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·.Meigs Local Oi~trict Bus

''

....t~··sirators

to
Receive· Extra Pay for Overtime Driving
* * *
* * * * *
*
Activity Funds to

.,

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'

ROUTINE B!JSINE$
The Meta:• c:ouncy C&lt;lllmloslonera' meeting MCJIIIII.y concluelscl only roullne business,
Mrs. Martlla Clwnbera, clerk
reporta. Al1endb!g were Commilllonen Robert Clark ...r
· Warden Oun
.

Provisions for ..extra' remu11- ls satisfactory, based on a max, eratioo fo!i' school bus 4rtvers imubl of three hours driving
who Will .be driving e~ time time eaeh day. However, ln the
this rail ~ue to the eo~oid.a\IOn tall some driven will be reprogram' in. the Mets.i b:j} 1c a 1 quired to drive for longer periods
School District were .~ Tues- and the board approved Morria~ r\fght when the " ctis~ct's son's recommendatioos that a

Proposed
·
d
.
BU get
ArD.rn rov ed':

NEW POsT

· W~VEIILY, Ohlo· (UPI)
Canml11llftr8 MoixiiJ :IIIIIMi!
WaliA!r P. lllartln, Like Willie,'
lo the Pike COUJJQ&gt; AIQIOrl A»- 'thoricy. The abpor:t, nearing comglotiOili II .·lo .llo
dedleated latA! thla 1ummer. ·

~~~ educatl~ met

UJepw-""

·

1

;..· '

·A proposed budget lor 1969
totaling $1,343,389,86 was approved "!Ue&amp;day niGht when the
Meigs Local School District
board of education met at Middleport High School.
~bmltted by assistant suportn.
tendent Larry Morri.son, thepropesed budget shows anticipated
revet~~e ol $1,3t3,389.86 with
expenditure• estimated at $1,345,175.30.
Anticipated expenditures rrom
tho total m&lt;lude admlnletratlon,
$46,408; inat·uctlon, '$855,239 .•
95i auxiliary agencies, tran&amp;pOr·
14tlon, $58,181.10; operation or
school plant, $45,77~.25; maln.ltnaneo, $10,441; special aervlces, $150; MIIJPII~.i, $83,60!1;
material&amp; ror JliaiDII!ilance, '$10,·
500; eQUipmenl 'j eplacemeot,
$22,610; eontract ind oPen order iervlce, $t0,475; fixed char'loa,, $17o,oo5 and capttat outlay,
$r;8oo.
,

MAKE IIERfDDS ·If POMEROY YOUR
SIIOPPIIG CENTER FOR WURJNG APPE FOR.
YOUR FAMILY AND FURNISHttGS FOR YM HOME
•

•••••••
·.
WE INVm YOU TO V1SIT OUR PIECI.GOOOS AMi

A -1 INSPECTED USED TIRES

Big selection of sizes &amp; types
Many matched pairs and sets

YOUR
CHOICE$

00

Big liVings on slightly used new car "ttkl·ofts" tool

sessments will remain at40 cents
monthly, It Jf&amp;S res;orted.
COimcll approved the eatimat.
ed budget ror 1969 as ptesented
by Clerk·Treaaurer Gene GratA!,
Eatimated receipts ror the year
11111 tDial $301,3tl65 wblle estimated expense&amp; will tDial $2t3,.
178, GratA! said. The eatimated
budpt ror tho next year will
now be ftled with Meigs Cooney
Auditor Gordoo Caldwell.
The reJIOrt or Mi1or Fisher
ror tho month or June was approved. The report ror lbloa, permit&amp;
&amp;lid merehant JIO)Ico eoUectlona
showed reeolpto or$86s.tO. AletIA!r was read rrom the Columbia
Gas Co. or Ohio poiDtlng out that
• sllsht ratA! Increase will be 10ing lnlo etrect In accordance to
tho rue! eoat clause or tile viiI&amp;Be's CGIIIract with lhe company.
CGuncU discussed lhe taxicab
ll&lt;enaeo In the town. It wu a.
greed that lo8islatlon provides
thsl more than those already Ia.
sued can be 8iven applicants
and It was agreed that M8I'QI'
Fisher can ISsue two licenses to
Norman Hawley. Hawley appear.
ed before council to recJJest two
licenses.

River Gauges

PATTERNS DEPARTMENT ON TH£ SECOND FI,OOI

GAUGES- Gallft&gt;olls l2.1and
12.3 rumlng 3 reot or rollers;
Pl. Pleasant, 2UO; Plmtoroy Maaon, 20.t0; !Unloa, 0.90 sUit.;
Kanawha Fallo, 2.80 rising; Char·
lestDn, 18.00 risl1111. Loodon,
Marrnet, and Winfield, are on
the sill.
VETERANS MEMORIAL
HOSPITAL
Admissions - Jack Slaoley,
Pomeroy; Debbie F.Ynon, Reidsville; Brenda Johnaon, Ewlng!Dn;
WOllam Barnhard, Fortlllld;
Charles WhiiA!, Pomeroy; Dlual
Lambert, Rutland.
DIBcl!arges - Victor Genhel.
mer, !llarlea Neiaon, H el e n
Mnls, Sally Byers, Cynthia Tr'li'-

•••••••
SEE THE IIG SELECTION OF NEW

DRESS FABRIC$Brlchl polterna In eotloD llld lortrel Volle• - Floeked
Dots In 100 per cent lllcroa and lllcroa llld ct.tton blend - llript Jewe1 roae Prlntl m'
Clllvaa 6&gt;r tho- "OIHIIOiiO" clotlleo- Avrllllldeottooprintamtllepermatllllj
pre&amp;&amp; lllbrlca thit are sopepular tor the hot dayL Demma in ~I and Solid&amp; - Wr~Di!lf
rree lllbrlc:a -

LADIES
WELCOME

You'll appreciate our courteous service and
we'll handle your car with "kid gloves."

ELBERFELD$ IN

'

NO MONEY DOWN
Take months to pay

We invite you to open
a Firestone Uni-Charge
account! Credit established in minutes.

o~n~b~o~t~h;.E~~~~~
~

was 76 degrees.

Your
oid
bmery
is wonh

Your
old
llolrety
lawonh

•&amp;oo
•soo

v::;.:~$400
II worth

TONIGHT, JULY 9
(JJouble Feature Program)
"FANTASTIC VOYAGE"
Slephen Boyd - Rique! Walch
PLUS
"A COUNTESS FROM
HONG KONG"

Marlon Brando- Sophll Loren

---------

Toward th• purcheM

of • FlrHton•

SUPREME
Tow•rd the purch•M

of • Flrerston•

EXTRA LIFE
Toward the purchaM

of a Firtatane

MOTOR KING

Customer/$ KINIJ.(Jt Fireston1l

ROY

,.
measle&amp; lmmunlzati9n
cl~ca· . .,.Ul be l)eld slmultan.
:
OiJutly
&amp;ondii.Y, July 21, In
Mell!s County, sellm Blazewicz,
~
oount,y hsailb commls1'*'er, ant«mced toda.Y.
· At tho same time, Dr. Blaze.
•'
.
wic~ announc"'l .tile' extension ol
Ill ~ Iii limit lor tl!e lorthcomtnr · cltnles. TM vaccine will
,.,.. ~ admlnlltOred sl .tho elmlea· t&lt;J all 'Meigs .Co!Jnly chUdron
ll'om qe i111' !fu'OOI!I112.
.
ThO cUI\I~ !'fll be bold rrom
12 1100~ t02p.m.,utheelemenlarY 'schools tn1 Pomeroy and.
Miii&lt;IIOJIOrt, · the Amerl&lt;an Lo·
eta" Hall In Rutland llld tho
.·:hlp "!'hool In Racine. ,AltbqU&amp;h
then will be DO charp (J)r 1m.
·' Jll!ll!lz&amp;~~on. contrO.JIIIono will be
acceplejt. ali&lt;! containers will be
' located '&amp;I esch or the ceotors
ror·those wlshilll! lA&gt; ,make a dl&gt;cation.' .
..
A doctor wll) ~au·
or'the
tou(, l~catloris ~ •lb• clinic

on

ih¥1 ;eleiH: ' ·

•

Dean Jooeo
In
ANY WEDNFSDAY
(Tochnjeolor)

- ),£~·:.!.·_,..,

COLUMBUS (IJPO..-

tt~

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wa~

Viti,.. otalei .. ear])' .. the .(J)r
l!eeit ~~ to .....d
frlol ror
~~or 1l&gt; •
;.~ .,
:1 K•l i~"" !

, "'Drttp,
UlllQeey',ntw
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~ • ::tld::,C:~ · dlaclo~}:,
thO

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This is the most spirited
·car·6fwhich doesn't interfere in the slightest
'
with its being the most luxurious.
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FEATVRETTE:
Trlclcy Chicks
COLORCARTOONS:
~lll&gt;ound HOIIflds

Brlnetna Up-...

The yeafs most surP,isl~g driving experience Is
yours for lhe asl&lt;!f1S. we cell 11 a '·commaqd ·Per·
'
'
rormance,"· ~lld 11, lle.l lll)a·the,mlnule you tak~i your
seapn a ioo~ ~;:ecllllac. . · · . . , ,·' ,,
.'
. }'hi~Y~I:I'· o~,~l ~'fa ~; 8.j~nsilrllllf1tr~uc~,d a ri.ew ,
1~1 of performance 10 )lii&lt;u,Y IY\OI&lt;irl i'tli.
tar:
'-' dd
" !.1¢I!On
; ' L V·a ever
'·
I
11!'81"'
16 j:ldwerI 8 pas!i&lt;'nQe'r·car,
11 dollvers .performance lhat Is smoqth !'Iuter and
hl~hly ~l'P&lt;&gt;~stve-, perfor"((iuic~. 1o' r~itY. ")Bich ,
Cadillac's s1a1ure.
•

WEDNFSDAY &amp; rlfvRSDAY
Jill¥ 12 - 13
.NOT OI'EN

The

'

ERtJY

'

''

~k your ca€ul1c:lc

'

.n..

~ung,

0..
&amp;tradl ;

· ·~fi'Q.Rped
by MrS.
,. 1~Nllll.Ne~Jamea
~w .oildu.&lt;~o:
·.'~· ,. , •. · ·
• .•·
.llay,~d . t~te4 to, ~ llela)i

.,

menlarY actlvlcy accour,t, Bred- . aon and Eric Hart.
Eaeh clerk - eu-.n named
wiU be reQiired to hiVe a bond
In the amOQnl of $$,000 wiG! tile
board provldbri PQment of lbe
bond. The Pomer111 N.u-1
Bank, Tho Farmers Bank llld
Savlnp Co. and Tile CIUZOIII
Jack&amp;CII1, palling oo ,19 mile National Bank In Mlddlejlori _..
or Ohio 279, Gotr-Kirb1 eo. or
Port-.....th, m;m· ·eoam&amp;,
$92,000.
clerk • eustodlan Will mob a
monthly report to lhe !loan! of
.wcauon and a cow ror ..ell
' ' lldvlsor, In addition loan
rlleuiQIIIIIIU8l rlljiOtl. The llflmlastra-

,.,

Galll·a· p· rosecutor ~~!~:.~."'~:. ·h~e~~:e~
Denied·Rehearing , ,,, , ,., ,,,, ,,~'*'''*';,:,:,~m''*''' '~, , ,,,

.

~t~~- To~~~Y ·. .~~;~~Y .29

Jane Foncla, Jaaon Robards

TONIGHT, JULY 9
"HOW TO SAVE AMARRIAG
- AND RUIN YOUR UFE"
(Teelmlcolor)
Dean lllartln • Stella Sl8

night were o«&lt;clslly ad,.X..

bury Elementary acdvley account, Salisbury Elementary acUvtzy aeeount, Old MlddlOJIOI'I
Elementary activlcy acOClUDI.
Named clerk~stodlu and adminlstradve o!Deer, re-"VO•
zy, lor ea&lt;h account were MalQ
HiGh School, Kathr7n llolaDIOII
and Jamea Dlobl; Melga H II~
School athlellc, Donald Wolfoontl
James mehl; Me11• Junior ID&amp;b
School, Uncia Hsley and Ru..

ed Each of the employes of the
three categories will be gi'Yen a
copy of the regulations as estab.
lished by the board a.m administration. Upon the suggestion of
board member Frank W, Porter,
each employe will be requlred to
sign that he has received a copy
of the policies pertaining to hls
The board designated a clerk~ &amp;ell Moore; Pomeroy Elemen.. ,
particular job.
custodian and an ndmlnlotratloo tary, .\j)rll Smith and 8ebert
The board also spent consider- office for each of the f u n d s MOrrlSi Rutland Elementary,
able time on general school poli .. which include Meigs high school Linda llale,y and James Vmcies of the district. These pro.. activlty account, Molp 111gb narl; Salem center, Linda Havisions also have be~ compUed School athletic account, Meigs lfll' and Raberta WU11011; Harriover a period of a year or so and Junior HiGh activity, Pomeroy 100v1Uo, Linda l!ale,y ODd W. E.
had been studied on previous oc· elementary activity account. Rut. Canljlboll; BradlurJ, Silanaon
casions by tlle board. The poli- land Elementary activity account, and Eric Hart; SaliiiNry, o\pril
(Continued on Page 8)
Salem Center El.-rtaey activ- Smith and RoNllo Story; Mlddl•·
lty accoun~ HarriSC111vllle Ele- port Elemeolary, KatbryJt Soran-

~&amp;a!~~~.::

Dissention

Problem is

I

~·.s:..:-:.~~:

..
'n

~sorr~~.

a ~s.mooo··
to a client '
his

tlve offtcer will 9JW0Ve eaehex-

...r the clork..,..-..
admlnlotratlvo orncw will

pendlture

and
stsn sll chocks In each lUnd.
All recorda and tranllctilllla
nwot be oo lorma _..,.od by
PT. PLEASANT - A 2'4 hour tho auditor or the stale.
executive session of the Mason
Cwuly Board or EWcatiDn was
held during the lengtizy Tue&amp;day
night regular session for the
purpose ol trying to solve lhe
coaching dissension problem at
Wahama High School.
The press was excluded rrom

Given Study

*"""·

:;•~~; .~;~ ~ ·_Hw~

MaGs 111AYIIE

studied for o\'er a year and Tues·
day

:

eietl

1 DAYS- WED. TIIRU TllES,
JULY 10 - 18
Double Feature
BONNIE AND CLYDE
Warren Beatljr, Faye DunaWay
(Color)
PLUS

All school activity funds In
the Meigs LOesl School District
must 110 through a sUIIA!-approv.
ed recording plan In the More,
according to an action taken by
the Meigs LOesl Board Tuesday
night.
Officials pointed oot that lhe
procedure will sovern all runda
raised throogh any actlvlzy lor
the school, Including athletics,
clubs and yearbooks.

ides have been compUed ancl

$6.5 Mtnion Worth Deferred

1•yse .or 1116 w.n:d 'killer' to
·
wUJ wm the Democratic nomde ..rlbinpeaslel·somehowdooaInation, would create voter i~
~·£ IIi tiM! lmaie m-.slos ~·
:
tercst ln the election.
aciJ!Ired ·over tho ·Years aa a
harmio11 chDdhood allllcatloiL
~ltlca Pfll""· the, I..... Ia
~ EvorJ¥/W lnlll!~­
MUST REPORT
tr¥, .apprOximately 5!10 mlldrtll • COLUMBUS (IJPI) - Gallla writing and uttering checks
Farmers who are in the 1968
die and 1,600 ·are left mentall,y C!&gt;WII.v Prosecutor John A. Ep- without" .sutflclent fUnds.."
feed grain prngram must report
retarded aa a result or the 10 llrw was denied a rebearlng toIt was expet::ted that an ap- compliance not laiA!r than July
to 14 dii.Y .or ro1111iar meae]oa. ~ by the 01110 !qlr'IIJII COUrt peal by llPUna to the u. s. S~t&gt;­ 15, 1968. The Meigs ASCS office
.
on his iildefintiAl 'suapenalon remo Court would be acted on will. be open until ooon Slturdly,
rrom tho pncdce ollaw.
beror~ lhe ·.
or his IA!rm as ,July 13, to assist canners wh?
1
Gallla
Counl;y
prosecutor
ends cannot report to the office dur..
••
who ... su...,nded
mJ~. ,
II• ....,.w- ornee boors.
tile lotsl lleallh· ilepartlnenl ...r .
Juno 19. by tho awe•~ hijheilt
' ol Health''per
·"'"''
~(Nrt. &amp;al'li"f aitd be 1nltindid
D•··--ent
........
tiort
to lake hlo ease"tb the u.s. su.
'"•' ~ ~O 'aliOO!IIItdod. tobe '
,(
.
pr '''• CA&gt;Ur~ ,.
'1. , : . '·
._
• , .
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~rid!Ciaie ror lildae, ~Ia. •

DRIVE·IN

ter School was accepted with r~
gret and hired lo replace her was
Bernice Garnes.
The board reviewed at length
policies governing custodians,
bus drivers and cooks. The pol-

T h.e ..could peril more than $21 mii- .08 mile ·or Ohio 279 In Gallla
Golf -Kirby eo•. or Pbrto.. By.. unlfed:f'fNa•-..woiiii~!•• !
-A!!
~·.':!,.~ r.,.,~~;. l.'~i'l .Q&amp;• ~~ ..~ction Cilunt1,
mooitl.;$16~4'4h'allniate:
Sl73.·
:·~~~~
art~eted I • ~· 1 as~on 58 ProJeC:b, , proJ~CfS~, S · SUmmi'!r,
.
900.
·
ii&gt;M\lat:ti,.ro~~~~~ II.( million but derer·
1110 bias:
Moil• and Vinton, applying a
··
"!PPIdii.Y·Htahai!lll
rod opening' a total or $6.5 milF","'ral proJects in area counsurface course on 4.02 miles
averiiO tho loWer 80s north · lion worth ol proJects becauae deo \Delude:
and the upper g0 1 ·south. Lowt
~ a racial directive handed down
Gallia and Jackson, resurfac~ of Ohio 689 In Meigs Couniy
will generally be In !he loWI!r
by the lederal government.
tng on .33 mile or u. S. 35, and 3. 36 miles or Ohlo 6891n VinThe dire&lt;tlve was issued by 6.08 miles or Ohio 279, .20 miles ton Couniy, Shelly Co. or Thornpreaent. U the turnout Ia hea'(Y . 60s north and lllo middle 60s
'thO u. s. Department or Trans- ol Ohio 233 and 1.63 miles or ville, $52,669 estimate: $58,200.
at IDl' particular ceniA!r, hours IIOUth
Pike, installing drainage and
Th~re
will
be
a
warmlqg
portatlon and aimed it· insur. Ohio 327 in Jackson Coon1;y, and
or tho clinic will be estanded.
concrete
pavement repair on 2
IIIII OQJal employment ,IIPJIOrluniHealth departmento!Dctalsare trend early In tbe period and
miles or u. s. 23, Golf-Kirby
Uea for minority groups.
streoslni{ lhe "lriou&amp;ness or coollr over the weekend. Tem.
Co, or Portsmouth, $99,558 es.
peratures will rise again earIt demanded that Negroes, Mex~
measles. The measles tor which
CLEVELAND'(UPI)
Richtimate:
$ll2,700.
leans and Puerto Rlc1111 be hired
tho immuntzallon Is being glv- ly next
ard
Nixon
said
today
he
would
Lawrence, paving on .20 mile
Ralnrall will average . - on 90 per &lt;ent rederally financed
en l!frecto more children In the
debate
Vice
President
Hubert
of
U, S. 52, J. J. Blazer Cmst.
one~lt
Inch
later
In
1
he
hiJillway
conatructlonprojectsbeVlllted ~as than IDl' other alnon
national
televisHumphrey
Co.
or Wheelersburg, $337,165
Hie dlsea..,. n Ia a -ly mis- week and again early ne¥f, fore contracts are awarded.
Ion
acter
the
party
convenestimate:
$373,300.
week.
·
Hil!flway
Director
P.
E.
MawideriiOlld and traglcalJ¥ undertions.
Biteter said a continued dela_y
esllm.lled 'killer, i&gt;alctala at.te.
::::::--::::::::-;:::::=-;::-.:::::::::~~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
At a news conference Nixon
Four F'mes Levied
AcCJ&gt;IIItnr tci .a beallh depart-

.stilled
;.ll..

P-

Put YOUR csr in th1 h1nds of our ski/IBd mBchBnics
who work with th1 mo1t mod~tn •quipm1nt svsilsbiB.

of which' pro~ded for about 2,100
miles or dtlving for 28 buses. a year extra pay. Morri son will
However, ' Morrison said that di scuss routes with the respeche and Robert Swick, malnten- tive drivers in August.
He reported that the di strict
ance supervisor of buses, had
abo devtsed a plan for trans- will recel ve an additional $10,492
porting students. Thier plan calls from the state in transportation
for the use of only 27 buses and Curds, eCfective this ran, what
wiU requh·e only about 1,600 plus with the consolidation of the senmiles or driving each day. Under lor and junior high schools in the
their plan, 6:55 a. m. each districL
morning would be the earliest
The board awarded 'the school
time that 811,'.' chlld will be re- bus insurance fur thencxtyearto
qutred to leave hi s home for ~he Downing Insurance Agency
school
f . which submitted a $1,960.90 bid
Morrison reported thatameetl tor the poJicy witll a $50 deduc·
itW was he)d with school bus ./ftibltl clause. William Childs, repdrivers on the changes to be resentativc or the Downing Age~
mad~ this ran. It was generally
cy, said lhat policy will be dividagreed that the preseTt base ed with the Davi s-Warner tnsursalary of $1,762.50 for drlvers ance Agency. The board also

Go Through
Recording Plan

the student insurance coverage.
The resignation of Dena Hoffman as cook at the salem Cen--

'

•

dow~

tlonal $225 and those working
even longer are to receive $300

pate ln athletics unless they have

"
::::::~::::::::~X$:~~1.:~::::::::::;:::::::::::::~::

Four

---

BUY ON EASY BUDGET TERMS

and outlined ,hfo sy stems, each

Tho propoand budget will now ·

lett.

lolln Pomeroy at 11:30 Lm.
Tuesday, under suM)' skies,

M,ASON

Larry Morflson,asslstant sui&gt;" will receive an additional $75
er:,lntendent, ~· tfii:'IOtted to the per year; one working up to oneb~d thlt" j'Sta"' ~transpo~tion halt hour more each day will
people had . studied transporta- recehe $150 more a year; those
tion problems :1n the district for working Up tp 45 minutes more
the approechiiJg school system each day will receive an addi-

OHIO FIVE-DAY FORECA,ST

GAME SCHEDULED
Mella Leglcm will host Hur&gt;tlJVI&lt;&gt;n Legion Wednesday at
6 p.m. at lhe Syracuae ball
pork.

_

driver working up to 15 minutes
over the three hours each day

ed that students In the dlstri&lt;t
wUl not be permiLte&lt;l to partici-

l
$
I I ll
~=:,;r~~c'""'- Ohio Projects JOta 11.4 1ui ion

" ...

BeautifUl colors and f.lbrlco - In IIOlldalllld prints Alao Ill the Dnpery Dip~ :rou will 111111 SlmpBcley i&gt;-.a Groot l'llohl0111to ..,. rl&amp;lrt oow, weer oow iu.IJaiA!r.

LOCAl TEMP
The temperature in

'

in Mid-

recommerXIed the purchase of
studeJt lnsuraooe [rom the Guar•
anteed Trust Co., al&amp;Oreprea~nt-­
ed through Childs. It was repcn:t..

Cpl. Pettit

Re~ipient of

In Pomeroy Court
Four fines were levied ln Pomeroy Mayor Charles Legar's

the exeCI.Itive session as weU u
the more than 30 interested persons. Appearing at the execu.

Bronze Star

tlve session were the three coach~
Cpl. Larry Pettll, 11011 of Mr.
es at Waba.ma, Grant Barnette, and Mrs. Albert Pettll of PomeHarold Walker. 48, Racine,
was fined $5 and costs for run- Donnie V1111Meter and John Sang. roy, has beSI •-llltbratzo
Followllll! a long walt, t h e star ror IIOn'l&lt;o In Vlatnlm.
ning a rod light, Dewey Blrchgroup
returned to Ule meeting
His citation waa for •'autttaJld..
!ield, 38, Harrloonvllle, apeeding, $10 and oosts; Thomas M&lt;- room at l a.m. and the follow- ing morltorlws aervlee In eon.
Ciung, 36, Pomeroy, drivllll! on Ing recommendation, made by nection wiU. military operation
expired platA!&amp;, $10 and oosto, and &amp;lpt. L Brooks, was approved aplnst a ho&amp;tllo roreo In tile
Republic or VIetnam cming tile
Mike Smith, 19, Syracuse, as- by the board members:
Head
football
coach
is
to
be
period,
Mareh, 1967, to Fob.
aured clear distance, $5 and
Grant
BarnetiA!;
assistant
root1968."
ooota,.
ball c:oach and 7th and 8th grade
Cpl. Pettit was atl&amp;ehed to
coach and varsity scouting, Don. the !Blot tnrantry or the u. s.
nie VanMeter; John Sang was Army. 11a Is ...., olationod at
Dlft'led as freshman football coach Fort Cam!&gt;bell, Ky.
IDd assistant varsity scout under
'
tho ]Urlldl ctlon or Barnette and
court Tue&amp;day evening.

VIII Meteri

Head

Basketball

mach, John Sang; Assistant basketball, Donald Uploll; Jr. High
baoketbsll ooaeh, Doonie VanWtor; llead baseball coach,
Grant Barnette; Head track
mach, VanMeter and Jr. HI g b
lr_ac1&lt;, Sans; Goll coach, Doeald
IJPton. CQ-de Folo,y was named
illtlotlc director with BarbeUe
slblo lor aosiROrnonll In
··· illiOIIIon and Sane ror baskelball.
'"No- commonta on thaiCllli
-dva aeallliln were made by
olhr the l!&lt;&gt;"rd memberl &lt;ir
~~ 'berore tb •

rf....

}.,., '!lOll'.

.

Announeement

Of Endorsement
•
Test is Given
'
Amotoreyclo...SO......,.Iell
will be 8iVOD F~, ...17 lt,
rrom ~
.il 1111
Stale

!lOUie

�3-

Rookies, Free
Agents May Ge.t
Starting Roles

"'
'

·A Reprieve ·rs Won
For the Wild ·River$ ·
~

me for conservallOII!Ito. '
. They sorely need It in the upbill campal~~t
to preserve at least a omall portion of natural
America from the bulldozer and Dian's many
and ingenious ways of foUling hli environment.
A House interior subcommittee bas ap·
proved eolablishmenl of a scenlc·~lvers
system to preserve in the wlld slate 111rea1ns
of psrllcular scenic, wlldille and recAallOJIB)
value. Any c h a n g e s in the landscape
opecifically dam building, would requ1111 con:
g111Ssional authorization.
Portions of six rivers - the Rogue in
Orecon, Rio Grande in New Mexico Salmon
and Clearwater in Idal!o, Upper St. 'Croix ill
~esola and Wlsconsill and Wolf in Wiscon1111-WOuld be protected lnlllally with provision for later additions.
The rivers would be a natural and welcome
addition to the pment n a II o n a I park
sntem, th111atened with overcrowding by a
cfoubUng of the visitor fiow in the psst decade
alone.
The gain is a small one and the game is
far from over in a Congress much more at·

'·

·,

.

I

Next lime you slari worrying about the
younger generation let these facts come into
your mind.
~ what is becoming a spring tradition in
Califomls, 110,000 l!!llh acboOI graduates held
a!J-nlgbt frolics at DlSDeyland this year. Five
mgbts the park was thronged from 11 ,.m.
unlll 5 a.m. by classes from a total o 308
schools.
Wblle !1llneyland makes II plain to the kids
that thi.'l.li aland for no nonsense, olficials In
cbart...!"Y they have less trouble with them
tban ....y have with some adults.

Reds Have Yen for Yen

':.:t

bit, He

au.kl rve

b..

to.--

.idda . -..aiol.eaoul!h
..... ... !lll!l ..,..~ ""r ••...,....is.,..
.......
Bill
fiOI. . aoeepted•• aa,..,.,&lt;Jf

become

wraar- porlod.

. . ,... alno4b' know lblo, ..

' ~ bit )'OUr blaell !.lull:
. llltlkllll NOYtr call a man "IIIII·
:lll!le" .__.
when__
he1111a1 he ba
. · '•Wblla
; ,f

,.,

~·

--be-

1

..........

~Will

••

....'! yuu llnd • job aud
•.
e .,. boblc an oas;r mark for
.Diarrl.. ma.?- H.
1-toudHodbytllo~

Mr. c. ,II. two ....
retarded. The part thai bit
to me wao the Wljl JJtiiPI•
~ .,.._, who 1ft "dUI'er~·" '11d.1 does .IKit necellar·
r' lhele am1- wilh

.. pllJslcal aliJI!ento, but
41.. lhelewlloiO tamll1\!allarnl

l

ill

. Tht hlstot'fl of J\merictlll aldvt'll fi
marked btl!the occufioence of at leost %50
111poried N~ .CO!Upirocie• and .revoltl,· \
'""' "''19 -Herbert Aplbetel'
•.,.,

Among the .many myths about the Ne~ .
ill the claim that he must have been wen•.
suited for slavery because he never (&lt;belled ,
In truth, ·~~e did rebel, lime arul again, begin:
Ding as early a1 1502 on Hispaniola, 10 years'
aftir Colum~us· first voyage.
·
·
· The African slave trade was ever a danger·
ons busineu. Slaves frequently mutinied, and
eometlmes sucCeeded. Other case• are on
reconl ol wlwle boatloads of &amp;!avea jumping
overboard or olhenrlse commltt!Dg suicide. ·
The flrll revolt in wbat was to be the United
Slates took pllce 1n p111sent-day South Carolina

'

....'
•
i

at a 1ow11 called

·'
' '1

"It'll Never Get Off the Ground!"

.

.

.· \li
''
, '

.•

aa~aAii MAILUd.
' .
·' '
" .' '.

Quaker Stale Post

regretted; He went to lhe instl·
tutloo when he was 16, alter m,y
heallh W011! bad.
I can truthflllly til¥ he is bappier 1he111. He baa his own work
to do, he's aeeoptad am&lt;mg his
own kind. Altboualllhe State heme
Ia understaffed, lhe dedicated
workers take the patients 011 picnlca, trips, outings. They ao
camping, to ball samoa, lhe clr·
cua.
OUr boy comes home lll&gt;oUt
6(} day&amp; out o( the year and OUI'

Big Bend Triumphs

I

lu. N
ra ate kind,
"lftd'llll''lf'Muf
nilk
'
'
·
-" ' ~ · .
.
. .~
e 11111'" mm•
. are .... silenced by oiJr 'lfvo .
olhers who take him lhopplng,
bowling, swimming, etc.
Thoogh he enjoys It wilh us,
he Is alwljls asaor 1o ao"homo"
- back to lhe lnstltullon, where
he can be with his !rlenda.
We're prood &lt;i our 8011 endlhe
~e who care ror him ao wen.
Perhaps Mr. C. H. llhouid eon.
aldor lhla aolutloo. - MRS. J.
G.
_
This column Is dedicated to
tamll1 living, ao I! you're hsY·
lng ldd - l e or just plain
troul&gt;le, let Holen help YOU.
h will alao welcome~ own
amusing experienceo. Addreas
Hal111 Boltel In care or t h 1 s
newspaper .

I,

(
I

'

WASHINGTON NOTEBOOK

II
I

Senate Intercom Bridges ·
Phone Servi~ B,.akdown

I

I

lr NOEL GlOVE
NEA StaH Co......dent
WASHINGTON- (NEA)That Isn't 11101ly a panlc bill·
ton that has been inotalled In
seaate_olflces, lneists a Cap!·
tol o!lclal
•
Some persist Ill calling It
that, hOwever, siDce the button hookl up senator• with an
illtercom system that could
give a recomed account of
nearby riot acUvlty In case
civil dltturbanceo bit the elty
again,
With smake d r If t1 n g over
the dome and the sound of
making plate glass almoet
within ear1bot 1ft the April
riots, 1ome•. slalfera becam,

A~ broke out

~

)l&lt;,_..,aplt to pi-ovltif · ·

, a · . O(coaunti11icat19n .~·,

. ol~ ,

.

.

. IDtbeevw&gt;
.,..~

bteik®wlllll

p~ =~~~.~
. ·;:. ' $··7~tre ;• . ~~r:. ~~~\;.
-

.

! ··\·,

Vl!!Utiri' Jl ,

·lftl ',,.•.- ., '
j

J

·,.,', -!~!1
iistMfai\W,: ~ft; r.
Iii~... ~~ ~ev,er./riJiioe •
· .....,..waDI·.,.. ntiUiill)ili!tt '
to so~ ~

·t' .

ll!t 18111e Olrenoet•

n:; ,

a Rlotol bUll to llibdll8 8 ,
who oald be had
to
"gel'• now·npeilecf~
Adam ~ llOWiU.
In ·r.lareli ·
·

Word Bp111nd that enipen
w0111 walunc outslda and that
riotero were on Capitol
grounds.
The new Intercom system
would help quash IUCb
rumqra, admits Senate (actIng) . Serg~ at ,Ai'ml Nl&lt;ll·
#U, LltCov~~"' lilrt ita matn,,
~·

-"1 In

I the llaYI&gt;u'm \1at'eter1a bUt
wo .,....,_,
' · '
·
Capti'tli"fOp. q~ ytJ:-

phODOI daad, for tboae who
wanted to eheck on the

rumor•.

=·

the! bit the~~~ Of tile naUoo.
Theft of .Jlurlel from olice
daskl, typewrlteu,
even •
fritm thO
gorges are Included on
•
fol police 111eords.

edaY · and rumors ran ram~
paiii. A torrent of ealll d
over Wubillgton left many

....,c:::;:;_.lr.;:J

lI

,.

Thoughts

Time

HOIJSTON (UPO - You could

u.v

lt prOl'ed what everyboci:Y'a

been Sll)ling, that 1968 Is a
pitchera' year!' Or you could

'4

S11Y It proved that )1st about

every year, one w_,- or another,
ta the National Leaaue'a year.
There weren't many other
ways to figure it in the wake of

the ftrstlndoor All-Star game In
major league history that saw
the National League whip the
Americans 1-0 for the 8ixth
straight year with tbe lowest
single and two-team hit totals in
history, and a whopping total of
20 strlkeoots.

••n

was a pitchers' battle,"
aummed up losing manager
Dick Williams ol the American
League, whose men were held
to three hits and suffered 11
strikeouts by six NL pitchers.
·Those three hits were the
lowest W1Y team has gotten in
39 All-Star games and, since the

Natlonala bsggod oo11 ftvo, lhe
total o! ell!ht ~ed the alltime low. That's the way it's
been In a year that already hu
seen two no.hltters, including
the !lrst perfect game In the
American League in 46 years,

team and league batting avera·
ges near record lows, and a
record string of 58 scoreless
Innings pitched by Don Drya.

•.• A pitcher, Luis Tlant orlhe
Cleveland h'wtlans, wu the
"goat" for two bad throws.
Aller yielding

the alnglotoMayo,

Tlant lhrew wildly to !lrst on a

plckol! attempt enabling Mayo
to "' to aecond (even tlloul!h
first baseman Harmon Killebrew
was charged with an error on
lhe play). snd lhen threw a wild
pitch to Curt Flood to send

The players, quoting the
owners that they wished to
make the pension equal to that
of professional baseball, said

tom•

'I

81MM· 111e Mlmooota a1uaor beln.l unhlttable u any pltcltoro
record by runalnll hll totll at- pillllcl lhe lllmatrlng muacle In In the gam8's blo1Gr7.
The Amerlcaa Leap tlltlttiMl
his lett leg end had to be
bats In theae games lo 66.
corps
clld not bavo to blall!,
curled rrom 111e tleld.
KUiobmr inJured
ellher,
The six lurloro pve ..
National starter end wlmer
Klll- was the game's bl!
only
five
hlta aud the nm .,.
loser. Not only cUd he pt Don Dryatlsle aud hlo ftve
lfi8Bod with an error m lhe M~eceaiOI'I C'IJOked the heralded Tlant WS1 unearned.
ft .... the Natlnnala' slxtb
tllrow by Tlanf..- which mlltl' American League power 10
&amp;trall!ht
victory aud their 2lot
lhou8ht ,.....•t his fault-but he ol!ectlvei.Y thai lhey gave up
oullered an Injury that mlsht only thret hlta and, following overall aplnll 17 daleato aud
sideline him ror a month. Fregoat•• leadoff double, retired - lie. II aloo waothe llrat 1.0
Stretching ror a low, wide throw tho next 20 men In a row. Juan game In oearb' roar - s ol
by Jim Fregosi later In lhe Marlcllal, Steve Carlton, Tom lhe mltl.,.mmor classic.

dale.
Wondrous Willie Honored
There were two ironies in the
classic before 48,321 fana at the
alr-&lt;Ondltloned Astrodome:
...The "Most Valuable PlaJ"er" award went to a non.

Mau"s over to third.
Ma,ys, of oourse, wasn't even
supposed to be In lhe startln8
lineup. He got Ln because Pete
Rose of the Reds, who was
elected to the first team, waa

pitcher, wondrous Willie Mays
of the San Francisco Giants
who scored the game's only run
in the first irmlng when he
singled, took second on an
error, third on a wild pitch, and
scored as WUUe McCovey

"I was just lucky to be in the
right place at the right Ume,"
explained Mays, who has been
doing lhat sort or thing In AllStar games Cor years.
Mays' hit was his 23rd, an
All&amp;r record, and the run his
A single by len ftelder Tim
2oth, also a record, and he went summers ln the bottom ot the
seventh inning with one out and
one on gave the New Haven Reds
a 1-0 win over the Cottageville

bounded Into a dooble play.

hurt.

New Haven Reds,
Addaville Jets Win
two pitches to Summers were out 12. Jete Haymaker, in six
balls but summers togged lhe innings, gave 'C) three hltl,

third pitch Into right field ror wsiked one ond struck out 1L
a single that drove txrne the
wirml~V

or the D!th inning by Donnie Dye

nament.

Pitcher Mlke Workman ot the
Stars and Jetf Haymaker of the
Reds hooked up in a six inning
scoreless pitching duel and both
had to leave the mound when the
contest went lnto extra innings.
Rarliy Grinstead went to the
hill for the Reds in the top of
the seventh, walked Tom West
and then struck out S.'teve Wood,
Rocky Corbin and Chuck Whitney. Grinstead took the win.

Alan Gerwig relieved Worlt..

man when the contest went into
extra innings arxl walked Ronnie
RusseU, first man up . Ra.Y Bar·
nett struck ouL Gerwig's Ont

•·

National

abrhbi

Maysd

4 I I 0
I 0 0 0
I 0 I 0

Flood If
M. Alou II

The win ldvances the New HIV·
en Reds to the oext bracket where
they'll meet the Gallipolis White
Sox II 7 p. m. Tuesday, July 16.
In the oecood game last

nll!h~

of the Reds, who was two for tile Addavllle Jots plied "'a 20.
three at the plate. Jeff Haymak~ 9 victory over Letart..
The winners had 20 runs oo 15
er blasted a brace of singles In
hits. They committed tl.ve errors.
Letart hod nine I"UIIS oo only two
limelight.
catcher Mopsy Haymaker had hits. They played errorless baiL
Dave Rite, Joe Stidham IIXI
a single ln three trips. Substi~
Dave
Melage took turna on the
tutes David Roush and Tim Sum~
mers each had a single ln one moond lor the wlmers. Bob Mil·
Ier started for the losera. He
trip.
was
relieved by Norm Curtman
Jell Haymaker Umltod t h e
and
Dave
J enkina.
stars to three scattered singles
Larry Tabor had a dooblo aud
by Micky Taylor,MikeWorkman,
aud Roclcy corbin, the 1..1 being three singles and scored tour
In the top of lhe !ourlh inning. runs for the wimers. Sld Manuel
In the pitchers' duel, Mike and John, Jenkins collected the
Workman, in six iMings pve lo-s only hits.
11&gt;nlgh~ Pt. Pleasant City Ice
up six hits, walkel:ltwoandstruck
lnd Fuel will bettie the VInton
Dodgers at 7 p , m., and at 8;30,
the Mldclleport Yankees will take
on Rio Grande.
three trips to share the hitting

Wilt Goes To Lakers

KIDS GLOVED-Youngaters cover their beads as Booton's George Scott (front) and
Mike Aadrewo reach lor roul baD. Spectators came away unharmed while Scott and
Andrews eame out ol It wllhoul the ball.

sdord's Studio defeated the that the 25 per cent Increase
GSI 11..1 Tuesday evening In a offered by the owners still
llrst round game or the Bli Bend woold leave baseball 100 per
Tournsment at Waltama H I g h cent ahead or !ontball.
Sehoul, Lou LultoD was lho win·
Pensions were the only point
nlng pitcher, Jim Rose 1ook the
lett at issue between the players American
abrhbl
loss.
am
owners. PrerlOWJly agree- Fregosi ss
3 0 I 0
GSI had flve runa on nine hits ment was reached on minimum
I 0 0 0
wl.th one error. Bernie Guinther salary, payment Cor preseason Clmpanerls ss
3 00 0
led their hitllng with 3 ror 3 games, grievance procedures, Carew 2b
I 0 0 0
with Neal collecting 2 hils also. contract submission to players, Jolmaon 2b
4
00 0
Yastrzemski
cf
Qllnther had their only extra
option clause, Geverance pay Howard rf
2000
base hit, a dooble .
and payment of moving ex- Oliva rf
I 0 I 0
Sll!ord' 1 pi eked up 11 runs penses.
Horton
II
2 00 0
;~ q .,)dt! while commltliog I
However, both sides have Azcue c
l 0 0 0
er:ror. Bush, Bennett, Lutton, been adamant on the pensl&lt;n
Josephson c
0 0 0 0
-and Jagera again led lheir hlf..
matter. The players originally KIDebrew lb
1000
ling with two hlta each. L o u
asked for a contribudon of $5 Powell lb
2
0 0 0
Bush had a t"" nm homer and mlllloo annually !rom lhe
Freehan c
20 0 0
Jager&amp; two doobloa.
league tor the pension lund, but McLain p
0 0 0 0
Tonight Salford' s wUI take on
have not made public any
0 0 0 0
Harlow Ume &lt;i Parkersburg COUlter o!!er to the 1968-69 McDowell p
Mantle
ph
I 0 0 0
while GSI will plljl MlnersvUle prq&gt;OSal from the owners.
Stottlemyre p
0 0 0 0
m Friday evening.
The owners have offered to John p
0 0 0 0
Bob Saunders QJakr.r S t a t e make retroactiwe to 1968 an:l
Robinson
3b
200 0
&lt;i Gallipolis came from behind 1969 whatever pen~loo aetUeWert
3b
I 0 I 0
to down the ~ncer Truckers ment is reached in 1970, after
0000
8.6 In the opening roond &lt;i the the merger of the NFL aud Tlallt p
Harrelson
ph
I 0 0 0
Bls Bend Sollball Tournameot. AFL.
Od&lt;m
p
0
0 0 0
Bob Saundero, trailing 5-3, came
Monday c!
20 0 0
to lite In the !lt1h Inning a n d
30
Tcnlo
0 3 0
pu11hed across 3runa, the big blow
being Mick Morgan's two run
Major League Ali.Star s
homer.
AL
000 000 000- 0 3 I
This was a costly win lor Bob NL
100 000 OOx- I 5 0
Saunders u lhay lost the serv.
Tlan~ Odom (3), McLain (5)
Ices or their star short llalder McDowell ('1), Stottlemyre (8),
Carl WoUe. who !radured John (9) aud Froehan, Azcue
By IRA BERKOW
hlo hand In a coiUsion wilh (5), Josephson (8); Drysdale,
NEA Sports Writer
Glb MUUron in the olxlh Inning. Marlchal (4), Carlton (8),
NEW YORK-INEA)- 11
Bob saundera had ·8 runs on seaver (7), Reed (9) ani
stxteen hits and made one er. Koosman (9) aud Grote, Haller Simmer! doesn't stop and roll
ror. Spencer had 6 runs on 12 (6), Bench (9). WP- Drysdale. over for a snooze on the way
to the finish line, he has a
hlta end had me error.
LP- Tllnt.
good chance of becoming the
Leading hi-a lor Bob Saun.
first German-bred horse to
dero were Carl Wol!o 3 lor !,
win the $100,000 Roosevelt
Art Lanham 3 ror 3, and Glb BASKETBALL TRAIIE
Raceway
International trotNEW YORK {UPI)- The New
MIIUron, Mlck Morgon, Dan
ting races scheduled lor July
York franchise, formerly the 13,
Chick, all had two hils.
At this writing. there Is
The Winning pitcher was Glenn New Jersey Americana of the
American
Basketball
x...a,..
some
question when the race
TrOUt, and the loser was ~n~
obtained
Maurice
McHartly
will
come
off since a strike
cer.
by horsemen over purses has
rrmn
the
Dallas
Chej&gt;paralo
In
Bob Sounders Qlokor Slate COD·
hobbled racing at Roosevelt.
tlnuos play In lho toornament exchange for a future draft It hardly matters to Simmer!
Wodnosda¥ at 7:15p.m. whenlhiiY choice.
when the race is held, howThe New York team, which i&amp; ever. His training is the same
meet thO Firs! National BaM &lt;i
sUD looking lor a home court, under all clrcumstancesRlpiiiY, W. Va.
hal scheduled a news confer- pracUcally nothing.
Falla City of GalllpoUs , .
ence ror July 15.
The 8-year-old staUion, Ger·
felled Goooetown of Pt Ples~o
man champ for the psst two
ant 15-13 In lhe Bli Belli event
seasons, Js "trained" and
Tuesda¥ evening.
driven by Rolf Lurr. "I live
"The star-Spangled Banner" and train in Munich." said
The 1968 rW1110rsup wUI now
bettie Hardey 011 &lt;i Ravenswood woo first sung In public by Luff, "and between races
at R:30 tonight The two teams Ferdinand Durang, an actor, Simmer! goeo to the farm of
have met on fDur previous oecu· in Baltimore, Md., on Oct. 19, his owner In Grossenplnnlng
In the Tyrol, about 100 miles
tona this summer, and apllteven. 1814.
from Munich.
"They never train Slmmerl.
Every day they take him lor
a three-hour walk through
the woods. The rest of the
day he opends In thejaddock
With a milk cow an a don·
key. '{'hat's all. On race days

Seaver, Ron Reed end JJJT1
Koosman came aa eloM Ill

ahead &lt;i stan Mualal'• All-.!lar

run.
The
only
extra base hit or the
Stars Tuesday night In the Kygame
was
a
double in the bottom
ger Creek Little League Tour-

Box Score

~~=,ro~r4 .11li&gt;IPM·

I •
)'OII'Il print this, Helen, !or lhen are lots &lt;i HUla In
loto o! towno. - NEIGHBOR
Dear Nol&amp;li&gt;or:
Don't point tile linger, Bee·
.... with It, lnotaad.
One kind-hearted mother can
malie!ilrlhe dllforenoe to Bill.
9lli&gt; worrying - . t lhe rest &lt;i
M9 onguilh, my anguilh! I
the nelaN&gt;orhood and bring him uwithe in poml Oh, the UIGlll
I'*&gt; )'OUr ramtJ.y. If you accOill of my !'"'11 Mil heart il bt&lt;lthim, others ..., follow your '~ wildly; I c ann o I luep
ailtnt; f,. I hear the 1ound of
18111.- B.
'
the
trumpet, the alarm of
Dear llellll:
war.-Jeremini&amp; 4:19.
It's IIDe or Mr. c. ll to de·
0
0
0
vote hlo ll!e to hio two mental.
Nothing In history bas
IJ' retarded 10111, but aometlmes turned out to he more lmper·
11'1 better for all c:oaeernod It manent than military victory
be coosidoro an Institution.
-Harry Emeraon Fosdick
'
OUr aldell &lt;i m Is retarded. American clergyman,
When he waa alaht, we made

Nationals Win Pitchers Battle, 1-0·

Safford's Studio,

dedslon, but one we have never

~ !lnee he II tile only oie
For tho ~e 1n the DOII!h·
. ' left, aud keopa believing tfm IIIIo Is a Ctisltlellllli ox.
;....,. end trullln&amp; rvo plcl&lt;Od BDqJ!o &lt;i cla11 oatraclom. Yet
. , Jdm. Alao be Is lhe onl,y man 1 we do nothing to belp Bill or
• 1'
- CIIl mare or less lead by the make him !eel wanted, 1 lmsg&gt; .no•- Dll so fUo I'Ve had m 1ne many encourap this ....,.
: luck leadlnl! him to lhe cllvorco bery, for they aeem ofrald Bill's
court.
bad ramtJ.y lite will nob oft 011
He 1!1111 me as ofteD aa he them.
, coa, aud I call him every clay,
The aaddestlhillg &lt;i au is thai
: : - . v..,. belpleoo, ao he'D Bill- why heialoftwt.llo'o
.f . .... "'er end COIISOia me. 11o 14, a nloe kid, but. !H&gt;W lq will
' ,, )'jlal DOYer come rillll out aud he 11111 thai Wljl wltll no love
&gt;. :: Aid he loved me, but he doem't at heme aud no .......,....,0111
i . ~ore· hlo wire, so tllal'o 110 prob. elsewhere? &amp;&gt;on he'll
. .loo\1- .
b~, and then tile nelllix&gt;rs
;: Noir, llolaa, I'Ve .... bonell can sq, "We told yuu ao:... thai
;,wllll ,.... Tell me boneotly 1111a1 kind olwa,ra comoo to no &amp;00&lt;1

, YOU'n

'
Black Rebers
-

him a ward &lt;i the state ao that
It anything happened 1o my bua.
band .and me, we lmew be would
be taken care ct. h was a hard

tnle Udlfferent." And 80, though the

ANYWilEIIE

'

when circumstances warrant, eacb case

ore dllfereat.
In our neighborhood we have
a boy, let's call him BIll,
-.e parents are _.-alad.
When his ralher comes bomo to
visit, all the neighbors hear are
screams aud yelling.
Bill hu lack &lt;i matemallove
too. mo molher aud alstero don't
care 1lllal he doea. Ills clothes
ore ''&lt;lilferont." Rio house Ia

NOT GET. end."

FootbaD Legue owners plan to league president am owner of
6&amp;1flll their commitments for the Cleveland Browns, said.
)Jre--season games, playing rook· "but the response would unles and Cree agents, but they doubtedlY vary from team to
said they cannot grant what team and create an unfair
they termed "unrealistic" de- competitive imbalance.
mands of veteran players for a
uThere is no way lor
boost in the penslon fund.
lrxtlvtdual clubs to determine
The owners voted unanimous- the nUJI'lber of players that will
ly to back ..., their negotiatlrw be aw.ilable at any given time,"
committee in its offer of a· 25 he salcl. On the assUJI'lption that
per cent increase in the clubs have an adequate number
contribution to the pension fund of players available, properly
in 1968, !rom $900,000 to ~ ~onditioned and prepared to
$1,125,000, and. a 50 per cent .play, each club intends to fulfill
hike In 1969, to $1,350,000.
Its pre-season game commitThey also stood fast on their menta."
~sltlon that because merger
"We have rookies in sufficient
with the American Football nwnbers.'' he said.
Modell said that the position of
League will be cunpleted in
1970, the agreemert on pensions the owners was expressed "in
must be for only two years uaa substance" by labor consultant
will the other 21 demands" of Theodore Kheel to Dan Sulman,
the players "accepted by the attorney for the players.
.. We are ready to open
owners."
The owners voted to open further negotiations at any
tbeir training camps on sche- time," he added.
The player representatives,
dule tor whatever rookies desire
to report, but they decreed they however, rejected the last otfer
would not premit veterans to ol higher contributions to the
show ~ unless the Players' pension fund and left lor their
Aasociation allows all of them imtvidual hmnes. Modell was
unable to indicate whether the
to come.
owners would attempt to reopen
Avoid Unfair Competition
the negotiatlona, or leave the
' 4 We do not know bow many
vete; .u.s want to come to reopening at lhe option of the
players.
No Comment
Neither Shulman nor Player's
Association Presid&amp;nt John Gor·
dy was available tor comment.

'

judJIOCI on an individual basis.
.\ few years ago lbls probably would have
""'~'~ hailed with hoots of "bureaucratic
·w•stefulness." Now we sigh and recognize lt
as a cost of staying In biisiness.

them.

IIDilll ..._.., -

'

ClfiCAGO (UPI) - National camp," spokeSIIIOll Art Modell,

II Is jlrobably a sign of our growing up. A
change m government rules was made recent·
ly: Lale·working girls in government offices
Will be allowed to lake cabs home and the
government. will pay the tabs, including 10
per cent tips. Some men ·will be included

By Helen Bottel

much married ""'sia. The other
alwa,ra found out !he trut11
my pi~ arllund. but
1111' tn~llin-ln-low Is very Iilli·

'

Long eddicted to using the pound sterling
ill lntemalional trade-and ideology be
damned, Communist China awitched to the
F111nch franc last November when the pound
was devalued.
.'
But France's troublea now have Mao's
bankers leery of the franc, and It Is the Japanese yen that Ia currently ill favor as the
prime monetary unit for Red Chinese fl.
nanclal transactions with the West.
TheA's nothing like trouble In tha dirty
capitalist money depsrlment to keep Peking's
double-dyed Marxists olf balance.
.

uSe••

lnel1lclnlrn,y llle husband's very

-

. tuned .to. the desires of lntet;esls with con- ~ ·• ·
· slderably mo111 political clout than conserva• ' . ·
llonlsta.can muster in their Uiree-front baUlo ' '
aP!Iist olficlal lndllference, P1\hllc a\&gt;il"'" ~- 'l'
aii(.flme.
' . ""' 'J''''
•qnc.,· gone, the wild rivers will be gone·
forever.
'·
'
~ f.

Helen Help
Doarllelon:
I bsve beea a widow for six
JNI"I aud have had &amp;!fairs wilh
....,.a! _, - no regrets -

•

Taxi! Taxi!

On the Plus Side

HONEST WIDOW GETS
RONilST ANSWER

•

Tho Dolly Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, July 10, 1968

PHILADELPHIA (UPI) - Any Yankees !or $125,000 as the
the block who trades PhtlKelphia 76en admitted

kid on

Wert. SB- Aaron.
Tiant L,

bubble gum pi cture cards koows TUesdl,y they dealt Olamberlaln
you
don't trade one Wilt probably the highest paid
50
2 2 1 o 2 2 Chamberlain for one Darrell athlete in the U.S. to the Los

Odom

2 o 0 o 2 2 Imhof!, one Archie Clark and Angelea

ip h r er bb

McLain
McDowell

2
1
1-3
2-3
3

1 one Jerry Chambers.
0 00 0
F. Alou If
3 But everyone who plays
4 0 0 0
Mc Covey Ib
stottlenlj're
1 atlention to the strange world of
3
0 I 0
Aaron rf
John
o the Nationa1 Basketball Associa·
20 I 0
santo 3b
Drysdale w
o don know s that' s e11ctly what
0 0 0 0
Perez 3b
Marichal
2 o o 0 0 3 happened officially Tuesday.
3 0 I 0
Helms 2b
carlton
1 o o o o 1 The NBA, struggling for years
2 0 0 0
Grote c
, ~r
2 .2 o o o 5 to achieve big league status,
00 00
carlton p
Reed
2.J 2 0 o 0 1, showed It Is at lhe stage that
I 0 0 0
staub ph
Koosman
1-3 o o o o 1. baseball was in 1920 when
0
0 0 0
Seaver p
Boston sold Babe Ruth to the
Stottlemyre faced 1 man In
0 0 0 0
Reed p
Koosman faced 1 man in
0 0 0 0 8thi
Koosman p
Sth.
20 0 0
Kessinger ss
WP _ Tlant. T _ 2:10. A I 0 0 0
Williams ph
RECALL WILUAMS
0 0 0 0
2
Cardenas sa
4B,J 1.
CHICAGO (UPO- Outfielder
I 0 0 0
Drysdale p
Wait Williams has been recalled
0 0 0 0
Marichal p
from Hawaii of the Pacll!.c
Pig iron
200 0
Haller c
Coast League, it was announced
o oo o
Pig iron, a rorm of crude
Bench c
21 1 5 o
cast iron , gets its name from Tuesday by the Chicago White
Totals
molds orij:!;inally made of Sox.
000 000 000_ 0
Amn
sand and formed in a way
Williams, who hit .320 in 70
Natl
100 000 OOx- l
suggesting 8 nursing litter ~f games with Hawaii, will replace
E- Killebrew. DP- American
pigs. The iron was poured di- the injured BUl Voss, who
2, LOB- American 3, National rectly into the molds from the suffered a fractured cheekbone
8, 2B- Fregosi, Helms, Oliva, b1ast furnace .
on July 4.

'Lazy-bones' Seeks a Title

1
1
o
1
1

u
o
o
o
o

o
0
o
o
o

2
0
o
o
o

BOUT RESCHEDULED
PHILADELPHIA (UPO - The
twice

posiponed middleweight

bout between Emile Grlmth ani

Lakers ror lmho!l,

Clark and Chambers because
they refused to meet the &amp;tCJer
star's contract demands.
Philadelphia owner Irv Kosloff said 11 i•smuch as we were
having difficulty c&lt;mlng to
terms with Wllt, lt seemed

advisable to effect a trade when
we would be able to -In

commensurate value tor his
services,"
Chamberlain received about
$200,000 last year and now Is
ell:l)ected to get more from
Lakers' owner Jack Kent Cooke
11Jparently wUI sada(y Cham·
berlain because he ftgures the
trio of Wilt and his own Jerry
West and Elgin Baylor will
make the Lakers the ...n NBA
champloos.
It will be interesting to see if
Wilt is a winner in LA. Since
1959, the Bill Russell-led Boston
celtic teams have beaten

ANTHONY
Pltmlilg-llealbg
Your DepctMiabla
DNlerFor

PLUMBING
AND

HEATING
l'honeWY2-2550

Chamberlain-led teams seven
times in eight attempts for
divisional or league tides.
Chamberlain, a former AllAmerica at Kansas who passed
up his senior yeAr in college to
play wiUl the Harlem Globetrotters, his now been traded twtce
In less than three years.
Mldwll)'

through the 196H5

season, he was dealt to the
76ers from san Francisco tor
Paul Neumann, Connie Diering,
Lee Shaffer and $300,000 cash.

AII·Stars 00

Strike ~ riel! in

fani~ •iuyment

...'.
.'··
,,.

REDUCED RATES
AFTERNOONS
Except Sunday
OPEN IOWUNG
Exc:ept Tue.,
Thurs.. Frt.

MASON IOWIIII

Take l Look At The Pu••l
See how mucb you are paying for major blllltl
JlasQhne and next time you will try CERTIFIED.

IIEGUlAI

so 9/10

I1HYi.

.31 '9/10

Cet a FREE ANTENNA. ROSE each Ume you~
8 &amp;allollll at psollne.
.
. : ·

�3-

Rookies, Free
Agents May Ge.t
Starting Roles

"'
'

·A Reprieve ·rs Won
For the Wild ·River$ ·
~

me for conservallOII!Ito. '
. They sorely need It in the upbill campal~~t
to preserve at least a omall portion of natural
America from the bulldozer and Dian's many
and ingenious ways of foUling hli environment.
A House interior subcommittee bas ap·
proved eolablishmenl of a scenlc·~lvers
system to preserve in the wlld slate 111rea1ns
of psrllcular scenic, wlldille and recAallOJIB)
value. Any c h a n g e s in the landscape
opecifically dam building, would requ1111 con:
g111Ssional authorization.
Portions of six rivers - the Rogue in
Orecon, Rio Grande in New Mexico Salmon
and Clearwater in Idal!o, Upper St. 'Croix ill
~esola and Wlsconsill and Wolf in Wiscon1111-WOuld be protected lnlllally with provision for later additions.
The rivers would be a natural and welcome
addition to the pment n a II o n a I park
sntem, th111atened with overcrowding by a
cfoubUng of the visitor fiow in the psst decade
alone.
The gain is a small one and the game is
far from over in a Congress much more at·

'·

·,

.

I

Next lime you slari worrying about the
younger generation let these facts come into
your mind.
~ what is becoming a spring tradition in
Califomls, 110,000 l!!llh acboOI graduates held
a!J-nlgbt frolics at DlSDeyland this year. Five
mgbts the park was thronged from 11 ,.m.
unlll 5 a.m. by classes from a total o 308
schools.
Wblle !1llneyland makes II plain to the kids
that thi.'l.li aland for no nonsense, olficials In
cbart...!"Y they have less trouble with them
tban ....y have with some adults.

Reds Have Yen for Yen

':.:t

bit, He

au.kl rve

b..

to.--

.idda . -..aiol.eaoul!h
..... ... !lll!l ..,..~ ""r ••...,....is.,..
.......
Bill
fiOI. . aoeepted•• aa,..,.,&lt;Jf

become

wraar- porlod.

. . ,... alno4b' know lblo, ..

' ~ bit )'OUr blaell !.lull:
. llltlkllll NOYtr call a man "IIIII·
:lll!le" .__.
when__
he1111a1 he ba
. · '•Wblla
; ,f

,.,

~·

--be-

1

..........

~Will

••

....'! yuu llnd • job aud
•.
e .,. boblc an oas;r mark for
.Diarrl.. ma.?- H.
1-toudHodbytllo~

Mr. c. ,II. two ....
retarded. The part thai bit
to me wao the Wljl JJtiiPI•
~ .,.._, who 1ft "dUI'er~·" '11d.1 does .IKit necellar·
r' lhele am1- wilh

.. pllJslcal aliJI!ento, but
41.. lhelewlloiO tamll1\!allarnl

l

ill

. Tht hlstot'fl of J\merictlll aldvt'll fi
marked btl!the occufioence of at leost %50
111poried N~ .CO!Upirocie• and .revoltl,· \
'""' "''19 -Herbert Aplbetel'
•.,.,

Among the .many myths about the Ne~ .
ill the claim that he must have been wen•.
suited for slavery because he never (&lt;belled ,
In truth, ·~~e did rebel, lime arul again, begin:
Ding as early a1 1502 on Hispaniola, 10 years'
aftir Colum~us· first voyage.
·
·
· The African slave trade was ever a danger·
ons busineu. Slaves frequently mutinied, and
eometlmes sucCeeded. Other case• are on
reconl ol wlwle boatloads of &amp;!avea jumping
overboard or olhenrlse commltt!Dg suicide. ·
The flrll revolt in wbat was to be the United
Slates took pllce 1n p111sent-day South Carolina

'

....'
•
i

at a 1ow11 called

·'
' '1

"It'll Never Get Off the Ground!"

.

.

.· \li
''
, '

.•

aa~aAii MAILUd.
' .
·' '
" .' '.

Quaker Stale Post

regretted; He went to lhe instl·
tutloo when he was 16, alter m,y
heallh W011! bad.
I can truthflllly til¥ he is bappier 1he111. He baa his own work
to do, he's aeeoptad am&lt;mg his
own kind. Altboualllhe State heme
Ia understaffed, lhe dedicated
workers take the patients 011 picnlca, trips, outings. They ao
camping, to ball samoa, lhe clr·
cua.
OUr boy comes home lll&gt;oUt
6(} day&amp; out o( the year and OUI'

Big Bend Triumphs

I

lu. N
ra ate kind,
"lftd'llll''lf'Muf
nilk
'
'
·
-" ' ~ · .
.
. .~
e 11111'" mm•
. are .... silenced by oiJr 'lfvo .
olhers who take him lhopplng,
bowling, swimming, etc.
Thoogh he enjoys It wilh us,
he Is alwljls asaor 1o ao"homo"
- back to lhe lnstltullon, where
he can be with his !rlenda.
We're prood &lt;i our 8011 endlhe
~e who care ror him ao wen.
Perhaps Mr. C. H. llhouid eon.
aldor lhla aolutloo. - MRS. J.
G.
_
This column Is dedicated to
tamll1 living, ao I! you're hsY·
lng ldd - l e or just plain
troul&gt;le, let Holen help YOU.
h will alao welcome~ own
amusing experienceo. Addreas
Hal111 Boltel In care or t h 1 s
newspaper .

I,

(
I

'

WASHINGTON NOTEBOOK

II
I

Senate Intercom Bridges ·
Phone Servi~ B,.akdown

I

I

lr NOEL GlOVE
NEA StaH Co......dent
WASHINGTON- (NEA)That Isn't 11101ly a panlc bill·
ton that has been inotalled In
seaate_olflces, lneists a Cap!·
tol o!lclal
•
Some persist Ill calling It
that, hOwever, siDce the button hookl up senator• with an
illtercom system that could
give a recomed account of
nearby riot acUvlty In case
civil dltturbanceo bit the elty
again,
With smake d r If t1 n g over
the dome and the sound of
making plate glass almoet
within ear1bot 1ft the April
riots, 1ome•. slalfera becam,

A~ broke out

~

)l&lt;,_..,aplt to pi-ovltif · ·

, a · . O(coaunti11icat19n .~·,

. ol~ ,

.

.

. IDtbeevw&gt;
.,..~

bteik®wlllll

p~ =~~~.~
. ·;:. ' $··7~tre ;• . ~~r:. ~~~\;.
-

.

! ··\·,

Vl!!Utiri' Jl ,

·lftl ',,.•.- ., '
j

J

·,.,', -!~!1
iistMfai\W,: ~ft; r.
Iii~... ~~ ~ev,er./riJiioe •
· .....,..waDI·.,.. ntiUiill)ili!tt '
to so~ ~

·t' .

ll!t 18111e Olrenoet•

n:; ,

a Rlotol bUll to llibdll8 8 ,
who oald be had
to
"gel'• now·npeilecf~
Adam ~ llOWiU.
In ·r.lareli ·
·

Word Bp111nd that enipen
w0111 walunc outslda and that
riotero were on Capitol
grounds.
The new Intercom system
would help quash IUCb
rumqra, admits Senate (actIng) . Serg~ at ,Ai'ml Nl&lt;ll·
#U, LltCov~~"' lilrt ita matn,,
~·

-"1 In

I the llaYI&gt;u'm \1at'eter1a bUt
wo .,....,_,
' · '
·
Capti'tli"fOp. q~ ytJ:-

phODOI daad, for tboae who
wanted to eheck on the

rumor•.

=·

the! bit the~~~ Of tile naUoo.
Theft of .Jlurlel from olice
daskl, typewrlteu,
even •
fritm thO
gorges are Included on
•
fol police 111eords.

edaY · and rumors ran ram~
paiii. A torrent of ealll d
over Wubillgton left many

....,c:::;:;_.lr.;:J

lI

,.

Thoughts

Time

HOIJSTON (UPO - You could

u.v

lt prOl'ed what everyboci:Y'a

been Sll)ling, that 1968 Is a
pitchera' year!' Or you could

'4

S11Y It proved that )1st about

every year, one w_,- or another,
ta the National Leaaue'a year.
There weren't many other
ways to figure it in the wake of

the ftrstlndoor All-Star game In
major league history that saw
the National League whip the
Americans 1-0 for the 8ixth
straight year with tbe lowest
single and two-team hit totals in
history, and a whopping total of
20 strlkeoots.

••n

was a pitchers' battle,"
aummed up losing manager
Dick Williams ol the American
League, whose men were held
to three hits and suffered 11
strikeouts by six NL pitchers.
·Those three hits were the
lowest W1Y team has gotten in
39 All-Star games and, since the

Natlonala bsggod oo11 ftvo, lhe
total o! ell!ht ~ed the alltime low. That's the way it's
been In a year that already hu
seen two no.hltters, including
the !lrst perfect game In the
American League in 46 years,

team and league batting avera·
ges near record lows, and a
record string of 58 scoreless
Innings pitched by Don Drya.

•.• A pitcher, Luis Tlant orlhe
Cleveland h'wtlans, wu the
"goat" for two bad throws.
Aller yielding

the alnglotoMayo,

Tlant lhrew wildly to !lrst on a

plckol! attempt enabling Mayo
to "' to aecond (even tlloul!h
first baseman Harmon Killebrew
was charged with an error on
lhe play). snd lhen threw a wild
pitch to Curt Flood to send

The players, quoting the
owners that they wished to
make the pension equal to that
of professional baseball, said

tom•

'I

81MM· 111e Mlmooota a1uaor beln.l unhlttable u any pltcltoro
record by runalnll hll totll at- pillllcl lhe lllmatrlng muacle In In the gam8's blo1Gr7.
The Amerlcaa Leap tlltlttiMl
his lett leg end had to be
bats In theae games lo 66.
corps
clld not bavo to blall!,
curled rrom 111e tleld.
KUiobmr inJured
ellher,
The six lurloro pve ..
National starter end wlmer
Klll- was the game's bl!
only
five
hlta aud the nm .,.
loser. Not only cUd he pt Don Dryatlsle aud hlo ftve
lfi8Bod with an error m lhe M~eceaiOI'I C'IJOked the heralded Tlant WS1 unearned.
ft .... the Natlnnala' slxtb
tllrow by Tlanf..- which mlltl' American League power 10
&amp;trall!ht
victory aud their 2lot
lhou8ht ,.....•t his fault-but he ol!ectlvei.Y thai lhey gave up
oullered an Injury that mlsht only thret hlta and, following overall aplnll 17 daleato aud
sideline him ror a month. Fregoat•• leadoff double, retired - lie. II aloo waothe llrat 1.0
Stretching ror a low, wide throw tho next 20 men In a row. Juan game In oearb' roar - s ol
by Jim Fregosi later In lhe Marlcllal, Steve Carlton, Tom lhe mltl.,.mmor classic.

dale.
Wondrous Willie Honored
There were two ironies in the
classic before 48,321 fana at the
alr-&lt;Ondltloned Astrodome:
...The "Most Valuable PlaJ"er" award went to a non.

Mau"s over to third.
Ma,ys, of oourse, wasn't even
supposed to be In lhe startln8
lineup. He got Ln because Pete
Rose of the Reds, who was
elected to the first team, waa

pitcher, wondrous Willie Mays
of the San Francisco Giants
who scored the game's only run
in the first irmlng when he
singled, took second on an
error, third on a wild pitch, and
scored as WUUe McCovey

"I was just lucky to be in the
right place at the right Ume,"
explained Mays, who has been
doing lhat sort or thing In AllStar games Cor years.
Mays' hit was his 23rd, an
All&amp;r record, and the run his
A single by len ftelder Tim
2oth, also a record, and he went summers ln the bottom ot the
seventh inning with one out and
one on gave the New Haven Reds
a 1-0 win over the Cottageville

bounded Into a dooble play.

hurt.

New Haven Reds,
Addaville Jets Win
two pitches to Summers were out 12. Jete Haymaker, in six
balls but summers togged lhe innings, gave 'C) three hltl,

third pitch Into right field ror wsiked one ond struck out 1L
a single that drove txrne the
wirml~V

or the D!th inning by Donnie Dye

nament.

Pitcher Mlke Workman ot the
Stars and Jetf Haymaker of the
Reds hooked up in a six inning
scoreless pitching duel and both
had to leave the mound when the
contest went lnto extra innings.
Rarliy Grinstead went to the
hill for the Reds in the top of
the seventh, walked Tom West
and then struck out S.'teve Wood,
Rocky Corbin and Chuck Whitney. Grinstead took the win.

Alan Gerwig relieved Worlt..

man when the contest went into
extra innings arxl walked Ronnie
RusseU, first man up . Ra.Y Bar·
nett struck ouL Gerwig's Ont

•·

National

abrhbi

Maysd

4 I I 0
I 0 0 0
I 0 I 0

Flood If
M. Alou II

The win ldvances the New HIV·
en Reds to the oext bracket where
they'll meet the Gallipolis White
Sox II 7 p. m. Tuesday, July 16.
In the oecood game last

nll!h~

of the Reds, who was two for tile Addavllle Jots plied "'a 20.
three at the plate. Jeff Haymak~ 9 victory over Letart..
The winners had 20 runs oo 15
er blasted a brace of singles In
hits. They committed tl.ve errors.
Letart hod nine I"UIIS oo only two
limelight.
catcher Mopsy Haymaker had hits. They played errorless baiL
Dave Rite, Joe Stidham IIXI
a single ln three trips. Substi~
Dave
Melage took turna on the
tutes David Roush and Tim Sum~
mers each had a single ln one moond lor the wlmers. Bob Mil·
Ier started for the losera. He
trip.
was
relieved by Norm Curtman
Jell Haymaker Umltod t h e
and
Dave
J enkina.
stars to three scattered singles
Larry Tabor had a dooblo aud
by Micky Taylor,MikeWorkman,
aud Roclcy corbin, the 1..1 being three singles and scored tour
In the top of lhe !ourlh inning. runs for the wimers. Sld Manuel
In the pitchers' duel, Mike and John, Jenkins collected the
Workman, in six iMings pve lo-s only hits.
11&gt;nlgh~ Pt. Pleasant City Ice
up six hits, walkel:ltwoandstruck
lnd Fuel will bettie the VInton
Dodgers at 7 p , m., and at 8;30,
the Mldclleport Yankees will take
on Rio Grande.
three trips to share the hitting

Wilt Goes To Lakers

KIDS GLOVED-Youngaters cover their beads as Booton's George Scott (front) and
Mike Aadrewo reach lor roul baD. Spectators came away unharmed while Scott and
Andrews eame out ol It wllhoul the ball.

sdord's Studio defeated the that the 25 per cent Increase
GSI 11..1 Tuesday evening In a offered by the owners still
llrst round game or the Bli Bend woold leave baseball 100 per
Tournsment at Waltama H I g h cent ahead or !ontball.
Sehoul, Lou LultoD was lho win·
Pensions were the only point
nlng pitcher, Jim Rose 1ook the
lett at issue between the players American
abrhbl
loss.
am
owners. PrerlOWJly agree- Fregosi ss
3 0 I 0
GSI had flve runa on nine hits ment was reached on minimum
I 0 0 0
wl.th one error. Bernie Guinther salary, payment Cor preseason Clmpanerls ss
3 00 0
led their hitllng with 3 ror 3 games, grievance procedures, Carew 2b
I 0 0 0
with Neal collecting 2 hils also. contract submission to players, Jolmaon 2b
4
00 0
Yastrzemski
cf
Qllnther had their only extra
option clause, Geverance pay Howard rf
2000
base hit, a dooble .
and payment of moving ex- Oliva rf
I 0 I 0
Sll!ord' 1 pi eked up 11 runs penses.
Horton
II
2 00 0
;~ q .,)dt! while commltliog I
However, both sides have Azcue c
l 0 0 0
er:ror. Bush, Bennett, Lutton, been adamant on the pensl&lt;n
Josephson c
0 0 0 0
-and Jagera again led lheir hlf..
matter. The players originally KIDebrew lb
1000
ling with two hlta each. L o u
asked for a contribudon of $5 Powell lb
2
0 0 0
Bush had a t"" nm homer and mlllloo annually !rom lhe
Freehan c
20 0 0
Jager&amp; two doobloa.
league tor the pension lund, but McLain p
0 0 0 0
Tonight Salford' s wUI take on
have not made public any
0 0 0 0
Harlow Ume &lt;i Parkersburg COUlter o!!er to the 1968-69 McDowell p
Mantle
ph
I 0 0 0
while GSI will plljl MlnersvUle prq&gt;OSal from the owners.
Stottlemyre p
0 0 0 0
m Friday evening.
The owners have offered to John p
0 0 0 0
Bob Saunders QJakr.r S t a t e make retroactiwe to 1968 an:l
Robinson
3b
200 0
&lt;i Gallipolis came from behind 1969 whatever pen~loo aetUeWert
3b
I 0 I 0
to down the ~ncer Truckers ment is reached in 1970, after
0000
8.6 In the opening roond &lt;i the the merger of the NFL aud Tlallt p
Harrelson
ph
I 0 0 0
Bls Bend Sollball Tournameot. AFL.
Od&lt;m
p
0
0 0 0
Bob Saundero, trailing 5-3, came
Monday c!
20 0 0
to lite In the !lt1h Inning a n d
30
Tcnlo
0 3 0
pu11hed across 3runa, the big blow
being Mick Morgan's two run
Major League Ali.Star s
homer.
AL
000 000 000- 0 3 I
This was a costly win lor Bob NL
100 000 OOx- I 5 0
Saunders u lhay lost the serv.
Tlan~ Odom (3), McLain (5)
Ices or their star short llalder McDowell ('1), Stottlemyre (8),
Carl WoUe. who !radured John (9) aud Froehan, Azcue
By IRA BERKOW
hlo hand In a coiUsion wilh (5), Josephson (8); Drysdale,
NEA Sports Writer
Glb MUUron in the olxlh Inning. Marlchal (4), Carlton (8),
NEW YORK-INEA)- 11
Bob saundera had ·8 runs on seaver (7), Reed (9) ani
stxteen hits and made one er. Koosman (9) aud Grote, Haller Simmer! doesn't stop and roll
ror. Spencer had 6 runs on 12 (6), Bench (9). WP- Drysdale. over for a snooze on the way
to the finish line, he has a
hlta end had me error.
LP- Tllnt.
good chance of becoming the
Leading hi-a lor Bob Saun.
first German-bred horse to
dero were Carl Wol!o 3 lor !,
win the $100,000 Roosevelt
Art Lanham 3 ror 3, and Glb BASKETBALL TRAIIE
Raceway
International trotNEW YORK {UPI)- The New
MIIUron, Mlck Morgon, Dan
ting races scheduled lor July
York franchise, formerly the 13,
Chick, all had two hils.
At this writing. there Is
The Winning pitcher was Glenn New Jersey Americana of the
American
Basketball
x...a,..
some
question when the race
TrOUt, and the loser was ~n~
obtained
Maurice
McHartly
will
come
off since a strike
cer.
by horsemen over purses has
rrmn
the
Dallas
Chej&gt;paralo
In
Bob Sounders Qlokor Slate COD·
hobbled racing at Roosevelt.
tlnuos play In lho toornament exchange for a future draft It hardly matters to Simmer!
Wodnosda¥ at 7:15p.m. whenlhiiY choice.
when the race is held, howThe New York team, which i&amp; ever. His training is the same
meet thO Firs! National BaM &lt;i
sUD looking lor a home court, under all clrcumstancesRlpiiiY, W. Va.
hal scheduled a news confer- pracUcally nothing.
Falla City of GalllpoUs , .
ence ror July 15.
The 8-year-old staUion, Ger·
felled Goooetown of Pt Ples~o
man champ for the psst two
ant 15-13 In lhe Bli Belli event
seasons, Js "trained" and
Tuesda¥ evening.
driven by Rolf Lurr. "I live
"The star-Spangled Banner" and train in Munich." said
The 1968 rW1110rsup wUI now
bettie Hardey 011 &lt;i Ravenswood woo first sung In public by Luff, "and between races
at R:30 tonight The two teams Ferdinand Durang, an actor, Simmer! goeo to the farm of
have met on fDur previous oecu· in Baltimore, Md., on Oct. 19, his owner In Grossenplnnlng
In the Tyrol, about 100 miles
tona this summer, and apllteven. 1814.
from Munich.
"They never train Slmmerl.
Every day they take him lor
a three-hour walk through
the woods. The rest of the
day he opends In thejaddock
With a milk cow an a don·
key. '{'hat's all. On race days

Seaver, Ron Reed end JJJT1
Koosman came aa eloM Ill

ahead &lt;i stan Mualal'• All-.!lar

run.
The
only
extra base hit or the
Stars Tuesday night In the Kygame
was
a
double in the bottom
ger Creek Little League Tour-

Box Score

~~=,ro~r4 .11li&gt;IPM·

I •
)'OII'Il print this, Helen, !or lhen are lots &lt;i HUla In
loto o! towno. - NEIGHBOR
Dear Nol&amp;li&gt;or:
Don't point tile linger, Bee·
.... with It, lnotaad.
One kind-hearted mother can
malie!ilrlhe dllforenoe to Bill.
9lli&gt; worrying - . t lhe rest &lt;i
M9 onguilh, my anguilh! I
the nelaN&gt;orhood and bring him uwithe in poml Oh, the UIGlll
I'*&gt; )'OUr ramtJ.y. If you accOill of my !'"'11 Mil heart il bt&lt;lthim, others ..., follow your '~ wildly; I c ann o I luep
ailtnt; f,. I hear the 1ound of
18111.- B.
'
the
trumpet, the alarm of
Dear llellll:
war.-Jeremini&amp; 4:19.
It's IIDe or Mr. c. ll to de·
0
0
0
vote hlo ll!e to hio two mental.
Nothing In history bas
IJ' retarded 10111, but aometlmes turned out to he more lmper·
11'1 better for all c:oaeernod It manent than military victory
be coosidoro an Institution.
-Harry Emeraon Fosdick
'
OUr aldell &lt;i m Is retarded. American clergyman,
When he waa alaht, we made

Nationals Win Pitchers Battle, 1-0·

Safford's Studio,

dedslon, but one we have never

~ !lnee he II tile only oie
For tho ~e 1n the DOII!h·
. ' left, aud keopa believing tfm IIIIo Is a Ctisltlellllli ox.
;....,. end trullln&amp; rvo plcl&lt;Od BDqJ!o &lt;i cla11 oatraclom. Yet
. , Jdm. Alao be Is lhe onl,y man 1 we do nothing to belp Bill or
• 1'
- CIIl mare or less lead by the make him !eel wanted, 1 lmsg&gt; .no•- Dll so fUo I'Ve had m 1ne many encourap this ....,.
: luck leadlnl! him to lhe cllvorco bery, for they aeem ofrald Bill's
court.
bad ramtJ.y lite will nob oft 011
He 1!1111 me as ofteD aa he them.
, coa, aud I call him every clay,
The aaddestlhillg &lt;i au is thai
: : - . v..,. belpleoo, ao he'D Bill- why heialoftwt.llo'o
.f . .... "'er end COIISOia me. 11o 14, a nloe kid, but. !H&gt;W lq will
' ,, )'jlal DOYer come rillll out aud he 11111 thai Wljl wltll no love
&gt;. :: Aid he loved me, but he doem't at heme aud no .......,....,0111
i . ~ore· hlo wire, so tllal'o 110 prob. elsewhere? &amp;&gt;on he'll
. .loo\1- .
b~, and then tile nelllix&gt;rs
;: Noir, llolaa, I'Ve .... bonell can sq, "We told yuu ao:... thai
;,wllll ,.... Tell me boneotly 1111a1 kind olwa,ra comoo to no &amp;00&lt;1

, YOU'n

'
Black Rebers
-

him a ward &lt;i the state ao that
It anything happened 1o my bua.
band .and me, we lmew be would
be taken care ct. h was a hard

tnle Udlfferent." And 80, though the

ANYWilEIIE

'

when circumstances warrant, eacb case

ore dllfereat.
In our neighborhood we have
a boy, let's call him BIll,
-.e parents are _.-alad.
When his ralher comes bomo to
visit, all the neighbors hear are
screams aud yelling.
Bill hu lack &lt;i matemallove
too. mo molher aud alstero don't
care 1lllal he doea. Ills clothes
ore ''&lt;lilferont." Rio house Ia

NOT GET. end."

FootbaD Legue owners plan to league president am owner of
6&amp;1flll their commitments for the Cleveland Browns, said.
)Jre--season games, playing rook· "but the response would unles and Cree agents, but they doubtedlY vary from team to
said they cannot grant what team and create an unfair
they termed "unrealistic" de- competitive imbalance.
mands of veteran players for a
uThere is no way lor
boost in the penslon fund.
lrxtlvtdual clubs to determine
The owners voted unanimous- the nUJI'lber of players that will
ly to back ..., their negotiatlrw be aw.ilable at any given time,"
committee in its offer of a· 25 he salcl. On the assUJI'lption that
per cent increase in the clubs have an adequate number
contribution to the pension fund of players available, properly
in 1968, !rom $900,000 to ~ ~onditioned and prepared to
$1,125,000, and. a 50 per cent .play, each club intends to fulfill
hike In 1969, to $1,350,000.
Its pre-season game commitThey also stood fast on their menta."
~sltlon that because merger
"We have rookies in sufficient
with the American Football nwnbers.'' he said.
Modell said that the position of
League will be cunpleted in
1970, the agreemert on pensions the owners was expressed "in
must be for only two years uaa substance" by labor consultant
will the other 21 demands" of Theodore Kheel to Dan Sulman,
the players "accepted by the attorney for the players.
.. We are ready to open
owners."
The owners voted to open further negotiations at any
tbeir training camps on sche- time," he added.
The player representatives,
dule tor whatever rookies desire
to report, but they decreed they however, rejected the last otfer
would not premit veterans to ol higher contributions to the
show ~ unless the Players' pension fund and left lor their
Aasociation allows all of them imtvidual hmnes. Modell was
unable to indicate whether the
to come.
owners would attempt to reopen
Avoid Unfair Competition
the negotiatlona, or leave the
' 4 We do not know bow many
vete; .u.s want to come to reopening at lhe option of the
players.
No Comment
Neither Shulman nor Player's
Association Presid&amp;nt John Gor·
dy was available tor comment.

'

judJIOCI on an individual basis.
.\ few years ago lbls probably would have
""'~'~ hailed with hoots of "bureaucratic
·w•stefulness." Now we sigh and recognize lt
as a cost of staying In biisiness.

them.

IIDilll ..._.., -

'

ClfiCAGO (UPI) - National camp," spokeSIIIOll Art Modell,

II Is jlrobably a sign of our growing up. A
change m government rules was made recent·
ly: Lale·working girls in government offices
Will be allowed to lake cabs home and the
government. will pay the tabs, including 10
per cent tips. Some men ·will be included

By Helen Bottel

much married ""'sia. The other
alwa,ra found out !he trut11
my pi~ arllund. but
1111' tn~llin-ln-low Is very Iilli·

'

Long eddicted to using the pound sterling
ill lntemalional trade-and ideology be
damned, Communist China awitched to the
F111nch franc last November when the pound
was devalued.
.'
But France's troublea now have Mao's
bankers leery of the franc, and It Is the Japanese yen that Ia currently ill favor as the
prime monetary unit for Red Chinese fl.
nanclal transactions with the West.
TheA's nothing like trouble In tha dirty
capitalist money depsrlment to keep Peking's
double-dyed Marxists olf balance.
.

uSe••

lnel1lclnlrn,y llle husband's very

-

. tuned .to. the desires of lntet;esls with con- ~ ·• ·
· slderably mo111 political clout than conserva• ' . ·
llonlsta.can muster in their Uiree-front baUlo ' '
aP!Iist olficlal lndllference, P1\hllc a\&gt;il"'" ~- 'l'
aii(.flme.
' . ""' 'J''''
•qnc.,· gone, the wild rivers will be gone·
forever.
'·
'
~ f.

Helen Help
Doarllelon:
I bsve beea a widow for six
JNI"I aud have had &amp;!fairs wilh
....,.a! _, - no regrets -

•

Taxi! Taxi!

On the Plus Side

HONEST WIDOW GETS
RONilST ANSWER

•

Tho Dolly Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, July 10, 1968

PHILADELPHIA (UPI) - Any Yankees !or $125,000 as the
the block who trades PhtlKelphia 76en admitted

kid on

Wert. SB- Aaron.
Tiant L,

bubble gum pi cture cards koows TUesdl,y they dealt Olamberlaln
you
don't trade one Wilt probably the highest paid
50
2 2 1 o 2 2 Chamberlain for one Darrell athlete in the U.S. to the Los

Odom

2 o 0 o 2 2 Imhof!, one Archie Clark and Angelea

ip h r er bb

McLain
McDowell

2
1
1-3
2-3
3

1 one Jerry Chambers.
0 00 0
F. Alou If
3 But everyone who plays
4 0 0 0
Mc Covey Ib
stottlenlj're
1 atlention to the strange world of
3
0 I 0
Aaron rf
John
o the Nationa1 Basketball Associa·
20 I 0
santo 3b
Drysdale w
o don know s that' s e11ctly what
0 0 0 0
Perez 3b
Marichal
2 o o 0 0 3 happened officially Tuesday.
3 0 I 0
Helms 2b
carlton
1 o o o o 1 The NBA, struggling for years
2 0 0 0
Grote c
, ~r
2 .2 o o o 5 to achieve big league status,
00 00
carlton p
Reed
2.J 2 0 o 0 1, showed It Is at lhe stage that
I 0 0 0
staub ph
Koosman
1-3 o o o o 1. baseball was in 1920 when
0
0 0 0
Seaver p
Boston sold Babe Ruth to the
Stottlemyre faced 1 man In
0 0 0 0
Reed p
Koosman faced 1 man in
0 0 0 0 8thi
Koosman p
Sth.
20 0 0
Kessinger ss
WP _ Tlant. T _ 2:10. A I 0 0 0
Williams ph
RECALL WILUAMS
0 0 0 0
2
Cardenas sa
4B,J 1.
CHICAGO (UPO- Outfielder
I 0 0 0
Drysdale p
Wait Williams has been recalled
0 0 0 0
Marichal p
from Hawaii of the Pacll!.c
Pig iron
200 0
Haller c
Coast League, it was announced
o oo o
Pig iron, a rorm of crude
Bench c
21 1 5 o
cast iron , gets its name from Tuesday by the Chicago White
Totals
molds orij:!;inally made of Sox.
000 000 000_ 0
Amn
sand and formed in a way
Williams, who hit .320 in 70
Natl
100 000 OOx- l
suggesting 8 nursing litter ~f games with Hawaii, will replace
E- Killebrew. DP- American
pigs. The iron was poured di- the injured BUl Voss, who
2, LOB- American 3, National rectly into the molds from the suffered a fractured cheekbone
8, 2B- Fregosi, Helms, Oliva, b1ast furnace .
on July 4.

'Lazy-bones' Seeks a Title

1
1
o
1
1

u
o
o
o
o

o
0
o
o
o

2
0
o
o
o

BOUT RESCHEDULED
PHILADELPHIA (UPO - The
twice

posiponed middleweight

bout between Emile Grlmth ani

Lakers ror lmho!l,

Clark and Chambers because
they refused to meet the &amp;tCJer
star's contract demands.
Philadelphia owner Irv Kosloff said 11 i•smuch as we were
having difficulty c&lt;mlng to
terms with Wllt, lt seemed

advisable to effect a trade when
we would be able to -In

commensurate value tor his
services,"
Chamberlain received about
$200,000 last year and now Is
ell:l)ected to get more from
Lakers' owner Jack Kent Cooke
11Jparently wUI sada(y Cham·
berlain because he ftgures the
trio of Wilt and his own Jerry
West and Elgin Baylor will
make the Lakers the ...n NBA
champloos.
It will be interesting to see if
Wilt is a winner in LA. Since
1959, the Bill Russell-led Boston
celtic teams have beaten

ANTHONY
Pltmlilg-llealbg
Your DepctMiabla
DNlerFor

PLUMBING
AND

HEATING
l'honeWY2-2550

Chamberlain-led teams seven
times in eight attempts for
divisional or league tides.
Chamberlain, a former AllAmerica at Kansas who passed
up his senior yeAr in college to
play wiUl the Harlem Globetrotters, his now been traded twtce
In less than three years.
Mldwll)'

through the 196H5

season, he was dealt to the
76ers from san Francisco tor
Paul Neumann, Connie Diering,
Lee Shaffer and $300,000 cash.

AII·Stars 00

Strike ~ riel! in

fani~ •iuyment

...'.
.'··
,,.

REDUCED RATES
AFTERNOONS
Except Sunday
OPEN IOWUNG
Exc:ept Tue.,
Thurs.. Frt.

MASON IOWIIII

Take l Look At The Pu••l
See how mucb you are paying for major blllltl
JlasQhne and next time you will try CERTIFIED.

IIEGUlAI

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$31.95

$1.99 EACH
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WE NOMINATE SAVINGS

HmDON

BIG SAVINGS ON

SPiN .CASTING

CAMPING
TRAILERS

REEL.

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GREBI MtrAL
BLUE BONNET

BEEF or PORK

BLEACH

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�•
1- '1110 Dally Sandnol, Mlddlepoa1-Pomeroy, July 10, 1968

Mr. IUid Mra. Joe Sl1re IUid
Tim have gune to Florida boeauoe of the aerloua condltiCII
of Mr. Sayre's father, Carl Sa.Yre.
who re&lt;elved serloos Injuries
In a fallond Is oonllned to a bospl1al there.
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Face-.
myre, Glouster, were guests of
hla brotherandsister-in..J.aw, Mr.
IUid Mrs. Webster Facefi\)Te,
Mr. IUid Mro. Earl Starkey

went to Columbus on Friday vh-

Washington•••
Report By

Wolfpen ·

Carpenter
News, Notes

Ouenee MUI(!l'

News, Notes
Mr. and Mra. Ray Ruasell,
Tens Roe, ()( Washington C, H.
were recent vlaltors of hla parents, Mr. and Mrs. LinColn Russell.
Mr. IUid Mrs. W, Boyce of
Coiwmus, Mr. and Mrs. Rob·
ert Ruoseli, Ronald of Pameroy
IUid Mr. and Mrs. William Ruosell of Minersville were amday visitors of Mr. and M r s.
Howard Russell.
Mr, Guy Russell of Pameroy
was ~day violtor of his parents, Mr . and Mrs. Lincoln Ru:~­
sell.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Tuckerman, Rhonda Jean Haning, were
~day visitors of her aloter,
Mrs. Elsie Bratton of carpen-

itlng with their daug!lter, Mrs.
Wanda Janes and family, Nelsonville, enroute. They were f:llpper guests of his sister, Mrs.
Jessie JeweU ln Columbus on
Friday nlght. On Saturday, Mr.
Starkey attended the monthly
meeting of directors of t h e ter.
Gromge Mutual CaouaU~ JnourMr. and Mrs. Eugene Haning,
ance Company IUid the G. M, Pre- RhCIIda and Ronald, were Satmium Budget con&gt;oration.
urday visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. Bernice McKnight, Co- Bra&lt;IY Knotts of Kina Hill.
lumbus, is spending a vacation
Mrs. J. C. Wyatt spent some
with Mr, IUid Mrs. D, 0, Mc- time with their daughter, Mr.
Knl&amp;ht, Mr. IUid Mro. Fern Gll- and Mrs. John Dodder and son
logly and other relatives here. of Columbus last week.
Mr. IUid Mro. Artlllr Crabtree
Mrs. Mable Ollver of Mansvisited with Mr. IUid Mrs. Frank Oeld was weekend visitor or her
Ryther in Pomeroy.
daug!\ter, Mr. and Mrs. J, C.
Callers at the home of Mr. Wyatt. Also visiting were Mr.
and Mrs. AJva Rupe were Mr. and Mrs. John Dodder and son
IUid Mrs. Norman Fitch, Detroit, t1 COlumbus.
Mich.; Mr. and Mrs. Harry McMr. and Mrs. Larey Johnaon
Cann and Cleve ~ver, Colum- and Gina Rae enjoyed a SundaY
bus, and Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
WoodrUm and LOretta, Athens.
Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Canode,
Marysville, visited their parents,
Mr. and Mro. R. S. '!Urner and

'

Mrs. Clarence Canode recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Glen Cline called on Nora Murdock In Hamden.

Recent callers at the Glen Cline
home were Mr. and Mrs. Henry
Carpenter, Middleport; Mr. and
Mrs. Alva Swick, Danville; MaxIne Haning, Mrs. Gloria Haning,
Taa1ya and Sanya, local.
Mr. Glen Cline IR opend!ng
1 vacation with relaUves near
Venice, Florida and visiting var Ious point&amp; oflnterest. Mro. Dora
Carpenter, Dexter, is vi siting her

daug!lter, Mrs. Glen Cline, while
Mr. Cline is away.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Schmidt,
Tina Marie and Roberta Arm,
PL, visited at
the home or her g~arents.
Mr. and Mrs. Stansbury,
Other guests at the Stansberry

cannonsburg,

home Included Mrs. Wanda '1\lraer and oon and Mr. IUid Mrs.
Larry Stan~' Reynoldllbllrg.

Mr. and Mra ... Carl Crabtree,
R11Ssell and Kevin, called on Mr.
and Mrs. Dwaine Jordan and sons

on 9.mda$ evening.

The naUon's Governors have

rllliOIUtiCIIO

wen!

Governors (Winthrop Rod&lt;ofeller
of ArkanUB and Hulett Sndih ()(
West VIrginia) aii'"O'I to a reiDlutlon Cll llacal ..:esponolbllit,y.
The resolution.i:lte• !I seal responolbU~ ' ' a deolrable aoal
of pernment. It calls Cll each
lndlvi~al who aspires to poj&gt;ll&lt;
ol!lce, lndudlna canclldate• tor
President IUid Vice Proaldonl
of tile United states, and the
COngress, to declare and pledge
him sal! to a proliJ"&amp;m of Dacal
responalblll~,
lncludlnl
a
prompt and orderly etlmlnatlon
of amual operating dellclto.
With this resolution I ean ful.
ly .......

Man!' of the reoolutlona m&amp;&lt;lo

News, Events

Mr. and Mr&amp;. Alva Townoend

BY MRS. HERBERT ROUSH
Mro. Bodily CUrtiss (lhe for- Mary Reed ~day.
Mrs. Leota Massar was a &amp;mmer Laura Farra) and t o u r
dey
dlmer guesl of Mr. and
daug!lters of Fort Walton Beach,
Mrs.
Oscar Babcock at Long
Fla. were recent visitors of Mr.
IUid Mro. Ray Heiney IUid Mr. Bottom.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Flck and
and Mrs. Floyd Farra.
family
of Columball spent severMrs. Roger Beegle and daug!lal
days
with hil mother, Mrs.
ter of ~rlngfield are visiting
Mr. and Mra. Marvin Wicker- Dana Flck.
Mr. and Mrs. Norman Mcsham. The Wlcker&amp;hamo held
Cain
and daU&amp;hters spent two
I cook~t recently with Mrs.
Ruth Wi._-ett of Syracuse as day&amp; at Lake Hope recently.
Mrs. Peter Galla (the former
guest.
Ethel
Frl&amp;by of Chester) and
Mrs. Feme Hayman spent the
Mra.
W,
D. Welch of Steubenweekend with Mrs. WealeyBelles
rille, violted a recent Tuesday
Jr. at Wellston.
and Wednesday with Mrs. Dana
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Ours ot
WoliBVUle, Mrs. TheodoreCratg, Fick.
Todd IUid Lisa, and John Deverse of Columbus were weekElusive Planet
end guest a of Mr. and Mrs. Ray
Although the existence of
Heine)'.
the p I a n e t Pluto was sus·
WalUft Stover is a medlca1 peeled, it took 25 intensive
patient at Veterans Memorlol years of scanning the heavens
before it was discovered.
Hotpital .
Clyde
Tombaugh. a 24-year-old
Mr. and Mrs. Don Bell IUid
astronomer.
detected the elu·
1.AJrna spent 9lllday with the for sive planet in 1930.

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Sausage _2 .. 1.19
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high priceil

Pr~s "Effectiv~

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We're Famous For Savings

...... .

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Opel

....U.S. Grade. A Metll.unt .,.:

10117

9tt9-

Ful- Valu Buys!

EVERYDAY LOW PRICES!

DOG FEED (CHUNKS)

251b.

bit

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esc a e•••••••••••••••••• •
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fer

_LAUNDRY DETERGENT

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•
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ARMOUR 3 oz.

qu•'f

CAMNEI.L'S
CHICKEN NOOOlE

cans

Prod.,...•
MILK_______ -~------~e:~C" 89~
Orw A Homogenlaed

for 4k
BREAD.. _______ .,.-~----· 51:!' 1.00
E•y MonUy He.vy Duty Blue L'.undry

DETERGENt.--~--------t:' 59~
Jo-lo Brlllll
·DOG &amp; CAT FOOD___ _I2 -.1.00

.............
ouo_______ ~ ________s ..
CUifOOII. , . Alearted PI-~

FRENCH FRfES
2 lb. HI 35~

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SANDWtOI

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$ t;:=~~!!@!··~~lb.~~:u-~~r$$&lt;l'$$&lt;'o~!~l~~-·~
Fnsh From the Iouth
ICE COLD

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SWMt I Julq Norkte

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MERRY CHERRY_~~!~---~ 29~
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DEL MONTE ORANGE or

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PORK &amp; BEANS. ______ 3:: 1. 00

FROZEN FOOD BUY!

Crinkle Cut

doz.

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Cud1hy Bar· S

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lutch't Own s-.1 Rodpe-IP""oo,.,.

and Joam, Mike IUid Johmle
spent the weekend with Mr, and
Mrs. Walter McDade at Troy.
Mrs. Edna Roush accom,Pilllled
them to her home here on &amp;Inday .
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Shields,
Mr. and Mrs. Randall Roberts,
Leslle and Todd, lett ror an ln~
deftnlte visit with Gene Hagen
IUid daug!lters at Largo, Fla.

i

SAVE 4~
PER LB.

j

31b.pkt.

Ground · Beef

.

o·· ·BE EF

'

mer's aunt at Cairo, W. Va.
Mr. and Mro. Cheater Durst,

Niles, Mr. and Mrl. Pet o
Durst wore Saturday guests of
Mf, and Mra. Rusoeli Rou&amp;h,
Mf, and Mrs. Dor&amp;a Par1001
111111 )lr, and Mrs. Herbert Rou&amp;l1.
lfr. and Mrs. Don Rlffie IUid
j[,, dlqbler moved recenUy to Ciari ~.. .
where Mr. Rime Ia em. . •J)klred on lilt dam there. Vlcld
~~~-~ aceomp811led lhe Riffles
,. llletl : "" home for a vi alt.
, • and Mrs. ' ~ster Roush

l

lb.

., .,

5 to 71b. Averap

blgldlll8
size &amp;ox

of West VIrginia called on Mrs.

G

pected that many of them will
he 11111roved at that time.
COngress IUid the rest of lhe
Na!ICII would be wise to listen
closelY to these men.

$18.19.

Eastern Local
Social Notes

•

National Governors• conference
to be held this month. It' • ex-

lb.

F1orence Circle spent Sunday
with Mr. and Mrs. Robert Koon
and family or Belpre.
Thirt;y~ were present for
SuOOay school and collection was
Rev. and Mrs. Richerd You'l!
and familY of Sidney, Ohio, were
guests or Mr. and Mrs. Elson
Roush over the weekelll.
Mrs. Mary RusseU of Waver·
ly, W. Va., spent the weekeOO
with Mr, and Mrs. Douglas Clr·
cle. Others that called during
the week were Mrs. Mildred
Bissell of Long Bottom, and Mr.
and Mrs. Lawrence Scarbrough
of GraOO Raplds, Ohio, who spent
a few days at the Circle home.
Dean Barnltz and gronddaug!l.fora, Mal!)' and EUon, of Pomeroy, called on Eunle Brinker and·
family SUnday evening,
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Smith IUid
family, Eunie Brinker, Betty Van
Meter called at the home of .

Leln; Fr'esh··,Griund.froiD Pre11ler 'Beef

by the Weatern and!blthemil&gt;v·
eroors will be presented to the

SMOKED

Carmel News
By the Day

Apple Grove

1 '.

111mber ()(

Iod of the past few yean. Their conalderatloo.
'1110 reooluttons ., . 21 In all
Influence IUid leader&amp;11lp In national atfaln has grown consid- ••• range from oceanograpby and
!1111 resources to the topics of
erably.
Following the 1968 annual sliver and gold.
S&gt;me of them hit closer to
meeUng of the Wcq_ern Gover~o
home. One resolution lsonmined
trip violtlng the Columbus Zoo, land reclamation. The Qwernors
Mary Ruth Barnltz o! Pamestated that lhe problem of mined
roy was weekend visitor of her land reclamation should be apgr""""'rents, Mr. and Mrs. D. proached willa the rsellzatlon
H. Robeson and uncle, Chester
that where surface dlsturbanee
Morris.
is unavoidable, mining operaMr. and Mrs. Che.rley Smith
tions muot be &lt;.'01161cted In such
and grand50nB, Kail, Kevin and
a marmer as to provide adequate
Charles Knapp, visited Sunday
protection 11&gt; the public and to
evening with Mr, and Mrs. Clair
other resource values on minerGiles Jr.

RETURN HOME
Jerry Penn, Carpenter Boys Wayne Hoback of Portlard Sun-4-H member and Marilyn Perm, day afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Shelby Picken•
member or the Columbia Make~
am
family of Columbus, spent
It 4-H glrJs, ha\'e returned home
from Junior 4-11 Club Camp at the weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
Canter's Cave, Jackson. Mike Allan Tl.)'lor an:l other relatives.
Mr. and Mro. Ray Byera of
La'ft'son, member of the CarpenTanners
Run called at the home
ter Boys' 4-H Club was a counof Betty Van Meter a recent
oelior for Junior camp.
Those visiting with Mr. and FridQ evening.
Mrs. Robert Lee and children,
Mrs. Fern GUlogly were Mr.
. IUid Mrs. Otho Gregory, Hamden; Ralph Lee, ·were guests of Mrs.
Holzer Gregory, Gall.ipolhli Fer- Fern Stansbury of Athens on
ntln Boring, Dundas, IUid grand- &amp;lndl)'.
Mr. and Mrs. James Circle
lOll, De.vld Reeves,FalrportHarbor; and Mr. and Mrs. Roger Mc- and Ricky of New Haven, W. Va.,
were at the home or Mrs. Mary
Knight and IJamy, Coiumhes.
Circle over the weekeOO.

at

a

DOI".S

continued to grow In stature IUid paooed by that 8l'OUP were tran1o
political lnDuence over the per- milted to Congressmen for their

corporate• the "block grant.,
sl iond. But, they continue, be- SafeQ" Act; IUid tile propooed Na- motbod of funding Is the Onml..... of widely diverse condl· tional AirwaY• Trull Fund. The bus Crime CCIItrol and S a f e
lions a rem~ cllliiOI be at· Western Governors' Conference l:llreet• Ad of 1968. '1110 Govertalned b7 uniform national J'OilU- noted that lhe NatiCIIal Gover- nors C!)rnmended Conlll'&amp;U for
nors' CmferenCe baa already
lllllons,
maidD&amp; theoe provisions. On the
They reoolved that ade!jUate gone on record favvrlnR block matter ct llrearmo tho Goverslate ieglolatiCII be enacted for ll!'ants over categorical lll'anto. nora apln aoked for the rl&amp;ht to
re&amp;~~IIIIICII of mlnocl land, tbat The block grants would permit local ccntrol. Their retDiutlCII
lhe slates be urged to ratl(y the lhe states to use fundi as tlllll' nota&amp; lho widespread CCIIC!'m
lnterslalo mlnlnl compact, IUid oee fit. In tile case of categori- lor flrearmo control lel!lalatlon
that COngress be urged to avoid cal grants the Federal pem. and enforcement. The.r point out
national regulatiCIIs or preemp- m..,t maintains detailed stand- lhat many state&amp; are ,_ oontion of state activities In t h l a ards and requirements of how olderlng additional meaourea to
tho funds are spent,
fleicl.
The Southern Governors• con .. keep llrearmo from lrrelpontlThe Qwernors also got Into
ble element• of socleQ". Thell&gt;v·
lhe mailer of fedoral-atate rela- Iorence wao held late In June. ernors
oo to expreao their
They came a., with 20 reoolutions.
belief
tbat
the
burden and reTheir resolution points oot tbat tlono, many doaely related to sponolbU~ Uos primarily withfrom time to time laws enact- ~e of the Western GoYenaou. In each of the states. The.Y Ill&gt;
ed by Congress have infringed Here again they discussed Fed- on to accept the responolblllt.Y
upon areas traditionally reser- eraJ..statc- relations. Their resolution on this matier Is nearly a "' promoting and -cling lo&amp;ltved for the state.
latlon within each state dealing
They point to numerous Fed- carbolj copy ofthatrnaclebyWest· with the sale IUid pooseoslon of
eral programs Including Feder- ern Governors. Again they urge firearms, within the framework
al air and water pollution con- tho Congresa to allow more flex- of tho Second ADIOIIdrnent of the
trol; the propooed Federal COil• Ibility on the part of local gov. Constitution.
troll on surface mining; the Fed- ernment.
All but two of the Soothem
One recent measure which In~
eral Occupational Health and

ORANGES-_____ $ ....
lb.

;.,-

...; ;~-""

These 6uys.are
kaock-orlfsl

�•
1- '1110 Dally Sandnol, Mlddlepoa1-Pomeroy, July 10, 1968

Mr. IUid Mra. Joe Sl1re IUid
Tim have gune to Florida boeauoe of the aerloua condltiCII
of Mr. Sayre's father, Carl Sa.Yre.
who re&lt;elved serloos Injuries
In a fallond Is oonllned to a bospl1al there.
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Face-.
myre, Glouster, were guests of
hla brotherandsister-in..J.aw, Mr.
IUid Mrs. Webster Facefi\)Te,
Mr. IUid Mro. Earl Starkey

went to Columbus on Friday vh-

Washington•••
Report By

Wolfpen ·

Carpenter
News, Notes

Ouenee MUI(!l'

News, Notes
Mr. and Mra. Ray Ruasell,
Tens Roe, ()( Washington C, H.
were recent vlaltors of hla parents, Mr. and Mrs. LinColn Russell.
Mr. IUid Mrs. W, Boyce of
Coiwmus, Mr. and Mrs. Rob·
ert Ruoseli, Ronald of Pameroy
IUid Mr. and Mrs. William Ruosell of Minersville were amday visitors of Mr. and M r s.
Howard Russell.
Mr, Guy Russell of Pameroy
was ~day violtor of his parents, Mr . and Mrs. Lincoln Ru:~­
sell.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Tuckerman, Rhonda Jean Haning, were
~day visitors of her aloter,
Mrs. Elsie Bratton of carpen-

itlng with their daug!lter, Mrs.
Wanda Janes and family, Nelsonville, enroute. They were f:llpper guests of his sister, Mrs.
Jessie JeweU ln Columbus on
Friday nlght. On Saturday, Mr.
Starkey attended the monthly
meeting of directors of t h e ter.
Gromge Mutual CaouaU~ JnourMr. and Mrs. Eugene Haning,
ance Company IUid the G. M, Pre- RhCIIda and Ronald, were Satmium Budget con&gt;oration.
urday visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. Bernice McKnight, Co- Bra&lt;IY Knotts of Kina Hill.
lumbus, is spending a vacation
Mrs. J. C. Wyatt spent some
with Mr, IUid Mrs. D, 0, Mc- time with their daughter, Mr.
Knl&amp;ht, Mr. IUid Mro. Fern Gll- and Mrs. John Dodder and son
logly and other relatives here. of Columbus last week.
Mr. IUid Mro. Artlllr Crabtree
Mrs. Mable Ollver of Mansvisited with Mr. IUid Mrs. Frank Oeld was weekend visitor or her
Ryther in Pomeroy.
daug!\ter, Mr. and Mrs. J, C.
Callers at the home of Mr. Wyatt. Also visiting were Mr.
and Mrs. AJva Rupe were Mr. and Mrs. John Dodder and son
IUid Mrs. Norman Fitch, Detroit, t1 COlumbus.
Mich.; Mr. and Mrs. Harry McMr. and Mrs. Larey Johnaon
Cann and Cleve ~ver, Colum- and Gina Rae enjoyed a SundaY
bus, and Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
WoodrUm and LOretta, Athens.
Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Canode,
Marysville, visited their parents,
Mr. and Mro. R. S. '!Urner and

'

Mrs. Clarence Canode recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Glen Cline called on Nora Murdock In Hamden.

Recent callers at the Glen Cline
home were Mr. and Mrs. Henry
Carpenter, Middleport; Mr. and
Mrs. Alva Swick, Danville; MaxIne Haning, Mrs. Gloria Haning,
Taa1ya and Sanya, local.
Mr. Glen Cline IR opend!ng
1 vacation with relaUves near
Venice, Florida and visiting var Ious point&amp; oflnterest. Mro. Dora
Carpenter, Dexter, is vi siting her

daug!lter, Mrs. Glen Cline, while
Mr. Cline is away.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Schmidt,
Tina Marie and Roberta Arm,
PL, visited at
the home or her g~arents.
Mr. and Mrs. Stansbury,
Other guests at the Stansberry

cannonsburg,

home Included Mrs. Wanda '1\lraer and oon and Mr. IUid Mrs.
Larry Stan~' Reynoldllbllrg.

Mr. and Mra ... Carl Crabtree,
R11Ssell and Kevin, called on Mr.
and Mrs. Dwaine Jordan and sons

on 9.mda$ evening.

The naUon's Governors have

rllliOIUtiCIIO

wen!

Governors (Winthrop Rod&lt;ofeller
of ArkanUB and Hulett Sndih ()(
West VIrginia) aii'"O'I to a reiDlutlon Cll llacal ..:esponolbllit,y.
The resolution.i:lte• !I seal responolbU~ ' ' a deolrable aoal
of pernment. It calls Cll each
lndlvi~al who aspires to poj&gt;ll&lt;
ol!lce, lndudlna canclldate• tor
President IUid Vice Proaldonl
of tile United states, and the
COngress, to declare and pledge
him sal! to a proliJ"&amp;m of Dacal
responalblll~,
lncludlnl
a
prompt and orderly etlmlnatlon
of amual operating dellclto.
With this resolution I ean ful.
ly .......

Man!' of the reoolutlona m&amp;&lt;lo

News, Events

Mr. and Mr&amp;. Alva Townoend

BY MRS. HERBERT ROUSH
Mro. Bodily CUrtiss (lhe for- Mary Reed ~day.
Mrs. Leota Massar was a &amp;mmer Laura Farra) and t o u r
dey
dlmer guesl of Mr. and
daug!lters of Fort Walton Beach,
Mrs.
Oscar Babcock at Long
Fla. were recent visitors of Mr.
IUid Mro. Ray Heiney IUid Mr. Bottom.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Flck and
and Mrs. Floyd Farra.
family
of Columball spent severMrs. Roger Beegle and daug!lal
days
with hil mother, Mrs.
ter of ~rlngfield are visiting
Mr. and Mra. Marvin Wicker- Dana Flck.
Mr. and Mrs. Norman Mcsham. The Wlcker&amp;hamo held
Cain
and daU&amp;hters spent two
I cook~t recently with Mrs.
Ruth Wi._-ett of Syracuse as day&amp; at Lake Hope recently.
Mrs. Peter Galla (the former
guest.
Ethel
Frl&amp;by of Chester) and
Mrs. Feme Hayman spent the
Mra.
W,
D. Welch of Steubenweekend with Mrs. WealeyBelles
rille, violted a recent Tuesday
Jr. at Wellston.
and Wednesday with Mrs. Dana
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Ours ot
WoliBVUle, Mrs. TheodoreCratg, Fick.
Todd IUid Lisa, and John Deverse of Columbus were weekElusive Planet
end guest a of Mr. and Mrs. Ray
Although the existence of
Heine)'.
the p I a n e t Pluto was sus·
WalUft Stover is a medlca1 peeled, it took 25 intensive
patient at Veterans Memorlol years of scanning the heavens
before it was discovered.
Hotpital .
Clyde
Tombaugh. a 24-year-old
Mr. and Mrs. Don Bell IUid
astronomer.
detected the elu·
1.AJrna spent 9lllday with the for sive planet in 1930.

''•C ...

-·--

l

'

_AMS

!)'
•

.....,...,
·r' ltfGLISH
~·~•., ._., ·
,::to•sT ."a0Al

Sausage _2 .. 1.19
Goool Grllllo Sliced

Bologna 2 :. 89~

.

.

...

'~"": ·

5TH and PEARL S'I'S.-RAC1Nl!

.

'

89

31..
Cll

.,.

..
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"Tilt Stor• With
A. Hart''
.
. . . .
~~ retl\ll ved to llm1t !!UanUU""

:

~

'

We K.O'D

We accept Fed. Food Stamps

high priceil

Pr~s "Effectiv~

·
Jult 1su12i13 'd

.

.

We're Famous For Savings

...... .

.

Opel

....U.S. Grade. A Metll.unt .,.:

10117

9tt9-

Ful- Valu Buys!

EVERYDAY LOW PRICES!

DOG FEED (CHUNKS)

251b.

bit

•••••••••••••••••••••••••• •

·
esc a e•••••••••••••••••• •
0 nU5••••••••••••••
•
..
·INSTANT COFFEE

tooz.
fer

_LAUNDRY DETERGENT

I

bit

otte

ea I ••••••:••
•
ress1n ••••
ARMOUR 3 oz.

qu•'f

CAMNEI.L'S
CHICKEN NOOOlE

cans

Prod.,...•
MILK_______ -~------~e:~C" 89~
Orw A Homogenlaed

for 4k
BREAD.. _______ .,.-~----· 51:!' 1.00
E•y MonUy He.vy Duty Blue L'.undry

DETERGENt.--~--------t:' 59~
Jo-lo Brlllll
·DOG &amp; CAT FOOD___ _I2 -.1.00

.............
ouo_______ ~ ________s ..
CUifOOII. , . Alearted PI-~

FRENCH FRfES
2 lb. HI 35~

·---·~

-.

1.oo

CANNED POt __________!!:

·
8
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. ' r
:( ...

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.

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...................... """

.~

CIWIIIS

.
'

0reo Chocolate
SANDWtOI

COODS

$ t;:=~~!!@!··~~lb.~~:u-~~r$$&lt;l'$$&lt;'o~!~l~~-·~
Fnsh From the Iouth
ICE COLD

,,,.,

WATERMELON
SWMt I Julq Norkte

.

'

oo

'· ·f:.W

..............~-~~~-1'11111'

s.Unre

200ct.

10~

MERRY CHERRY_~~!~---~ 29~
N.bltce p,_lum

.

,.

' ' HUdson '

DEL MONTE ORANGE or

,. ,.,_.

.

'

......
,
PORK &amp; BEANS. ______ 3:: 1. 00

FROZEN FOOD BUY!

Crinkle Cut

doz.

L - AMOUnlW ltlr; 2

•••••••••••••••••••••

'~:,'

-----

·'

Cud1hy Bar· S

:,/,..

1.59

lutch't Own s-.1 Rodpe-IP""oo,.,.

and Joam, Mike IUid Johmle
spent the weekend with Mr, and
Mrs. Walter McDade at Troy.
Mrs. Edna Roush accom,Pilllled
them to her home here on &amp;Inday .
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Shields,
Mr. and Mrs. Randall Roberts,
Leslle and Todd, lett ror an ln~
deftnlte visit with Gene Hagen
IUid daug!lters at Largo, Fla.

i

SAVE 4~
PER LB.

j

31b.pkt.

Ground · Beef

.

o·· ·BE EF

'

mer's aunt at Cairo, W. Va.
Mr. and Mro. Cheater Durst,

Niles, Mr. and Mrl. Pet o
Durst wore Saturday guests of
Mf, and Mra. Rusoeli Rou&amp;h,
Mf, and Mrs. Dor&amp;a Par1001
111111 )lr, and Mrs. Herbert Rou&amp;l1.
lfr. and Mrs. Don Rlffie IUid
j[,, dlqbler moved recenUy to Ciari ~.. .
where Mr. Rime Ia em. . •J)klred on lilt dam there. Vlcld
~~~-~ aceomp811led lhe Riffles
,. llletl : "" home for a vi alt.
, • and Mrs. ' ~ster Roush

l

lb.

., .,

5 to 71b. Averap

blgldlll8
size &amp;ox

of West VIrginia called on Mrs.

G

pected that many of them will
he 11111roved at that time.
COngress IUid the rest of lhe
Na!ICII would be wise to listen
closelY to these men.

$18.19.

Eastern Local
Social Notes

•

National Governors• conference
to be held this month. It' • ex-

lb.

F1orence Circle spent Sunday
with Mr. and Mrs. Robert Koon
and family or Belpre.
Thirt;y~ were present for
SuOOay school and collection was
Rev. and Mrs. Richerd You'l!
and familY of Sidney, Ohio, were
guests or Mr. and Mrs. Elson
Roush over the weekelll.
Mrs. Mary RusseU of Waver·
ly, W. Va., spent the weekeOO
with Mr, and Mrs. Douglas Clr·
cle. Others that called during
the week were Mrs. Mildred
Bissell of Long Bottom, and Mr.
and Mrs. Lawrence Scarbrough
of GraOO Raplds, Ohio, who spent
a few days at the Circle home.
Dean Barnltz and gronddaug!l.fora, Mal!)' and EUon, of Pomeroy, called on Eunle Brinker and·
family SUnday evening,
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Smith IUid
family, Eunie Brinker, Betty Van
Meter called at the home of .

Leln; Fr'esh··,Griund.froiD Pre11ler 'Beef

by the Weatern and!blthemil&gt;v·
eroors will be presented to the

SMOKED

Carmel News
By the Day

Apple Grove

1 '.

111mber ()(

Iod of the past few yean. Their conalderatloo.
'1110 reooluttons ., . 21 In all
Influence IUid leader&amp;11lp In national atfaln has grown consid- ••• range from oceanograpby and
!1111 resources to the topics of
erably.
Following the 1968 annual sliver and gold.
S&gt;me of them hit closer to
meeUng of the Wcq_ern Gover~o
home. One resolution lsonmined
trip violtlng the Columbus Zoo, land reclamation. The Qwernors
Mary Ruth Barnltz o! Pamestated that lhe problem of mined
roy was weekend visitor of her land reclamation should be apgr""""'rents, Mr. and Mrs. D. proached willa the rsellzatlon
H. Robeson and uncle, Chester
that where surface dlsturbanee
Morris.
is unavoidable, mining operaMr. and Mrs. Che.rley Smith
tions muot be &lt;.'01161cted In such
and grand50nB, Kail, Kevin and
a marmer as to provide adequate
Charles Knapp, visited Sunday
protection 11&gt; the public and to
evening with Mr, and Mrs. Clair
other resource values on minerGiles Jr.

RETURN HOME
Jerry Penn, Carpenter Boys Wayne Hoback of Portlard Sun-4-H member and Marilyn Perm, day afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Shelby Picken•
member or the Columbia Make~
am
family of Columbus, spent
It 4-H glrJs, ha\'e returned home
from Junior 4-11 Club Camp at the weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
Canter's Cave, Jackson. Mike Allan Tl.)'lor an:l other relatives.
Mr. and Mro. Ray Byera of
La'ft'son, member of the CarpenTanners
Run called at the home
ter Boys' 4-H Club was a counof Betty Van Meter a recent
oelior for Junior camp.
Those visiting with Mr. and FridQ evening.
Mrs. Robert Lee and children,
Mrs. Fern GUlogly were Mr.
. IUid Mrs. Otho Gregory, Hamden; Ralph Lee, ·were guests of Mrs.
Holzer Gregory, Gall.ipolhli Fer- Fern Stansbury of Athens on
ntln Boring, Dundas, IUid grand- &amp;lndl)'.
Mr. and Mrs. James Circle
lOll, De.vld Reeves,FalrportHarbor; and Mr. and Mrs. Roger Mc- and Ricky of New Haven, W. Va.,
were at the home or Mrs. Mary
Knight and IJamy, Coiumhes.
Circle over the weekeOO.

at

a

DOI".S

continued to grow In stature IUid paooed by that 8l'OUP were tran1o
political lnDuence over the per- milted to Congressmen for their

corporate• the "block grant.,
sl iond. But, they continue, be- SafeQ" Act; IUid tile propooed Na- motbod of funding Is the Onml..... of widely diverse condl· tional AirwaY• Trull Fund. The bus Crime CCIItrol and S a f e
lions a rem~ cllliiOI be at· Western Governors' Conference l:llreet• Ad of 1968. '1110 Govertalned b7 uniform national J'OilU- noted that lhe NatiCIIal Gover- nors C!)rnmended Conlll'&amp;U for
nors' CmferenCe baa already
lllllons,
maidD&amp; theoe provisions. On the
They reoolved that ade!jUate gone on record favvrlnR block matter ct llrearmo tho Goverslate ieglolatiCII be enacted for ll!'ants over categorical lll'anto. nora apln aoked for the rl&amp;ht to
re&amp;~~IIIIICII of mlnocl land, tbat The block grants would permit local ccntrol. Their retDiutlCII
lhe slates be urged to ratl(y the lhe states to use fundi as tlllll' nota&amp; lho widespread CCIIC!'m
lnterslalo mlnlnl compact, IUid oee fit. In tile case of categori- lor flrearmo control lel!lalatlon
that COngress be urged to avoid cal grants the Federal pem. and enforcement. The.r point out
national regulatiCIIs or preemp- m..,t maintains detailed stand- lhat many state&amp; are ,_ oontion of state activities In t h l a ards and requirements of how olderlng additional meaourea to
tho funds are spent,
fleicl.
The Southern Governors• con .. keep llrearmo from lrrelpontlThe Qwernors also got Into
ble element• of socleQ". Thell&gt;v·
lhe mailer of fedoral-atate rela- Iorence wao held late In June. ernors
oo to expreao their
They came a., with 20 reoolutions.
belief
tbat
the
burden and reTheir resolution points oot tbat tlono, many doaely related to sponolbU~ Uos primarily withfrom time to time laws enact- ~e of the Western GoYenaou. In each of the states. The.Y Ill&gt;
ed by Congress have infringed Here again they discussed Fed- on to accept the responolblllt.Y
upon areas traditionally reser- eraJ..statc- relations. Their resolution on this matier Is nearly a "' promoting and -cling lo&amp;ltved for the state.
latlon within each state dealing
They point to numerous Fed- carbolj copy ofthatrnaclebyWest· with the sale IUid pooseoslon of
eral programs Including Feder- ern Governors. Again they urge firearms, within the framework
al air and water pollution con- tho Congresa to allow more flex- of tho Second ADIOIIdrnent of the
trol; the propooed Federal COil• Ibility on the part of local gov. Constitution.
troll on surface mining; the Fed- ernment.
All but two of the Soothem
One recent measure which In~
eral Occupational Health and

ORANGES-_____ $ ....
lb.

;.,-

...; ;~-""

These 6uys.are
kaock-orlfsl

�.

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I

·~:~;~' :ntlncl, !liddl&lt;l"'··•~;·;:;~~:~~;::::~;~;:::~~i:::;::~;;,.,: =: : : :: : : :;:;=;= :;;?fi:':: 'i;:};:: ;}i'i?iii::::::::; :;::: ;Ni;: ~·' .
·'·

News..• in Briefs

(Continued Cram I'IQ;O I)
&lt;ies wea·e adopted w~h re&lt;om·
, merdcd modlrit•atloosciet"idcd"""
on 1\tesda.y night.

•

The board employed Jeanne
Tl.)·tor as an English "teacher.
The bid of the Ohio Vallel Blklre

Co.

rru·

bakel'J proclutts was •~
won the contract for providing tires for ve-

cepled and Uizer Oil

hides used in the district The
Texaco Co. 1vas awartll&gt;d the co.
tract for gasoline, oil and andfreeze. An increase in the salary
allowam·e for wrestling, from

$300 to $400, was given.
George Hargra\es, superintendent, reported on the building
projects in the di strkt. The basic
grading has been completed for
the new high school and footers

are now being dug. At the Rutland elemenLa•'Y school, a mud-.
jacking proc£'sS was scheduled
to begin toda). Work on a ceiling
at the salisburJ school has not

!

begun.
Morrison reported on the summer improvement program being
carried out in the buildings and
grounds of the district Plans
were made for the board to inspect facilities before the openiJlt
&gt;f school nelct fall.
The board ret•iewed its plans
or the sale of the Bedford School
·n Route 33 at a publil' auctiOlL
The building and three and onehalf acres of grouOO will be sold
at 8 p, m. on .&gt;\ug. 1. Porter will
serve as auctioneer.
After a di seussion, the board
passed a resolution indicating
that it wishes to learn more
about a proposed joint vocational
school for Gallia, Meigs, Jackson and Vinton counties. Hargraves will attend a meeting on
the proposal to be held tonight
in Rio Grande.
It was agreed to acknowledge
receipt of the approval or the
sewage disposal system plans for
the new high school from the
state Department of Health with
~ental n conditions imposed. /Wproval was given Sullivan, Isaacs
and Sullivan, the architectural
firm on the new high school, to
increase the size of a culvert
needed for a parking area. The

additional cost will be $420 to be
paid out of the building contingency fund.
Others attending were Virgil
kill:, president, Mrs. E. 0. Rail,
Don Mullen and Hiram Slawter,
board members, and Clerk, L.
W. McComas.

GOV. JAMES A. RIIODES said today Ohio's
QrQI:('h to education hi outmoded, outdated and antiquated.
CLEVELAND -

Circus.
~' ·~

'f

·'

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sct&gt;res 1111r1
'

. tns

&lt;apitaJ. ·
·,
A •u.S. lll"J~ , api!kesm10
,lllld a Comnlunlai Ioree opOO
men tried to prol!e ll"!I!Oil''

Outside, the raJa,was 10 heavy·

oirter detenato

With the poles gone, the canvas
nuttered down and envelope(! 1,·
first heart transplant patient died Tuesday night on!}· five hours aft- 400 or the 2,000 performers and
spectators, who screamed in horer the q&gt;eratlon, Radio Czech said loday.
Mrs. Helena Horvatho\'&amp;, a 49~year-old widow with no family. ror. S1x -loandred were I!J)Ored
was the 20th of the world's 25 heart recipients to die. No cause of the ordeal - 300 sitting in a
part or the tent that did not col.
death 1Was given.

ONE LESS enemy to worry abollt 11 South Vletaameoe
aoldlen ftush a VIet Coag out of hll weU..,oaeealed bldloc
place. fnftltrators o!tea Opt froin boloo due Ia baek yardo,
under trash piles and ln graveyarda.

lapac and 300 sitting where the
wind
whipped the tent awa.y
from them.
Children Injured
No one was killed. Auburn's

Racine Social Events
Mrs. George, !ialrley and David
and Juno Nelgler, and friend,
Phlt Miller and brother, Carl
Miller of Columbus, and Mr.
and Mrs. Titus Pickens of &amp;Yra-

cuso ei\IOYed a plcnlc at Royal
oak Pari&lt; ~ afternoon.
Weekend guesls o( Mr. arA
Mrs. AI Crow were Mr. Md
Mrs. George Graham and son

DoMtd o! Columbia, S. C.
Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Morris
of Bedford called ~ alter·
noon on Mt. and Mrs. Francis

mE \VAl' TO BEAUT\'

Announce Advance Sale of Grid
Tickets to Begin on July 15
Meigs Marauder Football fans, sold during this time will go
who had season tickets for last on sale to the general public
y~ar's home games, are golng to August I through Sept. l.
be given the opportunity or pur Season tickets are S7.2S eath.

Morris and Mr. and Mrs. Cllf·
Cord Morrls.

Mr. and Mrs. Paul !Uiidore
and !aml]y ot Anchoraao, Alas·
ka, who are • l~ting his parents,
Mr. and Mra. T. G. muttore til
~racuac, called on Mr. and Mrs.
Francis Morris Monday.

tod8l' but

- • turned · bad&lt; · ID a til!arJ&gt;
action. barol.Y live J11Deo weilt of
the Chlri"e · aecl\00 ot Cholon.
Halt a dozen minor aldrmtlhe•
w8re reported elsewhere around
Saigon.
..
'·•
As the VIet Coni lnlllliati&lt;m
of lbo saigon area IDcreaaed
ahatp]y, Ll. Gen. N~en Von
Minh, South Vletnameac eommanclor of the capital district,
predl~
a new Communist
asaault on the cit;y Jul,y 20, the
14th amiYeraary ot the Ge"""a
accords divldln8 Vl~.
Informed U.S. mllllu7 sour••• aald they had oo ·reason to
dolj)t thO posolbUl\1' ot another
Communill attack on 'satgon,
but they '""'ld not predict the
date or 1111 where tile thrust
might start.
Tlie !lghUng around Solson
wao reported ll,y Allied troops
pre80lng anii-Vlet Coni patrols.
Pres!- Nguyen Van Tblw
told a news oonterenco aboard
the U.S. Navy olreraft carrier
Constaliatlon loda,y he boliOI'OS
North VIetnam wlll not· bqln
formal pt~~ce talks willl Com~1\UJ~lsl !Drees aeored a major
vletory.

soon " Thlou said ·. o! the
eJ&lt;I)Oded posh. "We ,aiiJ walling
lor tho ·next olfenSive. and I
~ . Ill• ,11ex1 ~enal~e will :. ·
shorten . the war. II' 'nily blO
their .iasl."
.'
·Tile ' llepped •li lllftltrallon
Info tho Saigon area ootncltled
with' the heaYy U.S. rllds
igalnsl North VIetnam and a
dltermlried ottenslve I&gt;Y· Amerl· &gt;
can ·llllrines aplnl!l: CoDU11111llt '
ioreea .Just below lh• Demlllta·
rized Zone.
.
There w.,.. · i36 mlsalons
Tuesda!i ap.lnl!l: Communist
supply routea.
.,

N. S. White,
Former Meigs
Resident, Dies
s.

White, ~o. ot Akron,
a former Ml(kl-' realclent,
died Tuesday morning In I h e
Akron Clfl Hospital,
He lo ourvl•ed by hlo wile,
N.

Nell, a son, Robert, of Barberloll; two daughters, Mrs. ROber.

Ia Wyent and Mrs.

Bett.v Mc-

Clary, boi1a ot Akron; lhreo litters, Mrs. Beulah White of MlddlO[lOrt and Mrs. Florence Hannay and Mrs. Myrtle Watldno,
both ot Akron; and • bfOI!aer,
Charles White ot Mlddlllporl,
Funeral eervtcea wtll ,. hel~
ot I p.m:. Frldo.Y at thelloPdno
·F uneral Home,' Conlon Road, Ill
Akroa. Burial olll be Ill Akr&lt;ll.
Friends may cail at the rufteral
home.

Mrs. Whittington

Syracuso defeated lhe Mots 18
to 6.. On
moond for Syracuse

Dies Wednesday

the

was David BISs. Mark Forbes
was the blg sUck for Syr1cuae,
collect!~

4 hits.

Mrs. Doroth)' Whl~. 57,
Rl. 2, CheoldrJ, died Oat]y Wed-

.

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.

MASoN - The RO\'erend and
Mro. Charlo• Pai'rllh, Mallon,
wtU be ,_ed at a reception
... Quldoy, July 14, from z to
4 p.m. In llle IOdal room olllle
Pr. · PLEASANT - Six d~- EYadpllcal United MAlthodllll
U actfGiol wore Wed rt&lt;ODII,y CIMlrch. RO\'. Pai'rlob llltteeds
In the olllce ot the Circuli Clerk. · the Rrierood Leater Lane and
Judgment of $112,049 lo be- boPD -cling aervlcooln May
!ng IIJUihl by the plalntilf ill lithe Cllurch•.
an action 1!\Yied Barbero Am
RO\'. and Mrs. Parrilli are the
Brown, admrx. or estaiAo ot Clar- 1 pareltl of oae son, Ji)JgeDO. He
once A. Dean' n. Thomas· Rog. , woo tormerly paatur of thel!ed
or Parker of Chrlatlod&gt;urg, Va., Hiu Clllrch ill Parkersburg, W.
and Jolm Lawson, Jr., Stuart, va. and has been a minister lor

.News Notes Is Sought
By Alma Manhali

Peraona ll'tin every nctiOii ot thl1 C&lt;lUDti-y visited the Craft
~r II Cedar ~. In ftlllejl{ W, VL · cluriiiR the live day perIod otartlng on Jul.Y 3. At lhe close or the to1r ~ eveDirw,
35,920 admlsslona were totaled.
Sbace lhe starling · oC lhe llllt ln 1863, ID obaenanee of Weat
30 yeara.
VlrJJ[Dta's Conteontal, the talr has grown by laepa and boundL Va.
The
action
11
lbo
re811lt
of
Mmlsaloo on lhe Qrst day last year was 1,190 and atleDionoe
thla year wu 3,010. O..r 200 craftsmen exhthlted and dOJIIIlO. the hll!hwal ot Clarence
atralod the makiiV of varlouo articles. AD outstanding attroe- Deau Ill an acci- wblch ocP
tion was Mar1011 SOndaD or Pilgrim Glass who shaped charac- curred oo Rt. 17 In December
]ers are
1967.
tera ot molten ~sa.
Another action styled Aooa Lee
Mrs. Adelaide S. Umland, scmo]y had limo to eat - 10
Hoic. ng
Colllnl
and Salll Lou Steenber·
Beckie)', W. Vo. displayed ber didn't got 00 -rtunl~ to aco
.talent of moklng 10tnilthln&amp;·beau.· or hear lbo apodal ontertaln· gan · VI, Theodore R. Ste¥ena,
tiM Crom bottles. TheH bolt!•,• ment prciytded by Bll]y Edd Pl. Pleuant, shows .!he plalnNEW 11,\VEN - EYangellsl
were pot In a kiln melted Whooler and AWII Jenny WUson. tll!o dlmandlng Judl!monl against
Iner
and Emily Basalngor of
dth colored paso IDalde and I talked brtell1 to Bll!r Edd th.e doCondanl tn lbo llll&lt;lUIII ot
Parkersburg are .....,cling a
. D!olded ill the ahape of an alh w1ao otatid thll the ta1r was an ~.500.
Camp
Ground Cruaade at Union
A promlsiOQ' note Is I b e
troy. A good wa;y to. turn 10 an. enJyyable me to """k. I was
Camp
Ground
back ot New HaYen
.llque bottle tnto something UIC· told that Bll]y Edd Wheeler pye ...,rce of the action styled Great
from
JuJ.y
21
to Au&amp;ust 2. Rev.
Ad and taking up Ieos space. AWII Jenny Wl11011 10 -~~~e American ID"'ranee~va.
Other area craftamen partie!- · bllllo and that ahe wa1 over- Harold L, Porter IDd Vlstlla M. and Mro. Basalnger wore for.
Porter, Pl. Pleasant, with t h' e mercy with the BDiy Graham
paling """" Harl,.y Burna or POint whelmed by hla pneroolt;r.
Croaacle.
Pleaaanl, exhibiting atrlng sculpAunt Jlldll' told me aha taa• plalntll! dlmandlng Judgment ID
!lagers Cram all chUrches
lure; Otho and Holen Fllz Ran- playing the ba11fo lhlce abe the amount ot •1,116.22.
wanting
to sing In the choir are
The
Masoo
Coun17
Hospital,
' dolph, Pl&gt;lnt Pleaaanl, exhlbltlng . was nine years old, AliO an
IDe.
c1&gt;a
Pleasant
Valle)'
11osrecpealed
to practice on Setur.
woodcraft and carvlnga; Vernon -added attraction was a oometb'
cacJio, Leon, woodcarvings; Mrs. by Bollvor, Clltle and Ugl.y lrv- pltal to tho plalntilf ID two ac- -day, July 2o, at 7:30p.m. at Un·
Hazel Wright, Cottapvllle, wea•- lng. Another feature was the lions, both cor lnd&lt;iJtodness with lon Camp Ground. A 100 voice
lng; Walden and Loulae llouah, hammer dulclmor whlch was Sammie Colvin Sturgeon, Ash- cholr41 dOBlred.
PUint Pleaaanl, and ·Jo~ Mar- piaJed \&gt;YRusseliFiut!hart:r. Tbl1 too, the defendant In one -king · - - - - - - - - · lhall; New HaYen, pm a1U1e • lnatnunent Ia reported over 100 Judimenl ID the amount of •lf- Rt. 1 Letart, and Charles Zus289,6'/ and Erma Jane Zuapao,
jewelry.
Y..,l old.
pan, Rl. I Letart, the de!ondoats
Mam- watched com bolnl
Wtlb ~~ ...,r)'Wbere, 10100·
ID the other wttb judgment of
_..t Info meal oo
ttmeo you had to stand ill line to eoln Helgh!a was r~ 111 $539.42 being sooght Crom the
burr. 011 JuJ.y 4111, two lhouo- got aomothlng to eat.
Mr. and Mra. Pal Lochei'y, II• Zuapans.
and jiDUDds ot yellow 001'11 meal
Well, ..,oush aboulllle fair - noliced Mrs. Jame1 Dlebl, !'Om·
The alxth action Is • styled
....... aold at the fair. ~ !'01'11 good to aco ID1 tormer Pome- oro,y - Mrs. Donald Cook, WID- Sears, Hoebuck Co., vs. Freda
srown In ¥aaon Counl1, was re- lOl' nei&amp;N&gt;ors, Mr. """ Mra. tenvUle; - Mrs..Norman Foaa, t;pllng, l't. Pleaaant, with t h e
porledly the besl thai the work- Jowell Curtis' and .Ia Kom Pt. Pleaaanl; Mrs. Georp Jfll· plalnlllf asking Jud&amp;ment ID the
era had "'" sround.
thoro - Janet liked the fair - ell, New Havoo, and DIIIIIY other llll&lt;lUIII o1 $433.09 !rom the de.
During lhe live days at the bow wao 11 this year Janet? LIDtendiDI.
ana realdents.
~,__thlngs .,-• 10 bull.!',, I

Crusade

the--

.

nesdy momtns In Holzor Hos-.
pltal.
•
Mrs. Whltlln&amp;lon waabornJari~
uary 12, 19llal Mai~I!Yfllo,'\(1:,
the daul!ller of llie late Will\~
and Laura GooCimoia llartrim.
. Sbe la aurvlved by her h u ~­
band,

'

Set for Parrishes

PI'. PLEASANT- Clfl Coun- ed and ~ tor 'lemla activdl metlnrO(IU!arsesslonMonday l\1'.
Jdihl at the dt;r building with Counctl voted to drop • l ly
two )lllbllc 1aear1np held ID eon- memberllhlp In the Wool Vlr!llaJunction

wiJh

the 1oasloo, but Ia

Leacue ot !dunidpalltles

duo

.., one aj&gt;peared tn conneetion *&gt; the !Jicreaso In duel O¥er
wllb either matter.
thOo past three yean. Thto ....,,
The !lrst hearing concerned (or 19118-69 fear were •173.55
tho abacdooment o1 20th street In oomparlam with
olios
_ . . . Madlaon Avenue and lllrce year a 080 and the CCIUlcti
Kanawha - which has not and lbo mayor did "'\~ teol thai
uaed tor JJI8IIY years - and COUll· lbo ett.Y was getting OIIIIUih out
ell voted to IIJ)PfOVe llle aban- of lt to warrant the
cost.
donment as asked cor by John
The proposed Recriollonal •
CotUna, Pl. Pleasant business- Cultural Conler was liP tllacusiod and the COIIIIcti voted to
man.
The second hearing was on a ask lor an oxtenolon ot lime
recommendation ot tbe Clcy on lhe Bjl[lllcation If necosaary
Plamlng Commission to allow lor the purpose ol seleetlng a
protesalonal ofllces ln buildings site lor the Center.
without a residence occupancy tn
Ma,yor Morgan appointed coun-

•so

hJib

all residential R2 zoning which
!Jicludos Walnut street, Decatur
Street, the area from tbe r.U,.
r&lt;&gt;ac1 brtdge to Ulh Slroet and
part ol North MaiD Crom Camden Aveme to lhe Marietta MaJ&gt;.
ufacturlng Co. The z o n i n g
change was approved by council

ell members JlmFlaherandJack
Fowler to meet with representa.
lives ot lhe Maaon Counl1 JD.
surance Agency to discuso au In"'""'•• policy of the etcy now olio
before premium Ia paid to make
sure the policy covers all nee~
essary lte~s.

The actlvlcy report of the cltiY
MeiJI Street paving was again pollee department Cor tbe 111011tb
brooght before coundl by May- ol .lane was read by coonctiman
or D. B. Morgan with a llot ot Doo Waldie ao submlttodbyChle!
as no protests were made.

the varlou:~ ,Property owners con- of Police Jack Pyles. The re..

corned given ln blocks to ooun- pori showed the patrolmen workell members to be oonta&lt;ied lor ed a total or 940 hours - In·
agreement ot paving wlthoui!J&gt;- veatlgated 14 accldonts and ar-

ing to due legal proeess or as- rested seven drivers involved sessment to force the paving made 13 road law arrests ~

which would Increase the pav1ng costs considerably. The Mayor cited estimated cosls ot pav.
log by agreementotpropert;v own·
ere which were: MaiD street
$2 13
toot· 6th street
:: $1.'87; ::- str..;t - $1.83;
lOth Street •• $1.55 and lllh
Sir t $2 62 The COIDICII momber~ wer~ ~sked to report back
tD lhe Mayor withtn Ule next
10 days.
Mayor Morgan announced to
council thai the temla oour1 ID
Hirmon field was now oomplet-

30 other mledemeanor arreots;
three felony arrests - lnued
387 parking tickets And 15 un.
lswiW parking llckels - reeov.
ered lllolon PfOi&gt;ercy- a lady's
wrlot watch - valued st $100.
The financial report of the
lilree clfl departments wasgl•en
ahowing the lollowlng balances
on June 30, 1968 - Clt.Y, ~3,­
086.64; Water Works, $38,t8tJ .•
~I; Sewer Fund, $19,194.30.
Present were M'l)lor Morgan,
Clt;y Clerk Pa1t:r Burdette, Clt.Y
Attorney Roy Musgrave and oouo-

.

.,

.Soeial Evenf8' NewS, Notes
· Mra. Addle Ohllrwer has returned to bar home .alter bolrw
apltienlat Piea- Vall~ Hospltll aulferlng ll'tin a broken
b4a recehed In 1 1111 at her home
on 6th street.
Dr. and Mra. Tom R. Vance
and children, Bullon, Jelf and
Debonl1 olsall P • NawYork,
vlalted with hll parents, Mr.
, and MrL
R. Vaace OYOr the
weekend.
Mr. and MrL Jolm ~ of
OWensboro, II)'., Ylallod during
. the weekend with hlt parenll,
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Layne.
Mrs. Roland Karr of Owensboro, II)'., Is vlaltlng here with
her parenll, Mr. and MrL ot:fAJ
Grimm. Her chUdren, Debro and
lllano ha•e been here vlaltlqr
!heir JiHDI)Jllrents lor several
weekL Mr. Karr wUI Join his
!amll,y to visit oYer the holiday
weekend. Tliey wiD return to
!heir heine on Sunday.
Mrs. Eugene Hart ls a patient
at Veterans Memorial Hospital
In P001eroy.
Karen Greene, daughter o!Mr.
and Mrs. R. G. Greene, Is taking
a 1\vo-wook orleiUUon at Und-

a

. ~.
...., Ill lfrl. ~
il1aft 11!14 lllio 1¥111 111'111· •I
!bMJat .V. Mr. and llrj. Wll·
Uam Slrlla* and - . ~ ot·
D~

~ Jet., N.

aa

J., Mr• .1\1111!1•

111111 of Uma, Oblo, aolii ,.._

maa

11yu, Jr~ Ill

alo ~.

"""llr.

JackltiiYillo,l'la.,
IDol
Mra. l!tlwOr&lt;l 111111 1114 fullll.
The !leY. Morftlle Wldl.o of
the 91. I'IUl KoebOdlll ai.rdl,
Polnl Plea- IIIII - - llhlp oontcnlt lllo Ualt.
ed Mltbodlll Qmch Sandq,
wldle llle !leY. ~~ ~
and famlb' an oo ncatiGa.
Mrl, R. C. King, lleaderiCIII,
relunled trom lliJI'trll ....,..
villi willa her ,.,.,... and f.m.
l]y, Mra. I'IUl 'BaU!II' it Sui
A-., TODL Sbo wu • .....,.
panled home 111 bar ..., Niclo'
lltatloned In the AF bi ~
Vlalting Mn. lllq IDd NldQ&lt;
and weloomlng them hOmo wen
Mrs. catherine -.eJIDd Norman; Mr. IDd Mrl. Al¥a Luckeydoo, Mrl. ~ La.......
Mr. and Mro. Curoll SbliD and
famlb'; Mr. and Mra. Tbomu
iAp&gt;rt, HendoriCIII, W, Vo.

sey WUson JllRior College at

Columbia, II)'. She will enroll
lor the fall bonn as a freshman
at Lindsey WUaoo.
Mrs. Chesbor Curry Is a Illtient at Pleaaant Valley Hospital
in Point Pleaaant.
Mrs. R. G. Greene visited rei&amp;tives in Louisville, Ky., over the
weekend.
Mr. and !drs. Charles Smith
and famUy are vacationing at
Myrtle Beach, S. C., this week.
cllmon WadaarThabst, JackFOW·
lor, Jack Juniper, Reid Doollt.
Ue, Jim Wiggins, Lorain WUoox.,, Jim Fllhor, Don Waldie, Bill
Wallmao, and Wallace Smith.

BARBECUE PLANNED
~ - The Lldlea A..U.
lu7 ollbo Maltlll Vol-Fln
llopartmtnt II tliiOIIICirilll a
. chi- barbeeuo oo Soturdo.J,
July 13, at CIIJ HaiL
Residents are lnYited 1o p1aa ·
to eat out lor h.U IDd booll
the Fin ~ s.nt.ra
WW be all day -.a at 10
a.m.
Ol!01t Bumaa FOIIII
A 1100,0011-year-old hum an
fossil s k u II, discovered In
Tanganyika by Brltlah antbropologlsts, is said to be the
oldest human foosll yet found.

.

Mishap is Noted

lle, RD

Clllford, both qf HarriiOIIVIIIe .,.,,,,

ily propped for mare

grandchildren.

and sand on the beach,
taday's giri'!upper) ~uses
rellectively in the shade.

from glare, 5he won'.t mor

7 to 9 . and
lines or tired eyes at the. ol services.

end of the day. Fashion·
able styling, teamed with
real protection (lower),
provide a health .and
beauty treotment that
can be applied in o mat·
ter of secorid..
.
FYI ; lt11tllttn ..._. Howl tre aey.

and Rudy Allan &amp;ewart, 18, San-

dusl\y, $18.70 bond, illegal exhaust.

""' ,.., londl I 'f"~·

USW, Pre,.. Will
Meet Thi• Evening

news blackout surrounding steel
contracL negotiations when the
United steelworkers union (U:;W)
will meet the press.

ence aner a meeting of the negotiating advisory committee
which is comprised of union representatives from the 11 maJor
steel producers, district direct..
ors and stiff personneL The committee meeting was scheduled Cor
B p. m.

MASON

'

SotUrdaf •until
·

~

'

''

'

. r'

•

;

•

" •

':'

11-12-13

~;t

t:.=r...: ..........
light

Reserved
to
Limit

QuantitieS

H1- c~;;:____________3~ &amp;9e

.
t
69~
Sh
_ or en•ng.?!.:::==-='-· "
~'lgs!i!,.l!Lm blers..!.69e
Cream Sandwiches3~1
··N·esca fe.·-------------~"•1 •19
zola Oi I__________!-:63C
e

,.\ r

~.,.

t''

,1

-frH l'lrklna

..

,

·,~Y':·

Store)
1.11n TILL

9, SATURDAY Till
~,
•

Inlaid Li

Sunshine HI- Ho Cricktrs
Vanilla Wafers
12 oz. pack11n

'

St. Anthony is U1e patron
samt of ltal,v.

... .

INSTANTCOFFEE

ICE MlLK·

fullnlll (0.

SNOW DRIPT

160UNCI

·Low C~tl•rlt
..

L W. Abel, usw president,

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

Tbur!lday

selection.

SWEET

Hunt's Peaches 3-:;~1.00
Hunt's Tomatoes..:~.29C

hlry Fresh

has scheduled a news confer..

PO.OO ....··••••

an

"A simple little band of gold;··
or any stvht' wedding' .ring is
:,·· ,
made by famous t&lt;eepsake. '
1
Stop in and ; see a:ur Jine1 ' r ••

Pdces
EfhctlYI
JULY

~=~

PITTSBURGII (UPO - Some
1ight will be shed tonight on a

$'299

the lllaerol home

her beauty with squint rrom 8 to 9, Frltlal 2·to 4 arid

Racine, $18.75 bond, speeding,

3 ROOMS
New Fur.nlture

Fllnoral aervlcea wiD be held

SaturtfoJ at 2 p.m. til the lltw-

glare. Because they ore Jtnga-Coats Funeral Home with
reo! sunglasses with. the Rev. 0. H. Cari olllclatlng.
lenses that do protect Burial will · bt In Gravil lUll
c.m.tery. Frtond• Jlulf ~~ o1 ·

ltartlord, $25 hond, speeding;
Paul Eugene Black, 21, Rt. 2,

bulance,

OC·

tion against sun ond

I, Gallipolis, $30 bond, intoxIcation; George W. Turnbull, 53,

talks today in an effort to halt as the result of an accident
the Tuesda.)· strike by 250 mem- Tuesda,y night on TOMlShlp Road
bers of the union.
141, 1.3 miles northeast of State
The workers went on strike Route 143.
over alleged Pill' discrepancies.
The department or 1&gt;11orlf! Rob·
The union claimed workers ert Hartenbach said the eastwere elevated to better post- bound car on Road 141 driven
tloos but were not given better by 1&gt;11oUa R. Whaley, 24, went
JII,Y.
out o! control tn loose gravel,
went to the lett of lhe roud and
Rufus King was the last into a ditch. The driver was tak.American minister to the en to Holzer Hospital by am-

Her sunglasses ore read-

and Lewis, Brunlwlck, Ga.; 11!0
b~s, ~,troy Ba.rtrum, RD '
I'Omoro)' and Carl Bartnun, RD
MkldiO[lOri; tour alstaro, Mri.'
Leonar~ (Martha) GUmore, RD
MkldiO[)Ort; Mra. VirSIDla McDaniel, RD Middleport; Mrl. ut]y Gokey, Senclii!Q- and Mr!· VIola EdWards, Pllmeroy, aild 18

After hours of sun, wind

feiting bonds were Alfred C.
Mkins, 55, Middleport, $30 bond,
intoxication; Cecil Hawley, Rt.

TALKS SCHEDULED
Light damages were incurred
WARREN, Ohio (UPD - Officials of lhe Copperweld Steel to a car and its driver was
Co. alii United Steel Workers taken to Holzer HospltaJ f o r
Local 4243 are scheduled to hold treatment of head lacerations

-

ton,

Ught

"·

.

Zoning Change OK'd · New Haven·! Mason .Area' ·
. . ·f

'

Judgement

Mason Count)(

r

July 14 Reception

garnet

Five Forfeit Bonds

·.

'

SYRACUSE WINS

River Gauges

OilY

early

In Pee WeeactlonTuesdlyev&amp;o
ning at the Syracuse ball park,

Protect Eyes From Sun's Glare

chasing their reserve seat tick- There will be five home
ets for the 1968 Mnrauder Foot- during the 1968 season with the
ball season in advance of other entire schedule as follows:
sales.
Sept 6- Wallama (AW'I)I)
Charles Chancey, head coach Sept. 13 - l't. Pleasant (Home)
GAUGES - Gallipolis, ll.9 and athletic director, armounc- Sept. 20 - Nelsonville (Awa,y)
and 12.6 runnill£ 4:.5 feet of rol.. ed ~·last year's season tick- Sept. 27 - Athens (Home)
lers; PL Pleasant, 23.40; Pom- et-hOlders will be given priority Oct. 4 - Gallipolls (Home)
eroy..Mason, 20.20; Hinton, 0.80 over other sales by allowing Oct. ll - Logan (Aw'l)l)
stat.i Kanawha Falls, 2.90 rising; them purchase of reserve ell- Oct. 18 - Wellston (Home)
Charleston, 17.80 falling. Lon- cats two weeks before tickets Oct 25 - Ironton (Away)
. don, Marmet, Winfield, are on go on sale to the general public.
Nov. 1 - Jackson {Home)
lhe sill.
Those who had reserve seats Nov. 8 - Parkersburg Sooth
last year may pJ.rchase their
(AW'I)I)
1968 season tickets from July
BOMB EXPLODES
NEW YORK (UPD - A bomb 15 to August 1 at the oatce of
exploded near the Cuban Mis- Mr. James Diehl at the MiddleFive bonds were forretted and
aion to the United Nations in mid- port !Ugh School.
one fine was levied In Middle. town Manhattan early today ond
Season tickets that are not port Mayor c. 0. Fisher's court
shattered windows in six sur·
TUesday evening.
row:dlng buildings including the
Lue D. Garnes, 20, Rt. 1,
Damage in
Yugosll.,· Mission. No injuries
Dexter, was fined $10 and costs
were reported.
on charges of speeding_ For-

Papal States. in the l869s.

.$112,049

Tut(.$d~~;
J'

pika\ blasted a 'MIG 4f~m tho
.skies tiltor l{orth Vlelnam
'fUe!lday cklrlng saturation· raids
· ap~n\11 Coll!ll)unlf\ ~ lliJea
. 10 ' llle Dem!lltartz.ed Z~
(DM?). In sal&amp;lill1 lioY.omtnent
·omcllla warnOcl ot an ~ndROd ·oiiAok · ..igalnst the

'

his palal·e the (·abinet led by Premier Georges Pompidoo. The experts said the ministers woold emerge with Maurice COtJ\'e deMurvi1le as premier.
Politicians, new:spapers and govermnent observers said De two hospitals reported that 250
Gaulle is angr)' with Pompidou or is putling him from political in- persons were brought in, most
fighting to groom him as his successor. The experts were not sure. of them terrified howling children. The hospitals said they
LONDO!':, 01110 - STATE PRl"'~ oO'irials believe their prob- treated 78 persons, 23 of whom
lems are solved at the medium security London Correctionallnsti· were admitted,
tution north of here following the transfer Tuesday of 8.5 "ring
REVIEWS .\CTIVITIES
leaders."
Don Hunnell, new commander,
The 1,500 irunates at the prison retlll'ned to ncar normal ro~..t­
reviewed
committee activities in
tines late Tuesda~ as more lhan 250 Ohio National Guardsmen and
Americanism,
child welfare and
30 State Highway Patrolmen prepared to leave after bei~ sem to the
the county fair police delell when
prison shortly after midnight MuOOay.
the executive committee of Drew
SACREMF.STO, CALIF. - A SECHET Service agent drove off Websler Post 39, American Letwo youths carrying Molotov cocktails with one gunshot Tuesday gion, met. The plamed builclin6
night as the~ stalked LC&gt; the driveway of Gov. Ronald Reagan's home. program was disr.ussed and offiThe )OU!lg men tossed the firebombs &amp;WillY as they Oed. !\either cials of the Po&amp;1 are OOping to
of the gasoline-m.led bottles ignited as they shattered on the ground. receive bids on the new planned home thi.s summer.

····,I

~,\JGON (IJPIJ-A 'Navy Jot . "l.!hatthil~l'IIICOI!lO (

THE Communist world's

PRESIDE.t•.JT CIIABLES de Gaulle tOOay summoned to

I'

')

Support grew. meanwhile, for provisions can·ying stiff prison
The acrobats never went on.
Tho wind ended the show In a
termg for gun-carrying rrimina.ls.
The House Hules Commillee approved 10 to 5 Tuesday the ad- grand finale of terror.
A mlghcy gu sl lifted the huge
ministration bill to bar most interstate shipments of ri[les and
shotguns excq&gt;t between dealers, and to restrkt store purchase to canvas and 1he aluminum tent
poles toppled like matchsticks.
state residents 18 or older.

PARL.'i -

i :

Navy ·pPot

' .

that the sherilf 100 1WS aW'I)I
could not ll4ie lho .;!reus ten~
The wind whipped olf owasco
Lake, one ot the F~r Lakes,
WA.~HINGTON
A Mi\JOR barrier behind ihem, strategists In l\llsiS up to tc !'Illes an hoor
tor a bill to ban interstate gun sales set their sights tcxllll' on House Tuesday night. Ughtrllng nosh·
ed aod thunder boomed.
passage by the weekelll.
"

BRATl~LA\ A, CZEOIOSLAV AKIA -

'I

'~ ~IG Shot D,o~~-~y·t

AUBIJRN-, N, Y, - , Tlie cJr.
u1'hc sqbjeL·ts that junior high and high school boys and girls cua· eli!J!!aants rumbled out or
are fo.rcOO to take is ove~:; balanced with college preparatory sub- the tll)olllgtit to applause arid the
acrabatl . waited to dazzle Ute
jeds," Uhodes said.
.. This is wrong for only 50 per rent of the boys and girls go on audience 4¥ith h~rolcs on the
to College and only l4 per cent are graduated from a four yen trapeze anehored high Ill lhe
blg top.
college course," he-added.
"Schooling at the junior and higtl srhool level shoold cuarantoe that )'Dllf18 people can grac:hate with a diploma in one han:l
and a job in .the other," Rhodes told the ClevelaOO Junior Chamber of Commerce.

'

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3

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' •I •

I

·~:~;~' :ntlncl, !liddl&lt;l"'··•~;·;:;~~:~~;::::~;~;:::~~i:::;::~;;,.,: =: : : :: : : :;:;=;= :;;?fi:':: 'i;:};:: ;}i'i?iii::::::::; :;::: ;Ni;: ~·' .
·'·

News..• in Briefs

(Continued Cram I'IQ;O I)
&lt;ies wea·e adopted w~h re&lt;om·
, merdcd modlrit•atloosciet"idcd"""
on 1\tesda.y night.

•

The board employed Jeanne
Tl.)·tor as an English "teacher.
The bid of the Ohio Vallel Blklre

Co.

rru·

bakel'J proclutts was •~
won the contract for providing tires for ve-

cepled and Uizer Oil

hides used in the district The
Texaco Co. 1vas awartll&gt;d the co.
tract for gasoline, oil and andfreeze. An increase in the salary
allowam·e for wrestling, from

$300 to $400, was given.
George Hargra\es, superintendent, reported on the building
projects in the di strkt. The basic
grading has been completed for
the new high school and footers

are now being dug. At the Rutland elemenLa•'Y school, a mud-.
jacking proc£'sS was scheduled
to begin toda). Work on a ceiling
at the salisburJ school has not

!

begun.
Morrison reported on the summer improvement program being
carried out in the buildings and
grounds of the district Plans
were made for the board to inspect facilities before the openiJlt
&gt;f school nelct fall.
The board ret•iewed its plans
or the sale of the Bedford School
·n Route 33 at a publil' auctiOlL
The building and three and onehalf acres of grouOO will be sold
at 8 p, m. on .&gt;\ug. 1. Porter will
serve as auctioneer.
After a di seussion, the board
passed a resolution indicating
that it wishes to learn more
about a proposed joint vocational
school for Gallia, Meigs, Jackson and Vinton counties. Hargraves will attend a meeting on
the proposal to be held tonight
in Rio Grande.
It was agreed to acknowledge
receipt of the approval or the
sewage disposal system plans for
the new high school from the
state Department of Health with
~ental n conditions imposed. /Wproval was given Sullivan, Isaacs
and Sullivan, the architectural
firm on the new high school, to
increase the size of a culvert
needed for a parking area. The

additional cost will be $420 to be
paid out of the building contingency fund.
Others attending were Virgil
kill:, president, Mrs. E. 0. Rail,
Don Mullen and Hiram Slawter,
board members, and Clerk, L.
W. McComas.

GOV. JAMES A. RIIODES said today Ohio's
QrQI:('h to education hi outmoded, outdated and antiquated.
CLEVELAND -

Circus.
~' ·~

'f

·'

'

.

sct&gt;res 1111r1
'

. tns

&lt;apitaJ. ·
·,
A •u.S. lll"J~ , api!kesm10
,lllld a Comnlunlai Ioree opOO
men tried to prol!e ll"!I!Oil''

Outside, the raJa,was 10 heavy·

oirter detenato

With the poles gone, the canvas
nuttered down and envelope(! 1,·
first heart transplant patient died Tuesday night on!}· five hours aft- 400 or the 2,000 performers and
spectators, who screamed in horer the q&gt;eratlon, Radio Czech said loday.
Mrs. Helena Horvatho\'&amp;, a 49~year-old widow with no family. ror. S1x -loandred were I!J)Ored
was the 20th of the world's 25 heart recipients to die. No cause of the ordeal - 300 sitting in a
part or the tent that did not col.
death 1Was given.

ONE LESS enemy to worry abollt 11 South Vletaameoe
aoldlen ftush a VIet Coag out of hll weU..,oaeealed bldloc
place. fnftltrators o!tea Opt froin boloo due Ia baek yardo,
under trash piles and ln graveyarda.

lapac and 300 sitting where the
wind
whipped the tent awa.y
from them.
Children Injured
No one was killed. Auburn's

Racine Social Events
Mrs. George, !ialrley and David
and Juno Nelgler, and friend,
Phlt Miller and brother, Carl
Miller of Columbus, and Mr.
and Mrs. Titus Pickens of &amp;Yra-

cuso ei\IOYed a plcnlc at Royal
oak Pari&lt; ~ afternoon.
Weekend guesls o( Mr. arA
Mrs. AI Crow were Mr. Md
Mrs. George Graham and son

DoMtd o! Columbia, S. C.
Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Morris
of Bedford called ~ alter·
noon on Mt. and Mrs. Francis

mE \VAl' TO BEAUT\'

Announce Advance Sale of Grid
Tickets to Begin on July 15
Meigs Marauder Football fans, sold during this time will go
who had season tickets for last on sale to the general public
y~ar's home games, are golng to August I through Sept. l.
be given the opportunity or pur Season tickets are S7.2S eath.

Morris and Mr. and Mrs. Cllf·
Cord Morrls.

Mr. and Mrs. Paul !Uiidore
and !aml]y ot Anchoraao, Alas·
ka, who are • l~ting his parents,
Mr. and Mra. T. G. muttore til
~racuac, called on Mr. and Mrs.
Francis Morris Monday.

tod8l' but

- • turned · bad&lt; · ID a til!arJ&gt;
action. barol.Y live J11Deo weilt of
the Chlri"e · aecl\00 ot Cholon.
Halt a dozen minor aldrmtlhe•
w8re reported elsewhere around
Saigon.
..
'·•
As the VIet Coni lnlllliati&lt;m
of lbo saigon area IDcreaaed
ahatp]y, Ll. Gen. N~en Von
Minh, South Vletnameac eommanclor of the capital district,
predl~
a new Communist
asaault on the cit;y Jul,y 20, the
14th amiYeraary ot the Ge"""a
accords divldln8 Vl~.
Informed U.S. mllllu7 sour••• aald they had oo ·reason to
dolj)t thO posolbUl\1' ot another
Communill attack on 'satgon,
but they '""'ld not predict the
date or 1111 where tile thrust
might start.
Tlie !lghUng around Solson
wao reported ll,y Allied troops
pre80lng anii-Vlet Coni patrols.
Pres!- Nguyen Van Tblw
told a news oonterenco aboard
the U.S. Navy olreraft carrier
Constaliatlon loda,y he boliOI'OS
North VIetnam wlll not· bqln
formal pt~~ce talks willl Com~1\UJ~lsl !Drees aeored a major
vletory.

soon " Thlou said ·. o! the
eJ&lt;I)Oded posh. "We ,aiiJ walling
lor tho ·next olfenSive. and I
~ . Ill• ,11ex1 ~enal~e will :. ·
shorten . the war. II' 'nily blO
their .iasl."
.'
·Tile ' llepped •li lllftltrallon
Info tho Saigon area ootncltled
with' the heaYy U.S. rllds
igalnsl North VIetnam and a
dltermlried ottenslve I&gt;Y· Amerl· &gt;
can ·llllrines aplnl!l: CoDU11111llt '
ioreea .Just below lh• Demlllta·
rized Zone.
.
There w.,.. · i36 mlsalons
Tuesda!i ap.lnl!l: Communist
supply routea.
.,

N. S. White,
Former Meigs
Resident, Dies
s.

White, ~o. ot Akron,
a former Ml(kl-' realclent,
died Tuesday morning In I h e
Akron Clfl Hospital,
He lo ourvl•ed by hlo wile,
N.

Nell, a son, Robert, of Barberloll; two daughters, Mrs. ROber.

Ia Wyent and Mrs.

Bett.v Mc-

Clary, boi1a ot Akron; lhreo litters, Mrs. Beulah White of MlddlO[lOrt and Mrs. Florence Hannay and Mrs. Myrtle Watldno,
both ot Akron; and • bfOI!aer,
Charles White ot Mlddlllporl,
Funeral eervtcea wtll ,. hel~
ot I p.m:. Frldo.Y at thelloPdno
·F uneral Home,' Conlon Road, Ill
Akroa. Burial olll be Ill Akr&lt;ll.
Friends may cail at the rufteral
home.

Mrs. Whittington

Syracuso defeated lhe Mots 18
to 6.. On
moond for Syracuse

Dies Wednesday

the

was David BISs. Mark Forbes
was the blg sUck for Syr1cuae,
collect!~

4 hits.

Mrs. Doroth)' Whl~. 57,
Rl. 2, CheoldrJ, died Oat]y Wed-

.

'

.

MASoN - The RO\'erend and
Mro. Charlo• Pai'rllh, Mallon,
wtU be ,_ed at a reception
... Quldoy, July 14, from z to
4 p.m. In llle IOdal room olllle
Pr. · PLEASANT - Six d~- EYadpllcal United MAlthodllll
U actfGiol wore Wed rt&lt;ODII,y CIMlrch. RO\'. Pai'rlob llltteeds
In the olllce ot the Circuli Clerk. · the Rrierood Leater Lane and
Judgment of $112,049 lo be- boPD -cling aervlcooln May
!ng IIJUihl by the plalntilf ill lithe Cllurch•.
an action 1!\Yied Barbero Am
RO\'. and Mrs. Parrilli are the
Brown, admrx. or estaiAo ot Clar- 1 pareltl of oae son, Ji)JgeDO. He
once A. Dean' n. Thomas· Rog. , woo tormerly paatur of thel!ed
or Parker of Chrlatlod&gt;urg, Va., Hiu Clllrch ill Parkersburg, W.
and Jolm Lawson, Jr., Stuart, va. and has been a minister lor

.News Notes Is Sought
By Alma Manhali

Peraona ll'tin every nctiOii ot thl1 C&lt;lUDti-y visited the Craft
~r II Cedar ~. In ftlllejl{ W, VL · cluriiiR the live day perIod otartlng on Jul.Y 3. At lhe close or the to1r ~ eveDirw,
35,920 admlsslona were totaled.
Sbace lhe starling · oC lhe llllt ln 1863, ID obaenanee of Weat
30 yeara.
VlrJJ[Dta's Conteontal, the talr has grown by laepa and boundL Va.
The
action
11
lbo
re811lt
of
Mmlsaloo on lhe Qrst day last year was 1,190 and atleDionoe
thla year wu 3,010. O..r 200 craftsmen exhthlted and dOJIIIlO. the hll!hwal ot Clarence
atralod the makiiV of varlouo articles. AD outstanding attroe- Deau Ill an acci- wblch ocP
tion was Mar1011 SOndaD or Pilgrim Glass who shaped charac- curred oo Rt. 17 In December
]ers are
1967.
tera ot molten ~sa.
Another action styled Aooa Lee
Mrs. Adelaide S. Umland, scmo]y had limo to eat - 10
Hoic. ng
Colllnl
and Salll Lou Steenber·
Beckie)', W. Vo. displayed ber didn't got 00 -rtunl~ to aco
.talent of moklng 10tnilthln&amp;·beau.· or hear lbo apodal ontertaln· gan · VI, Theodore R. Ste¥ena,
tiM Crom bottles. TheH bolt!•,• ment prciytded by Bll]y Edd Pl. Pleuant, shows .!he plalnNEW 11,\VEN - EYangellsl
were pot In a kiln melted Whooler and AWII Jenny WUson. tll!o dlmandlng Judl!monl against
Iner
and Emily Basalngor of
dth colored paso IDalde and I talked brtell1 to Bll!r Edd th.e doCondanl tn lbo llll&lt;lUIII ot
Parkersburg are .....,cling a
. D!olded ill the ahape of an alh w1ao otatid thll the ta1r was an ~.500.
Camp
Ground Cruaade at Union
A promlsiOQ' note Is I b e
troy. A good wa;y to. turn 10 an. enJyyable me to """k. I was
Camp
Ground
back ot New HaYen
.llque bottle tnto something UIC· told that Bll]y Edd Wheeler pye ...,rce of the action styled Great
from
JuJ.y
21
to Au&amp;ust 2. Rev.
Ad and taking up Ieos space. AWII Jenny Wl11011 10 -~~~e American ID"'ranee~va.
Other area craftamen partie!- · bllllo and that ahe wa1 over- Harold L, Porter IDd Vlstlla M. and Mro. Basalnger wore for.
Porter, Pl. Pleasant, with t h' e mercy with the BDiy Graham
paling """" Harl,.y Burna or POint whelmed by hla pneroolt;r.
Croaacle.
Pleaaanl, exhibiting atrlng sculpAunt Jlldll' told me aha taa• plalntll! dlmandlng Judgment ID
!lagers Cram all chUrches
lure; Otho and Holen Fllz Ran- playing the ba11fo lhlce abe the amount ot •1,116.22.
wanting
to sing In the choir are
The
Masoo
Coun17
Hospital,
' dolph, Pl&gt;lnt Pleaaanl, exhlbltlng . was nine years old, AliO an
IDe.
c1&gt;a
Pleasant
Valle)'
11osrecpealed
to practice on Setur.
woodcraft and carvlnga; Vernon -added attraction was a oometb'
cacJio, Leon, woodcarvings; Mrs. by Bollvor, Clltle and Ugl.y lrv- pltal to tho plalntilf ID two ac- -day, July 2o, at 7:30p.m. at Un·
Hazel Wright, Cottapvllle, wea•- lng. Another feature was the lions, both cor lnd&lt;iJtodness with lon Camp Ground. A 100 voice
lng; Walden and Loulae llouah, hammer dulclmor whlch was Sammie Colvin Sturgeon, Ash- cholr41 dOBlred.
PUint Pleaaanl, and ·Jo~ Mar- piaJed \&gt;YRusseliFiut!hart:r. Tbl1 too, the defendant In one -king · - - - - - - - - · lhall; New HaYen, pm a1U1e • lnatnunent Ia reported over 100 Judimenl ID the amount of •lf- Rt. 1 Letart, and Charles Zus289,6'/ and Erma Jane Zuapao,
jewelry.
Y..,l old.
pan, Rl. I Letart, the de!ondoats
Mam- watched com bolnl
Wtlb ~~ ...,r)'Wbere, 10100·
ID the other wttb judgment of
_..t Info meal oo
ttmeo you had to stand ill line to eoln Helgh!a was r~ 111 $539.42 being sooght Crom the
burr. 011 JuJ.y 4111, two lhouo- got aomothlng to eat.
Mr. and Mra. Pal Lochei'y, II• Zuapans.
and jiDUDds ot yellow 001'11 meal
Well, ..,oush aboulllle fair - noliced Mrs. Jame1 Dlebl, !'Om·
The alxth action Is • styled
....... aold at the fair. ~ !'01'11 good to aco ID1 tormer Pome- oro,y - Mrs. Donald Cook, WID- Sears, Hoebuck Co., vs. Freda
srown In ¥aaon Counl1, was re- lOl' nei&amp;N&gt;ors, Mr. """ Mra. tenvUle; - Mrs..Norman Foaa, t;pllng, l't. Pleaaant, with t h e
porledly the besl thai the work- Jowell Curtis' and .Ia Kom Pt. Pleaaanl; Mrs. Georp Jfll· plalnlllf asking Jud&amp;ment ID the
era had "'" sround.
thoro - Janet liked the fair - ell, New Havoo, and DIIIIIY other llll&lt;lUIII o1 $433.09 !rom the de.
During lhe live days at the bow wao 11 this year Janet? LIDtendiDI.
ana realdents.
~,__thlngs .,-• 10 bull.!',, I

Crusade

the--

.

nesdy momtns In Holzor Hos-.
pltal.
•
Mrs. Whltlln&amp;lon waabornJari~
uary 12, 19llal Mai~I!Yfllo,'\(1:,
the daul!ller of llie late Will\~
and Laura GooCimoia llartrim.
. Sbe la aurvlved by her h u ~­
band,

'

Set for Parrishes

PI'. PLEASANT- Clfl Coun- ed and ~ tor 'lemla activdl metlnrO(IU!arsesslonMonday l\1'.
Jdihl at the dt;r building with Counctl voted to drop • l ly
two )lllbllc 1aear1np held ID eon- memberllhlp In the Wool Vlr!llaJunction

wiJh

the 1oasloo, but Ia

Leacue ot !dunidpalltles

duo

.., one aj&gt;peared tn conneetion *&gt; the !Jicreaso In duel O¥er
wllb either matter.
thOo past three yean. Thto ....,,
The !lrst hearing concerned (or 19118-69 fear were •173.55
tho abacdooment o1 20th street In oomparlam with
olios
_ . . . Madlaon Avenue and lllrce year a 080 and the CCIUlcti
Kanawha - which has not and lbo mayor did "'\~ teol thai
uaed tor JJI8IIY years - and COUll· lbo ett.Y was getting OIIIIUih out
ell voted to IIJ)PfOVe llle aban- of lt to warrant the
cost.
donment as asked cor by John
The proposed Recriollonal •
CotUna, Pl. Pleasant business- Cultural Conler was liP tllacusiod and the COIIIIcti voted to
man.
The second hearing was on a ask lor an oxtenolon ot lime
recommendation ot tbe Clcy on lhe Bjl[lllcation If necosaary
Plamlng Commission to allow lor the purpose ol seleetlng a
protesalonal ofllces ln buildings site lor the Center.
without a residence occupancy tn
Ma,yor Morgan appointed coun-

•so

hJib

all residential R2 zoning which
!Jicludos Walnut street, Decatur
Street, the area from tbe r.U,.
r&lt;&gt;ac1 brtdge to Ulh Slroet and
part ol North MaiD Crom Camden Aveme to lhe Marietta MaJ&gt;.
ufacturlng Co. The z o n i n g
change was approved by council

ell members JlmFlaherandJack
Fowler to meet with representa.
lives ot lhe Maaon Counl1 JD.
surance Agency to discuso au In"'""'•• policy of the etcy now olio
before premium Ia paid to make
sure the policy covers all nee~
essary lte~s.

The actlvlcy report of the cltiY
MeiJI Street paving was again pollee department Cor tbe 111011tb
brooght before coundl by May- ol .lane was read by coonctiman
or D. B. Morgan with a llot ot Doo Waldie ao submlttodbyChle!
as no protests were made.

the varlou:~ ,Property owners con- of Police Jack Pyles. The re..

corned given ln blocks to ooun- pori showed the patrolmen workell members to be oonta&lt;ied lor ed a total or 940 hours - In·
agreement ot paving wlthoui!J&gt;- veatlgated 14 accldonts and ar-

ing to due legal proeess or as- rested seven drivers involved sessment to force the paving made 13 road law arrests ~

which would Increase the pav1ng costs considerably. The Mayor cited estimated cosls ot pav.
log by agreementotpropert;v own·
ere which were: MaiD street
$2 13
toot· 6th street
:: $1.'87; ::- str..;t - $1.83;
lOth Street •• $1.55 and lllh
Sir t $2 62 The COIDICII momber~ wer~ ~sked to report back
tD lhe Mayor withtn Ule next
10 days.
Mayor Morgan announced to
council thai the temla oour1 ID
Hirmon field was now oomplet-

30 other mledemeanor arreots;
three felony arrests - lnued
387 parking tickets And 15 un.
lswiW parking llckels - reeov.
ered lllolon PfOi&gt;ercy- a lady's
wrlot watch - valued st $100.
The financial report of the
lilree clfl departments wasgl•en
ahowing the lollowlng balances
on June 30, 1968 - Clt.Y, ~3,­
086.64; Water Works, $38,t8tJ .•
~I; Sewer Fund, $19,194.30.
Present were M'l)lor Morgan,
Clt;y Clerk Pa1t:r Burdette, Clt.Y
Attorney Roy Musgrave and oouo-

.

.,

.Soeial Evenf8' NewS, Notes
· Mra. Addle Ohllrwer has returned to bar home .alter bolrw
apltienlat Piea- Vall~ Hospltll aulferlng ll'tin a broken
b4a recehed In 1 1111 at her home
on 6th street.
Dr. and Mra. Tom R. Vance
and children, Bullon, Jelf and
Debonl1 olsall P • NawYork,
vlalted with hll parents, Mr.
, and MrL
R. Vaace OYOr the
weekend.
Mr. and MrL Jolm ~ of
OWensboro, II)'., Ylallod during
. the weekend with hlt parenll,
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Layne.
Mrs. Roland Karr of Owensboro, II)'., Is vlaltlng here with
her parenll, Mr. and MrL ot:fAJ
Grimm. Her chUdren, Debro and
lllano ha•e been here vlaltlqr
!heir JiHDI)Jllrents lor several
weekL Mr. Karr wUI Join his
!amll,y to visit oYer the holiday
weekend. Tliey wiD return to
!heir heine on Sunday.
Mrs. Eugene Hart ls a patient
at Veterans Memorial Hospital
In P001eroy.
Karen Greene, daughter o!Mr.
and Mrs. R. G. Greene, Is taking
a 1\vo-wook orleiUUon at Und-

a

. ~.
...., Ill lfrl. ~
il1aft 11!14 lllio 1¥111 111'111· •I
!bMJat .V. Mr. and llrj. Wll·
Uam Slrlla* and - . ~ ot·
D~

~ Jet., N.

aa

J., Mr• .1\1111!1•

111111 of Uma, Oblo, aolii ,.._

maa

11yu, Jr~ Ill

alo ~.

"""llr.

JackltiiYillo,l'la.,
IDol
Mra. l!tlwOr&lt;l 111111 1114 fullll.
The !leY. Morftlle Wldl.o of
the 91. I'IUl KoebOdlll ai.rdl,
Polnl Plea- IIIII - - llhlp oontcnlt lllo Ualt.
ed Mltbodlll Qmch Sandq,
wldle llle !leY. ~~ ~
and famlb' an oo ncatiGa.
Mrl, R. C. King, lleaderiCIII,
relunled trom lliJI'trll ....,..
villi willa her ,.,.,... and f.m.
l]y, Mra. I'IUl 'BaU!II' it Sui
A-., TODL Sbo wu • .....,.
panled home 111 bar ..., Niclo'
lltatloned In the AF bi ~
Vlalting Mn. lllq IDd NldQ&lt;
and weloomlng them hOmo wen
Mrs. catherine -.eJIDd Norman; Mr. IDd Mrl. Al¥a Luckeydoo, Mrl. ~ La.......
Mr. and Mro. Curoll SbliD and
famlb'; Mr. and Mra. Tbomu
iAp&gt;rt, HendoriCIII, W, Vo.

sey WUson JllRior College at

Columbia, II)'. She will enroll
lor the fall bonn as a freshman
at Lindsey WUaoo.
Mrs. Chesbor Curry Is a Illtient at Pleaaant Valley Hospital
in Point Pleaaant.
Mrs. R. G. Greene visited rei&amp;tives in Louisville, Ky., over the
weekend.
Mr. and !drs. Charles Smith
and famUy are vacationing at
Myrtle Beach, S. C., this week.
cllmon WadaarThabst, JackFOW·
lor, Jack Juniper, Reid Doollt.
Ue, Jim Wiggins, Lorain WUoox.,, Jim Fllhor, Don Waldie, Bill
Wallmao, and Wallace Smith.

BARBECUE PLANNED
~ - The Lldlea A..U.
lu7 ollbo Maltlll Vol-Fln
llopartmtnt II tliiOIIICirilll a
. chi- barbeeuo oo Soturdo.J,
July 13, at CIIJ HaiL
Residents are lnYited 1o p1aa ·
to eat out lor h.U IDd booll
the Fin ~ s.nt.ra
WW be all day -.a at 10
a.m.
Ol!01t Bumaa FOIIII
A 1100,0011-year-old hum an
fossil s k u II, discovered In
Tanganyika by Brltlah antbropologlsts, is said to be the
oldest human foosll yet found.

.

Mishap is Noted

lle, RD

Clllford, both qf HarriiOIIVIIIe .,.,,,,

ily propped for mare

grandchildren.

and sand on the beach,
taday's giri'!upper) ~uses
rellectively in the shade.

from glare, 5he won'.t mor

7 to 9 . and
lines or tired eyes at the. ol services.

end of the day. Fashion·
able styling, teamed with
real protection (lower),
provide a health .and
beauty treotment that
can be applied in o mat·
ter of secorid..
.
FYI ; lt11tllttn ..._. Howl tre aey.

and Rudy Allan &amp;ewart, 18, San-

dusl\y, $18.70 bond, illegal exhaust.

""' ,.., londl I 'f"~·

USW, Pre,.. Will
Meet Thi• Evening

news blackout surrounding steel
contracL negotiations when the
United steelworkers union (U:;W)
will meet the press.

ence aner a meeting of the negotiating advisory committee
which is comprised of union representatives from the 11 maJor
steel producers, district direct..
ors and stiff personneL The committee meeting was scheduled Cor
B p. m.

MASON

'

SotUrdaf •until
·

~

'

''

'

. r'

•

;

•

" •

':'

11-12-13

~;t

t:.=r...: ..........
light

Reserved
to
Limit

QuantitieS

H1- c~;;:____________3~ &amp;9e

.
t
69~
Sh
_ or en•ng.?!.:::==-='-· "
~'lgs!i!,.l!Lm blers..!.69e
Cream Sandwiches3~1
··N·esca fe.·-------------~"•1 •19
zola Oi I__________!-:63C
e

,.\ r

~.,.

t''

,1

-frH l'lrklna

..

,

·,~Y':·

Store)
1.11n TILL

9, SATURDAY Till
~,
•

Inlaid Li

Sunshine HI- Ho Cricktrs
Vanilla Wafers
12 oz. pack11n

'

St. Anthony is U1e patron
samt of ltal,v.

... .

INSTANTCOFFEE

ICE MlLK·

fullnlll (0.

SNOW DRIPT

160UNCI

·Low C~tl•rlt
..

L W. Abel, usw president,

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

Tbur!lday

selection.

SWEET

Hunt's Peaches 3-:;~1.00
Hunt's Tomatoes..:~.29C

hlry Fresh

has scheduled a news confer..

PO.OO ....··••••

an

"A simple little band of gold;··
or any stvht' wedding' .ring is
:,·· ,
made by famous t&lt;eepsake. '
1
Stop in and ; see a:ur Jine1 ' r ••

Pdces
EfhctlYI
JULY

~=~

PITTSBURGII (UPO - Some
1ight will be shed tonight on a

$'299

the lllaerol home

her beauty with squint rrom 8 to 9, Frltlal 2·to 4 arid

Racine, $18.75 bond, speeding,

3 ROOMS
New Fur.nlture

Fllnoral aervlcea wiD be held

SaturtfoJ at 2 p.m. til the lltw-

glare. Because they ore Jtnga-Coats Funeral Home with
reo! sunglasses with. the Rev. 0. H. Cari olllclatlng.
lenses that do protect Burial will · bt In Gravil lUll
c.m.tery. Frtond• Jlulf ~~ o1 ·

ltartlord, $25 hond, speeding;
Paul Eugene Black, 21, Rt. 2,

bulance,

OC·

tion against sun ond

I, Gallipolis, $30 bond, intoxIcation; George W. Turnbull, 53,

talks today in an effort to halt as the result of an accident
the Tuesda.)· strike by 250 mem- Tuesda,y night on TOMlShlp Road
bers of the union.
141, 1.3 miles northeast of State
The workers went on strike Route 143.
over alleged Pill' discrepancies.
The department or 1&gt;11orlf! Rob·
The union claimed workers ert Hartenbach said the eastwere elevated to better post- bound car on Road 141 driven
tloos but were not given better by 1&gt;11oUa R. Whaley, 24, went
JII,Y.
out o! control tn loose gravel,
went to the lett of lhe roud and
Rufus King was the last into a ditch. The driver was tak.American minister to the en to Holzer Hospital by am-

Her sunglasses ore read-

and Lewis, Brunlwlck, Ga.; 11!0
b~s, ~,troy Ba.rtrum, RD '
I'Omoro)' and Carl Bartnun, RD
MkldiO[lOri; tour alstaro, Mri.'
Leonar~ (Martha) GUmore, RD
MkldiO[)Ort; Mra. VirSIDla McDaniel, RD Middleport; Mrl. ut]y Gokey, Senclii!Q- and Mr!· VIola EdWards, Pllmeroy, aild 18

After hours of sun, wind

feiting bonds were Alfred C.
Mkins, 55, Middleport, $30 bond,
intoxication; Cecil Hawley, Rt.

TALKS SCHEDULED
Light damages were incurred
WARREN, Ohio (UPD - Officials of lhe Copperweld Steel to a car and its driver was
Co. alii United Steel Workers taken to Holzer HospltaJ f o r
Local 4243 are scheduled to hold treatment of head lacerations

-

ton,

Ught

"·

.

Zoning Change OK'd · New Haven·! Mason .Area' ·
. . ·f

'

Judgement

Mason Count)(

r

July 14 Reception

garnet

Five Forfeit Bonds

·.

'

SYRACUSE WINS

River Gauges

OilY

early

In Pee WeeactlonTuesdlyev&amp;o
ning at the Syracuse ball park,

Protect Eyes From Sun's Glare

chasing their reserve seat tick- There will be five home
ets for the 1968 Mnrauder Foot- during the 1968 season with the
ball season in advance of other entire schedule as follows:
sales.
Sept 6- Wallama (AW'I)I)
Charles Chancey, head coach Sept. 13 - l't. Pleasant (Home)
GAUGES - Gallipolis, ll.9 and athletic director, armounc- Sept. 20 - Nelsonville (Awa,y)
and 12.6 runnill£ 4:.5 feet of rol.. ed ~·last year's season tick- Sept. 27 - Athens (Home)
lers; PL Pleasant, 23.40; Pom- et-hOlders will be given priority Oct. 4 - Gallipolls (Home)
eroy..Mason, 20.20; Hinton, 0.80 over other sales by allowing Oct. ll - Logan (Aw'l)l)
stat.i Kanawha Falls, 2.90 rising; them purchase of reserve ell- Oct. 18 - Wellston (Home)
Charleston, 17.80 falling. Lon- cats two weeks before tickets Oct 25 - Ironton (Away)
. don, Marmet, Winfield, are on go on sale to the general public.
Nov. 1 - Jackson {Home)
lhe sill.
Those who had reserve seats Nov. 8 - Parkersburg Sooth
last year may pJ.rchase their
(AW'I)I)
1968 season tickets from July
BOMB EXPLODES
NEW YORK (UPD - A bomb 15 to August 1 at the oatce of
exploded near the Cuban Mis- Mr. James Diehl at the MiddleFive bonds were forretted and
aion to the United Nations in mid- port !Ugh School.
one fine was levied In Middle. town Manhattan early today ond
Season tickets that are not port Mayor c. 0. Fisher's court
shattered windows in six sur·
TUesday evening.
row:dlng buildings including the
Lue D. Garnes, 20, Rt. 1,
Damage in
Yugosll.,· Mission. No injuries
Dexter, was fined $10 and costs
were reported.
on charges of speeding_ For-

Papal States. in the l869s.

.$112,049

Tut(.$d~~;
J'

pika\ blasted a 'MIG 4f~m tho
.skies tiltor l{orth Vlelnam
'fUe!lday cklrlng saturation· raids
· ap~n\11 Coll!ll)unlf\ ~ lliJea
. 10 ' llle Dem!lltartz.ed Z~
(DM?). In sal&amp;lill1 lioY.omtnent
·omcllla warnOcl ot an ~ndROd ·oiiAok · ..igalnst the

'

his palal·e the (·abinet led by Premier Georges Pompidoo. The experts said the ministers woold emerge with Maurice COtJ\'e deMurvi1le as premier.
Politicians, new:spapers and govermnent observers said De two hospitals reported that 250
Gaulle is angr)' with Pompidou or is putling him from political in- persons were brought in, most
fighting to groom him as his successor. The experts were not sure. of them terrified howling children. The hospitals said they
LONDO!':, 01110 - STATE PRl"'~ oO'irials believe their prob- treated 78 persons, 23 of whom
lems are solved at the medium security London Correctionallnsti· were admitted,
tution north of here following the transfer Tuesday of 8.5 "ring
REVIEWS .\CTIVITIES
leaders."
Don Hunnell, new commander,
The 1,500 irunates at the prison retlll'ned to ncar normal ro~..t­
reviewed
committee activities in
tines late Tuesda~ as more lhan 250 Ohio National Guardsmen and
Americanism,
child welfare and
30 State Highway Patrolmen prepared to leave after bei~ sem to the
the county fair police delell when
prison shortly after midnight MuOOay.
the executive committee of Drew
SACREMF.STO, CALIF. - A SECHET Service agent drove off Websler Post 39, American Letwo youths carrying Molotov cocktails with one gunshot Tuesday gion, met. The plamed builclin6
night as the~ stalked LC&gt; the driveway of Gov. Ronald Reagan's home. program was disr.ussed and offiThe )OU!lg men tossed the firebombs &amp;WillY as they Oed. !\either cials of the Po&amp;1 are OOping to
of the gasoline-m.led bottles ignited as they shattered on the ground. receive bids on the new planned home thi.s summer.

····,I

~,\JGON (IJPIJ-A 'Navy Jot . "l.!hatthil~l'IIICOI!lO (

THE Communist world's

PRESIDE.t•.JT CIIABLES de Gaulle tOOay summoned to

I'

')

Support grew. meanwhile, for provisions can·ying stiff prison
The acrobats never went on.
Tho wind ended the show In a
termg for gun-carrying rrimina.ls.
The House Hules Commillee approved 10 to 5 Tuesday the ad- grand finale of terror.
A mlghcy gu sl lifted the huge
ministration bill to bar most interstate shipments of ri[les and
shotguns excq&gt;t between dealers, and to restrkt store purchase to canvas and 1he aluminum tent
poles toppled like matchsticks.
state residents 18 or older.

PARL.'i -

i :

Navy ·pPot

' .

that the sherilf 100 1WS aW'I)I
could not ll4ie lho .;!reus ten~
The wind whipped olf owasco
Lake, one ot the F~r Lakes,
WA.~HINGTON
A Mi\JOR barrier behind ihem, strategists In l\llsiS up to tc !'Illes an hoor
tor a bill to ban interstate gun sales set their sights tcxllll' on House Tuesday night. Ughtrllng nosh·
ed aod thunder boomed.
passage by the weekelll.
"

BRATl~LA\ A, CZEOIOSLAV AKIA -

'I

'~ ~IG Shot D,o~~-~y·t

AUBIJRN-, N, Y, - , Tlie cJr.
u1'hc sqbjeL·ts that junior high and high school boys and girls cua· eli!J!!aants rumbled out or
are fo.rcOO to take is ove~:; balanced with college preparatory sub- the tll)olllgtit to applause arid the
acrabatl . waited to dazzle Ute
jeds," Uhodes said.
.. This is wrong for only 50 per rent of the boys and girls go on audience 4¥ith h~rolcs on the
to College and only l4 per cent are graduated from a four yen trapeze anehored high Ill lhe
blg top.
college course," he-added.
"Schooling at the junior and higtl srhool level shoold cuarantoe that )'Dllf18 people can grac:hate with a diploma in one han:l
and a job in .the other," Rhodes told the ClevelaOO Junior Chamber of Commerce.

'

'

3

�J:loll1

,Selalnel, MlddiOilOrt.-Puneroy, Jli!y 10, 1988

, .,.·" •

;~.'

).

. , ,

·

~ayrc iS

BUlACceptefl;

f;
, BY MAXINE WALTERS
Fr. I'\£MANT- TIJt MaiCXI
'Cc~u~Q -rd Ill Educlllon Ill •
lonl ....... -IIIJOUrftlai~ 1:10
.. lhi • m&lt;lll'l1i1lll - approved the bid
at tho Colwnllua Heating Com·
pany Ia lha amount ot $22,675
for 118 heating of the old Jr,
Hlgh School, !IIWinthoprotUI
of being renovated for Centrll
School this !aU.
The cllscuoslon on whether to
uae ps heat or eleotrlc bell and
hearing pro' a and em' a m tho
mstler from repreaontatlveo ot
both tn~ea ot beat consumed me
and me-llalf boursoftheionaoe~o
alon. The board memhera \Ued
lor tho pa boat on recommtllla·

PUll, ~ limo Latin toocher
PPllS; . Elizabelll ~. ~·
school; Elwood While, PPIIS oncl
Corol Ann Whlta, Pl. PlearJanl
Jr. Hlgh.
SUbstllllle toocbera hired were
Judith Corrtvaau, Leta FogleICXIB, Wilbur Planta, Cary Howard P.aybum, Ruaaell Crawfor&lt;l,
Larey I'IIU!Ipa, Mildred LucUlo
S!nllh, Geral Rupe, lllarian So1ro,
Home W. Waltara, Merrill A.
Blllce, Floyd Cole, Kathryn AIexaodor, Alvin Gore, Asa l!o1o
klrul, Lelah Jane Powell, Har103' Cloud, Marie Smith, Orpba
Oblinger, Ethel So1re, Goldie
Beattie, w, S. BUI~a. Carl Dab·
JIIIl', Lena Gibbs, Ruth F o I o y,
Sally IAu Clark, Jane RaUey,
LWian Perry, Luia Jividen, Norma Perry,JackWelcb,JeanB!ng-

Ill&amp; a bl&amp; 1hllllake - onlf lhree
Of, lha live · """""' bciord !I!''

pre• lor Ia- D!P!'• IJIIport!1111 H&gt;Woft 'llltli, .~1 Howard
~ Earl K-.fot ol&gt;111Mit.
.
£mpiO,yed aa ~-· for tbe
1968-69 acilool term laat nlsht
WII'O~amla Franld!a IV, Pl.
Pieqiut ' Jr. IIIah; Cl!'rle Harris, New !liven school; Pool E.
Ferrari, Wahama Jr. and Sr.
High~ Ordftallee

ICbOol - Grace

:MoDermltt, Mabel Bleaa!n&amp; Min-

nie lllcCirtlle)', l!orutby Lew! a,
Hittle Jordan; New Ha\len achool,
Mary Kell,r and Edith Forreat;
lila-. MUdred lllwlQ and Alioe
lioacb; ~aide, Katie Sines,
AUoe Rulon, WU!Iam H. Blaine,
Jr.;
lAlnl Jones, Roooevelt
t!on or erch!teet BUI Framplm.
ICbool;
1\ladp Byul, Central;
Bllpb So1re, who lor lhe pall
Jllr baa aerved the ..._Coun- Lawrence Sl.eele, WoodSi Leon

.

~·

Jlam;· W.lb&lt;!iii I'Uiill!.

11 -

The Daily Sentinel, Mlddleport-Pomeroy, July 10, 1968

PLAY
THE

""*"•

C I a r a or; and
AI.,. ·
Mot~JIO!', !ioqdouen l!eney,, ·New lll~en ..~ ,and
Kit Ileal, ·Fi'ancll It Sl,mma, Weaver, I,IIICXI. . , .

I!Ortil!··E~ 'I.Otue Banlolle,
H, E,

Tllie .}' .
l!of&lt;\lhf·

Berlatoilt, l;bal'les Fr:um,
·Wilfte, IAwell Keill1,

Norflll•

TO

mlelly~l' ,
, · ,
Olin al!l was tranllerrid l'rom

toocblni ,JIPncfpal ·at Beoch HOI
school 10 Rooaevelt ~hool and
Eatel tOw!I w11 empl9ied as
taaeblns 1'prln~ at Beech HOI
to replace Hlil. Mr•· :Marpret
Frlfttla wll named aWl! bade
.Wcatlm teaohor - psychiatric
training class hosiMlnll Jllll' 15
at the sal117 ot $4 P.r hour.
Tho bOOrd aocetited lhe reaiinatim otPatrlotaGresol'J', toocbor at Ordnanoe ilchl101; Jeaole
Ruth Hunler, toocher, Roosevelt
aobooi; Riobard W.er, ,teacb-

You can lie a ltl11 wlnnerl Win '500'200-'I00-•50-'I0-•5-'2-'1-or
...
Coprrftlot, Tho K-r Co., 1M
11M rltM ..
Hnolt 'l"lnlfliot.

w. _,..

Bacon .... __ .. 65c

· BIG BUYS

on

"Super-Right" Meats!

,,

.:fresh
I

Kwlck Krl. Slletd

USDA Choice
Tenderay

Thriftg Brand

Bacon -·---- •.

"

STAMPS

Round Steak

Bacon ____ :: $1.29

..

Pomeroy
Kroger
OPEN

FEDERAL FOOD

By The Piece
Bone In- Full Cut

-·-Sliced

'

·WE HONOR

- ' .... Sllctol

~ school

111- .. illperVIIIOl'
of Instruction and not rehired by
tho board In that capac!~. w a a
r0&lt;0111111ended by !qlt. llrGOko
to be plaoed as a weber
at Wahama Jr. and Sl'. Hlib
ochool for tbe 1968-61 school
tarm and after much cliiiCUulm

Top Value Stamp

SUNDAYS
10 A.M.

... approvedbytho-.d. Board

'

. . . - Ted Stevena auge&amp;tod
that Slllllh ..... ..~
Sayre lor 91pervl1101' of Jnatruot!on but Smith lllated the board
bad turaed clown bla reeommendstlon of this at a prevlnoa meeting oncl, therefore, be clld not
feat It proper tD do 10 apia.
member Dr. 1.-rd
Brolin moved tv accopt lho recommencll\tlon •• 1&gt;o1re I o r
taatl&gt;••r - and lor some time It
looked u tho motion - d clle
lor iaclc of a Moond. Stevena then
• aald ho - d -

tho

Kwlck Krlop III&lt;M

Bacon _. __ !:.

-~ l

'

t!m but felt the board ""' mak-

·•· .~

FRESH FRYER LEGS :~t':,g:s
FRESH FRYER BREASTS • • •

I.ague Members
•'

Special This Week!

Fr. PLEASANT - ~ ol&amp;hl Juoloi ·Patrolmen League
member a rocelved-qew uniform a
Ill a meot!ng of the Jll'(ql held
at the Cl~ buUcllnl with Kooneth lAVe presiding.
'l1lere ore openlnga In lha orpnizatlm lor bQyl .... 8·16
and llllllaro&amp;todtho)'OUthallhould
1111' ol~ potrolman.
The Jr. Patrolmeo have boon

-....

holcllnl ..,. ~· ..~•. 'Q; !;;,

dol beh!ad

'u.e ol~ buU

'"

t~.rtJ

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

,.,-. .•. l'tl

money lor the
· Hill and bad&amp;os are ordered

·

Quarters

I

SOUPS
·
._,.,
TAfa Wool!

.. 1'8ll \
'1.

'

~

'

'

.,.

:, 1/ ".".iii,_ . .

.

'

'

'' ''·

. .·

.1

·

APPLE .C.lorox Bleach''-~''··
PIES Co"age t~Q~;sl\il:~

Fr. PLEASANT, W, VA,
Solurdoy, July 6, 1968

1J to 41.

'

.•; '

•'

'

'

.,

\·

'

~

'·I
!

A.U BRANQ- WHY PAY MORE7

WHY

00
liVE

....

PAY

MOll

MA~VEL ~ NEAPOUTAN..,. SAVE 20c

1
1

, _. . . . . .

,,.. Rlile

1
I

I

I

I

I

•.:.•
I

......

............. ·-·
1

•

\

.

i

I

I . 0

I

ol ~·

•

"

lb.

' .:

.•·~ · l'

'

.

\

... '

.

'

'

·~

· , Hp , · ·, '\ 11~
. · IUili "

.,

.··. ·. - ' . .

' "t..-

.. - ...........!:.
•..•. •

USDA Choice
Tenderay

Leg of Lamb . __ _. .. 79c

,.Blades

__ 2

8&amp;

,1.11 ........ .,tk

Listerine __ . ~ 62c

••
_,.,.c..

Sugar -. _. _. .

=- $2.69.
..

Slobfr

Catsup ____ . . 5

~

$1
boltiiJ

1441.

Buttermilk 4 ...,.. $1
..........,.d....... c.....
Cheese _·- 3
$1

lloblr Wlltlt K'""' - ·

Com --·----- 5 ":;..* $1

=.

,.....,

c...... -

Colon ,tclol

'

Tissue ___ . . 4 ::;· 88c

Cofft"e __ _____ ,....
$139
ltr
•

Cor1nd AsMrltd Colen

A-ric.........

Towels . ___ . 3

tlonl

'""'

89

c

YJ·gal.
crtns.

Pork &amp;Beans 10 ':"'-* $1
K,....r ,...,,.

Corontt AMortwd c•rs latftrtom

Tissue __ . . . . 4

Ice

!tltflltM ,......

~-;!~

$1

Flour

-------

H-Ill.

$1.59

Dt...,.nt

KROGH

-Margarine 4 ~. $1

Grade A Medium

Eggs

Fab or Ajax ... =' 69c
Applesauce . . 7"".: $1
. . 7 .: $1
Evap.
-ely

Krc...- lrlftd

FREE 50

Kroger Golat!M or

.... . .. 7c
:HI.

Pepsi-Cola~~ 69¢

MAXWEU-

RIG., DRIP, ELECTRA PIRK

Vanish ___ 2 '!: $1
L~lllll_,....,

Kandu -----:::; 39c

&amp;

Sandwich Bread

PLUS DEPOSIT

-c-

KROGIIIIIUTTHCIIUST,
I~RMILK ~CM

Coffee
3 99

lb.

can

4
:
.
:
;
$1
,__ltyo, ....,
llack Ftmt

'

Breads _. _ 4 t!: $1
·-.-·ltyo
Buns __ . 2 ,:: 49c

-... ........

KROGIJI I'IIOIEN

___ .,_

Orange Juice
Ylt-C-d

•,:..~:.::

-

eL

99c

Boney Bu.ns 4 ::. $1
........ J.(.,.

D'mners . _. _'',;: 59c
c.... ., a. Alii.......

Plolft I """ •0 1p1oo

Olol , ..._

Tomato:·

Spare Ribs-·-·-- .. 79c

-.lAM

Donuts ___ 4 ,.... $1

•

Htllywoool llylo

:4.ll Flavors

, , ...

....... c.loo'

Pound Cake _ _ 59c .

Our'Own.
•

Beef Liver . ______ .. 49c

Kroger

Green"
'·

... $1.99

, ..... y _ _

09

4111AIIAHIIID
IUIIItiii.PIIIIHI

'

Fried Chicken ·-

-Bone Steak

09

.. ·

·•Qe ~-aan~~i-.8$~:·~

n.

WIINtlrlllloa=.o • 4-llc
........

.

---

Tailleu

Thrifty Brand

JANE PA*KER .l.. Baked Fresh O.Oy

LIVESTOCK SALES CO,

7$1!11UI.
· ,JWIY CALVIIS -

•

.

ScOFFLABEL-WHYPAYMORE ·

Fr. PLEASANT

u.w.

'

I

Jane Parker Buysl

Market Report

cal•••

'•

CMICilN
NOODU

I

HOGS - 175 tD 220 21.85
to 22.70; IINYlea 17 to21; Lllllrt•
18 to 22.50; Fat S&lt;nra 15 to 19.75; - · ll tD 12.50; Pip 5,50
1lo 1f; Sboots 12 to 25.
CATI'LE - !Jeon 20 tD 23;
Holter• 16.50 to 24; Fit Cowl
lUO to 18.60; camera 14.25
, to 11.75; lJIIIII 22 to 22,50; Milk
Cowl 100 to 175; Cowl
and Cllfel 150 to 225; - · 22 to 27.25; StoCk Hell·
ora 2UO tD 24; Stock Steer
22 to 28.50; Hau·
er cah-eolll to 2f.
VEAL~VES- TopoU.10;
lloco*il p.!IO; u.dlum 211.25 to
CclmmGII .... lleo'rltl 27 ••

'

$1.09

Jh.

USDA Choice
Tenderay

~,..

ON'LY .

.:ll&lt; .•.·-"'

Thrifty Brand

'

'

Ira l'lltts, Ai&gt;Ple Grove; lllro.
· Pltrlcla COWger, HenderiiOD; AD·
lbooiJ 'I'I1olnplc¥l. Leon.
DIICIIARGED: Pby!lla Blclc,
.·~&lt; ~' .• , J'L
Pleu&amp;Dt; OICllr Bucll,
·11 1 •Grimme LIDdlnir. Fllzabetb 1\ICo·,-· j:~} ~. Evana; - d RamHY, Pt.
,-'&gt;. '· , f'lelunl; MrS. l.arl')' Eahenaur
clllqllter, Pl. Pleaunl.
• ·:
BmTHS: lllr. and Mrs. Hoior Scboumacher, Ft. Pleaunl,
a - . lllr. and !lira. Jaek Bolo
tiel&lt;, Bacino, • 11011.

Sirloin Steak

,

*""', •:"._. :.."",

and will be presented later.
The 11011 meeting of the Jll'(ql
will be Saturday, .lily 20, at 8
p.m. at the el~ buUding.

. PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPI'l'AL
' AD!IImED: Jamoa Ulllrt,
. PlinY; Gerlld ~. lllf·
. : lalo; !lira. Jack -ck, Racine;
lllra. J. R. Kin&amp; Jr., Ft. l'lealo
.ant; ~ loleCoy' Leon; lllrl.

···'_

'

lentllll Rlllalerl R-" . ....... • If II . · ti-JIM'oll&amp;llf WIN.,. ........ . .... =.g. :' r""-F-...:....;;,;j
CUTfRDM
'
.
' '
FIllII' .........
......, IOTTOII - · · " " " • a. ..... , IMp Cltllk ...... , .'., .. ~ .. , '·" .....
Tlldlr Clllt Steib ............. • 11.114 IIIIIIIIIIIIMI10• ~ ;~:;:4~~'ii1 .
"
.
. ..... , ......... • ...
"'
I
NRK · . . . . . . . . . . . •I.. ., IIIIfllldlfiiHiil
en, lllllck••• .=:-. .................
111 · ...._. • - Jewll .. ../ .. .'....... no
. .
WM.Ii.'.l
Fried Filii Cat• ............. _. .. • . .
wwo •
...ellit Tip 111111111 1t11k .......... 11,11
1111111 L111IICM!111 l•plldld ....... • Me
·..... FIHelt ur;". ."'f" .... .~...
, .,.... .
............., It~""" ' -·
.1:.~ .... ·. ' . ' , ,, .

Cube

'-

,,

Pork CkQps • • ~ ,,( ,:t{

111111 " Whole Lop

Frying Chicken _. .. 59c

Sausage _____ ~t: 69¢

QUARTERED LOIN - 9 to II CHOPS ·

SUPER-RIGHT QUALITY

-

Pick '0 Chick . _. _ .. 59c

' \

Boneless Roasts· ..

Get Uniforms

. "_,.

'!I
.....:
· ·~-- . ·~

BOTIOt.1 ROUND OR RUMP

, ..... -

POLISH

·\

'

, , 'I

7 P.M.

Cod---------= 99c

It Clltlct , _ - ....... , .... -

........

. .•••.lbsac..

mo-

To

F-1-

Redeem Week
No. 6Summer
Stamp Fe/ltival
Coupontl For 450
EXTRA TOP
VALUE STAMPS

Twin Pops _4 · !! $1
Ctu:••r

a.

Eskimo Pies _ :: 55c

I'

Potatoes

Fresh, Large 5.Size

••••

......
- - 69c
....... c.top

Blueberries • 3 ..,.. $1

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

Celery Hearts • ..., 39c

PIIUM •••••• ~ . . .

,.,. 'Nih

CIIHII ... lte'11

.· · Lemons ., ..... ..,G9c

Grapes ••••••

...
...

..

.·

..

�J:loll1

,Selalnel, MlddiOilOrt.-Puneroy, Jli!y 10, 1988

, .,.·" •

;~.'

).

. , ,

·

~ayrc iS

BUlACceptefl;

f;
, BY MAXINE WALTERS
Fr. I'\£MANT- TIJt MaiCXI
'Cc~u~Q -rd Ill Educlllon Ill •
lonl ....... -IIIJOUrftlai~ 1:10
.. lhi • m&lt;lll'l1i1lll - approved the bid
at tho Colwnllua Heating Com·
pany Ia lha amount ot $22,675
for 118 heating of the old Jr,
Hlgh School, !IIWinthoprotUI
of being renovated for Centrll
School this !aU.
The cllscuoslon on whether to
uae ps heat or eleotrlc bell and
hearing pro' a and em' a m tho
mstler from repreaontatlveo ot
both tn~ea ot beat consumed me
and me-llalf boursoftheionaoe~o
alon. The board memhera \Ued
lor tho pa boat on recommtllla·

PUll, ~ limo Latin toocher
PPllS; . Elizabelll ~. ~·
school; Elwood While, PPIIS oncl
Corol Ann Whlta, Pl. PlearJanl
Jr. Hlgh.
SUbstllllle toocbera hired were
Judith Corrtvaau, Leta FogleICXIB, Wilbur Planta, Cary Howard P.aybum, Ruaaell Crawfor&lt;l,
Larey I'IIU!Ipa, Mildred LucUlo
S!nllh, Geral Rupe, lllarian So1ro,
Home W. Waltara, Merrill A.
Blllce, Floyd Cole, Kathryn AIexaodor, Alvin Gore, Asa l!o1o
klrul, Lelah Jane Powell, Har103' Cloud, Marie Smith, Orpba
Oblinger, Ethel So1re, Goldie
Beattie, w, S. BUI~a. Carl Dab·
JIIIl', Lena Gibbs, Ruth F o I o y,
Sally IAu Clark, Jane RaUey,
LWian Perry, Luia Jividen, Norma Perry,JackWelcb,JeanB!ng-

Ill&amp; a bl&amp; 1hllllake - onlf lhree
Of, lha live · """""' bciord !I!''

pre• lor Ia- D!P!'• IJIIport!1111 H&gt;Woft 'llltli, .~1 Howard
~ Earl K-.fot ol&gt;111Mit.
.
£mpiO,yed aa ~-· for tbe
1968-69 acilool term laat nlsht
WII'O~amla Franld!a IV, Pl.
Pieqiut ' Jr. IIIah; Cl!'rle Harris, New !liven school; Pool E.
Ferrari, Wahama Jr. and Sr.
High~ Ordftallee

ICbOol - Grace

:MoDermltt, Mabel Bleaa!n&amp; Min-

nie lllcCirtlle)', l!orutby Lew! a,
Hittle Jordan; New Ha\len achool,
Mary Kell,r and Edith Forreat;
lila-. MUdred lllwlQ and Alioe
lioacb; ~aide, Katie Sines,
AUoe Rulon, WU!Iam H. Blaine,
Jr.;
lAlnl Jones, Roooevelt
t!on or erch!teet BUI Framplm.
ICbool;
1\ladp Byul, Central;
Bllpb So1re, who lor lhe pall
Jllr baa aerved the ..._Coun- Lawrence Sl.eele, WoodSi Leon

.

~·

Jlam;· W.lb&lt;!iii I'Uiill!.

11 -

The Daily Sentinel, Mlddleport-Pomeroy, July 10, 1968

PLAY
THE

""*"•

C I a r a or; and
AI.,. ·
Mot~JIO!', !ioqdouen l!eney,, ·New lll~en ..~ ,and
Kit Ileal, ·Fi'ancll It Sl,mma, Weaver, I,IIICXI. . , .

I!Ortil!··E~ 'I.Otue Banlolle,
H, E,

Tllie .}' .
l!of&lt;\lhf·

Berlatoilt, l;bal'les Fr:um,
·Wilfte, IAwell Keill1,

Norflll•

TO

mlelly~l' ,
, · ,
Olin al!l was tranllerrid l'rom

toocblni ,JIPncfpal ·at Beoch HOI
school 10 Rooaevelt ~hool and
Eatel tOw!I w11 empl9ied as
taaeblns 1'prln~ at Beech HOI
to replace Hlil. Mr•· :Marpret
Frlfttla wll named aWl! bade
.Wcatlm teaohor - psychiatric
training class hosiMlnll Jllll' 15
at the sal117 ot $4 P.r hour.
Tho bOOrd aocetited lhe reaiinatim otPatrlotaGresol'J', toocbor at Ordnanoe ilchl101; Jeaole
Ruth Hunler, toocher, Roosevelt
aobooi; Riobard W.er, ,teacb-

You can lie a ltl11 wlnnerl Win '500'200-'I00-•50-'I0-•5-'2-'1-or
...
Coprrftlot, Tho K-r Co., 1M
11M rltM ..
Hnolt 'l"lnlfliot.

w. _,..

Bacon .... __ .. 65c

· BIG BUYS

on

"Super-Right" Meats!

,,

.:fresh
I

Kwlck Krl. Slletd

USDA Choice
Tenderay

Thriftg Brand

Bacon -·---- •.

"

STAMPS

Round Steak

Bacon ____ :: $1.29

..

Pomeroy
Kroger
OPEN

FEDERAL FOOD

By The Piece
Bone In- Full Cut

-·-Sliced

'

·WE HONOR

- ' .... Sllctol

~ school

111- .. illperVIIIOl'
of Instruction and not rehired by
tho board In that capac!~. w a a
r0&lt;0111111ended by !qlt. llrGOko
to be plaoed as a weber
at Wahama Jr. and Sl'. Hlib
ochool for tbe 1968-61 school
tarm and after much cliiiCUulm

Top Value Stamp

SUNDAYS
10 A.M.

... approvedbytho-.d. Board

'

. . . - Ted Stevena auge&amp;tod
that Slllllh ..... ..~
Sayre lor 91pervl1101' of Jnatruot!on but Smith lllated the board
bad turaed clown bla reeommendstlon of this at a prevlnoa meeting oncl, therefore, be clld not
feat It proper tD do 10 apia.
member Dr. 1.-rd
Brolin moved tv accopt lho recommencll\tlon •• 1&gt;o1re I o r
taatl&gt;••r - and lor some time It
looked u tho motion - d clle
lor iaclc of a Moond. Stevena then
• aald ho - d -

tho

Kwlck Krlop III&lt;M

Bacon _. __ !:.

-~ l

'

t!m but felt the board ""' mak-

·•· .~

FRESH FRYER LEGS :~t':,g:s
FRESH FRYER BREASTS • • •

I.ague Members
•'

Special This Week!

Fr. PLEASANT - ~ ol&amp;hl Juoloi ·Patrolmen League
member a rocelved-qew uniform a
Ill a meot!ng of the Jll'(ql held
at the Cl~ buUcllnl with Kooneth lAVe presiding.
'l1lere ore openlnga In lha orpnizatlm lor bQyl .... 8·16
and llllllaro&amp;todtho)'OUthallhould
1111' ol~ potrolman.
The Jr. Patrolmeo have boon

-....

holcllnl ..,. ~· ..~•. 'Q; !;;,

dol beh!ad

'u.e ol~ buU

'"

t~.rtJ

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

,.,-. .•. l'tl

money lor the
· Hill and bad&amp;os are ordered

·

Quarters

I

SOUPS
·
._,.,
TAfa Wool!

.. 1'8ll \
'1.

'

~

'

'

.,.

:, 1/ ".".iii,_ . .

.

'

'

'' ''·

. .·

.1

·

APPLE .C.lorox Bleach''-~''··
PIES Co"age t~Q~;sl\il:~

Fr. PLEASANT, W, VA,
Solurdoy, July 6, 1968

1J to 41.

'

.•; '

•'

'

'

.,

\·

'

~

'·I
!

A.U BRANQ- WHY PAY MORE7

WHY

00
liVE

....

PAY

MOll

MA~VEL ~ NEAPOUTAN..,. SAVE 20c

1
1

, _. . . . . .

,,.. Rlile

1
I

I

I

I

I

•.:.•
I

......

............. ·-·
1

•

\

.

i

I

I . 0

I

ol ~·

•

"

lb.

' .:

.•·~ · l'

'

.

\

... '

.

'

'

·~

· , Hp , · ·, '\ 11~
. · IUili "

.,

.··. ·. - ' . .

' "t..-

.. - ...........!:.
•..•. •

USDA Choice
Tenderay

Leg of Lamb . __ _. .. 79c

,.Blades

__ 2

8&amp;

,1.11 ........ .,tk

Listerine __ . ~ 62c

••
_,.,.c..

Sugar -. _. _. .

=- $2.69.
..

Slobfr

Catsup ____ . . 5

~

$1
boltiiJ

1441.

Buttermilk 4 ...,.. $1
..........,.d....... c.....
Cheese _·- 3
$1

lloblr Wlltlt K'""' - ·

Com --·----- 5 ":;..* $1

=.

,.....,

c...... -

Colon ,tclol

'

Tissue ___ . . 4 ::;· 88c

Cofft"e __ _____ ,....
$139
ltr
•

Cor1nd AsMrltd Colen

A-ric.........

Towels . ___ . 3

tlonl

'""'

89

c

YJ·gal.
crtns.

Pork &amp;Beans 10 ':"'-* $1
K,....r ,...,,.

Corontt AMortwd c•rs latftrtom

Tissue __ . . . . 4

Ice

!tltflltM ,......

~-;!~

$1

Flour

-------

H-Ill.

$1.59

Dt...,.nt

KROGH

-Margarine 4 ~. $1

Grade A Medium

Eggs

Fab or Ajax ... =' 69c
Applesauce . . 7"".: $1
. . 7 .: $1
Evap.
-ely

Krc...- lrlftd

FREE 50

Kroger Golat!M or

.... . .. 7c
:HI.

Pepsi-Cola~~ 69¢

MAXWEU-

RIG., DRIP, ELECTRA PIRK

Vanish ___ 2 '!: $1
L~lllll_,....,

Kandu -----:::; 39c

&amp;

Sandwich Bread

PLUS DEPOSIT

-c-

KROGIIIIIUTTHCIIUST,
I~RMILK ~CM

Coffee
3 99

lb.

can

4
:
.
:
;
$1
,__ltyo, ....,
llack Ftmt

'

Breads _. _ 4 t!: $1
·-.-·ltyo
Buns __ . 2 ,:: 49c

-... ........

KROGIJI I'IIOIEN

___ .,_

Orange Juice
Ylt-C-d

•,:..~:.::

-

eL

99c

Boney Bu.ns 4 ::. $1
........ J.(.,.

D'mners . _. _'',;: 59c
c.... ., a. Alii.......

Plolft I """ •0 1p1oo

Olol , ..._

Tomato:·

Spare Ribs-·-·-- .. 79c

-.lAM

Donuts ___ 4 ,.... $1

•

Htllywoool llylo

:4.ll Flavors

, , ...

....... c.loo'

Pound Cake _ _ 59c .

Our'Own.
•

Beef Liver . ______ .. 49c

Kroger

Green"
'·

... $1.99

, ..... y _ _

09

4111AIIAHIIID
IUIIItiii.PIIIIHI

'

Fried Chicken ·-

-Bone Steak

09

.. ·

·•Qe ~-aan~~i-.8$~:·~

n.

WIINtlrlllloa=.o • 4-llc
........

.

---

Tailleu

Thrifty Brand

JANE PA*KER .l.. Baked Fresh O.Oy

LIVESTOCK SALES CO,

7$1!11UI.
· ,JWIY CALVIIS -

•

.

ScOFFLABEL-WHYPAYMORE ·

Fr. PLEASANT

u.w.

'

I

Jane Parker Buysl

Market Report

cal•••

'•

CMICilN
NOODU

I

HOGS - 175 tD 220 21.85
to 22.70; IINYlea 17 to21; Lllllrt•
18 to 22.50; Fat S&lt;nra 15 to 19.75; - · ll tD 12.50; Pip 5,50
1lo 1f; Sboots 12 to 25.
CATI'LE - !Jeon 20 tD 23;
Holter• 16.50 to 24; Fit Cowl
lUO to 18.60; camera 14.25
, to 11.75; lJIIIII 22 to 22,50; Milk
Cowl 100 to 175; Cowl
and Cllfel 150 to 225; - · 22 to 27.25; StoCk Hell·
ora 2UO tD 24; Stock Steer
22 to 28.50; Hau·
er cah-eolll to 2f.
VEAL~VES- TopoU.10;
lloco*il p.!IO; u.dlum 211.25 to
CclmmGII .... lleo'rltl 27 ••

'

$1.09

Jh.

USDA Choice
Tenderay

~,..

ON'LY .

.:ll&lt; .•.·-"'

Thrifty Brand

'

'

Ira l'lltts, Ai&gt;Ple Grove; lllro.
· Pltrlcla COWger, HenderiiOD; AD·
lbooiJ 'I'I1olnplc¥l. Leon.
DIICIIARGED: Pby!lla Blclc,
.·~&lt; ~' .• , J'L
Pleu&amp;Dt; OICllr Bucll,
·11 1 •Grimme LIDdlnir. Fllzabetb 1\ICo·,-· j:~} ~. Evana; - d RamHY, Pt.
,-'&gt;. '· , f'lelunl; MrS. l.arl')' Eahenaur
clllqllter, Pl. Pleaunl.
• ·:
BmTHS: lllr. and Mrs. Hoior Scboumacher, Ft. Pleaunl,
a - . lllr. and !lira. Jaek Bolo
tiel&lt;, Bacino, • 11011.

Sirloin Steak

,

*""', •:"._. :.."",

and will be presented later.
The 11011 meeting of the Jll'(ql
will be Saturday, .lily 20, at 8
p.m. at the el~ buUding.

. PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPI'l'AL
' AD!IImED: Jamoa Ulllrt,
. PlinY; Gerlld ~. lllf·
. : lalo; !lira. Jack -ck, Racine;
lllra. J. R. Kin&amp; Jr., Ft. l'lealo
.ant; ~ loleCoy' Leon; lllrl.

···'_

'

lentllll Rlllalerl R-" . ....... • If II . · ti-JIM'oll&amp;llf WIN.,. ........ . .... =.g. :' r""-F-...:....;;,;j
CUTfRDM
'
.
' '
FIllII' .........
......, IOTTOII - · · " " " • a. ..... , IMp Cltllk ...... , .'., .. ~ .. , '·" .....
Tlldlr Clllt Steib ............. • 11.114 IIIIIIIIIIIIMI10• ~ ;~:;:4~~'ii1 .
"
.
. ..... , ......... • ...
"'
I
NRK · . . . . . . . . . . . •I.. ., IIIIfllldlfiiHiil
en, lllllck••• .=:-. .................
111 · ...._. • - Jewll .. ../ .. .'....... no
. .
WM.Ii.'.l
Fried Filii Cat• ............. _. .. • . .
wwo •
...ellit Tip 111111111 1t11k .......... 11,11
1111111 L111IICM!111 l•plldld ....... • Me
·..... FIHelt ur;". ."'f" .... .~...
, .,.... .
............., It~""" ' -·
.1:.~ .... ·. ' . ' , ,, .

Cube

'-

,,

Pork CkQps • • ~ ,,( ,:t{

111111 " Whole Lop

Frying Chicken _. .. 59c

Sausage _____ ~t: 69¢

QUARTERED LOIN - 9 to II CHOPS ·

SUPER-RIGHT QUALITY

-

Pick '0 Chick . _. _ .. 59c

' \

Boneless Roasts· ..

Get Uniforms

. "_,.

'!I
.....:
· ·~-- . ·~

BOTIOt.1 ROUND OR RUMP

, ..... -

POLISH

·\

'

, , 'I

7 P.M.

Cod---------= 99c

It Clltlct , _ - ....... , .... -

........

. .•••.lbsac..

mo-

To

F-1-

Redeem Week
No. 6Summer
Stamp Fe/ltival
Coupontl For 450
EXTRA TOP
VALUE STAMPS

Twin Pops _4 · !! $1
Ctu:••r

a.

Eskimo Pies _ :: 55c

I'

Potatoes

Fresh, Large 5.Size

••••

......
- - 69c
....... c.top

Blueberries • 3 ..,.. $1

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

Celery Hearts • ..., 39c

PIIUM •••••• ~ . . .

,.,. 'Nih

CIIHII ... lte'11

.· · Lemons ., ..... ..,G9c

Grapes ••••••

...
...

..

.·

..

�The Daib sertinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, July 10, 1968

12 -

Install Officers Shift With Three Armholes

FASHION IN THE NEWS

Flattering Fashions with Flair

Mrs. Walker, pJUVIor memInstallation of ol!lcers lor the
1968-69 year highlighted Mon- ber, reported the pre-marc he
day nll!hl's moetlng o! Molp pouvlor will be beld on ~day
County Solon 710, Eight a n d evening with tile parodies to lol·
Forty, held •t the POmeroy Le- low. Mrs. Martlnootedtltatearda
and climes had beon - to chJI.
gion Hall.
Mrs. Faye Wlldermuth, clla- dron at the Natlonol Jawllh lloo ·
peau passe o! Gallla COOnty sa. :pltal In Denver, Colo. by tile sa.
ion 612, was the Installing ol!l- ·Ion and four members. It was recer. Mrs. Julla Hl'soll, retir- ported that the conotltullon 'and
Ing chapeau, Bj)pOinted M r s. by~aws have beon appnwed by
Ruth Thornton as sergeant tor the state oolllllllttoe. A copy was
tile Installation. !J1t1. escorted rotumecl to the Solon.
Ritual and Eui&gt;lem Chairman
Mrs. Wildermuth.
Installed were Mrs. Iva Pow~ Mrs. Brinker, reported that the

By HELEN HENNESSY
NEA Women's Editor
NEW YORK-(NEA)-Dur·
ing her nine y e a r s in the
fashion field Helen Rose haS
become internationally known.
Her designs stand for true
elegance, superb craftsman-

ship and a type of fashion
beauty that reminds a woman
that she is a woman.

No one understands the
female figure better than Miss
Rose. This is not surprising
when one realizes that she
bas designed the clothes for
232 MGM films, during which
time she designed for every
imaginable type of woman,
with the p 1u s of having
created wardrobes for Eliza-

chapeaui Mrs. Catherine chapeau passe pins have been
Welsh, le demi ebapeau; Mrs. Increased from $14 ID $18. The
Mary Martin, le demi chapeau Departemental La &amp;llir&lt;he was
deuxlemei Mrs. Myrtle Walker, announced ror this weekend and
le secretaire cldsslere; M r s. repreaenting the Solon will be
Rhoda Hackett, i'aumonlor; Mrs. Mrs. Martin, delegate at large,
Eileen Searls, l'archiviste; Mrs. Mrs. Hysell, Mrs. Knapp, Mrs.
Pearl Knapp, Ia co.nclerge; and Searls, de1egates; and &amp;mie

ell,

beth Taylor, Cyd Charisse,
Debbie Reynolds, Lana
Turner, Grace Kelty and Dina
Merrill. She also has to her

Mrs. Hysell, pouvtor member. Brinker, Mrs. Welsh, Mrs. HackMra. Wildermuth extendecl con- el~ and Mrs. POwell.
During a oonclucllng sodal hour
gratulations to Mrs. Hl'sell on
punch
and cookies were served.
her past year's work and· best
The
partners
practiced tbe parwishes to Mrs. Powell. :Jae

credit two Oscars.

The influence of the Spanish
look has entered her FaU '68
collection not only for daytime wear but also for eve-

thanked the SSlon ror her gift

ning. In the ctaytime line there

Knit Fashions
for Men Only

are sever &lt;tl short, cropped
jackets with dresses that are
belted in leather and fabric.
Boots and flamenco hats truly

complete the look.
In the daytime group there
is fur trim on several coat
costumes. Miss Rose says
"All women love something
trimmed with fur. It makes
them feel hL'I:urious."

For alter· five the deep
p)unge neckline is successfully carried out in matte

jersey, with varied skirts ln
chiffon, jersey and luxurious

bands of white mink.

For formal evening attire

the ball gown Is definitely
back In all its beauty. The
gowns

a,re.

donP in heavy

Jane Surface
Is Honored with
Bridal Shower
Shiela Childs and Mary Hol~
man entertained Moojay night
with a bridal shower honoring

and corsage.

Peggy Story, Debbie Crow, Pen.-

. nie Hayes, Becky Hawley, Shir·
ley McKinney,

Donna Wilso)\

Frances Hold

Anno ncement

Get-Together

Of Banquet
G · en

Donna Braham,

Mary Woods,
Connie Bachner, Mary Jane JenkInson, Lois Sauer, Nancy Harris,
Donna Lish, Kathy Morgan, C&amp;th,y
Bailey, Mary Bradbury, AnnWII~

Wilson, Kathy Russell, son, Remalee Nieri, Lirx:la Hack~
carol Stout, Sheila Cowa)\ AlXI· ett, Violet Wolfe, Joyce Riley,
rey Shuler and Jenny Craig.
Judy Brewer, Mrs. Hood, Mrs.
Clthy Moore, Resa Surt"ace, Henderson and SaJXI,y Johnson.

Mryta

Make a Nehru Jacket

Bored with the same old
otlhouette? Here's a new approach to summer fashion-a
shift witb three armholes to
make In mother-daughter
versions of the gayest possible summertime cottons.
Thill unusual pattern, with
Its three armholes, ls de·
signed to wrap arolDld, and
may be worn with the opeD·
lng In the front or ln the
back. It can be stitcbed up In
a couple of hours lor there
are no buttons, buttonholes,
zippers, hooks, snaps, lacings
or heltlll to slow down the
sewing operation.

Tbe basic dress, with a bare
minimum of major pattern
pieces, ill llnished on all raw
edges with bias tape, After
seaming the long seams, attach the binder to your sewIng macblne and zip around

the neckline. armholes,

open~

ing edge and hem.

Select a carefree summer
cotton, such as this one with
multioolored · bubbles on yellow, accented with green
tape. Made In terry cloth, it's
a perfect beach shift or bath·
ing suit coverup.

Pleasant; Mrs. Harry E. Crump,

Henderson, W, Va.; Mra. 0 r a
Roush, Rt, 2 Letart; Lewis J.
Smith, Rt. 2 Pomeroy; Mrl. Dale
M. Duttoo, Middleport; Richard
A. Jaeks, Sr., Langsvfile; Mar~

Diana L. Davia, Mrs. Ralph W.
Jackson, Farrell R, Miller, Mrs.
&amp;!san A, Rawlings, James V,
Reynolda, Mrs. Harry L. steel,

Jr., Mlss Pauline M. WIJI!e,
Mrs. Mary A., Wippel, Elmer

r····------------------1
I DOWNIE·GROSS 1

i . CLOSED
i ALL DAY THURSDAY
1

B400N

I

i
1

-~llll-lllllllllll..&amp;lllllllrl!llliiii!IBIIIIIIIIIIIIImtllllllllillllli'&lt;J;mi.

SAVE

s$$$s
3 COMPLETE ROOMS OF

FURNITURE

595.00

·· BAKER. FUIINI'fURE
Mlcldleport, 0.

Be
choosy.
You've got a right.
THIS IS THE REAL THING

This is his own

hde; James R. Morton, Rich-

vln D. King, Rt. 3 POmeroy; Mrs. Geer, Earl L, ~urlock, Mrs.
Danny G. Folden, Albany; Mrs. Jerry K, Lambert and ln!ant
Larry Adkins, Rt. 3 oak lUll; 11011, Mrs. Herman N. Parcell
Paul c. Ruggles, Welloton; An- and ln!ant son.

10036.

one of the new permanent-

press cottons, available in a
dazzling variety of summer-

So get your patterns and
fabrics now, and be ready to
sew on the next rainy afternoon-you'll have a quick·
and-easy shift for summer
fun.

mondale,

Vicki S. Gibbs, Rt. I Letart;
Discharges
John W, MacKnight, New Haven;
Mrs. Jolll C. Bacon, Jr., Carl
Clarence M. Johnson, Rt. I Pl. H. Beane, Mrs. Mary Beclq,

No. 8400-N with PHOTOGUIDE is in sizes small (3436), Medium (38-401, ond
Iorge (42-44). Medium .size
tokes 3 yards of 45-inch
;fabric .
SEND SOc in coins plus ISc
for fi11t-class moil and, Sll!ciol
:ll011dlina for eoch pattern to
( DalJ,y sentinel ), 1150 Avenue
ttl tho Americas, New York,

The dress opens Rat lor
ironing but even that step
can be avoided if you pick

styled prints.

son; Loonle S. LaMaster, Rl I

1224 second Ave.; Penny L o u
Births
Hansen, 131 Fourth Ave.; Cinda
Mrs. Dam.v G. Folden, A1bany,
M. Mimis, 715 Fourth Ave.; 11011, 2:30 p.m. Tuesday; M r s.
Earl L. S!&gt;urlock, Rt. 2 Crown Larry Adkins, Rl 3 oak IWI,
Cl~; Mrs. Cecil J. McCOy, CheM 1011, 4:41 p.m. Tuesday; Mrs.
shire; Arlie M. Fadely, Vinton; Cecil J. McCoy, Cheshlre, son,
Martin M. Dean, 449 Lariat Dr.; 5:23p.m. Tuesday.

expensive to make.

time required for a single
one.

Of course, you could always
fan yourself. But when your arm
got tired, then what? Buy an
electricfan? Fine, if you like a
breeze blowing at you.
Then came those cool, air
conditioned nights at the movies.
But what happened when you'd
seen every show in town?
Try to convince somebody,
back then, that there were too
many brands of air conditioners
on the market.
Yet, there are people around
today who are trying to do just
that. They'd like to regulate
competition.
Isn't it time somebody stood
up for the free enterprise system?
This system has given us the
highest standard of living in the
world. Why knock it?
Decide for yourself which is
the best air conditioner for the
money. Then, buy it.

Holzer Hospital: Visltinghoun thony R. Gibbs, Athens; Pamela
2-4 and 7-8 v.m. Parenta only on J. Siders, Jackson; The Rev.
Pediatrics Ward.
James W. Garrett, Rt. 3 Jack-

Filth Ave.; Mrs. Freel M. Waugh,

THE MAN in your life would
love to own the latest in
men's clothong . .. a boldly
designed Nehru Jacket.
You'll find it quick and in-

MOTHER-DAUGHTER WRAP-AROUNDS or&amp; made
with 'three armholes, and con wrap to front or bock.
No buttons, buttonholes, hems or facings guo.rantee
quick stitching.

HOSPITA
Admlssloos

~.Y.

alter the .i)l'e-marche pouvior.

increased far beyond those of
ship of the Woman's Society of, the male knitters.
,~hristian Service Was announced
'
at Monday night's meeting of lhe " Men's interest in knitting is
oCflcial board of the Rutland Unit- on the upsurge again, how·
ed Methodist Church.
ever. Recently I visited a
Meeting in the pastor's study, neighborhood knitting shop in
the board voted to dispense with New York which offers ina daily \18cation Bible School this struction in knitting. Tuesday
year. Mrs. C. 0. Chapman agreed nights were reserved for men
to serve as accompanist one Sun- only. The class I observed included a few retired gentleday a month to relieve D o n n a men and businessmen of
Weber.
young and middle ages.
Vernon Weber was re-elected
to serve as chairman of t h e
Knitting is becoming popular
among the ranks of men
board, and Mrs. Howard Birchexecutives
especially. They
field was appointed secretary,
at
home
and on comknit
Prayer to open the meetl~ was
muter
trains,
too.
Most claim
by the Rev. Chester Lemley and
that they knit to relax and
others attending were Mrs. Joan relieve the day's tensions.
Harrison, Mrs. Grace Colwell,
John Colwell, Mrs. Jessie White
The handsome cardigans
and Mrs. Ruth Erlewine.
I'm showing today may tempt

Richard E. Cremeans, 617

•'

sldt which they will present

•

ly JOANNE SCHREIBER

It's so quick and easy to
sew that smart seamstresses
will use the assembly-line
technique to make one lor
each of the girls In the lam·
Two-piece comet dress ond coot costume (left) hos
more men to take up the craft lly, as well as one lor themBy JUDY LOVE
high.chain belted empire waist. The coot with side
or at least to prod their favor- selves.
wrap and high mandarin neck is banded in lynx.
Are you listening, knitters? Ite female knitters Into makFlamenco inspired costume of red wool (right} has
Cut out all garments at
Somebody up there likes you! Ing a topper lor them.
cropped jacket and inverted pleated skirt. The blouse
once.
Do all long seams with
The somebody I'm talking
The
man's
cardigan
can
be
regular
presser foot. Switch
is in motte jersey in block and has a black leather
about is St. Fiacre, lhe pa- knitted in small, medium and
to
binder
attachment and do
belt. These are Helen Rose designs.
tron saint of knitting.
large to lit sizes 36 to 48. Use all bound edges. You'll end
Bernal's Nylo Germantown up with two or three garMost people today know yarn
satin, heavy silk and taffetas.
This is a collection to be
on circular needles. For ments In llttle more than the
appreciated by any woman little about this devoted knit- the little boy in yow· life, knit
With a number of her after- who wants beauty and eleg- ter, but both the Irish and the richly cabled cardigan in
the French claim him as their
five and evening clothes, she ance in her wardrobe.
own. Actually, St. Fiacre was· Willowspun yarn, a woo) and
uses her signature rose bogus
Irish by birth. Like many nylon blend. Instructions are
diamond pin.
Cellic scholars, he brought available to lit children's
Indian Clalms
his learning and his skill to sizes 8 to 14.
France. Settling in France,
Since 1948, when they were
For your copy of a leanet first allowed to b1ing legal
U
he taught his knitting skill to
townsmen and later his name giving lnslrucUons lor both action against the U.S. govwas given to the first conti- the man's and boy'• sweaters, ernment without obtaining Its
nental knitters guild, The send 50 cents to Stltehln' permission, American Indian
Time, c/o your local paper, tribes have filed claims to
Guild of St. Fiacre.
P.O. IIGx lOS, Radio City Sta· lands which amount to an agIn St. Fiacre's time and for Uon, New York, N.Y. 18011. gregate area larger than the
centuries after, knitting was Be sure to Include your name, United States, according to
An annual Fourth of July get~ /
a man's craft. Women learned address and zip code and ask tbe Encyclopaedia Britannica.
together or relatives and rriends S
IV
knitting from men and even- for leaflet Sl4fi.
was held ths year at the home
or Mr. and Mrs, Onnie France,
Mother . Daughter banquet to tually, as women won more
leisure time, their numbers
Langsville.
be held on July 30 under sponsor-

Attending were Mrs. Louise
Jane Surface, recent bride of
Te'l'JIIO\OJ!.
..lllllllington, W, 'le.;.
Benny Branham.
Mr. and Mrs. George Douthat,
The shower was held at the
Tampa, Fla.: Lillian Chapman,
Middleport home of Kathy IloOO
Baltimore, Md; Mr. and :Mrs.
and Slndra HeJXIerson. A pink
Lyle France, Milton, W. Va.;
and white color scheme was car~
,Mrs. John Utterback and sons,
ried out in the decorations.
Sonny and Anthony, Scranton,
Games were played with prizes
Ky.; Clara Jean France, Rutbeirt: awarded to sandy Johnson,
Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Connie Bachner and Joyce Riley. lard;
Gltts for the honored guest France, Miltoflt W. Va.; and Mr.
were placed on a table decorat;ed and Mrs. Otho Smith of Ona, W.
Va.
with wedding bells. Cake, ice

cream am punch were served.
The guest list included Karen
Flores, Rachel rife, Janel Bol~
in, Kathy Manley, Theresa Casct. Mary Long, Cynthia Mills,

ody

The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, July 10, t968

Prepetlng For Our . .

I

!
I

I
CLEARANCE SALE
~
Starting Friday At 9 a.m. I
JULY

Your son is one of lhe lucky ones. He is one of approximately a
million lads in the U. S. and Canada who bas his own business.
Every day he is getting valuable tralning that could be secured
in no other way, He is learning sell-reliance, bow to meet and get
along with people, lhe value of work, the need for setting goalsand reaching them. He feels the deep inner satisfaction that comes
from serving people well. He learns the practical side of econom·
ics-to supplement tbo formal lessons of the classroom. And, all
the time, he is earning while he learns.
Whether he shows it or not, your son appreciates your interest.
Sometimes his eager young mind needs direction; give it to him.
Sometimes he needs a word of encouragemen~ afrer he ha' had
some frustrating experience. Explain to him how a mistake can
ofren be turned into a stepping alone to success.
One of the most valuable things you can point ou1 to him is
thai a newspaperboy businesl is a year 'round~. Summer is
full of opportunities lor sr&lt;&gt;wth and improvement. When autumn
rolls around, he can continue his busine11 alongside his sc:bool
work. School officials everywhere recognize the value of supponing school work with practical business experience.
Sometimes a boy gels lhe idea he'sleamed all there is to know
about a newspaperboy business and wants to drop out afrer a few
months. To drop out of his business prematurely is like dropping
out of sc:booi. Both deprive a boy of knowledge that would be
helpful to him all his life. Most newspaperboys continue to learn
valuable lessons for at least two yean. Older bo)'l everywhere,
mliziOJ that they are ba~ding a firm foundation for tomorraw;
alldt to their busine.u as long u they c&amp;ll.

THE
DAILY SEN

.,

II••••••••••••••••••••••J
See Thuncl.iy's ~1. Ad In The Sentinel
I

"-

,:;:

.

�The Daib sertinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, July 10, 1968

12 -

Install Officers Shift With Three Armholes

FASHION IN THE NEWS

Flattering Fashions with Flair

Mrs. Walker, pJUVIor memInstallation of ol!lcers lor the
1968-69 year highlighted Mon- ber, reported the pre-marc he
day nll!hl's moetlng o! Molp pouvlor will be beld on ~day
County Solon 710, Eight a n d evening with tile parodies to lol·
Forty, held •t the POmeroy Le- low. Mrs. Martlnootedtltatearda
and climes had beon - to chJI.
gion Hall.
Mrs. Faye Wlldermuth, clla- dron at the Natlonol Jawllh lloo ·
peau passe o! Gallla COOnty sa. :pltal In Denver, Colo. by tile sa.
ion 612, was the Installing ol!l- ·Ion and four members. It was recer. Mrs. Julla Hl'soll, retir- ported that the conotltullon 'and
Ing chapeau, Bj)pOinted M r s. by~aws have beon appnwed by
Ruth Thornton as sergeant tor the state oolllllllttoe. A copy was
tile Installation. !J1t1. escorted rotumecl to the Solon.
Ritual and Eui&gt;lem Chairman
Mrs. Wildermuth.
Installed were Mrs. Iva Pow~ Mrs. Brinker, reported that the

By HELEN HENNESSY
NEA Women's Editor
NEW YORK-(NEA)-Dur·
ing her nine y e a r s in the
fashion field Helen Rose haS
become internationally known.
Her designs stand for true
elegance, superb craftsman-

ship and a type of fashion
beauty that reminds a woman
that she is a woman.

No one understands the
female figure better than Miss
Rose. This is not surprising
when one realizes that she
bas designed the clothes for
232 MGM films, during which
time she designed for every
imaginable type of woman,
with the p 1u s of having
created wardrobes for Eliza-

chapeaui Mrs. Catherine chapeau passe pins have been
Welsh, le demi ebapeau; Mrs. Increased from $14 ID $18. The
Mary Martin, le demi chapeau Departemental La &amp;llir&lt;he was
deuxlemei Mrs. Myrtle Walker, announced ror this weekend and
le secretaire cldsslere; M r s. repreaenting the Solon will be
Rhoda Hackett, i'aumonlor; Mrs. Mrs. Martin, delegate at large,
Eileen Searls, l'archiviste; Mrs. Mrs. Hysell, Mrs. Knapp, Mrs.
Pearl Knapp, Ia co.nclerge; and Searls, de1egates; and &amp;mie

ell,

beth Taylor, Cyd Charisse,
Debbie Reynolds, Lana
Turner, Grace Kelty and Dina
Merrill. She also has to her

Mrs. Hysell, pouvtor member. Brinker, Mrs. Welsh, Mrs. HackMra. Wildermuth extendecl con- el~ and Mrs. POwell.
During a oonclucllng sodal hour
gratulations to Mrs. Hl'sell on
punch
and cookies were served.
her past year's work and· best
The
partners
practiced tbe parwishes to Mrs. Powell. :Jae

credit two Oscars.

The influence of the Spanish
look has entered her FaU '68
collection not only for daytime wear but also for eve-

thanked the SSlon ror her gift

ning. In the ctaytime line there

Knit Fashions
for Men Only

are sever &lt;tl short, cropped
jackets with dresses that are
belted in leather and fabric.
Boots and flamenco hats truly

complete the look.
In the daytime group there
is fur trim on several coat
costumes. Miss Rose says
"All women love something
trimmed with fur. It makes
them feel hL'I:urious."

For alter· five the deep
p)unge neckline is successfully carried out in matte

jersey, with varied skirts ln
chiffon, jersey and luxurious

bands of white mink.

For formal evening attire

the ball gown Is definitely
back In all its beauty. The
gowns

a,re.

donP in heavy

Jane Surface
Is Honored with
Bridal Shower
Shiela Childs and Mary Hol~
man entertained Moojay night
with a bridal shower honoring

and corsage.

Peggy Story, Debbie Crow, Pen.-

. nie Hayes, Becky Hawley, Shir·
ley McKinney,

Donna Wilso)\

Frances Hold

Anno ncement

Get-Together

Of Banquet
G · en

Donna Braham,

Mary Woods,
Connie Bachner, Mary Jane JenkInson, Lois Sauer, Nancy Harris,
Donna Lish, Kathy Morgan, C&amp;th,y
Bailey, Mary Bradbury, AnnWII~

Wilson, Kathy Russell, son, Remalee Nieri, Lirx:la Hack~
carol Stout, Sheila Cowa)\ AlXI· ett, Violet Wolfe, Joyce Riley,
rey Shuler and Jenny Craig.
Judy Brewer, Mrs. Hood, Mrs.
Clthy Moore, Resa Surt"ace, Henderson and SaJXI,y Johnson.

Mryta

Make a Nehru Jacket

Bored with the same old
otlhouette? Here's a new approach to summer fashion-a
shift witb three armholes to
make In mother-daughter
versions of the gayest possible summertime cottons.
Thill unusual pattern, with
Its three armholes, ls de·
signed to wrap arolDld, and
may be worn with the opeD·
lng In the front or ln the
back. It can be stitcbed up In
a couple of hours lor there
are no buttons, buttonholes,
zippers, hooks, snaps, lacings
or heltlll to slow down the
sewing operation.

Tbe basic dress, with a bare
minimum of major pattern
pieces, ill llnished on all raw
edges with bias tape, After
seaming the long seams, attach the binder to your sewIng macblne and zip around

the neckline. armholes,

open~

ing edge and hem.

Select a carefree summer
cotton, such as this one with
multioolored · bubbles on yellow, accented with green
tape. Made In terry cloth, it's
a perfect beach shift or bath·
ing suit coverup.

Pleasant; Mrs. Harry E. Crump,

Henderson, W, Va.; Mra. 0 r a
Roush, Rt, 2 Letart; Lewis J.
Smith, Rt. 2 Pomeroy; Mrl. Dale
M. Duttoo, Middleport; Richard
A. Jaeks, Sr., Langsvfile; Mar~

Diana L. Davia, Mrs. Ralph W.
Jackson, Farrell R, Miller, Mrs.
&amp;!san A, Rawlings, James V,
Reynolda, Mrs. Harry L. steel,

Jr., Mlss Pauline M. WIJI!e,
Mrs. Mary A., Wippel, Elmer

r····------------------1
I DOWNIE·GROSS 1

i . CLOSED
i ALL DAY THURSDAY
1

B400N

I

i
1

-~llll-lllllllllll..&amp;lllllllrl!llliiii!IBIIIIIIIIIIIIImtllllllllillllli'&lt;J;mi.

SAVE

s$$$s
3 COMPLETE ROOMS OF

FURNITURE

595.00

·· BAKER. FUIINI'fURE
Mlcldleport, 0.

Be
choosy.
You've got a right.
THIS IS THE REAL THING

This is his own

hde; James R. Morton, Rich-

vln D. King, Rt. 3 POmeroy; Mrs. Geer, Earl L, ~urlock, Mrs.
Danny G. Folden, Albany; Mrs. Jerry K, Lambert and ln!ant
Larry Adkins, Rt. 3 oak lUll; 11011, Mrs. Herman N. Parcell
Paul c. Ruggles, Welloton; An- and ln!ant son.

10036.

one of the new permanent-

press cottons, available in a
dazzling variety of summer-

So get your patterns and
fabrics now, and be ready to
sew on the next rainy afternoon-you'll have a quick·
and-easy shift for summer
fun.

mondale,

Vicki S. Gibbs, Rt. I Letart;
Discharges
John W, MacKnight, New Haven;
Mrs. Jolll C. Bacon, Jr., Carl
Clarence M. Johnson, Rt. I Pl. H. Beane, Mrs. Mary Beclq,

No. 8400-N with PHOTOGUIDE is in sizes small (3436), Medium (38-401, ond
Iorge (42-44). Medium .size
tokes 3 yards of 45-inch
;fabric .
SEND SOc in coins plus ISc
for fi11t-class moil and, Sll!ciol
:ll011dlina for eoch pattern to
( DalJ,y sentinel ), 1150 Avenue
ttl tho Americas, New York,

The dress opens Rat lor
ironing but even that step
can be avoided if you pick

styled prints.

son; Loonle S. LaMaster, Rl I

1224 second Ave.; Penny L o u
Births
Hansen, 131 Fourth Ave.; Cinda
Mrs. Dam.v G. Folden, A1bany,
M. Mimis, 715 Fourth Ave.; 11011, 2:30 p.m. Tuesday; M r s.
Earl L. S!&gt;urlock, Rt. 2 Crown Larry Adkins, Rl 3 oak IWI,
Cl~; Mrs. Cecil J. McCOy, CheM 1011, 4:41 p.m. Tuesday; Mrs.
shire; Arlie M. Fadely, Vinton; Cecil J. McCoy, Cheshlre, son,
Martin M. Dean, 449 Lariat Dr.; 5:23p.m. Tuesday.

expensive to make.

time required for a single
one.

Of course, you could always
fan yourself. But when your arm
got tired, then what? Buy an
electricfan? Fine, if you like a
breeze blowing at you.
Then came those cool, air
conditioned nights at the movies.
But what happened when you'd
seen every show in town?
Try to convince somebody,
back then, that there were too
many brands of air conditioners
on the market.
Yet, there are people around
today who are trying to do just
that. They'd like to regulate
competition.
Isn't it time somebody stood
up for the free enterprise system?
This system has given us the
highest standard of living in the
world. Why knock it?
Decide for yourself which is
the best air conditioner for the
money. Then, buy it.

Holzer Hospital: Visltinghoun thony R. Gibbs, Athens; Pamela
2-4 and 7-8 v.m. Parenta only on J. Siders, Jackson; The Rev.
Pediatrics Ward.
James W. Garrett, Rt. 3 Jack-

Filth Ave.; Mrs. Freel M. Waugh,

THE MAN in your life would
love to own the latest in
men's clothong . .. a boldly
designed Nehru Jacket.
You'll find it quick and in-

MOTHER-DAUGHTER WRAP-AROUNDS or&amp; made
with 'three armholes, and con wrap to front or bock.
No buttons, buttonholes, hems or facings guo.rantee
quick stitching.

HOSPITA
Admlssloos

~.Y.

alter the .i)l'e-marche pouvior.

increased far beyond those of
ship of the Woman's Society of, the male knitters.
,~hristian Service Was announced
'
at Monday night's meeting of lhe " Men's interest in knitting is
oCflcial board of the Rutland Unit- on the upsurge again, how·
ed Methodist Church.
ever. Recently I visited a
Meeting in the pastor's study, neighborhood knitting shop in
the board voted to dispense with New York which offers ina daily \18cation Bible School this struction in knitting. Tuesday
year. Mrs. C. 0. Chapman agreed nights were reserved for men
to serve as accompanist one Sun- only. The class I observed included a few retired gentleday a month to relieve D o n n a men and businessmen of
Weber.
young and middle ages.
Vernon Weber was re-elected
to serve as chairman of t h e
Knitting is becoming popular
among the ranks of men
board, and Mrs. Howard Birchexecutives
especially. They
field was appointed secretary,
at
home
and on comknit
Prayer to open the meetl~ was
muter
trains,
too.
Most claim
by the Rev. Chester Lemley and
that they knit to relax and
others attending were Mrs. Joan relieve the day's tensions.
Harrison, Mrs. Grace Colwell,
John Colwell, Mrs. Jessie White
The handsome cardigans
and Mrs. Ruth Erlewine.
I'm showing today may tempt

Richard E. Cremeans, 617

•'

sldt which they will present

•

ly JOANNE SCHREIBER

It's so quick and easy to
sew that smart seamstresses
will use the assembly-line
technique to make one lor
each of the girls In the lam·
Two-piece comet dress ond coot costume (left) hos
more men to take up the craft lly, as well as one lor themBy JUDY LOVE
high.chain belted empire waist. The coot with side
or at least to prod their favor- selves.
wrap and high mandarin neck is banded in lynx.
Are you listening, knitters? Ite female knitters Into makFlamenco inspired costume of red wool (right} has
Cut out all garments at
Somebody up there likes you! Ing a topper lor them.
cropped jacket and inverted pleated skirt. The blouse
once.
Do all long seams with
The somebody I'm talking
The
man's
cardigan
can
be
regular
presser foot. Switch
is in motte jersey in block and has a black leather
about is St. Fiacre, lhe pa- knitted in small, medium and
to
binder
attachment and do
belt. These are Helen Rose designs.
tron saint of knitting.
large to lit sizes 36 to 48. Use all bound edges. You'll end
Bernal's Nylo Germantown up with two or three garMost people today know yarn
satin, heavy silk and taffetas.
This is a collection to be
on circular needles. For ments In llttle more than the
appreciated by any woman little about this devoted knit- the little boy in yow· life, knit
With a number of her after- who wants beauty and eleg- ter, but both the Irish and the richly cabled cardigan in
the French claim him as their
five and evening clothes, she ance in her wardrobe.
own. Actually, St. Fiacre was· Willowspun yarn, a woo) and
uses her signature rose bogus
Irish by birth. Like many nylon blend. Instructions are
diamond pin.
Cellic scholars, he brought available to lit children's
Indian Clalms
his learning and his skill to sizes 8 to 14.
France. Settling in France,
Since 1948, when they were
For your copy of a leanet first allowed to b1ing legal
U
he taught his knitting skill to
townsmen and later his name giving lnslrucUons lor both action against the U.S. govwas given to the first conti- the man's and boy'• sweaters, ernment without obtaining Its
nental knitters guild, The send 50 cents to Stltehln' permission, American Indian
Time, c/o your local paper, tribes have filed claims to
Guild of St. Fiacre.
P.O. IIGx lOS, Radio City Sta· lands which amount to an agIn St. Fiacre's time and for Uon, New York, N.Y. 18011. gregate area larger than the
centuries after, knitting was Be sure to Include your name, United States, according to
An annual Fourth of July get~ /
a man's craft. Women learned address and zip code and ask tbe Encyclopaedia Britannica.
together or relatives and rriends S
IV
knitting from men and even- for leaflet Sl4fi.
was held ths year at the home
or Mr. and Mrs, Onnie France,
Mother . Daughter banquet to tually, as women won more
leisure time, their numbers
Langsville.
be held on July 30 under sponsor-

Attending were Mrs. Louise
Jane Surface, recent bride of
Te'l'JIIO\OJ!.
..lllllllington, W, 'le.;.
Benny Branham.
Mr. and Mrs. George Douthat,
The shower was held at the
Tampa, Fla.: Lillian Chapman,
Middleport home of Kathy IloOO
Baltimore, Md; Mr. and :Mrs.
and Slndra HeJXIerson. A pink
Lyle France, Milton, W. Va.;
and white color scheme was car~
,Mrs. John Utterback and sons,
ried out in the decorations.
Sonny and Anthony, Scranton,
Games were played with prizes
Ky.; Clara Jean France, Rutbeirt: awarded to sandy Johnson,
Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Connie Bachner and Joyce Riley. lard;
Gltts for the honored guest France, Miltoflt W. Va.; and Mr.
were placed on a table decorat;ed and Mrs. Otho Smith of Ona, W.
Va.
with wedding bells. Cake, ice

cream am punch were served.
The guest list included Karen
Flores, Rachel rife, Janel Bol~
in, Kathy Manley, Theresa Casct. Mary Long, Cynthia Mills,

ody

The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, July 10, t968

Prepetlng For Our . .

I

!
I

I
CLEARANCE SALE
~
Starting Friday At 9 a.m. I
JULY

Your son is one of lhe lucky ones. He is one of approximately a
million lads in the U. S. and Canada who bas his own business.
Every day he is getting valuable tralning that could be secured
in no other way, He is learning sell-reliance, bow to meet and get
along with people, lhe value of work, the need for setting goalsand reaching them. He feels the deep inner satisfaction that comes
from serving people well. He learns the practical side of econom·
ics-to supplement tbo formal lessons of the classroom. And, all
the time, he is earning while he learns.
Whether he shows it or not, your son appreciates your interest.
Sometimes his eager young mind needs direction; give it to him.
Sometimes he needs a word of encouragemen~ afrer he ha' had
some frustrating experience. Explain to him how a mistake can
ofren be turned into a stepping alone to success.
One of the most valuable things you can point ou1 to him is
thai a newspaperboy businesl is a year 'round~. Summer is
full of opportunities lor sr&lt;&gt;wth and improvement. When autumn
rolls around, he can continue his busine11 alongside his sc:bool
work. School officials everywhere recognize the value of supponing school work with practical business experience.
Sometimes a boy gels lhe idea he'sleamed all there is to know
about a newspaperboy business and wants to drop out afrer a few
months. To drop out of his business prematurely is like dropping
out of sc:booi. Both deprive a boy of knowledge that would be
helpful to him all his life. Most newspaperboys continue to learn
valuable lessons for at least two yean. Older bo)'l everywhere,
mliziOJ that they are ba~ding a firm foundation for tomorraw;
alldt to their busine.u as long u they c&amp;ll.

THE
DAILY SEN

.,

II••••••••••••••••••••••J
See Thuncl.iy's ~1. Ad In The Sentinel
I

"-

,:;:

.

�The Jlally

It -

. .

Middleport-Pomeroy,
Jucy 10, 1968.

---

So~nel,

-A -LITTLR.-'IIQMEWORK' Watching Want Ads Bri1tg
Top Grade. Res~lts.
•.
.
'

--WAft AD

INPGIMATIOII

1 •·•·..., ....... PWIIC.,.._
......, DMllllnt t .....

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

w....

1111 .... 11tHI f

l.fll,

n.. Pwa~llllltr

,...,.,., tM Pllllt

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

.. Mit .,. Ntttt 'tiiY Mt ....... ...

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

,........................._.~-FM;.~~;~;:;;.:.:..:..
~
Property
Pomeroy
&lt;JULY ONLY&gt;
2 SIGNS·

tw

Day
., """"""'
IHULATIOIII

will ....

Cl'
i'

lATII

I

,

" " llllllrfleftt,

11 cdta . ., Ward tlx ltNKUUN

-rt~

u ,.,

'

o-...-t .,. ,... •

ttnt

IIMI a ,. .. wfttlln 1t Gra.
CAID OP THANKI &amp; OIITUAI'Y
t1.11 .... .. ....,. ......... •••

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

·-·

aLIND ADI
.._.IHIMI tk CMrWe

'

,., ..._.

O. . ICI HOUtl
11• a.a to II.. IL•· INfiN ...... ,.. . . . . . . . . ....,

QUALITY _

I

lftcarNd .,..,..••

,., Want M .."In
..... ' " ........................
..
MIRI!ItUftl Clla,.. 7ft
It dftll .., . . nl. till'" ""'"ilOOII..
I

'
i

I

Motor Co.

'

1965 CHEVELLE MALIBU • .••. , , •• •• •• • •••• $1595

Conv. v..a onglna, P'"'ergtlde, rod!o, heater, new whitewall
· tires, green OJrterior finish with white nylon tql vinyl in~ri~ trim. A·~ owner trade in
1964 FORD GALA
.
500
••• • •••-~•• • •• •• •••• $1295
4 Door. dark green finish with clean matching interior.
New W.W. tires, V-8 ellgine, automatic trans., power steer. ing, radio &amp; heater. _
.

1962 FORD XL 500 HT CPE. • . , ... , .. .... .. . $895
Beautlful white finish with red vinyl interior, bucket seats,

console, V-8 er:wtne, automatic trrAns., power steering.
-~o !!, ~etttL...NB!I'

ltW..lire.L.

Pcittleroy Motor Co. ·
OPEN lEVIS. 1:00 P.M.
I'OMEIIIOY, OHIO

NOll~

BAND AT JACKS CLUB every
Friday and Saturday from 9
For Sale
to 1. Dale McDonald and his
For Sale
Drifters.
7-11»tc Ill PEARL ST., Middleport, JERSEY COW, $175. PIJOne
must aell lor eaah price,
mG21.
74-Jic
$3000. Pbone 99Z-.1267. 7-7-ftc
BAND EVERY FRIDAY from
9 p.m. to 2 a.m. "Best band
1964 CHEVROLET pickup, I ft.
in the area ." Shenang Springs CAN YOU QUALIFY? 1968
step side, dark blue, pooltlve
name
brand
stereo
AM
&amp;
FM,
Nile Club.
7-11).11c
traction. Call 99U256 after
4 speakers, floating turn
5:110 p.m.
7-8-.ltc
table, nice wabut finish, take
THERE WILL BE a gun shoot
over paymen:S of 16 per ONE OF THE BEST grocery
Sunday, July 14, beginning at
month or pay balance SIOI.62.
noon at the Forked R u n
businesses In the area, a very
Try
It
in
your
llome,
call
mSportsman Club. Everyone II
profitable Investment I o r
2&amp;!6.
7-7-«c
someone who wishes til oper.
wei&lt;Ome.
7~tc
ate their own busbtess. ConTERMITES SWARMING? - I(.EEP carpet cleaning probtact Lynn Hart at Racine Full
lems small, use Blue Lustre
They a,.. re-productlves, not
Value Market, Rt. 338, Racine.
wall to .,all. Rent electric
your #orlrer rolony. Free In7-Mic
sbampooer Sl. Baker Furnispections and Information on
ture.
7-Utc '10. 2 POTATOES, cabbage,
crawl space dangers. No
salesman, low overhead, 50
hall rwmer beans, tllarleo
per cent savings. Allled Pest POODLE PUPPIES. AKC Toy
Hilton, Portland.
7.f.121c
mlnlan,e. S75 and up. Stud
Control. Pomeroy,
Ohio.
service and grooming. Phooe HEREFORDS at private treaty,
Ph'lne ll9!-56li9 evenlnp.
992-5443.
II 3 Uc
f..IWOip
50 &lt;OWS with calvee at side,
10 two year old bred heifers,
wr. .L DO oewing at home - AKC Golden Retriever pupple~~, 22 yearling open heifers, herd
524 Ash St., Middleport. 99%zippers. pockets, pegging.
strong In breeding ol Zato
5443.
I-2S-tfc
hemming. alterations, etc.
Heir, Real Sllver Domino,
Mrs. Froddle Thabet. Mason.
HUI!ker Milchtel and Real ()n..
Pbono l'IS-5651.
4-!0-tlc NEW JOHN DEERE diesel doward. (lows rebred to Mastr.r
zer, angle blade and hydrauLampllght and Silver Zato
lic winch, only run 711 hours.
HAPPY HOUR, Shenang Springs
heir bulla. Keith Farms, SpenAlso 11164 International twoNile Club, 5 to e p.m. Moncer, W. Va. Phone 304-927·1431
ton truck, good shape. Above
day lhru Friday. Ladles night
or 3tH--927-2SII.
7-Utc
Ma&gt;on
on left of road. Phone
every Friday.
utle
m-5147.
7-Z-tlc
ONE IC mm IIOUIId or silent moW•nted To Buy
vie projector, 50 to laiO feet
ANTIQUES, lumltnre, dlahes. YOU CAN still save S30 or more
reel capacity, SIOO, complete
on aluminum boats. Call 99%milcellaneous. Mrs. Howard
lawn
mower shop sharpening
1347 or 992-8256. Caoh or
Cecil, 1100 W. Main st., Pomoequipment, like new, pbone
S-19-30tc
' .. ...,
1-S,-tf&lt;! term...
Milson 'I'IS6ISS alter 5 p.m.
7-1&amp;4tc63 HONDA. 300 DREAM, and

- -- -

APPLIANCE SALE

Ab Applll-. DlkNii!edl
Free Benrul and Timex

Sherman D. Bualdrk and Ellie

olfv.

OlD'

~ POMEROY
PHONE

•

6.6$ · 1 I

992-2!81

liCk W. CarMy, Mgr•
Buslneas Servfcts
APPLIANCE HOSPITAL - Authorized Brlgp alld Stratton
and Lawn Boy, parts a n d
servlcee; repair Tecumseh
aod Kohler eng!neo and aU
small appllanceo, 'l1drd st.,
Mason, W. Va., John M. Rollgeu.

I;ylo w. Hysell, Leona Hysell, and Carey H. Hysell to

C. C. BRADFORD

AUCriONEER
Cooaplele Senke
Pboae IIIII'!
Q1ll Bradlant
llldne. liMo

Marcia J. Capehart, 33.37 Acres,

Navada Beaver, dec., to Henry

SEWING MACHINES, repair
oervlce. aU makes. WY 2- - Tho Fabric Shop, Pomeroy. Authorhed Singer Sales
and Service. We Sharnen
Scissors.
:1-29-tlc
C!GARE'M'E vending machines
and service. ABC Enterprises,
Mason, W. Va. Phone T'IS-5MS.

Utle .

son, Foster Drive, Mason, w.
Va ., completed reconnais88Jlc:e
traJniug June 21 at the Army
Armor Cooter, Ft. Knox, Ky.
He received eight weeks ot
training in the methods ot scwt.
lng and patroll!r~g, with e~­
sts on the operation or Army
jeeps on rugged terrain. Instruction wa s aJso given In camou-

Middleport, o.

Pomeroy

SAVE SPACE

BELPRE, OIUO

FlEE STORAGE

BRING NEW
liFE TO

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment

5:.55.

Mason, W, Vo.

CARPETING
RtviYI tftl orl1iul buut1 tf M . ..
CIIIIIICI' ill rour DWn hanlt b~ Yon Jl:llrlltr
dtJ•fHIII "lttlod. ND IIIUIL flo ' fiiiL No
Odtr. UN fUll tile 1111'111 ~IJ.

.....................
""'-···-,...,

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
IN E. MilD

AIC ClEANERS
773-$643

YOUR

-GUARANTEEDPHONE 992-2094

IMHtl Malle Cl,.. CIHftllle

1-.111 l•lllt

Pomeny, 0

•

EYINRUDI
8ALBII AND IIERVICE

'68'1ln 5toc:lc

It, I r.t.rer

CALL COOLYH.&amp;.I ....,..

ArnNnON BOYS &amp; GIRISI

1li Mat.
3Ughtwln
9li Sportwln

-Schwane! Marine
Hocking~ry, Ohio

AGES 10.17
Pomeroy-Middleport ArH

PBONB.,...

DO YOU NEED SPENDING MONEY?
If the answer is yes, -

or call
Katie Crow, The Dally Sentinel,
992-21 56. She'll tell you how to Hm
(t and at the lime time get valuable
tr1lnlng

and Mu. Eugene E. Jobn.

-

-- " ·FEMALE HELP WANTED

..

~-

flage techniCJ,les, concealment 1n

natural torraJn and handling or
weapons.

Receptionist-Bookkeeper-Excellent
Starting Pay-Ho1pitaU1Ation and
Paid V1cation. Call for Appointi\'Hint

Pine Grove

WMPORADIO

PHONE 992-5355

Those spending the weekend

with Mrs. Katie Young

and Mr.
and Mrs. Lewis Hud8011 were

Mr. and Mrs. Otho Young, Burbank; Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Ropp
and dausJ&gt;ter, SevUie; Mr. Jay •
Grunder, Gary Grunder, Inez,
Venus, and Louella Young, Bur-

bank.
Mrs . Katie Young and Mr. and
Mrs. Lewis Hudson called on
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Meek, Middle-

port.
Howtrd Young ia recovering

from a heart atlack at Meigs Genera! Hospital, Pomeroy.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Baney
and aon spent an afternoon ov!th
Mrs. KaUe Young.
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Hudsoo
aod Mrs. Katie Young called on
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bailey
and 1011 on Saturda.Y afternoon.

PIAIIK W. ...,..,

SuM
1.1.0D

Dorcas.
Mr. and Mrs. Warren

News Notes

were v!olttng Mrs.
cle recently.

Mary

,.., .......

~

Rnae

---

Cir-

Mrs. Eunie Brinker, Mrs. set..
Mr. and Mrs. Allen Teylor ll' Carleton, Margaret Alii and
had as guests over Ule week. Pat were guest a ol Mr. and Mra.
end their daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Warren Rose recently.
!ilelby Pickens ()luby), Keith,
Mr. and Mrs. Ral.Pit Rn10 of
Ronnie, Katl&gt;l', Bonnie, Branda, Racine aod two children were
and Jay or Columbus. lilolby recent callers at Warr01t Rn10
celebrated hta birthday SUoda,y. bome.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hodson,
Mr. Ral_pb Lee, Mro. Robert
Gene aod Tont, and DroamaStump _ Lee aod eldldr111 visited !lJnda.y

. Five Bondsmen

Return from Tour
MASON - Five Wahama 111gb
School Band mambera have returned til their bomes from a

tour with tbe Al!-State Bond.
llarrlett ~- Mar!l1n Glbbl
and her cousin were &amp;lnday dlo- afternoon In Athens with Ralph' I and Bock;y Gilmore, all of N..,
Hav.., ~ad aeecind, third and
ner I!IIOsts or Mr. and Mrs. AI- a!ster, Mrs. Faro Stansbury.
fourth In tho first clarinet ••·
len Taylor.
Warren Rose did some com~

tlon; Mike Jones, New Hav•. ·

wao In tbe IOlo clla!r of tho
b!n!ng Cor Foreet VanMeter et
Firat Claa
The U.S. A I r F or c e drum sactlon and Jameo ArUo,
· Academy commissioned 2115 Ma100, was fourth 11110111 the

Mr. and Mrs. Jamea Maya,

11 lrllmpots. Gerald Simmons
Is director or the Wahama Bond. · _

On' THr:PICl'URE
With A,DIII Tower

COMPLITI LINI 011
CHANNIL MASTD &amp;

'I NCO
OIOTOtll eiOOITill
eANTINNAS
Allout Tile Channa!
Moohr c -.. "-""

"*

RIDENOUR
RADIO &amp; TV

Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur FreckFischer, Racine, called on Mrs.

Katie Young and Mrs. Lew!o
Hudaon Tuesda,y afternoon.
Mrs. Katie Young, Mr. and
Mrs. Lewis Hndeon called on
Mn. Margaret BaJJey, ~aeu1e.
Lewis Hodson called on Simon
Newland and sons, Thursda_y,

Mr. and Mrs. Jamet Hollan
Sr. and Rick spent a few day a
in Georgia with their son, Gerald.
MilS Avice Mays spent a few
days with her sister, Mr. and

Mrs. Elmor Young and Gerry.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Ralley
and Bobby spent Wednesda,y evening with Mrs. Katie Young.
Friend• of the coiiUJIUiit;y are
glad to •
of tbe recovery of
Howard YOUIIiMn. ()nthta Gohrlng, Middleport, and Paat Bailey, Colum-

.......,

It:..

• ......,., .... L... Tlll&amp;ll.. ef P. M.

Mr. and Mn. Howard Searle a, . bus, called on Mr. Katie Young · second lieutenants in its first
Carl Pullins, and Ruth Am Mus- and Mr. and Mra. Lewlo Hod- graduat!JJR cia" at Colorado
ser cat led on Mrs. Katie Young son July 4.
Springs, COlo., in June of 1959..
and Mrs. Howard Young and L!oda.
Several trom here have been
visiting Howard Young &lt;ku-lnglda
hospital stay.
Mro. Ada Holter, Pomeroy,
cslled oo Mrs. Katie Young, ~­
day evening.

WAKIID

·.FAYE MAN11Y

P1L 99:1-21 t3

MOTH PROOFING

Howard 0. Johnson, 19, son of

Mr.

ILAETTNAIS

1· 5 SUNDAYS

1220 WASHfNGTON BLVD.
423-7521

Private

er, Cleveland, and Mrs. &amp;laie

CONI'Aa

f

FT. KNOX, Ky. -

From the Larpst Truc1&lt; or
Bulllbzer Hlcllator To The
limallost H•ter Core. ·-

MILLER MOBILE HOMES

Training Period

Long Bottom, vi ailed Mr. and
Mrs. Elmer Youn_i and Gerry.

IN MIDDLEPORT

OPEN: 9 • 9 WEEKDAYS

ser and BarbaraJ. Grueser, Par-

CARIB

CARRD
WANrED

IN TH£ MII).()HIO V~
Nv:Ne into a completely furnished, brand
new home that le~s you enjoy life at Its care
free best.
COMPAU OUR SERVICE
QUAUTY &amp; PRICE AS LOW AS _ $3495.00

READY • MIX concreto dellv- cels, Rutland,
ered rlgbt to your project.
Everett Coy to Vivian Coy,
ll'asl and easy. Free eoll- Parcels, Rutland.
mateo. Phone 1192--!284, GoogEllla J . Wolfe to David A.
leln Ready · Mb: Co., Middle- Wolfe, 60 Acres, Letart.
port, Ohio.
.
I 10 tic
Earl and Farmie Hart to Ronald llart and Hilda Hart, ParBUDGET PRICE furnltill'll on cels, &amp;rtton.
our third floor budget shop.
Baker Furniture. Middleport. Johnson F'mishes
Ohio.
! !I tic

........

f

cia Hysell to I;yle W. Hysell and
Leona Hysell, 31.20 Acres, SalIsbury.

AIR CO~mONING Refrlser· R. Beaver, Cert. for Trans.,
atlon service. Jack'll Rafr!R- Chester .
eratlon, New Raven. hone
Nicholas Grueser and Marjor11112-11'/1.
4 • tic ie Grueser to James E. Grue-

·-·

In Business
Section

MOillE HOMES

Marcia J. Capehart and Mar-

I 1 tic

.....

---

ll•llf• Senlca

LargatDisplayOf

Salisbury.

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

lotte.

EIPEIIENCED

MIWR HOMES

Syracuse-&amp;ltton.

·-·

"*

to Mary M. Merrill
and ilerbert D. Merrit~ Parcels,
salisbury.
Gertrude Nelson, dec., to Denver Nelson, Hope E. Peck, Jack
M. Nel11011, Ronald C, Nel100,
Joan Brickles, Atr!d. for Trano.,
salem.
Armle D, Clendenin, dec., to
Goldie M. Clendenin, Cert. Cor
Trans., Lebanon.
Jobn ROJI1ll" ~le and Juno
E. ~le til Russo!! R. Bailey and
Margaret Ralloy, 2.9 acres,
Chester.
Herbert Gilkey and Mary GO·
key to Johnnie H. Nailll and Mil·
dred B, Nash, Lot 14, MiddleM. Bualddt

ELECTROLUX SALES and m- port.
Archie E. Lee and June P.
vice : Sweepers, rug wasben
and polishers. Genuine parts. Lee to Robert M. Hysell and
Call ~S-tS-tfc Jul!a M. Hysell , . 161 Acres,

helmet. Recently overhauled,
NGTICI 0111 AJ111'(11MTMINT
LOST, SET OF KEYS on ring
$395. See Raymond Rowe, Rt. NO. 6, STOKER COAL at for. ltt.t.
Of N.. U• Peerf lvehr, .,._
In Pomeroy or Middleport,
mer Clinton Coal Co. tipple,
I, Racine, or pbone 317-2270
• herebJ ..,,.a tht.l I~
located S miles east of Wells- H. Notke
llndor please ootlly Clyde
alter 8 p.m.
7-6-4tc
Bm1er of 11'1' H. 18th Strat, Coton. Pbone 38f.3787 Welilton lumbtQ:, Obto. bu beea dull ·~
Wines, PortlaDd, reWloll'd, Pit
MmlD11tnlor of tile r.Laa..
for Information. Walton Coal polnted.
MS-:1211.
7-1o-Jtp ACREAGE IN Melgl L o c a I
M N.W. hul Rurbr d - 4 .
Company.
7-11).30tc late of PlltatturJh,, AllaJbiDJ' CouaSchool Diltrlct. Write Box IllSt,-, Pea.a.
Cnd.lt.on are r.qlllred to ftle UMir
A, In care ol '!11e Dally SenHelpWa.nd
r l.aJ.IM wttb utd fiduetkQt Wldtln roar
CAR HOPS, apply In penon, tinel, Pomeroy.
7-Htp
mcmtbl.
Dt.tect w. 1n1 11.,. or JuiJ' 111a.
RHI
E1t1te
For
Sale
Cnnr'l Steak llouaa. 7-t«e
P. M, O'aiJIN
llltl ZIG ZAG sewing machine.
~
'1'·10; 7_17; TM Me
Saleoman'o
demonstrators
For Sale or Tracie
LlltAi. NOTICI
MOTORBIKE FOR SALE OR regularly sold for $99.95. will
'Notice
bl berllbl' livea that a pubaen lor S4U5 or SS per month.
He burtftl for Su.ltoa ToWDthiJI r.r
!ride lor pmy. • • tbtl UMIII budpt wiD bll beld. at I
Free bome demonstration.
7-~
p.m. luJy 11. at U.. ~ 'l'oWB
-.ma.
7-7-«&lt; Gl!lO. BOliSTEi'tER, llrolhtunDM TOWtftiiiP
00 IT YOIJIISEll - I Bed. 1116 MUSTANG connrtlble, I
TRUITift
SPECIAL STEREO. 1168 Early
rooms, bath, lull baseml!lll. UO.Uc
e,lillder. 3 lpeed, al1lo !til
Ama1can
stereo
radio
eomS1200.00
llutq V-1, 3 speed, llnancNOTICI OP APP'OttiTMfrl'
iq anllable. Coli IliUM? blnatlon. Thls Is a beautiful HANDY - 5 Room1, bath, levoolld
state
unit
wl1ll
4
speed
el
lot,
near
stores.
f31100.00
c ... No. lf.114
after 5 p.m. pbme 111-1741.
hta,. .. .....,. 1. MapiMI!, hchanger. Take over payments CI.OSE-IN - I Acre, I rooms,
7-t-lfc
.. llenbr 111"11. tht Onof sa or pay balance o1 $39.88
cistem with wlller system, aidNotte~
flaJo.D\Ia of Ral!lne, MelD Count,., Ohlo, bu 1Mta d1llJ appotDt.e«
lor free bome demonstration
storm doors, windows.
:lxlfaltor of thti &amp;tate or Oeorte
Forhnt
ea!l -.ma. Also, have re~.000.00 R. H•)'Dllll. deceued. Jaltl or IAtart
PLENTY of space for ooe tnDpoueaaed 11ereo In walnut IN TOWN- 5 rooms, bath, fur. ToWD~hlp. II•IP CouatJ, Obto.
CrtdHGn ue ft4lulred to mt U.ell'
er with aU facllltles. In s,ra. · cabinet lor payments of f5.91
nace, out of htgb waler, cloae datm.
wt!.h IMld ftd•cl.arr wltllln four
or balance of fl8.95. 7-7-4tc - to stores. $4500.00
- - Call m-1101. f.IJ.lte
D11M thlll 1n dq of .11111, lMI.
BELEN or VIRGIL TEAFORD
' · N. 0'11181
,,...... JW.. ef llld CltVaty
P'IJRNISBED and unfurnlslled POI'ATOES, beaiiB, cabbage
7-31 f ·lOJ 7 IT Me
A!JIIOCIATI!S - apartmento. Clooe til IICIIoal.
8YRAaJSE
ODd beell. Pbono 1143-22!'4.
l'bolle IIUG!.
I._IJ.lte Clarence Proffitt, Portland.
NOf'ICI OP AP'POIHTMUIT
ca. No. 11.ltt•..
..
MM H. Phi ...... D.ctleecl
Ohio.
7-7-tlc
Notlet II beftbJ Jl•ea that n.rTRAILER SPACE, aU uWillel
Insurance
eoa .lohQIIOD of Rout. I. ltadae.
available. Inquire 156 Mulber- ArmQUES, round table wl1ll AUTOMOBILE Insurance beoo Oblo, ball bela 41117 ·~ Kaeeuklr of UJ.e Lbt ww and ,...._.
ry after 3 or 5 p.m. Write P.
center pool. Love OM!, two eaneeDed! Lost ynur operat- IIIIIU of 11M B. Pblhoa. D~Nued.
of Letut Townablp, ....,. CoalrtJ',
0. Jim: 425 Pomeroy. '-D-Ue
11111111 center tables, marble
or's license? CIU 992-21111!.
Obi~
Cndllon art l'llll\lbWd to filii tJM&amp;t
top drelaer, 710 Maple st.,
I II Ue
~ ..... hid flchletUJ Wlthl.a four
JI'URNISIIED apartmem, two
111011tl&amp;l.
Middleport.
7-Hk
bedrooDII, Middleport. Pbonll
Dtl.etl w. J8dl of ~~.~. P. H. O'IRIIN
'
,.......
liNIN
ef
.... CWIIIy
ln#l4.
SEVEN ROOM fumllhed farm
Help WHied
t.a. f.lD; 7 l7 ate
boule and 7 ..,... of laod.
I ROOMS AND BATH, !'IV Mul11ooae jull recently remadeJ.
berry Ave., Pomeroy. emed. Nice 8IIITOUIIIIIngs, 2
tact Rose Sisson, pbone welll, utreme!J good wlller,
2011 after 5 p.m. Phone Illone eellar, two lllorage lbeda,
lilt.
1-1-t!e
plenty ol ganleu lp&amp;CO. 'Green
Aerel" Farm In Rutland.
TIIAILER. BROWN'S TraUor
7.f.t21p
Pari:, Mlnem1lle. Pbonll 111JDI.
7-f«e FIVE ROOM HOUSE and bath,
- floor, pully lumfshed if
•
Ji'URNIBIIED GARAGE ...-rtdellred. 'II! s. Second Ave.,
menl on Llneoln Hill. UIDIIIel
Middleport. Can be seen by
paid; ldultl only. Phone ... . appointment alter 5 p.m. m,
den Walburn, pbone m-280&amp;.
-l-It-tle
7.f.tfc
ONE P'IVE ROOM boule, 11Jo
llll'le 1o11 rw ~&amp;~e. c.n Jaeob O!IE ~AITED rldln8 mare,
'IWIIII'. lflddleprt, Olllo.
broke lD ride the beat. Am7-I0-4tp
Disputed Possession
old Grate, Rutland, 742-4211
The
only disputed possession
days, 742-SSIII nllblll. 7-10 6lc
of
t!Je
United States Is three
, ForW.
square miles of Caribbean
8o\LlCSMAN'S DEMONSTRA- ONE HACKNEY MARE, chestreal estate called the Swan
Islands. Both the United
ToR. ,.. Jli zag -ml ma- nut oolor, I yean old, 41
States and Honduras claim the
lndlel taU, Clll and "-'-·
..... NfUIIriY AI, In port.
i•lands, which lie 100 miles off
tiWt complete, pay $39 or t5 U. been llbown two yean.
the
Central American coast,
l'laac Lewis, Cllft«&lt;, W. Va.
-'11, call 19J-21136.
northeast of Honduras.
7-l~p
7-7-«c

ean

Business -Services

Transfers

Watcllee . . time to cheel&lt;

Loll and Found

'

.

"How can wo danco topthor If you lnelrt on llltilnl,.
to th• ball camo7"

,

�The Jlally

It -

. .

Middleport-Pomeroy,
Jucy 10, 1968.

---

So~nel,

-A -LITTLR.-'IIQMEWORK' Watching Want Ads Bri1tg
Top Grade. Res~lts.
•.
.
'

--WAft AD

INPGIMATIOII

1 •·•·..., ....... PWIIC.,.._
......, DMllllnt t .....

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

w....

1111 .... 11tHI f

l.fll,

n.. Pwa~llllltr

,...,.,., tM Pllllt

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

.. Mit .,. Ntttt 'tiiY Mt ....... ...

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

,........................._.~-FM;.~~;~;:;;.:.:..:..
~
Property
Pomeroy
&lt;JULY ONLY&gt;
2 SIGNS·

tw

Day
., """"""'
IHULATIOIII

will ....

Cl'
i'

lATII

I

,

" " llllllrfleftt,

11 cdta . ., Ward tlx ltNKUUN

-rt~

u ,.,

'

o-...-t .,. ,... •

ttnt

IIMI a ,. .. wfttlln 1t Gra.
CAID OP THANKI &amp; OIITUAI'Y
t1.11 .... .. ....,. ......... •••

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

·-·

aLIND ADI
.._.IHIMI tk CMrWe

'

,., ..._.

O. . ICI HOUtl
11• a.a to II.. IL•· INfiN ...... ,.. . . . . . . . . ....,

QUALITY _

I

lftcarNd .,..,..••

,., Want M .."In
..... ' " ........................
..
MIRI!ItUftl Clla,.. 7ft
It dftll .., . . nl. till'" ""'"ilOOII..
I

'
i

I

Motor Co.

'

1965 CHEVELLE MALIBU • .••. , , •• •• •• • •••• $1595

Conv. v..a onglna, P'"'ergtlde, rod!o, heater, new whitewall
· tires, green OJrterior finish with white nylon tql vinyl in~ri~ trim. A·~ owner trade in
1964 FORD GALA
.
500
••• • •••-~•• • •• •• •••• $1295
4 Door. dark green finish with clean matching interior.
New W.W. tires, V-8 ellgine, automatic trans., power steer. ing, radio &amp; heater. _
.

1962 FORD XL 500 HT CPE. • . , ... , .. .... .. . $895
Beautlful white finish with red vinyl interior, bucket seats,

console, V-8 er:wtne, automatic trrAns., power steering.
-~o !!, ~etttL...NB!I'

ltW..lire.L.

Pcittleroy Motor Co. ·
OPEN lEVIS. 1:00 P.M.
I'OMEIIIOY, OHIO

NOll~

BAND AT JACKS CLUB every
Friday and Saturday from 9
For Sale
to 1. Dale McDonald and his
For Sale
Drifters.
7-11»tc Ill PEARL ST., Middleport, JERSEY COW, $175. PIJOne
must aell lor eaah price,
mG21.
74-Jic
$3000. Pbone 99Z-.1267. 7-7-ftc
BAND EVERY FRIDAY from
9 p.m. to 2 a.m. "Best band
1964 CHEVROLET pickup, I ft.
in the area ." Shenang Springs CAN YOU QUALIFY? 1968
step side, dark blue, pooltlve
name
brand
stereo
AM
&amp;
FM,
Nile Club.
7-11).11c
traction. Call 99U256 after
4 speakers, floating turn
5:110 p.m.
7-8-.ltc
table, nice wabut finish, take
THERE WILL BE a gun shoot
over paymen:S of 16 per ONE OF THE BEST grocery
Sunday, July 14, beginning at
month or pay balance SIOI.62.
noon at the Forked R u n
businesses In the area, a very
Try
It
in
your
llome,
call
mSportsman Club. Everyone II
profitable Investment I o r
2&amp;!6.
7-7-«c
someone who wishes til oper.
wei&lt;Ome.
7~tc
ate their own busbtess. ConTERMITES SWARMING? - I(.EEP carpet cleaning probtact Lynn Hart at Racine Full
lems small, use Blue Lustre
They a,.. re-productlves, not
Value Market, Rt. 338, Racine.
wall to .,all. Rent electric
your #orlrer rolony. Free In7-Mic
sbampooer Sl. Baker Furnispections and Information on
ture.
7-Utc '10. 2 POTATOES, cabbage,
crawl space dangers. No
salesman, low overhead, 50
hall rwmer beans, tllarleo
per cent savings. Allled Pest POODLE PUPPIES. AKC Toy
Hilton, Portland.
7.f.121c
mlnlan,e. S75 and up. Stud
Control. Pomeroy,
Ohio.
service and grooming. Phooe HEREFORDS at private treaty,
Ph'lne ll9!-56li9 evenlnp.
992-5443.
II 3 Uc
f..IWOip
50 &lt;OWS with calvee at side,
10 two year old bred heifers,
wr. .L DO oewing at home - AKC Golden Retriever pupple~~, 22 yearling open heifers, herd
524 Ash St., Middleport. 99%zippers. pockets, pegging.
strong In breeding ol Zato
5443.
I-2S-tfc
hemming. alterations, etc.
Heir, Real Sllver Domino,
Mrs. Froddle Thabet. Mason.
HUI!ker Milchtel and Real ()n..
Pbono l'IS-5651.
4-!0-tlc NEW JOHN DEERE diesel doward. (lows rebred to Mastr.r
zer, angle blade and hydrauLampllght and Silver Zato
lic winch, only run 711 hours.
HAPPY HOUR, Shenang Springs
heir bulla. Keith Farms, SpenAlso 11164 International twoNile Club, 5 to e p.m. Moncer, W. Va. Phone 304-927·1431
ton truck, good shape. Above
day lhru Friday. Ladles night
or 3tH--927-2SII.
7-Utc
Ma&gt;on
on left of road. Phone
every Friday.
utle
m-5147.
7-Z-tlc
ONE IC mm IIOUIId or silent moW•nted To Buy
vie projector, 50 to laiO feet
ANTIQUES, lumltnre, dlahes. YOU CAN still save S30 or more
reel capacity, SIOO, complete
on aluminum boats. Call 99%milcellaneous. Mrs. Howard
lawn
mower shop sharpening
1347 or 992-8256. Caoh or
Cecil, 1100 W. Main st., Pomoequipment, like new, pbone
S-19-30tc
' .. ...,
1-S,-tf&lt;! term...
Milson 'I'IS6ISS alter 5 p.m.
7-1&amp;4tc63 HONDA. 300 DREAM, and

- -- -

APPLIANCE SALE

Ab Applll-. DlkNii!edl
Free Benrul and Timex

Sherman D. Bualdrk and Ellie

olfv.

OlD'

~ POMEROY
PHONE

•

6.6$ · 1 I

992-2!81

liCk W. CarMy, Mgr•
Buslneas Servfcts
APPLIANCE HOSPITAL - Authorized Brlgp alld Stratton
and Lawn Boy, parts a n d
servlcee; repair Tecumseh
aod Kohler eng!neo and aU
small appllanceo, 'l1drd st.,
Mason, W. Va., John M. Rollgeu.

I;ylo w. Hysell, Leona Hysell, and Carey H. Hysell to

C. C. BRADFORD

AUCriONEER
Cooaplele Senke
Pboae IIIII'!
Q1ll Bradlant
llldne. liMo

Marcia J. Capehart, 33.37 Acres,

Navada Beaver, dec., to Henry

SEWING MACHINES, repair
oervlce. aU makes. WY 2- - Tho Fabric Shop, Pomeroy. Authorhed Singer Sales
and Service. We Sharnen
Scissors.
:1-29-tlc
C!GARE'M'E vending machines
and service. ABC Enterprises,
Mason, W. Va. Phone T'IS-5MS.

Utle .

son, Foster Drive, Mason, w.
Va ., completed reconnais88Jlc:e
traJniug June 21 at the Army
Armor Cooter, Ft. Knox, Ky.
He received eight weeks ot
training in the methods ot scwt.
lng and patroll!r~g, with e~­
sts on the operation or Army
jeeps on rugged terrain. Instruction wa s aJso given In camou-

Middleport, o.

Pomeroy

SAVE SPACE

BELPRE, OIUO

FlEE STORAGE

BRING NEW
liFE TO

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment

5:.55.

Mason, W, Vo.

CARPETING
RtviYI tftl orl1iul buut1 tf M . ..
CIIIIIICI' ill rour DWn hanlt b~ Yon Jl:llrlltr
dtJ•fHIII "lttlod. ND IIIUIL flo ' fiiiL No
Odtr. UN fUll tile 1111'111 ~IJ.

.....................
""'-···-,...,

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
IN E. MilD

AIC ClEANERS
773-$643

YOUR

-GUARANTEEDPHONE 992-2094

IMHtl Malle Cl,.. CIHftllle

1-.111 l•lllt

Pomeny, 0

•

EYINRUDI
8ALBII AND IIERVICE

'68'1ln 5toc:lc

It, I r.t.rer

CALL COOLYH.&amp;.I ....,..

ArnNnON BOYS &amp; GIRISI

1li Mat.
3Ughtwln
9li Sportwln

-Schwane! Marine
Hocking~ry, Ohio

AGES 10.17
Pomeroy-Middleport ArH

PBONB.,...

DO YOU NEED SPENDING MONEY?
If the answer is yes, -

or call
Katie Crow, The Dally Sentinel,
992-21 56. She'll tell you how to Hm
(t and at the lime time get valuable
tr1lnlng

and Mu. Eugene E. Jobn.

-

-- " ·FEMALE HELP WANTED

..

~-

flage techniCJ,les, concealment 1n

natural torraJn and handling or
weapons.

Receptionist-Bookkeeper-Excellent
Starting Pay-Ho1pitaU1Ation and
Paid V1cation. Call for Appointi\'Hint

Pine Grove

WMPORADIO

PHONE 992-5355

Those spending the weekend

with Mrs. Katie Young

and Mr.
and Mrs. Lewis Hud8011 were

Mr. and Mrs. Otho Young, Burbank; Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Ropp
and dausJ&gt;ter, SevUie; Mr. Jay •
Grunder, Gary Grunder, Inez,
Venus, and Louella Young, Bur-

bank.
Mrs . Katie Young and Mr. and
Mrs. Lewis Hudson called on
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Meek, Middle-

port.
Howtrd Young ia recovering

from a heart atlack at Meigs Genera! Hospital, Pomeroy.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Baney
and aon spent an afternoon ov!th
Mrs. KaUe Young.
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Hudsoo
aod Mrs. Katie Young called on
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bailey
and 1011 on Saturda.Y afternoon.

PIAIIK W. ...,..,

SuM
1.1.0D

Dorcas.
Mr. and Mrs. Warren

News Notes

were v!olttng Mrs.
cle recently.

Mary

,.., .......

~

Rnae

---

Cir-

Mrs. Eunie Brinker, Mrs. set..
Mr. and Mrs. Allen Teylor ll' Carleton, Margaret Alii and
had as guests over Ule week. Pat were guest a ol Mr. and Mra.
end their daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Warren Rose recently.
!ilelby Pickens ()luby), Keith,
Mr. and Mrs. Ral.Pit Rn10 of
Ronnie, Katl&gt;l', Bonnie, Branda, Racine aod two children were
and Jay or Columbus. lilolby recent callers at Warr01t Rn10
celebrated hta birthday SUoda,y. bome.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hodson,
Mr. Ral_pb Lee, Mro. Robert
Gene aod Tont, and DroamaStump _ Lee aod eldldr111 visited !lJnda.y

. Five Bondsmen

Return from Tour
MASON - Five Wahama 111gb
School Band mambera have returned til their bomes from a

tour with tbe Al!-State Bond.
llarrlett ~- Mar!l1n Glbbl
and her cousin were &amp;lnday dlo- afternoon In Athens with Ralph' I and Bock;y Gilmore, all of N..,
Hav.., ~ad aeecind, third and
ner I!IIOsts or Mr. and Mrs. AI- a!ster, Mrs. Faro Stansbury.
fourth In tho first clarinet ••·
len Taylor.
Warren Rose did some com~

tlon; Mike Jones, New Hav•. ·

wao In tbe IOlo clla!r of tho
b!n!ng Cor Foreet VanMeter et
Firat Claa
The U.S. A I r F or c e drum sactlon and Jameo ArUo,
· Academy commissioned 2115 Ma100, was fourth 11110111 the

Mr. and Mrs. Jamea Maya,

11 lrllmpots. Gerald Simmons
Is director or the Wahama Bond. · _

On' THr:PICl'URE
With A,DIII Tower

COMPLITI LINI 011
CHANNIL MASTD &amp;

'I NCO
OIOTOtll eiOOITill
eANTINNAS
Allout Tile Channa!
Moohr c -.. "-""

"*

RIDENOUR
RADIO &amp; TV

Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur FreckFischer, Racine, called on Mrs.

Katie Young and Mrs. Lew!o
Hudaon Tuesda,y afternoon.
Mrs. Katie Young, Mr. and
Mrs. Lewis Hndeon called on
Mn. Margaret BaJJey, ~aeu1e.
Lewis Hodson called on Simon
Newland and sons, Thursda_y,

Mr. and Mrs. Jamet Hollan
Sr. and Rick spent a few day a
in Georgia with their son, Gerald.
MilS Avice Mays spent a few
days with her sister, Mr. and

Mrs. Elmor Young and Gerry.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Ralley
and Bobby spent Wednesda,y evening with Mrs. Katie Young.
Friend• of the coiiUJIUiit;y are
glad to •
of tbe recovery of
Howard YOUIIiMn. ()nthta Gohrlng, Middleport, and Paat Bailey, Colum-

.......,

It:..

• ......,., .... L... Tlll&amp;ll.. ef P. M.

Mr. and Mn. Howard Searle a, . bus, called on Mr. Katie Young · second lieutenants in its first
Carl Pullins, and Ruth Am Mus- and Mr. and Mra. Lewlo Hod- graduat!JJR cia" at Colorado
ser cat led on Mrs. Katie Young son July 4.
Springs, COlo., in June of 1959..
and Mrs. Howard Young and L!oda.
Several trom here have been
visiting Howard Young &lt;ku-lnglda
hospital stay.
Mro. Ada Holter, Pomeroy,
cslled oo Mrs. Katie Young, ~­
day evening.

WAKIID

·.FAYE MAN11Y

P1L 99:1-21 t3

MOTH PROOFING

Howard 0. Johnson, 19, son of

Mr.

ILAETTNAIS

1· 5 SUNDAYS

1220 WASHfNGTON BLVD.
423-7521

Private

er, Cleveland, and Mrs. &amp;laie

CONI'Aa

f

FT. KNOX, Ky. -

From the Larpst Truc1&lt; or
Bulllbzer Hlcllator To The
limallost H•ter Core. ·-

MILLER MOBILE HOMES

Training Period

Long Bottom, vi ailed Mr. and
Mrs. Elmer Youn_i and Gerry.

IN MIDDLEPORT

OPEN: 9 • 9 WEEKDAYS

ser and BarbaraJ. Grueser, Par-

CARIB

CARRD
WANrED

IN TH£ MII).()HIO V~
Nv:Ne into a completely furnished, brand
new home that le~s you enjoy life at Its care
free best.
COMPAU OUR SERVICE
QUAUTY &amp; PRICE AS LOW AS _ $3495.00

READY • MIX concreto dellv- cels, Rutland,
ered rlgbt to your project.
Everett Coy to Vivian Coy,
ll'asl and easy. Free eoll- Parcels, Rutland.
mateo. Phone 1192--!284, GoogEllla J . Wolfe to David A.
leln Ready · Mb: Co., Middle- Wolfe, 60 Acres, Letart.
port, Ohio.
.
I 10 tic
Earl and Farmie Hart to Ronald llart and Hilda Hart, ParBUDGET PRICE furnltill'll on cels, &amp;rtton.
our third floor budget shop.
Baker Furniture. Middleport. Johnson F'mishes
Ohio.
! !I tic

........

f

cia Hysell to I;yle W. Hysell and
Leona Hysell, 31.20 Acres, SalIsbury.

AIR CO~mONING Refrlser· R. Beaver, Cert. for Trans.,
atlon service. Jack'll Rafr!R- Chester .
eratlon, New Raven. hone
Nicholas Grueser and Marjor11112-11'/1.
4 • tic ie Grueser to James E. Grue-

·-·

In Business
Section

MOillE HOMES

Marcia J. Capehart and Mar-

I 1 tic

.....

---

ll•llf• Senlca

LargatDisplayOf

Salisbury.

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

lotte.

EIPEIIENCED

MIWR HOMES

Syracuse-&amp;ltton.

·-·

"*

to Mary M. Merrill
and ilerbert D. Merrit~ Parcels,
salisbury.
Gertrude Nelson, dec., to Denver Nelson, Hope E. Peck, Jack
M. Nel11011, Ronald C, Nel100,
Joan Brickles, Atr!d. for Trano.,
salem.
Armle D, Clendenin, dec., to
Goldie M. Clendenin, Cert. Cor
Trans., Lebanon.
Jobn ROJI1ll" ~le and Juno
E. ~le til Russo!! R. Bailey and
Margaret Ralloy, 2.9 acres,
Chester.
Herbert Gilkey and Mary GO·
key to Johnnie H. Nailll and Mil·
dred B, Nash, Lot 14, MiddleM. Bualddt

ELECTROLUX SALES and m- port.
Archie E. Lee and June P.
vice : Sweepers, rug wasben
and polishers. Genuine parts. Lee to Robert M. Hysell and
Call ~S-tS-tfc Jul!a M. Hysell , . 161 Acres,

helmet. Recently overhauled,
NGTICI 0111 AJ111'(11MTMINT
LOST, SET OF KEYS on ring
$395. See Raymond Rowe, Rt. NO. 6, STOKER COAL at for. ltt.t.
Of N.. U• Peerf lvehr, .,._
In Pomeroy or Middleport,
mer Clinton Coal Co. tipple,
I, Racine, or pbone 317-2270
• herebJ ..,,.a tht.l I~
located S miles east of Wells- H. Notke
llndor please ootlly Clyde
alter 8 p.m.
7-6-4tc
Bm1er of 11'1' H. 18th Strat, Coton. Pbone 38f.3787 Welilton lumbtQ:, Obto. bu beea dull ·~
Wines, PortlaDd, reWloll'd, Pit
MmlD11tnlor of tile r.Laa..
for Information. Walton Coal polnted.
MS-:1211.
7-1o-Jtp ACREAGE IN Melgl L o c a I
M N.W. hul Rurbr d - 4 .
Company.
7-11).30tc late of PlltatturJh,, AllaJbiDJ' CouaSchool Diltrlct. Write Box IllSt,-, Pea.a.
Cnd.lt.on are r.qlllred to ftle UMir
A, In care ol '!11e Dally SenHelpWa.nd
r l.aJ.IM wttb utd fiduetkQt Wldtln roar
CAR HOPS, apply In penon, tinel, Pomeroy.
7-Htp
mcmtbl.
Dt.tect w. 1n1 11.,. or JuiJ' 111a.
RHI
E1t1te
For
Sale
Cnnr'l Steak llouaa. 7-t«e
P. M, O'aiJIN
llltl ZIG ZAG sewing machine.
~
'1'·10; 7_17; TM Me
Saleoman'o
demonstrators
For Sale or Tracie
LlltAi. NOTICI
MOTORBIKE FOR SALE OR regularly sold for $99.95. will
'Notice
bl berllbl' livea that a pubaen lor S4U5 or SS per month.
He burtftl for Su.ltoa ToWDthiJI r.r
!ride lor pmy. • • tbtl UMIII budpt wiD bll beld. at I
Free bome demonstration.
7-~
p.m. luJy 11. at U.. ~ 'l'oWB
-.ma.
7-7-«&lt; Gl!lO. BOliSTEi'tER, llrolhtunDM TOWtftiiiP
00 IT YOIJIISEll - I Bed. 1116 MUSTANG connrtlble, I
TRUITift
SPECIAL STEREO. 1168 Early
rooms, bath, lull baseml!lll. UO.Uc
e,lillder. 3 lpeed, al1lo !til
Ama1can
stereo
radio
eomS1200.00
llutq V-1, 3 speed, llnancNOTICI OP APP'OttiTMfrl'
iq anllable. Coli IliUM? blnatlon. Thls Is a beautiful HANDY - 5 Room1, bath, levoolld
state
unit
wl1ll
4
speed
el
lot,
near
stores.
f31100.00
c ... No. lf.114
after 5 p.m. pbme 111-1741.
hta,. .. .....,. 1. MapiMI!, hchanger. Take over payments CI.OSE-IN - I Acre, I rooms,
7-t-lfc
.. llenbr 111"11. tht Onof sa or pay balance o1 $39.88
cistem with wlller system, aidNotte~
flaJo.D\Ia of Ral!lne, MelD Count,., Ohlo, bu 1Mta d1llJ appotDt.e«
lor free bome demonstration
storm doors, windows.
:lxlfaltor of thti &amp;tate or Oeorte
Forhnt
ea!l -.ma. Also, have re~.000.00 R. H•)'Dllll. deceued. Jaltl or IAtart
PLENTY of space for ooe tnDpoueaaed 11ereo In walnut IN TOWN- 5 rooms, bath, fur. ToWD~hlp. II•IP CouatJ, Obto.
CrtdHGn ue ft4lulred to mt U.ell'
er with aU facllltles. In s,ra. · cabinet lor payments of f5.91
nace, out of htgb waler, cloae datm.
wt!.h IMld ftd•cl.arr wltllln four
or balance of fl8.95. 7-7-4tc - to stores. $4500.00
- - Call m-1101. f.IJ.lte
D11M thlll 1n dq of .11111, lMI.
BELEN or VIRGIL TEAFORD
' · N. 0'11181
,,...... JW.. ef llld CltVaty
P'IJRNISBED and unfurnlslled POI'ATOES, beaiiB, cabbage
7-31 f ·lOJ 7 IT Me
A!JIIOCIATI!S - apartmento. Clooe til IICIIoal.
8YRAaJSE
ODd beell. Pbono 1143-22!'4.
l'bolle IIUG!.
I._IJ.lte Clarence Proffitt, Portland.
NOf'ICI OP AP'POIHTMUIT
ca. No. 11.ltt•..
..
MM H. Phi ...... D.ctleecl
Ohio.
7-7-tlc
Notlet II beftbJ Jl•ea that n.rTRAILER SPACE, aU uWillel
Insurance
eoa .lohQIIOD of Rout. I. ltadae.
available. Inquire 156 Mulber- ArmQUES, round table wl1ll AUTOMOBILE Insurance beoo Oblo, ball bela 41117 ·~ Kaeeuklr of UJ.e Lbt ww and ,...._.
ry after 3 or 5 p.m. Write P.
center pool. Love OM!, two eaneeDed! Lost ynur operat- IIIIIU of 11M B. Pblhoa. D~Nued.
of Letut Townablp, ....,. CoalrtJ',
0. Jim: 425 Pomeroy. '-D-Ue
11111111 center tables, marble
or's license? CIU 992-21111!.
Obi~
Cndllon art l'llll\lbWd to filii tJM&amp;t
top drelaer, 710 Maple st.,
I II Ue
~ ..... hid flchletUJ Wlthl.a four
JI'URNISIIED apartmem, two
111011tl&amp;l.
Middleport.
7-Hk
bedrooDII, Middleport. Pbonll
Dtl.etl w. J8dl of ~~.~. P. H. O'IRIIN
'
,.......
liNIN
ef
.... CWIIIy
ln#l4.
SEVEN ROOM fumllhed farm
Help WHied
t.a. f.lD; 7 l7 ate
boule and 7 ..,... of laod.
I ROOMS AND BATH, !'IV Mul11ooae jull recently remadeJ.
berry Ave., Pomeroy. emed. Nice 8IIITOUIIIIIngs, 2
tact Rose Sisson, pbone welll, utreme!J good wlller,
2011 after 5 p.m. Phone Illone eellar, two lllorage lbeda,
lilt.
1-1-t!e
plenty ol ganleu lp&amp;CO. 'Green
Aerel" Farm In Rutland.
TIIAILER. BROWN'S TraUor
7.f.t21p
Pari:, Mlnem1lle. Pbonll 111JDI.
7-f«e FIVE ROOM HOUSE and bath,
- floor, pully lumfshed if
•
Ji'URNIBIIED GARAGE ...-rtdellred. 'II! s. Second Ave.,
menl on Llneoln Hill. UIDIIIel
Middleport. Can be seen by
paid; ldultl only. Phone ... . appointment alter 5 p.m. m,
den Walburn, pbone m-280&amp;.
-l-It-tle
7.f.tfc
ONE P'IVE ROOM boule, 11Jo
llll'le 1o11 rw ~&amp;~e. c.n Jaeob O!IE ~AITED rldln8 mare,
'IWIIII'. lflddleprt, Olllo.
broke lD ride the beat. Am7-I0-4tp
Disputed Possession
old Grate, Rutland, 742-4211
The
only disputed possession
days, 742-SSIII nllblll. 7-10 6lc
of
t!Je
United States Is three
, ForW.
square miles of Caribbean
8o\LlCSMAN'S DEMONSTRA- ONE HACKNEY MARE, chestreal estate called the Swan
Islands. Both the United
ToR. ,.. Jli zag -ml ma- nut oolor, I yean old, 41
States and Honduras claim the
lndlel taU, Clll and "-'-·
..... NfUIIriY AI, In port.
i•lands, which lie 100 miles off
tiWt complete, pay $39 or t5 U. been llbown two yean.
the
Central American coast,
l'laac Lewis, Cllft«&lt;, W. Va.
-'11, call 19J-21136.
northeast of Honduras.
7-l~p
7-7-«c

ean

Business -Services

Transfers

Watcllee . . time to cheel&lt;

Loll and Found

'

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"How can wo danco topthor If you lnelrt on llltilnl,.
to th• ball camo7"

,

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polb Sentincl 1 Mid&lt;l!eport·romeroy, July 10, '1968 ,

'~,~ &gt;~~;m~uity~ : /i :.., " ~'c,

, . , · $r

.

enteF~

,

. ~~rk'.

c,_,_

\.AJ~tller. • 'Hoellicll
TJIE ·REV, Wlll,iUI\ )'Orio,: = e r pastor o.r st. Paul and st.
John Lo!lheran Chw'chos, will lie
work next month.

1

Specs

.
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Mr. \'oris and his. wire, the for·

mer Ann Baker, have been here

.,

visiting with her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Paul Baker of Syracuse.

a 'lOW area of Christian

day; ,11~ p.m. at Le~
In~~.,
PAST WUNclLORS oi Chef. ';'
ter ' cOuncil 823, Dii181lters 6f
America, wlhmeetll~p.ili. WO!I\;
n,oda¥,at ttia liOftoe_"of Mi'~~o ~·
d!.e Tl'uueU,.jOitli Mrs. Opal)loi-",
lon as the ~cO-bOatesi.
·
'''
FEENEY -BI!NN;::'IT Poot 121, .
Am•rieaP' Leg!""'' will moetljt
7:30 Wedil&lt;!sday nlgltt at the haiL
. '
THVRSilAY
LAVREL CUFF Better Health
Club annual picnic to lie held
ThuriiiJ,Y evenl~ at Ro,yal Oak
ParkROCK SPRINGS GRANGE,
Thursdsr, 8 P-DI. lnspeetlon IIIII
be held and all members are asked to atwnd. A program wiD be
pre.sented and refreshments wlll
be eerved.
CANDYSTRIPERS meeting at'
the Veterans Memorial Hospltol
hao been scheduled for 7 p.m.
Tharadsy nlgllt New girls who
have ordered unlform.s may secure them at the meeting for ·

at homeyet, : .
.
'
bday tho group was joined
by Mr. and Mrs. Char leo Grue-

ser and son, Jon, of Mlnersvllle,

RESPONSE TO an appeal lor
magazines for the veterans at
the ChUli-e Hospital hao been
tremendous.
Mrs. Albert Roush of the aux-

iliary

o(

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c

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DRIVE· IN

TIIA'IRE

.,d
.

$6.23.

h.,.,~

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MEIGS COVNTY American Red
',. ,,,,
cro,.
Chapter meelinl, 8:30 p.
. .,,.
m.
Thursday
atVateransMeJII&lt;U'.
'~·
lal Hospital.
REVIVAL 11 Pageville Free} . I :·~ Greg~ si~,·~g;. s~~r of "Happy Time,"_,entertoins in a brown and white Nehru
wlll
Baptist Missim, July 7-18 1
t~n,ic and ~etching pants by Lynn S~uart of Mister Pa~ts (left). She peers thr~ugh
preaching by Rev. Eddie Boyer
h'te-frome
brown-lens oval sunspecs for the latest v•suol weather report. Sk1nny
1
and Rev, OUs Chapmon_ Special
;ro me 51 1ve..-' owl -eye sunglasses pick. up the bright whr_te po.lko dots on brown co~­
slngl~. 7:30 p.m.
ton voile of her hooded mini -culotte by David H Smotb (roght). Sunspecs are Y
PHIL ATilE A SOCIETY of Mid·
Foster Grant.
dleport Church of Christ, Thurshues . Skinny frames and wraparounds vie in day, 7:30 p.m. at the church.
By HELEN HENNESSY
popularity For very bright glare there are Past presidents U;t be honored.
NEA Women's News Editor
darker lenses and the pale tints can be worn
YOUNG DEMOCRAT Club or
NEW YORK-(N E A)-Summer entertain- indoors as well as outdoors.
Meigo County monthly meeting
ing is a different cup of tea from its wi~t~r
Thursday, 8 p.m. at Leadirc
Big owt-~yes , square eyes, octagonal eyes,
counterpart simply because so much of 1t l'i
Conservane~
District
Creek
oval eyes , semicircle eyes can be yours for
done outdoors.
the swilch of a sunglass. High style in in· · building In RuUand.
FRIDAY
Clothes are more casual. Anything goes expensive glasses allows a whole fun ward·
HOMEMADE ICE cream oupo
robe of shades without denting the budget.
from midi and maxi skirts to mini-culottes.
per Friday at 4:30 P·"'- at MidBlack and white or brown and white ~re
A few rules of thumb will help you get the dleport Penecostal Church' lawn.
the favorite shades this season for lookmg most flattery out of sunshades:
sandwiches, pte, cake alll soft
chic on the terrace. And smart sunglasses.
with glint and gleam at the frames are the
• Match the shape of the frame to !he drinko aloo. Open to public.
ICE CREAM social beglmlng
shape of your face . What looks great on your
accessory rage. •
best friend may not suit you. If your face is 6:30p.m. Friday at Rock~rings
The sunglass industry has made itsel£ _in- small you can still wear big glasses if they Clllrch. Homemade lee cream,
dispensible to the fashion scene b¥ creatmg have pal~ . skinny rims.
cake and 10ft drlnko. Proceeds
shades to go with anything, anytime. Sun·
glasses have become as important t() a well
• Matching !he frame and lens color to to the church bolldlng Improve.
turned-out woman as ·the right shoes or the color of a dress or swimsuit is elf~tive ment lund.
A HIGH SCHOOL ~ party
jowelry. They are worn day or evening, sun- bul keep your complexion in mind. A ruddy
shine or drizzle becallse. they add color and ~kin needs glasses tinted in the cool colors. wW be held thlo Frida~' Dilbt
If you can't match, then contrast.
drama to the lace.
!rom 9 IO 12 p, DL at the Porn•
eroy tennis court un:ler· spo~
The spectacular year-around appeal of sun• This summer's hostess will enjoy havin~ oorohlp or the Meigs Alhled&lt;
glasses is the result of myriad shapes, styles more glasses than the ones into which she
Assoclai'O"- The Jars wiU em·
and colors from which to choose ~ The newest pours cold ddnks for her guests.
cee. Iii case of rain the dance
this summer are frosty or shiny metallic
wUI be held In the ~roy Htgh
frames with hint-of-tint lenses In eye-shadow
Scboolll)'IR.

Four Girls Initiated
Initiation was held for four
girls when Bethel 62, International Order or Jobs Daughters,
mot Monday nlgllt at the Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
Presiding at the sesolon In
ltle absence of Annette Warner
""' DebbiE King. paot honored
(Jieen. carol King served as
chaplain for ilecky Hoodashelt,
who is on vacation. It waa reported by Elole Smith, gumlian, that $140 was collected on
cancer tag day ln Pomeroy. Next
meeting of the Bethel was announced for August 12.
Distinguished guests lntri&gt;Weed were Janice Burner, honored
queen of Bethel 73, the senior
prince" of Bethel 73, GalllpoUs, and Mrs: . Ralph Bllrller,

LADIES' SHOES
Connies, Paris Fashion end Joya~
VALU£5 TO 18.00

4.87 and 7.87
NEW FALL SHOES ARRIVING DAilY

Shop in Air·Condittoned Comfort

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHTS TIL 9:00
Also Open All Dey Thursday

where your dollar

of Middleport Lodge 363.
A purple and white color
scheme was carried rut tn the
refreshment table decorations.
Mabel Goeglein, promoteroChospltality, was assisted by Dorothy Will, Da Darnell, an&lt;l Bessie King. Mrs. Burner, the visiting guardian, closed t h e
BetheL

SATIJRDAY
MIDDLEPORT Little League
Will sponsor an outside dance
thlo ' oomlrc Saturdsr night from
9 to 12 P- m. at the Middleport
c.mmunlcy Park- The Jars will
:~
~
be In charge_
BAKE SALE, Racine Molhe&gt;dlot
Church Annex, Saturdl,,
Mrs. M. c. F1ec:htner or Columbus was the holiday weekel'(t from 10 a, m. to I p. m. Spono
guest of her mother, Mrs. Hat- sored by !be Happy Hustler Subday School Clots.
tie Smith.
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Darst,
Craig and Jeff, visited Ash cave,
Old Man's Cave and Rock Hoose
Ne~er Elected ·

:rM=;;;;;;;;;;=;::::· &lt;·==
·\:·
!Personal Notes :\:

S..nda~.

P. K. Russell, Fourth st., underwent surgery Mond&amp;y at Holzer Hospital
~:~
Mr. and Mrs. William Betz
and daughter, Sandy, or Hllllanls
visited over the weekend in Mld~::
:~
dleport with Miss Ruth Wise and
Glen Smith and sons, David other relatives and In Gallipolis.
ar&lt;l Donald, Mrs_ caddie Wick- They also vioited 11 Wawrly
guardian; Robert King., worthy ham aoo Mrs. Verlle Gordon will\ Mr. and Mrs. c_ H. Wloe,
patron of Evangeline Chapter 172, spent SUnday at the horne of Aoa Jr.
Mro, Leo Swick of Cdumbllo
Middleport; Thomas Edwards, Hoskins. His birthday was celewas
here laat week to vtslt her
Knight or the York Crou ot brated with a dinner party,
sister,
Miss Ruth Wlae.
Honor; Dale Smith, excellent high
Jack Chase o!Da,ton Iell TuesMr.
and
Mrs. Albert Roush and
priest of Pomeroy Chapter 80, day afO.r a visit here with Mr.
Royal Arch Masons, and Ken- alii Mrs. ,.Patrick Lochary.
~ - · children, Kennr and BeokY, have
neth Wilcox, worshipful master
Mrs. Catherine Welsh and Mrs. returned from Beaufort, S. C.,
Osby Martin will leave Cor C~&gt;o wbere IIley viol ted Mro. Dlllllld
lumbus Thursday to attend the ~ ar&lt;l ehilclren_ G, Sit
Donald Matheny, statiooed In
department convention of the
American Legion AuxUiary, VIetnam, wiU return in August
Eigllt and Fort,y La March, July and has been assigned to Clll1l
12-15. Mrs. Welsh will serve on Le.Juene, N, C,
Mrs. Larry n...era, the lorm·
a pre-convention committee for
er Jndy Roush of Middleport, lo
the AxuUiary,
confloed to a Colwnbllo hospital.
Mrs. J, R. Hood of florida
She
eJqJects to remain there un..
and Col11mbus is here ror a two
buy~ MILES more
til
Saturday.
weeks visit with the Misses Len1
and Katie Guth.

NEW TREADS
FOR

650xl3

s

49

Plus Tax and Recappable Tire.

•

R
. l,,_ .. - ...' -.... J-,t. ~~~~ Wnu·'

-~-~-·~.

enttne

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Weatltet

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POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

''

THURSDAY, JULY 11, 1968

frtdsr, '

Cooler tocler, hllh In low teL
Fair, mild IAlrllitlll. low In 50'1
and low 601. LIWo _,_. Frlday,

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VOL. XXI NO. 55

"
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.&gt;'
,C

IJevoted To Tfae lntere3ts Of The Mei{(•·MUMJn Area

~~:::::::::::::::%;:; :;:;:;~:::: : ;;::::;:;;::: :;:::::::: :: ::::::: :::}

Pomeroy.__
::
i Personal Notes f

.Four of the presidents of the
Uniled States we r e never
elected to lhat office-John
Tyler, M lila r d Fillmore,
Andrew Johnson and Cheater
A. Arthur. These men .became
president on the death of a
preoldent. .

....

B-113

News•.• in Briefs

For a Young Miss
AN ALL-ROUND DRESS is fashioned here in a
fresh summer version. The collar is rolled and a belt
gently hugs the hips. Added attractions are slel'.(ls •.
with tiny belted cuffs and a squared neckline for •
versatility.
. · , •'
Consult our exclusive fa~hion Co-ordlrator included in epch Young Ongmal pattern for color,
1
fabric and. accessory suggestions.
B-113 with PHOTO-GUIDE Is in sizes 9{ 11J. 12,
13, 14, 16, 18, bust 30Y2 to 38. Size 1, .,1~ ,
bust, 33,.~ yards of 45-inch.
..
'·· ,."
Send $1 for !he obove pattim to: 'I'OUI'i!G ·9RI~h.·
NALS ( The Dalb Santlnel ), P.O. Box 438A, Modijwjj, i
Station, New York, N.Y. 10018. Print your full •""l'.t ·
oddress, with zip code, pattern number and siu_ Add P; :
cents lor first-class handling.
.. .:

Mt. Union Bible School Ends

Church Youth
Sponsorship
Is Approved

lil\1'

ln!Onilent, Llrll!, Cla!k, b7i(tf.Rooalle Ssrre. Bible $ ~-b a.al
Dlreetor,
The

Congress.
Many members believe President Johnson figured it right when

he said Wednesday they mlgllt have to return to work In September,
The annual foreign aid authorization and a ban on mall order
gun 11ales - two items on Johnson's ..must" list for the rest of
the seulon - skidded tram this week's House program to next
week's. Gun controls !!I so failed to move In the Senate Judiciary Commltleo.

'

JWOP'IDI ....llteil '*~

tlall' taking pert In. • llllkf.·
bellave 1V PI'OII"IDI, tlie lllellte
beln&amp; "Gocl'l Word - ~~

wornen•a sod,cy or Cbrtollan R-··
·
· ,;.,:.
Sarvlce of the JI..UO Melhedllt
Teaeherl _ , nur~. Bell """•••
at a ' meetlliB MOll' ..
W004
IIIII~'£
Altllti'tiJo;.
lF'
~;r·... vgted
,_
-..:. ..
.. ',
• ':.....··
,... ,.~..-.db -llllbt to IIJIOIIeGr a ·-eh oo••""ft'
...,
Ll!Oa

)'OIIth at the School or Mlallons Morris; priDIOI')', Grace WU~
to be held at.~' the campus ol Ot- and Floren..,. Barnlt, and jull•
~rl&gt;eln COIIep thlo month.
lou, Naney ~. J0111 ~~
Tho oocletjo will pay !be •· ned,Y, and llazel Black~
pensea ol ~ Johni&lt;XI. It wu teens, JIY! and Larry Clark·'·
a110 valed mrflllr !be mooting
Helpers - . . David and Jane·
to perehase ..... carpellng (or Wlserilan, ltoP!' IIIII Heleril
the parliOIIIP. Tht aot1on was Rial, Alan ~ Coilnl{
taken totlowiroJ a report by Mn. · GrouniiJ, F..., Ja~ llilclre'ol
Earl K!Jistrt.
Workman, Man' l!lnlnr, Charli~
Group llinfilnl or "What o Barrett, Panll,l' Jordan, .Cloil&amp;
Friend We llave In Je111o," and I!Utllln, ClOVIs, !JI\Orfer, J u o! 1
a 1108111 .onlfll.. '"Wanted" op. Kina'; Tim se.yre IIIII Rose Cox;
ened the meetlliB presided o:Rer
Mibol Pauley waoin' ciwop'of
by Mra. Galen Bl'GIIII, vice pres- nwlle, atolstad by c.nioli
!dent. Mro. L. w. McCGmaopve IIIII Nancy Joseph; Joe se.vre·wal!
deVotlOIII ullnl "A Boad of eo-director of the ·achpol. One
Frlendlh!l'' aa har ll!eme. The lnmdred lniltw.,ey;IIV• ehlldreoi
prolll"IDI 111 '"Being With ThoH · reidllered llltll !Ill average atWho Hurt'' was pre-..1 by '*'olanee o1 10$ eaCh dar 01!4
Mlao Ben - m 9le _apoke 78 dolldren with pej'fect atfenil- ·
ol the oodal problems In Sim ...,., Theoe - . . liven . _l,
ance c:erWI.cates.
-~ ~···
Franelteo.
A IUIIUner noral"'eeelllldplnk . Teaehero' holpara """"1)1'&amp;.- ·
taper• ,.., uoe.i"... the ro- aentet1 appree~att... .Cetl!iiCito• .,.
I r e - 1&amp;bie- Mro. J a m, e a by the dire...,: ~ crlillo inadt
CrltweU, Mro. E- ~Wood, Mro. by lha_ IIUdonta lrere IUI!jlisyed
WWiam llllba, and' Mro. !W- In the rooms and viewed by the
Ue Smllll
hoileeoee. Mjl._ inanr parents and frlando wboaf.:
Brown prelldod ·Ill the pench tended.
'
bowl.

Greer;

wore

NEW YORK -

of the National Urban J.eaaue, said today both black ond white Americans must reallze there are nonviolert and constructve versions of
ublack power."
He warned 11 wtdte America has over-reacted to the phrase out
of rear and guUt and shut its eyes to anything positive in the concept," trQptng men like himself, who have begun to use it, ln
frtghtenlng otereot,ypes.
Yoorc Included lhe $2 mUIIon "new trust" of the Urban Leegue
among the constructive eJ:pressions or "black power."

·D$

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See The New l~!iModels
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Thompson Is Secretary; 29
Attend Rio Grande Session
By HOBART WILSON, JR.
Ten superinteOOents and two board members representing 12
school district.. in Meigs, Vinton, Jackson and GaUia counties Wednesday night elected Rio Grande College President A. R. Christensen permanent chairman of a proposed vocational education school
dil!ltrlct projecl Christensen had been serving as temporary chairman since June 18.
Gallta County SchoolS Superintendent Clarence Thompson was
elected secretary.
This came about after school officials in the foor counties indicated they were Interested in knowing more about the cost and operation of such 11. district. and after the Gallipolis District had been
selected a sponsoring dlstrl~t.
Twent,y-nine persons attended p.as.
last night's special meeting, held
Prior to Wednesday's session,
in the President's Dining Room each dlstrlCt was asked to study
on the Rio Grande,"
1!i!
proposals made June 18 by Dr.
Byrl R. hemaker during a spe01
cial Southeastern Ohio Regional
-\
Council meeting In Jackson. Shoemaker 1s director, vocational education, state department of edu&lt;:atlon.
After studying the proposals,
each district was asked tO do
one of four things:
1- Pass a resolution support~
lng the creation or a new dis-

1

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trict;

DR_ CHRISTENSllN

23 Reds Die In 8- Hour Battle
SAIGON (IJPI) - U.S. lorceo
cauaht a guerrilla band on a
main Conununlot r o u t e to
Saf&amp;on and killed 23 of the Red
~· In an elgtrt-lloor, two-act
battle late Wednesday, military
opol&lt;e amen said today.
Amerlcon helleopter l!llnshipa
lljiOited lilt Communlsto nestled
In bonkers 32 miles norlhweot or
Saiaoo, near the cambodlan
border, and In a blaze of Ore
killed 10. U.S. foot soldiers
1warmed ln two hours later,
~lad . lbi'OIIIIh a heavy
burst of machine gun and

rocket flre and killed at least 13
more.
U_S, opokesmen said 18 Gfo
Sllftered wounds. None was
killed_ In a way It cypilled the
trend ol the war 1he past rew

Americans Lose

Fred H. George has been 81&gt;polnted as rural carrier for the
maD route at the Rutland Poot
omce and wtU assume his new
duties Sowrday,

198 Men During
Past Seven Days
SAIGON (IJPI) -

'

- - ----

WHITNEY M. YOUNG, JR., executive director

American

easualtle1 in Vietnam dropped

I

Our Greato1t Bargains Evorl

SACRAMENTO- ASPOKESMAN fORGov. Ronafd!!upniOday
denied a published report that Reagan would armounce his candidacy
for the Republican presidential nomination on July 21.
"I will tell you natly that lt Is not true, .. Paul Beck, the gover..
nor's press secretary, said of the report, published in the Boston
Herald Traveler.
The Mccarthy camp prepared another debate chaUenge IOday
for Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey, who was invited Wednesday
to take on Richard M. Nixon lf they wln:l up as the major parQo prealdentlal nominees.
Aides of the Mirmesota senator passed word he will be undertakq a .~;erie a of halt-bour televislon talks between now ao;l the AIJ8.
26 Democratic National Convention, and Humphrey will be invited
to participate.
loi~Garthy hao made similar oilers In the past, bot Hwnphrey
declirld on grounds he was saving his fire for the Republican nomInee.
WASHINGTON - LEGISLATIVE TIMET ABLES are slipping, and
prospects dimming for a pre-axtvention adjournment or the 90th

Mt. Union Church DallY V•ce; l,y by having COJIUiltllcemanl ...
tion Bible Scbool cloaeiJ recent- erc!Ho at the Honioonvllle l!l~&gt;o
1110111ar7 School. .
'
The prolll"IDI _,.,r
,bl.lroolldlool ol the pu!Di'," C81ll!(
Cox, and &amp;mda,y ScbcloJ iq,ej.

Name SponsoringDistrict;

By United Press International

Fred George

Is Appointed

~

.

weeks- battling a Communist
threat to Saigon and lower
Amertcan cal!lllalt:ies.
Bomb Border Area
In the air war, U.S. B52
stratorortresses conthwed their
powldlng of Communist troop
areas in the saigon area and in
other pockets of Red mtinace up
to the North Vietnam border.
Above the border, Lt. Roy
Cash Jr., 28, of Memphis,
Tenn. , a Navy radar officer who
owltched to piloting to get a

Rural Carrier !t~!.~ ;,::~

MIG21- the oecond MIG downed
In two days by Navy pilots.
"I have been waiting all my
life tor this, •• Cash said later. I
was the 108th MIG show down
In dogfight• over North VIetGeorge served four years In narn.
the U, S. Air Force !run 1952
until 1956. He 11 a member of
the Maoonlc Lodge, American
Legion Post 467, and is asslatant Scoulmaoter of Troop 240,
He Is married to the Conner
Avanell Jordano!Larcav!Ue. The
clll(&gt;!e has foor sono, TorrJ,
Gary, RiellY and Rendr.
The routehasbeenvacantalnce
the retirement of W. D, Muasor
on May 31, 1965, and hao been
oerved by MrL Rosalie G. Sayre
since that time. Mrs. Sayre wiU
remain ao a substitute carrier.

to tholr lowell! total In six
months last week, the U.S.
c:ommand said tocJer. A total ol
198 Gls were killed and 1,247
IIOUilllod.
A spokesman aeld !be l,Ue
Americana killed or -"!&amp;
was lhe lowest weekly caaualtl"
11&gt;11 since the week ending Jan.
Q. and reflected a general lull In
,......,.. aetlon aorots South
VIetnam.
Communlot losses for the
wek nre the lowest of the
rear- 961 killed, the announce- Pompidou Endtl
mont said. But !bat llgure was
-cted Ill be revised upwarda
~lx- Year·Term
wllen late Deld report• are
, tallied, a spokesman said.
Soolb Vlelbameoe IJ{IOkeamen
PARIS (VPI) - The praloe
aald Z93 government troopo Oiled letter frmn Preoldont Char·
'""" ldUed and 597 wounded les de Gaulle bepn with "M,y
Jalt week, one o1 the lowest dear friend." It 1ald Premier
goveonmenl euualty tolls olnce Georps POIIlllldOU's restgnation
the Tel otrenllive.
had been accepted
The lateat caaualcy report
But down toward the end, De
raloed to 25,752 the number o1 Gaulle aoked POO!I)idoU to hold
Amorlcans killed In the Vietnam hlmoelf roacb to "aecomplloh
and booated the mmber or all mioolons and uoumeallman..
.IIOUIIded 1o 160,693, AnOther dates which CCIIIId be one IIi¥
I, 187 Amerlcano are 1111811 aa conferred on you by the naUon."
etihor milllnl or captured,
A &amp;olden 1U1ure 1M' gclden handCommunlal loSIOI for lilt ohake?
II&gt;W' total 369,528 mon killed, the
'llouo Polnpldou, 57, enie&lt;l olx
Amorlcan Jpekeaman said. The reoro and three moolho o1 dl·
•illlmat4d, Communtot lllreallb recllow De Gaulle'• .....rnmeat
In Soaib V I - wu pel Ill . 1101 In dlqraoe 11 .....culallooi
.lletweiln ·all7,ooo and uo,ooo, 1le4 ~ tor·wo, bul.llllh • hird
'.iiJone tlli Ariotrlean lomlnlt• : hli ml8ftt ,.&amp;1•bO preolclent ~·
,~ ,0.• estimated at ""'" day, De ~e, 77, would b!l 81
""" 535,000 "*'·
· , , ' whop h!o.ta1111 ellllireL
'...

,.

•

at y

e

Hlatory•s worst earthq.lake, in
term• of loss or life, occurred ln
Chins, Jan. 24, 1566, when 830,000 peri&lt;Hit periohed.

PECIAL TRUCKLOAD SALE
750xl4
73Sxl4
700xl4
f50xl4

•

--

,.. (

,,
)

FIVE CENTS

'

Feeney-Bennett Rtst

128, American Legion, reports
just six weeks old. arrived rrom
that over 500 magazines have
Houston, Texas. David, who has been donated. She'll be taking
enlisted In the U. S. Arms, and them to the hospital on July 19
his wlfe, the former &amp;tsan Mor- when she goes Cor the birthday
ris of Middleport, are here now, party,
and Lynn and Carroll are both
Incidentally, the junior auxiliary members of the unit have
made loot bags for each of the
MASON
patients attending theparty. Each
bag contains a pocket comb do7 DAYS, TONIGHT THRU TUE.
nated by Lionel Boggs of the
July 10- 16
Middleport Department Store,
'(811dy, gum, etc. along with a
Double Feature Program
birthday
card.
BONNIE AND CLYDE
Warren Beatty, Faye Dunaway
MR. AND Mrs. James Hol(Color)
lon, Sr., and son, Ricky, and
PLUS
Miss Sheila Faulk are home Crom
Robards
Jane Fonda, Ja son
a
visit In Georgia with their son,
Dean Jones
Gerald, who has since been transin
ferred to Fort Leonard Wood,
ANY WEDNESDAY
Mo. with the combat engineers.
(Technlcolor)
Enroute home trom Georgia, they
visited with Mr . and Mrs. Frank
Barr and family at Winston-Salem, N. C., and with Mr. and
Mrs. Lester Casto at Dunbar,
TONIGHT &amp; TI!URSDAY
W. Va,
JULY 10 - 11
NOT OPEN
WANT TO buy something Cor
fRIDAY AND SATURDAY
a dime?
July 12 ·13
Then take in the rummage sale
THE WAY WEST
to be held at Tuppers Plalns this
(Technlcolor)
weekood.
Kirk Douglas, Robert Mitchum
The sale is another project
fEATURETTE:
of the Women's Community Club
Dizzy Detectives, 3 stoogesJ whose sole objective Is to raise
COLORCARTOON:
funds for a community building.
Magoo' s Caine Mutin,y
The sale will be held friday and
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.
Saturday - noon to 8 p.m. both
days - at the Clarence Headley
COMING - "BONNIE AND
home rlght on Route 7.
CLYDE" (Technicolor) We're advised that every Item
Warren Beatty, Faye Dunwill be priced from ten cents
oway.
to a quarter. Now you can't beat
July 19
25
that!

.\

.. wEiua:mAY
Wllf,l'~ ROsE L!lclae; ' I\
, r..C..e•··

'

for a picnic at Coal l-UU near
Cheshire. The Gruesers are the
They are now in Columbus visit- parents of Mrs. James Baker.
ing his mother and other relatives but wiU return here next
week before going back to Mlnn·
eapolis to prepare for the move.
The past weekend was rewtion
time for the Baker family. Mr.
and Mrs. James Baker and their
children, Jeffrey, Lisa, and Andy,

Now You Know

~~

·

He has aceepted the PC~SitlOfl of c.._lain in a Lutheran Nos·
pitol at Pu,l' Alloe&gt;, Washlhgion. He;s boen.pastorlng a church In

Minneii&gt;OIIs, Minn.
For t.,e past week, the Rev.

i'

•I

,.

2 - Pass a resolution as interested in knowing more about
the cost and operation oC such
a dllltricl;
3 - Pass a resolution as opposed ~ such a jointure, but
· would 1,.,._\oJ.e rePl'eoented at
a July , 10' meeting In order to
ftnd out more about the proposal;
or,
4 - Pass a resolution as opposed to suchajointureandwould
not be interested in attending
the July 10 meeting.
AU 12 districts were represented.
The CalHa and Meigs County
superintendents selected the second reso1ution, as did the following districts: Hannan Trace,
&amp;Juthwestcrn, K y g e r Creek,
North GaJiia, Jackson, Eastern,
Meigs, Vlnton Consolidated and
&amp;xrthern Local.
GalllpoUo, Oak Hill Union and
Wellston districts, along with
the Jackson coonty superintendent selected the first resolution.
Status of each district was the
first step last night.
The second step was the aelectioo of a district to act as sponsor tor the proposal. Then carne
(Continued on Page 10)

For No Progress

United States Blamed
PARIS (IJPI) - Off to one
side of the Vietnam war
conference table Hanoi's Xuan
Thuy and America's W. Averell
Harriman share tea and some
sympathy over the awful roar
af Paris traffic.
Later Thuy and his 34 aides
offer whiskey and statistics to
newsmen, declaring the UnitE-d
states alone is to blame ror no
progress ln the talks now two
months old.
Harriman offers the newsmen
oo hard sell. Unlike Thuy, he
talks of hope. After Wednesday's 12th session, Harriman
said he notes "straws in the
wind" that somday the taJks
will manage to do what they
are supposed to do- cool down
the war enough to permit a
peace conference.
Behavior Predictable
Diplomats had predicted the
talks would be long and bumpy.
Dealing .with Communists at the
conference table always has
been. Harriman himself has
been doing it for W years and
has · managed to pull out such
plums as the U . S.~viet-Britlsh

Measles
·Vaccines
Effective
Measles vaccines are virtually
100 per cent effective and not
using them is a reckless gamble
with the intellecmal growth and
development of children.
This is lhe report of the Meigs
County Department of Health
which will stage four measles
clinics from 12 noon to 2 p. m.
in fwr locations on Sunday, July
21. The clinic s for children one
through 12 will be conducted at
the Pomeroy arv:l Middleport Elementary Schools, the AJnerican
Legion Home in Rulland aOO at
the Southern High School in Racine.
There Is no charge for the im·
munizaUons although contributions for the healthdepartmentto
help reimburse tor the expenses
involved will be accepted.

••te&amp;ort••

VLSJ'I1NG WINNERS - TrOilhtes were recehed by violdng winners or the varlooo
Cllllpetitlon 1n the seventh artlllaf Hidden Valier Country Club Women's Invitational Goll Toornament held Wednesday. Pictured with thelr trophies are, front row. left to right, Anna HoweU,
1'"' ill"OSS ird !ltght, Pomeroy Goll Club; Pearl Welker, low puUo 3rd 8tghl, Pomeroy Golf Club;
Barbara Dlrnell, closest 1o pin on No. 7 hole, Rlvenswood Golr Club; Qprtha Harris, low net 3rd
nlgbt, South HWs; carol Corry, liM net lsi tltght, Riviere C4Juniry Club. second row, Helen Gall,..ay 10¥1 net 2nd night, Galllpolla Country Club; Georgia Lelmllay, 1.., pu«o 1st Olght, Raven..
1
WOOIJ.; Betty Brooka, Ioneeat drive, RavenswOCJIS; Phyllis stakey, low gross lat dtght. Riviere;
ilolse Vllderwood, low pulto 2nd ll1ght, Riviere, and Grace Freshour, low groos 2nd nlgllt South
HWa,
SQUAD SUMMONED
The Pomeroy emergency 1&lt;1.\IOd
wao OIDIImoned Wednesday at
11:53 o. m. to Lotw Bottmn tor
Bryan HQman. Mr. HO)'IIIIII, a
medical p1Uont, wat taken to
Melga General lloll'ltil by the
oquad. TIJt ,aquac~ was' """"'ooed
apln .11¥11; mornlrc at 6:20 L m.
llUt thel~all wao cancellod bi&gt;fore

River Gauget

tile
'

'

Besides, Western

Tht South Vletname11 goveraIIH!fll has never hidden Ita
auoplclono that tho Ialka here
bode no IIOOd for them. The
spectre ~ a "deal" 11 the

special niglltmare of ProalNguyen

•~~on:

Van Thleu•a pern-

ment- much

as
the Welt
Germano continualb long for
U.S. assurance that American•
will not
up the defenoe ol
Weot l!eTlln.

II••

Eastern Board Interested
In Starting Kindergarten
T h e Eastern Local School trict will be determined by the
Board has Indicated that Jt is in- interest shown and the number oC
terested in establishing a kinder- pupllo reglotered. lntereotedpar.
garten program effective this ento may register their children

fall.
According to tentative plans
for Ule kindergarten program,
there would be two one~lf day
sessions, five days a week, at
the Chester Elementary School
for the distrlct. Youngsters who
will be five on or before Oct. :u
are eligible to attend.
Parents of children attending
would provide one-way transportation, Those attending the mornIng sesolons would rtde school
buses ln the mornings and be
picked up by their parents at
noon. Those attending attemoon
sessions wouJd be taken to the
school at noon by the parents and
would ride school buses home
alter school.
Final decision oo whether kindergarten will he held in the dis~

by calling Eastern Hlgll School,
985-3329, hetween 1 and 3 p.m.
on July 12 or during the deolgnated hours trom Monday, July
15 throogh friday, July 19,
The Eastern Board also has
indicated It would like an expression of interest from resi dents interested in adult classes
In lyping, bookkeeping or ornce
machines.
Classes for a&amp;llts would be
tauidlt twice a week for a lS
woek period by lloyd Mackney,
Eastern Hlgh School commercial
teacher. Adults Interested in attending liliCh classes are to telephone the high school between 1
and 3 p.m. this friday or between those hours M o n d a y
lhrougb friday, next week.
In oilier aetlontJdurlng a Tueo-

day night meatlng, the board
awarded contracts to the HoliiiDI
Bakery for baked aood•; Valley
Bell for milk; Toxaoo for aaaoUne and l'ueli Jaymar COli Co.,
for coal with the boo Insurance
going to Henry Beaver or Granp
Mutual Insurance.
Two new teachers were e.ployed for ill"ade school work.
They are Mrs, Gla&lt;IYs Bryant,
who has been working in 1be
summer federal program, and
Robert Sawlders who has been
teaching In the New Lexlngtoo
schools for the past several
years. Bill Wlll .... a 'noploJeo!. to
repair a chimney at lha ...._...
Plalno Sebool.
Attending were .1o1m Rtebel,
superintendent; c_ o. Newlalld,
clerk, and board members, WUI
Karr, president; L 0. McCoy,
Roger JOWle, Donald Mora and
Erneot Whitehead,.

Mr. Ginther,

Three Meigs

67, Dies on

Mishaps are

Wednesday

Investigated
One car was demolished ami
two others incurred heavy damage as the result of three accidents in Meigs County reported
the Meigs County Sheriff's Department.
Michael E. Cremeans, Middleport, cullided with a counly
truck on County Road 13 at 11:30
L m. Wednesday, The 1948 Plymouth Cremeans was driving WI&amp;
demolished. Larry L. T'a5lor, 1
JOHN WILL
passenger in the car, sustained
lacerations of the face.
The second mishap occurred
on State Route 1 arxl124 Wednesday at 7 p. m.
Edwin L Coe, Parkersburg,
traveling east, hit a slick spot in
the highway causing the car to
veer to the right strildrw 1 fence
and golng over an embankment.
Amouncement was made toThe fence belorced to F r e d
day that John Wll i, a Middleport
GoegleiiL There was heavy damresident, has been appointed to
age to the car. No arrests or
Board
No. 83, seleetlve service,
injuries were reported.
for Metss Courrt;y by Gov. James
Fred Junior Conkle, 33, Rt. 1,
s and President John11011.
Bidwell, traveling south on LeadMr. Will, who serves as man~
Ing Creek Rood, lost control of
his vehicle causing the car U) 1110r of the Slate Li~J~Or Store
in Pomeroy, is a past commandleave the road and turn over on
er ol Pomeroy Drew Webster
ita top. The accident occurred
Post No. 39, American Legion,
this morning at b. m. There was
oervea as Auxiliary Captain or
heavy damage to the car. Conkle
llle Ohio Slate Patrol, member
was cited and lodged In JaU on
charges oC intoxication, it was ol the Pomeroy Gun Club, Shade
reported. He was not 11\iured. River Lodp 453 F&amp;A~ Pomeroy York Rite Maoonle bodleo
and the Aladdin Temple !llrlne.
The aaieetlvo oervlce board In
SCHOOL COSTS UP
Melgo reportedly lobelng_,.
COLUMBUS (UP0- State Aucl- ed from three to avo memberl
ltor Roger Cloud reported IOday with the naming or Mr. WUI beOhio' a public scboolay•tem coat Ing the nrot new lljlJJOImore thin $1,7 blUion during the Oiher board members are Paul
1967 calendar rear.
Cllld, oui Klq)p and Wallace
Clood oald lhlswaoanlnereaao ADDer1181".
of $268.7 miDIon over theamOtinl
spent In 1966,
·
·
LOCAL TEMPS
The total re'lntllt · reeelved
The·
temperature
In 6&gt;wiiiiiOUIIted to $1.81iwlon~
at 11:30 a.m.
lulila roeel..,. ~ . ll!i!ld ·." "'
note olleo, an lnerea.. .iit- ~10.7 - r 1111•• -· ,78 .....
mUUon over tho previooo rear.

•
John Will IS
Named as
New Member

~

'

test ban tr&amp;at.y. man looked across 1be Cmferobservers said ence table in the French foreign
there has been progress of a ministry conference building
sort here.
and told Tbor to stoP it.
Last month VIet CQIIg terror
The 767'ear-old American said
SIJ!ads dally bombarded Saigon such shelling would only msan
with rockets and mortars. They bad things Indeed for the talko
hit rew mUltary targets and here. In VIetnam, the sheU!ng
battered mostly civilians and dropped off. The diplomats
their homes. Even U.N. Secreta- connect this to Harriman' •
ry General Thllllt, who dislikes warning. And something more
taking sides, said he was basic may have been done
appalled at the shelling, llarri - Wedneoday.

Allleo Fear Sellout

n u c I ear

-IW

' .·'

.......

1111r....,.

Oris E. Ginther, 68, Rl 7,
near Chester, died Wednesday
at I p.m. In Holzer Hospital.
Mr . Ginther was an employee
for the Parkersburg RIBand Reel
ror 42 years. He retired in 1959
when the plant closed.

He is survived by his wife,
M. Ginther; me son,
James E. Ginther ol Middletown,
Ohio; twt1 grand~a~s, George and
Philip Ginther of Middletown.
Funeral servlees will be (."Oftdueled Saturday at2 p.m. at Elling
Chapel with the Rev_ Wllhur Perrin otrlctatlng. illrlal wUI ~eln
Beech Grove Cematecy. Friends
moy call at anrtlme.

Rosaltha

Man Suffen Baek
Injury In Aeeident
John l Belver, 50, Pclneroy,
w•s admitted to Hulaer ROI!litol
It 6:30 L m. Wedno"""' lllib I
t.ck injury. He wu ~ at
the Tri-State Materialo, o1i1J11e
Grove, when a shovel turned owr
and he jumped orr ICeordiow to
the hospilll report_ Hlo condi·
tlon Is reported 11 aood.
Mrs. can lol. Bateo, 68, Ill. 5,
Jlckson, Wll ldmlu.t ao Holler
Hospital at 7 p. 111- Wodnoldsy
with a fractured loll hlp. . , _
IIWred In a fall at her IDbe. Her
condlt1011 lo reported u
flc1lMry.
~~

aau..

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