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Weather
8 -

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Dally Scnlhwl, l'omcroy.Middleport, 0 .• Morlla,y, June 10, 1988

Nina, Pinta, Santa Maria
About to be 'Torpedoed'
HOLLYWOOD (UPJ)- Director Edward Dmytryk leaves lor
!lab' soon to lire torpedoeobelatedly- lnto the hulls o1 lhe
Nina, the Pinta and the Santa
Marla.
He's making a super epic
biography o! Christopher Columbus.
Dmytryk apent the last five
years researching the man who
discovered the Western Hemisphere and has come up with
some conclusions that will curl
the hair of Italian patriots.
"COlumbus was a bungler, a
con-man, a ladles' man and one
of the great liars of hls time,"
the directQr said.
A guy with a Ukranian name
o! Dmytry has a lot o! gall
putting
the
rap
on the

TONIGHT AND TUESDAY
June 10 • 11

OUR MAN FLINT
Jllmel Coll)ura

PLUS
IN LIKE FIJNT
James Colburn

discoverer of America, but he
says his movie will tell It Uke it
was back in the 15th arid 16th
centuries.
"Columbus was a very , bad
scientist," be said. ~•11Jat•s why
he discovered America. The
best scientific minds of his day
alreatb knew the world was
round.
Calculated Wrong
"The difference between him
and tlle others was Utat he
!igured China was ooly 3,500
miles from Europe across the
ocean and the otllers knew it
was at least 11,000 miles.
Thanks to Columbus' miscalculations, he made it safely to San
Salvador."
Much d. the picture, which
will star Marcello Mastrolana,
will debunk the Columbus cl
American textbooks.
"There never was a mutiny
among his crew," Dmytryk
said. u Nor were his men
cutthroats and convicts. History
shows onl,y four of the crew had
been taken from jails.
"And it is a phony story that
Spain's Queen Isabella pawned
her jewel s to send Columb~ls on

his first voyage. "Actually the

MEIGS TIIATU
TONIGHT AND Tl!ESD ,\Y
June 10 • 11

COOL HAND LUKE
(Tecbnicolor)
Paul Newman
and Geo. KeMedy
COLORCARTOONS:
Fastest Car in the World
Rodent to Stardom

SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.

whole trip cost only $14,000."
At those prices he was lucky
he got out of port.
Dmytryk will trace Columbus'
life from the time he wa s a
child in Genoa until his desth.
"A lot of our study has come
from Columbus' own kournals,"
Dmytryk e x plained. "He
cooldn't read or wrlte until he
was 21, and then it was
Portuguese, not Italian. His OM"l
papers are full of outright lies,
contradictions and the coloring
of the truth.

tries.
urm going to show him as a
human being wllh all lhe !aults
and !olbles o! a !lesh and blood
man ."
ian 't Dmytryk a!raid the
Italians will tar and leather him
lor
lambasting the great
explorer?
•1No . He Is more a Spanish
hero than an llalian bero. Alter
all, it was lor spain I h a I
Columbus saUed aDd made his
three discoveries and landings
in the New World.
"Which brings up another
point o! his bungling. lilstead o!
bringing hack guld, he returned
to Spain with corn. tobacco and
Indians. That didn't set too well
with the q.~een.
•• After his second trlp- which
didn't produce any gold either-·
the king wanted hi s nutty
navigator thrown into prison tor
debts and a variety of other
reasons. He eventually was
imprisoned, but that wa s after
his lhlrd trip.
"His third trip was made at
the insistence of Isabella who
j ust wanted to get him oot or
the way. And history records
Utere might have been some
romantic h~~ ~
Christopher and Isabella, too."

REAL SWINGER, Danielle
Laine demonstrates the
form sbe used to wiD at the
Seeond NaUonal Festival of
Freneb Majorettes lD Nice,

France. Danlelle, ZO, was
~rowned. queen of baton

--

•

2 Cycles Normal and Short

• 3 .W~ih Water
· SeleCtions

II

• 2 Ainse Water
Selections

• 2 Spin Speeds
• 2 Agit!tion Speeds
• Stainless ·Steel Tub
• Matching "Silver

lining " Dryers. Too

Model MA690F

248.

5

A 1"'"11 driill witll 1 cor of
his own his 1 ri1ht to fool
flllotr prOIHI.
Unlortunottll, this pride
cen ond sometimes does llu
tile form or sllowinc oft llld
lsijnl chances. In such mes,
• cor becomes primlllll 1 1111
to lloYe fun wilh.
M1n1 IOUn&amp; people, ol
have excollant driYinl
records. The! know th1t on
automobile is dofinlloiJ not 1
1111. It's 1 powerlul rnochino
witll tile .....,.lrottd ...,...
ity to Wll and llllim.
Ytt, bt prOIHI o1,.. car ...
but, II tilt limo, ' - '
ot and operate il with care rtstrllnt llld inltllifenct. '
Perdoo tile prucllinc. 1101t
wo ~n lo tllink lhlt drif.
ina il serious bulintlt.

course.

Dlvls-Wa,..llll.
Phone 992·2966
114 Court St. PomWoy

MIDDLEPORT, 0.
DON'T
FORGET!
For LadW. Only

Special Shopping
Hours:
6:00 to 9:00 P.M.
1 r~uRs., JUNE 13

I

News, Notes

Gallipolis, 12.0

J'OY-MaiiOil, 21.60; lllnton, 2.10
stat.; Kanawha Falls, 5.30 !ailing; Charleston, 18.80 rising.
London and Marmet, are on the
sUI; Win!leld, running 2 !eet o1
rollers.
CALL ANSWERED
The Pomeroy emergency IQl8d
answered a call to the Elmer
Still residence on Nye Ave. at
12:47 a.m. &amp;mday from where
Still was taken to Veterans Mem.
orlal Hospital, given medical
treatmmt, and discharged.

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LINE OF DUTY - TIU'olfsb closed door, ell.)' pairOiman Gary E. Wallace 'talka toJimes p
llalley at 752 First Ave. aboot a blt-aldp accident saturday night invulving Halley'• car. ~
alter this picture was taken the o!llcer waa admitted to the house ani Halley surrendered a revulver to the policeman. The time was 12:45 L m. Sundey, The other patrolman, on the rl&amp;ht Is
John Altizer.

the 1-·'1.~ afternoon parade,
Word..of~mouth can help make
Heports o( committee chair- which begins in Middleport June
a su CCe ss of the Big Bend Re- day in a C of C business rnoet.
21 at 1 p.m., should make known
ing following lunch at Dailey' s men were heard and general
gatta Weekend June 21.22-23.
their intentions to participate by
planning advanced .
This was one of the methods Rcstaurnnt. Said Carsey:
It was pointed out that organ- contacting Chairman Tom Cas"We nood to give word-Of •
Regatta Coordinator and Pre sizations, bu sinesses and indi· sell . There will be an estimatIdent of the Pomeroy Chamber mouth puUidty of the regatta viduals planning to participate in ed 29 t~e presented
ol Commerce Jack Carsey urg- to fi-lends and relatives wherev .
in the various clas ses of t h e
parade competition. •
John Kerr, chairman of the
\''t'
rock 'n roll show reaturlng the
. \group, "Your Lovin' St. Bernard," said arrangements for
this part of the Friday activities have been confirmed and
the group will appear at 3 p.m.
and again at 7 p.m. The band
is also expected to participate

to the fullest Mon- er they may be ."

Dies Saturday

ELBERFELDS

Ray Trial

Father's Day

Is Next Sunda.r

HOSPITAL . NEWS

June 16th
Ladies &amp; Girls Pie•• Rncl:

0~ Thursday night this week. New York Clothing
WIU turn the store over to you for easy sh~l

ger, Rl. I Albany; William E.
Henry, Jackson; Mn. Richard L.
Pullin, St. Albans, w. va.; Mro.
llenry J. Mozzl, Riverdale, Dl.
Births
Mre. John F, Aelker, Rt. 1
Mlcldleport, daughter, 9 :55 a.m.

That~

Bartlett, Mra. Verne c. Blazer, Frederick V. Bouie, WU·
Uam A. Brewer, Mra. Joaeph W.
Clark, Mrs. Joseph F. CUmlng.
ham, Wendell J. Ervin, Orria G,
Fisher, Otia J. Jolm!oo, Dennis
P. Martin, Amette Miller, Mro.
Clarence C. Myers, Mra. Gilbert R, Planto, Mrs. Earl R.
Plummer, Mra. AudreY Poore,
Delmar W. Rhodea, Mra.
liam L. Rollins, Robert L, Soxem, Jr., Mrs. James L. Sm.Jth,
Mrs. Ralph G. Smith, Mrs. DoDaid B. Allen and ln!ant om, Mrs.
Michael II. Dum and 1n1ant lion,
Mre. Robert E. Law""' and inCant twin daugbtero, Ray Barker,
Joeee D. Beckett, Rufus R, IJu.
pre, James F, FooN, Mra. !IIerman L, Leeob', BUI,y B. Matthowa, Chrlllllpber.Pollho', Mra.
Cecll D. Price, Avery Wllllama,
J. Waldo Wileman, FAlwanl G.
RQDOlda, Mro. Stanley R. Lamley and ln!ant dauahter.

FREE GIFTS - D001. PRIZES

3 - $10.00 GIFT CERTII1CATE.~ liven away at
9 p. m. No purchase neceasary, Free registration.

New York Clothing House,' Pon.or

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9(,11?'

-0

~ ut\OERFOot

srf.\\\~

Jerlu loclo
otCreelane
Acrylic Fiber

wu.

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Bill Mayer, chairman of the
Fred Crow. chairman of the art show to be held tn the St.
Frog Jump contest , SaJd nlcm · Paul's Lutheran Church, said a
bcrship cards for the Society large display will be avallabl~
for the Promotion or Bull Frogs, tor art lo-ver~J and only a free
In c. , Meig s Chapter, will go on wUJ offering will be accepted.
sale Wednesday morning, Per ~ Ladies of the church will serve
sons holding membership cards food.
will have to pay only half price
Bill Grueser, Frida.Y chair-

man, said the editor o! the Woilder!ul World of Ohio Mapzine
and other news media repre..
sentatives or Ohin and West VIrginia will be present.
Robert Wingett reported 111011
material for the Regatta Program
book has alreadY been turned
over to the printer but some
advertisements are ye~ be .
sold. It was also noted that com·
mercia! exhibit space Is atill available and cor,tacta to budnesses will be made yet this
week and also next week. The
commf!rclal exhibits wUL be lo-cated In the Junior hl&amp;h auditorium.

I,

rownm
Court for

SA1GON (U PO - A handful of Viet Cong firing from suburban
ric e paddies rocketed rush hour crowds today in their bloodiest
bar rage of Saigon, sending thou sand s of ci vilians into sc reaming panic and killing or wounding a record 135 Vietname se.
HOLL\'WOOD (UPO - For·
For 10 minute s 26 six·foot 122mm rockets rained on downtown
mer Cleveland Browns Cootbail
Saigon at daybreak in the 11th consecutive day of terror shelling
great Jim Brown appear• ln
aimed at b : ~aking tbe capital's will to fight.
court today answer charges of
assaulting a police officer in
Pani c swept the jammed kiUed more in a single day but
SmaU wonder that Mrs. Myron (Kathryn) Miller, one of Meigs connection with an incident
streets. The shrieking of victim s never claimed so high a toll of
County's mos t patriotic women, returned to her home in Grafton whlch hospitalized an attractive
rose from rul:.oble and smoke both dead and wounded.
a
The
rockets
slammed
into
model who was Brown' a trefor the annual Memorial Day service s.
from rocket bl ast s that ripped
In ca se you didn't know - I didn't - the only United States quent companion.
bulldings within two blocks or squar e mile area, cutting down
me n, women aOO ch ildren near National Cemetery in West Virglnia is located at Grafton and the
The district attorney' a omee
the presidential palace in the
the
pres
idential
palace,
the
U.S.
observance
of
Memorial
Day
there
has
become
an
event
to
merit
has
relused to !onnall,y charp
city' s center.
Embassy,
three
American
milinational
acclaim.
It
is
s
aid
to
be
the
only
celebration
of
its
kind
Brown with assault with iiUDt
One rocket burst into the
to commit murder, one of the
waiting room of Dr. Dan Van tary billet hotel s and govern- in the nation.
ment
buildings.
'['hey
hit
a
Each
year
since
1869
the
school
chlldren
of
Grafton,
dressed
charges on which he na
1
Chleu. "I saw several pregnant
doctor's
crowded
office,
houses,
in
white
and
each
carrying
a
mall
bouquet
Or
Oowen
and
an
AmboQM!l SJ!n\lll flig,hL
.
women and children rUMing
an
old
woman
seiling
bread
and
erl~n
Flag,
along
with
other·MU~iJW
untts,
have
perticiplted
In
Eva
Mlrle
Bohn-Chii1.
'22,
no
!rqm ,lloe bi!IJdj!1&amp;. ~ l!ill4 BUl
Mykelhost o! tulare, Cali!., a a motorbike rider p]1.1s other the annual Memorial Day parade. This year there were 2,000 found semi..conseioua and se-u.s. adviser . He heard the targets unseen from the rice school children taking part. Speaker for the oc casion was Richard r lously il\lured Sundey night
W, Homan, Sr. , vice commaOOer • in · chief of the National Veter- beneath the baJcmy of Brown's
moans of victims buried in tl1-: paddi es.
lleturn Fire
second-door apartment in West
ruins or the doctor's O{fice.
ans or Foreign Wars.
burial.
Again
the
dedicaUon
was
U.S.
spokesmen
said
the
Viet
The Grafton National Ceme·
Hollywood.
Hit Officers' Billets
When she wu questioned by
Explosion s ripped into wall s Cong fired the rockets from si x tery , e stablished in IS67, con- held. However , there were so
many unburied still lying oo the detectives at ber hoJPltal bed
or the Rex and ~lendid, two mile s east and east-northwest. tains some 2,035 graves of men
Allied artillery fired back but a or all wars, including the Kor- ground that a parade proces. Monday, she refused to nmne
COMING TO REGATTA - A rock 'n roll singing group, "Your Lovin' St. Bernard," wUI ap.
U.S. military officers' billet s.
later check found no guerrilla ean Confiict. or the total sen- slon had to move to another lo· Brown as her assailant.
pear in person for the 1968 big bei"Kl regatta. The group soon wiU cut its fir st major album. The
Maj. EMn Krellick of Hopkins~
catioo for the ceremonies.
shows, expected to be big attractioo to all ages, wlU be on Friday, June 21, at 3 p.m. and again
bodies.
Depocy DisL Atty. PhU!lpa
ville, Ky., said he "just rolled
ice graves 1,251 are bodies ot
Decoration of the graves with Mueller said be did not lsauo
Vietnam
governThe
South
at 8 p.m. The tallest boy above recenUy left the ~ ai"Kl has been replaced by a girl
both
Union
·
and
Confederate
orr the bed when they started
Dowers began in 1869 wben the the
ment announced shortly later Troops of the Civil War.
complaint because of
coming in. It was a rude
Vietname
se
civilians
thaf
more
Work on the cemetery began mayor asked all citizens to donate "insufficient evidence."
awakening.''
than allied troops were killed ln in 1867 and It was Intended to liberall,y to children who would
"There was not suftlciU
The shelling came shortly
call
at
thelr homes for t h e evidence to convict," he sald.
saigon
fighting
in
May.
dedicate the memorial site on
before Gen. William C. West·
"This is aside from the facl
May 30, 18&amp;8, to mark the day flowers .
moreland, ending four years'
appeared
on
behalf
of
Tiny's,
During this year's cerernontes, that the woman would not slsn
members
()(
the
Planning
ComAn ordinance establishing the
of May 30 in 1861, when Genercommand of U.S. forces ln
posiUon of e,Ppment Oj)Orator mission have recommended that which owns both lots in question. Vietnam, left by plane lor his
al B. F. Kelley entered Grafton a repllea of the Unknown Sol· the complaint.' '
COUncil
approved
the
report
and the salary to be paid was the change be made.
However, the former foalball
to start the llrst land engage- dler' s Tomb was dedicated.
new duties as Army chief or
of Mayor C. 0. Fisher for the
}lepresented among -the lnter- star recently turned actor, was
CouncU
acce]lled
the
bid
of
given alllhree re&lt;Predreadings
staff. "Good luck!"
called
ment of the Civil War. Howevred at the cemetery are 24 charged with one count or
for pa11age MondaY niBht when Dale Dutton, Mlcldleport, lor the month of May. It showed an in· Westmoreland to his successor,
er, a three day rain Ieft t h e
come
of
$1,321
in
fines
and
fees
.
Micldleport Councll met in regu- village dump pi'OJ)OrtY located
ground muddy and a postpone- states. The capacity of the cern ~ felony assault against a sher·
Gen. Creighton W, Abrams.
It
was
reported
that
repair
of
etary is 2, 123, with no unde- iff s deputy who said he waa
oo the fiood road. Dutton's bid
lar aeaslm at VUiege Hall.
Westmoreland had judged the
ment was necessary .
the
streets
or
the
town
torn
up
for
the
property
was
$2,000.
The ordiaanco wUl be an adroughed up by Brown when ha
shelling a publicil;y stunt,
Meantime, trains and army veloped area for expansion.
In
the
construction
or
the
sew·
Each
year
lhe
West
Virginia
dition to the present salary or- In another action Council at the
attempted to enter the apart..
however bloocl,y. Captured Comambulances bearing bodies from
age
disposal
system
has
begun
State
Legislature
appropriates
request
o!
Robert
IIetz,
Gallidinance
the vlllap. The rate
ment. Bail ol $1,000 was
munists said the harassment or
nearby battielleldo streamed Inand is expected to be completot. pay for an tiJ!lpment OJIOrl- polis, passed another resolution
to Gratton until bodies were pil- $2,000 to delray the l!liJIOIISeS recommended.
Saigon was designed to add
ed within the next few days.
(Continued on Page 8)
tDr will be $1.66 an hour lor providing for the vacating or an
punch to the bargaining power
CHARLESTON, W. Va. (1JP0 ed hlgb on the ground awaiting
Bills were approved for pay ~
one year's nperionce; $1.75 lor alley between two lots in the
o! Norlh Vietnam delegates - Go\'. Hulett C. Smith's office
two years exparieioee aJXi $1.85 Pearl and Beech st. areas. Bett ment.
meeting American diplomats in said Monday contracts totaling
for three years experlence. LaW·
prellmtnary peace talks in $6,682.938 have been awarded to
reece Manley has been serving
Paris.
two out of state construction
ao ecpdpment operator but haa
The shelling has intensified to companies for portions or a
ac:tepted new employment, it was
bridge to rep1ace the Silver
the extent that bomb shelter
reported.
builders have begun business in Bridge at Point Pleasant.
eouneU dlscuned another orAllied Structural Steel Co.,
the capi1al. Today's barrage
dinance being &lt;Msideredlorpaskilled 19 clvUians and wounded Hammon, Ind. , was givena$124,·
o&amp;p but Is e11110cted to take no
appreciation of his work wiu("
116 others. The barrages have 328 contract for two of four
Nearly 200 Meigs County Con-- with an outline or Meigs County the district
further action until late in Jwte.
pier s to be used on the new
servationists and frieOO.s ~ were pre sented to all past suThai ordinance, ~!readY given
Coru.ervalion project awards
bridge
south
o!
Point
Pleasant.
pervisors and present supeni·
served
the
25th
anniversary
of
two o! the th~ reQI!red readThe Title I summer project Slx weeks or instruction will be
were presented by Clyde Walker,
and another Cor $5,226,450 Cor
the founding of the Meigs SoU sors. Past supervisors present manager 1 Federal Lar.:l Bank to
lngl, will chanae lho zoning reg- in lhe Eastern Sehoul District gl.ven the student•· selected to
steel.
participate on the basis o! test
and Water Conservation District indudcd Dale Dye , W. S. Michael, first place winner Tom Hamm
ulalloo• lor pioperiY •t the cor- wlli begin Monday at Tuppers
The
Al
Johnson
Construction
MoOOI..Y evenin,g at Pomeroy Ju. Dorald Mora, Reid Youn,g, and and rumer--up Don Smith. Tom
ner o! Belich and Lolcusl Sts. Plains, Charles Taylor, direc- results. Taylor noted that only
Co.
,
MiMeapolb,
Minn.,
receivthose showing the greatest need
Clarence Price.
The properlY would be changed tor, announced.
Hamm' s project on erosion co.
ed two contracts for piers total- nior Hl&amp;h School with Karole! earPast supervi sors unable to at·
for
pre~school
instruction
could
nahan, one of the original super!Nm a residential categury to
Classes will be in reading,
Ing
$665,105
and.
$667,055.
be included in the summer pro·
tend were C. E. Humphrey, Dana trol will go to the District Con1 bullness category. A super
maUl, and physic-al fitness for
Bid s tor the West Virginia visors, the master of Ceremon- Hoffman, Ear1y Roush and John test to be held at A~,ns on June
oorvlce sWion is plOMed lor students selected on the basis gram .
approach to the Ohio River bridge ies.
22.
Kindergarten students as well
The Invocation was given by HamiD . Present supervisors retho location, It le reported, and Of need for remedial instrUC•
wUl
be
opened
Tuesday.
FollowClarence McKnight, area conas those ln the remedial p r oWayne Roush. Dinner was serv· ceiving p~ues included Thereon servatiOIJist wlth the SOU Con-tlon. The eighl week program
log
that
the
ani)'
remaining
co~
gram wlll be transported by bus
COLUMBUS (UPO - Amer- tract will be for the bridge deck. ed by the SalisbUry P. T. A., ani Johnson, Harold Carnahan, Roy servation service, introduced the
wlll conclude on August 14. ClassDAM.\GES ONLY MINOR ·
entertainment was furnished by Miller, Rex Shenefield, and Da- guest speaker, Paul' A. Dodd,
es will be held daily !rom 8:45 and · are asked to be ready to ica ls undergoing a far reach·
Minor damages were lncurred Lm. to 12:1&gt; p.m. with a lunch- board the bus at 7:30 a.m. lng social revolution and •~physi·
the Impacts, !eaturing TOOU11Y vid Koblentz.
Monday.
More
exact
bus
sched·
A special 20 • _vear service Project Coordinator. ~ckeye
to a car driven by Howard Kit- eon at noon.
Karr,
Titnii\Y
Gumpf,
Jeanne
clans who fall to recognize these
Hills Resource, Conservation and.
A charter for non..profitpurules will be developed.
chen, Jr., Marietta, 1\J.esday
Whitehead, Kirk Chevalier and award coveri~ the years 1948 Development ProjecL He point«
needs and change with the times
Bus transportation wUl be pro·
poses
was
granted
today
by
Teachers and aides will begin are actuall,y !ailing In their reto 1968 WIS presented to Clrl
morning when it struck the rear vided !or the approximatel,y 80
Rick Buckley.
Secretary
o!
Slate
T
e
d
W.
with
a
planning
and
orlentaUOD
Bilikam,
soil conservationist, in to the los&amp; of j)CI[)uiation, par.
ot a car driven by Mary Olive students tn grades ooe through
District Appreclation Awanls
sponsibUlty to thelr patients,"
tlculorl,y of the YOU111 - ' • ·
Brown to the Ohio Sociel;y for
_Weber, LOng Bottom, Route" l, eight from Tupper&amp; Plains and meeting on Wednesday at 10 a. according to Dr. Earl Lyons.
were presented by ThereonJohn-as
one of our most serioua ~
the
Promutioo
of
Bull
Frogs,
m. at the Tuppers Plains Sehoul.
Tenth ., District Cmgreesat ~ intersection of Nye Ave., the Riverview Schools.
son, chairman of the district,
Dr. Lyons, p r e - ol the
east
Ohio problems. He nl1811
Inc., Pomeroy.
and Cheater Road, .meroy poAmerican Oateopathic AssociaKindergarten will also be cOn·
to Edson Roush, Wallace Dame-- lnan Clarence E. Miller, 1n
quesUoos •• to lMM thio trend
The artieh~ B of lncorpora·
·uce oiald. 'rhere weFe no il\lur- dueted beginning on June 17.
wood, and Wayne and Uoyd Roush a telegram !rom Washington, can be reversed.
MEIGS GENERAL HOSPITAL tion, told the annual meeting
tioo
elate
that
lhe
organizatea and no charges:' ··
for outstanding conservaUonpro- D. C, earl,y today, lnlormed
Admbslons - CetU Clrcle, o! tho Ohio ()lteopelhte AasoRegionol jea[OIISiel ond poll•
tion wlll .. Promote the Ohio
grams on their farms . Johnson Ohio Valley I'Ubllshing Ce.,
Pomeroy; Richarll S m I t h, cllllion MondaY that lhe traditical
boondarieo camot be per!late Frog Jumping Champalso presented the anmal re- Publisher Rlchar&lt;! S. ()wen
Reedsville; &amp;&gt;pbla Du!I.Y, Pom- tional aystem must be changed
mitted 1o handi&lt;IP the JIOCIIII•
ionship."
that he will be unable to atand uid Medlcare was an ex·
port o! the dtstricL
DISCU&amp;~ AIRPonT
eroy.
Meiga County. WI muat 1111W
lniUal trustees ~e ~obert
Recognition was given to Mrs. tend tooil!ot's IJIIIII ...,.. acRoutine business was conduct- · GAUGES - Ga)llpoils, 11.9
Discharge - Emma McCOy. ample nece&amp;lll')' change.
change I, aald Doold, clllltpl ha..
Wingett, ~racuse ... ~ Fred
E\'ereU Colwell, wife ot one or tivities, due to 1ctiV!tle1 in
•'Medicare has brought witb
od, and Roy Miller, RD, Ches- and 17.0 running 16 !eet o! rollto start witll ~e.
W. Crow, Jr., Dale Warner and
the original dlstrlctsupervlsors, CoogreSI, COng. Miller aenl
ll a set o! basic reQIIremente
ter, di~tCussed prospects of an ers; Pt Pleasant, 24.20; Pome·
Halrcl work lo ,at ·tho loit
Gey
Qo!ulhe.
r
,
Pomeroy.
and to Ralph Berker, district his &lt;Mill'atulatiooo and belt
lor partlclpatlon and has lhtreairport bolng 'built in the coun- roy-Mason, 24.20; lllnlon, 2.00
OPEN MIXED
neodo.
Doold
ashod.
)'Gil , 'I
Crow, a member o! the law
cy when the Meigs Jll&gt;ard ol stat.i Kanawha Falls, 4.80 stat.;
supervisor ol the Soli eonoe ...... wlabea on the compan,y' 1 nnr
NEW YORK (UPI) - Prices fore provio!!ld more JOotlvatlon
wjlli~
to
IIG'k
to
...
..
!irm o! crow, Crow an&lt;! Portloo Service at lhe time the o([set plllt llld priltlJiB facUCcmamlssLQtWrs met Monlsa1wi*:h Cha.rleston, 18.~0 Calling. Lon- todaY OJIOiled mixo&lt;\ in aetlve tor healtb core !acilltieo to keep ter, Pomeroy, was listed aa
nece••ll'Y ctoln&amp;H .... .uil'lioito:
ltios.
t;hal"los Il Karr, Sr;, presiden4 don 11¥1 Marmet, on the sith trading oo the New York Stock up their atandard• in order to
district was orpnized.
out?"
etalut&lt;lry ageni.
Awarda cooaioUng of 1 plaque
Ralplo
ours and Robert Clark Win!lold, running 2 loot of roll· Exchange.
retain ac&lt;redltatlon." lie said. .:t:~::::~*:~~"!&gt;.:~~:~&gt;.&gt;.::::::::::~::·:~:~:~:::·::.~::~:~s·

Assault

Ordinance Approved by Council

Contracts for
Portions of

Bridge Sold

or

Conservationists Observe

Remedial Instruction
Work Starting Monday

.

25th District Anniversary

Be Sure To See Ill the Other Gift~
gestlons for F1ther's Dly. Shop Every ·

Floor. Look Around. Select What YoU

Need.

Elberfel•s In Pomeroy

Medical Field

River Gauges

or

or

w.

QfS,

attending. ·

•

'
0

test .
Finals of the Crog jumping will
be held at 2:30 p.m. on 9.mday
and is scheduled to be the main
event that day , other than t h e
boat races which are to lrtart
at 12:30 p.m.

Or Wounded in Attack

,,

•

con ~

Revolution in

Discharge•
Mrs. Herman Adams, Clarence

John F. Aeiker, HI. I Mlcldleport; Laoro L, Roush, Rt. 1
MiddlOJO&lt;rl: Mra. Frelda M,
Spires, Rt. 3 Wellston; Miss ae;.
en M. Dempaey, Jackson; Floyd
S. DeLashmutt, Rt. 1 Wellston•
Mra. Robert 0. Thacker, Alh~
land, Ky.; Mro. Nora B. Harrell, Jackson; Clayioo L. lla-

.o the frog jumping

Speaker Sees

81nday.

Uam C. Aelker, Henderaon; Mrs.

~;,

Dies Sunday

Louis Sisson

Fa~9'er's Day

Other features of the saturday activities include the races
on the Ohio niver, The U. S.
Divisional Frog Jumping Cham·
pionship contest, a pie eating
contest, and home talent show.

to

,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,~,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,~,,,,,,i,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,B,,
,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,:,,,,,,,,,,,~,·~

W. R. Jeffers

Destroyed by Fue

Holzer Ho511ilal: Visitinghoura
2-4 and 7-8 p.m. Parente only oo
Pediatrics Ward.
Admiesioos
Miss Della Buckle, 88 Locust
St.; Connie J. Zeoli, 41 Central Ave.i COnnle ~ Maynard,
Rt. 2 Bidwell; Mrs. Henry Davis, Rt. 2 Cheshire; Lora M.
Pl,ymale, R~ 1 Crown Cll;)'; Mra.
William J. Smith, Bidwell; Mro.
Carl E. FJliott, 50 I Magnolia
Dr.; Jolon R, Wol!, Rt. 2 Gallipoiia; Leo B, Hartwell, Gallipolts; Mrs. Mollie M. Addns, Patriot: Mrs. Kermit J. Johnson,
Bidwell: L, Nell Ring, Rt 2
VInton; Cbarles A. Bales, Rt.
2 Gallipolis; WOllam E. :Main,
Rt. I Northup; Mark B. Ta,ylor,
Rt. 1 West Columbia; Mrs. Worthy E. Rogers, West Columbia;
Charmaine K. Sauer, Rt. 2 Pl.
Pleasant; Mrs. Cecil E. Roach,
l't. Pleasant; William J, Freeman, Galllpolls Ferry;.Mra. WU~

in the parade.
;t
Rounding out Friday aetbities will be a 9:30 p.m. record
hop under direction ofDrewWebster Post No. 39, American Legion.
No problems were foreseen
for the Eastern U. s. Divisional Championship Boat Races that
will begin at 1:30 p.m. satur&lt;lay
and &amp;lnday afternoons .

The Frog Jump committee is
making arrangements ror its
event along with the pie eating
event and home talent show, all
to be held at the high school
football stadium in Pomeroy from
5-9 p.m. A record hop lo begin
at 9:30 p.m . will conclude the
Saturday affairs.

Paddy
Rockets
Panic
Saigon
135 Vietnamese Killed , , , ,.,,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.

and

Craft

.

•

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

.. --·-- - - -

cd be used

charge May 29 inmunlci)lai coort he talked Holley into giving to
rtned. $50 and costs, 1entenc- him. Warrarta were served on
ed to five days in jati and had llalley 8lnday morning and he
hla license auspended lor six was lodged in jati.
moothB.
Charges ugatnst Halloy were
tiled alter an accldent at 10:09
p.m. Satur&lt;lay Involving a car
owned by CecU L Newell o1 1022
Secood Avo., perked In !ront of
Funeral services lor WU!ard
hlo residence.
Thare was moderate damal!ll ~ Jeffen, 38, Minersville, who
to the r!glrt 1ront o1 lhe Railey dJed Sunday at his residenc:e wW
car and to the !ell rear of the be held Tuesday at 2 p. m. at
Newell car. Witnesses closcrib- the Ewing Chapel with the Rev,
ed the Halley car and police 1111- Eugene Gill o!llclatlng. Burial
er located it at Railey's resi- wlll be in the Rock.Springs Cemetery.
donee.
He was preceded.indeathbyhts
When afticers went to the Hal lather,
John L. Jellers,andthree
ley home, they wereftretinlormbrothers,
Junes Marvin, Chared Halley wam't home. The house
was kept under surveUlance, how. les Howard and Lewis Eugene.
ever, and it was later discover. He was a member or the Laurel
ed that Halley was in the house. Cli!f Free Methodiot Cburch.
Survi vurs Include his wife,
A pleasuroboatownedbyChar-"
Pollee aald Halley reCused to
Audria;
children, Anita Louise
les Gaskill, Wellston, was detercome out and talk to litem. AdJeffers,
Deloris Jeffers, Willard
mined a complete loss when it
ditional police and sheril!' a deJ&gt;Jeffers
D,
Beatrice Bachtel, Roncaugbt fire &amp;~~~day at the Pomeutlea were called. Later Halley
roy levee.
talked to PI!. Gary E. Wallace nie Bachrol aJXi Cerol Bechtel,
ProperQt loss was set at $5,Funeral services Cor Louis E. througb an IJIIIIIUJialeirs window all at home; three brothers, Har000. Pomeroy firemen were on Slsaon. 56, Rt. 4, Pomei'O)', who and agreecl to 191 tbe policeman old, John aJXi Doreld Jelrers, ell
the scene. It waa reported the died une11110ctedl,y saturday e&gt;&amp;o come Into the house to talk to of -Pomeroy; hla mather, Mrs.
John L. Jeffers, Pmneroy, and
craft was Insured. The report nlng in Veterans Memorial Hoa. him.
indicated gasoline caugbtfire and pital, will be held Tuesday at 2
PI!. Wallace talked wllh Halley two sistera,EdnaNelgler, Racine
consumed the boat. Mr. Gasidll p. m. at the Bndlord Cbrlstlan and later came out wlth a re· and Louise Dodridge, Columbus.
is the husband of the Iormor Church with the Rev. Charles volver wblch l'tl. Wellace said Friends may cell at lhe funeral
home anytime.
t:dna Maxine Coats of Mlcldle- Rusaell om elating. Burial wUI be
port.
in the Riverview Cemetery.
He was the son of the late
John aJXi Nellie Jane Bailey Sisson, and was also preceded ln
death by a brother.
(Continued !rom page 0
Survivors include his wife,
lng him for data about jolni~ a
Audreyj two daughtera, Mrs. WU·
merceni-Y army in Africa. ltam (Bell.)' Jo) McCoy, WesterThere was a cover story about ville, aJXi Mrs. Richard (Donna
a lost mercenary brother. Jean) Payne. Mt. Vernon; two
Brussels was the place to go, brothers, Paul, Pomeroy; and
said Colvin. Ray was arrested CUI, Clinton; and elgbt grandSee all the new colorslnJerksSockalor men. Ideal Father's
en route trom Lisbon to
Da.x
Gilt. Black, gull blue, Jet olive, botUe green, white,
chUdren.
Brussels.
' ..Piilnpkln, rum, whiskey, tro hy, Cerollna blue, red, olive,
Friends may cell at the RawlIn the Midwest, the former ings-Coats Funeral Home uotfi
Jet brown, coffee, cinnamon mix, burgundy, butter, gold,
~lers of ex-convict Ray IDlY
blue,
olive mix, jet navy, ll&amp;ht gray, $1.00 psir.
12:30 p. m. on TUesdoY when the
have been rlibL illl' mlglrt body will be taken to lhe church.
have served himself more
lntelll~ently by going to Brussels via Paris where a strike
made
spaghetti o! airport
bureaucracy, Sl.Jpplng through
AUXIUARY TO MEET
France might have been easier.
The
ildie s auxiliary o! the RaInstead, Ra,y ended up in an
&amp;-by-12 loot cell In cannon cine fire deJIUbnent will hold
Street J&gt;Oll« station. Pollee said their regular meeting Tuesday
be haa been quite pro!ane aJXi ot 7:30 p. m. at the nre hoose.
uncooperative."
'

AMERICAN WIN
RATZEBURG, Germany
(UPO - PbUadelphla' s Veaper
Boat Club captured the coxed
lours event in the 12th
International Ratzeburg Rowing
Classic &amp;onday in six mirutes
and 46.13 seconds.
Russia's Ivanov took the
single sculls in &amp;even minutes
'
27.63 secoods.

!for dad. Come as you are, shop leisurely,
or 3 hours only.

XXI NO 34

'

'J

FIVE CENTS ·.

Spread the Word of Regatta

VETERANS MEMORIAL
HOSPITAL
Satur&lt;lay Admissions - WarJames P. Railey, 49, of 752
ren Cla.y, AJ.banyi Burton car.
son, Middleport; Aries Simpson, First Ave., Galllpolls, pleaded
Middleport; Freda Mossman, not gullcy Monday morning in
Minersville; Lorena Snyder, Mid. Gallillolis Municipal Court to
dleport.
charges of driving while intoxiSaturday Discharl!llS - Mar- cated, driving while unclor rev&lt;&gt;garet !WI, Marlon Michael, Lar- c&amp;tlon, and leaving the scene of
ry ~ncer, Kathy Sayre, NeUe an accident (hltsldp).
Graves, 9.11&amp;11. Woods.
Halley req.oested a Jury trial,
:omday Admissions - Randy date of which will be set later
Michael. Pomeroy; Etta Custer, lhls week. A jury will have to be
Racine; Wanda Hubbard, &amp;Yra- called.
cuse; Charles Lemley, MiddleJudge Robert S. Betz set bond
port; Ben Kesterson, Miners. lor Halley at a total of $1,236,
including $608 lor DWI, $308 lor
ville.
Rena drlvlng unclor revocatioo, and
&amp;mda,y Discharges McDaniels, Adria Jeffers.
$308 for hitaldp. Normall,y, bond
lor DWI ollenses Is $308, however, a second otJense requires
a $608 bond.
,
Pleasure
is
Halley was convicted m a DWI

JOE SIGNS
,
NEW YORK (UPQ-Fullback
BUI,y Joe, who last seasoo filled
In lor b\iured Matt ~ll, signed
his 1~68 contract with the New
York Jets,. It was announced
&amp;mday by Coach and General
Manal!llr Weeb Ewbank.

BAKER FURNITURE

,

Jury Trial Requested by Halley

and 12.8 running 19 !eel of roll ers; l't. Pleasant, 24.50; Pome-

THE WASHER WITH THE

..'-.
~ '
""

A thoogbt lor the day; Greek
author Aesop once said, "Sell
conceit may lead to self
destruction."

Mason Area

r

lx

ceasefire.

twirlers .

GAUGES -

/

4

Pf'C. Charle s Yonker is spencJ.
ing lea"e witl1 his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Charles F. Yonker of
New Haven. He is stationed at
Fort Lewis, Wash.
Mr . and Mrs. C-arl PoweJI and
Darla of IOOianapolis, Ind., Mrs.
Je s sie Yonker aiKI RaymonJ.YOI\ker and Charlene Hartley, Tampa, Fla., have been visiting Mr.
and Mrs. Charles F. Yonker.
Mr. and Mrs, John Aumiller
and sons of sandusky, Ohio, visited with Mr. aOO Mrs. Reuben
Stewart of Mason and Mrs. Mary
MEIGS GENERAL HOSPITAL
Aumiller, Hartford.
Saturday Admissions - None.
s.,&lt;;gt and Mrs. Eugene Fields
Saturday Discharges- Leopold and sons of Anchorage, Alaska,
Hysell .
have been \lisiting his parents,
&amp;mday Admissions - Blanche
Mr. and Mrs. Franklin Fields and
Haskins, Middleport; Alma Rupe, other relatives. They were en-Rutland .
route to Florida where Sgt.
&amp;mday Discharge s - None. Field s will be stated with the Air
Force.
REVIV AL BEGINS
Mr. and Mr s. Waldon Bennett
A revival meeting Ill Fairplay Roush, Salt Point, N. Y., visited
Chapel wUl begin today and con- Mr s. Roush's parents, Mr. and
tinue through the 16th. Falrplay Mrs. Fred ~encer. They came
Chapel is located just off Rt. lor the funeralofhi s grandCather,
32&gt; toward VInton. The Rev. Mr. Probe Roush.
Junior Malloy o! Wellston Is
Tommy Marr visited recently
the evangelist, wtJh the Rev. R. with Mrs. Rhoda Yeager.
D. Brown in charge.
Thomas H,yan, Lima. Ohio, visited o"er the weekend with his
mother 1 Mrs, Emma Ryan, am
attended the ahunni banquet.
Miss Sarah Doupe of Columbus
spent the weekend with Mrs. Helen Stewart and atterxled the alumni banquet.
Mrs. Dianne self and sons of
Columbus visited over the weekend with her parents, Mr. and
Mr s. Russell C&amp;pehart.

SPEED OUEEN.
TM

TiiJcL is tWil'l' lhL· ki"l.c of

162nd day o! 1968 with 204 to
follow.
The moon is MI.
The morning ataro are Saturn
w Veuus.
The evening star i 1 Jupiter.
On tide day In history:
In 1898 u.s. Marines began
the lnvallioo of C\lba in the
Spanish-American War.
Iii 1940 llallae Dictator Benito
_Mussollnl declared war on
France w Britain.
In 1942 the Gorman Geetepo
burned the tiiuo village o! Lidlce
In Czechoslovakia alter shootinl
173 men llll&lt;l deporting woman
and children to concentratioa
camps.
In 1967 the &amp;&gt;viet Untou broke
diplomatic relationa with llrael
alter llrael announced a msjor
victory over Syria as botb
Mideast nations accepted a U.N

"But that isn, IUIUsual. After
all, he was an Jta.Uan. lUa
characterizlllioo is based on
some llalians I !mow, charming
con men who are proud of their
abilicy to lie and cheat yoo oot
of a dollar.
Traditioo in Italy
ult' s a tradition 1n Italy
where the people have bad to
light lor centurieo to ootw:lt the
conquerors from other COUD·

p·.,rt.ly cloudy, wMrm and humid t.oni~'ht with seallcrod shoW·
erR iif!d thundDrsl.orms ,;prOMd·
inJ,:: ovor state. A litllo (:(ll)ler
Wednesday except HOUtheiUit. Low
tonll:ht in 611s.

Tl'XI N.

By United Prell International
Toda,y ie Monday, June 10, the

River Gauges

Silver

Now lou Know

Today's
Almanac

�-.

Helt~n

Council Acts on Big Agenda

Help

US. •

BY MA '-i iNE W:\I.'I'EH:-i

POINT

elly Helen Bolte/

WilY .\UEN"T P .,HENTS
IIOXF..~T·.'

VEHTISLNG M.\N

i\1y folks are pussyfooters.
Instead of coming out with
a flat "NO!" when they dnn't

Dear Son:

pic. their problems and pleas-

m·cs, their troubles and futt.
\s with the rest or 1\elcn !lclp
Us!, it welcome s laughs but won't
dod !t~

a serious question wilh a
brush...off.
Send your tecmlgc questions

to YOU'fl I .\SKEil FOH !T, care
of llclen Help US! this newspaper.

want me to do something, they

ease around and try indirect
persuasion so ru "make up mr
own mind" against doing it. It
starts out almost "Yes," but it
ends up no dice all the same because by the Umethey'rethrologh

'
\

•

talking in riddles I'm out of the
mond - or else I get the message and say "Forget it."
rn be truthful and sas that
" !ot of lhe time these things
1 want aren't very s~1art or
practical. But wh.l can't my Dad
just once slam his fist on the
table and shout. "I said 'No!'
and I mean 'No!' like m ~· gi rl
friend's Dad d•JC &lt;.&gt;? That' s mor~
honest than this "kind a.J1d understanding' ' bit that mea11S the
same thing. All I want is a
straight. short answer. not a
coorsc in child psychology. TffiED OF DOUBLE DOUBLE
TALK
Dear Tired:
I certainly agree a straightforward ''No!" is better chan
a psychological con game. Hut
the parent should be prepared
to back up his ''No" with good
reasons, if asked. And he should~
n't resent the asking! - II.
Dear Helen:
About those corns TV com-

T h ,,

'lty &lt;'ouncll of J&gt;tJini Pleasant
n\•t in rcl-..'lllat· monthly HN;siun
last night ami actCd upon u var -

m"rcials. Sofuctiml:!s the people wh0 wl'it" tl)cm gag too. M,y
Dad, for example . lie says that
certain oompanles stick with the
"hard sl'll.'' or the h'OOJlY sturr
because they think thc new .kind
or advertising doesn't make poop!!! want lo buy - it just amuses them.
When Wt' groan about l'ertain
commercials, he says, "Well,
_you kids like to eat. and it's a
living." - SON OF /\..,.._ All -

-lOFI'II ,\ShEll FOH IT!
This l'Oiumn is for young IX-'0

1'1.1':.\:-:1\.'i'l' -

True . Where it takes "corn"
to make the "I.Jrcad!' a fami ly
man curt't risk his JOb adding
spice. But H lhe corn g-o~J.:s him.
he'd do well to rind another compam·. - II.
Dear Helen:
A whJie Lack I went out with a
boy I like very much. I was
terribly anxious to date him so
I ignored the warnings of lllJ
friends who said he was fast.
Well, he went a littl e farthN
than he should , but not T!J ,\T
far. and I didn't mind because
I was cra1.1 about him
But the next day r rcmcm bcn•d his reputation, and J,'IJt to
thinliing that he feel s I'm iusl
another ea s.v mark and it m('.ant
nothing to me.
lie drove me home that evening and I goofed it up b_y trying
to explain that maybe he'd got
the wrong impression of me.
Since then we really haven't talk-

ed.
TodaJ• I read in a magazine
that some time s boys are afraid
to ask a girl out ar:ain if they
went a little too far on Lhe rirst
date. They're either embarrassed or else they don't want to
get involved. [s this true? - .ro
:\~NE

Dear Jo .\nne :
Yes. You can be sure a "fast,.

i('d a"J..:enda.

ONE OF THE FUNNY MEN with lhe famous lloxie Bros.

3-Ring Cin·us takes time out to talk with a young visitor.
"Children of all age::;" will thrill at the exdteml.'nt of a real
three ring ci•Tus unde'? Lhe big Lop when the l'nlarged lloxic
Bros. Circus l"Omes to Pomeroy on June H with perform·
ances at .2 and 8 p. m. at Lhc city loL Advam"C Lit:kets are being sold now by lite Pomeroy 'volunteer· Fire DepL
boy know s which girls pul out
and which don't. When you al lowed more than he cxpccled, he
proi..ably figured you fur whal
you are: .\ ni ce gal •~lm conruses petting with love, and he
wasn't buying any of that ''serious" stuff.
~ext time pla_y it cool , II,

Hv the end u! World War I.
the . llnited Slates had a
strength of &lt;Jimost 3.000 aircraft. accordin g to the EtH'y·
c lop&lt;~edia Britannka.

TIU: 11\11 ,\ SE'OTINEt
I ~

\&lt;"ll &lt; l&lt;'l \11 HI· '/ 1&lt;1
\II l&lt;o... ~lil.,.t\ ANI •I

til &lt; ll .~t , l&lt; '·' '"I \,P I I!Ll~ ll &lt;. l!
• t .. ,,.. , I onn,•ht l l. f. d.tor
]" .,hl•·'l"•l •io• l &lt; &lt;"&gt; •"I" '&lt;IIU«Ji) b&lt; "lite
'"'" I oi l• l ,. t•l ''"'' ( @I~On.•. JJU ~~~~~ · .... noc
~.
I .,,,,, I"
• """''• ].,~ · •" ll .&lt;&gt;,nt" IJ((Ift
!"'""' "'"' . I '' • l•lltN•ll ~llont~~:l-2157.
"' " ' · ••" ~~o.-ta~e ~.,, ot rom"'&lt;l.).

...

·~

~'" "''"' ' '"'"' " '""~ r•pr~&gt;&lt;nt..aure llol'""'lio-&lt;. olla, • •·•· ln .• , 1; foot ll &gt;&lt; .\1. , ~*"
''~' " '''"" "
a.,.t,o, j,

''" '

~ ··• &lt; •

I•

• '1:11\cii&gt;J ~.1

' "'' P&lt;"l ~•olo.

•orn•c

,•., )Mr

, .., .. ,.lt)ff,co·. $1•.20.
~·,
Sl.,it. ll;
\I" ' ' , I'•• "' " "",, ""'"' ,., , , . ""' •.all.
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('nunt:il itppmvc..'tl the siJ.,'ning
of it d•.·e&lt;.l for right..(Jf·\\"iiY or
ca~il'llleni ~;ranted by E. n. .Junes
to tlw city of J'&lt;lint l"&gt;leasant for
lite ('Hn~cying of three feet and
nine 1ndws of hmd ownc..&gt;d by
.Jool!s to the clt,v for unintcr·
ruptcd use permanently by the
city · al no cost to the city with
.Jones maintaining the right to
use of the land for maintenance
on a building to b(! constructed
adjacent to the strip of land
whieh contains the driveway at
the city building through an en-.
ginecring error,
Council alllio:
Approved apJNllntmcnt or Laura Gaskins, llfflcc secretary, to
serve and sign papers while City
&lt;..:Jerk Patty Burdette is on vacation.
Approvc..&gt;d a week's vacation
for Ma,yor D. B. Morgan and
for Counci lman Bill Wellman 'o
.~ervc as acling mayor dtlring
the absence of Morgan.
Apprm·ed 30 minute parking
signs lo be ~o: rected in front
of the local courthouse.
Appro\cd the mayor to hire
an engineer lo establish boundar.~- lines of all property owned
by the city of Pt. Pleasant.
Approved a board or appeals
for the bulldlng eode to be es.
tablished which is necessary for
the cit_}· lo be eligible to apply
for federal funds for various
projects.
Authori7.ed !\&lt;layor Morgan to
purchase a bulldozer for the
city from any one or the vari ous companies submitting prices on a do2er - with the Mayor to work out the best ·deal pos sible in ~ making the purchase.
Approved )$1,568 to each or the
two paid city firemen for back
pay due to the two men under the
recent wage and hour law ena(·(.
ed by the Congress. The two paid
firemen, Frank nonecutter and
Melvin .Johnson, will now receh·e $.&gt;,304 a .}ear and work
24 hours each.
Approved the following salary
increases for variou!l. city employee s effective July I, 1968
All Water Department emploYees includin(l the W a t e r
llepl. superintendent a S20 per
month increase but not including th&lt;' Water nept. manager in
the raise; City Police Depart·
m('nl a S20 per month raise across the board; probalionary
policemen will now start at a

Service Held
For Mr. Roush
PT. PLEA~Ar\T - Funeral
service was held toda}, 2 p.m.
in the Board Baptist Church for
Dennis Asbury Roush, Sr., 7R,
Letart, who died Sunda; night
in Pleasant Valle) llospita.l after a long illne~s.
A retin.'&lt;'l farmer and carpenter, he was born at Letart on Feb.
9, 1890 a son of the late Asbury
and slrah Ble!&gt;sing Roush. He
was a veteran of World War I.
Surviving arc his widow, May
Edward Roush; three sons, Dennis, Jr., Pl Pleasant, J1&gt;tm or
Proctorville and .Jack Roush of
Letarl; two daughters, Mrs. Jerf..l" (llelen) Lambert, lfindsdale,
Jllioois; Mrs. Elmer (Catharine)
Newberry, Letart; one brother,
Okey B. Roush of Letart and 17
grandchildren.
Burial was in the church cemetery under the direction C1( the
Mohl-Stevens Funeral Home.

Police Make
Month Report
PT. PLEASANT - The monUtly activity report of the City
Police Department for thi! month
of May has been released b)'
Chief of Police Jack Pyles.
The report showed the department members investigated 12
auto accidents and arrested six
drivers involved; issued 244
parking meter tickets and lour
unlawful parking tickets; made
l2 road law Jrrests and 18 other misdemeanor arrests; recovered stolen property (four parkIng mt'lers) valued at $235.50;
a~ worked a total of 1,041 man
hours during May.

with a $3.00 purchase of Ashland Gasoline
The~e

clltrilCttvr~Jy

tPxfurr&gt;d

lnqw. mrltcl un q bowl cf:l n he
your~ fo r only 89ct Wllh iHl
0 11 chanq0 ( 1r luhn cfl tton .r t

h owls 1n Avnca rln Grr!f!n .tn~
JU S t t he th1n9 for ~Prvtng
sa la d S, C.f!(€iliS , SOUJ)S, df:'•:; serfS, chrp ;md rl1p . ..,] • &lt;~de.,.
W1th eve ry $] OfJnltrr:l'&lt;~~l!

slJf

o f Ashland Gasolrnr · yn•1 r 1f'l

sP. rv 1C0 •, l dllon

one smnll hr,..;v l f"Hf . f

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WithRo~e~

S!(JJ) :tl .tny A·~hl :mrl 01 l
dt~ plllytnq

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th u

ASHLAND OIL &amp;
REFINING COMPANY

59 N. 2nd Ave.

I

.,

YOliN(; CONGRt:SSMAN
Rlehard M. Nixon started
bis political career In 1947
after an Impressive win In
what was conceded to be a
tough CaiUornla contest.

Heights
Omrch in

Busy Week
. '
'""
-11' '
.
~'T. PLEASANT - Two class

meetings, both at Krodel Park,
the m1dweek prayer and Bible
services, and the Vacation Bible
school combine to make this a
busy week at Heights United
Methodist Churc.:h.
Tuesda~, Friendship c I a s s
members will share in an annual
hamburger fr)' at the cit)• park
at 6:30 p.m. Thursday evening.
Christian Builders Class mcm·
bers will s hare in a covered,
dish supper at the parh. at 6:30
p.m.
The prayer service will begin
at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday and se~
ior choir members will practice immediately following the
service. The customar)" Thurs.
day morning Bible study will be
postponed until arter the dose
or the Vacation Bible school.
Rev. Charles Frum asked
members to plan now for the
Union Campground evangelistic
services, scheduled for the Laber·
nacle near New IIaven July 21·
August. 2. The Basingers, evangelists from the Parkersburg
area, aoo widely known for both
their singing and preaching, will
be 11ssisting in the outdoor ser·
vices. The Camp meetlng will
involve all l he former EUB
churches In the Point Pleasant
District as well as all other
interested persons.
Another important date was
announced by the pastor which
will be of dtrect interest to all
teachers and Sunday School workers. T h e annual Laboratory
school will be held at otterbein CoBege, Westerville 1 Obio.
.July 7-14. West Virginia Con.ference will pay $15 on school
costs for each teacher attending and the Heights Conference
also voted to pay a similar
amount on the expense of each
person attending.
carrel Cox directed Sunda.v's
morning worship In the Illness
of superi ntendent Clair Lee Cot..
trill. T he Senior choir sang in
both services Sunday wlthJimrny
Capehart as soloist wil.h lhe choir
in Ole morning service.

.....poa,
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_.,

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1UIOIII

....

PT. PLEA.'jANT - Following
closely the end of the Mason
county schooJ term, Ule annual
daily Vacation Bible school began Monday morning in the
Heighls United Methodist church
on North Main Street.
Classes were in session from
9 until 11:30 a.m. and will follow
this same schedule during the 10
days of the sehool, according
to Mrs. Katheryn Towner, Oi·
"\'ector.
Her starr ofteachers, workers,
assistants, etc., includes:
Assistant director, Mrs. Le·
na Mae Cox, Pianist, sarah Lewis; Song leader, Barbara Harris;
Devotional leader, Re\'. Charles
F r u m; Supervising relreshments, Mrs. Bonnie Waldie.
Superintendent-Pre-School Department, Nurser)" -Mrs. Margaret Capehart, and Teachers,
Mrs. Janie Hamm, Mrs. Lois
Bumgarner, Mrs. lcle Bennett,
and Aid, Winona Wilcoxen.
SuperintcOOent, Primary department, Mrs, Vada Crump, ar"'

CIIICAGO (UPO -

The Reds, tied with PhiJadeJphla tor fifth place just 51~
~Dles behind leading St.. Louis
which split wilh Cincinnati on
the Ohio diamond Sul\day, opened a four ..game series by
dropping a 4-3 decision Monday
hlghligtlted by seventh inning
action. Both teams tallied two
runs to finish the scoring, boosting the Cubs to just six games
out oi flrst place.
Clncinnatl opened the scoring
boosting the Cubs to just six
games out or first place.
Cincinnati opened the scoring
; n the first frame when Pete

tng of 2" asphalt over the entire area. Mayor Morgan stated
It was hoped that the restirtaclng could be started by the last ·

of this month.
The flnanclal report of the
three ctty departments was read
showing the following balances
on Mas 31. 1968- City or Point
Pleasant, $41,679.92; Water Department, $56, ~37. 36; S e we r
. Fund, $22,795.42.
Present last night were May ..
or Morgan, Attorney Musgrave,
Cle~ Patty .Burdette and councilmen Bill Wellman, Wallace
Smith, Jlm Fisher, Lorain Wilcoxen, Russell Holland, J i m
Wiggins, BIH Winter, Leonard
Riffle, Jack Fowler, Jack Juniper; Elmer Jones and Wadear

removed tor a pinch hitter in
the 1eventh, 110 Chuck Hartenoteln ond Phil Hopn had to
finl1h h11 mound chores, both
going ln during the eighth innlng,
Holtzman allowed nve hits, as

llOCIIF:~TEH ,

College

might

'""/.oundK! I •lwllyM&gt;-"!aitl your
Alow pl•y would rllla your
~eame!"

Redlegs

ties, 76,840inrecreational clubs,
894,224 in informal recreation,
372,511 In off-campus groups
and 1.5 million in physical
education activities.
List Popular Sports
or the 30 sports conducted on
an intercollegiate basis, the 10
m021t popular on the basis or the
number of colleges sponsoring
them were, in order: baske\bal.l,
baseball, tennis, track and field,
golf, football, cross country,
wrestling, swimming and soccer. Football, however, ranked
first on the basis of the total
number of intercollegiale participants, fo!Jowed by lrack and
field, baseball, basketball and
soccer.
"The survey results confirm,
in our judgement," said Plant.y
"that the colleges and universi·
ties of Ute NCAI'. have emerged
as the most significant national
force in pro..iding broad sports
leadership, competent athletic
instruction and training, ard
competitive opportunities.''

lowing a single by Adolfo Phll-

This Y{eek's
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~D~!!!._T,

The motto on many U .S.
post offices, "Neither snow.
nor rain. nor heat, m,.r gloom
of night stays these couriers
from the swift completion of
1heir appointed rounds," was
written by the Greek histor·
ian. Herodotus. to describe
the mounted c&lt;1uriers ol King
Xerxes or Persia. according
to the Encyclopaedia Britannica.

Yanks, Tigers Post Wins

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Margaret Finnicum
Emma Lou Davia
Erma Lyons

Chet TaMehl!l
John Morgln

INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR

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Bill Hof!man

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Robert Wingett
t&lt;atle Ct1'f¥
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lkl Lisle
Vernon DeWeeae
Larry Boyer
Artus Bunch

Bill Gudnor

Elbert McGhee
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---------------------------

Richie Hebner's solo homer in
Mud Hens will be out for a the third inning. Hebner and
twin bill sweep against the Co- John Kennedy, who got a solo
lumbus Jets tonight in trying to insurance homer in the eighth,
narrow the 1112 game gap be- accounted for half of the Jets'
tween the International League hits. Both have racked up three
four-baggers this season.
top teams.
Colwnbus put two runs on the
The twi-nighter will find the
scoreboard
in the fifth inning,
Hens starring southpaw Jack
chasing
loser
Mike Marshall
DiLauro (4-ll and righthander
(S..S)
from
the
mound. Three
Dick Radatt (3-2) against the
league-leading Jets' Bruc'e Oal singles, a walk and a hit gave
Clnton (0-3) and Ken Larsen Toledo a pair o( runs in lhe
next frame.
(4-1).
After Kenned.)" homered, ToBoth teams tallied 10 hits
ledo
tallied once in the final
Monday night in the opener of
frame
on a double and a single
the Important series here, with
that
ended
pitching chores (or
Tol~o getting1wo errors as Cowinning southpaw Dave Roberts
lumbus scored a 5-3 win.
now 6-2. Dock Ellis finished the
The Jets j u m p e d to a
frame
and the game.
4..0 lead In the first five frames,
with one oC the tallies being

TOLEDO (UPO - The Toledo

The Yanks downed the Pirates B-4 and the Tigers scored
a 8-3 triumph over the Dodgers ln Pomeroy Boys' League
baseball Monday afternoon.
Yank pitcher Jot! McKinney
went all the way on the mound
and allowed five hits. Ue also
famed eJght and walked three.
J. D. Story of the Pirates &amp;truck
out eight and issued four free
passes while going the distance
for the Pirates.
Yank hitters were Mark Werry with a two-run hOmer and single, McKinney, a double and single; Joe Rosem&amp;.um, two lingles, and Gary SnouO'er, a single.
Getting Pirate hits were Mike
Nesselroad, Mark Dillard, Story,
Kevin Field• and Jorr Ohlinger,
each a 1ingle,
Tight lnlleld pla,y and I I n e
pitching by Bob Ea11011 end Arnly
Vaughan pla,yed a big role ln
the Tiger wfn over t11e Dod·

~----------.,
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SHERWIN1
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Jeff

Ridgway,

White; Cheney (LP), Colburn and

Ohlinger.

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Knock Off
Yankees
A couple of Acres, but not
of the landed variety. teamed
up to lead the Middleport Boys
League Redlegs to an upset 4-3
victory over the previously undefeated Yankees Monday.
The Acres were Doug Acre,
second baseman, with two hits ,
and Allen Acre, who pitched sixhit ball, fanned 9, and walked
two over the six innings.
Acre gave up a two-run homer to Woody Call of l.he Yanks
in the second after Terry Pickens had singled leading off, then
pretty well scattered five other
hits gotten by Tyree, two singles, and one each by Phil Mil ~
ler, and Chris Miller.
The Redlegs won it in t h e
fifth when Doug Acre led off with
a slngle, was sacrificed down
by brother Allen, and Steve Wal burn, Kenny ~Wisher and Terry
Brew~F singled.
Pllll Miller of the losers fan.
ned 7, walked 3.
021 000- 3 6 1
Yankees
il0020- 461
REM;Ilegs
P. Miller and Call. A. Acre
and Kim.

been putting well . And, I· don't
Lhink I'll be as nervous this

In the 1966 U.S. Open . Las1 ~car
he was fi fth.
The way this talented Texan
is playing now - he's won$90,000
since the 1967 Open m hi s first
year on the tour - he could win
this year's dass1c , which will be
played out between yawning
bunkers and beckoning ln..~ s on
Rochester's oak Hill ("I)Ul' SC.
One thing is certain. Trevino
is out to win.
"Why else would I be here'!"
h~ a s ks.
But he quick!~· adds he doubts
it will be one of the "new
breed" who wins lhe nation's
mosl presti gi ou~ golf priz.e nex t
Sunday .
It'll be one of the velera11
players, more ably cquipp!!d to
withstand the withering pressures Lhal are an ou:upat.ional
hazard in the open.
Not on!~ doe s he p1 ck former
champion Billy Ca~pc r lu take
the open, but Trevino predict~
Jack Nicklaus' year-oM ! lpen
record of 27J may be tied, if the
weather hold s up.
"If the re&lt;:ord isn' l matched,
it'll take at least a .2713 or '1.77 10
win here," the stock) lad from
E:l Paso said,
"I think I have a very good
cham;c - IJul I know the pressure will be great,' ' he said.
"About the only waj fur me to
win is to have a big lead going
into the final round and JUSt
back in. "T!tis is a to ugh course
- but J like tough courses. M)
hitting has been great and I've

SOrry, only one gu-.• pllr P'IIOn.
CIVE YOUR GUESS WHEN VOV REGISTER t"OR TilE
QPEN HOIJSE.

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Siam changed tu name to
Thailand in !948.

EXTRA
CASH
for summer?
Tomorrow mon1ing
just give us a call
or stop ·in. Get
the money quickly
to clean up debts,
take a vacation
and re1ax.

Our thrifty budget
loan plan may be
just the answer

for you now.
Have less to pay out
and more for
yourself.

CITY LOAN
s' Savings Co.
Phone 992-2171
125 E. MAIN ST.
POMEROY, 0.

League o( Ohio Sportsmen has
called for passage of the firearms control bill now in U.
S. Congress, but said "great er restrictions on firearms
than those now in the measure would be mere political ex .
pediency .''
The league sent a telegram
containing Its views to t h e
commission appointed by Pres ident Johnson to investigate
crime and study means of pre serving law and order in the
country. The telegram, signed
b.Y John ThOmpson. league
president, said:
••we believe the President's
call for an end to lawlessness
and violence should be met
with solutions, not expediences. Stricter gun legislation will
not solve the problem."
Copies of the message were
sent to various congressional
leaden&gt;.

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~

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A~anta

year and has earned $54,426 ~
stand eightJt on the money
winners' list. •

"U'',

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OFFICEI
PLANTS
SCHOOLS

(UI'O-

TIm

Bearhs and Grueser. Hitting Cor
th&amp; Dodgers were Chaney with
a triple and two singles and Lonnie COats with a pair of singles .
012 122-8 6 I
Yanks
Pirates
013 00~4 52
McKinney and Werry. Story
and Nesselroad.
Tigers
303 OJI-8 8 0
Dodgers
020 01{&gt;.- 3 5 2
Eaaon (WP), Vaugluln (4) and

I

I

KING BUILDERS
SUPPLY 'CO•

gers.
Eason and Vaughan combined
to strike out 13 Dodgers while
permltting only six bases on
balls. BUl Chaney and T I m
Colburn, Dodger moundsmen,
taMed eight and walked six.
Tiger hitter s were Vaughan
with a home run and double,
Sherman White, a double and a
single each by Charles Marshall,

Eason,

N.Y.

Let! Trevioo tied for 54th place

College Athletic Programs
No Longer Self-Sustaining
CHICAGO (UPO -

Trevino Is Out To
Capture U. S. Open

Roberts Wins Sixth

Thabet.

·•

12

Beckert Williams' drive O(t the
right centerfield renee permitted both to score easily• .
That gave Bob Lee, who relieved Gary Nolan in the seventJt, his fourth defeat against
two wlns this basebell season.
The Cubs' starter Ken Holtzman

year as I w1s last yea·~·"
Trevino hasll't Won a tour..
namcnt yet, bUt he was seeord

11 llooston and

his teammates aot elgh~ but all
throe of the Clnc:lnnaU runs
were unearned. Both squads were
credited with two errors.
errors.
The Reds are to play sh~e
games daily with the Cubs
through Thursday, alii then
head lor st. Louis •.

be eased by general
athletic programs have reached college revenue or govermnenthe stager where they no longer tal assistance in the construeare self-sustaining.
tlon and maintenance of faclliThlt's the conclusion drawn . ties.
from a report filed Monday by
The report noted that NCAA
the National Collegiate Athletic colleges currently have an
Association (NCAA) wUh Vlce investment of $2,050,019,519 in
Rose doubled, advanced on a Pre.sldent Hubert fl Humphrey physical facilities and that the
wild pitch and went over on and the Congress of the United operating budget for 1966-67
Randy Hudley's throwing error. States.
totaled $190 million, nearly
The c_ubs matched it in the
.. In my judgement,,. said double that of the budget for
next lrunng, when Ernie Banks , Marcus L. Plant, professor of 1961--62.
hit a solo homer, his lOth of the ' law
at the Unlverslty of
The report, stressed the
season. TWo iMlngs later he du· Michigan and the president of NCAA, clearly irdicated that
plicated it, giving Chicago a 2-1 the NCAA. "new ways am college budgets are being sorely
lead. Both hits were orr starter means must be fourd to finance strained by the inflationary rise
Gary Nolan, who gave up six our e:xpandlng activlties. There in costs and the pressure for
hits in six innings.
are obvious limitations on gate more facilities and participation
The visitors jumped back in Income as a support factor QR~or\unities. Participation In
front in the top of' the seventh. because of increased student intercollegiate athletics by men
TOiij- Perez and Leo Cardenas bodies, practh:al llmltations on has increased by 46,672 over the
singled, with Perez going over fieldhwse and stadium capacl- past to years, accordil\:: to the
when right fielder AI SpBQgl.er ties and also a practical ceiling survey.
dropped Don Pavletlch's Oy on thepriceoftickets.''
A breakdown of individuals
ball. Cardenas went to third on
Need Additional Funds
participating showed a toW or
the play and went over on an
Plant, in Issuing the third of a 169,306 men and women taking
series ot reports begun in 1956- part in intercollegiate athletics,
intleld force out.
The smarting Cubs then got 51 and repeated every fifth 1.4 million In lntramuralactivithe win fever and also put over year, indicated the ftnancla1
two rW\8,
crisis ln the colleges' expallied
Billy Williams drove in the sports, physical preparedness
&gt;
lfinni~W runs with a double, fol. a n d recreational
programs

Umat•d $1.65 per !clot for the
rtlllng of all pot holes and poor-

~~r~:h~:s.11=:t~/~~::::h ; ~ ;b
·~ oa
~:

AT

AII·Stlrs@

son.

.ar

Flossie Musgrave, Mrs . Huel
Hussell, Mrs. Helen Evick, an:l
Mrs, Allene Plants.
Superintendent, Junior department, Mrs. Sylvia Frum, and
Teaeher s
Mrs. Margaret
Crush, Mrs. Faye Meadows, Mrs.
.J une Mallette, Mrs. Lenore As·
bury, Mrs. Betty Gardner, Mrs.
Clara McGraw, and Mrs. Mary
Wilcoxen.
Superintende nt, Teen depart-ment, Mrs. Nanc,y Hamm, and
Teacher - Mrn. Beverly Cottrill. A program will be presented and an exhibit will be
made on comPletion o( the school.

The Cin- Ups, who had advanced on an got his ftftll win In nine oftlclal
error and a walk to ~lem appearances. He, however, was

clllllati Ueds, only a half game
~.
ahead of Chic11go in the Nation\ •...aJ· League standings, must beat
the Cubs today U they wish to
remain in the fintt division.
The Ohio team will have
George Cnl~er, who has a S-5
record, on the moun::l to oppose
Joe Niekros, 5-4 so far this sea-

owners is given fOr the resurfacing the cost would be an es.

At Heights

o., Tueodoy, June 11, 1968

Culver On Mound Today

· torblkes and present ..{t the next
meeting. Also discussed was the
problem or hitchhikers lh the city
and people b.-topping suddenly In a
line or traffic to pick up hitchhiker s which could cause a sertoul) accident or a chain of accidents. City Attorhey Ray Mus..
grave was asked to draw up an
ordinance on this mstter and
present next meeting.
Mayor Morgan announced there
would be a meeting
the City
Charter revision committee on
Wednesda..v, June 26, at 7:30 p.
m. In oouncll chambers,
A discussion was held on the
proposed resurfacing or Main
street from 6th to 12th including all side streets from Main
to VIand In this designated area
with the Mayor reporting that
the proposal is looking mote favorable all the time, but some
property owners In the area have
still not been cOntacted on the
matter.

II the consent or the property

Began Monday_

F.
~

by Mayor Mnrs.:an to represent
the tl"it,y at mt!etins.:s of the Ma11011 County Cummonlt,y Action
f;rou]l, Inc., with the next meet·
lng schl!dulcd (or the group on
.June 13 ul 7:311 p.m. in the
courthouse.
Mayor Murgan announced that
Krodel !'ark ~wlmming area and
the local ."i!~wnec swlmmi ngpool
will be opened on June 15. Appli cations are now being taken
by the city for the position of
llre,guard at Krodel Park lake
and those wishing to apply for
lifeguard at ~awnee pool l!lhWid
contact either Robert ~rtzer
or Clay llinkle.
Complaints have been regis;
tered concerning motorbikes in
the residential sections at all
hours to various council members and Mayor Morgan asked
City Attorney Ray Musgrave to
contact Charleston, and get a
copy of their regulations on mo.

Bible School

ma\trllll C.D ltUIN up ln
Lracil •net JO\I NOOIM I
•
, unoomrorWtte •nd IHl elu 111.
C.Nr .. Pilla WIUI IW vntqW lu·
am• formula •ht up tbl lllofttd
..... 111\Mdll ot &amp;hi 101m~,........
&amp;Net and IIIIINIUit r.rlaUrJI:Ia. It•~
~
nlltf Of lbl• ll'ftl\l·
a.nc,. Tbta rou wm M JDW' ..U•

Ease The Pain.

Dudley's Florist

or-

TIM&lt; mu~ewar Muon • rout dill""
""".,...Ill, eallad ..111'-lall, lhiNkl
•ol IIOW CIOWD . It IIlia bap~DI

A lovely, Fragrant
Bouquet Will

Start cnllr;c t,nq : ~ r;nmnlr!r ~

rx·•·

WAKEUP YOUR
PERISTALSIS
Wit,_ b*-t . .

CheerThemUp

regulru pm .r~.

sular) of ::i:~5U per month lhc11·
11flcr .-;ix ml)fllhs will be paid
~3fill
month, one tu five
years so•·vice will pay $3RII und
on!r fl~·e years, the pay will ~o
Lo :;;41!11 and lhe Chief or Pulice
wi II receive !-H!',I/ r&gt;er month;
strecl and Sttnitbry workers will
rccc..'ivc a :\&gt;21J per munth raise
with the Street Commissioner to
be paid :li4l!ll tond the building
inspector will be raised from
~0
per month to $75 per
munth; Sewer Dcp1:1.rtmcnt superintendent will now receive
$34!; per month and the assist.
ant .. will receive $320 p e r
month with all hourly employees receiving a 15 cent an hour
increase and the clerk of thlil
sewer fund was granted a $40
pel' month raise - the two
fico secretaries, I .aura Gaskins
and .Janet Miller were granted
a $22.50 per month rah;e.
Bill Wellman was appointed

3 - The Dail.Y Sentinel, Pomerii)'-Middle110rt.

' . '•

ICE
POINT

non-akid trelllld-l,a

I .

FUEL C

tiAa

&amp; AUTO

PLE~SANT,

W. VA.
675-2460

IIH I.'N-11
F-1
excl11ta

E. MAIN ST.
"

-

Of Free
•

••

'

Ill
\

·

�-.

Helt~n

Council Acts on Big Agenda

Help

US. •

BY MA '-i iNE W:\I.'I'EH:-i

POINT

elly Helen Bolte/

WilY .\UEN"T P .,HENTS
IIOXF..~T·.'

VEHTISLNG M.\N

i\1y folks are pussyfooters.
Instead of coming out with
a flat "NO!" when they dnn't

Dear Son:

pic. their problems and pleas-

m·cs, their troubles and futt.
\s with the rest or 1\elcn !lclp
Us!, it welcome s laughs but won't
dod !t~

a serious question wilh a
brush...off.
Send your tecmlgc questions

to YOU'fl I .\SKEil FOH !T, care
of llclen Help US! this newspaper.

want me to do something, they

ease around and try indirect
persuasion so ru "make up mr
own mind" against doing it. It
starts out almost "Yes," but it
ends up no dice all the same because by the Umethey'rethrologh

'
\

•

talking in riddles I'm out of the
mond - or else I get the message and say "Forget it."
rn be truthful and sas that
" !ot of lhe time these things
1 want aren't very s~1art or
practical. But wh.l can't my Dad
just once slam his fist on the
table and shout. "I said 'No!'
and I mean 'No!' like m ~· gi rl
friend's Dad d•JC &lt;.&gt;? That' s mor~
honest than this "kind a.J1d understanding' ' bit that mea11S the
same thing. All I want is a
straight. short answer. not a
coorsc in child psychology. TffiED OF DOUBLE DOUBLE
TALK
Dear Tired:
I certainly agree a straightforward ''No!" is better chan
a psychological con game. Hut
the parent should be prepared
to back up his ''No" with good
reasons, if asked. And he should~
n't resent the asking! - II.
Dear Helen:
About those corns TV com-

T h ,,

'lty &lt;'ouncll of J&gt;tJini Pleasant
n\•t in rcl-..'lllat· monthly HN;siun
last night ami actCd upon u var -

m"rcials. Sofuctiml:!s the people wh0 wl'it" tl)cm gag too. M,y
Dad, for example . lie says that
certain oompanles stick with the
"hard sl'll.'' or the h'OOJlY sturr
because they think thc new .kind
or advertising doesn't make poop!!! want lo buy - it just amuses them.
When Wt' groan about l'ertain
commercials, he says, "Well,
_you kids like to eat. and it's a
living." - SON OF /\..,.._ All -

-lOFI'II ,\ShEll FOH IT!
This l'Oiumn is for young IX-'0

1'1.1':.\:-:1\.'i'l' -

True . Where it takes "corn"
to make the "I.Jrcad!' a fami ly
man curt't risk his JOb adding
spice. But H lhe corn g-o~J.:s him.
he'd do well to rind another compam·. - II.
Dear Helen:
A whJie Lack I went out with a
boy I like very much. I was
terribly anxious to date him so
I ignored the warnings of lllJ
friends who said he was fast.
Well, he went a littl e farthN
than he should , but not T!J ,\T
far. and I didn't mind because
I was cra1.1 about him
But the next day r rcmcm bcn•d his reputation, and J,'IJt to
thinliing that he feel s I'm iusl
another ea s.v mark and it m('.ant
nothing to me.
lie drove me home that evening and I goofed it up b_y trying
to explain that maybe he'd got
the wrong impression of me.
Since then we really haven't talk-

ed.
TodaJ• I read in a magazine
that some time s boys are afraid
to ask a girl out ar:ain if they
went a little too far on Lhe rirst
date. They're either embarrassed or else they don't want to
get involved. [s this true? - .ro
:\~NE

Dear Jo .\nne :
Yes. You can be sure a "fast,.

i('d a"J..:enda.

ONE OF THE FUNNY MEN with lhe famous lloxie Bros.

3-Ring Cin·us takes time out to talk with a young visitor.
"Children of all age::;" will thrill at the exdteml.'nt of a real
three ring ci•Tus unde'? Lhe big Lop when the l'nlarged lloxic
Bros. Circus l"Omes to Pomeroy on June H with perform·
ances at .2 and 8 p. m. at Lhc city loL Advam"C Lit:kets are being sold now by lite Pomeroy 'volunteer· Fire DepL
boy know s which girls pul out
and which don't. When you al lowed more than he cxpccled, he
proi..ably figured you fur whal
you are: .\ ni ce gal •~lm conruses petting with love, and he
wasn't buying any of that ''serious" stuff.
~ext time pla_y it cool , II,

Hv the end u! World War I.
the . llnited Slates had a
strength of &lt;Jimost 3.000 aircraft. accordin g to the EtH'y·
c lop&lt;~edia Britannka.

TIU: 11\11 ,\ SE'OTINEt
I ~

\&lt;"ll &lt; l&lt;'l \11 HI· '/ 1&lt;1
\II l&lt;o... ~lil.,.t\ ANI •I

til &lt; ll .~t , l&lt; '·' '"I \,P I I!Ll~ ll &lt;. l!
• t .. ,,.. , I onn,•ht l l. f. d.tor
]" .,hl•·'l"•l •io• l &lt; &lt;"&gt; •"I" '&lt;IIU«Ji) b&lt; "lite
'"'" I oi l• l ,. t•l ''"'' ( @I~On.•. JJU ~~~~~ · .... noc
~.
I .,,,,, I"
• """''• ].,~ · •" ll .&lt;&gt;,nt" IJ((Ift
!"'""' "'"' . I '' • l•lltN•ll ~llont~~:l-2157.
"' " ' · ••" ~~o.-ta~e ~.,, ot rom"'&lt;l.).

...

·~

~'" "''"' ' '"'"' " '""~ r•pr~&gt;&lt;nt..aure llol'""'lio-&lt;. olla, • •·•· ln .• , 1; foot ll &gt;&lt; .\1. , ~*"
''~' " '''"" "
a.,.t,o, j,

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I•

• '1:11\cii&gt;J ~.1

' "'' P&lt;"l ~•olo.

•orn•c

,•., )Mr

, .., .. ,.lt)ff,co·. $1•.20.
~·,
Sl.,it. ll;
\I" ' ' , I'•• "' " "",, ""'"' ,., , , . ""' •.all.
dl,l,· "" '"""' ' ' l '" 11, n •.,t llrle """'
~ ' "'" ' · ' • " "'"
,,_,.JJ,n•emonti&gt;,~J.UO.
'' ' • '""'" ' • ' 11 ,.

'•· '""" ''

~•h

], , ..,,.,. m"""''•

"d' · ''"' U" '"'"' ••• lu&lt;J&lt;&gt; "Jn.JO) I,,...,...-.,.,.
I

"&lt;]

('nunt:il itppmvc..'tl the siJ.,'ning
of it d•.·e&lt;.l for right..(Jf·\\"iiY or
ca~il'llleni ~;ranted by E. n. .Junes
to tlw city of J'&lt;lint l"&gt;leasant for
lite ('Hn~cying of three feet and
nine 1ndws of hmd ownc..&gt;d by
.Jool!s to the clt,v for unintcr·
ruptcd use permanently by the
city · al no cost to the city with
.Jones maintaining the right to
use of the land for maintenance
on a building to b(! constructed
adjacent to the strip of land
whieh contains the driveway at
the city building through an en-.
ginecring error,
Council alllio:
Approved apJNllntmcnt or Laura Gaskins, llfflcc secretary, to
serve and sign papers while City
&lt;..:Jerk Patty Burdette is on vacation.
Approvc..&gt;d a week's vacation
for Ma,yor D. B. Morgan and
for Counci lman Bill Wellman 'o
.~ervc as acling mayor dtlring
the absence of Morgan.
Apprm·ed 30 minute parking
signs lo be ~o: rected in front
of the local courthouse.
Appro\cd the mayor to hire
an engineer lo establish boundar.~- lines of all property owned
by the city of Pt. Pleasant.
Approved a board or appeals
for the bulldlng eode to be es.
tablished which is necessary for
the cit_}· lo be eligible to apply
for federal funds for various
projects.
Authori7.ed !\&lt;layor Morgan to
purchase a bulldozer for the
city from any one or the vari ous companies submitting prices on a do2er - with the Mayor to work out the best ·deal pos sible in ~ making the purchase.
Approved )$1,568 to each or the
two paid city firemen for back
pay due to the two men under the
recent wage and hour law ena(·(.
ed by the Congress. The two paid
firemen, Frank nonecutter and
Melvin .Johnson, will now receh·e $.&gt;,304 a .}ear and work
24 hours each.
Approved the following salary
increases for variou!l. city employee s effective July I, 1968
All Water Department emploYees includin(l the W a t e r
llepl. superintendent a S20 per
month increase but not including th&lt;' Water nept. manager in
the raise; City Police Depart·
m('nl a S20 per month raise across the board; probalionary
policemen will now start at a

Service Held
For Mr. Roush
PT. PLEA~Ar\T - Funeral
service was held toda}, 2 p.m.
in the Board Baptist Church for
Dennis Asbury Roush, Sr., 7R,
Letart, who died Sunda; night
in Pleasant Valle) llospita.l after a long illne~s.
A retin.'&lt;'l farmer and carpenter, he was born at Letart on Feb.
9, 1890 a son of the late Asbury
and slrah Ble!&gt;sing Roush. He
was a veteran of World War I.
Surviving arc his widow, May
Edward Roush; three sons, Dennis, Jr., Pl Pleasant, J1&gt;tm or
Proctorville and .Jack Roush of
Letarl; two daughters, Mrs. Jerf..l" (llelen) Lambert, lfindsdale,
Jllioois; Mrs. Elmer (Catharine)
Newberry, Letart; one brother,
Okey B. Roush of Letart and 17
grandchildren.
Burial was in the church cemetery under the direction C1( the
Mohl-Stevens Funeral Home.

Police Make
Month Report
PT. PLEASANT - The monUtly activity report of the City
Police Department for thi! month
of May has been released b)'
Chief of Police Jack Pyles.
The report showed the department members investigated 12
auto accidents and arrested six
drivers involved; issued 244
parking meter tickets and lour
unlawful parking tickets; made
l2 road law Jrrests and 18 other misdemeanor arrests; recovered stolen property (four parkIng mt'lers) valued at $235.50;
a~ worked a total of 1,041 man
hours during May.

with a $3.00 purchase of Ashland Gasoline
The~e

clltrilCttvr~Jy

tPxfurr&gt;d

lnqw. mrltcl un q bowl cf:l n he
your~ fo r only 89ct Wllh iHl
0 11 chanq0 ( 1r luhn cfl tton .r t

h owls 1n Avnca rln Grr!f!n .tn~
JU S t t he th1n9 for ~Prvtng
sa la d S, C.f!(€iliS , SOUJ)S, df:'•:; serfS, chrp ;md rl1p . ..,] • &lt;~de.,.
W1th eve ry $] OfJnltrr:l'&lt;~~l!

slJf

o f Ashland Gasolrnr · yn•1 r 1f'l

sP. rv 1C0 •, l dllon

one smnll hr,..;v l f"Hf . f

. FRF E ROW I

1111•

WithRo~e~

S!(JJ) :tl .tny A·~hl :mrl 01 l
dt~ plllytnq

S tCJ~ 1

th u

ASHLAND OIL &amp;
REFINING COMPANY

59 N. 2nd Ave.

I

.,

YOliN(; CONGRt:SSMAN
Rlehard M. Nixon started
bis political career In 1947
after an Impressive win In
what was conceded to be a
tough CaiUornla contest.

Heights
Omrch in

Busy Week
. '
'""
-11' '
.
~'T. PLEASANT - Two class

meetings, both at Krodel Park,
the m1dweek prayer and Bible
services, and the Vacation Bible
school combine to make this a
busy week at Heights United
Methodist Churc.:h.
Tuesda~, Friendship c I a s s
members will share in an annual
hamburger fr)' at the cit)• park
at 6:30 p.m. Thursday evening.
Christian Builders Class mcm·
bers will s hare in a covered,
dish supper at the parh. at 6:30
p.m.
The prayer service will begin
at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday and se~
ior choir members will practice immediately following the
service. The customar)" Thurs.
day morning Bible study will be
postponed until arter the dose
or the Vacation Bible school.
Rev. Charles Frum asked
members to plan now for the
Union Campground evangelistic
services, scheduled for the Laber·
nacle near New IIaven July 21·
August. 2. The Basingers, evangelists from the Parkersburg
area, aoo widely known for both
their singing and preaching, will
be 11ssisting in the outdoor ser·
vices. The Camp meetlng will
involve all l he former EUB
churches In the Point Pleasant
District as well as all other
interested persons.
Another important date was
announced by the pastor which
will be of dtrect interest to all
teachers and Sunday School workers. T h e annual Laboratory
school will be held at otterbein CoBege, Westerville 1 Obio.
.July 7-14. West Virginia Con.ference will pay $15 on school
costs for each teacher attending and the Heights Conference
also voted to pay a similar
amount on the expense of each
person attending.
carrel Cox directed Sunda.v's
morning worship In the Illness
of superi ntendent Clair Lee Cot..
trill. T he Senior choir sang in
both services Sunday wlthJimrny
Capehart as soloist wil.h lhe choir
in Ole morning service.

.....poa,
'•L-· ol..,
.,..._ _.. ..U
.._.
_.,

....

1UIOIII

....

PT. PLEA.'jANT - Following
closely the end of the Mason
county schooJ term, Ule annual
daily Vacation Bible school began Monday morning in the
Heighls United Methodist church
on North Main Street.
Classes were in session from
9 until 11:30 a.m. and will follow
this same schedule during the 10
days of the sehool, according
to Mrs. Katheryn Towner, Oi·
"\'ector.
Her starr ofteachers, workers,
assistants, etc., includes:
Assistant director, Mrs. Le·
na Mae Cox, Pianist, sarah Lewis; Song leader, Barbara Harris;
Devotional leader, Re\'. Charles
F r u m; Supervising relreshments, Mrs. Bonnie Waldie.
Superintendent-Pre-School Department, Nurser)" -Mrs. Margaret Capehart, and Teachers,
Mrs. Janie Hamm, Mrs. Lois
Bumgarner, Mrs. lcle Bennett,
and Aid, Winona Wilcoxen.
SuperintcOOent, Primary department, Mrs, Vada Crump, ar"'

CIIICAGO (UPO -

The Reds, tied with PhiJadeJphla tor fifth place just 51~
~Dles behind leading St.. Louis
which split wilh Cincinnati on
the Ohio diamond Sul\day, opened a four ..game series by
dropping a 4-3 decision Monday
hlghligtlted by seventh inning
action. Both teams tallied two
runs to finish the scoring, boosting the Cubs to just six games
out oi flrst place.
Clncinnatl opened the scoring
boosting the Cubs to just six
games out or first place.
Cincinnati opened the scoring
; n the first frame when Pete

tng of 2" asphalt over the entire area. Mayor Morgan stated
It was hoped that the restirtaclng could be started by the last ·

of this month.
The flnanclal report of the
three ctty departments was read
showing the following balances
on Mas 31. 1968- City or Point
Pleasant, $41,679.92; Water Department, $56, ~37. 36; S e we r
. Fund, $22,795.42.
Present last night were May ..
or Morgan, Attorney Musgrave,
Cle~ Patty .Burdette and councilmen Bill Wellman, Wallace
Smith, Jlm Fisher, Lorain Wilcoxen, Russell Holland, J i m
Wiggins, BIH Winter, Leonard
Riffle, Jack Fowler, Jack Juniper; Elmer Jones and Wadear

removed tor a pinch hitter in
the 1eventh, 110 Chuck Hartenoteln ond Phil Hopn had to
finl1h h11 mound chores, both
going ln during the eighth innlng,
Holtzman allowed nve hits, as

llOCIIF:~TEH ,

College

might

'""/.oundK! I •lwllyM&gt;-"!aitl your
Alow pl•y would rllla your
~eame!"

Redlegs

ties, 76,840inrecreational clubs,
894,224 in informal recreation,
372,511 In off-campus groups
and 1.5 million in physical
education activities.
List Popular Sports
or the 30 sports conducted on
an intercollegiate basis, the 10
m021t popular on the basis or the
number of colleges sponsoring
them were, in order: baske\bal.l,
baseball, tennis, track and field,
golf, football, cross country,
wrestling, swimming and soccer. Football, however, ranked
first on the basis of the total
number of intercollegiale participants, fo!Jowed by lrack and
field, baseball, basketball and
soccer.
"The survey results confirm,
in our judgement," said Plant.y
"that the colleges and universi·
ties of Ute NCAI'. have emerged
as the most significant national
force in pro..iding broad sports
leadership, competent athletic
instruction and training, ard
competitive opportunities.''

lowing a single by Adolfo Phll-

This Y{eek's
K&amp;V.SfJeci•lll
.

65 Pontiac Catalina Con.
~

•

.. $1995

Auto. trans., power steering, power brakes. Blue
finish with ~-tone vinyl in!.

· ·. ; ,

+inrt.

UI ~·

KARl&amp; VANZANDT MOTOR SALES

1

"You'll Uke Our Quality Way of Doing Business"
Cadlllae-Oidsmoblle
. 992-5342
Pomeroy, Ohio

Underway or at anohor,

)'OIIIIHCI ahlp-thape prottc11on on your boat and
~nell. Why rille btlng

'aunk" flnanolally? Malle

tlllt

-oaltha 11101;1 llflo

)oyabla ytf"by prottOIIng

F

JOUIHII with Oulboard or
YaCht 1111unonco from Tha

llal1lord. Call us today lor

eomplata Information on
toa!Pitlt proiiOIIob.

He Wrule Mollo

~D~!!!._T,

The motto on many U .S.
post offices, "Neither snow.
nor rain. nor heat, m,.r gloom
of night stays these couriers
from the swift completion of
1heir appointed rounds," was
written by the Greek histor·
ian. Herodotus. to describe
the mounted c&lt;1uriers ol King
Xerxes or Persia. according
to the Encyclopaedia Britannica.

Yanks, Tigers Post Wins

MYSTERY
PRIZE

DOWNING
INSURANCE
, INC.

To the person coming the closest to guessing the combined weight of the crew of
the Sunday Times-Sentinel.
Register at our Open House

Tuesday, June 11th. 7to9 P.M.

SPECIAL THIS WEEK

HERE'S THE CREW

Dramex®

I

James Danner
Margaret Let.ew
Ruth Brown
Marie Fo1ter

PAINT FOR
All NEEDS

Charlene DIY!a
BUI Rl&amp;er
GII.Yiand Buah

Fred Hoftman
carol Mullins

CIW"!One Hooftich
Hobart Wilson
Dick Owen
Pat Houck

Eustice Wtlaon
Margaret Finnicum
Emma Lou Davia
Erma Lyons

Chet TaMehl!l
John Morgln

INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR

STOCK CLOSE-OUT
OFF LIST
PRICE

Bill Hof!man

Don ,Wrlght
Robert Wingett
t&lt;atle Ct1'f¥
Bob Hoorltch

Shirley Brown

Dick Thomas
lkl Lisle
Vernon DeWeeae
Larry Boyer
Artus Bunch

Bill Gudnor

Elbert McGhee
Charles Snodgr11s
Otho Mattox
Helen Devts

Marlo Bush

Maxine Waltera

-

DRAMEX spreads easily yet covers and fills every dent,
crack or lmpcrfcct.l90o DHAMEX gives wMis constructed
with wallboard the appearance of a newly plastered room.

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

Richie Hebner's solo homer in
Mud Hens will be out for a the third inning. Hebner and
twin bill sweep against the Co- John Kennedy, who got a solo
lumbus Jets tonight in trying to insurance homer in the eighth,
narrow the 1112 game gap be- accounted for half of the Jets'
tween the International League hits. Both have racked up three
four-baggers this season.
top teams.
Colwnbus put two runs on the
The twi-nighter will find the
scoreboard
in the fifth inning,
Hens starring southpaw Jack
chasing
loser
Mike Marshall
DiLauro (4-ll and righthander
(S..S)
from
the
mound. Three
Dick Radatt (3-2) against the
league-leading Jets' Bruc'e Oal singles, a walk and a hit gave
Clnton (0-3) and Ken Larsen Toledo a pair o( runs in lhe
next frame.
(4-1).
After Kenned.)" homered, ToBoth teams tallied 10 hits
ledo
tallied once in the final
Monday night in the opener of
frame
on a double and a single
the Important series here, with
that
ended
pitching chores (or
Tol~o getting1wo errors as Cowinning southpaw Dave Roberts
lumbus scored a 5-3 win.
now 6-2. Dock Ellis finished the
The Jets j u m p e d to a
frame
and the game.
4..0 lead In the first five frames,
with one oC the tallies being

TOLEDO (UPO - The Toledo

The Yanks downed the Pirates B-4 and the Tigers scored
a 8-3 triumph over the Dodgers ln Pomeroy Boys' League
baseball Monday afternoon.
Yank pitcher Jot! McKinney
went all the way on the mound
and allowed five hits. Ue also
famed eJght and walked three.
J. D. Story of the Pirates &amp;truck
out eight and issued four free
passes while going the distance
for the Pirates.
Yank hitters were Mark Werry with a two-run hOmer and single, McKinney, a double and single; Joe Rosem&amp;.um, two lingles, and Gary SnouO'er, a single.
Getting Pirate hits were Mike
Nesselroad, Mark Dillard, Story,
Kevin Field• and Jorr Ohlinger,
each a 1ingle,
Tight lnlleld pla,y and I I n e
pitching by Bob Ea11011 end Arnly
Vaughan pla,yed a big role ln
the Tiger wfn over t11e Dod·

~----------.,
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SHERWIN1
WIWAMSII
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Jeff

Ridgway,

White; Cheney (LP), Colburn and

Ohlinger.

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L••'!!~!t~t.••l

Knock Off
Yankees
A couple of Acres, but not
of the landed variety. teamed
up to lead the Middleport Boys
League Redlegs to an upset 4-3
victory over the previously undefeated Yankees Monday.
The Acres were Doug Acre,
second baseman, with two hits ,
and Allen Acre, who pitched sixhit ball, fanned 9, and walked
two over the six innings.
Acre gave up a two-run homer to Woody Call of l.he Yanks
in the second after Terry Pickens had singled leading off, then
pretty well scattered five other
hits gotten by Tyree, two singles, and one each by Phil Mil ~
ler, and Chris Miller.
The Redlegs won it in t h e
fifth when Doug Acre led off with
a slngle, was sacrificed down
by brother Allen, and Steve Wal burn, Kenny ~Wisher and Terry
Brew~F singled.
Pllll Miller of the losers fan.
ned 7, walked 3.
021 000- 3 6 1
Yankees
il0020- 461
REM;Ilegs
P. Miller and Call. A. Acre
and Kim.

been putting well . And, I· don't
Lhink I'll be as nervous this

In the 1966 U.S. Open . Las1 ~car
he was fi fth.
The way this talented Texan
is playing now - he's won$90,000
since the 1967 Open m hi s first
year on the tour - he could win
this year's dass1c , which will be
played out between yawning
bunkers and beckoning ln..~ s on
Rochester's oak Hill ("I)Ul' SC.
One thing is certain. Trevino
is out to win.
"Why else would I be here'!"
h~ a s ks.
But he quick!~· adds he doubts
it will be one of the "new
breed" who wins lhe nation's
mosl presti gi ou~ golf priz.e nex t
Sunday .
It'll be one of the velera11
players, more ably cquipp!!d to
withstand the withering pressures Lhal are an ou:upat.ional
hazard in the open.
Not on!~ doe s he p1 ck former
champion Billy Ca~pc r lu take
the open, but Trevino predict~
Jack Nicklaus' year-oM ! lpen
record of 27J may be tied, if the
weather hold s up.
"If the re&lt;:ord isn' l matched,
it'll take at least a .2713 or '1.77 10
win here," the stock) lad from
E:l Paso said,
"I think I have a very good
cham;c - IJul I know the pressure will be great,' ' he said.
"About the only waj fur me to
win is to have a big lead going
into the final round and JUSt
back in. "T!tis is a to ugh course
- but J like tough courses. M)
hitting has been great and I've

SOrry, only one gu-.• pllr P'IIOn.
CIVE YOUR GUESS WHEN VOV REGISTER t"OR TilE
QPEN HOIJSE.

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Siam changed tu name to
Thailand in !948.

EXTRA
CASH
for summer?
Tomorrow mon1ing
just give us a call
or stop ·in. Get
the money quickly
to clean up debts,
take a vacation
and re1ax.

Our thrifty budget
loan plan may be
just the answer

for you now.
Have less to pay out
and more for
yourself.

CITY LOAN
s' Savings Co.
Phone 992-2171
125 E. MAIN ST.
POMEROY, 0.

League o( Ohio Sportsmen has
called for passage of the firearms control bill now in U.
S. Congress, but said "great er restrictions on firearms
than those now in the measure would be mere political ex .
pediency .''
The league sent a telegram
containing Its views to t h e
commission appointed by Pres ident Johnson to investigate
crime and study means of pre serving law and order in the
country. The telegram, signed
b.Y John ThOmpson. league
president, said:
••we believe the President's
call for an end to lawlessness
and violence should be met
with solutions, not expediences. Stricter gun legislation will
not solve the problem."
Copies of the message were
sent to various congressional
leaden&gt;.

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'i~t8ii;i~s etH''~ :}\''~'

AVICTIM OF WINTER

~

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A~anta

year and has earned $54,426 ~
stand eightJt on the money
winners' list. •

"U'',

I
OFFICEI
PLANTS
SCHOOLS

(UI'O-

TIm

Bearhs and Grueser. Hitting Cor
th&amp; Dodgers were Chaney with
a triple and two singles and Lonnie COats with a pair of singles .
012 122-8 6 I
Yanks
Pirates
013 00~4 52
McKinney and Werry. Story
and Nesselroad.
Tigers
303 OJI-8 8 0
Dodgers
020 01{&gt;.- 3 5 2
Eaaon (WP), Vaugluln (4) and

I

I

KING BUILDERS
SUPPLY 'CO•

gers.
Eason and Vaughan combined
to strike out 13 Dodgers while
permltting only six bases on
balls. BUl Chaney and T I m
Colburn, Dodger moundsmen,
taMed eight and walked six.
Tiger hitter s were Vaughan
with a home run and double,
Sherman White, a double and a
single each by Charles Marshall,

Eason,

N.Y.

Let! Trevioo tied for 54th place

College Athletic Programs
No Longer Self-Sustaining
CHICAGO (UPO -

Trevino Is Out To
Capture U. S. Open

Roberts Wins Sixth

Thabet.

·•

12

Beckert Williams' drive O(t the
right centerfield renee permitted both to score easily• .
That gave Bob Lee, who relieved Gary Nolan in the seventJt, his fourth defeat against
two wlns this basebell season.
The Cubs' starter Ken Holtzman

year as I w1s last yea·~·"
Trevino hasll't Won a tour..
namcnt yet, bUt he was seeord

11 llooston and

his teammates aot elgh~ but all
throe of the Clnc:lnnaU runs
were unearned. Both squads were
credited with two errors.
errors.
The Reds are to play sh~e
games daily with the Cubs
through Thursday, alii then
head lor st. Louis •.

be eased by general
athletic programs have reached college revenue or govermnenthe stager where they no longer tal assistance in the construeare self-sustaining.
tlon and maintenance of faclliThlt's the conclusion drawn . ties.
from a report filed Monday by
The report noted that NCAA
the National Collegiate Athletic colleges currently have an
Association (NCAA) wUh Vlce investment of $2,050,019,519 in
Rose doubled, advanced on a Pre.sldent Hubert fl Humphrey physical facilities and that the
wild pitch and went over on and the Congress of the United operating budget for 1966-67
Randy Hudley's throwing error. States.
totaled $190 million, nearly
The c_ubs matched it in the
.. In my judgement,,. said double that of the budget for
next lrunng, when Ernie Banks , Marcus L. Plant, professor of 1961--62.
hit a solo homer, his lOth of the ' law
at the Unlverslty of
The report, stressed the
season. TWo iMlngs later he du· Michigan and the president of NCAA, clearly irdicated that
plicated it, giving Chicago a 2-1 the NCAA. "new ways am college budgets are being sorely
lead. Both hits were orr starter means must be fourd to finance strained by the inflationary rise
Gary Nolan, who gave up six our e:xpandlng activlties. There in costs and the pressure for
hits in six innings.
are obvious limitations on gate more facilities and participation
The visitors jumped back in Income as a support factor QR~or\unities. Participation In
front in the top of' the seventh. because of increased student intercollegiate athletics by men
TOiij- Perez and Leo Cardenas bodies, practh:al llmltations on has increased by 46,672 over the
singled, with Perez going over fieldhwse and stadium capacl- past to years, accordil\:: to the
when right fielder AI SpBQgl.er ties and also a practical ceiling survey.
dropped Don Pavletlch's Oy on thepriceoftickets.''
A breakdown of individuals
ball. Cardenas went to third on
Need Additional Funds
participating showed a toW or
the play and went over on an
Plant, in Issuing the third of a 169,306 men and women taking
series ot reports begun in 1956- part in intercollegiate athletics,
intleld force out.
The smarting Cubs then got 51 and repeated every fifth 1.4 million In lntramuralactivithe win fever and also put over year, indicated the ftnancla1
two rW\8,
crisis ln the colleges' expallied
Billy Williams drove in the sports, physical preparedness
&gt;
lfinni~W runs with a double, fol. a n d recreational
programs

Umat•d $1.65 per !clot for the
rtlllng of all pot holes and poor-

~~r~:h~:s.11=:t~/~~::::h ; ~ ;b
·~ oa
~:

AT

AII·Stlrs@

son.

.ar

Flossie Musgrave, Mrs . Huel
Hussell, Mrs. Helen Evick, an:l
Mrs, Allene Plants.
Superintendent, Junior department, Mrs. Sylvia Frum, and
Teaeher s
Mrs. Margaret
Crush, Mrs. Faye Meadows, Mrs.
.J une Mallette, Mrs. Lenore As·
bury, Mrs. Betty Gardner, Mrs.
Clara McGraw, and Mrs. Mary
Wilcoxen.
Superintende nt, Teen depart-ment, Mrs. Nanc,y Hamm, and
Teacher - Mrn. Beverly Cottrill. A program will be presented and an exhibit will be
made on comPletion o( the school.

The Cin- Ups, who had advanced on an got his ftftll win In nine oftlclal
error and a walk to ~lem appearances. He, however, was

clllllati Ueds, only a half game
~.
ahead of Chic11go in the Nation\ •...aJ· League standings, must beat
the Cubs today U they wish to
remain in the fintt division.
The Ohio team will have
George Cnl~er, who has a S-5
record, on the moun::l to oppose
Joe Niekros, 5-4 so far this sea-

owners is given fOr the resurfacing the cost would be an es.

At Heights

o., Tueodoy, June 11, 1968

Culver On Mound Today

· torblkes and present ..{t the next
meeting. Also discussed was the
problem or hitchhikers lh the city
and people b.-topping suddenly In a
line or traffic to pick up hitchhiker s which could cause a sertoul) accident or a chain of accidents. City Attorhey Ray Mus..
grave was asked to draw up an
ordinance on this mstter and
present next meeting.
Mayor Morgan announced there
would be a meeting
the City
Charter revision committee on
Wednesda..v, June 26, at 7:30 p.
m. In oouncll chambers,
A discussion was held on the
proposed resurfacing or Main
street from 6th to 12th including all side streets from Main
to VIand In this designated area
with the Mayor reporting that
the proposal is looking mote favorable all the time, but some
property owners In the area have
still not been cOntacted on the
matter.

II the consent or the property

Began Monday_

F.
~

by Mayor Mnrs.:an to represent
the tl"it,y at mt!etins.:s of the Ma11011 County Cummonlt,y Action
f;rou]l, Inc., with the next meet·
lng schl!dulcd (or the group on
.June 13 ul 7:311 p.m. in the
courthouse.
Mayor Murgan announced that
Krodel !'ark ~wlmming area and
the local ."i!~wnec swlmmi ngpool
will be opened on June 15. Appli cations are now being taken
by the city for the position of
llre,guard at Krodel Park lake
and those wishing to apply for
lifeguard at ~awnee pool l!lhWid
contact either Robert ~rtzer
or Clay llinkle.
Complaints have been regis;
tered concerning motorbikes in
the residential sections at all
hours to various council members and Mayor Morgan asked
City Attorney Ray Musgrave to
contact Charleston, and get a
copy of their regulations on mo.

Bible School

ma\trllll C.D ltUIN up ln
Lracil •net JO\I NOOIM I
•
, unoomrorWtte •nd IHl elu 111.
C.Nr .. Pilla WIUI IW vntqW lu·
am• formula •ht up tbl lllofttd
..... 111\Mdll ot &amp;hi 101m~,........
&amp;Net and IIIIINIUit r.rlaUrJI:Ia. It•~
~
nlltf Of lbl• ll'ftl\l·
a.nc,. Tbta rou wm M JDW' ..U•

Ease The Pain.

Dudley's Florist

or-

TIM&lt; mu~ewar Muon • rout dill""
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A lovely, Fragrant
Bouquet Will

Start cnllr;c t,nq : ~ r;nmnlr!r ~

rx·•·

WAKEUP YOUR
PERISTALSIS
Wit,_ b*-t . .

CheerThemUp

regulru pm .r~.

sular) of ::i:~5U per month lhc11·
11flcr .-;ix ml)fllhs will be paid
~3fill
month, one tu five
years so•·vice will pay $3RII und
on!r fl~·e years, the pay will ~o
Lo :;;41!11 and lhe Chief or Pulice
wi II receive !-H!',I/ r&gt;er month;
strecl and Sttnitbry workers will
rccc..'ivc a :\&gt;21J per munth raise
with the Street Commissioner to
be paid :li4l!ll tond the building
inspector will be raised from
~0
per month to $75 per
munth; Sewer Dcp1:1.rtmcnt superintendent will now receive
$34!; per month and the assist.
ant .. will receive $320 p e r
month with all hourly employees receiving a 15 cent an hour
increase and the clerk of thlil
sewer fund was granted a $40
pel' month raise - the two
fico secretaries, I .aura Gaskins
and .Janet Miller were granted
a $22.50 per month rah;e.
Bill Wellman was appointed

3 - The Dail.Y Sentinel, Pomerii)'-Middle110rt.

' . '•

ICE
POINT

non-akid trelllld-l,a

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FUEL C

tiAa

&amp; AUTO

PLE~SANT,

W. VA.
675-2460

IIH I.'N-11
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excl11ta

E. MAIN ST.
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Of Free
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Ill
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�... ,. . .

.

•
~ - Tin Daily Sentlnol,

Pomeroy-Middleport, fl., Tuosdi¥,June II, 1968
i~;t======~=::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::t::::::::::::~~j~

Key to Stop Delinquency

~!~Middleport...

: : Personal Notes I~=~ Retums For

SEATTLE, Wash. (UP0- constructiYe to do and you crews, and Tony Jackson, also
Paul Belleaen has his own won't have juvenile delinquen- 11, a boy who really knows how , s~
to keep the engine purring.
theory or how to combat cy," he says.
While "The Queen" ls ideal
Belle sen p.1t his theon . intO
juvenile delinquency among
practice last Nov. 17 when he
underprivileged youths.
"Ghe the kids something formed North-By -Northwest Adventurers, a nonproftt saHlng

organizaUon for poor boys from
Seattle's central area, where

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lb•at&lt;•d Colo" •.

POMEROY
CEMENT
BLOCK CO.
The Department Store

of Building Since 1915

most of the city's Negro
population Hvea.
Since then, he has been
training a group of boys, aged 9
to 16, in the arts or seamanship.
About 35 boys, most or them
Negro but with a sprinkling or
whites and orientals, now
belong. Bellesen, hlmse1C a
Nef{ro. hopes the number will
increase as his enthusiastic
charges
spread the word
around,
Always on Saturda.y
Shoreside classroom sessions
ror club members are held for
two hours every Saturday
morning. In the afternoon the
crew boards "The ~een," an
Indiana riverboat donated by
Qusiness executive Frederick
Norton. They take her out on
Lake Washington to put the
lessons into practice.
Bellesen is exacting 1n his
training program. Each boy
must los a minimum of 20
hours In casting otf and docking
before earning cruise privileges.
"Most of the boys know the
rules or the road," Bellesen
said, "and I have some whose
semaphore sending would make
a Navy signalman sJt up . and
tal\e notice."
The boys even have taken
•'The
Queen" through the
Ballard LOcks which link Puget
Sound and Lake Washington,
Two or Bellesen' s prime
students are George Jorden, 11,
the helmsman on one of his

tor trall'llng purposes, Belleseft
wants a 40~-foot yacht so
hla youthful sallora can iJJ on
long distance cruises on Puget
SOUnd this summer. The plan Ia
to rurnlah free transportation to
the scenic &amp;m Juan Islands tor
children who have never been
out of the IMer city.
He presently ia conWctlng a
fund drive to raise money to
buy his cruiser.
"June tl is the deadline and
we're going to make lt,"
BeiJesen vows.
The boys do the work when
"The ()teen" is underway, but
adult supervisors always go
along.
Curtis Jackson and brothers
Mel and Ray Donaldson assist
Bellesen in the program, as
does Ron Lloyd, the only
Caucasian in the instructor
corps.
All the men havE! experience
working with youth groups such
as the Boy Scout-s and Sea
Scouts. Bellesen served as the
rtrst vice president of the
Snohomish CountJ' Boys Club ln
nearby Everett.
Bellesen plans to keep the
North - By - Northwest Adventurers program running year
around Training programl!l and
weekend cruises will be U1e
format during the school and
the long Pug~ Sound cruises
will be made in the summer.
Girls Ma.y Cruise
He also is thinking of starting
a girts• auxiliary for North-By~
Northwest Adventurers. "But
that's still in the prellmlnary
piBMlng stage," he said.
When the new vessel Ia
obtained, Bellesen plana to
christen It the "S.S. Langston
Hughes" after the Negro poet
and playwright.
He thinks this 3s a good name
for a Negro~rlented boys'
sailing club.
He explains that a Negro
youth needs an outstanding
individual to emulate, but finds
it hard to identify with white
heroes such as John Paul Jones

or George Washington.
"I know how that ia," he 1said.
"When J was going to school In
Everett, l didn't know George
Washington Carver was a Negro
until my mother ·told me."

Thoughts
There are those today who
say that each man can choose
the law he wishes to obey,
that need for soda) change is

justification to wreck society,
that reform is excuse to vio-

late individuals and destroy
property. In their perversion

of the right to dlssent, these
revolutionary hypocrites sing
songs of freedom but dance

to the beat of anarchy.
-Gov. Rorw.ld Reagan
California.

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A simple way to get rid o,
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t

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124 W. MAIN

992·2848

-

That grand old actlng Yeteran

Mr. and Mrs. Harold Chase, Mr.
and Mrs. Raymond LleviJig, Side~
Ia, Mike, Judy Jane, and &amp;~ale,

returns to the district tilts week~
end to participate ln a series of
agricultural and civic meetings.

Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Anthony
On Friday, June 14, Miller will
and children, Barbara and Joe, be in ZaneiJ\'Uie to appear at the
and Ji. W. Farley were in Ports~ Amual Musklngum County Farm
mouth lill'!day to visit Mr. and Bureau Ox Roast, which begins at
Mrs. David J83 Jenkins and fam- 6:30 p.m. at the fairgrounds.
Ily.
On Sab.lrda.Y: the Congressman

c, E. Ruppelt, who resided will travel to Washington County

with his son, the Rev. Howard

Ruppelt In Middleport until re·
cent weeks, entered the COm~
munlt,y Hospital at ~rlngfield
today. He is scheduled for surgery Wednesday.
Mr. and Mrs. John K. Smith
of Akron were Saturday over~
ntght guests of hia mother, Mrs.
J. K. smith.
Mr. and Mrs. John Cyrus of
Kenova, w. Va. have been the
guests ot Mrs. E. M. Wood of

Middleport.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry CooPer, David, Doug, and Janet of
Parma were weekend guests of
Mrs. Eva Hartley. On &amp;.lnday
U!e Cooper family and Mrs. Hartley joined Major and Mrs. James
Roller and chlldren Kathy, Jim,
and John, here on furlough af~
ter thre~ years in Germany, for
a family dinner at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Richard OWen,
Dick and Judy.

Carmel News

By the Day
Mr. JOOd Ours, Mrs. Sherman
Clay of Buckeye Lake and Mrs.
Everett Ours of Somerset called
on Eunie Brinker one day re-

to address the Amual REA Picnic at the fairgrounds ' ln Marietta.
On &amp;mda)', the Congressman
completes his weekend scheWle
in Morgan County where he will
take part in the dedication cere~
monies of t;,e new fire house at
stockport at 2 p.m.

[HOSPITAL NEWS

J

PLEA5ANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
ADMITTED, Mrs. Hobby Powers, llerderson; Rex Martin, PL
Pleasant; Brenda Lee Oliver,
Galhpolis Ferry; Mrs. James R.
Pullins, Pomeroy; Mrs. Delmar
Parsons, Pt. Pleasant; Richard
Esque, Gallipolis Ferry; William
Cochran, PL Pleasant; Hoberl
Craig, Buffalo.
DISCHARGED: Mrs. Charles
Boardman, Gallipolis Ferry;
Mrs. lioy Brinker, Mason; Syl~
via Spears, Henders:Jn; Mrs.
Stephen Mashburn, Bufta1o; Mrs.
Howard Thornton and son. Pt.
Pleasant.
BIRTH: Mr. and Mrs. Delmar
Parsons, Pt. Pleasant, a son;
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Lane, PL

Pleasant, a son.

Paris agency to find til em a blond
two-months-old boy . .. One of
the saddest stories we know con~
cerns a movie actor whose wife
~er surgery ooul&lt;M't have children, so they went to an orphan·
age to adopt what they foresaw

as the Ideal little blorui perrection; they got there and saw just
one little tad and couldn't leave
without him - he was deformed
but today alter multi-surgery the
now grown4.1p lad Is normal; but
these two so admirable human beings who toOk such painstaking
care or one nearlY ~ permanent
misfit- aredfvorced .•. We hope
prayerfUlly no further punchline
is added to their tale, such as
Vietnam.
Marcel Cerdan Jr., son of a
French prizefighter killed in a
plane en route to America, is a
middleweight with an undefeated
.. record who said his father came
to him i!l a dream and asked Jr.
to j lwin back my middleweight
championship;" his lucky taBsman: his great-fighting father's
trunks worn the night he took the
crown from Tony Zale.
Handsome slx..foot bartender
at Miss Lacey's looks like an
actor or a halidsome athlete but
he's neither: he's Dale Lind, for~
mer ass't pastor of st. Peter's
Lutheran Church on Lexington
Ave. who still prll&amp;.ches In Lu~
theran pulpits whilepost-graduat ~
ing at the N. Y. Theological Seminary; gets In a little noble ad-

mer and her Dr. husband Vin-

~Jip

day, 1:30 p.m. at

or wobbl1

f'eeney~Ben­

Home.

POMEROY CHAPTER SO, Roy-

kle on your plates, keep&amp; h.bie teeth
more tlr illiJ' ~et . Olve&amp; conftdent feelIng: or securlt~ 'md added comfort.

al ,\rch Masons, stated meeting

Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. Pomeroy Masonic Temple to elect and
install officers for the 1968~
69 year. Officers and compan-·
ions invited.
, FEENEY -BENNETT Post 128
American Legion, Wednesday
night, at the hall, 7:30p.m.

No gummy, gtlOt;y taste or feellns .

DtmtureH that 1\t ar., eseentlal to

resu larly.

Q('t f'ASTEIITH at all drug counteta.

THURSDAY
HOCK SPIDNGS Grange, 8 p.
m. Thursday at the grange hall.
Chester and Hemlock granges
have been inviled; sewing am
baking contests to be held.

Juanita Jane Dozer
THE REV. and Mrs. Charles E. Dozer of Langs\'ille,
Route l, arc announcing the engagement and approaching marriage of their daughter, Jaunila Jane, lo Douglas Wayne
Thatcher, son of Mr. aM Mrs, C. M. Thateher of Elyria.
Miss Dozer attended high school at Libcrt.Y Union and
Bloom-Carroll in Fairfield County before ~:oming to Hutland
High Sc hool where she graduated in 1967. She attended
Owosso College ard is currently employed by the General
Telephone Co. of Owosso, Mich.
Mr. Thatcher is a graduate of the Elyria Jligh School and
a senior at Owosso College when! he is majoring in religion.
The open church wedding will be an event of Aug. 17 at
2:30p.m. at the Elyria Wesleyan Church,

PIIILATHEA SOCIETY, Thursday, 7:30 p.m., at Mid&lt;lleport
Church of Christ.
REVIVAL AT Fair Play Cha·
pel, through June 16, with Re\'.
Junior Malloy, Wellston evangelist and the Rev. R. D. Brown in
charge, Located ocr Route 325
towards Vinton.

PAST COUNCILORS, Theodor-

I
ll'
I

us Council, Daughters of Am·
erican, Thursday, 7:30 p.m. at
borne of Mrs. Eva Dessauer,
Cave Sl

FRIDAY
ICE CREAM SOCIAL, Chester
Auxiliary Fire Department. Fri·
day evening at the firehouse.

I
Skating Party

992·5560
MIDDLEPORT

RETURN fRIDAY

Pomeroy ...
i Personal Notes ·:·:·•·•
i

.

Dr. and Mrs. Everett A. Tra-

'

S9 N. 2nd Ave.

Mushrooms are raised in
hundreds of miles of mushroom beds in caves, tunnels
and sheds in the suburbs of
Paris.

ron

nett Post 128, American Legion

( non- ac! Ll ) powder to ~prln­

health. See your dentlllt

Lewis

WEDNESDAY
WIIITE ROSE Lodge Wednes-

Love &amp; Appreciation

Being Planned
A skating party was planned

cy of Columbus were weekend

visitors of Mrs. Nellle Tracy.
Mrs. Fred Goeglein and son,
Danny , of Circleville were weekend guests of her pa.reotl!l, Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Wagner or
Racine, and Mr . and Mrs. Fred

during a recent meeting of the

Goegleln.

Guernsey and Jersey Division
or the Meigs County Better Livestock Club held at the home of

Dr. and Mrs. J. B. Marshall
and son, John, of Louisville, Ky.
were weekend guests of Mrs.
Russ Watson. They stopped here
enroute to Elkins, W, Vli., where
Dr. Marshall's brother, Sam
Marshall, had been killed Satur~
day In a tractor accident. Mrs.
WUitam R, Knight of Point Pleasant and Mrs. Watson attended the
funeral services at Mingo, W.Va.
today, Mr. Marshall taught school
in Kentucky.
Mr. and Mrs. Pete Vanica or
Cleveland and Mrs. W. R. Knight,
Billy and Johnny of Point Pleas~
ant, were weekend guests of Mrs.
Olan Genheimer and Mr. an c:l
Mrs. William Sheridan. M r s.
Richard \'anica of Cleveland
spent the weekend with Mrs. Russ
Watson.
Mr. and,..Mur'James Dawson
of COlumbus visited over t h e
weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Will
Myer of Minersville.
Mrl!l. James Diehl and daughter, Jo Ellen, went to Pittsburgh, Pa. over the weekend to
visit Miss Charlene Diehl. Mrs.
Diehl returned home Sunday
night, but Jo Ellen remained and
will accompany her sister here
Wednesday. Charlene will leave
next week on a tour of Europe,

Linda Hollon.
Donald Mora, advisor, and 11
members attended the meeting.
R~orts were given by Roger
Nease and Mark Mora. Roma
Nease was in charge of recrea ..

tlon.
Next meeting of the group was
schedu1ed for June 27 at the
home of Tony Carnaham. Refreshments were served by Mrs.
Edison Hollon.

Rusche/ Family
Guests at Outing
Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Huschel
and family , who lett for Florida
Monday, were honored by members of the Syra~se Church of
the Nazarene during an outing
at the &amp;vracuse Park.
A gift or silverware was pre~
aented to the family. Refresh~
ments were served. AUending
were Janet Johnson, the Rev.
...t Mrs. A. E, Mlller, Mr. and
Mrs. Carson Hayes, Mr. and
Mrs. Bob :Jewart, Mr. and Mrs.
Hobert Moore and family, Mr.
and Mrs. Asa Custer, Mrs. Ar~
tie Grindley, Mrs. Pauline Authorson and daughter, Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Davis and family, tMra.
Ora Bass and family, and Mr.
and Mrs. Leroy Watson.

2-Hour
DRY QEANING
SERVICE

CALL PRAYER MEETING
A prllfer meeUng will be beld
at 7,30 p.m . this evening at the

-

%

coiiii•IJ

ll

suot• 111

l. See hOW the neW

Check the char
with its special
Qodge Super ~eeu agtlin&amp;l othef
383 4-bbl. VS stacks p Look again at
care. . beca!JIIB
Per1ormance
.
impt'BISI'IIe
\he pr\ce. It's
ae d stick a• standard.
it i"ch.&amp;del a 4:epee -duty brake• and
,
alonG wlt'-.-he"'Y . OLiide-trea.de,
.
Red \.me ...
and erT'blem•. i.
8118 pene1on, .

liT

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t

ur

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t.l 11·111'1

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home ot James Proffitt, first
house north of the ferry on the
Ohio side or the river. Mls~
alonary worker Robert Harper
of the Ravenswood SO&lt;oncl Bap.

ur

dat Church will be present.

I

si l

."' ..... .
I

co•"'moo

C&amp;rl Walton alxl t'lmUy In New-

from Prince Albert.

LADIES AUXILIARY,

when you talk , ~t. laugh or sneer:e?
Don't be annoyed 11nd emharrL~!!ed
by ~uch handl cap.a. FAS'I'EETH. an

olkul111~

BAND Boosters,

Manle,l PosL;G3, Tuesday, 7 p.
m. at NaoKH Baptist Church.

FALSE TEETH

Wedding Anniven•ry
C11mlngUp?
Let Flowers
Express Your

and Mrs. James Ingram or columbus visited Mr. alxl Mrs. Robert Lee ard family alxl Ralph
Lee on saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Mllton Circle of
Bashan visited with Mr. and Mrs.
Douglas Circle on Monday,
Dean Barnitz of Pomeroy, Eu-nie Brinker, Betty Van Meter,
Ann carleton and son, Patrick,
of Carmel visited with Mr. and
Mrs. Clarence Koehler ot Tuppers Plains on Thursday.
Warren Rose, Chester Rose
and William Carleton called on

Changed Name
King Geor~e V adopted the
name of Windsor for the Brit·
Ish royal house in 1917. during the war with Germany, to
get away from the German
name of Saxe·Coburg·Gotha
which Queen VIctoria took

'of.:,\STI-:1!~

TuesdaJ, 7::JUp.m, at high school.
Elel·tion o! new officers. All
members asked to be present.

Don't Neglect Slipping
Do ra111e teeth drop.

Tom Hall has given 14&gt; the security of the weekly paycheck with
the Chicago Tribune to try his haM as a free lance wrltcr..photog~
rapher. After all, nothing ventured, nothing gained.
lle plans to spend the summer at (ape Cod doing feature material which he hopes .to sell to newspapers and magazines. At any
rale, Tom is only ori ·· a.. leave of absence from the Tribune, so if
things happen not to work out over 1-'.ast, he can always return to
the Chicago newspaper come tall.

Tl 1E.SD !\\'

Sinatra's record label ,(Reprise) thought It had Tony Ben·
nett algned up but Colwnbla Records &amp;Ot Tony with a hlp - fee
longterm bundle 1;Pread o v e r
many years.

Mr. alxl Mrs. Dwight Swep•ton
alxl lamily of Columbus alxl Mr.

ark and Mr. and Mrs. 0 r v y
Gainer of Hebron on Sunday.
Those calling at the Dougles
Circle home on saturday were
Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Marks .and
Tina Marie, of Brilliant, Mrs.
James Patterson aod sons of Old
Town F1ats, and Mu. Glen Abies,
of Bald Knobs.
Mrs. Dan Smith called on her
Cather, Mr. Lawrence Smith. of
Laurel Clirt recently,

,•,

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1
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11.11'1

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Pomerov

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992-5428

GREr\T GOOD WOKS
SPRING SHOES

HI BROWS
MAHOGANY

Q-Did George Washington
have any lineal descendants?
A-Since the Father of His
Country had no offspring he
cou1d not have any descend·
ants in the direct line, al·
though he had brothers and
sisters and has many, col·
lateral descendants.

The Eighlh District swnmer
convention of the Ladie~. Aux~
iliary of the American Legion,
will be held Thursday at .Jackson. Registration for the convention will begin at noon. Aux~
iliary members of Feeney~Ben­
nett Post 128, are asked to ~n­
tact Mrs . Albert Roush for traAsportatlon.

Plans have been (:ompletlld for
the open ehunh wedding of Miss
Kathy i\rul Housh, daughter or
Mr. and Mrs, Everett Housh of
New Haven, to llanny E. IUckard.
The ceremony will be perform~
ed at 8 p.m. Friday, .June 14
at the SL Paul Lutheran Church
in New !Iaven. The Rev. George
Weirick of Ravenswood will per~
form the ceremony. Miss Linda
Roush will serYc as maid of honor for her sister, and best man
for the bridegroom will be Denni s Smith. Ralph Rou~h aOO Mi~
chael Goodnite will bt: the ushers.

Lohses Entertain

Wins Degree
Fred Sisson, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Leland Sisson, Pomeroy,
reeeivcd a bachelor of science
degree in cdutation from Ohio
University Sunday at the 215th
commencement exercises.
1
While atten::ling Ohio University he was In the marching
band arK! concert band for four
years, arxl a member or Kawa
Kappa Psi, honorary music fra.
ternity. He has accepted a teaching position in the Galion City
school system.
Mr. and Mrs. Sisson and Mrs.
Mary Kunzelman of Pomeroy at-tended the commencement exercises.

Sgt. E.S Willian! Dixon, 1M!11
of · Mr. and Mrs. John W, liar·
rison of Mlddlepori, bas Ilion

assigned to t'orl Riley, K1111111
with the Second Seventh Arm·
or 24tll tnrontry Division.
SGt. lxon recehUy l'fllllrnod
froiJI til
montiiJ In GeriiiW
and he lind a wife, the Iormor
Beverly Perri _.t nve ~·
here vlaiUng ~eli1Uve1. Mra.lllxon returned to Pontiac, MICh.
wllere she Ia employed. Sfll. Db&lt;·
on will be discharged oo Nov. 8.

The

a v e r a g e Frenchman

&lt;!tJIIOullles about two pounds
of mushrooms a year.

At Outdoor Buffet
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Lohse
of Wolfe Drive, Pomeroy, enterta.Jned &amp;mday evening with
an outdoor buffet honoring their
daughter, Jennifer, and her fiance, James SlJeets.
Guesls were Mr. and M r s.
Charles Sheets, Jr., Mr. and
Mrs. John Musser, and J o h n
Lohse.

4 brlchtldu fer rATRII'I D41'

live u• u -ARROIF
KING

·-·frell

~II ...... llllrC

CtJmfortable 100% cotton

... pressed for th-e life ~
the shirt. We have a
wide aelection of

plaids and colors to
choose from.

DON'T FORGET
DAD ON "HIS"
DAY-JUNE 16th
Even D11ds

Like Flowers

DOWNIE-GROSS

DUDLEY'S FLORlST
59 N.

The Men's Store

2ND AVE,

Pomeroy

Big Bend Regatta, June 21, 22, 23

992-5560

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

•

•

TO MAKr: VISIT
Chester Grange mefnbers will
visit Hock Springs grange on
Thursday night. Regular meeting
of the Chester Grange is June

She isn't
carryl!!g home
the
best bargain
of all ...

25.

SINGER

HAWAIIAN
HAPPENING

\
\
SEE ALL THE SINGER
MACHINES
ON SALE NOWII
·~

We deliver it!

WINoNEOF25
ALL·EXPENSE PAID TRIPS
TO HAWAII FOR 2, IN THE

Electricity is the "' best buy" in your budget
today. And it is delivered mstanlly, as you
need it, in any amo unt you need !
While the prices ol many 1tems have
doubled or tripled, the price you pay per
kilowatt -hour ol elect u city is actual l y
lower in Ohio than it was 20 years ago! ~Be­
cause electricity does so many things lor
you, you are using more thAn ever - and
naturally your lola/ bill is h1gher .)
How has etectncity remamed s uch ,,
bargain?

I-IAWAII·I-IO
TRAVEL STAI&lt;ES
Win a free full-week Hawellar. vacation for 2. Winners .my weak. Entry blanks available et your
appr&lt;MKI SINGER dealer. No obllsatlor to buy.
Traval Stakes runs May 13th throu&amp;h August 3rd.
Rukllnti'Of Ohio and florida may IIlier bY mall.

e bea~Jtitu1

MILL .&amp; SECOND STREETS
()HIO

QUICK QUIZ

Convention Will Be
Held Jackson

Rohlnson's Cleaners

..,..,...d \o\ mor
v\ny\ interior, an a ttY new Qodge
st~.&amp;tt. Make&amp; thl:·ggu ea~ biU'd~n yet
coupe the 19
~ .... butiat
for pertorrT\cu ...8

R. H. Rawlints Sons Co.

superintendent of
the &amp;mday School at the Syracuse Church or the Nazarene,
and the Rev. Morris Wolfe, pas~
tor of the Racine Church of the
Nazarene, returned Friday af~
ter a week of training for pas~
tors held at the Olivet Nazarene
College, Kankakee, 01.

American Legion, Mlddleport, has come through with the Eighth
District award for penentage giving to the Gifts for the Yanks
Who Gave.
&amp;mday at the summer t:onven~ Chillicothe while the ties and
tion held at Wellston, Ule unit ribbons will be taken to t h e
was awarded a plaque in recog- Dayton hospital where they are
nition for h~lng given 831 per made into rugs by the bljnd pa~
cent of goal for the Gins for the
Uents.
Yanks program. This was the
Mrs. Roush will be going to
highest In the district in the the Chillicothe hospital on July
membership category ot under
19, and hopes by that lime to
500. Actually, the post gave over have a quantity of magazines and
$400 - including $100 from the books to take along, ~ if you
Ladies Auxiliary.
have some to contribute, just
The unt t wati also presented leave them by at the North Third
a trophY award for the team Ave. residence ot the Roushes.
event in the Legion bowling tour~
Just last week the auxiliary
nament. Albert Roush, c o m~ had a letter from Sam Beanmander, Jacob Turner, and WU~ stock, administrator of the ChU~
liam Swisher were present at licothe facility, thanking the
the convention to accept the a~ members for 200 magazines sent
wards. Mrs. Roush attended with over this spring
her husband.
Incidentally, the Middleport
unit has ret-eived a citation rrom
TIES, HnmO~S from funeral the department president, Mrs.
baskets, magazines. and paper - James Warner, for membership.
back books are being collected The auxiliary was 14 over goal.
by Mrs. Albert noush of t h e
Ladies Auxiliary of Feeney •
ENTHUSIASTIC .o\BOUT o I d
Bennett Post 128, American Le- cars-:' The Ilarold Lohse fam ~
gion.
ily is. Jim has a 1935 D o'd g e
The magazines and books will which he entered in the antique
go to the Veterans Hospital at show at Lancaster last weekend, and the Lohses here are
in the process or overhauling
their 1936 Chevrolet so they
can join the antique car circuit.
in

Our UfJI,III GDCNI Cleanlnt

Ill

I1

~wart,

Post 128,

Assigned to Riley

fUPON REQUESTJ

111

Jll

Bob

THE SECOND consecutive year Feeney·Bennett

Sgt. Wm. DIKO!i is

Fred Sisson

Wedding for 14th

~

,•,

cent.

Dudley's Florist

cently.
Mr. and Mrs. William Perry
and daughter, Francine, of llol·
Ion, Ohio, spent a night with Mrs.
Mary Circle. Others calling were
Mr. and Mrs. Meh'in Circle and
daughter of Columbus, Mr. arxl
Mrs. Donald Pierce of Athens,
and Mr. and Mrs. James Cirde
of New Haven.
Mr. and Mrs.. Raymol"ll Snyder
and Cecil of Columbus spent a recent Sunday with Mr. am Mrs.
Homer Circle.
Ralph Lee and grandchildren,
Bob, Bill and Beclcy, called on
Betty Van Meter, Margaret AM
Carleton aOO Pat recently,
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Orr of
Chester visited the Robert Lee
family a recent Sunday.
Eunle Brinker, Betty Van Met.
er, Ann Carleton and Pat caUed
on Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Clar k
at Racine.
Larry Circle, Joliet. Dl., spent
a few days with his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Douglas Circle.
CAlling at the home of Mrs.
Mary Circle over a recent weekend were Mr. and Mrs. George
Circle and daughter of Ashland,
Ky., Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Circle
of Columbus, Mr. and Mrs.
James Circle of New Haven, Mrs.
Virgie Walker of Racine, Mrs.
Hattie Powell and daughter, Mdie, ot Portland.
Sunday callers at the home of
Douglas Circle were Mr. and
Mrs. Jack Follrod and daughter,
Kim, of Pmneroy, Paul Moore,
local, ...t Mr . ...t Mrs. Thoms•
and family of Morning star.

U. of Texas drama Dep't this
summer •.• narry Belafonte will
play a Negro named ·Levine in
his next movie with Edward" G.
Robinson: Harry should let and
be well.
Lord Jim's owner Jimmy Au~
fiero sent a bottle of champagne
to Tammy Grimes who shrugged
u1 never touch the stuff" (peas~
antl) .. . He doesn't need it but
Bob Hope's now eligible for so~
cial security ... Dane Clark'$ acting career has paused somewhat
but not his income: says he bought
Occidental Oil at three and oow
It's 40 alter Its Big Split.
Prettiest rtr.e-looderle in town:
the lovely outdoor Italian gar~
dens of Barbetta's W. 46th St.
spot; one of the most beautltul

los o! Bourbon Parme asked a

Miss Roush Sets

Community.
£"
By Charlene
\.AJfDer••• Hoeflich

•••social
• Calendar \

thelovellost Italian restaurant in
New York City ... Little Mellsa
Merendino. trying to · reed her
toy bunny pasta at the Tiberio Is
tile daugbter o! TV's Bet!IY l'al·

Sabbaths,

heirless years, Dutch Princess

it's by far

Ohlo·s investor·owned electric light and
power companies keep developing better
ways to serve your electrical needs . One
fu.a mple ... the strong regional network
thfli 1nterco nnects Ohio·s eighl eleclric
companies with each other. and links with
electric systems 1n other stales. This ex·
change ol power results m mOre eflicient
operahon. Increased eflic1ency (and yo'n
mcreased use ol e lectnc1ty) have helped
to keep the price low. Electricily is the

··best buy ·· in your budget today!

~ In Wllconlln.

3.49
THE SHOE BOX
Whore Shot'S A·; , Sensibly Prlcod
MII,)DLEPORT, 0,

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r
•

POMEROY

Local Events

Mrs. 'Cush Johnston of Bradbury Is ronllned to Metgs General Hospital with a broken buck.
WAS!INGTON - loth District
Mr . ...t Mro. WUIIa Antllony, Congressman Clarence E. Miller

Valuable Information On LaWn &amp; G•rdens

MOORE'S

r~staurants ~ere,

vice to bar customers betwoen

BY JACK O'BRIAN
NEW YORK - After f·o u r

Irene and husband Prince Car· Kathy Crosby will lecture at the

Ask For Free Ortho Lawn &amp; Gard•n Bookr.t.

SIIOP ANI SAVE AT

Voice along Broadway

Congressman

Your Ohio Electric Compa,n.ies
The CincinnJ!i G1s &amp; ~lectlit Company
The Cltvtllnd Eltclrie lllumint~tina UJmpany
Columbus and SDUthtrn Ohio Electric Compt~ny
Th! Lla,ton Powtr 1nd Licht Comp•nr

The Fabri' Shop
Singer Sales &amp; Service

Mccall's Patterns

992-2284
115 w•. $ECOND
POMUOY
. OHIO

MononJ.1hlll l'o'lrtr Complrl)'
Ohio Edison Comp.1ny
Oflio PGWar Company
The Toledo tcli1on Company

Providing low t:lllrt. tWii•blll f!Ower to 8 miNion-'-

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�... ,. . .

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~ - Tin Daily Sentlnol,

Pomeroy-Middleport, fl., Tuosdi¥,June II, 1968
i~;t======~=::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::t::::::::::::~~j~

Key to Stop Delinquency

~!~Middleport...

: : Personal Notes I~=~ Retums For

SEATTLE, Wash. (UP0- constructiYe to do and you crews, and Tony Jackson, also
Paul Belleaen has his own won't have juvenile delinquen- 11, a boy who really knows how , s~
to keep the engine purring.
theory or how to combat cy," he says.
While "The Queen" ls ideal
Belle sen p.1t his theon . intO
juvenile delinquency among
practice last Nov. 17 when he
underprivileged youths.
"Ghe the kids something formed North-By -Northwest Adventurers, a nonproftt saHlng

organizaUon for poor boys from
Seattle's central area, where

two coats in ONE DAY...

PRATT &amp; LAMBERT

This outstanding later. pain/Is easy,

an ':I dries quickly. Apply
the same day! And the
ldu•,.ble , blister-resistant finish
new-look ing longer. CMose
White plus ready-mixed
""'"o'm made Cali use ~

$8.63

lb•at&lt;•d Colo" •.

POMEROY
CEMENT
BLOCK CO.
The Department Store

of Building Since 1915

most of the city's Negro
population Hvea.
Since then, he has been
training a group of boys, aged 9
to 16, in the arts or seamanship.
About 35 boys, most or them
Negro but with a sprinkling or
whites and orientals, now
belong. Bellesen, hlmse1C a
Nef{ro. hopes the number will
increase as his enthusiastic
charges
spread the word
around,
Always on Saturda.y
Shoreside classroom sessions
ror club members are held for
two hours every Saturday
morning. In the afternoon the
crew boards "The ~een," an
Indiana riverboat donated by
Qusiness executive Frederick
Norton. They take her out on
Lake Washington to put the
lessons into practice.
Bellesen is exacting 1n his
training program. Each boy
must los a minimum of 20
hours In casting otf and docking
before earning cruise privileges.
"Most of the boys know the
rules or the road," Bellesen
said, "and I have some whose
semaphore sending would make
a Navy signalman sJt up . and
tal\e notice."
The boys even have taken
•'The
Queen" through the
Ballard LOcks which link Puget
Sound and Lake Washington,
Two or Bellesen' s prime
students are George Jorden, 11,
the helmsman on one of his

tor trall'llng purposes, Belleseft
wants a 40~-foot yacht so
hla youthful sallora can iJJ on
long distance cruises on Puget
SOUnd this summer. The plan Ia
to rurnlah free transportation to
the scenic &amp;m Juan Islands tor
children who have never been
out of the IMer city.
He presently ia conWctlng a
fund drive to raise money to
buy his cruiser.
"June tl is the deadline and
we're going to make lt,"
BeiJesen vows.
The boys do the work when
"The ()teen" is underway, but
adult supervisors always go
along.
Curtis Jackson and brothers
Mel and Ray Donaldson assist
Bellesen in the program, as
does Ron Lloyd, the only
Caucasian in the instructor
corps.
All the men havE! experience
working with youth groups such
as the Boy Scout-s and Sea
Scouts. Bellesen served as the
rtrst vice president of the
Snohomish CountJ' Boys Club ln
nearby Everett.
Bellesen plans to keep the
North - By - Northwest Adventurers program running year
around Training programl!l and
weekend cruises will be U1e
format during the school and
the long Pug~ Sound cruises
will be made in the summer.
Girls Ma.y Cruise
He also is thinking of starting
a girts• auxiliary for North-By~
Northwest Adventurers. "But
that's still in the prellmlnary
piBMlng stage," he said.
When the new vessel Ia
obtained, Bellesen plana to
christen It the "S.S. Langston
Hughes" after the Negro poet
and playwright.
He thinks this 3s a good name
for a Negro~rlented boys'
sailing club.
He explains that a Negro
youth needs an outstanding
individual to emulate, but finds
it hard to identify with white
heroes such as John Paul Jones

or George Washington.
"I know how that ia," he 1said.
"When J was going to school In
Everett, l didn't know George
Washington Carver was a Negro
until my mother ·told me."

Thoughts
There are those today who
say that each man can choose
the law he wishes to obey,
that need for soda) change is

justification to wreck society,
that reform is excuse to vio-

late individuals and destroy
property. In their perversion

of the right to dlssent, these
revolutionary hypocrites sing
songs of freedom but dance

to the beat of anarchy.
-Gov. Rorw.ld Reagan
California.

House &amp; O.rden
SPRAY CAN

Genertl Purpose

INSECT SPRAY
OR THO
GARDEN SUPPLIES

1.59
Rose &amp; Flower Spray
FOR BLACK SPOT, MILDEW
AND APHIDS
SPRAY CAN
TOMATO AND
VEGETABLE DUST

SMN
Garden Spray

CHLORDANE

DUST
Kills Ants, Grubs,
Roaches, Termites

fOR
JAPANESE BEETLES,
TENT CATERPILLAHS
BAG WORMS

1.59
1.49

WEED-8-GON

BAR
A simple way to get rid o,
weeds in the lawn. Fasten
bar to lawn mover, aOO kill
wec!ds as you mow.

t

of

I

124 W. MAIN

992·2848

-

That grand old actlng Yeteran

Mr. and Mrs. Harold Chase, Mr.
and Mrs. Raymond LleviJig, Side~
Ia, Mike, Judy Jane, and &amp;~ale,

returns to the district tilts week~
end to participate ln a series of
agricultural and civic meetings.

Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Anthony
On Friday, June 14, Miller will
and children, Barbara and Joe, be in ZaneiJ\'Uie to appear at the
and Ji. W. Farley were in Ports~ Amual Musklngum County Farm
mouth lill'!day to visit Mr. and Bureau Ox Roast, which begins at
Mrs. David J83 Jenkins and fam- 6:30 p.m. at the fairgrounds.
Ily.
On Sab.lrda.Y: the Congressman

c, E. Ruppelt, who resided will travel to Washington County

with his son, the Rev. Howard

Ruppelt In Middleport until re·
cent weeks, entered the COm~
munlt,y Hospital at ~rlngfield
today. He is scheduled for surgery Wednesday.
Mr. and Mrs. John K. Smith
of Akron were Saturday over~
ntght guests of hia mother, Mrs.
J. K. smith.
Mr. and Mrs. John Cyrus of
Kenova, w. Va. have been the
guests ot Mrs. E. M. Wood of

Middleport.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry CooPer, David, Doug, and Janet of
Parma were weekend guests of
Mrs. Eva Hartley. On &amp;.lnday
U!e Cooper family and Mrs. Hartley joined Major and Mrs. James
Roller and chlldren Kathy, Jim,
and John, here on furlough af~
ter thre~ years in Germany, for
a family dinner at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Richard OWen,
Dick and Judy.

Carmel News

By the Day
Mr. JOOd Ours, Mrs. Sherman
Clay of Buckeye Lake and Mrs.
Everett Ours of Somerset called
on Eunie Brinker one day re-

to address the Amual REA Picnic at the fairgrounds ' ln Marietta.
On &amp;mda)', the Congressman
completes his weekend scheWle
in Morgan County where he will
take part in the dedication cere~
monies of t;,e new fire house at
stockport at 2 p.m.

[HOSPITAL NEWS

J

PLEA5ANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
ADMITTED, Mrs. Hobby Powers, llerderson; Rex Martin, PL
Pleasant; Brenda Lee Oliver,
Galhpolis Ferry; Mrs. James R.
Pullins, Pomeroy; Mrs. Delmar
Parsons, Pt. Pleasant; Richard
Esque, Gallipolis Ferry; William
Cochran, PL Pleasant; Hoberl
Craig, Buffalo.
DISCHARGED: Mrs. Charles
Boardman, Gallipolis Ferry;
Mrs. lioy Brinker, Mason; Syl~
via Spears, Henders:Jn; Mrs.
Stephen Mashburn, Bufta1o; Mrs.
Howard Thornton and son. Pt.
Pleasant.
BIRTH: Mr. and Mrs. Delmar
Parsons, Pt. Pleasant, a son;
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Lane, PL

Pleasant, a son.

Paris agency to find til em a blond
two-months-old boy . .. One of
the saddest stories we know con~
cerns a movie actor whose wife
~er surgery ooul&lt;M't have children, so they went to an orphan·
age to adopt what they foresaw

as the Ideal little blorui perrection; they got there and saw just
one little tad and couldn't leave
without him - he was deformed
but today alter multi-surgery the
now grown4.1p lad Is normal; but
these two so admirable human beings who toOk such painstaking
care or one nearlY ~ permanent
misfit- aredfvorced .•. We hope
prayerfUlly no further punchline
is added to their tale, such as
Vietnam.
Marcel Cerdan Jr., son of a
French prizefighter killed in a
plane en route to America, is a
middleweight with an undefeated
.. record who said his father came
to him i!l a dream and asked Jr.
to j lwin back my middleweight
championship;" his lucky taBsman: his great-fighting father's
trunks worn the night he took the
crown from Tony Zale.
Handsome slx..foot bartender
at Miss Lacey's looks like an
actor or a halidsome athlete but
he's neither: he's Dale Lind, for~
mer ass't pastor of st. Peter's
Lutheran Church on Lexington
Ave. who still prll&amp;.ches In Lu~
theran pulpits whilepost-graduat ~
ing at the N. Y. Theological Seminary; gets In a little noble ad-

mer and her Dr. husband Vin-

~Jip

day, 1:30 p.m. at

or wobbl1

f'eeney~Ben­

Home.

POMEROY CHAPTER SO, Roy-

kle on your plates, keep&amp; h.bie teeth
more tlr illiJ' ~et . Olve&amp; conftdent feelIng: or securlt~ 'md added comfort.

al ,\rch Masons, stated meeting

Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. Pomeroy Masonic Temple to elect and
install officers for the 1968~
69 year. Officers and compan-·
ions invited.
, FEENEY -BENNETT Post 128
American Legion, Wednesday
night, at the hall, 7:30p.m.

No gummy, gtlOt;y taste or feellns .

DtmtureH that 1\t ar., eseentlal to

resu larly.

Q('t f'ASTEIITH at all drug counteta.

THURSDAY
HOCK SPIDNGS Grange, 8 p.
m. Thursday at the grange hall.
Chester and Hemlock granges
have been inviled; sewing am
baking contests to be held.

Juanita Jane Dozer
THE REV. and Mrs. Charles E. Dozer of Langs\'ille,
Route l, arc announcing the engagement and approaching marriage of their daughter, Jaunila Jane, lo Douglas Wayne
Thatcher, son of Mr. aM Mrs, C. M. Thateher of Elyria.
Miss Dozer attended high school at Libcrt.Y Union and
Bloom-Carroll in Fairfield County before ~:oming to Hutland
High Sc hool where she graduated in 1967. She attended
Owosso College ard is currently employed by the General
Telephone Co. of Owosso, Mich.
Mr. Thatcher is a graduate of the Elyria Jligh School and
a senior at Owosso College when! he is majoring in religion.
The open church wedding will be an event of Aug. 17 at
2:30p.m. at the Elyria Wesleyan Church,

PIIILATHEA SOCIETY, Thursday, 7:30 p.m., at Mid&lt;lleport
Church of Christ.
REVIVAL AT Fair Play Cha·
pel, through June 16, with Re\'.
Junior Malloy, Wellston evangelist and the Rev. R. D. Brown in
charge, Located ocr Route 325
towards Vinton.

PAST COUNCILORS, Theodor-

I
ll'
I

us Council, Daughters of Am·
erican, Thursday, 7:30 p.m. at
borne of Mrs. Eva Dessauer,
Cave Sl

FRIDAY
ICE CREAM SOCIAL, Chester
Auxiliary Fire Department. Fri·
day evening at the firehouse.

I
Skating Party

992·5560
MIDDLEPORT

RETURN fRIDAY

Pomeroy ...
i Personal Notes ·:·:·•·•
i

.

Dr. and Mrs. Everett A. Tra-

'

S9 N. 2nd Ave.

Mushrooms are raised in
hundreds of miles of mushroom beds in caves, tunnels
and sheds in the suburbs of
Paris.

ron

nett Post 128, American Legion

( non- ac! Ll ) powder to ~prln­

health. See your dentlllt

Lewis

WEDNESDAY
WIIITE ROSE Lodge Wednes-

Love &amp; Appreciation

Being Planned
A skating party was planned

cy of Columbus were weekend

visitors of Mrs. Nellle Tracy.
Mrs. Fred Goeglein and son,
Danny , of Circleville were weekend guests of her pa.reotl!l, Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Wagner or
Racine, and Mr . and Mrs. Fred

during a recent meeting of the

Goegleln.

Guernsey and Jersey Division
or the Meigs County Better Livestock Club held at the home of

Dr. and Mrs. J. B. Marshall
and son, John, of Louisville, Ky.
were weekend guests of Mrs.
Russ Watson. They stopped here
enroute to Elkins, W, Vli., where
Dr. Marshall's brother, Sam
Marshall, had been killed Satur~
day In a tractor accident. Mrs.
WUitam R, Knight of Point Pleasant and Mrs. Watson attended the
funeral services at Mingo, W.Va.
today, Mr. Marshall taught school
in Kentucky.
Mr. and Mrs. Pete Vanica or
Cleveland and Mrs. W. R. Knight,
Billy and Johnny of Point Pleas~
ant, were weekend guests of Mrs.
Olan Genheimer and Mr. an c:l
Mrs. William Sheridan. M r s.
Richard \'anica of Cleveland
spent the weekend with Mrs. Russ
Watson.
Mr. and,..Mur'James Dawson
of COlumbus visited over t h e
weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Will
Myer of Minersville.
Mrl!l. James Diehl and daughter, Jo Ellen, went to Pittsburgh, Pa. over the weekend to
visit Miss Charlene Diehl. Mrs.
Diehl returned home Sunday
night, but Jo Ellen remained and
will accompany her sister here
Wednesday. Charlene will leave
next week on a tour of Europe,

Linda Hollon.
Donald Mora, advisor, and 11
members attended the meeting.
R~orts were given by Roger
Nease and Mark Mora. Roma
Nease was in charge of recrea ..

tlon.
Next meeting of the group was
schedu1ed for June 27 at the
home of Tony Carnaham. Refreshments were served by Mrs.
Edison Hollon.

Rusche/ Family
Guests at Outing
Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Huschel
and family , who lett for Florida
Monday, were honored by members of the Syra~se Church of
the Nazarene during an outing
at the &amp;vracuse Park.
A gift or silverware was pre~
aented to the family. Refresh~
ments were served. AUending
were Janet Johnson, the Rev.
...t Mrs. A. E, Mlller, Mr. and
Mrs. Carson Hayes, Mr. and
Mrs. Bob :Jewart, Mr. and Mrs.
Hobert Moore and family, Mr.
and Mrs. Asa Custer, Mrs. Ar~
tie Grindley, Mrs. Pauline Authorson and daughter, Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Davis and family, tMra.
Ora Bass and family, and Mr.
and Mrs. Leroy Watson.

2-Hour
DRY QEANING
SERVICE

CALL PRAYER MEETING
A prllfer meeUng will be beld
at 7,30 p.m . this evening at the

-

%

coiiii•IJ

ll

suot• 111

l. See hOW the neW

Check the char
with its special
Qodge Super ~eeu agtlin&amp;l othef
383 4-bbl. VS stacks p Look again at
care. . beca!JIIB
Per1ormance
.
impt'BISI'IIe
\he pr\ce. It's
ae d stick a• standard.
it i"ch.&amp;del a 4:epee -duty brake• and
,
alonG wlt'-.-he"'Y . OLiide-trea.de,
.
Red \.me ...
and erT'blem•. i.
8118 pene1on, .

liT

., '"'~"
'" iUII

nr

111
Jll

u

,,_, ,,._,J ,..1

11.1

Bee •t"pe'

1.1

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G12l -

1"''

c...I'W'It

t

ur

l.l

t.l 11·111'1

·~

!I

home ot James Proffitt, first
house north of the ferry on the
Ohio side or the river. Mls~
alonary worker Robert Harper
of the Ravenswood SO&lt;oncl Bap.

ur

dat Church will be present.

I

si l

."' ..... .
I

co•"'moo

C&amp;rl Walton alxl t'lmUy In New-

from Prince Albert.

LADIES AUXILIARY,

when you talk , ~t. laugh or sneer:e?
Don't be annoyed 11nd emharrL~!!ed
by ~uch handl cap.a. FAS'I'EETH. an

olkul111~

BAND Boosters,

Manle,l PosL;G3, Tuesday, 7 p.
m. at NaoKH Baptist Church.

FALSE TEETH

Wedding Anniven•ry
C11mlngUp?
Let Flowers
Express Your

and Mrs. James Ingram or columbus visited Mr. alxl Mrs. Robert Lee ard family alxl Ralph
Lee on saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Mllton Circle of
Bashan visited with Mr. and Mrs.
Douglas Circle on Monday,
Dean Barnitz of Pomeroy, Eu-nie Brinker, Betty Van Meter,
Ann carleton and son, Patrick,
of Carmel visited with Mr. and
Mrs. Clarence Koehler ot Tuppers Plains on Thursday.
Warren Rose, Chester Rose
and William Carleton called on

Changed Name
King Geor~e V adopted the
name of Windsor for the Brit·
Ish royal house in 1917. during the war with Germany, to
get away from the German
name of Saxe·Coburg·Gotha
which Queen VIctoria took

'of.:,\STI-:1!~

TuesdaJ, 7::JUp.m, at high school.
Elel·tion o! new officers. All
members asked to be present.

Don't Neglect Slipping
Do ra111e teeth drop.

Tom Hall has given 14&gt; the security of the weekly paycheck with
the Chicago Tribune to try his haM as a free lance wrltcr..photog~
rapher. After all, nothing ventured, nothing gained.
lle plans to spend the summer at (ape Cod doing feature material which he hopes .to sell to newspapers and magazines. At any
rale, Tom is only ori ·· a.. leave of absence from the Tribune, so if
things happen not to work out over 1-'.ast, he can always return to
the Chicago newspaper come tall.

Tl 1E.SD !\\'

Sinatra's record label ,(Reprise) thought It had Tony Ben·
nett algned up but Colwnbla Records &amp;Ot Tony with a hlp - fee
longterm bundle 1;Pread o v e r
many years.

Mr. alxl Mrs. Dwight Swep•ton
alxl lamily of Columbus alxl Mr.

ark and Mr. and Mrs. 0 r v y
Gainer of Hebron on Sunday.
Those calling at the Dougles
Circle home on saturday were
Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Marks .and
Tina Marie, of Brilliant, Mrs.
James Patterson aod sons of Old
Town F1ats, and Mu. Glen Abies,
of Bald Knobs.
Mrs. Dan Smith called on her
Cather, Mr. Lawrence Smith. of
Laurel Clirt recently,

,•,

Ul'l

1
" ·

11.11'1

.

• mn

dl

....

Pomerov

••~

r-

·••

•

992-5428

GREr\T GOOD WOKS
SPRING SHOES

HI BROWS
MAHOGANY

Q-Did George Washington
have any lineal descendants?
A-Since the Father of His
Country had no offspring he
cou1d not have any descend·
ants in the direct line, al·
though he had brothers and
sisters and has many, col·
lateral descendants.

The Eighlh District swnmer
convention of the Ladie~. Aux~
iliary of the American Legion,
will be held Thursday at .Jackson. Registration for the convention will begin at noon. Aux~
iliary members of Feeney~Ben­
nett Post 128, are asked to ~n­
tact Mrs . Albert Roush for traAsportatlon.

Plans have been (:ompletlld for
the open ehunh wedding of Miss
Kathy i\rul Housh, daughter or
Mr. and Mrs, Everett Housh of
New Haven, to llanny E. IUckard.
The ceremony will be perform~
ed at 8 p.m. Friday, .June 14
at the SL Paul Lutheran Church
in New !Iaven. The Rev. George
Weirick of Ravenswood will per~
form the ceremony. Miss Linda
Roush will serYc as maid of honor for her sister, and best man
for the bridegroom will be Denni s Smith. Ralph Rou~h aOO Mi~
chael Goodnite will bt: the ushers.

Lohses Entertain

Wins Degree
Fred Sisson, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Leland Sisson, Pomeroy,
reeeivcd a bachelor of science
degree in cdutation from Ohio
University Sunday at the 215th
commencement exercises.
1
While atten::ling Ohio University he was In the marching
band arK! concert band for four
years, arxl a member or Kawa
Kappa Psi, honorary music fra.
ternity. He has accepted a teaching position in the Galion City
school system.
Mr. and Mrs. Sisson and Mrs.
Mary Kunzelman of Pomeroy at-tended the commencement exercises.

Sgt. E.S Willian! Dixon, 1M!11
of · Mr. and Mrs. John W, liar·
rison of Mlddlepori, bas Ilion

assigned to t'orl Riley, K1111111
with the Second Seventh Arm·
or 24tll tnrontry Division.
SGt. lxon recehUy l'fllllrnod
froiJI til
montiiJ In GeriiiW
and he lind a wife, the Iormor
Beverly Perri _.t nve ~·
here vlaiUng ~eli1Uve1. Mra.lllxon returned to Pontiac, MICh.
wllere she Ia employed. Sfll. Db&lt;·
on will be discharged oo Nov. 8.

The

a v e r a g e Frenchman

&lt;!tJIIOullles about two pounds
of mushrooms a year.

At Outdoor Buffet
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Lohse
of Wolfe Drive, Pomeroy, enterta.Jned &amp;mday evening with
an outdoor buffet honoring their
daughter, Jennifer, and her fiance, James SlJeets.
Guesls were Mr. and M r s.
Charles Sheets, Jr., Mr. and
Mrs. John Musser, and J o h n
Lohse.

4 brlchtldu fer rATRII'I D41'

live u• u -ARROIF
KING

·-·frell

~II ...... llllrC

CtJmfortable 100% cotton

... pressed for th-e life ~
the shirt. We have a
wide aelection of

plaids and colors to
choose from.

DON'T FORGET
DAD ON "HIS"
DAY-JUNE 16th
Even D11ds

Like Flowers

DOWNIE-GROSS

DUDLEY'S FLORlST
59 N.

The Men's Store

2ND AVE,

Pomeroy

Big Bend Regatta, June 21, 22, 23

992-5560

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

•

•

TO MAKr: VISIT
Chester Grange mefnbers will
visit Hock Springs grange on
Thursday night. Regular meeting
of the Chester Grange is June

She isn't
carryl!!g home
the
best bargain
of all ...

25.

SINGER

HAWAIIAN
HAPPENING

\
\
SEE ALL THE SINGER
MACHINES
ON SALE NOWII
·~

We deliver it!

WINoNEOF25
ALL·EXPENSE PAID TRIPS
TO HAWAII FOR 2, IN THE

Electricity is the "' best buy" in your budget
today. And it is delivered mstanlly, as you
need it, in any amo unt you need !
While the prices ol many 1tems have
doubled or tripled, the price you pay per
kilowatt -hour ol elect u city is actual l y
lower in Ohio than it was 20 years ago! ~Be­
cause electricity does so many things lor
you, you are using more thAn ever - and
naturally your lola/ bill is h1gher .)
How has etectncity remamed s uch ,,
bargain?

I-IAWAII·I-IO
TRAVEL STAI&lt;ES
Win a free full-week Hawellar. vacation for 2. Winners .my weak. Entry blanks available et your
appr&lt;MKI SINGER dealer. No obllsatlor to buy.
Traval Stakes runs May 13th throu&amp;h August 3rd.
Rukllnti'Of Ohio and florida may IIlier bY mall.

e bea~Jtitu1

MILL .&amp; SECOND STREETS
()HIO

QUICK QUIZ

Convention Will Be
Held Jackson

Rohlnson's Cleaners

..,..,...d \o\ mor
v\ny\ interior, an a ttY new Qodge
st~.&amp;tt. Make&amp; thl:·ggu ea~ biU'd~n yet
coupe the 19
~ .... butiat
for pertorrT\cu ...8

R. H. Rawlints Sons Co.

superintendent of
the &amp;mday School at the Syracuse Church or the Nazarene,
and the Rev. Morris Wolfe, pas~
tor of the Racine Church of the
Nazarene, returned Friday af~
ter a week of training for pas~
tors held at the Olivet Nazarene
College, Kankakee, 01.

American Legion, Mlddleport, has come through with the Eighth
District award for penentage giving to the Gifts for the Yanks
Who Gave.
&amp;mday at the summer t:onven~ Chillicothe while the ties and
tion held at Wellston, Ule unit ribbons will be taken to t h e
was awarded a plaque in recog- Dayton hospital where they are
nition for h~lng given 831 per made into rugs by the bljnd pa~
cent of goal for the Gins for the
Uents.
Yanks program. This was the
Mrs. Roush will be going to
highest In the district in the the Chillicothe hospital on July
membership category ot under
19, and hopes by that lime to
500. Actually, the post gave over have a quantity of magazines and
$400 - including $100 from the books to take along, ~ if you
Ladies Auxiliary.
have some to contribute, just
The unt t wati also presented leave them by at the North Third
a trophY award for the team Ave. residence ot the Roushes.
event in the Legion bowling tour~
Just last week the auxiliary
nament. Albert Roush, c o m~ had a letter from Sam Beanmander, Jacob Turner, and WU~ stock, administrator of the ChU~
liam Swisher were present at licothe facility, thanking the
the convention to accept the a~ members for 200 magazines sent
wards. Mrs. Roush attended with over this spring
her husband.
Incidentally, the Middleport
unit has ret-eived a citation rrom
TIES, HnmO~S from funeral the department president, Mrs.
baskets, magazines. and paper - James Warner, for membership.
back books are being collected The auxiliary was 14 over goal.
by Mrs. Albert noush of t h e
Ladies Auxiliary of Feeney •
ENTHUSIASTIC .o\BOUT o I d
Bennett Post 128, American Le- cars-:' The Ilarold Lohse fam ~
gion.
ily is. Jim has a 1935 D o'd g e
The magazines and books will which he entered in the antique
go to the Veterans Hospital at show at Lancaster last weekend, and the Lohses here are
in the process or overhauling
their 1936 Chevrolet so they
can join the antique car circuit.
in

Our UfJI,III GDCNI Cleanlnt

Ill

I1

~wart,

Post 128,

Assigned to Riley

fUPON REQUESTJ

111

Jll

Bob

THE SECOND consecutive year Feeney·Bennett

Sgt. Wm. DIKO!i is

Fred Sisson

Wedding for 14th

~

,•,

cent.

Dudley's Florist

cently.
Mr. and Mrs. William Perry
and daughter, Francine, of llol·
Ion, Ohio, spent a night with Mrs.
Mary Circle. Others calling were
Mr. and Mrs. Meh'in Circle and
daughter of Columbus, Mr. arxl
Mrs. Donald Pierce of Athens,
and Mr. and Mrs. James Cirde
of New Haven.
Mr. and Mrs.. Raymol"ll Snyder
and Cecil of Columbus spent a recent Sunday with Mr. am Mrs.
Homer Circle.
Ralph Lee and grandchildren,
Bob, Bill and Beclcy, called on
Betty Van Meter, Margaret AM
Carleton aOO Pat recently,
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Orr of
Chester visited the Robert Lee
family a recent Sunday.
Eunle Brinker, Betty Van Met.
er, Ann Carleton and Pat caUed
on Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Clar k
at Racine.
Larry Circle, Joliet. Dl., spent
a few days with his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Douglas Circle.
CAlling at the home of Mrs.
Mary Circle over a recent weekend were Mr. and Mrs. George
Circle and daughter of Ashland,
Ky., Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Circle
of Columbus, Mr. and Mrs.
James Circle of New Haven, Mrs.
Virgie Walker of Racine, Mrs.
Hattie Powell and daughter, Mdie, ot Portland.
Sunday callers at the home of
Douglas Circle were Mr. and
Mrs. Jack Follrod and daughter,
Kim, of Pmneroy, Paul Moore,
local, ...t Mr . ...t Mrs. Thoms•
and family of Morning star.

U. of Texas drama Dep't this
summer •.• narry Belafonte will
play a Negro named ·Levine in
his next movie with Edward" G.
Robinson: Harry should let and
be well.
Lord Jim's owner Jimmy Au~
fiero sent a bottle of champagne
to Tammy Grimes who shrugged
u1 never touch the stuff" (peas~
antl) .. . He doesn't need it but
Bob Hope's now eligible for so~
cial security ... Dane Clark'$ acting career has paused somewhat
but not his income: says he bought
Occidental Oil at three and oow
It's 40 alter Its Big Split.
Prettiest rtr.e-looderle in town:
the lovely outdoor Italian gar~
dens of Barbetta's W. 46th St.
spot; one of the most beautltul

los o! Bourbon Parme asked a

Miss Roush Sets

Community.
£"
By Charlene
\.AJfDer••• Hoeflich

•••social
• Calendar \

thelovellost Italian restaurant in
New York City ... Little Mellsa
Merendino. trying to · reed her
toy bunny pasta at the Tiberio Is
tile daugbter o! TV's Bet!IY l'al·

Sabbaths,

heirless years, Dutch Princess

it's by far

Ohlo·s investor·owned electric light and
power companies keep developing better
ways to serve your electrical needs . One
fu.a mple ... the strong regional network
thfli 1nterco nnects Ohio·s eighl eleclric
companies with each other. and links with
electric systems 1n other stales. This ex·
change ol power results m mOre eflicient
operahon. Increased eflic1ency (and yo'n
mcreased use ol e lectnc1ty) have helped
to keep the price low. Electricily is the

··best buy ·· in your budget today!

~ In Wllconlln.

3.49
THE SHOE BOX
Whore Shot'S A·; , Sensibly Prlcod
MII,)DLEPORT, 0,

.-

r
•

POMEROY

Local Events

Mrs. 'Cush Johnston of Bradbury Is ronllned to Metgs General Hospital with a broken buck.
WAS!INGTON - loth District
Mr . ...t Mro. WUIIa Antllony, Congressman Clarence E. Miller

Valuable Information On LaWn &amp; G•rdens

MOORE'S

r~staurants ~ere,

vice to bar customers betwoen

BY JACK O'BRIAN
NEW YORK - After f·o u r

Irene and husband Prince Car· Kathy Crosby will lecture at the

Ask For Free Ortho Lawn &amp; Gard•n Bookr.t.

SIIOP ANI SAVE AT

Voice along Broadway

Congressman

Your Ohio Electric Compa,n.ies
The CincinnJ!i G1s &amp; ~lectlit Company
The Cltvtllnd Eltclrie lllumint~tina UJmpany
Columbus and SDUthtrn Ohio Electric Compt~ny
Th! Lla,ton Powtr 1nd Licht Comp•nr

The Fabri' Shop
Singer Sales &amp; Service

Mccall's Patterns

992-2284
115 w•. $ECOND
POMUOY
. OHIO

MononJ.1hlll l'o'lrtr Complrl)'
Ohio Edison Comp.1ny
Oflio PGWar Company
The Toledo tcli1on Company

Providing low t:lllrt. tWii•blll f!Ower to 8 miNion-'-

\
•
I

'

\'

,,
'

�"··" - '

.
,,

-·

.

.

G- The Daib sentinel, Pomeroy-Middleport, 0., TUesdly,June 11, 1968

A LITTLE 'HOMEWORK' Watching Want Ads Bri,.g Top
WANT AD
INPOIMATICMI

DIAIM.Ittll
I 11.1111, D., ...,.,. P.-llu'!IOftll
MtMIY DHdiiM • .....
Ctftefllttltltl &amp; CtrNCtiMI
WIR . . ICCI...... ..,til t I,M, fer
o.y er Pu•llcotlon
•HULATIONI
Thl PUitlllher r...rvtt Hit rl.ht
.. Hllf et nltct tny lch dNraH •
jKH......... Ttlo ,ulllllll!or will net
H niiNN"It fer ..,.,. tMn .,.
lrteorNd lnMFfltll,

.--------......
BULK
Pomeroy
,

2 SIGNS
Of'

QUALITY

......

For Wtftl All ltrttcl
.t cen1t ,... Wenl ... lttMI'tiOfl
MI!'IIMUM C:htrwt 7k
n ctntt ,., wonl tttrft ct...-.
five l.... rtlent.
II Clllh "'' Wonl IIX conMCIIflve
IMtrtltnt.

II ,... tont DIW:ounl H ,.~ ...
.,... tdt ,.., "'""''" 11 doYI.
CAID OP THANKS A OltTU,UY
tl Jl for M 'IIOnl mlnlnwM. lo.
tiiiiii+Nnol weN tc.
ILIND ADI
AcNft..... l Uc CM1'91 ,_, AlfftrH..IRtnl,
O,ICI HOUII
laM • ·"'· to 5:11 p.m. Dolly
~- t.M .. tt:H

Motor Co.

... !'.awe you lime &amp; money. We
c an su pply mixed fertilizers &amp;
straight materials you need- or

apply them lor

,

you. Call today.

POMEROY

!967 CHEVELLE MALIBU _ ...... , .••.. ___ .$2095
6bj . ll

Jack W. Caney, Mgr.

1'966 CHEV. D NOV A •••.. __ . ••..•.•... , .. $1695
Bardto. ~ coupe.

V·S motor, auto. trans., P.S., radioand heater . Beautiful white finish with red lnterior.

Real Est1te For S.le

OPEN EVES. 1:00 P.M.

---------------'!1.---J
s.r.

.....,.

Insurance

Geo. Robsteller, B"'ker
AUTOMOBn.E lnlllll'lll«!t beel
POMEROY - 2 story 5 rooms,
eaneeDed? Loot l'01Ir operatbath, convenient to stores, Je.
or's license? ean 891-2968.
vel lot. Make offer.
I II lie
DAIRY F\UIM, 2!12 acres, 150
improved pasture, 80 In cultivation, 3 ponds, 3 gas weDs,
free gas, Income; 2 barna, 1
houses. baths, other buildings . .
FARMS WANTED
HELEN and VIRGIL TEAFORD
Associates - t9W3Z5
Syracuse, Ofllo

'POMEROY, OHIO

THERE WILL be a gun shoot I_
Sunday, June 16, beginning at
noon at lhe Forked Run
Auction
For
Sportsman Club. Everyone is CONSIGNMENT Sale: Complete
SORREL RIDING mare, white
welcome.
6-ll-4tc
line of farm machinery and
blaze, stockings: $165. Phone
household ilems. June 15 start..
99U'/93.
6-II-3tp
THE HOUSE of Wilson: Exotic
fng at noon. Sldehlll auctiOn
fish and supplies. Open 9 a.
on Leo Morris farm, RutlaDd, FOUR ROOM HOUSE, bath,
m. to 9 p.m. Tuesday through
Ohio. Anyone wishing to sell
basement, two large lots, In
Saturday: Sunday and Mooany llem at the sale call 70.
Racine. Call lm-2039 or tiS.
day by appointment. First 4M3 or 7C-5817_ Not respon6-7-&amp;tp
road left, below Pleasant Pt.
sible for accidents. Lunch will
Resort. Watch for signs. Pb. be served. Terms of sale TWO BEDROOM borne, bath
67S-106S.
1&gt;9-!0te
Caab,
U«c
full basement, R&amp;rage: Twoyear-&lt;&gt;ld
home in Syracuse.
WILL CARE FOR elderly men
Phone 992-2121.
1&gt;21-30tc
For Rent
and women, ambulatory or
•, · bed patients, Mason Cllnl&lt;, FURNISHED apartmen~ two GERT'S A GAY GffiL - ~a­
j
Mason.
6-7-30tp
bedrooms, Middleport. Phone
dy for a whirl, after cleaning
m3874.
6-f.l!c
carpets with Blue Lustre.
WILL CARE for elderly women
Rent electric shampooer, 11.
In my home. Phont 742-.'i795. PLENTY of space for one trailBaker Furniture .
$-I0-6tc
6-5-8tp
er with all facilities . In Syra.
euse. Call 992-390i.
4-18-tfc
THREE ACRES, 5 room house,
TERMITES SWARMING? They are re-productives, nol FURNISHED and unfurnished new roof, barn, cellar, tw&lt;l
cisterns and furniture 14500.
your worker colony. Free Inapartments. Close to oehool.
PholY&lt; 712-5613.
1&gt;16-30tp
spections and information on
Pbone ~IU.
111-18-tk
crawl space dangers. No
salesman, low overhead, 50 LARGE five room and ~atlt LARGE HOUSE In Racine, 9
per cent savings, Allied Pest
rooms, one third acre lot,
apar'llllOllt, newly derorall!d,
Control. Pomeroy,
Oblo.
good loeation, $11500. Phone
fumace heat, Pomerov,
Phone m-5669 evening&amp;.
949-3752.
5-29-12tc
Phone 99U307.
H·tlc
5-24-31ltp
TRAILER SPACE, all utilities POODLE PUPPIES, AKC Toy
WILL DO sewing at home miniature. $75 and up. Stud
available. Inquire 156 Mulberzippers, pockets, pegging,
service and grooming. Ph!lle
ry after ! or 5 p.m. Write P.
hemming, alterations, etc.
992-5443.
II S tic
0. Bo• 425 Pomeroy. 5-D-tlc
Mrs. Freddie Thabet, M880!1,
Phone 'm-5651.
4-30-tlc
SAVE $30 or more on aluminum
S ROOMS AND BATH, 170 Mulboats. All sizes 10.11-13-14
berry
Ave.,
Pomeroy.
CooHAPPY HOUR, Shenang Springs
loot. Call 992-2347. or 99U258.
tad Roae Sluon, phone fD.
Nile Club. 5 to 6 p.m. MooS.l9-3otc
2019 after 5 p.m. Pbooe fD.
day thru Friday. Ladles night
143L
6-f.l!c WALNUT STEREO rodlo. Beau.
every Frlday.
~e
Uful contemporary walnut steSINGLE HOUSES, nice lOcareo wilh AM &amp; MF radio, qe..
Fer Trade
tion, apartments f'Urnl!hed 6
luxe
floating turntable, dual
CASH FOR Antiques. BID
unfurnlabed In Middleport, volume control. Four speed
Hamm, Middleport, Ohio.
phone lft.3267.
M-1211: automatic changer. Pay only
$-111-30te
15 per month or balance
v
$78.112. Free home demonstraWanted To Buy
Uon. can 992-3218.
6-7-61e
SMALL ACREAGE, no buDding,
ForS.Ie
state price and fuU particu- TWO BEDROOM house trailer.
MAPLE STEREO. 1968 model
lars. Write Box 668 F e-o the
Phooe 992-511!.
6-11~tc
stereo. I.Alvely maple, AM &amp;
DaUy Sentinel, Pomeroy.
FM radio. Four speed auto.
6-7-41e ONE WESTERN riding horae. maUc changer, four speaker
Phone Mason 773-51'18.
system. Pay only $89 58 or
GOOD USED Elec. RDaater.
6-11-31&lt;:
monthly paymr.nl! ol$6. Free
Chester Fire Dept., Phone
home demonstration , "!&amp;11 ggs.
98.1-U92.
U-3tp 60 HP SCOTT motor, electric 1218.
6-7-6tc

Reedsville

News, Notes

*!.

IN TMI COMMOH I'LI.U COUIT
Of MIIOI COUNTY, OtiiO
No. 14,183

.Y,I, ·

RICHAID JOIIII'H OIL.IIIIDI ,
1132 Flotbustl Annuo.

Brnklyn, New Vtrk.
De,.II!MIII.

NOTI(I
RICHARD
Whllollt! p]ICt!

IY PUII.ICAVION
JOSEPH
GlLBRlDE.
of l't!lidt!OCt! II 1'f:JJ Flat-

bUJh

Avl'ni.lll!, Brooklyn. :&gt;lew York .
•W U.lile nnUce that on the 25tb ..
dt)' of APril. 1969, the undenl1ned
liled her peUtlon .agiln.lt him Ia the

Common 1'\eas Court nf A'elll• County. Ohio . praying for dlvor~. CUI·
todiY of minor c hild 11nd other re ·
lie! on the JroUndJ of Gro• Nl!lll! ct
of Duly . Said cauu will be for hearlnl on and tfter the l:ath . day or
Junt. 1988
LINDA GILIR\01,
Pl•lntUf
Crow, Crow &amp; "omr
~41

30: 151 l; 14 : :1:1; 28 . 181 4. II lie

ANTIQUES, furniture, dishes,
mlsceUaneous. Mrs. Howard
Cecil, ~ W. Main St., Pomeroy.
1-Z5-tlc

generator,

WAHI'ED

Pomeroy Route.
.In Business

Section

nf Webster 1nd F\J!tz,, Pnlllf!roy.

Oh.lo. unUI TuHda:r. Jun11 18, 1188
tt to ,oo O'CI!Kk A.M. lor the sale
~ the Grace L,-nft CarT propl!!rl.J.
11tu1t-ed In the VIIIU:t of llorrUon·
..me. Ohio. Bldli m1y be IIUbfnttted
tn wrtttnl' or In ptnon at tbt time
of talt. Ttl-e rtlht 11 ~ed tG re~t any or all bids.
Thol'l'l" c. Morttn,
Adml!'llltretor.
llfeto ef Grace LJMI Corr,
dKen«&lt;

w.-..r end Fu"'
Attorrwtl

for

head.
Mrs. Rose Thomas and Mr.
and Mrs. Carroll Randolph were
recent guests of Mrs. Gladys
Baughman of Gahanna.
Mrs. James Adkins, Paula and
Jeff, of Newburgh. Ind. , were recent guests oCher mO[her, Mrs.
Mary Nichols.
Visiting Mr. aM Mrs. Law.
renee Hose Sunday were Mrs.
Ruth Waggoner, and Mr s. The!·
rna Dutton of Parkersburg, and
Mr. and Mrs. Dana Van Meter
and family of Belpre.
Mr. aoo Mrs. Roger Buckley
and children of Pomeroy Rd. re..
ce ntly visited with relatives here.
Carl Walton is at home after
having spent some time in St.
Joseph's Hospital, Parkersburg.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Goode and
family visited with relatives in
Ironton over a recent weekend.
Mrs. L. Balderson

BuslnHS Services

YOUR

Complelo

&amp;~tallest Heater

Sal(e

LIGAL MOTICI
NOTIC:I 011 APPOINnrUNT

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

hta,. ef verlle o . AMot. DtcouH.
NoUee it herebJ F.v.n tllal l'l'l.n·
el! V. Amo. of Pomeroy, A. D. J ,
Melp County. Ohio, hat been 41117
appointe-d Eucutor of tht !!tt&amp;\e ol
Vtrlle D. Amo~~, deceued. 11141 ol
Pomeroy , Ohlo, R .D. J. Mtll• Cuuft·

ty, Ohio.
Creditor• ore requlrtd to file th-'r
elaliiUI with .. td fklucl&amp;rJ wtthln four
n1onth1 .
Pat-ed thla UDd . diY ol IIIJ", 1111.
F . H . O'BRIEN
Probole Jlldll of Aid CountJ
May 38 J11ne l-11
3tc

BUEfTNARS
Pomel'O)'

SAVE SPACE

FREE STORAGE
HE'S'- WSLL 8UILT A WT Ltt&lt;E

AIC CLEANERS
Ma50n, W, Va.

'17U543

5.55

.37

.a
,43
.43
.4.1

10.11

11.11

//

TRAILER

11.11 .47
Plus. R.-cappale ExeM•
Netlonwht. GI.MrlnfM

-GUARANTEED-

LOVE.

~AAOMOTHER

BEGINNDS
SPECIAL
$295.00
RED RSH BOAT
MASTERCIAFT

T..

lo.ll

O.REER YOU

~E!

FIRISTOfiE DLC 100
•'
TREAD-BLACKWALL ,

Price
9.11
9.11

i

GE'E 1 M0M WE
CAN'T LEf 'rOU
GIVE UP A

li'$ ..IJST THAT

MOTH PROOFING

WHOOPEE! HURRAY!
HAIW ~ 1/EAA!

Schwarze! Marine
Hockingport, Ohio

.POMEROY HOME AND AUTO

W141\T P'YA MEA'-.! .
'141\PPY "--E.W YEAR: 1.

THIS

IS~!

Now to qet Chipper'&gt;
ca r back to the houGe
before Clovia qeb;
home from Gchool!

MA'-1, DID YOU
MISS: 1&gt;. WILD
PARN!

I'&gt; IT
JUIVE
~?

PRONE _,_.,.

SIDE OLANCES .By Oill fox

WMPO

II

INFORMATION
NEWS
presents

LOCAL REPORTS
DAILY
.
• ~ AT
7:50 A.M.
12 NOON
3 P.M.
AND
4:30 P.M.

in May

" He that would ,live for aye
!always! must eat sage In May,"
goes an old Engllsh proverb.
For cen l urles sage was used
not only os an herb but a medldne. It supposedly strengthened
memory, for a sage I wise person J has to remember well.
So, have I«Jme sage ln May,
he that In a stuffing for pork
roost, bread dre!i!ling balls with

J;L~

roi.L T~EM UP

Al-lD S~OVE THEM

NOt I'M II-I.E
Wl'llWT W\-Wfl'
AND CAl&lt;
WIN rr ALL

T&gt;ii20UhH T"E

i'EYHOLE!

I "fl.IIHK 14E'LL
~Ali\-1\L'r' ANO VErN
SOON ... &lt;IT' t1!; I

.-

BUI COULD

M\1. lOU '&lt;&gt;U~E.
KNOUJG I-lOW -n.IAT
BJTO-I::R 114ltiKS~

W t WIN IN
114tSt I&lt;NUI&lt;'S

Cffi\'i?OLLED

COURTS?

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

pork sausage llnk9 or potties,
or a stu ffing for beet birds
(round steak pi Pees wrapped
around a bread dressing).

I

Core.

PIL 99:1-2143

~W

Sl1e

. . . ., ........ .,.M. ... UN. CNI:

"All tho candldatea' wives are lovely, but f ooom to
Identify more with Ethel!"

.

Entertained

Carpenter
News, Notes
Dormte Cheadle, Cheryl Ellis,

ry, seniors at A1exander High,
were presented Bibles a£Temttle

Church a recent SullCiay morning.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Starkey
were in Columbus saturday for an
i~~ce meeting.

. Mr. and Mrs. Cllttoo Fraley,
Jr. and Ru s ty Ray, Ma rm, w. v a.,

Carol Fraley, Donald Keeton,
Toni Lasure, April 'UMther, were weeketw:l guests of her parKaren Sue Nelson, Jenny Whit-. enU, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Greentington, David Wooten, Kenneth lees aOO Rilla.
Jones and Dean Wooten, all of
Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Jewell and
this community, were among Mary an:! Donald Blackwood of
those graduatb~ from Alexan:ler '~- Columbus were supper guests ot
High School recently. M a n Y ·Mr. and Mrs. Earl Starkey on
t'rlerlds and relatives from here Sunday evening.
attended graduation exercises.
Those visiting with Mr. arv:t
CARNIVAL
Mrs . Robert Stout duri11: t h e
weekeiJ:I were Mr. and Mrs. Dave
Raynard, Mark and Randy, of
Johnson City, Tenn., Mr . aOO
Mrs. Ra,y Stout, MlcheleandBitl,
Charleston, W. Va., Mrs. Mary
Napper, Terry and Scott, Wells..
ton, Mrs. Jean Stout and C&amp;rol of
Syracuse, and Mr. and Mrs. John

Wolfpen

cil GIUogly and family of Athens were Sunday visitors ot Mr.
and Mrs. Everett Lambert.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Jel!era
and VaJorie of Coalton were the

News, Notes

weekend visitors of Mr. and Mrs.

Recent visitors ot Mr. and
Mrs. Howard RusseU were Mr.

Joe Hatlleld.
Mrs. Lee Roush aM Rodney

or Gallipolis were Tuesday vlsit,.

The Almanac
Unll8cl Press lnternattcmal
Today Ia Tuoaday, June 11,
the 163rd da,y or 1968 wllh 203 to
follow.
The moon io between Its Ml
phase and last quarter.
The morning stars are Satum
By

and ldrt. Donald Hauck, Mrs.
Ullie Hauck, Mr. Albert Wood- ors of her mother, Mrs. Joseph
and Venus.
ard, all of Pomeroy, and Mr. and Johnson.
Mrs.
Nora
Johnson
of CoThe evening lltar isJupltar.
Mrs. WWiam RusseU, MlnersJwnbus spent a week with Mrs.

~lle.

On Uds day In hlatori:

Joseph Johnson and lamlly.
In 1920 Ohlo Sen. Warren
Mr. am Mrs, Harley Haning of
Mra.
James Johnson, Jamie Harding wat called to a Chleago
Ftatwood and Mr. and Mrs, C...
Sue and Todd, of Pomeroy, Mrs. hotel and ln!ormod he would be
Joseph Johnson an:l Mn. Non the dark hone Ropublfc:an
Johnson attended the graduaUon candidate lor prestdenl.
of Michael Evans, son

ot Mrs.

Madeline Evans or Grove City.
Mr. and Mrs. Cecil GU!ogly
, and lamlly of Athens vlsll8cl her

AUCTION

parents, Mr. and Mra. Everett
Lambert.

SOIOOL

and other relatives.

Mr. and Mrs. W. Boyce or Columbus were vlaHonoverthere·
cent hoUdaY weekeiXI of her J)ll'·
ents, Mr. and Mn. Howard R1,1s•
sell.

Scott McComas has returned
here atter abusinesstriptoF1orlda and Arizona. He made the trip

by plane !rom Columbus.
Mrs. Roy Wiseman, Spri~­
field, visited her parenta, Mr.

The tax booKS are now open for the June or sec·
ond half eollectlon of the 1967 Real Estate taxes.
Also for deUnquent tax. Closma date wtll be luly

and family or Athens were guesta
of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fern

Gillogly on Sunday after,_,
Warren Keirns and Phil Low-

?j(;.~ -·

1, 1988.

'

"''· .... n . , _*'· .

"My dad's Idea of

rldlna: mower Is to ride mo until
I start mowlna:!"

.

How.d LFrink·

1

Meigs County TI'UIUrw

...
'

II. Guard
Jt.Aw&amp;y:
pretia

farm

equipment
10. M.t.n'l

·

nickname

U.Japane•
hotlctay
12.8howen
,. If. Ptrtormed

U.Money

JO,Ropo•
apti&lt;lnl'

drawen

"'

- y.......,.......

one Jetter to each square, to
form four ordinary words.

lljeeted

ll'l. Pett. to
r ain

I

FIAYE

.

Il

U.Xotlto4or
learnlnl'

U.lt:nemy
fiCOUt

at.Siuof
eool
40. J:quat

u.-or

Juotlee

~

II
tOSANT.4I
] ()
•
'oPIITEIE

•·U

(J I

II

WHAT 'IOU MIOH'T DO
IF YOU LOOt&lt; $HARP.

No .. ammre the circled !etten

( ~ to form the IUrpriH UliWer, U

~~==~=:::::-=~-;L1~~~~-~ted b1 tho above cartoon;

I ....- ....... I[II)THE(IIIIJ
(AIItwen
Joml&gt;koo ADAOI

'6:-+--ln:

liFOO KINNIL

to~aorrow'

TIIWAIT

l'~tl'l!rda.l''l

A.n1wm

IJ'Iaat

a

leaJry t.ol,..llll' IHJjJll! mnh
wn I,_IT

rlu.Jdllj&lt;&gt;y--A

OI&lt;E Of .. 1&lt;1(1
\OM TORTE'S
GIIE5T ROOMS,
lURY CON ·

-

.

U.Loli4

'

TEMPLAl!,

I IOQ
D1ldllnful
DAILY CBYI'TOQ110ftl- Hen'a ~
.

A CJrnlapoM QooloiiM

w work

to..... "'"'"'

AXYDioaAAXa
'r lio 1. o.lf o I' • I! 1o ow
one lllllrllmtll- ~;...-or. lll _lllli.,.Jlo A
, ror 11u1 u.,oo 111, X tor lho I"" O'o, ""· lllqlrl_loltell, .,...
•. . ~ tile
~., .~

\lllllk""'
-'
'' ..... ~ tliO- !illr ~ dlftl)i!lil
.......

DA'Il
WILL "YOU ASSIST !#E. IN LII'TII'/3
IT ONTO THE COO-ER AI'TER 1
REMOVE 1HI6 EMPTY~

Sli.Amonc

rl,.r

·-·L

~EA\I'll THIS TIME; O&gt;

-

28.Afrlu.n
ontelope

31.8w!oo

Ti&lt;ESE BOTTLES. GET Q,UI'TE

..........
,_ ...... .. _..... _
,.•.."'-.....

d.lpo&lt;IIIO

Gr-. when Colwnbia members

,_,j

11. Hltter
13. J;llwtder
14. Sgeck
16. BlOow

t. Pte&lt;o or

"""'
"
:u.

III.Y.....

, nook

REAL EST ATE OWNERS

ning.
Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Gltlogly

6. Notln
I.Mot'Mll
T. Tender

M....
JolaJ1n
10. Aquatlc
bini

Un~tramble the1e. four Jumbles,

' d.Balr ...

Twerty - nine Grangers and
guests, Columbia Grange atterded a recert meeting oC Laurel
presented a program ror the eve-

a.-

aT. HW:8. Afr,
11. Dlopctittloll
.0. Compe"""'
d.~..

NOTICE

and Mro. Earl Starkey.

UJe1

JJUJJ~M;-::' =~ -:t.r:::

wuhed

22. Baklnf

buoko
18-J....t
ltl.ll'outll
10. Dt!amofl
N.Luooa
aatmo _
11. Water: l'r.

homo alter spending a
week ln Kentucky visltlngparonts

on Sunday afternoon.

._ Rooflnl'

1lt11
21. Spirit .
16.Pllnit
se.outer

~orned

and Greg of Jackson called on
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jerry
Culwell and other relatives here

2. Kettle
3. Artl&lt;le

ACII088
1. Reoort.
t. Wectp
T. SerullnlR

21.W.......

Eugene Haning, Rhonda and Ro~
ald.
Mr. and Mrs. W, A. Elam r.,.

cal.
Mr. and Mrs. T. H. Blanton

BUGS BUNNY

DAILY CROSSWORD
18. Willie·

tool

Mr. and Mrs. Brady Knotts of
King IIUI vlsll8cl Mr. and Mrs.

Stout and Diane and Johnny, lo-

'

i' '

j

SALES AND SERVICE

650xl3
650.14
700xl3
700xl4
710•14
670•15

AHEM!f-Cilfi&gt;,Kf-

tho Largest Truek or
Bull&lt;llzer Radiator To Tho

n

"'

ABNER

From

M11111'11$h'Her

S.lO: f.lJ; 1-11: t-1:t: f.U: &amp;.11: 8

MAl~ ...

EVINIUDE
Wheel Alignment

ATAt.t.. ...

se-s ... Ml""

I'E~LAS---

matea. Pbone 182-32M, Goerloin Ready - MiJ: Co., MJddle.
port, Oblo,
I 10 lie

I I lie

NO HOPI&gt;'

HOWD'I•

READY • MIX conerell deUY·
ered rlibt to yoiD' pl'l)jecl.
Faat and euy. Free estl·

EXPERT

HAIR

GATE CRICKING- --

4 • flo

!IC-Im.

Servlel

Bt&lt;Tl'~THAIJ.,

WHY5HG'D
SAY 1-l!P

hvive tiM or1r1n11 Hut\ Of W011J RIP.
t inned in !'(lur olfft ho111 J ran k~flller
dry·fatll l'lltiiiOd. No 11\MU. No Just. flo
odor. use ru11 ne 11n111 dar.

---

CAN'f

I'M HIRRING A FONN'I

APPALOSSA STUD service. By Affi &lt;XJNDI'I'IONINO JlefrlgeP.
appointment, phone lfiUill.
aUon service. Jack's Refrlai-14-301p
eraUon, No Rave~~. . _

Write, Pboae or OJalld
Crllt Ill llllford
Raeble, OMo

\NHAT MV LEETLE
"YrATER'S OONE --

JU5!

IMA61~1S

N018&amp;-UKE A FIUSTY

"DAIRY BEEF"
.AIIw.ll ,_.......,
bn!edlng service. ~ Leland
, .... '" ,d,_ ..,.,
Pai'ter, Pomeroy resldenee
IMffll -.111 c.,.. c....,,..
911S-2264 or call stallon Top. ....,. ,.,,,. ••· 1 , _ ,
pera Plains 6&amp;7-3211. U aote L._.....
....;•_•_-....;v.;~.;.1;..;.."'.;,...;;..-J

C. BRADFORD
AUCl'IONEER

HE JEST
SPROUTED
HIS FUST

CARPETING

CURTISS

c.

~ COME OVER TO
SHOW OFF MV M:W
GqANDS0'-1, LOWEEZV-HI~ NAME'S
BUqLJAMES

ENE!JfJ A
fll'J.UDULEit.IT'
HOPI!E15

ITS At.lRIGH!;VO-

LOOKV!l

SPEAI&lt;IN 'OF
SHOWIN ' OFF- LET ME SHOW ~E·

EXPERIENCED
Rdlattr Service

BRING NEW
UFE TO

RADIO &amp; TV repair, reaacJ11.
able prices, Antenna 6 Booiter service. John Harrison,
701 B"'adway St., Middleport,
Oblo. Pbone 911S-252Z, open
evenings.
u.3llte

handle

control. $200; AC hay rake on RESTAURANT equipment. call
rubber, power take off $56: Rutland Furniture, 742-4211.
New Idea mower. on rubber,
6-9-3tc
$56; 6-foot disc, $211; John
Deere corn planter, $20; ma- A NEW shloment of clothing
nure spreader on rubber $25. baa anived. Women's and
Help Wanted
Bill Grueaer, Rt. 1, Miners. Children's and Men's Work
~it..
6-fl-!tp Uniforms. Also Ford "'-!on
pickup truck, 4-0peed trans1968 ZIG ZAG sewing machine. mission. Jeffers Clothing
This machine makes button- Store. Rt. 33, Pomeroy.
holes, darna &amp; emb. Take
11-!I-GI&lt;
over 8 payments of $6.31 per
month or $45 cash. We will CORN, 1200 bushels, DaDaa
bring this machine to your
IIIII, Letart Falls, Phone 247home for you to try. Call 2164.
6-9-3k
lm-2836.
6-11-61c
GOOD DAffiY HAY to cut on
I ROOM HOUSE, hath, large
shares. Alba Y4lt, Mfners.
lot; also 14 fool john boat, 24
vlffe.
6-9-3tp
Railroad St.. Middleport.
DESK CLERK. Live ln. Apply
Phone 992-3826.
6-11-71&lt; BLACK MINIATURE Poodle
ln peroon at Ohio Hotel.
Pups, $75. West Highland
6-11-61&lt;:
REAL SOl'ND. 1968 stereo AM
White Terriers $100. 1!164
&amp; FM radio, walnut finish.
Farm aft Cub Tractor, hydrau.
LADY for housework, cook, Uve
Take over payments of 15.14
Uc
11ft, S point fast bitch, sinIn or out, phone 992-5251, CODper
month
or
pay
$96.22.
Will
tact 0. !Dndy over Uberty
gle plow, 5 foot cutter bar
discount for cash. Phone 992and disc $11110. Price firm . Lit.
'11leatre, Middleport for lnter2836.
6-fl-61e tie Barkaroo Kennels. Cool·
~mo.
11-5-«e
ville, Ohio, 53654. 6-7-10te
BALDWIN
HOME
organ
to
be
WAITRESS and CST hnp. Apply
picked up In this area. For
In person.
Crow's Steak
Re&gt;l !;state For S•l•
information, write Credit
House.
U«c
O'BRIEN I CROW
Mgr., Graves Plano &amp; Organ
REALTY
COMPANY
Co., :u!J E. Broad St. ColumFor Sale or Rent
bus, Ohio.
6-11-2te POMEROY-Butternut Ave. 2
FIVE ROOM house and bath,
story frame, 4 bedrooms. 2
aluminum siding, s!&lt;&gt;rm wlnbaths. garage. $1,1150.110.
SAVE MONEY at Bryant's on
do'll'll, -~- Phone tiiS-3718. - a gift for Dad. Tape record· POMEROY- Union Ave. Ter11-Ntp
race, I II. story frame, 1 bedera reduced 115 to 129. SM.
rooms.
bath.
basement.
radio only 1!1.911. Automat!&lt;:
For Rent
14.1100.00.
letter opener, battery power·\ 1'WO f'IJRNJSHED apartments,
«! fl. Golf balls 17 a dozen; MIDDLEPORT - South 2nd.
4 TQOm~; and bath. Phone 992dre" shoes f(.99 pair. Save 2 s!&lt;&gt;ry lrame, 4 bedroorruo, 2
39'15, after 5, phone 992-2571.
baths, $10,1100.110.
half, portable TV like new,
6-11-31&lt;:
$69: stereo player $59.95; gos. FOR RENT, FliRNISRI!D
pel records, two lor $5; wat. APARTMENT. I bedroom.
HENRY CLELAND
FURNISHED APARTMENT on
ches, $6.95; electric guitars.
first floor for adults only, 212
Olllce-fft.Z!H
129.95. Shop and save at Bryllel.-tft.!lll
South Filth Ave., Middleport.
ant's, !118 IV. Main, Pomeroy.
6-11-31&lt;
Phone 992-.5435.
6-11-tfc
6-11-4tc

CARRIER

NOTICI
Bleil ..Ul be reeelnd 1t Ole offle"

Mr. and Mrs. Harold E. Coww
dery spent their vacation in Ari-zona and California visiti~rela..
ti ves and friends.
Mr. and Mrs. James Reed and
sons were Sunday diMer guests
of her sister, Mrs. Mary Nlch~

ols a,_, lamUy .
Nancy Baum of Chester was
an overnight guest of Jean White--

---

starter,

22114. Tbe Fabrle Shop, Pomeroy. Authorized Singer Sales
and Service. We Sbarpen
Scissors.
s.a.tre
CIGARE'I'l'E vending lMdlhles
and service. ABC Enterprises,
M111011, W. Va. Phone 'I'IU543.

HOBSTETTER
REALTY

Pomeroy Motor Co.

MACHINES, repair

service, aD makes. WY 2-

• 992-218!

Businrss Seryic·es

BUDGET PRICE furniture on
our lblrd Door budget shop.
Baker Furniture, Midclleport.
Oblo.
? 23 tie

SEWING

PHONE

4 Door Std. trans., spotless clean interior, maroon finish.
w·w tires like new, radio, heater. Shawroom clean.

NMII ..IVNIJ

Notice

FERTILIZERS

Business Services

Grad~ ~esults.

BARNEY

'

·~··

·,

.

'

•

XLXPQIIV YrX CHKQVQLX QO UW·
RWYKH Ll UPWXVQIIV RWQXO QKXL
•
J&gt;
RKHWG 1'0 HG .-G XWKQOXWrG
Y.......,.. CJ11Jia. .lar WHO WIU. AIIIIIJIIII 'I'G lUll
THAT AliAIID01ftl IIIJIIa.J'T--IIIDifi:Y

HI~

NfXT 1101! .

LUCK ILY, M"'t
AGILE BRAIN
IS NOT AS
EX~AUSTEO

AS

MY ,.,..YS/C"AL
POWERS~

�"··" - '

.
,,

-·

.

.

G- The Daib sentinel, Pomeroy-Middleport, 0., TUesdly,June 11, 1968

A LITTLE 'HOMEWORK' Watching Want Ads Bri,.g Top
WANT AD
INPOIMATICMI

DIAIM.Ittll
I 11.1111, D., ...,.,. P.-llu'!IOftll
MtMIY DHdiiM • .....
Ctftefllttltltl &amp; CtrNCtiMI
WIR . . ICCI...... ..,til t I,M, fer
o.y er Pu•llcotlon
•HULATIONI
Thl PUitlllher r...rvtt Hit rl.ht
.. Hllf et nltct tny lch dNraH •
jKH......... Ttlo ,ulllllll!or will net
H niiNN"It fer ..,.,. tMn .,.
lrteorNd lnMFfltll,

.--------......
BULK
Pomeroy
,

2 SIGNS
Of'

QUALITY

......

For Wtftl All ltrttcl
.t cen1t ,... Wenl ... lttMI'tiOfl
MI!'IIMUM C:htrwt 7k
n ctntt ,., wonl tttrft ct...-.
five l.... rtlent.
II Clllh "'' Wonl IIX conMCIIflve
IMtrtltnt.

II ,... tont DIW:ounl H ,.~ ...
.,... tdt ,.., "'""''" 11 doYI.
CAID OP THANKS A OltTU,UY
tl Jl for M 'IIOnl mlnlnwM. lo.
tiiiiii+Nnol weN tc.
ILIND ADI
AcNft..... l Uc CM1'91 ,_, AlfftrH..IRtnl,
O,ICI HOUII
laM • ·"'· to 5:11 p.m. Dolly
~- t.M .. tt:H

Motor Co.

... !'.awe you lime &amp; money. We
c an su pply mixed fertilizers &amp;
straight materials you need- or

apply them lor

,

you. Call today.

POMEROY

!967 CHEVELLE MALIBU _ ...... , .••.. ___ .$2095
6bj . ll

Jack W. Caney, Mgr.

1'966 CHEV. D NOV A •••.. __ . ••..•.•... , .. $1695
Bardto. ~ coupe.

V·S motor, auto. trans., P.S., radioand heater . Beautiful white finish with red lnterior.

Real Est1te For S.le

OPEN EVES. 1:00 P.M.

---------------'!1.---J
s.r.

.....,.

Insurance

Geo. Robsteller, B"'ker
AUTOMOBn.E lnlllll'lll«!t beel
POMEROY - 2 story 5 rooms,
eaneeDed? Loot l'01Ir operatbath, convenient to stores, Je.
or's license? ean 891-2968.
vel lot. Make offer.
I II lie
DAIRY F\UIM, 2!12 acres, 150
improved pasture, 80 In cultivation, 3 ponds, 3 gas weDs,
free gas, Income; 2 barna, 1
houses. baths, other buildings . .
FARMS WANTED
HELEN and VIRGIL TEAFORD
Associates - t9W3Z5
Syracuse, Ofllo

'POMEROY, OHIO

THERE WILL be a gun shoot I_
Sunday, June 16, beginning at
noon at lhe Forked Run
Auction
For
Sportsman Club. Everyone is CONSIGNMENT Sale: Complete
SORREL RIDING mare, white
welcome.
6-ll-4tc
line of farm machinery and
blaze, stockings: $165. Phone
household ilems. June 15 start..
99U'/93.
6-II-3tp
THE HOUSE of Wilson: Exotic
fng at noon. Sldehlll auctiOn
fish and supplies. Open 9 a.
on Leo Morris farm, RutlaDd, FOUR ROOM HOUSE, bath,
m. to 9 p.m. Tuesday through
Ohio. Anyone wishing to sell
basement, two large lots, In
Saturday: Sunday and Mooany llem at the sale call 70.
Racine. Call lm-2039 or tiS.
day by appointment. First 4M3 or 7C-5817_ Not respon6-7-&amp;tp
road left, below Pleasant Pt.
sible for accidents. Lunch will
Resort. Watch for signs. Pb. be served. Terms of sale TWO BEDROOM borne, bath
67S-106S.
1&gt;9-!0te
Caab,
U«c
full basement, R&amp;rage: Twoyear-&lt;&gt;ld
home in Syracuse.
WILL CARE FOR elderly men
Phone 992-2121.
1&gt;21-30tc
For Rent
and women, ambulatory or
•, · bed patients, Mason Cllnl&lt;, FURNISHED apartmen~ two GERT'S A GAY GffiL - ~a­
j
Mason.
6-7-30tp
bedrooms, Middleport. Phone
dy for a whirl, after cleaning
m3874.
6-f.l!c
carpets with Blue Lustre.
WILL CARE for elderly women
Rent electric shampooer, 11.
In my home. Phont 742-.'i795. PLENTY of space for one trailBaker Furniture .
$-I0-6tc
6-5-8tp
er with all facilities . In Syra.
euse. Call 992-390i.
4-18-tfc
THREE ACRES, 5 room house,
TERMITES SWARMING? They are re-productives, nol FURNISHED and unfurnished new roof, barn, cellar, tw&lt;l
cisterns and furniture 14500.
your worker colony. Free Inapartments. Close to oehool.
PholY&lt; 712-5613.
1&gt;16-30tp
spections and information on
Pbone ~IU.
111-18-tk
crawl space dangers. No
salesman, low overhead, 50 LARGE five room and ~atlt LARGE HOUSE In Racine, 9
per cent savings, Allied Pest
rooms, one third acre lot,
apar'llllOllt, newly derorall!d,
Control. Pomeroy,
Oblo.
good loeation, $11500. Phone
fumace heat, Pomerov,
Phone m-5669 evening&amp;.
949-3752.
5-29-12tc
Phone 99U307.
H·tlc
5-24-31ltp
TRAILER SPACE, all utilities POODLE PUPPIES, AKC Toy
WILL DO sewing at home miniature. $75 and up. Stud
available. Inquire 156 Mulberzippers, pockets, pegging,
service and grooming. Ph!lle
ry after ! or 5 p.m. Write P.
hemming, alterations, etc.
992-5443.
II S tic
0. Bo• 425 Pomeroy. 5-D-tlc
Mrs. Freddie Thabet, M880!1,
Phone 'm-5651.
4-30-tlc
SAVE $30 or more on aluminum
S ROOMS AND BATH, 170 Mulboats. All sizes 10.11-13-14
berry
Ave.,
Pomeroy.
CooHAPPY HOUR, Shenang Springs
loot. Call 992-2347. or 99U258.
tad Roae Sluon, phone fD.
Nile Club. 5 to 6 p.m. MooS.l9-3otc
2019 after 5 p.m. Pbooe fD.
day thru Friday. Ladles night
143L
6-f.l!c WALNUT STEREO rodlo. Beau.
every Frlday.
~e
Uful contemporary walnut steSINGLE HOUSES, nice lOcareo wilh AM &amp; MF radio, qe..
Fer Trade
tion, apartments f'Urnl!hed 6
luxe
floating turntable, dual
CASH FOR Antiques. BID
unfurnlabed In Middleport, volume control. Four speed
Hamm, Middleport, Ohio.
phone lft.3267.
M-1211: automatic changer. Pay only
$-111-30te
15 per month or balance
v
$78.112. Free home demonstraWanted To Buy
Uon. can 992-3218.
6-7-61e
SMALL ACREAGE, no buDding,
ForS.Ie
state price and fuU particu- TWO BEDROOM house trailer.
MAPLE STEREO. 1968 model
lars. Write Box 668 F e-o the
Phooe 992-511!.
6-11~tc
stereo. I.Alvely maple, AM &amp;
DaUy Sentinel, Pomeroy.
FM radio. Four speed auto.
6-7-41e ONE WESTERN riding horae. maUc changer, four speaker
Phone Mason 773-51'18.
system. Pay only $89 58 or
GOOD USED Elec. RDaater.
6-11-31&lt;:
monthly paymr.nl! ol$6. Free
Chester Fire Dept., Phone
home demonstration , "!&amp;11 ggs.
98.1-U92.
U-3tp 60 HP SCOTT motor, electric 1218.
6-7-6tc

Reedsville

News, Notes

*!.

IN TMI COMMOH I'LI.U COUIT
Of MIIOI COUNTY, OtiiO
No. 14,183

.Y,I, ·

RICHAID JOIIII'H OIL.IIIIDI ,
1132 Flotbustl Annuo.

Brnklyn, New Vtrk.
De,.II!MIII.

NOTI(I
RICHARD
Whllollt! p]ICt!

IY PUII.ICAVION
JOSEPH
GlLBRlDE.
of l't!lidt!OCt! II 1'f:JJ Flat-

bUJh

Avl'ni.lll!, Brooklyn. :&gt;lew York .
•W U.lile nnUce that on the 25tb ..
dt)' of APril. 1969, the undenl1ned
liled her peUtlon .agiln.lt him Ia the

Common 1'\eas Court nf A'elll• County. Ohio . praying for dlvor~. CUI·
todiY of minor c hild 11nd other re ·
lie! on the JroUndJ of Gro• Nl!lll! ct
of Duly . Said cauu will be for hearlnl on and tfter the l:ath . day or
Junt. 1988
LINDA GILIR\01,
Pl•lntUf
Crow, Crow &amp; "omr
~41

30: 151 l; 14 : :1:1; 28 . 181 4. II lie

ANTIQUES, furniture, dishes,
mlsceUaneous. Mrs. Howard
Cecil, ~ W. Main St., Pomeroy.
1-Z5-tlc

generator,

WAHI'ED

Pomeroy Route.
.In Business

Section

nf Webster 1nd F\J!tz,, Pnlllf!roy.

Oh.lo. unUI TuHda:r. Jun11 18, 1188
tt to ,oo O'CI!Kk A.M. lor the sale
~ the Grace L,-nft CarT propl!!rl.J.
11tu1t-ed In the VIIIU:t of llorrUon·
..me. Ohio. Bldli m1y be IIUbfnttted
tn wrtttnl' or In ptnon at tbt time
of talt. Ttl-e rtlht 11 ~ed tG re~t any or all bids.
Thol'l'l" c. Morttn,
Adml!'llltretor.
llfeto ef Grace LJMI Corr,
dKen«&lt;

w.-..r end Fu"'
Attorrwtl

for

head.
Mrs. Rose Thomas and Mr.
and Mrs. Carroll Randolph were
recent guests of Mrs. Gladys
Baughman of Gahanna.
Mrs. James Adkins, Paula and
Jeff, of Newburgh. Ind. , were recent guests oCher mO[her, Mrs.
Mary Nichols.
Visiting Mr. aM Mrs. Law.
renee Hose Sunday were Mrs.
Ruth Waggoner, and Mr s. The!·
rna Dutton of Parkersburg, and
Mr. and Mrs. Dana Van Meter
and family of Belpre.
Mr. aoo Mrs. Roger Buckley
and children of Pomeroy Rd. re..
ce ntly visited with relatives here.
Carl Walton is at home after
having spent some time in St.
Joseph's Hospital, Parkersburg.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Goode and
family visited with relatives in
Ironton over a recent weekend.
Mrs. L. Balderson

BuslnHS Services

YOUR

Complelo

&amp;~tallest Heater

Sal(e

LIGAL MOTICI
NOTIC:I 011 APPOINnrUNT

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

hta,. ef verlle o . AMot. DtcouH.
NoUee it herebJ F.v.n tllal l'l'l.n·
el! V. Amo. of Pomeroy, A. D. J ,
Melp County. Ohio, hat been 41117
appointe-d Eucutor of tht !!tt&amp;\e ol
Vtrlle D. Amo~~, deceued. 11141 ol
Pomeroy , Ohlo, R .D. J. Mtll• Cuuft·

ty, Ohio.
Creditor• ore requlrtd to file th-'r
elaliiUI with .. td fklucl&amp;rJ wtthln four
n1onth1 .
Pat-ed thla UDd . diY ol IIIJ", 1111.
F . H . O'BRIEN
Probole Jlldll of Aid CountJ
May 38 J11ne l-11
3tc

BUEfTNARS
Pomel'O)'

SAVE SPACE

FREE STORAGE
HE'S'- WSLL 8UILT A WT Ltt&lt;E

AIC CLEANERS
Ma50n, W, Va.

'17U543

5.55

.37

.a
,43
.43
.4.1

10.11

11.11

//

TRAILER

11.11 .47
Plus. R.-cappale ExeM•
Netlonwht. GI.MrlnfM

-GUARANTEED-

LOVE.

~AAOMOTHER

BEGINNDS
SPECIAL
$295.00
RED RSH BOAT
MASTERCIAFT

T..

lo.ll

O.REER YOU

~E!

FIRISTOfiE DLC 100
•'
TREAD-BLACKWALL ,

Price
9.11
9.11

i

GE'E 1 M0M WE
CAN'T LEf 'rOU
GIVE UP A

li'$ ..IJST THAT

MOTH PROOFING

WHOOPEE! HURRAY!
HAIW ~ 1/EAA!

Schwarze! Marine
Hockingport, Ohio

.POMEROY HOME AND AUTO

W141\T P'YA MEA'-.! .
'141\PPY "--E.W YEAR: 1.

THIS

IS~!

Now to qet Chipper'&gt;
ca r back to the houGe
before Clovia qeb;
home from Gchool!

MA'-1, DID YOU
MISS: 1&gt;. WILD
PARN!

I'&gt; IT
JUIVE
~?

PRONE _,_.,.

SIDE OLANCES .By Oill fox

WMPO

II

INFORMATION
NEWS
presents

LOCAL REPORTS
DAILY
.
• ~ AT
7:50 A.M.
12 NOON
3 P.M.
AND
4:30 P.M.

in May

" He that would ,live for aye
!always! must eat sage In May,"
goes an old Engllsh proverb.
For cen l urles sage was used
not only os an herb but a medldne. It supposedly strengthened
memory, for a sage I wise person J has to remember well.
So, have I«Jme sage ln May,
he that In a stuffing for pork
roost, bread dre!i!ling balls with

J;L~

roi.L T~EM UP

Al-lD S~OVE THEM

NOt I'M II-I.E
Wl'llWT W\-Wfl'
AND CAl&lt;
WIN rr ALL

T&gt;ii20UhH T"E

i'EYHOLE!

I "fl.IIHK 14E'LL
~Ali\-1\L'r' ANO VErN
SOON ... &lt;IT' t1!; I

.-

BUI COULD

M\1. lOU '&lt;&gt;U~E.
KNOUJG I-lOW -n.IAT
BJTO-I::R 114ltiKS~

W t WIN IN
114tSt I&lt;NUI&lt;'S

Cffi\'i?OLLED

COURTS?

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

pork sausage llnk9 or potties,
or a stu ffing for beet birds
(round steak pi Pees wrapped
around a bread dressing).

I

Core.

PIL 99:1-2143

~W

Sl1e

. . . ., ........ .,.M. ... UN. CNI:

"All tho candldatea' wives are lovely, but f ooom to
Identify more with Ethel!"

.

Entertained

Carpenter
News, Notes
Dormte Cheadle, Cheryl Ellis,

ry, seniors at A1exander High,
were presented Bibles a£Temttle

Church a recent SullCiay morning.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Starkey
were in Columbus saturday for an
i~~ce meeting.

. Mr. and Mrs. Cllttoo Fraley,
Jr. and Ru s ty Ray, Ma rm, w. v a.,

Carol Fraley, Donald Keeton,
Toni Lasure, April 'UMther, were weeketw:l guests of her parKaren Sue Nelson, Jenny Whit-. enU, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Greentington, David Wooten, Kenneth lees aOO Rilla.
Jones and Dean Wooten, all of
Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Jewell and
this community, were among Mary an:! Donald Blackwood of
those graduatb~ from Alexan:ler '~- Columbus were supper guests ot
High School recently. M a n Y ·Mr. and Mrs. Earl Starkey on
t'rlerlds and relatives from here Sunday evening.
attended graduation exercises.
Those visiting with Mr. arv:t
CARNIVAL
Mrs . Robert Stout duri11: t h e
weekeiJ:I were Mr. and Mrs. Dave
Raynard, Mark and Randy, of
Johnson City, Tenn., Mr . aOO
Mrs. Ra,y Stout, MlcheleandBitl,
Charleston, W. Va., Mrs. Mary
Napper, Terry and Scott, Wells..
ton, Mrs. Jean Stout and C&amp;rol of
Syracuse, and Mr. and Mrs. John

Wolfpen

cil GIUogly and family of Athens were Sunday visitors ot Mr.
and Mrs. Everett Lambert.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Jel!era
and VaJorie of Coalton were the

News, Notes

weekend visitors of Mr. and Mrs.

Recent visitors ot Mr. and
Mrs. Howard RusseU were Mr.

Joe Hatlleld.
Mrs. Lee Roush aM Rodney

or Gallipolis were Tuesday vlsit,.

The Almanac
Unll8cl Press lnternattcmal
Today Ia Tuoaday, June 11,
the 163rd da,y or 1968 wllh 203 to
follow.
The moon io between Its Ml
phase and last quarter.
The morning stars are Satum
By

and ldrt. Donald Hauck, Mrs.
Ullie Hauck, Mr. Albert Wood- ors of her mother, Mrs. Joseph
and Venus.
ard, all of Pomeroy, and Mr. and Johnson.
Mrs.
Nora
Johnson
of CoThe evening lltar isJupltar.
Mrs. WWiam RusseU, MlnersJwnbus spent a week with Mrs.

~lle.

On Uds day In hlatori:

Joseph Johnson and lamlly.
In 1920 Ohlo Sen. Warren
Mr. am Mrs, Harley Haning of
Mra.
James Johnson, Jamie Harding wat called to a Chleago
Ftatwood and Mr. and Mrs, C...
Sue and Todd, of Pomeroy, Mrs. hotel and ln!ormod he would be
Joseph Johnson an:l Mn. Non the dark hone Ropublfc:an
Johnson attended the graduaUon candidate lor prestdenl.
of Michael Evans, son

ot Mrs.

Madeline Evans or Grove City.
Mr. and Mrs. Cecil GU!ogly
, and lamlly of Athens vlsll8cl her

AUCTION

parents, Mr. and Mra. Everett
Lambert.

SOIOOL

and other relatives.

Mr. and Mrs. W. Boyce or Columbus were vlaHonoverthere·
cent hoUdaY weekeiXI of her J)ll'·
ents, Mr. and Mn. Howard R1,1s•
sell.

Scott McComas has returned
here atter abusinesstriptoF1orlda and Arizona. He made the trip

by plane !rom Columbus.
Mrs. Roy Wiseman, Spri~­
field, visited her parenta, Mr.

The tax booKS are now open for the June or sec·
ond half eollectlon of the 1967 Real Estate taxes.
Also for deUnquent tax. Closma date wtll be luly

and family or Athens were guesta
of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fern

Gillogly on Sunday after,_,
Warren Keirns and Phil Low-

?j(;.~ -·

1, 1988.

'

"''· .... n . , _*'· .

"My dad's Idea of

rldlna: mower Is to ride mo until
I start mowlna:!"

.

How.d LFrink·

1

Meigs County TI'UIUrw

...
'

II. Guard
Jt.Aw&amp;y:
pretia

farm

equipment
10. M.t.n'l

·

nickname

U.Japane•
hotlctay
12.8howen
,. If. Ptrtormed

U.Money

JO,Ropo•
apti&lt;lnl'

drawen

"'

- y.......,.......

one Jetter to each square, to
form four ordinary words.

lljeeted

ll'l. Pett. to
r ain

I

FIAYE

.

Il

U.Xotlto4or
learnlnl'

U.lt:nemy
fiCOUt

at.Siuof
eool
40. J:quat

u.-or

Juotlee

~

II
tOSANT.4I
] ()
•
'oPIITEIE

•·U

(J I

II

WHAT 'IOU MIOH'T DO
IF YOU LOOt&lt; $HARP.

No .. ammre the circled !etten

( ~ to form the IUrpriH UliWer, U

~~==~=:::::-=~-;L1~~~~-~ted b1 tho above cartoon;

I ....- ....... I[II)THE(IIIIJ
(AIItwen
Joml&gt;koo ADAOI

'6:-+--ln:

liFOO KINNIL

to~aorrow'

TIIWAIT

l'~tl'l!rda.l''l

A.n1wm

IJ'Iaat

a

leaJry t.ol,..llll' IHJjJll! mnh
wn I,_IT

rlu.Jdllj&lt;&gt;y--A

OI&lt;E Of .. 1&lt;1(1
\OM TORTE'S
GIIE5T ROOMS,
lURY CON ·

-

.

U.Loli4

'

TEMPLAl!,

I IOQ
D1ldllnful
DAILY CBYI'TOQ110ftl- Hen'a ~
.

A CJrnlapoM QooloiiM

w work

to..... "'"'"'

AXYDioaAAXa
'r lio 1. o.lf o I' • I! 1o ow
one lllllrllmtll- ~;...-or. lll _lllli.,.Jlo A
, ror 11u1 u.,oo 111, X tor lho I"" O'o, ""· lllqlrl_loltell, .,...
•. . ~ tile
~., .~

\lllllk""'
-'
'' ..... ~ tliO- !illr ~ dlftl)i!lil
.......

DA'Il
WILL "YOU ASSIST !#E. IN LII'TII'/3
IT ONTO THE COO-ER AI'TER 1
REMOVE 1HI6 EMPTY~

Sli.Amonc

rl,.r

·-·L

~EA\I'll THIS TIME; O&gt;

-

28.Afrlu.n
ontelope

31.8w!oo

Ti&lt;ESE BOTTLES. GET Q,UI'TE

..........
,_ ...... .. _..... _
,.•.."'-.....

d.lpo&lt;IIIO

Gr-. when Colwnbia members

,_,j

11. Hltter
13. J;llwtder
14. Sgeck
16. BlOow

t. Pte&lt;o or

"""'
"
:u.

III.Y.....

, nook

REAL EST ATE OWNERS

ning.
Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Gltlogly

6. Notln
I.Mot'Mll
T. Tender

M....
JolaJ1n
10. Aquatlc
bini

Un~tramble the1e. four Jumbles,

' d.Balr ...

Twerty - nine Grangers and
guests, Columbia Grange atterded a recert meeting oC Laurel
presented a program ror the eve-

a.-

aT. HW:8. Afr,
11. Dlopctittloll
.0. Compe"""'
d.~..

NOTICE

and Mro. Earl Starkey.

UJe1

JJUJJ~M;-::' =~ -:t.r:::

wuhed

22. Baklnf

buoko
18-J....t
ltl.ll'outll
10. Dt!amofl
N.Luooa
aatmo _
11. Water: l'r.

homo alter spending a
week ln Kentucky visltlngparonts

on Sunday afternoon.

._ Rooflnl'

1lt11
21. Spirit .
16.Pllnit
se.outer

~orned

and Greg of Jackson called on
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jerry
Culwell and other relatives here

2. Kettle
3. Artl&lt;le

ACII088
1. Reoort.
t. Wectp
T. SerullnlR

21.W.......

Eugene Haning, Rhonda and Ro~
ald.
Mr. and Mrs. W, A. Elam r.,.

cal.
Mr. and Mrs. T. H. Blanton

BUGS BUNNY

DAILY CROSSWORD
18. Willie·

tool

Mr. and Mrs. Brady Knotts of
King IIUI vlsll8cl Mr. and Mrs.

Stout and Diane and Johnny, lo-

'

i' '

j

SALES AND SERVICE

650xl3
650.14
700xl3
700xl4
710•14
670•15

AHEM!f-Cilfi&gt;,Kf-

tho Largest Truek or
Bull&lt;llzer Radiator To Tho

n

"'

ABNER

From

M11111'11$h'Her

S.lO: f.lJ; 1-11: t-1:t: f.U: &amp;.11: 8

MAl~ ...

EVINIUDE
Wheel Alignment

ATAt.t.. ...

se-s ... Ml""

I'E~LAS---

matea. Pbone 182-32M, Goerloin Ready - MiJ: Co., MJddle.
port, Oblo,
I 10 lie

I I lie

NO HOPI&gt;'

HOWD'I•

READY • MIX conerell deUY·
ered rlibt to yoiD' pl'l)jecl.
Faat and euy. Free estl·

EXPERT

HAIR

GATE CRICKING- --

4 • flo

!IC-Im.

Servlel

Bt&lt;Tl'~THAIJ.,

WHY5HG'D
SAY 1-l!P

hvive tiM or1r1n11 Hut\ Of W011J RIP.
t inned in !'(lur olfft ho111 J ran k~flller
dry·fatll l'lltiiiOd. No 11\MU. No Just. flo
odor. use ru11 ne 11n111 dar.

---

CAN'f

I'M HIRRING A FONN'I

APPALOSSA STUD service. By Affi &lt;XJNDI'I'IONINO JlefrlgeP.
appointment, phone lfiUill.
aUon service. Jack's Refrlai-14-301p
eraUon, No Rave~~. . _

Write, Pboae or OJalld
Crllt Ill llllford
Raeble, OMo

\NHAT MV LEETLE
"YrATER'S OONE --

JU5!

IMA61~1S

N018&amp;-UKE A FIUSTY

"DAIRY BEEF"
.AIIw.ll ,_.......,
bn!edlng service. ~ Leland
, .... '" ,d,_ ..,.,
Pai'ter, Pomeroy resldenee
IMffll -.111 c.,.. c....,,..
911S-2264 or call stallon Top. ....,. ,.,,,. ••· 1 , _ ,
pera Plains 6&amp;7-3211. U aote L._.....
....;•_•_-....;v.;~.;.1;..;.."'.;,...;;..-J

C. BRADFORD
AUCl'IONEER

HE JEST
SPROUTED
HIS FUST

CARPETING

CURTISS

c.

~ COME OVER TO
SHOW OFF MV M:W
GqANDS0'-1, LOWEEZV-HI~ NAME'S
BUqLJAMES

ENE!JfJ A
fll'J.UDULEit.IT'
HOPI!E15

ITS At.lRIGH!;VO-

LOOKV!l

SPEAI&lt;IN 'OF
SHOWIN ' OFF- LET ME SHOW ~E·

EXPERIENCED
Rdlattr Service

BRING NEW
UFE TO

RADIO &amp; TV repair, reaacJ11.
able prices, Antenna 6 Booiter service. John Harrison,
701 B"'adway St., Middleport,
Oblo. Pbone 911S-252Z, open
evenings.
u.3llte

handle

control. $200; AC hay rake on RESTAURANT equipment. call
rubber, power take off $56: Rutland Furniture, 742-4211.
New Idea mower. on rubber,
6-9-3tc
$56; 6-foot disc, $211; John
Deere corn planter, $20; ma- A NEW shloment of clothing
nure spreader on rubber $25. baa anived. Women's and
Help Wanted
Bill Grueaer, Rt. 1, Miners. Children's and Men's Work
~it..
6-fl-!tp Uniforms. Also Ford "'-!on
pickup truck, 4-0peed trans1968 ZIG ZAG sewing machine. mission. Jeffers Clothing
This machine makes button- Store. Rt. 33, Pomeroy.
holes, darna &amp; emb. Take
11-!I-GI&lt;
over 8 payments of $6.31 per
month or $45 cash. We will CORN, 1200 bushels, DaDaa
bring this machine to your
IIIII, Letart Falls, Phone 247home for you to try. Call 2164.
6-9-3k
lm-2836.
6-11-61c
GOOD DAffiY HAY to cut on
I ROOM HOUSE, hath, large
shares. Alba Y4lt, Mfners.
lot; also 14 fool john boat, 24
vlffe.
6-9-3tp
Railroad St.. Middleport.
DESK CLERK. Live ln. Apply
Phone 992-3826.
6-11-71&lt; BLACK MINIATURE Poodle
ln peroon at Ohio Hotel.
Pups, $75. West Highland
6-11-61&lt;:
REAL SOl'ND. 1968 stereo AM
White Terriers $100. 1!164
&amp; FM radio, walnut finish.
Farm aft Cub Tractor, hydrau.
LADY for housework, cook, Uve
Take over payments of 15.14
Uc
11ft, S point fast bitch, sinIn or out, phone 992-5251, CODper
month
or
pay
$96.22.
Will
tact 0. !Dndy over Uberty
gle plow, 5 foot cutter bar
discount for cash. Phone 992and disc $11110. Price firm . Lit.
'11leatre, Middleport for lnter2836.
6-fl-61e tie Barkaroo Kennels. Cool·
~mo.
11-5-«e
ville, Ohio, 53654. 6-7-10te
BALDWIN
HOME
organ
to
be
WAITRESS and CST hnp. Apply
picked up In this area. For
In person.
Crow's Steak
Re&gt;l !;state For S•l•
information, write Credit
House.
U«c
O'BRIEN I CROW
Mgr., Graves Plano &amp; Organ
REALTY
COMPANY
Co., :u!J E. Broad St. ColumFor Sale or Rent
bus, Ohio.
6-11-2te POMEROY-Butternut Ave. 2
FIVE ROOM house and bath,
story frame, 4 bedrooms. 2
aluminum siding, s!&lt;&gt;rm wlnbaths. garage. $1,1150.110.
SAVE MONEY at Bryant's on
do'll'll, -~- Phone tiiS-3718. - a gift for Dad. Tape record· POMEROY- Union Ave. Ter11-Ntp
race, I II. story frame, 1 bedera reduced 115 to 129. SM.
rooms.
bath.
basement.
radio only 1!1.911. Automat!&lt;:
For Rent
14.1100.00.
letter opener, battery power·\ 1'WO f'IJRNJSHED apartments,
«! fl. Golf balls 17 a dozen; MIDDLEPORT - South 2nd.
4 TQOm~; and bath. Phone 992dre" shoes f(.99 pair. Save 2 s!&lt;&gt;ry lrame, 4 bedroorruo, 2
39'15, after 5, phone 992-2571.
baths, $10,1100.110.
half, portable TV like new,
6-11-31&lt;:
$69: stereo player $59.95; gos. FOR RENT, FliRNISRI!D
pel records, two lor $5; wat. APARTMENT. I bedroom.
HENRY CLELAND
FURNISHED APARTMENT on
ches, $6.95; electric guitars.
first floor for adults only, 212
Olllce-fft.Z!H
129.95. Shop and save at Bryllel.-tft.!lll
South Filth Ave., Middleport.
ant's, !118 IV. Main, Pomeroy.
6-11-31&lt;
Phone 992-.5435.
6-11-tfc
6-11-4tc

CARRIER

NOTICI
Bleil ..Ul be reeelnd 1t Ole offle"

Mr. and Mrs. Harold E. Coww
dery spent their vacation in Ari-zona and California visiti~rela..
ti ves and friends.
Mr. and Mrs. James Reed and
sons were Sunday diMer guests
of her sister, Mrs. Mary Nlch~

ols a,_, lamUy .
Nancy Baum of Chester was
an overnight guest of Jean White--

---

starter,

22114. Tbe Fabrle Shop, Pomeroy. Authorized Singer Sales
and Service. We Sbarpen
Scissors.
s.a.tre
CIGARE'I'l'E vending lMdlhles
and service. ABC Enterprises,
M111011, W. Va. Phone 'I'IU543.

HOBSTETTER
REALTY

Pomeroy Motor Co.

MACHINES, repair

service, aD makes. WY 2-

• 992-218!

Businrss Seryic·es

BUDGET PRICE furniture on
our lblrd Door budget shop.
Baker Furniture, Midclleport.
Oblo.
? 23 tie

SEWING

PHONE

4 Door Std. trans., spotless clean interior, maroon finish.
w·w tires like new, radio, heater. Shawroom clean.

NMII ..IVNIJ

Notice

FERTILIZERS

Business Services

Grad~ ~esults.

BARNEY

'

·~··

·,

.

'

•

XLXPQIIV YrX CHKQVQLX QO UW·
RWYKH Ll UPWXVQIIV RWQXO QKXL
•
J&gt;
RKHWG 1'0 HG .-G XWKQOXWrG
Y.......,.. CJ11Jia. .lar WHO WIU. AIIIIIJIIII 'I'G lUll
THAT AliAIID01ftl IIIJIIa.J'T--IIIDifi:Y

HI~

NfXT 1101! .

LUCK ILY, M"'t
AGILE BRAIN
IS NOT AS
EX~AUSTEO

AS

MY ,.,..YS/C"AL
POWERS~

�•
". r

'

·• •

I

3--

I

The Daily Sentinel, Pomeroy-Middlcpm·t, o •• 'l'uesda.}',June 11, J968

Oaim Gun Merchants
·l

Inspire Assassination
P,\RJS (UP!)- North Vietnamese diplomats charged toda.Y
that "gun merchants'' Wiih
llnancial interests in ihe Viet-

MEIGS TIIATU.
TONIGIIT, JUNE II
COOL HAND LUKE

(TechniC&lt;Jlor)
Paul Newman
and Geo. Kennedy
COLORCARTOONS:
Fastest Car in the World
Rodent to Stardom
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.

----------Wednesday &amp; Thursday
JLUle 12- 12
NOT OPEN

tm!YN
"rivt·ln
~J vn II
TONIGHT, JUNE 11

OUR MAN FLINT
James Colburn

PLUS
IN LIKE FLINT
Jllll08 CG!burn

-----------·
WED. - THURS. - FRL
June12-13 ~ 14

"CLAMBAKE''
Elvis Presley
PLUS
"BEACH RED"

nam war mp,y have conspired in
10 a
plot" to eliminate sen.
Robert F. Kenned.Y because he
was a peace candidate.
The Communist envoyS admitted to newsmen they had no
proof for their assertions.
The Hanoi diplomats engaged
in preliminary talks With the
United States have refused
official comment on the assassination, contending it was an
"internal American matter .••
But in private they admitted
shock.
"The United States has been
exporting violence Cor years." a
high-ranking North Vietnamese
delegate !aid. "Now it is
reaplng violence at home which
has boomeranged,.,
North Vietnamese sources
indicated their delegation would
make no concessions In forthcoming meetings with
W,
Averell ritarriman, President
JOhnson's special ambassador.
They said their instructions
were the same as at the first
meeting May 13- demand an
immediate and unconditional
halt of V.S. bombing.
DUNOV AN JAILED
Gary Lester Donovan, 19, Rt.
2 Badne, has been jailed by the
sherifrs department on a charge
of c:onU'ibuting to the dclirquency u! a minor.

News ... in Briefs
By United Press lnternatlonal
CAPE TOWN, SOUTH AFIUCA - DR. PHIUP BL/UBERG, the
world's longest surviving heart transplant patient, has sutrered a
"relapse" from a ilver complication and Ouid aroond his heart.
spokesmen for Groote Schuur hospital said toda.Y.
The condition of the 58-year-old retired South Arrlcan dentist
is "causing doctors some concern," a hospital bulletin said. SOureeti at the hospital said Blaiberg•s pulse rate had weakened.

BoUrd Agrees to Exemption
COLUMBUS (UPO - The
state Board or Education granted (13-1); an exemption Monday
rrom a state law that would
have

sent high school pupils

f'tom an a11-whltc sQhool district'
to a predomlilantly Negro
school.

The board agreed to the tw~
year exemplion after residents
of Bratenahl Elementary District promised to raise $30,000
ARLINGTON, VA. - ETHEL KENNEDY and her four oldest to $35,000 to educate 35 Negro
children rebJrned to the grave or her husband, Sen. liobert F. Ke~ students in their elementar,y
nedy, at 1\rli~on National Cemetery MoJday evening arter the district during the period.
gates were closed to other visitors.
Had the exemption not been
I
She was accompanied by sons Joseph, 15, Robert, 14, and David, 12, and daughter Kathleen, 16. Mrs. Kennedy alii Joseph also
visited the grave Sunday. Some 15.000 persons - twice the usual
weekday number - nled by the gra ''es of the Kenned_v brothers
during the day. Fitly thousand paid their respects Surw:lay.
COLUMBUS (IJPD- The stele
Board of Education:
WASHINGTON - THE PRES....~G QUESTIONS have been posed.
- Chartered 685 city, exemptNow comes the dlrflcult part: Determining whether there is "somG- 0&lt;1 and COWity school districts.
thing in lhe environment of American society" that produces vio- JUred Dr. Franklin B. Wal~
lence.
·.;.
ter, superintendent of Westlake
That in essence was the assignment President Johnson handed school district, as an assistMond&amp;J' to his new HI-member National Commission on the causes ant state superintendent of eclland Pre\·ention of Violence.
cation.
Approved a plan Cor· the
COLUMBUS- THE STATE BOARD OF EDUCATlUN rejected administration or a federal proMorxtay a request from a Belmont County school district for a ooo- gram to aid Local communities
year exemption from a rorced merger. A recommendation by State in recruiting and training teachSupt. of Education Martin W, Essex for the denial of the request ers.
of the Wheeling Local Elementary School District was tabled at the
- Entered into a contract wiUt
May meeting.
the Belmont County Joint VocaLinder a law passed by the last session of tl1e General As sembly, tional School Board of Educano district without a high school can exist after July 1 aOO any
such district must be dissolved and joined with another district
TIME OF WEDDiNG
The open church wedding of
PAJUS - STUDENTS PROTESTING TilE drowning of a demMiss Joyce Elaine Clonch of
onstrator brought fierce new rioting to strife-torn France today.
Middleport, Route 1, to Mr. RonThey vowed they would take to the streets of Pari s again tonight.
The Latin Quarter rocked to the thump of exploding tear gas ald Eugene Vance of Harrisonville, will be an event of June
and percussion grenade s Monday night and early today ns 4,000 to
15 instead of June 14, at 7
s.ooo students fought with riot poli ce. "They have killed our com- o'clock
in the ,evening at the
rades!" the students screamed as they hurled paving stones and
molotov cocklails, and set fire to vehicles and built barricades. Hssell Run F r e c Methodist
Church.

WRITE A CHECK!
PAY YOUR BIUS THE EASY WAY-

Wilh A Checking Account Here

FREE CUSTOMER PARKING

lit

tr\S

,.alional B

hf

Member of Federal Deposit Insurance Corporadm

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

LOI\DON (UP0 - Scotland
Yard Loday hunted U.rdon
contacts of the man accused of
killing Dr. Martin Luther King
Jr .
The sear ch centered on
persons who may ha ve kept the
~0-year-old escaped convi ct sup.
plied with mone.Y before his
an-est at London International
Airport saturday.
The hunt spread to Brussels
and Lisbon where, accordl~ to
unofficial reports, Ray may
have been pi.cking up furds
funneled through a Swiss bank
a ccount.
The detectives hunted while
U.S. and British government
lawyers cooperated in an effort
to extradite Ray to Ameri ca to
stand trial Cor the slaying of the
civil rights leader in Memphis,
Tenn., April 4.
U.S. Assl Atty. Gen. Fred M.
Vinson Jr., leading the extradition drive, was aiming for as
speedy an extradition as possible- by June 28, legal sources
said. But court observers here
said the process could run Into
a long hot summer i1 Ray
exercises his civil rights to the
extent of an appeal oto the House

of Lords, Britain's supreme
court.
Frank Milton, London' s chief
magistrate, granted Ray a
court-appointed lawyer, Michael
Dresden. At the same 82~second
hearing Monday Mllton ordered
Ray held until .June 18 on the
technical arrest charges- that

Scores Soar
In PeeWees

+

:

LOpsided scores were the or.
der or the day as Pee Wee teams
met in Friday's pia,¥ .
The Mets downed tbe Angels
27 to 1 while Syracuse whipped the Redlegs 22 to 4. For the
Mets Roach had3 singles, Browning 2 singles, Sisson and Warner
1 each and English a double.
Foil rod Canned eight.
Hitting safely for the Angels
were Smith with a double and single and Mitch a single. Four Angel pitchers gave up 19freepasses while striking out only 3 bat ters.
At Syracuse the Redlegs collected one hit; a homer by G.
Browning. Meanwhile, pounding
out IS hil! for &amp;Yracuse were
Hayman, Hamilton, Winebrermer,
Cundiff, Brown, C, Forbes, M.
Forbes, Warner, Bass and Wil -

••
•.: &lt;&gt;!~~r~~!\olf, 53, RD
son.

Mrs. Wolf, 53,

Dies

:
•
•
•

•
:

••

like an angel. The Englander
yields just enough to conform
to her feather-weight.
Sleeps

Quality constructed at a new bw price I That's what you'll say
w hen you see the innerspring Mattress by Englander now
being festured in our Bedding Department for just

/

i

lo\IDDLEPORT,

• +

•

+
•
•
t•

t

•
:·
39 88

BAKER FURNITURE

:

oHib

For Ladies Only

Spedal Shopping
Hours:

6:00 .to 9:00 P.M.

THURS., JUNE 13
•

2, Galena, died Sunday evening
in the Grant Hospital, CoJum~
bus. She was a member of the
narlem Church of Christ in
Christian Union. She was a former resident or Meigs County.

Survivors include her husband,
Irvin J,; three daughters, Mrs.
Vivian stratton, ostrander; alld
PauleltA! and Mary Lou
both at homei a son, Charles R.

Wolf,

dWol!, U. S.b Nauvy; six grandchllren; one ro 1er, Donald Leifheit, ~ringfield, and her step-

•• ::l7o~~:. 2r~~~~:~~~~::
:•

•+ +++++++++++++++++++++++++++·
OON'T
FORGE11

tion for the operation or the district, contingent upon approval
or funds by the !,ppalachlan Regional Commission.
- Entere&lt;l into contracts with
eight e&amp;leational television stations, value&lt;! at $500,000.
- Agreed to reimburse school
dl stricts $25 per pupil for trainable mentally retarded youngsters.

G. E. Lewis,

- - - - - 70, Succum}ls

+++++++++++·+•+••••••··~·&lt;4·&lt;4·&lt;4H~4~++++++•

f'
f'

been merecd · with Cleveland
and pupils · now atrendlng hig~
school rroni Bratenahl would
have been sent to' Predominant..
ly Negro Glenville since Cleve..
land follows a neighborhood
school policy.
The exemption was granted
under the same law .that requires all school districts without high schools to merge with
districts that have by July l.
The law provides for the state
Board or EducaUon to grant an
exemptlort 11where topography,

State Board Also:

Ray's Back Trail under Scrutiny
I KNOW WHAT PLL DO...

granted, the dislrlct would have

DeVore Funeral Home in Sunbury with the Rev. Charles Hedges orficlatlng. Tentative groveside services have been set for
1 p.m. at the Beech Grove Cemelery.

Father's Day
June 16th
L1dies &amp; Girls Ple1.. Re1d:
On Thursday night this week, New York 'Clothing
wHI turn the store over to you Cor easy shopping
Cor dad. Come as you are, shop leisurely. That'$;
for 3 hours only.

FREE GIFTS- DOOR PRIZES

3 ~. $10.00 GIFT CERTHlCAT~S given away at
9 p. m. No purchaae_neceas.ary. Free registration.

New York Oothl!41 House, Pomerty

of holding illegal passports and
a pi stol without permit when
arresled at the airport.
Police sources said Ha.y was
at the airport on the last of a
series or a money-fetching trips.
The police wanted to know
Where the money came from and
through which hands. Ha)• was
known to have been in the
Portuguese capital Ma.Y 8-17,
living in a . cheap waterfrQJlt
hotel and nightclubbing. He was
said to have lived in cheap
hotel s here but no sign of
nightlife was unearthed in t11e
LoOOon hunt so far .

Beat...

George Everett Lewis, 70, Shadyside, Ohio died at 11:05 p.m.,
SuOOay at his home.
He was born In Meigs County.
Mr. Lewis was a retired teacher. He taught Industrial arts at"
Bellaire for several years.
Mr. Lewis was amemberofthe
Lincoln Ave., Methodist Church,
and a World War I veteran.
He is survived by his wife,
the former Pearl Welker, and
one son, Robert, Columbus;
one sister, Mrs. Cora Ward
Rupe, Cheshire;. three brothers,
Clyde, Athens; Clarence, and C&amp;cU, Columbus. Two granddaugh~
ters survive.
Funeral services wUI be held
at 9 a.m. Wednesday at Shadyside.
Graveside services with mili·
tary honors will be conducted 2
p.m,, Wednesday at the Cnlvary
Cemetery, Rio Grande, under
the direction ot Bauknecht Funeral Home, Shadyside.

Police Lay
Siege onto

(Continued from page l)

Incurred in the . annual program
which has also become homecoming das.

ON .~ BET, ROD GTI .KEY,
Pomeroy High School graduate
this spring, sent a graduation
announcement to the late Sen ator Bobby Kennedy . Rod received a congratulatory telegram in answer to the announce~
ment - certainly a treasure in
view or the events or the last
few da,ys.
CYfHEH AREA RESIDENTS who

arf' first cousins of Mrs. J n a
Sanders include Mrs. Sarah Fosler, George M. Zuspan a:Jtft~Nil­
liam F, Zuspan, Mason; Mrs.
Beulah Roush, Middleporl, and
Mrs . L, 0. Gaskins, Pt. Pleasant. Mrs. Sanders and seven
members o1 her family were
killed in a helicopter crash at
Paramount, Calif., May 22,

Sorbonne
PARiS (IJP0 - Riot pollee
today conducted a three - hour
siege or Sorbonne University
where 4:,000 students holed up
after a night of bloody rioting in
the Latin Q.iarter. Police tear
gas and concussJon grenades
shattered windows and splattered walls of the Sorbonlle facade
and students hurled back moiOtov cocktails.
Student spokesmen said grenades exploded in classrooms
and faculty halls, Injuring 20
students, rive seriously. Pollee
broke off the siege three hours
after dawn but remained on the
alert nearby in blue riot squad
cars .
The new rioting broke out In
strife-torn France Monday night
as students tOok to the Latin
Quarter's streets to protest the
drowning or a demonstrator.

sparsit.Y of population and other
factors make compliance impractical."
lteduces Term
originally Bratenahl request,.
ed a 10-year extension of the
merger. Then it asked for a
five--year exemption and last
month awlied for a two·.. year
\
one.
The two-year exemPUon request was tabled by the board
last rn"ooth at ~ thEr same meeting whlch saw the board adopt
a ,.._ley statement on equal educational opportunities.
Monday's proposal by Bratet&gt;ahl for a merger July 1, 1970,
and a written promise to educate 25 Negro ~hildren drew
State Sup~ Martin Essex to
term it a "sUJ"')rJse reoommendatioJL''
Essex called it "a practical
solution" since a forced "merger could be Ue&lt;! up In the
courts for at least flv.e years."
Essex withdrew his earlier
recommendation that .•Bratenahl's petition be denied and
substituted one reconunending
the district's proposal be accepted by the bo!rd.
Segregation Pressing
"The most crucial issue toda,y in our society is segregation," said Essex. "Court decisions have been made and various approaches have been tak·
en but at this time only minor
advances have been made.

Mrs. Stutler
Dies Tuesday
PT. PLEASANT - Mr~ Eliza
Jane stutler, 70, or 2114 Ml
Vernon Ave., who had been ser·
iously ill for the past year,
died at her home at 5:35 a.m.
Tuesday.
Born Feb. 8, 1898 in Mason
County, she was the daughter or
the late Fred and Gertie Mae
Edwards McDade Mitchell.
Surviving include her husband,
Perry SbJtler; a daughter, Mrs.
Robert (Verdon) O'Dell, Galllpolls; a son, Herman Stutler,
Pt. Pleasant; three sisters, Mrs.
Ethel Thornton and Mrs. Juanita Ward, Pt. Pleasant; and Mrs.
Florence Pelley of Columbus;
five brothers, John F. al'kl Clyde
McDade, ColumbUSi Lawrence
McDade, Rt. 1 Leon, W. Va. t
Wood McDade, F1orlda; and Edward McDade, Red House, W.
Va.; and three children.
Funeral servlces wlll be conducted at 2 p.m. Thursday at the
Crow-Hussell Funeral Home by
the Rev. William B. &amp;.trbrook
and the Rev, Charles L. Frum.
Burial will be In Plne Grove
Cemetery. Friends ma,y call at
the runeral home after 11 a.m.
Wednesday.

Thls proposal offers .....n
lnovaUon and experimental ,P.
proac~ toward lnt.gratlng ,..,_
urban yoongsten and 'urban
youngsters or dif'terent races."
Board members Wayne ~
Sharrer, ·Bryan, and Elliot E.:
Meyers, Ironton, pointed out thft
proposal was inconsislent with-•
the adoption . or the boon! las{
.
'
month of a policy ~promisiJ¥
"every effort shall be made to
prevent and to eliminate segre-gation or children -. and staff bY.
reason or race or color.''
!
11 Thla noble experiment in education Is not an e~erlment hi
education but an exPeriment in
excusirw Ywrllelf rroni re~a~
tions that apply to other people," said 'Meyers • .
Shaffer also sold "II could be
said this was a death bed pro_posal."
On Opposing Sides
The board discUssion alll the
public partlc!patlon part or lb.
meeting founcl three Negroes~·
two ot them state legislators,
on opposite sides.
Board member RusseU Davis,
Clevelard, said he voted for the
prQPOSal because he "hesitated ""
to break up an lntegration pr~
gTam that will receive national

•

11

acclaim."
State sen. M. Morris Jacksoa,.
whose district includes BraterP
ahl, said a "merger at this time
would not beneCJt either school
district" and asked for the twoyear extensloJL
But state Rep. Thcmas E.
Hill, whose district also includes
Dratenahl, said the exemptloo
"would clearly serve as a
stamp or approval by this board
tor segregated schools ln Ohio."
Hill charged"B rate na h 11
through design or innocence ..•
could easily ierve as a classic
example of segregation, northern
style" based on "real estate
sales, rental selectivity· and by
vlgllaotly guarding any otempt.ed encroachment up o n ita
boundaries.''

VETERANS MEMORIAL
'HOSPITAL
ADWTTED - Erll Pickens,
Racine; Louise Partlow, Minersville.
DISCHARGED - Glodys TOOmas, Maude McMurray,

LAWHORN PROMOTED
Marine Sergeant Steward M,
Lawhorn. 29, soo of Mr. aRt
Mrs. Carl G. Lawhorn of P~
roy, and husbal\1 or Mrs. Alice
F. Lawhorn of Hartford, W, VL,
was promoted to his present rank
while serving with Headquarters
Battallm, Twe11ty - seventh Marine Regiment, Fint Marine Division in Vietnam.

LODGE TO MEET
LOCAL TEMPS
Racine Lodge 460, F&amp;AM, will
The temperature In downtown
Pomeroy at 11 a.m. TUesday, meet tonight at 7 for work In
under sunny skies, was 80 de- the entered apprentice and felgrees.
lowcraft degrees.

ELBERFELDS
FATHER'S DAY SALE

KODAK

INSTAMATIC CAMERAS

"

Five secretaries of fltate have
become president -

Thomas

Jefferson, James Monroe, John
Q.Jlncy Adams, James Madison
and Martin Van Buren - but

none since Van Buren. in 1829.

• VOL. XXI

e

lnteret~llt

Of The

~

1

at y
Devoted To The

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\

•

Now You Know

en tine
Me~s-MUJIOn

'

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Weather

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~~
o;r. il'l

'l

ol

J

1, II 1
~ ~ &lt;6 °.

'ooler, less humid, hlllh toupper 70o and lower 80s; '
cooler IDnlllht, I"" 56. .
ostly ......,, cooler '1111ro-

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Area

~·¢ ....

N0._35-'--------:--""'.:...:PO~M~·E~R.::::O:..:.Y-::_M::,:ID~D~Lf:c._PO::::R~T~
. O::::.H:...::I.::::O_ _ _ __ _ _ __ _· ~Wi~'ED'::N.::f:::S'::DA:.:.:Y.:...:,J~U~N:::,_E~I2.~1968~ _ _ ____:_.:___ _----'-~F!_!IV.:_E~C:!_EN!_!TS.~'

Housing Plan Bared
By Governor Rhodes
COLUMBUS (IJPD - Go v. consented to the designat1on, r 1 and, from lbe mooey raloed,
James A, Rhodes today sent to
The designation ot an area as make low c::ost luana to ft.nant'e
a legislative ltudy committee 011 "Urban Redevelopment Area" coostructlon and rehobWia1loll
sublllandard houoing In Ohio his would trigger the avallablilty or of low and moderate eolll hous$250 miilioo plan lor fostering programs Cor tax abatement Ing.
economic and commercial devel- and for housing finance loans.
The bonds would oot be pn,
opment throogh sUmulatioo of
20 Years
eral obligations In Ohio,
ldjw and moderate lnrome housReal property tax abatements !sld,
Ing.
would remain ln Coree ((lr
"The bUt submitted does not
twenty
years
or
unW
the
total
answer
all the problema rJ.
R._s llliiiOWiced his plan In
a letter to state Rep. Keith amoont of t a x e s abated Ohio's cities,'" the pemor
McNamara, R-Co1uri:rue, the equalled certain improvement said. wlbe new houslDg programs II envisioo&amp; should be
costs.
committee chairman.
"The abatement would be linked with other programs and
The bill R-! proposed
available only for improvements designed to 80lve atber acute
would
create
an
Urban
ReSPECIAL AWARD- CarJ Biltkam, right, conservationist
. development COmmission and a resulting in the development ol urban problema."
for the Meigs Soil and Water Conservation District, is speak·
Separate Report
stat&lt;&gt; Hou&amp;1ng Finance Agency. low or moderate oost housing,"
RISING FAST IN POMEROY arc the exterior walla of the new quarten of the Fanners Bank
ing at the 25th anniversary dinner Monday night at Pomeroy
14
stat&lt;&gt; Urban Development DI"tbe Urban Redevelopment Rhodes said. This COJld come
and Savi"ls Co. to be located trom W. Main st. toW. Second St. OfftclaJ groondbrealdrw Cor the
Jr. High audltorlum. He is acknowledging the special award
either
through
rehabllltali011
ol
rector
Albert Gtles recommendCommission
woold
mark
of!
new baM quarters was held on March 9.
he holds given to him In recognition of20 years service - 1948existing
substandard
buildings
areas
in
which
community
reed
ln
a separate report m
1968 - to the conservation district. Standing, at left.. is Coun- ---- - development or conservation or new construction, either on housing and redevelopment acty Extension Agent, Agriculture, C. E. Blakeslee.
are needed after lltuctving vacant land or oo land now oc~ tivities "consideration ot the
det&lt;&gt;rloratlon and blight er:1 sling cuple&lt;l by !Ribstandard build- posslbUity and nature of atate
:: ::::: ;: &lt;:. ;:::::::::·:·:-;.: ..;.· :-:· :-: ·:-: ·:.·.
.=,•.:.·.·.=,=.=.·.=.::.::,::.= .• .' .• ,=·.· ,'.•,=.•,'.•,'·.·,=.•.·.•.=.•,'.•,'.•.=.• ',.•.'.•:'.•.·.=.·.=.·.=.·.= .·.=.·.•.·.·.···.'.•,·.·.·. ·: ·.·. =.· . ·.··. ·.·.·.· ··.·•·.·.· ..
in areas," Rhodes said. 44&amp;lch ings."
In Important, related
- •·.: · .•· ..· ::::;:;:;:;:::
··.;:;::::::::.:.:::::::::.;.. :-=:::::::::::
The Housing Finance agency areas ...
areas would be labeled 'Urban
Redevelopment Areas• but ooly would, under Rhodes' propoaaJ,
These Include _ . - enIt was voted to sell the Bed- Austin Phillips, Wilkie Holman, High SchoOl have been placed on after the local &amp;1)\'ernment body issue and sell revenue bonds
(Contlnued .., 1'1180 2)
ford Elementary school building Elber Johnson, Mrs: Neal White the BDPfOVed list for 1968-69,
Tuesday night when the Meigs and Mrs. Helen Miller, cust&lt;XI- The consolidated senior high
Local School District board of ians; Mrs. Nora Mills, Mrs. Aus- school will be evaluated during
education met at Middleport High tin Phillips, Mrs. Margaret Ac· the next school year, the report
School.
ree, Mrs. May Homlne, Mrs. Nel- slates.
By United Press International
It was agreed to accept sealed lie Borgan and Mrs. Bernice
Teachers who wiU have temATLANTA - FOUR ARMED CONVICTS, HOLED UP with 21
bids
on
the
building
and
lard
until
Garnes.
cooks.
porary
certificates for the next
hostages in an offtce of the Atlanta Federal Prison while other innoon,
Aug. 1. The board reserves
Mrs.
Martha
VeMBri,
social
school
year
were appointed. They
mates screamed and shattered windowa, agreed today to surrender
the
right
to
rejecl
any
or
all worker; Mrs. Claudia Grueser, are John Arnott, Will tam Coff1.1100 pUblication of their grievances.
The grievances were published in a copyrighted story by the bids. The elementary school was social worker aide; Mrs. Car- man, Ida Die!U, Robert Hamm,
. Atlanta ~ournal at m~orning and the hostages - 16 men and five used in the summer ot 1966 for olyn Heines, speech and hearing Kate JarreU, Robert Meier, Thelm. Tuesday where a buck _ .
wcmen - were expected to be released shortly. Their ordeal had a summer program. It was aban- specialist, and L. W. McComas, ma Michael, Phyllis Miller, Ada
Two elderly men appareotly cation charges.
doned
after
that
when
students
bookkeeper,
complete
the
staf(.
Ohlinger,
YvoMe
Scally,
Donald
The
Pomeroy
volunteer
tire
leaped off a wall 30 ft . above
listed more than 26 boors.
escaped injury when a 1951 modror the most part were assigned
The board approved the em- Stivers, Richard Swackhamer, el vehicle left the highwa.y, went department was aummonded to the hlghwa,y oato a car drlvea
LONDON - TilE UMTED STATES TODAY 'i'OOK the first to Salisbury elementary school ployment or Aaron Zahl, Terry James Wickline, and Ellen Wirth, Into a ditch, and exploded aloog extinguish the bla.ze and Pom~ In anortllbounddlrectloo mRmte
roy Police Sgl George Hicks ar- 7, 1.9 mOos north of POmeroy,
lepl steps to secure the extradition or James Earl Ray, accused as- and Pomeroy Junior High School. Ohli~er and W, P. Gibbs as all returning to the district, and Slat&lt;&gt; Rout. 7 early today.
The
board
approved
the
staff
Cor
driver
education
instructors
new
teachers,
Fred
Kes:-&gt;inger,
•ntn or Dr. Marlin Lulller King Jr.
&amp;llerlff Robert c. Hartenbach's rived at the scene shortly alter by Charles WllUam Bailey, 23,
ror the Meigs Head Start Pro- the swnrner course being given. who wil1 teach U1e fifth grade in department said the accident oc- the incident was reported. He Akron.
The aerdor counsel of the u. S. Embassy deUvered a rue or docAuthorities said !here wu
amenta to the foreign ofllce at a brier meeting, Sources said the file gram with cMters in Bradbury, There are 65 students enrolled Pomeroy, and Glen Shaw, who curred at 1:45 a.m., 2.6 miles assisted until arrivil or sherS&amp;lem Center, Harrisonville, with centers at Pomeroy, Mid- wiU serve as assistant band diifr~
deputies.
daJna&amp;e to the hood and wlndnorth ot Pomeroy.
W«&lt;l.d aeek to satisfy British law that there is a prima Cacle case
Pomeroy and Middleport.
dleport arw:l Rutland. The boe.rt:l r ector. Shaw will receive his
The sherill's department also ohield of the 1967 car drlvea bJ
The two occupants of the car,
oplnst 1111 on lbe assuslnation charge.
The staff includes Thomas Kel- approved four students current- degree from Ohio University in Clarence H. Beaver, 64, Rt. 2, Investigated an incident at 8 p, Bailey and the deer was killed.
Racine,· and Jeas Pickens, 67,
WASIIINGTON - ·~ft I'E(}PI.G!'S·CAMPAIGN leeders today i&amp;- ly 1 director; Mr"s. • Farle Ken- ly employed on a s\lnrner work December.
nedy, Miss Judith Codner, Mrs. program for vocational students.
The status of the progress be- Rt. 1. Racine, were inside the
IU8d ftw "bnmedlate" demmls they said must be granted by the
aovernment before residents. of Reaa~~rection City can begin to con.. Elma Louks, Mrs. Mary Skin- These are David Jacks, J o h n ing made on the new comprehe~ vehicle when the ditched car
CHARLESI'ON, W.Va. (IIP0
alder tlelr campaign victorious and think about returning home. ner, Mrs. Diana Hartinger, Mrs. Pope and Lee Roy Cadle, all of sive Meigs High School was dis- was discovered by a passerby,
- A Minneapolis firm has enMargaret Parsons, Mrs. Karen Rutland, and Mike Davis of Pom- cussed with Lloyd Sullivan, Ralph Trussell, or LOng Bottom
The se""'i)lge statement o! limited p s called lor exparded
tered an apparent low bid ot
Brown, Mrs. Betty Hutchisoo, eroy. The young people receive representing the architectural
and lower cost food aid to the needy • increased participation by the
RD.
2, 09 mllltm tor construction
Trussell rushed to summon au~ ln federal antipoverty policy and repeal or controverslal wel- Mrs. Jeannie Taylor and M r s. $1.25 per hour with 75 per cent firm of Sullivan, Isaacs and Sul€1
an approach to the HenderOlive Page. teachers; Penni of the amount paid by the state livan, Cincinnati; and Horace thorities by telephone and while
fare restrictions Congress adopted last year.
son Bridge that will replace
Hayes, Allie Price, Phyllls Mc- aJXI 25 per cent locally,
Karr, the general contractor. he was nearby telephoning. the
lbe collapsed Sliver Bridge
Intyre,
Brenda
McGuire,
ThelA
report
was
reeeived
£rom
the
The board selected the brick car broke in flames. Trussell
PARIS- THE FRENCH GOVERNMENT, caught up !nits second
over the Ohio River in Mason
IDIJor crisis in a month, toda,y banned all demonstrations through- ma Robinson, Debra Drummond, North Centro! Association indi- - a smooth, red type - to be hurried back to the scene to find County.
Lucy Jacks, Patty Birchfteld, cating that both the Middleport used on the buildi~. The board Beaver and Pickens outside the
. (Continued on Page 2)
The S. J. Groves &amp; &amp;Ins
Mary Hall and Linda Betz, aides; High School and the Pomeroy
(Continued on Page 2)
vehicle but wllbln range of the
Co.'s bid to build the IIIPro&amp;Ch
names .
oo U. S. 35 to W. Va. 2 was
The second armuai Regatta Art
~eritrs deputies said Trusone of several received by t:ml · ~w will be bigger and better
sell assisted the men away from
state Road Commission Tuesthan ever.
lbe auto just borore it exploded doy.
WilHam J. Mayer and Aaron
and was destroyed.
Zahl, co-chairmen, said the outBy United Press International
"Glencoe, Dltncilse" expresses launcher can be purchased.
It was not determined immestanding success of the 1967 show
other imported weapons.
survey showe&lt;l,
unear Mr. President,
diately
which
of
the
two
men
the nation' 11 shock, grief and
will be repe:l.ted and even imThe U.S. House of RepresenThe House Judiciary CommitReqdre Registration
4 '1 just turned eleven years
sorrow following the murder of tatives, reporting some increase tee, in a tie vote, refused to
proved upon.
The city councU of Washing- had been driving the automo..
: old. I !lUke ap early one Seo. Robert F. Kennedy.
The show will be held in the
in ma1l to cut the tramc ln endorse Johnson's call for a ban ton, D. C., receJved a proposal to bile. Both were jailed on lntoxi: morning and heard my grandMany Seok Action
air-conditioned &amp;. Paul's Luguns, Tuesday rejected a on mall orders sales oC all req.tire registration of sellers
: - • r ccy!ng. I a!lted her
It also expressed the desire o( propoaal
that would have weapons and ammunition.
theran Church in Pomeroy. The
and owners of all types of
: ..u.t waa wrong. ~e said 'I many Americans, according to banned the Import of SllfPius
welcoming committee includea
The powerrul National RiDe firearms, Dealers also would
:Ju• saw Seo. Kenned,y lll)'lng a United Press International handguns and rifles, such as the Association continues to exert have to keep an inventory on all
Mrs. Kenneth Braun, Mrs Wal.~ thdl: you
to everyone for survey, to fido something" one that killed President John pressure on Congress, but firearms and amnnmition in
ter Schreiber, and Mrs. Rdlert
·_helping him win the California about the surprising ease with F. Kennedy. The House also public sontlment lor gun legisla- stock.
Hamm.
j)rlmar)' and shaking hallds and which anything from a plsM- refused an etrort to register tion has brought action ln some
The eultural events commitThe Massachusetts House
.: oay~ng thank you. But iu'at then IIke lbe one lbat kllle&lt;t Keonedy first JJUrCbaaera of these and stat&lt;&gt;s and cities, lbe VPI
tee is made up or Mrs. Wlll!am
(COntinued on Pago 2)
: be was l,yeing (lie) there bloody -to a cannon or rocket
Mayer, Mrs. Aaron Zahl, and1be
Sixty arrests were made by
. .., the ground.
Rev. Wilbur Perrin. In charp ~
the Mldlllop&gt;rt Pollee DepartCOLUMBUS (IIP0 - T h e
·.· uThe next couple of days he
ment In May, Chief of Pollee Ohio Slpreme Court agreed We&lt;!- the arrangement of the arl a·died, My grandmother was vecy
hibit will be Jack Slavin, M r 1.
Herbert Gilkey reports.
nesday to hear the llfiiiOal of
.DIIIIIY.
ot the total, 19 were on traf- !'osteal Laskey Jr., C!nclmali Ruth Gosney and A Artiste Gol~= ur have a very nice dacklvl
fic violations, ooe of dlsiuro- night club musician lUlder a death leries.
: But 10111e chlldren don~ have a
Entrle11 for the art show will
tng the peace, one real sting ar- sentence for the stabblng death
~ father Ithe the Kennedy childinclude
oil paints, water colora.
rest, six ror investigation. one ot a stenographer.
wood
sculpture,
ceramics, weavdriving UDder suspMalon, two
Laskey's attorney, Bert Sigu Please do something about
oxecutloos old fines, three )We- ner, flied the appeal with t h e ~. photographs and other art
lie gun law."
niles, one loitering, two ahop- Stat&lt;&gt; &amp;Jpreme Court claiming it forms.
This _ . to Prealdent
Entries will be received bellfllng, 20 Intoxication, two drlv- was lmposaible for the Negro
Johnson from Myta Froll111111 ~
11111 whlle !ntmdcatecl, and 11ro to 1!01 a fair trial Ill Cincinnati ginning a wee1&lt; before U. - ·
The total of all Middleport .
The ladles of lbo oburd! will
for open Oaok.
VUiage funds as of Mll)' 31
because of a "climate or hostil~
have
re~shmentll or Nndwlcb1110 department also inYesti- U;y."
amounted to $150,31$.78, Geno
ell, deueh and clriM:s aYiila.
lited 10 ac&lt;ldents.
Grate, clerk-treasurer, reportLaskey has been scheduled to
ble.
Parking meter c:ollectloos for die In the electric chair July
0&lt;1,
U. monlb totaled $743.20. Mer- 8 for tho Aug. 14, 1966, doalh of
Receipts, dlsburnments and
chant pollee coUectioos totaled Barbara Bowman. The execution
tho balance In each fund respec. $193.50.
date was postponed by lbe !11llvely, Include&amp;: genaral, ~.793.. CAPE TOWN, SOuth Africa 80, f,3,671.7G, .$26,240.70; cemepreme COurt's acceptance ot his
(IJPO- Dr. Philip Walberg, the tery, $524.81, $714.SS, $1,3U.appeal.
Marines Promote
-ld' S longest BUn'!Ving heart 39; parking meter, no ·rece!pto,
Three defendants forleiled
An llfiiiOal to the lsi Ohio Dis': !fanll)&gt;lant patient, showed slight no dlllburaemonla,.!73.71; Dre
trict Court of Ajlpeals!n March bonds ancl two others wen 1lr.d
~ ltnprovement
teda,Y. Slrgeoo equlpmenl, $40, $2S.7t, $268.86;
waa reJectect The IIIPOIIale oourt Tuesday night in the &lt;ourtofllf6.
· Chrlstlaail Barnard new batk swimming pool, $200, $166.35,
set lbe July 8 execution dat&lt;&gt;. dleport .Mll)'or c. 0. F1..,_.,
... Blalberll's bedalde to belp $52.91; pllllninl oonun!ollm, 111
Forfeiting boncla wen Denn1.1
·
R.
McMahon, 24, Middleport,$~$
~treat hlm for a liver "disfunc- recelpta,
VETERANS MEMORIAL
u. S. Marine llllvld J. (JoO)')
no dl.stiursementa,
HOSPITAL
s - . : Torey L. Beecl!ler,lt,
tion."
staphon11011 has been promoted
$500.
, A mornlnl! medltal bulletin
ADMISSIONS
Barboro
Young,
Columbus, $18.70, IIPiledl.-, n1
to the rank of aergeant.
'Street majotenaoco, $10,033.~ llld Blafberg was cOnsetous as IZ, $2,494.20, $7,661.56; state
8@1. Stephensoo Is currently Pomero.y; Kathleen Anthony, Mid- Roger I. Hicks, 19, ~. 111.
:. .. llQ' In his srerlle ward and hlghwlQ', $803.47, no dllburseconfined to the U. S. Naval Hos- dl_.t; Goldie Goodnit&lt;&gt;,'Lellrl, I, reckless ~ration, $10.
:.lllt his "blond and circulation mento, $1, 73'7 .23; sanitary ...,_
F1nocl were Fred A. ~. It,
pital at Clmp LoJOIUIO for treat- W. Vo.; WUUom Bu&lt;ldey, Mid~"are aatiafaetory." Barnard waa ers, IJ3,953.74, ij3,03U6, fl5,dleport.
Mlddloport,
Rt. 1, tto .,. ......,
ment of an eye ~ae. He oooin LondOn w1len he received word 858.BOi . waler, ~,842.60, $6,~
DISaiARGES Christine Wepl exhaus~ and llonlCI!J ')!'; ' '
lracted the dloeaoe cUring hia,
.'.or Blllberll'• relapse and he 108.56, $13, 45UO; wster metBranham,
Louise
Partlow,
Mer- Roller, Nlddlaport, $5 ..,._...
13 months In Vl-.rt, no treat":. ut.d he was '·'ttr8 worried." er depoalt trusts, $72, $48, $2,lly
Durham.
ed Ill l1lol time, but hal had •
violation,
~ Bornlrd, who led lbe medical 756,75;
water construction,
recurrence.
MEIGS GENERAL ·HOSPITAL
:"team that pve f!IIIber8 a new $154.44, t:;:;.98, ~3,486.43; ......
!bt of WUlhm R. staphonADMISliONS - Maaie Herd,
'heart five months and 10 claJs er oonlllructlon, $116.68, $9,'485.IClll, hll oddreiS II set. llliYid
Syrocun;
llllorld Dcxloon, l'lono:;.., said the c:vndltion of tile 58, $28,029.681 pneral bonct'reJ, !lepheniiOII, 2218190, Word ro,y.
::r.tlred Clll!l To1m cleltlllll was tirement, no reoelpto, ~5. $9,.
zo. u. NaYal lloli&gt;ltal. Clmp lliSQIARGES - Thomoo Co::J"not critical!'
7411.43,
L+.Jeuno, N.C.
lind.

R-•

Bedford School for Sale

a'li"D

News ... in Briefs

Pair Escapes Injury when
Ditched Vehicle Explodes

Exciting

Art Show

Promised

Child Writes LBJ To Ask For Gun Control

Death Row

60 Arrests

Case Will

Made in May

Get Review

All Funds at

HOSPITAL NEWS
llolz.er Hospital: Visiting hours
2-4 anc:l7 ~p.m . Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
Admissions
Melanie J. Wiseman, Orchard
Hill; Mrs . Clarence J. Waugh,
810 Second Ave.; Clarence C,
Yardley, Lower River Rd.; Charles L. Carter, Rt. 2 Gallipolis;
Mrs. Ernie C, Bloomer, 25 Mad.
ison Ave.; Harry V, Truesdell ,
Crown City; Mrs. Robert G.
Brumfield, IU. 1 Crown City;
Mrs. Julie L. Cremeans, Cheshire; MrS. Gerald A. Thompson,
Ht. 2 Bidwell ; Charles B. Tackett, Rt. 1 Rldwell; Mrs, U a n
Glassman, Pl ..... pleasant; Mt·s.
Scott Bemtett, 1tt. ~ Leon, W.
Va.; Sammie L. DooLittle- ~.t.
2 pt, Pleasant; Donald R. 31inn,
Rt. 2 Leon; Kermit E. R o o t,
Chester; Mrs. Hanford Hutton,
IH . I Middleport; Mrs. Cora M.
Mcinharl, Pomeroy; James D.
Matheny, Ht. I Leon; Mra. Thomas J, Hughes, Jackson; M r s.
James N. Murgan, Hl. 2 WellSton; Mrs . Erd &lt;.:onley, IU. 4
Oak Hill; Howard J. Walser,
Ironton; Ml'S. Audrey L. Poore,
Jackson; Mrs. Ada Weston, Jackson; Mrs. ·Michael F. Carpenter,
IlL 4 Oak Hill; Fred Goo!, Iron-

$150,315.78

""·

ton; Frederick J. Maynard, Jack~
5&lt;HI.; RobeJ!t E. Armstrong, SOuth

Point; Lewis I. Stevenson, Jackson; Mrs . Richard A., Shupe, Jackson; Ricky A. Friend, Coalton;
Mrs. John E. E.Vans, Jackson;
Mrs. Sherman R. Rogers, Ironton; Mrs . Raymond J. Lalrlnere, Athens; Rodney D. Van Fos!an, Rt. I Mt. Alto; Mrs. Roddy
T. Moore, Jackson; Mrs. James
W. Church, Rt. 3 Wellston.
Births
Mrs. Richard Pullin, St. Albans, W.Va., son, 7:50a.m, Monday; Mrs. Michael F . Carpenter,
Rt. 4 Oak Hill , son, 6:49 a.m.
Monday; Mrs. Ernie C. Bloomer, 25 Madison Ave., Gallipolis,
son, 10:40 a.m. Monday.
Discharges
Charles A., Rates, Usa L.
humphreys, F:mory N. Johnson,
Mrs. Evelyn M. MoUneaux, L,
Neil lling, Laura L. Roush,
i\rmctt M. Sleets, William E,
Smith, Mark B. Taylor, Mrs. Randolph E. Ward, Connie J, Zeoli,
Mrs. James M. lo'ridenmaker and
InCant daughter, Mrs. Maxwell E.
Johnson and inrWlt son, M r a.
Kenneth II, SWain and Infant
daughter.

In Middleport

BWbergSome

Better Today

1'hree Defendants
Forfeit Bonds

You can really save on all the Kodak lnstamatic cameras.
The 404 (as pictured), the 304-104 and 154 plus the well
known lnstarnatlc 704 and 804,
The Kodak lnstarnatic Movie cameras are sale prlced too.
The Ml2, M14, MIG, Ml8 and lbe new M20.
Stop in the Camera Deparbnent on the 1st Coor. Select the
camera you want to buy and reallyaavenow during the sale.

SALEI FILM
Kodak and Polnold ftlm at ver)' special sale prices. Black
and white or color. All sl:zes. No'rl I&amp; a good time to ~~ up
on your film needs.
·

ELBERFELDS
IN
POMEROY
'

Joey Stephenson

s-.. .

s.

..

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•

'

.

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