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•

Tile Jloib' SeQtiDel, Pcmoroy-Mlddleport, 0., TUeidQ, July 23, 1968

,-

.u.s.

IQUI'ces said.
At the same time, the Com-

munists hit Q&gt;ang N,;al City oo
the northern roast with 56 rounds
and were thrown back attempting
to take over the radio station

there.

oald 47 ~rscins wei:e killed or
.....-, lncludlugfour &lt;1\'lllano.
The .two •Uacki~retheheavl­
est sbelllngaln morelbanamooth
In the threeteoed Mrtl\erD CJIOrter and Jllli.Y have been tbe pretude to the wldeapread Commynist oi!enslve '"""'cted before

on W•ter St.

Sept. I,

Near Tam K,y, 40 miles south
o! Da Nang, U.S. Marines were
reported engaged In heavy lighting today tn the first ~r battle tn that area In several weeks.

Government spokesmen

Soviet- Czech Summit
.Breaks all Precedent
MOSCOW (UPO - The moun1ain today p.--red to move to M&lt;&gt;hlmmad.

For the first time in history the entire Soviet party presidium
ts leaving the couDtry - Cor a showdoWn meeting with Czech reformers Ln the former Russian satellite. Political observers said the outcome of the Soviet - Czech summit may be momentous.
It could settle the crisis between the Czechs, strugglirw for
what they call udernocradzation.'' and the Soviets. arguing that
Czechoslovakia may be going capitalist and is certainly harming
Communist military security. The observers said the outcome may
also set a pattern tor the remnants or the crumbling empire that
Josef Stalin built
The Soviet security problem the Kremlin line. Hungar. Ln
w a s unprecedented, possibly 1956 did not, its upri!'ing crush!&amp;(palling the tonunygun precau- ed by &amp;&gt;viet tanks in a biOO&lt;IY
tions taken when Stalin went to episode wen - remembered by
Tehran during World War 11 to Czechs.
meet President Roosevelt and
Brlllsh Prime Minister Winston
Churchill.
Golng from Moscow were such
leaders as Communist part;y Secretary General Leonid L Brezlmev, Premier Alexei N. KDsygln, President Nikolai Podgorny
PRAGUE (UPO - The Soviet
- the commooty called big three
o! the Kremlin - plus other pre- Union's soldiers sped out of
sidium members including the Czeehoslovalda today. Czech
punt, durable party Ideological Communist reform leaders muscldef, Mikhail Slslov. There are tered- their arguments a n d
11 members in the SOVIet party waited for the Kremlin's masters
to come.
presidium.
According to observers, the
Most sources here said the
talks would probably last oo loog- Soviet declsiOIJ to pull out itl
maneuver forces CJ.rlckly and to
er than two days.
All Eastern E&gt;Jrope watched. send Its entire 11 - man ruling
Rumania and Yugoslovta have ·presidium to talk to the defiam
gotten awa,y with breaks !rom Czechs averted - at least temporarily - an explosion In East
Europe's major crisis or the
decade.
The crunch would come at the
cooirontatlon meeting. No exact
date, no site has been amoonced
for
the summit dl&amp;closed here
(Continued from page I)
and In Moscow Mooday night.
cording to figures furnished by &amp;&gt;me soorces said tbe SOviet
the U. S. Bureau o! Lal&gt;or Sta- leadersblp already may be enllcs. The companies place their route.
employment costa at $4.88 per
~dftcally, lhe Soviets have
manbour, Including !rlnge bene- demanded the Czechs once more
fits.
muzzle their press - which
The union ia seeldng•a con- has been openly crlllcal of the
. tract worth 6 per cent or DVJre Soviets - and slap down all poin wages and tringe benefits, or litical groups but the Commua pachage worth 90 cents to nist party. Moscow warned Monone dollar an hour OYer the
the Communist world would
.ure of a Um.~-year agreement. day
not allow tbla country to slip
Their last three contracts from the Red defense nstworh.
have averaged about 3 per cenl
The present agreement was
reached In t965 only alter Pres:ldent Johnsoo Intervened. lle
brought both sides to Washington when they became stalemated and a three - month extension was about to e"'llre.
Altboug!J Wllllam E. Slmldn,
chief o! the Cederal medlatloo
and conciliation service, was
here last FridEQ there are no
lndleatlons the government planl!
to step tn tmmedtately.
Both union and management
have professed a desire to
reach accord withoUt outside
help, but time Is running out
on their wishes.

MEDICAL HISTORY was

made when John Meyer, '71,

received a metal ball and
soeket to replace a htr.
joint destroyed by arlhr •
tis. The surgery, performed
at a St. Petersburg, Fla.,
hospital, was the fir81 of 118
kind ever attempted tn the
United States. Meyer reportedly wUI soon dls&lt;ard
the erutehe• and be able to
walk normally again.

Syracuse

Speeding News, Society
Homeward

Steel Strike
Vote Set

By ADA SLACK
Mr. and Mrs. Willard Kendall,
Kathy and Keith, o(Warren, Mich.
and their daughter, Mrs. Bob
Marshall, daughter, Marchelle,
or Beaver Dam, Ky., spentaweek
with Mrs. Kendall's mother and
step·father, Mr. and Mrs. Harry
Potts. They also visited Mr. and
Mrs. Donald Lisle and !amity,
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Harden and
famlly and Mr. and Mrs. Morris
Harden.
Mr. and Mrs. James Teaford,
Mr. and Mrs. sampson Hall and
Mrs. Janice Lawson an:l son, David, spent Sunday in Athens with
Mrs. Blanche Cunningham a n d

son, Robert.
Mr. and Mrs. James R. White
ond daughter, Mar~ Beth, o!DIIhbar, W. VL, Mr. and Mrs. Char~
les White and daughter, Texanna,

Beulah White, Betty and JeCfrey
Darst of Middleport, and Agnes
White, local, attended funeral
services for Nealy White ill Akron. Whlle there ·they were house
guests of Mrs. Myrtle Watkins
arw:t Mrs. F1orence Hanney.
Mr. Ben Quisenberry and Mr.
William Holm.. lij)eDI Swldaj'
with their children, Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Quisenberry and ramuy or
Athens.
Mrs. Douglas Johnson, Mro.
Max Manual and Joan or Racine
visited their aurt and uncle, Mr.

.

.'

.

{ •.

'

and Mr .. James Quick.
Mr. and Mrs. C&amp;rlos Graham
and !amity have moved toBe)jJre,
Mr. and Mrs. ilonnte !lltlter
and children of Columbus have
moved Into the Turner apartment

!)a Nang Hit
~: SAIGON (UPO - COinmunlot
· vtlllel')'lllen slammed 135 mor,'•lar ond rod&lt;et rounds Into the
war complex at Da Nong
~. the most Intensive shellIng or the war against the northem base. Sb; Americans were
killed and 30 wounded, military

"(,

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\';•~"""·, •

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.

Mr. and ldro. ~-~ R. White
and clallfhtet, Mary Beth; of Dunbar, apsnt ,Sunday and Monday
wlth--hls mother, Agnes White and
uncle, Richard Duckworth. They
also visited Mrs. Rose Schwan
and family of Mason, Mr. ~nd
Mro. Charles ~~. lni! Ma~y
Sue, Pomeroy. They were accompanied by Agnes White.
~e Warner and Ray Fur·
gersoo of Alliance and Daley
Pauley or Deerneld apent a week
wtth Mr. and Mrs. sam Pickens.
AcciiiiiPinied by Mro. Plc~''t"
lhey visited Mr. and Mro. 'CI:it
Jividen at Leon, W. Vo.
Sllltday dinner guests of Mro.
Myla Hudson were Mr. and Mrs.
Eugene Hudson ani children of
Letart Falls and Mr. and Mrs.
Dem:il Hullsoo anddsughter, Becky, of Middleport.
A recent visitor at the James
Teaford home was Rol' Rowe or
Plants. He has Just returned trom
Vietnam.
Mrs. R. B. Sellers and M· ~. ._
Lawrence Sellers o( Columbus
spent a few days here.
Mrs. Laura Leifllelt has been
returned to her heme from Holzer Hospital wbere she had been
a medical patient for several
weeks. Her daughter, Mrs.
Esther Amspoker of Columbus
was here for a week with her
mother. Another daughter, Kathryn Peters, o( Arca.:lla,ls here to
care for their mother for a while.
Mr. and Mrs. Norman Hendrix
took his brother, Wooirow Hendrix, Jr., to his home in Milwau-kee, Wls., and visited with their
parents, Mr. arxJ Mrs. W~row
Hendrix Sr. and !amlly. ,
Mr. and Mrs. George Morgan
Jenkins and daughter, Jan, Bellevue, called on his brother • Fred
Jenkins and family recenUy.
Mrs. sam Pickens, accompanIed by her house guests, Mayme
Warner and Daisy Pauley, and
Edith Hood and Thoma Grueser,
atterded the recent Craft Fair at
Cedar Lake near Ripley, W, Va.
They also shqlped. in Ravens·
wood.
Mrs. Henry Erwin and Mrs.
Marte Lawrence of PorU.nd visited on Tuesday wllh Mro. HarrJ
Potts.
Alice Flanagan ot Parkersburg spent Swldaj' with her
mother, Mrs. Mar~ M. Diddle,
and her sister, Grace Oller, and

son Jim Bill.
DAYTONITE KILLED
DAYTON (tJPO - William T.
Bradley, Dayton, darted !rom between parked cars Morday into
the parth or a aemi..a-ailer truck
and WBB k1lled.

FREE CLOTHING
The Salvalloo Army will have
a free clothing day at Its home,
115 Butternut Ave., Pomeroy,

ThUrsday. Anyone In Meigs County tn need o! clothing Is weloome.

N9wYou Kno~

Black,Monday.Certain Says Watson
.
,,,
, tJ. JIUIO 1966.
t,y unexpected, ef!eet &lt;!II ,the
the ....,.ceplt&lt;!ll policy was Post Office ~s ordered for a
·WASIIINGTON (tJPO - Post- , lndlcatloo bel'*je a4loornment
master Geo. W. Marvin Watson r.... . the polttlcal conventions . . .
.
t of Budget sharP curtailment of m a 1.1
aeea the day coming' when ,whetltw Congress Intends ~ do adoPied oo the adV co
_
ext rour
-"'•lng abou~ the. d&lt;&gt;P!rl· Dlre&lt;lor Charles J. Zwick, who · service over the n al ......
mailboxes lllid post offices all!le
""'
..-.......
s · ~ed to explain to the years. The first reaul! r....,..
wtll overllow aa a result or the mepl's pltgbl when ~~ •• ~rs ~~~ today the rallooale behind Ia being felt In the etoslni ol 50Q,
~sonnet reduction Congress re,....ene later In tbe rear• . ''' l""'t
· -,
lhlrd and fourth claao po,tl
ordered.
watson's problem stems '!rom
and next
could come as early directives tn tbe recently . The jm!hedlate, and ...mlng- ofllcea this month
~:..__
Thai •··
_,
.
Belllnning Saturday, -~
as Qctcber or November when enacted Income tax increase
~-!1
se"lces at first and 11cmi
Satnrda7 resldentlal deltverles taw that required all f~al
I'
Bll
class post i&gt;l!lcea wtll ba
are ettmlna'ted, Wat11011 told the agencte.._ withOut exception-- to
stqllled.
Saturday eolloctloo
1
Senate Post Office Commlttee reduce their persomei to levels
service also will be cut back to
Mooday.
the teS. frequent ilmdiJ'
"Monday mornings wtll be an
Impossible problem," he said,
to
.,
·
schemte.
"Uatll the mall 11 acwally not
''The P.,at omcea are p~~Yidcally
not e&lt;~~lpped to handle the
1
there 011 SalurdaY 11101'11\DSS. the
backlog of two days' mail."
On
PrTTSBURGH (UPO ~ Atrac- people will not be heard from,"
, Watson appeared before the
A State Highway Motor Vehicle tor traUer loaded wllh tomaloeo Wall&lt;lft ~ld the committee.
panel to ask for some rlrm inspection team will Inspect ve- swerved to miss an ooooming
hictes at !be Meigs Count,y fair· ear tn the doWntoWn area
Young Rep~lieans'
~ .,
grounds Thursday, Jul~ 25 lr&lt;m (lay nigbl and UPset, aendlng to8:30 a. m. to 3 p. m.
matoea rolllng· ln all dlredlons.
• • ..J
Vehicle owners tn the Meigs
111e driver, Marvin Gould, Mid- Banquet Announco:u
County area are urged to have. clleporl, Ohio, told !"'lice his
MillS Shirley Beegle,pretldent
their vehicles Inspected at thls brakes failed llhlle llllllro&amp;ching
ttme. lnspec:t!on allckera wtll 'be the city from the Libert)' Bridge. or the lOth Con~renlooal Dtatrlct
put on vehicles thai pass which The truck tipped over on Its Young Republican Fedenllon, ~
CHARLESTON, W, Va. (tJP0 exeJil&gt;l them from lns~c:t!oos rlgbt stele. Gould ns not lnjUr- oounces a banquet at the Knights
ed.
of Columbus HalllnLencaateron
- The State Rood Commission the rest ol1968.
was to open bids today on three
Plans are to cootl11110 volu"'
111e tomaloea were enroute to TUesday, July 30, at 7 P. m. with
contracts totaling nearly $16.5 tary lnapectlons ever~ other the Pittsburgh Produce Yard Lt Gov. John Browt\ as prlnctlor major Appalachian and In- Toorsday through the remainder from a farm near Letart Falls, pal speaker.
terstate highway cooatruc:t!on.
of the summer at the fairgrounds. Ohio.
Eveeyone wishing to obtain ticTwo contracts wtU pro\')de for Unannounced tnapec:t!ms also
Passersby belped themselves keta should contact Nlos BoOIIe
construction of 6.5 miles orthe wiD continue througbootthe c:oun- to the tomatoes alter the truck or Don ~Ire&amp;, preotdent tJ. the
new U. S. Expressway 50. p a r t t,y, according to Sgt. P. D. Me- was removed by wreckers. '!be Meigs County Yourc 114pllblloan
or Corrldor D of the Appalachian Creedy.
remainder were shoveled away. , 11\Jb, before July 26. ,. ..
system, which generalb follows
old U, S. 50 between Parkersburg
and a future J-79 comect:lon near
Clarksburg.
Most of that work wlll be In
the area or the Rltchie • Duddridge County llne. The third contract is tor construction of more
Righi now Elberfelds lire showing and aeiUng tbe new RCA VICTOa 11160 llD8
than three miles otl-64inGreenof Home Entertainment and Invite 7011 to vl.!lt the mllSk; department an the
brler County, beginning just east
2nd floor and see wbat'a aew-'uk 1111 of the sales people to show )"011 tbele
of Alta.
new radios, stereos, televlr.lOm, tape reeorden ancf to deDIODJirate them for

8

fnspeCtiODS

d

Be

Thurs ay ,

1

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lljlh

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C~ry.

en
... ttn·. ..,~.e. !;

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Ten D1e In Cleveland : :
War of the East Si e

Truck Loaded
w·th Tomatoes

!•

CLEVELAND (Upl)- &amp;olpora

Commission

tn se&lt;OIId41oor windows ...
nre with pollee ao
dawn broke here today alter a
night o! vicious &amp;On r!l!htlng.
Some 2,600 Nallonal Qaardsmen
were dispatched to tha S&lt;arred
Negro East Side, with orders to
ushoot to ldll snipers."
Ten per800a were killed by
gunfire, Including three pollee
olllcers, three smpera and four
Negroes apparently caught In
changed

·Opening Bids

crossfire.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY YOUR
HEADQUARTERS FOR RCA VICTOR

ClmCKING·DRAFT- SEVERAL MEMBERS of the Executive Committee o! the Melgt County Regional Planning Co!!&gt;·
mission met Tuesd!Q&lt; nlgbt at tJ!e extension oftlcein Pomer'oy
to clloouss a prallmtnary draft for a ccrnj&gt;rehenalve plaonlng
p~ for Meigs County as submitted by carroll HlU &amp; A1J.
soclates, professlooal ptanntng llrm. The comprehensive planning pregrom will be developed by the private firm In c-ation With the State Development Department and tbe Meigs

.you.

(Continued !rem page I)
major damage was reported.
Crews were clearnlng the trees
from the roads today.
RoUand Torrence, Stilt. of the
State Garage, said no occurranees or any ma.ior nature were
reported to hls department Torrence said some trees and several tree limbs, however, apparently Cell on state highways.
LANCASTER, Ohio (tJPO Richard L, Sheely, 35, assistant
school sl.t)erintendent at Parma,
is to take over as dty school
head here in september under a
contract calling for an annualsaJ..
ary of $19,500. He will succeed
J. E. Brown, who took a posttioo with the state Board or Educatiun..
MEIGS GENERAL HOSPITAL
ADMISSIONS - Mrs. Doris
Darst, Pomeroy; Peart Darst,
Che&amp;blre.
DISCHARGES - Thomas WUllamo, Raymond Collins.

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qua:a

RCA PORTABLE UCORD PLAYIRS,-Icleailor the yomipter'- ~--.
·er and College C~wd. Stereo llld_miirio_mog,el! in_a.~e ·selection of~!~~~
illld power detlvery ~ and down rijht gooaloo~. fit110118 ROA ~ U0141811.

Throat SoUDd.

(UP!l- The Ohio

Plannlng Commission. It would require
months to COO!plete, and the coat could .be about $40,000. Seated, 11-om, left,
are Harold Carnahan o! RD, Raetne, l!tanntng Commtsoton
President, and Edison Baker, _secretary; Standing, E. F.~
son. PomerO.n David Koblentz, Chester;.Frank ClelaM, Racine,
and Ell Denison, Rutland. Also preselt were Robert Wingett,'!
Syracuse; C. E. Blakeslee, Councy Extenstoo Alent. Agriculture, and Csrl BWkam, ASC representative. - Sentinel Pboto.

were looted.
SUperior Avenue, a maJor
block In the heart o! the
predominantly Negro aree, was
hardest hit. Several ~r fires
rsgad out uf control. Mayor
Carl B. stoke&amp;, a Negro, hinted
the gun batlle and attendant
violence may have been
planned.
Troops Brought In
Gov. James Rhodes ordered
the Ohio Nstlonal Giard moblttzed, and ZOO Nallonal Guard

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announcement regarded as a anxious to get together on thl&amp;
moral vlclor)l for U.S. Sell. E&gt;J- as they had been," oald O'Gragene MccarthY, D-Mlnn.
dy, rererrlng to a planned meetThe caucus at a breakfast Ing In JUlie as part of a atop
, Aug. 26 tn the Wln&lt;b' City was U.S. Sen. Robert F. Kennedy
announced Tuesday by S t a t e . move.
Chairman E u g e n e (Pete)
A majority or the delegates
O'Grady after a weekend meot- have been committed to, or
tng.
;
leaning toward VIce President
"'!be delegates are not as Hubert H. Humphrey and It
~
~
..~ ~
!
,.., concedsd a Jll'e-cotlVentlon
caueua WGUid hrie resulted tn
.a 'wrnJ)brey. ~.
'
HG.!Ie,
v u, . .Q'Grll&lt;b' ...rs now
thet t "bard • core" commitmont to Rumpltrey "appear to
.h 8011enlng'' and is mt willing
:;~*i~~!il1~if:~~l~~l~~lli~i~~i!~f~~!i~rm~~~i~~t1~1r~~titt;~~r~~t~:~~~~ff~:~:~~~~~=~:~:~r:n:~:}~l~l{:!:~: tD rule oot u.s. Sen. ~sene J.
'
McC&amp;rfhT of 1\lhine-.
By United Pren lntarnatlonil
He said he cOuld not estimate
WASIIINGTON - CONGRESS, UNDER UII!EAT of slowdowns in the strength o1 Humphrey or
airline service and mell dellverteo, already lsinibblllV at the econo- McCsrthy tn the delegation lllid
1111 pactcaae It thrust upoo the Johnson admlntotratloo a lew weeks thinks the conventloo ts "a long
......._
.
.
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wa,y !rom being locked up."
.. ' Both the Senate and House are moving to exempt 30,000 postal
"The time will come when
~. Ancl tbs Senate, told that the qation was fact._ alarming
backq)s tn the airways, voted 78 to 8 Tuesday 1tJ relax tbe persomet

COLUMBUS
delegatloo to the Demoerallc
NIIIlonal COnvention appears to
be ' taklna on aln like those o!
Ita -rpart aero" the poUtleal alate.
The 12&amp; - member deleptloo
wtll ·not· ...,..,, on a preiddenuat )Inference until It arrive•
· taq next mcillh at Chlc&amp;IO, an
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RCA COLOR OR BLACK AND WHITii TV - Whether JOU eboose a. portable
set. table model, or a beautifUl console you should see the brand ~ 19118
HCA Television. A big, big selection of styles, In sereen s.tzes from the 1111811est to tbe 23 Inch, 2911square lncb eolor eonaole. Get ready for the new fill
prograDII now with a new RCA TV Set.
.

STOP IN • LOOK 'EM OYER~ YOU'LL ENJOY IT

ELBERFELDS IN PO

The shooting lasted more than
five hours Tuesday nigbl and
early thls morning, lllbslded for
a lime alter a driVing
rainstorm, lhen broke out again
at an Intersection in the heart
of the Ova-block area where the
dlstu.rbances erupted.
Pollee reported a series ol
flrebombtngo and said stores

Ohio Democrats Acting Like GOP

RCA TAPE RECORDlRS- Select transistor recorders or the plug IIi cumGt
kind. 3 Inch up to 7 .to. reel capadty. Noted thiJ year u alway&amp; for tbe1r fine
tone. RCA Tape Recorders make excellent gifts for blrlbdays, special
occasions aad Cbrlsllllll.

ROY

:~eiKJUgbtoallowthegovernmenttohire'morealrtrafflc coo-

L-------------·----· --~.
,

AVER~

PARIS- ,tJ..S. AlofBASSADORW.
Harriman today pr&lt;&gt;· t4iated VIet
terrarlsm !IPIDSI civilians In VIetnam. "What I&amp;
. · 4lslurblllll••
thoterroracttoowhlcbhasstartedapjnlttbeaterstn
the Slip area," Harriman said mome'bta before the 14th seasloo of
tho U. S. North Vle!J'Ul talks oo VIetnam.
1 '·
·~ople have been ldlled and I wtll call atteallon to this," he
. aald. I!Ur~ referred to a series Of bomblnrs In Sllaon and otber
~1111 lp llhlcb 20 persons ware ldlled and 1"0re t1an 120 InJured
[Jlt weetce11&gt;1, Western dlplCIDah sald Ieday North Vlntnam's pl'qlO~ hu taken a new turn with a view to driving a wedge
~. :1!~011 Si!ICHI and Waahlngton.

cOilll

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an 101commltted deleptlojl 1'411
be an lmportam bargaining
altlon," said the chslrman, taktng a point o! view held b)'
State GOP Chairman John S.
Andrews and Gov. James A.
Rhodes.
''If youtve given away your
dsleptlon ahead of lime, you
are not tn· much of a barpin.
tng spot," said O'Grady.
1ha chllrman ~ out
that delaying the caue•s unlll'
... _ M ll Chi••- .would eJiabl
.· . •
._..
party leaders to keep the dotegatloo unoommll!od. However,
U. S. Sen. Staphen M. Young,
the delegation's favorite son,
has announced his IIIPJ&gt;Orl of
McCerlby lor President.
Young, who has changed his
mind four times, said !llnda1
he would ll1lpPOl'l M&lt;Carth,y "on
the second ballott If not the
(Cootlnued on Page 8)

Full Rehearsals .Open
J\J
TF7
k
1.1:
•
l
11eXt wee On lUUSlCa

·

MILFORD HYSELL

H·ysell JI"J:•
W lRS

assigned to tbe A&amp;P. 's Hunt..
lngtoo stair and plans to cootlnue
to reslde In Middlti)OI'I.
Mr. and )(ro. Hyoell reside at
222 North Third Ave., and have
two sOilS, qes stx and four. Hysell sened four and aae-11alf
yeora In tbe U. S. Air Force,
i967-1062. · Mrs. Hysstl ta the
former Laura P, Thomaa.

Pomeroy Scouts Win .~ec.9,gnition
•'·

PreMI\lltlj)n

TONIGHT, JULY 23
(Double Feature)
FITZWIILY
(Color)
VanD)'k&amp;-Birbara Feldon
PLUS
O'Brlan.John Mills
- TEXAS STYLE

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a cert1flcate

for merltorlOUJ aervlce tnreeot-

,

vlctlriJo·o!

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First Scramble

~

Hysell's new dulles wlll take
him to 120 A&amp;P. Stores tn Ohio,
West VIrginia and Kentucky, He
will assist tn the vertflcatlm of
Inventories and cash. He will
also ald In the per!ormtne of

' ' .

20,000 Evacuated
In Chemical City

Promotion to
Columb .... Vinr't

otflce.

FINAL CLEARANCE ON '68's

\nlops had been IIYOn order&amp; to
''llboot to ldll lllfper.."
CLEVELAND (UPO - State Adj. GeiL .S. T. Del Corso
To011111teraetthewtll4rllled
said today a nlgbt of ontplng led flrebemhtng here wao part o!
lnlpero, who pollee aald llrecl
a Black Power plot that wao dsslgnecl to opread to other &lt;Illes
1&gt;11 rilles, ~·· . . - .
In Ohio and tbe •lion.
carbines and st 1- ..,.
"I think there waa scme kind o! a plot behind thla vl&lt;&gt;mac:hlne gun, a~thorltiN bor·
lence," Del COrso said. "lntalllaenee reports from the mUIr&lt;JIIed 81'1IIOl'&lt;ld trucks rrom
tary and the ,FBIIndlc:ated tnadyancetrooblewould start.....,_
Brink's Inc., U&gt; for17 relntoreotime today In Cleveland, other cities In Ohio and six or eight
menta Into the ana.
other cltiea elsewhere."
lila voice ebol&lt;ed with en»11This trouble is across the nation,'' Del Corso aa1d. "1
llen, Stokes, flrlt Negro alecled
think it is a plot to spread destruction."
Mafor of a major Amer!CIII
:;:;o;:;«q..S:?.;~~~~~;:::::~::§IW.:&gt;;~::::-::::::--:~::::::::-.-;:~~~:
city, told - - .alter the .
;z.:~::q~·x~~-:·:·'7.;:...... ~&amp;&amp;.~w.....v.....~~:~~.t wild
- . . . had ad&gt;olded : .
troops, 15 jeeps and nine St. Clair and Eaot IOSth streets "There Ia a dlflftlble ~ ·
involved!'
armored peraonnel carriers at 5:30 a.m., as the aporadlc
Not A ltlot
l!llipi!V of the early morning
were dispatched to the area.
Rhodes oald by $ o.m., 2,600 hours erupted agatn Into aerlooa "MD!tl of tllem haVe been
gun batlles. Pollee fired tear arrested," he oalli. "It'&amp; not a
~ tho stale's 14.500 guardsmen
gas
Into the building to flu&amp;b out rial It hao not reaebod that
would be palroUing the streeto.
kind of preportlooa."
Pollee said nine smpers, two the auapected sm~rs.
Col.
Dana
Stewart,
In
charge
Stokes, under heaVY securll;jo
betteved wounded, were firing
o!
the
auardamen,
aald
the
auard
wblle he eddrelllld •
at olllcers at tho barsection of
- s c:onferenee, bad . - the
-~ to kelp .
Natlonat Giard \nlops elf the
- · and give Nelt'Oel a
cbanee "to ... ll IlliG' Clll
COIIIrol their coiiU1lUIIIl;y.• But
he rellllted moments tater and
tho \nlops were summoned.
''1 don't Intend to pormll tblo
kind tJ. lawles1110os and vlolmee
to l!ll unchecked in t h I a
SOUTH CHARLESfON, W, Va. by In North Cbarleaton In case COIIIIDIIIIIQI. II we are aobll to
(UPO - More than 20,000 por- reiddents there would have to bring tbls terrible night to an
soos along a three • mite stretch leave tater . . About 3,000 !aft end, lt wllt depend oo the kind
o! tbls chemical city complex North Charteaton shortly alter of cooperatloo we pi from the
were evacuated TuelllkiY nlpt the clllorlne gas settled over the cl.tlzena.H
w11en an explosion unloooed a area.
Pollee refuoed to dlvulp the
cloud of chlorine PI "500 feel
The U.S. Army Corps ef En- IIIJNift o! arreato.
hl&amp;l&gt;-.
gineers ordered all boat tralllc
Vlntence brol&lt;e out In a 1111'11"
Tile blut occurred at the FMC 011 the Kanawha River halted tJ. (JIDflro at the lnteraeetlon tJ.
IDorpolc Division plant here. until Wedneodo¥ morning.
~ led Arbondale
According to an FMC execuNo ooe was roporled kllted or AYOIII8S about 8:30 , p.m.,
tive, all leak&amp; ware ~lopped, but Injured tn !be explosion IIIII the TUeadiJ.
cltl•- rrom 11ou111 Cbarloaton, - - - - lealilp · ... illt .... · 'Wltnollh' lllifa·[lfGi(JoCf1¥e·' ·
aoroaollle KanawhaRI•wlnDunCharlastoo pollee ordered all N-o, · armed with ~
bar and North Charleaton, evac- ambutanc's 'with oxygen maaks and automatic rilles, poured
uated to aebool• and other des- to the st:ene. Motor! ots along bullete Into a pollee cndsar,and
18nated centers oslabllsbed by u.s. 21 ~ W. Va. 3.1
a tow truck that p&amp;lled UP to
pollee lllid emerpncy crewa,
the
lntersectkD to pick ·UP an
eneed ~ sen11tloos o! the
A ltaiD was reported olandlng eyes. .
abandoned auto.
Within 30 minute• violence
was narlng UP h1 a fiVK!od&lt;
ares around thelnteraeetlon.
Pollee Plmed Dowa
Flrot pollee oo tbe scene •re
plmed down by beaYJ nre
coming from apartment buildings,
The wllDesses said the five
(Continued on Page 8)

Mllford ltysall, employed In
the Middleport A &amp; P SIDre slnee
1957, has baen promoted U&gt; the
store aullltlng stair o! tbe Allal&gt;ti.c and Pacific'• Columbus unit

You couldn't pick a better time to move up ~o
CHRYSLER. Come in today, get a great
buy and the model of your choice.

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-rl-

various surveys. He la current!)'

TONIGHT TIIRU THURSDAY
JULY 23 • 25
BONNIE &amp; CLYDE
(Technicolor)
Warren Beatty, Faye Dunaway
FEATURETTE: Idiots Deluxe
CARTOONS: Under Sea Dogs
ilawY Hwrtlng
It Must Be Love,·
SHOW STARTS 7 P,lll.

.,

JULY 24, 1968

am-

Storm

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.'l'

ak,es ,F.

·
RCA STEREOS-- All are solid llate players, Masten:rafted fulnt\ure de- .
sign. Choose models witb ~ 10 speaP! 110uad systems wtth excellent
radios that bring in AM and N Mldon. Choose your favorlte style
wood flnlsb. Tbey're all excellent qwi'ity.
.
.
RCA RADIOS - 'fran.slstor or pltll In current.style. · Soltd stat~ .and AM and .
AM-FM Models. Vinyl aad wood cal!~Deta thai you'll Ull:e - tl!e RCA ndlolliie
Is truly outstaiuliog this year aad the vir lo118 models will surely pleue you. _

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MEIGS 111EATRE

WED, • THURS. • FRI.
July 24 • 25 - 26
(Double Feature)
RIOT CJ111 SUNSET STRIP
(Color)
All!o RoY • MiMSl Farmer
PLUS
.. ~~oq~~.a Welcb-TOllY FrsncloSio I
FATHOM
(Color)

•

t ,

The fife and stele ,drum were
jntroduced ao Infantry lnslrumenlt Cor soundmgmltttary calls .
llid•, PI'IIYidlng music lor march·
1ng bY SWlaa' mcrcenarl•• In the

I

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1

Residents whose tastes run to better music should hne "moments to romember" ThUrsday evening when the American Wind
$,ymplony Orcheatn preaenta 1 concert at the Pomeroy levee et
8:30p.m.
Tile orchestra wtll present four new works In keeping with the
philollll!lh.7 of Robert A. Boudresu, the conductor, who believes that
~·s mualc should reflect todsy's world. or course, there will be
otber presentattono.
'
The orchestra plays !rom a ape&lt;lall,y constructed barge, 111111 11
plays well. Llgltlng Is excellent and there's smnethlng about tbe tnformallt,y o! sitting along tbe river In the cool of the evening that
Just makes tbe - e bit enjoyable led different.
Hats off to Mrs. W. P. Loch- tier them but so could u- callary, lonc-ttmo local music 1,.. ttw.
s!fuc:lol', who has headed the ow
pearance of the orcllostra hare
WOMEN Of St. Paul Lutheran
thla year. She and tho.. asotat- Church wUt stsge an tee cream
t~ bar have dooe a COIIIIIIOIId- soctal saturday bqlnnlng at 11a.
able service In brl~Wlntr l ,cult.- m. In tbe air conditioned hall at
ural touch to tbe clllllll;y,
the church In Pomeroy,
,,
The women sarved dallclous
REMEBER wben life pa aim- homemade tee cream during the
plot Tala()honlng waa t"'n easy re111tta when the art show waa
in the clal•a before a.ri• ciX'll!l, ..,_.4..,(( there. 'ltley're atrea...
direct dtan111 and ~hl\...ho:va-you lng tblo ttme, that they'D have the
In the world of p~ss.
same &amp;ood lee creamand&amp;ll"'llDo you rememloir your o I d er seating copaclty since the art
phone rumber'l fW ·-le, ahow has been »ul Into moth balls
Mra. Borne!ll
L.
until tbe next resatta. The lacllea
Crew, &amp;-Mi C.
1f.X; will also have hem- cake led
C..!.
pit 011 hand. Servt.wtlleontl...
%8; Marlo
~ '1!1111 ao the IIWl,y lasiL

a

l'. :Sterrett,
F.

'"IF ICB Cl!EAM socllls _.. a

tame (OI'Yo&gt;II'POI'htils, ~··
the nrat molorl!ytle
, racea wba held thlo
. , · ~ the Me1p Miltoreycle

MEET THE UNBEATABI.ES •••_
,.

RUE MOTORS

Is Sunday at
Qub Grounds
The Meigs Motorqcle Ctlil
tJ. l'omeroy wUt bold the nrot
motorcycle acrambtea races ..,
llmday st Its cllil _.,.., Ill&lt;
miles north o! l'lmlelo,)' .., the
Peach Fork Road elf U.S. 33.
Practice Is from 11 a.m. to I
p.m., and races lla!t at 1:30
p.m.
This Is a ..,. balr-mllo dirt
ltaok tree of cmst, ,_.ted to
be very fast for the ncaa. llk'ers from Ohio, ~~. led
West Vlrg!lda will Ialii pan.
Refreshments wtll ba IOld II
the grounds led plen!J or ,_
parktng Ia ayallable.

Curtailment

Is Saturday
•

�•

••

··~ ~·

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\

"'!:.._

••. l, .

r

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Nip ·Brave~, 2-1, I(r,anepOOl.· ..

T~~, '"' ,:~ole'
~.f U.S . .;,~ Czdc:h
Squabble
,
.
.

,

. r~~ '~luallon 1!1 C~hos.loy~kla is as
Not OIIIY that, but 'tbe breach wolilcl till·
(r~lllllt 'w!th .uneertainties lor •lite Russians
dc\u~, widen to lllciude Romania whlCb
as lt is Jor !he ~echo~lovakians. For both
t.s restive in it.s own right and Is givllli mOI,'al
cow!tri~s. much !S at stake. Fqr both, wropg
' supPOrt to llil! C!ecbs, and go on from tJw;e •.
moves ~r prectpitate overreactions could· set
; Nothing 1s more cerllln than !bat lerievents m mollon that could mak,e the Hun~lenninaUon and democraey ·will 0110 day
gartan Revolution l~k like a minor discome the nations of Eaatem Euiope ..Time
agreement between friends .
. and the tide iif human affain are on tile aide
There is no chanee at this juncture, how- · of thooe who love freedom.
ever, that the Soviets will resort to armed
The Unlled States can do two tlllnJ!a to
force to bring their maverick satellite back
hasten !bat day-keep Its bOSe out ol the
Into a closer orblt~not unless the Czechs are
Czecho-Russian squabble, and continue PIU'·
rash enough to \rY hurry the departure of
suing every avenue that can lead detente
lingering R~ Army units Iii the point of
with Russia.
b~yonet .or proceed ~; quickly ~nd too ,tar
For the more lhal .tensioas and suajileiODI
With !herr program of democratization.
are relaxed between the United States and
But the Czechs have too much to lose to
the U.S.S.R., the less reason the Russian
push the issue to a military shoWdown they
bear wiU have to unsheath her claws when

v 11

one of her cubs wanders away.

lives or with whatever gains toward freedom
they have already made.
Czechoslovakia, 1968, is not Hungary, 1956.
The Hungarian Revolution was a popular upriling not only against Russian overlordslup
but against communism itself. So far, though
II has the enthusiastic support of the people,
what is happening in Czechoslovakia is a
palace reformation within the party, not
against it.

As the Good Book notes, where there is no
vision, the people perish, and it is heartening
to learn that somebody is doing something
about it.
The Chemical Specialties Manufacturers
Association reports that there was an 84.83

Yet Russia's vital interests are also at

per cent increase in the production of windshield washer concentrate in consumer-sized
packages in 1967.
The total was 14,203,141 packages, a far
cry from the measly 49.872 produced in 1961.

stake. Sbouid "democratization" get out of
hand, should it begin leading to real democracy with the creation of a multiparty system, sbould Czechoslovakia begin turning Its
face toward the West, Russia would be left
with a gaping hole in the string of buffer
states protecting ito western boundary-a
hole through which not only troops but ideas
could march.

Traffic accidents haven't gone down. but
at least more people are getting a better view
of the car that runs into them on the high·

We mwt preumt the rile of anr prona•nced d • gr • e of intilllocy bctwem
French ofllcerr and black of/il!or! ... We
mwt nat eat ODith them, mwt not ahake

. ··'.. ...

''

~

ha1lda ...

laformalloa Coaeeruillc Blaek
Tnopa," killed by U.S. Army ill lt18.

Deteriorating social and economic conditi0118 ·
in the South, a labor shortage ill the North
caused by ·a fall-off' in European Immigration
after the start of World War I, an Industrial
boom BB America turned lt.self IIIIo the arsenal
of democracy-all these conspired to set ol a
great exocllis of Negroes from the land In the
second decade of the 20th century.
The North reacted with a poUcy of contain-

(
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~T; lllrlelll ~IIIMM ' ' ', ;~;
-

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• u lt)

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~:,;;t

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Helen Help.:

"A Jug of Wine and Thou!"
'

uSe••

ACold Look at Humphrey's
'Thaw' in Soviet Relations

t f:b..!..

nothing?

,,,' l.llf ·.t!m•.-,Mlf~-4-M,,
' 01' """•m!'!j tht· more Dad CQI• ·
. .e.ffi;~- 'Oil bual)iO~. W 7

to

on

mamtaill

~~ PHIL

cold chicken is fine to take
•

PASTORET

on a picnie, urifelil sbe hap.
pens to be your 'date.

• • •

Nu, Qwendo!yn, yuu

• •
wolf says that

rum't

go

to a

Japa~se

r«rstfaurant t11 get lroratP

chop•.

~·

"

She bso never been w11at you'd
ceil a lovin8 wife. Oh, ahe'adolle
her duty by Dad, and llle raised
three klda well, but.ahewa111101:e
interested In keeping a perfect
house than enJoying us, We don't
blame her lor thio - It's jullt
her WI!'.

Timely Quotes

Thoughts
QUICK . QUIZ

We intend to double and redouble our efforts to flood
the Congress with mail. We
simply believe !bat the people
can reach their elected reprosenlatives in Washington and
make them listen.
-Former aatronaut John
Glenn, on vroponentl of
gun control legiSlation.

11 is not enough to say,
"When I was your age . . ."
We were never their age.
Television has given the mod·
em student an awareness,
' perhaps an excessive aware-

Hatlo's

Q-Who oriQIIIGted t II e
"Whil!h of you canvict.s me proctil!e
of unng tlie Bible ill
of sin? If I tell the truth, IDhy admlngterillg
an oathr
do vou not believe me?"A-The great ByzaniiDe
emperor, TUIIlnlan, in 532,
The best answer to a false who took the oath with a book
idea is the trulb.-Richard 14. of the Golpeia in bl8 ·band.
Nixon, fonner U.S. vice pres!·
Q-Who ~ f/le first leto
dent.
appointed to t h e U.S. Supreme Courtr
.
A-Loula D. Brandeis, ap.
ness, of the world around pointed ill 1916 by President
Woodrow WUaon. .
him.
-Robert H. Shaffer, dean of
Q-What dotl tlie """nk"
&amp;ludentl at Indiana Univer- mean ill "fnmld!u:ense1;r- ·.
sity, an 1tudent unrest.
A-U meana free or pure.

John 8:46.

• • •

Time

®

,~r

.~ ...~

t·

lavelllln~:tt,-· ''".' ·• '
The first steamship ~
its ttiarrurt 'In L · ~
THili city beCa~ 1r0ik11f
sUlfcap!lal after the m~
·tree wu'lntroduc&lt;d.; -lacq~
iil~eJ!Ied his 1o'O n;t l
Al\l~re wprked 011 ljl8 Ia .
of e!ectrodynamlc• .lba~ Jell ,
modem great li)'llfOOlectri •
.works; and the brOIIien ~
tete experlmen~ . w 1·1II ~
movie camera.
I :
.

'*'i

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trcdlie, let Helm help YOU,
!lie IIIII allo welcome10111' OWl!
Dear Helen:
amusbq:
txperl...oo, Addreas
Will you pleaoe help us eoo- Hel.., Bottel
in '•ar• of thia
vince our mother that lfJOU can't
have cream, milk Ia better than nowapaper.

~tate

1 The'I!Miel'is, of course, that t'revolutionilry w"'s of liberallon''-the subilei'IIOII' ofllltfltee W'orl~rei!Iains' ljle mtemost '
objective of Marxist-Leninists, whether they are pro-Russian
or pro-Chinese.
·
Nevertheless, it would be unrealistic-even a serious error
-to ignore the fact that since Stalin's death in 1.953 the Red
world has been reacting to severe strains.
Soviet leaders repeatedly have revised their foreign policyveer between "hard" and "soft" policies-and '""!pone the
"inevitable" showdown with the West.
.
, Things do change, however slowly and tortuously. Two
decades ago, as Humphrey said in his statement
foreign
policy, the Uniled states faced "an aggressive and highly
centralized Communist bloc."
Today, Red Russia and Red China are engaged In ~ bitter
· conflict. With Romania, Yugoslavia and Czechoslovilia increasingly critical of Ru.ssia while seeking closer ties to the
West, the Communist countries no longer pose a monolithic
· threat.
Tbe Kremlin leaders are painfully aware of this. They no
·longer can rely on their East European oateUijes. And China
1,
· is an overt enemy.
The Russians now look for results wherever they ean get
them, choosing their methods on strictly pragmatic rather
than ideologically tidy lines.
.
i
For the present it is in their interest to ignore Fidel Castro's
protest.s and seek to expand trade with Latin America,
For the present, too-until they have resolved the conflicts
Ill the Red world-they also want to
the, stetus quo
ID West Europe, at least a truce In the Middle Eaa~ and the
reopenillg of the Suez Canal.
Tbe obvious reason for Moscow's unusually co-operative
altitude toward the American-Soviet nuclear nonprollleratlon
treaty is to restrain West Gennany from becoming an •tomlc
power far as long as possible.
·
The treaty, hailed by optimiata as a milestone iD AmericanSoviet relations, is also Moscow's excuse for denying the East
European ssteUites nuclear energy even for peaceful purposes.
, I
This e~iains wby Romania, iD an unprecedented diplomatic.
-r
move, decided to sign an agreement with the United states.'
for expanded co-operation In technology, science and iDdUJtry. .
The Kremlin's compromise on the nonproliferation treaty
and the current peace moves In the Middle East are another
indication that coe:Pstence wlU be backed by diplomatic action
whenever Moscow finds it advisable. It is even conceivable
that the Russians will continue to aid North VIetnam and the
Viet Cong only as long as this policy appears to be producing
diplomatic gains.
This is, after aU, what foreign policy is aU about. The
foreign policy of any country is Si!DViY concerned with the
espansion of its power, influence and strateglc posture.
&gt;11 the Wesl is to outwit the Russians in the complex diplo·
matlc game, it will have to be better at playing its cards, or
aimpiy hold a better hand, and not to confront the Communists
with unacceptable alternatives-peaceful coexistence or limited revolutionary wars.
·
The Communists remain Communists. They will always be
ready to exploit any weakness or opportunities in the nonCemmunist world.
, ., · But a policy to ease.East-West tensions m~t not necessarily
' ' be based on Western 1deas of how the Kremlin should behave.

BARBS

,

A PRACTICAL ARRANGEMENT

NEW YORK (NEA)
Vice President Humphrey, who was once a firm supporter
ol Communist "containment," now advocates a policy of "re·
coneiliation" in East-West relations.
Since he aspires to be the next president of the United States
this dramatic change in Humphrey's views requires careful
consideration.
Is the time ripe for a "thaw" in the relations between the
United States and Soviet Russia? Are the Communists, in
view of their long record of duplicity and subversion, more
trustworthy today than they were two decades ago when the

~~~e~t~~ent !'.~ ..~!'~~- inf~g_ura.ted

·&lt;" •

By Helen Bottel

By LEON DENNEN
NEA Foreign News Analyst

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'·.:THE CIQCTQR .BAVJI
\" •!,, -·'• ·•
r

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~P

'; Even Minute,Symptonts ,.·.,

,Aid Doctor's J&gt;iagnosi~ , ·~
.

. 1 ~· . '

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a, WAYNE G. IRAHPSTAOT, _t.,l.D.,, · · .

· he alwa,fs bad time lor .. ........, ·
we were home. 'l1loullh theN a
wasn't rnucb - - the"1, I
think he was true to her. 1bat
lo, unW about throe yean ..,.
Then be met Marilyn, who I hate to 1111: tt - waa ·ali our
mothl!l'. wasn;~ and he !eli for
bOl'.
He seos ber about onet a
week, but he doesn't want to
bresk up hla marrtaso of 28
yeara. IUe atlllude, Ia, ''WilY
nat"/ My wife doeiD't want me;
MariiJ'II doea, wtthno strings at..
tacbod. Ill return for my name,
evl!l7lhlna abe wanta, pius )IDOl!
aoclei lllancllng, my wife shOuld
live me time off to be a man.~
'
Whoil Mother
found . out, abe
lo!&gt;k to her bed with a threatened
nervoua breakdown wlllcb oldn't
come off. '111en llle announced
llbe waa 1J101t1n1 a divorce and

8.f,

ADPt•• 3 Houston 1; nlahl

.

, 'l'ollq'l! Prd&gt;able Pltcbero

·Ail Times EDT
· int..rnallanal League Standli!p
· Qdcaso (Holtzman 5~7) at Son BY United Proao International
Franclaoo (Parry 8.8), f p.m.
W, L. Pel. GB
.~ (Lemattar 8-10) 11 Toledo . . . • , 53 44 .558
L4ll Anlotea (Jlryadalo 12~, 8 ..-........ , .47 55 .511 3'h
p.m.
·
· Jacksonville ... 47 f6 .505 4
PtdladelPilla (L. Jackaon 9·11) Rochester •• , •• 48 47 .505 4
a1 St. Louis (Wallhburn ~. 8 Columbua ••.•• 45 45 .500 4¥1 ·
p.m.
,
Loulovlllo ..... 47 f8 .495 5
Cincinnati (Nolan 4.:) at Pitts- Buffalo .• , . , , .46 49 .484 6
burlh (,MODH 4-8), 8:05 p.m. Rlchmood .• , •. 43 52 ,453 t
, NtW YOrk' (R,yan 64), Ill AtTuosdl,y's R~!91~s
"

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·

Pfl'TSBURGH (IJPI) bala wore reall,r -"&gt;'
tho Cinclmatl Rods and
bits melllll a hard-lought

·

to key a lhreo~
rally in tho third, and aolo hom-

the

ari by Mack Jonaa and Perez.
El~ Face, the alxtb ol
seven PlltiiMJrah Jlllehoro, waa
tile victim or the Redo' wtmlni
rally,
Gen,. Arri&amp;O, fourth ClnciDnstl lwrlor, ~ved the win aa·
he chalked up bla e1xth triumph
of tho oeaom.
Gary Nolin, 4-2, was to burl
tonlahl' a pme and hla oppon.
ont wao t&lt;i be Bob Moooe, who
IJIOrll • 4-4 mark.

tri-

Tho Reds halnmerod out 20
bits, inclUding five by Tony
Perez, to """' a three-pme
Ptttaburah wlminl streak TUel·
day nltlbt.
Tho Ylctory, holrevor, took 12
laniDI• aa tho Roda edpd tho
determined Pirates, 7-4.
'It waa Perez' fifth hlt of tile
pme that scored Lee llll,)i
from third to start a l1lo-&lt;un
12th lmlni rally. The Ylctoey
otretcbsd tllo Rads' win atreak
to five atralaht.
What turned out
be the

to

I'Wlt

hoW&amp;Yer.

was

I&lt;OI'ed b,y Tommy Helma aa he
alnilod, driving in Jllilan:J

Bench.
The Plratea made II clo'" in
thltr half of tho 12th when
Maury WUls walked, IV&gt;le oecond, advOIICed to thlld on a
bunt and tllea scampered homo
on WUIIe lilarpll's oecrtflce

flY.

Pinch Hamer Hurta
Plttsburah sent the pme Into overtime when •
tied tile
aoou 5-15 in tile ninth alter one
wao out as 11111 Vlrdon pounded
'f.'~~.!O~-~~' P:~:. !lYr~) ~ho~~
a' 'JIIncb hit" bomtr'' ,wl~ JOse
-~Atlanta Ollli
'
·
Rochester 12· Syracu10 4 (2nd) Papn on tho pallia. Papn had
.
'
Plttllbui'ah, nJahl Toledo 8l!ul!alo 6
walked.
Ill St. Loula, nlahl Loolovllle 1 Columbus 0
Olhar big blta !or the Rods
scheduled
Rlcbmood 8 JackaonvDle 3
in the pme
Vada Pin-

3

IIWI.

an loiotliar •• -rmillod. Slle

,. ' . : ':fo.

.' 0 I , I · -•. /

I .

:: (•

.

'

I (!a\:

om'a triple

•••

Pitcher Protection
1

Would you believe the Bal·
tlmore Orioles are bel n g
babledt When a reporter vislied the Florida training
camp, be found the trainer
biiSY ordering gallons ol baby
oil. His questioo brought the
reaponse, "to protect the ·
pitchers against wind or raw

two-nm 12tll

Ilia!'

'
like hlo' liltll

'!II'

qaln~{

.
gave Cineimatl the win liVer dtleets.
. Cl~dt 0~
Plttabur~. Tommy ~ms fGJ.
iowed Perez• slnl!le with IIIOih· oeven,bltter

••lh•

er single,

. .,..

WUlla lllcCove,y'a lourlh 1\lt,

llalilltM. Bob

ror the DodPra'

bla :Utb homer .'in •1¥ 10tb idldh lniltna off
lnnln&amp; pve Son Franci&amp;OII the CuellOI'.
triumph over Cldcaso.• ~
Marlchal pltohed a five-hitter to

,.

year we'd be pusbins for first
again."
The 6-5, 24-year-old righthandar is a resident of South
Chatham, Ontario. Fergie Is
the easy-going type who
doesn't mope around because
of hla bad luck. In the loeker
room he ca!IJ himself Super
Canadian. During the off-seaspa he plays for the Globe·
trotten. He finds less presaure iD basketball.
14
lD. baaketball, 11 be says,
"one guy aeidom bas to carry
the wbole teani, although a
player must be sound every
day. A pitcher, however, con·
trois the game for the most
part and feels more individual

•• ,i(;,,A

~~m-·(
,.

~·

,

"Y

mGiiter to \011111::1

. . ...,....... boreN
T he c111't

No-Hitter

Rutland, McArthur

Post Tourney Wins

ant Fruth's Pharmacy at 8,3o,
Thursdl,y, PL Pleasant CIQ&gt; Ice
and Fuel meeta the Syracuae Gl·
anto at 7, and Middleport' 1 yank·
oes battle PL Pleasant's Sleel·
workers at 8:30.

'!~oan.;; S::!~to"';!::":~~ ,
could be traded to the Saints.
seek Oraft Choice
-•~ ~.....:.- He
Boars Pre-~ .._••• the.
·-••
deal for
las, Jr., a
veteran afenalve aafellmal!
could be made. All the Boarforl
would wont In . exchange
Petitbon would be the Salnla'
No. 1 draft choice next year.
Halas alao ......,cod that
delenalve tackle John JohDaon
and ollenslve back Gerr)'• I.Yie
(Jdt camp.

The Dallas Cowboys revealed
they have lured place kicker
Mike Clark oot of retirement.
Clark, who Hid he waa
quitting aa a pla.yer last week

veteran of the Chicago Bears, while

announced his retirement
aa a player last weell, may be
lured back to the playing field It
the Bears can swing a deal with
the New Orleans Solnts.
Petltbon, who piii,Yed his

who

RutlaDd and McArthur ad- win. He OUowed but one Addaville
vanced In tho Kypr Creek Utile hit - a third Inning double by
League basebell tournament M. French.
TUeoday evening.
WhltUngton had a triple a n d
Rut11J11 slammed the AddavUie two RBis for the winners. R. HatSil-o 13-3 In the llrot pme. field had a double andtwoiii!Wies
The McArthur Morehantl, behind and foor RBia. T. Sheets was
the no-hit, no-run hurling of Mike charged with the loss.
Ratzlaff, blanked the llf.ooon TlK. Comp hiD'led three lnnlngs
gers J..() lnanold-faohlonedpitch- and R. Lambert three !orthe'Maers dueL
aon Ttsoro. Both allowed but two
This evening, the Gllllpolls McArthur hila - they came ofl
White Sox battle the Gllllpoil&amp; Lambert In the ·tilth and sixth
Red Sox at 7 p. m. The Middle- rliDg&amp; Both flnned14Merc1111nlll,
port Rediegs battle the PL Pl.,.._ but 11 was all In a losll~ cause

college bell at Tulane and baa
bualneao lntereats In New

"'" &amp;

a

metmer

ol

tbe

Pittsburgh Steelen, agreed ·to
term• wltb the CowboY•, who
ac~lred the rtgbta to the
former Texas A &amp; M pl.,ar In
exchange for a hlilh draft
choice.

z..,.. ...,••,. PriSHts

PICKUP TRUCK
COVERS

SIZES TO FIT ANY MODEL PICKUP

Prices Start At S203

"to

: ON DISPLAY AT

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN
MATERIALS COMPANY

your dollar buys MILES more ·

Saturday.

I SALE

TIRES

clutch

• ·P

t J.'

., '._,.
·hi '
;

inl· you

PU'ellli unlell 11101 make 11111111'&lt;1·'I
thin p dl.wt.rul bulintia 'II-&lt;

plans to devote his time to a
theatrical career In addition to
promoting peace among the
races. started With Giants
Grier' a third round draft
choice of the New York Giants
1n 1955 after attending Penn
pi
Slate, played on live Eastern
:'~r, 36, a participant In the . Conference championship teams
clv11 rights movement, said he with New York and twice was
selected to pla,y in the pro buwl.
· He was traded to tile Rams In
1963.
The Rams, who w111 fill the
vacancy left by Grier with 6tOot.&lt;;, 300 pound Roger Brown,
held a two and a half hour
scrimmage Tuesdl,y against tile
San Diego Chargers of the
American Football League.
Rlcble Petltbon, the nine-year

Tuesdl,y after 12 seasons In the
National, Football League
Grier was sidelined ior the
,mire 1967 season with a
"'ptured sc'!"les . tendoo and
w11en the •lllurf failed to
____.. to treatment, be
re...,..~
de&lt;lded to can It Qllts as a

ao tho McArthur lads pushed
across one run In the llfth Innflw, and held on for 1 1..() win.
K. Barber opened the fifth with
a alngle, and scored later In the
weather."
Inning. Kim Ward had the other
In Tuesday'• ftnt game, the Merchant hit, also a single.
Rutlllll Reds smaahedAddaviUe,
Mike Ratzlaa hurled a no13-3 In a game called alter three hit, nc&gt;-run game, fanning 14 Tl·
.and me-half innlllll• becauae of prs in the six-inning hotUe. He
Flab !or Fertilizer
the J!J..run lead rule.
hit one batter, walked six, and the
The most important fisb In
The winner• had 1o hits. c. Merchants made one error·
the United States is not ""'-"· . Whlttlngton'Waa credlioll withllle ·• · ··~"
It is tbe menb¥en, of ~IJ!cll- ·,
,
.• . ·
, . f !,
oYer 1.5 bUIIon pounclli are
'
•
• ·· .,.; I!" ' 'LATE HOUR SALE
caught eaeb year aad used
Sc:ores
· Two, Late
. ·· · For the convenience of those
primarily for ou and tertillzer, aCcording to the Enwho canDOt purchase their recyeiopaedla Britannica. .
Syracuse scored two runs In serve seat .tickets for the 1968
the last Inning to defeat Ra&lt;lne Meigs Marauder football season
7-6 at the Syracuoe Municipal during the day, James Diehl wUJ
Park Tuesdl,y eveniJW,
be in his omce at Middleport
Kelly Winebrenner, the win- High SChool on Friday, July 26,
nf1w pitcher, allowed.throe hits, from 6 to 8 p. m. This sale Is
A gaiyJ.nlzed steel utility pickup truck co1fe!', Protect your
struck out sewn and walked two. for last season ticket holders
cargo
. or workmen an:l use for vacations, weekend llshbw
!Utters lor Syracuse were Kelly only, Ticket&amp; wW go on sale to
cago 1100 1100 1100. But he says ~ with a triple with the the pnerei public on Allgust 1.
or hunting trips.
he has an Idea that may help
blaes loaded, Greg Cundiff, two
his luck.
alftgies,· and Brian Hamilton, •
"I plan/' he states solemn· ai$ Syracuse ls nmr 9-lover..
Brautl1ul Book
Iy
stert takiDf extra batThe Irish "Book of Kells,"
ting practice. I'm frying to get all far the season
containing
the four Gospels,
better at bunting and I even
was
written
and drawn by
bit a home run last year and
GIUDDERS' NOTICE
A.D.
7110 and conhand
about
one lhla year. 1\faybe if ,1
C.Och Barnette, bead football tains many beautiful decoracould hlt a couple mare ...
coach at WahlmtHighSchoo~an­ tions. Many people consider
'
nouncod today that boyslngradea it the most beautiful book in
9 lhrouah 12 Interested In play- the world.
NATIONALS ENTRIES
Cllm'NITI' HILL, Mus. llw football this fall aretoreport
Thursdl,y, July 25, at 7:30 p. m.
(IJ~ American Marl1 RiolMASON, W. VA.
at
the 11)'111. The buys wUI be given
aen, Herb FltsGlbboll, and Tom
Edlef1011, ail of whom oj:OI'ed · their physical slips and their paronto permi88lon •lips at this
...a Ylctortea at Wimbledlln, time.
llavo enterad the field for the
U.S. National• to be held Aug.
IS.:5.
. CONTINUE SALE
The tournament, wlllch wUI
The Racine Pee Woo and Litllavt more than 300 competitor• tle Lea&amp;Ues wUI C&lt;Jnlinue the
'fin~ for allllle• and doubles rummage sale.on Friday and Sattltiea, wtU be held at the urday from 9 to 4 p. m. In the
whAr•
Longwood Cricket Club.
Sbq&gt;son buUdlns next to t h e
Snack and Chat Restaurant In
· Racine. A bake sale will tie hold

lo·nt;lt : : !_Pra&lt;tlcal, ~!~:
, , , rl''r IY8170nlt --r•oo •

tiiHI nervoua cbUcli'en, :\
if thi'a murilat huna ~- ,
..all it ' t be ''boot" for rour
' ..
r·~

Rat~laff Hurls

So Golden for Fergie

I'll ·~ure 11f1D8 'that up at nut
Fergie Ia feeiillg it rnueh
ye&amp;f'a. cclirttai:t ·.nel191iallons, more tl)e" days W,hea he
&amp;tilaily, t:vo felt goocl? aU idob to the ieoreboatd ill the
year. I could have comp~ted .late inillftga and ae,es: Chi·
the games I've loll. Leo'a
DeVOl' ..Pull'~
.
t : did~'t
think ;1 shoUld
II be
'
·thinks I'm
Flehl!ier,
Wooten
come out to

·""
kilo!!•
We're
·

·' ·

The
for

UIIIjlll.

wlmtna

f Cbicqo 3, 10 lma., nl&amp;lll

·.

·

way:' "1'. Jenklna:, ·~~able strain."

bq:· her enpaement to" IIIOihar

Cllq.Dl!EN ·
Dear,..
..,

1M

the fact he's been keeping his
ERA well below last year's.
· Ferlde has had only 51 runs
scored against him In the first
half of the season. But the
Cubs had only ilcored 51 for
him. Six times hls teammates
faUed to score and four times
ha lost, 1_-!l,_ _
The Cuba suffered only six
shutouts aU last&gt; season but
have been biankou·lbree tlmea
that many lhla year. ' TII8
Year of the Pltcber Is working
in reveroe for Fergie JenkinS.
. Manager Leo Duroeber says
Jenkins baa been quite eHec·
live and considers those four
1.0 games as wills for Fergie,
",I'm. glad be feels "'at

~~ matleraalongbyann6omct•

1111 I!Jtliliierll- THREE GROWN

-·

"'are

~pse Eggs Not

Well,' Dad' a - Ia milT
bla llft. He 1111 be'll live·lip
Mar1i7D. thtJutll he IIIII lhlnka
ho ... jullllfl4d, 1'ociil Marli,yD

ah8•u be oa1eo up wtlh IOI!illfl.
WIIJart her iovtiY home and her
C011J1r7 eiub IDd wi\Oea• rroupa,
elc. lbe'll bo lOot,
Howemwemskeher- ·
ll'a· boot tor ....,...,. if 11!01

gr.... Blll8alo.
lllR be
•8•1115 p. ID. lnat to the Clilcinnsll
at .Jial. • AQairl Ia lllllfarlrw frGm •
. 8p. m.
llldn' ID!eetlcitt that IIIII
"bep him out of the /IUD for
[Deirott at .Waohiii81DD. nl&amp;lll
four or IIYO -ka," acoordlna
pmt ochedlllod.
to Coach Paul llrolm.
"I'm ju8l afraid that's It for
National Lea&amp;ue
BUI," Hid Brotm.
W, L, Pel. GB
The - • !aeoa at the trainLoula , 1 ••. 63 84 .648
inl camp Tuesdl,y wore Rablilo
[ ;All... " " .. so 46 .521 12'h Wllllanto, a 21$.plund l'lllllliDI
Clnclmatl ...•47 45 .511 13'h back who the Bengala claimed
' Fran ..•• 49 48 .505 14
from the San Diego Chlraara,
.
. .48 47 ,495 15
and Dan Archer, a 250.pound of.
• ' ' .• 48 50 .590 15'1.1 leoatvo tackle who boa been on
• , . •f1 D ,f15 17
• two • wtek loul' of ~ wtth
•• ' .45 110 .474 17
the Army Reilet'Yea.
... t4 53 .454 11
WUllanta 18 a rookie from the
' ' .... c 56 .429 21'h UnlveriiQ&gt; of Houston. Archer
'J'Uisdl,y'a Resulta
had one year profeaalonal sertiew ..york 2 Atlanta 1, Diibl Yice II Oakland. He wao a ll'adu·
~ 1 Pilla 8, 12 ima., nlahl ate of Oregon.
If Loula i1 Pldla 5, nllht

"*'

11011.

inlla her triUIIIjlll, liben 8&lt;1ualiY

.,

'
.
6
Unl•arllll. ~
ft. ·e:ds Win 7•·

.

would omear Dad' a name 10 badlY he'd looe hla aeeutiYO poal-

wanla rev ..... She thlnka lht'U
be ·bam' HYing alone and lllorY·

......

Infection

~"Seertt

way.

THE GLDBAL VIEW

Aiide'rs" Has .
8evere Skin
· .

Dollars and 'Doughboys

Taking a Better View

· Marla Sj:OI'ea Ft!W'
·Roser Marla colleclecl three
blto and drove in loUr nms to
lead • 14-ldt auack .. the Carda
drubbed the Pblla. Orlando
eep8d. collected two blta,
IICOI'ed three runa and knOcked
in ....
Tony Perez alngle, hla !Ifill
bit, acorad Leo llf.oy to otart a

lillling ,rallY

Grier Retires, Will Promote Peace~

to

could not hope to survive, either with their

California and M!MeliOI.a 11111t a
bblol)eader by Identical 3-1
acore• with the Anpla taking
the lljiatt!'. Dt!ll'alt Odpd
Walhlnilton M, Baltimore out-

lasted o"~land 8-4, Booton
New York 4-1 and the
·Kr-1 Ia tlll'tal4lllnl to thrwah au thooe loooea with the 'i'otlre.
.
old Meta who were a b&amp;Mball Oakland-Cbl- game ...
' KriiiOPOD.l bfa .amoonced that joke, lnaloto be ~ 10 lhrouah rained oyt.
U tho Meta don't Proteet ]ilm in It apln if the Meta don't keep
tlie _.a1on draft and he's ldm.
.
. picked by an _.alon IAIIIII,
"I don't 'hill to start off With
·
·... ,
• . he'll cadi the pme. ·
~ ""l'l'laion club 111141 liD
"No, I ..r.Ni.t ' do tho ~·~~entlr. thouah; KrilleP!JOI IIIOiher II,.. 1eara ioalng.
rito _ _
deonl.. o~ loomel
hoi ~IY acidtd he 11101 ~ Winning Ia lltn. rm getdns to
8 STU CAMEN
ttJahl
to meilap with btaebOU, He like ~ can you lm•llno me
Y
wrtle
Dlaht
hal raised bia avarap . from piJ,ylnf .on a team like the old
F_!l~.~:m rd of pro
t Bootmt· 1, Dlaht .
·
.
,
,183 last IIIDtltll .1&lt;1 .259. Alld he Meta apln?''
II'GIIOY'a Pt'llbobijo ·Pllcbera
eontlnlled fda reclllll .,.P irllh - EIMwbere ill tile · National football· to the world of
, All Tbiloa . EDT ·
Tllosdl,y tdibt 111141 Ron Lea&amp;ue, Clilelnnltl ediOd Plt- promoting peace IIIIDillt the
1 racoa.
(Ellls' 7-6) at Min- .
Siocboda a 1o .... tiburlh 7-4, 111 12 ~nn~n~a.
n.at'a the task facing mam9 'P. II!the New York Meta and .1om , Franelaco nipped Cblcaso 44111
· a:&amp;') .a t lliw· ·
iioavar a 2-1 Ylctor)&gt; ovar ·tho 10 lnnini• and Loa Angeles moth Roosevo[t Crier, the 684
foot..\ 287 pound defenalve
All- Bn....
,
....... Houston a-1.
tackle of the Loa Angeles Rams
who amounced hlo retirement
WILIIINGtON, Ohio (IJPI) - •
,
BU1 Altlltra, a former 01110
. .
.
e

to

to

1!1 Vri'O SI'ELUNO
Tho Al!uia lOll, · coinblned
ul'i ~· Writer .
with· tho St.. Laals' U-l5 frolic
• u you 'cllm't think biHball · over Pbiladeipb{~ left the Cll'dl
' '·-aild . baaeblll pl.,ara hal!• 12'11 ~· · ~ ill , U..
· cbiupd, take the caoe ill Eddie National ~e ...,.,,...
KrlnepoOI.
Llkta Wlnnins
. . At the riPt old ap of n,
Kr~. who • uff er • d

r
In tile Americltl Lea&amp;Ue,

'

.
pf the Gila monster,
· ~; ls u pc)tent
. , ,~e rattleanskea.

•

�•

••

··~ ~·

, •

\

"'!:.._

••. l, .

r

..·

Nip ·Brave~, 2-1, I(r,anepOOl.· ..

T~~, '"' ,:~ole'
~.f U.S . .;,~ Czdc:h
Squabble
,
.
.

,

. r~~ '~luallon 1!1 C~hos.loy~kla is as
Not OIIIY that, but 'tbe breach wolilcl till·
(r~lllllt 'w!th .uneertainties lor •lite Russians
dc\u~, widen to lllciude Romania whlCb
as lt is Jor !he ~echo~lovakians. For both
t.s restive in it.s own right and Is givllli mOI,'al
cow!tri~s. much !S at stake. Fqr both, wropg
' supPOrt to llil! C!ecbs, and go on from tJw;e •.
moves ~r prectpitate overreactions could· set
; Nothing 1s more cerllln than !bat lerievents m mollon that could mak,e the Hun~lenninaUon and democraey ·will 0110 day
gartan Revolution l~k like a minor discome the nations of Eaatem Euiope ..Time
agreement between friends .
. and the tide iif human affain are on tile aide
There is no chanee at this juncture, how- · of thooe who love freedom.
ever, that the Soviets will resort to armed
The Unlled States can do two tlllnJ!a to
force to bring their maverick satellite back
hasten !bat day-keep Its bOSe out ol the
Into a closer orblt~not unless the Czechs are
Czecho-Russian squabble, and continue PIU'·
rash enough to \rY hurry the departure of
suing every avenue that can lead detente
lingering R~ Army units Iii the point of
with Russia.
b~yonet .or proceed ~; quickly ~nd too ,tar
For the more lhal .tensioas and suajileiODI
With !herr program of democratization.
are relaxed between the United States and
But the Czechs have too much to lose to
the U.S.S.R., the less reason the Russian
push the issue to a military shoWdown they
bear wiU have to unsheath her claws when

v 11

one of her cubs wanders away.

lives or with whatever gains toward freedom
they have already made.
Czechoslovakia, 1968, is not Hungary, 1956.
The Hungarian Revolution was a popular upriling not only against Russian overlordslup
but against communism itself. So far, though
II has the enthusiastic support of the people,
what is happening in Czechoslovakia is a
palace reformation within the party, not
against it.

As the Good Book notes, where there is no
vision, the people perish, and it is heartening
to learn that somebody is doing something
about it.
The Chemical Specialties Manufacturers
Association reports that there was an 84.83

Yet Russia's vital interests are also at

per cent increase in the production of windshield washer concentrate in consumer-sized
packages in 1967.
The total was 14,203,141 packages, a far
cry from the measly 49.872 produced in 1961.

stake. Sbouid "democratization" get out of
hand, should it begin leading to real democracy with the creation of a multiparty system, sbould Czechoslovakia begin turning Its
face toward the West, Russia would be left
with a gaping hole in the string of buffer
states protecting ito western boundary-a
hole through which not only troops but ideas
could march.

Traffic accidents haven't gone down. but
at least more people are getting a better view
of the car that runs into them on the high·

We mwt preumt the rile of anr prona•nced d • gr • e of intilllocy bctwem
French ofllcerr and black of/il!or! ... We
mwt nat eat ODith them, mwt not ahake

. ··'.. ...

''

~

ha1lda ...

laformalloa Coaeeruillc Blaek
Tnopa," killed by U.S. Army ill lt18.

Deteriorating social and economic conditi0118 ·
in the South, a labor shortage ill the North
caused by ·a fall-off' in European Immigration
after the start of World War I, an Industrial
boom BB America turned lt.self IIIIo the arsenal
of democracy-all these conspired to set ol a
great exocllis of Negroes from the land In the
second decade of the 20th century.
The North reacted with a poUcy of contain-

(
'•
...

'

"

~T; lllrlelll ~IIIMM ' ' ', ;~;
-

'

'

•

• u lt)

. 1:1

~:,;;t

, , .. ,
. '

Helen Help.:

"A Jug of Wine and Thou!"
'

uSe••

ACold Look at Humphrey's
'Thaw' in Soviet Relations

t f:b..!..

nothing?

,,,' l.llf ·.t!m•.-,Mlf~-4-M,,
' 01' """•m!'!j tht· more Dad CQI• ·
. .e.ffi;~- 'Oil bual)iO~. W 7

to

on

mamtaill

~~ PHIL

cold chicken is fine to take
•

PASTORET

on a picnie, urifelil sbe hap.
pens to be your 'date.

• • •

Nu, Qwendo!yn, yuu

• •
wolf says that

rum't

go

to a

Japa~se

r«rstfaurant t11 get lroratP

chop•.

~·

"

She bso never been w11at you'd
ceil a lovin8 wife. Oh, ahe'adolle
her duty by Dad, and llle raised
three klda well, but.ahewa111101:e
interested In keeping a perfect
house than enJoying us, We don't
blame her lor thio - It's jullt
her WI!'.

Timely Quotes

Thoughts
QUICK . QUIZ

We intend to double and redouble our efforts to flood
the Congress with mail. We
simply believe !bat the people
can reach their elected reprosenlatives in Washington and
make them listen.
-Former aatronaut John
Glenn, on vroponentl of
gun control legiSlation.

11 is not enough to say,
"When I was your age . . ."
We were never their age.
Television has given the mod·
em student an awareness,
' perhaps an excessive aware-

Hatlo's

Q-Who oriQIIIGted t II e
"Whil!h of you canvict.s me proctil!e
of unng tlie Bible ill
of sin? If I tell the truth, IDhy admlngterillg
an oathr
do vou not believe me?"A-The great ByzaniiDe
emperor, TUIIlnlan, in 532,
The best answer to a false who took the oath with a book
idea is the trulb.-Richard 14. of the Golpeia in bl8 ·band.
Nixon, fonner U.S. vice pres!·
Q-Who ~ f/le first leto
dent.
appointed to t h e U.S. Supreme Courtr
.
A-Loula D. Brandeis, ap.
ness, of the world around pointed ill 1916 by President
Woodrow WUaon. .
him.
-Robert H. Shaffer, dean of
Q-What dotl tlie """nk"
&amp;ludentl at Indiana Univer- mean ill "fnmld!u:ense1;r- ·.
sity, an 1tudent unrest.
A-U meana free or pure.

John 8:46.

• • •

Time

®

,~r

.~ ...~

t·

lavelllln~:tt,-· ''".' ·• '
The first steamship ~
its ttiarrurt 'In L · ~
THili city beCa~ 1r0ik11f
sUlfcap!lal after the m~
·tree wu'lntroduc&lt;d.; -lacq~
iil~eJ!Ied his 1o'O n;t l
Al\l~re wprked 011 ljl8 Ia .
of e!ectrodynamlc• .lba~ Jell ,
modem great li)'llfOOlectri •
.works; and the brOIIien ~
tete experlmen~ . w 1·1II ~
movie camera.
I :
.

'*'i

.

trcdlie, let Helm help YOU,
!lie IIIII allo welcome10111' OWl!
Dear Helen:
amusbq:
txperl...oo, Addreas
Will you pleaoe help us eoo- Hel.., Bottel
in '•ar• of thia
vince our mother that lfJOU can't
have cream, milk Ia better than nowapaper.

~tate

1 The'I!Miel'is, of course, that t'revolutionilry w"'s of liberallon''-the subilei'IIOII' ofllltfltee W'orl~rei!Iains' ljle mtemost '
objective of Marxist-Leninists, whether they are pro-Russian
or pro-Chinese.
·
Nevertheless, it would be unrealistic-even a serious error
-to ignore the fact that since Stalin's death in 1.953 the Red
world has been reacting to severe strains.
Soviet leaders repeatedly have revised their foreign policyveer between "hard" and "soft" policies-and '""!pone the
"inevitable" showdown with the West.
.
, Things do change, however slowly and tortuously. Two
decades ago, as Humphrey said in his statement
foreign
policy, the Uniled states faced "an aggressive and highly
centralized Communist bloc."
Today, Red Russia and Red China are engaged In ~ bitter
· conflict. With Romania, Yugoslavia and Czechoslovilia increasingly critical of Ru.ssia while seeking closer ties to the
West, the Communist countries no longer pose a monolithic
· threat.
Tbe Kremlin leaders are painfully aware of this. They no
·longer can rely on their East European oateUijes. And China
1,
· is an overt enemy.
The Russians now look for results wherever they ean get
them, choosing their methods on strictly pragmatic rather
than ideologically tidy lines.
.
i
For the present it is in their interest to ignore Fidel Castro's
protest.s and seek to expand trade with Latin America,
For the present, too-until they have resolved the conflicts
Ill the Red world-they also want to
the, stetus quo
ID West Europe, at least a truce In the Middle Eaa~ and the
reopenillg of the Suez Canal.
Tbe obvious reason for Moscow's unusually co-operative
altitude toward the American-Soviet nuclear nonprollleratlon
treaty is to restrain West Gennany from becoming an •tomlc
power far as long as possible.
·
The treaty, hailed by optimiata as a milestone iD AmericanSoviet relations, is also Moscow's excuse for denying the East
European ssteUites nuclear energy even for peaceful purposes.
, I
This e~iains wby Romania, iD an unprecedented diplomatic.
-r
move, decided to sign an agreement with the United states.'
for expanded co-operation In technology, science and iDdUJtry. .
The Kremlin's compromise on the nonproliferation treaty
and the current peace moves In the Middle East are another
indication that coe:Pstence wlU be backed by diplomatic action
whenever Moscow finds it advisable. It is even conceivable
that the Russians will continue to aid North VIetnam and the
Viet Cong only as long as this policy appears to be producing
diplomatic gains.
This is, after aU, what foreign policy is aU about. The
foreign policy of any country is Si!DViY concerned with the
espansion of its power, influence and strateglc posture.
&gt;11 the Wesl is to outwit the Russians in the complex diplo·
matlc game, it will have to be better at playing its cards, or
aimpiy hold a better hand, and not to confront the Communists
with unacceptable alternatives-peaceful coexistence or limited revolutionary wars.
·
The Communists remain Communists. They will always be
ready to exploit any weakness or opportunities in the nonCemmunist world.
, ., · But a policy to ease.East-West tensions m~t not necessarily
' ' be based on Western 1deas of how the Kremlin should behave.

BARBS

,

A PRACTICAL ARRANGEMENT

NEW YORK (NEA)
Vice President Humphrey, who was once a firm supporter
ol Communist "containment," now advocates a policy of "re·
coneiliation" in East-West relations.
Since he aspires to be the next president of the United States
this dramatic change in Humphrey's views requires careful
consideration.
Is the time ripe for a "thaw" in the relations between the
United States and Soviet Russia? Are the Communists, in
view of their long record of duplicity and subversion, more
trustworthy today than they were two decades ago when the

~~~e~t~~ent !'.~ ..~!'~~- inf~g_ura.ted

·&lt;" •

By Helen Bottel

By LEON DENNEN
NEA Foreign News Analyst

.~

.

'

t·. (. ' (
' }i~ •. ..-. .•·
''

'

'

~ '"

'""

'·.:THE CIQCTQR .BAVJI
\" •!,, -·'• ·•
r

•.

~P

'; Even Minute,Symptonts ,.·.,

,Aid Doctor's J&gt;iagnosi~ , ·~
.

. 1 ~· . '

'

.. ......

a, WAYNE G. IRAHPSTAOT, _t.,l.D.,, · · .

· he alwa,fs bad time lor .. ........, ·
we were home. 'l1loullh theN a
wasn't rnucb - - the"1, I
think he was true to her. 1bat
lo, unW about throe yean ..,.
Then be met Marilyn, who I hate to 1111: tt - waa ·ali our
mothl!l'. wasn;~ and he !eli for
bOl'.
He seos ber about onet a
week, but he doesn't want to
bresk up hla marrtaso of 28
yeara. IUe atlllude, Ia, ''WilY
nat"/ My wife doeiD't want me;
MariiJ'II doea, wtthno strings at..
tacbod. Ill return for my name,
evl!l7lhlna abe wanta, pius )IDOl!
aoclei lllancllng, my wife shOuld
live me time off to be a man.~
'
Whoil Mother
found . out, abe
lo!&gt;k to her bed with a threatened
nervoua breakdown wlllcb oldn't
come off. '111en llle announced
llbe waa 1J101t1n1 a divorce and

8.f,

ADPt•• 3 Houston 1; nlahl

.

, 'l'ollq'l! Prd&gt;able Pltcbero

·Ail Times EDT
· int..rnallanal League Standli!p
· Qdcaso (Holtzman 5~7) at Son BY United Proao International
Franclaoo (Parry 8.8), f p.m.
W, L. Pel. GB
.~ (Lemattar 8-10) 11 Toledo . . . • , 53 44 .558
L4ll Anlotea (Jlryadalo 12~, 8 ..-........ , .47 55 .511 3'h
p.m.
·
· Jacksonville ... 47 f6 .505 4
PtdladelPilla (L. Jackaon 9·11) Rochester •• , •• 48 47 .505 4
a1 St. Louis (Wallhburn ~. 8 Columbua ••.•• 45 45 .500 4¥1 ·
p.m.
,
Loulovlllo ..... 47 f8 .495 5
Cincinnati (Nolan 4.:) at Pitts- Buffalo .• , . , , .46 49 .484 6
burlh (,MODH 4-8), 8:05 p.m. Rlchmood .• , •. 43 52 ,453 t
, NtW YOrk' (R,yan 64), Ill AtTuosdl,y's R~!91~s
"

.

·

Pfl'TSBURGH (IJPI) bala wore reall,r -"&gt;'
tho Cinclmatl Rods and
bits melllll a hard-lought

·

to key a lhreo~
rally in tho third, and aolo hom-

the

ari by Mack Jonaa and Perez.
El~ Face, the alxtb ol
seven PlltiiMJrah Jlllehoro, waa
tile victim or the Redo' wtmlni
rally,
Gen,. Arri&amp;O, fourth ClnciDnstl lwrlor, ~ved the win aa·
he chalked up bla e1xth triumph
of tho oeaom.
Gary Nolin, 4-2, was to burl
tonlahl' a pme and hla oppon.
ont wao t&lt;i be Bob Moooe, who
IJIOrll • 4-4 mark.

tri-

Tho Reds halnmerod out 20
bits, inclUding five by Tony
Perez, to """' a three-pme
Ptttaburah wlminl streak TUel·
day nltlbt.
Tho Ylctory, holrevor, took 12
laniDI• aa tho Roda edpd tho
determined Pirates, 7-4.
'It waa Perez' fifth hlt of tile
pme that scored Lee llll,)i
from third to start a l1lo-&lt;un
12th lmlni rally. The Ylctoey
otretcbsd tllo Rads' win atreak
to five atralaht.
What turned out
be the

to

I'Wlt

hoW&amp;Yer.

was

I&lt;OI'ed b,y Tommy Helma aa he
alnilod, driving in Jllilan:J

Bench.
The Plratea made II clo'" in
thltr half of tho 12th when
Maury WUls walked, IV&gt;le oecond, advOIICed to thlld on a
bunt and tllea scampered homo
on WUIIe lilarpll's oecrtflce

flY.

Pinch Hamer Hurta
Plttsburah sent the pme Into overtime when •
tied tile
aoou 5-15 in tile ninth alter one
wao out as 11111 Vlrdon pounded
'f.'~~.!O~-~~' P:~:. !lYr~) ~ho~~
a' 'JIIncb hit" bomtr'' ,wl~ JOse
-~Atlanta Ollli
'
·
Rochester 12· Syracu10 4 (2nd) Papn on tho pallia. Papn had
.
'
Plttllbui'ah, nJahl Toledo 8l!ul!alo 6
walked.
Ill St. Loula, nlahl Loolovllle 1 Columbus 0
Olhar big blta !or the Rods
scheduled
Rlcbmood 8 JackaonvDle 3
in the pme
Vada Pin-

3

IIWI.

an loiotliar •• -rmillod. Slle

,. ' . : ':fo.

.' 0 I , I · -•. /

I .

:: (•

.

'

I (!a\:

om'a triple

•••

Pitcher Protection
1

Would you believe the Bal·
tlmore Orioles are bel n g
babledt When a reporter vislied the Florida training
camp, be found the trainer
biiSY ordering gallons ol baby
oil. His questioo brought the
reaponse, "to protect the ·
pitchers against wind or raw

two-nm 12tll

Ilia!'

'
like hlo' liltll

'!II'

qaln~{

.
gave Cineimatl the win liVer dtleets.
. Cl~dt 0~
Plttabur~. Tommy ~ms fGJ.
iowed Perez• slnl!le with IIIOih· oeven,bltter

••lh•

er single,

. .,..

WUlla lllcCove,y'a lourlh 1\lt,

llalilltM. Bob

ror the DodPra'

bla :Utb homer .'in •1¥ 10tb idldh lniltna off
lnnln&amp; pve Son Franci&amp;OII the CuellOI'.
triumph over Cldcaso.• ~
Marlchal pltohed a five-hitter to

,.

year we'd be pusbins for first
again."
The 6-5, 24-year-old righthandar is a resident of South
Chatham, Ontario. Fergie Is
the easy-going type who
doesn't mope around because
of hla bad luck. In the loeker
room he ca!IJ himself Super
Canadian. During the off-seaspa he plays for the Globe·
trotten. He finds less presaure iD basketball.
14
lD. baaketball, 11 be says,
"one guy aeidom bas to carry
the wbole teani, although a
player must be sound every
day. A pitcher, however, con·
trois the game for the most
part and feels more individual

•• ,i(;,,A

~~m-·(
,.

~·

,

"Y

mGiiter to \011111::1

. . ...,....... boreN
T he c111't

No-Hitter

Rutland, McArthur

Post Tourney Wins

ant Fruth's Pharmacy at 8,3o,
Thursdl,y, PL Pleasant CIQ&gt; Ice
and Fuel meeta the Syracuae Gl·
anto at 7, and Middleport' 1 yank·
oes battle PL Pleasant's Sleel·
workers at 8:30.

'!~oan.;; S::!~to"';!::":~~ ,
could be traded to the Saints.
seek Oraft Choice
-•~ ~.....:.- He
Boars Pre-~ .._••• the.
·-••
deal for
las, Jr., a
veteran afenalve aafellmal!
could be made. All the Boarforl
would wont In . exchange
Petitbon would be the Salnla'
No. 1 draft choice next year.
Halas alao ......,cod that
delenalve tackle John JohDaon
and ollenslve back Gerr)'• I.Yie
(Jdt camp.

The Dallas Cowboys revealed
they have lured place kicker
Mike Clark oot of retirement.
Clark, who Hid he waa
quitting aa a pla.yer last week

veteran of the Chicago Bears, while

announced his retirement
aa a player last weell, may be
lured back to the playing field It
the Bears can swing a deal with
the New Orleans Solnts.
Petltbon, who piii,Yed his

who

RutlaDd and McArthur ad- win. He OUowed but one Addaville
vanced In tho Kypr Creek Utile hit - a third Inning double by
League basebell tournament M. French.
TUeoday evening.
WhltUngton had a triple a n d
Rut11J11 slammed the AddavUie two RBis for the winners. R. HatSil-o 13-3 In the llrot pme. field had a double andtwoiii!Wies
The McArthur Morehantl, behind and foor RBia. T. Sheets was
the no-hit, no-run hurling of Mike charged with the loss.
Ratzlaff, blanked the llf.ooon TlK. Comp hiD'led three lnnlngs
gers J..() lnanold-faohlonedpitch- and R. Lambert three !orthe'Maers dueL
aon Ttsoro. Both allowed but two
This evening, the Gllllpolls McArthur hila - they came ofl
White Sox battle the Gllllpoil&amp; Lambert In the ·tilth and sixth
Red Sox at 7 p. m. The Middle- rliDg&amp; Both flnned14Merc1111nlll,
port Rediegs battle the PL Pl.,.._ but 11 was all In a losll~ cause

college bell at Tulane and baa
bualneao lntereats In New

"'" &amp;

a

metmer

ol

tbe

Pittsburgh Steelen, agreed ·to
term• wltb the CowboY•, who
ac~lred the rtgbta to the
former Texas A &amp; M pl.,ar In
exchange for a hlilh draft
choice.

z..,.. ...,••,. PriSHts

PICKUP TRUCK
COVERS

SIZES TO FIT ANY MODEL PICKUP

Prices Start At S203

"to

: ON DISPLAY AT

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN
MATERIALS COMPANY

your dollar buys MILES more ·

Saturday.

I SALE

TIRES

clutch

• ·P

t J.'

., '._,.
·hi '
;

inl· you

PU'ellli unlell 11101 make 11111111'&lt;1·'I
thin p dl.wt.rul bulintia 'II-&lt;

plans to devote his time to a
theatrical career In addition to
promoting peace among the
races. started With Giants
Grier' a third round draft
choice of the New York Giants
1n 1955 after attending Penn
pi
Slate, played on live Eastern
:'~r, 36, a participant In the . Conference championship teams
clv11 rights movement, said he with New York and twice was
selected to pla,y in the pro buwl.
· He was traded to tile Rams In
1963.
The Rams, who w111 fill the
vacancy left by Grier with 6tOot.&lt;;, 300 pound Roger Brown,
held a two and a half hour
scrimmage Tuesdl,y against tile
San Diego Chargers of the
American Football League.
Rlcble Petltbon, the nine-year

Tuesdl,y after 12 seasons In the
National, Football League
Grier was sidelined ior the
,mire 1967 season with a
"'ptured sc'!"les . tendoo and
w11en the •lllurf failed to
____.. to treatment, be
re...,..~
de&lt;lded to can It Qllts as a

ao tho McArthur lads pushed
across one run In the llfth Innflw, and held on for 1 1..() win.
K. Barber opened the fifth with
a alngle, and scored later In the
weather."
Inning. Kim Ward had the other
In Tuesday'• ftnt game, the Merchant hit, also a single.
Rutlllll Reds smaahedAddaviUe,
Mike Ratzlaa hurled a no13-3 In a game called alter three hit, nc&gt;-run game, fanning 14 Tl·
.and me-half innlllll• becauae of prs in the six-inning hotUe. He
Flab !or Fertilizer
the J!J..run lead rule.
hit one batter, walked six, and the
The most important fisb In
The winner• had 1o hits. c. Merchants made one error·
the United States is not ""'-"· . Whlttlngton'Waa credlioll withllle ·• · ··~"
It is tbe menb¥en, of ~IJ!cll- ·,
,
.• . ·
, . f !,
oYer 1.5 bUIIon pounclli are
'
•
• ·· .,.; I!" ' 'LATE HOUR SALE
caught eaeb year aad used
Sc:ores
· Two, Late
. ·· · For the convenience of those
primarily for ou and tertillzer, aCcording to the Enwho canDOt purchase their recyeiopaedla Britannica. .
Syracuse scored two runs In serve seat .tickets for the 1968
the last Inning to defeat Ra&lt;lne Meigs Marauder football season
7-6 at the Syracuoe Municipal during the day, James Diehl wUJ
Park Tuesdl,y eveniJW,
be in his omce at Middleport
Kelly Winebrenner, the win- High SChool on Friday, July 26,
nf1w pitcher, allowed.throe hits, from 6 to 8 p. m. This sale Is
A gaiyJ.nlzed steel utility pickup truck co1fe!', Protect your
struck out sewn and walked two. for last season ticket holders
cargo
. or workmen an:l use for vacations, weekend llshbw
!Utters lor Syracuse were Kelly only, Ticket&amp; wW go on sale to
cago 1100 1100 1100. But he says ~ with a triple with the the pnerei public on Allgust 1.
or hunting trips.
he has an Idea that may help
blaes loaded, Greg Cundiff, two
his luck.
alftgies,· and Brian Hamilton, •
"I plan/' he states solemn· ai$ Syracuse ls nmr 9-lover..
Brautl1ul Book
Iy
stert takiDf extra batThe Irish "Book of Kells,"
ting practice. I'm frying to get all far the season
containing
the four Gospels,
better at bunting and I even
was
written
and drawn by
bit a home run last year and
GIUDDERS' NOTICE
A.D.
7110 and conhand
about
one lhla year. 1\faybe if ,1
C.Och Barnette, bead football tains many beautiful decoracould hlt a couple mare ...
coach at WahlmtHighSchoo~an­ tions. Many people consider
'
nouncod today that boyslngradea it the most beautiful book in
9 lhrouah 12 Interested In play- the world.
NATIONALS ENTRIES
Cllm'NITI' HILL, Mus. llw football this fall aretoreport
Thursdl,y, July 25, at 7:30 p. m.
(IJ~ American Marl1 RiolMASON, W. VA.
at
the 11)'111. The buys wUI be given
aen, Herb FltsGlbboll, and Tom
Edlef1011, ail of whom oj:OI'ed · their physical slips and their paronto permi88lon •lips at this
...a Ylctortea at Wimbledlln, time.
llavo enterad the field for the
U.S. National• to be held Aug.
IS.:5.
. CONTINUE SALE
The tournament, wlllch wUI
The Racine Pee Woo and Litllavt more than 300 competitor• tle Lea&amp;Ues wUI C&lt;Jnlinue the
'fin~ for allllle• and doubles rummage sale.on Friday and Sattltiea, wtU be held at the urday from 9 to 4 p. m. In the
whAr•
Longwood Cricket Club.
Sbq&gt;son buUdlns next to t h e
Snack and Chat Restaurant In
· Racine. A bake sale will tie hold

lo·nt;lt : : !_Pra&lt;tlcal, ~!~:
, , , rl''r IY8170nlt --r•oo •

tiiHI nervoua cbUcli'en, :\
if thi'a murilat huna ~- ,
..all it ' t be ''boot" for rour
' ..
r·~

Rat~laff Hurls

So Golden for Fergie

I'll ·~ure 11f1D8 'that up at nut
Fergie Ia feeiillg it rnueh
ye&amp;f'a. cclirttai:t ·.nel191iallons, more tl)e" days W,hea he
&amp;tilaily, t:vo felt goocl? aU idob to the ieoreboatd ill the
year. I could have comp~ted .late inillftga and ae,es: Chi·
the games I've loll. Leo'a
DeVOl' ..Pull'~
.
t : did~'t
think ;1 shoUld
II be
'
·thinks I'm
Flehl!ier,
Wooten
come out to

·""
kilo!!•
We're
·

·' ·

The
for

UIIIjlll.

wlmtna

f Cbicqo 3, 10 lma., nl&amp;lll

·.

·

way:' "1'. Jenklna:, ·~~able strain."

bq:· her enpaement to" IIIOihar

Cllq.Dl!EN ·
Dear,..
..,

1M

the fact he's been keeping his
ERA well below last year's.
· Ferlde has had only 51 runs
scored against him In the first
half of the season. But the
Cubs had only ilcored 51 for
him. Six times hls teammates
faUed to score and four times
ha lost, 1_-!l,_ _
The Cuba suffered only six
shutouts aU last&gt; season but
have been biankou·lbree tlmea
that many lhla year. ' TII8
Year of the Pltcber Is working
in reveroe for Fergie JenkinS.
. Manager Leo Duroeber says
Jenkins baa been quite eHec·
live and considers those four
1.0 games as wills for Fergie,
",I'm. glad be feels "'at

~~ matleraalongbyann6omct•

1111 I!Jtliliierll- THREE GROWN

-·

"'are

~pse Eggs Not

Well,' Dad' a - Ia milT
bla llft. He 1111 be'll live·lip
Mar1i7D. thtJutll he IIIII lhlnka
ho ... jullllfl4d, 1'ociil Marli,yD

ah8•u be oa1eo up wtlh IOI!illfl.
WIIJart her iovtiY home and her
C011J1r7 eiub IDd wi\Oea• rroupa,
elc. lbe'll bo lOot,
Howemwemskeher- ·
ll'a· boot tor ....,...,. if 11!01

gr.... Blll8alo.
lllR be
•8•1115 p. ID. lnat to the Clilcinnsll
at .Jial. • AQairl Ia lllllfarlrw frGm •
. 8p. m.
llldn' ID!eetlcitt that IIIII
"bep him out of the /IUD for
[Deirott at .Waohiii81DD. nl&amp;lll
four or IIYO -ka," acoordlna
pmt ochedlllod.
to Coach Paul llrolm.
"I'm ju8l afraid that's It for
National Lea&amp;ue
BUI," Hid Brotm.
W, L, Pel. GB
The - • !aeoa at the trainLoula , 1 ••. 63 84 .648
inl camp Tuesdl,y wore Rablilo
[ ;All... " " .. so 46 .521 12'h Wllllanto, a 21$.plund l'lllllliDI
Clnclmatl ...•47 45 .511 13'h back who the Bengala claimed
' Fran ..•• 49 48 .505 14
from the San Diego Chlraara,
.
. .48 47 ,495 15
and Dan Archer, a 250.pound of.
• ' ' .• 48 50 .590 15'1.1 leoatvo tackle who boa been on
• , . •f1 D ,f15 17
• two • wtek loul' of ~ wtth
•• ' .45 110 .474 17
the Army Reilet'Yea.
... t4 53 .454 11
WUllanta 18 a rookie from the
' ' .... c 56 .429 21'h UnlveriiQ&gt; of Houston. Archer
'J'Uisdl,y'a Resulta
had one year profeaalonal sertiew ..york 2 Atlanta 1, Diibl Yice II Oakland. He wao a ll'adu·
~ 1 Pilla 8, 12 ima., nlahl ate of Oregon.
If Loula i1 Pldla 5, nllht

"*'

11011.

inlla her triUIIIjlll, liben 8&lt;1ualiY

.,

'
.
6
Unl•arllll. ~
ft. ·e:ds Win 7•·

.

would omear Dad' a name 10 badlY he'd looe hla aeeutiYO poal-

wanla rev ..... She thlnka lht'U
be ·bam' HYing alone and lllorY·

......

Infection

~"Seertt

way.

THE GLDBAL VIEW

Aiide'rs" Has .
8evere Skin
· .

Dollars and 'Doughboys

Taking a Better View

· Marla Sj:OI'ea Ft!W'
·Roser Marla colleclecl three
blto and drove in loUr nms to
lead • 14-ldt auack .. the Carda
drubbed the Pblla. Orlando
eep8d. collected two blta,
IICOI'ed three runa and knOcked
in ....
Tony Perez alngle, hla !Ifill
bit, acorad Leo llf.oy to otart a

lillling ,rallY

Grier Retires, Will Promote Peace~

to

could not hope to survive, either with their

California and M!MeliOI.a 11111t a
bblol)eader by Identical 3-1
acore• with the Anpla taking
the lljiatt!'. Dt!ll'alt Odpd
Walhlnilton M, Baltimore out-

lasted o"~land 8-4, Booton
New York 4-1 and the
·Kr-1 Ia tlll'tal4lllnl to thrwah au thooe loooea with the 'i'otlre.
.
old Meta who were a b&amp;Mball Oakland-Cbl- game ...
' KriiiOPOD.l bfa .amoonced that joke, lnaloto be ~ 10 lhrouah rained oyt.
U tho Meta don't Proteet ]ilm in It apln if the Meta don't keep
tlie _.a1on draft and he's ldm.
.
. picked by an _.alon IAIIIII,
"I don't 'hill to start off With
·
·... ,
• . he'll cadi the pme. ·
~ ""l'l'laion club 111141 liD
"No, I ..r.Ni.t ' do tho ~·~~entlr. thouah; KrilleP!JOI IIIOiher II,.. 1eara ioalng.
rito _ _
deonl.. o~ loomel
hoi ~IY acidtd he 11101 ~ Winning Ia lltn. rm getdns to
8 STU CAMEN
ttJahl
to meilap with btaebOU, He like ~ can you lm•llno me
Y
wrtle
Dlaht
hal raised bia avarap . from piJ,ylnf .on a team like the old
F_!l~.~:m rd of pro
t Bootmt· 1, Dlaht .
·
.
,
,183 last IIIDtltll .1&lt;1 .259. Alld he Meta apln?''
II'GIIOY'a Pt'llbobijo ·Pllcbera
eontlnlled fda reclllll .,.P irllh - EIMwbere ill tile · National football· to the world of
, All Tbiloa . EDT ·
Tllosdl,y tdibt 111141 Ron Lea&amp;ue, Clilelnnltl ediOd Plt- promoting peace IIIIDillt the
1 racoa.
(Ellls' 7-6) at Min- .
Siocboda a 1o .... tiburlh 7-4, 111 12 ~nn~n~a.
n.at'a the task facing mam9 'P. II!the New York Meta and .1om , Franelaco nipped Cblcaso 44111
· a:&amp;') .a t lliw· ·
iioavar a 2-1 Ylctor)&gt; ovar ·tho 10 lnnini• and Loa Angeles moth Roosevo[t Crier, the 684
foot..\ 287 pound defenalve
All- Bn....
,
....... Houston a-1.
tackle of the Loa Angeles Rams
who amounced hlo retirement
WILIIINGtON, Ohio (IJPI) - •
,
BU1 Altlltra, a former 01110
. .
.
e

to

to

1!1 Vri'O SI'ELUNO
Tho Al!uia lOll, · coinblned
ul'i ~· Writer .
with· tho St.. Laals' U-l5 frolic
• u you 'cllm't think biHball · over Pbiladeipb{~ left the Cll'dl
' '·-aild . baaeblll pl.,ara hal!• 12'11 ~· · ~ ill , U..
· cbiupd, take the caoe ill Eddie National ~e ...,.,,...
KrlnepoOI.
Llkta Wlnnins
. . At the riPt old ap of n,
Kr~. who • uff er • d

r
In tile Americltl Lea&amp;Ue,

'

.
pf the Gila monster,
· ~; ls u pc)tent
. , ,~e rattleanskea.

•

�'

' 1·. '

. ··~ ~·

t

Pcmoroy·Mlddl·i. 0., Wedneodlt,. Jllb' ~~ ,1""'

. ·

,.

~n

.. t

'

·t·r~

f· !.', .... ~

by Doil Oakley and John Lane

Nfp · Brave~ 2-1,.

'

'

i~JI, imd&gt;~

.rowa vn·

Not. onlY that, but the. breach
to Include Romania, which
Is ,restive In its own right and Is glvlJl&amp; moral
·For both, wrong
' support to the Czechs, and go on from tiJere.
moves ·
could set
' Nothing Ia more certain thAn ihat JOlf·
events• In motion ·
ma~e the Hlln·
determlnatloll
and democracy ·will one day
garian Revolution
like a minor dis'
come
to
the
"'lions
of Eutem E111Wi!. .Time
agreement between lrh~nds:
. and the lflle of human aflairl are oil the elde
There is no chance at this junctun, how· · of tboae who love freedom.
·
ever, that the Soviets wm resort to armed
Tbe
United Ststes can do "two lhlDJis .to
Ioree to bring their maverick satellite hack
hasten thet day-keeP Its nose O.t ol the
Into a clo~er orllit-not unleis the Czechs are
Czecbo.Russlan squabble, and conlinue purrash enough to ,lrY to hurry \he departure of
sulnc every avenue thet CG lead to deteDte
!:angering ~ Army '!lilts at the point ol
with 'Russia.
t •
',
yonet or p~ too &lt;(wck!y and too far
For the more that tensions IIJ!d suaplclou•
with their program of "democra~atlon."
are relaxed 'between the United Stateo and
But the Czechs have too ljiUCh to lose to
the U.S.S.R., the less reason the Russian
pusb tbe issue to a military showdown they
hear will have to unsheath her c!a.-o wben
could not !lope to survive, either with their
one of her cubs wanders away.
lives or with whatever gains towaro freedom
they have. already made.
Czecboslo~akla. 1968, is not Hungary, 1956.
~e Hungar~an ~evolution was a popular uPrising '!ot only aga~st Russian overlordslup
~ut agamst communism itself. So far, though
As the Good Book noles, where there is no
vision, the people perish, and it is heartening
11 has the enth~lastic supp~rt of the people,
to learn lbat somebody is doing something
what is happerung in Czechoslovakia is a
about it.
palace reformation within the party, not
against it.
The Chemical Specialties Manufacturers
Association reports that there was an 84.83
Yet Russia's vital interests are also at
per cent increase in the prcxt'uction of windstake. Should "democratization" get out of
shield washer concentrate in consumer-sized
hand, should it begin leading to real democpackages in 1967.
racy With the creation of a multiparty system, should Czechoslovakia begin turning its
The total was 14,21l3,141 packages, o far
face toward the West, Russia would be left
cry from !he measly 49.872 produced ill 1961.
with a gaping hole in the string of buffer
Traffic accidents haven 'I gone down, but
states protecting its western boundary-a
at least more people are getting a better view
hole through which not only troops but Ideas
of the car that runs into !hem on the high·
could march.
way.
do~ widen

Taking a Better View

'

'

[!!] Dollars and 'Doughboys·
W• niUit pre~l the rise of any pronounced d t g r e e oJ intimacy b(lween
Fr~h officer~ and black olfictN , , , Wt
must t10t eal with them, 11111.11 1101 allakt

""""' ...

~"Seerel llformatloa

eoncehla,

Bilek
Troops," luued by U.S. Army In 1t18.

.

DeterloratiQS social and economic conditions
In the South, a labor Rhoi1a'e In the North
caused by a 1811-o!f' In European Immigration
alter the start of World War I, an lncfuttrlil
boom as America turned itself Into the arsenlll
olljemocri1cy-aU these conspired to set orr a
great exodus of Negroes from the land In the
second decade of the :1001 century.
The North reacted with a policy of contain·

'

;.ot aai.lnot the teds ot. thouland- of·Jil~.croes
•Ire~~$~ up from the SOutJi. N"" .f~~··

Harlem, once a dillrable residential nelghJMir.
hocd,iibollz8d tile ebettooltiallilil ' ~
. 'ce In the major eltlel.
.
13,
WoodrOW ,Wlllon h&amp;d
JO&amp;nPb!d IOY8fliment,eating and t'eatr~
lacllltlea.· TWeDt)' hlUs Jl""""iln~a·
u.n ·~ Ne ·
·1n
~ettu.. In
the Ku'· Kius•"Kian 'wu '

~

·Preald~Jt(

.·. bJiJieen

·iflr Avli mWion .m...bero.

,-evlv~ f!Ml.&lt;hol~

Yet ,wljea World' Wart ~me, N';g..o' ~trlol·
lim 1fal;never In dou!IJ. ' Close 'rimP,' qrged
W,li;.B. D!ll!ola. A· f111' weeb later, In the
wont rlol of .lbe cent!!l"Y, at least tO Negroes
WeN twed In Eut Si. ·Louis, IU., lind' lh!l1i·
salido drlvq from tboJr homea. Jn 1917, there
were
In lllll, 58.
~~~~~~
,ooo Negr)l!ll
entered the armed
~!·
half of them iervlng IIi France.
...,• ..,, to Negro. pretlure, the. f,rmy trained
1,400 ollcetJ, 1M Nearoes were barred entirely

ft!!!Jinc•·

'

'

~-

'

()I numei:OU oulstandln, _.blaclt unl(f1 qne ·
~
wu the 38fth lnfailtry, 1rhlch saw '181 '\lays ..
ol conlinUOiulf aclloti In the trencheJ. '' Tile
1'!.
Germ1111 clUed them tile "Hell Figbterl" IIIII
llti French decorated the entlri regiment with
tiHI Croix ·4• Glien'e and LOsJon of :!J~.
'lbey hall helped ~ate the WOrld u ' (or
democr~7. !or -oa lime, .but If lltey tllo'dpt
anJthbll pao changed :In America, ~
N•gro tr"!'P' were qulcl!l)' dlllll~Oaoidl ·M!!i• ·
llt~n 70 Jliegroe.a, lncll!lllftg 1• ·Y/~. \'etel'illl,i
were. IYne~ in the llrst ....._., •oar. ·More,
than lliJ l'loio l:roke out ~w !be
111
the "Red Summer" ofl81t. .
· ~~p.,., "
But li611!ethb!l wu dlfterent. In betrC!it, 1 i
Waahln~, Chic""· Tulsa, Longylew, Tex.,
Ne~ were llp6n1 back and wjJitel were•
dyinl fl{f a change.
'
·

'eo ·....,

NEXT! Harlem RftlaiiN-* ' '

• n'

~' •i.q
·'f''l.

•. ,

..·,·~
..""''
~~

THE GLCBAL VIEW

US•••

A Cold Look at Humphrey's
'Thaw' in Soviet Relations

By Helen Sotrel
trouble, let Helen help YOU.
She Will aloo welcome ;your own
IIIIIUIIni exporlencos. Address
Holen BGttol In :care of thio

By LEON DENNEN
NEA Foreign News Anolyst
NEW YORK (NEA)
Vice President Humphrey, who was once a firm supporter

••

'

.

on a plcnlc, uiiJe~ she happens til he your. date.
~

•

•.

r .

Nu, q W·e .~ d'() l.u n, "ruu
don't 110 Ia -a J4panese

aayo that

re.Ytaurant
Ch(JfJS.

ftJJ

get ·katate

'·~ ~·~

1

•oota :(Chenco s.e), g 'P. m.
· IIOft.is &lt;EiJ,;,d s-6&gt; at New

. York cP...,aon . ¥

.

Anders }las
Severe 81.:'1,\UJ.
Infection

fl.••

Olklllll(}lub'f.GandJ(rauiiO
f.6l ai Cblollio Glmn 7-2 end !lorwn.MlNGTON, Ohio &lt;UPO Ion 7-$), 2, 7 p. ill.
BU1 A.dera, .a former Olllo Stale
..Detroit P,.l!~ 7-$) at Waabo Unlveraltl' pid areat. l1lo¥ be
~ ~· 34), '8;0$ p. m. loot to the Clnclnnlll a.nP~s.
ClevaJaDd..cr. 1Wl atBII- , Ancl8rl Ia lltll!erlnc frODI I
~ (McNallet U~; 8 p. m. ...... .....- ilttectl&lt;in thet wlll
P!M'SBURGH (UP!)
The
'Thuroda,y'o Glmea
. •'keep him out o! tile lUll for
bata
were
reoi)J
poppln'
for
four or tlve Wllkl," aeeordin&amp;
Detroit at WUhltwton. nJs1t
the Clncfmlill Roda aDd the
,oDly pmo ochedulecl.
to colch l'llll Brown.
"I'm ~ afralcl Ulst'a It for hlta meant a hard.fou&amp;lll triumph.
BUI, H Aid Brown.
-~ Loapo
The Redo hammered out 20
The MWell !lcea at tho tralnW. L. Pet. GB
IDI camp Tuoodl; were Rob~ bill, lncludiDI live by TOll!'
!1. Lout• •••••63 34 .849
Allanta •. : ...50 48 .521 12th WUllama, a 215-j&gt;ound . runnllil: Perez, 11&gt; ..., a tllr.._
Clndmall .• ' .47 45 .511 J.3lh bock who the Benpla claimed PIUobur&amp;b wlmln&amp; streak 'llless.n Fran ••.. 49 48 .50S 14 from the San Dloao Chargero, c!IQ' nl&amp;bl.
Tho vlc!Dry, however, - 12
aDd Dan Arcbor, a 250-fOUntl of.
Pldlodelphla •• 46 47 .495 15
48 50 .590 15\1 lonalve tackle ,hao bOon. Gil lmlnla u the Rods edpcl the
• two • week lllur of ~ with tlotermlnod Plral.et, 7~.
""' tork ••.• 47 52 .475 17
II waa Perez• IUih bit of tho
tile Afi!IY Reaoi"YOI.
~' ••• 45 50 .474 17
WUUams Is a roclde from tllo Pille 1211 AltiOiea ••• 44 53 .454 19
ocored Leo lda,Y
116ulton ...... 42 56 .429 21th Unlversi!T of Houston. Archer from third 11&gt; otart a two-run
had me year profeoalonal aer- 12th lmll18 rally. The vletm7
~'
Nodi.Y'I ReiUita
rltw Yorl! 2 Atlanta 1, niabt vlce at oal&lt;land. Ho ,..s a &amp;radii· stretched tho Redo' win llroak
11&gt; nvo olralabl.
dit 1 Pllia 8, 12 tnna., nlillt ate of Oregon.
What turned ou1 ID bo tho
~ Loulo i11'111ta 5, nl&amp;bt
wlmlng
...., however, wao
Lis Ancelea 3 Houston 1; nl&amp;bt
oeored by Tommy Helma ao bo
s.r. 4 Cblcqo 3, 10 tnna., nl&amp;bt
'J'Odq•l Prol&gt;oble Pltcltero ,
111D81ed, drfvbw In JollnJIJ
· Intarnatlonal League Stanclinp llonch.
·All Tbnea EDT
The Plrateo mado It clooo In
· Cblcoao ()loltaman 5~7) at San Bt United Preoo InternaiJDnal
Franciaco (Perry 8-$), 4 p.m.
W, L, Pet. GB their halt of the 12th whon
II!IUIIpn (Lemaater 8-10) at Tulodo . . • • • . 53 44 .558
Maury Wllla walked, lllole aocLOa AltiOiaa cpryadale 12-Gl, 8 $facuao . . •.• 47 55 .m 3th oncl, adVanced to tb1M Gil a
p.m.
·
· Jackoonvllle •.. 47 46 .505 4
bunt and 1hon ocamperod homo
Phllade!J!bl• (L. JackJon 9-11) Rooheater ••••• 48 47 .505 4
on Wlllle '!llargeU'o aacrlllco

Reds Win 7-6

Chi..;. . . ...

...,•s lrlplo to luO' a lhreo-nm
rally In tha lltlrd, aDd oolo homers by Mack JoaeJ and twez.
Elroy Face, lite alxlb of

Timely Quotes

ThoughIs
QUICK · QUIZ

We intend to double and re''Which of ~ou convicts me
double our efforts to flond
of
rin? If I tell the truth, wh~
the Congress with mail. We
do
tiOU n.ot believt me?"simply believe that the people
John
8:48.
can reach their elected representstives in Washington and
The best answer to a false
make them listen.
Idea
Is the truth.-Richard M.
-F o r m e r astronaut John
Nixon,
former U.S. vice presiGlenn, on pro~ents of
dent.
.
gun control leg11lation.

• • •

o~te!l the
proctkt of uti"~~ fije Bible
adminflterillg 1111 oath?
·

Q-Who

m

A-The great B)'Witble
em~r. Tuatlnlaq, In ·1532,
who took'tbe oath with a book
of the Goipell In hli'halld,

Q-Who

W&lt;IB

the flrrt /tiD

the fact he's been keepln~ his
ERA well below last year s.
· Fergie has llad only 51 runs
scored agalnJI him In the first
half of the season. But the
Cuba had only scored 51 for
him. Six times his teammate~
failed to score and lour times
he lost, 1_-!1...
The C~bs suffered OJJiy six
shutouts aU last . sea1011 but
have been blankr.d'tbree times
that mJDy this )"'.ar. ·The
Year of the P)reher ill working
In reverse for Ferpe Jenkins.
Manager
saya
Jenkin• has
effective and
f!)Ur

1.0

year we'd be pushlug for first

a-aln."
.
Tbo 6-5, 24-year-old rlgbthander b a resident of SOuth
Chatham, Ontario. ~·orgle Ia
the easy-going type wbo
doesn't mope around because
of hla bad luck. In the locker
rocm ht caUa himself Super
canadian. During the off-sea·~ he playa ·for the Globe·
trotten. He fiDda less pressUre In baakelbaU.
"In ·~b'uketb811," be says,
"one auy seldom has to carry
the whole teani, although a
player must be aound every
day. A plreher, hCIWever, controls the game for the most
part and feels more Individual
!traln."
.
Fergie ·Is feeling It much
. more the4!' days 'fben be
IOqlca to !!1i8 $cpreboai'd In lilt·
. late ltqllligll and see•' Chi·
' '

conference championship teams
wltll New York ancl twice was
&amp;elected to play In tho pro bowl.
· He was traded to the Rama in
!963.

The Rams, wbo will fill llle
vacancy le!t by Grier with 6!oot-5, 300 pound Roger Brown,
held a two and a half boor
scrimmage Tuesday against the
San Diego Chargers of the
American Football League.
Riehle Petltbon, 1he nine-year

Rutland, McArthur
Post Tourney Wins

veteran of the Chicago Bears,
who announced his retirement
aa a pla:er last week, may be

defensive

sat'et&gt;'rna!!

could be made. All tile Beora
would want In · exchange lor
Petithon would be the Salnlo'
No. 1 draft choice next year.
Halas aloo amounced that
delenalve tackle John Johnaon
and o!lonslve back Garry• Lyle
quit camp.
The Dallas Cowboys revealed
IIIey have lured place kicker
Mike Clark ou1 of retirement.
Clark, Aid he wu
quitting as a player laal week
wldle a member of the
Pittsburgh Steelers, agreed to
terms with the Cowl&gt;oYI, acquired the rlgltls to the

win. He .Uowod but one Adela ville
hit - a third lnnll18 double by lured back to the playing lleld II
tile Bears can swing a deal wllh former Texas A &amp; M player In
M. French.
exchange for a hi&amp;b draft
Whittington had a triple a n d the New Orleans saints.
two Rms lor 1he winners. II. HatPetltbon, who played bls choice.
Oeld had a double and two sl~es
and lour RBis. T. Sheets was
charged with the loss.
K. c.mp hurled throe lnnlrvs
llftrllll , ......
and II. LJmbert tllree lor lhe Mooon Tigers. Bolli allowed bet two
McArthur hila - they cJme off
LJmbert In tho Otth end sixth
runp. Bolh llnned 14 Merchant&amp;,
but It wu aU In a losl!li cause
•• the McArthur lids pushed
across one run In tho ft!th Innlng, and held on lor a 1..0 win.
K. RJrber opened the Mhwith

111ft '

z..,..

PICKUP TRUCK
COVERS

a !lingle, and scored later ln the
lmlng. Kim Word had the other
Merchant hit, also a single.

In Tuesday' 5 ttnt gune, the
Rutland Reds smuhed AddaviUe,
Mike RJtzWI hurled a ..,.
13-3 In a pme called a!ter three hit, no-run pme, Ianning 14 Tl· ·
and Dll&amp;-hal! lnnl!!il becouoe o! prs In 1he six-inning battle. He
Ule Ill-run lead rule.
hit- batter, walked six, and the
The winners had 1o hlta. c. Merchants made one error.

• Flab lor Ferlllller
The most Important fiah in
the United Ststea Is not ~ten. . Whlttlncton ,.., crodltoil wlthlhe
It Is the menha""n, .of '!liitl}, ,
.
,
.
over 1.5 bUIIon poundS ire
· ·
·
caught each year and used
·
• _
prlmarUy for oil and forti·
Seores Two, ude
lizer, aCcordiDg to the Encyclopaedla Britannica.
~neuse scored two runs In
Ule last lnn1118 to defeat RJclne
7-6 at the Syra&lt;!u&amp;e Municipal
Park Tuesday evening.
Kelly Wlnobre...,r, the winn11v pitcher, allowecl.three hits,
struck out sewn am walked two.

Goose Eggs Not So Golden lor Fergie
'.

veteran

aate, pi&amp;Jed on five Eastern

Ratzlaff Hurls No-Hitter

•••

(WashbUrn ~. 8

Columbua ..... 45 45 .500 4!1.· fly.
LIU..Ule ..... 47 48 .4&amp;5 5
Pinch Homer Hurta
CinctnnBII (Nolan 4-2) at Pitts- Bul!alo . . • . . • .46 49 •484 6
PIUabur&amp;b oont the game In·
bur&amp;h (lo!ooao 4-6), 8:05 p.m. Richmond .•.•. 43 52 .453 9
to overtime when 1h01)' tied Ulo
Nltl York' (RJan 6-4), at AtTuoa&lt;IBI" a R~~ta
•
ocore 5-6 In Ulo ninth one
wao
oul
as
Bill
Vlrdon
pounded
~~~~·~0~.~.0~ P,~ ., ~..::) 3 ~dlo~ 1 (111,,,; a' ·ptnch hit ·homer" )IIlii Joao
NP. York lt Atlanta, nlslit
Rochester 12 !lfracuae 4 ~ Papn on Ule paths. Plpn had
l$ictnnatl. ,,et Plttobur&amp;b, n!lllt Toledo 8 Bul!elo 6
walked.
~11\111~ at St. Loula, nl&amp;bl lAUIIVDle ! Columhua 0
Other big hill for the Rod•
., . OniJ.,....,... Jdledulecl Richmond 6 Jacl&lt;sonvUle 3
In the pme ....., Vada Pin-

at 'St. · LOUla

plana to devote his time to a college ball at Tulane and hal
1hoatrlcal career In addition to bullineos lntereata ' In N~
promoting JIO&gt;CO among the Orleans, aalcl he ...,ld NC&lt;I!11i•
der his plans to retire If ha
races.
could be traded to llle SalntJ.
Started Wltll Glanta
Seek Draft Choice
Grier, a third round draft
Boars Preoldent George Ho· .
choice of tile New York Giants
las,
Jr., said a cloal lor the
1n 1955 after attondlni· P e n n

Tueoda.Y, after 12 seasoos In tbe
NIIIIOIIJI Football League.
Grier was aldellnecl lor tile
ontlre 1967 sea!Miil wltll a
ruptured achUleo, tenlon and
when the 11\1Ur7' !ailed ID
respond to treatment, he
decided to call It quits as a
player.
Grier, 36, a participant In the
civil rltlbts movement, said he

,.... l'llbllurlb pltehera, wa•
the victim al the Redo' wlmln&amp;
rai)J.
Gei-rJ Arrtalo, fourth CIDcln- Rutland and McArthur acl11111 horler, received the win as vanced 1n the Kyger creek Little
he chalked up Ida alxlb triumph Leque baaeboll tournament
Tueoda,y evening.
"'the--·
Gar)' Nolen, ~. wao to hurl
Rutland slammed the Addavllle
IDnlcbt's pmo and hla OlliiOII· Slugger• 13-3 In the Oral pme.
ont waa tO be Bob Moose, who The McArthur lllerchanto, behind
sport• a 4-8 mlrk.
the no-hit, oo-run hurll!li oiMiko
RJizta!f, blanked the Mason Tl·
gers 1..0 lnonolcl-~shioneclpltcbo
ers dueL
Pitcher Protection
This evening, the Gallipolis
1 Would you believe the Bal·
White Sox bottle the Gallipolis
tlnlore Oriole a are be I n g Red Sox at 7 p. m. The MJddle..
babied? When a reporler vis· port Redlegs hattie tho Pl. Pleas!ted lite Florida t ra I n I n g ant Fruth's Pharmacy at 8:30.
camp, be found the trainer
Thursday, p~ Plea11111City1ce
busy ordering gaUons of baby
and
Fuel moeta tile il)Tacuoe Gloil. His queatlon brought the
reaponae, "to proteet the- ants at 7, and Mkldleport'sYaD&lt;·
plrehers agalnat wind or raw ees battle Pt. Ple1sart'a ~el~
workers a! 8:30.
weather.''

-'•

•PJ&gt;Olllteci to t h e U.S. Svposes
..
preme COIWI7
A-Loula D. Brandela, apexplains why Romania 1n an unprecedented dlplomatk:
It is not enough to say,
move, decided to sip an agfeement with the United StateS. I'' "When I was your age . . ." ness, of the world around polllted In 1918 by Prelldent
Woodrow Wllloli. "I
for expanded co-operation In technology science and industry. \ ·We were neve! their age. him.
,
.
'
Telev1s1on has gJ.ven the modQ-Whot doel the """Ilk"
The Kremlin a compromise on the nonproliferation treaty ern student an awareness, -Robert H. Slwffer, dean of
studentJ at lndoa"" Univer· IMIIil .In "fran/clru:eme1;7 •
and~ current pe~e moves In the Middle East are another \ perbops an excessive awareBity, on student unrest.
A-'-1! meaufree or pure.
.lndlcation that coe~stence will be backed by diplomatic action
whenever Moscow finds it advisable. It is even conceivable
thAI the Russians will continue to aid North Vietnam and the
VIet Con' only as long as this policy appears to be pruduclng
diplomatic galnJ.
This is, alter all, what foreign policy is aU about. The
, foreign policy of any country is si~ply concerned with the
WHI&lt;N DIPIITHONG TAKES IAA£,. D.
I!J!)l&amp;nsion of its power, inftuence ahd strategic posture.
/&gt;.N EVENING ~E C/&gt;.N'T
,i'if.l the West Is to outwll the Russians In tbe complex diploEAR~Y ENOUGH· • · • •
·D!atic game, it will have to be better at playing its cards, or
'limplY hold a better hand, and not to confront the Communists
With ,unacceptable alternatlvell-i"'aceful coelllstence or lim·
. w.;~ofutlonary wars.
·
The'· Communists remain ColnmUDists. They wiU always be
ready to elploit any weakness or opportunililos in the non. ' Comm!lillat world .
. ~.; But a Jlllticy to ease East-West tensions must not necessarily
~ !Ia baseCI on Western ideas of how the Kremlin should behave.

eold chicken 18 fine lo. lake

Yori 4 Booton
:: .
Tudtly'l l!idlabl7 Pltebera
.AU Tlmea .E171'
cal~ (Ellll 7.$) at ~

.

.. p.m.

•. :

'l'hb

'

Minute Symptom.s . · .i.
Aid Doctor's Diagnosis ...

lion" -the suiWentotr of 'llli!'ll'ee W'orld-'-re!llains ·l,lle 18remost •
objective of Marnst-Leninists, whether they are pro-Russian
or pro-Chinese.
Nevertheless, it would be Ulll'flllstic-even a serious error
-to ignore the fact that since· Stalin's death in 1953 lbe Red
world has been reacting to severe strains.
Soviet leaders repeatedly have revised their foreign policyto veer between "hard" ancl "soft" policies-and ~tpone the
"inevitsble" showdown with lhe·.west.
..
. Things do change, however slOWly and tortuously. Two
. decades ago, as Humphrey said ill his ststement on foreign
policy, the United Ststes faced "an aggressive and highly
' centralized Communist bloc."
Today, Red Ruswa and Red China ~ engaged In )' biller
: con81ct. With Romania, Yugoalavla and CzechoslCIVilia increulngly CJ:itlcal of Russia while seeking closer ties to the
West, the Communist countries no longer pose a monollthic
· threat.
'
The Kremlin leaders are paitlfully aware of this. They no
;longer can rely on their East European aateWtes. And China
\

.

.Ev~n

a T1ie~m~· lo,-o~course,..that '!ftvolutionjfy .J;.s of·libera- .

•
1

'

.

~~ 'l ...

Is the time ripe for a "thaw" in the relations between the
United Ststes and Soviet Russia? Are the Communists, in
view of their long record of duplicity and subversion, more
trustworthy today than they were two decades ago when the

The Rlisslans now lock for results wherever !bey can get
,them, chooolng their methods on strictly pragmatic rather
,than ideologlcaUy tidy lines.
., .(
.
'· For the present it is In their Interest to l~e Fidel Castro's
proleats and seek to e~pand trade with Lalin America,
For the preaent, too-unW tboy have reaolve'd the c~nftlcls
In the Red world-they also want to m&amp;lntaln the ·status quo
Ill West Europe, at least a truce Ill tbe Middle East and the
.-eopening o! the Suez Canal
· ··
Tbe obvious reason for Moscow's unusuaUy co-operative
attitude toward the American-Soviet nuclear nonprolllerallon
treatY Is to teJtraln West Germany from becoming an atomic
' ·
power for u long aa poaslble.
The treaty, hailed by opttmls!J as a mUestone In AmeriCG·
Soviet relations, Is also Moscow's excuse ior denying the East
Ew'.opean JSteWtes nuclear energy even for peaceful pur-

-

'. THE CIQCTQA BAVB
'
: J. -

consideration.

·ts an overt enemy.

. -,, ·,

.

of Communist "containment," now advocates a policy of "re-

conciliation" In East-West relations.
Since be aspires to be the next president of tbe United Stales
this dramatic change in Humphrey's views requires careful

~~~~t~~e~! _!~ !::':~!-i"{'.u~.~ted ~.Y ~~~tate

lavellllve ·City· " ·'!'Z·
Tbo first steamablii rod~'
Its !rial twtln Lyons,~
This city became tll8 'wdrid'w1
silk 'capital .alter the muibenlf!
tree was lntroiluced; .J•~~
ID~ented his I o·o 111 , ber4~
Ampere worked on ~ laWJ .
of electrodynamlcJ .~~ ~ tli:',
modern great hYll!"oel~·
.works; and the brotlierJ l,\DQ"
!ere experimented! .,; I t h. ~!if
movie camera.
' ,
.

Helen Help. \

"A Jug of Wine ,and Thou!"

~·

from ihe &gt;Marlne Corp~ and air "IOI'Yice· and, · ··~~-·

sJven ,0111)' I!Ieltlal lobS In tile Navy. . :. ; , , .... '!I

I

Grier Retires, Will Promote Peac~

'
rain
·

4, nJabt

.- .

'

Amerl~ ~··
ldeJIII(Il

Bt VrrO mLUNO
The Au.nta
•
In tho
.
ul't ~· Wrlm ,
with the !II•. l.~Ua' U-11 trollc · Co1lfornla and ¥1Jme101a opllt a
11 100 *&gt;n't lblnk boHii!lll over Pidladelphl'a left tbo c.,dl ~~ by
3-1
and . ·booeball plliJer~ bove 12\2 ~· · 111• In . tbo ...,.... !rUh ~ Anpla IIkins
chonPd; lake tho coae all!ddlo Nlii!OIIJ!'J;.elp _....
the &lt;Perm',' D~t edBod
KrUiepocl.
Llkt• Wlnnlua
Walhlll&amp;tOII ll.f, lllltbnore outAt the rljoe old ap al 23,
Kr~. ""ll • u If e r e d ~ 51ev..and 8~, Boolcll
·Kr-' (,. lhrea!ODinl to lllrwall all thoao looaea with the beat 'NOW York 4-1 and the
iellre.
old Moll ...., were e buli&gt;all oal&lt;laDd.ctdcaao game waa
' Kraoepooi hal ......,..cod tbat lc*t, lnalll• .ho woo't 110 throuab rained 4IQt.
II the loleta don'i p,_ blm In II aplD If the loleta clllll't keep
'
the oxpa1111lon draft and bo'a him.
•
picked by 111 -•ton teJm,
''I clllll't W8lll to otart Glf With
b0111 Gilt tile pme.
·
anoCIIOr -.oiOD el.., and 10
~; tbough, Krlile:Pool anolber live yearo Joidng.
hal IIDaU, deelllld he IIIQ' try Winning II lion. I'm l'ollbll' to
By SI'U CAMEN
to maM&amp;e witll baoeball. Ho like II. can YGU· iJnaCIDo me
has ralood hla averap from pl.,... on a teiin Uke ihe old
FromUPI
tile""'""
violentWriter
world o! prn
,183 last month to .259. And he ~ell apln'l''
CGIIIllllod bla rocenl wrp with
Elaowbere In the · Natlon81 -.u to tho -ld ol
a bolDer Tuooda,y nl&amp;bt and RCIIl LeiiiJi,, Cblclmall odpd Plt- promoting peace 1111111111 the
SIIoboda aAiod a homer to
tobur&amp;b 7-4, Ill 12 iniiiDBa, Sjln races.
Thal'a tho tallk lacing mamtho Now York Mota aDd Tum ,Francla&lt;o nipped Cblcap t4 In
moth Roosevelt Grier, the 6Seaver a 2-1 vlctDry over .tho 10 lmlniJ aDd Loa Aliplea
!oot-5, 287 pound clefenalve
AtlaniJ Braveo.
eclged Houston 3-1.
tackle of the Loa Angvlos RJml
who announced his retirement

cago 000 000 000. But he says
he has an Idea that may help
his luck.
"I phm," he states solemn·
ly, "to start IakinS extra batuDg practice. I'm trying to get
better at bunting and I even
hit a home rwt lAst year and
one this year. Maybe If I
could hit~ couple more ... "

•

.1

"·

(;, · LATE HOUR . SALE

• -

For the convenience

or those

who cannot purchase their reserve seat Uckets lor tile 1968
Meigs lllerauder football season
during tho day, James Diehl will

be in his o!!lce at Middleport
High School on Friday, July 26,
!rom 6 to 8 p. m. This sale Is

SitES TO FIT ANY MODEL PICKUP
A gal~lzed steel utility pickup truck cover. Protect your
cargo ·or workmen aOO use ror vacations, weekend ft.shlrw

ror

last season ticket holders
IUtlera for SyrlcUI!Ie were Kelly only. Tlcketa will go on saJe to
Hayman with a triple with the the general public on August I.
bases loaded, Greg Cundiff, two
al~es, · and Brian Hamilton, a
Beautiful Book
airwle. S)Tacuse is now S.loverThe Irish "Bock of Kells,"
aU for the season.

or huntil18 trips.

Prices Start At S203
ON DISPLAY AT

containing the lour Gospels,
was written and drawn by
hand about A.D. 700 and contslns many beautiful decora·
lions. Many people consider
it the most beautiful book in
the world.

GRIDDERS' NOTICE
C&lt;lach U..nette, head !ootbaU
coach at WlbomaHltlbSchool,anIIOIIIICed t.oday thllt bo)'slngrades
8 throulh 12 intereslecl In play·
NATIONALS ENTRIES
iiV !oolbiU this ~ are to report
CHm'NlTf Hn.L, Mus.
Leaves change color ln au·
Thur!IIIQ, Jllb' 25, II 7:30 p. m. tumn because they stop mak·
(U~ Amtlrl&lt;&amp;n Mart.\' RielPHoNE '73-5554
sen, Herb· FU.Glbboo, ancl Tum at tho gym. Thobo)'awWbeglven ing food and green chlorotheir pbyslcal allpsand lh••lr parEdletSOit. all of ~od . onto permission ollps at this
....... ........ ........
tiiiMI vlc!Drlea at Wimbledon, time.
ltav~ entered the !leld lor the
U.S. Nationals 11&gt; be held Aug.
1~.
. CONTINUE SALE
Tbe ~. whl&lt;h will
The RJclno Pee Wee and Litltallo DIOl'e then 300 competitors tle Lellgues wlll continue 1he
Yytna for llftlleo aDd doubiJB J'UIIIIIli&amp;O oale on Friday and Sattltleo, will ba held at the urday from 9 to 4 p. m. In tile
I..OniWOOd Cricket Club.
SIJnpoon bulldlng next to t h e
Snack ard Chill RJstaurant In
· RJclne. A bake sale wlll lle held
SaturciiQ'.

phylldiaappe~a•r•s

HOGG &amp;ZUSPAN
MATERIALS COMPANY

~

~

MASON, W. VA.

~~----------------. .

where your dollar buys MILES more

~er;
'

'

WOolen

SALE

ANTHONY
..,~......

•·

' i'IO. '~~·!MIIbll

• : , 'Pro.le•,For

.

, .pu)M:IItiG
.

' AND

1

TIRES

FW 4 PLY NYt.ON
650 X 13 WUI'I'I STR1P! . .. . . . .. ............. . $17.95
775 x 14
StRIP£ . ' . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $19.95
.... .. .. ' . ' . . . . . $21.95
' 825 X 14
STRiPE
.55 X 14
StRiP~ .. ~ . . . . . . . . . . . ...... . $23.95
•.......... ' ' ' . '. $21.95
8l5 X 15
STRIPE
. .. . .. . .. .. " " .. .. $23.95
845 X 15
$TRIP.E

.

'

"500" ·••d DELOit fiRESTONE ·
. .· ,PRICED ·IN SIZES ,

�'

' 1·. '

. ··~ ~·

t

Pcmoroy·Mlddl·i. 0., Wedneodlt,. Jllb' ~~ ,1""'

. ·

,.

~n

.. t

'

·t·r~

f· !.', .... ~

by Doil Oakley and John Lane

Nfp · Brave~ 2-1,.

'

'

i~JI, imd&gt;~

.rowa vn·

Not. onlY that, but the. breach
to Include Romania, which
Is ,restive In its own right and Is glvlJl&amp; moral
·For both, wrong
' support to the Czechs, and go on from tiJere.
moves ·
could set
' Nothing Ia more certain thAn ihat JOlf·
events• In motion ·
ma~e the Hlln·
determlnatloll
and democracy ·will one day
garian Revolution
like a minor dis'
come
to
the
"'lions
of Eutem E111Wi!. .Time
agreement between lrh~nds:
. and the lflle of human aflairl are oil the elde
There is no chance at this junctun, how· · of tboae who love freedom.
·
ever, that the Soviets wm resort to armed
Tbe
United Ststes can do "two lhlDJis .to
Ioree to bring their maverick satellite hack
hasten thet day-keeP Its nose O.t ol the
Into a clo~er orllit-not unleis the Czechs are
Czecbo.Russlan squabble, and conlinue purrash enough to ,lrY to hurry \he departure of
sulnc every avenue thet CG lead to deteDte
!:angering ~ Army '!lilts at the point ol
with 'Russia.
t •
',
yonet or p~ too &lt;(wck!y and too far
For the more that tensions IIJ!d suaplclou•
with their program of "democra~atlon."
are relaxed 'between the United Stateo and
But the Czechs have too ljiUCh to lose to
the U.S.S.R., the less reason the Russian
pusb tbe issue to a military showdown they
hear will have to unsheath her c!a.-o wben
could not !lope to survive, either with their
one of her cubs wanders away.
lives or with whatever gains towaro freedom
they have. already made.
Czecboslo~akla. 1968, is not Hungary, 1956.
~e Hungar~an ~evolution was a popular uPrising '!ot only aga~st Russian overlordslup
~ut agamst communism itself. So far, though
As the Good Book noles, where there is no
vision, the people perish, and it is heartening
11 has the enth~lastic supp~rt of the people,
to learn lbat somebody is doing something
what is happerung in Czechoslovakia is a
about it.
palace reformation within the party, not
against it.
The Chemical Specialties Manufacturers
Association reports that there was an 84.83
Yet Russia's vital interests are also at
per cent increase in the prcxt'uction of windstake. Should "democratization" get out of
shield washer concentrate in consumer-sized
hand, should it begin leading to real democpackages in 1967.
racy With the creation of a multiparty system, should Czechoslovakia begin turning its
The total was 14,21l3,141 packages, o far
face toward the West, Russia would be left
cry from !he measly 49.872 produced ill 1961.
with a gaping hole in the string of buffer
Traffic accidents haven 'I gone down, but
states protecting its western boundary-a
at least more people are getting a better view
hole through which not only troops but Ideas
of the car that runs into !hem on the high·
could march.
way.
do~ widen

Taking a Better View

'

'

[!!] Dollars and 'Doughboys·
W• niUit pre~l the rise of any pronounced d t g r e e oJ intimacy b(lween
Fr~h officer~ and black olfictN , , , Wt
must t10t eal with them, 11111.11 1101 allakt

""""' ...

~"Seerel llformatloa

eoncehla,

Bilek
Troops," luued by U.S. Army In 1t18.

.

DeterloratiQS social and economic conditions
In the South, a labor Rhoi1a'e In the North
caused by a 1811-o!f' In European Immigration
alter the start of World War I, an lncfuttrlil
boom as America turned itself Into the arsenlll
olljemocri1cy-aU these conspired to set orr a
great exodus of Negroes from the land In the
second decade of the :1001 century.
The North reacted with a policy of contain·

'

;.ot aai.lnot the teds ot. thouland- of·Jil~.croes
•Ire~~$~ up from the SOutJi. N"" .f~~··

Harlem, once a dillrable residential nelghJMir.
hocd,iibollz8d tile ebettooltiallilil ' ~
. 'ce In the major eltlel.
.
13,
WoodrOW ,Wlllon h&amp;d
JO&amp;nPb!d IOY8fliment,eating and t'eatr~
lacllltlea.· TWeDt)' hlUs Jl""""iln~a·
u.n ·~ Ne ·
·1n
~ettu.. In
the Ku'· Kius•"Kian 'wu '

~

·Preald~Jt(

.·. bJiJieen

·iflr Avli mWion .m...bero.

,-evlv~ f!Ml.&lt;hol~

Yet ,wljea World' Wart ~me, N';g..o' ~trlol·
lim 1fal;never In dou!IJ. ' Close 'rimP,' qrged
W,li;.B. D!ll!ola. A· f111' weeb later, In the
wont rlol of .lbe cent!!l"Y, at least tO Negroes
WeN twed In Eut Si. ·Louis, IU., lind' lh!l1i·
salido drlvq from tboJr homea. Jn 1917, there
were
In lllll, 58.
~~~~~~
,ooo Negr)l!ll
entered the armed
~!·
half of them iervlng IIi France.
...,• ..,, to Negro. pretlure, the. f,rmy trained
1,400 ollcetJ, 1M Nearoes were barred entirely

ft!!!Jinc•·

'

'

~-

'

()I numei:OU oulstandln, _.blaclt unl(f1 qne ·
~
wu the 38fth lnfailtry, 1rhlch saw '181 '\lays ..
ol conlinUOiulf aclloti In the trencheJ. '' Tile
1'!.
Germ1111 clUed them tile "Hell Figbterl" IIIII
llti French decorated the entlri regiment with
tiHI Croix ·4• Glien'e and LOsJon of :!J~.
'lbey hall helped ~ate the WOrld u ' (or
democr~7. !or -oa lime, .but If lltey tllo'dpt
anJthbll pao changed :In America, ~
N•gro tr"!'P' were qulcl!l)' dlllll~Oaoidl ·M!!i• ·
llt~n 70 Jliegroe.a, lncll!lllftg 1• ·Y/~. \'etel'illl,i
were. IYne~ in the llrst ....._., •oar. ·More,
than lliJ l'loio l:roke out ~w !be
111
the "Red Summer" ofl81t. .
· ~~p.,., "
But li611!ethb!l wu dlfterent. In betrC!it, 1 i
Waahln~, Chic""· Tulsa, Longylew, Tex.,
Ne~ were llp6n1 back and wjJitel were•
dyinl fl{f a change.
'
·

'eo ·....,

NEXT! Harlem RftlaiiN-* ' '

• n'

~' •i.q
·'f''l.

•. ,

..·,·~
..""''
~~

THE GLCBAL VIEW

US•••

A Cold Look at Humphrey's
'Thaw' in Soviet Relations

By Helen Sotrel
trouble, let Helen help YOU.
She Will aloo welcome ;your own
IIIIIUIIni exporlencos. Address
Holen BGttol In :care of thio

By LEON DENNEN
NEA Foreign News Anolyst
NEW YORK (NEA)
Vice President Humphrey, who was once a firm supporter

••

'

.

on a plcnlc, uiiJe~ she happens til he your. date.
~

•

•.

r .

Nu, q W·e .~ d'() l.u n, "ruu
don't 110 Ia -a J4panese

aayo that

re.Ytaurant
Ch(JfJS.

ftJJ

get ·katate

'·~ ~·~

1

•oota :(Chenco s.e), g 'P. m.
· IIOft.is &lt;EiJ,;,d s-6&gt; at New

. York cP...,aon . ¥

.

Anders }las
Severe 81.:'1,\UJ.
Infection

fl.••

Olklllll(}lub'f.GandJ(rauiiO
f.6l ai Cblollio Glmn 7-2 end !lorwn.MlNGTON, Ohio &lt;UPO Ion 7-$), 2, 7 p. ill.
BU1 A.dera, .a former Olllo Stale
..Detroit P,.l!~ 7-$) at Waabo Unlveraltl' pid areat. l1lo¥ be
~ ~· 34), '8;0$ p. m. loot to the Clnclnnlll a.nP~s.
ClevaJaDd..cr. 1Wl atBII- , Ancl8rl Ia lltll!erlnc frODI I
~ (McNallet U~; 8 p. m. ...... .....- ilttectl&lt;in thet wlll
P!M'SBURGH (UP!)
The
'Thuroda,y'o Glmea
. •'keep him out o! tile lUll for
bata
were
reoi)J
poppln'
for
four or tlve Wllkl," aeeordin&amp;
Detroit at WUhltwton. nJs1t
the Clncfmlill Roda aDd the
,oDly pmo ochedulecl.
to colch l'llll Brown.
"I'm ~ afralcl Ulst'a It for hlta meant a hard.fou&amp;lll triumph.
BUI, H Aid Brown.
-~ Loapo
The Redo hammered out 20
The MWell !lcea at tho tralnW. L. Pet. GB
IDI camp Tuoodl; were Rob~ bill, lncludiDI live by TOll!'
!1. Lout• •••••63 34 .849
Allanta •. : ...50 48 .521 12th WUllama, a 215-j&gt;ound . runnllil: Perez, 11&gt; ..., a tllr.._
Clndmall .• ' .47 45 .511 J.3lh bock who the Benpla claimed PIUobur&amp;b wlmln&amp; streak 'llless.n Fran ••.. 49 48 .50S 14 from the San Dloao Chargero, c!IQ' nl&amp;bl.
Tho vlc!Dry, however, - 12
aDd Dan Arcbor, a 250-fOUntl of.
Pldlodelphla •• 46 47 .495 15
48 50 .590 15\1 lonalve tackle ,hao bOon. Gil lmlnla u the Rods edpcl the
• two • week lllur of ~ with tlotermlnod Plral.et, 7~.
""' tork ••.• 47 52 .475 17
II waa Perez• IUih bit of tho
tile Afi!IY Reaoi"YOI.
~' ••• 45 50 .474 17
WUUams Is a roclde from tllo Pille 1211 AltiOiea ••• 44 53 .454 19
ocored Leo lda,Y
116ulton ...... 42 56 .429 21th Unlversi!T of Houston. Archer from third 11&gt; otart a two-run
had me year profeoalonal aer- 12th lmll18 rally. The vletm7
~'
Nodi.Y'I ReiUita
rltw Yorl! 2 Atlanta 1, niabt vlce at oal&lt;land. Ho ,..s a &amp;radii· stretched tho Redo' win llroak
11&gt; nvo olralabl.
dit 1 Pllia 8, 12 tnna., nlillt ate of Oregon.
What turned ou1 ID bo tho
~ Loulo i11'111ta 5, nl&amp;bt
wlmlng
...., however, wao
Lis Ancelea 3 Houston 1; nl&amp;bt
oeored by Tommy Helma ao bo
s.r. 4 Cblcqo 3, 10 tnna., nl&amp;bt
'J'Odq•l Prol&gt;oble Pltcltero ,
111D81ed, drfvbw In JollnJIJ
· Intarnatlonal League Stanclinp llonch.
·All Tbnea EDT
The Plrateo mado It clooo In
· Cblcoao ()loltaman 5~7) at San Bt United Preoo InternaiJDnal
Franciaco (Perry 8-$), 4 p.m.
W, L, Pet. GB their halt of the 12th whon
II!IUIIpn (Lemaater 8-10) at Tulodo . . • • • . 53 44 .558
Maury Wllla walked, lllole aocLOa AltiOiaa cpryadale 12-Gl, 8 $facuao . . •.• 47 55 .m 3th oncl, adVanced to tb1M Gil a
p.m.
·
· Jackoonvllle •.. 47 46 .505 4
bunt and 1hon ocamperod homo
Phllade!J!bl• (L. JackJon 9-11) Rooheater ••••• 48 47 .505 4
on Wlllle '!llargeU'o aacrlllco

Reds Win 7-6

Chi..;. . . ...

...,•s lrlplo to luO' a lhreo-nm
rally In tha lltlrd, aDd oolo homers by Mack JoaeJ and twez.
Elroy Face, lite alxlb of

Timely Quotes

ThoughIs
QUICK · QUIZ

We intend to double and re''Which of ~ou convicts me
double our efforts to flond
of
rin? If I tell the truth, wh~
the Congress with mail. We
do
tiOU n.ot believt me?"simply believe that the people
John
8:48.
can reach their elected representstives in Washington and
The best answer to a false
make them listen.
Idea
Is the truth.-Richard M.
-F o r m e r astronaut John
Nixon,
former U.S. vice presiGlenn, on pro~ents of
dent.
.
gun control leg11lation.

• • •

o~te!l the
proctkt of uti"~~ fije Bible
adminflterillg 1111 oath?
·

Q-Who

m

A-The great B)'Witble
em~r. Tuatlnlaq, In ·1532,
who took'tbe oath with a book
of the Goipell In hli'halld,

Q-Who

W&lt;IB

the flrrt /tiD

the fact he's been keepln~ his
ERA well below last year s.
· Fergie has llad only 51 runs
scored agalnJI him In the first
half of the season. But the
Cuba had only scored 51 for
him. Six times his teammate~
failed to score and lour times
he lost, 1_-!1...
The C~bs suffered OJJiy six
shutouts aU last . sea1011 but
have been blankr.d'tbree times
that mJDy this )"'.ar. ·The
Year of the P)reher ill working
In reverse for Ferpe Jenkins.
Manager
saya
Jenkin• has
effective and
f!)Ur

1.0

year we'd be pushlug for first

a-aln."
.
Tbo 6-5, 24-year-old rlgbthander b a resident of SOuth
Chatham, Ontario. ~·orgle Ia
the easy-going type wbo
doesn't mope around because
of hla bad luck. In the locker
rocm ht caUa himself Super
canadian. During the off-sea·~ he playa ·for the Globe·
trotten. He fiDda less pressUre In baakelbaU.
"In ·~b'uketb811," be says,
"one auy seldom has to carry
the whole teani, although a
player must be aound every
day. A plreher, hCIWever, controls the game for the most
part and feels more Individual
!traln."
.
Fergie ·Is feeling It much
. more the4!' days 'fben be
IOqlca to !!1i8 $cpreboai'd In lilt·
. late ltqllligll and see•' Chi·
' '

conference championship teams
wltll New York ancl twice was
&amp;elected to play In tho pro bowl.
· He was traded to the Rama in
!963.

The Rams, wbo will fill llle
vacancy le!t by Grier with 6!oot-5, 300 pound Roger Brown,
held a two and a half boor
scrimmage Tuesday against the
San Diego Chargers of the
American Football League.
Riehle Petltbon, 1he nine-year

Rutland, McArthur
Post Tourney Wins

veteran of the Chicago Bears,
who announced his retirement
aa a pla:er last week, may be

defensive

sat'et&gt;'rna!!

could be made. All tile Beora
would want In · exchange lor
Petithon would be the Salnlo'
No. 1 draft choice next year.
Halas aloo amounced that
delenalve tackle John Johnaon
and o!lonslve back Garry• Lyle
quit camp.
The Dallas Cowboys revealed
IIIey have lured place kicker
Mike Clark ou1 of retirement.
Clark, Aid he wu
quitting as a player laal week
wldle a member of the
Pittsburgh Steelers, agreed to
terms with the Cowl&gt;oYI, acquired the rlgltls to the

win. He .Uowod but one Adela ville
hit - a third lnnll18 double by lured back to the playing lleld II
tile Bears can swing a deal wllh former Texas A &amp; M player In
M. French.
exchange for a hi&amp;b draft
Whittington had a triple a n d the New Orleans saints.
two Rms lor 1he winners. II. HatPetltbon, who played bls choice.
Oeld had a double and two sl~es
and lour RBis. T. Sheets was
charged with the loss.
K. c.mp hurled throe lnnlrvs
llftrllll , ......
and II. LJmbert tllree lor lhe Mooon Tigers. Bolli allowed bet two
McArthur hila - they cJme off
LJmbert In tho Otth end sixth
runp. Bolh llnned 14 Merchant&amp;,
but It wu aU In a losl!li cause
•• the McArthur lids pushed
across one run In tho ft!th Innlng, and held on lor a 1..0 win.
K. RJrber opened the Mhwith

111ft '

z..,..

PICKUP TRUCK
COVERS

a !lingle, and scored later ln the
lmlng. Kim Word had the other
Merchant hit, also a single.

In Tuesday' 5 ttnt gune, the
Rutland Reds smuhed AddaviUe,
Mike RJtzWI hurled a ..,.
13-3 In a pme called a!ter three hit, no-run pme, Ianning 14 Tl· ·
and Dll&amp;-hal! lnnl!!il becouoe o! prs In 1he six-inning battle. He
Ule Ill-run lead rule.
hit- batter, walked six, and the
The winners had 1o hlta. c. Merchants made one error.

• Flab lor Ferlllller
The most Important fiah in
the United Ststea Is not ~ten. . Whlttlncton ,.., crodltoil wlthlhe
It Is the menha""n, .of '!liitl}, ,
.
,
.
over 1.5 bUIIon poundS ire
· ·
·
caught each year and used
·
• _
prlmarUy for oil and forti·
Seores Two, ude
lizer, aCcordiDg to the Encyclopaedla Britannica.
~neuse scored two runs In
Ule last lnn1118 to defeat RJclne
7-6 at the Syra&lt;!u&amp;e Municipal
Park Tuesday evening.
Kelly Wlnobre...,r, the winn11v pitcher, allowecl.three hits,
struck out sewn am walked two.

Goose Eggs Not So Golden lor Fergie
'.

veteran

aate, pi&amp;Jed on five Eastern

Ratzlaff Hurls No-Hitter

•••

(WashbUrn ~. 8

Columbua ..... 45 45 .500 4!1.· fly.
LIU..Ule ..... 47 48 .4&amp;5 5
Pinch Homer Hurta
CinctnnBII (Nolan 4-2) at Pitts- Bul!alo . . • . . • .46 49 •484 6
PIUabur&amp;b oont the game In·
bur&amp;h (lo!ooao 4-6), 8:05 p.m. Richmond .•.•. 43 52 .453 9
to overtime when 1h01)' tied Ulo
Nltl York' (RJan 6-4), at AtTuoa&lt;IBI" a R~~ta
•
ocore 5-6 In Ulo ninth one
wao
oul
as
Bill
Vlrdon
pounded
~~~~·~0~.~.0~ P,~ ., ~..::) 3 ~dlo~ 1 (111,,,; a' ·ptnch hit ·homer" )IIlii Joao
NP. York lt Atlanta, nlslit
Rochester 12 !lfracuae 4 ~ Papn on Ule paths. Plpn had
l$ictnnatl. ,,et Plttobur&amp;b, n!lllt Toledo 8 Bul!elo 6
walked.
~11\111~ at St. Loula, nl&amp;bl lAUIIVDle ! Columhua 0
Other big hill for the Rod•
., . OniJ.,....,... Jdledulecl Richmond 6 Jacl&lt;sonvUle 3
In the pme ....., Vada Pin-

at 'St. · LOUla

plana to devote his time to a college ball at Tulane and hal
1hoatrlcal career In addition to bullineos lntereata ' In N~
promoting JIO&gt;CO among the Orleans, aalcl he ...,ld NC&lt;I!11i•
der his plans to retire If ha
races.
could be traded to llle SalntJ.
Started Wltll Glanta
Seek Draft Choice
Grier, a third round draft
Boars Preoldent George Ho· .
choice of tile New York Giants
las,
Jr., said a cloal lor the
1n 1955 after attondlni· P e n n

Tueoda.Y, after 12 seasoos In tbe
NIIIIOIIJI Football League.
Grier was aldellnecl lor tile
ontlre 1967 sea!Miil wltll a
ruptured achUleo, tenlon and
when the 11\1Ur7' !ailed ID
respond to treatment, he
decided to call It quits as a
player.
Grier, 36, a participant In the
civil rltlbts movement, said he

,.... l'llbllurlb pltehera, wa•
the victim al the Redo' wlmln&amp;
rai)J.
Gei-rJ Arrtalo, fourth CIDcln- Rutland and McArthur acl11111 horler, received the win as vanced 1n the Kyger creek Little
he chalked up Ida alxlb triumph Leque baaeboll tournament
Tueoda,y evening.
"'the--·
Gar)' Nolen, ~. wao to hurl
Rutland slammed the Addavllle
IDnlcbt's pmo and hla OlliiOII· Slugger• 13-3 In the Oral pme.
ont waa tO be Bob Moose, who The McArthur lllerchanto, behind
sport• a 4-8 mlrk.
the no-hit, oo-run hurll!li oiMiko
RJizta!f, blanked the Mason Tl·
gers 1..0 lnonolcl-~shioneclpltcbo
ers dueL
Pitcher Protection
This evening, the Gallipolis
1 Would you believe the Bal·
White Sox bottle the Gallipolis
tlnlore Oriole a are be I n g Red Sox at 7 p. m. The MJddle..
babied? When a reporler vis· port Redlegs hattie tho Pl. Pleas!ted lite Florida t ra I n I n g ant Fruth's Pharmacy at 8:30.
camp, be found the trainer
Thursday, p~ Plea11111City1ce
busy ordering gaUons of baby
and
Fuel moeta tile il)Tacuoe Gloil. His queatlon brought the
reaponae, "to proteet the- ants at 7, and Mkldleport'sYaD&lt;·
plrehers agalnat wind or raw ees battle Pt. Ple1sart'a ~el~
workers a! 8:30.
weather.''

-'•

•PJ&gt;Olllteci to t h e U.S. Svposes
..
preme COIWI7
A-Loula D. Brandela, apexplains why Romania 1n an unprecedented dlplomatk:
It is not enough to say,
move, decided to sip an agfeement with the United StateS. I'' "When I was your age . . ." ness, of the world around polllted In 1918 by Prelldent
Woodrow Wllloli. "I
for expanded co-operation In technology science and industry. \ ·We were neve! their age. him.
,
.
'
Telev1s1on has gJ.ven the modQ-Whot doel the """Ilk"
The Kremlin a compromise on the nonproliferation treaty ern student an awareness, -Robert H. Slwffer, dean of
studentJ at lndoa"" Univer· IMIIil .In "fran/clru:eme1;7 •
and~ current pe~e moves In the Middle East are another \ perbops an excessive awareBity, on student unrest.
A-'-1! meaufree or pure.
.lndlcation that coe~stence will be backed by diplomatic action
whenever Moscow finds it advisable. It is even conceivable
thAI the Russians will continue to aid North Vietnam and the
VIet Con' only as long as this policy appears to be pruduclng
diplomatic galnJ.
This is, alter all, what foreign policy is aU about. The
, foreign policy of any country is si~ply concerned with the
WHI&lt;N DIPIITHONG TAKES IAA£,. D.
I!J!)l&amp;nsion of its power, inftuence ahd strategic posture.
/&gt;.N EVENING ~E C/&gt;.N'T
,i'if.l the West Is to outwll the Russians In tbe complex diploEAR~Y ENOUGH· • · • •
·D!atic game, it will have to be better at playing its cards, or
'limplY hold a better hand, and not to confront the Communists
With ,unacceptable alternatlvell-i"'aceful coelllstence or lim·
. w.;~ofutlonary wars.
·
The'· Communists remain ColnmUDists. They wiU always be
ready to elploit any weakness or opportunililos in the non. ' Comm!lillat world .
. ~.; But a Jlllticy to ease East-West tensions must not necessarily
~ !Ia baseCI on Western ideas of how the Kremlin should behave.

eold chicken 18 fine lo. lake

Yori 4 Booton
:: .
Tudtly'l l!idlabl7 Pltebera
.AU Tlmea .E171'
cal~ (Ellll 7.$) at ~

.

.. p.m.

•. :

'l'hb

'

Minute Symptom.s . · .i.
Aid Doctor's Diagnosis ...

lion" -the suiWentotr of 'llli!'ll'ee W'orld-'-re!llains ·l,lle 18remost •
objective of Marnst-Leninists, whether they are pro-Russian
or pro-Chinese.
Nevertheless, it would be Ulll'flllstic-even a serious error
-to ignore the fact that since· Stalin's death in 1953 lbe Red
world has been reacting to severe strains.
Soviet leaders repeatedly have revised their foreign policyto veer between "hard" ancl "soft" policies-and ~tpone the
"inevitsble" showdown with lhe·.west.
..
. Things do change, however slOWly and tortuously. Two
. decades ago, as Humphrey said ill his ststement on foreign
policy, the United Ststes faced "an aggressive and highly
' centralized Communist bloc."
Today, Red Ruswa and Red China ~ engaged In )' biller
: con81ct. With Romania, Yugoalavla and CzechoslCIVilia increulngly CJ:itlcal of Russia while seeking closer ties to the
West, the Communist countries no longer pose a monollthic
· threat.
'
The Kremlin leaders are paitlfully aware of this. They no
;longer can rely on their East European aateWtes. And China
\

.

.Ev~n

a T1ie~m~· lo,-o~course,..that '!ftvolutionjfy .J;.s of·libera- .

•
1

'

.

~~ 'l ...

Is the time ripe for a "thaw" in the relations between the
United Ststes and Soviet Russia? Are the Communists, in
view of their long record of duplicity and subversion, more
trustworthy today than they were two decades ago when the

The Rlisslans now lock for results wherever !bey can get
,them, chooolng their methods on strictly pragmatic rather
,than ideologlcaUy tidy lines.
., .(
.
'· For the present it is In their Interest to l~e Fidel Castro's
proleats and seek to e~pand trade with Lalin America,
For the preaent, too-unW tboy have reaolve'd the c~nftlcls
In the Red world-they also want to m&amp;lntaln the ·status quo
Ill West Europe, at least a truce Ill tbe Middle East and the
.-eopening o! the Suez Canal
· ··
Tbe obvious reason for Moscow's unusuaUy co-operative
attitude toward the American-Soviet nuclear nonprolllerallon
treatY Is to teJtraln West Germany from becoming an atomic
' ·
power for u long aa poaslble.
The treaty, hailed by opttmls!J as a mUestone In AmeriCG·
Soviet relations, Is also Moscow's excuse ior denying the East
Ew'.opean JSteWtes nuclear energy even for peaceful pur-

-

'. THE CIQCTQA BAVB
'
: J. -

consideration.

·ts an overt enemy.

. -,, ·,

.

of Communist "containment," now advocates a policy of "re-

conciliation" In East-West relations.
Since be aspires to be the next president of tbe United Stales
this dramatic change in Humphrey's views requires careful

~~~~t~~e~! _!~ !::':~!-i"{'.u~.~ted ~.Y ~~~tate

lavellllve ·City· " ·'!'Z·
Tbo first steamablii rod~'
Its !rial twtln Lyons,~
This city became tll8 'wdrid'w1
silk 'capital .alter the muibenlf!
tree was lntroiluced; .J•~~
ID~ented his I o·o 111 , ber4~
Ampere worked on ~ laWJ .
of electrodynamlcJ .~~ ~ tli:',
modern great hYll!"oel~·
.works; and the brotlierJ l,\DQ"
!ere experimented! .,; I t h. ~!if
movie camera.
' ,
.

Helen Help. \

"A Jug of Wine ,and Thou!"

~·

from ihe &gt;Marlne Corp~ and air "IOI'Yice· and, · ··~~-·

sJven ,0111)' I!Ieltlal lobS In tile Navy. . :. ; , , .... '!I

I

Grier Retires, Will Promote Peac~

'
rain
·

4, nJabt

.- .

'

Amerl~ ~··
ldeJIII(Il

Bt VrrO mLUNO
The Au.nta
•
In tho
.
ul't ~· Wrlm ,
with the !II•. l.~Ua' U-11 trollc · Co1lfornla and ¥1Jme101a opllt a
11 100 *&gt;n't lblnk boHii!lll over Pidladelphl'a left tbo c.,dl ~~ by
3-1
and . ·booeball plliJer~ bove 12\2 ~· · 111• In . tbo ...,.... !rUh ~ Anpla IIkins
chonPd; lake tho coae all!ddlo Nlii!OIIJ!'J;.elp _....
the &lt;Perm',' D~t edBod
KrUiepocl.
Llkt• Wlnnlua
Walhlll&amp;tOII ll.f, lllltbnore outAt the rljoe old ap al 23,
Kr~. ""ll • u If e r e d ~ 51ev..and 8~, Boolcll
·Kr-' (,. lhrea!ODinl to lllrwall all thoao looaea with the beat 'NOW York 4-1 and the
iellre.
old Moll ...., were e buli&gt;all oal&lt;laDd.ctdcaao game waa
' Kraoepooi hal ......,..cod tbat lc*t, lnalll• .ho woo't 110 throuab rained 4IQt.
II the loleta don'i p,_ blm In II aplD If the loleta clllll't keep
'
the oxpa1111lon draft and bo'a him.
•
picked by 111 -•ton teJm,
''I clllll't W8lll to otart Glf With
b0111 Gilt tile pme.
·
anoCIIOr -.oiOD el.., and 10
~; tbough, Krlile:Pool anolber live yearo Joidng.
hal IIDaU, deelllld he IIIQ' try Winning II lion. I'm l'ollbll' to
By SI'U CAMEN
to maM&amp;e witll baoeball. Ho like II. can YGU· iJnaCIDo me
has ralood hla averap from pl.,... on a teiin Uke ihe old
FromUPI
tile""'""
violentWriter
world o! prn
,183 last month to .259. And he ~ell apln'l''
CGIIIllllod bla rocenl wrp with
Elaowbere In the · Natlon81 -.u to tho -ld ol
a bolDer Tuooda,y nl&amp;bt and RCIIl LeiiiJi,, Cblclmall odpd Plt- promoting peace 1111111111 the
SIIoboda aAiod a homer to
tobur&amp;b 7-4, Ill 12 iniiiDBa, Sjln races.
Thal'a tho tallk lacing mamtho Now York Mota aDd Tum ,Francla&lt;o nipped Cblcap t4 In
moth Roosevelt Grier, the 6Seaver a 2-1 vlctDry over .tho 10 lmlniJ aDd Loa Aliplea
!oot-5, 287 pound clefenalve
AtlaniJ Braveo.
eclged Houston 3-1.
tackle of the Loa Angvlos RJml
who announced his retirement

cago 000 000 000. But he says
he has an Idea that may help
his luck.
"I phm," he states solemn·
ly, "to start IakinS extra batuDg practice. I'm trying to get
better at bunting and I even
hit a home rwt lAst year and
one this year. Maybe If I
could hit~ couple more ... "

•

.1

"·

(;, · LATE HOUR . SALE

• -

For the convenience

or those

who cannot purchase their reserve seat Uckets lor tile 1968
Meigs lllerauder football season
during tho day, James Diehl will

be in his o!!lce at Middleport
High School on Friday, July 26,
!rom 6 to 8 p. m. This sale Is

SitES TO FIT ANY MODEL PICKUP
A gal~lzed steel utility pickup truck cover. Protect your
cargo ·or workmen aOO use ror vacations, weekend ft.shlrw

ror

last season ticket holders
IUtlera for SyrlcUI!Ie were Kelly only. Tlcketa will go on saJe to
Hayman with a triple with the the general public on August I.
bases loaded, Greg Cundiff, two
al~es, · and Brian Hamilton, a
Beautiful Book
airwle. S)Tacuse is now S.loverThe Irish "Bock of Kells,"
aU for the season.

or huntil18 trips.

Prices Start At S203
ON DISPLAY AT

containing the lour Gospels,
was written and drawn by
hand about A.D. 700 and contslns many beautiful decora·
lions. Many people consider
it the most beautiful book in
the world.

GRIDDERS' NOTICE
C&lt;lach U..nette, head !ootbaU
coach at WlbomaHltlbSchool,anIIOIIIICed t.oday thllt bo)'slngrades
8 throulh 12 intereslecl In play·
NATIONALS ENTRIES
iiV !oolbiU this ~ are to report
CHm'NlTf Hn.L, Mus.
Leaves change color ln au·
Thur!IIIQ, Jllb' 25, II 7:30 p. m. tumn because they stop mak·
(U~ Amtlrl&lt;&amp;n Mart.\' RielPHoNE '73-5554
sen, Herb· FU.Glbboo, ancl Tum at tho gym. Thobo)'awWbeglven ing food and green chlorotheir pbyslcal allpsand lh••lr parEdletSOit. all of ~od . onto permission ollps at this
....... ........ ........
tiiiMI vlc!Drlea at Wimbledon, time.
ltav~ entered the !leld lor the
U.S. Nationals 11&gt; be held Aug.
1~.
. CONTINUE SALE
Tbe ~. whl&lt;h will
The RJclno Pee Wee and Litltallo DIOl'e then 300 competitors tle Lellgues wlll continue 1he
Yytna for llftlleo aDd doubiJB J'UIIIIIli&amp;O oale on Friday and Sattltleo, will ba held at the urday from 9 to 4 p. m. In tile
I..OniWOOd Cricket Club.
SIJnpoon bulldlng next to t h e
Snack ard Chill RJstaurant In
· RJclne. A bake sale wlll lle held
SaturciiQ'.

phylldiaappe~a•r•s

HOGG &amp;ZUSPAN
MATERIALS COMPANY

~

~

MASON, W. VA.

~~----------------. .

where your dollar buys MILES more

~er;
'

'

WOolen

SALE

ANTHONY
..,~......

•·

' i'IO. '~~·!MIIbll

• : , 'Pro.le•,For

.

, .pu)M:IItiG
.

' AND

1

TIRES

FW 4 PLY NYt.ON
650 X 13 WUI'I'I STR1P! . .. . . . .. ............. . $17.95
775 x 14
StRIP£ . ' . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $19.95
.... .. .. ' . ' . . . . . $21.95
' 825 X 14
STRiPE
.55 X 14
StRiP~ .. ~ . . . . . . . . . . . ...... . $23.95
•.......... ' ' ' . '. $21.95
8l5 X 15
STRIPE
. .. . .. . .. .. " " .. .. $23.95
845 X 15
$TRIP.E

.

'

"500" ·••d DELOit fiRESTONE ·
. .· ,PRICED ·IN SIZES ,

�lB•

.'

.'

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\

. STEAK ---;.------·-_L_..,_.,

..

·,~

.

.

-;BONELESS

.

i

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--- F RO

.

LB.
''

'
Has Big

·Buys

OPEN

For Y4u,_,~"'·~·

SUNDAY

.

.-.

SUGAR

'

'

'

1FAMILY

"' '
~. -

.

'

I'

·'

'

LIGIT·CIIINI STYLE

lL

Crackers.:~,2

\ -!'0 GIMMICKS

•

,

·0.

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..... _....... "'
....

)
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LIST

· ·:':;)· ·. T~ v. ·rov
•.

..."TUN .

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~.

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~.'

'

. (ir~WmJ

~aUtlK ER STAT~E

·f.STEST i\'ETAL

SUPER BLEND

I

•.

i

·

.t.' CA'R'IN

POLARBA

'

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eleanslnic. Pure boby soap
elpeelolly . !of leader
l~lf, is, Ole:;~~wa1
dt!a.nae
your
llinlll!d
e~~mplell!~·
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Theil · was
article S!!ttlng fqrth \he · to drive me to swlmmjng ~{ass!;; -,·
opinl~n of a'n· e~pert. "Ch!)dre!t,'" I, read,
·''You'll have• to w·aJk ~ause 'i'•d Inter"want rules and desire a flfm ~and. They rupted lirsl," I said. ''Flrst ecme, first
are seeking honesty from parents .. .'i
served."
•
1
"Mother;'' my son said, "let's go gel my
"Mrs. Gordon Ia on the telephone and
bicycle from the bike shop."
wants to know ·lt you'll baby-sit with Charloll~-"
•
"I am bW.y,'' I .said ·fltmly.
"Yes,''. ! answeredfimly. "You can't go
"You said Utat thJs mOrning."
to the bike shop, ,Ta , becauso I pfOJ!Ilsed
"I was busy this morning," !said honesUy. you yesterday but 1. promised Mrs. Gordon
·'
·
·
"I was writlrtg a poem and trying to find a last week."
word to rhyme with Byzantine and all I
What. elSe was It that ertlcle sald? "Parcould think of was wolverin~ and tontine, en.ts will eventually )lay wl'th·Jiol.only broken
which, I'll admit, made the morning a total scbedules but sometlmOs broken hearts .•• "
loss."
Now, that was really well•sald 1
"Try Ovaltine. Now, I've helped you, so
"Everybody get into the c.;.!" I decided.
you help me. That's a rule."
·
''I'U take you to the pool, Cissy, and then
Tad to the bike shOp on the way to get
11
Don't bother me, dear," I said fifmly. take
Utile
Cbarlotte, and then I'll get Stu at
"Remember that rule? 'Do not interrupt Ronnie's
house and tal(e Rick to work on the
mother while sbe is working.' "
'
way h.ome and perhaps I!U ,]lave ume to
"But, yeslwday you made a firm offer whlp up those butterscotch bioowilles I prom·
~ .
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about going to the bike shop. Remember our ised your father.''
rule that a promise Is a promise? "
.
"I know what you're thinkinc,"
said,
I quickly ocanned the next two pragraphs, asJ fir!!lly put down my maf~~Zine. ., Where
l
..
hoping my expert would get on with hls ex- there's a will there's a ·way.'
perUse and perhaps touch on which rule ·has
''You're wrong," I said., ~th hone'sty,, ''it
precedence over . . .
was 'Pay now-re•d later.'" ,
Ult's 2 o'elockl" Cissy interrupted, 11TiJDe
•

.2DRY-Hou·
r
·
CLEANING

'

Nightly

The preUlest fee\, on the.
beach cain be yours il.you begin this intensive beautifying
program right now. Ev~ry
night before bed gently pumlee all rough spots. Blend \he
juice of one lemon with baby
cream and gently masaage
your feet. The erearil softens
as
lemon bleaches dis-

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Our Uofial Good

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1nar.K'e~ ; e~rt . ~ . lfuGs-tt~ti&gt;nOJto~2ut) ,· ,

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Pomtroy·

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l.liVmltooll
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;r Fat .Sdirl
. - ,.tJ.1U
~.,to :t7;
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• lQo:-22tf.
zt"'liNo·
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· ' • ;'' ' · ' B!IU'I lL '10 to 12.'!0l Plio•IO to
.
21.50: 220.240, 2?'00,,24Q--260, 1 !1:SO; '.~ l!llol)l, li31)ci., 17

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oervtce.

A tboull1l for the dal-: Brltloh

Three amllll IIJWJipoal otllces
""tor Jlu&lt;b'urd Ktpllnlllld, "A tn the Tenth District ore to be
110111111'1 ;r.~e.. lo moro ac=- cloled til tile -few ....... beste thlll a ,...•a.cortalnb':"
cauoe of recent cllt becko .,._

•·

Lambl, ciiOtce, 25.5D; good,

25; nio&lt;ullll), 23,50.

·

~·· ·~ ll'lat· ~~·

. •••· •

IIOIIIICocl

..,verMr

cllll, 27 d""n. Baby clllves, BH

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tltOu&amp;lt • .,.dllaf;
, "': out,:~· tho: bliliet.' ufl!ii-.o ~

Dee Miller
real tlfoct 01! Witklrl "I""" \boi:
by lhe Post omce Jlel. come trom tr111t liida jupplltid

Q. a r e

"In 1920 It &lt;OOt f20.60tomake
a ·l..,-4lstanco coli tr&lt;1111 Now
York to San Fnncloco. For that
11m11111.W. ormono1 ,,.. could
lillll. t,0371ettoiro. 1'aoll,)' ltecista
fl,U to llllke the oome
coli, and for that price,,.. can
mall on!¥ 47Jotters. So tile Gov25
ernmonl'a lnveollpllrw tbt Bon
' VEAL CALVES- Tepa 3L60; S.Yatom."
·
8eeondo 31.90; Mocltum 28.75 to
tbot Is a quote rrom Calt&amp;n-nia
29.80; Common " Hoovtea, 28 ·
Honold Reqan.ltmlpt
to 31. 70,
be iomewhll flcetlous, but its
point c~• be weD taken now1 with
the .......,cement or eut blcka In

cattle, otoera, 28 -50-3°1 helforo,
24.75-211.75.
calvea, , chOice, 34.501 good,
32,75; medium, 29.50; commor-

bytbe ,~W .......k
o( hisii!JQ •
~ ....~' tile

g~
·

Re'.p·'h o·.rt
· .: . . &amp;y·.

to 22.
..• ·
.
CATTLE. ~~1Btd23.50;
Holforo 11·to 22.10; ru C...s 17
til lUO; Clnnoro 12 to 1&amp;.50;
a.Do 19 60 to 21• Stoek Steero
20.
•...
•
•
50 to ... eo; Stoek Holfof•
17.75 to 23,25;StookSteercalvea
Stoek Holter calws, 2);75 to 23-

~=w;~, "2s.~;:;~,.4 ~ 1~~

21-42.

. . . '.
as . . . on

w· .
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Heaute•i,ftol9o7J~ w';/~. 18to ····

-l5.1iO.I~. Stoek ,HOI•• 17,115~so. cbot~
.,-. · . .
re- Clltlo, • ceoteirs,2'!'·28.60;
Good, 25 -~6.50;standlrd,23.50Zt,SIIi GOodhtlfer'o u,'SWLSO·
~ I!Otroro· z!;-51144. Gocxi
cCIIIs, 1a, 7.__. 0_.to,· iii.DI.Il', 'tuo.
..,. tnil
17•751. cannea: ·
cutter, l6

CIMolni
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Jul7·:20

Sowrda)o

'

r• ••· 20.50, ~60r280,, 20, !S0.1!'0, ¥0.
,75. SOW!- ~S. 8CI-17.9Q~ J!oir•

(UPON RE,QUESTf

.

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·!liD•· Two, .
,
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Mnllllo- .
l&lt;llel'lle ocllllkbie

portmelll.

Tlds Ia an example of theM-

mlnlotratlon reAislrw to
ec01101111 In lfll' ronn. The Pootmuter General's announcement
that 11111 poollloervtce wawd be
eut beck ao an "ecOIICID,)' mow"
. to a little arm twlotlrw &amp;n- the
·lal!po.yers. It follwl)'s the most
vllll ,and direct services thetthe
l'i&gt;ei'nment cuts !!rot, thus demonstrat!ng that "ec0110111J" Is
lou&amp;fl oo tbe talli!l.)'ero.
Some of the absurd.research
proJects, .PI.l'DIOnla to Itinerant
poeta, waste and cfttJlicatton In
the Pen!api, and other such
Items won't ever feel the elfect
or the cutback knife. 'This sort
of culhecki&gt;Olltlcs was cypl6ed

by '""""..; .and , . .

'

J.llllll'lhlllllllllll

done to olrlft the .L7 bllllOII , to
.
~on orrir¢ to cut l!l&lt;li, thlt IIIIDUii Pilot Qlllce ~ .., point Ia !be.
tiJpe ... ·~...,. 111\Choa. . . ' dell~t, !hot eenatnb lo , . Pro~ C
'Wh!!n alll!IP• w~~lbreoft!¥, """"" bl' the men "" the .lll'fllr caotw
mill waa ~verocl twloe a ,1!17 llile IHinl tNt the mall •·0 0 •
So fir
hu beell hit ltlra
sl:i til)',a a week.. .NoW .111111 ,a 11»- tlu:&lt;Julh,
cent ·lla.JI&gt;p ~ Poo~ Ge,..
Jt :...,m,lllmoltt.......lvablo .. .
era) 1111 rilijl ell).., deliver«! that a buolneaolheti]UIIII!roloed tllouilf1
onb' O!Ke a ~, !lve ·tiJD'ea a Ita • .,...._, •• mueb u the Poot iu'e
Olllce•l!ai OYIII' the past &amp;01101'11 ftr
week.
.
.
II! a 212-pp teP&lt;!I't • P~eat­ )'OAfs, and baa had such an lJI.
dentlol ComliltjalcnqnPollli 110" cteue iJl buliMI!II, continues to low, AI
orpnlutlon .r~ tho 1... more and more....Oy, Molt tix Bill 11111
Post Qmce Dopartmen\bo ..,.r. pr!YIIe organlut!CRII who hllldle It dt.t.•'t
ated by a govenanent • CIIIIIOd ..-r . YOiumeo •of bualne11 where the
ccnporotlon that llrOU!d. be Insu-- 'llllke more and more prolliL
modo. - · lt ~· '
lated trom palltloi. The "Poltll Tldo the; frequently dowhile Clll- that If lilY ~~ · U., will
be made In vltiiiMirvt...,
c;orpoHiton" would hi•HIM!WI tlill the cost to tllo u&amp;efl,
I
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THERE IS NOTHING MORE FASHIONABLE for foil thon suede. The three-piece
sueded pigskin suit (left) will always keep its shape because the bolero jacket is
underlined with Pelion as is the set-in high rising belt of the softly gathered skirt.
The long-sleeved blouse is of silk paisley. Pelion olso interlines the. teak color
suede cope and double-breasted coot and belt (right). This magnificent Inverness
hos detachable cape collar. TheSe designs are by Monika of Mallory.

1

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BIG BUYS

on

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BETI'ER BOMEMAIUNG

Color: Vital Part of Life
By AILEEN SNODDY

value your
can buy II!

NEW YORK-(NEA)-since
textile designer Dorothy
Liebes picked up her bachelor's degree in art from San
Jose (Calif.) State Teachers
College she has made color a
vital part of everyone's life.

·'

center blade cutJ!

Seen in her Manhattan
apartment decorated in black, ·
red, white and gold, she is a
walking exponent of her favorite topic. Miss Liebes was
relaxing after a day of photogr a p h y an d interviewing
dressed in a light knit of blue,
green and purple with green
mesh~kings . Certainly the
cosi'F._e ~elped . her !hold her
own in }:OOms with soarJng
ceilings whJch accommodated
a classic mobile over a grand
plano and with Oriental art
mixed with sharp lines and
colors of today's abstract
paintings.
"Color," Miss Liebes says
in her definite way, "comes
first and then - texture and
composition."

Some people may not care.,, but we care.
Your grandmother's classic blueberry pies
were baked with juicy, wild berries.
We think they're th.e best for plea. .
.
. we're.lit""""""
,. ,_,
'' "t'' .co,.....,"'"
·"""' "'" "";I...' !IL\,
.:.:v.· ·-..
I

.

DOROTHY Ll EBES, textile designer and color
consultant, uses color
photographs to catch his-

ONLY $'299
$30.00 ........,••" •

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W•termelons

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work. People afraid of color should
look at nature, she says.
"There is no bod calor,
just bod combinations of

'

blessed as a nation with
science to allow anyone to
have beautiful color prints ror
decorating.''

Her one regret is that
some people are born with a
blind spot which leads h"er to
advise those shopping for
clothes or the home that,
"Good color doesn't cost any
more than bad."

Softening Treatment
For those with dry , sensi·
tive skin. try this soft .treatment: Dissolve powdered
milk I equivalent of one quartl
into your bath water and add
a half-cup of rock salt and two
capfuls of baby oil. Your skm
will respond to this babying.

• • •

Inexpensive luxury
Luxpry doesn't have W coat
a inn&lt;ill fortune. f'or a scented
after-bath rultdown. tl m p l ~·
add a small amount of your
fa\'orlle pt:rfume to a bottl~
of baby oU and ohake well.
Right after yoar bath, wblle
your skin It still warm and
pores are still
lmooth
the perfumed ol llghdy all
over your body. Let your skin
absorb the oil for a few minutes, then towel orr ucesl.

ern,

C..fllltlt ,.,..

MASON

If you want proof that

c.ttn; this mueb counts,
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SHRIMP ~-:,,:• •

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HALF ORANGE SHERBET

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WHY PAY

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SAVE
tOe

YOU SAVE
16cl

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590
24C
25c

2.~39c
·Ct. •••• G3c

· ears
'•

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..... S4tl

• •

~,-

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Wutu Wu Pa,.r • • •
Sift loistlo&amp; Filii AI' llANO
CHUNIS

10'••• "'"'14c

BEAN &amp; BACON
OR VEGETABLE

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A &amp; P Groceries!

Bill

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SEAFOOD DINNER •
BREADED SHRIMP

IIIII Ted
well,

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~~
~~~-•_Sttlll
___•_···~:·::~:~:.~·....:~...:~:.....:.·....:·_:.·:'"-:..s.:1_o'_...:•~•:rt:..:c:•:•:•:•_9:~::'-:.k":~::::.....:~_:·:._:·...:·_:••:·:•:..._~==::::;;;=~
I

.....,...,

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The price! It's' as wiklu' the blueberries.

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PREMIUM

------..Cap'n John• Fioh and Seafood Sp«iabl'-------

flavor!

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Swlfh

111. .111 Stukl
• • .... $J89
Short Mill t1 ... • • • • •••.4fc
frJer Quarltn ~t.'::
• ......c
lilt Leaf 111 ..~:· • • • lb.stc

Ch11ck Sttlkr ~· , • • • • •••.51•
lo11l111 Chllcl Rlllt ~;" • • ••. 78•
.... _Steak ·~~~· • , • • ••. &amp;lc
E•&amp;IIM Cu' l11l Rtllt
78c

"''I '

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~~·1 09

try a Jane Parker Blueberry Pie this week.

.

BXTRA

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WIENERS

SUPER RIGHT QUALITY -7 INCH CUT STANDING

We're that fuasy about all :our baking.
No matter ~hat It is: If it's b~ed by our Jane P~!fker Bakers,
it's baked with quality lnJreilie~:~tl;
It's baked with p!'lde and eare.

color."

-

wing Chicken ~~ 39c
Roast • • • • • lb. gsc

.. -

In fa~ we care so much about such thing11,
we've made just one big change ill the classic recipe:
We bake only wild berries that are U.S. G~e A!

ond also in her

r------------------"'
1
1
3 ROOMS

Tomoloft • Squish

~ll'k•

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...,.. e C.ntoloupet

.,.,~ "

FRESH, PLUMP,- FULLY DRESSED WHOLE

- 'Qii.

' Only wild berries get into our Jane Parker Blueberry pies.

HOME GROWN
eCORN
C.lobope Pepper.

.

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f!l"' ...~'""'''.
- ~ .. -~

·~
-~ · . :, I
~&gt;

_,.

NONE
PRICED
HIGHER

I

.,

She is happy that we are. in
a color culture where people
toric or nostalgic mOments
can go to museums and study
· how the professional artists
attack and control color.
.· However, she is unhappy that
· more cities such as New York explains, and when tr.aveling
11
baVe so Uttle exterior color." or entertaining in the apartment or in her summer home
fashioned
from two Denver
She adds that a lot or
and
Rio
Grande
railroad ca-· Ulldistinguished architecture
booses
she
greets
her gllests
eculd~mproved with more
with a clicking camera. "They
use of color. "Paint covers a all laugh and say, 'Here she
lot of mistakes," she feels.
comes with her camera,' but
they always can for prints."
During her career as textile
designer and color consultant
"Ours is a color culture,"
the Liebes sleight-of-hand with she continues, ..and ' we are
colorations has touched all
age groups through her designs in wallpaper; blankets,
seanres, tablecloths, carpets,
For Cleaner Hair
blinds, knits and other clothes.
Slnce mueb of the beauty of
Recent Liebes-directed styles
the
new hairstyles depends
appeared in Morgan Jones
on
balr'a
aalural sblne, mant
bedspreads and Canso trims,
women
wiD
bave to obampoo
for example.
mere often than usual. Those
To ·present her ideas she who find frequent shampoofollows through with her Ing a problem should try
adamant thought that "you using baby ohampoo. It will
can't talk color. You must see &amp;lve hair the dellcale, yet
it.'·' For this she has approxi- thorough, eleanlng It needs.
mately 20,000 dye lots in her
• • •
studio and travels with at
Puff-Protect Your Eyes
least 10 suitcases of items to
show prospective clients.
When sunbathing, protect
bleached or dyed hair with a
Another gimmick she uses scarf, apply a good oil or sunstems from her interest in screening lotion to the skin and
·, f.boto~raphy . "I started tak- cover your eyes with soft rosnc fJCtures when J was 8, metic puffs. Contrary to popu·
and have about 40 books of Jar belief, most Unted glasse.;
cUppinfS and personal photog- are not effective sun-screenrqhl!
4 ing aids; they reduce glare
but not the potency of th~
She photographs a design sun's rays.
project in color, Miss Liebes

~noney

. TAlE THIS STIIIP TO YOUI FiltHILY
liP FOR IOIUS PUID STAMPS!
CHECK ITEMS YOU IUYI

100 =:..rum::..... 0
IITIIA ...... tt.,...wtat

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eleanslnic. Pure boby soap
elpeelolly . !of leader
l~lf, is, Ole:;~~wa1
dt!a.nae
your
llinlll!d
e~~mplell!~·
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Theil · was
article S!!ttlng fqrth \he · to drive me to swlmmjng ~{ass!;; -,·
opinl~n of a'n· e~pert. "Ch!)dre!t,'" I, read,
·''You'll have• to w·aJk ~ause 'i'•d Inter"want rules and desire a flfm ~and. They rupted lirsl," I said. ''Flrst ecme, first
are seeking honesty from parents .. .'i
served."
•
1
"Mother;'' my son said, "let's go gel my
"Mrs. Gordon Ia on the telephone and
bicycle from the bike shop."
wants to know ·lt you'll baby-sit with Charloll~-"
•
"I am bW.y,'' I .said ·fltmly.
"Yes,''. ! answeredfimly. "You can't go
"You said Utat thJs mOrning."
to the bike shop, ,Ta , becauso I pfOJ!Ilsed
"I was busy this morning," !said honesUy. you yesterday but 1. promised Mrs. Gordon
·'
·
·
"I was writlrtg a poem and trying to find a last week."
word to rhyme with Byzantine and all I
What. elSe was It that ertlcle sald? "Parcould think of was wolverin~ and tontine, en.ts will eventually )lay wl'th·Jiol.only broken
which, I'll admit, made the morning a total scbedules but sometlmOs broken hearts .•• "
loss."
Now, that was really well•sald 1
"Try Ovaltine. Now, I've helped you, so
"Everybody get into the c.;.!" I decided.
you help me. That's a rule."
·
''I'U take you to the pool, Cissy, and then
Tad to the bike shOp on the way to get
11
Don't bother me, dear," I said fifmly. take
Utile
Cbarlotte, and then I'll get Stu at
"Remember that rule? 'Do not interrupt Ronnie's
house and tal(e Rick to work on the
mother while sbe is working.' "
'
way h.ome and perhaps I!U ,]lave ume to
"But, yeslwday you made a firm offer whlp up those butterscotch bioowilles I prom·
~ .
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about going to the bike shop. Remember our ised your father.''
rule that a promise Is a promise? "
.
"I know what you're thinkinc,"
said,
I quickly ocanned the next two pragraphs, asJ fir!!lly put down my maf~~Zine. ., Where
l
..
hoping my expert would get on with hls ex- there's a will there's a ·way.'
perUse and perhaps touch on which rule ·has
''You're wrong," I said., ~th hone'sty,, ''it
precedence over . . .
was 'Pay now-re•d later.'" ,
Ult's 2 o'elockl" Cissy interrupted, 11TiJDe
•

.2DRY-Hou·
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CLEANING

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Nightly

The preUlest fee\, on the.
beach cain be yours il.you begin this intensive beautifying
program right now. Ev~ry
night before bed gently pumlee all rough spots. Blend \he
juice of one lemon with baby
cream and gently masaage
your feet. The erearil softens
as
lemon bleaches dis-

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Pomtroy·

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l.liVmltooll
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;r Fat .Sdirl
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• lQo:-22tf.
zt"'liNo·
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· ' • ;'' ' · ' B!IU'I lL '10 to 12.'!0l Plio•IO to
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21.50: 220.240, 2?'00,,24Q--260, 1 !1:SO; '.~ l!llol)l, li31)ci., 17

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oervtce.

A tboull1l for the dal-: Brltloh

Three amllll IIJWJipoal otllces
""tor Jlu&lt;b'urd Ktpllnlllld, "A tn the Tenth District ore to be
110111111'1 ;r.~e.. lo moro ac=- cloled til tile -few ....... beste thlll a ,...•a.cortalnb':"
cauoe of recent cllt becko .,._

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Lambl, ciiOtce, 25.5D; good,

25; nio&lt;ullll), 23,50.

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IIOIIIICocl

..,verMr

cllll, 27 d""n. Baby clllves, BH

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tltOu&amp;lt • .,.dllaf;
, "': out,:~· tho: bliliet.' ufl!ii-.o ~

Dee Miller
real tlfoct 01! Witklrl "I""" \boi:
by lhe Post omce Jlel. come trom tr111t liida jupplltid

Q. a r e

"In 1920 It &lt;OOt f20.60tomake
a ·l..,-4lstanco coli tr&lt;1111 Now
York to San Fnncloco. For that
11m11111.W. ormono1 ,,.. could
lillll. t,0371ettoiro. 1'aoll,)' ltecista
fl,U to llllke the oome
coli, and for that price,,.. can
mall on!¥ 47Jotters. So tile Gov25
ernmonl'a lnveollpllrw tbt Bon
' VEAL CALVES- Tepa 3L60; S.Yatom."
·
8eeondo 31.90; Mocltum 28.75 to
tbot Is a quote rrom Calt&amp;n-nia
29.80; Common " Hoovtea, 28 ·
Honold Reqan.ltmlpt
to 31. 70,
be iomewhll flcetlous, but its
point c~• be weD taken now1 with
the .......,cement or eut blcka In

cattle, otoera, 28 -50-3°1 helforo,
24.75-211.75.
calvea, , chOice, 34.501 good,
32,75; medium, 29.50; commor-

bytbe ,~W .......k
o( hisii!JQ •
~ ....~' tile

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Re'.p·'h o·.rt
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to 22.
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CATTLE. ~~1Btd23.50;
Holforo 11·to 22.10; ru C...s 17
til lUO; Clnnoro 12 to 1&amp;.50;
a.Do 19 60 to 21• Stoek Steero
20.
•...
•
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50 to ... eo; Stoek Holfof•
17.75 to 23,25;StookSteercalvea
Stoek Holter calws, 2);75 to 23-

~=w;~, "2s.~;:;~,.4 ~ 1~~

21-42.

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-l5.1iO.I~. Stoek ,HOI•• 17,115~so. cbot~
.,-. · . .
re- Clltlo, • ceoteirs,2'!'·28.60;
Good, 25 -~6.50;standlrd,23.50Zt,SIIi GOodhtlfer'o u,'SWLSO·
~ I!Otroro· z!;-51144. Gocxi
cCIIIs, 1a, 7.__. 0_.to,· iii.DI.Il', 'tuo.
..,. tnil
17•751. cannea: ·
cutter, l6

CIMolni
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Sowrda)o

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,75. SOW!- ~S. 8CI-17.9Q~ J!oir•

(UPON RE,QUESTf

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Mnllllo- .
l&lt;llel'lle ocllllkbie

portmelll.

Tlds Ia an example of theM-

mlnlotratlon reAislrw to
ec01101111 In lfll' ronn. The Pootmuter General's announcement
that 11111 poollloervtce wawd be
eut beck ao an "ecOIICID,)' mow"
. to a little arm twlotlrw &amp;n- the
·lal!po.yers. It follwl)'s the most
vllll ,and direct services thetthe
l'i&gt;ei'nment cuts !!rot, thus demonstrat!ng that "ec0110111J" Is
lou&amp;fl oo tbe talli!l.)'ero.
Some of the absurd.research
proJects, .PI.l'DIOnla to Itinerant
poeta, waste and cfttJlicatton In
the Pen!api, and other such
Items won't ever feel the elfect
or the cutback knife. 'This sort
of culhecki&gt;Olltlcs was cypl6ed

by '""""..; .and , . .

'

J.llllll'lhlllllllllll

done to olrlft the .L7 bllllOII , to
.
~on orrir¢ to cut l!l&lt;li, thlt IIIIDUii Pilot Qlllce ~ .., point Ia !be.
tiJpe ... ·~...,. 111\Choa. . . ' dell~t, !hot eenatnb lo , . Pro~ C
'Wh!!n alll!IP• w~~lbreoft!¥, """"" bl' the men "" the .lll'fllr caotw
mill waa ~verocl twloe a ,1!17 llile IHinl tNt the mall •·0 0 •
So fir
hu beell hit ltlra
sl:i til)',a a week.. .NoW .111111 ,a 11»- tlu:&lt;Julh,
cent ·lla.JI&gt;p ~ Poo~ Ge,..
Jt :...,m,lllmoltt.......lvablo .. .
era) 1111 rilijl ell).., deliver«! that a buolneaolheti]UIIII!roloed tllouilf1
onb' O!Ke a ~, !lve ·tiJD'ea a Ita • .,...._, •• mueb u the Poot iu'e
Olllce•l!ai OYIII' the past &amp;01101'11 ftr
week.
.
.
II! a 212-pp teP&lt;!I't • P~eat­ )'OAfs, and baa had such an lJI.
dentlol ComliltjalcnqnPollli 110" cteue iJl buliMI!II, continues to low, AI
orpnlutlon .r~ tho 1... more and more....Oy, Molt tix Bill 11111
Post Qmce Dopartmen\bo ..,.r. pr!YIIe organlut!CRII who hllldle It dt.t.•'t
ated by a govenanent • CIIIIIOd ..-r . YOiumeo •of bualne11 where the
ccnporotlon that llrOU!d. be Insu-- 'llllke more and more prolliL
modo. - · lt ~· '
lated trom palltloi. The "Poltll Tldo the; frequently dowhile Clll- that If lilY ~~ · U., will
be made In vltiiiMirvt...,
c;orpoHiton" would hi•HIM!WI tlill the cost to tllo u&amp;efl,
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THERE IS NOTHING MORE FASHIONABLE for foil thon suede. The three-piece
sueded pigskin suit (left) will always keep its shape because the bolero jacket is
underlined with Pelion as is the set-in high rising belt of the softly gathered skirt.
The long-sleeved blouse is of silk paisley. Pelion olso interlines the. teak color
suede cope and double-breasted coot and belt (right). This magnificent Inverness
hos detachable cape collar. TheSe designs are by Monika of Mallory.

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BETI'ER BOMEMAIUNG

Color: Vital Part of Life
By AILEEN SNODDY

value your
can buy II!

NEW YORK-(NEA)-since
textile designer Dorothy
Liebes picked up her bachelor's degree in art from San
Jose (Calif.) State Teachers
College she has made color a
vital part of everyone's life.

·'

center blade cutJ!

Seen in her Manhattan
apartment decorated in black, ·
red, white and gold, she is a
walking exponent of her favorite topic. Miss Liebes was
relaxing after a day of photogr a p h y an d interviewing
dressed in a light knit of blue,
green and purple with green
mesh~kings . Certainly the
cosi'F._e ~elped . her !hold her
own in }:OOms with soarJng
ceilings whJch accommodated
a classic mobile over a grand
plano and with Oriental art
mixed with sharp lines and
colors of today's abstract
paintings.
"Color," Miss Liebes says
in her definite way, "comes
first and then - texture and
composition."

Some people may not care.,, but we care.
Your grandmother's classic blueberry pies
were baked with juicy, wild berries.
We think they're th.e best for plea. .
.
. we're.lit""""""
,. ,_,
'' "t'' .co,.....,"'"
·"""' "'" "";I...' !IL\,
.:.:v.· ·-..
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DOROTHY Ll EBES, textile designer and color
consultant, uses color
photographs to catch his-

ONLY $'299
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work. People afraid of color should
look at nature, she says.
"There is no bod calor,
just bod combinations of

'

blessed as a nation with
science to allow anyone to
have beautiful color prints ror
decorating.''

Her one regret is that
some people are born with a
blind spot which leads h"er to
advise those shopping for
clothes or the home that,
"Good color doesn't cost any
more than bad."

Softening Treatment
For those with dry , sensi·
tive skin. try this soft .treatment: Dissolve powdered
milk I equivalent of one quartl
into your bath water and add
a half-cup of rock salt and two
capfuls of baby oil. Your skm
will respond to this babying.

• • •

Inexpensive luxury
Luxpry doesn't have W coat
a inn&lt;ill fortune. f'or a scented
after-bath rultdown. tl m p l ~·
add a small amount of your
fa\'orlle pt:rfume to a bottl~
of baby oU and ohake well.
Right after yoar bath, wblle
your skin It still warm and
pores are still
lmooth
the perfumed ol llghdy all
over your body. Let your skin
absorb the oil for a few minutes, then towel orr ucesl.

ern,

C..fllltlt ,.,..

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If you want proof that

c.ttn; this mueb counts,
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HALF ORANGE SHERBET

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tOe

YOU SAVE
16cl

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24C
25c

2.~39c
·Ct. •••• G3c

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Sift loistlo&amp; Filii AI' llANO
CHUNIS

10'••• "'"'14c

BEAN &amp; BACON
OR VEGETABLE

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A &amp; P Groceries!

Bill

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SEAFOOD DINNER •
BREADED SHRIMP

IIIII Ted
well,

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~~
~~~-•_Sttlll
___•_···~:·::~:~:.~·....:~...:~:.....:.·....:·_:.·:'"-:..s.:1_o'_...:•~•:rt:..:c:•:•:•:•_9:~::'-:.k":~::::.....:~_:·:._:·...:·_:••:·:•:..._~==::::;;;=~
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The price! It's' as wiklu' the blueberries.

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flavor!

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111. .111 Stukl
• • .... $J89
Short Mill t1 ... • • • • •••.4fc
frJer Quarltn ~t.'::
• ......c
lilt Leaf 111 ..~:· • • • lb.stc

Ch11ck Sttlkr ~· , • • • • •••.51•
lo11l111 Chllcl Rlllt ~;" • • ••. 78•
.... _Steak ·~~~· • , • • ••. &amp;lc
E•&amp;IIM Cu' l11l Rtllt
78c

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try a Jane Parker Blueberry Pie this week.

.

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WIENERS

SUPER RIGHT QUALITY -7 INCH CUT STANDING

We're that fuasy about all :our baking.
No matter ~hat It is: If it's b~ed by our Jane P~!fker Bakers,
it's baked with quality lnJreilie~:~tl;
It's baked with p!'lde and eare.

color."

-

wing Chicken ~~ 39c
Roast • • • • • lb. gsc

.. -

In fa~ we care so much about such thing11,
we've made just one big change ill the classic recipe:
We bake only wild berries that are U.S. G~e A!

ond also in her

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Tomoloft • Squish

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- 'Qii.

' Only wild berries get into our Jane Parker Blueberry pies.

HOME GROWN
eCORN
C.lobope Pepper.

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NONE
PRICED
HIGHER

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She is happy that we are. in
a color culture where people
toric or nostalgic mOments
can go to museums and study
· how the professional artists
attack and control color.
.· However, she is unhappy that
· more cities such as New York explains, and when tr.aveling
11
baVe so Uttle exterior color." or entertaining in the apartment or in her summer home
fashioned
from two Denver
She adds that a lot or
and
Rio
Grande
railroad ca-· Ulldistinguished architecture
booses
she
greets
her gllests
eculd~mproved with more
with a clicking camera. "They
use of color. "Paint covers a all laugh and say, 'Here she
lot of mistakes," she feels.
comes with her camera,' but
they always can for prints."
During her career as textile
designer and color consultant
"Ours is a color culture,"
the Liebes sleight-of-hand with she continues, ..and ' we are
colorations has touched all
age groups through her designs in wallpaper; blankets,
seanres, tablecloths, carpets,
For Cleaner Hair
blinds, knits and other clothes.
Slnce mueb of the beauty of
Recent Liebes-directed styles
the
new hairstyles depends
appeared in Morgan Jones
on
balr'a
aalural sblne, mant
bedspreads and Canso trims,
women
wiD
bave to obampoo
for example.
mere often than usual. Those
To ·present her ideas she who find frequent shampoofollows through with her Ing a problem should try
adamant thought that "you using baby ohampoo. It will
can't talk color. You must see &amp;lve hair the dellcale, yet
it.'·' For this she has approxi- thorough, eleanlng It needs.
mately 20,000 dye lots in her
• • •
studio and travels with at
Puff-Protect Your Eyes
least 10 suitcases of items to
show prospective clients.
When sunbathing, protect
bleached or dyed hair with a
Another gimmick she uses scarf, apply a good oil or sunstems from her interest in screening lotion to the skin and
·, f.boto~raphy . "I started tak- cover your eyes with soft rosnc fJCtures when J was 8, metic puffs. Contrary to popu·
and have about 40 books of Jar belief, most Unted glasse.;
cUppinfS and personal photog- are not effective sun-screenrqhl!
4 ing aids; they reduce glare
but not the potency of th~
She photographs a design sun's rays.
project in color, Miss Liebes

~noney

. TAlE THIS STIIIP TO YOUI FiltHILY
liP FOR IOIUS PUID STAMPS!
CHECK ITEMS YOU IUYI

100 =:..rum::..... 0
IITIIA ...... tt.,...wtat

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w..-illlll~. J!lb 21,

usa

·t Ho,.."·.
_ . Guns as Battle Ru.f.:!_,·*(s
~

"

",o CINCI!!NA-Tl

(tJP!)- The N..

Governora Conference
10dQ ·eonslderect a bland gu11
- o l resolutloa at Its wind~
aauloo aiiM hearing Prealdort
JobnJon Tuesday call (or
Increased cooperatinn between
stales and the federal gover,..
melll.
Consideration of the IUD
resolve came as morniDB
new &amp;Papers told nt live deaths
tn a rqtng gunbatUe In
Clevelend. A mon was arresled

' jql\lll

here 1'1111~ for CIIJT;ylng a
IOided revolm In "the governors' headquarters hotel.
Johnson told lhe 'gowrnors
that state and tedenl. goYI!r,..
menta must deal with I number
of problems In parlnorahlp or
the national govermnent will be
canpelled tuactalooe.
The resoludoo for tuday's
session proposed that IUD laws
be left to the lndiYidlal states.
It had the unanimous recom·
mendatlon o! the nlne-membor

execudw committee and lhe
law enforcement clllllllittee
headed by Gov. DaYid cargo of
New Meldco.
UcensiDK Move DrlliJI)Od
ClriO told I DBWI conference
Tuesdll' that a sizable groop nf
JOY&amp;rnors wonled to call for
llcensiDB of lndiVIdlal gu11
owners. Aller the executive
commlltee action, hollevor, he
u1c1 he dooJJted that there
would be much dl&amp;PUle tuday
over the resolution.

.
'here, de;pite

for Goof by Wallacites
COLUMBUS (UPI}- Tho ex- Molnar who had asked for Inecutive chairman of the George formation concerning the law m
Wallace American Independent third parlles.
"If they (tho Alabama 8tall)
par1y toda,y placed the blame
had
paid more attention to us,
for the orpnization's troubles
In Ohio on tho Alabama staff. we would have no problema to"The Alabama statr was lnelllclen~"

George Molnar told
United P r e s s lntematlooal .
"Tbey put us Into this posf.

them mtW lately. b

Molnar aald the headquarters
stall of the former Alabama
BOVemor ••was reluctant to get

lnto this" because of the election laws in Ohio which req.dre
day," Molnar told ·uPL uwe 15 per cent ol the total number
never got much response from of voees cast In the preceedlng

ichedllf(l

ob~ the me!llillo!Yerelln-

Gov• ,Jqlm 0 "• ,o( Rh"'.•
loland - wu rtliJOi1!! , to ...
witbd~wn a resol~ cant,.
011 lhe ~r »llli~:~lea to
aareO
SOIJporl the ~ IIJDOiti topreaidentlll
~-, if
~ge C. WaUace's Amorl_can
lnde!lC!ndent '!*IV ciiKI!dacy •
dralna awoy ODCilolh volea to
dei\V IIQ'OJIO a maJoriQI of the
eloctrlalcoll018 wle. _
· The President flew trcm
Texas Tuesdll' night tn accopt
a J))aque IPJ)Iauliing him for
state and federal ·-nmenta.
He spoke whUe Gov. James A.
Rhndes waa geU!qr a report 011
the live deothe from aunflre In
Cleveland.
JohnSOII said the Constitulloo
and tredlti011a gave state and
loeal government responalblUQI
!or law and order but that
IIIIIQ' cltlzeoa look tu the
federal 10vernment when the
crime rate rises. He. aald lhe ·
federal government had noYOr
souatrt tho r-ilbllicy for
pollciDK the sireet. and he
hoped It would never accept I~ ·
He also urged the governors
to review their state tax

IUbornatorlal election In slgnasystems and employment servi~
tures on petitions to form a
&lt;es.
third party.
tian."
Demand Federal Action
Brown, 1n his letter dated luThe poaltlon to which the
The President said people will
ds,y, told Molnar he would le·
Clevelander referred waa the
demand
actioo by the federal
gaUze the G eo r g e Wallace
ruling by Secretary of Stale
JOvermnont
unless tt and the
(Contlllled from Pue I)
American Independent ParQI In
Ted W. Brown the parcy had
stales
work
IIJ8ether
to provide
filled to comply with state olec- gunmen retreated Into one of Ohio If It met the roqulrement .idla, carry out the model cities
Unn lawa and could not nm the apartment units ahoutln&amp; t of submitting petitions with program, protect inltrits against
George Wallace for Prealdent ••we'll shoot anything that's 433,100 valid signatures.
disease and provide higher
In Ohio.
white.,
education for aU who want It
Brown made hlspoaltlon
"The answer must never lie
As the aouncls of auntlre
.. clear'' Tuesday when be re- rolled across the hot, sultry
with the federal government
laaaed the oontent of a letter tu nlsb~ large banda of Negroes
alone," he said.
()( Vietnam, he said an
gethered at varlooo Intersections. Fir&lt;bombs were thrown
Americans wanted peace but
that some nt' them Ignored the
and stores looled.
pr.esence or an irreconeilable
Sopads of pollee wore met
(Continued lrmn Page I)
enemy.
with sniper r&lt;lUilda at they
deployed through the nelSilborflnt." •
hood.
O'Grad,y claimed TuesdiJ' the
Sbortly before mldDI&amp;Irt a
COLUMBUS (UPO - The Ohio
delegaUon "was st1ll uncommft- 11Wnderlhower !JWCIII( the ciQI
of H~s opened
f
Wd" except to Young and would and helped quell the violence, D8Pirlment
bids Tueads,y on 39 projects
0
remain so unW the breakfast althoulh aporadlc gunshots
meednl at chicago next month. were stlll ringing In the nll!ht worlh $18.8 million.
The mojor project 1n the bid
Ho said Young's aopport of air at 1:30 a.m.
opening waa relocation and widenI!•Cartlcy'a eiiKiidlcy """ "ln· Stukes wont on the foor ~ Ing of a 3.8 mile aectioo of Ohio
~&lt;UI thimdn&amp;'' and did oot Cleveland TV atadons at 11
The 47th anniversary of the
apress the will of the mojorley p.m., with a plea for cltizOIUI tu 124 In Jackson County, part of
the
Appalachlo
Develgpment
Pomeroy
Foreal Run Baptist
of the delegates.
remain calm. uwe have a bad lllghwoy ~stam.
Clllrch will be observed with
"The Important thing Is what altuatlon In Cleveland tonliht,"
Apparent
low
bidder
was
J.
an
all..tay service SUndoy.
Is the delepti011 png to do he said.
J.
Blazer
Constructioo
CO.,
The
morning program will inIt aet• tugether," he aald,
Pleads tor Calm
Wheelersburg,
with
a
quotation
elude
a
aarmoo by the Rev. L.
uSo far the vast mmber d. the
He pleaded with residents "to of $2.4 million.
Simpson, pastor of the church,
dele&amp;ates have expreoaad no remain In your homes and
Other
Federal
projects,
by
with spacial music by the choir.
ebolee."
remain calm. "
....,cy, in&lt;:lude:
A guest spaaker will be a loaAs he spoke pollee were
Jackeoo, pavin&amp; oo 3.80 miles lure of the afternoon program
ehootlng It out with pockets of of Ohio 124, J. J. Blazer COns!. with special music tn be presentwbat they eaUed "organized CO., Wheelersburg, $2,386,506 eel by tho New Hope Baptist
resistance."
estimate: $2,331,300.
Church choir of Harrisburg,
Pollee sold the snipers were
State projecta by crunt;y In- Ohio.
armed with Ml rifles, shotBUDs,
elude:
The J-. meal will be served
autumatlc rifles and at least
Noble,
paving
on
1-77,
Suttoo at the Naoinl Biptlst Church.
Two defendants fnrfelledbonde ooe machine gun . Pl&gt;llce bor·
lllld tour others - e fined Tueo- rowed armored tnlcks from &amp; Stewart, Inc., Bridgeport, $48,. Program chairman for the evant
545 estimate: $53,500.
Is Mrs. Margaret Armstrong,
~ ntata In the court of MlddlaBrinks' Inc. to ferry reinforceFalrfteid and Licking, roaur- Mro. WUllam Smith Is the ft.
porl MQor C. 0. Fisher.
ments tmo the area.
!acing on 3.41 miles of Ohio 161 nance chairman, and Mrs. Ruth
Forfeiting bonds were wnuam
The aaetlm of heaviest In Ucblng County, and 2.45 mile Buflln&amp;lun and Mrs. Cornelius
L. Butcher, 24, Cheshire, $30 !!Jhtlng ,..s neor the Nel!fO
on ljJeediDB charps, and an. &amp;hello of Housh where rlotloi of Ohio 256 In Fairfield County, amch will have charge of en·
other $30 bond 011 a !lcticlous erupted In the summer of 1966. Newark Asphalt Paving CO., New· tertalnment and lood. The guild
ark, $t8, 412 estimate: $69,700. girls will serve the dinner.
llcenae pllle charge, and Mrs.
QJnflre was so heaY)' at
Athens, resurfacing on 3.9
lldney Little, Middleport, $25, times pollee could not go to the
miles of U.S. 33, 2.t5 mUeo nt
aid of their 1¥DUIIIIod comrades. Ohio 681 and U6 miles of ohio lee Cream Social
Fined were Clarence Potts,
Mr. and Mrs. James Fryer 691, 9lelly co., Thornville,
Middleport, ~and costs, squsaJ. wat&lt;hed the llhootlna start from
$113,982, elilmate: $101,000.
lng tires; James A. Stitt, 19,
their home neor Lskevlew and
Middleport, and Cheller M. TanArhondale. Mrs. Fryer said a
nehill, 18, Middleport, ~ and policeman was lying on the
An lee cream soclal was plancosta, for riding cycles without Bldewalk In Iron! nt her home
ned fnr SaWrday when the Auxprotective headgear, and Terry pleadine for help.
Uiary of the Baeban Fire De·
Evana, 18, Pomeroy Route 3,
partment met recertly at the
"He was IJ(lJ'eaming •My leg"s
$10 and costa, stop algn viola- been shot off' fnr the longest
department headcparters.
Two
defendants
forfeited
bonds
tion.
The social will be held at the
Ume," &amp;he said.
and
three
were
Oned
Tuesdll'
firehouse
and aerviDK will begin
OOicer Rescued
night
In
hearlng8
held
before
at 6:30 p.m. It waa ooted durMrs. Fryer said on ambu·
lance lnehed down tho street Pomeroy MQor Charles Logar. Ing the meeting th&amp;t the auxilForfeltln&amp; bonds were Lyle
GAUGES _ Gallipolis, l2.l amid the bullets and rescued Moore, Henderson, W.Va., $25, Iary cleared $90 on the last Ice
cream social sponsored by the
and 12.1 running 2_5 feet of the otrlcer. She an d her
paning on a yellow line, and a;roup. Present for the plamlng
rollers; Pl. Pleasant, 24.02 ; husband lay huddled on the Larry Teen, oo address listed,
11:8Silon were nve active memPomeroy-Mzaoo, 2o.37 ; Hinton, Ooor of their darkened home lor
$23.70 speeding.
bers
and Mra. Eva Baney an
0.98 rising; Kanawha Falls, 2.72 hours as tho IUD batUo raged
Fined were Gary Rollins, Le- honorary member.
rising; Charleston, 17.85 stat. outalde.
on, W, Va., $10 and costs, reckLondnn, Marmet, and Winfield
A UP! reporler was trapped less operation; David Southerare m the sUI.
' for two hours by balding pollee
land, Lexinglon, Ky.. $5 and
::--:-.::::;;::;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::::: ment
and snipers ln another apart- costs, assured clear distance,
Mr. and Mrs. David Leach
building a few blocks
Ohio Five-Day Foreeaat
are
amouncln&amp; the birth of an
and Lyle !lnclalr, 91ade, $10
away.
B.!' Unlled Pres&amp; International
He said a YOUIIK man In his and costs, reckless operaUon ellht pound, me oonce son, Da.
Temperatures will average 2llo was l;ylng on the street of a motor vehicle.
vld Allen, recertly at the Pleasnear oormal Thur sda,y throolh twitcbin&amp; u pollee and snipers
ant Valley Hoapltal.
Monday with hll!hs In the 801
This Ia the first child of the
shot over his bod,y.
DIVORCE ASKED
and lows In the 60s. II will be
couple. Gr~• are Mr.
"A YOUIIK (!lrl darted out and
Apetition for divorce has been and Mrs. Harold Loedl and Mr.
eooler &amp;Jnday and Monday.
scurried over to the man and
Scatlered showers ThursdiJ' manaied tn drag him to ffied in Meigs COWty Common and Mrs. James Snider, PomePleas Court by Mary Ann Van- roy, Great . &amp;randparents are
throulh &amp;Jnday are expected tu safety," the newsman said.
over, 663 N. Front.&amp;., Middle.
nerap one~f lnch or more.
GO¥. James Rhodes heard of port, against Carl Vanover, same Mrs. Janie Snider, Pomeroy, and
:r~:~:::::::-;«.;:::;:y;::::;:;:::;:;:;:::::::;:;::::::::::::::~:.
the trouble while listening to address. The plaint1tr charps Mrs. Elizabeth Rowley, Cleve·
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Prealdent Johnson addroaa the gro., llellect of duQiand extreme land.
HOSPITAL
amual Governors Conference In cruel!JI and aoks custudy ntthree
M11CI Of~- ,
ADMITrED - LolaDa.,hercy, Cincinnati. He left Immediately minor chUdren.
O.VavUie; 801sle Morrison, Pl. and wort to the state capital
P!e..-.11; VIola Jef!ers, Porno- wltore lte remained throulh the
•,J~:..,... Ill It - c.
DANCE TONIGHT . ,
James Hollon, Jr., Miners- nlabt Ill constant eootact with
~......
"'"..,"- Ill ........
...., ...
.
. . . •Olllo:
..........
W', ,.... ,_. , ...._. I ' ei"
The Junior Class nt ~I'll ldt
Tim Coats, Pomeroy; Artie Cleveland.
t1 ......,.., n· ,
c.uLlnl:oVIIIe.
He ordered the entire ablte High School will ,.,.._ 1 c11p or.t.~u. . .
,
._
. .,._
,......,..
, .. . . . . '
_...
1rula_
- Mildred National Guanl alerled and Part.Y from 8:30 to 11•30 ton!J!1t _ qllll:ll..
DIIIVJ Reynolds, Mary shortly efter ~ a I, 400 on the parking lot nf tho Doll7
Shirley Hamm, 01&gt;- man dotadlment was auembleil Top In Ractne. !lualc will be by
l'""f '!I'
. Plullne Darst, Clleryl at the 91akor Armo17 In the Joys. The dance Ia open to ,.... ,~
..,, Ml ...
the public.
·
-u. lrjs ~Kinney.
lllbultlon Shaker llel&amp;llto.
~ •
'1 )o,
·.•
"'

i
·

---

Planned Saturday

Three Fined in

,'·/,i

Chpptnan-C.naday Shoe ·St.,• . ~
. St. ·'

.

MIIOLtPQRT,:O.·'
I,
.
.
'

-

.

SALE:•.

THURS. .
CLEARANCE VALUE

ClEARANCE VALUE

Reg. 29c Value
COlTON
Reg. 29-c Value Children&amp;'
cotton tralnlDB pent, size 2.
4-6. Stock up now.

ca.Ual slip m atyles Raffia
ltraw sandals, cool for summer wear. Stock up now at
thla low prlee.

~-

$ 00

~lr

~lr

ladles and Chif~ren
•'
Famous br&amp;lld men• a Walkll\i
a~~qrta. Value to •uo.
of pllln, color and
patterna. illzo 29 to 42.
"';;&gt;
'"

'

All rubber construction with
soft erepe sole."Au~ colOrs
ID all olzea, boq sevaral pair

"""·

- ~

25 ~lr

oo·

s

each

each

·
LADIES· SUMMER

SPORTSWEAR-.
One large a;roup of summer IPOI'tlwear. !111orts, Jamalcalhono, a.rtors,
111101'1 lopl and ..,m .... Slock ap
'.~

00

; .. • .

now.

s 44.

···.&lt;t

BlTHING SUITS

1' 30ff

Tske yoor choice of IIQ' of these ooe
and two piece Girls Bathing Silts.
Our complete atock, reduced one-third

Q\. (

. '

~··

each

MENs ·

SPORT
SHIRTS
to
·aroap of

Values
$3.99 In thla
mona
better aport shirts. slze 1111111-llledlum·
large. Redlced for quick cleariiiiCe.
Slock up - for the hot weather
. ahead.
.

LADIES REG. 1.99

REG. 79c M£NS CQlTON

~~~!~!~. ~~~~~~~~ $ 00

TEE SHIRTS
Mona ttne cotton tee ablrta, olze 11111111·"
medium and 1~. Reg. 79-&lt; value.
Slock up now for summer value Plus.

pair

sandals. Cool for summer wear. See
these for value plus. Bu,y several
pair now.

New York Oothbig House •••

1

Young Mason

Democrats To

Meet Thursday

troduced and will aerveu speakers IOF the meetlllio A full raport lrmn the &lt;OIIY81tl011 commlltee wUI be given and a dele' gate list wUl be proYided lor
theae attendln&amp; the Slete Young
Jlompcral .Convention In Wheel·
·In&amp;, W. Va., on August 22, 23
and24.
Executive Chalnnan Homer
Smith, wUI stve a report oo the
· Slete l)emocrat COnvention to be
held August "3 at Fairmont, W.
: VL
Relreahmenta will be served
and the public Is InVIted.

VALUE

CLEARANCE VALUE

Reg. 29c Value
BOYS

Rag. 49c Value
PLASTIC

COTTON BRIEFS

LAUNDRY BASKET

WOOD
CAMPING STOOl'

Boys Reg. 29-c value cotton
brlefL Size 2 to 8. New low
clear111ce price. See thoae
for extra value -stock up
now for sehoul.

BIB Reg. 49-&lt; value plastic
clothe&amp; basket. Alst. colors,
lllo' several at this new low
clearance prlce.

Reg. $1.99 value, well_,...,. ·
wood Foldlftl camp llool~· See
the'!' fOI' valu• pluo. ·!hlp
eariJ, theN woo'l lut lOIIJ.

. yltOLUE

Reg. 79cVIIIHi ., ' •
2 PKG. . . :·.

Reg. 1.39 Value

umm-RliG
.
'· ·

Rea. 79-&lt; Value 2 pq; Ull)l:t:i
Rua. 2 to pka. See these.
will aaveral at this

. low.j,iice.

"

f;l,lhion

Is BIO&lt;Iiling" will be lhe thorne
Of the ~son COI!IIQI Fair Scylo
Show tn lie holil Saturday, . Aug.
· , 10, llnal day¢ the fair.
~ Nuntilr will be Mrs. Law·
: re(ce otrlach, Jr., and Judges
:lQyjq '!rill be home economist.
·, ~the APpalachian Power
• Company of Huntlngtoo, w. VL
:.1 The scyle shoW will begtn at 6
ip, m. and any 4-!l or FHA girl
·, haviDB clothlna on display at the
" fair made as:: part ola project ls
, ellalble to compete.
.~ ~. bxteStants may enter one of
' ihe" following claSies: 1. shirt
: Allll btbusl; 2. jumper and blouse;
\) $. schoo\ or casual clotlies; 4.
', II[)OI'le &lt;!otlilng; 0. bethll18 sulta;
~ 8. lool18ll!i coatumes (t.:H onlY);
: !1. sullii 8. complele coobmle (4:. H only); 9,. part;y dreiS; 10. eveniDK dreaa; and 1L 4-H wool out' fit
: ·· Pramluma will be awarded In
~; 11eh claSI aa follows: blile, $5;
, nd, f3,50, ~nd white, $2,00.
' Mrs. Mr~ Lathey Is goner. al chalrmon for the •event

CLOSED
ALL DAY

•

THURS., JUlY 25

.

.........................
_II.....,,__ _...

-

"

..........

_

R..tf " • •

Reg. Price $45.00 to $10.00
NOW ON SALE--$22.50 to $40.00

Men's Sport Coats
1/2 Price

formerly from Mason Coonty.
She now resides in Columbus,

A real nice selection of styles and
.colors. Reg. $29.50 to $39.50. Yours
m Regular, lAng for 14.75 to 19.75

Ohio.
Special aiDBing will be teatu.
each evenln&amp; 1&gt;1 EvaiiiiOllst nu....
con and her husband, Buren nu ...
can, The nightly services will begin at 7:30 p. m. and everyone Is
welcome to attend. Tho postur of
the church Is the Rev. O'Dell
Bush.

MEN'S SHORT SLDVE

l PRICE

SPORT SHIRTS
1/2 PRICE

ln&lt;luded are Rayon blend that ..., be
,wasltod. Dacron-wool blends and aD wools
!" regs. aborts &amp; lomts. A very good name
m dre.s slackl. Re&amp;. 8.98 U. 16.98 You
will want more tluln 1 pair of these at
4.49 to 1.49. Small &lt;harte for alterations

Most of thellt! never need il'Onlng. Sizes are broken. Reg. 6.98
and 7.98. Sole Price 3.49 to 3.99

Woyan Rites

BOYS DENIM JEANS
·~·.··

rr

1.1: . .

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $2.98

.. .

..

'"

MEN S.S. BANLqN KNIT SHIRTS . . . . . . . . Y.s OFF

Most of the~~e have ii p&lt;Jcket. Sizes S. M. L. &amp; XL in a beauti·
ful selection of colors. Reg. 5.98 to 10.98. Sole Price 3.99 to
7.32.

PT. PLEASANT - Funedal
serVIce for Charles C. Woy111,
87, retired SoulbsJde farmer,
were held toda,y (\Vednesday),
2:30p.m. attheHambrlckUnlWd
Methodist Church 'with the Rev.
Charles
Klnralrd offlclaUI!io
Burial followed In the clllrth
cemetery.
Mr. Woyan died Mondoy 1,. a
Mlson nursins home. He Ia survived by tour lona, one da.,hler
and one sister.

.

wiai.'

'.

· IPI'inll

MENS S.S. conON KNIT SHIRTS . . . . . . 1h PRICE
Both button and crew neck styles. S, M, L &amp; XL. Reg. H8 !()
6. 98. Now Going At 1.49 to 3.49

MENS WHITE HANDKERCHIEFS

.. .. .. Be

Umt 12 Per Customer

Rag. 1~00 Val'"'"
. 18x27 Size, .

Mens Reg. 2.79
Bllue, Loden, White

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
ADMITTED - Herbert Mo.
theny, ~: Charles Adkins, Pt.
Pleasant, Mrs. . George Kauff,
Pomeroy; Mrs. Clay McCartney,

'•

MENS LIGHT WEIGHT JACKm

' t'
·Min 8 to

"

12 Blue, Lod!!ll, White tetmls

·, 1

·Oxrordi 8114 ai!p. on atyle; Rea. $2.119
v~ue.

'Ef,rly.

" • ' :·!,

see theH lqr vBI~ plui. Sllop
'

.,

.. ,", , .'",
',l

~I

l

'

.!

'I

to 20. Made by a very Jood name In Sh()ris. Reg. 2.98
Now Only U9 to 2. 5,
.. .
' . "·! ••

!O . ~.§p.

BOYS SUMMER WEIGHT
SUITS and SPORT COATS . . . . . . . . . . . . 1h PRICE
Sl2es are broken. Reg. Price 9.95 to 29.50, Now Only 4.98 h

MENS STRAW HATS

........... , . . Y.s PRICE

Reg. U8 to 6.98, Now 2.49 to 3.49

MENS PAJAMAS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Y.s OFF

'

. . . . . . 1h PlfCE

Bqth lined and unlined styles. S, M, L &amp; XL. Some are wash·
able. Reg. 6.98 to 12.98. Sole Price 3.49 to 6.49

I.e""'

MENS SUMMER CAPS .. . .. . . . . .. .. .. . Y.s OfF.

DISCHARGED - Mra. Dudley
Edgell, Sharon Oldaker, Deborah
Wamsley, Dorald Hwnphrey, Addle Ohilnpr, Deborah Scott.

Reg. 1.00

BOYS PAJAMAS

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1h PRICE

Sizes are broken. Reg. 2.98 to 3.49, Now Only 1.49 to 1.75

MEN"S WHITE JEANS ..
Western Style. Reg. 4.98

.. .. .. .. . .. 1h PRtCE

to 5.98, Now 2.49

to 2.?9

to 1.98. Now Just 67c to 1.32.

MENS FOOTBALL SWEAT SHIRTS . . . . . .
On s.le 2.33

MENS BATHING SUITS . :u . . . .. . .. . . .. 1h PRICE

ODD LOT MENS HATS

$3.00

MEN'S S.S. UNIFORM·.$HIITS ....

$2.00

to.18. Reg. 2.49 to 4.98. Now Just 1-25 to 2.49

. neg. 2.98 Now On!1 2.00
.,.' '

BOYS' S.S. SPORUII.,.S . . . " . . . . . . . . ~ PRICE
ll!!ed lronlnl[. Sizes 6 to 18. These will be

. M~ of theae nev~

•

nice for. back

....

1.99

"

.

to t!cllool. Rer. 2.49 io 3.98, Sale Price 1.25 t.'
'I

··"

,

·

.

~~· 5.5. K~!~ I.HitJS ..... . ........ ~ PRICE

"

.....,? run ot ,, cllt!g.".; Price 1.98 to 2.98, Now Juat tao

·A ~
,

: I

.

· · '

Values to 7.911

Tan, green and grey. S, M, L &amp; XL

MEN'S LONG SLEEVE DRESS 5111115. . . . . . . . $3.00
Values to

5.95. Sizes are broken

COMPLm SELECTION

Mlni.C11ull

MENS DRESS JEANS.

WASH 'ANI'S

(n III the
_eoloro that
ing.

latest stylet Uld
never need Iron-

$4.98 to $6.98

1111811 ifon'DI .
Slzea 28 to u ill all tile Jat.
!hat

Dever

est colon.

$5.98 to$UO

-~.

S~l

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.,_.

&lt;,;

I

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. ·'

, ·· ,/W't'i,' l1GH~9f4T JACKI1;5
•

fi

. . . . . . ~ PRICE

Us t11 !.00, On Sale 2.49,"' 4.50

,, Sizes. ~ to•20. Reg:
'' '
.
:t'

~

Y.s OFF

All of them have the numbel's on the fronl Reg 3 49

MENS liB, V1lues to $1.50 ... ... .. ...... JOe

!These are real Dogs, but I don't believe they will bite.)

..

BROADLOOM RU.G
,, ~

tENNIS OXFORDS

BOYS WALKING SHORTS . . . . . . . . . . 1h PIICE
Sizes 6

MENS WHITE HOSE . .. . .. . .. .. .. . 4 pal- $1 00

All 1ftat~ clowlt fF ~~k ~e,

,

Sizes are broken but what we have lefl are rea) buys at 1.49
3.50, Reg. Price was 2.98 to ? .00.

to

floth Short Sleeve and long sleeve styles" A very good name

All have the Cushion Foot.

'•

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M!NS WALKING SHORTS . . ..... . .... 1h RPICE

~ :.:iamas. Size A, B, C, D. Reg. 4.98 to 6.98, Sale Price 3.32

ind' lllmlllllr ~-

-t '

All from our retuJar stuck of top quai!IJ
shirts in button down and Spread eon.
styles. Moat of th- oeYer Deed lroDinf.;
ae,. 2.118 to 8.98, This you ..,, al!ord
miss at 1.49 to SAt. Slr.et S. II, L. XL

14.75.

~a!U.~ tn_$.1.119 4' ~-...~~.of cllll~1111'·

Yes, just 4 in lot. 3 11ze
12, I size 14. Values to
$17.00.

MEN'S DRESS SlACKS

'
000 LOT MENS WASH PANTS ........
1h PRICE

.LADIES SPORTSWEAR .("liD.RIN: .·

$. ·00

3.00

.'

.

;

·~~

ta.ll9 In this &amp;roUp of ildleo
Bellfr Sportewear, all •·e&amp;rouped tor
Q.JiCil llllhmer clear.ance. ·
.

5.00
,24.50.

S.S. MEIGS MARAUDEil SWEAT 5HII1'S .. . . Y.s Off
,Sizes 6 to XI; In Meus: ·'f!lese are just right for back to schooL

VIII...• tu

DRESSES

Just 5 in lot. Reg. Price

Small Charge for Alterations

area.

Sizes 8

)i

SPORT COATS

Summer weights and year round weights in all wools
and Dacron-Wool blends. Reg., Shorts &amp; Longs.

'

Jutt 4 Lldlel'

Odcl Lot Men's

Men's
Suits
HALF-PRICE
'.

Pr~ for this event. Remember a Sale
of this importance only
happeDB twice a year at
our store. So be here
early and see all your
friends from around the

BOYS BATHING TRUNKS . . . . . . . . . . . . Y.s PRICE

•

t
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River Gauges

•V

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&lt;

SIZes are broken but there is 'l nice seled!on of sQ-Iea and
colors In broken sizes. Reg. 2.98 to 6.98. Sale Prl- 1.49 "'
3.49

Announce Birth

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Court Hearings

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TREMENDOUS BARGAINS
THROUGHOUT THE STORE!

PT. PLEASANT - Revival
services wUI be(!ln Sunday, July
28, at the MIUstone Christian
Church at HOJsetl, W. Va., with
evangelist Bonnie Duncan . In
charge. Eval!iol!St Duncan Is
well known in the area aM is

Held J'oday
PT. PLEASANT -

I

3 BIG DAYS·THURSDAl, FRIDAY, MONDAY, JULY 26,27,29

These are wrinkle free in black, brown and Green . Sizes 6 to

{i;~.

i

Start Sunday

Theme Announeed

11

''

Starts F.riday, July 26 At 9 a.m.

"

Valutsto2.99&amp;3.~

GIRlS and CHILDREN

o,o

$

Valuesto2~99

Tremendous selection nt summer
dresses. Choose from IIUIIUI\or bell
dealp, crlapy cottuns • sheora and
blended fabrics: Real Value.

Values to $2.99 &amp; $3.99 values. Re·
grouped for quick summer clearance.
Sbop early, these won't last long.

,

w.

eourthouse.
County ciiKIIdatcs will be 1,..

ZORIES .

DRESSES

DRESSES

CLEARANCE VALUE

Rlpleyj
va.; ~ •. Joe JR. Melvln, RL 1 Gr~~. KJ!,; Mrs·. Caell V, Stith, n~osell,Ky.;Pamela
Sue Roacfi, Jacklon; Mra. !lqjer
D. Jenkins, Jackson.
" ·•
.
IIIRTIIS
; ·,
· ~a. Charles Roberto, IlL 2
GaUIPoll~, son, 9:25a.m. Tues·
day; Mrs. R~r ~ iJalley, 41&lt;·
or River Rd., dl.,_, 2:50 p,
m., Tueadoy; Mrs. Ru'"ell ~
Thcmas, Rt. 1 Pt. Pleasant, son,
2:22 p. m. Tuesday; Mrs,' Roger
D. Jenklns. Jackaon, 1011, 3:03
L "'- Wedneadoy_
DISCHARGES
Mrs. Denver A. .,.Akers, Jo1 D.
Beaver; Rlchard M. Braimher,
DaYid Coleman, Mro. ca,Jvin R.
Dowell, Dean R. French, Mrs.
William K. Harrington, M r s.
Russell S. Johnstun, Mrs. Herbert T. J6Deo, Frank "E. Kirb);
Jr., Mra. WJiaonUtchfleld,Siev:
en K. Lorbach, DaYid R. Me.Claln, Mrs. Ronnie R. McCain,
...Alpha W. McKimey, David VI.
OhllJ180r, Franklin ll Pope, Jr.,
Oscar V, lloborlann, Mrs. no..
coe Sitter field, Mrs. Ida stobarl,
. Mrs. Harley G. Thomas, Elmer
S. Trimble, Donald R. Williams,
Mrs. Donald C&amp;mp, Janet !oleMa,..
lo, Mrs. Larry J. Bumgernerand
infant son, Mrs. Newton Ice antS
PT. PLEASANT- The Muon I nf'ant BOll.
County Young Domocrets will
"hold their regular meatlDJThursdl,y,'' July 26, at 8 p. m. In the

HOSPITAL - ·visitt,. houi"s 2-t and 7-9 p; D). · Parent. only on Pecllalrlcs Ward.
, , ADMISSiONS \ \
Mrs. Charles Robert$, RL 2
~ll!ilo!)s; Mro. · Roger E. Hal"~'• Lo!rer River Rd.; Mra. Virs,il.~olef, Rt. 1 BldweUi"Charlos I. ~bay; Rt. 2 Crown Clcy;
M.rL Ru&amp;SI'II E. Thomas, "RL 1
l'L Pleiaabt; Charles R. Wolle,
Jr., New Haven; Katby Jo North,.,, PL Pleaaant; La Donna A.
Pyles, Pt. Pleasant; Mrs. Les·tor I. ~ooah, Rt 2 Letar!; Mrs.
Barto L. Durst, Pt Pleas~nt;
Dona ,Lee Gilman, New Haven;
Oris H. Q.odson, Mason; Jei'ry
W, Searles, II, Rt. I Rutland·
'I'Cirrl E. fotblr, . Mlddleport;
Mrs. Thoma,· C. Mzrtin, R u tland; Mrs. C&amp;rl R. Shook, Rt 2,
Wellston; G~orge W. Jones,
WUkesVIIle; Wend,y I. Herrmann,
'

Revival To

to6.99
LADIES BUDGET

Values to 2.99 &amp; 1.99
LADIES SUMM~R

$

CLEARANCE VALUE

LADIES STRAW
RAFFI SANDALS

TRAINING PANTS

Be Observed

Forfeit Bonds

lilil'lllli Yttl Sk., ...... :

128 MttUTREET

Anniversary
Of Ch urc .h

'l'wo Defendants

'
.:
:-

. "

Highway

Democrats

a.

tlO't,l:li:~

·

~-~~~~:~~~=~~-~~~:-~=~~!-'~~~~~!~~~~,!~~

Cleveland

Job Bids
Opened

O(le~';~~i~~~~;~i~

.....~

·

July n,
.
, ,
" .Prqlerly caUed .. Hulild, hoW·
" Dovotl~s lnd, J&gt;ulllllaS '1\'tr•
ever, thai hla state '!l"'l.•d'...,. 'led by )Ira. Beetrlee Ma)-, .The
inaln to "cpllault olio~!! lh~ . """m~ber Is loll'•· llli,l(ilj&gt;u- . ·
;facts" to be J)re-..L · '
gill; C&lt;lncludlng the inoetiJ18, "'.
''!i!'''~·~''""···;•"&lt;~·
l
•••"·;~·&lt;"'
'
'~':i&lt;;?,l'
).t'r'l; Patterlion ass~ · by
.. ·'·. ·'· :.;,.:.,...•~...:&gt;. •....-.:o!.. &lt;!&gt;.~·!&gt;.-:•. • • ·' • Mlas Roxanna P&amp;tteriOnand Milt '
Cj\RS DAMAGEo
Andrea Dewhurst sorYecl•retfesll- t
HoeY)' diJIIIiOB were lncutred marts tu lhe abo'le ind Mrs.
·toacarowoodby~leaFryoo Lealie ll,ysell, Mra. Juanita
the Beech Grove Road Weilne.. Wanaley, Mrs. LeoJa Wloe, M.a.
doy, the RuUand Fire Depart- carrie Moore, Mrs. 0on11a F1'7,
ment reports. The bllze was MrL Ada Keesee, Mi-a. J u' n 8
Quaad when the aoto backOred, Dewhurst, Miss · !losllee Wloe
flremen said.
and Mra. Audrey Patleraon.

to lmprow
rell,tlona
between
doiDK
more than
11Q' president

Alabama Staff is Blamed

•

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;Ladles' HoM·-----· 2 111lrs'66~
First Quality ;. ;· · ·

··

�~leli 'l'•arcif'll'fdi!l•port,

o.,

w..-illlll~. J!lb 21,

usa

·t Ho,.."·.
_ . Guns as Battle Ru.f.:!_,·*(s
~

"

",o CINCI!!NA-Tl

(tJP!)- The N..

Governora Conference
10dQ ·eonslderect a bland gu11
- o l resolutloa at Its wind~
aauloo aiiM hearing Prealdort
JobnJon Tuesday call (or
Increased cooperatinn between
stales and the federal gover,..
melll.
Consideration of the IUD
resolve came as morniDB
new &amp;Papers told nt live deaths
tn a rqtng gunbatUe In
Clevelend. A mon was arresled

' jql\lll

here 1'1111~ for CIIJT;ylng a
IOided revolm In "the governors' headquarters hotel.
Johnson told lhe 'gowrnors
that state and tedenl. goYI!r,..
menta must deal with I number
of problems In parlnorahlp or
the national govermnent will be
canpelled tuactalooe.
The resoludoo for tuday's
session proposed that IUD laws
be left to the lndiYidlal states.
It had the unanimous recom·
mendatlon o! the nlne-membor

execudw committee and lhe
law enforcement clllllllittee
headed by Gov. DaYid cargo of
New Meldco.
UcensiDK Move DrlliJI)Od
ClriO told I DBWI conference
Tuesdll' that a sizable groop nf
JOY&amp;rnors wonled to call for
llcensiDB of lndiVIdlal gu11
owners. Aller the executive
commlltee action, hollevor, he
u1c1 he dooJJted that there
would be much dl&amp;PUle tuday
over the resolution.

.
'here, de;pite

for Goof by Wallacites
COLUMBUS (UPI}- Tho ex- Molnar who had asked for Inecutive chairman of the George formation concerning the law m
Wallace American Independent third parlles.
"If they (tho Alabama 8tall)
par1y toda,y placed the blame
had
paid more attention to us,
for the orpnization's troubles
In Ohio on tho Alabama staff. we would have no problema to"The Alabama statr was lnelllclen~"

George Molnar told
United P r e s s lntematlooal .
"Tbey put us Into this posf.

them mtW lately. b

Molnar aald the headquarters
stall of the former Alabama
BOVemor ••was reluctant to get

lnto this" because of the election laws in Ohio which req.dre
day," Molnar told ·uPL uwe 15 per cent ol the total number
never got much response from of voees cast In the preceedlng

ichedllf(l

ob~ the me!llillo!Yerelln-

Gov• ,Jqlm 0 "• ,o( Rh"'.•
loland - wu rtliJOi1!! , to ...
witbd~wn a resol~ cant,.
011 lhe ~r »llli~:~lea to
aareO
SOIJporl the ~ IIJDOiti topreaidentlll
~-, if
~ge C. WaUace's Amorl_can
lnde!lC!ndent '!*IV ciiKI!dacy •
dralna awoy ODCilolh volea to
dei\V IIQ'OJIO a maJoriQI of the
eloctrlalcoll018 wle. _
· The President flew trcm
Texas Tuesdll' night tn accopt
a J))aque IPJ)Iauliing him for
state and federal ·-nmenta.
He spoke whUe Gov. James A.
Rhndes waa geU!qr a report 011
the live deothe from aunflre In
Cleveland.
JohnSOII said the Constitulloo
and tredlti011a gave state and
loeal government responalblUQI
!or law and order but that
IIIIIQ' cltlzeoa look tu the
federal 10vernment when the
crime rate rises. He. aald lhe ·
federal government had noYOr
souatrt tho r-ilbllicy for
pollciDK the sireet. and he
hoped It would never accept I~ ·
He also urged the governors
to review their state tax

IUbornatorlal election In slgnasystems and employment servi~
tures on petitions to form a
&lt;es.
third party.
tian."
Demand Federal Action
Brown, 1n his letter dated luThe poaltlon to which the
The President said people will
ds,y, told Molnar he would le·
Clevelander referred waa the
demand
actioo by the federal
gaUze the G eo r g e Wallace
ruling by Secretary of Stale
JOvermnont
unless tt and the
(Contlllled from Pue I)
American Independent ParQI In
Ted W. Brown the parcy had
stales
work
IIJ8ether
to provide
filled to comply with state olec- gunmen retreated Into one of Ohio If It met the roqulrement .idla, carry out the model cities
Unn lawa and could not nm the apartment units ahoutln&amp; t of submitting petitions with program, protect inltrits against
George Wallace for Prealdent ••we'll shoot anything that's 433,100 valid signatures.
disease and provide higher
In Ohio.
white.,
education for aU who want It
Brown made hlspoaltlon
"The answer must never lie
As the aouncls of auntlre
.. clear'' Tuesday when be re- rolled across the hot, sultry
with the federal government
laaaed the oontent of a letter tu nlsb~ large banda of Negroes
alone," he said.
()( Vietnam, he said an
gethered at varlooo Intersections. Fir&lt;bombs were thrown
Americans wanted peace but
that some nt' them Ignored the
and stores looled.
pr.esence or an irreconeilable
Sopads of pollee wore met
(Continued lrmn Page I)
enemy.
with sniper r&lt;lUilda at they
deployed through the nelSilborflnt." •
hood.
O'Grad,y claimed TuesdiJ' the
Sbortly before mldDI&amp;Irt a
COLUMBUS (UPO - The Ohio
delegaUon "was st1ll uncommft- 11Wnderlhower !JWCIII( the ciQI
of H~s opened
f
Wd" except to Young and would and helped quell the violence, D8Pirlment
bids Tueads,y on 39 projects
0
remain so unW the breakfast althoulh aporadlc gunshots
meednl at chicago next month. were stlll ringing In the nll!ht worlh $18.8 million.
The mojor project 1n the bid
Ho said Young's aopport of air at 1:30 a.m.
opening waa relocation and widenI!•Cartlcy'a eiiKiidlcy """ "ln· Stukes wont on the foor ~ Ing of a 3.8 mile aectioo of Ohio
~&lt;UI thimdn&amp;'' and did oot Cleveland TV atadons at 11
The 47th anniversary of the
apress the will of the mojorley p.m., with a plea for cltizOIUI tu 124 In Jackson County, part of
the
Appalachlo
Develgpment
Pomeroy
Foreal Run Baptist
of the delegates.
remain calm. uwe have a bad lllghwoy ~stam.
Clllrch will be observed with
"The Important thing Is what altuatlon In Cleveland tonliht,"
Apparent
low
bidder
was
J.
an
all..tay service SUndoy.
Is the delepti011 png to do he said.
J.
Blazer
Constructioo
CO.,
The
morning program will inIt aet• tugether," he aald,
Pleads tor Calm
Wheelersburg,
with
a
quotation
elude
a
aarmoo by the Rev. L.
uSo far the vast mmber d. the
He pleaded with residents "to of $2.4 million.
Simpson, pastor of the church,
dele&amp;ates have expreoaad no remain In your homes and
Other
Federal
projects,
by
with spacial music by the choir.
ebolee."
remain calm. "
....,cy, in&lt;:lude:
A guest spaaker will be a loaAs he spoke pollee were
Jackeoo, pavin&amp; oo 3.80 miles lure of the afternoon program
ehootlng It out with pockets of of Ohio 124, J. J. Blazer COns!. with special music tn be presentwbat they eaUed "organized CO., Wheelersburg, $2,386,506 eel by tho New Hope Baptist
resistance."
estimate: $2,331,300.
Church choir of Harrisburg,
Pollee sold the snipers were
State projecta by crunt;y In- Ohio.
armed with Ml rifles, shotBUDs,
elude:
The J-. meal will be served
autumatlc rifles and at least
Noble,
paving
on
1-77,
Suttoo at the Naoinl Biptlst Church.
Two defendants fnrfelledbonde ooe machine gun . Pl&gt;llce bor·
lllld tour others - e fined Tueo- rowed armored tnlcks from &amp; Stewart, Inc., Bridgeport, $48,. Program chairman for the evant
545 estimate: $53,500.
Is Mrs. Margaret Armstrong,
~ ntata In the court of MlddlaBrinks' Inc. to ferry reinforceFalrfteid and Licking, roaur- Mro. WUllam Smith Is the ft.
porl MQor C. 0. Fisher.
ments tmo the area.
!acing on 3.41 miles of Ohio 161 nance chairman, and Mrs. Ruth
Forfeiting bonds were wnuam
The aaetlm of heaviest In Ucblng County, and 2.45 mile Buflln&amp;lun and Mrs. Cornelius
L. Butcher, 24, Cheshire, $30 !!Jhtlng ,..s neor the Nel!fO
on ljJeediDB charps, and an. &amp;hello of Housh where rlotloi of Ohio 256 In Fairfield County, amch will have charge of en·
other $30 bond 011 a !lcticlous erupted In the summer of 1966. Newark Asphalt Paving CO., New· tertalnment and lood. The guild
ark, $t8, 412 estimate: $69,700. girls will serve the dinner.
llcenae pllle charge, and Mrs.
QJnflre was so heaY)' at
Athens, resurfacing on 3.9
lldney Little, Middleport, $25, times pollee could not go to the
miles of U.S. 33, 2.t5 mUeo nt
aid of their 1¥DUIIIIod comrades. Ohio 681 and U6 miles of ohio lee Cream Social
Fined were Clarence Potts,
Mr. and Mrs. James Fryer 691, 9lelly co., Thornville,
Middleport, ~and costs, squsaJ. wat&lt;hed the llhootlna start from
$113,982, elilmate: $101,000.
lng tires; James A. Stitt, 19,
their home neor Lskevlew and
Middleport, and Cheller M. TanArhondale. Mrs. Fryer said a
nehill, 18, Middleport, ~ and policeman was lying on the
An lee cream soclal was plancosta, for riding cycles without Bldewalk In Iron! nt her home
ned fnr SaWrday when the Auxprotective headgear, and Terry pleadine for help.
Uiary of the Baeban Fire De·
Evana, 18, Pomeroy Route 3,
partment met recertly at the
"He was IJ(lJ'eaming •My leg"s
$10 and costa, stop algn viola- been shot off' fnr the longest
department headcparters.
Two
defendants
forfeited
bonds
tion.
The social will be held at the
Ume," &amp;he said.
and
three
were
Oned
Tuesdll'
firehouse
and aerviDK will begin
OOicer Rescued
night
In
hearlng8
held
before
at 6:30 p.m. It waa ooted durMrs. Fryer said on ambu·
lance lnehed down tho street Pomeroy MQor Charles Logar. Ing the meeting th&amp;t the auxilForfeltln&amp; bonds were Lyle
GAUGES _ Gallipolis, l2.l amid the bullets and rescued Moore, Henderson, W.Va., $25, Iary cleared $90 on the last Ice
cream social sponsored by the
and 12.1 running 2_5 feet of the otrlcer. She an d her
paning on a yellow line, and a;roup. Present for the plamlng
rollers; Pl. Pleasant, 24.02 ; husband lay huddled on the Larry Teen, oo address listed,
11:8Silon were nve active memPomeroy-Mzaoo, 2o.37 ; Hinton, Ooor of their darkened home lor
$23.70 speeding.
bers
and Mra. Eva Baney an
0.98 rising; Kanawha Falls, 2.72 hours as tho IUD batUo raged
Fined were Gary Rollins, Le- honorary member.
rising; Charleston, 17.85 stat. outalde.
on, W, Va., $10 and costs, reckLondnn, Marmet, and Winfield
A UP! reporler was trapped less operation; David Southerare m the sUI.
' for two hours by balding pollee
land, Lexinglon, Ky.. $5 and
::--:-.::::;;::;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::::: ment
and snipers ln another apart- costs, assured clear distance,
Mr. and Mrs. David Leach
building a few blocks
Ohio Five-Day Foreeaat
are
amouncln&amp; the birth of an
and Lyle !lnclalr, 91ade, $10
away.
B.!' Unlled Pres&amp; International
He said a YOUIIK man In his and costs, reckless operaUon ellht pound, me oonce son, Da.
Temperatures will average 2llo was l;ylng on the street of a motor vehicle.
vld Allen, recertly at the Pleasnear oormal Thur sda,y throolh twitcbin&amp; u pollee and snipers
ant Valley Hoapltal.
Monday with hll!hs In the 801
This Ia the first child of the
shot over his bod,y.
DIVORCE ASKED
and lows In the 60s. II will be
couple. Gr~• are Mr.
"A YOUIIK (!lrl darted out and
Apetition for divorce has been and Mrs. Harold Loedl and Mr.
eooler &amp;Jnday and Monday.
scurried over to the man and
Scatlered showers ThursdiJ' manaied tn drag him to ffied in Meigs COWty Common and Mrs. James Snider, PomePleas Court by Mary Ann Van- roy, Great . &amp;randparents are
throulh &amp;Jnday are expected tu safety," the newsman said.
over, 663 N. Front.&amp;., Middle.
nerap one~f lnch or more.
GO¥. James Rhodes heard of port, against Carl Vanover, same Mrs. Janie Snider, Pomeroy, and
:r~:~:::::::-;«.;:::;:y;::::;:;:::;:;:;:::::::;:;::::::::::::::~:.
the trouble while listening to address. The plaint1tr charps Mrs. Elizabeth Rowley, Cleve·
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Prealdent Johnson addroaa the gro., llellect of duQiand extreme land.
HOSPITAL
amual Governors Conference In cruel!JI and aoks custudy ntthree
M11CI Of~- ,
ADMITrED - LolaDa.,hercy, Cincinnati. He left Immediately minor chUdren.
O.VavUie; 801sle Morrison, Pl. and wort to the state capital
P!e..-.11; VIola Jef!ers, Porno- wltore lte remained throulh the
•,J~:..,... Ill It - c.
DANCE TONIGHT . ,
James Hollon, Jr., Miners- nlabt Ill constant eootact with
~......
"'"..,"- Ill ........
...., ...
.
. . . •Olllo:
..........
W', ,.... ,_. , ...._. I ' ei"
The Junior Class nt ~I'll ldt
Tim Coats, Pomeroy; Artie Cleveland.
t1 ......,.., n· ,
c.uLlnl:oVIIIe.
He ordered the entire ablte High School will ,.,.._ 1 c11p or.t.~u. . .
,
._
. .,._
,......,..
, .. . . . . '
_...
1rula_
- Mildred National Guanl alerled and Part.Y from 8:30 to 11•30 ton!J!1t _ qllll:ll..
DIIIVJ Reynolds, Mary shortly efter ~ a I, 400 on the parking lot nf tho Doll7
Shirley Hamm, 01&gt;- man dotadlment was auembleil Top In Ractne. !lualc will be by
l'""f '!I'
. Plullne Darst, Clleryl at the 91akor Armo17 In the Joys. The dance Ia open to ,.... ,~
..,, Ml ...
the public.
·
-u. lrjs ~Kinney.
lllbultlon Shaker llel&amp;llto.
~ •
'1 )o,
·.•
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Planned Saturday

Three Fined in

,'·/,i

Chpptnan-C.naday Shoe ·St.,• . ~
. St. ·'

.

MIIOLtPQRT,:O.·'
I,
.
.
'

-

.

SALE:•.

THURS. .
CLEARANCE VALUE

ClEARANCE VALUE

Reg. 29c Value
COlTON
Reg. 29-c Value Children&amp;'
cotton tralnlDB pent, size 2.
4-6. Stock up now.

ca.Ual slip m atyles Raffia
ltraw sandals, cool for summer wear. Stock up now at
thla low prlee.

~-

$ 00

~lr

~lr

ladles and Chif~ren
•'
Famous br&amp;lld men• a Walkll\i
a~~qrta. Value to •uo.
of pllln, color and
patterna. illzo 29 to 42.
"';;&gt;
'"

'

All rubber construction with
soft erepe sole."Au~ colOrs
ID all olzea, boq sevaral pair

"""·

- ~

25 ~lr

oo·

s

each

each

·
LADIES· SUMMER

SPORTSWEAR-.
One large a;roup of summer IPOI'tlwear. !111orts, Jamalcalhono, a.rtors,
111101'1 lopl and ..,m .... Slock ap
'.~

00

; .. • .

now.

s 44.

···.&lt;t

BlTHING SUITS

1' 30ff

Tske yoor choice of IIQ' of these ooe
and two piece Girls Bathing Silts.
Our complete atock, reduced one-third

Q\. (

. '

~··

each

MENs ·

SPORT
SHIRTS
to
·aroap of

Values
$3.99 In thla
mona
better aport shirts. slze 1111111-llledlum·
large. Redlced for quick cleariiiiCe.
Slock up - for the hot weather
. ahead.
.

LADIES REG. 1.99

REG. 79c M£NS CQlTON

~~~!~!~. ~~~~~~~~ $ 00

TEE SHIRTS
Mona ttne cotton tee ablrta, olze 11111111·"
medium and 1~. Reg. 79-&lt; value.
Slock up now for summer value Plus.

pair

sandals. Cool for summer wear. See
these for value plus. Bu,y several
pair now.

New York Oothbig House •••

1

Young Mason

Democrats To

Meet Thursday

troduced and will aerveu speakers IOF the meetlllio A full raport lrmn the &lt;OIIY81tl011 commlltee wUI be given and a dele' gate list wUl be proYided lor
theae attendln&amp; the Slete Young
Jlompcral .Convention In Wheel·
·In&amp;, W. Va., on August 22, 23
and24.
Executive Chalnnan Homer
Smith, wUI stve a report oo the
· Slete l)emocrat COnvention to be
held August "3 at Fairmont, W.
: VL
Relreahmenta will be served
and the public Is InVIted.

VALUE

CLEARANCE VALUE

Reg. 29c Value
BOYS

Rag. 49c Value
PLASTIC

COTTON BRIEFS

LAUNDRY BASKET

WOOD
CAMPING STOOl'

Boys Reg. 29-c value cotton
brlefL Size 2 to 8. New low
clear111ce price. See thoae
for extra value -stock up
now for sehoul.

BIB Reg. 49-&lt; value plastic
clothe&amp; basket. Alst. colors,
lllo' several at this new low
clearance prlce.

Reg. $1.99 value, well_,...,. ·
wood Foldlftl camp llool~· See
the'!' fOI' valu• pluo. ·!hlp
eariJ, theN woo'l lut lOIIJ.

. yltOLUE

Reg. 79cVIIIHi ., ' •
2 PKG. . . :·.

Reg. 1.39 Value

umm-RliG
.
'· ·

Rea. 79-&lt; Value 2 pq; Ull)l:t:i
Rua. 2 to pka. See these.
will aaveral at this

. low.j,iice.

"

f;l,lhion

Is BIO&lt;Iiling" will be lhe thorne
Of the ~son COI!IIQI Fair Scylo
Show tn lie holil Saturday, . Aug.
· , 10, llnal day¢ the fair.
~ Nuntilr will be Mrs. Law·
: re(ce otrlach, Jr., and Judges
:lQyjq '!rill be home economist.
·, ~the APpalachian Power
• Company of Huntlngtoo, w. VL
:.1 The scyle shoW will begtn at 6
ip, m. and any 4-!l or FHA girl
·, haviDB clothlna on display at the
" fair made as:: part ola project ls
, ellalble to compete.
.~ ~. bxteStants may enter one of
' ihe" following claSies: 1. shirt
: Allll btbusl; 2. jumper and blouse;
\) $. schoo\ or casual clotlies; 4.
', II[)OI'le &lt;!otlilng; 0. bethll18 sulta;
~ 8. lool18ll!i coatumes (t.:H onlY);
: !1. sullii 8. complele coobmle (4:. H only); 9,. part;y dreiS; 10. eveniDK dreaa; and 1L 4-H wool out' fit
: ·· Pramluma will be awarded In
~; 11eh claSI aa follows: blile, $5;
, nd, f3,50, ~nd white, $2,00.
' Mrs. Mr~ Lathey Is goner. al chalrmon for the •event

CLOSED
ALL DAY

•

THURS., JUlY 25

.

.........................
_II.....,,__ _...

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"

..........

_

R..tf " • •

Reg. Price $45.00 to $10.00
NOW ON SALE--$22.50 to $40.00

Men's Sport Coats
1/2 Price

formerly from Mason Coonty.
She now resides in Columbus,

A real nice selection of styles and
.colors. Reg. $29.50 to $39.50. Yours
m Regular, lAng for 14.75 to 19.75

Ohio.
Special aiDBing will be teatu.
each evenln&amp; 1&gt;1 EvaiiiiOllst nu....
con and her husband, Buren nu ...
can, The nightly services will begin at 7:30 p. m. and everyone Is
welcome to attend. Tho postur of
the church Is the Rev. O'Dell
Bush.

MEN'S SHORT SLDVE

l PRICE

SPORT SHIRTS
1/2 PRICE

ln&lt;luded are Rayon blend that ..., be
,wasltod. Dacron-wool blends and aD wools
!" regs. aborts &amp; lomts. A very good name
m dre.s slackl. Re&amp;. 8.98 U. 16.98 You
will want more tluln 1 pair of these at
4.49 to 1.49. Small &lt;harte for alterations

Most of thellt! never need il'Onlng. Sizes are broken. Reg. 6.98
and 7.98. Sole Price 3.49 to 3.99

Woyan Rites

BOYS DENIM JEANS
·~·.··

rr

1.1: . .

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $2.98

.. .

..

'"

MEN S.S. BANLqN KNIT SHIRTS . . . . . . . . Y.s OFF

Most of the~~e have ii p&lt;Jcket. Sizes S. M. L. &amp; XL in a beauti·
ful selection of colors. Reg. 5.98 to 10.98. Sole Price 3.99 to
7.32.

PT. PLEASANT - Funedal
serVIce for Charles C. Woy111,
87, retired SoulbsJde farmer,
were held toda,y (\Vednesday),
2:30p.m. attheHambrlckUnlWd
Methodist Church 'with the Rev.
Charles
Klnralrd offlclaUI!io
Burial followed In the clllrth
cemetery.
Mr. Woyan died Mondoy 1,. a
Mlson nursins home. He Ia survived by tour lona, one da.,hler
and one sister.

.

wiai.'

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· IPI'inll

MENS S.S. conON KNIT SHIRTS . . . . . . 1h PRICE
Both button and crew neck styles. S, M, L &amp; XL. Reg. H8 !()
6. 98. Now Going At 1.49 to 3.49

MENS WHITE HANDKERCHIEFS

.. .. .. Be

Umt 12 Per Customer

Rag. 1~00 Val'"'"
. 18x27 Size, .

Mens Reg. 2.79
Bllue, Loden, White

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
ADMITTED - Herbert Mo.
theny, ~: Charles Adkins, Pt.
Pleasant, Mrs. . George Kauff,
Pomeroy; Mrs. Clay McCartney,

'•

MENS LIGHT WEIGHT JACKm

' t'
·Min 8 to

"

12 Blue, Lod!!ll, White tetmls

·, 1

·Oxrordi 8114 ai!p. on atyle; Rea. $2.119
v~ue.

'Ef,rly.

" • ' :·!,

see theH lqr vBI~ plui. Sllop
'

.,

.. ,", , .'",
',l

~I

l

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.!

'I

to 20. Made by a very Jood name In Sh()ris. Reg. 2.98
Now Only U9 to 2. 5,
.. .
' . "·! ••

!O . ~.§p.

BOYS SUMMER WEIGHT
SUITS and SPORT COATS . . . . . . . . . . . . 1h PRICE
Sl2es are broken. Reg. Price 9.95 to 29.50, Now Only 4.98 h

MENS STRAW HATS

........... , . . Y.s PRICE

Reg. U8 to 6.98, Now 2.49 to 3.49

MENS PAJAMAS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Y.s OFF

'

. . . . . . 1h PlfCE

Bqth lined and unlined styles. S, M, L &amp; XL. Some are wash·
able. Reg. 6.98 to 12.98. Sole Price 3.49 to 6.49

I.e""'

MENS SUMMER CAPS .. . .. . . . . .. .. .. . Y.s OfF.

DISCHARGED - Mra. Dudley
Edgell, Sharon Oldaker, Deborah
Wamsley, Dorald Hwnphrey, Addle Ohilnpr, Deborah Scott.

Reg. 1.00

BOYS PAJAMAS

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1h PRICE

Sizes are broken. Reg. 2.98 to 3.49, Now Only 1.49 to 1.75

MEN"S WHITE JEANS ..
Western Style. Reg. 4.98

.. .. .. .. . .. 1h PRtCE

to 5.98, Now 2.49

to 2.?9

to 1.98. Now Just 67c to 1.32.

MENS FOOTBALL SWEAT SHIRTS . . . . . .
On s.le 2.33

MENS BATHING SUITS . :u . . . .. . .. . . .. 1h PRICE

ODD LOT MENS HATS

$3.00

MEN'S S.S. UNIFORM·.$HIITS ....

$2.00

to.18. Reg. 2.49 to 4.98. Now Just 1-25 to 2.49

. neg. 2.98 Now On!1 2.00
.,.' '

BOYS' S.S. SPORUII.,.S . . . " . . . . . . . . ~ PRICE
ll!!ed lronlnl[. Sizes 6 to 18. These will be

. M~ of theae nev~

•

nice for. back

....

1.99

"

.

to t!cllool. Rer. 2.49 io 3.98, Sale Price 1.25 t.'
'I

··"

,

·

.

~~· 5.5. K~!~ I.HitJS ..... . ........ ~ PRICE

"

.....,? run ot ,, cllt!g.".; Price 1.98 to 2.98, Now Juat tao

·A ~
,

: I

.

· · '

Values to 7.911

Tan, green and grey. S, M, L &amp; XL

MEN'S LONG SLEEVE DRESS 5111115. . . . . . . . $3.00
Values to

5.95. Sizes are broken

COMPLm SELECTION

Mlni.C11ull

MENS DRESS JEANS.

WASH 'ANI'S

(n III the
_eoloro that
ing.

latest stylet Uld
never need Iron-

$4.98 to $6.98

1111811 ifon'DI .
Slzea 28 to u ill all tile Jat.
!hat

Dever

est colon.

$5.98 to$UO

-~.

S~l

'

.,_.

&lt;,;

I

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. ·'

, ·· ,/W't'i,' l1GH~9f4T JACKI1;5
•

fi

. . . . . . ~ PRICE

Us t11 !.00, On Sale 2.49,"' 4.50

,, Sizes. ~ to•20. Reg:
'' '
.
:t'

~

Y.s OFF

All of them have the numbel's on the fronl Reg 3 49

MENS liB, V1lues to $1.50 ... ... .. ...... JOe

!These are real Dogs, but I don't believe they will bite.)

..

BROADLOOM RU.G
,, ~

tENNIS OXFORDS

BOYS WALKING SHORTS . . . . . . . . . . 1h PIICE
Sizes 6

MENS WHITE HOSE . .. . .. . .. .. .. . 4 pal- $1 00

All 1ftat~ clowlt fF ~~k ~e,

,

Sizes are broken but what we have lefl are rea) buys at 1.49
3.50, Reg. Price was 2.98 to ? .00.

to

floth Short Sleeve and long sleeve styles" A very good name

All have the Cushion Foot.

'•

•

M!NS WALKING SHORTS . . ..... . .... 1h RPICE

~ :.:iamas. Size A, B, C, D. Reg. 4.98 to 6.98, Sale Price 3.32

ind' lllmlllllr ~-

-t '

All from our retuJar stuck of top quai!IJ
shirts in button down and Spread eon.
styles. Moat of th- oeYer Deed lroDinf.;
ae,. 2.118 to 8.98, This you ..,, al!ord
miss at 1.49 to SAt. Slr.et S. II, L. XL

14.75.

~a!U.~ tn_$.1.119 4' ~-...~~.of cllll~1111'·

Yes, just 4 in lot. 3 11ze
12, I size 14. Values to
$17.00.

MEN'S DRESS SlACKS

'
000 LOT MENS WASH PANTS ........
1h PRICE

.LADIES SPORTSWEAR .("liD.RIN: .·

$. ·00

3.00

.'

.

;

·~~

ta.ll9 In this &amp;roUp of ildleo
Bellfr Sportewear, all •·e&amp;rouped tor
Q.JiCil llllhmer clear.ance. ·
.

5.00
,24.50.

S.S. MEIGS MARAUDEil SWEAT 5HII1'S .. . . Y.s Off
,Sizes 6 to XI; In Meus: ·'f!lese are just right for back to schooL

VIII...• tu

DRESSES

Just 5 in lot. Reg. Price

Small Charge for Alterations

area.

Sizes 8

)i

SPORT COATS

Summer weights and year round weights in all wools
and Dacron-Wool blends. Reg., Shorts &amp; Longs.

'

Jutt 4 Lldlel'

Odcl Lot Men's

Men's
Suits
HALF-PRICE
'.

Pr~ for this event. Remember a Sale
of this importance only
happeDB twice a year at
our store. So be here
early and see all your
friends from around the

BOYS BATHING TRUNKS . . . . . . . . . . . . Y.s PRICE

•

t
l

River Gauges

•V

;..

&lt;

SIZes are broken but there is 'l nice seled!on of sQ-Iea and
colors In broken sizes. Reg. 2.98 to 6.98. Sale Prl- 1.49 "'
3.49

Announce Birth

I

'

Court Hearings

"

I

TREMENDOUS BARGAINS
THROUGHOUT THE STORE!

PT. PLEASANT - Revival
services wUI be(!ln Sunday, July
28, at the MIUstone Christian
Church at HOJsetl, W. Va., with
evangelist Bonnie Duncan . In
charge. Eval!iol!St Duncan Is
well known in the area aM is

Held J'oday
PT. PLEASANT -

I

3 BIG DAYS·THURSDAl, FRIDAY, MONDAY, JULY 26,27,29

These are wrinkle free in black, brown and Green . Sizes 6 to

{i;~.

i

Start Sunday

Theme Announeed

11

''

Starts F.riday, July 26 At 9 a.m.

"

Valutsto2.99&amp;3.~

GIRlS and CHILDREN

o,o

$

Valuesto2~99

Tremendous selection nt summer
dresses. Choose from IIUIIUI\or bell
dealp, crlapy cottuns • sheora and
blended fabrics: Real Value.

Values to $2.99 &amp; $3.99 values. Re·
grouped for quick summer clearance.
Sbop early, these won't last long.

,

w.

eourthouse.
County ciiKIIdatcs will be 1,..

ZORIES .

DRESSES

DRESSES

CLEARANCE VALUE

Rlpleyj
va.; ~ •. Joe JR. Melvln, RL 1 Gr~~. KJ!,; Mrs·. Caell V, Stith, n~osell,Ky.;Pamela
Sue Roacfi, Jacklon; Mra. !lqjer
D. Jenkins, Jackson.
" ·•
.
IIIRTIIS
; ·,
· ~a. Charles Roberto, IlL 2
GaUIPoll~, son, 9:25a.m. Tues·
day; Mrs. R~r ~ iJalley, 41&lt;·
or River Rd., dl.,_, 2:50 p,
m., Tueadoy; Mrs. Ru'"ell ~
Thcmas, Rt. 1 Pt. Pleasant, son,
2:22 p. m. Tuesday; Mrs,' Roger
D. Jenklns. Jackaon, 1011, 3:03
L "'- Wedneadoy_
DISCHARGES
Mrs. Denver A. .,.Akers, Jo1 D.
Beaver; Rlchard M. Braimher,
DaYid Coleman, Mro. ca,Jvin R.
Dowell, Dean R. French, Mrs.
William K. Harrington, M r s.
Russell S. Johnstun, Mrs. Herbert T. J6Deo, Frank "E. Kirb);
Jr., Mra. WJiaonUtchfleld,Siev:
en K. Lorbach, DaYid R. Me.Claln, Mrs. Ronnie R. McCain,
...Alpha W. McKimey, David VI.
OhllJ180r, Franklin ll Pope, Jr.,
Oscar V, lloborlann, Mrs. no..
coe Sitter field, Mrs. Ida stobarl,
. Mrs. Harley G. Thomas, Elmer
S. Trimble, Donald R. Williams,
Mrs. Donald C&amp;mp, Janet !oleMa,..
lo, Mrs. Larry J. Bumgernerand
infant son, Mrs. Newton Ice antS
PT. PLEASANT- The Muon I nf'ant BOll.
County Young Domocrets will
"hold their regular meatlDJThursdl,y,'' July 26, at 8 p. m. In the

HOSPITAL - ·visitt,. houi"s 2-t and 7-9 p; D). · Parent. only on Pecllalrlcs Ward.
, , ADMISSiONS \ \
Mrs. Charles Robert$, RL 2
~ll!ilo!)s; Mro. · Roger E. Hal"~'• Lo!rer River Rd.; Mra. Virs,il.~olef, Rt. 1 BldweUi"Charlos I. ~bay; Rt. 2 Crown Clcy;
M.rL Ru&amp;SI'II E. Thomas, "RL 1
l'L Pleiaabt; Charles R. Wolle,
Jr., New Haven; Katby Jo North,.,, PL Pleaaant; La Donna A.
Pyles, Pt. Pleasant; Mrs. Les·tor I. ~ooah, Rt 2 Letar!; Mrs.
Barto L. Durst, Pt Pleas~nt;
Dona ,Lee Gilman, New Haven;
Oris H. Q.odson, Mason; Jei'ry
W, Searles, II, Rt. I Rutland·
'I'Cirrl E. fotblr, . Mlddleport;
Mrs. Thoma,· C. Mzrtin, R u tland; Mrs. C&amp;rl R. Shook, Rt 2,
Wellston; G~orge W. Jones,
WUkesVIIle; Wend,y I. Herrmann,
'

Revival To

to6.99
LADIES BUDGET

Values to 2.99 &amp; 1.99
LADIES SUMM~R

$

CLEARANCE VALUE

LADIES STRAW
RAFFI SANDALS

TRAINING PANTS

Be Observed

Forfeit Bonds

lilil'lllli Yttl Sk., ...... :

128 MttUTREET

Anniversary
Of Ch urc .h

'l'wo Defendants

'
.:
:-

. "

Highway

Democrats

a.

tlO't,l:li:~

·

~-~~~~:~~~=~~-~~~:-~=~~!-'~~~~~!~~~~,!~~

Cleveland

Job Bids
Opened

O(le~';~~i~~~~;~i~

.....~

·

July n,
.
, ,
" .Prqlerly caUed .. Hulild, hoW·
" Dovotl~s lnd, J&gt;ulllllaS '1\'tr•
ever, thai hla state '!l"'l.•d'...,. 'led by )Ira. Beetrlee Ma)-, .The
inaln to "cpllault olio~!! lh~ . """m~ber Is loll'•· llli,l(ilj&gt;u- . ·
;facts" to be J)re-..L · '
gill; C&lt;lncludlng the inoetiJ18, "'.
''!i!'''~·~''""···;•"&lt;~·
l
•••"·;~·&lt;"'
'
'~':i&lt;;?,l'
).t'r'l; Patterlion ass~ · by
.. ·'·. ·'· :.;,.:.,...•~...:&gt;. •....-.:o!.. &lt;!&gt;.~·!&gt;.-:•. • • ·' • Mlas Roxanna P&amp;tteriOnand Milt '
Cj\RS DAMAGEo
Andrea Dewhurst sorYecl•retfesll- t
HoeY)' diJIIIiOB were lncutred marts tu lhe abo'le ind Mrs.
·toacarowoodby~leaFryoo Lealie ll,ysell, Mra. Juanita
the Beech Grove Road Weilne.. Wanaley, Mrs. LeoJa Wloe, M.a.
doy, the RuUand Fire Depart- carrie Moore, Mrs. 0on11a F1'7,
ment reports. The bllze was MrL Ada Keesee, Mi-a. J u' n 8
Quaad when the aoto backOred, Dewhurst, Miss · !losllee Wloe
flremen said.
and Mra. Audrey Patleraon.

to lmprow
rell,tlona
between
doiDK
more than
11Q' president

Alabama Staff is Blamed

•

. ?i~
·-

.

~.

'

r , •

.

;Ladles' HoM·-----· 2 111lrs'66~
First Quality ;. ;· · ·

··

�WR.L!AM s.
' -'
WASHJNGTON - 'l11e pOI[tleo
of pl'Ot2at trGat botl1 the left and
By

tho rllbl

wino ~ ..... bocoai~ '

a .)IOililcs of oxtrelpl,..-·' so lmplaeable as to nbu ciiiJ' .1!!&lt;1 ' '
present doqrertoan""""Q-elec- · ·
Uon In November and lo the hlotorlc ~Q&gt;. syaJo!n ltaelf.
From the rjgl14 G$arp Wal-

.
the

lh6

l'ej&gt;Oitedly shown, Wallace's 11&gt;-

Al!OAHD TilE 1!$ ORISKANY (CV A 34), SAN FRANCISCO BAY NAVAL S111PY AHD- Radarman Third ClAu Herold
R. Cobb, son of Mr. and .Mrs. ~ie C. Cobb, of Mason, recent))' reeellsted lor six yeers In the U. S. Navy. Pott,y Otflcer
Cobb attended Wahama High School be!Dre jolnllll the Navy,
Cobb receives his reellstment bonus of $6,992 from Cmdr.
Harrell Hall and will som be transferred to the USS NORTON
SOUND (AVMl), homeported in Port Hueneme, Cali!
The Almanac
By United Press btter national
Today Is WedneOJ()a,y, July 2f,
the 206th day of 1968 with 160 to

!Dltew.
The moon is between its last
fPU'(er and new phase.
The morning star is Sabirn.
The evening stara are Venus
and Jupiter.
On thls day tn hlstory:
In 1679, N• w Hampahlre
became a royal t'Olooy at the

BriUah crown.
In 1929, President Herbert

Hoover signed the KelloggBrland Treacy, IUlder wlllch 43
nations agreed to renounce war
as an instrument of national

policy.
1n 1948, Henry Wallace and
Idaho Sen. Glen Taylor were
nominated as presidental candidates of the Progressive party.
In
1958, Vice President
Richard N!Jron and Soviet

Premier

Nlkita

Khrushchev

staged tlleir famous

14

kitchen

debate" at the American exhibit
in Moscow,

5._eno_Church '•
· ·• '
P'.cnt·c·H·ef'&gt;-~
a·

•dj,en QQ ify 9to ·

&lt;f.

lace's thil'diJirfiy cuwH"'ey , set fr1m tho mOre
&gt;Otlng mtnortUe~, ""'"tl!e
Out ,.. auperftelall,y a cbiUeop warl!B&lt;Jplo whlie , ,. .. ·
lrilllultlon of ma'l9rl!1 rulo.
to a Democratic pl11;yhehldlelt, chiPpiDg I'IVIjl
.
Is dotty~ 10 •I ii his !batheogh It wu In tact a greater
ter through the Wallaeelteo and tlon on the race !'ttd cljme· lo- ~·;:-;~;:~
practical perU to any ReJ&gt;Ubllcan this naUon might IID!~teelrlln lilies; Mccartl!y lnhlo"CI'1tlllde" ..o(
. proliiJOct of carcylng the south, !IOUUcal crr.. , w1100u1 ...,q,lli* ~ ·destroy fhrOuah mtnortQ&gt;te&lt;h- make that
'1
'
. .t-.1.·~· :
.
?.
on the asslllllj)tion that he wadd
alph011 off more wtea from the
~·'liB
•
G.O,P, than lrm1 tbellomocrata.
llut now It has become much
more than thaL As the polls have
1

We Aecept F~ ,food Stomp~

Camer Mil IIIII •••1111 ita.

PHbNJ: f92.3480··
"We ileNt;ii'l'lltiiiCht To U!l\lt

•,

·'i

.'·

~·

,

,~(+~·/4'

orne Mail Deliveries · rob~.

-·~ A&amp;IINGTON (UPI)-~ Roll-

poai is not only steodlly rlstog
FOIV4wo persona ~tiended' a.
but Is plainly not cOIIftned to the
'a1 moD sarvlce ool Saturpicnic of Keno Church of Cluist
South or to any other region. He
at FDI'kod Run Lake &amp;mda,y,
111\va li!JI be halted Iii lh6 tall
is personit,ying tbe angera, trusThey
were
Mr.
lind
l.lrs.
charand •
dellverle~ W!ll be ilu111tnltions and the fears ofan ultraer cutltilcll to four dl,yo a week
les
Russell,
Mr.
IDd,M'.ra.
RollS
conservative seedono!Ameriean
life that knows no state or region- ClelaDd, Mrs, Vernon Cleland, later Wider a congresslona!J1
S.,.&lt;;gt. and Mrs. Jerry Cleland, ordered ~eduction Iii postal em.
al or percy boundaries.
Diana,
Jaaua, Deeter and Davia, Jlioyment, Postmaater Genorll
Tho net orlt Is thatlt is lor the
Mrs.
starling
Massar, Chul:k w.' Marvtn' Watt10tt said Monda.!'.
first time entirely possible that
Watson,
before tlte
he might be able to deny to either and Diana, Mra. Tina Marks,
Senate
POst
Offi&lt;e
and
ClvU Sermajor parcy Presidential candi- M111 Jos..,ldne llltchle, Joyce
date an clectocal pluraltcy, thus and LiDda M.Yero, Mrs. Mary Vice Comml~. ur&amp;od ellmlnatloo of tlte l'Oiii-Ot!tco Departthrowing the election Into t h e Reed, Mr. and Mrs. T. W, White,
mont
from persomel celtlngo
House of Representatives, where Mr. and Mrs. Norman Mccalll
Cmgress placed ., on all !oderal
eaCh state wouldhaveonevoter&amp;o and Sherry, Faith and Alllbor,
agencies In paoilug Prelldent
Min
Clth,y
Pickens,
Mr,
and
g&amp;rdless of its size. He cauldacMrs. Harold Osborn, GaD, Ropr John"""'• bill to 'talse lilcome
complish this, however - and
and
Gary, Miss Janenne Grimm, taxes.
here Is the crucial point of it all
Plans lor ellmlna'tton at SatMr. and Mrs. Junior Koenig and
- only with the actual If unlnLeoDard and ildela, Mrs. Leona unlal relldentlal IIOl'VIc,e ere to
ten:led cooperation of the politics
Sisson, Mr. and lllra. Charles he completed by s..,j; )., Watol extremism from the left of
Sen. Eugene Mccarthy's lorces. Cline, Dorael Bibbee and M u r 1 aon said. He said In ~ oom.
Taylor.
munltles the ¢ack wollidlake
For tr, as is very likely, Me-

~~~~lying

elfe&lt;t· fi1 :0c8l1Jer atld lil·other•

I

1

'

'•

1 ,

·

;· . .

·

·I

.••

IIINovttrobfr. ·
ll'oiiill:xtolivea.ieok.
' .' dldmai;l.l • '':~~;·, ..1'1!1
, _ ~1!11 ollllllnatlcll.ol Soillr: ·; '1 t~rol.r~bel(ovelfill:~- ; -, Ho #,l~lllil ~.• ~

. allt.'llucbt

&lt;!'!~' ·»Srctl,.JI!IIII . .[·~·· al"' ves~;wu t)ilt ·~ of ~~; .b ~I he . ~~~~ '
he~.

place about Ottdler, per-.t'/ llmttallcnaWllUid ~ &gt;IIIII tilt Jll1rodilriil
1

HuaklaroductlonofltOmede-

liveries by oootbor lltll do¥ al10

...Wd be neeeoaary l'I!Or but
gave 110 eatimale wllen.
.·
Beildea otowaiDi Salurdsy oarVice to bomeo, Wat1011 said the
poll olllce II closing 500 thlrd
and l'ourth class poll olllce Utlo
11101111a and In Auaual
- •&lt;We han alreaciJ !allied or.
dora tit clesa 3lt olllees where
vaeanclea exist," he said. ~'We
will · lljprtly 11... orders to
elosa 186."
Alnilll8 !urlher actionJ t h a t
must ''Of noceartlf,y" be tillen,
he said, ere:
.
-Hoductiott ollltUltl..triPbull-

.

..,.,...

oothei'OII Ollleelle!alrtmeot, · 11llUldb1onolllet!•loQol,...rv:let-.,
WatBCII said. ' ...,'l'llV~onlire! ' to new~y 'eiJsliale'per,r
atlt Iii a alowir Pi'Ooeillng or .. cludlq pew
r-:ft- Mht. .
· lho river at IQ!l 1iltlm loiJ'uly · end ol an ..titutt·~
·ot~
. stidi ·• main
of
!Ice 'buildlnii; ''110\r·'
: ·
tltlllllc and aocl~ i,ke. •
' buUdlnp, or small towna ol liD. 'llte poll olllce, third loraost c1er 2,~0!1 per....,
.,
elvWan otllJlloyer lp tlilo wor!dJ
Watb said .2~-~
&lt;~~rrently_ ltaa 731,0QO emplo,ytJ. unlal window
c!e st~'IIMI
11te congrenlooall)'nred eut- saOCllld elaaa poll omeei, • ·

!loll.,.•

m-.m our~- ·

'2 ,

£/i',

backs WllUidrodu&lt;elia-krof~ C01it !or a t - r perlald;
by 83,238 POTtllltta Ill 1973 when delivery at mall,, ~&lt;l,~fi
WalBCII said volwne would IJ!tla el!ectlvo 11!1•· ilaelc ,i';"''1'1-_
f fl
l)oai&lt; of 93 bW~GD plocea of nlaU. 27,
•: . . ,M;·-, ,,
Walaon teliUlled' that lh6~ot
Salurdsy ooUectloo ~;.
olll&lt;e plan ol .IIOl'VIce e . • . will be "!'"Yerted to thO l~a' ~ \
mont lor 1970 ·shoWed tb'!l . I 'Ileal ~ ·~~' •'l"'', ji
7,039 fDurtb class .[lOst olllo.es _ sallttpl~'; • !' . ., ' '.' (!; ·\""&lt;!! ,

and $;000 llllrd .elau" poot Of.

,.,1 ,'

. •

i

. MIDDIIPOIIT, o.

L--A.R.D.
'29
1'••

· 1 ·•

··

c

•

-,1';·-~- ;·.- I&gt; ,.
nesi , deUverjeo to' one a 111\v. f; licao 1!!"!14 ,baYI .• fl&gt; b@ ,eloMII

•

.

will lake

Assort•• ·

'," ' · · ~ ••~ • ·
I

1

:Wieners~f~~-:=.' ::·99e

CANNED

Jo~l ·Bacon.-:::~.. ~.29e
a•
.Ba con... \········· ..... 89~
Grou"d Beef.......~ 49e
. Ends I Pllcel

HAM

E.GGS

box

•
1185
lhcult, cO"' Mufln llld Assorttd-Cib fttns
'

U.S. Grade A
Me.ium

ou [_-~-~-- .99
3
$
h
e ate e s--=-- -· PILLSIUiY

SHOWIOAT

PORK &amp;BEANS
:. ."' .:---.;.

ICID .518!,~. '•

GrHrYtllow

~

Alwa"

Meat
Values!

MAXWElL
HOU5I!
3..
Drip, Regular · en
or Elac. Pwft.

DOG FOOD

. =12 .. $

BEST

TAGE CHEES

,•.•••

,.

. Y.lENNA

__ _

.!In

RUG RUNNERS

.

$19 9

24oz.

I

DAIRY FRESH

~
-

No.2li

Col ee------------ $1
Jel
riscO Oi ~-19~

Jo-Bo Brand
Robin Hoo• All Purpese

25.. ]

Size 72"124" ·

.
'

49~
Our Best Grade I
2 lb .

.OSCAR MAYER

crt.

SLICED

BACON
.......

iSKl
i'r' . • ''

'

... -~ · -~

'

.AIIOI1Id Colora
tWidclllck
'

··..•.

12 tal.

d

carton

SUPERIOR BRAND

NCHEON
.

SPECIAL!
Sai Only July 27th
•

FOR

Sl

· FilsH~ IGA ·

BR·IADs

. :

"

'

.(' "
'•c

'

ToChoo1t
'I

"

•

'·' .

·.· , ~
,··~ · ·
.
·\

·Vatletfes

1''
,,

'J~

.

.

'\

'

''.)f.,·

.

~

$

•
.

Stvnl

251b.

------ ---~----

Several
Flavors

EAT

JOY

~

·.

\

SPECIAL!
Sun. Onl,-.
-

·A.

�WR.L!AM s.
' -'
WASHJNGTON - 'l11e pOI[tleo
of pl'Ot2at trGat botl1 the left and
By

tho rllbl

wino ~ ..... bocoai~ '

a .)IOililcs of oxtrelpl,..-·' so lmplaeable as to nbu ciiiJ' .1!!&lt;1 ' '
present doqrertoan""""Q-elec- · ·
Uon In November and lo the hlotorlc ~Q&gt;. syaJo!n ltaelf.
From the rjgl14 G$arp Wal-

.
the

lh6

l'ej&gt;Oitedly shown, Wallace's 11&gt;-

Al!OAHD TilE 1!$ ORISKANY (CV A 34), SAN FRANCISCO BAY NAVAL S111PY AHD- Radarman Third ClAu Herold
R. Cobb, son of Mr. and .Mrs. ~ie C. Cobb, of Mason, recent))' reeellsted lor six yeers In the U. S. Navy. Pott,y Otflcer
Cobb attended Wahama High School be!Dre jolnllll the Navy,
Cobb receives his reellstment bonus of $6,992 from Cmdr.
Harrell Hall and will som be transferred to the USS NORTON
SOUND (AVMl), homeported in Port Hueneme, Cali!
The Almanac
By United Press btter national
Today Is WedneOJ()a,y, July 2f,
the 206th day of 1968 with 160 to

!Dltew.
The moon is between its last
fPU'(er and new phase.
The morning star is Sabirn.
The evening stara are Venus
and Jupiter.
On thls day tn hlstory:
In 1679, N• w Hampahlre
became a royal t'Olooy at the

BriUah crown.
In 1929, President Herbert

Hoover signed the KelloggBrland Treacy, IUlder wlllch 43
nations agreed to renounce war
as an instrument of national

policy.
1n 1948, Henry Wallace and
Idaho Sen. Glen Taylor were
nominated as presidental candidates of the Progressive party.
In
1958, Vice President
Richard N!Jron and Soviet

Premier

Nlkita

Khrushchev

staged tlleir famous

14

kitchen

debate" at the American exhibit
in Moscow,

5._eno_Church '•
· ·• '
P'.cnt·c·H·ef'&gt;-~
a·

•dj,en QQ ify 9to ·

&lt;f.

lace's thil'diJirfiy cuwH"'ey , set fr1m tho mOre
&gt;Otlng mtnortUe~, ""'"tl!e
Out ,.. auperftelall,y a cbiUeop warl!B&lt;Jplo whlie , ,. .. ·
lrilllultlon of ma'l9rl!1 rulo.
to a Democratic pl11;yhehldlelt, chiPpiDg I'IVIjl
.
Is dotty~ 10 •I ii his !batheogh It wu In tact a greater
ter through the Wallaeelteo and tlon on the race !'ttd cljme· lo- ~·;:-;~;:~
practical perU to any ReJ&gt;Ubllcan this naUon might IID!~teelrlln lilies; Mccartl!y lnhlo"CI'1tlllde" ..o(
. proliiJOct of carcylng the south, !IOUUcal crr.. , w1100u1 ...,q,lli* ~ ·destroy fhrOuah mtnortQ&gt;te&lt;h- make that
'1
'
. .t-.1.·~· :
.
?.
on the asslllllj)tion that he wadd
alph011 off more wtea from the
~·'liB
•
G.O,P, than lrm1 tbellomocrata.
llut now It has become much
more than thaL As the polls have
1

We Aecept F~ ,food Stomp~

Camer Mil IIIII •••1111 ita.

PHbNJ: f92.3480··
"We ileNt;ii'l'lltiiiCht To U!l\lt

•,

·'i

.'·

~·

,

,~(+~·/4'

orne Mail Deliveries · rob~.

-·~ A&amp;IINGTON (UPI)-~ Roll-

poai is not only steodlly rlstog
FOIV4wo persona ~tiended' a.
but Is plainly not cOIIftned to the
'a1 moD sarvlce ool Saturpicnic of Keno Church of Cluist
South or to any other region. He
at FDI'kod Run Lake &amp;mda,y,
111\va li!JI be halted Iii lh6 tall
is personit,ying tbe angera, trusThey
were
Mr.
lind
l.lrs.
charand •
dellverle~ W!ll be ilu111tnltions and the fears ofan ultraer cutltilcll to four dl,yo a week
les
Russell,
Mr.
IDd,M'.ra.
RollS
conservative seedono!Ameriean
life that knows no state or region- ClelaDd, Mrs, Vernon Cleland, later Wider a congresslona!J1
S.,.&lt;;gt. and Mrs. Jerry Cleland, ordered ~eduction Iii postal em.
al or percy boundaries.
Diana,
Jaaua, Deeter and Davia, Jlioyment, Postmaater Genorll
Tho net orlt Is thatlt is lor the
Mrs.
starling
Massar, Chul:k w.' Marvtn' Watt10tt said Monda.!'.
first time entirely possible that
Watson,
before tlte
he might be able to deny to either and Diana, Mra. Tina Marks,
Senate
POst
Offi&lt;e
and
ClvU Sermajor parcy Presidential candi- M111 Jos..,ldne llltchle, Joyce
date an clectocal pluraltcy, thus and LiDda M.Yero, Mrs. Mary Vice Comml~. ur&amp;od ellmlnatloo of tlte l'Oiii-Ot!tco Departthrowing the election Into t h e Reed, Mr. and Mrs. T. W, White,
mont
from persomel celtlngo
House of Representatives, where Mr. and Mrs. Norman Mccalll
Cmgress placed ., on all !oderal
eaCh state wouldhaveonevoter&amp;o and Sherry, Faith and Alllbor,
agencies In paoilug Prelldent
Min
Clth,y
Pickens,
Mr,
and
g&amp;rdless of its size. He cauldacMrs. Harold Osborn, GaD, Ropr John"""'• bill to 'talse lilcome
complish this, however - and
and
Gary, Miss Janenne Grimm, taxes.
here Is the crucial point of it all
Plans lor ellmlna'tton at SatMr. and Mrs. Junior Koenig and
- only with the actual If unlnLeoDard and ildela, Mrs. Leona unlal relldentlal IIOl'VIc,e ere to
ten:led cooperation of the politics
Sisson, Mr. and lllra. Charles he completed by s..,j; )., Watol extremism from the left of
Sen. Eugene Mccarthy's lorces. Cline, Dorael Bibbee and M u r 1 aon said. He said In ~ oom.
Taylor.
munltles the ¢ack wollidlake
For tr, as is very likely, Me-

~~~~lying

elfe&lt;t· fi1 :0c8l1Jer atld lil·other•

I

1

'

'•

1 ,

·

;· . .

·

·I

.••

IIINovttrobfr. ·
ll'oiiill:xtolivea.ieok.
' .' dldmai;l.l • '':~~;·, ..1'1!1
, _ ~1!11 ollllllnatlcll.ol Soillr: ·; '1 t~rol.r~bel(ovelfill:~- ; -, Ho #,l~lllil ~.• ~

. allt.'llucbt

&lt;!'!~' ·»Srctl,.JI!IIII . .[·~·· al"' ves~;wu t)ilt ·~ of ~~; .b ~I he . ~~~~ '
he~.

place about Ottdler, per-.t'/ llmttallcnaWllUid ~ &gt;IIIII tilt Jll1rodilriil
1

HuaklaroductlonofltOmede-

liveries by oootbor lltll do¥ al10

...Wd be neeeoaary l'I!Or but
gave 110 eatimale wllen.
.·
Beildea otowaiDi Salurdsy oarVice to bomeo, Wat1011 said the
poll olllce II closing 500 thlrd
and l'ourth class poll olllce Utlo
11101111a and In Auaual
- •&lt;We han alreaciJ !allied or.
dora tit clesa 3lt olllees where
vaeanclea exist," he said. ~'We
will · lljprtly 11... orders to
elosa 186."
Alnilll8 !urlher actionJ t h a t
must ''Of noceartlf,y" be tillen,
he said, ere:
.
-Hoductiott ollltUltl..triPbull-

.

..,.,...

oothei'OII Ollleelle!alrtmeot, · 11llUldb1onolllet!•loQol,...rv:let-.,
WatBCII said. ' ...,'l'llV~onlire! ' to new~y 'eiJsliale'per,r
atlt Iii a alowir Pi'Ooeillng or .. cludlq pew
r-:ft- Mht. .
· lho river at IQ!l 1iltlm loiJ'uly · end ol an ..titutt·~
·ot~
. stidi ·• main
of
!Ice 'buildlnii; ''110\r·'
: ·
tltlllllc and aocl~ i,ke. •
' buUdlnp, or small towna ol liD. 'llte poll olllce, third loraost c1er 2,~0!1 per....,
.,
elvWan otllJlloyer lp tlilo wor!dJ
Watb said .2~-~
&lt;~~rrently_ ltaa 731,0QO emplo,ytJ. unlal window
c!e st~'IIMI
11te congrenlooall)'nred eut- saOCllld elaaa poll omeei, • ·

!loll.,.•

m-.m our~- ·

'2 ,

£/i',

backs WllUidrodu&lt;elia-krof~ C01it !or a t - r perlald;
by 83,238 POTtllltta Ill 1973 when delivery at mall,, ~&lt;l,~fi
WalBCII said volwne would IJ!tla el!ectlvo 11!1•· ilaelc ,i';"''1'1-_
f fl
l)oai&lt; of 93 bW~GD plocea of nlaU. 27,
•: . . ,M;·-, ,,
Walaon teliUlled' that lh6~ot
Salurdsy ooUectloo ~;.
olll&lt;e plan ol .IIOl'VIce e . • . will be "!'"Yerted to thO l~a' ~ \
mont lor 1970 ·shoWed tb'!l . I 'Ileal ~ ·~~' •'l"'', ji
7,039 fDurtb class .[lOst olllo.es _ sallttpl~'; • !' . ., ' '.' (!; ·\""&lt;!! ,

and $;000 llllrd .elau" poot Of.

,.,1 ,'

. •

i

. MIDDIIPOIIT, o.

L--A.R.D.
'29
1'••

· 1 ·•

··

c

•

-,1';·-~- ;·.- I&gt; ,.
nesi , deUverjeo to' one a 111\v. f; licao 1!!"!14 ,baYI .• fl&gt; b@ ,eloMII

•

.

will lake

Assort•• ·

'," ' · · ~ ••~ • ·
I

1

:Wieners~f~~-:=.' ::·99e

CANNED

Jo~l ·Bacon.-:::~.. ~.29e
a•
.Ba con... \········· ..... 89~
Grou"d Beef.......~ 49e
. Ends I Pllcel

HAM

E.GGS

box

•
1185
lhcult, cO"' Mufln llld Assorttd-Cib fttns
'

U.S. Grade A
Me.ium

ou [_-~-~-- .99
3
$
h
e ate e s--=-- -· PILLSIUiY

SHOWIOAT

PORK &amp;BEANS
:. ."' .:---.;.

ICID .518!,~. '•

GrHrYtllow

~

Alwa"

Meat
Values!

MAXWElL
HOU5I!
3..
Drip, Regular · en
or Elac. Pwft.

DOG FOOD

. =12 .. $

BEST

TAGE CHEES

,•.•••

,.

. Y.lENNA

__ _

.!In

RUG RUNNERS

.

$19 9

24oz.

I

DAIRY FRESH

~
-

No.2li

Col ee------------ $1
Jel
riscO Oi ~-19~

Jo-Bo Brand
Robin Hoo• All Purpese

25.. ]

Size 72"124" ·

.
'

49~
Our Best Grade I
2 lb .

.OSCAR MAYER

crt.

SLICED

BACON
.......

iSKl
i'r' . • ''

'

... -~ · -~

'

.AIIOI1Id Colora
tWidclllck
'

··..•.

12 tal.

d

carton

SUPERIOR BRAND

NCHEON
.

SPECIAL!
Sai Only July 27th
•

FOR

Sl

· FilsH~ IGA ·

BR·IADs

. :

"

'

.(' "
'•c

'

ToChoo1t
'I

"

•

'·' .

·.· , ~
,··~ · ·
.
·\

·Vatletfes

1''
,,

'J~

.

.

'\

'

''.)f.,·

.

~

$

•
.

Stvnl

251b.

------ ---~----

Several
Flavors

EAT

JOY

~

·.

\

SPECIAL!
Sun. Onl,-.
-

·A.

�'

~...._..~

I"

.

For-~..:.;. .

lPiliiNISII!D.' 'lliJ(I!;J!;

•

QOIII¥~ belli:

Of'

anALITY .

7*11~

'..

Jl'iVB BOO¥ furidslled boule,
........ In POmeroy, Mn. Row-

lit Cecll. 100

w.

Pomeroy.

Mila
7-M

IIJ.,

'*

ForS.Ie
POODLE PUPPIES AKC TO)'
Wblle and stud service, 4 and
I lbs. Phone lm-3115.
T-ID-3Gie

,I

.,

RYE SEED,
bushel. navld
Yost, Portland. Phone IllS71
2242 '
• utp

Notice

'' '

. •

2SIOMS

room

ilortb Secmd Ave.,_MfdolltPorl !'bone

. . . ·.

~·

.

.

1917 CHEVROLET IMP,Y.A t DOOR ••• • •
White IIJdoll, turQIOlu lirterlor, 327 .engine,
trt.na., power steering, new ear title, ridlo, hoa.ter.),'
1963 DODGE POLARO HT CPE. • • •••••••
V-8 •!line, automatic trana., aleorlng and
Vh!yl iirtei-lor, radio and lleatOr. Like new tires.

=-::Am

SPIDER 2 DR. • , , ...... , ..
New llrea, red vh!yl bucket oaato, t apeed trans.,
and heater. Wblle top over black finish.

;

.3Lig~ ,

· ·~~

Pomeroy
Motor Co. .®.U~
- ...·,.·
01'1111 EVIl. 1:00 P.M.

.,

.n.

.I

E

AIC

RN tOSER .

.

'

'

'
•I
•

o-WMPo~:
,
'

,''
~-

.

INFORMAnON
NEWt

~

'
•
Jt.,.

lirese•ii ·· ·

T•&gt;t

(OCAL REPORTS • .·,.:t:::~
DAIL·Y

IF 001' FOR 'THE

AT

A RlliTICIIW JUS!"
Cou.DIJ'T S&lt;JRIJI\.E ...

7:50 A.M.
\

..__

'

)':

12. NOON · '' ·
3 P.M.

AND . ,.
•:3_0 P.M. --

Keeping Meigs
.Gallic and
Mason ' Area

"JO

HOBSTETTER~..

.·REALtY

'

'
llOTH· PRooFING

.......

I

... . l.

·""'··""";:::=:...!'-:: ';~::.:''"' ...

----

---

•

IIOMeaov. QHto

POODLE PUPPIES. AKC Toy . ._ _ _ _lllil!l____________
h&gt;
miniature. $75 and 11p. Stud
For $lie
•ervlee and grooming. Phoae
Real Est•te For S1~
BROWN SOFA, folda Into lull
m-5113.
U I tie
O'IIIIIEN a llROW ' · .'
welcome.
7·2!-41e
U bed with lprlnp I Dd
REALTY
COMPANY
maltrus, 140, good llOIIIIilion;
AKC Golden Retriever puppies.
BAND EVERY Friday from 8
General Electric dryer. 2 POMeROY - 5 mllu oul. Lot
524 Aob Sl., Middleport. Illp.m. to 2 a.m., Shenang
100d4B. Ranch type home, I
speed, good llOIIIIillon, $35.
MO.
&amp;-21-tfe
'
\\ ''
Sprlnp Nile Club, Best band
l•rae bedrooms wllll lilbled
Call Cbesler 81WS25, 7~
ciooell, Living room lbU
\J
In lbe - ·
7-24-21c YOU CAN still oave ~0 or m.,.
wllll comer fireplace of
on aluminum boall. Call 111- TRY BEFORE you buy: We
BAND EVERY Friday ond Satatone, wall to wall carpet,
2347 or llft.I25S. Calh or wiD bring lhla 1118 model ztc
I'.·
urday at Jacks Club on Har- . Ierma.
'l1led
balll wltb gtas. •lldlnt ·
... ...... macbllle to )'0111'
&amp;-1~
rlaoa.nte Road off Rl. 7.
home oo JOU may aow on II. cloon, buill In kitchen wllh
Gayle McDonald and h Ia POTATOES, beans. oobbage
n :roa lib It, buy 1~ for only range and oven, garage wllll .
Drlftera. Country ll11lllc
breezeway. paUo In mr.
.. cub, or I pa)'IDellll of
and beell. !'bone 143-mt.
T-24-3te
TIDS
PROPERTY IS L II B
eii.IIO
per
monlll.
Call
IIIZ-183e.
Clarence ProfftU, P&lt;ll'lland.
NEW
AND A BUY al $17,••
7-21-811:
()hlo,
7-741&lt;
MIDDLEPORT - I \!r otory
SQUARE DANCE ol m-7 Club
frame, 2 bedroom•. NEW
f'rlclay and Saturday nlabl. FIVE ROOM ROUSE and belli, IJII8 S'I'EREO: LOvely wllnat
bolll, famace, bot water lank,
1:!0 p.m. to I a.m. 7-~
one floor, partly fumlsljed II OIIDIOie wltil radio, 4 apeakand floor covering. $4,700.10.
deab'ed. 'I8S S. Seooud Ave., en. Take over paymenll of
REVIVAL, Cburch of God, CbuRI!NRY aJ!:LAND .
Mlddleport. Can be seen b7 til per month or ply belaneo
Olllce . . .
11!1', July 21 tilmJ&amp;I! 18. Rev.
appointment after S p.m. Et, $1011.24. Try II In yGUr home.
11obbJ Porter, evangelill. S«- den Wilburn, pbone lft.K Call 1182-2136.
7-U-«e
7-24-31e
•
7:!0 p.m. each evenmg,
, ...lfe
()pea -to lbe public. 74Sip
SIX ROOM boqae, I at 4 bedNO. 8. STOKER COAL al lor- rooma, 1\!o Mill, full baaoBusiness Servle~~
'l'BRMITES SWARMING? mer Clinton Coal Co. tipple,
ment, two lblllbed - ·
'Diey are re-producllves, not
C. C. DAIIJI'OKD
located 5 m1lel eaat of WellJ. Two elfra loll will! ouUel.
JOIII' worker colony. rr. lnA~
ton. Pbooe !Mm'l Welillon Contact BID W11Ua1111011, 211
Chlplole
llerviM
spoctloas and Information ou
Unloo
Ave.,
Pomeroy,
Phone
for Information. Walton Coal
crawl apace
No
lltli-MII.
7-U.etp
Company.
7-1~
Crflt Bladltnl
llleeman, low oVerllead, 110
par ceat aavlnp. Allied Pest GOOD SEVEN room bouae, STBRI!lO RADIO COI!Iblnallon.
........ GMt
Qmol,
Pomeroy,
Oblo.
I I lie
bath and half; two loll, will
repoiiBiaod, beaullful cabinet,
Pbone 9ft 1511 ev&lt;lllnp.
eonslder trading trailer. Coo- like · new. Balance due flU!,
I-IWIIp
i
tad suale Woad, Syraeuso.
at
a WMI:. CaD ...._ AIR OONDmONING Refrlprallon aerrice. Saclr:'a Relrfc7-U-«e
Phone II!IZ-J555.
7-la.elo
erallon, New Haven. boaa
WILL DO ..U.g at borne llppen, poctell, pej!glng, TWO YEAR old two bedroom
aat-211'11.
4 I 1ft!
Real Est1te For Sale
bemmlng, alleratlonl, ete.
home, bath, tun basement. gaMit. l"reddde '!babel. MUll!,
READY • lolll[ concrete ,lloUv·
raiiiO, In ·Syracuse, Phone 1ft.
efecJ rli!ld .'fo ' yOUr ' pj\ljeel.
4-111-tfc
·r ~. j.~ l'lllin8 7Ts-sast.
2421.
7-tl-tfc
~
Fill and euy. FrH estiJIAPPY HOUR, Shenang Sprlnp SMALL POODLES. groomed
mates. Phone 112-3284, r.oegleln
Ready • Mix Co., MiddleIIIIJ aub, s to 1 p.m. Moaln!o If you wlllt West Rlsb- GEO. HOditiil'IEB, BROUil
I II ltc
daJ 1111'11 Friday. Ladles nJgbt land Wblte Terriers ancl· miD- !IUJCI: - i rooma, belli, living port, Ohio.
llffltJ Friday.
u.tle
ruom pODeled, two aeres.
Ialure Schnauzers, lemponi'J
.
•bois, all A.K.C. Barkaroo ... ON RT. 7 - Four rooma, BUDGET PRICE furnltan on
I}
our thin! ftoor budget lbop.
. W1nt.cl To Buy
Kennela, Coolville. Phone 88'1- belb, lifo acres.
Baker
F'umllure, Middleport.
AHI'IQUES, fumltunl, dishes.
1.\VNDIIY - Doing 1ond. All
36M, visitors weleome.
'•
Olllo.
? 22 lie
'
equipment and bullcllni. Be
nllsMD'"""""'. Mrs. Howard
7-U-IOlc
,_ own boa.
· Olcll, IIIII W. Main St., Pomo. IIIJ.
1-ts-llc FO!.IR ROOM HOUSE. beth, lilt ACREs - I cu wella, I SEWING MACIIINES. roualr
aervlce, an makeil. WY s;
farm ponds, 2 barn!, 2 houaextra lot and boule trailer In
GOOD a.BAN dry rooll, ,W.
es. Minerals. Dairy now oper- 2184. 'n1e Fabric shop, PomPmneroy. Call lltUI37 after
eroy. Aulll&lt;lllad .lllntler Sales
. . . . . lb., yellcnr root, •
ating.
I p.m.
7-14-lillp
and llervlce. We Sliarpen
lb.; May apple ~ 10 001111
IIBLEN Gl' VIRGIL TBAFOIID
llclaMI.
. ,S-2f.lfc
lb. BID Bailey, IIMiavllle, SAVE NOW on aluminum boata,
Aaodalel
·CldD,
7-17-ete
SYIIACV8!!:
IO.IS-11-14 II.. dean mode,
CIGAIIE'I'I'I!l ventllng maeldnea
sturdy, One
bottoma.
.,'
IDd Mllce. AJC ltnlerprlaes,
One mDe off Rt. 33. on Kinll• Femlle Help W1nted
~.
v•. ,_ 'I'IS-5543.
bury Road.
7-17-lllle
luslnas Servle~~
IWl IIAID, 110 uporleDce
8-f.lfc
RADIO AND TV REPAIR, bouae
•..,, Dl(lli ablft. Apply
Ill peru~, Blue TartaD, Mid- WELL KEPT carpell show !be ealll, antemla, aile and In• ur•nee
•
t....
, . dllpaiL
7-U-«e
results of resutar Blue Lualre atallallon. Jolm llarrlloo, 701
'
,spot cleaning. Rent electrle
Broadway st., Mkldlopott, A'O'I'OMOIIILl!! InSUrance bee1
eueelled? Loot your 01101'11shompooer $1. Baker Fuml- pbone llft-2522.
7-14-tfc
HelpW1nt.cl
lure,
7-2Ufc
or'l 11cenoeT
JANmlll, PART time Sunday
I II lfe
APPLIANCE HOSPITAL - Au· employment. Apply Blue Tar.
1941 PONTIAC, 2 door, body
lhorlad llrlgp and Slrattan
1111, Middleport.
7-2Uio
-nent, good llres, like new · IDd LaWn Boy, parll and
lnterlor, motor needl repair, 111 vlcea; repair Teeumaeh
,
Forhnt
fitS,
Ernell Griffin, Lcmg and Kolller engines and all
'
Boltom, phone t~J-~310.
CAIII'm'G 'l'rl!lf!r by day "'
amaD appliances, 'nl1rd St.,
.... aJeepa 7, Phone . .
Muon, W. Vo., Jolm M. lloll7~
•.
7-U...,
pa,
&amp;-JJ.ale
COLT, 20 months old, pbone
'l'AAILER, Bmm'a Trailer . . ..
7-:13-51e ELECTROLUX SALI!S and aer.
Pat:, 11lnemille, Pbooe . .
vice: Sweepers, 1'118 waaben
....
7-~121e !liM BUICK In running eondland polilben. Genuine parll,
tlon and a 1955 Dufek body
1-JI.Ifc
PLENTY of space !or me
and motor, all lor $50. Phone
er wltb all facllllles. In
MN411.
7-21-llc
CUlt. Call 912-MM.
4-11-lfe
MANUFACTURER'S SALE - . . . .
FI1RHISliED and unfumllllecl
FIMII and Home white Lata
. .. apartmenll. Cloae to aclloaL
bouae and barn paint. Reg,
Pbone IIIUU4,
IO.atfe
15.41 fallon. Slle price $1.111
• gallon .. King Bulidf!t'l SupIIIAILI!:R SPACE, all ut111t1oo
ply Co.. Middleport, Ohlo, 1111mllable. Inquire 156 Mulber·
3741.
7-Z3-121c
•
after .S or 5 p.m. Write P. ·
·~;.,•·11 'it 80r Cl Pomeroy, $.8-tft 1118 APACHE Falcon camping
trailer. Call 119Z-IIOI or aee
Willie Gulntller after 4:30 p.m.
•
7-2Uic

THERE WILL be a SUD ahool
Sunday, July 18, beginning at
110011 at lbe Forked Run
8pclrflman Club. Everyone Is

l'

I! .

1~· M ·····,,

" '

...

: . JnfE)f,(lleq,~!~ '
· Well As ..-'
Entertained

IF WE lURN 'EM LOOSE,

'M M08'U. FlND()JT HOW
WE DtD NOr C:ONFER
\'A'TH THEiiR LEADERS!

ran

w.

.,

can • •·

DAILY CROSSWORD
. childrd
$. :M~L

...t:Detiate
1•

---

lllape. Marton a.,aolda, llaaon. Pllone 7'1S-5147. 7-21-lfc
HARLI!:Y DAVIDSON MOTORCYCLE, PliO, call tit-JUt ·
Monday lhru l'rlday heiGrt

I p.m.

7-ti-tlp

ewfACT

!ta CO!l'Vj!ii'li!l, Ronduru mi1'0011, -~ bp,, 4 apaed;
$!!ell. Call Coolville • • .

.... :.~.· to.
;H,Jjf , .,·"'
211.·ff1J'011!'

'llon ·~

;:, 21. PU.tout
to -

"

t~
~..J'IOPI

'

t ·2s. Clndle'nut
I

ill. JIIIIIC note .

.· ilf:·Bxtlnct
u~ ,..h . '
.,r
';
.

AGE510o17
••

Pomeroy.Mlcldlepcrt ArM

. · DOYOU~ID $PEtaNG MONEY?
I • Hthe aniwer Is yea,'" or call
~ ~·

WANIIf

IN MDliPOII' .

. 22....1·,

'' IJ.~ '
.. :IS.IIcoila
:1$. Impolite

·\

''

1

'

Katie Crow, The Dilly Sentinel,

9n-21 56. She'll tell y.ou how to Hm
•·. ,. _tt 1nd If the ume time get vllullllll

.

'

tnlnlng

7~~--~--~~~
'·

..
a. cat

~ shaped

Ye ..eflll¥'1 "•••rr

30. Foreb9dlng&amp;

AlsO

. 1 coulrtdOWn ~

form four ordinu1 · word•.

29. Soan1
aw&amp;y,

31.1......
art•rr

!&amp;. --.--'- Spee
.21.

bulk•

'. 18.BI!U'\ol&amp;

'

name
Defunct
27. Scorch
2~.

~Y

WithhOrQI

Sectltn

.ana
.

18. Narrow

Unocrllllble the~tl'our Jumblet,
one letter to each •quare, to

2,, Oirl'tJ

' powth
15. Dart

· ulhe

........

1811 NEWPORT Chryllor, 4Doar, good rubber, goad

of -,,,
16. Buddha -

~· ·

PomtrOJ RMte.

•

11. Hum1
13 Under-

. tT. Itenfoved,

i

for
clpra:

u:tona\lmed

. 16. SJ~atthe

s.J;;..

tacle.

7. Bktll
8. Short
t, Exelam,..
Umi

· 11. Htb«tnate

JJW]-~®~.:=:!==

:l3, Recep-

quart

coati

10. Employed

. 12. Entice

CaD...-.

..\.n.

a:He.lf a

AOB088
1. LltUe

·

Or

!H.
37. ~;i~~er

·tho heart ,

'121 eaR ,

' · 38.

dep~n~·,~;·"Tl~~F~ra~nclsc::..o,
~·~~;;:;
, wnue\' ' st· _:•40.

.. ' l:H/1'11

�'

~...._..~

I"

.

For-~..:.;. .

lPiliiNISII!D.' 'lliJ(I!;J!;

•

QOIII¥~ belli:

Of'

anALITY .

7*11~

'..

Jl'iVB BOO¥ furidslled boule,
........ In POmeroy, Mn. Row-

lit Cecll. 100

w.

Pomeroy.

Mila
7-M

IIJ.,

'*

ForS.Ie
POODLE PUPPIES AKC TO)'
Wblle and stud service, 4 and
I lbs. Phone lm-3115.
T-ID-3Gie

,I

.,

RYE SEED,
bushel. navld
Yost, Portland. Phone IllS71
2242 '
• utp

Notice

'' '

. •

2SIOMS

room

ilortb Secmd Ave.,_MfdolltPorl !'bone

. . . ·.

~·

.

.

1917 CHEVROLET IMP,Y.A t DOOR ••• • •
White IIJdoll, turQIOlu lirterlor, 327 .engine,
trt.na., power steering, new ear title, ridlo, hoa.ter.),'
1963 DODGE POLARO HT CPE. • • •••••••
V-8 •!line, automatic trana., aleorlng and
Vh!yl iirtei-lor, radio and lleatOr. Like new tires.

=-::Am

SPIDER 2 DR. • , , ...... , ..
New llrea, red vh!yl bucket oaato, t apeed trans.,
and heater. Wblle top over black finish.

;

.3Lig~ ,

· ·~~

Pomeroy
Motor Co. .®.U~
- ...·,.·
01'1111 EVIl. 1:00 P.M.

.,

.n.

.I

E

AIC

RN tOSER .

.

'

'

'
•I
•

o-WMPo~:
,
'

,''
~-

.

INFORMAnON
NEWt

~

'
•
Jt.,.

lirese•ii ·· ·

T•&gt;t

(OCAL REPORTS • .·,.:t:::~
DAIL·Y

IF 001' FOR 'THE

AT

A RlliTICIIW JUS!"
Cou.DIJ'T S&lt;JRIJI\.E ...

7:50 A.M.
\

..__

'

)':

12. NOON · '' ·
3 P.M.

AND . ,.
•:3_0 P.M. --

Keeping Meigs
.Gallic and
Mason ' Area

"JO

HOBSTETTER~..

.·REALtY

'

'
llOTH· PRooFING

.......

I

... . l.

·""'··""";:::=:...!'-:: ';~::.:''"' ...

----

---

•

IIOMeaov. QHto

POODLE PUPPIES. AKC Toy . ._ _ _ _lllil!l____________
h&gt;
miniature. $75 and 11p. Stud
For $lie
•ervlee and grooming. Phoae
Real Est•te For S1~
BROWN SOFA, folda Into lull
m-5113.
U I tie
O'IIIIIEN a llROW ' · .'
welcome.
7·2!-41e
U bed with lprlnp I Dd
REALTY
COMPANY
maltrus, 140, good llOIIIIilion;
AKC Golden Retriever puppies.
BAND EVERY Friday from 8
General Electric dryer. 2 POMeROY - 5 mllu oul. Lot
524 Aob Sl., Middleport. Illp.m. to 2 a.m., Shenang
100d4B. Ranch type home, I
speed, good llOIIIIillon, $35.
MO.
&amp;-21-tfe
'
\\ ''
Sprlnp Nile Club, Best band
l•rae bedrooms wllll lilbled
Call Cbesler 81WS25, 7~
ciooell, Living room lbU
\J
In lbe - ·
7-24-21c YOU CAN still oave ~0 or m.,.
wllll comer fireplace of
on aluminum boall. Call 111- TRY BEFORE you buy: We
BAND EVERY Friday ond Satatone, wall to wall carpet,
2347 or llft.I25S. Calh or wiD bring lhla 1118 model ztc
I'.·
urday at Jacks Club on Har- . Ierma.
'l1led
balll wltb gtas. •lldlnt ·
... ...... macbllle to )'0111'
&amp;-1~
rlaoa.nte Road off Rl. 7.
home oo JOU may aow on II. cloon, buill In kitchen wllh
Gayle McDonald and h Ia POTATOES, beans. oobbage
n :roa lib It, buy 1~ for only range and oven, garage wllll .
Drlftera. Country ll11lllc
breezeway. paUo In mr.
.. cub, or I pa)'IDellll of
and beell. !'bone 143-mt.
T-24-3te
TIDS
PROPERTY IS L II B
eii.IIO
per
monlll.
Call
IIIZ-183e.
Clarence ProfftU, P&lt;ll'lland.
NEW
AND A BUY al $17,••
7-21-811:
()hlo,
7-741&lt;
MIDDLEPORT - I \!r otory
SQUARE DANCE ol m-7 Club
frame, 2 bedroom•. NEW
f'rlclay and Saturday nlabl. FIVE ROOM ROUSE and belli, IJII8 S'I'EREO: LOvely wllnat
bolll, famace, bot water lank,
1:!0 p.m. to I a.m. 7-~
one floor, partly fumlsljed II OIIDIOie wltil radio, 4 apeakand floor covering. $4,700.10.
deab'ed. 'I8S S. Seooud Ave., en. Take over paymenll of
REVIVAL, Cburch of God, CbuRI!NRY aJ!:LAND .
Mlddleport. Can be seen b7 til per month or ply belaneo
Olllce . . .
11!1', July 21 tilmJ&amp;I! 18. Rev.
appointment after S p.m. Et, $1011.24. Try II In yGUr home.
11obbJ Porter, evangelill. S«- den Wilburn, pbone lft.K Call 1182-2136.
7-U-«e
7-24-31e
•
7:!0 p.m. each evenmg,
, ...lfe
()pea -to lbe public. 74Sip
SIX ROOM boqae, I at 4 bedNO. 8. STOKER COAL al lor- rooma, 1\!o Mill, full baaoBusiness Servle~~
'l'BRMITES SWARMING? mer Clinton Coal Co. tipple,
ment, two lblllbed - ·
'Diey are re-producllves, not
C. C. DAIIJI'OKD
located 5 m1lel eaat of WellJ. Two elfra loll will! ouUel.
JOIII' worker colony. rr. lnA~
ton. Pbooe !Mm'l Welillon Contact BID W11Ua1111011, 211
Chlplole
llerviM
spoctloas and Information ou
Unloo
Ave.,
Pomeroy,
Phone
for Information. Walton Coal
crawl apace
No
lltli-MII.
7-U.etp
Company.
7-1~
Crflt Bladltnl
llleeman, low oVerllead, 110
par ceat aavlnp. Allied Pest GOOD SEVEN room bouae, STBRI!lO RADIO COI!Iblnallon.
........ GMt
Qmol,
Pomeroy,
Oblo.
I I lie
bath and half; two loll, will
repoiiBiaod, beaullful cabinet,
Pbone 9ft 1511 ev&lt;lllnp.
eonslder trading trailer. Coo- like · new. Balance due flU!,
I-IWIIp
i
tad suale Woad, Syraeuso.
at
a WMI:. CaD ...._ AIR OONDmONING Refrlprallon aerrice. Saclr:'a Relrfc7-U-«e
Phone II!IZ-J555.
7-la.elo
erallon, New Haven. boaa
WILL DO ..U.g at borne llppen, poctell, pej!glng, TWO YEAR old two bedroom
aat-211'11.
4 I 1ft!
Real Est1te For Sale
bemmlng, alleratlonl, ete.
home, bath, tun basement. gaMit. l"reddde '!babel. MUll!,
READY • lolll[ concrete ,lloUv·
raiiiO, In ·Syracuse, Phone 1ft.
efecJ rli!ld .'fo ' yOUr ' pj\ljeel.
4-111-tfc
·r ~. j.~ l'lllin8 7Ts-sast.
2421.
7-tl-tfc
~
Fill and euy. FrH estiJIAPPY HOUR, Shenang Sprlnp SMALL POODLES. groomed
mates. Phone 112-3284, r.oegleln
Ready • Mix Co., MiddleIIIIJ aub, s to 1 p.m. Moaln!o If you wlllt West Rlsb- GEO. HOditiil'IEB, BROUil
I II ltc
daJ 1111'11 Friday. Ladles nJgbt land Wblte Terriers ancl· miD- !IUJCI: - i rooma, belli, living port, Ohio.
llffltJ Friday.
u.tle
ruom pODeled, two aeres.
Ialure Schnauzers, lemponi'J
.
•bois, all A.K.C. Barkaroo ... ON RT. 7 - Four rooma, BUDGET PRICE furnltan on
I}
our thin! ftoor budget lbop.
. W1nt.cl To Buy
Kennela, Coolville. Phone 88'1- belb, lifo acres.
Baker
F'umllure, Middleport.
AHI'IQUES, fumltunl, dishes.
1.\VNDIIY - Doing 1ond. All
36M, visitors weleome.
'•
Olllo.
? 22 lie
'
equipment and bullcllni. Be
nllsMD'"""""'. Mrs. Howard
7-U-IOlc
,_ own boa.
· Olcll, IIIII W. Main St., Pomo. IIIJ.
1-ts-llc FO!.IR ROOM HOUSE. beth, lilt ACREs - I cu wella, I SEWING MACIIINES. roualr
aervlce, an makeil. WY s;
farm ponds, 2 barn!, 2 houaextra lot and boule trailer In
GOOD a.BAN dry rooll, ,W.
es. Minerals. Dairy now oper- 2184. 'n1e Fabric shop, PomPmneroy. Call lltUI37 after
eroy. Aulll&lt;lllad .lllntler Sales
. . . . . lb., yellcnr root, •
ating.
I p.m.
7-14-lillp
and llervlce. We Sliarpen
lb.; May apple ~ 10 001111
IIBLEN Gl' VIRGIL TBAFOIID
llclaMI.
. ,S-2f.lfc
lb. BID Bailey, IIMiavllle, SAVE NOW on aluminum boata,
Aaodalel
·CldD,
7-17-ete
SYIIACV8!!:
IO.IS-11-14 II.. dean mode,
CIGAIIE'I'I'I!l ventllng maeldnea
sturdy, One
bottoma.
.,'
IDd Mllce. AJC ltnlerprlaes,
One mDe off Rt. 33. on Kinll• Femlle Help W1nted
~.
v•. ,_ 'I'IS-5543.
bury Road.
7-17-lllle
luslnas Servle~~
IWl IIAID, 110 uporleDce
8-f.lfc
RADIO AND TV REPAIR, bouae
•..,, Dl(lli ablft. Apply
Ill peru~, Blue TartaD, Mid- WELL KEPT carpell show !be ealll, antemla, aile and In• ur•nee
•
t....
, . dllpaiL
7-U-«e
results of resutar Blue Lualre atallallon. Jolm llarrlloo, 701
'
,spot cleaning. Rent electrle
Broadway st., Mkldlopott, A'O'I'OMOIIILl!! InSUrance bee1
eueelled? Loot your 01101'11shompooer $1. Baker Fuml- pbone llft-2522.
7-14-tfc
HelpW1nt.cl
lure,
7-2Ufc
or'l 11cenoeT
JANmlll, PART time Sunday
I II lfe
APPLIANCE HOSPITAL - Au· employment. Apply Blue Tar.
1941 PONTIAC, 2 door, body
lhorlad llrlgp and Slrattan
1111, Middleport.
7-2Uio
-nent, good llres, like new · IDd LaWn Boy, parll and
lnterlor, motor needl repair, 111 vlcea; repair Teeumaeh
,
Forhnt
fitS,
Ernell Griffin, Lcmg and Kolller engines and all
'
Boltom, phone t~J-~310.
CAIII'm'G 'l'rl!lf!r by day "'
amaD appliances, 'nl1rd St.,
.... aJeepa 7, Phone . .
Muon, W. Vo., Jolm M. lloll7~
•.
7-U...,
pa,
&amp;-JJ.ale
COLT, 20 months old, pbone
'l'AAILER, Bmm'a Trailer . . ..
7-:13-51e ELECTROLUX SALI!S and aer.
Pat:, 11lnemille, Pbooe . .
vice: Sweepers, 1'118 waaben
....
7-~121e !liM BUICK In running eondland polilben. Genuine parll,
tlon and a 1955 Dufek body
1-JI.Ifc
PLENTY of space !or me
and motor, all lor $50. Phone
er wltb all facllllles. In
MN411.
7-21-llc
CUlt. Call 912-MM.
4-11-lfe
MANUFACTURER'S SALE - . . . .
FI1RHISliED and unfumllllecl
FIMII and Home white Lata
. .. apartmenll. Cloae to aclloaL
bouae and barn paint. Reg,
Pbone IIIUU4,
IO.atfe
15.41 fallon. Slle price $1.111
• gallon .. King Bulidf!t'l SupIIIAILI!:R SPACE, all ut111t1oo
ply Co.. Middleport, Ohlo, 1111mllable. Inquire 156 Mulber·
3741.
7-Z3-121c
•
after .S or 5 p.m. Write P. ·
·~;.,•·11 'it 80r Cl Pomeroy, $.8-tft 1118 APACHE Falcon camping
trailer. Call 119Z-IIOI or aee
Willie Gulntller after 4:30 p.m.
•
7-2Uic

THERE WILL be a SUD ahool
Sunday, July 18, beginning at
110011 at lbe Forked Run
8pclrflman Club. Everyone Is

l'

I! .

1~· M ·····,,

" '

...

: . JnfE)f,(lleq,~!~ '
· Well As ..-'
Entertained

IF WE lURN 'EM LOOSE,

'M M08'U. FlND()JT HOW
WE DtD NOr C:ONFER
\'A'TH THEiiR LEADERS!

ran

w.

.,

can • •·

DAILY CROSSWORD
. childrd
$. :M~L

...t:Detiate
1•

---

lllape. Marton a.,aolda, llaaon. Pllone 7'1S-5147. 7-21-lfc
HARLI!:Y DAVIDSON MOTORCYCLE, PliO, call tit-JUt ·
Monday lhru l'rlday heiGrt

I p.m.

7-ti-tlp

ewfACT

!ta CO!l'Vj!ii'li!l, Ronduru mi1'0011, -~ bp,, 4 apaed;
$!!ell. Call Coolville • • .

.... :.~.· to.
;H,Jjf , .,·"'
211.·ff1J'011!'

'llon ·~

;:, 21. PU.tout
to -

"

t~
~..J'IOPI

'

t ·2s. Clndle'nut
I

ill. JIIIIIC note .

.· ilf:·Bxtlnct
u~ ,..h . '
.,r
';
.

AGE510o17
••

Pomeroy.Mlcldlepcrt ArM

. · DOYOU~ID $PEtaNG MONEY?
I • Hthe aniwer Is yea,'" or call
~ ~·

WANIIf

IN MDliPOII' .

. 22....1·,

'' IJ.~ '
.. :IS.IIcoila
:1$. Impolite

·\

''

1

'

Katie Crow, The Dilly Sentinel,

9n-21 56. She'll tell y.ou how to Hm
•·. ,. _tt 1nd If the ume time get vllullllll

.

'

tnlnlng

7~~--~--~~~
'·

..
a. cat

~ shaped

Ye ..eflll¥'1 "•••rr

30. Foreb9dlng&amp;

AlsO

. 1 coulrtdOWn ~

form four ordinu1 · word•.

29. Soan1
aw&amp;y,

31.1......
art•rr

!&amp;. --.--'- Spee
.21.

bulk•

'. 18.BI!U'\ol&amp;

'

name
Defunct
27. Scorch
2~.

~Y

WithhOrQI

Sectltn

.ana
.

18. Narrow

Unocrllllble the~tl'our Jumblet,
one letter to each •quare, to

2,, Oirl'tJ

' powth
15. Dart

· ulhe

........

1811 NEWPORT Chryllor, 4Doar, good rubber, goad

of -,,,
16. Buddha -

~· ·

PomtrOJ RMte.

•

11. Hum1
13 Under-

. tT. Itenfoved,

i

for
clpra:

u:tona\lmed

. 16. SJ~atthe

s.J;;..

tacle.

7. Bktll
8. Short
t, Exelam,..
Umi

· 11. Htb«tnate

JJW]-~®~.:=:!==

:l3, Recep-

quart

coati

10. Employed

. 12. Entice

CaD...-.

..\.n.

a:He.lf a

AOB088
1. LltUe

·

Or

!H.
37. ~;i~~er

·tho heart ,

'121 eaR ,

' · 38.

dep~n~·,~;·"Tl~~F~ra~nclsc::..o,
~·~~;;:;
, wnue\' ' st· _:•40.

.. ' l:H/1'11

�''

,•.
.

'

.'
_,

tS ::_

•••
~

(

Thi Dally

•

OPEN SU~bA Y lO o. m. "! i f. !II. : :,

.,'

\

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

..........
Bacon . . . . :.. 65t

"'"
C I fl ltllf, 'flit Krator C.., 1Me
. . - t h o rttllt ..
liMit .. allllw.

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

(-CUI lit.

lfnr. . VK ........ Sllatl

-....

_ . . , 'N

,,F.V. Fun, c..lrW o..... e. hr

Bologna

Detergent
22.... 63c

Corned Beef ,., 69c

::;: 49c

Active

hNPortr

... ' " I II .,. ••••

All

l

Will•~~·~~~~

avg.

lb.

Pork Steak .
l'mhly G.....

Meat Loaf . . . . . .. 65c

Ham Loaf •.

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

Fmh

0.

69c

..

No

0

0

0

89c

...

lb.

Beef Liver. . •. • .. 49c

Fri7 ( Chicken ... $1.89

2 llolh Nrt 49c

Rolled Roast
Wute

......., ..... ld

;

0

K,.... luna

Bread4

"AMIRICA'I FINIIT"

KROGU

I

=. $1

'

llniiYit

c.....

Donubl 3::!
$1 . Bags 4
. . .
'

•

~

$1.,
1:

'
i

2 .... Nro 41c

Drinks

0

0

0

10

=

$1

Wisk

-."'""

-----

o.

0

_

ljlllrl

~~~~- VIIIIM

~ausage

KaOOn

. . 4 ::; 89( Liquid Soap

..........

Jt-..lrMJcut

Green Beans 8 •.!' $1 Cake Mixes •__

S-TI'Ntlllcod

:;~ 39~

=

Pineapple . 3 "!...~~'~ $1
Aua•lc ...,..

lOt Plums . . . . 3 ":'..~~'~ 8k
Fig Bars

!!:

FREE 50

Peas

Treet """' ..... .....• Coffee : sl.29 :: sl.39
• • • •• • • •

.AI ..... VICI'K

-

••

,..

Callftrwla .......

Grapes .......... 39e

,.....
•

~

Strawberries ...

0

__

0

•

_.

~e.

.,......

7~

2...~· 89c

Bufferin
llkt.

"'""

.,. .... Glttlll

Buttermilk 4 _.. $1

Toothpaste 3 ":..: $1

Eatnl*'

0

•

0

0 . ':;.

9c

. . . . . llllaloiC,_

CheeSe,

0

0

0

..,.,"!+ Pllll Anlarlc•

Cheese ..... '::: 79c

......
Nectarines
...... .

Mouthw..h

....
:.lb. .
..._____
0

••

Purl ..

~

Me·

,~

H~neydews

2 ... 69e,

'

..... 19e . '· ~.
'
;

.'

c..., Htll1l .,

IIDUJ'cee and work .GUt control
and penaJQ&lt; m.l:...rii•.

IlOilo ·Sr., M&amp;alllr, Mrs. Gladys

r

lallatant ; COII)II)ijjlloller ot lhl
National Air Mlullall ConUol

Freoh Giant 7.S lb. 1\'1.
0

1.00 to 2,tf

THE SHOE BOX

U.S. 60 WEST-HUNftNCm)N

Mlddl..,rt, 0.
·'

POR

THICK·

STEA

SLICED

3 lb.

BACO'N

5TH and PEARL STS., RACJ!Iij!;
"The Store Wltb A Hart"
Right reserved to Umlt quantifies

pkg.

lb.

We accept Feel. Food Stempa

IIDUIIC!nglhl birth ofthelrthlrd
d&amp;ullrter, 'It,. K&amp;¥, 011 Job' 17,
at the Holzer HOf!PIIaL The IJ&gt;o
rant wetahld nw poullde. Their

· ...· ..~
ar ··•'
Peaches
4 ... 59e Celeey -······
,,
...... , ....
2
•
·
· .~~~·,
Cantaloupe __ 3 "'$1 \Onions
.
••o•
...

'

Rood. , Jo!IDiraYIIte,

o.

Great-

~··· an Mr. Thurman
YouqJ, Clifton, and loire. Sue
Joh111011, M&amp;aon. ·

~ru~~on.

£;:~!:~.::;

INFANT CHRISTENED
MASON':- Jonda JeuchatUn,
Mr. 01 Mr•· John
W. ChltUn ·Qt JIIIUmore, lold., .
waa chrlai!"*' oil Sla1!lll It 0.,,
)laaoo Meihudla~ Clnll'cll.by lhl

ThOIJ!l• r.ert, ~ Jldy'lil
at Holzer iloopttil. He weighed
tDWIII'i feu!"
Mr.
•nd Mrs, Billnglrd11tr'1 · Other
lona are J' lfr,eY.
8/ ind ~
l!'fo , qe ,1.· -~are

''"'
pkg.

July 25.26.27

BACON
511 e4
2 1._' pk1.

.

89C,

Open Mon. thra Sat.
9 tO 9-Suaday 10 to 7

E
&lt; . very.day Low,l!.rices!
Grade A Producer's

Mi 1k
,, k&amp;9e
Brea d
~------ 5 1 00
(a"··dy ·.Bars_IO 39e
Preserves._____...:.:~·~;59"1eet
P·ineapple
._....,_ _ _ _..:;v::.;.::tl'o::::,.._
-

Lesser Amo~-~. Re1. 2for 43c

16 01
lvo . '

.

Chew lit Glim and

e

CRINKLE CUT

6 PK. 25c

FRENCH
FRIES
2 I..... 35~

PK.

.

S

W

T

Frozen Food Buy!

S

reat !Iced

Assorted Colors Hudsm

canne.d p011
All Fl

Sunshine EVaDOI'ated

.

JO"$'D B~ilif

PORK &amp;BEANS
Fa11lly Slzt
40 01. , ••

39~

'

i"...................... .

ARMOUR'S

· 5 oz. can·
Only.......

1 ·

·' 1111111, Bit,trovllle;
. o.

,,.

''

.

.-· ;

oo o

UIR ...-Atllll
ltllloltiN AND JUICY

Watermelon.

•'-- -~

....... IWW

......

•

Blueberries

........
22 . 24 lb.

PLUMS
lukt

2.

·-

~. ··~

Nl$~ -CAI.ii'QIIfiiA ICiaQt' ·

· lf~D:.
i'

Rj'

'

11&amp;11 ~~-

·~i-

~1

·1

':j:

·" ' . .

.. """ 39e Beans .o .... 2 ... 39*··· •.. ·

CAI.IP'OIIAIA

....

*. ·,
.

'

'

,.

'

f'

'

•'

VIENNA SAUSAGE

~
1 .·

25~

By Kraft ·
Quart Jar
................,.,•,•,•,-,•,•,•,•,•,·
.............
,.. .... .
·.···········:.:-:-:-:-:-:-:.:-:-:-:-:-:.:.·:~:y::;.:.:·:~::::~::::::::~::~:::~~ .. 'WP.W·"t ... ::as

1 .

-

SHOWBOAT BRAND

SALAD DRESSING

c~:•· 1oe

C
avors ustom

Ful- Valu Buys

SALAD BOWL

,

Skimmed Milk2 :~~.25e
aon,
Kraft Oualltv
'ra·.,:ft.e JeIIV. .',2. ~~~; 49C.
~ter .or
~&amp;Ill
-~ 'G
I'
lae
·
·
D
&amp;
c
F
d
·
11
~!:e"J'*·=~·ru: :t~~.::':"~·;: ·' . .0.!JI, . · :. at _. oo ,· 12••n·1.0.0
.
Jolm A. ChatUa, Naaollo

Prices Effective

JOWL

Qt

MASON - Mr. and Mrs. How·
ani Johnloo, Jr. oUI&amp;son&amp;reiJio

It

69¢ '

Cat Utter

GOODYEAR ATOMIC CORP.

Lean, Ravorful

·

' Howevtr, he aald hla alate
. would reftialn 111 "eciniiUit llbaut
the facta'' tobopre-..1. a.,.
. reoeni&amp;Uno fromKenlueiQ', Ohio
and Welt Vlrilnla met 'W dia..
cu .. lhl atr polluuCn prdltem

.!"tadl'/~~~!!:u~.:;

Mierin

Noxzema

-......

51... 6111&gt;3

:~at~~-;:::; Em?.~~~=.:: Towel41ls"·_____ 3 ~!r~.l.OO

~~~

3 :;. $1

Of"

LITTLE GIRLS
WHITE SHOIS
ToPINohThe

.Zes...l &amp;trawberrv &amp; Blackberr.u
""' 01
1
1

.~~a~e.~

:=:.'*t

~

Ma ,..., '"'""

Mr. and Mrs. Burton webb of
lofanal!eld, Ohio, and Mrs. L, D.

till federal We!Jb, .1.etart Falls, o.
...,rrunillt pro ' · ' '·111 eonault
wllll various ~fate ~~ be.
IbN COIWenilllth•ttl
hallilo!Mflllldtld•
DAIJGHTEI.I BORN

· Bracldnrldp

Hi-Nit or Skim Milk

"ANNUAl SUMMER OUTING"

,Fresh Meaty .

oo d..nalve dr!Yingetarted 'Jaot
Frlda1 evening and wUI contl'"'e
for fDI;D' wteka, given by theWest
Vlrslnla State Hll[hway Patrol,
frCllll 1 to~ 9 p. ~ at the Ai&gt;Pal·
acblan' Building In Pl. Pleasant
each Friday,
A U.nk you note for a gift Wll
acknowledied from Miss Louise
Lotv, . former M&amp;soo Couni¥
Home Delnonatratioo Agenl, who
resigned to go to F1orlde.
Mra. ~ Fox, Cllllon, Ill'"'
·11ated the lesson on "Gettlowlho
Moot FrCllll Your Market Ba..

a.emee~~ngwut--riJcatl.
lei.
·
i
' : ·..

KIIOClllt IIIIND

_Kroger

'I·

',

49c

'

/

A~

......

3 =. $1 lee Cream ..

bome ~f Mr•. George H~ In
llfaaon· and dlscusoed parttctpallallln,the M&amp;soo Cowlt,y Fat~ and
·mill)&gt; atbir aui&gt;Jocte.
Foll_p..IJW thollag sal~,t&gt;frs,
Leureno Lewis preaented the de·
Y!lll~• On "God's Gilt otrr....
dam," and "The Chrlatlan as a

Roll!'rt lllrrla, ADRI VF-31
p.p Dlvllloo and blo wife and
two chlldr.en. ~obeth~ ~
Douala• of CoqJus Cbrlatl, rex;,
prope.~nelle4 recently wtlhher.PVente,
Mr. lllll Mrs. Paul WIBhlllgtoll,
Letart: hi• brother and lllfe, Mr.
and
Alanflarrta, Pomeroy,
•
and with ' Mr. and Mrs. Donald
__!.
;
. . Fos1e~,.,!d flmtly.
mONl~N. Ohio (Viii) - Ken·
Mre. F1orenee Barker • n d
tueky
General. John dllllhter of Fairmont Ylalted oo
l!recklnrltlp aald '1\ltM atlhl Suncll.v with Mre. Jolul Chattin.
· apenlng .aston of f!te:Trl•
Guests of Mr. and Mre. John
f'ntl • Pollulioo eontmnce lhat . Raad!and l'ami)JI on SUIIIay were

K-AIII'IIVIn

~

,MASpN - The M&amp;soo Hom,.:

makerl Club Ql8t ncently at the

•}y
1m
• Called

ressmg ...... ...,. 29c Ice Milk . . . . 2 '!:: $1

Dol-..
Cablup . ..

K _ l r....

Saltines

.......
,.....
D .

,

..

'

Mason

DIWI FlatiWq,_.
All FlrNn lit K

·Is Disc.ussed

. Say\.'.s·. Meet '

Lifebouy
Soap

IIU.I.

~ -f'

59c

'f

pft ...: • ti•
CU uClp&amp;. · On
In Mason F..:..

\•

faaue of lofcC&amp;II'o
m&amp;Pzlnt, aald lhat there baa
been ''''lio ra&lt;llcal 11llll&amp;l revolu.
11a11 lun!lnl college m• In the
pall 20 Je&amp;rl" except lor a
marked decline In eJQJerlence
.111111 prooUtutea. According to
the Klnae,y sex report ot 20
, ......,, 22 per cent of college
man J'CIOrted -!once 111111
proatltutea while only 4 per cent
of the U.S. college men today
have had auch -rlene6.
On the olher hand, Packard
noted, the Kinsey report Showed
about 27 per cent of college
women had experienced 88XIIat
relaUoos b7 the age of 21, while
the current report showed that
43 per cent ot lhe 21.year.oldo
admitted .....at relaUoos.
"That is an Increase of 60 per

the

w

Pies 4 ':: $1

............. c-.

GIIADI! A MIDIUM

Eggs

·-

a""

'·

. ' llniiUII C....

did 2~ 1~• liD and the rea11011
.Ia .tn1111dt In a new aex studJ• 60 per cent Increase In 10&gt;11at

eur...

actlvll,yiiiiiCIIIIoollePstrte. .
Tho ' aurvey ot' ilix 00
American ~ tocla)' com·
pared wllll l"tl repoo ted by
Kinsey In the Jll'e-ltt8 period
was organized by author Vance
Pac"-rd and 1 Ulllveralt~; of
Comectlcut group ui!der the
direction of PII!'Choloslat Dr.
Eleanore Braun lAic~. It was
baoed oo reaponaea to ""'atlonnalrea sent to 2,1oo )lnlor and
aeruor college students at 21
schools In the United states.
More ~ldattcated
Its moat atrlldng flr!dllll was
that lho American ·coed Ia much
more IOIJhlatlcated aemallyand more Jli'OIIliiCUOUo-lllan
slrll of her mother' a generaUon.
The 11»&lt;11, published In the
'

NEW RAVEN - Roger l.Aickeydo, too of Mr. and Mr1. Alva
Lucktydoo, New Haven, to attendlns Reserve omi!ers Trainlow C&amp;mp for alx we.ekil at lndlin
Toom Gap! Pa. G:adet Luckeyd'oo
started th,t}adl'lnced training on
JIDI8 29. .,;;,
'
,!,...,.
Al!8r ~Jx we.eks ot training, he
wiJJ r"11ifn to hla hClllle In HuntIngton. jl~ere he will resiDDe hl1 kat. II ' \
Attending the meeting wer e
otudles , 't M&amp;rah&amp;IJ Urilverolcy
Mrs.
John Roech, Mrs. L a W·
as a builljeas admlnlltratlonmajor.
.J· ~
.
renee Routh, Mrs. Dorothy cart.
He II Ueruor thlt fAll and will wright, Mrs. catherine Swotzel,
be holdlri\•: ~aiU"" at Century Mrs. ., El~lbeth Jelrera, Mrs.
Bullneaa COI!it8 '· teech!'ll aO- Young, Mrs. Evelyn Stewart and
Robin· Stewart, Mrs. Matilda NO&gt;o
counUng.
.
ble,
!4rs. Ray Fox, Mrs. Gordoo
Roger's wUt, \I.e .._r S....
Y.OIIIW,
Mrs. Jolm Marshall and
dra.·Brewtnaton of.Middlllil&gt;!ii ti
lx&gt;etelliea;
.Mrs. Georp Rudooo
empJbyod wllll ·~hi! ntie 1,
and CIJII:YL .
Mnmel' PI'CIIlUI bl Clbili Co.
and Ia P~jtaently worklllg 111 h.;
Maater'o ,'Degtee IJI Jleldln&amp; at
Maroh&amp;IJ tJnlverstl)',

IDNIILIII IOSTOII

Frtlh, lh1ulder Ctlt

ll&amp;trol!l••.prolllblt.!a ~ !hill

' •

Y.,..,

ROTC U.mp
ftNDIIIAY

.

'1'1\o .~ president, Mrs. (lofdoo
amounced that leSSOIIS

Luckey~oo in

Slnuldlf Cut .twiN

_

HcDemalJr. u

F...... ·. ,

Bucket Steak . . ... 99c

8·12lb.

Tide

J',!l,ll

Ground Chuck ·.. 69e

...........

Turkeys

Dove Liquid
Detergent

....

~~

i

'

Steak .... ••· 49c Steak .. . •.. ·69c

KROGIIt

Soap

'l

&lt;

C....... Cut Chucll

Phase ill

I, .

"..

Haddotk . ~ 39c

Franks ..... 79c

-. .... 79e

• .;~.

.......

Perdt .... :;.- 39c

Veal ...• ...... 99c

' r, •

' lb.

S. T,....,. lnol J CoJ .,

m...

Jlffp · -

Hnr..

'

J

lrttbtol

' ' ,.J I

Center
Cut

\

K....., Deluu Cl..

'

Chuck ·Roast-

Picnics ..... 43c

Whole Ham .. 99c

SWAN UQUID

'

CHIOICE .

Bot

,.........,

WALDO!!I'

39~

..

Baeon ...... 49c

Bacon ...... 79t

.MASON - Recent charipo ·In
postal service Cil!led by Public
Law 91-364 will """ an S&amp;tur.day window aervtce at the M&amp;eoo
and New Haven Poit Ofllcee 1M&gt;lillllng July 27, 1008. How'""r
• ..,..rat dellwey wt.- wtti
be open from 8;80 L Ill. to 10:30
L m. for the purpoae of dellverlow mall to genenl delivery pa.
lrODa and to 11111111 oot packapa
to box holdere. This c:b&amp;owe UIO
requires lhat there bo 110 fl-~
dal tnnoacUona ••ch 11 a.Ui.;
of allmpe or money orders, ie·
ceplance of pickaps, or d~lv·
fllY of COD packapa. ,
There wiJJ not be lilY change
ln 'the houra lhotll!i'' botloliblu
Ire q&gt;en. The poallnaalara re.
quut Ql&amp;t Patrooa clil)loltt their
IIWI eariJ for aellwey onache6ale, and IChli the correct Zip
Code te use.i 01! an 111111'

,'
"l

·t

-4re Announced •• NEW~rlcan
j ORK (UPI)..Far few. college men

. ''

'

r

Colfege
(;iris More Proniiscuous
.

~

I

Bacon •• :: $1.29

~ ---

Toilet Tissue

!

Y

N~~~~~ Sllld.y Shows.~· . :... , .1. ;·

. PO ;s. irvioo.
f
.
:l

•

Senft-•
.··
.
· ·
""'' Pomeroy·Middlepli't, 0., Wldnu41J, Job' 2~, 1988

Ch'f~~ in ;

'

..
'

Nescafe Instant

COFFEE.. .. .lO oz. jar 1.39
PINK uq~ID DETERGENT
Stokely's
CATSUP....3-Zl ill~• bot. $1
, ~ ·.t_··
A!lletlcan 6eallti Sliced., ·:
!·~d~( ' Quat
CA~RQTU•p C4R~ 25c , , ~· ~
. ·'
Plastic
Hurit's rc.mata·

PEDAL
I

JUIC~ ... ·!~ »•· ·
1

~.:

. iJ"

•

19~

&lt; '

�''

,•.
.

'

.'
_,

tS ::_

•••
~

(

Thi Dally

•

OPEN SU~bA Y lO o. m. "! i f. !II. : :,

.,'

\

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

..........
Bacon . . . . :.. 65t

"'"
C I fl ltllf, 'flit Krator C.., 1Me
. . - t h o rttllt ..
liMit .. allllw.

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

(-CUI lit.

lfnr. . VK ........ Sllatl

-....

_ . . , 'N

,,F.V. Fun, c..lrW o..... e. hr

Bologna

Detergent
22.... 63c

Corned Beef ,., 69c

::;: 49c

Active

hNPortr

... ' " I II .,. ••••

All

l

Will•~~·~~~~

avg.

lb.

Pork Steak .
l'mhly G.....

Meat Loaf . . . . . .. 65c

Ham Loaf •.

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

Fmh

0.

69c

..

No

0

0

0

89c

...

lb.

Beef Liver. . •. • .. 49c

Fri7 ( Chicken ... $1.89

2 llolh Nrt 49c

Rolled Roast
Wute

......., ..... ld

;

0

K,.... luna

Bread4

"AMIRICA'I FINIIT"

KROGU

I

=. $1

'

llniiYit

c.....

Donubl 3::!
$1 . Bags 4
. . .
'

•

~

$1.,
1:

'
i

2 .... Nro 41c

Drinks

0

0

0

10

=

$1

Wisk

-."'""

-----

o.

0

_

ljlllrl

~~~~- VIIIIM

~ausage

KaOOn

. . 4 ::; 89( Liquid Soap

..........

Jt-..lrMJcut

Green Beans 8 •.!' $1 Cake Mixes •__

S-TI'Ntlllcod

:;~ 39~

=

Pineapple . 3 "!...~~'~ $1
Aua•lc ...,..

lOt Plums . . . . 3 ":'..~~'~ 8k
Fig Bars

!!:

FREE 50

Peas

Treet """' ..... .....• Coffee : sl.29 :: sl.39
• • • •• • • •

.AI ..... VICI'K

-

••

,..

Callftrwla .......

Grapes .......... 39e

,.....
•

~

Strawberries ...

0

__

0

•

_.

~e.

.,......

7~

2...~· 89c

Bufferin
llkt.

"'""

.,. .... Glttlll

Buttermilk 4 _.. $1

Toothpaste 3 ":..: $1

Eatnl*'

0

•

0

0 . ':;.

9c

. . . . . llllaloiC,_

CheeSe,

0

0

0

..,.,"!+ Pllll Anlarlc•

Cheese ..... '::: 79c

......
Nectarines
...... .

Mouthw..h

....
:.lb. .
..._____
0

••

Purl ..

~

Me·

,~

H~neydews

2 ... 69e,

'

..... 19e . '· ~.
'
;

.'

c..., Htll1l .,

IIDUJ'cee and work .GUt control
and penaJQ&lt; m.l:...rii•.

IlOilo ·Sr., M&amp;alllr, Mrs. Gladys

r

lallatant ; COII)II)ijjlloller ot lhl
National Air Mlullall ConUol

Freoh Giant 7.S lb. 1\'1.
0

1.00 to 2,tf

THE SHOE BOX

U.S. 60 WEST-HUNftNCm)N

Mlddl..,rt, 0.
·'

POR

THICK·

STEA

SLICED

3 lb.

BACO'N

5TH and PEARL STS., RACJ!Iij!;
"The Store Wltb A Hart"
Right reserved to Umlt quantifies

pkg.

lb.

We accept Feel. Food Stempa

IIDUIIC!nglhl birth ofthelrthlrd
d&amp;ullrter, 'It,. K&amp;¥, 011 Job' 17,
at the Holzer HOf!PIIaL The IJ&gt;o
rant wetahld nw poullde. Their

· ...· ..~
ar ··•'
Peaches
4 ... 59e Celeey -······
,,
...... , ....
2
•
·
· .~~~·,
Cantaloupe __ 3 "'$1 \Onions
.
••o•
...

'

Rood. , Jo!IDiraYIIte,

o.

Great-

~··· an Mr. Thurman
YouqJ, Clifton, and loire. Sue
Joh111011, M&amp;aon. ·

~ru~~on.

£;:~!:~.::;

INFANT CHRISTENED
MASON':- Jonda JeuchatUn,
Mr. 01 Mr•· John
W. ChltUn ·Qt JIIIUmore, lold., .
waa chrlai!"*' oil Sla1!lll It 0.,,
)laaoo Meihudla~ Clnll'cll.by lhl

ThOIJ!l• r.ert, ~ Jldy'lil
at Holzer iloopttil. He weighed
tDWIII'i feu!"
Mr.
•nd Mrs, Billnglrd11tr'1 · Other
lona are J' lfr,eY.
8/ ind ~
l!'fo , qe ,1.· -~are

''"'
pkg.

July 25.26.27

BACON
511 e4
2 1._' pk1.

.

89C,

Open Mon. thra Sat.
9 tO 9-Suaday 10 to 7

E
&lt; . very.day Low,l!.rices!
Grade A Producer's

Mi 1k
,, k&amp;9e
Brea d
~------ 5 1 00
(a"··dy ·.Bars_IO 39e
Preserves._____...:.:~·~;59"1eet
P·ineapple
._....,_ _ _ _..:;v::.;.::tl'o::::,.._
-

Lesser Amo~-~. Re1. 2for 43c

16 01
lvo . '

.

Chew lit Glim and

e

CRINKLE CUT

6 PK. 25c

FRENCH
FRIES
2 I..... 35~

PK.

.

S

W

T

Frozen Food Buy!

S

reat !Iced

Assorted Colors Hudsm

canne.d p011
All Fl

Sunshine EVaDOI'ated

.

JO"$'D B~ilif

PORK &amp;BEANS
Fa11lly Slzt
40 01. , ••

39~

'

i"...................... .

ARMOUR'S

· 5 oz. can·
Only.......

1 ·

·' 1111111, Bit,trovllle;
. o.

,,.

''

.

.-· ;

oo o

UIR ...-Atllll
ltllloltiN AND JUICY

Watermelon.

•'-- -~

....... IWW

......

•

Blueberries

........
22 . 24 lb.

PLUMS
lukt

2.

·-

~. ··~

Nl$~ -CAI.ii'QIIfiiA ICiaQt' ·

· lf~D:.
i'

Rj'

'

11&amp;11 ~~-

·~i-

~1

·1

':j:

·" ' . .

.. """ 39e Beans .o .... 2 ... 39*··· •.. ·

CAI.IP'OIIAIA

....

*. ·,
.

'

'

,.

'

f'

'

•'

VIENNA SAUSAGE

~
1 .·

25~

By Kraft ·
Quart Jar
................,.,•,•,•,-,•,•,•,•,•,·
.............
,.. .... .
·.···········:.:-:-:-:-:-:-:.:-:-:-:-:-:.:.·:~:y::;.:.:·:~::::~::::::::~::~:::~~ .. 'WP.W·"t ... ::as

1 .

-

SHOWBOAT BRAND

SALAD DRESSING

c~:•· 1oe

C
avors ustom

Ful- Valu Buys

SALAD BOWL

,

Skimmed Milk2 :~~.25e
aon,
Kraft Oualltv
'ra·.,:ft.e JeIIV. .',2. ~~~; 49C.
~ter .or
~&amp;Ill
-~ 'G
I'
lae
·
·
D
&amp;
c
F
d
·
11
~!:e"J'*·=~·ru: :t~~.::':"~·;: ·' . .0.!JI, . · :. at _. oo ,· 12••n·1.0.0
.
Jolm A. ChatUa, Naaollo

Prices Effective

JOWL

Qt

MASON - Mr. and Mrs. How·
ani Johnloo, Jr. oUI&amp;son&amp;reiJio

It

69¢ '

Cat Utter

GOODYEAR ATOMIC CORP.

Lean, Ravorful

·

' Howevtr, he aald hla alate
. would reftialn 111 "eciniiUit llbaut
the facta'' tobopre-..1. a.,.
. reoeni&amp;Uno fromKenlueiQ', Ohio
and Welt Vlrilnla met 'W dia..
cu .. lhl atr polluuCn prdltem

.!"tadl'/~~~!!:u~.:;

Mierin

Noxzema

-......

51... 6111&gt;3

:~at~~-;:::; Em?.~~~=.:: Towel41ls"·_____ 3 ~!r~.l.OO

~~~

3 :;. $1

Of"

LITTLE GIRLS
WHITE SHOIS
ToPINohThe

.Zes...l &amp;trawberrv &amp; Blackberr.u
""' 01
1
1

.~~a~e.~

:=:.'*t

~

Ma ,..., '"'""

Mr. and Mrs. Burton webb of
lofanal!eld, Ohio, and Mrs. L, D.

till federal We!Jb, .1.etart Falls, o.
...,rrunillt pro ' · ' '·111 eonault
wllll various ~fate ~~ be.
IbN COIWenilllth•ttl
hallilo!Mflllldtld•
DAIJGHTEI.I BORN

· Bracldnrldp

Hi-Nit or Skim Milk

"ANNUAl SUMMER OUTING"

,Fresh Meaty .

oo d..nalve dr!Yingetarted 'Jaot
Frlda1 evening and wUI contl'"'e
for fDI;D' wteka, given by theWest
Vlrslnla State Hll[hway Patrol,
frCllll 1 to~ 9 p. ~ at the Ai&gt;Pal·
acblan' Building In Pl. Pleasant
each Friday,
A U.nk you note for a gift Wll
acknowledied from Miss Louise
Lotv, . former M&amp;soo Couni¥
Home Delnonatratioo Agenl, who
resigned to go to F1orlde.
Mra. ~ Fox, Cllllon, Ill'"'
·11ated the lesson on "Gettlowlho
Moot FrCllll Your Market Ba..

a.emee~~ngwut--riJcatl.
lei.
·
i
' : ·..

KIIOClllt IIIIND

_Kroger

'I·

',

49c

'

/

A~

......

3 =. $1 lee Cream ..

bome ~f Mr•. George H~ In
llfaaon· and dlscusoed parttctpallallln,the M&amp;soo Cowlt,y Fat~ and
·mill)&gt; atbir aui&gt;Jocte.
Foll_p..IJW thollag sal~,t&gt;frs,
Leureno Lewis preaented the de·
Y!lll~• On "God's Gilt otrr....
dam," and "The Chrlatlan as a

Roll!'rt lllrrla, ADRI VF-31
p.p Dlvllloo and blo wife and
two chlldr.en. ~obeth~ ~
Douala• of CoqJus Cbrlatl, rex;,
prope.~nelle4 recently wtlhher.PVente,
Mr. lllll Mrs. Paul WIBhlllgtoll,
Letart: hi• brother and lllfe, Mr.
and
Alanflarrta, Pomeroy,
•
and with ' Mr. and Mrs. Donald
__!.
;
. . Fos1e~,.,!d flmtly.
mONl~N. Ohio (Viii) - Ken·
Mre. F1orenee Barker • n d
tueky
General. John dllllhter of Fairmont Ylalted oo
l!recklnrltlp aald '1\ltM atlhl Suncll.v with Mre. Jolul Chattin.
· apenlng .aston of f!te:Trl•
Guests of Mr. and Mre. John
f'ntl • Pollulioo eontmnce lhat . Raad!and l'ami)JI on SUIIIay were

K-AIII'IIVIn

~

,MASpN - The M&amp;soo Hom,.:

makerl Club Ql8t ncently at the

•}y
1m
• Called

ressmg ...... ...,. 29c Ice Milk . . . . 2 '!:: $1

Dol-..
Cablup . ..

K _ l r....

Saltines

.......
,.....
D .

,

..

'

Mason

DIWI FlatiWq,_.
All FlrNn lit K

·Is Disc.ussed

. Say\.'.s·. Meet '

Lifebouy
Soap

IIU.I.

~ -f'

59c

'f

pft ...: • ti•
CU uClp&amp;. · On
In Mason F..:..

\•

faaue of lofcC&amp;II'o
m&amp;Pzlnt, aald lhat there baa
been ''''lio ra&lt;llcal 11llll&amp;l revolu.
11a11 lun!lnl college m• In the
pall 20 Je&amp;rl" except lor a
marked decline In eJQJerlence
.111111 prooUtutea. According to
the Klnae,y sex report ot 20
, ......,, 22 per cent of college
man J'CIOrted -!once 111111
proatltutea while only 4 per cent
of the U.S. college men today
have had auch -rlene6.
On the olher hand, Packard
noted, the Kinsey report Showed
about 27 per cent of college
women had experienced 88XIIat
relaUoos b7 the age of 21, while
the current report showed that
43 per cent ot lhe 21.year.oldo
admitted .....at relaUoos.
"That is an Increase of 60 per

the

w

Pies 4 ':: $1

............. c-.

GIIADI! A MIDIUM

Eggs

·-

a""

'·

. ' llniiUII C....

did 2~ 1~• liD and the rea11011
.Ia .tn1111dt In a new aex studJ• 60 per cent Increase In 10&gt;11at

eur...

actlvll,yiiiiiCIIIIoollePstrte. .
Tho ' aurvey ot' ilix 00
American ~ tocla)' com·
pared wllll l"tl repoo ted by
Kinsey In the Jll'e-ltt8 period
was organized by author Vance
Pac"-rd and 1 Ulllveralt~; of
Comectlcut group ui!der the
direction of PII!'Choloslat Dr.
Eleanore Braun lAic~. It was
baoed oo reaponaea to ""'atlonnalrea sent to 2,1oo )lnlor and
aeruor college students at 21
schools In the United states.
More ~ldattcated
Its moat atrlldng flr!dllll was
that lho American ·coed Ia much
more IOIJhlatlcated aemallyand more Jli'OIIliiCUOUo-lllan
slrll of her mother' a generaUon.
The 11»&lt;11, published In the
'

NEW RAVEN - Roger l.Aickeydo, too of Mr. and Mr1. Alva
Lucktydoo, New Haven, to attendlns Reserve omi!ers Trainlow C&amp;mp for alx we.ekil at lndlin
Toom Gap! Pa. G:adet Luckeyd'oo
started th,t}adl'lnced training on
JIDI8 29. .,;;,
'
,!,...,.
Al!8r ~Jx we.eks ot training, he
wiJJ r"11ifn to hla hClllle In HuntIngton. jl~ere he will resiDDe hl1 kat. II ' \
Attending the meeting wer e
otudles , 't M&amp;rah&amp;IJ Urilverolcy
Mrs.
John Roech, Mrs. L a W·
as a builljeas admlnlltratlonmajor.
.J· ~
.
renee Routh, Mrs. Dorothy cart.
He II Ueruor thlt fAll and will wright, Mrs. catherine Swotzel,
be holdlri\•: ~aiU"" at Century Mrs. ., El~lbeth Jelrera, Mrs.
Bullneaa COI!it8 '· teech!'ll aO- Young, Mrs. Evelyn Stewart and
Robin· Stewart, Mrs. Matilda NO&gt;o
counUng.
.
ble,
!4rs. Ray Fox, Mrs. Gordoo
Roger's wUt, \I.e .._r S....
Y.OIIIW,
Mrs. Jolm Marshall and
dra.·Brewtnaton of.Middlllil&gt;!ii ti
lx&gt;etelliea;
.Mrs. Georp Rudooo
empJbyod wllll ·~hi! ntie 1,
and CIJII:YL .
Mnmel' PI'CIIlUI bl Clbili Co.
and Ia P~jtaently worklllg 111 h.;
Maater'o ,'Degtee IJI Jleldln&amp; at
Maroh&amp;IJ tJnlverstl)',

IDNIILIII IOSTOII

Frtlh, lh1ulder Ctlt

ll&amp;trol!l••.prolllblt.!a ~ !hill

' •

Y.,..,

ROTC U.mp
ftNDIIIAY

.

'1'1\o .~ president, Mrs. (lofdoo
amounced that leSSOIIS

Luckey~oo in

Slnuldlf Cut .twiN

_

HcDemalJr. u

F...... ·. ,

Bucket Steak . . ... 99c

8·12lb.

Tide

J',!l,ll

Ground Chuck ·.. 69e

...........

Turkeys

Dove Liquid
Detergent

....

~~

i

'

Steak .... ••· 49c Steak .. . •.. ·69c

KROGIIt

Soap

'l

&lt;

C....... Cut Chucll

Phase ill

I, .

"..

Haddotk . ~ 39c

Franks ..... 79c

-. .... 79e

• .;~.

.......

Perdt .... :;.- 39c

Veal ...• ...... 99c

' r, •

' lb.

S. T,....,. lnol J CoJ .,

m...

Jlffp · -

Hnr..

'

J

lrttbtol

' ' ,.J I

Center
Cut

\

K....., Deluu Cl..

'

Chuck ·Roast-

Picnics ..... 43c

Whole Ham .. 99c

SWAN UQUID

'

CHIOICE .

Bot

,.........,

WALDO!!I'

39~

..

Baeon ...... 49c

Bacon ...... 79t

.MASON - Recent charipo ·In
postal service Cil!led by Public
Law 91-364 will """ an S&amp;tur.day window aervtce at the M&amp;eoo
and New Haven Poit Ofllcee 1M&gt;lillllng July 27, 1008. How'""r
• ..,..rat dellwey wt.- wtti
be open from 8;80 L Ill. to 10:30
L m. for the purpoae of dellverlow mall to genenl delivery pa.
lrODa and to 11111111 oot packapa
to box holdere. This c:b&amp;owe UIO
requires lhat there bo 110 fl-~
dal tnnoacUona ••ch 11 a.Ui.;
of allmpe or money orders, ie·
ceplance of pickaps, or d~lv·
fllY of COD packapa. ,
There wiJJ not be lilY change
ln 'the houra lhotll!i'' botloliblu
Ire q&gt;en. The poallnaalara re.
quut Ql&amp;t Patrooa clil)loltt their
IIWI eariJ for aellwey onache6ale, and IChli the correct Zip
Code te use.i 01! an 111111'

,'
"l

·t

-4re Announced •• NEW~rlcan
j ORK (UPI)..Far few. college men

. ''

'

r

Colfege
(;iris More Proniiscuous
.

~

I

Bacon •• :: $1.29

~ ---

Toilet Tissue

!

Y

N~~~~~ Sllld.y Shows.~· . :... , .1. ;·

. PO ;s. irvioo.
f
.
:l

•

Senft-•
.··
.
· ·
""'' Pomeroy·Middlepli't, 0., Wldnu41J, Job' 2~, 1988

Ch'f~~ in ;

'

..
'

Nescafe Instant

COFFEE.. .. .lO oz. jar 1.39
PINK uq~ID DETERGENT
Stokely's
CATSUP....3-Zl ill~• bot. $1
, ~ ·.t_··
A!lletlcan 6eallti Sliced., ·:
!·~d~( ' Quat
CA~RQTU•p C4R~ 25c , , ~· ~
. ·'
Plastic
Hurit's rc.mata·

PEDAL
I

JUIC~ ... ·!~ »•· ·
1

~.:

. iJ"

•

19~

&lt; '

�I

.•
&lt;

~

'

.

' !'

,...

,,·, .( r
M
•';

.~·.

. .
'

'

II

\

'

Murphy~_,st'$.&amp;os-

'

..

.'

Diary

·~~ ~·~"'
',
1'' !,Ira. Eoll- lklbaletler Ia In

;,.. aeWJI""'

vlaltlrc her shier,
Hazel Groft, whUe!,lr, Hol&gt;otetter 1o ~catlon!Qilln ·eanoda.
• Mr. and !lr&amp;. otho CUrtis ot

' *·•·

· MecbanlesvlUe, Iowa, have been
bere to attend funeral services
for his aunt, Mra. BerthaOJlver.
T~· have been guest&amp; ofhiaperenta, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Cur·

tis, and hls sister, Mrs. Paul
Frick, and flmiJs.
Mrs. Louise Davis or Columbus has spent the past week

here

visiting Mr. and Mn. Hobort
Raub. On Sunda,v Mr. and Mr&amp;.
Raub and Mrs. Davi11 were tn
Huntington to vl&amp;il Mr. and Mrs.
George Raub. Mr!. Hobort Raub
was in Columbus Monday to visit
Mr. and Mrs. Phi] McKeller.
Mrs. Minnie Green and grand-daughter are in Arizona visiting

her son, Walter, who recently returned trom Vietnam.
Mrs. Delmar Canaday is spe~
1
ing the week in Columbus with

\

Mrs. Mildred Gamlin. Later this
week, Mr. and Mn. Eugene Fish-er will go to Columbus Cor a day
at the Gamlin home.
Mitchell Chapman accompanied his grandfather, Delmar A..
Canaday, on a trip to Michigan
this week.
Mr. arx:l Mrs. Joseph KeUey

II

arxl. daughter, Sarah, of Columbus

'

r
\

\
•

..
I

'

By Charlene

•• • Hoeflich

Camp Kla"'uta baa been turned Into a beehive of activll3' thia
wool&lt; as 222 Melp Couroll Girl
Scouts participate In the annual
day camp prosram.
Going to the Chester o:amp aile
at 9 a.m. eoch day, the girla
apend their time Ieeming ~
nature, getting lnstnlctlon In
archery, taldng part in new arts
and crafts, going on hikes and
participating In a variety of other
activities before returning home
at 3:30 p.m.
The day camp prosram began
Monday and will cooclude Friday
when the girls will report at
12:30 p.m. for an afternoon and
evening of events. Parents' visltation day wlll be observed and
following a wiener roast at sup-

"The HUlbUIIe&amp;," a jUnior
&amp;OOUI group with Doona Grate
and Wanda Vining aa the lead·
era. Making up the group are
Kelly Wilson, SanoiY Carleton.
Moll' illY Gallagher, Moll' ~
Durst, Ingrid Hawley, Cynthia
Eada, Avis Bi&amp;sell, Martha MeNoel, Diana Smith, Debbie Halley, Cathy Davis, Vicky Sue Lee,
Krista Morris, 9lerry ~le,
TIIIJUIIY SchoonoVer, Pamela

MIS&amp; Charlotte Davidson spent
the weekend In Columbus with Mr.
ond Mrs. Jomos Dowling and son,
Joey. Mr&amp;. Dowll~~glstflelormer
Judy Overture of Ml&amp;lleport
Mr. and Mr&amp;. WOllam Diltz of
Columbus were weekelll guests

ot Mr. · and Mrs. Con Young.

!olr&amp;. carla Lobrer and daughter, Shari, have returned to Ketterln&amp; aftervlaltlrcherewlth Mr,
and Mra. Terry Ohlinger and son.
Mrs. Lohrer and Shari were met
In Lopn at the home ol,her parenta, Mr. aDd Mr&amp;. Rlls ..u wuson, by BUI Ldorer.
Vaughan, Rhonda Kay Hager,
Mr. and Mrs. WUI!aJio Criner
Rose 5howden, Sliella Newell, ot Middleport, Brenda Laagley ot
Edith Woodward, and Darlene Jack,... and Mr. and Mrs. CharJ&gt;.mcan.
les Buab ol Tremont City, have
"The Maple Leaves," jmdors, returned from a week''* vacation
&amp;lsanne Warner, JuneEic:hlnger, at Sarasota, Fla.
and June Epple, leaders; 8Jzy
Mr&amp;. l R. Noel end daughter,
Samuels, Dreama Hovatter, Bar-· Janet Lee, recently spent tO days
bara Fultz, sandra Curtis, Kim in Mullens, W, Va., with herparSebo. Kim Ohlinger, Teml Hot!· ents, the Rev. arxl Mrs. George
man, Debra J. nartenbach, Pen- Oller.

pertlme, the girls wlllentertuln
their parents withskitsandsongs
aroond a campfire.
ni Elllln, Karen Baltey, :Jterry

oorse is on duty
at the camp at all times. Ruth
Powers, the l\1.11-time nurse, was
assisted with the first day examlnations of the girls by Flo
Martin and Barbara Van Meter,
A volunteer

both of RuUand.
DolUla Ohlinger, director ol
the camp, is given assistance
by MOIUIB Lee Neal, neighborhood chairman. Annie Chapman

Lane,

Mary

L.

Mills, Mary

Boggs, Vicki Slack, Joame Ftck,
Terri Lyoo RusseU, Patricia
Warner, Paula Hawk, Rachel Ta,y.
lor, Diana Epple, and Bobble

Kay Chapman.
The Hill Climbers," a junior
unit, with Ruby Vaughan, Mary
Hunter, Marilyn Wilcox. and Jean
Weyersmiller, Leaders. The girls
41

l.: ,·:s~·~·~~·i··'·'· · · · ·'· '·., ., :·':

:~ Ca/endarlli

WEDNESDAY
ANNUAL PICNIC, Put Preol·
denta, Ladles Auxiliary, Drew
Webster Post 39, American I.eglon. 6 p, m. Wednesday at trail..
er court alq river near Laura
Watson home. In case of rain, at
heme of Mrs. Watson.

are Kathy Baker, Marl1ee Cas..11. Julia Ann Capehart, Cathy
Coburn, Kathy Harris, Vanessa
Folmer, Deborah McLaughlln,
JOMI!er Grate, Terri Jacob&amp;,
Beth McKnight, &amp;lzy Slunuels,
Melody ScaggR, Cindy Triplett,
PICNIC, OffiO Eta Phi Choi&gt;ager is Rose Ann Sebo.
Kimberly Sebo, Vidd Gaul, BrenThe girls are dlvldedlntounlta da E. ~!reo, Rachel HWller, ter, Beta Slgmo Phi, at Hoyol
as follows;
Debbie Taylor, Jayne Ann Smith, oak Park, 11:30 L 111., for mem''The Hide..a.Wa,ys", a brownie Debra Windon, andLuamte Staats, bers and their children; take a
unit with Jane Miller, Beverly
"The HUl Tops,., juniors, Jan- covered dish ard table service.
REUNION SET
POMEROY WCTU annual picThe 44th amual Haye&amp;-Youns Chapman, Barbara Murray and et Nease, Minnie Harris, and DeblamUy and Holliday School Re- Debbie Humel as the leaders. ble Harbrecht, leaders aDd as. nic, 5 p. m. Wedne., at Ute
United Methodist
wUon will be held Dn ~ay ,
Glrls ln the group ate Diane aJ stant, respectlvelyi CindY De- Porner0,11
OnU"chj
bring
a covered diah,
Aug. 4. 1968, on the Holllda,y Smith, Sally Carleton, Am Fitch, mo&amp;ky, Jennifer Chapman, Carla
School grounds In Bedford town- Sally Jo Walter&amp;, Jennifer Lynn Nell Crlsp, Jane Ann Bahr, Vicki table service, and a guesL
ICE CREAM SOOAL, Wednesahlp. Ronald DouiJllll I&amp; proal- Wl&amp;e, JUI Balcy, Kimberly Ann Kell,11, Becky Fultz, Ro&amp;e Marie
dent, and Helen Woode is sec- BaiO.Y, Rhonda Hudsoo, Ll&amp;a illY Colburn, Patcy Eblin, Janet Noel, day, 4 p. m., Racine Methndlat
Jett, Florence Richmond. Siler. Sandra Little, Mary Ann Weyors- Church annex, sponsoreo! by Raretary..treaSUI'f:r.
ry Gall Tackett, Jane Slsaon, miller, VIcky L, Hoffman, Ore- cine Wesleyan Service GuUd.
CORRECTION MADE
Paula Ashley, Juni Murray, Jen- nessa Hood, Cheryl Woods, Pam.
WOMEN'S GUILD, 7:30 p.m.
Mrs. Stanley Bass, and oot nifer Graham, and Cindy Pat- ela North, Debble Hager, BonWednesday
at Trlnlcy United
Mr. Bass, was in Columbus terBOn.
nle Wood&amp;, Kathy Newell, Bev- Church of Christ. Mrs. BUI PerThursday fDrthetuneral services
"~The Bluebirds," brownies, erly Wilcox, Frances L. Hawk,
rin, program leader; Mrs. Carl
of her brother, Herman RuscheI,
Marcella Coleman, Janet Lew!&amp; and All.s\lllarrls.
Kautz, devotional leader; youbg
oii'OIIleroy.
1 'The GreetTHornets, 11 juniors,
and Darla Sleridan, leaders. Enadllt claaa, hostess group .
rolled in the unit are Patricia Betty Hawk, Mryna Carpenter,
Boyles, Tracy Burdette, Valerie and Lenora Davis, leaders; Kelly
FRIDAY
Lewis, Megan Miller, Deborah Jo Burdette, Deborah Black, Bet"TOWN A.l\l() Country Store••
Ann Pickens, Judith Graham, 9.1- sy Amsbary, Vicki Kelly, Kathy
and Saturday, neJCt door
Friday
san Burns, Kelli Clelland, Kim- Coleman, Jill Cottrill , ~a
TONIGHT, THURS. , FlU.
to
Earl's
Barber Shop, Racine,
berly J. Taylor, Janet Van Vran- Jean White. Carla Nottingham,
July 24 - 25 - 26
9
a.m.
to
5
p.m., sponsored by
ken, Autumn Rae Ellis, Tamera Cindy Hind.Y, Crystal Glaze, Ter (Double Feature)
Fry, Becky Coleman, Christy esa Mitchell, Denise Dean, Dl- HaWY Hustlers Clas s of Racine
RIOT ON SUNSET STRIP
Jones, Tarmr.y Martin, Conni ana ~pic , Carol Richmond, Cin- Methodist Church.
(Color)
MIDIJLEPORT WCTU annual
Baker, and Marcia Cale.
d,y Reedy, Patricia Vaughan, Tina
Aldo Ray - Mims.} Farmer
pJcnic,
Middleport
Roadside
"~The Busy Bunnies,'' brownA. ~Ires, Pamela Kautz, Sharon
PLUS
Park, next to post ofrice, Friday,
Haque! Welch-Tony Franci,osal les, Margaret Sheridan, Nellle Vining, Cindy Lou Thomas, and 6 p.m. Open to publi c,
Wright, and Clarice Krautter, , Julia Gooch.
FATHOM
leaders; Rita Bailey, Robin CapeThe "Kiashuta Wildcats," ju.
OUTSIDE IIIGH SCIIOOL dance
(Color)
hart, Paula Kloes, Martha Kraws- nior unit, Janet Duffy, Donna party Friday rrom 9 to 12 p.m.
cz:yn, Teresa Ferrell, LaunaJune Jones, leader s, Shirley Simmons, at tlle Pomeroy tennis court. The
Greer, Catherine Blaettnar, VIr- helper; Carol Harnitz, Katrina Jays will emcee the dance sponginla Buchanan, Kimberly K, Batey, Tina Duffy , Cindy Glale, sored by the Meigs Athletic Assn •
Krautter, Cynthia McKLMey, Paula Eichinger, Carol Lewi s,
SA TURD/\ Y
TONIGHT AND THURSDAY
Teresa Van Meter, Terrl Vin- Vicki Jane Fry , Anita Buckley,
MIDDLEPORT Little League
JULY 24-2.\
lng, Jill Ann Walburn, Marcia Mary Ann lloffman, Vicky Vaugh- sponsors a teen dance Saturd&lt;\Y
BONNIE &amp; CLYDE
Dillard, Cindy Lou Darst, and an, Patricia lleaton , Teresa Mus· Jrom 9 to 12 p.m. at the Midwere Sunday guests of Mr, ard
Mrs. Robert Crow arid tamlly oC
Syracuse. The KeUey !amily, Mr.
and Mrs. Crow, Jim and Bobby,
Mrs. Mayme Holmes and P a m
Neutzllng drove to the Burr Oak
Lodge where they joined Mrs.
Helen Wetzel, Don Wetzel, Joey
and Sherri Kelley of Columbus
who are vacationing there.

)

I.

and Carolyn Thoma• have charge
of arts and crafts, and Mr. and
Mrs. Eugene McKinney are glv.
lng lnstructloo In archery. Lady
of the lodge is Mrs. Clarencr:
McNeal and the business man-

MOGS THEATIE

(Technicolor)
Warren Beatty, Faye Dunaway
FEATURETTE: ldints Deluxe
CARTOONS: Under Sea Dogs
Happy Hunting
ft Must Be Love

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
JULY 2~27
''lT"
(Technicolor)
Ro:kly McDowall.Jill Haworth
ALSO
(Chiller o( the Year)
THE FROZEN DEAD
Dana An:Jrews • Anna Palk
SHOW STARTS 7 P, M.

Susan Wright.
"The SWinging Monkeys, u a
junior unit with Carol Ohlinger,
leader, and Becky Houdashelt,
her assistant. Members of the
unit are Cynthia Anderson, Janet
Amrose, Mary Helen Blaettnar,
Vicki Clelland, Robin Dewhurst,
Tammi Bahr, CindY Manley,
Kathy HaUey, Julta Gheen, Julia Carpenter, Teresa Thomas,
Debra .Osborne, Faith Perrin,
Trudy Roach, Beth Vaughan, Melanle Simmons, Angela Sisson,
Judith Snowden, Louann Newell,

ser, Debra Priddy , Kim Jones,
Rebecca Thomas, April Lois Fraser, Melissa Thomas, Loreta
Tackett, Nancy Ridenour, Peggy &amp;le Trussell, and Kimberly
Grueser.
"~okey's Little llelpers,"
cadette unit, Mary Bahr, leader;
Irene Barnes, Jo Ellen Diehl,
CaralyM Tracy, MaralyM Tracy, Becky Wright, Leanne Sebo,
&amp;!san Powers, Barbara Anthony,
Jeatme 11ahr, Chrystal Erwin,
Joy Grover, Diana Larkins, Deni se Pullins, Tonya Keebaugh,.

Debra Williamson, Patricia Win. .slleila Folmer, Floranell Burn-

~~~~~~~~~~~d=on~·~•:nd~Su:s:an~r.oo:c~h·~--.
r

ey, Ocbble

Ohlinger, Am Oh-

linger, Mlllsa RllOr and Cln&lt;ly
Spengler.
Robyn Mills, ~ron Glaze,
Becky Trlplett, and Debbie llunnel , senior scoUts are working
as aides at the day camp.

dleport community
Jays will emcee.

Mrs. Don L. Murphy oC'NewHav..

en,

w.

VL, for her wedding to

Charles Robert Staubs, Charles..
ton, W. VL, son or Mr. and Mrs.
James Staubs, Martinsburg, W,

Vo.

'

'Mle wedding was an ' event of

July 13 II the First Methodist
Church al New Haven. Vows of
the double ring ceremony were
read by the Rev. Marshall'I'hom·
as of Charleston, at 2 p. m. ))e..
fore an altar decorated with bas-kets of yellow daisies arxllore-

let gladioli flanked by candelabrL The bride was escorted by
her lather.

Her gown was desitned with

a fitted bodice and an A-line
skirt with an overlay of Chan-tilly lace, ani long tapered
sleeves. Her shoulder le-.wth veil
fell trom a tiara crown and her
only jewelry was pearl earrings,
a glfi or the groom. The bride
carried a bouquet of yellow datsles with white streamers on a
white lace-covered Bible.
Mrs. Don 0. Murphy, sisterln-Iaw of the bride, of New Hav·
en served asmatronofhonor. She
wore a street-length saUn gown
with a fttted bodice and A-line
skirt whlchleaturedalacejacket.
. Mrs. Murphy had a ribbon head})ieee and a corsage otpink swee~
heart roses. Sharon Murphy, sis·
ter olthe bride, ina yellow dress
a rd. Michelle Murphy, niece of
the bride, in blue, were acolyWs
for the wedding. Each wore cor·
sages which matched the color
of their dresses.
Charles R. JOdd of Charles too.,

W,'"' VL, served as best man for
the bridegroom.
Music for tl}t weddlngwaapro..
vlded b.Y Miss Jiiane Herndon of
New Haven. Her selections included ••o, Promise Me" and
"1 Love Thee".
For her daughter's wedding,
Mrs. Murphy wore a shell pink
crepe dress with navy blue accessories and a corsage or wtute
carnations,
A reception was held at the
home of the bride's parents. A
white and sliver color sclleme
was carried out in the appoint..
ments or the table which featured
a three-tiered wedding c a k e.
Dal&amp;y and gladioli orrangements
were used. Assbtinl at the reception were Mrs. Don 0, Mur·
phy, Mrs. Doris Harr.all. Park~
ersburg, and Grace Slyer, New
Haven, W, Va.
The COiflle spentthelr wedding
weukend at tho Pleasant Point
Raoort. The bride changod Into
a navy blue sheath with white

,1

,,,

'

. ,,,.
~
VIIO:ftr -

0 •

&lt;-

Participation in the Meigs
County Fair was discussed when
the Walk..Jn Garden Club met rea
c~ntly at the home of Mrs. Guy
Morris. The club has been invited to exhibit in the first show
on Aug. 14-15, in the class for
''Christmas," which must be
Christma s arrangements, not
decora.tions.
The meeting was conducted by
the president, Mrs. Vern Well,
and opened with the club prayer
and salute to the flag.
"Wonders on My Shoulder", a
demonstration on corsage mak·
lng, was given by Mrs. Homer
Willard. A ready-made corsage
was shown and details given for
making the bal'kground, prepar·
lng the nowcr s by wiring the
stems, and the le~h of ribbon
and how to usc it
During the social hour, a contest l'OBs conducted i.Jy Mr s.
George Ziegler, won by Mrs.

'

Mrs. Glen Lee was reported
still confined to her home due to
a broken hip suffered several
months ago.
The August meeting will be a
picnic at the roadslde park on
Rt. 33 in Bedford Twp., and a
tour ot Carper's Nursery.

Now You Know

~ regional

Plll...,.ork for public

achoola.

1

· lea~e

·• · :c~LAND (UPO - Ten
J!t1'am• . were ~. Bloo;kl ot
Ill( lartely Negro eeat. aide IIY
llaciuldarl!l(l. Occaalonal • •
ar • b b e d mercillndlae rrom
110re windows. ~ cartrlolpa
11Y In lbo - • and on the
lloon or darkened apartments
~ pollee ""' anlpea had
~ lire Tuesday nlllht

.. :•.. .. .

.•.•.•

and

~ou

tea~e it to

going

.·

it to

.

th11

-..
..

,•

Conn•e to br 1ng you the hiPPest mocs

\

~4hlll ~

eANTENNAS

a. 99 to 10.99

-:

0.

'

Confidentially
to rely on your

own

good tast e
and look for the name "Keepsake" on
lhe ring and on the tag _

·

·meinber· It the~ ...
. ·icutl••
beard wDi oHrclat the
iulhOriiY to strike 1illii .......

and on!)' ollar ......
'· · all e«&lt;rta to netllllate fair and
reaiOIIIble
'

COmplete Seleclion of
Connie Sport Shoes. New
fill styles now in stoc!l '

RADIO&amp;TY

'

The Datioa' 1 el!illlll
larpol clb' was "' odllt.
TbOn llll)'or CUI B, stoke&amp;, a
Nesro, made hia bold pmble.
He. ordered the N a tlo n a I
Qlardamen removed !rom the
street• Wednesday rdgbl.
Hla gamble apparently paid

obn.

orr.

~

tonliiJt

'

ID 60a north 1111

central, low 701 - · Mo.U,
warm, laomld Frldo.raeallerod UamdorlhoWera bJo

evening.

lllmltles from Cambridge to pear at the courthouoe there,
and then went lXI to aad
Sa&gt;l&gt;e, his wife Dolly, and a the Lawrence Com13' Fair.
The Saxbe atafl oald the tour
campaign stall ol three Y&lt;JUD1
was
·to omllnue 'lburaday. Mr.
men, traveled em the vole.getting
trail In a oonvertad Gn7ltound Salobo will return to ColUIIIb!ll
Bus. The tour atarted yeater- Thursday nlsht f o r the red a 1 mumlng In Cambridge, mainder !J( the week.
Sa&gt;l&gt;e, off to an early atut
moved to Marl- and then to
Ohlo Unlveralt;y In Ath0111 for oo the campalsn trail, lo opan eer!J afternoon rally and posed this fall b.Y Clnelmatl Demluncheon. Following the atop- oerat Jolm Gilligan who defeat..
over In Pomeroy, the GOP can- ed SOIIator Frank J. Lauaeheln
didate went to Galllpolla to ap- the &amp;prlng prlmarle&amp;.

and Air Guard mombora except lbolalntlio
land and Akroo ......
Rhodea
oald thOt 3,1100
tl!lOP• woold remain In the
aavellnd .... lind an undl ...
cloaed number In tho Akrm
erea. Cloveland wu &amp;truck
Tueadl)' niFf end WedModay
with Napoel ellai&amp;bw In JUD
liatllea w!UI _polico. Ten Par_,.,. were idiJed.

a .....

w.·.:~''"'~~""""m••..J.~­
~. ·;•;o;t;oV&lt;o•;.&gt;;.&gt;~·~·.........,..•••~,..
J

•

Otbo Ashworth
-

r,

-

to rlgilt, are

~.. ~

Welker, Janie Wella,
Sally Globokar, Sandra BaUey, Jeunlfer Me,.
chinl, Becky Neaae, Su&amp;an Lanning, COlby Full2
and Mr. end Mra. Saxbe. - SOnllnel Photo.

News ... in Briefs

Mr. Saxbe, ~ was ~ntrocme.
ed by 27th Houoe Plstrlo:t Rep.
Ralph Welker, tollowlng a welcome extended to the audience
by Meigs Repoi&gt;llcan Executive
Committee Chairman Lealie F.
FUltz, urged volers to put m011
with new ambltloo and ability In
national pernment by electin.11
new people thi&amp; November.
Saabe'a vlalt to Melp eourocy,
a _..,...r or about 15 mlnuteo

Guard Given

Gov. Rhodes

Times Endorses
Rockefeller Bid
•

the electloll • •. we do not 7el
lmow whether he will be
preferable to the Domocratlo

United Pre8&amp; Inlernatlonal
Nel""' A. Rockefeller re.iJo I . . . , . , llllinc 1111'011&amp;11 eolved lhe -011111001 ol the
Now York Tlme&amp;tlda,y for the
-aasterD Ohio, waablgldl8bl- RaiiUI&gt;IIran
prelidantlal nominaBy United Pres• International
ed by the -ance or &amp;everal
tion.
WASHINGTON - 111E'·"POST OFF1CE llepartment ha&amp; 1 110- local poi!Ucal leadorl to bear
The Times described the New
ahead to raf&amp;e parcel poet rate&amp; 10.5 per cent - 'pr~ effective the brief - and to the point York
pemor as "a man with
In 60 days.
talk of the popular Altorno,7 Genbroad understanding of forelsn
The lnt8ralate CIXlunerce Commiulon QCC) cleared the way eral,
with deii1CIIstrated popuffalra,
for the lncreaae Weolneadl)' by decllnlrw to undertake a study of the
••ttta time to take an interest
ular
appea] to Negro as well as
propoaed chan&amp;o. 'lloe lncreaoe, ftrat parcel post rill since JIJD- In polltlc&amp;," oald Sa&gt;l&gt;e, and addary 1967, will lffeet P*cketlo• and catalogue&amp; sent througlo the mell&amp;.
ed. upeople don't want I repl&amp;J' white votera, and with valuable
It Ia OliPOcted to bring In an extra $86 million In postal reveme. of act:Mties they have enCOWJt. executive uperlence."
The ..-sement added, "We
ered cllrtng the past four years. n
apedllcally
refrain !rom a
WEST YELLOWSTONE, MONT. - YELLOWSTONE National
He alao commented oo vlo&gt;.
Park rangera killed their second·grizzly In three day&amp; after the bear lenee, lnllatlon, strikes and the conunltment to his IUj1I10rt In
attacked a man tlahirc near YeDowatone Lake, park omclals said' Vletllam confllet In atopo at eom-

-

Rockefeller Wedneaday contl·
Jllod hlo faJII.j&gt;acnd ~
ing In Kansas and Mlaoourl.
In Wichita, Hoo:keleller told a
crowd or 1,500 enlhualaatic
supporter• that Richard M.
Nlxoo coald not , win In
Nov..mer. and "that'• wby rm
bere,u
He told an airport ralls the
nalkal needs to face ~ to the

realities ot the Vietnam oltuatloo.
"I ~ we camot win tb1a war
and we better realize It,'' he
laid. ''The eDell\l' lmows II, aad
we raol to realize k In tills
country,"

Czechs in
Hard to
Find Mood

SAIGON - U. S. 852 STRATOFORT!WiSES alammed hundreds
ol hlib-eJOPiO&amp;Ive bombs Into Cumnunlat hldeouta on a favorite VIet
CoQil lnllltradiXI route from cambodia toward Salgoo today. Head.quarters aald American bottle deaths hit a I !).month low last week.
The hlgi1-llylq B52s bit an areo four mlleo from the Cambodian
border Cll the heels of a hattie near Loc Nlnh that aost the eornmunl&amp;ta21 killed Wedneada,y, spokesmen Bald. CasualtY reportuhowed
157 American servicemen killed Iaiii week - the lowest alnce 102
died dur!Qiltho week end!Qgilat Oct. 7. Another 2,104 were wowded,
blgioeat alno:e the weak beginn!Qg Jwoe 15, the a..,....ement Bald.

WASHINGTON - DESPITE PUBUC PRE!iSURES generated hy
the aa..,abatloo ot two ..-lor publle figures thia year, It II clear
tho 90th CC&gt;Qgreas will put no now controla mllrearms beyood prohlbltiQillnter&amp;tate eale ot 10"11,....
'11111 waa eatabllaheol beycnl oil dcubtWeolnead&amp;ywhenthe Hou&amp;e
....,.helmlnai111lProved 1 biD Umlted tothebanolllllter&amp;tate sales,
and the ,Se..U. Jndlclaey committee qned ... esaonttaiiJ' the .....
1qlaJatloq.' 'l'l1oullll sen. Jolltllh Tydl~~ga, Jl..Md., Pledaed • Door
ll&amp;hliO rev!"' tht John- administration'! proposals for federal
I'OIIiltrltlon 01 oil firearms ap(llleen•~ It their owMri, hi&amp; pro8110clt for tucee&amp;a appeared almott nooella~ent-

By

Poll&amp;ter Lool&amp; Harrla meantime reported the elecorate
favors Bodtefeller over Nlxcrl
lor the Republican nomination,
but among Republican&amp; Nixon Ia
prelerred 2 to I.
Harris aleo eald pins In
IIU[I[l01'I for George Wallace
Indicate hil thlrdi&gt;&amp;rtf randldaey "ha&amp; the cllatlnd posalbUIV
ol ....-.eking Richard Nballl." He
Bald Nlxoo ...., iaaed Wallaco
and 1111 proepeetlye Democratic
preslck!ullal In the
SOOth.

PRAGUE (UPO - Deflent
Czech Co111111Un1al&amp; today played
bard - to . get In a confrontation
with angry SOVIet leaders.
According to Communist reporta, the Kremlin'. ruling 11man party prealdlum I&amp; en roote
to a -.m with the Czechs
and tbeir program ror HdeJno..

DAN IIINDY

cratization."
But the Czech&amp;, led b)' !&gt;lrV
First Secretary Alexander Dubcek are not makl!lll It easy for

Lehman Company

tbe Russians.

Hindy to Head
Circleville

Office

'

B'!

According to Czech opokeamen 'I _
J J _
ami aources, Dubcek I&amp; balki!l(l UJW
at a summit that would pit the
SOVIet eleven against his own
n ..: .. .-.
11....., presidium.
""'"""
.,....,..
Despite veUnd threats of SO..
viii armed Intervention, Czech
The Paul Lehman CO., 911m·
lpokoomen aleo Jlllbticly con- merovllle, W.Va., wao ~
tiDUed to vow that the polley low blddar at $217, toO Ill • pool
ol reform - Including 1 free cloari"'l prQjec:l II tilt Rodne
preso - 'IIIII not be cha!l(led 1D Lockl aDd Dalll, 11M!

uurer on

R

Proti-t

Dlatrlo:t,

u.s..

... Soviet liking.

ton

the Czecha were
lllclcl!l(l to their pealtlm that
lbe7 lhemeelvoa can defend their
we&amp;tern borden, without the aid
oiSOvtot dttllial• ... cz.o:to 1011.
To ""' It all, the Czecha - •
nported pr.,..ol to domand
.,..,.ull!l(l ol the Soviet&amp; -thai
U.t Kremllll pay Ill dolltJ ...

glneera .... _ .
The work ll&lt;illlii!IJ ot
IIlii and
Rl oil
bruab
o1 the Ohio River
oUrlea ~
lneludlnil lba,

Further,

l..od.a.and

... .

aad

~~~......
oil iht
, ileo.O

~peake•
'

•

'

VETERANS MEMORIAL

~,p.·:Fr·idav. ,:;Night

· , U"TIL 9:ioo .
'

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.'

· -··" AI~ OjMn All D•y Thursdap
'&lt;

···· .·· '

.

cl~,

thia
•, OIIUIIIr7.

'T.,;""'- !!:.,.G I S T I! IU 0

~~-.
•~ :,..
.em&lt;e:

iii;

LOw

ES&amp;L
'•

·~"""' ~

Weather

keep the peace. 1'he7 did.
, A - of &lt;!vii r1g11to leader•
wearing oranso armbanda '111111
"Jil8J'Or'1 oommtttee" prtnt.ed
on them, moved IDto the area
talking with realdenls and
tr)1ng to rellovetenalooa.
Stokes told an early morning
news COIIIerence ~ the
llltuaUon wu •trelatively calm.,
In the aeven_.,.e.rnlle area
that had been torn aparl
Tuesday nlsht and eerly Wed-·
nesday by onlper&amp;, !Ires and
loollng, leaving tbe 10 dead, tS today.
......- and eomo 50 arrested.
The man, not ldentiJ!ed, tried to run when the big adult grizzly
Three ol tho&amp;e killed wero white charged. But he alllll)od and the bear fall oo him. The onlmaJ then
pollee ofllcer&amp; and at least three ambled Into tho woodo. The man &amp;uff~i'ed only minor &amp;cntcheo.

Calm Returns
The Cloveland pollee chief,
Michael Blackwell, called It "a
brUllant IA!ea." The ci!J' WIS
relatively c a I m Wednesday
n1a1&gt;t and early today.
stokea ordered oil but 100
1181110 pollee out or the clt;y'e
oeari'ed eaat aide. He roplaced
the Natlmal Guard with 500 were snipers.
Maj . . Gen. lb'lvester T. Del
block COIIIIIIIIIIIQ'Ieaders.
(COntlmed on Pop 6)
Stckel "challenged" them to

Jounea
A. - · tnday r ...
leaaed oil OhloNatlonol Guard

, i'tl'filiiUJIGH (UP0 - T h e
Utlltod steelworken Unlm(USW)
' ' b!aJ· llold ltollrll rank-.ale
. mMdde to strike In IIQIIIOf! ol
..,caot:reet demallds b u t unloD
·jJnlldent L W. Abel bopod I

tiaa

Stl!!fl '" Seventeen

RIDENOUR

&lt;

· • mOOD lllere illll be a otrike."
'' · Abel laid. •-tlie Oflleeia aad

B. The tarnished gold buckle style in Slack. Brown.

Ask About The Channel
Master Cre11flrt Anttnnl

atoppOd~o!rhla converted GreyhOUnd BO&amp; In
P0111eroy Wedneadl)' afternooo. Pictured, loft

COLUMIIliS (UP!) - G o v,

' "Sirlke 'iiUibllrl..uoil cloel not

A. The antique silver l_ook in Brown. Green.

,, ,.,•• 1,.

SAXIIE GIIIU - Mr. ""' Mr&amp;. WOllam B.
Salobo were greetod by • Jll'OI'I of yOUQglacllea
who called themselves ' 1Sixbe Glrla" when he

:~:::::::::::::::::::-.:.:::::;.':::::::~:::::::::::::~;.;:;:;:;:;::::=::::
..

·:Steelworkers Hope
Walkout ATerted

n - coald be averted.

Fall! " Hard ·core "" hardware maket

lht hlp scene In lho1ue handtewn moe a:

eBOOSTERS

~-~- conv~a
~ar.

to our Canners."

tnq~&amp;

to know whars ·· h1p··

roltor-hla~

BY ROBERT WINGETT
WUI!am B. Sa&gt;l&gt;e, per&amp;O!Uible
Ohio Attome7 General and Repobllcan candidate for the U.S.
Senate, Bald legialatlon Ia needed to benefit rarmliis oommunltlea o( the nation In Pomeroy
Wednesday altA&gt;moon.
Speak!DIJ !rom the main floor
bale&lt;JII)' of tho Meigs Coullt;y
CourthouO&amp;, Mr. Saxbe eald:
"If tbere ls any place to atart
returning to real econom,y In aur
country, It Ia at the local level

'Stokes Gambles

w-•

Shop in
Air-Conditioned
Comfort

·~

, nomination. "rve aiWOJI oald
that," he replied.
,p.t~.·· .be""'7."'
.....: '"Blot'
r: ....'I
.., the aomlllatloa on!)' two
"Are you abaolutely 100 per 11111* It IJ rea, lllllabi, •Jto liT
.,..J&lt;a before the Repoiln
,, ~ eeot serious when you 117 Y'"' !bat Ul~ ~
- : to ...... .,
''·"-·'
'
b ••..........,1
-"-r ..
·•a
1 t don't want
R.....,._ ....,,,.,_,
to e
nee - · - - "'
Mliml . lleaah 10 pick the patl;y prealdent?" he was alked.
greiter JOOi-'!'11 I'IJr
"Abaolutely, 100 per eon! 11&gt;an (loea
fue preilclnlll
He · wal uloed II It wa•
ooa," he replied.
DOIIIinltloll."
Selection' CloM .

R.....,

at y ·

computer centers to

handle

'l'llera were 2,600 National
. ~amen patroling the otreeta
·weolnyda.y, armed and ordora to to kill anlpero.
Tho east aide wao a battlerramol The raelal (IOICI that
bad been Cleveland e.- In the
nport o1 automatic
· and the craab ol molot&lt;w
-eoektalls lllrougb gi1ettD win-

The "Hippest" Mocs
are Hard-Core
Hardware Buffs!

•"'bk.

·saxbe Calls for
Farm Legislation
-

lmuDJ efficiency," Essex aald.
He aald the computers woold
plan achedules In tho ~ for the
2.4 m!Bioo chlldren In the school
l)'otem. E"ex &amp;aid the eomput..
era would oloo make out thalr r,.
port cordi.
Tho &lt;01111&gt;\1101'&amp; would ol&amp;o lake
..,.,., ot other record keep!Qg delilla1 lnclnd!Qil purchu!Qil recorda, blllln&amp;, love~ cootrel
and lonna· end r"'orta used In
!ht· dally admlnlstraUm of
IChooll.

ELD$1N POMEROY

... :

.'

1J no matdll!l(l Joi&gt; 111 , I·
lillleh 'you ' .coaJd liT w111t 111!'
dol- Ia. aa lm-"
. ""' ,u ....
.. ·

II,)'

I

to 20 computer center• thet will
operate aro111d theclockformax-

New 72-Car Collectar CaM

.

•

'

, ·-our Intent is to eslablilh 12

Stop In on the l&amp;t Ooor, see the excellent selection of
Match BOx, cars - Ye&amp;tecyeor ear&amp; end ldQil alze ear,o.
Add to your collection whfle selict!Oil II \lOot lddi !Or
gifts lor 1&gt;0,11&amp; and girl&amp;.

·..·

.
~~""'' ~
atort ' eorroct to
he wwld eeeept
but not aetfvuly seek the

vi..H~ily
·~...,..

~~~~pre~
~·1

new

..... w...... morning.

: . : ::: :·:;:·

'

riJirt m and
IIJ'OWIIIg Ill the atreot,'•

r-~~

COLUMBUS (UP0 - S tIt e
School Supt Mardn w. E&amp;aex
Bald tnday the alate plana to aet

• :t=..'=-MII.IW

EL

~

f_IVE CENTS'

Another Shipment .

WeU.

.,

Devoted To The lnlereA,. Off'Jae Meigs·MaMJil Area

scott, ami Mrs. Hoas wataon.' A
question and ansWm: l)erlod followed. Mrs. Evans clo&amp;ed. With
prayer.
Special readl~~gs fOr the e•enlng wos P&amp;alm 8 by Mrs. Rail- .
son Hol~r and a poem, "Philosolines" by Mrs. Sisson.
·
Mlas Marcia Karr, the dele-gate to conference, gaw t h e
highlights of this year's meeting.
Mrs. Russ Wats.onpresldedov•
er the business meeting. ~
nouncement was made of a district workshop to be held August
29 at Camp Franc!&amp; Asl!ury.
There were 50 slck calls made
during the month.
Watermelon was served to U
members and two guests, M111
Morcla Korr and Jue Sluon.

DS

guests, Bonnie Morris and Patti

'

•

.

The name ot movie Idol Rudolph Valontlno·- wa&amp; Rodol!o Allonzo Raf!aelo Pierre FU!bert
Guglielmi dl Valenllna d' Antoll&amp;llolla.

Theme, Service to Others .

Edson Hart.
A dessert was served by the
hostess to members and t w o

'

abOard a Jet '"' a. .fllgbl from prellldo!otlal drive he at llrot pobllcly h1a view of the lhoW.
Sacramento to Loa Angelea.
_ . . . realoted, then ol- presidency aa • possible candl"We !oriel thia country hal
"I think 8111' ..a..-.unleaa be lowed to run !reo.
date.
thl'llilsh the traeoo!Y of
·~
.,.
~'""'
""'""
-·
·
·~
as..,alilotlon,
chl!l(leB of leadhal m
' ade a ..of .pol"'c&amp;,
"--•
"Service •• - e . •••
'
uftlea&amp; he hal beoll tlntlrc for
AI lut Ooooll, eblllt 26 -.1 made mo realize the strOI!&amp;Ih I• etihlp, and ovea the Ul health o1
Yl!31'1 for a ~Ill!' 'man "had active Reaian lor Prelidanl not 'in ona man, lt'.a ·in th~ a ptellderit when be was
ciiMculcy thillkl!l(l or himself In i!OIIPI to form 11\e eOre ol 8111' lllllon," be eald. "I .thJM
hol•'•a&amp;, and .not lXI
that apot," R....., oa1d.
eoimpaiiJII- 110111011mea wo have 1 tendeDcy
....,
.
·
·
.mcy,a
But he pondered as Ule plane 11 11
op6,
.
we think about that ofllce
u\\'.. IIW the great atren&amp;lh of
over lhe ' world'&amp; richest
Tlie Interview markod the• 10 think It one man !'lll1ninB thlo. 'nation; that thllliB ' wont
"'cultural valley about the llrat lime Reaian has dlaeuued overytliuia, takl!lll the wliole

.....

1

~:

.

Participation in Fair

~CR,~~NT~-w~ Calli.
(UP!)
Republican

':j!..

&lt;·

Out or town guest• at the wedd!Qil and recepU.IXllncluded Ml"
Ann Edgar, Huntington; Mr&amp;. Arlene Morgan and MI .. cP itrlcla
Litton, Fostorlai Mr. and M r s.

.

~~ Convention and the
.llontold
.......•s · - · make Gov.
Reapn prealdant, lt'a a
!"mantlsk
h~ lh• prepared to aaaume,
e e•a ready to wear.
-''II' I eometlllng thst'a· almoat
'"'pollllble to •-·"'·· In
.,..
_._.,..
your
,mlnd •" the California
•.,.....1can Bald In an InterVIew

.... '

~.

IS

-

Ire (·

-. /

The wisest way 1o selec1 a d1amond n"'lg

~.

weokl \
motiJior 1 Mrrt
B. A.
Che,tir. wh~,!·
her.,· they
hll lliolhef ~
kitchen ,remod91!"!, andaleovi•Jf!'l' •
ed with M~s•. Coni'Ol''l slittr(
Mro .. ~ -Raynolda, ami hli"··
band of M ep/)1'1,. :~

years.

.

Reagan Prepatl!dfor Role ()f Preside11t if GOP

1

Cllltor&lt;l llanloy, Culloden, w.
VL; Mr. and :o~rs. ,JQ!n Whitt,
Mrs. Clarence C,ante~biiiJII n d
daughter, Bonnie; Mrs. stana.
Wymer, Scott Depot; •Mrs. lpez
Stephenson, MOton; Mr;)ndMrs.
'&lt;·
Bernai-d HansOn,
llurrlcane; ·
,
~
/' ,!.
Miss Mebel King p 0111 eroy·
Encke s·comet, first lderiU· .;
. •
• fled In 1786, returns ipo&amp;t
Rudolph Vlgonto, Y'l""istown, quenUy of. all comets In, tlie' ::
and.Woodrow Bragg, Charleston, solar system. Its period Is 3.3-:

W. Va.

:P.

r.

.......

Mr~ and

Aug. 4.

COMPLETE LINE OF
CHANNEL MASTER &amp;
FIN CO

Cht~ttr,

'

•

Walk-In Club Reviews

to begin at 6:30 p.m.
ICE CREi\M Social, begirminc
11 a.m. Saturday in air condiUoned fellowship hall at St. Paul
Lutheran C h u r c h, Pomeroy.
Homemade ice cream, pies and
c:akes.

11!·3301

'

• j&gt;

\\nd~
d . e_r,'
of. Akton,
, t;rlday
· W,lth

Mrs. ~uss Watson led devotions,. reading a unsion prayer
and the meditation, 11 Everyday
Is A' Da.y To Serve/' when the
WSCS of the Forest Run United
Methodist Churcll met at t h e
church In Its July meeting.
Mrs. Mark Evans, program
leader, had "Where Do We Go
From Here" as the title of h e r
program. Scripture was taken
trlm, beige accessories, and a !rom Honwos 14:111-14. The purcorsage of yellow daisies from
pose of the program was to proher bridal bouquet.
vide guidance for parents and
The new Mrs. Staubs I&amp;a grad- adulta In -relating helpfully to
uate of the Romney School for tho yurt~
I
Deal at Romney, W. VL Sbe is a
Mrs. Evans served as modermember of the New Haven First
ator and panelista were M r a.
Methodl&amp;t Church. Mr. Staubs Alfl'ed YRuger, Mrs. Edith Sisgraduated !tom the Hagentown son, Mra. Fred Nease, Mrs. John
Hlsh School at llager&amp;tow n, Md.,
and Ia empiOJ!ed at Raine&amp;
Motor&amp; in Charleston. The&lt;&lt;qlie
will reside in Charleston after

ICE CREAM SOcial, Ra&amp;hiUl
firehouse , Saturday with senrin ~;

•ROTORS

I

MATCH BOX CARS

park. The

GE'I' THE:PICTURE
With A Dill Tower

,

•

Is Event _
ofJvly 13th
A Door-length white saUngown
was worn by Miss Bernice Mar·
neU Murphy, dauglrter of Mr. ond

•

'

I.

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