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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

:
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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

/

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lo\IDDLEPORT,

• +

•

+
•
•
t•

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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

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lnteret~llt

Of The

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Devoted To The

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Me~s-MUJIOn

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

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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;:. ;:::::::::·:·:-;.: ..;.· :-:· :-: ·:-: ·:.·.
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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.

..

·-.•

••

'·

.n

•

'

.

'

- • i'
II'
I

I

�..

Light Sought in Ray's Dark Days
I

LONDON
(UPI)- From
a
walkup hotel In Pimllco to a
neonllt bar In Portugal tile F B1
sod Scotlaod Yard today tried
to uncover the mysterious
weeks in the lite of the man
,accused of killing Martin Luther

Kirlg Jr.

'

James Earl RIQ', the accu•ed
assassin, sat in a Wandsworth
prison cell with "two silent
guards and awaited extradition
to stand trial In tile United
States.
In Plmlico, a district which
lies next to the glittering
Lpndon West End but has not
seen major deVelopmeot since
Charles Dickens wrote o1 Its
. _pest hou&amp;eBt Mrs. Ama Thomas
talked of the boarder ln May
who may have been Ra,y on the

loose.
"He kept the door ot his room
··

REFRE~MENTS were served to awroximately 400 persoos attending Tuesday night's open

house acdvities held in the new Ohio Valley Publishing Co. plant Mrs. Margaret Finnicum. left1
and Bea Usle, right. company employes, hidped serve punch and cookies.

Over 400
On Hand For

Open House

cookies in the spacious plant
lounge.
Publisher Richard S. Owen,
on behalf of company employes,
expressed his appreciation to
those who made the open house
event a success.
Winner of the registration contest - the person coming closest to guessing the combined
weight of the compan.y's 37 employes - will be annoonced later this week according to Mr .

Over 400 Tri-County area resIdents toured tile Ohio Valley
Publishing Company's new offset printing plant during an open
Owen.
house Tuesday evening.
Guests registered, then toured tn sma1l groups the circulation, editorial, advertising, composing, camera~late making,
BOND FORFEITED
press and mailing departments.
Earl
Renshaw, Minersville
Department hellds and stalls deforfeited
a $25 borr:l in the couri
scribed functions of their departof
Pomeroy
Mayor Charles Lements.
. ,.
gar Tuesday night posted lln in-.
After completing the tour, ;visitors were treated to punch and toxication ~harges.

TV . . . in Review
py RICK DU BROW
HOLL YWDOD (UPO - That
coast.oo-ooast thud yoo heard on
n e two r k television Tuesday
night was the
signal that
summer's musical-variety replacement series have arrived
with a vengeance.
C8S-:TY presented a new onehour series called ••Showtime,"
~ NBC:T\1 countered wltll a
:nf-lninute enlry ~.altl.ed uShowcase •ss," and the proceedings
were every bit as thrilling as
the title&amp;.
u:bmtime," which r(lplaces
the Red ~elton program for
the summer, is produced in
London, for the American
audience, whlctr means it's
really not here nor there, but
rather a show without a
COllllry. SWinging U&gt;ndon it
ain't. Mll3'be IIley !Ike lt
somewhere In the mid-Atlantic.
~alley Bombs
There are guest-star hosts
Mch week for this series, and
the first was ~lley Berman, a
a median with a sharp sense of
lotus wbo, alas, loond himsell
on a program with no focus at
all. H al!ected hlm, and he
wasn't the same Shelley we
kmw, aa he opened with a
dreadf'ul R'•UJJlogue about London time and failed to recover.
There were also a dated jazz
bllld, a vocal -Instrumental
group from Paraguay, a German juggler and two British
aingers, S!irley Hassey and
Matt Monroe. I have always
beard ~ things about Miss
Ba111ey, but the w~ she
strained and hollered her way
through "JI Ever I Would Leave

You" made one wonder . Pity.
Future hosts will include
George Gobel, Phyllis Diller,
Eddy Arnold, Uberace, Steve
Allen, Juliet Prowse, Godfrey
Cambridge, Frank Fontaine and
Terry
Thomas. Terry, or
Thomas, or Terry -Thomas,
whatever yoo call him, is
British. How did he sneak in
there?

Poor Execution
"Showcase •68., is an imaginative idea, executed with no
imagination at all. The notion or
presenting professional regional
entertainers
in their first
national television outings is a
wise way to uncover some
talent for the networks. But the
format is stone--age television.
A regular host, Lloyd Thaxton, who used 00 have a
syndicated series in which he
did pantomine mouthings or hit
records and the like, introduces
Ule acts, and that's all.
One group, the Jade Set,
rocked and ruined ••.&amp;tmmertime."
A few acts were
enjoyable, including the Craig
Hundley jazz trio, composed or
amazingly young boys . But all in
all, the show came across lille a
sort or semi...pro version of the
long-rurmtng uAmateur Hour."
The settings for both of
Tuesday's shows were nice
enough. But one was reminded
of the recent magazine article
tn which S. N. Behrman told
how Ira Gershwin met Sam
Goldwyn, who is over 80, at a
party and conplimented him:
"You're looking very well,
Sam." And Goldwyn replied
'~What good OOes it do?u

Tight Gun
Control is

In Offing
WASIIINGTON (UPO - Members or Congress- possibly including a key House Republican
- have ~ne President Johnson
one better and are pushing for
gun control legislation that
would mean nationwide registration of firearms.
Rep. John Anderson, U-01 .,
said today he had .. tentatively"
concluded that registration is a
necessity. Anderson, a senior
member or the Rules Conunit~
tee, was influential In winning
House approval or an open
housing law earlier this year
and the omnibus crime bill last
week.
• 1 For the
life of me, I can't
wxlerstand those who claim
we'll bring about a fascist state
with registration," Anderson
said in an Interview. "I think
that's absurd. We register
automobiles and no one objects."

Meigs Roads
Figure in
New Projects
COLUMBUS (UPO The
state Highway Department opened bids Tuesda.Y on 40 projects
worth $22.3 million, which was
$3.1 million below state esti-

mates.

SHOWS MICROFU..MS - Robert Winget4 ol the JJt.ilJ' Sentinel's
. Pomeroy news staff, explains a photograph film reader (microfilm)
in offices of the Ohio Valley Publishing Co. to two youngsters during
Open House Thesday night. Records are maintained here of the last
75 years.

Rocliets Kill
lst American
SAIGON
(UP0- The
VIet
Cong killed their first American
victim tod~ in 12 days of
shelling Saigon.
)
The guerrillas fired 14 sixfoot-two rockets into suburban
Tan Son Nhut Airbase, ld.lling a
U.S. airman and four Vietnamese children.
The barrage blasted military
areas and the houses of South
Vietnamese soldier families ,
wounding 24 Vietnamese plus
two American servicemen and
two U.S. civilians.
In the capital's 12 days ol
agon..v, hundreds of Vietname-se
have beerl"" killed or wounded in
the indiscriminate terror shell-

Gertrude Motts
Service Today
Funeral services for Miss Gertrude Motts, 82, Rt. 2, Letart,
W, Va., who died Sunday in Holzer Hospital, were held today at
2 p. m. at the Leach and Son
fWleral Borne in Columbus. Burial was in Silent Home Cemetery,
Reynoldsburg.
Miss Motts was a secretary
for the Columbus Blank Book
Mfg. , Co., who was born August
21, 1885, in Franklin CO\UltJ', the
daughter of the late John and Rebecca Stover.
She is ~unived by a sister,
Mrs. Mary Kalish, 820 Grandon
Ave., Bexley, and Mrs. Kathryn
Rood, a niece with whom she
made her hom.e and several other
niel:'es and nephews,

The projects included several
in Melgs County, an addition to
the Appalachian Development
Highway ~stem, and several interstate highway additions. The
AD liS projectt.rlngsto21.5 miles
the total under construction in
the projected east-west highw~
Shumaker
across southern Ohio. The bids,
by county, included:
Meigs and Vinton - Paving Dies on
and constructing three bridges
on 4.87 miles ol Ohlo 346, ShellY
Millard Ralph (Pete) Shumak&amp; Sands Inc. , Zanesvllle, $4,134,- er, 49, of 133 Mayfield Heights,
466, estimate, $5,170,000.
West Mayfield, who died Friday
Hocking bnproving a n d in Oakland VA Hospital, Pittsroads and facUlties at Old Man's burgh, was born In Pomeroy, May
Cave Slate Park and Cedar Falls 11, 1919, a son of the late George
State Park, York Canst. CO., Nel- and Jennie Davis Shumaker.
sonvUle, $54,921; estimate, $61,A veteran of World War 2, he
500.
was a molder for Mayfield FounMeigs Resurfacing 2.45 dry. Mr. Shumaker was a memmUes of Ohio 7 and 7.29 miles ber of Mayfield Veterans organol Ohio 143, Shelly Co., Thorn- izatioos.
ville, $99,932; estimate, $105,Surviving are four brothers,
300 .
George R. Chippewa; Rollin 0.,
Meigs - Scarifying and resur- South Beaver; KeMeth C., at
facing .90 mile of roads and ra. home, and Orville ll, Darllngtoo
cilities at Forked Run State Park, Twp., and two sisters, Mrs. HomffiRTHS
York Const. Co., NeJsonvllle, er B. (Evelyn) Young, at home,
Mrs. Roger L. Jeffers,- Rt. 2.
$13,346; estimate, $16,700.
and Mrs. Alvert M. (Blanche)
Pomeroy, son, 12:40 p, m. TuesVinton - Resurfacing on 5.61 Hoy, Beaver Falls.
day; Mrs. James M. Moore, Pom- miles of Ohio 124 and 4.74 miles
Mr. Richard Davis, Pomeroy,
eroy, daughter, 3:21 p, m. Tues~
of Ohio 160, F. H. Brewer Co., is a cousin or Mr. Shumaker and
day; Mrs. Richard H. Randol h, Lancaster, $110.934; estimate,
was visiting there when death
191/z Pine St., twins, a daughter, $115,200,
came.
1:3I a. m. Wednesday, a daughter
1:35 L m. Wednesday.
DL'iCII ARGES
(Continued !rom Page I)
Enoch R. Brewer. Charles L.
Carter, Mrs. Luther L. carter, out France and ordered the immediate dissciutl.on ot a number of
Mrs. Luther L. Cochran, Mrs. lettlst organizations and prl vate militia grcqts,
Mallie G. Dayton, Floyd s. DeThe drastic steps were announced as new fights broke out beLaBhrnutt, Mrs. Carl E. FJllot4 tween police using tear gas and students who hurled Molotov cockWilliam J. Freeman, Gary w. ~ls In a new wave of violence that swept 2,000 demonstrators into
Gilbert, Paul R. Halle)', Mrs. .iails in Paris alone. HWJdreds were InJured and arrested in other
\
Hazel McLeod, Mrs. Carl E. cities. Five persons have died.
Mitch, Mrs. James N. Morgan,
Le"OY Rlrtle, Charmaine sauer,
VIOLENT WEATHER TORE THROUGH THE eastern hall ol
Mrs. Richard A.. Shupe, Mrs. the nation tuia.y, spawning a tornado in Flortda and sending heavy
William J. Smith, Mra. Shady thunderstorms swee_plng from Ohio to New York. The most violent
Tackett, Mrs. Robert n. Thacker, weather prevailed east of a cold !root stretchlrv from central Texas
Kenneth L. Vickers, Mrs. Rosa.- to Ohi~
The tornado struck West Panama City, Fla., just before mlcj..
lie saunders, Mrs. James E.
Hoggs and infant daughter, Mrs. night. One woman was injured when her camper trailer was over..
William L. Patterson and Infant turned. Hall .., to ooHlalf Inch ln diameter acc'OO!ponled heavy rain
daughter, Mrs. Ha.rold W. Hussell at Lancaster, Ohio. PeMsylvanbl, New York and Ohio had more than
and infant daughter,
on&amp;-half inch ot rainfall within a slx~our period eOOing today,

Millard

Friday

HOSPITAL NEWS
HOLZER HOSPITAL: VIsiting
hours 2-4 and 7-8 p.rn. Parents
only on Pediatrics Ward.
AD~USSIONS

Mrs. Opel! M. Meadows, 846
Second Ave.1 Mrs. Fred Facemire 12221/z . Second Ave. ; Mrs.
Ivan L Uurt, Rt. 2 Bidwell;
Lesa J. Ue.rder, Rt. 1 EwtngtcA1; Miss Robin B. Robinson,
729 First Ave.; Mrs. Wash K.
C&amp;vins, Rt. 2 BidweJJ; MiChael
A. Shepherd, Mason: Dale A.
Durst, Rt. 2 Letart; Rudolph P.
Perczian, West Columbia; Mrs.
James M. Moore, POmeroy; Mrs.
Roger L. Jeffers, RL 2 Pome~
roy; Howard It Bahr, Ht. 2 Long
BottmJ; Mrs. Lester Brisker,
Qak Alllj Mrs. John D. Hensley, Flatwoods, Ky.; Louis D.
Hochberg, Jackson; Mrs. James
H. Wllls, RL 1 Oak Hill; The
ReY. James W. Garrett, Jackson;
Maxwell L. Watkins, Harnden;
WOllam C. Abert&amp;, Wellston;
Mrs. Larcy Goble, Rl 2 Jack11011; Mrs. Richard A. Handolph,

19'h Pine st.

News Briefs

•
\

'•

ing. But previously tile ooly
American casualties was the
ol two mllllary
wounding

policemen.
ConBider Unlimited Bombing
In Paris. American diplomats
returned to the Vietnam war
negotiating table today to warn
North VIetnamese delegates
that the shelling of Saigon is
seriously • hindering their ftttempt to cool down Ule war.
Diplomatic observers in Paris
ssld tile United States mlgbt
consider resuming air raids
against all of North Vietnam if
the terror shelling of Saigon
goes on.
Today for the first time in 12
days all the fire reu on military
base areas. The rockets struck
the Tau Soo Nhul flight llne and
heliport., damaging at least
three American aircran.
Airman 1.C. William Walters,
20, oC Dover, N.J., saw a friend
die in the shelling.
"I lost a Yer.&gt;' good bud:ly. He
was running toward his bunker
when hls hut got hlt, and lt
killed hin1.
In Paris, U.S. negotiator W,
Averell Harrinian. told newsmen
just before today' s session with
Hanoi
delegates, "We are
gravely
concerned by the
COmmunist terror campaign.
We are concerned- as I am
sure are all Americans. The
North Vietnamese Commwtlst
party is pursuing terrorist
actions and Is killing clvilians
without an,y mHltary objective."
Jolm Tamehlll, 16, Middle-

port, who swept men' a and jun.
lor events in the Elkhart, Ind.,
Open Table Tonnls tournament
last weekend, is spending this
week with friends in Colum~
bus.
He won the men'a singles,
men's OOuble&amp; and Boy II 17
and Undt!r events, defeating
U, S. 4th-ranked Dan Pecora,
23, of Chicago in the men's
singles finals.

River Gauges

locked at all times and when I
brougbt hls breaklast·up he told
me to leave it outside,., the
hotel keeper sald.
Her boarder paid
Mrs.

Humphrey Seems
Winner in Texas
By United PresB International
Vice President Hubert H.
Humphrey, already more than
half way toward the total
delegate votes needed to win
the Democratic nomination.
appeared heir today to another
I04 votes from Teu.s.
Texas Democrats designated
Gov.
John
Col1lll.lly their
favorite
son candidate for
president Tuesday after agreeing to cast the state's national
convention votes ln a bloc.
The adoption of the so-called
unit rule, over the protests of a

Housing
(ContiiUled !rom Page ll
forcement ol buJlding and houS·
lng codes, guarantelld avallahll lty ol real property lnBUrance
for residential property 1 study
of the field of laodlord-lenant
legal rolatlonshlps and study by
tile Little Hoover Commission
of tile organ[zatl!ll and functionIng ol motropolltan housing authorities in Ohio.
A lengtey session 'IUesda.y
was expected to be repeated today In tile committee hearings,
At least seven witnesses, including Martin Graham of Ole
Building Trlldes Council and
o1 tile
Harold
Strickland
NAACP, were expected to testily,

Schools
(CooUnued !rom Page I)
also selected black tq)ping or
drh.es and parking lots, an alter.
nate, at a price of $11,000, and
selected grey glass which wlll
cost $5,500 eddltlonal.
Building use requests approved
Include those ol the Rutland E!&amp;mentary kitchen and cOOler or
July I tllrough July 4 b) the Rutland Volunteer Fire Department
for the annual July 4th celebra-tlOnj use of the Pomeroy elementary auditorium on Saturday, Nov.
30, and SUnday, Dec. I. by Meigs
CWnty Garden Clubs tor a c&lt;MJn.t.Y·wkJe Oower show, and t h e
Pomeroy High School on June 30
tor a recital by music students
of Miss Mercedes Condon.
Attending tile mllOtlng besides
those named above were George
Hargraws and Larry Morrison.
8UJ&gt;ertnte11(1ent and auiPant, re-

GAUGES Galllpolls, 12.2
ond 17. 5 runnlr18 20 loet of rollers; Pl PleaSUX:, 24.70; Pome- a_pecti~; L. W, McComas.
roy - MaliOll, 21.70; Hlnton, 2.30 clerk, bi Boord Members Vlrgll
ng, . Mra. E. 0, Rail, lllram
stat.; Kanawha Falls, 5.80 lallwter. Don Mullen and Frank
lng; lllarleston, 18.80 rlslng.
Porter.
LOndon and Marmet, rumlng one
foot of roUer11; Winfield, running fleet.

t

COLLECTIONS NOTED
Disbursements from Meigs
County court collections lor May
totaled $2,107.30, according to
Clerk Bette Uobstetter, including $537.15 ln fines to tho state
aoo $93. 3S in fees to the sher~
iff; nnes· and costs to the county goneral lUnd $929. 21; law ll·
brary, $322.17, Uld to the auto
license and gas tax tuOOs $225.42.

HEMINDDI MADE
Ohio employers, employment

agencies, aod labor unlon11 were
reminded thalthe Ago Dlacrlmlnatlon In Employment Aet of
1967 goes Into elfeet today, and
applies to workers from fO to
65. The reminder came from
John V. Soppilt, Dlstrlet Director lor Ohio of the U. S. Labor
Department's wage - Hour and
PUblic contracts Division.

Thomas $10.80 lor three dayo'
stay. His luggage was an airline
bag, He refused . to slgn tile
smudi!Y register In Mrs. Tho·
mas• hotel.
In Lisbon, where police said
an FBI agent was at work along
wiili other 'Investigators, a
plump, red-haired bsr girl"just call me Gloria"- rem"mbered the faee In the newspaper
but not the name.
Gloria said she shared d!'lnks
wlth tile man In tile Galo bar.
other girls ln other bars, wch
as the VieMa bar &lt;,_nd the
Diana bar, remembered the
face.
Scotland Yard and the U.S.
lawyers and diplomats here
were keeping mostly silent
about their llunt for the missing
days in Ra,y' s Ufe since the
April 4 assassination In Memphis, Tenn. They 00 not want to
ollend British judges.
The judges of Brltaln rule
heavily against 'those who talk

I

•\

Nelson A Rockefeller Launching a stepped-up drive to
overtake Richard M. Nixoo in
the race for the Re~blfe&amp;n
"r@sidentia1
nomination, the
New York governor said in
Washington that Nixon represents the jjal.d poHtlcs" that
have proved inadequate. He
said Sen. Robert, F. Kennedy's
death made lt incwnbent on
remaining candidates to 11 carry
forward the great unfinished
mission o! bullding a betk:r
Amerlca."
Lyndon B. Johnson - The
President reaffirmed IJis decision to leave the White House at
the eOO or his term in Jawary.
Speaking at a While House
ceremony for graduates or the
congressional page school, the
President said: "Next Jall.l8.ry
I will gradual&lt; a!ld hope!Uicy go
back to Ule classroom" as a
teacher.
Dllnols - Senate Republtcan
Leader E,·erett M. Dirksen won
rcnominatiotl to a fow-th term
in the state GO r primary over
Roy C. Johnson, a Chicago area
ti'Uck driver. In the g~lbernator­
ial nmninatlon, where f~
Republican candidates are entered, Richard B. Ogilvie,
president or the Cook County
Board or OJmmissiooors, wa.s In
the lead.
SOutll Carnli,.- Chairman L.
Mondel Rivers of the House
Armed Services Committee
swept to renomination over
Negro George PB¥ton ln the
Democratic congreasloral priu
mary. Freshman Sen. Ernest F.
Hollings won over Greenville
attorney John Bolt CUlberlaon.

•'

•'

out o1 court belore trial or
hearing. And U.S. "gfttclals
wanted JIQihlng to lnle!iere wltll
tllelr declared lnter.tloo ol
getting Ray, to, back to
America as soonaapoa&amp;ible.
A British deportation order
could oome anytime, MorJI
likely, a legal lls!tt with hll
court..pJVrlded lawyen eould
stretch until Auguat the time
New York-bouod plane.

'"
~.

(Continued fr&lt;ln Pli" I)
"
Monday p\'e pi'G[lmlilary- ~
proval to a bUl tighte!dnl tlui(
state's already striet IUfi
control laws. The bUl reQdre~
reporting to pollee ebleta all
eales ol &amp;'IDS In munlclpalftjea,.
makes the tliegal possession ot
a llrearm a lelon,y Instead ~ a'
mllldemeanor, and expands tile·
dettni.Uon of ••dangerous
pon" up to sod Including'
ollngsbots.
Some say tll'e problem ls
broader thsn oontroUing lethal
weapons.
.
Phlladelphla attorney NoriiiiD
Ashton Klinger eald llle cause
of murder may be 11 tbe ethic of
violence." He says chlldrea.
learn !rom their toys- their
11 military
hardware.u · Klinger
proposed "lddile dl.sarmament .
• . unllateral dlsarmameot ol all
children of Ule world'' by
ellmlnatlng toy wespons,
'
But guns kill, oot toys.
The J-Mart discount housea In
Columbus,
Ohio,
made an
impressive financial sacrl!1ce
by turning ln $20,000 WOrth ot:
guns to city pollee. Said tile,
firm's president, MartiV Rosen:,
••we know that over the palllO,
years we have sold guns which
have been used In selcldas Uld.
by some to kill tllelr nel&amp;flbors,
11 1t
has preyed on aura
consdence ror Cllfte aome.
time."
~
An Indiana-based chain, WOD•
dorland Stores, dlscontlnued 1110:
oalo of ammunition. It
the sale of IWlfl two years a10~
President Stanfortl Frledmm
said the new move ~s "to helP:
preserve public safe~;¥ sod;

wea-'

cmcAGO (UPO - Milt

I,'
'

.j

Pap.

PI• was glad; General Marager Bob Howsam pleased; ml
the Cbx:imaU Reds were hlthawy.
Pappas, a I &amp;-13 wlmer lor the
Reds last season and a 2-5 hurler 10 lar thlo year, was traded
to the Atlanta Braves along
with plteher Ted Ilavldsoo, who
Wll 1..0, and Infielder Bob JohnlOlL
In return1 the Reds got pttc~
ers Tony Cloolnger aod Clay
Carroll and lnllelder Woody

""s

Including a World War It
machlnegun, were collected In!
four days. Twenty-three w.a~
pons, five of them mtlea,
turned ln to pollee it Phlladol-;
phla.
•
But ln Salt Lake Clt;y, Utah,
Wolle's Sporting Go/KI( reporle4:
an upswing In tlie sale of'
handguns and ammunltli.t
tile past lew days. : Mayor J,:
Brack.., Lee says _ . t a IJI,
gun legislatloo are l"'l'rreactlq
to assassinations. nyou can't
change
human nature b)''
passing laws.'•
•
No attempts lo chanp hwnaQ,
nature
were
wularway IIi.
Lout slana- whose 85,000 rqla,;
tered bunters are ~chy
gun legislation- or 11181\)'
othel"
.
states .-here lluntlng Ia popula •

were:

b7

stirred u,p a horOOt' s nest the
past weekend, when as player
representative he led a group
of players who didn't 11fant to
play until the funeral for Sen.
Robert F. Kenoedy was over
Saturday nlghL
Reds Manager Dave Bristol
nipped that In the bud when he
roonded lijl nlne wl!Ung players
and prepared to play the game.
Pawu and the res~ of the
players agreed to go to work,
Howaam.
but Paps said he would reThe 29-l'ear~d Paw&amp;&amp;, who sign as p~er representative.
Pappas sold Tuesday he had
received a telegram rrom Frank
Manlkewicz, press secretary to
the late serator, thanking him
for his acti91'1S.
'jPlease accept my personal
admiration ror your action~ ..
the telegram said. "SanW&gt;r
Kennedy
indeed enjoyed cmnpet!tlve sportJ, but l donbt lhlt
he would have put box office
receipts
ahead of nittonal
mourning under an,y circumstances.
Perez Led Attack
Tony Parez highlighted the 18hlt Reds attack 'IUesday wllh
two sircles and a homer 00
drive in four runs.
Perez evened the second inning with a slfllle and both
Johnny Bench and Leo Canle~&gt;o
as also hit safely for one run
and Pete Rose drove in another
with a sacrifice Oy.
In the fourth, Perez singled
to score Alex Johnson. who had
tripled and in the sixth, Perez
homered allor a single by Lee
May.

The Reds banged Jack Lamabe for three slrwJ.es 100 I dou-ble before a man was out in
the third and had the help ol
two Chicago errors ror a three-

run

aiJout

.
••

~~~U~EL •
.

:

RICHARDS, CMIN,

c..... TMMNU.

Pllllllthlll ......, lllelll ~ " Tlot
01!11:1 \'-'lb P...blilbh• ec.,a.,, lQ.._
s....
auo, 457ft.
om.
PhoM 111~2118, Edlltr-' l'lloM ftWI ..t
~ •ltu ~ ,iN II ,.;...,,
Ol!k&gt;.
Ntlkq,l ~o~Mrt~•IIW
I•

•-•1'9)'.

•••lliH•

r.-._...
r...

•

•

•.
•
•

•

!iiiiiHrlptlol'! niP: IIIII. . . .
~ IWIII Pll" 11 . . . - , . . ,
Ill .-lwt,.l 11 Thll lllllly lil:&gt;liMI Olliee.lli,IL

:

v......_ Cltr,

NMr

~n.

,
11r earn.

Whtl"l 101il.abl1

S£• monlho, IUO. T11rw ........,,

tui. lit

lillo4or Ko\ohl lllltn IIUritr _.,... .. 1111J.
•tole: Ont -~ tuo. e, .,.., o. ,.,
aJG.IIIl. sb .._..,, IJ-21. n .... - - . ea.tL
illlbwtlpllM. prk-11 Ind-. 1f1111111r ~
I.III"A.

•
•

6" Ovol twin....,. _k,.. JUST$

,
t.

I

•

.
444

inning.

May capped lila ocorlng with
an el&amp;hth lmlng hcmer.
BUI,y . McCool, wbo reUeved
starter George Culver ln the
fourth, was credited with bls
aecofli win in a two-inning per.
lormance ln which he lllowed
two hits and throe runs. Ted
Abernathy ccmpleted the Reds'
pitching efforts.
Jlm Maloney (6-3) wao to hurl
lor Clnclmatl today agalnat tile
CUba' Ferguson Jenkins (:&gt;-7).

~

ZENITII HiGH PRfOIMANa IIANDaAfiiD COI.OI
lV CIIASSII No Printed Circuits! No Poodudlon Short&lt;ulol Handwhod for unriYiled dependability.

••
••

SUNIIIi!NlO COlOI I'ICfUII TUIE for amter pi&lt;Wrt
briP.If!eSI wtth redder reds, briafller peens, 1nd mo;.!
brilil.ril blPATENTID ZINITM COlOII ~TOll OIOJ1111Y
for unsurpmecl ~ p~re.

:..
•
••

Pith A1dlo Cotpot~~tlon WlrNntalhl COlOr picture tuDIIn
tht Zenltl) ~ TV r«etvtrt shown htrt to bt fret from
der.t::rslft iNtlfliM art line from nornt6l uup for two yan
from !Mtt" of orfel...t conaumtr ~rchaM. W.l'ftnty c:onr.
,_.1, of COlor Olctwt tube, ar r.,a.c.ment· With rebUilt ·

•••
••
,,••

The new 118ht-wolilt M Series Rocm Alr ConllUooers wlth patent pondlow Alr SMop,
brine 1111 100 »w cent Exhaust Alr Coutrol. Thla unique feature chulps lila alr In an
over1110 alzed room almost 8 tlmea an hour, once everyel8ftt mlllltes. Moat COIIQIOIItlvo
units Koold lak.t! 40 mltolleo to chulp lila alr just once. GIBSON to Olllra IJI[ot, to

RIDENOUR RADIO &amp; TV

two,..,

•
•••

IANI IA11 PINANCINe

.

•

CHESTER. 0 ...10

ivecy tlme

'' .

INGELS

•

.......

~-

'BoWling Clinic ·

you come i Into
buy 8 sallon• or

our
alation and
ps,
we will give you a ~ or other
flower. These mate
nice bouqueta.
Display a free rose on y&lt;&gt;ur car
an~Jlll and y&lt;&gt;u are In the eon-.
test. We are gl\llng away 2,000,000 tradlns stamps.and $1,000.00

~

thl....,.z...ru• .,.,.....

()pen Fri. I Sat. Nfiilt.
992~t6U '
Mlclclltport

•

S!JN,

. . . F·R·
EE. ROSEl'

•nywhere· oWntr·m.y 1tvt or move; tran.,...Uon. IHir
•net ...... dl•rct~.,. tt1t obllptlon o1
,.plactmtnt t1.1M te .....,.... tor ....
ttnn of'tftl ortclnel
wwnt~~tJ.

••

EXCEPT

G, AB R. H. Pet.
Rose, Cln
56 232 42 83 .358
Flood, St.L
.58 243 37 81 ,333
A.JhnSIL, Cln 54 222 38 74 .333
Aloo; Pll
43 147 13 49 .333
Aloo, Atla
55 236 27 77 .326
Staub, Hou
54 210 22 67 .3!9
Helma, Cln
53 213 16 66 .310
Grote, NY
51 168 15 52 .310
Millan, Alia
56 217 16 65 .300
WUms, Chi
56 228 26 68 .298
American Lea!!ue

:L
. . ·Cw.iRTIFiii Oll~. ~OMPANY

G. AB R. H. Pet.
54 189 29 64 .339
56 210 31 69 .329
Monday, Oak 42 128 12 38 .297
47 187 22 55 ,294
Carew, Min
Horton, Del
50 176 26 51 .290
White, NY
58 204 32 59 .289
Jchnao, Bal
52 176 24 49 .278

Ystrl!kl, Boa
Hwrd, Walh

33; Jobnomt,
::~ Orlolea, Horton, lndlans and
::; lloiCO, YILIIka 31.
~
Pitching
~ National Leap: SOlma, Melo
:$ 8-11; Marlehal, Glanto 11..'1;
~~ Kooaman, Mota 9..'1; Carllllll,

Ml!i!_ ~·

•

.

Po-, 0.

Neb. (UPI)- The
OMAHA,
field in the 22nd annual NCAP
College World Series was to be
cut to six teams today with
either Texas or Brigham Young
players packing their bags._
Both suffered losses in their
first games in the double
elimination tournament Tue&amp;day. Harvard, ·which ab!orbed
two defeats In as many days,
became the first club erased
from further competition.
Other poirlngs today lind st.
John's or New York playing
Nortb carolina State at 5:30
p.m., (CDT) and Oklahoma {jrtate~·
State meeting Southern CaUfor~
nia at 8 p.m. The TexasBrigham Young contest was
scheduled for 2 p.m.
Tuesday was a day oft tor Sl
John's which (llened its series ,ICIB OF IIII!S-t..r.lrS.Idll
action with a 2-0 win over
Harvard Monday, the same day Advance Tickets
North Carolina State registered
~e Purchased From
a 7-6 cOIJle.from-betJ.nd victory
over Southern illinois.
Oklahoma State beat Texas,
1
8-5, aid Southern California
clipped Brigham Young, 5-3, in
the cmtpletion of Orst-round
games Tuesday night.
The Salukis from Southern
llllnois got on the winning track
ClRCUI.
Tuesday with an 11-lnning 2-1
triumph over Harvard.
Ulolar 12 -,..
ADIA.11
SOuthern Celttornia, picked by
most as a slight favorite for the
title, had its hands flll1. with a
NO
tough Brigham Young team.

7he ,..CirCu'P!~~

for t6e nu,.,g!

WILD ANIHAlHelfOitf
HORSES· HiaUerial STA
Astoundlacr"'ACRCIATS·.Roalc
&amp;Rolll&gt;allikt B.Ei&gt;HAifrS

Acltaa$
Ticbts
$1.25

$1.50

Man-Size Comfort! W
Hemmock-Lovnp
/'i'l'-

first pitch and Brooks Robinson
contributed a two-run homer for
the Orioles, who lead tile
Indians by two percentage
points. Rookie Roger Nelsoo
pined his ftrsl major league
victory ln relief.

... the family store and

oowa

Carda 7..'1; Rood, Bra,.• and
:~: IIIIILia, Qlb&amp; 6..2 •

I

American

League:

McLain,

Titera 1..'1; Hardla, Orioltl a.2;

~ ld, Twllll; Boll, Red &amp;II

1111

DIALD

ma
DON &amp; EDNA WILSON, 0.....
....._ • • OWNID , .....,

MIDDLEJIOIT, OHIO

•••••••••t••·••••••••••l•••t••••••••••1••1•1•1•••••

HIGH SCHOOL; RANGES

GAl

'•

·•
I

(eGold Star) Name lnn4s
Completely Auto.-a-W11h A
Brain

I
I
I

M ON SALE aH DISPLAY AT

~:

- . . . . y .... 6..'1; I'Wrai&gt;OIand
~Y,";:~~::~'-'Io'!m.~~~t-=:::::::~:::::.-x:::::=:::::t":».~o!&gt;"?.!«~ Wrlshl, Aapla 5.:1 .

Sill

After Today

nl

33.

Horton Tlpro

Down To Six

. Pomeroy VoluniMr

til rowing error In tile
nth
Inning as the Tigers won the
second game to complete the
sweep.
Jim Price singled in two runs
In the second lnniDg ol the
opener and scored a tlllrd run In
tile fifth on a slngle by winning
pitcher
Pat Dobson. Dean
Chance suffered his eighth
defeat In 12 decisions.
Don Buford homered on the

Amen ean League: Howard,
~ Senator• .t8; Powel1 Ortolea 39;
1

~

NCAA Field

tor
l2Shows_ 2 &amp;8 PM

Scores Oa Error
Tom Matchick scored from
second base on Cesar Tovar's

Hrrllll, Bos
42 138 23 38 .276
Slnlud, Wash 42 133 24 36 .271
58 220 24 59 .268
Oliva, Min
Home Runs
Nation a I Leage: McCOVe;y,
Giants 12; 'Banks, Cubs; Hart
snd Mayo, Glanto ll; Stargall,
Pirates and H. Aaron, Bnt,.s
10.
American
Leqlle:
Howard,
Senators 22; Horton, Tiaers 18;
KDlobrow, Twlno 12; McMtlllen,
Sena1oral Harrelson and Yastrzemlld, Red b 10.
Runl Battod In
Natkleal Le~&amp;Uo: Parez, Reds
39; Mays, GlaDtl,
and
Banka, CUba Uld llonch, Reda

~

14

JUNE

May

the doorw~ to his locker and
the path was framed by an arch
ol baseball bats held alolt by
his teammates.
Tile Detroit Tigers stretched
their American League lead to
4'12 games by sweeping a lwlnight doubleheader from ttle
Minnesota Twins, 3-1 and 3..2,
while Baltimore took over
second by pwrunelling Washington 8-4 while Oakland edged
Cleveland 2..0 in a rain~
shortened game. A doubleheader between Boston and California was postponed by rain.
Pete Ward-also-di=Ove ln three
runs tor the White Sox, who
survived a three-run homer by
Tom Tresh and a tw(H'Uil blast
by Mickey Mantle, the 526111 ~
his career. Joe Horlen, wtth
relief help from Don McMallon
and Wilbur Wood, raised his
reoord to 5-6.

s.mo

~~:;:;~::.::;~-:·~._..._.:::::;::;..;~~~~:;::::,~:;;;:z:::::;;;t:::::J:i:.;:;:{;»!!"!·:;:;:~;;:-.p,·~}N~::-.":~·

color plcturt tubt, ....,.,... anr Mltltortltcf Ztnhh dlatw

••

new Silent Service Aoouatlcll Conotructlon.

WEEKDAYS
Tn.L5P,M.

MEN • L.\iiiFs
MIXED -JUNIORS

i
i

Bl' united Press International
National League

New York (ll.yan 5-4) at Los
Angeles (Drysdale 8-3), ll p.m.
Tbursday•s Games
Clncllllat at Chlcasu
Plltsborgh at San Francisco
St. Lnelst at Atlanta, night
Houston at Pltlladelphla, nlgltt
(Only gameo schdllecl)

SUMMER lU.GIJES

tt .

Leaders

p.m.

For Women· FlEE

New Zenith 2·year color
·pieture lube WGITGIIIy

By JOE GERGEN
UPI Sports Writer
A grand gei119Jre by Russ
Snyder resulted ln still another
by the Chicago White Sox.
Snyder, a veteran oo.tfielder
In his lirat season wlth tile
White Sox, slugged tile llrst
grand slam homer ol hia to.
year career Tuesday night In a
9-5 victory over the New York
Yankees, touching otr a regal
ceremony
in the
Chicago
dressing room.
Snyder, who had !all ed to
drive in a nm. in 36 previous
games, was treated with all the
pomp ot a visiting monarch as
he stepped Into tile clubhouse.
~read before him was a carpet
of white towels stretching from

National Lea&amp;OJe
W. L. Pel. GB
35
23 .603
St. Louis
San Francisco 31 27 .534 4
32 28 .533 4
LOs Ange1es
29 27 .518 5
Atlanta
28 27 .509 51h
Clnclmati
25 26 .490 61h
Phlllldelphla
27 29 .482 7
Chicago
26
29 . 473 71h
New York
22 30 .423 10
Pltlsburgb
23 32 .418 IO'h
Houston
Tuesday's ReBUlts
ClnclnnaU 9 Chicago 7
Hooston 5 Pltlla l, nlgbt
St. Lnels 6 Atlanta o, nlgbt
New York 3 Los Ang 0, nJgbt
Plttaburgh 7 San Fran 4, nJgbt
TodU' a Probable Pitchers
(All Time• EDT)
Clnclmatl (Maloney 6-3) at
Chicago (Jenkins 5-7), 2:30 p.m.
St. Louis (Briles 7-4) at
AUanta (Jarvis 5-4), 8 p.m.
Plttaburgb (Blass 2..2 or
McBean 5-S) at San Francisco
(Perry 6-3), 4 p.m .
Hooaton (Wlii!OIL
4-7) at
Phlladelphia (Short 3-7), 7:30

-

PLUS

were willing to go ahead.
Braves Manager Luman Harris was delighted with the
trade. He had been a coach at
Baltimore when Pappas, now
29, joined the Orioles as an IS.
year-old prospect.
"He's always been a late
starter each year," Harris said
"H~ had a bad spring last year,
yet wour.t up with 16 wins. I
just hope it holds true again
this year since he can really
help us. ••
To get Pappas, the Braves
adml tteclly took a gamble on
Cloninger. The ace of the
Braves In 1965 when he won 24
games, the 27-year-old Cionl•
ger has been plagued by
in).uies the past couple or
years. He was only 4-7 in 1967
and 1-3 so rar this year.
Pappas was 2--5 with the Reds
this spring. But his lifetime
record is 140-I03 and before
being traded to Clncirua.tl after
the 1965 season, he set Oriole
records for victories (110),
shutouts (26) and complete
games (82),

After First Grand Slam

York (Peterson 3..2), 8 p.m.
Calllornta (Murphy 0.0 Uld
Bnmet 5~) at Boston (Cutp 2-2
Uld Senttasu 7-3), 2, 5:30p.m.
Tbur sda,y' s Games
Minnesota at Detroit
Oakland at Cleveland
Calitornia at Boston
(Only games scheduled)

- ~-

mv

Snyder Gets Treatment

C~cago (Peters 3-6) at New

DETROIT (UPD- F.IIJM. lfod.
dox, . the Bll Ten'alaa411N1111•
tills ••""" lfiDtad · Tuudaf
wltll the Detrctlt Tlpro.

"I 'Jhould hne li&amp;ttned when
you Maid you threw nothinxbul sinker balls!"

p.m.

REDUCED RATES

- .

tHoosl ZENRH /Y~r Best Color TV Buy I

Mo,. effecthe ·
with
Dreft·f,.e
Air Sweep

Tuesday's Resu.Jts
Detroit 3 Mlml, 1st, lwlilgbt
Detroit 3 Mlnn 2, 2nd, night
Oak 2 Cle 0, 2 Ins., rain, night
Chicago 9 New York 5, nll!hl
Baltimore 8 Washington 4, night
Calli al Boston, 2, ppd., rain
Today's Probable Pitchers
{All Times EDT)
Minnesota
(Kaat
~)
at
Detroit (Lollch 4.:1), 8 p.m.
Oaklllld
(Odom
5-4) at
Cleveland (llargan 4.,\), 7:30
p.m.
Baltimore (POOebus 5-S) at
Washington (!Iannan l-11), 8:05

BOWLING
MASON-BOWING CENTER

~

"

M-SEIIES

=

Tile GAINSIOAGUGH • YfSI2W
Comp.ct tllble model television. Vinyl did metal cabinet
in ar•ined W•rnul color. Super Video ltanle Tunina Syttem.

111

tJ• a,, ""'

tlMUioGIIIqhlr, lnc., U

ATLANTA (UP0- The Clt&gt;cinnad Reds have resolved their
feud with pitcher Milt PllJ)pas
by trading the controverslal
righthander
to the Atlanta
Braves.
The Reds and Braves pulled
ofi a six-player deal Tuesday
night that
brings
Pappas,
lefthaOOed reliever Ted Davidson and veteran utili!)' infielder
Bob Johnson to Atlanta in
exchange for rl'ghthanded pitchers Ton,y Cloninger and Clll,y
carroll and former second
baseman Woody Woedward.
Pappas was traded less than
72 hoors after he resigned as
the Reds' player represerU.tive
following an argument because
the Reds decided to go ahead
with their Saturday nlgllt game
with st. Louis even though Sen.
Robert F, Kennedy's burial
hadn't taken place.
Pappas was the spokesman
for a group or players who
wanterl to wait but who agreed
to play after Reds' Manager
Dave Bristol found ni'ne who

1Arr7' -

.SIGN DRAFT

FRI.

wntroversial
Pappas Traded

Standings

Woodward.
141 had been talldng about beIng traded and Wall.\ed 1&lt;1 be
traded aJkl I'm glad .to leave,"
said Pappas before the Reds
went out and smashed the Chi~
cago CUbs 9-7 ln so 18-hil attack.
Howsam 'Pleased'
uwe're pleased with the trade
am lee! both Cloninger Uld
Carroll wlll be a tremen;lous asset to our pitching staff," sal.d

Brigham Yoiull'a
De)' ln tho ef&amp;hth.

the Cubs. The lour Rlllll runs wltll a pair ol singles to
Pltt.sburs!t post San
boosted his Natl0111l League poce
leading llgure to 39. Redo' Franclseo. Roberto Clemente
reliever Bllly McCool the hit hls eighth homer' lor the
Pirates In the olxth lmlng to tie
game.
Dick Selma boosted hla record the game 3-3 and start a fourto 6.0 wltll a llve-hltter as tile run rally that de&lt;:[ded things.
Meta turned back the Dodgers. Rm Kline, 4-l, took the victory
Bill Mazeroskl. drove in three in relief.

very

lARGEST PIOURE
IN COMPACT
ZENITH TABLE TV

tlree.rnlso·:
;
San Francisco Mayor J o Alioto said any
turned "':
would oot be lra~ed for crlmOo
delectlon purpoaea, but ...Wei:
be destroyed. Some '12 ....,m.;:

•
,.

ls

ENJOY
COlOR TV's

Collect Firearms
Several cities armounced ''n(
Cl-Jest.lons asked." invitations for'
citizens 'to turn 1n thetlt

,

lt

At lngelsl

stowe&lt;i

ME!Cs..IIIASON .lii:A

American Lea&amp;ll8 lead to 4'1.!
games by sweeping Mlnnesola
••
3-1 and 3-2, Oakland blanked
He conclllded,
I just went .. Cleveland 2-11 ln a game halted
out there to play ball today, tr s by rain In tile beth lnniDg
1
all over. There are some things Chl
topped N
y k 9.s'
to be said that are best unaaid. n and C:umore bla~ :asl·ling~
ton 8-4. The Calllornla-Boston
Aapromonte started tllo segame was rained out.
cond lnniDg rall,y with a walk.
St. Lnels stretched Ill NationJulie Golay's single, Jom
al Lea&amp;OJe lead by winning Its
Bateman'a double, Larry Dierk1oth stralgbt game !rom atlanta
er•• single and Ron DaviS1
over. the past two seasons. Bob
aaeritlce fly produced tbree
Gibson set down the Drives on
runs and after Denis Menke
llve hits to gain his sixth
walked Staub doubled ln the
victory in 11 decisions.
final two niDI,
Tony Perez highlighted an 18Cincinnati attack wltll two
hll
Dierker pitched a seven-hitter
slngles and a homer to drive ln
to pick up the victory,
four
runs and pace the rout ot
Elsewhere In the Natonsl
League,
St. Lnelo blanked
Atlanta 6-11, Cincinnati ootlaated
Chicago 9-7, New York shut out
Los Angeles 3-11 and Pittsburgh By United Press International
outolugged sin Francisco 7-4.
American League
Tigers Win Two
W, L. Pel. GB
In tile American League, tile Detroit
37 20 .649
Detroit Tigers slratched tllelr Baltimore
32 24 .571 4lh
33 25 .569 4'h
Cleveland
28 29 .491 9
26 38 .581 9'h
26 29 .473 10
26 32 .4411 ll'h
New York
24 30 .444 ll'h
Chicago
25 32 .439 12
Calllornia
24 32 . 429 l2'h
Washington
country'
ll'atltying. tJ

the

But tho Trojans brolol!lllll a J.
I deadlock ln tho aotinlll ...
lour 1'111(8, more thol1 ,....., IIi
wlthoillll 1 twCH'LIIL hclner 111

On, Off Field

••

Pappas Happy,Bob Howsam~E~
Pleased, Reds Hit- Happy

r-------------------------·
GIBSON

PHONE 915-3301

.

Who also refUsed to . plll,y,
received · telegrams from' KenneRust)' staub haa class- both d.Y'a pre as secretary, FranK
'"' and otl the lleld.
Manldewtcz, which thanked
· &amp;mday, for stalib was a ttme tllem lor tllelr public display~
kl mourn, and Tuesday was a oympatey, Mut Pappai ol the
lime to play agaln, He dld botll Reda, jaqt traded to the Bravea,
Udngs wltll ~ grace,
Maury Wills ol the Pirates and
·· S:ta. who was flned a dey's the New York Mets received
111.1'- about 11250- b)' Hooaton lor telegrams, too.
B~ng out &amp;mday'a game in
Message Commends Action
deference to the memory of
The telegram aald. "Pluae
Son. Robert F. KOiliiOdy, made accept my peroonal admiration
a spectacular return to the for your actions. .Senator
Aatros' lineup Tuesday nlgtrt, Kennedy
loved
,.,_t~Uve
He stroked a two-rnn dooble to oporto but I doobt that he would
Climax a five-run second lmlng have put box..otfice receipts
lrhlch lifted tile Astros to a 5-l ahead ol national ...,rn1ng
victory over tile Phlladslphla under any circumstances."
Philo.
Aller Tuesday nlgbt'o game,
General Manager ~· Rich- Staub seld, ''I was pleased Uld
ardson o1 the Astros had honored today lo receive tile
ordered tile team to play telegram !rom the Kennedys.
&amp;mclay deaplte tile protell ol
u1 loved that man and that
the players, claiming, "Kem~ lamlly Uld lelt very deep In
would have wanted us to play!' here (he tapped his heart)
But on 'IUesday, . both Staub about it. I have received calls
and teammate Bob Aspromonte, and gotten letters from all over

before Ray Ia bundled aboard ~

Gun~' Law

Staub Has Class
By VlrO llrEL LINO
UP! ~rts Writer

\U

minority liberal faction, means
all 104 votes will go to
whichever candidate a majority
or the delegates favor when
the,)l are released by COnnally'
The governor has no presidential aspiration, but has lef't the
door open to considering second
spot on the party ticket. '
Before the Texans acted
Tuesday. Hwnphrey had 6621.~
delegate votes, based on com·
mitrnents or preferences of
state delegations. He needs
1,312 to secure the nomination.
Other developments:
Eugene J, McCarthy- The Ml1&gt;
nesota Democrat conferred with
President Johnson at the White
House for about 40 minutes
Tuesday. He lett unobserved.
and the White House declined
comment on the talk.
McCarthy was holding a n....--ws
conference in Washington later saniQ&gt;."
today.

3 - The Daily Sentinel~ Mldd.Ieport-Pomeray, June 12, 1968

:H&amp;
., .

''·

�..

Light Sought in Ray's Dark Days
I

LONDON
(UPI)- From
a
walkup hotel In Pimllco to a
neonllt bar In Portugal tile F B1
sod Scotlaod Yard today tried
to uncover the mysterious
weeks in the lite of the man
,accused of killing Martin Luther

Kirlg Jr.

'

James Earl RIQ', the accu•ed
assassin, sat in a Wandsworth
prison cell with "two silent
guards and awaited extradition
to stand trial In tile United
States.
In Plmlico, a district which
lies next to the glittering
Lpndon West End but has not
seen major deVelopmeot since
Charles Dickens wrote o1 Its
. _pest hou&amp;eBt Mrs. Ama Thomas
talked of the boarder ln May
who may have been Ra,y on the

loose.
"He kept the door ot his room
··

REFRE~MENTS were served to awroximately 400 persoos attending Tuesday night's open

house acdvities held in the new Ohio Valley Publishing Co. plant Mrs. Margaret Finnicum. left1
and Bea Usle, right. company employes, hidped serve punch and cookies.

Over 400
On Hand For

Open House

cookies in the spacious plant
lounge.
Publisher Richard S. Owen,
on behalf of company employes,
expressed his appreciation to
those who made the open house
event a success.
Winner of the registration contest - the person coming closest to guessing the combined
weight of the compan.y's 37 employes - will be annoonced later this week according to Mr .

Over 400 Tri-County area resIdents toured tile Ohio Valley
Publishing Company's new offset printing plant during an open
Owen.
house Tuesday evening.
Guests registered, then toured tn sma1l groups the circulation, editorial, advertising, composing, camera~late making,
BOND FORFEITED
press and mailing departments.
Earl
Renshaw, Minersville
Department hellds and stalls deforfeited
a $25 borr:l in the couri
scribed functions of their departof
Pomeroy
Mayor Charles Lements.
. ,.
gar Tuesday night posted lln in-.
After completing the tour, ;visitors were treated to punch and toxication ~harges.

TV . . . in Review
py RICK DU BROW
HOLL YWDOD (UPO - That
coast.oo-ooast thud yoo heard on
n e two r k television Tuesday
night was the
signal that
summer's musical-variety replacement series have arrived
with a vengeance.
C8S-:TY presented a new onehour series called ••Showtime,"
~ NBC:T\1 countered wltll a
:nf-lninute enlry ~.altl.ed uShowcase •ss," and the proceedings
were every bit as thrilling as
the title&amp;.
u:bmtime," which r(lplaces
the Red ~elton program for
the summer, is produced in
London, for the American
audience, whlctr means it's
really not here nor there, but
rather a show without a
COllllry. SWinging U&gt;ndon it
ain't. Mll3'be IIley !Ike lt
somewhere In the mid-Atlantic.
~alley Bombs
There are guest-star hosts
Mch week for this series, and
the first was ~lley Berman, a
a median with a sharp sense of
lotus wbo, alas, loond himsell
on a program with no focus at
all. H al!ected hlm, and he
wasn't the same Shelley we
kmw, aa he opened with a
dreadf'ul R'•UJJlogue about London time and failed to recover.
There were also a dated jazz
bllld, a vocal -Instrumental
group from Paraguay, a German juggler and two British
aingers, S!irley Hassey and
Matt Monroe. I have always
beard ~ things about Miss
Ba111ey, but the w~ she
strained and hollered her way
through "JI Ever I Would Leave

You" made one wonder . Pity.
Future hosts will include
George Gobel, Phyllis Diller,
Eddy Arnold, Uberace, Steve
Allen, Juliet Prowse, Godfrey
Cambridge, Frank Fontaine and
Terry
Thomas. Terry, or
Thomas, or Terry -Thomas,
whatever yoo call him, is
British. How did he sneak in
there?

Poor Execution
"Showcase •68., is an imaginative idea, executed with no
imagination at all. The notion or
presenting professional regional
entertainers
in their first
national television outings is a
wise way to uncover some
talent for the networks. But the
format is stone--age television.
A regular host, Lloyd Thaxton, who used 00 have a
syndicated series in which he
did pantomine mouthings or hit
records and the like, introduces
Ule acts, and that's all.
One group, the Jade Set,
rocked and ruined ••.&amp;tmmertime."
A few acts were
enjoyable, including the Craig
Hundley jazz trio, composed or
amazingly young boys . But all in
all, the show came across lille a
sort or semi...pro version of the
long-rurmtng uAmateur Hour."
The settings for both of
Tuesday's shows were nice
enough. But one was reminded
of the recent magazine article
tn which S. N. Behrman told
how Ira Gershwin met Sam
Goldwyn, who is over 80, at a
party and conplimented him:
"You're looking very well,
Sam." And Goldwyn replied
'~What good OOes it do?u

Tight Gun
Control is

In Offing
WASIIINGTON (UPO - Members or Congress- possibly including a key House Republican
- have ~ne President Johnson
one better and are pushing for
gun control legislation that
would mean nationwide registration of firearms.
Rep. John Anderson, U-01 .,
said today he had .. tentatively"
concluded that registration is a
necessity. Anderson, a senior
member or the Rules Conunit~
tee, was influential In winning
House approval or an open
housing law earlier this year
and the omnibus crime bill last
week.
• 1 For the
life of me, I can't
wxlerstand those who claim
we'll bring about a fascist state
with registration," Anderson
said in an Interview. "I think
that's absurd. We register
automobiles and no one objects."

Meigs Roads
Figure in
New Projects
COLUMBUS (UPO The
state Highway Department opened bids Tuesda.Y on 40 projects
worth $22.3 million, which was
$3.1 million below state esti-

mates.

SHOWS MICROFU..MS - Robert Winget4 ol the JJt.ilJ' Sentinel's
. Pomeroy news staff, explains a photograph film reader (microfilm)
in offices of the Ohio Valley Publishing Co. to two youngsters during
Open House Thesday night. Records are maintained here of the last
75 years.

Rocliets Kill
lst American
SAIGON
(UP0- The
VIet
Cong killed their first American
victim tod~ in 12 days of
shelling Saigon.
)
The guerrillas fired 14 sixfoot-two rockets into suburban
Tan Son Nhut Airbase, ld.lling a
U.S. airman and four Vietnamese children.
The barrage blasted military
areas and the houses of South
Vietnamese soldier families ,
wounding 24 Vietnamese plus
two American servicemen and
two U.S. civilians.
In the capital's 12 days ol
agon..v, hundreds of Vietname-se
have beerl"" killed or wounded in
the indiscriminate terror shell-

Gertrude Motts
Service Today
Funeral services for Miss Gertrude Motts, 82, Rt. 2, Letart,
W, Va., who died Sunday in Holzer Hospital, were held today at
2 p. m. at the Leach and Son
fWleral Borne in Columbus. Burial was in Silent Home Cemetery,
Reynoldsburg.
Miss Motts was a secretary
for the Columbus Blank Book
Mfg. , Co., who was born August
21, 1885, in Franklin CO\UltJ', the
daughter of the late John and Rebecca Stover.
She is ~unived by a sister,
Mrs. Mary Kalish, 820 Grandon
Ave., Bexley, and Mrs. Kathryn
Rood, a niece with whom she
made her hom.e and several other
niel:'es and nephews,

The projects included several
in Melgs County, an addition to
the Appalachian Development
Highway ~stem, and several interstate highway additions. The
AD liS projectt.rlngsto21.5 miles
the total under construction in
the projected east-west highw~
Shumaker
across southern Ohio. The bids,
by county, included:
Meigs and Vinton - Paving Dies on
and constructing three bridges
on 4.87 miles ol Ohlo 346, ShellY
Millard Ralph (Pete) Shumak&amp; Sands Inc. , Zanesvllle, $4,134,- er, 49, of 133 Mayfield Heights,
466, estimate, $5,170,000.
West Mayfield, who died Friday
Hocking bnproving a n d in Oakland VA Hospital, Pittsroads and facUlties at Old Man's burgh, was born In Pomeroy, May
Cave Slate Park and Cedar Falls 11, 1919, a son of the late George
State Park, York Canst. CO., Nel- and Jennie Davis Shumaker.
sonvUle, $54,921; estimate, $61,A veteran of World War 2, he
500.
was a molder for Mayfield FounMeigs Resurfacing 2.45 dry. Mr. Shumaker was a memmUes of Ohio 7 and 7.29 miles ber of Mayfield Veterans organol Ohio 143, Shelly Co., Thorn- izatioos.
ville, $99,932; estimate, $105,Surviving are four brothers,
300 .
George R. Chippewa; Rollin 0.,
Meigs - Scarifying and resur- South Beaver; KeMeth C., at
facing .90 mile of roads and ra. home, and Orville ll, Darllngtoo
cilities at Forked Run State Park, Twp., and two sisters, Mrs. HomffiRTHS
York Const. Co., NeJsonvllle, er B. (Evelyn) Young, at home,
Mrs. Roger L. Jeffers,- Rt. 2.
$13,346; estimate, $16,700.
and Mrs. Alvert M. (Blanche)
Pomeroy, son, 12:40 p, m. TuesVinton - Resurfacing on 5.61 Hoy, Beaver Falls.
day; Mrs. James M. Moore, Pom- miles of Ohio 124 and 4.74 miles
Mr. Richard Davis, Pomeroy,
eroy, daughter, 3:21 p, m. Tues~
of Ohio 160, F. H. Brewer Co., is a cousin or Mr. Shumaker and
day; Mrs. Richard H. Randol h, Lancaster, $110.934; estimate,
was visiting there when death
191/z Pine St., twins, a daughter, $115,200,
came.
1:3I a. m. Wednesday, a daughter
1:35 L m. Wednesday.
DL'iCII ARGES
(Continued !rom Page I)
Enoch R. Brewer. Charles L.
Carter, Mrs. Luther L. carter, out France and ordered the immediate dissciutl.on ot a number of
Mrs. Luther L. Cochran, Mrs. lettlst organizations and prl vate militia grcqts,
Mallie G. Dayton, Floyd s. DeThe drastic steps were announced as new fights broke out beLaBhrnutt, Mrs. Carl E. FJllot4 tween police using tear gas and students who hurled Molotov cockWilliam J. Freeman, Gary w. ~ls In a new wave of violence that swept 2,000 demonstrators into
Gilbert, Paul R. Halle)', Mrs. .iails in Paris alone. HWJdreds were InJured and arrested in other
\
Hazel McLeod, Mrs. Carl E. cities. Five persons have died.
Mitch, Mrs. James N. Morgan,
Le"OY Rlrtle, Charmaine sauer,
VIOLENT WEATHER TORE THROUGH THE eastern hall ol
Mrs. Richard A.. Shupe, Mrs. the nation tuia.y, spawning a tornado in Flortda and sending heavy
William J. Smith, Mra. Shady thunderstorms swee_plng from Ohio to New York. The most violent
Tackett, Mrs. Robert n. Thacker, weather prevailed east of a cold !root stretchlrv from central Texas
Kenneth L. Vickers, Mrs. Rosa.- to Ohi~
The tornado struck West Panama City, Fla., just before mlcj..
lie saunders, Mrs. James E.
Hoggs and infant daughter, Mrs. night. One woman was injured when her camper trailer was over..
William L. Patterson and Infant turned. Hall .., to ooHlalf Inch ln diameter acc'OO!ponled heavy rain
daughter, Mrs. Ha.rold W. Hussell at Lancaster, Ohio. PeMsylvanbl, New York and Ohio had more than
and infant daughter,
on&amp;-half inch ot rainfall within a slx~our period eOOing today,

Millard

Friday

HOSPITAL NEWS
HOLZER HOSPITAL: VIsiting
hours 2-4 and 7-8 p.rn. Parents
only on Pediatrics Ward.
AD~USSIONS

Mrs. Opel! M. Meadows, 846
Second Ave.1 Mrs. Fred Facemire 12221/z . Second Ave. ; Mrs.
Ivan L Uurt, Rt. 2 Bidwell;
Lesa J. Ue.rder, Rt. 1 EwtngtcA1; Miss Robin B. Robinson,
729 First Ave.; Mrs. Wash K.
C&amp;vins, Rt. 2 BidweJJ; MiChael
A. Shepherd, Mason: Dale A.
Durst, Rt. 2 Letart; Rudolph P.
Perczian, West Columbia; Mrs.
James M. Moore, POmeroy; Mrs.
Roger L. Jeffers, RL 2 Pome~
roy; Howard It Bahr, Ht. 2 Long
BottmJ; Mrs. Lester Brisker,
Qak Alllj Mrs. John D. Hensley, Flatwoods, Ky.; Louis D.
Hochberg, Jackson; Mrs. James
H. Wllls, RL 1 Oak Hill; The
ReY. James W. Garrett, Jackson;
Maxwell L. Watkins, Harnden;
WOllam C. Abert&amp;, Wellston;
Mrs. Larcy Goble, Rl 2 Jack11011; Mrs. Richard A. Handolph,

19'h Pine st.

News Briefs

•
\

'•

ing. But previously tile ooly
American casualties was the
ol two mllllary
wounding

policemen.
ConBider Unlimited Bombing
In Paris. American diplomats
returned to the Vietnam war
negotiating table today to warn
North VIetnamese delegates
that the shelling of Saigon is
seriously • hindering their ftttempt to cool down Ule war.
Diplomatic observers in Paris
ssld tile United States mlgbt
consider resuming air raids
against all of North Vietnam if
the terror shelling of Saigon
goes on.
Today for the first time in 12
days all the fire reu on military
base areas. The rockets struck
the Tau Soo Nhul flight llne and
heliport., damaging at least
three American aircran.
Airman 1.C. William Walters,
20, oC Dover, N.J., saw a friend
die in the shelling.
"I lost a Yer.&gt;' good bud:ly. He
was running toward his bunker
when hls hut got hlt, and lt
killed hin1.
In Paris, U.S. negotiator W,
Averell Harrinian. told newsmen
just before today' s session with
Hanoi
delegates, "We are
gravely
concerned by the
COmmunist terror campaign.
We are concerned- as I am
sure are all Americans. The
North Vietnamese Commwtlst
party is pursuing terrorist
actions and Is killing clvilians
without an,y mHltary objective."
Jolm Tamehlll, 16, Middle-

port, who swept men' a and jun.
lor events in the Elkhart, Ind.,
Open Table Tonnls tournament
last weekend, is spending this
week with friends in Colum~
bus.
He won the men'a singles,
men's OOuble&amp; and Boy II 17
and Undt!r events, defeating
U, S. 4th-ranked Dan Pecora,
23, of Chicago in the men's
singles finals.

River Gauges

locked at all times and when I
brougbt hls breaklast·up he told
me to leave it outside,., the
hotel keeper sald.
Her boarder paid
Mrs.

Humphrey Seems
Winner in Texas
By United PresB International
Vice President Hubert H.
Humphrey, already more than
half way toward the total
delegate votes needed to win
the Democratic nomination.
appeared heir today to another
I04 votes from Teu.s.
Texas Democrats designated
Gov.
John
Col1lll.lly their
favorite
son candidate for
president Tuesday after agreeing to cast the state's national
convention votes ln a bloc.
The adoption of the so-called
unit rule, over the protests of a

Housing
(ContiiUled !rom Page ll
forcement ol buJlding and houS·
lng codes, guarantelld avallahll lty ol real property lnBUrance
for residential property 1 study
of the field of laodlord-lenant
legal rolatlonshlps and study by
tile Little Hoover Commission
of tile organ[zatl!ll and functionIng ol motropolltan housing authorities in Ohio.
A lengtey session 'IUesda.y
was expected to be repeated today In tile committee hearings,
At least seven witnesses, including Martin Graham of Ole
Building Trlldes Council and
o1 tile
Harold
Strickland
NAACP, were expected to testily,

Schools
(CooUnued !rom Page I)
also selected black tq)ping or
drh.es and parking lots, an alter.
nate, at a price of $11,000, and
selected grey glass which wlll
cost $5,500 eddltlonal.
Building use requests approved
Include those ol the Rutland E!&amp;mentary kitchen and cOOler or
July I tllrough July 4 b) the Rutland Volunteer Fire Department
for the annual July 4th celebra-tlOnj use of the Pomeroy elementary auditorium on Saturday, Nov.
30, and SUnday, Dec. I. by Meigs
CWnty Garden Clubs tor a c&lt;MJn.t.Y·wkJe Oower show, and t h e
Pomeroy High School on June 30
tor a recital by music students
of Miss Mercedes Condon.
Attending tile mllOtlng besides
those named above were George
Hargraws and Larry Morrison.
8UJ&gt;ertnte11(1ent and auiPant, re-

GAUGES Galllpolls, 12.2
ond 17. 5 runnlr18 20 loet of rollers; Pl PleaSUX:, 24.70; Pome- a_pecti~; L. W, McComas.
roy - MaliOll, 21.70; Hlnton, 2.30 clerk, bi Boord Members Vlrgll
ng, . Mra. E. 0, Rail, lllram
stat.; Kanawha Falls, 5.80 lallwter. Don Mullen and Frank
lng; lllarleston, 18.80 rlslng.
Porter.
LOndon and Marmet, rumlng one
foot of roUer11; Winfield, running fleet.

t

COLLECTIONS NOTED
Disbursements from Meigs
County court collections lor May
totaled $2,107.30, according to
Clerk Bette Uobstetter, including $537.15 ln fines to tho state
aoo $93. 3S in fees to the sher~
iff; nnes· and costs to the county goneral lUnd $929. 21; law ll·
brary, $322.17, Uld to the auto
license and gas tax tuOOs $225.42.

HEMINDDI MADE
Ohio employers, employment

agencies, aod labor unlon11 were
reminded thalthe Ago Dlacrlmlnatlon In Employment Aet of
1967 goes Into elfeet today, and
applies to workers from fO to
65. The reminder came from
John V. Soppilt, Dlstrlet Director lor Ohio of the U. S. Labor
Department's wage - Hour and
PUblic contracts Division.

Thomas $10.80 lor three dayo'
stay. His luggage was an airline
bag, He refused . to slgn tile
smudi!Y register In Mrs. Tho·
mas• hotel.
In Lisbon, where police said
an FBI agent was at work along
wiili other 'Investigators, a
plump, red-haired bsr girl"just call me Gloria"- rem"mbered the faee In the newspaper
but not the name.
Gloria said she shared d!'lnks
wlth tile man In tile Galo bar.
other girls ln other bars, wch
as the VieMa bar &lt;,_nd the
Diana bar, remembered the
face.
Scotland Yard and the U.S.
lawyers and diplomats here
were keeping mostly silent
about their llunt for the missing
days in Ra,y' s Ufe since the
April 4 assassination In Memphis, Tenn. They 00 not want to
ollend British judges.
The judges of Brltaln rule
heavily against 'those who talk

I

•\

Nelson A Rockefeller Launching a stepped-up drive to
overtake Richard M. Nixoo in
the race for the Re~blfe&amp;n
"r@sidentia1
nomination, the
New York governor said in
Washington that Nixon represents the jjal.d poHtlcs" that
have proved inadequate. He
said Sen. Robert, F. Kennedy's
death made lt incwnbent on
remaining candidates to 11 carry
forward the great unfinished
mission o! bullding a betk:r
Amerlca."
Lyndon B. Johnson - The
President reaffirmed IJis decision to leave the White House at
the eOO or his term in Jawary.
Speaking at a While House
ceremony for graduates or the
congressional page school, the
President said: "Next Jall.l8.ry
I will gradual&lt; a!ld hope!Uicy go
back to Ule classroom" as a
teacher.
Dllnols - Senate Republtcan
Leader E,·erett M. Dirksen won
rcnominatiotl to a fow-th term
in the state GO r primary over
Roy C. Johnson, a Chicago area
ti'Uck driver. In the g~lbernator­
ial nmninatlon, where f~
Republican candidates are entered, Richard B. Ogilvie,
president or the Cook County
Board or OJmmissiooors, wa.s In
the lead.
SOutll Carnli,.- Chairman L.
Mondel Rivers of the House
Armed Services Committee
swept to renomination over
Negro George PB¥ton ln the
Democratic congreasloral priu
mary. Freshman Sen. Ernest F.
Hollings won over Greenville
attorney John Bolt CUlberlaon.

•'

•'

out o1 court belore trial or
hearing. And U.S. "gfttclals
wanted JIQihlng to lnle!iere wltll
tllelr declared lnter.tloo ol
getting Ray, to, back to
America as soonaapoa&amp;ible.
A British deportation order
could oome anytime, MorJI
likely, a legal lls!tt with hll
court..pJVrlded lawyen eould
stretch until Auguat the time
New York-bouod plane.

'"
~.

(Continued fr&lt;ln Pli" I)
"
Monday p\'e pi'G[lmlilary- ~
proval to a bUl tighte!dnl tlui(
state's already striet IUfi
control laws. The bUl reQdre~
reporting to pollee ebleta all
eales ol &amp;'IDS In munlclpalftjea,.
makes the tliegal possession ot
a llrearm a lelon,y Instead ~ a'
mllldemeanor, and expands tile·
dettni.Uon of ••dangerous
pon" up to sod Including'
ollngsbots.
Some say tll'e problem ls
broader thsn oontroUing lethal
weapons.
.
Phlladelphla attorney NoriiiiD
Ashton Klinger eald llle cause
of murder may be 11 tbe ethic of
violence." He says chlldrea.
learn !rom their toys- their
11 military
hardware.u · Klinger
proposed "lddile dl.sarmament .
• . unllateral dlsarmameot ol all
children of Ule world'' by
ellmlnatlng toy wespons,
'
But guns kill, oot toys.
The J-Mart discount housea In
Columbus,
Ohio,
made an
impressive financial sacrl!1ce
by turning ln $20,000 WOrth ot:
guns to city pollee. Said tile,
firm's president, MartiV Rosen:,
••we know that over the palllO,
years we have sold guns which
have been used In selcldas Uld.
by some to kill tllelr nel&amp;flbors,
11 1t
has preyed on aura
consdence ror Cllfte aome.
time."
~
An Indiana-based chain, WOD•
dorland Stores, dlscontlnued 1110:
oalo of ammunition. It
the sale of IWlfl two years a10~
President Stanfortl Frledmm
said the new move ~s "to helP:
preserve public safe~;¥ sod;

wea-'

cmcAGO (UPO - Milt

I,'
'

.j

Pap.

PI• was glad; General Marager Bob Howsam pleased; ml
the Cbx:imaU Reds were hlthawy.
Pappas, a I &amp;-13 wlmer lor the
Reds last season and a 2-5 hurler 10 lar thlo year, was traded
to the Atlanta Braves along
with plteher Ted Ilavldsoo, who
Wll 1..0, and Infielder Bob JohnlOlL
In return1 the Reds got pttc~
ers Tony Cloolnger aod Clay
Carroll and lnllelder Woody

""s

Including a World War It
machlnegun, were collected In!
four days. Twenty-three w.a~
pons, five of them mtlea,
turned ln to pollee it Phlladol-;
phla.
•
But ln Salt Lake Clt;y, Utah,
Wolle's Sporting Go/KI( reporle4:
an upswing In tlie sale of'
handguns and ammunltli.t
tile past lew days. : Mayor J,:
Brack.., Lee says _ . t a IJI,
gun legislatloo are l"'l'rreactlq
to assassinations. nyou can't
change
human nature b)''
passing laws.'•
•
No attempts lo chanp hwnaQ,
nature
were
wularway IIi.
Lout slana- whose 85,000 rqla,;
tered bunters are ~chy
gun legislation- or 11181\)'
othel"
.
states .-here lluntlng Ia popula •

were:

b7

stirred u,p a horOOt' s nest the
past weekend, when as player
representative he led a group
of players who didn't 11fant to
play until the funeral for Sen.
Robert F. Kenoedy was over
Saturday nlghL
Reds Manager Dave Bristol
nipped that In the bud when he
roonded lijl nlne wl!Ung players
and prepared to play the game.
Pawu and the res~ of the
players agreed to go to work,
Howaam.
but Paps said he would reThe 29-l'ear~d Paw&amp;&amp;, who sign as p~er representative.
Pappas sold Tuesday he had
received a telegram rrom Frank
Manlkewicz, press secretary to
the late serator, thanking him
for his acti91'1S.
'jPlease accept my personal
admiration ror your action~ ..
the telegram said. "SanW&gt;r
Kennedy
indeed enjoyed cmnpet!tlve sportJ, but l donbt lhlt
he would have put box office
receipts
ahead of nittonal
mourning under an,y circumstances.
Perez Led Attack
Tony Parez highlighted the 18hlt Reds attack 'IUesday wllh
two sircles and a homer 00
drive in four runs.
Perez evened the second inning with a slfllle and both
Johnny Bench and Leo Canle~&gt;o
as also hit safely for one run
and Pete Rose drove in another
with a sacrifice Oy.
In the fourth, Perez singled
to score Alex Johnson. who had
tripled and in the sixth, Perez
homered allor a single by Lee
May.

The Reds banged Jack Lamabe for three slrwJ.es 100 I dou-ble before a man was out in
the third and had the help ol
two Chicago errors ror a three-

run

aiJout

.
••

~~~U~EL •
.

:

RICHARDS, CMIN,

c..... TMMNU.

Pllllllthlll ......, lllelll ~ " Tlot
01!11:1 \'-'lb P...blilbh• ec.,a.,, lQ.._
s....
auo, 457ft.
om.
PhoM 111~2118, Edlltr-' l'lloM ftWI ..t
~ •ltu ~ ,iN II ,.;...,,
Ol!k&gt;.
Ntlkq,l ~o~Mrt~•IIW
I•

•-•1'9)'.

•••lliH•

r.-._...
r...

•

•

•.
•
•

•

!iiiiiHrlptlol'! niP: IIIII. . . .
~ IWIII Pll" 11 . . . - , . . ,
Ill .-lwt,.l 11 Thll lllllly lil:&gt;liMI Olliee.lli,IL

:

v......_ Cltr,

NMr

~n.

,
11r earn.

Whtl"l 101il.abl1

S£• monlho, IUO. T11rw ........,,

tui. lit

lillo4or Ko\ohl lllltn IIUritr _.,... .. 1111J.
•tole: Ont -~ tuo. e, .,.., o. ,.,
aJG.IIIl. sb .._..,, IJ-21. n .... - - . ea.tL
illlbwtlpllM. prk-11 Ind-. 1f1111111r ~
I.III"A.

•
•

6" Ovol twin....,. _k,.. JUST$

,
t.

I

•

.
444

inning.

May capped lila ocorlng with
an el&amp;hth lmlng hcmer.
BUI,y . McCool, wbo reUeved
starter George Culver ln the
fourth, was credited with bls
aecofli win in a two-inning per.
lormance ln which he lllowed
two hits and throe runs. Ted
Abernathy ccmpleted the Reds'
pitching efforts.
Jlm Maloney (6-3) wao to hurl
lor Clnclmatl today agalnat tile
CUba' Ferguson Jenkins (:&gt;-7).

~

ZENITII HiGH PRfOIMANa IIANDaAfiiD COI.OI
lV CIIASSII No Printed Circuits! No Poodudlon Short&lt;ulol Handwhod for unriYiled dependability.

••
••

SUNIIIi!NlO COlOI I'ICfUII TUIE for amter pi&lt;Wrt
briP.If!eSI wtth redder reds, briafller peens, 1nd mo;.!
brilil.ril blPATENTID ZINITM COlOII ~TOll OIOJ1111Y
for unsurpmecl ~ p~re.

:..
•
••

Pith A1dlo Cotpot~~tlon WlrNntalhl COlOr picture tuDIIn
tht Zenltl) ~ TV r«etvtrt shown htrt to bt fret from
der.t::rslft iNtlfliM art line from nornt6l uup for two yan
from !Mtt" of orfel...t conaumtr ~rchaM. W.l'ftnty c:onr.
,_.1, of COlor Olctwt tube, ar r.,a.c.ment· With rebUilt ·

•••
••
,,••

The new 118ht-wolilt M Series Rocm Alr ConllUooers wlth patent pondlow Alr SMop,
brine 1111 100 »w cent Exhaust Alr Coutrol. Thla unique feature chulps lila alr In an
over1110 alzed room almost 8 tlmea an hour, once everyel8ftt mlllltes. Moat COIIQIOIItlvo
units Koold lak.t! 40 mltolleo to chulp lila alr just once. GIBSON to Olllra IJI[ot, to

RIDENOUR RADIO &amp; TV

two,..,

•
•••

IANI IA11 PINANCINe

.

•

CHESTER. 0 ...10

ivecy tlme

'' .

INGELS

•

.......

~-

'BoWling Clinic ·

you come i Into
buy 8 sallon• or

our
alation and
ps,
we will give you a ~ or other
flower. These mate
nice bouqueta.
Display a free rose on y&lt;&gt;ur car
an~Jlll and y&lt;&gt;u are In the eon-.
test. We are gl\llng away 2,000,000 tradlns stamps.and $1,000.00

~

thl....,.z...ru• .,.,.....

()pen Fri. I Sat. Nfiilt.
992~t6U '
Mlclclltport

•

S!JN,

. . . F·R·
EE. ROSEl'

•nywhere· oWntr·m.y 1tvt or move; tran.,...Uon. IHir
•net ...... dl•rct~.,. tt1t obllptlon o1
,.plactmtnt t1.1M te .....,.... tor ....
ttnn of'tftl ortclnel
wwnt~~tJ.

••

EXCEPT

G, AB R. H. Pet.
Rose, Cln
56 232 42 83 .358
Flood, St.L
.58 243 37 81 ,333
A.JhnSIL, Cln 54 222 38 74 .333
Aloo; Pll
43 147 13 49 .333
Aloo, Atla
55 236 27 77 .326
Staub, Hou
54 210 22 67 .3!9
Helma, Cln
53 213 16 66 .310
Grote, NY
51 168 15 52 .310
Millan, Alia
56 217 16 65 .300
WUms, Chi
56 228 26 68 .298
American Lea!!ue

:L
. . ·Cw.iRTIFiii Oll~. ~OMPANY

G. AB R. H. Pet.
54 189 29 64 .339
56 210 31 69 .329
Monday, Oak 42 128 12 38 .297
47 187 22 55 ,294
Carew, Min
Horton, Del
50 176 26 51 .290
White, NY
58 204 32 59 .289
Jchnao, Bal
52 176 24 49 .278

Ystrl!kl, Boa
Hwrd, Walh

33; Jobnomt,
::~ Orlolea, Horton, lndlans and
::; lloiCO, YILIIka 31.
~
Pitching
~ National Leap: SOlma, Melo
:$ 8-11; Marlehal, Glanto 11..'1;
~~ Kooaman, Mota 9..'1; Carllllll,

Ml!i!_ ~·

•

.

Po-, 0.

Neb. (UPI)- The
OMAHA,
field in the 22nd annual NCAP
College World Series was to be
cut to six teams today with
either Texas or Brigham Young
players packing their bags._
Both suffered losses in their
first games in the double
elimination tournament Tue&amp;day. Harvard, ·which ab!orbed
two defeats In as many days,
became the first club erased
from further competition.
Other poirlngs today lind st.
John's or New York playing
Nortb carolina State at 5:30
p.m., (CDT) and Oklahoma {jrtate~·
State meeting Southern CaUfor~
nia at 8 p.m. The TexasBrigham Young contest was
scheduled for 2 p.m.
Tuesday was a day oft tor Sl
John's which (llened its series ,ICIB OF IIII!S-t..r.lrS.Idll
action with a 2-0 win over
Harvard Monday, the same day Advance Tickets
North Carolina State registered
~e Purchased From
a 7-6 cOIJle.from-betJ.nd victory
over Southern illinois.
Oklahoma State beat Texas,
1
8-5, aid Southern California
clipped Brigham Young, 5-3, in
the cmtpletion of Orst-round
games Tuesday night.
The Salukis from Southern
llllnois got on the winning track
ClRCUI.
Tuesday with an 11-lnning 2-1
triumph over Harvard.
Ulolar 12 -,..
ADIA.11
SOuthern Celttornia, picked by
most as a slight favorite for the
title, had its hands flll1. with a
NO
tough Brigham Young team.

7he ,..CirCu'P!~~

for t6e nu,.,g!

WILD ANIHAlHelfOitf
HORSES· HiaUerial STA
Astoundlacr"'ACRCIATS·.Roalc
&amp;Rolll&gt;allikt B.Ei&gt;HAifrS

Acltaa$
Ticbts
$1.25

$1.50

Man-Size Comfort! W
Hemmock-Lovnp
/'i'l'-

first pitch and Brooks Robinson
contributed a two-run homer for
the Orioles, who lead tile
Indians by two percentage
points. Rookie Roger Nelsoo
pined his ftrsl major league
victory ln relief.

... the family store and

oowa

Carda 7..'1; Rood, Bra,.• and
:~: IIIIILia, Qlb&amp; 6..2 •

I

American

League:

McLain,

Titera 1..'1; Hardla, Orioltl a.2;

~ ld, Twllll; Boll, Red &amp;II

1111

DIALD

ma
DON &amp; EDNA WILSON, 0.....
....._ • • OWNID , .....,

MIDDLEJIOIT, OHIO

•••••••••t••·••••••••••l•••t••••••••••1••1•1•1•••••

HIGH SCHOOL; RANGES

GAl

'•

·•
I

(eGold Star) Name lnn4s
Completely Auto.-a-W11h A
Brain

I
I
I

M ON SALE aH DISPLAY AT

~:

- . . . . y .... 6..'1; I'Wrai&gt;OIand
~Y,";:~~::~'-'Io'!m.~~~t-=:::::::~:::::.-x:::::=:::::t":».~o!&gt;"?.!«~ Wrlshl, Aapla 5.:1 .

Sill

After Today

nl

33.

Horton Tlpro

Down To Six

. Pomeroy VoluniMr

til rowing error In tile
nth
Inning as the Tigers won the
second game to complete the
sweep.
Jim Price singled in two runs
In the second lnniDg ol the
opener and scored a tlllrd run In
tile fifth on a slngle by winning
pitcher
Pat Dobson. Dean
Chance suffered his eighth
defeat In 12 decisions.
Don Buford homered on the

Amen ean League: Howard,
~ Senator• .t8; Powel1 Ortolea 39;
1

~

NCAA Field

tor
l2Shows_ 2 &amp;8 PM

Scores Oa Error
Tom Matchick scored from
second base on Cesar Tovar's

Hrrllll, Bos
42 138 23 38 .276
Slnlud, Wash 42 133 24 36 .271
58 220 24 59 .268
Oliva, Min
Home Runs
Nation a I Leage: McCOVe;y,
Giants 12; 'Banks, Cubs; Hart
snd Mayo, Glanto ll; Stargall,
Pirates and H. Aaron, Bnt,.s
10.
American
Leqlle:
Howard,
Senators 22; Horton, Tiaers 18;
KDlobrow, Twlno 12; McMtlllen,
Sena1oral Harrelson and Yastrzemlld, Red b 10.
Runl Battod In
Natkleal Le~&amp;Uo: Parez, Reds
39; Mays, GlaDtl,
and
Banka, CUba Uld llonch, Reda

~

14

JUNE

May

the doorw~ to his locker and
the path was framed by an arch
ol baseball bats held alolt by
his teammates.
Tile Detroit Tigers stretched
their American League lead to
4'12 games by sweeping a lwlnight doubleheader from ttle
Minnesota Twins, 3-1 and 3..2,
while Baltimore took over
second by pwrunelling Washington 8-4 while Oakland edged
Cleveland 2..0 in a rain~
shortened game. A doubleheader between Boston and California was postponed by rain.
Pete Ward-also-di=Ove ln three
runs tor the White Sox, who
survived a three-run homer by
Tom Tresh and a tw(H'Uil blast
by Mickey Mantle, the 526111 ~
his career. Joe Horlen, wtth
relief help from Don McMallon
and Wilbur Wood, raised his
reoord to 5-6.

s.mo

~~:;:;~::.::;~-:·~._..._.:::::;::;..;~~~~:;::::,~:;;;:z:::::;;;t:::::J:i:.;:;:{;»!!"!·:;:;:~;;:-.p,·~}N~::-.":~·

color plcturt tubt, ....,.,... anr Mltltortltcf Ztnhh dlatw

••

new Silent Service Aoouatlcll Conotructlon.

WEEKDAYS
Tn.L5P,M.

MEN • L.\iiiFs
MIXED -JUNIORS

i
i

Bl' united Press International
National League

New York (ll.yan 5-4) at Los
Angeles (Drysdale 8-3), ll p.m.
Tbursday•s Games
Clncllllat at Chlcasu
Plltsborgh at San Francisco
St. Lnelst at Atlanta, night
Houston at Pltlladelphla, nlgltt
(Only gameo schdllecl)

SUMMER lU.GIJES

tt .

Leaders

p.m.

For Women· FlEE

New Zenith 2·year color
·pieture lube WGITGIIIy

By JOE GERGEN
UPI Sports Writer
A grand gei119Jre by Russ
Snyder resulted ln still another
by the Chicago White Sox.
Snyder, a veteran oo.tfielder
In his lirat season wlth tile
White Sox, slugged tile llrst
grand slam homer ol hia to.
year career Tuesday night In a
9-5 victory over the New York
Yankees, touching otr a regal
ceremony
in the
Chicago
dressing room.
Snyder, who had !all ed to
drive in a nm. in 36 previous
games, was treated with all the
pomp ot a visiting monarch as
he stepped Into tile clubhouse.
~read before him was a carpet
of white towels stretching from

National Lea&amp;OJe
W. L. Pel. GB
35
23 .603
St. Louis
San Francisco 31 27 .534 4
32 28 .533 4
LOs Ange1es
29 27 .518 5
Atlanta
28 27 .509 51h
Clnclmati
25 26 .490 61h
Phlllldelphla
27 29 .482 7
Chicago
26
29 . 473 71h
New York
22 30 .423 10
Pltlsburgb
23 32 .418 IO'h
Houston
Tuesday's ReBUlts
ClnclnnaU 9 Chicago 7
Hooston 5 Pltlla l, nlgbt
St. Lnels 6 Atlanta o, nlgbt
New York 3 Los Ang 0, nJgbt
Plttaburgh 7 San Fran 4, nJgbt
TodU' a Probable Pitchers
(All Time• EDT)
Clnclmatl (Maloney 6-3) at
Chicago (Jenkins 5-7), 2:30 p.m.
St. Louis (Briles 7-4) at
AUanta (Jarvis 5-4), 8 p.m.
Plttaburgb (Blass 2..2 or
McBean 5-S) at San Francisco
(Perry 6-3), 4 p.m .
Hooaton (Wlii!OIL
4-7) at
Phlladelphia (Short 3-7), 7:30

-

PLUS

were willing to go ahead.
Braves Manager Luman Harris was delighted with the
trade. He had been a coach at
Baltimore when Pappas, now
29, joined the Orioles as an IS.
year-old prospect.
"He's always been a late
starter each year," Harris said
"H~ had a bad spring last year,
yet wour.t up with 16 wins. I
just hope it holds true again
this year since he can really
help us. ••
To get Pappas, the Braves
adml tteclly took a gamble on
Cloninger. The ace of the
Braves In 1965 when he won 24
games, the 27-year-old Cionl•
ger has been plagued by
in).uies the past couple or
years. He was only 4-7 in 1967
and 1-3 so rar this year.
Pappas was 2--5 with the Reds
this spring. But his lifetime
record is 140-I03 and before
being traded to Clncirua.tl after
the 1965 season, he set Oriole
records for victories (110),
shutouts (26) and complete
games (82),

After First Grand Slam

York (Peterson 3..2), 8 p.m.
Calllornta (Murphy 0.0 Uld
Bnmet 5~) at Boston (Cutp 2-2
Uld Senttasu 7-3), 2, 5:30p.m.
Tbur sda,y' s Games
Minnesota at Detroit
Oakland at Cleveland
Calitornia at Boston
(Only games scheduled)

- ~-

mv

Snyder Gets Treatment

C~cago (Peters 3-6) at New

DETROIT (UPD- F.IIJM. lfod.
dox, . the Bll Ten'alaa411N1111•
tills ••""" lfiDtad · Tuudaf
wltll the Detrctlt Tlpro.

"I 'Jhould hne li&amp;ttned when
you Maid you threw nothinxbul sinker balls!"

p.m.

REDUCED RATES

- .

tHoosl ZENRH /Y~r Best Color TV Buy I

Mo,. effecthe ·
with
Dreft·f,.e
Air Sweep

Tuesday's Resu.Jts
Detroit 3 Mlml, 1st, lwlilgbt
Detroit 3 Mlnn 2, 2nd, night
Oak 2 Cle 0, 2 Ins., rain, night
Chicago 9 New York 5, nll!hl
Baltimore 8 Washington 4, night
Calli al Boston, 2, ppd., rain
Today's Probable Pitchers
{All Times EDT)
Minnesota
(Kaat
~)
at
Detroit (Lollch 4.:1), 8 p.m.
Oaklllld
(Odom
5-4) at
Cleveland (llargan 4.,\), 7:30
p.m.
Baltimore (POOebus 5-S) at
Washington (!Iannan l-11), 8:05

BOWLING
MASON-BOWING CENTER

~

"

M-SEIIES

=

Tile GAINSIOAGUGH • YfSI2W
Comp.ct tllble model television. Vinyl did metal cabinet
in ar•ined W•rnul color. Super Video ltanle Tunina Syttem.

111

tJ• a,, ""'

tlMUioGIIIqhlr, lnc., U

ATLANTA (UP0- The Clt&gt;cinnad Reds have resolved their
feud with pitcher Milt PllJ)pas
by trading the controverslal
righthander
to the Atlanta
Braves.
The Reds and Braves pulled
ofi a six-player deal Tuesday
night that
brings
Pappas,
lefthaOOed reliever Ted Davidson and veteran utili!)' infielder
Bob Johnson to Atlanta in
exchange for rl'ghthanded pitchers Ton,y Cloninger and Clll,y
carroll and former second
baseman Woody Woedward.
Pappas was traded less than
72 hoors after he resigned as
the Reds' player represerU.tive
following an argument because
the Reds decided to go ahead
with their Saturday nlgllt game
with st. Louis even though Sen.
Robert F, Kennedy's burial
hadn't taken place.
Pappas was the spokesman
for a group or players who
wanterl to wait but who agreed
to play after Reds' Manager
Dave Bristol found ni'ne who

1Arr7' -

.SIGN DRAFT

FRI.

wntroversial
Pappas Traded

Standings

Woodward.
141 had been talldng about beIng traded and Wall.\ed 1&lt;1 be
traded aJkl I'm glad .to leave,"
said Pappas before the Reds
went out and smashed the Chi~
cago CUbs 9-7 ln so 18-hil attack.
Howsam 'Pleased'
uwe're pleased with the trade
am lee! both Cloninger Uld
Carroll wlll be a tremen;lous asset to our pitching staff," sal.d

Brigham Yoiull'a
De)' ln tho ef&amp;hth.

the Cubs. The lour Rlllll runs wltll a pair ol singles to
Pltt.sburs!t post San
boosted his Natl0111l League poce
leading llgure to 39. Redo' Franclseo. Roberto Clemente
reliever Bllly McCool the hit hls eighth homer' lor the
Pirates In the olxth lmlng to tie
game.
Dick Selma boosted hla record the game 3-3 and start a fourto 6.0 wltll a llve-hltter as tile run rally that de&lt;:[ded things.
Meta turned back the Dodgers. Rm Kline, 4-l, took the victory
Bill Mazeroskl. drove in three in relief.

very

lARGEST PIOURE
IN COMPACT
ZENITH TABLE TV

tlree.rnlso·:
;
San Francisco Mayor J o Alioto said any
turned "':
would oot be lra~ed for crlmOo
delectlon purpoaea, but ...Wei:
be destroyed. Some '12 ....,m.;:

•
,.

ls

ENJOY
COlOR TV's

Collect Firearms
Several cities armounced ''n(
Cl-Jest.lons asked." invitations for'
citizens 'to turn 1n thetlt

,

lt

At lngelsl

stowe&lt;i

ME!Cs..IIIASON .lii:A

American Lea&amp;ll8 lead to 4'1.!
games by sweeping Mlnnesola
••
3-1 and 3-2, Oakland blanked
He conclllded,
I just went .. Cleveland 2-11 ln a game halted
out there to play ball today, tr s by rain In tile beth lnniDg
1
all over. There are some things Chl
topped N
y k 9.s'
to be said that are best unaaid. n and C:umore bla~ :asl·ling~
ton 8-4. The Calllornla-Boston
Aapromonte started tllo segame was rained out.
cond lnniDg rall,y with a walk.
St. Lnels stretched Ill NationJulie Golay's single, Jom
al Lea&amp;OJe lead by winning Its
Bateman'a double, Larry Dierk1oth stralgbt game !rom atlanta
er•• single and Ron DaviS1
over. the past two seasons. Bob
aaeritlce fly produced tbree
Gibson set down the Drives on
runs and after Denis Menke
llve hits to gain his sixth
walked Staub doubled ln the
victory in 11 decisions.
final two niDI,
Tony Perez highlighted an 18Cincinnati attack wltll two
hll
Dierker pitched a seven-hitter
slngles and a homer to drive ln
to pick up the victory,
four
runs and pace the rout ot
Elsewhere In the Natonsl
League,
St. Lnelo blanked
Atlanta 6-11, Cincinnati ootlaated
Chicago 9-7, New York shut out
Los Angeles 3-11 and Pittsburgh By United Press International
outolugged sin Francisco 7-4.
American League
Tigers Win Two
W, L. Pel. GB
In tile American League, tile Detroit
37 20 .649
Detroit Tigers slratched tllelr Baltimore
32 24 .571 4lh
33 25 .569 4'h
Cleveland
28 29 .491 9
26 38 .581 9'h
26 29 .473 10
26 32 .4411 ll'h
New York
24 30 .444 ll'h
Chicago
25 32 .439 12
Calllornia
24 32 . 429 l2'h
Washington
country'
ll'atltying. tJ

the

But tho Trojans brolol!lllll a J.
I deadlock ln tho aotinlll ...
lour 1'111(8, more thol1 ,....., IIi
wlthoillll 1 twCH'LIIL hclner 111

On, Off Field

••

Pappas Happy,Bob Howsam~E~
Pleased, Reds Hit- Happy

r-------------------------·
GIBSON

PHONE 915-3301

.

Who also refUsed to . plll,y,
received · telegrams from' KenneRust)' staub haa class- both d.Y'a pre as secretary, FranK
'"' and otl the lleld.
Manldewtcz, which thanked
· &amp;mday, for stalib was a ttme tllem lor tllelr public display~
kl mourn, and Tuesday was a oympatey, Mut Pappai ol the
lime to play agaln, He dld botll Reda, jaqt traded to the Bravea,
Udngs wltll ~ grace,
Maury Wills ol the Pirates and
·· S:ta. who was flned a dey's the New York Mets received
111.1'- about 11250- b)' Hooaton lor telegrams, too.
B~ng out &amp;mday'a game in
Message Commends Action
deference to the memory of
The telegram aald. "Pluae
Son. Robert F. KOiliiOdy, made accept my peroonal admiration
a spectacular return to the for your actions. .Senator
Aatros' lineup Tuesday nlgtrt, Kennedy
loved
,.,_t~Uve
He stroked a two-rnn dooble to oporto but I doobt that he would
Climax a five-run second lmlng have put box..otfice receipts
lrhlch lifted tile Astros to a 5-l ahead ol national ...,rn1ng
victory over tile Phlladslphla under any circumstances."
Philo.
Aller Tuesday nlgbt'o game,
General Manager ~· Rich- Staub seld, ''I was pleased Uld
ardson o1 the Astros had honored today lo receive tile
ordered tile team to play telegram !rom the Kennedys.
&amp;mclay deaplte tile protell ol
u1 loved that man and that
the players, claiming, "Kem~ lamlly Uld lelt very deep In
would have wanted us to play!' here (he tapped his heart)
But on 'IUesday, . both Staub about it. I have received calls
and teammate Bob Aspromonte, and gotten letters from all over

before Ray Ia bundled aboard ~

Gun~' Law

Staub Has Class
By VlrO llrEL LINO
UP! ~rts Writer

\U

minority liberal faction, means
all 104 votes will go to
whichever candidate a majority
or the delegates favor when
the,)l are released by COnnally'
The governor has no presidential aspiration, but has lef't the
door open to considering second
spot on the party ticket. '
Before the Texans acted
Tuesday. Hwnphrey had 6621.~
delegate votes, based on com·
mitrnents or preferences of
state delegations. He needs
1,312 to secure the nomination.
Other developments:
Eugene J, McCarthy- The Ml1&gt;
nesota Democrat conferred with
President Johnson at the White
House for about 40 minutes
Tuesday. He lett unobserved.
and the White House declined
comment on the talk.
McCarthy was holding a n....--ws
conference in Washington later saniQ&gt;."
today.

3 - The Daily Sentinel~ Mldd.Ieport-Pomeray, June 12, 1968

:H&amp;
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THI$1$ PO$$/BLE BECAUSE OF FOODLAND'$ POLICY OF LOWER PRICE$ ON NAME BRAND - - - - 6ROCERIE$. NOT JII$T AFEW COME-ON SPECIAL$, BUT THOUSAND$ OF .
EVERYDAY LOW PRICE$ EVERV DAY OF THE WEEK, 52 WEEK$ A VEAR.
WHEN VOU MAkE THE 816 CHAN6E TO FOODLAND VOUIL DISCOVER HOW
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fULL OUAIT

NYlON
OUART

SAVEl

DEL MONTE

32 oz. CAN

· 1/2 GAL.
PLASTIC CARTON

SALT &amp; PEPPER .

FATHER'S DAY GIFf

SHAKERS

· WHOLE KERNEL OR CREAMED

CORN
I lB. CAll

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COMPARE!

EVERYDAY LOW PRICES

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BASKETS
BAYERS
ASPIRINS
100 TABLETS
PEPSODENT
TOOTHPASTE
KING SIZE
BLACK &amp; DECKER

HElD &amp;
SHOULDERS
FlMIL'Y SIZE .
TUBES

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THI$1$ PO$$/BLE BECAUSE OF FOODLAND'$ POLICY OF LOWER PRICE$ ON NAME BRAND - - - - 6ROCERIE$. NOT JII$T AFEW COME-ON SPECIAL$, BUT THOUSAND$ OF .
EVERYDAY LOW PRICE$ EVERV DAY OF THE WEEK, 52 WEEK$ A VEAR.
WHEN VOU MAkE THE 816 CHAN6E TO FOODLAND VOUIL DISCOVER HOW
TO CUT
DOLLAR$ EACH WEEJ(.
·i

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'

'

7\f'"

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99
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'

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ALARGE
S~LECTION

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SAW

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95
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CHARCOAl
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LISTERIN£
MOUTHWASH

lll\lS

fULL OUAIT

NYlON
OUART

SAVEl

DEL MONTE

32 oz. CAN

· 1/2 GAL.
PLASTIC CARTON

SALT &amp; PEPPER .

FATHER'S DAY GIFf

SHAKERS

· WHOLE KERNEL OR CREAMED

CORN
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�6 - The Dolly Sentli.el. Mktdteport.l'omeroy, June 12, !968

Mason Board Refuses Salary Increase .Asked By Sayre
MAXI~WAL

By
TERS
POINT PLEASANT - It coold
hiVe been the heat.
But plainly it was the natural
course that the administration of
9chools awear to follow in West
VirginiL
Whatever the root, tempers
ro5e near the end of a three and
one half hour meeting or Ute Mason County Board of Education
Tuesday nlghL The immediate
cause was the question or whether or not Ralph Slyre, supervisor of instruction, should be
re-employed at an annual salary of $10,500. He wanted $11,000.
The employment of So,yre at
the said salAry was recommended by Supt. L Brooks Smith, who
was sbsent last night, and Asst.
Supt. Dorsey Scott, but prior to
the recommendation being put in
form or a motion,S&amp;yreaskedthe
board members to raise his salary to $11,000 and Bill Howard.

boar&lt;i member, stated he was in
fawr ot the raise. This actlon
was turned down by the bQard
for the lack of a motion tOibat
effect.
Sayre was then IBked by the
board to give a progress r..,t
he had prepared ror pr8sentalion last ntgtlt. Sayre replied
that before he gave the report
he would like to kniJW' just whore
he stood In employment. He was
informed by board president Earl
Keefer that he was already employed in the school system by
reason or tenure. Sayre said.

"Yes, as a teacher but oot as
~rviaor of Jnatructlonr••
SQre was then told to give his
reportashadbeenscheduled,and
sayre proceeded with the progreSB reporL But upon ftnishing
it he asked the bolrd again to go
back and take up his employment
question. He said he would be
willire to accept the Supervisor
position at the recommended salary. Howsrd moved the! So,yrebe
hired as SUpervisor at the $10,500
salary, with Ted steveru!l secOIJi..
ing the motion.
Earl Keeter 11tated at this point
he coold not go alqwlththem,_
tlon, because of the dissention,
ond board member Harry Siders
stated he did not care for Mr.
Slyre's attitude towardgivingthe
report unleu the board passed
the motion to hire him.
Elza Meadows, St, a ratlve of
When the hiring was brought
Masoo County, died Tuesday at to a vote it was defeated, with
the home of hls 8011 in Mason Keefer, Dr. Leonard Brown and
Collllty following 1 long illness. Siders voting no.
Mr. Meadows is survived by
Another controversial matter
four daughters, Mrs. R F. Par- was the request of PPHS pri~
malee, Middleporti Mrs. Susie dpal Charles Withers to the
Duering, In Cormectlcuti Mrs. board to appoint Charles ChamAlva Caldwell, Florida, and Mrs. bers as SUpervJsor of the SumAgnes Chrlstian; Huntlngtoo; two mer School with his salary to be
sons, Pete Meadows, Ohio River the state basic, plus experience,
Road, andWesleyMeadow..s,Glen- with board member Dr. Leonard
Brown protesting again and again
wood~ W. va., and one sIster,
Angelina Cremeans, Huntington. against Chambers being superFuneral services will be held visor and receiving more salary
Thursday at z:ao p.m. at the than the other teachers hired for
Palestine Church in Mason Coull- the program.
ty with burial in the Meadows
Principal Withers explained
Fa.rnily cemetery. Friends may
that the other teachers would be
call at the Chapman Funeral paid $4 per hour for four hours of
Home in Huntington Wednesday teaching each day but Chambers
until time of services.
would be teaching and also s~
enlsing theprogramwhichwould
require an extra four hOW's and
he (Withers) did not have the time
to supervise the summer pr~
gram with all the other matters
he had to attend to.
..,.;
Finally, after much discussion, the board chose to hire the
PI'. PLEASANT-Orderulrn- tescllers for the summer proed by the Mason Coullty Circuli
ani table the matter of a
COurt entered In the o!lleo ol gram
supervisor.
the Circuit Clerk were: 1n the
Teachers hired were Molly
criminal sctloo o( Slate of West Park, typing; Lajens Harper,
Virginia ex rel va. James E.
English; Russell Wood, Ameri-·
Slover it was ordered that the
can History; Jack Crank, drivdefendant James E. Stover Js
ers education; Charles Chamnot guilty or being lather of
Rosemary Curtla, according to bers, critic teacher in biology;
Richard Austin, chemistry aOO
blood grouping test reports.
critic l'n Algebra.
Judgment was granted t h e
Another item ontheagendalast
plainWr, Mason County llellk, In
night bringing much discussion
the sum of $364.73 wlllt Interest
and er:Dlng in a split vote Was the
and costs from tho defendant
placing of Olin Hill as principal
Frances Swartz in a civil action.
The divorce action of Estella
Grimes vs. Wilson Georp
Grimes was ordered dismissed.

Elza Meadows
Dies Tuesday

Grand Jury
'

Indicts 7

Persons
POINT PLEASANT- Ten indict" wta were returned by the
Masoo County Circuit Court
grand jury Tuesday In Circuli
Court. Of the ten, flv11 were CeJonies and five were ml sdemeanors involving seven persons.
Robert E. Henry, Pl Pleasant, was indicted on three fel ony charges and was named also
In two other joint Indictments.
Henry was indicted for breakIng and entering of &amp;mnyslde
School and taking merthandlse
valued at $103.90; breaking and
entering ol Beale School and
taking merchandise valued at $70;
and breaking and entering ol
Lloyd Casto Grocery and takIng goods valued at $69.25. Henry was also named in a joint
indictment with James Ray
Cheesebrew, Pt:. Pleasant, chargIng breaking and entering of
~'a Texaco and taking goods
Wued at $350; ond am!her iolnt
£dlctment with Ml!lsrd Greenlee, breaking and enterjng of
Wood S.:hool ond taking goods
valued at $100.
Indictments
Misdemeanor
were returned against Mlles
Darst, Masoo County COnservation Ol!lcer, charging brandishIng a weaJ)OII and lltreatenlng tho
bread&gt; of peace by !lrlng It Into
a tractor driven by Charles C.
Stone; Ned Lsmbert and Kate
Lsmbert, brandishing a weapon
ond threatening to shoot one Douglas Mitchelli James &amp;over, contributing to the delinquency of a
· Jninor; Kate Lambert, trespassIng and Carl Barnet!, assault and
battery on Hadle Young.
Per1011s indicted by Tuesday's
grand jury are scheduled to report to court oo Thersday at
9:30 a.m. to answer their tn..
&lt;llctments.
The grand jury was dismiss~
ed following lltolr Wiles Tuesday but are IIUI&gt;Ject to recall lUItil July I.

Orders Signed

By Mason Court

COUPLES TO WED
PI'. PLEASANT - Three ewplea have made applications ror
marriage licenses in the om.ce
of the county clerk.
Aw~ were KeMeth Eugene
Dougherty, 46, Parkersbura, and
Ann Sue Townsell:~, 31, Leon.
Charles Riley Arderaon. 19,
Mason, ond Nancy Lor- Pickens, 17, Mason.
Robert Mason Bush, Jr., 21,
Pomeroy, 0,, and Patty Ann
LeUhedt, 18, Pomeroy, 0.

of Beech HUl S.:hool, the transfer

of WUfred Dingess as principal
of Beech IIUI to prlncllJBl of Sun..
JU'Side SChool, and transfer of
Revada Di~ss, a teacher at
Beech HUl, to Beale School
Ted Stevena, board member,
stated he could see no reason
to place HUI at Beech Hill am
transfer Dingess when everythlng
had been rWUling well at the
school during the past term. Stevens and Bill Howard voted no
on the matters but Earl Keeter,
Harry Siders and Dr. Brown
voted yes, so the Jt)acement and
transfers were granted.
Unanimous approval of the
board was given to the following:
Swnmer Recreationa.J. Pr~
gram and SchOOule from Ha&amp;
nan HlJdl, PPHS and Wahama
High School; Summer Band
Program and schedule · for all
three county hlgh schools; Home
Economics Smnmer Program
and Schedule and Vocatlonal-Agricultural &amp;unmer programs and
Schedule for all three county high
schoolsi confirming of payment
or $300 to C. L. Head !or extra
duties as chorus director at
PPHS and payment of $300 to
Jack Rogers Cor baseball coach-ing duties at PPHS; transfer of
tiUe of Bus No.1, 1954lnterna~
tiona! to Lakin State Hospital at
no cost to Lakin.
Teachers hlred for the 1968-69
school year were: Mildred D.
Hart, Roosevelt Schoolj Howard
Cole. special education; Paul
Powell, Wahama Jr. and Sr. High;
Martin Leon Hall, Wahama Jr.
and Sr. Highi William W. Webb, ·
Jr., PL Pleasant High Schooli
Jimmy Lee C&amp;rpenter. Pt. Pleasant Jr. High.
Title I ESEA Personnel hired
effective July 1wereBiHySteele,
director, $850 per month; Jean
Baker, SOcial Referral Worker,
$450 per month; Barbara Steele,
Nurse, $450 per month; Betty

$325 per month. ESEA Title I
Teacher-Aides hired were R8becca Louise Withrow, Mary K.
Boyle, Sandra Reynolds, Shella
Raye Smith.
Other school personnel hired
were Frank Darst, maintenance
carpenter and mason, salary$500
per monthj Lowell Cook, VocaUonal Supervisor, saluy *10,500
per yeari Edison Prunl;y, Utilley
man, salary $4,422 per year;
Maxine Lathey, substitute secrelary in the board office, at a
salary of$300permonth,andVlr..
gil Sider.s hired as principal at
Hannan High School.
The request of former Mason
Coonty SUJ)erlntendento!S.:hools,
Milton Burdette. who Will hired
prevtwaly and placed as a teacher at pt. Pleasant Jr. High, tobe
considered for the position of
principal at Sunnyside Sehool was
ignored by the board.
The board denied the request
of PPHS principal Charles Withers to employ Mrs. Violet Gerlach for an additional two weeks
ss guidance counselor and also
that Richard Ware be used by
Withers in counseling for one-half
day ror two weeks. Ware Is ~m­
ployed as a sununer recreational
director and is paid from these
funds.
Alice Bartley was hired as
a teacher for the Head Start Summer program at Mason Elementary SChool.
Resignations accepted by the

2-Hour

board were: Te.lchera, Ann v..
ger, Maurice Mayes, I.Jrda Pet..
trey, Ruth . Sawyers, Patrtcla
Kirk, Geraldine Steele, Jop
Thomas, Madelyn selton, Clarence Morton. Edgar 'lbaxton,
Tina SimCiltoO. Edward Garten
and Thelma Watterson. other
resigmtions aecepted were: Karen Brown, Head start Teacher at
Mason; Jerri Neal, Title I Sum• mer prosram; Dorothy Mltehell,
Guidance Counselor at Pt. Pleas..
ant Jr. Hlghi Molly Park, Slntlra
Pickena and Nancy Somenllle,
teachers in the summer program.
Title I; Ruth Wllliamson, school
secretary; Warren Stewart, Leon
school custodian; Geraldloe
Gibbs, New Haven school cook;

Edison Mayes, Jr. bus driver.
Lea~ of absences were granted
to Cllrolyn Heuon, a teacher at
New Haven School and Barbara
L8wls, •cher at PL Pleasant
Jr. High.
Board members approved stipell:ls for Title I ESEA RemedJal
Reading School - WVU
branch - Kanawha Valley Graduate School, Nitro, for the fol).,.!ng teachers, stipend $75 per
month; Mary Lee Powell, Rebec..
ca Buckner, Helen sterrett, Katie
smith, Retadl Dingess aiXI Faye
Smith and also approvedpaymfnt
to Roher! straight for teachlng
YOUng Fanner Class, Adult
Farmer Class and Special Adell
Class, tota1 $715 whlchis100per

Mayes, Mary
secretary,
$350~~pe;r~~===
month;
Van Horn,
Clerk,

,.._, - · crow" ...,d Cl')"flfl ••• •niKI.

IW. will ecllj~ll'lltlHJIIiiiiiO lhlt tol•,.nc:•. tF n..cetw••· Gulflnt• il fOI- filii,_.

Harvest nme Sliced

Lunch Meat

PICNICS

BACON

Next DOor to E1berfelcls

'

lb.

Sirloin lip

Sirloin Tip

ROASt.99C

ST

bRisS soacs

lb.

DONUTS
pkg.

Sandwich Spread-----------3~.~ 49e
.
KlAFT
llackere[_______________: ·
COOKING

'

%" &amp; l•'Widtfls

Kids!

Anorted Pltterns

s 00

$. '99

Grape
Jelly·--------~-----·
2
Planten
1
Peanut Butter.------------ ~.~ 49e

99·

I

·, . i

()tl.'f

~niel

691-"

TO
CE
~= 1.00

/JepartmMt

Wellesley Farm
1/2 gal.
carton
EVERYDAY LOW PRICB

BUY ONE
AND GeT
1 FREEfl

lb.

Popcor•---------------------~19e

Glllette_stelnletl St.-i''

Food

ICE

3-o

Boone

IGA Fine Quality

PRICE!

Fudgesickles,Popsickles 6.,.c~c29~

2

Alum lnu m Foil.------------· !:·2se
.C1ke, Brownie, Corn MuHin, P•nake

Duffs Mixes---------------- box 10e

Mens Custno. Selt
White Work Sox

4""aae

PEPSI

8
ORANGE
10oz.

bots.

SHOE STORE
..

·

1-lb.
an

STOKELY ·

Royal Gelatin_____________ 2 m':17e
Delmonico
l-lb.J e
9
Spaghetti ·------------------ box

&amp;lq V•lu.r .

. onfy

RINSO i
GIANT SIZE 59C

Folger s Coffee. ._.;.__________
-

For Desltrts &amp; S.llds
.

s oo·
·SPORT S"IRTS

=· 35C

I!

Regul•r or Drip

8 Pldrfor

Pel!tl• Prea

TISS~E

l I '4

HANDKERCHIEFS

••

iWiL"oOi~ r·--iili-N"Ew·---~

II

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·swiM TRUNIS

s:

box

1
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Sires A-a.e.D

Mefts Demv 8r1nd

29'

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Kpftl'ii,;

Bleck or Brown

Kids!

Chocolate
White
Etc.

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.-PAJAMAS·

·tow

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lb.39

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French Style

,,,.

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SMOIED

S.ladBowl

/Make the most of those bright vacation tlays ahead. Spend 'em in Kedsthe better fitting. longer lasting,
sharper looking sneakers Jhat are
America's favorite footwear. Keds
are the perfect vacation pals-wherever you go, whatever the action.

.

Slle,.•'s S,.CIII S.CIItr's

•.,..

$ 99.

BOSTON BELTS

'

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3 ....k

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111~s. hm·m ·m ·m.

•

Robinson's aeaners

d

v

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t

W. MAIN

NCh

ACCUTROtf' tw BULOYA

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SHULERS MARKO

,$ 99·
Or aain.
We'll gin you that Kunantee When yoo buy an Accutran" time ·
piece. It'll be accurate to within a minute a month.t An averaee of
two seconds a da)'. Other watches have their own notions lbout how
long a day should last. Sometimes they shorten it to 23 hours loll'ld 56
minutes. Or mille it last Joni[er !han the usulf 24 flours. Accutron
doesn't believe in malin&amp; lime. Or losi'!i it. Just keepina it.

I

I

Our Usu•l Good Cltenlng

See Our Super
Summer

1\llfllttll 11111.

• Bennucll OnloM e

'
...- ...• ·'

Beer

June i6

OWN

WAlKING SHORTS

$ 00 ...

Ask us for details. Just
fill in an Entry blllii when
you visit our store. No purchase
is necessary. Need not be present to win.

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

OUR

-

FlWIT 0t= THELOOM

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

PACK

(UPON REQUEST)

WIN A KEDS
BLAZON
CUBE CLIMBING
TOWER

Here's A Special W1y to Rernember Hlml

WE

Men's F*nw ,_. '

GIFT NECK Tl8

I

Day
Sunday,

-OHIO

DRY ClEANING
SERVICE

FREE!

g

Father's

cent relmbursed by the Division
or Vocational Education.
The next regularmeetlrwofthe
board Is scheduled lor June 27
at 7:30 p. .m.

• •

Priced
For

ea .•

Molh'a Hearla«
Moths have such highly developed hearing organs that
they can hear the supersonic
impulses emitted by bats,
and thus survive being eaten
by them.
· (

I

.

We Accept Federal Food Stamps

I
I
I
I

�6 - The Dolly Sentli.el. Mktdteport.l'omeroy, June 12, !968

Mason Board Refuses Salary Increase .Asked By Sayre
MAXI~WAL

By
TERS
POINT PLEASANT - It coold
hiVe been the heat.
But plainly it was the natural
course that the administration of
9chools awear to follow in West
VirginiL
Whatever the root, tempers
ro5e near the end of a three and
one half hour meeting or Ute Mason County Board of Education
Tuesday nlghL The immediate
cause was the question or whether or not Ralph Slyre, supervisor of instruction, should be
re-employed at an annual salary of $10,500. He wanted $11,000.
The employment of So,yre at
the said salAry was recommended by Supt. L Brooks Smith, who
was sbsent last night, and Asst.
Supt. Dorsey Scott, but prior to
the recommendation being put in
form or a motion,S&amp;yreaskedthe
board members to raise his salary to $11,000 and Bill Howard.

boar&lt;i member, stated he was in
fawr ot the raise. This actlon
was turned down by the bQard
for the lack of a motion tOibat
effect.
Sayre was then IBked by the
board to give a progress r..,t
he had prepared ror pr8sentalion last ntgtlt. Sayre replied
that before he gave the report
he would like to kniJW' just whore
he stood In employment. He was
informed by board president Earl
Keefer that he was already employed in the school system by
reason or tenure. Sayre said.

"Yes, as a teacher but oot as
~rviaor of Jnatructlonr••
SQre was then told to give his
reportashadbeenscheduled,and
sayre proceeded with the progreSB reporL But upon ftnishing
it he asked the bolrd again to go
back and take up his employment
question. He said he would be
willire to accept the Supervisor
position at the recommended salary. Howsrd moved the! So,yrebe
hired as SUpervisor at the $10,500
salary, with Ted steveru!l secOIJi..
ing the motion.
Earl Keeter 11tated at this point
he coold not go alqwlththem,_
tlon, because of the dissention,
ond board member Harry Siders
stated he did not care for Mr.
Slyre's attitude towardgivingthe
report unleu the board passed
the motion to hire him.
Elza Meadows, St, a ratlve of
When the hiring was brought
Masoo County, died Tuesday at to a vote it was defeated, with
the home of hls 8011 in Mason Keefer, Dr. Leonard Brown and
Collllty following 1 long illness. Siders voting no.
Mr. Meadows is survived by
Another controversial matter
four daughters, Mrs. R F. Par- was the request of PPHS pri~
malee, Middleporti Mrs. Susie dpal Charles Withers to the
Duering, In Cormectlcuti Mrs. board to appoint Charles ChamAlva Caldwell, Florida, and Mrs. bers as SUpervJsor of the SumAgnes Chrlstian; Huntlngtoo; two mer School with his salary to be
sons, Pete Meadows, Ohio River the state basic, plus experience,
Road, andWesleyMeadow..s,Glen- with board member Dr. Leonard
Brown protesting again and again
wood~ W. va., and one sIster,
Angelina Cremeans, Huntington. against Chambers being superFuneral services will be held visor and receiving more salary
Thursday at z:ao p.m. at the than the other teachers hired for
Palestine Church in Mason Coull- the program.
ty with burial in the Meadows
Principal Withers explained
Fa.rnily cemetery. Friends may
that the other teachers would be
call at the Chapman Funeral paid $4 per hour for four hours of
Home in Huntington Wednesday teaching each day but Chambers
until time of services.
would be teaching and also s~
enlsing theprogramwhichwould
require an extra four hOW's and
he (Withers) did not have the time
to supervise the summer pr~
gram with all the other matters
he had to attend to.
..,.;
Finally, after much discussion, the board chose to hire the
PI'. PLEASANT-Orderulrn- tescllers for the summer proed by the Mason Coullty Circuli
ani table the matter of a
COurt entered In the o!lleo ol gram
supervisor.
the Circuit Clerk were: 1n the
Teachers hired were Molly
criminal sctloo o( Slate of West Park, typing; Lajens Harper,
Virginia ex rel va. James E.
English; Russell Wood, Ameri-·
Slover it was ordered that the
can History; Jack Crank, drivdefendant James E. Stover Js
ers education; Charles Chamnot guilty or being lather of
Rosemary Curtla, according to bers, critic teacher in biology;
Richard Austin, chemistry aOO
blood grouping test reports.
critic l'n Algebra.
Judgment was granted t h e
Another item ontheagendalast
plainWr, Mason County llellk, In
night bringing much discussion
the sum of $364.73 wlllt Interest
and er:Dlng in a split vote Was the
and costs from tho defendant
placing of Olin Hill as principal
Frances Swartz in a civil action.
The divorce action of Estella
Grimes vs. Wilson Georp
Grimes was ordered dismissed.

Elza Meadows
Dies Tuesday

Grand Jury
'

Indicts 7

Persons
POINT PLEASANT- Ten indict" wta were returned by the
Masoo County Circuit Court
grand jury Tuesday In Circuli
Court. Of the ten, flv11 were CeJonies and five were ml sdemeanors involving seven persons.
Robert E. Henry, Pl Pleasant, was indicted on three fel ony charges and was named also
In two other joint Indictments.
Henry was indicted for breakIng and entering of &amp;mnyslde
School and taking merthandlse
valued at $103.90; breaking and
entering ol Beale School and
taking merchandise valued at $70;
and breaking and entering ol
Lloyd Casto Grocery and takIng goods valued at $69.25. Henry was also named in a joint
indictment with James Ray
Cheesebrew, Pt:. Pleasant, chargIng breaking and entering of
~'a Texaco and taking goods
Wued at $350; ond am!her iolnt
£dlctment with Ml!lsrd Greenlee, breaking and enterjng of
Wood S.:hool ond taking goods
valued at $100.
Indictments
Misdemeanor
were returned against Mlles
Darst, Masoo County COnservation Ol!lcer, charging brandishIng a weaJ)OII and lltreatenlng tho
bread&gt; of peace by !lrlng It Into
a tractor driven by Charles C.
Stone; Ned Lsmbert and Kate
Lsmbert, brandishing a weapon
ond threatening to shoot one Douglas Mitchelli James &amp;over, contributing to the delinquency of a
· Jninor; Kate Lambert, trespassIng and Carl Barnet!, assault and
battery on Hadle Young.
Per1011s indicted by Tuesday's
grand jury are scheduled to report to court oo Thersday at
9:30 a.m. to answer their tn..
&lt;llctments.
The grand jury was dismiss~
ed following lltolr Wiles Tuesday but are IIUI&gt;Ject to recall lUItil July I.

Orders Signed

By Mason Court

COUPLES TO WED
PI'. PLEASANT - Three ewplea have made applications ror
marriage licenses in the om.ce
of the county clerk.
Aw~ were KeMeth Eugene
Dougherty, 46, Parkersbura, and
Ann Sue Townsell:~, 31, Leon.
Charles Riley Arderaon. 19,
Mason, ond Nancy Lor- Pickens, 17, Mason.
Robert Mason Bush, Jr., 21,
Pomeroy, 0,, and Patty Ann
LeUhedt, 18, Pomeroy, 0.

of Beech HUl S.:hool, the transfer

of WUfred Dingess as principal
of Beech IIUI to prlncllJBl of Sun..
JU'Side SChool, and transfer of
Revada Di~ss, a teacher at
Beech HUl, to Beale School
Ted Stevena, board member,
stated he could see no reason
to place HUI at Beech Hill am
transfer Dingess when everythlng
had been rWUling well at the
school during the past term. Stevens and Bill Howard voted no
on the matters but Earl Keeter,
Harry Siders and Dr. Brown
voted yes, so the Jt)acement and
transfers were granted.
Unanimous approval of the
board was given to the following:
Swnmer Recreationa.J. Pr~
gram and SchOOule from Ha&amp;
nan HlJdl, PPHS and Wahama
High School; Summer Band
Program and schedule · for all
three county hlgh schools; Home
Economics Smnmer Program
and Schedule and Vocatlonal-Agricultural &amp;unmer programs and
Schedule for all three county high
schoolsi confirming of payment
or $300 to C. L. Head !or extra
duties as chorus director at
PPHS and payment of $300 to
Jack Rogers Cor baseball coach-ing duties at PPHS; transfer of
tiUe of Bus No.1, 1954lnterna~
tiona! to Lakin State Hospital at
no cost to Lakin.
Teachers hlred for the 1968-69
school year were: Mildred D.
Hart, Roosevelt Schoolj Howard
Cole. special education; Paul
Powell, Wahama Jr. and Sr. High;
Martin Leon Hall, Wahama Jr.
and Sr. Highi William W. Webb, ·
Jr., PL Pleasant High Schooli
Jimmy Lee C&amp;rpenter. Pt. Pleasant Jr. High.
Title I ESEA Personnel hired
effective July 1wereBiHySteele,
director, $850 per month; Jean
Baker, SOcial Referral Worker,
$450 per month; Barbara Steele,
Nurse, $450 per month; Betty

$325 per month. ESEA Title I
Teacher-Aides hired were R8becca Louise Withrow, Mary K.
Boyle, Sandra Reynolds, Shella
Raye Smith.
Other school personnel hired
were Frank Darst, maintenance
carpenter and mason, salary$500
per monthj Lowell Cook, VocaUonal Supervisor, saluy *10,500
per yeari Edison Prunl;y, Utilley
man, salary $4,422 per year;
Maxine Lathey, substitute secrelary in the board office, at a
salary of$300permonth,andVlr..
gil Sider.s hired as principal at
Hannan High School.
The request of former Mason
Coonty SUJ)erlntendento!S.:hools,
Milton Burdette. who Will hired
prevtwaly and placed as a teacher at pt. Pleasant Jr. High, tobe
considered for the position of
principal at Sunnyside Sehool was
ignored by the board.
The board denied the request
of PPHS principal Charles Withers to employ Mrs. Violet Gerlach for an additional two weeks
ss guidance counselor and also
that Richard Ware be used by
Withers in counseling for one-half
day ror two weeks. Ware Is ~m­
ployed as a sununer recreational
director and is paid from these
funds.
Alice Bartley was hired as
a teacher for the Head Start Summer program at Mason Elementary SChool.
Resignations accepted by the

2-Hour

board were: Te.lchera, Ann v..
ger, Maurice Mayes, I.Jrda Pet..
trey, Ruth . Sawyers, Patrtcla
Kirk, Geraldine Steele, Jop
Thomas, Madelyn selton, Clarence Morton. Edgar 'lbaxton,
Tina SimCiltoO. Edward Garten
and Thelma Watterson. other
resigmtions aecepted were: Karen Brown, Head start Teacher at
Mason; Jerri Neal, Title I Sum• mer prosram; Dorothy Mltehell,
Guidance Counselor at Pt. Pleas..
ant Jr. Hlghi Molly Park, Slntlra
Pickena and Nancy Somenllle,
teachers in the summer program.
Title I; Ruth Wllliamson, school
secretary; Warren Stewart, Leon
school custodian; Geraldloe
Gibbs, New Haven school cook;

Edison Mayes, Jr. bus driver.
Lea~ of absences were granted
to Cllrolyn Heuon, a teacher at
New Haven School and Barbara
L8wls, •cher at PL Pleasant
Jr. High.
Board members approved stipell:ls for Title I ESEA RemedJal
Reading School - WVU
branch - Kanawha Valley Graduate School, Nitro, for the fol).,.!ng teachers, stipend $75 per
month; Mary Lee Powell, Rebec..
ca Buckner, Helen sterrett, Katie
smith, Retadl Dingess aiXI Faye
Smith and also approvedpaymfnt
to Roher! straight for teachlng
YOUng Fanner Class, Adult
Farmer Class and Special Adell
Class, tota1 $715 whlchis100per

Mayes, Mary
secretary,
$350~~pe;r~~===
month;
Van Horn,
Clerk,

,.._, - · crow" ...,d Cl')"flfl ••• •niKI.

IW. will ecllj~ll'lltlHJIIiiiiiO lhlt tol•,.nc:•. tF n..cetw••· Gulflnt• il fOI- filii,_.

Harvest nme Sliced

Lunch Meat

PICNICS

BACON

Next DOor to E1berfelcls

'

lb.

Sirloin lip

Sirloin Tip

ROASt.99C

ST

bRisS soacs

lb.

DONUTS
pkg.

Sandwich Spread-----------3~.~ 49e
.
KlAFT
llackere[_______________: ·
COOKING

'

%" &amp; l•'Widtfls

Kids!

Anorted Pltterns

s 00

$. '99

Grape
Jelly·--------~-----·
2
Planten
1
Peanut Butter.------------ ~.~ 49e

99·

I

·, . i

()tl.'f

~niel

691-"

TO
CE
~= 1.00

/JepartmMt

Wellesley Farm
1/2 gal.
carton
EVERYDAY LOW PRICB

BUY ONE
AND GeT
1 FREEfl

lb.

Popcor•---------------------~19e

Glllette_stelnletl St.-i''

Food

ICE

3-o

Boone

IGA Fine Quality

PRICE!

Fudgesickles,Popsickles 6.,.c~c29~

2

Alum lnu m Foil.------------· !:·2se
.C1ke, Brownie, Corn MuHin, P•nake

Duffs Mixes---------------- box 10e

Mens Custno. Selt
White Work Sox

4""aae

PEPSI

8
ORANGE
10oz.

bots.

SHOE STORE
..

·

1-lb.
an

STOKELY ·

Royal Gelatin_____________ 2 m':17e
Delmonico
l-lb.J e
9
Spaghetti ·------------------ box

&amp;lq V•lu.r .

. onfy

RINSO i
GIANT SIZE 59C

Folger s Coffee. ._.;.__________
-

For Desltrts &amp; S.llds
.

s oo·
·SPORT S"IRTS

=· 35C

I!

Regul•r or Drip

8 Pldrfor

Pel!tl• Prea

TISS~E

l I '4

HANDKERCHIEFS

••

iWiL"oOi~ r·--iili-N"Ew·---~

II

. MENS'
·swiM TRUNIS

s:

box

1
;,

I

Sires A-a.e.D

Mefts Demv 8r1nd

29'

ou

•.

Kpftl'ii,;

Bleck or Brown

Kids!

Chocolate
White
Etc.

I

~rpst•kes

.-PAJAMAS·

·tow

•

f~J(~JI
.

•
'

'

"

N· -CANADAY
. ..

lb.39

,.. 39e

!

French Style

,,,.

I

49~

pq.

Mensllroeddoth

il l

.

SMOIED

S.ladBowl

/Make the most of those bright vacation tlays ahead. Spend 'em in Kedsthe better fitting. longer lasting,
sharper looking sneakers Jhat are
America's favorite footwear. Keds
are the perfect vacation pals-wherever you go, whatever the action.

.

Slle,.•'s S,.CIII S.CIItr's

•.,..

$ 99.

BOSTON BELTS

'

'

3 ....k

li

111~s. hm·m ·m ·m.

•

Robinson's aeaners

d

v

I,.
t

W. MAIN

NCh

ACCUTROtf' tw BULOYA

'\

SHULERS MARKO

,$ 99·
Or aain.
We'll gin you that Kunantee When yoo buy an Accutran" time ·
piece. It'll be accurate to within a minute a month.t An averaee of
two seconds a da)'. Other watches have their own notions lbout how
long a day should last. Sometimes they shorten it to 23 hours loll'ld 56
minutes. Or mille it last Joni[er !han the usulf 24 flours. Accutron
doesn't believe in malin&amp; lime. Or losi'!i it. Just keepina it.

I

I

Our Usu•l Good Cltenlng

See Our Super
Summer

1\llfllttll 11111.

• Bennucll OnloM e

'
...- ...• ·'

Beer

June i6

OWN

WAlKING SHORTS

$ 00 ...

Ask us for details. Just
fill in an Entry blllii when
you visit our store. No purchase
is necessary. Need not be present to win.

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

OUR

-

FlWIT 0t= THELOOM

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

PACK

(UPON REQUEST)

WIN A KEDS
BLAZON
CUBE CLIMBING
TOWER

Here's A Special W1y to Rernember Hlml

WE

Men's F*nw ,_. '

GIFT NECK Tl8

I

Day
Sunday,

-OHIO

DRY ClEANING
SERVICE

FREE!

g

Father's

cent relmbursed by the Division
or Vocational Education.
The next regularmeetlrwofthe
board Is scheduled lor June 27
at 7:30 p. .m.

• •

Priced
For

ea .•

Molh'a Hearla«
Moths have such highly developed hearing organs that
they can hear the supersonic
impulses emitted by bats,
and thus survive being eaten
by them.
· (

I

.

We Accept Federal Food Stamps

I
I
I
I

�~

8-

'J'I!I! Dally 5ellllno1, Ml:t''c •t.-r&lt;merey, JUliO IZ, 1968

......

-

··~

... . . .

Laurel Cliff
Social Notes

Washington•••
Report By 0aren~ Mmer

()P~N ~LLi)AY THURSDAY THlS WEEK
f()ti_OUR SHOPPING CONVENENCE
Friday Till . . . . . . Saturd11y Tll9

'
In the wake of Panama'• recent Preslclontlol elecllaa, two

per oons died and more tlwl a
dozen were inJured. To 4J!Oie..,.
reporter, •'black fumes - trom
burning cars 111&lt;1 butldlnp 111111
over the clly or Panama •• the
battle for pollllcol was
fooglrt In the llreeU and In voting places."
This moot recent outburlll

ARROW
SHIRTS ·
SPORT

&amp; DRESS,

ANENT PRESS -

PER~

button

down tapered and regular
otyles. A ohirt to gladden
the heart of all dada.
Knit shlrts, Banlon, DecWn
and cotton. Turtle and mock
turtle necks, crew and but-

ton styles.
BERMUDA SHORTS - plaids, checks, solids, perma press.
COOL SUMMER SLACKS - by Jaymar &amp; Hubbard. PermO·

press, dacron and worsted.
STRAW HATS, SPORT HATS AND CAPS by Portis.
SOCKS &amp; JIFfY SUPPERS by E1111.ulre.
SPORTCRAFTER JACKETS by Ruiby.
BELTS &amp; LEATHER GOODS by Saha!Drl
mLL FOLDS &amp; MEN'S JEWELRY by SWank.

JADE-EAST
After Shave, Cologne, T1lcum
and Deodorant

DOWNIE-GROSS
Pomeroy

The Men't Store

or

violence In a Latin Americ:an
nation whose hlotory Ia f11J.11
with revolution and rebelUon
makes the pl'fliiOaed trealles betwesn the United states and Pan·
ama wlllch would lurn the slrateglc Panama Canol over to Pan·
ama all the more rldlcuiCOis and dangerooa.
Aa many of yoo will recoil,
last J\DMI, after more 1ban two
years of secret Ialka, the U. S.
and Panama.niBn governments anM
nounced tentative agreement on
three new trestles which would
ultlmatels surrender U. S. rights,
SOYerelsn11 and property In the
Panama Canal Zone. Almoot Jm.
medlstels, more than 150 member&amp; of Congress Jntrod!ced or
oo-;;:oosored resolutions agalnot
what has been described as ,.one
of the blggeot glv...,ways In U,
S. diplomatic hlotory."
The facts are clear. Under
the n.y..&amp;mau Treaty of 1903,
the United states was granted
total and exclusive soverelsn11
over the Panama Canol Zone.
The treaty's 111111!11880 was ""te
specific, grantinl! thess rights
"In perpetuity" !D tho U. S.
We did not lesae the Canal Zone
from Panama - we booglrt It for
$10 mllllon plus an 111111ual pay-

.

mont which woo not a rental fee

or

but part
tho J)Urchase price.
The Panama Canal Is ]uBI as

much Federol 9J.,.rty as Ill!)'
national park or miUtaey bose.
Panama baa prollted • hand·
101110cy from the Canal Zone,
Sbe IOIW re&lt;elves an amual payment or about $2 miUlon. 111e
bat been glv111 property valued
at $105 mllUon by us. ToJol u.
s. Investment In the Canol Ia
$1.9 billion plua another $3 bll·
lion Ill defense lnstallstloos. D:
Ia estimated that U, S. oporatloos In the Zone, Including-a
and solarlea to Panamanians and
the purchase of SOOCSs and servIces, oow total more than $115
mtlllon a year. That figure, by
the wo.y, just about equals Pan·
ama's annual budget. And now,
after 64 years, the Admlnlstratlon would give the canal away.
Under tho flrllt tresty, the Ca.
nol Zone wUI beahoUshedlll&lt;lreplaced by a much omallor canal
area. A new autlloricy wUl take

over, governed by a nine-member board - five !D be ·ll)lllOinted
by the U. S. President, four by
the Panamanian President. This
authority will assume all assets
and llsbllltles of the old canol

zone.
Under the second treaty, the
U. S. and Panama wtll "share"
the defense of the Panama Canal.
But reollstlcoiJ.y, since Panama
has neither the economic n o r

mtlltary resources, the u. S.
will &amp;boulder the defense reopon.
albUlcy. And under very pecu.

liar circumstances.
Certain de[ense bases a r e

specified In the trescy, 111&lt;1 when

By BERTHA PARKER
Mrs. HarmM Fox and Patcy
Roush attended the grecent gntluadllll exercises at Alban1 Jllih
School, Athens Coonty. JIDIIM
Douglaa, gJ'IIIIIdauahter of Mrs.
Fox, wao 1 member of th!_Sfldo

.

,

11'.......,

uattrv cl111.
Mr. and Mra. Fritz Stlhl of
Now Marshlleld, Mr. and Mra.
Paul Neutzllne. Athena, Mta.

Rlehanl Dunkle, ... carl, of
MIU11old and Mr. and M r a.
Mark Stahl of .PorjamOUth called
on Mr. IIIII Mra. Norman Schaef·
or recently.
Mr. and Mra. Wllllam Jaccba
and children ol Colllllll)ua visited
Mrs. Jacobs' Parent&amp;, Mr. and
Mra. Pearl Jacobo, rocontb.
Mr. and Mra. Woltar Hellman.
.Bertha ~ker, o-gla Diehl

and
Charlos Anlhon,y,
spent a recent saturda,y evening
with Mr. and Mra. Charles Oishi,
Ropr and Pepy Staat, Thmnas
Fork. It woo Mr. Diehl'• blrtJ&gt;.
dl,y and refreshmenta were
aervocl.
Mra. Emma Fox vlalted a recent Sunday evenlnl with Mr• .,..
Mra. W~lt RIA!ford. Hoek
Springs.
Mr. Harmon Fox ind Lamlt
Lyons 1)101\t a recent weekend It
their bomts here.

Hiarty Drest1n1

ways to say•••

Hearty blue cheese dresslnJf

combines a aeuoned oil and
vlneNar blend wlih mayon·
nalBe. Mix together % cup of

areaa out apedfled In the trea·
cy, IMY wUl flrat have to obtain
apeclol permission from the Pan·
amanlan government. lt'o ""te
possible, obVIoul!l.Y, that bomb•
could be dropjJ(ng and the canal
could be · overrun by Invading
troops before 11permlaaion" ls
obtained from the Panamanian
govomment - a18Umlng It Is
nol controlled or lnflueneed by
pro ..communlots.
Under the third treaty, the U.
S. een build a new canal In Pan·
una but muot flrot bujo the land
from Panama, pay Indemnities
for abandoning the old canol,
pay for Its conatrucllon - 111&lt;1
then grant Panama aoverelllltiY
and control over the new canal.
The Panama Canal remains one
of the moat lmJ)Urtanl waterways, commercloll.Y and mUJ.
tar!J.y, ' In the world. Psnsma,

&lt;aboUt y, pound) or blue
clleOoe, crumbled, I teblespoon
of lemon juice, \l cup of maY·
onnaloe, I teaspoon or dry
mustard and I tablespoon of

worcea:tershlre

Gin DAD WITH A

sauce. Blend

well. Retrlprate several hours,
but serve a.t room tempera\Ul'e.
JUfrlgerote leftovers. MakOti
2\l cups,

GIFT CERTIFICATE

as underscored by lts recent
presl.dential elections, remains

one of the moat unstable republics In the world. We cannot
and muot 1101 allow the canal
Zone !D fall ln!D the hands or
a nation so dearlY uniJII)lfled
to manage a waterway vital to
the securlcy of the United States
111d the Free World.

REt JJXMIG COMFORT

-

20 STORES

106 M_AIN ST.
POMEROY, 0.
DAD LOVES BRAND NAME GIFTS

.

RfX.O·I!AHB ...
by FlfXSIEB.IS 111
IH.Y RECi.llll WITH
IIIU·SfAT SPRIIGIH&amp;

AND STIFFlER'S
HAVE OVER 150 BRAND NAMES
AT BUDGET PRICES!

This exclusive, completely coonterbollnced mechanism and
!amoot llfe.tlme Floxsteel spring Insure you of nwdmum
comfort In Ill!)' poaltlon, !run atttlng to full reclining.

.

'IYlon bearings and rollers provided notaeleaa, trouble-free
~eration.

;;.s. 1

4

time conslrucdon, ettortlesfi operatiorL .•the Ftexateel Flex·

~Cong. ·M iller

r~cUnera.

FUIIITURl

PRATT &amp; LAMBERT

~~
Your home can be dlstinc·

tive and decoratively correct
quickly, economically, estlly

]UNE16

· · ~~

w~h

Pratt &amp; Lambert pelnb

end enamels. We will help
you 111ect them In colors
which hormoniZII perfectly
from the unlqu. 111nge o1

Collbrated
Colors•.

The Ohio Hereford Ann. will
sponsor an Ohio Hereford ClinIc Day Saturda,y, June 15, at the
Animal Science building Ohio
'
State Universizy. Regiotration

•

~--·~'

/

•

1'l~

f\eq

.

of Bulldlng. Since 1915

c

-

Building ANew Home?
lemodellag the old one?

j ~

I

LOW PRICES

Reg. 19.95

FRAMING
LUMBER

SWINGER
BIG SWINGER KODAK 104
POLAROID
POLAROID
.... 18.95 14.95 \''-~
.... 14.
WWtl'ltN~~

2x4

h6

24.95

19.95

For A••ly He- •n Scent
• British Sterling
•Brnura
• ht by Faberge
• English Leather
• Chanel for ••
•·We East
•Hal-Karate

hi
2x10
lftd

Fill
'

GIFT

WRAP

8~•-tle.l 6u~a•e

~~ :rricc.

MATIING
lUMBER

/

The Idea or having U, S. cititzens clip small flags onto their

car aerials was originated by two
law enforcement of'ficers - sep arately of each other. On&amp; was
Dan Mahllt1oy, a ~~r of tho
New York City .Police Department, and the other was J. E.
Stavinoha, an FBI agent stationed In Washington, D. C. Both came
up with the idea last year to offset the nag burning demonstrations In major cities.

HOGG &amp; ZUS~ N
~

MATERIAlS COM,. NY
MASON, Y/• VA.

Broadcloth Shorls
Knit Briefs
Knit Tee Shirts

$599
.
p•or

,

81C

h

$ l5

2!.100

$3~~

PKG.
HIJ

13, one size fits

.a nd subdued plnids. Permanent

au. Compares

press.

79c.

_ SIZES S..M-\.a\

MEN'S FATHER'S DAY

GIFT TIES
4 in hand and reddi lied
in plain and fancy patterns.
Big choice of patterns, colors and sty les for Dads
Day giving.

$

- WI'IITE COTTON

HANES Briefs • Tee Shirts

Stretch sizes 10-

~o l ors

national holidays.

PACKAGE Of 3

sox

SHORTS

c

YOUR
CHOICE

DRESS

WALKING

Si1:es 29 to 42 m plain

$299

MEN'S BAN-LON

DAD WILL LOVE
PERMANENT PRESS

ades or other activity - only
citizens displaying nags on Flag
Day, Fourth of July and oUler

~~~

P'KG. OF 3 - $3.39

$115
.

each

LET DAD RELAX IN A CONI I . _

Tubular Aluminum Palio Chair

AVOCADO&amp;
TANGERINE

MEN'S HIGH QUAliTY

59

White Cotton
Handkerchiefs

will begin at9 a.m.

The clinic will stresstheprac~
tlcablllty of lhe topics under discussion and the basic theme will
be of promoting and Improving
the breed. Discussions of the
modern Hereford type and carcass evaluation are important
topics for the ellnic.
~akers for Chis program in clude R, H. Mathiessen, Jr., presIdent of the American Hereford
Association, discussing the Future of the Hereford breed; Art
Lindon, the American Hereford
Association, ''Performance Records," Dr. Veroon L. Tharp,
Ohio State University, ••More
Dollars from Improved Repro.ducttYe Efficiency;,. Dr. w. w.
Wharton, Ohio State Unlvsrslcy,
discussing the Ohio Procllction
Testing Program: Dr. Charles
Parker, Ohio State Universicy,
Genstlc Aapects of Tellilng Pro·
grams, and Or. Randall Reed
111&lt;1 Dr. B. D. Van Stavem, Ohio
State Univeraity, "Modem Herolord Typo and Corea .. Evaluation."
.uso Included In the progsm
wUI be Or. B, V, Scheib, proaldent of the Ohio llereford Asso.
elation, talking oo the activities
ol the Ohio Hereford Asaoela.
don, IUij! Dr. G. R, Jomson,
chairman of the Animal Science
Department of the Ohio state
Universll;y, Everyone Interested
In beef cattle Is welcome.

.i

'I

"""',;...l

Never-iron while dress shirls, short
sleeve for summer wear, sizes 14%
to 17. Compares at $3.99,
·

Miller, in prals.ing the concept,
said the organization plans no
demonstrations, marches, par-

Outc!Hr Tip
To conaerve ator~~;ge space In
your boat or camper, take
along a box of baking soda. To
serve aa a dentifrice. a mouthwash, a deodorant, a sunburn
soother, an acld lndtgea~ion
remedy, an emeraeney exttn ..
Q'!isher lor cookln• ftres, 1 re·
frlierator or IceboX noeeten•
er,. a lf)Od scourtnr arrent 'for
pats and pana. an~ 1n1 -metal
Parts around lhe bo&amp;t or' camp·
er that need. !' sbfne •

UNCONDtnOMAU.Y CUARAHTEED

each

MEN'S PERMA PRESS WHITE DRESS SHIRTS

Fruit ot

Lb~

••m

Loom

7·WEB MATCHING FOLDING

CHAISE$
I;

PANTS
Perm~~'*lt

P,.ss

ss.4~ ·
IN'"

Matching Shirts •ea. 4. 49 .
!Nir

Never Iron Pl1ld
SHORT SlEEVE

s
...... ....
99

SPORT SHIRTS
Allldoal
llr ,...... ....
-

.,

·=·.:.. . . ·
' " " •blrt.

Caft Us For Prlcnl

PH()Nl773-5554

dormant _ namely pride ·n
country and respect for the di~·
play of the American Oag.
The committee is a nonprofit
ventupe designed solely to pro~
mote pride in nag and country.
There will be no dues or mem bershlp assessments. Anyone de siring more information about
the organizatlon should contact
Mr. Fred 1.. Dixon, National
Chairman of Pride in Ameri~
ca, at Post Office Box 1600,
Washington, D. C., 20013.

Plan Hereford Clinic Day

Pomeroy
Cement Block Co.
The Department Store

:

Men's Campus slacks are permanent
press, in assorted colors. Carefully tailored of long-wea ring fabrics .

Backing Committee ·

America" Committee to promote display of the nag and
pride in country ~as recently
aMounced in Washmgton. Gen~
eral Dwight D. Eisenhower will
serve as honorary national chair man or the committee.
Tenth District Congressman
Clarence E, Miller indicated the
"Pride in America" Committee
was established to counter-hal~
ance the wave of lawlessness,
violence, nag burnings and similar activities which have been
sweeping the country and to pro~
vide a rallying point Cor citi ~
zens who sttll have faith a n d
pride in this nation and its nag.
The first phase of the comntli(«, ,;Jil~ w;.w tore re!poc1
for tit~ llag, the Ohio lawmal!.
er indicated, tylJI come on June
14 - Flag 11ay, On thai da,y,
and on subsequent national hol idays, Americans across t h e
country wiil be asked to c 1 i p
small (4 by 6 Inch) nags on thelr
car radio antermas, to wear met.
al lapel Oags on their sults or
dresses, or display flags on
their homes and places of busi.
ness.
41 What this committee ts try~
ing to revive,,. Miller said, His
a spirit which has been too long

':' WA.!IliNGTON - The forma.
:j:lon of a nationwide "Pride in

MIDDLIPOIT, OHIO

rt•clcllc ro.-T, o.

s-r•'
~'t4\INL.e"S.$

••• anyrimel

$299

MEN'S PERMA PRESS CAMPUS SLACKS

8.

In every way. , .smart style, luxurious comfort, quality life..

tlead.o..as.

l'\ !\l'

Assorted patterns, plain colors in never
tron Campus sport shirts. Sizes S-ML-XL.

WASHINGTON - Tenth 'District Co~essman Clarence E. Miller is shown clipping a smaU
,,~! i:h
na~ onto his car radio aeri~l to point up the formation of the newly-established
er ca Commlttee. The committee formed to promote the display of our nationa1
· ~ emblem has as ita honorary national chairman, General Dwight o Eisenhower Its rormatl
~~ announced to coincide with the observance of F1ag Day 011 Friday, June l4, 196
on was
_

moving parts are permanently lubricated at ·the tactory;

ers

AWRCOME Glfl

SHORT SLEEVE SPORT SHIRTS

The Flex~Loonger Ia UMXcalled for dunblllcy and smooth,
malnlenlllco-free operation. Frames are kllD&lt;Irled hardWood,
collltlletel.Y metal-reinforced for rlgldiJ.y and lq life. All

BAKER

1

MEN'S PERMANENT PRESS CAMPUS BRAND

Flex~Loungera are fashionably atyled choirs, nallable In CO...
temporary, Modern, Tradltlonol and Esrl.Y American designs,
ln your choice or over a thoollnd selected tabrlca. You'll be
proud !D ""n thl&amp; beaullful furniture.

Ia unequalled_In

Puzzled over a gilt for
Dad? Why not gel a gift
certificate at your Stiffler !
store, for any amount you
:hoose, and let Dad pick
out his own gift.

Slacks &amp; Sport Shirts

DI!COIIATIVI!&amp;.'f
COIIIII!CT I

\)3M

Any
Amount
You
Choose!

SERVING OHIO

FLEX STEEL

Q.Lounger

·r.
•

salad oil, 1/4 cup of vlnerar and
1'4 cup or paprika. Add o/o cUP

coiled upon by the canal author·
Icy, the U, S. may UIO them with·
out approvol of l'all8lll8. But In
the eveut of war or II'BV8 emer ..
&amp;01\C:f, If the U, S. - s to use

.,

,.tta,...

c

Sizes ·

Father will love a new •itt
biWold with tee-thru cant

JROADCLOTH

PAJAMAS
~2.99

each

Fancy paticr.us • • •
SizesA·B·C·D
.. Fine qunlib" cotton broadctoO.

F A!ICJ OOTI'ON

·. "1...

.

·.

·'

·.·. ~'

.

\

.

.. J

\',1 ~ . ', !

.

ROBES

$3.99

I

I

Somethinl Spai•l For Someone Spedll
MIN'S NOVILTY STYli

$100

Sport Straw Hats
...
BOSTON BRAND
MEN'S BELT$ $1 &amp;$1 50
BIAC!t Oil B&amp;4)WN

�~

8-

'J'I!I! Dally 5ellllno1, Ml:t''c •t.-r&lt;merey, JUliO IZ, 1968

......

-

··~

... . . .

Laurel Cliff
Social Notes

Washington•••
Report By 0aren~ Mmer

()P~N ~LLi)AY THURSDAY THlS WEEK
f()ti_OUR SHOPPING CONVENENCE
Friday Till . . . . . . Saturd11y Tll9

'
In the wake of Panama'• recent Preslclontlol elecllaa, two

per oons died and more tlwl a
dozen were inJured. To 4J!Oie..,.
reporter, •'black fumes - trom
burning cars 111&lt;1 butldlnp 111111
over the clly or Panama •• the
battle for pollllcol was
fooglrt In the llreeU and In voting places."
This moot recent outburlll

ARROW
SHIRTS ·
SPORT

&amp; DRESS,

ANENT PRESS -

PER~

button

down tapered and regular
otyles. A ohirt to gladden
the heart of all dada.
Knit shlrts, Banlon, DecWn
and cotton. Turtle and mock
turtle necks, crew and but-

ton styles.
BERMUDA SHORTS - plaids, checks, solids, perma press.
COOL SUMMER SLACKS - by Jaymar &amp; Hubbard. PermO·

press, dacron and worsted.
STRAW HATS, SPORT HATS AND CAPS by Portis.
SOCKS &amp; JIFfY SUPPERS by E1111.ulre.
SPORTCRAFTER JACKETS by Ruiby.
BELTS &amp; LEATHER GOODS by Saha!Drl
mLL FOLDS &amp; MEN'S JEWELRY by SWank.

JADE-EAST
After Shave, Cologne, T1lcum
and Deodorant

DOWNIE-GROSS
Pomeroy

The Men't Store

or

violence In a Latin Americ:an
nation whose hlotory Ia f11J.11
with revolution and rebelUon
makes the pl'fliiOaed trealles betwesn the United states and Pan·
ama wlllch would lurn the slrateglc Panama Canol over to Pan·
ama all the more rldlcuiCOis and dangerooa.
Aa many of yoo will recoil,
last J\DMI, after more 1ban two
years of secret Ialka, the U. S.
and Panama.niBn governments anM
nounced tentative agreement on
three new trestles which would
ultlmatels surrender U. S. rights,
SOYerelsn11 and property In the
Panama Canal Zone. Almoot Jm.
medlstels, more than 150 member&amp; of Congress Jntrod!ced or
oo-;;:oosored resolutions agalnot
what has been described as ,.one
of the blggeot glv...,ways In U,
S. diplomatic hlotory."
The facts are clear. Under
the n.y..&amp;mau Treaty of 1903,
the United states was granted
total and exclusive soverelsn11
over the Panama Canol Zone.
The treaty's 111111!11880 was ""te
specific, grantinl! thess rights
"In perpetuity" !D tho U. S.
We did not lesae the Canal Zone
from Panama - we booglrt It for
$10 mllllon plus an 111111ual pay-

.

mont which woo not a rental fee

or

but part
tho J)Urchase price.
The Panama Canal Is ]uBI as

much Federol 9J.,.rty as Ill!)'
national park or miUtaey bose.
Panama baa prollted • hand·
101110cy from the Canal Zone,
Sbe IOIW re&lt;elves an amual payment or about $2 miUlon. 111e
bat been glv111 property valued
at $105 mllUon by us. ToJol u.
s. Investment In the Canol Ia
$1.9 billion plua another $3 bll·
lion Ill defense lnstallstloos. D:
Ia estimated that U, S. oporatloos In the Zone, Including-a
and solarlea to Panamanians and
the purchase of SOOCSs and servIces, oow total more than $115
mtlllon a year. That figure, by
the wo.y, just about equals Pan·
ama's annual budget. And now,
after 64 years, the Admlnlstratlon would give the canal away.
Under tho flrllt tresty, the Ca.
nol Zone wUI beahoUshedlll&lt;lreplaced by a much omallor canal
area. A new autlloricy wUl take

over, governed by a nine-member board - five !D be ·ll)lllOinted
by the U. S. President, four by
the Panamanian President. This
authority will assume all assets
and llsbllltles of the old canol

zone.
Under the second treaty, the
U. S. and Panama wtll "share"
the defense of the Panama Canal.
But reollstlcoiJ.y, since Panama
has neither the economic n o r

mtlltary resources, the u. S.
will &amp;boulder the defense reopon.
albUlcy. And under very pecu.

liar circumstances.
Certain de[ense bases a r e

specified In the trescy, 111&lt;1 when

By BERTHA PARKER
Mrs. HarmM Fox and Patcy
Roush attended the grecent gntluadllll exercises at Alban1 Jllih
School, Athens Coonty. JIDIIM
Douglaa, gJ'IIIIIdauahter of Mrs.
Fox, wao 1 member of th!_Sfldo

.

,

11'.......,

uattrv cl111.
Mr. and Mra. Fritz Stlhl of
Now Marshlleld, Mr. and Mra.
Paul Neutzllne. Athena, Mta.

Rlehanl Dunkle, ... carl, of
MIU11old and Mr. and M r a.
Mark Stahl of .PorjamOUth called
on Mr. IIIII Mra. Norman Schaef·
or recently.
Mr. and Mra. Wllllam Jaccba
and children ol Colllllll)ua visited
Mrs. Jacobs' Parent&amp;, Mr. and
Mra. Pearl Jacobo, rocontb.
Mr. and Mra. Woltar Hellman.
.Bertha ~ker, o-gla Diehl

and
Charlos Anlhon,y,
spent a recent saturda,y evening
with Mr. and Mra. Charles Oishi,
Ropr and Pepy Staat, Thmnas
Fork. It woo Mr. Diehl'• blrtJ&gt;.
dl,y and refreshmenta were
aervocl.
Mra. Emma Fox vlalted a recent Sunday evenlnl with Mr• .,..
Mra. W~lt RIA!ford. Hoek
Springs.
Mr. Harmon Fox ind Lamlt
Lyons 1)101\t a recent weekend It
their bomts here.

Hiarty Drest1n1

ways to say•••

Hearty blue cheese dresslnJf

combines a aeuoned oil and
vlneNar blend wlih mayon·
nalBe. Mix together % cup of

areaa out apedfled In the trea·
cy, IMY wUl flrat have to obtain
apeclol permission from the Pan·
amanlan government. lt'o ""te
possible, obVIoul!l.Y, that bomb•
could be dropjJ(ng and the canal
could be · overrun by Invading
troops before 11permlaaion" ls
obtained from the Panamanian
govomment - a18Umlng It Is
nol controlled or lnflueneed by
pro ..communlots.
Under the third treaty, the U.
S. een build a new canal In Pan·
una but muot flrot bujo the land
from Panama, pay Indemnities
for abandoning the old canol,
pay for Its conatrucllon - 111&lt;1
then grant Panama aoverelllltiY
and control over the new canal.
The Panama Canal remains one
of the moat lmJ)Urtanl waterways, commercloll.Y and mUJ.
tar!J.y, ' In the world. Psnsma,

&lt;aboUt y, pound) or blue
clleOoe, crumbled, I teblespoon
of lemon juice, \l cup of maY·
onnaloe, I teaspoon or dry
mustard and I tablespoon of

worcea:tershlre

Gin DAD WITH A

sauce. Blend

well. Retrlprate several hours,
but serve a.t room tempera\Ul'e.
JUfrlgerote leftovers. MakOti
2\l cups,

GIFT CERTIFICATE

as underscored by lts recent
presl.dential elections, remains

one of the moat unstable republics In the world. We cannot
and muot 1101 allow the canal
Zone !D fall ln!D the hands or
a nation so dearlY uniJII)lfled
to manage a waterway vital to
the securlcy of the United States
111d the Free World.

REt JJXMIG COMFORT

-

20 STORES

106 M_AIN ST.
POMEROY, 0.
DAD LOVES BRAND NAME GIFTS

.

RfX.O·I!AHB ...
by FlfXSIEB.IS 111
IH.Y RECi.llll WITH
IIIU·SfAT SPRIIGIH&amp;

AND STIFFlER'S
HAVE OVER 150 BRAND NAMES
AT BUDGET PRICES!

This exclusive, completely coonterbollnced mechanism and
!amoot llfe.tlme Floxsteel spring Insure you of nwdmum
comfort In Ill!)' poaltlon, !run atttlng to full reclining.

.

'IYlon bearings and rollers provided notaeleaa, trouble-free
~eration.

;;.s. 1

4

time conslrucdon, ettortlesfi operatiorL .•the Ftexateel Flex·

~Cong. ·M iller

r~cUnera.

FUIIITURl

PRATT &amp; LAMBERT

~~
Your home can be dlstinc·

tive and decoratively correct
quickly, economically, estlly

]UNE16

· · ~~

w~h

Pratt &amp; Lambert pelnb

end enamels. We will help
you 111ect them In colors
which hormoniZII perfectly
from the unlqu. 111nge o1

Collbrated
Colors•.

The Ohio Hereford Ann. will
sponsor an Ohio Hereford ClinIc Day Saturda,y, June 15, at the
Animal Science building Ohio
'
State Universizy. Regiotration

•

~--·~'

/

•

1'l~

f\eq

.

of Bulldlng. Since 1915

c

-

Building ANew Home?
lemodellag the old one?

j ~

I

LOW PRICES

Reg. 19.95

FRAMING
LUMBER

SWINGER
BIG SWINGER KODAK 104
POLAROID
POLAROID
.... 18.95 14.95 \''-~
.... 14.
WWtl'ltN~~

2x4

h6

24.95

19.95

For A••ly He- •n Scent
• British Sterling
•Brnura
• ht by Faberge
• English Leather
• Chanel for ••
•·We East
•Hal-Karate

hi
2x10
lftd

Fill
'

GIFT

WRAP

8~•-tle.l 6u~a•e

~~ :rricc.

MATIING
lUMBER

/

The Idea or having U, S. cititzens clip small flags onto their

car aerials was originated by two
law enforcement of'ficers - sep arately of each other. On&amp; was
Dan Mahllt1oy, a ~~r of tho
New York City .Police Department, and the other was J. E.
Stavinoha, an FBI agent stationed In Washington, D. C. Both came
up with the idea last year to offset the nag burning demonstrations In major cities.

HOGG &amp; ZUS~ N
~

MATERIAlS COM,. NY
MASON, Y/• VA.

Broadcloth Shorls
Knit Briefs
Knit Tee Shirts

$599
.
p•or

,

81C

h

$ l5

2!.100

$3~~

PKG.
HIJ

13, one size fits

.a nd subdued plnids. Permanent

au. Compares

press.

79c.

_ SIZES S..M-\.a\

MEN'S FATHER'S DAY

GIFT TIES
4 in hand and reddi lied
in plain and fancy patterns.
Big choice of patterns, colors and sty les for Dads
Day giving.

$

- WI'IITE COTTON

HANES Briefs • Tee Shirts

Stretch sizes 10-

~o l ors

national holidays.

PACKAGE Of 3

sox

SHORTS

c

YOUR
CHOICE

DRESS

WALKING

Si1:es 29 to 42 m plain

$299

MEN'S BAN-LON

DAD WILL LOVE
PERMANENT PRESS

ades or other activity - only
citizens displaying nags on Flag
Day, Fourth of July and oUler

~~~

P'KG. OF 3 - $3.39

$115
.

each

LET DAD RELAX IN A CONI I . _

Tubular Aluminum Palio Chair

AVOCADO&amp;
TANGERINE

MEN'S HIGH QUAliTY

59

White Cotton
Handkerchiefs

will begin at9 a.m.

The clinic will stresstheprac~
tlcablllty of lhe topics under discussion and the basic theme will
be of promoting and Improving
the breed. Discussions of the
modern Hereford type and carcass evaluation are important
topics for the ellnic.
~akers for Chis program in clude R, H. Mathiessen, Jr., presIdent of the American Hereford
Association, discussing the Future of the Hereford breed; Art
Lindon, the American Hereford
Association, ''Performance Records," Dr. Veroon L. Tharp,
Ohio State University, ••More
Dollars from Improved Repro.ducttYe Efficiency;,. Dr. w. w.
Wharton, Ohio State Unlvsrslcy,
discussing the Ohio Procllction
Testing Program: Dr. Charles
Parker, Ohio State Universicy,
Genstlc Aapects of Tellilng Pro·
grams, and Or. Randall Reed
111&lt;1 Dr. B. D. Van Stavem, Ohio
State Univeraity, "Modem Herolord Typo and Corea .. Evaluation."
.uso Included In the progsm
wUI be Or. B, V, Scheib, proaldent of the Ohio llereford Asso.
elation, talking oo the activities
ol the Ohio Hereford Asaoela.
don, IUij! Dr. G. R, Jomson,
chairman of the Animal Science
Department of the Ohio state
Universll;y, Everyone Interested
In beef cattle Is welcome.

.i

'I

"""',;...l

Never-iron while dress shirls, short
sleeve for summer wear, sizes 14%
to 17. Compares at $3.99,
·

Miller, in prals.ing the concept,
said the organization plans no
demonstrations, marches, par-

Outc!Hr Tip
To conaerve ator~~;ge space In
your boat or camper, take
along a box of baking soda. To
serve aa a dentifrice. a mouthwash, a deodorant, a sunburn
soother, an acld lndtgea~ion
remedy, an emeraeney exttn ..
Q'!isher lor cookln• ftres, 1 re·
frlierator or IceboX noeeten•
er,. a lf)Od scourtnr arrent 'for
pats and pana. an~ 1n1 -metal
Parts around lhe bo&amp;t or' camp·
er that need. !' sbfne •

UNCONDtnOMAU.Y CUARAHTEED

each

MEN'S PERMA PRESS WHITE DRESS SHIRTS

Fruit ot

Lb~

••m

Loom

7·WEB MATCHING FOLDING

CHAISE$
I;

PANTS
Perm~~'*lt

P,.ss

ss.4~ ·
IN'"

Matching Shirts •ea. 4. 49 .
!Nir

Never Iron Pl1ld
SHORT SlEEVE

s
...... ....
99

SPORT SHIRTS
Allldoal
llr ,...... ....
-

.,

·=·.:.. . . ·
' " " •blrt.

Caft Us For Prlcnl

PH()Nl773-5554

dormant _ namely pride ·n
country and respect for the di~·
play of the American Oag.
The committee is a nonprofit
ventupe designed solely to pro~
mote pride in nag and country.
There will be no dues or mem bershlp assessments. Anyone de siring more information about
the organizatlon should contact
Mr. Fred 1.. Dixon, National
Chairman of Pride in Ameri~
ca, at Post Office Box 1600,
Washington, D. C., 20013.

Plan Hereford Clinic Day

Pomeroy
Cement Block Co.
The Department Store

:

Men's Campus slacks are permanent
press, in assorted colors. Carefully tailored of long-wea ring fabrics .

Backing Committee ·

America" Committee to promote display of the nag and
pride in country ~as recently
aMounced in Washmgton. Gen~
eral Dwight D. Eisenhower will
serve as honorary national chair man or the committee.
Tenth District Congressman
Clarence E, Miller indicated the
"Pride in America" Committee
was established to counter-hal~
ance the wave of lawlessness,
violence, nag burnings and similar activities which have been
sweeping the country and to pro~
vide a rallying point Cor citi ~
zens who sttll have faith a n d
pride in this nation and its nag.
The first phase of the comntli(«, ,;Jil~ w;.w tore re!poc1
for tit~ llag, the Ohio lawmal!.
er indicated, tylJI come on June
14 - Flag 11ay, On thai da,y,
and on subsequent national hol idays, Americans across t h e
country wiil be asked to c 1 i p
small (4 by 6 Inch) nags on thelr
car radio antermas, to wear met.
al lapel Oags on their sults or
dresses, or display flags on
their homes and places of busi.
ness.
41 What this committee ts try~
ing to revive,,. Miller said, His
a spirit which has been too long

':' WA.!IliNGTON - The forma.
:j:lon of a nationwide "Pride in

MIDDLIPOIT, OHIO

rt•clcllc ro.-T, o.

s-r•'
~'t4\INL.e"S.$

••• anyrimel

$299

MEN'S PERMA PRESS CAMPUS SLACKS

8.

In every way. , .smart style, luxurious comfort, quality life..

tlead.o..as.

l'\ !\l'

Assorted patterns, plain colors in never
tron Campus sport shirts. Sizes S-ML-XL.

WASHINGTON - Tenth 'District Co~essman Clarence E. Miller is shown clipping a smaU
,,~! i:h
na~ onto his car radio aeri~l to point up the formation of the newly-established
er ca Commlttee. The committee formed to promote the display of our nationa1
· ~ emblem has as ita honorary national chairman, General Dwight o Eisenhower Its rormatl
~~ announced to coincide with the observance of F1ag Day 011 Friday, June l4, 196
on was
_

moving parts are permanently lubricated at ·the tactory;

ers

AWRCOME Glfl

SHORT SLEEVE SPORT SHIRTS

The Flex~Loonger Ia UMXcalled for dunblllcy and smooth,
malnlenlllco-free operation. Frames are kllD&lt;Irled hardWood,
collltlletel.Y metal-reinforced for rlgldiJ.y and lq life. All

BAKER

1

MEN'S PERMANENT PRESS CAMPUS BRAND

Flex~Loungera are fashionably atyled choirs, nallable In CO...
temporary, Modern, Tradltlonol and Esrl.Y American designs,
ln your choice or over a thoollnd selected tabrlca. You'll be
proud !D ""n thl&amp; beaullful furniture.

Ia unequalled_In

Puzzled over a gilt for
Dad? Why not gel a gift
certificate at your Stiffler !
store, for any amount you
:hoose, and let Dad pick
out his own gift.

Slacks &amp; Sport Shirts

DI!COIIATIVI!&amp;.'f
COIIIII!CT I

\)3M

Any
Amount
You
Choose!

SERVING OHIO

FLEX STEEL

Q.Lounger

·r.
•

salad oil, 1/4 cup of vlnerar and
1'4 cup or paprika. Add o/o cUP

coiled upon by the canal author·
Icy, the U, S. may UIO them with·
out approvol of l'all8lll8. But In
the eveut of war or II'BV8 emer ..
&amp;01\C:f, If the U, S. - s to use

.,

,.tta,...

c

Sizes ·

Father will love a new •itt
biWold with tee-thru cant

JROADCLOTH

PAJAMAS
~2.99

each

Fancy paticr.us • • •
SizesA·B·C·D
.. Fine qunlib" cotton broadctoO.

F A!ICJ OOTI'ON

·. "1...

.

·.

·'

·.·. ~'

.

\

.

.. J

\',1 ~ . ', !

.

ROBES

$3.99

I

I

Somethinl Spai•l For Someone Spedll
MIN'S NOVILTY STYli

$100

Sport Straw Hats
...
BOSTON BRAND
MEN'S BELT$ $1 &amp;$1 50
BIAC!t Oil B&amp;4)WN

�.. !

.•• -- ''*~~.·Middleport-Pomeroy, June 12, 1968.

l

.Play

•

UP

Kroger's N,w Fun Game

l

TO

CASH CRIS·CROSS

I

I

••

:

I•

C.,tlht, The K,..., C.., 1M
We nserve the rllht .. limit .,111tlllet.

. Thriftg Brand

Round Steak
Thriftg Brand

\

I
I

'

Sirl;oin~ Steak :,~.

Bg The Piece
Bone In -Full C''t

•

I

KROGER is having4STEAKSAtE! .
:.I.

l•

I

I

•I
I

I

TenderagllNPUl

. 09

•

•
•

'

;·,

Tentlerag Brand

lb.

(

lb.

I

'•

T-Bone Steak .~ ,.,
ltiDIEM WIIR NO. 2 COUPONS
THIS WIEIC FOR 4St
TOP YAWl SYMPSI

'

Pomeroy
Kroger
OPEN
SUNDAYS
10 A.M•.

•

TO 7 P.M.

T_.,
Cubed Steak

Thriftg Brand

Tenderag Brarid

09

29

Le111,

a-1111

~ ~. ~ .•... ~.

$1.09

Slrhln

Full Shenk Helf

lult Ptrtln - 111. SSo

Smell 4 .. , ._lin

Leg of Lamb
Picnics

IIi.

SliM •. 4k ·
Armour ~ Ster

lb.

A..- ChWin Iter

Canned Ham !! $3.99

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

HAM

Applesauce

Vegetole

... '"

Tetrazinni
12-11. 69c

IIHdl

--'c ··-······ ...... 49c

~
·.

s...

~

Dash . . . . . . . . . ... :!· 69c

3

ITOUFFHS TURKEY.

'

Canned Ham :!· $6.49

IOI.OGIA

... 4ft

Escallops
~~~ 69c

,.,.._,...

"';-""'~

Ivory ... _....... '.!:· 89c

Play Cash CriB-Cross/
No Purchase Required!,

Stokley

Crisco
79c

Crisco
. . CIII

37c

-·

Smoked Ham .......... _. __ . .. 49c

ITOUfiiiERI
Chlc:lltn I Needlt

.... Clll

I

I
I

lb.

lb•.

Tip Roast .........•...•. 99c

I
'

GAME ENDS SAT., JUNI 21

Green Beans. ____ 5 ~~~Sl
Hunt'•

-

Plm~

3

Lunch.Meat

Catsup

Rogal Court
Fine China

Me-n .............

SOUP I

Drip, I llectre PM!

3

09

Coffee .. !

1
::

ceREAL H.

39c NoNiCttpu
Limit

UNIVIRIAL
HISTORY IOOICI
VOL. 12

•••

99c

K,..., Vlt.m.t C Emc:llell s-t. er U.-..t,
GUIH STRAINED
•'

J Baby Food
....... ,., 11c

Orange Juice '!::;..':....ce:..:' ·"· 99e
K,.._r Bleci!Mrry, Aptlle,

inti

Gripe

Jelly .......... _...... 5

1

~

KROGIR 1RAND

KROGER

GRADE A MEDIUM

AU. FUVORS

Eggs

$1

Marthe White ..........

MAIISCO

Ice Milk
•
•
••

Vanilla Wafers Corn Meal . _... _..• _. _. . ~ 39c
Brlllll
39c Homo.
12«. .....
Milk ... ________ __v~. 49c

.

l).pl,

~

CALOON

Bouquet
........... 59c

crtM.

..

K,..., lultwcMt

~~

Bread ····· ······--·· 4 ~ $1.
110811 SHEIIIT'
QT. 4ft
VIne I" l~~e Selecl

•

,.., Clll

Calgonite
49c

FOl.GIIt'l

Freth Ripe

Cantaloupe

Fmh

lb.

23¢

••
••

'
&lt;
'

Grapes __ .. 49c

'""'
.. 59c Oranges . -. 69¢
Radishes 3 ::. 39c Cherries

27 Size

Fmh

Cucumbers 3 ,., 39c
Lettuce . _. .. 29e
.~~~i!ffi;,[lii:3~!i!~rr.~~~~~~~--~

FREE 50

FREE 50

4)

. *-

)

..... _... .....,..,.
.
Krtier

FREE 50

.......

1'0fVALUI

Strawberries •.

Leef

FREE 10o

'

""" Callfwftle

VALUMU COUNII

ZOe OFF

........

ltiGC.•"Aa PltiCI

1 ....

!111ft

Eql. 8/11/.

(·G

.FREE 50

FREE 50

., 'Milt ..,.

w..... , ...
Willi ftla

c.-,••

Exp. 8/151.

.
- "" ..

I

C.llfM'IIIe 11S ....

...

.. -

FREE 50

'•

White C.llfetllle

FI'Mh Red

Jumbo

Conditioner
~•. $1.29

.J'

'

)

,,

Peaches

Green Beans 2.... 39f

CAl.GON WATIIt

..

lor

Corn
,,..

Celery . . . . n 39c

Coffee
77c

Conditioner
78t
~·· ....

•

I

Fmh Hterta ef

w.LGON WATil

.. ..

llreth, .....

To••1atoes · 111. 29c

._

.... ,. -

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

_,

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

'

Chlplttlb

'*II &amp; IAMIORN VAC PM.

Coffee
$1.55

FREE 50

- ......

.

. . . . .. . . .
~

.

~

-

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

,_

___ ,. ... _..

~.~~

. . . .. .......... .. . -- ····- ...···· ··

.

·····.

-- ~-

_ _........

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

--~-

... __.,__,.......

_,

_____

\
........ ~------

-... ..- .

�'I
G

11 - The Dally Sentinel, Middleport.-Pomeroy, June 12, 1968

ADHS Bids Openings Set

BERRf'S WORlD

COLUMBUS - Bids for construction of a flh -mile section
of the Appalachian Development
Highway &amp;It stem (ADHS) In Meigs
and Athens counties are scheduled to be opened by the Ohio
Department of Highways here
AU.I~ 6. Estimated cost of the
project Is $2,233,000.
The section, ruth to be placed under construction on t h e
main east-west corridor, Ilea

between Ohio 689 and a point
2.2 miles east d. the MeigsAthens county line.
This will be the eastern terminus of Ohio 346, where the
ADHS becomes US 50. RelocaUon of a mile of US 50 In Athens County Ia Included In the
project,
No Interchanges or structures
over 20 feet long will be constructed In this section, and no
detours will be required.
'

YDUPI DENTAL HEALTH

Some Antibiotics Cause
Staining of Teeth
By WILLIAM LAWRENCE, D.D.S.

therefore should not be the
llomalna
drug ~f preference. Othe_r
The national domain is all
antlbiollc~ should be substr,,~ifand, public and private; the
luted to fight disease:
~public domain 1s the remain·
The degree of stamlng de- mg portliftl of lands originally
pends on amount of dl'ug · acquired by our government.
taken and length of treatment, but also varies with the
person. Stains are permanent
and are in the enamel, not on
the surface. They can't be
rubbed or polished off.
There are some few cases
when stain is not severe and
is close to the surface. In
these cases, It'' possible to
shave off the staine:l enamel
and highly polish the new surface. This technique should
be highly selective and depends on your dent!st's judgment. Teeth sometimes be·
come markedly sensitive
after this treatment.
Later in life, when teeth
are fully formed and roots
fully developed, stained teeth
can be capped with porcelain
crowns. This can restore
them to natural beauty.

R:!lnbows
Rainbows are caused by
sunlight striking drops of
water. As light strikes the
raindrops, it · is reflected and
bent, s e n d·'i n g off myriad
colors.

NOW IN.
'

POMEROY
Enjoy the Fresh New Taste
ORANGE

•

A great new taste • .• • pure, wholesome, delicious! Delicately carbonated to bring out the true, fruit flavor.

ANTHONY
Plumbing-Heating

~

""., NIA, loc.

~~

IN THE NEW
BOTTLE

"NO-HO-HO! You're o 'militant nonviolent,' not a
'lfiolent nonmilitant'!"

Today's
Almanac

By tradition, the bidder lit·
ling nearest the rostrum aeta
the item in the. event of equal
biddinl! at an aucUPn.
The U.S. mints at Charlotte,
N.C., and Dahlbne'p, Ga.,
ceased ojli!raticm at the out·
break of the Civil War.

..

'
'

CARTON

By United Preas International
Today Is Wednesday, June 12,
the 164th cii!.Y .of 1968 with 202 to
follow.
·
The moon Is between Ita full
phase and last quarter.
The morning stars are Saturn
and Venus.
The evening star Is J~C~Iter.
On this day In history:
In 1630 the first governor of
the Massachusetts. Bay Colony,
John Wlntrhop, :entered the
harbor at Salem.

a'

In 1924 Pre~ldent calvin
Coolidge recel ved the presidential nomination at the Republican convention In Cleveland.
In 1963 a sniper killed Negro
civil rights leader Medgar
Evers In Jackson, Miss.
In 1967 the U.S. S~C~reme
Court ~ec;l that states could
not ou~ lnterractal marriages.
' ··
A tho\ight for the day: Plato
once said, "No evil can happen
to a good man, either In llfe or
after death."

•

'i

GET SEVERAL

I

l
I

CARTONS TODAY
BOTTLED &amp; DISTRIBUTED By The SEVEN-UP BOTTLING
'

co.·

'

PRODUCE BUYSl
,,

/

(

DELICIOUS FRESH SWEET

'

\ - ,..f

'''

-------------•

AT RACNE

\!~!l.&lt;;.l2ii.S.Q.t!il
FROZEN. FRENCH FRIES

PERCH
FILLETS

---------1
I

r ..
I RUTLAND
·

l!~~!:-~!2!!J

49c

21o~z.

Summer

.

.

•29'

OUR GOOD.GRADE
.,

oz. JAR

NESTEA

BOTS.

39c

NO.2~

CAliS

''

I

..."'

'

'

DB.SEY BRAND

!

'

TOILJr TISS·UE

.2·

/4-ROLL

- PKG.

.
•·

\ .

\

2
5

APRICOTS

FOR

C·

,,[, '

HUNT'S BRAND

Pork&amp;Beans

ICf.·CREAM

£

oum 37c

VAN
, CAMP'S

CATsu ·p

2

SALAD ·IIESSING

JAR

LIBBY'S RWIN PACK) ·

1~oz.

ZESTEE BRAND

foz.ggc

1.14

49c

CAN

Coolers

CHASE &amp;SANBORN
'

BEEF STEW
24 oz.

For

•

INSTANT COFFEE

.

Quantities

VAN CAMP'S

/

HOT DOG SAUCE

10

Umit

We Hove The Hom urger TOO!

CASTLEBERRY'S

·CH,OCOLATE
.
M'I LK

Right
Reserved
to

AT RUTLAND

LB.39c

JUNE

13-14-15

LB.
PKG.
PORT-0-ROCKLAND

r::.

'·

5

c
''

,.

CORN
5 49c
l6RS

FLORI-DA
ORANGES

5 a~G 59c

I

j

�-••·• , ,. _ _ ,,. _ _ _ _ . ._ _,..._ __ , .,1 \...._, -

&lt;
',

V•

...

~

'1-• l .,..,_,.

o •L- • · ~ •-

,, ,. ..... . .... ,.... .... , _ _ .. • ~..,.,_, , , ,, -••'''•• ••

, . ' " ' '~

-·•• ·-'

;.,
••

'
f

.

-\

•

· n - TliO Dolly SenUnel, Mlddlfi)Ol't-Pbmeroy; Juno12; .1968

:·A.LITTLE' 'HOMEWORK' Watching
....... Q\2
Pomeroy _.

Want Ads Bri;ng
. Top Grade. Results

-'Ill
•••cnt~~~~oTIM

. .. ......._....

CIMIR.t... &amp; CM'rect. . .
WIN .. ICittiM -'1 t

.,

e.-. ...

laULATIONI

,... PUINitlltl' ,...,.. ""' ,....,

.. tflt ... ,.... • ., ... Ill. . . . . . .

n.. ,..._.,

fNHPMII.

"

will Mt

..........w. ,., ...,. """ ...
•••rtiH.

lrlaf'Nd

OAno

,.,, W1M M

J ee11t1 ,_, WtN

ltr*t

Me . _.......
MlniMU• Cilia.... 1k

........ .., ...Ntt.I'H ........
' ' " IIIMf'tlefta,

11 """ ,.,
,,...,.
......
II ,., lent Dllcellld M

""'

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

W.nl .... ,...........,.

!IIIII Ml

~~~

CARD 01 TMANKI • MITVAIY
t1JI fiH' M wtrf miniMum. 11.
ltNJHIMI ..... IL

·-·

ILIND ADI
MfiiiiMl tiC C....... (1141P .....,..

OfiPICI NOUII
till ,..._ te J:tt .... D.IIIJ
• • ••• .. llltl ...............

brdof'1111nks
I WISH to thank my relatives
and friends for their visits
and &lt;ards. I also want to
!bank Dr. Plrkens and nurses
at Veterans Memorial Hospital for their kindnesses.
Mildred Frank 6-U.ltc

Notice
ALL MEMBERS and thelr
guests are urged to attea:l the

Rutland Gun Club tra,:~ shoot,
Juo! ' d:3, 1968, and the monthly
meeiing on June 14.
6 12 2tc

REVIVAL NOW In progress at
Ash St. Free Will Baptlst
Church in Middleport held by
Rev. John Mayhew from W.
Va.
~U-ta.
THERE WILL he a gun sbool
Sunday, June 16, beginning at
noon at the Forked Run
Sporlsman Club. Everyone Is
weloome.
~ll~t.
THE HOUSE of Wilson: l!:lollc
flsb and supplies. Open I a.
m. to t p.m. TueaclaJ througb
Salunlay; Sunday and Monday by appointment. Flnt
· !:Old lei~ below Pleasant Pl.
c.:.:, .-rt_._. Watch I« signs. Pb.
11'15-1 .
&amp;f.IOic
WILL
for elderly WliiDell
In my borne. Pbooe 73117115.

w.«p
'I'!RMlTES SWARMING! -

'nle7 a ro-productlves, DOl
JOUI' -ter colony. Free Jn.
lp0ctl01111 and lnformati&lt;m on
ennrl space dangers. No
IIIOII!Ian, low ovedlead, 50
per Ct!llt aavlng!. Allied Pest

Cclntrol. Pomeroy'
Oblo.
Pbooe IIIU86I eveulnp.

---at

WILL DO aewlng

WWOlp

home -

pocket~,

llppm,

pegglq,
hemming, alleratlons, ole.
Mrs. Freddie Thabet. Muon,
Phone ~1.
4-10-tfe

HAPPY HOUR, Sllenlllf Sprlnp
Nile Club. 5 to 8 p.m. Monday thru Friday. Ladleo nlgbt
etlry Friday.
Utle

HMpWantecl
WAITRESS ·FOR bar or restaurant. Phone 99U253. 6-!Nte
DESK CLERK. Uve ln. Apply
In per11011 at ObJo lfDtel
f.ll

CARRIBt
WANIID
,..,.,. Route.

6

Motor

QU:m

eo.

BUDGET PRICE lumlllln on
our lblrd floor budget shop.
Baker FDrnllure, Middleport.
Oldo.
f II tie

1967 CHEVELLE MALIBU ................ .
4 Door std. Trans., Low mileage. Spotless clean interior,
MaroOn finish with m1tchina: interior. Radio, Heater, White

SEWING MACHM:S, repoJr
servlee, an makes. WY J.
2284. Tbe Fobrle Sbop, Pomeroy. Autborlzed Singer Sales
and Service. We Sharpen
Sclaiors.
sa-trc

Walls.
1967 CIIEV. l!.p'ALA 4 DR. •••• •.. .• • • ...•. $Z895
327 Engine, Turbo Hydrunatlc Trans., Power Steering,

)Vhlte wall Urea. White ftnlsh with Turq. Interior. Radio
and heater. The car has Bal. of warranti)' and new car title.
!966 CHEVY D NOVA ... , ••
HT Cpe, Low mUeage by local

JKir W. Carsey, Mgr.

. ....•...... . .$1695 ·

ForS.Ie

resident. Tires llke new.
V8 Engine, Automatic Trans., Power SteeriJv, Radio and
,ll.ealer - White Onl~ •

croARE'l'I'E vending madl1net

WAITRESS and ear bop. App1J
In periOD. Cnnr's SIW:
Baalll.
IMe

Auction
OONSIGNI4ENI' Sale: Completll
line of farm madd""l IIIII
household Items. Juoe 15 stan.
lq at 11000. Sldaldll auc:tloD
.. Leo Monil farm, R1111m1,
Obio. AII)'Uie 11'11111111 to lell
1111 Item at the oale call 7G4111 ar 70-4117. Not ...paa.
lllllo far occldeutl. LuDell wiD
lie .....oc1. Terms .. IIIII Clob.
'1411:

Wanted To Buy ··
SMALL ACREAGE, no ba1Jdln8,
•\ IIIIU prlee and full partlcullrl. Write Box 6811 F c-o the
. .Dilly Sentinel, ~..
f-7~·

ANTrQUES, fumlture, dbllel.
mJwlllneoos. Mrs. Howard
Cecil, 110 'lr. Mllin St., PoftiJ'.
14-lfe

Business Servi(es
.

I

••
. Busl11811 Strvlctt

RADIO • TV repair, reasonable prlcet. Antenna lr Booster service. Jobn Harrison,
701 Broadway SL, Middleport,
Ohio. Pbone 1191-2522. open
evening~.
8-S-30te

SAVE MONEY at 81')'11nt's ..
and servite. AI!C Enterpriaes.
a gift for Dad. Tape reoordMason, W.Va. Phone ma4S. CURTISS "DAIRY BED'"
breeding aervlee. CaD Leland
m reduced $15 to PJ, SM.
lf.lle
radio only $9.98. Automat!&lt;
Parker, Pomeroy residence
1111!-2284 or call station TupOPIN EVES. 8:00 P.M.
tetter opener. battery power·
pen Plalna 16'1-3211. U 1101&lt;1
. For Trade
od fl. Golf balls 17 a dozen;
I'OMIIIOY, OHiO
dresS shoes $8.91 pair. SaVII CASH FOR Antiques. BID
APPALOSSA STUD service. 111
Ramm, Mlddleport, Ohio.
ball, portable TV like new,
appoiDtment, phone 119Ulll
$611; stereo player $59.95; gas.
5-lNOtc
For Sale
For 5•1• or Rtnt
l-14-30tp
pel records, two for 15; watFIVE ROOM bouse and llalb, RACING HYDRO plane, 10 loot,
ches, $8.95; electrle guilarl,
LI.AL NOYICI
alwolnum siding, storm wb- 16 HP motor, trailer. Must
c. C. liJIADJ'OBD
$29.95. Shop and save at BryNOTICI Ofl AP'IIOIMTMINT
sell, $250, or best offer. Phone
GoWI, t8200. Pbone 111U11J.
. . Ne. 1f,tll
AUCl'IONEER
ant's, 108 W. Mabt, Pomeroy. ....... .. ...... 1.. cNertlft..,,
.,...
843-2736.
6-12-Stc
IMp
Complete
Service
&amp;-11-ftc cttMCI.
NoUn II btNbJ' IIQD thl.t f'Nd
Write,
Pltoae or W
Crow, .lr.. of Pomero1. llelp
JOHN DEERE 4211 dozer with THREE ACRES, 5 room bouse, W.
Crill Bradltrrd
Coun\f, ObJo, b. beea. dulJ' appalat.For Rent
Bd Eieeutor of Lbe Eltate of ldltll
win&lt;:h and blade; also 1951
RadDe.
Oltlt
new roof. barn, cellar, two L. HartiDIIf• 4eceutd. la&amp;e of Pom•
1'WO troRNISiiED apartments,
Studebaker 2\i ton trudc with
ei"OJ',
Melli
Co1111t)',
Oblo.
• 1 tie
claterns and fumlture $4500.
4 rooms and bath. Phone 1192CH4llon aN req111Nd to ftle tM1r
five speed transmlssion. Ph.
elJim•
wtth
llllld
ftduelaQ"
'tlflthtn
four
Phone 74U813.
&amp;-16-30tp
W/5, alter 5, phone 1111!-2571.
DICID.\U,
992-6040.
6-!Utc
De.ted Ulll ht. dal of lwae, 1M8.
&amp;-11~
r. B. O'BBIIIN
LARGE HOUSE In Racine, t
Probate IWIP of Kid COUII\1
63 HONDA, recently overhauled,
room•. one third a&lt;re lot, .111M J.lJ.U
FURNISHED APAR'I'MENT on
_. EXPERT
and helmet; also '59 Ford, 8
sood
location, $85110. Phone
flnll floor for adults only, ZlJ cylinder. See Raymond Rowd
NO'flel
· Wheal Alignment
940-3752.
$-2!1-121e
Bldl wm .,. nce~ntt 1t tiM offto.
South Fifth Ave., Middleport.
after 6 p.m. or phone 247-22'10.
"
of Webder and I"Dltz. Po~.
Pbone ltZ-5435.
6-11-lfe
Oldo. uatn Tueecla,.. lu11e Ut,
6-ll~te
POODLE PUPPIES, AltC Toy at UI:OO O'Ciocll: A.M. for tbe pie
of tbe Oraee LJDn Carr propeitJ,
miniature. 175 and up. stud llhlaUd
In the VUIIQ of Rar!'lloll·
PLENTY of apace lor one tralJ. 15 TON mixed hay and one :Jn.
..rue, Ohio. Bldl miJ' bl 1111'bmltted
servl&lt;e
and
grooming.
Phooe
er' with all laclUiles. In Syra. ternatlonal drag plow, two bot.
In wrltl!lf or in perton at t'tle time
11 3 tfe
of llle. '!'he rtl'ht ll mnllll to r-.
cuse. Call 18U104. f-11-t!e tom. 14-lncl!; eontact Marvin 19U443.
Jed any or all bl4a.
""'""' c. Mlrfl•·
Keebaugh before 7 p.m. at 14 FOOT WEAVER SlUFF, 3.6
AdMI..lttraiOro
-GUARANI'IED,. .
FURNISHED and unfurnlsbed
Pomeroy 1192-5342 after 7 p.m.
...... "' Or.ct """' earr,
HP
motor
ard
oars,
$140.
Ph.
apartments. Cl01e to scllool.
at Chester 985-3913. 6 12 3tc
Welltttr and Fultl
949-4272.
6 12 6tc
Pllone IIUI4S.
111-IJ.Ife
Attorn..,. ftr AciMh•llfratw
1-10; 1-UJ I-ll; 1-1.3; S.tt1 •tt; 8 11
SORREL RIDING mare, white
LARGE live room and baOt
blai!O, stocklnga : $165. Phone
apartment, newly de«&lt;ratod,
99Um.
6-11-Mp
Real Estate For S•lt
furna&lt;e beat, Pomeroy,
O'BRIEN I CROW
Phone 119W8'1.
1-~-lfc
FOUR ROOM HOUSE, bath,
REALTY COMPANY
basement. two large loll, ID
POMEROY-Butternut Ave. 2
TRAILER SPACE, an uWitlell
Racine. Call 992-:1039 or HOstory frame, 4 bedrooms, I
avallable. lnqulno 156 MulberMr. and Mrs. James Robert
By JEAN HALL
1-7-etp batha. garage. $1,850.00.
White
and Mary Beth ol Dunbar,
ry alter S or I p.m. Wrllo P.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Laven..
0. Box 425 Pomeroy, 1-»Ue
POMEROY- Union Ave. Ter- der, Misses Linda ard Mary W. Va., visited Friday with his
TWO BEDROOM bome. bath
race, I It story frame, 2 bed- La.ven;Jer spent a recent week- mother, Agnes White, and uncle,
full basement, garage: Tworooms,
bath,
basemeDt. end In Chicago with their broth-- Richard Duckworth, and her
FliRNISIIED apartment, two year-old borne in Syracuse.
$1,1100.110.
bedroomll, lrflddleport. Pbooe
ers, Jame s and Larry, and fam- mother, Mrs. Rose Schwarz and
Phone 992-1421.
5-IWOte
MIDDLEPORT
South
2nd,
ilies. They went espedally tore- family ol Mason, w. va. They
IIINrlt.
&amp;f.lle
2 91ory frame, 4 bedroo!DII, J turn their motber, Mrs. Clan also visited Mr. and Mrs. Char·
GEin"S A GAY .GJRL -Rea.
Lavender, to her home here ~ leo Whito and Tennna, BeUlah
sJiboMS AND BATH, 170 Jlul.
batha. $10,0iio.IIO.
dy lor a whirl, after cleaDing
er
she· -had spent rour weeks White and Jell Darst. Ml&amp;tteport,
FOR
RENT,
FU11N1S11ED
hell')' Ave., Pomeroy. Coocarpets with Blue lA!atre.
accompanied by Mrs. Agnes
in Chicago with her sons.
~~ Rose Si.lloa, j6ooe Rent electric sbampooer, $1, APARTMENT, I bedroom.
Mr. and Mrs. Glem Cund.ifi White.
HENRY CLELAND
- .alter • p.m. Pbooe Baker Furniture.
~10-4U!
spent
a weekend at their home
MaL
&amp;f.lle
~
here.
FULLY EQUIPPED rerreatlon
Mr. and Mrs. John Rowe and
THREE ROOM furnished apartcenter In Racine; 4 pool Ia·
famUy
spent sunday evening at
ment, bath, adults, 126 Mul·
FACTS
~ . ping ~ table, pop
the
James
Teaford home.
berry. Phone 992-66911. 6-12-tk
LIGA&amp;. NOTICI
cooler. etr. Also 2-story brick

rorneroy motor Co.

t•

·--

5.55

,

....

From thO Large&amp;t T,.,lt or
Bulltbzer Radlamr To The
&amp;nallost Heater Core. . ..

ca.,.. c...n...

lmttll MJtlt

1._•_•_-_v_ou._•_' """ ••· •___
....,..., ,

.__._
...

BUETrNARS

AIR CONDmOHING Jlefr1gll'

PH, 992-2143

otlon servloe. Ja&lt;k'a Refrigeration, New Raven. lronl
182-20'11.
' • do

FlEE STORAGE

READY • MIX eonerete dellY·
enol right to JOUI' project.
Fast and easy. Free esti-

MOTH PROOFING

mates. Phone 99UIIf, Goelleln Ready • Mll Co,, Middleport, Ob!Q.
810 tfe

Masoo, W. Va.

..,.

650x13
650.14

Pr1co T011
9.18 .3l
Ul ,.g

700.13
700x14
750x14
670.15

10.18
IO.U
11.11

SPECIAL
$295.00
RED RSH BOAT

·"
A3
.4J
.
n.u .47
Plu• Rocoppoblo lxchN•tlonw~ Gwranttt
·

Mr. and Mrs. George Freeland
and Agnes White spent Tuesday
even!~

with Mrs. Dorothy Rol-

ler of MlddleJ)Ort and also attended a meeting of the Doreoa
Ml!lsionary Circle at the home
of Mn Jolm MeNeU.
Mrs. cart Duckworth, 1811
Woodland Drive, COshO&lt;ton, ala·
ter-l~&gt;-iaw of Agnes White and
Richard Duckworth is at her
home lollowtng surgery at Unl·
verslcy HoS()lW, Columbus.

.

MASTElCIAFT
TIAILER

Schwarzel Marine
Hockin_gport, Ohio

'

can ••·

Origin Lost In Time

- ~

come•

•

Clovia!

,

stones were the soldiers of

Alexander the Great.

•

\o.MrcH ONE WElle '/OU U51r-J6
WUE&gt;l '{OU TOOK THf E~M ?

UTTLE ORP!lAN ANNIE

WPL, AS 1 YTMPPSO
-~
I!OI!&amp;RS
OR IWIWADE
IN,JU$

o;o•OR

11JO&lt;t(~

Keeping Meigs =
•
..•
Gallia 0nd
Mason Area .••
Informed As .•
•
Well As
"

~

•

~

"Yankee Doodle" was

Entertained

first sung by British troops
to make fun of the American colonial forces, The
World Almanac notes. But
by the end of the Revolutionary War, the victorious
colonials were singing the
so~g themselves and proud
to be known as Yankee
Doodles.

i

-..

•
'

..

I

'

'

Q-Wlth what C!Uiotn iB the -.
name Peter Funk g.,..raliy -a&amp;IO&lt;iated1
·

IN THE SWIM-This An·
. nette Kellerman and shifty
· eover~up are made ot Orion
aeryUc eluttclaed with Lycra

• • •

. Th6 fellow who taker •
little •omething for hil
health had better put it
back before the druggist
spots him.

•pandex. They wen designed
In turquoi.e with or&amp;ft&amp;'e and
yellow atrlpes by Bob b 1 e
Brooks of :Montreal, Que. The
&amp;leeveleu oover~up alao can be
worn over thr pRRtl ar n tunlr:

A-The custom of using
tbe name for 1 person employed at an auction' to olrer
bogua bldJ In order to raise
the price.

&amp;-

DAILY CROSSWORD
1. Bt10vel181
pm11Dt

66 Mercury ..

.. - - ·

C,done V8 GT 2
Hard . Top. ,890 V8 e..lDe. 4 rrp, • ,

Sblft. One owner dew GTO
Trrode-IIL

AUCTION

a Dr.

=:

lllrd 'l'oJI • 400 :·

:~J."- v~,.:·~! :

:

f1 Pontl1c .. $2895 ::

K-lchool el AvoA

GTO

.. Will Conduot
lerlol ol ........

Clo- At Tho Lof""
~ in O.ll!pollt.

Ctrtolilla 2 Dr. lllrd Top.
clean lDiide ond '"'l

:

........

11. In lido

12. Tr1n10m
••• ,....
11. Cue
11, Roup lava
!1. Mam&gt;lo

11. Inquire

20. River:
Bo. Am.
11. Liberate

:a. Stream of

··-

--~1
IU-

e.lle.llre

7. Hel&amp;hl:
abbr.

I. Deupte

box

II. Btl....

1nr

h&amp;wlllom
ll.llollon
oo&amp;a
li.Bodlolaf
· water
18. Minced

i'rancll

O&amp;tb

ll.l'ut

lt. CoalteJ..

l&amp;Uon
11. Run

~{glOOID~;u..J::~-:c

Ina'

11.~t

aru..

'

II.Po&lt;k.

Unaeramble th- &amp;rur Jumbieo,
letter to tlth oquore. lo

OM

form four ordin•ry word1.

to&amp;

painter

I

24. Buperlo.
tlvo

ondlq

20, Beaded
Uurd

17.ollolnaa7
119. Hotel

prtc.o

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

311. RrK. for

ono: &amp;blir.
24. Rufflon

110. Btolrw&amp;y

IT. 0 31. Bprud

31. Banal
(IOit

fO. M-110to
· · dr)'

awa.y

rrom ·

.,..-r:--r;-

GUAJIE

..

,,,_ ._,... c..... T -

..........

,~

~- · ~

....

[]

b
II
II
tGLUPEA I
PRAIT

WHAT A PAIR OF
'IOUNI5 D05 Fii\NCI~

M16MT eN6A6E IN.

3T.Ptrlob
:JI. Inooct
B. Tleldo
:JI. IIIII af 1111
tnllnlU¥0
st. Rlvtr:

Jullt 14111 At 7:10. - -

VII1••1...

Moy

Wltheut Chorwo or

10. P....,.war

water

SteerJnc. Power
lralll. ·Wtr'll
.
J0U to !be ODO

ltor11nt Prl..r l•oinlttt

lntotottod
It this Pint

e.IHnvnpour
plal!o

66 PontiiC .. $2495 •
~-

SQIOOI.

0111~

~;

II

"

r&lt;
c•

Mr.

III.JI4foro

lt.PO.-re
:JI. Two

3 ROOMS

41. DfOOpo
d.N6t

~

.......... .......
~

-----~.

A Q»tt111•

III"U

KWU WURJ"i:
DV .PKWI"O·I'

W.VA.

..

-=

lXVZUl

FUINRUIE CO.

.·--··'--.. ---.. --!'"-•"'"......1!1'_. . . _&lt;-A..;.-~..:-

IIOIMTA " " "

iit':'."r of (

::m= .·

'MAlON
•

lo"""" LWY C-1

··!f.~.

1.

Cllvtillllt , .....
"Sure Jant Ellon lives within her allowance-sht 1111
$10 a wook!"

(qweft II"]WCPW)

at. Rob

.e. Dop

New Furniture
ONLY $'299
sao.oo .........-. ..

,... .11-....... -

.........

'I

Here

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

t-nilfmble.

•
Q .,

juGt in

,.

presents

Origin of the diamond Jn.
dustry Is lost in time. It is
believed that by 1000 B.C. the
Chinese were obtaining the
hard gems from northern
B o rn·e o. TradltlonaUy,. the
first westerners to see the

car

back
time~

INFORMATION
NEWS

I l l tic

I qo~
Chipper's

~

PJt•.

~·

-,,r---"'"1

WMPO

AUTOMOBU..E Jn!tll"anee ben
t!811eeUed1 Lost your opent.
or'o 11eense1

•

'

TilE BE.W
UVJ'-JG IT lJPI

..

Insurance

.E ...

I

OF &lt;nUR&gt;E, IF YO.J'D.
LIKE 10 :sE&amp; ME. t 11-llNK
I &lt;XX.XD SGU£.ZE YrJJ
IM .. LE.T"S SJ..'-1 r.. ~ "--FROM 11-li.JIISDA'I 1' 1

'

PHONE _,#II

.

or McCc:.

der and famlly.

----

BEGINNERS

FlRESTotiE DLC 100
NEW TREAJ)..ILACKWALL .

Sampson HaD.

nellsville and Mrs. Edna Thlrcyacre oC Hawaii spent two days
recently with Mrs. Clara Laven..

"E~10A~

fiALI!lS AND SERVICI!:.

51,.

VE~ EASt~Y I

MY DEAR.. rM

MNRUDE

of Mldd1eport spent an eveninc
with Mr. and Mrs. Jame11 TeaMrs. Mary Curry

.

773-6543

\'OU A

Mr. and Mrs. Don Covert were
recent Sunday dinner guests of
Mrs. Mildred Salser and family . .
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Teaford
Mr~

THE BORN LOSER

ABC CLEANERS

son Hall.

ford and

Pomeroy

SAVE SPACE

Mrs. Don Hendricks spent a
recent afternoon with Mrs. Samp..

...

......

ABBIE AND SLATS

':f.·

WORLD ALMANAC

seeooo

I

Anl~t tltt orltinal bt111t' of YGIJ'
Clnnad in your own fttm1 by Von Scllr tr
dry-fo•m l]ltthod. No 111ns. No f~n . Na
odor. U1e rut• tilt sam• dty.

•t.

MAI"1'11. OP IITT\.IMI.If.T
• tile blO&lt;k building on 3rd· INOP THI
ACCOUNTS. PROIATI COURT,
FURNISHED APARTMENT,
MIIOI II:OUNTY, OHIO
St., Radne. Large business
A c:C:0\111\1 aDd VOUCbUI of Ule fOlthree rooms, bath, 1M Mulroom now ocellpied by reere- lowinC named ftdud.art.1 ban been
helry Ave. Phone 1192-&gt;91111.
ftled .la the Proln.te Ccnan. 11..,.
-i!tlon center. Three apart- l:o\l.DQ,
Uhlo, for apprvvel aDd .. t.
6-12-tf~
ments on
floor, t w o ue....nt ~
CA.SE NO . IT.BJ. Zilblb C\lrrent
lurnlshed. Separate garage &amp; A.ceout
of: Delma llaliQ, Quard.
laundry room with apartment ian of Rulb Ann HalleJ, a mlDol".
CAB&amp; NO, 18.333. &amp;!Pt.b. Cunut
on seoond floor. Apartment A«lount ~ BettJ L. &amp;mit.b, Guuciof tbe ~'- of JlarJ It, Gal·
parUy furnished. Also separ· Wl
kJber I:Dd Debra L. Oauaper,
.....n .
ate one story wooden businea
t:ASE NO. le.383. Fint ud nJW
building ana va&lt;1111t lot. All
Aecount of ll•nojnl D. Webltu,
De Bollia NOll of the
For Slit
furniture Included, all units A.lt.lni&amp;\Utrat.oz
of Peart D. LottrtdJe, •
TWO iEDROOM houu traDer. rented with ;~ood income. CoJr ~~~
l:e&amp;lld.
CAB&amp; NO. 18,.U3. Fint UWl l"ll:lal
PJime 991-5112.
S.ll-4tc tact Joe Britt at RecreaUon
Aceo\ult of llu)' E. J'ncbr, Ex•
(!Ulof of tbe ..Uite of Ella Freek·
Cent.r, or can 940-m.
er. Dlceued.
6NE WESTERN riding borse.
~~lfe
CABI: NO. 18M3. nnt and naaJ
Al!eown of X.thlee~~ tl-ucll AdPhone Muon 773-11'11.
.m.l.DJ.IUatrtx De !IDIIil .N fl of Ull
~11~ !967 AVACADO green Flreblrd.
Eltate ol ...,. H. Frmell, Dlclu·
Take over paymenta or trade
CAll NO. 18.8M. rtm aDd 1\aal
60 liP SCOTI' motor. electrlc lor older oar. Phone 11112-39110.
Acoount of &amp;a&amp;hlea f'rucil Ado
miallt.r1tru De Bon.Lt Noa of tb
starter. generator, handle
6-!Utc
llnate o1: a.orte P. rrmc~~. o.
oontrol, $200: AC hay rake on
CAM HO, ltMl. Flm ud J'laa1
rubber, power take off 1$0: SIMMONS METAL bed and
Aeco\lnt of Kq Wood, ~
tntrtz. 01 &amp;be .~lata.. ol' , ....
Now Idea mower. on rubber,
springs, also one Door laDIIJ. lVOOCio
Dece11Md.
$50; ~fool dloe, SID; Jolm
f;AH NO. a.-. rtnal aacl IHIPhlliiO 1111!-3115S.
~IUic:
IrtbUUwt A.e.eOW1t of 'Rk:laard &amp;.
Deere eom planter, $20; maIDUI, AclmiDlRn.tor of U&amp;e Eltate
o1 .t.ero1 ere-.. .o.c:.a.ed.
nure spreader on rubber $25. WALNUT STEREO radio. BelllltA&amp;I NO. 111,114. Flnt and l'lnal
tiM
contemporary
walnut
~
Bm Grueser, Rt. I, MJnm.
Aecowlt of AIIDI II. OpUD.. &amp;a.
culrb of lbe .... u.te ot KIII'DI)'
reo with AM • 1lfll' radio, deville.
~11-3tp
luxe floating turntable, dual
t..rme. ucepUon~ are fUed IoblN·
~--to, 1 Hid KGDW~te wW be for hear111611 ZIG ZAG mrlng maclrlne. volume control. Four speed l"f
IMfore Mid Co\an on U. 1Jtb
IWJ, 11i188. at wb1eb ume - .
This marhine makes button- autnmatl&lt; cl!anger. Pay only
tl wW btl couldered and COD$ll
per
month
or
~
boles, dams &amp; emb. Take
hom daJ kl 411 uW f:iii&amp;D7
$'11.82.
Free
home
demonsfn.
over 8 payments of $8.31 per
'· H. O'&amp;RIIN
f-7-ete
P'ltOIATI JUDGI
month or $15 cash. We will Uon. CaD 1192-3211.
•auo
bring this macl!lne to your
borne lor you to try. CaD MAPLE STEREO. 111611 model
LIOAL NOTICI
Ottold L. Olbbe. wtloee plaee of
1111!-21111.
~lHtc
stereo. L&lt;lvelv maple, AM lr reetdce.
II Muon, ' w... VlriJinll,
FM radio. Four speed auto- aD4 whOM •nkrl ...._ II ....
Gerold L. Olbbl, IIA ltUI831, 70ftla
5 ROOM HOUSE, bath, large mad&lt; changer, !oar speaker llala\a1Wic:e Co. C, PDn Cancnro, Colo.-.do il hereb,- nottfiH that on tile
lot; also 14 fool john boat. 24 oystem. Pay only t89.!18 or ,ltd
ol .h&amp;DI, . . . au. :E. 01"'-·
Rallroad St., Middleport. montlriy payments of ~- Froe belnr plaintiff flied Mr petUloa
blm .. ..,.DIIaat ,. die
bome demonstration, call 992- IJilntt
Phone 1192-3825.
~11-71&lt;
Court of CommoJI
llellt COW·
!21!.
1-7-ete b. Oldo. c... No. IUOB pnrfnl few
~lYOI'Ct from laid O.rold L. OftiN
oa tiM lf'O\lDdl ol lf'OII •llld If
REAL SOL'ND. 1968 -.o AM
dV.t.J' ud txtrtme eruelty, plalaUU
A
NEW
shlnrnent
or
elolhiD•
• FM radio, walnut ftnloh.
•* prUI for C!Gitod:' Of adDOr
hss arrived. Women's and elllld., tupport 11ld alimonJ aad otbar
, Take over paymento of 15.14
,..... NIWJ Aid eiUM wW M IIW
Children's and Men's Wort bearlDI
' per month or pay t98.21. WID
oa or altar U. :tOOt dar Dl
UnlformJ. Allo Ford "--ool - IW. 1-. SUI J!:. Olbbl, plU.Uff
discount lor cash. Phone 992plrkup truck; wpeed lrlm8- 1: B. O'BIIn.
21111.
~11-4te
mlsslon. Jellm ClotlllDa AUorneJ for PlaiDtiUJolt . .
Store. Rt. 13, Potrieroy.
BALDWIN ROME organ to he
LIOAL NOTICW
pleted up ID thiJ erea. For
NonCI 011 APJID1NTMIUIT
c....... lt,NI
Information, write Credit
tf IWf TYree. Jr,. Dlct-111.
Mgr., Graves Plano • Organ BLACK MINIATURE Poodle ......
Heuce il beNbJ ll'Ma \hat om.
Pope, tm. Weot lllghland TJrile 01! IDU.Ktl 1. Mld4iQtrt, OMI.
Co., 333 E. Broad St .. Colum.
Mea IJuiT appatnt.d .Admta!ttnWhite Tmlen $1110, IBM bu
bull, Ohio.
~11·2tc
tdJ: or tiM EA&amp;t• Df BOJ ,.,.., lr ..
Farman cub Tra&lt;tor, hydrau. cleeeUed, ••• of fl011U! l, llldiDfl·
port, Mtlte c::oaat,, Oblo.
lle lift, 3 point last bitch, sin&lt;:replttn are required \0 file lbelr
SAVE~ or more on aluminum
fDill'
gle plow, &amp; foot eutler bar clal.mi Wltb llld flduclar,- wltbla.
.
boats. All sizes 10-12-IS-14
Dat.ld WI lrtt diJ of June, 1 foot. can 1111!-2347, or 992-82511. and dlsr $11110. Price linn. Lit.
r. K. O'U:liN
Ue
Barkaroo
Kennell,
Cool·
•PnH\- IUdll of nld Couatr
5-10-SO!c
3tc!
viUe, Ohio, 1169-3654. f-7-IOte · .IUM f..iJ.II

I

CARPETING

""

Reo.--

I
I

UFE TO
YOUR

.POMEROY HOME AND .AUTO

Syracuse News, Society

I

IT MUST. BE THAT
NEW FORMULA . / - ---,;-1 GOT HIM ON

I WONDER
WHAT MADE
TATER'S HAIR
SPROUT UP
OVERNIGHT,
PAW-·

BRING NEW

----

-.

lnllsiness
•
Section

BARNEY

.

.

I,.........,.
.... DIY_,.,.,_...
.......
........ t .... '

..

.,•
•

. . . . . ---·-·- ---- .'""'"'""

4Psta« a

IXVIIUI
~0.111

OPZI:

KWU

DWUP

DVI"U. -

Y..le*(O Ci7J&gt;I\Iflolte• NOTHINO BlJT liii..IOlON II CA•
PAJlL!Ii Of C,IWiqtNq P4QIII ·JNTO JILIAIUUII.-IT~•
IILAUS
,. '

"f!
'

~'.OR

.

•

�-••·• , ,. _ _ ,,. _ _ _ _ . ._ _,..._ __ , .,1 \...._, -

&lt;
',

V•

...

~

'1-• l .,..,_,.

o •L- • · ~ •-

,, ,. ..... . .... ,.... .... , _ _ .. • ~..,.,_, , , ,, -••'''•• ••

, . ' " ' '~

-·•• ·-'

;.,
••

'
f

.

-\

•

· n - TliO Dolly SenUnel, Mlddlfi)Ol't-Pbmeroy; Juno12; .1968

:·A.LITTLE' 'HOMEWORK' Watching
....... Q\2
Pomeroy _.

Want Ads Bri;ng
. Top Grade. Results

-'Ill
•••cnt~~~~oTIM

. .. ......._....

CIMIR.t... &amp; CM'rect. . .
WIN .. ICittiM -'1 t

.,

e.-. ...

laULATIONI

,... PUINitlltl' ,...,.. ""' ,....,

.. tflt ... ,.... • ., ... Ill. . . . . . .

n.. ,..._.,

fNHPMII.

"

will Mt

..........w. ,., ...,. """ ...
•••rtiH.

lrlaf'Nd

OAno

,.,, W1M M

J ee11t1 ,_, WtN

ltr*t

Me . _.......
MlniMU• Cilia.... 1k

........ .., ...Ntt.I'H ........
' ' " IIIMf'tlefta,

11 """ ,.,
,,...,.
......
II ,., lent Dllcellld M

""'

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

W.nl .... ,...........,.

!IIIII Ml

~~~

CARD 01 TMANKI • MITVAIY
t1JI fiH' M wtrf miniMum. 11.
ltNJHIMI ..... IL

·-·

ILIND ADI
MfiiiiMl tiC C....... (1141P .....,..

OfiPICI NOUII
till ,..._ te J:tt .... D.IIIJ
• • ••• .. llltl ...............

brdof'1111nks
I WISH to thank my relatives
and friends for their visits
and &lt;ards. I also want to
!bank Dr. Plrkens and nurses
at Veterans Memorial Hospital for their kindnesses.
Mildred Frank 6-U.ltc

Notice
ALL MEMBERS and thelr
guests are urged to attea:l the

Rutland Gun Club tra,:~ shoot,
Juo! ' d:3, 1968, and the monthly
meeiing on June 14.
6 12 2tc

REVIVAL NOW In progress at
Ash St. Free Will Baptlst
Church in Middleport held by
Rev. John Mayhew from W.
Va.
~U-ta.
THERE WILL he a gun sbool
Sunday, June 16, beginning at
noon at the Forked Run
Sporlsman Club. Everyone Is
weloome.
~ll~t.
THE HOUSE of Wilson: l!:lollc
flsb and supplies. Open I a.
m. to t p.m. TueaclaJ througb
Salunlay; Sunday and Monday by appointment. Flnt
· !:Old lei~ below Pleasant Pl.
c.:.:, .-rt_._. Watch I« signs. Pb.
11'15-1 .
&amp;f.IOic
WILL
for elderly WliiDell
In my borne. Pbooe 73117115.

w.«p
'I'!RMlTES SWARMING! -

'nle7 a ro-productlves, DOl
JOUI' -ter colony. Free Jn.
lp0ctl01111 and lnformati&lt;m on
ennrl space dangers. No
IIIOII!Ian, low ovedlead, 50
per Ct!llt aavlng!. Allied Pest

Cclntrol. Pomeroy'
Oblo.
Pbooe IIIU86I eveulnp.

---at

WILL DO aewlng

WWOlp

home -

pocket~,

llppm,

pegglq,
hemming, alleratlons, ole.
Mrs. Freddie Thabet. Muon,
Phone ~1.
4-10-tfe

HAPPY HOUR, Sllenlllf Sprlnp
Nile Club. 5 to 8 p.m. Monday thru Friday. Ladleo nlgbt
etlry Friday.
Utle

HMpWantecl
WAITRESS ·FOR bar or restaurant. Phone 99U253. 6-!Nte
DESK CLERK. Uve ln. Apply
In per11011 at ObJo lfDtel
f.ll

CARRIBt
WANIID
,..,.,. Route.

6

Motor

QU:m

eo.

BUDGET PRICE lumlllln on
our lblrd floor budget shop.
Baker FDrnllure, Middleport.
Oldo.
f II tie

1967 CHEVELLE MALIBU ................ .
4 Door std. Trans., Low mileage. Spotless clean interior,
MaroOn finish with m1tchina: interior. Radio, Heater, White

SEWING MACHM:S, repoJr
servlee, an makes. WY J.
2284. Tbe Fobrle Sbop, Pomeroy. Autborlzed Singer Sales
and Service. We Sharpen
Sclaiors.
sa-trc

Walls.
1967 CIIEV. l!.p'ALA 4 DR. •••• •.. .• • • ...•. $Z895
327 Engine, Turbo Hydrunatlc Trans., Power Steering,

)Vhlte wall Urea. White ftnlsh with Turq. Interior. Radio
and heater. The car has Bal. of warranti)' and new car title.
!966 CHEVY D NOVA ... , ••
HT Cpe, Low mUeage by local

JKir W. Carsey, Mgr.

. ....•...... . .$1695 ·

ForS.Ie

resident. Tires llke new.
V8 Engine, Automatic Trans., Power SteeriJv, Radio and
,ll.ealer - White Onl~ •

croARE'l'I'E vending madl1net

WAITRESS and ear bop. App1J
In periOD. Cnnr's SIW:
Baalll.
IMe

Auction
OONSIGNI4ENI' Sale: Completll
line of farm madd""l IIIII
household Items. Juoe 15 stan.
lq at 11000. Sldaldll auc:tloD
.. Leo Monil farm, R1111m1,
Obio. AII)'Uie 11'11111111 to lell
1111 Item at the oale call 7G4111 ar 70-4117. Not ...paa.
lllllo far occldeutl. LuDell wiD
lie .....oc1. Terms .. IIIII Clob.
'1411:

Wanted To Buy ··
SMALL ACREAGE, no ba1Jdln8,
•\ IIIIU prlee and full partlcullrl. Write Box 6811 F c-o the
. .Dilly Sentinel, ~..
f-7~·

ANTrQUES, fumlture, dbllel.
mJwlllneoos. Mrs. Howard
Cecil, 110 'lr. Mllin St., PoftiJ'.
14-lfe

Business Servi(es
.

I

••
. Busl11811 Strvlctt

RADIO • TV repair, reasonable prlcet. Antenna lr Booster service. Jobn Harrison,
701 Broadway SL, Middleport,
Ohio. Pbone 1191-2522. open
evening~.
8-S-30te

SAVE MONEY at 81')'11nt's ..
and servite. AI!C Enterpriaes.
a gift for Dad. Tape reoordMason, W.Va. Phone ma4S. CURTISS "DAIRY BED'"
breeding aervlee. CaD Leland
m reduced $15 to PJ, SM.
lf.lle
radio only $9.98. Automat!&lt;
Parker, Pomeroy residence
1111!-2284 or call station TupOPIN EVES. 8:00 P.M.
tetter opener. battery power·
pen Plalna 16'1-3211. U 1101&lt;1
. For Trade
od fl. Golf balls 17 a dozen;
I'OMIIIOY, OHiO
dresS shoes $8.91 pair. SaVII CASH FOR Antiques. BID
APPALOSSA STUD service. 111
Ramm, Mlddleport, Ohio.
ball, portable TV like new,
appoiDtment, phone 119Ulll
$611; stereo player $59.95; gas.
5-lNOtc
For Sale
For 5•1• or Rtnt
l-14-30tp
pel records, two for 15; watFIVE ROOM bouse and llalb, RACING HYDRO plane, 10 loot,
ches, $8.95; electrle guilarl,
LI.AL NOYICI
alwolnum siding, storm wb- 16 HP motor, trailer. Must
c. C. liJIADJ'OBD
$29.95. Shop and save at BryNOTICI Ofl AP'IIOIMTMINT
sell, $250, or best offer. Phone
GoWI, t8200. Pbone 111U11J.
. . Ne. 1f,tll
AUCl'IONEER
ant's, 108 W. Mabt, Pomeroy. ....... .. ...... 1.. cNertlft..,,
.,...
843-2736.
6-12-Stc
IMp
Complete
Service
&amp;-11-ftc cttMCI.
NoUn II btNbJ' IIQD thl.t f'Nd
Write,
Pltoae or W
Crow, .lr.. of Pomero1. llelp
JOHN DEERE 4211 dozer with THREE ACRES, 5 room bouse, W.
Crill Bradltrrd
Coun\f, ObJo, b. beea. dulJ' appalat.For Rent
Bd Eieeutor of Lbe Eltate of ldltll
win&lt;:h and blade; also 1951
RadDe.
Oltlt
new roof. barn, cellar, two L. HartiDIIf• 4eceutd. la&amp;e of Pom•
1'WO troRNISiiED apartments,
Studebaker 2\i ton trudc with
ei"OJ',
Melli
Co1111t)',
Oblo.
• 1 tie
claterns and fumlture $4500.
4 rooms and bath. Phone 1192CH4llon aN req111Nd to ftle tM1r
five speed transmlssion. Ph.
elJim•
wtth
llllld
ftduelaQ"
'tlflthtn
four
Phone 74U813.
&amp;-16-30tp
W/5, alter 5, phone 1111!-2571.
DICID.\U,
992-6040.
6-!Utc
De.ted Ulll ht. dal of lwae, 1M8.
&amp;-11~
r. B. O'BBIIIN
LARGE HOUSE In Racine, t
Probate IWIP of Kid COUII\1
63 HONDA, recently overhauled,
room•. one third a&lt;re lot, .111M J.lJ.U
FURNISHED APAR'I'MENT on
_. EXPERT
and helmet; also '59 Ford, 8
sood
location, $85110. Phone
flnll floor for adults only, ZlJ cylinder. See Raymond Rowd
NO'flel
· Wheal Alignment
940-3752.
$-2!1-121e
Bldl wm .,. nce~ntt 1t tiM offto.
South Fifth Ave., Middleport.
after 6 p.m. or phone 247-22'10.
"
of Webder and I"Dltz. Po~.
Pbone ltZ-5435.
6-11-lfe
Oldo. uatn Tueecla,.. lu11e Ut,
6-ll~te
POODLE PUPPIES, AltC Toy at UI:OO O'Ciocll: A.M. for tbe pie
of tbe Oraee LJDn Carr propeitJ,
miniature. 175 and up. stud llhlaUd
In the VUIIQ of Rar!'lloll·
PLENTY of apace lor one tralJ. 15 TON mixed hay and one :Jn.
..rue, Ohio. Bldl miJ' bl 1111'bmltted
servl&lt;e
and
grooming.
Phooe
er' with all laclUiles. In Syra. ternatlonal drag plow, two bot.
In wrltl!lf or in perton at t'tle time
11 3 tfe
of llle. '!'he rtl'ht ll mnllll to r-.
cuse. Call 18U104. f-11-t!e tom. 14-lncl!; eontact Marvin 19U443.
Jed any or all bl4a.
""'""' c. Mlrfl•·
Keebaugh before 7 p.m. at 14 FOOT WEAVER SlUFF, 3.6
AdMI..lttraiOro
-GUARANI'IED,. .
FURNISHED and unfurnlsbed
Pomeroy 1192-5342 after 7 p.m.
...... "' Or.ct """' earr,
HP
motor
ard
oars,
$140.
Ph.
apartments. Cl01e to scllool.
at Chester 985-3913. 6 12 3tc
Welltttr and Fultl
949-4272.
6 12 6tc
Pllone IIUI4S.
111-IJ.Ife
Attorn..,. ftr AciMh•llfratw
1-10; 1-UJ I-ll; 1-1.3; S.tt1 •tt; 8 11
SORREL RIDING mare, white
LARGE live room and baOt
blai!O, stocklnga : $165. Phone
apartment, newly de«&lt;ratod,
99Um.
6-11-Mp
Real Estate For S•lt
furna&lt;e beat, Pomeroy,
O'BRIEN I CROW
Phone 119W8'1.
1-~-lfc
FOUR ROOM HOUSE, bath,
REALTY COMPANY
basement. two large loll, ID
POMEROY-Butternut Ave. 2
TRAILER SPACE, an uWitlell
Racine. Call 992-:1039 or HOstory frame, 4 bedrooms, I
avallable. lnqulno 156 MulberMr. and Mrs. James Robert
By JEAN HALL
1-7-etp batha. garage. $1,850.00.
White
and Mary Beth ol Dunbar,
ry alter S or I p.m. Wrllo P.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Laven..
0. Box 425 Pomeroy, 1-»Ue
POMEROY- Union Ave. Ter- der, Misses Linda ard Mary W. Va., visited Friday with his
TWO BEDROOM bome. bath
race, I It story frame, 2 bed- La.ven;Jer spent a recent week- mother, Agnes White, and uncle,
full basement, garage: Tworooms,
bath,
basemeDt. end In Chicago with their broth-- Richard Duckworth, and her
FliRNISIIED apartment, two year-old borne in Syracuse.
$1,1100.110.
bedroomll, lrflddleport. Pbooe
ers, Jame s and Larry, and fam- mother, Mrs. Rose Schwarz and
Phone 992-1421.
5-IWOte
MIDDLEPORT
South
2nd,
ilies. They went espedally tore- family ol Mason, w. va. They
IIINrlt.
&amp;f.lle
2 91ory frame, 4 bedroo!DII, J turn their motber, Mrs. Clan also visited Mr. and Mrs. Char·
GEin"S A GAY .GJRL -Rea.
Lavender, to her home here ~ leo Whito and Tennna, BeUlah
sJiboMS AND BATH, 170 Jlul.
batha. $10,0iio.IIO.
dy lor a whirl, after cleaDing
er
she· -had spent rour weeks White and Jell Darst. Ml&amp;tteport,
FOR
RENT,
FU11N1S11ED
hell')' Ave., Pomeroy. Coocarpets with Blue lA!atre.
accompanied by Mrs. Agnes
in Chicago with her sons.
~~ Rose Si.lloa, j6ooe Rent electric sbampooer, $1, APARTMENT, I bedroom.
Mr. and Mrs. Glem Cund.ifi White.
HENRY CLELAND
- .alter • p.m. Pbooe Baker Furniture.
~10-4U!
spent
a weekend at their home
MaL
&amp;f.lle
~
here.
FULLY EQUIPPED rerreatlon
Mr. and Mrs. John Rowe and
THREE ROOM furnished apartcenter In Racine; 4 pool Ia·
famUy
spent sunday evening at
ment, bath, adults, 126 Mul·
FACTS
~ . ping ~ table, pop
the
James
Teaford home.
berry. Phone 992-66911. 6-12-tk
LIGA&amp;. NOTICI
cooler. etr. Also 2-story brick

rorneroy motor Co.

t•

·--

5.55

,

....

From thO Large&amp;t T,.,lt or
Bulltbzer Radlamr To The
&amp;nallost Heater Core. . ..

ca.,.. c...n...

lmttll MJtlt

1._•_•_-_v_ou._•_' """ ••· •___
....,..., ,

.__._
...

BUETrNARS

AIR CONDmOHING Jlefr1gll'

PH, 992-2143

otlon servloe. Ja&lt;k'a Refrigeration, New Raven. lronl
182-20'11.
' • do

FlEE STORAGE

READY • MIX eonerete dellY·
enol right to JOUI' project.
Fast and easy. Free esti-

MOTH PROOFING

mates. Phone 99UIIf, Goelleln Ready • Mll Co,, Middleport, Ob!Q.
810 tfe

Masoo, W. Va.

..,.

650x13
650.14

Pr1co T011
9.18 .3l
Ul ,.g

700.13
700x14
750x14
670.15

10.18
IO.U
11.11

SPECIAL
$295.00
RED RSH BOAT

·"
A3
.4J
.
n.u .47
Plu• Rocoppoblo lxchN•tlonw~ Gwranttt
·

Mr. and Mrs. George Freeland
and Agnes White spent Tuesday
even!~

with Mrs. Dorothy Rol-

ler of MlddleJ)Ort and also attended a meeting of the Doreoa
Ml!lsionary Circle at the home
of Mn Jolm MeNeU.
Mrs. cart Duckworth, 1811
Woodland Drive, COshO&lt;ton, ala·
ter-l~&gt;-iaw of Agnes White and
Richard Duckworth is at her
home lollowtng surgery at Unl·
verslcy HoS()lW, Columbus.

.

MASTElCIAFT
TIAILER

Schwarzel Marine
Hockin_gport, Ohio

'

can ••·

Origin Lost In Time

- ~

come•

•

Clovia!

,

stones were the soldiers of

Alexander the Great.

•

\o.MrcH ONE WElle '/OU U51r-J6
WUE&gt;l '{OU TOOK THf E~M ?

UTTLE ORP!lAN ANNIE

WPL, AS 1 YTMPPSO
-~
I!OI!&amp;RS
OR IWIWADE
IN,JU$

o;o•OR

11JO&lt;t(~

Keeping Meigs =
•
..•
Gallia 0nd
Mason Area .••
Informed As .•
•
Well As
"

~

•

~

"Yankee Doodle" was

Entertained

first sung by British troops
to make fun of the American colonial forces, The
World Almanac notes. But
by the end of the Revolutionary War, the victorious
colonials were singing the
so~g themselves and proud
to be known as Yankee
Doodles.

i

-..

•
'

..

I

'

'

Q-Wlth what C!Uiotn iB the -.
name Peter Funk g.,..raliy -a&amp;IO&lt;iated1
·

IN THE SWIM-This An·
. nette Kellerman and shifty
· eover~up are made ot Orion
aeryUc eluttclaed with Lycra

• • •

. Th6 fellow who taker •
little •omething for hil
health had better put it
back before the druggist
spots him.

•pandex. They wen designed
In turquoi.e with or&amp;ft&amp;'e and
yellow atrlpes by Bob b 1 e
Brooks of :Montreal, Que. The
&amp;leeveleu oover~up alao can be
worn over thr pRRtl ar n tunlr:

A-The custom of using
tbe name for 1 person employed at an auction' to olrer
bogua bldJ In order to raise
the price.

&amp;-

DAILY CROSSWORD
1. Bt10vel181
pm11Dt

66 Mercury ..

.. - - ·

C,done V8 GT 2
Hard . Top. ,890 V8 e..lDe. 4 rrp, • ,

Sblft. One owner dew GTO
Trrode-IIL

AUCTION

a Dr.

=:

lllrd 'l'oJI • 400 :·

:~J."- v~,.:·~! :

:

f1 Pontl1c .. $2895 ::

K-lchool el AvoA

GTO

.. Will Conduot
lerlol ol ........

Clo- At Tho Lof""
~ in O.ll!pollt.

Ctrtolilla 2 Dr. lllrd Top.
clean lDiide ond '"'l

:

........

11. In lido

12. Tr1n10m
••• ,....
11. Cue
11, Roup lava
!1. Mam&gt;lo

11. Inquire

20. River:
Bo. Am.
11. Liberate

:a. Stream of

··-

--~1
IU-

e.lle.llre

7. Hel&amp;hl:
abbr.

I. Deupte

box

II. Btl....

1nr

h&amp;wlllom
ll.llollon
oo&amp;a
li.Bodlolaf
· water
18. Minced

i'rancll

O&amp;tb

ll.l'ut

lt. CoalteJ..

l&amp;Uon
11. Run

~{glOOID~;u..J::~-:c

Ina'

11.~t

aru..

'

II.Po&lt;k.

Unaeramble th- &amp;rur Jumbieo,
letter to tlth oquore. lo

OM

form four ordin•ry word1.

to&amp;

painter

I

24. Buperlo.
tlvo

ondlq

20, Beaded
Uurd

17.ollolnaa7
119. Hotel

prtc.o

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

311. RrK. for

ono: &amp;blir.
24. Rufflon

110. Btolrw&amp;y

IT. 0 31. Bprud

31. Banal
(IOit

fO. M-110to
· · dr)'

awa.y

rrom ·

.,..-r:--r;-

GUAJIE

..

,,,_ ._,... c..... T -

..........

,~

~- · ~

....

[]

b
II
II
tGLUPEA I
PRAIT

WHAT A PAIR OF
'IOUNI5 D05 Fii\NCI~

M16MT eN6A6E IN.

3T.Ptrlob
:JI. Inooct
B. Tleldo
:JI. IIIII af 1111
tnllnlU¥0
st. Rlvtr:

Jullt 14111 At 7:10. - -

VII1••1...

Moy

Wltheut Chorwo or

10. P....,.war

water

SteerJnc. Power
lralll. ·Wtr'll
.
J0U to !be ODO

ltor11nt Prl..r l•oinlttt

lntotottod
It this Pint

e.IHnvnpour
plal!o

66 PontiiC .. $2495 •
~-

SQIOOI.

0111~

~;

II

"

r&lt;
c•

Mr.

III.JI4foro

lt.PO.-re
:JI. Two

3 ROOMS

41. DfOOpo
d.N6t

~

.......... .......
~

-----~.

A Q»tt111•

III"U

KWU WURJ"i:
DV .PKWI"O·I'

W.VA.

..

-=

lXVZUl

FUINRUIE CO.

.·--··'--.. ---.. --!'"-•"'"......1!1'_. . . _&lt;-A..;.-~..:-

IIOIMTA " " "

iit':'."r of (

::m= .·

'MAlON
•

lo"""" LWY C-1

··!f.~.

1.

Cllvtillllt , .....
"Sure Jant Ellon lives within her allowance-sht 1111
$10 a wook!"

(qweft II"]WCPW)

at. Rob

.e. Dop

New Furniture
ONLY $'299
sao.oo .........-. ..

,... .11-....... -

.........

'I

Here

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

t-nilfmble.

•
Q .,

juGt in

,.

presents

Origin of the diamond Jn.
dustry Is lost in time. It is
believed that by 1000 B.C. the
Chinese were obtaining the
hard gems from northern
B o rn·e o. TradltlonaUy,. the
first westerners to see the

car

back
time~

INFORMATION
NEWS

I l l tic

I qo~
Chipper's

~

PJt•.

~·

-,,r---"'"1

WMPO

AUTOMOBU..E Jn!tll"anee ben
t!811eeUed1 Lost your opent.
or'o 11eense1

•

'

TilE BE.W
UVJ'-JG IT lJPI

..

Insurance

.E ...

I

OF &lt;nUR&gt;E, IF YO.J'D.
LIKE 10 :sE&amp; ME. t 11-llNK
I &lt;XX.XD SGU£.ZE YrJJ
IM .. LE.T"S SJ..'-1 r.. ~ "--FROM 11-li.JIISDA'I 1' 1

'

PHONE _,#II

.

or McCc:.

der and famlly.

----

BEGINNERS

FlRESTotiE DLC 100
NEW TREAJ)..ILACKWALL .

Sampson HaD.

nellsville and Mrs. Edna Thlrcyacre oC Hawaii spent two days
recently with Mrs. Clara Laven..

"E~10A~

fiALI!lS AND SERVICI!:.

51,.

VE~ EASt~Y I

MY DEAR.. rM

MNRUDE

of Mldd1eport spent an eveninc
with Mr. and Mrs. Jame11 TeaMrs. Mary Curry

.

773-6543

\'OU A

Mr. and Mrs. Don Covert were
recent Sunday dinner guests of
Mrs. Mildred Salser and family . .
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Teaford
Mr~

THE BORN LOSER

ABC CLEANERS

son Hall.

ford and

Pomeroy

SAVE SPACE

Mrs. Don Hendricks spent a
recent afternoon with Mrs. Samp..

...

......

ABBIE AND SLATS

':f.·

WORLD ALMANAC

seeooo

I

Anl~t tltt orltinal bt111t' of YGIJ'
Clnnad in your own fttm1 by Von Scllr tr
dry-fo•m l]ltthod. No 111ns. No f~n . Na
odor. U1e rut• tilt sam• dty.

•t.

MAI"1'11. OP IITT\.IMI.If.T
• tile blO&lt;k building on 3rd· INOP THI
ACCOUNTS. PROIATI COURT,
FURNISHED APARTMENT,
MIIOI II:OUNTY, OHIO
St., Radne. Large business
A c:C:0\111\1 aDd VOUCbUI of Ule fOlthree rooms, bath, 1M Mulroom now ocellpied by reere- lowinC named ftdud.art.1 ban been
helry Ave. Phone 1192-&gt;91111.
ftled .la the Proln.te Ccnan. 11..,.
-i!tlon center. Three apart- l:o\l.DQ,
Uhlo, for apprvvel aDd .. t.
6-12-tf~
ments on
floor, t w o ue....nt ~
CA.SE NO . IT.BJ. Zilblb C\lrrent
lurnlshed. Separate garage &amp; A.ceout
of: Delma llaliQ, Quard.
laundry room with apartment ian of Rulb Ann HalleJ, a mlDol".
CAB&amp; NO, 18.333. &amp;!Pt.b. Cunut
on seoond floor. Apartment A«lount ~ BettJ L. &amp;mit.b, Guuciof tbe ~'- of JlarJ It, Gal·
parUy furnished. Also separ· Wl
kJber I:Dd Debra L. Oauaper,
.....n .
ate one story wooden businea
t:ASE NO. le.383. Fint ud nJW
building ana va&lt;1111t lot. All
Aecount of ll•nojnl D. Webltu,
De Bollia NOll of the
For Slit
furniture Included, all units A.lt.lni&amp;\Utrat.oz
of Peart D. LottrtdJe, •
TWO iEDROOM houu traDer. rented with ;~ood income. CoJr ~~~
l:e&amp;lld.
CAB&amp; NO. 18,.U3. Fint UWl l"ll:lal
PJime 991-5112.
S.ll-4tc tact Joe Britt at RecreaUon
Aceo\ult of llu)' E. J'ncbr, Ex•
(!Ulof of tbe ..Uite of Ella Freek·
Cent.r, or can 940-m.
er. Dlceued.
6NE WESTERN riding borse.
~~lfe
CABI: NO. 18M3. nnt and naaJ
Al!eown of X.thlee~~ tl-ucll AdPhone Muon 773-11'11.
.m.l.DJ.IUatrtx De !IDIIil .N fl of Ull
~11~ !967 AVACADO green Flreblrd.
Eltate ol ...,. H. Frmell, Dlclu·
Take over paymenta or trade
CAll NO. 18.8M. rtm aDd 1\aal
60 liP SCOTI' motor. electrlc lor older oar. Phone 11112-39110.
Acoount of &amp;a&amp;hlea f'rucil Ado
miallt.r1tru De Bon.Lt Noa of tb
starter. generator, handle
6-!Utc
llnate o1: a.orte P. rrmc~~. o.
oontrol, $200: AC hay rake on
CAM HO, ltMl. Flm ud J'laa1
rubber, power take off 1$0: SIMMONS METAL bed and
Aeco\lnt of Kq Wood, ~
tntrtz. 01 &amp;be .~lata.. ol' , ....
Now Idea mower. on rubber,
springs, also one Door laDIIJ. lVOOCio
Dece11Md.
$50; ~fool dloe, SID; Jolm
f;AH NO. a.-. rtnal aacl IHIPhlliiO 1111!-3115S.
~IUic:
IrtbUUwt A.e.eOW1t of 'Rk:laard &amp;.
Deere eom planter, $20; maIDUI, AclmiDlRn.tor of U&amp;e Eltate
o1 .t.ero1 ere-.. .o.c:.a.ed.
nure spreader on rubber $25. WALNUT STEREO radio. BelllltA&amp;I NO. 111,114. Flnt and l'lnal
tiM
contemporary
walnut
~
Bm Grueser, Rt. I, MJnm.
Aecowlt of AIIDI II. OpUD.. &amp;a.
culrb of lbe .... u.te ot KIII'DI)'
reo with AM • 1lfll' radio, deville.
~11-3tp
luxe floating turntable, dual
t..rme. ucepUon~ are fUed IoblN·
~--to, 1 Hid KGDW~te wW be for hear111611 ZIG ZAG mrlng maclrlne. volume control. Four speed l"f
IMfore Mid Co\an on U. 1Jtb
IWJ, 11i188. at wb1eb ume - .
This marhine makes button- autnmatl&lt; cl!anger. Pay only
tl wW btl couldered and COD$ll
per
month
or
~
boles, dams &amp; emb. Take
hom daJ kl 411 uW f:iii&amp;D7
$'11.82.
Free
home
demonsfn.
over 8 payments of $8.31 per
'· H. O'&amp;RIIN
f-7-ete
P'ltOIATI JUDGI
month or $15 cash. We will Uon. CaD 1192-3211.
•auo
bring this macl!lne to your
borne lor you to try. CaD MAPLE STEREO. 111611 model
LIOAL NOTICI
Ottold L. Olbbe. wtloee plaee of
1111!-21111.
~lHtc
stereo. L&lt;lvelv maple, AM lr reetdce.
II Muon, ' w... VlriJinll,
FM radio. Four speed auto- aD4 whOM •nkrl ...._ II ....
Gerold L. Olbbl, IIA ltUI831, 70ftla
5 ROOM HOUSE, bath, large mad&lt; changer, !oar speaker llala\a1Wic:e Co. C, PDn Cancnro, Colo.-.do il hereb,- nottfiH that on tile
lot; also 14 fool john boat. 24 oystem. Pay only t89.!18 or ,ltd
ol .h&amp;DI, . . . au. :E. 01"'-·
Rallroad St., Middleport. montlriy payments of ~- Froe belnr plaintiff flied Mr petUloa
blm .. ..,.DIIaat ,. die
bome demonstration, call 992- IJilntt
Phone 1192-3825.
~11-71&lt;
Court of CommoJI
llellt COW·
!21!.
1-7-ete b. Oldo. c... No. IUOB pnrfnl few
~lYOI'Ct from laid O.rold L. OftiN
oa tiM lf'O\lDdl ol lf'OII •llld If
REAL SOL'ND. 1968 -.o AM
dV.t.J' ud txtrtme eruelty, plalaUU
A
NEW
shlnrnent
or
elolhiD•
• FM radio, walnut ftnloh.
•* prUI for C!Gitod:' Of adDOr
hss arrived. Women's and elllld., tupport 11ld alimonJ aad otbar
, Take over paymento of 15.14
,..... NIWJ Aid eiUM wW M IIW
Children's and Men's Wort bearlDI
' per month or pay t98.21. WID
oa or altar U. :tOOt dar Dl
UnlformJ. Allo Ford "--ool - IW. 1-. SUI J!:. Olbbl, plU.Uff
discount lor cash. Phone 992plrkup truck; wpeed lrlm8- 1: B. O'BIIn.
21111.
~11-4te
mlsslon. Jellm ClotlllDa AUorneJ for PlaiDtiUJolt . .
Store. Rt. 13, Potrieroy.
BALDWIN ROME organ to he
LIOAL NOTICW
pleted up ID thiJ erea. For
NonCI 011 APJID1NTMIUIT
c....... lt,NI
Information, write Credit
tf IWf TYree. Jr,. Dlct-111.
Mgr., Graves Plano • Organ BLACK MINIATURE Poodle ......
Heuce il beNbJ ll'Ma \hat om.
Pope, tm. Weot lllghland TJrile 01! IDU.Ktl 1. Mld4iQtrt, OMI.
Co., 333 E. Broad St .. Colum.
Mea IJuiT appatnt.d .Admta!ttnWhite Tmlen $1110, IBM bu
bull, Ohio.
~11·2tc
tdJ: or tiM EA&amp;t• Df BOJ ,.,.., lr ..
Farman cub Tra&lt;tor, hydrau. cleeeUed, ••• of fl011U! l, llldiDfl·
port, Mtlte c::oaat,, Oblo.
lle lift, 3 point last bitch, sin&lt;:replttn are required \0 file lbelr
SAVE~ or more on aluminum
fDill'
gle plow, &amp; foot eutler bar clal.mi Wltb llld flduclar,- wltbla.
.
boats. All sizes 10-12-IS-14
Dat.ld WI lrtt diJ of June, 1 foot. can 1111!-2347, or 992-82511. and dlsr $11110. Price linn. Lit.
r. K. O'U:liN
Ue
Barkaroo
Kennell,
Cool·
•PnH\- IUdll of nld Couatr
5-10-SO!c
3tc!
viUe, Ohio, 1169-3654. f-7-IOte · .IUM f..iJ.II

I

CARPETING

""

Reo.--

I
I

UFE TO
YOUR

.POMEROY HOME AND .AUTO

Syracuse News, Society

I

IT MUST. BE THAT
NEW FORMULA . / - ---,;-1 GOT HIM ON

I WONDER
WHAT MADE
TATER'S HAIR
SPROUT UP
OVERNIGHT,
PAW-·

BRING NEW

----

-.

lnllsiness
•
Section

BARNEY

.

.

I,.........,.
.... DIY_,.,.,_...
.......
........ t .... '

..

.,•
•

. . . . . ---·-·- ---- .'""'"'""

4Psta« a

IXVIIUI
~0.111

OPZI:

KWU

DWUP

DVI"U. -

Y..le*(O Ci7J&gt;I\Iflolte• NOTHINO BlJT liii..IOlON II CA•
PAJlL!Ii Of C,IWiqtNq P4QIII ·JNTO JILIAIUUII.-IT~•
IILAUS
,. '

"f!
'

~'.OR

.

•

�... - .....
15 - The IJail~ Sentinel, llliddlcpm·t·l'ornea·oy, June l:!, 1:1M

· BIG BUYS on "Super-Ri ghf' Quality Meats!

Helen Help
U8. •• By Bottel

·Super-Right Quality Steak Sale!

Helen

THE BATTLE RAGES
Dear Helen:
After reading the Jetter from
11
Trred Mom" ·· who tholght the

FULL
CUTS

,

BONELESS
STEAK

Sirloin Tip
Potato Bread
Delmonico S
4~89c Rib Steaks

lb. $1°9

•••

JANE PARKER

Sirloin Steak • • •
Club Steaks • • •

Gala To els

TAKE THIS STRIP TO YOUR FRIENDLY
AlP FOR BONUS PLAID STAMPS!
CHECK ITEMS YOU BUY!

D
D
D

EXTRA Plaid SUmps wtth

PURCHASE of One 2-lb. Pill·
Super-Riatrt 8lllf stub

100
50

50

EXTRA ""' Slomps PURCHASE of $2.!50 or moN In
frHh frultl and veptlblel

UJ1!A "'"ofstomps
withLl Char
PURCHASE
two cans
Chow Meln Noodl" 211..

50 a...,.
50
50
50.
25

EXTRA Plaid St.mpt with
PURCHASE of ONE pr Welchs

Jelly 2 lb.

••

EXTRA Pl•ld Stlmps wtth
PURCHASE of ONE J11!1. Dry
... now F•t BNIM 2 lb.
EXTRA l'ltld Slomps PURCHASE of ONE boltlo al

A-,..,n F•bric flnllh 20 oz.

'

EX'11lA Pllld Stlmpe. wfth
PURCHASE af ONE a~n
Yanish BCJWI ca.n.r 34 01.

•

I

•

I

lorde1'1 Cho01e SllctJ ........................ 12-oL pkg. 65c
All Ruon
ISc
Hi.C: Fnoit Drink• .................................. 46-oL cao
Heinz Porlt &amp; ltc111 ........................ Z 16-oL ca11 35c
Doy-brlh Soh Bleach .......................... 13oOL pkg. 49c
llrdsoyo Frozen Awake ........................ foOL coo 39c
Calgoolh, 12c Off Label .................... JS-. pkg. 71c
Folgon Vacuum Pack Coffee ................ 1·1b. coo 77c
Maxwell House Coffee ........................ 3 lb. cao $Z.35
Pillsbury or Ballard llscelh ............ 4 1-oL pkgs. 40c
Chlffoo MaN)arloo, 4c Off Label ........ 1·1b. pkg. 43c

pk(.

....

botu.ggc

I

Purchases, you are entitled to one piece at this
low price. There', no limit •.• with a $0 purchase
yo~; can get two piece' . . . and so on!

''
'
•'

••
•'

Noblsco "Doo OMs" . . . . . . 3 pkgs. $1.00
AAI'

I",._, Pie Sholl• . . . ... .... . . 2 for 37c
A&amp; I'
F - Gorman Choc. Cok•, 12 oz. . .59c

::.!.,

Cream Ch- Coke .17 oz. 79c
Think You Apple Pie Filler 21-. con 39c

'

... . ..
·-

_

-- ...

.. . _ . , _

.., .•• - #"

• •

!

'

.. ...-....._-

• •

•
I

• •
•

•

Marsh Seedless

Size

Jug

Grapefruit

29C

69c

5-lb.
bag

'

MUSHROOMS -

• •

Pint Box 29c
HANK 011
SANDWICH

..... Me

WHITE HOUSE
MAKES 20 &lt;;&gt;Ts.

•

I

JANE
MUER

JANE

lb.Jt

PARKEII

1

ofU - -

.......

•

::

Ill WEll
2nd WEEl
3rd WEEK
Ath WEEK
lith WEll

...... DINIEft. PLATE. 211c,;'~•.::.~~
. . . . . . . . DESSERT DISH 211c ,;'~.::::_
.. .. . . .. . .. .. .. . CUP 26c .;";..:;.:~
. . . . . . . . . . . . . SAUCER 211c .;''~.:':..
. . . . . BRUD l . lUTTER 26c ;':..:-:~

SARli
SEAL WRAP

u:::'35c

.,,

13-1•••

CRISCO
SHORTEll I&amp;

R11l1110n
Limo• Juice

~10C

3:. 7tc

-: 6tc .

-. ,. '"'. .-

'

.

Mennen Wild Mosa
Skill I._,

~ate

T1ndtlen .................................... At
Wahr Pltc.or .........................$2.tt
&amp;nvy loat .......................-..... .H,
GoNvy IHt Tray ..........- ...·~ At , ,
Gravy Ladle ......................_.. At
Alii r..., .........-.-· ..·-" 2 for ... I
Salt. Pepporl..bn .... pair I.Jt
111-111Ck Deep Pie la..r ..-..... .It

Muellen Mtlcarool ........- .. 1-III.Jik" Ztc
Fre..llko Pns ............. IJ'Ia..,-e.il He ·

fr...l•• ..... eor. 2 tz.n. ••••.•,.. '
.....Ilk Cot GoNe~~ ..... u ... coo 2k
•r•fiiWOOil '\llctd
Plck!M ...h ....... - ............ 1'- jor Jtc
!.,.l•r ., H•r4 to Hol4

Dljlplfr Do Hair Sottl19 Chi • - larftc

\
• J
.
. . . . • • . .. . ___ ,.... .•_ :r."* •:Jt::: . ~ ':"- ,... :- :-::.-::::-r--~- -:-:: !"· ~---===--:4t..,.,.,. at "'• ~~ft...;. d , !hhb ·r·c·r
.

i -·-··-~·,_

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

'J

.

letter. )lost or lite young girls
wero aplnst this mollter, but I also welcome your own amus·
1111 lhey must be spoiled. If a 1ng experiences. Address Helen
teen-ager Is so lazy he or she Bottel In care or this newspa.
won't llfl his hand to help, he de- JJOr.
serves garblllll In bed. rm sure
Dr.
would gasp at my
llteoey, but even his own mother
dlaasree• wllh his methods.
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO,
These lazy, goocl.lor....tblngklds
Salurda.Y, June .8. 1968
nowada1s need ohaldng up.
SALES REPORT or
OHIO VALLEY LIVESTOCK CO.
HOGS - 1?5 to 220 lbs. 20
to 21; 220 to 250 lbs, 20 to
21; Light 18 to 22; Fat Sows
14 to 17; Slags 12 to 16; Boars
10 to 14; Sows and Pigs 70 to
100; Sloat• 10 to 18 •
CATTLE - Steers 20 to 26.•
50; Heifers 18 to 25; Baby Beef
20 to 27; Fat COWs 16 to 20.50;
Canners 14 to 18; Bulls 20 to
26; Mllk COWs 100 to 200.
VEAL CALVES - Taos 34.Doleptes to two oonvenlloos 50; Sooonds 30 to 32; Medium
were appointed ""'"' the Racine 22 to 28; Com. and Hvs. 20
American !.eglon AuxiliAry met to 26; Culls 18 to 22 .
recently with Mrs. Jobn Young,
SHEEP - Ewes and Lms.
president, preal.dlngover thebul- 5 to 10; Stodc Ew., 5 to 10;
lness moet~ns•
Fat Sheep 4 to 10; Culls 1 to
8unmer convention was Ill).. 5i Bucks 4 to 10; Fat Wethers
nouneed !Qr June ~1 at Jockson. 5 to 10.
Nained
delop!es lor the disLAMBS - Tops 24; Seconds
trict &amp;lllf1clapartment oonv-. 18 to 22; Light Wts. 16 to 18;
were
Lawrenoe&amp;lld Le- Common l4 to 16.
ora Young, and alternatea are
Margaret Yost and fDilaBrlnkPT, PLEASANT
er.
LIVESTOCK SALES CO.
A-edgmeola """e r...lv.
1'1'. PLEASANT, W, VA.
ed from CARE for contribution
Saturdolr, June B, 1968
11&gt; lite Malarslan project, and
HOGS - 175 to 220 18.75
!rom lhe &lt;forelga relatlona 8lld to 19.90; ,Heavies 16 to 18.80;
publle rilauooa ~ Llj(llla 17 to 19.80; Fat Sowa
cbolrmon . lor reports received. 14 to 17; Boors 10.5(1 to 12.75;
The hlstol7 of the unit was read Pigs 6 to If; Stock 910ats 12
as p~ by Grella Slmpsoo to 22.
CATTLE - Steers 21,50 to
The
MrVed lunch to lite 23.75; llellero 19 1o 22.5(1; Fat
Soulllem
School )land mem- Cows 17 lo 19.70; C01111ers 12
bers who~ofo&gt;ltadlnlheMem­ to 17.50; Buill 21 to 23.75; Milk
orlal DOT, service• at lhe Lotort Cowa 110 to 160; Stock cows
Falla J111!1 ·Greenwood Cemetor. and Calves 175 to 237.50; Stock
los.
•
Shoers 19 to 26; Stock Heifers
The. !allowing wore nominated 18.75 to 22.25; stoek Sleer Catv.
tor otnclstor '68-'69year:Jean- eo 23.75 to 28.30; Slook Helfer
nette
Lawrence, prelldellt; Calves.21.251Al23. 75.
Blanc:he &amp;oencer, lot vlce.prelli·
VEAL · cALVES - Tops 33.- ·
dent; c~ Jlhodeo, 2ncl vtoe - 50; Secondo 3t.60; Medium 30
pretldenlr ·lloty l!ousb,
· IAl 33;1 ¢ommon and Heavies 29.&amp;aryj FAlla Wolf~, tr11surer; Bflu..
60 to $1.60.
lob Br~ .c)ilplaiD, ancl.llmJe Brinker, oer~Arms..
SCIOTO LIVESTOCK
Jnttallailiin ot olllcera
be
HOGS _ 190-220, 21; No. I,
held In June with MYrlle Wal- 21.25; 220-lltll, 20.50; 2tll.ll60,
ller, post prelldeol, u Install- 20; 21111480, 19.50. Sows. 16.30·
lll(lolllcer.
. 17.80: Boars, IU0-15; Plga B.
Mra. ..Young PNJentecl • pro- 11., 12,60·18.
...... oolhe ''POPIII'" and read '. CATTLE- CboltlO Steers,27l "Ill Fllllldon Field," 27;211! Good, 2$.:16.85; Slllldarcl,
..........., our war beroea. 11Dlt 23' 50~.35; Good IUra., 25.25 amber&amp; prepored ••· 25!?5; Standard Hfn., 23.50-llf.membranceo to be ploees otl 25; Good COWs, 19.35.20.50; utll- lf0\'81 of -141d membero. ·flf, ·17.50-18; ca-r 111111 Ot!IM,
ru trovellal prize do!JIItd 11.50 doWn; Bulla, 22,85.2U5;
111 Fl'llloe&amp; R&lt;lbertl Wll ~ Slo~ Callie Sloers, 2U0.:8;
oil to !iargaret Yost, l'lllllldc ~k catUe Halters, 23-.25.25.
nlr,~l li!DI be Hrved at ' V,EAL CA).LVES, Cholet, Sf·
lie :tun. mfM!IIhimd bJ #.~.1&amp;; Good, 32: Med. 30; Com.,
~~:~.: Ro4tell. · 27[ ~7 c,J¥ts B. H., 30-38.
Leora , - .
.
i ,_AJIIIS, Cholee, 17.50: Good,
aad. ~hOUr !allolred..
. ~t.30; Llalllli, 23.

*""k

Conventions

Are Appointed

as

J-

·. .

will

•• • •. ,. .. ,••

'

.

Joseph's College ... All that fanfare about how big a star Zero

Mostel was to take Paddy Cha)&gt;evsky's ,.The Latent Heterosexual" to Texas ror a try-out and
then next season to Bdwy. with

DON'T
FORGET!

-

the low - pay APA Repertory
troupe - now Zero quitting Pad.
with CBS for reature films gets
signed any moment; CBS also
same longMgreen bait ..• Columbia Pix (no relation) admits it
will Pill' Dick Van Dyke $25(1,000 ,_. the re.release of um_
vorce American Style;" Dick
got $750,000 !irs! bonanaz -

Italian is tile native laJI.
guage or 55 million peop~ ' .

.

FREE GIFTS- DOOR PRIDS
3 - $10.00 GIFT CERTiflCATES given IWI,): It
9 p. m. No purchase _ne_cessary. Free registra&amp;a.

T RS., JUNE _13

New York Oothing lfoust, PollllrOJ
Fro:tSen Food Sale!
RED BA1N

Mom Saves Dad's Cash
With These Food S1vings .... No Stamps, No ConleltSr

CUBED
STEAKS

No Games, Just Lower Food Prices! BeHer Check!

Best Way We Know To

Pka. of 10

99~

5TH and PEARL STS.··RACINE
"The Stor&lt; With A Hart"

Rl~t !'!served :o limit _quantities

We accept Fed. Food

Sta,mn.&lt;

Ju_ne 13-14-15
Open Mon. thru Sat.
9to 9··Sunday lOto 7
Storewide Everyday
Low Prices to Show Our

Appreciation For Your IAJyal Patronage!!

We Call Them Ful- Valu Buys

and .THEY ARE!
Extra Fine Granulated Colonial

.::Sugar _______ s:.ssc
Crackers_____. ~ 19e r
Tissue._____l 0;:.s 9e
Fireside Saltine

a.r.111 Bathroom

·Assorted Colon

Fiddle- Faddle
Snack Treat

Req.39c
Clusters
of r..111ts
and popcorn

25~

SUNDAY ONLY- June 16
Producers Grade A Homogeniz:ed

NoDepoait

Miracle Whip_~~-oressing ~-~~-------qt. 59~
-HI- C Drinks~~~F~~·,~----\~_::. ____ 3te.,: J. 00
Kraft Grape JeiiJ. __________ 2 1•. far 49~
Preserves z.,,~ str~wberry,~lackberry_________ qt. 59C
Bread :,:.er.~~~~i·~-Regular ----------- 516,:.. 1. 00
Argo Sliced Peaches ____________ 3No~.~ 1.00
Argo Pineapple Juice ____________ 3 ~~ 1.00
Hudson Towels~~------· 3 •ig rollsl.OO
Bounty TowelsDecor••ed_" ~-3 •ig rolls 1.00
Banner Sweet Pickles·---~---- qt. lar 49~
Velveeta Cheese~g:...~~~~ Kraft__ 2 1•. bx. 99~ ·
Showboat Pork &amp; Beans ______ 300 can 10~
Hunt's Catsup!~~~----------· 3 bo:: 1.00
.

211

TAKE DAD ON
A COOKOUn
But, You
Do The Cool'ingl

MIL

OurOwn&amp;elter
Fnthly Ground

1/2 GALLON CARTON

GROUND
BEEF

SUNDAY ONLY, June 16

TO

TO JUICE

FAMOUS

4
:.:'·

HUNT~

-

23~
-

SUNDAY ONLY -June 16

VEGETABLE SOUP
CAIPI!LL'S
'

.

~ _ 10~
1

31b.pka·1.59
ARMOUR'S

Ohio Valley

Wienor~

_ 2 lb. Pk. 9lc

3an2.
lb.
Canned Picnics_____
Sliced Jowl Bacon _ _ 2 lb. Pk. 79c

.........

GoiMII"

Bananas Grapefruit

Corn

7 i~ 1.0-0 5 ~~ ... 59~ .

~:. 39~

f,

'

aademle ..:: '.:It tl._olon Nlf7,
but wlll •be a ~ :hJ•
lor movie ... l..clewt ~
will ~ce aOfJI!IIill&lt;lll Ill Ill
more pllchah palaoeo ~ .....
tklol •

lAdies &amp; Girls Pie... h1cl:

Special Shopping
Hours:
6:00 to 9:00 P.M.

grabbed Lee Marvin, Steve McQueen and Jack Lemmon with the

'

Bo-...,.

On Thuro&lt;lay night this week, Now York Clothltw
will turn the store over to you lor easy •'-llli
tor dad. Come as you are. shop leJsurel)l. 'lbl&amp;'1
lor 3 hours ooly.
•

'

,( 'I

' ''.

.

For Ladia Only

d.Y' s opus .•. Robert Gulp's deal

.

In Town" but TllllmY G!!!...
!rlond' lnlli~' IIIII
r,al!)r did ,I IJI 110rk; w, 1111

Father's Day
June 16th

Make Dad Glad on Father's Dayl

Market Report

Delegates to

'
I

They'll pla,y Randall's Island stadium here July 21.
TV's Mike Douglas' initials
are of course MD and he's made
'em come true with an Honor·
ary Doctorate !rom Phllly's Sl,.,

up - for them or for us parents - the famUy rallies around

...r,_

Sutar lowl wl.. Cover ..........$1.29 Covered I•H•r Dlsll ............. .$1.19
Meat Platter ............................$1.29 CovorH CosHralo ...............SZ.tt
c......., ..................................$1.29 TeapOt wltll Cover ...............J2.H
Yo..teblo lowl ......................$1.29 eo ... I·Salad·S..p lowl ........ At
Deep Yttttablo lowl ............$1.79 7-lock Salad Plate .................. ,jt
Soup lowl ................................ .St 1Z·l••• looiHI c••, Ploh •..JUt
9·1•cll Luockoan Plote ............ .49 Caffee Pot with Cover ........sz.tt
Oval PlaHor .............$1.6t Caffee Mug ............................. .It

Gerber Slrelned
lilly FIOd

BY JACK O'BRIAN
NEW YO)!K - Yep - Geor·
gie Jessel's 70 all right: he
lunches dally with his secre·
I well remember the famUy tacy - a male ..• Fashion col.
dts(llssions my parent. bad with umnlst I!)Jgenla Sheppar&lt;l's sur.
us lour children around lhe kit- fering some a~nJes J.,ut keeps
chen table, and the pJd ll did. her typewriter sizzling entertain·
By the Ume my folks p dooe lngly '.. Several cab neets give
talking we felt so ashamed 0( drivers strict orders to keep
ourselves a spanking wasn't nec- their headlllfhts bright even da.Y·
essary. We were taught to work! times: because N. Y, traffic is
'-Tired Mofu" should teach her vicious and especially old folks
kids likewise, with any melhod get careless In the monolony
that does the trick ror her. - 0( street jams and walk Into
their paths ... Finally Nancy
P. P.
Sinatra tells why her marriage
Dear P,:
You uphOld •'Tired Mom's" tn Tommy Sands fiunked: "He
get-even methods while recall. didn't want children and I do,"
1ng your own parents' wise dis- she recalls ln next month's Mccussions. Which kind of parent Call's ... uneah Come de Judge"
YOU'LL be depends on how soon creator Pigmeat Markham's
you star! which kind o! dlsd- toorlng laugh-troupe (!Del In lor
pllnel- H.
odd namesi · Pigmeat's seoorkl
Dear Helen:
banana ts named Baby Seals ...
Throw dishes, clothes, trash
on my cbUdren's beds? Never!
I respect them as human beings.
And they respect us enough to
take resJIC)nslbUity. 0! course
we lmow that just as nobody
ever learned lhe multiplication
tables at one session, 10 too do
children need constant reminders about chores. We don't ex-.
peel JJOrlecUon. SorneUmesl yell
at them, often they complain, yet
when something Important comes

to help each other make t h e
deadline. We take over each othM
er's jobs because we share love
and respect. - MOTIIER OF
FOUR FINE ONES
Dear Helen:
What 't'flred Mom" n e v e r
learned is that you must torm
good habits early. She can't
break bad habits late!- PROUD
MOM
Dear Helen:
That Hvacation" you suggested mll!ht work. When kids know
they have to do housework or It
won't be done, they start doing
it.- KNOWS
This column Is dedicated to
family Uvlng, so Jr yw're havIng kid trooble or juilt plalntrou·
ble, lei Helen help YOU. 9Ie will ·

t:y COleman's "lley Big ~­
er" from ••Sweet Charit,y" goes
up In 9penslve smoke - Edie
Adams exhales it for hor TV
commerclata
•• ltonald Reagan
around.
Paramount bossea saw uaoae..
American rock • star Aretha says ne's not a candidate- but
mary's
Baby" and Wllllled Mia
Franklin rolled Lonclonaudlenees would YO!I believe: !lllrley Tern·
In lite alslea ... Fifteen minute pJe' s former campajgn rnanag. Farrow lor three more but "!'d·
standing ovaUon ... Bdwy. pros- er Robert C. Walker has set up denl,y Mia's price lli04 ltiPleol
ties make $300 a week average Miami Beach shop in Ronnie's ... llorey Nel~ ' P f!.• IXiiwo
for directing ''The Onlr Game
- before payoffs and panders ... behalf at the Deauvllle.

Voice along ~roadway

over lhe:tyears. ·

Get these matching companion pieces at our low prices!

(IT WILL IE REPEATlOI

•

'I

Glant66C

•

·SCHUULE of SW WEEKS

c.......

Keebler Chocalote Fudge . . . . . pkg. 43c

•

39

each

Mom 11 or her children, I know
oomethlng Is terribly wrong In
that family, and It Isn't all lite
kids fault.
rm a 15.year-&lt;&gt;ld girl who has
been brousht up to respect my •
self and olhers. Our family knows
tbat everyone works tor the common good. If we do our jobs well,
we all have more time to el\joy
life and each other - and we all
take pride In the way our house
and yard look. We've been brought
up with discipline and love and
rm grateful my !olks aren't like
"Tired Mom." Kids are never
hopeless, unles·s parents have
lost hope,- L.M.B.T,
P.S. Ot course we have our
differences, but we iron them
out, Instead or hitting each Dlh·
er over the head with them.
Doar Helen:
1'\lttlng dirty dishes and gar.
bag4' In a daughter's b e d
wouldn't teach a girl to d dlshos - It would teach her to hate
her moth,.-."- T.G.A.
Dear Helen:
We had a big discuuion at the

olllce over your "Tired Mom"

In oddition to the ottrocti•e s.pc. ploce ""ings
you coRe~ over the next few weeks ..• we'll help
you add to your set with many beautiful matc:hin9
companion pieces. You can purchase thne com·
pleter items anytime in the weeks to c:ome at our
specially low prices.

PAnERN

•••

• •

c

Save Even More
On A
Complete Set!

~G.Qow­

,~ i

Cantalou.pes

I

On Our Piece-of-the-Week Plan

Eeeh week a piec:e of Ster·Giow Dinnerware will
be featured . for just 25c:. For eaah $3 in 9rocery

23c

lb.

I

YOURS FOR ONLY 510

W;th Eocll
$3 Purchose

Yell ow Meat

Jane Parker Rolls
• each35c
A&amp;P Cream Cheese
Spanish Bar Cake
Sharp Cheese WI~~~SIN •
Peach Pie
• •
Fresh Eggs s~~~~Y:RL~~~
Corn Puffs ,~~~:. • •
4t
Macaroni &amp;Cheese FR~~N 1t Eight O'Clock Coffee • 5t
Apple Base Jellies s~i~:A3 ~~ 5100 Our Own Tea Bags • • ~~ 5t

TABLE SEniNG

2S'c

Red Skin -

pkgl

Dry M1'l k

40 Piece

only

It

Western- Extra Large

TREE SWEET •

Stuffed Olives s~~:~A
. . . ac
Inn Page Puddings
Salad Dressing :::e • • . •~&gt;-&lt;~'J3c
A&amp;P Buffered Aspirin •~: 5t
Bufferin •• 11's • • •
A&amp;P Whole Beets • 1~ 5100

lb.

• • •

I

Fresh Produce!

roll

PINEAPPLE
GRAPEFRUIT

Fab DeterCJent • • • •
Bright Sail Bleach-Gal.
Salad Dressing ~~l~'6NA
Frozen Lemonade

VALID THRU SAT., JUNE 15th

'roctU Anlefk.tn or Pim'"to

•• •

DeI Mont e Dr1n k
e

• •

PEACHES

t-Y2 Gal.

D
D
D
D

'EXTRA l'ltil ~~~~- PURCHASE al ONE J11!1. Meet.. Grlln Riel 2 lb.

•

•

CRESTMONT- Assorted Flavors (Regularly 79c)

D
D

EXTRA P11icl StamPI wtth
PURCHASE of ONE ttr Rip
Spt&amp;hetf:l Sluce Plain 15¥z«.

Ground Chuck ·

• •

JUMBO ROLL (Regularly 37c)

PLAID STAMPS

Dear Astonished:
I didn't have to - I knew my
correspondents wou1d do it lor
me. Keep reading:- H.
Dear Helen:

1'houih I don't know "Tired

Leon - Freshly Ground

BIG BUYS on A&amp;P Groceries!

525 EXTRA

"Childish get - even
schemes" is rl(Eht, Helen. You
should have said ten times
more." - ASTONISHED

~

Boneless.Beef Roast

ROUND BONE
SHOULDER

• •

them.

~·~38c

FRESH
Small
5 to 91bs.

combat their sloppiness, I sat
there stunned!
Wily didn't she teach them re.
spect ror their parents and pride
in themselves in the early, formative years? Why didn't she consider the work involved betore
she produced eight kids? What
kind or example does she set for

Rump or Bo"om Round

.

Porterhouse Steaks
Sw1•ss Steaks

• •

'

Turkeys

'·

••• lb.

BONE IN

and garbage in kids'
beds'' routine was just liae to

lb.

88
lb.$1

MADE WITH POTATO FLOUR

~'dishes

Ulggest cod&lt;lall paril' o! J968 ·
- at the Miami llMoh IUiton
Plaza, aa August draldWI ror
7,000 - • • to111ed b7 the GOP
Nal'l Committee.

•

'

.•·'

• l.i'

.
;

'

Radishes ·
I

••

'
-~

2

'•

•

�... - .....
15 - The IJail~ Sentinel, llliddlcpm·t·l'ornea·oy, June l:!, 1:1M

· BIG BUYS on "Super-Ri ghf' Quality Meats!

Helen Help
U8. •• By Bottel

·Super-Right Quality Steak Sale!

Helen

THE BATTLE RAGES
Dear Helen:
After reading the Jetter from
11
Trred Mom" ·· who tholght the

FULL
CUTS

,

BONELESS
STEAK

Sirloin Tip
Potato Bread
Delmonico S
4~89c Rib Steaks

lb. $1°9

•••

JANE PARKER

Sirloin Steak • • •
Club Steaks • • •

Gala To els

TAKE THIS STRIP TO YOUR FRIENDLY
AlP FOR BONUS PLAID STAMPS!
CHECK ITEMS YOU BUY!

D
D
D

EXTRA Plaid SUmps wtth

PURCHASE of One 2-lb. Pill·
Super-Riatrt 8lllf stub

100
50

50

EXTRA ""' Slomps PURCHASE of $2.!50 or moN In
frHh frultl and veptlblel

UJ1!A "'"ofstomps
withLl Char
PURCHASE
two cans
Chow Meln Noodl" 211..

50 a...,.
50
50
50.
25

EXTRA Plaid St.mpt with
PURCHASE of ONE pr Welchs

Jelly 2 lb.

••

EXTRA Pl•ld Stlmps wtth
PURCHASE of ONE J11!1. Dry
... now F•t BNIM 2 lb.
EXTRA l'ltld Slomps PURCHASE of ONE boltlo al

A-,..,n F•bric flnllh 20 oz.

'

EX'11lA Pllld Stlmpe. wfth
PURCHASE af ONE a~n
Yanish BCJWI ca.n.r 34 01.

•

I

•

I

lorde1'1 Cho01e SllctJ ........................ 12-oL pkg. 65c
All Ruon
ISc
Hi.C: Fnoit Drink• .................................. 46-oL cao
Heinz Porlt &amp; ltc111 ........................ Z 16-oL ca11 35c
Doy-brlh Soh Bleach .......................... 13oOL pkg. 49c
llrdsoyo Frozen Awake ........................ foOL coo 39c
Calgoolh, 12c Off Label .................... JS-. pkg. 71c
Folgon Vacuum Pack Coffee ................ 1·1b. coo 77c
Maxwell House Coffee ........................ 3 lb. cao $Z.35
Pillsbury or Ballard llscelh ............ 4 1-oL pkgs. 40c
Chlffoo MaN)arloo, 4c Off Label ........ 1·1b. pkg. 43c

pk(.

....

botu.ggc

I

Purchases, you are entitled to one piece at this
low price. There', no limit •.• with a $0 purchase
yo~; can get two piece' . . . and so on!

''
'
•'

••
•'

Noblsco "Doo OMs" . . . . . . 3 pkgs. $1.00
AAI'

I",._, Pie Sholl• . . . ... .... . . 2 for 37c
A&amp; I'
F - Gorman Choc. Cok•, 12 oz. . .59c

::.!.,

Cream Ch- Coke .17 oz. 79c
Think You Apple Pie Filler 21-. con 39c

'

... . ..
·-

_

-- ...

.. . _ . , _

.., .•• - #"

• •

!

'

.. ...-....._-

• •

•
I

• •
•

•

Marsh Seedless

Size

Jug

Grapefruit

29C

69c

5-lb.
bag

'

MUSHROOMS -

• •

Pint Box 29c
HANK 011
SANDWICH

..... Me

WHITE HOUSE
MAKES 20 &lt;;&gt;Ts.

•

I

JANE
MUER

JANE

lb.Jt

PARKEII

1

ofU - -

.......

•

::

Ill WEll
2nd WEEl
3rd WEEK
Ath WEEK
lith WEll

...... DINIEft. PLATE. 211c,;'~•.::.~~
. . . . . . . . DESSERT DISH 211c ,;'~.::::_
.. .. . . .. . .. .. .. . CUP 26c .;";..:;.:~
. . . . . . . . . . . . . SAUCER 211c .;''~.:':..
. . . . . BRUD l . lUTTER 26c ;':..:-:~

SARli
SEAL WRAP

u:::'35c

.,,

13-1•••

CRISCO
SHORTEll I&amp;

R11l1110n
Limo• Juice

~10C

3:. 7tc

-: 6tc .

-. ,. '"'. .-

'

.

Mennen Wild Mosa
Skill I._,

~ate

T1ndtlen .................................... At
Wahr Pltc.or .........................$2.tt
&amp;nvy loat .......................-..... .H,
GoNvy IHt Tray ..........- ...·~ At , ,
Gravy Ladle ......................_.. At
Alii r..., .........-.-· ..·-" 2 for ... I
Salt. Pepporl..bn .... pair I.Jt
111-111Ck Deep Pie la..r ..-..... .It

Muellen Mtlcarool ........- .. 1-III.Jik" Ztc
Fre..llko Pns ............. IJ'Ia..,-e.il He ·

fr...l•• ..... eor. 2 tz.n. ••••.•,.. '
.....Ilk Cot GoNe~~ ..... u ... coo 2k
•r•fiiWOOil '\llctd
Plck!M ...h ....... - ............ 1'- jor Jtc
!.,.l•r ., H•r4 to Hol4

Dljlplfr Do Hair Sottl19 Chi • - larftc

\
• J
.
. . . . • • . .. . ___ ,.... .•_ :r."* •:Jt::: . ~ ':"- ,... :- :-::.-::::-r--~- -:-:: !"· ~---===--:4t..,.,.,. at "'• ~~ft...;. d , !hhb ·r·c·r
.

i -·-··-~·,_

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

'J

.

letter. )lost or lite young girls
wero aplnst this mollter, but I also welcome your own amus·
1111 lhey must be spoiled. If a 1ng experiences. Address Helen
teen-ager Is so lazy he or she Bottel In care or this newspa.
won't llfl his hand to help, he de- JJOr.
serves garblllll In bed. rm sure
Dr.
would gasp at my
llteoey, but even his own mother
dlaasree• wllh his methods.
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO,
These lazy, goocl.lor....tblngklds
Salurda.Y, June .8. 1968
nowada1s need ohaldng up.
SALES REPORT or
OHIO VALLEY LIVESTOCK CO.
HOGS - 1?5 to 220 lbs. 20
to 21; 220 to 250 lbs, 20 to
21; Light 18 to 22; Fat Sows
14 to 17; Slags 12 to 16; Boars
10 to 14; Sows and Pigs 70 to
100; Sloat• 10 to 18 •
CATTLE - Steers 20 to 26.•
50; Heifers 18 to 25; Baby Beef
20 to 27; Fat COWs 16 to 20.50;
Canners 14 to 18; Bulls 20 to
26; Mllk COWs 100 to 200.
VEAL CALVES - Taos 34.Doleptes to two oonvenlloos 50; Sooonds 30 to 32; Medium
were appointed ""'"' the Racine 22 to 28; Com. and Hvs. 20
American !.eglon AuxiliAry met to 26; Culls 18 to 22 .
recently with Mrs. Jobn Young,
SHEEP - Ewes and Lms.
president, preal.dlngover thebul- 5 to 10; Stodc Ew., 5 to 10;
lness moet~ns•
Fat Sheep 4 to 10; Culls 1 to
8unmer convention was Ill).. 5i Bucks 4 to 10; Fat Wethers
nouneed !Qr June ~1 at Jockson. 5 to 10.
Nained
delop!es lor the disLAMBS - Tops 24; Seconds
trict &amp;lllf1clapartment oonv-. 18 to 22; Light Wts. 16 to 18;
were
Lawrenoe&amp;lld Le- Common l4 to 16.
ora Young, and alternatea are
Margaret Yost and fDilaBrlnkPT, PLEASANT
er.
LIVESTOCK SALES CO.
A-edgmeola """e r...lv.
1'1'. PLEASANT, W, VA.
ed from CARE for contribution
Saturdolr, June B, 1968
11&gt; lite Malarslan project, and
HOGS - 175 to 220 18.75
!rom lhe &lt;forelga relatlona 8lld to 19.90; ,Heavies 16 to 18.80;
publle rilauooa ~ Llj(llla 17 to 19.80; Fat Sowa
cbolrmon . lor reports received. 14 to 17; Boors 10.5(1 to 12.75;
The hlstol7 of the unit was read Pigs 6 to If; Stock 910ats 12
as p~ by Grella Slmpsoo to 22.
CATTLE - Steers 21,50 to
The
MrVed lunch to lite 23.75; llellero 19 1o 22.5(1; Fat
Soulllem
School )land mem- Cows 17 lo 19.70; C01111ers 12
bers who~ofo&gt;ltadlnlheMem­ to 17.50; Buill 21 to 23.75; Milk
orlal DOT, service• at lhe Lotort Cowa 110 to 160; Stock cows
Falla J111!1 ·Greenwood Cemetor. and Calves 175 to 237.50; Stock
los.
•
Shoers 19 to 26; Stock Heifers
The. !allowing wore nominated 18.75 to 22.25; stoek Sleer Catv.
tor otnclstor '68-'69year:Jean- eo 23.75 to 28.30; Slook Helfer
nette
Lawrence, prelldellt; Calves.21.251Al23. 75.
Blanc:he &amp;oencer, lot vlce.prelli·
VEAL · cALVES - Tops 33.- ·
dent; c~ Jlhodeo, 2ncl vtoe - 50; Secondo 3t.60; Medium 30
pretldenlr ·lloty l!ousb,
· IAl 33;1 ¢ommon and Heavies 29.&amp;aryj FAlla Wolf~, tr11surer; Bflu..
60 to $1.60.
lob Br~ .c)ilplaiD, ancl.llmJe Brinker, oer~Arms..
SCIOTO LIVESTOCK
Jnttallailiin ot olllcera
be
HOGS _ 190-220, 21; No. I,
held In June with MYrlle Wal- 21.25; 220-lltll, 20.50; 2tll.ll60,
ller, post prelldeol, u Install- 20; 21111480, 19.50. Sows. 16.30·
lll(lolllcer.
. 17.80: Boars, IU0-15; Plga B.
Mra. ..Young PNJentecl • pro- 11., 12,60·18.
...... oolhe ''POPIII'" and read '. CATTLE- CboltlO Steers,27l "Ill Fllllldon Field," 27;211! Good, 2$.:16.85; Slllldarcl,
..........., our war beroea. 11Dlt 23' 50~.35; Good IUra., 25.25 amber&amp; prepored ••· 25!?5; Standard Hfn., 23.50-llf.membranceo to be ploees otl 25; Good COWs, 19.35.20.50; utll- lf0\'81 of -141d membero. ·flf, ·17.50-18; ca-r 111111 Ot!IM,
ru trovellal prize do!JIItd 11.50 doWn; Bulla, 22,85.2U5;
111 Fl'llloe&amp; R&lt;lbertl Wll ~ Slo~ Callie Sloers, 2U0.:8;
oil to !iargaret Yost, l'lllllldc ~k catUe Halters, 23-.25.25.
nlr,~l li!DI be Hrved at ' V,EAL CA).LVES, Cholet, Sf·
lie :tun. mfM!IIhimd bJ #.~.1&amp;; Good, 32: Med. 30; Com.,
~~:~.: Ro4tell. · 27[ ~7 c,J¥ts B. H., 30-38.
Leora , - .
.
i ,_AJIIIS, Cholee, 17.50: Good,
aad. ~hOUr !allolred..
. ~t.30; Llalllli, 23.

*""k

Conventions

Are Appointed

as

J-

·. .

will

•• • •. ,. .. ,••

'

.

Joseph's College ... All that fanfare about how big a star Zero

Mostel was to take Paddy Cha)&gt;evsky's ,.The Latent Heterosexual" to Texas ror a try-out and
then next season to Bdwy. with

DON'T
FORGET!

-

the low - pay APA Repertory
troupe - now Zero quitting Pad.
with CBS for reature films gets
signed any moment; CBS also
same longMgreen bait ..• Columbia Pix (no relation) admits it
will Pill' Dick Van Dyke $25(1,000 ,_. the re.release of um_
vorce American Style;" Dick
got $750,000 !irs! bonanaz -

Italian is tile native laJI.
guage or 55 million peop~ ' .

.

FREE GIFTS- DOOR PRIDS
3 - $10.00 GIFT CERTiflCATES given IWI,): It
9 p. m. No purchase _ne_cessary. Free registra&amp;a.

T RS., JUNE _13

New York Oothing lfoust, PollllrOJ
Fro:tSen Food Sale!
RED BA1N

Mom Saves Dad's Cash
With These Food S1vings .... No Stamps, No ConleltSr

CUBED
STEAKS

No Games, Just Lower Food Prices! BeHer Check!

Best Way We Know To

Pka. of 10

99~

5TH and PEARL STS.··RACINE
"The Stor&lt; With A Hart"

Rl~t !'!served :o limit _quantities

We accept Fed. Food

Sta,mn.&lt;

Ju_ne 13-14-15
Open Mon. thru Sat.
9to 9··Sunday lOto 7
Storewide Everyday
Low Prices to Show Our

Appreciation For Your IAJyal Patronage!!

We Call Them Ful- Valu Buys

and .THEY ARE!
Extra Fine Granulated Colonial

.::Sugar _______ s:.ssc
Crackers_____. ~ 19e r
Tissue._____l 0;:.s 9e
Fireside Saltine

a.r.111 Bathroom

·Assorted Colon

Fiddle- Faddle
Snack Treat

Req.39c
Clusters
of r..111ts
and popcorn

25~

SUNDAY ONLY- June 16
Producers Grade A Homogeniz:ed

NoDepoait

Miracle Whip_~~-oressing ~-~~-------qt. 59~
-HI- C Drinks~~~F~~·,~----\~_::. ____ 3te.,: J. 00
Kraft Grape JeiiJ. __________ 2 1•. far 49~
Preserves z.,,~ str~wberry,~lackberry_________ qt. 59C
Bread :,:.er.~~~~i·~-Regular ----------- 516,:.. 1. 00
Argo Sliced Peaches ____________ 3No~.~ 1.00
Argo Pineapple Juice ____________ 3 ~~ 1.00
Hudson Towels~~------· 3 •ig rollsl.OO
Bounty TowelsDecor••ed_" ~-3 •ig rolls 1.00
Banner Sweet Pickles·---~---- qt. lar 49~
Velveeta Cheese~g:...~~~~ Kraft__ 2 1•. bx. 99~ ·
Showboat Pork &amp; Beans ______ 300 can 10~
Hunt's Catsup!~~~----------· 3 bo:: 1.00
.

211

TAKE DAD ON
A COOKOUn
But, You
Do The Cool'ingl

MIL

OurOwn&amp;elter
Fnthly Ground

1/2 GALLON CARTON

GROUND
BEEF

SUNDAY ONLY, June 16

TO

TO JUICE

FAMOUS

4
:.:'·

HUNT~

-

23~
-

SUNDAY ONLY -June 16

VEGETABLE SOUP
CAIPI!LL'S
'

.

~ _ 10~
1

31b.pka·1.59
ARMOUR'S

Ohio Valley

Wienor~

_ 2 lb. Pk. 9lc

3an2.
lb.
Canned Picnics_____
Sliced Jowl Bacon _ _ 2 lb. Pk. 79c

.........

GoiMII"

Bananas Grapefruit

Corn

7 i~ 1.0-0 5 ~~ ... 59~ .

~:. 39~

f,

'

aademle ..:: '.:It tl._olon Nlf7,
but wlll •be a ~ :hJ•
lor movie ... l..clewt ~
will ~ce aOfJI!IIill&lt;lll Ill Ill
more pllchah palaoeo ~ .....
tklol •

lAdies &amp; Girls Pie... h1cl:

Special Shopping
Hours:
6:00 to 9:00 P.M.

grabbed Lee Marvin, Steve McQueen and Jack Lemmon with the

'

Bo-...,.

On Thuro&lt;lay night this week, Now York Clothltw
will turn the store over to you lor easy •'-llli
tor dad. Come as you are. shop leJsurel)l. 'lbl&amp;'1
lor 3 hours ooly.
•

'

,( 'I

' ''.

.

For Ladia Only

d.Y' s opus .•. Robert Gulp's deal

.

In Town" but TllllmY G!!!...
!rlond' lnlli~' IIIII
r,al!)r did ,I IJI 110rk; w, 1111

Father's Day
June 16th

Make Dad Glad on Father's Dayl

Market Report

Delegates to

'
I

They'll pla,y Randall's Island stadium here July 21.
TV's Mike Douglas' initials
are of course MD and he's made
'em come true with an Honor·
ary Doctorate !rom Phllly's Sl,.,

up - for them or for us parents - the famUy rallies around

...r,_

Sutar lowl wl.. Cover ..........$1.29 Covered I•H•r Dlsll ............. .$1.19
Meat Platter ............................$1.29 CovorH CosHralo ...............SZ.tt
c......., ..................................$1.29 TeapOt wltll Cover ...............J2.H
Yo..teblo lowl ......................$1.29 eo ... I·Salad·S..p lowl ........ At
Deep Yttttablo lowl ............$1.79 7-lock Salad Plate .................. ,jt
Soup lowl ................................ .St 1Z·l••• looiHI c••, Ploh •..JUt
9·1•cll Luockoan Plote ............ .49 Caffee Pot with Cover ........sz.tt
Oval PlaHor .............$1.6t Caffee Mug ............................. .It

Gerber Slrelned
lilly FIOd

BY JACK O'BRIAN
NEW YO)!K - Yep - Geor·
gie Jessel's 70 all right: he
lunches dally with his secre·
I well remember the famUy tacy - a male ..• Fashion col.
dts(llssions my parent. bad with umnlst I!)Jgenla Sheppar&lt;l's sur.
us lour children around lhe kit- fering some a~nJes J.,ut keeps
chen table, and the pJd ll did. her typewriter sizzling entertain·
By the Ume my folks p dooe lngly '.. Several cab neets give
talking we felt so ashamed 0( drivers strict orders to keep
ourselves a spanking wasn't nec- their headlllfhts bright even da.Y·
essary. We were taught to work! times: because N. Y, traffic is
'-Tired Mofu" should teach her vicious and especially old folks
kids likewise, with any melhod get careless In the monolony
that does the trick ror her. - 0( street jams and walk Into
their paths ... Finally Nancy
P. P.
Sinatra tells why her marriage
Dear P,:
You uphOld •'Tired Mom's" tn Tommy Sands fiunked: "He
get-even methods while recall. didn't want children and I do,"
1ng your own parents' wise dis- she recalls ln next month's Mccussions. Which kind of parent Call's ... uneah Come de Judge"
YOU'LL be depends on how soon creator Pigmeat Markham's
you star! which kind o! dlsd- toorlng laugh-troupe (!Del In lor
pllnel- H.
odd namesi · Pigmeat's seoorkl
Dear Helen:
banana ts named Baby Seals ...
Throw dishes, clothes, trash
on my cbUdren's beds? Never!
I respect them as human beings.
And they respect us enough to
take resJIC)nslbUity. 0! course
we lmow that just as nobody
ever learned lhe multiplication
tables at one session, 10 too do
children need constant reminders about chores. We don't ex-.
peel JJOrlecUon. SorneUmesl yell
at them, often they complain, yet
when something Important comes

to help each other make t h e
deadline. We take over each othM
er's jobs because we share love
and respect. - MOTIIER OF
FOUR FINE ONES
Dear Helen:
What 't'flred Mom" n e v e r
learned is that you must torm
good habits early. She can't
break bad habits late!- PROUD
MOM
Dear Helen:
That Hvacation" you suggested mll!ht work. When kids know
they have to do housework or It
won't be done, they start doing
it.- KNOWS
This column Is dedicated to
family Uvlng, so Jr yw're havIng kid trooble or juilt plalntrou·
ble, lei Helen help YOU. 9Ie will ·

t:y COleman's "lley Big ~­
er" from ••Sweet Charit,y" goes
up In 9penslve smoke - Edie
Adams exhales it for hor TV
commerclata
•• ltonald Reagan
around.
Paramount bossea saw uaoae..
American rock • star Aretha says ne's not a candidate- but
mary's
Baby" and Wllllled Mia
Franklin rolled Lonclonaudlenees would YO!I believe: !lllrley Tern·
In lite alslea ... Fifteen minute pJe' s former campajgn rnanag. Farrow lor three more but "!'d·
standing ovaUon ... Bdwy. pros- er Robert C. Walker has set up denl,y Mia's price lli04 ltiPleol
ties make $300 a week average Miami Beach shop in Ronnie's ... llorey Nel~ ' P f!.• IXiiwo
for directing ''The Onlr Game
- before payoffs and panders ... behalf at the Deauvllle.

Voice along ~roadway

over lhe:tyears. ·

Get these matching companion pieces at our low prices!

(IT WILL IE REPEATlOI

•

'I

Glant66C

•

·SCHUULE of SW WEEKS

c.......

Keebler Chocalote Fudge . . . . . pkg. 43c

•

39

each

Mom 11 or her children, I know
oomethlng Is terribly wrong In
that family, and It Isn't all lite
kids fault.
rm a 15.year-&lt;&gt;ld girl who has
been brousht up to respect my •
self and olhers. Our family knows
tbat everyone works tor the common good. If we do our jobs well,
we all have more time to el\joy
life and each other - and we all
take pride In the way our house
and yard look. We've been brought
up with discipline and love and
rm grateful my !olks aren't like
"Tired Mom." Kids are never
hopeless, unles·s parents have
lost hope,- L.M.B.T,
P.S. Ot course we have our
differences, but we iron them
out, Instead or hitting each Dlh·
er over the head with them.
Doar Helen:
1'\lttlng dirty dishes and gar.
bag4' In a daughter's b e d
wouldn't teach a girl to d dlshos - It would teach her to hate
her moth,.-."- T.G.A.
Dear Helen:
We had a big discuuion at the

olllce over your "Tired Mom"

In oddition to the ottrocti•e s.pc. ploce ""ings
you coRe~ over the next few weeks ..• we'll help
you add to your set with many beautiful matc:hin9
companion pieces. You can purchase thne com·
pleter items anytime in the weeks to c:ome at our
specially low prices.

PAnERN

•••

• •

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On A
Complete Set!

~G.Qow­

,~ i

Cantalou.pes

I

On Our Piece-of-the-Week Plan

Eeeh week a piec:e of Ster·Giow Dinnerware will
be featured . for just 25c:. For eaah $3 in 9rocery

23c

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Yell ow Meat

Jane Parker Rolls
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A&amp;P Cream Cheese
Spanish Bar Cake
Sharp Cheese WI~~~SIN •
Peach Pie
• •
Fresh Eggs s~~~~Y:RL~~~
Corn Puffs ,~~~:. • •
4t
Macaroni &amp;Cheese FR~~N 1t Eight O'Clock Coffee • 5t
Apple Base Jellies s~i~:A3 ~~ 5100 Our Own Tea Bags • • ~~ 5t

TABLE SEniNG

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Red Skin -

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40 Piece

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Western- Extra Large

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Stuffed Olives s~~:~A
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Inn Page Puddings
Salad Dressing :::e • • . •~&gt;-&lt;~'J3c
A&amp;P Buffered Aspirin •~: 5t
Bufferin •• 11's • • •
A&amp;P Whole Beets • 1~ 5100

lb.

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Fresh Produce!

roll

PINEAPPLE
GRAPEFRUIT

Fab DeterCJent • • • •
Bright Sail Bleach-Gal.
Salad Dressing ~~l~'6NA
Frozen Lemonade

VALID THRU SAT., JUNE 15th

'roctU Anlefk.tn or Pim'"to

•• •

DeI Mont e Dr1n k
e

• •

PEACHES

t-Y2 Gal.

D
D
D
D

'EXTRA l'ltil ~~~~- PURCHASE al ONE J11!1. Meet.. Grlln Riel 2 lb.

•

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CRESTMONT- Assorted Flavors (Regularly 79c)

D
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EXTRA P11icl StamPI wtth
PURCHASE of ONE ttr Rip
Spt&amp;hetf:l Sluce Plain 15¥z«.

Ground Chuck ·

• •

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PLAID STAMPS

Dear Astonished:
I didn't have to - I knew my
correspondents wou1d do it lor
me. Keep reading:- H.
Dear Helen:

1'houih I don't know "Tired

Leon - Freshly Ground

BIG BUYS on A&amp;P Groceries!

525 EXTRA

"Childish get - even
schemes" is rl(Eht, Helen. You
should have said ten times
more." - ASTONISHED

~

Boneless.Beef Roast

ROUND BONE
SHOULDER

• •

them.

~·~38c

FRESH
Small
5 to 91bs.

combat their sloppiness, I sat
there stunned!
Wily didn't she teach them re.
spect ror their parents and pride
in themselves in the early, formative years? Why didn't she consider the work involved betore
she produced eight kids? What
kind or example does she set for

Rump or Bo"om Round

.

Porterhouse Steaks
Sw1•ss Steaks

• •

'

Turkeys

'·

••• lb.

BONE IN

and garbage in kids'
beds'' routine was just liae to

lb.

88
lb.$1

MADE WITH POTATO FLOUR

~'dishes

Ulggest cod&lt;lall paril' o! J968 ·
- at the Miami llMoh IUiton
Plaza, aa August draldWI ror
7,000 - • • to111ed b7 the GOP
Nal'l Committee.

•

'

.•·'

• l.i'

.
;

'

Radishes ·
I

••

'
-~

2

'•

•

�\

16 - "1'110

~ ~·'

PJ.E.,~i,~,.'~;E:,: liOSriT.II.
A,DUITTEII: ]lilly see, l't.

· . ,, ;JIIilalllnl:

t: ;t-~

•

.

u.HY SOtotlo!Ol. Middluport-l'llmcroy, Jto"'

Edll\1, uomnan, GalllIJO!It Ferry: Mrs. John stow.
·art, Pt. Pleasant; WilHam Douglas, Elizabeth, w. va.
DISCII.IRGED: Zoe So!ller.
vllle, Rex Martin, Brenda OH- ·
ver, Cl2Q' McCartney, Richard
EsQJe, Grill Durilln, Mrs. Pearl
Rime, &amp;-.
BffiTH: Mr. and Mrs. Joseph
Boston, Pt. Pleasant, a son.

TONIGHT-THU. &amp; FRI.
June 12 • 13 • 14
CLAMBAKE
Elvis Presley
Plus
BEACH RED

MDGS 111ATR1
TONIGHT &amp; THURSDAY
NOT OPE~
FRIDAY THRU . TUES.

June 14- 18

TilE SAND PEBBLES
(Technicolor)
Steve McQueen
Richard Attenborough
Running time: 3 llrs. 15 min.

SHOW STARTS 7 P.14.

df

•) 1~6.~
1.,

.

L M

Delegates Nome ror a
·

llclegates to I h e 42nd La
Marchc Oepartementale, Eight
and f'orty, were elected when
Meigs Coooly Saloo 710 met Mooday night at the home Of Julia
Hysell, chapeau, ~n Middleport.
Elected as delegates for the
state meeting whleh will be held
in Columbus at the Nei11louseon
July 14 and 15, were MarY Martin and MyrUe Walker, delegates·
at..Jarge; Mrs. Hysell, Pearl
Knapp, and Eileen Searles, delegates; and Eunie Brinker, Catherine Welsh, and Rhoda Hackett,
alternates.
Mrs. Martin, departemental
l'archiviste, reported on the June
Pouvtor held recently in Columbus attended by four other partners ol the local salon. During
the meeting, which opened ln
ritualistic form a letter was
read from the Franklin Count;y
Salon 333 inviting local members to an anniversary dinner on
June 13.
It was voted during the meetIng to pa.y assessment and delegate fees for officers and to provide the chapeaux passes luncheon tickets for the salon's three
chapeaux passes and the newly
elected chapeau, Mrs. Iva PowelL
Other officers elet"ted for the
year, 1968-69, were Catherine

IT'S SUMMER TIME
•

HI BROW

BONE

4.99

Welsh, first demi-chapeau premtere; Mn. Martln, second
deml-chapeau deuxleme; Rho4a
H a c k e t. t, l'aumomler; Mrs.
l
Searles, t•arclllviste; Pea r
Knapp, La concierge; and Mrs.
HyseU, pouvior mem~r.
Mrs. PoWell appotnted Mrs.
Myrtle Walker as her le secre·
tatre..Usslere, and Mro. Knapp
as her l'aviOlcate.
Chairmen appointed for the

h }:, ,, ... · ,,, ' ::, Annette' Warner Installed

arc e

m:~..n t h e meeting, Mrs.

•oe
KnaW presented the parody to
be given at the Pre-Marche Fouvior on !lmday evening, July 14.
Cards and dimes were sent to

the eight children at the Denver
Jewish Hospital, Denver, Colo.,
observing birthdays. n was announced that the next meeting
will be bold oo July 8 at the Pomth t tt
eroy Le!lion llall. At a me,
Faye WUdermuth, a chaPeau
. passe of Gallla COUnty Salon 612
will Install the 1968-ll9 ol!lcers.
The traveling prize donated by
Mrs. PoWell, was won by Mrs.
Walker. Refreshments we r e
served by the hostesses, Mra.
u••sell and Mrs. Searles, Wring
~..,concluding social bollr.

.

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'

,•,•

..

:;: a en a r ;:; .
WEDNESDAY

f,

'.

Annette Warner, daugllter of

Mr. and Mrs. Dale Warnef. was
WIIITI: ROSE Lodge Wednes-

installed as hooored

day, 1:30 p.m. at fo'eeney-B:enncU Post 128, American Leglon

"'eenb

Bethel 62, Internatkmal

ot

'

of

rder

Jobs Daughters, tllrlng cere-

Miss War· ored queen from her parent&amp;.
oo the robe wor.:, b:ehalf of the Both Mr. and Mrs. Warner OX·
ner' who then
ft
res sed their appreciation to the
BolheMIIolllce~~:grese~ ':., ~
~ethel for thelrdaul!hter'.s selec·
to
as
a pe' rsonal g I [ t Uon as honOred queen.
also given
Ml King pre
During aconduding soclal hoUr

... ' : ,':J.,,

,',,

'

monies of the Bethel Mllnday by Miss w;,t"%" Mr:~ Harry P: refreshments were served with
night at the Pomeroy Masonic sented a dian of the Bethel, Mn. King and Mrs. Warner preTemple.
Smith, guar
II aasoelale sldln at the puoch boWl. The
Other new omcers installed and Paul Darne '
..... ,rp18e· and white colot-s or the
roy Masonic Temple to elect and
Se lo
I
guardian
oM ln the
rody
install officers for the 1968- were Sliela Cowan, . n r pr n.
. install Uon service, Bethel were car.rled
year were Mrs. Walker, pa
~ year. Officers and compan- cess; Kathy King, JUnior prtn· for ~h~ Waaner gave cor- table decorationl. A noral piece
and publleley; Mrs. Welsh, scho·
••
cess; Mickey Wolfe, guide; Shor- Mr. an
rs. s:;,lth and the of purple and wblte waa Oanked
larship and mualcene; •. Eunie
lonslnvlted.
rle King, marshall; BediyHouda- aages to P:frs.
~ a bou- by JNrple tapers.
Brinker' wreck; Glattys Mowrey'
FEENEY-BENNETT Post 128 shelt, chaplain; Brenda Ta,ylor, installing officer,•,,
...... ~el ,........,..•ein was chairman
constitution and by-laws; MrS.
to Darne
PMW
vvv&amp;American Legion, Wednesday third messenger; 1rene Barnes, tonniere
·
'd Ada Nease for the refreshments and wu
Searle&amp;, partnership; Mrs. Hack·
night. at the haU, 7:30p.m.
fourth messenger; Jan Alkh·e,
Mrs. edroo:aa :"sts The guest assisted by DorothY Woodard and
eU, ritual, emblems, and noral;
THURSDAY
fif'Ul messenger· Elizabeth Bla- register ~oue gu
•
.....
Ruth Thornton, child welfare,
•
•-•
gilt ~ the new ,,n. Mrs. Nease.
range 8 P
G
SPRINGS
OCK
R
·
'
· ettnar, librarian; Twila Clatwor- ""'--' was a
""
a n d Mrs. Martin, ways and
at the gra~e hall.
Ge r 1a ch •
m. Thu &lt;sday
\
thy, musiclan; &amp;!san
Chester ·fnd Hemlock granges treasurer; Rhonda Hysell, senhave beeri"\jnvited; sewing and lor custodian; Kathy Watson, inbaking contes'ts to be held.
ner guard and Grace Hysell, outPIOLATHEA SOCIETY • Thurs- er guard,
Stuf!ed animals and pastel Mrs. Horace Abbott and Vicki,
day, 7:30 p.m., at Middleport
Choir members installed were streamerS decorated the social Mrs. John RedoVIan, Mrs. Wooof..
Church of Christ.
Connie warner, Lou AnnFreneh, room of the Middleport Church row wnson, Mro. Kenneth .M
REVIVAL AT Fair Play Cha.. Sherrie Turner, Teresa Gooch, or Christ for a layette shoWer Elhlnny, Mrs. John Hood. An
pel, through June 16, v.ith Hev. Patty Well, Pat Dumas, and Mland Laora Ohlinger, Mrs. Ralt
hooorlng Mrs. Terry W. OhlinS·
.lunior Malloy, Wellston evange- lisa Rizer.
Carl, Mra. Olan Harrison, Mr
er ThuradBY night.
list and the l{ev. It D. Brown iil
Debbie Ktng, retiring honored
sympath.Y
was
sent
to
Mrs.
John
Miss Judy Wildermuth, Mrs. Gla~&amp; Cudder, Mrs. Lawrem
A contribution to the camp..
charge. Located off Haute 325 queen, was the installing ofl'tcer.
Kincaid, who recently lost her
Jack Satterfield, Mrs. Rlclla~ Morarlv, Mrs. William Stul!li
ing fund Cor Heath Methodist
toward5
Vinton.
She
was
assisted
by
Linda
MayyoUth was made when the Wom- brother by death. Members also
Well, and Mrs. Richard Lo!!g Mrs. Paul Tribe and daughte
P flST cOUNClLOHS, Theodor- er, guide; Becky Nease, marsigned cards for Mrs. 0, P.
were hostesses. Gifts were plac- Jane, Mrs. Tracy Whaley, Mr
an's Society or Christian ServKlein, a patient at Veterans Mem .. us Council, Daughters of Am- shal; JeMifer Blakeslee, chap- ed in a baslnett. and on a decor- Chester Enrln, Mrs. Faye Pnt
ice met Monday night at the home
erican, Thursday, 7:30 p.m. at .lain; Unda Yost, recorderi &amp;eMro. Robert Eastman, Mr: .
of Mrs. Bernard Fultz, Fair- orial llospital, and Mrs. Noah
ated table.
hon~~
of
Mrs.
Lva
Dessauer,
phanie
Pullen,
flag
bearer,
and
Haskins, confined to Meigs GenGames were played with prfz.. Carl Wolfe, Jr., Miss Mal
lane Dri\'C, Middleport.
eral.
It
was
noted
that
Miss
Cave
Sl
Jennifer
Lohse,
all
past
honored
es being won by. Miss Charlene Bradbury, Mrs. Ira Botebel
Mrs. Nan Moore presided at
vesta
McCoy
is
now
home
trom
FRIDAY
queens
of
the
Bethel;
and
Mary
•
Davis, Mrs. WUUam Ohlinger, Mrs. EdWard Crooks, Mrs. De
the meeting which followed a
ICE CllEAM SOCIAL, Chester Francis, senior custodian, and
the hospital, and that Homer
Mrs. Tracy Whaley and M r a. Jlumel, Mrs. Charles E. Rlftlt
picnic on the Fultz lawn. The
Auxiliary Fire Deparlment.. Fri- Rosetta RedoVian, junlor custoCook· remains Ill at Bolter HosMrs. Ray Brickle&amp;, Mrs. Chu
societJ 110 ted to give $30 to the
Phil Ohlinger.
day evening at the firehouse.
les
Brad:JUI7, Mrs. Mary lUI\
Others on the guest ltst were
camping fund for young people
!{£GULAR PREACHING serv· di~iss King, presiding at the
dy • Miss Marilyn llwan, Mro
of the church who will be attendices, Hazel Community Church meeting, introdUced Mr. and Mrs.
Ron Rlftle, Mrs. Edgar Roy
ing sessions at Camp Francis
Friday, 8 p, m. Hcv. Edsel Hart, warner, parents of the honored
nolds, Mrs. ArthUr Nease 8111
Asbury near Rio Grande.
queen
elect; Naomi King, Grand
pastor. Public invited.
Becky, Mts. Lloyd King. Mra.
The School of Missions to be
.llTNEY SUPPEH Friday start· Ruth of the Grand Chapter of
WUI!am T. Grueaer and Del&gt;
held at Otterbein College, Westing 5 p. m., Middleport Pente· Ohio. Order of the Eastern 5iar,
ble
Mrs. Dale Harrloon.
erville, was amounced for July
• and Gerald
costal Church lot. Public Invited. and Ann Thomas, worthy matroo
Mrs.
Anthony, Mro.
S-7. Program Cor the year was
liOMEMWE KE CRI:AM so- of Evangeline Chapter, Middle·
Herman Ohlinger, Mrs. Ruuell
discussed and it was decided to
cial Satu1·day, beginning at 2 P·
WUBOII, Mrl. Kala WUdermuth,
. T
port.
continue using the stud,Y book
m., at ElJB parsonage 1R up.
The retiring honoree! queen
Mrs. Doo Brlckles, Mrs. Gene
until January when new mater·
pers Plains. llomemode. Icc placed the honored queen's pln
Mr. and Mrs. Gall Buck, Glor- Abbott, Mrs. Charles P. Rlftle,
ial as a result of the merger
cream. ct,ke, pie, sloppJ pes,
Ia and Jon, and Larry Milch Mrs. Robert Sis lUI, M r L
and
between
the E.U.B.
coUce and sofl drinks. Public inwere in Columbus ~ to vis- Charles Searles, Mrs. Mike MorMethodist churches will be Isvited.
It Mrs. William Mataoo and rison, Mrs. Geolltey wuson, and
sued.
MARY SllniNE, White Shrinll
Jack Matson, former resident&amp; Mrs. William F. Lohrer of Day·
A committee meeting for Roof Jerusalem, school of instrucof POmeroy. Other guests there ton.
tary chairmen was scheduled for
tion, 8 p. m. Friday at the 1001·
were Mr. and Mrs. John Blair,
next week, and the group made
hall. Mar)' llughcs, districtdeputhe rorJJier JeaMe Matson, and Mr. and Mrs. Buteh Armt and
plans for a complete cleaning of
t)· of Dislrkt 17 In charge. Offi·
daughter&amp;, Liz and Linda, and children.
the church in september.
ccrs asked to atlcnd. Potluck rePlans for or float to be enter- son, John\ or ChUlicothei Dr.
Gueats of Mr. and Mrs. Char·
~mpathy was expressed to
freshments.
ed
in
the
Regatta
Weekend
par·
and
Mrs.
Robert
Matam,
Laurlea
Grueaer and eon, .kin,
Mrs. C. F. llibbs on the death
MlDDLEI'OHT Firemen sponade
were
made
when
the
Meigs
le,
Jeanne
and
Scott
of
Kent:
the weekend were Mr. and Mrl.
of her mother, and a card of
sor an outsidl! teen dance party
county Junior Leaders Club and Mias Maxine Matson and Eddie Gruaser and dau8hler ol
Frida)· st.a 1· ting at 9 p. ni.. at the
met recently in the Columbus and Ridgeway Thomas of Dayton.
Columbua.
Middleport communilY park. The
Southern Ohio Electric Co. soMr. 111d Mrs. Leo WUllams
Gordoo t'lsher, aoo of Mr. and
Ja)'·s will emcee.
were Saturday guesta of Mrs. Mrs. Mason Fisher, ls recupercial room.
Bob Bailey presided at the Welby Whalay.
ating at home following an 811S.~TURDAY
meeting during which time the
Mr. and Mrs. James Keller pendeetomy last week at Holzer
Ot;TSlDE IIIG!l School dance
year's program was outlined and and aoo. James, of Cleveland, llospltal.
part..y, open to publ.ic saturday
recreational activlties pl8J'11.ed. were weekand visitors of Mr.
Miss JeaD!Ie Hines of COium·
at the Pomeroy tennis court.
Camp counselors were an~ and Mra. Qlpne F orilea.
bus was the weekend guest ol
Dandnc from 9 to 12 p. m. The
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Phil' her mother, Mrs. Emma Hlnea,
nounced and delegates to the jun.Jays, emcees. In case of rain,
ior leaders camp and 4-H Club Ups were in Bellefontaine aver Minersville. •
the dance will be 'held in the high
Congress were named. Alan Hol- the weekend til vltlt their daughschool gym.
ter led in recreation following ter, Mrs. Willlam NeBie, and
JlTI'\E\' sUPPEH, Syracuse
the meeting and refreshments family.
The Cabinet remained un·
The Middleport Public Library
Grade School saturday, serving
Mr. and Mr•. Roy Arms spent changed throughout the ador
cookies and punch were gerhas received 05 new booksasfolfrom 4:30 P- m. lo 7 p. m. Proved to the 32 members attend- tho weekand In LOndonvllle with ministration of Pres' dent
lows :
ceeds to help purchase a new
their 1011 and ' daughter-in""aw, Franklin Pierce.
Ing aod c. E. Blakeslee.
The Tower or Babel. West; The
nrc truck bed.
Outsiders, !linton; The Loveliest
Librarian. Roberts; Christy,
Marshall; Airport. Hailey; Couples, Updike; Vanished, Knebel;
Topaz, Uris; Testimony of Two
Men, Caldwell; The New Year,
Buck; The Seventeen Book of
Fashion and Heauty; The Seventeen Guides To Knowing Yourself; With Option To D I e,Lock~
ridge; A Horse's Uead, Hunter;
Give Ded A Shirt This Yeer
Third Girl, Christie.
The library will be closed on
White Shirts _ solid colors - Plaids - Stripes - Checks.
Thursdays during June, July and
. selectiOn
.
·m ,the b us.}' me n' s Department on the
August. Library hours are 12 to
You'll nrm a b1g
5 p.m., Mooday througll Satur1st noor. All sizes, too. Be sure to see the Wembley Ties. So
day. Telephooe, 992-5713. Miss
Carroll ARD Lyont is librarian.
right ror Father's Day. Plenl,)• to choose from arr:l each with a

fun FrOlic... ,...Open to AU

Divided

~Iti Free!' Highlights '68 Regatta

But Not

'

A filii three~sofenteitalnmti1t ~
wltbfllebla.par.
ado oa "Friday, Joiae 21. The
~~~- , ·~~ lite parade II The
''BIIIId" Toward Re!lnllllon. 1!11·
trlet In lite parltle IIII.Y be mot1e
wllb 1'01!1
Parade 11!4

Layette Shower is Given

commercial ox61blta wllll&gt;e In
Pome~ Junior lll&amp;h School

lbo

with tho Ever Lovin

-.a
....,. Ball ......... - o d

The role of youth in the future of the church was presented when the East Letart Woman's Society or Christian service met at Lhe church June 4 in
regular session. OpenillJl: devotions were given by Mrs, William t'ox. Mrs. Virgil H.oush presided at the business session.
Mrs. f'erne Hayman, missionary secretary, shared a letter
Crom Wendell Golden telling of
the family's return to the mission field.
••Youth - The Church's llope
for Change," was presented by
Mrs. Barbara Dugan. Assisting
her ln addition to the above
were' Mrs. Doris Adams, Mn.
Mabel Shields, Mrs. Nora Pearson, Mrs, MUdred Donohew, and
Mr&amp;. Julia Norris.
Having no birthdays, a special
offeriTIK was added to the home
missionary treasury. A social
Ume was enjoyed by the group
with Mrs. Barbara Dugan and
Mrs. Julia Norris hostesses.

Brasilia replaced Rio de
Janeiro as the capital of Bra·
zil on April 21. 1960.

__ __________
I

.. ._
"I·

;c;

..,

..:_'

.....

"'.,.,...... , . . ., . ..... _ ... . ... . .-&gt;&lt;'. '

;

I.

ned· Gil

ot

~ ..

~=='=-¥i·
Je.ltdedlll
talknnaiDIIIat
of AmlriC8IOif.Qrod
beiDI a lick.....,.:·::::=.~::!='~;
Ill • willa
- ....
FRANCISCO
(IJPI) -1111111
Guo. wu
NelA.
cododSAN
today
thel lite 111111114
a lllvldotl

Ohio, with

The Eaet.m Dlvlidaaal Cham·
The ArllUal Big Bond
lD llilllllkla to Ule bolt ricea plcublp Race• wiU bt held It Repila Art SJow wW be bold
011 ~ the .bla wiU 12:30 p.m. and 3 P·l!!· m am- In the llroc:oncllllon Ill. Poul•s
Lutllerall Cburch all three days
be the tiMIIIoaal CIOIIIall In tbe ~. Juno 23. Flnalo In the
u.s. rroc Jllll¢li c;llalDj1lon. Jumping and • rac1ni corteot• lllldtr the cllrectkm of WIIUam
·lhl&gt;er ... Aaron Zahl.
~- Fred ' Crow, PollloroJI at.' wllfal10 be bold :imtiiJ.

to 1be elite COIDIIIoaWIIIb Cbil,

Prldt;r.

rr.c

. ...

orried Hippies Going to Boulder
heod~Jw

llld It -lo duo for 111 extremel,y
close Pen Friday aflo..Sclentloto fllure It wiU come
within laur mllllaa mUes of San
Franclseo'o llll,lbt.Aobury dlotrlct, live or lllle a mile.
Hilabt.~ 11 the mecea of
lower pOWer.
·
' SeleuUIII

·eeraa4

aren't

aiJaut·

lJie

for Boultlar b;y the
hwxlrodL The Word baa oot for moniha 1hat there's "a
damn .,... cbauee" Icarus will
blt the llrth.
"We think Call!orDia willallde
Into the 101, there wiU be
violent eartltqualtao, there wiU ·
be a YloloDI chau&amp;e In Ill ol
soclaey and ~ even Allantla
will rise," aald "!loa," a
ahagy.ljalred native o1 iOoml
IIIDOIIII lbt 1-ro Ia the ruah

loo .,...
oecutoa,

tlllhouP If lrirus ahoold
'-lien to ,lfmnllle pnto · tho

...U....IIId lllmlllr meteorites
did 10 mWlano or yearo - I t to COIOI'Itlo.
waulAI blt wl- the lllr&lt;s of
"We've ...,. up here becauoe
tiiOuaandl ol mulllluaploo ~ tills Is tho oaleot placo Ill lite
world lA&gt; be If It bajlpeno," he
Now, hljlpleo have IIOddJw eJplllusd. "Here IIIII Tibet."
ophut oelentlall, but lbQ ore
There were Ill! 1..-Iata

r--· · ·

.. . . .-MtUion to
'

r •' '

4 ' . - ...

'

•

I

Poyerty,
'
"Ill n.IIU.I&amp;Jt Ajlrll.
It -

alao 0.. flral &lt;lifeof

bt1oiN11 liilool0111 II tho 11711!
&amp;1111111 ...11011. The II!MtinJ
c....rudes ~ wileD Bbbap
F. Gerald EnoloJ!, Collllllbua,
reodo hlo llji))Ob!IIIOIIII Ill. mu..
toters to tho 11211.W cbtlrches
In ldo jurladlt:IIOII.

. !t.tt!:4ft.~~~~l~illi~~t~;*=\~T:~l1~m~~~~~i;li~;l;~~l~t~m~~l;l~1~~~;~~~i~l;lilil;ili~**;~;~*;~1
.•
J
.

IIADE- C. G. Adler, ........ .,.--,_

w.

relll&amp;inllv - S I of the · - ·
bulldl,._ Those JadUtlea wiU be ~~to tho 1lllrD of N011 Hoven u soon 11 the
baa
cleared. This - o a Is a result of tho -atod
effort opearbeaded 111 the New Hovan W0111111'1 Club, aalllotoward

pool

lll1lnc

IIIII

the

Clllllllllnley

-i•

ed b:Y other el ¥ic clubo to '-•"' reereatloaal lllcllltlu
of the ClllllntJnley.

Pie-Eating Rac-e
Deadline is Set
Deadline lor entry In the pie

eatlJW

cOIUs~

to be bald In

c..,.

dur!JW the eveniDS of the frill
jumping

Rockellllor dl-"tt who oay IIIII II a ildi
"I do not be!IIM thil," ~or 1114 "We baY8 , _ 1D
lib a Jleari.OrakoD ~·· ADd thlo ueedo heallnl- u Cllll'

-

noodllllllllnl.
•we are llvl!w tllrou81lM 13
•lltlt It Ia - thlrw w lAY
ol
reYOiuU~ .....,.. Ill
IIIli we are a dl¥ided peoplowblch we are. ADd It It quite a 1114 "Ill ouch u .,., tho ldeU
dlflereut, llld quite. • to oay we are a tkdlled

tiitrw

pecpe- which

"' llt1l DOt."
Roclooflllor tcld tho (;GanDO!&gt;o
wealth Club-1 ....., of cltlc

To OnloiD
-ardalll
· 54
Blobop
Enalo.rwW
MW mlniatero lllni&amp;ht. Blobop
Sbot K. MoDdol, ratlred t111t IIIIIIOD ollndla, wiU tltllvor
the lll'lllnat!CII

.....,a. ....

''Ia tho trqlc Gi ·
Vlea.o, •e went iDIII u artill
wllll tho - t ........ 0(

bl..,..

contest 1111 Saturday,

junctloo with the Big Bolld a... J-22.
plla Frog JUIIIjling CoDtell, Is
The pte eaUJW eve1lt, Ulplbor
Wednaldo.y, J ... 19, II 4 p. m. with thefniiJ~ng conteo~ wiU
Pie ea:tin&amp; contest entrlea are be fruD 5 to 9 p. m. at tho Moll•
to be submltllld to Cbalnnan Gill' foolbollllod!IDD ID Pomorqy,
The orpnlz.Uon spouoorlnc
Eddie Guinther, acCOftlll&amp;nled b;y
the $10 entry fee and the name tho wlllnirw conteallnt Ill tbo plo
of the cont.eotant
eattrw eoutost will ~ a
Guinther said 1 fi;D prbe will hallll.....
\rat111r. !'Galerol'
be awarded the cont.esllnt who Amertean LfCIOil POfl No. ae 11
eata the moat 8-lneh . . _ r tho first orpuliatlon to otllclal·
pies dertne a one hour perllld. 1y make enti-J IDIII. tho contell.
Pltl for tho o - will be proThe contest will be eondocled

117 lllllted ....... IDiorltltloaal
Jiel- A. Botkeflllor'l . .

IIIII .._,... to ...........

vided b)! l'oa\0~ Pu1ry . . .

Authorized by Court
prlton Ill 196'1.

Tbe order camo u Scotload
Yord lnmted o ihadow,y - or meu - IIIII I W0111111 with Ill
American ''twaDI'' aced to
learn what Ray ns dolui In
Brllaln before bls arrell II
Loncloa Intemadoaal Airport
Saturday.

-e111 ..

•e llvo with ean bocaDe Ill
the
llsht with.

IIIII buolnou loodora weokb' llmclloano oileD havo mW1117 equlpllleut, 1M . . . .
oulo4atod pditleal ............
be"""" llllloaal polltlool 1DDI- thM ODe criter'IOD of ''DIW llW , , • llld we IIIDnl •
leodorshlp'' Is u acute oeDU of oucb .,.....,.. coatuol&lt;11 In lbt

Blcblnl Nlml Ill tho '11 ltJI'*1, ~. . -.....

.

.

,

~.News••• in Briefs

reports of an lnOux of hlwles In
Tibet, but hltehblldng In that
dlrectloo leaves much to be
desired.
The pots!~ of Icarus will be
noted with lntereat b)! selentlsta
thr....,..t the world- and hlpplea lhr~ the Boulder
area. There Is no lndlcotloo that
the cltlaens of Tibet care ono
wo.y or the other.
.MrL JO)Iee Hiles of Boulder
Aid she doeaa't mlDd tho
!...,loll of the loiiKhalro, ao
l q u It, lou't poriiWIOIL
"I'd IJtllor have u- up
!bore 1I1ID 111110 of the Boy
Seouta who bave been here. The
hlpplts klop a cleaner •IIIIIP·"

DoNATION

liiiDoral ~. Ntw Hoven,
VL, pre..llll a ct.ck
for $500 lA&gt; lloolld F. lkluah, past chalrm&amp;D of the beard
ot the N011 Hoven Recreation FOUIIIIatlon, u • doDollaa •

a.. -

URIIInllloo of Sen. Jtober1 F. KemadY - d not IIIIU lbt
erlt:111 ~· feel "oilllod bl'lllllt- 1111" 1110H1IIID "' *'llld' 1W
ebeelred b)! INr or l"lllolod 111-."

~

KinCaid of
Ansted is
At Eastern

-on.

P. Shalor
lodleatetl ......... be • - hll lllvorteo - pao1.
tloa It lbt bood !If l'W1111•
r.l&amp;'o
&amp;Dd
owlqj It beliiDtl ~ ...........
proiJitiiJ tho lltw Yarll _ . .

114-,..

d'!fi!JIIIaD

-·

bfor Aid he waulAI decide
CCI1IIIrrlni wl1b tha
dol. . .l in the few dayL
.MCOidlnil to hll oboorvatllla,
- . "a sullatlllllll
maJoritt' ol tho deiQIIICII
Java llocltelaller.
~ louDehod

after

In._

olllod .._lan a the.-..
tlon Ia Waah~Jw~Dn Tuoldo.y,
then foll..,od It 1W wl1b

DuriiW Wednaotlay'o -aim.

Enaley ·~ the Vllldlzy

..

- ~~---­
llld 'fi&amp;Orpuo ltllmiiiJWIII
ClllfDrDia.
b;y 20 Socret
Sanlce ...,u llld 1llllllben Ill.
NIIW Yarll llld ClllbU lft ·
Jnfcftement I I e D c i I It Ill
, . _ Ylallild tho

FATHER'S DAY IS SUNDAY

WSCS Meets

i¥-

Rockefell

St. Ber·

aardo, l!le pie eallna llld frotl
JllllljiiDI t:h8Jn&amp;11CIIIblps In the
Melp
Local F_.l sta41wn.
2::10 p.m IIIII lilt pte eat1nr
·-•
!lie evanlnl pro. Buo orcurllloao are boliospllll·

- . . per(crmances or· 1111 at 1:30 p.m. ·IIIIi ap1n 111 s p.m. tlla .;.akolbor.e ~-· Jleadlna
Em Lovin Ill. Bernorill will be Both F,.._ IIIII $llurdlo- cto.. the buo orcurolotla· loea117 II
featunolll Sp.m. llld 7::10 p.m. wllb a rec:or.s bop;
· · N~ ComjJtal.
.

Received

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

bPdt.,~WthliOY8nl.

Entries &amp;Q,fOtll'IJIIIn!romoul
ot town IIIII l.W· pariGIIalltlos.
AIIO oa ~ "11111 be file
td&gt; racet In U,. Ohio lllnr II

ca-,
!IGol Chairman, llllildiii!OI'I.'I'IIv,

By Jr. Leaders

fN•

IDrnliJ,Io

.p...

Float Planned

Role of Youth
Is Topic when

,,.;.

s

11-;:';MEROY CIIAPTER80, Roy-• 1\rch Masons, stated meeting
~
Po
Wectnesda.Y at 7 :30 p.m.
me-

Contribution to
Camp Fund Made

I.

w- ...

of Loa

~eo,

1lllrD

bill

then ltJIQbllt a
ltmc'- ll tbe

free gift box. For unusual gifts ror Father's Day select Binocu-

Bll_.. Hutol.
I l l - wu bWed u o ala&amp;"
forei&amp;D policy addreu, be .....
tho Ullltod stateo to w I •

lars - a reading glass -

callod for . . . .lid -

thorollol-ld~­

a cane or an umbrella - Cameras.

Rod Chlla.
"Ill the oulltle

Shop e-very aoor ror your Father's Day buying. Cosmetics ll.l1d

Toiletries _ Luggage -

Furniture GiR.s - lladios an::l TV sets

_

Handcrchiefs -

Barbeq,ue grills -

CGmllltftot

&amp;Dd

lbt

uWsllhlr
Improve COD" reloUCIII wllfi..C.
u ... dove!... Gill' . . . . .
lowanlo boCII,. he .....

Buxton ell'&amp;.u. -

And select yoor Father's Day Greeting Cards from our large

Hallmark selection -

lrilllllll wltll

China

Sotlet Uldal, we -

wllb

Gift wrapping paper and ribbon, too.
All waist sizes 29 to 44 and ¢~tf~ large
sizes 46 to 50. Solid colors ...., n6;at PI~
terns - all expertly tallon~ - mOst all
are permanent press. Perfect for Father's
Day Gl ving.

Salel Slacks
6. 95 Slacks ___ .5.77
7. 95 Slacks ____6.37
8.95 Slacks----7.27
9. 95 Slacks: __ . 7. 87

-

llberfelds ere open wery
- k dey including
Thunclu 'tll5 PM end both .
Frkley end Satvnley Nights

't119PM

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
•

&gt;)''nita ....

''

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