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                  <text>--8 -

The Dally Sentinel,

Marching Falcons

WftSHIN(;TON (l!Pl)-

CourtJusticeAbeFortao,
in an historic appearance before Congress, testlfted today he
participated in some of President Johnson's top level strategy
sessions on the Vietnam War and riots Jn the nation's cities.

Going to Parade

:~..........
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LANCASTER, Ohio (UPO
The Fairfteld Union High School
bllXI hae. i.ccept.ed an invitation

Mrs. McLane,

to appear in the 1968 Macy's
Thanksgiving 011..}' Parade in New

York City.

87, is Dead

The "Marching Falcons" plan
to be in the dty for severa1

LOCAL TEMPS
in downtown
Pomeroy at 11:30 a.m. was 78
degrees under partly SUllllJ' skies.

TONIGHT
JULY 16
Double Feature Program

Kell,y Kirksey of santa Rosa, Cali f., apparently one of the nation's most a~·id old Ume fiddler contest enthusists, has sent Tom
Reuter, chairman of tlle Meigs County event this year, a trophy to
be awarded to the best - liked old time fiddler of the local ovent
Kirksey sent a similar tr~h.Y to the Meigs County event last
year and was sent a tape of the local winners. He wrote to Reuter
that the tape indicated that there was "five fine fiddlers among your
winners". Kirksey also comml:!nded judges of last year's event for

their selections of winners.
This yea~s contest. which again puts the Ohio Champion~
ship on the line, will be staged
Aug. 16 at the Meigs County
Fair. There Is to be some $650

sex told the stale Board that a

study being completed by the
BOI\"NIE A~D CLYDE
Columbus-based Battelle MemI WArr•n Beatty, Fa)'e Duoaw~ll
orial Institute should offer a
(Color)
long range plan ror the growth
PLUS
awarded in prize s during t h e of vocational schools.
Jane Fonda, .Jason
04 I am inclined to believe we
contest which will feature not
Dean Jones
can
make some very serious mls~
only competition for those seek~
ing the state title but for area takes," Dr. Essex is quott..&gt;d,
ANY WEDNESDAY
fielders who wish to take part ''unless thorough studies are t.'On~
(Technkolor)
ducted on the advisability and lo~
on a less competith·e basis.
cation of tl1e job training
WED. - THURS. - Ffll.
WII.U:\M DOWNIE .111d Alfred schools.''
JULY 17- 18- t 9
Elberfeld have returned h o m e
The former Middleport school(Double Feature)
frorn the Southern Furniture Mar~ man Is (J.IOted also as saying he
Dean Martin as Matt Helm
l&lt;_et at High Point , r-.:. C.
is concerned about small dis ~
Karl Malden ~ An~Margret
The market is exdusively for tl'icts being approved and he
MURDEREt!S' ROW
retail fUrniture and department cautioned against a "h o d g e
p]us
store bu,ycrs and wa s held from podge'' of vocational schools
Jack Lemmon
July i' to July 11. .\t the market which do not fit into an overall
LUV
owners and buyers select from state plan.
the variety of mer chandise which
features not only the "tried and
PUBLIC TIIINJ\JNG changes.
true" but the "radically new." Once - and not too long ago homemade clothing was Cor some
T0~1GHT
WHILE
PLANS
,\RE
being
disreason frowned upon by many , In
JULY 1G
cussed for anewfour-eount;y joint the past few years, the Ameri~
WAIT UNTIL DARK
vocational
school, the Ohio Edu~ can woman has returned to the
(Technicolor)
cation
Associatlon
warns that the sewing machine and the product
Audrey Hepburn, Alan ArJ;jnl
sprouting
of
new
joint
vocational has gained real fashion status.
Richard Crenna
Enjoying - among other stores
Samantha Jones, Jack We.stor•l school districts around Ohio may
be
halted
temporarily
during
the
wonderfUl progress as a result
E1ram Zimbalist, Jr.
next
few
months.
of
the
home sewing popularity COLORCARTOONS,
According to a release from has been Pomeroy's Fabric Shop.
Go Away Stowaway
the
education news service, ac- The shop recently installed wall Cool Cat; Bungle Uncle
tion
taken last week by the State to~wall carpeting- an indication
Loco Lobo
Board of Education in disapprov- that the owners, Mr. and Mrs.
WEDNESDAY &amp; THURSDAY
ing a proposed joint vocational
r\rthur Nease - believe t h e
JU LY 17- 18
district in Cuyahoga County may trend will continue.
NOT OPEN
signal a temporary end in the establishment of new job training

'"

MUGS THfATR£

FIUDAY TH~U THURSDAY
JULY 19- 25
"BON!I.1E AND CLYDE"

(Technicolor)
Warren Beatty, Faye Duna.way.

SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.

0. R. Faris Dies

21, the f:l.rst roond h to be play-

In Lawreneeburg

l!lchools.
On a narrow 11 ~10 vote t h e
hte Board followed the recommendation of &amp;ate !ilpe:rintendent Martin Essex, former
Middleport Schools &amp;lperinten~
dent, In rejecting the proposed
school.

Mra. Lelah McLane, 87, Tup- dent, 0, R. Faria, has died In
pers Plains, died early t h i o Lawrenceburg, Tetll.
Funeral oerrices will be held
mornlng In St. Joseph Hospital
TltlrsdiiJ'
al 2 p.m. at Ewing
at Parkersburg.
9Je was the daugllter ol the Chapel with the Rev, Carver Willate David and Hannah Orr Cle- liams olllciating, Burial will be
land and wa&amp; born ln Chester. In Beech Grove cemetery.
Mr. Farla is survived by Ids
9!.e was also preceded In death
by her husband, Homer McLane; wile, Henrietta; one son, George,
one son, Thurl; a daughter, IJJ- ol. Columbus, and a daughter,
cllle; two brothers, Max and Mrs. Sam Buckner, LawrenceWayne Cleland, and a sister, Mrs. burg. Term. Friends may ca11
Cora Benson. Mrs. MCLane was at Ewing Chapel Wedteeday evea meni&gt;er or the Chester Metho- ning,
dist Church.
3Je is survived by two daugh-

ters, Mrs. R, K. (1'11yil!s)Rowan,
Middleport; Mrs. J. S. (Doris)
Davis, Tuppers Plains; one sister, Mrs. c. s. Kimes, Colum-

Approved by Board

The estimated budget l o r
1969 wasapprovedwhentheboard
bus; three grandchildren, three of oonunissloners met in regugreat..grandchlldren, three nephlar session Monday.
ews, and a niece.
Estimate expenses for the
Funeral services will be con~ county general fund were set at
dueled Thursday at 2 p.m. at
$307,278.70 while the auto lithe White Funeral Home In TUp~
cense and gas tax fund'sestimatpers Plains with tile Rev. Pearl ed budget was set at $598,300
Casto ln charge. Burial will be and the dog and kennel fund at
in the TUppers Plains cemetery. $16, 140.0S. Present were comFriends may call at the funeral missioners Robert Clark and
home after noon Wednesday.
Ralph W. Ours.

MAY GET HELP
CINCINNATI (UPD - U. S.
Democratic senatorial candidate
John J. Gilligan said t o d a y

Frank Mankiewicz, who served
as news secretary for Ute late
Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, miiJ'
join the Gilligan campaign, Gil~
ligan said he had "discussed"
with Mankiewicz the possibility
that he head up the press section .

COLLECTIONS UP
Sales tax collections in Meigs
County for the perind of July I
through July 6 this year, totaled
$7,926.58 compared to receipts
ol $2,884.82 lor the period or
July I throogh July 8, last year,
according to the report ol State
Treasurer John D. Herbert.
active funds; overall total of inactive and active rum expendiMRS. OLNER DIES
lures showing an estimated $270,·
Bertha Oliver, wife o( the late
413.90.
Dana Oliver, died this morning.
Mr.
Oliver was the owner and
- Approved a request by the
operator
or what is now Balley'a
board of public arrairs to have
Restaurant
and later the Five
an ordinance drawn up to prcr
hibit any other water company Po:lnts Grill. Funeral arrangeLo run Jines in the village with- ments will be announced later
out permi ssion of council and by Ewing Funeral Home.
the board; noting that council believes such permission should
Nellie Tayloe Ross. the nabe granted another company, if llon's nrst woman governor
the dllage ca noot provide water was t'lected in Wyoming 1~
for a ce rtain area and another 1924 to .succeed her husband
who died in office.

ballot and also a one mill renewal levy Cor fire department ex-

penses.
- Approved re solutions unanimou sly to ha ve a one- half mill
utilit) renewal levy ror street
light s placed on the November

Estimated Budget

land and D. M. Cleland, Chester, and D. D. Cleland, Colum-

Winners in the Big Bend Slow
pitch sortball tournament that
opened at Bachtel Field, Waha~
rna Monday evening were Ripley
Fin.1 National Bank 8 over the
Syracuse Giants I; Ripley First
National Bank Hi, Goodyear Athletic s 0; Red's Club 4, Falls Ci1y
7, and Safford's Studio 7, Minersville 6.
Games tonight will be at 6
p.m., Ripley First National Bank
vs. Bob Saunders QJ.aker State;
at 7: IS, Falls City vs. Safford's
Studio; at 8:30, Hart1ey Oil vs,
wirmer of second game; at 9:45,
winner of the first game vs.
wlrmer of the third game.

Attending were Mayor Legar,
Clerk Schoenleb am COuncilmen

Collins. Reuter, Poulin, Hysell
and Rizer.

ed on or before July 31.
Palringo for the championship
Olght are Ama Howell vs. Mar·
garet . S.ack, Agnes Brown vs.
lllyrtle Sioaon, 1'11yilia Hermessy
vs. Audrey Betzlng and Louise
Thompson vs. Pearl Welker.
First Oiilbt pairs include Martha Howell with a bye, Jane Brown
vs. Bernice Durst, Beulah Ewing
vs. Helen Handley and Shirley
Custer va. Beulah Strauss.
Pairings lor the second niilbt
are Janice Reuter vs. Dorothy
Jenklno, Helen Neutzling va. Nellie Brown, Frankie HUMel vs,
Betsy Horkey and Betty Miller,
Evelyn Lucke, Bet~;)' Ohlinger,
Carolyn Bachner and Katie Crow

bus; three brothers. V. D. Cle-

Bank Players Win

The Women's Assn. of the
Pomel'&lt;IO' Golf Club will IJIIOIIIIOI'

Injured on Cycle
F-A Thomas 0, McKay, Jr.,
was injured in an accident late
in June In san Juan, Puerto Rico_
it was )earned here today.

According to the report, Mcwas riding a motorcycJe
when he was struck by a car at
an intersection. He is now hospitalized in the U.S. Naval Hospital No. 5, Ward 4, Philadelphia, Pa. He i.s sening with the
U.S. Navy and is the son of Thomas McKay, Sr., Long Bottom,
and the late Florence McKay.
Kay

with byeo.
The handicap tournament will
slllrt on August 4, it was also
announced, and players must have
a handlcap to compete. H members do not yet have a handicap
established, they should have at
least five scores turned In to
the handicap chairman by July

31.

Services for
Francis Set
Funeral services for Ralph
E. Francis, 53, of 140 Cole
Street, Middleport, will he held
at the Foglesmg Funeral Home
Wednesday at 2 p.m. with t h e
Rev. Raullin Moyer officiating.
Burial will be In the &amp;merest
Memorial Park.
He was born July 14, 1915,
at West Columbia, the son of
I!Je late George P. and May H.
Hagerman Francis. He was a
painter by occupation.
&amp;Jrvlvors include two sisters,
Mrs. Charles Mason, Charleston, and Miss Marie Francis,
Pomeroy; three brothers, Marion Francis, Middleport; Gar!

goes on.

F1NDLAY, OIUO - THE REPUBUCAN PARTY must c~ il
to survive, its nominee for the U.S. Senate claims.
That was the reason Atty. &lt;;&lt;tn. WUUam B. Slxbe Ill"" ..,.,men
Monday lor carrying a liberal phUosophy lito conservative noril&gt;western Ohto. 4'1'm trying to dramaUze the need for change,"' Saxbe
told newsmen. "I think that lor the Republican party to survive, lt
t.s to do things."
it is

SAIGON - U.S. SECRETARY OF DEFENSE Clark CIU!ord met
President Nguyen Van Thieu today to lay the grOUI'olhvork lor the
South VietDamese leader's upcoming conference with Preaident
JohnsoJL Among the topics for discussion were the war, the J)&amp;Cltlcatioo program, the Paris talks and especially how America could
more effectively help general mobilization in Sooth Vietnam.
CUfrord led America's VIetnam ubnlntnlst," tncludlqr Ambassador EUsworth Bunker and commander Gen. Creighton W.
Abrams, to bxlcpeOOence Palace for closed meet111g1 ud IWlch with
Thieu and his top adviser!,

C. Scally, Middleport; Chrisl&lt;&gt;-

VETERANS MEMOIUAL
HOSPITAL
ADMiiTED - Mary starkey,
Pomeroy; Montie P. B a k e r,
Reedsville; Geneva Dillon, Mas o n; Nellie Hatfield, Dexteri
Christine Branham, Pomeroy;
Opal Berry, Middleport; David
VenDer, Franklin Furnace; JerreU A. Carr, Coolville; Thomas

AUTO DAMAG.ED
Heavy front end 'damage was
(Continued from Page 1)
caused to a truck driven by John
reforming the drat\ by introduc- Thurman Fischer, 50, Pomeroy,
ill: a random selection method in a one -vehicle accident Mon..
and calling younger men first day at l :50 p.m. on the Royal
Richard M. Nixon-ln a taped Qak Park Road, near Five Points.
broadcast interview, Nixon criti- The sheriff's department said
cized the Johnson administra- Fischer apparently lost control
tion "for placing too much of the vehicle while lighting a
emphasis on a military solu- cigarette, striking two trees. No
tion" in Vietnam. uMy positions injuries or arrest were reporthas always been that the only ed.
:. ·:::·.:.: :::: ..
alternative to war Is negotiations," he said. ' 1 but any U.S.
withdrawal from Vietnam that
would amount to surrender of
the South to the Communists
would only lead to more and

pher Cross, Rutland; Lawrence
Weddie, PorUard.

DISCHARGED -Charles White.
MEIGS GENERAL HOSPITAL
ADMISSIONS - None.
DISCHARGES - Leopold Hysell, Marie Buck, Fronk Halii·
day.

Eugene

NOW YOU CAN SAVE 1.00 ON
BESTFORM LYCRA GIRDLES

Mccarthy- Two
s~.~&gt;porters of Sen. Robert F.
Kennedy in New York announced they were backing
Mccarthy for the Democratic
nomination. The sl()port came

from

Eugene

H.

Nassau County executive who

was deteated by a Mccarthy
sl.l)porter

for

his

party s
4

Sizes-~

nomination for a U.S. Senate
aeat, and Percy H. Sutton,
Manhattan Borough president
and a Negro.
Ronald Reagan- The Cali!ornia governor said Alabama ··
Republican leaders urged ·hini ::
to campaign In the Sooth to ::,
counteract the political strength ,:

:~nd= ~~: w!'t'~:~e~:~

gan Is scheduled to address a

GOP
4. raUy in Blnni"""•.... -.. July
2

Reg. 3.99 Panty Girdle · ·· ··· Sale 2.99

Reg. 3.99 Lace Cuff Panty
Girdle .... · .. .. .. ........ Sale 2.99

UBERFELDS IN POMEROY

,

The assassination in Sll.gon's

Clifford told reporters ln Oa Cholon quarter was the lourth in
Nang the impending "wide- the capital in five days. The
lipread
attacks" would be poiJceman was investigating an
'~spectaculars" aimed at i"" incident on TraJW Tu Street
nuencing the Communist bar- when the gunman opened ~.
gaining position at Paris. "Our then escaped.
intention," he said, 11 is not to
Two American infantry units
let that spectacular happen."
TUesday uncovered arms caches
"We know that they (the on Saigoo's lrlnges contalnlng

195 Communists withln 60 miles
ol the capital late Monday and
early Tuesday.
Bomb Near cambodia
Four waves oi B52 bombers

Clifford, in his tour of the
northern war zone, was told by
one top U.S. commander the
Communists had no chance ot
succeu iC their offensive plans

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THIS...

WNDON - JAMES EARL RAY, GIVING 111&gt; his light againlSt
utradltion to America to stand trial lor the slaying ol Dr. Marlin
Lulller King Jr., could be ia a Memi1his, Tenn., lali by this -kend,
hio lawyer said toda,y,
Michael Eugene, ~·· British lawyer, said his cUent may be
llown back to the United Stales as early as Thuroclay or Friday. Eugene said ~ had decided "o! his own accord" not to - ' bet
lalied to say why. Tocbl,y 1o the deadUne lor lUi~ ol an ~ ol the
oxtraditloo order.

COLUMBUS - NEW YORK GOV. NELSON Rockeleller, llllld~
1 late and determined bld lor the Republican Presidentiol ....W...
doa. wUl be in Ohio tonight and TblD'sdly atlemjJIIJw to pin s.port !'rom the slats's 58 delegatea to the convention.
1
RockeleUer wlli arrive in Toledo toni!dlt at 9:30 where he
Will adtireso a public rally at the airport. Ho wiD stl,)' at the Cern. . - . Perry Hotel where a public breaklllst Ia 1thecllled at 8
L m. Thursday. He wDl be iDtr&lt;duced by Republl- •e..tarlal
candidate wuuam a SlXbe.

Registration

MENS, BOYS, YOUtHS

NEW I,EBANON, Ohio (tJPD
-Mayor Harold Moore dlcln't
gat I very lllg ban&amp; OUt of I
ell;)' couaeU meed~ Tueoclay

Set Friday

nilbL

Ro!liotratlon lor the oocond
CountU aalted him to reIUIIUIIOr U.rm at Rio Grando Col- liiD beeauoa he had been
lop will be held Friday, In Corn- charged with· the Woflll !lllo
lDUitlt;y Hall, !rOm 9 a ..m. to 3 o1 llnlworkl. ~ said. rio
p.m.
was l1111001nt and retulild to
Dr. Edward Wallon, director . sullo)tlt lila rea!anallon.
It the awnmit icbOOl at R I o
Grande Colloga, said that mort ~~«.$::;."":;:::;:::::::&gt;;;:-&lt;.::;.":i,~.;;:&gt;:i:i:i:!::::
I PASTqll INJURm ·
than 300 otudonto wel'!l enroll·
'I'M l'nl1t- emorpney 191&amp;4
o&lt;1 for tho Drill tlllfliMir torn\.
call to t11e FvmtThiS 11 the largaal t'III'Olirnaal . _,~
IW
toothal1
aold
Tlielda.Y otter·
Rill Grande CoUoga haa mr
where 111e Rev. BUI
Perhad lor oummer ochool.
'
l'lr1008 'Interested, bl ·f urlhlt riD; wllo.haAiraJlan ata ·oooco..
IIIXI otand under ~.
btOrtllatiCIII concerillnl tllo
.ps...,.,er term lllould contaet wa1 llkl!l to Vateran• - ·
Dr. Etli1ard Wollen, ~ GrM lllllottPltal tor ~olmill·
Coil..._ or lei~ 243-5351.

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.

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FJVE CENTS

coastal plain in every area" of
his command, Barsanti said.

Clii!ord said many ol the
North Vietnamese troops in the
northern

provinces

SAIGON (UPO - A force of several thousand U, S. Marines
today attacked what was believed to be the lut North Vietnamese stronghold along the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ). The
heUL-opter..borne Leathernecks ran into heavy Gghti~ which
raged thronghout the dsy,
Initial repor\8 said the Marines killed at least 20 Communlats durl~ a fireft~t which enwted obortly after the
Marines struck eight miles southwest of Con Thien, a mountainous area where 350 to 400 North Vietnamese were believed holed up ln the last Red sactuary in this area.

of South

VIetnam had pulled hack Into
the north to resupply and refit
before the ·offensive. U.S. B52
bombers went after them for
the third successive day today
In raids above the Demilitarized
Zone dividing the two countries.

Lull To End
"This is just the lull before
the storm," he said, ref'errlngto
the current drop.off in the level
ol fighting.
Over North Vietnam, U.S.
pUnts new 122 bombing mis-

sions Tuesday and lost one
plane, an Air Force F105
Thu!XIerchief, to ground nre
west of' Dong Hoi, spokesmen
said. The two-man crew was
declared misslng In action.
U.S. Navy spokesmen said the
destroyer US5 Blue, bombarding Communist Slflply boats in
the panhandle of North Vietnam, took two direct hits from

Driver Arrested
Following Wreck

NEW YORK - THE AMEIUCAN TELEPHONE and Telegraph
Co (AT&amp;1'&gt; and the Communlcationo Workers ol America (CW A)
agreed toda,y 011 a three-year contract with substantial wage 1..
creases and """ lr!lwe beneDts lor AT&amp;T long lines onq&gt;loyeea.
The agroement averted the threat ol a atrtke o! 24,000 telephone operators acrooa the natioa wbo handle long distance and
overaeas cllla.

•

' ·'

the

OAKLAND, CAUF. - billS, MAR'l GONSALVES was struck
IIIIi cridcally injured by 1 ear ao ohe walked home alter an evenlD&amp;
of volunteer dulj! at the UUia Siotera ol. the Poor h&lt;BDe for the aged.
A gr~ of three or loor youths l'liShed to the aide o1 the 56year-&lt;&gt;ld W001811 •• aha lay in the street. Belore siartled byslandera
coold lnterv-, pollee oald Tueoclay, the youths oponed Mrs. (loo.
salves' purse~ took a coin purse and the keys to her heme and Qed.

Brown Sllllfl, Gr1nd For llclc
To School, AA &amp; BWidth SALf

&amp;

.

near

lacerations and numerous stitch-

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incJOOed Hue and portions or the

northern coast. .
Cambodian border northwest
"They could never take the
and southwest of saigon, streets ot Hue again," said Maj.
·attempting to break ~ Viet Gen. Ollntax M. Barsanti,
Cong troops gathering for a commander of the U.S. lOlst
move on the clj)Ual, spokesmen Airborne Division. "We have
knocked the enemy out ol the
nld.
munist

A driver was arrested on the es were required to close t h e
charge or leaving the scene or wounds. A passenger ln his car,
an accident and a passenger in Linda P\11llns 4 Pomeroy, wastak ~
the car was hospitalized with en to Veterans Memorial Hospltfractures and contusions, follow- aJ where she is confined with
Ing an accident at s a.m. Tues. leg and arm fractures, and con~
diiJ', Pomeroy police said todiiJ'. tusions or the (ace.
Arrested Wednesd"3WasCharThe Van Meter car was delea W, VanMstor,20, Middleport. moll-. · Moderate- damaae«
Fl&gt;lice said he wao driver or a were incurred to the truck.
car which pulled !rom llle BeaMeanwhile, POmeroy police re~
PRAGUE - CZECH COMMUNIST LEADERS are ccrmnced con Service Station parking lot
ported
another accident Tuesday
they have won their bettie with lo!oocow to get So.tet.lroopa out of to move onto Nye Ave. His car
thiJ country, a blah Jlll'QI oource aaid today. The oource oald the fishtailed and went over t h e afterooon. cirs ~lven by Rolclimax came !he niahl or July 10.11 In an _.-ent ihillidown tale- centerllne, striking a truck driv- lin Hawk, 53, Chester, headed
phone conversation between Soviet party Ieider Leonid L Brezhnev en by Gary Walker, 26, Gallipo- east, and WUlard Clay, Pome~
roy, headed west, collided causlis.
aod Czech Jlll'QIIeader Alelllnla• llubcok.
Following the accident, Van ing minor damages to both cars.
The source said Dubcek placed the call as fears rose ln CzechMeter
was not located at the Tho accident occurred on Un.
oslovakia that Russian forces "that came here tor East moe maneuver• were overataylng their l'lolt as part ola Kremlin campaign to scene. n was learned Wednes- ion Ave. Hawk was arrested on
charges ol driving while Intoxiday that he had received mouth
undo llle Czech party drive lor more freedom.

4 99
Womens, Ret· $11.95
SALE
WHITE LEATHER T·STRAP, A Sum,_r Hulh
~:
Puppy, M &amp; W Width
8. 99
;;j·-;::;:;::-;;-:;-::::.:;.~;.;.;.;;,.;,;..;,;.;;;~r-~----------=:..::.::__i

::·;·.•.

t

lashed out today against Com-

By United Pres a Imrnational
WASHINGTON - PRESIDENT JOHNSON CONFERRED at length
today with Cyrus R Vance, In prepar1tionlor weekend talks in Ho.,.
olulu on the Vletaam War.
Vance, America' • No. 2 delegate to the Pari a talks with North
VIetnam, briefed Jotm.on owr brealdlot at the WhiteHouse on slow·
moving "oiDcial discussions" willl HIDOI. 'lbe meetilv lasted about
two hooro. Johnoon wu OJII&gt;OCtedto!lytoTe&gt;aslater today and spend
the lllahl at hla ranch before lea vi~ lor Honololu oo his sixth lrip
to tlif' Pa"c!Jlc !br ~ tonlenmw on the
Soulh Vtat.
-ae Prooldenl Nalo'on Van Thleu.

MISS AMERICA
LOAFERS, From Our Regul1r Stock, But Bnlbn

Nickerson,

SAIGON (UPI)- U.S. Secretary of Delenae Clark M. Clillord
today predicted another Com·
munlst Tet.type attack Into
Sligon in the next six weeks.
The VIet Cong picked ol! their
latest victim in a wave ot
Saigon IdDings, 1 national

News ... in Briefs

SALE STARTS JULY 17

.,: .~

.

Clifford Warns Communists
Will Mount New Tet Attacli

Reg. 5.95 Sidestep Longleg · ·Sale 4.95

Reg- 5.00 Longleg Panty · · ·· S.le 4.00
Reg. 3.99 Regular Girdle ··· · Sale 2.99

WEDNESDAY, JULY 17, 1968

.POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

VOL. XXI NO 59

83 rocket and mortar roWlds,
360 Chinese hand grenades and
nearly 1,500 rourxls of ammuniClii!ord oald. U.S. forces killed tion, the war communique said.

Bestform July Specials

Going, going, gone. Our shoe sale is
on. Heels, Rats, plain or fancy, at tre•
mendous savings. Shoes that will step
comfortably' in any walk of life. Do
not miss this unique opportunity!

J,

)

arf.oblo cloudlneol, warm, 1111·
lllroulh Tllur. . willl - .
1 thunder-rl. Hl&amp;ll too
nld 801 tq .low too, low too
. . _ 101 ont1 lower 701.

(

Communists) are increasing
their forces aroutkl Sllgon. We
will be watching it carefully,"

SU MER SHOE SALE·

bigger wars in Southeast Asia."
He said he wanted to set the
record straight because Rockefeller quotes his position as
being "there Is no alternative
but to continue the war."

.

Weather

fkvoled To T1ae lnlere.bl OJ' The Meigs·MtuKJn Area

ROME - THt HEMLINE HOVERED AS THE Italian loll • winter
high laohion collections went into their loorth day today;
There were lots or short skirts and lots or very loog skirts,
But the long skirts were tentative - ali the major deBianera tried
them, with about the enthusiarun ol a reluctant swimmer dipping a
toe into the icy water,
•.

Rockefeller

·' -,

enttne

at y

Orep' s nickname is the Beaver State.

(Continued !rom Page I)

Francis, Pt. Pleasant, and Lawrenee Francis, Pomeroy, and a
number of nieces and nephews,
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 7 to 9 p.m. this evening.

•

•

Now You Know

News •.. in Briefs

Tournament
a club tournament beldming July

A former Meigs county re&amp;J-

days.
Temperatorc

Women Plan

S~reme

..

cated, pollee said.

Gunman Has DCB
man armed explode the grenade If anyone
wtUl a revolver and hand attempted to Interfere with the
grenade hijacked a National plane's departure from New Or ~
Airlines DCS shortly after it leans, the FAA said.
No attempt was made to pretook off trom Houston today,
forced it to land in New Orleans vent the plane from taking ott,
to refuel, then ordered the pilot the FA A said.
to fly to Havana, the Federal
National identifted the copilot
Aviation Adminlstration (F AAJ of the hijacked airliner as Leo
said.
Riso. The flight elfPneer was
The National _jet, carryinr; 113 Charles DHe and the stewardpersona, took ott l'rom New esses were identified as Barbara
Orleons at 8:15 a.m. EDT and Wadley, Susanne Lawton, Shelly
was to land in Havana at 9:50 Moore and C.thline Dickinson.
s.m. EDT, the FA said.
This was the 9th plane hijacked
The pilot, ldentlfted as cap~ thls year and the fourth this
Sid OUver, waa ordered by the month. It was the second Nationhijacker to land In New Orleans Ill fiillbt to be hijacked this year.
to roiUel the big jet belore
departing lor Havana.
He warned the crew or the
lllght, which originated in Los
MIAMI (UPO- A

Inspection of

Angeles and was bol.aOO for
Miami, to allow only a fuel
truck to approach the plane.
A FAA spokeiiiJWI here eald
was made to
interlere with the hijacker.
While a !me tl'llck ]lWiql8d
fuel Into the DCB at the end ol a
no

attenwt

Buses is Set
Annual lrupection of ali school
buses in Meigs County has been
set lor Wedneeday, July 31, Robert Bowen, couraty SqJerlmendert of scht'd1 1 announces.

SP-4 Jaekie Miller .
SP-4 Jackie Miller, son ol Mr.
and Mrs. Thomao B. Miller, Pont·
01'0$, has beeltawllrdedtheArmY
Commendation Medal wltll a "V"
device lor l!'r&gt;iee In Vieu.m. ·
Tho award wao made lor herolam in connection willl mllllary
-•limo ~not a OO.tl!e Ioree
In , !Itt ltepubllc ol Vl~lnaDI
Jan. 31, SP4 Mill..- was aU.ched
to the Nimh lnltiltry DM1lm at
!Itt lime. He la now •lalloqed at

on

Fort Cllq)boll,

KJ,

JAMES YEIUAN, PUBUC HEALTH repreoentative olthe Ohio llepartmem ollleoltll, demCJDo
sb'ates a measles innoculation ~'gun" to be used at foor measles clinics to be held from 12 AOOil
to 2 p. m. SuDday in Meigs Cowty. Two of the "guns" will be used at each of tbe tour clinic a. T1le
"guns" have no needle and the vaccine is short into the arm by pressure. Mrs. Betty Lowery,
county health rmrse, assists Yerian with the demonstration.

Plan Measles Clinic

partment to be!lln serving a 1.:10
yeif seiieilfe ·oo- I' inin)lluighler
charge.
Deskins,. who entered a plea or
guilt;y to the charge, was arrested oo i\pril 4 following the death
of Avel Harvey of near Dexter.
Harvey allegedly died ol knile
wounds in the abdomen following an altercation with Deskins.
Harvey expired at Holzer Hospital in Gallipolis where he wao

Stop Wallace Drive Opens

WASHINGTON CUPO - Sever·
al congressmen are about to
launch a bipartisan drive to
neutralize third.party candidate
George Wallace and avoid
throwing the presidential election into a deadlocked House.
House Ieader s from both
taken by Deskins by private auto parties are skeptical of Ulc
soon after the stabbing occur- chances- at least for the
red. Deskins was represented in present.
court by Attorney Fred W. Crow,
The plan calls for a compact
Jr.
between the Democratic and
9Jerii! Hartenbach reported Republican parties and, specltiDana L. Congrove, 26, QjysvUle, cally, candidates for House
was also transported by his de- seats in the 91st Congress.
parunent yesterday to Fairfield
Reps. Charles Goodell, RCowrt;y to stand trial on bad check N.Y., and Morris Udall, D-Ariz.,
charges. Congrove had been held
In the Meigs jail since May 18.

Steel may
Be Hit by
Walkouts
PITISBURGH (UPO -

can

the steel Industry afford a 6 per
cent pay hike for the men in the

mills?
The Industry says no.
The U n I t e d Steelworkers
Unlon (USW) says yea.
Unless one side changes its
mind- or President Johnson
Intervenes as he did ·three years
a&amp;&lt;&gt;- the industry may be hit in
two weeks with Its ftrst strike

since 1959-60.
The union deeided Tueeday to
order a strike authorization vote
by Ito 400,000 members em·
ployed in buic steel. The vote
will be held July 23, one week
before the current contract

..

•

Strike in

Meigs County Heaii!J Commis- costs will be accepted,
sioner, Sellm Blazewicz, M, D.,
Dr. Blazewicz pointed out that
reminds parents of Meigs Coun- the reason donattoos are acty that a measles immunization cepted is due to the fact that
clinic will be held f'or children the Meigs County Department ol
one through 12, SUnda,y at t h e Health can obtain free vaccine
Pomeroy and Middleport Elemen- !rom the state Department or
tary Schools, the Racine H i g h Health cor pre-achoolera only,
School, and the American Le- The county health department
gion Hall In Rutland.
will have to purchase all vacCarson Eugene Deskins, 30,
Measles vacclne will be ad- cine for children other than preLangsville Hl 1, was removed
free ot charge to all schoolers, the stx throogiJ 12
ministered
to the Ohio State penitentiary
Meigs
County
children. Dona- group.
Tuesday by Meigs County Shertions
to
help
cover
excessive
111 Robert C. Hartenbach' o de-

are

leading

the

campaign.

:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·:::·:·:·~..:::·:·:·:·

OPCO to
Continue
STEUBENVILLE, Ohio (tJPD
- The stfike by the lnternadoo111 Brotherhood ol Electrical
Workers against Ohio Power Co.

c-

toda,y

otter UD!oa r,..

reseatatives, the company and a
~ mediator 1IIOtdaJ lliD.ad
to negoltale an agreement.

Alter ~ lor two - · ·
the offtctal word lr&lt;ml the utiUcy

Goodell claims potential support was that there was "no chln&amp;e
in the situation." The Ohio POitis great.
The pian would work this er spokesman said all aspects
of the walkout were discussed.
way,
The 360 line crewmen and
Sbould the presidential election be thrown into the House maintenance worlters repreaerrt.(which woold occur if no ed by mEW struck July 1 alter
presidential candidate received their contract eJI)ired. Another
a majority of electoral votes), union, the Electrical Services U•
members who had signed the ion, aloo walked out that clay when
compact would cast their votes its contract eJPired. Three days
f'or Ule candidate who woo the earlier, the utill1;y Workers of
highest popular vote, regardless America lett their jobs.
Federal Mediator It J. Monol party,
tone)', who met with the sides

Pony Pulling

Tuesday, "as

to a1t in oo talka

hetween the COIIIP-'11Y and the
UW A in Zanesville Thursday.

Will Lead Off Deadlines at
A pony pulllng contest has been
scheduled for the first
Fair are Set
event of the 105th Meigs
grand-

01110 FIVE-DAY FOREC.&gt;.Sr
By United Press International
Above normal temperatures

wUI be expected Thureday
through Monday with highs

av~

oraging In the upper 80s and
low 90s and lows in the upper 60s and low 70s.
It will be a little cooler nm1:h
over the weekend.
Stowers Thur sda,y and Friday and at lhe ftrst ol next
week will average one half to

ooelnch.

stand

County Fair at 7:30p.m. on Tuesday, Aug. 13.
Under the direction of Fred
Leifheit and Hugh P. CUster, the
contest will feature events for two
size classes, Tbe 6rst event wlU
be lor teams 46 Inches and under
while the aecood wiD be lor ponies
47 to 52 inches Inclusive. cash
prizes of $25, $20, $15 and $10
wiU be awarded to the top four
teams of each class.
Rules or the Southern Ohio Pul11~ Association will govern Ute
event.

Deadllnea tor entries of vari·
ous events ol the Meigs County

Fair have been announced.
Beef and dairy cattle, she~
and swine are to be registered
by 4 p. m. on Aug. 7; horse show
by I p. m. on Aug. 14 and oil

nther departmerts, 4 p, m. on
Aug. 8.
No entries wUI be acc~ted
after the above dates. The secretary will be at the fair board of.
fice at the Rock Springs Falrgroun:ls trom 10 L m. on AJ18.
5 through Aug. 8 to accept en-

tries.

Wallace Inspiring Jitters

By United Preso lhtemational
RBilQblican presidential bopeluls are showing olgns ol
lncreaslna: concern over thirdparty candidate George Walexpires, at local union oftlces '.ace, the beneficiary of dramathrqhout the Unlted States tic late gains ln tho polls.
All three major proapects lor
Southern, 2 p. m. The inspection and Canada.
"Time
Ia
rurmirw
oot
on
US
"
the
GOP nomination 8(lOke out
wUl be. held in the area of the
1
county progeonthe RockSpri~ USW president l W. Abel told a on the former Alabamlil goverDeWI
cmference after three nor•• candidacy Tuesdft7, for
F1lrgroun!o.
Bowen alaeremlndedl'!lsidenta union cunmittees approved the lllo most post arauiDI that
Pllnnlrv to drl"" ochool besea vote order. 11 We are required to voters should ilnore l~
meet certain pro.taiono and the
Front-f'UIIIing GOP tllldldate
d~ the new echool term
timetable is here."
s~ have tholr phyaltol exRichard M. Nixon told a
ifhuadelphla - s conference
amh•tion -~ complete ond
on ftle oo that !hey can be acted
'Wallace's effort was "a formi~
FDIE DOUSED
dabie one , , , It can't be
"""' when tbe couall' board of
The
Pomel'01
lire
department
diocorded aa the uoual third
education "'"to em Aue. 6,
an-..! a call at 9:52 p.m. party...
Tueoclay to llle Elllla llfoooman
But he eald that ''alee the
MEIGS GENERAL HOSPITAL
borne at Dutchtown where a lan two conventtolls mMt and
ADMISSIONS - Latham Ba1a, over a stove had OIUllhl ftre. cornmond lht atlllttirll ol llle
Pomei'Ol'; Thomas WUlloma. llan)oguo were estimated at $20, nation, I IIIII* the people
PCRIIOl'Q)',
Pomeroy Fire Chlol H8111'l' Wer- (supporting Wallace) wiD
DISCHARGES- Nry &amp;ald. '!bOre wao ln&amp;ui'illlce. chanp. I lklo't lhiok tho people

Now Orleans ntnW"3, tho hi·
ln charge o1 the inspection will
Jaeker held I!Je crew and pa&amp;be
Q&gt;l. C. L. llogso of the Ohio
t1011Pl'5 at be.Y with the gun and
Slate
Hl!lhWIJ' Pa1rol. Schedule
hand sronade.
lor the inspection includes the
He warned tho crew he would
Meiss Local buses at 7 s. m.;
Eastern Locol It 12:30 p. m. and

'V' Deviee Awarded

Communist s h or e batteries
Tuesday. There were no casualties, the announcement said.
Earlier, war communiques
reported S u u t h Vietnamese
troops early Tuesday had
uncovered a Communist hospital and freed ei vilian prisoners
from a primitive Viet Co~
prison In a battle south of
Saigon.

will throw away their wte."
Cal!fomia Gov. Ranald Rea·
The lormer \ice president gan, aaya he Ia willing to
also said that "under no be eonlldered a aerloua ciDdlclrcumstances" would he ''Or date If that il what dtvelops at
Huber! Humphrey" enter Into the GOP Nadonal C&lt;mendon,
neiiiJital!ons with Wallace In the bellnl a apeak!ng twr o1 the
event the Electoral Collega Sooth Friday.
reached an impasse and the
other developmenll:
electior, was thrown Into the
Hubert , IL lll•re,y-1'11o
House ol Representatives.
.tee pretildeoa, .UU feellni a.
Nixon's chief _.enl, NoJ. oiler - • o1 !nllu...a, met
om A, Rockefel ler, told a rally brle!IJ· at bh home wllll lndlln
at Abraham Liacoln'a Spring. - · I n - d ·Ia id~Uc u
Delcl, m., bome Wallace planned. 1f1s - · cleared
"denies everything tlttt Llneoln ldm lor Ill trYel'lllll!lt •hll to
otood for. We want 11&gt; pai't 0( New York !"''-- ..er,....-·
""" ,,_.,
hin
.,.. ..

m.

vate

.,~·;Mas.

••

·

ha:~:::~-:=: ~ ..::.-~ · :-:~i:

cent IUilOil8 voten, a&lt;cordlnlll&gt; lab&gt;ti!l· lor talkl 'wiih ' I/'IIIUII'I·
recent poll•, 111ou1 - l e hfa, yq1a . O.IOOlotUc I~ a, 1io&amp;
tllondlng laal ..,rtltl. Tbt poll1 .. . ~ 110 filllle

olao Indicate bll '. _-t .-r• ~ lie loW 1 n111
oily lurla 1111 I!IPibli&lt;aD JIII'V ltllii-we ........ Ill
mare lhan b.o ~ ~~~i ~ It _. 11
pardcularlrln t1tt ~.
, :lleltil .. llll'l 11 .
..

�TIMELY
QUOTES

EDITORIALS
Two-hundred million Americans will have
nearly two monlha of respite from tbe statis·

Trucking Associations, puts II this way : "For
too long, Americans have looked at tbe high·
way accident rate as a sort or a lottery and
that pothing could be done to Increase lbe
safety factor. ••
He lhinks the situation is chanl!!"gL ~ow•
ever and tbat at long laot we are """"''l "a
solid: permanent confrontation of Americans
with their dismal neglect of • . . trallic
safety."
It is io be hoped that he Is not being unreal·
istically optimlstic. Anyone wbo does much
driving these days-and who doesn't?-&lt;&gt;an
only wonder tbat Utere are not more accl·
dents. Only the good sense of the majority
of drivers plus a large meaaure of luck,
keeps the 'toll from being blgber than It is.
But whet Is needed is more good sense by
more drivers and less dependence on the element of luck.
One journalist who covered some 5,000
miles in a vacation trip between his home in
the Midwest and Hemlsfalr In San Antonio recently reports that in all those miles he saw
only one driver of a 1968 car using bla shoul·
der barness.
It is difficult to believe, after aU the em·
phasis there has been on traffic safety in the
pas! two years, that this should be possible.
We have a lot to Jearn yet, and untll we
begin learning, the exhorters and slatisticians
will have little reason to rest.

ticians and exhorters before another lang

boliday weekend turns the publicity spotlight
on traffic salety again.
Those thousands who were unfortunate
enough to have been Involved in lbe accidents
tbat marred lhe July 41h weekend but who
were fortunate enough to have survived, or
those who merely witneased tbe results of Ute
higb·speed Impact of human ftesh against
metal wl\1 think of little else but traffic
safety' for a long time to come, however.
For Utem. then, the latest statiatics from
the National Safety Council:
Since the beginning of the year, ~ericans
bave been killing themselves with mternal
combustion machines at

l'!D

average rate of

134 a day. The total of traffic deaths up to
June 1 waa 20,380, or about 6 per cent above
the 19,270 registered for the same pertod In
1967. About 700,000 other persons have been
disabled in traffic accidents.
If our soldiers were suffering casualties of
the sa.."Ue magnitude Ln Vietnam, there would
be a march on Washington that would pale all
others into significance.
But slaughter on the battlefield and slaugh.
ter on the highways are not the same thmg.
The one is man-caused and man-stoppable;
the other we seem to accept as being largely
dealt by the band of fate.
J. David Brothers, president of American

' &gt; •

I

'';

"

'

·'

i

( ..

.

~I '
' ri

-

'

. i hl:r' , .
t ,;; I

1 .''

¥

'

i: '

.) /1
~I

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the hippies."

I went Into the community
to represent the church as I
felt It should be represented
in our aociety today. I came
back to Parkville and tried
to pa .. on what I had learned
to anyone in the congregation
who was interested. But these
pinheads wouldn't let me
teacb what I had learn•d. It
made me damned mad.
-The Rev. James R. Belt Jr.,

on leaving his pastorate at
Parkville (Mo.) Presby.
terian Church.

1 was beealmed off the
Azores. But you can't get out
and pusb.

- Alec Rose, the 59·year-old
British grocer on his return
from a 854-day round-the·
world voyage on his yawl.
l ain't got no secrets. I just
lives.

-Charlie Smith, the oldest
man on the Social Security
rolls, wha celebrated his
!26th birthday July 4.

- Phil Greenwald, entertain·
mont director of the Con·
cord Hotel in the Catskills,
on the problems of cotering
to fmrw-us entertatners such
"" Sammy Davis Jr.

. , .. I '

~-

years now.
-British jazml4n Humphrey
Lyttelton, descril&gt;ing Louis
Armstrong .. "the first of

1 have to ~ive Sammy a
limousine and tt's got to have
a phone and a TV set. His
own limousine follows the
limousine we got for him.

. ·,, I!( ·.·,'
,'

·f I .

;·

Fie, FBI, The Stoop Is Low

;

fi!yry· ·

In the beginning I found
these reports incredible, but
1 gradually began to realize
tbat something was not right
about what was bappening to
the Jews.
-Chancellor Kiesinv.er o I

By WARD CANNEL

porters.'
Naturally the three major televiaion networka have protested to th~ Justice Department And we here at the Institute
endorse the move heartily.
As regular readers know, we have long held that impersonation of any sort indicates a basic lack of self..steem. And
to impersonate a television news employe is juot about as low
as you can get
To see the once-proud end powerful FBI come to this-well,
it gives renewed resolve and purpose to the work we are try·
tng to do here at the Institute.
,
And now, a peek into the mallbeg:
DEAR DR. CANNEL: AI editor ol the biJb school paper, I
feel I could get more lalormation !rom lbe faculty and kids
II 1 let It be !mowa I wa1 an FBI age at . .Would that be all
rlgbl?
ANSWER : Yours is a common problem, and properly
speaking does not involve Impersonation. But we here at the
Institute feel that you sbould give up one job or the other.
DEAR DR. CANNEL: In order lo see Vlee Pre11denl Bum·
phrey In penon, my crandmothor bomnred a tape reeorder
and mleropbone and palled beraelf oil •• a newaman. That
was three weeb afo Wedfteaday, and ao lar ao I can lad out,
Mr. Humphrey Ia sUR talking Into ber mleropbone. Wbal can

By PHIL PASTORET
II you think jokes about
plumbers are funny, you have
not had any plumbing trouble
lately.

• • •

Don't knock television
commercials. Consider how

much more of the regular
programming you'd have

to watch if there weren't
any.

mate sooic booms in tertain

areas.''
-Dr. Robert, Linn, chairnuln
of the National Environ·
ment Commission of the
Interog~ncy Aircraft Noise
Abat""ent Progral/l. on
learning that sonic booms
were endangering Indian
cliff dwellings in Arizona.

Anyone with a wolf on
,,. "' . '
'

TJ.tli

~TTENTLON?
~61&lt;.

'NLN0Nio."'

'

WORLD
ALMANAC
.
FACTS
DCCTCRIB MAILBAG

Menstrual Flow Clots
Not Unusual Condition

Outdoor Cookery

Soc!iety News
Mrs. Edward P, King and Mrs.
. , Jack F. King (Josn Hudnall) have
been-·cUing ·Cor the three week
old daoghter ol Mr. and Mrs.
WUitam J. King while his wile,
Cledlth Jane King, was a pa.
tlent at Slelterlng Arm• Hospital, Athena.

•
•

'

•••
'

~·

bany Rt. 2, limday afternoon.
Mrs. WUIIam King is borne
from ~elterlng Arm!! Ho1pital,

Outmor cookery projects were

discussed wben the Morning Star
Athena, and Is somewhat imp,.ov- HUI-bUIIes 4.1! Club met July
10 at the Morning Star United
ed.
Methodist Cburch.
Club members worked oo in·
'lne r u i n s of England's
dlvlwal
projects which are to
Glastonbury Abbey are of
great interest because King he ftnlslled belore the judglag
Arthur and Queen Guinevere on Auguot I. Refreshments were
are said to have been buried eerved by Patt;y lhle, reporter.
there.

lAST

•'

'

Projects Worked

English is the world's
most inconsistently spelled
language with 25 per cent
of the words not spelled as
they · sound, The World
Almanac notes. Current
Engllsh speiUng was fixed
by 17tl&gt;century printers
and 18th-&lt;:entury diction·
aries. Moat w or ds were
sr.elled phonetically, but
silent letters added for
etymological reasons, pronunciation changes and let·
ters with dlllerent sound
values h a v e conspired
against spelling con·
sistency.

by Don Oakley and John Lane

Jcokaoey,

So llttldlro 1e1tm
llM60 lillie #N.

~oo~r-r..
Piri~!.!,d.

•,

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•,.

••
.,
'

.•

.
•'
'•j

'~

• -- f ..
-' Two ....
•-•oted columnsJ
(....
Q-Wbat causea blood clots to who you are, where you an depressed states. Their ef.
to pass with the menstrual and what day, month or year fectivenesa varlea w It h the
flow! I'm 33, not pregnant It ts. Tbe paranoid Individual type and severity of lbe
end not taking blrtll control believes, e n t I r e I y without underlying cauae.
·
pUis. WUIIt cause anemia!
basts, lbet others are plotting
IHH.,.,.., ,....,,..,,. A.... l
A-The pa1111e of clots Is against him. In some caaes
not unusual. When secondary tills may make him very ,.,_ ""' ,..,
ool
anemia Is aasoclaled with dangerous.
""""""" to w.,.. G. 1Nt41Wt,
menstruation, lt is caused by
" u 0,. ~-~L-e are shock MD. l• ..,. of '"" ,.,..,, WAlle
~
"Cu~w..Dt. ltonlat.~t cunot .,,., illllithe Io.. or a large amount r treatments
for persons with .
•·
,lt/••1 letttn, 6e wUI ,.,.. ,.Hen
blood, not bY cIotting.
severe depreBSion? How long o1
..-r 1.,.,.. Itt ,...,. ..,,...,,
must one take them! What
Q-I am belnC treated lor are the after e•ects? Do !bey
an ovarian condition lor which Impair tbe memory of con.
my d o c t o r used a German centration? Are there any
Thou hlut commandtd thy
name meaning middle i&gt;l the drugs lor depression!
precepts to be kept dillgentmonth. Con you give me the
A-'nere an eeveral types ly.-Psalms 119:4.
name end explaln the contJI. of depreuion. For acme,
• •
Uon?
electroconvulslve shock treat.
Character Ia made by wbet
A-Tbe word you an grop- menta are very effective. The you stand lor; reputaUon by
lng for Is mlttelscbmerz (lit- number of treatments required what you fall for .-Alexander
orally middle pain). It Is a depends largely on bow well Woolleott, American playrather sharp p81n that occurs the patient responds to lbem. wright.
about midway between me..
atrual periods and Is caused
by the rupture or the capaule
or a ripe ovum as it leaves
lbe ovary in the process of
ovulation. In most women thio
Is painless. You are one ol
the exceptions.

q-

°

•

Q-Conld ta k In 1 seven
aspirin tablets at one time and
being very upset cause me to
min a period?
A-All emtllonal upael
might cause a delayed period
but neither factor would cause
a completely missed period.

••
•

•

They may have to be repealed
later if the depression recurs.
The strength of the current
used must be carefully con·
trolled to prevent pbyolcalln·
jury !rom the convulsive ,....
action. The treatments may
· cause some muacular soreness but !bey do not cause
brain damage or tmpalr the
memory. They are more likely
io
Improve
Many
drugs are
now
used Ialt.the
treatment
o1

BERRl'S WORLD

.•'

The face ofihe lt'W ~Ht.

~ Binding the Wounds
I had fondly flreamefi that Wilt!&amp; any
fortunate chance slwuld have broken up
for a while tl•e foawdalio~t of DUT in.stitu·
tion fwe would have) . _ . freed them of

every

ve~· riyc af ltuman
itlf!f[UOiily uf TifJIIts .

op1&gt;re~.'iion,

of

-Thaddeus Stevtaa
The end or the Civil War found the South i_n

ruins, it! economy shattered, its cities dev-

·asta~d.

its countryside laid waste-and with

more than four million des1itute former slaves.
Jn March 1865, the Freedman's Burea\1 was
eslabllsbed, !be firs! altempt by tbe gdvcrn·
ment to direclly aid the Negro.
t'ood distributed by tbe bureau saved thOU!·
ands of Neer()(ls-ttnd whiteR-from - starva-

tion. The bureau resettled displaced persons,
protected Negro workers and set up hospitals
and schools, including universities like Howard
and Fisk and Hampton Institute. Forerunners
of the freedom riders of the 1960s came from
the North to assist in teaching Negroes the
basic rudiments of education and culture.
The much-maligned ''Radical Republicans"
had opposed the martyred Lincoln's lenle~t
policies toward the South. Ni&gt;W under President Andrew Johnson. they saw their civil
rights bllls vetoed and ex·Confederate general;
and poHticians regaining power in Congress
and the state legislatures. Legally, by means
of restrictive "Black Codes," or lllegaUy, by
means of terroc tactics, the slavocracy was
restoring In peace what it had lost In war.
The radicals, led by Thaddeus Stevens ol
Pennsylvania in the House and Charles Sumner
of Maaaachusetts in the Senate, seized the
reins of &amp;overnment, although they failed In an

attempt lo impeach Johnson In 1868. The South
Was divided into mJlltary districts and occuf.ied by Union troops. The franchise was
ex ended io Negroes and poor whites and
denied to unregenerate rebels.
Stevens, a fervent believer ln the words of
the Declaration of Independence, realized !hat
only by giving the freedmen land could they
attain true freedom and equality. Tbe cry
was "40 acres ancfa mule." It was not to be,
and it was this lailure to Institute thorough·
going economic reform that ultimately doomed
Reconstruction. Both the Negro and tbe poor
white slowly drilled Into a new kind of bondage
called sbarecropplng.
In the meantime, however, the Negro was
making stunning progress on the political
front For. 10 yeara, between 1868 and 1876,
black power was a feet
NEXT: Bottono RaU oo Top

nine players

chosen

nalional League All.star ""'ad
that will p!IIJ' the Cincinnati
Reds in Loulsv!Jle next Monday
nllllrt.
lnllelder Dave Campbell, Who
has htt I7 homers U.ls Jeason,

and pitcher Dick Dral;'&gt;, Who

has a 9-4 record, were named

was replaced at tlrst base by

Don Psvletlch.

sonvlile and Georga Tbomas ol
league Pre&amp;ldent George SJa. Loulovlllo, catcher Ellie RodJ'f. Drysdale'• 11th victory against
ler, who also chose Toledo guez ot avracu&amp;e, pitchers six losses.
pitcher Jim Rooker and obort- Stove Jooes of But!alo, John
Drysdale departed with one
stop John Kennedy o! Colum. Gelnor or Columbus and Rick
bus as replacements for two Delgado o1 Rochester, and fn.
All-Stars wbo cannot pill' be. fielder Riel( Hebner of Colum.
cause or prior military com- bus.
mlttments.
Hebner at.d first baseman
The seven other pla,yers Mike Hegan of Syracuse, who
named Tuesday Included OOI· was chosen last saturday, ·are
Clelderl!l Tom Reynolds of Jack- the two piiiJ'era wbo wlll be In
II)' PETE ALFANO
military service at game time.
UPI Sports Writer
Also named to the team last
Lou Brock and Nelson Briles
Saturday were shaggera Brant are at It again.
Alyea o1 Butralo, wbo leads the
The lalented d!o Who helped
league with 28 homers, team- bring the pennant and world
mate Bob Chance, who has 20 championship to &amp;. Louts last
homers, Cluck Harrison of season are bard at work on
Richmond, who has alammed d!pllcatlng the leal once more
18 homers and Merv Retten- this year.
mWid of Hocheoter with 16
Brock collected throe hits,
but Valentine was thrown out at roundtrippera.
stole three bases, drove in two
third lor the second oul
Hoadlng the pitching alan nms and scored twice while
B. Wallis went to third on a will be Dave Roberls or Colum. Briles OOrled a three-hitter
passed balL Jelf Lewis walked bus with an U-4 record an:l Tuesda,y nlllllt to lead tho
an:l stole second. Taylor was Galen Cisco of Louisville, who teague~eadlng Cardinals to an
safe on an error in right field, has posted a 10.6 mark.
easy 6·1 vlclory over the San
Rounding oot the .,.ad are Francisco Glants.
with Wallts scoring. Lewis scored as Facemire was safe on a lnlleldera Syd O'Brien of Loots·
Brock gut the Cardinals oil
fielder's choice, Sheets W&amp;l!l safe vULe, Mike Ferraro ol ~a­ winging In the first lnnlns When
on an error wlth Taylor and Face- cuae, Bob Floyd of Rochester he was hit by a Rill' Sadeckl
mire scoring. S. Wallis walked and GU Garrido ol Richmond, pitch, stole second, went to
and Condee grounded oul The as well as outfielders Larry third on a fielder's choice aJY.I
White Sox led 5-0.
&amp;ahl and Amos Otis of Jack. acored on Mike !iaamon•s
The Whlte Sox last run came sonvllle, Bob Cbrlalian or 'fo. alngle.
in Ute top ol the fourth Inning. ledo and catcher Gerry Moses
In the second inning Ute felt
Valenline fanned. Jim Noe waa or Loolsvllle.
fielder singled home two runs
Coaching Ute All-Stars will be following a single by Dol
hit by a pitch, stole second and
scored on B. Wallis' &amp;Ingle. Wal- managers Clyde McCullough ol MaxvUI and an error by Ssdeckl
ll~t waa out going to second. Lew- Jacksonville and Eddie Kuco
on Briles sacrlOce bunt. The
Is walked IDd Tlj'lor struck oo~ or LoulsvUie whUe Jack 11Bbe speed,y Re&lt;l&gt;lrd promptly stole
It wu 8-0.
or Tuledo ..UI serve as mana- his second base of the evening
The Reds left only two men gor,
and 22nd of the seaeon, and
on ba'Se while White Sox left alx
came home on Curt Flood 1 s
FRIENDLY
BAT
stranded.
MONTREAL (IJPO- Montreol single.
The White Sox pulled J doubl~ ·IIQOI' Jean· Drapeau. "'~Qo ~as
Expert Base Slealer
Pklln the (9ui'th l'be.U~!Oed re(etved much crt.ticlenl recent-Brock, who stole 52 baaes last
was safe on ValenttM•a. fn'or ly over snafus involved In the season and added seven more in
at llrst. D. Dye groonded out
clcy' s winning ol a Natlooal the World Series, made his 23rd
Noe to Valentlno and Valonline League baseball tranchise, is to theft this season toUoMng a
tossed Grinstead out to B. Wal- set a lrlendller tip of the bat single In the 8lxUt tnnlng and
lis It third to complete Ute doo. this week.
now haa piltered 12 bases In the
ble pllj'. BusseD lllnned to end
The tourifll cast ot "You're a last eight games.
the innlrw,
BrDea, wOO won a starting job
Good MAN, Charlle Brown" will
The Gllllpolis Hed SOx battled
last
season when Cardinal ace
present the swinglng mayor
Pt. Pleasant American 011 to a
with an autogrlj&gt;hed baseball Bob Gibson broke a leg and
(l..(J tie tor alx full lnnlngs, tell
bat Thursday at the ' 4 Man and responded with 14 clctorles,
behind 2-0 In the top or Ulo sev· His World" fair site, the gained hi• lith triumph or the
enth, Ilion rallied lor three mark- mayor's favorite playb.r tleld.
year Tuesday, allowing only a
era in their halt of Ute seventh
The hat Is Intended to bomer by WUI!e McCovey in the
to win, 3-2.
commemorate the awarding oC
Brent WUson's two-run dou- the baseball franchise to
INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE
ble tied lt 2-2, then RlckGrlmes'
W. I. PeL GB
Montreal.
olrwte scored WUson, ending the
Toledo,
,
.
,
..
50 40 ,556
IDGH RATING
extra tnnlrw melee.
NEW YORK (UPI)- Dr. Fa- Hochester, , . , 46 41 .529 2'h
It was a real pitchers dueL
Columbus •... 43 42 . 506 !lh
Butch Thomae, Jetr Thcmaa and ger, un:lefeated in three starts Jacksonvtile, . ,44 43 .506 4'h
Tim Cottrell ahared moond du- this year, was the unanimous LootovUle .... 4! 44 .soo s
ties lor Point - they had • com- choice In the Thorouahbred Syracuse . . .• 42 44 . 488 6
bl...t total ol nine strilleoutL Racing Auoclatlon'slltest mon- Butr.alo .....• 43 47 .478 7
They gave up only five hlta, two thly ratingB Tuesday Cor Hors&amp;- Richmond •••• 39 50 ,438 IO'h
olo.the-Year honors.
by Wilson.
Tuesday's Results
Damascus, who was beaten
Ralph S&amp;urMiera and Rick BarToledo
10 Hochester 5
cus hurled tor the winnerL They by Dr. Fager in the Suburban Syracuse 8 adfalo l
fanned a tolal ort7 batters, IDd Hamlcap on July 4, held second Loolsvllle 6 Richmond 3
gave up ouly three hits, a lourth place In the ballnling with In JucksonvUie 9 Colwnbus 2
Inning slrwte by Butch Thomas a Healicy third.
seve nUt Inning double by Thomas,
and a seventh lmlng single by
Jotr Thomas.

by

~A.:A

a..
....
.........
....,.TlftiiiNllo
......
__ • n.
ue ~

... ,._,, ONto ..,.., ........ c...
" - 11141M. u..rw ..._ •a.aur.

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YMCIU,

•von.

~lk'rifdDI n1e11

IIIII.... fit IICTilr

ll'htn ...111111. a c.. .- """ ,.. ,..,
......... It ci• ~IJ ........... tl....

~

............ ll.lO.'ftni . . . . . . .,Jir

..... IIIMI W"'R Clrrllr lll'riott 1M ·~
Hie! 0... . . .ft '1.111• ., lftlill - , ....

.til.to, lb ......

"'"'

CllllllrNM. ....

tLZI. 11INIIIIIIII•tul.

.._,,..,. tJrlct IIICWu ..... ~

New Haven went down in order
· In the hollom of the sixth as
• Nowell popped ~ to Jim Noe,
M. llaymaker !armed and R. Dye
ll...t out to Noe.
The White SOx took a I~ lead
.· when Roger Tlj'lor singled, went
- to second on a passed ball, stole
third an:l scored on Dave Face, mire's 11crlllce Qy. John Sheets

: struck ouL steve Wallis alrw!ed,
This evening, the AddlvWe
, atole second and went to third Jets wiU battle Ulo Mlddl"'art
on a pasaed ball Bob CoiXIee Reds at 7 p.m. The Galllpoljs
Ortales will meet Fruth's Pharatruck out.
Four more White Sox runs macy ln an 8:30 p.m., contest.
crossed the plate with two out
Of Ute 40 teams which bupn
tn the tq, of tbe third tnnlng. play on July 6, only 22 remain
Tom Valentino singled IDd stole in contention for the lOth anrual
1econd. Jim Noe lanned. Boll champlonohlp trophy.
W'allh was sate on an error

lRoberts Win String

BICHAID I. OWDI, ....,_..

~,

..threl~

•

DEVOTED TO IHf&amp;IUI' Of

.....

Trolling 6-0 the Hecla puohed
· over five runs on two hits and
ftve errors. Lonnie Newell was
on by an error am scored on
' Mopoy Haymaker's slrwte. Ricky
Dye fanned. SCoti King grounded
. oot with M. Hlj'ntakor scoring
. to make lt 6-2.
Jeff Haymaker was safe on an
• error. Tony Weaver reached nrst
· on an error and Randy Grlnstead
: alrw!Od scol'lng J. Haymaker 111!d
" Weaver to make it 6-4. Don Dye
was sate on an error arM! Grinstead scored the last run. Ronnie
• Russell struck out to end the

!Jacksonville Snaps

THE DAILY SENTINEL

Y.U. ......... ~.

runs.

"Wflat's • nico tirl Ill• )'lltllol., 1ft •

"IICt Ill• tillar

: COLUMBUS (UPD - Jack.
The Jets' bl&amp; blowa IPinll
' 8C11vllle Mets ranked fourth in wlmtng pitcher Jim McAndrew
club battiDi In latest IIIIer. were by Georgo ~.. pt..
DlliOIIII LeaiJue averages.
t:tng bls second bonier In three
, But 11 !bey continue to wear dill's and fourth or the year ln
: out pltchero ao they did the Ute 'll"ftlng innln&amp; IDd AI Oil·
: poll till"'.&amp;Ira here, Including vor, tripling in tho seYOnth IDd
l Tuesda,y's .,~ vlclory over CoJ. acorllw "" a Oy to centar by
r umbua, Utey•li"eoon be lea4ing Jack Domasha.
the leaaue.
·
Dave Roberti tried lor ~
1ft !DUr ,..,es IIIII' collecled ninth ln a row l!nd 12th Of the
50 hits and ocorad 32 1'11111 ......, but IDalc bla tldrd loll
against the olub that's leadlq lnst.id, aa !tie Mt11 mauled
. the reaaue tn hittina.
him for ,..., hilo uiU llvo
: 'l'olllll'1 ReyDOidl and Llrrr .,.,.. 'In ·tllreo IDd -~trd
I Slalll, wtiO combined for it hlta lillln.l• .
' 1n the aeiie•, picked till• Jei '· ,·
,
PJtcliou til' ..,. ,Ti!;.atJ.
J ·m per 1 HI, Villley o1
' EacO ·had three. hllf C!UI ,or sQill~•aiter'ri ,Californl(baa :flii
I J..,kfl!ll1\'lll~l lolal Of ~a .fin!!. ~ilqual r,Ynfiiii of less th8n 3.~:
1. they ' ~ lri, ·tt~ 'l,lllo il!l\ii' . '"~h•s. ~ccordi~g t~ the l'l~r
by ~~~
, ' ,.
~yclbjla~~~~ .Br.tunmca. .

l

The

l

'

-&lt; " ••

'j-

0

}

juat

don't

quite

clear

the

fences."
be laughingly added.
The Dodgero went Into last
The Heels nicked the Dodger
pitching ace lor 10 hits, includ- night's game losers of 11 of

drunk,"

strike soon so they can get thlt

new park done 1n a hW'ry,"
chimed In Dodaer trainee BUI

their last previous 12 games,
an:l that one victory came over

the Heels In a July 7 game in
1. A. Juat before the All Star
pme break.

That July 7 loss was their
tlrst of the seven-in-a-row which
the Reds now have.
''I woold be ranting and rav-

Qnattetbaek

him."

Today'• Probable Pitchers

All Times EDT
11ro1m ~ out stora ~·
ChiCI&amp;Q (!Ianda 8...1 IIIII Nye od only three pllj'a loa trw II playera were doging I~ 4-10) at Philadelphia (Frynw~!l). beloro IIUI!erlng a ......., lq
but they aren't," said Red 9 and James ~), 2, 7:35 j). m. In the Doipblno' llrot ...,.ar
New York (Koo.oman 12-4 and 10111011 pmo.
manager Dave Bristol.
Cardwell 3-8) at Pittsburgh (Stsk
Brown waa also hiltl In his
~ and Blass 6-2), 2, 8:05 p. m. praloe or Oanker Bill Andera ol
Los AJweles (Singer 6-9) at Cl,.. Ohio state.
clnnali (Nolan 4-2) 8:05 p. m.
"He's not too tall but he'•
Atlonto (Brtttoo 4-2) at Houstoo got a 11Q0C1 noodle IDd he does
Ray I~ 8:30 p. m.
catch the ball," Brown oald.
San Francisco tMar!chal 16-4) "He eatchea U Jtandlng em bla
at St. Lools(Gibson(l:z..s),Hp.m. head IUid with 111011 banslnl""
the CUbs snapped a seven.pmo
Thuradlj''s Gemes
him. ll does your beart IJI)OCI to
Philadelphia winning streak.
New York at Plttsburi!ll, nli!llt have him around. Ho'o • ll&amp;lrtReMrve tnnelder Bob John· Los Ang. at CinchN.ti, nlsht er."
son, a Jast-mimte starter, Atlonto at Housloo, nigl!t
Tbe ~· alto cut two
doobied and S&lt;Ored the t;ytna San Fran. at St. Loolo, nli!llt players. They were Bill FrUz,
nm In the 8lxUt lnnlns and then
Only games scheduled.
a tJchi end !rom WisOCftlln IDd
singled home the wionlog run in
AMERICAN LEAGUE
ballheck Nate Jolll- ac.
the eighth as Atlanta and
W.
I.
Pc~ GB cplred from the Oakland Jlald.
reliever Cecil Upshaw topped
Houston and former Brave Detroit ...... .,57 32 .640
Baltimore, .. .,49 37 .570 6'h
Demy Lemaster.
Cleveland, .... 52 U .559 7'12
Boston ... , , , ,45 U .523 iiJih
Mtmesota •••• 42 45 .483 14
More Browns
Oakland , ..• ,42 46 ,477 14'h
Calllornla . . • 42 !6 •477 14'12
Report For
New York . , , 41 45 .477 1flh
Chicago . . . . 37 48 .435 18
Washington •.• 30 55 .353 25
Training

Brock, Briles at it Again

•

Q-My bubaatl, 84, ts In a
mental hospital. His doclor
says he Is confused end bas a
paranoid attitude. What does
this mean?
A-MeDial c o a I ulo n Is
manifested by uncertainty as

OfriiD

The Gautpnlis White Six almost blew a six run lead Tues-day nli!llt at the Kyger Creek
Little League Tournament but
held on alter a five ru.'l barrage
In tho fifth Inning to down the
New Haven Reds 6-5.
The win moves the White Sox
lmo the next round ol the tourDIIIlent where at 7 p.m. next
Tuesday nli!llt Utey~l take on tbe
Galllpelts Hed SOx, wiimers laot
alaht 3-2 in seven lmings f.lver
Pl. Pleosaot American OIJ ln
Ulo nlptclj&gt;.
Jim Noe went the route ror
the White Sox as he yielded but
three hits. newr walked a man
and etruck out 10. Sloppy s..,_
port almost snatched the win
from Noe as the White Sox made
1lx errors, tlve or them In the
1&gt;ottom ol the filth Inning when
the Reds scored five runs.
Jef! J1arnlal&lt;~r ~as on U..)IW
rllr ,. Hed1; 1'1\1 up f9ur hki,
"~· lour and also struck out
10. He also received rigged support as the Reds made six errors, lour In the top ol the Utlrd
·• when the White Sox scored four

w••

didn't arrest me for betrw

United Preas htel'llltlOIIII
NATIONAL LEAGUE
W. L. Pet GB
!1. Loola ..... 59 31 .56.1
Atlonto ....... 49 40 .5$1 9'h
Phllldelphla ... 45 tl ,523 12
San Fran. •••. 45 45 .500 14
WILIIINGTON, Ohio (IJi'GChiCI&amp;Q ..•.• 44 47 .484 15'h C00C11 Paul BriiWD uld W-o.
Cincinnati , •.. 42 45 .483 15'h dill' tllat .lclhD lll&gt;lro WGIII&lt;t tlllrt
Pittoburgh , , , .u 47 . 466 17
at ~de lor Ulo C:bu:lo.
U.. AJweleo ... 42 49 .462 17\1 IIIII Bengololn tbelr llrAIIhl·
New York .... ,41 49 .456 IB
bltlon pmo AUJ. 3 aplna Ulo
Houston • , . .. • 38 52 •422 21
Kansas CIQ&gt; Clllot..
Tueodlll''s Hesults
stora wao aCQIIred !rom U1o
Chicago 4 Phllldolllhla 3, Dlaht Miami Dolplllno In a tradt.
Pitts. 3 New York 2, nli!llt
''lhl haa _.-~.,.. IUid we
Los Ang. 9 Cincinnati 2, nlaht want him 1o have ~~~e · -"""
Atlanta 6 Houstoo 2, night
it;y, • Brown llld. •owe him
St. Lools 6 San Fran. · 1, nli!llt 1o look at 111111 oomllll In ""
II)'

out In the severth Inning IDd Buhler.
Ute Dodgers leading 8-2.
FIJrley•s grand slammer
"I lost 14 pounds out there on the tint for the Dodier' a since
1964.
the mound," said Drradale.
"We sometimes hit balls like
"The way I wu ataggerirw
on my Will' to the clubhouse that at home," said Dodger
it's a wonder a park policeman pilot Walt Alstoo, "but they

Ing streak ol their own last 1118 Pavletich's ftrst hamer of
the season, before he was renlghL
Victim or both homers was placed by Brewer.
"I have to agree I pitch betJim Maloney, who sull'ered his
ter
ball in other pukl," said
olxth loos against eight victorwho hasn't COJJW)leted
Drysdale,
ies.
Lefly Jim Brewer shut oot a game at Crosley Field since
tbe Heds Ute final two and ~ 1963.
"Don's hoping they settle that
innings to ])reaene starter Don

Two Gallipolis Teams

I

By WAYNE G. BRANDSTADT, M.D.

Harrisonville

among

Tuesday to round out the lnter-

I

BIG 1»-Y '-ND
I'M) GElS ~LL

not the answer to crime.
-A Scottsbluff, N&lt;b., man
stating his opJJOiilion to
gun control legisl&lt;Jtion in a
telegram to Sen. Clinton P.
Andtrson, D-N.M.

of Pomeroy were visitors of
her mother and rather, Mr, and
Mrs. Ernest W. lludnsll ol AI.

leading Toledo Mud Hens were

OFFICE
PICNIC "
QJCCESSou

Cain murdered Abel with
a rock. Registering guno is

Mr. and Mrs. Edward J. King
were 1n Kentucky recently tor
her granclather'a funeral. Their
Joseph Edward King, ago
21 montha, ota.Yed with Mr a.
Charles Elll1.
Walter Ellis built a porch for
Edward J. King last week.
Charles and Allee Marie King
were visitors ot Mr. and Mrs.
Edward J. King. While visiting
Charles mowed hia hay to have
ready lor baling &amp;mde.Y.
Mr. and Mn. Jack F. King

ROCHESTER, N.Y. (UP!) -

W1NQN,t..
WlLUNeiiOR$
WORKeD lo.
Naml ON
~ER. OON TIME
'Rl IMI&lt;.E THE

• •

his daorstep lives pretty far
out i!l'the cdt&lt;ntt'!/.

Tom Haller socked a three
run homer and Hon Fairly hit
a grand slammer as the Dodgers &amp;rJIPped a five game los-

fracture at the base of his llttle

Whltlleld left !rom the llekl
In the llflh lnnl!W alter pulll!W
a hamotrlng In his left leg whUe
rouncH.ng second base, and later

Win In Tournament

(;(was IT THE

•

lnlurles last night as the Los

Two members of the league.

• • •

Without all that hot air,
some big wh~&gt;.o:]s would be
nothing " ·
than flat tires.

Singer.

Roberts Heads IL All-Star
Pitchers With 11-4 Mark

BARBS

West Germany, testifying as
a witness for the defe.,.e
in a Nazi war crimes trial.

So far there's been no ral
effort to document the co ·
mandmenl: "Tbou shalt n t

I do?
ANSWER: Nothing.
DEAR DR. CANNEL: Moll ol U1 leUowa Ia the elly room
leel very bed about FBI ageals lmpetloaallng now1mea. But
OD 0.. other bend, U Is a lol oaler lor the public than the eld
daya wbea we bed lo lmpenonate brain ourgeon1 alii Com·
mualsls. So doesa'l lbet sbow lhe bureau Is Improving?
ANSWER: Absolutely. We at the lnsiltute do not expect
perfection overnight.
DEAR DR. CANNEL: Mr. Hoover boo asked me lo WJ'[Ie
aad laqlllre bow come you plek oa tbe FBI lor Ill cover, ud
aut on tho CIA?
ANSWER: Yours is a common problem. And we here at the
Institute wlll deal with tbat matter just as soon as we can
find out what the CIA is a cover for.
DEAR DR. CANNEL: In order to open OIJI' own hair drell·
log salon, my husband and I beve paned oureelve1 •• aa
lloten. 1 do not think Ibis Is really aa lmperiHallon aa my
husbend loob very mach like his sister. Nevorlheleoo, he
Is quite worried.
ANSWER: It is impossible to say whether your huebend
should be worried without further data. II you wiU send us a
photo of blo sister, we will advise him by return maiL
DEAR DR. CANNEL: You an absolnlely wronc. I have
been lmpenoaatlal a newsman for 4e years, and now have
bofll a DAUOIUllly 1yadlcaled Waoblaglon column and my own
weekly magazine. What do you oay to lbat?
ANSWER : Kindly send two box tops to us bare at the IDBII·
tute, and we wUI be bappy to leU you.

NEW YORK (NEAJ
Before answering reeder mau, we would like to take a
moment to register a strong protest against the FBI.
In" recent draft card·burnlng demonstration in Wash\"gton,
FBI agents Impersonated televialoo newsmen in order to get
Information !rom the demoastrators.
Bona fide broadcasters on the scene say that the FBI men
carried tape recorders, microphones and other .~ectronlc jour·
nallsm ~ear, and Identified themselves as free-lance re-

CINCINNATI (UP0 U Tho Angeles Dodgers pOUIIIIOil out a ftqrer oo his left hand.
Cincinnati Reds are losing play- 9-2 viclory to hand the Heds
•:hlco Rutz tEillaced Wooders almost as fast as games their seventh straight loss.
ward at second and prohabb'
these days.
Woodward left tbe game In will be there ogatn tonlsht
Two more players, lnftelderE the second lnnlqr after being when the Reds selll GII'y
Woody Wondward and Fred hit by a Don ·Drysdale pitch. Nolan, tbelr 21).year-old rlsht
WhitOeld, were sidelined with X-ray• Indicated a hairline bander against the Dodgers BUI

Stofa Will
Be .Startiqg

Standings

Two More Reds Injured In 9-2 'Setback

·,

There has been a lot ol
publicity In recent years
about people whose Idea In
life is to spread love. Louis
bas been doing that for 68

The Grim Lesson Not Yet Learned

3 - Tho Dally Sentinel, Mlddleport-Pomeroy, 0,, July 17, 1968

CANNEL AT BAY

aecond

inning and two singles.
The cardina.ls have now wan ·

13 or their laot 14 games to
malnlaln their nine and C110-llall
game bulge In Ute standings.
In other NL action Pittsburgh
snapped a IO.game lo&amp;lng streak
with a 3-2 victory over New
York, Loa Angeles rocked
Cinclnnali 9..2, Chicago edged
Philadelphia in 12 Innings 4-3
and second place Atlanta
downed Hoo- 6..2.
In the American League New
York swept a pair from
Waahlngton 4~ and 4-3, Bald·
more defeated Chicago 4-2,
Minnesota !iwnced Bostoo 12-3,
Cleveland edged Calllornla In 10
innlnga 2.1 and league.Jeading
Detroit towed oakland ~.
Did Losing Streak
Jerry MOl' doobled bome two
nma in the sevonth lmtlng to
give reliever Ron Kline his sixth
win and help Pittsburgh beat
New York. The vlclory IIJUII)jled
the

now." Charlie said. 111 toOk a
big king just outside the reef
day before yesterday."
Tbe engines were thro!Ued
back to 1,000 r.p.m. and tbe
Annettt B. mushed down end
began the long day of troJIIng.
SomeUmea you raise no flab,
and It can be a very long day,
but the antlelpaUon, the ex·
ci!A!ment of not knowing if or
when the stril&lt;oa will como,
keeps ennui at rod'a lenalh.
Four miles out, with the
berberpole amote alacb ol
the power company and the
blgh rise apartment bulldlnp
around Port Everglades otiU
thrusting above the horizon,
we bH the m-eam end that in·
credibly blue water.
And J'lot long after that, we
spotted an amber line ol sea·
weed di1ftlng with tjle current
OD Ita nortlieas!A!rt:y coune .
Filllnl In a1 bellnsman while
Charlie cleared the dook for
acU&amp;n, I brought tbe An·
Mtt&lt; B. arottild ~ a ~·Uel
course so 11M! biills sklpiJe41
just oiJ!sltle ,!lie ~Y.•ed _ Une, .
"The dol~b!n ' feed undir
there,'" ,C·b'a i' He said. "We
lll!&amp;ltt hiU ~ho91,"
'•'
Larry·Anlat. tbe tbltd mlom.·
ber ol'our par~r ; a,.t In a deek

,,..

lO ~game

loslng

streak Whlle handing Dick
Selma his fourth loss agatnot
eight vlclorles.
Ron Fairly belted a grand
slam homer and Tom Haller hit
a three-nm homer to give Don
Drysdale his lith win and lead
the Dodgen over Cincinnati.
Glenn Beckert cnltected three
hltll-includJni a 12th inning

double which S&lt;Ored pinch·
rwmer Adollo Phillips with the
tl~reaklng ru1&gt;- and ran his
hitting streak to 21 games as

F'lght Results
United Press International
MIAMI BEACH (UP0- Eddie
Talhlmi, 178, Miami~ s~
Chip Johnson, 187, Naplea1 Fla. •
II)'

(!),

HffiAM, Ohio (UPD - A lew
more Cleveland Browns trailed
lnto the summer training camp
Tuesday to ioin the rookies, two
tt whom will oot begin tralnlng
Sstordlll' because o1 in,iurtes.
Flanker J;Wie Barney and
tackle John Demario, Jim eope.
land, Guy Lane and a few
others showed up at camp,
Dave Porter of Mlchi&amp;an was
placed on the reserve ltst and
ent home after surgery on his
cut loot. He stepped on a
broken bottle last MOl' in Ann
Arbor.
.
·~ere IS nothing I can do
about It, 11 he said. The Browns

have told me oot to push
things, to just let It heal. • The
foot waa operated on after an
lnlection set in, and a wire was
placed ln&amp;lde to tie a tendon to
a toe bone.
POrter, a ninth round draft
choice, was NCAA and Big Ten
heavywell!f!t wrealitng champ.
ion last year.

Wtoconaln State's Dick Sleven
was passed up until next year

because o1 a knee Injury sutler.
ed in a fall from a ladder.
HOUSTON (UPO-Dave ZyHe also underwent an operaglewlcz, 188%, Houston, stopped tlon.
Willie JohDBon, 190, Miami
Belch, Fla. (4).
Dennard, IS!'h , Houstoo, stocllled
Ra.v Vega, 185, Mempllio, (3).

-Y

SAN DIEGO, CallL (UPDJullan Tellez, U41 Lcs AfWeles,
stq)ped Leq)oldo Becerra, 142,

New York 4 Washington 0, lat

New York 4 Washington 3, 2nd
Baltimore 4 Chicago 2, night
Mlmesota l2 Boston 3, night

Cleve. 2 Callt I, night, 10 Inns.
Detroit 4 Oakland 0, night
Today's Probable Pitchers

All Timeo EDT
Washington (Pascual lhS) at
New York (Stottlemyre 12-5), 2
p.m.

Baltimore (Phoebus 9-8) at Chi·
cago (Horlen 5-8), 9 p. m.
Boston (Culp 6-4) at Mime sola
(Kaat 6.6), 9 p. m.

Cleveland (Hargan 5-10)atCalIIDrnla (Clark 1-41), 11 p. m.
Detroit (Sparma 7-8) at Oakland
(Hunter 6-7), 11 p. m.
Thursday's Games

Dotrott at Oakland
Boston at Minnesota
Baltimore at Chicago

Waohlngton at New York, nlpt
Only games scheduled.
RIDERS HONORED
SARATOGA SPRINGS, N.Y.
(UPO- The Natiooal Museum of
Racing announced the addition
of two famous amateur steeplechase rider11 to Its Hall of Fame
Tuesday. The two are George
ll (Pete) Bustwick and IUgan

Mckimey.

GENERAL ELECTRIC
COMBINATION
REFRIGERATORS and FRE •••

Mexico Clcy (10). Richard
Gonzales, !25'h , Los AJweles,
ootpointed Juan Montoya, 127,
TIJilllll, Mexico (10).

Less than
38" wide!

Be on Your Toes
When Big Fish Hit

Roy Attaway's
Outdoor Notebook

FT. LAUDERDALE, Fla.(NEA)-The monsoon broke
after 29 days and it waa one
of those b r ill! a n t South
Florida mornings with the sea
running moderately from one
to three. Tbe Annette B., a 3tJ.
foot Cbrla-Craft lbet began
life on the lakes around Lou!..
ville, Ky., lilted her bull on
the swell end skimmed past
the jetties.
This waa a new role for her .
She had been given the beart
of a Uon, twin 225s that flung
her out toward lbe fatbomle..
blue of the Gull Stream, ud
a new ouUook wltb the olender
white outrigger• protruding
port and starboard.
She waa built as a fun boat,
a boat lor moonlight cocktail
parties on the ~ or ldy~
cruises on , the Intracoastal
Waterway. But now ibe was a
work boat and sbe kept pace
with the cleo and functional
Haltera! and Bertram !!'Qrt·
. flibermen ;
Charlie StoU, owner, master
and mate, reUnqulsbed· .the
helm·and,went abotit ·the bull·
·ness of riJI*Iilg' lbe INiUyboo
':balts,:one 1or ~aeW'ou,trigger.
A silver apocn was ftalled .dl·
·. re~tly an. '. -~; · ',.
·,
hWe may ·as well 11\art

Pirates•

Tuesday' a Results

- . , ...t..........,r
. . fJaet IUIJW(Iere.

11&amp;1'1-Jce
chair and sipped a cuo of
coffee, his eyes darting !rom
one bait to the other.
We didn't bave long to wait.
Dolphin not only are the
most beauU!ul llsh In the sea,
and one of the best eating,
they also are one of the
gamtlt. When they hit there
fs no besUetion. Tbey just bit,
slaBbing at the bait end tak·
ing It whole. The clothespins
on both outrlggora IDApped al·
most simultaneously.
Charlie Insisted .that I take
one rod, and rather than
argue end take a cbance on
mlsalni the strike, I tlCI'tlm·
bled aown and 1et lbe star
drag on the lltlrboard rod.
There e111uetl one of those
spectacular aerial displays
unmatched except perhaps lly
an enraged barraeuda.
Six minutes later a blue·
green and gold bull dolPhin
(cbaractertzetl by the biunt
brow) wao thralblaJ on the
· deck wldlil La.71 pleyed his
alope.brolred cow away from
. the
boat. Llrry'o llsh. joined
mine.several mlnulel later.
'
.
Anything after tbat wouJd
bave been anllcUmactlc. We
~racked bitterly cold cans or
bt!er lo celebrate aiM! grinned
ancl said silly thlogc In lhe
wa~ you always do whtn

'

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lfE(itM'tawt.
. .oat for t1eu!lng.
llodaiTIT·IlD

579

5

FREEZER
NANCY Rlcbey, a IID.O·
lq leJutla pla;rer, demo•·
!lhlel Ia e.mpetltloa hew
to deDver a amaab lhot.
DEDtCATE IJBRARY
COOPERSTOWN, N.Y. (IJP0
- commlsiiCI18r WWiam D.
Eekart IIIIIIOWICed Tuesday !hat
the NaUOIIII Baseball Library
will be dedicated Mondl)', July
22 011 a lite adjacent to Ulo
Baaoball Mus.,.. and Hall or
Fame.

The twwtory building· will
bouse

UhlbH

areaa and a

librar)' with• a written IDd
pictnrlal reeord ol boaebolL
you're completelY bappy. It
w,s Just ,belnc there, aavor·
lag tbe sky and the water and
the amblei\Cf or. the Annolt&lt;
8,. that r:eally mattered.
'

FREEZER

12 Cubic Foot
UPRIGHT
15

CHEST

SJ99
SJ99

Also Av1ilebleln The• Siaea
AI ComJMfeble L9w Ptt- •
16 Cu. Ft. Upright•20cu. ft. Chest

'a cu. ft. Upright •2s cu. ft. Chest

�TIMELY
QUOTES

EDITORIALS
Two-hundred million Americans will have
nearly two monlha of respite from tbe statis·

Trucking Associations, puts II this way : "For
too long, Americans have looked at tbe high·
way accident rate as a sort or a lottery and
that pothing could be done to Increase lbe
safety factor. ••
He lhinks the situation is chanl!!"gL ~ow•
ever and tbat at long laot we are """"''l "a
solid: permanent confrontation of Americans
with their dismal neglect of • . . trallic
safety."
It is io be hoped that he Is not being unreal·
istically optimlstic. Anyone wbo does much
driving these days-and who doesn't?-&lt;&gt;an
only wonder tbat Utere are not more accl·
dents. Only the good sense of the majority
of drivers plus a large meaaure of luck,
keeps the 'toll from being blgber than It is.
But whet Is needed is more good sense by
more drivers and less dependence on the element of luck.
One journalist who covered some 5,000
miles in a vacation trip between his home in
the Midwest and Hemlsfalr In San Antonio recently reports that in all those miles he saw
only one driver of a 1968 car using bla shoul·
der barness.
It is difficult to believe, after aU the em·
phasis there has been on traffic safety in the
pas! two years, that this should be possible.
We have a lot to Jearn yet, and untll we
begin learning, the exhorters and slatisticians
will have little reason to rest.

ticians and exhorters before another lang

boliday weekend turns the publicity spotlight
on traffic salety again.
Those thousands who were unfortunate
enough to have been Involved in lbe accidents
tbat marred lhe July 41h weekend but who
were fortunate enough to have survived, or
those who merely witneased tbe results of Ute
higb·speed Impact of human ftesh against
metal wl\1 think of little else but traffic
safety' for a long time to come, however.
For Utem. then, the latest statiatics from
the National Safety Council:
Since the beginning of the year, ~ericans
bave been killing themselves with mternal
combustion machines at

l'!D

average rate of

134 a day. The total of traffic deaths up to
June 1 waa 20,380, or about 6 per cent above
the 19,270 registered for the same pertod In
1967. About 700,000 other persons have been
disabled in traffic accidents.
If our soldiers were suffering casualties of
the sa.."Ue magnitude Ln Vietnam, there would
be a march on Washington that would pale all
others into significance.
But slaughter on the battlefield and slaugh.
ter on the highways are not the same thmg.
The one is man-caused and man-stoppable;
the other we seem to accept as being largely
dealt by the band of fate.
J. David Brothers, president of American

' &gt; •

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( ..

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' ri

-

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. i hl:r' , .
t ,;; I

1 .''

¥

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.) /1
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the hippies."

I went Into the community
to represent the church as I
felt It should be represented
in our aociety today. I came
back to Parkville and tried
to pa .. on what I had learned
to anyone in the congregation
who was interested. But these
pinheads wouldn't let me
teacb what I had learn•d. It
made me damned mad.
-The Rev. James R. Belt Jr.,

on leaving his pastorate at
Parkville (Mo.) Presby.
terian Church.

1 was beealmed off the
Azores. But you can't get out
and pusb.

- Alec Rose, the 59·year-old
British grocer on his return
from a 854-day round-the·
world voyage on his yawl.
l ain't got no secrets. I just
lives.

-Charlie Smith, the oldest
man on the Social Security
rolls, wha celebrated his
!26th birthday July 4.

- Phil Greenwald, entertain·
mont director of the Con·
cord Hotel in the Catskills,
on the problems of cotering
to fmrw-us entertatners such
"" Sammy Davis Jr.

. , .. I '

~-

years now.
-British jazml4n Humphrey
Lyttelton, descril&gt;ing Louis
Armstrong .. "the first of

1 have to ~ive Sammy a
limousine and tt's got to have
a phone and a TV set. His
own limousine follows the
limousine we got for him.

. ·,, I!( ·.·,'
,'

·f I .

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Fie, FBI, The Stoop Is Low

;

fi!yry· ·

In the beginning I found
these reports incredible, but
1 gradually began to realize
tbat something was not right
about what was bappening to
the Jews.
-Chancellor Kiesinv.er o I

By WARD CANNEL

porters.'
Naturally the three major televiaion networka have protested to th~ Justice Department And we here at the Institute
endorse the move heartily.
As regular readers know, we have long held that impersonation of any sort indicates a basic lack of self..steem. And
to impersonate a television news employe is juot about as low
as you can get
To see the once-proud end powerful FBI come to this-well,
it gives renewed resolve and purpose to the work we are try·
tng to do here at the Institute.
,
And now, a peek into the mallbeg:
DEAR DR. CANNEL: AI editor ol the biJb school paper, I
feel I could get more lalormation !rom lbe faculty and kids
II 1 let It be !mowa I wa1 an FBI age at . .Would that be all
rlgbl?
ANSWER : Yours is a common problem, and properly
speaking does not involve Impersonation. But we here at the
Institute feel that you sbould give up one job or the other.
DEAR DR. CANNEL: In order lo see Vlee Pre11denl Bum·
phrey In penon, my crandmothor bomnred a tape reeorder
and mleropbone and palled beraelf oil •• a newaman. That
was three weeb afo Wedfteaday, and ao lar ao I can lad out,
Mr. Humphrey Ia sUR talking Into ber mleropbone. Wbal can

By PHIL PASTORET
II you think jokes about
plumbers are funny, you have
not had any plumbing trouble
lately.

• • •

Don't knock television
commercials. Consider how

much more of the regular
programming you'd have

to watch if there weren't
any.

mate sooic booms in tertain

areas.''
-Dr. Robert, Linn, chairnuln
of the National Environ·
ment Commission of the
Interog~ncy Aircraft Noise
Abat""ent Progral/l. on
learning that sonic booms
were endangering Indian
cliff dwellings in Arizona.

Anyone with a wolf on
,,. "' . '
'

TJ.tli

~TTENTLON?
~61&lt;.

'NLN0Nio."'

'

WORLD
ALMANAC
.
FACTS
DCCTCRIB MAILBAG

Menstrual Flow Clots
Not Unusual Condition

Outdoor Cookery

Soc!iety News
Mrs. Edward P, King and Mrs.
. , Jack F. King (Josn Hudnall) have
been-·cUing ·Cor the three week
old daoghter ol Mr. and Mrs.
WUitam J. King while his wile,
Cledlth Jane King, was a pa.
tlent at Slelterlng Arm• Hospital, Athena.

•
•

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'

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bany Rt. 2, limday afternoon.
Mrs. WUIIam King is borne
from ~elterlng Arm!! Ho1pital,

Outmor cookery projects were

discussed wben the Morning Star
Athena, and Is somewhat imp,.ov- HUI-bUIIes 4.1! Club met July
10 at the Morning Star United
ed.
Methodist Cburch.
Club members worked oo in·
'lne r u i n s of England's
dlvlwal
projects which are to
Glastonbury Abbey are of
great interest because King he ftnlslled belore the judglag
Arthur and Queen Guinevere on Auguot I. Refreshments were
are said to have been buried eerved by Patt;y lhle, reporter.
there.

lAST

•'

'

Projects Worked

English is the world's
most inconsistently spelled
language with 25 per cent
of the words not spelled as
they · sound, The World
Almanac notes. Current
Engllsh speiUng was fixed
by 17tl&gt;century printers
and 18th-&lt;:entury diction·
aries. Moat w or ds were
sr.elled phonetically, but
silent letters added for
etymological reasons, pronunciation changes and let·
ters with dlllerent sound
values h a v e conspired
against spelling con·
sistency.

by Don Oakley and John Lane

Jcokaoey,

So llttldlro 1e1tm
llM60 lillie #N.

~oo~r-r..
Piri~!.!,d.

•,

l

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f

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i

•,.

••
.,
'

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•'
'•j

'~

• -- f ..
-' Two ....
•-•oted columnsJ
(....
Q-Wbat causea blood clots to who you are, where you an depressed states. Their ef.
to pass with the menstrual and what day, month or year fectivenesa varlea w It h the
flow! I'm 33, not pregnant It ts. Tbe paranoid Individual type and severity of lbe
end not taking blrtll control believes, e n t I r e I y without underlying cauae.
·
pUis. WUIIt cause anemia!
basts, lbet others are plotting
IHH.,.,.., ,....,,..,,. A.... l
A-The pa1111e of clots Is against him. In some caaes
not unusual. When secondary tills may make him very ,.,_ ""' ,..,
ool
anemia Is aasoclaled with dangerous.
""""""" to w.,.. G. 1Nt41Wt,
menstruation, lt is caused by
" u 0,. ~-~L-e are shock MD. l• ..,. of '"" ,.,..,, WAlle
~
"Cu~w..Dt. ltonlat.~t cunot .,,., illllithe Io.. or a large amount r treatments
for persons with .
•·
,lt/••1 letttn, 6e wUI ,.,.. ,.Hen
blood, not bY cIotting.
severe depreBSion? How long o1
..-r 1.,.,.. Itt ,...,. ..,,...,,
must one take them! What
Q-I am belnC treated lor are the after e•ects? Do !bey
an ovarian condition lor which Impair tbe memory of con.
my d o c t o r used a German centration? Are there any
Thou hlut commandtd thy
name meaning middle i&gt;l the drugs lor depression!
precepts to be kept dillgentmonth. Con you give me the
A-'nere an eeveral types ly.-Psalms 119:4.
name end explaln the contJI. of depreuion. For acme,
• •
Uon?
electroconvulslve shock treat.
Character Ia made by wbet
A-Tbe word you an grop- menta are very effective. The you stand lor; reputaUon by
lng for Is mlttelscbmerz (lit- number of treatments required what you fall for .-Alexander
orally middle pain). It Is a depends largely on bow well Woolleott, American playrather sharp p81n that occurs the patient responds to lbem. wright.
about midway between me..
atrual periods and Is caused
by the rupture or the capaule
or a ripe ovum as it leaves
lbe ovary in the process of
ovulation. In most women thio
Is painless. You are one ol
the exceptions.

q-

°

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Q-Conld ta k In 1 seven
aspirin tablets at one time and
being very upset cause me to
min a period?
A-All emtllonal upael
might cause a delayed period
but neither factor would cause
a completely missed period.

••
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They may have to be repealed
later if the depression recurs.
The strength of the current
used must be carefully con·
trolled to prevent pbyolcalln·
jury !rom the convulsive ,....
action. The treatments may
· cause some muacular soreness but !bey do not cause
brain damage or tmpalr the
memory. They are more likely
io
Improve
Many
drugs are
now
used Ialt.the
treatment
o1

BERRl'S WORLD

.•'

The face ofihe lt'W ~Ht.

~ Binding the Wounds
I had fondly flreamefi that Wilt!&amp; any
fortunate chance slwuld have broken up
for a while tl•e foawdalio~t of DUT in.stitu·
tion fwe would have) . _ . freed them of

every

ve~· riyc af ltuman
itlf!f[UOiily uf TifJIIts .

op1&gt;re~.'iion,

of

-Thaddeus Stevtaa
The end or the Civil War found the South i_n

ruins, it! economy shattered, its cities dev-

·asta~d.

its countryside laid waste-and with

more than four million des1itute former slaves.
Jn March 1865, the Freedman's Burea\1 was
eslabllsbed, !be firs! altempt by tbe gdvcrn·
ment to direclly aid the Negro.
t'ood distributed by tbe bureau saved thOU!·
ands of Neer()(ls-ttnd whiteR-from - starva-

tion. The bureau resettled displaced persons,
protected Negro workers and set up hospitals
and schools, including universities like Howard
and Fisk and Hampton Institute. Forerunners
of the freedom riders of the 1960s came from
the North to assist in teaching Negroes the
basic rudiments of education and culture.
The much-maligned ''Radical Republicans"
had opposed the martyred Lincoln's lenle~t
policies toward the South. Ni&gt;W under President Andrew Johnson. they saw their civil
rights bllls vetoed and ex·Confederate general;
and poHticians regaining power in Congress
and the state legislatures. Legally, by means
of restrictive "Black Codes," or lllegaUy, by
means of terroc tactics, the slavocracy was
restoring In peace what it had lost In war.
The radicals, led by Thaddeus Stevens ol
Pennsylvania in the House and Charles Sumner
of Maaaachusetts in the Senate, seized the
reins of &amp;overnment, although they failed In an

attempt lo impeach Johnson In 1868. The South
Was divided into mJlltary districts and occuf.ied by Union troops. The franchise was
ex ended io Negroes and poor whites and
denied to unregenerate rebels.
Stevens, a fervent believer ln the words of
the Declaration of Independence, realized !hat
only by giving the freedmen land could they
attain true freedom and equality. Tbe cry
was "40 acres ancfa mule." It was not to be,
and it was this lailure to Institute thorough·
going economic reform that ultimately doomed
Reconstruction. Both the Negro and tbe poor
white slowly drilled Into a new kind of bondage
called sbarecropplng.
In the meantime, however, the Negro was
making stunning progress on the political
front For. 10 yeara, between 1868 and 1876,
black power was a feet
NEXT: Bottono RaU oo Top

nine players

chosen

nalional League All.star ""'ad
that will p!IIJ' the Cincinnati
Reds in Loulsv!Jle next Monday
nllllrt.
lnllelder Dave Campbell, Who
has htt I7 homers U.ls Jeason,

and pitcher Dick Dral;'&gt;, Who

has a 9-4 record, were named

was replaced at tlrst base by

Don Psvletlch.

sonvlile and Georga Tbomas ol
league Pre&amp;ldent George SJa. Loulovlllo, catcher Ellie RodJ'f. Drysdale'• 11th victory against
ler, who also chose Toledo guez ot avracu&amp;e, pitchers six losses.
pitcher Jim Rooker and obort- Stove Jooes of But!alo, John
Drysdale departed with one
stop John Kennedy o! Colum. Gelnor or Columbus and Rick
bus as replacements for two Delgado o1 Rochester, and fn.
All-Stars wbo cannot pill' be. fielder Riel( Hebner of Colum.
cause or prior military com- bus.
mlttments.
Hebner at.d first baseman
The seven other pla,yers Mike Hegan of Syracuse, who
named Tuesday Included OOI· was chosen last saturday, ·are
Clelderl!l Tom Reynolds of Jack- the two piiiJ'era wbo wlll be In
II)' PETE ALFANO
military service at game time.
UPI Sports Writer
Also named to the team last
Lou Brock and Nelson Briles
Saturday were shaggera Brant are at It again.
Alyea o1 Butralo, wbo leads the
The lalented d!o Who helped
league with 28 homers, team- bring the pennant and world
mate Bob Chance, who has 20 championship to &amp;. Louts last
homers, Cluck Harrison of season are bard at work on
Richmond, who has alammed d!pllcatlng the leal once more
18 homers and Merv Retten- this year.
mWid of Hocheoter with 16
Brock collected throe hits,
but Valentine was thrown out at roundtrippera.
stole three bases, drove in two
third lor the second oul
Hoadlng the pitching alan nms and scored twice while
B. Wallis went to third on a will be Dave Roberls or Colum. Briles OOrled a three-hitter
passed balL Jelf Lewis walked bus with an U-4 record an:l Tuesda,y nlllllt to lead tho
an:l stole second. Taylor was Galen Cisco of Louisville, who teague~eadlng Cardinals to an
safe on an error in right field, has posted a 10.6 mark.
easy 6·1 vlclory over the San
Rounding oot the .,.ad are Francisco Glants.
with Wallts scoring. Lewis scored as Facemire was safe on a lnlleldera Syd O'Brien of Loots·
Brock gut the Cardinals oil
fielder's choice, Sheets W&amp;l!l safe vULe, Mike Ferraro ol ~a­ winging In the first lnnlns When
on an error wlth Taylor and Face- cuae, Bob Floyd of Rochester he was hit by a Rill' Sadeckl
mire scoring. S. Wallis walked and GU Garrido ol Richmond, pitch, stole second, went to
and Condee grounded oul The as well as outfielders Larry third on a fielder's choice aJY.I
White Sox led 5-0.
&amp;ahl and Amos Otis of Jack. acored on Mike !iaamon•s
The Whlte Sox last run came sonvllle, Bob Cbrlalian or 'fo. alngle.
in Ute top ol the fourth Inning. ledo and catcher Gerry Moses
In the second inning Ute felt
Valenline fanned. Jim Noe waa or Loolsvllle.
fielder singled home two runs
Coaching Ute All-Stars will be following a single by Dol
hit by a pitch, stole second and
scored on B. Wallis' &amp;Ingle. Wal- managers Clyde McCullough ol MaxvUI and an error by Ssdeckl
ll~t waa out going to second. Lew- Jacksonville and Eddie Kuco
on Briles sacrlOce bunt. The
Is walked IDd Tlj'lor struck oo~ or LoulsvUie whUe Jack 11Bbe speed,y Re&lt;l&gt;lrd promptly stole
It wu 8-0.
or Tuledo ..UI serve as mana- his second base of the evening
The Reds left only two men gor,
and 22nd of the seaeon, and
on ba'Se while White Sox left alx
came home on Curt Flood 1 s
FRIENDLY
BAT
stranded.
MONTREAL (IJPO- Montreol single.
The White Sox pulled J doubl~ ·IIQOI' Jean· Drapeau. "'~Qo ~as
Expert Base Slealer
Pklln the (9ui'th l'be.U~!Oed re(etved much crt.ticlenl recent-Brock, who stole 52 baaes last
was safe on ValenttM•a. fn'or ly over snafus involved In the season and added seven more in
at llrst. D. Dye groonded out
clcy' s winning ol a Natlooal the World Series, made his 23rd
Noe to Valentlno and Valonline League baseball tranchise, is to theft this season toUoMng a
tossed Grinstead out to B. Wal- set a lrlendller tip of the bat single In the 8lxUt tnnlng and
lis It third to complete Ute doo. this week.
now haa piltered 12 bases In the
ble pllj'. BusseD lllnned to end
The tourifll cast ot "You're a last eight games.
the innlrw,
BrDea, wOO won a starting job
Good MAN, Charlle Brown" will
The Gllllpolis Hed SOx battled
last
season when Cardinal ace
present the swinglng mayor
Pt. Pleasant American 011 to a
with an autogrlj&gt;hed baseball Bob Gibson broke a leg and
(l..(J tie tor alx full lnnlngs, tell
bat Thursday at the ' 4 Man and responded with 14 clctorles,
behind 2-0 In the top or Ulo sev· His World" fair site, the gained hi• lith triumph or the
enth, Ilion rallied lor three mark- mayor's favorite playb.r tleld.
year Tuesday, allowing only a
era in their halt of Ute seventh
The hat Is Intended to bomer by WUI!e McCovey in the
to win, 3-2.
commemorate the awarding oC
Brent WUson's two-run dou- the baseball franchise to
INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE
ble tied lt 2-2, then RlckGrlmes'
W. I. PeL GB
Montreal.
olrwte scored WUson, ending the
Toledo,
,
.
,
..
50 40 ,556
IDGH RATING
extra tnnlrw melee.
NEW YORK (UPI)- Dr. Fa- Hochester, , . , 46 41 .529 2'h
It was a real pitchers dueL
Columbus •... 43 42 . 506 !lh
Butch Thomae, Jetr Thcmaa and ger, un:lefeated in three starts Jacksonvtile, . ,44 43 .506 4'h
Tim Cottrell ahared moond du- this year, was the unanimous LootovUle .... 4! 44 .soo s
ties lor Point - they had • com- choice In the Thorouahbred Syracuse . . .• 42 44 . 488 6
bl...t total ol nine strilleoutL Racing Auoclatlon'slltest mon- Butr.alo .....• 43 47 .478 7
They gave up only five hlta, two thly ratingB Tuesday Cor Hors&amp;- Richmond •••• 39 50 ,438 IO'h
olo.the-Year honors.
by Wilson.
Tuesday's Results
Damascus, who was beaten
Ralph S&amp;urMiera and Rick BarToledo
10 Hochester 5
cus hurled tor the winnerL They by Dr. Fager in the Suburban Syracuse 8 adfalo l
fanned a tolal ort7 batters, IDd Hamlcap on July 4, held second Loolsvllle 6 Richmond 3
gave up ouly three hits, a lourth place In the ballnling with In JucksonvUie 9 Colwnbus 2
Inning slrwte by Butch Thomas a Healicy third.
seve nUt Inning double by Thomas,
and a seventh lmlng single by
Jotr Thomas.

by

~A.:A

a..
....
.........
....,.TlftiiiNllo
......
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ue ~

... ,._,, ONto ..,.., ........ c...
" - 11141M. u..rw ..._ •a.aur.

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

...

.,, llldtM •·.......-alilll , . . I
' " ...
·~Ill'11 lui '-'• .......
YMCIU,

•von.

~lk'rifdDI n1e11

IIIII.... fit IICTilr

ll'htn ...111111. a c.. .- """ ,.. ,..,
......... It ci• ~IJ ........... tl....

~

............ ll.lO.'ftni . . . . . . .,Jir

..... IIIMI W"'R Clrrllr lll'riott 1M ·~
Hie! 0... . . .ft '1.111• ., lftlill - , ....

.til.to, lb ......

"'"'

CllllllrNM. ....

tLZI. 11INIIIIIIII•tul.

.._,,..,. tJrlct IIICWu ..... ~

New Haven went down in order
· In the hollom of the sixth as
• Nowell popped ~ to Jim Noe,
M. llaymaker !armed and R. Dye
ll...t out to Noe.
The White SOx took a I~ lead
.· when Roger Tlj'lor singled, went
- to second on a passed ball, stole
third an:l scored on Dave Face, mire's 11crlllce Qy. John Sheets

: struck ouL steve Wallis alrw!ed,
This evening, the AddlvWe
, atole second and went to third Jets wiU battle Ulo Mlddl"'art
on a pasaed ball Bob CoiXIee Reds at 7 p.m. The Galllpoljs
Ortales will meet Fruth's Pharatruck out.
Four more White Sox runs macy ln an 8:30 p.m., contest.
crossed the plate with two out
Of Ute 40 teams which bupn
tn the tq, of tbe third tnnlng. play on July 6, only 22 remain
Tom Valentino singled IDd stole in contention for the lOth anrual
1econd. Jim Noe lanned. Boll champlonohlp trophy.
W'allh was sate on an error

lRoberts Win String

BICHAID I. OWDI, ....,_..

~,

..threl~

•

DEVOTED TO IHf&amp;IUI' Of

.....

Trolling 6-0 the Hecla puohed
· over five runs on two hits and
ftve errors. Lonnie Newell was
on by an error am scored on
' Mopoy Haymaker's slrwte. Ricky
Dye fanned. SCoti King grounded
. oot with M. Hlj'ntakor scoring
. to make lt 6-2.
Jeff Haymaker was safe on an
• error. Tony Weaver reached nrst
· on an error and Randy Grlnstead
: alrw!Od scol'lng J. Haymaker 111!d
" Weaver to make it 6-4. Don Dye
was sate on an error arM! Grinstead scored the last run. Ronnie
• Russell struck out to end the

!Jacksonville Snaps

THE DAILY SENTINEL

Y.U. ......... ~.

runs.

"Wflat's • nico tirl Ill• )'lltllol., 1ft •

"IICt Ill• tillar

: COLUMBUS (UPD - Jack.
The Jets' bl&amp; blowa IPinll
' 8C11vllle Mets ranked fourth in wlmtng pitcher Jim McAndrew
club battiDi In latest IIIIer. were by Georgo ~.. pt..
DlliOIIII LeaiJue averages.
t:tng bls second bonier In three
, But 11 !bey continue to wear dill's and fourth or the year ln
: out pltchero ao they did the Ute 'll"ftlng innln&amp; IDd AI Oil·
: poll till"'.&amp;Ira here, Including vor, tripling in tho seYOnth IDd
l Tuesda,y's .,~ vlclory over CoJ. acorllw "" a Oy to centar by
r umbua, Utey•li"eoon be lea4ing Jack Domasha.
the leaaue.
·
Dave Roberti tried lor ~
1ft !DUr ,..,es IIIII' collecled ninth ln a row l!nd 12th Of the
50 hits and ocorad 32 1'11111 ......, but IDalc bla tldrd loll
against the olub that's leadlq lnst.id, aa !tie Mt11 mauled
. the reaaue tn hittina.
him for ,..., hilo uiU llvo
: 'l'olllll'1 ReyDOidl and Llrrr .,.,.. 'In ·tllreo IDd -~trd
I Slalll, wtiO combined for it hlta lillln.l• .
' 1n the aeiie•, picked till• Jei '· ,·
,
PJtcliou til' ..,. ,Ti!;.atJ.
J ·m per 1 HI, Villley o1
' EacO ·had three. hllf C!UI ,or sQill~•aiter'ri ,Californl(baa :flii
I J..,kfl!ll1\'lll~l lolal Of ~a .fin!!. ~ilqual r,Ynfiiii of less th8n 3.~:
1. they ' ~ lri, ·tt~ 'l,lllo il!l\ii' . '"~h•s. ~ccordi~g t~ the l'l~r
by ~~~
, ' ,.
~yclbjla~~~~ .Br.tunmca. .

l

The

l

'

-&lt; " ••

'j-

0

}

juat

don't

quite

clear

the

fences."
be laughingly added.
The Dodgero went Into last
The Heels nicked the Dodger
pitching ace lor 10 hits, includ- night's game losers of 11 of

drunk,"

strike soon so they can get thlt

new park done 1n a hW'ry,"
chimed In Dodaer trainee BUI

their last previous 12 games,
an:l that one victory came over

the Heels In a July 7 game in
1. A. Juat before the All Star
pme break.

That July 7 loss was their
tlrst of the seven-in-a-row which
the Reds now have.
''I woold be ranting and rav-

Qnattetbaek

him."

Today'• Probable Pitchers

All Times EDT
11ro1m ~ out stora ~·
ChiCI&amp;Q (!Ianda 8...1 IIIII Nye od only three pllj'a loa trw II playera were doging I~ 4-10) at Philadelphia (Frynw~!l). beloro IIUI!erlng a ......., lq
but they aren't," said Red 9 and James ~), 2, 7:35 j). m. In the Doipblno' llrot ...,.ar
New York (Koo.oman 12-4 and 10111011 pmo.
manager Dave Bristol.
Cardwell 3-8) at Pittsburgh (Stsk
Brown waa also hiltl In his
~ and Blass 6-2), 2, 8:05 p. m. praloe or Oanker Bill Andera ol
Los AJweles (Singer 6-9) at Cl,.. Ohio state.
clnnali (Nolan 4-2) 8:05 p. m.
"He's not too tall but he'•
Atlonto (Brtttoo 4-2) at Houstoo got a 11Q0C1 noodle IDd he does
Ray I~ 8:30 p. m.
catch the ball," Brown oald.
San Francisco tMar!chal 16-4) "He eatchea U Jtandlng em bla
at St. Lools(Gibson(l:z..s),Hp.m. head IUid with 111011 banslnl""
the CUbs snapped a seven.pmo
Thuradlj''s Gemes
him. ll does your beart IJI)OCI to
Philadelphia winning streak.
New York at Plttsburi!ll, nli!llt have him around. Ho'o • ll&amp;lrtReMrve tnnelder Bob John· Los Ang. at CinchN.ti, nlsht er."
son, a Jast-mimte starter, Atlonto at Housloo, nigl!t
Tbe ~· alto cut two
doobied and S&lt;Ored the t;ytna San Fran. at St. Loolo, nli!llt players. They were Bill FrUz,
nm In the 8lxUt lnnlns and then
Only games scheduled.
a tJchi end !rom WisOCftlln IDd
singled home the wionlog run in
AMERICAN LEAGUE
ballheck Nate Jolll- ac.
the eighth as Atlanta and
W.
I.
Pc~ GB cplred from the Oakland Jlald.
reliever Cecil Upshaw topped
Houston and former Brave Detroit ...... .,57 32 .640
Baltimore, .. .,49 37 .570 6'h
Demy Lemaster.
Cleveland, .... 52 U .559 7'12
Boston ... , , , ,45 U .523 iiJih
Mtmesota •••• 42 45 .483 14
More Browns
Oakland , ..• ,42 46 ,477 14'h
Calllornla . . • 42 !6 •477 14'12
Report For
New York . , , 41 45 .477 1flh
Chicago . . . . 37 48 .435 18
Washington •.• 30 55 .353 25
Training

Brock, Briles at it Again

•

Q-My bubaatl, 84, ts In a
mental hospital. His doclor
says he Is confused end bas a
paranoid attitude. What does
this mean?
A-MeDial c o a I ulo n Is
manifested by uncertainty as

OfriiD

The Gautpnlis White Six almost blew a six run lead Tues-day nli!llt at the Kyger Creek
Little League Tournament but
held on alter a five ru.'l barrage
In tho fifth Inning to down the
New Haven Reds 6-5.
The win moves the White Sox
lmo the next round ol the tourDIIIlent where at 7 p.m. next
Tuesday nli!llt Utey~l take on tbe
Galllpelts Hed SOx, wiimers laot
alaht 3-2 in seven lmings f.lver
Pl. Pleosaot American OIJ ln
Ulo nlptclj&gt;.
Jim Noe went the route ror
the White Sox as he yielded but
three hits. newr walked a man
and etruck out 10. Sloppy s..,_
port almost snatched the win
from Noe as the White Sox made
1lx errors, tlve or them In the
1&gt;ottom ol the filth Inning when
the Reds scored five runs.
Jef! J1arnlal&lt;~r ~as on U..)IW
rllr ,. Hed1; 1'1\1 up f9ur hki,
"~· lour and also struck out
10. He also received rigged support as the Reds made six errors, lour In the top ol the Utlrd
·• when the White Sox scored four

w••

didn't arrest me for betrw

United Preas htel'llltlOIIII
NATIONAL LEAGUE
W. L. Pet GB
!1. Loola ..... 59 31 .56.1
Atlonto ....... 49 40 .5$1 9'h
Phllldelphla ... 45 tl ,523 12
San Fran. •••. 45 45 .500 14
WILIIINGTON, Ohio (IJi'GChiCI&amp;Q ..•.• 44 47 .484 15'h C00C11 Paul BriiWD uld W-o.
Cincinnati , •.. 42 45 .483 15'h dill' tllat .lclhD lll&gt;lro WGIII&lt;t tlllrt
Pittoburgh , , , .u 47 . 466 17
at ~de lor Ulo C:bu:lo.
U.. AJweleo ... 42 49 .462 17\1 IIIII Bengololn tbelr llrAIIhl·
New York .... ,41 49 .456 IB
bltlon pmo AUJ. 3 aplna Ulo
Houston • , . .. • 38 52 •422 21
Kansas CIQ&gt; Clllot..
Tueodlll''s Hesults
stora wao aCQIIred !rom U1o
Chicago 4 Phllldolllhla 3, Dlaht Miami Dolplllno In a tradt.
Pitts. 3 New York 2, nli!llt
''lhl haa _.-~.,.. IUid we
Los Ang. 9 Cincinnati 2, nlaht want him 1o have ~~~e · -"""
Atlanta 6 Houstoo 2, night
it;y, • Brown llld. •owe him
St. Lools 6 San Fran. · 1, nli!llt 1o look at 111111 oomllll In ""
II)'

out In the severth Inning IDd Buhler.
Ute Dodgers leading 8-2.
FIJrley•s grand slammer
"I lost 14 pounds out there on the tint for the Dodier' a since
1964.
the mound," said Drradale.
"We sometimes hit balls like
"The way I wu ataggerirw
on my Will' to the clubhouse that at home," said Dodger
it's a wonder a park policeman pilot Walt Alstoo, "but they

Ing streak ol their own last 1118 Pavletich's ftrst hamer of
the season, before he was renlghL
Victim or both homers was placed by Brewer.
"I have to agree I pitch betJim Maloney, who sull'ered his
ter
ball in other pukl," said
olxth loos against eight victorwho hasn't COJJW)leted
Drysdale,
ies.
Lefly Jim Brewer shut oot a game at Crosley Field since
tbe Heds Ute final two and ~ 1963.
"Don's hoping they settle that
innings to ])reaene starter Don

Two Gallipolis Teams

I

By WAYNE G. BRANDSTADT, M.D.

Harrisonville

among

Tuesday to round out the lnter-

I

BIG 1»-Y '-ND
I'M) GElS ~LL

not the answer to crime.
-A Scottsbluff, N&lt;b., man
stating his opJJOiilion to
gun control legisl&lt;Jtion in a
telegram to Sen. Clinton P.
Andtrson, D-N.M.

of Pomeroy were visitors of
her mother and rather, Mr, and
Mrs. Ernest W. lludnsll ol AI.

leading Toledo Mud Hens were

OFFICE
PICNIC "
QJCCESSou

Cain murdered Abel with
a rock. Registering guno is

Mr. and Mrs. Edward J. King
were 1n Kentucky recently tor
her granclather'a funeral. Their
Joseph Edward King, ago
21 montha, ota.Yed with Mr a.
Charles Elll1.
Walter Ellis built a porch for
Edward J. King last week.
Charles and Allee Marie King
were visitors ot Mr. and Mrs.
Edward J. King. While visiting
Charles mowed hia hay to have
ready lor baling &amp;mde.Y.
Mr. and Mn. Jack F. King

ROCHESTER, N.Y. (UP!) -

W1NQN,t..
WlLUNeiiOR$
WORKeD lo.
Naml ON
~ER. OON TIME
'Rl IMI&lt;.E THE

• •

his daorstep lives pretty far
out i!l'the cdt&lt;ntt'!/.

Tom Haller socked a three
run homer and Hon Fairly hit
a grand slammer as the Dodgers &amp;rJIPped a five game los-

fracture at the base of his llttle

Whltlleld left !rom the llekl
In the llflh lnnl!W alter pulll!W
a hamotrlng In his left leg whUe
rouncH.ng second base, and later

Win In Tournament

(;(was IT THE

•

lnlurles last night as the Los

Two members of the league.

• • •

Without all that hot air,
some big wh~&gt;.o:]s would be
nothing " ·
than flat tires.

Singer.

Roberts Heads IL All-Star
Pitchers With 11-4 Mark

BARBS

West Germany, testifying as
a witness for the defe.,.e
in a Nazi war crimes trial.

So far there's been no ral
effort to document the co ·
mandmenl: "Tbou shalt n t

I do?
ANSWER: Nothing.
DEAR DR. CANNEL: Moll ol U1 leUowa Ia the elly room
leel very bed about FBI ageals lmpetloaallng now1mea. But
OD 0.. other bend, U Is a lol oaler lor the public than the eld
daya wbea we bed lo lmpenonate brain ourgeon1 alii Com·
mualsls. So doesa'l lbet sbow lhe bureau Is Improving?
ANSWER: Absolutely. We at the lnsiltute do not expect
perfection overnight.
DEAR DR. CANNEL: Mr. Hoover boo asked me lo WJ'[Ie
aad laqlllre bow come you plek oa tbe FBI lor Ill cover, ud
aut on tho CIA?
ANSWER: Yours is a common problem. And we here at the
Institute wlll deal with tbat matter just as soon as we can
find out what the CIA is a cover for.
DEAR DR. CANNEL: In order to open OIJI' own hair drell·
log salon, my husband and I beve paned oureelve1 •• aa
lloten. 1 do not think Ibis Is really aa lmperiHallon aa my
husbend loob very mach like his sister. Nevorlheleoo, he
Is quite worried.
ANSWER: It is impossible to say whether your huebend
should be worried without further data. II you wiU send us a
photo of blo sister, we will advise him by return maiL
DEAR DR. CANNEL: You an absolnlely wronc. I have
been lmpenoaatlal a newsman for 4e years, and now have
bofll a DAUOIUllly 1yadlcaled Waoblaglon column and my own
weekly magazine. What do you oay to lbat?
ANSWER : Kindly send two box tops to us bare at the IDBII·
tute, and we wUI be bappy to leU you.

NEW YORK (NEAJ
Before answering reeder mau, we would like to take a
moment to register a strong protest against the FBI.
In" recent draft card·burnlng demonstration in Wash\"gton,
FBI agents Impersonated televialoo newsmen in order to get
Information !rom the demoastrators.
Bona fide broadcasters on the scene say that the FBI men
carried tape recorders, microphones and other .~ectronlc jour·
nallsm ~ear, and Identified themselves as free-lance re-

CINCINNATI (UP0 U Tho Angeles Dodgers pOUIIIIOil out a ftqrer oo his left hand.
Cincinnati Reds are losing play- 9-2 viclory to hand the Heds
•:hlco Rutz tEillaced Wooders almost as fast as games their seventh straight loss.
ward at second and prohabb'
these days.
Woodward left tbe game In will be there ogatn tonlsht
Two more players, lnftelderE the second lnnlqr after being when the Reds selll GII'y
Woody Wondward and Fred hit by a Don ·Drysdale pitch. Nolan, tbelr 21).year-old rlsht
WhitOeld, were sidelined with X-ray• Indicated a hairline bander against the Dodgers BUI

Stofa Will
Be .Startiqg

Standings

Two More Reds Injured In 9-2 'Setback

·,

There has been a lot ol
publicity In recent years
about people whose Idea In
life is to spread love. Louis
bas been doing that for 68

The Grim Lesson Not Yet Learned

3 - Tho Dally Sentinel, Mlddleport-Pomeroy, 0,, July 17, 1968

CANNEL AT BAY

aecond

inning and two singles.
The cardina.ls have now wan ·

13 or their laot 14 games to
malnlaln their nine and C110-llall
game bulge In Ute standings.
In other NL action Pittsburgh
snapped a IO.game lo&amp;lng streak
with a 3-2 victory over New
York, Loa Angeles rocked
Cinclnnali 9..2, Chicago edged
Philadelphia in 12 Innings 4-3
and second place Atlanta
downed Hoo- 6..2.
In the American League New
York swept a pair from
Waahlngton 4~ and 4-3, Bald·
more defeated Chicago 4-2,
Minnesota !iwnced Bostoo 12-3,
Cleveland edged Calllornla In 10
innlnga 2.1 and league.Jeading
Detroit towed oakland ~.
Did Losing Streak
Jerry MOl' doobled bome two
nma in the sevonth lmtlng to
give reliever Ron Kline his sixth
win and help Pittsburgh beat
New York. The vlclory IIJUII)jled
the

now." Charlie said. 111 toOk a
big king just outside the reef
day before yesterday."
Tbe engines were thro!Ued
back to 1,000 r.p.m. and tbe
Annettt B. mushed down end
began the long day of troJIIng.
SomeUmea you raise no flab,
and It can be a very long day,
but the antlelpaUon, the ex·
ci!A!ment of not knowing if or
when the stril&lt;oa will como,
keeps ennui at rod'a lenalh.
Four miles out, with the
berberpole amote alacb ol
the power company and the
blgh rise apartment bulldlnp
around Port Everglades otiU
thrusting above the horizon,
we bH the m-eam end that in·
credibly blue water.
And J'lot long after that, we
spotted an amber line ol sea·
weed di1ftlng with tjle current
OD Ita nortlieas!A!rt:y coune .
Filllnl In a1 bellnsman while
Charlie cleared the dook for
acU&amp;n, I brought tbe An·
Mtt&lt; B. arottild ~ a ~·Uel
course so 11M! biills sklpiJe41
just oiJ!sltle ,!lie ~Y.•ed _ Une, .
"The dol~b!n ' feed undir
there,'" ,C·b'a i' He said. "We
lll!&amp;ltt hiU ~ho91,"
'•'
Larry·Anlat. tbe tbltd mlom.·
ber ol'our par~r ; a,.t In a deek

,,..

lO ~game

loslng

streak Whlle handing Dick
Selma his fourth loss agatnot
eight vlclorles.
Ron Fairly belted a grand
slam homer and Tom Haller hit
a three-nm homer to give Don
Drysdale his lith win and lead
the Dodgen over Cincinnati.
Glenn Beckert cnltected three
hltll-includJni a 12th inning

double which S&lt;Ored pinch·
rwmer Adollo Phillips with the
tl~reaklng ru1&gt;- and ran his
hitting streak to 21 games as

F'lght Results
United Press International
MIAMI BEACH (UP0- Eddie
Talhlmi, 178, Miami~ s~
Chip Johnson, 187, Naplea1 Fla. •
II)'

(!),

HffiAM, Ohio (UPD - A lew
more Cleveland Browns trailed
lnto the summer training camp
Tuesday to ioin the rookies, two
tt whom will oot begin tralnlng
Sstordlll' because o1 in,iurtes.
Flanker J;Wie Barney and
tackle John Demario, Jim eope.
land, Guy Lane and a few
others showed up at camp,
Dave Porter of Mlchi&amp;an was
placed on the reserve ltst and
ent home after surgery on his
cut loot. He stepped on a
broken bottle last MOl' in Ann
Arbor.
.
·~ere IS nothing I can do
about It, 11 he said. The Browns

have told me oot to push
things, to just let It heal. • The
foot waa operated on after an
lnlection set in, and a wire was
placed ln&amp;lde to tie a tendon to
a toe bone.
POrter, a ninth round draft
choice, was NCAA and Big Ten
heavywell!f!t wrealitng champ.
ion last year.

Wtoconaln State's Dick Sleven
was passed up until next year

because o1 a knee Injury sutler.
ed in a fall from a ladder.
HOUSTON (UPO-Dave ZyHe also underwent an operaglewlcz, 188%, Houston, stopped tlon.
Willie JohDBon, 190, Miami
Belch, Fla. (4).
Dennard, IS!'h , Houstoo, stocllled
Ra.v Vega, 185, Mempllio, (3).

-Y

SAN DIEGO, CallL (UPDJullan Tellez, U41 Lcs AfWeles,
stq)ped Leq)oldo Becerra, 142,

New York 4 Washington 0, lat

New York 4 Washington 3, 2nd
Baltimore 4 Chicago 2, night
Mlmesota l2 Boston 3, night

Cleve. 2 Callt I, night, 10 Inns.
Detroit 4 Oakland 0, night
Today's Probable Pitchers

All Timeo EDT
Washington (Pascual lhS) at
New York (Stottlemyre 12-5), 2
p.m.

Baltimore (Phoebus 9-8) at Chi·
cago (Horlen 5-8), 9 p. m.
Boston (Culp 6-4) at Mime sola
(Kaat 6.6), 9 p. m.

Cleveland (Hargan 5-10)atCalIIDrnla (Clark 1-41), 11 p. m.
Detroit (Sparma 7-8) at Oakland
(Hunter 6-7), 11 p. m.
Thursday's Games

Dotrott at Oakland
Boston at Minnesota
Baltimore at Chicago

Waohlngton at New York, nlpt
Only games scheduled.
RIDERS HONORED
SARATOGA SPRINGS, N.Y.
(UPO- The Natiooal Museum of
Racing announced the addition
of two famous amateur steeplechase rider11 to Its Hall of Fame
Tuesday. The two are George
ll (Pete) Bustwick and IUgan

Mckimey.

GENERAL ELECTRIC
COMBINATION
REFRIGERATORS and FRE •••

Mexico Clcy (10). Richard
Gonzales, !25'h , Los AJweles,
ootpointed Juan Montoya, 127,
TIJilllll, Mexico (10).

Less than
38" wide!

Be on Your Toes
When Big Fish Hit

Roy Attaway's
Outdoor Notebook

FT. LAUDERDALE, Fla.(NEA)-The monsoon broke
after 29 days and it waa one
of those b r ill! a n t South
Florida mornings with the sea
running moderately from one
to three. Tbe Annette B., a 3tJ.
foot Cbrla-Craft lbet began
life on the lakes around Lou!..
ville, Ky., lilted her bull on
the swell end skimmed past
the jetties.
This waa a new role for her .
She had been given the beart
of a Uon, twin 225s that flung
her out toward lbe fatbomle..
blue of the Gull Stream, ud
a new ouUook wltb the olender
white outrigger• protruding
port and starboard.
She waa built as a fun boat,
a boat lor moonlight cocktail
parties on the ~ or ldy~
cruises on , the Intracoastal
Waterway. But now ibe was a
work boat and sbe kept pace
with the cleo and functional
Haltera! and Bertram !!'Qrt·
. flibermen ;
Charlie StoU, owner, master
and mate, reUnqulsbed· .the
helm·and,went abotit ·the bull·
·ness of riJI*Iilg' lbe INiUyboo
':balts,:one 1or ~aeW'ou,trigger.
A silver apocn was ftalled .dl·
·. re~tly an. '. -~; · ',.
·,
hWe may ·as well 11\art

Pirates•

Tuesday' a Results

- . , ...t..........,r
. . fJaet IUIJW(Iere.

11&amp;1'1-Jce
chair and sipped a cuo of
coffee, his eyes darting !rom
one bait to the other.
We didn't bave long to wait.
Dolphin not only are the
most beauU!ul llsh In the sea,
and one of the best eating,
they also are one of the
gamtlt. When they hit there
fs no besUetion. Tbey just bit,
slaBbing at the bait end tak·
ing It whole. The clothespins
on both outrlggora IDApped al·
most simultaneously.
Charlie Insisted .that I take
one rod, and rather than
argue end take a cbance on
mlsalni the strike, I tlCI'tlm·
bled aown and 1et lbe star
drag on the lltlrboard rod.
There e111uetl one of those
spectacular aerial displays
unmatched except perhaps lly
an enraged barraeuda.
Six minutes later a blue·
green and gold bull dolPhin
(cbaractertzetl by the biunt
brow) wao thralblaJ on the
· deck wldlil La.71 pleyed his
alope.brolred cow away from
. the
boat. Llrry'o llsh. joined
mine.several mlnulel later.
'
.
Anything after tbat wouJd
bave been anllcUmactlc. We
~racked bitterly cold cans or
bt!er lo celebrate aiM! grinned
ancl said silly thlogc In lhe
wa~ you always do whtn

'

.

lfE(itM'tawt.
. .oat for t1eu!lng.
llodaiTIT·IlD

579

5

FREEZER
NANCY Rlcbey, a IID.O·
lq leJutla pla;rer, demo•·
!lhlel Ia e.mpetltloa hew
to deDver a amaab lhot.
DEDtCATE IJBRARY
COOPERSTOWN, N.Y. (IJP0
- commlsiiCI18r WWiam D.
Eekart IIIIIIOWICed Tuesday !hat
the NaUOIIII Baseball Library
will be dedicated Mondl)', July
22 011 a lite adjacent to Ulo
Baaoball Mus.,.. and Hall or
Fame.

The twwtory building· will
bouse

UhlbH

areaa and a

librar)' with• a written IDd
pictnrlal reeord ol boaebolL
you're completelY bappy. It
w,s Just ,belnc there, aavor·
lag tbe sky and the water and
the amblei\Cf or. the Annolt&lt;
8,. that r:eally mattered.
'

FREEZER

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UPRIGHT
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TOMAlO SOUP.....:-..J2~.
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CRA(KERS........... 25
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LILT SPECIAL

Seat

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BEEF·
TURKEY &amp;
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BACON-..............

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1 1/2 lb.'
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'WIENERS

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'A'·

'20 TO

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BEAT

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CUBE STEAK ••• !-.~,

..

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BOOK

1 LB. 14 OL

CAN
'.

KRAFT

.

JELLY
Apple
Apple Stnwberry
Apple Bl1ckbtny
AppleGr.pt :. '

.

·BROUGHTON

I

SHERBERT

ORANGE
LIME
. PINEAPPLE

t

.MORTON'S FROZEN

STORCKS FRUIT FILLED'

TOMAlO SOUP.....:-..J2~.
~·ndS.ItiM
..
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CRA(KERS........... 25
ENY..!!..39e

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KOTEX

NOW

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. 20 gallon

~ . GARBAGE $
CANS
LUCAS-GLOSS

.G. E. SPRAY ·STEAM

49

..

•

-

OUTSIDE . $ 99 ,.. .

44 PAINT

DRY IRONS

~

a•'·

--~--~~--AUTOIOIILE-AIR COOLED
LILT SPECIAL

Seat

:::;:

$ 97

, -CUSITIONS ·-.

:

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:. !.
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.

TOOTH
BRUSHES

I

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CHILDRENS
.FLAVORED TRAINING -

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BROOMS

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PROPS -~ ~ ·.

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BUCKETS

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CONTAI'NERS

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DINNERS !SWEET ROLLS
BEEF·
TURKEY &amp;
ICKEN

( II),
I

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.....
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.
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:...:

FREEZER

:I·

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. I ,I.
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OPEN SUNDAY

FULLY LINED

. 32 oz•

I'

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BOX

•
THE WINNER
". . . ·' PLASTI'C LISTERINE
DRAPES
s
:

18 oz. JAR

~

I

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NO ·._
MINI.UN·
PURCHASE'
·REQUIRED.

;pORI( .

•

..

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BACON-..............

I.

... ,. .:
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"

1 1/2 lb.'
.

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BA.SKE_
T_
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~-,

SWEET
TEN
12 oz. 80TTU

HOME
PERMANENT

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48 COUNT

GOLDEN -RIPE

H

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·--~MAXWELLHOUSEINSTANI'

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~ PEAT

FISHING ~ eo•~

COFFEE

FLIES

10 u.

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�Bookmobile Reports Over

GBC to Enroll
July 22-3lst
Gallipolis Buolness College
will accept reglstraUons (rom

r

Wolfpen

Laurel Cliff
News, Events
BY BERTH;\ PARKER
Sabbath School attendance July
14 wu 104. Colle-ction was $19.-

68.
Mr. Olin Rife and son, Randy ,
Columbus; Mr. and Mn. Ike
Warren , Columbus, Mr. and Mrs.
Murl Harri~ and daughten, Vicki and Brenda, Mr. and M r s.
George Harris, St. Albany, W.
Va. , Mr. and Mrs. C har I e Y
Brown, Gallipoli~ . were here to
attend the tuneral or Mr. George
Renshaw.
Mr. and Mrs. Cornel Elkins
and son, steve, Columbus, visited recently with Mrs. Dora
fWioy .
Mrs. M11ory Landerfield, Steubenvllle, visited recently wtth
her mother, Mrs. Esta Wise.
MT!I.

Lelia Hickman, Ball
Run, Mrs. Ed Russell, Brad-

bury, visited 9.1nda,y with Mrs.
Georgia DiehL
Ptllly Karr, Columbus, spent
the weekend with her mother,
Mn. Charles Karr, and her
father, COmmissioner Charles
(Dick) Karr, who I!I a patient at
· Veteran!! Memorial Hospital.
Mn. Vern Story, Columbus,
spent the weekend with her parent!!, Mr. and Mrs. Norm an
&amp;haefer. Her son, John, accompanied his mother home after a
month visit with his grandparents.
The Laurel Cliff Health Club
· held their picnic at Royal Oak
with 45 present. Guests were
S. Sgt. William Brown and famll,y, and Mr. and Mrs. Marvin
~ncer . The August meeting will
be with Mrs. Nellie Tracy, Ball
Run.
Mn. Earl Dill , Mrs. Bertha
Parker attended a dinner at Martin Restaurant in Middleport, given by the Rio Rancho Estates,
Albuquerque, New Mexico.
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Darst,
Milan, spent the wookend with
her parents, Mr. and Mn. James
GUmorc.

News, Notes

Alfred
Social Notes

UKE POPCORN pouring from a giant popper, polyester

chips drop into a 25,000-pound-capacity bleeder at Goodyear's
polyester yarn plant near Point Pleasant, W. Va., under su~r­
vision of technician Jack Vallance. The blended ard dned
chips next will be fed into extruders to form yarn. This yarn
will then be spun into tire cord at one of Goodyear's textile
mill s. Goodyear is the only tire producer which makes its
own polyester tire cord.

Mrs. Clair Giles, Jr., Cec il
and frankl in were rather's Da~
weekend visitors Saturday with
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Rhoton of
Dayton, c~Jcning with Mrs. Giles'
brother Sam Hart, Jr., in St.
Paris and Sunday with Mr. Samuel Hart, Sr., her father.
Mr. and Mrs. Brady Knotts of
George W. SOmerville, 86 of
King Hill were visitors of Mr. 81 Garfield Ave., died at 6:25
and Mrs. Eugene Haning, Rhon- p. m., Tuesday at the Gallipolis
da and Ronald on July 4.
Medical Center Hospital. fie had
Mr. and Mrs. KeMeth Wise- been a patient there since July 7
man of Mansfield were Fourth of after suffering a hip injury. He
July weekend visitors of her
had been in failing health about
son, Mr. and Mrs. Gene Thomp- six months.
son, Gina and Cinda.
Mr. Somerville was a retired
Mrs. Ann Collin and family cattle farmer. He was born Oct.
of Columbus were recent visitors 10, 1881, in Mason County, W.
of her parents, Mr. arxl Mn:1. Va., the son or the late Robert W.
Joe Hatfield.
Mr. and Mrs. Harley E. Johnson arxl family were recent visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Sheldon
Rowan and rantily of Athens,
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Baker
Mr. and Mrs, Howard Russell
and ram ily and Sharon Baker or
visited Sunday afternoon with her
Washington, D. C., have returned
brother, Mr. and Mrs. BIU Woodfrom a vacalion touring the westard of Langsville.
ern states. Traveling nearly
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Mil3,000
miles, the Bakers visited
bourne and family of Columbus,
Mr. an:l Mrs. Richard .J ef- the Graham Caves in lllinois.
fers, and Valorie, or Coal- The highlight of their trip was
ton, Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Dodge City, Kansas, where they
Scarberry and family of Hellier- attended a show at the L o n g
son, and Cpl. and Mrs. J. B. Hat- Branch saloon. Enroute home,
field and family of New York they visited the Meramec Ca,es
were weekend visitors of their at Stanton, Mo., ard Coney Isparents, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Hat- lard at Cindnnati.
Mr. and Mrs. Mayford Buchfield and Mr. C&amp;mpbell.
anan
and Joey visited recently
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bailey
wilh
Mr.
and Mrs. George Reed.
visited relatives in Columbus
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Brannon and
SuOOay. Christine accompanied
family
of Nelsonville have moved
them home atter spending the
into
their
home here.
week with relatives.
Leonard Paugh or Pittsburgh
Mr. arxl. Mrs. Eugene Haning,
visited
in this community reRhonda and Ronald, and Mr. and
cently
.
Mrs. Brady Knotts enjoyed a trip
Mr. and Mrs. Junior Petty
to Henderson, W. Va. Sunday.
and
family or Milard, Neb., and
Mrs. Freda Elam, Bill, Mrs.
Mrs.
Flossie Petty visited reEugene Haning, Rhonda, Ronald
cently
with Mr. and Mrs. Clar~
and Mrs. Fred Tuckerman were
Wednesday visitors of Mrs. Elsie ence Baker aOO family. Other
visitors were John Clem, Vern
Bratton or Carpenter.
Castle aOO BiJI Barlilouse of
Lottridge.
Mrs.. Irene Cottrell of Newton Falls, is visiting friends
and relatives in the community.

t;.
I

'

George Somerville Dies

Joppa News..

and Jane Catherine Boggess Somerville.
He married Virgie E. Gray on
Jan. 1, 1904. She dled March 3,
1964. Ue is survived by one son,
Alvin B. Somerville, 6 Burkhart
Lane, Gallipolis. Two grandchildren survive. Two brothers, Edward and Taylor Somerville preceded him in death, The Somcrvilles moved to Gallia from
Mason County about26 years ago.
lie attended the Flats Presbyterian Church in Mason County,
Services will be held at 10 a. m.
Frtday at the Waugh-Halley-Wood
Funeral Home with Rev. Joseph
Chapman officiating. Blliial will
be in Sun Crest Cemetery in Pt.
Pleasant
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 7 to 9 p. m. Thursda,y.

Kingsbury
News, Notes

The Carleton Church which
has had Bible School lor the
past week had a program Saturday evening at the close of the
Bible School.
Mr . Earl Beal, who has been
a patient at Veterans Memorial
Hospital Cor several weeks, has
been taken to University Hospital at Columbus for further treatment and is improving.
Miss Evaline Arnold visited recently with Mrs. Selim Blaze~
wtcz and Phyllls.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Carl and
son had as recent visitors Mr.
and Mrs. David Wees of Baltimore, Ohio.
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Beal and
family were visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Roger Young recently.
Pic. and Mrs. Patrick Wilson.
ALTA CONE
liam
and son. David, of ColumTaylrJr Moore and wHe spent
Floyd Klng, who stays with his
bus, Georgia visited her mother,
cousin Mrs. Ney Carpenter, fell the weekend with Jack Moore and
Mrs. Hazel Arnold, Walter and
Corn • Culkes
family,
Cincinnati.
and broke a leg on Saturday
Evallne.
They also visited Mr,
Miss T&amp;mffiJ' Pettit has been
•Beans
evening. lie was taken toSheJtervisiting her sister, Mrs. Lli'Kla and Mrs. Nathan Aroold and Mr.
i~ Arms Hospital.
Potatoes • Tomatoes
and Mrs. Richard Bearhs and
Henslar
and family, Newark.
Mrs. Giles Pauley ard her
!amity
at Chester.
Mrs.
Ora
Cottrill
is
visiting
Cabbage • Mangoes
son Darrell and wife, CharlesVlsltlng
recently with Mr. and
Squ1sh
ton, spent Thursday with her relatives in Florida,
Woodrow Bowen called on the Mrs. John Dean and SORI!I were
mother, Mrs. Nancy Jack.
Long family near Wilkes- Mr. and Mrs. Walter Hielman
William
Columbus visitors Tuesday
of Ball Run, Rev. and M r s.
ville Sunday afternoon.
~~l..L were Mrs. A]bert Cone, EverAlbert Cone and wife were Clyde Hinton o! Columbus, Mr.
~~)'llb;~~~~ J..
ene Holcomb and K, E. ErickPomeroy and Middleport visitors and Mrs. Lonnie Hudson, Mrs.
Helen Dais, Mrs. Elizabeth MurWednesday .
Several from here attended ra,y, Mrs. Hazel Arnold, Evallne
the Hagerty sale on saturday. and Walter, Mrs. 9.le King and
Mrs. Ginevra Foster receiv· Joey of Harrisonvllle, Mrs. Janed word that her sister-In-law, elh Beal and Linda, Mrs. WilMrs. llarve} Bratton, Logan, liam King, Mrs. Delores Kbtg,
pas sed away on Sunday morning. Rev. Ja,y Stiles and Mr. RichFuneral was on Tuesday In Lo- ard Hellman and Mr. and Mrs.
gan, and burial was in oak Grove Kenneth Marldns of Racine.
Miss Brenda Smith has returnCemetery.
ed home after spending several
weeks In Michigan with her sisters, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Bates
and
Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Hat&amp; Motor l..odMe
North on Rt 62
. Po1n1 Plea111111, Wnf Yirtinia
neld and !amity.
f~!OY ha~ui•i+• ~~d un i&lt;lo• llvong fvr 111 Night, WMUI!d, " W"ll
Miss Boni\ie Banks, who is
o• W•ot Vorgonoo, Newu+ onO ~~~~" ...o6em l~~"'Y. l~... ., . ; i.
empiu)'W in Wiilihidgton, · 91+ .5. a
l•ue 1'1UI!I.I"' I " Mil a · · - ''"1ft GWIIIt •. . U+lll In 'IIG «&lt;IUIGWI
J vur o.,.na.bi•
0 '" roam "~d Cl ub '" ·~• Storlighl room bolh und..- th• GHdni&lt;
Dttler For
home to visit her parents re:~ ...,
~ ..... ~- - - '·=-· ·::"': :::;~. ·::i-+ "' ,..~.,~ .... 1 ... , ...
Swim
Golf
1nio1 llle w+ "eel'""' Pon•t h.ott . . ••ico,
cently.
lla" 51' 50 linalt. Sl1 .50 c!oublt
Lester Arnold vlalted In Ken.
• Air f\trt' f•rlllti•
• Ttnnl~ Laurl•
• c;.tf C111r..r Prblltr••
• t:hda a (;e•r•d R"'-"''"t
tuck)'
recentll' with Mr. and Mro.
AND
e Ob•ple l•l••l111 P•l
WMIIlf PHI f.r Y•••••ltln • Cnl•efttlefl rullltiet
Rutua Orender, Mr. and Mra.
GloM Orender and Mr. and Mro.
- Sll for your listening and dancing pleasur~ Thurs.,
Phont WY 2~25SO
Wayne Orender.
Fri. .,, ~ 'i&amp;L !~~~i~s. ... a a= = .. wu is u • ._.. ..,. • _ _..... , ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..
Min Carol llall was Injured

Chestnut Ridge

Social Events

SHUlER'S

w.

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Delmar Baum to Kathryn Baum
all prospective students w h o to Columbia Gas or Ohio, right
plan to enroll for the fall quar- of way, Chester.
ter during July 22 throogh July
E.. E. McGrath, dec., Ruth
31.
Lightfoot, dec., Clarence East-This definite enrollment perman, dec., Alta Eastman, dec.,
iod Is eotabllshed this year In A. 0. Ught!oot, dec., aka Anorder that the school ma.y bet- thony Lightfoot, Rena Lightfoot,
ter plan Its program.
dec., R. V. Ebersbach, Florence
Registrations will be acceDt- McGrath, Betty McGrath, Robert
ed from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m., Mon- McGrath, carol,yn McGrath, Edda,y through Friday, !rom July die McGrath, Y:url McGrath,
22 through July 31. The class. Thomas McGrath, Irene Mcrooms at 36 Locust St. will also Grath, Samuel McGrath, Mary
be open at this time tor those McGrath, Mary Giffin, Coster
who want to tour the facUlties. Giffen to state of Ohio, Journal
9\oold there be sufficient en- Entry Sel!!~ent, Bedford.
rollments during this regi.stra~
Huntington Nat'l Bank. Trustlon period to !Ill the I a I 1 tee, Henry N. Swift to Columbus
classes, nQ registrations will aoo Southern Ohio Electric Co.,
be accepted after July 31 for lots, Middleporl
the fall quarter.
Huntington Nat'l Bank, Trustee, trW T. A. May, dec. to Columbus and So, Ohio Elec. Co.,
lots, Middleport.
James W. Clifford, Adm., Helena M. Clifford, dec., to Donald
W. Lisle, Mary M. Lisle, lot,
Pomeroy.
Sunday School attendance on
Bertha McClaid, dec., to CeJuly 14 was 54, the offering was cil McClaid, Marilyn Grim, AI·
$15.75. Worship services were fidavit for TransCer, Salem.
held at 10:45 with the Rev. Casto.
Cecil McGrath, dec., to MarTom Yost is confined to the ilyn Grim, affid. Cor trans., saVeterans Memorial Hospital at lem.
Pomeroy and under observation.
Clayton C. Folden, dec, to DenMr. and Mrs. AI Pearson and ver C. Folden, afOd. for trans.,
daughter or Columbus, recenUy Salem.
visited her sisters, Mrs. Osie
Marie E. Morris, dec., to RobFollnxl and Mrs. Thelma Hender- ert F. Morris, cert. for trans., .
son and their families.
Pomeroy,
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence AtherRobert J. Fortney, Norma J.
ton and family of Columbus have Fourtney to Jack A. Gorrell,
been spending U1eir vacaUJn here Joyce Ann Gorrell, parcels, Orwith his parents, Mr. and Mrs. ange.
Arthur Atherton.
Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Yost
and family of Columbus, spent
the weekend with their parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Yost and Mr.
and Mrs. Harry Guthrie.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles D. Woode
visited Mrs. sarah Woode, Tom
Yost, and Tony White, at the VetBY MAY JOIINSTON
erans Memorial Hospital, Pome·
Mrs.
Edra Bush's sister and
roy, Sunday afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. William Carr husband, Mr. and Mrs. Harshe.,..
were called to the Ralph P!fker burger of Wisconsin, arw:t her sisfarm Monday evening where ter, Mrs. Ollie Young of Pometheir nephew, Tony White, -had roy, called on Mr. and Mrs. Edd
suffered injuries in a bicycle ac- Bush.
Mr, and Mrs. Louis Icenhower
cident, and transported him to the
Veterans Memorial Hospital at and two children of East Liverpool, Mr. and Mrs. Clifford IcenPomeroy.
Tamara Robinson of Belpre Is hower and family of Pomeroy
spending a rew days with her Route, and Mrs. Doris Dalley
grandmother, Nina Robinson and and family visited Mr. and Mrs.
Homer IcertJ.ower.
aunt, Clara Follrod.
Mr. and Mrs. Carter, Long
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Swartz
and family of Marie~ "isited Bottom, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Ours
their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ho- aoo two children, local, and Ralph
bart SWartz and Nina Robinson Guilty called on Mr. and Mrs.
and aunt, Clara Follrod, one day Lawrence Johnston aoo family.
Jeannette aoo Tony Zipper..
last week. Their daughter Sherri,
who had been visiti~ here re~ man, Barbara and Buddy Zip.
perman of Gihanna, and Mr. RolJ..
turned home with them,
The area was saddened to hear ert Ours, local, visited Mr. and
of the tragic death of Ronnie Mrs.. Charles carroll and tamiSwartz, son or the late Robert ly.
Mr. and Mrs. Ja,y Scol4 Coswartz, and grandson or Mr. and
Mrs. Dana Swartz last Saturday lumbus and his sister, Becky,
and Mr. and Mrs. Oris Fredrick
evening.
and Shelia, Indianapolis, 100.,
visited Mrs, Sylvia Carpenter,
and Mrs. Bobby Joo Wolfe
QUICK QUIZ andMr.three
children, Racine Route,
Q-What is the origin of Mr. Lawrence Johnston, VIcki
the expression that one is and Lawrence G. and Ralph Gull·
"worth his salt"?
ty, local, called on Mr. and
A-This can be traced back Mrs. Maywood Johnston.
to the days of tpe Roman
Mr. Henry Autherson, Lowell,
legions when salt was a preciOhio,
called on hls parents, Mr.
ous commodity. Part of the
pay for soldiering was made and Mrs. carl Autherson.
Mrs. Louise Van Meter, Nicki
in salt, from which we get
our word "salary." So when and Mrs. Garnet Johnston were
we say one is worth his sal~, at Pomeroy one dal'.
it merely means that he lS
worth his salary.

Old Town

Flats News

Carmel News

at her home here recently. ~e
Slffered a broken nose.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Chase
of Columbus are visiting at their
farm here.
Mr. and Mrs. Lonnie Hudi!IOn
visited with his mother at ~a­
cuse recently.
Mr. and Mrs. BUI Murray,
who have been attending college
in Calitornia, have been visiting
his mother, Mrs. Elizabeth Mur-

ray and also with her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. EdwardGelezlnsky
and family at Freeland, Pa.
Several from this community
attended a shower for Mrt. Tom
Burnside at the home of Mrs.
Earl Thoma.

Over 90,000 withdrawals were
mode ·!rom the Melgo.Jackaoo
BookmobUe the past year, according to the oMclal annual report turned In this week by district librarian Vliml Pikkoja,
The exact at, 90,324:, Is an i•
crease of 3,655 over the previous 12 morths.
There were 5.556 juvenile and
2,090 adult borrowers taking out
64,554 Oct! on ani 25,770 '"'"'
ftcUoo booko trun July 1, 1967
to June 30, 1968. Averoge dally
circulation was 641.
November was proved t h e
reodlngest month with 11,344 total withdrawals In all categor·
ies. Next highest withdrawals in
all categories. Next highest was

Old Salem
Social Notes
Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Eriewine were visiting recently with
his brother, Uarry F. Erlewtne
ond family.
Visitors at the home of Mrs.
Blanche Nelson, July 4th, were
her cousin, Mrs. C. E. Atkinson,
Mrs. Ethel Tribe and Mrs. P. II,
Druggan, all of Athens. A picnic
lunch was served at ooun.
Mr. and Mrs. James Neal and
children or Toledo were vlsttl~
a few days with her sister and
brother·!Dolaw, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Bolen, and her mother, Mrs.
Minnie Perry, at the home or
George Perry,
Mrs. George Perry returrmd
to Columbus with the Neals to
visit her parents.
Mr. and Mrs. carl Everett
Shenefield are visiting her par..
ents in Concord, W. VL, and
other relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Bennett and
two sons of Pt. Pleasant spent
an evening with her brother, Harry F, Ereiwine and famUy.
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Folden
and son, Mr. and MrS. Robert
Folden of Akron have been guests
of his staters, Mrs. Anna Ogdln
and Mr. and Mrs. Cerl Shenefield. Mro. Ogdln returned home
with them for a visit with relatives in Akron.
Mrs. Blanche Nelson accompanied Mrs. William Glllogiy to
Mentor, Ohio, and visited a few
days at the home of the latter's
!Uece, Mr. and Mrs. Ashbrook and
children, Beth and Billy.
Mr. and Mrs. Corwin Smith
and daughters, Kathy ani susan,
of Columbus, enjoyed a vacation
with her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Marvin Wilson and his mother,
Mrs. Alma Smith.
Star Grange held lts regular
meeting saturday nigh~ July 6,
with thirty - one members and
three visitors present.
The third and !ourth degree
was conferred on Frank Colwell.
The Sewing COntest was held
with Mrs. Kenneth Wilcox r~
cciving first on the apron and
Mrs. Ann Halliday, seconcL On
the doilies, Esther Kennedy received both first and second. On
the scarf, Mrs. ora Profitt r~
celved first arxlon the dress Mrs.
Adrian WUcox was ftrstand Mrs.
KeMeth Wilcox, second.
A beaut! rut qullt was dlspla,yed
by Mrs. Ralph Macumber. It was
not judged as there were no
quilts on the score sheet
Mrs. Macumber received Orst
on Luncheon Cloth.
Judges were Mrs. Thelma
Smith, Mn. Evelyn DeVault srvJ
Mrs. Vivian T~.
Lunch was aerved at the close
of the meeting.

Mr. and Mrs. John Ours of
Dunbar, W, Va., visited with
Mr. and Mrs, Douglas Circle recently.
Mr. and Mrs. James ingram
of COlumbus spent the recent
holldl)' weekend with Ralph IAe
and Robert Lee ani lamUleo.
Mr. and Mrs. Melvln Circle
and daughter of Columbus were
guests of Mary Circle over the
weekem. Mr. aTXI Mrs. Donald
Plerce of Athens called. onSat~­
day evening at the Circle home.
Eunie Brinker and Bett.Y Van
Meter visited Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Koehler of Tuppers Plains
a recent at'ternoon.
Margaret Ann carleton and

Patrick called on Martha Lee and
children, Bob, Blll and Becky.
Betty Van Meter, and AM carleton and son, Patrick, and Eunie
Brinker called at the home of
Mr. and Mro. Ha,yman Barnltz
recently.

HEAliNG

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Tuppers Plains
Soeiety News
By MRS. EVELYN B!UCKLES
Mr. ond Mrs. Lamont Nichols
and son of Tampa, F1L, and Rev.
and Mrs. Earl Nichols and oono!
GreenviUe, Tenn., spent several
days here visiting their parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Nichols.
The Mlller reunion ·was held
at Forked Run Lake SUnda,y and
those attending trun Tt~Jpers.
Plains were Mr. and Mrs. Dor·
sol Miller and !amUy ani Miss
Clrol Lucas, Mr. and Mrs, Ger·
aid Violet and Mike Gorrell.
Rev. W. W. Bragg of Fort M.Y·
ers, Fla., and daughter, Mr. and
Mrs. Halsey Marium orParkersburg and son, Jamea Parr, ,of
Kentucky all were Sunday guests
o! Mr. and Mrs. Fon Halsey,
Way Clark and sister, Mrs.
WUda Cowdery visited their
brother, Thurston Clark, at Doc·
tors Hospital, Cohunbus, where
he was taken suffering 1 severe
heart condition. He will go !rom
the hospital there to Cleveland
Clinic for surgery.
The Spencer reunion was held
at Forked Run Lake sunday. Mr.
ani Mrs. Guy Spencer and two
children attenied.
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald VIolet
were Sunday evenirw: guestl ot
her brother, Mr. and Mrs. VergU
Roush of West Shade. others visiting in the home were the Rouahs'
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie
Pooler of West Columbia, W. VI.,
and Mr. and Mrs. WOllam Mat.
lac~ a brother to Mrs. Roush, of
near Chester. They heljJed celebrate the birthday o!Mro. Roush.
Velma cassidy moved her
trailer to Tuppers Plains to the
Arbaugh oddltlon.
Mr. and Mrs. Wllllam Boggess
ol BarboUrsville, W. VL, visited
Mrs. Neisel Weatherman recently.
Mrs. Rushia Shumway is 1 p...
tient at Veterans Memorial HospitaJ, Pomeroy.
--:--- ..-:!.Ti,

BRTONE
Hearing Aid
Service Center
MI. H. W. Mattingly
WILL BE AT
306N. 2nd Ave.

Middleport, Ohio
ON

ntURSDAY,
JULY 18, 1968 ..
FROM
9 A.M. to 12Noon .

To ·repair and s&gt;-rvice '
hearing ai~ .
Bottorilt ond auppli10
forall mok10 for •I•
Mr, Mattingly wUI bo glad to
give you a !roe heorltW telll
wllh tile lalell Beltone EJeo.
tronlc ~ent.

.r-n~;tn;r.-;o;.•";
1 problem BeltoM lo I
L--l'l:.:'.lVL-.;._1

)

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~care--------~

504 TENTH ST.
HUNTINGTON, W.VA.
Pt-e 525·7221

NOWGOINGONA1

, Chapman-Canaday Shoe Store

I

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(
I
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I.

( I

I

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Through the lncoporatloo of the
following provl sloo s, hone at reporting ol clll11palgn conlrlbutlons
and expenclltureoand streamlined
on!orcement proceollre.l wwld
be lnlllred:
- A bipartisan Federal Elect1o111 Comm108loo Is establish·
eel to receive rOllOrl• and state. menta reprding campaign con·: ll'il&gt;ulionl and axpendlturoo.
• - It shall be tile duty of tile
: Cornmlstrion to make reporto and
; statements avallable !or public
: lnajJectlon and to prepare and
: pmlloh summaries and reports,
: - candl&lt;iatea !or Federal ol: nee andpoiltlcalcommltteeooup.
: porting such candidates that ac: cept contributions or ntal&lt;e "'. penclltures exceeding $1,000 In
: ~ ealendar year are r~
· to rOllOrl contrlbutloos and ex: . pendlturea.
• - Donation• by an lncllvldual
: ol more thall $5,000 to any Clllldlclate !or !odaral olflce or ~
C!Oillm!ltee _.un. each can·
dlclate In any calendir year are
prddblted.
- The dlaclolllre ol 1111• or
honorariums of more tllan $100
!1 re&lt;J!lred of cancll-s !or tho
House and Senate as well ••
Incumbents.
- Members of tile House and
Senate are prohibited Irom us-

Committee

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"'! ....

'"

Timely Quotes

floor, behind dra,..
ahades, they saw what appear·
Americana ohould not walt
ed to be someone t?ulng a dol1 any longer for a strict SUDtnro the air. When It cootlnuod, control Jaw. The time for ,...
they rolled cloWn a and tion is now. We mull live our
thoof![lt tlley heard a baby cry. people tbe protection tbey delng, so th07 rushed into an of- serve from lethal rlflel and
fice heamy, got someonetocome shotguns as soon aJ JIOilllble.
out and observe, and then thi\Y -l'relident Joh111011.
called the pollee. They were
We bllve not yet, I think,
Involved, but like most of us
taken
any giant strltleo.
In like circumstances, t h e y
weren't aure what was happen. -SeCf"ttm'!i of Slate De011
Ruok, agreemg tDith Clllrk
lng, so raUler than break into
Clifford, recretGI"fl of &lt;fe.
an apartment, they called I o r
jenre, thllt tllne haa be011
help. - ONE WHO KNOWS
"some movement," hotD·
..,.,. •light, at lhe Paril
This column is dedicated to
pt&lt;ICO talks.
family living, so if you're havoeoond

.,•._

.

.,

.'' '

dal..... . .

P·
Mlllidl)o. ;JUly

' '

. .,;,
ifllh,' 111 dlaoua• lll!porlolil'lialf·

.... .

:. ..

'

TENDER-JUICY
•

LEAN, TASTY

Sirloin Steak .

• lb.$118

•

WELL TRIMMED

44

C

Club Steak •

• 111•

• •

spa

BONELESS- NO WASTE

Porterhouse

STEAK

•

,•. spa

Ground Round Steak • • ,•. 88c
Boneless English Cut Steak ,•. 94c
Top Round Steak • . • SJOB
OJI
sac
Frying Chicken . . llUASTS
THIGHS
lb.
All Good Sliced Bacon
Braunschwe1ger ANY'"c'SIZE . ., ••. 48c
Frozen Beef Steaks:~:~ 2 .~ SJS9

'•·98C

of "The Think Drink" you'veever tasted,

lb

buy and brew one of A&amp;P's three Bean Coffee blends ...

OCEAN PERCH

Eight O'Clock, Red Circle or Bokar.

Fillets

0

s~~.sls'

Not every store can offer you custom·ground bean coffee.
MP can and does.
Shouldn't A&amp;P be your store?

Delmonico Steaks

MILD

EIGHT O'CLOCK

CALIFORNIA- FANCY VINE RIPENED

COFFEE

TOMATOES

and

MELLOW

3

1b.$159
ba9

Jane Parker Buys!

I~ 29t;

Special
Price

SAVE

16c

•

...

. . =.
3::

.....

CALIFORNIA - JUfi1BO

Cantaloup~s,

• • • 3···98·
BinCJ Cherries • • ,.. Stc
Pineapples • • •

SWEET TASTY

Why Pay
More

LARGE FRESH

...,..,.

...~~

BIG BUYS on A &amp; P Groceries!

.,~~

Swiss Steak ,~g~~g,:~~. . . , 111. 78'
Family Steaks ,.;~6~·~~uNo. '"· 98C ·
Pork Butt Steaks • • • ,
Super-Right Wieners • ~ 6Sc
Haddock Fillets ,~:~~s
6Sc
Breaded Shrimp,~~~. • ::. 8§c
• Cockt a1"ICAP"N
Shr1mp
SlOG
JOHN"' •

BIG BUYS on Fresh Produce!

COPYRIGHT Cl t,U, THl GRlAT ATLANTIC &amp; PACifiC TlA CO., INC:.

625

WHY PAY MORE
JANE PARKER- ENRICHED

Libby Catc:hup~:::2s~
Similac:
• •• 24~
2-lb. 58 ~
Strawberry

White Bread

SAVE 3c-WHY PAY MORE

MADE WITH BUTIERMILK

1-lb.

LIQUID
BABY MILK

loaves

STRATFORD FARM -

00
Rye Bread IU.IN
suo••

•

• 4loo- 4J9c

Clorox Bleach
Campbell Soup
Fresh Fig Bars
Fudgsicle-6 pack

5c OFF
LABEL

More Big Buys!

Lemon Drink-Qts.
.Irick Cheese "':[.J.l%1 • • • ,•. 69c
Ann Page Spaghetti • 3 ,t. 59c
E~~w M~CII'Onl Q . ·. 3,':i-.59c
Blfick, Pwer ~;. • • • ~ 59'
Sanclwfc~ Spread :::. • /~ 33C
Froz.... Lemonclde •• ' ~
~i~a •••• ,.~" •• •2 ~ .Qc

C• r.U &amp; P•.;.~" . 5::;:: .,._..

·'

• •

.

'

· - - · ... -

I

13"

• •

I

I

jar

• •+·Chi.
J., 68•

CHICKEN
NOODLE

IOj ..L

•••

2:~ 39c
••••••••• • 2~IL 49c
• • • • •

SAVE 29c

--

..._. _¥ .....
.

'"~

. .:..· ---

.,...lo

i.

..

EXTRA Pllld Stamps with

PURCHASE: Of S2.50 CM' lftlrt
Fresh Ftlllts • Yapi.IIIIH
UTRA Plaid Sllfl'llll wHh
PURCHASE OF ONE 14-oz. Htl"

A&amp;P oral Anlinplic
EXTRA Plaid Stam111 witft

-....'

IXTM-Pit.. ....._ . .
PUACHMI
e1 ,_ _
1.,..._ . . .
eono..... _
llntA ,..... ltiMti ·...CilAII"' .... ~--

Collooo ... - -

c

•

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-

PURCHASE. OF ONE 5-lb. ltt1
Ocaan Ptlrcb Fillets

PUICHAII. DP .......... Mi 1t

lA 0111-1 ~~ h lio~ tach Woolj

J;,.l

100
100
100
100
1
25
25
25 .....
25
25

E.XlltA Pllllll Stlmps witll

IJITJIA ,,_, I - - wltll

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CHECK ITEMS YOU IUY!

EITIA P~ll lti!WN MUI PURCtiASI: OF DNI1kl. CM1 C'-'
lar-Ar-Oit tHai Wftltat 1111

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una P11ld ltlm'*' w~
PUitCHASI OF ONiilkz, Cllll
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DINNER PLATE
••

Ta• thlt Strip to Your Frlilrtdly AU'

UTRA Plaid Stamts witt!
II'UIIICHISE OF ONl U•t· lullt
AlP Toettlpast.

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PLAID STAMPS

PURCHASE OF ONIE 1tn: ..

THIS WEEK GET YOUR
.'

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SAVE JOe

Ann Page French DressiiMJ • • •

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SAVE 2Jc

FRESH lAKE
IRAND

lORDEN'S - SAVE

•

SPECIAL THIS WEEK - SAVE 2rc

VEGETABLE
101/l'oL can

.

13-oz.
can

Preserves

Peach
Pies 'ADAILY
"" '"'H
.
• ••
• • ••. 49c
CoHee Cake ~~~~·.':~~.~~
ChiHon Cake o~·~~~~ • •••. 59c

"", l

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lb.

Rump Roast

So if you want.the finest cup

In Disasters
The POint

economical full cuts

BONELESS

4•01.

~

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WHOLE

To Give Aid

'l'ho· llfl'!lll illll eoilillc( •

/

--·

BIG BUYS on "Super-Right" Meats!

Picnics

no furiher mea11.1res regarding
election retorm have been taken.

ant. .. ..

Pometoy

.mu,lng

l!ilSI1 to
bop bl!ilD CDffl!l!I

1o l!lve aid during emergencleo
or dlaa1ter1.
Proaldenl Jim Ta,ylor IIJPOlnt·
ed Dale Watter&amp;on cltalrman ol
tile new committee and 801&gt; Coch.
nn and Paul Watldno member•
ID oel up the protp"am be(.,... It
II llnallzed by tho memborohlp.
The Ja¥ceeo aloo endoraod a
dane• to be arranged by tile Ja,y~~ during Point PloaW!lSido·
walk.O.,o, Aui- 2 and ar&lt;I.
Jamol Call prooented I N·
jlirl on llodlo 0., ichecm!id !or
llllurda,y. .ad,y 20tlt, t h•
Ja,y...a ..Ul conduct lho .p r o.
li'ammtng on WJEH. The 1lfiiUII
J will roeolvo o porconta&amp;oot ...,_
~ morclal rticalptl !or tllebl oftori~; 'l"bo -r •..ani wiU itieludit
' '
~lilatoly !rAir lloqrl"&lt;lf·....
q!c¥ broodcut !rom WJEI! 1111dlo .. Main Slnot In. l1l Pl-

FOR MEN, WOMEN, CHILDREN

pie

It Isn't.

InTONE
Nearing Aid Center

USee e By Helen Botte/

By Oareoee Miller

The 90tll Congreos will acl- Ins contr!butl0111 derived from MARRIAGE NOT HER
erable I alwa,y s come back, afjour'n within the next few weeks a ~ raising event or activity BIGGESr PROBLEM
ter he begs me to. We are now
having accompllohed nmch, but !or personal or family purposeo. Dear Helen:
sleeping apart.
without havinll acted on a very
I want a divorce. I am 24,
I know he loves me, and his
The above are some ot t h e
important measure, one which
provisions of tile Election Re- married five years, have one family Is llke my own. I had a
I have strongly endorsed and form Act or 1968 which will not ·chUd and am very unhappy. I very bad chllcltood. This ma,y
worked for.
be acted upon by the 9oth em. have oo deaire to make t h I s have some bearing on- 1 guess
Thla blll, called tile Election gross. And II is lndeod un!ortu. marrloge work and !eel like rm you'd call it - my meu.
Reform Act, has been pending nate.
wasting rny life. I have felt this
We are not religious people,
in Congress for a number or
way
for
many
years.
and
no matter what, rn still
The ltrengtb of our li"Vernyears. It is a much needed and ment, and cor Federal IU'stem
M,y l"llsband lo a good work- want a divorce. Even w h e n
long overckle reform of the laws as "" know It today, depends on er, provider and father. What things are itt their worst, my
governing political campaign D- the strength o! oor American bothers me most is parting him husband doesn't letan.yth!ngbothnandng In the federal oomlnatlon &amp;.Ystem ol elections as well as from his son. He knows I don't er him, He's patient, good, honand election process.
the faith the governed hold In love him. We have separated orable - and 1 want out! Help
Aller much prodding by Re- theoe "ho govern.
a few times, but I reel so mis- me please. Where do I start?
publican members the House Admlnlatratlon Committee comptet.
ed work oo H. R, UZ33. But the
Election Reform Act of 1968
will have to be re-dated because
the House Rules Committee recently sel a cut-o1r date of July
9, 1968 !or dloposlnt! of bUls.
And election roil¥"m will not be
considered by the 90th Congress.
Wlthoot batric reform, public
con11dence In the election pro.
cess will contlme to erode. It
Is vitally ID!i&gt;Orlant that tile dtly
elected representatives in Congress keep constituents tntorm~
ed ol the actions and purpose of
COngress and that we leave no
doobt in their mlnda ao to the
purpose of any action.
Do yoo believe that Preslden.
Nowadays, very few stores offer you bean coffee.
tlal candidates and Congresamen should be r8fll{red to report contr!butlooa and expendl·
Why does A&amp;P still offer coffees in the bean?
tures'? Do you believe there
ohould be limits on how much
Basically, because "We Care:'
a .oeraon can contribute and that
1111s received by Congressmen
Specifically, because we know these facts:
ohould be reported and no funde
The coffee bean is nature's seal that holds the flavor.
received !rom a lUnd - ralalng
event should be diverted to perOnce that seal is broken by grinding, flavor fades ...
eonal use? Your answer isproblb]J "Yea" and yet, none of
NO MATIER HOW IT'S PACKAGED.
these things are presently re~red Wider Federal law.
The shorter the time between grinding the beans
The Federal Corrupt Prac.
!lees Act was enacted In 19Z5
and brewing your coffee, the greater the flavor.
and the Hatch Act was paiSed
SMOKED
28 yearo aao. Since that time

Plea1111t area Jaycee• havenamod a Community Help Conunlllee

Brolcen Sizes I But, Oh, What B•rg•lntl

PlUMBING

:

~eport

lng

ldd ,.....,.. rlr )1. Pla!n
who Wire rtporlod to hive
watched !or 20 mll&gt;lles while a IJOOlble; 1.t l!ellll blip YOU.
baby was beaten to death. YOOI lile ..UI ol• • - jaur owil
PpO!I'f'l""l· Addrtao
ware rlf![lt, Helen, they weren't
llelon
1!0ttel
In can of !Itlo
that unfeeling.
This yoong COO!Pie was slttlng
In a closed car acrou the str.-t
!rom an apartment ltru&amp;e. On tha

Should he fl(ve her awa.t, when
she
aven give ME the time
of day?- LEFT OUT
Dear L.O.:
A husband's nrst loyalty Is
to his wile - not hlo sister. He
should gin her to understand
that her wedding lnvltalloo In·
eludes you both - or neltller
showal- H.
Dear Helen:
M,y problem lo rny busl. What
can I do? - BUST FUSSED
Dear B.F.:
Your problem is laek of eornmunlcatlon. Ia yoor bull size
Dear Helen:
rve got a trooble - making ueye cup," trlple..C cup, or
sister-in-law who has caused .,mug?" The tirsi takes camoufioge; the third, support; and the
nothing but grief for me. Now
she is planning to be married second - a uNo-ing'' way with
and has asked lll.Y husband to wolves,- H.
Dear Helen:
stand up for her, as they have
MB.Ybe I! I tell you atory beno lather.
hind the bare facto w1llchappearI am not even invited to her .
ed in the paper, ywr readen
wedding!
won't think so badly of the couWithout hurting people too much?
- P.M.E.
Dear P:
Your problems, rmqulteaure,
started long before your mar~
riage, ·and a divorce won't solve
them. You've got a deep.down
misery that turns whatever you
have Into something you don't
want - this because you've never learned to live with - or like
- your sell. A good psychologllll
might show you the way. WhY
not call the Family servlce Agency ln your city? - H.

Helen Help

Washington •••

PT. PLEASANT -

ANTHONY
Plumbing-Heating

;

March with 10,855.
Juvenile relders tookout3.422
books on science. The next hia:hest was social scleaees with
Z,781 books borrowed.
Adults hod blogrljlh,y ani ....
fu1 arts at a near staDdoft There
were 2,259 biographies and 2,218
books aboUt useful artstlkenout.

-t

The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., July 17, 1968

90,000 Volumes Borrowed

Fall Students
Holzer Hospital: Visiting hours Homer P. Huddleston, Rt. t
2-4 and 7-8 p.m. Parents only Jackson: Deborlh K, !!apr, Rt
1 Gallipollo: Mro. Howard Jobn·
~ on Pediatrics Ward.
son, Masoni EsteUa S. Runyon,
Admissions
Ht. 1 Galllpollsi Mrs. Charles
Mrs. H. Sherman Kemper, 1282
Eastern Ave.; Mrs. Dora F. Lu- W, McKean, Gallipolis.
Births
f
man Portsmouth Rd.; Mrs. ArMrs. Charles McKean, Galli~
·~ thur' E. Henson, Addison; Carl
polis, son, 5:41 a.m. Tuesday;
D. Askew, Ht. 2 Gallipolis; K,
Mrs. Charles N. lble, Rt. 1 Ra·
Phillip Fisher, Ill. 2 Gallipolis;
cine, daughter. 9:10 a.m. TUesIra D. Calloway , !H. 1 Bidwell;
Mrs. Terry L. Carhart, Pt. d~; Mrs . .&lt;\rthur E. Henson,
Addison, 2:3H p.m. Tuesday; Mrs.
Pleasant; Debora C. Filson, ?t.
Tt!rry 1.. Carhart, Ft. Pleasant,
Pleasant ; Alpha W. McKinney,
daughter, 2:51p.m. TuesdaJ~.
Rt. L Pt. Pleasant; Larry L. WilDischarges
ey, New Haven; Dale Marr, llt.
Gary Bellomy, Mrs. Lola W.
1 Letart; Mrs. Charles ~- Ihle,
Crow, Mrs. HarrY C, Crump,
Racine; Jeffrey R. McKnight,
Mrs. Henry Davis, Mrs. Or~
Pomeroy; 1\.trs. Barbara A. Gardville R. DeMin, Basil L. Ev.
ner, Syracuse; Jeffrey H. Mcans, Mrs. James L. Hammond,
Knight, Pomeroy; Mrs. Barbara
Mrs. Otis W. Hesson, Lori L.
A, Gardner, 5,)Tacuse; Angela
Holle, Mrs. Loman P. Jones,
R. Baker , Middleport; Russell
Mrs. William G. Littleton, John
P. Painter, Rt. 3 Pomeroy; Mrs.
E, McGuire, Mrs. Pat E. Mltth1da M. stobart. IH. 2 Racine;
ell, Mrs. Patrick Mundell, Sr.,
Ernest W. Bahr, Long Bottom ;
Mrs. Forest E. Roach, Fred C.
Mrs. John P. Foil rod, PomeRosenbaum, Mrs. Lewis L.
roy; Raymond J. Ingalls, Sr.,
Smith, Mrs. Homer 5Purlock,
Wel~ston; Ralph M. ~ewartson,
Paul W. Ta,y lot, Mrs. Jes:se R.
Rt. 2 Logan, Ohio; William B.
Van
Meter, 1\l,yrl 0. Warren,
Bowman, Jr., Coal Gro1,;e; Rich.-\ litia u. Hidenour, Mrs. David
ard R. Perkins, Rt. 2 Wellston;
James Hughes . Ht. 4 Oak !!ill; c. Williams and infant son, Mrs.
Roger D. Gray and infant son.
Mrs. Edward J. Bentine, ,\sh land, Ky.; Mrs. Murven ·\. DeWeese, Athens; Mrs. Elva J.
Musle, Rt. 2 St. Paris, Ohio;

7 -

0

,..

.

D
D
D

D
D
0
D

�Bookmobile Reports Over

GBC to Enroll
July 22-3lst
Gallipolis Buolness College
will accept reglstraUons (rom

r

Wolfpen

Laurel Cliff
News, Events
BY BERTH;\ PARKER
Sabbath School attendance July
14 wu 104. Colle-ction was $19.-

68.
Mr. Olin Rife and son, Randy ,
Columbus; Mr. and Mn. Ike
Warren , Columbus, Mr. and Mrs.
Murl Harri~ and daughten, Vicki and Brenda, Mr. and M r s.
George Harris, St. Albany, W.
Va. , Mr. and Mrs. C har I e Y
Brown, Gallipoli~ . were here to
attend the tuneral or Mr. George
Renshaw.
Mr. and Mrs. Cornel Elkins
and son, steve, Columbus, visited recently with Mrs. Dora
fWioy .
Mrs. M11ory Landerfield, Steubenvllle, visited recently wtth
her mother, Mrs. Esta Wise.
MT!I.

Lelia Hickman, Ball
Run, Mrs. Ed Russell, Brad-

bury, visited 9.1nda,y with Mrs.
Georgia DiehL
Ptllly Karr, Columbus, spent
the weekend with her mother,
Mn. Charles Karr, and her
father, COmmissioner Charles
(Dick) Karr, who I!I a patient at
· Veteran!! Memorial Hospital.
Mn. Vern Story, Columbus,
spent the weekend with her parent!!, Mr. and Mrs. Norm an
&amp;haefer. Her son, John, accompanied his mother home after a
month visit with his grandparents.
The Laurel Cliff Health Club
· held their picnic at Royal Oak
with 45 present. Guests were
S. Sgt. William Brown and famll,y, and Mr. and Mrs. Marvin
~ncer . The August meeting will
be with Mrs. Nellie Tracy, Ball
Run.
Mn. Earl Dill , Mrs. Bertha
Parker attended a dinner at Martin Restaurant in Middleport, given by the Rio Rancho Estates,
Albuquerque, New Mexico.
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Darst,
Milan, spent the wookend with
her parents, Mr. and Mn. James
GUmorc.

News, Notes

Alfred
Social Notes

UKE POPCORN pouring from a giant popper, polyester

chips drop into a 25,000-pound-capacity bleeder at Goodyear's
polyester yarn plant near Point Pleasant, W. Va., under su~r­
vision of technician Jack Vallance. The blended ard dned
chips next will be fed into extruders to form yarn. This yarn
will then be spun into tire cord at one of Goodyear's textile
mill s. Goodyear is the only tire producer which makes its
own polyester tire cord.

Mrs. Clair Giles, Jr., Cec il
and frankl in were rather's Da~
weekend visitors Saturday with
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Rhoton of
Dayton, c~Jcning with Mrs. Giles'
brother Sam Hart, Jr., in St.
Paris and Sunday with Mr. Samuel Hart, Sr., her father.
Mr. and Mrs. Brady Knotts of
George W. SOmerville, 86 of
King Hill were visitors of Mr. 81 Garfield Ave., died at 6:25
and Mrs. Eugene Haning, Rhon- p. m., Tuesday at the Gallipolis
da and Ronald on July 4.
Medical Center Hospital. fie had
Mr. and Mrs. KeMeth Wise- been a patient there since July 7
man of Mansfield were Fourth of after suffering a hip injury. He
July weekend visitors of her
had been in failing health about
son, Mr. and Mrs. Gene Thomp- six months.
son, Gina and Cinda.
Mr. Somerville was a retired
Mrs. Ann Collin and family cattle farmer. He was born Oct.
of Columbus were recent visitors 10, 1881, in Mason County, W.
of her parents, Mr. arxl Mn:1. Va., the son or the late Robert W.
Joe Hatfield.
Mr. and Mrs. Harley E. Johnson arxl family were recent visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Sheldon
Rowan and rantily of Athens,
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Baker
Mr. and Mrs, Howard Russell
and ram ily and Sharon Baker or
visited Sunday afternoon with her
Washington, D. C., have returned
brother, Mr. and Mrs. BIU Woodfrom a vacalion touring the westard of Langsville.
ern states. Traveling nearly
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Mil3,000
miles, the Bakers visited
bourne and family of Columbus,
Mr. an:l Mrs. Richard .J ef- the Graham Caves in lllinois.
fers, and Valorie, or Coal- The highlight of their trip was
ton, Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Dodge City, Kansas, where they
Scarberry and family of Hellier- attended a show at the L o n g
son, and Cpl. and Mrs. J. B. Hat- Branch saloon. Enroute home,
field and family of New York they visited the Meramec Ca,es
were weekend visitors of their at Stanton, Mo., ard Coney Isparents, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Hat- lard at Cindnnati.
Mr. and Mrs. Mayford Buchfield and Mr. C&amp;mpbell.
anan
and Joey visited recently
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bailey
wilh
Mr.
and Mrs. George Reed.
visited relatives in Columbus
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Brannon and
SuOOay. Christine accompanied
family
of Nelsonville have moved
them home atter spending the
into
their
home here.
week with relatives.
Leonard Paugh or Pittsburgh
Mr. arxl. Mrs. Eugene Haning,
visited
in this community reRhonda and Ronald, and Mr. and
cently
.
Mrs. Brady Knotts enjoyed a trip
Mr. and Mrs. Junior Petty
to Henderson, W. Va. Sunday.
and
family or Milard, Neb., and
Mrs. Freda Elam, Bill, Mrs.
Mrs.
Flossie Petty visited reEugene Haning, Rhonda, Ronald
cently
with Mr. and Mrs. Clar~
and Mrs. Fred Tuckerman were
Wednesday visitors of Mrs. Elsie ence Baker aOO family. Other
visitors were John Clem, Vern
Bratton or Carpenter.
Castle aOO BiJI Barlilouse of
Lottridge.
Mrs.. Irene Cottrell of Newton Falls, is visiting friends
and relatives in the community.

t;.
I

'

George Somerville Dies

Joppa News..

and Jane Catherine Boggess Somerville.
He married Virgie E. Gray on
Jan. 1, 1904. She dled March 3,
1964. Ue is survived by one son,
Alvin B. Somerville, 6 Burkhart
Lane, Gallipolis. Two grandchildren survive. Two brothers, Edward and Taylor Somerville preceded him in death, The Somcrvilles moved to Gallia from
Mason County about26 years ago.
lie attended the Flats Presbyterian Church in Mason County,
Services will be held at 10 a. m.
Frtday at the Waugh-Halley-Wood
Funeral Home with Rev. Joseph
Chapman officiating. Blliial will
be in Sun Crest Cemetery in Pt.
Pleasant
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 7 to 9 p. m. Thursda,y.

Kingsbury
News, Notes

The Carleton Church which
has had Bible School lor the
past week had a program Saturday evening at the close of the
Bible School.
Mr . Earl Beal, who has been
a patient at Veterans Memorial
Hospital Cor several weeks, has
been taken to University Hospital at Columbus for further treatment and is improving.
Miss Evaline Arnold visited recently with Mrs. Selim Blaze~
wtcz and Phyllls.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Carl and
son had as recent visitors Mr.
and Mrs. David Wees of Baltimore, Ohio.
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Beal and
family were visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Roger Young recently.
Pic. and Mrs. Patrick Wilson.
ALTA CONE
liam
and son. David, of ColumTaylrJr Moore and wHe spent
Floyd Klng, who stays with his
bus, Georgia visited her mother,
cousin Mrs. Ney Carpenter, fell the weekend with Jack Moore and
Mrs. Hazel Arnold, Walter and
Corn • Culkes
family,
Cincinnati.
and broke a leg on Saturday
Evallne.
They also visited Mr,
Miss T&amp;mffiJ' Pettit has been
•Beans
evening. lie was taken toSheJtervisiting her sister, Mrs. Lli'Kla and Mrs. Nathan Aroold and Mr.
i~ Arms Hospital.
Potatoes • Tomatoes
and Mrs. Richard Bearhs and
Henslar
and family, Newark.
Mrs. Giles Pauley ard her
!amity
at Chester.
Mrs.
Ora
Cottrill
is
visiting
Cabbage • Mangoes
son Darrell and wife, CharlesVlsltlng
recently with Mr. and
Squ1sh
ton, spent Thursday with her relatives in Florida,
Woodrow Bowen called on the Mrs. John Dean and SORI!I were
mother, Mrs. Nancy Jack.
Long family near Wilkes- Mr. and Mrs. Walter Hielman
William
Columbus visitors Tuesday
of Ball Run, Rev. and M r s.
ville Sunday afternoon.
~~l..L were Mrs. A]bert Cone, EverAlbert Cone and wife were Clyde Hinton o! Columbus, Mr.
~~)'llb;~~~~ J..
ene Holcomb and K, E. ErickPomeroy and Middleport visitors and Mrs. Lonnie Hudson, Mrs.
Helen Dais, Mrs. Elizabeth MurWednesday .
Several from here attended ra,y, Mrs. Hazel Arnold, Evallne
the Hagerty sale on saturday. and Walter, Mrs. 9.le King and
Mrs. Ginevra Foster receiv· Joey of Harrisonvllle, Mrs. Janed word that her sister-In-law, elh Beal and Linda, Mrs. WilMrs. llarve} Bratton, Logan, liam King, Mrs. Delores Kbtg,
pas sed away on Sunday morning. Rev. Ja,y Stiles and Mr. RichFuneral was on Tuesday In Lo- ard Hellman and Mr. and Mrs.
gan, and burial was in oak Grove Kenneth Marldns of Racine.
Miss Brenda Smith has returnCemetery.
ed home after spending several
weeks In Michigan with her sisters, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Bates
and
Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Hat&amp; Motor l..odMe
North on Rt 62
. Po1n1 Plea111111, Wnf Yirtinia
neld and !amity.
f~!OY ha~ui•i+• ~~d un i&lt;lo• llvong fvr 111 Night, WMUI!d, " W"ll
Miss Boni\ie Banks, who is
o• W•ot Vorgonoo, Newu+ onO ~~~~" ...o6em l~~"'Y. l~... ., . ; i.
empiu)'W in Wiilihidgton, · 91+ .5. a
l•ue 1'1UI!I.I"' I " Mil a · · - ''"1ft GWIIIt •. . U+lll In 'IIG «&lt;IUIGWI
J vur o.,.na.bi•
0 '" roam "~d Cl ub '" ·~• Storlighl room bolh und..- th• GHdni&lt;
Dttler For
home to visit her parents re:~ ...,
~ ..... ~- - - '·=-· ·::"': :::;~. ·::i-+ "' ,..~.,~ .... 1 ... , ...
Swim
Golf
1nio1 llle w+ "eel'""' Pon•t h.ott . . ••ico,
cently.
lla" 51' 50 linalt. Sl1 .50 c!oublt
Lester Arnold vlalted In Ken.
• Air f\trt' f•rlllti•
• Ttnnl~ Laurl•
• c;.tf C111r..r Prblltr••
• t:hda a (;e•r•d R"'-"''"t
tuck)'
recentll' with Mr. and Mro.
AND
e Ob•ple l•l••l111 P•l
WMIIlf PHI f.r Y•••••ltln • Cnl•efttlefl rullltiet
Rutua Orender, Mr. and Mra.
GloM Orender and Mr. and Mro.
- Sll for your listening and dancing pleasur~ Thurs.,
Phont WY 2~25SO
Wayne Orender.
Fri. .,, ~ 'i&amp;L !~~~i~s. ... a a= = .. wu is u • ._.. ..,. • _ _..... , ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..
Min Carol llall was Injured

Chestnut Ridge

Social Events

SHUlER'S

w.

.J

l

Delmar Baum to Kathryn Baum
all prospective students w h o to Columbia Gas or Ohio, right
plan to enroll for the fall quar- of way, Chester.
ter during July 22 throogh July
E.. E. McGrath, dec., Ruth
31.
Lightfoot, dec., Clarence East-This definite enrollment perman, dec., Alta Eastman, dec.,
iod Is eotabllshed this year In A. 0. Ught!oot, dec., aka Anorder that the school ma.y bet- thony Lightfoot, Rena Lightfoot,
ter plan Its program.
dec., R. V. Ebersbach, Florence
Registrations will be acceDt- McGrath, Betty McGrath, Robert
ed from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m., Mon- McGrath, carol,yn McGrath, Edda,y through Friday, !rom July die McGrath, Y:url McGrath,
22 through July 31. The class. Thomas McGrath, Irene Mcrooms at 36 Locust St. will also Grath, Samuel McGrath, Mary
be open at this time tor those McGrath, Mary Giffin, Coster
who want to tour the facUlties. Giffen to state of Ohio, Journal
9\oold there be sufficient en- Entry Sel!!~ent, Bedford.
rollments during this regi.stra~
Huntington Nat'l Bank. Trustlon period to !Ill the I a I 1 tee, Henry N. Swift to Columbus
classes, nQ registrations will aoo Southern Ohio Electric Co.,
be accepted after July 31 for lots, Middleporl
the fall quarter.
Huntington Nat'l Bank, Trustee, trW T. A. May, dec. to Columbus and So, Ohio Elec. Co.,
lots, Middleport.
James W. Clifford, Adm., Helena M. Clifford, dec., to Donald
W. Lisle, Mary M. Lisle, lot,
Pomeroy.
Sunday School attendance on
Bertha McClaid, dec., to CeJuly 14 was 54, the offering was cil McClaid, Marilyn Grim, AI·
$15.75. Worship services were fidavit for TransCer, Salem.
held at 10:45 with the Rev. Casto.
Cecil McGrath, dec., to MarTom Yost is confined to the ilyn Grim, affid. Cor trans., saVeterans Memorial Hospital at lem.
Pomeroy and under observation.
Clayton C. Folden, dec, to DenMr. and Mrs. AI Pearson and ver C. Folden, afOd. for trans.,
daughter or Columbus, recenUy Salem.
visited her sisters, Mrs. Osie
Marie E. Morris, dec., to RobFollnxl and Mrs. Thelma Hender- ert F. Morris, cert. for trans., .
son and their families.
Pomeroy,
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence AtherRobert J. Fortney, Norma J.
ton and family of Columbus have Fourtney to Jack A. Gorrell,
been spending U1eir vacaUJn here Joyce Ann Gorrell, parcels, Orwith his parents, Mr. and Mrs. ange.
Arthur Atherton.
Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Yost
and family of Columbus, spent
the weekend with their parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Yost and Mr.
and Mrs. Harry Guthrie.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles D. Woode
visited Mrs. sarah Woode, Tom
Yost, and Tony White, at the VetBY MAY JOIINSTON
erans Memorial Hospital, Pome·
Mrs.
Edra Bush's sister and
roy, Sunday afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. William Carr husband, Mr. and Mrs. Harshe.,..
were called to the Ralph P!fker burger of Wisconsin, arw:t her sisfarm Monday evening where ter, Mrs. Ollie Young of Pometheir nephew, Tony White, -had roy, called on Mr. and Mrs. Edd
suffered injuries in a bicycle ac- Bush.
Mr, and Mrs. Louis Icenhower
cident, and transported him to the
Veterans Memorial Hospital at and two children of East Liverpool, Mr. and Mrs. Clifford IcenPomeroy.
Tamara Robinson of Belpre Is hower and family of Pomeroy
spending a rew days with her Route, and Mrs. Doris Dalley
grandmother, Nina Robinson and and family visited Mr. and Mrs.
Homer IcertJ.ower.
aunt, Clara Follrod.
Mr. and Mrs. Carter, Long
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Swartz
and family of Marie~ "isited Bottom, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Ours
their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ho- aoo two children, local, and Ralph
bart SWartz and Nina Robinson Guilty called on Mr. and Mrs.
and aunt, Clara Follrod, one day Lawrence Johnston aoo family.
Jeannette aoo Tony Zipper..
last week. Their daughter Sherri,
who had been visiti~ here re~ man, Barbara and Buddy Zip.
perman of Gihanna, and Mr. RolJ..
turned home with them,
The area was saddened to hear ert Ours, local, visited Mr. and
of the tragic death of Ronnie Mrs.. Charles carroll and tamiSwartz, son or the late Robert ly.
Mr. and Mrs. Ja,y Scol4 Coswartz, and grandson or Mr. and
Mrs. Dana Swartz last Saturday lumbus and his sister, Becky,
and Mr. and Mrs. Oris Fredrick
evening.
and Shelia, Indianapolis, 100.,
visited Mrs, Sylvia Carpenter,
and Mrs. Bobby Joo Wolfe
QUICK QUIZ andMr.three
children, Racine Route,
Q-What is the origin of Mr. Lawrence Johnston, VIcki
the expression that one is and Lawrence G. and Ralph Gull·
"worth his salt"?
ty, local, called on Mr. and
A-This can be traced back Mrs. Maywood Johnston.
to the days of tpe Roman
Mr. Henry Autherson, Lowell,
legions when salt was a preciOhio,
called on hls parents, Mr.
ous commodity. Part of the
pay for soldiering was made and Mrs. carl Autherson.
Mrs. Louise Van Meter, Nicki
in salt, from which we get
our word "salary." So when and Mrs. Garnet Johnston were
we say one is worth his sal~, at Pomeroy one dal'.
it merely means that he lS
worth his salary.

Old Town

Flats News

Carmel News

at her home here recently. ~e
Slffered a broken nose.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Chase
of Columbus are visiting at their
farm here.
Mr. and Mrs. Lonnie Hudi!IOn
visited with his mother at ~a­
cuse recently.
Mr. and Mrs. BUI Murray,
who have been attending college
in Calitornia, have been visiting
his mother, Mrs. Elizabeth Mur-

ray and also with her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. EdwardGelezlnsky
and family at Freeland, Pa.
Several from this community
attended a shower for Mrt. Tom
Burnside at the home of Mrs.
Earl Thoma.

Over 90,000 withdrawals were
mode ·!rom the Melgo.Jackaoo
BookmobUe the past year, according to the oMclal annual report turned In this week by district librarian Vliml Pikkoja,
The exact at, 90,324:, Is an i•
crease of 3,655 over the previous 12 morths.
There were 5.556 juvenile and
2,090 adult borrowers taking out
64,554 Oct! on ani 25,770 '"'"'
ftcUoo booko trun July 1, 1967
to June 30, 1968. Averoge dally
circulation was 641.
November was proved t h e
reodlngest month with 11,344 total withdrawals In all categor·
ies. Next highest withdrawals in
all categories. Next highest was

Old Salem
Social Notes
Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Eriewine were visiting recently with
his brother, Uarry F. Erlewtne
ond family.
Visitors at the home of Mrs.
Blanche Nelson, July 4th, were
her cousin, Mrs. C. E. Atkinson,
Mrs. Ethel Tribe and Mrs. P. II,
Druggan, all of Athens. A picnic
lunch was served at ooun.
Mr. and Mrs. James Neal and
children or Toledo were vlsttl~
a few days with her sister and
brother·!Dolaw, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Bolen, and her mother, Mrs.
Minnie Perry, at the home or
George Perry,
Mrs. George Perry returrmd
to Columbus with the Neals to
visit her parents.
Mr. and Mrs. carl Everett
Shenefield are visiting her par..
ents in Concord, W. VL, and
other relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Bennett and
two sons of Pt. Pleasant spent
an evening with her brother, Harry F, Ereiwine and famUy.
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Folden
and son, Mr. and MrS. Robert
Folden of Akron have been guests
of his staters, Mrs. Anna Ogdln
and Mr. and Mrs. Cerl Shenefield. Mro. Ogdln returned home
with them for a visit with relatives in Akron.
Mrs. Blanche Nelson accompanied Mrs. William Glllogiy to
Mentor, Ohio, and visited a few
days at the home of the latter's
!Uece, Mr. and Mrs. Ashbrook and
children, Beth and Billy.
Mr. and Mrs. Corwin Smith
and daughters, Kathy ani susan,
of Columbus, enjoyed a vacation
with her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Marvin Wilson and his mother,
Mrs. Alma Smith.
Star Grange held lts regular
meeting saturday nigh~ July 6,
with thirty - one members and
three visitors present.
The third and !ourth degree
was conferred on Frank Colwell.
The Sewing COntest was held
with Mrs. Kenneth Wilcox r~
cciving first on the apron and
Mrs. Ann Halliday, seconcL On
the doilies, Esther Kennedy received both first and second. On
the scarf, Mrs. ora Profitt r~
celved first arxlon the dress Mrs.
Adrian WUcox was ftrstand Mrs.
KeMeth Wilcox, second.
A beaut! rut qullt was dlspla,yed
by Mrs. Ralph Macumber. It was
not judged as there were no
quilts on the score sheet
Mrs. Macumber received Orst
on Luncheon Cloth.
Judges were Mrs. Thelma
Smith, Mn. Evelyn DeVault srvJ
Mrs. Vivian T~.
Lunch was aerved at the close
of the meeting.

Mr. and Mrs. John Ours of
Dunbar, W, Va., visited with
Mr. and Mrs, Douglas Circle recently.
Mr. and Mrs. James ingram
of COlumbus spent the recent
holldl)' weekend with Ralph IAe
and Robert Lee ani lamUleo.
Mr. and Mrs. Melvln Circle
and daughter of Columbus were
guests of Mary Circle over the
weekem. Mr. aTXI Mrs. Donald
Plerce of Athens called. onSat~­
day evening at the Circle home.
Eunie Brinker and Bett.Y Van
Meter visited Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Koehler of Tuppers Plains
a recent at'ternoon.
Margaret Ann carleton and

Patrick called on Martha Lee and
children, Bob, Blll and Becky.
Betty Van Meter, and AM carleton and son, Patrick, and Eunie
Brinker called at the home of
Mr. and Mro. Ha,yman Barnltz
recently.

HEAliNG

I

I

Tuppers Plains
Soeiety News
By MRS. EVELYN B!UCKLES
Mr. ond Mrs. Lamont Nichols
and son of Tampa, F1L, and Rev.
and Mrs. Earl Nichols and oono!
GreenviUe, Tenn., spent several
days here visiting their parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Nichols.
The Mlller reunion ·was held
at Forked Run Lake SUnda,y and
those attending trun Tt~Jpers.
Plains were Mr. and Mrs. Dor·
sol Miller and !amUy ani Miss
Clrol Lucas, Mr. and Mrs, Ger·
aid Violet and Mike Gorrell.
Rev. W. W. Bragg of Fort M.Y·
ers, Fla., and daughter, Mr. and
Mrs. Halsey Marium orParkersburg and son, Jamea Parr, ,of
Kentucky all were Sunday guests
o! Mr. and Mrs. Fon Halsey,
Way Clark and sister, Mrs.
WUda Cowdery visited their
brother, Thurston Clark, at Doc·
tors Hospital, Cohunbus, where
he was taken suffering 1 severe
heart condition. He will go !rom
the hospital there to Cleveland
Clinic for surgery.
The Spencer reunion was held
at Forked Run Lake sunday. Mr.
ani Mrs. Guy Spencer and two
children attenied.
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald VIolet
were Sunday evenirw: guestl ot
her brother, Mr. and Mrs. VergU
Roush of West Shade. others visiting in the home were the Rouahs'
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie
Pooler of West Columbia, W. VI.,
and Mr. and Mrs. WOllam Mat.
lac~ a brother to Mrs. Roush, of
near Chester. They heljJed celebrate the birthday o!Mro. Roush.
Velma cassidy moved her
trailer to Tuppers Plains to the
Arbaugh oddltlon.
Mr. and Mrs. Wllllam Boggess
ol BarboUrsville, W. VL, visited
Mrs. Neisel Weatherman recently.
Mrs. Rushia Shumway is 1 p...
tient at Veterans Memorial HospitaJ, Pomeroy.
--:--- ..-:!.Ti,

BRTONE
Hearing Aid
Service Center
MI. H. W. Mattingly
WILL BE AT
306N. 2nd Ave.

Middleport, Ohio
ON

ntURSDAY,
JULY 18, 1968 ..
FROM
9 A.M. to 12Noon .

To ·repair and s&gt;-rvice '
hearing ai~ .
Bottorilt ond auppli10
forall mok10 for •I•
Mr, Mattingly wUI bo glad to
give you a !roe heorltW telll
wllh tile lalell Beltone EJeo.
tronlc ~ent.

.r-n~;tn;r.-;o;.•";
1 problem BeltoM lo I
L--l'l:.:'.lVL-.;._1

)

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II

I
l
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~care--------~

504 TENTH ST.
HUNTINGTON, W.VA.
Pt-e 525·7221

NOWGOINGONA1

, Chapman-Canaday Shoe Store

I

I

(
I
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,
I.

( I

I

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1

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Through the lncoporatloo of the
following provl sloo s, hone at reporting ol clll11palgn conlrlbutlons
and expenclltureoand streamlined
on!orcement proceollre.l wwld
be lnlllred:
- A bipartisan Federal Elect1o111 Comm108loo Is establish·
eel to receive rOllOrl• and state. menta reprding campaign con·: ll'il&gt;ulionl and axpendlturoo.
• - It shall be tile duty of tile
: Cornmlstrion to make reporto and
; statements avallable !or public
: lnajJectlon and to prepare and
: pmlloh summaries and reports,
: - candl&lt;iatea !or Federal ol: nee andpoiltlcalcommltteeooup.
: porting such candidates that ac: cept contributions or ntal&lt;e "'. penclltures exceeding $1,000 In
: ~ ealendar year are r~
· to rOllOrl contrlbutloos and ex: . pendlturea.
• - Donation• by an lncllvldual
: ol more thall $5,000 to any Clllldlclate !or !odaral olflce or ~
C!Oillm!ltee _.un. each can·
dlclate In any calendir year are
prddblted.
- The dlaclolllre ol 1111• or
honorariums of more tllan $100
!1 re&lt;J!lred of cancll-s !or tho
House and Senate as well ••
Incumbents.
- Members of tile House and
Senate are prohibited Irom us-

Committee

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'"

Timely Quotes

floor, behind dra,..
ahades, they saw what appear·
Americana ohould not walt
ed to be someone t?ulng a dol1 any longer for a strict SUDtnro the air. When It cootlnuod, control Jaw. The time for ,...
they rolled cloWn a and tion is now. We mull live our
thoof![lt tlley heard a baby cry. people tbe protection tbey delng, so th07 rushed into an of- serve from lethal rlflel and
fice heamy, got someonetocome shotguns as soon aJ JIOilllble.
out and observe, and then thi\Y -l'relident Joh111011.
called the pollee. They were
We bllve not yet, I think,
Involved, but like most of us
taken
any giant strltleo.
In like circumstances, t h e y
weren't aure what was happen. -SeCf"ttm'!i of Slate De011
Ruok, agreemg tDith Clllrk
lng, so raUler than break into
Clifford, recretGI"fl of &lt;fe.
an apartment, they called I o r
jenre, thllt tllne haa be011
help. - ONE WHO KNOWS
"some movement," hotD·
..,.,. •light, at lhe Paril
This column is dedicated to
pt&lt;ICO talks.
family living, so if you're havoeoond

.,•._

.

.,

.'' '

dal..... . .

P·
Mlllidl)o. ;JUly

' '

. .,;,
ifllh,' 111 dlaoua• lll!porlolil'lialf·

.... .

:. ..

'

TENDER-JUICY
•

LEAN, TASTY

Sirloin Steak .

• lb.$118

•

WELL TRIMMED

44

C

Club Steak •

• 111•

• •

spa

BONELESS- NO WASTE

Porterhouse

STEAK

•

,•. spa

Ground Round Steak • • ,•. 88c
Boneless English Cut Steak ,•. 94c
Top Round Steak • . • SJOB
OJI
sac
Frying Chicken . . llUASTS
THIGHS
lb.
All Good Sliced Bacon
Braunschwe1ger ANY'"c'SIZE . ., ••. 48c
Frozen Beef Steaks:~:~ 2 .~ SJS9

'•·98C

of "The Think Drink" you'veever tasted,

lb

buy and brew one of A&amp;P's three Bean Coffee blends ...

OCEAN PERCH

Eight O'Clock, Red Circle or Bokar.

Fillets

0

s~~.sls'

Not every store can offer you custom·ground bean coffee.
MP can and does.
Shouldn't A&amp;P be your store?

Delmonico Steaks

MILD

EIGHT O'CLOCK

CALIFORNIA- FANCY VINE RIPENED

COFFEE

TOMATOES

and

MELLOW

3

1b.$159
ba9

Jane Parker Buys!

I~ 29t;

Special
Price

SAVE

16c

•

...

. . =.
3::

.....

CALIFORNIA - JUfi1BO

Cantaloup~s,

• • • 3···98·
BinCJ Cherries • • ,.. Stc
Pineapples • • •

SWEET TASTY

Why Pay
More

LARGE FRESH

...,..,.

...~~

BIG BUYS on A &amp; P Groceries!

.,~~

Swiss Steak ,~g~~g,:~~. . . , 111. 78'
Family Steaks ,.;~6~·~~uNo. '"· 98C ·
Pork Butt Steaks • • • ,
Super-Right Wieners • ~ 6Sc
Haddock Fillets ,~:~~s
6Sc
Breaded Shrimp,~~~. • ::. 8§c
• Cockt a1"ICAP"N
Shr1mp
SlOG
JOHN"' •

BIG BUYS on Fresh Produce!

COPYRIGHT Cl t,U, THl GRlAT ATLANTIC &amp; PACifiC TlA CO., INC:.

625

WHY PAY MORE
JANE PARKER- ENRICHED

Libby Catc:hup~:::2s~
Similac:
• •• 24~
2-lb. 58 ~
Strawberry

White Bread

SAVE 3c-WHY PAY MORE

MADE WITH BUTIERMILK

1-lb.

LIQUID
BABY MILK

loaves

STRATFORD FARM -

00
Rye Bread IU.IN
suo••

•

• 4loo- 4J9c

Clorox Bleach
Campbell Soup
Fresh Fig Bars
Fudgsicle-6 pack

5c OFF
LABEL

More Big Buys!

Lemon Drink-Qts.
.Irick Cheese "':[.J.l%1 • • • ,•. 69c
Ann Page Spaghetti • 3 ,t. 59c
E~~w M~CII'Onl Q . ·. 3,':i-.59c
Blfick, Pwer ~;. • • • ~ 59'
Sanclwfc~ Spread :::. • /~ 33C
Froz.... Lemonclde •• ' ~
~i~a •••• ,.~" •• •2 ~ .Qc

C• r.U &amp; P•.;.~" . 5::;:: .,._..

·'

• •

.

'

· - - · ... -

I

13"

• •

I

I

jar

• •+·Chi.
J., 68•

CHICKEN
NOODLE

IOj ..L

•••

2:~ 39c
••••••••• • 2~IL 49c
• • • • •

SAVE 29c

--

..._. _¥ .....
.

'"~

. .:..· ---

.,...lo

i.

..

EXTRA Pllld Stamps with

PURCHASE: Of S2.50 CM' lftlrt
Fresh Ftlllts • Yapi.IIIIH
UTRA Plaid Sllfl'llll wHh
PURCHASE OF ONE 14-oz. Htl"

A&amp;P oral Anlinplic
EXTRA Plaid Stam111 witft

-....'

IXTM-Pit.. ....._ . .
PUACHMI
e1 ,_ _
1.,..._ . . .
eono..... _
llntA ,..... ltiMti ·...CilAII"' .... ~--

Collooo ... - -

c

•

·'. '• I

-

PURCHASE. OF ONE 5-lb. ltt1
Ocaan Ptlrcb Fillets

PUICHAII. DP .......... Mi 1t

lA 0111-1 ~~ h lio~ tach Woolj

J;,.l

100
100
100
100
1
25
25
25 .....
25
25

E.XlltA Pllllll Stlmps witll

IJITJIA ,,_, I - - wltll

• •

.

,

Jllil ~ •

..

CHECK ITEMS YOU IUY!

EITIA P~ll lti!WN MUI PURCtiASI: OF DNI1kl. CM1 C'-'
lar-Ar-Oit tHai Wftltat 1111

'

~ ............... I.

tar 1tonu1 ... ~ - --

una P11ld ltlm'*' w~
PUitCHASI OF ONiilkz, Cllll
CMt ~r.ot. llta witlt ....,

DINNER PLATE
••

Ta• thlt Strip to Your Frlilrtdly AU'

UTRA Plaid Stamts witt!
II'UIIICHISE OF ONl U•t· lullt
AlP Toettlpast.

14C

~G.Qow-- ·

..
' .....,._

PLAID STAMPS

PURCHASE OF ONIE 1tn: ..

THIS WEEK GET YOUR
.'

EITRA

....,,. ctttort s .. b,

SAVE JOe

Ann Page French DressiiMJ • • •

1•

... .,, .... "···-·-

SAVE 2Jc

FRESH lAKE
IRAND

lORDEN'S - SAVE

•

SPECIAL THIS WEEK - SAVE 2rc

VEGETABLE
101/l'oL can

.

13-oz.
can

Preserves

Peach
Pies 'ADAILY
"" '"'H
.
• ••
• • ••. 49c
CoHee Cake ~~~~·.':~~.~~
ChiHon Cake o~·~~~~ • •••. 59c

"", l

•

lb.

Rump Roast

So if you want.the finest cup

In Disasters
The POint

economical full cuts

BONELESS

4•01.

~

'

WHOLE

To Give Aid

'l'ho· llfl'!lll illll eoilillc( •

/

--·

BIG BUYS on "Super-Right" Meats!

Picnics

no furiher mea11.1res regarding
election retorm have been taken.

ant. .. ..

Pometoy

.mu,lng

l!ilSI1 to
bop bl!ilD CDffl!l!I

1o l!lve aid during emergencleo
or dlaa1ter1.
Proaldenl Jim Ta,ylor IIJPOlnt·
ed Dale Watter&amp;on cltalrman ol
tile new committee and 801&gt; Coch.
nn and Paul Watldno member•
ID oel up the protp"am be(.,... It
II llnallzed by tho memborohlp.
The Ja¥ceeo aloo endoraod a
dane• to be arranged by tile Ja,y~~ during Point PloaW!lSido·
walk.O.,o, Aui- 2 and ar&lt;I.
Jamol Call prooented I N·
jlirl on llodlo 0., ichecm!id !or
llllurda,y. .ad,y 20tlt, t h•
Ja,y...a ..Ul conduct lho .p r o.
li'ammtng on WJEH. The 1lfiiUII
J will roeolvo o porconta&amp;oot ...,_
~ morclal rticalptl !or tllebl oftori~; 'l"bo -r •..ani wiU itieludit
' '
~lilatoly !rAir lloqrl"&lt;lf·....
q!c¥ broodcut !rom WJEI! 1111dlo .. Main Slnot In. l1l Pl-

FOR MEN, WOMEN, CHILDREN

pie

It Isn't.

InTONE
Nearing Aid Center

USee e By Helen Botte/

By Oareoee Miller

The 90tll Congreos will acl- Ins contr!butl0111 derived from MARRIAGE NOT HER
erable I alwa,y s come back, afjour'n within the next few weeks a ~ raising event or activity BIGGESr PROBLEM
ter he begs me to. We are now
having accompllohed nmch, but !or personal or family purposeo. Dear Helen:
sleeping apart.
without havinll acted on a very
I want a divorce. I am 24,
I know he loves me, and his
The above are some ot t h e
important measure, one which
provisions of tile Election Re- married five years, have one family Is llke my own. I had a
I have strongly endorsed and form Act or 1968 which will not ·chUd and am very unhappy. I very bad chllcltood. This ma,y
worked for.
be acted upon by the 9oth em. have oo deaire to make t h I s have some bearing on- 1 guess
Thla blll, called tile Election gross. And II is lndeod un!ortu. marrloge work and !eel like rm you'd call it - my meu.
Reform Act, has been pending nate.
wasting rny life. I have felt this
We are not religious people,
in Congress for a number or
way
for
many
years.
and
no matter what, rn still
The ltrengtb of our li"Vernyears. It is a much needed and ment, and cor Federal IU'stem
M,y l"llsband lo a good work- want a divorce. Even w h e n
long overckle reform of the laws as "" know It today, depends on er, provider and father. What things are itt their worst, my
governing political campaign D- the strength o! oor American bothers me most is parting him husband doesn't letan.yth!ngbothnandng In the federal oomlnatlon &amp;.Ystem ol elections as well as from his son. He knows I don't er him, He's patient, good, honand election process.
the faith the governed hold In love him. We have separated orable - and 1 want out! Help
Aller much prodding by Re- theoe "ho govern.
a few times, but I reel so mis- me please. Where do I start?
publican members the House Admlnlatratlon Committee comptet.
ed work oo H. R, UZ33. But the
Election Reform Act of 1968
will have to be re-dated because
the House Rules Committee recently sel a cut-o1r date of July
9, 1968 !or dloposlnt! of bUls.
And election roil¥"m will not be
considered by the 90th Congress.
Wlthoot batric reform, public
con11dence In the election pro.
cess will contlme to erode. It
Is vitally ID!i&gt;Orlant that tile dtly
elected representatives in Congress keep constituents tntorm~
ed ol the actions and purpose of
COngress and that we leave no
doobt in their mlnda ao to the
purpose of any action.
Do yoo believe that Preslden.
Nowadays, very few stores offer you bean coffee.
tlal candidates and Congresamen should be r8fll{red to report contr!butlooa and expendl·
Why does A&amp;P still offer coffees in the bean?
tures'? Do you believe there
ohould be limits on how much
Basically, because "We Care:'
a .oeraon can contribute and that
1111s received by Congressmen
Specifically, because we know these facts:
ohould be reported and no funde
The coffee bean is nature's seal that holds the flavor.
received !rom a lUnd - ralalng
event should be diverted to perOnce that seal is broken by grinding, flavor fades ...
eonal use? Your answer isproblb]J "Yea" and yet, none of
NO MATIER HOW IT'S PACKAGED.
these things are presently re~red Wider Federal law.
The shorter the time between grinding the beans
The Federal Corrupt Prac.
!lees Act was enacted In 19Z5
and brewing your coffee, the greater the flavor.
and the Hatch Act was paiSed
SMOKED
28 yearo aao. Since that time

Plea1111t area Jaycee• havenamod a Community Help Conunlllee

Brolcen Sizes I But, Oh, What B•rg•lntl

PlUMBING

:

~eport

lng

ldd ,.....,.. rlr )1. Pla!n
who Wire rtporlod to hive
watched !or 20 mll&gt;lles while a IJOOlble; 1.t l!ellll blip YOU.
baby was beaten to death. YOOI lile ..UI ol• • - jaur owil
PpO!I'f'l""l· Addrtao
ware rlf![lt, Helen, they weren't
llelon
1!0ttel
In can of !Itlo
that unfeeling.
This yoong COO!Pie was slttlng
In a closed car acrou the str.-t
!rom an apartment ltru&amp;e. On tha

Should he fl(ve her awa.t, when
she
aven give ME the time
of day?- LEFT OUT
Dear L.O.:
A husband's nrst loyalty Is
to his wile - not hlo sister. He
should gin her to understand
that her wedding lnvltalloo In·
eludes you both - or neltller
showal- H.
Dear Helen:
M,y problem lo rny busl. What
can I do? - BUST FUSSED
Dear B.F.:
Your problem is laek of eornmunlcatlon. Ia yoor bull size
Dear Helen:
rve got a trooble - making ueye cup," trlple..C cup, or
sister-in-law who has caused .,mug?" The tirsi takes camoufioge; the third, support; and the
nothing but grief for me. Now
she is planning to be married second - a uNo-ing'' way with
and has asked lll.Y husband to wolves,- H.
Dear Helen:
stand up for her, as they have
MB.Ybe I! I tell you atory beno lather.
hind the bare facto w1llchappearI am not even invited to her .
ed in the paper, ywr readen
wedding!
won't think so badly of the couWithout hurting people too much?
- P.M.E.
Dear P:
Your problems, rmqulteaure,
started long before your mar~
riage, ·and a divorce won't solve
them. You've got a deep.down
misery that turns whatever you
have Into something you don't
want - this because you've never learned to live with - or like
- your sell. A good psychologllll
might show you the way. WhY
not call the Family servlce Agency ln your city? - H.

Helen Help

Washington •••

PT. PLEASANT -

ANTHONY
Plumbing-Heating

;

March with 10,855.
Juvenile relders tookout3.422
books on science. The next hia:hest was social scleaees with
Z,781 books borrowed.
Adults hod blogrljlh,y ani ....
fu1 arts at a near staDdoft There
were 2,259 biographies and 2,218
books aboUt useful artstlkenout.

-t

The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., July 17, 1968

90,000 Volumes Borrowed

Fall Students
Holzer Hospital: Visiting hours Homer P. Huddleston, Rt. t
2-4 and 7-8 p.m. Parents only Jackson: Deborlh K, !!apr, Rt
1 Gallipollo: Mro. Howard Jobn·
~ on Pediatrics Ward.
son, Masoni EsteUa S. Runyon,
Admissions
Ht. 1 Galllpollsi Mrs. Charles
Mrs. H. Sherman Kemper, 1282
Eastern Ave.; Mrs. Dora F. Lu- W, McKean, Gallipolis.
Births
f
man Portsmouth Rd.; Mrs. ArMrs. Charles McKean, Galli~
·~ thur' E. Henson, Addison; Carl
polis, son, 5:41 a.m. Tuesday;
D. Askew, Ht. 2 Gallipolis; K,
Mrs. Charles N. lble, Rt. 1 Ra·
Phillip Fisher, Ill. 2 Gallipolis;
cine, daughter. 9:10 a.m. TUesIra D. Calloway , !H. 1 Bidwell;
Mrs. Terry L. Carhart, Pt. d~; Mrs . .&lt;\rthur E. Henson,
Addison, 2:3H p.m. Tuesday; Mrs.
Pleasant; Debora C. Filson, ?t.
Tt!rry 1.. Carhart, Ft. Pleasant,
Pleasant ; Alpha W. McKinney,
daughter, 2:51p.m. TuesdaJ~.
Rt. L Pt. Pleasant; Larry L. WilDischarges
ey, New Haven; Dale Marr, llt.
Gary Bellomy, Mrs. Lola W.
1 Letart; Mrs. Charles ~- Ihle,
Crow, Mrs. HarrY C, Crump,
Racine; Jeffrey R. McKnight,
Mrs. Henry Davis, Mrs. Or~
Pomeroy; 1\.trs. Barbara A. Gardville R. DeMin, Basil L. Ev.
ner, Syracuse; Jeffrey H. Mcans, Mrs. James L. Hammond,
Knight, Pomeroy; Mrs. Barbara
Mrs. Otis W. Hesson, Lori L.
A, Gardner, 5,)Tacuse; Angela
Holle, Mrs. Loman P. Jones,
R. Baker , Middleport; Russell
Mrs. William G. Littleton, John
P. Painter, Rt. 3 Pomeroy; Mrs.
E, McGuire, Mrs. Pat E. Mltth1da M. stobart. IH. 2 Racine;
ell, Mrs. Patrick Mundell, Sr.,
Ernest W. Bahr, Long Bottom ;
Mrs. Forest E. Roach, Fred C.
Mrs. John P. Foil rod, PomeRosenbaum, Mrs. Lewis L.
roy; Raymond J. Ingalls, Sr.,
Smith, Mrs. Homer 5Purlock,
Wel~ston; Ralph M. ~ewartson,
Paul W. Ta,y lot, Mrs. Jes:se R.
Rt. 2 Logan, Ohio; William B.
Van
Meter, 1\l,yrl 0. Warren,
Bowman, Jr., Coal Gro1,;e; Rich.-\ litia u. Hidenour, Mrs. David
ard R. Perkins, Rt. 2 Wellston;
James Hughes . Ht. 4 Oak !!ill; c. Williams and infant son, Mrs.
Roger D. Gray and infant son.
Mrs. Edward J. Bentine, ,\sh land, Ky.; Mrs. Murven ·\. DeWeese, Athens; Mrs. Elva J.
Musle, Rt. 2 St. Paris, Ohio;

7 -

0

,..

.

D
D
D

D
D
0
D

�Iraq's Aref Fallen
"~
•
ln Bloodless Coup
-

Bob Grimm, son of Mr. and Mr s. Bert Grimm, sports editor In
Ohio for the llnited Press International in ColumOOs, returned
·· Tbursday from Germa~zy,
Bob wa s one of eight newsmen who accompaJrled a grOl(t of Air
. Nltiona1 Guardsmen {reservists) to Chicago and then on a two week
.· tour of duty to Germafi.Y.
The newsmen went e specialJy to observe the refueling of the
· KC-97-L Strata Tankers of the Rhine Main UnJted ~'tate&amp; Air Force
;&gt; Dear Frankfurt They also observed ndar operations at the U.S.
. · A. F. Base near Weisburg. Their function, of course, was to write
.· ol their observance s. Bob's story was sent over the ocean wire
to the states.
~ring the two week jaunt, two sta1J members of the Za,·· or course. BOO had an oppor- leski Youth Camp visited Pom.. 1unity to tour Southern G e r- eroy and attended the Big
·. many. He was more than im- Bend Regatta.
"We all enjoyed the activities
pressed with thetremendoustrafassaciated with the regatta and
., ftc oo the Rhine River.
·. ft was the first time that Na- felt that thi s was a very reward tional Guardsmen had ~me out- tng and worthwhile experience
: aide of the United States on such for our young men.
' 1 We were, however, more Im:. ·an assignment.
, Bob's wife, Joyce, and chi! - press~ and pleased by the gen·: dren, visited Wring Bob's ov- uine hospitality and generosity
': erseas business combined with of the people of your commun·: .pleasure trlp with her parents, ity than by anything else.
.. We truly appreciated every:·Mr. and Mrs. Da.ytoo Phillips,
: and his parents, the Grimms . thing that was done for us, and
we will long remember the sin.: SPEAKING OF THE reserves, cerity and kindneu of the peo. 1he Rev. Brian V. Engel, pas-. ple of Pomeroy .''
Active in helping arrange the
·: 1or ol the St. Paul and Sl John
Pomeroy visit for the young peo..
~: Lutheran Churches, attended two
~: weeks of army r.eserve active pie was Carl Hysell , Rutland,
:•
camp at Camp Pickett, Va., former employe of the Zaleski
:: recently. He is the chaplain of Youth Camp.
::tile 463rd Engineering Battal .- lon with headquarters in Wheel CONDUCTING A giant man·· lng, W.Va.
hunt is the famed Thunderbolt
During the period the unit con- Division of World War n.
. · structec:l permanent bridges,
The division is seeking some
· roads, buildings, boat docks at 25,000 formermemberswhohave
- ·state parks and other construe- not been contacted since the end
·. Uon ,.,rk. Approximately l, 400 of the war.
. men belong oo the unit.
The 83rd Infantry Division Assn., was formed and an armual
JERRY GRIFFITH, social reunion is held every year in
· worker of the Ohio Youth Com- the PhlladelpMa area. All for · mlssioo, has some nice things to mer members of the old 83rd
·· _say abwt Pomeroy. His letter are asked to contact the natoUowing is self explanatory:
tional secretary, Larry R e d"On J\Ule 22, 31 wards and mond, 132 Rockwood Drive, Havei1own, Pa. , 19083.

'·

Voting

BEDlUT (UP!)- A bloodless conUnuo the Arab atruggle
predawn coup lx&gt;pplod the Iraq against lsraOI and wtll bue Its
government of Prellldent Abdol relations with nations aceordlng
Rahman Arel today, tho Iraqi to the 011tions' attitude toward
the Jewish state. The broadBaghdad radio said.
The broadcald from Baghdad casts also oald the new masters
said the new masters of the &lt;1 Iraq will encourap private
Arab oation, calling themselves
uThe Revolution C o m m a n d
Council,,. send Aref and his
family oo an unBpeCl1!ed foreign
oountcy following the coup that
was '~bloodless- Mth no bul-

Syracuse Boys

lets."
Banished with Are! wont
Premier Maj.
Gen. Talllr
Yahya, his chief aides and
military otficers.
The new regime, according to
Baghdad radio, said it will

0

0

Funeral Will

Be on Friday

be done on the charter revision -

6~

Funeral services for M r s.
Bertha Oliver, 79, who died late
Tuesday morning will be held
at 3 p.m. Friday at the Ewing
Funeral Home with the R e v.
Carver WUUams oO'iciatlng.
Mrs. Oliver was a member of
the Pomeroy Fl r st Baptl st
O.urch and was a charter member of the Laurel Cliff Better
llealth Club. S!Je and her husband, the late Dana OUver, operated the former Riverview Restaurant in Pomeroy and later the
Five Points Grill on Route 7.
~e is survived by two daughUirs, Mrs. ,\gnes McGhee, Coton Holman and. Mickey Williams.
lumbus, and Mrs. Hazel (Polly)
Leaders spending the week with
Eichinger, Pomeroy; two sons, the boys were John Sauvage and
Byron lJysell, Columbus, and Ce-- George Holman.
cil Hysell, Pomeroy; a sister,

grandchildren.
Burial will be in Beech Grove
Cemetery. Friends may call at
the fUneral home anytime.

0

Tourney Results

Mae Kaylor Stokes, 61. Columbus, former Mason County resi-

deciding how many wards and
, boundaries of each ward.
dent, died Tuesday in Grant HosLawrence Gerlach , Jr., mem- pital there.
. :ber of the Coonty Court, was
Mrs. Stokes was born May 14,
:present and said he would Uke 1907 in Mason County, thedaugh,:to see legally established town ter of the late John and Frances
-- )nundartes by rivers, railroad Grimm Kaylor. She wa.s a retired
=tracks, creeks, hJghwa,y11 etc., school teacher who had received
and if so clone, it would elimin- the Distinguished Service award
ate separate city and county reg. from the state of West Virginia
lltratioo books whi ch w o u I d for her service to public educamean a great saving to the city. tion.
.Gerlach said the first step in his
She was a graduate ol Racine
· ilpln1on was to try to compre- lligh School In Meigs County aoo

~"'lllind

how big the city or Pl.
_·,.eaaant will be i.n the seeable

MASON - Results of softball
tournament play at Bachtel Field
Tuesday night showed BobSallflll.

ers' Quaker

State

defeating Rtp..

ley First National Bank, 7-2, in
the first game; Fans City 3, Saf·

ford's Studio 2, second gamei
Falls City 6, Hartley OU 16, and
Bob Saunders Quaker state 10,
Hartley Oil 9 In the twa ftnal
games.
Aahlaoo OU will go against Bob

Saunders'Quaker state this

e~

ning at 6 p. m. and tne winner or
tonight's competition "ill play
Harlow Lime tor the championship.

of Marshall University, and attcMed Ohio University.
." 'A dure - would Burdette addiShe was a teacher In the MatiDD and SanelY Heights soon be
son County schools for m a n y
VETERANS MEMORlAL
_ ~ part of Pt. Pleasant, and to
years and a member of the state
HOSPITAL
1 ..bep in mlnd when boundary lines
Education Assn., the MasonCOunADMISSIONS _ Linda Pullins,
of warda were establi shed where
ty
Retired
Teachers
Assn.,
the
.
Pomeroy;
Myrtle Walker, Ra'
Association of Retired School ~ine; Robert Scarberry, Racine;
Employees, ancl of the First Unit- Mae Roach, West Colwnbia; Auded Presbyterian Church of Mid- ria Jeffers, Pomeroy; John Jiv-dleport
iden. Racine; Edgell Lewis. Long
She is survived by her husband, Bottom.
H. M. Stokes; a sister, Miss F1orDISCHARGES _ Sarah Woode,
ence Kaylor, and a brother, W. E. Anna Neal, lda Hysell, Deborah
Kaylor, of Letart, and a number Rife, Jacqueline Gao:lis. Da\li.d
of niece s and nephews.
Vernier, Troy Sltterrield, Roger
!UPON REQUEST)
Funeral services will be held Barnett
friday at 2 p. m. at the Fogies~ Funeral Hmne with burial
in Broad Run Cemetery. Friends
may call Thursday evening from

.

2-Hour

DRY ClEANING
SERVIa

obinlion's Cleaners

River Gauges

GAUGES Galllpolls, 12,2
and 12.6 running 2.5 !eet of rollers: Pt. Pleasant, 24.10; Pomeroy-Masori, 2!n4Q; Hinton, 1.20
falling; Kanawha Falls, 3.00 risIng; Charleeoon, 17.90 stat. Landoo, Marmet, and Winfield, ere
on the IIlli .

7oo9p,m.

-:-:.-: .··-:-

Every time yoU come Into our
station and buy 8 gallons of gas.
we will give you a rose or other
decorator nower.
nirP bouquets.

These

RIBke
.•

Display a free rose on your car
antenna and you are in the COJJ-.
lest. We are giving away 2,000,.
000 trading stamps and $1,000.00
in cash.

FlED OIL COMPANY

531 W. Maln St.

-; Pornerov. e .

Janis Hopeful of

Settling Job Issue

Mrs. Clarence Curtis, Pomeroy,
five grandchildren, and 14 great-

0

Dies

ru.,

members included Dick Sluvage, !ormerly of Pt. Pleasan~ died
senior patrol leader, a medalfpr Tuesda,y In Chicago.
leadership, and Franklin Rizer
She was the last memberofthe
was nominated to the Order of ,.Four Bryants" which included
the Arrow, The troop took rop her brother, Clptaln Billy Bryhonors in swimming, rifle and Dl• ant, who died Jan. 26, 1968, and
ture events. sauvage was winner her parents, the late Mr. and
of the rlfie event and Rizer. the Mrs. sam Bryant. She was born
nature event.
Aug. l, 1885, In Broadyn, N. Y.
Thirty-three tests required in
SUrviving is a daughter, Mrs,
eight merit badges were passed Mary r.. Gesse of Park Forest,
by the boys during the week. ru., two grandchildren and one
The group inc1uded Sauvage, great-grandchild,
senior patrolleaderj Rodney Hoi·
The 1\meral wiD be held In Chiman, assistant senior patrol lead· cago and lr¢erment wUl be In the
er; Rick Ash, Rizer, Bobby El'· family mausolewn at Pl Pleas-non. Amos Moore. Terry Moore, ant at 10:30 L rn. Friday by the
Danny Hoodashelt, David Nease, Crow-Hussell FUnera1 Home.
David Smith, Bobby Patterson.
Gene Harris. Danny Huston~ Ken--

Mae Stokes,

ary step before more work could

Wickline Named Principal

PT. PLEASANT - Mrs. F1or-

Emergency Unit in

Two Tuesday Runs
The Racine emergency squad
answered two ca11s yesterday
to the Jdm Stobart ralddenc.;
J'lpple Grove, at 4:5tl p.m. for
Mrs. Ida Stobart who was taken to Holzer Hospital and entered as a medJc81 patient, and at
8:15 p.m., oo the Jalm Jividen
residence, Racine. Mr. Jividen
was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital and admitted as a
medical patient.

Market Report
GALLlPOLIS, OHIO,
Saturda.Y, July 13, 1968
SALES REPORT OF
OIDO VALLEY LIVESI'OCK CO,
HOGS - 175 00 220 lba. 22 00
22.5tl; 220 oo 250 lbs. 22to22.5tl;
Light 18 oo 22.50; Fat Sows l4 oo
18; Stags 12 oo 16; Boars lO oo
15; Sows and Pigs 65 oo 100;
91oats8oo 18.
CATILE - Steers 20 oo 26;
Halters 18 oo 23; Baby Bee! 20
to 26; Fat Cows l6to 19; Comers
13 oo 16; Bulls 18 oo 22.50;
Milk Cows l 00 oo 200.
VEAL CALVES- Tops 33.5tl;
Secunda 28 oo 32; Medium 24 oo
30; Com, and Hvs. 22 to 32;
Cullo 20 oo 22,
SHEEP - Ewes and Lma. I
oo 10; Stock Ewes 4 oo tO; Fat
S!Jeop 5 oo 10; Culls l oo S;
Bucks 4 oo 10; Fat Wethers 5
00 10.
LAMBS - Tape 25; Seoonds 20
oo 22; Llglrt Wts. 18 oo 20; Common 16 oo 18,
PT. PLEASANT
LIVESI'OCK SALES CO,
PT. PLEASANT, W, VA.
Saturday, JUly 13, 1968
HOGS - 175 oo 220 21 oo 22,10; lleavles 18 oo 20.75; Lll!hts
17 oo 19.60; Fat Saws 15 oo 18;
Boars ll oo II; Pigs 8,5tl oo
18.7S; Stock 91oats 17 00 23.
CATILE - Steers 19.50 oo
21.30; Heifers 17 oo 22,5tl; Fat
Cows 17 00 19; canners l3.7S
oo 16.50; Bulla 19.5tl oo 22.75;
Stock Cows and Calves ISS to
218; Stock Staors 22.10 to 21.25; SOOck Helton 17.35 oo 22.40; Stock Steer Calves 23 oo
26.50; ·Stock Helfer Calves 20.85
00 23.7S.
VEAL CALVES- Tops 33.85;
Seeoods 33.20; Medium 28 oo29.75; Common and H.eavtea 25,8S
to 33.60.

COLUMBUS (UPO - State correction oOlclals met Tuesday
with roprosentatlves of 0 h l o
Penitentiary guards, who voted
Monday night oo sttlke. B o t h
side! said ne~ationr; were satls!actory.
Martin A. Janis, director o(
the Department of MenUII llyglene and Correctlm, said negotiations "got ofl. to a good begiming," and would continue.
"We OOpe we can bring about
a good environment for aU employes Involved," Janis eald,

Pomeroy post olll ' .'J&gt;Okesmen said today that canadian

postal employe• are on strike
and there Is an embargo m all

I

A veteran Galli a Countyboaketdegree and Admlnt.tratlve d~
boll
coach, Wickline guided lhe
gree irom the University of VfY·
llyger
Creek Bobcats to their
oming, has been employed In the
Kv..r Cook District since the ftrot baoketball chamjllooshlp In
196~4 school year as head bask.. history two years ag&lt;&gt;
The Kyger Creek Boord last
etball coach, driver education lnntglrt
employed Mrs. Patsy Instrucror, hlsoory and biology lngels, wife of Dr. Clyde Ingels
structor.
of Middleport, u conunerclli lnstrucoor at Kyger Creak illgll
School, replacing Mrs. Mary
Walker, who realgned the post
LONDON (Up0 - James Earl Ray's Alaboma lawyer said
oo return oo North Gallla High
today Ray is innocent of the murder of Dr. Martin Luther King
School.
Jr., and wants to return to the United states to clear himself
Mrs. !Jvels, who Is a gracll&gt;of the charges.
ate of Ohlo Univerldty with a
Atoorney Arthur J. Hanes Sr. said Ray agreed oo waive an
Bachelor ol Science dqree, and
eXtradition appeal when they met at London's Wardsworth Pris, 1 commercial major, and Wick·
on this afternoon.
line, were both offered one year
contracts for their respective
positions.
The Kyger Creek Boord TuesRIGH SPIRITS
day night also passed 1 resoluLONDON (Up!)- Pollee Tues- tion of necessity placing the
day night recovered two truck-- $200,000 bond losue on tile Nov.
loads of gin hijacked a few 5 pnenl electloo bolloL Pashours earlier In what a dlstllll~ sage w11l asaure the cmatruction
company said was Britain's of 1 flve roun addition at Addabiggest thoU ol an,y kind of vllle Elementary and two rooms
Miss Elaine Milhoan spent a spirits. The two trucks were at Kyger Creek Junior Illgh
week with her cousin, Miss Jack· loaded with 25,740 boWes oi gin. School.

w.

Keno Ridge

News Notes

lyn Seldenabel who is a nurse at

Marietta, ·
BOMB VICTIM
Mr. andMrs. William Rose and
BELGRADE (UP!)- Sava
SOfit Billy, visited Suncla.y with cuJovic, 25, one of 70 persons
her mOf!ter, Mfs. GleiUII Mil- wounded, . Sa\Ul'dlY
in
the ·,

c...

h~

.00 Bernard.

.. ,.

..,.. ,. e"PJ._on .,o( a time bomb ln •"

BOland Kay Bahr ofGalllpoils
visited his parents Saturday and
Mr. and MrL Art Kasper and
Clara visited her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. MaylWJ'd Bahr Sunday.
Mr. alll Mrs. Kenneth Davis,
cathy and Marie, spent a weekelll at Royal Oak Park.
Mrs. Wilma Ohlinger am son,
Mlffie alll wite alll daughter of
Colwnbus visited her parents,

Mr. and Mrs.

Maynard

theater,
died Tueeda1. No
suspects have been arrested In
the bomblno.
KENNEDY VISITS
ARUSHA, Tanzania {\IP0Robert Kenned,y Jr. arrived
today for a one-month tour of
Tanzania's national pme reserves.
One of his tlrat
was with Pres-

GEl' THE1PICI'UR£

With A,Dtll Tower

COMPLITI LINI 0'
CHANNIL MASTIR &amp;
'I NCO

e ROTOIII

UOOSTIRI
eANTINNAI
Ask About T1lo Channel

Maohr Crollflro Anltnna

RIDENOUR
RADIO &amp; TV

Bahr on

GRIM OUTLOOK
UNDERGOEli SURGERY
LONDON
(UPO- A Weal
Leland !lsam, Pomeroy, unrabbi
said Tuesday the
German
clorwent eye aurgecy Tueeda1 at
outlook
for
Jewa tn West
the Ga!Upolla Medical Ce!Ur.
Germany ia ''very dim" beHis room wmber Ia 116,
cause tho death rate among
Jews exceeds the birth rate.
uMany of our communities have
LOCAL TEMPS
oo
children at all and have
The temperature In do"""wnt,..,..~~"'
oo look !orward to but
nothing
Pomeroy at 11 a.m. Wednesday
under clau&lt;!Y lldea was 72 de- death," Rabbi Be~...-.1 Parkes
told t h a World Council of
ereea.
Synagcguos.

dent.

MASON - That Maoon
people oo earn.that nmch,
IT bird Is baek again (or did
With llle help of BUb G lilt ever leave?)
more, we ltarted to ltllt thoae
Mrs. Edward Sayre (Opal) of that helped - but with so many
Letart, W, Va. reports that ahe name• it Is so easy to overwas enroute to Point Pleasant . look IIOID80ne - 10 we gave
and wao traveling oo Sand lUll up,
Road when she saw the blrdl
SEVERAL NEW HOMES and
Sle said, '•1 wasn't frightened,
juat amazed that I was -lng a one newbuJinesahavebeenerected In the Cllfton..Ma100 area.
bird tbal big,"
Mr. and Mra. Mllloo Roollh
It was on Wedneeda1 between
ll and 1!:31! a.ni., and 'llblle rid- plan In the very near lllturo oo
Ing along, her thoughts were m open their place o! bualneas
the buslne11 at hand. The bird wbere they will sell lee cream,
had been on the ground and wllon aandwlches and sofldriD&lt;o. 1be
she got a (alr[J good look It was new buDding on Route 62 waa
up In the air. S!Je couldll't do- erac:ted on the former BeiQ' L;yacrlhe It very well, slnee she ma property near Wahema High
lldll~ get a close look, but did SeMol.
New homes have recently been
aay lllat It had dark leaiUrea.
built
by Mr. and Mra. RichWell, I hove heard a lot of
ard
Gilkey,
Mr. and Mro, Charbird slorlea, but I believe lllla
one - and some of the others. I lea stan!QY and Dr, and M r a,
only hope that aomeone doosn't Thomas B. McGowan.
kiU this rare specimen. Beeauae
THERE ARE SO MANY minfrom Mrs. Sape'• report, the
llllers and mloslonarleo In the
bird Wanted only 00 eseape.
!amUy of the Rev. and Mrs. J.
Hanlon, Letart, W. Va. - J
THE MASON VOLUNTEER
Fire llopartment at a recent am beginning to wooder - have
mooting ele&lt;ted Walter Worry, I loft any one oot'l
The Rev. J, W, Hanlon, oow a
Ma11011, as tholr ""' fire chief, .
He succeeds Fred Taylor, Who pot!ent at the Veterans Memorbaa resigned. Werry, an aoldst- W llollp!W, Ia a retired minant foreman at Vanadium, has later of the Methodist Chllrcb.
Their 1011 and wife, tho Rev. and
been with the Mai&lt;HI Fin Dept,
Mrs. J, Kellll Hanlon and lllelr
for two yearo.
Hla relatives, all Werrys, are famUy, Jim, 17; Steve, 13; Mona,
aetlve with the Pomeroy Vol- 12; Martha, 9, and Mary. 4, have
untoer Fire Department - hla Just returned oo thlo country
father, Charles J. Werry, is a after serving aa mlaolooarlea
Gremani his uncle, Herman Wer- In HaiU for alx years, They are
ry Is me too, and a melllber o! relldlng near the Ver!MXI Comtile Pomeroy emergency IIIJ!ad, · munity In a heme made ready for
Ills coulln, Henry Werry. Is · them by nelgli&gt;oro and frlenda
Pomeroy's !Ire chief and his and members of the Graham,
other cousin, Charlea M, Wer· Clifton and Letart clllrehea.
Rev. and Mra. J. W. Hanlon'&amp;
cy, Is a volunteer fireman and
daughter,
Rev. Mrs, Bernice
a member ol the emergency
and
her husband, the
Winkler
squad.
Rev. Clarence Wlnk1er, are both
THE WARAMA BAND Boost- ordained mlnlaters, The latter
ers realbed &amp;j)proxlmately $1,· retired In June after approxl352,89 from tho eale of food at m.ately 20 years Mrvlce as a
qedar Lakes Cr.rt Fair, That' a minister. Rev. Mro. Wlnklerwtll
i lot o! monQY ·- ' 'blrt' It !akis a le1'YI the ·Graham and IAiart
let ot hardwork and a lot o! United Metltodlat Churehos.

The Kyger Creek Local School
District Board of Educat1011 Tues·
day night accepted the resignation
ol Prlncl.llli E. Rlehard Frost at
Kyger Creek High Schoolalllassigned John C. Wickline of Rio
Gnllle oo the post
Wlckline, who has a Master's

July 4th,
Mr. and Mrs. Ben Perry hod
mall going there until furtber
as guests the past week, thelr
mtice.
son and lamUy of near Cleveland.
Mr. alll Mrs, W, E. Milhoan
ol. Pomeroy called on Ida mother,
Mrs. Glenna Milhoan, Monday.
MRS. BUTIERFlELD DIES
Mrs. Gle,.. Mllh,.n and BerMrs. Alma YOUI'@, Pomeroy,
nard were dinner gueata of Mr.
has learned that her sister, Sidle
Mldkltr Butlerfield, died Tuesday and Mrs. Blaine Milhoan on Sunin Mlami, OklL Mrs. Butterfield day, Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Milwas a former resident of this hoan, PeJ!I!Y, Held! and Rhett,
were slt)per guests saturday evecouncy. Funeral services 1 n d
ning.
burial wUI be there Thursday,
Mr, and Mrs. Errol Conway
and son, Hugh, of Akron are va,..
catloning wlth his sister, Dori11
MR. SHIFLET DIES
Fred A, S!Jlnet, Middleport, a Bet2 at SL Joseph, Mich., their
prominent bullnossman, died this daughter, Rosie, bt Arizona, and
morning In Holzer Hoapltal. Fu- visited his mother, Mrs. Allee
neral arrangements wtll be an- Dodson, local, for a lew da,yo.
- GleJU S, Milhoan
nounced lalllr by Rawlings Coats
Funeral Home.

RE-ELECT GILBERT
HOUSTON (UPO - Members
ot the Brother- ot Locomotive FlromOD and Englnemen
Tueeda1 unanimously re..,lectod
H, E. Gilbert, 81, Cleveland, oo
the poll of lnternaUonal preol-

Notes

coun.

Mrs. Bryant

enee Bryant. 82. Chlcago,

•

By Alma MarsbaU

TOWN CAR of lbe future was sbowa ID Cologae, Germaay. A lwo·ltaler, lbe auto Is
deotrlbod as roomy, It baa lbree b[J doors and lo dellgoed lo 61 .... sman spaee1.
Tbe veblcle ls not yet on the market.

Dies Tuesday

•

~News

tnvestment and prbate enter·
prise.
Claim CornQII!on
llaglldad radio lllld the
council oo- Arot ''We to
corruption and ~MX~aolutlon o!
the Kurdish prd&gt;lem" Involving
the Kurds' battle for autooomy
In Aral&gt; Iraq. The council also
ac:ted, the broadcast said,
because oC the Arel _regime' a
•'prevention of the IraQI army
from facing the laraells INrlni
the June war and covering up
for lmperlallat and Zloolat
esptonage rings."

PT. PLEASANT - The annual
Aitl.r tile group a"embled, a
reunion of the Slone couslno and service was held outdoon near
the blrthds,y dinner honoring Mra. clubhouse. Rev. Cherie• Frum
Belle Sayre of Route 1, Point ot Heights United MetloOdlit
Pleasant, was held at Krodel Park church, presented a llhort serclwhouse JUly 7, The picnic out- mon and pro,yer concluded the
Ing Ia held on the Sunday nearest
service, The covered dish dinthe Fourth of July.
ner was served in the clubNine ol the 10 living cllllclren house.
ot Mrs. Slyre were present to
A business aesslon, held in the
honor her 84th birthday while afternoon, resulted lD the re-eleemany descendants ot her father, Uan o! of!leera of tho reunion.
John stone, were In attendance Lloyd Morrisools chairman, Af.

Mason County

(

Boy Scout Troop 242 ol Syra-

PT. PLEASANT - City coun- there are pti:llic buildings avail- employ a registered engineer
- ell met in a special session Thes- able for voting places, as thia to assist with the survey.
Rime will present his commitda,y niglrt at the city building oo was becoming a serious problem
tee
plans at the next regular counnot
only
In
the
city,
but
throogh.
~ discuss the City Charter Board
cil session it at all possible.
· recommendation ror redivision out the county.
Mayor Morgan named Gerlach
Council approved the appoint:: ol the voting warda and a city voters registration.
ment of councilman Leonard Rlt- and County Clerk Getty as adThe 7:30 p.m. meeting did not fie to select several other mem- visors to the Charter Board to
get underway until 8:30 p.m. as bers to work with Mm and draw a.ssl st with the voting registra: • quorum was not present until up definite legal boundaries and tion problems and ward divithat Ume.
sions.
City Attorney Ray Musgrave
aplained that under the new
111preme court ruling - one-

man one-vote - this was anecea-

Birthday Dinner Highlights Reunion

Certificate
cuse has been awarded a cerUfi..
cate of achievement for 11 best
campers of the week" at cam,
Arrowhead near Huntington.
Other achievements by troop

d
D
R
d
war
lVISlOUS
eVleWe

JY/

Rewarded with

. '' 9

Budding ANew Home?
Remodeling the old one?.

~I
r

\ .'

I

FRAMING
LUMBER
2x4
2x6
2x8
2x10
•nd

.,.

SHEATIMG
Plenty of Lon11 J..ntth
2x6'aln Stock

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN
MATERIALS COMPANY

sate Hospital and

1t

+roU
p1c

twln pol&lt;
Producer's
~--- gellon 89~
11,- Kroft
Salad Dresslng;~~o____
.,.,__
t9~

mittee chairman, reported m the
posllbUllf ol a Lewiabore, Va,
tour and oo Beclday, W. VL 00
... llooey In the Rodl.
Approxlm.ltely 50 por1011s att e - the tee and ware aerved
Grecian cookies along with lea.

Reports Given

Bonus~-------------~ 79~

to

tile -

Scientists believe that almost 9,000 years ago the
Egyptians used Iron from meteors to make tools and weapons .

5TH and P~!ARL STS., RACINE
"The Store With A Hart"
Right reserved to Umlt quaDtltlei

We accept Fed. Food Stamps
-

Prices Effective
. July 1B-19-20

Open Mon. thru Sat.
9 to 9-Sunday 10 to 7

Good fal~ "
BUYS!
SHOWBOAT
PORK &amp; BEANS
2~!~39e

TOMATO JUICE
3 ~: ~1.00

HI·C Fruit Drinks 3 !:-1.00
L-r AmountS, 2 43c
Breaci_----~--~5 1 f:I.OO
C:hef• Delight
Cheese Loat._____
, :. 69~
for

PAL BRAND

PEANUT lUTTER

Custom-All Fl-1'1

Canned Po..,p.._______!: 10~
Argo
Peaches ____3 ~~ 1.00
Uq~T;. Detergent
~:tc 39~

f•r

Sliced

•BAKERY BUY

Holsum Angel Food

CAKE

Rtg.

TO G()(JI&gt;
OUTIHJDR

SQUARES

dolph , and M111 Linda Weaver
Jl[w lhelr reports on GlrloSiala.
llafreolmloiXo were -~
Mrs. Robert J, Roolh, MrL ArJ&gt;.
old Rooill lind Mrs. Mlty E.
~ to Holen ~. Mary Aumiller, Thelma Clilelw~ Slbjoi
. Smith, Vera 'l'locluw!OI\ SldiJ
wartto, Clilrlotta Rlllllh. poo1ma
!IGulh, Mary Ol!ob) ~~lilry
(BilO RGush. ·
· '~
Guttll · were Mrs. Rclbort

u..,. -

··-·-'u,.
w.. .. ·- ..---···
....,..
' ......... · ............ ..:..

-.
,er and Piu!itll Ra.,.

.

-

-.

FRESH, ltiPI

FRESH GROUND

BEEF
3 1••
pkg.

•

FRENCH CITY .

ARMOUR'S

C'iNNED
-PICNICS
3Ut. , ... .29

LON

•I

e

I

.

I!&amp;

liA•

00~
.• . ¥

... 00~

20ct, I

•

•

FRENCH CITY

.

FOR COoKOUTS

' .._,._ _ . . , .
rrvm I'M lllOtmueno, -'"" ,.,
.I

oft-

WIENERS
··~-

••

Plcg.

·. .

WA-TE

EAT/NfJ

Our Own Good Lean

39c

Breaded Fish

Le-

49e
,_.._,_

18oL

1

night at the New Haven Park at
1o30 ~ Mlu ~tta RaJ&gt;.

,.

atlendlng In addlllon

oreea, Mr. 111111 Mrl. lllll&gt;ortBirnltz, lllciQo, Scot~~' IIIII Jeller7;
Mr. and Mra. JIIIIOI uu,boo,
Comle, carolyn, lld1 111111 ,._
rll, all of - ; Mr. WUIJam
Tliomaa, Gallipolis, Mr. andMrl.
Marahall McMillion, Blll,y IIIII
Mello.., Middleport, and t h e
hostess, Mrs. McMillion.

STCM&lt;RY'S

All Flovon

Jl[on Allldllary meetln&amp; Monday

.

wlllo

a cllleken ......,.. '-'lllllha
blrlbda;ro of her hull&gt;and, lllr·
mlo; her . ........, llaiJb¥ Bam·
112, 111111 11tr IIIIer, Mr1. WU.
llam ,_,.., of Galllpalll.
1be - . . .... held Ill Me·
Mlllkla home with tile !ollowllll

L..,ndry Detervent

• FROZEN FOOD BUY

On Girls State

w ........... ~ U-~

Mc-

S.lod Bowl

Normen Foss.
Mrs. Nora Keiser, tau com-

MASON _ 1be American

~

~ !blday

MASON .,;. Mrs.

Millian

.

~·

Grode A H"""!''enlacl

0.. Home Patio

!!!!':! ~

at the Holzer HospiUII, weighed
7 pounds 8\2 ouncea. The mother
Ia the former Edith Sebrall. Sl1e
ia the Kearns' ftrst child. Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Joooph Kearno, Clifton, and Mr. and
Mrs. Carl Sebrell, West Columbia.

HERE ARE TYPICAL EVERYDAY LoW PRICES

Aller ...ch dla&lt;uaaloo llle
c:ounetl agreed oo sponsor a Ma..., Coun\Y Fair -with handlcrofl articles end baked goocla
for oalo,
Mro. Burris, appointed M r •·
Harry Rhodu, chairman of Aehievomlllt Day and Mrs, Garnette C, KlmberUng and Mro.
!loa C&amp;pehart. Council voted to
bave the dinner catered lnateed
&lt;1 pollock.
The prellldant OI&gt;Pointed the
followinc to the namlnatlnl committee: Mra. Powell Reynolds,
Mro. Jdm Marshall aad MrL

WSC::S Meets

-·~

wm.

...
~

cll's candidate.

so.

NEW HAVEN - The Wsal of
the UDited Methodist Church In
• New llaveo met reeently on the
polio ill the heme of MrL a.,.
loll Athey with Mrs. T. Bert
lbllh and Mlu Millie &amp;nnp.,..
er u hosteaaes.
BeY. MrL Acbaah MUier was ·
,....,..., leader and her. topic
,.._
"Communicators
for
Oirlat." They opened with the
of "Lord Spook To Me."
the Pl'OII'IIII a discusfollowed .... they
will! the II!Whll of "Thlo
IIJ
World."
bullnell meoll!w fol,.
Attendlow werw Mra.
Mrs. ~ LltvPlcbnl, ¥1'1.
llrL Fred Batay,

Okay and Carolyn King and
m and Joy Ann, Mrs, !if·
bU Phillips and Ronda, ~u and
-Mae Barr, alf ol Charleatoni
terward, Mra, Sayre opODed her John and LucreUa Sayre,
IIUIIOroos birthday gltta. Adding ard and FAma Woodndl, all o!
Interest oo the meeting was the Vinton, Ohio.
reading of oome famUy history
Also, Mrs. Beatrice Boles,
m:1terial by John and Lucretia Hersel and Iva Morriaon and
So,yre.
Roger, or Leoni Albury and RuRegistering $Iring tile morn- by See, Henry and Evelyn KaefIng were the honoree, Mrs. Say• er, of Point Pleasant Route I;
DAUGHTER BORN
re; Uo.yd Morrhon, Salem, Ohio; Oran and Lena Slone, Tom and
CLIFTON - Mr. and Mra.
Vernon and Sarah 1\IOrrison, Cy- Lola stone, Claude and Verta Thomas Kearns are announcing
rus and Lillian Donatme, Paul Billard, all ol RlpiiiY; BUl and llle birth of a daugj!ter, T I n a
Morrlscn and Pamela, Vernoo Allene mesalng and Ame and Am. Tho Infant, hom oo July I,

OkQY

BATHROOMTISSUE
ASSORJIO COLORS

1be couneU vnted oo sponsor
a candidate lor Mum Couni;r
Fair Qlten, hllsa Addlo Rmdes,
dau&amp;llter ot Mr. and Mrs. Harry Rhodes, 3324 Mouman, Point
Pleasant, was eho.., the coun-

"lltt.VI of

Forrest and Phylllo Door1111111
and Cindy, Larcy, Phlllli\ and
Erlc, all &lt;1 Loekbourno, \)hlo;
Jerald and Delores MeC~llls­
ter and Carole, &amp;11111, Uuro,
Jef!rey and David of Barboursville; WUliem R. and Cleo King
and Jack and Sandra, Mrs. Ina
Carte, and llercy Forbes, all &lt;1
Ravenswood; Franklin and Joan
King and L;ym and Greg &lt;1 Aiken, South carolina; Rev, Charles Frnm and Roy and Amla
meseing, Point Pleasant.

-

Birthdays .OJ.em.d
•
AI Sunday Barbeeue

s·

....

· -Greece, spoke tn MuoD Counb
Homemakers and gueata In re' · prdo oo vtllap life and her
periOIIai life In Greece. Dr, ZOI·
· rafldow Ia IOOI'klng with retarded andomotlonall,ydlaturbeclchll' 4ren at Laldn, In working with
tile children she reported that
love was the one thing they neecled.
Those In ellargo of tile lalerDIUonal Tea were Mra. Elmer
N.-ry, Mro. Ray Fox, Mrs.
WIU!am Langst.al!, and M r a,
llllerldan McLerran.
Mro. VIrgil Burris, Sr., PresIdent of Mason County Homemakers council presided, wbon t h e
COUIICll doclc!Qd 00 eomblne tllil
yaar with Jaek1011 Counb Homemakers In holding a Homemak.
er'o camp. A meeting Is scheduled lor .luguat 2, In the Bank of
Rlj)ley Bulldlils 10 work rut dolalla. Cost ~ the · eamp ls $12 .•
No definite data hal boon

Ohio.

. ~:~~~'~\~t" , ·
·~:· 5 .,~t
V.IN EG.AR•••••••••w••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
AXWELL HOUSE.. !~~~~~~.~~~~~~ .......... ·~.~L 1. 29
VIENNA SAUSAGE.....~~~~~~~ ..............~~ 19C
AGIC BL EACH......u······················· ~:~: 39C
HUDSON TOWELS... :::~~:: ..........•.~~ 25C
3
1
00CHA IN.....................................
.
~ ~~Ous~ · 2,~ 1. 69
BEST. DOG F·E·E·D· MEAL ..................

Work With Children
loiASON - Dr. Marlo C, ZoKrafldow, an employee •t Lakin

Ohio,

SEWING CLUB MEETS
NEW HAVEN - 1be Jull&amp;
Bryant Sewing a.m mot Tuesday
afternoon at the heme ol Mrs.
Otde Roooh with Mrs. R F. Bryant 11 co-hostesa. Refreslunentl
were served to Mrs. L C. RouJh.
Mrs. Fred Batey, Mrs. Howard
Waaenhals, Mrs. Clyde Foley,
Mri. John Fey, Mrs. LIO)'d
Roosh, Mrs. N. 0, Weln, Mrs.
~rman Leyne, Mro. Harold
Johnson, Mro. D. A. Smlth, guest
Miss Millie !lumgarnor, and hosO:
es1es, Mrs. Bryant and Mra.
Roush.

Money-Saving Ful- Valu~-Buys!

1

Love Most Needed in

l
I

oo llhare In the birthday dinner,
Children present Included Lloyd
Morrison, Beatrice Boles, Vernm Morrl11011, LUlian Donahue,
Amla We~&amp;lng, Her10l Morri1&lt;11, wuma Knapp, Paul Morri1011 and Il&lt;llald Morrlsm.
One daUghter, Mary Rllllo, died
In 1923, aad me 1011, Cherles
Morrison, died In April of this
year. Their father, Holly Morrison, died In !940.

and Ethel Stone, Ra,ymond and
llama Keefer and Sllella, Mrs.
Cbarlea Morr!SOD, Mrs. L;ydla
Blair and Teresa, Richard and
Edana Helsel and RobYil, Mark,
Mike and Naney, all of Columbus, Ohio; Carl and WUmaKna&amp;oP
and Wayne, WUda Jeao, of &lt;htz,

Noney, of Nortb !tlringfleld, VL;
Myrtle mes•lng of Huntlngtaa;
Il&lt;ll and BetiY Slrawaer and Brad
and Brian, Donald and Ruth Morrison and Rlelde, Donald, Jr.,
and Chcystle, all of {lrme City,

c1n

I

,
-

Ito
lhlfor

......
....... ••
'

',

'"

. ,(\· .

,,

�Iraq's Aref Fallen
"~
•
ln Bloodless Coup
-

Bob Grimm, son of Mr. and Mr s. Bert Grimm, sports editor In
Ohio for the llnited Press International in ColumOOs, returned
·· Tbursday from Germa~zy,
Bob wa s one of eight newsmen who accompaJrled a grOl(t of Air
. Nltiona1 Guardsmen {reservists) to Chicago and then on a two week
.· tour of duty to Germafi.Y.
The newsmen went e specialJy to observe the refueling of the
· KC-97-L Strata Tankers of the Rhine Main UnJted ~'tate&amp; Air Force
;&gt; Dear Frankfurt They also observed ndar operations at the U.S.
. · A. F. Base near Weisburg. Their function, of course, was to write
.· ol their observance s. Bob's story was sent over the ocean wire
to the states.
~ring the two week jaunt, two sta1J members of the Za,·· or course. BOO had an oppor- leski Youth Camp visited Pom.. 1unity to tour Southern G e r- eroy and attended the Big
·. many. He was more than im- Bend Regatta.
"We all enjoyed the activities
pressed with thetremendoustrafassaciated with the regatta and
., ftc oo the Rhine River.
·. ft was the first time that Na- felt that thi s was a very reward tional Guardsmen had ~me out- tng and worthwhile experience
: aide of the United States on such for our young men.
' 1 We were, however, more Im:. ·an assignment.
, Bob's wife, Joyce, and chi! - press~ and pleased by the gen·: dren, visited Wring Bob's ov- uine hospitality and generosity
': erseas business combined with of the people of your commun·: .pleasure trlp with her parents, ity than by anything else.
.. We truly appreciated every:·Mr. and Mrs. Da.ytoo Phillips,
: and his parents, the Grimms . thing that was done for us, and
we will long remember the sin.: SPEAKING OF THE reserves, cerity and kindneu of the peo. 1he Rev. Brian V. Engel, pas-. ple of Pomeroy .''
Active in helping arrange the
·: 1or ol the St. Paul and Sl John
Pomeroy visit for the young peo..
~: Lutheran Churches, attended two
~: weeks of army r.eserve active pie was Carl Hysell , Rutland,
:•
camp at Camp Pickett, Va., former employe of the Zaleski
:: recently. He is the chaplain of Youth Camp.
::tile 463rd Engineering Battal .- lon with headquarters in Wheel CONDUCTING A giant man·· lng, W.Va.
hunt is the famed Thunderbolt
During the period the unit con- Division of World War n.
. · structec:l permanent bridges,
The division is seeking some
· roads, buildings, boat docks at 25,000 formermemberswhohave
- ·state parks and other construe- not been contacted since the end
·. Uon ,.,rk. Approximately l, 400 of the war.
. men belong oo the unit.
The 83rd Infantry Division Assn., was formed and an armual
JERRY GRIFFITH, social reunion is held every year in
· worker of the Ohio Youth Com- the PhlladelpMa area. All for · mlssioo, has some nice things to mer members of the old 83rd
·· _say abwt Pomeroy. His letter are asked to contact the natoUowing is self explanatory:
tional secretary, Larry R e d"On J\Ule 22, 31 wards and mond, 132 Rockwood Drive, Havei1own, Pa. , 19083.

'·

Voting

BEDlUT (UP!)- A bloodless conUnuo the Arab atruggle
predawn coup lx&gt;pplod the Iraq against lsraOI and wtll bue Its
government of Prellldent Abdol relations with nations aceordlng
Rahman Arel today, tho Iraqi to the 011tions' attitude toward
the Jewish state. The broadBaghdad radio said.
The broadcald from Baghdad casts also oald the new masters
said the new masters of the &lt;1 Iraq will encourap private
Arab oation, calling themselves
uThe Revolution C o m m a n d
Council,,. send Aref and his
family oo an unBpeCl1!ed foreign
oountcy following the coup that
was '~bloodless- Mth no bul-

Syracuse Boys

lets."
Banished with Are! wont
Premier Maj.
Gen. Talllr
Yahya, his chief aides and
military otficers.
The new regime, according to
Baghdad radio, said it will

0

0

Funeral Will

Be on Friday

be done on the charter revision -

6~

Funeral services for M r s.
Bertha Oliver, 79, who died late
Tuesday morning will be held
at 3 p.m. Friday at the Ewing
Funeral Home with the R e v.
Carver WUUams oO'iciatlng.
Mrs. Oliver was a member of
the Pomeroy Fl r st Baptl st
O.urch and was a charter member of the Laurel Cliff Better
llealth Club. S!Je and her husband, the late Dana OUver, operated the former Riverview Restaurant in Pomeroy and later the
Five Points Grill on Route 7.
~e is survived by two daughUirs, Mrs. ,\gnes McGhee, Coton Holman and. Mickey Williams.
lumbus, and Mrs. Hazel (Polly)
Leaders spending the week with
Eichinger, Pomeroy; two sons, the boys were John Sauvage and
Byron lJysell, Columbus, and Ce-- George Holman.
cil Hysell, Pomeroy; a sister,

grandchildren.
Burial will be in Beech Grove
Cemetery. Friends may call at
the fUneral home anytime.

0

Tourney Results

Mae Kaylor Stokes, 61. Columbus, former Mason County resi-

deciding how many wards and
, boundaries of each ward.
dent, died Tuesday in Grant HosLawrence Gerlach , Jr., mem- pital there.
. :ber of the Coonty Court, was
Mrs. Stokes was born May 14,
:present and said he would Uke 1907 in Mason County, thedaugh,:to see legally established town ter of the late John and Frances
-- )nundartes by rivers, railroad Grimm Kaylor. She wa.s a retired
=tracks, creeks, hJghwa,y11 etc., school teacher who had received
and if so clone, it would elimin- the Distinguished Service award
ate separate city and county reg. from the state of West Virginia
lltratioo books whi ch w o u I d for her service to public educamean a great saving to the city. tion.
.Gerlach said the first step in his
She was a graduate ol Racine
· ilpln1on was to try to compre- lligh School In Meigs County aoo

~"'lllind

how big the city or Pl.
_·,.eaaant will be i.n the seeable

MASON - Results of softball
tournament play at Bachtel Field
Tuesday night showed BobSallflll.

ers' Quaker

State

defeating Rtp..

ley First National Bank, 7-2, in
the first game; Fans City 3, Saf·

ford's Studio 2, second gamei
Falls City 6, Hartley OU 16, and
Bob Saunders Quaker state 10,
Hartley Oil 9 In the twa ftnal
games.
Aahlaoo OU will go against Bob

Saunders'Quaker state this

e~

ning at 6 p. m. and tne winner or
tonight's competition "ill play
Harlow Lime tor the championship.

of Marshall University, and attcMed Ohio University.
." 'A dure - would Burdette addiShe was a teacher In the MatiDD and SanelY Heights soon be
son County schools for m a n y
VETERANS MEMORlAL
_ ~ part of Pt. Pleasant, and to
years and a member of the state
HOSPITAL
1 ..bep in mlnd when boundary lines
Education Assn., the MasonCOunADMISSIONS _ Linda Pullins,
of warda were establi shed where
ty
Retired
Teachers
Assn.,
the
.
Pomeroy;
Myrtle Walker, Ra'
Association of Retired School ~ine; Robert Scarberry, Racine;
Employees, ancl of the First Unit- Mae Roach, West Colwnbia; Auded Presbyterian Church of Mid- ria Jeffers, Pomeroy; John Jiv-dleport
iden. Racine; Edgell Lewis. Long
She is survived by her husband, Bottom.
H. M. Stokes; a sister, Miss F1orDISCHARGES _ Sarah Woode,
ence Kaylor, and a brother, W. E. Anna Neal, lda Hysell, Deborah
Kaylor, of Letart, and a number Rife, Jacqueline Gao:lis. Da\li.d
of niece s and nephews.
Vernier, Troy Sltterrield, Roger
!UPON REQUEST)
Funeral services will be held Barnett
friday at 2 p. m. at the Fogies~ Funeral Hmne with burial
in Broad Run Cemetery. Friends
may call Thursday evening from

.

2-Hour

DRY ClEANING
SERVIa

obinlion's Cleaners

River Gauges

GAUGES Galllpolls, 12,2
and 12.6 running 2.5 !eet of rollers: Pt. Pleasant, 24.10; Pomeroy-Masori, 2!n4Q; Hinton, 1.20
falling; Kanawha Falls, 3.00 risIng; Charleeoon, 17.90 stat. Landoo, Marmet, and Winfield, ere
on the IIlli .

7oo9p,m.

-:-:.-: .··-:-

Every time yoU come Into our
station and buy 8 gallons of gas.
we will give you a rose or other
decorator nower.
nirP bouquets.

These

RIBke
.•

Display a free rose on your car
antenna and you are in the COJJ-.
lest. We are giving away 2,000,.
000 trading stamps and $1,000.00
in cash.

FlED OIL COMPANY

531 W. Maln St.

-; Pornerov. e .

Janis Hopeful of

Settling Job Issue

Mrs. Clarence Curtis, Pomeroy,
five grandchildren, and 14 great-

0

Dies

ru.,

members included Dick Sluvage, !ormerly of Pt. Pleasan~ died
senior patrol leader, a medalfpr Tuesda,y In Chicago.
leadership, and Franklin Rizer
She was the last memberofthe
was nominated to the Order of ,.Four Bryants" which included
the Arrow, The troop took rop her brother, Clptaln Billy Bryhonors in swimming, rifle and Dl• ant, who died Jan. 26, 1968, and
ture events. sauvage was winner her parents, the late Mr. and
of the rlfie event and Rizer. the Mrs. sam Bryant. She was born
nature event.
Aug. l, 1885, In Broadyn, N. Y.
Thirty-three tests required in
SUrviving is a daughter, Mrs,
eight merit badges were passed Mary r.. Gesse of Park Forest,
by the boys during the week. ru., two grandchildren and one
The group inc1uded Sauvage, great-grandchild,
senior patrolleaderj Rodney Hoi·
The 1\meral wiD be held In Chiman, assistant senior patrol lead· cago and lr¢erment wUl be In the
er; Rick Ash, Rizer, Bobby El'· family mausolewn at Pl Pleas-non. Amos Moore. Terry Moore, ant at 10:30 L rn. Friday by the
Danny Hoodashelt, David Nease, Crow-Hussell FUnera1 Home.
David Smith, Bobby Patterson.
Gene Harris. Danny Huston~ Ken--

Mae Stokes,

ary step before more work could

Wickline Named Principal

PT. PLEASANT - Mrs. F1or-

Emergency Unit in

Two Tuesday Runs
The Racine emergency squad
answered two ca11s yesterday
to the Jdm Stobart ralddenc.;
J'lpple Grove, at 4:5tl p.m. for
Mrs. Ida Stobart who was taken to Holzer Hospital and entered as a medJc81 patient, and at
8:15 p.m., oo the Jalm Jividen
residence, Racine. Mr. Jividen
was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital and admitted as a
medical patient.

Market Report
GALLlPOLIS, OHIO,
Saturda.Y, July 13, 1968
SALES REPORT OF
OIDO VALLEY LIVESI'OCK CO,
HOGS - 175 00 220 lba. 22 00
22.5tl; 220 oo 250 lbs. 22to22.5tl;
Light 18 oo 22.50; Fat Sows l4 oo
18; Stags 12 oo 16; Boars lO oo
15; Sows and Pigs 65 oo 100;
91oats8oo 18.
CATILE - Steers 20 oo 26;
Halters 18 oo 23; Baby Bee! 20
to 26; Fat Cows l6to 19; Comers
13 oo 16; Bulls 18 oo 22.50;
Milk Cows l 00 oo 200.
VEAL CALVES- Tops 33.5tl;
Secunda 28 oo 32; Medium 24 oo
30; Com, and Hvs. 22 to 32;
Cullo 20 oo 22,
SHEEP - Ewes and Lma. I
oo 10; Stock Ewes 4 oo tO; Fat
S!Jeop 5 oo 10; Culls l oo S;
Bucks 4 oo 10; Fat Wethers 5
00 10.
LAMBS - Tape 25; Seoonds 20
oo 22; Llglrt Wts. 18 oo 20; Common 16 oo 18,
PT. PLEASANT
LIVESI'OCK SALES CO,
PT. PLEASANT, W, VA.
Saturday, JUly 13, 1968
HOGS - 175 oo 220 21 oo 22,10; lleavles 18 oo 20.75; Lll!hts
17 oo 19.60; Fat Saws 15 oo 18;
Boars ll oo II; Pigs 8,5tl oo
18.7S; Stock 91oats 17 00 23.
CATILE - Steers 19.50 oo
21.30; Heifers 17 oo 22,5tl; Fat
Cows 17 00 19; canners l3.7S
oo 16.50; Bulla 19.5tl oo 22.75;
Stock Cows and Calves ISS to
218; Stock Staors 22.10 to 21.25; SOOck Helton 17.35 oo 22.40; Stock Steer Calves 23 oo
26.50; ·Stock Helfer Calves 20.85
00 23.7S.
VEAL CALVES- Tops 33.85;
Seeoods 33.20; Medium 28 oo29.75; Common and H.eavtea 25,8S
to 33.60.

COLUMBUS (UPO - State correction oOlclals met Tuesday
with roprosentatlves of 0 h l o
Penitentiary guards, who voted
Monday night oo sttlke. B o t h
side! said ne~ationr; were satls!actory.
Martin A. Janis, director o(
the Department of MenUII llyglene and Correctlm, said negotiations "got ofl. to a good begiming," and would continue.
"We OOpe we can bring about
a good environment for aU employes Involved," Janis eald,

Pomeroy post olll ' .'J&gt;Okesmen said today that canadian

postal employe• are on strike
and there Is an embargo m all

I

A veteran Galli a Countyboaketdegree and Admlnt.tratlve d~
boll
coach, Wickline guided lhe
gree irom the University of VfY·
llyger
Creek Bobcats to their
oming, has been employed In the
Kv..r Cook District since the ftrot baoketball chamjllooshlp In
196~4 school year as head bask.. history two years ag&lt;&gt;
The Kyger Creek Boord last
etball coach, driver education lnntglrt
employed Mrs. Patsy Instrucror, hlsoory and biology lngels, wife of Dr. Clyde Ingels
structor.
of Middleport, u conunerclli lnstrucoor at Kyger Creak illgll
School, replacing Mrs. Mary
Walker, who realgned the post
LONDON (Up0 - James Earl Ray's Alaboma lawyer said
oo return oo North Gallla High
today Ray is innocent of the murder of Dr. Martin Luther King
School.
Jr., and wants to return to the United states to clear himself
Mrs. !Jvels, who Is a gracll&gt;of the charges.
ate of Ohlo Univerldty with a
Atoorney Arthur J. Hanes Sr. said Ray agreed oo waive an
Bachelor ol Science dqree, and
eXtradition appeal when they met at London's Wardsworth Pris, 1 commercial major, and Wick·
on this afternoon.
line, were both offered one year
contracts for their respective
positions.
The Kyger Creek Boord TuesRIGH SPIRITS
day night also passed 1 resoluLONDON (Up!)- Pollee Tues- tion of necessity placing the
day night recovered two truck-- $200,000 bond losue on tile Nov.
loads of gin hijacked a few 5 pnenl electloo bolloL Pashours earlier In what a dlstllll~ sage w11l asaure the cmatruction
company said was Britain's of 1 flve roun addition at Addabiggest thoU ol an,y kind of vllle Elementary and two rooms
Miss Elaine Milhoan spent a spirits. The two trucks were at Kyger Creek Junior Illgh
week with her cousin, Miss Jack· loaded with 25,740 boWes oi gin. School.

w.

Keno Ridge

News Notes

lyn Seldenabel who is a nurse at

Marietta, ·
BOMB VICTIM
Mr. andMrs. William Rose and
BELGRADE (UP!)- Sava
SOfit Billy, visited Suncla.y with cuJovic, 25, one of 70 persons
her mOf!ter, Mfs. GleiUII Mil- wounded, . Sa\Ul'dlY
in
the ·,

c...

h~

.00 Bernard.

.. ,.

..,.. ,. e"PJ._on .,o( a time bomb ln •"

BOland Kay Bahr ofGalllpoils
visited his parents Saturday and
Mr. and MrL Art Kasper and
Clara visited her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. MaylWJ'd Bahr Sunday.
Mr. alll Mrs. Kenneth Davis,
cathy and Marie, spent a weekelll at Royal Oak Park.
Mrs. Wilma Ohlinger am son,
Mlffie alll wite alll daughter of
Colwnbus visited her parents,

Mr. and Mrs.

Maynard

theater,
died Tueeda1. No
suspects have been arrested In
the bomblno.
KENNEDY VISITS
ARUSHA, Tanzania {\IP0Robert Kenned,y Jr. arrived
today for a one-month tour of
Tanzania's national pme reserves.
One of his tlrat
was with Pres-

GEl' THE1PICI'UR£

With A,Dtll Tower

COMPLITI LINI 0'
CHANNIL MASTIR &amp;
'I NCO

e ROTOIII

UOOSTIRI
eANTINNAI
Ask About T1lo Channel

Maohr Crollflro Anltnna

RIDENOUR
RADIO &amp; TV

Bahr on

GRIM OUTLOOK
UNDERGOEli SURGERY
LONDON
(UPO- A Weal
Leland !lsam, Pomeroy, unrabbi
said Tuesday the
German
clorwent eye aurgecy Tueeda1 at
outlook
for
Jewa tn West
the Ga!Upolla Medical Ce!Ur.
Germany ia ''very dim" beHis room wmber Ia 116,
cause tho death rate among
Jews exceeds the birth rate.
uMany of our communities have
LOCAL TEMPS
oo
children at all and have
The temperature In do"""wnt,..,..~~"'
oo look !orward to but
nothing
Pomeroy at 11 a.m. Wednesday
under clau&lt;!Y lldea was 72 de- death," Rabbi Be~...-.1 Parkes
told t h a World Council of
ereea.
Synagcguos.

dent.

MASON - That Maoon
people oo earn.that nmch,
IT bird Is baek again (or did
With llle help of BUb G lilt ever leave?)
more, we ltarted to ltllt thoae
Mrs. Edward Sayre (Opal) of that helped - but with so many
Letart, W, Va. reports that ahe name• it Is so easy to overwas enroute to Point Pleasant . look IIOID80ne - 10 we gave
and wao traveling oo Sand lUll up,
Road when she saw the blrdl
SEVERAL NEW HOMES and
Sle said, '•1 wasn't frightened,
juat amazed that I was -lng a one newbuJinesahavebeenerected In the Cllfton..Ma100 area.
bird tbal big,"
Mr. and Mra. Mllloo Roollh
It was on Wedneeda1 between
ll and 1!:31! a.ni., and 'llblle rid- plan In the very near lllturo oo
Ing along, her thoughts were m open their place o! bualneas
the buslne11 at hand. The bird wbere they will sell lee cream,
had been on the ground and wllon aandwlches and sofldriD&lt;o. 1be
she got a (alr[J good look It was new buDding on Route 62 waa
up In the air. S!Je couldll't do- erac:ted on the former BeiQ' L;yacrlhe It very well, slnee she ma property near Wahema High
lldll~ get a close look, but did SeMol.
New homes have recently been
aay lllat It had dark leaiUrea.
built
by Mr. and Mra. RichWell, I hove heard a lot of
ard
Gilkey,
Mr. and Mro, Charbird slorlea, but I believe lllla
one - and some of the others. I lea stan!QY and Dr, and M r a,
only hope that aomeone doosn't Thomas B. McGowan.
kiU this rare specimen. Beeauae
THERE ARE SO MANY minfrom Mrs. Sape'• report, the
llllers and mloslonarleo In the
bird Wanted only 00 eseape.
!amUy of the Rev. and Mrs. J.
Hanlon, Letart, W. Va. - J
THE MASON VOLUNTEER
Fire llopartment at a recent am beginning to wooder - have
mooting ele&lt;ted Walter Worry, I loft any one oot'l
The Rev. J, W, Hanlon, oow a
Ma11011, as tholr ""' fire chief, .
He succeeds Fred Taylor, Who pot!ent at the Veterans Memorbaa resigned. Werry, an aoldst- W llollp!W, Ia a retired minant foreman at Vanadium, has later of the Methodist Chllrcb.
Their 1011 and wife, tho Rev. and
been with the Mai&lt;HI Fin Dept,
Mrs. J, Kellll Hanlon and lllelr
for two yearo.
Hla relatives, all Werrys, are famUy, Jim, 17; Steve, 13; Mona,
aetlve with the Pomeroy Vol- 12; Martha, 9, and Mary. 4, have
untoer Fire Department - hla Just returned oo thlo country
father, Charles J. Werry, is a after serving aa mlaolooarlea
Gremani his uncle, Herman Wer- In HaiU for alx years, They are
ry Is me too, and a melllber o! relldlng near the Ver!MXI Comtile Pomeroy emergency IIIJ!ad, · munity In a heme made ready for
Ills coulln, Henry Werry. Is · them by nelgli&gt;oro and frlenda
Pomeroy's !Ire chief and his and members of the Graham,
other cousin, Charlea M, Wer· Clifton and Letart clllrehea.
Rev. and Mra. J. W. Hanlon'&amp;
cy, Is a volunteer fireman and
daughter,
Rev. Mrs, Bernice
a member ol the emergency
and
her husband, the
Winkler
squad.
Rev. Clarence Wlnk1er, are both
THE WARAMA BAND Boost- ordained mlnlaters, The latter
ers realbed &amp;j)proxlmately $1,· retired In June after approxl352,89 from tho eale of food at m.ately 20 years Mrvlce as a
qedar Lakes Cr.rt Fair, That' a minister. Rev. Mro. Wlnklerwtll
i lot o! monQY ·- ' 'blrt' It !akis a le1'YI the ·Graham and IAiart
let ot hardwork and a lot o! United Metltodlat Churehos.

The Kyger Creek Local School
District Board of Educat1011 Tues·
day night accepted the resignation
ol Prlncl.llli E. Rlehard Frost at
Kyger Creek High Schoolalllassigned John C. Wickline of Rio
Gnllle oo the post
Wlckline, who has a Master's

July 4th,
Mr. and Mrs. Ben Perry hod
mall going there until furtber
as guests the past week, thelr
mtice.
son and lamUy of near Cleveland.
Mr. alll Mrs, W, E. Milhoan
ol. Pomeroy called on Ida mother,
Mrs. Glenna Milhoan, Monday.
MRS. BUTIERFlELD DIES
Mrs. Gle,.. Mllh,.n and BerMrs. Alma YOUI'@, Pomeroy,
nard were dinner gueata of Mr.
has learned that her sister, Sidle
Mldkltr Butlerfield, died Tuesday and Mrs. Blaine Milhoan on Sunin Mlami, OklL Mrs. Butterfield day, Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Milwas a former resident of this hoan, PeJ!I!Y, Held! and Rhett,
were slt)per guests saturday evecouncy. Funeral services 1 n d
ning.
burial wUI be there Thursday,
Mr, and Mrs. Errol Conway
and son, Hugh, of Akron are va,..
catloning wlth his sister, Dori11
MR. SHIFLET DIES
Fred A, S!Jlnet, Middleport, a Bet2 at SL Joseph, Mich., their
prominent bullnossman, died this daughter, Rosie, bt Arizona, and
morning In Holzer Hoapltal. Fu- visited his mother, Mrs. Allee
neral arrangements wtll be an- Dodson, local, for a lew da,yo.
- GleJU S, Milhoan
nounced lalllr by Rawlings Coats
Funeral Home.

RE-ELECT GILBERT
HOUSTON (UPO - Members
ot the Brother- ot Locomotive FlromOD and Englnemen
Tueeda1 unanimously re..,lectod
H, E. Gilbert, 81, Cleveland, oo
the poll of lnternaUonal preol-

Notes

coun.

Mrs. Bryant

enee Bryant. 82. Chlcago,

•

By Alma MarsbaU

TOWN CAR of lbe future was sbowa ID Cologae, Germaay. A lwo·ltaler, lbe auto Is
deotrlbod as roomy, It baa lbree b[J doors and lo dellgoed lo 61 .... sman spaee1.
Tbe veblcle ls not yet on the market.

Dies Tuesday

•

~News

tnvestment and prbate enter·
prise.
Claim CornQII!on
llaglldad radio lllld the
council oo- Arot ''We to
corruption and ~MX~aolutlon o!
the Kurdish prd&gt;lem" Involving
the Kurds' battle for autooomy
In Aral&gt; Iraq. The council also
ac:ted, the broadcast said,
because oC the Arel _regime' a
•'prevention of the IraQI army
from facing the laraells INrlni
the June war and covering up
for lmperlallat and Zloolat
esptonage rings."

PT. PLEASANT - The annual
Aitl.r tile group a"embled, a
reunion of the Slone couslno and service was held outdoon near
the blrthds,y dinner honoring Mra. clubhouse. Rev. Cherie• Frum
Belle Sayre of Route 1, Point ot Heights United MetloOdlit
Pleasant, was held at Krodel Park church, presented a llhort serclwhouse JUly 7, The picnic out- mon and pro,yer concluded the
Ing Ia held on the Sunday nearest
service, The covered dish dinthe Fourth of July.
ner was served in the clubNine ol the 10 living cllllclren house.
ot Mrs. Slyre were present to
A business aesslon, held in the
honor her 84th birthday while afternoon, resulted lD the re-eleemany descendants ot her father, Uan o! of!leera of tho reunion.
John stone, were In attendance Lloyd Morrisools chairman, Af.

Mason County

(

Boy Scout Troop 242 ol Syra-

PT. PLEASANT - City coun- there are pti:llic buildings avail- employ a registered engineer
- ell met in a special session Thes- able for voting places, as thia to assist with the survey.
Rime will present his commitda,y niglrt at the city building oo was becoming a serious problem
tee
plans at the next regular counnot
only
In
the
city,
but
throogh.
~ discuss the City Charter Board
cil session it at all possible.
· recommendation ror redivision out the county.
Mayor Morgan named Gerlach
Council approved the appoint:: ol the voting warda and a city voters registration.
ment of councilman Leonard Rlt- and County Clerk Getty as adThe 7:30 p.m. meeting did not fie to select several other mem- visors to the Charter Board to
get underway until 8:30 p.m. as bers to work with Mm and draw a.ssl st with the voting registra: • quorum was not present until up definite legal boundaries and tion problems and ward divithat Ume.
sions.
City Attorney Ray Musgrave
aplained that under the new
111preme court ruling - one-

man one-vote - this was anecea-

Birthday Dinner Highlights Reunion

Certificate
cuse has been awarded a cerUfi..
cate of achievement for 11 best
campers of the week" at cam,
Arrowhead near Huntington.
Other achievements by troop

d
D
R
d
war
lVISlOUS
eVleWe

JY/

Rewarded with

. '' 9

Budding ANew Home?
Remodeling the old one?.

~I
r

\ .'

I

FRAMING
LUMBER
2x4
2x6
2x8
2x10
•nd

.,.

SHEATIMG
Plenty of Lon11 J..ntth
2x6'aln Stock

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN
MATERIALS COMPANY

sate Hospital and

1t

+roU
p1c

twln pol&lt;
Producer's
~--- gellon 89~
11,- Kroft
Salad Dresslng;~~o____
.,.,__
t9~

mittee chairman, reported m the
posllbUllf ol a Lewiabore, Va,
tour and oo Beclday, W. VL 00
... llooey In the Rodl.
Approxlm.ltely 50 por1011s att e - the tee and ware aerved
Grecian cookies along with lea.

Reports Given

Bonus~-------------~ 79~

to

tile -

Scientists believe that almost 9,000 years ago the
Egyptians used Iron from meteors to make tools and weapons .

5TH and P~!ARL STS., RACINE
"The Store With A Hart"
Right reserved to Umlt quaDtltlei

We accept Fed. Food Stamps
-

Prices Effective
. July 1B-19-20

Open Mon. thru Sat.
9 to 9-Sunday 10 to 7

Good fal~ "
BUYS!
SHOWBOAT
PORK &amp; BEANS
2~!~39e

TOMATO JUICE
3 ~: ~1.00

HI·C Fruit Drinks 3 !:-1.00
L-r AmountS, 2 43c
Breaci_----~--~5 1 f:I.OO
C:hef• Delight
Cheese Loat._____
, :. 69~
for

PAL BRAND

PEANUT lUTTER

Custom-All Fl-1'1

Canned Po..,p.._______!: 10~
Argo
Peaches ____3 ~~ 1.00
Uq~T;. Detergent
~:tc 39~

f•r

Sliced

•BAKERY BUY

Holsum Angel Food

CAKE

Rtg.

TO G()(JI&gt;
OUTIHJDR

SQUARES

dolph , and M111 Linda Weaver
Jl[w lhelr reports on GlrloSiala.
llafreolmloiXo were -~
Mrs. Robert J, Roolh, MrL ArJ&gt;.
old Rooill lind Mrs. Mlty E.
~ to Holen ~. Mary Aumiller, Thelma Clilelw~ Slbjoi
. Smith, Vera 'l'locluw!OI\ SldiJ
wartto, Clilrlotta Rlllllh. poo1ma
!IGulh, Mary Ol!ob) ~~lilry
(BilO RGush. ·
· '~
Guttll · were Mrs. Rclbort

u..,. -

··-·-'u,.
w.. .. ·- ..---···
....,..
' ......... · ............ ..:..

-.
,er and Piu!itll Ra.,.

.

-

-.

FRESH, ltiPI

FRESH GROUND

BEEF
3 1••
pkg.

•

FRENCH CITY .

ARMOUR'S

C'iNNED
-PICNICS
3Ut. , ... .29

LON

•I

e

I

.

I!&amp;

liA•

00~
.• . ¥

... 00~

20ct, I

•

•

FRENCH CITY

.

FOR COoKOUTS

' .._,._ _ . . , .
rrvm I'M lllOtmueno, -'"" ,.,
.I

oft-

WIENERS
··~-

••

Plcg.

·. .

WA-TE

EAT/NfJ

Our Own Good Lean

39c

Breaded Fish

Le-

49e
,_.._,_

18oL

1

night at the New Haven Park at
1o30 ~ Mlu ~tta RaJ&gt;.

,.

atlendlng In addlllon

oreea, Mr. 111111 Mrl. lllll&gt;ortBirnltz, lllciQo, Scot~~' IIIII Jeller7;
Mr. and Mra. JIIIIOI uu,boo,
Comle, carolyn, lld1 111111 ,._
rll, all of - ; Mr. WUIJam
Tliomaa, Gallipolis, Mr. andMrl.
Marahall McMillion, Blll,y IIIII
Mello.., Middleport, and t h e
hostess, Mrs. McMillion.

STCM&lt;RY'S

All Flovon

Jl[on Allldllary meetln&amp; Monday

.

wlllo

a cllleken ......,.. '-'lllllha
blrlbda;ro of her hull&gt;and, lllr·
mlo; her . ........, llaiJb¥ Bam·
112, 111111 11tr IIIIer, Mr1. WU.
llam ,_,.., of Galllpalll.
1be - . . .... held Ill Me·
Mlllkla home with tile !ollowllll

L..,ndry Detervent

• FROZEN FOOD BUY

On Girls State

w ........... ~ U-~

Mc-

S.lod Bowl

Normen Foss.
Mrs. Nora Keiser, tau com-

MASON _ 1be American

~

~ !blday

MASON .,;. Mrs.

Millian

.

~·

Grode A H"""!''enlacl

0.. Home Patio

!!!!':! ~

at the Holzer HospiUII, weighed
7 pounds 8\2 ouncea. The mother
Ia the former Edith Sebrall. Sl1e
ia the Kearns' ftrst child. Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Joooph Kearno, Clifton, and Mr. and
Mrs. Carl Sebrell, West Columbia.

HERE ARE TYPICAL EVERYDAY LoW PRICES

Aller ...ch dla&lt;uaaloo llle
c:ounetl agreed oo sponsor a Ma..., Coun\Y Fair -with handlcrofl articles end baked goocla
for oalo,
Mro. Burris, appointed M r •·
Harry Rhodu, chairman of Aehievomlllt Day and Mrs, Garnette C, KlmberUng and Mro.
!loa C&amp;pehart. Council voted to
bave the dinner catered lnateed
&lt;1 pollock.
The prellldant OI&gt;Pointed the
followinc to the namlnatlnl committee: Mra. Powell Reynolds,
Mro. Jdm Marshall aad MrL

WSC::S Meets

-·~

wm.

...
~

cll's candidate.

so.

NEW HAVEN - The Wsal of
the UDited Methodist Church In
• New llaveo met reeently on the
polio ill the heme of MrL a.,.
loll Athey with Mrs. T. Bert
lbllh and Mlu Millie &amp;nnp.,..
er u hosteaaes.
BeY. MrL Acbaah MUier was ·
,....,..., leader and her. topic
,.._
"Communicators
for
Oirlat." They opened with the
of "Lord Spook To Me."
the Pl'OII'IIII a discusfollowed .... they
will! the II!Whll of "Thlo
IIJ
World."
bullnell meoll!w fol,.
Attendlow werw Mra.
Mrs. ~ LltvPlcbnl, ¥1'1.
llrL Fred Batay,

Okay and Carolyn King and
m and Joy Ann, Mrs, !if·
bU Phillips and Ronda, ~u and
-Mae Barr, alf ol Charleatoni
terward, Mra, Sayre opODed her John and LucreUa Sayre,
IIUIIOroos birthday gltta. Adding ard and FAma Woodndl, all o!
Interest oo the meeting was the Vinton, Ohio.
reading of oome famUy history
Also, Mrs. Beatrice Boles,
m:1terial by John and Lucretia Hersel and Iva Morriaon and
So,yre.
Roger, or Leoni Albury and RuRegistering $Iring tile morn- by See, Henry and Evelyn KaefIng were the honoree, Mrs. Say• er, of Point Pleasant Route I;
DAUGHTER BORN
re; Uo.yd Morrhon, Salem, Ohio; Oran and Lena Slone, Tom and
CLIFTON - Mr. and Mra.
Vernon and Sarah 1\IOrrison, Cy- Lola stone, Claude and Verta Thomas Kearns are announcing
rus and Lillian Donatme, Paul Billard, all ol RlpiiiY; BUl and llle birth of a daugj!ter, T I n a
Morrlscn and Pamela, Vernoo Allene mesalng and Ame and Am. Tho Infant, hom oo July I,

OkQY

BATHROOMTISSUE
ASSORJIO COLORS

1be couneU vnted oo sponsor
a candidate lor Mum Couni;r
Fair Qlten, hllsa Addlo Rmdes,
dau&amp;llter ot Mr. and Mrs. Harry Rhodes, 3324 Mouman, Point
Pleasant, was eho.., the coun-

"lltt.VI of

Forrest and Phylllo Door1111111
and Cindy, Larcy, Phlllli\ and
Erlc, all &lt;1 Loekbourno, \)hlo;
Jerald and Delores MeC~llls­
ter and Carole, &amp;11111, Uuro,
Jef!rey and David of Barboursville; WUliem R. and Cleo King
and Jack and Sandra, Mrs. Ina
Carte, and llercy Forbes, all &lt;1
Ravenswood; Franklin and Joan
King and L;ym and Greg &lt;1 Aiken, South carolina; Rev, Charles Frnm and Roy and Amla
meseing, Point Pleasant.

-

Birthdays .OJ.em.d
•
AI Sunday Barbeeue

s·

....

· -Greece, spoke tn MuoD Counb
Homemakers and gueata In re' · prdo oo vtllap life and her
periOIIai life In Greece. Dr, ZOI·
· rafldow Ia IOOI'klng with retarded andomotlonall,ydlaturbeclchll' 4ren at Laldn, In working with
tile children she reported that
love was the one thing they neecled.
Those In ellargo of tile lalerDIUonal Tea were Mra. Elmer
N.-ry, Mro. Ray Fox, Mrs.
WIU!am Langst.al!, and M r a,
llllerldan McLerran.
Mro. VIrgil Burris, Sr., PresIdent of Mason County Homemakers council presided, wbon t h e
COUIICll doclc!Qd 00 eomblne tllil
yaar with Jaek1011 Counb Homemakers In holding a Homemak.
er'o camp. A meeting Is scheduled lor .luguat 2, In the Bank of
Rlj)ley Bulldlils 10 work rut dolalla. Cost ~ the · eamp ls $12 .•
No definite data hal boon

Ohio.

. ~:~~~'~\~t" , ·
·~:· 5 .,~t
V.IN EG.AR•••••••••w••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
AXWELL HOUSE.. !~~~~~~.~~~~~~ .......... ·~.~L 1. 29
VIENNA SAUSAGE.....~~~~~~~ ..............~~ 19C
AGIC BL EACH......u······················· ~:~: 39C
HUDSON TOWELS... :::~~:: ..........•.~~ 25C
3
1
00CHA IN.....................................
.
~ ~~Ous~ · 2,~ 1. 69
BEST. DOG F·E·E·D· MEAL ..................

Work With Children
loiASON - Dr. Marlo C, ZoKrafldow, an employee •t Lakin

Ohio,

SEWING CLUB MEETS
NEW HAVEN - 1be Jull&amp;
Bryant Sewing a.m mot Tuesday
afternoon at the heme ol Mrs.
Otde Roooh with Mrs. R F. Bryant 11 co-hostesa. Refreslunentl
were served to Mrs. L C. RouJh.
Mrs. Fred Batey, Mrs. Howard
Waaenhals, Mrs. Clyde Foley,
Mri. John Fey, Mrs. LIO)'d
Roosh, Mrs. N. 0, Weln, Mrs.
~rman Leyne, Mro. Harold
Johnson, Mro. D. A. Smlth, guest
Miss Millie !lumgarnor, and hosO:
es1es, Mrs. Bryant and Mra.
Roush.

Money-Saving Ful- Valu~-Buys!

1

Love Most Needed in

l
I

oo llhare In the birthday dinner,
Children present Included Lloyd
Morrison, Beatrice Boles, Vernm Morrl11011, LUlian Donahue,
Amla We~&amp;lng, Her10l Morri1&lt;11, wuma Knapp, Paul Morri1011 and Il&lt;llald Morrlsm.
One daUghter, Mary Rllllo, died
In 1923, aad me 1011, Cherles
Morrison, died In April of this
year. Their father, Holly Morrison, died In !940.

and Ethel Stone, Ra,ymond and
llama Keefer and Sllella, Mrs.
Cbarlea Morr!SOD, Mrs. L;ydla
Blair and Teresa, Richard and
Edana Helsel and RobYil, Mark,
Mike and Naney, all of Columbus, Ohio; Carl and WUmaKna&amp;oP
and Wayne, WUda Jeao, of &lt;htz,

Noney, of Nortb !tlringfleld, VL;
Myrtle mes•lng of Huntlngtaa;
Il&lt;ll and BetiY Slrawaer and Brad
and Brian, Donald and Ruth Morrison and Rlelde, Donald, Jr.,
and Chcystle, all of {lrme City,

c1n

I

,
-

Ito
lhlfor

......
....... ••
'

',

'"

. ,(\· .

,,

�'

.. - . ... .
•· •

to" '-·• ··-·· ··

.. .

l~

-

... ..

--.~·-

... ·~·-··-

·· ·- ·-- -··

·- ·- --

... ---··- ·- -~~-·-···-·-~-· -· ·--

~· ·

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

..

. . ...
.

Tile Dolly Senllnel, llllddloport..P-roy, 0., July 17, 1968

.,Mason Area
f

1Jarra11,

Mr. and Mrs. John
Chris and Joan, spent the weekend at Albury, W, VL, where
'111e,y visited Mr. Harrah's par.
enta, Mr. ~ Mrs. Ba&amp;Jl Hu-

LAGJ: or

TiiomNo.2 ...... 2 13
1HI&amp;tl Game and Series - Mary
VOol, 180-465; E&lt;l Voss, 205-

~·

tale Tuesday Mixed League
'

Points
38
. . . 2 ............. 26
...... t ....... . •. • •• 22
...... 6 •..••.•. ' •••• 16

fi.,s .......... . ..

w...... s League
Won Lost

5 • • • • • • ••• 14

7

1 • . . • • • .•. 13

8
10
12
13
13

Game -- Sarah OWens,
----:c_ Series - NeacU Clr·

Men's Iague
Points

OPEN SUNDAY 10 a.m.-7 p.m.

fl.mltbK te
vm.,.
of llldmeport, Oblo.
thtnlllaftft called
"""hrdelMUtJ")
trte

leniN

U1Utla'IIN

In tlte

for the PHiad ..t torUI ta I!IMtlml

u1e of ltakl:

IDIDIIICI aft.YICI
A..U.W. fw Nllftt'l MI"\''M
CODIQIDUI

......

'""' l'lclllc llyla WW4

Pork Roast

No Pr~rchaae Reauired

I of tbll ordiDIIbCIII ..., IMNb ftHd
•• DO&amp; &amp;o llleeld dtt foUtwlq' 8elled_

To Play/

te

JbMe, •

......

'""' -

"".. 1JD.Itl 90ft~, alttraetlq ftfo

rf'nt,

.upplJH.

10 •wb or 1.- ,.,
•
ntontl for .. . . .. .. . .. .. • ..

nm

U. S. Gorlt. lna.pected

Nellt 10 kwb Mr IIKIBUI l .la " ' hll

Nezt 100 hob
per mDIIth . . . . .. .. l.lo
Nut 100 kwb _., IIIOAth

,.,

.

t•ONDAIY

AYAILA.ILITY

Patra1 u,1d ad ·
it COIUUIMN lldDii
tb• Compaa,'e ltaadarll Mrriet lor
J'IW'POMI ot:ller Ulu ntiCeau.l a.
•114 •teb.ll.abtar 11u111nua Clpeelt1.. leftlf.U, · - .... It IWowatte.
CHAU.CTII 01111 IIIYICI
Altenulblr n.nwnt. ., qcle, Cleo
hvend froll'l tiMI CaalpuT'I eeooa4..
A..Uabll fer

TV .. . in Review

Long Bottom

Activities

Of Week for

At this point, it seems likely
that oU-network and local
programming will terrJ more

and more to give added and
irxllvldual attention to the black
community. The n e t w o r k s,
meanwhile, being a mass
population business, will make
their adjustments in their own
way. Unquestionably, although
the current racial series are
just summer entries, the
networks wm sharply increase
public attair.s programs on
Nep-o ll!e.
Forestall Separatism
But the networks are also
aware that these periodic broadcasts w111 probably not be
enough ul ..tis!Y tile militant
view and those it lnO.uences.
Thus, perhaps the strongest
weapon the national television
organizations have is in the way
they Indicate their new outlook
in the roles blacks play on the
various series. This WiU surely
not stqJ militant desires for
sepantism, l!u~ as the networY
source says, · •&lt;If wDI indicate
our best intentions."
The source adds: "We feel an
absolute obligation to do our
part In heading orr any moves
toward separate societies- and
separatism in general-in the
United States, because Jt must
lead eventually to a dre&amp;dtul
en:l. ,,
Viewers, therefore, will be
able to see in the coming season
whether- 1 n d how- televtsior
makes significant adjustments.
Whatever happens. there is a
long and nervous period al1ead
because of the pressures of
ratings anJ business along with
s~ development~

Point Roek

Social Notes

By NELLIE VALE
Columbia Chapel Church, In
its semi arnaal business meet-ing on Sunday, made plana for
the assembling cf the history ot
the church. Next summer, they
Thursday Late Women'a Iague plan to celebrate the tOOth anni.
Woo Lost versary of the tourdlrw of t h e ·
Team1 . . . . . . . . . . 9
3
church. Mr. and Mrs. Jarrot
Teamt . • , ••••••• 8
4
Bobo were appointed as a comToam6 .......... 7
5
mittee. Mr. Woyne Clark o! AlToam5 ......... 5
7
bany was re-hired for a period
Team3 ••••••••• 5 7
of sb months to corduct services
Team 2 .......... 2 10
oo the second and fourth Sunday
High Game - Sandy Simpson, mornings. Rev. Morris, a re165; High Series- JullaBoylea, tired minister who has pastured
142,
the church tor several years, was
invited to conduct services on
the third Surday o! the month.
Melg~lllla Credit Bureau
Wig lalue
A larse crowd attended the
Firat High Glme - Linda we&lt;ldlng Saturday evening at tho
WlnebrOIUIOT,
C&amp;rJ&gt;enter Church o! Miss SharSecond High Game - Linda cm Cox and Mr. Burt Christian.
Wlnebrenner.
A recf!jltion !allowed at the eo.
Third High Game - Loulae lumbl&amp; School. Mr. Christian Is
Gilmore.
on leave from Army duty and
Flrat High Series - Linda wUl return to Italy sooo. The
Winebrenner.
new Mrs. ChrlsUsn will join him
Second High Series - Julla there In early !all.
Boyles.
Mr. arrJ Mrs. Nonnan Roy are
Third High Series - Loulae spending tho IUJ!lmer at thalr
Gilmore.
traUer home here (the former
Emmet Harvey !arm). Tbey ore In
the process of buildirw: a new
home and will reside here perASK TO WED
PT. PLEASANT - Nell Wade manently.
Guests o! lhe Harvey !amily
Dilly, 21, Davlllville, W. VL, and
Patricia Ann Durfee, 19, Pt. here durirw the holidays were
Pleasant, have made applicaUon Mr. and Mrs. Elba Harvey and
lor a marrla&amp;e ll&lt;e~~ae In tho !amlly or Toledo and slater, Nellie, and lamily.
office or tll:e eount;y clerk.
Mrs. Cecelia McC&amp;lahan ot
Newark Is speOOirw &amp;IXne time
The wedge, wheel and axle, at the home of her GT~~rwhnn _
l•u ......., J .. .-.u ..... ,.;~ .......... _
--- -···
- -·~- 1
. .............
r•....,•"• -.•ew
and pulley are usually defined Frank Shlltz.
John Vale of United ElectrOJ&gt;.
as the six "simple" machines
or tools.
ics Institute In Akroo spent the
'

.

Oturch Usted
PT. PLEASANT - Ho!ghto
United M-st young people
shared In the l'lllnt Pleasont District Youth Fellowship meeting
at Good Shepherd ch,D"ch Tues.
day at 7:30 p.m. This was the
first meeting In anuruluallyheavy schecltle. Tuesda,y evening, a
bridal shower also was held In
the church dining room lor Miss
Pat Durfee.
Wednesday, midWeek Jll'II,Yer
services will begin at 7:30p.m.
with choir practice !ollowlng at
8:35p.m.
Thursday, tile regular 10 a.m.
Bible study will be held. Tlllrsd1U' evening, teachers and ofncers will attend the Conference
Workahop at Mo11011 church w
study new &amp;mday School litera.
ture and materials.
Saturday, tile wecldlng of Miss
~ McGn"•"'*'iofr•·WlHhm
H.' (BUI) Hamm will be perlorin.
od In the church sanctuary al
7:30 p.m. by Rev. Charles Frum
tn an open church service. Miss
McGraw Ia the daUghter of Mr.
and Mrs. Wllltam F. McGraw
~ Maxwell road, and Mr. Hamm
Is tile elder 5011 of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Hsmm of north Ma I n
street. An open reception will
follow In the church dining room.
iilnday, the special evanreltstic services at the Union camPgrounds wiU be81n at 8 p.m. and
will continue through August 2.
A training sesslon lor teachers
~ ..mit classes wUl be hold In
August, cons1stins of nve class
perlDds. Dellntte dale a will be announced later. Two guest mlnlaters -•hod at Helsblo &amp;ulday
with ll8v' Bud Hattlotd speaking
In the morning service ancl Rev.
NorviUe White Sji08!dn£ In the
evening services. Both services
wore weU attendod. ll8v. Frum Ia
attending a loadorlhlp lrslnlns
course at West Virllnla Unlversley.
holltloy weekend with his mother, Nellie Vale.
The !amily of Mra. Edna Fauber entertained Thursday evening
with a cookout celebrating tile
blrtbdoy of her son, Tom Fauber.
SUnday alternoon and evening
guesta o! Mro. Ellie Hooalor and
Mr. and Mrs. Morvin wuaoo
were the former's niece• and
nephews, Mr. and Mrs. Audley
Boyes o! Call!ornla, Mrs. Paul
Mogler and Alfred Boyes o! Rltt..
man, Ohio.
Mrs. Ora Proi!U to alowly Improving at her home here. She Ia
able lD get a - wttlla walker.
Her claughter-h&gt;law, Mrs. D&amp;ra
Neloon of Maryland spent a week
here recently aaalstlng Mr. and
Mra. Prontt.

Property Damage
Reported Heavy

Social Notes

t•.

•ry diatrlbutJoa .,n.DIII el noDliut
volta,.. of
1»141 ar 1IDoiOI

*· ....

Mr. anJ Mrs, Robert Larldns
have purchased the Oscar Bab- !;:~•!:m!:
eock property. The Babcock&amp; are the oJUoa o1 u.. Coii'IP&amp;DJ".
ICMIDULI 011 CNAHII
residing lemj&gt;orarily with Mr. Ftnt ao nh ar ,_
and Mrs. ThurmanBabcoekwhUe
per •aUltor .. .. .. . .. . .• a.ao
Ne.xt • twb
thclr new b[llle near 'I'UJipera
per modi . . . . . . uo. ,., 11ft
Plains is urxler cons.truction.
Next 1100 hb PH moDUt.
plu. 10D twb ,., lnr 1111
Mr, and Mrs. M, L. Clrr have
IIUI.aaum CQaelb' Ia uoe.
received the news that their son. ha..:'eee.:,~ ·.n;. •·• PH btl
Eddie. was married recently to
,... mDatll •. . . ._011 ,... hl
o"r..,.,.
11000 .. . . a.ou ,.. ...,
Evelyn Comminp o! Opp, Ala. AU ,..
Mr, and Mn. Charles Henslev DITIIMINA:nON Of'
" MAXIMUM CAIIIIACITY
attended the post- o.t'Jlce dedi ca..
ne Mlldmw:a CUaetQ Aaa h
tb• nm of the IDdhtdul Dauadl
Uon at Cool ville recenUy•
of Meh tutend ..m,1141, IIUtJUed
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Cozart aDder UM JroYllloai o1 au ldM4..
ule, eae.p' u m....,._. ................
and dau&amp;iJ.ters of lAn'aln spent
The
DlmUd o1 ••"several days with Mrs. Nellie metered ""b llhi.U be 4nlmd.De4
~epanttJ7, , . . ladl\okftll Delaald
COzart an:l Mr. and Mrs. Darrel man '- tb• .... ~ Dtlballd ......
..
lhl coauat.ed ltd OD a IDitand
Cozar,.
ter't'lce 11 1n ...... oC tnllb' CIIJJ
VIsiting Mr. and.Mr•. Guy Hay- tltlo_u., - . . too ,.......,. 1ao4
man were Mr. and Mrs. Elbert •lndJYiduaJ
t"Wttb 121»
tuentU or -.. u..
Dam&amp;IKI ...,. be .......
Fitzpatrick and family, Comle mJaed, at tilt CoatJUI'I .........
Hayman, Jim WaDs am Lila Ridenour and friends of Columbus. kMik Mit. or • u. llltlllult.d Dt..
Mr. and Mrs, Bob Fitzpatrick :::.' derlftd Irena the eoll!MJeW
and da•.....hter u ... -ion, 0 u..
lleuurtdl Dama1dl, eJtMr ' ' ,.,.
"'6'' 1 •t PUo
,l"-..1 lnl\allatQI of ....... ·and Mradl¢ Bap•lllti~'A":IM
""'~and Mr. aiXI Mrs. Norman Helll- ~=• 1nnaDdud ~ _ :
riekson, Marietta, C. B. HI)'Jillll, neept lft uauaual ~. ldlllll .. tiM
maldnunn 10 mlmllol Ja&amp;qnled ..,_
Ch~ster and Mr. and Mrs. Tom watt ttem&amp;Ad neo~ of u .Int.·
Hayman and daughters.
.-r•Uftl duwld: ~~~Mer. or lbe hltb.
ed rqU.tratloll of • tiM1'11111 tne
Mrs. Garnet.Hensleyspentsev- domuul ~Httr. 4u1u \be t11111nt
eral weeks with Mr and Mrs. Joe INirlod. ·111 tn&amp;W~caa ill llllllb' fbae,
•
tual:lnr Jaada. or dem&amp;Ddt o1 eon
Rebecca. Columbus.
ch:ratkm, tbt lleiiUNd Deaaad ...,.
Visiting Mr. an:l Mrs. Fred ::_q~:'d~
Larkins were Mrs. Ven Web- •un fti.IIJ u.. laNd o1 IUOll ...
• 1__
mendl. Wlton Kea&amp;IUJ\ed DeiUDCII
er and VIda , Ttwers PlU.lut
and .,.11 detemllald bJ periodic ten. a
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Larldna Keu.and. DemiDd • dderadiMid. llliD
eoatlnuo lD .a.et aaUl npen..s.d
and lamlly , PorUand.
b7 a •bMqaeat teat.
Mrs Louise Van Meter and
r.umatl4 O.IUJIIb aball 111 ~Jeter•
llliaed from the ClaJUIIII!MII INd. oa
daughter, Stiversville were visit.- eac:h lndJ:ridual rutand .......-. •
itW Mi-. and Mrs. Junior Hauber. to=: .. a.ooo watta at • ,... eat ,
Mrs. Vera Stanley arx:1 family
Nat 1.000 w11U1 at • ,_ - . t
O..r lO.aoD watta at 'fl _... nat
of Tampa. F1L, Mr. and M r s,
'l'he lll.ld!ml.m eu.cttr 1D ..,
Jamea Eckard and family of Hy- raoatb. uau aot ·111 - . than the
mlalarwD bUllaC dtau4. t1 ..,., IJI.
attsvllle. Md,, and Mr. and Mrs. clll~ 1a tile •I'YIM eoatnet.
George ))otson of Reynoldaburg, M~~:~:!atbb' Cbarle ahaU
were visiting Mr. and Mra. M. L. " m tuo , .... em • • ,... kilo-

-

Moyer

Corned Beef

Whole------

.......... Cure 11 , . , c.ltlll

c..... ,

c~

.. DR•.-

Ham_____ .. $1.29 Ham _-.
IHT!wa..,. ....... P - t l

--

11:.

c.nn.~

!lt.

79c ..

Fl'llhart P. D.

:. $1.49 Shrimp

Shrimp

la4l..._.

Ham -----Ita T'"""" """"'

$2.39 Fish Sticks _

1\'.tlt.
,tq:. .

..-..•.,

.

Mr. llJJ:I Mrs. Douglas :ean.
Elkridge, W. VL, were vbittrw
Mr. and Mrs. MUlard Ball.
£'....
Tress o"l'ltainaJ)entsevenldl,ya
with Bess Wkins, Reedntlle.
.Mra. Toblo Sandlyn Ia vtoldng
relatives in F1orlda.
Mr. and Mrs. David Smlth and
family spent a weekend with Mr.
and Mrs. Ted Hayman andda.
tera ln Columbus.
Patay Haskl Dl of lronton spent
a dly Ylaitlrw Mr. and Mra.
Wayne Prince.
Mr. and Mra. Mike Fields and
aon of Belpre were overnl&amp;bt
m~o~~~ata of Mr and Mra. Jim Car·
e_.
•
ter and J lmmie.
Mr. and Mrs. M. L. carr •.Veta·
stanley and family, Mr. andMro,
Jamea Eckard and Mr. and .Mra.
George Ooteon were vlsltinl Mr.
and MrL ftiJ' Woodyard of AI-

ban7

'

e~~~~L

ot

u.. ~·-

of

w u..

Ita T Ilt.

49c (',oct Fillet --

... 39c Flounder __
IHT.....,.._

Jl:l,

-

Fig Bars.:.. ___ 2 :. 49~
.U..Ie

Pot Pies ____ 5

- At:l:lo.- .. ~

Wf.ltlllnt

K_._

HolaT_.

...,_! ..

Aw•••••• Cut

)JeetB ----·-

All Flavors

Ice Cream

.............
KOTEX

aoatnct

4 :. $1

c:•:"
c.,....,to~~~
...,..._.,:-n'-=:!
tou
of -

Willi

l:":..:O:

:...,.-:_~· ~
..,... uadtr ue prowltlou. Row_

at Myrtle Beach, N, C.
Mr. 1111 Mra. Jim Clrutllera
.... _.... Loulavlllo 0
and .&amp;alllii,J
I
J
'I 1P8Dt
several daJ• with Doris Marka.
-VIole! Marks

OMal;;N ••

...a~wa':" U: =..:.,tnotllballtor""!;

u.e

s.

net

a..

ntw · ,_
. , _ ..,.,.. _. • - ta 1 .. Gill Ordlaaaee ellaU .. calnWo

~

q

foiJowtl

m Dell 1a011t11 dDriDI u.e .._
., tlda oMaa.... .... .,..,..,.
... . - ..,. ,.. ........,

-••d:arJ
ldHtriD 11HY1M ID ...
J(uftiGtpall.tJ M Ulle rdtl ..e lora
natter •

1)UI

tor ,..._ UlbUDI'

*"
COICinOe wiUl ............... ...
MniM Ia tile IIUDit'pllltJ' S.

tbn IIBaUft ........... ....

iadi!OolU..~.

,., &amp;.* ....u. MUla; 4M . . .
Of w.· OrdlaUct, U.
Will ~ tllll .., ,........

e.,_,
uaaaanr4•rr
... •Mnl
..me. - ...u
-'* et tM ,....

-··

... raatb 1a ....._ 1

o!JIIuct IJMMM.

•

or au

1!1 1M

1ort111 .. 1ec11011 • fll

Or-

*' or.
rBIUlMI'

W ftll dlfllnDMI .... _ 6
ellcwleu... ua.., Parlli'illl Q)
htrelnallow rtltrn41 to 111 WI
8ecUoa I ... tbl caJnliU.. •

...

\\ttl.

K...... LM....

Cheese ....

.. 68c

~w~

78c Preserves _..

!lit.

I•

99c

......... .......... - ··
~

...\.,....

•.&amp;!. •.olllNII'&gt;''

~ ~"" ~-

d

~--

-

-

. ..).

••

- -·

··---:-- -·

Gleem ____ 2 'i!: $1

$1.15 SID R... &amp; H.T.H.- . . . .

Hidden Magic:"' 68c
Mouth Wash

Listerine 1~e 72e ·

Margarine 2

88c

Silver Dust
... 3 - Sl
Coffee ... 3 Sl.59

Poo.t's

Cold Cream";,8L99

-·-· ... ---=.

111\eo.

--., .· _.&amp;A;JIIi"·

NOIICI 01' APPOttrrMIIIT

.............. L~II-:
lf.U..to _ _ ... _

•kl -

.. llotp ......
. . . ..., el tlae ..... .. Georae
L IIQaua decae... lete of Letart

...

..._
0111o.
Crlllton .,. .._,.. ..........

,.ana~~~,,

Towels

C.Nhl551o lW

Grapes ............

eou~.

lJttll .... ~ wUida Ioiii'

.......

.....

.,.... We ... .., .. la)J, 1• •

'· "·

·-~-e~
N.l t-HJ
' ., . .

...
-·
....................
___
__
-__ ...... _

~""'

Peaches •.•••• 4 ..,49t

Sunrile-Freah
/umbo Z7 Siu

....

. . . . . . . . . tilt

_ . ll

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

~

CNtltln an t~til Ill a.ir

..,.,

P, M, "MIIf

.

toll t•JII 1tl·1t 1M

When Sl. r r·•aac Newton re·- to ta 1t1ta acted to Crl!lclam nf hl• ..t.
• ........,..... .,. ,.,_., enUftc theorlea his frlenda
of t.bt eurnlll: wa. to tbl lhl· · ha
·
'
··
"'"""" ,. • ...,. ",...,.. .._
d to plead with him to pub... ,.. - - ........ ..,.... lllh hls most valuable dis·

3:.: 59e

7-·
Plums------...
29c
.......... -..
Ce~IR

.,

CllluMLa

let• " MM II. ,...... DNa.m•

-. ._B......,
--~~-­
Deecrwt,
.. a.tart:
...... o..av.

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

Wllla11*

lltmCI OP - -

-~~
.- .....
.......
1_
...
.,......_..,
L....._,

Delae,
Toilet Ti~tae

,....

Ne.etarines --

llt.

............
Honeydews ......
Bluebeid-

•

eoveries.

••••••

•

tSc II• T.....elll

l:otl

71'/fJ/A

,_... tn ,...,..,. .., - · ·

lnt ONIIBIMt ~&amp;eludlftl •u u.

-.... -

Pa:l:op Soft Dlot

total IIIIUD' atlliAUOil ...... ...
000 ldlowatwloan Ia 8aF montll, thla ·

frorld:M 1111 tbe lDdl..,_. eoatnet
..tt11 ncb eo~~~~~~m~r, bat Ia DO aiYU
eoa&amp;ract ..,. be
IIIIa

...

59c

tlt.

No~

·~

YIIM "" .-ucT

_

Ml'lk

59c

lpollfllrt -

f".apaett1 ••~ 10 kilowatt~ or 1lle

ot •.,...., UIJ

..

ClovtrValaJIIrMIWry

Ivory ..... 12

Countru Club

, ...,. M

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

$1

K..,... Cl:ocelato

SAW UP 1'0 . .

llh:o - . . " '

.....
, .141 wa&amp;lr •puate coatnete u4H
w. or ou..r Qfllcahrle .......,...
at lbe eOanmre oplloa.

~ua ..,...

~

Z-lb.
crtn.

Tomatoes . _. 5 r:..• $1 Soup----·- 8 :.· 89c Peanut Butter :: ~or $1

h1ltL

aappu.d to • oonMI ... r ,..,_
tb1a lehallule at . . CoMnd tocatloa. WMn two or mGI'I -mo.
. . -.,lied lo • . . . . , _ at . .
eoatnct --.Uoa uld aen~cae, wtth1r1 lbe llaltaU~~a~ •boft e&amp;at.N. ..,.

.._

!: $1

- · ''""'· ...,, .... TIN

"""' ..........:
Flour ------- :;. 49c Bread ...... 4
..... &amp;If ....,., -

Kr0118r

be

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

"""* ~llht

r.a --·--- 3 ~..._~ 89c

1111 -

Shampoo

CottaQe Cheese

Drinks ::-:----10 cans $] Pies ........ 3 ~ $1

:!::u!~aS~~CC::
billed uDder • ..,.,... aemot 0011..
tr~ ou Ke1.end -.moe e1 Ndl
.,... • to .oltQe _. ,._, Wlll

~.

.... 49c
llt.

•
]ar

Big • K canned

a.dl aaperat.e JOial o1 diiiiYerJ or
..me.
1rr oM OJ' more KMaN( ....

Mr. and Mrs. Howard Yowwof
Paden CIQ', w. va.. agent aever·
al dajra tialtlng Mr. alii MrS.
Gu1lt Smith and NeUie Stebem.
Karen Cu1er GWenwater haa
~ aile
_ ... -.~....
eturned
r
.-.e
r Yl....w
.... - .

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
ADIIItiTED: David Woaley
IJmpdna, Pl. Ploaaant; 9luul .
Oldaker, Loon; Connie and !hr.
on Lon&amp; Pl. Ploaaant.
DlliCHARGFD: Mra.J,R,KID&amp;,
~dlms8t.
Jtltle A. Htll...., 3,, l.oll&amp;l, Jr., Pl. Pleaoont; Mra. Fred
driver of a U.S. Moll truck, re- WUlot, Pl. Plealllll; Dania!
eetved a laceration of lilt rlillt Planta, Hender1011; C o n D1 e
arm and le&amp; llh011 hla vohlcle Bowlea, Grlmmo Landlnc Mrs.
drtlllllod off the berm, - IIIIo Jameallurat, Pl&gt;ca; JlftNJ Par·
a ditch and &amp;truck a - · Honltlt1 110118. Pl. Pleaoant: Mrs. !lletlh·
to1c1 officer&amp; ho ha4 botn bavlntl ana Wllllama, Wa,yne, N.J.; Rich·
.-.tn8 dllllculey wllll .lilt ... ard FrUt~, Pl. Plealllll; Mra•
hlele jolt prior to the lllllbttp, Glen Rice, Pl. Plouant.

Pork &amp;Beans 9 !~ $1

, ..vtcl AND ootrriACT
NOYtltONI

u.s.

-01t JIRIUII

K,....,O..Fftol:

a-va~~ay

u.. ..,.... ..,...._

b. comiiiHd . . . . . - " ' -

$1.29

FREE 50

eoaWtet or 00 tM ce)NICIIt:r "·
of tbe N .,...

u.a.

Rolled Roast

quart

can

t~nlnruat.

Wed 1a

Boston

Salad

16 01,; ''

=~~~rill~~C.::~~:.
we.

Tenderau BoneleBt

Flavora

71'/fJ/A

wan ,... month .,w to • Jllxl•
1r..llll C.PMHJ -.u..leD&amp; to •
,.,

49c

......... 69c
... 85c
.....

Suppers --

:!'.

•

lh.

lan,ut luHit

__ ........

Drinks

"All

Baked Ham

49c

Hi-C

::u:=-:.=.t*:u'.:",::

carr

IlioN

Kal:n'a-..or

n•

Ia Jtc\IOD I of WI ~.
(I) .... mutll U.. CnlpuQ- WID

PT. PLEASANT - The Shor·
Ill' I clopartment tm-.stlpltd a
one Yohlcla accident 'J'Uellli.Y,
6:50 a.m. one mile IOitUI of Pl.
Ploaaant on Rl. 2 reaultlngln IDJurJ to one persoo and •1.100

---- .
Baccn -----

:b.::=e.U.:. P.:a!t

*'"'

..... ..,.......lit_

Weiners . . :: $1.19

lb.

volt.. a:llllle Phutl and IID..JCII. lJO.
ItO and ..... J pllaeL
Serva of at Jet.at ou o1 o.. ton·
aol111 dliena~ut~Uot lbaD 'ill ~

Bucket

.. Lot Cllll:lwo

"New Pack" ttywr. . All Mut

FULL
SHANK
HALF

power RniM

Beef or Pork

Bologna . . . .. 59c

Smoked Ham~

.... ,., kwh

All over 1100 lndl
Pll' moiiUt. . .. .. .. . Uo " ' lliw1l
Mlnia'nal:lll Chup 11.11 .... ..wr "'
month,
OINIU.L IIIYICI--IMALL

_

Kroger Premium Quality

kwh

39c

llt.

Fryers ---- .. 39c

tbroutll o"l'bead &amp;1,

trikUOD faclUU..

HOLLYWOOD (UP0-Br01dcasts about racial matters are
dominating television's summer.
And more Negroes wW be used
in the coming season's entertainment series. But many key
Mrs. Helen Barker ln Clifton. figures in HollYWood and New
Mrs. Stella Cross of Erie, Pa. York believe the period of
vlaited recently with Mrs. Katie adjustment between l'ideo a n d
OUver In Clil!oo.
tho black cooununley Is just
Mr. and Mrs. Curtis McDan- beginning to reach a showdown.
For despite the racial proiel, Jr. and son of Jenkinstown,
Pa. vt sited hls parents, Mr. and grams and the added use of
.Mrs. Curtis McDaniel, S.. Two blacks in series, the specter
that is haunting television- says
~ their three children, Shawn
and Pamela, had been vtsltins a high network source- is the
With grandparents for severa1 rear expressed in the Kerner
days. They J.ll r~turned home on commission report: That of two
separate societies developing in
Mond'l)'.
Mrs. Robert Cochran of St. the nation unless major steps
Albans, W. Va. visited her sis- are taken.
ter, Mrs. Lola Jeffers.
With te1evision series opening
Violtlng with Mr. and Mrs. up more arxt more to blacks, it
Las Smith recently were her Is not too likely that whites and
lister, Mrs. Robert Cochran, Negroes will eve.....,ny graviCorporal A, A. and Mrs. GaJ. tate entirely to their awn shows.
ford and son, Greg o! Madtsoo; Al¥1 the separate-l&gt;uHqual tlleoMr. and Mrs. Charles Moore ot ry is not new either. But this
Huntington.
dme, lnatead of orlgtJatlns with
whites, It is emiDiting tram the
arguments of black mllitants
who believe It is hq,eless to
operate in the present structure,
au::l don't want to.
POMEROY LA!mi
More Militant ~porters
SUMMER LEAGUES
And as a white newsman
Indicated on last Thursday's
SUnday Early Mixed Loegue
ABC-TV hour, "Time tor
Points Americans," man,y influential
' 1WDiNo. 1 .......... 38
media executives- video offi' Tam No. 4.. . • • •..••• 44
cials among them- are coming
'lam No. 2 •••.•••• , • 32
to believe that more Negroes
·~ Team No. 3 •• . .••••.• 24
are sympathetic with black
:Telm No.6 ..••••.••• 22
militant views than had pre:Teem No. 5 . • .. .. • .. • 22
viously boon thougbt by whites.
' Hlsh Game - Terry Phaltn,
As eJQ&gt;ressed by a black poet
'211i J.ulia Boyles, 168. IUgh Ser- on another "Time tor AmeriIes - Terry Phalto, 491; Julla cans" broadcas4 one view held
,l;loJies, 433.
by some militants Is that they
simply want their own separate
programming on video, totally
tpart from the "hite world, arxt
Late SUnday Mixed Loegue
pr&lt;t&gt;Ordonate In time to the N..
Points gro .P&lt;I)ulation.
Telm No. 3 .. .. .. .. 18
1'e11Jpos , , • • • • •••• 18
1111 Busters . • • • . .• 16
V.LD. 's .....•..... 26
Telm Four .•.•••. , , 10
Hustlers • , . . , • • •••• 2t
llalllleaps . . , . . . . . . 6
Three Aces • • • • • • . • • 16
ll.C.S. ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ... 4
WUdcats ••...•••••• 12
Hllb Game and Series - Bud Firet..U s • • • • , • • • • • • 10
Mc!Ceaney, 193--533; Betcy Batey,
filch Game and Series 110-615.
Micky Menchtrd, 222-56L
Early Tuesday Mixed Iague
Won Lost
1f.....ll Wonders • . 10
5
Teem No. 4 . . . • ••• ll'h Slh
~No.1 ...... 10
5
,_.. Sportsman .. .. 7
8
Fp Rangers • . • . . Slh Blh

n...

aJt4 louthtm
OJJ:lo meetrte eompu:r o..ntoafttr
uiJed ""Compaaf''), tt. ncotlllm
•nd Ull~~~t, IIWl .. atlthd te
rhar,. fer ltudard HeOIIdur' elte•

Russell. His parents will visit
here later and spend their va-

Local Bowling

Tl

KZlGI

~.

Prtot. whlc:• ·Colurn"bat

mother, Mn. Everett Thomas.
Gary Russell, son o1 MJ·. and
Mrs, Lester Russell, Saulk VIllage, Dl., is visiting his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Cla,ytm

cation.
Mrs. Ida Mae Schneider a n d
grauddaughter, Debbie of Detro!~ visited on Thursday with
Mrs. Catherlne SWatzel and Norman.
Mr. and Mrs. John Aumiller
of Sandusky, Ohio spentthewoekend vtsltins Mr. and Mrs. Reuben Stewart and Gary.
Recent visitors of Mr. and
j Mrs. Lloyd Williams were Mr.
and Mrs. Floyd McDermitt and
11011 of Lexington, Ky.
Vlolting with Mr. and Mrs.
Frank McDermitt on Tuesday
evening were Mr. and Mrs, Denver Blake and daughter, Mr. and
Mrs. Lloyd WUliam.s, Mr. and
Mrs. Richard Gilkey and aon,
.Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Williams
and ""' and daughter of Wash.
lngton, D, C,
Mrs. Alevla SWeeney o! Grove
Cley, Ohio vislted a ,...k with

INAHCI: ~. 101 AND ftXJNO TRB
RATIS WHICH COWIIBtM AND
liOUTIII:UI' OHIO I:L&amp;CI'IliC COW.
Po\NY. ITS IUCCIISORI AND AS810NI. MAY CRAROI FOI l'f'ANI).
ARD S&amp;CoNDA&amp;Y ltllt'I'IIIC 811:_

COUNTY, OHIO, AJIID &amp;IJ"''ABUIR~
.l NG A J'OiliiUL.\ ro• VAtYJNQ
$VCR BATII.
M: IT O~o\IN'Ib BY 'ftm COUK.
en. tW TlfJ: VJU.AGI: OF IIIDDI.&amp;POllT. ITA'I'J: 1()1' ORIOt
Saci'ION 11 '!'bat t1M1
od

·Reserve, Newpor1 News, Va.,
vlalted recently with his grand.

Late

PlAY
THE

VICZ TO CONIUIIiu IN '1'111 vn,..

rlh.
VIctor Ebersbach of tho Na.)o

9

,

The Dolly Sentinel, Mlddlf!llort.-Pmneroy, o .. Jub' 17, 1968

DIDIIMNCI NO. tiWI
A~ OftDINAHCII RIPI:AUNO OID-

·News, Notes

·~,!iodnellday

It ·-

Legal Notice

U!Uuce ----I

... 69c

....
.

1~

•••

...
M...: ·.

•I

•'

�'

.. - . ... .
•· •

to" '-·• ··-·· ··

.. .

l~

-

... ..

--.~·-

... ·~·-··-

·· ·- ·-- -··

·- ·- --

... ---··- ·- -~~-·-···-·-~-· -· ·--

~· ·

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

..

. . ...
.

Tile Dolly Senllnel, llllddloport..P-roy, 0., July 17, 1968

.,Mason Area
f

1Jarra11,

Mr. and Mrs. John
Chris and Joan, spent the weekend at Albury, W, VL, where
'111e,y visited Mr. Harrah's par.
enta, Mr. ~ Mrs. Ba&amp;Jl Hu-

LAGJ: or

TiiomNo.2 ...... 2 13
1HI&amp;tl Game and Series - Mary
VOol, 180-465; E&lt;l Voss, 205-

~·

tale Tuesday Mixed League
'

Points
38
. . . 2 ............. 26
...... t ....... . •. • •• 22
...... 6 •..••.•. ' •••• 16

fi.,s .......... . ..

w...... s League
Won Lost

5 • • • • • • ••• 14

7

1 • . . • • • .•. 13

8
10
12
13
13

Game -- Sarah OWens,
----:c_ Series - NeacU Clr·

Men's Iague
Points

OPEN SUNDAY 10 a.m.-7 p.m.

fl.mltbK te
vm.,.
of llldmeport, Oblo.
thtnlllaftft called
"""hrdelMUtJ")
trte

leniN

U1Utla'IIN

In tlte

for the PHiad ..t torUI ta I!IMtlml

u1e of ltakl:

IDIDIIICI aft.YICI
A..U.W. fw Nllftt'l MI"\''M
CODIQIDUI

......

'""' l'lclllc llyla WW4

Pork Roast

No Pr~rchaae Reauired

I of tbll ordiDIIbCIII ..., IMNb ftHd
•• DO&amp; &amp;o llleeld dtt foUtwlq' 8elled_

To Play/

te

JbMe, •

......

'""' -

"".. 1JD.Itl 90ft~, alttraetlq ftfo

rf'nt,

.upplJH.

10 •wb or 1.- ,.,
•
ntontl for .. . . .. .. . .. .. • ..

nm

U. S. Gorlt. lna.pected

Nellt 10 kwb Mr IIKIBUI l .la " ' hll

Nezt 100 hob
per mDIIth . . . . .. .. l.lo
Nut 100 kwb _., IIIOAth

,.,

.

t•ONDAIY

AYAILA.ILITY

Patra1 u,1d ad ·
it COIUUIMN lldDii
tb• Compaa,'e ltaadarll Mrriet lor
J'IW'POMI ot:ller Ulu ntiCeau.l a.
•114 •teb.ll.abtar 11u111nua Clpeelt1.. leftlf.U, · - .... It IWowatte.
CHAU.CTII 01111 IIIYICI
Altenulblr n.nwnt. ., qcle, Cleo
hvend froll'l tiMI CaalpuT'I eeooa4..
A..Uabll fer

TV .. . in Review

Long Bottom

Activities

Of Week for

At this point, it seems likely
that oU-network and local
programming will terrJ more

and more to give added and
irxllvldual attention to the black
community. The n e t w o r k s,
meanwhile, being a mass
population business, will make
their adjustments in their own
way. Unquestionably, although
the current racial series are
just summer entries, the
networks wm sharply increase
public attair.s programs on
Nep-o ll!e.
Forestall Separatism
But the networks are also
aware that these periodic broadcasts w111 probably not be
enough ul ..tis!Y tile militant
view and those it lnO.uences.
Thus, perhaps the strongest
weapon the national television
organizations have is in the way
they Indicate their new outlook
in the roles blacks play on the
various series. This WiU surely
not stqJ militant desires for
sepantism, l!u~ as the networY
source says, · •&lt;If wDI indicate
our best intentions."
The source adds: "We feel an
absolute obligation to do our
part In heading orr any moves
toward separate societies- and
separatism in general-in the
United States, because Jt must
lead eventually to a dre&amp;dtul
en:l. ,,
Viewers, therefore, will be
able to see in the coming season
whether- 1 n d how- televtsior
makes significant adjustments.
Whatever happens. there is a
long and nervous period al1ead
because of the pressures of
ratings anJ business along with
s~ development~

Point Roek

Social Notes

By NELLIE VALE
Columbia Chapel Church, In
its semi arnaal business meet-ing on Sunday, made plana for
the assembling cf the history ot
the church. Next summer, they
Thursday Late Women'a Iague plan to celebrate the tOOth anni.
Woo Lost versary of the tourdlrw of t h e ·
Team1 . . . . . . . . . . 9
3
church. Mr. and Mrs. Jarrot
Teamt . • , ••••••• 8
4
Bobo were appointed as a comToam6 .......... 7
5
mittee. Mr. Woyne Clark o! AlToam5 ......... 5
7
bany was re-hired for a period
Team3 ••••••••• 5 7
of sb months to corduct services
Team 2 .......... 2 10
oo the second and fourth Sunday
High Game - Sandy Simpson, mornings. Rev. Morris, a re165; High Series- JullaBoylea, tired minister who has pastured
142,
the church tor several years, was
invited to conduct services on
the third Surday o! the month.
Melg~lllla Credit Bureau
Wig lalue
A larse crowd attended the
Firat High Glme - Linda we&lt;ldlng Saturday evening at tho
WlnebrOIUIOT,
C&amp;rJ&gt;enter Church o! Miss SharSecond High Game - Linda cm Cox and Mr. Burt Christian.
Wlnebrenner.
A recf!jltion !allowed at the eo.
Third High Game - Loulae lumbl&amp; School. Mr. Christian Is
Gilmore.
on leave from Army duty and
Flrat High Series - Linda wUl return to Italy sooo. The
Winebrenner.
new Mrs. ChrlsUsn will join him
Second High Series - Julla there In early !all.
Boyles.
Mr. arrJ Mrs. Nonnan Roy are
Third High Series - Loulae spending tho IUJ!lmer at thalr
Gilmore.
traUer home here (the former
Emmet Harvey !arm). Tbey ore In
the process of buildirw: a new
home and will reside here perASK TO WED
PT. PLEASANT - Nell Wade manently.
Guests o! lhe Harvey !amily
Dilly, 21, Davlllville, W. VL, and
Patricia Ann Durfee, 19, Pt. here durirw the holidays were
Pleasant, have made applicaUon Mr. and Mrs. Elba Harvey and
lor a marrla&amp;e ll&lt;e~~ae In tho !amlly or Toledo and slater, Nellie, and lamily.
office or tll:e eount;y clerk.
Mrs. Cecelia McC&amp;lahan ot
Newark Is speOOirw &amp;IXne time
The wedge, wheel and axle, at the home of her GT~~rwhnn _
l•u ......., J .. .-.u ..... ,.;~ .......... _
--- -···
- -·~- 1
. .............
r•....,•"• -.•ew
and pulley are usually defined Frank Shlltz.
John Vale of United ElectrOJ&gt;.
as the six "simple" machines
or tools.
ics Institute In Akroo spent the
'

.

Oturch Usted
PT. PLEASANT - Ho!ghto
United M-st young people
shared In the l'lllnt Pleasont District Youth Fellowship meeting
at Good Shepherd ch,D"ch Tues.
day at 7:30 p.m. This was the
first meeting In anuruluallyheavy schecltle. Tuesda,y evening, a
bridal shower also was held In
the church dining room lor Miss
Pat Durfee.
Wednesday, midWeek Jll'II,Yer
services will begin at 7:30p.m.
with choir practice !ollowlng at
8:35p.m.
Thursday, tile regular 10 a.m.
Bible study will be held. Tlllrsd1U' evening, teachers and ofncers will attend the Conference
Workahop at Mo11011 church w
study new &amp;mday School litera.
ture and materials.
Saturday, tile wecldlng of Miss
~ McGn"•"'*'iofr•·WlHhm
H.' (BUI) Hamm will be perlorin.
od In the church sanctuary al
7:30 p.m. by Rev. Charles Frum
tn an open church service. Miss
McGraw Ia the daUghter of Mr.
and Mrs. Wllltam F. McGraw
~ Maxwell road, and Mr. Hamm
Is tile elder 5011 of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Hsmm of north Ma I n
street. An open reception will
follow In the church dining room.
iilnday, the special evanreltstic services at the Union camPgrounds wiU be81n at 8 p.m. and
will continue through August 2.
A training sesslon lor teachers
~ ..mit classes wUl be hold In
August, cons1stins of nve class
perlDds. Dellntte dale a will be announced later. Two guest mlnlaters -•hod at Helsblo &amp;ulday
with ll8v' Bud Hattlotd speaking
In the morning service ancl Rev.
NorviUe White Sji08!dn£ In the
evening services. Both services
wore weU attendod. ll8v. Frum Ia
attending a loadorlhlp lrslnlns
course at West Virllnla Unlversley.
holltloy weekend with his mother, Nellie Vale.
The !amily of Mra. Edna Fauber entertained Thursday evening
with a cookout celebrating tile
blrtbdoy of her son, Tom Fauber.
SUnday alternoon and evening
guesta o! Mro. Ellie Hooalor and
Mr. and Mrs. Morvin wuaoo
were the former's niece• and
nephews, Mr. and Mrs. Audley
Boyes o! Call!ornla, Mrs. Paul
Mogler and Alfred Boyes o! Rltt..
man, Ohio.
Mrs. Ora Proi!U to alowly Improving at her home here. She Ia
able lD get a - wttlla walker.
Her claughter-h&gt;law, Mrs. D&amp;ra
Neloon of Maryland spent a week
here recently aaalstlng Mr. and
Mra. Prontt.

Property Damage
Reported Heavy

Social Notes

t•.

•ry diatrlbutJoa .,n.DIII el noDliut
volta,.. of
1»141 ar 1IDoiOI

*· ....

Mr. anJ Mrs, Robert Larldns
have purchased the Oscar Bab- !;:~•!:m!:
eock property. The Babcock&amp; are the oJUoa o1 u.. Coii'IP&amp;DJ".
ICMIDULI 011 CNAHII
residing lemj&gt;orarily with Mr. Ftnt ao nh ar ,_
and Mrs. ThurmanBabcoekwhUe
per •aUltor .. .. .. . .. . .• a.ao
Ne.xt • twb
thclr new b[llle near 'I'UJipera
per modi . . . . . . uo. ,., 11ft
Plains is urxler cons.truction.
Next 1100 hb PH moDUt.
plu. 10D twb ,., lnr 1111
Mr, and Mrs. M, L. Clrr have
IIUI.aaum CQaelb' Ia uoe.
received the news that their son. ha..:'eee.:,~ ·.n;. •·• PH btl
Eddie. was married recently to
,... mDatll •. . . ._011 ,... hl
o"r..,.,.
11000 .. . . a.ou ,.. ...,
Evelyn Comminp o! Opp, Ala. AU ,..
Mr, and Mn. Charles Henslev DITIIMINA:nON Of'
" MAXIMUM CAIIIIACITY
attended the post- o.t'Jlce dedi ca..
ne Mlldmw:a CUaetQ Aaa h
tb• nm of the IDdhtdul Dauadl
Uon at Cool ville recenUy•
of Meh tutend ..m,1141, IIUtJUed
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Cozart aDder UM JroYllloai o1 au ldM4..
ule, eae.p' u m....,._. ................
and dau&amp;iJ.ters of lAn'aln spent
The
DlmUd o1 ••"several days with Mrs. Nellie metered ""b llhi.U be 4nlmd.De4
~epanttJ7, , . . ladl\okftll Delaald
COzart an:l Mr. and Mrs. Darrel man '- tb• .... ~ Dtlballd ......
..
lhl coauat.ed ltd OD a IDitand
Cozar,.
ter't'lce 11 1n ...... oC tnllb' CIIJJ
VIsiting Mr. and.Mr•. Guy Hay- tltlo_u., - . . too ,.......,. 1ao4
man were Mr. and Mrs. Elbert •lndJYiduaJ
t"Wttb 121»
tuentU or -.. u..
Dam&amp;IKI ...,. be .......
Fitzpatrick and family, Comle mJaed, at tilt CoatJUI'I .........
Hayman, Jim WaDs am Lila Ridenour and friends of Columbus. kMik Mit. or • u. llltlllult.d Dt..
Mr. and Mrs, Bob Fitzpatrick :::.' derlftd Irena the eoll!MJeW
and da•.....hter u ... -ion, 0 u..
lleuurtdl Dama1dl, eJtMr ' ' ,.,.
"'6'' 1 •t PUo
,l"-..1 lnl\allatQI of ....... ·and Mradl¢ Bap•lllti~'A":IM
""'~and Mr. aiXI Mrs. Norman Helll- ~=• 1nnaDdud ~ _ :
riekson, Marietta, C. B. HI)'Jillll, neept lft uauaual ~. ldlllll .. tiM
maldnunn 10 mlmllol Ja&amp;qnled ..,_
Ch~ster and Mr. and Mrs. Tom watt ttem&amp;Ad neo~ of u .Int.·
Hayman and daughters.
.-r•Uftl duwld: ~~~Mer. or lbe hltb.
ed rqU.tratloll of • tiM1'11111 tne
Mrs. Garnet.Hensleyspentsev- domuul ~Httr. 4u1u \be t11111nt
eral weeks with Mr and Mrs. Joe INirlod. ·111 tn&amp;W~caa ill llllllb' fbae,
•
tual:lnr Jaada. or dem&amp;Ddt o1 eon
Rebecca. Columbus.
ch:ratkm, tbt lleiiUNd Deaaad ...,.
Visiting Mr. an:l Mrs. Fred ::_q~:'d~
Larkins were Mrs. Ven Web- •un fti.IIJ u.. laNd o1 IUOll ...
• 1__
mendl. Wlton Kea&amp;IUJ\ed DeiUDCII
er and VIda , Ttwers PlU.lut
and .,.11 detemllald bJ periodic ten. a
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Larldna Keu.and. DemiDd • dderadiMid. llliD
eoatlnuo lD .a.et aaUl npen..s.d
and lamlly , PorUand.
b7 a •bMqaeat teat.
Mrs Louise Van Meter and
r.umatl4 O.IUJIIb aball 111 ~Jeter•
llliaed from the ClaJUIIII!MII INd. oa
daughter, Stiversville were visit.- eac:h lndJ:ridual rutand .......-. •
itW Mi-. and Mrs. Junior Hauber. to=: .. a.ooo watta at • ,... eat ,
Mrs. Vera Stanley arx:1 family
Nat 1.000 w11U1 at • ,_ - . t
O..r lO.aoD watta at 'fl _... nat
of Tampa. F1L, Mr. and M r s,
'l'he lll.ld!ml.m eu.cttr 1D ..,
Jamea Eckard and family of Hy- raoatb. uau aot ·111 - . than the
mlalarwD bUllaC dtau4. t1 ..,., IJI.
attsvllle. Md,, and Mr. and Mrs. clll~ 1a tile •I'YIM eoatnet.
George ))otson of Reynoldaburg, M~~:~:!atbb' Cbarle ahaU
were visiting Mr. and Mra. M. L. " m tuo , .... em • • ,... kilo-

-

Moyer

Corned Beef

Whole------

.......... Cure 11 , . , c.ltlll

c..... ,

c~

.. DR•.-

Ham_____ .. $1.29 Ham _-.
IHT!wa..,. ....... P - t l

--

11:.

c.nn.~

!lt.

79c ..

Fl'llhart P. D.

:. $1.49 Shrimp

Shrimp

la4l..._.

Ham -----Ita T'"""" """"'

$2.39 Fish Sticks _

1\'.tlt.
,tq:. .

..-..•.,

.

Mr. llJJ:I Mrs. Douglas :ean.
Elkridge, W. VL, were vbittrw
Mr. and Mrs. MUlard Ball.
£'....
Tress o"l'ltainaJ)entsevenldl,ya
with Bess Wkins, Reedntlle.
.Mra. Toblo Sandlyn Ia vtoldng
relatives in F1orlda.
Mr. and Mrs. David Smlth and
family spent a weekend with Mr.
and Mrs. Ted Hayman andda.
tera ln Columbus.
Patay Haskl Dl of lronton spent
a dly Ylaitlrw Mr. and Mra.
Wayne Prince.
Mr. and Mra. Mike Fields and
aon of Belpre were overnl&amp;bt
m~o~~~ata of Mr and Mra. Jim Car·
e_.
•
ter and J lmmie.
Mr. and Mrs. M. L. carr •.Veta·
stanley and family, Mr. andMro,
Jamea Eckard and Mr. and .Mra.
George Ooteon were vlsltinl Mr.
and MrL ftiJ' Woodyard of AI-

ban7

'

e~~~~L

ot

u.. ~·-

of

w u..

Ita T Ilt.

49c (',oct Fillet --

... 39c Flounder __
IHT.....,.._

Jl:l,

-

Fig Bars.:.. ___ 2 :. 49~
.U..Ie

Pot Pies ____ 5

- At:l:lo.- .. ~

Wf.ltlllnt

K_._

HolaT_.

...,_! ..

Aw•••••• Cut

)JeetB ----·-

All Flavors

Ice Cream

.............
KOTEX

aoatnct

4 :. $1

c:•:"
c.,....,to~~~
...,..._.,:-n'-=:!
tou
of -

Willi

l:":..:O:

:...,.-:_~· ~
..,... uadtr ue prowltlou. Row_

at Myrtle Beach, N, C.
Mr. 1111 Mra. Jim Clrutllera
.... _.... Loulavlllo 0
and .&amp;alllii,J
I
J
'I 1P8Dt
several daJ• with Doris Marka.
-VIole! Marks

OMal;;N ••

...a~wa':" U: =..:.,tnotllballtor""!;

u.e

s.

net

a..

ntw · ,_
. , _ ..,.,.. _. • - ta 1 .. Gill Ordlaaaee ellaU .. calnWo

~

q

foiJowtl

m Dell 1a011t11 dDriDI u.e .._
., tlda oMaa.... .... .,..,..,.
... . - ..,. ,.. ........,

-••d:arJ
ldHtriD 11HY1M ID ...
J(uftiGtpall.tJ M Ulle rdtl ..e lora
natter •

1)UI

tor ,..._ UlbUDI'

*"
COICinOe wiUl ............... ...
MniM Ia tile IIUDit'pllltJ' S.

tbn IIBaUft ........... ....

iadi!OolU..~.

,., &amp;.* ....u. MUla; 4M . . .
Of w.· OrdlaUct, U.
Will ~ tllll .., ,........

e.,_,
uaaaanr4•rr
... •Mnl
..me. - ...u
-'* et tM ,....

-··

... raatb 1a ....._ 1

o!JIIuct IJMMM.

•

or au

1!1 1M

1ort111 .. 1ec11011 • fll

Or-

*' or.
rBIUlMI'

W ftll dlfllnDMI .... _ 6
ellcwleu... ua.., Parlli'illl Q)
htrelnallow rtltrn41 to 111 WI
8ecUoa I ... tbl caJnliU.. •

...

\\ttl.

K...... LM....

Cheese ....

.. 68c

~w~

78c Preserves _..

!lit.

I•

99c

......... .......... - ··
~

...\.,....

•.&amp;!. •.olllNII'&gt;''

~ ~"" ~-

d

~--

-

-

. ..).

••

- -·

··---:-- -·

Gleem ____ 2 'i!: $1

$1.15 SID R... &amp; H.T.H.- . . . .

Hidden Magic:"' 68c
Mouth Wash

Listerine 1~e 72e ·

Margarine 2

88c

Silver Dust
... 3 - Sl
Coffee ... 3 Sl.59

Poo.t's

Cold Cream";,8L99

-·-· ... ---=.

111\eo.

--., .· _.&amp;A;JIIi"·

NOIICI 01' APPOttrrMIIIT

.............. L~II-:
lf.U..to _ _ ... _

•kl -

.. llotp ......
. . . ..., el tlae ..... .. Georae
L IIQaua decae... lete of Letart

...

..._
0111o.
Crlllton .,. .._,.. ..........

,.ana~~~,,

Towels

C.Nhl551o lW

Grapes ............

eou~.

lJttll .... ~ wUida Ioiii'

.......

.....

.,.... We ... .., .. la)J, 1• •

'· "·

·-~-e~
N.l t-HJ
' ., . .

...
-·
....................
___
__
-__ ...... _

~""'

Peaches •.•••• 4 ..,49t

Sunrile-Freah
/umbo Z7 Siu

....

. . . . . . . . . tilt

_ . ll

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

~

CNtltln an t~til Ill a.ir

..,.,

P, M, "MIIf

.

toll t•JII 1tl·1t 1M

When Sl. r r·•aac Newton re·- to ta 1t1ta acted to Crl!lclam nf hl• ..t.
• ........,..... .,. ,.,_., enUftc theorlea his frlenda
of t.bt eurnlll: wa. to tbl lhl· · ha
·
'
··
"'"""" ,. • ...,. ",...,.. .._
d to plead with him to pub... ,.. - - ........ ..,.... lllh hls most valuable dis·

3:.: 59e

7-·
Plums------...
29c
.......... -..
Ce~IR

.,

CllluMLa

let• " MM II. ,...... DNa.m•

-. ._B......,
--~~-­
Deecrwt,
.. a.tart:
...... o..av.

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

Wllla11*

lltmCI OP - -

-~~
.- .....
.......
1_
...
.,......_..,
L....._,

Delae,
Toilet Ti~tae

,....

Ne.etarines --

llt.

............
Honeydews ......
Bluebeid-

•

eoveries.

••••••

•

tSc II• T.....elll

l:otl

71'/fJ/A

,_... tn ,...,..,. .., - · ·

lnt ONIIBIMt ~&amp;eludlftl •u u.

-.... -

Pa:l:op Soft Dlot

total IIIIUD' atlliAUOil ...... ...
000 ldlowatwloan Ia 8aF montll, thla ·

frorld:M 1111 tbe lDdl..,_. eoatnet
..tt11 ncb eo~~~~~~m~r, bat Ia DO aiYU
eoa&amp;ract ..,. be
IIIIa

...

59c

tlt.

No~

·~

YIIM "" .-ucT

_

Ml'lk

59c

lpollfllrt -

f".apaett1 ••~ 10 kilowatt~ or 1lle

ot •.,...., UIJ

..

ClovtrValaJIIrMIWry

Ivory ..... 12

Countru Club

, ...,. M

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

$1

K..,... Cl:ocelato

SAW UP 1'0 . .

llh:o - . . " '

.....
, .141 wa&amp;lr •puate coatnete u4H
w. or ou..r Qfllcahrle .......,...
at lbe eOanmre oplloa.

~ua ..,...

~

Z-lb.
crtn.

Tomatoes . _. 5 r:..• $1 Soup----·- 8 :.· 89c Peanut Butter :: ~or $1

h1ltL

aappu.d to • oonMI ... r ,..,_
tb1a lehallule at . . CoMnd tocatloa. WMn two or mGI'I -mo.
. . -.,lied lo • . . . . , _ at . .
eoatnct --.Uoa uld aen~cae, wtth1r1 lbe llaltaU~~a~ •boft e&amp;at.N. ..,.

.._

!: $1

- · ''""'· ...,, .... TIN

"""' ..........:
Flour ------- :;. 49c Bread ...... 4
..... &amp;If ....,., -

Kr0118r

be

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

"""* ~llht

r.a --·--- 3 ~..._~ 89c

1111 -

Shampoo

CottaQe Cheese

Drinks ::-:----10 cans $] Pies ........ 3 ~ $1

:!::u!~aS~~CC::
billed uDder • ..,.,... aemot 0011..
tr~ ou Ke1.end -.moe e1 Ndl
.,... • to .oltQe _. ,._, Wlll

~.

.... 49c
llt.

•
]ar

Big • K canned

a.dl aaperat.e JOial o1 diiiiYerJ or
..me.
1rr oM OJ' more KMaN( ....

Mr. and Mrs. Howard Yowwof
Paden CIQ', w. va.. agent aever·
al dajra tialtlng Mr. alii MrS.
Gu1lt Smith and NeUie Stebem.
Karen Cu1er GWenwater haa
~ aile
_ ... -.~....
eturned
r
.-.e
r Yl....w
.... - .

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
ADIIItiTED: David Woaley
IJmpdna, Pl. Ploaaant; 9luul .
Oldaker, Loon; Connie and !hr.
on Lon&amp; Pl. Ploaaant.
DlliCHARGFD: Mra.J,R,KID&amp;,
~dlms8t.
Jtltle A. Htll...., 3,, l.oll&amp;l, Jr., Pl. Pleaoont; Mra. Fred
driver of a U.S. Moll truck, re- WUlot, Pl. Plealllll; Dania!
eetved a laceration of lilt rlillt Planta, Hender1011; C o n D1 e
arm and le&amp; llh011 hla vohlcle Bowlea, Grlmmo Landlnc Mrs.
drtlllllod off the berm, - IIIIo Jameallurat, Pl&gt;ca; JlftNJ Par·
a ditch and &amp;truck a - · Honltlt1 110118. Pl. Pleaoant: Mrs. !lletlh·
to1c1 officer&amp; ho ha4 botn bavlntl ana Wllllama, Wa,yne, N.J.; Rich·
.-.tn8 dllllculey wllll .lilt ... ard FrUt~, Pl. Plealllll; Mra•
hlele jolt prior to the lllllbttp, Glen Rice, Pl. Plouant.

Pork &amp;Beans 9 !~ $1

, ..vtcl AND ootrriACT
NOYtltONI

u.s.

-01t JIRIUII

K,....,O..Fftol:

a-va~~ay

u.. ..,.... ..,...._

b. comiiiHd . . . . . - " ' -

$1.29

FREE 50

eoaWtet or 00 tM ce)NICIIt:r "·
of tbe N .,...

u.a.

Rolled Roast

quart

can

t~nlnruat.

Wed 1a

Boston

Salad

16 01,; ''

=~~~rill~~C.::~~:.
we.

Tenderau BoneleBt

Flavora

71'/fJ/A

wan ,... month .,w to • Jllxl•
1r..llll C.PMHJ -.u..leD&amp; to •
,.,

49c

......... 69c
... 85c
.....

Suppers --

:!'.

•

lh.

lan,ut luHit

__ ........

Drinks

"All

Baked Ham

49c

Hi-C

::u:=-:.=.t*:u'.:",::

carr

IlioN

Kal:n'a-..or

n•

Ia Jtc\IOD I of WI ~.
(I) .... mutll U.. CnlpuQ- WID

PT. PLEASANT - The Shor·
Ill' I clopartment tm-.stlpltd a
one Yohlcla accident 'J'Uellli.Y,
6:50 a.m. one mile IOitUI of Pl.
Ploaaant on Rl. 2 reaultlngln IDJurJ to one persoo and •1.100

---- .
Baccn -----

:b.::=e.U.:. P.:a!t

*'"'

..... ..,.......lit_

Weiners . . :: $1.19

lb.

volt.. a:llllle Phutl and IID..JCII. lJO.
ItO and ..... J pllaeL
Serva of at Jet.at ou o1 o.. ton·
aol111 dliena~ut~Uot lbaD 'ill ~

Bucket

.. Lot Cllll:lwo

"New Pack" ttywr. . All Mut

FULL
SHANK
HALF

power RniM

Beef or Pork

Bologna . . . .. 59c

Smoked Ham~

.... ,., kwh

All over 1100 lndl
Pll' moiiUt. . .. .. .. . Uo " ' lliw1l
Mlnia'nal:lll Chup 11.11 .... ..wr "'
month,
OINIU.L IIIYICI--IMALL

_

Kroger Premium Quality

kwh

39c

llt.

Fryers ---- .. 39c

tbroutll o"l'bead &amp;1,

trikUOD faclUU..

HOLLYWOOD (UP0-Br01dcasts about racial matters are
dominating television's summer.
And more Negroes wW be used
in the coming season's entertainment series. But many key
Mrs. Helen Barker ln Clifton. figures in HollYWood and New
Mrs. Stella Cross of Erie, Pa. York believe the period of
vlaited recently with Mrs. Katie adjustment between l'ideo a n d
OUver In Clil!oo.
tho black cooununley Is just
Mr. and Mrs. Curtis McDan- beginning to reach a showdown.
For despite the racial proiel, Jr. and son of Jenkinstown,
Pa. vt sited hls parents, Mr. and grams and the added use of
.Mrs. Curtis McDaniel, S.. Two blacks in series, the specter
that is haunting television- says
~ their three children, Shawn
and Pamela, had been vtsltins a high network source- is the
With grandparents for severa1 rear expressed in the Kerner
days. They J.ll r~turned home on commission report: That of two
separate societies developing in
Mond'l)'.
Mrs. Robert Cochran of St. the nation unless major steps
Albans, W. Va. visited her sis- are taken.
ter, Mrs. Lola Jeffers.
With te1evision series opening
Violtlng with Mr. and Mrs. up more arxt more to blacks, it
Las Smith recently were her Is not too likely that whites and
lister, Mrs. Robert Cochran, Negroes will eve.....,ny graviCorporal A, A. and Mrs. GaJ. tate entirely to their awn shows.
ford and son, Greg o! Madtsoo; Al¥1 the separate-l&gt;uHqual tlleoMr. and Mrs. Charles Moore ot ry is not new either. But this
Huntington.
dme, lnatead of orlgtJatlns with
whites, It is emiDiting tram the
arguments of black mllitants
who believe It is hq,eless to
operate in the present structure,
au::l don't want to.
POMEROY LA!mi
More Militant ~porters
SUMMER LEAGUES
And as a white newsman
Indicated on last Thursday's
SUnday Early Mixed Loegue
ABC-TV hour, "Time tor
Points Americans," man,y influential
' 1WDiNo. 1 .......... 38
media executives- video offi' Tam No. 4.. . • • •..••• 44
cials among them- are coming
'lam No. 2 •••.•••• , • 32
to believe that more Negroes
·~ Team No. 3 •• . .••••.• 24
are sympathetic with black
:Telm No.6 ..••••.••• 22
militant views than had pre:Teem No. 5 . • .. .. • .. • 22
viously boon thougbt by whites.
' Hlsh Game - Terry Phaltn,
As eJQ&gt;ressed by a black poet
'211i J.ulia Boyles, 168. IUgh Ser- on another "Time tor AmeriIes - Terry Phalto, 491; Julla cans" broadcas4 one view held
,l;loJies, 433.
by some militants Is that they
simply want their own separate
programming on video, totally
tpart from the "hite world, arxt
Late SUnday Mixed Loegue
pr&lt;t&gt;Ordonate In time to the N..
Points gro .P&lt;I)ulation.
Telm No. 3 .. .. .. .. 18
1'e11Jpos , , • • • • •••• 18
1111 Busters . • • • . .• 16
V.LD. 's .....•..... 26
Telm Four .•.•••. , , 10
Hustlers • , . . , • • •••• 2t
llalllleaps . . , . . . . . . 6
Three Aces • • • • • • . • • 16
ll.C.S. ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ... 4
WUdcats ••...•••••• 12
Hllb Game and Series - Bud Firet..U s • • • • , • • • • • • 10
Mc!Ceaney, 193--533; Betcy Batey,
filch Game and Series 110-615.
Micky Menchtrd, 222-56L
Early Tuesday Mixed Iague
Won Lost
1f.....ll Wonders • . 10
5
Teem No. 4 . . . • ••• ll'h Slh
~No.1 ...... 10
5
,_.. Sportsman .. .. 7
8
Fp Rangers • . • . . Slh Blh

n...

aJt4 louthtm
OJJ:lo meetrte eompu:r o..ntoafttr
uiJed ""Compaaf''), tt. ncotlllm
•nd Ull~~~t, IIWl .. atlthd te
rhar,. fer ltudard HeOIIdur' elte•

Russell. His parents will visit
here later and spend their va-

Local Bowling

Tl

KZlGI

~.

Prtot. whlc:• ·Colurn"bat

mother, Mn. Everett Thomas.
Gary Russell, son o1 MJ·. and
Mrs, Lester Russell, Saulk VIllage, Dl., is visiting his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Cla,ytm

cation.
Mrs. Ida Mae Schneider a n d
grauddaughter, Debbie of Detro!~ visited on Thursday with
Mrs. Catherlne SWatzel and Norman.
Mr. and Mrs. John Aumiller
of Sandusky, Ohio spentthewoekend vtsltins Mr. and Mrs. Reuben Stewart and Gary.
Recent visitors of Mr. and
j Mrs. Lloyd Williams were Mr.
and Mrs. Floyd McDermitt and
11011 of Lexington, Ky.
Vlolting with Mr. and Mrs.
Frank McDermitt on Tuesday
evening were Mr. and Mrs, Denver Blake and daughter, Mr. and
Mrs. Lloyd WUliam.s, Mr. and
Mrs. Richard Gilkey and aon,
.Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Williams
and ""' and daughter of Wash.
lngton, D, C,
Mrs. Alevla SWeeney o! Grove
Cley, Ohio vislted a ,...k with

INAHCI: ~. 101 AND ftXJNO TRB
RATIS WHICH COWIIBtM AND
liOUTIII:UI' OHIO I:L&amp;CI'IliC COW.
Po\NY. ITS IUCCIISORI AND AS810NI. MAY CRAROI FOI l'f'ANI).
ARD S&amp;CoNDA&amp;Y ltllt'I'IIIC 811:_

COUNTY, OHIO, AJIID &amp;IJ"''ABUIR~
.l NG A J'OiliiUL.\ ro• VAtYJNQ
$VCR BATII.
M: IT O~o\IN'Ib BY 'ftm COUK.
en. tW TlfJ: VJU.AGI: OF IIIDDI.&amp;POllT. ITA'I'J: 1()1' ORIOt
Saci'ION 11 '!'bat t1M1
od

·Reserve, Newpor1 News, Va.,
vlalted recently with his grand.

Late

PlAY
THE

VICZ TO CONIUIIiu IN '1'111 vn,..

rlh.
VIctor Ebersbach of tho Na.)o

9

,

The Dolly Sentinel, Mlddlf!llort.-Pmneroy, o .. Jub' 17, 1968

DIDIIMNCI NO. tiWI
A~ OftDINAHCII RIPI:AUNO OID-

·News, Notes

·~,!iodnellday

It ·-

Legal Notice

U!Uuce ----I

... 69c

....
.

1~

•••

...
M...: ·.

•I

•'

�•

.

!

J~ Dally Selllioel. PomerQJ-Mlddi"""':', -~·· Tlle~· July ~6, 1968

'

Grade Resu~~
A LITTLE.. 'HOMEWORK' Watching Want Ads Bri:O.g Top
.
.
...

.

ROBIN MALONE

.

.

@)

,.

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

2SIGNS

-

OP

QUALITY

tires, green exterior Rnish with white nylon top vinyl Jn-

•'

1965 FORD GAL. 4 DOOR ..••............•..$1695
Black finish, clean interior, good

tires, V-8 engine,

W·S..W

auto. trans., power steering, radio, heater. Sharp 1 owner
car.
. 1962 CORV AIR MONZA •...........•.....•• $595
· Coupe. Vinyl interior, bucket seats, auto trans,, Radio, ·

I
' •
'

Heater, good tires.
'

Pomeroy Motor Co.
Loat 1nd Found

Notice

DANCE
Saturday, July 20
I 0:00 til2:00

At
WHISPRING
PINES
Music by "The Raven'''

..

-.

LOST, TWO hounds, shy to
strangers; one is black and
white, one dark tan. Alvin
Myers. Phone 985-3984 Ches• ter.
7-16-Mp

@)

OPEN EVES. 1:00 P.M.
'POMEROY, OHIO

For&lt;Sale

Forhnt

9 PAYMENTS o!- $5 or ..,.,
cash. Must sen 19111 ileiiiN
machine. Fully equipped to
'I'RAILER, Brown's Trallor zig zag, make butlonholel,
sew on buttons, etc., 5 months
Park, Minersville, Phone t927-lutc
!321.
7-IJ.121e old, call 1192-2836.

APARTMENT, close in town,
127 Bulterndl Ave.
7·16-tfc

••

,
'

••

:

:
•

DON'S BARBER Shop will be
GOOD CLEAN dry roots, gin·
closed July 22 through July FURNISHED apartment, lw o
bedrooms, Middleporl. Phmle seng. $28 lb., yellow root, t2
29. Don Weese, Racine.
tfl#l4.
U-lte lb.: May apple root, 30 cents
7-l~tc
lb . Bill Bailey, Reedsville,
Ohio
7-17-41c
TERMITES SWARMING! - I ROOMS AND BATH, 1'10 Mol.
berry Ave., Pomeroy. ConThey are re-productlves, DOl
tact
Rose Sisson, phone IIIJ. SAVE ~OW on aluminum boats,
your worker colony. Free IJI.
1012-13-14 ft .. clean made,
!049 aHer 5 p.m. Phono IIIJ.
opectlons and information 011
sturdy,
three rail bottoms.
f+4lo
crawl apace dangera. No IIU
One mile off Rt 33. on Kings.
salesman, low overhead. 10
bury
Road.
7-17-!0tc
per cent saving&amp;. Allled Pest P'URNISIIED GARAGE oputmenl on Lincoln Hill. UUIItles
Control, Pomeroy,
Oldo.
Plld: ldalts only. Pl!one IIIJ. 1!154 BmCK and 1955 Buick
Phone 991-5669 evenlnp.
body and moror. all lor $55.
6- J.t.tfc
~ Mill,
Phone 949-2413.
7-17-3tc
WILL DO sewing at home - TWO BEDROOM efficiency
apartment, 408 Spring Ave.,
zippers, pockets, pegl!ln8,
For S.le
Pom.roy. Phone 992-2288 .
-~· alterat10111, etc:.
7-14-lfc 14 FOOl' STAR CRAFT RUN~ P'reddl.- 'niobe!: MalOn,
ABOUT, 30 hp Johnson, traij•.
Phone 773-$51.
4-311-llc
er and all accessories, very
NEWLY remodeled
office
good condition, low price,
rooms. corner Court and East
HAPPY HOUR, 9llenang Spr1Dp
phone 992-3163
7-16-5tc
Main . DLrect inquiries to AlNile Club, 5 to 8 p.m. Monhert Hill, Jr., Roher! lffil,
day thru Frldsy. Ladles night
Richard Vaughan, Sr , or Les- Oil FORD Pickup, Ranger, take
every Friday.
U#c
over payments. 67 Cheve!le.
ter Hart.
7-17~
also 14 fool Lone Star Boat,
SHOOTING MATCH Sunday,
88 Evinrude Moror, 40 hp.
July 21 , 12 to 4. Hams, bacon, CLEAN MODERN trailer, extra
also · 6 horses, Bill Hunter,
built.&lt;Jn living room. Ideal lor
hall of hog. Shotguns only.
phone
992-6112.
7-16-4tc
elderly couple, young married
Rutland American Legion
with no children, or one eld·
Home.
7-17-!tc
erly resident. Phone 71~!163. POODLE PUPPIES, AKC Toy
miniature, $'15 and up. stud
7-17-31e
HELEN'S B·A Beauty Salon
service
and gToomlng. Ph0111
opens again. July 23. can
m-5443.
II 3 lie
now for aonointment . Closed
Mondays. Phone 667-3966 Tup.
AKC Golden Retriever puppies.
pera Plains, Ohio.
7-17-3tp
ForS.Ie
524 Ash St., Middleport. 11ft.
BLUE LUSTRE not only rids M.
ts-23-llc
carpets ol soil but leaves pile
W•nt@d To Buy
soft and loft. Rent electric NEW JOHN DEERE dleael doFEED OATS. Charles Yost, MIshampooer
$1 . Baker Furnf. zer, angle blade and hydraunersville. Phone 949-9666.
lire.
?·lUte lic winch, only run 18 hours.
7-l~tp
Also 1964 International twoWOULD LIKE to buy young GUINEA PIGS, male and re- ton truck, good shape. Above
male. Call 992-2301. HII-3tp Mason on left of road. Phone
male hog ready for service.
Contact James Hollon, Sr.,
7'1UI47.
7-2-lfe
(.5 FORD FALCON, good conMinersville. Phone 992-5007.
dition, 6 cylinder; standard. YOU CAN still save $30 or moro
7-16-31&lt;:
Pllone 992-5931.
7-1~
on aluminum boats. can 992ANTIQUES, fumlturo, cUabe1,
2147 or llft.&amp;258. CaM or
mlloellaneous. Mrs. 11owan1 ONE DELRAY electric gutlar terms.
ti-Jt.30te
with amollfler, 165; one sman
C..CD, 100 W. Main St., Pomt..,.
14-lfe bay pony 130. Call alter 5 p.m., SEVEN ROOM furnished farm
Chester, 985-3549.
7-IWc house and 7 8&lt;rell of land.
House just recenUy remodel·
Help W•ntecl
CAR HOPS, apply In person, SOLID STATE slen!o, 19811 nJ. ed. Nke 1111'1'011Rdlnp, 2
nut stereo console with 4 wells, extremely good water,
Crow's Steak Hm~e. 7·1S-61c
speakers, 4 speed automaUc one cellar, two otorage sheds,
changer, paymente of t$.'1$ plenty of garden apace. 'Green
ForS•IeorTr~de
per month or pay bllanee due Aeres" Farm in Rutland.
1115 MUSTANG convertible, I
f7UO. Call 992-1211. 1·1Ut&lt;
7-f.Utp
eyllnder, I speed, also 11t11
Jolustang Yo$, 3 speed, f111auo. EARLY American stmo, AM
lDg available. Call tiiUMI
FM radio, has IOfely maple
after 5 p.m. phone IIIIU741.
llnlsh, 4 speed changer, payu.tle ments of f6.41 per month or
pay balance due tsi.IS. Call
U!IU!II,
7-IUie

CARtUBt

WANTID

ForS.Je
13 FORD

. .. .. .

Gal.u.ie 500 4 dr.
t:ru.U;ematjc Trana. Power
Steering, Power Brakes.

Choice oi two one
:an. Extn nice.
16 PONTIAC
~ecutive

owner

. . . . $2295

4 dr. Sedan. On·

ty 29,902 easy miles by one
o( our repeat cUJtomen.
Like new inside and out.
Bur(andy vinyl interior.
l'S. PB • AT.

.r CHRYSLER

..

. 12595

Newport 4 dr. Sedan.
Beautiful dark green fin ·
ish. One careful local own·
~.

f'qlty equipped.

BWTTNARS
lUlCK
POMTIAC
GMCTRUCKS
Ph.tn-2143

p-r:·Ohlo

'10. 2 POTATOES, cabbqe.
half nmner beans, 0.•1•

Hilton, Portland.

Pomeroy Route.

7•ute

In Business
Section

SMALL POODLES. gr· 'med
free If you wish. West dlgllland White Terriers and mJn.
lature Schnauzers, temporii'J
shots, all A.K.C. Barbroo
Kennels, CoolviTie. Phone fr/.
3654, visitors welcomo.
7-14-10te

CARRIER
WAN'I'ID

- -FM-19111 waJ.
STEREO AM

Gar

•

hllfshteForS.Ie

HOBSTETTER '.
REALTY ~

ments.
IS ACRES - LaJ1e 7 1'0011111,

beth, cellar, bam. hll, •I•·
tern. Minerals. m.oo pay-

menu.

IIELEN or VIRGIL TEAFORD
ASSOCIATEs
mtACUIIB
7-1~

Buslneas ServfcM
AUTO BODY Shoo, new shop
managed by Tom Masters.
Low overhead and skUied labor. Can offer you the verv
best contract. Customers satisfaction guaranteed. 26 Railroad St., Middleport, Phone
9ft.5457. •
7·1~tc
RADIO AND TV REPAIR, house
calls, antenna, sale and Jn.
stallatlon. John Harrison, 701
Broadway St., Middleport,
phone 992-2522.
7·14-tfc

COMPLETE eleetrlcal service.
house wiring, appliance repair. CaD IJ85.S54i Chesler.
7-11-41c
APPLIANCE HOSPITAL- Allthorized Brtgp and strallon
and LaWn Boy, parll an d
serrices; repair Teeumsell
and Kobler engines and aD
small appll111ces, 'n1lrd St.,
Muon, W. Va., John M. ~
pn.
f.INIIe
ELEC'I'ROLUX SALES and ser.
olce: Sweepers, .... wasbero
and polishers. Genuine parts,
Call .....
f.U-tfe
C. C. IIIUDFORD

........

AtJCnOIIIEBR
Clmplelo 8enlet
Cltlt Bra4fft
..... GMt

I I lie
AIR OONDmONING Refrtglll'
atlon semce. Jack'• Refrt,.
eraUon, ll'ow l!aftll. bone
ID-IO'II.
4 • lfa
READY - JIIX t!ODerell delivered rigid to JOID' proJect.
ll'ul and Ill)'. Free 0111males. Phone - - - . Goecleln llead7 - Mil: Co., JllddL&gt;.
part, Ohio.
• • lfa

BtJDGtT PRICIIl fllliiiiiN 1111
OlD' third floor budpt &amp;hop.
Bater Pumllure, Jlldcl!epawt.
OIJ!o.
nl 11e

SEWING

MACIIINil8, repair
oerv1ee. 1111 mabl. WY t2114. 'l'lle , ... Shop, PoiJI.
erq. Aatllorlled 8btpr Salea

Ser.....

IIIII

~:

nut console. These sets are
now brought from over stocked company. WID sell on pay.
ments of $5 ptr mOI!Ih or will
,. __ .,., ~•n. ary ".. m
.
"""' ...,,
yoor homt. Call • • ·.

l•ck W. Caney, Mgr.

Public Sile
HOUSEHOLD SALE, Saturday,
July 20, 11 a.m. We have aold
our home locaied IICI'OII !be
road from WMPO radio otaUon In Bradbury and will sell
the following personal property. No frost G.E. refrigerator,
Welbuilt gas rqe, G.E.
automatic washer, Kenmore
dryer, Magic Chef gas heater,
RCA TV, two bedroom sulles,
one with s11181e bed, bedding,
drapes and curtains, clolblng,
two wardrobea, one wood, one
metal, llvlng room Bulte, occulonal chair, rocker, coffee
table, stands, 7 lamps, pletures, mirrors, rollaway bed,
rug 19llb pad and throw n~g~,
7 plecl! dinette, kilehen cab!·
net, bue cabinet, two utility
cupboards and cart, chest of
drawers, book rack, medicine
cabinet, twenty two Savage
rifle, lawn and porch fum!·
lure, step ladder. lawn mo.r.
er, hand tools and many useful articles not Itemized.
Terms of sale cub. Not responsible for accidents. Sher·
man and Effie Buskirk, 01111•
ers. Sale conducted by 1h e
Bradford Auction Co., Box 116,
Racine. Obi&lt;&gt; 45771. Phone 949..
1!121. Lunch served. This Ill
an nice clean merchandise

--B,y

· FAYE MANllY
Middleport, 0.

7-11-«A!

"'\
0

-

0

OM . , . .

_'c·~ J

.:...., ••_

o

OPEN: 9- 9 WEEKDAYS

1- 5 SUNDAYS

1220 WASHINGTON BLVD.
423-7521

meeting aOO the treasurer's re-

port were read by Erma Cleland.
She also gave a report on the ice
cream social. Plans for serving
lunch at the Gaul sale were discussed and also plans for helping
the firemen with the food stand

at the Meigs Count,y Fair. An
electric roaster was purchased
by the auxiliary. Attending were
Clarice Allen, Cleo Smith. Erma Cleland, Margaret Christy,

a longer visil

Recent visitors of Mr. arxl Mrs.
D. M Cleland have been Mr.
and Mrs. Leland Smith and children, Jeslt), GL, D. D. Cleland,
Mrs. CArpenter, Columbus; Mrs.
Etta Will. Mrs. Audrey Rowan
and Mrs. Robert Berry, Belpre.
Robert Allen, Leesburg, va..
spent a few days with Mr. a n d
Mrs. Clayton Allen and BUI. Mrs.
F. T. Allen, Akron, spent an eve~with lhe Aliens.
Mr. ai'KI Mrs. Harold Hawk,
Mark and Dean, McConnetlsville,

spent the weekend with Mri. L.!tha Wood and Mr. and Mrs. J. L.

BLAETTNARS
Pomeroy

FilE STORAGE

BRING NEW
LIFE TO
YOUR
CARPETING

EXPERI' .
Wheel Alignment

s:ss

-GUARANTEED-

PHONE 992-2094
Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
t1111 E. Main

l'llmoroy, 0

AIIw.,t....-•••
,.....
,_ ........ .....

l"'lth Matte C1,.e CIHtllfll

•••eld lmlttl

If. I ,.....,.,
CALL COOI.VtU.I JII.IM

W, Va,

EVINRlJ)E

...

'68'aln Stodc
,~

3 Llghtwln

~

mained

with

their gra,.ar-

'7-17

0

0

0

0

0

-

EEK AND MEEK
TELL '1bU WMI&gt;.T JtL

Wf\H.J LUI LL ltU
!'eOf'l£ (EAA.U ... YOU

00... l'U. Cl\1£ YOU
q CCIJTS IF ~tt ~fE

CNJ PUSH A 'HI&gt;.VE·I.JOT'
~US T

SO FA!&gt;. AkJD IJO

lv\ORE I

INFORMATION
NEWS
presents

Spcial Notes

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

Sunday School attendance July
7 was 67, of!ering $19.12. The
Homecoming program committee was named as follows: Genevieve Guthrie, Thelma Henderson and Florence Spencer.
Worship services were held
at 10:45 a. m. with Johnn,y Taylor, of the Air Force, staUoned
near Dayton, as leader. Worship
services were held St.uxtay evening at 7:45 with the Rev. Cas-

Keeping Meigs

to.
Teresa Swartz of Williamstown, W, Va., has been visiting
her grandparents, Mr. and Mn.
Hobart SWartz tor the past week.
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Ather·

Enlerlained

W, Va., and Danny Bush, Mason,
were recent SurKlay afternoon
guests of Min Fern Showalter.

ton and family o! Colwnbus have

Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Orr lett

been visiting his parents, Mr.

FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS

IIJHA"r FAMOJS C"AIZ.".:.Tfr.?.
SAID ''WHO'S ~E&gt;J EATINIO
MY f'OOJ!IC'&lt;o&lt; ?•

4

Gallic and
Mason Area
lnfor,med As
Well As

and Mrs. Arthur Atherton, for

for a vacation In canada.

several days during their vac ...

Market Report
SCIOTO LIVESTOCK
llogs: 190~20, 22.10; No. I,
22.35; 220~40, 21.60; 210~60,
21.10; 260~80. 20.60; 180-190,
21.60; Boaro, 16.35-16.50; Light
SOWs, 17.90-19.05; Heavy SOWs,
18.15-18.40; Pigs by the Head,
15~0. 10.
Cattle: Cholee steers, 27.50·
28.10; Good, 26.70~7; Slandard,
24.50~5. 75; Good Heifers, 2526.50; Standard, 22.50~4; Good
Cows, 19.35-:Zl; UWJQ-, 17-18..
25; Cutter and Canner, 16-down;
Bulls, 22.90~4.60; Heavy Feed·
er Steera, 25~7.40; Steck Cal!
Steers, 25~9.
Veal Calves: Cholee, 35..'1.\•.
50; Good. 34; Medium, 32; Com.

lion. Their eldest daughter,
Christine, has spent a couple of
weeks with her grorq,arents.
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Swartz
and family o! Marleltl visited her
mother, Nina RobiiiiG!I, and aunt,
. Clsra Follrod, and his parents,
Mr• and Mr s. Hobort Swartz, one
day last week.
Most o! the local families attended the auctloo at the hmne o!
. the late Delhert and Unnle Gaul
Saturda1 alter noon.
Mr. and Mrs. Jlmea CrockarellandfamUy, Alexandria, Vs.,
are spending a lew days at their
!arm home here. The house Is to
be occupied by a renter aoon.
Mr. and Mra. Harry Guthrie
recently visited their son-in-law
and doughoor, Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Yost and !lmlly, at SUaar

DAILY CROSSWORD
~

-~-----~~---··---'-- ····-··· - ~,. ___

machlnoo

13. God of ·

love

.... .,.....

11. Oaewho

1e. Father or
motller
II.Aopr

' 11. Kenlment

IO.Deput
21.
lwlurtver
, _
_ te

h. Ulloa

rr.

TRADERS DAYI

&lt;.l..... unJI

flour
21. Blneen
2e. Hall

5.8UAIOd
I. Aerou
7.8bMr

.....

a.H&amp;vmc

Unaeramble the. four Jumbl..,
- letter 1o eaeh squm, to
form four onllnar1 word•.

em

Z1.8a.Uor

2t. SUI•
11. Greek
pend
letter
31. Te~ :
ll.ao.d
Ger.
U. Paeklaway 12.Wiq·
IT. lndeflallo
like
artlell
33. KlDdot

lt. Girl'• name
21. Afllx
2J.Bovtne
2S. Exetamatlon

JJW/t6W1Y£;::.:~==

-r......, •• , ....
3T.Gnat

....
u.

Lake
S8. Notfut

Tllnialan

u. DeYoured

Utll

43. - and

:ae. TropiCal

YOOST

(]

~(realty

fruit

ad)

II I I

rRUNEY±
J ( )

...leeltd
pl&lt;len
Mm:Jwl.
dlll

II

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

IO.RaottatloD
ll.~ob

Q, Warp-yam

-.....

y....,..

UIIIT NAYM l'lUIIIII
. Ann"'a .... th •''"' Mill ., •• pi
Alo --"'lunt!I'TO In"

. II. Altnll,pnt

fiUit

II. Rip

~-

fl.l(lx
M. CarTy

l.lllltalco

DAILY (!RYPTOQUO'l'll-ii.Ja-

tA-

A-X YDL .A .II. X II ..

II LOKoFIILLO. W

'

~.._...,

-

..a. Ntbula
I•

·
pitollor
' ' ' II01VJII

'

(......, .._....,

ll.ota

4ti.Abowtd
.• fi.Uddtd

v•iiiPC!iia, wnio

_____

2f. Source
ol

"· Ill
what
manner

Corner Third and Olive

-.. ···-------- ____......._

2. Stop

a.eue

21.ApPelldqe

K~!ts Coq~mun!ty Au.dlon Bam

..

•• Cbec:k
10. Afflrm
11. Ho11Unr

-

Old fashioned trader's ~ and nea morket ovary Saturday. Hant a stalllnotdeor outall ~ tor~. Brillll your
own display table and aell your own ltemo. Buy, sell, and
trade antiques, gun1, coins, tools, dishes. Jewelcy,
knhea, trult and vegetables, hardWare, clothti'Ji, &amp;addles,
bridles, and other tack, or a111thl11t! else that )'(Ill want
to clear out ot your prqe, atde, blsemem., or barn.
Items which you caiVIOt oall or trade cluriqr the da.Y lllll'
he aold at our reaular Slturda1 oVOIIIqr aueUon II Ume
permito. For ln!ormaUon Clll R. E. Klillta, 44~917.

... __........ ~ .....

1. Reverberate
• . Pl&amp;y
bo.. to....ay

Grove.
•
The Women' a Societ;yo!Chriat; ·
ian Service wW hold Ill r~
meeting next Tuesdly, July 180
at the home of Genevieve Gutho
rle with Nellie Parker leadlri
the program.
•
Copt and Mrs. John Tayloi
and family of the Air Foree, neai
Dayton, SI&gt;Onl the weekend witH:
his parents, Mr. and ldra. Ern.:
eat Taylor, and attended ehurel[
here Sunday.

A honey!Me haa flve eyes.

-

-- .........

WMPO

')iljred

Mrs. RogerGrueserarxldaughters, Logan, spent the weekend
with Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Orr.
Lisa, Susan and Jennifer re-

D

PekliJ(!

tr•lnlng

were Mrs. Eichinger and son,
Don, an:l Mrs. Laura Hartung.

0

m eAIUJ lHE 011\ER

If the 1nswer is yes, see or call
K1tie Crow, The D•ily Sentinel,

Mrs. Raymond Van Mater and
son, Youngstown, spent a rew
days with Mrs. Mabel VanMeter.
Laura JeanEichi~ercelebrat­
ed her 5th birthday Sunday by being taken for an airplane ride by
her uncle, Lt. Edgar Hartung, at
the Athens airport. Others going

o o
-.......
0

DO YOU NEED SPENDING MONEY?

3 ROOMS
New Furniture
ONLY $'299

-

WINKLE.

BALES AND SERVICE

·Schwarzel Marine
Hor.,kin_gport,
Ohio
.... JilroNE • . -

AGE$10.17
Pomeroy-Middleport Area

We llhlrpen

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

JOE KfRR,'!'OUVE
GONElOOFAA
IN TEASit-JG

0

AmNTION BOYS &amp; GIRLSI

Hawk.
Jotm W. Frank has returned
to his home in &amp;.. Cloud, Fla.,
alter a visit with Mr. and Mrs.
Guy Swnmerfleld and Mn. Nora
Brawn.
Mr. and Mrs. Kennell! Wickham and children, Richmoll:l, re-cedly apent a weekend with Mr.
and Mrs. John Wickham and oth- merclal, 29--doWn; Baby Calves
er relatives.
by the Head, 2!-M.
Charles EicbiJWOr, WashingLambs: Choice, 26. 70; Good,
ton, D, C., apent the weekend 25.70; Modlum, 21.
with Mrs. Henry Etcbinger and

,..... ,.,..

.

7n-5543

9~Sportwln

-

~ ·

_
-

AIC CLEANERS
Muo~~o

Relllve Hie ariain11 bt111tr If JOif "'Il·
Cloud ih ra\11' oWll home bJ Yoa Jcltlllller
dr~•l01m tn~tlltd. ND mUlL No f - No
01111. Un ruu tile 11111• ••r-

lnzy Newell, Grace Gumpl, Jean ents ror a week's visiL The Orrs
lliXI granddaughters spent an evesexson and Opal Eichinger.
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Matlack ning with Mr. and Mrs. Bob Lee
and Donna Kay, Lakeworth, Fla., and children, Bashan.
Mr. Curtis Smith, Co«agevil!e,
spent two weeks with Mr. and

Mrs. Roy Christ)! and Mr. and
Mrs. Virgil Roush. Donna Kay
remained with the Olrlstys tor

From the Largest Truek or
Bullcbzor Radiator To The
Smalleat Heater Core.

SAVE sPACE

!;LARICE ALLEN

dent. Minutes of the previous

CReATION WA'I DAIO
AS A ROACH .~1

BELPRE, OHIO

992·2156. She'll tell you how to Hrn
it •nd at the 11me time get valueble

ident. Cleo Smith acted as presi-

i'IQPE.. BUT WHEN TH' VAPO~

LII'TED-&amp;V'""' FUIA IN

MOTH PROOFING

T•••
MAlON
..llliMI11iH
--···-- tft_

. '"' ......... ..

~K ...

U'L ABNER

PH. 99:1-2143

MILLER MOBILE HOMES

$30.00 .......lllct •
Cetwohlt

'

'

IN THE MID-OHIO VAWY
MDve into a completely furnished, brand
new home that lets you enjoy life at its care
free best.
COMPARE OUR SERVICE
QUALITY &amp; PRICE AS LOW AS _ $3495.00

7·1Uie

house. In the absence ofthepres-

w.

~D A_RaiOMtJU6

816 VARMINT

MOBILE HOMES

ThJ· t.~{es Auxiliary o(i he
Chester Fire Department met ·
Wednesday evening at the .fire- family.

CIGARI!."''''8 ftnd1nc ..........
lnd smtee. ABC llljllrprllel,
M-. v•. Pblllle maa.
Mile

TH'

EXPERIENCED
lllllltw Service

l.lrgest Dlaplay Of

Social Notes

.-.rc

~ Sf'l;eD6 l&lt;a&gt;JEW

THAT PROBLEM WIF

Services

MIWR HOMES

Chester

CONTAa

--

PHONE
• 992-2181

66J -11

WANT A PLACE lo mt and relax. a s room collage with
beautiful view of Ohio River
at Long Botlom. VirgO Walker, Raelne, Oblo.
7-11~

A MALOIE 6eJ&lt;IIICEi

HAV~

offer.

POMEROY ,

IN MIDDlEPORr

&amp;

~ - ··

~ Dllee!DIIedl
Free Benruo and Ttmu
Walehel . ,,time to cheek

All

NO. 8, rroKER OOAL al former &lt;linton Coal Co. tipple,
located 6 miles east of Wellston. Phclne 38UI8'T Wellston
lor Information. Walton Coal
Company.
7-11).301e

1968 STEREO RADIO combination. Handsome walnut eonsole. This has BSR automalle GBO. ROB81'ii'l'l ER* 8nbr
VILLAGE STORE - Stod&lt;,
record changer. Take ovtr
nxtures, doing good. 7 room
payments
of
ts
ptr month or
P'URNISIIED and llllfumllbecl
homt, bath, 110 acres. $110.00
pay ~ .46. Call 11112-11111.
apartments. Close to 1ehool.
per month. Alter do'tm pay7-14-lte
Phone 99UIM.
111-18-tfe
ment.
I'OMEilOY - Stone warehouse,
TRAILER SPACE, all utllltlol FOUR ROOM HOUSE, INrth,
two floors 25 1 63, convenJ.
avaDable. Inquire 158 Mulber- extra lot and house trailer In
enUy located.
ry after 3 or 5 p.m. Write P. Pomeroy. Call 992-3437 after !IYRA(lUS! - 6 rooms, bal!l,
7-14-121p
0. Box 425 Pomeroy. 5-19-tfe I p.m.
furnace, level lot. tsa.OO pay-

---

APPliANCE SALE

7...U.

•

Bu~iness

(JULY ONLY)

POTATOES,. belnt, eabboge
and beell, Pbon&lt;i IIW2S4.
Oarence ·Proffitt, Portland,
1-7-t!c

PLENTY of space for one trail·
er wllh all facli!Ues, In Syracuse. Call 992-391M. 4-IJ.Ue

----

.•

ow LaiMimlrla Siammerllmo

FIVE ROOM HOUSE and bath,
ooe floor, partly furnished II
dellred. 78S S. Second A.._,
Middleport. Can be bJ
appointment after 5 p.m. El,
den Walburn, phone llaaOII.

terlor trim. A sharp 1 owner trade in.

•

hrSiile

Olllo:·

"1965 CHEVELLE MALffiU .• . . .• .•....•....•• $1S95
Conv, v..s engine, powerglide, radio, heater, new whitewall
I

'IE'll NEVER

'

.'

.

" ~ Qolelolloa
OHtOXH KHUHC VDUH DO
KMH~C
XBJHCNBHW ~DK DKOHC

' N•K

,,.:;~.;,'··.~~:! oidoply aloo~ for . -... r,. 111111.....,.. A 11 ...,;j
;,.p;.~,.,lh'" L'a, X forlhe t,. O'o, oti:. SJoCII ~­
"
lhelllllth llld lo...,._ Iff
ofo II llato.
Cbt codt ltttll'l an ~t
.i; . 1

lilt·'"""*

w•sH . oilxowaFK .-JoeiH

It•

\'ooli&gt;rU'J'o at&gt;..W.oolel I ALWAYS TRIKK TID: n.GW•

1¥ C.,.N ~IIJI, US, AND KNOW WHAT Wll ARI: THINK·
INu ·ABO'U'I'.-I:l.IOT
.
·
to 1 • XIIII: T•turo 8¥1tt~tt, roc.)
:

•

,.·

'

'

THE'I SHOULD'VE SENT
A COUPLE 0' FLEAS UP
IN THAT ~OCKET­
'STEAD 0' '10'/W' ME!f

�•

.

!

J~ Dally Selllioel. PomerQJ-Mlddi"""':', -~·· Tlle~· July ~6, 1968

'

Grade Resu~~
A LITTLE.. 'HOMEWORK' Watching Want Ads Bri:O.g Top
.
.
...

.

ROBIN MALONE

.

.

@)

,.

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

2SIGNS

-

OP

QUALITY

tires, green exterior Rnish with white nylon top vinyl Jn-

•'

1965 FORD GAL. 4 DOOR ..••............•..$1695
Black finish, clean interior, good

tires, V-8 engine,

W·S..W

auto. trans., power steering, radio, heater. Sharp 1 owner
car.
. 1962 CORV AIR MONZA •...........•.....•• $595
· Coupe. Vinyl interior, bucket seats, auto trans,, Radio, ·

I
' •
'

Heater, good tires.
'

Pomeroy Motor Co.
Loat 1nd Found

Notice

DANCE
Saturday, July 20
I 0:00 til2:00

At
WHISPRING
PINES
Music by "The Raven'''

..

-.

LOST, TWO hounds, shy to
strangers; one is black and
white, one dark tan. Alvin
Myers. Phone 985-3984 Ches• ter.
7-16-Mp

@)

OPEN EVES. 1:00 P.M.
'POMEROY, OHIO

For&lt;Sale

Forhnt

9 PAYMENTS o!- $5 or ..,.,
cash. Must sen 19111 ileiiiN
machine. Fully equipped to
'I'RAILER, Brown's Trallor zig zag, make butlonholel,
sew on buttons, etc., 5 months
Park, Minersville, Phone t927-lutc
!321.
7-IJ.121e old, call 1192-2836.

APARTMENT, close in town,
127 Bulterndl Ave.
7·16-tfc

••

,
'

••

:

:
•

DON'S BARBER Shop will be
GOOD CLEAN dry roots, gin·
closed July 22 through July FURNISHED apartment, lw o
bedrooms, Middleporl. Phmle seng. $28 lb., yellow root, t2
29. Don Weese, Racine.
tfl#l4.
U-lte lb.: May apple root, 30 cents
7-l~tc
lb . Bill Bailey, Reedsville,
Ohio
7-17-41c
TERMITES SWARMING! - I ROOMS AND BATH, 1'10 Mol.
berry Ave., Pomeroy. ConThey are re-productlves, DOl
tact
Rose Sisson, phone IIIJ. SAVE ~OW on aluminum boats,
your worker colony. Free IJI.
1012-13-14 ft .. clean made,
!049 aHer 5 p.m. Phono IIIJ.
opectlons and information 011
sturdy,
three rail bottoms.
f+4lo
crawl apace dangera. No IIU
One mile off Rt 33. on Kings.
salesman, low overhead. 10
bury
Road.
7-17-!0tc
per cent saving&amp;. Allled Pest P'URNISIIED GARAGE oputmenl on Lincoln Hill. UUIItles
Control, Pomeroy,
Oldo.
Plld: ldalts only. Pl!one IIIJ. 1!154 BmCK and 1955 Buick
Phone 991-5669 evenlnp.
body and moror. all lor $55.
6- J.t.tfc
~ Mill,
Phone 949-2413.
7-17-3tc
WILL DO sewing at home - TWO BEDROOM efficiency
apartment, 408 Spring Ave.,
zippers, pockets, pegl!ln8,
For S.le
Pom.roy. Phone 992-2288 .
-~· alterat10111, etc:.
7-14-lfc 14 FOOl' STAR CRAFT RUN~ P'reddl.- 'niobe!: MalOn,
ABOUT, 30 hp Johnson, traij•.
Phone 773-$51.
4-311-llc
er and all accessories, very
NEWLY remodeled
office
good condition, low price,
rooms. corner Court and East
HAPPY HOUR, 9llenang Spr1Dp
phone 992-3163
7-16-5tc
Main . DLrect inquiries to AlNile Club, 5 to 8 p.m. Monhert Hill, Jr., Roher! lffil,
day thru Frldsy. Ladles night
Richard Vaughan, Sr , or Les- Oil FORD Pickup, Ranger, take
every Friday.
U#c
over payments. 67 Cheve!le.
ter Hart.
7-17~
also 14 fool Lone Star Boat,
SHOOTING MATCH Sunday,
88 Evinrude Moror, 40 hp.
July 21 , 12 to 4. Hams, bacon, CLEAN MODERN trailer, extra
also · 6 horses, Bill Hunter,
built.&lt;Jn living room. Ideal lor
hall of hog. Shotguns only.
phone
992-6112.
7-16-4tc
elderly couple, young married
Rutland American Legion
with no children, or one eld·
Home.
7-17-!tc
erly resident. Phone 71~!163. POODLE PUPPIES, AKC Toy
miniature, $'15 and up. stud
7-17-31e
HELEN'S B·A Beauty Salon
service
and gToomlng. Ph0111
opens again. July 23. can
m-5443.
II 3 lie
now for aonointment . Closed
Mondays. Phone 667-3966 Tup.
AKC Golden Retriever puppies.
pera Plains, Ohio.
7-17-3tp
ForS.Ie
524 Ash St., Middleport. 11ft.
BLUE LUSTRE not only rids M.
ts-23-llc
carpets ol soil but leaves pile
W•nt@d To Buy
soft and loft. Rent electric NEW JOHN DEERE dleael doFEED OATS. Charles Yost, MIshampooer
$1 . Baker Furnf. zer, angle blade and hydraunersville. Phone 949-9666.
lire.
?·lUte lic winch, only run 18 hours.
7-l~tp
Also 1964 International twoWOULD LIKE to buy young GUINEA PIGS, male and re- ton truck, good shape. Above
male. Call 992-2301. HII-3tp Mason on left of road. Phone
male hog ready for service.
Contact James Hollon, Sr.,
7'1UI47.
7-2-lfe
(.5 FORD FALCON, good conMinersville. Phone 992-5007.
dition, 6 cylinder; standard. YOU CAN still save $30 or moro
7-16-31&lt;:
Pllone 992-5931.
7-1~
on aluminum boats. can 992ANTIQUES, fumlturo, cUabe1,
2147 or llft.&amp;258. CaM or
mlloellaneous. Mrs. 11owan1 ONE DELRAY electric gutlar terms.
ti-Jt.30te
with amollfler, 165; one sman
C..CD, 100 W. Main St., Pomt..,.
14-lfe bay pony 130. Call alter 5 p.m., SEVEN ROOM furnished farm
Chester, 985-3549.
7-IWc house and 7 8&lt;rell of land.
House just recenUy remodel·
Help W•ntecl
CAR HOPS, apply In person, SOLID STATE slen!o, 19811 nJ. ed. Nke 1111'1'011Rdlnp, 2
nut stereo console with 4 wells, extremely good water,
Crow's Steak Hm~e. 7·1S-61c
speakers, 4 speed automaUc one cellar, two otorage sheds,
changer, paymente of t$.'1$ plenty of garden apace. 'Green
ForS•IeorTr~de
per month or pay bllanee due Aeres" Farm in Rutland.
1115 MUSTANG convertible, I
f7UO. Call 992-1211. 1·1Ut&lt;
7-f.Utp
eyllnder, I speed, also 11t11
Jolustang Yo$, 3 speed, f111auo. EARLY American stmo, AM
lDg available. Call tiiUMI
FM radio, has IOfely maple
after 5 p.m. phone IIIIU741.
llnlsh, 4 speed changer, payu.tle ments of f6.41 per month or
pay balance due tsi.IS. Call
U!IU!II,
7-IUie

CARtUBt

WANTID

ForS.Je
13 FORD

. .. .. .

Gal.u.ie 500 4 dr.
t:ru.U;ematjc Trana. Power
Steering, Power Brakes.

Choice oi two one
:an. Extn nice.
16 PONTIAC
~ecutive

owner

. . . . $2295

4 dr. Sedan. On·

ty 29,902 easy miles by one
o( our repeat cUJtomen.
Like new inside and out.
Bur(andy vinyl interior.
l'S. PB • AT.

.r CHRYSLER

..

. 12595

Newport 4 dr. Sedan.
Beautiful dark green fin ·
ish. One careful local own·
~.

f'qlty equipped.

BWTTNARS
lUlCK
POMTIAC
GMCTRUCKS
Ph.tn-2143

p-r:·Ohlo

'10. 2 POTATOES, cabbqe.
half nmner beans, 0.•1•

Hilton, Portland.

Pomeroy Route.

7•ute

In Business
Section

SMALL POODLES. gr· 'med
free If you wish. West dlgllland White Terriers and mJn.
lature Schnauzers, temporii'J
shots, all A.K.C. Barbroo
Kennels, CoolviTie. Phone fr/.
3654, visitors welcomo.
7-14-10te

CARRIER
WAN'I'ID

- -FM-19111 waJ.
STEREO AM

Gar

•

hllfshteForS.Ie

HOBSTETTER '.
REALTY ~

ments.
IS ACRES - LaJ1e 7 1'0011111,

beth, cellar, bam. hll, •I•·
tern. Minerals. m.oo pay-

menu.

IIELEN or VIRGIL TEAFORD
ASSOCIATEs
mtACUIIB
7-1~

Buslneas ServfcM
AUTO BODY Shoo, new shop
managed by Tom Masters.
Low overhead and skUied labor. Can offer you the verv
best contract. Customers satisfaction guaranteed. 26 Railroad St., Middleport, Phone
9ft.5457. •
7·1~tc
RADIO AND TV REPAIR, house
calls, antenna, sale and Jn.
stallatlon. John Harrison, 701
Broadway St., Middleport,
phone 992-2522.
7·14-tfc

COMPLETE eleetrlcal service.
house wiring, appliance repair. CaD IJ85.S54i Chesler.
7-11-41c
APPLIANCE HOSPITAL- Allthorized Brtgp and strallon
and LaWn Boy, parll an d
serrices; repair Teeumsell
and Kobler engines and aD
small appll111ces, 'n1lrd St.,
Muon, W. Va., John M. ~
pn.
f.INIIe
ELEC'I'ROLUX SALES and ser.
olce: Sweepers, .... wasbero
and polishers. Genuine parts,
Call .....
f.U-tfe
C. C. IIIUDFORD

........

AtJCnOIIIEBR
Clmplelo 8enlet
Cltlt Bra4fft
..... GMt

I I lie
AIR OONDmONING Refrtglll'
atlon semce. Jack'• Refrt,.
eraUon, ll'ow l!aftll. bone
ID-IO'II.
4 • lfa
READY - JIIX t!ODerell delivered rigid to JOID' proJect.
ll'ul and Ill)'. Free 0111males. Phone - - - . Goecleln llead7 - Mil: Co., JllddL&gt;.
part, Ohio.
• • lfa

BtJDGtT PRICIIl fllliiiiiN 1111
OlD' third floor budpt &amp;hop.
Bater Pumllure, Jlldcl!epawt.
OIJ!o.
nl 11e

SEWING

MACIIINil8, repair
oerv1ee. 1111 mabl. WY t2114. 'l'lle , ... Shop, PoiJI.
erq. Aatllorlled 8btpr Salea

Ser.....

IIIII

~:

nut console. These sets are
now brought from over stocked company. WID sell on pay.
ments of $5 ptr mOI!Ih or will
,. __ .,., ~•n. ary ".. m
.
"""' ...,,
yoor homt. Call • • ·.

l•ck W. Caney, Mgr.

Public Sile
HOUSEHOLD SALE, Saturday,
July 20, 11 a.m. We have aold
our home locaied IICI'OII !be
road from WMPO radio otaUon In Bradbury and will sell
the following personal property. No frost G.E. refrigerator,
Welbuilt gas rqe, G.E.
automatic washer, Kenmore
dryer, Magic Chef gas heater,
RCA TV, two bedroom sulles,
one with s11181e bed, bedding,
drapes and curtains, clolblng,
two wardrobea, one wood, one
metal, llvlng room Bulte, occulonal chair, rocker, coffee
table, stands, 7 lamps, pletures, mirrors, rollaway bed,
rug 19llb pad and throw n~g~,
7 plecl! dinette, kilehen cab!·
net, bue cabinet, two utility
cupboards and cart, chest of
drawers, book rack, medicine
cabinet, twenty two Savage
rifle, lawn and porch fum!·
lure, step ladder. lawn mo.r.
er, hand tools and many useful articles not Itemized.
Terms of sale cub. Not responsible for accidents. Sher·
man and Effie Buskirk, 01111•
ers. Sale conducted by 1h e
Bradford Auction Co., Box 116,
Racine. Obi&lt;&gt; 45771. Phone 949..
1!121. Lunch served. This Ill
an nice clean merchandise

--B,y

· FAYE MANllY
Middleport, 0.

7-11-«A!

"'\
0

-

0

OM . , . .

_'c·~ J

.:...., ••_

o

OPEN: 9- 9 WEEKDAYS

1- 5 SUNDAYS

1220 WASHINGTON BLVD.
423-7521

meeting aOO the treasurer's re-

port were read by Erma Cleland.
She also gave a report on the ice
cream social. Plans for serving
lunch at the Gaul sale were discussed and also plans for helping
the firemen with the food stand

at the Meigs Count,y Fair. An
electric roaster was purchased
by the auxiliary. Attending were
Clarice Allen, Cleo Smith. Erma Cleland, Margaret Christy,

a longer visil

Recent visitors of Mr. arxl Mrs.
D. M Cleland have been Mr.
and Mrs. Leland Smith and children, Jeslt), GL, D. D. Cleland,
Mrs. CArpenter, Columbus; Mrs.
Etta Will. Mrs. Audrey Rowan
and Mrs. Robert Berry, Belpre.
Robert Allen, Leesburg, va..
spent a few days with Mr. a n d
Mrs. Clayton Allen and BUI. Mrs.
F. T. Allen, Akron, spent an eve~with lhe Aliens.
Mr. ai'KI Mrs. Harold Hawk,
Mark and Dean, McConnetlsville,

spent the weekend with Mri. L.!tha Wood and Mr. and Mrs. J. L.

BLAETTNARS
Pomeroy

FilE STORAGE

BRING NEW
LIFE TO
YOUR
CARPETING

EXPERI' .
Wheel Alignment

s:ss

-GUARANTEED-

PHONE 992-2094
Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
t1111 E. Main

l'llmoroy, 0

AIIw.,t....-•••
,.....
,_ ........ .....

l"'lth Matte C1,.e CIHtllfll

•••eld lmlttl

If. I ,.....,.,
CALL COOI.VtU.I JII.IM

W, Va,

EVINRlJ)E

...

'68'aln Stodc
,~

3 Llghtwln

~

mained

with

their gra,.ar-

'7-17

0

0

0

0

0

-

EEK AND MEEK
TELL '1bU WMI&gt;.T JtL

Wf\H.J LUI LL ltU
!'eOf'l£ (EAA.U ... YOU

00... l'U. Cl\1£ YOU
q CCIJTS IF ~tt ~fE

CNJ PUSH A 'HI&gt;.VE·I.JOT'
~US T

SO FA!&gt;. AkJD IJO

lv\ORE I

INFORMATION
NEWS
presents

Spcial Notes

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

Sunday School attendance July
7 was 67, of!ering $19.12. The
Homecoming program committee was named as follows: Genevieve Guthrie, Thelma Henderson and Florence Spencer.
Worship services were held
at 10:45 a. m. with Johnn,y Taylor, of the Air Force, staUoned
near Dayton, as leader. Worship
services were held St.uxtay evening at 7:45 with the Rev. Cas-

Keeping Meigs

to.
Teresa Swartz of Williamstown, W, Va., has been visiting
her grandparents, Mr. and Mn.
Hobart SWartz tor the past week.
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Ather·

Enlerlained

W, Va., and Danny Bush, Mason,
were recent SurKlay afternoon
guests of Min Fern Showalter.

ton and family o! Colwnbus have

Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Orr lett

been visiting his parents, Mr.

FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS

IIJHA"r FAMOJS C"AIZ.".:.Tfr.?.
SAID ''WHO'S ~E&gt;J EATINIO
MY f'OOJ!IC'&lt;o&lt; ?•

4

Gallic and
Mason Area
lnfor,med As
Well As

and Mrs. Arthur Atherton, for

for a vacation In canada.

several days during their vac ...

Market Report
SCIOTO LIVESTOCK
llogs: 190~20, 22.10; No. I,
22.35; 220~40, 21.60; 210~60,
21.10; 260~80. 20.60; 180-190,
21.60; Boaro, 16.35-16.50; Light
SOWs, 17.90-19.05; Heavy SOWs,
18.15-18.40; Pigs by the Head,
15~0. 10.
Cattle: Cholee steers, 27.50·
28.10; Good, 26.70~7; Slandard,
24.50~5. 75; Good Heifers, 2526.50; Standard, 22.50~4; Good
Cows, 19.35-:Zl; UWJQ-, 17-18..
25; Cutter and Canner, 16-down;
Bulls, 22.90~4.60; Heavy Feed·
er Steera, 25~7.40; Steck Cal!
Steers, 25~9.
Veal Calves: Cholee, 35..'1.\•.
50; Good. 34; Medium, 32; Com.

lion. Their eldest daughter,
Christine, has spent a couple of
weeks with her grorq,arents.
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Swartz
and family o! Marleltl visited her
mother, Nina RobiiiiG!I, and aunt,
. Clsra Follrod, and his parents,
Mr• and Mr s. Hobort Swartz, one
day last week.
Most o! the local families attended the auctloo at the hmne o!
. the late Delhert and Unnle Gaul
Saturda1 alter noon.
Mr. and Mrs. Jlmea CrockarellandfamUy, Alexandria, Vs.,
are spending a lew days at their
!arm home here. The house Is to
be occupied by a renter aoon.
Mr. and Mra. Harry Guthrie
recently visited their son-in-law
and doughoor, Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Yost and !lmlly, at SUaar

DAILY CROSSWORD
~

-~-----~~---··---'-- ····-··· - ~,. ___

machlnoo

13. God of ·

love

.... .,.....

11. Oaewho

1e. Father or
motller
II.Aopr

' 11. Kenlment

IO.Deput
21.
lwlurtver
, _
_ te

h. Ulloa

rr.

TRADERS DAYI

&lt;.l..... unJI

flour
21. Blneen
2e. Hall

5.8UAIOd
I. Aerou
7.8bMr

.....

a.H&amp;vmc

Unaeramble the. four Jumbl..,
- letter 1o eaeh squm, to
form four onllnar1 word•.

em

Z1.8a.Uor

2t. SUI•
11. Greek
pend
letter
31. Te~ :
ll.ao.d
Ger.
U. Paeklaway 12.Wiq·
IT. lndeflallo
like
artlell
33. KlDdot

lt. Girl'• name
21. Afllx
2J.Bovtne
2S. Exetamatlon

JJW/t6W1Y£;::.:~==

-r......, •• , ....
3T.Gnat

....
u.

Lake
S8. Notfut

Tllnialan

u. DeYoured

Utll

43. - and

:ae. TropiCal

YOOST

(]

~(realty

fruit

ad)

II I I

rRUNEY±
J ( )

...leeltd
pl&lt;len
Mm:Jwl.
dlll

II

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

IO.RaottatloD
ll.~ob

Q, Warp-yam

-.....

y....,..

UIIIT NAYM l'lUIIIII
. Ann"'a .... th •''"' Mill ., •• pi
Alo --"'lunt!I'TO In"

. II. Altnll,pnt

fiUit

II. Rip

~-

fl.l(lx
M. CarTy

l.lllltalco

DAILY (!RYPTOQUO'l'll-ii.Ja-

tA-

A-X YDL .A .II. X II ..

II LOKoFIILLO. W

'

~.._...,

-

..a. Ntbula
I•

·
pitollor
' ' ' II01VJII

'

(......, .._....,

ll.ota

4ti.Abowtd
.• fi.Uddtd

v•iiiPC!iia, wnio

_____

2f. Source
ol

"· Ill
what
manner

Corner Third and Olive

-.. ···-------- ____......._

2. Stop

a.eue

21.ApPelldqe

K~!ts Coq~mun!ty Au.dlon Bam

..

•• Cbec:k
10. Afflrm
11. Ho11Unr

-

Old fashioned trader's ~ and nea morket ovary Saturday. Hant a stalllnotdeor outall ~ tor~. Brillll your
own display table and aell your own ltemo. Buy, sell, and
trade antiques, gun1, coins, tools, dishes. Jewelcy,
knhea, trult and vegetables, hardWare, clothti'Ji, &amp;addles,
bridles, and other tack, or a111thl11t! else that )'(Ill want
to clear out ot your prqe, atde, blsemem., or barn.
Items which you caiVIOt oall or trade cluriqr the da.Y lllll'
he aold at our reaular Slturda1 oVOIIIqr aueUon II Ume
permito. For ln!ormaUon Clll R. E. Klillta, 44~917.

... __........ ~ .....

1. Reverberate
• . Pl&amp;y
bo.. to....ay

Grove.
•
The Women' a Societ;yo!Chriat; ·
ian Service wW hold Ill r~
meeting next Tuesdly, July 180
at the home of Genevieve Gutho
rle with Nellie Parker leadlri
the program.
•
Copt and Mrs. John Tayloi
and family of the Air Foree, neai
Dayton, SI&gt;Onl the weekend witH:
his parents, Mr. and ldra. Ern.:
eat Taylor, and attended ehurel[
here Sunday.

A honey!Me haa flve eyes.

-

-- .........

WMPO

')iljred

Mrs. RogerGrueserarxldaughters, Logan, spent the weekend
with Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Orr.
Lisa, Susan and Jennifer re-

D

PekliJ(!

tr•lnlng

were Mrs. Eichinger and son,
Don, an:l Mrs. Laura Hartung.

0

m eAIUJ lHE 011\ER

If the 1nswer is yes, see or call
K1tie Crow, The D•ily Sentinel,

Mrs. Raymond Van Mater and
son, Youngstown, spent a rew
days with Mrs. Mabel VanMeter.
Laura JeanEichi~ercelebrat­
ed her 5th birthday Sunday by being taken for an airplane ride by
her uncle, Lt. Edgar Hartung, at
the Athens airport. Others going

o o
-.......
0

DO YOU NEED SPENDING MONEY?

3 ROOMS
New Furniture
ONLY $'299

-

WINKLE.

BALES AND SERVICE

·Schwarzel Marine
Hor.,kin_gport,
Ohio
.... JilroNE • . -

AGE$10.17
Pomeroy-Middleport Area

We llhlrpen

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

JOE KfRR,'!'OUVE
GONElOOFAA
IN TEASit-JG

0

AmNTION BOYS &amp; GIRLSI

Hawk.
Jotm W. Frank has returned
to his home in &amp;.. Cloud, Fla.,
alter a visit with Mr. and Mrs.
Guy Swnmerfleld and Mn. Nora
Brawn.
Mr. and Mrs. Kennell! Wickham and children, Richmoll:l, re-cedly apent a weekend with Mr.
and Mrs. John Wickham and oth- merclal, 29--doWn; Baby Calves
er relatives.
by the Head, 2!-M.
Charles EicbiJWOr, WashingLambs: Choice, 26. 70; Good,
ton, D, C., apent the weekend 25.70; Modlum, 21.
with Mrs. Henry Etcbinger and

,..... ,.,..

.

7n-5543

9~Sportwln

-

~ ·

_
-

AIC CLEANERS
Muo~~o

Relllve Hie ariain11 bt111tr If JOif "'Il·
Cloud ih ra\11' oWll home bJ Yoa Jcltlllller
dr~•l01m tn~tlltd. ND mUlL No f - No
01111. Un ruu tile 11111• ••r-

lnzy Newell, Grace Gumpl, Jean ents ror a week's visiL The Orrs
lliXI granddaughters spent an evesexson and Opal Eichinger.
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Matlack ning with Mr. and Mrs. Bob Lee
and Donna Kay, Lakeworth, Fla., and children, Bashan.
Mr. Curtis Smith, Co«agevil!e,
spent two weeks with Mr. and

Mrs. Roy Christ)! and Mr. and
Mrs. Virgil Roush. Donna Kay
remained with the Olrlstys tor

From the Largest Truek or
Bullcbzor Radiator To The
Smalleat Heater Core.

SAVE sPACE

!;LARICE ALLEN

dent. Minutes of the previous

CReATION WA'I DAIO
AS A ROACH .~1

BELPRE, OHIO

992·2156. She'll tell you how to Hrn
it •nd at the 11me time get valueble

ident. Cleo Smith acted as presi-

i'IQPE.. BUT WHEN TH' VAPO~

LII'TED-&amp;V'""' FUIA IN

MOTH PROOFING

T•••
MAlON
..llliMI11iH
--···-- tft_

. '"' ......... ..

~K ...

U'L ABNER

PH. 99:1-2143

MILLER MOBILE HOMES

$30.00 .......lllct •
Cetwohlt

'

'

IN THE MID-OHIO VAWY
MDve into a completely furnished, brand
new home that lets you enjoy life at its care
free best.
COMPARE OUR SERVICE
QUALITY &amp; PRICE AS LOW AS _ $3495.00

7·1Uie

house. In the absence ofthepres-

w.

~D A_RaiOMtJU6

816 VARMINT

MOBILE HOMES

ThJ· t.~{es Auxiliary o(i he
Chester Fire Department met ·
Wednesday evening at the .fire- family.

CIGARI!."''''8 ftnd1nc ..........
lnd smtee. ABC llljllrprllel,
M-. v•. Pblllle maa.
Mile

TH'

EXPERIENCED
lllllltw Service

l.lrgest Dlaplay Of

Social Notes

.-.rc

~ Sf'l;eD6 l&lt;a&gt;JEW

THAT PROBLEM WIF

Services

MIWR HOMES

Chester

CONTAa

--

PHONE
• 992-2181

66J -11

WANT A PLACE lo mt and relax. a s room collage with
beautiful view of Ohio River
at Long Botlom. VirgO Walker, Raelne, Oblo.
7-11~

A MALOIE 6eJ&lt;IIICEi

HAV~

offer.

POMEROY ,

IN MIDDlEPORr

&amp;

~ - ··

~ Dllee!DIIedl
Free Benruo and Ttmu
Walehel . ,,time to cheek

All

NO. 8, rroKER OOAL al former &lt;linton Coal Co. tipple,
located 6 miles east of Wellston. Phclne 38UI8'T Wellston
lor Information. Walton Coal
Company.
7-11).301e

1968 STEREO RADIO combination. Handsome walnut eonsole. This has BSR automalle GBO. ROB81'ii'l'l ER* 8nbr
VILLAGE STORE - Stod&lt;,
record changer. Take ovtr
nxtures, doing good. 7 room
payments
of
ts
ptr month or
P'URNISIIED and llllfumllbecl
homt, bath, 110 acres. $110.00
pay ~ .46. Call 11112-11111.
apartments. Close to 1ehool.
per month. Alter do'tm pay7-14-lte
Phone 99UIM.
111-18-tfe
ment.
I'OMEilOY - Stone warehouse,
TRAILER SPACE, all utllltlol FOUR ROOM HOUSE, INrth,
two floors 25 1 63, convenJ.
avaDable. Inquire 158 Mulber- extra lot and house trailer In
enUy located.
ry after 3 or 5 p.m. Write P. Pomeroy. Call 992-3437 after !IYRA(lUS! - 6 rooms, bal!l,
7-14-121p
0. Box 425 Pomeroy. 5-19-tfe I p.m.
furnace, level lot. tsa.OO pay-

---

APPliANCE SALE

7...U.

•

Bu~iness

(JULY ONLY)

POTATOES,. belnt, eabboge
and beell, Pbon&lt;i IIW2S4.
Oarence ·Proffitt, Portland,
1-7-t!c

PLENTY of space for one trail·
er wllh all facli!Ues, In Syracuse. Call 992-391M. 4-IJ.Ue

----

.•

ow LaiMimlrla Siammerllmo

FIVE ROOM HOUSE and bath,
ooe floor, partly furnished II
dellred. 78S S. Second A.._,
Middleport. Can be bJ
appointment after 5 p.m. El,
den Walburn, phone llaaOII.

terlor trim. A sharp 1 owner trade in.

•

hrSiile

Olllo:·

"1965 CHEVELLE MALffiU .• . . .• .•....•....•• $1S95
Conv, v..s engine, powerglide, radio, heater, new whitewall
I

'IE'll NEVER

'

.'

.

" ~ Qolelolloa
OHtOXH KHUHC VDUH DO
KMH~C
XBJHCNBHW ~DK DKOHC

' N•K

,,.:;~.;,'··.~~:! oidoply aloo~ for . -... r,. 111111.....,.. A 11 ...,;j
;,.p;.~,.,lh'" L'a, X forlhe t,. O'o, oti:. SJoCII ~­
"
lhelllllth llld lo...,._ Iff
ofo II llato.
Cbt codt ltttll'l an ~t
.i; . 1

lilt·'"""*

w•sH . oilxowaFK .-JoeiH

It•

\'ooli&gt;rU'J'o at&gt;..W.oolel I ALWAYS TRIKK TID: n.GW•

1¥ C.,.N ~IIJI, US, AND KNOW WHAT Wll ARI: THINK·
INu ·ABO'U'I'.-I:l.IOT
.
·
to 1 • XIIII: T•turo 8¥1tt~tt, roc.)
:

•

,.·

'

'

THE'I SHOULD'VE SENT
A COUPLE 0' FLEAS UP
IN THAT ~OCKET­
'STEAD 0' '10'/W' ME!f

�fi~ tif£;" 16

Tho Dail~ Sertlnel, Mlddl,Port-Pomeroy,
July 17,
SPONSORING SALE
Tho Racine poe wee and 111- ,:,:·s;~,;~·; :,:,:,,:,:,:,::::::::ll.
le&amp;JUe&lt; will be spon sortng a
, , l'IIJIIItiQe aale Friday and Sal. · , urday at tile Simpson building
in Racine from 9 a.m. to 4 p.
. , · , m. Arl)oooe having ltolll• to be
··~ ; , . picked up are asked to call 949- ·
···
3093 or 949-4342.
&gt;4&gt; WEDNESDAY
WINDING TRAIL Garden Club,
Wednesday, 8 p.m. Ohio PoWer
Co.; bring an arrangement suitable for a class at the Meigs
Count.v Fair Oower stto¥e Guests
TONlGHT-THll,- FRL
will be women of the Letart
Jul,y 17 - 18- 19
Falls - Racine area interested
Double Feature Program
in organizing a club.
"MURDERERS' ROW"
THURSDAY
DEAN MARltN
TWIN CITY Shrinettes, TOOrsas Mat! Helm
day, 7:30 p.m. in socia1 rooms
KARL MALDEt\
of Columbus and Southern Ohio
ANN-MARGRET
Electric Co., Middleport
PLUS
WILLING WORKERS Class,
'' LUV ''
Enterprise United Methodist
JACK LEMMON
Church, Thursday at Marietta
PETER FALK, ELAINE
Husted camp site, Ro.val Oak
====~ Park, 6:30 p.m. potluck supperj
bring table service.
T\\1LIGHT GARDEN Club, pol•
luck picnic, Thursday, at 6 p.m.
at the ,!\vracuse Roadside Park.
FRIDAY
MIDDLEPORT FffiEMAN spon.
sor an outside dance party this
Friday, 9 to 12 p.m. at the Middleport Communlty Park. The
Ja,ys will emcee.
ICE CREAM SOCIAL, Friday,
begilming 6 p.m., at the Forest
Run Methodist Church. Homemade ice cream, pies, cakes and
cookies; place advance orders
with any member of the church.
SATURDAY
MEIGS ATHLETIC Assn. to
hold high school dance Saturday
at the Pomeroytermis court
COMFORT IS FIT night
starting at 9 p.m. In case of
rain, the dance wlll be held at
the Pomeroy Gym. The Jays will
emcee.
Mlara's
SUNDAY
PICNIC at Lock 23, Apple
Grove, 6 p.m. SUnday Cor all
area churches. Open to the pub~
•
lie. Bring a covered dish. Service at 8 p.m. at Apple Grove
Metlwdlst Church following, the
W• stock R..t Wing
Rev. Char~e.s Norris speaking.

-

0.,

1968

:

.

And

...

A New
LOAFER

For Workl

oxford&amp;, oix-lnch, .Jght·
inch and pullo0n1.
SIIH6-16,AA-EEEE
•vailabla.
uu: ...

2..--...

:--wNG"

111
...

R

~h

Hartley &amp;
Bennett
SHOE STORE
Mlddl• of Uptitr Block
POMEROY

Open All Dey Thundoyo
FRIDAY TIL 9 PM

COMMUNION SET
Communion will be observed
at 7:30 p.m. &amp;mday at Grace
Episcopal Church.

one

darn
minute
CALENIII "¥" W11111lroof .~ IWitD ucond
ll or sil~er di•l. 1umi11ous doh a~W! han1h.

$HUG

That's the most an Accutro~ timepiece will gain or lose in one month. And we'll
auaranlee i1.t Accutron looks li ke a watch. But it isn'l. II doesn'l have a mainspring, a hairspring, or a bal~nce wheet Accutron has replaced them with an
1lectronic-powered tuning lor•. It splits each second into 360 equal parts. And
makes the Acculron timepiece so precise, it won't gain or lose an aver•ae of
,.- · ntore than two seconds a day.

..
~

'I!

::'

ACCUTRON~

by BULOVA

mer Miss Angela Fink, was hon-

ored

recently with a bridal

shower at the home

or

M r e.

Richard Fink, ..tlb Mro. Lionel
Gilmore as the hostess.

Decorations carried oot a mint
green and white color scheme.
Girts were placed on a table
centered with a bride doll.
Games were pla,yed with prfzes
being won by Mrs. ~ Smith,
Mrs. Kenneth Yeauger, M r a.
Mike Parker, Mrs. Morris Harden, and 1\-Uss Reva Shellne. The

door prize was won by Mrs. Howard Ervin.

Refreshments o( cake and ice
cream, tea, nuts and mints were
served to the guests.
Other

guests at the shower

were Miss Debbie Harden, Mrs.
David Darst, Mrs. John Sigman,
Miss Betty Lou Gilmore, Mrs.
Herbert Fink, Mrs. DonaJd Liale,

Social, Musical Show
Planned on Saturday
Plans for an ice cream sociaJ and western and country
musical show to be staged at
the Tuppers Plains School Saturday night were completed at
a recent meeting of the Thp.
pers Plains and Alfred Communlcy Club.
The social frill begin at 5 p.
m. with ice cream, cake, pie,
and cofl'ee to be served. Harry
Gorrell's western and country
band will present a program
in the school aud.Jtorium at 3
p.m. Admission for the show
will be ~ cents for adults with
children under 12 to get in free.
Mrs. Jimmie Lee Batley pre.
sided at the meeting d u r i n g

which time reports oo past ac~
tivitles were given and tuture
activities of the club diacussed. The resignation of Mrs. DougJas Adams as treasurer was
accepted and Mrs. Clarence
Headley was elected Cor theremainder of the year.
Due to the many activities in
the county Wring August, it was
decided to cancel the meeting
for the next month. The Sept. 1i
meeting will be held at the home
of Mrs. Vera Weber at 10 a.m.
Cookies and Iced tea were served by the hostess, aASisted by
Mrs. James stout and Mrs. Kenneth Grlrnth.

i

It gOH

hm·m·m·m.

Health Club
Members Hold
Annual Picnic

Tho annual ramDy picnic or111o
Lsurel Clilf Butter Health Club
was hold Thursday night at t11o
Royal Qak Pork.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Ernest Powell, Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Frick and daughter, Paula,
Mrs. Robert Bowen, Mr. and

Mrs. Marvin

~cer and 508,

Brian, Mr. a n d Mro. Lloyd
Wright, llenn,y and Becky, Mrs.
Merlin Tracy, &amp;Isle Tracy, Barbara Smith, SJS.le Johnson, Mr.
and Mrs. Clarence OJrtls.
Mrs. Lou Diehl and Charles,
Mr. and Mrs. James Gilmore,
Brenda and Demis, Mrs. Frances Hewetson, Fern ~walter,
Mr. and Mro. William Bro...,
Billy and Randy, Mr. and Mrs.
William PUIIlno, Rodney, Lori,
stevan and Kevin, Mrs. Harcy
Clark, RickY, Vlck)', imrrl, and
Terry.

SUMMER
SHOf SALE
NowlnProgresa
For All the Family
Budget Priced

-------------THE SHOf BOX
Mlddl_.t,D.

COVERINGS
Inlaid linoleum-Carpeting
Get the belt ••, in Ofllo ulngtll
Furniture. Alk·your neighbor!

Ingels Furniture
MIDDI.EPOIT

Rlchardo, Portsmouth dlllricl
W.S.C.S. president, read at Monday oigtrt' 1 moetlng of the Woman's Society or Christian Service of the MJnenvllle Methodlot Church.
Business meeting of' the 50clety
followed an Indoor picnic held
ln the church basement with Mrs.
Sadie Brown asking grace.
The letter from Mrs. Richards annoonced a 1¥0rkshop to be
held on August 8-9 at Wheelersborg, and another to be bold at
Camp Francis Asbury at Rio
Grande, oo August 29.
PreseJXed at the meeting wa1
a card of thanks for flowers
from Mrs. Herbert Pugh. AOYmpathy card was sent to the Earl
Renshaw family, and a set-Well
card to William Roudaahelt.
Attending lbe picnic were Mr.
and Mrs. Bradford Maag, Mrs.
Sadie Brown, Mra. stella Gf\leser, Mrs. CII!Cord Phillips, Mrs.
Eugene Forbes, Mr. and Mrs.
BIll Russoli, Mr. and Mrs.
Brooks Sayre, Roger Sayre, Mrs.
Bert Grueser, Ri('k and Diana,
and Mrs. Karl Grueser.

Class

Names

Committee

to

Select Carpet
A rommllleo to select carpet.
ing for the church sanctuary
..as appointed at Mondlly night's
meeting of t11o JOB class or tho
United Metlwdllll Church.
Named t.n the committee were
Mro. Glen DUI, Mro. V, D. Edwards, Mrs. Gerald WUdennutb,
Mrs. Norma Parker, and Mrs.
Glen Hiles. Mrs. Antone Lucke
prosldod at lbo boslness mooting which followed a plcnic on the
lawn or tile home or Mrs. Dill
In ltfracuse.
Guesta at the picnic wore Katle
Rousey, David Edwards, andJo!!,
Mark, and Beck)' HUes. Mombora attontllng besldos I b o a o
named above 1\'0ro Mlsa Mrytls
Kay Parker, Mro. Verlle Gordon, Mrs. Leona Smith, Mrs. Jod
Webster, Sr., Mrs. Katrine Millikan, Mrs. Grace CamP,ell,
Mrs. Mule Chapman, and Mrs.
Clara Thomas.

MEIGS TIIAll£
TONIGHT AND THURSDAY
JULY 17 ·18
NOT OPEN
FRIDAY THIIU THURSDAY
JULY 19-25
"BONNIE AND CLYDE"
{Tochnlcolor)
Warren Beotty, Faye Dun-

7p

I

f

....

-

... "

To Celebrofe

50th .Wedding Anniversary

MR. AND MRS. OMER DAILEY WILL CELEBRATE lbolr golden woddlng aMlvorouy Sunda,y,
Route 1 home. The c«~~le were married at Pomeroy on

July 21, with open house at their Racine,

July 12, 1918. Mr. Dolley worked at t11o National Drawn steel Millin Midland, PL, until Ids r&amp;tiremenl Mr. and Mrs. Dailey have six children. They are Mrs. Thomas Autherson of Beverly;
Mrs. Thomaa Czech1 Lawrence Dalley al'kl Mrs. Ralph MIUer of East Liverpoolj Floyd DaUey of
Racine; and Mrs. Frank LUdWig of Cleveland. Tboy have 17 grandchildren and eight groot-graolcblldren.

!:.,.·.·

Personal Notes ·.·.• •
·.~

Mrs. William Bentz and dsughter, Krlstl, are here rrom Muncie, Ind. Cor a week,• vtait with
Mr. and Mro. Dale Whipple.
Mr. and Mro. Charles ClarklOll of Dayton were weekend visitors 1n Pomeroy and Middleport
Roger 8ayre, who has been stationed at Memphia 1 Tenn. with the
U. S. Air Force, leaves Thursday
for Jacksonville, Fla. He has
been home on fUrlough with hla
family ,

Announcing Birth
July 10th

Mn. Mryna Jordan and daughter, Tracy, of Columbus were
weekend 11010sts of hor parents,
Mr. and Mro. Bradford Moag.
Mr. and Mrs. Heino Lind wore
In Huntington, W. Va, SUnolo,y to
Visit his sister ..in-law, Mrs. Fannie Lind and daughter, Laura.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert lluwen
were In McArthur &amp;tnday tovisit
his mother, Mra. Gomer Bowen,
and In Chllllcotbe to visit b I 1
father.
port.
Mrs. Jerry Fry andoon, Mark,
Mra. Melvin VanMeter, and Mrs.
Faye Fry are vialtora today In

Methodist Class

BUSY THESE DAYS ARE employes oftlloMlddleportMalntenance D~ent with the laying o!a new Ill-Inch water main
shown here on I.Jncoln St., We lies along curbing for the plan-ned Une. The new line wUl be installed on Beech, Laurel am
Sycamore Sis. loading to Its destination at tho new lmporlal
Electric eo. plant andor construction on the old Pytblan Park

In Middleport

Bite.

Newseeein Briefs
By United Press International
LONDON - BRITAIN TODAY DROPPED Its charges against
James Etrl
removing the last barriers to his extradition to
stand trlel for t11o murder or Dr. Marlin Luther King Jr. His Alabama attorney accused the United States of turning the case into a
Yankee Stadium- P. T, Barnum affair,
Ray,s attorney, Arthur J, Hanes, called a news conference two
hours la.ter to make his P. T. Barnum charges. "The government
pe.,lo are being very polite - they Just don~ give you lbe time of
day - they don't tell you anything," the dapper former mayor of
Blnningham said. His face hardened. uBut if they want to play hard
boU wo'll play . ~ .~ . , , If lbe1 w!J!I, to pla,y sol\ ball we'll plo,y
soli ball." Tlii t!. S. ~en! has lhuo ti.r refuaed Hanes permission either to trave1 with his client or to speak to hlm once Ray is
handed over to U, S. authorities.

n.r,

COLUMBUS - THE OffiO SUPREME COURT ruled apin W~
nesday that to use as evidence a person'• refusal to take a chemical
test for Intoxication Is not n violation of bls constllutloJBI riglrts.
Tbe hlgb court handed down tl1o same decision last week. Tbls
limo It upheld tho Modlna Municipal Court whore John M. Stanton
of Cleveland was ftnod $150 and costs aftBr bolng arrosle&lt;l by tho
Ohlo Highway Patrol aftBr a traffic accident In Modl111 Count,y.

Alas~

CHILUCOTHE, OHIO - MORE THAN 30 new automobiles were
damaged or destroyed late Wednesday when 16 &lt;~ars of the train
haollng them derailed near here.
The cuase of the derallme.Jit remained under investigation. No
injuries were reported by RoBS CoWJty sheriff's deputies. At least
· '12 automobiles were destroyed by tire but the others were reoatrahle. The fire raged for more than ftve hours before being extin-

Picnics at Pa'rk
Loyal Helporo Class or the
~t~racuse u n I t o d Met-at
Church bold a picnic recently
at tho ~racuse Park.
Table grace was by Carl B.
Weese. AUending were Mr. and
Mrs. Wooae, Mrs. Allee Cljle.
hart, Mr. and Mrs. Orville
Crooko, Mrs. Helen Damewood,
Mrs. Ralph ilai&gt;IOII, Mra, William Elchlngor, Mr. and Mrl.
Damon Ferrell and daugbter,
Tarrle, Mr. and Mra. H. w.
Thomas, Mr. and Mra. T. G.
Hllldore, and Mr. and Mro. Wllllom lloudasbelt.

II' YOU COULD

WEAR

pANTY - HOSE THROUGHOUT

THE

gulsbod.

LONG HOT
COLUMBUS - PENITENTIARY GUARDS voted Wednesd~ to
extend thelr strike deadline, which was set for todl.)', arwJ work on a
olo,y.to&lt;lo,y basis,
Lawrence Henry, director of Council 21 of the American Feder·
allon of State, Count,y IIlii Municipal Employes Union, said t11o guards
voted to extend tl1o deodlluo u long as lhuy felt omclala ot t11o D&amp;partment of Msutalll)lglene and Correction were negottallng In good
!alth.

SUMMER WITHOUT ALL
THE DISCOMFORT !'ROM
THE HEAT... OR IF YOU
COULD WEAR REGULAR
STOCKINGS

WITHOUT

ALL THE P ARAPHER!&lt;!AAUSTIN, TEX. - DESPITE PERSISTENT rumors that news of
eXtraordinary Importance on the Vietnam War might cane tram PreaJdent Johnson'a Hawaiian summit this weeke~ U, S. oMclala today
upacled less lban dramatic developments.
Johnson and Secretary of state Dean Ruak tlew nonstop to Hono' lulu today sbortljo bo!ore noon (CM) for talks Friday and Saturd~
wltll South VIetnam's President Nguyan Van Thleu and bls advisers.

UA LIKE HOT GIRWES

Women of Moose

AND GAHTER BELTS. ..

Name Committees
Pr. PLEASANT -

Commit-

tees for the comtna: yeu were
8j)()O(nted by Women ol I h o

Mooso, Chapter 594, aenlor R•
Mary Choqueue and ·plano
were formulated Cor attendallce
at lbe Slate Coo!eronco lobe held
at Porkors..&amp;rg Auguat 2~4251h at the Chancellor llolol.
Committees are: August, pub.
Hcity, Evelyn Bauer; Sept.,
Moosobarl, 8efl'lO Redman;
Nov., llbrary, Roberta Maynard
and Gla&lt;lys Hart; Dec., SOCial
service, Clara Powers and Rosemary Gray; Jan., Child Welfare,
Lorena Randolph and Mary Cbo&lt;JiotiA!; Feb., hospilol, Gla&lt;b'o
Panons and Pauline B r i g h ti
March, Mooaehaven, Grace Mol·
er and Julia Theiss; April, homemaking, Gaynell Foglesong a n d
Mildred Garrett; May, mombersbljJ, Mabie Rruah andHelenVlckert; June, academy of Frlendohlp, PelliiY Treodway and Lou110 Bryant.

sent

Southeastern Californ;
ia's Imperial Valley has an
average yearly temperature
of more lhan 75 degrees according to the Encyclopaedia
Britannica .

· EL

LDS IN POMEROY

.i-

-·

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New York

About 2,500 paroons, oomo ol

-rl

...._,,w ·

........

Fred Shiflet

~

.......,.,IIOiflllwiD..__..
! c
'!

THURSDAY. JULY 18, 1998

..

fJVECENTS

Guard
Patrols
Akron

'

of the first issue of $79,000 was

not sold. Government agencies
have made grants eJq~ected to
push the total cost of the project
to over three--quarters of a mil~
Iton dollars.
Why the lack of fanfare?
The system, required by the
state and federal govermnent, has
been a nut that councils Cor 20
years have been gnawing at and
finding most Indigestible.
lt wasn't untU 1956 that town
council contracted with Floyd G.
Brown Assoc., Marion. to update
plans drawn in 1949, ftnanced by
a govermnent loan of $5,000,
since written oft
At that time, also, !!long investigation of the lagoon type sewerage compared to the standard
type was begun.
Some community leaders admit
privately the sewerage should
have long range benefits leading
to residential and ii'Klustrial expansion.
And Cor the first time mayor
and councilmen wUl be breathing
easier, no longer under the threat
or being Jetled for lailW'e to compl,y with the state non ~pollution
ordorL

Service Will
Be on Friday
Funeral services for Fred A.
Shlnot, 93, Middleport, w11o died
Wemosday In Holzer Hospilol
will be hold Frlolo,y at 2 p.m. at
lbo Mldtlloport Cburcb of Christ.
The Rov. Raulln Moyer 11111 of· ficlato, Burial will be In lbo Shlflet Msu •~· · lnRI
so~m
verv1ew Cemetery,
Mr. Shlnet was born In Middleport, the son of the late Lom
and Eva Austin Shiflet. He waa
also preceded In death by four
brothers and two sisters.
He was a member ot the Middleport Cburcb or Christ. He
owned and operated a music store
In Middleport and wa• also In
the real estate business.
He ls survived by a si.ster,
Mrs. Louise Freeland, In Callfonda and severaJ nieces and
nephews.
Friends may call at the Rawlings -Coats Funeral Hc.me any.
limo. The body will be taken to
tllo cburcb at 12:3&amp; p.m. Frlolo,y
to lie In ststo prior to services,

River Gauges
GAUGES - Gallipolis, 11.9
and 12.21'WIIllng 2Cootofrollors;
Pl. Pleosant, 23. 80; Pomeroy.
Msson, rut; Hinton, 1,30 falling;
Kanawha Falls, 3.80 rlelng; Charleston, 17.90 stat. Lond&gt;n. Marmet, and Wlnlleld, aro on tho
sUI.

aald only a few 41o.Ya ago bo
had loot delegate llrength, But
he said there now was a "drift
IDrrud being uncommlltotl"
ammg tl1o delegatoa.
Taking a verbal slap at Wallace the tiOI'trnor oald, "we'Yo
fast audience of 400. "OIIlo Is an aovernor.
lmportaDt atato."
A PJ'eos aldli'ifreetlbed t110 got to unite America .and have
ovorybo4y llhare equally In the
· Rockefeller stoppad up hlo recepllon as "wlld." 1
qpu country campal., for dtle- Rocltorellor llld bo waa lllln- Greal American Dreun - 1101
dio• IG tho GOP national cou- lnll In t•~ with uncommitted dlv(de tl1o country."
He predicted Wallace -.Jd
v~ with a sehe411ed flvo delegations to lbo comontlon
"carry
llll'Oo to ...., stalls In
at;y tDui' cK Ohio today,
.
while Richard Nixon, tile front.
~was -cedallbE:• nlll1lng ciDdldsto, was loalnJi tile IIOilh," but lose t11o reraat by atate Atcy. Gen.
deleguto
"alowJ,y araund malntlar ill lbe Jlallon.
Twice dloolillora In the lhr&lt;&gt;na
SUbe, tl1o Ropublleon
tho counlry,"
.
~ V.S. -tor.
. l;!t predicted Nixon'a forces, Ill tH ~ ' tried to upstaa&lt;e
Rodto!elllr will moot later In wbo han been repocted claim- Roebt&lt;tller
When ilie' pemor alartod 1o
lilt 41o,y w:llh Gov. James A. 1n11 800 dolegateo, would lind
Bbodel and mtmber 1 of U.tllate lboy ba" fewer than 600 ·at tile talk aboOII hlo plano 11.1181 forth
GOP del.,.dOII.
CGIIYontlon oven alter favorite In hll campa(lt1, ~~~~ crowd
•. Ho told ., alrpari raJbo W~- aono ban tlrOIIIIod out. II tibe Jhouted bl.ck: UNo. It
•My GbdJ You'Ve liQIIo ban
....., llljhl ~lleOrp Wl!llae. ~ vptol to ~ 1 presla plan. Thit•a the~-.
1• · ~~ •lo -., ••worst ol dt!nllal ~IDdl&lt;llle.
·
{Continued on P.ae 10)
ill!
~l1r conoodecl he ba4
TOLEDO (UPI) -

Gov. Nelson Beckolollor aald to- whom gathered sbout six hours
41o.Y Ohio Ia vttal to a Ropubll- before Rockefeller'• arrival, two
can vtclory In November.
bands, a folk singing IJI'OIIP and
"AI Ohio aoes so 1001 tba Ru- tl1o Unlvorslzy of Toledo Rockp611can parf3o," he told a break- eues were "" hand IG sroet t11o

BUY HIP- POSE BY U YSER HOSIERY

.

By CHET TANNEffiLL
A project that had ita begin-.
nings 20 years ago will be completed ofiicially tomorrow in M:fd..
dleport. Thoro will bo no bands,
no speeches, no public congrat.r
latory slaps on the collective
backs of anybody.
But perhaps there should be on
this occasion of the completion or
the lagoon type sewerage system.
First plans - largely junked
later - for a sewerage system
were drawn lt) in 1949,
Mayor Clyde Fisher, Council
President John Zerkle, members
of the cOWJcll and Clerk Gene
Gnte expect to beonhandtomorrow at 9 a.m. at town hall to meet
goveriUilent omclals, engineer~
trw firm representatives c. R.
Martin and Dale Tesmer, aNI of
the prime construction firm,
Morey, ol Parkersburg.
They .. m conduct t11o final Inspection oi the system and put It
into cveratlon.
Nobody Is absolutely certain of
how much It has cost.
Council issued $525,000 ofreverue--based bonds of which part

Ohio Vit~l to Rocky

NOW
YOU CANI
KAYSER HIP-POSE DOES WHAT PANTY-HOSE DOES. .. ONLY BETTER. ffiP·POSE
ARE INDIVIDUAL STOCKINGS WITH SPECIAL COMFORTABLE GARTER TOPS. HJP.
POSE f1T IDGH ON THE TffiGH, WON'T RIDE DOWN,
NO SAG, NO 'WRINKLE, NO BIND. THANKS TO THE
SPECIAL STAY· UP· NO· MATTER- WHAT TOP,
HIP-POSE - STOCKINGS AS LONG AS YOUH LEGS
11P TOP TAN, SKYSCRAPER BEIGE, PEAK BROWN, NAVY, SUMMIT PALE

.

Of Project at 9 AM

Wouldn't It Be Great?

Columbua.

mldJOL,LMtoniiN
801 .. 11114 10t. ·~·­
variable
cl........,ll; tt atw ·

per 801 1D

Final, Official Check

Kin Club Meets
At Fry Home

Elbabeth Young, Rochester, Pa.;
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Ginther,
of Oris E. Glntllor at the Ewing New Brighton, PL: Mr. and Mrs.
Fwleral Home.
Fills Smith, and Cyntllla Yehuert,
They were Mr. and Mrs. James Akroni Mr. a n d Mrs. Albert
Ginther, GeorgeGLntheraOOPhil· Sparks, H~denvlllo; Mr. &amp;Ill
ip GJnther of Middletowni Mrs. Mrs. William Ginther and son,
Donald, Beverly.
Paul Ginther and two deughters of Charleston, W. Va.; Mr.
and Mrs. Earl Ho!!rMn, Hartford, w. va.; Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Rollman, Mr. and Mrs. Bernard
Son
Lelving, Mrs. Barbara Zerkle,
New Haven, W. Va.; Mr. and
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Bunce, Mrs. Stanley stasis, Mr. and
Pomeroy, are announcing the Mrs. Harry Staata, Faye Hoff.
blrlb of a son, Do111id Perry, man, Letart, W. VL
Mr. and Mrs. llencil Hoffman
on July 10 at Pleosant Valley
Hospital.
and daughter, Mendy, G.alllpolisi
Gra.q,uents areMr, and Mrs. Mrs. Jolla Norris, Lallrt; Mr.
Walter Bunce, Middleport, and aNI Mrs. Albert Ginther, Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Rae, Miner&amp;- lAlla Russell, Mr. and Mrs. Ed·
ville. Great ~ gra~arents are ward stiles, MidcDeport and Mrs.
Mrs. Ernest Rae, Pomeroy; Mr. Freda Hart of New Haven, W.
• • •
and Mrs. Grover Erb, Pomeroy, Va.
The forget-me~not ia
ka's ata.te flower.
and Mrs. M. J. Miller, Middle-

,..til

Middleport Sewerage Goes Into
Operation on Friday Morning

During tho mooting, conckictod by Mrs. Harry Davia, plana
wore made for a trip to Boldmore for a party at the home
of Mrs. Edna Boyer. Games
..ere played wllb prizes being
won by Mlu Joyce El&gt;ersbach,
Mrs. James Clifford, &amp;-., Mrs.
Wald Wlnclon, and Mrs. Harold
E11orobach.
The bosteso sorved I c o
cream and cake, mints, coffee
and tea em crystal trays. Sle
gave favors of headjl(eces. The
next moedng wlil be hold oo
Aug, s at tho homo or Mrs. Dolo
Wldi&gt;Pie.
At the meollng besides those
lllllled were Mrs. Wllllam Bentz
and tJauJI(IIM, Krlatt, or Muncie,
Ind., Mrs. Richard Vaughan, Sr.,
Mra. Garnet Hubreeht, M r a.
Tod Warner, Mrs. Jamea Clifford, Jr., Mlas Angela Clllrorcl,
and Mlas Patricia Warner.

Numerous relatives came Sat·

Of

'
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT.
OHIO

Partl,y Jotull'; ·1ifll'lno llllild
1111'01111&gt; ~
~
tiiiUider-.4-•. '·'JIIIo.lall1 "'"

)

.•

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port.

urday for the funeral services

en tin( ,;

Devoted To 1Jw Inter~?'~ Of The MeigR-Mtuon Area

VOL. XXI NO 60

Mrs. Ellen E11erobach was
hostess for a moollng of lbe
Kin Club recontly at the homo
of Mrs. Jerry Fry In Middle-

•:•: ;~;:;~;.·.=:.•'•'• •:'•':•·=· · ·'·: .1 Attend Ginther Service Saturday

at y

The post office motto, 11 NeJther snow, .nor rain, nor heat, nor
gloom of night stays these courlors from the swift completion
of theJr appointed rotutds," was
written In 430 B. C, by Herodotus
of the m!)Ubted cwrlers used by
King Xerxes of Perala.

Plano have boon completed for
lbo opoe clllrch ·wedding.ot Mill
Pamela Kay Hayeo, PomOI'Q)', IG
Mr. Charles W, Holcomb, Colwnbuo.
Tho woddlni will bo an ovem
of SUnolo,y, July 21, at 2:30 In
t11o afteriiOOil Ill tllo First Ball·
dill Church ot Pomeroy. A halfhour of nl,lptlal music by Mlaa
Diana lloosb will procodo lbe
ceremony. The Rev. Carver Willloma will o!Jlclsto.
M111 Hayes hasehosenasmaid
of honor bar slater, Karen, and
sorvlng as bridesmaids will be
Min Darlene Chafin, Mill BeckY Howley, and Mloa Msurlsha
Durst.
Belli man for Mr. llolcomb
will bo TIJmn.y Lawhon and lbo
uahers will be Kendall Dunfee,
Don Nel oon, and Keith Pballn.
Lena !IJo Phalln will be t11o
flower girl and Msrk La'IVboll
will aorve as acob'to. Mlas Mary
!IJe Hayes will register lbo wedding gueste.
A reception Cor tho f111114'
will follow at the homo of I h e
brtdo.

•' '

•

Now You Know

Pamela Hayes

Mrs. Earl Wines, Beverly, Sllaron and Rhonda Ervin, Mrs. llabert R. Harden, Mrs. Carl wam,...
lo,y, Mrs. Bill Hardon, Miss Rill
Halley, Mlas Mabel H,vsoll, MrL
Danny Little, Miss llabln 91tlloo,- and Mrs. Bill Fink.
Others presenting glfts to the
recent bride were Mr. and Mra.
Arthur Nelgler, Mr. and MrL
Forrest Nolgler, Delma Hall.,and Ruthann, Mro. Oma 11)11011
and Bill, Mrs. OWen Fink, tho
Rev. and Mrs. Eddie Boyer, Mra.
John Buckley, the Rov. and Mrl.
Caudlle Atkins, Mr. and Mro.
Earl Harden and family, Mill
Df\lcUla House, Miss Marolyn
Harden, Mr. and Mrs. Hobert
A, Harden, Mr. and Mrs. Carroll Nelgler, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
Nelgler, Mr. and Mro. D a It
Smith, and Mr. and Mrs. Jim
Smith.

Workshops are Announced

Just

{"""'oo II rap.

Mro. Donald Harden, t11o for-

PLAN SALE
A rummage sale will be held
beginning at 9 a.m. Frlolo,y at
Workshops to be held In Aug.
the American Legion Hall in
RuUand. Proceeds will go to ust were announced in a comthe boys' baseball leagues to munication from Mrs. James
help purchase uniforms a n d
OIJllpment. Anyone having any.
thing to donate II asked to phone
742-4156 Cor piclrup.

'

' .

Wedding Plans
Completed by

Mrs. Harden Honored
:·: C I d · ,'~ With Bridal Shower
• · oen on

NEW WAREHOUSE- A now warehouse onMiddleport'slleecb st. Is a part or Tlny'allorpl~&gt;o
lan:l and Foodland. It marks the flttheJP&amp;nsionofthe ftrm since its estlbllshmeM in Middleoort in
1963.

::::::::::::::~::~:~~3~~:;;::~::::::;:;::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

Czecks Nyet .Soviets
PRAGUE (UPO - Czech Communist leaders today rejectej
Soviet demands they drop their
drive for more democracy. They
told the Kremlin that Czechs
would battle a return to Stalinism
Thls nation's new Communist
reform leadership saidinanopen
letter to Moscow that bringing
back the old system would "imperil the party's leadi~ role and
wwld create a situation in which
a power conflict would really
ariae."
The Czech defiance of Moscow
came amid diplomatic reports
Crom London and the Soviet capital that the Kremlin leaders
might use force in Czechoslova~
kiL

They said Tito volunteered to

'\

CARL lol, C'.ORBY

Gorby Named
To Board Post
Msmbenhlp of Meigs Coun\Y
Board 83, selective Service, Js
now at full llronglb with lbo ap..
polntmont by Presldert ~
Johnson of Carl M. Gorby, R.D.
1, Langsville, as Its ruth member.
Gorby curios the U.S. mell
llll the LangiVIile rural route,
where he reaides with his wife,
Pauline, and son, Roonlo. Ho Is
a veteran ot World War 11, sec~
rotary of t11o lOUt Congresalonal
District Rural Letler Curlers
Association, Iormor attendance
officer and probation o!!.lcer of
tl1o Melia County Juvenile Court,
and a membar of t11o Unlle&lt;l
Clllrch of Cbrlal at Langsville.
Other members serving Local
Board 83 are Paul Cascl, Mlddlaport; Wallace
Amberger,
Cbelteri OUs Knopp, RaclDe, and
another recent appWlteo, John
M. wm. MlddltllOI'I.
CONTRACT APPROVED
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
llepartmont ~ Housing and Urban Development boa IIIJProved
a financial asalstance conlract
for purchase or 100 low-rent,
hllh • rise dwell!Jqj units In
Palneavtllo Ohio.

come if asked. The sources said
the Yugoslav Communist leader, who made his break with
the Kremlin In 1948, would
come Friday or saturday if the
Czechs accept his offer.
Alexander Dubcek, lbe Czech
Communist leader under fire
from the Russians for his
program for more democracy in
thi s country, Is engaged In a
long distance duel with Soviet
party leader Leonid L Brezbriev, the swrcea &amp;ald.
The srurees said Brezhnev
demanded Dubcek go to the
Soviet Union for a face to face
meeting. Dubcek refUsed and
sug~ested Brezhnev come to the
Czechoslovak city of Koslce for
the meeting, the sources said.

According to the sources,
Brezhnev rejected Kosice and
proposed Dubcok moot him
either in the Soviet clties of
KJev or ln Lvov.
Once more Dubcek said m to
lbe
Kremlin and Insisted
Brezhnev come to Kosice, which
is in SlovaJd.a and near the
SOViet border. The sources said
no reply has been received from
the Kremlin to the Czech'•
latest message.
Tho party ssld Dubcek was
having trooble 4t homo. They
aald the Czech Cornm..Ust
party presidium-its ruling bo&lt;b'
-is closely divided on the issue
of whether this former satellite
should have a showdown with

C&lt;olllnued 011 Pap 10)

AKRON ~JPl) - About 100
National Guardsmen were llftl&amp;ed Into palrol ~ lo\l1lr aa a
night ot rock - throWIIII ODd 'tllndow smasblng waa ~­
control. A 9 p.m. curlew was
ordered by Ma,yw .1o1m Ballard.
The JP181'C(smen m palrol ~
wore part or the 700 - man 145111
Infantry Dlvloloit wllleb wu ordered to ~ at 2:30 LIL by
Gov. James A. Rhodia It Ute re&lt;J!est of Mayor Ballard.
Tbo JP181'C(smen ;nl'e palrol. ling a llvo -block II!CtlilaofWoostor Avo. In jeeps and !nicks.
Throe guardsmen and one pollee
olficer were assigned to each
vehicle.
Tbe remelndor ot tile tpl8l'd
unit Is on
\lJ11 at an
armory here.
u AnYooe wbo is ·asked to
otq&gt; or halt and does 1101 do w
can OIIJOcl to bo shot," MJ,
Gtl1. $. T, Dol ~10 aald.
Ballard aald an lncl- at a
dance at lbe Elizabeth j'ark &amp;beltor may have triggered lbe Ylolonce. Ho aald youths !'rom tile
West Side and tile North 81dt (llll
Into a IIJI(It. Pollee ·- • caliod
IG brlna order and 011e erulaw
wasdarnag&lt;od.
He aald tonlllona In tho cfV
have been high for IIIOIIIIII. '!be
first violence broke &lt;lUI before
mldnlglrt In tho section, well ol
tile downtown area. Pollee quelled It Ill a few hours.

-Y

10-Class Horse Show ;;:=~~;,;::7:::,,,
Features 105th Fair
ers In 14 Ohio .....Uos hit by
Doods, beavy ralna, frost, mr nadoes or hall llda IPrlns will
be able to receive 10&amp;11&amp; from
t11o Farmers Homo Admlalstration.
The oountles were Adams,

A ten-dass horse show has pony, Western tack.
h o r s e competition, however,
belm scheduled as a part of the
Judging of horse conformation must be filed with the Meigs
IOSib OMual Meigs Count,y Fair, classes will be held at 10 a. m. County Fair Boord b~ 4 p. m. on
Open to world C0J111etition, the on the date of the horse show. Aug. 7,
show will be held at 1 p, m. on Entries for that phase of the
Conformation classes are alao
Wednesday, Aug. 14, on the track
open to world competition with
of the Meigs Councy Riding Club
Herbert E. Shields arxl Tom R
at the Rock Springs Fairgroonda
CHANCEY INJURED
P..euter as st4)erintendents.
wltb William Downie and T o m
Football Coach Charles ChanThere 1'fill be conformation
Reuter as sl.4)erintendents in cey received a knee Injury Wed- judging ln Western horse, Eng..
charge,
nesday afternoon while conduct- lish horse, ponies, 47 to 56 inEntries for the event will not ing physical fitness classes in ches, and ponies, 46 inches W
close unW 1 p. m. on the day or tbo Meigs Local Sehoul Dl strl ct. urder, classes.
the show. Cash premiums of $5,
O!ancoy su!!erod a twisted cartl.
$3, $2 and $1 plus rosettes for lage of the knee wtdch has boon
VETERANS MEMORIAL
t11o top live sntmels oroachclass placed in a cast Cor about three
HOSPITAL
will be awarded. Each entry in \feekS.
ADMISSIONS - Carlos CeJn.
the lead-in pony class will re-RuUand; Penny Wilson, Mlnersceive a smaU trophy.
villei Ernest Lambert, Rutlandi
C1asses for this year's show
Mary Deerlnberger, Pomeroy;
will include W horsii!manshlp,
CAR DAMAGED
llessle Petterson, Middleport;
horses or pontes from Meigs
Minor damage IG the left side
James Elias, Letart, W. Va.
County clubs onlyi lead~in pony,
~ a parked car owned by Wald
DISCHARGES- Christine BranWestern tack, 56 inches and un- L. Nicholson, 25, Dexter, was Inham, Henry hwver, E'Jidte Wilderi Western plee.l!lure pony, 48 to curred Wedne~ when the veliams, Belva Priddy, Christopher
56 Inches; Wf'!stern pleasure hicle waa struck by an uniden~
Cross, Allee Russell, ~e Me~
horae; pleasure .POI\Y, harness Ufied auto. Nicholson's auto was
Cumber, Fred Wilcoxon.
class; EngUsh pleasure hor&amp;&amp;i reportedly parked on Salem st.
barre1 race; Western pleasure In Rutland when tllo Incident ocMEIGS GENERAL HOSPITAL
pony, under 48 inches; trail curred, ae&lt;ordlng to Rutland
ADMISiiONS - None.
horse, Western tack, and trail
Marshall John TUllo.
DISCHARGES- None.

Athens, Clor...,t, Crawfonl,
Gallla, Hamilton,
lk&gt;cldDg
Jackson, L a k e, Lawrebce,
Meigs, Scioto, VInton and
Washington. 'I1te - o r af.
fected crops, pallblro.t; livestock, bulldlngsand ...tlpment,

TO SELL RUMMAGE
The Racine Pee Woe llldLlttle
loogue •ill hold• f1llllllllp aale
Friday and Slturdl,y frum 9 L m.
to 4 p. m. Frldl¥lllll S&amp;turdi.Y at
the Simpson BulltiiQJ In llaclne.
Residents h-.'Ybw namrnaae to
pick .., are to call 94W09J oc
949-4342.
ANSWERS CALL
Mlddl_.t _,.ncy
squod anowered a call at 4:37 a.
m., Thursday to tilt~ Fife
homo on Turkey Run RoM. Rose
Fife waa IUen lolloborllospltal
for medical ~
Tho

DEMOCRATS TO IIEET
Tbe Melp c...tJ Jlomocret
Ceatral Comml- ·'lrill 1110e1 at
8 p. m. tonl&amp;ltt In the Cllll1iJ court
offices.

Jetliner Spoofe~ by Shave Lotion

MIAMI (UPI) - 'I1te bls
American jetliner taxied to a
stop at lbo Havana Airport and
Cuban soldier• OJJickly rushed
FIR!( SOLD
aboard.
A grin spreld across
HAWTHORNE, Call!. (UPl) tile
race
of a dsrk-sklmed yruth
Ohio Steel Flllllldr)- Co. ~ Uma,
elauplng a packag&amp;.
Ohio, has boon Plr&lt;hlaod by
Wllb a Dourlsh, he unwrapped
TelaciYoo, Inc. for an llldlilelootllo packqo and bold up Its
ed 11110!1111 of lblclt. The i&gt;'anB&amp;cdon waa announced Wamollda,y. oontents for lhe other 63
paasengors and crew members
to see. The ..hand grenade..
LOCAL TEMPS
wlllcb the Youtlt bad uaod to
Tbo totnporalureln Poonoroto hiJack tho Loa Anplea.to-Mlaml
tlolnown bullntoi dlolrlot a\ ' fllllht 1101 a bcittle ot after
10:50 a.m. lotlalwao 82 • - • lbtl•e lotfm.
, llllder IUIJIIJ'ii*IH.
.liOW smlllnJi broadly, the

JOUth Ill a polo-ohtri and tlglrt - ' e are before they come
pants stuck a .38 eallber pistol here."
lnlo hla pocket and walked off
Tho paBIO!t80rB, wbo returned
tho plane Ill a allow of aboard a Cuban rolugoe !llgbt
romrodesblp with tbo llllldlera. soverol houro after t11o Jetliner
Tlllo was coqletocl Wames- came back with only Its crew,
doy tho 13th hljacldng IIIla you tndlcated they wore 1101 liven
~ a plano to Cuba. Evon tho
tile rod.Ql'pet l r - UIUal•
Cubans _..-ed to bo Mliii'Y· ly accorded hiJacked IIIJt(rts.
Inti ~ U.e·lncldenls.
"We were treated hot IDd
. • "Thoy told me lhe,y don't cold by tllo Cubano," aald
want tl1o - ' • of Amllrlca Frank Balamonte of Kay Woat,
sending .Ust ll!,)'body down Fla. ••The nre nlee GM
bore," aald lbe tJIIQI ot U.e minute lnd nao(f lbe - ...
NaiiAlnal Altllnia plane, Capt.
One p a - .......tr!IW
Sidney L 011-. "'1'118,Y' aald from a tllllnal lllriWY eoiii8Md
lbe pt.,. and ilaa gqn
lboy .IG 1atow wiD thoao -

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l4 - ....._
Tbe
Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jul,y 17,
. __ DIIIJ SonllnOI,
__, . 1968

1Carpenter

·wHOLE .

'

3·
1BoL 1
·
00
JELLIES .::!!'~~....
Bl1clcberry,Grlpe

KRAFT
MARGARINE.....::-~:~:!: ....4 .. 1.00
4.NtaC1.,!~·.1.00
GREEN BEANS
LIBBY'S CAISUIP. ........••• 51!:1.00
PEDAL SOFT....~~ul!~'...... 3~~: 1.00
CANDY BARS .. ~:;;!i~r: .......3 .::1.00
glllltl

WIENERS

Kentuclsvlleluty

•••••••••••••••••

20 count package, only •••••

9
Ground Beef••••••••••••• !~ 5 'r Everything
.
You Need
2
8
9
l
at
Canned Hams••••-••••~~ __ ~ . \ MARK v
sfk~meBa(On.......•·.......~ 33~
~

Fresh, Extr• Lean-Everyd1y Low Price

Cud•hy Qu•lity

.

, .

•

1

NESCAFE
.1ooz. Jer
INSTANT COFFEE~ .

3lb.

.

1.19·
.9.

~-

.

ow

. •.

JOY
2s1~t.IMtl
DOG FOOD
FIRESIDE GRAHAM'_
CRACKERS 1.a~. * -

it,

'

, :· Cor! Greeolees, Mr. lod Mra.
.-,.rl Starkey, .Mr. and Mra. Arthur Cnblree, Klthy Cheadle,
Ruth ADD ·and JIDO Jonlln, Mro,
Flye J~ · MrL ,'lluriGIJaway
and MrL Meodll JonlanandWII·
ter of Columbla G.... 'fit~e In
llteodsnce at the July meetiJW of
Meigs Counb P - Granae
at Rock Springs. The Columbia
Granae aerved refrellunents to
tho lll'lq),
Mr. and Mrs. lllsrco Eacobar
and 1'amll1 ofSanFranclso, Clllt
are vlsltlnl with his sister, MrL
Gene Jofrera and tlmlly, Mondaj&lt;
evenlng, the Jeffers 1'amll1 alOJW
with their pots, tho Escobar
IUIIl,y, were guests of Mr. and
Yra. Reed Jol!era.
·
Mix Crabtree, Annada, Mich.,
.tatted with his puents, lllr. aDd
Mrs. Edpr crabtree.
Guests or lllr. and Mrs. D. o.
McKnilht were Mr. and MrL
Charles McKnight, Rose, llllvld,
Uld Dickey, Patsokela, Mr. and
Mrs. Delmer McKnight, Outvllle;
Mr. and Mrs. Junior Allen and
children, CollllllllUJ, and Mr. and
Mrs. Glen Han!JW of Downlngton.
Thld Dye, U. S. Navy, Long
Beach, Clilt, Mrs. Madge Blackwood and Ll&amp;l Dye, Drotl.m, AlL.
are spend! IIi some time with relothes here. They also visited with
Mr. aDd Mrs. Grant Price at Vln
Wert, Ohio.
Mr. aDd Mrs. Dole Dye have
boon vla!lll!i their daughters,
Mrs. CeUa Irwin and 1'amll1 of
Marysville, MrL lucy l!onnpr&lt;loer and lamiiJ ot Coshocton and
I
Mrl. Mary Kepnar and tlmlly of
Hartford.
Mr. and Mrs. Cllllnll Fraley
and Ruacy ~. lllaDory, W, VL,
opent a vacation with her paronto, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Gree,_
lees, and at tho farm_they recently purchased from Mrs. Ellz.

J

CUT UP
lb. 33e

DAVID DAVIES

Mr. and Mrs. Archie Lee spent
a week In Wash!o&amp;ton. D. c.
wLth ~er aUJ1t and IUicle, Mr. and
Mrs. B, B, Bouldin.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Biddle of
Winter Haven, Florida were recent evening dinner I!UOsts ot
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Parker.
Mrs . . Estella Reclnr ot Carroll!M spent several days with
her sister, Mrs. lilYIa HudSOD.
Mr. Larry Lavender of Sault
VWage, 01. spent a ""k with

· :Ntws, Notes

1••

entt, Mr. and Mra. J111111s S.
~d&lt; and sister, Mn Mupret cottrlll and children.
Miss CGnnle Leadin&amp;llam at-

Syracuse News, Society

his mother, Mrs. Clara Laven-

·
HOME WINNERS - ~ Vallof CounlrJ a ... Women's A"'oclatlon wimers In a Ulurnamant there laat week were, o~ted, loll to right, Allee Marlo Icard, low putts third O!Jht; Sarah
Bumrvton. low grou, third llight; .~e1n NeweU, closest to pin and low gro.sa, tlrst :fllghtj Rita
Pauley, low net, third ntgtrt; Luella Morpn, . closest to pin, Standil!i, Joan Warner , low putts,
second Olght; Louise Anderson, low gross, second flll!ht; Mary Aroold, low ne~ first Olght; Terri Cosio, low net, second Olght, and Donia Wellman, !""'putts, first ntghL

abeth Gardner.
Carl Greenlees was a SundaY
cllnnor guest of his br&lt;ther and
alster-ln-law, Mr. and Mrs. Chester Greenlees and tlmlly of Bar·
low, and called on his brother,
Deaa Greenlees of Fleming on
Swlday afternoon.
Henry Gercy and Charles Newman, Hamden. called on Mr. and
Mrs. Rd&gt;ert Mattox Sunday an.
erooon.
Mr. and Mrs. George McClure
ot Weyne, Mich., spent a night
with her nepbew, WWlam Law·
.... and lamUy.
Mro. WWI.am Lawson aDd
Cheryl were In Charleston, W.
VL, on Friday where !hoy vlsl~
ed with her mother, Mrs. Bert
Withrow.
Floyd King, who hna been &lt;rJlte
ill, Is S&lt;lllewhot 11111roved aDd Is
DOW Stayllli with Mr. and MrS.
Ney carpenter.
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Cribtree of McArthur called on his

grandmother, Mrs. Murl Gllawey
on Saturday evening. other guests
of Mrs. Gliawey have been Mr.
lnd Mrs. Bob Woodrmnand Tracy
of Sprlnglleld, Mr. and Mrs. Leon
Woodrum aDd Randy, Ricky aDd
Kathy ot McArthur, John Woodrum of Albany, and Mrs. Millie
Coon, Ruth and Hache!, local.
Ricky Woodrum spent the week
with hb grandmother.
Mr. aDd Mrs. WUliam Lawson
and Mike, Pat aDd Cheryl attended the Miller reunion at Forked
Run Lake State l'ark Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Fern Gillogly
ealled on her brother and sisterIn-law, Mr. aDd Mrs. T. R BorIJW, McArthur, on Swlday,
Several members rrorn Temple
United Methodist Church attended
a hymn sll!iaodfellowshlptowelc,..e the Rev. H""ard Meyne and
lamll,y, who have been aaslgned
to tho Albany Charge. The Temple choir gave two numbers for
the hymn sllli.

Mr. aDd Mrs. Allred Rice and
Rleky, Columbus, spent a week ..
el'd with her parerts, Mr. a n d
Mrs. WUllam Culwell, and other
relatives here. Other guests of
the Culwella were Mr. and Mr s.
T. R. Blanton am son, Jackson.

Chestnut Ridge
Social Events
BY MRS. ALTA CONE
Mrs. Ora Cottrill visited her
daughter. Mrs. Lawrence Oxley
and family in 'colmnbus.
Mrs. Pauline Foster was a re~
cent Wellston viiJitor.
Mr. and Mrs. John Fitzpatrick
or Columbus and her parents, Mr.
aDd Mrs. Mccabe of Chillicothe
spent a weekend at the Thomas
Fitzpatrick home.
Mr. and Mrs. Taylor Moore at~
tended the Moore reunion at Car
a

and famiiJ ot Gahallla Ylolted
with ber slatar and bro!her.Jnlaw, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Smith.
Mr. and Mrs. Dolo Hubbard
ot Washington, D. c . were weekend gueats ol his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. EdiSM Hubbard and
o'lher relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hlrden,
Jim and Debbie, vlsltedthelrother 8011 and daulllter-ln~aw, Mr.
and Mrs. Robert A. Harden and
..., Eric, at Markln. Debbie stay.
ed for a 1011881' vial!.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Harris
and ehlldren of &amp;lena P a r k,
Callf. have returned to their
home after spending len days
with his parenlo, Mr. and Mrs.
Dick Harris and other relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Parker visited with their 8011 and
daughter-In-law, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Parker and son at llllr-

der, and si&amp;U.r s, Mary and Unda. He had been confined to a
hospital In Sauk Vlllage Blll!erlng from a fall at his home.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Hobad&lt;
and daughter of Jacksonville, Fla.
spent two wed&lt;s with his parents, lllr. and Mrs. Charles Ho..
back and her parents In cadiz.
Mrs. Grace Lance ot Salem
and Evelyn JmesofR!ttmanwere ietta.
here for a vtsitwlthrelatlvesand
Mrs. Daisy Roush and daughfrleods.
ter, Mrs. George Sclxlelder,
Mr. and Mrs. Aldo Jef!ers spent a few days In Rittman with
relatives.
ter cave, Ky. , a recent SuOOay.
Mrs. HesterBallardofGalllpo..
Mr. an:l Mrs. Wesley Boboand lis spent a weekend here with
Mr. and Mrs. Jarrott Bobo were her daUghter and son-ln~aw, Mr.
shq&gt;pllli in Pomeroy r&lt;lcenUy. and Mrs. Willie Guinther.
Mrs. Mellie Coon and daugh·
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Koeller
ters were Athens vi sitors a r~ of West Alexander spent a weekcent Friday.
end with her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Lizzie Clnode is home Mrs. Herman LMdon. Mrs.
after having visited her son, Wal~ Koeller remained untll Tuesday
er all:l family, Apple Creek.
and was aeeompanied home by
Richard Jordan has employ~ her mother, Mrs. London and
ment near Pt. P1easant, W. Va. sister, Mrs. James Guinther and
Charles Keeton who has served daughters, Lori and Carrie. They
in Viet Nam for several months rsturned on Thursday.
is now at home.
Recent visitors of Mr. L l g e
David Mul11ns is now stationed Shields were Mrs. Mery Miller
in PeMsylvania.
and sons, Tommy and Joluln,)', ol
Mrs. Grace Henslar hils r~ Cleveland and Mrs. Oshel Chilturned home after visiting her ders, end daughter and son-Inson, John P. Henslar aoo family law, Mr. and Mrs. Brown of Coat Newark.
lumbus.
Mr. and Mrs. 11m Jones of
Mr , and Mrs. Thomas Qllck
Grayson, Ky., spent several days of Columbus and their - Donat the home of her parents, Mr. ald Qllck of Gshanos were ~­
and Mrs. Ramon Morris.
day guests ol the former's par-

J,angsyi).le·· ·

New~ No~ ·

tended a Sludent Nurses Conventlm In Akron. Sbe Is a stu- .
dent nurse at Holzer Hoop!tal
By MRS. ALPtiA BARil
In Galllpolls.
Mr. and Yra. w~ ,..,.
Mr. and Mrs. Jolul Slack and
are
aJIJIDWlCIIII tile bb1lt ot I
ams, John Jr. and Donald, of
daugjlter
on J.,. 29. Shewellhed
Canton were weekend i!JO!ItS ot
lo
his mother, Mrs. Ada Slack. eight pouado aDII her Cloda
Down.
She
las
a
oloter,
111117 eujoyed a lawn picnic dinner at the home or Mra. Slaek'l Teressa, 5 years o&amp;d.
Mr. and Mro. 'KflrN111 ' dau8lller and son-ln~aw, Mr. and
lllteth
are aJIJIOIIIII:I~ tht blrtll
Mrs. Harley E. Johnson and cbll•
of
a
daU&amp;hter
., Holier Hollillal
I
dren ol Wolf Pen.
on
July
3_
She
hal boon' lllliiiCI
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Hershelman and Mrs. Josephine R!dde Mellsaa ·Jane allll • two lorGCIIOf Meadsvllle, Pa. spent a week- ers, Laiii!J' aDd Jolumlo..
Mr. aDd MrL Cheater Mel'and with the latter's brother and
aDd
chUdren Qt Columbua .,...
slater..l~law, Mr. and Mrs, Her..
the Jul,y 4th holidays wltlo
man Lomon.
tivea
here.
Mr. and Mrs. George SalzMr.
and MrL Larr)' Barr and
man of Mansfield were recent
.....
David,
open! SuaiiiQ Illerguests of her brother and slsterln~aw, Mr. end Mrs. WUIIs noon with her parenta, Mr. and
Mrs. Howard 1'._.. of.l'..,.
Lead!n8ham and daqllters.
Mr. and Mrs. Willie Qdnther, r0)'. other 'rlllitors wen her aliMr. and Mrs. Malcolm Qdnther ter, Mra. Bernice Sarver and
and chUdren and Mrs. Guy A. boys of Beverl,y.
Mr. and Mrs. G u y Soladley
Guinther and children spent a
spent
a few days vacaUonbtll at
&amp;lnciRj' at Buckeye Lske.
Mrs. Evol,yn Moore and daugh- their summer c-.e near Parkter Cheryl and Mrs. Ruth Cun- er sburl(,_ w•. VL
dll!, visited with Mr. and Mro.
Pelle Cundll! and lamll,y at Charleston.
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Wente
BADGLEY IN VIETNAM
and Mrs. Charles Horner and
RACINE
- Charlel fltellbtll
chUdren, Charles Jr. and ArBadgley,
1M
of Mr. aDII Yr1.
meta ol PortsmoUth visited with
Mr. and Mrs. Willis Leading- Rali&gt;h Badglll)' of Racine, hal
arrived In Vletllam far a7-'•
ham and clauslrters.
' Debbie and Diana Cundll! ot tour of~- mu4dreasi•Char·
Charleston spent s few days with les S. Badgley, H. N., B 20their grandmothers, Mrs. Ruth 80-84, "IP' Co., 2nd Jlo., 26111
Cundll! and Mrs. Evol,yn Moore. Marines, FPO San FranciiCO,
Their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Cal!f. 00602.
Pelle Cundll! of CharleatM came
end accompanled them home.
Mrs. Glen Cundll! Jr. a o d
children and Mr. and Mrs. Raljlb her daughter and SM.Jn~aw. Mr.
Lavender visited with Mr. and and Mra. HlrliiJ E• .JohnJm and
Mrs. Glen Cundll! Sr. ot Char- children recently.
Mrs. Edward Moore of
leatm.
vUie
was a l!IIO!It ol Mro. £¥-.
Mrs. Ada Slack spent Tueslyn
Moore
and dau8lller Cheryl.
day night and Wednesday with

r-

z.uw..

29A
.. . ~·
.

•'

IGA
CRACKERS·
Anaconda .
·Heavy Duty

\ut\\ec's
t\\l\

New White

1\0

POTATOES
-

APPLES

Peten V!Ctof Reid Loecf

PF,.IIOX
12 Gauge
16Gauje
20Gaup

SPECIAL!
Sat. Only July 13th

FRESH IGA

BREAD
., ~,
I

IOIVH

18"•25 ft. Roll ·

.Jumbo
role

... I

1.00'
1.00
1.00
.1.00

HUDSON TOWELS••••• ~ •••••••••••••• ~ .
WALDORF TISSUE••••••••••••••••••• 12 t.nSKIMMED MILK••••••••••• :::!n:.... .lO
614
FRISKIES CAT FOOD•••••••••••••••• lO
BISCUITS•••••~,~-!':?.o:!:•::. ••••••••••••••••••••••••::~.lOe
29e
POPSICLES....·::=-::: ...................6
rpiJs

Cucurnbers••••••••••• ~.1oe
Carrots•• u ••• , • • • • • ;::;, 1OC
Peppers •••••••••••••• ~ .1 oe
Radishes••••••••••••• :c:.1oe
Cabbage. ••••••••••••• ~· .1oc

SHOTGUN
SHELLS

FOIL

\q

39~

•

HomeGrown

SPECIAL!

Aluminum

.

20 lb.
bag

Large Red Delicious

~

"

Cllll

01. 1
CIM

Orange Drin
Pork &amp; Beans.............................:::.
Wax Paper. =................... ron.
,
Peanut BUlie r.........................!::~.
Evap. Mi k
Maxwell Hous e......................~
54 oz.

.FRUIT
. COCKTAIL
't&amp;ca:~

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

·· PEAS

75ft.

2 :: 4'5~
w

•

--·

PALBIWID

"'1

· DB. MONTE "11tl~ ~

CATSUP
26
39'.,.~

••••••••••••••••••••••••••

01. .

~~Hie

!lEGuW OR

DEl. MON1'E UGHT CHUNK

2

TUNA ·
:.:59~
D CALLI
· ~39~

carton

I}

ftt!

~.,T

I

Cmw Mdl1nd

W- ~-• I'..J......,l

J'.....l .~ .

11111~ ~~~:.::,.":~%~=~·.

at.

lfhqlll
JIIY

YONS MARKE
·PROPucE~Piua:n ro PLEAsn·
~h U;S..No. 1

·l iP·

Pdcls '

SEALTEST GRADE A

M!Gel.

Cllt .

Always .Good
DAIRY
YALUESI

Sun. Only July 14th

SUPER MARKET· Open Daily 9 m9:3~Sun.12 to 9:30

3Rt.

.

· DRIP GRIND

·SPECIAL!

M·IL

2'Kib; ·

·

HURON BII.AN)

'

glint

40 oz. ·

SHOWBOAT

~·

,...,.

bot•

LOWCALORII

39e·

·-

pldr

--

' DEL k'IONI'E

"

~ Ll~ 51. ~hfoml•

AT ltUTLAND

RUTL

11-19-20

...

·BAKERY
SPECIAL
llol11"'

SW·EET
ROLLS

-:t ·' 29C

l9~

�..

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

-~

------- --

-

l4 - ....._
Tbe
Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Jul,y 17,
. __ DIIIJ SonllnOI,
__, . 1968

1Carpenter

·wHOLE .

'

3·
1BoL 1
·
00
JELLIES .::!!'~~....
Bl1clcberry,Grlpe

KRAFT
MARGARINE.....::-~:~:!: ....4 .. 1.00
4.NtaC1.,!~·.1.00
GREEN BEANS
LIBBY'S CAISUIP. ........••• 51!:1.00
PEDAL SOFT....~~ul!~'...... 3~~: 1.00
CANDY BARS .. ~:;;!i~r: .......3 .::1.00
glllltl

WIENERS

Kentuclsvlleluty

•••••••••••••••••

20 count package, only •••••

9
Ground Beef••••••••••••• !~ 5 'r Everything
.
You Need
2
8
9
l
at
Canned Hams••••-••••~~ __ ~ . \ MARK v
sfk~meBa(On.......•·.......~ 33~
~

Fresh, Extr• Lean-Everyd1y Low Price

Cud•hy Qu•lity

.

, .

•

1

NESCAFE
.1ooz. Jer
INSTANT COFFEE~ .

3lb.

.

1.19·
.9.

~-

.

ow

. •.

JOY
2s1~t.IMtl
DOG FOOD
FIRESIDE GRAHAM'_
CRACKERS 1.a~. * -

it,

'

, :· Cor! Greeolees, Mr. lod Mra.
.-,.rl Starkey, .Mr. and Mra. Arthur Cnblree, Klthy Cheadle,
Ruth ADD ·and JIDO Jonlln, Mro,
Flye J~ · MrL ,'lluriGIJaway
and MrL Meodll JonlanandWII·
ter of Columbla G.... 'fit~e In
llteodsnce at the July meetiJW of
Meigs Counb P - Granae
at Rock Springs. The Columbia
Granae aerved refrellunents to
tho lll'lq),
Mr. and Mrs. lllsrco Eacobar
and 1'amll1 ofSanFranclso, Clllt
are vlsltlnl with his sister, MrL
Gene Jofrera and tlmlly, Mondaj&lt;
evenlng, the Jeffers 1'amll1 alOJW
with their pots, tho Escobar
IUIIl,y, were guests of Mr. and
Yra. Reed Jol!era.
·
Mix Crabtree, Annada, Mich.,
.tatted with his puents, lllr. aDd
Mrs. Edpr crabtree.
Guests or lllr. and Mrs. D. o.
McKnilht were Mr. and MrL
Charles McKnight, Rose, llllvld,
Uld Dickey, Patsokela, Mr. and
Mrs. Delmer McKnight, Outvllle;
Mr. and Mrs. Junior Allen and
children, CollllllllUJ, and Mr. and
Mrs. Glen Han!JW of Downlngton.
Thld Dye, U. S. Navy, Long
Beach, Clilt, Mrs. Madge Blackwood and Ll&amp;l Dye, Drotl.m, AlL.
are spend! IIi some time with relothes here. They also visited with
Mr. aDd Mrs. Grant Price at Vln
Wert, Ohio.
Mr. aDd Mrs. Dole Dye have
boon vla!lll!i their daughters,
Mrs. CeUa Irwin and 1'amll1 of
Marysville, MrL lucy l!onnpr&lt;loer and lamiiJ ot Coshocton and
I
Mrl. Mary Kepnar and tlmlly of
Hartford.
Mr. and Mrs. Cllllnll Fraley
and Ruacy ~. lllaDory, W, VL,
opent a vacation with her paronto, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Gree,_
lees, and at tho farm_they recently purchased from Mrs. Ellz.

J

CUT UP
lb. 33e

DAVID DAVIES

Mr. and Mrs. Archie Lee spent
a week In Wash!o&amp;ton. D. c.
wLth ~er aUJ1t and IUicle, Mr. and
Mrs. B, B, Bouldin.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Biddle of
Winter Haven, Florida were recent evening dinner I!UOsts ot
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Parker.
Mrs . . Estella Reclnr ot Carroll!M spent several days with
her sister, Mrs. lilYIa HudSOD.
Mr. Larry Lavender of Sault
VWage, 01. spent a ""k with

· :Ntws, Notes

1••

entt, Mr. and Mra. J111111s S.
~d&lt; and sister, Mn Mupret cottrlll and children.
Miss CGnnle Leadin&amp;llam at-

Syracuse News, Society

his mother, Mrs. Clara Laven-

·
HOME WINNERS - ~ Vallof CounlrJ a ... Women's A"'oclatlon wimers In a Ulurnamant there laat week were, o~ted, loll to right, Allee Marlo Icard, low putts third O!Jht; Sarah
Bumrvton. low grou, third llight; .~e1n NeweU, closest to pin and low gro.sa, tlrst :fllghtj Rita
Pauley, low net, third ntgtrt; Luella Morpn, . closest to pin, Standil!i, Joan Warner , low putts,
second Olght; Louise Anderson, low gross, second flll!ht; Mary Aroold, low ne~ first Olght; Terri Cosio, low net, second Olght, and Donia Wellman, !""'putts, first ntghL

abeth Gardner.
Carl Greenlees was a SundaY
cllnnor guest of his br&lt;ther and
alster-ln-law, Mr. and Mrs. Chester Greenlees and tlmlly of Bar·
low, and called on his brother,
Deaa Greenlees of Fleming on
Swlday afternoon.
Henry Gercy and Charles Newman, Hamden. called on Mr. and
Mrs. Rd&gt;ert Mattox Sunday an.
erooon.
Mr. and Mrs. George McClure
ot Weyne, Mich., spent a night
with her nepbew, WWlam Law·
.... and lamUy.
Mro. WWI.am Lawson aDd
Cheryl were In Charleston, W.
VL, on Friday where !hoy vlsl~
ed with her mother, Mrs. Bert
Withrow.
Floyd King, who hna been &lt;rJlte
ill, Is S&lt;lllewhot 11111roved aDd Is
DOW Stayllli with Mr. and MrS.
Ney carpenter.
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Cribtree of McArthur called on his

grandmother, Mrs. Murl Gllawey
on Saturday evening. other guests
of Mrs. Gliawey have been Mr.
lnd Mrs. Bob Woodrmnand Tracy
of Sprlnglleld, Mr. and Mrs. Leon
Woodrum aDd Randy, Ricky aDd
Kathy ot McArthur, John Woodrum of Albany, and Mrs. Millie
Coon, Ruth and Hache!, local.
Ricky Woodrum spent the week
with hb grandmother.
Mr. aDd Mrs. WUliam Lawson
and Mike, Pat aDd Cheryl attended the Miller reunion at Forked
Run Lake State l'ark Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Fern Gillogly
ealled on her brother and sisterIn-law, Mr. aDd Mrs. T. R BorIJW, McArthur, on Swlday,
Several members rrorn Temple
United Methodist Church attended
a hymn sll!iaodfellowshlptowelc,..e the Rev. H""ard Meyne and
lamll,y, who have been aaslgned
to tho Albany Charge. The Temple choir gave two numbers for
the hymn sllli.

Mr. aDd Mrs. Allred Rice and
Rleky, Columbus, spent a week ..
el'd with her parerts, Mr. a n d
Mrs. WUllam Culwell, and other
relatives here. Other guests of
the Culwella were Mr. and Mr s.
T. R. Blanton am son, Jackson.

Chestnut Ridge
Social Events
BY MRS. ALTA CONE
Mrs. Ora Cottrill visited her
daughter. Mrs. Lawrence Oxley
and family in 'colmnbus.
Mrs. Pauline Foster was a re~
cent Wellston viiJitor.
Mr. and Mrs. John Fitzpatrick
or Columbus and her parents, Mr.
aDd Mrs. Mccabe of Chillicothe
spent a weekend at the Thomas
Fitzpatrick home.
Mr. and Mrs. Taylor Moore at~
tended the Moore reunion at Car
a

and famiiJ ot Gahallla Ylolted
with ber slatar and bro!her.Jnlaw, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Smith.
Mr. and Mrs. Dolo Hubbard
ot Washington, D. c . were weekend gueats ol his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. EdiSM Hubbard and
o'lher relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hlrden,
Jim and Debbie, vlsltedthelrother 8011 and daulllter-ln~aw, Mr.
and Mrs. Robert A. Harden and
..., Eric, at Markln. Debbie stay.
ed for a 1011881' vial!.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Harris
and ehlldren of &amp;lena P a r k,
Callf. have returned to their
home after spending len days
with his parenlo, Mr. and Mrs.
Dick Harris and other relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Parker visited with their 8011 and
daughter-In-law, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Parker and son at llllr-

der, and si&amp;U.r s, Mary and Unda. He had been confined to a
hospital In Sauk Vlllage Blll!erlng from a fall at his home.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Hobad&lt;
and daughter of Jacksonville, Fla.
spent two wed&lt;s with his parents, lllr. and Mrs. Charles Ho..
back and her parents In cadiz.
Mrs. Grace Lance ot Salem
and Evelyn JmesofR!ttmanwere ietta.
here for a vtsitwlthrelatlvesand
Mrs. Daisy Roush and daughfrleods.
ter, Mrs. George Sclxlelder,
Mr. and Mrs. Aldo Jef!ers spent a few days In Rittman with
relatives.
ter cave, Ky. , a recent SuOOay.
Mrs. HesterBallardofGalllpo..
Mr. an:l Mrs. Wesley Boboand lis spent a weekend here with
Mr. and Mrs. Jarrott Bobo were her daUghter and son-ln~aw, Mr.
shq&gt;pllli in Pomeroy r&lt;lcenUy. and Mrs. Willie Guinther.
Mrs. Mellie Coon and daugh·
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Koeller
ters were Athens vi sitors a r~ of West Alexander spent a weekcent Friday.
end with her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Lizzie Clnode is home Mrs. Herman LMdon. Mrs.
after having visited her son, Wal~ Koeller remained untll Tuesday
er all:l family, Apple Creek.
and was aeeompanied home by
Richard Jordan has employ~ her mother, Mrs. London and
ment near Pt. P1easant, W. Va. sister, Mrs. James Guinther and
Charles Keeton who has served daughters, Lori and Carrie. They
in Viet Nam for several months rsturned on Thursday.
is now at home.
Recent visitors of Mr. L l g e
David Mul11ns is now stationed Shields were Mrs. Mery Miller
in PeMsylvania.
and sons, Tommy and Joluln,)', ol
Mrs. Grace Henslar hils r~ Cleveland and Mrs. Oshel Chilturned home after visiting her ders, end daughter and son-Inson, John P. Henslar aoo family law, Mr. and Mrs. Brown of Coat Newark.
lumbus.
Mr. and Mrs. 11m Jones of
Mr , and Mrs. Thomas Qllck
Grayson, Ky., spent several days of Columbus and their - Donat the home of her parents, Mr. ald Qllck of Gshanos were ~­
and Mrs. Ramon Morris.
day guests ol the former's par-

J,angsyi).le·· ·

New~ No~ ·

tended a Sludent Nurses Conventlm In Akron. Sbe Is a stu- .
dent nurse at Holzer Hoop!tal
By MRS. ALPtiA BARil
In Galllpolls.
Mr. and Yra. w~ ,..,.
Mr. and Mrs. Jolul Slack and
are
aJIJIDWlCIIII tile bb1lt ot I
ams, John Jr. and Donald, of
daugjlter
on J.,. 29. Shewellhed
Canton were weekend i!JO!ItS ot
lo
his mother, Mrs. Ada Slack. eight pouado aDII her Cloda
Down.
She
las
a
oloter,
111117 eujoyed a lawn picnic dinner at the home or Mra. Slaek'l Teressa, 5 years o&amp;d.
Mr. and Mro. 'KflrN111 ' dau8lller and son-ln~aw, Mr. and
lllteth
are aJIJIOIIIII:I~ tht blrtll
Mrs. Harley E. Johnson and cbll•
of
a
daU&amp;hter
., Holier Hollillal
I
dren ol Wolf Pen.
on
July
3_
She
hal boon' lllliiiCI
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Hershelman and Mrs. Josephine R!dde Mellsaa ·Jane allll • two lorGCIIOf Meadsvllle, Pa. spent a week- ers, Laiii!J' aDd Jolumlo..
Mr. aDd MrL Cheater Mel'and with the latter's brother and
aDd
chUdren Qt Columbua .,...
slater..l~law, Mr. and Mrs, Her..
the Jul,y 4th holidays wltlo
man Lomon.
tivea
here.
Mr. and Mrs. George SalzMr.
and MrL Larr)' Barr and
man of Mansfield were recent
.....
David,
open! SuaiiiQ Illerguests of her brother and slsterln~aw, Mr. end Mrs. WUIIs noon with her parenta, Mr. and
Mrs. Howard 1'._.. of.l'..,.
Lead!n8ham and daqllters.
Mr. and Mrs. Willie Qdnther, r0)'. other 'rlllitors wen her aliMr. and Mrs. Malcolm Qdnther ter, Mra. Bernice Sarver and
and chUdren and Mrs. Guy A. boys of Beverl,y.
Mr. and Mrs. G u y Soladley
Guinther and children spent a
spent
a few days vacaUonbtll at
&amp;lnciRj' at Buckeye Lske.
Mrs. Evol,yn Moore and daugh- their summer c-.e near Parkter Cheryl and Mrs. Ruth Cun- er sburl(,_ w•. VL
dll!, visited with Mr. and Mro.
Pelle Cundll! and lamll,y at Charleston.
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Wente
BADGLEY IN VIETNAM
and Mrs. Charles Horner and
RACINE
- Charlel fltellbtll
chUdren, Charles Jr. and ArBadgley,
1M
of Mr. aDII Yr1.
meta ol PortsmoUth visited with
Mr. and Mrs. Willis Leading- Rali&gt;h Badglll)' of Racine, hal
arrived In Vletllam far a7-'•
ham and clauslrters.
' Debbie and Diana Cundll! ot tour of~- mu4dreasi•Char·
Charleston spent s few days with les S. Badgley, H. N., B 20their grandmothers, Mrs. Ruth 80-84, "IP' Co., 2nd Jlo., 26111
Cundll! and Mrs. Evol,yn Moore. Marines, FPO San FranciiCO,
Their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Cal!f. 00602.
Pelle Cundll! of CharleatM came
end accompanled them home.
Mrs. Glen Cundll! Jr. a o d
children and Mr. and Mrs. Raljlb her daughter and SM.Jn~aw. Mr.
Lavender visited with Mr. and and Mra. HlrliiJ E• .JohnJm and
Mrs. Glen Cundll! Sr. ot Char- children recently.
Mrs. Edward Moore of
leatm.
vUie
was a l!IIO!It ol Mro. £¥-.
Mrs. Ada Slack spent Tueslyn
Moore
and dau8lller Cheryl.
day night and Wednesday with

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29A
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CRACKERS·
Anaconda .
·Heavy Duty

\ut\\ec's
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New White

1\0

POTATOES
-

APPLES

Peten V!Ctof Reid Loecf

PF,.IIOX
12 Gauge
16Gauje
20Gaup

SPECIAL!
Sat. Only July 13th

FRESH IGA

BREAD
., ~,
I

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18"•25 ft. Roll ·

.Jumbo
role

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1.00'
1.00
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HUDSON TOWELS••••• ~ •••••••••••••• ~ .
WALDORF TISSUE••••••••••••••••••• 12 t.nSKIMMED MILK••••••••••• :::!n:.... .lO
614
FRISKIES CAT FOOD•••••••••••••••• lO
BISCUITS•••••~,~-!':?.o:!:•::. ••••••••••••••••••••••••::~.lOe
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POPSICLES....·::=-::: ...................6
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SHOTGUN
SHELLS

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HomeGrown

SPECIAL!

Aluminum

.

20 lb.
bag

Large Red Delicious

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Pork &amp; Beans.............................:::.
Wax Paper. =................... ron.
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Peanut BUlie r.........................!::~.
Evap. Mi k
Maxwell Hous e......................~
54 oz.

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't&amp;ca:~

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

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75ft.

2 :: 4'5~
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PALBIWID

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CATSUP
26
39'.,.~

••••••••••••••••••••••••••

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DEl. MON1'E UGHT CHUNK

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·PROPucE~Piua:n ro PLEAsn·
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SEALTEST GRADE A

M!Gel.

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Always .Good
DAIRY
YALUESI

Sun. Only July 14th

SUPER MARKET· Open Daily 9 m9:3~Sun.12 to 9:30

3Rt.

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M·IL

2'Kib; ·

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HURON BII.AN)

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SW·EET
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�</text>
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