt.
Ml)"or Herman Landon, with
LOS ANGELES (UPI) - LOs
awrovll o1 alUJiell, appolr1tBd
Angeles
County Medical ExamiWOllam Hubbard as boll lleld
ner Dr. Thomas T. Noguchi said
program eoordlna!Dr lor 1968
ThursdlQ'
that the brain ol Sen.
and Fred Morrow as baseball
Robert
F.
KeruJedy had sullerlleld 1i8Jrtlng committee ebalr1
ed ' extenslve damage" trom the
maa. Both men will aerve oo. a
assassin's bullet
Yoluntary besls.
Noguchi, who released t h e
Counell also dla..,aaed at
preliminary
!lndlngs ol the sixlength the clevelopment ol the
hour autopsy performed on Kenpark and ·ol!lclally recordod Its
necb''s
bOOy told a news conferawreclalion tD Denver Paraoos,
ence
that
' 1 scattered fragments
~racuae Flx-lt !11011 owner, and
or
the
bullet
and bone tissue
other periOI\8 who have volundamaged the main portion ol
teered help.
the right side or Uta brain."
Getnlnc Interest ol more citiThe formal bulletin said: 1'The
zens 1ft ·the clevelopment d. the
cause
of death is ascribed by me
10-aere park tract IJUreblsed by
Meig1 County commercial veg- as 8 gunshot wound or the right
the ·town last year waa abo disetable growers ace invited to mastoid penetrating the brain.
cussed.
Join a uTwutght Clbbllp Tour" Complete findlllgs will he conThe pl&amp;Ylni aree was reportnext Monday at 7 p.m. at the talned in the official auiopsy reed neerb' oompieted and readY Vegetable Crq&gt;s Branch of the port."
!or l'lln)' Loque, Boys' League
Ohio Agricultural Research and
Noguebl said secondary eiand Amerlean Lesion team Development Center, Devola,
games.
Ohio, between Belpre and Marl- leota, lftcludlng bleeding and
pressure -~ U\41' brain stem !.r 9m
II other actlvtty, councll de- etta.
swelling ~ the brain, were rnadeled lo arrange llltohlllll work
Cabbage varieties and fertlli· jor factors in the cause of death
dqne lhla summer olmg vlllago
ty levela will be discussed. The rather than the actual penetrastreets, agreed tD haVe weeds opportunlcy will be given to see tion ol the .22-callber bullet.
along the atreeta eullmmedlateAll vital organs, including the
b', and wa,rned reslclenta against all of ttle vegetable crops now
being grown at the station, ac.. enUre brain, were removed from
allowing dbla tD run loose.
cordlrw to C. E. Blakeslee, coun- · the bociY lor further pathoioglAttending were Ml)"or Herman
ty extensioo agent.
cal examination here. Hwulreds
London, Clerk -Rlehard DuckResource people include Dr. or color pictures were taken.
worth, Treasurer George Holman Walter Brown, OARDC; Or. Free-and Councilmen Allen Upsoom, man Hcnveltt, OARDC; Harold
Troy Zwilling, William llaTes, Race, Farm Manager, and WilArthur Sylvester, Glom Cundll!, Ham Brooks, Extension SpecialMEIGS GENERAL HOSPITAL
Jr., and Robert Wingett.
ADMISSIONS - Edward Stiles,
ist. Vegetable Crops, 0 h I a
Middleport.
state University.
DISCHARGED - Edilll Rice,
C. J. Cunningham, Jr., CounHennan Warner. Robert Cornell,
ty Extension Agent, Agriculture,
at Marietta, is plaMing the tour. Frank Halliday.

: See tbe complete line ol BuxtDn BW!olcla lor men - La.rp

S..Ovrlig
Selection For

~6.95

Eastern Star

removable
card-photo case
snap

Ties

:•.

Special Father's Day S&amp;le of summer
weights and year 'round weights ror
men ard young men. Waist size 29 to
44 ard extra large sizes 46 to 50. Solid
colors and neat patterns - Most all
are permanent press.

....
\

Kennedy.
Sherltr's otl'lcers tightened
aecurlt.Y at the Los Angeles
Coun\l' jail 1ft respoooe tD
telephoned threats tD storm the
jail and kill the 24-year-old
Jordanian lmrnlgrant. They said
the callers Bald they would risk
anything- oven cleath- tD eliminate the man they believe
ldlled Kennedy .
Sheri!! Peter J. Pltchess said
Sirhan, captured WednesdlQ'
morning at the Ambasai.dOr
Hotel alter Kermedy was leiled
by a bullet In the braiD,
remained ootwardly calm and
u n co n c e r n 0 d. The aUght,
swarthy race track exerelae boy
and health store stock elerk was
CCXIIIDed tD a 1:-by-12 windowleu cell in the remote hos}dtal
wing o1 the downtown jaU.
PrOtect Accused
The extreme coneern over
keeping Sirhan alive eonvlneed
Dlst. Atty. Evelle J. Younger to
ll" tD the · grand jury lor the
indictment, rather than followIng tho normal proeedUce o1
ftling a formal murder complaiDI.

LOS ANGELES (I!Pll- A
Calllornla grand jury assembled
today tD COII&amp;Ider a r~~q~est lor
a murder Indictment against
.llrhan Sirhan, the accused
assassin of Sen. Robert F ,

CHICAGO (I!Pll- The chairman o1 the Republican National Committee ThursdlQ' suggested "a second look at the
mathoda ol campaigning" 1ft
light ol the asaanlnalion or
Sen. Robert F. Kermedy.
Ray BUss ol Akron, Ohio,
en route to Washington from
committee meetings in Portland, Ore., said, "We must
safeguard
the candidates
from people who are distorted and want to ld.llaomebody,"

.. -

·AJIMaoe
SAIGON (111'1).. The VIet
Cong today . laund!ed their
bloodiest rocket attack or the
war against Sllgoo. Explosions
ringed the presdent!al palace,
killed 25 per8(Jils, woonded 46
more and destroyed '1:1 holidblga.
Military spokesmen sald the
16 rockets did more damage
than previous terror barrages of
100 or more shells.
n marked the seventh day ln
a row ot terror shelling at the
c81)ltal. Guerrilla defectors and
captured VIet CCXI8 documants
&amp;aid the attack on Saigon Is
designed tD strengthen the hand
of North VIetnam in preliminary peace talks with the United
States in Paris.
Nine ol the rockets exploded
within a mlie ol the modem
marble palace and several
within half a mUe.
Rocket Hits COOrch
The rockets hit' a Roman
Catholic d!urch, a hospital and
the olf1 COB ol JnternadonaJ
c...tro1 Commission (ICC), the
lndtan.Canadlan-Pollsh agency
set up tD .,...rvlae peace
provisions or the 1954 Geneva
trealy oo IndOChina.
The hospital blast killed two
persons and wounded four. No
casual'tle.11 were reported ln the
church or in the ICC headcJ,Iarters.

Complotml

or

the first 800,000 ldlowatl 111111 Ia
piamed lor 1971, will! the aoeond unit lo be completed eight
months la!Dr.
The plant, he said, will be
fueled by coal .....undor
contract !rom ~ minIng ~·· In Soothem Woat
Vtrgjnla_
lAwrence H. Llevlng has '-t
named resident engineer lor construction d. tho plaut. He oDiy Ia chttf al".cM'I· ..........
lion at the Cardinal Jllant "'
Ohio Power Co., a sister utJI.
Icy d. Appalachian withbl t h e
AEP Ill' stem.

Athenian Fails
To Make Curve
The sheriff's department investigated a one-car accident at
4:55 p.m. Thursday 3.3 miles
oorth ol the RooU&gt;s 124 and

7 junction on Route 33.
Richard Herderson, Athens,
traveling north, tailed to round
a curve. His 1966 model vehicle
went into a tleld, caush~ eoosiderable damage, No arrest or
injury was reported.
The depactment also returned
Lonnie Frazier, 70, Middleport,
from Lima state Hospital to the
county jail. Frazier wu taken
to Lima sometime ago alter IJeo.
lng charged with felonious a ..

-·~
Eastern District
Receives $3,158

WASHINGTON - Congreo..
man Clarence E. Miller.,.....
ed Monell)" that tho Olllce or
Education ol the U.S. Depart..
msnt of H.uh. Education and
Wellare has IIJilroved Federal
assistance ror the Eastern t..
col School District ol Nelp
Teenager Suft'ers
Coonty.
The Eastern Local School DloBrain Concussion
trict will receive $3,158. \1nder
the provisions ol TIUo 1 of PubThomas ~ncer Gumpf, 15, lic lAw 874.
Chester, was admitted to Hoizer Hospital at 5:45p.m. TlairsdiJt with I cerebral concussion.
-e·
He was ll\IUred when he !ail olf
GAUGES - Galllpolla, 11.1
Ids bicycle. His condtlioo Is r&amp;- and 22.4 'rlnllnl 36 IHt Ill rollported aa aetlslac!Dry.
, ora; Pt. Pleeunt, 25.10; .._..
Terry Lee Pierce, 11 , Rad- 1 roy-Muon, 23.20; ~ 2.80
ell!!, was admitted to tbe hos- · lalllng; Konawha Falla, UO r.llpita! 11 4:SO p.m. Thursdl1 with tng; Charloslon, lS.to r.111111.
1 laceration or 111e eye. He wu Loolllon, and Marmot are 00 lilt .
hliured whllo ploytJW at heme. alllo Wlllllald, l'UIIIIarl 2 flet Gf ·
Hela reported In aond ....nuon.
. rollera.

River Ganaet

WlND3IIIEUI BROK!II

, - EI,EVEN GOIN9
·
Tho Slaii -R~c~••~v~=~i~~
Elevon \lelgs Couoi;J laichon .. ~ a
wiD llllend IIIOCial tduelltiCXI · oeel- 11 11

111. m, lhn~VI~~ Ololo Ulllm'~ ••t or
All~::~~
Leteat n
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