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                  <text>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-

-·

....
.

··-·~·------~-·---····"--·

-

.

"

. - .. -· . · ··-- ..
·-·~

··-· · --~- --- --

... - ··-

~·.

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 "'"

)

.•

.

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 -

�·,

Helen Help
Us••• sy Helen Bolt81

---And Everywhere that Dickie Went
the Lomb Was Sure to Go

IALS

YOUTH ASKED FOR IT!
.
1bla column 11 for young people, their problema and pleasurea, their lroublea and fun" AI
with the roll of Helen Help USI,
It welcomes laUiht but WINI'I
dodge a aerlooa quelltlon with a
broth-oft.
Send your teenage queJtlonaiD
YOUTH ASKED FOR IT, care ot
Heten Help USI thla newa-r.
NECESSITY IS THE
MOTHER OF CUSTOM?
Dear Helen:
Please tell me wilY Ealdmoa
rub IIOHI lnllead of kissing? RESEARCHER
Dear Rea;
rm not sure, but a eorres.
pondent once came up wtth thla
explanatlon:
Dear Helen: Aa to wilY Eeldmos rub noees: Can you piclure an Eeldmorock-&lt;~-rollertaklng a gal home from a dras?
No?
Well, It' a 50 below aa hewalka
her to the door of her Igloo. SO
he wants her to know how he
feela. SO he tmootches h e r.

Tile Law's Halter On Dr. Spock
them'"!''
As Federal Judge- Jo...rancis Ford stated at
the time of sentencing Spock and his three

··A rllic'd. like au adult. knows when
· he is getril!g away with too much
uaugl1ti11ess or rudeness eve ll when his
mot11er 1s tryillg to close her eyes to it.
He feels guilty ill-Side. He would like to
be stopped. But if he isll't corrected,

co-defendants. they had been found guilty of
" what amounts to rebelhon against the law.
It is important that the laws be enforced for
the protection of each one of us. I believe
that lawlessness cannot be tolerated. _Wh~re

he's hkely to belwve worse and worse.
if li e were saying, 'How bad do I
llave to be before someborly stops me?'"

It's as

the law and order stops, anarchy begms.
That is what the trial and conviction of Dr.
Spock was all about. It had nothing to do with

- From "Baby and Child Care."
by Benjamin Spock . M.D.

the suppression of free speech o~ the crushing
of opposition to government policy. .

Dr. Spock, of course. is not a child, nor
doe s he feel at all guilty inside for behaving
··naughtily"- for having encouraged resist·
ance to the draft . E:ntirely the contrary: the
highest personal moral motives impeUed him

~

There is no doubt that Dr. Spock

IS

con"

vinced of the immorality of the Vietnam war
and the evil of a law that requires your.g men

to fight in it. He could go on decrying the war
and the law for as long as the war lasted and

to do what he did .
Nor is society in the posi:ion of parent to
Dr. Spock. Yet there is a parallel between

no one would question his right to do so.
He chose, however, the tactic of Ol;ltrig~t
violation of the law in order to dramatize hts
beliefs and to arouse the consciences of those
American:; who aren't sure or who perhaps
don't care.

the situation described above by the famed
baby doctor and the situation society found
itself in because of his opposition to the war
in Vietnam .
America , the wails of the way-out Liberals
notwithstanding. still tolerates a great deal
of dissent- perhaps more than it eve~ has in
history. Because it does , Spock and hts associates had to deliberately court a confrontation with authority and had to go to extreme

In that he has so far failed . Another gen-

eration ~ay vindi~!lte him and hflil him as a

hero. Or it may very well decide that the

I

course he advocated would have led to even
greater evils than those he denounced.

Whatever tbe event, the good doctor today

lengths before the government could be prod-

stands convicted of breaking the law and has
no choice but to take his medicine.

ded into indicting them on a charge of "conspiring to counsel young men to evade the

Wh~

finds he It Ice-bound.
A call Is put In tor sn Icebreaker. Well, the - d pta
around and although rubbing
noses Isn't the IIBllte, lt'a the
next bell.
Anyhow you are stuck With one
gal. - EARL M.
Dear Helen:
My mother says girls don't
"call out" other glrlt. Maybe
you'll understand.
There' a a prl In a gang of
kid• who tlve near us. Sl1e mocked me out at &lt;thool and made
m,y seventh grade year miterable. I tried to Ignore her, but
when she got Into my locker
and cut holes in my grm clothe•,

draft."
A point was finally reached when authority
could no longer close its eyes and realized
that if respect for the law were not enforced,
the actions of the dissenters would get worse
and worse. 1t was as if it said, "How bad
can we allow them to get before we stop

Perfect the Market Look
We hear the latest wrinkle in wigs is one
designed for the ladies to wear to the supermarket.
It comes with butlt·ln curlers.

RAY CROMLEY

Deep Breathing Dangerous
Practice for Swimmers

The Cracks of Dissension
Widen in Viet Foe's Camp

Br WAYNE G. BRANDSTADT, _M"D.

By RAY CROMLEY
NEA Washington Correspondent
WASHINGTON I NEA)
There are small but persistent signs of increasing_ diss~n­
sipn in North Vietnam , in Ho Chi Minh's southern mvas1on

forces and in the Viet Cong.
These cleavages offer the United States an opportunity to
drive wedges within the enemy camp.
• In North Vietnam, "public security Jetter boxes" have

been set up in Haiphong for those wishing to reporl sabotage,
counterrevolutionary propaganda or defeatist or antigovernment talk to the public security men.
Hanoi is pushing a campaign of educating children in the
cepts of "counterrevolutionarx. J'esistance and the protec-

n of security for t~e fatherland."
~arty fJfficials publicly praise the success of children in uncovering " reactionaries and agents."
Punishments have been stiffened for a range of counterrevolutionary activities, ranging from defeatist talk to ban-

ditry and sabotage.
~

.. There has been an increase in officer desertion among
Ho's North Vietnamese invasion armies in the south.
Some village party secretaries in Viet Cong-rul~ areas

complain that many of the young men they recruit desert
back to their hamlets.
• Enough time has now passed since the Tet offensives
for analysts to get a clearer picture of who among the ene~y
cUed in these suicide raids and in the series of clashes which

followed .
It is now clear that the heavy sacrifices were

~.ainly ~mong

the VietCong. That is, for the most part, the sutcide rru_ds cut
into the lower leadership of the VC. Except at some Important strategic objectives. as Hue, the North Vietnamese south·
ern invasion army losses were comparatively light.
Men who know Ho 's methods say this was no accident. ln
visits to Thailand and Laos some time after the Tet raids ,
this reporter talked at length with experienced Thai and Lao
guerr:'ta officers, some of whom had been with Ho in the
war against the French, and therefore know his methods well.
l'hese men insisted that one purpose of the Tet raids was to
wipe out key men in the Viet Cong junior leadership_ who

might stand out

a~ainst

THE GLOBAL VIEW
Soviet, U.S. in Accord
On Urging Mideast Peace

THE DDCTDR SAYS

the dominance of the North VIetna-

mese generals. This "thinning out" of the Viet Cong activist

leadership, in theory, would put Ho and the other Hanoi leaders in stronger control of the southern underground .

But there are signs that this North-Snuth cleavage is grow"
log, not declining, despite the deaths at Tet.

LAST

If you plan to dive and remain under water as long as
possible, it would seem logical

to take a few deep breaths
first. Even though professional
pearl divers do this, it is a

dangerous practice and should
be discouraged, accordmg to

Dr. James R. Webster of Chicago, who has treated many
victims of near drowmng.

Taking 10 or 12 deep
breaths, a process known as

Q-ln a recent column you
recommended the use o! min-

eral oil in the nose to soften
dry crusts. In another column

you said that taking mineral
oil for constipation may cause
an inflammation of the lungs.
Couldn't mineral oil used in
the nose reach the lungs?

A-If you use a cotton swab,
you should squeeze it nearly
dry before applying it to your

hyperventilation, will replac~ . nasal mucous membrane. This
with oxygen much of the car- . will not only eliminate anr
bon dioxide normally present danger of inhaling the oil- It
in the deeper recesses of your

lungs. This will quickly lower
the carbon dioxide concentra-

will also avoid ''drowning"

the delicate cilia of the lining
of your nose .

tion in your blood to a point
below the level needed to
Q-ls there a hormone that
stimulate the normal fiow of is effective in the treatment of
blood to your brain. Then, tic douloureaux?
even though you may feel fine ,
A-No. Injecting the facial
you may suddenly lose connerve
involved Is still the most
sciousness while under water
satisfactory
treatment.
and he unable to come up for
air.

Br LEON DENNEN
NEA Foreign News Analyst
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (NEA )
For the first time since the end of the war in June, 1967,
the United States and Russia are jointly,urglng Israel and the
Arab nations to agree to direct or indirect peace talks on the
Middle East.
East European diplomats see this as another sign that,
despite the war in Vietnam, the Soviet leaders are moving
slowly toward an accommodation with the United States in
some areas of conflict. It accounts, they believe, for the fail-

then laughed about It, I told the
teacher.
From then on I was afraid to
Ill horne clown her street. !lie
uya she's going to get me, and

her gang Will take over when .
she's through, Helen, I'd rather

get beat up and heve It over
with, than be a!rald all the time.
Ever)' time she - s me, and
rm with otherS 10 she can't

ure of President Nasser's recent mission to Moscow.

Egypt's president went to Russia with a request and a veiled
threat. He sought more Soviet arms and the Kremlin's aid
for prompt action to bring about Israel's withdrawal from
conquered Arab territory" He Intimated that he would seek
closer relations with the United ~'tales should Moscow deny
hio request.
· · ... ·· · .. ...
·
Tbe Russiaris, it !eems, vieie not Impressed by Nasser's
diplomatic blackmail since they are themselves currently
engaged in secret bargaining with Washington about peace in
the Middle East
Leonid Brezhnev, chief of Russia's Communist party, went
through the usual ritual of castigating "American-Zionist Imperialism ." However, according to the East European diplo"
mats, he warned Nasser to seek a diplomatic solution.
Peace between the Arabs and Israelis still only a dim hope.
But there is considerable evidence that Russia, like the
United States, is eager to settle the conflict without a renewal

QUICK QUIZ
Q-Is the tenn of a U.S.
congressman fixed by law?

cate situation.
An authoritative radio commentary, Life Abroad, even

happens whoo a child at play
hyperventilates and a play"
A--{lnly the Congress of
mate comes up from behind the United States, among the
him and Ughtly squeezes the agencies of the federal gov"

~ ·'as

it
tJ

·l

ig.

..,; 3 ,

good Negro government. If there
1ything they feared more than an
'It Negro, tt was a brilliant one.
-Leroae Beaaetl Jr.

The history of Re c onstruction has been
viewed largely tllrough Southern·rnade glasses
-ignorant blacks. abetted by carpetbaggers
(Northern while opportunists) and scalawags
CSouthern while traitors), lording it over
;Whites in the statehouses, wasting the people's

' money on such things as gold-plated spittoons
, an,. making a mockery of Western
..,.,... "' IArY I&lt; w.

The facis speak otherwise.

parliament~

occupied the .seat or ex -president of the Confederacy Jetrerson Davis.
Among many other important posts. Negroes
served as lieutenant governors in Mississippi,
South Carolina and Louisiana. P .B.S. Pinch·

back briefty held the otrice of governor of
Louisiana.

Although the freedmen had a saying-"lhe
boltom rallls on top"- in no state did Negroes

rights of women were enhanced.

Ironically, it was the white population that
was to beneftt from all this when Reconstruction was finally overthrown. Except for Negro
rights, white supremacy governments were to
retain many of the advance• made during this
short period of experimentation with democracy In the South.
NEXT: Ead ol lhe Dream

'·

!
I

...

ro
_......,

lNTEIUr or

RICHUD S, OWEN, PtliLIIHU:
CMKH ~ ldita"
f'l*ll•hM ..iiJ' HeiPl s.~ llr , .
ONo Vd ..J I'Wollllhlt~~ c:-,uo., llllilldtlllk
st~ ,._...,., Ohio, U1et, ~ OIJee
Ptllnlt tll~nu, EdlwW l'hDIM ..Wtlf,
!Jiconof dan ~ JUI • ,_.,,

'

Meigs Drops 5th Straight

35-y..r~d

mum-traveled
~ball rellet pitcher,
who It co~lng an 07ti101Jplng
record diii'!iil"a aea11011in which
re~ka'bfl! ¢tch(ng performance&amp; have been C011DD&lt;qllaee.
. The ll-tciot, f.lnch rllhthander
!rom Slanley, N,C,, hal ~"
II001ed 1n no rower than ts
games. I!nd tporls a 7-I record
1\!arlne Lance Corporal
Robert 11. Burwell of Galli·
polls, a hero ot lhe Vletllam
war, threw out the Drat ball
and g~astandlngovattonrrom
the

~owd

of over 8,000 at

Croaley field In Cincinnati
Jut n!Sht.

Pinch • hitter 1\!ack .-a
lllapjied a f.-4 tla With a - doolile 1n tho elghtll Inning and
ICOI"ecl tho tlllrd nm ot tho
frame oo Vada PinMJD.'s aacrillce !ly to Jl(ve Abemath,y and
tile Reds .tile win.
Abematliy, .llho Bfarted ids
career as aa overhand P,tcher,
but became an underhanded
thrower becauoe of a sore
shoulder, set a maJor league
record ot 84 appearances ror the
Clllls in 1965 and had a 6-3
record and 1.27 ERA lor the
Reds lall 1088011.
Banko Scores Six
Ernie Banks drove in sh
with two homert and a slnille
and Bltl Hands went 7 2-3
Innings for hit ninth vlctoey for
the CUba· ln their. opener. The
Phlllles gained a split In the
doobleheader when Jeri James
· pitched hia first slurtout and
drove In a nm wUh his first
mlllor l081!Ue hit ln the
nightcap. Jarnea was backed by
a 10-1111 attack, Including
homers by Don Lock, JohiiiiY
Callison and Cookie Rojas"
Doug Rader and pitcher
DIIIIII,Y Coombs drove ln two
runs each as the AstroB ralUed

n...

li.Y III'II·CAMEN .
UPI~Writir
w.-: ProiHIIooal foolball
~ dl s!alt.llilecl With
preleit Place

.,elr

aefo!lcoo
~ 'star
I!Ieplll)'ecl
' !Cir11\0t.
Loufalana. Stat.l
G!!l .,~~i:!il
bit .O(Idal with the Pa~· .
'A

when he eould !101 . . .. ... "

I111811Cial ~rma with Greeti iiV.
Walt one 7041', don't tlsn· a General lllinlger VInce Lom•
CCllllract·llld then contact either bardl.
Head C&lt;Nieh 1'om Fearo or
Parka joint Solnta .
Geneial . llana,aer VIc ~
The NFL;I )'QIII&amp;ell member
0( .the New OrlOIUIS Saint~.
Will now begin Ha sopliolno!1
Tilt Sotlrtt, ono~ear mmiiben aeaaon With anca.or provee
ot tha Natlaull Foolball League, star, end Dave Parka, wbQ.
began tbelr lnlllal taiDPalsn In joined the Saints via the , _ · 'the
196? With . 01117 one pJ'O\'OII I'OUUI as Taylor.
"
otrenalve star, Jim Taylor, long
The Solnta &amp;lllOWICed w..s;.
• mainlllll or the Green i!IQ" nelday that Parka, an All: tllf•lllli•e
Pacl!era' back!leld"
America aalectlon ln 19113 WhU;, ,._, the
The Solnta aC&lt;IIIred Taylor'a at T-•• Tech and a toui":Yt'ir ""'y·
~ ·
NFL veteran, hal llrDecl a lit ilal;.
.
mllltl.year CCllllraet with the. ~
·
New OriOIUIS club after pta,ylng
com.i'ba~ ','~ali ~,am,
out hit Ql)llon With lhe Sill GbtaJnld b)' .tho ·" "" l'~; liN
Franc:loco Forey Nlnera.
• !rom 'Uie Pooml'· !lr&lt;!ft1¥··Gnly
Terms oC Purks' contract Iall . . ~i!eil ~·. ~~~~~~~
were not announced, but · he to . II!!!Y · Ol!l !il• , iploii; ' tile
!lgurecl to come a little ch._ ~ Wei - - ntllan Taylor, who reportedly loran detenil•e ~ , A!Yin
received a four"year pact Heymoad lillil N.W 1IUDJIY
calling lor $400,000.
and nlne-t'Nr .....,_., ladile
TolecloOUt
Ron Mix sorked iiiiii -.dlh•tlle
Hllh1Y touted Bob Toledo, me san Dla., Cbll'swi.' at Eacaadlof tho nation's top collegiate do, Call!., lor tlijl ftrot Jlme
Fruth's PharmacyofPt. Plea.:. passers last oeaaon at San since he sulfered
coae
ant downed the Gallipolis Orioles Francisco State, got his walking oC lnlluensa two • • .;p.
f-3 and the llllddleport Reds
eliminated the AddavUie Jets 4-2
in Wednesday night's Uttle
Leauge tournament actloo at Ky.
ger Creek.
The tournament, anderway now
of tmplOliiiOIII-

-

Fruths, ·
Reds In.
KCWins

The sluqtng Meigs American first Inning lead, added one run the second, Tom !lyooll slogled
Legion beseball team dropped Its In the third, three lnthafi!th, one with one out. and an error on and a gUttering 0. 79 earned run
fifth straight game ln a 12-3 cl.- in the seventh, three intheelghth Pitcher John logela. ground ball average. He has allowed seven
with two out
earned runs In 80 lnnlnga and
cislO(i to Parktrsliur1 .Wednes· ind two In the ninth.
Meigs, meaiMhUe, managed
The third tnnlng runs for lllelga -entad a Cincinnati stalf
day e\'flDtng . ~t tlie, ~&gt;Yracuselllu­
crnly one run intheseeol&gt;lafldtwo included singles by Ed Bier, plaguud by sore ar011 !rom
nlclpai Park. '
lllelgt, now 6-IG-1, wiD move In lhe third on a total of seven T&lt;Mn Spencer am Steve Oiler, a tailing apart completely.
for four runs in tile sixth lnnlng,
walk ahl an error.
01' Abby, as he Ia known by Jim Britton had a one-IIItter since July 6, has reached the
Into tourney action S&amp;turcfa¥ aft. hlta.
Meigs' Brat scorfl came when
The only other hits !or Meigs his leaJiunales, pitched I 2-3 with two out In the sixth when halfWay point Only 20 teams reernoon at Athens agaln,t Athena.
Bill
led
oit
with
~
single
In
were
a single by Van 1\!eter ahl Innings of shutout reUef to earn the Astros filled the bases on main tn contention for the crown.
Parkeraburg jumped o!!to,a :1-0
,. "
one by Spencer.
bl.s aeventl• .:tctory of the Norm Miller's single and two
In Wednesday's first game, the
IOgels, starting mouhlarnan, 1081100 Wednesday night when walk1. Rader's single kayoed MlddJeport Reds scored two ru111!1
worked untU the botkm of the tile .Redt ended a Hven.garne Britton and Coombs later In the fifth inning to as&amp;W"e a win
sixth when he gave way to Jon losing streak with a 7-4 triumph completed the rally with a twoM over the Addavllle Jeta. The 1\!ld.
Rothgeb. Rothgeb was replaced over the Loa Anplet Dodgers. run single o!1 Ken Johnaon"
dies held a slim 2-1 lead JOlng
by Oller In the top of the ninth. The victory enilbled the Reds to
Ron
SMiboda singled home Into the filth.
Fran., night
Wentzel siJrted lor the wl,_ pin groond on all foor teams the first run and scored the last
A Acree was credited with the
League
at St. Louis, night nors ahl w.. relieved by De currently ahead · of them,
In
a
three-run
stxth-lmlng
rally
win. He allowed ftve hits" Rife
W, L, Pet. GB
Haven In the third. They combined inc:lucllni the Orst-j)lace st. which enabled the Mets to snap was charged with the loss, He
St. Louis " .•..59 31 .656
AMERICAN LEAGUE
to tan Ove ahl walk five whUe Louis Clrdlnals who were
Allanta .... " "49 41 .544 10
W, L, Pet" GB Meigs pitchers, likewise, struck leading ~ behind Bob Glbaon a slx..game losing streak. Gene allowed but Ove hita. Cottrel
Alley drove ln two runs and paced the losers with two singles.
Philadelphia" .. 46 42 .523 12
Detroit ..•• ·•. S? 3S .633
out five abllssued five bases on when their game With the San WHile Stargell hit hla ISth Acree, Walburn an:l Bratton each
San Franclaco .. 45 45 .500 14
Baltimore . " •. 49 38 .563 6\1 balls.
Franelaco Gl..anta was rained out homer ol the season to lead the had doubles for the winners. AcClnelmlll ... ".43 45 .489 15
Cleveland " ... 52 41 .559 6\1
De Haven was the big stick for alter lour complete lmlngs,
Pirates to their opening-game ree fanned 10 Jeta.
Chicago o , ,.t,l 48 ,484 15\!i Boilton ' ' " " " e46 41 ,529 9V, Parkersburg with ti trlplo and
Cubs, Phillie• Spltt
trlwnph behind the el8ht-1Ilt
In the nightcap, Fruth's PharPlttaburgh " ... 42- 48 .467 17
Oaklsnd . " .. "43 48 .483 13\1 two singles in three trips to the
The Chicago CUbs scored sn pitching of Steve _B lass.
macy
broke a 2-2 tie In the top
New York •.•. 42 50 .457 18
Mlmesota " •• .42 48 .477 14
plate. DeQuasle, the se&lt;ondllase, 8-4 triumph and then lost to lhe
of
the
sixth by scoring live big
Los Angeleo .. 42 50 .m 18
California " " " .42 47 .472 14\1 man, had three singles In sixol· Philadelphia Phlllles 8~, the
runs,
held
off the Galllpolts OriHoostoit •..•. 39 52 .429 21\1
New York " .. "41 46 .471 14\1 ficlal times at bat, while Swlth- Houlton Astroa defeated the
oles who got one marker in the
Wednesday'• Results
Chicago . . ... 3S 48 .422 17
Syracuse Winner
er, the shortstop, ahl John Morrl· Atlanta Braves 5-ll and the New
buttom
of the sixth for a 7-3 win.
Chicago 8 Philadelphia 4, lst Wallhlngton . •. 31 55 .360 24
son. left ftelder, each had three York Mets beat the PIUsburgh
Gil
Price
was charged with the
Philadelphia 8 Chicago 0, 2hl
Wednesday'• Reaultt
alogles in five trips"
Pirates 5-4 alter losing 8-ll In
loss. He fanned nine, and gave up
Over
9-5
Pittsburgh 8 New York 2, Ill Washington 2 Now York 1
Parkersburg
other National League games.
seven
hits. AmyWUsonwascredNew York 5 Pittsburgh 4, 2nd Chicago I Baltimore 0, nlt!111
201 030 132-12 19 3
In the Arnerlcan leall'l~ •. liul,
lle!i.
wll!l
.t~e \'lcl&lt;!i"Y- !!o save up .
' ". " .'
C~l!tlatll Lo8 ,~lts 4 ·
Boston 61111mesota 5, 'nlsht
1\!elgs. ,., 012 000-(100- 3 7 S Oaliland ~etics edied the
ljyraeuse defeated · 'l'oin«&lt;y's five hits,
Hoollilt!SAtlanta 2•
Oikllald 3'n..trolt2, nlgJit " .'
Wentzel~ De Haven (3) (WP) Detroit Tigert 3-ll,. the Boston Angel. 9-.lln Pee,.. pill¥ 'noes"' WUson had a double ahl slogle
S.F.. .at st.' Louis, IJI)d,, rain Clevall!nd 4 CaHJornla 2, DISht and Bell. Ingels (LP), Rothgeb Red Sox shadad the Mlmesota day at the &amp;Yraeuse Municipal
for the winners, Tim Tatterson
· t(l'oda,y'a l'rl&gt;bable Pltcheu
'l'oday'a l'rUiabl• Pltcbero
(6), Oller (9) ahl swan.
Twins 6-.l, the Chicago Whit&lt; park.
a
single and double and Rick
All Timet EDT
Baltimore CLeonhard 5-3) at
SOx stopped the Baltimore
Kelly Winebrenner went the Frazier two singles.
New York (lieaYOr 7-8)atPIIII· Chleatl '(Jobll 7.1), 2:15 p.m.
Orioles 1~, the Waablngton distance for the winners, strikFor Ute loser's, David Thomas
burgh (Bunning 4-11), 8:05 p.m.
Bostdl '(Bell 8-3) at Mlmesota
Senators nipped the New York Ing oot 15, giving up five hila had 1 double, llllke Berridge two
Loa Angeles (Keldch 1-3) at
Roawalf(7-3), 2:30p.m.
Yankees 2-1 and the Cleveland and Issuing eight bases on balls. shvJes.
Clnc:lnnati (Culver 6-S), 8:05p.m.
Detroit (Wllltlll 6-7) atOeldand
lndlarui defeated the California &amp;Yracuse hitters were Hamllton
Tonlgh~ the Gallipolis Yankees
· San Francisco (lllerlchal 16-4) (Kraum 6-7), 4:30 p.m.
Angel• 4-ll.
with a triple and lingle; Jlllb. play P~ Pleasant City lee and
at St. Loula (Carlton 9-4), 9
Washington (Hannan3-3)atNew
bard, a dooble, andWinebremer, Fuel at 7 p, m., and the Syracuse
p.m.
York (8abnoen "7-f), Bp.m"
a single.
Giants meet the Pt. Pleasant KJ.
Allanta (Jarvia 9-6) at HouaOnly games aChoclilecl
For the Angels, Smith walked wants in the nightcap.
Fight
Results
ton (Giusti 5-tl or WU1011 6-11),
Frid!l7't Gomet
liY United Preas Internattonal 10, struck rut nine and was tagged
8:30p.m.
Oaldand at Mlmeaota, nlsht
LAS VEGAS (UP!)- Pole
NEW YOI\K (IJPl) - llmael lor four hita. IIIIIch had a dooble
oftl,y pme1 ~eel
. Call!ornla at Chlcal/,ll, nl&amp;hl
Gonzalez,
129, San Dlel/,ll, Call!.,
Lllgulla, 136, Panama, &lt;iutpolnt- and single, OWens f triple, and
Pittsburgh at·Atlanta, nlgirt
. Baltimore at Dotrolt, nlgirt
,.
ed VIetor 1\!elendez, 136, Puerto coach and Rosemaum each a outpointed Rene Macla, 130, Los
Chlcafl at Lot Ange!ea, night cJ.,iaJand at New York, nl8ht
· Angeles (10)"
Rloo (10)" · Frank DePaula, slnille.
Phil a at Clnelmati. nlsht
Washington at ·Botton, nlabt
SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (IJPI)- 172%, New York, stopped
The golden annlver&amp;al")' PGA Rod\Y Rlnro, 176, Argentina
championship tees orr deep In (6). Jlmm,y Dupree, 175, Jeroay
the heart of Texatloc!IIJ'- tOme . Clt,y, N.J., outpointed Charlie
TWO ADDED
15 minutes before dawn-With Green, 176, New York (10).
NEW YORK (IJPl) - The
golden hear Jack Nlddaus and
United
Statet track and lleld
gold&lt;nlnor Billy Casper rated
team was given a boost
CO-tlYorltea.
more
than
$1
miiHon
·In
a
•
Oddsmakers have made Nick- brllllant career but has not been Wednesday when national AAU
laus and Casper 3-1 choices to able to CO)Iiure the PGA decathlon champ · Bltl Tommey
aucceecl Don January as champ championship In II tries, Ia llld John Workonton left to Join
taarn In cassel, Germany.
aiid ley claim 10 lho $25,000 back ror another Ill at lt. And thoBoth
Toomey and Warkenton
Or 11 prize after four ~~n~ellng
10 II revl!&amp;llzed Sam &amp;lead. will aloo compete In meets at
· I'CIUIIda on the heat-aeared, light
whoH game was never butter
and tight Pecan Vall07 Country as he ps for hia rourth PGA Kronstadt, · Rumania and stuttgart, Germany.
CIID COurH, which i-eacbes out Ulle.
"""e 7,1196 tJrda !!lib &amp;.35-35•.
70 par,
I'
..
. 'out, o thote nuDb\lntl llliiH&amp;
the lldtllnel ..,., from
the ''1tiWII Ilona," again waiting
· v. .. , .•. Reg•
hungrUy ln the '~ina~ IIi eaptu1e
!19·.1110
"·~ "blg"GUG'' trOril the "old
P..,a." LHdll;glluj l&amp;ie.l l aurle
~' new, ~~ an u.s.
. "&lt;hampion Lao 'rrevlnol,
· colorfUl Cobelltro 1!IIo :
alre.dy. liN bemi
of san ·
0

f""e,;.

Wizard Citation NO-FROST

,

Angels

. O'fLY

0 ,

Dear Scared:
First, tell your mother for

me that gir!a DO "call out". oth-

I

.
.
.. ~ '. ··14.S ... ft. -1 .._. ~t~
• NO-fROST refrigerator artl ..........
Ql, ft. aepaf'Ote ........... .
0 23.5 lqe It, Gf olooll • 4.6

:ot " ,

• La'll• ~Id...., polnlolo wt
Two full-wlcfth •helvet lft ref~f..W

wtd! lifHII lraotil
Two booH~Io ._ rqcb JiOid ;11. _ .
1 ''"''" ce~n .raclt I• fntear cloori

Nicklaus,

_ _ _ _ _ _ _. . • A &lt; . - y t k - "

3WC1116," "

Casper at

Even Odds

Join the Enjoyers

M."·v.c~

Thoughts

.. HIA,Ioc.
"II rau're so smart-why aren't you DE GAULLE?"

AmerJcan educator.

post-Civil War New York or the federal government during the Grant administration.
Once given the chance, Negroes took to polltics on local, state and national levels with
alacrity and an amazing ability to learn. Between 11169 and 1901, 20 Negroes served in the
U.S. House of Representatives and two In the
Senate. One of the latter, Blanche Kelso Bruce,

. .
'
GETTiNG JU:AD'I' - CUI Demotkty, center, a pltcher-&lt;IUtftelder lor the Me1p Lesion TOIDI,
Is JI8IIIIW tips onlxqitlngprlor ID tho local squad's entry In tho District Aln&lt;orloan Lesion llaaeboll
tournaiDent at Athens this saturdiy. Coach Ruas 1\!oore, left, lnstructa Demoskey While Richard
Pickens o! l\llddleport Feeney·BennOtt Poa~ American Legion, looks on. Pickens ts ma-r of tho
team for Ihe sponsoring Mlddleport, Butla'!'l llld PomerO¥ Amerlcon Lesion Poota, - Sent1Jiol

SCARED

but don't cry over them. We
best redeem the paat by forgetting it.-Elbert Hubbard,

was anything Souihern whites
feared mort than bad Negro government,

The rea1111,ll Tiid olbernath,y,

a

THE DAILY SENTINEL

• • •

If Ihere

tenders.

jump me, she cornea up elose
and whispers, 10 Jult wait, you'll
get yours!"
I caia't always be with some-one else. What can I do? -

Learn from your mistakes,

14 Bottom Rail on Top

By. FRED
DOWN '
'
Ufl ~·, Writer
1\!anager'.Jlave Bristol baa an.,
underhandecl ...-aon lor !nllstlng hie cCinelmatl. lied• ahould
IIIII lKi r~ 11 aertOua
Natianal League liemanl coo-

ular," fast I - H.

But who can discern his
errors? Clear thou me from
hidden faults.-Psal1118 19:12"

control the government, . although In South
Carolina they had a majority In the hoiUe.
There was a notable lack ot desire for revenge
against the whites. Senator Bruce, for one,
championed the re-enfranchlsement of former
rebels ..
It was In their remaking o! tbe slate constitutions that the black politicians left their last•
ing mark. Voting qualifications and imprison-.
men! for debt were abolished, free publle
schools for both races were established, the

HaltS

Chicinnati Skid ~

lOrry." ..Firat periOD PJIHI-

blamed Red China's "provocateurs," working hand-in-hand
with "reactionary Arab extremists," for fom enllng new strife.
Echoing Pravda, the commentary finally conceded Israel's
ernment, has no fixed tenure
abdomen.
right
to exist As though the Kremlin never urged the destrucDrowning is still one of the of office or date of retire- tion of the "Zionist state," Life Abroad even claimed that
leading causes of accidental ment for its members. Sena" "former Arab threats to eliminate Israel" originated mainly
death. Any victim of drowning tors a n d representatives from "irresponsible Arab figures" who serve as Red China's
should be rushed to a hospital. alone decide when and if they agents in the Middle East.
Attempts at resuscitation can should no longer seek reIn the view of e~~perls on Russia, renewed warfare between
election.
be carried out en route . Even
Israel and the Arabs is the last thing the Russians want, for
if the victim appears to have
Q-When, in the U.S. NaV!J, the present at least.
been revived he may need ex- is a flag flown above the no"
They have their hands full with Red China and face an
pert care because his injured tiona! flag?
increasing
anti-Russian upsurge in Czechoslovakia and elselungs may go on filling up with
A-The church pennant
where
in
East
Europe. They are also eager to reopen the
body fiuids exuded from hiS flies above the U.S. flag durSuez
Canal
since
Soviet shipments, especially to North Vietlymphatic vessels.
in~ divine service on board
nam
and
India,
have
become more costly because of the need
ship.
to sail around Africa.

There was some corruption, to be sure, but
no worse than the South knew before and not
as bad as it was to know later. It could not
compare with the graft-ridden government of

-~ ,;_, Of'·'Abby

•'

p~

'

m~~~lf#.lm..:~..::?"~-«?".&amp;:~~Zi::::::m:?-::::::m:=w::r.-'"*
" .

.,

slve" turn&amp; second per lOll ••ling-

BERRf'S WORlD

18, .1988

j

''

ventures in the Middle East would not help an already deli-

by Don Ookley and John Lane

'

'
July

ot hostilities.

munist party's paper, warned in an editorial that new military

'

j

er glrta ond acratching, hair·
'JIUtllng and 1\!cldng ml8ht oven
end with a slaab from a twitchblade knife.
Then call bully .girl up and tall
her you're wUllng to for(ltl tho
whole mess, but If ohe mak~
one more threat - Jut! one! she'll aet the worat IUl'Prlae of
her life. Let her illltl what It
lo.
NeXt lime you oee her1 amite
as If you had a big oecrtt. Brazen It out. Don't act scared In fact, abow her you feel a littie oorr)' for her.
11 this doesn't llo[l her, it•a
yoor father's move. With I he
help of a juvenlle om.cer, he ean
dllh 'out a pretty fancy "aurprise,"
P.S. Don't say, "But Pll get
In blger trouble If I Dnk.'' How
elH can you atop a gang of baddies?- H,
Dear Helen:
Pve been going with thlt girl
10 montha. Before school waa out
"" had an exchange trip to an.
- r tchool, We lleyocJ ln studentl' homaa, to saveexpensea.l
tta.Yed With anollier boy, but ~
assigned my girl totheparentto!
a 17.year~d boy who Ita "fall•
buck. I told her to lock her bedroom door and she said I had
oothlng to worr)' aboot. But later
I found out he took her homo
from a meeting and some kissing went on.
I blew m,y stack, and now she
won't tpeak to me. 511• Pm too
attached to her and not trutllng
•Ii!lUI!h· rm Willing to forgive and
fofget but the won't tlsten. I
know she likes me. What can I
do?- CAN'T LOSE HER
Dear CUI:
You can knock o!tlho ''forgive
and forget" rouUne and try, "I'm

~van:»

'"

\.

I

Even before Nasser reached Moscow, Pravda, the Com-

Fainting in children has
been known to occur through
a similar mechanism . This

he oomes up for alr, he

"

IT'S NATIONAL HOT DOG MONTH'.

. ' ". Jteg.

~1/.3

MR" GAVRI.,
C~~IRMI&gt;.N

a=

~E

ETWICS
COMMITTEii, ~~S

OUED ~ MEETit-6
FOR
lif

FOUR

.

...

.• ..

�·,

Helen Help
Us••• sy Helen Bolt81

---And Everywhere that Dickie Went
the Lomb Was Sure to Go

IALS

YOUTH ASKED FOR IT!
.
1bla column 11 for young people, their problema and pleasurea, their lroublea and fun" AI
with the roll of Helen Help USI,
It welcomes laUiht but WINI'I
dodge a aerlooa quelltlon with a
broth-oft.
Send your teenage queJtlonaiD
YOUTH ASKED FOR IT, care ot
Heten Help USI thla newa-r.
NECESSITY IS THE
MOTHER OF CUSTOM?
Dear Helen:
Please tell me wilY Ealdmoa
rub IIOHI lnllead of kissing? RESEARCHER
Dear Rea;
rm not sure, but a eorres.
pondent once came up wtth thla
explanatlon:
Dear Helen: Aa to wilY Eeldmos rub noees: Can you piclure an Eeldmorock-&lt;~-rollertaklng a gal home from a dras?
No?
Well, It' a 50 below aa hewalka
her to the door of her Igloo. SO
he wants her to know how he
feela. SO he tmootches h e r.

Tile Law's Halter On Dr. Spock
them'"!''
As Federal Judge- Jo...rancis Ford stated at
the time of sentencing Spock and his three

··A rllic'd. like au adult. knows when
· he is getril!g away with too much
uaugl1ti11ess or rudeness eve ll when his
mot11er 1s tryillg to close her eyes to it.
He feels guilty ill-Side. He would like to
be stopped. But if he isll't corrected,

co-defendants. they had been found guilty of
" what amounts to rebelhon against the law.
It is important that the laws be enforced for
the protection of each one of us. I believe
that lawlessness cannot be tolerated. _Wh~re

he's hkely to belwve worse and worse.
if li e were saying, 'How bad do I
llave to be before someborly stops me?'"

It's as

the law and order stops, anarchy begms.
That is what the trial and conviction of Dr.
Spock was all about. It had nothing to do with

- From "Baby and Child Care."
by Benjamin Spock . M.D.

the suppression of free speech o~ the crushing
of opposition to government policy. .

Dr. Spock, of course. is not a child, nor
doe s he feel at all guilty inside for behaving
··naughtily"- for having encouraged resist·
ance to the draft . E:ntirely the contrary: the
highest personal moral motives impeUed him

~

There is no doubt that Dr. Spock

IS

con"

vinced of the immorality of the Vietnam war
and the evil of a law that requires your.g men

to fight in it. He could go on decrying the war
and the law for as long as the war lasted and

to do what he did .
Nor is society in the posi:ion of parent to
Dr. Spock. Yet there is a parallel between

no one would question his right to do so.
He chose, however, the tactic of Ol;ltrig~t
violation of the law in order to dramatize hts
beliefs and to arouse the consciences of those
American:; who aren't sure or who perhaps
don't care.

the situation described above by the famed
baby doctor and the situation society found
itself in because of his opposition to the war
in Vietnam .
America , the wails of the way-out Liberals
notwithstanding. still tolerates a great deal
of dissent- perhaps more than it eve~ has in
history. Because it does , Spock and hts associates had to deliberately court a confrontation with authority and had to go to extreme

In that he has so far failed . Another gen-

eration ~ay vindi~!lte him and hflil him as a

hero. Or it may very well decide that the

I

course he advocated would have led to even
greater evils than those he denounced.

Whatever tbe event, the good doctor today

lengths before the government could be prod-

stands convicted of breaking the law and has
no choice but to take his medicine.

ded into indicting them on a charge of "conspiring to counsel young men to evade the

Wh~

finds he It Ice-bound.
A call Is put In tor sn Icebreaker. Well, the - d pta
around and although rubbing
noses Isn't the IIBllte, lt'a the
next bell.
Anyhow you are stuck With one
gal. - EARL M.
Dear Helen:
My mother says girls don't
"call out" other glrlt. Maybe
you'll understand.
There' a a prl In a gang of
kid• who tlve near us. Sl1e mocked me out at &lt;thool and made
m,y seventh grade year miterable. I tried to Ignore her, but
when she got Into my locker
and cut holes in my grm clothe•,

draft."
A point was finally reached when authority
could no longer close its eyes and realized
that if respect for the law were not enforced,
the actions of the dissenters would get worse
and worse. 1t was as if it said, "How bad
can we allow them to get before we stop

Perfect the Market Look
We hear the latest wrinkle in wigs is one
designed for the ladies to wear to the supermarket.
It comes with butlt·ln curlers.

RAY CROMLEY

Deep Breathing Dangerous
Practice for Swimmers

The Cracks of Dissension
Widen in Viet Foe's Camp

Br WAYNE G. BRANDSTADT, _M"D.

By RAY CROMLEY
NEA Washington Correspondent
WASHINGTON I NEA)
There are small but persistent signs of increasing_ diss~n­
sipn in North Vietnam , in Ho Chi Minh's southern mvas1on

forces and in the Viet Cong.
These cleavages offer the United States an opportunity to
drive wedges within the enemy camp.
• In North Vietnam, "public security Jetter boxes" have

been set up in Haiphong for those wishing to reporl sabotage,
counterrevolutionary propaganda or defeatist or antigovernment talk to the public security men.
Hanoi is pushing a campaign of educating children in the
cepts of "counterrevolutionarx. J'esistance and the protec-

n of security for t~e fatherland."
~arty fJfficials publicly praise the success of children in uncovering " reactionaries and agents."
Punishments have been stiffened for a range of counterrevolutionary activities, ranging from defeatist talk to ban-

ditry and sabotage.
~

.. There has been an increase in officer desertion among
Ho's North Vietnamese invasion armies in the south.
Some village party secretaries in Viet Cong-rul~ areas

complain that many of the young men they recruit desert
back to their hamlets.
• Enough time has now passed since the Tet offensives
for analysts to get a clearer picture of who among the ene~y
cUed in these suicide raids and in the series of clashes which

followed .
It is now clear that the heavy sacrifices were

~.ainly ~mong

the VietCong. That is, for the most part, the sutcide rru_ds cut
into the lower leadership of the VC. Except at some Important strategic objectives. as Hue, the North Vietnamese south·
ern invasion army losses were comparatively light.
Men who know Ho 's methods say this was no accident. ln
visits to Thailand and Laos some time after the Tet raids ,
this reporter talked at length with experienced Thai and Lao
guerr:'ta officers, some of whom had been with Ho in the
war against the French, and therefore know his methods well.
l'hese men insisted that one purpose of the Tet raids was to
wipe out key men in the Viet Cong junior leadership_ who

might stand out

a~ainst

THE GLOBAL VIEW
Soviet, U.S. in Accord
On Urging Mideast Peace

THE DDCTDR SAYS

the dominance of the North VIetna-

mese generals. This "thinning out" of the Viet Cong activist

leadership, in theory, would put Ho and the other Hanoi leaders in stronger control of the southern underground .

But there are signs that this North-Snuth cleavage is grow"
log, not declining, despite the deaths at Tet.

LAST

If you plan to dive and remain under water as long as
possible, it would seem logical

to take a few deep breaths
first. Even though professional
pearl divers do this, it is a

dangerous practice and should
be discouraged, accordmg to

Dr. James R. Webster of Chicago, who has treated many
victims of near drowmng.

Taking 10 or 12 deep
breaths, a process known as

Q-ln a recent column you
recommended the use o! min-

eral oil in the nose to soften
dry crusts. In another column

you said that taking mineral
oil for constipation may cause
an inflammation of the lungs.
Couldn't mineral oil used in
the nose reach the lungs?

A-If you use a cotton swab,
you should squeeze it nearly
dry before applying it to your

hyperventilation, will replac~ . nasal mucous membrane. This
with oxygen much of the car- . will not only eliminate anr
bon dioxide normally present danger of inhaling the oil- It
in the deeper recesses of your

lungs. This will quickly lower
the carbon dioxide concentra-

will also avoid ''drowning"

the delicate cilia of the lining
of your nose .

tion in your blood to a point
below the level needed to
Q-ls there a hormone that
stimulate the normal fiow of is effective in the treatment of
blood to your brain. Then, tic douloureaux?
even though you may feel fine ,
A-No. Injecting the facial
you may suddenly lose connerve
involved Is still the most
sciousness while under water
satisfactory
treatment.
and he unable to come up for
air.

Br LEON DENNEN
NEA Foreign News Analyst
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (NEA )
For the first time since the end of the war in June, 1967,
the United States and Russia are jointly,urglng Israel and the
Arab nations to agree to direct or indirect peace talks on the
Middle East.
East European diplomats see this as another sign that,
despite the war in Vietnam, the Soviet leaders are moving
slowly toward an accommodation with the United States in
some areas of conflict. It accounts, they believe, for the fail-

then laughed about It, I told the
teacher.
From then on I was afraid to
Ill horne clown her street. !lie
uya she's going to get me, and

her gang Will take over when .
she's through, Helen, I'd rather

get beat up and heve It over
with, than be a!rald all the time.
Ever)' time she - s me, and
rm with otherS 10 she can't

ure of President Nasser's recent mission to Moscow.

Egypt's president went to Russia with a request and a veiled
threat. He sought more Soviet arms and the Kremlin's aid
for prompt action to bring about Israel's withdrawal from
conquered Arab territory" He Intimated that he would seek
closer relations with the United ~'tales should Moscow deny
hio request.
· · ... ·· · .. ...
·
Tbe Russiaris, it !eems, vieie not Impressed by Nasser's
diplomatic blackmail since they are themselves currently
engaged in secret bargaining with Washington about peace in
the Middle East
Leonid Brezhnev, chief of Russia's Communist party, went
through the usual ritual of castigating "American-Zionist Imperialism ." However, according to the East European diplo"
mats, he warned Nasser to seek a diplomatic solution.
Peace between the Arabs and Israelis still only a dim hope.
But there is considerable evidence that Russia, like the
United States, is eager to settle the conflict without a renewal

QUICK QUIZ
Q-Is the tenn of a U.S.
congressman fixed by law?

cate situation.
An authoritative radio commentary, Life Abroad, even

happens whoo a child at play
hyperventilates and a play"
A--{lnly the Congress of
mate comes up from behind the United States, among the
him and Ughtly squeezes the agencies of the federal gov"

~ ·'as

it
tJ

·l

ig.

..,; 3 ,

good Negro government. If there
1ything they feared more than an
'It Negro, tt was a brilliant one.
-Leroae Beaaetl Jr.

The history of Re c onstruction has been
viewed largely tllrough Southern·rnade glasses
-ignorant blacks. abetted by carpetbaggers
(Northern while opportunists) and scalawags
CSouthern while traitors), lording it over
;Whites in the statehouses, wasting the people's

' money on such things as gold-plated spittoons
, an,. making a mockery of Western
..,.,... "' IArY I&lt; w.

The facis speak otherwise.

parliament~

occupied the .seat or ex -president of the Confederacy Jetrerson Davis.
Among many other important posts. Negroes
served as lieutenant governors in Mississippi,
South Carolina and Louisiana. P .B.S. Pinch·

back briefty held the otrice of governor of
Louisiana.

Although the freedmen had a saying-"lhe
boltom rallls on top"- in no state did Negroes

rights of women were enhanced.

Ironically, it was the white population that
was to beneftt from all this when Reconstruction was finally overthrown. Except for Negro
rights, white supremacy governments were to
retain many of the advance• made during this
short period of experimentation with democracy In the South.
NEXT: Ead ol lhe Dream

'·

!
I

...

ro
_......,

lNTEIUr or

RICHUD S, OWEN, PtliLIIHU:
CMKH ~ ldita"
f'l*ll•hM ..iiJ' HeiPl s.~ llr , .
ONo Vd ..J I'Wollllhlt~~ c:-,uo., llllilldtlllk
st~ ,._...,., Ohio, U1et, ~ OIJee
Ptllnlt tll~nu, EdlwW l'hDIM ..Wtlf,
!Jiconof dan ~ JUI • ,_.,,

'

Meigs Drops 5th Straight

35-y..r~d

mum-traveled
~ball rellet pitcher,
who It co~lng an 07ti101Jplng
record diii'!iil"a aea11011in which
re~ka'bfl! ¢tch(ng performance&amp; have been C011DD&lt;qllaee.
. The ll-tciot, f.lnch rllhthander
!rom Slanley, N,C,, hal ~"
II001ed 1n no rower than ts
games. I!nd tporls a 7-I record
1\!arlne Lance Corporal
Robert 11. Burwell of Galli·
polls, a hero ot lhe Vletllam
war, threw out the Drat ball
and g~astandlngovattonrrom
the

~owd

of over 8,000 at

Croaley field In Cincinnati
Jut n!Sht.

Pinch • hitter 1\!ack .-a
lllapjied a f.-4 tla With a - doolile 1n tho elghtll Inning and
ICOI"ecl tho tlllrd nm ot tho
frame oo Vada PinMJD.'s aacrillce !ly to Jl(ve Abemath,y and
tile Reds .tile win.
Abematliy, .llho Bfarted ids
career as aa overhand P,tcher,
but became an underhanded
thrower becauoe of a sore
shoulder, set a maJor league
record ot 84 appearances ror the
Clllls in 1965 and had a 6-3
record and 1.27 ERA lor the
Reds lall 1088011.
Banko Scores Six
Ernie Banks drove in sh
with two homert and a slnille
and Bltl Hands went 7 2-3
Innings for hit ninth vlctoey for
the CUba· ln their. opener. The
Phlllles gained a split In the
doobleheader when Jeri James
· pitched hia first slurtout and
drove In a nm wUh his first
mlllor l081!Ue hit ln the
nightcap. Jarnea was backed by
a 10-1111 attack, Including
homers by Don Lock, JohiiiiY
Callison and Cookie Rojas"
Doug Rader and pitcher
DIIIIII,Y Coombs drove ln two
runs each as the AstroB ralUed

n...

li.Y III'II·CAMEN .
UPI~Writir
w.-: ProiHIIooal foolball
~ dl s!alt.llilecl With
preleit Place

.,elr

aefo!lcoo
~ 'star
I!Ieplll)'ecl
' !Cir11\0t.
Loufalana. Stat.l
G!!l .,~~i:!il
bit .O(Idal with the Pa~· .
'A

when he eould !101 . . .. ... "

I111811Cial ~rma with Greeti iiV.
Walt one 7041', don't tlsn· a General lllinlger VInce Lom•
CCllllract·llld then contact either bardl.
Head C&lt;Nieh 1'om Fearo or
Parka joint Solnta .
Geneial . llana,aer VIc ~
The NFL;I )'QIII&amp;ell member
0( .the New OrlOIUIS Saint~.
Will now begin Ha sopliolno!1
Tilt Sotlrtt, ono~ear mmiiben aeaaon With anca.or provee
ot tha Natlaull Foolball League, star, end Dave Parka, wbQ.
began tbelr lnlllal taiDPalsn In joined the Saints via the , _ · 'the
196? With . 01117 one pJ'O\'OII I'OUUI as Taylor.
"
otrenalve star, Jim Taylor, long
The Solnta &amp;lllOWICed w..s;.
• mainlllll or the Green i!IQ" nelday that Parka, an All: tllf•lllli•e
Pacl!era' back!leld"
America aalectlon ln 19113 WhU;, ,._, the
The Solnta aC&lt;IIIred Taylor'a at T-•• Tech and a toui":Yt'ir ""'y·
~ ·
NFL veteran, hal llrDecl a lit ilal;.
.
mllltl.year CCllllraet with the. ~
·
New OriOIUIS club after pta,ylng
com.i'ba~ ','~ali ~,am,
out hit Ql)llon With lhe Sill GbtaJnld b)' .tho ·" "" l'~; liN
Franc:loco Forey Nlnera.
• !rom 'Uie Pooml'· !lr&lt;!ft1¥··Gnly
Terms oC Purks' contract Iall . . ~i!eil ~·. ~~~~~~~
were not announced, but · he to . II!!!Y · Ol!l !il• , iploii; ' tile
!lgurecl to come a little ch._ ~ Wei - - ntllan Taylor, who reportedly loran detenil•e ~ , A!Yin
received a four"year pact Heymoad lillil N.W 1IUDJIY
calling lor $400,000.
and nlne-t'Nr .....,_., ladile
TolecloOUt
Ron Mix sorked iiiiii -.dlh•tlle
Hllh1Y touted Bob Toledo, me san Dla., Cbll'swi.' at Eacaadlof tho nation's top collegiate do, Call!., lor tlijl ftrot Jlme
Fruth's PharmacyofPt. Plea.:. passers last oeaaon at San since he sulfered
coae
ant downed the Gallipolis Orioles Francisco State, got his walking oC lnlluensa two • • .;p.
f-3 and the llllddleport Reds
eliminated the AddavUie Jets 4-2
in Wednesday night's Uttle
Leauge tournament actloo at Ky.
ger Creek.
The tournament, anderway now
of tmplOliiiOIII-

-

Fruths, ·
Reds In.
KCWins

The sluqtng Meigs American first Inning lead, added one run the second, Tom !lyooll slogled
Legion beseball team dropped Its In the third, three lnthafi!th, one with one out. and an error on and a gUttering 0. 79 earned run
fifth straight game ln a 12-3 cl.- in the seventh, three intheelghth Pitcher John logela. ground ball average. He has allowed seven
with two out
earned runs In 80 lnnlnga and
cislO(i to Parktrsliur1 .Wednes· ind two In the ninth.
Meigs, meaiMhUe, managed
The third tnnlng runs for lllelga -entad a Cincinnati stalf
day e\'flDtng . ~t tlie, ~&gt;Yracuselllu­
crnly one run intheseeol&gt;lafldtwo included singles by Ed Bier, plaguud by sore ar011 !rom
nlclpai Park. '
lllelgt, now 6-IG-1, wiD move In lhe third on a total of seven T&lt;Mn Spencer am Steve Oiler, a tailing apart completely.
for four runs in tile sixth lnnlng,
walk ahl an error.
01' Abby, as he Ia known by Jim Britton had a one-IIItter since July 6, has reached the
Into tourney action S&amp;turcfa¥ aft. hlta.
Meigs' Brat scorfl came when
The only other hits !or Meigs his leaJiunales, pitched I 2-3 with two out In the sixth when halfWay point Only 20 teams reernoon at Athens agaln,t Athena.
Bill
led
oit
with
~
single
In
were
a single by Van 1\!eter ahl Innings of shutout reUef to earn the Astros filled the bases on main tn contention for the crown.
Parkeraburg jumped o!!to,a :1-0
,. "
one by Spencer.
bl.s aeventl• .:tctory of the Norm Miller's single and two
In Wednesday's first game, the
IOgels, starting mouhlarnan, 1081100 Wednesday night when walk1. Rader's single kayoed MlddJeport Reds scored two ru111!1
worked untU the botkm of the tile .Redt ended a Hven.garne Britton and Coombs later In the fifth inning to as&amp;W"e a win
sixth when he gave way to Jon losing streak with a 7-4 triumph completed the rally with a twoM over the Addavllle Jeta. The 1\!ld.
Rothgeb. Rothgeb was replaced over the Loa Anplet Dodgers. run single o!1 Ken Johnaon"
dies held a slim 2-1 lead JOlng
by Oller In the top of the ninth. The victory enilbled the Reds to
Ron
SMiboda singled home Into the filth.
Fran., night
Wentzel siJrted lor the wl,_ pin groond on all foor teams the first run and scored the last
A Acree was credited with the
League
at St. Louis, night nors ahl w.. relieved by De currently ahead · of them,
In
a
three-run
stxth-lmlng
rally
win. He allowed ftve hits" Rife
W, L, Pet. GB
Haven In the third. They combined inc:lucllni the Orst-j)lace st. which enabled the Mets to snap was charged with the loss, He
St. Louis " .•..59 31 .656
AMERICAN LEAGUE
to tan Ove ahl walk five whUe Louis Clrdlnals who were
Allanta .... " "49 41 .544 10
W, L, Pet" GB Meigs pitchers, likewise, struck leading ~ behind Bob Glbaon a slx..game losing streak. Gene allowed but Ove hita. Cottrel
Alley drove ln two runs and paced the losers with two singles.
Philadelphia" .. 46 42 .523 12
Detroit ..•• ·•. S? 3S .633
out five abllssued five bases on when their game With the San WHile Stargell hit hla ISth Acree, Walburn an:l Bratton each
San Franclaco .. 45 45 .500 14
Baltimore . " •. 49 38 .563 6\1 balls.
Franelaco Gl..anta was rained out homer ol the season to lead the had doubles for the winners. AcClnelmlll ... ".43 45 .489 15
Cleveland " ... 52 41 .559 6\1
De Haven was the big stick for alter lour complete lmlngs,
Pirates to their opening-game ree fanned 10 Jeta.
Chicago o , ,.t,l 48 ,484 15\!i Boilton ' ' " " " e46 41 ,529 9V, Parkersburg with ti trlplo and
Cubs, Phillie• Spltt
trlwnph behind the el8ht-1Ilt
In the nightcap, Fruth's PharPlttaburgh " ... 42- 48 .467 17
Oaklsnd . " .. "43 48 .483 13\1 two singles in three trips to the
The Chicago CUbs scored sn pitching of Steve _B lass.
macy
broke a 2-2 tie In the top
New York •.•. 42 50 .457 18
Mlmesota " •• .42 48 .477 14
plate. DeQuasle, the se&lt;ondllase, 8-4 triumph and then lost to lhe
of
the
sixth by scoring live big
Los Angeleo .. 42 50 .m 18
California " " " .42 47 .472 14\1 man, had three singles In sixol· Philadelphia Phlllles 8~, the
runs,
held
off the Galllpolts OriHoostoit •..•. 39 52 .429 21\1
New York " .. "41 46 .471 14\1 ficlal times at bat, while Swlth- Houlton Astroa defeated the
oles who got one marker in the
Wednesday'• Results
Chicago . . ... 3S 48 .422 17
Syracuse Winner
er, the shortstop, ahl John Morrl· Atlanta Braves 5-ll and the New
buttom
of the sixth for a 7-3 win.
Chicago 8 Philadelphia 4, lst Wallhlngton . •. 31 55 .360 24
son. left ftelder, each had three York Mets beat the PIUsburgh
Gil
Price
was charged with the
Philadelphia 8 Chicago 0, 2hl
Wednesday'• Reaultt
alogles in five trips"
Pirates 5-4 alter losing 8-ll In
loss. He fanned nine, and gave up
Over
9-5
Pittsburgh 8 New York 2, Ill Washington 2 Now York 1
Parkersburg
other National League games.
seven
hits. AmyWUsonwascredNew York 5 Pittsburgh 4, 2nd Chicago I Baltimore 0, nlt!111
201 030 132-12 19 3
In the Arnerlcan leall'l~ •. liul,
lle!i.
wll!l
.t~e \'lcl&lt;!i"Y- !!o save up .
' ". " .'
C~l!tlatll Lo8 ,~lts 4 ·
Boston 61111mesota 5, 'nlsht
1\!elgs. ,., 012 000-(100- 3 7 S Oaliland ~etics edied the
ljyraeuse defeated · 'l'oin«&lt;y's five hits,
Hoollilt!SAtlanta 2•
Oikllald 3'n..trolt2, nlgJit " .'
Wentzel~ De Haven (3) (WP) Detroit Tigert 3-ll,. the Boston Angel. 9-.lln Pee,.. pill¥ 'noes"' WUson had a double ahl slogle
S.F.. .at st.' Louis, IJI)d,, rain Clevall!nd 4 CaHJornla 2, DISht and Bell. Ingels (LP), Rothgeb Red Sox shadad the Mlmesota day at the &amp;Yraeuse Municipal
for the winners, Tim Tatterson
· t(l'oda,y'a l'rl&gt;bable Pltcheu
'l'oday'a l'rUiabl• Pltcbero
(6), Oller (9) ahl swan.
Twins 6-.l, the Chicago Whit&lt; park.
a
single and double and Rick
All Timet EDT
Baltimore CLeonhard 5-3) at
SOx stopped the Baltimore
Kelly Winebrenner went the Frazier two singles.
New York (lieaYOr 7-8)atPIIII· Chleatl '(Jobll 7.1), 2:15 p.m.
Orioles 1~, the Waablngton distance for the winners, strikFor Ute loser's, David Thomas
burgh (Bunning 4-11), 8:05 p.m.
Bostdl '(Bell 8-3) at Mlmesota
Senators nipped the New York Ing oot 15, giving up five hila had 1 double, llllke Berridge two
Loa Angeles (Keldch 1-3) at
Roawalf(7-3), 2:30p.m.
Yankees 2-1 and the Cleveland and Issuing eight bases on balls. shvJes.
Clnc:lnnati (Culver 6-S), 8:05p.m.
Detroit (Wllltlll 6-7) atOeldand
lndlarui defeated the California &amp;Yracuse hitters were Hamllton
Tonlgh~ the Gallipolis Yankees
· San Francisco (lllerlchal 16-4) (Kraum 6-7), 4:30 p.m.
Angel• 4-ll.
with a triple and lingle; Jlllb. play P~ Pleasant City lee and
at St. Loula (Carlton 9-4), 9
Washington (Hannan3-3)atNew
bard, a dooble, andWinebremer, Fuel at 7 p, m., and the Syracuse
p.m.
York (8abnoen "7-f), Bp.m"
a single.
Giants meet the Pt. Pleasant KJ.
Allanta (Jarvia 9-6) at HouaOnly games aChoclilecl
For the Angels, Smith walked wants in the nightcap.
Fight
Results
ton (Giusti 5-tl or WU1011 6-11),
Frid!l7't Gomet
liY United Preas Internattonal 10, struck rut nine and was tagged
8:30p.m.
Oaldand at Mlmeaota, nlsht
LAS VEGAS (UP!)- Pole
NEW YOI\K (IJPl) - llmael lor four hita. IIIIIch had a dooble
oftl,y pme1 ~eel
. Call!ornla at Chlcal/,ll, nl&amp;hl
Gonzalez,
129, San Dlel/,ll, Call!.,
Lllgulla, 136, Panama, &lt;iutpolnt- and single, OWens f triple, and
Pittsburgh at·Atlanta, nlgirt
. Baltimore at Dotrolt, nlgirt
,.
ed VIetor 1\!elendez, 136, Puerto coach and Rosemaum each a outpointed Rene Macla, 130, Los
Chlcafl at Lot Ange!ea, night cJ.,iaJand at New York, nl8ht
· Angeles (10)"
Rloo (10)" · Frank DePaula, slnille.
Phil a at Clnelmati. nlsht
Washington at ·Botton, nlabt
SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (IJPI)- 172%, New York, stopped
The golden annlver&amp;al")' PGA Rod\Y Rlnro, 176, Argentina
championship tees orr deep In (6). Jlmm,y Dupree, 175, Jeroay
the heart of Texatloc!IIJ'- tOme . Clt,y, N.J., outpointed Charlie
TWO ADDED
15 minutes before dawn-With Green, 176, New York (10).
NEW YORK (IJPl) - The
golden hear Jack Nlddaus and
United
Statet track and lleld
gold&lt;nlnor Billy Casper rated
team was given a boost
CO-tlYorltea.
more
than
$1
miiHon
·In
a
•
Oddsmakers have made Nick- brllllant career but has not been Wednesday when national AAU
laus and Casper 3-1 choices to able to CO)Iiure the PGA decathlon champ · Bltl Tommey
aucceecl Don January as champ championship In II tries, Ia llld John Workonton left to Join
taarn In cassel, Germany.
aiid ley claim 10 lho $25,000 back ror another Ill at lt. And thoBoth
Toomey and Warkenton
Or 11 prize after four ~~n~ellng
10 II revl!&amp;llzed Sam &amp;lead. will aloo compete In meets at
· I'CIUIIda on the heat-aeared, light
whoH game was never butter
and tight Pecan Vall07 Country as he ps for hia rourth PGA Kronstadt, · Rumania and stuttgart, Germany.
CIID COurH, which i-eacbes out Ulle.
"""e 7,1196 tJrda !!lib &amp;.35-35•.
70 par,
I'
..
. 'out, o thote nuDb\lntl llliiH&amp;
the lldtllnel ..,., from
the ''1tiWII Ilona," again waiting
· v. .. , .•. Reg•
hungrUy ln the '~ina~ IIi eaptu1e
!19·.1110
"·~ "blg"GUG'' trOril the "old
P..,a." LHdll;glluj l&amp;ie.l l aurle
~' new, ~~ an u.s.
. "&lt;hampion Lao 'rrevlnol,
· colorfUl Cobelltro 1!IIo :
alre.dy. liN bemi
of san ·
0

f""e,;.

Wizard Citation NO-FROST

,

Angels

. O'fLY

0 ,

Dear Scared:
First, tell your mother for

me that gir!a DO "call out". oth-

I

.
.
.. ~ '. ··14.S ... ft. -1 .._. ~t~
• NO-fROST refrigerator artl ..........
Ql, ft. aepaf'Ote ........... .
0 23.5 lqe It, Gf olooll • 4.6

:ot " ,

• La'll• ~Id...., polnlolo wt
Two full-wlcfth •helvet lft ref~f..W

wtd! lifHII lraotil
Two booH~Io ._ rqcb JiOid ;11. _ .
1 ''"''" ce~n .raclt I• fntear cloori

Nicklaus,

_ _ _ _ _ _ _. . • A &lt; . - y t k - "

3WC1116," "

Casper at

Even Odds

Join the Enjoyers

M."·v.c~

Thoughts

.. HIA,Ioc.
"II rau're so smart-why aren't you DE GAULLE?"

AmerJcan educator.

post-Civil War New York or the federal government during the Grant administration.
Once given the chance, Negroes took to polltics on local, state and national levels with
alacrity and an amazing ability to learn. Between 11169 and 1901, 20 Negroes served in the
U.S. House of Representatives and two In the
Senate. One of the latter, Blanche Kelso Bruce,

. .
'
GETTiNG JU:AD'I' - CUI Demotkty, center, a pltcher-&lt;IUtftelder lor the Me1p Lesion TOIDI,
Is JI8IIIIW tips onlxqitlngprlor ID tho local squad's entry In tho District Aln&lt;orloan Lesion llaaeboll
tournaiDent at Athens this saturdiy. Coach Ruas 1\!oore, left, lnstructa Demoskey While Richard
Pickens o! l\llddleport Feeney·BennOtt Poa~ American Legion, looks on. Pickens ts ma-r of tho
team for Ihe sponsoring Mlddleport, Butla'!'l llld PomerO¥ Amerlcon Lesion Poota, - Sent1Jiol

SCARED

but don't cry over them. We
best redeem the paat by forgetting it.-Elbert Hubbard,

was anything Souihern whites
feared mort than bad Negro government,

The rea1111,ll Tiid olbernath,y,

a

THE DAILY SENTINEL

• • •

If Ihere

tenders.

jump me, she cornea up elose
and whispers, 10 Jult wait, you'll
get yours!"
I caia't always be with some-one else. What can I do? -

Learn from your mistakes,

14 Bottom Rail on Top

By. FRED
DOWN '
'
Ufl ~·, Writer
1\!anager'.Jlave Bristol baa an.,
underhandecl ...-aon lor !nllstlng hie cCinelmatl. lied• ahould
IIIII lKi r~ 11 aertOua
Natianal League liemanl coo-

ular," fast I - H.

But who can discern his
errors? Clear thou me from
hidden faults.-Psal1118 19:12"

control the government, . although In South
Carolina they had a majority In the hoiUe.
There was a notable lack ot desire for revenge
against the whites. Senator Bruce, for one,
championed the re-enfranchlsement of former
rebels ..
It was In their remaking o! tbe slate constitutions that the black politicians left their last•
ing mark. Voting qualifications and imprison-.
men! for debt were abolished, free publle
schools for both races were established, the

HaltS

Chicinnati Skid ~

lOrry." ..Firat periOD PJIHI-

blamed Red China's "provocateurs," working hand-in-hand
with "reactionary Arab extremists," for fom enllng new strife.
Echoing Pravda, the commentary finally conceded Israel's
ernment, has no fixed tenure
abdomen.
right
to exist As though the Kremlin never urged the destrucDrowning is still one of the of office or date of retire- tion of the "Zionist state," Life Abroad even claimed that
leading causes of accidental ment for its members. Sena" "former Arab threats to eliminate Israel" originated mainly
death. Any victim of drowning tors a n d representatives from "irresponsible Arab figures" who serve as Red China's
should be rushed to a hospital. alone decide when and if they agents in the Middle East.
Attempts at resuscitation can should no longer seek reIn the view of e~~perls on Russia, renewed warfare between
election.
be carried out en route . Even
Israel and the Arabs is the last thing the Russians want, for
if the victim appears to have
Q-When, in the U.S. NaV!J, the present at least.
been revived he may need ex- is a flag flown above the no"
They have their hands full with Red China and face an
pert care because his injured tiona! flag?
increasing
anti-Russian upsurge in Czechoslovakia and elselungs may go on filling up with
A-The church pennant
where
in
East
Europe. They are also eager to reopen the
body fiuids exuded from hiS flies above the U.S. flag durSuez
Canal
since
Soviet shipments, especially to North Vietlymphatic vessels.
in~ divine service on board
nam
and
India,
have
become more costly because of the need
ship.
to sail around Africa.

There was some corruption, to be sure, but
no worse than the South knew before and not
as bad as it was to know later. It could not
compare with the graft-ridden government of

-~ ,;_, Of'·'Abby

•'

p~

'

m~~~lf#.lm..:~..::?"~-«?".&amp;:~~Zi::::::m:?-::::::m:=w::r.-'"*
" .

.,

slve" turn&amp; second per lOll ••ling-

BERRf'S WORlD

18, .1988

j

''

ventures in the Middle East would not help an already deli-

by Don Ookley and John Lane

'

'
July

ot hostilities.

munist party's paper, warned in an editorial that new military

'

j

er glrta ond acratching, hair·
'JIUtllng and 1\!cldng ml8ht oven
end with a slaab from a twitchblade knife.
Then call bully .girl up and tall
her you're wUllng to for(ltl tho
whole mess, but If ohe mak~
one more threat - Jut! one! she'll aet the worat IUl'Prlae of
her life. Let her illltl what It
lo.
NeXt lime you oee her1 amite
as If you had a big oecrtt. Brazen It out. Don't act scared In fact, abow her you feel a littie oorr)' for her.
11 this doesn't llo[l her, it•a
yoor father's move. With I he
help of a juvenlle om.cer, he ean
dllh 'out a pretty fancy "aurprise,"
P.S. Don't say, "But Pll get
In blger trouble If I Dnk.'' How
elH can you atop a gang of baddies?- H,
Dear Helen:
Pve been going with thlt girl
10 montha. Before school waa out
"" had an exchange trip to an.
- r tchool, We lleyocJ ln studentl' homaa, to saveexpensea.l
tta.Yed With anollier boy, but ~
assigned my girl totheparentto!
a 17.year~d boy who Ita "fall•
buck. I told her to lock her bedroom door and she said I had
oothlng to worr)' aboot. But later
I found out he took her homo
from a meeting and some kissing went on.
I blew m,y stack, and now she
won't tpeak to me. 511• Pm too
attached to her and not trutllng
•Ii!lUI!h· rm Willing to forgive and
fofget but the won't tlsten. I
know she likes me. What can I
do?- CAN'T LOSE HER
Dear CUI:
You can knock o!tlho ''forgive
and forget" rouUne and try, "I'm

~van:»

'"

\.

I

Even before Nasser reached Moscow, Pravda, the Com-

Fainting in children has
been known to occur through
a similar mechanism . This

he oomes up for alr, he

"

IT'S NATIONAL HOT DOG MONTH'.

. ' ". Jteg.

~1/.3

MR" GAVRI.,
C~~IRMI&gt;.N

a=

~E

ETWICS
COMMITTEii, ~~S

OUED ~ MEETit-6
FOR
lif

FOUR

.

...

.• ..

�5 - The Dally Sendnel, Pomeroy~Middleport,

o.. Thursdav .. rulv 11t 1cu~.11

The \!.S. ConatltutJon
· r«o. colll!t ~· .jbt tll.nbor
.
Of ....,,Ill Ccilllll'etl jq .. ap.
I
rlotll
qu ru ape
e census, ooce .......,oned 10 .•. 'b IUIW
_•

Salon 710's Mary Martin
Is Elected to State Office
Mra. Mary Martin of Pomeroy awards, :Including three trC~»hies.
wu elected L' Aumonler at the
Departamental Ell!l:t and Forty
La Marche, American Legion,
held this week at the Nell House
In Columbus.
An active member or Meigs
County Salon 710, Mrs. Martin
was ~so elected as one or rour
delea-U.s to the NatiiDIBI La
- .~che to be held in New Orteaiili~ ··Sf&amp;&gt;_t IZ-14. She is the rotiring oiepl.r!Oniental L' Archivtste.
In addition to having a member
elected to a state oftlce, and as a

delegate to the national convenUoo, the Melgs County Salon
Clllle in for numerous service

-

Ravenswood, it's Generally Agreed,

.

(1

I

3,000,000 ·In March olthls yeer.
accidents were reduced from 13
'' Ac&lt;ord!Dg to lbe National
Safet;y
Cooncll, • says Fllher,
In 1966 to just lour last year;
FabrlcaUm employees twice t•we are the safest non.ferroua
reached 1,000,000 CIDlsecutlve metal operation In lhe United
sale m&amp;nhoura &lt;loring the year states. We inepd to keep ltlbal
and ran the string all the way to way."

Kaiser Aluminum's

largest integrated !acUity. The
grins belong to ((rom left) Gary
Flaher, Works Safety iOlpervlsor; "Ike" ~aur, Vice Presi. · dont-USWA !..oral 5668andCbalrman of the Union Safety Committee; and Warren Cooper, Man-

':

"

00 he IIOUllbl &lt;OIVO&gt;utlons i'rom
area bualneoses, bdlstrlea, orpnlzattons and lndl~a to eollbllsh a Ioau founda-

NEUIONVILLE - No lludonl
wiU be lllrnedaway~lbeTrt­
Coon1J Tecludcal lniiU1ulll becauiO otlln&amp;nclal nood.
·
John !Jilrt, dlreetor,,loday antlon.
IIOUIIced tile lnllltulf.'• ~ or
He revealed !bat about """'
providing an .Wcatton for ev- !bird of tho studeDis alroadl'
ory daaervlng atudtllt, dalplte Olll'Olled at tile Trl-Coutt\Y Techtl:elr ftlwlclal dllllcuiUes;
nlcal Instltttte havelncllcoledlhey
USIIt made bla IDliOUIIellllen will Deed lln&amp;nclal aoolstanee.
The tnautute, along with lbe
'
;~&lt;;_;~.::.·~·;o;o::.&lt;•'.;.:.;,.•.•-;.•.-..,.w.u..w.v.•...•.•,!o!·
Trl
• Count,y Vocational Scbool,
W_...,.o;o.;•.•. •.O:•~.,.... •'•'• ,'o';'H&lt;/'HNH•'•'•V•'•'•-&amp;

HOSPITAL NEWS

Tbe plaque was awarded to just
HOLZER HOSPITAL - VlsltDISCHARGES
live or 149 non-ferrws plantain
ing hwrs Z-4 and 7-8 p. m. Par·
Tbomas E. Anderson, lbo Rev.
tile United States in 1967.
This latest Raven......S safety ents only on Pediatrics Ward. Walley 0. Bennett, Karen D.
ADI\liSSIONS
Bloso, WUttam E. Bowm1n, Jr.,
award is based on FabrlcaUoo
Clayton S. Beard, 260 Fourth OUIA! M. Burchett, Sr., Mrs.
employee's outstanding safety
Ave.; Deborah K. Hager, Rt I Gladys M. CaldweU, Brenda S.
Galllj&gt;olis; Elll&gt;ila S. RWIYOII, Cooke, Mrs. Arnold J. Derllleld,
J1t. I Gallipolis; Mrs. Edward F. Mrs. M. Garnet Elllo!t, Horace
Manley, RL 2 Cheshirei Mrs. Evans, Arlie M. Fadeley, Debora
lllillord G. Gilber~ Rt. 2 GaiU- C. Fllson, lllro. Ke...U: C. Fillpolis; Ward C. Hall, Eureka star Ier, Mrs. Linda M. Gantz, Emin
RI.; Mrs. lloy Baisden, Jr., Rt. ll.Y C. Grose, Mrs. Lucy Hard2 Thurman; Mrs. Howard W. way, Frank L trion, Herston R.
Mr. and Mrs. John C. Hlte, Johnson. Mason; Mrs. Maud W. Jarvis, George W, Jones, Miss
ll!iddleporl, attended the wedding Johnson, Hartford; Earl R. Me- Betty KaUy,' Mark J. Kl&amp;ht, Mro.
of their niece, Norma Diane Per- Clrcy, PL Pleaoant; Scott Be:&gt;- Kenneth King, Mrs. Melvin J.
slqfer, or Piketoo, and Hubert
nett, RL 3 Leon: Mrs. Robert A. Little, Mro, Norma J. Martin,
Justice, of Cattletsburg, Ky., ina
Goldoberry, New Hawn; Mrs. Er- Ronald W. Martin, Mro. Paut
ceremony colllucted by the Rev.
nest E. Sisson, Jr., S)TI.cuse; E. McGraw, James P. Neal, Mn.
· Schultz at the Nazarene Church
Mrs. Bert W. Teaford, Syrecuaf-..,.Eber Piekenf, ~ llllrvtn ~­
in Waverly. The couple left after
Mrs. Weber C. Teobold, Rot.- lloiolnson, Walter F. S.hoooove'il!'
1 reception at the home of her
land; Morlen J. Rowland, Jr., Mrs. Ella Stanley, Mrs. P aut
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Coalton; Mrs. Dwigtt F. Grow, Zirkle, Edson Roush, Rodney
Persinger, Cor their furnished
Jackson; Mrs. Paul F. Tbleken, Cremeeno, Mso Georgia Fisher,
home in Kentucky. Mrs. Hlte
West Portsmouth; Mrs. Sylws!A!r Mrs. Clarence S. Frank and t...
, II the great aunt of the new Mrs.
Colley, Jackson; Mrs. Dan B. lant son. MrL John D. Greenarxl
Hubert Justice.
Collins, WeUoton; Mrs. Denwr lnlant son, Mrs. Robert E. HerrA. Akers, Jackson; Charlea G. man and iDfant daughter, MrL
Watson, Wellston; Mrs. Ronald llama H. Lu-r and lnlant
L.. carr, Pomeroy.
son.
Llkt Hlppl-1

bkst Friends
~~~

"Get Wtll Soon'1
andMokoj~

Wednesday; Mrs. Md!ord G. Gilbert, Rt. 2 Gallipolis, daual!ter,
1:12 p, m. Wednesday; Mrs. Edward F. Lemley, Rt. 2 Cheshire,
daughtsr, 4:52 p. m. Wednesday;
· Mrs. Howard W. Johnaoa, Ma.
son, daughU.r, 10 p. m. Wedneo-

0nt Hoppy You
Thought About
1'hllll

day.

~

~~

i~Lound,
'

"EIItertng

'

·

stlakvl!i'.' Potu-

Gr-..

To Local Church

Oil;int•,gr::tes
.

~rease

AvaU-

. here in 5-!0·5 and 25 pound cans.

BACH

'

H.-RDWAIE

.
•

Rtlftlbmel!li or
cob, teo cr- and po~~~eb - •
servod. loliekoy Wotie and Jon
Alkire sent IIIIo, but were im.
able to attend.

dlnclns.

Hoeflich

Mrs. Dwight Wallace or Middleport bad the nJcest surprise
&amp;mcl~,y, Just as sheanddaugJ:ter,
Nancy, returned from cburcb,
the phone rang and it waa her
aoo, Alan, who io stationed at
DeN~~~&amp; Vietnam.
The call wu by overseas radio lltith'lnvolted'•tnewhat dl!!erent procedure In talking, but
Mrs. Wallace eald lbe connecUon was good and utt was wonderful )1st to hear his voice."
Alan, a ho1pltalman, has another nve months at the DeNang
Hoapltal. In September, he will
be taking rest and recuperation
Ume In Formosa, and It aU goes
woii, should be home lor Christ-

'

d 1 h
HOI· Sp1as Party
1

looloa r.taed lbe llillffiY lhl'&lt;IU&amp;h

a bake late.

Students earolled 1n the Tech·
Dlcal tnatilllle aro from all parta
o1 SOutheutem Ohio, wilb tile
eutcematlcn from Melp, Walb··~ ..
u-LI-" .
........, A

~a ";;'i:.= ~&lt;1$';'~""'''"-'.::l~;j;WJ;;;'&lt;'='~~~~m~~W.~~P.I~~~
,
' -·
,
"

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

•
•
•

•

.~,·•
:~•

Sl
O
:
N
'S
. . ARKEt ,.
,, .. .. .
'

OpenEvervW~kl)eyf:Otho7:0o ·,

-SIIIildar m

.,. .

t

'·

~

·':.
¢
~
,_' . j'

'

'·

mat.
CLARENCE McCABE, a Porneroy naUve, has surtered another
coronary attack, hia third, and
11 now confined to the Naval
Hospital at O&amp;kland, Call!. He's
10mewhat imJiroved, according
. to ww&lt;t received by hlo olster,
Florance Richard a of Middleport,
althoUgh ho will be heapitalbed

~

e:

•

ii

I

2-Hour
DRY QEANING
SERVICE
CUPON REQU&amp;Sn
Ovr Uouol OHII Cleanl.;,

Robinson's deaners
Pemeror

992.J4H

for a couple of months.
Mr. McCabe, 54, is retired
from the navy. He graduated
from Pomeroy High School before going into aervice. Bet about
now he'd be happy to get some
card a.
CERTAINLY A disappoint"
ment for Mra. Naomi King was
lhe !act that her husband, BUI,
wasn't able to attend the reception given ln her honor saturday. He lo ooe ollbe ouperviaora lnalde the Philip ~
plant due to the labor problema.
Tbe reception honored Naomi
w11o hao an appointment as Grand
Rutb or the Grand Chapter ol
Ohio, Order of the Eastern Star.
At her ateUon Cor the occaaioo
was a vase of yellow roles, a
gift trom her husband.
DON BECKER grad:a!A!s this
weekend !rom lbe University o!
Wlaooflate at MadliOII with a degree in business administration.
Hlo wile, Betty Lou, left trom
lbe Wood Coonty Airport near
Parkersburg Wedneada..v morn~
lng for WIBCIDllln to aUOnd the
Kracl.lation exercises, and then
the COU[)ie will drive back !linday. Tbelr children, Gregg and
Llu, are here with lbelr grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Searieo and Mr. and Mrs. Dolbert Becker.
Don Ia wilb the West VIrginia
Credit Unloo II Kalter Aluminum. Hlo eoUep work baa extended over a mmber ~ yeara
Iince he has attended 01117 om-

ins the a~mmers.

o

==ic~:

..... 4.99

REG~:..

Norrla, Boverty - . Ed4le
H....,, Arllllr IIIII, RuUr Jarrell,
JlomJ IIIII, I1o7 Johuoa, t11r17
Plckent, Jim Hardon, !lldt w~
pit, Belli' Shol!er, BUt Habeck,
Goorp Lawrenee, Itand,y Roberta, Pat Hlll, Jtm Jolmoon, Ro6IHIY Nolgior and Ike . .or. local, and Jim Glaze, Van Jolm111111 ,
ind lki&gt; Brottan, or llllddl~
The ovonllqwulpllllln-•

I

\

~ 1tw
preac~lptlon ptl- and ~rompf ~ . !IIIII •
count drug ptlc. ie¥tn d.ylo W. Lit w M,w
'
.
you for 111 yaur pnecrlptf4111 ~~~~- •u•.
Swisher '•nd Lohse R-Ill Drup. 'nwy

LAWN FURNITURE
~UG.Ut . . 2 99·
C:IWU . . . . .

Is Celebrated

ind

IIUdont In

FOLDING ALUMINUM

:&amp;vtn,
Ervla, J.. Hill, Gal'7

and sludge and creates pro-

•

Community
By Charlene
Cofflef eee

Weyne Swlaher, H.,.WJ.ohM IIIII K........ MICullciugh ore your frlandly pl\lnnlcjitJ It

CLOSEOUT! ·

Kenny Thelll, -

·- no pumping nece&amp;sary.

11;,.,~ would be a tnen for

'

Allondlnc-tRoillltW-,

DOUBLE DurY
Cm?OOL &amp; SEPTIC TANK CLEANER

&lt;

., .

!

Mr. and Mr o. Blll.Y HW of Raclno ontertalnod with a aurprl•
blrtbo'..v Pll'l1 for tl:elr 1011, Bll•
ty Jr, •1 lith blrlbday.

cAMP

'

'•

Returns

16th Birthday

Don't Do Anything
Expen•lw Until 'Vou Ust

'

latiiDI 72,000 Stinking ci:ickena, Unrtt lor 1111man Hultallclft."

-·

Septic Tank Problems?

., •'

j

:.;~;s~ , ~Q~O~,~ ~~~~~f2?~ '"'' '."': : l~i!.'::i~=~~~ -·' I~· "·"

Mra. Gonmovo Dewburst and
Mrs. Allla :aJek, dlcaiOd memben ol tile cburcb and miiiiOIIary IIOC!ell, - . bonorod In a
10mco of remembraDCe ror all
dtceased membera of tile Oblo

HAVE

t

'} 71/,1"

MRS. MARY MARTIN

WARREN, Ohio (UPI) - It
1Ji1rt rev~edthelnllltutehaa
waan't a caN llhere evOIII your borrow from tile flmd and pay alroadl' Aceived 1101110 eaatrl·
best frland wout..,'t tell. They back tho loau with a modest rate boluma, Among tllese ltCIIBfrom

Youth groups orlbree Lulberan
ct:urcbea of lbe area enjoyed a
aplash ~ at tile Elberfeld
It to aU part of a "'11- !ann 9mday. They werotromlho
dentl of thlo ....., ore 1JII(ng st. Plul ChUrch or Pomeroy, st.
aplnot the Greeatno Chleun . - Churob ol Cheater, and st.
Farm and tile odor ilyon oU by Paul Cturch ot New Haven.
lbo chlckona.
·
Swimlpln&amp; 101! ball' tiniiDI.
The Trumbull Counf1 Hd ind an _ , . barbecue were
Wise
lhe acUvlllea. !iJonoora or lbe
Ilepartmeot two - • qo ordarod tile farm iiDiratora io sroup.a are Mra.lllmprG!erand
Mrs. . - Lane of New aa...
tUmlnate tile odors.
Farm "'-pr and Mr. and Mn. Pete Thortn
RaiJib .-.... aald Tlltlfda1 that and 111r. and Mrs. wmtam J!l&lt;ktaR Mooday he hod ·Pllln uo a ""' of ...,__ Paator Briln
Tbe Rev. Cecll WIN will oon- new -lnlllon of . . . -ldlllng
time paator ol the Hysell Rm chemlealt. But nolhllli:tia~ .;.m. ·
Free Methodist Church, aoeonl- ed to work. The cUi II new set
inl Ill udiiJIIIIOIIU made &lt;loring Ill ., Ill eourt Jul1 31.
tile re&lt;en1 conference at lo!arullleld camp lll"&lt;IUDds.
Clrrle Moore wao doiepte to
lbe conference from the loeai
GRANT IIIADE to OU
church.
ATIIENS- The Olllee or Ecoothers atlmdlng from here .-lc OpJIOI'IWliQ' liu awarded
were Ronllle Moore, 11ou11e • .,.... or tro.~2. 10 ~ unt.
WIN, and Mr. and Mra. Emor- ver~ to contbue. ~ or
1011 Hyoell. Vloltlng lithe camp.. ita Canter for ~· oppor8l'&lt;lQnda wero Mr. and Mrs. Ken- tunity.
neth Michie! and dauabter lllerry; Mrs. Beatrleo "'-7', loin. Eva
McKimey, !oral, and lilts. Victor Cremeans and chlldna of

Rev.

-;.,•

',

ON

'

Clearj

Bucyrus.

DO
YOU

~~

'

t

d. lntereot. In thla manner tile
fUnd ..Wd [I01110iuate ltoelf and
help vUloul otudontayeat after
year, 'and "'~lire dOnors to 90!1·
lribulp 01117 ..,.._ With ICholar·
ship tun4s, IIIIIUII eontrlbullons
ara ....,.uM; be eJq~IaiDed.
Llshl aald lbaro ara fourtne•
o1 eoalrlllullona IIIIich may be
made. Tho" llrst ..Wd be. to.a
·
.loner~ loau foundation. The sec01111 "MIIIId be for - · from 1
·apec~~~c area ind m1111t Inter""'.
elll orpnlzattonoln •l!l•en...,_

a opedllc technolOf!Y and mllbllnteresttnmstrles
:~: perpetuale lteolf. He added that seeldng tecbnlealty trained per~~~~ 111f dze donatloo for aloantoun- ~-!OUflh ..Wd be oontrlbuclatloo wlil be aceepled.
Fund&amp; lor tile lllldent 101111 llclfts wblob ..Wd be set up In
111181 eqme rrom Vol~ ...,_ ll1f 9'110 1oen or acbolarshlp lhe
I trlbutl&lt;111, he oeld. Studlllto will COIIIrlbutor dlalres.

·=*

Waverly

BIRTHS
Mrs. Ernest E. Sisson, Jr.,
Syracuse, dalllh!A!r, 12:13 p. m.

~

will _ . In Soplember. adldtnga are - Ulldar eonotruCtlon
at Kimberly, (Neloonvlllo, Route

otistu said a ollldent loan proE
,
.
=~=
il ven ~old 1.t:r~ gram Is desired because It wilt

Aftend Wedding at

Ltt Flowe,.. Say

,'~J,;•

• ASI 'AlOut OUR ' ,, , .·~~\:i ·

Financial Status Irrelevant to School

ager - Fabrications Operations.

• Church

-

gen.rol

The award they're holding is performance In 1967. Lost U1110

home

~:

It if thQught thaf this vitamin aids In '·
, ma~y b_cldy.process~• as a
me~- ~
. bolic :IOctor and ·helps prevent br~kd~ ·
of fot ·in tinutJ.
· :
:-. · :ll.tt1

They've Got Good Grounds'for Grinning
lbo highest bdlstrial"honor giv.., by the National Safety Coon. ell. Ravensw~. of course, is

.

..

Two were the chlldweltare trophy given lor the best all-around
program in the state, the MlybeUe Gamble trq&lt;hy, and the Esther Allen Nursing Scholarship
Trophy, lor contrlbutinglbomost
funds per partnertotheprogram.
The third was for having contributed the most money to child
welfare in saJons with 10 to 30
partners. Contributions totaled
$8.35 per partl:er.
First place awards for scrap..
book and lor being the !lrst to
attain membership goal in the
state, and lor having that goal
before Jan. 25, were preserted
to the Meigs salon, which also
won third place in the parodies
with a skit and received an honorable mention for its memory
book.
During the convention it was
reported that the Meigs County
Salon had contribeted $110 of the
$481 collected for the nurses
scholarship. Ethel VanFossan,
the departemental scholarship
chairman, reported that t w o
nurses are currently being considered by the naliooai Eigj:t and
Forty for scholarships to further
their work in tuberculosis.
A feature of the LaMarche was
an impressive memorial service
tor 20 partners, one or whom
was Mrs. Mary Reapp of the
Meigs County salon and mother
of Mrs. Martin. Pearl Knapp ol
the local salon assisted with
the service conducted by Hazel
Elliott of Portsmouth, departe-

'llli!___llil!liiio

5.99

ALL YOUit PICNIC
NIII&gt;IINCLUDING ICI
CHEiTS, JUGS, lTC, .

SEASONABLE TOYS

·~·
MMING

.

every

10

~arL

Tbe

Middleport... ••
Personal Notes .,

One •ncl Two Piece
Solidl•nd Prints
Size 32 to 42

TO OBSERVE ANNIVERSARY - Mr. and Mrs. Charleo A.
Jeffers will observe their golden wedding anniversary Sunday

with open house from 2 to6p. m. at their Mason, W. VL borne.
They were married July 22, 1918. Mrs. Jeffers Is the (ormer
Jessie Bartrwn of Henderson, W. Va. They are the parents of
two daughters, Mrs. C1ara Lewis of Charleston, W. Va., aOO
Mrs. Wilda Van Meter of Mason; two sons, Homer Jeffers, of
Clifton, and David JeQ'ers, of Mason, lOgra'-'chlldren, and four
grea~ndcbildren.

RtDL)CED

Near-Mtaa
The planet Pluto cuts acroos
Neptune's path periodically
but the two planets miss col1968
liding by a comfortable 240
million miles. Pluto wiU act·
ually come closer to the sun
The Cundiff family reunion was than
Neptune from 1969 to
held at Leland Lievings on Ohio :mi.
River Road, July 13th.
Attending from out - or • town
Sunday was named for the
were Mrs. carl Vaoover an:l
Monday for the moon.
sun;
cbildren, Gemy, Susan and Vicki
of Middleport; Frieda DeWees
and children, Mary' Rae and m. .
ane, and Phyllis Belknap, of
Brady Lake, 0.: Louise Cundiff
and grandchildren, Tammie and
Stephen Garrett, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Cundiff and son, Jeffery,
Now In Progress
Mr. and Mrs. J, M. Burns, Mr.
For All the Family
sod Mrs. Ralph Cundiff and chll·
dren, Timmy and Mike, Mr. and
Budget Priced
Mrs. James Menshall and son,
Tommy, all ofColumbus;Mr.and
Mrs. Ral'mond Cundiff an:t son,
Johnny, of Mason, snd Junior,
David, Patty, Beverly and Ray mond Lievif1!l: and Vicki Errett.

Cundiff Families •
Hold

Reg. 2.98
Reg. 3.98

'13 :

Sale $2.66

MEN'S and BOYS'
TRUNKS

Reg. 1.98 .. Now $1.33
Reg. 2.9Q,. Now $1.98
Req. 3. 98 .. Now $2.66

SHO£ SAL£

Unsurpassed
Fabulous Outstanding

VALUES

I
I
I
"' I
I
I
I
I

"II
I

ICRIN

II

MOUTHWASH
Reg.73c

BOx

FLESH BANDAGES
ONLY 52e

leg. $2.25 Only

VITAL IS

79e

..'

STORE HOURS

DAILY
..

9 I.

.FLEA-&amp; TICK

:39e

99

SICK
LARGE STOCK

TOOTHPASTE
ONLY

le 89

Q. TIPS
teg.59c

Reg.

.er:=

I
I
.49·

Reg. $1.19

~~-:.= ~
~
....., - . Gel . . _
T.t-L.
Dnto~rt~a.
e...,...,• FltiJ
hW ••
., ..,
,.... ~
eli
Now ol ., . - · - o i """' -

I

I
I
f-.."=--! I

HAIR LIGHTENER

FOR MEN

ONLY

48j.

I

~__:.::.:.".....r--!
!-===-II
SUDDEN SUMMER

PlalnP•d'

Yl8 ICIIATOL YftC ACTION

Switch Over I• On• Day

:

·.

Sale $1.33
Sale $1.99

Reg. 1.98

SUMMER

-

It was reported by Mn. Ada
IIIDrrla that Ortha II!Usgrave ol
Kitts Hill, a charter member of
· tile council, had vlolted her recently. Mrl. Mllqrave left Chea-

.

·:
·:

Size 3x to 14

Reunion

Mrs. Wickham Honored
Mra. Elizabeth Wickham, who IA!r 34 years ago.
RejJOrta were al10 given on
will oboerve her 951b birthday
on July 27, was honored at Tues- sons of members servlng in the
day nlglrt' s meeting ol Cheater armed forces. Mrs. Pauline
Council 323, Daugj:ters o! Am- Ridenour noted that her son,
John, who has been stationed tn
erica, held at lbe halt.
Mrs. WJckham was escorted Germany, is now dlscbarged.
by the Oagbearers to a seat of Mro. Erma Cleland reportedlhst
honor In the copter or the haU. her am, Jerry, is home from
Tbere was a parade of the mem .. Germany but will be leaving soon
bero and special mualc hoiiOl"!ni lor VIetnam, and !bat another
her ~ the .Presentation of a son, Vernon, has been ass:isned
cardV'&gt;Mrs. Wickham responded · to Pllerto Rloo. Gary llol!A!r, IIDl
with .~ments fill III&gt;Prectatton ol Mrs. Arvll Hot!A!r hea rewrn'ld to 1)11 ba!lll at Newport, R. L
lor the re~Uon.
Mra, Enzy Newell, associate a'fter visiting here with hlo !srni'
counclior, presided lithe meet- t,y.
Re!reshmenta ol p I e. Ice
in~ which opened In rltuaii.Uc
form. There was a note ofthanks cream, ootree and KooJ..aid were
from Ona Osborne tor remem- Nrved by the kltehen oornrnluee
brances of her tJJsband at the following the meeting.
Ume of hlo dlalb, and lor dra[)tng the charter In his memory. l
Mr. Olborne was a member of '01 AYIIUITI'I HOT

...

Reg. $7.95 to $15.95 ~::

Thoughts

IICAU._

~·~

.•

pre-marche pouvior at the Nell
mentall'awnonier.
t}epartmental o!ftcers elect- Houoe. The processional ol of!led and Installed during the co:&gt;- cers arxl the rltualtsUc (ormat
ventton were Violet Aichholz of opened the meeting. Meigs CounNew Washington, chapeau; Hazel ty salon partners were amo~
Stiefel of Canton, 1st le demt those presenUng skirts during
chapeau premiere; Hazel Elllott, the evening. Another event was a
Portsmouth, second Je deml reception honoring Virginia
challeau deux:l.eme; Evaline Berk- Rahe, outgoing departemental
ely of Ne~a. l'archlvlste; Irene chapeau.
Melr; Sebrlngs, Ia conciergei,arxl
Distinguished suests presentVirginia Rahe, national pouvior ed at the opening o!thelamarche
member.
included EUa Mae Beverson, Gib-Named as delegates..at-large to sonburg, American Legion Auxilthe national la marche were Ar- iary national executive commitree Marshall ao:l Mrs. Rahe. teewoman~ A n n a Eshelman,
Deiega!A!s elecled besides Mrs. Zanesville, department secreMartin were Donna Crispen, Sue tery; Ropr Munson, Cleveland,
Somanstine, and Hazel Stiefel, newly elected department. comand the alternates selected were maMer, and Fred IL Rodenbaugh,
Mrs. Elliott, Mrs. Melr, Doris grand chef de pre, 40 et 8,
Speaker at the seulon was
standrlff, Edna Smeltz, J a n e
Richard Bluestine, who is alftlWiills, and Mrs. Berkecy.
Mrs. Martin presented a re- iated with the Natiooai Jewish
port on thedepartementa1 history Hospital in Denver, Colo. Ohio
scrapbook, and memory book to presented its 18th bed at a cost
be entered for national competi- or $1,000 each this year and
tion at the Ia marche. Her page, leads all otber states in the proMrs. Julia HyseU of Middleport, jecL
Membership was discussed and
distributed awards for the lOhis-tories and three scrapbooks en- lt was reported that Ohio has
tered in th.e competition.
reached tts goal aoo that three
salons
are over goal with Meigs
Awards Cor histories went to
Lorain County Salon 334, nrst; County first and GaiHa County,
Richland County SBJon 450, sec~ set::ond.
A luncheon was beld on Monday
ond i Summit County salon 165.
by
the Passe Chapeau Club. The
third place. Scrapbook awards
went to the Meigs County Salon, theme "Peace" was carried out
first; Crawford County Salon389, In the decorations which featured
second, and the Richland County the dove motif in the tavors am:l
lloraJ piece accessories. A red
salon, third.
A dutch supper at the Kuel~ and white color scheme was used.
lings Restaurant preceded the Guests incJuded the American
Legloo Auxiliary deparunent
::··:::::::::::::::;:;:;:::::::::::::::·:·:·:::::-:::.:;:·:.:-:.:-:·:&lt;&lt;:::: president, Mrs. Edward Ullum
of Cincinnati, and Mn. Marsball.
The club voted to send $50 each
to the Columbus and Cincinnati
Chapters of Cystic Fibrosis.
:;::
·=:·
The Rev. John Kafnin, priest
at Gibsonburg, and past grand I'~
Peggy and Vicki Boso of Great awnonier of Forty and Eight,
Bend are in Middleport lhlsweek was featured speaker at the anwith their grandmotber, Mrs. nual banquet of the depart.emenDessie Patterson, who is con· tal Ia marche.
lnstalJation of officers followed
fined to her home by illness.
Mr. and Mrs. Tony Fowler and the banquet. Mrs. Aiccholz, the
son, Mark, wtll return this week. new chapeau, presented Mrs.
end from their Florida vaca- Rahe an ln:lian chiers hat made
or money contributed by the oftion.
Mrs. Jerry Fry and son, Mark, ficers, chairmen and petit saland ·M rtt Fay,e· F:rY.,JQft .todaY ons. Crawford County salon 389
for a vac•tion at VIrginia Beacb. hosted a tea for the newly elect..
Mrs. Ron Halley and daughter, ed chapeau. There was speclaJ
Paige, of Columbus are here for music during the evening by the
the week visiting her parents, Eight and Forty Chorus of which
Mr. lllld Mro. Earl Knll!l:t. Mrs. Mrs. Eunle Brinker of the Meigs
Hailey will be Joined by her bus- COunty salon is a member.
Catherine Welsb served as one
band for the weekend before the
of the tellers and otbers attendfamOy returns to Columbus.
h~ from here lfere Mrs. Knapp,
Mrs. Rhoda Hackett, Mrs. Eileen Searls and Mrs. Hysell.
A thougJ:t for the day: Mary
VISIT IN JACKSON
Baker Eddy, founder of the
Mrs. Deibert lllilam and Mrs.
Chri&amp;tlan Sclenee Church, eald,
Jack Hlte spent saturday with
"Divine love always has met
Mr. and Mrs. Ben R. Ba!A!y and
and alwa,ya will meet eYE!fY
!amicy at Jackson
hUJIWl need."
-

the eouncll,

census

63e

Reg. IOc a.th Si1e

JERGENS. SOAP
3 .FOR 20e Lim1t 6
... $1.19

DESENEX

79~

SUPPLI

SPRAY

�5 - The Dally Sendnel, Pomeroy~Middleport,

o.. Thursdav .. rulv 11t 1cu~.11

The \!.S. ConatltutJon
· r«o. colll!t ~· .jbt tll.nbor
.
Of ....,,Ill Ccilllll'etl jq .. ap.
I
rlotll
qu ru ape
e census, ooce .......,oned 10 .•. 'b IUIW
_•

Salon 710's Mary Martin
Is Elected to State Office
Mra. Mary Martin of Pomeroy awards, :Including three trC~»hies.
wu elected L' Aumonler at the
Departamental Ell!l:t and Forty
La Marche, American Legion,
held this week at the Nell House
In Columbus.
An active member or Meigs
County Salon 710, Mrs. Martin
was ~so elected as one or rour
delea-U.s to the NatiiDIBI La
- .~che to be held in New Orteaiili~ ··Sf&amp;&gt;_t IZ-14. She is the rotiring oiepl.r!Oniental L' Archivtste.
In addition to having a member
elected to a state oftlce, and as a

delegate to the national convenUoo, the Melgs County Salon
Clllle in for numerous service

-

Ravenswood, it's Generally Agreed,

.

(1

I

3,000,000 ·In March olthls yeer.
accidents were reduced from 13
'' Ac&lt;ord!Dg to lbe National
Safet;y
Cooncll, • says Fllher,
In 1966 to just lour last year;
FabrlcaUm employees twice t•we are the safest non.ferroua
reached 1,000,000 CIDlsecutlve metal operation In lhe United
sale m&amp;nhoura &lt;loring the year states. We inepd to keep ltlbal
and ran the string all the way to way."

Kaiser Aluminum's

largest integrated !acUity. The
grins belong to ((rom left) Gary
Flaher, Works Safety iOlpervlsor; "Ike" ~aur, Vice Presi. · dont-USWA !..oral 5668andCbalrman of the Union Safety Committee; and Warren Cooper, Man-

':

"

00 he IIOUllbl &lt;OIVO&gt;utlons i'rom
area bualneoses, bdlstrlea, orpnlzattons and lndl~a to eollbllsh a Ioau founda-

NEUIONVILLE - No lludonl
wiU be lllrnedaway~lbeTrt­
Coon1J Tecludcal lniiU1ulll becauiO otlln&amp;nclal nood.
·
John !Jilrt, dlreetor,,loday antlon.
IIOUIIced tile lnllltulf.'• ~ or
He revealed !bat about """'
providing an .Wcatton for ev- !bird of tho studeDis alroadl'
ory daaervlng atudtllt, dalplte Olll'Olled at tile Trl-Coutt\Y Techtl:elr ftlwlclal dllllcuiUes;
nlcal Instltttte havelncllcoledlhey
USIIt made bla IDliOUIIellllen will Deed lln&amp;nclal aoolstanee.
The tnautute, along with lbe
'
;~&lt;;_;~.::.·~·;o;o::.&lt;•'.;.:.;,.•.•-;.•.-..,.w.u..w.v.•...•.•,!o!·
Trl
• Count,y Vocational Scbool,
W_...,.o;o.;•.•. •.O:•~.,.... •'•'• ,'o';'H&lt;/'HNH•'•'•V•'•'•-&amp;

HOSPITAL NEWS

Tbe plaque was awarded to just
HOLZER HOSPITAL - VlsltDISCHARGES
live or 149 non-ferrws plantain
ing hwrs Z-4 and 7-8 p. m. Par·
Tbomas E. Anderson, lbo Rev.
tile United States in 1967.
This latest Raven......S safety ents only on Pediatrics Ward. Walley 0. Bennett, Karen D.
ADI\liSSIONS
Bloso, WUttam E. Bowm1n, Jr.,
award is based on FabrlcaUoo
Clayton S. Beard, 260 Fourth OUIA! M. Burchett, Sr., Mrs.
employee's outstanding safety
Ave.; Deborah K. Hager, Rt I Gladys M. CaldweU, Brenda S.
Galllj&gt;olis; Elll&gt;ila S. RWIYOII, Cooke, Mrs. Arnold J. Derllleld,
J1t. I Gallipolis; Mrs. Edward F. Mrs. M. Garnet Elllo!t, Horace
Manley, RL 2 Cheshirei Mrs. Evans, Arlie M. Fadeley, Debora
lllillord G. Gilber~ Rt. 2 GaiU- C. Fllson, lllro. Ke...U: C. Fillpolis; Ward C. Hall, Eureka star Ier, Mrs. Linda M. Gantz, Emin
RI.; Mrs. lloy Baisden, Jr., Rt. ll.Y C. Grose, Mrs. Lucy Hard2 Thurman; Mrs. Howard W. way, Frank L trion, Herston R.
Mr. and Mrs. John C. Hlte, Johnson. Mason; Mrs. Maud W. Jarvis, George W, Jones, Miss
ll!iddleporl, attended the wedding Johnson, Hartford; Earl R. Me- Betty KaUy,' Mark J. Kl&amp;ht, Mro.
of their niece, Norma Diane Per- Clrcy, PL Pleaoant; Scott Be:&gt;- Kenneth King, Mrs. Melvin J.
slqfer, or Piketoo, and Hubert
nett, RL 3 Leon: Mrs. Robert A. Little, Mro, Norma J. Martin,
Justice, of Cattletsburg, Ky., ina
Goldoberry, New Hawn; Mrs. Er- Ronald W. Martin, Mro. Paut
ceremony colllucted by the Rev.
nest E. Sisson, Jr., S)TI.cuse; E. McGraw, James P. Neal, Mn.
· Schultz at the Nazarene Church
Mrs. Bert W. Teaford, Syrecuaf-..,.Eber Piekenf, ~ llllrvtn ~­
in Waverly. The couple left after
Mrs. Weber C. Teobold, Rot.- lloiolnson, Walter F. S.hoooove'il!'
1 reception at the home of her
land; Morlen J. Rowland, Jr., Mrs. Ella Stanley, Mrs. P aut
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Coalton; Mrs. Dwigtt F. Grow, Zirkle, Edson Roush, Rodney
Persinger, Cor their furnished
Jackson; Mrs. Paul F. Tbleken, Cremeeno, Mso Georgia Fisher,
home in Kentucky. Mrs. Hlte
West Portsmouth; Mrs. Sylws!A!r Mrs. Clarence S. Frank and t...
, II the great aunt of the new Mrs.
Colley, Jackson; Mrs. Dan B. lant son. MrL John D. Greenarxl
Hubert Justice.
Collins, WeUoton; Mrs. Denwr lnlant son, Mrs. Robert E. HerrA. Akers, Jackson; Charlea G. man and iDfant daughter, MrL
Watson, Wellston; Mrs. Ronald llama H. Lu-r and lnlant
L.. carr, Pomeroy.
son.
Llkt Hlppl-1

bkst Friends
~~~

"Get Wtll Soon'1
andMokoj~

Wednesday; Mrs. Md!ord G. Gilbert, Rt. 2 Gallipolis, daual!ter,
1:12 p, m. Wednesday; Mrs. Edward F. Lemley, Rt. 2 Cheshire,
daughtsr, 4:52 p. m. Wednesday;
· Mrs. Howard W. Johnaoa, Ma.
son, daughU.r, 10 p. m. Wedneo-

0nt Hoppy You
Thought About
1'hllll

day.

~

~~

i~Lound,
'

"EIItertng

'

·

stlakvl!i'.' Potu-

Gr-..

To Local Church

Oil;int•,gr::tes
.

~rease

AvaU-

. here in 5-!0·5 and 25 pound cans.

BACH

'

H.-RDWAIE

.
•

Rtlftlbmel!li or
cob, teo cr- and po~~~eb - •
servod. loliekoy Wotie and Jon
Alkire sent IIIIo, but were im.
able to attend.

dlnclns.

Hoeflich

Mrs. Dwight Wallace or Middleport bad the nJcest surprise
&amp;mcl~,y, Just as sheanddaugJ:ter,
Nancy, returned from cburcb,
the phone rang and it waa her
aoo, Alan, who io stationed at
DeN~~~&amp; Vietnam.
The call wu by overseas radio lltith'lnvolted'•tnewhat dl!!erent procedure In talking, but
Mrs. Wallace eald lbe connecUon was good and utt was wonderful )1st to hear his voice."
Alan, a ho1pltalman, has another nve months at the DeNang
Hoapltal. In September, he will
be taking rest and recuperation
Ume In Formosa, and It aU goes
woii, should be home lor Christ-

'

d 1 h
HOI· Sp1as Party
1

looloa r.taed lbe llillffiY lhl'&lt;IU&amp;h

a bake late.

Students earolled 1n the Tech·
Dlcal tnatilllle aro from all parta
o1 SOutheutem Ohio, wilb tile
eutcematlcn from Melp, Walb··~ ..
u-LI-" .
........, A

~a ";;'i:.= ~&lt;1$';'~""'''"-'.::l~;j;WJ;;;'&lt;'='~~~~m~~W.~~P.I~~~
,
' -·
,
"

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

•
•
•

•

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:~•

Sl
O
:
N
'S
. . ARKEt ,.
,, .. .. .
'

OpenEvervW~kl)eyf:Otho7:0o ·,

-SIIIildar m

.,. .

t

'·

~

·':.
¢
~
,_' . j'

'

'·

mat.
CLARENCE McCABE, a Porneroy naUve, has surtered another
coronary attack, hia third, and
11 now confined to the Naval
Hospital at O&amp;kland, Call!. He's
10mewhat imJiroved, according
. to ww&lt;t received by hlo olster,
Florance Richard a of Middleport,
althoUgh ho will be heapitalbed

~

e:

•

ii

I

2-Hour
DRY QEANING
SERVICE
CUPON REQU&amp;Sn
Ovr Uouol OHII Cleanl.;,

Robinson's deaners
Pemeror

992.J4H

for a couple of months.
Mr. McCabe, 54, is retired
from the navy. He graduated
from Pomeroy High School before going into aervice. Bet about
now he'd be happy to get some
card a.
CERTAINLY A disappoint"
ment for Mra. Naomi King was
lhe !act that her husband, BUI,
wasn't able to attend the reception given ln her honor saturday. He lo ooe ollbe ouperviaora lnalde the Philip ~
plant due to the labor problema.
Tbe reception honored Naomi
w11o hao an appointment as Grand
Rutb or the Grand Chapter ol
Ohio, Order of the Eastern Star.
At her ateUon Cor the occaaioo
was a vase of yellow roles, a
gift trom her husband.
DON BECKER grad:a!A!s this
weekend !rom lbe University o!
Wlaooflate at MadliOII with a degree in business administration.
Hlo wile, Betty Lou, left trom
lbe Wood Coonty Airport near
Parkersburg Wedneada..v morn~
lng for WIBCIDllln to aUOnd the
Kracl.lation exercises, and then
the COU[)ie will drive back !linday. Tbelr children, Gregg and
Llu, are here with lbelr grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Searieo and Mr. and Mrs. Dolbert Becker.
Don Ia wilb the West VIrginia
Credit Unloo II Kalter Aluminum. Hlo eoUep work baa extended over a mmber ~ yeara
Iince he has attended 01117 om-

ins the a~mmers.

o

==ic~:

..... 4.99

REG~:..

Norrla, Boverty - . Ed4le
H....,, Arllllr IIIII, RuUr Jarrell,
JlomJ IIIII, I1o7 Johuoa, t11r17
Plckent, Jim Hardon, !lldt w~
pit, Belli' Shol!er, BUt Habeck,
Goorp Lawrenee, Itand,y Roberta, Pat Hlll, Jtm Jolmoon, Ro6IHIY Nolgior and Ike . .or. local, and Jim Glaze, Van Jolm111111 ,
ind lki&gt; Brottan, or llllddl~
The ovonllqwulpllllln-•

I

\

~ 1tw
preac~lptlon ptl- and ~rompf ~ . !IIIII •
count drug ptlc. ie¥tn d.ylo W. Lit w M,w
'
.
you for 111 yaur pnecrlptf4111 ~~~~- •u•.
Swisher '•nd Lohse R-Ill Drup. 'nwy

LAWN FURNITURE
~UG.Ut . . 2 99·
C:IWU . . . . .

Is Celebrated

ind

IIUdont In

FOLDING ALUMINUM

:&amp;vtn,
Ervla, J.. Hill, Gal'7

and sludge and creates pro-

•

Community
By Charlene
Cofflef eee

Weyne Swlaher, H.,.WJ.ohM IIIII K........ MICullciugh ore your frlandly pl\lnnlcjitJ It

CLOSEOUT! ·

Kenny Thelll, -

·- no pumping nece&amp;sary.

11;,.,~ would be a tnen for

'

Allondlnc-tRoillltW-,

DOUBLE DurY
Cm?OOL &amp; SEPTIC TANK CLEANER

&lt;

., .

!

Mr. and Mr o. Blll.Y HW of Raclno ontertalnod with a aurprl•
blrtbo'..v Pll'l1 for tl:elr 1011, Bll•
ty Jr, •1 lith blrlbday.

cAMP

'

'•

Returns

16th Birthday

Don't Do Anything
Expen•lw Until 'Vou Ust

'

latiiDI 72,000 Stinking ci:ickena, Unrtt lor 1111man Hultallclft."

-·

Septic Tank Problems?

., •'

j

:.;~;s~ , ~Q~O~,~ ~~~~~f2?~ '"'' '."': : l~i!.'::i~=~~~ -·' I~· "·"

Mra. Gonmovo Dewburst and
Mrs. Allla :aJek, dlcaiOd memben ol tile cburcb and miiiiOIIary IIOC!ell, - . bonorod In a
10mco of remembraDCe ror all
dtceased membera of tile Oblo

HAVE

t

'} 71/,1"

MRS. MARY MARTIN

WARREN, Ohio (UPI) - It
1Ji1rt rev~edthelnllltutehaa
waan't a caN llhere evOIII your borrow from tile flmd and pay alroadl' Aceived 1101110 eaatrl·
best frland wout..,'t tell. They back tho loau with a modest rate boluma, Among tllese ltCIIBfrom

Youth groups orlbree Lulberan
ct:urcbea of lbe area enjoyed a
aplash ~ at tile Elberfeld
It to aU part of a "'11- !ann 9mday. They werotromlho
dentl of thlo ....., ore 1JII(ng st. Plul ChUrch or Pomeroy, st.
aplnot the Greeatno Chleun . - Churob ol Cheater, and st.
Farm and tile odor ilyon oU by Paul Cturch ot New Haven.
lbo chlckona.
·
Swimlpln&amp; 101! ball' tiniiDI.
The Trumbull Counf1 Hd ind an _ , . barbecue were
Wise
lhe acUvlllea. !iJonoora or lbe
Ilepartmeot two - • qo ordarod tile farm iiDiratora io sroup.a are Mra.lllmprG!erand
Mrs. . - Lane of New aa...
tUmlnate tile odors.
Farm "'-pr and Mr. and Mn. Pete Thortn
RaiJib .-.... aald Tlltlfda1 that and 111r. and Mrs. wmtam J!l&lt;ktaR Mooday he hod ·Pllln uo a ""' of ...,__ Paator Briln
Tbe Rev. Cecll WIN will oon- new -lnlllon of . . . -ldlllng
time paator ol the Hysell Rm chemlealt. But nolhllli:tia~ .;.m. ·
Free Methodist Church, aoeonl- ed to work. The cUi II new set
inl Ill udiiJIIIIOIIU made &lt;loring Ill ., Ill eourt Jul1 31.
tile re&lt;en1 conference at lo!arullleld camp lll"&lt;IUDds.
Clrrle Moore wao doiepte to
lbe conference from the loeai
GRANT IIIADE to OU
church.
ATIIENS- The Olllee or Ecoothers atlmdlng from here .-lc OpJIOI'IWliQ' liu awarded
were Ronllle Moore, 11ou11e • .,.... or tro.~2. 10 ~ unt.
WIN, and Mr. and Mra. Emor- ver~ to contbue. ~ or
1011 Hyoell. Vloltlng lithe camp.. ita Canter for ~· oppor8l'&lt;lQnda wero Mr. and Mrs. Ken- tunity.
neth Michie! and dauabter lllerry; Mrs. Beatrleo "'-7', loin. Eva
McKimey, !oral, and lilts. Victor Cremeans and chlldna of

Rev.

-;.,•

',

ON

'

Clearj

Bucyrus.

DO
YOU

~~

'

t

d. lntereot. In thla manner tile
fUnd ..Wd [I01110iuate ltoelf and
help vUloul otudontayeat after
year, 'and "'~lire dOnors to 90!1·
lribulp 01117 ..,.._ With ICholar·
ship tun4s, IIIIIUII eontrlbullons
ara ....,.uM; be eJq~IaiDed.
Llshl aald lbaro ara fourtne•
o1 eoalrlllullona IIIIich may be
made. Tho" llrst ..Wd be. to.a
·
.loner~ loau foundation. The sec01111 "MIIIId be for - · from 1
·apec~~~c area ind m1111t Inter""'.
elll orpnlzattonoln •l!l•en...,_

a opedllc technolOf!Y and mllbllnteresttnmstrles
:~: perpetuale lteolf. He added that seeldng tecbnlealty trained per~~~~ 111f dze donatloo for aloantoun- ~-!OUflh ..Wd be oontrlbuclatloo wlil be aceepled.
Fund&amp; lor tile lllldent 101111 llclfts wblob ..Wd be set up In
111181 eqme rrom Vol~ ...,_ ll1f 9'110 1oen or acbolarshlp lhe
I trlbutl&lt;111, he oeld. Studlllto will COIIIrlbutor dlalres.

·=*

Waverly

BIRTHS
Mrs. Ernest E. Sisson, Jr.,
Syracuse, dalllh!A!r, 12:13 p. m.

~

will _ . In Soplember. adldtnga are - Ulldar eonotruCtlon
at Kimberly, (Neloonvlllo, Route

otistu said a ollldent loan proE
,
.
=~=
il ven ~old 1.t:r~ gram Is desired because It wilt

Aftend Wedding at

Ltt Flowe,.. Say

,'~J,;•

• ASI 'AlOut OUR ' ,, , .·~~\:i ·

Financial Status Irrelevant to School

ager - Fabrications Operations.

• Church

-

gen.rol

The award they're holding is performance In 1967. Lost U1110

home

~:

It if thQught thaf this vitamin aids In '·
, ma~y b_cldy.process~• as a
me~- ~
. bolic :IOctor and ·helps prevent br~kd~ ·
of fot ·in tinutJ.
· :
:-. · :ll.tt1

They've Got Good Grounds'for Grinning
lbo highest bdlstrial"honor giv.., by the National Safety Coon. ell. Ravensw~. of course, is

.

..

Two were the chlldweltare trophy given lor the best all-around
program in the state, the MlybeUe Gamble trq&lt;hy, and the Esther Allen Nursing Scholarship
Trophy, lor contrlbutinglbomost
funds per partnertotheprogram.
The third was for having contributed the most money to child
welfare in saJons with 10 to 30
partners. Contributions totaled
$8.35 per partl:er.
First place awards for scrap..
book and lor being the !lrst to
attain membership goal in the
state, and lor having that goal
before Jan. 25, were preserted
to the Meigs salon, which also
won third place in the parodies
with a skit and received an honorable mention for its memory
book.
During the convention it was
reported that the Meigs County
Salon had contribeted $110 of the
$481 collected for the nurses
scholarship. Ethel VanFossan,
the departemental scholarship
chairman, reported that t w o
nurses are currently being considered by the naliooai Eigj:t and
Forty for scholarships to further
their work in tuberculosis.
A feature of the LaMarche was
an impressive memorial service
tor 20 partners, one or whom
was Mrs. Mary Reapp of the
Meigs County salon and mother
of Mrs. Martin. Pearl Knapp ol
the local salon assisted with
the service conducted by Hazel
Elliott of Portsmouth, departe-

'llli!___llil!liiio

5.99

ALL YOUit PICNIC
NIII&gt;IINCLUDING ICI
CHEiTS, JUGS, lTC, .

SEASONABLE TOYS

·~·
MMING

.

every

10

~arL

Tbe

Middleport... ••
Personal Notes .,

One •ncl Two Piece
Solidl•nd Prints
Size 32 to 42

TO OBSERVE ANNIVERSARY - Mr. and Mrs. Charleo A.
Jeffers will observe their golden wedding anniversary Sunday

with open house from 2 to6p. m. at their Mason, W. VL borne.
They were married July 22, 1918. Mrs. Jeffers Is the (ormer
Jessie Bartrwn of Henderson, W. Va. They are the parents of
two daughters, Mrs. C1ara Lewis of Charleston, W. Va., aOO
Mrs. Wilda Van Meter of Mason; two sons, Homer Jeffers, of
Clifton, and David JeQ'ers, of Mason, lOgra'-'chlldren, and four
grea~ndcbildren.

RtDL)CED

Near-Mtaa
The planet Pluto cuts acroos
Neptune's path periodically
but the two planets miss col1968
liding by a comfortable 240
million miles. Pluto wiU act·
ually come closer to the sun
The Cundiff family reunion was than
Neptune from 1969 to
held at Leland Lievings on Ohio :mi.
River Road, July 13th.
Attending from out - or • town
Sunday was named for the
were Mrs. carl Vaoover an:l
Monday for the moon.
sun;
cbildren, Gemy, Susan and Vicki
of Middleport; Frieda DeWees
and children, Mary' Rae and m. .
ane, and Phyllis Belknap, of
Brady Lake, 0.: Louise Cundiff
and grandchildren, Tammie and
Stephen Garrett, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Cundiff and son, Jeffery,
Now In Progress
Mr. and Mrs. J, M. Burns, Mr.
For All the Family
sod Mrs. Ralph Cundiff and chll·
dren, Timmy and Mike, Mr. and
Budget Priced
Mrs. James Menshall and son,
Tommy, all ofColumbus;Mr.and
Mrs. Ral'mond Cundiff an:t son,
Johnny, of Mason, snd Junior,
David, Patty, Beverly and Ray mond Lievif1!l: and Vicki Errett.

Cundiff Families •
Hold

Reg. 2.98
Reg. 3.98

'13 :

Sale $2.66

MEN'S and BOYS'
TRUNKS

Reg. 1.98 .. Now $1.33
Reg. 2.9Q,. Now $1.98
Req. 3. 98 .. Now $2.66

SHO£ SAL£

Unsurpassed
Fabulous Outstanding

VALUES

I
I
I
"' I
I
I
I
I

"II
I

ICRIN

II

MOUTHWASH
Reg.73c

BOx

FLESH BANDAGES
ONLY 52e

leg. $2.25 Only

VITAL IS

79e

..'

STORE HOURS

DAILY
..

9 I.

.FLEA-&amp; TICK

:39e

99

SICK
LARGE STOCK

TOOTHPASTE
ONLY

le 89

Q. TIPS
teg.59c

Reg.

.er:=

I
I
.49·

Reg. $1.19

~~-:.= ~
~
....., - . Gel . . _
T.t-L.
Dnto~rt~a.
e...,...,• FltiJ
hW ••
., ..,
,.... ~
eli
Now ol ., . - · - o i """' -

I

I
I
f-.."=--! I

HAIR LIGHTENER

FOR MEN

ONLY

48j.

I

~__:.::.:.".....r--!
!-===-II
SUDDEN SUMMER

PlalnP•d'

Yl8 ICIIATOL YftC ACTION

Switch Over I• On• Day

:

·.

Sale $1.33
Sale $1.99

Reg. 1.98

SUMMER

-

It was reported by Mn. Ada
IIIDrrla that Ortha II!Usgrave ol
Kitts Hill, a charter member of
· tile council, had vlolted her recently. Mrl. Mllqrave left Chea-

.

·:
·:

Size 3x to 14

Reunion

Mrs. Wickham Honored
Mra. Elizabeth Wickham, who IA!r 34 years ago.
RejJOrta were al10 given on
will oboerve her 951b birthday
on July 27, was honored at Tues- sons of members servlng in the
day nlglrt' s meeting ol Cheater armed forces. Mrs. Pauline
Council 323, Daugj:ters o! Am- Ridenour noted that her son,
John, who has been stationed tn
erica, held at lbe halt.
Mrs. WJckham was escorted Germany, is now dlscbarged.
by the Oagbearers to a seat of Mro. Erma Cleland reportedlhst
honor In the copter or the haU. her am, Jerry, is home from
Tbere was a parade of the mem .. Germany but will be leaving soon
bero and special mualc hoiiOl"!ni lor VIetnam, and !bat another
her ~ the .Presentation of a son, Vernon, has been ass:isned
cardV'&gt;Mrs. Wickham responded · to Pllerto Rloo. Gary llol!A!r, IIDl
with .~ments fill III&gt;Prectatton ol Mrs. Arvll Hot!A!r hea rewrn'ld to 1)11 ba!lll at Newport, R. L
lor the re~Uon.
Mra, Enzy Newell, associate a'fter visiting here with hlo !srni'
counclior, presided lithe meet- t,y.
Re!reshmenta ol p I e. Ice
in~ which opened In rltuaii.Uc
form. There was a note ofthanks cream, ootree and KooJ..aid were
from Ona Osborne tor remem- Nrved by the kltehen oornrnluee
brances of her tJJsband at the following the meeting.
Ume of hlo dlalb, and lor dra[)tng the charter In his memory. l
Mr. Olborne was a member of '01 AYIIUITI'I HOT

...

Reg. $7.95 to $15.95 ~::

Thoughts

IICAU._

~·~

.•

pre-marche pouvior at the Nell
mentall'awnonier.
t}epartmental o!ftcers elect- Houoe. The processional ol of!led and Installed during the co:&gt;- cers arxl the rltualtsUc (ormat
ventton were Violet Aichholz of opened the meeting. Meigs CounNew Washington, chapeau; Hazel ty salon partners were amo~
Stiefel of Canton, 1st le demt those presenUng skirts during
chapeau premiere; Hazel Elllott, the evening. Another event was a
Portsmouth, second Je deml reception honoring Virginia
challeau deux:l.eme; Evaline Berk- Rahe, outgoing departemental
ely of Ne~a. l'archlvlste; Irene chapeau.
Melr; Sebrlngs, Ia conciergei,arxl
Distinguished suests presentVirginia Rahe, national pouvior ed at the opening o!thelamarche
member.
included EUa Mae Beverson, Gib-Named as delegates..at-large to sonburg, American Legion Auxilthe national la marche were Ar- iary national executive commitree Marshall ao:l Mrs. Rahe. teewoman~ A n n a Eshelman,
Deiega!A!s elecled besides Mrs. Zanesville, department secreMartin were Donna Crispen, Sue tery; Ropr Munson, Cleveland,
Somanstine, and Hazel Stiefel, newly elected department. comand the alternates selected were maMer, and Fred IL Rodenbaugh,
Mrs. Elliott, Mrs. Melr, Doris grand chef de pre, 40 et 8,
Speaker at the seulon was
standrlff, Edna Smeltz, J a n e
Richard Bluestine, who is alftlWiills, and Mrs. Berkecy.
Mrs. Martin presented a re- iated with the Natiooai Jewish
port on thedepartementa1 history Hospital in Denver, Colo. Ohio
scrapbook, and memory book to presented its 18th bed at a cost
be entered for national competi- or $1,000 each this year and
tion at the Ia marche. Her page, leads all otber states in the proMrs. Julia HyseU of Middleport, jecL
Membership was discussed and
distributed awards for the lOhis-tories and three scrapbooks en- lt was reported that Ohio has
tered in th.e competition.
reached tts goal aoo that three
salons
are over goal with Meigs
Awards Cor histories went to
Lorain County Salon 334, nrst; County first and GaiHa County,
Richland County SBJon 450, sec~ set::ond.
A luncheon was beld on Monday
ond i Summit County salon 165.
by
the Passe Chapeau Club. The
third place. Scrapbook awards
went to the Meigs County Salon, theme "Peace" was carried out
first; Crawford County Salon389, In the decorations which featured
second, and the Richland County the dove motif in the tavors am:l
lloraJ piece accessories. A red
salon, third.
A dutch supper at the Kuel~ and white color scheme was used.
lings Restaurant preceded the Guests incJuded the American
Legloo Auxiliary deparunent
::··:::::::::::::::;:;:;:::::::::::::::·:·:·:::::-:::.:;:·:.:-:.:-:·:&lt;&lt;:::: president, Mrs. Edward Ullum
of Cincinnati, and Mn. Marsball.
The club voted to send $50 each
to the Columbus and Cincinnati
Chapters of Cystic Fibrosis.
:;::
·=:·
The Rev. John Kafnin, priest
at Gibsonburg, and past grand I'~
Peggy and Vicki Boso of Great awnonier of Forty and Eight,
Bend are in Middleport lhlsweek was featured speaker at the anwith their grandmotber, Mrs. nual banquet of the depart.emenDessie Patterson, who is con· tal Ia marche.
lnstalJation of officers followed
fined to her home by illness.
Mr. and Mrs. Tony Fowler and the banquet. Mrs. Aiccholz, the
son, Mark, wtll return this week. new chapeau, presented Mrs.
end from their Florida vaca- Rahe an ln:lian chiers hat made
or money contributed by the oftion.
Mrs. Jerry Fry and son, Mark, ficers, chairmen and petit saland ·M rtt Fay,e· F:rY.,JQft .todaY ons. Crawford County salon 389
for a vac•tion at VIrginia Beacb. hosted a tea for the newly elect..
Mrs. Ron Halley and daughter, ed chapeau. There was speclaJ
Paige, of Columbus are here for music during the evening by the
the week visiting her parents, Eight and Forty Chorus of which
Mr. lllld Mro. Earl Knll!l:t. Mrs. Mrs. Eunle Brinker of the Meigs
Hailey will be Joined by her bus- COunty salon is a member.
Catherine Welsb served as one
band for the weekend before the
of the tellers and otbers attendfamOy returns to Columbus.
h~ from here lfere Mrs. Knapp,
Mrs. Rhoda Hackett, Mrs. Eileen Searls and Mrs. Hysell.
A thougJ:t for the day: Mary
VISIT IN JACKSON
Baker Eddy, founder of the
Mrs. Deibert lllilam and Mrs.
Chri&amp;tlan Sclenee Church, eald,
Jack Hlte spent saturday with
"Divine love always has met
Mr. and Mrs. Ben R. Ba!A!y and
and alwa,ya will meet eYE!fY
!amicy at Jackson
hUJIWl need."
-

the eouncll,

census

63e

Reg. IOc a.th Si1e

JERGENS. SOAP
3 .FOR 20e Lim1t 6
... $1.19

DESENEX

79~

SUPPLI

SPRAY

�"' .,, .........

"

.
'

,,.; \'

by Mrs. McNeil followed by de· · a cake or fruit

Baptist Circles
Outline Pro;ects

According to a "form" letter from the WaUace Campaign which
has arrived here, ''Wallace for President'' volunteer petition drive
workers wiU be in front of the Meigs COW1ty Courthouse Saturday
gathering signatures on behalf of former Alabama Governor George

~...
According to the arutounrement, workers will be at the courthouse (rom 10 a. m. to 6 p. m. Saturday helping to gather the thousands of signatures Wallace must have to have his name on the Ohio
C. WaUace.

ballo~

The a&lt;:tion is being laken in drummer for the shOW'. Incidentfront of every courthouse in Ohio ally, Fred wiU start teaching this
this Satw·day, the letler said fall in the Galion schools.
THE MEIGS LOCAL Athletic
Boosters will tr.Y their hand in
the food business at the county
tair this year.
The former poultry building on
the Rock Springs fairgrounds
has been converted into a rcslaurant for use b} the Meigs
group. A concrete floor has been
poured and a number of other improvements have been made to
the structure.
SPEAKING OF TilE County
fair - whi ch is just around the
corner, by the way - you'll be
seeing some new fac~s in the
annual musical of the Big B~nd
Minstrel Association which will
play on Aug. 15 and 17.
Rehearsals have been underWl)' for the past col{)le of weeks
in preparation for the annual
show. Mrs. Arnold Rirhards,
Middleport seamstress, is working on some of the new costuming which wiU be featured this
year. Becky Nease and JellJl)'
Menchini have been in charge or
training the dance lines, wilh
some 35 girls taking part.
Accornpan.ving again thi s year
will be Mrs. Olive Weber, and
Fred Sisson, a recent gradU2lte
of Ohio Unhrersity, will again be

ACCUTIGM "425" W.ttrproof! twetP
sec:ond hind, 11111lled romu nwnel'll
lllnr IIIII.
,1)1.011

ne Accutron tuning fort replaces

th! outdated balance wheel that's
lound in all watches. Stop by so
we can tell you more. Starting
with the right lime of day. Accu.
Iron by Bulova. From $125.00.
ACCUTIION' by BULOVA

V goes hm·m ·m·m.
It

GOESSLER

Jewelry Store
Court St., Pomeroy

AND A SMALL mistake led to
several days of companionship
for Mrs. Nellie Vale and Mrs.
Thelma Orr.
Mrs. Orr drqJpedbythecounty
. board of education office recentIJ to correct a minor error. She
began chatting with Mrs. Vale,
one of the school slflervisors.
Mrs. Orr. of course, is a teach·
cr.
Vacation talk came up. Mrs.

Vale commented that she would
be traveling alone this year. She
was a little skeptical about thaL
So, Mrs. Orr indicated that they
might work something out so they
could tra l•el a bit together.
H finally came about, and Mrs.

Social
Calendar
THURSDAY
TWIN CITY Shrinettes, Thurs.
day, 7:30 p.m. in social rooms
of Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co., Middleport
WILLING WORKERS Class,
Enterprise United Methodist
Cllun:h, Thursday at' Marietta
Husted camp site, Royal Oak
Park, 6:30 p.m. potluck supper;
bring table service.
TWILIGHT GARDEN Club, pot.
luck picnic, Thursday, at 6 p.m.
at the SyraCuse Roadside Park.
FRIDAY
MIDDLEPORT FD!EMAN spon.
sor an outside dance partY thia
Friday, 9 to 12 p.m. at the Middleport Community Park. The
Ja,ys will emcee.
ICE CREAM SOCIAL, Friday,
beginning 6 p.m., at the Forest
Run Methodist Church. Homemade ice cream, pies, cakes and
cookies; place advance orders
with arcy member of the church.
SATURDAY
MEIGS ATHLET!C Assn. to
hold high school dance Saturday
night at the Pomeroy tennis court
starting at 9 p.m. In case of
rain, the dance will be held at
the Pomeroy Gym. The Ja.ya will

Food packages to rniss!ooar!es, devotional booklet• for
oerv!cemon, and goodies for shutins were amongtheprojectsplanned cmlng meellngo 'lllesdey of
tile B. H. Samorn Mloslonary SO·
clecy circles of the Middleport
Ftrst BBj)tlst Church.
LOVE JOY CD!CLE
MEETING AT THE home ol
Mrs. Charles Searles lor a pot.
luck diMer, the Love Joy Circle members made plans far
sending a food package to a mta.
sionary in India, and copies of
t h e Secret Place and Slndl.y
schoOl books to servicemen or
the church.
Members signed a rounc:l-robln
card for Mrs. Julia Grimm who
remains a patient at Holzer Hos·
pital. "Confidence in God" was
the devotional theme used by
Mrs. Daisy Bing, Grace before
the dinner was saJd by Venida
Gibbs, daughter of Mrs. Fred
Gibbs, Jr., chairman or the circle.
Othera at the potluck were
Trina Gibbs, Mrs. Mary LYons,
Mrs. Genevieve Saxon, Mrs.
France! Bearhs, and Mn. Jva
Turner.
DORCAS CD!CLE
LAST WEEK'S entertainment
of the residents of the Meiga
Coonty Infirmary was reported
on when the Dorcas Circle met
at the home of Mrs. Freda Hood.
Mrs. Tony Fowler, Mra. AtIan King, Mrs. Pearl Hoffman,
Mrs. Bert Bodlmer, Mrs. IIOOd,
Mrs. E. L. Hughes, and Mrs.
John McNeil took ice cream and
cake to the infirmary residents
and presented an informal program during their vlslt.
Orr accompanied Mrs. Vale as
far as St. Louis, Mo., and from
there took a long-awaited bus tour
to the West. Mrs. Vale visited in
Dlinois. The two met again in
Vandalia for the return trip home.

Annual Family
Picnic is Held

The annual family plcni&lt;. of
Mary iillrine, Whlte iillrine 'II
Jerusalem, was heJd at the Halliday-Atkins home at Harrisonville Frid&lt;Q~ evening.
Attending the affair were Mn.
Pearl Reynolds, M r s. Helen
Reynolds, Mrs. Evelyn Lewis,
Mrs. Nellie Tracy, Mr. and Mrs.
Allen Hughes, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Collins, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Jewell, Mr. and Mrs. Max Davis, Mr . and Mrs. Earl Werner,
Mrs. Bernice WlM, Mrs. Evelyn Murray, Mrs. Barbara Dugan, Mrs. N~!!.,. Bland, Mrs. Verlle Workman, Mrs. Wanda Gabrttsch and children, Donald, Jete
and Darry, Miss MaudeGrueser,
Miss Freda Grueser, Mr. and
Mrs. Ernest Wingett, Mrs. Stella
Atkins, Miss Ruby Diehl, Mr.
emcee.
and Mra. Fran!&lt; Halliday, and
SUNDAY
PICNIC at Lock 23, Apple Mr. and Mrs. VIrgil Atkins.
Grove, 6 p. m, 9.mday for all
area churches. Open to the public. Bring a covered dish. Ser- Parkers Home from
vice at 8 p.m. at Apple Grove
Methodist Church following, the
Rev. Charles Norris speaking. Jetting to Texas
MONDAY
Mr. and Mrs. Wilber Parker
TENT 95, Daughtera of Union and son, Eddie, Pcrneroy Rt. 3,
Veterans, will meet at 7:30 Mon- returned Monday £rom a trip Ln
d"J' night at the D.A.V. hall. the southwest.
They flew by jet trom Columbus to E1 Paso, to visit Mr. Park·
er's brother, Edson aoo fam.Hy,
at LaTuna, Texas. While there,
they made short trips to t h e
world's largest pecan orchard
and the irrigated fielc:ls along the
Rio Grande, to Juarex, Mexico,
"here they shopped In the Mercado Juarez; to Carlsbad caverns, New MexJ co, where they ate
lunch 850 reet urxlerground, a!'ll
to White Sands, New Mex:Jco, the
world's largest gypsum bed.

A report on the Women's Convention held at GranvUle ~ last
month was &amp;hen by Mrs. MeNeD, wM attended along with
Mra. Mamlng Kloe1, Mrs. Chu·
Ies Simona, and Mrs. Fred
Gibbs, Jr.
Members a!gned a round • robIn card for Kent Kloes who remains a patient at St. Mary's

Hospital in Huntington, Proyer

em.
Mrs. Hood prooenled the program using an article Crom the
World Vision magazine, u Ancient Alla Goes Young" relat;. ·
ing to the lnflux ot eommunlsm
and population exploolon.

QOTHES PINS

A DISCOUNT
DEPARTMENT STOR£

NOW-SHOP ANY OF OUR 3 STORESI
GALLIPOUS- MASON- POINT PLEASANT
REECE UNEDI SOUD CClOIS

CANDY
BARS
Hershey - Clark • Marsetc. - Every Cavorite bar
you may desire at Shoppers
Mart.

...
20 Inch

PORTABLE
FANS
Two Speed - push but-

!"or u~P with :
I Blend·Air 31h"

SWEAT SHIRTS

:5 or 6" conventional perimeter

svsterna

• ;\JI conventional

rl'&lt;'langu1ar duet

~ y s 1cms

ALSO IN COLEMAN FURNACES
Upfkw--For Buemenll or Closet
DownHow-For clOset or alcove
11onzontal Flow~For attic
Garage or CrawlSpace

CHASE HARDWARE
~2-2511

LOCUST ST.

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

FT. CAMPBELL, Ky. - Army
~claliat Foor Larry J. Pettit,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Pet,.
U~ 14 W. Cave St., POOteroy,received the Bronze Star Medal
here June 21 Cor meritorious
1ervir.e in ground operations
agalnat hoaUle forces dw1ng his
last assignment In VIetnam.
He Io a oecurlty guard !n the
524 Ord111nce Company here. He
entered the Army In September
19116 and completed blalc training
at ll. BeM11"8- The 21-.ur-old
oold!er IP"adlllted in 1966 rrom
Middleport HJib School. Before
eiXeYlng the Army, he was employed bf Pomeroy Food ComPin!'.

,_,_,

Menshncy

37c •

Sandpaper • rope .. socket
wrenches .. cutters - vla•
grlj&gt; pliers - long nose
pUers .. hammers screw
drivers .. wrenches .- ete.

...

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FLOWERS
A loaded table o!popular
year around flowers ard
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For Exhibits

BAN
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75~

VALUE

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A 98~ VALUE

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your

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the
easy way
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New 1968 fall ocyles for
my lady or the teenagerColon and plastic leatbera ready for you nawl

ILK
MAGNESIA

Bflil&amp;etl

Hand.ags

Bois

·

.

rish,&amp;gOrllyseUincl14wtonce Roy
'•
Stewart; New Haven, Hav, Paul p.rald Slyre EmorY llwlh
Fortney, Harold llwnR&amp;r110r lncl lloJ( U.....s.Q.
·

Prizes Fixe4

Service Held

A ·llren.wlll.blo!i
; to
alpaJ lhe CUrttir.llldi'e¥111!nr
'
'

LADIES

very famous brand o( dress OX·
fords and slipon styles- Your choice
of fine leathers - popular styles and
long wearing shoes. Sizes 6ih to 11.
-Come In arxllook them over!

,

VALLEY LUMBIR &amp;SUPPLY CO.

preo!dent, Appalaclllan P~&gt;wor
and American Electric C&lt;&gt;mjlany;
Boyce Grll!!th, chajr~ West .
Virginia Public Sei'Yfcof com.
mloslon, and the Honorlble Hulett c. Smith, Govomor of the
Slato or Weill Vlr8lnla•
1'1'. PLEASANT- PrlzemonMuo!c wll! be provided by the
Winfield H1ib School Band under 01 for the rorm and garden exJ
!:
the d!rect!ori of Rlymond Poak, hlb!to at the Mason Count,y Fair,
OFFICERS ELECTED
August 6 through tile lOth bave
director.
.
PI'. PLEASANT - Ol!lcers
been
amounced.
for the COIIIIIIi )'eliot the wscs
Blue ribbon wiriners will re ..
of lhe Hti!deroon -"Mlitllooi!Bt
celve $3, red ribbon $2, and
Clllrch - . elected at a rlil!enl
white ribbon $1.
meetlnr of tile Jll'llllll, The,Y - e
Exhibits from area rarmera
. Mra. Baron Meaip, prlaidlntj
will Include corn, small grain,
Mr1. Dora Glen, vice pns1dent;
forage crops, silage, honey, sorMr1. Rebert Sbamblen, troaiiUI'·
ghums and tobacco, vegetables,
er; Mrs. Jack Sblrpon, aecre~
Funeral services-for Htrman fresh fruit, potatoes, sweet potary and Mrl, II1J8h Oaul!hert.Y' Ruachel, 70, of Columbus, anatat.ooo, and Jumbo vegetables.
l)llrltual liCe chairman.
tive of POmeroy, were .,..,meted All exhibits mull be grown by
!n Columbua toclay.
the exhibitors. The exhlblto will
IWLA TO MEEr
Mr. Ruechel died Tuellllay fol- be Judged oo the basil of quall' PI'- l'tl!ASAirr - 'lbe Izaak lowing a heart attack. Holt ourunUormiV and varlecy and .
Walliaft ~ wlllmoet tonight vlved by Ida wife, Julia, a daughnwst be in place by 10 p.m. Mon·
II 7:311 p.m. II Krodol Pork to ter, Alma Of Columbus; six sisday, Aug, 5 and cannot be re· clio"'" 1!11 po•llblo -"'&amp; of . ters, Mr1. $ybtl Russell, Athens; moved until 9 p.m. Saturday,
Krodol, Pork Like for lllhfni In "MiL Dale Russell and MrLHarAug. 10.
'
tile' near .future.
All member• old Ruooell, Bidwell; Mro. Fred.
lncllnterellad llahel'IIIID are uti•
Deasauer,·~ Mrs. Walter White,
"
,
edto . - .
\·
and ~- Stanle,y Baas, Pomeroy;
a brolber, Albert lluechel of
PQ~ $\ED
Pom Boy, Fla.; a hall-brother,
• PLEA$ANT - WDIIom Leroy Ruocheloft:olumbuo; and a
1 111~
. ' em•':......lii:'flte
;t,' IWI..o!~,
Ruache! of
.
~.,..
Cluinbal
of
a ·t:tA ·Ita new r ~:. ""..~ " .
.
'poll.,.,i\li"\ A io:'Jl·~ .curIW llal Jii'e~ed in deall1 by
,.,. liao
bp &amp;lid ill ctill- llll.wento, Mr. and Mro._l'l1!llp
' llf!l'l - t. $ ,,...•
~ 81!~. two brother• and. a!s,., to'·be uu.
-·.-.-~
.
.....
....
.....
. .
.,...... ~ ·tR ....... ,....... ·' m-.
&lt; ~- "·'"''I~

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New FaiiStylea
A

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v.

Oreelllrf, Too

Famous "Tip Top"

.

'

'

~·- w~ ~~ "·
\ lite.
;
~ file program li!r the"·dlly be!llnL.with a .IIIII rala!Da\• core111011)' 117.1118 W~ot 'l(!rg!nla Arln1

WALL PAINT
SPRAY
PAM'

.

-~· tT:.rhz'ri~
"' ~'~' ~~ ~·· n.. U3
;..~.~ { ,··u
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nr·uAgr··.r.m
..·~~~:;;:~:.::~':'.~~~ =~~~~;::;;
:f h,, will'il&gt;~ra
\.JI·· . ~tnp
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~e,s!llg

!'~.~!~to ~~-~~
...,.~
,V-,.L._

Vinyl Latex
The paint that dries quickly! This is
oot a .. CHEAP" paint!!! Compare it
anywhere with paint seUing at twice
the price! Allpurposeglosspaintat
the same rice!

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The most wanted or all
hair rollers - Regular
$1.00 purchase - Every
size that's·made.

'

In Columbus

77

ROLLERS

'

I

It you've Jost your mar•
bles - you can get them
bocl&lt; here - Less than lc
each! II

DreuSocb

""

. .
Am"os' Pl.ant Ceremony
'
·
·d.
T
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tarte
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at
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0
ay
S
11

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rooms! New shipment just
received!

Brush Hair

)

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MARBLES

The smart shirt that teen-agers like to wear! Colors they
like - Boys or Girls wear these, too- A OrJ&amp;otime speciaJ buy at Ulie low price - All sizes.

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BAND-AID
1.55 VALUE .

79~

VALUE

.

DISCOUNI'ED

'

Reg. 2.00 "lllt"'
MIM "Derby"'

BRIEFS SHORTS
T SHIRTS
Every

day

mmey here -

you save
You save

13c on each gannentl! Yoo
wiU like their fiij

PERMANENTS

$14~,,

MOUTH
WASH

Reg. 69c
25T•W...

400vlrt

ALIA
SELTZER

WASJE
BASKETS

...~

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QUARTS

USTERIN E

$1.98Value
,.

In gold or geen - A
plastic waste basket that' a

big - It wm hold your litter!

TOOTH
PASTE
JconomySia

We'N Not llragglnsl We Have Jheml

In The EntiN Qklo Val!.yl

MENS "PERMANENT

CASUALS
SLAC

IODAI

PAN
FIL
120-620.127

Willow--Black-Grey-Blue Etc.
Sil.CIS 2910 42
Twills--Denims-Home Spunsl
Well Tailored I For Arly Age

Open
Nlghll

Until
9o'clock

••

37$
pr.

IIICI

COLOR

FIL
120-620-127

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UP
ON .

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1~rimeter system~

14,

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ton switch! Cools up to 5

$

e AAA hrvlce ·

MENS SHORT SLEEVE

Pettit is Awarded

Bronze Slar Medal

W.Moln

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ASHLAND SERVIC~

U-Haulllontol

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ECONOMY
TOOLS

All Popular 5c

'

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Choice of 301

FURNACE
Cl•1r1nc•
lnstell1tlont ...

P~ .
------

ELECTA CD!CLE
PLANS FOR SENDING either

GAS

for Low

'T.v.-tt;,;.-· LOU'S

1 COil s-.ING

pkg.

, -,

·I '

Ion Compg..O.J AJ-foc!aUon.
;g!n!i, (\!;e• u~.;... cla~o; Ailllust
'
';r;~.G,.ncls, locolecllwo'mllea ooot ~;t cr.;r~h. · ·
, Primary pUi,ole.otJIHi~· · 20; 18311) sii&amp;Ube ~ml,d :wlth ,
ot.New Halc"'o ~11-111111110 10111- 1 •An alii laih~ Clll))meetlliJ ,ZIIICI!, as llxil!" J~ the revfsecl H&gt;ec!il OJ'IPbaols e..ry Dfl3'
. tution- unique In thitillaonecil rmill · wm alll't at the ciinp · c011JtltuUon IJIPnMcillat Octo- Yeii"L''
. ·
.: the lew remlll!lni"~-~- •.~ ·~. July 21 ,
eXo' bof, ''.~ · ~"&gt; ·tit. U111!"1'1Pnl tJIII
The . auocla!ion !o cl!nciteil bj
1:
slleole('\_1~ thlo part of jhecCND- iOni throuafl Augilot 2. Servtcas e~nc! the mlplstrt .of Chrlol a JIOVei'ni!V bOinl t!Jat lncludeo
try, · •'' ·
• ,':
· wm begin' at ' uch ... ntng. ti1too&amp;lt the EUB dnJr&lt;hea of l!io nine paltllra, rilDe ·truote.a; and
t, ·•ItJo aloo •..,..sual In that It Is
Altogether, 18 churches with Pol!lt Pleasant D!atr!ct, theWeat Dine comin!tteemen, r&lt;prelent.
~ ~ a , COCJIIOI'~tl.. pov;lecl ~~ tile ·n!bit paot.orqr~ &amp;baring !n this Vlrslnla Conference, 1nc1 thell&amp;- . lng the 18 churcheo. On this
~ dlurcllt1 'lrt the P.olnl.pleaoanj 'e,....!stlc'; lileet!JW. Tl)e)" com-. ~on."
.
boinl are the to!lowllle persons
~ dl~trk:t of the Conner EliB com- priae the membarohiP·ot the u... , It Is plainly al!pulated In the named bf charp, past.or, trqs:'
document tbat, "Meetlng,o at the ·tee, and colnni!tteemen, In that
'\.
cainpgrounclahall bo for the pur· .. cinler:
..,.
pose of promodon and extension . . Al!jl)e Grove, Rev. Marlin
or the Christian faith through Coml&gt;boll, Chat-lie Fowler, and
.
evangelism, preaching of the Mro. Joonn KIJIIIlnl; Bachtel,
·
Word, Chrlotlao edueetion, •lnll- Rev. Mro. .l.challh Miller, Friend
!~~g o~oslono, fellowah!po, IP"DIIP Gibbs and Martin Hall; ReU&amp;meetings, comnwnUy and famtly mead, Rev. Eugene Garlow, Otho
,
.. ·· · ·. . • .
•.
'
Pthering,s; IJ&lt;Uiecomlngs andre- ·Mattox and ~ SchwA!'; Good 1
.. .
. ·~
.
..
unlcfts. " ·-'
~.
Sh~erd, Rev. Earl rerkins,
'PI'. P~EASANT - Ground- National OW'd at 11 L111. ,,
Of Ulllul !nlereot, too, !o tho Wallle Hart and Mrs. Ruth Hunt.l&gt;r,nldnl co\'liii&lt;Jnlo} forlhe John Tho invocation will be given fact the constitution Includes IIJo ~r; Ko:eb• Chlllel,~ Rev. l!"llliam
E. A~Jloi ~Plant ln •PUinom br Dr. D, r. De!lst ot !lyrrl- PI'Ovlo!on that, "The custoDi of
C!1Ul111"wore ,IIi.~ ~d ~be- cane and the weii'Ome' ~Y Joo _the ~~}110morat1on of tho fouild-'
llnall!l at 11 a.m. with ievoral P. Gills, execotlve vlce·P,.eal- lng of the llrot United Brethren
local' ,.;,ll)denta, inc!udlnc DewS dent, ,,\ppalachlan Power.
Church west of tho Allegheny
modi~, atteacl.,!l}hecOHI!Ipn!,s.
Addreoses will be given by Mowaina, in MaoooCounty, VIrLocal peri!Oilo ''liwltid to ut- . ~ E. Amoo, lor whom the
t'llid will travel b)' cha!Wnd buo .p!'ant lo Milled; Donald C. COOk,

Lou's SuN CuN for Summer Clr llwa
•Br•ket •11res •Cooling . . ....,

and cookies. The August meet.
lng wfll be at the home or Mrs ~
llolfman.

Hardwood clothes pins
for the thrifty housewife
-save money here.

'"' ht
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-- • • • . • .
·:'t
·'
{ - T_he DallY Sentlnol, Pcimeroi·MI~I't. Q, , Thurldl¥, July 181 1988
.•

. : \.l:f. PLEAsANT..;: u~oncair.. ' m:;.]~

WI PRESCRIIE OUR FREE
SUMMI.I SAFETY OICKI

PICkof18

~

For the program, Mra. Richani Owen di apl oyed progam literature and rand an article by
Pearl Buck. Relroohmento - e
oerved during the concluding soclal hour.

,

Mra. Hood served ice cream

Low Boy

Big Fumece

hoatess lor the meeUng which
_,ed with a poem "We Go Till a
Woy But once" by Mro. WUI!o
Antholl)'. Devotion• were g!von
by Mrs. Paul Smart whose topic
was "CUp ot Cold Water."

vodons by Mrs. Bodlmer opened · m 1helr bh11tdiQrl were llladt
the meeting, Mro. BOdlmer used . when the EJecta Circle met at
a ~ermonctte on the 23rd Psalm I the home ' Of Mta. Charles Ben~
entitled "The !bepherd and the 1 nett.
91eep"' and concluded with a po..
Mrs. Charles Edwards was CO·

Coleman

Perlorm~nce

to church shuttns

'

HAIR SPRAY

Regu

an v

�"' .,, .........

"

.
'

,,.; \'

by Mrs. McNeil followed by de· · a cake or fruit

Baptist Circles
Outline Pro;ects

According to a "form" letter from the WaUace Campaign which
has arrived here, ''Wallace for President'' volunteer petition drive
workers wiU be in front of the Meigs COW1ty Courthouse Saturday
gathering signatures on behalf of former Alabama Governor George

~...
According to the arutounrement, workers will be at the courthouse (rom 10 a. m. to 6 p. m. Saturday helping to gather the thousands of signatures Wallace must have to have his name on the Ohio
C. WaUace.

ballo~

The a&lt;:tion is being laken in drummer for the shOW'. Incidentfront of every courthouse in Ohio ally, Fred wiU start teaching this
this Satw·day, the letler said fall in the Galion schools.
THE MEIGS LOCAL Athletic
Boosters will tr.Y their hand in
the food business at the county
tair this year.
The former poultry building on
the Rock Springs fairgrounds
has been converted into a rcslaurant for use b} the Meigs
group. A concrete floor has been
poured and a number of other improvements have been made to
the structure.
SPEAKING OF TilE County
fair - whi ch is just around the
corner, by the way - you'll be
seeing some new fac~s in the
annual musical of the Big B~nd
Minstrel Association which will
play on Aug. 15 and 17.
Rehearsals have been underWl)' for the past col{)le of weeks
in preparation for the annual
show. Mrs. Arnold Rirhards,
Middleport seamstress, is working on some of the new costuming which wiU be featured this
year. Becky Nease and JellJl)'
Menchini have been in charge or
training the dance lines, wilh
some 35 girls taking part.
Accornpan.ving again thi s year
will be Mrs. Olive Weber, and
Fred Sisson, a recent gradU2lte
of Ohio Unhrersity, will again be

ACCUTIGM "425" W.ttrproof! twetP
sec:ond hind, 11111lled romu nwnel'll
lllnr IIIII.
,1)1.011

ne Accutron tuning fort replaces

th! outdated balance wheel that's
lound in all watches. Stop by so
we can tell you more. Starting
with the right lime of day. Accu.
Iron by Bulova. From $125.00.
ACCUTIION' by BULOVA

V goes hm·m ·m·m.
It

GOESSLER

Jewelry Store
Court St., Pomeroy

AND A SMALL mistake led to
several days of companionship
for Mrs. Nellie Vale and Mrs.
Thelma Orr.
Mrs. Orr drqJpedbythecounty
. board of education office recentIJ to correct a minor error. She
began chatting with Mrs. Vale,
one of the school slflervisors.
Mrs. Orr. of course, is a teach·
cr.
Vacation talk came up. Mrs.

Vale commented that she would
be traveling alone this year. She
was a little skeptical about thaL
So, Mrs. Orr indicated that they
might work something out so they
could tra l•el a bit together.
H finally came about, and Mrs.

Social
Calendar
THURSDAY
TWIN CITY Shrinettes, Thurs.
day, 7:30 p.m. in social rooms
of Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co., Middleport
WILLING WORKERS Class,
Enterprise United Methodist
Cllun:h, Thursday at' Marietta
Husted camp site, Royal Oak
Park, 6:30 p.m. potluck supper;
bring table service.
TWILIGHT GARDEN Club, pot.
luck picnic, Thursday, at 6 p.m.
at the SyraCuse Roadside Park.
FRIDAY
MIDDLEPORT FD!EMAN spon.
sor an outside dance partY thia
Friday, 9 to 12 p.m. at the Middleport Community Park. The
Ja,ys will emcee.
ICE CREAM SOCIAL, Friday,
beginning 6 p.m., at the Forest
Run Methodist Church. Homemade ice cream, pies, cakes and
cookies; place advance orders
with arcy member of the church.
SATURDAY
MEIGS ATHLET!C Assn. to
hold high school dance Saturday
night at the Pomeroy tennis court
starting at 9 p.m. In case of
rain, the dance will be held at
the Pomeroy Gym. The Ja.ya will

Food packages to rniss!ooar!es, devotional booklet• for
oerv!cemon, and goodies for shutins were amongtheprojectsplanned cmlng meellngo 'lllesdey of
tile B. H. Samorn Mloslonary SO·
clecy circles of the Middleport
Ftrst BBj)tlst Church.
LOVE JOY CD!CLE
MEETING AT THE home ol
Mrs. Charles Searles lor a pot.
luck diMer, the Love Joy Circle members made plans far
sending a food package to a mta.
sionary in India, and copies of
t h e Secret Place and Slndl.y
schoOl books to servicemen or
the church.
Members signed a rounc:l-robln
card for Mrs. Julia Grimm who
remains a patient at Holzer Hos·
pital. "Confidence in God" was
the devotional theme used by
Mrs. Daisy Bing, Grace before
the dinner was saJd by Venida
Gibbs, daughter of Mrs. Fred
Gibbs, Jr., chairman or the circle.
Othera at the potluck were
Trina Gibbs, Mrs. Mary LYons,
Mrs. Genevieve Saxon, Mrs.
France! Bearhs, and Mn. Jva
Turner.
DORCAS CD!CLE
LAST WEEK'S entertainment
of the residents of the Meiga
Coonty Infirmary was reported
on when the Dorcas Circle met
at the home of Mrs. Freda Hood.
Mrs. Tony Fowler, Mra. AtIan King, Mrs. Pearl Hoffman,
Mrs. Bert Bodlmer, Mrs. IIOOd,
Mrs. E. L. Hughes, and Mrs.
John McNeil took ice cream and
cake to the infirmary residents
and presented an informal program during their vlslt.
Orr accompanied Mrs. Vale as
far as St. Louis, Mo., and from
there took a long-awaited bus tour
to the West. Mrs. Vale visited in
Dlinois. The two met again in
Vandalia for the return trip home.

Annual Family
Picnic is Held

The annual family plcni&lt;. of
Mary iillrine, Whlte iillrine 'II
Jerusalem, was heJd at the Halliday-Atkins home at Harrisonville Frid&lt;Q~ evening.
Attending the affair were Mn.
Pearl Reynolds, M r s. Helen
Reynolds, Mrs. Evelyn Lewis,
Mrs. Nellie Tracy, Mr. and Mrs.
Allen Hughes, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Collins, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Jewell, Mr. and Mrs. Max Davis, Mr . and Mrs. Earl Werner,
Mrs. Bernice WlM, Mrs. Evelyn Murray, Mrs. Barbara Dugan, Mrs. N~!!.,. Bland, Mrs. Verlle Workman, Mrs. Wanda Gabrttsch and children, Donald, Jete
and Darry, Miss MaudeGrueser,
Miss Freda Grueser, Mr. and
Mrs. Ernest Wingett, Mrs. Stella
Atkins, Miss Ruby Diehl, Mr.
emcee.
and Mra. Fran!&lt; Halliday, and
SUNDAY
PICNIC at Lock 23, Apple Mr. and Mrs. VIrgil Atkins.
Grove, 6 p. m, 9.mday for all
area churches. Open to the public. Bring a covered dish. Ser- Parkers Home from
vice at 8 p.m. at Apple Grove
Methodist Church following, the
Rev. Charles Norris speaking. Jetting to Texas
MONDAY
Mr. and Mrs. Wilber Parker
TENT 95, Daughtera of Union and son, Eddie, Pcrneroy Rt. 3,
Veterans, will meet at 7:30 Mon- returned Monday £rom a trip Ln
d"J' night at the D.A.V. hall. the southwest.
They flew by jet trom Columbus to E1 Paso, to visit Mr. Park·
er's brother, Edson aoo fam.Hy,
at LaTuna, Texas. While there,
they made short trips to t h e
world's largest pecan orchard
and the irrigated fielc:ls along the
Rio Grande, to Juarex, Mexico,
"here they shopped In the Mercado Juarez; to Carlsbad caverns, New MexJ co, where they ate
lunch 850 reet urxlerground, a!'ll
to White Sands, New Mex:Jco, the
world's largest gypsum bed.

A report on the Women's Convention held at GranvUle ~ last
month was &amp;hen by Mrs. MeNeD, wM attended along with
Mra. Mamlng Kloe1, Mrs. Chu·
Ies Simona, and Mrs. Fred
Gibbs, Jr.
Members a!gned a round • robIn card for Kent Kloes who remains a patient at St. Mary's

Hospital in Huntington, Proyer

em.
Mrs. Hood prooenled the program using an article Crom the
World Vision magazine, u Ancient Alla Goes Young" relat;. ·
ing to the lnflux ot eommunlsm
and population exploolon.

QOTHES PINS

A DISCOUNT
DEPARTMENT STOR£

NOW-SHOP ANY OF OUR 3 STORESI
GALLIPOUS- MASON- POINT PLEASANT
REECE UNEDI SOUD CClOIS

CANDY
BARS
Hershey - Clark • Marsetc. - Every Cavorite bar
you may desire at Shoppers
Mart.

...
20 Inch

PORTABLE
FANS
Two Speed - push but-

!"or u~P with :
I Blend·Air 31h"

SWEAT SHIRTS

:5 or 6" conventional perimeter

svsterna

• ;\JI conventional

rl'&lt;'langu1ar duet

~ y s 1cms

ALSO IN COLEMAN FURNACES
Upfkw--For Buemenll or Closet
DownHow-For clOset or alcove
11onzontal Flow~For attic
Garage or CrawlSpace

CHASE HARDWARE
~2-2511

LOCUST ST.

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

FT. CAMPBELL, Ky. - Army
~claliat Foor Larry J. Pettit,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Pet,.
U~ 14 W. Cave St., POOteroy,received the Bronze Star Medal
here June 21 Cor meritorious
1ervir.e in ground operations
agalnat hoaUle forces dw1ng his
last assignment In VIetnam.
He Io a oecurlty guard !n the
524 Ord111nce Company here. He
entered the Army In September
19116 and completed blalc training
at ll. BeM11"8- The 21-.ur-old
oold!er IP"adlllted in 1966 rrom
Middleport HJib School. Before
eiXeYlng the Army, he was employed bf Pomeroy Food ComPin!'.

,_,_,

Menshncy

37c •

Sandpaper • rope .. socket
wrenches .. cutters - vla•
grlj&gt; pliers - long nose
pUers .. hammers screw
drivers .. wrenches .- ete.

...

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Vinyl Plastic
FLOWERS
A loaded table o!popular
year around flowers ard
greenery - Thekindyou'U
wantl
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Basket Ball
OXFORDS 2. 94

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AVE. - 99Z.2709- MIDDLEPORT, O.

-----------

For Exhibits

BAN
ROLL-ON
75~

VALUE

~

100 count r:;
A 98~ VALUE

- ·MI

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.,

i

8HAMPOQ

u.
COOL PRICE 2~wt00

•

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... 1.00

, •.;'...: 1

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JOHNSON$

BY POWER

your

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whole .house
the
easy way
.

-

260UNCE

.:r ...

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New 1968 fall ocyles for
my lady or the teenagerColon and plastic leatbera ready for you nawl

ILK
MAGNESIA

Bflil&amp;etl

Hand.ags

Bois

·

.

rish,&amp;gOrllyseUincl14wtonce Roy
'•
Stewart; New Haven, Hav, Paul p.rald Slyre EmorY llwlh
Fortney, Harold llwnR&amp;r110r lncl lloJ( U.....s.Q.
·

Prizes Fixe4

Service Held

A ·llren.wlll.blo!i
; to
alpaJ lhe CUrttir.llldi'e¥111!nr
'
'

LADIES

very famous brand o( dress OX·
fords and slipon styles- Your choice
of fine leathers - popular styles and
long wearing shoes. Sizes 6ih to 11.
-Come In arxllook them over!

,

VALLEY LUMBIR &amp;SUPPLY CO.

preo!dent, Appalaclllan P~&gt;wor
and American Electric C&lt;&gt;mjlany;
Boyce Grll!!th, chajr~ West .
Virginia Public Sei'Yfcof com.
mloslon, and the Honorlble Hulett c. Smith, Govomor of the
Slato or Weill Vlr8lnla•
1'1'. PLEASANT- PrlzemonMuo!c wll! be provided by the
Winfield H1ib School Band under 01 for the rorm and garden exJ
!:
the d!rect!ori of Rlymond Poak, hlb!to at the Mason Count,y Fair,
OFFICERS ELECTED
August 6 through tile lOth bave
director.
.
PI'. PLEASANT - Ol!lcers
been
amounced.
for the COIIIIIIi )'eliot the wscs
Blue ribbon wiriners will re ..
of lhe Hti!deroon -"Mlitllooi!Bt
celve $3, red ribbon $2, and
Clllrch - . elected at a rlil!enl
white ribbon $1.
meetlnr of tile Jll'llllll, The,Y - e
Exhibits from area rarmera
. Mra. Baron Meaip, prlaidlntj
will Include corn, small grain,
Mr1. Dora Glen, vice pns1dent;
forage crops, silage, honey, sorMr1. Rebert Sbamblen, troaiiUI'·
ghums and tobacco, vegetables,
er; Mrs. Jack Sblrpon, aecre~
Funeral services-for Htrman fresh fruit, potatoes, sweet potary and Mrl, II1J8h Oaul!hert.Y' Ruachel, 70, of Columbus, anatat.ooo, and Jumbo vegetables.
l)llrltual liCe chairman.
tive of POmeroy, were .,..,meted All exhibits mull be grown by
!n Columbua toclay.
the exhibitors. The exhlblto will
IWLA TO MEEr
Mr. Ruechel died Tuellllay fol- be Judged oo the basil of quall' PI'- l'tl!ASAirr - 'lbe Izaak lowing a heart attack. Holt ourunUormiV and varlecy and .
Walliaft ~ wlllmoet tonight vlved by Ida wife, Julia, a daughnwst be in place by 10 p.m. Mon·
II 7:311 p.m. II Krodol Pork to ter, Alma Of Columbus; six sisday, Aug, 5 and cannot be re· clio"'" 1!11 po•llblo -"'&amp; of . ters, Mr1. $ybtl Russell, Athens; moved until 9 p.m. Saturday,
Krodol, Pork Like for lllhfni In "MiL Dale Russell and MrLHarAug. 10.
'
tile' near .future.
All member• old Ruooell, Bidwell; Mro. Fred.
lncllnterellad llahel'IIIID are uti•
Deasauer,·~ Mrs. Walter White,
"
,
edto . - .
\·
and ~- Stanle,y Baas, Pomeroy;
a brolber, Albert lluechel of
PQ~ $\ED
Pom Boy, Fla.; a hall-brother,
• PLEA$ANT - WDIIom Leroy Ruocheloft:olumbuo; and a
1 111~
. ' em•':......lii:'flte
;t,' IWI..o!~,
Ruache! of
.
~.,..
Cluinbal
of
a ·t:tA ·Ita new r ~:. ""..~ " .
.
'poll.,.,i\li"\ A io:'Jl·~ .curIW llal Jii'e~ed in deall1 by
,.,. liao
bp &amp;lid ill ctill- llll.wento, Mr. and Mro._l'l1!llp
' llf!l'l - t. $ ,,...•
~ 81!~. two brother• and. a!s,., to'·be uu.
-·.-.-~
.
.....
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.,...... ~ ·tR ....... ,....... ·' m-.
&lt; ~- "·'"''I~

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· ctJt

New FaiiStylea
A

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v.

Oreelllrf, Too

Famous "Tip Top"

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~·- w~ ~~ "·
\ lite.
;
~ file program li!r the"·dlly be!llnL.with a .IIIII rala!Da\• core111011)' 117.1118 W~ot 'l(!rg!nla Arln1

WALL PAINT
SPRAY
PAM'

.

-~· tT:.rhz'ri~
"' ~'~' ~~ ~·· n.. U3
;..~.~ { ,··u
i ,!.•.~:q
;· e Tl
nr·uAgr··.r.m
..·~~~:;;:~:.::~':'.~~~ =~~~~;::;;
:f h,, will'il&gt;~ra
\.JI·· . ~tnp
._ ..,~
,., · C· u
.
~e,s!llg

!'~.~!~to ~~-~~
...,.~
,V-,.L._

Vinyl Latex
The paint that dries quickly! This is
oot a .. CHEAP" paint!!! Compare it
anywhere with paint seUing at twice
the price! Allpurposeglosspaintat
the same rice!

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The most wanted or all
hair rollers - Regular
$1.00 purchase - Every
size that's·made.

'

In Columbus

77

ROLLERS

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It you've Jost your mar•
bles - you can get them
bocl&lt; here - Less than lc
each! II

DreuSocb

""

. .
Am"os' Pl.ant Ceremony
'
·
·d.
T
d
tarte
.
at
.
0
ay
S
11

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rooms! New shipment just
received!

Brush Hair

)

., BULK
MARBLES

The smart shirt that teen-agers like to wear! Colors they
like - Boys or Girls wear these, too- A OrJ&amp;otime speciaJ buy at Ulie low price - All sizes.

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BAND-AID
1.55 VALUE .

79~

VALUE

.

DISCOUNI'ED

'

Reg. 2.00 "lllt"'
MIM "Derby"'

BRIEFS SHORTS
T SHIRTS
Every

day

mmey here -

you save
You save

13c on each gannentl! Yoo
wiU like their fiij

PERMANENTS

$14~,,

MOUTH
WASH

Reg. 69c
25T•W...

400vlrt

ALIA
SELTZER

WASJE
BASKETS

...~

...

QUARTS

USTERIN E

$1.98Value
,.

In gold or geen - A
plastic waste basket that' a

big - It wm hold your litter!

TOOTH
PASTE
JconomySia

We'N Not llragglnsl We Have Jheml

In The EntiN Qklo Val!.yl

MENS "PERMANENT

CASUALS
SLAC

IODAI

PAN
FIL
120-620.127

Willow--Black-Grey-Blue Etc.
Sil.CIS 2910 42
Twills--Denims-Home Spunsl
Well Tailored I For Arly Age

Open
Nlghll

Until
9o'clock

••

37$
pr.

IIICI

COLOR

FIL
120-620-127

...
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•

STOCK
UP
ON .

'Fffi-

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FLASH
CUBES
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The Llrgett and Most Complete Selection

1~rimeter system~

14,

9t2-3DS

lyM

ton switch! Cools up to 5

$

e AAA hrvlce ·

MENS SHORT SLEEVE

Pettit is Awarded

Bronze Slar Medal

W.Moln

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ASHLAND SERVIC~

U-Haulllontol

' •

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ECONOMY
TOOLS

All Popular 5c

'

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.F

Choice of 301

FURNACE
Cl•1r1nc•
lnstell1tlont ...

P~ .
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ELECTA CD!CLE
PLANS FOR SENDING either

GAS

for Low

'T.v.-tt;,;.-· LOU'S

1 COil s-.ING

pkg.

, -,

·I '

Ion Compg..O.J AJ-foc!aUon.
;g!n!i, (\!;e• u~.;... cla~o; Ailllust
'
';r;~.G,.ncls, locolecllwo'mllea ooot ~;t cr.;r~h. · ·
, Primary pUi,ole.otJIHi~· · 20; 18311) sii&amp;Ube ~ml,d :wlth ,
ot.New Halc"'o ~11-111111110 10111- 1 •An alii laih~ Clll))meetlliJ ,ZIIICI!, as llxil!" J~ the revfsecl H&gt;ec!il OJ'IPbaols e..ry Dfl3'
. tution- unique In thitillaonecil rmill · wm alll't at the ciinp · c011JtltuUon IJIPnMcillat Octo- Yeii"L''
. ·
.: the lew remlll!lni"~-~- •.~ ·~. July 21 ,
eXo' bof, ''.~ · ~"&gt; ·tit. U111!"1'1Pnl tJIII
The . auocla!ion !o cl!nciteil bj
1:
slleole('\_1~ thlo part of jhecCND- iOni throuafl Augilot 2. Servtcas e~nc! the mlplstrt .of Chrlol a JIOVei'ni!V bOinl t!Jat lncludeo
try, · •'' ·
• ,':
· wm begin' at ' uch ... ntng. ti1too&amp;lt the EUB dnJr&lt;hea of l!io nine paltllra, rilDe ·truote.a; and
t, ·•ItJo aloo •..,..sual In that It Is
Altogether, 18 churches with Pol!lt Pleasant D!atr!ct, theWeat Dine comin!tteemen, r&lt;prelent.
~ ~ a , COCJIIOI'~tl.. pov;lecl ~~ tile ·n!bit paot.orqr~ &amp;baring !n this Vlrslnla Conference, 1nc1 thell&amp;- . lng the 18 churcheo. On this
~ dlurcllt1 'lrt the P.olnl.pleaoanj 'e,....!stlc'; lileet!JW. Tl)e)" com-. ~on."
.
boinl are the to!lowllle persons
~ dl~trk:t of the Conner EliB com- priae the membarohiP·ot the u... , It Is plainly al!pulated In the named bf charp, past.or, trqs:'
document tbat, "Meetlng,o at the ·tee, and colnni!tteemen, In that
'\.
cainpgrounclahall bo for the pur· .. cinler:
..,.
pose of promodon and extension . . Al!jl)e Grove, Rev. Marlin
or the Christian faith through Coml&gt;boll, Chat-lie Fowler, and
.
evangelism, preaching of the Mro. Joonn KIJIIIlnl; Bachtel,
·
Word, Chrlotlao edueetion, •lnll- Rev. Mro. .l.challh Miller, Friend
!~~g o~oslono, fellowah!po, IP"DIIP Gibbs and Martin Hall; ReU&amp;meetings, comnwnUy and famtly mead, Rev. Eugene Garlow, Otho
,
.. ·· · ·. . • .
•.
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Pthering,s; IJ&lt;Uiecomlngs andre- ·Mattox and ~ SchwA!'; Good 1
.. .
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.
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unlcfts. " ·-'
~.
Sh~erd, Rev. Earl rerkins,
'PI'. P~EASANT - Ground- National OW'd at 11 L111. ,,
Of Ulllul !nlereot, too, !o tho Wallle Hart and Mrs. Ruth Hunt.l&gt;r,nldnl co\'liii&lt;Jnlo} forlhe John Tho invocation will be given fact the constitution Includes IIJo ~r; Ko:eb• Chlllel,~ Rev. l!"llliam
E. A~Jloi ~Plant ln •PUinom br Dr. D, r. De!lst ot !lyrrl- PI'Ovlo!on that, "The custoDi of
C!1Ul111"wore ,IIi.~ ~d ~be- cane and the weii'Ome' ~Y Joo _the ~~}110morat1on of tho fouild-'
llnall!l at 11 a.m. with ievoral P. Gills, execotlve vlce·P,.eal- lng of the llrot United Brethren
local' ,.;,ll)denta, inc!udlnc DewS dent, ,,\ppalachlan Power.
Church west of tho Allegheny
modi~, atteacl.,!l}hecOHI!Ipn!,s.
Addreoses will be given by Mowaina, in MaoooCounty, VIrLocal peri!Oilo ''liwltid to ut- . ~ E. Amoo, lor whom the
t'llid will travel b)' cha!Wnd buo .p!'ant lo Milled; Donald C. COOk,

Lou's SuN CuN for Summer Clr llwa
•Br•ket •11res •Cooling . . ....,

and cookies. The August meet.
lng wfll be at the home or Mrs ~
llolfman.

Hardwood clothes pins
for the thrifty housewife
-save money here.

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{ - T_he DallY Sentlnol, Pcimeroi·MI~I't. Q, , Thurldl¥, July 181 1988
.•

. : \.l:f. PLEAsANT..;: u~oncair.. ' m:;.]~

WI PRESCRIIE OUR FREE
SUMMI.I SAFETY OICKI

PICkof18

~

For the program, Mra. Richani Owen di apl oyed progam literature and rand an article by
Pearl Buck. Relroohmento - e
oerved during the concluding soclal hour.

,

Mra. Hood served ice cream

Low Boy

Big Fumece

hoatess lor the meeUng which
_,ed with a poem "We Go Till a
Woy But once" by Mro. WUI!o
Antholl)'. Devotion• were g!von
by Mrs. Paul Smart whose topic
was "CUp ot Cold Water."

vodons by Mrs. Bodlmer opened · m 1helr bh11tdiQrl were llladt
the meeting, Mro. BOdlmer used . when the EJecta Circle met at
a ~ermonctte on the 23rd Psalm I the home ' Of Mta. Charles Ben~
entitled "The !bepherd and the 1 nett.
91eep"' and concluded with a po..
Mrs. Charles Edwards was CO·

Coleman

Perlorm~nce

to church shuttns

'

HAIR SPRAY

Regu

an v

�.

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ROWN MALONE

BARNEY

l''"'
lTiiYi,ON
'ib1s &amp;'.St'
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·1

.I

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"f \

•

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·.? AGE$1G-17

'r
.
Pom.)rC!y;M!Cidl.pcrt ~ '
DO YoU NEED.SPINDING MONEY?

l

,;

....,
41 FORD )'letuP. Ranter, lab
oVer Pf)'lllel!ll, 87 a.mJie,
..
(
.
PuliRc
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also
14
fool
tone
Slit
11oM,
.
IIOIJSEIIOLD SALB, S.luldef,
If the 1ils-r ls.yes, '" or call
July 20, 11 a.DL We bm IOld 81 Evtarude Motor, 40 hp,
oar home loealed ....,.. 111e also 8 ....... Bdl llunt«,
Katie
The D1lly Sentinel,
.,_,
phone '09UII1
7-11-4te
road from WMPO radio Ill.
lion In Bradburr lllld wiD aeD
992-2156. She'l tell yow
to elm
the !oDowtng pertoDa] proper. POODLI PVPP1E11. AIC 'l'IJ
and If the lime time get Ylfuable
mtn~U~re,
11111 ap. 111111
ty. No .f'rGol G.E. reA1cntor.
Nv:Nff into a completely fumlshed; brand .
aervtce and lfOO'DIDC• ..._
Welbullt gaa l'llngl, G.E.
trllnlng
n~twhOine that.lets yoy ljni9Y lif~ et,Jtl care
l! I tlii
antomallc Wilber, IComDn ~~!Uta.
free bftt:. . l . ·
,
drytr, Magic Chef gaa beater,
RCA TV, two bedroom nllel, AICC Goldllll Rolrlavw ~­
tcfMI'~
SEIY!CE _ , ,
_
at Alb Sl, Mldclleporl. one with single bed, bedding,
•
QUAIJTY &amp; PRICE A$ ~OW AS _ $3495.00
For
IMI.
Nl-lte
Lost 1nd Found
drapea lllld curlalna, clollliDJ,
...lllllroteForW.
OPEN: 9- $ WEE!(DAYS
·1- 5 suNDAYS
LOST, TWO hounds, shy to
I
...
two wardrobes, one """"· OliO
strangers; one is black and
tiO « ' - NDif Landmart &amp;nauieiilbw
matal, HYing room Illite, oc- YOU CAN IIIII 1
1111
alumlnam
lloats.
CaD ...
...lonal chair, rooter, coffee
white, one dark tan. Alvin
(JULY
ONLY)
REALTY ~
Myers. Phone 985-3984 Cbestable, llands, 7 Iampo, plchll- ,IM7 ar ....._ Cllb ar
1220 WASIIINGTON BLVD,
BELP!It, OIDO
APPLIANCE'
SAlE
fermt.
S-!NIIe
es, mirrors, roDany bed,.
' ter.
7-16-Mp
423-7521
All AppiiiDcel lllteoanled!
01110. IIIJIIIII'BTIER, .....,
rug wllh ped lllld throw rup,
'1
Free
Benrus
and
Timex
POTATOES, bealll, elliiJql
VIU.\GE STORE - Stoci,
7
piece
dinette,
Mt&lt;ben
cabi'~
.. ·MOTH .
~J
Notice
Watches . . time to check
IIIII blell. l'llono I4NISl
flxlms, doinl &amp;GOd, T . . .
net, bue eablnel, two ullllt)'
BRING
EXPER1'
~
ClE.Eis .i
our offer.
home, bath, 1" acrea. •lllil.oo
cupboards and cert, eheat of aannce l'llllflll, PllrlliDd,
LIFE TO
Wheel Alignment
Oldo. 7·7-lfo
w.
thftl'll, boot raet, medicine
POMEROY , por montll. After down ·payment
V:OUR
eablnet, hrenty two Savege
• •
POMEROY
Stone
,...._,
FIVE
ROOK
BOUSE
lllllllllh,
PHONE
.
.
rille, lawn and )IOI'Cb fum~
CARPETING
Saturday, July 20
ftii&amp;IDIMI! . ·.
one t1oor, pi!'IIJ lurnllbod II
two fioors 211 • 113, ~veni­
• 992-2181
lore, step ladder. lawn mow~ ~ ~~~
'
645
-11
'"I"
"''I"'
bo••r o1 ,., ,... W
10:00 til2:00
OIIIIy loceled.
CIUIIId".,.
fh row
OWft IIGIIt., VOl R~
er, hand looll and 1111111 ,_ dealred. liS 8. l!omnd An.,
-GUAR.Atm!D.llfJ'tolllil t"flholl. N&amp; II'IIIM. No tilt. lilo
SAUlS ~-VICE
..
.
l1ck W. C.rsey, Mgr. BYR.\WBE - 6 1'001111, bath, .
IIJddleplrl Clll be bJ
fnl articles not tteml!ed.
l!der. UM rup tilt 11111t dly,
PHONE
992-2094
appolatmeal
.,...
I
p.1111!,
furnace,
level
lot.
fSI.OO
payAt
,..,.,. of Sale caah. Not ....
Alf~~-,..,
•'
'68's In Stock
ments.
diD Wolllam, J1bone ~~~sponatllle
for
aeelden!B.
SherWHISPERING
M4fa lfO. I POTA'l'O!B, 'ealllllfil, • ACRI!!tl - Large 7 - ·
&amp; Au
man and Effie Bustl!t, - .
lliMIN
PINES
llall ...... beana, (ta1ll
beth, cellar, bam. well, els.
....N IMttfll
lt. I ..._,.,
era. Sale conducted by I h e
.
.
EMala
~.
0
CALL COII.vtU.J . . . . .
llllloa, Pwlllllll.
7+111e . tern. M!Dorals. ea'I.OO Par-3 Llghtwrft. '
'llradford Auction Co.. Box !If, 110. f, rroDR COAL at ....
Music by ''The Ravens 11
mer aJnton Coli Co. tipple,
menta.
Radne. Ohlo 15771. Phone 9liS~n
....led I miJII 1111 of WeJII. SMAIL POODLES, lll"OOIIIed lla.BN er VIRGIL ftAPOIID
!1121. Lunch """""· 'ftds 11 1t1L Plloao IIU'II'I Welllton
·•\ 'i,
.._
free II YIMI wisll. West Rf&amp;!l- AII80CIATEs
nice clean merdumd!Je.
..
C.rcl Of Thlnb
The Salton Sea la a 280land White Terriers IIIII minlor llllorll&gt;'lbl WIItAla Coli
llftAilllliB
Y.IU!e
:-. ·~ WE WISH to express our gratsquart-mUe
lake cbleOy In
Compeny.
T-!NIIIe
Iature Scbululen, lempal_,
T-tf.llt
Imperial CouniY, CaUl. It Is
' · !tude and thanb to each and
shotl, aU A.K.C, Barkaroo
Mrs. Elva Dalley, looal, and mON tban ·250 1e.t below sea
'· ,, everyone who assisted us durKennels, Coolfll!e. Phone .,_
l-•
,.,:
_
_...;,
,
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Pepe, Mid- · level. .
.
.
RIDING LAWNMOWER 3" hp.
For
lent
Bul · - . . ~I"Yiw..
Ing the Illness and death of APARTMENT, clc""'
JltiONB-- .
~ dleport, were weekerKI guest&amp;
Phone 119Z-5IMO.
7-11-31c
3154, vlsilol'!l weleome.
In town,
James Greathouse. Special
12'1 Butternut Ave.
7·14-ljl!e APPUANCE HOSPITAL - M- or Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Oatley
7-IS-tfo
tllanb to Meip General Hosof Newark.
l958 CHEVROLET, :l&lt;loor, 6
Rear Adm. Rlchald E. Byrd
lhorlled I1r1tP IIIII llrlllleo
pital staff, friends and neighAccording .to tradlll~n,
Miss Leota Birch returned.-. waa the flnt man to Dy over
TRAILER, llnnm'a 'l'ralll!r cylinder, new battery, gener- STEREO AM lr !I'M IIIII nlIIIII
Lon
lloJ,
parll
I
I
d
Joaepb
o1 Ar!matbe4 foUIHIOQ
bors who sent flowers and
celtly !rom Holzer Hospital and both the north lllt!IOUI!i POieo,
Part, Mlnem!De, Phone liDo
ator, carbera!«, fuel pump,
11111 COIIIIO!e. Tbese aela 11'11
-*eli
repeJr
TfomM
the
flnt
CbrlsllaD chureb In
lood, tile Rev. Glen IDles,
is recuperatlr~~at home.
in -1821
and 191!9 respeetfvely.
3311.
7-IJ.I2te plup and wiring. Phone days
now ilr&lt;lugbt from over atoclr.
·...
Englaad.
lllld
Kobler
""8'NI
IIIII
Ill
F'r!tz Buck, Ewing F.meral
Howard and Dwaine Allen ol
119Z-5131, evenlngB oeum.
ed eompany. wm aeD on PQ1111111
!tppllancoo,
,....
...
Home and thooe tllat helped PLENTY or ~paoe for ane traa.
Ripley, W, Va., and Dale Lawaon
7-18-31&lt;
.,_, 11'. Va., Jalaa It Jlall. were recent SUI'Ida3 gueatl of
menll of " por month «' wiD
ln ony way. Your corullderaer w1t11 all feclUUea. 111 SyraaeD for • cash. 'IV It Ill
....
..!Nile Sylvia Allen.
tlon and help waa greatly ap.
.... CaD II9UIIN. t-Il-lilt 3~ liP JOHNSON outhoanl mo.
your bome. Call . . .
Mr. and Mrs. Mac VanMeter,
predated and will always be
tor, ~ dinette oet, both
7·1f.lte
New Haven, spent 1 recent saturremembered.
PURNISIIED lllld onfllndabed In very good OOIIdlllon. Rn.
day wttll Mrs. Ada Van Meter.
Wife and Family.
apertments. Cloll to ldlool. sonably priced. ean 74S-41111. · 1 PAYMEN'nl of ts or "'
Blain Dailey and Maryl,yJI Flt&lt;:h
7-11-Jte
Pllone llllal
!..ll-lflt
7-IUic
eul!. 111181 aeD IIIII . . . .
Yislted Mr. !P!I.Mra. !!I¥Jlall~
--llllddlll, .·1!'1!1!1 ·equipped - to
ani tamUy ~. ~ . -~~- ...~
Notice
llg ug, m11re bullonboloe,
0.
IJWI11011D
DON's BARBER Shop wm be 'I'IIAILER SPACE, Ill ldiiiiiM STRAW - Clean w!Jea! lllraw,
Mr. and Mrs. Milton Frederick
.. I'
naDable.
lDqulrw
118
llulberany
amount.
Dale
Kautz,
Cbeaaew
on
butlclna,
etc.,
5
IIIOIIIhll
&amp;ucnoNID
dOled July 22 tl!rqb .Jllly
of Miners viDe were recentgue1ta
'1
alli!!r
1
or
s
p.m.
1l'rlle
p_
ter.
Phone
1185-3831.
7-ll-3tp'
old,
call
tnall.
7-U.C
C..,'lll tllnlll
8. Don Weese, RaciDo.
ol Mr. and Mrs. lleU Talbotl.
o.
11a1:
as
"-o)r.
JaUc
ftllt
.
.
.
R R Durst and Tmn oUended
7-IU!e
PONY, 43 INCIIES, ~year• IIIII 8'J'EREO RADIO &lt;GIIIJdu.
the recent repU&amp; at Pomeroy.
Crill a ...
nJIINISIIID
IPiriDWIII,
two
old
geldJni,
well
tralnod.'
Mro. Cheryl Durst and Scotzy
tlon.
IW!dlome
niDat
.
'l'IIIMITI!:S SWARJIIIIOT bedrooml,
lllddlliport,
1'
1
111111
Rhonda
Soutll,
Oelr:
Grove
were
suesta or Mr. and Mro. R
oole.
'nlll
1111
B8R
aulomalle
'11111 .. Nti'Gdadllll, . . - 4 .
I I lie
...,
Road, Racine.
7-114k
R Durot and Tmn recently.
:111111' worbr &lt;OionJ....... IDreeard elwlger_ 'l'IU AIR
OONDI'iiOMNG
..,.,..,.
Mr. and Mro. Lorey Flt&lt;h ore
Iplelllllll IIIII lnrGrmiiJaa 01
pay-.ts of " por 111011111 «'
I 1100118 AND BATH, nii&amp;J. SIX ROOM houae, IIIII Be4!cb
porentJ
or a daughter born repay ...... Clll-.allen wtloe. Jaet'i lllfl\"
ilmJ
Aft.,
Ponaoy.
0..
cently
at
Holl:er Hospital.
crnl
- · · lfll
Sl, Middleport; new floora,
eratlon, Kew lJafta. . _
n!nz:nan,IJIICI
low -.,.._.,
8
f..tf.lte
Hank ond ha CeiJIOIIIer Yis!ted
Jllr - IIYiago, Allied ,.. tactRo............. new bath, large poreb aud
Mr o. IIUdrod Clrclo of lolorniJv
H alli!!r I p.a l'llolli . . . yard, teGOIJ, Phone ltJ.I092. FOOR ROOM HOUSE, llllh,
Cliilhl. ~. stor.
IDL
IMII
7-IUic
ertra lot IIIII boule 1r11111r Ill
Ilale Lawson coiled on his
Pomeroy. can ....., aller
brother,
Mr. and Mro. GloM Law·
196:J Dodge Polliro HT Cpe. . . . . $96S
PURNISIIED GARAGE IIJ*t- SEVEN ROOM fumlsbed far,:.
I p.m,
7-lt-Uip
lOR and l&amp;mlJy at Cheater I re_ . (1ft Llaealn llllL tJtlllllet
V8 eJW(ne, automatic ll'IDL, power lteerjlli 111111 bnkia.
house, 7 acres al land, alta .
' WilL DO ..t11111 .._ cant
&amp;lnday
eveni~Wrlodlo aild heater. Like ,.w.tireo, sand betp
Ytll)'llatertor,
Jlllll;
ldulll
CIIIIJ
.........
llpp,n, poebls, ,....,
bulldlnga, one ceDar, garden GOOD CLEAN dry roots, llfnAndjl
and
Ed
Ward
wore
rellnloh.
.
..IMe space, extmnely aood water.
...,, $21 lb., yellow 1'001, •
.......... llterillali, ole. ...
cent Yisltoro o! Mr. and Mri. ·
Houae just recenUy remodellb.; May apple root, 30 centa
lin. lfreddJe '11111111. lluoa,
...,._
Gene Ward and !omlly,
1963 Coe:v1ir Spider 1
•. . . . .
...... 'I'IHIII.
H04re TWO IIEDIIOOM elllclency
ed. 'Green Acres', one mDe
lb. Bdl BalJe1, lleedmlle, Bt!JDGET riWWir ,...._, •
Mr .........
our
lhlnl
11oar
budCit
lltDp.
s.
Fox
wu
1
recent
vloapartment, f4l8 8priDc Ave.,
on coonty road 16, Rt. I, RutObln.
7-17-«e
Now Um, Ad WIJI bucMI:a~ t llj)tid - · .Jio'arid
l'llmeroy.
!'lime
.....
BUer ........... 1llddlltjlln, :.:~:r slater, Mra.Nei!Mld~ IU'PY llllllR, .._, llpllap
!aDd.
7-11-41p
- · Whlta tq&gt; 1&gt;!V black ftnloh. .
7-14-llc
IIIII a.b. I to f p.DL J1oe.
. SAVE NOW on aiiiDIInom bolt;,
011111.
' • •
' Mr. lnd MrL Cecil Roseberry
.., tin Friday. IAdlollda!JI
---11165 HONDA, Dream 150, w!Dd10-IJ.IS.tf ft., clean llllde,
and chUdren and Mr. and'Mra. Ed
1965 Chiville Wllbu . - .• - ....• $t595_ •
_ , Friday.
Mile NEWLY remodeled
office
shield, addle baga, lugqe
llunly,
rail bottoms.
'
Buah were SUndly atterDoon Yiorooms, comer Court and East
carrier, t3SO. Phone I9Utllf.
c-o.
v-i
eilclne, powll'lllde, radio. hlilar, naw W!dtalllll
One mile of! Rt. 33, on Klngaltora of Mr. and MrL Jim MldMain. lllrect lnqulrles to Al7-ll-llc
·_ 11110011NG MATCH &amp;mday,
tlreo, ~ -rtor liDI~h wttit while :"{''!" lqp YiJvl
llury Road.
7-17-llle
dlea....-t.
bert Hll~ Jr., Robert RID,
.tarlor
trim, A IIMrp l -tri4i Ia. · , ,
- r .
.J1IIy II, 12 to 4. Hams, bacon,
Recent sueate of E. H.·car- ·
Richard
Vauglwt,
Sr.,
or
1MRIDING
HORSE,
sls-year-old
lla!f of hog. Shotgano only.
tiiSf BUICit and 11511 11a1c1r
penler and lomlly ware Mr. and
Rutland American Legion
ter Hart.
7-17...., · 11181'0, tHO: with saddle • ·
Door -·· .. , ·, .......
MrL S. W, llunt; Mr1, S)oolja ~­
body lllld motor, aD lor • ·
&gt;·
c.J
· ~,
,
"
,.
•....
J
Phone Mason . '1'13-5310.
!lame.
T-17-31c
Phone MN413.
7-1741&lt;
!on, Clar~ Ward,'
¥rl.
CLEAN MODERN trailer, ertra
' Jl!a~ !\ldlll. ' .e~fan lnieriOr, aooJd
tlreo 0, VB • •
7-!Utp
CIGARJii II Yllldlnc ...... In F.4dle TIYtoi, 1111! ion, ,itr; and
bollt-on
llvlng
room.
Ideal
for
B-A Beauty Salon
IIIII Mtlct. ABC ~ Mrs. lluey llunt, Mrs. Ehillai"l'oar.1"- -..
•.power
' . -~z·
:.: ;.............. ndlo,
.,:_. - · Sharp " .-I
hlllatite For We
elderly couple, young married GOOD !lEVEN room lloaae,
.{¥ililenJ apln, July 13. ean
Maa, W'. Va. Plloae t,'INHI. · ley, Wesley Cozart, &lt;tom.nurt_1.\'
,.
'
. ·'
~·
with no chll&lt;hn, or one eld- bath and ball; two lots, wiD
'
· ..
M.tiD Rev. E. J, Grlllllh, Mra. Gertrllila
. l&lt;&gt;r apJJOintment. Closed
OWIIEH I CROW
erly resldent. Phone Tu-4183.
Mcllode, Mr. and Mrs. DeU TalRI!ALTV COMPANY
.
. Phone 811-3MII 'flip.
consider !radlng traDer. Coolf..i$,
'J-17-31c
bolt, Mr. and Mrs. huJ Chovlo
' , pn Plains, Ohio. 7-17-3tp
tact SUSie Wood, S)Tacule. M1DDU!I'OI\T story
l11111r1nce
V-8 .~~, . · ~c.;1r.a.L,' delux tlimt. p-ela ~,
frame, I bedrooml, new belli, · At!'I'OMOI!Itl IDIUI- " - Uor and Gacy, MrL ·Frelil Mid-,· ·
Phone lfM555;
7-IMI&lt;
dle
....
rt,
Mr.
and
llfi'~
DIIe
·
All ~ .w.., jltel,
II liMiar. . ·
·
new furnace, new bot water
llllll!elledT teat ,.,., - " Bo;yd, Mr. R. R Durilllllll Tom.
lank, new floor coverln(. '1!111
..... lkwa? llall - . Mr. s. w. DurO!,
·R; II;
povperty bt mellen~ eondlIll"
.
Durot
IIIII
Tom
,..re,!h,We,IVIr•
·
.'
'.•.
tiOII. $4,7110.00.
lkda
recentlll
trylnc,I0~11ie
...
POIIEROI' - I lllory lnmo,
place they Uved beA!h cpl!l!patO
I bedlvoma, booement, PI
Ohio on ...,
D~•• .,., .li..._
-~ i-"""
.,..·~· r,l"!i'
floor furnace. tl,GOD.OO.
JIOI'ted
there
wore
111 ~a )ell.
CAlL Us FOR YOlJR NNiiiJJi. NoCtilnc but t11e ,...;t ~ al)do
IN RI!AL EIITATI:
----·.'"(''
·' .~( . ,. ' ....'
rtiiiiiU.J..
-~ ,
. .,·f· ··v-~:
BENBY CLBLAND
Mr. and Mrs. 'wllitl.i J/,.Q*'
OffiCI · - ·
. &lt;llllbergef, I&lt;eO~. ~N; .r:; llra! .
Eva Klmei," CJ1ioteio, oild ill'• ·
aDd MrL El.. Btreh Df,...,!ho
,..re -n ceat pota ol t;llllt and
ONE DELRAY electric iUitll'
x- Birch:
'
.
.
wtth amnllfler. 165: one 1111811
Help War.cl
bay pony t:JO. Call afitr I p.a,
~• ....t.-

s.r.

;

-

.

crow,

how

SHE. ON~'/ OOE.S IT FD'
HER OW!ol PEDP~~ !f
THEM FUAAINERS

Mto.:oHIO V'AuEY · ·

rt

m

LI'L

FLIGHT OF VUl-TURE'$
FORMING '5"!f ""EAN

OUR

Sir.

~

HOBSTETTER:,

..

_,

MillER· MOBiLE HOMES

MD LUCK FOR CERTAIN '
INJUN SHRIMP!.'

•

'

AIC

DANa

5:55 .

I

DINNER .

.•

- _

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

Stiversville

an

'5chwarztl Mll'llt.

EEl\ AND MEEK

LET.S SEID JJO\U ...J: TOOl&lt;.
A DOLlAR FROM '{(].), .
NJD YOU GWfi A
OOU-AA. 10 /1\fi !

Hockingport, Ohio

.- - -

HER. ABOUT THE

TESTIMONIAL

.-

";. ....... ,. ........ .....

Pome~~Home

JOE K=RR 1 TELL

THE BORN LOSER

ll-IE SAMe IIIU. "TB..l.
"OJ TI-lE .D'ICiliS lteW

c.

HI~LF, PntCE99!

........

---

..,.,

..................••••

..•

---

2 ~.

HAVE A

Clc.ARETTE?

sats

a-

!'t-.

lilt.·-

---

't965,'hni:G.i.,4
•'

19~2 'Old.

.

.....

.......

0

•

I

o

$11)9..5

Sell fiiDOUI ·
Aerolrecl shoea, full
J11r1 lime. HIP COIDIDIIplus !Jomu. Complete

lor men and women.
furnilbed free
1D Gordon Rae DIJtrlei
Mgr., 3584 n~

Columbua, Obln,

am.

'MUte
----

I

penon,
7-!Mie

Chester, 1185-!Mt.

7-1~ ·-===ftWIVII=====

WI'ATE stereo - waJ.
•
nul stereo COIIIOie 111111 4
11*lbn. 4 IPIId llllllmltle
changer, PBJIIIIIlil . ol •-•
per IIIOI1Ib ar Jll7 ~~~~ ...

IIOLJI)

rruo.

Call ttJ.al8. f;SS«e

I

.. $199

Fl:ird{6 4.1D•. Std. Trens. . . ... , $295

..

SU:ac

•

WANI'ID

Full PC!Wer . . . . $200
. .. .. , ....... $29.

·c. o.,

~fiYIMAIUY
,

0.

.

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.

l'v-.1118

.

endiJIC

,.....

e. Trouble

12.Se&amp;eqle

21'. Outer

1. Bounder

ta. Cont&amp;latr

"·1114-

m..t

8. Llur
D. Hind
ll. App,.bend
lJ. Firm

16. Malt.ne
..
ortabby
..; 11. Land

.........

-; 1T, Renew•

29. Joy
31. Salor

U.. Wlnd

SS. Power
aupplled

11. Pe11ex

to&amp;

..

....

D.Opono:
~

U..OnYI

robber

r

11

1tenuot
eerull:

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at. SecuriJII',
uarope

aLir.'ldl4
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....=..

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4t- IIIII!IIOI.Y
Parll

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I HAVEN'T MISSED
ITA~lT!

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dne!Oitor llalptyltudl fot -

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. . , ...... _ ........ UH1•

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KLNSV
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fo1W·KI&amp; ART
ClX.I.fClCRcuoo, PALTRIE

a,...,._ ca-wa-

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..........,..~
- · ltr"ota1 Tlul PIIOI'ill: NBVIlR GlVIl UP
Tlll!ll\·, •
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.'Ia tiiJa illilpW A I I Uo, X tor lhe two O'o, oto. IIIP ~
\.I J,roJIIIIII!o 1110 foJo111a iu1&lt;! ill lhio ·110* IN sll
•
lilda o11.y P,lo
~ an dlffNl
•.

tor 1111 -

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Here....... to worll
. AlPt",(.IIA.I.XII ,.

DAILY (lBYPIOQUOU
... ..

~

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41.0..of
.lliaoY layon

.

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tt. Toward

~

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oufilx

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18. Collected

i'

canate
U.Cbemleal

wute1Uk

tenftll

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40. Venlce

SG.DuU

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lor
pi&amp;Jinr

, .......... a..••

machlno
3t. Pieetl ot

1f.BIIektJIOd
13. Eally
Chine•

20. l'rOIIWit
21. Coocealed

.,

COII'Aa

lcol

f5. Iuerl.bed

17. Pmlllt

,.:2· ~11': ~.~ 'rrl"'· .~. ..

..,.,

a.

outllt
f.Kinfdom
10. Lariat

1

on

21. Oirl'a
t.II&amp;UIIp
Rubber tr.
M.Cbom'· Prlater'l

&amp;llllf

~

K Spoet-

l.CoruUe

1.Real
IS. Ftmlrl.lllt

4:ot. -..... " ......

In Business

CASH?

·- .........-

DAILY CROSSWORD

·.',

"-!'•

*·

WANIED

I

~'

I"

CARRI8t

w--

1

·.of'

.....,

SUid """"'"'
""YOPI&lt;fiMJ
Hltf SC.t4fMI

�.

'

·'

/

'

.. :
ROWN MALONE

BARNEY

l''"'
lTiiYi,ON
'ib1s &amp;'.St'
'
·1

.I

.

"f \

•

•. 1 '

'

·.? AGE$1G-17

'r
.
Pom.)rC!y;M!Cidl.pcrt ~ '
DO YoU NEED.SPINDING MONEY?

l

,;

....,
41 FORD )'letuP. Ranter, lab
oVer Pf)'lllel!ll, 87 a.mJie,
..
(
.
PuliRc
'
also
14
fool
tone
Slit
11oM,
.
IIOIJSEIIOLD SALB, S.luldef,
If the 1ils-r ls.yes, '" or call
July 20, 11 a.DL We bm IOld 81 Evtarude Motor, 40 hp,
oar home loealed ....,.. 111e also 8 ....... Bdl llunt«,
Katie
The D1lly Sentinel,
.,_,
phone '09UII1
7-11-4te
road from WMPO radio Ill.
lion In Bradburr lllld wiD aeD
992-2156. She'l tell yow
to elm
the !oDowtng pertoDa] proper. POODLI PVPP1E11. AIC 'l'IJ
and If the lime time get Ylfuable
mtn~U~re,
11111 ap. 111111
ty. No .f'rGol G.E. reA1cntor.
Nv:Nff into a completely fumlshed; brand .
aervtce and lfOO'DIDC• ..._
Welbullt gaa l'llngl, G.E.
trllnlng
n~twhOine that.lets yoy ljni9Y lif~ et,Jtl care
l! I tlii
antomallc Wilber, IComDn ~~!Uta.
free bftt:. . l . ·
,
drytr, Magic Chef gaa beater,
RCA TV, two bedroom nllel, AICC Goldllll Rolrlavw ~­
tcfMI'~
SEIY!CE _ , ,
_
at Alb Sl, Mldclleporl. one with single bed, bedding,
•
QUAIJTY &amp; PRICE A$ ~OW AS _ $3495.00
For
IMI.
Nl-lte
Lost 1nd Found
drapea lllld curlalna, clollliDJ,
...lllllroteForW.
OPEN: 9- $ WEE!(DAYS
·1- 5 suNDAYS
LOST, TWO hounds, shy to
I
...
two wardrobes, one """"· OliO
strangers; one is black and
tiO « ' - NDif Landmart &amp;nauieiilbw
matal, HYing room Illite, oc- YOU CAN IIIII 1
1111
alumlnam
lloats.
CaD ...
...lonal chair, rooter, coffee
white, one dark tan. Alvin
(JULY
ONLY)
REALTY ~
Myers. Phone 985-3984 Cbestable, llands, 7 Iampo, plchll- ,IM7 ar ....._ Cllb ar
1220 WASIIINGTON BLVD,
BELP!It, OIDO
APPLIANCE'
SAlE
fermt.
S-!NIIe
es, mirrors, roDany bed,.
' ter.
7-16-Mp
423-7521
All AppiiiDcel lllteoanled!
01110. IIIJIIIII'BTIER, .....,
rug wllh ped lllld throw rup,
'1
Free
Benrus
and
Timex
POTATOES, bealll, elliiJql
VIU.\GE STORE - Stoci,
7
piece
dinette,
Mt&lt;ben
cabi'~
.. ·MOTH .
~J
Notice
Watches . . time to check
IIIII blell. l'llono I4NISl
flxlms, doinl &amp;GOd, T . . .
net, bue eablnel, two ullllt)'
BRING
EXPER1'
~
ClE.Eis .i
our offer.
home, bath, 1" acrea. •lllil.oo
cupboards and cert, eheat of aannce l'llllflll, PllrlliDd,
LIFE TO
Wheel Alignment
Oldo. 7·7-lfo
w.
thftl'll, boot raet, medicine
POMEROY , por montll. After down ·payment
V:OUR
eablnet, hrenty two Savege
• •
POMEROY
Stone
,...._,
FIVE
ROOK
BOUSE
lllllllllh,
PHONE
.
.
rille, lawn and )IOI'Cb fum~
CARPETING
Saturday, July 20
ftii&amp;IDIMI! . ·.
one t1oor, pi!'IIJ lurnllbod II
two fioors 211 • 113, ~veni­
• 992-2181
lore, step ladder. lawn mow~ ~ ~~~
'
645
-11
'"I"
"''I"'
bo••r o1 ,., ,... W
10:00 til2:00
OIIIIy loceled.
CIUIIId".,.
fh row
OWft IIGIIt., VOl R~
er, hand looll and 1111111 ,_ dealred. liS 8. l!omnd An.,
-GUAR.Atm!D.llfJ'tolllil t"flholl. N&amp; II'IIIM. No tilt. lilo
SAUlS ~-VICE
..
.
l1ck W. C.rsey, Mgr. BYR.\WBE - 6 1'001111, bath, .
IIJddleplrl Clll be bJ
fnl articles not tteml!ed.
l!der. UM rup tilt 11111t dly,
PHONE
992-2094
appolatmeal
.,...
I
p.1111!,
furnace,
level
lot.
fSI.OO
payAt
,..,.,. of Sale caah. Not ....
Alf~~-,..,
•'
'68's In Stock
ments.
diD Wolllam, J1bone ~~~sponatllle
for
aeelden!B.
SherWHISPERING
M4fa lfO. I POTA'l'O!B, 'ealllllfil, • ACRI!!tl - Large 7 - ·
&amp; Au
man and Effie Bustl!t, - .
lliMIN
PINES
llall ...... beana, (ta1ll
beth, cellar, bam. well, els.
....N IMttfll
lt. I ..._,.,
era. Sale conducted by I h e
.
.
EMala
~.
0
CALL COII.vtU.J . . . . .
llllloa, Pwlllllll.
7+111e . tern. M!Dorals. ea'I.OO Par-3 Llghtwrft. '
'llradford Auction Co.. Box !If, 110. f, rroDR COAL at ....
Music by ''The Ravens 11
mer aJnton Coli Co. tipple,
menta.
Radne. Ohlo 15771. Phone 9liS~n
....led I miJII 1111 of WeJII. SMAIL POODLES, lll"OOIIIed lla.BN er VIRGIL ftAPOIID
!1121. Lunch """""· 'ftds 11 1t1L Plloao IIU'II'I Welllton
·•\ 'i,
.._
free II YIMI wisll. West Rf&amp;!l- AII80CIATEs
nice clean merdumd!Je.
..
C.rcl Of Thlnb
The Salton Sea la a 280land White Terriers IIIII minlor llllorll&gt;'lbl WIItAla Coli
llftAilllliB
Y.IU!e
:-. ·~ WE WISH to express our gratsquart-mUe
lake cbleOy In
Compeny.
T-!NIIIe
Iature Scbululen, lempal_,
T-tf.llt
Imperial CouniY, CaUl. It Is
' · !tude and thanb to each and
shotl, aU A.K.C, Barkaroo
Mrs. Elva Dalley, looal, and mON tban ·250 1e.t below sea
'· ,, everyone who assisted us durKennels, Coolfll!e. Phone .,_
l-•
,.,:
_
_...;,
,
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Pepe, Mid- · level. .
.
.
RIDING LAWNMOWER 3" hp.
For
lent
Bul · - . . ~I"Yiw..
Ing the Illness and death of APARTMENT, clc""'
JltiONB-- .
~ dleport, were weekerKI guest&amp;
Phone 119Z-5IMO.
7-11-31c
3154, vlsilol'!l weleome.
In town,
James Greathouse. Special
12'1 Butternut Ave.
7·14-ljl!e APPUANCE HOSPITAL - M- or Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Oatley
7-IS-tfo
tllanb to Meip General Hosof Newark.
l958 CHEVROLET, :l&lt;loor, 6
Rear Adm. Rlchald E. Byrd
lhorlled I1r1tP IIIII llrlllleo
pital staff, friends and neighAccording .to tradlll~n,
Miss Leota Birch returned.-. waa the flnt man to Dy over
TRAILER, llnnm'a 'l'ralll!r cylinder, new battery, gener- STEREO AM lr !I'M IIIII nlIIIII
Lon
lloJ,
parll
I
I
d
Joaepb
o1 Ar!matbe4 foUIHIOQ
bors who sent flowers and
celtly !rom Holzer Hospital and both the north lllt!IOUI!i POieo,
Part, Mlnem!De, Phone liDo
ator, carbera!«, fuel pump,
11111 COIIIIO!e. Tbese aela 11'11
-*eli
repeJr
TfomM
the
flnt
CbrlsllaD chureb In
lood, tile Rev. Glen IDles,
is recuperatlr~~at home.
in -1821
and 191!9 respeetfvely.
3311.
7-IJ.I2te plup and wiring. Phone days
now ilr&lt;lugbt from over atoclr.
·...
Englaad.
lllld
Kobler
""8'NI
IIIII
Ill
F'r!tz Buck, Ewing F.meral
Howard and Dwaine Allen ol
119Z-5131, evenlngB oeum.
ed eompany. wm aeD on PQ1111111
!tppllancoo,
,....
...
Home and thooe tllat helped PLENTY or ~paoe for ane traa.
Ripley, W, Va., and Dale Lawaon
7-18-31&lt;
.,_, 11'. Va., Jalaa It Jlall. were recent SUI'Ida3 gueatl of
menll of " por month «' wiD
ln ony way. Your corullderaer w1t11 all feclUUea. 111 SyraaeD for • cash. 'IV It Ill
....
..!Nile Sylvia Allen.
tlon and help waa greatly ap.
.... CaD II9UIIN. t-Il-lilt 3~ liP JOHNSON outhoanl mo.
your bome. Call . . .
Mr. and Mrs. Mac VanMeter,
predated and will always be
tor, ~ dinette oet, both
7·1f.lte
New Haven, spent 1 recent saturremembered.
PURNISIIED lllld onfllndabed In very good OOIIdlllon. Rn.
day wttll Mrs. Ada Van Meter.
Wife and Family.
apertments. Cloll to ldlool. sonably priced. ean 74S-41111. · 1 PAYMEN'nl of ts or "'
Blain Dailey and Maryl,yJI Flt&lt;:h
7-11-Jte
Pllone llllal
!..ll-lflt
7-IUic
eul!. 111181 aeD IIIII . . . .
Yislted Mr. !P!I.Mra. !!I¥Jlall~
--llllddlll, .·1!'1!1!1 ·equipped - to
ani tamUy ~. ~ . -~~- ...~
Notice
llg ug, m11re bullonboloe,
0.
IJWI11011D
DON's BARBER Shop wm be 'I'IIAILER SPACE, Ill ldiiiiiM STRAW - Clean w!Jea! lllraw,
Mr. and Mrs. Milton Frederick
.. I'
naDable.
lDqulrw
118
llulberany
amount.
Dale
Kautz,
Cbeaaew
on
butlclna,
etc.,
5
IIIOIIIhll
&amp;ucnoNID
dOled July 22 tl!rqb .Jllly
of Miners viDe were recentgue1ta
'1
alli!!r
1
or
s
p.m.
1l'rlle
p_
ter.
Phone
1185-3831.
7-ll-3tp'
old,
call
tnall.
7-U.C
C..,'lll tllnlll
8. Don Weese, RaciDo.
ol Mr. and Mrs. lleU Talbotl.
o.
11a1:
as
"-o)r.
JaUc
ftllt
.
.
.
R R Durst and Tmn oUended
7-IU!e
PONY, 43 INCIIES, ~year• IIIII 8'J'EREO RADIO &lt;GIIIJdu.
the recent repU&amp; at Pomeroy.
Crill a ...
nJIINISIIID
IPiriDWIII,
two
old
geldJni,
well
tralnod.'
Mro. Cheryl Durst and Scotzy
tlon.
IW!dlome
niDat
.
'l'IIIMITI!:S SWARJIIIIOT bedrooml,
lllddlliport,
1'
1
111111
Rhonda
Soutll,
Oelr:
Grove
were
suesta or Mr. and Mro. R
oole.
'nlll
1111
B8R
aulomalle
'11111 .. Nti'Gdadllll, . . - 4 .
I I lie
...,
Road, Racine.
7-114k
R Durot and Tmn recently.
:111111' worbr &lt;OionJ....... IDreeard elwlger_ 'l'IU AIR
OONDI'iiOMNG
..,.,..,.
Mr. and Mro. Lorey Flt&lt;h ore
Iplelllllll IIIII lnrGrmiiJaa 01
pay-.ts of " por 111011111 «'
I 1100118 AND BATH, nii&amp;J. SIX ROOM houae, IIIII Be4!cb
porentJ
or a daughter born repay ...... Clll-.allen wtloe. Jaet'i lllfl\"
ilmJ
Aft.,
Ponaoy.
0..
cently
at
Holl:er Hospital.
crnl
- · · lfll
Sl, Middleport; new floora,
eratlon, Kew lJafta. . _
n!nz:nan,IJIICI
low -.,.._.,
8
f..tf.lte
Hank ond ha CeiJIOIIIer Yis!ted
Jllr - IIYiago, Allied ,.. tactRo............. new bath, large poreb aud
Mr o. IIUdrod Clrclo of lolorniJv
H alli!!r I p.a l'llolli . . . yard, teGOIJ, Phone ltJ.I092. FOOR ROOM HOUSE, llllh,
Cliilhl. ~. stor.
IDL
IMII
7-IUic
ertra lot IIIII boule 1r11111r Ill
Ilale Lawson coiled on his
Pomeroy. can ....., aller
brother,
Mr. and Mro. GloM Law·
196:J Dodge Polliro HT Cpe. . . . . $96S
PURNISIIED GARAGE IIJ*t- SEVEN ROOM fumlsbed far,:.
I p.m,
7-lt-Uip
lOR and l&amp;mlJy at Cheater I re_ . (1ft Llaealn llllL tJtlllllet
V8 eJW(ne, automatic ll'IDL, power lteerjlli 111111 bnkia.
house, 7 acres al land, alta .
' WilL DO ..t11111 .._ cant
&amp;lnday
eveni~Wrlodlo aild heater. Like ,.w.tireo, sand betp
Ytll)'llatertor,
Jlllll;
ldulll
CIIIIJ
.........
llpp,n, poebls, ,....,
bulldlnga, one ceDar, garden GOOD CLEAN dry roots, llfnAndjl
and
Ed
Ward
wore
rellnloh.
.
..IMe space, extmnely aood water.
...,, $21 lb., yellow 1'001, •
.......... llterillali, ole. ...
cent Yisltoro o! Mr. and Mri. ·
Houae just recenUy remodellb.; May apple root, 30 centa
lin. lfreddJe '11111111. lluoa,
...,._
Gene Ward and !omlly,
1963 Coe:v1ir Spider 1
•. . . . .
...... 'I'IHIII.
H04re TWO IIEDIIOOM elllclency
ed. 'Green Acres', one mDe
lb. Bdl BalJe1, lleedmlle, Bt!JDGET riWWir ,...._, •
Mr .........
our
lhlnl
11oar
budCit
lltDp.
s.
Fox
wu
1
recent
vloapartment, f4l8 8priDc Ave.,
on coonty road 16, Rt. I, RutObln.
7-17-«e
Now Um, Ad WIJI bucMI:a~ t llj)tid - · .Jio'arid
l'llmeroy.
!'lime
.....
BUer ........... 1llddlltjlln, :.:~:r slater, Mra.Nei!Mld~ IU'PY llllllR, .._, llpllap
!aDd.
7-11-41p
- · Whlta tq&gt; 1&gt;!V black ftnloh. .
7-14-llc
IIIII a.b. I to f p.DL J1oe.
. SAVE NOW on aiiiDIInom bolt;,
011111.
' • •
' Mr. lnd MrL Cecil Roseberry
.., tin Friday. IAdlollda!JI
---11165 HONDA, Dream 150, w!Dd10-IJ.IS.tf ft., clean llllde,
and chUdren and Mr. and'Mra. Ed
1965 Chiville Wllbu . - .• - ....• $t595_ •
_ , Friday.
Mile NEWLY remodeled
office
shield, addle baga, lugqe
llunly,
rail bottoms.
'
Buah were SUndly atterDoon Yiorooms, comer Court and East
carrier, t3SO. Phone I9Utllf.
c-o.
v-i
eilclne, powll'lllde, radio. hlilar, naw W!dtalllll
One mile of! Rt. 33, on Klngaltora of Mr. and MrL Jim MldMain. lllrect lnqulrles to Al7-ll-llc
·_ 11110011NG MATCH &amp;mday,
tlreo, ~ -rtor liDI~h wttit while :"{''!" lqp YiJvl
llury Road.
7-17-llle
dlea....-t.
bert Hll~ Jr., Robert RID,
.tarlor
trim, A IIMrp l -tri4i Ia. · , ,
- r .
.J1IIy II, 12 to 4. Hams, bacon,
Recent sueate of E. H.·car- ·
Richard
Vauglwt,
Sr.,
or
1MRIDING
HORSE,
sls-year-old
lla!f of hog. Shotgano only.
tiiSf BUICit and 11511 11a1c1r
penler and lomlly ware Mr. and
Rutland American Legion
ter Hart.
7-17...., · 11181'0, tHO: with saddle • ·
Door -·· .. , ·, .......
MrL S. W, llunt; Mr1, S)oolja ~­
body lllld motor, aD lor • ·
&gt;·
c.J
· ~,
,
"
,.
•....
J
Phone Mason . '1'13-5310.
!lame.
T-17-31c
Phone MN413.
7-1741&lt;
!on, Clar~ Ward,'
¥rl.
CLEAN MODERN trailer, ertra
' Jl!a~ !\ldlll. ' .e~fan lnieriOr, aooJd
tlreo 0, VB • •
7-!Utp
CIGARJii II Yllldlnc ...... In F.4dle TIYtoi, 1111! ion, ,itr; and
bollt-on
llvlng
room.
Ideal
for
B-A Beauty Salon
IIIII Mtlct. ABC ~ Mrs. lluey llunt, Mrs. Ehillai"l'oar.1"- -..
•.power
' . -~z·
:.: ;.............. ndlo,
.,:_. - · Sharp " .-I
hlllatite For We
elderly couple, young married GOOD !lEVEN room lloaae,
.{¥ililenJ apln, July 13. ean
Maa, W'. Va. Plloae t,'INHI. · ley, Wesley Cozart, &lt;tom.nurt_1.\'
,.
'
. ·'
~·
with no chll&lt;hn, or one eld- bath and ball; two lots, wiD
'
· ..
M.tiD Rev. E. J, Grlllllh, Mra. Gertrllila
. l&lt;&gt;r apJJOintment. Closed
OWIIEH I CROW
erly resldent. Phone Tu-4183.
Mcllode, Mr. and Mrs. DeU TalRI!ALTV COMPANY
.
. Phone 811-3MII 'flip.
consider !radlng traDer. Coolf..i$,
'J-17-31c
bolt, Mr. and Mrs. huJ Chovlo
' , pn Plains, Ohio. 7-17-3tp
tact SUSie Wood, S)Tacule. M1DDU!I'OI\T story
l11111r1nce
V-8 .~~, . · ~c.;1r.a.L,' delux tlimt. p-ela ~,
frame, I bedrooml, new belli, · At!'I'OMOI!Itl IDIUI- " - Uor and Gacy, MrL ·Frelil Mid-,· ·
Phone lfM555;
7-IMI&lt;
dle
....
rt,
Mr.
and
llfi'~
DIIe
·
All ~ .w.., jltel,
II liMiar. . ·
·
new furnace, new bot water
llllll!elledT teat ,.,., - " Bo;yd, Mr. R. R Durilllllll Tom.
lank, new floor coverln(. '1!111
..... lkwa? llall - . Mr. s. w. DurO!,
·R; II;
povperty bt mellen~ eondlIll"
.
Durot
IIIII
Tom
,..re,!h,We,IVIr•
·
.'
'.•.
tiOII. $4,7110.00.
lkda
recentlll
trylnc,I0~11ie
...
POIIEROI' - I lllory lnmo,
place they Uved beA!h cpl!l!patO
I bedlvoma, booement, PI
Ohio on ...,
D~•• .,., .li..._
-~ i-"""
.,..·~· r,l"!i'
floor furnace. tl,GOD.OO.
JIOI'ted
there
wore
111 ~a )ell.
CAlL Us FOR YOlJR NNiiiJJi. NoCtilnc but t11e ,...;t ~ al)do
IN RI!AL EIITATI:
----·.'"(''
·' .~( . ,. ' ....'
rtiiiiiU.J..
-~ ,
. .,·f· ··v-~:
BENBY CLBLAND
Mr. and Mrs. 'wllitl.i J/,.Q*'
OffiCI · - ·
. &lt;llllbergef, I&lt;eO~. ~N; .r:; llra! .
Eva Klmei," CJ1ioteio, oild ill'• ·
aDd MrL El.. Btreh Df,...,!ho
,..re -n ceat pota ol t;llllt and
ONE DELRAY electric iUitll'
x- Birch:
'
.
.
wtth amnllfler. 165: one 1111811
Help War.cl
bay pony t:JO. Call afitr I p.a,
~• ....t.-

s.r.

;

-

.

crow,

how

SHE. ON~'/ OOE.S IT FD'
HER OW!ol PEDP~~ !f
THEM FUAAINERS

Mto.:oHIO V'AuEY · ·

rt

m

LI'L

FLIGHT OF VUl-TURE'$
FORMING '5"!f ""EAN

OUR

Sir.

~

HOBSTETTER:,

..

_,

MillER· MOBiLE HOMES

MD LUCK FOR CERTAIN '
INJUN SHRIMP!.'

•

'

AIC

DANa

5:55 .

I

DINNER .

.•

- _

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

Stiversville

an

'5chwarztl Mll'llt.

EEl\ AND MEEK

LET.S SEID JJO\U ...J: TOOl&lt;.
A DOLlAR FROM '{(].), .
NJD YOU GWfi A
OOU-AA. 10 /1\fi !

Hockingport, Ohio

.- - -

HER. ABOUT THE

TESTIMONIAL

.-

";. ....... ,. ........ .....

Pome~~Home

JOE K=RR 1 TELL

THE BORN LOSER

ll-IE SAMe IIIU. "TB..l.
"OJ TI-lE .D'ICiliS lteW

c.

HI~LF, PntCE99!

........

---

..,.,

..................••••

..•

---

2 ~.

HAVE A

Clc.ARETTE?

sats

a-

!'t-.

lilt.·-

---

't965,'hni:G.i.,4
•'

19~2 'Old.

.

.....

.......

0

•

I

o

$11)9..5

Sell fiiDOUI ·
Aerolrecl shoea, full
J11r1 lime. HIP COIDIDIIplus !Jomu. Complete

lor men and women.
furnilbed free
1D Gordon Rae DIJtrlei
Mgr., 3584 n~

Columbua, Obln,

am.

'MUte
----

I

penon,
7-!Mie

Chester, 1185-!Mt.

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cUiu~•· o.)'•MWleport,

u., Tnursaay, Jul)' us,

•

HttiK

·.

the Fa,rm Front

.a.u.jor Farm Bill Chances are Good
:·.·• ; ..,W ASIIINGTON (UP!) - Pros• !" 1 11 tor passage of a major

mel C&amp;»&gt;tol Htll opokeomen be- Jlllbllcan and Democratic con:O.
venttons or after the Democratlng for the GOP convontloo, and Ic meotlnl!.
then returning lo complete their
A delay or the final windup
of
t1ie IOIIIOD would toke lOme
work, either between ~e Rea
presaure ott tarm leaden currently trying to jam approval
of a new farm bill Into the cloa-

gan Wldng In terms ol

term bill this yOIII' have
brlglitoned by the awar·
brukdown of plano to wind
the 1968 congresalonal sea-

Wedding Plans

before the natlonal political

eonventtona.
House and Senate leaders had

been

"*"'"""

Jng days. The pressure ls torm-

Are Completed

hoping to complete the

,.. tbe weekend before the opening
:: ~ the Republican National Con-

' •entlon.

;; Earlier this week, however ,
:: IIIOat of the leaders indicated
.;: that this deadline could not be

••

.·-·

:l:Rockefeller
,•.
•'

_

(Continued from page J)

; ne administration doesn't have
:!~.. plan," he shouted and the

row hecklers became sil:"~·em. As Rockefeller explained
; ..the reasons for his fora..v lnto
:; Oldo as being an attempt to
:..,., ••otrer the people a choice," an: · other group chanted: "Down
,;~lront

-'

~th

Nixon."

Free Country
.. No. ll' s a free country,"
__. lhauted Rockefeller.
.' Rockefeller said, ''The Ameri~· ean people are tired of the old
""' poiWcs" since the administra,,
'' tiGn was "1Diwilling to face
'"~~ ~ as they are and won't
~ tell it aslt is."
~~ Ohio aides to the governor
; ; llfd they considered the state
:' "erucia1u to his campaign to
~- &lt;:Ojlture the Republican presl: _dtatial nomination.
. Gov. James A. Rhodes, as
: ~ delegation's favorite son,
.;: ciantrols 55 of the state's 58 con,,
~ :vfllltlon lotes. Although Rhodes
· .baa remained uncommitted, lt
' "was believed he tavored a tick-

Some Chani!O•
The Senate was to debate this

Bv
Miss Eblin
•

Plans have been completed for
the open church weddi~ of Miss

Cathy Darlene Eblin of Pomeroy
to Mr. Roger E. Weaver of Middleport.
The wedding will be an eHmt
of Friday, July 19, at 6 p, m. at
the Bradford Church of Chri.st. A
half-hour program of nuptial rnu·
sic by Mrs. Linda Grimm wiJI

Youth Jailed
On Suspicion
Of Car Theft

precede the ceremony. The Rev.
A 19 • year • old Montague,
Charles Russell wlll officiate. Mass,, man was taken lnto cusMiss Eblin has chosen as her tody this morning by Meigs Counmaid of honor, Miss Sheila Faulk ty Sherill Robert C. Hartemach
and serving as bridesmaid will and was lodged in jail for inbe Miss Susan Weaver, Best man vestigation of alleged car theft.
for Mr. Weaver will be Butch
~erift' Hartenbach apprehendLightioot and ushers are William ed Leo David Girouard, Jr., who
Biggs and William Neutzling.
is believed to have been the drivMrs. Jerry Neutzling will er of a vehicle found abandonregister the wedding guests. An ed at 3:20a.m. today oo the.!ilotopen reception will rollow In the gun Hollow road, after he was
church basemenl
seen walking in the vicinity near

AWARDS MADE
COLUMBUS - The awarding
of medical scholarships of$2,000
each, to Rebecca L. Terrell, New
VIenna, Ohio, aM to Larry R.
Thomas, RL 2, Findlay, Ohio,
was announced tOOay by the Ohio
State Medical Association.

Soviets

(Continued from page 1)
its former master.
They said an automoblle
accident involving a presidium
member and an American
·..... of RockefelJer and Gov. Roocitizen could well decide the
; :a1d Reagan of California,
issue in favor of the Stalinists
: ';, Rockefeller arrived here from who oppose Dubcek .
. ·. tblcago where he toured that
Presidium member Josef
, 'City's south sldo Neuo ghetto, ~cek suffered head injuries in
; JII'Nchi.ng "love and less hate"
a head.on collision Wednesday,
: ad walked hand In hand wllh the newspaper Svobodne Slovo
: J&gt;laek youngst&amp;rs along tee~
said.
: Eut 47th &amp;reel.
The newspaper said the
Rockefeller told the youths, in American, not ldentUied, aloo
aswer to a question, that "the auft"ered injuries. The sources
' ~ Report was like the
said Spacek was In a hospital
'~~: l[bock treatment In piO)'chlateyami would be unable to reach
.,, ·It woke the AmericBil people Prague and the critical presi.
dium sel!l!iona here for at least

the Pomeroy-Mason bridge .
The search for the teenager began after he eluded sherifrs

officers earl.Y today while driving
a 1960 Chevrolet Impala licensed from Carter County, Ky.
A short time later the depart-

ment received a report that a
car had been abandoned on the
3lotgun Hollow Road and upon
investigation, found the vehicle's
motor still ruming •
9leriff Hartenbach said his

department conducted an all night search for tlle driver of the
vehicle, which is believed but not
officially confirmed stolen, and
the hunt continued until Girouard's arrest at 9:59 a.m. today.

.,...

three days.

MEIGS THfATR£
TONIGHT, Jaty 18
NOT OPEN

FRIDAY TIII!U THURSDAY
JULY 19 -25
"BONNIE AND CLYDE''
(Technlcolor)
I;w,orr,., Beatl,y' Faye Dun-

TONIGHT AND FRIDAY
July 18-19
Double Feature Program
"MURDERERS' ROW"

DEAN MARTIN
IS

Matt Helm

KARL MALDEN

ANN-MARGRET
PLUS
'' LUV"

'""E~rERJ ACK LEMMQN

;.-;

F ALK, ELIUNii' MA'YI

That, the 84Wrees said, could
well make the difference In
whether Dubcek'a liberals win

l{)se the power struggle.
Accused of Imperialism
The division among the Czech
Communists Oared anew following a letter from the Soviets
and their .. hard lbte'' East Bloe
allies, East Germany, Poland,
Hunl!lll")' and Bulgaria. The
Jetter accused "imperialism" of
aiding the reforRl movement Cor
democracy in Czechoslavakia.
''We shall never agree to
imperialism making peacefully
or ooni)88cetully, from the
inside or outside, a breach in
Ule socialist system and chang~
ing the balance of forces in
Europe in its favor,'' the letter
said, according to the Soviet
or

news agency Tass.

The danger that Russian troops
might do here whattheydidln
Hungary in 1956 lay at the root
of the unrest in Eastern Europe.
ln London, diplomatic sources
said the threat of Soviet armed
intervention in Czechoslovakia
will remain until the Kremlin is
convinced the Czechs will remain
tied to the Soviet Bloc,

-------------------------;

.,parade of EASY CARE
mmer values!
For jet propelled little charmers ...
styles that are summer right,
·,...rl),~i;;l

1

i
I

I
I
I

lines for Boys, Girls
'·
and lnf•nh
, Toddle Tyke, Blue

Columbus .... 44 42 .512

4\'2

Louisville .... 45
Jacksonville ••. 44
Syracuse .•••• 42
Buffalo ...... 43
Richmond .. ... 39

5
Sl-12
6
7

44 .506
44 .500
44 .488
47 .478
51 .433
Wednesday's Games
Toledo 8 Rochester 6

111}~

Only games scheduled.

TRADE KEYS
MINNEAPOLIS (UP!) - Defensive halfback Brady Keys
waa traded Wednesday by the
MiMesota Vikings to the St.
Louis Cardina1a.
The VIkings dld oot say who
they would receive in return tor
the much-traveled veteran who
saw action with the Pittsburgh
Steelers before moving to
late last season.

V

Stretchini, Nannette
'
the Kid, Rob Roy, Polly
Cinderella and

MANfGIFTS)OR-BABY --:
AND SHOWERS
i

~---------------------.
I

ON THE T IN MIDDLEPORT, 0.

INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE
By United Press International
W. L. Pet GB
Toledo ...... 51 40 .560
Rochester ..•• 46 42 .523 31,'2

i ~~:,~:::/:~~:: ;

---------These Famous

.

WEATHER MAST Is
m o u n t e d by construction
workers atop a 195-foot-hlgh
reltctor dome at a new
atomic eenter jn Grosswelzhelm, Germany. The mast
will contain meteorological
Instruments and radioactivity detectors.

1 3

cool. Sizes Infant to 12

KIDDIE SHOPPE

Y"f'•

Stratoforts

teplrlte, final votel.
'lbe Hwse bill, llllllke the
Senate meaiW'e, Would extend
the Airlculturol Act or 1965 ..,_.
ly for one year, throulll&gt; the end
or 1970.
An Asrtoment
The HouH measure, under u.
asreemont betwaen GOP and
DemocraUc ,. tum leaden,
makeo no chonpo In the ulot~ program. Thlo would leave
ionB-ranae term ,POlley dedalono
to the ·~ admlnlotntton llld

tllenexl Congreu.
., llddltlon lo the prto81rea o1
time, uvorol other potentlol
I'Oidbloekt remoln In the path
or IIDal pao- or any maJor
term bUI IIIIo year.
'lbeH Include promised attompto lo amend tho Houoe end
Senate bOlo to tack on llr&amp;ln raservo procromo and llmlto on
federol payments to lndlvicllli
terms. Adoption ol any or theH
chanpo '""ld threlten tho bl)llll"iloan term ble&gt;e__agreement

'

ln the HouN.

Another lllllor bloek In ~
House lo tho fad U1at oomo ur•
bon Democrats have threltoned
lo vote down farm lqll)otlon.
unlesa thoY pi help In pas~
a subotantlal expant!on or the
Food stamp Procram.
An admlnlotTatlon o!!l•lal hal
predletocl, hoWover, that tblo

lhreat will bo dloaolved by on
lnformol worldlig qreement be·
tween farm and &lt;ltv law·
makou.

ldable.

or tbla last session or the
Congress by Aug. 2 or 3,

week 1181slatloa lo ertend magovernment farm support
with a
programa for foor
number ol changes. 1
The Hoose, delaylhg action
jor

COr -k• beeouoe o1 a baekllla&amp;o battle - n farm
opokoomin llld ""-" membeJ' a
wai not _.qd 1o lake ..,
Ito venloil ollhe farm bUllllltll
late nexlweek.
· ·
U tho Houae did not· paos Ita
bill until JUly 25 or %6 - auum.
~ It did pall - onl,y 1 little
over a week would be loft to
compromise hou1e .and senile
dttrerencea in a ccnterence committee, then to ~ that verolon boek lo both houuo COr

.I' '

I
I
I

I

i-·----- ---------------- ____ _l

Fly 4th Day
SAIGON (UP!) - U. S. B52
Stralofortressos Dew their foorth
successive d a y ot raids into
North Vietnam today and bombed
surface - to - olr mlssDe lites
for the ftrst time 1n the wnr•
U.S. head.,arters said.
Highly wlnornble 1o the a~r­
race - to • air mlsolles (SAMS),
tile elg)it - engine bombers onJ,y
on occasion def¥ the missilefilled northern lkles. Today they
went after the weapons that
threaten them.
They hit SAM firing positions
four and 11 miles above tlle Demilitarized Zone separating the
hro Vletnams, spokesmen said.
No SAMSs were reported fired.
The United States has never lost
a 852 in combat.
The U.S. command, mean.
time, disclosed the thlrd lowest
weekly American casualty toll
of the year last week - 188
servicemen killed and 1,337
wounded, continuing a lour week
dropoiJ in fighting and American losses,

Mail Carrier

Exam Deadline

FRIDAY and IAIURDAY
This IS bargain l.ime at Elberfelds in Pomeroy and the store is ope•1 both Friday and

An examination for rural car~
rler tor the post omce at Pomeroy will be open for ac~tance
of applications until Aug. 13, the
United states Civil service Com~
mission announced todl)'.
All qualified applicants will receive consideration for appointment without regard to race, religion, color, national origin, sex,
politic s or any other non-merit
factor.
Complete Information about the
examination requirements and instructions for filing applications
may be obtained at the Pomeroy
Post Office. Applications must be
fHed with the U. S. Civil Service
Commission, Washingt()n, D. C.,
aJXl must be received or post,..
marked not later tha.n the closing
dala
Applicants must take a written
test, must have resided within the
delivery of the officeforoneyear
immediately preceding the closing date of the examination and
must hale reached their 18th
birthday on the closing date for
acceptance ofapplications. There
is no maximum age Hmit Hownee, persorui who have passed
the age of 70 rna,y be considered
only for temporary limited appointments of one year.

Harlow-Lime Wins
MASON - Harlow Lime blanked Ashland Oil of GsDlpolls by a
13-0 count 10 win the Big Bend
Slow-Pitch softball toornament
championship here at Bachtel
F1eld wednesday night
Ashland Oil had earned Its
berth In the championship match
by doloatill8 Bob Saunders' Quak·
er State team 4-3 in the ftrst game
last evening. Harlow Lime, t h e
same team that won the slowpitch event last year, went
through the tournament uOOeaten.
CHANGE LINEUP
NEW YORK (UP!)- Catcher
Paul Casanova and outttelder
Hank Allen were recalled
Wednesday by the Washington
Senators rrom their Butralo
rarm club in the International
League.

To make room for the two
minor league playen the
Senators sent down ootflelder
Sam Bowens and infielder
Frank Coggins.

l'lU5

HONEY
end

!OIOHUM

l~15" 1

IDWAY MARKET

~~.

I ,.

Saturd~y from 9:30 in the morning until 9:00 in the evening.
-

WEU KNOWN BRAND

SALE! MENS, BOYS

Better Lingerie

SWIM TRUNKS

Small gr()lC)s of discontinued styles or colors.
REX),

REG.

REG.
REX;.
REX),

rux;,

$6.00 FULL SUPS , • • ... .........• SALE $2.99
~.00 FULL SUPS ..•••••... , , • , .. SALE $2.49
$4.00 FULL SUPS .............. , , SALE .1.99
$3. DO HALF SUPS , ...... , ..•...•. SALE $1.49
$2.00 TRIMMED PANTIES . , ......... SALE 99&lt;:
$1.50 TRIMMED PANTIES , .• , ..•. , , , SALE 79&lt;:

The wor~t· lar~ot lake Is the
ClBPiaD S61, 143,550 8 q u I r e
mtles.

I '

$1.95 BOYS SWIM TRUNKS •.•••..•• , , •• Solo .1.50
$2.95 BOYS SWIM TRUNKS • • , •• , . , , .... Sale $2.00
$2.96 MEN'S SII'IM TRUNKS , • . . .. , .•.•• SOlo P,OO

Mens2.49 Short SIHve

Speci•ll

LADIES HOSIERY
Discontinued colors In our
beat selling sheer hosiery,
(Not

Ill sizes In all color&amp;)

Retvl~r

1.35 Pwlr

This Sale 79c pair

Men's Big Y•nk

Work Uniforms
Friday and S.turd•y S.le

Our regular •8.90 molchod work oult.
Pants olzes 29 to 50 - Shirts alae• 14'h to 20.

MOttE BARGAINS-WOMEN'S AND
CHlLDRENS WEAR-2nd Floor

Permanent Pros• C.suol Slacka ••••••• SOle P-99
f4_95 Permanent Pre•• C.suol Slacka ••••••• SOle $2.19
fl. 95 Faotbeck Slacka and Pormonent
Preas Jeans , • , ••••••••• , , , ••• , .. , • Sale f3,.19
$8.95 Pormanelll Press Dreu Slacka ••••••• SOle $5.00
.7.95 Permonent Preos Dren Slacka • • •••• SOle $6.00
f8.95 and .9.95 P0J'111811011t Preos DroBS Slacka •• SOle $7.00
~.95

Girls • Women's Swim Suits
1/2 price
GIRLS
GIRLS
GIRLS
GIRLS
GIRLS
GIRLS
GIRLS

~. 95

$3.95
$2.95
$3.95
.2. 95
$2.95
$3.95

Special Friday end Saturday

SKIRTS . , , . , , ........•. SALE $3.00
SKIRTS .. , , •. , • , , •...••. SALE $2.00
SKIRTS . . . . , ............ , SALE $1.50
KNIT TOPS .....•..•....... SALE $2.00
KNIT TOPS . . ......•....... SALE $1.50
SHORT SETS , •...•..••• , . , , SALE $1.50
SHORT SETS . , ... , .. , , .... , SALE $2.00

Bargains In
Boys Trousers and Jeans

SPECIAL SALE PRICES
ALL GIRLS SUMMER SLACKS
WOMEN'S
WOMEN'S
WOMEN'S
WOMEN'S
WOMEN'S

JOhn R. Am08 Plant: To Bum .f. Million Tom ol Coal Annually

$3.95 caauol Slacks .• •••• '. ' •••..••. SOle $2.99
$3.95 &amp;rllngton Fast Back Jeans' • • , . •••• SOle $2.99
$3. 95 and $3. 50 ' - Slac hi and Hogular Jeans , • , • • $2. 99
AU of tllooe oole slack• and Jeaas are Permanent Pron

$8.00 LAURA MAE DRESSES .•.• , , SALE ~. 95
$2.95 to $8.00 SUMMER SHORTS ..• \1 PRICE
$3.95 SUMMER BLOUSES ..••• , .. SALE $2.00
$2.00 SLEEVELESS BLOUSES .... , SALE $1.50
$3.00 SLEEVELESS BLOUSES .. .• , SALE $2.00

POIN'I: PLEA~- The$200

E. Amos power 17 8Dd ,the river Juat north or
.pill!; lhown In 'an ~111'1 con- ·Inter- .,..riv,;. croaolnll. It
. lllptiCIII abc!ro, Ia located on the will be Oll!!til 1&gt;1 fll~- -~hKanawha River, IIIJ)I"OXImatol !all ~r · ·eo~ or tho
22 ~nortllweatoiCharlelllon, Amari"'!'! ·Electric F!Jwer ft'o.
li!d 30 mllel from Point Plea•· tom. ,

Spodol SOlo prices on every bleycle In stock. Stop 1n, oee
the dltrerent mudels and save on tile one yoo want durliw
Udo two day aalo.

''

$1.69 - 45" "EDVi"' 100 per cent Rayon.
Solid colors ••••.•••••••••••.•••••• S&amp;Ie $l29 )'d.
$1.59 - 45" "C8rnaby street" Dacron a~
cotton Dot . • , ••••••••• , •• , , ••.•• Sale $tl9 yd.
$1.49 Whipped Cream Prints- 45" widths ••• Sale •1.09 yd.
St. 49 - 100 per cent Dacron Polyester
F1ocked lluts, 45" , .... , , , • , , .•. , . • SOle $1.09 yd.
99c ~rioted Volle, Dacron and cotton- 45" •• sale 79c yc1
99c "'Jewel Tone" Printed Clavae - 45" , , •• Sale 75e )'d.
89c Faoblon Fabric - 45" Printed Patterno ••• Sale 69c ytl
69c - 36" Sport Donlm, otri!leo and solids ••• Sale 59c yd.
45" AvrU and Cotton Pennenent Preas Prtrta , ••• 69c yd.
79c - 36" Permanent Press Prints , .• , .. , Sale 59c yd.·
69c - 36" Checked Gingham • • •••• _ •.•• , SOle 50c yd.
59c Quodrlga Percale - Solids and Prints • • • SOle 49c yd.
89c Solid COlor Terry Cloth - 36" wide •••• , SOle 69c yd.
79c - 45" Cotlon Sheath LIIIIJW .. • • • . • • • • Solo 69c yd.

1 uawpollo,

· •

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SPECIAL SALE PRICES FOR FRIDAY AND SATI!RDAY ON
ROTARY LAWN MOWERS - 18 !Nat AND 21 INCH CUT
SIZFS - A GOOD SELECTION.
Elberfoldo Warohouae oolo!ecbaalc Street.

This Month the Furniture Dep.~rtment
Is Fe•turlng-

MattrtSSeS and
Box Springs
See them 00 sale OD the 2nd Qoor. FuU bed size - Twin bed
olzo - King and Queen Size - Famous kla-n mokea that
you will recosnlze at once for their comfort and ~ war
Stop in on the 2nd Qoor thlo Wookond - Look at the opri •
and mattre11 that are 011 sale llll! aaw plenty.
lW

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1
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two 1 3

, · · ·. ·, av n~lod
e' •• ,..._.,,.,.,
· sdl«l• .'Uttl · · r " ~---- ·
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·· ~f.iloit to J, sOuU, v1~ dlfo.l If,,!=~::!.~ atiJig •

~ -id\!1 N~.v~·- ~fllr•~&lt;Pl&gt;l~•a;~ _-.

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~·lll!!!th
~, IIi

'ao!ll

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~ ·~~se
to bf wori'UICI . ' ::ion

Vi81Mmeat preoiclollt
mare. wiUIQII• than
.be to
.. I

,,,

,, ;

Wltli' Noi"th .

feet

E,ch bull"!" will be ll&gt;le lo
deliver 5.3 '!"IJllon ptj&lt;lllla ol
. liNin par ~r 19 Ito turbine.

:kMm::t::iiii:iiii'i'::::::::::::;:::ili'itHi:'::::::;:::;:::::r:;:: :::::::::::::::::n/m:~:::::}:::w ·

Salel Lawn llowers

coal-burnlnll plant In this cwntry
with tills being pooltlve proof
o1 West Vlrglnla potentlol, and
proor too, that, bee.... or Ita
coal reserve. Its good transportation, Its location with reopect
to the mojor alectric power load

center,

and the area's - skilled

lalior, West Vlrglnla holds all
the assets that wUI attract even
Virginia's tuture, noting that, more new lncll.strles in the years
"When the pian Is finally dovel· to come."
Boyce Grlfflth, chaitrrnutofthe
opad to Its lUll potenUal, West
Weal
VIrginia Public Service
Vlrglnla will bave the lar~st
COmmisalon, congratulated AEP,

· plated, ,
.....
......:...
.. "''' 1 ......

ol

:n:::~ ~ Tawnoy lost coo-

:-

:~·~~~·_!~!m~

trOI or his plcliq&gt; lniek Oil ~ Tawney, residents ol Rt 588. He
curve. The vohldo werit off .the Ia abo survived by four broth.
b!PoY and overturned. ·'l'he era, Olke7, Billy .and Lawrence

-

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·

Mollo

Tho

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county

. ,..

Post 467 Buys

Apparel for
Unit Services

=:":.:!E!~~~~ :olha~ :·:\~:::.
partlclpatlllg In funeral oorvlees
and memorial services.

Dd1mlng,

kina. &amp;a UNIT CALLED

~;,·•rece.;;' =~ ·~~~

by live American Fl811 to the
Dexter Christian Chur&lt;h.
lt '"' repot1ed _that 11 membero OOUducted fUneral services
for Worley Reeves, Rutland,

w-.: ;,~ \:":"~ ~00

The Middleport emergooey to the American Legion baleSQWiwao8UIIlDIOI1edThurldayal hill program. The poat bas OJ.•
5 p.m. for Mro. Hobert Duell- tended thanks to all rosl-s

:.U:;.,~~J,! was

treated

;'! ~~ ~f~~.

u;::..:

tho pao woo, pony, little and
American Legion Loat~~~ea.

ks R'os·.'.n·g:'.B~g
. · . Pro bl ems
.

• .
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.

texlhooka are .old
coildltl&lt;ll.
'·

II

was reported.
Sherif! Hartemoch olao repot1ed the Athens County slier
Ill's departmentyeaterdO)'apprebolllled Tom Urdarovskl, 18, C&lt;&gt;lumbuo, for hia department. Urdarovakl Wll re1urned lo the
Meigs jollwhere he to being held
on chlll'ps of petty larceny by
to!Ung lo pay COr gao at Ray
Reuter 1 8 service statltm.
In other activity, conllrmatlon has been obtained ,that the
- ~960 mndel Ctevrolet found by
ihe oberlfl' s department on the
Shotgun Hollow Road Thuradoy
mCI'tllna was stolen in carter
Clount)', Ky.

. Leo llPjd Girouard, Jr., ol
:t.ronlque, ~IL, allegod drh'er
ot the .vehicle, ...... wos ll)pre9i.59 Lm. yeaterday by
~oh, Ia held In
.llll
W18 undei'IIOtng
by FBI

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poor

los Jr. lltonturo olud)l, and wo
_ ·.
• : will hlvil'tblo aeries In gradea 9
~DI&amp;trlct
,
., it ®leidy. ~ obvlouo;that ~ 12. A see&lt;lniiEQiilaht wr&lt;&gt;te 'a Jill
lio·"UnabJ.• to
1o be -ilaed In eoq,osltlon and
tlio ' e"ey
gi~.,.,- wm
be placed to
Ia the bad to ·
~nallab ,' ·~• In tp'IC[eo 9
11)11 In

JOHN R. AJoroS

Uninjured
In Wreck

ElberfOld, Earl Clark, RcdDey
I'fed Goegloln, Seth
brtngs lo fwr tho monber of ' Nicbolaon, lllrs. lletV ldllboan,
persons kllled tn 1968 on Gallla lllra. Joe Thoren, Georp Gen·
County highways.
helmer, Benn,y EwiD&amp; Mrs. Joe
Donold L. Tawney was born Thoren, and Mra. Plullne At-

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Joe P. GUll, executive vice
or tho host ~a&lt;h­
(Continued on- 10)

president

IJe.
year •
·· putmont ol Heallh' .,._,_
II was decided to hold a ope- oed ~ It will not be
clal meatll!g ol the truetees end
g(Ying lmmunlzatlori - ·
buJldlng committee as BOOn as
to children under 12 yearo
otlier estimates are recalved.
ol 1110 Saturday due lo t h e
During. tbe dlscuasion It w a s
measles cllnlcs to be hold
pointed out that the soelaty has
from ooon to 2 p.m. at the
COillllded m fund drive for ratsPo!neroy and Mlddloport Elo~ funds for the conatructlon.
mentary Schools, the Haelno
A 1962 model auto was demolHOWeVer, there is some$80,- llilh School and at the Amor·
Ished
in a sh_.e • vehicle acci~
000 In the troasw:)' which will lean Legloo Homo In Rutland.
dent
todoY
at 8:10 Lm. on Route
be applied to the museum COil·
7 at Five Polnta.
atructlon. Moll of this has been
·Meigs County Shorllr C. Harlnveated In interest - paying U.
temach
said the ateoring mechS. Troaoury notes.
anism apparently went out on a
It was xtressed that the group
car operated by Rachel L.
has dlscuned tile plamed conBrown,
46. Parkersburg, causatructlon for oome 18-months
iJW her to lose cordrol.
and BO ter, oolb1ng has oc&lt;ur·
The auto turned around In the
red towards actuallybeglmlnglt.
hlgtmay
aDd. tore out a aection
Bojldlng end material costs bave
or
92
ft.
or i1UUc1 nlling. The
atoadlly risen during tills per1od, it was observed.
Rutland American Legion Folt _driver escaped Injury. No arrest

He was treated 11 the ;:'.sptW

and releaood. Tawney's death

Corp, w1n :
COr tho

·

@

Rent from the space each year
- to be uaed ln malntal.ning the
bull~ and expenoos Involved
In operation ol the museum would amount to about $5,200 a

hide, accordl~ to the patrol. Mrs. Dollie Mayes, treasure'".
A passenger In the truck, MlOChers attending were c. E.
The pool JIUI"&lt;hlsod one comcbael Skidmore, 17, Rt. I Galli• · j!lfl&lt;oslee, Leo Stoey, WsDace plete unll'orm, slx cops, I I y e
polio, sullored
· minor i·'urles. Bradford, H. E. Sldolds, Rol- ·""' and !I bl
-- at

'

•

tnt, -..., Weill' V~IID!I Rt.

ll®lon , JOhn

Fatally Injured

"-~ L. Tawn8y, 17, Rt. 2
died at 7:03 Lm. b&gt;The ftrat unll or the ~ant Ia doY l~ Ho!Je~ Hospllalaller sui·
ocboduied COr tompleUoo ·lil1971 ~o"'- severe 'h··• .... ohe'at Inand_tho .second 'In 1972. ;Iii' f\!11 ·. Juri~~ In 1 ona~eht~lo ~c
operalloil the plant will oonllllllO accident sborii.Y after midnight
flYer f.mllllm lxlna ol coallll!ll·
The Slate Hlg)iwoY Patrol roally. Each unit will lncludo,.lts ported the acdd• · at 12:15 .._
own steam boiler ..,.a1 loa 20.. m. f:rldly 011 Nefihborhood Rd.,
atory hlgb, bulldiJ!g and I alnlle 0110 and olx-tentho mtles snuth
.

Good color seiectlon - Slop In and buy what you

Bargains in The
Drapery Dept.

I

Anw
_ s Plant 30 _Mil~··f· r.om -I~Qint

This weekend Ia a perfect time to bUY boys or girls bicycles.

ANew Shipment
Wrangler Jeans And Cut-Offs

f:.:::X::~:~~S:::::::::;:.::::::::::::::&gt;.~~:::~:::::&gt;.&gt;.&gt;.:::~:::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::!:::::~~::::=-;:::~~:::::::~~~·

'

Salel Bicycles

Just Received in the Re•dyto-Wear Department-2nCI Floor

AU sizes need """.

near fUture. Johnson Indicated
that the muooum ao planned
ahmld be constructed at no more
than $20 a square foot at top
figure,
The museum plans were displl\)'ed by Johnson who explained details ot the drawings. He
otressed •hat complete opeclll·
cations a,,d retJJirements have
been dra.vn leavlnl! JKJtlllng to ,
the discrctl.oo of the contractor.
Thls Is dono so that conttmlty
ol deolgn can be carried o u t
thl'OUIIhout the building.
As plamed now, the bull~
reeelved here late last week.
Collie• or the plans and specl. with a cantor entrance, would
flcaUoris were given to several Include almoat 2,000 S&lt;Jiare feet
local cmtractors with requests of Door space for ol!lces whl&lt;h
for estimated costs. At yester- would be occupied by the, local
dO)"s mostiD&amp; mly one or the Agricultural Slal&gt;tlizatlon a n d
contractors bad responded with · Conoorvatlll! om~· and the lo1111 eatlmate whl&lt;h, lnilllees felt cal Soil Conservation· Service.

Special Frid•y and S.turd•y

Bargains liens Trousers
·
and Jeans

•'-In

-.re.

.F_IVE CENTS

erated by such a company, bear
11\Y name. u He said he waa deeply grautled that tile design or the
new plant incorporated the most
modem features for the maximum control or air and water
pollution.
Governor Hulett C. Smith or
Wool VIrginia said the IIOW AmOI
plant II the epitome ol West

T!J.lr~, is excessive.
HO\t(&gt;\ler, other estimates are
expected to be received In the

u'I'he museum must be a pru.
dent lnvoatment for people or
Meigs COllnty," Edllon Hobstetter, president or tho Meigs Coun·
ty Pioneer and Hllloricai Socle1;11, said Thursday allerotOOn.
Hobetelter pre aided at a .,arterly meeting or the trustees or
the sociaty held at the c:oqnty
Infirmary and made tile pollc7
statement In a dlscuoslon on the
propooiod muooum.
Meeting with the trustees was
Ra,y Johnson, !OJ mer Me l g s
County realde!!l; •.OW ol Colum·bus, wbo has ~n employed as
erchl(ect,for the museum.
Plans drawn by ' Johnson were

Very well made - Perfect llttlllg pants with shirt to matcb.
Dark Olhe - Foceat Greou - Grey.

Ne" selection or styles that wlll pleue you - Just received
for this two doY oale.

'
'

Museum Plan Studied?E.?,;:Ii·~~;

7.00 a suit

Women's Half Sizes Dresses
8.95

first spades of earth marklngtbe

start or construction or the 1.6
milllon.ldlowatl $200 million alation.
Sjleakers Included Donald C.
Cook, president of AEP and Ap.
palachlan Power, who paid trlb·
ute to John E. Amos, Charleston
attorney and businessman and a
Slates.
Before an audience of. nearly director or AEP for whom t h e
800 lnvltedgueolsunderahotsun, plant has been named.
Mr. Amos, inhisremarka. said
a group or 24 distinguished loaders or West Virginia pernment, he was deeply honored uto have
lnduatry and labor. tUrned t h e such a plant, to be built and op-

Work Shirts
Two day sale 3.0p , ,

for This Sale a Special Group

"'

lli4 eoolor loiiJiht, IOIJ ill ·lhe ..,_
per 50a lo middle 60L Sun!\)' Sat~· not much
le!Qp-

FRIDAY, JULY /9, /968

BY MAXINE WALTERS
PI'. PLEASANT ""' Groan&lt;l was
broken Thursday atScaey, W, Vs.
Putnam County, 30 miles f r o m
pt, Pleasant for the John E. Amos
steam.electrle plant that someday may be lati!Ol' than any generating alation In the U n I t e &lt;l

Men'o $3.49 Permonont Pross ob"'Vleovo

A spacial &amp;I'OIIjl - Regular size and half size - Plaid - Solid
Colors - Chocks - strlpas. Stop In on the 2nd F1oor Ready
to Wear Department and buy several.

Scattered - · e r o In

eaat and- oectlona, e - e
IINheaJII !hi• ,allernooll. Fair

$200 Million Pow~.# Stati()n
Begun Near Point Pleasant

2.00

Women's Dresses
Sale 6.00

enttn

.POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

VOL. ' XXI NO.
16i
.

Work Shirts

AU ·alzes frmn 8 to 18 and 32
to 38- Comfortable !It- Sldo
zipper. Brown, green, blue or
pink.

Weather

Devoted To The lnler4!$IM Of The Meig8-Mason Area

Sizes: Small (14-14'h ), medium (15-lfilh ), tarp (15-16'h)
extra larp (17·1'1'h). Two way collar - 6illlengtllohlrt
taUs. Not every alze in every color. Tan, green, grey.
SPECIAL TWO DAY SALE.
.

Stretch
Denim Slacks
3.95

•

•

at y

'

mt

Is August 13

Check Your Shoppl"' Lltt

•WATI!ItMl!LON
ePI!'ACHES
• !IWUT CORN
•HONI!Y D!WS
•CANTALOUPI
•TOMATOES
eGtllrH lEANS

Elberfelds Special Bargain Days

-'loo

12.

.

In any one clasa. In other

wordl,

two claases of grade 8 hillol'y JIJtj.~:J
mlgllt use ono toxtbeok and.(our ·.
clones mlg)it uoe li!OIIIer. This
1s belns dono ........ ~ ol "...,
theoo booka are otlU \Jt """'"""'
clltim lli4 "" can't ~
" ~'-"'•
&lt;iur.oeod·llith one or !he
~tOto which are
Wolook
allldlea In

- ·year. 'rhtoo wiD·
at COI"I'Oetlilll
bGI!itlio

hl&amp;h

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