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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.

.

'

'

,•,•

..

:;: 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 ....

''

�.
·l

.' fll •'
·"
1

...

~

'
·,~···

.

; -

.

·,~

i

'

'

•

•

.

'

.~~~.,

The I~ Thing Tod4y is Chailge

~

. ;,h

'

EYOI')'OIIO

ilut the moot obtuse recosnlzea that

the ''ID~ thing~ Ia change.
If you don't manage aeooveraationpleceabout
' change you're a bore.
,
11'1 0111 to talk obout changjo, lor lbo. other
!elloll. Most ol us woold Uke to see our polkbarrel atyle

(J(

"Inland improYementa" by tbe

federal IIOVOJ'nment ehangecl. UnW, that Ia, the
pi'OJ)Osed dam doWn the river a pi~ce Is ellmlnsted m grounds ol lesser noceulcy thaD arother project ln the Sacramento fllver.
It's hard - nigh polstble, glven the present
status ·~ mankind's nature - to eSI)OU.se the
long view, or more precisely, the wlae one.
Ne~erthele1s, by O$Ul0slt, perhlpa, men must

leanr to !real othen aa.tbl)' would like to be
treated, or aurely perlob, 'About 700 yoars of
~elf.government tn Rome ended with the ascen.
s1o11 of Cats Octavius In 31 BC aa Emperor.
Peculiarly, Arnot!eons roallze their republican
form &lt;i gaJVel'DIIlt!lll Is headed directly toward
a simllar event. And apparently we are near
po"erleso to cllange dlreetlon. The J)OI)Ular
policy Ia to &amp;low down the race to the awful
da,y, not to change direction so as to avoid it.
For example, tt is more popular and seems

to make more sense, to tirhten pollee controla
over rioters than to deal 1eriously with the

the flodng,
Yes, change is the word; if only we can understand where it ls taking uS, and how to persuade &lt;Qrselves to manage it. man for the rtrit
time will have teamed from Hilltory.
Among the frontllners
those part• of our
IOcietJ' recognizing the importance or change
ue our aeadlng, progressive farm people.
Perhaps they are ahead ol most of ua.
On the cover of the program last Monday
evening for the 25th anniversary celebration

«

•

I

\

'

IMUal dlmer of the Metp .coun1r Soli
Conaorvotlon Dlstrl~ were tile foUoWID.I para.
grapho. 'llley command ui to "Consider IJ'Jte
Time:" ·
.
Atroso thO nation, In our vUlapa 111111 towas
u W.ll1 •• In our eltlea 111111 INburl&gt;s, a deep.
rooted change' Is taldnsplace. Natllrel resoureea
Mee taken lor gr..,ted .,_e belils nprded
with Increasing lmportanee. (;lean water an.C
air, a1oq with trna ~the JOil) aro'laldne on
1 new IIIOIII1Ing. People .,..; dlsMerlq - .
resour&lt;es are not only limited aDd vital, but
Yoinerable to foui!Dg, waaljl and ruin. 'l'he7 aro
awakening to the no~, for · ~ ~
ahlp. On all aldes there lo a ·, .w 'cllmite lor
111111

•

·-

No one of us can forcaat tbe 1fati:IN, ·IJut eldJ
o! us can look 101'Wil'llrto wliat Is P.s~ie'and
and probable. There are clear alpi. of on..

comlni resoureerequtrementL Wldeii)JI'&lt;Iadbimger lsCIIthehorii!Oilfor larpareuol ihe world.
At horne, the demand for jails 111111 im)ll'OI'ed Ill·
came must be met pertly tbrough l'eiOIU'CO
' 'development. C&lt;&gt;III;IOIItion lor the uae o! re...,rces o! all kinds Is growing and the need
for reliOUl'ce producta Is bound to lnereue.
It Ia time to Join In planning - to bring your
experience and views to bear, along with those

QIU'

"*-

enda, pillows, l!lankets and ·•

- '=-to

Consider the time. COnsider It well.
I

· Voice along Broadway

(

WASHINGTON (NEAl
Including Sen. Robert Kennedy, wbo was a candtdab! and
,. two cas~s where would-be assassins had prepared their 'murder dev1ces but had not. ac~ when caught, there has been

one presidential assassmation or attempted assassinatiOn

·· ~very

seven years since the 1933 attempt on the life of President..,lect Franklin Roosevelt.
Going back to the 1835 attack on Andrew Jackson, in almost
every cas~ ~ a~ckers were neat, overly fastidious men,
short or slight m build and very serious in nature. They were,
••"' ~ners '~·
m•n w'1th
'-'-•· . w••
•·•·d
e most
=«'
Auc"T~L , . few~t~'"!'•·
..,_,..~
I.
""'''·:, wu• .. • w~- ..,... y. t.be V••""' Sl&amp;_teo. •'-;-' ·
ost till used revolvers for ·their 4eeds. Two, however,
1
ugbt befort! they could acl were planning to blow themselves up with the president. A73·year-old had wired his own
~ar ~th dyna!J'!ite and an Army deserter wa&amp; caught preparmg rutroglycerm bombs be was planning to lie lil his own
body,
More importantly, what is known about these men indicates that mosl bad been menlaily ill for years.
The man wbo aliempled to kill Theodore Roosevelt uld
lllalla a dream be wao at the olde ol Presldeat MeKbJley'a
eofflo when the eorpse 881 up, and po!Died to ,ftooHvell, sayIng, "There 11 my marderer. '
There was a long history of insanity In the family of the
man who tried to kill Andrew Johnson. AfU!r attacking his
sister with a four-pound weight, the court judged him mentaUy lncapallle and not responsible for Ills acts. At times be
believed he was Richard Ill, king of England.
It is reported that psychologists who studied Lee Harvey
Oswald as a .tee~-ager recommended that he be confined to
a mentalmstitution because of "polentially dangerous schizophrenic tendencies."
Several of the attackers saw themselves acting at the direction oi God.
Tllougll not much Is lnown yet about Slrbao Slrbaa It Ia
evident lllal llle record ol pre~ldentlal aaaasslna sugcesla
Ibis eountry would do well to do more toward ldenUfylag
treatlag and caring lor lllose people wbo are ao olek mntally
tl!al they are a danger to tbomaelves and to society.
A great deal of work. needs to be done in $Ingling oul those
children wbo, by heredity, accident or early experiences are
almost certainly destined to be dangerously menlaily Ill.
But identlllcatlon is only the start. At least lwo of the attackers lisb!d above were judged seriously menlaily ill years
before they attacked a president.
In some stales the care of menially oick people ia a disgrace. Not nearly enough Ia done lo care for or to cure these
unfortunales. Both they and society pay a price.
One of !he more fortunate. ones is a former neighbor of
mine. HIS Illness was caught m lime; be was treaU!G. At last
repnrt be is Itv!Jig a happy and useful life.
If this aid could be given many more of these slek men
and women we would bring new hope lo them and their
families. When this help is l!lyen to those with violent tendencies we also save those they might some day harm. We
might well save the tile of a president.

~ce

Cklssey:·• "When are th~

ered 1101110 1926 stock.......,.shlp
ot an old Mae West play "The
Wicket A&amp;e;" Joe looked It II))
-It .... a bust.
lool&lt; mag notes Mia Furow
was notified by Sb)atra wttlle
she was on the ·~semary Baby" set that they were throoghj
eo-star Pals¥' Kelly gave Lonk
her ,...et\011 when Mia hunil 1111

to turn the page?" T h •
Joer Bishop TV show received the pllone:
an odd backpat In a IIOOdslze
"I had a bedside scene with
ourvey: Its most ontbustastle poor little Miss Farrow ... I
ooaat.tn-eoast audler.ce tsalmoot felt har forehead and felt a high
1he same as Lawrence Welk's ... fever. I said to them, •You bet~
Press agent of a newish restaur~ ter got this girl to a doctor,' but
ant bombards columnist' with lhe kept rillll\.011 Wlll"killll·~· .
. the liamot &lt;t croat Oelebrlttea
'nler~s a "crook'' ~an
presumably Its clleatele: none
ol them has been there.
Met baritone Rd&gt;ert Merrill
eaneelled his son's Bar Mitzvah
scbeOO!ed lor Robert F. Kennedl's funeral day ... College degrees in engineering and sdeRce
bring grawates iob otrero ot
$510 more per year this Juue
· Bt LEON
going

armored car service at Avoo,
N, J., In wr Aobury Pal'k Press
area: !farcy Crook, that Is ...
Mtry Plcl®RI's been vecy tu,
with 2t-hour nurseo; tlha was
15 AprU 8 ... Tiny Tlm'o awIW enough but Bdwy. agOntsll)'
ocada o! Jmltatora have oimed
at his il'OIOSIJ!e nrt ... Lad ,..
know motored to a suburloan showbiz date with Jstaell singer Esther Tohbl and the capsule &lt;i

than last ••• uGolden Boy11 may
retun1 to Bdwy. after Its London ..._ment; II&lt;Nider wily?

••• Esoterta: Lewis Carroll's
•• Allee in Wondedand'' was a..
vatlable at the downtown Flea
Market - In Grea !Jiorthand.
Charles 37X Kenyatta (Harlem

Mau-Mau poobab) oow says he
believes unsuapeeting Harlem~
ltes were '"used'' by Mark Rudd

In the C&lt;llwmla U, riots; What
else? ... That colorful Yiddish
word "Chutzpah" now js a game,
IUbtiUed "The Good Life;" Bklyn.' s A, &amp; S. dep't store pitched it Uws: "You don't have to be

Jewish to play Chutzpah - the
game for schlemiels,

schlema~

zets, balabll&amp;tahs - and even
some of yOUr friends," ... Oya
klug!

More showbiz olt8))rlng In new
fllms: Peter Lorre Jr., Edward

Cedrlc'a son) llardwlcke,
Carol COle, !belate Nafa dangh.
ter, a tlke we knew when she
(Sir

was a child as "COokie" ... Bar·
bara Hutton's son Lance has a

new toy - his own film flrm ...
Cleaning out ar oldWNeeddreslltns room at the VIllage PUrple

"'ga

Hatlo's
TilE GRAADPARENTS SEE
UTTLE ION lN PERSON ,1,ND lf:1N

IC? DON'T MK!!

GUSSS 'WW.T, IMIM?
LITTU ICAA800 CI&gt;N
PIJT ~ J~W

uncov-

0114!

r;ta,r, I'U

\

'.
. ....

~

.. --··"- ...
.;-. ·.·

'

tlllla'' - or 10U'rt' • £!imiJIIIe
II!Mtt wbo tbllllla, '.''HOI!' tll14
abe'a ~ ·tn ~;Ywbt' .illit

·make

::-•. ' • .,.

.

Heredity a_Fac~or
..l!'l.Cases of Gout
li

;. '\.,·

DENNEN

NEW YORK (NEA)
"Have no fear-! shiJU not fail to dti," President De Gaulle
once assured France's ambitious and squabbling pOliticians.
At 78, the old general Is still very much alive though his
father-image is tar n ish e d and his vision of France's
"grandeur" lurned into a nightmare. Even bis anti-American
and pro-RuS8Ian policies lie in shambles.
Nevertheless, the Gaullisla and their allies on the rigbt
like Giscard d'Estaing, are especled to win a comfortablli
majority in the e,lectlono to the National Assembly June 23.
A!U!r all the barricades, revolts and strikes that shook
France In May there is not a single charismatic leader on
the political scene lo replace the aged general.
His non-Communist opponents on the left, like Francois
Mltterand and Mendei!-Fl'811Ce, failed lo capture the imagination o! the rebellious stuclents and young workers. They
ollered no real alternative to De Gaulle's pab!rnalistic rule.
All they ~ould suggest was a popular front government-a
coalition w1th the Communists-that is unacceptable to a
majority of French men and women on the right and on the
left.
·
It is not because ti1ey love De Gaulle that the French wUI
vote again for him on June 23 and June 30 but because they
abhor and fear the Communists. That is why he is also backed
by the army which has gond reason to distrust him.
.
"De Gaulle betrayed us during lbe Algerian crials " a
promil~&lt;mt French general told this wrJU!r fn Paris. "But If
!here IS a danger o! a popular front government with the
COmmunists we shall back him to the bitter end."
De Gaulle knows II. Like Egypt's Prealdent Nasser be
flirted with the Russians to undermine the Untied StSU!s
But, like Nasser, be never tr1111ed the domestic CommUnlsis:
He now hopes to win the election• by making the campaign
an issue between the French Rag and the red Dag, between
order and chaos and between patriotism and subversion.
There Ia no longer any doubt that the Communist party was
the real casualty of the strike~ and riots.
Two decades ago the spontaneo111 revolis would have
brought Moocow's partisans in France to pnwer. Today !hi!
aludenla and young workers in France, West Germany !laly
!Old the Unlled Stales regard. the Communiste as p01:be'illed
middle-aged opportunists whose primary atm is to serve
Russia's foreign policleo.
.
As young J)anlel Cobn·Bendlt wbo led the olucltnt revOlt in
Paris said, the olftclal lifO-Russian Communills .... Utile

I·

'~

1Uitice Is tbt losunnee we matcli ~ i!llndircll.
A lfJ!IPire17. ''PIIIic'' It have on our llvea, and obediHowewer, I'll bet tlha'a tpJd lhlali, ;.but a' ~s ..p..
ence is the premium we pay II Cltber tll\ng!L Cooldar.' per. out? ~ this We dale Jou!rt
for it. - W 1111 a m Penn,
tltbel' mlillllkiDc coil. . . . &amp;
founder of Pennsylvania.
love - ,.,.. .. ~ ''1! ·1'!110
rlaht b7 her, I'll'· feel rllbt a.

"dtal;~ .-~··::- ~l '-!'
,Jl,,.,~-·

) •

Wlulhoe OtJUln tHislttttr, .Wte "bom . . . o1J!erorievOI'Q1118 · Tr¥ ~~~at · with 'iwr•
aeQdre an a.re lor - · YCitll' ltllf. ·Hld 1111t iNU7&lt;kllied
. ,_
slater can be · tn1De4 up to a girl, 1111t -.1cln't 111M Itt her
point, but llhe'U aolclom reallr face all U.WIII PrOfll!llltl a!onf,
• • •

It big, they can't oUip me, starstar-star, ole.' ~ ... llleldaltalll',
that',- one ol 111e patbi'Jo, ....
IS

&lt;

•-t entirely loin h o .lbcut.' what can 1 dO? .::. l:fn
proble,m, lorlllllli-.ollrlun Dar1llck:

thot ""'"· and hllve nothing
to do lllilft him, thot he ma~
fie O,hllmtd.-11 Then. 8:!4.

·
..~.

~~·

r~~:·r··

•,,..,
,,,,,;~ "'' , ,.,
, ..•.
J
~~-...

lake up, illiil'e
GIVe ,.., a
horl ..... H..
, r·u,•

~·

l't"•

-~ ·

.If WAYNiiG; BRANDSTADT,' M.ri:'•

.,.-'IC

tJff'it;

• ..i _(ptpt

b~~

ll..., q~-'

.

-..

~'1.- "

"If:

er:'\lo '\. . .lllili\l

· fatber~ Perhap~ ·r ~'I
send 4 to liDI - tben'a 111!'··
Q-1 am a man, 33, and not another method II is 2.5 to prldo, ~ 1a1nr _ . but 1 ~ jD
overweight. My doctor sayo 5.0.
11. ·
· &lt;
I have gout. lan't this a
,·
'
.. · • .:..::... ••:c• :··
disease of older persons who
Q-Whal are ·lhe symptoms
~- ~' t,..~ _,,r~·
eat excessively rlcb food ~ of gout? Is i!out the SI!IIIO as .Ver. hi.ve to wrl~,i·~ !IJ&lt;e
drink a Jot of alcohol?
~outyarthritis!
'
~s. 11\!thol! ~~~'tl!aoiw ~
A-In mool •••s-gout l"e
When the uric acid level lltl1' relaifGaalliP ·=•-t:iaaol ,ait1
' "' In
blood Is big!! sbarp ·
' ·~.- : &gt;·.
dtabeb!s, i8 an Inborn error of uric acid cr•aW• Hi'ecl~tate wl)'?
.• ...;. .. " y . ; . , , ' '~...
1
metabolism wtllj heredity an 1 the
'
•
-ptlf ~14,important factor. Women great
n
joints
(eSJWIC
iiry
the,
aald 1'"'
· ' 1ov
· i\DIO•
' '''' x',...,..
"'"
toe) and Ill the skin --11"'
rarely get it before the onset (especially In the uternal tbe same about ""'-.,...,lboti&amp;lll
of the menopouse but In men ear) . In an acute attacldhere we'd be IDjpillter tllroilib a'l l7
it usually starts in the early is pain, redliess and swellln~ maiL
.
30s. Foodo rich in purinea . fh
·
will c a. u s e gout only in a • e InvOlved·jomt. Altho0g1 ·: 1 111Uot llaYe l!ac! ·to!&gt; ~ell
peroon who Is born with this
e attack malsubalde with- hltlt la-l'l)li.' r.~~..., ,Jiafi
metabolic defect. An excepa COlfle o weeks, recur- for ...,., ..., QMcxilll' 1'"' .
tlon is that it may be caused ~~:!t:r t
cs~!rt:DJ:~tS! tired ot 1111 I~ '"::~lit
by taking large amounts of and persist for a longer time 11 ,...., 11\1!'
·
pyrazinamide for tuberculosis until a chronle stage-gouty ed aa a,.._ No:ciOol!t JQU!iaa
or chlorotbiazide for water- arthritis-is reached.
IJ!Diher i!rl .
\II!IW, .and 1
logging In the tissues. ,
~ 1111t·doa't l!!atiJir-tiJij'Ar,
In the treatment of g&lt;&gt;Ut, It
Q-1 have a mild case of
·l(,y ~~ dqll'l ~ llll.,but
is wise to avoid sucb ~urine· gout. Is there ' any kin!l Of tb' , . , •-'. ,._.~,........ ~ 1
rt'ch foods as
eet · ad fruit juice that .doesn" c•n- OJ' """' - .,..,..""""'. """"
liver, kidney, m:i e~; tain uric acid1 Dooe' g~ut fr8JIIIIJ!I1 ~~'II·•·
bouillon, consomme, oysh!rs, alfect the heart or the blood
IIW!J!I't be .~ IIJ!I&lt;II:IG!tlltr!"+
anchovies and sa r d 1 n e s. pressure?
!oro I ' I..Ve ~'lb)aari ann'
Alcobollc beverages, especial·
A-Frull luleeo contaln a uro~ m t_.. the ~· ~- I ,
ly beer, should also be avoid· Vllfil:tY .of acids but not urle waa ~=,, ~~~~~:Jl~~~=·
ed. There are no other diet- acid. Although the cbief- come l!1ll!k
ary restrictions but the 111e of plication of gout is kidney tb.d ·
tobaceo Ill any form sbould damage, retl!l\t etudtes l!ave · hi true
be avoided. Although obesity •hown ·that the "tbeideriCe 01 . 1
· · liM~•·· ~~··=~~
predisposes to g o u t, the high blood pressure, bardon· iS~beij·~
~
disease may also be agcravat- ing of the arteries ·~d coron~ . ~.,.
ed by beroic elorts at jveight · II!'Y II~Ft disease. is, higher in .
t •reduction.
persons w;ilh gout' ~ia bj· tile
geDeral Pl!P.ula~•., ,, ,, .
. I
...
Q-1 have gout. 'My uric
acid level is 7. What Is the
normal !.Vel!

wrue

e
, el

The Cln-

(UPI) -

the Milt Pappas trade.
The Reds were scheduled to
start former Atlanta Brave

American League ,
W, L. Pet. GB

Detroit
Baltimore
Cleveland
Minnesota
Oakland
Boston
New York
Chicago
California

38 20 . 656 ...
32 24 .571 5
33 26 .559 51h
28 30 ,483 10
27 29 .482 10
26 28 .481 10
26 32 • . 448 12
24 30 .444 12
25 32 .432 12 1h

to score santo and Banks w~nt CaHf at Boston 2, ppd., rain
'"' ~
to third, scoring later on a WJld Chicago at New York, ppd., rain
Tony Cloninger today In hopeo pitch by Maloney.
Baltimore at Wash., ppd., rain
ol salvagl.ng an even break in
Maloney was the victim of
Today's Probable Pitchers
~ · the four-game series with the another Santo eruption in the
(All Times EDT)
; Chicago Cubs.
sixth lming, this time In the MiMesota (Merritt 4-5) at
.. .. It was Cloninger, who fell up- form of a two-out homer with Detroit (MeLaln 9-2) 1:30 p.m.
on bad times with the Atlanta the bases empty. Clay Carroll,
Oakland (Nash 5-4) at Cleve~
Brave11 last year, who was re- obtained from the Braves in the . land (McDowell 6-4) 2:15 p.m.
-·' garded as the key figure in the same trade lnvolving Cloninger,
Caltfornla (McGlothlin 5-4 and
.' . trade of the controversial Pap~ came In to stop the Cubs In the Bnmet 5.8) at Bnslon (Santiago
: .·. pas to Atlanta. Cloninger, who eighth Inning.
7-3 and Bell 5-2), 2, II a.m.
~r was 1-3 with the Braves before
Meanwhile, the Reds had all (Only games scheduled)
~· the trade, went against the tbey could handle with Jenkins'
friday's Games
Cubs' Frank Reberger in the ti- offerings. The only run came on New York at Oakland, night
•
nal game or the series.
a homer by Tony Perez 1n the Washington at Calllornia, night
"'• Chlcago ootched its seeond second imlng.
, Balt at Mhm 2, twt-night
victory of the series Wednesday
The homer boosted Perez Detroit at Chicago, night
:r-·as the Reds fell victim to the league~eadlng RBI total to 40 • Bnston at Cleveland, night
1' hitting o! Ron Santo and the It was hil eighth homer of the
National League
',' !lve-hlt pltchlnS o! Ferguson aeaaon.
w. L. Pet. GB
•· Jenkins, who combined for a
Jenkins, the ace of the Chica~ &amp; tool
35 24 .593 ..•
_ 4-1 victory over Cincinnati.
go pitching stall, went the dis- &amp;., Fr.:claoo 32 27 .542 3
:"

lance en

Maloney The Victim

'

Jim Maloney was the victim
assault, although he held
the Cubs in check for the first
..,, three irmlngs, In the foUrth,
•: Glenn Beckert singled and Billy
-: Williams walked to open the In~ ntng, and that set the stage lor
Sturto'a fireworks.

·~ or the
••

route

to his sixth vie- Atlanta

30 27 .526 4

tory against seven tosses. For Los Angeles

Maloney, II wao his fourth setback against six wins.
The Reds needed a victory today In order to hang onto flflh

Cincinnati
Chicago
Philadelphia
New York

place,

Th.e Chicago third bateman

;· elubbed the ball to the left field
' fenee where It hit the rail and
"· bounced back Into play to score
"

aince the Cubs were Houston
right bEI1\nd them, only a half- Plttlburgh

32 29

28
28
25
27

28
29
26
29

.525. 4

.500 5\0
.~1 6
.490 6
.482 61h

23 32 .418 10

22 31 .415 10

game away . A loas today could
Wednesda¥'s Results
slide the Reds all the way Into Chicago 4 ClnciMatl 1
seventh p)ace as Chicaso and San Fran 4 Pittsburgh 2
Phliadelphl.a are a virtual tie Houston at Phlla, ppd., rain
for the olxth spot,
Atlanta 7 st. Louis 1, night
New York 2 1.011 Angeles 1,

Casner
Favored nl~oday
r
.. ,., W7•
T Ts 0
n
~ 0 ,., zn u
pe

•• Prd&gt;able Pitcher•
(All Times EDT)
Clnclmatl (Cloninger 1-3) at
Chccago (Reberger 0-ll. 1:30

e

•

•1nl'lo
ROCHESTER, N.Y. (uru- The new.. motto here i:s, ulook
out lor the young Ilona," but the

. . . . ..
POMEROY
•
FRI.
JUNE

. . . ... . .

Big D Stopped By Mets
Hy

.

14

CITY LOT
2 Showw_ 2 &amp;8 PM

e

p,';ittaburgh (McBean 5...1) at

smart money will still be riding San Francisco (Perry 6-3), 4
be o1
on Billy Casper, a mem r
p.m.
the old guard, when a 150-mar St. Louis (Carlton 7.2) at

field tees oil today to the first Atlanta (JohniiOII 4-3 or Reed 6round o! the U.S. Open golf 2), 8:05p.m.
championship.
Houston (Wl1110n
4-7) at
Casper, the leading money- Philadelphia (!Jiort 3-7), 7:35
wtDJEr of the year and wirmer p.m.
or four tournaments on the
(Qnly games scheduled)
regular tour so far thts season.
Frl.da,y's Games
wfll be 37 in two weeka and the San Fran at New York, night
odds--makers believe he ' will Chicago at AtJanui., nlaht

·have his third open Utle by that Hooston at Plttaburgh, night
time.
LOs Ang at Phlla., 2, twl-lllght
They have Installed him s 5-2 Clndrmatl at St. Louis, night
favorite, as solid a choice aa
has been ever named for this
defending champion Jack Nick- By UnJted Press International
laus pegged the second choice
W L Pet. GB
at 3-1 and Arnold Palmer all! C&lt;&gt;lumbus
26 17 .605
Gary Player bracketed together Buf!alo
28 23 .549 2

''

"Uon•t t.-11 mt' ho• to ~t
!&lt;iltih" . _ . I'm 11. champion
bu" ltor !"

Managers of Pee Wee, Pony
and Boys' League basebaiJ
teams or the county are again
urged to report the results or
their games to the Daily Sen~
tinel office by 9 a.m. on the
morning after contests.
Bob Wingett, Santlnel ~rts
Wrlter, said he wU I also be
in the office of the Daily Sentinel Monday thruFrldayfrom
10-11 p.m. for the convent~
enee of home team managers
in phoning reports of games.
Some teams in the several
summer leagues are not get~
ting coverage or games because tbe home managers are
falllng to report results, In

Middleport, managers should
call Chet Tannehill.

Grant-in-aid
Won by Howard
NEW HAVEN- Tom Howard,
son of Mr. and Mrs. JllD\es Hem~

ard of Milton, former residents
of New Haven, and grandson or
Mr. and Mrs. 0. J. Howard or
New Haven, has won a football
grant in aid at Marshall Univertly. He will begin at Marshall
University in the fall. He is 6
foot tall and weighs 200 pourxls.

Torn bepn playing football his
frestunan year at Wahama High
School under coach Frank Capehart, Jr. He received rna~ ho~
ors while playing at Milton High
Schooli was on the third all~state
AAA team, honorable mention
all southern, and nominated for
"State Lineman or the Year."
While at Milton he was guard

and mlddle linebacker, did

otf a vlctory at Indianapolis, Syracuse
19 29 .396
"alii I'd rather win this
Wednesda,y's Results
tournament than any other one Buaalo 4 LoulsviHe 0
I knoW. I feel nne mentall,y and Richmond 8 &amp;Yracuse 7

9'h

physically and I'm ready lor C&lt;&gt;IUmbuo 7 Toledo I

ll-0 Winner
Eastem scored a ll..U shutout
wln over Rutland ln the nut

on the hili for Eastern. He struck
out 15 oft 1e 22 batters he faced.
Rutland'a lone hit was a single

by Hatfield.
Eastern hitters were Bob Cald-

this course which 1 realize is s Rochester at Jacksonville, post- well a alngJe, Rick Sanders a
triple, Jim Amsbury a 00\lble,
poned, rain
Ste1ham a home run, Rand)' Young
two single&amp;, and G. Holter and
Palmer and Nicklaus and some
H. Holter, a aJngle each.
o! the YOUIW lions like Tom
Weiskopf, Bob Lunn, Marty
Fleckman and Lee Trevino, LAST LOOK
FOOTBALL TRADE

difficult one."
All the competitors, Including

1he ' C'trCuS on Earfh
urntest for tfte'Mo~~ty/
WILD ANIMALS· Perfurm"

HORSES·HiafiAarial STA

Asms;rACROIIATS·Q,cJc
&amp;loU

·~ lfft

B.EPHAHTS

G.tiJrlrS~tltJII

Advance Tickets May
Qe Purchased From
IPomeroy Volunteer
Fl~ Depl!b!L!"'

00

realized the same thing after
finishlrw their final warm-ups
over the heavlly-!rawed, 6,962-

yard, par 70 Ook Hill Cl""'trY

BOSTON (UPI)- Owner Peter
FAIRFIELD, Conn. (UPI}Fuller announeed Wednesdl)' The New York Giants dealt
that his cootroverstal 3-year-old speed for alze Wednesday when
Dancer's Image will make his they ac~J~Ired 6-loot-3, 235iJ(IIIIId

Chb course.

final

,.

"The golf courae Is beautiful
but I don't like the sand traps,''
declared Palmer.
He wasn't alone. There are 66
traps on the course and there
wasn't a man in the entire fleld
who didn't forget to include his

appearance on a race

track June 19 wilen the colt will
parade around the course at

!W!olk Downs In 1 prelude to
the 34th running of the $50,000
added Masaachu-s llandlclll'·
Dil'llalllled Rrst 1o last In the
Kentucky Derby and dropped
sand wedge among the 14 clubs from lblrd to eighth after a
In his bag.
bumping lneldent In the PreakBoros Contender
aesa, Dancer's Jma&amp;e wlll aoon
With the sam being so much be put out to stud.
a factor, another member of the
old guard, 47-rear-old Julius

plac&lt;&gt; Baltimore and dropped
the fourth place Twins 10 games
back.

Atlanta drubbed St. Louis 7-l,
New York nipped Los Angeles 2~
1, San Francisco beat Pittsburgh 4-2 and Chi cago topped
Lincinnatl 4~1. The llousLOn at
Philadelphia game was rained
out.
McAuliffe' s homer gave the
victory to Mickey Lolich, 5-3,
who pitched a five-hitter.
Reggie Jackson and John
''Bllie Moon" Odom hit back40back homers In the fourth
inning and Dave Duncan hit the

Dodgers. Grote' a blow came off

reliever ,Jack UUlingham but
the loss was charged to
Llrysdale wtto took a 1-0 lead Ia
the ninth but is now S..f. AJ
Jackson got the win in relief of
Nolan Ryan.

first homer of hi s career as
Oakland blanked Cleveland.
Odom, who one-hit Baltimore in
his tast start, pitched a sevenhitter to gain the win and boost
his record to 6-4.
Ends Losing &amp;ring
Atlanta beat St. Louis for the
rirst time since last Sept. 23 for
its £irst win over the Cards in
11 games as Pat Jarvis pitched

a three-hitter and drove in two
runs wiU1 a pair of singtes.
The Tigers, who haven't won
Jarvis
is now 6-4.
a pennant since 1945, usually
Don Drysdale's seven-game
fall to live up to their advance
billing- and they usually col - Boston doubleheader and the winning streak came to an end
lapse when Kaline Is injured.
Chlcago~New York and Balti~ as J. C. Martin doubled in the
The club ts only third In the more -Washington games were tying run and scored the
wirming run on Jerry Grote's
teague in team batting and all rained oot .
single
in the ninth hming to give
fourth in team pitching. Kaline
In
the National League,
the Mets the triumph over the
Long Dry SpeH

Oakland Scores .':ilutout
In the only other American
League game, Oakland blanked
Cleveland 7 -fl . The Callfornia at

Barry Brown of the BaiUmore

C&lt;&gt;lta In exchange lor 6-3, 195detenJdve back Henry

pound
Carr.

A former Olympic aprlnt
champion, carr was a reaWar

It was the night of the upset.
That was Wednesday evening
in Middleport Boys League baseball play where the lndtans upended the early season la\orites
in a marathon or walks and hits
by a score of 18-15, and the Mets

-yes, those lowly Metsl -· clobbered the other predi cted powerhouse, Redlegs, 11-1.
Jay Warner picked up the victory for the Indians, working
three irmings of relief, bul he
had to have help rrom J. Manley
In the fourth. D. Tyree, t h I r d
Yankee pitcher, took the los s.
Yankee pitchers walked 12,
fanned 8; Indian pitchers did a
llttle worse, though winning,
walking 16 and Ianning 8.

Said lrdian Manager
bart:

Art

Sto-

We're gonna speTXI a little time with the pitching staff
talking about control.'' Yank :Manager Bob Hysell may have a few
11

Taylor Whiffs

15 BatterS

words selected on the same subjecl for hi s boys.
Indian hitters were J. Manley
4 for 4, Brian Mullen 3 Cor 4,
Warner 2 for 5, Rick':!tobart2for
5 with a homer, and Danny Dot~
son and John Tyree, each one
hit.
For the Yankees, Phil Miller
was 3 for 5 wilh a homer, Robbie Harris 3 for 4 with a homer,
and Chris MilJer and D. Tyree
each a hit. The Indians now are
2-1, U•e Yankees 1·2.
No details of the Mels·Redlegs
game were kept or reported.
IOOians
715 104 - 18 13 3
Yanks
160 611 - 15 8 5

a single.
Roach picked up three singles
tor the Mets and four Met pitch~
ers struck out 10 batters. The

Angels 111111 Redlegs play at &amp;lgar
Run and the Mets and ~racuse
wUl meet at the Junior High

on Friday.

BULK

GARDEN SEED
QUALITY SEEDS

Field and
laboratory Tested

ALSO
ONION SETS
STOP IN AT ..

CHASE KARDWARE

992-2511
LOCUST ST., MIDDLEPORT

-

BUTLER SIGNS
BOSTON (UPI}- Hlgh-IIOOrlng
forward Btll Butler of St.
Bonaventure University signed.
Wednesday

with

the

Boston

Celtics ol the National Basketball Assoclation.
The 6-foot..3 Butler, who will
be tried out at a guard position
by the Celts, scored l, 462 points
in his three year career for Ule
Bormies, and last season aver~
aged 20.9 per game for the

Redleg pitcher Rick Taylor
fanned 15 batters Thesday in nation's third-ranked quintet.
Pomeroy Pee Wee play to lead
his team to a 11~1 wtn over
the Meta.
The Redlegs collected 11 hits
wi'th n . seth two singles and a
triple, Smith two singles and a
dooble, G. Browning a single and
triple, D. Browning a triple,
D. King a double, and Marshall

Stobart, J. Warner (WP) (1),
J, Manle)l (4) and Lemley, Stobart (0. T, Picken:s, Harris (2),
D. Tyree (LP) (4), C. Miller (6)
and Call.

LIVINGSTON'S

IU0/7.00

I

13

lubellll
btlchMit pin

.
!u..........
and old tlfl

$17.45

THE DAILY SENTINEL
ro lNTt:ltEST Ot
M£lG..,_ r.tA.';()N ~REA
RllK IIHO !&gt;. O'lot:N, I'IJSI.W!Ii;R
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lilc&gt;ld r Mou\e "~"" &lt;trnor M rYl.. IIIII: ...u.
abl~; OM tnl&gt;lll h tUO. 1\y rn&amp;\l. 01'11 )'Mr

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ti ..l.

(11968 THE HUDEPOHL BREWING COMPANY OF CINCINNATI. OHK)

PUT DAD'S NAME ON THIS ONE

Join the Enjoyers

In 1966 but waa hampered by

illlurles last season. Brown, a
linebacker and tight end, pll)'ed
In ali 14 C&lt;llt garneo last sea11011,
but aaw wcy primarily m the
apeelal teams.

Boros, also wu geven t decent
chance. Boro1, one of the six

former lJ.S. Open chamlls In the
neld, generelly Is conaldered
the dnest 8IIMI player In the
game today.
Lucian o! Samasata wrote
the first novel portraying
Oll!bt beyond earth around
A.f&gt;. 185.
'

SWIM
FISH

PICNIC

APPEARING JUNE 22 ONLY

,. THE INK SPOTS
Dine 1nd Dlnce To The Music of
The Stan At

e PLEASANT POINT
RESE~VATIONS

ACCEPTED NOW

PHONE 675-1611
lii~~~~9yj~·
:r:

the

punting, averaging 45 yards per
punt, and a ct&gt;eaptaiiL He was
voted outstanding athlete ot the
year.

28 24 .538 2'h
24 22 .522 3'h game o! Poll)' League play this
24 25 .490 5 season held last week.
Terry stetham allowed only
my career," offered the relaxed JacksonvUle 25 27 .481 S'h
Casper, who came here straight Richmond
22 29 .431 8'h one hit wttlle going the distance
Toledo
Casper Ready
Rochester
"I'm playing the host golr o! Louisville

at 4-1.

The Detroit Tigers, who
traditionally look better on..paper than they do on the ricld,
now are looking better on the
field than they do on paper.
With a makeshift lineup
minus their best hitter, AI
Kaline, and one of their best
pitchers, Earl Wilson, and with
their all.star catcher, Bill
Freehan, at tirst base, the
Tigers are threatening to make
a runaway or the American
League race.
The Tigers' 2~1 victory over
the Minnesota Twins Wednesday
night, their eighth in their last
rune g-c~mes and their 14th in the
last 18, stretched their lea~e
lead to five games over seCOJld

hasn't played since May 2::ith
when he sutfl!red a b'rOken bone
tn his right forearm and Wilson,
a 22 -game winner last year,
hasn't pitched since May 24
when he bruised his heel. The
team is 14-6 since Kaline was
injured.
The dub's starting shortstop,
Ra.v Oyler, is hitting a robust
. 146 and the club has such
problems at rlrst base that
Manager Mayo Smith is playing
Freehan there against le~an~
ders and J)Utting Jim Pnce,
hitting . 180, behind the plate,
First baseman Norm Cash is
hitting .2 02.
\
Despite all those statistics,
the club is wiMing and doing it
by coming from behind. They
completed a sweep of the Twins
Wednesday night on Dick
McAuliffe's eight-bming homer
that snapped a 1 ~ 1 tie.

Indians Scalp Yankees 18 to 15

Eastern is

annual golfing classic, with International League Standings

vno ~1'ELLINO

IJI'I ~rts Writer

out. But Lou Johnson doubled Oakland 7 Cleveland 0, night

«rrflld

-~·· ·''·

All-Stirs ®

Beckert and send Williams to Washington
24 32 .429 13
third. Williams was out at the
Wednesday's ReBUlts
plate on Ernie Banks' Infield Oetrolt 2 Minnesota I, night

..=t

F&lt;Jl' Soviet foreign poUcy the events Ill France were even a
greab!r blow than Israel's defeat oi the Araha' last Juno
The Soviet Ie.aders considered their rapp'rlichement wltli
. France and De Gaulle's anti-NATO pnUcies as a major r~tor
in their European poUcy. It represented f&lt;Jl' them an Important strategic and preotige vlotory over the United Statal.
But De Gaulle found out' the herd way that the French
except the Communists, would not tolerate a complete break
with the United Stales or ~th N.\TO.
!
..., "
Now the Warsaw Pact Alttanee-Moscow's equlvaJent ol
NATO-is Ill seriouo dtt!iculty because o1 the anti,Rq~slan
policies on Romania aucl Czechoslovakia, But NATO tkeived
a new lease on life.
.
· '' ' . ' .,.
There Is an Old Frencb oaylng that "the.mlll'f tliings chllnle
the more they remain as before." .But ~-•110 charip liD!! - :, ·'
blatory d\)Oa not' stand sUU.
·
· ~ ' •. · '
Frapce will never be the same after lhe tibia'. ' Jnatet.d ~ '' .
hubo!;ing il)u(!ono of grandeur, De tlaulle, If he. Ia tO rei8aln · ~~;~~~~
president· untU his term expires in ,1172; wlfl havC,-to tillte't'..
Vol~e'a advice and culti~ate .bis own Prdel!., IJe ~111- 114v~ ,. ·
to rejuvenate France's a~liquajed,educaUoli ~yatein, ·llll~i!·1 '
of undermining the At~lclin dollar, he wlli have to',I~P•Iti'' , "'(' ~~=r
the wages ot the wot ers wbo are the mool ullcle~io ',., '
West Europe.
. · ,

'IWRiEI.F SONP'&lt;Y!

'

IIlia

refum to obey

more than "stallnist plgs."

PUZZLE 'IOGeTHEJlo"
HE'fi 50 ~ HE
~"l.E.S US··AIIP Hei
50 GOO()· .. -.otJ ~NP
WILL 5U FOil

'

her conversation over many

hours: .14 rm a

THE GILDBALVIEW
French Fear Red Rule,
So They'll Back De Gaulle

Onion, owner Joe

DOES HE

•

If anu

NEA Washington Correspondent

. , . ,

. beds.pread are added to our a~ yoo p&gt;n'l .bell~•l!n'
0001"1 normalaClCUIIIUlaliarl.
I .hitod lll)'llif lor beinl a, ~1 do tbe m&gt;Jor cleaning &lt;i the ard, Jell 'coaltWt ,... blr: _.
bOdnloJII'I but I lull ~-t·
•• ~
- · d;
• •:n-"Y
btvI )'-"~n·~
' .,~
.....
II)) with ber cluttet. D.o any ·
, ·C01!Je bomo w!thoul
· · · It
or llrls Who share ' room have hu: i lore that sirl ind I'll ,11.
· !della lor me? :.. TEIJRIF~, ways.lowber; l'd ml ~
TREMBLING TWELVE
. . ftre It I could eraN· lb. . 'lUI
' (.
• • I.
Dear T'M': .
111111111" I've frled J)O, .....fi;r,
Outside otleparaie bedrOomJ; but .ibil w'oll'l . . 'to me. ·Bts&lt;
the beot soluUon Ia ~ Y·Ou r fcllko ,..'I Ill me ...,. .be,r:,- l,
mother's firm Ultlmatullls, .Ef., -1111111r1'7 herdl'ullltldl*

It is a time or leadership - because the job
to be done ls as large as the nation and the
rears lor doing It are short.

By RAY CROMLEY

lp.

It on

oornmuniiY and watershed.
It Is time to become involved - becauae in·
action Is Ull.lall,y an evidence of fear or apa~
and neither Is creditable to a man of honor or a
aervant o! God.

BY JACK O'BRIAN
NEW YORK - Gllted oomle
Milt Kamen Is delighted to go oo
the Merv Grttrln TV show a n rtlrne - that Allsha Kaahl Is not
on It ••. FalthJW reOountlng of a
little-boy's comment at the do·
llberately llllllllpaeed "2001: A

.

~OIIds

of your netatmors, ontheinventoryotresource•,
and the establishment ot reBOUrce goaJaln your

History's Assassins Show
Pattern of Mental Illness

CHICAGO

cimatl Reds are wasting no
... time in reaping the benefits ol
lt"

conservation.

.RAY CROMLEY

Standings

Cubs Triumph,
Eye Win Over
~:.,., Tony Cloninger

'J'.f

Tigers Hil~e AL Lead;

The Daily Sentinel, Pomeroy-Middleport, 0., Thursday, June 13, 1968

EI.HTRIC e BATH e LAUNDRY
. FAOUTIES FOR OVEit 1501
T•lce AV•c•tlon At Home 'nti• Summer

lOYAL Otl PARI •

PliASANT POINT RESORT
11. 62 North
Pt. Plnunt

I

For Father's Day, give him an 8-pack of the beer
with enjoyment brewed right in

Enjoy a Hudepohl

t

.

.

�.
·l

.' fll •'
·"
1

...

~

'
·,~···

.

; -

.

·,~

i

'

'

•

•

.

'

.~~~.,

The I~ Thing Tod4y is Chailge

~

. ;,h

'

EYOI')'OIIO

ilut the moot obtuse recosnlzea that

the ''ID~ thing~ Ia change.
If you don't manage aeooveraationpleceabout
' change you're a bore.
,
11'1 0111 to talk obout changjo, lor lbo. other
!elloll. Most ol us woold Uke to see our polkbarrel atyle

(J(

"Inland improYementa" by tbe

federal IIOVOJ'nment ehangecl. UnW, that Ia, the
pi'OJ)Osed dam doWn the river a pi~ce Is ellmlnsted m grounds ol lesser noceulcy thaD arother project ln the Sacramento fllver.
It's hard - nigh polstble, glven the present
status ·~ mankind's nature - to eSI)OU.se the
long view, or more precisely, the wlae one.
Ne~erthele1s, by O$Ul0slt, perhlpa, men must

leanr to !real othen aa.tbl)' would like to be
treated, or aurely perlob, 'About 700 yoars of
~elf.government tn Rome ended with the ascen.
s1o11 of Cats Octavius In 31 BC aa Emperor.
Peculiarly, Arnot!eons roallze their republican
form &lt;i gaJVel'DIIlt!lll Is headed directly toward
a simllar event. And apparently we are near
po"erleso to cllange dlreetlon. The J)OI)Ular
policy Ia to &amp;low down the race to the awful
da,y, not to change direction so as to avoid it.
For example, tt is more popular and seems

to make more sense, to tirhten pollee controla
over rioters than to deal 1eriously with the

the flodng,
Yes, change is the word; if only we can understand where it ls taking uS, and how to persuade &lt;Qrselves to manage it. man for the rtrit
time will have teamed from Hilltory.
Among the frontllners
those part• of our
IOcietJ' recognizing the importance or change
ue our aeadlng, progressive farm people.
Perhaps they are ahead ol most of ua.
On the cover of the program last Monday
evening for the 25th anniversary celebration

«

•

I

\

'

IMUal dlmer of the Metp .coun1r Soli
Conaorvotlon Dlstrl~ were tile foUoWID.I para.
grapho. 'llley command ui to "Consider IJ'Jte
Time:" ·
.
Atroso thO nation, In our vUlapa 111111 towas
u W.ll1 •• In our eltlea 111111 INburl&gt;s, a deep.
rooted change' Is taldnsplace. Natllrel resoureea
Mee taken lor gr..,ted .,_e belils nprded
with Increasing lmportanee. (;lean water an.C
air, a1oq with trna ~the JOil) aro'laldne on
1 new IIIOIII1Ing. People .,..; dlsMerlq - .
resour&lt;es are not only limited aDd vital, but
Yoinerable to foui!Dg, waaljl and ruin. 'l'he7 aro
awakening to the no~, for · ~ ~
ahlp. On all aldes there lo a ·, .w 'cllmite lor
111111

•

·-

No one of us can forcaat tbe 1fati:IN, ·IJut eldJ
o! us can look 101'Wil'llrto wliat Is P.s~ie'and
and probable. There are clear alpi. of on..

comlni resoureerequtrementL Wldeii)JI'&lt;Iadbimger lsCIIthehorii!Oilfor larpareuol ihe world.
At horne, the demand for jails 111111 im)ll'OI'ed Ill·
came must be met pertly tbrough l'eiOIU'CO
' 'development. C&lt;&gt;III;IOIItion lor the uae o! re...,rces o! all kinds Is growing and the need
for reliOUl'ce producta Is bound to lnereue.
It Ia time to Join In planning - to bring your
experience and views to bear, along with those

QIU'

"*-

enda, pillows, l!lankets and ·•

- '=-to

Consider the time. COnsider It well.
I

· Voice along Broadway

(

WASHINGTON (NEAl
Including Sen. Robert Kennedy, wbo was a candtdab! and
,. two cas~s where would-be assassins had prepared their 'murder dev1ces but had not. ac~ when caught, there has been

one presidential assassmation or attempted assassinatiOn

·· ~very

seven years since the 1933 attempt on the life of President..,lect Franklin Roosevelt.
Going back to the 1835 attack on Andrew Jackson, in almost
every cas~ ~ a~ckers were neat, overly fastidious men,
short or slight m build and very serious in nature. They were,
••"' ~ners '~·
m•n w'1th
'-'-•· . w••
•·•·d
e most
=«'
Auc"T~L , . few~t~'"!'•·
..,_,..~
I.
""'''·:, wu• .. • w~- ..,... y. t.be V••""' Sl&amp;_teo. •'-;-' ·
ost till used revolvers for ·their 4eeds. Two, however,
1
ugbt befort! they could acl were planning to blow themselves up with the president. A73·year-old had wired his own
~ar ~th dyna!J'!ite and an Army deserter wa&amp; caught preparmg rutroglycerm bombs be was planning to lie lil his own
body,
More importantly, what is known about these men indicates that mosl bad been menlaily ill for years.
The man wbo aliempled to kill Theodore Roosevelt uld
lllalla a dream be wao at the olde ol Presldeat MeKbJley'a
eofflo when the eorpse 881 up, and po!Died to ,ftooHvell, sayIng, "There 11 my marderer. '
There was a long history of insanity In the family of the
man who tried to kill Andrew Johnson. AfU!r attacking his
sister with a four-pound weight, the court judged him mentaUy lncapallle and not responsible for Ills acts. At times be
believed he was Richard Ill, king of England.
It is reported that psychologists who studied Lee Harvey
Oswald as a .tee~-ager recommended that he be confined to
a mentalmstitution because of "polentially dangerous schizophrenic tendencies."
Several of the attackers saw themselves acting at the direction oi God.
Tllougll not much Is lnown yet about Slrbao Slrbaa It Ia
evident lllal llle record ol pre~ldentlal aaaasslna sugcesla
Ibis eountry would do well to do more toward ldenUfylag
treatlag and caring lor lllose people wbo are ao olek mntally
tl!al they are a danger to tbomaelves and to society.
A great deal of work. needs to be done in $Ingling oul those
children wbo, by heredity, accident or early experiences are
almost certainly destined to be dangerously menlaily Ill.
But identlllcatlon is only the start. At least lwo of the attackers lisb!d above were judged seriously menlaily ill years
before they attacked a president.
In some stales the care of menially oick people ia a disgrace. Not nearly enough Ia done lo care for or to cure these
unfortunales. Both they and society pay a price.
One of !he more fortunate. ones is a former neighbor of
mine. HIS Illness was caught m lime; be was treaU!G. At last
repnrt be is Itv!Jig a happy and useful life.
If this aid could be given many more of these slek men
and women we would bring new hope lo them and their
families. When this help is l!lyen to those with violent tendencies we also save those they might some day harm. We
might well save the tile of a president.

~ce

Cklssey:·• "When are th~

ered 1101110 1926 stock.......,.shlp
ot an old Mae West play "The
Wicket A&amp;e;" Joe looked It II))
-It .... a bust.
lool&lt; mag notes Mia Furow
was notified by Sb)atra wttlle
she was on the ·~semary Baby" set that they were throoghj
eo-star Pals¥' Kelly gave Lonk
her ,...et\011 when Mia hunil 1111

to turn the page?" T h •
Joer Bishop TV show received the pllone:
an odd backpat In a IIOOdslze
"I had a bedside scene with
ourvey: Its most ontbustastle poor little Miss Farrow ... I
ooaat.tn-eoast audler.ce tsalmoot felt har forehead and felt a high
1he same as Lawrence Welk's ... fever. I said to them, •You bet~
Press agent of a newish restaur~ ter got this girl to a doctor,' but
ant bombards columnist' with lhe kept rillll\.011 Wlll"killll·~· .
. the liamot &lt;t croat Oelebrlttea
'nler~s a "crook'' ~an
presumably Its clleatele: none
ol them has been there.
Met baritone Rd&gt;ert Merrill
eaneelled his son's Bar Mitzvah
scbeOO!ed lor Robert F. Kennedl's funeral day ... College degrees in engineering and sdeRce
bring grawates iob otrero ot
$510 more per year this Juue
· Bt LEON
going

armored car service at Avoo,
N, J., In wr Aobury Pal'k Press
area: !farcy Crook, that Is ...
Mtry Plcl®RI's been vecy tu,
with 2t-hour nurseo; tlha was
15 AprU 8 ... Tiny Tlm'o awIW enough but Bdwy. agOntsll)'
ocada o! Jmltatora have oimed
at his il'OIOSIJ!e nrt ... Lad ,..
know motored to a suburloan showbiz date with Jstaell singer Esther Tohbl and the capsule &lt;i

than last ••• uGolden Boy11 may
retun1 to Bdwy. after Its London ..._ment; II&lt;Nider wily?

••• Esoterta: Lewis Carroll's
•• Allee in Wondedand'' was a..
vatlable at the downtown Flea
Market - In Grea !Jiorthand.
Charles 37X Kenyatta (Harlem

Mau-Mau poobab) oow says he
believes unsuapeeting Harlem~
ltes were '"used'' by Mark Rudd

In the C&lt;llwmla U, riots; What
else? ... That colorful Yiddish
word "Chutzpah" now js a game,
IUbtiUed "The Good Life;" Bklyn.' s A, &amp; S. dep't store pitched it Uws: "You don't have to be

Jewish to play Chutzpah - the
game for schlemiels,

schlema~

zets, balabll&amp;tahs - and even
some of yOUr friends," ... Oya
klug!

More showbiz olt8))rlng In new
fllms: Peter Lorre Jr., Edward

Cedrlc'a son) llardwlcke,
Carol COle, !belate Nafa dangh.
ter, a tlke we knew when she
(Sir

was a child as "COokie" ... Bar·
bara Hutton's son Lance has a

new toy - his own film flrm ...
Cleaning out ar oldWNeeddreslltns room at the VIllage PUrple

"'ga

Hatlo's
TilE GRAADPARENTS SEE
UTTLE ION lN PERSON ,1,ND lf:1N

IC? DON'T MK!!

GUSSS 'WW.T, IMIM?
LITTU ICAA800 CI&gt;N
PIJT ~ J~W

uncov-

0114!

r;ta,r, I'U

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tlllla'' - or 10U'rt' • £!imiJIIIe
II!Mtt wbo tbllllla, '.''HOI!' tll14
abe'a ~ ·tn ~;Ywbt' .illit

·make

::-•. ' • .,.

.

Heredity a_Fac~or
..l!'l.Cases of Gout
li

;. '\.,·

DENNEN

NEW YORK (NEA)
"Have no fear-! shiJU not fail to dti," President De Gaulle
once assured France's ambitious and squabbling pOliticians.
At 78, the old general Is still very much alive though his
father-image is tar n ish e d and his vision of France's
"grandeur" lurned into a nightmare. Even bis anti-American
and pro-RuS8Ian policies lie in shambles.
Nevertheless, the Gaullisla and their allies on the rigbt
like Giscard d'Estaing, are especled to win a comfortablli
majority in the e,lectlono to the National Assembly June 23.
A!U!r all the barricades, revolts and strikes that shook
France In May there is not a single charismatic leader on
the political scene lo replace the aged general.
His non-Communist opponents on the left, like Francois
Mltterand and Mendei!-Fl'811Ce, failed lo capture the imagination o! the rebellious stuclents and young workers. They
ollered no real alternative to De Gaulle's pab!rnalistic rule.
All they ~ould suggest was a popular front government-a
coalition w1th the Communists-that is unacceptable to a
majority of French men and women on the right and on the
left.
·
It is not because ti1ey love De Gaulle that the French wUI
vote again for him on June 23 and June 30 but because they
abhor and fear the Communists. That is why he is also backed
by the army which has gond reason to distrust him.
.
"De Gaulle betrayed us during lbe Algerian crials " a
promil~&lt;mt French general told this wrJU!r fn Paris. "But If
!here IS a danger o! a popular front government with the
COmmunists we shall back him to the bitter end."
De Gaulle knows II. Like Egypt's Prealdent Nasser be
flirted with the Russians to undermine the Untied StSU!s
But, like Nasser, be never tr1111ed the domestic CommUnlsis:
He now hopes to win the election• by making the campaign
an issue between the French Rag and the red Dag, between
order and chaos and between patriotism and subversion.
There Ia no longer any doubt that the Communist party was
the real casualty of the strike~ and riots.
Two decades ago the spontaneo111 revolis would have
brought Moocow's partisans in France to pnwer. Today !hi!
aludenla and young workers in France, West Germany !laly
!Old the Unlled Stales regard. the Communiste as p01:be'illed
middle-aged opportunists whose primary atm is to serve
Russia's foreign policleo.
.
As young J)anlel Cobn·Bendlt wbo led the olucltnt revOlt in
Paris said, the olftclal lifO-Russian Communills .... Utile

I·

'~

1Uitice Is tbt losunnee we matcli ~ i!llndircll.
A lfJ!IPire17. ''PIIIic'' It have on our llvea, and obediHowewer, I'll bet tlha'a tpJd lhlali, ;.but a' ~s ..p..
ence is the premium we pay II Cltber tll\ng!L Cooldar.' per. out? ~ this We dale Jou!rt
for it. - W 1111 a m Penn,
tltbel' mlillllkiDc coil. . . . &amp;
founder of Pennsylvania.
love - ,.,.. .. ~ ''1! ·1'!110
rlaht b7 her, I'll'· feel rllbt a.

"dtal;~ .-~··::- ~l '-!'
,Jl,,.,~-·

) •

Wlulhoe OtJUln tHislttttr, .Wte "bom . . . o1J!erorievOI'Q1118 · Tr¥ ~~~at · with 'iwr•
aeQdre an a.re lor - · YCitll' ltllf. ·Hld 1111t iNU7&lt;kllied
. ,_
slater can be · tn1De4 up to a girl, 1111t -.1cln't 111M Itt her
point, but llhe'U aolclom reallr face all U.WIII PrOfll!llltl a!onf,
• • •

It big, they can't oUip me, starstar-star, ole.' ~ ... llleldaltalll',
that',- one ol 111e patbi'Jo, ....
IS

&lt;

•-t entirely loin h o .lbcut.' what can 1 dO? .::. l:fn
proble,m, lorlllllli-.ollrlun Dar1llck:

thot ""'"· and hllve nothing
to do lllilft him, thot he ma~
fie O,hllmtd.-11 Then. 8:!4.

·
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•,,..,
,,,,,;~ "'' , ,.,
, ..•.
J
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lake up, illiil'e
GIVe ,.., a
horl ..... H..
, r·u,•

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.If WAYNiiG; BRANDSTADT,' M.ri:'•

.,.-'IC

tJff'it;

• ..i _(ptpt

b~~

ll..., q~-'

.

-..

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"If:

er:'\lo '\. . .lllili\l

· fatber~ Perhap~ ·r ~'I
send 4 to liDI - tben'a 111!'··
Q-1 am a man, 33, and not another method II is 2.5 to prldo, ~ 1a1nr _ . but 1 ~ jD
overweight. My doctor sayo 5.0.
11. ·
· &lt;
I have gout. lan't this a
,·
'
.. · • .:..::... ••:c• :··
disease of older persons who
Q-Whal are ·lhe symptoms
~- ~' t,..~ _,,r~·
eat excessively rlcb food ~ of gout? Is i!out the SI!IIIO as .Ver. hi.ve to wrl~,i·~ !IJ&lt;e
drink a Jot of alcohol?
~outyarthritis!
'
~s. 11\!thol! ~~~'tl!aoiw ~
A-In mool •••s-gout l"e
When the uric acid level lltl1' relaifGaalliP ·=•-t:iaaol ,ait1
' "' In
blood Is big!! sbarp ·
' ·~.- : &gt;·.
dtabeb!s, i8 an Inborn error of uric acid cr•aW• Hi'ecl~tate wl)'?
.• ...;. .. " y . ; . , , ' '~...
1
metabolism wtllj heredity an 1 the
'
•
-ptlf ~14,important factor. Women great
n
joints
(eSJWIC
iiry
the,
aald 1'"'
· ' 1ov
· i\DIO•
' '''' x',...,..
"'"
toe) and Ill the skin --11"'
rarely get it before the onset (especially In the uternal tbe same about ""'-.,...,lboti&amp;lll
of the menopouse but In men ear) . In an acute attacldhere we'd be IDjpillter tllroilib a'l l7
it usually starts in the early is pain, redliess and swellln~ maiL
.
30s. Foodo rich in purinea . fh
·
will c a. u s e gout only in a • e InvOlved·jomt. Altho0g1 ·: 1 111Uot llaYe l!ac! ·to!&gt; ~ell
peroon who Is born with this
e attack malsubalde with- hltlt la-l'l)li.' r.~~..., ,Jiafi
metabolic defect. An excepa COlfle o weeks, recur- for ...,., ..., QMcxilll' 1'"' .
tlon is that it may be caused ~~:!t:r t
cs~!rt:DJ:~tS! tired ot 1111 I~ '"::~lit
by taking large amounts of and persist for a longer time 11 ,...., 11\1!'
·
pyrazinamide for tuberculosis until a chronle stage-gouty ed aa a,.._ No:ciOol!t JQU!iaa
or chlorotbiazide for water- arthritis-is reached.
IJ!Diher i!rl .
\II!IW, .and 1
logging In the tissues. ,
~ 1111t·doa't l!!atiJir-tiJij'Ar,
In the treatment of g&lt;&gt;Ut, It
Q-1 have a mild case of
·l(,y ~~ dqll'l ~ llll.,but
is wise to avoid sucb ~urine· gout. Is there ' any kin!l Of tb' , . , •-'. ,._.~,........ ~ 1
rt'ch foods as
eet · ad fruit juice that .doesn" c•n- OJ' """' - .,..,..""""'. """"
liver, kidney, m:i e~; tain uric acid1 Dooe' g~ut fr8JIIIIJ!I1 ~~'II·•·
bouillon, consomme, oysh!rs, alfect the heart or the blood
IIW!J!I't be .~ IIJ!I&lt;II:IG!tlltr!"+
anchovies and sa r d 1 n e s. pressure?
!oro I ' I..Ve ~'lb)aari ann'
Alcobollc beverages, especial·
A-Frull luleeo contaln a uro~ m t_.. the ~· ~- I ,
ly beer, should also be avoid· Vllfil:tY .of acids but not urle waa ~=,, ~~~~~:Jl~~~=·
ed. There are no other diet- acid. Although the cbief- come l!1ll!k
ary restrictions but the 111e of plication of gout is kidney tb.d ·
tobaceo Ill any form sbould damage, retl!l\t etudtes l!ave · hi true
be avoided. Although obesity •hown ·that the "tbeideriCe 01 . 1
· · liM~•·· ~~··=~~
predisposes to g o u t, the high blood pressure, bardon· iS~beij·~
~
disease may also be agcravat- ing of the arteries ·~d coron~ . ~.,.
ed by beroic elorts at jveight · II!'Y II~Ft disease. is, higher in .
t •reduction.
persons w;ilh gout' ~ia bj· tile
geDeral Pl!P.ula~•., ,, ,, .
. I
...
Q-1 have gout. 'My uric
acid level is 7. What Is the
normal !.Vel!

wrue

e
, el

The Cln-

(UPI) -

the Milt Pappas trade.
The Reds were scheduled to
start former Atlanta Brave

American League ,
W, L. Pet. GB

Detroit
Baltimore
Cleveland
Minnesota
Oakland
Boston
New York
Chicago
California

38 20 . 656 ...
32 24 .571 5
33 26 .559 51h
28 30 ,483 10
27 29 .482 10
26 28 .481 10
26 32 • . 448 12
24 30 .444 12
25 32 .432 12 1h

to score santo and Banks w~nt CaHf at Boston 2, ppd., rain
'"' ~
to third, scoring later on a WJld Chicago at New York, ppd., rain
Tony Cloninger today In hopeo pitch by Maloney.
Baltimore at Wash., ppd., rain
ol salvagl.ng an even break in
Maloney was the victim of
Today's Probable Pitchers
~ · the four-game series with the another Santo eruption in the
(All Times EDT)
; Chicago Cubs.
sixth lming, this time In the MiMesota (Merritt 4-5) at
.. .. It was Cloninger, who fell up- form of a two-out homer with Detroit (MeLaln 9-2) 1:30 p.m.
on bad times with the Atlanta the bases empty. Clay Carroll,
Oakland (Nash 5-4) at Cleve~
Brave11 last year, who was re- obtained from the Braves in the . land (McDowell 6-4) 2:15 p.m.
-·' garded as the key figure in the same trade lnvolving Cloninger,
Caltfornla (McGlothlin 5-4 and
.' . trade of the controversial Pap~ came In to stop the Cubs In the Bnmet 5.8) at Bnslon (Santiago
: .·. pas to Atlanta. Cloninger, who eighth Inning.
7-3 and Bell 5-2), 2, II a.m.
~r was 1-3 with the Braves before
Meanwhile, the Reds had all (Only games scheduled)
~· the trade, went against the tbey could handle with Jenkins'
friday's Games
Cubs' Frank Reberger in the ti- offerings. The only run came on New York at Oakland, night
•
nal game or the series.
a homer by Tony Perez 1n the Washington at Calllornia, night
"'• Chlcago ootched its seeond second imlng.
, Balt at Mhm 2, twt-night
victory of the series Wednesday
The homer boosted Perez Detroit at Chicago, night
:r-·as the Reds fell victim to the league~eadlng RBI total to 40 • Bnston at Cleveland, night
1' hitting o! Ron Santo and the It was hil eighth homer of the
National League
',' !lve-hlt pltchlnS o! Ferguson aeaaon.
w. L. Pet. GB
•· Jenkins, who combined for a
Jenkins, the ace of the Chica~ &amp; tool
35 24 .593 ..•
_ 4-1 victory over Cincinnati.
go pitching stall, went the dis- &amp;., Fr.:claoo 32 27 .542 3
:"

lance en

Maloney The Victim

'

Jim Maloney was the victim
assault, although he held
the Cubs in check for the first
..,, three irmlngs, In the foUrth,
•: Glenn Beckert singled and Billy
-: Williams walked to open the In~ ntng, and that set the stage lor
Sturto'a fireworks.

·~ or the
••

route

to his sixth vie- Atlanta

30 27 .526 4

tory against seven tosses. For Los Angeles

Maloney, II wao his fourth setback against six wins.
The Reds needed a victory today In order to hang onto flflh

Cincinnati
Chicago
Philadelphia
New York

place,

Th.e Chicago third bateman

;· elubbed the ball to the left field
' fenee where It hit the rail and
"· bounced back Into play to score
"

aince the Cubs were Houston
right bEI1\nd them, only a half- Plttlburgh

32 29

28
28
25
27

28
29
26
29

.525. 4

.500 5\0
.~1 6
.490 6
.482 61h

23 32 .418 10

22 31 .415 10

game away . A loas today could
Wednesda¥'s Results
slide the Reds all the way Into Chicago 4 ClnciMatl 1
seventh p)ace as Chicaso and San Fran 4 Pittsburgh 2
Phliadelphl.a are a virtual tie Houston at Phlla, ppd., rain
for the olxth spot,
Atlanta 7 st. Louis 1, night
New York 2 1.011 Angeles 1,

Casner
Favored nl~oday
r
.. ,., W7•
T Ts 0
n
~ 0 ,., zn u
pe

•• Prd&gt;able Pitcher•
(All Times EDT)
Clnclmatl (Cloninger 1-3) at
Chccago (Reberger 0-ll. 1:30

e

•

•1nl'lo
ROCHESTER, N.Y. (uru- The new.. motto here i:s, ulook
out lor the young Ilona," but the

. . . . ..
POMEROY
•
FRI.
JUNE

. . . ... . .

Big D Stopped By Mets
Hy

.

14

CITY LOT
2 Showw_ 2 &amp;8 PM

e

p,';ittaburgh (McBean 5...1) at

smart money will still be riding San Francisco (Perry 6-3), 4
be o1
on Billy Casper, a mem r
p.m.
the old guard, when a 150-mar St. Louis (Carlton 7.2) at

field tees oil today to the first Atlanta (JohniiOII 4-3 or Reed 6round o! the U.S. Open golf 2), 8:05p.m.
championship.
Houston (Wl1110n
4-7) at
Casper, the leading money- Philadelphia (!Jiort 3-7), 7:35
wtDJEr of the year and wirmer p.m.
or four tournaments on the
(Qnly games scheduled)
regular tour so far thts season.
Frl.da,y's Games
wfll be 37 in two weeka and the San Fran at New York, night
odds--makers believe he ' will Chicago at AtJanui., nlaht

·have his third open Utle by that Hooston at Plttaburgh, night
time.
LOs Ang at Phlla., 2, twl-lllght
They have Installed him s 5-2 Clndrmatl at St. Louis, night
favorite, as solid a choice aa
has been ever named for this
defending champion Jack Nick- By UnJted Press International
laus pegged the second choice
W L Pet. GB
at 3-1 and Arnold Palmer all! C&lt;&gt;lumbus
26 17 .605
Gary Player bracketed together Buf!alo
28 23 .549 2

''

"Uon•t t.-11 mt' ho• to ~t
!&lt;iltih" . _ . I'm 11. champion
bu" ltor !"

Managers of Pee Wee, Pony
and Boys' League basebaiJ
teams or the county are again
urged to report the results or
their games to the Daily Sen~
tinel office by 9 a.m. on the
morning after contests.
Bob Wingett, Santlnel ~rts
Wrlter, said he wU I also be
in the office of the Daily Sentinel Monday thruFrldayfrom
10-11 p.m. for the convent~
enee of home team managers
in phoning reports of games.
Some teams in the several
summer leagues are not get~
ting coverage or games because tbe home managers are
falllng to report results, In

Middleport, managers should
call Chet Tannehill.

Grant-in-aid
Won by Howard
NEW HAVEN- Tom Howard,
son of Mr. and Mrs. JllD\es Hem~

ard of Milton, former residents
of New Haven, and grandson or
Mr. and Mrs. 0. J. Howard or
New Haven, has won a football
grant in aid at Marshall Univertly. He will begin at Marshall
University in the fall. He is 6
foot tall and weighs 200 pourxls.

Torn bepn playing football his
frestunan year at Wahama High
School under coach Frank Capehart, Jr. He received rna~ ho~
ors while playing at Milton High
Schooli was on the third all~state
AAA team, honorable mention
all southern, and nominated for
"State Lineman or the Year."
While at Milton he was guard

and mlddle linebacker, did

otf a vlctory at Indianapolis, Syracuse
19 29 .396
"alii I'd rather win this
Wednesda,y's Results
tournament than any other one Buaalo 4 LoulsviHe 0
I knoW. I feel nne mentall,y and Richmond 8 &amp;Yracuse 7

9'h

physically and I'm ready lor C&lt;&gt;IUmbuo 7 Toledo I

ll-0 Winner
Eastem scored a ll..U shutout
wln over Rutland ln the nut

on the hili for Eastern. He struck
out 15 oft 1e 22 batters he faced.
Rutland'a lone hit was a single

by Hatfield.
Eastern hitters were Bob Cald-

this course which 1 realize is s Rochester at Jacksonville, post- well a alngJe, Rick Sanders a
triple, Jim Amsbury a 00\lble,
poned, rain
Ste1ham a home run, Rand)' Young
two single&amp;, and G. Holter and
Palmer and Nicklaus and some
H. Holter, a aJngle each.
o! the YOUIW lions like Tom
Weiskopf, Bob Lunn, Marty
Fleckman and Lee Trevino, LAST LOOK
FOOTBALL TRADE

difficult one."
All the competitors, Including

1he ' C'trCuS on Earfh
urntest for tfte'Mo~~ty/
WILD ANIMALS· Perfurm"

HORSES·HiafiAarial STA

Asms;rACROIIATS·Q,cJc
&amp;loU

·~ lfft

B.EPHAHTS

G.tiJrlrS~tltJII

Advance Tickets May
Qe Purchased From
IPomeroy Volunteer
Fl~ Depl!b!L!"'

00

realized the same thing after
finishlrw their final warm-ups
over the heavlly-!rawed, 6,962-

yard, par 70 Ook Hill Cl""'trY

BOSTON (UPI)- Owner Peter
FAIRFIELD, Conn. (UPI}Fuller announeed Wednesdl)' The New York Giants dealt
that his cootroverstal 3-year-old speed for alze Wednesday when
Dancer's Image will make his they ac~J~Ired 6-loot-3, 235iJ(IIIIId

Chb course.

final

,.

"The golf courae Is beautiful
but I don't like the sand traps,''
declared Palmer.
He wasn't alone. There are 66
traps on the course and there
wasn't a man in the entire fleld
who didn't forget to include his

appearance on a race

track June 19 wilen the colt will
parade around the course at

!W!olk Downs In 1 prelude to
the 34th running of the $50,000
added Masaachu-s llandlclll'·
Dil'llalllled Rrst 1o last In the
Kentucky Derby and dropped
sand wedge among the 14 clubs from lblrd to eighth after a
In his bag.
bumping lneldent In the PreakBoros Contender
aesa, Dancer's Jma&amp;e wlll aoon
With the sam being so much be put out to stud.
a factor, another member of the
old guard, 47-rear-old Julius

plac&lt;&gt; Baltimore and dropped
the fourth place Twins 10 games
back.

Atlanta drubbed St. Louis 7-l,
New York nipped Los Angeles 2~
1, San Francisco beat Pittsburgh 4-2 and Chi cago topped
Lincinnatl 4~1. The llousLOn at
Philadelphia game was rained
out.
McAuliffe' s homer gave the
victory to Mickey Lolich, 5-3,
who pitched a five-hitter.
Reggie Jackson and John
''Bllie Moon" Odom hit back40back homers In the fourth
inning and Dave Duncan hit the

Dodgers. Grote' a blow came off

reliever ,Jack UUlingham but
the loss was charged to
Llrysdale wtto took a 1-0 lead Ia
the ninth but is now S..f. AJ
Jackson got the win in relief of
Nolan Ryan.

first homer of hi s career as
Oakland blanked Cleveland.
Odom, who one-hit Baltimore in
his tast start, pitched a sevenhitter to gain the win and boost
his record to 6-4.
Ends Losing &amp;ring
Atlanta beat St. Louis for the
rirst time since last Sept. 23 for
its £irst win over the Cards in
11 games as Pat Jarvis pitched

a three-hitter and drove in two
runs wiU1 a pair of singtes.
The Tigers, who haven't won
Jarvis
is now 6-4.
a pennant since 1945, usually
Don Drysdale's seven-game
fall to live up to their advance
billing- and they usually col - Boston doubleheader and the winning streak came to an end
lapse when Kaline Is injured.
Chlcago~New York and Balti~ as J. C. Martin doubled in the
The club ts only third In the more -Washington games were tying run and scored the
wirming run on Jerry Grote's
teague in team batting and all rained oot .
single
in the ninth hming to give
fourth in team pitching. Kaline
In
the National League,
the Mets the triumph over the
Long Dry SpeH

Oakland Scores .':ilutout
In the only other American
League game, Oakland blanked
Cleveland 7 -fl . The Callfornia at

Barry Brown of the BaiUmore

C&lt;&gt;lta In exchange lor 6-3, 195detenJdve back Henry

pound
Carr.

A former Olympic aprlnt
champion, carr was a reaWar

It was the night of the upset.
That was Wednesday evening
in Middleport Boys League baseball play where the lndtans upended the early season la\orites
in a marathon or walks and hits
by a score of 18-15, and the Mets

-yes, those lowly Metsl -· clobbered the other predi cted powerhouse, Redlegs, 11-1.
Jay Warner picked up the victory for the Indians, working
three irmings of relief, bul he
had to have help rrom J. Manley
In the fourth. D. Tyree, t h I r d
Yankee pitcher, took the los s.
Yankee pitchers walked 12,
fanned 8; Indian pitchers did a
llttle worse, though winning,
walking 16 and Ianning 8.

Said lrdian Manager
bart:

Art

Sto-

We're gonna speTXI a little time with the pitching staff
talking about control.'' Yank :Manager Bob Hysell may have a few
11

Taylor Whiffs

15 BatterS

words selected on the same subjecl for hi s boys.
Indian hitters were J. Manley
4 for 4, Brian Mullen 3 Cor 4,
Warner 2 for 5, Rick':!tobart2for
5 with a homer, and Danny Dot~
son and John Tyree, each one
hit.
For the Yankees, Phil Miller
was 3 for 5 wilh a homer, Robbie Harris 3 for 4 with a homer,
and Chris MilJer and D. Tyree
each a hit. The Indians now are
2-1, U•e Yankees 1·2.
No details of the Mels·Redlegs
game were kept or reported.
IOOians
715 104 - 18 13 3
Yanks
160 611 - 15 8 5

a single.
Roach picked up three singles
tor the Mets and four Met pitch~
ers struck out 10 batters. The

Angels 111111 Redlegs play at &amp;lgar
Run and the Mets and ~racuse
wUl meet at the Junior High

on Friday.

BULK

GARDEN SEED
QUALITY SEEDS

Field and
laboratory Tested

ALSO
ONION SETS
STOP IN AT ..

CHASE KARDWARE

992-2511
LOCUST ST., MIDDLEPORT

-

BUTLER SIGNS
BOSTON (UPI}- Hlgh-IIOOrlng
forward Btll Butler of St.
Bonaventure University signed.
Wednesday

with

the

Boston

Celtics ol the National Basketball Assoclation.
The 6-foot..3 Butler, who will
be tried out at a guard position
by the Celts, scored l, 462 points
in his three year career for Ule
Bormies, and last season aver~
aged 20.9 per game for the

Redleg pitcher Rick Taylor
fanned 15 batters Thesday in nation's third-ranked quintet.
Pomeroy Pee Wee play to lead
his team to a 11~1 wtn over
the Meta.
The Redlegs collected 11 hits
wi'th n . seth two singles and a
triple, Smith two singles and a
dooble, G. Browning a single and
triple, D. Browning a triple,
D. King a double, and Marshall

Stobart, J. Warner (WP) (1),
J, Manle)l (4) and Lemley, Stobart (0. T, Picken:s, Harris (2),
D. Tyree (LP) (4), C. Miller (6)
and Call.

LIVINGSTON'S

IU0/7.00

I

13

lubellll
btlchMit pin

.
!u..........
and old tlfl

$17.45

THE DAILY SENTINEL
ro lNTt:ltEST Ot
M£lG..,_ r.tA.';()N ~REA
RllK IIHO !&gt;. O'lot:N, I'IJSI.W!Ii;R
llt:~OTtU

U"'"'*'

TMMfiiU, Eclkw
Pobi11Md &lt;11\U J n~01"' "'-wrdoJ b! Tile
llhko '&gt;'1ll•J Pl!bli ., H11 ( II!IIPIII), 110 lllerhu\O&lt; .r
~ •• PO!!WI'Q), 1111oa, t57tiil . Ouol•u Oll'l&lt;'t
J'bor. f'ii~ZI~ ~ . t;oi1Wrlal Ph&lt;!"' '1\1).2157 .

~''"o;H&gt;Il d i u

11"'111' ""!d II

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NotouRll """ortlob'l repr l _ l l .. Rol-1!NII;..t.allao:hllr, In&lt;., 12 Eiol 4101 ~ .• Np
Yor ~ ( II}. 1&gt;ew hr~ .

:&gt;uio•&lt;rlpdon r 11... lloh-.r.ol br o:ar rl•r
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1n lll•once 11 Uoo l:.. tl) -lnal Oll'leo~,II~ . JO,
Sh -~•. tUU nrM IMMM, P,BU. By
lilc&gt;ld r Mou\e "~"" &lt;trnor M rYl.. IIIII: ...u.
abl~; OM tnl&gt;lll h tUO. 1\y rn&amp;\l. 01'11 )'Mr

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WHmwALU ONLY $3: MORE.

BUY NOW on our Easy Pay Plan!

GOOD)"iEAR
RIZER OJL CO.
70U E. MAIN ST. , Pll. 992-2101

POMEROY, 0.

~00.

Soi&gt;l&lt;'rlpbon ~ Ic e 11101-1 lilniQ Tbw....S..
ti ..l.

(11968 THE HUDEPOHL BREWING COMPANY OF CINCINNATI. OHK)

PUT DAD'S NAME ON THIS ONE

Join the Enjoyers

In 1966 but waa hampered by

illlurles last season. Brown, a
linebacker and tight end, pll)'ed
In ali 14 C&lt;llt garneo last sea11011,
but aaw wcy primarily m the
apeelal teams.

Boros, also wu geven t decent
chance. Boro1, one of the six

former lJ.S. Open chamlls In the
neld, generelly Is conaldered
the dnest 8IIMI player In the
game today.
Lucian o! Samasata wrote
the first novel portraying
Oll!bt beyond earth around
A.f&gt;. 185.
'

SWIM
FISH

PICNIC

APPEARING JUNE 22 ONLY

,. THE INK SPOTS
Dine 1nd Dlnce To The Music of
The Stan At

e PLEASANT POINT
RESE~VATIONS

ACCEPTED NOW

PHONE 675-1611
lii~~~~9yj~·
:r:

the

punting, averaging 45 yards per
punt, and a ct&gt;eaptaiiL He was
voted outstanding athlete ot the
year.

28 24 .538 2'h
24 22 .522 3'h game o! Poll)' League play this
24 25 .490 5 season held last week.
Terry stetham allowed only
my career," offered the relaxed JacksonvUle 25 27 .481 S'h
Casper, who came here straight Richmond
22 29 .431 8'h one hit wttlle going the distance
Toledo
Casper Ready
Rochester
"I'm playing the host golr o! Louisville

at 4-1.

The Detroit Tigers, who
traditionally look better on..paper than they do on the ricld,
now are looking better on the
field than they do on paper.
With a makeshift lineup
minus their best hitter, AI
Kaline, and one of their best
pitchers, Earl Wilson, and with
their all.star catcher, Bill
Freehan, at tirst base, the
Tigers are threatening to make
a runaway or the American
League race.
The Tigers' 2~1 victory over
the Minnesota Twins Wednesday
night, their eighth in their last
rune g-c~mes and their 14th in the
last 18, stretched their lea~e
lead to five games over seCOJld

hasn't played since May 2::ith
when he sutfl!red a b'rOken bone
tn his right forearm and Wilson,
a 22 -game winner last year,
hasn't pitched since May 24
when he bruised his heel. The
team is 14-6 since Kaline was
injured.
The dub's starting shortstop,
Ra.v Oyler, is hitting a robust
. 146 and the club has such
problems at rlrst base that
Manager Mayo Smith is playing
Freehan there against le~an~
ders and J)Utting Jim Pnce,
hitting . 180, behind the plate,
First baseman Norm Cash is
hitting .2 02.
\
Despite all those statistics,
the club is wiMing and doing it
by coming from behind. They
completed a sweep of the Twins
Wednesday night on Dick
McAuliffe's eight-bming homer
that snapped a 1 ~ 1 tie.

Indians Scalp Yankees 18 to 15

Eastern is

annual golfing classic, with International League Standings

vno ~1'ELLINO

IJI'I ~rts Writer

out. But Lou Johnson doubled Oakland 7 Cleveland 0, night

«rrflld

-~·· ·''·

All-Stirs ®

Beckert and send Williams to Washington
24 32 .429 13
third. Williams was out at the
Wednesday's ReBUlts
plate on Ernie Banks' Infield Oetrolt 2 Minnesota I, night

..=t

F&lt;Jl' Soviet foreign poUcy the events Ill France were even a
greab!r blow than Israel's defeat oi the Araha' last Juno
The Soviet Ie.aders considered their rapp'rlichement wltli
. France and De Gaulle's anti-NATO pnUcies as a major r~tor
in their European poUcy. It represented f&lt;Jl' them an Important strategic and preotige vlotory over the United Statal.
But De Gaulle found out' the herd way that the French
except the Communists, would not tolerate a complete break
with the United Stales or ~th N.\TO.
!
..., "
Now the Warsaw Pact Alttanee-Moscow's equlvaJent ol
NATO-is Ill seriouo dtt!iculty because o1 the anti,Rq~slan
policies on Romania aucl Czechoslovakia, But NATO tkeived
a new lease on life.
.
· '' ' . ' .,.
There Is an Old Frencb oaylng that "the.mlll'f tliings chllnle
the more they remain as before." .But ~-•110 charip liD!! - :, ·'
blatory d\)Oa not' stand sUU.
·
· ~ ' •. · '
Frapce will never be the same after lhe tibia'. ' Jnatet.d ~ '' .
hubo!;ing il)u(!ono of grandeur, De tlaulle, If he. Ia tO rei8aln · ~~;~~~~
president· untU his term expires in ,1172; wlfl havC,-to tillte't'..
Vol~e'a advice and culti~ate .bis own Prdel!., IJe ~111- 114v~ ,. ·
to rejuvenate France's a~liquajed,educaUoli ~yatein, ·llll~i!·1 '
of undermining the At~lclin dollar, he wlli have to',I~P•Iti'' , "'(' ~~=r
the wages ot the wot ers wbo are the mool ullcle~io ',., '
West Europe.
. · ,

'IWRiEI.F SONP'&lt;Y!

'

IIlia

refum to obey

more than "stallnist plgs."

PUZZLE 'IOGeTHEJlo"
HE'fi 50 ~ HE
~"l.E.S US··AIIP Hei
50 GOO()· .. -.otJ ~NP
WILL 5U FOil

'

her conversation over many

hours: .14 rm a

THE GILDBALVIEW
French Fear Red Rule,
So They'll Back De Gaulle

Onion, owner Joe

DOES HE

•

If anu

NEA Washington Correspondent

. , . ,

. beds.pread are added to our a~ yoo p&gt;n'l .bell~•l!n'
0001"1 normalaClCUIIIUlaliarl.
I .hitod lll)'llif lor beinl a, ~1 do tbe m&gt;Jor cleaning &lt;i the ard, Jell 'coaltWt ,... blr: _.
bOdnloJII'I but I lull ~-t·
•• ~
- · d;
• •:n-"Y
btvI )'-"~n·~
' .,~
.....
II)) with ber cluttet. D.o any ·
, ·C01!Je bomo w!thoul
· · · It
or llrls Who share ' room have hu: i lore that sirl ind I'll ,11.
· !della lor me? :.. TEIJRIF~, ways.lowber; l'd ml ~
TREMBLING TWELVE
. . ftre It I could eraN· lb. . 'lUI
' (.
• • I.
Dear T'M': .
111111111" I've frled J)O, .....fi;r,
Outside otleparaie bedrOomJ; but .ibil w'oll'l . . 'to me. ·Bts&lt;
the beot soluUon Ia ~ Y·Ou r fcllko ,..'I Ill me ...,. .be,r:,- l,
mother's firm Ultlmatullls, .Ef., -1111111r1'7 herdl'ullltldl*

It is a time or leadership - because the job
to be done ls as large as the nation and the
rears lor doing It are short.

By RAY CROMLEY

lp.

It on

oornmuniiY and watershed.
It Is time to become involved - becauae in·
action Is Ull.lall,y an evidence of fear or apa~
and neither Is creditable to a man of honor or a
aervant o! God.

BY JACK O'BRIAN
NEW YORK - Gllted oomle
Milt Kamen Is delighted to go oo
the Merv Grttrln TV show a n rtlrne - that Allsha Kaahl Is not
on It ••. FalthJW reOountlng of a
little-boy's comment at the do·
llberately llllllllpaeed "2001: A

.

~OIIds

of your netatmors, ontheinventoryotresource•,
and the establishment ot reBOUrce goaJaln your

History's Assassins Show
Pattern of Mental Illness

CHICAGO

cimatl Reds are wasting no
... time in reaping the benefits ol
lt"

conservation.

.RAY CROMLEY

Standings

Cubs Triumph,
Eye Win Over
~:.,., Tony Cloninger

'J'.f

Tigers Hil~e AL Lead;

The Daily Sentinel, Pomeroy-Middleport, 0., Thursday, June 13, 1968

EI.HTRIC e BATH e LAUNDRY
. FAOUTIES FOR OVEit 1501
T•lce AV•c•tlon At Home 'nti• Summer

lOYAL Otl PARI •

PliASANT POINT RESORT
11. 62 North
Pt. Plnunt

I

For Father's Day, give him an 8-pack of the beer
with enjoyment brewed right in

Enjoy a Hudepohl

t

.

.

�j
Mel@!

Property

'

·90 Emnloyes to Receive Awards

HUNTINGTON - The 193rd ty district engineer, will be mas- mlnlstratlve assistant, engineer anniversary ot the foolldlng or ter ot ceremonies; and Richard ing division.
Allen E. BaU, Freda Ball to the U.S. Arm,y Engineers will E. McCoy, executive assistant,
Sox field employes rcccivlnt;:
Ada starcher,l.14 aero, Chester. be observed at a luncheon held will deliver the invocation.
30-year awards are James J,
q o Price to Mary E. Gra- In the Prichard Hotel ballroom
Howard A, Flim, lockmaster F'uchs, Lock 15, Ohio !Uveri
ham, 2 acres, Lebanon.
June 14 at noon when 90 em- al Lock 18, Ohio River, wlll re. D.Jcenc W. llenry, Gallipolis
Claude E. Woodyard (CE) to ployes ol the ~IUitlnglon District celve a 40-year service award. Locks' a n d Dam; Charles (.
Delbert H, stearns, Marguerite will receive se~ce awards.
Sixteen employes will receive Munchmeycr, Lock 19, 0 hI o
Stearns, 1.30 acre, Or~nge.
COl William It. Falck, district awarda Cor 30 years of servlce, River; Carl M. Murrell, Deer
Alb!~ Glue!lencamp, dec., to engineer, will make the presenTen are from the district of. Creok Reservoir near ColumLawrence R. Gluesencamp, Lau- tations; Maj. Roy A. Brown, dell" · flee as rollow_!l: Adrian L, Bas- bus, Ohio; Clyde 8. Myers, Lonrence R. Gluesencamp, Jr., Jul.
tianellt, chief, contract admin- don Locks, Kanawha River; and
ius E. Gluesencamp, Amd. tor
Istration
branch, construction di- Forest T, Reed, repair parties,
Wolle, 69 atres, Sutton.
John Young, son of Mrs. Bernetta Yourw of Pomeroy, and a Trans., Lebanon.
vision; Elton L. Beard, elder, operations divjsion.
George P. Daniels, auditor,
former resident here, received his muter's degree ln education
LawreJlce R. Gluesencamp Jr.
speclflcatlons section, design
Thirty employes wtll receJve
Carleton, to Homer ijoush,
Belle
with a major in physical education last Wednesday at XlvJer. John Patricia
Cluesencam.p, Julius
branch; George w. Britton, as- awards for 20 years·or service,
is current.IJo· emplOl'ed as industrial arts teacher and football coach E. Gluesencamp, Alberta Glues- 1 acre.
etstant chief, operations division; and 43 ror 10 years.
63 Easements, Tuppers Plains-at the Stanbury Junior High School in Lancaster.
encamp to lAwrence R. GlueseoAn Army film, 11 0ld Glory,"
Woodrow M. Griffith, reproducChester Water District.
Mrs. Ymmg made the trip with her son and daughter-in-law, camp, Sr., parcels, Lebanon.
tion branch, oaice oradm~istra­ depleting the evolution or the
Dana M. Lambert, dec., to
the former Janet Carpenter, to see her son receive his degree.
lawrence R. GluesencampJr.,
tlve services; Thurman II, Hol- American Oag, will be shown.
The Young children - Philip, Robin and Lisa - were guests of Patricia Gluesencamp, Julius E. Ethel Corey Lambert, Gleqn H. ley, chief, supply eootrol and June 14 Is national Flag Day.
their grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Carperter - while their Gluesencamp, Alberta Gluese• Lambert, Gladys I., Walburn, distribution branch, supply dl·
c&amp;m.P to Lalrence R, Glueaen- Max Walburn, eert for trans., nslon; Marvin A. R, Paden, plant
parents were at Xavier.
Mldd!OJK&gt;rl
ITCHING, SWEATY FEET
lnctdentallJ,-in the same group the summer months. He's an e~ camp, Sr., Lebanon.
section, operations division; HarEthel
Corey
Limber~
dec.
to
ROW TO STOP IT,
Tella E. Hatfield, dec., to A J.
receivi~ his master's degree gineering major.
'r
vey T. &amp;ephenson, chief, dvU
CAUSED BY A GI:RN'. Kilt ttl•
Glenn
II.
Lambert,
Gladys
I.,
Hatneld, Olive Page, Raymond
was Alex J. rilo, former Pam~
defeJPC support braJich; Clem- you ltop thll ltehtng, IWeJtlnr. Or·
Walburn, Max Lambert, cerL of
dln1ry •nUNptlca 1re ao u... Apply
Hatfield,
Frances
Hell:lrix,
Atfld.
eroy High School football coach
mie E. Weaver, chlet, !Jnance T+L
THE AMERICAN Red Cross
PoWERFUL OI!:RM KILL!:R
trans., Middleport.
who is now supecintendent of blood program in Meigs Councy
for Trans., RutlaOO.
accounting sectlon; Charles E. for lteh,y, n"atJ' teet, foot odor. u
C. F. Tompkins, dec. to Ruth
pleated OVERNIGHT, YOUr 4&amp;
schools at Federal Hocking.
A J. Hatfield to Olive Page,
WilBOn, chief, survey branch; not
is again in crlti.ca) rondlUon. In
bid: at 1n1 dnal count.r, TODA.T
E.
Tompkins,
eerl
for
trans.,
and Mrs. Charlotte S. White, ad- at IWIIHIIt. a LOlli D.l.lal _,..
faet, once again officials are dis- Raymond Hatfield, Frances Hen- Pomeroy.
NILIO:tt
I'NIIa
adv.
CONGRATL'LATIONS to Oa\'id cussing the possible necessity drix, 72.28 acres, Rutland.
John
W,
Arbaugh,
Ethel
M,
Ar·
Hargraves, son of Mr. and Mrs. of putting Into efl'ect an ellgfbllBill M. West to Thomas R.
baugh to Thurman Babcock, JosGeorge Hargraves, PomerOJ, for ilJ policy ror residents needing West, lot, Pomeroy.
having been selected to Phi Eta Red Cross blood.
John L. Wolfe, dec., to Eula J. ephine Babcock, lot, Tuppers
Plains.
Sigma, freshman men' s honorary
The next bloodmobile visit will Waite, Mary E. Ord, Addle NorCharles Peck, dec., to Paul
1t Ohio l'ni\'ers it,l.
ris, Nora Lewis, Odessa Swarts,
be next Morx:lay from 1 to 6 p.m.
Anna Crabtree, Klzzle
David was one of 41 new mem- at Pomeroy Junior High School. John T. Wolfe, David A. Wolfe, Peck,
Crabtree,
Virginia Townsend, W.
lers selec ted. Freshman male Walk - in donors are welcome.
H. Victor Wolfe, Austin Wolfe,
C.
Peck,
Madge
ffiackwood, El,tudents who attain a 3.5 aver- Serving the canteen wUI be the cert. for trans., Letart.
sie
Davis,
cert.
tor
trans., Cp.
age during their fir st quarter or Ladies Auxiliary of Middleport's
Mary E. Ord, John E. Ord, Ada 3.5 cumulat..i\·e average at the rceney~Bennett Post 128, Amer- die Norris, Carroll Norris, Nora lumbia.
J. KeMeth Crabtree, Amta
end of their freshman J ear an itan Legion.
Lewis, James H. Lewis, Odessa
Crabtree,
W. F.. Crabtree. Kiz~
eligible for membership.
Swarts, Glen Swarts, John L.
zle
Crabtree,
Virginia Townserxl, •
The organization as sist s in
Clli\NGES IN this year's Big Wolfe, Joan H. Wolfe, David A.
the raising of monc,\ ftlf foreign Bend Regatta should improve the Wolfe, AUce Wolfe, Austin Wolfe, W. C. Peck, Emzie Davis, Elsie
Stlll'fl'nt loans and other act i\'i- presentation - It's rl.ghtuponus, Donna Wolfe to Eula J, Wolfe, Davis, Cecil L. Blackwood,
Madge Blackwood to Paul Peck,
ties. Dr. Hobert H. Wiuk.Jer, as- you know - starts on June 21. parcels, Letart
parcels,
Columbia.
sociate professor of chemistry,
Lula M. Qui vey, Arthur L.
The entire operation has been
Dale Wiwel, Frankie Rusche!
is faculty advisor of the group. moved upriver to Pomeroy school Quivey, Darleen QuiYey to LenFrankie Rusche!, Shirley Polto
David has begun work at the fa c ilities. Boat racing for the ora Spencer, 3 1 ~ acres, Chester.
. Coppertone
ing,
parcels, Pomeroy.
KJger Creek Powc1· Plant for fourth annual event wiD be free
August..t Will, Pauline AutherWalter Hoffman, liazcllloff.
son, James Autherson, Kathryn
man
to Uoyd llorrman, Pegg,y
Butcher, Ray moM Butcher to
8 acres, Chester.
Hoffman,
Harley C. Roberts, 22 acres,
Edmond
Gruescr,
Irene
Salisbury.
Nell Middleswart to Wchards Grueser to Lela J, Curtis, Jl :2
and Son, Inc., 100 acres, Leba~ acres, Sulton.
lloward Frank, l~uth Frank to
~~ ine members att ended the
on,
A demonstration on preparameeting of the Rig Bend Bo.Ys ~-H tion of sarx:lwiches was given by
Riverside Lard Co., Inc. , to Frank W. Porler, Jr. , Mary R
Club held la st Wednesda;.- eve-- Tamara and Christie Stanley,
Nell Middleswart, 100 acres, ParLer, parcl•ls, Sutton.
Uuth Lee Hunyon, t\-l W_ llu~
ning, according to Uo}' \'aughan, Kimberly Stevers had a report
Lebanon.
reporter. The J unior LeAders as- on U1e unknown soldier. Pamela
Sadie M. Wolfe to Clarence H. yon to Larr;. A. Ritchie, .Janke
Bitchie, parcels, Chester.
sisted members Ulking rope with Wilson and Christie Stanley were
Harold llysell, Ethel lly~ell
their projecL
in charge of recreation. Refresh- o( charge for the first time arxl
to Ralph McKee, lot, Pomeroy.
Projects were assigned bJ the ments were served by Vickie Ob- the ri\'er bank area ~ar the
advisor, Mrs. Harold Lohse • .-\ erholzer and Christie and Tam- ¥hoot \\111 be cleared for viewcommiuee was worked out on re- ara Stante~.
ei1.
freshments and the group planned
Rides from the Nolan Amuseto go to the Ohio Valle)' Publishment Co. wiiJ be at the rear.of the
iii Compam. Pool 'was piayed The Pink Poodles 4-lt Club met junior high school and the jWlior
''H1S'~
recreation.
at U1e Racine Park with ad\'isor, high audilorium wiU house comMrs . Barbara Roush, assisti~. mere ial exhibits also which will
Pam Goody, r eporter for the according to Hhonda West, new~ be open to thcpublicalno charge.
Eden Ridge 1-H Club, said the reporter.
The parade will leave Middlegroup met on T uesda~, .Ma,y 28,
A breaklast meeting was plan- port at J p. m. on Friday, June
with 7 member s in attendance at ned for June. The group had a 21. Othel'· highlights will include
the home of Connie Reed, ad\is- cookout with hamburgers, po.- Lhe annual art show, a modern
or.
rock group, record hops, the
llltoe s and salad.
.'i!l :-.1. 2!\"D .1\VE.
MIDDLEPORT
The group plan s to meet at ea ch
!192-5560
Vicki Wolre demonstrated a frog jumping events, tub raccJ&gt;
member's home during the sum- proper table setting.
and a pie eating contest
mer. Refreshments will be paid
tor from the dub trea sury. MarThe Rutland 4-H EX)llorers met
sha Kimes was in charge of nx:- at the home of Vernon Weber, adrealion of teatherball . Hefresh- visor, on Wednesday, May 20th,
ments were ser\'ed by Diane according to Dallas Weber, news
Kimes and Karen Heed.
reporter. The group is planning
1.0 finish their cabin and will deThe ~nowville 4-11 Club mel at cide on buying a tarpattlin.
the home of advisor s, Mr. and
.I im Birchfield led recreation
Mn. Fred Stanle) , with 12mem- of dumb spclli ng bee aM carry
bers in attendance, according lo beans on a stick. Hick)- Bolin
Ken Wood, assi stant new s r e- served refreshments.
porter. The girls taking Fun
With Food s brought dc\ilcd hamburger s or open heanie~. Girls
in Breads brought a loaf of bread.
Girls in Food lor Snacking a n d
Packi~
brou~t a beverage
called "wi tc h~ brcw''.
The girls 'in sewing worked on
dresses ard towel s. Those taking
!UPON REQUEST!
rabbits, poultr~. !.heep, vegeOur Usu11 Good CINnln1
table gardening and special crup s
had a quc s lionandan s werpcriud .
They also told about their projecL Girls in .J r . ilost and llostPotMroy
(.SS brought a table arrangement .

~~:.:==-P~om:;e;;ro:iiy.:MI:ddl=..,...=~~oi••_ :. . Juno I ( } ;

YOU1L LOVE Ill

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and

HOLZER HOSPrr AL: Visiting
hours 2-4 and 7.8 p.m. Parents
only on Pediatrics Ward.
ADMISSIONS
Mrs. Stanley B. Huntington,
354 Third Ave.; Mrs. Julia WJi.
llama, 845 Fourth Ave. ~ stacey
E, Burge, Patriot Star Rt.; Michael W, Crothers, Rt. 2 Galllpolla; Mrs. George G. Cremeans, Cheshlrej Mrs. Frank
L. Kalynsld, Rt. I Gallipolis;
Mrs. Everett E, Sims, 21 Willow Dr.; Mrs. Wllllam G, Longstaff, 130 River st.; Miss Mar·
garet L. Lewia, Rt. 1 Pl. Pleas.
Inti Mrs. Eugla L. Johnson, Rt.
I Mlneravllle; Mrs. Andrew Lambert, Rt. I RuUand; Wilbur A.
Dean, Rt. 3 Pomeroy; Carol E.
Daro~ Rt. I RuUand; "Mrs. Ron.
aid L, Carr, Pomeroy; Jamesw.
1lwingle, Jackson; Mrs. James
F, WU son, Jackson; Mrs. Rob·
ert D. Withrow, Rt. 2 Leon, W.
Va.; Miss Bernice L. Carter,
Rt. 3 Qak Hlil; Tina M, Steel,

MEN'S RINGS
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DON'T FORGET
DAD ON
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DAY-JUNE 16th
Even Dads
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c.,

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BAKER

F•rniture

BANKER BILLFOLD
by PRINCE GARDNER
~

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~
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WIIM

Otlu!r Suggestions:
-TIE-TACS-CUFF U~ICEY
PROUCTORS-SPEIDS. WATCH IAN)$
-8\I.OVA, CARAVBIE, ACCUTRON
WATCHES-RONSON &amp; ZIPPO LIGHTER$

JEWELRY STORE
Court St.
.
Pomeroy
BIG Bl!lND REGATl'A....:.WNE 21·22-23

De1bert Smith and five sons,
Mrs. Harold Smith and three chll·
dren and Mt. and Mrs. Oris
Smith.
Mr. and Mro. Omer Cramlet
apent Juoo 2 at Rock Creek, W.
Vs. Their grea!.i!ranclchllcl had
ourgery at Charleston Hospital.
He Is the aon of Mr. and Mrs.
James Pierce. They were IC·
companied by Mr. and Mrs. Ke,.
neth Wilt, Bucyrus.
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Sayre of
Roseville and Mrs. Oil Adams of
Z1110svllle visited recently with
reloUvos.
Mr. ond Mrs. Jack Sharp111ck,
Jr., of Columbus were recent
guasti of their parents, Mr.
Mrs. Jack ShlrpDBck, Sr., llld
Mr. and Mrs. C. w. Promtt.
Mr. and Mrs . .,Jomes Ellln&amp;"
ton ot Bllti.Jnore, Md., were S~.~r
· day gue11ts, June 2, of Mr. and
Mrs. Jock Sharpnock.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Roush of
Co!UIIlbuJ are visiting !lOr parents, Mr. and Mrs. Owen Watson
for the summer.
Mr. and Mrs. Tim Trouto!Colwni:Kw were here over the weekend ond visited her grandfather,
OWen Watson, a medical pa~ent
ot Meigs Ganerol Hoopltal. ·
Mr. ond Mrs. Ben Turner of
Lancaster spent a weekend wlth
• her alster, Mrs. Owen Wataoo.
Mlos JIUIO Neigler of COlumbus spent a weekend with her
pareMI, Mr. a_nd Mrs.: Geiqe
(llelgler. Her sister, Shirley Neig•
ler oecconponled her to CoiUIItbuo lor a vi sit.
Mr . . and Mrs:· Titus Pickens
and aloters, Joale lll!d Maud, of
S)'rocuoe spont sUnday a!t8rnoon
with their oioter, Mrs.· · Frankie

A ONE-ROOM
AIR CONDITIONER
IS FINE ••.
IF YOUR WHOLE
FAMILY LIVES
IN ONE ROOM.

.... ~a.

GUAitt

Ill TOUGH·
NUS ......

2.05
EBERSBAlH
tiARDWARE

~.JCONOMY

QIJIQ(lY DRIES
TO A fUll GlOSS

-.
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,.

II you want lo live in, say. two rooms. you Just buy
another one-room air conditioner For three
rooms. another . . . and so on. It 's really very
s1mple.
It's also very silly! And supporting a flock of
one -room atr conditioners is very cosily, too.
Now let's get serious. For only $14 a month
(maybe less), you can own clean, trouble-free.
economical Gas whole -house air conditioning.
W1th normal installation, a hefty three-ton unit

~­

Qltllm, IDAIJ,

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Here·s the best part. II your home is heated
w1th Gas, you probably already own aboGt hall a
Gas air conditioning system: the ductwork the
blower and the filter. All you need is a CC:.Iins
umt and a condensing unit.
For all the refreshing facts. just call the Gas
Company. Gas whole-house air conditioning proVIdes comfort lor every member of your family . ..
1n every room of your house!

~~·

Mra. Bert Heilman
and sister were recent guests o!
Mr Mar
t Houda helt.
s.
gare
s LHIIan
Mr Am Coe and Mrs
Jivlde~ returned home ~Oifi Ak·
ron after visltlng relatives'.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Curtis
and daughter of Columbus spent
the weekend withhlsparent.s, Mr.

LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UPDJose Pimentel, 124, Los An·
geles, stopped Jess Lopez, 119,
Tucson, Ariz., (3). Jorge
Torres, 119, Los Angeles,
stopped Gobby Eapilloza, 116,

Phoenix, Ariz., (2).

The winter games of skat·
Jng1 ski jumping, tobogganing
aoo hockey were added to the
Olympic Garnes in 1924.

Nol&amp;lor.
.
Mr. and Mro. PhUip Roberta
of GllllJJoll• opont SUnday with
hla modleri Mrs. frances Roberts.
Mr. ·and Mro. Fronclo Morris

THINK OF All T~E THINGS YOU CAN 00 WITH THE MONEY

YOU SIIVE. GAS MAKES THE BIG DIFFERENCE.

llere SUnday dinner 1111•st• OC:Mr·

•

,

•

and Mrs. Eitl. lllorrlaonddat¢tor, Jone4-of llaclne~ Rt. I, Joi"'

'•
I

In World Trade Proposed
WASHINGTON (UP0 - The
senate ma,y be asked to ratify
a treaty which attempts to put
a tloor, starting July 1, under
the price or wheat moving in
commercial world trade.

Laurel Cliff
Social Notes
By BERTHA PARKER

Rev. Eugene Musser delivered
the morrling and evening services
at the local church June 2nd In
the absence of Rev. Eugene Gill
who was vacationing with his
Ounlly in cambridge. The GU!s
were calJed back by the death o(
Ray Ewns Jr•
Mr. William Carman remains
a patient at Veter~s Memorial
HospJtal. Mrs. WilHam carman
returned home from Holzer Hospital where she was a patient for
several days.
Mr. aOO Mrs. Norman HyseU
announce the birth of a daughter
at Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Peters
and children of Mason visitedrecently with Mr. and Mrs. Nor·

man Schaefer.
Lawrence A. Smith has been ill.
Laura Gayle Smlth, small
d~ughter ot Mr. and Mrs. Oscar
Smith, fell at home recently and
broke her right arm.
Mrs. Hannon Fox left friday
for llisif€sun to be with her husban::IR wHho ills emplotyhed thekrnde.
oy owe spent e wee e
·tit h. •·-u
h
\ J WI
IS ....111 Y ere.
Olin llife of Columbus visited
saturday with his mother, Mrs.
Cora Renshaw.
.
Mrs. Pearl Jacobs IS ill at
her home here.
Mrs. Murel Harris an:l Bren.da of st. Albans, W. Va., spent
a FrldaJ.• with her motller' Mrs.
Cora Renshaw.
Special singing was presented
at the local church Sunday evening, .4'une 90 by Rev. Gill and
his four daughters and Robert
Pearson and daughter. ·
::· Mr. and Mrs. Richard Hursey,
Wayne, Neb., .and Mrs. Gomer
Bowen of Me Arthur were recent
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Bowen.
Denver Carman of Peach Fork
visited recently with his daughter and soo-in-law, Mr. and Mrs •
Robert Bowen.
Mrs. Pearl Jacobs Is a patient
at Holzer Hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Hottman or
Florida spent a weekend with
Dora Holley.
Mrs. Earl Dill, Mrs. Nancy
Walker and Bertha Parker spent
Friday In Gallipolis.
The Laurel Cliff Health Club
met Thursda,}· evening at Ule
home or Mrs. Ernest Powell with
Mrs. James Gilmore as co-hostess. Ten members atteOOed. The
devot.iorl.! were read by Mrs.
Charles Karr followed by the
Lord's Prayer in unison. Games
were played with prizes awarded to Mabel Tracy, Georgia Diehl,
Judy Eichinger, Iva Powell and
Bertha Parker. The July meet·
ing will be a picnic at the Royal
Oak picnic grounds, July 11 evening;

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lng their weekend guests, Mr. and
Mrs. Merle Schroeder an:l three
children of COlwnbus.
Mrs. Bessie Smith and bfOth.:
er, Oscar Sines, of Texas ar·
rived tor a visit at her home here.
Mr. and Mrs, Tom Lindsey and
son, Scott, ot Grove City, spent
the weekerdwlthherparents,Mr.
ao:1 Mn. Mason Spencer.
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Powell
were guests of relatives in Lo-

it.ortloo.

GOESSLER

GAllON

,._ .....

By MRS, FRANCIS MORRIS
Rev. W. B. Davis was the
guest speaker Sunday at the First
Baptist Church. Ac&lt;OII1jliii\Ying
him were his wife and their three
sons, Dayton. He will also ttU
the pulpit next Sunday.
The Baptist Vacation Blble
School commencement was held
Sunday evening at the church.
The prgram theme was God's
Word, Today's Hope. Mrs. Adria 5a,yre was superintendentam
other teachers were Mary K.
Yost, Pltyll1s Bailey, Beulalt

dus J:iendricks, Janice Saber,
Mickey Wolfe, Dottie Wilcoxen,
Brenda Sayre, Nancy Bentz. Mary
K, Yost directed singing; Mickey
Wolle was pianist, Susie Biggs,
secretary, and Oag beArers were
Eddie Diddle and Larry Wilcox- and Mrs. Harry Curtis.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Hendricks
en. The craft w~k was ondio_play
ot
Union Furnace spent a week·
tn the basement.
end
with Rev. and Mrs. Sellers
The Esther Circle met Monall:l
visited Mr. and Mrs. Matt
day evening at the home of Mrs.
HeOOricks.
Ethel Smith. Devotions. "T h e
Guests or Mr. and. Mrs. Fred
Symbol of Lite," were led by
Cldle
and Harold are their ~
Mrs. Gretta Simpson, usirw a
J.p-law
and da.ugflter,. Mr. 1 n d
JJ( .lhe . Ullv ehopt4r of
Ftrst Timotlty lor s&lt;riplure read- Mrs. George Strobush and Sue
Ing and a medltaUon, "Thou Shalt Ann, Jefferson, Wis., alii their
Remember." Marie Roush led daughter, Mrs. Ted Martsch and
the prrqer. After the business Billy, Oneida, Ky.
session, roll call was answered
with a Btble vene and prayer for
Figlrt Results
apecill mis1lonarlea was given
By United Fross International
by Vero Beegle, A program of
COLOGNE, Germany (UPI)rettdlnp by members tonowed Carlos Duran, 162'4 , Italy,
and the Lord's Prayer in unison stopped Jupp Elze, 1611h,
closed the service. Mrs. Smith Germal\Y (15). WU!y c;)la!Dr,
served refre1hments during the 143, Germany, slolli&gt;ed Alssa
aoclal boor.
Haschhas, 140\1, France (4),
The Smith illmll,y annual reiiJio
ion held at Lancaster Sunday was
TOKYO (UPI)- Katsuo SaitD,
lltended !rom this area by Mr. 125, Japon, stopped Francisco
and Mrs. Ernest Smith, Mike Balug, 125\1, Pblllppines(4),
and David smith, Mr. ond Mrs.

Smooth turned edges. Wafer thin, two-piece eon.
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credit cards, photos, etc. Two 4-place removable
see-through windows for cards, phofus, etc. Duplicate key slots. $6.00 BiiUolds have Rondo lining
and leather banded currency divider. Black,
8.00
Brown

Robinson's Ceaners

ONLY

BlnTIIS
Mrs. Robert D. Withrow, Rt.
2 Leon. W, Va., daughter, 10:·
38 a.m. Wedneidayj Mrs. James
c. Ricige, Jack11011, daughter, 4:·
II a.m. Tl'(lrsday.
DISCHARGES
Robert E. Armstrong, Howard
N. Bahr1 Mrs. Frances Brown,
Mrs. Robert G, Brumfield, Mrs,
Julle Lee Cremeans, Sammie
Doolittle, Mrs. Jolm E. Evans,
Mrs. Mary L. Fields, Riclcy A.
Friend, Mrs. Walter Hudson,
Mrs. Thomas J. Hughes, Mrs.
Evan L. Hurt, Raymond J. Ingalls, Ra,ymood J. QJalls, William JOO Dink Jackson, Ronald
G, Martin, c&lt;tnnie llle Maynard,
Mrs. Clyde H. McCoy, Jr., Mrs.
Herman N. Parcell, Terry L.
Pierce, Lora Plymale, Mrs. Mil~
ford Reynolds, Mrs. 9Jerman R.
Rogers, Kermit E. Root, Mrs.
Lloyd W, Roush, Homer A. sax.
ton, Donald R.Sitlm, Lewisstevl·
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Racine Soeial Events

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\

Meigs 4-H News

F run•-c huve · lmlleutcd they Intend to ratiry, The L, S. &lt;action
is now pending.
Crltles VIew
critics of ' the trade plan
maintain the new priec noors
would spur t~~rplus produ(,tion
around the world, and hurt tJ _s,
farmers by paving the way tor
·price · . t.'UUlng raids by other

Price Floor Under Wheat

••rm,

a•u•

the Farm Front

PHILCO

The treaty, orticially termed
the International Grains Arrangement, also would provide
tor other wealthy nations to
share with the United States the
burden or providing food ald for
hungry countries.
Administration backers of the
measure have predicted it
would pass by well over the required two-thirds margin . But
spokesmen for the American
Farm Ilureau Federation, one
of the treaty's leading critics,
held slim hopes the pact would
be rejected.

The controversial section ot
the trade plan, a 11 wheat trade

convention," would set

mini~

mum world prices 20 cent} per
bushel above minimums in an
older agreement which expired
last year, and close to actual
trading prices of recent years.
Ceiling prices would be 40 cent&amp;
above the floor for each type.
For average quality U.S. hard
winter wheat at Gulf Porta, Ule
new mlnimum would be $1.73 a
bushel. Thts is equjvalent to
$1.35 to $1.40 a bushel at rarma
in the Central Great Plains, or
10 to 15 cents above the government price support loan rate.
Below Floors
If actual u.s. market prices
are below the new noors -

as

Administration orrtciala conthey l'Urrently are ror some rnatend these tears are groundless,
jor t,ypes such as hard and soft
and insist that returns to Amerwinter wheats exported at the ican rarmcrs "will be higher
Cult - the government would than in the past, and certainly
boost export prices to the world hlgher than without the arfloor loy levying a ree on exrangement."
porters.
The second and less controIf fee collections exceed gov.
versial phase of the IGA, a
ernment payments for what ex· food aid convention," would set
port subsidies, the excess would up a 4.5-million - ton annual
be paid out to American wheat
food aid program with contribugrowers.
tions t r o m both exporting
What happens ll some coun- and Importing countries. The
tries sell below the JGA miniimporters in general would conmum? The treaty would set up
tribute cash to buy grain tor
an International Cmsulting needy countries.
Committee which could drop
So rar, officials estimate counprice noors ror all exporters.
tries involved in the plan have
And iC the committee tailed to
pledged 4.2 mUlion tona or grain
agree, all countries would be
or Its equivalent to the profree to act on their own to
gram. The United ~tes has ofkeep their prices competitive.
U.S. officials said, however,
that Canada and Australia, two
ot the world's Big Five wheat
Up
exporters, currently are selllng
wheat at or very close to the
With
new noors, France, like the
United states, has made some
sales recently below the noon,
but experts indicated they expect all major exporters to respect the new fioors.

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I'UII U&amp;alll- 0&amp;

4.39au.
• fiOIIUUI COLOII AND
• UIIA COYIIAII, -

wlln
-.rt

VALLEY LUMBER &amp; SUPPLY
992-2709

992·5560

S. 3RD AVE.

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

~::::::::::::::::::::::::~

.

UGGESTIONS

TIMEX
ATCHE

BRUT
FOR

MEN
Fine Selection of Pipes &amp; Cigars
Delux Brands Smoking Tobacco

For Y11catlon

BRITISH

II ~1rfERLINO
mLIIIM

lllllfliiiS . . . .

lEATHER TOILET KITS
SHOE SHIN£ OUTFITS

--. ......
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••• tor Fath•r._ Day glttlngl
I

TAPE
RECORDERS ,

TRANSISTOR
RADIOS

Carllsto Contem,.Oiar~
Genuine wn..'\:n llni'lhl.-d lo n"•h.'h W;~ln111 rumitun:. • ft1l1•r Tunin11
l:yc: • New Phiku M••1i&lt; "••h'l'' Pit.:111fl: Tu~ .• Suli•l St:ak! Silrt.ll Syst~.n
• V..OOO Votl ( 'ulut Pilut ( 'tkll ( 'h-.~~s • lllu•ninah.•d VHf lJHt-' ( 'h;~n­
ncllndM:t~IOI!' • t.. !nt.:h Oval Srtcak'\:r • Ttlftl t."'l"'lrc,.
OoitF.N!!ION!: H'.297 ~", W.ll' . . ", 0.1¥": 4" """

6511 WA

FAmER'S DAY CARDS BY HAUMARK

39c New Cushion Grip

79c
IIOe&amp;.,Merthol and HOlY)'

66~

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SHOE SHINE IllS
PAPERMATE PENS
PEN &amp; PENCIL SETS

1.19MENNEN

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FOREMAN &amp;ABBOTT

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lnatlllt Lllhlr

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PRESIDENT

59 N. 2nd A...

of the Big Five, Argentina and

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filter 1111

Dudley's Florist

ortlclaJs added that Canada
and Australia already have ratified the IGA. Among the relrt

~~,·UZOR

I.,.,...,._..;.__,_.;...~..;._---::'_~_'

flllllt

Cheer Them
Rosel
A Lovely, Fragrant
Bouquet Will
Ease The Pain.

•GILLEnE

IIDDlEPOIT, 0.

to lltlp Jill

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c!}t{asteteraft
Gollectioll

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count ricH.

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Mel@!

Property

'

·90 Emnloyes to Receive Awards

HUNTINGTON - The 193rd ty district engineer, will be mas- mlnlstratlve assistant, engineer anniversary ot the foolldlng or ter ot ceremonies; and Richard ing division.
Allen E. BaU, Freda Ball to the U.S. Arm,y Engineers will E. McCoy, executive assistant,
Sox field employes rcccivlnt;:
Ada starcher,l.14 aero, Chester. be observed at a luncheon held will deliver the invocation.
30-year awards are James J,
q o Price to Mary E. Gra- In the Prichard Hotel ballroom
Howard A, Flim, lockmaster F'uchs, Lock 15, Ohio !Uveri
ham, 2 acres, Lebanon.
June 14 at noon when 90 em- al Lock 18, Ohio River, wlll re. D.Jcenc W. llenry, Gallipolis
Claude E. Woodyard (CE) to ployes ol the ~IUitlnglon District celve a 40-year service award. Locks' a n d Dam; Charles (.
Delbert H, stearns, Marguerite will receive se~ce awards.
Sixteen employes will receive Munchmeycr, Lock 19, 0 hI o
Stearns, 1.30 acre, Or~nge.
COl William It. Falck, district awarda Cor 30 years of servlce, River; Carl M. Murrell, Deer
Alb!~ Glue!lencamp, dec., to engineer, will make the presenTen are from the district of. Creok Reservoir near ColumLawrence R. Gluesencamp, Lau- tations; Maj. Roy A. Brown, dell" · flee as rollow_!l: Adrian L, Bas- bus, Ohio; Clyde 8. Myers, Lonrence R. Gluesencamp, Jr., Jul.
tianellt, chief, contract admin- don Locks, Kanawha River; and
ius E. Gluesencamp, Amd. tor
Istration
branch, construction di- Forest T, Reed, repair parties,
Wolle, 69 atres, Sutton.
John Young, son of Mrs. Bernetta Yourw of Pomeroy, and a Trans., Lebanon.
vision; Elton L. Beard, elder, operations divjsion.
George P. Daniels, auditor,
former resident here, received his muter's degree ln education
LawreJlce R. Gluesencamp Jr.
speclflcatlons section, design
Thirty employes wtll receJve
Carleton, to Homer ijoush,
Belle
with a major in physical education last Wednesday at XlvJer. John Patricia
Cluesencam.p, Julius
branch; George w. Britton, as- awards for 20 years·or service,
is current.IJo· emplOl'ed as industrial arts teacher and football coach E. Gluesencamp, Alberta Glues- 1 acre.
etstant chief, operations division; and 43 ror 10 years.
63 Easements, Tuppers Plains-at the Stanbury Junior High School in Lancaster.
encamp to lAwrence R. GlueseoAn Army film, 11 0ld Glory,"
Woodrow M. Griffith, reproducChester Water District.
Mrs. Ymmg made the trip with her son and daughter-in-law, camp, Sr., parcels, Lebanon.
tion branch, oaice oradm~istra­ depleting the evolution or the
Dana M. Lambert, dec., to
the former Janet Carpenter, to see her son receive his degree.
lawrence R. GluesencampJr.,
tlve services; Thurman II, Hol- American Oag, will be shown.
The Young children - Philip, Robin and Lisa - were guests of Patricia Gluesencamp, Julius E. Ethel Corey Lambert, Gleqn H. ley, chief, supply eootrol and June 14 Is national Flag Day.
their grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Carperter - while their Gluesencamp, Alberta Gluese• Lambert, Gladys I., Walburn, distribution branch, supply dl·
c&amp;m.P to Lalrence R, Glueaen- Max Walburn, eert for trans., nslon; Marvin A. R, Paden, plant
parents were at Xavier.
Mldd!OJK&gt;rl
ITCHING, SWEATY FEET
lnctdentallJ,-in the same group the summer months. He's an e~ camp, Sr., Lebanon.
section, operations division; HarEthel
Corey
Limber~
dec.
to
ROW TO STOP IT,
Tella E. Hatfield, dec., to A J.
receivi~ his master's degree gineering major.
'r
vey T. &amp;ephenson, chief, dvU
CAUSED BY A GI:RN'. Kilt ttl•
Glenn
II.
Lambert,
Gladys
I.,
Hatneld, Olive Page, Raymond
was Alex J. rilo, former Pam~
defeJPC support braJich; Clem- you ltop thll ltehtng, IWeJtlnr. Or·
Walburn, Max Lambert, cerL of
dln1ry •nUNptlca 1re ao u... Apply
Hatfield,
Frances
Hell:lrix,
Atfld.
eroy High School football coach
mie E. Weaver, chlet, !Jnance T+L
THE AMERICAN Red Cross
PoWERFUL OI!:RM KILL!:R
trans., Middleport.
who is now supecintendent of blood program in Meigs Councy
for Trans., RutlaOO.
accounting sectlon; Charles E. for lteh,y, n"atJ' teet, foot odor. u
C. F. Tompkins, dec. to Ruth
pleated OVERNIGHT, YOUr 4&amp;
schools at Federal Hocking.
A J. Hatfield to Olive Page,
WilBOn, chief, survey branch; not
is again in crlti.ca) rondlUon. In
bid: at 1n1 dnal count.r, TODA.T
E.
Tompkins,
eerl
for
trans.,
and Mrs. Charlotte S. White, ad- at IWIIHIIt. a LOlli D.l.lal _,..
faet, once again officials are dis- Raymond Hatfield, Frances Hen- Pomeroy.
NILIO:tt
I'NIIa
adv.
CONGRATL'LATIONS to Oa\'id cussing the possible necessity drix, 72.28 acres, Rutland.
John
W,
Arbaugh,
Ethel
M,
Ar·
Hargraves, son of Mr. and Mrs. of putting Into efl'ect an ellgfbllBill M. West to Thomas R.
baugh to Thurman Babcock, JosGeorge Hargraves, PomerOJ, for ilJ policy ror residents needing West, lot, Pomeroy.
having been selected to Phi Eta Red Cross blood.
John L. Wolfe, dec., to Eula J. ephine Babcock, lot, Tuppers
Plains.
Sigma, freshman men' s honorary
The next bloodmobile visit will Waite, Mary E. Ord, Addle NorCharles Peck, dec., to Paul
1t Ohio l'ni\'ers it,l.
ris, Nora Lewis, Odessa Swarts,
be next Morx:lay from 1 to 6 p.m.
Anna Crabtree, Klzzle
David was one of 41 new mem- at Pomeroy Junior High School. John T. Wolfe, David A. Wolfe, Peck,
Crabtree,
Virginia Townsend, W.
lers selec ted. Freshman male Walk - in donors are welcome.
H. Victor Wolfe, Austin Wolfe,
C.
Peck,
Madge
ffiackwood, El,tudents who attain a 3.5 aver- Serving the canteen wUI be the cert. for trans., Letart.
sie
Davis,
cert.
tor
trans., Cp.
age during their fir st quarter or Ladies Auxiliary of Middleport's
Mary E. Ord, John E. Ord, Ada 3.5 cumulat..i\·e average at the rceney~Bennett Post 128, Amer- die Norris, Carroll Norris, Nora lumbia.
J. KeMeth Crabtree, Amta
end of their freshman J ear an itan Legion.
Lewis, James H. Lewis, Odessa
Crabtree,
W. F.. Crabtree. Kiz~
eligible for membership.
Swarts, Glen Swarts, John L.
zle
Crabtree,
Virginia Townserxl, •
The organization as sist s in
Clli\NGES IN this year's Big Wolfe, Joan H. Wolfe, David A.
the raising of monc,\ ftlf foreign Bend Regatta should improve the Wolfe, AUce Wolfe, Austin Wolfe, W. C. Peck, Emzie Davis, Elsie
Stlll'fl'nt loans and other act i\'i- presentation - It's rl.ghtuponus, Donna Wolfe to Eula J, Wolfe, Davis, Cecil L. Blackwood,
Madge Blackwood to Paul Peck,
ties. Dr. Hobert H. Wiuk.Jer, as- you know - starts on June 21. parcels, Letart
parcels,
Columbia.
sociate professor of chemistry,
Lula M. Qui vey, Arthur L.
The entire operation has been
Dale Wiwel, Frankie Rusche!
is faculty advisor of the group. moved upriver to Pomeroy school Quivey, Darleen QuiYey to LenFrankie Rusche!, Shirley Polto
David has begun work at the fa c ilities. Boat racing for the ora Spencer, 3 1 ~ acres, Chester.
. Coppertone
ing,
parcels, Pomeroy.
KJger Creek Powc1· Plant for fourth annual event wiD be free
August..t Will, Pauline AutherWalter Hoffman, liazcllloff.
son, James Autherson, Kathryn
man
to Uoyd llorrman, Pegg,y
Butcher, Ray moM Butcher to
8 acres, Chester.
Hoffman,
Harley C. Roberts, 22 acres,
Edmond
Gruescr,
Irene
Salisbury.
Nell Middleswart to Wchards Grueser to Lela J, Curtis, Jl :2
and Son, Inc., 100 acres, Leba~ acres, Sulton.
lloward Frank, l~uth Frank to
~~ ine members att ended the
on,
A demonstration on preparameeting of the Rig Bend Bo.Ys ~-H tion of sarx:lwiches was given by
Riverside Lard Co., Inc. , to Frank W. Porler, Jr. , Mary R
Club held la st Wednesda;.- eve-- Tamara and Christie Stanley,
Nell Middleswart, 100 acres, ParLer, parcl•ls, Sutton.
Uuth Lee Hunyon, t\-l W_ llu~
ning, according to Uo}' \'aughan, Kimberly Stevers had a report
Lebanon.
reporter. The J unior LeAders as- on U1e unknown soldier. Pamela
Sadie M. Wolfe to Clarence H. yon to Larr;. A. Ritchie, .Janke
Bitchie, parcels, Chester.
sisted members Ulking rope with Wilson and Christie Stanley were
Harold llysell, Ethel lly~ell
their projecL
in charge of recreation. Refresh- o( charge for the first time arxl
to Ralph McKee, lot, Pomeroy.
Projects were assigned bJ the ments were served by Vickie Ob- the ri\'er bank area ~ar the
advisor, Mrs. Harold Lohse • .-\ erholzer and Christie and Tam- ¥hoot \\111 be cleared for viewcommiuee was worked out on re- ara Stante~.
ei1.
freshments and the group planned
Rides from the Nolan Amuseto go to the Ohio Valle)' Publishment Co. wiiJ be at the rear.of the
iii Compam. Pool 'was piayed The Pink Poodles 4-lt Club met junior high school and the jWlior
''H1S'~
recreation.
at U1e Racine Park with ad\'isor, high audilorium wiU house comMrs . Barbara Roush, assisti~. mere ial exhibits also which will
Pam Goody, r eporter for the according to Hhonda West, new~ be open to thcpublicalno charge.
Eden Ridge 1-H Club, said the reporter.
The parade will leave Middlegroup met on T uesda~, .Ma,y 28,
A breaklast meeting was plan- port at J p. m. on Friday, June
with 7 member s in attendance at ned for June. The group had a 21. Othel'· highlights will include
the home of Connie Reed, ad\is- cookout with hamburgers, po.- Lhe annual art show, a modern
or.
rock group, record hops, the
llltoe s and salad.
.'i!l :-.1. 2!\"D .1\VE.
MIDDLEPORT
The group plan s to meet at ea ch
!192-5560
Vicki Wolre demonstrated a frog jumping events, tub raccJ&gt;
member's home during the sum- proper table setting.
and a pie eating contest
mer. Refreshments will be paid
tor from the dub trea sury. MarThe Rutland 4-H EX)llorers met
sha Kimes was in charge of nx:- at the home of Vernon Weber, adrealion of teatherball . Hefresh- visor, on Wednesday, May 20th,
ments were ser\'ed by Diane according to Dallas Weber, news
Kimes and Karen Heed.
reporter. The group is planning
1.0 finish their cabin and will deThe ~nowville 4-11 Club mel at cide on buying a tarpattlin.
the home of advisor s, Mr. and
.I im Birchfield led recreation
Mn. Fred Stanle) , with 12mem- of dumb spclli ng bee aM carry
bers in attendance, according lo beans on a stick. Hick)- Bolin
Ken Wood, assi stant new s r e- served refreshments.
porter. The girls taking Fun
With Food s brought dc\ilcd hamburger s or open heanie~. Girls
in Breads brought a loaf of bread.
Girls in Food lor Snacking a n d
Packi~
brou~t a beverage
called "wi tc h~ brcw''.
The girls 'in sewing worked on
dresses ard towel s. Those taking
!UPON REQUEST!
rabbits, poultr~. !.heep, vegeOur Usu11 Good CINnln1
table gardening and special crup s
had a quc s lionandan s werpcriud .
They also told about their projecL Girls in .J r . ilost and llostPotMroy
(.SS brought a table arrangement .

~~:.:==-P~om:;e;;ro:iiy.:MI:ddl=..,...=~~oi••_ :. . Juno I ( } ;

YOU1L LOVE Ill

White
and

HOLZER HOSPrr AL: Visiting
hours 2-4 and 7.8 p.m. Parents
only on Pediatrics Ward.
ADMISSIONS
Mrs. Stanley B. Huntington,
354 Third Ave.; Mrs. Julia WJi.
llama, 845 Fourth Ave. ~ stacey
E, Burge, Patriot Star Rt.; Michael W, Crothers, Rt. 2 Galllpolla; Mrs. George G. Cremeans, Cheshlrej Mrs. Frank
L. Kalynsld, Rt. I Gallipolis;
Mrs. Everett E, Sims, 21 Willow Dr.; Mrs. Wllllam G, Longstaff, 130 River st.; Miss Mar·
garet L. Lewia, Rt. 1 Pl. Pleas.
Inti Mrs. Eugla L. Johnson, Rt.
I Mlneravllle; Mrs. Andrew Lambert, Rt. I RuUand; Wilbur A.
Dean, Rt. 3 Pomeroy; Carol E.
Daro~ Rt. I RuUand; "Mrs. Ron.
aid L, Carr, Pomeroy; Jamesw.
1lwingle, Jackson; Mrs. James
F, WU son, Jackson; Mrs. Rob·
ert D. Withrow, Rt. 2 Leon, W.
Va.; Miss Bernice L. Carter,
Rt. 3 Qak Hlil; Tina M, Steel,

MEN'S RINGS
A wide selection of fhfn's
Rings, featuring emblems
of Masonic lodges. A fine
gift for dad,

S35.00

DON'T FORGET
DAD ON
.• ,
DAY-JUNE 16th
Even Dads
Like Flowers

c.,

DUDU'Y'S RORIST

~

1ndup

•

BAKER

F•rniture

BANKER BILLFOLD
by PRINCE GARDNER
~

;'

:
~
:
:

WIIM

Otlu!r Suggestions:
-TIE-TACS-CUFF U~ICEY
PROUCTORS-SPEIDS. WATCH IAN)$
-8\I.OVA, CARAVBIE, ACCUTRON
WATCHES-RONSON &amp; ZIPPO LIGHTER$

JEWELRY STORE
Court St.
.
Pomeroy
BIG Bl!lND REGATl'A....:.WNE 21·22-23

De1bert Smith and five sons,
Mrs. Harold Smith and three chll·
dren and Mt. and Mrs. Oris
Smith.
Mr. and Mro. Omer Cramlet
apent Juoo 2 at Rock Creek, W.
Vs. Their grea!.i!ranclchllcl had
ourgery at Charleston Hospital.
He Is the aon of Mr. and Mrs.
James Pierce. They were IC·
companied by Mr. and Mrs. Ke,.
neth Wilt, Bucyrus.
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Sayre of
Roseville and Mrs. Oil Adams of
Z1110svllle visited recently with
reloUvos.
Mr. ond Mrs. Jack Sharp111ck,
Jr., of Columbus were recent
guasti of their parents, Mr.
Mrs. Jack ShlrpDBck, Sr., llld
Mr. and Mrs. C. w. Promtt.
Mr. and Mrs . .,Jomes Ellln&amp;"
ton ot Bllti.Jnore, Md., were S~.~r
· day gue11ts, June 2, of Mr. and
Mrs. Jock Sharpnock.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Roush of
Co!UIIlbuJ are visiting !lOr parents, Mr. and Mrs. Owen Watson
for the summer.
Mr. and Mrs. Tim Trouto!Colwni:Kw were here over the weekend ond visited her grandfather,
OWen Watson, a medical pa~ent
ot Meigs Ganerol Hoopltal. ·
Mr. ond Mrs. Ben Turner of
Lancaster spent a weekend wlth
• her alster, Mrs. Owen Wataoo.
Mlos JIUIO Neigler of COlumbus spent a weekend with her
pareMI, Mr. a_nd Mrs.: Geiqe
(llelgler. Her sister, Shirley Neig•
ler oecconponled her to CoiUIItbuo lor a vi sit.
Mr . . and Mrs:· Titus Pickens
and aloters, Joale lll!d Maud, of
S)'rocuoe spont sUnday a!t8rnoon
with their oioter, Mrs.· · Frankie

A ONE-ROOM
AIR CONDITIONER
IS FINE ••.
IF YOUR WHOLE
FAMILY LIVES
IN ONE ROOM.

.... ~a.

GUAitt

Ill TOUGH·
NUS ......

2.05
EBERSBAlH
tiARDWARE

~.JCONOMY

QIJIQ(lY DRIES
TO A fUll GlOSS

-.
---.m.
,.

II you want lo live in, say. two rooms. you Just buy
another one-room air conditioner For three
rooms. another . . . and so on. It 's really very
s1mple.
It's also very silly! And supporting a flock of
one -room atr conditioners is very cosily, too.
Now let's get serious. For only $14 a month
(maybe less), you can own clean, trouble-free.
economical Gas whole -house air conditioning.
W1th normal installation, a hefty three-ton unit

~­

Qltllm, IDAIJ,

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is yours without even a down payment.
Here·s the best part. II your home is heated
w1th Gas, you probably already own aboGt hall a
Gas air conditioning system: the ductwork the
blower and the filter. All you need is a CC:.Iins
umt and a condensing unit.
For all the refreshing facts. just call the Gas
Company. Gas whole-house air conditioning proVIdes comfort lor every member of your family . ..
1n every room of your house!

~~·

Mra. Bert Heilman
and sister were recent guests o!
Mr Mar
t Houda helt.
s.
gare
s LHIIan
Mr Am Coe and Mrs
Jivlde~ returned home ~Oifi Ak·
ron after visltlng relatives'.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Curtis
and daughter of Columbus spent
the weekend withhlsparent.s, Mr.

LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UPDJose Pimentel, 124, Los An·
geles, stopped Jess Lopez, 119,
Tucson, Ariz., (3). Jorge
Torres, 119, Los Angeles,
stopped Gobby Eapilloza, 116,

Phoenix, Ariz., (2).

The winter games of skat·
Jng1 ski jumping, tobogganing
aoo hockey were added to the
Olympic Garnes in 1924.

Nol&amp;lor.
.
Mr. and Mro. PhUip Roberta
of GllllJJoll• opont SUnday with
hla modleri Mrs. frances Roberts.
Mr. ·and Mro. Fronclo Morris

THINK OF All T~E THINGS YOU CAN 00 WITH THE MONEY

YOU SIIVE. GAS MAKES THE BIG DIFFERENCE.

llere SUnday dinner 1111•st• OC:Mr·

•

,

•

and Mrs. Eitl. lllorrlaonddat¢tor, Jone4-of llaclne~ Rt. I, Joi"'

'•
I

In World Trade Proposed
WASHINGTON (UP0 - The
senate ma,y be asked to ratify
a treaty which attempts to put
a tloor, starting July 1, under
the price or wheat moving in
commercial world trade.

Laurel Cliff
Social Notes
By BERTHA PARKER

Rev. Eugene Musser delivered
the morrling and evening services
at the local church June 2nd In
the absence of Rev. Eugene Gill
who was vacationing with his
Ounlly in cambridge. The GU!s
were calJed back by the death o(
Ray Ewns Jr•
Mr. William Carman remains
a patient at Veter~s Memorial
HospJtal. Mrs. WilHam carman
returned home from Holzer Hospital where she was a patient for
several days.
Mr. aOO Mrs. Norman HyseU
announce the birth of a daughter
at Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Peters
and children of Mason visitedrecently with Mr. and Mrs. Nor·

man Schaefer.
Lawrence A. Smith has been ill.
Laura Gayle Smlth, small
d~ughter ot Mr. and Mrs. Oscar
Smith, fell at home recently and
broke her right arm.
Mrs. Hannon Fox left friday
for llisif€sun to be with her husban::IR wHho ills emplotyhed thekrnde.
oy owe spent e wee e
·tit h. •·-u
h
\ J WI
IS ....111 Y ere.
Olin llife of Columbus visited
saturday with his mother, Mrs.
Cora Renshaw.
.
Mrs. Pearl Jacobs IS ill at
her home here.
Mrs. Murel Harris an:l Bren.da of st. Albans, W. Va., spent
a FrldaJ.• with her motller' Mrs.
Cora Renshaw.
Special singing was presented
at the local church Sunday evening, .4'une 90 by Rev. Gill and
his four daughters and Robert
Pearson and daughter. ·
::· Mr. and Mrs. Richard Hursey,
Wayne, Neb., .and Mrs. Gomer
Bowen of Me Arthur were recent
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Bowen.
Denver Carman of Peach Fork
visited recently with his daughter and soo-in-law, Mr. and Mrs •
Robert Bowen.
Mrs. Pearl Jacobs Is a patient
at Holzer Hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Hottman or
Florida spent a weekend with
Dora Holley.
Mrs. Earl Dill, Mrs. Nancy
Walker and Bertha Parker spent
Friday In Gallipolis.
The Laurel Cliff Health Club
met Thursda,}· evening at Ule
home or Mrs. Ernest Powell with
Mrs. James Gilmore as co-hostess. Ten members atteOOed. The
devot.iorl.! were read by Mrs.
Charles Karr followed by the
Lord's Prayer in unison. Games
were played with prizes awarded to Mabel Tracy, Georgia Diehl,
Judy Eichinger, Iva Powell and
Bertha Parker. The July meet·
ing will be a picnic at the Royal
Oak picnic grounds, July 11 evening;

\
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quality in Color TV c.tbinetry

am

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lng their weekend guests, Mr. and
Mrs. Merle Schroeder an:l three
children of COlwnbus.
Mrs. Bessie Smith and bfOth.:
er, Oscar Sines, of Texas ar·
rived tor a visit at her home here.
Mr. and Mrs, Tom Lindsey and
son, Scott, ot Grove City, spent
the weekerdwlthherparents,Mr.
ao:1 Mn. Mason Spencer.
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Powell
were guests of relatives in Lo-

it.ortloo.

GOESSLER

GAllON

,._ .....

By MRS, FRANCIS MORRIS
Rev. W. B. Davis was the
guest speaker Sunday at the First
Baptist Church. Ac&lt;OII1jliii\Ying
him were his wife and their three
sons, Dayton. He will also ttU
the pulpit next Sunday.
The Baptist Vacation Blble
School commencement was held
Sunday evening at the church.
The prgram theme was God's
Word, Today's Hope. Mrs. Adria 5a,yre was superintendentam
other teachers were Mary K.
Yost, Pltyll1s Bailey, Beulalt

dus J:iendricks, Janice Saber,
Mickey Wolfe, Dottie Wilcoxen,
Brenda Sayre, Nancy Bentz. Mary
K, Yost directed singing; Mickey
Wolle was pianist, Susie Biggs,
secretary, and Oag beArers were
Eddie Diddle and Larry Wilcox- and Mrs. Harry Curtis.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Hendricks
en. The craft w~k was ondio_play
ot
Union Furnace spent a week·
tn the basement.
end
with Rev. and Mrs. Sellers
The Esther Circle met Monall:l
visited Mr. and Mrs. Matt
day evening at the home of Mrs.
HeOOricks.
Ethel Smith. Devotions. "T h e
Guests or Mr. and. Mrs. Fred
Symbol of Lite," were led by
Cldle
and Harold are their ~
Mrs. Gretta Simpson, usirw a
J.p-law
and da.ugflter,. Mr. 1 n d
JJ( .lhe . Ullv ehopt4r of
Ftrst Timotlty lor s&lt;riplure read- Mrs. George Strobush and Sue
Ing and a medltaUon, "Thou Shalt Ann, Jefferson, Wis., alii their
Remember." Marie Roush led daughter, Mrs. Ted Martsch and
the prrqer. After the business Billy, Oneida, Ky.
session, roll call was answered
with a Btble vene and prayer for
Figlrt Results
apecill mis1lonarlea was given
By United Fross International
by Vero Beegle, A program of
COLOGNE, Germany (UPI)rettdlnp by members tonowed Carlos Duran, 162'4 , Italy,
and the Lord's Prayer in unison stopped Jupp Elze, 1611h,
closed the service. Mrs. Smith Germal\Y (15). WU!y c;)la!Dr,
served refre1hments during the 143, Germany, slolli&gt;ed Alssa
aoclal boor.
Haschhas, 140\1, France (4),
The Smith illmll,y annual reiiJio
ion held at Lancaster Sunday was
TOKYO (UPI)- Katsuo SaitD,
lltended !rom this area by Mr. 125, Japon, stopped Francisco
and Mrs. Ernest Smith, Mike Balug, 125\1, Pblllppines(4),
and David smith, Mr. ond Mrs.

Smooth turned edges. Wafer thin, two-piece eon.
struclion. Pockets on both sides of billfold for
credit cards, photos, etc. Two 4-place removable
see-through windows for cards, phofus, etc. Duplicate key slots. $6.00 BiiUolds have Rondo lining
and leather banded currency divider. Black,
8.00
Brown

Robinson's Ceaners

ONLY

BlnTIIS
Mrs. Robert D. Withrow, Rt.
2 Leon. W, Va., daughter, 10:·
38 a.m. Wedneidayj Mrs. James
c. Ricige, Jack11011, daughter, 4:·
II a.m. Tl'(lrsday.
DISCHARGES
Robert E. Armstrong, Howard
N. Bahr1 Mrs. Frances Brown,
Mrs. Robert G, Brumfield, Mrs,
Julle Lee Cremeans, Sammie
Doolittle, Mrs. Jolm E. Evans,
Mrs. Mary L. Fields, Riclcy A.
Friend, Mrs. Walter Hudson,
Mrs. Thomas J. Hughes, Mrs.
Evan L. Hurt, Raymond J. Ingalls, Ra,ymood J. QJalls, William JOO Dink Jackson, Ronald
G, Martin, c&lt;tnnie llle Maynard,
Mrs. Clyde H. McCoy, Jr., Mrs.
Herman N. Parcell, Terry L.
Pierce, Lora Plymale, Mrs. Mil~
ford Reynolds, Mrs. 9Jerman R.
Rogers, Kermit E. Root, Mrs.
Lloyd W, Roush, Homer A. sax.
ton, Donald R.Sitlm, Lewisstevl·
.son, Rodney D. VanFosson, Howard J. Walser, Melanie J, Wiseman, George Hayman.

Racine Soeial Events

Autherson, Shirley Nelgler, Non-

DRY ClEANING
SERVICE

YANOUAID'I

W. Buescher, Wellston; Mrs.
James C. Ridge, Jackeou.

•

2-Hour

POICH
I lid
FLOOI

ley, Rt. 4 Oak Hill; Mrs. Wayne
McCoy, Rt. I Qak Hili; Hewitt

•

HAS EVERY
FEATURE YOU
WOULD WANT
IN AWASHEl

FLOOI-CUAID
EIAIEL

Wellston; VIctor D. Cales, Ravenswood; Mrs. samuel G. con-

\

Meigs 4-H News

F run•-c huve · lmlleutcd they Intend to ratiry, The L, S. &lt;action
is now pending.
Crltles VIew
critics of ' the trade plan
maintain the new priec noors
would spur t~~rplus produ(,tion
around the world, and hurt tJ _s,
farmers by paving the way tor
·price · . t.'UUlng raids by other

Price Floor Under Wheat

••rm,

a•u•

the Farm Front

PHILCO

The treaty, orticially termed
the International Grains Arrangement, also would provide
tor other wealthy nations to
share with the United States the
burden or providing food ald for
hungry countries.
Administration backers of the
measure have predicted it
would pass by well over the required two-thirds margin . But
spokesmen for the American
Farm Ilureau Federation, one
of the treaty's leading critics,
held slim hopes the pact would
be rejected.

The controversial section ot
the trade plan, a 11 wheat trade

convention," would set

mini~

mum world prices 20 cent} per
bushel above minimums in an
older agreement which expired
last year, and close to actual
trading prices of recent years.
Ceiling prices would be 40 cent&amp;
above the floor for each type.
For average quality U.S. hard
winter wheat at Gulf Porta, Ule
new mlnimum would be $1.73 a
bushel. Thts is equjvalent to
$1.35 to $1.40 a bushel at rarma
in the Central Great Plains, or
10 to 15 cents above the government price support loan rate.
Below Floors
If actual u.s. market prices
are below the new noors -

as

Administration orrtciala conthey l'Urrently are ror some rnatend these tears are groundless,
jor t,ypes such as hard and soft
and insist that returns to Amerwinter wheats exported at the ican rarmcrs "will be higher
Cult - the government would than in the past, and certainly
boost export prices to the world hlgher than without the arfloor loy levying a ree on exrangement."
porters.
The second and less controIf fee collections exceed gov.
versial phase of the IGA, a
ernment payments for what ex· food aid convention," would set
port subsidies, the excess would up a 4.5-million - ton annual
be paid out to American wheat
food aid program with contribugrowers.
tions t r o m both exporting
What happens ll some coun- and Importing countries. The
tries sell below the JGA miniimporters in general would conmum? The treaty would set up
tribute cash to buy grain tor
an International Cmsulting needy countries.
Committee which could drop
So rar, officials estimate counprice noors ror all exporters.
tries involved in the plan have
And iC the committee tailed to
pledged 4.2 mUlion tona or grain
agree, all countries would be
or Its equivalent to the profree to act on their own to
gram. The United ~tes has ofkeep their prices competitive.
U.S. officials said, however,
that Canada and Australia, two
ot the world's Big Five wheat
Up
exporters, currently are selllng
wheat at or very close to the
With
new noors, France, like the
United states, has made some
sales recently below the noon,
but experts indicated they expect all major exporters to respect the new fioors.

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

I'UII U&amp;alll- 0&amp;

4.39au.
• fiOIIUUI COLOII AND
• UIIA COYIIAII, -

wlln
-.rt

VALLEY LUMBER &amp; SUPPLY
992-2709

992·5560

S. 3RD AVE.

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

~::::::::::::::::::::::::~

.

UGGESTIONS

TIMEX
ATCHE

BRUT
FOR

MEN
Fine Selection of Pipes &amp; Cigars
Delux Brands Smoking Tobacco

For Y11catlon

BRITISH

II ~1rfERLINO
mLIIIM

lllllfliiiS . . . .

lEATHER TOILET KITS
SHOE SHIN£ OUTFITS

--. ......
I -----I
I
••• tor Fath•r._ Day glttlngl
I

TAPE
RECORDERS ,

TRANSISTOR
RADIOS

Carllsto Contem,.Oiar~
Genuine wn..'\:n llni'lhl.-d lo n"•h.'h W;~ln111 rumitun:. • ft1l1•r Tunin11
l:yc: • New Phiku M••1i&lt; "••h'l'' Pit.:111fl: Tu~ .• Suli•l St:ak! Silrt.ll Syst~.n
• V..OOO Votl ( 'ulut Pilut ( 'tkll ( 'h-.~~s • lllu•ninah.•d VHf lJHt-' ( 'h;~n­
ncllndM:t~IOI!' • t.. !nt.:h Oval Srtcak'\:r • Ttlftl t."'l"'lrc,.
OoitF.N!!ION!: H'.297 ~", W.ll' . . ", 0.1¥": 4" """

6511 WA

FAmER'S DAY CARDS BY HAUMARK

39c New Cushion Grip

79c
IIOe&amp;.,Merthol and HOlY)'

66~

•

SHOE SHINE IllS
PAPERMATE PENS
PEN &amp; PENCIL SETS

1.19MENNEN

Q. TIPS

FOREMAN &amp;ABBOTT

,...',•

~

·SPEED STICK
DEODORANT

lnatlllt Lllhlr

79e

s2e

'
,.

·'

HOUSE PAINT

•I

91$

\

.....,

PRESIDENT

59 N. 2nd A...

of the Big Five, Argentina and

• IllS

'

filter 1111

Dudley's Florist

ortlclaJs added that Canada
and Australia already have ratified the IGA. Among the relrt

~~,·UZOR

I.,.,...,._..;.__,_.;...~..;._---::'_~_'

flllllt

Cheer Them
Rosel
A Lovely, Fragrant
Bouquet Will
Ease The Pain.

•GILLEnE

IIDDlEPOIT, 0.

to lltlp Jill

r········-······----------~-----·

c!}t{asteteraft
Gollectioll

e

count ricH.

II

RISE

.... 1.19

.,

�,..

:.:·"t

'

I

-~,

MASON W.VA. • GALLIPOLIS , OHI~- POINT PLEASANT, W.VA.
..
THE ONLY TRUE DISCOUNT STORE~ SEE FOR YOURSELFI WE DON1 KID YOUU
FREE PARIINGII OPEN NIGHTS I 'AIR CONDITIONEDII
Polishes Aslt Shines!

A DISCOUNT

NYLON FLUFF TIP BROOM

DEPARTMENT STOltE

Light Weight!

SELF-SERVEII OPEN 9:30A.M.
White.Glass

Large Plastic

FLOWER
VASES

BABY
POOL

BATTER
BOWLS

In 8 blue eolor. A high imw
pa ct plastic poul to use in
the yard, on the patio or
on the porch Cor bab)'s

Large s i z ~ 7 to 9 inch
fluted top nower \'3SCS that
)OU willlo\·e to mm.

Anchor White

comforL

These are large .s ize. Made
with the easy to grasp hanle and wide pouring lip.

A utilitJ.· houscwarc dish.

Rapid Drying

For PainJers

SPRAY
PAINT

ROLLER
COVERS

Do your painting the easy

way. This is spray enamel
in mal\)', many colors including whi~s, black, clear
:and copper and brass.

Sturdy Handle!

•

When your 7 inch paint roller wears out just replace
it with one of these Changes in a jiffy. This is

a twin pack - two roUerlS

'

3 Plec"
Extension Cord

A very hand.Y package to
have around the house. Contains lwo 6 fl. and one 9 fL
extensions. All arc UL ap-.
proved sockets.

t• ·.

-•'

'

1./'

1

•::

~-

i, ')· •· --.,

,&lt;t~!Jini

•I(:IJ.J!)t,

ck 'l'hWI.''

:~;:,;~~~,\~,. ~:/~:

. .~.: rlett Layne, Unda

no,ueh,

lilY

long lasting handle. Hllll&gt;

at "'-

L::r-~~:et:~:~w:~ Eaolom~nwcb.~nlver-

i,1 ·

~f~:~::;~~£;£.~!

Circle,_Mra. faW Fortney, Mrs.
Paul Rickard, a.Od 'Mi-a. Eddie
.
Bumr
thegar:thr.
CMI rs1. Otlleh Roush
o
'"'t'
rc e was ostess •

·

CoR~.
*-at · Don.ohew ..,.,.
Q;.-a.;;
."n ·
'"'"e
·
_, •
. r~rwilnced in In Award AF~Unit Rotgl'y ....nns .ore
'f ~V'
D~l..u
J

ALITY

~

w~

WE'LL

BOXER
SHORTS
.

Household
BROOM

KNIT
BRIEFS

•

'These are full cut of fine
combed cotton. double pan-

el l:ront. All around knir in
la stex boi'K.I. 1-(egular s iz es.

'

For pl&amp;J e\;er.rda.l' - for
the small fry - eit her bo}·
or girl. Solid poplins and
twills. Size s 3 to 7.

WESTERN
Dungarees

Yes, ''
we mcon it - An

I S&lt;.nfor;" "· or cou rse - to

&lt;.·orn broom~! Thi s broom
ha s a niq: balance for &lt;:omfortl!blc sweeping. 1/appy

assure

permanent

JOU

HOUSEHOLD GLASSWARE

Boys

13% oz.

tacked and reinfor ced
all poi nts of strain. Si zcs

w l G.

SWIM
TRUNKS

LATEX '

up

pr.

\

At

-..

easy to apPJ
"
cover up job .You n:edand certain to do the
and man.ll Pastel colors~ Your choi ce of whlte

$ 98

'-.__.--

Dries In 1 Houri

l
,

Gel.

i

rheyre 'Cannon' Famous Brand

Seamless Nylon Hose
WomensMesh

Seamless
NYLON
HOSIERY

'h Gallon

Girls

18 Quaff

COOLER
CHESTS

PICNIC
JUG
K"eos Hot or Cold

Womens

RAYON
PANTIES

Molded Handle

JAMAICA
SHORTS

Sizes 4 to 14

Sizes 10 to 18

37cpr. 77 c. . 77 c. .

YOU'RE MONEY WILL BE REFUNDED IF YOUR ARE NOT COMPLETELY SATISTJFED!!

CANVAS
SNEAKERS
-In blach or while low

cut tan· :-. t) les.

\izt·~

SHOT GUN
SHELLS
in -1 • 5 - fi - 71 . shoe
gaugG

and -~~~ gauge

STRAW
HANDBAGS
llo ~~:·;· $~. 9X and $3. ~K

va

1

PERMANENT
lle~tdar

:5:.!.00

bci~-;e s ,

or'D'

7c...

)

ALIA· SELTZER

39.~.

in '

etc.

94
box

\alu~

CANVAS
OXFORDS

in tl1c sc ~ood looking

While,

fur men and bu) "·

HOME

44

ea.
Open 9:30AM
to
9:00 PM Monday
Thru Saturday!

All Sales Are
For Cash Only!
We Have No
Credit losses
To
ToYou

ea.

87

BOYS PANTS
IOoz. Denim

MENS

DUNGAREES

'• ..,~

"

.... ·--'"'

iniA!nden~ Mrs, Htjthtr,Yik, ie,.
rotary -tre•silr.r and Jea•S&lt;Jm. , rates
rates.
tfvute, music leafll!r. Ml'a. Bet- Berliq,
ty nom,ns will i!o In chlrgo Q( mark
rerreshrpents and devqtions will high
be led by M". Docnthy Phlwo. some
All children from age toUr rates

lhrpugh .Jwdor

IIi~

are invited

the

with a GIFT from ... .NELSON'S
OLD SPICE
AFTER

2for99~

·

~todSherthel!l'~f~lilenth Inve•:- . , rws.~ " · c ..,.
currecl wheu&amp;at ~~~nbyJohD

-.,:1 !tJl#!lllt! :, ~bert Fljltii\ ~1/fe. !~"~ .
II., N.i 1

.TJitre wei'OIIO'~,O .," ii!JID'Iea '

•.alnatru~tor~ !l'r;iit"\f, , - ~ - P~lJ!.t~ · s ~ad.. '
be\llr;hol&lt;!·lli, mated at toW,lolhe twll. liiCiea.
wltlllhtiladiocoi.IJ-'
'
.
.

. The clisses are

~.sclence

frotrl Ol1lo ,

'

abe Wll.

- ~­
Davis

n..

$1.45VeiU.

SOLARCAINE .
1..---.
2.25
SPRAY
8 OUNCE
VALUE

Outfit
S.10

1.29
DISCOUNTD· '

3.00 VALUE

...........

$2.39

'

Velue

HAl-lARA
AFTER
SHAVE

7• TRANSISTER
RADIO

$1.50Velue

'

AMITY
BILLFOLDS
$5.00

3.
99 ~··~
NOW 1.16 v~$COUNTED
$3

·~·15Chch

'

.

Mioa Allii'.Hartey, daulll&gt;lor of
. •1\frs, , Jolm llarley of
' alid IP'anddafl8hlor ol
of Ml'\d'eport,

SOME11ING
For GAlS

1.99

Color

$34.50

:~~:' !l~::~;:!'·
~chelor's1 Degree
, ;).
,·

99~

4-oL
$1.00Velue

,

-10.,

NOW

GILLETTE TECH
2.95
ALOE

MUM

rbllow"'

t~r&amp;OIJ.

SHAVE
50 VALUE

. SPECIAL
'
REG.
1.09 El.

10.00

•

Spi(
SETS.,
.50

encl
up

'

3

'

-EAST
--~
SETS
'

4.25

from

AND

6.95

$5.50

up

'TL

A Complete Style Selection!

~~_!!~S $HOES
$

Sizes6to it

pr.

f. BA'LLS
.

CUT PROOF

87

3.00 VALUE

pr.

READY MIXED

G.~!!~ PAINT
$ 98

WilY PB.Y more? Out I
ertcrlor gjoss and 8 de Whfte, lnttrior anct
too. PaJnt up now w~~ch lnd deck colora,
oor •~Is lo here.

'

Ji .·

•

s tyles, Sliorts that m~n~ fabrk.~. &lt;·olon; and
mer dan
\
are fight for the I
· ' value J'Ou 'JJ
JOt sum.
10
lO JG.
appreciate s 1·
· • zes

I .

:·'

. ;"with Mila POIIIIY Prol!lt~

~~."lops o~CA SHORT$ SETS
.1
8
-

An Oil Bated Palntf

'

inc freeman~wm ~er~a"·~~r­

'

.

· '! '1!d• Clau01-~1 ~n,at~o- col'"'eel ~ l""!' 11,1 iirilck In
Valley Hospital 011.,~&amp;11 · lbe .._., 1'1. ,tlitl · ·~
· , ;vehicle.

WOMfNS _2 PlfCf SUS

" famoiJs maker's b
the ~·aluc, MO&lt;' toe rand. You'll recognize
.
s, plaln
.
man~ St}·les. You'lf like
toes, Wing tJp,
will hold a shine.
them. Leathers that

. ·
•PT, PLEA$ANT

, .1.tant

..

.

Permanent Pres$ Typet

To .Trame

j

Womens

•

+oo Vaca..

~KEUP,DAD

!'&gt;e
·.

n.ted

;,. .

.

9[rls l~ts.To~-$1 .87

Mens-Boys

Mason: Couni.v

·~

c

Micro-Mesh-Reguler
Seamless Stretch; Too

·

~Plan Classes
. As NutSfi
1\lde
;r ,
',
."

For !he legs that get looHed
.
and French be '
at !! Jn cinnamon
Jge colors
the rinest ho se .\otJ can b. . ~rante~ to be
U}, Sizes Sl,~ to U

YOU BE THE .TVDG£1!

·

~:M.- Atfn~anYtrot Hbiw~edot Dinner

cLovJS.
&gt;1
ctasa .iOiib }'; DOr,wh~,,~ or
NE\i' nAv~ .,.. RoW7 c11m
.
. ,
"'.! W. and Mrc. Rof ,Qontiilf•, who me~ra honored Rotary-&lt;!Ms
l ~ , ,'
"'"de on ~~~ tetart Road, R· ' 01 jheqo re&lt;O!II dlmer meeting
&lt;·.' Nl!:)l' !IA~EN ·- .Tilt New.Ha. D 2, Ri C!no, ~.' Is i mem- at theMartford Methodist Church.
'\•~ JuniO'J;oman'o ~!i oPon- ' ~r:ottlleCalmon AFBJI,M, 11111J)olaflo,Ann and guest re.fiOrlng a
y eontest IDr I'Oii· p(J squadron thetha!~ select· eetved a torsap. ,Karl Wile&amp;.
\ iiO!Ito oi]Ma•••tCou!111·
. 0!1 as bell ollto kbtd In the U,S. president, presided at a short
,_ ·r Pi~a, ~ lauer thanh:JO, -~ A1r Foree.
bulirle&amp;S meeting, when he urg. .00 ao •lilr1 lee Of $1 mull be
Alrwan Donohew, a mall!rlal ed members to •Ut&gt;I&gt;Ort the bill
lil no later than June 25.
apeclallsl, and squadron person- ti&gt; preurve the red wood forest
/ • There wlll bethreeeatagorlea, ne1 have been named to receive. In caltromla. tiae to illness or
throe months to one year, the Dai!dallan !lipply ,mect~.vo. th·e speaker, there was nc pro.
roar,
I ' ·IIIII,..~,., ~IJX:Iqr the, ~11\.,el!'·.' 11'~· :
.
Y"'\'1 .
W ceilibase~~,'llf'll."\'l~d! At1Aiildlna were Mr, • 'loin.
, ·'·. es aitd .
• ~lhtwln- dUrlna Y,earaonievl!Gatf..,,·The ,, KaJ:l ,Wile~; Mra. Jerry Wiles,
~· Judi;• will be Bever(J airman, agra~atnfRadnellllll&gt; · · M?. WI ' Mrs, ·Arthur Thabet,
· lr~ln and J!ud Dilley o1 Sehool,.· ~110 a~· Clev~.fnd Mr. ~ Mrs. Lewlo !llmmera,
. e,W~Z-Ty,Hun1lnaton.
· l!iil\llule"of Art~ · .
'. · '' Mr. antl~to. Lewla Capehart,
,c. )n . ·Maaon, plttur~a may be
,
·
.· , ·•
· •W.\.AAd, a, !larry MOler, Mr.
'luriied In 11 tl\t, Maion I!OWI!nJ
·
. ,. ·
· .': '.nd ~r" Rlcliaftl Ord, Mr. and
J.onea, ~Ill New Haven at 91m'
,
:, , ;; , ,
M'1· JackTiesher, Clyde Foley,
~~ Pharmai:y. Plo:,Wr&lt;oa wW·, 1\Ll' ~
Mr1 1114. Mrl, Home Wllltam•
.be 011 dlspta,y at the!f ptaees.. ~.._.o ~,·~!"~~
fG,ii: Mr. ll!d!/oll'•AtermQn LJ1ne,
. · rgCOOIJI other torml wlll . be :
'
·
Mr:.ing·Mr!:'.111JnaldF;Rliulh,
,llill"!"'cet! )':ler, , CIIUIIas Jan.. ·
~rt ,
, Mr. :~.,A,tro&lt;.'Lioyd Roush, Mr.
J~ti Henq,_,!&gt;IO..,. 77~-5366, or
. :. ' ... • and 1,1!!f: Jameo .N. Rauah and
;JU'· A, 'L, &amp;&gt;~so, NOw Haven !'T. ' PLEA~!f,;.j"u ,l.(orman :f"• 1 11!\1 Mrs. Huisoll Cl!l"hart.
~882-250l5, .,to_.enter a baby.
Yci'bJa ;Blal(, , iiai'Jf~i(~o. :was , . 'f«i:~
, 1
"'
. ,
' -..
cited "" llltl!l'e'·.:&gt;~-..vehtcle . ••~•ss' Harley '~",ns
· '
...Wr ~trol
a twb ,. ''VI'
, , vn .

!;• •

, WAll
PAINr
Compare $3.98
Ver,·

$ 98

~

crystal and decorated glass.

A big .seleclionof st.' les and
colors apd for the bo) of
an~
age. Al so small fry
sileS 2 to~ at $ l. ?7 each.

·

Ea•t•·

Tumblers, cooler glasses, bud vases, ash trays, punch cups,
juice cups, coffee mugs, custard dishes, etc. A rlot of value in

.T

M', ' I'LE,\'iANT ...::

.

)

lll!il'

Boys

set , ·· '

.
*''"·

new,_,.

All Corn

"; ·~~t~·ffl £oinj '
.,_ . ·w · ·ror .a•...,ti
. ntt.,,
&gt;::,..,.
1~
J;t'J""",..~ -

,, _, Ottie . ~h;. cih&amp;lr~Jn. Mrs.
· P,ut Rickard ,and Mrs. ClaytDn
;· Athey ~. ' '
·\

colOrs.

w...

Childrens

'

lilatiilg commltltj&gt; to.select ol·
ficera tor ·the new year: Mn.

jmpact plasdc. Not ttlmsy,
In your choice of decorator

$

Mens

JII1'J-

.

.

lng. "
r'lorts e r e
given. Membere ~ on a nom1-

A large sbe dustpanwitha

.'

HI

Uihlc Sd·~·ol

JJates are

Cunnl~!lham, .M"fl"!' W.OOII,

,_

lion Bible Scl)ool or St. Peters
dai.lghte11 oC' MJi~r ~ Mr&amp;: faul _. rum, Davi~ J~usscfl, Uru~ ~f Luthoran thurch will bo held
F'. Jlou&amp;h, waa hllnortCI \'jllh a ama, ,J33 Uidb'W)IY, ~lldl p J., • . rrom June ·17 through .June 21.
~lnt.aw(y perty orf!il~ven- (era, Mike Jonos, Jane ll83""'·
·
- ~'~
·
k
Mrs llenry· n DUck, Jri ·~ _~1a~:~l:ies arc planned ror the
log at _fl. Paul Wtheran Chunh. er · , •
•·
_ . ··• rmtowing age groops: . Ghildron·
Clncll ~nd he.l'lamUy wllluemov- Mra. c. M. Adams, Jr., teaeh: .
. ·r
.'
M . . ol'
t.to..
,
') •
•~
·
;., th
.... 111 -n ......
a~ our, nursery, , rs. c.r
1 . ilnd •~n.~.,15 in the "'lr future to Roanoke era w. e can
'". ar''.ol1•
lc h
kinde
'
• aid Bummr.rdncr 1one ot the aPonvcr, ·ac cr;
•rgartcn,
Va., Where-he,
r Cather ha~ b"M
_
1:1"'
•
-~
Ml~;s Jackie ltomans teacher·
• ' eel
("
..,_.c; ' - oors ollhe leaJjUe
•
•
t ranuerr
• he I, ~....,II;N "V _ •
priml!rY· M_rs. Jk!lty Kn!gfltjchll•
the Appalachian Electric .(ll&gt;mDEGREE RECEIVED
drcn eight 'tfKf nine years, Mr..
~·: ·,
Alita t:ar~nter Crow receiv- Dorothy Scholz, tcach~ri · age 111
· MembersoftheLutb'r~· eel her BSDcgree ln education · and..11, Mrs. Ama Mac Ntbirt,
and the Juni~rll~&amp;mdiY School at Ohio University during the teacher; ages 12, 13 and ' 14,
Clasa prese.nted Clndi with 1 rf;cent cOmmencement. Attend- Frank Scholz teacher and Bruce
charm br•c~et wi~ il Joe.mem- 1ng w8re her parents, Mr. and Nibert • ass is:C.nt.
•
.
berance · ch_arm. Refreshrl)entl Mrs. w. R. Carpeqter, and Mrs,
t:la;ses wlll be held from 7 to
,...., servic! (1'1)111 a ll!a table W, o. Barnltz, her grandmotller.
Paul·

Rev,
Achaah Miller gave
/
:
'
·.
.'
_.. I r$ort;OI\·'the r8c'entc:onVentton
-..1M's
,\ ··· .•, the ...
Mr. O•l"
r ''., "-·'d
~r, '
1D,·-ce
""'
..\ ..· .,•:
·• S.W·,S; beld
- ...
·
·· ·
EV;-,\Jo--Bteth ACres recentb'.
· THE MARJuAGE, of DaVIt. W; Pierce 01 Mlrr!Dnl lo
• · Tbe pr'*'am, ••The Hole ol
1
Mlos J)e~ri,'~ BieYirla, daughter of ~~· ~ Mr.. .~ew '
the:Church- Part 2 Jlll&amp;n,"was
l!leYins 01 SclOtovllle, Ia bel"!! lnnoufl&lt;d.'\&amp; lila parenU,
. prise~ by Mrs. n...arll Bur.'Mr. and Mrl. .CarOl R. JIIOtce, Sr. of ~Yillt; · . ' . ,
. rta: She icOIICluded· the p)'ogtam
Vowa of the double rl"!l ceremon,y were read at 1:30·1• · • with racta about Jap&amp;~~and a dlo. · the evenlog on May 2t at the.Portamouth J!ll!tlat €burch. Tbe
cusslon. Tl!e groop sang "0 Zion
, , Re.v. Curtlo Wri&amp;ht om,eiatoil.atthe weclCIIrw, ·~ ~, · ·
Haste" and Mrs. Paul Fortney
;i'
A· 1~67, ertllloate' of Mlnfol'th H!Ijt School, tho:
rood "RowtheOtherHaliLives."
.!" Plef.ee Ia eq&gt;l~ as a derial .an!itant In the olllce of Ill',
Attending fr001 Ruth Clrde
: M. R. PlerrordfPortamoutlt. hlr; \ Pterce( a 1982 llfiC(uate
were Mrs. Howard Burris, Mrs.
:. of the IMiaud
School and a 1966 graduate of~ ColClayton Athey, Rev. Mrs. Achsah
1~ l,g~. •• emPiofed Is'· ~ad r~billl coach alii 1DdUstrW ~~
MOler, Mrs. GeorgaJeweU, Mrs.
·: totcher jn the.· Mlnfl&gt;rd Local School District. He' Ia dOirw
otha !Jeving, Mn. Bernard Llev·

.• ou

-1

' Mombcro und hii!&gt;sls
Jl .a\iend,
. ,

Oqin9"A~l;ly ~~ty·

_.,:.:" .,

'

_y

c:antc'n,d wiJf. ': a dtkh

't'

..", NE.\1' IIAVEW- "C]ilill Hooeb,

DUST
PANS

It's costing so litUe to stay
dean these days. Famous
Pabnol.ive bar soap either
banded in 4 packs or single.
Savtl here!

for this price.

in

large Plastic

Palmolive

TOILET
SOAP

SETS

i

~J.~•j;jl.,(l",;,,:C•~;,, '~t:

94.

SPONGE MOP'

3&gt;

.J!

· ·, ··-~~-:J; ···,
r_~~-.c,
·iY,1r~E;!Ht ~· fJi~i ~~~h Given; '
. ~·.
· ·!If · ' Iii·~. . . . ·, r ' '
_,·}·,
1

'

"

·

111.

-

'·

''

3~

1.5

•'

�,..

:.:·"t

'

I

-~,

MASON W.VA. • GALLIPOLIS , OHI~- POINT PLEASANT, W.VA.
..
THE ONLY TRUE DISCOUNT STORE~ SEE FOR YOURSELFI WE DON1 KID YOUU
FREE PARIINGII OPEN NIGHTS I 'AIR CONDITIONEDII
Polishes Aslt Shines!

A DISCOUNT

NYLON FLUFF TIP BROOM

DEPARTMENT STOltE

Light Weight!

SELF-SERVEII OPEN 9:30A.M.
White.Glass

Large Plastic

FLOWER
VASES

BABY
POOL

BATTER
BOWLS

In 8 blue eolor. A high imw
pa ct plastic poul to use in
the yard, on the patio or
on the porch Cor bab)'s

Large s i z ~ 7 to 9 inch
fluted top nower \'3SCS that
)OU willlo\·e to mm.

Anchor White

comforL

These are large .s ize. Made
with the easy to grasp hanle and wide pouring lip.

A utilitJ.· houscwarc dish.

Rapid Drying

For PainJers

SPRAY
PAINT

ROLLER
COVERS

Do your painting the easy

way. This is spray enamel
in mal\)', many colors including whi~s, black, clear
:and copper and brass.

Sturdy Handle!

•

When your 7 inch paint roller wears out just replace
it with one of these Changes in a jiffy. This is

a twin pack - two roUerlS

'

3 Plec"
Extension Cord

A very hand.Y package to
have around the house. Contains lwo 6 fl. and one 9 fL
extensions. All arc UL ap-.
proved sockets.

t• ·.

-•'

'

1./'

1

•::

~-

i, ')· •· --.,

,&lt;t~!Jini

•I(:IJ.J!)t,

ck 'l'hWI.''

:~;:,;~~~,\~,. ~:/~:

. .~.: rlett Layne, Unda

no,ueh,

lilY

long lasting handle. Hllll&gt;

at "'-

L::r-~~:et:~:~w:~ Eaolom~nwcb.~nlver-

i,1 ·

~f~:~::;~~£;£.~!

Circle,_Mra. faW Fortney, Mrs.
Paul Rickard, a.Od 'Mi-a. Eddie
.
Bumr
thegar:thr.
CMI rs1. Otlleh Roush
o
'"'t'
rc e was ostess •

·

CoR~.
*-at · Don.ohew ..,.,.
Q;.-a.;;
."n ·
'"'"e
·
_, •
. r~rwilnced in In Award AF~Unit Rotgl'y ....nns .ore
'f ~V'
D~l..u
J

ALITY

~

w~

WE'LL

BOXER
SHORTS
.

Household
BROOM

KNIT
BRIEFS

•

'These are full cut of fine
combed cotton. double pan-

el l:ront. All around knir in
la stex boi'K.I. 1-(egular s iz es.

'

For pl&amp;J e\;er.rda.l' - for
the small fry - eit her bo}·
or girl. Solid poplins and
twills. Size s 3 to 7.

WESTERN
Dungarees

Yes, ''
we mcon it - An

I S&lt;.nfor;" "· or cou rse - to

&lt;.·orn broom~! Thi s broom
ha s a niq: balance for &lt;:omfortl!blc sweeping. 1/appy

assure

permanent

JOU

HOUSEHOLD GLASSWARE

Boys

13% oz.

tacked and reinfor ced
all poi nts of strain. Si zcs

w l G.

SWIM
TRUNKS

LATEX '

up

pr.

\

At

-..

easy to apPJ
"
cover up job .You n:edand certain to do the
and man.ll Pastel colors~ Your choi ce of whlte

$ 98

'-.__.--

Dries In 1 Houri

l
,

Gel.

i

rheyre 'Cannon' Famous Brand

Seamless Nylon Hose
WomensMesh

Seamless
NYLON
HOSIERY

'h Gallon

Girls

18 Quaff

COOLER
CHESTS

PICNIC
JUG
K"eos Hot or Cold

Womens

RAYON
PANTIES

Molded Handle

JAMAICA
SHORTS

Sizes 4 to 14

Sizes 10 to 18

37cpr. 77 c. . 77 c. .

YOU'RE MONEY WILL BE REFUNDED IF YOUR ARE NOT COMPLETELY SATISTJFED!!

CANVAS
SNEAKERS
-In blach or while low

cut tan· :-. t) les.

\izt·~

SHOT GUN
SHELLS
in -1 • 5 - fi - 71 . shoe
gaugG

and -~~~ gauge

STRAW
HANDBAGS
llo ~~:·;· $~. 9X and $3. ~K

va

1

PERMANENT
lle~tdar

:5:.!.00

bci~-;e s ,

or'D'

7c...

)

ALIA· SELTZER

39.~.

in '

etc.

94
box

\alu~

CANVAS
OXFORDS

in tl1c sc ~ood looking

While,

fur men and bu) "·

HOME

44

ea.
Open 9:30AM
to
9:00 PM Monday
Thru Saturday!

All Sales Are
For Cash Only!
We Have No
Credit losses
To
ToYou

ea.

87

BOYS PANTS
IOoz. Denim

MENS

DUNGAREES

'• ..,~

"

.... ·--'"'

iniA!nden~ Mrs, Htjthtr,Yik, ie,.
rotary -tre•silr.r and Jea•S&lt;Jm. , rates
rates.
tfvute, music leafll!r. Ml'a. Bet- Berliq,
ty nom,ns will i!o In chlrgo Q( mark
rerreshrpents and devqtions will high
be led by M". Docnthy Phlwo. some
All children from age toUr rates

lhrpugh .Jwdor

IIi~

are invited

the

with a GIFT from ... .NELSON'S
OLD SPICE
AFTER

2for99~

·

~todSherthel!l'~f~lilenth Inve•:- . , rws.~ " · c ..,.
currecl wheu&amp;at ~~~nbyJohD

-.,:1 !tJl#!lllt! :, ~bert Fljltii\ ~1/fe. !~"~ .
II., N.i 1

.TJitre wei'OIIO'~,O .," ii!JID'Iea '

•.alnatru~tor~ !l'r;iit"\f, , - ~ - P~lJ!.t~ · s ~ad.. '
be\llr;hol&lt;!·lli, mated at toW,lolhe twll. liiCiea.
wltlllhtiladiocoi.IJ-'
'
.
.

. The clisses are

~.sclence

frotrl Ol1lo ,

'

abe Wll.

- ~­
Davis

n..

$1.45VeiU.

SOLARCAINE .
1..---.
2.25
SPRAY
8 OUNCE
VALUE

Outfit
S.10

1.29
DISCOUNTD· '

3.00 VALUE

...........

$2.39

'

Velue

HAl-lARA
AFTER
SHAVE

7• TRANSISTER
RADIO

$1.50Velue

'

AMITY
BILLFOLDS
$5.00

3.
99 ~··~
NOW 1.16 v~$COUNTED
$3

·~·15Chch

'

.

Mioa Allii'.Hartey, daulll&gt;lor of
. •1\frs, , Jolm llarley of
' alid IP'anddafl8hlor ol
of Ml'\d'eport,

SOME11ING
For GAlS

1.99

Color

$34.50

:~~:' !l~::~;:!'·
~chelor's1 Degree
, ;).
,·

99~

4-oL
$1.00Velue

,

-10.,

NOW

GILLETTE TECH
2.95
ALOE

MUM

rbllow"'

t~r&amp;OIJ.

SHAVE
50 VALUE

. SPECIAL
'
REG.
1.09 El.

10.00

•

Spi(
SETS.,
.50

encl
up

'

3

'

-EAST
--~
SETS
'

4.25

from

AND

6.95

$5.50

up

'TL

A Complete Style Selection!

~~_!!~S $HOES
$

Sizes6to it

pr.

f. BA'LLS
.

CUT PROOF

87

3.00 VALUE

pr.

READY MIXED

G.~!!~ PAINT
$ 98

WilY PB.Y more? Out I
ertcrlor gjoss and 8 de Whfte, lnttrior anct
too. PaJnt up now w~~ch lnd deck colora,
oor •~Is lo here.

'

Ji .·

•

s tyles, Sliorts that m~n~ fabrk.~. &lt;·olon; and
mer dan
\
are fight for the I
· ' value J'Ou 'JJ
JOt sum.
10
lO JG.
appreciate s 1·
· • zes

I .

:·'

. ;"with Mila POIIIIY Prol!lt~

~~."lops o~CA SHORT$ SETS
.1
8
-

An Oil Bated Palntf

'

inc freeman~wm ~er~a"·~~r­

'

.

· '! '1!d• Clau01-~1 ~n,at~o- col'"'eel ~ l""!' 11,1 iirilck In
Valley Hospital 011.,~&amp;11 · lbe .._., 1'1. ,tlitl · ·~
· , ;vehicle.

WOMfNS _2 PlfCf SUS

" famoiJs maker's b
the ~·aluc, MO&lt;' toe rand. You'll recognize
.
s, plaln
.
man~ St}·les. You'lf like
toes, Wing tJp,
will hold a shine.
them. Leathers that

. ·
•PT, PLEA$ANT

, .1.tant

..

.

Permanent Pres$ Typet

To .Trame

j

Womens

•

+oo Vaca..

~KEUP,DAD

!'&gt;e
·.

n.ted

;,. .

.

9[rls l~ts.To~-$1 .87

Mens-Boys

Mason: Couni.v

·~

c

Micro-Mesh-Reguler
Seamless Stretch; Too

·

~Plan Classes
. As NutSfi
1\lde
;r ,
',
."

For !he legs that get looHed
.
and French be '
at !! Jn cinnamon
Jge colors
the rinest ho se .\otJ can b. . ~rante~ to be
U}, Sizes Sl,~ to U

YOU BE THE .TVDG£1!

·

~:M.- Atfn~anYtrot Hbiw~edot Dinner

cLovJS.
&gt;1
ctasa .iOiib }'; DOr,wh~,,~ or
NE\i' nAv~ .,.. RoW7 c11m
.
. ,
"'.! W. and Mrc. Rof ,Qontiilf•, who me~ra honored Rotary-&lt;!Ms
l ~ , ,'
"'"de on ~~~ tetart Road, R· ' 01 jheqo re&lt;O!II dlmer meeting
&lt;·.' Nl!:)l' !IA~EN ·- .Tilt New.Ha. D 2, Ri C!no, ~.' Is i mem- at theMartford Methodist Church.
'\•~ JuniO'J;oman'o ~!i oPon- ' ~r:ottlleCalmon AFBJI,M, 11111J)olaflo,Ann and guest re.fiOrlng a
y eontest IDr I'Oii· p(J squadron thetha!~ select· eetved a torsap. ,Karl Wile&amp;.
\ iiO!Ito oi]Ma•••tCou!111·
. 0!1 as bell ollto kbtd In the U,S. president, presided at a short
,_ ·r Pi~a, ~ lauer thanh:JO, -~ A1r Foree.
bulirle&amp;S meeting, when he urg. .00 ao •lilr1 lee Of $1 mull be
Alrwan Donohew, a mall!rlal ed members to •Ut&gt;I&gt;Ort the bill
lil no later than June 25.
apeclallsl, and squadron person- ti&gt; preurve the red wood forest
/ • There wlll bethreeeatagorlea, ne1 have been named to receive. In caltromla. tiae to illness or
throe months to one year, the Dai!dallan !lipply ,mect~.vo. th·e speaker, there was nc pro.
roar,
I ' ·IIIII,..~,., ~IJX:Iqr the, ~11\.,el!'·.' 11'~· :
.
Y"'\'1 .
W ceilibase~~,'llf'll."\'l~d! At1Aiildlna were Mr, • 'loin.
, ·'·. es aitd .
• ~lhtwln- dUrlna Y,earaonievl!Gatf..,,·The ,, KaJ:l ,Wile~; Mra. Jerry Wiles,
~· Judi;• will be Bever(J airman, agra~atnfRadnellllll&gt; · · M?. WI ' Mrs, ·Arthur Thabet,
· lr~ln and J!ud Dilley o1 Sehool,.· ~110 a~· Clev~.fnd Mr. ~ Mrs. Lewlo !llmmera,
. e,W~Z-Ty,Hun1lnaton.
· l!iil\llule"of Art~ · .
'. · '' Mr. antl~to. Lewla Capehart,
,c. )n . ·Maaon, plttur~a may be
,
·
.· , ·•
· •W.\.AAd, a, !larry MOler, Mr.
'luriied In 11 tl\t, Maion I!OWI!nJ
·
. ,. ·
· .': '.nd ~r" Rlcliaftl Ord, Mr. and
J.onea, ~Ill New Haven at 91m'
,
:, , ;; , ,
M'1· JackTiesher, Clyde Foley,
~~ Pharmai:y. Plo:,Wr&lt;oa wW·, 1\Ll' ~
Mr1 1114. Mrl, Home Wllltam•
.be 011 dlspta,y at the!f ptaees.. ~.._.o ~,·~!"~~
fG,ii: Mr. ll!d!/oll'•AtermQn LJ1ne,
. · rgCOOIJI other torml wlll . be :
'
·
Mr:.ing·Mr!:'.111JnaldF;Rliulh,
,llill"!"'cet! )':ler, , CIIUIIas Jan.. ·
~rt ,
, Mr. :~.,A,tro&lt;.'Lioyd Roush, Mr.
J~ti Henq,_,!&gt;IO..,. 77~-5366, or
. :. ' ... • and 1,1!!f: Jameo .N. Rauah and
;JU'· A, 'L, &amp;&gt;~so, NOw Haven !'T. ' PLEA~!f,;.j"u ,l.(orman :f"• 1 11!\1 Mrs. Huisoll Cl!l"hart.
~882-250l5, .,to_.enter a baby.
Yci'bJa ;Blal(, , iiai'Jf~i(~o. :was , . 'f«i:~
, 1
"'
. ,
' -..
cited "" llltl!l'e'·.:&gt;~-..vehtcle . ••~•ss' Harley '~",ns
· '
...Wr ~trol
a twb ,. ''VI'
, , vn .

!;• •

, WAll
PAINr
Compare $3.98
Ver,·

$ 98

~

crystal and decorated glass.

A big .seleclionof st.' les and
colors apd for the bo) of
an~
age. Al so small fry
sileS 2 to~ at $ l. ?7 each.

·

Ea•t•·

Tumblers, cooler glasses, bud vases, ash trays, punch cups,
juice cups, coffee mugs, custard dishes, etc. A rlot of value in

.T

M', ' I'LE,\'iANT ...::

.

)

lll!il'

Boys

set , ·· '

.
*''"·

new,_,.

All Corn

"; ·~~t~·ffl £oinj '
.,_ . ·w · ·ror .a•...,ti
. ntt.,,
&gt;::,..,.
1~
J;t'J""",..~ -

,, _, Ottie . ~h;. cih&amp;lr~Jn. Mrs.
· P,ut Rickard ,and Mrs. ClaytDn
;· Athey ~. ' '
·\

colOrs.

w...

Childrens

'

lilatiilg commltltj&gt; to.select ol·
ficera tor ·the new year: Mn.

jmpact plasdc. Not ttlmsy,
In your choice of decorator

$

Mens

JII1'J-

.

.

lng. "
r'lorts e r e
given. Membere ~ on a nom1-

A large sbe dustpanwitha

.'

HI

Uihlc Sd·~·ol

JJates are

Cunnl~!lham, .M"fl"!' W.OOII,

,_

lion Bible Scl)ool or St. Peters
dai.lghte11 oC' MJi~r ~ Mr&amp;: faul _. rum, Davi~ J~usscfl, Uru~ ~f Luthoran thurch will bo held
F'. Jlou&amp;h, waa hllnortCI \'jllh a ama, ,J33 Uidb'W)IY, ~lldl p J., • . rrom June ·17 through .June 21.
~lnt.aw(y perty orf!il~ven- (era, Mike Jonos, Jane ll83""'·
·
- ~'~
·
k
Mrs llenry· n DUck, Jri ·~ _~1a~:~l:ies arc planned ror the
log at _fl. Paul Wtheran Chunh. er · , •
•·
_ . ··• rmtowing age groops: . Ghildron·
Clncll ~nd he.l'lamUy wllluemov- Mra. c. M. Adams, Jr., teaeh: .
. ·r
.'
M . . ol'
t.to..
,
') •
•~
·
;., th
.... 111 -n ......
a~ our, nursery, , rs. c.r
1 . ilnd •~n.~.,15 in the "'lr future to Roanoke era w. e can
'". ar''.ol1•
lc h
kinde
'
• aid Bummr.rdncr 1one ot the aPonvcr, ·ac cr;
•rgartcn,
Va., Where-he,
r Cather ha~ b"M
_
1:1"'
•
-~
Ml~;s Jackie ltomans teacher·
• ' eel
("
..,_.c; ' - oors ollhe leaJjUe
•
•
t ranuerr
• he I, ~....,II;N "V _ •
priml!rY· M_rs. Jk!lty Kn!gfltjchll•
the Appalachian Electric .(ll&gt;mDEGREE RECEIVED
drcn eight 'tfKf nine years, Mr..
~·: ·,
Alita t:ar~nter Crow receiv- Dorothy Scholz, tcach~ri · age 111
· MembersoftheLutb'r~· eel her BSDcgree ln education · and..11, Mrs. Ama Mac Ntbirt,
and the Juni~rll~&amp;mdiY School at Ohio University during the teacher; ages 12, 13 and ' 14,
Clasa prese.nted Clndi with 1 rf;cent cOmmencement. Attend- Frank Scholz teacher and Bruce
charm br•c~et wi~ il Joe.mem- 1ng w8re her parents, Mr. and Nibert • ass is:C.nt.
•
.
berance · ch_arm. Refreshrl)entl Mrs. w. R. Carpeqter, and Mrs,
t:la;ses wlll be held from 7 to
,...., servic! (1'1)111 a ll!a table W, o. Barnltz, her grandmotller.
Paul·

Rev,
Achaah Miller gave
/
:
'
·.
.'
_.. I r$ort;OI\·'the r8c'entc:onVentton
-..1M's
,\ ··· .•, the ...
Mr. O•l"
r ''., "-·'d
~r, '
1D,·-ce
""'
..\ ..· .,•:
·• S.W·,S; beld
- ...
·
·· ·
EV;-,\Jo--Bteth ACres recentb'.
· THE MARJuAGE, of DaVIt. W; Pierce 01 Mlrr!Dnl lo
• · Tbe pr'*'am, ••The Hole ol
1
Mlos J)e~ri,'~ BieYirla, daughter of ~~· ~ Mr.. .~ew '
the:Church- Part 2 Jlll&amp;n,"was
l!leYins 01 SclOtovllle, Ia bel"!! lnnoufl&lt;d.'\&amp; lila parenU,
. prise~ by Mrs. n...arll Bur.'Mr. and Mrl. .CarOl R. JIIOtce, Sr. of ~Yillt; · . ' . ,
. rta: She icOIICluded· the p)'ogtam
Vowa of the double rl"!l ceremon,y were read at 1:30·1• · • with racta about Jap&amp;~~and a dlo. · the evenlog on May 2t at the.Portamouth J!ll!tlat €burch. Tbe
cusslon. Tl!e groop sang "0 Zion
, , Re.v. Curtlo Wri&amp;ht om,eiatoil.atthe weclCIIrw, ·~ ~, · ·
Haste" and Mrs. Paul Fortney
;i'
A· 1~67, ertllloate' of Mlnfol'th H!Ijt School, tho:
rood "RowtheOtherHaliLives."
.!" Plef.ee Ia eq&gt;l~ as a derial .an!itant In the olllce of Ill',
Attending fr001 Ruth Clrde
: M. R. PlerrordfPortamoutlt. hlr; \ Pterce( a 1982 llfiC(uate
were Mrs. Howard Burris, Mrs.
:. of the IMiaud
School and a 1966 graduate of~ ColClayton Athey, Rev. Mrs. Achsah
1~ l,g~. •• emPiofed Is'· ~ad r~billl coach alii 1DdUstrW ~~
MOler, Mrs. GeorgaJeweU, Mrs.
·: totcher jn the.· Mlnfl&gt;rd Local School District. He' Ia dOirw
otha !Jeving, Mn. Bernard Llev·

.• ou

-1

' Mombcro und hii!&gt;sls
Jl .a\iend,
. ,

Oqin9"A~l;ly ~~ty·

_.,:.:" .,

'

_y

c:antc'n,d wiJf. ': a dtkh

't'

..", NE.\1' IIAVEW- "C]ilill Hooeb,

DUST
PANS

It's costing so litUe to stay
dean these days. Famous
Pabnol.ive bar soap either
banded in 4 packs or single.
Savtl here!

for this price.

in

large Plastic

Palmolive

TOILET
SOAP

SETS

i

~J.~•j;jl.,(l",;,,:C•~;,, '~t:

94.

SPONGE MOP'

3&gt;

.J!

· ·, ··-~~-:J; ···,
r_~~-.c,
·iY,1r~E;!Ht ~· fJi~i ~~~h Given; '
. ~·.
· ·!If · ' Iii·~. . . . ·, r ' '
_,·}·,
1

'

"

·

111.

-

'·

''

3~

1.5

•'

�and. shol(iino
"'
,..port
Baokero.
IIIII '

..

GOP Winner Needs Ohio
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Jam S.
Andrews, Ohio Replblloaa .....V
chairman BOld WednosdiJ a RopW!Iean o:amot win the preoldency wl1hout Ohlo In parb".
line. The &amp;tatemenl woo made
.m!Dg the lllllllli GOP &amp;late
leadersblp oooference.
About 275 CCJWI\y GOP chair-

Unescores

Ar!dreW•

BOld "We dlln't expeel a $1 mlllloo ~ but
we have rollablo 1181troa llhowIDg Gllllpn will opond thb
much In the nee...
•Get OUt And Vote• campa1p alrlleil' waa the mala
topic or dlieuoolon cmrtnc tho

conference. A lllrooll vote 1llrn.
men and repre110111a11ves or tho out Ia liCli&gt;Od 1o lllrmwnl tho
lllate · Replblleon committee at- -real IIIIIUiclal advantap oC
lendod tho one-dol' event.
tho Democrats. Androwo said.
Most .....V olllclal• •olced
coneom In tho U. S. Senate
race wlllch will 100 OhlD AtWr-

oey General Wllllem Saxbe nmning aplnst Demoerallc condldllo Jolm Gillipn, ol Clncln-

.."., '
."

'.
r,• • •

'

.

' .
'

-,. ··'

.
··:&gt;

..

Amorlean Leaauo
Baltimore at Waah., )IPII., rain
Chlcaao ot Now York, Jllld. rain
CalU at BoatDn, 2, pPII., rain

' .

..·-

.

·.

.;: .

CLOIHIERI
~. 'MIDIL:IPdiT, o.
•

Shadowy Man,
Woman Sought:

.

.

FOR DADS LADS
,;'

'

· . ' SIZE 4:; to 12

George Jlayman
Dies Wednesday

.

;lj

•.

. r' ~

..,.

..

...'

'·.·1

•.__

'

,.
'

'

"ROB.ROY"

nail.

Old Salem
Social Notes

,;.

'-

(~;.&gt;~.

Up? .

Let Flowera... ··
Expres~~ Voqt
love &amp; Appreclotion

Du••rs Florist
59 N. 2llt( A...

992-55QI
MIDDLEPORT

~

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•

• ,, .

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MEIGS GENERAL HOSPITAL
ADMISSIONS- None.

l

)

Pross llrtemallonal
Nallonal Loaauo

B7 United

G. AD, R. H. Pet.
Rooo, Cln
57 236 12 85 .360
Aloo, Pll
43 147 13 f9 .333
Jlmon, Cln
55 226 38 75 .332
Flood, S1L
59 247 37 81 .338
Alou, AU
56 2U 28 77 .330
- . llou
54210 22 6'1 .319
Grote, NY
52 172 15 53 .308
Helms, Cln
54217 16 66 .304
Mllln, All
57 222 17 6'1 .302
WUlmo, Cld 57 231 26 68 .294
American Loquo
G. AD. R. H. Pet.
Ylllold, Boa M 189 29 64 .339
Howrd, Waa 56 210 31 69 .339
llmldQ, Ook 43 132 13 to .303
Clrow. Min fl 187 22 55 .294
Wldte, NY
58 204 33 59 .269
- · Del 51178 26 51 .287
JolmOD, Bal
52 176 2f 49 .278
Hrrlon, Boo 42 138 23 38
Slrood, Waa 42 133 24 36 .271
Alvlo, Cle
58 208 19 56 .269
Home Runa
National

League:

.,,

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.

.,

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'
•

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.

•'

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1\\.'t\

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Dual Action
Fabric Protector

•

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.... ·._
·;

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•."•

. ·.

n

RELAX DAD

See Onr

.

Y GIFT WILL
PROBABLY COME FROM

McCovey

.

League: Howard,

Sonllon 22; Horton, Tlgora 16;
JWiobrow. Twins 12; McMullen,
Slnatora, Harrelson and Yaa~
trzomald, Rod sox 10.
·
RlDII Hatted In
Notional League: Perez, Rods
tO; Sonlo, Cubo 35; !11&gt;3a,
Giantl Uld li Aa~. Braves
34i BIDkl, .CUbs and Benth,

'

l,,t

'_;\~

.
•

'

· '.

, I•

•
' ' '.

American League: Howard,
s.ator• 48; Porfell, Orioles 39;
J1ior14m, Tlprs 3~; Johnson,

·'
'

Pllchtng

Marlohll,

G!anta 11-ll,
Kilo....,, ~; Carltm,
Cinii 1~i R~. Brii.VOI ~-:d:
IIIDcb, Cubl S-11.

AmoriOIII Lhguo: McLain,
Ortolof, 8-2;

'Ball•••"'!'! YIDka 8-2; P'rranoa11!, Twin•,
Rod Sox, and

"•II,

trrtala, Angoto h

~-'.

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JURE l6

·'

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'

·'•

'.

.

'- I!.'':I.

.

"

. •

' •

..

.

t

NatloMI League: Selma, Matt

Tlaer• ~; lllrdln,

SelectiQn

'

'

Ortolea, Hortm, lrKtlans Rftd
Ko-, Yanko 31.

I

'

Redo 33.

1--0;

'

·.

w

Aarcla, Braves 11.

Qfli

- ~0

· •"le·YJCJ

'~

'

IIIII Hart, Glante 12; Banks,
Cuba, 111&gt;3•. Giants and H.
American

'

It
.
T
•

'

•

On·
. .

'

-' ·
•
&gt;•

Dl$:HARGES - N011e.
.

.'

'

.

\',.

''

'

.
•

..••:

.•.

TRIMCUTS

·~;t·

'''BilL: THE ·KID" .
SHORT$· SLlCIS

....

LEVI'S®
. .
.
. (j)
STA-PREST-·.

.

''

EVI'"""' · ®
~TA- PRE"""' T

,.

Leaders

.' . .J :j
.; ' . : ·, ''

..

""'

,
I&gt; • -~

.,

.....

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. ,,'

~\),~,,£.

:.

.

-~

.
,.

'

&lt;
I

'

..

' '

�and. shol(iino
"'
,..port
Baokero.
IIIII '

..

GOP Winner Needs Ohio
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Jam S.
Andrews, Ohio Replblloaa .....V
chairman BOld WednosdiJ a RopW!Iean o:amot win the preoldency wl1hout Ohlo In parb".
line. The &amp;tatemenl woo made
.m!Dg the lllllllli GOP &amp;late
leadersblp oooference.
About 275 CCJWI\y GOP chair-

Unescores

Ar!dreW•

BOld "We dlln't expeel a $1 mlllloo ~ but
we have rollablo 1181troa llhowIDg Gllllpn will opond thb
much In the nee...
•Get OUt And Vote• campa1p alrlleil' waa the mala
topic or dlieuoolon cmrtnc tho

conference. A lllrooll vote 1llrn.
men and repre110111a11ves or tho out Ia liCli&gt;Od 1o lllrmwnl tho
lllate · Replblleon committee at- -real IIIIIUiclal advantap oC
lendod tho one-dol' event.
tho Democrats. Androwo said.
Most .....V olllclal• •olced
coneom In tho U. S. Senate
race wlllch will 100 OhlD AtWr-

oey General Wllllem Saxbe nmning aplnst Demoerallc condldllo Jolm Gillipn, ol Clncln-

.."., '
."

'.
r,• • •

'

.

' .
'

-,. ··'

.
··:&gt;

..

Amorlean Leaauo
Baltimore at Waah., )IPII., rain
Chlcaao ot Now York, Jllld. rain
CalU at BoatDn, 2, pPII., rain

' .

..·-

.

·.

.;: .

CLOIHIERI
~. 'MIDIL:IPdiT, o.
•

Shadowy Man,
Woman Sought:

.

.

FOR DADS LADS
,;'

'

· . ' SIZE 4:; to 12

George Jlayman
Dies Wednesday

.

;lj

•.

. r' ~

..,.

..

...'

'·.·1

•.__

'

,.
'

'

"ROB.ROY"

nail.

Old Salem
Social Notes

,;.

'-

(~;.&gt;~.

Up? .

Let Flowera... ··
Expres~~ Voqt
love &amp; Appreclotion

Du••rs Florist
59 N. 2llt( A...

992-55QI
MIDDLEPORT

~

.,"

-

"'

•

• ,, .

•

'

~~,

rr· .

•"

J •

•

....

-,: t:

..

MEIGS GENERAL HOSPITAL
ADMISSIONS- None.

l

)

Pross llrtemallonal
Nallonal Loaauo

B7 United

G. AD, R. H. Pet.
Rooo, Cln
57 236 12 85 .360
Aloo, Pll
43 147 13 f9 .333
Jlmon, Cln
55 226 38 75 .332
Flood, S1L
59 247 37 81 .338
Alou, AU
56 2U 28 77 .330
- . llou
54210 22 6'1 .319
Grote, NY
52 172 15 53 .308
Helms, Cln
54217 16 66 .304
Mllln, All
57 222 17 6'1 .302
WUlmo, Cld 57 231 26 68 .294
American Loquo
G. AD. R. H. Pet.
Ylllold, Boa M 189 29 64 .339
Howrd, Waa 56 210 31 69 .339
llmldQ, Ook 43 132 13 to .303
Clrow. Min fl 187 22 55 .294
Wldte, NY
58 204 33 59 .269
- · Del 51178 26 51 .287
JolmOD, Bal
52 176 2f 49 .278
Hrrlon, Boo 42 138 23 38
Slrood, Waa 42 133 24 36 .271
Alvlo, Cle
58 208 19 56 .269
Home Runa
National

League:

.,,

~d'
c,\i

.

.,

•I
'
•

'
',.''

.

•'

.r

1\\.'t\

~ot. ~o\.'"

'" .\.~

.,

. '• .

Dual Action
Fabric Protector

•

. ··. ,.'

.~.to

l

j

::

.I

•

•

~

.
.... ·._
·;

.

·'"
! ';:-

:;

~.

•."•

. ·.

n

RELAX DAD

See Onr

.

Y GIFT WILL
PROBABLY COME FROM

McCovey

.

League: Howard,

Sonllon 22; Horton, Tlgora 16;
JWiobrow. Twins 12; McMullen,
Slnatora, Harrelson and Yaa~
trzomald, Rod sox 10.
·
RlDII Hatted In
Notional League: Perez, Rods
tO; Sonlo, Cubo 35; !11&gt;3a,
Giantl Uld li Aa~. Braves
34i BIDkl, .CUbs and Benth,

'

l,,t

'_;\~

.
•

'

· '.

, I•

•
' ' '.

American League: Howard,
s.ator• 48; Porfell, Orioles 39;
J1ior14m, Tlprs 3~; Johnson,

·'
'

Pllchtng

Marlohll,

G!anta 11-ll,
Kilo....,, ~; Carltm,
Cinii 1~i R~. Brii.VOI ~-:d:
IIIDcb, Cubl S-11.

AmoriOIII Lhguo: McLain,
Ortolof, 8-2;

'Ball•••"'!'! YIDka 8-2; P'rranoa11!, Twin•,
Rod Sox, and

"•II,

trrtala, Angoto h

~-'.

..

JURE l6

·'

'T.
'

·'•

'.

.

'- I!.'':I.

.

"

. •

' •

..

.

t

NatloMI League: Selma, Matt

Tlaer• ~; lllrdln,

SelectiQn

'

'

Ortolea, Hortm, lrKtlans Rftd
Ko-, Yanko 31.

I

'

Redo 33.

1--0;

'

·.

w

Aarcla, Braves 11.

Qfli

- ~0

· •"le·YJCJ

'~

'

IIIII Hart, Glante 12; Banks,
Cuba, 111&gt;3•. Giants and H.
American

'

It
.
T
•

'

•

On·
. .

'

-' ·
•
&gt;•

Dl$:HARGES - N011e.
.

.'

'

.

\',.

''

'

.
•

..••:

.•.

TRIMCUTS

·~;t·

'''BilL: THE ·KID" .
SHORT$· SLlCIS

....

LEVI'S®
. .
.
. (j)
STA-PREST-·.

.

''

EVI'"""' · ®
~TA- PRE"""' T

,.

Leaders

.' . .J :j
.; ' . : ·, ''

..

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,
I&gt; • -~

.,

.....

\

. ,,'

~\),~,,£.

:.

.

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.
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I

'

..

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•

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Applications for Work· Being Invited
PT. PLEASANT -

AppUca-

Uona for summer emploYment

and 22 lor work In state Hoed
Commlaslon aDd Department of
Natural Resources facUlties.
To quality for em_ployment un-

the above eligibility factors would

an Income of $3,000 or less per

year, ellglblllty determined

be consldered tor the summer

by

farm, non.farm 1967 Income and •mploymenl program.
Youths selected tor u.e profamily size; not a high school
gram will be assi(D1ed to jobs
der the federally sponsored alid gr.O,ate, and in need of paid,
regulaled program, applicants part-time work ewerience to eo~ wltllln their county of residenCe.
They will he psld at a rate of
must meet tbe f01lowing criter- Bble· them to stay in or return
$1.25 per hour ror a maximum
Ia:
to school
25 hours per week. ThOse ac.
Age 16 through 21 years; per~
A apodal 10 - week summer
Jack L, Smith, manager of
Nelshborhood Youlll CoiPS pro.. manent resident ol tho United the Point Pleasant ol!lce of Em- cepted will be expected to accept two hours or vocational
IP'IDl wilt employ 2,800 state States; merd&gt;era of low-income ployment securiiY, emphasized
youths between the ages of 16 families ()lormally, those with that only those youth meeting counseling each week for Whleh
they wlll rot be paid, making a
total work week ol 27 hours.
Officials of the .bte R o a d
Commission and the Department
of Natural Re50Urces stated that
It was the responslbUity and
ber
wU
I
be
fifty
cents.
NEW HAVEN - The NehscU- Jr. will be hostesses. Members
A report was given on the
ma Carden Club heJd its regular will hold a nower arrangement Junior Garden Club, the club is
meeting recently at the home of workshop and Mrs. Riley will sponsoring, The Prood Planters. tudes, a sense of responsibUit,y,
Mrs. John Powell with Mrs. Da- judge the arrangements.
and the opportunity w give 111Mrs. Powell reported on the Their next meeting will be on
vid Simonton and Mrs. Loots
ture
prospective employers a
Rhododendrons planted at the Ma- June 28 at 2 p.m. at the Alex - work experience recommendaKarschnlk aa co-hostesses.
Qulllen Memorial Building. The
Mro. Donald Bwnl!lll'dner, son, Hartford and Ne" Haven Clower show to be held at the tion. Neighborhood Youth Corps
chairman of the Program Com- schools and at the New Haven Mason County Fair was discuss- projects are deslgnedro.increase
mittee, reported on the program Post Offtce.
the enrollees' later employabUMrs. Powell also gave a re. ed. The Ohio Guyan District
for the coming year. The July
meeting will be on October 12 iiY BIStus.
meeting will be a covered dish port on the Mason Cooney Coun- at Logan, W.Va.
Applicants- Cor the J)rogram,
diMer at the home of Mrs . Pat- cU of Garden Clubs which was
Mrs. Powell J)resentedthepro·
riek Rlley, president of the New recently organized with Mrs.
gram,
''Flower Arranging in CopHaven Garden Club, and Mrs. Donald Bumgardner on the nom· per .•• Following It, Mrs. William
Jamea N, Roush, Mrs. B. J. I n at i n g committee. Officers
R. Powell demonstrated a copHoward and Mrs. c. M. Adams, elected were Mrs. PatrlckRUey, per display and orders were
New Haven Garden Club, presJ~
:-:
dent; Mr.s. Carroll Casto, TU- taken for the items.
Attending
were
Mrs.
ClydeFol:;:
:·:
it down over my shoulders Endfe.Wei Garden Club, vice - ey, Mrs. L. C. Roush, guests, :::
a I most to the elbows. He president; Mrs. Earl Clark, Nelaughed and said• "Stay! hacllma Garden Club, secretary, Mrs. David Flelds, Mrs. James : .
What are you going to try to and Mrs. John Calloway, Hen- GUbert, Mrs. Henry H. Buck,
do, leave early?"
derson Garden Club . treasurer, Jr., Mrs. William C. Gibbs, Mrs.
Late the next evening, in a
There will be a tea on June Tom Hoffman, Mrs. Roy Jones,
San Francisco ballroom just 20 Crom 2 until 4 p.m. at the Mrs. Phil Batey, Mrs. Donald
as warm as the one in PortBumgardner, Mrs. C, M. Adams,
land, I had on the same coat Point Pleasant Episcopal Church. Jr ., Mrs. WUllam Powell, demas he again passed cJose. He Mrs. H. J. Simmon of Logan,
broke into a big grin, took the The Ohio Guyan District Direc- onstrator, and Mrs . David ~ ­
coat by the collar and said:
tor, will install the officers . manton, Mrs. John Powell, hos"Hey, Bruce, I don't be- Membership dues per club mem Lieve you with your raincoat!"

now being accepted tor a
limited oomber or disadvantaged Weill VIrginia youths, olrlclals of tile w. va. fle&amp;K. of
Employment SeiDriQ' IUIII(lUiced loda,v.
are

Garden Club Program Described

::;!!:I~':= ~o~"::.

nwIJar.,

.

silver

'eoffee

Gettles or Wejlslofl !O!'V¢ the

'

books were

,.. Mrs. Jamea membel-s.,.-A swlmlidnl!~~··~~

Bervl~o.

.

.

Announce Birth
Of a Daughter

planited foi- lJUfte

•' lfiddOn Likes.
were se~&gt;ed by p~
and recrcstllin
led by

w.,.

Harris.

Becky ..

·

IIISS IIILDRED IS PICnJRED with &amp;isle lrd - e , only two ~ t1Mi perlormlJW slephanta
!rom CII1L KenDY Ikert' s large herd of pachyderms. The famous Hoxie Bros. 3-RiJW Clrcua Ia
comlJW to Pomeroy on June 14 at the city lot tor perform1nces at 2 and 8 p. m. Advance tickets
are being sold now by the Pmneroy Volunteer Fire Department.

Cpl. and Mrs. stanley It Lem-

ley are aniiOIIPCirlg the birth of

GUESTS OF ROTARY

NEW HAVEN - coaches Grant
a daughter, Alice Mlchclle. The
six pound, 10 ou~~ infant was Barnett and Donald Upton ond the
born on June 4 at Holzer Hos- senior members .o f Wahsma'ijlgtl
pital, Gallipolis. ·1
School ,lootball and golf tei.ma
Maternal gra~rents are Mr. were guests at a re(ent~ me~t•
and Mrs. Kenneth ' E. Darst of ing ol the Berd Rotary Club dinMiddleport, aJIC( paternal grand- ner meeting. Karl Wiles Showed

.Sen. Kennedy Humorous,

parents are Mr. 1nd Mrs. Har- slides taken by _his son, Jerry.
·
old William Lemley, Pomeroy. In Vietnam.
Mr. ancJ Mrs. VE!rp Bolinger oC
Pomeroy, Mr. a'nd Mrs. Ray
Darst ot Cheshire, and Mrs. Ber·

EXPLAINS MAKEUP PROCEDURE - Fred Hofllnan, Middleport, promct!on mgr., explains page makeup or The Dally
Sentinel abo,. Ulagroopolvtsttorsdurlngthe Ohio Valley Pul&gt;-

eel -the firm's new offset printing facilities in GallipoliS: where
the Gsllipolis Dally Tribune ond SUnday Times-5enUnel also
are printed.

::::::;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;.;.;::=:=: :;:;:: :;:::::;: ==::::":

Pomeroy...

i

· ·.

I Personal Notes •••
~~:

Of Struggle

:~~

Allen Nolan and
chUdren and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Daugherty and children or
Columbus were &amp;mday guests of
their grandmoU!er, Mrs. Cora
Wiggins, and Mrs. Edith ThoMr. ·and Mrs.

mas. Other guetlts of Mrs. Wiggins and Mrs. Thomas were Mr:and Mrs. Dale Multord of Che:sh-

lre.

Chorle&amp; LemJor~..~­
jor surgery TUesda¥ at Veteran•
Memorlal Hospital. • His room
number is 124.

'

$tory Relate&lt;;/

Bruce Gotthardt returned to

~Tillie Scrubs On," the story

llro. Wer.lel Kaut•.
Mr. and Mra. John Kunzelman
ond daul!blers, Angela and s.....,,

'

Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Darst

spent the weekend in COlumbus

Her husband who la stationed
with the U.S. Army at Fort Eustis, Va., ia in Columbus with his
wife.

o1 Plttsburllb, Pa., and KeMeth
Sauer of &amp;lnnyvale, Callt., were
recent guests of Min Margaret

Is Celebrated

Sauer.

Mrs. James Dller, t the Rev.
The 2Sth weddl~ lllllli&gt;ersary and Mrs. Frank Cheesebrew, and
or Mr. and Mrs. R11m0nd 1111•.. the Rev, Max Donahue\and famler, the former Mtrgaret Thorn- lly are among thoae attending
11 of Syracuse, was observed the
Methodist COnference

tlu.ted

SaturdiiJ' with • dl~~~er party at at Lakeolde.
the Howard Johnson restaurant
Mrs. David EntJminger has
in Columbus. Hosting the affair

been the guest of her son, Char-

were children of the coup)e.
Followlr:w the dinner a~ anni~

lea, and family in Charleston,
W, Va., and her daughter, Mrs.

,.nary cake baked by Mr. , 00

Roth Z..., and rsmu.v, also of
Charleston.
Mrs. MUton Hood went to Hun.
tington Tllelda)' to meet her
dauglrter - In • law. Mrs. KathY

Mrs. Mlller•s daughter, Mrs.
Michael Thompson, was served.
Attending the part,)' were Mr.

ard Mro. Michael Thompaon and
daughter, Sharon, Mr. &amp;nd Mro. Hood, and Mrs. SanelY RenderDonald Galbreath, Miss Sydney ... ai tile Tri-State Airport,
Ill".-r, MJ ss Linde •SlI.DI'lP, Thorn- The two were returning Crom a
"

Miller and guest, and Mrs.

llbort visit in Wrightsville, N.C.,

j
l

·-- .

with Mrs. Henderson's relatives.
Sam Hood, home from Kent

i

Rhododendron Club

fM the summer at Vanadium.
Mra. WUJis Anthony I&amp; con-

u .......1 .__...

·~-··

'•

rme SuncjaY.

·; CaDdy Special!

Orange
Slices

Father's Dey Slltl

2

I

Mrs. T. Bert l!oush and Mro. 0.

ri.'

;
0, Sl)'re 11 hostesses. Mrs. G. Albert Roush.
Attending were Mra. G. a HazB. :nazlett led the devotions,
Mrs. Bernnd LievJng, Mrs.
lett,
read!• tile .IZJ at Psslm; Mrs.
Marun
9h!IJWer, Mrs. Albert
Charlt!:s Yonker read a poem,
h;s A Br•nd Ne• Dl)-, Exa.Hanl Rou•h, Mb• Mary PhUilpo, Mrs.
Mrs. Velma
SOng," a..t Lhey cloSt.'CI with ,Johooy ·Roush,
Uoush,
¥.&amp;"•·
Clarence
Thomaa
11/-a;ver.
Mr~,
~los
F.'
Yo.
n
ker,
Mr~
Member's · answr..) l' .Jd the rqll
&lt;:all •illi naming !heir lavorlle Otllc l!&lt;Nsh,
~olor.

..

)

. ,;,

Tl,te lesson "The World ltoush. .,'

1

.

eti-3975

OOMEROY

-----------~--·--------~
USDA CHOICE

c

ROUND

'lb.

STEA
etTRALEAN

YHE~

Ground Chuck
Ground Beef

'~'''

.oo·

..

99•---------------·

KIIJ'

ard Loo l::llon

sweeping

Discount

Priced

BILLFOLDS

.rom

' ney General or
• from New York.

g1ve

a "Royal" Treat .•.

'RUMLtt S±wvt
CANDIES

·.-,, ~

I

~ · .SMOKER

- .·CIGA.S'.:
'

, have what you want?"
•
: Auy reporter who eovered

. naU.Oal pelltles louad people
: aUinf him again aad again
• "wba Bobby Kennedy Is
:really Uke." Maay who an·
: twered &lt;!early s u r p r Is e d
•their lnlerro~ators by deserlb·
: lnl birD as a t:ompautouate,
; klad maa.
: That he was. He often went
:far out of his way to be help·
:lui.
: It was he, as a ki.nd of fam ;lly director, that I had to deal
. with In mld-1963 when l un·
~ dertook

a series of articles

•

•
'

~ Bride-Elect

... ,ft

RAISED POWDII(SPECIAL)

pic••
,. .

Br-ead:~!=----··. t :· e.O,.~
.

.

I

'

I

cloor prize ••• won by Mro.
John Balvor. Punch ond cookleo
were served from a tea table,
whit~ woo centered with a bridal
n..re ond candleo.
1'llo peot
lntluded Mr1.
llolvln KnaiiPi Mro. ~01
Rouah, Dlama lloulh, 11!11 Dorotlll' JloUoll, Deanla and Beverly
:tnltll, llro. William Ruoltll,
llro. J, v. lolcGnw, Mro. Jlilloo
...,.., ..,M!os Litlah J. Ponll,
¥&gt;'· lrill Mr~. Robert ,Jolmson,
llr•· MIJC!nl AI'I!Old. all.,..
Fllz,....td, llro. Evorlll Roul!ll,
Llldl Rouah, Ml't!. John Fey,
llr•· Max Elchln&amp;er, Mro. '1'11tl·

a._

...

I}

: ~ .r
iJ~
•
•

ASHLAND TOP RITE
BAIIERRS

6 Volt -

18.50

2 yr. guerantee

12 Volt _ 24.95
3 yr. guarantee

:

12 Volt _ 19.95

12 Volt _ 29.95

•

2 )'1'. guarantee

4 JT. gu&amp;nntee

:
LOU'S ASIA.AND STATION
•...................................
Mw. Moln Pomerov 229-3535

1 n stan

t of good fun when
someone noticed that Jerry
Bruno, a Kennedy " advance
man" noted for his toughness.

was observed carrying a toy
baseball bat The s e n a t o r
chuckled when a reporter

asked •
"Isn't that a little too obvi ous for a ruthless man?"

The walking tour ended
quickly. I watche1 as he
piled into his car for a trip
to the a i r p o t- t and more

youngsters .
At first he was r.eluctant
to approve the idea , since he
did not want the children's
privacy invaded and, besides.
feared there were already too
many stories about the very
large number or Kennedys .

Would you like to come over?"
A few days later, back in

campaigning in northern Calitorma and Oregon. I had no
way of knowing it was the
last time I would see alive the
a!resting, driving, controver·
s1al young man I had first
met in that barren warehouse
in Boston 16 years ago .

Washington, I called Ken·
neely's secretary to explain
!hal I still had one big problem-! had not been able to
learn anything about lhe four
children or his sister, Mrs.
. Finally he agreed. He could Patrit:ia Lawford, who were
Simply have advised me of his In Callfornla. Minutes later I
decision and left to me all ar· was advised Ul call Mrs. Law.
rangements with the familf. ford at her Santa Monica
Instead, I was told to call hiS home, where she would be
elder sister, Eunice at a par· waUing to hear from me.
ticular hour al the lamed Once again, It went this way •
~ennedy compound in Hyan·
"Yes, my brother Bobby
rusport, Mass. When I reached just called and asked me to
her, she responded warmly help you. What do you want
and said :
to know?"
"Oh,j•es, my brolher Bobby
S..:relariea could e a s i 1y
just caled me and told me
you would be phoning. When have managed. these contacts,
but Bob Kennedy cho&amp;e to
America's first pro 1e smate them himself, despite
slonal composer was WUhis genuine reservations
llam BUllngs !1748-11100),
about lhe srory.
The World Almanac says.
HI&amp; IIDie of JOOd fua WBI
In addiUon to wrtUng lbe
lmmeue, tlloqll It did aot
famous war song. "Chesler," In 1778, Bllllngs In·
ma CIIIIOhart, Mro. Uoyd Roush, n!lllly beeome widely vlolble
uaUI nearly a year after •t•
troduced the use ol the
Mro. Mary Aumiller, Mro. Ralph brolbor'o
auauluUoa . . Evea
pitch pipe, organized a
Roulh, .Mra. Jack He11oa, Mrs. theo, •• be wao l'1111111nJ for
singing class which beOtiD Grimm, Boclq T11¥10r, the Senate Ia New Yorl&lt; In
came our first national
ROOIM!a KQlor, Mro. Wendell lltl4, II ai-led wlllt pori·
musical society aad pubIIIJior, lolro. WOllam Pl&gt;well, odo of peal llloom when be
lbhed six collections or
church music. Excerpts
Bomle Fleldo, Mro. Ralph - - would olare vaeuUy out of a
plait 'l!illdow fer a ball hour
from his vigorous music
gen, Mr. aad Mro. Ed Harrlo, at a Ume.
have been use~ In recent
Mro. WUbur stawart, &amp;illoGrlncompositions
by Henry
llead, Mro. Lorey Bail, Mr. 1111
Tired as he was this spring
CoweD
and
William
Schu·
Nro. David Rouah, Mro. llar1'7 from Incessant campaigning
man.
ID half a d~ primaries, he
L
aYIIO, Mr. aDd 11": Harol~ kept hla good humor through
Rlehard, Sr., Mro. Robert~. the last arduous days In Ore·
Linda ll&lt;i!loh, Mr~. Donald BUm· · goo aad Calllornla. I, lllle
Quotes
sar..,.r, Chtryl .lrd Vldd Bum- other newame 0, occaalonally
prner, Mr1. John lloavor 1111 bec~me the object of his fun.
dlllihler, · Nro. Jol!nny Rouoh,
When, Ill Oregon, 1 sud·
For reasona thai baffle me,
Mrl. W~r Grln""ad, Mri,Jol· d~nly fuund myself crammecf Bob
Kermedy raises a storm
na Burtlo, Mr, 1111 Mro. CO.U )nte, a .-al 11 a press table · &lt;!I emollona
In the breasli of
nU.csa, Mr. ri iiro. 'l'llimiaa at r!l!'!ladd'~ City CluJ), I dld a lrtll maay
~pie, They
Grlnlleld, Mro' WUlla!n :flmu not have a c~nce 1o l!lke of!
ean'l be nUoilal about
.
· •
• a light ~alncoat I wao· wear·
Jr., Mro. c. It Adamo, Jr., lnJ. On bls wax lq the tP'!ak·
llr. and llrl(. ' rt.d ROIIIh, Mr.. d •::· billie, . ~necJy, Jiaasod -A11Ilwr WU!illm Manchesttr, oil hil llacki!IQ of Sell.
aad Nru• .Bill ~ootet. llr, ond cloae by 'and toolt.aote.
llobm
F. Ket~rifdr· tor
Nrl. Dannr Rouoh,
. ·
II• ieached out, grabbed my
pre~!.
1.
raincoat a,t the lop aad p~led

•

Given Shower

, NEW HAVEN - llloa Kathy
;Rouoh, brlcle..,leet orDomyRickard, no honored with a briur
Frldo)' evenln,g at st.
Paul LulhoraD Cbul'ch, with Mrs.
Volma Rouah, Mill Jllle Rouoh
ond lolro. David Roushhosteoseo.
A conteot wao held with !oli-o.
Will lain Ball the wlmer, 'lba

~
·F,~~'HER'S DAY BATTERY S~j·~·C•l•Al••••••••
: ru,

May 21, Bob Kennedy was
shaking hands on a brief walk
tbrough the Farmers' Market
!n Los Angeles. There was an

: most or whom Iii! liked just as
• had his late brother.
•
: Under questioning, he some' Urnes would stare a long
: while in silence as he thought
~ hard about an answer. When
• quietly •
•
: "Is that enough? Do you

r,;"'~"~~~~~:;.;"«•*~~::::~~,~~~

wa~h oa
Freckles.
On the sunny morning of

considerate. The impa: tient drumming of fingers on
• desk which aides observed as
: he talked to some visitors was
• seldom seen when he sat In
: the company of newsmen,

, an interview seemed to have
: run Its course, he would ask

Kennedy

........ ..

sented to keep

~and

·ros ·THE

HOME lAUNDRY

mlgbt be an ambassadorship

senator

Acollection of
things that cost less than they did
10 Years ago
I

Your ele&lt;lric bill j u&gt;l aboul &gt;lanJ, alone. Ekclric·
1ty actuall~· cu~ts less per kdowaH-hour todny than

I

Timely

1:1:.

I

ever before.
But if clectrh:il y's ~.: hcup1.' r th~lll."\"1.'1 , whv is vour
electric bill higher ?
Look around . Count thl' appliann.'s vou didn 't usc
ten y~ars _ago . Electric po\1/cr is gi,·ing yuu a bclter ,
happ1cr hfc . So even though rates arc lower, vour
bill is up because you usc rnorc . ·
·
Considering today's p1 in·s. t·k·ct ridtv ha~ to he
the b-iggest barguin urouml. And our \\;hole scn.·n·
slate sysh.'m kL't..~ working hard lo mak.c il 1.' \'\.' 11
more of a b;:LrJ;i.lin. Think ahou1 thai ll\.'XI tim\.· you
hear LIS sm· . . .
It .... , _,.
• "lj ••• ........
· • • ..., • ........
,
1
!"!!!-"
Mftll "··

•

t)

~

PICKUP &amp;
DBJVERY

In It for anyone who con-

: was Invariably co-operative
·~ .

~

At Sa11 Diego hours later,

: At conversational range, he

\

KING

be playfully ••ueoled Lllere

•

3.95
~~

as

:

"Would you take care of the

. palgns, serving as U.S. Allor·

t ··

SHIUS ')}~
FILI;n·~-· n: ~
~~·
FOR A ,;1· ~ :;

dog today?"

Hfe that he was
to play ln an ever·
larger way as John Kennedy
• won re ~election to the Senate
: in 1958 and went on to gain
• the presidency in 1960.
•
: Like many other reporters,
· I had long private conversa: tions with him over the years
~ when he was managing cam-

'

gesture.

ESTHER CIRCLE MEETS
The Esther Circle of the Lutheran Church Women met Tuesday evening at Ute St. Paul Lutheran Church with Mrs. Harry
Layne as hoste~;s, The lesson, "A
Portrait of GOO.'' was presented
by Mrs. David Roush. Others in
atterdance were Mrs. Melvin
Knapp, Mrs. Herman Layne, Mrs,
Velma Roush and Mrs. lloyd
Roush.

laughed, came over and put
his hand on my shoulder. He
asked •

~ At that moment, in a warm
• Boston summer, he seemed

·-r

. 17~

1;

bery.
After two summons. the dog
trotted toward the senator's
car. I waved him on with a

: ing.

; about lhe many Kenneily

Milk:...•.-··------·· ....

'"

.

w

who promptly

scampered off into the shrub-

: w1th sl~eves rolled up, talking
•crisply and knowledgeably or
: the campaign he was direct·

~

Open Every Week D•y 9:00 to 7:00
Salurdly Til

SLICED
!I BACON
1
I 2~~ 1.00
I

'
of ColQr," was presented bJ Mn.

Freckles,

• brother's

NEW IIAVEN -·The Rhododendron Home Demonstration Club
met Tiwrsda.y at the club house
with Miss Millie Bumgarner,

with his springer spaniel,

i marked

fined to Veterans Memorial Hospital for observation and lreatmenl.

Meets on Thursday

ern California. He emerged

: hardly believable In so big a
: role. Yet it was a part in his

MARKET

E

shot in the early minutes of
June 5, a Kennedy motorcade
was forming up for a long
day's nmpaigning in south-

he stood in khaki
~ tr~users and open white shirt

TIMEX

CREW SOCKS
~~9ae

•

,

!l

Hole! where he was fatally

• senior,

MEN'S

Sl ON'S !

II

side the same Ambassador

:John, who was running in 1952
• for the U.S. Senate seat then
:held by Henry Cabot Lodge.
: Then 26 years old bul look·
: lng as boyish as a high school

Choo11 Dadtfhlin
The Wideof
Allortintllt
.... ,

•............... ~-~

A lew days afterward, out.

• quarters for h1s brother

state University, Is employed

I ,

: WASHINGTON - INEA 1 :The first time I ever saw
··Robert F. Kennedy was in a
:big barn of a place on Bos·
; ton's Water Street, which was
: serving as camp~ign head-

(We Are Not

IE. MAIN ST.

Mr. and Mrs. Claude Our gee

Anniversary

arrived

cherry .Point, T'L c., and

r-----~~----•

PRICES ON OUR

~s~s.

Washington Correspondent

Marine

1
Open On Sundays)
.J EXTRA
r----------------------SPECIAL

I

vlsiL
with their daughter, Mrs. VerMrs. Melvin Circle and daughnon Cleland who Is hospttallzed.

ter, Marianne, of Columbus, are
here for a several days' visit
with her parenls, Mr. and Mrs.
C. E. Blakeslee.

u. s.

charge from the

arUele and another, uwe Are . ia Hazlett
·
So Aware!' M.rs. w. A.. Morgan
'fhf ' ctntJ!urs otd~I&lt;"myth·''·
·priiietited a Poem, i"frCubtes,"
ology
were a wild race, half·
and the meditation from the UPhorse
and
half-man.
per Room, uHoly Spirit," was
read by Mrs. William -Grueser.
Mrs Amos Leonard read, "The

W, A. Morgan, and his uncle a ~et Room," hy Mrs. William
and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Roger ·Grueser and prayer by Mrs.
Morgan.
Lewla Groeser were,Included In
Paul Kautz and chlldreo, Rich- the meeting,
ard and JUI, Columbus, were
!ilndal' pe Ills of his mother,

of St. I..Oul1, MO., were recent
IJIBits ofhl&amp; mother, Mrs. Mary
Kunzel~ and other relatives.
Mn. Kunzelman ::.nd children
were here for two weeks, and
John was here for a shorter

By BRUCE BIOSS.t.T

CJ)l. ~eJ re~eived his disCorps at

of a mother's struggle t$ educate her ~lJ.r. was included
on a program (){- readlr.gs presented at Tuesday night's meet.
ing of the Woman's Society of
Christian Service at the Rock
:tJrings Methodist Church.
Mrs. Lewis Gnaesei read that milt, Barbara Roush ard \ 'irgin-

Columbus toda.J· Iller visiting Good News."
here with hlsl!l'andmother, Mrs.
A meditation, ••The Wonder o1

:Warm, Considerate Person

gra~arent&amp;.

lishing Co. Open House Tuesday night Over 400 persons Visit-

W. S. W. S. MEETS
NEW HAVEN - The W~WS
oC the Bachtel United Methodist
Church met at the church for
their regular monthly meeting.
Opal MulfOrd ser-ved as leader
tor the topic, "The Role a(
the Church - Part D Japan."
They opened with the singing of
"lf Jesus Goes With Me," Col·
!owed with the scrif~ture taken
from Matthew and I Corinthians.
AUending were Opal Mulford,
Mildred Jewell, Laura Elliott,
Evelyn Jewell, Rena Lauder~

'

tha Ward of Columbus are great-

In addltiM to meetlnc the .U·
.glbUlty criteria, mull.,t.'I'J a
social seeurlty card betor. tiiO!)'
can be referred, Smlill . - _
lie !liSted that only tllotlO . - .
lng • tile ellalblllll' rl&lt;ldr..-o
srould apply. Ids ol!leea, fo&lt;al.ed at 225 Sixth street. 1o;d&amp;
PleaSOIII, Is currllllll,y ,..,._
lng applications and - · esle&lt;l are uriiad to ootiact II
lmmedlalely.
Detailed ln!onnaUoil • illll
and other youth traln!nC grams avaUable mQ be GtUIDed Iron. your loeal ol!lcs &lt;t
the Well Vlrglnfg ~
or Employment seeurtey.

\

q

1••• -~........ ,..••5o

....

••
••
••
•••
••
•••

••••••

�.

---·- ...

•

•

j .

l· I

Applications for Work· Being Invited
PT. PLEASANT -

AppUca-

Uona for summer emploYment

and 22 lor work In state Hoed
Commlaslon aDd Department of
Natural Resources facUlties.
To quality for em_ployment un-

the above eligibility factors would

an Income of $3,000 or less per

year, ellglblllty determined

be consldered tor the summer

by

farm, non.farm 1967 Income and •mploymenl program.
Youths selected tor u.e profamily size; not a high school
gram will be assi(D1ed to jobs
der the federally sponsored alid gr.O,ate, and in need of paid,
regulaled program, applicants part-time work ewerience to eo~ wltllln their county of residenCe.
They will he psld at a rate of
must meet tbe f01lowing criter- Bble· them to stay in or return
$1.25 per hour ror a maximum
Ia:
to school
25 hours per week. ThOse ac.
Age 16 through 21 years; per~
A apodal 10 - week summer
Jack L, Smith, manager of
Nelshborhood Youlll CoiPS pro.. manent resident ol tho United the Point Pleasant ol!lce of Em- cepted will be expected to accept two hours or vocational
IP'IDl wilt employ 2,800 state States; merd&gt;era of low-income ployment securiiY, emphasized
youths between the ages of 16 families ()lormally, those with that only those youth meeting counseling each week for Whleh
they wlll rot be paid, making a
total work week ol 27 hours.
Officials of the .bte R o a d
Commission and the Department
of Natural Re50Urces stated that
It was the responslbUity and
ber
wU
I
be
fifty
cents.
NEW HAVEN - The NehscU- Jr. will be hostesses. Members
A report was given on the
ma Carden Club heJd its regular will hold a nower arrangement Junior Garden Club, the club is
meeting recently at the home of workshop and Mrs. Riley will sponsoring, The Prood Planters. tudes, a sense of responsibUit,y,
Mrs. John Powell with Mrs. Da- judge the arrangements.
and the opportunity w give 111Mrs. Powell reported on the Their next meeting will be on
vid Simonton and Mrs. Loots
ture
prospective employers a
Rhododendrons planted at the Ma- June 28 at 2 p.m. at the Alex - work experience recommendaKarschnlk aa co-hostesses.
Qulllen Memorial Building. The
Mro. Donald Bwnl!lll'dner, son, Hartford and Ne" Haven Clower show to be held at the tion. Neighborhood Youth Corps
chairman of the Program Com- schools and at the New Haven Mason County Fair was discuss- projects are deslgnedro.increase
mittee, reported on the program Post Offtce.
the enrollees' later employabUMrs. Powell also gave a re. ed. The Ohio Guyan District
for the coming year. The July
meeting will be on October 12 iiY BIStus.
meeting will be a covered dish port on the Mason Cooney Coun- at Logan, W.Va.
Applicants- Cor the J)rogram,
diMer at the home of Mrs . Pat- cU of Garden Clubs which was
Mrs. Powell J)resentedthepro·
riek Rlley, president of the New recently organized with Mrs.
gram,
''Flower Arranging in CopHaven Garden Club, and Mrs. Donald Bumgardner on the nom· per .•• Following It, Mrs. William
Jamea N, Roush, Mrs. B. J. I n at i n g committee. Officers
R. Powell demonstrated a copHoward and Mrs. c. M. Adams, elected were Mrs. PatrlckRUey, per display and orders were
New Haven Garden Club, presJ~
:-:
dent; Mr.s. Carroll Casto, TU- taken for the items.
Attending
were
Mrs.
ClydeFol:;:
:·:
it down over my shoulders Endfe.Wei Garden Club, vice - ey, Mrs. L. C. Roush, guests, :::
a I most to the elbows. He president; Mrs. Earl Clark, Nelaughed and said• "Stay! hacllma Garden Club, secretary, Mrs. David Flelds, Mrs. James : .
What are you going to try to and Mrs. John Calloway, Hen- GUbert, Mrs. Henry H. Buck,
do, leave early?"
derson Garden Club . treasurer, Jr., Mrs. William C. Gibbs, Mrs.
Late the next evening, in a
There will be a tea on June Tom Hoffman, Mrs. Roy Jones,
San Francisco ballroom just 20 Crom 2 until 4 p.m. at the Mrs. Phil Batey, Mrs. Donald
as warm as the one in PortBumgardner, Mrs. C, M. Adams,
land, I had on the same coat Point Pleasant Episcopal Church. Jr ., Mrs. WUllam Powell, demas he again passed cJose. He Mrs. H. J. Simmon of Logan,
broke into a big grin, took the The Ohio Guyan District Direc- onstrator, and Mrs . David ~ ­
coat by the collar and said:
tor, will install the officers . manton, Mrs. John Powell, hos"Hey, Bruce, I don't be- Membership dues per club mem Lieve you with your raincoat!"

now being accepted tor a
limited oomber or disadvantaged Weill VIrginia youths, olrlclals of tile w. va. fle&amp;K. of
Employment SeiDriQ' IUIII(lUiced loda,v.
are

Garden Club Program Described

::;!!:I~':= ~o~"::.

nwIJar.,

.

silver

'eoffee

Gettles or Wejlslofl !O!'V¢ the

'

books were

,.. Mrs. Jamea membel-s.,.-A swlmlidnl!~~··~~

Bervl~o.

.

.

Announce Birth
Of a Daughter

planited foi- lJUfte

•' lfiddOn Likes.
were se~&gt;ed by p~
and recrcstllin
led by

w.,.

Harris.

Becky ..

·

IIISS IIILDRED IS PICnJRED with &amp;isle lrd - e , only two ~ t1Mi perlormlJW slephanta
!rom CII1L KenDY Ikert' s large herd of pachyderms. The famous Hoxie Bros. 3-RiJW Clrcua Ia
comlJW to Pomeroy on June 14 at the city lot tor perform1nces at 2 and 8 p. m. Advance tickets
are being sold now by the Pmneroy Volunteer Fire Department.

Cpl. and Mrs. stanley It Lem-

ley are aniiOIIPCirlg the birth of

GUESTS OF ROTARY

NEW HAVEN - coaches Grant
a daughter, Alice Mlchclle. The
six pound, 10 ou~~ infant was Barnett and Donald Upton ond the
born on June 4 at Holzer Hos- senior members .o f Wahsma'ijlgtl
pital, Gallipolis. ·1
School ,lootball and golf tei.ma
Maternal gra~rents are Mr. were guests at a re(ent~ me~t•
and Mrs. Kenneth ' E. Darst of ing ol the Berd Rotary Club dinMiddleport, aJIC( paternal grand- ner meeting. Karl Wiles Showed

.Sen. Kennedy Humorous,

parents are Mr. 1nd Mrs. Har- slides taken by _his son, Jerry.
·
old William Lemley, Pomeroy. In Vietnam.
Mr. ancJ Mrs. VE!rp Bolinger oC
Pomeroy, Mr. a'nd Mrs. Ray
Darst ot Cheshire, and Mrs. Ber·

EXPLAINS MAKEUP PROCEDURE - Fred Hofllnan, Middleport, promct!on mgr., explains page makeup or The Dally
Sentinel abo,. Ulagroopolvtsttorsdurlngthe Ohio Valley Pul&gt;-

eel -the firm's new offset printing facilities in GallipoliS: where
the Gsllipolis Dally Tribune ond SUnday Times-5enUnel also
are printed.

::::::;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;.;.;::=:=: :;:;:: :;:::::;: ==::::":

Pomeroy...

i

· ·.

I Personal Notes •••
~~:

Of Struggle

:~~

Allen Nolan and
chUdren and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Daugherty and children or
Columbus were &amp;mday guests of
their grandmoU!er, Mrs. Cora
Wiggins, and Mrs. Edith ThoMr. ·and Mrs.

mas. Other guetlts of Mrs. Wiggins and Mrs. Thomas were Mr:and Mrs. Dale Multord of Che:sh-

lre.

Chorle&amp; LemJor~..~­
jor surgery TUesda¥ at Veteran•
Memorlal Hospital. • His room
number is 124.

'

$tory Relate&lt;;/

Bruce Gotthardt returned to

~Tillie Scrubs On," the story

llro. Wer.lel Kaut•.
Mr. and Mra. John Kunzelman
ond daul!blers, Angela and s.....,,

'

Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Darst

spent the weekend in COlumbus

Her husband who la stationed
with the U.S. Army at Fort Eustis, Va., ia in Columbus with his
wife.

o1 Plttsburllb, Pa., and KeMeth
Sauer of &amp;lnnyvale, Callt., were
recent guests of Min Margaret

Is Celebrated

Sauer.

Mrs. James Dller, t the Rev.
The 2Sth weddl~ lllllli&gt;ersary and Mrs. Frank Cheesebrew, and
or Mr. and Mrs. R11m0nd 1111•.. the Rev, Max Donahue\and famler, the former Mtrgaret Thorn- lly are among thoae attending
11 of Syracuse, was observed the
Methodist COnference

tlu.ted

SaturdiiJ' with • dl~~~er party at at Lakeolde.
the Howard Johnson restaurant
Mrs. David EntJminger has
in Columbus. Hosting the affair

been the guest of her son, Char-

were children of the coup)e.
Followlr:w the dinner a~ anni~

lea, and family in Charleston,
W, Va., and her daughter, Mrs.

,.nary cake baked by Mr. , 00

Roth Z..., and rsmu.v, also of
Charleston.
Mrs. MUton Hood went to Hun.
tington Tllelda)' to meet her
dauglrter - In • law. Mrs. KathY

Mrs. Mlller•s daughter, Mrs.
Michael Thompson, was served.
Attending the part,)' were Mr.

ard Mro. Michael Thompaon and
daughter, Sharon, Mr. &amp;nd Mro. Hood, and Mrs. SanelY RenderDonald Galbreath, Miss Sydney ... ai tile Tri-State Airport,
Ill".-r, MJ ss Linde •SlI.DI'lP, Thorn- The two were returning Crom a
"

Miller and guest, and Mrs.

llbort visit in Wrightsville, N.C.,

j
l

·-- .

with Mrs. Henderson's relatives.
Sam Hood, home from Kent

i

Rhododendron Club

fM the summer at Vanadium.
Mra. WUJis Anthony I&amp; con-

u .......1 .__...

·~-··

'•

rme SuncjaY.

·; CaDdy Special!

Orange
Slices

Father's Dey Slltl

2

I

Mrs. T. Bert l!oush and Mro. 0.

ri.'

;
0, Sl)'re 11 hostesses. Mrs. G. Albert Roush.
Attending were Mra. G. a HazB. :nazlett led the devotions,
Mrs. Bernnd LievJng, Mrs.
lett,
read!• tile .IZJ at Psslm; Mrs.
Marun
9h!IJWer, Mrs. Albert
Charlt!:s Yonker read a poem,
h;s A Br•nd Ne• Dl)-, Exa.Hanl Rou•h, Mb• Mary PhUilpo, Mrs.
Mrs. Velma
SOng," a..t Lhey cloSt.'CI with ,Johooy ·Roush,
Uoush,
¥.&amp;"•·
Clarence
Thomaa
11/-a;ver.
Mr~,
~los
F.'
Yo.
n
ker,
Mr~
Member's · answr..) l' .Jd the rqll
&lt;:all •illi naming !heir lavorlle Otllc l!&lt;Nsh,
~olor.

..

)

. ,;,

Tl,te lesson "The World ltoush. .,'

1

.

eti-3975

OOMEROY

-----------~--·--------~
USDA CHOICE

c

ROUND

'lb.

STEA
etTRALEAN

YHE~

Ground Chuck
Ground Beef

'~'''

.oo·

..

99•---------------·

KIIJ'

ard Loo l::llon

sweeping

Discount

Priced

BILLFOLDS

.rom

' ney General or
• from New York.

g1ve

a "Royal" Treat .•.

'RUMLtt S±wvt
CANDIES

·.-,, ~

I

~ · .SMOKER

- .·CIGA.S'.:
'

, have what you want?"
•
: Auy reporter who eovered

. naU.Oal pelltles louad people
: aUinf him again aad again
• "wba Bobby Kennedy Is
:really Uke." Maay who an·
: twered &lt;!early s u r p r Is e d
•their lnlerro~ators by deserlb·
: lnl birD as a t:ompautouate,
; klad maa.
: That he was. He often went
:far out of his way to be help·
:lui.
: It was he, as a ki.nd of fam ;lly director, that I had to deal
. with In mld-1963 when l un·
~ dertook

a series of articles

•

•
'

~ Bride-Elect

... ,ft

RAISED POWDII(SPECIAL)

pic••
,. .

Br-ead:~!=----··. t :· e.O,.~
.

.

I

'

I

cloor prize ••• won by Mro.
John Balvor. Punch ond cookleo
were served from a tea table,
whit~ woo centered with a bridal
n..re ond candleo.
1'llo peot
lntluded Mr1.
llolvln KnaiiPi Mro. ~01
Rouah, Dlama lloulh, 11!11 Dorotlll' JloUoll, Deanla and Beverly
:tnltll, llro. William Ruoltll,
llro. J, v. lolcGnw, Mro. Jlilloo
...,.., ..,M!os Litlah J. Ponll,
¥&gt;'· lrill Mr~. Robert ,Jolmson,
llr•· MIJC!nl AI'I!Old. all.,..
Fllz,....td, llro. Evorlll Roul!ll,
Llldl Rouah, Ml't!. John Fey,
llr•· Max Elchln&amp;er, Mro. '1'11tl·

a._

...

I}

: ~ .r
iJ~
•
•

ASHLAND TOP RITE
BAIIERRS

6 Volt -

18.50

2 yr. guerantee

12 Volt _ 24.95
3 yr. guarantee

:

12 Volt _ 19.95

12 Volt _ 29.95

•

2 )'1'. guarantee

4 JT. gu&amp;nntee

:
LOU'S ASIA.AND STATION
•...................................
Mw. Moln Pomerov 229-3535

1 n stan

t of good fun when
someone noticed that Jerry
Bruno, a Kennedy " advance
man" noted for his toughness.

was observed carrying a toy
baseball bat The s e n a t o r
chuckled when a reporter

asked •
"Isn't that a little too obvi ous for a ruthless man?"

The walking tour ended
quickly. I watche1 as he
piled into his car for a trip
to the a i r p o t- t and more

youngsters .
At first he was r.eluctant
to approve the idea , since he
did not want the children's
privacy invaded and, besides.
feared there were already too
many stories about the very
large number or Kennedys .

Would you like to come over?"
A few days later, back in

campaigning in northern Calitorma and Oregon. I had no
way of knowing it was the
last time I would see alive the
a!resting, driving, controver·
s1al young man I had first
met in that barren warehouse
in Boston 16 years ago .

Washington, I called Ken·
neely's secretary to explain
!hal I still had one big problem-! had not been able to
learn anything about lhe four
children or his sister, Mrs.
. Finally he agreed. He could Patrit:ia Lawford, who were
Simply have advised me of his In Callfornla. Minutes later I
decision and left to me all ar· was advised Ul call Mrs. Law.
rangements with the familf. ford at her Santa Monica
Instead, I was told to call hiS home, where she would be
elder sister, Eunice at a par· waUing to hear from me.
ticular hour al the lamed Once again, It went this way •
~ennedy compound in Hyan·
"Yes, my brother Bobby
rusport, Mass. When I reached just called and asked me to
her, she responded warmly help you. What do you want
and said :
to know?"
"Oh,j•es, my brolher Bobby
S..:relariea could e a s i 1y
just caled me and told me
you would be phoning. When have managed. these contacts,
but Bob Kennedy cho&amp;e to
America's first pro 1e smate them himself, despite
slonal composer was WUhis genuine reservations
llam BUllngs !1748-11100),
about lhe srory.
The World Almanac says.
HI&amp; IIDie of JOOd fua WBI
In addiUon to wrtUng lbe
lmmeue, tlloqll It did aot
famous war song. "Chesler," In 1778, Bllllngs In·
ma CIIIIOhart, Mro. Uoyd Roush, n!lllly beeome widely vlolble
uaUI nearly a year after •t•
troduced the use ol the
Mro. Mary Aumiller, Mro. Ralph brolbor'o
auauluUoa . . Evea
pitch pipe, organized a
Roulh, .Mra. Jack He11oa, Mrs. theo, •• be wao l'1111111nJ for
singing class which beOtiD Grimm, Boclq T11¥10r, the Senate Ia New Yorl&lt; In
came our first national
ROOIM!a KQlor, Mro. Wendell lltl4, II ai-led wlllt pori·
musical society aad pubIIIJior, lolro. WOllam Pl&gt;well, odo of peal llloom when be
lbhed six collections or
church music. Excerpts
Bomle Fleldo, Mro. Ralph - - would olare vaeuUy out of a
plait 'l!illdow fer a ball hour
from his vigorous music
gen, Mr. aad Mro. Ed Harrlo, at a Ume.
have been use~ In recent
Mro. WUbur stawart, &amp;illoGrlncompositions
by Henry
llead, Mro. Lorey Bail, Mr. 1111
Tired as he was this spring
CoweD
and
William
Schu·
Nro. David Rouah, Mro. llar1'7 from Incessant campaigning
man.
ID half a d~ primaries, he
L
aYIIO, Mr. aDd 11": Harol~ kept hla good humor through
Rlehard, Sr., Mro. Robert~. the last arduous days In Ore·
Linda ll&lt;i!loh, Mr~. Donald BUm· · goo aad Calllornla. I, lllle
Quotes
sar..,.r, Chtryl .lrd Vldd Bum- other newame 0, occaalonally
prner, Mr1. John lloavor 1111 bec~me the object of his fun.
dlllihler, · Nro. Jol!nny Rouoh,
When, Ill Oregon, 1 sud·
For reasona thai baffle me,
Mrl. W~r Grln""ad, Mri,Jol· d~nly fuund myself crammecf Bob
Kermedy raises a storm
na Burtlo, Mr, 1111 Mro. CO.U )nte, a .-al 11 a press table · &lt;!I emollona
In the breasli of
nU.csa, Mr. ri iiro. 'l'llimiaa at r!l!'!ladd'~ City CluJ), I dld a lrtll maay
~pie, They
Grlnlleld, Mro' WUlla!n :flmu not have a c~nce 1o l!lke of!
ean'l be nUoilal about
.
· •
• a light ~alncoat I wao· wear·
Jr., Mro. c. It Adamo, Jr., lnJ. On bls wax lq the tP'!ak·
llr. and llrl(. ' rt.d ROIIIh, Mr.. d •::· billie, . ~necJy, Jiaasod -A11Ilwr WU!illm Manchesttr, oil hil llacki!IQ of Sell.
aad Nru• .Bill ~ootet. llr, ond cloae by 'and toolt.aote.
llobm
F. Ket~rifdr· tor
Nrl. Dannr Rouoh,
. ·
II• ieached out, grabbed my
pre~!.
1.
raincoat a,t the lop aad p~led

•

Given Shower

, NEW HAVEN - llloa Kathy
;Rouoh, brlcle..,leet orDomyRickard, no honored with a briur
Frldo)' evenln,g at st.
Paul LulhoraD Cbul'ch, with Mrs.
Volma Rouah, Mill Jllle Rouoh
ond lolro. David Roushhosteoseo.
A conteot wao held with !oli-o.
Will lain Ball the wlmer, 'lba

~
·F,~~'HER'S DAY BATTERY S~j·~·C•l•Al••••••••
: ru,

May 21, Bob Kennedy was
shaking hands on a brief walk
tbrough the Farmers' Market
!n Los Angeles. There was an

: most or whom Iii! liked just as
• had his late brother.
•
: Under questioning, he some' Urnes would stare a long
: while in silence as he thought
~ hard about an answer. When
• quietly •
•
: "Is that enough? Do you

r,;"'~"~~~~~:;.;"«•*~~::::~~,~~~

wa~h oa
Freckles.
On the sunny morning of

considerate. The impa: tient drumming of fingers on
• desk which aides observed as
: he talked to some visitors was
• seldom seen when he sat In
: the company of newsmen,

, an interview seemed to have
: run Its course, he would ask

Kennedy

........ ..

sented to keep

~and

·ros ·THE

HOME lAUNDRY

mlgbt be an ambassadorship

senator

Acollection of
things that cost less than they did
10 Years ago
I

Your ele&lt;lric bill j u&gt;l aboul &gt;lanJ, alone. Ekclric·
1ty actuall~· cu~ts less per kdowaH-hour todny than

I

Timely

1:1:.

I

ever before.
But if clectrh:il y's ~.: hcup1.' r th~lll."\"1.'1 , whv is vour
electric bill higher ?
Look around . Count thl' appliann.'s vou didn 't usc
ten y~ars _ago . Electric po\1/cr is gi,·ing yuu a bclter ,
happ1cr hfc . So even though rates arc lower, vour
bill is up because you usc rnorc . ·
·
Considering today's p1 in·s. t·k·ct ridtv ha~ to he
the b-iggest barguin urouml. And our \\;hole scn.·n·
slate sysh.'m kL't..~ working hard lo mak.c il 1.' \'\.' 11
more of a b;:LrJ;i.lin. Think ahou1 thai ll\.'XI tim\.· you
hear LIS sm· . . .
It .... , _,.
• "lj ••• ........
· • • ..., • ........
,
1
!"!!!-"
Mftll "··

•

t)

~

PICKUP &amp;
DBJVERY

In It for anyone who con-

: was Invariably co-operative
·~ .

~

At Sa11 Diego hours later,

: At conversational range, he

\

KING

be playfully ••ueoled Lllere

•

3.95
~~

as

:

"Would you take care of the

. palgns, serving as U.S. Allor·

t ··

SHIUS ')}~
FILI;n·~-· n: ~
~~·
FOR A ,;1· ~ :;

dog today?"

Hfe that he was
to play ln an ever·
larger way as John Kennedy
• won re ~election to the Senate
: in 1958 and went on to gain
• the presidency in 1960.
•
: Like many other reporters,
· I had long private conversa: tions with him over the years
~ when he was managing cam-

'

gesture.

ESTHER CIRCLE MEETS
The Esther Circle of the Lutheran Church Women met Tuesday evening at Ute St. Paul Lutheran Church with Mrs. Harry
Layne as hoste~;s, The lesson, "A
Portrait of GOO.'' was presented
by Mrs. David Roush. Others in
atterdance were Mrs. Melvin
Knapp, Mrs. Herman Layne, Mrs,
Velma Roush and Mrs. lloyd
Roush.

laughed, came over and put
his hand on my shoulder. He
asked •

~ At that moment, in a warm
• Boston summer, he seemed

·-r

. 17~

1;

bery.
After two summons. the dog
trotted toward the senator's
car. I waved him on with a

: ing.

; about lhe many Kenneily

Milk:...•.-··------·· ....

'"

.

w

who promptly

scampered off into the shrub-

: w1th sl~eves rolled up, talking
•crisply and knowledgeably or
: the campaign he was direct·

~

Open Every Week D•y 9:00 to 7:00
Salurdly Til

SLICED
!I BACON
1
I 2~~ 1.00
I

'
of ColQr," was presented bJ Mn.

Freckles,

• brother's

NEW IIAVEN -·The Rhododendron Home Demonstration Club
met Tiwrsda.y at the club house
with Miss Millie Bumgarner,

with his springer spaniel,

i marked

fined to Veterans Memorial Hospital for observation and lreatmenl.

Meets on Thursday

ern California. He emerged

: hardly believable In so big a
: role. Yet it was a part in his

MARKET

E

shot in the early minutes of
June 5, a Kennedy motorcade
was forming up for a long
day's nmpaigning in south-

he stood in khaki
~ tr~users and open white shirt

TIMEX

CREW SOCKS
~~9ae

•

,

!l

Hole! where he was fatally

• senior,

MEN'S

Sl ON'S !

II

side the same Ambassador

:John, who was running in 1952
• for the U.S. Senate seat then
:held by Henry Cabot Lodge.
: Then 26 years old bul look·
: lng as boyish as a high school

Choo11 Dadtfhlin
The Wideof
Allortintllt
.... ,

•............... ~-~

A lew days afterward, out.

• quarters for h1s brother

state University, Is employed

I ,

: WASHINGTON - INEA 1 :The first time I ever saw
··Robert F. Kennedy was in a
:big barn of a place on Bos·
; ton's Water Street, which was
: serving as camp~ign head-

(We Are Not

IE. MAIN ST.

Mr. and Mrs. Claude Our gee

Anniversary

arrived

cherry .Point, T'L c., and

r-----~~----•

PRICES ON OUR

~s~s.

Washington Correspondent

Marine

1
Open On Sundays)
.J EXTRA
r----------------------SPECIAL

I

vlsiL
with their daughter, Mrs. VerMrs. Melvin Circle and daughnon Cleland who Is hospttallzed.

ter, Marianne, of Columbus, are
here for a several days' visit
with her parenls, Mr. and Mrs.
C. E. Blakeslee.

u. s.

charge from the

arUele and another, uwe Are . ia Hazlett
·
So Aware!' M.rs. w. A.. Morgan
'fhf ' ctntJ!urs otd~I&lt;"myth·''·
·priiietited a Poem, i"frCubtes,"
ology
were a wild race, half·
and the meditation from the UPhorse
and
half-man.
per Room, uHoly Spirit," was
read by Mrs. William -Grueser.
Mrs Amos Leonard read, "The

W, A. Morgan, and his uncle a ~et Room," hy Mrs. William
and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Roger ·Grueser and prayer by Mrs.
Morgan.
Lewla Groeser were,Included In
Paul Kautz and chlldreo, Rich- the meeting,
ard and JUI, Columbus, were
!ilndal' pe Ills of his mother,

of St. I..Oul1, MO., were recent
IJIBits ofhl&amp; mother, Mrs. Mary
Kunzel~ and other relatives.
Mn. Kunzelman ::.nd children
were here for two weeks, and
John was here for a shorter

By BRUCE BIOSS.t.T

CJ)l. ~eJ re~eived his disCorps at

of a mother's struggle t$ educate her ~lJ.r. was included
on a program (){- readlr.gs presented at Tuesday night's meet.
ing of the Woman's Society of
Christian Service at the Rock
:tJrings Methodist Church.
Mrs. Lewis Gnaesei read that milt, Barbara Roush ard \ 'irgin-

Columbus toda.J· Iller visiting Good News."
here with hlsl!l'andmother, Mrs.
A meditation, ••The Wonder o1

:Warm, Considerate Person

gra~arent&amp;.

lishing Co. Open House Tuesday night Over 400 persons Visit-

W. S. W. S. MEETS
NEW HAVEN - The W~WS
oC the Bachtel United Methodist
Church met at the church for
their regular monthly meeting.
Opal MulfOrd ser-ved as leader
tor the topic, "The Role a(
the Church - Part D Japan."
They opened with the singing of
"lf Jesus Goes With Me," Col·
!owed with the scrif~ture taken
from Matthew and I Corinthians.
AUending were Opal Mulford,
Mildred Jewell, Laura Elliott,
Evelyn Jewell, Rena Lauder~

'

tha Ward of Columbus are great-

In addltiM to meetlnc the .U·
.glbUlty criteria, mull.,t.'I'J a
social seeurlty card betor. tiiO!)'
can be referred, Smlill . - _
lie !liSted that only tllotlO . - .
lng • tile ellalblllll' rl&lt;ldr..-o
srould apply. Ids ol!leea, fo&lt;al.ed at 225 Sixth street. 1o;d&amp;
PleaSOIII, Is currllllll,y ,..,._
lng applications and - · esle&lt;l are uriiad to ootiact II
lmmedlalely.
Detailed ln!onnaUoil • illll
and other youth traln!nC grams avaUable mQ be GtUIDed Iron. your loeal ol!lcs &lt;t
the Well Vlrglnfg ~
or Employment seeurtey.

\

q

1••• -~........ ,..••5o

....

••
••
••
•••
••
•••

••••••

�'

,'

.
•

ITUR

ARNOLD GRATE

OUR GREATEST SALE EYERI

.

Ph. 742:4211

RUTLAND, 0.

SALE STARTS TODAY at BOTH STORES

CLEAR

BOTH STORES

IGERATORS

j

New Shipments Have
d
DON'T
· rr.1ve ••••
A'

•

·-

LOWER THAN
·EVER PRICES!

169.95
'

WITH TRADE
•

•I

'.

Buy A

.•

!
\
1

We Give All the Extras ••••
RED CARPET SERVICI
EXPERIENCED SERVICE MEN
GENUINE MA YT AG PARTS

REGULAR ••• 529.95 ; ·
.
YOUR TRADE-IN 130.00 :

Living Room Suite
Selling For 229.95 ;ore

'

--:

WRINGER MODEL J2l

'

•

•

AND FOR ONLY

399.95:

$1 .
- 0 Q,IORE .

EASY .TERMS
FREE DELIVERY
' ' l·;
•

-

.'

t

':

.

Model68-364

,..

(TOP FREEZER)

.
.
399 • 95

·..

NOW

trouble-free senice.

THIS ONE SHOULD SEll FOI $239.95
ON TODAY'S lADET I
lilT WHIU THIS SHIPMENT. lASTS

199.95
WITH TUDE

Glbsoo th&lt; qualicy leader. •• Gib•on hlgi&gt; standard o! quallcy, beckcd by tlle exclusive quality miJe, 3lh hr. q»craUng
test ol every refrigerator, means better v1lue for you.
Compact in sh.c, surprisingly low in pr·lco. This GibiJOfl12
will give you U!uram·c of trouble~ tree dcpendlbillt)' for
yean, Now you save $10.00.

"
I

.
.-

room

'~- .

uite

F~l

FOR $
ONLY

MAYTAG
WASHER

•

GIVEN AWAY AT

When you purchase ANY Living Room Suite during this sale • This is one
of the finest suites we have hen able to offer. Be sure and visit us
soon for the
's best

$278 .

WITH TRADE
t\ow With New 10-Year Golden
Guan1ntee
Gtbson's patented ~rost'Ciear system as.
~ ures you no 1rost ever can form in re·
t'rigerator or freezer. Eliminate~; messy
defrosting chores forever. And Gibson's
new 10-year Golden Guarantee - first in
lhe industry - assures you of longer,

GIBSO
12 Cubi' Foot
REFRIGERATOR
FREEZER

You Get This Beautiful 3-Pie'e

Regular · · • 380.00 .
Trade-In - - .102.00 _.

' ' 'AI06·00300 -L

MAYTAG AUTOMATIC _
WASHER- DRYER PAIR

f-GET THE
Bed
Suite

Big 16 Frost-Clear
Refrigerator-Freezer
GIBSON

'"

"•

•

Free
Delivery
For All

THIS BUY!

... Sft ..-"'

WRINGER MODEL E2L

ARNot,o GRAre

•
·-··-··-··-··-··-·1·---~-~--··-··-··-··--·-------~-------------~-----·

•

I

I

l \
'\ i

At
Rutland"

Everybody Invited! Shop Rutland Furniture, Shop Mason Furniture! Shop Now! _

·-·····-··-··--1--1
AT

FROST

'

I

· Man

Grate ••• GREATEST A LUES!

HEIMAN GRA-TE

.-------

"The

Man
At
Mason"

BIG 19 S DE-8 •
&lt; -----32"-----&gt;

BEST DEAL
ANYWHERE!!

.

.

. t.

"The

·---------~--·--·····-·······-··-··-··-···i··---------------------------,---------Headquarters For T4e
3-County Area!!

\

.•

Rutland Furniture
Ph. 773-55~2 MASON, W.VA.

.

We have lust dosed our -most su(ceisful Spring Furniture Sale and want.to show ~ur appreciation of the fine patronaee.rWI
••,. · ·
..
enloyed -. We have searched the markets again to get more outstanding huys for this greater selling of homi furnlshl,gs. We· ....:
lleve these values to be the .est ever. ·ALL ITEMS ON SALE AT BOTH STORES. .
,
.

A LUES

HERMAN GRATE

.

EACH STOREI
Nothing to buy, just
register when you
visit our stores.

.

r

"

.•

~

L

'
.
•
~

~s;:--~~ ;

ONLY

I,

'

I

I

.••
.•"
.
..
•

Gi
Gives

You A

10 YEAR
GOLDEN
GUARANTEE

MAYTAG
WASHER

.

GIVEN AWAY AT

EACH STORE

· Heavy Vinyl 2 . pc. Sofa Bed Silite
. .• . 95

Nlptrc-..l'llll•lret

. Size SOFA .
Safe by day1 Mel by night. .
Cholc. of 4 ·~
'

"lllttr •• tl•e Jll
vllltwr liens.
. / P~. 74~2lJ . . ·.
'

'

MASON,
W. VA.
.
'.

-

·U . . ..

•,

Pleity for Every-.el. It lej.
•

•

'

'I

'- •

I. '

~

., -

.

�'

,'

.
•

ITUR

ARNOLD GRATE

OUR GREATEST SALE EYERI

.

Ph. 742:4211

RUTLAND, 0.

SALE STARTS TODAY at BOTH STORES

CLEAR

BOTH STORES

IGERATORS

j

New Shipments Have
d
DON'T
· rr.1ve ••••
A'

•

·-

LOWER THAN
·EVER PRICES!

169.95
'

WITH TRADE
•

•I

'.

Buy A

.•

!
\
1

We Give All the Extras ••••
RED CARPET SERVICI
EXPERIENCED SERVICE MEN
GENUINE MA YT AG PARTS

REGULAR ••• 529.95 ; ·
.
YOUR TRADE-IN 130.00 :

Living Room Suite
Selling For 229.95 ;ore

'

--:

WRINGER MODEL J2l

'

•

•

AND FOR ONLY

399.95:

$1 .
- 0 Q,IORE .

EASY .TERMS
FREE DELIVERY
' ' l·;
•

-

.'

t

':

.

Model68-364

,..

(TOP FREEZER)

.
.
399 • 95

·..

NOW

trouble-free senice.

THIS ONE SHOULD SEll FOI $239.95
ON TODAY'S lADET I
lilT WHIU THIS SHIPMENT. lASTS

199.95
WITH TUDE

Glbsoo th&lt; qualicy leader. •• Gib•on hlgi&gt; standard o! quallcy, beckcd by tlle exclusive quality miJe, 3lh hr. q»craUng
test ol every refrigerator, means better v1lue for you.
Compact in sh.c, surprisingly low in pr·lco. This GibiJOfl12
will give you U!uram·c of trouble~ tree dcpendlbillt)' for
yean, Now you save $10.00.

"
I

.
.-

room

'~- .

uite

F~l

FOR $
ONLY

MAYTAG
WASHER

•

GIVEN AWAY AT

When you purchase ANY Living Room Suite during this sale • This is one
of the finest suites we have hen able to offer. Be sure and visit us
soon for the
's best

$278 .

WITH TRADE
t\ow With New 10-Year Golden
Guan1ntee
Gtbson's patented ~rost'Ciear system as.
~ ures you no 1rost ever can form in re·
t'rigerator or freezer. Eliminate~; messy
defrosting chores forever. And Gibson's
new 10-year Golden Guarantee - first in
lhe industry - assures you of longer,

GIBSO
12 Cubi' Foot
REFRIGERATOR
FREEZER

You Get This Beautiful 3-Pie'e

Regular · · • 380.00 .
Trade-In - - .102.00 _.

' ' 'AI06·00300 -L

MAYTAG AUTOMATIC _
WASHER- DRYER PAIR

f-GET THE
Bed
Suite

Big 16 Frost-Clear
Refrigerator-Freezer
GIBSON

'"

"•

•

Free
Delivery
For All

THIS BUY!

... Sft ..-"'

WRINGER MODEL E2L

ARNot,o GRAre

•
·-··-··-··-··-··-·1·---~-~--··-··-··-··--·-------~-------------~-----·

•

I

I

l \
'\ i

At
Rutland"

Everybody Invited! Shop Rutland Furniture, Shop Mason Furniture! Shop Now! _

·-·····-··-··--1--1
AT

FROST

'

I

· Man

Grate ••• GREATEST A LUES!

HEIMAN GRA-TE

.-------

"The

Man
At
Mason"

BIG 19 S DE-8 •
&lt; -----32"-----&gt;

BEST DEAL
ANYWHERE!!

.

.

. t.

"The

·---------~--·--·····-·······-··-··-··-···i··---------------------------,---------Headquarters For T4e
3-County Area!!

\

.•

Rutland Furniture
Ph. 773-55~2 MASON, W.VA.

.

We have lust dosed our -most su(ceisful Spring Furniture Sale and want.to show ~ur appreciation of the fine patronaee.rWI
••,. · ·
..
enloyed -. We have searched the markets again to get more outstanding huys for this greater selling of homi furnlshl,gs. We· ....:
lleve these values to be the .est ever. ·ALL ITEMS ON SALE AT BOTH STORES. .
,
.

A LUES

HERMAN GRATE

.

EACH STOREI
Nothing to buy, just
register when you
visit our stores.

.

r

"

.•

~

L

'
.
•
~

~s;:--~~ ;

ONLY

I,

'

I

I

.••
.•"
.
..
•

Gi
Gives

You A

10 YEAR
GOLDEN
GUARANTEE

MAYTAG
WASHER

.

GIVEN AWAY AT

EACH STORE

· Heavy Vinyl 2 . pc. Sofa Bed Silite
. .• . 95

Nlptrc-..l'llll•lret

. Size SOFA .
Safe by day1 Mel by night. .
Cholc. of 4 ·~
'

"lllttr •• tl•e Jll
vllltwr liens.
. / P~. 74~2lJ . . ·.
'

'

MASON,
W. VA.
.
'.

-

·U . . ..

•,

Pleity for Every-.el. It lej.
•

•

'

'I

'- •

I. '

~

., -

.

�14- Tile Dail1 Sentinel, Pomerw-Mlddleport, 0., Tlturllday, June 13, 1968 .

•

Top
Grade
Results
A LITTLE 'HOMEWORK' Watching Want Ads Bri;ng
.
WAIIT AD

Notlce

I .. IIOIUMTION

O.lt.R ...II
I • ·• · DaY MhN P.,.ltcatleflll
,.._,.,. DHIIIIIM t l .l'ft.
Cl....._..... &amp; CNNCI .. ftl
Will 1M Mill...... -.HI t ""'· ,.,
DIY .. fliltWIUtlen

IHULATIONI
TM Pftlllhtlr rHIIr¥411 tflt;

rltltt

.. ..tt " ... tHt ..., . . ,....... . .

..lnc.r.-.ct
,..,....IItie
,., ..... ••• ..
.....,......
I1Htll.l'e, TM llltbll1.._ will Mt

lATII
fliP Went Ad ..,.,.
I ca"lt ,... W..-d Mte I...,.._
Mh•llftUftt Ctle,.. 71C

1:1 •••II ..,. werd tttrH ,.,..,.
....
.,,,..,
tlwe lftttrlitftl.
II c.,.tl ,., Word sla CIM*Cutlw
lnMrftoftl,
II ,.,

c.tnt

DtiCCMIIftl H

" " ldl

end 1111 INikl wltflln 11 dayl.
CAID Ofl T"ANII:I
ti .JI f9r Jl word

a

oaiTUAaY

mlntmun~ .

11.

••nleMI wertl tc.
ILIND ADS

AftlttleNf Uc CJterM ,_, ....,..,_

···-"'·

OIIIIIIICI HOURI

lzM l,fll, to l:tt lUI, Dally

tu,...,

t 1N •·• .. n :ll ....,. ..

lnMimory
IN MEMORY ol John W. Stout,
who passed away June 13,

1963.
Orba, Elenore, Judith
and Robert Stout. &amp;-111-lte

Card of Thanks

j

WE WISH to express o u ,
thanks to all those who bel[&gt;
ed when we lost our home by
fire. The efficient services of
the Bashan Fire Department
and auxiliary, the Racine
Fire Dept. and emergency
squad; Rev. Sellers and the
sheriff's department ; t h e
neighbors, the efficient ser.
vice of Dr. Roger Daniels and
~~e staff at Meigs General
Hospital. May God bless you
all.
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Circle
11-13-Itc

THE FAMILY of Louis E. Sis·
son wishes to express their
thanks to all of those that
helped in any way and for
their kind expressions of sympathy al the death of our [OV·
ed ones. We especially thank
the · Pomeroy Emergency
Squad, Dr. Pickens, the staff
and nurses at Veterans Me·
morlal Hospital, the Raw·
IJngs Goals Funeral Home,
the Minister and hls wife, for
their consoling words in me!·
sage and In song, also to the
pallbearers and to those send.
\IIi fond and those that bel[&gt;
od In any way.
Wife and family .
&amp;-13-1!1

Wanted To Buy
8IIALL ACREAGE, no building,
llale prlee aDd fuD partlculan. Wrllo lloJ: fill .. ~ the
Dally Senllnel, Pomeroy.
6-76

ANTIQUES, lumlture, dflbel.
mlscellaDeous. Mrs. Howard
Ceoll, 1110 W. Main St., l'omeI'Of.
1411e

Help Wanted
WAITRESS FOR bar or restau.
rant. Phone 992.Q53. 6-J.Uto
DESK CLERK. IJve 1D. AppiJ
In peroon at Oblo Hotel.
6-U-«Ao

WAITRESS IDd ear bop. AJlllb'
. In peroiln.
Cmr'l Sllllk

Business Services
·=

r..::::...

---

BLA[TTNARS

---

AIC CLEANERS

EVINRUD£

5.55

POMEROY HOME AND lUTO

Schwanel Man.
Hockinaport, Ohio

Old Town

.....

---

Flats News

'

.........

.....

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

_..

...........
..____

,,
_

"*

1968 Ca111aro H. T. Coupe

iuoo.

-

SPECIAL, $3195

HOBSTETTER
REALTY

CARRIER
WANTED
Pomeroy Route.
In Business

WMPO

Section
Notice
DANCE. Hotel Martin Friday
and Saturday from 10 p.m.
to 2 a.m.
11-IS.!to
ALL MEMBERS and their
guests are urged to attend
lhe Rutland Gun Club trap
shoot . June 13, 1968, and the
monthly meeting on June 14.
6-1:1·2tc
REVlV AL NOW In progress at
Ash St. Free •Will Bapu.t
Church in Middleport held by
Rev. John Mayhew from W.
Va.
6-12-JJic

I

BUJ.K

For Sale

THE HOUSE of Wlllon: l:rolle RACING HYDRO plane, 10 loot,
FERTILIZERS BUDGET PRICE lumll1n on
16 liP motor, trailer. Must
flsb and supplies. Open I L
. . ~ave you l 1.me &amp; money. We
our third noor budget ehop.
m. to I p.m. Tueaday.tbrGu&amp;fl · sell, f250, ar best olfer. Pbone
c an supply m llced fertilizers &amp;
slrilight materials you need - or
Baker
Furniture, M1ddleport,
8411-2736.
6-12-lilc
Saturday; Sunday and ~
apply th em f or you. Call today.
/
Ohio.
' 2! lie
day by appointment. Firat
road left, below Pleuant Pl. JOHN DEERE 4ZO dozer with
POMEROY
SEWING MACHINES, l'8]lllr
winch and blade; also 1958
Reaort. Watch lor lfpa, I'll.
Business Services
PHONE
EXPERIENCED
service, an makes. WY S.
BRING NEW
Studebaker 211 ton truck wllb
1'/1.106$.
W.lliiC
RADIO
&amp;
TV
repair,
reafiOIIo
•
992-2181
2284. The Fabrlo Shop, Pomlive speed transmlaslon. Ph.
6~~ · I I
Ra~l1hr Strvlct
able prices. Antenna lo Boos- LIFE TO
eroy.
Authorized Singer Saleo
992-G040.
&amp;-!Ute
TERMITES SWARMING? ter service. John Harrison, YOUR
Jack W. Caney, Mgr.
and Service. We Sharpen
Tiley are re-produetlves, DOl
701 Broadway St., Middleport, CARPmNG
Sclasors.
sa.tfe
your -ter &lt;Ofony. Free fD. 63 HONDA, recently overhauled,
and helmet; also '59 Ford. 8
Oblo. Phone
OJII!II Revlve t1w «lllnal htuh of Jlltl IUJI.
lpectiDDs and Inlol'lllllltm on
For Sale
evenlnp.
8-I.,!Oie Clnntd iM 1QIIr own hallll by Yon Scllrader
C!GARETI'E vending JMCh'cylinder. See Raymond Rowe
crawl spaee dangen. No
llfJ·fUIII lllttholl. Nl IIIMII. No fun. No
odor. U11 rUJt tfte um1 ••, .
and service. ABC Enterpr!Jeo,
alter 8 p.m. or phone 247-2270. SAVE MONEY at Bryanl'l 011
saleman, low overllead, !10
Mason, W. Va. Phone m.&amp;541. CURTISS "DAIRY BEEF"
6-114tc
a gilt lor Dad. Tape recordpor cent savlnga. Allied Pest
breeding lerVfce. Call Leland
••::.:::::"
w.tle
ers reduced fl5 to $!0. SM.
Olnlrol, Pomervy,
Oblo.
From tho Largest TrUCk or
1.,,,. ""'" • · - ...._
Parter, Pomeroy nsldence
radio only $9.98. Automatic
IS TON mlJed hay and one lnPholle 8IHIII8 evenlnp.
Radlalur Tjl The
Bullmzer
1112-UM or call alation 'nip. •-.. ""''" ot. • _..,
letter opener. battary power- ELECTROLUX SALES and serternallonal drag plow. two hot.
W440ip
&amp;nallest
Hotter
Corw
pers Plains 6874251. 61301c .__.....
.;...•_•.,;-,;.;,.v.,;IU..;;•;.;;'"'.;;•;;;;;......J
vice : Sweepers. rug washers
ed fl. Golf balls fl a dozen;
tom, 14-Inch; contact Msrv1n
and polishers. Genuine parts.
Keebaugh before 7 p.m. at
dreu shoes $1.99 palr. Save
HAPPY HOUR, Shenang Sprtnp
Call 992-37811.
&amp;-111-tfc APPALOSSA STUD eerviee. 111 AIR CONDmONING ~
PH. 99a.2143
Pomeroy
Pomeroy 992-5342 after 7 p.m. hall, portable TV Uke new,
Nlte Club. 5 to 8 p.m. M01&gt;
appointment, phone 99Ulll.
allon
eerv!ce.
Jack'•
Relrlg·
at
Chester
985-3913.
6-12·3te
$69;
stereo
player
"9.85;
p.
day Ibm Friday. Ladles nl&amp;bl
1-14-ltllp
eratlon, New Haven. hone
mirY Friday.
u.tlc
pel records, two for "' wat.
Insurance
SAVE SPACE
118M0'111.
4 • lie
ches, 18.95; eleclrlc guitars.
SORREL RIDING mare, while
Insurance bee-a
c. C. IIRAIIFORD
FREE STORAGE
#11.95. Shop and save at Bry- AUTOMOBR.E
blaze. stockings: $165. Phone
eanoeDed? Lost JOUr opeeat.
For Trade
AUCTIONEER
READY • MIX I!OIICI'et. dallvant's, 108 W. Main, Pomeroy.
99U'I93.
6-11-3\p
MOTH PROOFING
or'e license? CaD lft.291111.
Complete Servlct
CASH P'OR Antique~. BID
ered rlilbt to your pn&gt;ject.
6-1141e
I 15 tic
Write, Pllone or Collloet
Hamm, Middleport, Oblo.
Fast and euy. Free .U.
FOUR ROOM HOUSE, balb,
Crill
Bndftlrd
f.ltale
mates. Phone ~. aoe,.
Msson, W. Va.
773-S$43
basemen~ two !Bille loll, In THREE ACRES, 5 room house,
LUAL NOTIC•
RaciDe, Oldo
leln
Ready
Mix
Co.,
Mlddl
..
Racine. can 9ft.20!1 or I4J. new roo!, barn, ceDar, two
• l It!!
OIDINAHCI NO. t1H1
port, Ohio.
I • lie
2161.
6-7-Qp clslerns and furniture $1500.
An
Ord.ID&amp;Dee
to
PROHIBIT
Tim
Audlon
Phone '142-661S.
S.1&amp;-30tp PLACING or AJlY TIP.ASII, R&amp;n18&amp;
OR OTHER MATERIAL lN A VflL.
CONSIGNMENT Sale: Complete TWO BEDROOM home, ball!
AGE 8'l"REET Oil CATCH BABIN OR
SALI!!S AJill) SBll\'ICE
line ol farm mactdnery and
UWD THROUGH AN OPEMING
lull basement, garage: Two- POODLE PUPPIES, AKC Toy 6ri'UATID
IN A VD..LAGE STRD:T.
household Items. June II start.
year.old home In Syracuse. mlnlature, 1'15 and up. Stud
Be n ordained bJ' the CouacU of
EXPERT
FIRESTONE DLC 100
BEGINNERS
the Couadl of V!DIIt of llld4leport
Inc at noon. SldehiD auclloD Phone
NEW TREAD-BLACKWALL
992-2421.
S.Z8-301e service and grooming. Phoae u foUon:
Wheel Alignment
SPECIAL
on Leo Morr!.o farm, Rutland,
See. I. Tbat " lllall be 111111wfal
mMU.
11 3 lie
Price Tll!l
Sl••
for aJl1 perwun to 1weep or oUterOblo. Anyone wfahlng to eeD GERT'S A GAY GIRL - Jlu.
$295.00
650xl3
9.11 S1
WiN place aD7 truh, retuM. or o&amp;h·
any Item at the sale caD 70.
ar
material
bl
a
VUiqe
Stnet
or
650x14
9.11
.43
dy for a whirl, alter cleaning
RED R5H BOAT
WALNUT STEREO radio. Bean. C.kh Balbi. or Sewer tbroutb an
700xl3
1G.81 .d
4641 or 74U817. Not leiJIOGopelliDJ lil~alel:3 In a Vllll.la Slrett.
carpets with Blue LUIIre.
700&lt;14
10M .43
Uful contemporary walnut ate.
MASTElCIAFT
8J:C. D. Whoenr .tolakt UlSI orBible lor accidents. LilliCh 'IIlii
Renl electric shampooer, II,
750.14
11.11 .43
diiUince du.ll be ftned not ._ thaa
reo wiib AM lo MF radio, d&amp;be lerVed. Terml of sale nor mon tlr.m llfllt.OO.
TRAILER
67Gxl5 .
11.11 A7
Baker Furniture.
11-INic Iuxe lloatm, turntable, dual tJS.OO
n:c. m . Z.ub da)' tbat a pehCID
Ptu•
Rocap,...lo
Eocho.,.
Casll.
6Uic
permJta nflue, trub. or oUter m&amp;•
Nolioo1wlclt GuoroniH ·
volume control. Four speed tert.l to n!Pllln ln a VW111 Street,
-GUARANJEB),.
FULLY EQUIPPED recreatlon
.
.
eateh
llulD
or
se.tr
lhlll
eonftt.
autnmaUc challller. Pay only tute a "parat. ofleDM.
center In Racine; 4 pool ta·
For Sale or Rent
SEC. IV. 1'h1l ordia.laeti .. heNbJ
15 per month or balance
I
bles, ping pong table, p o p
declared to be an amarrancy aDd
FIVE ROOM house and bath,
1'
1
8.62.
Free home demoDBtra- dlall taka dfect on tile urlielt 41&amp;.
l'HONBifl.cooler. etc. Also !-story brick
aluminum sldlng, storm wfD.
aDowed. bJ law.
Uon.
can
912-3218.
&amp;-7-«e
Sec. V . 'l'ld. Onlliu.DM ahaJl t.b
&amp; tile block building on !rd·
dows, W.OO. Phone 11112-3718.
effect llld be 111 forM frcJm and af.
St. , Racine. Large business
X.,. n. 1181.
&amp;Hlp
MAPLE STEREO. 1968 model terPuled
the l'l'th d•J of 11'&amp;7 19M.
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Icenroom now occupied by recre.IOftN W. llaK.LI
stereo.
Lovely maple, AM 1o
,,.k*tt of Council
hower looked alter the chUtlren
ation center. Three apartFM radio. Four speed auto.
Athlt: 0Me Ontw
of Mr. and Mrs. Clll!ord Icenments un second floor, two
furnished . Separate garage &amp;\ . malic changer, lour speaker 1-11: ..., tk
hower willie Mrs. CIU!ord IcenWANTED
laundry room with apartment ' ~tem . Pay only tll9.58 or
hower was at HoJzer Hospital.
EXPERIENCED TRUCK driv·
NDTICI ON PILtNO 0# INVINTOIIY
on second floor. Apartment
nthly payments of fe, Free
Mr. Dillon Tayler returned
AND A,U.IIIMaNT
er. Phone 992-2565 or 992·2582,
BY MAYJOHNSTON
TIN ltlta of Oft ... Mtltt CouRty
home from Veterans Memorial
partly furnished. Also oepar- home demonstration, call 991Midway Market.
S.IS.3te
PNMtt Cnrt
Mr . and Mrs. Jay Scott of Hospllal.
ate one story wooden business 3218·
6-7-61c
To tbe E:ncutan or Adm1lllltt1·
tort of the eatatn; to 111ch of the Columbus, 0 ., visited her grandMr. and Mrs. Maywood John.
building and vacant lot. AU A NEW shl
fallowl.aJ u an rHideDtl of t!MI
1 1 1 th'•• State
mother, Mrs. Sylvia Carpenter. ston, local, called on Mr. and
For Rent
or
Oblo.
\'ll:-the
~'filii
furniture Included, alHu...
pmen o ~ o "'&amp; spolllfl , the nn:t of kin. tlMI beDII·
All the children of Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Johnston and
1·wo EURNISHED apartmenls,
rented with good incomt.'S has ~ved. Wo"""! I and Dclarlel under tbe wlD1 IQ(l to Ole
Mrs.
Carl Auther501l came Sat- family,.,, e ...
4 rooms and bath. Phone 992or atcora.n reprwentlll.l
tact Joe Brilt at Recreation Children s and Men • Work attomer
/.
1!17 at u. atonmntlon4 ..-. ~ · utday-,O,d !hO!ped celebrale bls
.
·
· ·
Uniforms. Also Pont ~ton
mll, alter 5, phone 9ft.2571.
C.
r:
Tornpkllu, N&lt;&gt;. lt.,-t, Poata·
Center. or call 94&amp;-3057.
ku tru k , •peed Ira
birthday. Cake and ice cream
&amp;-11-3tc
&amp;-12-tfc P1c P
c ' ~
ns- "'''
Oblo Tboma. No. tl.ltt. PomeDeft,.
were
served.
mlsslon. Jeffers Clothing ro,, Oblo
Webtr
Preern~n Holt. No. li.D.
Mr.
a n d Mrs. Lawrence
Store . Rl. 33, Pomeroy.
PLENTY of space lor one traD- l967 AVACADO green Flreb!nl.
ldplo TwP., Pomei'OJ, OMo
YoU are benbJ noUftetl thlt tM Theiss, Chicago, Dl., Mr. and
er with all lacllltles. In Syra·
INie Ia"IDt4riN
Take over payment! or trade
and Appraltemlllltll
ol Mrs. Ted Bailey and son, Indiana,
cuse. can 992-3904. 4-111-tfe
tbe Mates of the aforemenUOB.d,
for older car. !'hone 99Z-3!NIO.
tteeeled, late of Aid Counb' • ..,. visited their mother, Mrs. LouIUe4 .... tbll eoun. l!ll)d blftlltodel
6-lJ.61c
111d Appralel!mentll wtll be fCIJ' heu- ise Van Meter and Nield.
nJRNISIIED and unfurnished
Real Estate For Sale
lDI WoN UW. court Oil the lit 4aJ
Cindy Carroll, local, spent tbe
apartmenb. CIOIO to acbool.
O'IIIUEN I CROW
of IUIJ, ltel. al 1():00 o'eloek A.1f.
SIMMONS METAL bed and
weekem
with Nield Van Meter.
penoa
dHtJ'tq' to me aacepo
AoJ
Phone JI9Z.610.
10.11-tfc
REALTY COMPANY
Uoftl thereto IIIWit ftle them at leut
springs. also one fioor lamp.
Those
who
called on Mr. and
ft... da)'S prior to tbe lkot41 . . ,,.
POMEROYButternut
Ave.
2
Phone 911Z-3953.
&amp;-lute
Mrs. Roy Powell andlamJI.y were
TRAILER SPACE, aD utlllllea
story frame, 4 bedrooms, 1
0"- UDder IDJ' lland aad 11al of Mr. and Mrs. Hayes McMurry,
..sd court. w. tOtb ••, •t ,_.
avaUable. Jnqutre 158 Mulber- BLACK l\IINIATURE Poodle
baths, garage. $1,650.00.
Paul Smith, and Mr. and Mrs .
ry after ! or 5 p.m. Write P.
P. H. O'IIIDI
Pups 1'15. West ll1gh1and POMEROY-UniDD Ave. TerHomer IcenhoWer, loca1.
0 . Box 425 Pomeroy. 11-llt-lfc
Whl~ Terriers $tOO, 11M
race, 111 story frame, 2 bed·
clertr e1 t~lll cautt
Mr. Russell Rhodes of MarlP'armall Cub Tractor, h1drau. rooms,
bath,
basement.
etta,
0., visited his brother, Mr.
O.IMY Cltrll:
FURNISHED apartmOIII, two
and
Mrs.
Orville RhOOes and son
lie 1111, s point last hitch, aln- $4,000.00.
bedrooms, Middleport. Pllomo
g1e plow 6 foot cutter bar MIDDLEPORT - South Znd,
recently .
J192.38'14.
Mr. WUI Clonch and hlsdaullb·
and disc
Prlco linn. Ul- I story frame, 4 bedrooms, 1
lie Barkaroo Kennels Coot- baths. 110,000.00.
ter ; Mrs. Vlrgel Dowler and chilColor black with white vloyl l:q), front aceert band, POwer·
8 ROOMS AND BATH, 170 Mal.
'
FOR RENT, F'URNl8liED
dren of Athens visited Mrs. Mona ·
glide trans., ptMer steering, power disc brakes, style trim,
LIOAL NOTICI
viDe, Ohio. II6NilSt. 6-7-IOic APAR-~ 1 bedr
berry Ave., Pome!OJ. ConORDINANCE
NO.
380
Long.
un~:.~l....
oom.
custom
deluxe interior, front and rear mats, P.B., radio,
tact Rose Sisson, phone •
HENRY
a.EIAND
A
new
renee
has
been
built
rally
wheels,
w-a-w tlres, elee. clock, console, 327 eu. in.
AN OltDINANCI TO ,t,UTHOIIU
TMI! I!MPLOYMENT OF IPI&amp;CIA.L
204$ alter 5 p.m. Phone . . AR(i; YOU Interested In buylllll
Olllee-111!4!1i1
at
the
Bald
Knobs
cemetery
and
275 HP engine. Retail list $3686.00.
COUNSEL TO 'III'A.II AND IU·
a big house In Racine? can
HU
11-f.tfe
Ret. . . . .
nice slgno at the gate&amp;.
PUYISE P'ROCII!DINOS TO A.UTH·
94&amp;-3752. Let's talk about ll.
01111 THE IIIUANCI OP IONDI
Mr. Charles Johnston will go
TO FINANCI! THE COlT OF A IAN·
We
are
Interested
In
selling
THREE ROOM furnished apart..
ITARY JIWIRAOE IYITIM.
to Texas Mmday for service
one. Special price lor quick
BE IT O'lDA.I NED b' th e Counell
ment, bath, adults, 126 Mul·
with the army.
of the Vlllagl!l of Pomeroy, lletll
sale.
ll-13-3tc
County . Ohio :
berry. Phone 119U698. &amp;-a.tfc
Mr. Simon PoweU, Mr. LawSection 1. Tint the law tlnD of
.
renee
Johnston and sons, Mr.
Squ ire. Sanden &amp; Dempsty or CleH·
1967 Chevelle Malibu ____ _ $2095
NICE
HAND
made
quill!
and
land . Ohio, be empiG)'ed b)' tbt. VU·
SINCLE HOUSES, nice Ioca1a11e a• •vec: ll l counmel for the pur·
and Mrs. Homer IcenhoWer,
woven corduroy rugs. Phone
4 Door. std. Trans., Low mileage. Spolless claan IDler·
pose of preparlnj and MJpervlalaJ lbe : Christy and Carol Dailey loUon, apartmenll IUmlsbed l
proeeedlng• of lhlt Vlllap required ,
'
'
!J92.6'127.
ll-13-3tc
GEO.
ROBSTE'l'I'ER.
BROKER
lor,
Mllroon finish wilh matchlllJl lnterlor. Radio, Heater
unlurnllbed In Mlddloparl,
for tbe t..uanee of bonds to naaae. I cal, called on Mr. and Mrs .
White
Wills.
'
POMEROY
UNION
Tl!:fl.
the
co•t
of
c
onJtruelln~
a
unlt.l17
Maywood
Johnston.
pbone lft.S287.
&amp;l-Ute
ayetem for the Vlllqe.
HOTPOINT ELECTRIC range. RACE - 6 room home, 3 bed· Hwerap
Section 2. That for the Hrvlcee M
1967 Chev. lmpela 4 Dr. · -- - $2895
lC' be readered, R1tl l'l.rm lhaU be
Good
coudlllon,
135.
Phone
rooms.
front
porch
and
sbade,
MODERN AIR conditioned unpaid reasonable compenutlon, DOt
327 Engine, Turbo llydnmatlc Trano., Power steerlllg,
992-2302 day. or 99U183 at 6 elslem, eellar. storm doors to nceed M.OOO and to be ap~
lurnlshed apartment? Coals
bY Council . plus the eoet of loaJ dlaWhite wall tires•. White finish with Turq. Interior. Rsdto
p.m.
II-IS.31e
and windows. Outbuilding&amp;. tanee telephone call•, telecr111111 M4
BuDding, Middleport. Apply al
am
Heater. The car hss Bal. of warrant;y am new car
c thtr out-of·PQeket experuu. Com·
111 Acres.
Apartment 16.
&amp;-J3.7tc
pentaUon 1hall be paid from lha pre.
tiUe,
HOUSE IN Bradbury, 5 rooms. COUNTRY HOME - 7 Rooms, ceed1 of such OOnd• when laued, K
newly decorated ; balb wII h 4 bedrooms, balh, gas log fire. otherwlte from tbe Genenl J'uad.
1966 Chevy II Nova
$1695
Sec ti on 3 _ Thl• ordinance 1han taU
For Sale
all new fixtures. Will sen place. wall to wall carpeting, effeet and be in foroe from dll
HT Cpe. Low mUeage by loco! reslclent. Ttrea like new.
TWO BEDROOM house lraller.
th e ear uu t Period allowed bJ
with or without furniture . drilled well. cisterns, base- after
lew.
•
V8 Engine, Automatic Trans,, Power Steering. Rldlo
Phone 1192-5Il2.
&amp;-ll-61c
CHARLiiS W. L!DAB
Sherman BWikirk, Rt. I, Midment. aluminum siding, awn·
and Heater - White ftnlsh.
dleport.
11-13-«p lngs, other buildings. One ac· P...ed: June 3. IIIII.
ONE WESTERN riding horse.
Atteft: Kdal F . &amp;eb.MDleb, a.dL
1962 Corvair Mon:ra
_ _ $595
re fenced .
ihme f.ll
1te
Phone Mason 'I'IUI'II.
NICE PONIES while they 1811.
Coupe. Vln,yl Interior, bucket seats, auto. trans. Rtldlo
FARMS NEEDED
6-ll-3ic
Heater,
eoo:t tire~
'
'
Your choice of 10 head, mlll'1!
HELEN AND VIRGR.
and gelding. $4(1 each . Eskey
TEAFORD
1961 Pontiac Catalina _____ $545
110 liP scarr molar. electric
Hlll, F1alwonds &amp;ad, Porn·
ASSOCIATES
..
If!
1111
starter, generator. handle eroy.
The Almanac
S.~
Syracue,"\:
HT Cpa. Automltlc trans., Power Steerlllll, R &amp; H 10011
control, 1200; AC hay rake on
By United Press International
Ures, white Onlsh.
'
&amp;-l~te
rubber, power take off 150; 14 FOOT Wl!lAVER SKIFF, S.S
Today is Thursday, June 13,
New Idea mower, on rubber,
liP motor and oaro, $140, BY OWNER. Lovely three bed- lhe 16Sih diJ' of 1968 wilh 2011o
150; &amp;-loot disc, SID; John
phone 949-4272.
6-!Uic room home in Syracuse, large loilow.
1963 Chevrolet~ Ton _ _ __ $995
Deere com planter. $20; maThe moon ts between its full
nure spreader on rubber 125. APACHE FOLDING CAMPING ldtchen, llreplace, bssemenl, phase aOO last quarter.
700 x 17 tires. It dnt;y sprfn&amp;s, aolld cab, eowr«&lt; body.
BnJ Grueser, Rl. 1, Mlnero- TRAILER, sleeps 4, also hltdl garage. new metal awnings'
The morning stars are saturn
Local
I owner, low mileage.
and two extra large lots, an:l Venus.
vllle.
6-ll-3\p
and canopy, can bo seen at phone 992-5400.
&amp;-lUte
The evening star Is Jupiter.
102 Legion Terrace or caD
On
this day in history:
1968 ZIG ZAG Bewlllll maehlne.
1960 Studebaker~ ton Truck _ $395
9IU522 or 992-3320. 11-13-!tc
In 18n lhe Uusso-Turkish War
This machine makes button.
l&lt;eepi ng Meigs
began.
V-8 e~W~no, utlllt.Y body with ahelveo, 10011 tires.
holes, dantll lo emb. Tab REAL SOL'ND, 1988 stereo AM
Bldl w01 1MI neetnd at ~ oiJlo.
In
1935
Jim
Braddock
decl"
of
Wet.ter
and
Pulb,
P•IMfl07•
over I payment• of $1 .~1 nor
&amp; FM radio, walnut llnlsh. OMo. unUl Tue.dQ, lune tt, JNI!I
Gollio and
sloned Max Baer to win the
If 10:00 O'Cioe. A.lf. fOT 1Jw Ale
month or 145 cash. W~ wiD
Tab over payments of 15.14 of
the Once LJM Ctrr propert,.,
BoxlllJl ChampionMason Area
bring this machine to your
pee 1110111b or pay 188.21. Will lltuated In the Vl11all!t of Harrlloa. heavyweight
ship
or
the
world.
Ohio. Bid~ tnaJ bo aabtnltted
home lor you to try. CaD
discount lor C811h. Phone 1192&gt; InwDie.wrtlln•
OT ln perwon at t,!te time
Informed As
In 1944 Germany began u&amp;lllJl
9112-2136.
6-11-t!e . . .
6-11-«e of ..r.. Th• rt,11t 18 r.....a" to ~ its "buzz bomb" secret weapon
JDd an:v or all btda.
ThoM'u c:. Mlrtln,
Well As
on Englam durlllJl World Wor
A~flllnlltrdor,
,f ROOM HOUSE, bsth, large SAVE t!O or more 011 al111111Dum
lltaN .t DrKe LYM eerr, D.
Your ChevyDealer
lot; also 14 loot john boat, 24
dNHNtl .
boall, AU alll!!l J.0.1J.J3.14
In
1967
National
Guardlft'len
Entertained
Wtllltlr qftd Puft'l
Railroad 81., Middleport.
root. can IIMH7, ar Jl92.a5l.
......,....,. for Alllllllh•l....... were called oot to quell a racial
992·2126
Open Eves.
Phone 992-38211.
&amp;-11·'/le
5-INO!e ..101 8-lh ..II; •tl; f.tt; 8-11; I 17 uvrisi~ ln Cincinnati, Ohio.

THERE WILL be a SUD sbool
&amp;mday, June 18, beglnnlnl! at
110011 at the Forked Run
·\ Sportsman Club. Everyone Is
welcome.
&amp;-11-llc

WILL DO .wlng at bomo llppm, pockets, JM!8Ilnl,
heiJIIIting, lllerallonl, efc.
Mrs. Freddie Thabel. Muoa,
Phone TIS-5MI.
'-'G-Uc

INFORMATION
NEWS

.......

presents

LOCAL REPORTS
DAILY

AT

_.

7:50 A.M.
12 NOON
3 P.M.
AND
4:30 P.M.

.

Pomeroy

n1e

...

(

.I

T •-- .

•
'r' ........

Co.

-----------,--

t::'\

~

�14- Tile Dail1 Sentinel, Pomerw-Mlddleport, 0., Tlturllday, June 13, 1968 .

•

Top
Grade
Results
A LITTLE 'HOMEWORK' Watching Want Ads Bri;ng
.
WAIIT AD

Notlce

I .. IIOIUMTION

O.lt.R ...II
I • ·• · DaY MhN P.,.ltcatleflll
,.._,.,. DHIIIIIM t l .l'ft.
Cl....._..... &amp; CNNCI .. ftl
Will 1M Mill...... -.HI t ""'· ,.,
DIY .. fliltWIUtlen

IHULATIONI
TM Pftlllhtlr rHIIr¥411 tflt;

rltltt

.. ..tt " ... tHt ..., . . ,....... . .

..lnc.r.-.ct
,..,....IItie
,., ..... ••• ..
.....,......
I1Htll.l'e, TM llltbll1.._ will Mt

lATII
fliP Went Ad ..,.,.
I ca"lt ,... W..-d Mte I...,.._
Mh•llftUftt Ctle,.. 71C

1:1 •••II ..,. werd tttrH ,.,..,.
....
.,,,..,
tlwe lftttrlitftl.
II c.,.tl ,., Word sla CIM*Cutlw
lnMrftoftl,
II ,.,

c.tnt

DtiCCMIIftl H

" " ldl

end 1111 INikl wltflln 11 dayl.
CAID Ofl T"ANII:I
ti .JI f9r Jl word

a

oaiTUAaY

mlntmun~ .

11.

••nleMI wertl tc.
ILIND ADS

AftlttleNf Uc CJterM ,_, ....,..,_

···-"'·

OIIIIIIICI HOURI

lzM l,fll, to l:tt lUI, Dally

tu,...,

t 1N •·• .. n :ll ....,. ..

lnMimory
IN MEMORY ol John W. Stout,
who passed away June 13,

1963.
Orba, Elenore, Judith
and Robert Stout. &amp;-111-lte

Card of Thanks

j

WE WISH to express o u ,
thanks to all those who bel[&gt;
ed when we lost our home by
fire. The efficient services of
the Bashan Fire Department
and auxiliary, the Racine
Fire Dept. and emergency
squad; Rev. Sellers and the
sheriff's department ; t h e
neighbors, the efficient ser.
vice of Dr. Roger Daniels and
~~e staff at Meigs General
Hospital. May God bless you
all.
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Circle
11-13-Itc

THE FAMILY of Louis E. Sis·
son wishes to express their
thanks to all of those that
helped in any way and for
their kind expressions of sympathy al the death of our [OV·
ed ones. We especially thank
the · Pomeroy Emergency
Squad, Dr. Pickens, the staff
and nurses at Veterans Me·
morlal Hospital, the Raw·
IJngs Goals Funeral Home,
the Minister and hls wife, for
their consoling words in me!·
sage and In song, also to the
pallbearers and to those send.
\IIi fond and those that bel[&gt;
od In any way.
Wife and family .
&amp;-13-1!1

Wanted To Buy
8IIALL ACREAGE, no building,
llale prlee aDd fuD partlculan. Wrllo lloJ: fill .. ~ the
Dally Senllnel, Pomeroy.
6-76

ANTIQUES, lumlture, dflbel.
mlscellaDeous. Mrs. Howard
Ceoll, 1110 W. Main St., l'omeI'Of.
1411e

Help Wanted
WAITRESS FOR bar or restau.
rant. Phone 992.Q53. 6-J.Uto
DESK CLERK. IJve 1D. AppiJ
In peroon at Oblo Hotel.
6-U-«Ao

WAITRESS IDd ear bop. AJlllb'
. In peroiln.
Cmr'l Sllllk

Business Services
·=

r..::::...

---

BLA[TTNARS

---

AIC CLEANERS

EVINRUD£

5.55

POMEROY HOME AND lUTO

Schwanel Man.
Hockinaport, Ohio

Old Town

.....

---

Flats News

'

.........

.....

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

_..

...........
..____

,,
_

"*

1968 Ca111aro H. T. Coupe

iuoo.

-

SPECIAL, $3195

HOBSTETTER
REALTY

CARRIER
WANTED
Pomeroy Route.
In Business

WMPO

Section
Notice
DANCE. Hotel Martin Friday
and Saturday from 10 p.m.
to 2 a.m.
11-IS.!to
ALL MEMBERS and their
guests are urged to attend
lhe Rutland Gun Club trap
shoot . June 13, 1968, and the
monthly meeting on June 14.
6-1:1·2tc
REVlV AL NOW In progress at
Ash St. Free •Will Bapu.t
Church in Middleport held by
Rev. John Mayhew from W.
Va.
6-12-JJic

I

BUJ.K

For Sale

THE HOUSE of Wlllon: l:rolle RACING HYDRO plane, 10 loot,
FERTILIZERS BUDGET PRICE lumll1n on
16 liP motor, trailer. Must
flsb and supplies. Open I L
. . ~ave you l 1.me &amp; money. We
our third noor budget ehop.
m. to I p.m. Tueaday.tbrGu&amp;fl · sell, f250, ar best olfer. Pbone
c an supply m llced fertilizers &amp;
slrilight materials you need - or
Baker
Furniture, M1ddleport,
8411-2736.
6-12-lilc
Saturday; Sunday and ~
apply th em f or you. Call today.
/
Ohio.
' 2! lie
day by appointment. Firat
road left, below Pleuant Pl. JOHN DEERE 4ZO dozer with
POMEROY
SEWING MACHINES, l'8]lllr
winch and blade; also 1958
Reaort. Watch lor lfpa, I'll.
Business Services
PHONE
EXPERIENCED
service, an makes. WY S.
BRING NEW
Studebaker 211 ton truck wllb
1'/1.106$.
W.lliiC
RADIO
&amp;
TV
repair,
reafiOIIo
•
992-2181
2284. The Fabrlo Shop, Pomlive speed transmlaslon. Ph.
6~~ · I I
Ra~l1hr Strvlct
able prices. Antenna lo Boos- LIFE TO
eroy.
Authorized Singer Saleo
992-G040.
&amp;-!Ute
TERMITES SWARMING? ter service. John Harrison, YOUR
Jack W. Caney, Mgr.
and Service. We Sharpen
Tiley are re-produetlves, DOl
701 Broadway St., Middleport, CARPmNG
Sclasors.
sa.tfe
your -ter &lt;Ofony. Free fD. 63 HONDA, recently overhauled,
and helmet; also '59 Ford. 8
Oblo. Phone
OJII!II Revlve t1w «lllnal htuh of Jlltl IUJI.
lpectiDDs and Inlol'lllllltm on
For Sale
evenlnp.
8-I.,!Oie Clnntd iM 1QIIr own hallll by Yon Scllrader
C!GARETI'E vending JMCh'cylinder. See Raymond Rowe
crawl spaee dangen. No
llfJ·fUIII lllttholl. Nl IIIMII. No fun. No
odor. U11 rUJt tfte um1 ••, .
and service. ABC Enterpr!Jeo,
alter 8 p.m. or phone 247-2270. SAVE MONEY at Bryanl'l 011
saleman, low overllead, !10
Mason, W. Va. Phone m.&amp;541. CURTISS "DAIRY BEEF"
6-114tc
a gilt lor Dad. Tape recordpor cent savlnga. Allied Pest
breeding lerVfce. Call Leland
••::.:::::"
w.tle
ers reduced fl5 to $!0. SM.
Olnlrol, Pomervy,
Oblo.
From tho Largest TrUCk or
1.,,,. ""'" • · - ...._
Parter, Pomeroy nsldence
radio only $9.98. Automatic
IS TON mlJed hay and one lnPholle 8IHIII8 evenlnp.
Radlalur Tjl The
Bullmzer
1112-UM or call alation 'nip. •-.. ""''" ot. • _..,
letter opener. battary power- ELECTROLUX SALES and serternallonal drag plow. two hot.
W440ip
&amp;nallest
Hotter
Corw
pers Plains 6874251. 61301c .__.....
.;...•_•.,;-,;.;,.v.,;IU..;;•;.;;'"'.;;•;;;;;......J
vice : Sweepers. rug washers
ed fl. Golf balls fl a dozen;
tom, 14-Inch; contact Msrv1n
and polishers. Genuine parts.
Keebaugh before 7 p.m. at
dreu shoes $1.99 palr. Save
HAPPY HOUR, Shenang Sprtnp
Call 992-37811.
&amp;-111-tfc APPALOSSA STUD eerviee. 111 AIR CONDmONING ~
PH. 99a.2143
Pomeroy
Pomeroy 992-5342 after 7 p.m. hall, portable TV Uke new,
Nlte Club. 5 to 8 p.m. M01&gt;
appointment, phone 99Ulll.
allon
eerv!ce.
Jack'•
Relrlg·
at
Chester
985-3913.
6-12·3te
$69;
stereo
player
"9.85;
p.
day Ibm Friday. Ladles nl&amp;bl
1-14-ltllp
eratlon, New Haven. hone
mirY Friday.
u.tlc
pel records, two for "' wat.
Insurance
SAVE SPACE
118M0'111.
4 • lie
ches, 18.95; eleclrlc guitars.
SORREL RIDING mare, while
Insurance bee-a
c. C. IIRAIIFORD
FREE STORAGE
#11.95. Shop and save at Bry- AUTOMOBR.E
blaze. stockings: $165. Phone
eanoeDed? Lost JOUr opeeat.
For Trade
AUCTIONEER
READY • MIX I!OIICI'et. dallvant's, 108 W. Main, Pomeroy.
99U'I93.
6-11-3\p
MOTH PROOFING
or'e license? CaD lft.291111.
Complete Servlct
CASH P'OR Antique~. BID
ered rlilbt to your pn&gt;ject.
6-1141e
I 15 tic
Write, Pllone or Collloet
Hamm, Middleport, Oblo.
Fast and euy. Free .U.
FOUR ROOM HOUSE, balb,
Crill
Bndftlrd
f.ltale
mates. Phone ~. aoe,.
Msson, W. Va.
773-S$43
basemen~ two !Bille loll, In THREE ACRES, 5 room house,
LUAL NOTIC•
RaciDe, Oldo
leln
Ready
Mix
Co.,
Mlddl
..
Racine. can 9ft.20!1 or I4J. new roo!, barn, ceDar, two
• l It!!
OIDINAHCI NO. t1H1
port, Ohio.
I • lie
2161.
6-7-Qp clslerns and furniture $1500.
An
Ord.ID&amp;Dee
to
PROHIBIT
Tim
Audlon
Phone '142-661S.
S.1&amp;-30tp PLACING or AJlY TIP.ASII, R&amp;n18&amp;
OR OTHER MATERIAL lN A VflL.
CONSIGNMENT Sale: Complete TWO BEDROOM home, ball!
AGE 8'l"REET Oil CATCH BABIN OR
SALI!!S AJill) SBll\'ICE
line ol farm mactdnery and
UWD THROUGH AN OPEMING
lull basement, garage: Two- POODLE PUPPIES, AKC Toy 6ri'UATID
IN A VD..LAGE STRD:T.
household Items. June II start.
year.old home In Syracuse. mlnlature, 1'15 and up. Stud
Be n ordained bJ' the CouacU of
EXPERT
FIRESTONE DLC 100
BEGINNERS
the Couadl of V!DIIt of llld4leport
Inc at noon. SldehiD auclloD Phone
NEW TREAD-BLACKWALL
992-2421.
S.Z8-301e service and grooming. Phoae u foUon:
Wheel Alignment
SPECIAL
on Leo Morr!.o farm, Rutland,
See. I. Tbat " lllall be 111111wfal
mMU.
11 3 lie
Price Tll!l
Sl••
for aJl1 perwun to 1weep or oUterOblo. Anyone wfahlng to eeD GERT'S A GAY GIRL - Jlu.
$295.00
650xl3
9.11 S1
WiN place aD7 truh, retuM. or o&amp;h·
any Item at the sale caD 70.
ar
material
bl
a
VUiqe
Stnet
or
650x14
9.11
.43
dy for a whirl, alter cleaning
RED R5H BOAT
WALNUT STEREO radio. Bean. C.kh Balbi. or Sewer tbroutb an
700xl3
1G.81 .d
4641 or 74U817. Not leiJIOGopelliDJ lil~alel:3 In a Vllll.la Slrett.
carpets with Blue LUIIre.
700&lt;14
10M .43
Uful contemporary walnut ate.
MASTElCIAFT
8J:C. D. Whoenr .tolakt UlSI orBible lor accidents. LilliCh 'IIlii
Renl electric shampooer, II,
750.14
11.11 .43
diiUince du.ll be ftned not ._ thaa
reo wiib AM lo MF radio, d&amp;be lerVed. Terml of sale nor mon tlr.m llfllt.OO.
TRAILER
67Gxl5 .
11.11 A7
Baker Furniture.
11-INic Iuxe lloatm, turntable, dual tJS.OO
n:c. m . Z.ub da)' tbat a pehCID
Ptu•
Rocap,...lo
Eocho.,.
Casll.
6Uic
permJta nflue, trub. or oUter m&amp;•
Nolioo1wlclt GuoroniH ·
volume control. Four speed tert.l to n!Pllln ln a VW111 Street,
-GUARANJEB),.
FULLY EQUIPPED recreatlon
.
.
eateh
llulD
or
se.tr
lhlll
eonftt.
autnmaUc challller. Pay only tute a "parat. ofleDM.
center In Racine; 4 pool ta·
For Sale or Rent
SEC. IV. 1'h1l ordia.laeti .. heNbJ
15 per month or balance
I
bles, ping pong table, p o p
declared to be an amarrancy aDd
FIVE ROOM house and bath,
1'
1
8.62.
Free home demoDBtra- dlall taka dfect on tile urlielt 41&amp;.
l'HONBifl.cooler. etc. Also !-story brick
aluminum sldlng, storm wfD.
aDowed. bJ law.
Uon.
can
912-3218.
&amp;-7-«e
Sec. V . 'l'ld. Onlliu.DM ahaJl t.b
&amp; tile block building on !rd·
dows, W.OO. Phone 11112-3718.
effect llld be 111 forM frcJm and af.
St. , Racine. Large business
X.,. n. 1181.
&amp;Hlp
MAPLE STEREO. 1968 model terPuled
the l'l'th d•J of 11'&amp;7 19M.
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Icenroom now occupied by recre.IOftN W. llaK.LI
stereo.
Lovely maple, AM 1o
,,.k*tt of Council
hower looked alter the chUtlren
ation center. Three apartFM radio. Four speed auto.
Athlt: 0Me Ontw
of Mr. and Mrs. Clll!ord Icenments un second floor, two
furnished . Separate garage &amp;\ . malic changer, lour speaker 1-11: ..., tk
hower willie Mrs. CIU!ord IcenWANTED
laundry room with apartment ' ~tem . Pay only tll9.58 or
hower was at HoJzer Hospital.
EXPERIENCED TRUCK driv·
NDTICI ON PILtNO 0# INVINTOIIY
on second floor. Apartment
nthly payments of fe, Free
Mr. Dillon Tayler returned
AND A,U.IIIMaNT
er. Phone 992-2565 or 992·2582,
BY MAYJOHNSTON
TIN ltlta of Oft ... Mtltt CouRty
home from Veterans Memorial
partly furnished. Also oepar- home demonstration, call 991Midway Market.
S.IS.3te
PNMtt Cnrt
Mr . and Mrs. Jay Scott of Hospllal.
ate one story wooden business 3218·
6-7-61c
To tbe E:ncutan or Adm1lllltt1·
tort of the eatatn; to 111ch of the Columbus, 0 ., visited her grandMr. and Mrs. Maywood John.
building and vacant lot. AU A NEW shl
fallowl.aJ u an rHideDtl of t!MI
1 1 1 th'•• State
mother, Mrs. Sylvia Carpenter. ston, local, called on Mr. and
For Rent
or
Oblo.
\'ll:-the
~'filii
furniture Included, alHu...
pmen o ~ o "'&amp; spolllfl , the nn:t of kin. tlMI beDII·
All the children of Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Johnston and
1·wo EURNISHED apartmenls,
rented with good incomt.'S has ~ved. Wo"""! I and Dclarlel under tbe wlD1 IQ(l to Ole
Mrs.
Carl Auther501l came Sat- family,.,, e ...
4 rooms and bath. Phone 992or atcora.n reprwentlll.l
tact Joe Brilt at Recreation Children s and Men • Work attomer
/.
1!17 at u. atonmntlon4 ..-. ~ · utday-,O,d !hO!ped celebrale bls
.
·
· ·
Uniforms. Also Pont ~ton
mll, alter 5, phone 9ft.2571.
C.
r:
Tornpkllu, N&lt;&gt;. lt.,-t, Poata·
Center. or call 94&amp;-3057.
ku tru k , •peed Ira
birthday. Cake and ice cream
&amp;-11-3tc
&amp;-12-tfc P1c P
c ' ~
ns- "'''
Oblo Tboma. No. tl.ltt. PomeDeft,.
were
served.
mlsslon. Jeffers Clothing ro,, Oblo
Webtr
Preern~n Holt. No. li.D.
Mr.
a n d Mrs. Lawrence
Store . Rl. 33, Pomeroy.
PLENTY of space lor one traD- l967 AVACADO green Flreb!nl.
ldplo TwP., Pomei'OJ, OMo
YoU are benbJ noUftetl thlt tM Theiss, Chicago, Dl., Mr. and
er with all lacllltles. In Syra·
INie Ia"IDt4riN
Take over payment! or trade
and Appraltemlllltll
ol Mrs. Ted Bailey and son, Indiana,
cuse. can 992-3904. 4-111-tfe
tbe Mates of the aforemenUOB.d,
for older car. !'hone 99Z-3!NIO.
tteeeled, late of Aid Counb' • ..,. visited their mother, Mrs. LouIUe4 .... tbll eoun. l!ll)d blftlltodel
6-lJ.61c
111d Appralel!mentll wtll be fCIJ' heu- ise Van Meter and Nield.
nJRNISIIED and unfurnished
Real Estate For Sale
lDI WoN UW. court Oil the lit 4aJ
Cindy Carroll, local, spent tbe
apartmenb. CIOIO to acbool.
O'IIIUEN I CROW
of IUIJ, ltel. al 1():00 o'eloek A.1f.
SIMMONS METAL bed and
weekem
with Nield Van Meter.
penoa
dHtJ'tq' to me aacepo
AoJ
Phone JI9Z.610.
10.11-tfc
REALTY COMPANY
Uoftl thereto IIIWit ftle them at leut
springs. also one fioor lamp.
Those
who
called on Mr. and
ft... da)'S prior to tbe lkot41 . . ,,.
POMEROYButternut
Ave.
2
Phone 911Z-3953.
&amp;-lute
Mrs. Roy Powell andlamJI.y were
TRAILER SPACE, aD utlllllea
story frame, 4 bedrooms, 1
0"- UDder IDJ' lland aad 11al of Mr. and Mrs. Hayes McMurry,
..sd court. w. tOtb ••, •t ,_.
avaUable. Jnqutre 158 Mulber- BLACK l\IINIATURE Poodle
baths, garage. $1,650.00.
Paul Smith, and Mr. and Mrs .
ry after ! or 5 p.m. Write P.
P. H. O'IIIDI
Pups 1'15. West ll1gh1and POMEROY-UniDD Ave. TerHomer IcenhoWer, loca1.
0 . Box 425 Pomeroy. 11-llt-lfc
Whl~ Terriers $tOO, 11M
race, 111 story frame, 2 bed·
clertr e1 t~lll cautt
Mr. Russell Rhodes of MarlP'armall Cub Tractor, h1drau. rooms,
bath,
basement.
etta,
0., visited his brother, Mr.
O.IMY Cltrll:
FURNISHED apartmOIII, two
and
Mrs.
Orville RhOOes and son
lie 1111, s point last hitch, aln- $4,000.00.
bedrooms, Middleport. Pllomo
g1e plow 6 foot cutter bar MIDDLEPORT - South Znd,
recently .
J192.38'14.
Mr. WUI Clonch and hlsdaullb·
and disc
Prlco linn. Ul- I story frame, 4 bedrooms, 1
lie Barkaroo Kennels Coot- baths. 110,000.00.
ter ; Mrs. Vlrgel Dowler and chilColor black with white vloyl l:q), front aceert band, POwer·
8 ROOMS AND BATH, 170 Mal.
'
FOR RENT, F'URNl8liED
dren of Athens visited Mrs. Mona ·
glide trans., ptMer steering, power disc brakes, style trim,
LIOAL NOTICI
viDe, Ohio. II6NilSt. 6-7-IOic APAR-~ 1 bedr
berry Ave., Pome!OJ. ConORDINANCE
NO.
380
Long.
un~:.~l....
oom.
custom
deluxe interior, front and rear mats, P.B., radio,
tact Rose Sisson, phone •
HENRY
a.EIAND
A
new
renee
has
been
built
rally
wheels,
w-a-w tlres, elee. clock, console, 327 eu. in.
AN OltDINANCI TO ,t,UTHOIIU
TMI! I!MPLOYMENT OF IPI&amp;CIA.L
204$ alter 5 p.m. Phone . . AR(i; YOU Interested In buylllll
Olllee-111!4!1i1
at
the
Bald
Knobs
cemetery
and
275 HP engine. Retail list $3686.00.
COUNSEL TO 'III'A.II AND IU·
a big house In Racine? can
HU
11-f.tfe
Ret. . . . .
nice slgno at the gate&amp;.
PUYISE P'ROCII!DINOS TO A.UTH·
94&amp;-3752. Let's talk about ll.
01111 THE IIIUANCI OP IONDI
Mr. Charles Johnston will go
TO FINANCI! THE COlT OF A IAN·
We
are
Interested
In
selling
THREE ROOM furnished apart..
ITARY JIWIRAOE IYITIM.
to Texas Mmday for service
one. Special price lor quick
BE IT O'lDA.I NED b' th e Counell
ment, bath, adults, 126 Mul·
with the army.
of the Vlllagl!l of Pomeroy, lletll
sale.
ll-13-3tc
County . Ohio :
berry. Phone 119U698. &amp;-a.tfc
Mr. Simon PoweU, Mr. LawSection 1. Tint the law tlnD of
.
renee
Johnston and sons, Mr.
Squ ire. Sanden &amp; Dempsty or CleH·
1967 Chevelle Malibu ____ _ $2095
NICE
HAND
made
quill!
and
land . Ohio, be empiG)'ed b)' tbt. VU·
SINCLE HOUSES, nice Ioca1a11e a• •vec: ll l counmel for the pur·
and Mrs. Homer IcenhoWer,
woven corduroy rugs. Phone
4 Door. std. Trans., Low mileage. Spolless claan IDler·
pose of preparlnj and MJpervlalaJ lbe : Christy and Carol Dailey loUon, apartmenll IUmlsbed l
proeeedlng• of lhlt Vlllap required ,
'
'
!J92.6'127.
ll-13-3tc
GEO.
ROBSTE'l'I'ER.
BROKER
lor,
Mllroon finish wilh matchlllJl lnterlor. Radio, Heater
unlurnllbed In Mlddloparl,
for tbe t..uanee of bonds to naaae. I cal, called on Mr. and Mrs .
White
Wills.
'
POMEROY
UNION
Tl!:fl.
the
co•t
of
c
onJtruelln~
a
unlt.l17
Maywood
Johnston.
pbone lft.S287.
&amp;l-Ute
ayetem for the Vlllqe.
HOTPOINT ELECTRIC range. RACE - 6 room home, 3 bed· Hwerap
Section 2. That for the Hrvlcee M
1967 Chev. lmpela 4 Dr. · -- - $2895
lC' be readered, R1tl l'l.rm lhaU be
Good
coudlllon,
135.
Phone
rooms.
front
porch
and
sbade,
MODERN AIR conditioned unpaid reasonable compenutlon, DOt
327 Engine, Turbo llydnmatlc Trano., Power steerlllg,
992-2302 day. or 99U183 at 6 elslem, eellar. storm doors to nceed M.OOO and to be ap~
lurnlshed apartment? Coals
bY Council . plus the eoet of loaJ dlaWhite wall tires•. White finish with Turq. Interior. Rsdto
p.m.
II-IS.31e
and windows. Outbuilding&amp;. tanee telephone call•, telecr111111 M4
BuDding, Middleport. Apply al
am
Heater. The car hss Bal. of warrant;y am new car
c thtr out-of·PQeket experuu. Com·
111 Acres.
Apartment 16.
&amp;-J3.7tc
pentaUon 1hall be paid from lha pre.
tiUe,
HOUSE IN Bradbury, 5 rooms. COUNTRY HOME - 7 Rooms, ceed1 of such OOnd• when laued, K
newly decorated ; balb wII h 4 bedrooms, balh, gas log fire. otherwlte from tbe Genenl J'uad.
1966 Chevy II Nova
$1695
Sec ti on 3 _ Thl• ordinance 1han taU
For Sale
all new fixtures. Will sen place. wall to wall carpeting, effeet and be in foroe from dll
HT Cpe. Low mUeage by loco! reslclent. Ttrea like new.
TWO BEDROOM house lraller.
th e ear uu t Period allowed bJ
with or without furniture . drilled well. cisterns, base- after
lew.
•
V8 Engine, Automatic Trans,, Power Steering. Rldlo
Phone 1192-5Il2.
&amp;-ll-61c
CHARLiiS W. L!DAB
Sherman BWikirk, Rt. I, Midment. aluminum siding, awn·
and Heater - White ftnlsh.
dleport.
11-13-«p lngs, other buildings. One ac· P...ed: June 3. IIIII.
ONE WESTERN riding horse.
Atteft: Kdal F . &amp;eb.MDleb, a.dL
1962 Corvair Mon:ra
_ _ $595
re fenced .
ihme f.ll
1te
Phone Mason 'I'IUI'II.
NICE PONIES while they 1811.
Coupe. Vln,yl Interior, bucket seats, auto. trans. Rtldlo
FARMS NEEDED
6-ll-3ic
Heater,
eoo:t tire~
'
'
Your choice of 10 head, mlll'1!
HELEN AND VIRGR.
and gelding. $4(1 each . Eskey
TEAFORD
1961 Pontiac Catalina _____ $545
110 liP scarr molar. electric
Hlll, F1alwonds &amp;ad, Porn·
ASSOCIATES
..
If!
1111
starter, generator. handle eroy.
The Almanac
S.~
Syracue,"\:
HT Cpa. Automltlc trans., Power Steerlllll, R &amp; H 10011
control, 1200; AC hay rake on
By United Press International
Ures, white Onlsh.
'
&amp;-l~te
rubber, power take off 150; 14 FOOT Wl!lAVER SKIFF, S.S
Today is Thursday, June 13,
New Idea mower, on rubber,
liP motor and oaro, $140, BY OWNER. Lovely three bed- lhe 16Sih diJ' of 1968 wilh 2011o
150; &amp;-loot disc, SID; John
phone 949-4272.
6-!Uic room home in Syracuse, large loilow.
1963 Chevrolet~ Ton _ _ __ $995
Deere com planter. $20; maThe moon ts between its full
nure spreader on rubber 125. APACHE FOLDING CAMPING ldtchen, llreplace, bssemenl, phase aOO last quarter.
700 x 17 tires. It dnt;y sprfn&amp;s, aolld cab, eowr«&lt; body.
BnJ Grueser, Rl. 1, Mlnero- TRAILER, sleeps 4, also hltdl garage. new metal awnings'
The morning stars are saturn
Local
I owner, low mileage.
and two extra large lots, an:l Venus.
vllle.
6-ll-3\p
and canopy, can bo seen at phone 992-5400.
&amp;-lUte
The evening star Is Jupiter.
102 Legion Terrace or caD
On
this day in history:
1968 ZIG ZAG Bewlllll maehlne.
1960 Studebaker~ ton Truck _ $395
9IU522 or 992-3320. 11-13-!tc
In 18n lhe Uusso-Turkish War
This machine makes button.
l&lt;eepi ng Meigs
began.
V-8 e~W~no, utlllt.Y body with ahelveo, 10011 tires.
holes, dantll lo emb. Tab REAL SOL'ND, 1988 stereo AM
Bldl w01 1MI neetnd at ~ oiJlo.
In
1935
Jim
Braddock
decl"
of
Wet.ter
and
Pulb,
P•IMfl07•
over I payment• of $1 .~1 nor
&amp; FM radio, walnut llnlsh. OMo. unUl Tue.dQ, lune tt, JNI!I
Gollio and
sloned Max Baer to win the
If 10:00 O'Cioe. A.lf. fOT 1Jw Ale
month or 145 cash. W~ wiD
Tab over payments of 15.14 of
the Once LJM Ctrr propert,.,
BoxlllJl ChampionMason Area
bring this machine to your
pee 1110111b or pay 188.21. Will lltuated In the Vl11all!t of Harrlloa. heavyweight
ship
or
the
world.
Ohio. Bid~ tnaJ bo aabtnltted
home lor you to try. CaD
discount lor C811h. Phone 1192&gt; InwDie.wrtlln•
OT ln perwon at t,!te time
Informed As
In 1944 Germany began u&amp;lllJl
9112-2136.
6-11-t!e . . .
6-11-«e of ..r.. Th• rt,11t 18 r.....a" to ~ its "buzz bomb" secret weapon
JDd an:v or all btda.
ThoM'u c:. Mlrtln,
Well As
on Englam durlllJl World Wor
A~flllnlltrdor,
,f ROOM HOUSE, bsth, large SAVE t!O or more 011 al111111Dum
lltaN .t DrKe LYM eerr, D.
Your ChevyDealer
lot; also 14 loot john boat, 24
dNHNtl .
boall, AU alll!!l J.0.1J.J3.14
In
1967
National
Guardlft'len
Entertained
Wtllltlr qftd Puft'l
Railroad 81., Middleport.
root. can IIMH7, ar Jl92.a5l.
......,....,. for Alllllllh•l....... were called oot to quell a racial
992·2126
Open Eves.
Phone 992-38211.
&amp;-11·'/le
5-INO!e ..101 8-lh ..II; •tl; f.tt; 8-11; I 17 uvrisi~ ln Cincinnati, Ohio.

THERE WILL be a SUD sbool
&amp;mday, June 18, beglnnlnl! at
110011 at the Forked Run
·\ Sportsman Club. Everyone Is
welcome.
&amp;-11-llc

WILL DO .wlng at bomo llppm, pockets, JM!8Ilnl,
heiJIIIting, lllerallonl, efc.
Mrs. Freddie Thabel. Muoa,
Phone TIS-5MI.
'-'G-Uc

INFORMATION
NEWS

.......

presents

LOCAL REPORTS
DAILY

AT

_.

7:50 A.M.
12 NOON
3 P.M.
AND
4:30 P.M.

.

Pomeroy

n1e

...

(

.I

T •-- .

•
'r' ........

Co.

-----------,--

t::'\

~

�-~

..,.

'

'i

'

I.

'

.'

·~

.Now You .Know
In

~'

,.·•

. '7'nruRSDo\V . ,

7..,

ROCK SPRING$ Giqi,. 8: p.
.,_ Thurllll1 ill tilt. . . IIIII.
Cheater utd , Hemloe~ ~·
bo.. bsell lavlt,if; .oe;,l~ and
boldl!llconlaata 1o be held.
·
PHruA111EA SOCIETY, 'ftmr..
do,y, _7:3jl . p.m., at )llddleport
Church of Chiil~
REVIVAL AT Fair P~ Cliopal, lbrGuah June 16, wltll RAIY.
Junlcr lolallo,y, Wollatm·e lllt IIIII tho Rev, R. D. llraom In
chirp. Loc:alod otr Routt US .
towardoVIntoa.

~

'

.

,.

!

orlean, Thur~, 7:30 p.m. at
home ol Mrs. Ew. De111auer,
cave St.
FRIDAY
ICE CREAM SOCIAL, Cbester
Auxllflll7 Fire Deplrtmont, frio.
~ evon~tw at _.the lire~
REGULAR PREACHING .aenlces, Hual C&lt;lnmwdl;y Chureh
Frlclay, 8 p. m. Rev. Edsel Hart,
pastor. Public Invited.
JITNEY SUPPER Frida)' starf..
log S p. m., Mlddlejllll'l P eOBtal Church lot. Public lmltod.
HOMEMADE ICE CREAM ae&gt;- '
clll Saturclo!', IJqlnaiJ!g at 2 p.
Koren Solly Floyd
m., at EUB porso..,. In Tuppers Plllna. Homemade leo
NEW HAVEN, W, Va. - Mr. and MrL G-.. F101d of
crelm,
cake, pie. ·&amp;1~ Joes.
Delbor1on, W, Va., are IIUIOUilcing the . _ a t of their
coffee utd soft drlnha. Public lodluabter, Karen Solly, to Slleldon F. Roush, oon ot llr. and
vltod.
lira. lloMid F. Roush, New Ha..n. A Jul,y ~ Ia plonnod,
MARY SHIIINE, White Shrine
Miss Floyd was grwluated from Burcb lllgiiSdlocl, wbers
of
Jerusalem, school oflnstrucabe . . . . cheerIucier, member or Beta HODOI' SomrityI Future
Teachers, and Future Homemakers. She is 1 senlcr at Marsh- . tlon, 8 p. m. Frl~ 11 the IOOF
hall. Mary H"""'s, diatrlctdopuall Unl.eralcy where abe has been a member of Delta Zeta
ty
or Dlotrlct 17ln charge. om..
SOcii! Sorority, AJ,&gt;ha Beta Alpha, llbrar~ scleuce '-"ry,
cera aabd to atteM. Potluck re-and of the phyalcll educotlon ...x&gt;rs club, and a Deon'a Uat
fresbmoniJ.
atud....
MIDDLEPORT Firemen sponMr. Roush IJ'Iduated !rem Wahama High School whers he
sor
an outaldo teen dance Pl1'l1
wu an honor student and • member of Ute high school bani.
Friday
starting at 9 p. m. at the
He gracloated fr4llll Marshall Unlverslcy where he ""' o momMiddleport community (JIJ'k. The
bar of Slima Phi Epal]oo 5oclll Fraternlcy, Pbl llu Alpha
J~•
wiD smcoe.
music bonoror)' and the ll)'lllj)Molc choir. He wu employed
bf the Fcrd Moler Crscllt ColporatiiHI prier to enllatlnl Ia
W. M. JAMES Ill. Soulaby anthe Novy IIIII Ia statloood It Bremerton, Wub., aboard the
DOW!coa a ~cial mooting of
u.s.s. P u p t Pllmoroy Loofp, 164, F. utd A.
M., Frl~, 7:30p.m. to oonter
the Mor.ter MIJOil DeJl'M.., ..,,
candidate. Rotroohmoota follow
moetlnc. All Muter MaiOOa Invited.

22nd Anniversary of
B&amp;PW Club Observed

SATURDAY
OUTSIDE !UGH SC- do!lce
1Jil11, OI10D to p.muc SIUdly
it lb!t hr!Jo-.,i telll!io ecwj,
"'
Tile 22nd annlvereary of Ute
During the business mee!lnl llanCIDa from 9 to 12 p. .,_ The
lllddloport Business and Pro- &lt;OIIIIIIIttee chairmen were ap- Jays, •cees. In case of rain.
tesalooal WODI8II's Club was ob- ,POintacl tor Ute 1968.119 year. the dUlce will be hold Ia the high
served during a dlmtr meet~n~ Two lmltatiiHII trcm the Gil·
held II tho Martin Rollaurlnl Upolls club wors road, ooo r&amp;·
JITNEY SUPPER, !lfncuoe
TuolllaJ evenlq.
latina to 1 roceptloll being plan- Gndl School Soturda¥. oeniJv
T b o ..-&gt; llllll sold oolor old for Mrs. Merlalllle c._ ~~'""' t:30 p. m. to 7 p. m. Pro• - e or tho Federatloo waa bell, new 11a1a JII'Oildd or the etedo to helt purcblae a new
carried out Ia tho table de..,.... Poderal:l011, to be held 111 Juat lire truck bed.
IlGas.
and miDiature 25 at Gnce Methodlll Clll1'cb In ·
o-r pota modo b111r1. Jlarold Gllllpolla.
~~o.rpot, _ ,
aa IDcrs.
Tbo o1bor lm1tatlaft reprded
A de....- cake was ooned a moetlni of tho Gllllpolla dub
leo cream and oo«roo lol- to be held oo Juno 17 at oacara.
iowiD&amp; • bualne., ooaatoo hold Mra. ClmtiJell wllllloo bs preIn tho Columblo Gas of Oblo of. 11n1 11 thll and wllllnllall
!lee.
the oew ollleero.
Pluto were made tor 1 plcolc
to be held on Jul,y 9 at tho Middleport Perk. Tho 1114111111 ,...
port waapvoo bf the commlllee
'
CODQXJood of Mrs. Mar)' ~­
TONIGHT
&amp; fRIDAY
A . - - ceroii!CIIY with
zelman, Mrs. !lonJtl1y WUI, uti!
JIDIO 13·14
the CII1Sllnl or !Gur - · for
Mn. Grace Pratt. A card waa a lfrl lcoul troop hlghCLAMBAKE
llnl to Eoalo Ruooall, wbo re- lllhlod a III80IIn8 ot Middleport
Eblo PraalOJ
malos a patient 11 Melp Goo- Troop 185 Tueoclo,y nl&amp;hl at tllo
Pl..
erll Hospital. II wao 1110 ,... Co-o a ad -ero Ohio
BEACH RED
ported that Mrs. Frodl Boll Ia Electric Co. aoclal room.
Ill.
Venlda Glbbo, Am;y Hamm,
Tile JII'Oil'&amp;m for tho amlvera- Nancy Bualdrk, Tlaa Nlerl, and
aey maollnJ wao pre..- by Jyl Boovor smi tho ftag ..,...
Mrs. Sargent. Gamoo were di- mDQy to OI10D tho mootfn&amp;, Wbllo
TONIGHT, JUNE 13
rocied by Min llelty Lalllltrd, lll!lllng candles, Mlaa Beaver,
new JII'OBident, with prlzee baing Mlaa Nlorl, utd llaey Kr1WICZ711
FRIDAY TIIRV TVESDAY
woo by Mre. WW utd Mre. Lor- rslalod Ute Girl Seoul Promlu.
JIDIO 14 • 18
etta Saelono. lire. Gloria Il&gt;era- Laws ot the troop were slvoo by
11IE SAND PEBBLES
bacb Grll!ln woo the ll'l!vellng Soolya Ohllnpr, &amp;lOut Powera,
(Tecbolcolor)
prize.
Barbara A111bao1 and Vealda
SleYOIIc~
ilUJ'IDI Ute concludlna IOCtal Gibbs, wbo lllo~lc~Ud candlea.
Rlclerd~
bour • linen ........ Wll hold for
Tho aonlor &amp;frio ca&amp;ll*f were
Runnhw: tlm•n 3 Hra. 15 min.
Mra.Grlllln.
Debbie Lallo7, Robin Mlllo. 5boroo Glaze, and J - GUlley. Mrs.
Wedne~ utd Thur~
RUth Power• w111 · be 1 - or
JIDIO 19 • 20
No, we certaluly haven't, the - l8nlor troop,
Frida)' and Saturda)'
and nellber bas ,ID1Qne e!Je!
Cockadea, a bat aeceoooey,
JIDIO 21-22
-Ethel Kmned~. 011 btl!l{l Were JII'OIODied to 81Jtor1 AnNOT OPEN
011ctd If 1M K mnedtf cllm ~, &amp;lOut Power a, Soo1a ObSHOW STARTS 7 P. M.
hod C011finncd 1M !'llmor llnlor, Tina Nlarl, llaey Knwof lltr pre(II!4!ICII.
IC%,)'11, and Vealda Gibbs, wbo
recootl,y new..., tram a Jllllor
troop to Ute cadetle troop. JoiD
Blavlao. lllllble to - . wUl
be Jll'toonlad a coelwle Ialor.
Rotrssbmtnt• or IIWlcb and
cookie' ware aorved. Guuta at
tho cor'- were Mrs. Davlcl
Obllopr, Mrs. Frsd Glbbt, Mrs.
Ruth Powora, lira. Walloet Pow·
en, Mra. Jclm Krewac11711. and
Pamper dod's weary f..t by gifttho .....,. ....... Mrt. Wlllaco
Powers Ia ltldlr Gt Troop
ing him with one of our

··--·

COr-•
II••

Rededication

Carried Out

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JUST FOR Ybtm DAD

I•

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FOR THAT SPECIAL MAN
IN YOUR LIFE------····

185.

many

handsome styles.

01

· GIFT HIM WRH .AGin
.

CLUB MEETS
NEW HAVEN-· TheJullolleyont Sewllw Cl.m met recllllb' at
tho ' - • or MrL Fred 11ate7.
Durhw the 100111 hour rofreafl.
IIODtl were Btned io Mrs. D. .
A. Sllllth, llrL
..11, Mrs. OUie RGuoli, Mrs. II.
F. Beyut, lira. I. C. RGulh
utd Mro. lli!IJ•

"'*""" w-: .

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A fine selectloldor Fatfl.
' er's Oily giving.~~ Color
Guide Tie 'thet., ttlls ~.
which He to well' with
vou went.

1.50 to 3.00
37.95 ~20fnch

...........................,..,..
· Casual Slacks

Ge.,..Eiectrle

rial'"

.

I

ICAVIclw

Sets
a .peraonal TV ' oot tor

your Father as blaallt. Choice

cleu

picture.

129.95·-,.
1"79.95 .

16.95 ... 19.95

3.95
Other IMnl Spoil Shirts .... 2.95 to 6.95

Choola

tao.

dark

POST OFF1CE DEPARTMENT'S NEW labeling requlre'.mont for tho mailing of guns wUI bovo little effect on the mill ordsr
according to • sampling or oplnlons lrmt
' lrafllc or theiO
~- iallfill••.lsodlng Pn 4ealars.
Bi)l. oil8 f!rm aald. IIJo requirement coold oggravole a problem
. plalxll . . . .cjulora 111'0 having ... lot or trooblo" with - theft or
llrearnia from ihe malls.

.,..en· or

- · Slall llllill (lt-1~).
modlum (1~151,1, ), laqlt (18161h) utd ntra larp (17·
1.,), 100 per .... ;
Prsshnlllk.
Two
lhrou&amp;h lllp pockata. Full
leiWth ahlrt lalla.

.....
·c....
.

Cboooo -

~.
haadlea.

......

..~--

1'RjU)EaS SENT stoCK exchup sales voiiDilo
, ~'Jq r~ le11!a Tllll'adiJ, ·COU$1 new ~hes for brokerage
; JIOil.e tiirob' able to -- · with prolonged surp of~~~~~
'1W aolllng.
·
.
" . · The Niw York Stoek Exchlnge lurned In I 21,3SO,OOO.Ihlre
'
~., wW ov1it_ !liot.lll 'vlou4.recoi'd of

.

~ w~·1~: ~nn'i'iiiAiiier\-

.

EliCbanse " " - .., to I !'8Cord . 10,810,000 . . . .
iDilflh'! llie·JII'Ovlouo J¥1 ol10,197,1811ahlrelon~ 28 ol tlils 'year,

.

, Sowards Co. ·

bio.k or
Ellf sriP

2.95

: . l.bw ·Bidder
~

,.

I

-

sps ~·'' s3.so.
.
' ·.

Iars·
Trunks

Reaular alzu llld olll'tllarp
abeL I A line stleellon ot
ll;t1ea In
utd bolllr

w.o.

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WASliiNGTON (UPD- R"' .
Bob Caooy, D-Tox., told tho
Houae Thur~ ho wllcbed a
television oclltorlal tovorlag
8UII conlnllo lmmedlatel)' followed by •'The A.Yellllr&amp;," a
protll'am wblch~eda~

count ot-11YO~
"lilY 1V batl8r pUI Ito own

~--­
•

cool Uda aUnt-

~~W~.$~~,.h:&gt;m

liolloa In order ~~etoro putdJis
the blame .., tho rill ot uo, ~
CallfO' laid 1o IPJilluae rrom
HYerllll!ambsi'l.

Ca•ual
llacb

yGUr 1114

w-.

" :NEW YORK -

Mllll........_ .....

Keep

WASHINGTON - RALLYING UNDER THE banner "JII'oialn
power," poor Negroea and Mexiean.Americana pressed theJr queat
·tor mora food for tho hungey todO)' with around • the • clock picketing
of Ute Agriculture Department.
. Another vigil was being conducted at the Slate Department bf
•other portlcipents In the Poor Psq~lo's ca-l&amp;n. Including Mexl·
can • Americans wbo accuood Uncle Sam of steailDg tholr lind.
the i:ampelgnlea4er, th• Rev. Rolph D&amp;Yid Abei'DI~, Tbur~o
~ eontlnued hl1 atlock on Agrleullure Secretary Orville L, Fr..,.
' man, 8111ng thll cutting · the COlt of food stamps doe a not help tho
- with 111 OIIIPIY atomacb utd ut empty wallet.

THE

SaltI

Swim
w•te•

Redluai or Plaln diaia; :SI.o.k

.....,..

real1111t. ~·Ma.r!!llle;

~

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.

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.

-~M~
.E~
RO
.::.:.Y:.:.:.:
·fvf,:::IP:.:Dt:.:;:E::.,
_PO:::.
.. R
~To:...·O::..:H~
. 10::_:.'. -~----=---_;_:
FR:.:;:JD.~~.:..:,Y,:;.:J::;.U_N~-E~_I'='4'c.!.l968.!:!!!!,_ _ _::.,.
' ..__~

::="=-'po="'
_

Projeet

mer with a ..., pelr or two ot
1111k • •. Sltel 29 to u
wliat. Solid colora liiidJ]aldL

'

A111ENS, OHIO - OIDO LT. GOV. JOHN BROWN wUI addreos
1,360 membora of Ute Buckeye Boys State tonight as parid .llill
Slat II1IIUll boys alate aponaorod by the Amorlcut Legion.
Tile boys, 111111ch achoolaenlors, Th~ organized Into two
political parties which ware to hold thslr llrst caucus todO)' to elect
.., dale-• to tho two convanllona.

Short Sltlve"'(
Wo-rk Shirts

.

Made bf RCA Victor.- 1!11.teey q~eratod. Golden lhr&lt;Jat
sound. Conli'lct. Ea~ to
tune. In the MualcDepartment
DO thO W Door.

·· ,

.Mine

-~--~,.....

...,...red.

.

Two Diy Salt Met ··: .. ·.. ···:·· $t1t

2.49

-AFine Group

Alllll'O per!IIII)Ont press f'abrlcs In alzos amall(1t-14'h ), mecl111111 (1$-151!, ),large (11l-1Sih) ondoxtralarge(J7-17'h ). Plaids,
llrlpes, solid eoloro, window panes. !Iutton clown and wld&amp;ljlreod collarL Tapered utd

.

c_, Slle• .29 to t2 watat.

22.00

ssport s&amp;rrti

'\

Sdldcolon, SO_per •IIIJI .FIIrtreiPol)oeettr,iOper coM·-'*!

3 soeeds-5 blades
Pol table

Of IC!rBeD liZBI. Sharp,

. :. !·

Long distance telephone ser·
vice for area customers ,nil

users ln Pomeroy, Middleport,
Letart Falla, Racine, Rutian:t
· change drosUcolly S~ when · and Portland.
~

Gonerll Telephone Co. ot Ohio
llliii,BUl'lles Expinded DlrectDistance dialing (EDID) In Pmneroy·
This modern, cmnplex aystem
wiD be ·put In service ot 2:01
Lm. 5unday said Robert Keatley or Athens, district commerell! nlanager. It will 11!ectphone

COLUMIWS - OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY boltd or trustees
· -ovid an lncrooaocl 1968-119 achool year budget or $163.1 mWioil
Tbur~. The ·llgure rOJII'Osento a 9.2 per cent lncrooae over cur·
.. rent ligures.
·
Prsaldsnt Novice Fawcett aald tho balonrsd budget Is dealenlll
to conllllle. the academic growth of the uplvorolty without increalo
1118 olliilent fHi ·oWf alreil!r announced lovola. the lncroaedlJucl.
ge~ . Fawcot oald; .refteata faculty p~ rllses; sllozy lncreoaes for
non - academic omplo,yeo lnd lncroased coots of aoUilos.

whim suit,
.
Come In end l6lect whet

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l!)' United Pross Jnternatlooll
,
CHAIILE'STON, W. VA - DR. ROLAND 1l N!::LSON Jr., 39,
or Rlc!lmond, va., 1oc11y wu named president .or Mars hell Unlvortlty, the State Iioard ot Educotlon ........,....
Nal- president of Richmond ProfeosionOitnotliute, woi auc,cood Dr.· Stewart 1l Smith who Ia retiring June 30 alter 20 yoaro
.. as prealdent otthe Huntltwton unl.eralty.

'

Father knowo best And that's exacdy what
he'll be gellins when you choose a Hallmark .
Falher's Day card for Sunday, Junel6. Hallmark
has taken extra care to tell Dada (and Grandclads) that "you care enough to send !('• very
best.;• In our handsome collection, you'll
find a Hall,nark card so special it'1 seems
=•ted just fo&lt; your Dad.

Of 4 Cadettes

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:~~;i~!t!~~i.~~~~~~f~*ili~~~~~;:;~j!~~;l~~~~~i~!;l;! ~;~~;~l~~~;;l !l~~~~~~;~~~~~~;~~=~:~~~=~=~=~~j:~~j;~=~=:~i=~t~!~~:j:; :!:~:l:~~~ll:l:~*~~~=

.A
'I.,.-_ . ·yl: :

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~L~._;;,XX,; ./_N..:;,0•...:3,;.,.,7"'---__:_- --

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PAST COUNCILORS, , _ .
Ul CGullcU, llluafrtOrl ot Am- .

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News ••. in Briefs

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. Aniorlca'a . 'PIJaloot alrporlln
1967 was
•L&lt;Joka, Fla.,
J'hldt h!l 1M!' .chedultd fll&amp;htt.
Tho alrpoi't bad ~moot 500,000
""-• IU)d l~a. all bf private planes.

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Band Praetiee

OnThUrsda
. y

aJf.,.,

Keotley said EDDD
phone users to dill long distance
calls direct to more thaa 100
mWlon telephones In the Unltsd
Sletes and C&amp;nacla.
The mo111ger nOted that tei&amp;phone users in the area should
heve received their cop;y ol the
1968 telephone directories.

•' Cmlplete instruetlona on us-Ing this new serVIce are lncilllf.:
ed,ln""' Introductory POleS, aald
Keatley. "We urge everyone to
read these lnstruclloos careful·
1y bsfDre littemptlng to place a
long distance calL,. · ·

••· "'""~'
•--n., "

be

continUed' ''Di·

ollng an EDDD coil Is a simple
matter. For example, on at.
t1on to station colla, tho coller
wJU dial "1" plus the area code,

It dlf!ereDI from Ida and
tho ciut of town tele(lhOno mmber.
~·For Ill other QJ&gt;es or calla
- auch as person to per1011,
collect, credit card - the uoor
will dill zero plus tho ar\!l
code If dillaront fr4llll hla own
and tho coiled ptrl;y'a numbsr.
Keatley noted this arso will
;be among tho first In tho coUiltr)'
· to have the expoooed .artev or

.direct 41•• dllllrw, It
~nsta~W 1n tho Atheoa -w~.
1966, and, Ill • rir.utt, '
wiD become the tCIII -

tho Pi.meror COIIij&gt;Jox.

All t b e intrlcalo owltoehlltl
oqulpment Ia situated In Alb~
Toll calla tr4llll thlo area
be boomed to AthoOI by the
p1ex ndio oquipmeDI whlcb
orates the 180-toot mlc.,.,ri
tower DO Breez.y Hel&amp;bta.

Parade to Move Friday at 1
dleporl and move to Ute A. and dleport.
P. parking lot whers It will
Fire departmenta, emergency
disband aod re.torm at the Kerr OCJ!ada, 'IIOOns and their COill'ls,
and Van Zandt Motor Co., betoro festival quoons, Girl Scoute and
moving to the Pllmeroy Junior Cllb Scout troopa, 4-11 elubs, bua!Ugh SchooL
lnosi and private Individuals In
Tho 25 trophies to be award- Meigs, Gallla, Mason, Athena
was Miss Sluthern Ohio t h t s ed parade cad!gory whmers will and surrounding counUoa are Inyear at a Regional Miss Amer- be on dlspl~ Frl~ at lito Co- vited to participate In ~ of the
Ica Pageant In Pllmoroy, will be lumbia Gas Co. ol!lco Ill Mid- sections. Flrll, second and third
In tho parade. Other local ,.,eona
and representatives Of schools
ENTRY BLANK
are Invited to take part. The auto!TH
ANNUAL
BIG BEND REGATTA
mobile dellers or Meigs Count;y
P
AHADE
I
P. M. JUNE 21
will provide cars ror speclll
Retlll'n to C. T. cassell, 138 North Second Avenue, Middleport,
guelts and dl&amp;nltarles.
There Is stUI opportunity to 0., !5760, phone 992-5192. Check category to enter. .
enter the parade by filling out category
- - - Marchllli Unit
the coupon following and maU- - - - Best Float For Theme
- - -Horses
Ing It to C. R. Cassell, 138 - - - Best CommerCial Float
- - - Antique cars
North Second ~ve. , Middleport, - - - Best Noi&gt;-Commerclll Fl,.t
Religious
Float
Baoos
or bf phoning Cassell at 9925192. Others making op t h o - - - Queens or other special
-- - ------------ - ---------paradO Committee sre Mrs. 0. NAME
ADDRE'.'iS
- - - - - - - - - - - - _________ _ _ ...;_
B. stout: Mrs. Ted Reed, Ralph
Werry, Phil Globukar ll!ld Pulice ~0~
--------- - - - ---- - ---- - --Chlets Jed Webster and Herbert
At 1 p.m. Frl~, the Fourth
Armull Rig Bond Regatta tilrade
will get undorw~ from Middleport.
Tom CUsall, parade chairman, said ~ Miss Laurie
Lea Schaefer, COlumbus, who

SMOKE KILLER laiD·
slalled alap a Dare staell at

a Ba)'t&lt;lwo, Tex., oil reDnery ID a move to 8gbl air
poUuUoo. Speelal bumor
Up1, eaeb 12 feet taU and

weighing %,1101 pouoda, were
placed on alx elaelis to pro-

mote mora eomplele eombustloo of dl~~tharged gases.

Poultry in
For More
Inspection

Gltk~ .

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Th4j parade will star! In front
of Ute Rewllngs Sons Co. In Mid-

and Lout Co. DOll, ~~=~~
tho boll Boot for theme, bell 1011 BoolanobUe Dolt,
commercial Ooat, best non..eom- Cllb Scout Pack 248 marddal ,
mercill Boat, religious Root, llllt, Odd Fallows !loot, Klr·
marching units, horaes utd ut- ' - Sllrlnera marehiDI u n I t, ~tlque cara.
Landmark fioat, i'lllnii'O.Y - All bands In Melp utd sur- lng Lalla lloat, Girl Seoul Mardi. ,,· ·
rouocllng counties 111'0 lmltod. lng IIIII tram Rutland, CUb ScGUt ,
Each band will bs awarded a Psck 235 at Chester mercbiiJI ,.
troph,y.
unit, """ Malgo Coullt;y Jllllor
Units already enlered In thla Leaders t-Il Club Doll.
year's parade Include the Mal&amp;•
NumOl'llll otber -- • beve
lllgll School Band, e&gt;e Ea .mn boon commltlod tantatlvll;t.
Entries will be acceptod by
!Acal lllgll school Band, n .. Gloettea fioat and marching unit, tho &lt;OIIIIIIItteo u kluc •• - Young Republlcut Cl.m ot Malp le time to err..,.. tho llllll'CbiDI
COUnty Doat, Ecotlonl)' Slvlngs order.

placel will receive tropblea for

1st American
Civilian Hit
ply linea. N117 ICDU1a apojtled

with photop'lilbl •
diamond - ahljlall 1lllilorlniUDd
11111p~y dump ..... t1&gt;e city
.
b t
Vldl ~·-- the ~ .Jot · *'. I
rfiJped the aroa.

or

Jft

In Soutll Vletlllm, 852 i$1zP
forlresies late ThYI'sdl7 utd
todO)' pounded Ncrlh VleDmoae lll'!llY posiUIHII aear South
DDI'thero bonier IIIII
In the hlghlandJ .... Dlk Tv;
tho alllad butlon being taned bf growiiw: red b'cea.
In Sal- Soutll Korean opolooomoo IODDUIIC8II they ..... tured - - u-lna IIIII
at leost 14 Ncrth Kcr- cmlllllt troq&gt;s are at - " In
South Vletlllm - tho llrat CC..
zmmlll ontt thul tar - · lo
kave joined the N- V -. ·
meso In 1n...ung lhl• COII'llr)t.
They said the Koriiai
aimed. at lllldenldnlng the u,liiiO
South Kcreano llcbtlzw l!llb tbo .
allloa hem. The ...,.,.,_ pw ..
plana to uu YOUQK _ , lo , ·
ply South KD&lt;81D ~ far

v..-·.

ln!ormotlall.
.
., ,
Tbo opokesmen sold . . , · .
Korsans hlvo beaD at ....
ror at Joost two :roarL Soolli•\"
"
Korean oftlcors bove
the Ncrth Koroans hero bdri ·~ ' .
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