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Memoirs Show U. S. at Edge ofWar

R&amp;v. - ~IC.£!
SI..OLVPoK€?

•

W N-.1-tiNGTON (UPI) - The
gravest moments or the Cuban
missile crisis came when a
confrontation nearly occurred
between a Soviet submarine and
a U.S, aircraft carrier, according to newly published memoirs
of tlle late Sen. Robert r.

Kennedy.
The memoirs, purchased from
the Kennedy estate Cor more

HOMECOMING -

than $1 million and published
Slmday in McCall's magazine,
added new details to the
historical record of the show-

loll

Club candidate, was crowr
night at GAHS. Serving i

down between the United States
and Russia in October 1962,
At the height or the crisis on
Wednesday, OcL 24, Kennedy
reported, two Soviet cargo ships
approached
the
U.S. Navy
"quarantine" barrier set ~
across the .&lt;\tlantic approe.ches
to Cuba. A Russian sub was
sailing submerged between the
two ships,
The U.S. aircraft carrier
Essex
was to signal the
submarine b)' sound equipment
to surface and identify itself,

Kennedy said. He said that it it
reCused, the Essex was to drop
depth charges with "a small
explosive" 10 force compliance.
Describes Crucial Moment
Robert KeiUIC&lt;b described the
appearance and tlKMJihts of his
brother President John F.
Kennedy. at this moment:
"Was the world on the brink
of a holocaust? Was it our
error? A mistake? Was there
something rurther that should
have been done·? Or not done?
His hand went up to his face

and

covered his mouth. He
opened and closed his fist. His
face seemed drawn. his eyes
pained, almost gra.y,"
Robert Kemedy quoted the
President as saying: "Isn't
there some way we can avoid
having our Clrst exchange with
a Russian submarine- almost
anything but that'?"
Minute II later, a me11sage
came that some or the Soviet

ships headed toward Cuba had
stopped.
President
Kermedy
ordered the E11sex to do nothing

Now You Know

sored b.)· Thespian Club 81
of the studenl body, was c

By Katie
Up, Up, and Away!
Rambler Dealers in Un
trip recently to California. 01
ris ot H. H. Rawlings and M1
fiyil"@' to california by jet

C'/v¥)10, WVAEJ...E, I
f'£T I CA/0 B£1!\1 'rbu
1/J A RACE TO 1\-\E Rcn::~

1/ (/

010 YWR MI\RK

GET SET... GO!

.

Y\X.J C0'-.!1 STAND
A Cf.\AI0CE, FRE.:"IKY I

v

IJ.H(. L£T'S

e

PauJ Revere, best remembered as a horseman, was the leadIng silversmith of the American
colonies. He also sold spectacles, replaced missing teeth and
made surgicallnstrwnents.

OH, YE.AH'7

Missile Crisis

could win, ....

but give the Russian vessels an

Quote Khrushchev

opportwtlty to turn back. One
stage of the crisis was over.
The memoirs also reveal
some new gli.Jnpses lniO some of
the UJWUblished correspondence
between President Kennedy and
then Soviet Premier Nildta S.
Khrushchev, In one letter,
Kennedy told the Soviet leader:
"I have not uswned that _yoo
or al\)' other sane man would, ln
this nuclear age, deliberately
plunge the world into war which
it is crystal clear oo country

In an emotional letter to the
President Oct. 26, parts of
which Mve appeared in print
previously, Khrushchev said:
uu people do not show wisdom,
then in the n.nal aralysb they
wiJI come to a clash, like blind
moles, and then reciprocal
extennination will begin."
This was the letter which
contained the seeds or the
agreement later rOached In
which Soviet offensive missiles

were withdrawn Crom Cuba and
the u.s. blockade was lifted.
The article a1so told or a
poignant mc:nent when the two
brothers, both later a&amp;aassirat.-ed, were alone after the crl sis
had erded.
The President, recalling Abr'&lt;i·
ham Lincoln's death after the
Civil War, wryly cMtmented:
wrhis is the night J should go to
the theater."
"If you go, I want to go with
you," Robert Kenned.Y replied .
Robert
v
edy's accOWlt

•

George Da\'IS, and Connie

Katie's

•
ln

details how cl- the Cuban
crisis came to actual war In
aevenl ways- how mUliarJ
ldvlaers _pressed tor an attatk
qainst Cuba; how advance
preparation• lor such an attack
were madei and how, liB the
climax approached, the chancel
for mlac::alculation by both
countries grew.
Military Urge!l Attack
from Ihe begimlrw, he said,
the Joint Chiefs of Statr were
unanimous in advocatlrw imme(Contlnued oo page 8)

Weather

at y

'""

Mostly fair and not 11 coul
Lows In the 40a. Increasing cloudiness and warm
tonight.

t '

Tuesday. Scattered showera over
moat of the state by evening.

lkt&gt;oled To The lnleresls Of The MeitwMwon Area

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

VOL XXI NO. 126

FIVE CENTS

MONDAY. OCTOBER 21. 1968

S££ ABaJr lt\AT ·'
y

ROGER WEAVER, ~rand :
Syracuse, a recent graduate (
aon, iB now employed as a ctr:

SPACE CENTER, Houston
(U PI}- With pictures of their

HAH I I BEI&gt;.T VOU 1 I 5£AT
YOU COLD ' I'M BETT£R THAIJ

YSP, YaJ 5UR€ ARE, Kl D I
IT 1/JAS GRtAT FUIU AtuYii.JA,y

B£TIER, BElTER, &amp;lTE.R'

11-tERE~

ONE 'THI"-JC.
1 CAt..J'T STAND IT~
A GOOD LO~ER !

IF

Ul USE I&lt;JDDI'JG MYSELF BUT

YOU ARE I BETTER, B€TTE.R,

wives mounted tn front of them,
the three Apollo 7 astrooauts
lrtaged the finale or their space
television series loday and
windup or the moons hip's
superb 11-day orbital trial.
Despite the irritations of
colds, itchy b e a r d s and
' 1 blaach"
food, the fUght of
Walter Schlrra, Dom Eisele and
Walter Cwmingham was going
better than hoped. It soomed
certain lt. would set the stage
Cor a Christmas night around
the moon by Apollo 8.
Schirra opened the 10-minute

I

Wallace Demands Hanoi
Make Public Confessions

Comes from
owning a home
with a mort·
gage that is

By United Press International
V.,Lce President Hubert H.

easy to live with,
one that was

planned by experts.

PRESENTS SPEOAL SHOW - Mrs. Sarah McNelr Moshier, talented Gallipolis artist, displayed oil paintings, 8Culpture, acrylics and watercolors prior to the Tri-Count.y Community Concert Sunday afternoon at the Gallia AcNemy Hief1 School Auditorium. The highlight or Mrs, Moshier's exhibit wasamuraldepictingthe historical backgroWld of Gallipolis. The mural wUI be placed
on pennanent displa_y in the Gallipolis post office. Mrs. Moshier is presently teaching art at Kyger Creek High School. She is pictured above with her !lOR, Bertram.

Talk to us'

OHIO VAl
J!IOalillopooltc&lt;-... 016,1)

YtiOTTA HANP IT 10 OOP
AN' RX&gt;ZV! 'THEY SURE
II:NOW HOW 10 WHIP UP

A FINE FEEDf

GEE, .I NEVER

HEY, WWA.T YOU

GIRLS DOIN'

OUT HERE?

.

OH, WE TI-IOIJGHT WE'D
JOIN IN 11-1' FESTIVE
GA'THEORING/

QUITE A l\llf~L V0U
FELLAS COOKED
FOR KING GUZ
AND UMPA.!

550 Hear Folk Singer Duo
By MRS. CAROLYN RODERICK rounding area attracted much at-A beautiful fall Sunday after- tention. However, Ute entire lob-noon am two major attractions by or the high school was lined
c&lt;mbinod to fill Gallia Academy with a wide variety of paintings
High School auditorium with an and sculpture which demonstrataudience of almost 550 persons ed the versatility and unique talfor the qJening or the Tri-County ent of this gifted young artist.
From the hwnorous arxt colorCommunity Concert
Associaful "Sentinel of Lhe Studio," a
tion's current series.
Talented young Colk singers composition or pine, plywood and
Steve Addlss aM BUI Crofut cap- rods which greeted visitors at
tivated all thelr listeners, which the door, to the cement "lady,"
a paradox of grace and abandon
included a large nwnberofyoung
people as well aB concert assl)o combined with the weight of the
ciation members £rom the three- medium; from the bold splashes
cwnty area and Ashland, Ky., of the artist's "Configurations"
Portsmouth, Waverly, Chilli- to the subdued, translucent qualities of her oils done in the style
cothe and Washington C. H.
Before the concert and during of the Old Masters, the entire
lntermluion, concert-goers e~ show was termed one of the most
joyed the opJIOJ1unity of viewing exciting art events to be enioyed
a one-man showing of the art or In this area in anwnberoCyears.
Mrs. sara M.eNeir Moshier,
EXCITING ENTERTAINERS
sponsored by the French Art ColEqually
exciting and enterta.h~
o~ .
ing
were
the
two young performMrs. Moshier's large mural
ers
on
the
stage.
Opening strongdepleting the historical backly
with
an
old
Shaker
song, "Simground o( Gallipolis and the sur-

News ... in Briefs

ple Gifts," Addiss am CroCul
rolled easily into the rolicking
sea chantey, "The Whale."
Bill Crofut, demonstrating his
exceptional skill on the banjo,
which seemed almost an extension of himself, showed the similar basis for all mush.: from
Gregorian chams to contemporary folk music.
The two artists had cornDosed
many of their songs, setting them
to words by poets such as Sara
Teasdale and e. e. cwnmings or
based on themes inspll-ed by television programs, such as "The
J 1.mmy Song," which also incor·
porated Bach in its introduction
and close,
The program ranged from
American blues to old English
roundsi irom melodic conlemporary folk music and lovesongs
from Canada and Brazil to the
"Ragupati" of India arxtdellcate,
harp--like tunes on the unusual
dn-trartt of v letnam.
Establishing a warm rapport
with their listeners early in the
concert, the two versadle musicians evoked a rousing re!JI)OilSe
as the entire audience joined in
singing "Rambling Boy" and" Ah
Robyn," an English round. ~
other hwnorous round, "Don•t
Push," was a high point in the

program.
"The Jinun)o Song," their fl.rst
(CmUnued on Page 8)

By United Press International

AlL RIGHT, BOYS, NOW 'IOU CAN
UP AND 60 10 WORK!
The Reverend

elect nc heafin

cost us any

PARIS- NORTH VIETNAM TODAY CANCELED a regular new s
conference that might have Indicated Hanoi's feelings about efforts
to dHscalate the Vieblam War. The North Vietnarnen delegatloo
to 27-week-alc:l talks here with the United States gave no reason for
the sudden cancellation or their week.l,y Monday news briefl~.
Diplomatic observers said Hanoi possibly called ott the session, usually a platform for bitter dewnciation of American Vietnunese policy, in order mt to rock the J:Q.t in a time of delicate

Helen Molden
Dies Saturday

Funeral services for Helen B.
Molden, S4, RD 1, Rutland, who
negotlatloos,
died 5aturday evening In the Veterans Meinol'ial Ho!lpital after a
SAIGON - A C47 TRANSPORT PLANE enroute from Solgon to lon,g Illness, Jf'ill be held TuesDa Nang eras,..,.. South VIetnam's Central Highlands today ldlllng day at I p. m. at the Martin fu.
all 24 per&amp;ODI aboord, U. S. mllltary OI)O(&lt;esmen sold. The dead In- neral Home "'lth the Rev, Paul
cluded 20 AJr Force personnel, two Army men and two civillana, It Taylor omclat!n&amp; Burial wUl be
was reported.
In the Miles Cemetery. She was
Authorities said t:Jle alrer•tt crashed 11 miles southwest of preceded In death by 1 daughter,

Oh1o. You 've.·
rTK.

ele&lt;lrrc heat I

Call your Redr

a free elechic

lhe Central lll&amp;hlands city of B111 Me Thuot about dawn. Names of
the victims were wllhheld P81dns notiflcatlon of next of kin.

Lola.
Survivon Include her huaband.
WUbur; a sister, Mrs. OWe ShuLANCASTER, OWO - OHIO UNIVEJlSITY OPENED Its Dfth ler, Chesleri five brothers, Guy
nglonal campus here~ with tho dedication or the $2.35 mlliJon Priddy, RuueU PMddy and ThurJolm T. Brasee HaU Hal,ph D. smith waaiiJPO(nted OU'a now dean of marl Pridlb, all ot RD 1, Rutoi!&lt;IJI1IUI academic PJ'08l"IIDI and also will direct the OU rqional lallll; Lloyd Priddy, RD1, Mlddl..
por4 and R01 Prld!ly, Middleport.
CIJI1)US81.
Some 281 treahmen lind sophomores are enrolled at the new Friends may call at lhe Amoral
JllcUlty, located oo Ohio 37, north of here.
home after 7 p, m. today.

Mo

-- - ... -

engine later In the morning. But
telecast holding up the now- Cape Kennedy.
The "live" t.elecal!it, beamed he dritted up into the camera'.!!
familiar 11 cue card": "Hello
from the lovely Apollo Room back In the same hlgb quality view and all three pilots carne
high
atop everything''
and seen in .six earlier shows, into view.
1\S the little televisioo camera
showed heavy beards on the
closed h by saying:
panned across the Apollo 7
"As the SWl sinks slowly in three pUots.
uwe thought we'd give each cockpit, photographs of each
the West, this is Apollo 7
r1 you a closeup of our beards crewman's wife could be seen
Cutting out 00W, II
"This will end our weekly this morning to prove we've mounted on the ship's inbeen here and that we are not strument panel .
series," said Cumlngham.
Before the telecast, which
The astrooauts are scheduled fans of the beard club," Schirra
ID
rlde their
cone-!lhaped said. He added, however , he started at 8:21 a.m. IDT,
command ship down to a woold not admit to any gray In Schlrra said he, Eisele and
splashdown in the Western his whiskers . "Only my hair Cunnlngham were preparing for
their return to earth Tuesday
Atlantic Ocean at 7: 12 a.m . dresser lmows for sure."
Eisele at first was below the by taking decongestant pills
EDT Tuesday, after covering
4.5 mllllon miles in 163 orbits pilots' couches preparing for the every eight hours. The astrosince their Oct . 11 launch from !!eventh firing of Apollo's main nauts have been plagued by
colds for most of the fil.ght and
the piUs are expected to clear
their ears and reduce the risk
of rupturing lhem during the
pressure changes of Apollo's
descent .
As the pUots ate breakfast
today,
Cunnlnjjlam quipped:
"Happiness
is a package of
significance. 11 He said In a
hal nominee Sen. Edmtmd S.
bacon S&lt;J.Iare.ll oo da.y 10 ."
Muslde Sunday both raised the broadcast interview ( face the
question whether North VIet· Nation- CBS) the combat dt.'nam has actually offered cline "surely ought to be taken
into account" in the decision on
concessions in exchange for a
a
bambi ng halt.
Ll, S, bombing halt.
Nixon, in an interview pubWallace said in an interview
lished
in the New Republic, said
(Meet the Press- NBC), "I
he
opposed
"imposition of a
believe now they are talking
coalition
government
on South
about unannounced concessions
Vietnam.
ard I think any concession
"There is little reason to
ought to be made publi c to the
believe
that an imposed coali~
American people and to the
SKORPIOS, Greece (UPO lion
government
in South Aristotle and Jacqueline Onaspeople of the world. "
Vietnam
would
serve
the sis began their honeymoon toHe said there should not be
"any unannounced reciprocal interests of Lhe Soulh Vietna- day on his $3 millioo yacht oti
agreements on the part of the mese. "
a paradise island where they
North Vietnamese. "
The forme,r vice pre.sident~aso re wed during 1 rain that
Muskie, on another show advocated ' small wut ac
Greek mythology says will inaure
(Issues and Answers- ABC), in the war zone as a good 8.Y they live happily ever after.
was asked about the former to shift more of the Hghting to
The 39-year..old 5 ft. 7" widAlabBrna governor's comments. the South Vietnamese and start ow of President John F. Keme"Gov. Wallace has been briefed "de-AmerJcanf zation of the con- dy and the 62..year-old Greekas the rest of us have been on flic L ''
Argentine 5 ft. 5" multimillionthe present position aoo if he
In other developments:
aire will sail the 325-loot white
wants to mahe it public he' s in
Hwnphrey- Opening a week Christina down the kmian Sea
a position to do so."
of big state campaigning in New in search or Mediterranean sun
Humphrey, commenting on York today, the vice president in a day or so, aides said.
the recent s cale down in predicted a " Democratic mirFollowing their 45
minute
fighting, said the lull "has some acle" on election day. He said wedding ceremony in a 13 by
the Democrat s will win because 30 foot Greek Orthodox chapel
the people do not trust Nixon,
on Onassis' private island of
Agnew, Wallace or LeMay.
3rorp1os olJ Greece's western
Humphrey was going into Texas coast, the couple went aboard
aOO caiifornia later this week the yacht and toasted each othseeking those states ' big elec- er and fortWle with champagne
toral votes.
and red wine. Crewmen said
Nixon- In a network (CBS) the newlyweds lett word they
radio speech Surxla.,v night, would be sleeping late.
minor one.
NLxon proposed that the federal
Among their first tasks of
A car driven by Pauline Joyce goverrment provide aid to married life was saying gocxl&gt;ye
Taylor , 20, Columbus, traveling children attend i ng private to Mrs. Onassls' two children,
south. slid brto a pile of ties schools. He did not spell out Caroline Kennedy, 10, and John
that held an embankment when
(Continued on page 8)
F . Kermedy Jr., 7. The late presa Uclaid owned by the Shell..v
ident' s children were expected
Sand and Gravel Company ap- Two Defendants
toflybacktotheir private
proached the highway from a side
schools in New York City,
road and T.rlor thought the ve-

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r

HtirlPhrey says the recent lull
in flgl:lting In Vietnam should be
an important factor in the
American deliberations on whether to stq&gt; bomblll:t North
Viet~Wm again.
Third part.y candidate George
C. Wallace, at the same time,
Oatly opposed a bombing halt
unless the North Vietnamese
make immediate public concessions. He said the Communist5
are taking advantage of restrictions on U.S. bombing lo make
a "very significant" buildl.ll in
stt)plies.
Hichard M. Nixon, the Republi can presidential candidate,
meanwile rejected, by inference, Viet Cong participation in
any coalition govermnent in
Saigon, Nixon also called for
"de-Americanlzation" of the
war,
AU three caOOidates made
their stal.ements Sunday. Broadcast comments by both Wallace
and Democratic:: vice presiden--

Honeymoon
Begins on
Christina

w

Driver Cut when Car
Ditched Early Sunday
A driver Involved in one of

two accidents investigated by

Meiss Couotcy Sherit! Rober! C.
llartemach•s department over
weekend was takentoHolzerHosplial lor treatment oC lniurles.
Robert L, Dugan, 32, Rt. 1,
RuUa."ld. auftered a cut ~hin and
lacerations
the nose and right
arm when be lost control of his
1959 mo:lel car on a curve and
drove it. into a ditch on Route 124,
one-tenth of a mile east of Rut-

or

land, at 3:30 a.m. &amp;lnday.
Dugan was removed to the hospital by private vebiele. His car
had medium front end damage,
The other acciOOnt, w!tlch occurred Saturda,y at 9:50 a.m. on
RO&lt;Ile 338, 1.2 miles oorih at
Lock 23 at Apple Grove, waa a

hicle was going to cross in her
front. The uclaid was driven by
Danny Lee !l!aln, 24, Rt. 1, Racine.
The department over the weekend arrested Enunett Welch,
59, RD, Pomeroy, on an lntoxlcation charge . A 15-year..old Middleport girl was also booked 011
a delinquency aflldavit flied In
juvenile court.

Forfeited Bonds

Two defendants forfeited bonds
and a third w.t.s fined Saturda,y
night in the court of Pomeroy
Ma,ror Charles Legar.
Forfeiting boods ~ $23.70 each

MEIGS GENERAL HOSPITAL

ADMISSIONS SATUROAY -

None.
D~CHARGES

SATURDAY -

on charges or speeding

None.

ant, and Chester NeJ son, Columbus. Rodney 1\rtt.le, Minersville,
was fined $5 and costs on charges

Ben PhilSCtl\ Racine;

we r e
Donald Van MAire, Pl. Pleas-

~

""eallng tires.

ADMISSIONS
erson. Rutland;
Cheshire.

DISCHARGES

SUNDAY
Goldie~

Edna

Little,

SUNDAY

None.

New Auto Insurance Concept Bared
WASiliNGTON

(UPQ -

An
insurance association representing 160 companies today unveiled an auto insurance plan
designed to scrap the ''Whda at
Cauttn payment concept.
Accordlna tc the American
Insurance Assodatloo (AlA),

Personal Protection AutomOOlle
Insurance Plan, the proposal
would cost ''ul) to 45 per cent
less than the cost of the present
I)'8Win." said Associatlm Presldant T. ta~ence.Jones.
Under
y .r eMII llabUity

ac&lt;ldent victima would have

port. then must
a determination ol who Ia a fault before
claims can be pold.
The new pl111 woold be
compul10ey- that Ja, a per am
would have to meet Insurance
COYerap requirement• to oper-

their economic losses and
medlcel expenaea paid by lbelr
o w n btsuranee
companlas.

There would be no court
lltlp.tlon or settlement between

oppoalng companies.
Known as the

Complete

iniiUI'IDce

ate a ear.

Blem,*

[n

the most

return,

would be complete lnununlty
from court suits, Jones aald.
The proposed system woold
make no change in automobUe

coUlaion, fire and theft polldea.
Immediate ._.woo came

rrom other insurance companies
and grwps not comocted with

the AlA.
The Natimal AsiOdaUon
lndependeot

lnauren

ot

(NAil),

which says Its 480 member
companies write more than hall
the private car lniUJ'ance ln the

nation, said the no.tault scheme
U•ere woold aldft to each motorial

POLAR SCOUT, a E1r•
peao-&lt;leslgaed-aad-!JuUigleUte &lt;aUed ESR0-1, tlllder.
goeo tesllog al NASA'•
western test rau1e Ia Call·
forola. Tbe veblcle wlll be
lauocbed lo lludy tile
aurora borealis and oiler
related pbeuomeaa of tbe
polar loaoopbere Ia a ...
•r.raUve prDII'Itm laetw I
1 e 10-aalloo Eoropen
Spaee Reoear.. O.,ulu11 o o (ESRO) a a d U t
National Aeroaaalko IIIII
Space Admlalotralloa.

Enemy
Gunners
Bluffed
SAIGON (UPO - Two unarm.
ed U. S. Navy pilOU.buzzedNot111
Vietnamese gunners in a bluff
that paid oft in the r escue of six
American fliers downed off the
Commwdst
coast,
militarY
spokesmen said today .
They described the saving ~
the airmen Smday as one of the
most dramatic rescues of t h e
Vletnam War .
North Vietnamese gunners oo
an island just above the South
VIetnam border had shot down a
four..man U. S. Air Force ,.Jolly
Green Giant" helicopter that had
KDM to rescue the two crewmen or a downed American P'twl tom jet. The six downed alrmen
wallowed in IO..foot waves IDlder
fire from the coastal guns 11. mile
and a hal£ away.
About 24 Air Force and Na-vy
jets battered the coastal IUDII
for 90 minutes while another
"Jolly Green Gtant•' plucked the
six airmen to safety. In o n e
crucial moment, two Navy planes,
although out at ammunition,
streaked over the Red gunners Oil
"dry nms," divertln.g the Com ~
muniat fire from the airmen
struggling oti the shore.
In other action Communlat
mortars smashed Into U. S. and
Allied bases _ , . In the Central lilgblands, near Satson and
In the Mekaag Deha to tho - ·

QUARANTINE EXPANDS
'the entire burden of Insuring
COLUMBUS (UPIJ - S ta t e
himaelf qainst all hia losses- A8ricullure Director . - M.
both those caused by himself as Sladthouae hao repol1ed a Japo.
well as those caused by other neoe beetle _ . . _ ..._,
1

an additional five N!lmtleL c.a...
des ""'ered are Adamo, 11n11m,
ita 11 million poUeyboJ. Cler~ Pike IIIII SC1oU&gt;. Tbo
ders would want "the coat of _..anllne now laellldeo accldenta ahifted trom the ~ lltllo'a 88 ...-L
reckless drinr to his victims, •
AUotate lllsurance said the
LOCAL ' TEMPS
AlA pr&lt;~poaal """'d mean
The temperMqn ... f.!' " .....
'"'rreaponaJbie and reddeu
•~~rw. 11
driven would be held llniDcial11:10
a.m.
todl1·111 ~
l.Y blameless."
motorists."

Slate Farm Mutual expressed

-

,..-..

under SUI'IQ' aldoL

•

. ....

,,

~

.. ·'' .... ....... . _,.. .,....,. .... ., "" ......... . .
,·

f

f

"''i.,''c'
'

�... . ·-·-···

2-

The DollY Sentinel, Pomeroy-Middloport. 0., Monday, October 21, 1968

Escape Artist?

L::!:[J

.:.

.,

"'

..: .

..~

.. -· -: . ·--

comP. back from 1960 to haunt him? Would
Humphrey have shown himself to be some~
thing more than the talkative incompetent
his opponents say he is? Would Wallace have
been exposed as a shallow charlatan, or
would he have exposed the others? Would,
mayhap, a little light have been shed on the
shadowy issues of this campaign?
Or would none of these things have happened? Would the debates have been just a
form of entertainment for an apathetic elec~
torate that already has its mind pretty well
made up?
Edmund Muskie, the Democratic vice
presidential candidate, soundly castigated
Sen. Everett Dirksen, the JUinois Republican,
for decreeing, through the stratagem of a
threatened filibuster, that 74 million voters
were not to learn the answers to those
questions.
In fairness to Dirksen, however, he had a
point when he recalled that it was another
Democratic vice presidential candidate,
whose initials are HHH, who opposed debates
between President Johnson and _Barry Goldwater in 1964, when it was the Republican
candidate who was the underdog.
Politics being politics, it may be that
Americans witnessed in 1960 the first and
last televised debates between presidential
candidates they will ever see. And it may be
just as well.
As those debates suggested, and as the
fourth game o( the World Series of 1968 confirmed, and as political front-runners instinctively know, that magic all-seeing eye
called television has an unpredictable way of
assuming the role not of recorder of history
but maker of it.

·~ - -· ·

. -:

.· .

. .•
•' .. ..

B,y RICHARD E. LIGHTNER

erty owners.
Originally conceived to grant
a. real estate tax exemption for
resident homOOYmers age 65
and over, the amendment was
changed d u r i n g its journey
through the legi.slat.ure.
The language that may cost
the issue voter approvaJ was
added to permit the legislature

UPI &amp;atehoose Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP0 State
IBsue No. 2 may not be as successful wtth the voters as poll~
Uclans believe State [ssue No. 1
will be.
The s e c o n d constitutional
amendment on the Nov. 5 ballot
would give the General Assembly permission to grant tax

THE WELL CHILD®

Preschool Halloweeners
Need Adult Supervision
By WAYNE G. BRANDSTADT, M.D.
fleeter tape shouiJ be sewn
on all costumes. Keep the
hemlines up and dispense
with baggy sleeves. Painting
the face with grease is safer
than wearing a mask that
may slip and hamper vision
or impede a child's Lreathing .
Provide your c h i 1 d with a
flashlight and forbid the use
of matches or candles .
Finally. when the children
come to your door give them
small donations or jelly beans,
cookies or apples anJ, even
more important, tell them
what Hne costumes they have
contrived and how well they
have made themselve'i into
witches , goblins, etc. They
will love it.

Halloween is for youngsters .
Much has been done to make
it safer .and saner. The unbridled vandalism of the
"good old days" has been replaced by a parade of trickor-treaters in fancy costumes
and for many teen-agers by
W"!ll-orgaoized parties sponsored by churches, schools or
civic organizations . Welcome
as these changes are. all the
hazards have not yet been removed.
National Safety Council files
contain records of dog bites,
burns and other injuries in·
curred when young children
are allowed to roam through
strange neighborhoods with·
o u t adettuate supervision
That make·s Halloween a time
w he n all motorists should
take added precautions when
driving in residential areas.
Preschool children should be
allowed out only if they re main part of a group of older
children or if a parent follows
at a discreet distance . The
area canvassed should be
limited to the child's block so
that no streeis n e e d to be
crossed.
Flimsy costumes that can
easily catch fire should be replaced by costwnes of flame·
proof material or rendered
fireproof by soaking in a solution of seven ounces o( borax
and three ounces of powdered
boric acid in three quarts of
water . A few patches of re·

Q-Jn a rteeot column you
discussed intelligence testing.
Do you believe all children
should be tested?
A-While I believe that intelligence testing can be very
valuable when propf'rly conducted for certam pupils with
a learning problem, I don't
believe that their routine use
on an entire sludent body
means very much . A child
whose emotional climate at
home is happy and whl:se in ·
terest has been stimulated by
trips to zoos, musl'ums and
libraries will alwavs outshine
an unhappy child Who IS lack·
ing in motivation , no matter
how high his innate inteili·
gence.

Hatlo's
&amp;low

C.LEAN-C.UT

T~E

KIDS l.OOK

WHEN THEY'RE i!EINGo SCREENED

TO ENTER COLLEGE···
T~E

SEE

DE"-N WILL.
E.t..C~ BOY

AND

~15

~RENToS · --

to all

homeowners.
State Rep. Walter L. White,
R~Lima, the originaJ sponsor of
the amendment, said the reso.
lution was broadened because
tlle Ohio Tax Study Commis~
slon's June 1967, report recommended the exemption for 11ll
resident property owners.
Issue Attacked
A munber or newspapers in
Ohio have attacked the issue
and Fred J. Milllgan, president
of the Ohio Inlormation Com~
mittee, claim.s it is being pro~
moted wrong.
"This is being promoted as a
plan to Jtant exemption to persons over 65, n sa.vs Milligan.
"But lt does more Lhan that.
It allows the legislature to
grant any exemption it wants

to."
"What this could mean to
Ohio's tax structure, to those
political subdivisions who rely
on property taxes for their rev~
enue, and to Ohio's lndivktlal
taxpayers generally, should be
Cully . analy2ed and discussed,"
he cmcluded.
The proposed amendment
falls to specify how far the leg.
lslature may go in providing
exemptions. It I e a v e s that
broad power to Ule legislature
to determine who would get the
exemptions and how much an
exemption wotlld be granted.
Some observers feel the all~
inclusive language, one 24 word
sentence, was added to t h e
amendment in oontemplation of
the possible adoption of a statemandated, county .J.evied income

tax.
lssueOutlbted
I! so Implemented, it could
be used to permit rea.l estate
tax exemptions only in those
cOWltles which adopt a county.
wide income tax.
An income tax was before the
last session of the leglslature
and is currently the subject of
the Sealy Committee, a bl.par~
ti8Wl group named by House
Speaker Charles F . Kurfess.
The Sealy Committee, under

Time

the chairmanship of Dayton Republican Albert H. Sealy Jr.,
was expected to Issue its report
sometime after the Nov. 5 elec·
tion.
It held a oomber of hearings
an)Ulld the state, using the Income tax measure introduced
in ttre last sessioo. as a point
d. discussion. Under the pro~
posal, a county would levy a 1
per cent income tax on indl·
Yidllals and a 5 per cent tax on
business.

:::.-:~=~=~:~::=~=~=~:::~r=~=~=f~=~=~=r~=~=~~r~~~~~~~~t/~~I=~=~=}~:r;:?;fi~~~~t)~~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~:j:t~=r~{~
8
::::;;::

:;:;:;::
A presidential poll is being coOOucted. by Dateline,
=::;;:;: whose 1'J'eekly column appears in the Sunday Times-Senti:;:;:;=: neJ. Tri--Councy Area residents wlshiJ18 to e:tepress their
:;:;:;:: q~inion are invited to fill out the blank below, aM mail It
:;:;:;;: to Dateline, Sulllay Tlmes-Sentlnel, 825 'l1llrd Ave., Gal •
~;}~: lipolis, Ohio, 45631. All blanks should include the parti·
:;:;:;: cipant's name and address. Names will be kept conlldeo:;:;::: tial. Prior to the Nov. 5 election, results of the pall (fix:;:;:;:: ures only) wiU be announced
:;:;:::
DATELINE'S PRESIDENTIAL POLL

0

:\1 ~~c~h~c: ::!::~:::em
is:

.:;:::::
...

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:::::::
:::;:;:
:::::::

·:·::&gt;

By PHIL PASTORET
Another nice thing about
your newspaper: The tubes
don't go blooey 24 hours after
the 90-day warranty runs out.
0

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ol tho United

~~'/IIIII;

~ Hubert IL Humphrey

---George Wallace
Name - - - - - - - - - Address ~- ----- - - - -

i~~}
f\?&lt;tt)ttr::~:;r~r~rri~~::{:~:~:~=~=~:~:~:::~r:~::r::=rr~{{{:~=::::~:;:\}~:r~&lt;~

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The early bird can have his
worm. We much prefer eggs
and toast- and later in the
morning, please.

BY JACK O'BRIAN
NEW YORK There's an
apartment for sale in N , Y. '•
famed Rlnr Houle - for
$900,0001 .... The !Ire engine
that clanged out or our block on
E. 73rd &amp;. the other 11:12 p.m.
left wtth " blonde in pants a~

On The Farm Front

Has Congress Forgotten
The American Farmer?
WASiliNGTO;o.l (UPI) - Congress no longer cares much
about the American farmer.
And in the long run, this may
spell trouble for consumers.
That warning comes here
from Rep. W. R. Poage, [)..Tex.,
chairman of the House Agriculture Committee.
Before the 90th Congress fi~
nally adiourned this week, it
approved a one ~ year extension - thr ough 1970 - · or the
government's major farm slC)-port programs.
But Poage said In a statemert summing up the work of
the 1967 - 68 Co~ess that the
farm btll was pushed through
only by ccq~llng It with a consumer • oriented food stamp
biD, and only after !ann lead·
ers beat back a determined effort to limit pe,yments to farmers.
Turning Polm
Overall, Poage conteo:led, the
90th Congress was a cruclal
turning point for agriculture
"because b)' its actions it ha11
refiected a serious transition. ..
in the public attitude toward
the
American
Carmer and
hi a problems.''
"It is an attitude reflecting a
general lack of koowledge am
wxlerstanding, and !lOSslbly indllterence, on the part oC urban
America
regarding
(!arm)
problems.
"lronically, it is an attitude
which in the lo~ run may hurt
city residents more than any·
one. Failure to support programs whkh promote agricul·

tural production eventually will
inevitably lead either to scarci·
ties or mooqmllstlc controls of
production. In either case, we
wlll have higher consumer
prices."
Poage said a number of farm
bills were defeated in COngress
this year, not by partisan p~
Iitical opposition, but by opposl·
tion trom w-ban lawmakers.
He said some city congress·
men apparently do not understand farm needs. others, Page
added, are wUUng to vote for
!arm bills, but sre afraid their
city constituent.s wouldn't like
ll
New System
Meanwhile, Rep. Jamie L.
Whitten, O.Miss •• wiBJ'Iled. Thurs.
day that if farmers want city
lawmakers to permit continua·
tioo of rederal slft)ort programs
a new system will have to be
designed without using direct
federal payments to growers,
Under
present programs,
farmers cooperating in federal
surplus control and price 8\.P-'
port programs get part of their
return from dlrect government
payments which must be v&lt;Ud
annually by Corwesa, Whitten
noted In a speech to an extension agenta
convention at
Louisville, K,y,
"The urban Congress, with
onlY 47 out of t35 House mem·
bers having as much as 20 _per
cent of their constituents engaged in agriculture, will not
continue to make the appropriations," Whitten waroed.

board (it sure beats rocka on
the head, too many firemen's
reward for seiOeu courage) ...
Great lyricist Howard Dietz was
crippled cruelly by Parklnson'11
Disease for the laat few years
- W1tll the medical geniuses at
Columbia-Presbyterian IloBpltal
here gave him a mlraculoos re~
covery - courteay the latest
medication in the long battle •·
galnst lhe debllltatlng dlaeaae
.... Al 72, lbe brllllng songwriter (Dancing in the Dark, etc.
ole,) again ls pla,ylng 110111
Howard alao just had a grandaon (In BlarrUz) via dau!!hter
Uza and Chrlatopher !II&amp;Wj Tanis Guinness or the h'ilh stout •
mrutons Is the grandmother ...
Howard's present wife gifted
stage dealt!ner Lucinda Ballard,
alao jolna the grandparent aet
courtesy of 1100 Walter Ramberg
... The Denniston ~atersdt.vorce
selllement (blgl) haa been agreed
and lovely Anne wiD Jet oil U.
Mexico lorthwlth .•.. Home buDd-

they started 52 years

I&lt;Jpped Minnesota

only NFL
witt/ p~~!ect
records at 6.o
Meanwhile • the three--time
defendl"lf cham,ion Green Bay
Packers kepi alive by rallying
lor a 14-14 Ue with the Detroit
Lions. The tie kept the Packers
(,2...3..1) just one game behind the
Lions (:J.2.1) in the Central
Division race an:1 meana the
dub still has a chance to
repeat. A loss would have all
but domled them.
But Baltimore's loss was a
staggering blow lo the Colts
since it leaves them a game
behind the Rams and It'll be a
tougher job for them to catch

team;

•

. .. . ... . . -

.. . ' • •

!

TEAM
W L
Ohio Wesleyan ..• • ... •......••. .. 3 o
BaldwhrWallace • •. .•• , .•. , .••.. , • 2 0
Clq)ital ••••• •••• ••.•.••• •..• • .. 3 1

5 0
4 0
4 I

4 l

I

2

4

0

0

6

0

0 5

1

Ovwall

0

WL T
•

0 0

5 0 0
3 I

0

3

2

0

3

I

0

o

Wittenberg . , , , , , , , , , , , . , , , , , . , , 2 I
Mt.Unlon,, ••. • • , , , , , , •••.• ,, ••. 2 1

0
0

3 2 0

Denison ........................ 1 1 o

3 2 0

Oburlln . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . l
Musld~ . , ••••••.•• , , , , • , •.•.. 2
Wooster ••• ••..••• ••.• • • ••• .. •• •1
Kenyon .•.• .•••....•••.. ..•.. • .. 1
Otterbein . . , .••.••••. • .••••..• • . o
Heidelberg . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0
Hlram . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

o

I)

T
0
0

I
2

2 I

1

I
0

2 2 1

2 0

2 3 0

2 1
2 o

3

3

4

0

o

2

0

I 4 I
1 4 0
0

4

0

MID -omo
TEAM
Detlance •
Findlay . .

Wllmlngton
Blutrton.,

League
WLT
• .• , , , ••. , , •• , •••• 2 0 0
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. .. I 1 0
. • • • . . . •. . .. ••. . , ,, •. I I 0
••.•.••••.••••..•••••. o 2 o
INDEPENDENTS

Overall

W L T
3 2 0
2 3

1 3 I
I 5 0

TEAM
W L
Ashland . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 0
Ohio State .•• , ••• , • , •. , • •••.•• ; •••• •.•• , •• 4
o
Cincinnati . •••••.• •• • , ...•••••..••. , •.• , •• 3
1

Akron ........ . . .. . , . , ...•. , , ...•...... , . 4

2

Xavier , •••• , •.• , , • , ••. , • , ••••• , ••. , ••.•.• 3
Dayton .. . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3

2
2

~to

Central

0

.............................. I

3
4
4

y OlJIW.StowD State . . .
1
Ohio N!)rthern • ••• , ••• , • • , • , • . • , , , ••.••...• 1
••••••••••••••••••••••••

;.:_, f~ '~ '::o ~,-..r-:::; r.;.~
!.;;f;- lr..:., lul!.:::j ; ; -: r.:., •

giant 2'Y handcrafted

cOLOR
lV

T
0
0

MEXICO CITY (UPJ)- Greater than rour years ago: That
was the 1968 United States
Olympic track team, even 11
Jlm Ryun dld lose.
Everything worked against
this U.S. team- Mexico Clt;y'a
altitude, a slnunering ratial
aituatloo that broke out when
two sprint stars were suspended
and caused some folkl'l to say
the U.S. team had ..dissension "
and
harried Coach
P~
Jordan was ,iolt.ed midway In
the games by the death of his
father .
But the record is plain:
This U.S. lrack team captured
15 p&gt;ld medaJB-12 by men and
three by women. In 1964, at
Tokyo, the Yanks won 14 gold

,o;News
· (jood

$tudents
full Zenith
quality just

\
.{
•.\

NU.I~~e. ~

"Yes, it's called a 'mace,' but it lras nothi•r to do with
ciYi/ disorders in tire a/4 dtlfsl"

1

499.95

NEW ZENITH 2-YEAR COlOR

PICTURE TUBE WARRANTY
Zo•nith R~d,o Cmpo1r•1iun w.uranls lhe color pklure lube In lhe

z,.mth Cul11r TV receive•~ shown here lo br free from delecls in
nu1~11al ~1 i1i ng J,,,., nurmo~l uw11e lor two yean from dille ol
m•II•R.lll cnnsumr·r pun·b.,e. Warro~nly coYerl 1epaor nl color p1c:ture
luhe, 1or replartml'nl with rebuilt cnlor p1r11ue lube, thmuMh an,
.;m thuflll!'d Zt•norh dNil'r ~nywhl'r.! nwtter may live ur muve · trM'ISpurUiinn. ~Dm ~nd \l'l;."ll'l' •·h.nl(l'~ ~·e lhe ohl1~11un uf lhe ·,1wner.
Zt·nilh •cpliCNrw•nt tube is ~lso warranu:-d tur lhl' full unl'~pirll!'d
h'rm 11f I he nril(lnll lwn-y..ar w1nan1y.

I'

INGELS FURNITURE
OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT.

992-2635

Grid Scores

Purcell~l2

Warren Western Reserve 40
Niles McKinley 8
Cleveland St. Jorreph 56 Pawa 7
Fl&gt;whatan l'l&gt;lnl 6 Wo•wood (W,
Va.) o
Norwalk St. Paul 14 Mapletoo
13
Newark Catholic 76 New Alban..v
6

Brllllanl 35 St. Clairsville 12

2-Hour
DRY QfANING

beHor·than-mro1• hlp

IChDol or collop llldant, JD11
lillY quollfy far blc ll'llnp 1111

HANDCRAFTED

(

Ryun lost. The line yowg
Wichita, Kan., runner whose
picture has been on the cover ol
virtually every sports magazine
took a 30-meter beating from

H Ill)' opllllor Dl YDti'C• II

AS LOW AS

for unrivaled dependability

ended &amp;mday.

Games

~od

The DALfN • Z4513W
Sur&gt;erb Danish Modl!rn ~lyled mmp.ul &lt;o nsole
in .:l!nuine oil fin ishl!d Walnut ..eneers and
\l"lf'c l hardwood solids with Sr::india st)'led base.
VHF and UHF Illuminated Dial~

modals, 12 by men and two by
women, and the forecasts were
that tbe Americans could not
approach those ngures this
time. Not only did !hey beat the
figures, but they left records in
wreckage as track competition

This Week's

BERRY'S WORlD.

.,

~·--••' • r'"'''

OHIO HIGH SCIIOOL
FOOTBALL RESULTS
By United Press International
Solurd».,v
Cincinnati St. Xavier 62
Newport (K,y .) Catholic 8
Cincinnati Country Day 20
Lexington (Ky.) Sayre 7
Cleveland JFK Ill Cleveland Glen~
ville 8
Cleveland John Adams 19
Cleveland East lligh 0
Cleveland John Marshall 3U
CleYeland Rhodes 8
~aker
Heights 43 Parma Nor01110 COLU&lt;:GE
mandy 6
FOOTBALL SCHEDULE
Newbury 40 Richmond Heights
B)' L1nlted Press International
14
So1urda,y
Rerkshtre
13 Cleveland Luther~
Ohio state at Dlinois
an
East
12
Tulaa at Chlclmati
Kent State 8 Field 0
Dayton at Ohio U,
Gilmour Academy 44
Xavier at VIllanova
Cleveland Lutheran West 0
Bowitng Green a.t Miami
Hawken
School 44
Toledo at Kent State
Cleveland
St. &amp;anislaus 0
Western Michigan at Marshall
Detroit
Cranbrook
26 Universit)'
Muaklngum at Capital
School
16
Oberlin at Denison
Edlrron 32 llilladale 0
Aahland at Heidelberg
Canlleld
A Youngslown Howland
Wooster at Kenyon
6 (tie)
Otterbein al Marlette
Ledgemonl 38 Mathews 8
Wabash at Ohio Wesleyan
Akroo Kenmore 26 Akron East
Defiance al Blulfton
14
Wilmington at Case Tech
Akron Buchtel 28 Akron Fire~
Ferrla (Mlch.) at Findlay
stooe 16
Adelbert at John Carroll
McDonald 40 Lowellville o
West Virginia State at Central
United Local 13 Crestview 0
!late
Jackson-Milton 26 ~lngtteld LoNorthwood at Oldo Northern
cal 0
South Dakota ~to at Youngatown
Columbus Watterson 42 Colum~
!late.
bua Readr 0
Wlttenberg at Baldwtn~Wallace
Columbus DeSales 30 Columbus
()'I)
Wehrle 8
Hiram at Mt. Union (N)
Danville 34 Lucas 0
Clintoo. Massie 33 Kings l2
Cincinnati Roger Bacon 0
Cincinnati Elder 0
Cln~ller 23 Cincinnati

""'·

IMI.,

." "

..

~

......

~,,.a

-

........, ..,,., .. .... ,...,"" "''"''-·'• .. ,,. . • - -- ·
~,

for
a ID with I pass
lntercepdoo Cor the t1na1 score.
Sore-e.nned Bart Starr, in for
only' one play, tossed a thre&amp;yt.rd TD pa., with 7:25 left In
the game to gi 'le Green Bay the
tie with Oelroll
Roosevelt Taylor dished 96
yards with an inter~oo
return and Mac Percival kicked
five tleld goals ·as Chicago
turned back twpless Phlladelphla (~.
Charlie Durkee kicked three
field goals to lead New Orleans
past Pittsburgh, which is ()...6,
am the only other winless team
besides PhUa.delphiL
John Brodie Dipped two TD
passes as San Francisco turned
past New York, which was
hampered by the tact that Fran
Tarkenton had a sore shoulder
am wasn't passing with his
usual sharpness.

Jim Ryun Defeated

0
I
0

Marlelta ....................... 3 1

-

~

~

the Rams than It wlll be for the 41·14, and New Orleans edged
Packers to catch tlle Uons. The winless Pittsburgh, 16-12.
Bill
Nelson threw three
Rams beal the Colts and tied
them In Lheir two games last touchdown passes to pace the
Browns to the triumph, hittii'JK
year.
A gamble by Colt COOch Don Eppy Barney, Paul Warfield
Sula also backftred as he aOO LerO)' Kelley. Kelley, who
inserted the ailing Unftas tor gained 102 yards In 30 carries,
Earl Morrall- who had pUoted scored the other m on a fourthe COlts to DYe straight wins- yard sweep.
The Rams rallied in the
after the Browns took a 14~7
secoOO period on a pair of
halftime lead.
Unltas had three passes touchdowns passes by Roman
intercepted lhat led to Brown Gabriel to turn back stubborn
touchdowns in the secoo::l halt Atlanta, which looks like a
The victory was Cleveland's different team wkler Coach
tllird against the same number Nonn
Van
BrockliiL
The
of losses and kept them tied Falcons led 14-0 going into the
with Sl. Louis and New Orleans second period,
tor the Century Division lead.
Dallas, which meets Green
In the other four games Bay next MoOO.ay night in a
SuOOay, Chicago battered whr nationally
televised classic,
less Phlladelphia, 29--16, San rallied from a 7~ halftime
Francisco topped New York, 26- deficit
to beat Mirmesota.
10, St. Louis routed Washington, Cornell Green dashed 55 yards

W L T

Iague

'-:,_k:.· . . ~·· : :::l ;; :
~ 1.. ,..:., . ::.;
Nathan Handwerker new in the
r..:., Cf.:-•
-= ;;;;11111 .:. •
face of what seemed an e v e n 11:...:.··• .:::1 ~·· •• l •: r..:., ..:;.~' ::.1'..:..,
~ =~ ""~'-~'= : ' ~.. llur.J~n ~•
stronger Cooey laland reputation
'!:.l:-: n :.=~ ••'.:.,
·• -:::,' . Jr.:., .. ___,
1 ~ :::; '..:.'
~~ - IJ I:;::;;:~
~ ur.:., .;;.'
- Feltman' a lkrtdogs - and un1:::11 : 11;;1 ~, 0!111
dersold the Iauer's dime dogs
-.r..:., ~~~ ~~ 1 ;;: 1 r.:.~ ~ • ., ·~ ;;: :~~
:·: ~.,.J ' :::::::r ;;: -1-=' ur.:.--.u ;::;
': H• :II
by a nickel .... Nathan alao waa
[lilt•::=&lt;
'•;
r.:.~IIJ !:::I :: • .u
scheOOI.ed tomarrythesameyear
-, i ~ : ·~'-.::.:
•r.;.,i--in
--~ ~ =
but chary of marriage com_pli~
cated by new-business problems,
THE DAILY SENTINEL
he poatponed the wedding two
lliEVOTED 1'0 IHTU!Hf OF
year.s: and that's why the Nathan
MFMJ!I.Mo\Stl" Al£4
KICMAIIDS. C*'tN, PtJII.JKHI,a
and Ida Handwerker ue celEt&gt;rat1::-TMMhiii,IEclw
l'ltblloheol ..._,. . . . . ~ " n.
lng thelrGoloon Wedding this Oct.
'"'"' Vall~ ,...,...._ ~. ue ....,._
27 instead of two years ago.
_,.,, l'omti'QI, C.lo. 45761. lu.._o ..._
"l-lllt, WIDrW ,._ MN&amp;IT.
This isn't meant nasd1y: Is ......Sown~~
dau ,....... ,.... • ,_...,
Feltman' s stlU in the hotdog
~ ....,......._ r.,.--1• ...
dodge? .... Thla probably had tiMIII·G•li•&amp;INir, -._ l:llul 4ht a..,...
nothing to do with Joe Namath' a Ylri. t:it,r, ,_.. Yort..
~r~ niP! Dloll ..... ., ........
sad showing laat &amp;mday bla the . . . . a..u.lllt II ,.... . . . . . . - , _
Ill . , . . . &amp;I .... ~~~ ....... Ollol. tll.&amp;
Jete' awinger dld take the COpa- · !io
__...., lt.IQ, 11IIW- _..., lUG. a.cabana chorua m a personal tour . . . , ..,... ........., C81'1• -nee • • •
. 0.. _ . , ll.M. IJ- ...Lb Ollt , _
of his famous pad ... And they're .
••o,.o. ,loU lftOIIUI• ~b. nor.-.. tuL
w..c.-"'*'
IN'ict ........ ,...... ~
sUll goggiy-&lt;&gt;Yed.

Ing rumor: wllb morlgagea tough
at the banks, builders are turnIng (aounds wild) to Frank Sinatra ... Catherine Deneuve wa.s
paid $5,000 lor "Umbrellas ol
Cherbourg," now pta $250,000
per ntck.
Statua thimble Hubert de Gtvenchy ls deligning ladlea ll.lds
flat oo hls •acrolllac: painfUl
rheumatism .•.. Patrick Terra.ll,
whose father nms a ~ Par·
ts tourist attrac:tloo called Tour
d'Argent, wiD manage Trude Heller's Palm Beach discotek this
year .... We're _probably the last
to dlacover a caviar IOUffle at
"21" but it wasdeleetablelateor
early to our late-blooming taste~
buds .. .. And wallet.
Lara Schmidt (Ingrid Bergman's mate) paid only $2,800 lor
Paris rlghta to the Japanen musical verslon of "'Gone With the
Wind" (a blg hlt In Tokyo); he'o
already ollered Olivia de Haviland her original acreen role ...
Anthony Qu1m wUJ racord a Cl)&gt;lt.ol album cl Italian Jove 1011111
next month whlle here ror t h e
"9loe&amp; of the Ftlhermann pre-miere .•.• Let's gush " ham
72nd blrt!&gt;d».,v to Lillian Glsh.
Nalhln' B Coney laland Red
Hots ar~ .an ·Amerlea.n lepndi

-- ~

Owrall

League

TEAM
WLT
Ohio Unlveralll!, . , , , , , . , , , , , . , , , , .4 o o
Bowling Green .• .• •••. • ....•...••• 2 o 1
Miami . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . , .... 3 I 0
Toledo . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . , 2 1 1
Western Michigan .•••• . . , , , •• , , . , • 1 3 0
Kent state •.•.. , ... . ....... . ... . 0 4 0
Marshall . ............ .... . . .... o 4 o
OHIO CONFERENCE

Then I conside•ed all thot
my hands had dcne and the
toil I h-ad spent ,in doing it, ·'
and behold, all was vanity an4 --d
a striving after wind, and
the-re was nothing to be
gained under the sun.-Eccl.
2:11.

! : 1 ; ~:_ -

·• • • ••. ' r

By United Press International
MID-AMERICAN CONFERENCE

THOUGHTS

,.;.~ · ·J~·l

•

lhe

·-'
ago when

,.

2~7

.t.swer to Pruiou1 Puule
t-:-~~·lf!l'
'-lr.·,DI:r ::':i ~ 1::• 1 a

One way to evaluate a sin·
cere churchgoer is to see how
he behaves as he leaves the
parking tot after the 45-minute service.

..

Ohio Grid Standings

I

Voice along Broadway

'

By VITO STELLINO
UP1 ~rts Writer
II was only SlCJposed to be a
warmup but the Baltimore Colts
am Johllll)· Unitas wound l-1'
geUing burned.
The Colts, who'd only lost one
aame In 19 starts over the past
two season. were s~oosed to be
tunlrw up f o r next week's
showdOPin with the uliJeaten
Los AJWeles Rams but the:\:
wound 141 · sufiering a 30-20
setback Sunday at the haOOs ot
the deYeland Browns.
The loss lett the Rams, who
beat Atlanta, 27·14, and will
Invade Baltimore this Sunda.y,
and the Dallas Cowboys, who

lair," and "dolng lhe honelt
Jking.'' rm appalled at their
tldnldng. How can ~~ be so
biased? SUFFER, LITTLE
CHll.DREN.
Dear S.L.C.:
For some pecv~~. bias 11 aeeond nature. But scores of modfrom next~-"
erns belleve u you do- and eo
The next morning ahe called a lew unwanted brown childron
and said, ·'Don~ forget o u r wUl know the joy of real homes.
date," and then it hit: !lle was~
rm I50lTY more couplea n't klddin'l
and agencies - 0011'1 share your
I ozplalned the besl I could point cl view, II adoptions wera
that I wa111'1 ready tor mar· allowed, regardless of color rlage. but now she Is puWng and news stories helped by showoul that I am a no.p&gt;d lour- lng the plua aide - we wouldfiulher and not to be trusted. n•t find so uwcy- sad--eyed young.
A gentleman doesn't make dam~ stere in dormitories, waiting ror
aging remark• about a lady, but the next temporary foster home.
how do I stop her making such _ H.
remarks aboUt me? 51\e Is get~ Dear Helen:
tlng to a woman I am Interest~
rm a 29..year~Jd woman and
eel in, In fact I sense a eold- I have never had an affair, l
ness 1n all my former rrlends. have dated a tew men, Wt they
How do I make them aware of disappear somehow. I u1ed to
the lruth without making thla think It was the greatest thing,
lemale appear a lool? - WOM- keoplng yoursell lor lllAI'rlaP
ANLESS, SO-CALLED .. WOLF" but when does 'virtue glve
Dear Womanleaa:
to prudery? rm olc:k cl being
Pla,y the gentleman, slick by pure and lonely!
your .story that "R was all an un·
Last month I went to a doc~
fortunate
miatmderstandin&amp;" tor gave a fictltioul married
and you'll be surpriled how 8000 ~e and gut a prescription for
pecll&gt;le catch on. Gala wbo cry The Pill. But how do 1 lind a
uwo~r• 10011 lose their listen· man? It's gotten around at the
era. They're usually put down office that rm _ UNTOUCH~
as aore losers. - H.
ABLE.
Dear Helen:
Dear Un:
I read recently that there is True, a 29.year-old virgin
an oversupply of adopUve ba~ doesn't exactly brag aboot tt,
bles tor the first time in dec- but aren't you being a UttJeover~
&amp;del, tlda because glrls don't anxious? 1f you throw yoursetr
leel !hoY HAVE to get lllAI'rled at any old man, juat to prove
these da,ya, and alao because you aren't a prude you'D pt
children of mixed parenthood hap- taken but J'DU'll 'only prove
pen along oftener, and aren't you're" a p_~ah~er. Work on a
really wanted by any race, So new, warm, friendly perl0081·
the medium-brown c:hUdren, the ity and perhaps you'll attract
mea with lllghUy almond eyes the RIGHT guy. Atter which ...
or hair a bit too ldnky - are weU It'll your decision - H.
lett behind, to rattle around in
This column la dedic.ated to
Colter bomeH and never know family llving, 110 if you're l)e.v~
w::t it'a like to have real par~ ing kid trouble or just pl'tin
e 11 •
trouble, let Helen help YOU.
We have two chlldren of our She will also welcome your own
own, and I can't have any more. amusing experiences. Addreas
We wa:nt to adopt a child who Helen Bottel in care of t h 1 11
isn't pure caucasian, not only
because we feel these ehildroo newspaper·
should 11ave the 1011• they deserve, but because we want our
children and hopefully t h e I r
friend• to aee all races aa equal.
Some of our anoctatea are
IIJI)llled at thta. They say rumors will 1tart about me or my
huaband having a "110rdld al-

..

Browns Upset Colts, 30-20

Helen Bottel

w,.;

...

, ....

,.

0'

¥ •• •- •~•"' '

.....

All-Star•@

SHE WAENT KIDDING
Dear Helen:
We were ldddlng around at a
party and Marlene got lhe talk
ttarted about leap year. After
about lour pmleta, ahe propoaeel. and [, thinking It wa1 part
of the game, u.ld ••&amp;Ire, a week

,.1' .

. . . .... - .

0 '

••

3- The Daily Sentinel, l'mtel"O)'·Middleport, 0., Monda)', October 21, 196S

. .:

State Issue 2 Less Popular
tax exemptions

USe ••By

· .." '.

Ohio Politics

exemptions to all resident prop- to grant

Helen Help

. ··-.,._,., ' · ·- .

··'
··~---'

Have We Seen Last 1V Debate?
· There is an interesting similarity between
that controversial fourth game of the World
Series and the presidential election campaign.
The game, it will be recalled, was played
despite intermittent heavy rain. Ordinarily,
it would have been postponed, but it wasn't,
some sports wrilers charged, because o( the
overriding interests of the television industry
-specifically, sponsors' money and viewer
ratings .
Just 35 the St. Louis Cardinals, who were
leading, accused the Detroit Tigers of stalling
in hopes the game would be called before
the end of 6ve innings, which would make
it an official game, and the Tigers , who were
losing. accused the Cards of excessive haste
in trying to reach that crucial point, so the
politicians have traded blasts over a question
that also involves television.
Hubert Humphrey, the underdog, early be~
gan appealing for a series of televised de·
bates with Richard Nixon, accusing the latter
of ducking the issues. Republicans countered
that Humphrey was seizing on the debates
as a means of getting nationwide exposure
to inject some hope into a desperate campaign. Third-party candidate George Wallace
accused both o( the others of being afraid to
lace him .
Controversy over the fourth game or the
series is purely academic now , since Detroit
made a sensational recovery from that defeat to win the world championship. Academ. ic, too, is the whole matter of a three~way
candidates' debate since the Senate refused
to second the House-passed bill authorizing
them .
Would Nixon's five o'clock shadow have

,.-.

,.

•

___ ,.... _

your Automobile lnsuronco.
Stata Auto Mutual offor1 1
IOOD STUDENT DISCOUNT
llftllna up to 25".

SERVICE
!UPON REQUEST!
Our U...ol Good Clunlot

Robinson's deaurs

Datfs.WRur r..

Pemtroy

his arch~rival, Kipchoge Keino
Kenya, in the 1,500~meter
run.
Question &amp;rategy
But to beat this young man
who still is making a comeback
from a siege of mononeudeosis
Kelno had to rWl the second
fastest 1,500 meters in history~
3:34.9, And evetl so, there are
those who think RyWl might
have won with different strate~
gy- he laid back far In the
pack, relying on his la.te "kick."
Keino built up such a huge
lead that R)'Wl' s great ld ck lett
him a long way short.
But Ryun was far from
disgraced, and he said simply,
HPm happy to have won the
silver medal."
If this was a jolt to the U.S.
team,
it
certainly
wasn't
e v i d e n t. Immediately after
Ryun's
defeat,
the
Yanks
poUshed off the track and field
competition with four victories:
-world records in the men's
and women'~ 400-meter relays,
and the men's 1,600-meter
relay, and Dick Fosbury's
Olympic record in the high
jump.
~

U.S. swimmers were in a
record mood, too, aa they won
the men's and women's 200 ~
meter indJviWal medley, the
women's 4QO.meter freestyle,
and the men's springboard
diving. All three races were in
record Olympic time.
At the end or SUnday's
competition, the United States
led Huasia 24-11 in gold medals
and S5-35 In total medals.

.......,

-·--.
~=='
.....

Ohio's four.o01an team In the
National TaNe Tennis Team
Championships next month In Detroit for the first time in 10
years will be odds--on favorite
to return the title to the Buck·
eye State.

College Scores
SATURDAY'S OHIO COLLEGE
FOOTBALL RESULTS
By United Pross International
Ohio State 45 Northwe!ltern 21
Soulllern Wlnots 18 Dayton 17
Xavier 24 Northern Dlinoia 20
Bowling Green 30 Kent !late 7
Ohio u. 24 Miami 7
Toledo 30 Western Mlchlgan 6
Louisville 13 Manhall 10
ClnclnnaU 40 Wichita 27
Capital 15 Marl- 12
Wooster 28 Deni100 o
Wlltenberg 41 Hetdelberg 12
Kenyon 31 !Hram 28
Weatmlnster (Pa.) 20 ML Union

6
Ohio Wesleyan 19 Mus~m 3
Oberlin 43 Lake Forest (DI.) 22
Akron 31 Eastern Ken1ucky 20
Cenlral Mlchipn27 Central !late

0
Morehead 35 YOUI'lgstownState26
Manchester 3 Defiance 0
Aabland 45 John Carroll 0
Slippery Rock 25 Wilmington 12
Baldwln~Wallace 49 otterbein o
Oblo Northern 15 Flndla,y 8
Blulfton 20 Anderson 12

it's IN to eat out
I

SANDWICH

•SOFT DRINK
oDlNMER
_,ICE CREAM

Fine Food, Fast Service
.• .for On-the-Go People

BE IN THE KNOW GO TO

McCLURES

NIGHTS

~IDDLEPDRT

-=·

- ~-=---= -·

By CHARLES RICHARDS

j~

Joe

~~
'-....
''--

,
' '

l _ _ _ _ •._... ' ' ...

·I
' ' "' '

,rr ·'•' r
1
/

etgt,t
In a row but still
monapd to atea1 lhe pasalnt!
show ~ in the As:tr odome
encounter betWeen the New
York Jets and the Housloll
ml ...a

,,,
,.. I'

- " 1..;

UPI ~rts Writer
Nomath threw

II 1 '

o:.::-~

...

••

"l'ou'l'-f' waollinll your time
-dllal's "Yntheti•· 1ra1111 !"

Bucks, 'Cats
Smell Roses,
Tangerines
By United Press lntenaUonal
Thoughts of tangerines danced
through lhe heads o( Ohio Unlveralt;y Bobcats today, and Ohio
State University football fans
thought they smelled roses.
The Bobcats tc:dt the MidAmerican Conference lead with
a 24.7 win over previously-undefeated Miami of Ohio Saturday and with the win the driver's seat for a. trip to the Tangerine Bowl to play lhe Southern Conference cham,piona.
Ohio state's 45-21 win over
Big Ten opponent Northwestern
put the Buckeyes in a three-way
tie with Michigan and :Mhmes~
ta for the Big Ten lead, each
with a 2-0 loop mark. The Big
Ten champ gets the invitation
to the Rose Bowl.
This week, the 4-0 Buckeyes
meet illinois (~2 in league play
and 0-5 overall) at Champaign,
m:l the Bobcats play Dayton
(3-2-(l) in a ~onference tilt.
Other Games
Other action upcoming includes Ashland's Eagles seeking
their 19th straight against Heidelberg (1-4). The Eagles nwle
it 18 In a row with a 45-0 romp
over John carroll Sat~.
Heidelberg lost to Wittenberg
41·12 in Ohio Conference pla.y
last Saturda,y. Ohio Wesleyan
continued its lead in the OC
with a 19-3 win over Muski~
um. Baldwin - Wallace thlllllj)ed
Otterbein 49-0 and alayed In
second spot in tlle OC with a 2-0
record. Overa.ll, OWllls 4..0 and
BW .)..0 .
Ohio Wesleyan hosts Wabash
aOO Wittenberg (2-1 in loop play
and J.-1 overall) visits BaldwinWallace saturday.
Copltal bumped Marietta 15-12
Saturday and with the loss went
Marietta's undefeated seaaon
hq;~es.

OUera.
He llnally started oomectlng,
and when he did he marched
the Jets 80 yards in the waning
moments o( the game for a
touchdown that produced a 20-14
victory. The win kept New York
ooe game ahead ol Boston in
1he Eastern Division of the
American League,
A &lt;J~arterback nol&gt;oc!y aeemed
to want- former Baylor Univer.
IIIey atar Don TruU- al100at was
the man ol the hour. Cast of! by
the Oilers but re-hlred three
weeks ago as a free agent, Trull
waa summoned by Coach Wally
Lemm early In the fourth
quarter arter starter Bob Davis
was injured.
-

Sahara Title
Captured By
Rodriguez
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UPI)- Chi
Chi Rodriguet, the talkative
little Puerto Rican, borrow~
Arnold Palmer's caddy for the
Sahara lntltational Golf Tour.
nament and pro golf's No. 1 all~
time-money ..winner might have
trouble getting him back.
''f'or four hours t.oda.,}· I was
Chi Chi Palmer,•• he said with a
blg grin &amp;mday alter winning
the $122,222.22 tournament at
tlle sun-loaked Paradise Valley
Coonlry Chili.
Rodriguet, with Bob Blair of
Carlsbad, CalU ., carrylng his
bag, made a Paltner.J.ike charge
to come from six lt.rokes oft the
pace to de third round leader
Dale Douglass in regulatloo
play. He then won on the first
sudden-death hole.
uft•s been a long dry spell,''
he commented. "But rm back
to stay, folks."
Winning the fifth tournament
of his nine-year PGA career,
Rodriguez shot a seven-under ~
par 64 in the tlnal round while
Douglass was carding a 70.
They tied at 27 4, ten of"de,_
over the 7,109·yard iaywt.
The colorlUI Puerto RicM,
who llkea to talk to the gallery,
earned $20,000 first prize money
with a par on the 417 .yard firat
hole while his opponent missed
I two-loot p~U.

The Oilers we,., trailing, 13-0,
but Trull promptly Olllfneerad a
pair cl acorln&amp; drlvoa - capped
by TD passes ~ nino yards tD
Alvin Reed and 19 yards to Jim
Beirne. When the Jeta llnally
got the ball ..,.tn, there waa
less: than four mirartes left, but
Namath lound the mark lour
stralgllt limes lor :;6 yards ond,
with 4~ seconds loll, dispatched
Matt Snell for the w:IMlng
touchdown from one yard out.
Kansas City, its top receivers
on the tnJury list, abandmed Ita
uaually touted paaalni attack
and sloyed on the ground In Ita
game againlt Oakland's Raid·
ers. The result waa a 24~10
victory that kept the Chiefs one~
hall game ahead ol San Dleso.
which trounced Denver, 55-24.
Boston scored 17 points 1n the
thl.rd quarter to defeat Buftaio,
23-6, and Bob Griese led Mlaml
to a 24..22 decision over
Clndnnatl in other AFL games
!lmday.

Olympi~

StandiJI88

MEXICO CITY (LTPO - Medal
standlnga in the Olympic Garnes
alter Sunday's competition:
NATION
G S B T
u. s. - . - - ... 24 15 16 55
Russia • . . . . . 1l 13 11 35
Hungary . . . • • 3 6 a 17
West Germany _ , 2 6 4 12
East Germany . . - 4 4 3 11
Australia . . • • • . 3 5 3 11
Poland , , , . . . • , 3 0 7 10
France . . . . . . . . 51 1 9
Kenya . . • • ... .. 3 4 I 8
J_. ......... 4 2 I 7
Ital,y . . . . . . . . . . l 2 4 7
Romanla . . . . . . . . 3 2 0 5
Great Britain •. , .. 2 1 1 5
Holland . . . . . . . . , 2 2 I 5
Iran •......•••• 2 12 s
Bulgaria . . . . . . . . O 3 I 4
Denmark .•...•.. 0 2 2 4
Mo~ia . . . . . . . .
1 3 4
Czechoslovakia . . . . 2 0 2 4
Sweden . . . . . . . . . . 1 1 1 3
New Zealand ..... ,. 1 0 2 3
Turkey . . . . . . . . . . 2 0 o 2
Ethiopia . ......... 1 1 0 2
Tunisia , • , ...•• , t o 1 2
Finland .......... ! I 0 2
Cuba ............ o 2 o 2
Mexico .•. , .•...• 0 2 0 2
Switzerland ....... 0 0 2 2
Belgiwn .......... 0 1 0 i
Brazil ........... 0 l o 1
Jamaica .•.•.....• 0 1 0 1
Taiwan ••••. . ...•• 0 0 1 1
ArgenUna ..•...•.. 0 0 1 1

o

.

Ohio Team is Favored lorRodrJ!'";.~ed~;~e~w:~

....._,neM

.114 C.Urt St.

~ - ~.....·

Jets Rally, Top
Houston, 20-14

FOURTH &amp; LOGGsf

DAIRY ISLE
fr.

MIDDLEPORT

Trials Saturday a.nd Sunday in
which 41 oflhestate'stop_players
competed at the Columbus Table
Temis Club, resulted in a team
headed by Dal Joon Lee, 27,
Cleveland, U. S. Singles chaiiJ..
pion, No. l, and John Tannehill,
16, or Middleport, in the No
position. Tarmehill iA.. the top
ranked In the U. S. ""' Canada
among players- under 18 years
old, and Ohiomen's singles champion.
The third and fourth positions
on the team went to Don Lyons,
Dayton, 33, former state champion, and Richard Ferrell, Ut, Colwnbu..
Ohio won the natioml event in
1958 when the world-ranked Emery Lippai and Danny Vegh, who
had escaped the Hungarian rev~
lution, headed the Ohio team.
Vegh sWl resides in Cleveland
but is oo l~r an actlveplayer.
In the weekenl trials Dal Joon
Lee was undefeated with an 11..0
recordi Tannehill was 10--1, losIng only to Lee, and l.yons and
Ferrell each were 8-3.
NBA STANDINGS
By United Press International
Easl
"' W. L. Pet. GB
Cincinnati .. "" 0 1.000
Boston •• •.. 2 0 1.000
Philadelphia .. 2 0 1,000
Balllmore ..• , I I , 500
I
2
Milwaukee .•• 0 2 ••0
New York .•. 0 2 .trio 2
21,1,
Oelrolt • • • • 0 3 •000
West
W. L. P el GB
San Diego •• , 2 0 1.000
Phoenix •.• . I 0 1.000
'h
Chicago . . . , 2 l . 667
'h
Son Fran. , •• I l ,500 I
Allanta ••.•• I I . 500 I
Los Arweles .. I 1 ,500
1
Seattle ...... 0 3 , DOO
21,~
Sltw-da.y's Results
Philadelphlo 124 Balllmore 121
ClnclMlll 127 Oelrollll5
Los Arwelea 118 New York 96
Boston JOB Chicago 96
Atlanta 125 Milwaukee 107
Son Franclaco 107 Seallle 95

Sahara otnciaJs that he would
not be able to make t h e
tournament.
Douglaas, who led defending
champion Jack Nicklaus a.nd
BUiy Casper by a ahot alter lhe
third round Saturday. had to
.settle for the second place purse
ol $12,000,
Casper and Nicklaus both
faltered on the last day with
Casper finishing in a tie with
Open
champion
Lee
U.S.
Trevino, George Archer the
first year player Ron Cerrudo
for third place. Nicklaus, who
was bidding for his third
straight sahara championship,
Wound up al 279.

'
••

.

•
•'
' •

,-- -,

·~ • .J

Any bilor who can
keep JGU in stitches

lsinthef¥1

!he service is friendly
lhe best you've ever known_
When money is the q_uestion
lfien the answers
BOB MILLER

Manapr
&amp; SAYINGS

Co.

fiN'.tN'CIN'Ci OHIO 'fO,U SI,Cf

125 E. IIAIN ST.

Plllllt 192-2171

I~U

POIIEROY, 0.

�... . ·-·-···

2-

The DollY Sentinel, Pomeroy-Middloport. 0., Monday, October 21, 1968

Escape Artist?

L::!:[J

.:.

.,

"'

..: .

..~

.. -· -: . ·--

comP. back from 1960 to haunt him? Would
Humphrey have shown himself to be some~
thing more than the talkative incompetent
his opponents say he is? Would Wallace have
been exposed as a shallow charlatan, or
would he have exposed the others? Would,
mayhap, a little light have been shed on the
shadowy issues of this campaign?
Or would none of these things have happened? Would the debates have been just a
form of entertainment for an apathetic elec~
torate that already has its mind pretty well
made up?
Edmund Muskie, the Democratic vice
presidential candidate, soundly castigated
Sen. Everett Dirksen, the JUinois Republican,
for decreeing, through the stratagem of a
threatened filibuster, that 74 million voters
were not to learn the answers to those
questions.
In fairness to Dirksen, however, he had a
point when he recalled that it was another
Democratic vice presidential candidate,
whose initials are HHH, who opposed debates
between President Johnson and _Barry Goldwater in 1964, when it was the Republican
candidate who was the underdog.
Politics being politics, it may be that
Americans witnessed in 1960 the first and
last televised debates between presidential
candidates they will ever see. And it may be
just as well.
As those debates suggested, and as the
fourth game o( the World Series of 1968 confirmed, and as political front-runners instinctively know, that magic all-seeing eye
called television has an unpredictable way of
assuming the role not of recorder of history
but maker of it.

·~ - -· ·

. -:

.· .

. .•
•' .. ..

B,y RICHARD E. LIGHTNER

erty owners.
Originally conceived to grant
a. real estate tax exemption for
resident homOOYmers age 65
and over, the amendment was
changed d u r i n g its journey
through the legi.slat.ure.
The language that may cost
the issue voter approvaJ was
added to permit the legislature

UPI &amp;atehoose Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP0 State
IBsue No. 2 may not be as successful wtth the voters as poll~
Uclans believe State [ssue No. 1
will be.
The s e c o n d constitutional
amendment on the Nov. 5 ballot
would give the General Assembly permission to grant tax

THE WELL CHILD®

Preschool Halloweeners
Need Adult Supervision
By WAYNE G. BRANDSTADT, M.D.
fleeter tape shouiJ be sewn
on all costumes. Keep the
hemlines up and dispense
with baggy sleeves. Painting
the face with grease is safer
than wearing a mask that
may slip and hamper vision
or impede a child's Lreathing .
Provide your c h i 1 d with a
flashlight and forbid the use
of matches or candles .
Finally. when the children
come to your door give them
small donations or jelly beans,
cookies or apples anJ, even
more important, tell them
what Hne costumes they have
contrived and how well they
have made themselve'i into
witches , goblins, etc. They
will love it.

Halloween is for youngsters .
Much has been done to make
it safer .and saner. The unbridled vandalism of the
"good old days" has been replaced by a parade of trickor-treaters in fancy costumes
and for many teen-agers by
W"!ll-orgaoized parties sponsored by churches, schools or
civic organizations . Welcome
as these changes are. all the
hazards have not yet been removed.
National Safety Council files
contain records of dog bites,
burns and other injuries in·
curred when young children
are allowed to roam through
strange neighborhoods with·
o u t adettuate supervision
That make·s Halloween a time
w he n all motorists should
take added precautions when
driving in residential areas.
Preschool children should be
allowed out only if they re main part of a group of older
children or if a parent follows
at a discreet distance . The
area canvassed should be
limited to the child's block so
that no streeis n e e d to be
crossed.
Flimsy costumes that can
easily catch fire should be replaced by costwnes of flame·
proof material or rendered
fireproof by soaking in a solution of seven ounces o( borax
and three ounces of powdered
boric acid in three quarts of
water . A few patches of re·

Q-Jn a rteeot column you
discussed intelligence testing.
Do you believe all children
should be tested?
A-While I believe that intelligence testing can be very
valuable when propf'rly conducted for certam pupils with
a learning problem, I don't
believe that their routine use
on an entire sludent body
means very much . A child
whose emotional climate at
home is happy and whl:se in ·
terest has been stimulated by
trips to zoos, musl'ums and
libraries will alwavs outshine
an unhappy child Who IS lack·
ing in motivation , no matter
how high his innate inteili·
gence.

Hatlo's
&amp;low

C.LEAN-C.UT

T~E

KIDS l.OOK

WHEN THEY'RE i!EINGo SCREENED

TO ENTER COLLEGE···
T~E

SEE

DE"-N WILL.
E.t..C~ BOY

AND

~15

~RENToS · --

to all

homeowners.
State Rep. Walter L. White,
R~Lima, the originaJ sponsor of
the amendment, said the reso.
lution was broadened because
tlle Ohio Tax Study Commis~
slon's June 1967, report recommended the exemption for 11ll
resident property owners.
Issue Attacked
A munber or newspapers in
Ohio have attacked the issue
and Fred J. Milllgan, president
of the Ohio Inlormation Com~
mittee, claim.s it is being pro~
moted wrong.
"This is being promoted as a
plan to Jtant exemption to persons over 65, n sa.vs Milligan.
"But lt does more Lhan that.
It allows the legislature to
grant any exemption it wants

to."
"What this could mean to
Ohio's tax structure, to those
political subdivisions who rely
on property taxes for their rev~
enue, and to Ohio's lndivktlal
taxpayers generally, should be
Cully . analy2ed and discussed,"
he cmcluded.
The proposed amendment
falls to specify how far the leg.
lslature may go in providing
exemptions. It I e a v e s that
broad power to Ule legislature
to determine who would get the
exemptions and how much an
exemption wotlld be granted.
Some observers feel the all~
inclusive language, one 24 word
sentence, was added to t h e
amendment in oontemplation of
the possible adoption of a statemandated, county .J.evied income

tax.
lssueOutlbted
I! so Implemented, it could
be used to permit rea.l estate
tax exemptions only in those
cOWltles which adopt a county.
wide income tax.
An income tax was before the
last session of the leglslature
and is currently the subject of
the Sealy Committee, a bl.par~
ti8Wl group named by House
Speaker Charles F . Kurfess.
The Sealy Committee, under

Time

the chairmanship of Dayton Republican Albert H. Sealy Jr.,
was expected to Issue its report
sometime after the Nov. 5 elec·
tion.
It held a oomber of hearings
an)Ulld the state, using the Income tax measure introduced
in ttre last sessioo. as a point
d. discussion. Under the pro~
posal, a county would levy a 1
per cent income tax on indl·
Yidllals and a 5 per cent tax on
business.

:::.-:~=~=~:~::=~=~=~:::~r=~=~=f~=~=~=r~=~=~~r~~~~~~~~t/~~I=~=~=}~:r;:?;fi~~~~t)~~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~:j:t~=r~{~
8
::::;;::

:;:;:;::
A presidential poll is being coOOucted. by Dateline,
=::;;:;: whose 1'J'eekly column appears in the Sunday Times-Senti:;:;:;=: neJ. Tri--Councy Area residents wlshiJ18 to e:tepress their
:;:;:;:: q~inion are invited to fill out the blank below, aM mail It
:;:;:;;: to Dateline, Sulllay Tlmes-Sentlnel, 825 'l1llrd Ave., Gal •
~;}~: lipolis, Ohio, 45631. All blanks should include the parti·
:;:;:;: cipant's name and address. Names will be kept conlldeo:;:;::: tial. Prior to the Nov. 5 election, results of the pall (fix:;:;:;:: ures only) wiU be announced
:;:;:::
DATELINE'S PRESIDENTIAL POLL

0

:\1 ~~c~h~c: ::!::~:::em
is:

.:;:::::
...

(U

:::::::
:::;:;:
:::::::

·:·::&gt;

By PHIL PASTORET
Another nice thing about
your newspaper: The tubes
don't go blooey 24 hours after
the 90-day warranty runs out.
0

0

0

-

~

-

-

ol tho United

~~'/IIIII;

~ Hubert IL Humphrey

---George Wallace
Name - - - - - - - - - Address ~- ----- - - - -

i~~}
f\?&lt;tt)ttr::~:;r~r~rri~~::{:~:~:~=~=~:~:~:::~r:~::r::=rr~{{{:~=::::~:;:\}~:r~&lt;~

0

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The early bird can have his
worm. We much prefer eggs
and toast- and later in the
morning, please.

BY JACK O'BRIAN
NEW YORK There's an
apartment for sale in N , Y. '•
famed Rlnr Houle - for
$900,0001 .... The !Ire engine
that clanged out or our block on
E. 73rd &amp;. the other 11:12 p.m.
left wtth " blonde in pants a~

On The Farm Front

Has Congress Forgotten
The American Farmer?
WASiliNGTO;o.l (UPI) - Congress no longer cares much
about the American farmer.
And in the long run, this may
spell trouble for consumers.
That warning comes here
from Rep. W. R. Poage, [)..Tex.,
chairman of the House Agriculture Committee.
Before the 90th Congress fi~
nally adiourned this week, it
approved a one ~ year extension - thr ough 1970 - · or the
government's major farm slC)-port programs.
But Poage said In a statemert summing up the work of
the 1967 - 68 Co~ess that the
farm btll was pushed through
only by ccq~llng It with a consumer • oriented food stamp
biD, and only after !ann lead·
ers beat back a determined effort to limit pe,yments to farmers.
Turning Polm
Overall, Poage conteo:led, the
90th Congress was a cruclal
turning point for agriculture
"because b)' its actions it ha11
refiected a serious transition. ..
in the public attitude toward
the
American
Carmer and
hi a problems.''
"It is an attitude reflecting a
general lack of koowledge am
wxlerstanding, and !lOSslbly indllterence, on the part oC urban
America
regarding
(!arm)
problems.
"lronically, it is an attitude
which in the lo~ run may hurt
city residents more than any·
one. Failure to support programs whkh promote agricul·

tural production eventually will
inevitably lead either to scarci·
ties or mooqmllstlc controls of
production. In either case, we
wlll have higher consumer
prices."
Poage said a number of farm
bills were defeated in COngress
this year, not by partisan p~
Iitical opposition, but by opposl·
tion trom w-ban lawmakers.
He said some city congress·
men apparently do not understand farm needs. others, Page
added, are wUUng to vote for
!arm bills, but sre afraid their
city constituent.s wouldn't like
ll
New System
Meanwhile, Rep. Jamie L.
Whitten, O.Miss •• wiBJ'Iled. Thurs.
day that if farmers want city
lawmakers to permit continua·
tioo of rederal slft)ort programs
a new system will have to be
designed without using direct
federal payments to growers,
Under
present programs,
farmers cooperating in federal
surplus control and price 8\.P-'
port programs get part of their
return from dlrect government
payments which must be v&lt;Ud
annually by Corwesa, Whitten
noted In a speech to an extension agenta
convention at
Louisville, K,y,
"The urban Congress, with
onlY 47 out of t35 House mem·
bers having as much as 20 _per
cent of their constituents engaged in agriculture, will not
continue to make the appropriations," Whitten waroed.

board (it sure beats rocka on
the head, too many firemen's
reward for seiOeu courage) ...
Great lyricist Howard Dietz was
crippled cruelly by Parklnson'11
Disease for the laat few years
- W1tll the medical geniuses at
Columbia-Presbyterian IloBpltal
here gave him a mlraculoos re~
covery - courteay the latest
medication in the long battle •·
galnst lhe debllltatlng dlaeaae
.... Al 72, lbe brllllng songwriter (Dancing in the Dark, etc.
ole,) again ls pla,ylng 110111
Howard alao just had a grandaon (In BlarrUz) via dau!!hter
Uza and Chrlatopher !II&amp;Wj Tanis Guinness or the h'ilh stout •
mrutons Is the grandmother ...
Howard's present wife gifted
stage dealt!ner Lucinda Ballard,
alao jolna the grandparent aet
courtesy of 1100 Walter Ramberg
... The Denniston ~atersdt.vorce
selllement (blgl) haa been agreed
and lovely Anne wiD Jet oil U.
Mexico lorthwlth .•.. Home buDd-

they started 52 years

I&lt;Jpped Minnesota

only NFL
witt/ p~~!ect
records at 6.o
Meanwhile • the three--time
defendl"lf cham,ion Green Bay
Packers kepi alive by rallying
lor a 14-14 Ue with the Detroit
Lions. The tie kept the Packers
(,2...3..1) just one game behind the
Lions (:J.2.1) in the Central
Division race an:1 meana the
dub still has a chance to
repeat. A loss would have all
but domled them.
But Baltimore's loss was a
staggering blow lo the Colts
since it leaves them a game
behind the Rams and It'll be a
tougher job for them to catch

team;

•

. .. . ... . . -

.. . ' • •

!

TEAM
W L
Ohio Wesleyan ..• • ... •......••. .. 3 o
BaldwhrWallace • •. .•• , .•. , .••.. , • 2 0
Clq)ital ••••• •••• ••.•.••• •..• • .. 3 1

5 0
4 0
4 I

4 l

I

2

4

0

0

6

0

0 5

1

Ovwall

0

WL T
•

0 0

5 0 0
3 I

0

3

2

0

3

I

0

o

Wittenberg . , , , , , , , , , , , . , , , , , . , , 2 I
Mt.Unlon,, ••. • • , , , , , , •••.• ,, ••. 2 1

0
0

3 2 0

Denison ........................ 1 1 o

3 2 0

Oburlln . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . l
Musld~ . , ••••••.•• , , , , • , •.•.. 2
Wooster ••• ••..••• ••.• • • ••• .. •• •1
Kenyon .•.• .•••....•••.. ..•.. • .. 1
Otterbein . . , .••.••••. • .••••..• • . o
Heidelberg . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0
Hlram . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

o

I)

T
0
0

I
2

2 I

1

I
0

2 2 1

2 0

2 3 0

2 1
2 o

3

3

4

0

o

2

0

I 4 I
1 4 0
0

4

0

MID -omo
TEAM
Detlance •
Findlay . .

Wllmlngton
Blutrton.,

League
WLT
• .• , , , ••. , , •• , •••• 2 0 0
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. .. I 1 0
. • • • . . . •. . .. ••. . , ,, •. I I 0
••.•.••••.••••..•••••. o 2 o
INDEPENDENTS

Overall

W L T
3 2 0
2 3

1 3 I
I 5 0

TEAM
W L
Ashland . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 0
Ohio State .•• , ••• , • , •. , • •••.•• ; •••• •.•• , •• 4
o
Cincinnati . •••••.• •• • , ...•••••..••. , •.• , •• 3
1

Akron ........ . . .. . , . , ...•. , , ...•...... , . 4

2

Xavier , •••• , •.• , , • , ••. , • , ••••• , ••. , ••.•.• 3
Dayton .. . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3

2
2

~to

Central

0

.............................. I

3
4
4

y OlJIW.StowD State . . .
1
Ohio N!)rthern • ••• , ••• , • • , • , • . • , , , ••.••...• 1
••••••••••••••••••••••••

;.:_, f~ '~ '::o ~,-..r-:::; r.;.~
!.;;f;- lr..:., lul!.:::j ; ; -: r.:., •

giant 2'Y handcrafted

cOLOR
lV

T
0
0

MEXICO CITY (UPJ)- Greater than rour years ago: That
was the 1968 United States
Olympic track team, even 11
Jlm Ryun dld lose.
Everything worked against
this U.S. team- Mexico Clt;y'a
altitude, a slnunering ratial
aituatloo that broke out when
two sprint stars were suspended
and caused some folkl'l to say
the U.S. team had ..dissension "
and
harried Coach
P~
Jordan was ,iolt.ed midway In
the games by the death of his
father .
But the record is plain:
This U.S. lrack team captured
15 p&gt;ld medaJB-12 by men and
three by women. In 1964, at
Tokyo, the Yanks won 14 gold

,o;News
· (jood

$tudents
full Zenith
quality just

\
.{
•.\

NU.I~~e. ~

"Yes, it's called a 'mace,' but it lras nothi•r to do with
ciYi/ disorders in tire a/4 dtlfsl"

1

499.95

NEW ZENITH 2-YEAR COlOR

PICTURE TUBE WARRANTY
Zo•nith R~d,o Cmpo1r•1iun w.uranls lhe color pklure lube In lhe

z,.mth Cul11r TV receive•~ shown here lo br free from delecls in
nu1~11al ~1 i1i ng J,,,., nurmo~l uw11e lor two yean from dille ol
m•II•R.lll cnnsumr·r pun·b.,e. Warro~nly coYerl 1epaor nl color p1c:ture
luhe, 1or replartml'nl with rebuilt cnlor p1r11ue lube, thmuMh an,
.;m thuflll!'d Zt•norh dNil'r ~nywhl'r.! nwtter may live ur muve · trM'ISpurUiinn. ~Dm ~nd \l'l;."ll'l' •·h.nl(l'~ ~·e lhe ohl1~11un uf lhe ·,1wner.
Zt·nilh •cpliCNrw•nt tube is ~lso warranu:-d tur lhl' full unl'~pirll!'d
h'rm 11f I he nril(lnll lwn-y..ar w1nan1y.

I'

INGELS FURNITURE
OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT.

992-2635

Grid Scores

Purcell~l2

Warren Western Reserve 40
Niles McKinley 8
Cleveland St. Jorreph 56 Pawa 7
Fl&gt;whatan l'l&gt;lnl 6 Wo•wood (W,
Va.) o
Norwalk St. Paul 14 Mapletoo
13
Newark Catholic 76 New Alban..v
6

Brllllanl 35 St. Clairsville 12

2-Hour
DRY QfANING

beHor·than-mro1• hlp

IChDol or collop llldant, JD11
lillY quollfy far blc ll'llnp 1111

HANDCRAFTED

(

Ryun lost. The line yowg
Wichita, Kan., runner whose
picture has been on the cover ol
virtually every sports magazine
took a 30-meter beating from

H Ill)' opllllor Dl YDti'C• II

AS LOW AS

for unrivaled dependability

ended &amp;mday.

Games

~od

The DALfN • Z4513W
Sur&gt;erb Danish Modl!rn ~lyled mmp.ul &lt;o nsole
in .:l!nuine oil fin ishl!d Walnut ..eneers and
\l"lf'c l hardwood solids with Sr::india st)'led base.
VHF and UHF Illuminated Dial~

modals, 12 by men and two by
women, and the forecasts were
that tbe Americans could not
approach those ngures this
time. Not only did !hey beat the
figures, but they left records in
wreckage as track competition

This Week's

BERRY'S WORlD.

.,

~·--••' • r'"'''

OHIO HIGH SCIIOOL
FOOTBALL RESULTS
By United Press International
Solurd».,v
Cincinnati St. Xavier 62
Newport (K,y .) Catholic 8
Cincinnati Country Day 20
Lexington (Ky.) Sayre 7
Cleveland JFK Ill Cleveland Glen~
ville 8
Cleveland John Adams 19
Cleveland East lligh 0
Cleveland John Marshall 3U
CleYeland Rhodes 8
~aker
Heights 43 Parma Nor01110 COLU&lt;:GE
mandy 6
FOOTBALL SCHEDULE
Newbury 40 Richmond Heights
B)' L1nlted Press International
14
So1urda,y
Rerkshtre
13 Cleveland Luther~
Ohio state at Dlinois
an
East
12
Tulaa at Chlclmati
Kent State 8 Field 0
Dayton at Ohio U,
Gilmour Academy 44
Xavier at VIllanova
Cleveland Lutheran West 0
Bowitng Green a.t Miami
Hawken
School 44
Toledo at Kent State
Cleveland
St. &amp;anislaus 0
Western Michigan at Marshall
Detroit
Cranbrook
26 Universit)'
Muaklngum at Capital
School
16
Oberlin at Denison
Edlrron 32 llilladale 0
Aahland at Heidelberg
Canlleld
A Youngslown Howland
Wooster at Kenyon
6 (tie)
Otterbein al Marlette
Ledgemonl 38 Mathews 8
Wabash at Ohio Wesleyan
Akroo Kenmore 26 Akron East
Defiance al Blulfton
14
Wilmington at Case Tech
Akron Buchtel 28 Akron Fire~
Ferrla (Mlch.) at Findlay
stooe 16
Adelbert at John Carroll
McDonald 40 Lowellville o
West Virginia State at Central
United Local 13 Crestview 0
!late
Jackson-Milton 26 ~lngtteld LoNorthwood at Oldo Northern
cal 0
South Dakota ~to at Youngatown
Columbus Watterson 42 Colum~
!late.
bua Readr 0
Wlttenberg at Baldwtn~Wallace
Columbus DeSales 30 Columbus
()'I)
Wehrle 8
Hiram at Mt. Union (N)
Danville 34 Lucas 0
Clintoo. Massie 33 Kings l2
Cincinnati Roger Bacon 0
Cincinnati Elder 0
Cln~ller 23 Cincinnati

""'·

IMI.,

." "

..

~

......

~,,.a

-

........, ..,,., .. .... ,...,"" "''"''-·'• .. ,,. . • - -- ·
~,

for
a ID with I pass
lntercepdoo Cor the t1na1 score.
Sore-e.nned Bart Starr, in for
only' one play, tossed a thre&amp;yt.rd TD pa., with 7:25 left In
the game to gi 'le Green Bay the
tie with Oelroll
Roosevelt Taylor dished 96
yards with an inter~oo
return and Mac Percival kicked
five tleld goals ·as Chicago
turned back twpless Phlladelphla (~.
Charlie Durkee kicked three
field goals to lead New Orleans
past Pittsburgh, which is ()...6,
am the only other winless team
besides PhUa.delphiL
John Brodie Dipped two TD
passes as San Francisco turned
past New York, which was
hampered by the tact that Fran
Tarkenton had a sore shoulder
am wasn't passing with his
usual sharpness.

Jim Ryun Defeated

0
I
0

Marlelta ....................... 3 1

-

~

~

the Rams than It wlll be for the 41·14, and New Orleans edged
Packers to catch tlle Uons. The winless Pittsburgh, 16-12.
Bill
Nelson threw three
Rams beal the Colts and tied
them In Lheir two games last touchdown passes to pace the
Browns to the triumph, hittii'JK
year.
A gamble by Colt COOch Don Eppy Barney, Paul Warfield
Sula also backftred as he aOO LerO)' Kelley. Kelley, who
inserted the ailing Unftas tor gained 102 yards In 30 carries,
Earl Morrall- who had pUoted scored the other m on a fourthe COlts to DYe straight wins- yard sweep.
The Rams rallied in the
after the Browns took a 14~7
secoOO period on a pair of
halftime lead.
Unltas had three passes touchdowns passes by Roman
intercepted lhat led to Brown Gabriel to turn back stubborn
touchdowns in the secoo::l halt Atlanta, which looks like a
The victory was Cleveland's different team wkler Coach
tllird against the same number Nonn
Van
BrockliiL
The
of losses and kept them tied Falcons led 14-0 going into the
with Sl. Louis and New Orleans second period,
tor the Century Division lead.
Dallas, which meets Green
In the other four games Bay next MoOO.ay night in a
SuOOay, Chicago battered whr nationally
televised classic,
less Phlladelphia, 29--16, San rallied from a 7~ halftime
Francisco topped New York, 26- deficit
to beat Mirmesota.
10, St. Louis routed Washington, Cornell Green dashed 55 yards

W L T

Iague

'-:,_k:.· . . ~·· : :::l ;; :
~ 1.. ,..:., . ::.;
Nathan Handwerker new in the
r..:., Cf.:-•
-= ;;;;11111 .:. •
face of what seemed an e v e n 11:...:.··• .:::1 ~·· •• l •: r..:., ..:;.~' ::.1'..:..,
~ =~ ""~'-~'= : ' ~.. llur.J~n ~•
stronger Cooey laland reputation
'!:.l:-: n :.=~ ••'.:.,
·• -:::,' . Jr.:., .. ___,
1 ~ :::; '..:.'
~~ - IJ I:;::;;:~
~ ur.:., .;;.'
- Feltman' a lkrtdogs - and un1:::11 : 11;;1 ~, 0!111
dersold the Iauer's dime dogs
-.r..:., ~~~ ~~ 1 ;;: 1 r.:.~ ~ • ., ·~ ;;: :~~
:·: ~.,.J ' :::::::r ;;: -1-=' ur.:.--.u ;::;
': H• :II
by a nickel .... Nathan alao waa
[lilt•::=&lt;
'•;
r.:.~IIJ !:::I :: • .u
scheOOI.ed tomarrythesameyear
-, i ~ : ·~'-.::.:
•r.;.,i--in
--~ ~ =
but chary of marriage com_pli~
cated by new-business problems,
THE DAILY SENTINEL
he poatponed the wedding two
lliEVOTED 1'0 IHTU!Hf OF
year.s: and that's why the Nathan
MFMJ!I.Mo\Stl" Al£4
KICMAIIDS. C*'tN, PtJII.JKHI,a
and Ida Handwerker ue celEt&gt;rat1::-TMMhiii,IEclw
l'ltblloheol ..._,. . . . . ~ " n.
lng thelrGoloon Wedding this Oct.
'"'"' Vall~ ,...,...._ ~. ue ....,._
27 instead of two years ago.
_,.,, l'omti'QI, C.lo. 45761. lu.._o ..._
"l-lllt, WIDrW ,._ MN&amp;IT.
This isn't meant nasd1y: Is ......Sown~~
dau ,....... ,.... • ,_...,
Feltman' s stlU in the hotdog
~ ....,......._ r.,.--1• ...
dodge? .... Thla probably had tiMIII·G•li•&amp;INir, -._ l:llul 4ht a..,...
nothing to do with Joe Namath' a Ylri. t:it,r, ,_.. Yort..
~r~ niP! Dloll ..... ., ........
sad showing laat &amp;mday bla the . . . . a..u.lllt II ,.... . . . . . . - , _
Ill . , . . . &amp;I .... ~~~ ....... Ollol. tll.&amp;
Jete' awinger dld take the COpa- · !io
__...., lt.IQ, 11IIW- _..., lUG. a.cabana chorua m a personal tour . . . , ..,... ........., C81'1• -nee • • •
. 0.. _ . , ll.M. IJ- ...Lb Ollt , _
of his famous pad ... And they're .
••o,.o. ,loU lftOIIUI• ~b. nor.-.. tuL
w..c.-"'*'
IN'ict ........ ,...... ~
sUll goggiy-&lt;&gt;Yed.

Ing rumor: wllb morlgagea tough
at the banks, builders are turnIng (aounds wild) to Frank Sinatra ... Catherine Deneuve wa.s
paid $5,000 lor "Umbrellas ol
Cherbourg," now pta $250,000
per ntck.
Statua thimble Hubert de Gtvenchy ls deligning ladlea ll.lds
flat oo hls •acrolllac: painfUl
rheumatism .•.. Patrick Terra.ll,
whose father nms a ~ Par·
ts tourist attrac:tloo called Tour
d'Argent, wiD manage Trude Heller's Palm Beach discotek this
year .... We're _probably the last
to dlacover a caviar IOUffle at
"21" but it wasdeleetablelateor
early to our late-blooming taste~
buds .. .. And wallet.
Lara Schmidt (Ingrid Bergman's mate) paid only $2,800 lor
Paris rlghta to the Japanen musical verslon of "'Gone With the
Wind" (a blg hlt In Tokyo); he'o
already ollered Olivia de Haviland her original acreen role ...
Anthony Qu1m wUJ racord a Cl)&gt;lt.ol album cl Italian Jove 1011111
next month whlle here ror t h e
"9loe&amp; of the Ftlhermann pre-miere .•.• Let's gush " ham
72nd blrt!&gt;d».,v to Lillian Glsh.
Nalhln' B Coney laland Red
Hots ar~ .an ·Amerlea.n lepndi

-- ~

Owrall

League

TEAM
WLT
Ohio Unlveralll!, . , , , , , . , , , , , . , , , , .4 o o
Bowling Green .• .• •••. • ....•...••• 2 o 1
Miami . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . , .... 3 I 0
Toledo . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . , 2 1 1
Western Michigan .•••• . . , , , •• , , . , • 1 3 0
Kent state •.•.. , ... . ....... . ... . 0 4 0
Marshall . ............ .... . . .... o 4 o
OHIO CONFERENCE

Then I conside•ed all thot
my hands had dcne and the
toil I h-ad spent ,in doing it, ·'
and behold, all was vanity an4 --d
a striving after wind, and
the-re was nothing to be
gained under the sun.-Eccl.
2:11.

! : 1 ; ~:_ -

·• • • ••. ' r

By United Press International
MID-AMERICAN CONFERENCE

THOUGHTS

,.;.~ · ·J~·l

•

lhe

·-'
ago when

,.

2~7

.t.swer to Pruiou1 Puule
t-:-~~·lf!l'
'-lr.·,DI:r ::':i ~ 1::• 1 a

One way to evaluate a sin·
cere churchgoer is to see how
he behaves as he leaves the
parking tot after the 45-minute service.

..

Ohio Grid Standings

I

Voice along Broadway

'

By VITO STELLINO
UP1 ~rts Writer
II was only SlCJposed to be a
warmup but the Baltimore Colts
am Johllll)· Unitas wound l-1'
geUing burned.
The Colts, who'd only lost one
aame In 19 starts over the past
two season. were s~oosed to be
tunlrw up f o r next week's
showdOPin with the uliJeaten
Los AJWeles Rams but the:\:
wound 141 · sufiering a 30-20
setback Sunday at the haOOs ot
the deYeland Browns.
The loss lett the Rams, who
beat Atlanta, 27·14, and will
Invade Baltimore this Sunda.y,
and the Dallas Cowboys, who

lair," and "dolng lhe honelt
Jking.'' rm appalled at their
tldnldng. How can ~~ be so
biased? SUFFER, LITTLE
CHll.DREN.
Dear S.L.C.:
For some pecv~~. bias 11 aeeond nature. But scores of modfrom next~-"
erns belleve u you do- and eo
The next morning ahe called a lew unwanted brown childron
and said, ·'Don~ forget o u r wUl know the joy of real homes.
date," and then it hit: !lle was~
rm I50lTY more couplea n't klddin'l
and agencies - 0011'1 share your
I ozplalned the besl I could point cl view, II adoptions wera
that I wa111'1 ready tor mar· allowed, regardless of color rlage. but now she Is puWng and news stories helped by showoul that I am a no.p&gt;d lour- lng the plua aide - we wouldfiulher and not to be trusted. n•t find so uwcy- sad--eyed young.
A gentleman doesn't make dam~ stere in dormitories, waiting ror
aging remark• about a lady, but the next temporary foster home.
how do I stop her making such _ H.
remarks aboUt me? 51\e Is get~ Dear Helen:
tlng to a woman I am Interest~
rm a 29..year~Jd woman and
eel in, In fact I sense a eold- I have never had an affair, l
ness 1n all my former rrlends. have dated a tew men, Wt they
How do I make them aware of disappear somehow. I u1ed to
the lruth without making thla think It was the greatest thing,
lemale appear a lool? - WOM- keoplng yoursell lor lllAI'rlaP
ANLESS, SO-CALLED .. WOLF" but when does 'virtue glve
Dear Womanleaa:
to prudery? rm olc:k cl being
Pla,y the gentleman, slick by pure and lonely!
your .story that "R was all an un·
Last month I went to a doc~
fortunate
miatmderstandin&amp;" tor gave a fictltioul married
and you'll be surpriled how 8000 ~e and gut a prescription for
pecll&gt;le catch on. Gala wbo cry The Pill. But how do 1 lind a
uwo~r• 10011 lose their listen· man? It's gotten around at the
era. They're usually put down office that rm _ UNTOUCH~
as aore losers. - H.
ABLE.
Dear Helen:
Dear Un:
I read recently that there is True, a 29.year-old virgin
an oversupply of adopUve ba~ doesn't exactly brag aboot tt,
bles tor the first time in dec- but aren't you being a UttJeover~
&amp;del, tlda because glrls don't anxious? 1f you throw yoursetr
leel !hoY HAVE to get lllAI'rled at any old man, juat to prove
these da,ya, and alao because you aren't a prude you'D pt
children of mixed parenthood hap- taken but J'DU'll 'only prove
pen along oftener, and aren't you're" a p_~ah~er. Work on a
really wanted by any race, So new, warm, friendly perl0081·
the medium-brown c:hUdren, the ity and perhaps you'll attract
mea with lllghUy almond eyes the RIGHT guy. Atter which ...
or hair a bit too ldnky - are weU It'll your decision - H.
lett behind, to rattle around in
This column la dedic.ated to
Colter bomeH and never know family llving, 110 if you're l)e.v~
w::t it'a like to have real par~ ing kid trouble or just pl'tin
e 11 •
trouble, let Helen help YOU.
We have two chlldren of our She will also welcome your own
own, and I can't have any more. amusing experiences. Addreas
We wa:nt to adopt a child who Helen Bottel in care of t h 1 11
isn't pure caucasian, not only
because we feel these ehildroo newspaper·
should 11ave the 1011• they deserve, but because we want our
children and hopefully t h e I r
friend• to aee all races aa equal.
Some of our anoctatea are
IIJI)llled at thta. They say rumors will 1tart about me or my
huaband having a "110rdld al-

..

Browns Upset Colts, 30-20

Helen Bottel

w,.;

...

, ....

,.

0'

¥ •• •- •~•"' '

.....

All-Star•@

SHE WAENT KIDDING
Dear Helen:
We were ldddlng around at a
party and Marlene got lhe talk
ttarted about leap year. After
about lour pmleta, ahe propoaeel. and [, thinking It wa1 part
of the game, u.ld ••&amp;Ire, a week

,.1' .

. . . .... - .

0 '

••

3- The Daily Sentinel, l'mtel"O)'·Middleport, 0., Monda)', October 21, 196S

. .:

State Issue 2 Less Popular
tax exemptions

USe ••By

· .." '.

Ohio Politics

exemptions to all resident prop- to grant

Helen Help

. ··-.,._,., ' · ·- .

··'
··~---'

Have We Seen Last 1V Debate?
· There is an interesting similarity between
that controversial fourth game of the World
Series and the presidential election campaign.
The game, it will be recalled, was played
despite intermittent heavy rain. Ordinarily,
it would have been postponed, but it wasn't,
some sports wrilers charged, because o( the
overriding interests of the television industry
-specifically, sponsors' money and viewer
ratings .
Just 35 the St. Louis Cardinals, who were
leading, accused the Detroit Tigers of stalling
in hopes the game would be called before
the end of 6ve innings, which would make
it an official game, and the Tigers , who were
losing. accused the Cards of excessive haste
in trying to reach that crucial point, so the
politicians have traded blasts over a question
that also involves television.
Hubert Humphrey, the underdog, early be~
gan appealing for a series of televised de·
bates with Richard Nixon, accusing the latter
of ducking the issues. Republicans countered
that Humphrey was seizing on the debates
as a means of getting nationwide exposure
to inject some hope into a desperate campaign. Third-party candidate George Wallace
accused both o( the others of being afraid to
lace him .
Controversy over the fourth game or the
series is purely academic now , since Detroit
made a sensational recovery from that defeat to win the world championship. Academ. ic, too, is the whole matter of a three~way
candidates' debate since the Senate refused
to second the House-passed bill authorizing
them .
Would Nixon's five o'clock shadow have

,.-.

,.

•

___ ,.... _

your Automobile lnsuronco.
Stata Auto Mutual offor1 1
IOOD STUDENT DISCOUNT
llftllna up to 25".

SERVICE
!UPON REQUEST!
Our U...ol Good Clunlot

Robinson's deaurs

Datfs.WRur r..

Pemtroy

his arch~rival, Kipchoge Keino
Kenya, in the 1,500~meter
run.
Question &amp;rategy
But to beat this young man
who still is making a comeback
from a siege of mononeudeosis
Kelno had to rWl the second
fastest 1,500 meters in history~
3:34.9, And evetl so, there are
those who think RyWl might
have won with different strate~
gy- he laid back far In the
pack, relying on his la.te "kick."
Keino built up such a huge
lead that R)'Wl' s great ld ck lett
him a long way short.
But Ryun was far from
disgraced, and he said simply,
HPm happy to have won the
silver medal."
If this was a jolt to the U.S.
team,
it
certainly
wasn't
e v i d e n t. Immediately after
Ryun's
defeat,
the
Yanks
poUshed off the track and field
competition with four victories:
-world records in the men's
and women'~ 400-meter relays,
and the men's 1,600-meter
relay, and Dick Fosbury's
Olympic record in the high
jump.
~

U.S. swimmers were in a
record mood, too, aa they won
the men's and women's 200 ~
meter indJviWal medley, the
women's 4QO.meter freestyle,
and the men's springboard
diving. All three races were in
record Olympic time.
At the end or SUnday's
competition, the United States
led Huasia 24-11 in gold medals
and S5-35 In total medals.

.......,

-·--.
~=='
.....

Ohio's four.o01an team In the
National TaNe Tennis Team
Championships next month In Detroit for the first time in 10
years will be odds--on favorite
to return the title to the Buck·
eye State.

College Scores
SATURDAY'S OHIO COLLEGE
FOOTBALL RESULTS
By United Pross International
Ohio State 45 Northwe!ltern 21
Soulllern Wlnots 18 Dayton 17
Xavier 24 Northern Dlinoia 20
Bowling Green 30 Kent !late 7
Ohio u. 24 Miami 7
Toledo 30 Western Mlchlgan 6
Louisville 13 Manhall 10
ClnclnnaU 40 Wichita 27
Capital 15 Marl- 12
Wooster 28 Deni100 o
Wlltenberg 41 Hetdelberg 12
Kenyon 31 !Hram 28
Weatmlnster (Pa.) 20 ML Union

6
Ohio Wesleyan 19 Mus~m 3
Oberlin 43 Lake Forest (DI.) 22
Akron 31 Eastern Ken1ucky 20
Cenlral Mlchipn27 Central !late

0
Morehead 35 YOUI'lgstownState26
Manchester 3 Defiance 0
Aabland 45 John Carroll 0
Slippery Rock 25 Wilmington 12
Baldwln~Wallace 49 otterbein o
Oblo Northern 15 Flndla,y 8
Blulfton 20 Anderson 12

it's IN to eat out
I

SANDWICH

•SOFT DRINK
oDlNMER
_,ICE CREAM

Fine Food, Fast Service
.• .for On-the-Go People

BE IN THE KNOW GO TO

McCLURES

NIGHTS

~IDDLEPDRT

-=·

- ~-=---= -·

By CHARLES RICHARDS

j~

Joe

~~
'-....
''--

,
' '

l _ _ _ _ •._... ' ' ...

·I
' ' "' '

,rr ·'•' r
1
/

etgt,t
In a row but still
monapd to atea1 lhe pasalnt!
show ~ in the As:tr odome
encounter betWeen the New
York Jets and the Housloll
ml ...a

,,,
,.. I'

- " 1..;

UPI ~rts Writer
Nomath threw

II 1 '

o:.::-~

...

••

"l'ou'l'-f' waollinll your time
-dllal's "Yntheti•· 1ra1111 !"

Bucks, 'Cats
Smell Roses,
Tangerines
By United Press lntenaUonal
Thoughts of tangerines danced
through lhe heads o( Ohio Unlveralt;y Bobcats today, and Ohio
State University football fans
thought they smelled roses.
The Bobcats tc:dt the MidAmerican Conference lead with
a 24.7 win over previously-undefeated Miami of Ohio Saturday and with the win the driver's seat for a. trip to the Tangerine Bowl to play lhe Southern Conference cham,piona.
Ohio state's 45-21 win over
Big Ten opponent Northwestern
put the Buckeyes in a three-way
tie with Michigan and :Mhmes~
ta for the Big Ten lead, each
with a 2-0 loop mark. The Big
Ten champ gets the invitation
to the Rose Bowl.
This week, the 4-0 Buckeyes
meet illinois (~2 in league play
and 0-5 overall) at Champaign,
m:l the Bobcats play Dayton
(3-2-(l) in a ~onference tilt.
Other Games
Other action upcoming includes Ashland's Eagles seeking
their 19th straight against Heidelberg (1-4). The Eagles nwle
it 18 In a row with a 45-0 romp
over John carroll Sat~.
Heidelberg lost to Wittenberg
41·12 in Ohio Conference pla.y
last Saturda,y. Ohio Wesleyan
continued its lead in the OC
with a 19-3 win over Muski~
um. Baldwin - Wallace thlllllj)ed
Otterbein 49-0 and alayed In
second spot in tlle OC with a 2-0
record. Overa.ll, OWllls 4..0 and
BW .)..0 .
Ohio Wesleyan hosts Wabash
aOO Wittenberg (2-1 in loop play
and J.-1 overall) visits BaldwinWallace saturday.
Copltal bumped Marietta 15-12
Saturday and with the loss went
Marietta's undefeated seaaon
hq;~es.

OUera.
He llnally started oomectlng,
and when he did he marched
the Jets 80 yards in the waning
moments o( the game for a
touchdown that produced a 20-14
victory. The win kept New York
ooe game ahead ol Boston in
1he Eastern Division of the
American League,
A &lt;J~arterback nol&gt;oc!y aeemed
to want- former Baylor Univer.
IIIey atar Don TruU- al100at was
the man ol the hour. Cast of! by
the Oilers but re-hlred three
weeks ago as a free agent, Trull
waa summoned by Coach Wally
Lemm early In the fourth
quarter arter starter Bob Davis
was injured.
-

Sahara Title
Captured By
Rodriguez
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UPI)- Chi
Chi Rodriguet, the talkative
little Puerto Rican, borrow~
Arnold Palmer's caddy for the
Sahara lntltational Golf Tour.
nament and pro golf's No. 1 all~
time-money ..winner might have
trouble getting him back.
''f'or four hours t.oda.,}· I was
Chi Chi Palmer,•• he said with a
blg grin &amp;mday alter winning
the $122,222.22 tournament at
tlle sun-loaked Paradise Valley
Coonlry Chili.
Rodriguet, with Bob Blair of
Carlsbad, CalU ., carrylng his
bag, made a Paltner.J.ike charge
to come from six lt.rokes oft the
pace to de third round leader
Dale Douglass in regulatloo
play. He then won on the first
sudden-death hole.
uft•s been a long dry spell,''
he commented. "But rm back
to stay, folks."
Winning the fifth tournament
of his nine-year PGA career,
Rodriguez shot a seven-under ~
par 64 in the tlnal round while
Douglass was carding a 70.
They tied at 27 4, ten of"de,_
over the 7,109·yard iaywt.
The colorlUI Puerto RicM,
who llkea to talk to the gallery,
earned $20,000 first prize money
with a par on the 417 .yard firat
hole while his opponent missed
I two-loot p~U.

The Oilers we,., trailing, 13-0,
but Trull promptly Olllfneerad a
pair cl acorln&amp; drlvoa - capped
by TD passes ~ nino yards tD
Alvin Reed and 19 yards to Jim
Beirne. When the Jeta llnally
got the ball ..,.tn, there waa
less: than four mirartes left, but
Namath lound the mark lour
stralgllt limes lor :;6 yards ond,
with 4~ seconds loll, dispatched
Matt Snell for the w:IMlng
touchdown from one yard out.
Kansas City, its top receivers
on the tnJury list, abandmed Ita
uaually touted paaalni attack
and sloyed on the ground In Ita
game againlt Oakland's Raid·
ers. The result waa a 24~10
victory that kept the Chiefs one~
hall game ahead ol San Dleso.
which trounced Denver, 55-24.
Boston scored 17 points 1n the
thl.rd quarter to defeat Buftaio,
23-6, and Bob Griese led Mlaml
to a 24..22 decision over
Clndnnatl in other AFL games
!lmday.

Olympi~

StandiJI88

MEXICO CITY (LTPO - Medal
standlnga in the Olympic Garnes
alter Sunday's competition:
NATION
G S B T
u. s. - . - - ... 24 15 16 55
Russia • . . . . . 1l 13 11 35
Hungary . . . • • 3 6 a 17
West Germany _ , 2 6 4 12
East Germany . . - 4 4 3 11
Australia . . • • • . 3 5 3 11
Poland , , , . . . • , 3 0 7 10
France . . . . . . . . 51 1 9
Kenya . . • • ... .. 3 4 I 8
J_. ......... 4 2 I 7
Ital,y . . . . . . . . . . l 2 4 7
Romanla . . . . . . . . 3 2 0 5
Great Britain •. , .. 2 1 1 5
Holland . . . . . . . . , 2 2 I 5
Iran •......•••• 2 12 s
Bulgaria . . . . . . . . O 3 I 4
Denmark .•...•.. 0 2 2 4
Mo~ia . . . . . . . .
1 3 4
Czechoslovakia . . . . 2 0 2 4
Sweden . . . . . . . . . . 1 1 1 3
New Zealand ..... ,. 1 0 2 3
Turkey . . . . . . . . . . 2 0 o 2
Ethiopia . ......... 1 1 0 2
Tunisia , • , ...•• , t o 1 2
Finland .......... ! I 0 2
Cuba ............ o 2 o 2
Mexico .•. , .•...• 0 2 0 2
Switzerland ....... 0 0 2 2
Belgiwn .......... 0 1 0 i
Brazil ........... 0 l o 1
Jamaica .•.•.....• 0 1 0 1
Taiwan ••••. . ...•• 0 0 1 1
ArgenUna ..•...•.. 0 0 1 1

o

.

Ohio Team is Favored lorRodrJ!'";.~ed~;~e~w:~

....._,neM

.114 C.Urt St.

~ - ~.....·

Jets Rally, Top
Houston, 20-14

FOURTH &amp; LOGGsf

DAIRY ISLE
fr.

MIDDLEPORT

Trials Saturday a.nd Sunday in
which 41 oflhestate'stop_players
competed at the Columbus Table
Temis Club, resulted in a team
headed by Dal Joon Lee, 27,
Cleveland, U. S. Singles chaiiJ..
pion, No. l, and John Tannehill,
16, or Middleport, in the No
position. Tarmehill iA.. the top
ranked In the U. S. ""' Canada
among players- under 18 years
old, and Ohiomen's singles champion.
The third and fourth positions
on the team went to Don Lyons,
Dayton, 33, former state champion, and Richard Ferrell, Ut, Colwnbu..
Ohio won the natioml event in
1958 when the world-ranked Emery Lippai and Danny Vegh, who
had escaped the Hungarian rev~
lution, headed the Ohio team.
Vegh sWl resides in Cleveland
but is oo l~r an actlveplayer.
In the weekenl trials Dal Joon
Lee was undefeated with an 11..0
recordi Tannehill was 10--1, losIng only to Lee, and l.yons and
Ferrell each were 8-3.
NBA STANDINGS
By United Press International
Easl
"' W. L. Pet. GB
Cincinnati .. "" 0 1.000
Boston •• •.. 2 0 1.000
Philadelphia .. 2 0 1,000
Balllmore ..• , I I , 500
I
2
Milwaukee .•• 0 2 ••0
New York .•. 0 2 .trio 2
21,1,
Oelrolt • • • • 0 3 •000
West
W. L. P el GB
San Diego •• , 2 0 1.000
Phoenix •.• . I 0 1.000
'h
Chicago . . . , 2 l . 667
'h
Son Fran. , •• I l ,500 I
Allanta ••.•• I I . 500 I
Los Arweles .. I 1 ,500
1
Seattle ...... 0 3 , DOO
21,~
Sltw-da.y's Results
Philadelphlo 124 Balllmore 121
ClnclMlll 127 Oelrollll5
Los Arwelea 118 New York 96
Boston JOB Chicago 96
Atlanta 125 Milwaukee 107
Son Franclaco 107 Seallle 95

Sahara otnciaJs that he would
not be able to make t h e
tournament.
Douglaas, who led defending
champion Jack Nicklaus a.nd
BUiy Casper by a ahot alter lhe
third round Saturday. had to
.settle for the second place purse
ol $12,000,
Casper and Nicklaus both
faltered on the last day with
Casper finishing in a tie with
Open
champion
Lee
U.S.
Trevino, George Archer the
first year player Ron Cerrudo
for third place. Nicklaus, who
was bidding for his third
straight sahara championship,
Wound up al 279.

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,-- -,

·~ • .J

Any bilor who can
keep JGU in stitches

lsinthef¥1

!he service is friendly
lhe best you've ever known_
When money is the q_uestion
lfien the answers
BOB MILLER

Manapr
&amp; SAYINGS

Co.

fiN'.tN'CIN'Ci OHIO 'fO,U SI,Cf

125 E. IIAIN ST.

Plllllt 192-2171

I~U

POIIEROY, 0.

�-..

Honor Roll
At Southern

Holzer Medical Center: VIsIting hoora 2-4 and 7 p.m.
Parents ODlJ' on Pedlalrica Ward.
Admisalms
Mra. Pearl Markin, 539 Third

.a

High Noted
Southern High School ·honor
ltudentl the Oral alx-week gradIng period are anno1111&lt;'ad aa fol-

ROXANNE WALLIS

JOHN CULLEN

DEBBIE McCONniAY

Three Win 4-H Honors for Mason
MASON - Three members
ol the Hill-Billie 4.Jl club, which
meets in the Upper Flats Community Bull ding, recenlly represented Mason Coon&amp;iY tn the
4-H Round-Up at the Stale 4-H
Camp, Jackson's Mill, near We!lton.
After w!Ming the COOJllly demonstration, visual presentatloo
and talent contests, the young peo-

Pro Standings
AFL STANDINGS
by United Press International

East

W L T Pet.
2 0 ,667
3 0 ,500
3 I .400
5 0 . 286

Now York .... , 4
Booton ....... 3
Miami ...... , 2
Houston ...••. 2
Bull'alo ........ 1 5 I .167
West
W L T PeL
Kansas Clly ..• 6 I 0 ,857
S&amp;n Diego , • .• 5 I 0 .833
Qaldard
4 2 0 .667
Denver .... ... 2 4 0 .333
Cincinnati . . •. 2 5 0 . 286
Sunday's Results
San Diego 55 Denver 24
Boston 23 Buffalo 6
New York 20 Houston 14
Miami 24 Clndnnati 22
Kansas City 24 Daklalld 10
SuOOay' s Schedule
San Diego at Kansas City
Cincinnati at Oaklarxt
Boston at New York
Miami at Denver
Houston at Buffalo
0.

0

•••

NFL STANDINGS
By United Press International
Eastern Conference
century Division
W L T Pt~
New Orleans •• 3 3 0 . 500
st. Louis • , , , 3 3 0 • 500
Cleveland •.. , . 3 3 0 ,500
Pittsburgh . , , . 0 6 0 . 000
Capitol Division

WLTPct.
Dallas •.•.•.
New York .••.
Washington • • •
Philadelphia ...

6
4
3
0

0
2
3
6

0
0
0
0

1.000
,667
• 500
.000

Western Conference
Central Division

W L T Pet
Detroit . . . . . . 3 2 1 . 600
lolbme- ..... 3 3 0 , 500
Green Bay •..• , 2 3 I .400
O!icago ••... 2 4 0 .333
Coastal Division
W L T Pet.
Los Angeles ... 6 0 0 1.000
Baltimore . . .• 5 1 U . 833
San Francisco .. 3 3 0 .500
Atlanta , ..•• , I 5 0 ,167
Sunday's Results
Detroit 14 Green Bay 14 (tie)
Chicago 29 Philadelphia 16
New Orleans 16 Pittsburgh 12
San Fran. 26 New York 10
Clevelolld 30 BaiUmore 20
St. Loul1 41 Washfrwtoo 14
Dallas 20 Minnesota 7
Los Aq;.teles 27 Atlanta 14
Sunday's Schedule
Los Angeles at Baltimore
Minnesota at Chicago
New Orleans at st. Louis
Atlanta at Cleveland
New York at Washington
Philadelphia at Pittsburgh
San francisco at Detroit
Only games !lcheduled.
Moo:lay's Schedule
Green Bay at Dallas
Only game sch~du.led.
0

,,

pie won the privilege or representing Mason County In t h e
Charleston Area Activities, held
at the , Ame Bailey Grade Sthool
at &amp;. Albans.
Oebbie McConihay, now a
freshman at Marshall UniversJty,
won blue ribbons in all three contests. Her demonstraUon was on
"Bits, Dttrerent Kinds and Their
Proper Use." Miss McCooihay
won the state contest. Since there
is no National contest tor Horsemanship, 1be was declared West
VIrginia stare champion In the
category of Horsemanshlp.
Debbie ia the 17-year-o I d
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William McConlhe,y of Sand Hill
Road. l'ile has been In 4-H work
for six years and most of her
projects have been Light Horse
&amp; and
Horse Science a n d
Horsemanship.
While In Polnl Plesaant High
School, she was an active mem.
ber of the Big Black Marching
Band. ~e also won honors in
band, pla,ytng In the All Area
Band and the All stare Band.
She is currently a member of
the Marshall University March·
ing Band. She is a member ot.
the First Church of God in
Polnt Pleasant.
RoxAnne Walll8, a freshman
at Wahama High School, won
blue ribbons ln the County and
the Charleston Area Cont&amp;sts
and a white ln the State Contest. Her visual presentation was
on 11 Heads up, Hand !lOme," Miss
Wallis used a live model for her
part In llle phott&gt;graphy category, 9Je was the youngest mem.
ber to try In the stare Photogf"''by Cqntest.
..
Rox:Ame is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Orlando Walllo of
West Columbia Route. She is 13
years old and has been tn 4-H
club work five years . Some or
her projects have been Photography ~ U, UI, Pack 'N Snack,
Chat and Chew, Good Grooming for Young Women and Room
Improvement.
!!he served as an editor of the
Waharna Jr. High newspaper and
is a member otthe Ashton Baptist Church. She Is presently
attending Penial United Methodist Church, near her home, and
is a member ot. its Youth Fellowship.
John William Cullen Jr., Is
the son or Mr. and Mrs. J. William Cullen ol Letart Route, is
14 years old, and has been a
member or the Hll) -BUlle Club
Cor llve years where his projects ha•te been Potato GrowIng, Photography I, Handicraft
I and fly Good ~~omming f o r
Boys, West Virginia Trees and
Tractor Mechanics L
John entered the County, Char·
Ieston area and state Talent Con.
tests. He presented a recitation
of "Our Soldier Dead'' by C.
0, Clark. He won a blue rJbbon in the county contest, s red
ribbon in the Charleston Area
contc st and a green ribbon in
the State Talent contest tor recognition at Jacksoo's Mill. He
also won $10.
John is a ninth grade student
at Point Pleasant Jr. HIgh
School where he Js interested
in sports. He Is also active In

Oak Grove church, where he Ia
an usher and a member of the
Youth Fellowship.
Two of these young folks were
accompanied to Jackson's Mill
by Gary Rood, a retired member ot the Hill Billie ChJb, and
presently serving as president
ct lhc 4-H All Star Organization. Miss Barbara Adkins of
Point Pleasant also made the
trip.
Mrs. J, William Cullen, aJsoan
All Star, S3W the trio safely
home. Mrs. Cullen is presentJ.y
serving as an Assistant Leader
of the club and is past treasurer of the 4-H Leaders Association.

n.

lows (all with B or bettor grades):
FRESHMEN - Edwin Cross,
llruce Hart, Gary Michael, Lorl'tta MiddlesMlrt, Nancy 0 u r a,
~ebecca Promtt, Allan P u g h,
lonneth l'iluler, WUIIam Wheelor, David White, Ricky Whitt.
&amp;JPHOMOR~ Keith Ashley, ~on Ervin, Mary Ferrell, Patty lhle, Daniel Nease,
Roger Nease, Deborah Norrl1,
Rita Salser, Robert l'ilaln, Denise &amp;lodgrass.
JUNIORS -

JEFF BREWER,

(All A's), Irene Cooper, Pat Dumas, Eric Furbee, Danny Hill,
Jan Hill, Kathy lUll, Brenda Holman, Loretta Kiser, Joan Manuel, Trudy Maslonka, Crystal
Mathews, Debra McMillan, Patsy Picllens, Marsha Pugh, SANDRA SELLERS (All A'o), Mark
Smith, DORTHA Wll.COXEN, (All
A•s), Mickey Wolfe, Gary Nor~

rts.
SENIORS- Marl&lt;Beegle,Melanie Beegle, Rhonda Braden,
Brenda Bradtord, Jennller Davl1,
Unda Grindstaff, Donna Jefrers,
Carole Johnson, Jane Johnson,
Cheryl Maslonka, Robin

Morrow,

Brlgl.tte Nease, George Norris,
Barbara Roush, Aaron Sayre,
Beck;y Sayre, Brenda Sayre, San·
dra Ta.vlor, Joy Theiss, Susan
TuttJe James White.

Marauder 2nds

In Tough 6-0
Grid Victory

GEORGE BALL
ATHENS- Georg~W. Ball,
who r~cently resigned as U,S,
ambassador to the United Na.
tions to campaign lor Hubert
Hurnp~y, will deliver a Kennedy Lecture Series address
at Ohio Universit)•, Tuesday,
OcL 24. Ball will speak at
8:15 p. m. in Memoria] Auditorium on "United States Foreign Policy Agenda for the
Next Four Years.." His address is open tothepubllcwith-out charge,

The Meigs Marauder reserve
football team upped its season
slate to 2-2 with a hard-earned
6-0 triumph over visit!~ Point
Pleasant Saturday night at the
Middleport field.
Meigs, coached by Dick Well
and Fenton Taylor, scored its
TO on a 6 yard carry by Tailback Mike Grate, a sophomore,
with about 4'h minutes remaining in the game.
Grate's Till' wu set up by ·a
35 yard jaunt by back Randy Williams.
Point Pleasant alteD¥~ted a
comeback during the closingmiDutes of the contest and got down
to the sh: yard line with a pass.
ing attack. Time, however, ran
out on the Little Blacks.
The Meigs defense was credited with turning ln an overall
fine job srxt Roger Abbott aoo
Lynn Black were particularly
credited for doing good defensive work.

FOR PEANUTS
PALM SPRINGS, Calif. (UPO
-Harry "Peanuts 11 Lowery, San
Francisco Giants coach, has
captured the 9th annual Baseball Celebrlt.Y golt tournament. OSBORN CHAMP
TULSA, Okla. (l1 PO- Bennie
Lowery had a 72~e total of
288, five l!ltrokes tn front af Osborn of San ~rings, Okla.,
Andy Messef!lmJth. Defending won his second straight world
champion Sammy Ellis or tile drag racing championship SunCalifornia Angels t i n i I h e d da.Y In tho $111,000 world finalo
at
the Tulsa blternational
fourth .
Raceway. He defeated John
MuiUgan ct Garden Grove,
VISIT IN COLUMBUS
CaUl., in the last ot fwr
Mr. and Mrs. Allen Saunders elimination rounds.
and Mrs. Phyllis See or PL
Osborn was clocked at 211.76
Pleasant, and Mr. and Mrs. Joe miles per hour and had a time
Turner, Middleport, visited in ~ 7.05 seconds in a quarter
Columbus with Mr. and Mrs. mile in the winning round. He
Charles Turner on Sunday.
won $7,400 plus accessories.

Q-When

was

the

Irish

Sweepstakes inaugurated?
A-The lotrery on hehaH of
several Irish hospitals was in·

augurated in 1930 and soon became popular in America .

Within five years, it was the
most successful lottery in the

world .

AUTO WINNERS
SALEM,
Ind.
(UP0- The
driving team of Roy Wathen
and Jerry Norril!l af Louilrille
won the 250-mile Area Late
Model Stock Car race ~.
covering the diltance in 3 hours,
28 mimtes, 38,55 seconds.
or tha 37 cars that slarled the
500-lap rest, only 13 flnlahed.

P£!a.i anl

{Join/

f&lt;eJorl

North on Rt. 62
and
Pt. Ploa•ant, W. Ya .
MOTOR LODGE
FOR RESERVATIO~S CALL

675-1611
Entertainment In The "Starlight Room"
This Fri . &amp; Sat. the Francis. Taylor Cro"p fltCiturinv
th• exciting singing voice of kony Joseph.
SU~DAY BUFFET-~00~

TO 4 PM

SPECIAL WEEKEND RATES
THREE DAYS AHD TWO NIGHTS
(Fri. thru Sun . 2 p .m.)

2 Po,.on• (dauble bod) . ................... $24.00
3 P•non' (one double and

one ,;nglo bod) ............ . . ........ . .. $30.00
4 Person5 (two double bed•) -·····- ·-···-· $35.00
Tennis Courts
Air Strip Facilities

Golf Course Privileges
Convention ftJc:ilities

AM ADVENTURE IH SUMPTUOUS LIVING
AT VERY REASONABLE RATES-WITHIN EASY REACH

Ave,j Harry C. Dfeke,y, 707Thlrd

Ave.; Mrs. Doria M. Rwb'. 646
Firat Avo.; Mrs. Harle,y E. John&amp;011., 1808 Eastern Ave.; Mrs. c.
Ra.ymond Rallllr, 756 Se&lt;Oild
Ave.; Miss Carol J, Burns, 1495
Eastern Ave.; Mrs. John M. WUIIams, 258 state st.; Holly E.
M'\YS, Rt. 2 Crown C!Qo; lvor

Pomeroy; 'I'Clny R. Mohler, Rt.
1 Mlddleport; Miss S h a r o n
1bomj&gt;soo, Rt. I Rutland; Frank
Gruoaer, Rt. 2 Pomeroy; Ed1Yin
L, stein, Alhland, Ky.; M r a,
Gertrude M, DePriest, Jackaon;
Ra.ymond J. Cue,y, Rt.20okHUI;
Mro. Marlyn W, Gorrell, Ra-

venswoodj James R. sturglll, Sr.,
Rt. 3 Jaekaon; Mrs. Roger E,
Richards, East Worthington,
Ohln; Mrs. Daniel M. Jonldna,
Jackaon; Mra. James 0. BowlIng, Irontm; WUiard Bennutt,
·wuuams, Thurman; Mrs. Paul Chesapeake; Ml'S. Richard W,
c. Hammack, Rt. I Cheshire; Whitmore, Athens; Mrs. DonMrs. Gerald W. Edwards, Rt. I ald R. Wade, Rl. I Sand,yvl)le,
Cheshire; Harry H, llllshorat. W, Va.; Mrs. Orrlo E. Lewis,
Patriot star Rt.; Ronald K, GU- Rt. 4i Jackson; Mrs. Woodrow
Ienwater, Rt. 2 Crown City; Mrs. Garrett, Rt. 2 Jackson; Frank
Kerry W. Smith, Gallipolis For- A. Bell, Ironton; Miss Ida F,
ry; Edgar IJoonally, Rt. 2 Pat- Bayers, Qzysvtlle.
Births
riot; Mrs. Beatrice L. Perkins,
Mrs.
Kerry
W. Smith, GalllRt. I GoiUpoUs; Mrs. K. Monpolts
Ferry,
W,
Va., son, 4:53
roe Chase, Ft. Pleasant; Mrs.
p.m.
Saturdas;
Mrs.
William R,
c. Raymond Byer, Leon, W, Va.;
Helman,
Jackson,
daughter,
5:28
Mrs. Dan L. Rodgers, Pl. Pleasp.m.
Saturday;
Mrs.
Terry
D.
ant; Rhooda L. Carter, Rt. 2 GalPhalln,
Pomeroy,
daughter,
10:llpolls; Jennings Bias, Addison;
Mrs. Charles A. Searles, Rt. 1 15 p.m S.(urdny.
Discharges
Rutland; st. Clair IUU, Rt. 2
WUliam
F. Altizer, Mrs. Jo
Racine; Mrs. Terry D. Phalin,
Bird, Mrs. Don&amp;.ld E. Caldwell,
Mrs. Ora Cox, The Rev. F.arl
Trick, Treat Set
V. Cremeens, Michael J, Deem,
NEW HAVEN - The mayor, John L. Detty, Mrs. Robert A.
Thomas Grinstead, and oouncU Downard, Blaine Edwards, Mrs.
of New Haven have set October Douglas R. Fry, Mrs. J a c k
30, as Trick or Treat NighL Grimes, Brian Hayes, Mrs. BerThe Ore whistle will blow at nard Hunter, Alvin L. Johnson,
6:30 p.m. to set the start and Mrs. Harry E. Reapp, Gary T,
will blow again at 8 to announce Roush, Diane Sprinkles, Roy L.
stumho, Mrs. Arnold D. Ta.Ythe close.
Ior. Kenneth M. Worman, Mrs.
UPSET VICTORY
NEW YORK (UPI) - County
Down ~set New York 17-12
&amp;mdlly In the second game of
the lrilh Football Cup world
championships at Gaelic Park
to win the title.
Paddy Dougherty paced County Downs• attack with eight
points.

( Amended 5 ubstit..ote S.note Joint
Re1olulio n No . 291

JOINT RESOLUTION
Proposing 10 amend ~ VIII oJ
lb• CoullllllioD of Ut.• IIBI• of

Oblo by •ddiDI II..::Uoa 21 Jo
•!;llborl•• tiM I.Huann of boaU
or olh•r ohllg&amp;tl&lt;me for pv.bUc
capital tmproY•mnr. lD Oblo.
Be It resolved by the General
ABBembly of the Slate of Ohio
three-fifths of the members elected
to each house thereof concurring
therein. that then" 10h.all be submitted to the electors qf the State

OI..Q.IIIO..ln. .tllo.-

'""'"""'d

b'dir'Wf~ rat an .eteeUD!! · ~ be-'fleld
on the first Tuesday after the first
Monday In November, 1968, a proposition to amend Article VIII of the
Constltullon o1 the State of Ohio by
adding thereto a new II!Ctlon 11
follows :

ARTICLE VIII
Section 21. In addition to the a uthorization otherwise contained In
Article VIII of the Ohio Conslltution , the reneral aasernbly, In accordanc e with but subject to the
limitallons of this section. may authorize the issuance of obll(atlona,
Including bonds and notes, of the
11tate or of !&gt;tate institutions, boards.
comml~sions, authorities, or other
state 11encies or tna:trumentalltiea
for 1ny one or mol"ft of the followIng public capllal lmprovementa :
the construction, reconstruction, or
other Improvement ol hllhwaya,
including Ulose on tile state highway arstem and urban extensions
thereo , those wtthln or ll!ld.lnf to
public park s or recreational areal,
and those within or leadlnl to munlclvat corporations, the acqul•itlon, construcllon. reconatruction,
or other Improvement of. and pro·
vlllion of equipment for, bulldlnr•.
atructures, or other improvements,
and nece6lillry plannin&amp; and engineerln(, for water polluUon control
and abatement. lncludlnlf tho.Be for
HWaJe aollectlon , treatment, or disposal, water manarement, inciUdlnl
those tor watet· distribution . collection, aupp.ly, atorage, or impound ment. ana BLream flow c011trol. and
ftood control, atate mpported or
assisted lnstltutlons of higher education, technical education, voca·
tiona! education, Juvenile correction,
training and rehabilitation.
and recreallon, research an de•
velopmenl with respect to tranaportatlon, hla:hways and highway
lransportntlon, mental hyflene and
retardation, pollee and ftre training,
airporls, and other 1tate buildings
and ttructurel, and the acquisition
and improvement of real estate and
lnteruts therein required with relo the toreJolnJ, lncl\kUnJ
participation In any such capltil1
lrnprovement.a with ttce federal govenunent, lnUiolclpal corporations,
o::ounUes, ur other governmental
enUtl~s or an)'
one or more of
ttrem which participation may be
by grar.ts. loans or contrlbutlomr
lo them for an; of such capital
Improvements. It Is her.!lby determined that such capital Improvement. will directly or Indirectly
create jobs, enhance empioymen\
opportuniUes, and improve the economic welta~ of the people of ttra
stale.
The iiiiUance under authority of
ttrl.s s~tlon of obligations lhe hold en or owners of which are given
the right to have exclles a11d taxe1
levied by the aeneral assembly tor
the payment of the prlnclp11l
thereof or Interest thereon! herein
e~~lled
tax supported obi gatlona,
shall be aubject to the followlnl
limitations. Not more than one
hundred million dollau prlnclp~l
amount may be Issued In any calendar year and not more th1n t\ve
hundred mlllion dollars principii
amount may be oulstandlnl at any
one lime for such capital fmpl'(lvements for hlghway8 and resea rch
&lt;1nd development wllh respect to
hla:hways and hi&amp;:hway tranaporta·
tion . herein called hillhway nbllga llons. provided th.at ftfty per cent of
the proceeds of the ftrst ftve hundred mllllon dollars of such ux
s upported highway obll(atlons shall
be used for urban extensions ot
sl&lt;lte hll(hways and highway&amp; w ltltln
or leadlna: to municipa l corpora·
tlons. Not more Hum two hundred
fl.fty nine million dollars aggregate
principal amount ol such tax sup·
port~d ob llgallon s may be issued
for the o ther capital Improvements
aforesaid , provided thai from the
proceeds thereof one hundred
twenty million dollai'B shall be uaed
ror wnter pollution control and
abateme-nt and water mantolement,
one hundred million dollars shall
be used for higher education, ta:h lllcal and voc:lllonal education, and
juvenile correction. training and
~hablllt ll tlon, twent:v million dollllrs shall be used for p11rka .and
recreation , and nineteen milllnn dollara 1or airports, and for construction. rehllblll~tlon and equippinl
of other atate bulldlnrs and struc·
t1rrcs. iJicludinl lhnl:ll! for pollee and

J''"''

"PI!C'

Jamea D, Caldwell and Infant Cant daugllter, Mrs. Gory P, Mlndaugbter, Mrs, Roger L, Roush ton and Jnfant da\llhter, Mra.£11.
and Infant son, Nra. Clara Cam.. ward Phtlltps and 1ntant .an.
den, Mrs. E. Leo Carpenter,
Mra. Ruby CMle,y, Mrs. Mary
Cox, Mre. Ella llemy, R a I p h
rell, Mrs. Louise Haws, F.ddle
L, Howery, Mrs. Erma E, Nel1011, Odes D. Parsons, Keith D,
Saunders, Thomas E. SYare, Mrs.
Merlo E. Strait, Bobby G. Wat1011, Mra. LucUle G. Wlnqar,
Mrs. Mable L. Wolfe, Mrs. Ida
K. Rowe, Mrs. Rooald D. Cameron and infant daugbte:r, Mrs.
Cedi G. DeLong and infant son,
Mra. Gary M, Hustoo, and In-

- W I. *WIIB-.

relax,
AT
GOSNEY'S COIM..OP

:·.· ;~·~~;0;::·.············· · · · · ·. :
Personal Notes ~~~:
~

!

Mr. and Mrs. Leo Crew were
ln Warren Sunday for the funeral
senlces or Fred Latham.
Mro, Harold Triplett 0111 Mrs.

'

DUDS 'N' SUDS

UUHORY
Mlddlopoll
l1d &amp; Aoh

.

Harold LemleY spent Wedneada.y
in lrontonvisitirvMra. Triplett's
mother and other relatives and
Mra. Lemley's sister, Mrs. Betty McCoy.
Mr. Alii Mro. Bob Hoeflich
and daugflter, Jayne, l'fere weekend guests or Mr. and Mrs. Mike
Hammer, Lou Am alkl Kimberly,
Columbo! a,
Mrs. Roy Jooes, Jr. and •on,
Jeff, ot Columbus spent the weekend here with her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. E. J, Hill. They were
Jolned for a Sunday arternoon visIt by Mr. and Mrs. Ken Nease
ud !Mtlly.

Mr. and Mrs. Edwin! Mcin-

tosh and Mr. and Mrs. Marrln
Spencer and son of Dayton spent
the weekerd here l'flUI Mr. and :
Nl"w Zcno th "Zenetle " r Jn make Ide lun again. Pr-ecision amplifi·
cation lmm 2 Mrc ro · Lrthrc"t circuit~. Wcoghs on ly 1/11 ounce and
)loot! lor nw~l mold lmw ~ . Come in lor a demon ~ traloon or Zenrlh's
new ZC'tWIIe. II may he jU&gt;I ro ght lor you'

71"-/'H

""'I"''"''"" m b&lt;&gt;lo" lh• o•m• r~• oo0

"· o\IJTI-i()R17.W ZENilH DEALER

••
TEAR

OfF

MAll COUPON
COMPLETE

.
I 1m r

.

." .

.

1boul Zenittl HtlfiiiJ

-.Mil.

lJ PlfiiiSI m1illull details lltd lrte lil~rllur~
CJ Pltnellltphont rnt tl homtlo trrtnp lot a dltlft·
on1trat1on.

FREE
INFORMATION

Each issue of tax surported obligations Issued punuan to thll secUon shall mature In not more than
thlrly years from ttre date ol. ls11U ·
ance thereof, or. If Issued to retire
obllgatlon• lnued hereunder. within
thirty yean 1rom the date auch
dt~bt was o.r.l(lnaQ¥ contrac~ . J1
IUCh ·tax AUpportetf obliJatfot\.1 Pl'f:
luuej &amp;I note• In anticipation of
the luuanee ot bonds, proviSion
shall be made by law for settlnl
aside, so long as such notes are
outstandlngL illlo 11 special fund or
funds aucn amountl from the
aourcea authorized for payment of
such bondl under thi5 seetion 111
would be auffl.clent tor payment
of that amount of principal on auch
bonds ltrat wouki have been payable
during ouch period ll such bonds,
maturing during a period of thirty
years. had been lasued without
prior !nuance ot mch note~ . Such
fund or fundi may be used 1olely
tor the payment of principal of
such notes or of bonda in anticipation of which INCh note• have treen
I6&amp;Ued .
The fallh. and credit and exclsa
and taxes of the state, excludlnt"
ad valorem taxes on real or perooual pmperty and Income taxea
shall be pledged to the payment of.
the principal of and Interest on such
tax supported obllfations, llnklnl
or bond retirement fund provJIIllon1
shall be made therefor, and thbi
section shall otherwiae be lrnplemented. all In the manner and to
the exlent provided bv law by the
general aasembly, lncludlnl provisions for appropriaUon of pfedged
'"xcilet and taxes. and covenant.
to contlnue their levy, collection
and application, to oontlnue ao lonJ
as such tax supported obllaatlons
are outftandinJ, without neceuity
for further appropriation notwlth·
standlna S~tlon 22 or Article IL
Ohio Constitution; provided that
the moneys referred to In Seet.Jon
5a of Article xu. Ohio Constitution,
herein called hiJhway Wier recelpta,
ahall , aftl!"r provision for payment
of amounts pled.-ed to obUgaUoiUI
heretofore or hereafter luued under
Sectlona 2c and 21 of this Article,
be pledged to Ule payment of the
principal of and Interest on hl~­
way obUgatlons authorized by thla
section but not lo other obllcatlons
authorized hereby. U excillft and
Lui!"!! other than hl&amp;hway user recelpte are pledged to the payment
of the principal of or lntere.t. on
hlf,hway ollll&amp;atlona authorized by
th a ~ecUon, In each year lh:at such
highway user receipt. are available
for auch purpoae. the ume ahaU be
appro:rriated lberelo and the require
appliUIIJOn of mdl nther
excise• and ta~~:e~~ shall be reduced
In correapondlil&amp; amount.
TM reneral auembly al8o may
authorize the llauance ot nv1nue
obllgatlona and other oblWUona.
the ownen or holdei'B ot whlch are
not flven the rl£ht to have excise•
or taxea levied by the general usem bly for the payment of principal thereof or tnterelt thereon, for
such capital lrnp.rovementa for mental hYiiene and retardation. parka
and recreation, state supported and
state aSIJ.lsted lnstltutlona of hiJhf!r
education, includlnl lhol:ll! for technical education, water r.ollullon
control and abatetnent, wa er man·
agement, and boualnl of branches
and fllfenclea of ~tate tovernment,
wnich obligation• lhall not be subJect to other provisions of this section and shall not be deemed to be
debts or bonded lndebtednesa of the
state under other provi1lon1 ot this
Con11itutlon. Such obligations may
be secured by a pledce under law,
without neceanty for further appropriation, ot all or such porllon
ns the gen~ral nlll!embly ,.uthorJzes
of charges for ttre lrealment or care
of n •ental hygiene and retardation
pntleut.a, receipls with respect to
pnrk1 and recrtaUonal laeiiUiet, receipta of or on behalf of ~tate
supported and 1tate anlsted inst1tutions of higher education, or
othe r r.!lVenuea or r.!lcelpls, apeclfted
by law for sue!h purpose, or the
state or Its office1111, d~partmentl,
divisions, instltutlcma. boarda, commIn toms, aulhorltle~. or other alate
agencies or Instrumentalities, and
thil provision may be implemented
b:v law 1o better provide therefor:
provided, however, that any chruges
lor the trealment or care of mental
h:vgtene or relardallon paUents may
be 10 pled&amp;ed only to obll11:atlona
l6&amp;ued for capital improvementa for
mental hylfene and retardation. any
receipts with respecl to parks and
recreatlon may be 10 pledied only
to obllgntlonR Issued for capital Improvements tor parkll and recreation , rw:v re«!lptl of or on behalf
of slate &amp;orpported or rrt.nte nsslsled

-------STAll - - -

••oo

A panel dbc:ualion on way11
Of attracting and holding Y&lt;IWII!
people In the church wa1 featured
at the annual Rally Da.r program
cl the !Outde,y ochool of Heath
United Methodist ChUrch.
Serving oo tho p~~~ai for the
Informal dlarusalon with t h e
congregation were members rA
the Junior high and aenlor high
classes. Children from 1he nuroery through the sixth grade
parUdJtSted with 11011gs and recitations.
AI a meeting of tho Melhodlat Youth Fellowship limdoy evening, various projects were reviewed. Sind)' Johnson, presi..
dent, was in charge,

will be ....ed.

on u.ld amendment be declared tCcordinl to lltw to have voted' tn
favor thereot the 10vemor of U.e
State ot Ohio ahall make pi'CK!Iama·
tton thereof forthwith.
(Amended Sub1titute House Joint
Resolution No. f:l)
JOINT RESOLUTION
P"JOOdDg to am•nd MOHon I ol
Artlcl• xn of u.e CODUUutloa of
!be Slate ol Olt.lo to penab: lbe
a.nerral A-mblf lo 9fUll: lloJae..
...._ •xemptloal; for certaiD. nstdeall.
·; .,
.,.
.:,""' ,
J;le it t'ftDl~'lbY tile Gentral ~
Aasem bJy oi the State of Obto. ~
three·flltha of the memben elerled
to eaeh house concurring ,therein.
that there lhall be mbmltleil to tha
elector. of the litate In the manner
prescribed b:y law at 1he a:eneral
election to be held on the tint
TUesday a1ter the fil'llt Mondaf tn
November, 11188, a proposal to
amend tectlon 2 of Article XII of
1he ConaUtutlon of Ohio to read a1
follows:
ARTICLE XII
No property, taxed accordin1 to
value. lh.IB be 10 taxed In excea~ of
one per cent of IU lrue valu... In
money tor all atal.e and looal! purposa, but lawa may be ~
authorlzlnl .additional taxa to be
lll!vted outalde of JUcb UndtaUCn
either when approved b:y at 1eU1
a majority oJ electon oJ the taxlnc
dlatrtct vot1n1 on such propoai.Uon,
or when provided tor by Uie charter of a municipal corporallon.
Land and improvement. tbereon
shaD ~ taxed by unllonn rule accordlnt to value, e•cept that tbe
General Assembly may provtde b7
law for a homeftead exempUon,
The quallftcatlonl and conditione
for aucb exemption ahall be let by
the General A.sembly tubJec:t to
the UmitaUon that an owner of •
homeatead shall be a resident or 1be
atqte of Ohio, llhall be 11Xt)r-llv•
yean~ of ap or older and lhall
rellde tn the bome•tead. The Oeneral AIMmbl:y m1y also provide by
law for a homestead exemption for
aU reatdenta of Ohio who own and
reside tn the home~~tead, the amount
of 1uch exemption to be detenntned
by or In aecordanCII WIUt law . All
bonds outatandlnl on the ltt day of
Janual')', 1913, of the alate ot Ohio
or of any eity, viU.p, hamlet,
count¥ or town.hlp In this atate. or
Whlch have been luued in behalf
of lhe public IIChool• o1 Ohio and
the mean• of instructJon In eonnecUon 1berewltb. wbleh tondt were ,
outltandlnJ on the ht dar, of January, 1913 and all bonda nued for
the World War Compenaatlon l'undl
shall be exempt from taxaticm, ana
without llrnltl.ng the reneral power,
aubJect to the provisions ot Article
[ of thil constitution, to detennlne
the aubjecta and methods of taxa·
tlon or exemption• therefrom, 1ft"'
era! laws may be paaled to exempt
burying grounds, public ~ehoOl
boiLIH. houaea \lied exclualvely for
public wonhip, tnsUtuU0111 u.ed exclusively for charitable Pl.li'POS08.
and public properlY UHd exclusively for any publfc purpo•. bUt
all auch laWI shall be mbject. to
alteration or repeal: and the velulo
oJ
prop(trtY 10 exempted shall.
trom tfme to tlme, be aiCflrtatned
and publbihed as may be dlreded
by law.

Ever bwnp the ironing table

and have your iron fall over
on the floor? A new feature

to ltllnlmlze

this danger

Is a

"Heel Rest" which is a threeinch "V" which provides a
great deal of extra stability
when tile iron is sitting up and
a wider surface when It is In
upright position.

CANDYifi'RIPERS MEETING,
Veterans Memorial Hospital, 6:30p.m. Monde,y.
J,O,F, Class al7:30 p.m. Mon·
de,y In parlor or United Methodist Church, Pomeroy.
TIJEIDAY
LADIES AUXD..L\RY, Drew
Webster Post 39, American Lsglon, 7 •30 p.m. Tueade,y at post
homo.
LADIES AUXlUARY, Racine
American Legion Post 602, wlll
meet at 7 p.m. Tuesde,y. Civil
defense progrom will !ollow,
Meinliel's w 101.8 ftower' bUlbS
to be plantad,
LADIES AUXILIARY, FeeneyBennett Post 128, American Legion, 7:30 Tuesde,y n1g11t at the
hall. OrpnlzaUonal moedng ol
tho .Jmlor auxUiary will be bald
at 7 p.m. omcers wUl be elect..
ed.
FEENEY -BENNETI Post 128,
Amerlcsn Legion, 7:30 p. m.
Tuesday at tile hall, Plaru will
be OOIIIPieted "r tho 50th anniversary observance ot Veterana
Day with a potluck dinner on Nov.
llat 6 p.m.

Cenu1ne fLEX·O ·GlASS i! the only
plnlit window mtlerial that tiffin

a 2 rur aulnnttt ,The name
FLEX·O·GLASS is printed on the
tdp lor your pral!ldion.
t ".,•••,.a Lv~~tlter ...,

~

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

OHIO ETA Pin CHAPI'ER,
Beta ~ Phi Sororltjo, 7:30
Tuesde,y nl8lt, Columbia Gas Co.
Demonatration by the home ecooomiat.
POMEROY LODGE No. 164,
F&amp;AM. apodal meetlngTuoaday,
7:30 p.m. at ths Pomeroy Maaonlc Temple In honor of tho
Past Masters ol the Lodge who
will oxempll(y tho ritual of tho
third degree. Refreshments follow. All Master MBI!Jona 111Vited.

~·.,

...--

···Middleport. .. ..
::Persona/ Notes •·•

Devot1011a were presented by
Tom CaBBell. llleotlns with the
Y...,. - l o were Mr. and Mrs.
Jack Slavin. Thomas Caaaell,
and the Rev, and Mra. Jack
Slavtn.
Mary Bra(buoy and S u a a n
Powers aervecl relrelhmerU.
Others attending were George
llawle,y, Beth Fultz, JemUor Goble, and Anita Fultz. Mlu Bradbury Is treasurer cl the MYF
and Mlas Goble Ia Ito secretary,

Mr. and Mn. Jol1n Goodrich
ol Daytm and Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Wlnebremer, Colwnbu.11,
are the guests ot Mr. and Mrs.

Karl OWen,

Modern trends in arrangIng will be lhe thorne of a
demonatraUon w be given by
Mrs. Nell Franklin at the open

meeting of the Rutland Friendly Gardeners Wodnesda,v night
at tile Rutland Church or Christ

basement.
Members of all garden clubs
of Meip County, as well as
other per11011a interested in
flower arrang!ng, are Invited
to the open meet:lng scheduled to begin at 7•30 p.m. Mrs.
John Reese, new director oC
Region 11, Ohio Association
of Garden Clubs, will be a
guest.

Mr. and Mrs. Jan llaucll and
dilldren, Brent and Brenda, were
weekend visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Plcllens and Mra. Marle Van Cooney. Other recent
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Pickens were A. c. Webb and Adrah
Hutc:hins of Columbus.
Mr. and Mr.11. Ben Pickens lett
Thursday tor their home at BalThe Choice of Tiles
tbnoro, M&lt;l attor vlaltlng hero
with relatives.
If you are choosing bathMrs. Earl KnightreturnedFrt- room tiles, etc., it is n good
day from a week ln Columbus idea to stick to neutral colors
with her soo-ln-law and &lt;laugh. like gray or white so you can
ter, Mr. and Mrs. lion Halle,y, change the colors of the room
and daqhter, Paige. Mrs. M, with the seasons or your
C. Wilson and Mr. and Mrs. mood. If your room already
has tiles, you can work around
Knight went to Columbus a week
It in the same way. If you
ago ror the first birthday of have pink, for instance, you
Paige and Mrs. Knight remain- can use dark green to cool it
ed for the week.
in summer and mix oranges
Mr. and Mrs. L. E, Reymlds and pinks in your accessories
'The Malga Local Teachers'
came home Thursda,y from Cin- to warm it in winter.
Association met October 17 at cinnati where Mrs. Reynolds attho Middleport High School cafe- tended the conventioo of the Nateria with prealdonl Jolrl Mora Umal Auoclation of Bank Wom- ter, Jodie, Zanesvllle, w e r e
prealdlng ond -..en! 111 record In en. Before returning home they weekend visitors OC Mr. and Mrs.
IIIIIJPOri of Senator Ookle,y Col- visited In Lebanon with Mr. and Paul llaptonstall ,
lins and Rep. Ralph Welksr.
Mrs. T. G. Reynolds.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Sauer,
Mrs. Loab Ord reported that
Weekend guests of Hom e r Mary Ruth and Joy, attended the
she has been nominated as a Cook l'fere Mrs. Arth.J.r &amp;uart Trt-County Community Concert
member ct the executive com- and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Pel- series program 9.mday aftermittee of tho SEOTA.
zel ot Charleston, W. Va., and noon.
Mr. W, E. Campbell is attendHomer Hotrman of Chicago, nJ.
Mrs. Forrest Bachtel, Miss
Ing tho aalary ln-ctlonal
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Luckeydoo Carol Bachtel, Mrs. J. E, D,
school as chairman
the com- of Huntington, W, Va. were week- Hartinger, and Miss F'rleda
mlltoe and Mr. Robert 11amm Ia end guests
their parents, Mr. Faehnle were Wednesda,y visiattmdlng as chairman ot the and Mrs. Alva Luckeydoo ot. New tors in Columbus.
Profeaslona.l NejUtiadons COmHaven, W.Va. and Mr. and Mrs.
mittee.
James Brewington, Middleport.
Representatives to the southMrll. Gertrude Cabeen's "eekeaatern Ohio Educational Aaooend guests were Mr. and Mrs.
clatlon which will be hold In
George Cabeen, Freddie a n d
Athms Nov. 2 are Mrs. RichGeorge or Da.rton.
ard SW.ckhamer, Pbyllla HackMr. and Mrs. Tom Watkins,
ett, Howard Knight, Bob Hamm, Chris and Tom, Columbus spent
OPE~ TUESDAY
and Maxine PhllaoD. AllernDtes
EVEHI~G 7 TIL 9
the weekend here with their par.
are Terry Ohllqer, Dana Kes- ents, Mr. and Mrs. William Sla.
senger, Helen Dais, Martha Ven·
ter and son, Bill, and Mr. and
narl and John Mora.
Mrs. Ora Watkins.
The tlrst presentatioo ot a
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne hrp
past president's pln was made
Phone 992·3667
and dsughter, Marilyn, and Mr.
Middleport
by Mrs. Daiay Blakeslee to Mr. and Mrs. John 9larp and daughRichard SWackhamer, who thank-

Boon to Some Women
Rubber gloves are a boon

good idea to wash your outdoor mat. It has collected lots

of mud, etc., over the wJn,lel'.
Dip it In suda, tllen h018

to some women but can preteet hands properly only II

kept Krupulously elean. After
use, wash tb em In suday

water, rln1e thoroughly and

dry oa a glove caddy whleh
boldo each glove aprlghl and
open to permit g..d drainage

and air clreulaUon.

• • •

Wash Outdoor Mat
At the end or winter it is a

Collins,

or

or

Fall and
Holiday
Hair Styling

MARY JUNE'S
BEAUTY SHOP

while you dial it!
Slenderet. The one that delivers the dial
to your finger. The one thai fits neatly in your
hand and in any room in your home. All the
latest colors. Wall or desk models. Call
our Business Office today. We're holding a Slenderet extension for you.
Slenderer is the newest
addition to our "style-line."

SOUTHEASTERN OHIO TELEPHONE CO.

ed the aiSoelatlon.
Reports of tho Kent state University Leadership Conference
were given by Thelma 0, Campbell and Martha Huote&lt;l Martha
ond Mro. Halon Dais spoke oo
the work and ate: Proreastmal
NegotiaUona meeting which was
held In COlwnbus.
Throo Important resolutions
were adopted during tho buslneu meeting and Preal- Mora
appointed eommltteea for t h e

yoar.
Refreshments ot. cookies, cotfee and hot chocolate were served.

Melp

Property
Chrysler Newport
2-Door Hardtop

Malcolm Ingram, Mildred Ingram to John Dale Smith, MiMle

Elva Surlth, parcels, Rutlem
J. B. O'Brien, Reberta C. O'-

With a big V-8 engine that

Brien to MlirUn P. Nesaelroad,
6 acres, Ollve.
Charles R. !Qooell, Kathryn
Hysall to C&amp;rol Gene Mowery,
Dolly Faye Mowery,lnt, Middle-

runs on regular gas. Unbeatable(

port.
Douglas M. Bissen, carolyn A.
Blsaall w Clifford B. La!qJ, Edna E. l...u1), 4.35 acrea, Oranp.

ReedsYille.
Hue! Jean

With grecoful body accent stripes sweeping
the full kngth of theo fuse/ego. Unboeteblol

Kaoff to CecU

land.

Shatterproof

Flexible
Long-Lasting

-·36~(;,,,

PICKENS

W.VA.

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
STATE OF OHIO
OFFICE oF THE SU:RETARY
OF STATE

Archie EUla, Ina Elllo to Ohio
Fuel Gas Co.. right o( wa,y, SalIsbury,
Thomas R. Westen, Huol Westen to Dennis L. Palmer, Jessie
L. Palmer, .Parcels, Sllem.
Robert M. Hickman to Helen
M. Hickman, cerL tor tnna.,
Scipio.
&lt;lara Adams to Maury Mlller,

Mildred Miller, pareele, Salltbury,
James D. Adamo to Maury Miller 1 Mildred Miller, parcels, sallabury,
J, W, Scarbrough w Larry
Searbrouab, 57'4 acres, Lobu-

Chrysler Newport Custom
4-Door Sedan
A new styling concept.
A fusel•g• instead of
• bocf( bolted to 1
fr•me. Unbeellblel

'""Edith Newbouae, dee., Georp
Newhouu, Adm., to ll A. Cole,
Ollolla Cole, pareelo, Orlqje.
Georp G. Gum, Fl!ll Gwn to

I, TED W. BROWN, SecnlarJ" ol
State ot !he State of Ohio, do
hereb.v certify that the foteJOina
It a true copy of Amended 8ubBU'=
tute Sennte Joint Rl!aolutton No .
21 a!'1t1 Amended Substitute HOUR
Joint Resolution No. 43 ftled In tha
office nf the Secreteq of Stllte and
proposinl" to •mend the above aeoI!Ofll of the Constitution of Ohio.

Jack Cal"'ley, Neacll ~-. lot.
PC11111l'O)'.

AUTHORIZED

IIE.'It-.

CHRYSLER
M010118 CORPDRA11DN

Keeptng Knives Keen

To uoue depeadable, utthof, unlllf IDII cbopplaf,
It payo lo IHIJ llle bell lollvett
yoa CD offenl uti lllb ....

IN TI!'.STlMONY WlttRI:OF, I
have hereunto aubacrlbed my nartat
and afthred my_ 5Jmcial seal at Coo
lumbua th1t 1Ith day of AQIIllt.

,....

And be It further re.olved, that
the required pubUca11on ot the aald
proposed amendment shall be made
TED W. BROWif
and the tonn or ballot lo be uaed
Secretary ot Btatt
in l&amp;ld election for the lllbmisslon
thereof shall be prepared by the
Secretary of StoW of Ohio In con(Sea))
formlty with the abclve provlrlona.
U o majority ot the electors vollnl
tsy ooder of Plw Boord of Eleetiont, of Meig• Count~, Ohio
EI.!MElT G. WILL, Chohr~~on
Sept. 30-0c:t . 7, J.f., 21 &amp; 28
DOROTHY M. JOHNSTON, Dlret:lor

..

Kautr, Eva Kaufl', lite eatate, Rut-

au

EFFECTIVE DAft AND REPEAL
If adopted by a majority ot tha
electon voUn&amp; on thla a mendment
the amendment ahall take elrod
Immediately, and l!xlaUnr stctiGn I
of Article xn of the Con•tltutton
of Ohio s hall be repealed from 1uch
effective date.

... ....

Welker,
·:1--s~~·;~·i······················lll
Backed
'.! Calendari:

baby sitting and refreshments

Minimizes Danger

Shall Article VID of the
Ohio Con~tltutlon be
amended by addlnC
Section 21 empowerln&amp;
the General Auembly
to auUtorize additional
obligations, lncludinJ
bond• and notes, for
hl&amp;hway• and other
public cepital Improvementa dealll'Uited below,
tt beina: therein deter·
mined that they w1JI
create Jobe, enhanCe
employment opportunities and Improve the
economic welfare ot the
people of the state?
Such obUrattons pa)'·
able from exeJ.sea and
taxes, e~~:cept property
and Income tax-. lhaU
mature within thirty
years and are aubject
lo lhe followlnf llmltations: For hlghwa:yl and
research for hllhW&amp;YI
and bli'hway transportAtion, not more than
000,000 may be iaaued In any one year
and not more than a
total of fMJO,OOO,OOO may
be outstanding at an:y
one time: and tor other
capital improvementl
nol mo"' than a~n -~
........ ol
'
may be lssu~ wh
$120,000,000 1a tor wa r
pollullon conlrol and
waler munagement,
$100.000.000 tor hlcber
education. technical and
vocational education,
ood juvenile correction,
train ng and rehabU1tatlon , ,20,000,000 for
parka and recreation,
and 119,000,000 for airporia. and other state
bulldlnll and atructurea
lncludlnr tboae for pollee and ftre training.
Under mch Section 21
the General Aaembly
alao ml)' provide for
such capltal improvement. for mental hyrlene and retardation,
parka and recreaUon,
hl«her education, water
pollution control~ water
msnaa:ement, anc hous Ing of state government1
throu&amp;h the Issuance oi
revenue and other obligotlons , t he holders of
which are given no
Iia:bt to have exclle• or
taxu levied by the
&amp;:eneral assembly, which
obllratloru~ ahall not be
roun ted af alnst the
above Umita ions, shall
not be deemed to be
debts of the state for
other purposes of the
COI'IItltutlonb and may
be secured y a pled&amp;c
of revenues or receipts.

Youth Program
Is Discussed

tnlt Root, chairman. Room vtsitaUon starling at 1:25 p.m. Free

Berne st.

tn•tltutlotlll of bJfher education may
be pled&amp;ed onlr to obllp.tlon• !SlUed tor capita Improvement&amp; tor
ltate aupported or ttate aulfled
lntUtutloru: of bigher education, and
any other revenue1:1 or receipts may
be 10 pledged only to obUptiona
luued for eapltal lmpro\'ementa
which are In whole or In part uae·
ful to, conlltructed by, or financed
by the department, board, commll•
slon, authority, or other agency or
I!Uitrumentallty that receives the
reve11ues or rt!'celpts 110 pledged. The
authority provided by thfl para&amp;raph b In addition to, cumulative
with, and not a limitation upon, the
authority of lhe general assembly
under other provli;lon1:1 of thl!i Con sUtaUon; rruch para«nph doe!l not
imp!Ur any law. he~tot'ore enacted
by the pneral auembly. and any
obJJeatlons iuued under any rrueh
law consistent wllh the pmviston•
of thb pararraph shall be deemed
to b• llsued under authority of this
parafl"aph.
Both the principal of all obU&amp;aUons authoriZed under authority ot
this eection and the Interest thereon
llhall be exempl from taxation
within this state.
Be It further ruolved. That at
the eleetlon herein desJJnated 1or
aubmiulon of this amendmenl to
the electors of the Slate of Ohio,
auch amendment shall be placed on
th~ oftlcial ballot In the manner
preaertbed by law es•ntlally In lhe
followtne fonn:

·.·. ·.·.···&gt;&gt;:::..•:;:::::::::.::-:::::-:::::::::;:-:·:·:·:·: :·:······

Mrs. Ral()h Spencer. The Mar- ~
h
vin ~encer tamil,y also visited
MONDAY
with Mr11. Spencer'&amp; mother,
MIDDLF;J'ORT
PTA, 7:30 p.
Mrs. Frances Hewel!lon.
m.
Monde,y
In
the
Middleport
Mrs. Eldon Weeks r~ently reElementary
School
auditorium.
turned from a week's visit in
Clarksville, Ind., with Mr. Alii
SOUTHERN ATHLETIC BooB·
Mrs. Albert Burkhart. She waa tera, Monde,y, 7:30 p.m. at Southaccompanied by Mrs. JOOn Weeks em High School, Racine.
of Reynoldsburg.
REVlV AL at Silver Run Free
Mr. and Mrs. Eldon Weeks Will O!urch at 7:30 p, m. slartwere recert visltorsofMissGen- t.ng Oct. 21 for two weelu with
evlew stobart who now resides the Rev. carl VAlance, huntirwat the home or Mr. and Mr a. ton, speaker. Public welcome.
Rel()h Brewer of Portland.
CIIESI'ER PTA 8 p.m. MonMr. al'kl Mrs. Delbert Bruch
have returned home after a \'I sit de,y at school. Grandparents nlglll
ln Mount Vernon with their son, to be observed with Mra. Ker-

Pd. Pol. Adv.

tire training. U tax 1upported obUt:ationa are luued under authority
of lhla lt'C!tlon to retire tall: mp·
ported obligation~ previoUilY luued
under authority' of thla aectlon, auch
new obligations shall not be counted
against such limits to the erlent
that the prlndpal amount thereof
dou not exceed the principal
amount of the obllgatlonl to be retired thereby.

,... ,... ...

5- The Dally Sentinel, Pomeruy-Middleport:, 0., MORley, October 21, 1968

Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Um:len
or Columbus were weekend vtslt.-ors ot Mr. and Mrs. Eldon Weeks.

for

TAFT
CHIEF JUSTICE
till--·-

mom

Frecka, Mra. Marlyn W. Gor-

..

.... '

cue ol litem. - r lei a

I." !1ft
Ia a dJa.
II off

bile Malt or
wuler. IDitea

•••• .,•• ., ltANIII ON TMI lHI

~·~-~~fiiiACJIOif

HAUNTIII

Ebersbach H•dware, Main St., Pomeroy

1

wlllt a ntlty e- lm•edlately after .... lltea *Y uti
olore. Rab a 1llllo oU Ia wood
lwHIIet lo repel molllllre uti
preveal eraeb. Cll'IIOII llee1
lllatlel dlllbae&lt;l from ...
cu be Heued wM eleutier
uti tleel.wMI.

-

This ear join the Unbeatables.

-

Tom .Rue Motors, 399 South 3rd Ave., Middleport, ·o
.'

-- - -- ---~------------llliliiitiiiiitittllil

_________
I

�-..

Honor Roll
At Southern

Holzer Medical Center: VIsIting hoora 2-4 and 7 p.m.
Parents ODlJ' on Pedlalrica Ward.
Admisalms
Mra. Pearl Markin, 539 Third

.a

High Noted
Southern High School ·honor
ltudentl the Oral alx-week gradIng period are anno1111&lt;'ad aa fol-

ROXANNE WALLIS

JOHN CULLEN

DEBBIE McCONniAY

Three Win 4-H Honors for Mason
MASON - Three members
ol the Hill-Billie 4.Jl club, which
meets in the Upper Flats Community Bull ding, recenlly represented Mason Coon&amp;iY tn the
4-H Round-Up at the Stale 4-H
Camp, Jackson's Mill, near We!lton.
After w!Ming the COOJllly demonstration, visual presentatloo
and talent contests, the young peo-

Pro Standings
AFL STANDINGS
by United Press International

East

W L T Pet.
2 0 ,667
3 0 ,500
3 I .400
5 0 . 286

Now York .... , 4
Booton ....... 3
Miami ...... , 2
Houston ...••. 2
Bull'alo ........ 1 5 I .167
West
W L T PeL
Kansas Clly ..• 6 I 0 ,857
S&amp;n Diego , • .• 5 I 0 .833
Qaldard
4 2 0 .667
Denver .... ... 2 4 0 .333
Cincinnati . . •. 2 5 0 . 286
Sunday's Results
San Diego 55 Denver 24
Boston 23 Buffalo 6
New York 20 Houston 14
Miami 24 Clndnnati 22
Kansas City 24 Daklalld 10
SuOOay' s Schedule
San Diego at Kansas City
Cincinnati at Oaklarxt
Boston at New York
Miami at Denver
Houston at Buffalo
0.

0

•••

NFL STANDINGS
By United Press International
Eastern Conference
century Division
W L T Pt~
New Orleans •• 3 3 0 . 500
st. Louis • , , , 3 3 0 • 500
Cleveland •.. , . 3 3 0 ,500
Pittsburgh . , , . 0 6 0 . 000
Capitol Division

WLTPct.
Dallas •.•.•.
New York .••.
Washington • • •
Philadelphia ...

6
4
3
0

0
2
3
6

0
0
0
0

1.000
,667
• 500
.000

Western Conference
Central Division

W L T Pet
Detroit . . . . . . 3 2 1 . 600
lolbme- ..... 3 3 0 , 500
Green Bay •..• , 2 3 I .400
O!icago ••... 2 4 0 .333
Coastal Division
W L T Pet.
Los Angeles ... 6 0 0 1.000
Baltimore . . .• 5 1 U . 833
San Francisco .. 3 3 0 .500
Atlanta , ..•• , I 5 0 ,167
Sunday's Results
Detroit 14 Green Bay 14 (tie)
Chicago 29 Philadelphia 16
New Orleans 16 Pittsburgh 12
San Fran. 26 New York 10
Clevelolld 30 BaiUmore 20
St. Loul1 41 Washfrwtoo 14
Dallas 20 Minnesota 7
Los Aq;.teles 27 Atlanta 14
Sunday's Schedule
Los Angeles at Baltimore
Minnesota at Chicago
New Orleans at st. Louis
Atlanta at Cleveland
New York at Washington
Philadelphia at Pittsburgh
San francisco at Detroit
Only games !lcheduled.
Moo:lay's Schedule
Green Bay at Dallas
Only game sch~du.led.
0

,,

pie won the privilege or representing Mason County In t h e
Charleston Area Activities, held
at the , Ame Bailey Grade Sthool
at &amp;. Albans.
Oebbie McConihay, now a
freshman at Marshall UniversJty,
won blue ribbons in all three contests. Her demonstraUon was on
"Bits, Dttrerent Kinds and Their
Proper Use." Miss McCooihay
won the state contest. Since there
is no National contest tor Horsemanship, 1be was declared West
VIrginia stare champion In the
category of Horsemanshlp.
Debbie ia the 17-year-o I d
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William McConlhe,y of Sand Hill
Road. l'ile has been In 4-H work
for six years and most of her
projects have been Light Horse
&amp; and
Horse Science a n d
Horsemanship.
While In Polnl Plesaant High
School, she was an active mem.
ber of the Big Black Marching
Band. ~e also won honors in
band, pla,ytng In the All Area
Band and the All stare Band.
She is currently a member of
the Marshall University March·
ing Band. She is a member ot.
the First Church of God in
Polnt Pleasant.
RoxAnne Walll8, a freshman
at Wahama High School, won
blue ribbons ln the County and
the Charleston Area Cont&amp;sts
and a white ln the State Contest. Her visual presentation was
on 11 Heads up, Hand !lOme," Miss
Wallis used a live model for her
part In llle phott&gt;graphy category, 9Je was the youngest mem.
ber to try In the stare Photogf"''by Cqntest.
..
Rox:Ame is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Orlando Walllo of
West Columbia Route. She is 13
years old and has been tn 4-H
club work five years . Some or
her projects have been Photography ~ U, UI, Pack 'N Snack,
Chat and Chew, Good Grooming for Young Women and Room
Improvement.
!!he served as an editor of the
Waharna Jr. High newspaper and
is a member otthe Ashton Baptist Church. She Is presently
attending Penial United Methodist Church, near her home, and
is a member ot. its Youth Fellowship.
John William Cullen Jr., Is
the son or Mr. and Mrs. J. William Cullen ol Letart Route, is
14 years old, and has been a
member or the Hll) -BUlle Club
Cor llve years where his projects ha•te been Potato GrowIng, Photography I, Handicraft
I and fly Good ~~omming f o r
Boys, West Virginia Trees and
Tractor Mechanics L
John entered the County, Char·
Ieston area and state Talent Con.
tests. He presented a recitation
of "Our Soldier Dead'' by C.
0, Clark. He won a blue rJbbon in the county contest, s red
ribbon in the Charleston Area
contc st and a green ribbon in
the State Talent contest tor recognition at Jacksoo's Mill. He
also won $10.
John is a ninth grade student
at Point Pleasant Jr. HIgh
School where he Js interested
in sports. He Is also active In

Oak Grove church, where he Ia
an usher and a member of the
Youth Fellowship.
Two of these young folks were
accompanied to Jackson's Mill
by Gary Rood, a retired member ot the Hill Billie ChJb, and
presently serving as president
ct lhc 4-H All Star Organization. Miss Barbara Adkins of
Point Pleasant also made the
trip.
Mrs. J, William Cullen, aJsoan
All Star, S3W the trio safely
home. Mrs. Cullen is presentJ.y
serving as an Assistant Leader
of the club and is past treasurer of the 4-H Leaders Association.

n.

lows (all with B or bettor grades):
FRESHMEN - Edwin Cross,
llruce Hart, Gary Michael, Lorl'tta MiddlesMlrt, Nancy 0 u r a,
~ebecca Promtt, Allan P u g h,
lonneth l'iluler, WUIIam Wheelor, David White, Ricky Whitt.
&amp;JPHOMOR~ Keith Ashley, ~on Ervin, Mary Ferrell, Patty lhle, Daniel Nease,
Roger Nease, Deborah Norrl1,
Rita Salser, Robert l'ilaln, Denise &amp;lodgrass.
JUNIORS -

JEFF BREWER,

(All A's), Irene Cooper, Pat Dumas, Eric Furbee, Danny Hill,
Jan Hill, Kathy lUll, Brenda Holman, Loretta Kiser, Joan Manuel, Trudy Maslonka, Crystal
Mathews, Debra McMillan, Patsy Picllens, Marsha Pugh, SANDRA SELLERS (All A'o), Mark
Smith, DORTHA Wll.COXEN, (All
A•s), Mickey Wolfe, Gary Nor~

rts.
SENIORS- Marl&lt;Beegle,Melanie Beegle, Rhonda Braden,
Brenda Bradtord, Jennller Davl1,
Unda Grindstaff, Donna Jefrers,
Carole Johnson, Jane Johnson,
Cheryl Maslonka, Robin

Morrow,

Brlgl.tte Nease, George Norris,
Barbara Roush, Aaron Sayre,
Beck;y Sayre, Brenda Sayre, San·
dra Ta.vlor, Joy Theiss, Susan
TuttJe James White.

Marauder 2nds

In Tough 6-0
Grid Victory

GEORGE BALL
ATHENS- Georg~W. Ball,
who r~cently resigned as U,S,
ambassador to the United Na.
tions to campaign lor Hubert
Hurnp~y, will deliver a Kennedy Lecture Series address
at Ohio Universit)•, Tuesday,
OcL 24. Ball will speak at
8:15 p. m. in Memoria] Auditorium on "United States Foreign Policy Agenda for the
Next Four Years.." His address is open tothepubllcwith-out charge,

The Meigs Marauder reserve
football team upped its season
slate to 2-2 with a hard-earned
6-0 triumph over visit!~ Point
Pleasant Saturday night at the
Middleport field.
Meigs, coached by Dick Well
and Fenton Taylor, scored its
TO on a 6 yard carry by Tailback Mike Grate, a sophomore,
with about 4'h minutes remaining in the game.
Grate's Till' wu set up by ·a
35 yard jaunt by back Randy Williams.
Point Pleasant alteD¥~ted a
comeback during the closingmiDutes of the contest and got down
to the sh: yard line with a pass.
ing attack. Time, however, ran
out on the Little Blacks.
The Meigs defense was credited with turning ln an overall
fine job srxt Roger Abbott aoo
Lynn Black were particularly
credited for doing good defensive work.

FOR PEANUTS
PALM SPRINGS, Calif. (UPO
-Harry "Peanuts 11 Lowery, San
Francisco Giants coach, has
captured the 9th annual Baseball Celebrlt.Y golt tournament. OSBORN CHAMP
TULSA, Okla. (l1 PO- Bennie
Lowery had a 72~e total of
288, five l!ltrokes tn front af Osborn of San ~rings, Okla.,
Andy Messef!lmJth. Defending won his second straight world
champion Sammy Ellis or tile drag racing championship SunCalifornia Angels t i n i I h e d da.Y In tho $111,000 world finalo
at
the Tulsa blternational
fourth .
Raceway. He defeated John
MuiUgan ct Garden Grove,
VISIT IN COLUMBUS
CaUl., in the last ot fwr
Mr. and Mrs. Allen Saunders elimination rounds.
and Mrs. Phyllis See or PL
Osborn was clocked at 211.76
Pleasant, and Mr. and Mrs. Joe miles per hour and had a time
Turner, Middleport, visited in ~ 7.05 seconds in a quarter
Columbus with Mr. and Mrs. mile in the winning round. He
Charles Turner on Sunday.
won $7,400 plus accessories.

Q-When

was

the

Irish

Sweepstakes inaugurated?
A-The lotrery on hehaH of
several Irish hospitals was in·

augurated in 1930 and soon became popular in America .

Within five years, it was the
most successful lottery in the

world .

AUTO WINNERS
SALEM,
Ind.
(UP0- The
driving team of Roy Wathen
and Jerry Norril!l af Louilrille
won the 250-mile Area Late
Model Stock Car race ~.
covering the diltance in 3 hours,
28 mimtes, 38,55 seconds.
or tha 37 cars that slarled the
500-lap rest, only 13 flnlahed.

P£!a.i anl

{Join/

f&lt;eJorl

North on Rt. 62
and
Pt. Ploa•ant, W. Ya .
MOTOR LODGE
FOR RESERVATIO~S CALL

675-1611
Entertainment In The "Starlight Room"
This Fri . &amp; Sat. the Francis. Taylor Cro"p fltCiturinv
th• exciting singing voice of kony Joseph.
SU~DAY BUFFET-~00~

TO 4 PM

SPECIAL WEEKEND RATES
THREE DAYS AHD TWO NIGHTS
(Fri. thru Sun . 2 p .m.)

2 Po,.on• (dauble bod) . ................... $24.00
3 P•non' (one double and

one ,;nglo bod) ............ . . ........ . .. $30.00
4 Person5 (two double bed•) -·····- ·-···-· $35.00
Tennis Courts
Air Strip Facilities

Golf Course Privileges
Convention ftJc:ilities

AM ADVENTURE IH SUMPTUOUS LIVING
AT VERY REASONABLE RATES-WITHIN EASY REACH

Ave,j Harry C. Dfeke,y, 707Thlrd

Ave.; Mrs. Doria M. Rwb'. 646
Firat Avo.; Mrs. Harle,y E. John&amp;011., 1808 Eastern Ave.; Mrs. c.
Ra.ymond Rallllr, 756 Se&lt;Oild
Ave.; Miss Carol J, Burns, 1495
Eastern Ave.; Mrs. John M. WUIIams, 258 state st.; Holly E.
M'\YS, Rt. 2 Crown C!Qo; lvor

Pomeroy; 'I'Clny R. Mohler, Rt.
1 Mlddleport; Miss S h a r o n
1bomj&gt;soo, Rt. I Rutland; Frank
Gruoaer, Rt. 2 Pomeroy; Ed1Yin
L, stein, Alhland, Ky.; M r a,
Gertrude M, DePriest, Jackaon;
Ra.ymond J. Cue,y, Rt.20okHUI;
Mro. Marlyn W, Gorrell, Ra-

venswoodj James R. sturglll, Sr.,
Rt. 3 Jaekaon; Mrs. Roger E,
Richards, East Worthington,
Ohln; Mrs. Daniel M. Jonldna,
Jackaon; Mra. James 0. BowlIng, Irontm; WUiard Bennutt,
·wuuams, Thurman; Mrs. Paul Chesapeake; Ml'S. Richard W,
c. Hammack, Rt. I Cheshire; Whitmore, Athens; Mrs. DonMrs. Gerald W. Edwards, Rt. I ald R. Wade, Rl. I Sand,yvl)le,
Cheshire; Harry H, llllshorat. W, Va.; Mrs. Orrlo E. Lewis,
Patriot star Rt.; Ronald K, GU- Rt. 4i Jackson; Mrs. Woodrow
Ienwater, Rt. 2 Crown City; Mrs. Garrett, Rt. 2 Jackson; Frank
Kerry W. Smith, Gallipolis For- A. Bell, Ironton; Miss Ida F,
ry; Edgar IJoonally, Rt. 2 Pat- Bayers, Qzysvtlle.
Births
riot; Mrs. Beatrice L. Perkins,
Mrs.
Kerry
W. Smith, GalllRt. I GoiUpoUs; Mrs. K. Monpolts
Ferry,
W,
Va., son, 4:53
roe Chase, Ft. Pleasant; Mrs.
p.m.
Saturdas;
Mrs.
William R,
c. Raymond Byer, Leon, W, Va.;
Helman,
Jackson,
daughter,
5:28
Mrs. Dan L. Rodgers, Pl. Pleasp.m.
Saturday;
Mrs.
Terry
D.
ant; Rhooda L. Carter, Rt. 2 GalPhalln,
Pomeroy,
daughter,
10:llpolls; Jennings Bias, Addison;
Mrs. Charles A. Searles, Rt. 1 15 p.m S.(urdny.
Discharges
Rutland; st. Clair IUU, Rt. 2
WUliam
F. Altizer, Mrs. Jo
Racine; Mrs. Terry D. Phalin,
Bird, Mrs. Don&amp;.ld E. Caldwell,
Mrs. Ora Cox, The Rev. F.arl
Trick, Treat Set
V. Cremeens, Michael J, Deem,
NEW HAVEN - The mayor, John L. Detty, Mrs. Robert A.
Thomas Grinstead, and oouncU Downard, Blaine Edwards, Mrs.
of New Haven have set October Douglas R. Fry, Mrs. J a c k
30, as Trick or Treat NighL Grimes, Brian Hayes, Mrs. BerThe Ore whistle will blow at nard Hunter, Alvin L. Johnson,
6:30 p.m. to set the start and Mrs. Harry E. Reapp, Gary T,
will blow again at 8 to announce Roush, Diane Sprinkles, Roy L.
stumho, Mrs. Arnold D. Ta.Ythe close.
Ior. Kenneth M. Worman, Mrs.
UPSET VICTORY
NEW YORK (UPI) - County
Down ~set New York 17-12
&amp;mdlly In the second game of
the lrilh Football Cup world
championships at Gaelic Park
to win the title.
Paddy Dougherty paced County Downs• attack with eight
points.

( Amended 5 ubstit..ote S.note Joint
Re1olulio n No . 291

JOINT RESOLUTION
Proposing 10 amend ~ VIII oJ
lb• CoullllllioD of Ut.• IIBI• of

Oblo by •ddiDI II..::Uoa 21 Jo
•!;llborl•• tiM I.Huann of boaU
or olh•r ohllg&amp;tl&lt;me for pv.bUc
capital tmproY•mnr. lD Oblo.
Be It resolved by the General
ABBembly of the Slate of Ohio
three-fifths of the members elected
to each house thereof concurring
therein. that then" 10h.all be submitted to the electors qf the State

OI..Q.IIIO..ln. .tllo.-

'""'"""'d

b'dir'Wf~ rat an .eteeUD!! · ~ be-'fleld
on the first Tuesday after the first
Monday In November, 1968, a proposition to amend Article VIII of the
Constltullon o1 the State of Ohio by
adding thereto a new II!Ctlon 11
follows :

ARTICLE VIII
Section 21. In addition to the a uthorization otherwise contained In
Article VIII of the Ohio Conslltution , the reneral aasernbly, In accordanc e with but subject to the
limitallons of this section. may authorize the issuance of obll(atlona,
Including bonds and notes, of the
11tate or of !&gt;tate institutions, boards.
comml~sions, authorities, or other
state 11encies or tna:trumentalltiea
for 1ny one or mol"ft of the followIng public capllal lmprovementa :
the construction, reconstruction, or
other Improvement ol hllhwaya,
including Ulose on tile state highway arstem and urban extensions
thereo , those wtthln or ll!ld.lnf to
public park s or recreational areal,
and those within or leadlnl to munlclvat corporations, the acqul•itlon, construcllon. reconatruction,
or other Improvement of. and pro·
vlllion of equipment for, bulldlnr•.
atructures, or other improvements,
and nece6lillry plannin&amp; and engineerln(, for water polluUon control
and abatement. lncludlnlf tho.Be for
HWaJe aollectlon , treatment, or disposal, water manarement, inciUdlnl
those tor watet· distribution . collection, aupp.ly, atorage, or impound ment. ana BLream flow c011trol. and
ftood control, atate mpported or
assisted lnstltutlons of higher education, technical education, voca·
tiona! education, Juvenile correction,
training and rehabilitation.
and recreallon, research an de•
velopmenl with respect to tranaportatlon, hla:hways and highway
lransportntlon, mental hyflene and
retardation, pollee and ftre training,
airporls, and other 1tate buildings
and ttructurel, and the acquisition
and improvement of real estate and
lnteruts therein required with relo the toreJolnJ, lncl\kUnJ
participation In any such capltil1
lrnprovement.a with ttce federal govenunent, lnUiolclpal corporations,
o::ounUes, ur other governmental
enUtl~s or an)'
one or more of
ttrem which participation may be
by grar.ts. loans or contrlbutlomr
lo them for an; of such capital
Improvements. It Is her.!lby determined that such capital Improvement. will directly or Indirectly
create jobs, enhance empioymen\
opportuniUes, and improve the economic welta~ of the people of ttra
stale.
The iiiiUance under authority of
ttrl.s s~tlon of obligations lhe hold en or owners of which are given
the right to have exclles a11d taxe1
levied by the aeneral assembly tor
the payment of the prlnclp11l
thereof or Interest thereon! herein
e~~lled
tax supported obi gatlona,
shall be aubject to the followlnl
limitations. Not more than one
hundred million dollau prlnclp~l
amount may be Issued In any calendar year and not more th1n t\ve
hundred mlllion dollars principii
amount may be oulstandlnl at any
one lime for such capital fmpl'(lvements for hlghway8 and resea rch
&lt;1nd development wllh respect to
hla:hways and hi&amp;:hway tranaporta·
tion . herein called hillhway nbllga llons. provided th.at ftfty per cent of
the proceeds of the ftrst ftve hundred mllllon dollars of such ux
s upported highway obll(atlons shall
be used for urban extensions ot
sl&lt;lte hll(hways and highway&amp; w ltltln
or leadlna: to municipa l corpora·
tlons. Not more Hum two hundred
fl.fty nine million dollars aggregate
principal amount ol such tax sup·
port~d ob llgallon s may be issued
for the o ther capital Improvements
aforesaid , provided thai from the
proceeds thereof one hundred
twenty million dollai'B shall be uaed
ror wnter pollution control and
abateme-nt and water mantolement,
one hundred million dollars shall
be used for higher education, ta:h lllcal and voc:lllonal education, and
juvenile correction. training and
~hablllt ll tlon, twent:v million dollllrs shall be used for p11rka .and
recreation , and nineteen milllnn dollara 1or airports, and for construction. rehllblll~tlon and equippinl
of other atate bulldlnrs and struc·
t1rrcs. iJicludinl lhnl:ll! for pollee and

J''"''

"PI!C'

Jamea D, Caldwell and Infant Cant daugllter, Mrs. Gory P, Mlndaugbter, Mrs, Roger L, Roush ton and Jnfant da\llhter, Mra.£11.
and Infant son, Nra. Clara Cam.. ward Phtlltps and 1ntant .an.
den, Mrs. E. Leo Carpenter,
Mra. Ruby CMle,y, Mrs. Mary
Cox, Mre. Ella llemy, R a I p h
rell, Mrs. Louise Haws, F.ddle
L, Howery, Mrs. Erma E, Nel1011, Odes D. Parsons, Keith D,
Saunders, Thomas E. SYare, Mrs.
Merlo E. Strait, Bobby G. Wat1011, Mra. LucUle G. Wlnqar,
Mrs. Mable L. Wolfe, Mrs. Ida
K. Rowe, Mrs. Rooald D. Cameron and infant daugbte:r, Mrs.
Cedi G. DeLong and infant son,
Mra. Gary M, Hustoo, and In-

- W I. *WIIB-.

relax,
AT
GOSNEY'S COIM..OP

:·.· ;~·~~;0;::·.············· · · · · ·. :
Personal Notes ~~~:
~

!

Mr. and Mrs. Leo Crew were
ln Warren Sunday for the funeral
senlces or Fred Latham.
Mro, Harold Triplett 0111 Mrs.

'

DUDS 'N' SUDS

UUHORY
Mlddlopoll
l1d &amp; Aoh

.

Harold LemleY spent Wedneada.y
in lrontonvisitirvMra. Triplett's
mother and other relatives and
Mra. Lemley's sister, Mrs. Betty McCoy.
Mr. Alii Mro. Bob Hoeflich
and daugflter, Jayne, l'fere weekend guests or Mr. and Mrs. Mike
Hammer, Lou Am alkl Kimberly,
Columbo! a,
Mrs. Roy Jooes, Jr. and •on,
Jeff, ot Columbus spent the weekend here with her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. E. J, Hill. They were
Jolned for a Sunday arternoon visIt by Mr. and Mrs. Ken Nease
ud !Mtlly.

Mr. and Mrs. Edwin! Mcin-

tosh and Mr. and Mrs. Marrln
Spencer and son of Dayton spent
the weekerd here l'flUI Mr. and :
Nl"w Zcno th "Zenetle " r Jn make Ide lun again. Pr-ecision amplifi·
cation lmm 2 Mrc ro · Lrthrc"t circuit~. Wcoghs on ly 1/11 ounce and
)loot! lor nw~l mold lmw ~ . Come in lor a demon ~ traloon or Zenrlh's
new ZC'tWIIe. II may he jU&gt;I ro ght lor you'

71"-/'H

""'I"''"''"" m b&lt;&gt;lo" lh• o•m• r~• oo0

"· o\IJTI-i()R17.W ZENilH DEALER

••
TEAR

OfF

MAll COUPON
COMPLETE

.
I 1m r

.

." .

.

1boul Zenittl HtlfiiiJ

-.Mil.

lJ PlfiiiSI m1illull details lltd lrte lil~rllur~
CJ Pltnellltphont rnt tl homtlo trrtnp lot a dltlft·
on1trat1on.

FREE
INFORMATION

Each issue of tax surported obligations Issued punuan to thll secUon shall mature In not more than
thlrly years from ttre date ol. ls11U ·
ance thereof, or. If Issued to retire
obllgatlon• lnued hereunder. within
thirty yean 1rom the date auch
dt~bt was o.r.l(lnaQ¥ contrac~ . J1
IUCh ·tax AUpportetf obliJatfot\.1 Pl'f:
luuej &amp;I note• In anticipation of
the luuanee ot bonds, proviSion
shall be made by law for settlnl
aside, so long as such notes are
outstandlngL illlo 11 special fund or
funds aucn amountl from the
aourcea authorized for payment of
such bondl under thi5 seetion 111
would be auffl.clent tor payment
of that amount of principal on auch
bonds ltrat wouki have been payable
during ouch period ll such bonds,
maturing during a period of thirty
years. had been lasued without
prior !nuance ot mch note~ . Such
fund or fundi may be used 1olely
tor the payment of principal of
such notes or of bonda in anticipation of which INCh note• have treen
I6&amp;Ued .
The fallh. and credit and exclsa
and taxes of the state, excludlnt"
ad valorem taxes on real or perooual pmperty and Income taxea
shall be pledged to the payment of.
the principal of and Interest on such
tax supported obllfations, llnklnl
or bond retirement fund provJIIllon1
shall be made therefor, and thbi
section shall otherwiae be lrnplemented. all In the manner and to
the exlent provided bv law by the
general aasembly, lncludlnl provisions for appropriaUon of pfedged
'"xcilet and taxes. and covenant.
to contlnue their levy, collection
and application, to oontlnue ao lonJ
as such tax supported obllaatlons
are outftandinJ, without neceuity
for further appropriation notwlth·
standlna S~tlon 22 or Article IL
Ohio Constitution; provided that
the moneys referred to In Seet.Jon
5a of Article xu. Ohio Constitution,
herein called hiJhway Wier recelpta,
ahall , aftl!"r provision for payment
of amounts pled.-ed to obUgaUoiUI
heretofore or hereafter luued under
Sectlona 2c and 21 of this Article,
be pledged to Ule payment of the
principal of and Interest on hl~­
way obUgatlons authorized by thla
section but not lo other obllcatlons
authorized hereby. U excillft and
Lui!"!! other than hl&amp;hway user recelpte are pledged to the payment
of the principal of or lntere.t. on
hlf,hway ollll&amp;atlona authorized by
th a ~ecUon, In each year lh:at such
highway user receipt. are available
for auch purpoae. the ume ahaU be
appro:rriated lberelo and the require
appliUIIJOn of mdl nther
excise• and ta~~:e~~ shall be reduced
In correapondlil&amp; amount.
TM reneral auembly al8o may
authorize the llauance ot nv1nue
obllgatlona and other oblWUona.
the ownen or holdei'B ot whlch are
not flven the rl£ht to have excise•
or taxea levied by the general usem bly for the payment of principal thereof or tnterelt thereon, for
such capital lrnp.rovementa for mental hYiiene and retardation. parka
and recreation, state supported and
state aSIJ.lsted lnstltutlona of hiJhf!r
education, includlnl lhol:ll! for technical education, water r.ollullon
control and abatetnent, wa er man·
agement, and boualnl of branches
and fllfenclea of ~tate tovernment,
wnich obligation• lhall not be subJect to other provisions of this section and shall not be deemed to be
debts or bonded lndebtednesa of the
state under other provi1lon1 ot this
Con11itutlon. Such obligations may
be secured by a pledce under law,
without neceanty for further appropriation, ot all or such porllon
ns the gen~ral nlll!embly ,.uthorJzes
of charges for ttre lrealment or care
of n •ental hygiene and retardation
pntleut.a, receipls with respect to
pnrk1 and recrtaUonal laeiiUiet, receipta of or on behalf of ~tate
supported and 1tate anlsted inst1tutions of higher education, or
othe r r.!lVenuea or r.!lcelpls, apeclfted
by law for sue!h purpose, or the
state or Its office1111, d~partmentl,
divisions, instltutlcma. boarda, commIn toms, aulhorltle~. or other alate
agencies or Instrumentalities, and
thil provision may be implemented
b:v law 1o better provide therefor:
provided, however, that any chruges
lor the trealment or care of mental
h:vgtene or relardallon paUents may
be 10 pled&amp;ed only to obll11:atlona
l6&amp;ued for capital improvementa for
mental hylfene and retardation. any
receipts with respecl to parks and
recreatlon may be 10 pledied only
to obllgntlonR Issued for capital Improvements tor parkll and recreation , rw:v re«!lptl of or on behalf
of slate &amp;orpported or rrt.nte nsslsled

-------STAll - - -

••oo

A panel dbc:ualion on way11
Of attracting and holding Y&lt;IWII!
people In the church wa1 featured
at the annual Rally Da.r program
cl the !Outde,y ochool of Heath
United Methodist ChUrch.
Serving oo tho p~~~ai for the
Informal dlarusalon with t h e
congregation were members rA
the Junior high and aenlor high
classes. Children from 1he nuroery through the sixth grade
parUdJtSted with 11011gs and recitations.
AI a meeting of tho Melhodlat Youth Fellowship limdoy evening, various projects were reviewed. Sind)' Johnson, presi..
dent, was in charge,

will be ....ed.

on u.ld amendment be declared tCcordinl to lltw to have voted' tn
favor thereot the 10vemor of U.e
State ot Ohio ahall make pi'CK!Iama·
tton thereof forthwith.
(Amended Sub1titute House Joint
Resolution No. f:l)
JOINT RESOLUTION
P"JOOdDg to am•nd MOHon I ol
Artlcl• xn of u.e CODUUutloa of
!be Slate ol Olt.lo to penab: lbe
a.nerral A-mblf lo 9fUll: lloJae..
...._ •xemptloal; for certaiD. nstdeall.
·; .,
.,.
.:,""' ,
J;le it t'ftDl~'lbY tile Gentral ~
Aasem bJy oi the State of Obto. ~
three·flltha of the memben elerled
to eaeh house concurring ,therein.
that there lhall be mbmltleil to tha
elector. of the litate In the manner
prescribed b:y law at 1he a:eneral
election to be held on the tint
TUesday a1ter the fil'llt Mondaf tn
November, 11188, a proposal to
amend tectlon 2 of Article XII of
1he ConaUtutlon of Ohio to read a1
follows:
ARTICLE XII
No property, taxed accordin1 to
value. lh.IB be 10 taxed In excea~ of
one per cent of IU lrue valu... In
money tor all atal.e and looal! purposa, but lawa may be ~
authorlzlnl .additional taxa to be
lll!vted outalde of JUcb UndtaUCn
either when approved b:y at 1eU1
a majority oJ electon oJ the taxlnc
dlatrtct vot1n1 on such propoai.Uon,
or when provided tor by Uie charter of a municipal corporallon.
Land and improvement. tbereon
shaD ~ taxed by unllonn rule accordlnt to value, e•cept that tbe
General Assembly may provtde b7
law for a homeftead exempUon,
The quallftcatlonl and conditione
for aucb exemption ahall be let by
the General A.sembly tubJec:t to
the UmitaUon that an owner of •
homeatead shall be a resident or 1be
atqte of Ohio, llhall be 11Xt)r-llv•
yean~ of ap or older and lhall
rellde tn the bome•tead. The Oeneral AIMmbl:y m1y also provide by
law for a homestead exemption for
aU reatdenta of Ohio who own and
reside tn the home~~tead, the amount
of 1uch exemption to be detenntned
by or In aecordanCII WIUt law . All
bonds outatandlnl on the ltt day of
Janual')', 1913, of the alate ot Ohio
or of any eity, viU.p, hamlet,
count¥ or town.hlp In this atate. or
Whlch have been luued in behalf
of lhe public IIChool• o1 Ohio and
the mean• of instructJon In eonnecUon 1berewltb. wbleh tondt were ,
outltandlnJ on the ht dar, of January, 1913 and all bonda nued for
the World War Compenaatlon l'undl
shall be exempt from taxaticm, ana
without llrnltl.ng the reneral power,
aubJect to the provisions ot Article
[ of thil constitution, to detennlne
the aubjecta and methods of taxa·
tlon or exemption• therefrom, 1ft"'
era! laws may be paaled to exempt
burying grounds, public ~ehoOl
boiLIH. houaea \lied exclualvely for
public wonhip, tnsUtuU0111 u.ed exclusively for charitable Pl.li'POS08.
and public properlY UHd exclusively for any publfc purpo•. bUt
all auch laWI shall be mbject. to
alteration or repeal: and the velulo
oJ
prop(trtY 10 exempted shall.
trom tfme to tlme, be aiCflrtatned
and publbihed as may be dlreded
by law.

Ever bwnp the ironing table

and have your iron fall over
on the floor? A new feature

to ltllnlmlze

this danger

Is a

"Heel Rest" which is a threeinch "V" which provides a
great deal of extra stability
when tile iron is sitting up and
a wider surface when It is In
upright position.

CANDYifi'RIPERS MEETING,
Veterans Memorial Hospital, 6:30p.m. Monde,y.
J,O,F, Class al7:30 p.m. Mon·
de,y In parlor or United Methodist Church, Pomeroy.
TIJEIDAY
LADIES AUXD..L\RY, Drew
Webster Post 39, American Lsglon, 7 •30 p.m. Tueade,y at post
homo.
LADIES AUXlUARY, Racine
American Legion Post 602, wlll
meet at 7 p.m. Tuesde,y. Civil
defense progrom will !ollow,
Meinliel's w 101.8 ftower' bUlbS
to be plantad,
LADIES AUXILIARY, FeeneyBennett Post 128, American Legion, 7:30 Tuesde,y n1g11t at the
hall. OrpnlzaUonal moedng ol
tho .Jmlor auxUiary will be bald
at 7 p.m. omcers wUl be elect..
ed.
FEENEY -BENNETI Post 128,
Amerlcsn Legion, 7:30 p. m.
Tuesday at tile hall, Plaru will
be OOIIIPieted "r tho 50th anniversary observance ot Veterana
Day with a potluck dinner on Nov.
llat 6 p.m.

Cenu1ne fLEX·O ·GlASS i! the only
plnlit window mtlerial that tiffin

a 2 rur aulnnttt ,The name
FLEX·O·GLASS is printed on the
tdp lor your pral!ldion.
t ".,•••,.a Lv~~tlter ...,

~

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

OHIO ETA Pin CHAPI'ER,
Beta ~ Phi Sororltjo, 7:30
Tuesde,y nl8lt, Columbia Gas Co.
Demonatration by the home ecooomiat.
POMEROY LODGE No. 164,
F&amp;AM. apodal meetlngTuoaday,
7:30 p.m. at ths Pomeroy Maaonlc Temple In honor of tho
Past Masters ol the Lodge who
will oxempll(y tho ritual of tho
third degree. Refreshments follow. All Master MBI!Jona 111Vited.

~·.,

...--

···Middleport. .. ..
::Persona/ Notes •·•

Devot1011a were presented by
Tom CaBBell. llleotlns with the
Y...,. - l o were Mr. and Mrs.
Jack Slavin. Thomas Caaaell,
and the Rev, and Mra. Jack
Slavtn.
Mary Bra(buoy and S u a a n
Powers aervecl relrelhmerU.
Others attending were George
llawle,y, Beth Fultz, JemUor Goble, and Anita Fultz. Mlu Bradbury Is treasurer cl the MYF
and Mlas Goble Ia Ito secretary,

Mr. and Mn. Jol1n Goodrich
ol Daytm and Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Wlnebremer, Colwnbu.11,
are the guests ot Mr. and Mrs.

Karl OWen,

Modern trends in arrangIng will be lhe thorne of a
demonatraUon w be given by
Mrs. Nell Franklin at the open

meeting of the Rutland Friendly Gardeners Wodnesda,v night
at tile Rutland Church or Christ

basement.
Members of all garden clubs
of Meip County, as well as
other per11011a interested in
flower arrang!ng, are Invited
to the open meet:lng scheduled to begin at 7•30 p.m. Mrs.
John Reese, new director oC
Region 11, Ohio Association
of Garden Clubs, will be a
guest.

Mr. and Mrs. Jan llaucll and
dilldren, Brent and Brenda, were
weekend visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Plcllens and Mra. Marle Van Cooney. Other recent
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Pickens were A. c. Webb and Adrah
Hutc:hins of Columbus.
Mr. and Mr.11. Ben Pickens lett
Thursday tor their home at BalThe Choice of Tiles
tbnoro, M&lt;l attor vlaltlng hero
with relatives.
If you are choosing bathMrs. Earl KnightreturnedFrt- room tiles, etc., it is n good
day from a week ln Columbus idea to stick to neutral colors
with her soo-ln-law and &lt;laugh. like gray or white so you can
ter, Mr. and Mrs. lion Halle,y, change the colors of the room
and daqhter, Paige. Mrs. M, with the seasons or your
C. Wilson and Mr. and Mrs. mood. If your room already
has tiles, you can work around
Knight went to Columbus a week
It in the same way. If you
ago ror the first birthday of have pink, for instance, you
Paige and Mrs. Knight remain- can use dark green to cool it
ed for the week.
in summer and mix oranges
Mr. and Mrs. L. E, Reymlds and pinks in your accessories
'The Malga Local Teachers'
came home Thursda,y from Cin- to warm it in winter.
Association met October 17 at cinnati where Mrs. Reynolds attho Middleport High School cafe- tended the conventioo of the Nateria with prealdonl Jolrl Mora Umal Auoclation of Bank Wom- ter, Jodie, Zanesvllle, w e r e
prealdlng ond -..en! 111 record In en. Before returning home they weekend visitors OC Mr. and Mrs.
IIIIIJPOri of Senator Ookle,y Col- visited In Lebanon with Mr. and Paul llaptonstall ,
lins and Rep. Ralph Welksr.
Mrs. T. G. Reynolds.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Sauer,
Mrs. Loab Ord reported that
Weekend guests of Hom e r Mary Ruth and Joy, attended the
she has been nominated as a Cook l'fere Mrs. Arth.J.r &amp;uart Trt-County Community Concert
member ct the executive com- and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Pel- series program 9.mday aftermittee of tho SEOTA.
zel ot Charleston, W. Va., and noon.
Mr. W, E. Campbell is attendHomer Hotrman of Chicago, nJ.
Mrs. Forrest Bachtel, Miss
Ing tho aalary ln-ctlonal
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Luckeydoo Carol Bachtel, Mrs. J. E, D,
school as chairman
the com- of Huntington, W, Va. were week- Hartinger, and Miss F'rleda
mlltoe and Mr. Robert 11amm Ia end guests
their parents, Mr. Faehnle were Wednesda,y visiattmdlng as chairman ot the and Mrs. Alva Luckeydoo ot. New tors in Columbus.
Profeaslona.l NejUtiadons COmHaven, W.Va. and Mr. and Mrs.
mittee.
James Brewington, Middleport.
Representatives to the southMrll. Gertrude Cabeen's "eekeaatern Ohio Educational Aaooend guests were Mr. and Mrs.
clatlon which will be hold In
George Cabeen, Freddie a n d
Athms Nov. 2 are Mrs. RichGeorge or Da.rton.
ard SW.ckhamer, Pbyllla HackMr. and Mrs. Tom Watkins,
ett, Howard Knight, Bob Hamm, Chris and Tom, Columbus spent
OPE~ TUESDAY
and Maxine PhllaoD. AllernDtes
EVEHI~G 7 TIL 9
the weekend here with their par.
are Terry Ohllqer, Dana Kes- ents, Mr. and Mrs. William Sla.
senger, Helen Dais, Martha Ven·
ter and son, Bill, and Mr. and
narl and John Mora.
Mrs. Ora Watkins.
The tlrst presentatioo ot a
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne hrp
past president's pln was made
Phone 992·3667
and dsughter, Marilyn, and Mr.
Middleport
by Mrs. Daiay Blakeslee to Mr. and Mrs. John 9larp and daughRichard SWackhamer, who thank-

Boon to Some Women
Rubber gloves are a boon

good idea to wash your outdoor mat. It has collected lots

of mud, etc., over the wJn,lel'.
Dip it In suda, tllen h018

to some women but can preteet hands properly only II

kept Krupulously elean. After
use, wash tb em In suday

water, rln1e thoroughly and

dry oa a glove caddy whleh
boldo each glove aprlghl and
open to permit g..d drainage

and air clreulaUon.

• • •

Wash Outdoor Mat
At the end or winter it is a

Collins,

or

or

Fall and
Holiday
Hair Styling

MARY JUNE'S
BEAUTY SHOP

while you dial it!
Slenderet. The one that delivers the dial
to your finger. The one thai fits neatly in your
hand and in any room in your home. All the
latest colors. Wall or desk models. Call
our Business Office today. We're holding a Slenderet extension for you.
Slenderer is the newest
addition to our "style-line."

SOUTHEASTERN OHIO TELEPHONE CO.

ed the aiSoelatlon.
Reports of tho Kent state University Leadership Conference
were given by Thelma 0, Campbell and Martha Huote&lt;l Martha
ond Mro. Halon Dais spoke oo
the work and ate: Proreastmal
NegotiaUona meeting which was
held In COlwnbus.
Throo Important resolutions
were adopted during tho buslneu meeting and Preal- Mora
appointed eommltteea for t h e

yoar.
Refreshments ot. cookies, cotfee and hot chocolate were served.

Melp

Property
Chrysler Newport
2-Door Hardtop

Malcolm Ingram, Mildred Ingram to John Dale Smith, MiMle

Elva Surlth, parcels, Rutlem
J. B. O'Brien, Reberta C. O'-

With a big V-8 engine that

Brien to MlirUn P. Nesaelroad,
6 acres, Ollve.
Charles R. !Qooell, Kathryn
Hysall to C&amp;rol Gene Mowery,
Dolly Faye Mowery,lnt, Middle-

runs on regular gas. Unbeatable(

port.
Douglas M. Bissen, carolyn A.
Blsaall w Clifford B. La!qJ, Edna E. l...u1), 4.35 acrea, Oranp.

ReedsYille.
Hue! Jean

With grecoful body accent stripes sweeping
the full kngth of theo fuse/ego. Unboeteblol

Kaoff to CecU

land.

Shatterproof

Flexible
Long-Lasting

-·36~(;,,,

PICKENS

W.VA.

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
STATE OF OHIO
OFFICE oF THE SU:RETARY
OF STATE

Archie EUla, Ina Elllo to Ohio
Fuel Gas Co.. right o( wa,y, SalIsbury,
Thomas R. Westen, Huol Westen to Dennis L. Palmer, Jessie
L. Palmer, .Parcels, Sllem.
Robert M. Hickman to Helen
M. Hickman, cerL tor tnna.,
Scipio.
&lt;lara Adams to Maury Mlller,

Mildred Miller, pareele, Salltbury,
James D. Adamo to Maury Miller 1 Mildred Miller, parcels, sallabury,
J, W, Scarbrough w Larry
Searbrouab, 57'4 acres, Lobu-

Chrysler Newport Custom
4-Door Sedan
A new styling concept.
A fusel•g• instead of
• bocf( bolted to 1
fr•me. Unbeellblel

'""Edith Newbouae, dee., Georp
Newhouu, Adm., to ll A. Cole,
Ollolla Cole, pareelo, Orlqje.
Georp G. Gum, Fl!ll Gwn to

I, TED W. BROWN, SecnlarJ" ol
State ot !he State of Ohio, do
hereb.v certify that the foteJOina
It a true copy of Amended 8ubBU'=
tute Sennte Joint Rl!aolutton No .
21 a!'1t1 Amended Substitute HOUR
Joint Resolution No. 43 ftled In tha
office nf the Secreteq of Stllte and
proposinl" to •mend the above aeoI!Ofll of the Constitution of Ohio.

Jack Cal"'ley, Neacll ~-. lot.
PC11111l'O)'.

AUTHORIZED

IIE.'It-.

CHRYSLER
M010118 CORPDRA11DN

Keeptng Knives Keen

To uoue depeadable, utthof, unlllf IDII cbopplaf,
It payo lo IHIJ llle bell lollvett
yoa CD offenl uti lllb ....

IN TI!'.STlMONY WlttRI:OF, I
have hereunto aubacrlbed my nartat
and afthred my_ 5Jmcial seal at Coo
lumbua th1t 1Ith day of AQIIllt.

,....

And be It further re.olved, that
the required pubUca11on ot the aald
proposed amendment shall be made
TED W. BROWif
and the tonn or ballot lo be uaed
Secretary ot Btatt
in l&amp;ld election for the lllbmisslon
thereof shall be prepared by the
Secretary of StoW of Ohio In con(Sea))
formlty with the abclve provlrlona.
U o majority ot the electors vollnl
tsy ooder of Plw Boord of Eleetiont, of Meig• Count~, Ohio
EI.!MElT G. WILL, Chohr~~on
Sept. 30-0c:t . 7, J.f., 21 &amp; 28
DOROTHY M. JOHNSTON, Dlret:lor

..

Kautr, Eva Kaufl', lite eatate, Rut-

au

EFFECTIVE DAft AND REPEAL
If adopted by a majority ot tha
electon voUn&amp; on thla a mendment
the amendment ahall take elrod
Immediately, and l!xlaUnr stctiGn I
of Article xn of the Con•tltutton
of Ohio s hall be repealed from 1uch
effective date.

... ....

Welker,
·:1--s~~·;~·i······················lll
Backed
'.! Calendari:

baby sitting and refreshments

Minimizes Danger

Shall Article VID of the
Ohio Con~tltutlon be
amended by addlnC
Section 21 empowerln&amp;
the General Auembly
to auUtorize additional
obligations, lncludinJ
bond• and notes, for
hl&amp;hway• and other
public cepital Improvementa dealll'Uited below,
tt beina: therein deter·
mined that they w1JI
create Jobe, enhanCe
employment opportunities and Improve the
economic welfare ot the
people of the state?
Such obUrattons pa)'·
able from exeJ.sea and
taxes, e~~:cept property
and Income tax-. lhaU
mature within thirty
years and are aubject
lo lhe followlnf llmltations: For hlghwa:yl and
research for hllhW&amp;YI
and bli'hway transportAtion, not more than
000,000 may be iaaued In any one year
and not more than a
total of fMJO,OOO,OOO may
be outstanding at an:y
one time: and tor other
capital improvementl
nol mo"' than a~n -~
........ ol
'
may be lssu~ wh
$120,000,000 1a tor wa r
pollullon conlrol and
waler munagement,
$100.000.000 tor hlcber
education. technical and
vocational education,
ood juvenile correction,
train ng and rehabU1tatlon , ,20,000,000 for
parka and recreation,
and 119,000,000 for airporia. and other state
bulldlnll and atructurea
lncludlnr tboae for pollee and ftre training.
Under mch Section 21
the General Aaembly
alao ml)' provide for
such capltal improvement. for mental hyrlene and retardation,
parka and recreaUon,
hl«her education, water
pollution control~ water
msnaa:ement, anc hous Ing of state government1
throu&amp;h the Issuance oi
revenue and other obligotlons , t he holders of
which are given no
Iia:bt to have exclle• or
taxu levied by the
&amp;:eneral assembly, which
obllratloru~ ahall not be
roun ted af alnst the
above Umita ions, shall
not be deemed to be
debts of the state for
other purposes of the
COI'IItltutlonb and may
be secured y a pled&amp;c
of revenues or receipts.

Youth Program
Is Discussed

tnlt Root, chairman. Room vtsitaUon starling at 1:25 p.m. Free

Berne st.

tn•tltutlotlll of bJfher education may
be pled&amp;ed onlr to obllp.tlon• !SlUed tor capita Improvement&amp; tor
ltate aupported or ttate aulfled
lntUtutloru: of bigher education, and
any other revenue1:1 or receipts may
be 10 pledged only to obUptiona
luued for eapltal lmpro\'ementa
which are In whole or In part uae·
ful to, conlltructed by, or financed
by the department, board, commll•
slon, authority, or other agency or
I!Uitrumentallty that receives the
reve11ues or rt!'celpts 110 pledged. The
authority provided by thfl para&amp;raph b In addition to, cumulative
with, and not a limitation upon, the
authority of lhe general assembly
under other provli;lon1:1 of thl!i Con sUtaUon; rruch para«nph doe!l not
imp!Ur any law. he~tot'ore enacted
by the pneral auembly. and any
obJJeatlons iuued under any rrueh
law consistent wllh the pmviston•
of thb pararraph shall be deemed
to b• llsued under authority of this
parafl"aph.
Both the principal of all obU&amp;aUons authoriZed under authority ot
this eection and the Interest thereon
llhall be exempl from taxation
within this state.
Be It further ruolved. That at
the eleetlon herein desJJnated 1or
aubmiulon of this amendmenl to
the electors of the Slate of Ohio,
auch amendment shall be placed on
th~ oftlcial ballot In the manner
preaertbed by law es•ntlally In lhe
followtne fonn:

·.·. ·.·.···&gt;&gt;:::..•:;:::::::::.::-:::::-:::::::::;:-:·:·:·:·: :·:······

Mrs. Ral()h Spencer. The Mar- ~
h
vin ~encer tamil,y also visited
MONDAY
with Mr11. Spencer'&amp; mother,
MIDDLF;J'ORT
PTA, 7:30 p.
Mrs. Frances Hewel!lon.
m.
Monde,y
In
the
Middleport
Mrs. Eldon Weeks r~ently reElementary
School
auditorium.
turned from a week's visit in
Clarksville, Ind., with Mr. Alii
SOUTHERN ATHLETIC BooB·
Mrs. Albert Burkhart. She waa tera, Monde,y, 7:30 p.m. at Southaccompanied by Mrs. JOOn Weeks em High School, Racine.
of Reynoldsburg.
REVlV AL at Silver Run Free
Mr. and Mrs. Eldon Weeks Will O!urch at 7:30 p, m. slartwere recert visltorsofMissGen- t.ng Oct. 21 for two weelu with
evlew stobart who now resides the Rev. carl VAlance, huntirwat the home or Mr. and Mr a. ton, speaker. Public welcome.
Rel()h Brewer of Portland.
CIIESI'ER PTA 8 p.m. MonMr. al'kl Mrs. Delbert Bruch
have returned home after a \'I sit de,y at school. Grandparents nlglll
ln Mount Vernon with their son, to be observed with Mra. Ker-

Pd. Pol. Adv.

tire training. U tax 1upported obUt:ationa are luued under authority
of lhla lt'C!tlon to retire tall: mp·
ported obligation~ previoUilY luued
under authority' of thla aectlon, auch
new obligations shall not be counted
against such limits to the erlent
that the prlndpal amount thereof
dou not exceed the principal
amount of the obllgatlonl to be retired thereby.

,... ,... ...

5- The Dally Sentinel, Pomeruy-Middleport:, 0., MORley, October 21, 1968

Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Um:len
or Columbus were weekend vtslt.-ors ot Mr. and Mrs. Eldon Weeks.

for

TAFT
CHIEF JUSTICE
till--·-

mom

Frecka, Mra. Marlyn W. Gor-

..

.... '

cue ol litem. - r lei a

I." !1ft
Ia a dJa.
II off

bile Malt or
wuler. IDitea

•••• .,•• ., ltANIII ON TMI lHI

~·~-~~fiiiACJIOif

HAUNTIII

Ebersbach H•dware, Main St., Pomeroy

1

wlllt a ntlty e- lm•edlately after .... lltea *Y uti
olore. Rab a 1llllo oU Ia wood
lwHIIet lo repel molllllre uti
preveal eraeb. Cll'IIOII llee1
lllatlel dlllbae&lt;l from ...
cu be Heued wM eleutier
uti tleel.wMI.

-

This ear join the Unbeatables.

-

Tom .Rue Motors, 399 South 3rd Ave., Middleport, ·o
.'

-- - -- ---~------------llliliiitiiiiitittllil

_________
I

�1- 1110 Dolly Sentinel, Pomet·oy-Middlepor~ 0., M&lt;JIIday, Oc-r 21, 1968

A LITTLE 'HOMEWORK' Watching Want Ads Bring Top Grade Results

B.~RNEY

HARK~A!N'T
THAT TATER

SQUAWLJN',

LOW~EZV ?

WANT AD
INFORMATION

Oo, of

COMPLETE LINE

SIEGLER and
TROPIC·AIRE Heaters

P~lic.t i on

REGULA liONS
Tho Publlahor .... ,.,. •• iho rlt.ht
to ocllt "' reioct onr ad1 doomod ob·
1-ctionablo. Tho f.ublilhar will nat
bo ro•pon•iblo 01 mo•o rhon ono
inco"oet lnurtion .

5

65 CHEVELLE . . , • . . . ........•.. · ... $1495
Malibu Conv., VS e~ne, P,G, transmission, new w-~Hr
tires, green exterior with white nylon top, green with vinyl .
trim.

Big Trad .. ln Allowance

POMEROY
992·2181

W. Caney,
. Jock
•
Mgr.

64 CHEVROLET 1...... H. T. Q&gt;e••• , , ••.• , ••• $995

F 01 Wont Ad So•.,.ico
po• Word o,.. inaottion
Mini"'.,.,., Chargo 75c

~•nil

12 conh par wood throo cont oc "intorticu&gt;l .
, . COIIII par WO'&lt;d ti• COIIIOCoJio~O

fi¥0

lnaortiont
25 par ~ant Ootco 11 nt on paid adt
and od1 paid withon 10 dar•
CARD OF THAN I($ &amp; OBITUARY
$1 50 for 50 wo&lt;d ,.,,,;,.,.,m_ Eo
allllditional word 2&lt; .

283 engine, 4 on the Ooor, turquoise finish, black interior,
radio and heater. Priced to move now,
64

CORV AIR SPIDER 2 door .. , , •....•• , ••• ,$895

Four speed trans., blower on motor, good tires, bucket
seats, red vinyl Int., jtlt black ftnish. Radio.

Pomeroy Motor Co.
OPEN EVES. 1:00 P.M.

BLIND ADS
OFFICE HOURS
8 .)0 am to ~H)O p.m . Ooilr
8:30 o.m. to \ 2:00 Noon Sa turdo~

Notice

Rnl &amp;tlte For S.le
O'BRIEN &amp; CROW
REALTY OOMPANY
POMEROY - 1 room frame. I
bedrooms, bath, basement, 2
porches, gas noor furnace.
$5.500.00.
RACINE - BUSINESS ROOMTile construction, tiled floors.

POMEROY, OHIO

For Rent

LEGAL NOTICE

Save Now! Install Now!

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

DEADLINES
5 , ..... Da, 8of•• P .... llc.tion
Momlay Dudline 9 a . m.
Coll&amp;'a!lotlon• &amp; C•roction•
Will ~. occopl.d l,lf'll'll 9 G 111. for

ceiling heater, storage room.
t.!let in good condition.
$6,900.110,
REEDSVn.LE - NICE COT·
'fAGE - I 'h story, 6 rooms, 3
bedrooms. bath, basement.
free gas heat, drilled well, ga.
rage . A buy at $5,900.00.
HENRY CLELAND
Offfee - 9ft.!%5t
Res. - llf!Z518
10.211-3tc

For Sale

IN TNI COMMON PUAI COU•T
MilOS COUNTY, OHIO
TNI p IDIIlAL LAND .ANIC OP
I OUIIYILLI,
P.. lntiH,

n.

LOUII M.. ICH.IITJ.t.N, IT AL.,
Do .. nciOIIIII
No. 16,131
NOTICI .y PU&amp;LICATION
LANTY RIFFE and
CLAUDIAN
ldf'll'l!:, who:se placu ot ret.ldooce INI
unknown, will Uke noUee o• l.bo
:!lith da,- of June. 1115'1, tho under ·
~IIDod Wad U1 PoUUon , and lwo
Supplemental PetiUons, •1o1Nt )'OU
L1 Ulo Common Pleu Court Gl MeW
(.' ~.ounl)', Ohio, praytn1 for iuciJmenl
Ualn.lt )'OU In tho ID\OUDl of ITAJ8.•
bu, wll.b tn&amp;or. .c, and t11011 •ddldottol

auma of •.oo and ut.10, wUII In·
ter1111, and lor •
fo~eclomre
of
Mort(qe of tho followlll,f d_.-tbld
real property, ud otller r.U•f, to·
wit:
Belnl In
Culumltla
Towndllp
Molp Cou nb. Oblo. boUndod Uici
d11Kribed •• folloWll:
P..-t. ol SecUon :a. TowtU!hiP t,
lt1n1e u. beltnnlnl 1t 1 polnl 172-8
feet wut of lhe Northhsl torner
o f nJd Sodlon D; tllonce w..t
97:1 ffet; thence South 1 de1ree
We•L 1358 feel Lo Lhe eenWr of
• CQu.nt)' rold; tbeace lJODI tbe
cou.ntJ' road north N dell'"• 48
mlnu&amp;oa weat Zl teet to 1 ,olnlf
thence .ou.th 14011 teet to 1 e&gt;or·
ner at tho Une of Jrdrl• Hcryll1
thenc:e North 118 dqtea But 13n
teet to tho center ot Stste m,-b.
way No. 3$8; thence wlt.ll tho
meonden of said hllhWI)' North I
de&amp;ree Eut 7&amp;8 feet, North M de·
1r-e-eo eut :11811 teot 1nd North 43
de1reeo 30 mJnulol eul 22:1 teat
to thll Jnt.ersecUon al Stsle Hllh·
w•y No. 368 with the cen\er tiDe
or 11 county n11d ; therw:e alon1 the
center of Joid county road muth
B8 deareoa 30 minute• we•t 13-f.
fe'l!l to the toulbw.!ot corner ol
the 1tore lot; thence with the wut
Uno of 11ld atoN lot north 44 de.
1ree1 ~~:o1l 3~ fec:t lo tb11 norther·
ly curner u-.ereof; 1bonce wnb the
11orth liM of laid •tare lot north
87 de1ne ~ 30 mlnu.le. aast l3t
feat to tho center tina of StiLe
HllhWIIY No. 388; thence alo111
oald center llne north 43 4e,re..
eut 440 feet tD the IIOUthorl,- cor
ner of the lanD of Bolla MIY Lav·
c:nder; thence llon1 Did Lavender'• ll"e north &amp;II delrel!ll wolf.
tOM fe.,t and north t9 do&amp;Hel 80
mJnu.t• watt 527 roet t.o tho place
of bellnnlnl, contolnln1 101.!1 acrl'!a, more or leu .
Alto put ol Section 33. Town~htp 8, lbnl' 15, bellnlllnl It •
point 13tll teet we1t ot the IIOUthellt corner of .a td
,ecuon 33:
thence north 5 deiJn!!OI welt ~
t ee t; thence ...-e1t lJa8 feel: thence
aoulh 1 de1re• we1t 1220 feet to
the south line of laid secuon 33;
thenc:e eut alon1 the •aid aou.lh
line 1~ lett to the plan of be·
fl'lnnl"l · ct~nl.lllnlnl 38.2 oc-rea. rnon
or leu .
Conblnlnl In a ll 138.~
ICtell,
more or ieu, but nbJoc:t kl aU
lc:1al hllhWJYt. excepllnl theNfrom thst certsln vein of coal. 1•
colly and vorlaully ll:nown u Nun~ ­
ber .. Cll rlon or Ll!ne.tono COlli.
to1euier with the rilllt to mtne
11nd remove 11me a1 aokl In d.:~ed
recorded In Deed Book tlfl, Pa1e
209. or the Deed Jleco~ of Mell'•
County, Ohio.
You on r.qulred to on1wer the
111ld Petition by !he :lind dsY of De·
(embl!:r 19118. or Judllftlllll by dll·
flUit vrl.u be roeftdered o1al.u:t JOU.
THI FIDI~AL LAND .ANK
OF L.OUIIYILLI,
P'l•lttMff
Crow, Crow &amp; hrMf',
AttorM\'1 for "•lnttff
J11 'J; 10 H; 10 21; 10 18: U t
11 11 e1c

Business Services
EYINRUDE
69's Are Here
Romain,
worm' "
l·.Sprayo
ond thoo o high prouuro
lOOP

ri niO of aoh wato' to
make cor shiM
1. Attondanl on duly

M·F··~·-·····IIto6

Sat. · · • • · · · · · · ·9 to 7
Sun. • · • • • • • ·II

6-9%-18
On Display
115 Soon
To Arrive

Schawarzel Marl••
Hockingport, Ohio
Phone 667-3370

---

From the J..rgest Truc'k or
Bullcbzer Radiator To The
~est Heater Core.

BLAETTNARS
PH. 99:1.2143

!;X PERT
Wheel Alignment

s·:ss

'lllAlLER LOTS, Bob's Mobile 1'1 FOOT se!f.aasembl&lt;d camp.
THE MIDDLEPORT City Cab
er, Lone Eagle, located at
Court, Syracuse, Ohio on State
is oow open under new mancamp site 24, Ruyal Oak Park,
Rt. 12l, Phone 991-2951.
• Free Estimates
-GUARANTEEDagement giving prompt 24
$600,
Phone 992-6141. IO.I&amp;.31c
!1-ll·liC
hour service. Phone 99W280
PHONE 992-2094
• Quality Concrete
tll-IJI.6tc TRAILER SPACE, ready to WARM MORNING ooal st.ve
• Certified Strength
with fan, used less than two
----hook up. private, plenty of
Pomeroy
Home
&amp; Auto
months.
Glenn
Jewell,
DownBARN REVTVAL heginn!ng room ror children w play.
Ill E. Main
l'llmen&gt;y, 0
lngton, Ohio.
10-1~
• Delivery
Moaday, Oc!. 21, at 7:30 p.m.
Phone 992-3904.
&amp;.14·tle
Interdenominational services.
• Quick Service
NOTICI OP ILICTION ON TAX
Everyone we1cmne. Evange- FOUR ROOM furnil!hed apart- ACREAGE, beautiful site, dial
LIYY IN IXCUI OP THI
1111 Jim DebruhL Church lo- ment, E. Main St., Pomeroy,
593·7253 Athens, collect.
TIN Jit\IL1. LIMITATION
• Finlshilll
NOTJCE Is benby liven tluol 1n
cated on Horse Cave Road
10.1&amp;.3tc
Phone 1112-WSl.
t~lle
punuonee of a R ..oluUon of Uta
• Sand &amp; Gravel
near Bashan.
10.16-Sic
l!olnl of To...-nahip Tnuteel of die
To-lhlp D1 Rutland, OIUo, pUitld
F'JELD
GROWN
CHRYSAN·
on the 3111 dl:r of AUfllll, liMI8,
ONE FURNISHED apartment,
DIAL 992-3284
lhero wtlt be 1Ubmi\U4 to • vute ol
LADIES. Looking ror full or
THEMUMS and mumll an
one two-bedroom trailer.
•he people of did Rutland ToWNhlp
part time work for holiday
colors,
big
and
healthy,
alao
at o OENEiaAL ELECTION to be
Phone Mason 773-5141. Mar·
hekl ID lhe Town1hlP ol. B.lltl&amp;ll.d,
season ahead. Call 992-2419.
canning pears and potatoes, GEO. HOBSTETTER,BROKER
ion Reynolds.
I~Uc
Ohio. at the HIUlar pl•ce• of Ylllllll
)1).21).21c
lhe.-..ln. on TUetdoy, the ~th dlJ of
Reyooldo Flower Shop, Ma· POMEROY - 6 room brick,
GOEGLEIN GRAVEL
l'l&gt;ovl!mbef
llleB, the qUHUOD
of
bath,
fireplace
,
full
basement,
son City, just above Corp
J,.vylnl, ht eaceN of the Wn mill
THREE bedroom apartment
nice inside. $6500.110.
Hmltstlon, for the befteflt of •utNATIONAL BffiLE WEEK, Oct.
•01 PAGE
line.
111-4-lle
with garage on Buttel'nut
l;;."d TownlhiP for the purpo•• of
\IIDDLEPORT
7
rooms,
bath,
21).27, special offer, free Bi·
MIDDLEPORT,
OHIO
l
ravldlnl
and
rnolntllniNI
ftn
ap·
Ave . Phone 9!)2..5127. 10·14-tlc
PUitUI. spplllriCM, bUildlnp or •ltet
furnace, full basement, corb1e, with en1ightening, easy to
CARP),."l'S a fright. Make them
tl•oretor. or IOUrc-el of water II\IPJb'
ner lot, garage. $!4,000.00.
and m1tertah tbllrelor. or the 1111·
follow study guides. Reserve
NOTICI OF ILICTION ON TAX
a beautiful sight with Blue MIDDLEPORT - 2 apt. frame
lloblllhment and malnlenllll!'OII of Dna
LIYY tN IXCIH Of TMI
yours now , write to F'ree BiPublic Sale
ot fire ol•m tele1roph or tho PIJ'Lustre. Rent electric shamTIN MILL LIMITATION
house, 2 baths, both rented.
JI1ent of pennonenl, part-time 01' .olble, Box 333, Pomeroy, Ohio. FARM SALE, Saturday, Oct.
NO'I'ICI: II h&amp;nbJ' IJ,YOD tbet 111
pooer $1. Baker Furniture.
untel!lr firemen or t1.1ht111.1 contPAII• ~llfiUIIDCI ol 0 Re.olu.Uoo of tho
lnl'ome $132.00 per month .
!ll-20-6tp
26 at 11 a.m. I have sold my
lt'P to oPOrlt. th"' -.me.
( :nunc:ll of tbl!l VUJa.a'e ol Pomero:r,
10.21·6lc
Saki Llll belnl: 1 renelll'al ol u
$5500.00,
Uhlo. puoed on tiM 15tll diY ot lllb',
farm located 21&gt; miles north
nlltl"l tu o1 one bslt (~l mill to
1988, tben will be .ulnailtH to a
HELEN
or
VIRGIL
TEAFORD
run
for
nvoe
year•
st
•
rate
not
••·
phone
1112of Rutland just off Rutland RATS, MICE gone forever . 'Get
COAL HAULfNG.
vot-e of the people o! •aJ.d VWfiiO
ceftdlnl v., miU lor each on11 dollar
111 1 GI:NERAL. D.IICTION to be
ASSOCIATES
JII!.33ZS
lll-11·12tp
and Harrisonville Ruad. Walch
IIIIlS.
of ¥alu.allon. which llDIDUIItl to filrll
tleld ill lho Vilhp of Pomorv7, Ohio,
Star'. 21&gt; lb. lt .69 SUgar Run
\t:fll.ll for cach ono hundred doll:sn
SYRACUSE
at the r....W placo1 of YOtlnl tbeM
[or sale signs. WUI sell the
of nluoUon. Jor Fh•e )'.:liBMill, Ebersbach Hdwe ., Pick·
tu, oa 'I'IIeodtiY, tbo 5lb d.sy of No·
10.21).2tc •
The Pelll lor oald. Election will be
WILL DO aewlng at home following personal property.
u~mber, IMII, t.ha qu1111Uon o:l I•YJ"·
ens, Mason.
10 21 611&gt;
.,pen 1t 8'30 n'docll A.M. aDd ,.milt.
1111. J.a o.cc ... of tbe ten mlll limlll·
!lppers, pockets, pegging,
One 641 Foro tractor, plaw,
open unUI 1:30 o'clock P .M. Eut.rn
tlon, for the benefit of Pomeroy VllS\111\dard Time of 101d daJ,
lq-e for lh11 pur..- of pru\1dlq
hemming, ilterat!ons, elc.
mower, diSc harrow, two wa- 1r PAYMENTS of $5 or S4t
Business Services
By order of uao Bond of Kloctlou ,
snd mainlfl1nllll tl.ro IPP«rltul, op.Mra. Freddie Thabet, Maaon,
of Meip Coun\7, Ohio.
gons on rubber, Windrow hay
solloncn, blllldln&amp;l uul altu. or.
casll. Must sell 1968 sewing ll!TCH DIGGING, water lloes,
lMMITT 0. WILL
mon'o compt~ll&amp;IUoa permanent.
Phone 773·5651.
4-30-tlc
loader, some horse drawn
leech be&lt;ls, Paul Anderson.
c~lrmoll
machine , fully equinped to
..-.n umo or voh.talar7, ud oOier
DOROTHY
~
JOHNITON
tools, 1957 GMC pickup truck,
ffn protection apporatu•.
Mason, W. Va. Phone 713zig zag, make huttonho~es.
DlrocJ•r
Slid tu MIDI: • nnow.al ot u
REPAIR, REFINISH, reeondl·
1000 ljales of hay aad oome
['~olod. OCtobol' l, lNI.
5188.
lo.a.,'IO!p
l·•ltt1114 tu. of onct mill to run for
sew on buttons. etc. Five
10
1;
10
1*'
10
:111
10
II
Uc
flvo
yean st • nte not o:..coo4llll 1.0
lion golf clubo, John Teaford.
loose 'bay, 200 r..t of hay
months
old.
can
992-2836
u·tlll for each one doll.n ot vU1.11llon,
..~p
rope, garden tiller, tobacco
wlllc-h amount. to ton eenf-1 lor ooch
11).21J.j)lc DOZER, BACKHOE, trencher
~.one hundred doU..~ of valuoUoa., for
MOTIICI
OF
ILICTiotl
ON
TAX
sticka, ladders, grlndst.ne,
and truck service, oeptlc
t'lve y•or•.
NOTICI OF IL.ICTION ON TAX
LIY\" IN IXC:IIS Of' THI
Tho PolU for nld Slec:Uoll trW 1M
BACK HOE and Dozer Servl~.
one 4 year old Guernsey CtJW. 11163 STEREO. Lovely walnut
tanks, water lines, basemenLs,
TIN MILL. LIMITATIOfll
LIYV IN IXC:IJI Of' THI
open at &amp;:30 o'doc:ll A.ll. 1nd nmaln
TIN MIL-L L-IMITATION
~ OTIC&amp; U hereb)' atvon that 1111
poad. basement, water line,
Two piece living room suite,
open unW I :JO o'cloc:k P .M. Butera
a!ao topsoil. Henry Bohr,
NOTICE l1 llor.by flMil that lrl
rurauaneo of a ReooluUon of lbo
console with AM &amp; FM radio,
ISIIDdard Ttme of 11ld daJ'.
aepli&lt; tank, R. W. Orwdery, odd chairs, stands, chests or
l~oord of Tow1111blp Truoteaa of tba
purouance of I B... htU011 of the
phooe
!1115-3888
or
Roger
Bahr,
By ordor ot UMI Bo1rd of ~UDDI.
automatic floating turn Lable.
'lown•biP of Colu.mbt:s, Ollio. p. . .d
(.;ouncll of the vm.,e of Pomorn.
Long Bottom, Ohio. f.27-31lto
Co11DV, ObJo.
drawers, dressers, beds and
phone -:ill.
10.z..:IOtp Uhlo, puled on th11 t:ltb day of July , ''" tbll! 5Lb day ol Sept-ember, lMII, ot MelllIMMITT
0. WILL
Take over payments or $5 per
111811, thor• '1¥1.11 be IUbmltted Lo o
11:1ere will be aubmHted Lo • •oto of
bedding, wardrobe, chifforobe,
Ch•lrMon
the
people
of
.._ld
Columbia
TOWD•
~ote
of
tho
P&lt;8DPie
or
IAill
Vill&amp;IO
month or pay balance due,
DO~OTMY ~ ~NITON
VACANCY 1m' two elderly peoI'L o GENERAL ELECTION to be hllld
~hlp at • U&amp;NDAL ELECTION t.o be
three llxl2 rugs, rollaway bed
C. C. BRADFORD
Dlroctor
'106.43.
Try
it
in
your
home,
htld
In
the
Towublp
of
CoiWD.bl.o,
In
the
Vllll1e
ot
Pomeroy
,
Otdo,
at
ple. Prefer private paid pa..
Doted Octobor 1, 11118.
complete, old buffet, some
AUCI10NEER
Olllo, al the ne1u.1ar plrocee of vot.1n1
the rqullr placee "'' v0Unt" tbereln ,
call 992-2836.
IO·:W.Otc
J(l 7; JO 1.. ; 10 J1; 10 :II tte
Honll. Phone Mason, 7'1'»185.
on Tu•daJ. tb• 5th daY of Novemtherein, oD TuNdiY, the !ltb day cl
clothing, 5 gas heeaters, MayComplete Service
l&gt;er llil80. the QUf!ltlon of ..V)'inl .
Jliovernber , lMII, the
qu..Uon of
l~tlc
tag wringer washer, Burnside
p .........
In C.xeeu of Ulo tau mill limitiUOn ,
1'11\'Yirll, In eace• of ~ t.en mill
ForS.Ie
J966 RED FORD Futuri Sports
lor lbt IM!Defll ol Pomero,- VW11e
l.mlt.llon, for the benefit of COlllm·
stove, kllchen cabinet, poll
Ractae.
ObiG
BEAUTIFUL
all now electric 3for
tAo
pu.rpoH
of
c-urroent
c~tpenu..
bll
Tow11.1hlp
lor
the
purpooe
of
ptU·
Coupe, buc)&lt;et seats, CrulleSaid tu: beln1 : • nmewal of Ill
11tdln1 sml malnll.lnllll fJ.H api)U'atlll,
and pans, glass door cupboard,
CrtU Bradford
1'0001
II&amp;Jartmelt located tn
Wanted
u:lltinl I•• o! 011e hall HU mi.U to
appllsnC"ea. b1111411141 or Ct. UION ·
amal!c, new tires, Garnet
round oak table, two breakfast
Paneroy. Electric heating,
I I lie 111n tor f"'or yean at • r111e DOl ell · for, or the estobllahment 1nd maiD·
A GENEROUS PERSON to
Ruuah , pbone 1112-3'1'18.
ll!t'dlnl VI rolll for esch one 4ollt.r
u•oanc.., of H.n• of lln alrorm lela·
sets, lawn chairs, copper kettlble top range. waU oveJL See
donate a gas heater for the
•rapa or the parment of per111anent,
"' v11lu.aU~n. wblch 1mount:s t.u fin
lO.:I'Hic
r
ent.
tor
e•ch
uno:t
hundred
dollsn
part-t.l.me
a.r
"Voluntoer
finm.an
or
to ewrectate. Phone lor aptle,
iron
kettle,
hand
earl,
Affi
CONDmONING
Refrlger.
25r40 Chester meeting room
ut vahutlo"• for Four ye1ra.
tuo fllbllDI ~ompanlea to •perat.
pointment,
992-5271.
!amps,
5
old
style
bath
tubo,
atlon
service.
Jack's
Refrlg·
of the Cub, Boy aad G i r I
Tho Poll1 for utd Electlon wl.ll be
\.he IUDCI.
NINE ROOM HOUSE, Z baths,
Sakt tu bolnt: on odc11Uoul tu.
""n
1t e:JO o'cloett A.M. o.ad remain
10 21 If
eraLion,
New
Haven.
bone
Burnside
stove
and
many
ar~
Seouts. Contact Nat Carpenof one mill to run tor tour J'lll'l
open unUl 1:30 o'clock P.M. J.utorn
outbuildings, 13 acres ground,
.,.
a
rata
not
ex.celldlnl
1.0
mUI
for
882-Z079.
4 e lie
Stsndard Time or llid. diJI.
tlcles not llsted. Charley
ter, Long Bott.m, Phone 98&gt;'1&amp;,000. Call Mary Lyollll 992By onler ol thto Boord of ElecUonl,
o'c:h olll! dollor or "oluaUon. Wbleh
Stone, owner. Terms cash.
35M or Bob Mills , Star Route,
Pmounl.l to ton cento lor each on-e
of
Meta C.ulll)', Ohio.
!298.
10-21J.j)tc
IMMin 0 . WILL
tu.n.tlred dolllra of valuation for I'DUt
READY • !IIJX concrete deUV·
Not responsible for theft or acPhone 9111&gt;-4!!0.
!1).20-!tp
CholrnMII
yean.
DOROTHY M. .IOMNITON
cidenta. Bradford Auction Co. 7ldl FOOT overhead wood ga.. ered right to your projecl
The PoU. for said &amp;lec:Uoa wW bo
upen •t e:JO o'clock A.JI. o.ad nmain
Dl...c:tor
Fast and eaay. Free eoll·
Bo1 116, R:::c;il:::, Ohio. Phone
CABETAKER, free rent, dial
Datod October 1. 11111.
open \IJIW I:JO o'e*k P.ll. Ealt.enl
rage door, 4 inch clearanee.
Slandard Tlmll ol AW. 411.
mates. Phone 992-3284, G~,J­ 10 7; 10 14; 10 :Il l 10 18 ..t.e
949-3821.
111-=lc
5113-7253 Athens, collect.
B)' onkr ol t.be Bosrd of ltlocUou,
complete with hardware aad
Ieln
Ready
·Mix
Co.,
Mlddle111-l&amp;.!tc
oJ atai.p Coun.lf, Oblo.
door jams, t211.00. Brown's
aMMITT o.wtL.L
port, Ohio.
8 Ill tic
Ch•I.....HOTICI Of' ILICTIDN ON TAll
Trailer Park, MloerovUie.
ForS1Ie
DOROTHY M• .IOMNJ.TOM
\.IV'f IN IXCUI Of' TMI
RIDE TO ATHENS, musl leave
Phone 992-3324.
10.1~
n1rect0t'
TIN MILL LIMITATION
$30.00 . . . . . . .ct •
COAL
FURNACE,
new
gas
wa·
UUDGET
PJUCE
lurnlture
on
Pomeroy by 5 A.M. Phone
Dated Octotar 1, l.M8.
NOTICE Ia hereby liven t.blt in
ter heater, an materials in
our third Door budget shop. purauance of • Reoolutlon of the 10 'fl 10 1tJ 10 21; 10 • 4&amp;c
Ctlnttltltt ,.,••
IIU147.
Ill-lUI&lt;:
Council ol lhc Vllls1e of Syrseuu:,
2 story frame house, windows, ONE RIDING HORSE, galled,
Baker Furniture, Middleport. Ohio. pg~d on tha 5th day of SepStrawherry Roan, pbone 7ft.
tt·mber. 1988. there wUl be lllbm!tled
doors, etc. See at N. Second
Ohio.
t t1 tfe
ANTIQUES, furniture, dlsheo,
Q- Has the manna of the
to • .. ote of the people ol 11ld. VU Ull after 5 phone 74Ul63.
Ave.
Middleport
by
Blue
Su·
Io.l• •t o GENERAL BI..ECTION to
Bible been identified?
milcellaneoll5. Mrs. Howanl
10.1~
N! held lro the Vl11s1e o.f Syruuae.
noco Station.
10..1.8-3tc:
A-Some historians say
SEWING MACHINES, repair Ohio.
Cocll, 800 W. Maln St., Porno11 the refUit.r pll« of votiDI
manna was a gluey sugar
therein, o" 1\letdsr . the 5th day of
service,
all
makes.
WY
2ray.
l.JS.tfc
W. YA.
!'l:ovember, 1988, the queaUon
of
SOLID STATE Stereo, 1968 wal- TWO coal stokers wltb con2284. The Fabric Shop, Pom. I ~Y)'Inl• In ei&lt;COIIII Of t.be ten m\11 from the tamarisk shrub.
trots, Arnold Brothers, Pol1m1tstton , tor the benefit of Syn nut console model. Radio
eroy. Authorized Singer Sales fl'""
Vlllaae ror the purpo.e of proWanted To Buy
m...,,
Phone
119H448.
•
equipped with 4 speed autoand Service. We Sharpen ,·Jdlnf 1nd malntllnlnl fire opparsGINSENG, 133 lb. Golden Seal
tnae•.
appllsll&lt;'ea.
OOI!dlnp .
and
10-18-«e
mutic changer, 4 speaker
Scissors.
S-29-lfc o.lte• thereJor. and \hCI pl yment of
$2.50, Snake Root •uo, May
po:rman•nt, psrt time or volon ts.-,.
sound system, pay only $7'1 .33
t.o oper•te tho ume.
Apple 1\001 40 ceuta. Bill
or monthly payments. Call POTATOES, Phone 843-2254 CIGARETI'E vending maeb!Da firemen
Satd tu belnl: an additions! tilt
Bailey, Reedav!lle.
of
Two
mil
.. to run for f1ve yean.
C!arenoe Proffitt, Portland.
1192-3218.
10. 1&amp;.6tc
and service. ABC Enterprlaes. Mt 1 rate "ot
e"eModlnl :1.0 lllillll for
10.16-tfc
.,och one dollar of Ysh.tatlon, which
Mason, W. Va. Pbooe TIS-5543. Amounll
to twent)' cent. fOJ: ooc-h

HOBSTETTER
REALTY

EXPERIENCED
1141n Service

Pomeroy

WMPO
INFORMATION
NEWS
presents

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

A'JJ, C'M00 1 1 VJAS
OIJL't' KJDDIIJG I

Keeping Meigs
Gallia and
Mason Area
Informed As
Well As
Enterlained

~E5

, A NEW HI6~WAI' IS BEING
OPE'N.E'D TOD,\'{ I WITH 16 MIL!-5

LENGmwiSd

OF l"16e0&gt;/ 5Til&lt;TCHING f""" I(JoGsTON
To SHAD~SIO£! WE WANT ~---- &lt;
~OU To OFFICI AT• I

•

68 FIREBIRD • • • • $3,195

......

Hi'E A~E

THE 5L ISS O~S!

FACT~ ARE f&lt;1CTS,
9tiERl~ SAOO!

~LPI-IA OMEGA Ati '

2 dr. HIU'dtoi&gt;. Flmoua 400 cu.
ln. 350 horoep"""" engine.
PerfDrmance chalq&gt;lon. 4 sp.
tranL Extra aharp.

JQ411 MOSSY
.ARE. Q!!!! Ali' THf
'iJA~E ~}
SO IT 'PEARS

1' ME YOu GOT

65 DODGl: •••••• $1,295

t!Q~!

'h ton pic~. Long wheelbooe
- 8ft.bodJ!.Oneowner.Showa
good care.

66 FORD WAGOH. $1,795
Bronco. Popular 4 dr.iw. Good tirea.

BLAETTNARS
BUICK
PONTIAC
GMC TRUCKS
POMEROY

3 ROOMS

New Furniture
ONLY $'299

~.

h

-

DAILY CROSSWORD
AVIIOIS

MASON

For Sale or Trade

Ideal For Children

t96'r INTERNATIONAL truck, 4
speed, '1/o ton, 1964 Chem&gt;let,

1917 Muatang kyllnder, a.
speed. Financing available.
Phone 992-6541; after 5 p.m.
Phone 992-6748.
J.2f.dc

TURTLE SOAP

h Floou
G'"' Both lnd.,.c•••"'
Soap 'In' 5po"f•
Shop_.d Llh T,ntlo
Fit• '" Ho"d. !oar to Vao
G, . . , Gift for Children

ea. 39c
Como In a"d Sao Thom

For Sale or Rent
LARGE 4 BEDROOM house,
near all schools, in Racine.
Phone 949-4073.
I0.2(HIIc

Bryants Budget Shop
108 W. Moin
Pomoro'
992·5896
~:ARL Y

Help Wanted
GRILL COOK, Apply in person,
Craw's Steak House, Pome-ray.
IO.IJ.6tc

For Rent

AMERICAN Stereo.
lovely maple finish. instant
on radio, AM &amp; FM, 4 speed
changer, duJl volume controL
Balance of $91.(12 or monti:Jly
payments or 16, Phone 992·
3218.
111-tft.Gtc

POODLE PUPPIES, AKC Toy
miniature.
and up . Stud
service and grooming. Pboae
1192-5443.
11 s tfe

~trc

m

AKC Golden Retriever puppl08,
524 Aah St., Mlddloport. fm.

MO.

Insurance
AUTOMOBILE Insurance ean~lled? Lost YOUr operat.
or's license? Call 992-2961.
e 11 lie

&amp;-:IJ.tfe

Real Est1te For S1le
OSE STORY frame. three bed·
rooms, bath. large lot. [ui!
basement, on Pomeroy-Harrisonville Road . Rodney Downing, Broker. Phone 992-1342.
IO.lft.Gtc

FIVE ROOMS and bath on four
FURNISHED and unfurnished
level lots. One room cellar,
apartments. Close lo school. rHREE young heifers, two Holnice lawn and fruit trees. 300
Phone 992-5434.
111-18-«c
stein, one Jersey . Phone 742yards from highway. Close w
5252.
10.18-6tp
school. Priced reasonable.
FURNISHED GARAGE apartContact
Ben Quisenberry in
ment on Lincoln Hill. Utilities 1'WO FAMfLY boose, 294 Race
Syracuse. Phone 992-2954.
l-J
1dullS only . Phone IWJSt., Middleport, Phone 99210.21).6tc
3489.
f.I9-Uc
5684.
10.14-12tp

onl' hundred dollan of v11u111on, for
1-'l\'e

)'elnl.

Tbo Palla for uld l:leetlon will be
r.pen •I 1:30 o'chx:ll A.M. and re 11\ain ape" until 1:30 o•ctock P .N .
t:~~etem Standard 11me of llld day .
Br order ol Uto Boord of Electlon1.
d NeiP Coullt)'. Ohio.
IMMin 0. WILL
Chllrman
DOIIOTHY M. JOHNSTON
1 _ Olr.ctor
Lltof'OG October t , INa.
10 7; 10 14; 10 ll; 10 :18 ..tc:

•

'"•'• ot
NoUce Q

With

,_. WIM

"..••"
lltflor M. Cl•rk..
...

DMOMOd
hereby ,ctven that C•rl•

C'l11rk Kle in wbooe P011t Office Ad·
dreu 11 211 1i. Tblrd Ave ., Middle.
('&lt;&gt;rt, Ohio h11 bHn duiJI sppoJntod
1111 .Adm!nl•tr•lrU. with tho WJ.d ln·
ro:ud or the Ell1te o~ &amp;thor H.
(lull, lrote ol
Mlddlopart,
Melp
~ ount;r, Ohio, decoaaod .
F. H. O'lo.IIN
.lUll,. of Hlo P'rob•M ~rt
10· 1·; lD-:111; Jo-28 31c

Q-WJ1ere is the yrare of
the Unknown Revoluti!JIIary

SoldUir?
A-The grave Is in the
churchyard or the Old Presby.
terian Meetinghouse, Alexan·
dria, Virginia.

Cheddar,

UUo

Swlsa, etc.

12. Therefore
13. SucceulveJy
14. Headgear

9.

8. Beth'&amp; son
Meaau~

~{!J~U&amp;-!'!.,=t: "'"t..c

....

UaocrambletheoefourJumbl..,

24. Ecata.

ono letter to OKh - . to

form tour ordlnar,- wor41.

25. Piece
out
26. LaJr
28. Mar·

Df land

21. Sa.tllty

BALOT

I I
'lVITWE
II

I

-·

II I

CHORBO

3$.Raort

38.0ulde4
311. !Cxdama·

i

I

-··pol

···42.

I aJ
WHAT 'YOU CAN'T
~eN 'IOU eAT
'lOUR: CAKE.

tlO

II

V 'I

No .. orranp the cln:ledlellen

....[ I I 1 ]

to fonn the IUfllrioo .,...... u

~~===~~~~~~~~_J~,
Priol'" SORPUEmm ~~n I

tloD of
dlollke

tUdbythe~automL
~( I T
(A.._. IO-Iti'I'OW)

-

fli. Ctlut'U part
.

.ft. Colljecture

f~r·•

t7.Abo..U

IJ........ _ .. U..en

48.Pauou

1--·

n.., d

Dl&amp;uoi - "

eloM cal 111iUW'r q,._ DAYI

DOWN

l.Talk

3. Divtded

Reod I hem •·arefully. You'll find people who quit high school
nverage $45 a week lf'.'i:t than people who fini~h.
For the kin&lt; I or job you want, get the education you need.

A~q

IIMI'ely

t. UDtOOked

SWIIBBUA:N,

DAU.Y CRYI.'TOQVOIE-IIen'a laow to -rk It:

11o

Take the world as it la, not
aa it s h o u 1 d be.-German
proverb.

Naples
6. Best pa.rt
ll. One of the
Jofift801!."

30. State in
India
S2. For pro and
amateur
31.Klndot

t•n, Attomeya at

10 111 lf IOJ 10 J1

famlly
22. Moalem

moldli!J'•

NOTICI 01' IALI
Tbo aru!.lorollftod wlll offor for eol•
nt the office of Crow, Crow o\ Por-

Do~;~~.-.

6. Limburger,
7. Exasper·
ating kind
of tape

21. Member
of lhe

TetHINQ'• Aluwer
,...._ J.nen
10. Butcher
31 . Junlor'8
37. Poker atakt
17. Con&amp;tructed
ahop Item
vehicle
-to. Wind
scenery
14. Di&amp;eotbeque 34. Man on
UNazi
caper
18. Octavian's
the copy
detector
16. Klng of
month
deale: abbr.
43. Male sheep
21. Gym Items
15. Dl&amp;pute
Buhan
44. ParBOa blrd
23. Equipped
1&amp;. Customer~
36. GoddeSII of
46. Neighbor
20. Long- claw
volcanoes
ot BuJg.
27. s-sbapect

THE BESf ARGUMENT
AGAINSI' QUITIING SCHOOL IS
RIGHT IN THE WANT ADS.

LEGAL NOTICE
L:sw,
PomerQ)' ,
Ohio, t!IJ .creo, more or 1... In
klpto Town~htp, lleip Cou.nl:r, Ollie
••uepllnl "i ol miDOnlal, owned br
tbe lito Weber F . IJolt. Said Nal
..Ute &amp;a bo •old 011. Oc:tobtir II.
, , . 11 10;30 A..N . for DOt leu tluln
IJMI oppn1Nd. price of 110.1100.00.
liale aubJ«t to the fiiPPronl ot the
Probate Court of M•il• Countr, Oblo.
WILLIAM D. CMILDI,
.Wmlrllttr~tor of tt.
tttaM of w...r •· Melt,

Bay of

U5. Son of Odin
18. Metal

LIOAL NOTICI
NOTICI 0' AP',OINTMINT
No. 20,111
Admh•lstrotriJt

5. Preflx with
mDV&amp;ble,
moblle, etc.

. .

co.

I

I. lllaAd

-er.

AXYDLBAAXa

AdvNtts •nll: cnr•!rohu!NI !ror th,.. publoc aood m i:OO~Jc:ratron w1\h Tho ~dvortiainl Council
ilnli II"· holo ••"·''"'"''' ~ ~ ""'" I"·'P"" .O.d~erlisinl [~ecutives.

•

to LOMO .PJ:LLOW
OM teller -)ll)o lllotldii&lt;W
In tlltl ..,plo A to t« tile Uaree 118, X tor the two 0'., etc. BIDI" 1ttten. a.po
tropllta. tho leDIIh IIDII (onnaUOD o1 tile - - aU -

-

da7111!' ~ .~are dllf-.

WN
)(

ll

JXJ'U,

EPXI'P
XK

RLE

'$$

IIIIK

SLAOUA•

TALER

XRBL

FHKBL'J.-KNAHK

Y.......,.. C.)pl• ....•: MAX'S JNCLIN.ATJON TO INJUS ..
TICII IL\Kiill DIDIOCIU.CY tme"SURY. - REINHOLD
lfiBBI1HR

I

'

.,

�1- 1110 Dolly Sentinel, Pomet·oy-Middlepor~ 0., M&lt;JIIday, Oc-r 21, 1968

A LITTLE 'HOMEWORK' Watching Want Ads Bring Top Grade Results

B.~RNEY

HARK~A!N'T
THAT TATER

SQUAWLJN',

LOW~EZV ?

WANT AD
INFORMATION

Oo, of

COMPLETE LINE

SIEGLER and
TROPIC·AIRE Heaters

P~lic.t i on

REGULA liONS
Tho Publlahor .... ,.,. •• iho rlt.ht
to ocllt "' reioct onr ad1 doomod ob·
1-ctionablo. Tho f.ublilhar will nat
bo ro•pon•iblo 01 mo•o rhon ono
inco"oet lnurtion .

5

65 CHEVELLE . . , • . . . ........•.. · ... $1495
Malibu Conv., VS e~ne, P,G, transmission, new w-~Hr
tires, green exterior with white nylon top, green with vinyl .
trim.

Big Trad .. ln Allowance

POMEROY
992·2181

W. Caney,
. Jock
•
Mgr.

64 CHEVROLET 1...... H. T. Q&gt;e••• , , ••.• , ••• $995

F 01 Wont Ad So•.,.ico
po• Word o,.. inaottion
Mini"'.,.,., Chargo 75c

~•nil

12 conh par wood throo cont oc "intorticu&gt;l .
, . COIIII par WO'&lt;d ti• COIIIOCoJio~O

fi¥0

lnaortiont
25 par ~ant Ootco 11 nt on paid adt
and od1 paid withon 10 dar•
CARD OF THAN I($ &amp; OBITUARY
$1 50 for 50 wo&lt;d ,.,,,;,.,.,m_ Eo
allllditional word 2&lt; .

283 engine, 4 on the Ooor, turquoise finish, black interior,
radio and heater. Priced to move now,
64

CORV AIR SPIDER 2 door .. , , •....•• , ••• ,$895

Four speed trans., blower on motor, good tires, bucket
seats, red vinyl Int., jtlt black ftnish. Radio.

Pomeroy Motor Co.
OPEN EVES. 1:00 P.M.

BLIND ADS
OFFICE HOURS
8 .)0 am to ~H)O p.m . Ooilr
8:30 o.m. to \ 2:00 Noon Sa turdo~

Notice

Rnl &amp;tlte For S.le
O'BRIEN &amp; CROW
REALTY OOMPANY
POMEROY - 1 room frame. I
bedrooms, bath, basement, 2
porches, gas noor furnace.
$5.500.00.
RACINE - BUSINESS ROOMTile construction, tiled floors.

POMEROY, OHIO

For Rent

LEGAL NOTICE

Save Now! Install Now!

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

DEADLINES
5 , ..... Da, 8of•• P .... llc.tion
Momlay Dudline 9 a . m.
Coll&amp;'a!lotlon• &amp; C•roction•
Will ~. occopl.d l,lf'll'll 9 G 111. for

ceiling heater, storage room.
t.!let in good condition.
$6,900.110,
REEDSVn.LE - NICE COT·
'fAGE - I 'h story, 6 rooms, 3
bedrooms. bath, basement.
free gas heat, drilled well, ga.
rage . A buy at $5,900.00.
HENRY CLELAND
Offfee - 9ft.!%5t
Res. - llf!Z518
10.211-3tc

For Sale

IN TNI COMMON PUAI COU•T
MilOS COUNTY, OHIO
TNI p IDIIlAL LAND .ANIC OP
I OUIIYILLI,
P.. lntiH,

n.

LOUII M.. ICH.IITJ.t.N, IT AL.,
Do .. nciOIIIII
No. 16,131
NOTICI .y PU&amp;LICATION
LANTY RIFFE and
CLAUDIAN
ldf'll'l!:, who:se placu ot ret.ldooce INI
unknown, will Uke noUee o• l.bo
:!lith da,- of June. 1115'1, tho under ·
~IIDod Wad U1 PoUUon , and lwo
Supplemental PetiUons, •1o1Nt )'OU
L1 Ulo Common Pleu Court Gl MeW
(.' ~.ounl)', Ohio, praytn1 for iuciJmenl
Ualn.lt )'OU In tho ID\OUDl of ITAJ8.•
bu, wll.b tn&amp;or. .c, and t11011 •ddldottol

auma of •.oo and ut.10, wUII In·
ter1111, and lor •
fo~eclomre
of
Mort(qe of tho followlll,f d_.-tbld
real property, ud otller r.U•f, to·
wit:
Belnl In
Culumltla
Towndllp
Molp Cou nb. Oblo. boUndod Uici
d11Kribed •• folloWll:
P..-t. ol SecUon :a. TowtU!hiP t,
lt1n1e u. beltnnlnl 1t 1 polnl 172-8
feet wut of lhe Northhsl torner
o f nJd Sodlon D; tllonce w..t
97:1 ffet; thence South 1 de1ree
We•L 1358 feel Lo Lhe eenWr of
• CQu.nt)' rold; tbeace lJODI tbe
cou.ntJ' road north N dell'"• 48
mlnu&amp;oa weat Zl teet to 1 ,olnlf
thence .ou.th 14011 teet to 1 e&gt;or·
ner at tho Une of Jrdrl• Hcryll1
thenc:e North 118 dqtea But 13n
teet to tho center ot Stste m,-b.
way No. 3$8; thence wlt.ll tho
meonden of said hllhWI)' North I
de&amp;ree Eut 7&amp;8 feet, North M de·
1r-e-eo eut :11811 teot 1nd North 43
de1reeo 30 mJnulol eul 22:1 teat
to thll Jnt.ersecUon al Stsle Hllh·
w•y No. 368 with the cen\er tiDe
or 11 county n11d ; therw:e alon1 the
center of Joid county road muth
B8 deareoa 30 minute• we•t 13-f.
fe'l!l to the toulbw.!ot corner ol
the 1tore lot; thence with the wut
Uno of 11ld atoN lot north 44 de.
1ree1 ~~:o1l 3~ fec:t lo tb11 norther·
ly curner u-.ereof; 1bonce wnb the
11orth liM of laid •tare lot north
87 de1ne ~ 30 mlnu.le. aast l3t
feat to tho center tina of StiLe
HllhWIIY No. 388; thence alo111
oald center llne north 43 4e,re..
eut 440 feet tD the IIOUthorl,- cor
ner of the lanD of Bolla MIY Lav·
c:nder; thence llon1 Did Lavender'• ll"e north &amp;II delrel!ll wolf.
tOM fe.,t and north t9 do&amp;Hel 80
mJnu.t• watt 527 roet t.o tho place
of bellnnlnl, contolnln1 101.!1 acrl'!a, more or leu .
Alto put ol Section 33. Town~htp 8, lbnl' 15, bellnlllnl It •
point 13tll teet we1t ot the IIOUthellt corner of .a td
,ecuon 33:
thence north 5 deiJn!!OI welt ~
t ee t; thence ...-e1t lJa8 feel: thence
aoulh 1 de1re• we1t 1220 feet to
the south line of laid secuon 33;
thenc:e eut alon1 the •aid aou.lh
line 1~ lett to the plan of be·
fl'lnnl"l · ct~nl.lllnlnl 38.2 oc-rea. rnon
or leu .
Conblnlnl In a ll 138.~
ICtell,
more or ieu, but nbJoc:t kl aU
lc:1al hllhWJYt. excepllnl theNfrom thst certsln vein of coal. 1•
colly and vorlaully ll:nown u Nun~ ­
ber .. Cll rlon or Ll!ne.tono COlli.
to1euier with the rilllt to mtne
11nd remove 11me a1 aokl In d.:~ed
recorded In Deed Book tlfl, Pa1e
209. or the Deed Jleco~ of Mell'•
County, Ohio.
You on r.qulred to on1wer the
111ld Petition by !he :lind dsY of De·
(embl!:r 19118. or Judllftlllll by dll·
flUit vrl.u be roeftdered o1al.u:t JOU.
THI FIDI~AL LAND .ANK
OF L.OUIIYILLI,
P'l•lttMff
Crow, Crow &amp; hrMf',
AttorM\'1 for "•lnttff
J11 'J; 10 H; 10 21; 10 18: U t
11 11 e1c

Business Services
EYINRUDE
69's Are Here
Romain,
worm' "
l·.Sprayo
ond thoo o high prouuro
lOOP

ri niO of aoh wato' to
make cor shiM
1. Attondanl on duly

M·F··~·-·····IIto6

Sat. · · • • · · · · · · ·9 to 7
Sun. • · • • • • • ·II

6-9%-18
On Display
115 Soon
To Arrive

Schawarzel Marl••
Hockingport, Ohio
Phone 667-3370

---

From the J..rgest Truc'k or
Bullcbzer Radiator To The
~est Heater Core.

BLAETTNARS
PH. 99:1.2143

!;X PERT
Wheel Alignment

s·:ss

'lllAlLER LOTS, Bob's Mobile 1'1 FOOT se!f.aasembl&lt;d camp.
THE MIDDLEPORT City Cab
er, Lone Eagle, located at
Court, Syracuse, Ohio on State
is oow open under new mancamp site 24, Ruyal Oak Park,
Rt. 12l, Phone 991-2951.
• Free Estimates
-GUARANTEEDagement giving prompt 24
$600,
Phone 992-6141. IO.I&amp;.31c
!1-ll·liC
hour service. Phone 99W280
PHONE 992-2094
• Quality Concrete
tll-IJI.6tc TRAILER SPACE, ready to WARM MORNING ooal st.ve
• Certified Strength
with fan, used less than two
----hook up. private, plenty of
Pomeroy
Home
&amp; Auto
months.
Glenn
Jewell,
DownBARN REVTVAL heginn!ng room ror children w play.
Ill E. Main
l'llmen&gt;y, 0
lngton, Ohio.
10-1~
• Delivery
Moaday, Oc!. 21, at 7:30 p.m.
Phone 992-3904.
&amp;.14·tle
Interdenominational services.
• Quick Service
NOTICI OP ILICTION ON TAX
Everyone we1cmne. Evange- FOUR ROOM furnil!hed apart- ACREAGE, beautiful site, dial
LIYY IN IXCUI OP THI
1111 Jim DebruhL Church lo- ment, E. Main St., Pomeroy,
593·7253 Athens, collect.
TIN Jit\IL1. LIMITATION
• Finlshilll
NOTJCE Is benby liven tluol 1n
cated on Horse Cave Road
10.1&amp;.3tc
Phone 1112-WSl.
t~lle
punuonee of a R ..oluUon of Uta
• Sand &amp; Gravel
near Bashan.
10.16-Sic
l!olnl of To...-nahip Tnuteel of die
To-lhlp D1 Rutland, OIUo, pUitld
F'JELD
GROWN
CHRYSAN·
on the 3111 dl:r of AUfllll, liMI8,
ONE FURNISHED apartment,
DIAL 992-3284
lhero wtlt be 1Ubmi\U4 to • vute ol
LADIES. Looking ror full or
THEMUMS and mumll an
one two-bedroom trailer.
•he people of did Rutland ToWNhlp
part time work for holiday
colors,
big
and
healthy,
alao
at o OENEiaAL ELECTION to be
Phone Mason 773-5141. Mar·
hekl ID lhe Town1hlP ol. B.lltl&amp;ll.d,
season ahead. Call 992-2419.
canning pears and potatoes, GEO. HOBSTETTER,BROKER
ion Reynolds.
I~Uc
Ohio. at the HIUlar pl•ce• of Ylllllll
)1).21).21c
lhe.-..ln. on TUetdoy, the ~th dlJ of
Reyooldo Flower Shop, Ma· POMEROY - 6 room brick,
GOEGLEIN GRAVEL
l'l&gt;ovl!mbef
llleB, the qUHUOD
of
bath,
fireplace
,
full
basement,
son City, just above Corp
J,.vylnl, ht eaceN of the Wn mill
THREE bedroom apartment
nice inside. $6500.110.
Hmltstlon, for the befteflt of •utNATIONAL BffiLE WEEK, Oct.
•01 PAGE
line.
111-4-lle
with garage on Buttel'nut
l;;."d TownlhiP for the purpo•• of
\IIDDLEPORT
7
rooms,
bath,
21).27, special offer, free Bi·
MIDDLEPORT,
OHIO
l
ravldlnl
and
rnolntllniNI
ftn
ap·
Ave . Phone 9!)2..5127. 10·14-tlc
PUitUI. spplllriCM, bUildlnp or •ltet
furnace, full basement, corb1e, with en1ightening, easy to
CARP),."l'S a fright. Make them
tl•oretor. or IOUrc-el of water II\IPJb'
ner lot, garage. $!4,000.00.
and m1tertah tbllrelor. or the 1111·
follow study guides. Reserve
NOTICI OF ILICTION ON TAX
a beautiful sight with Blue MIDDLEPORT - 2 apt. frame
lloblllhment and malnlenllll!'OII of Dna
LIYY tN IXCIH Of TMI
yours now , write to F'ree BiPublic Sale
ot fire ol•m tele1roph or tho PIJ'Lustre. Rent electric shamTIN MILL LIMITATION
house, 2 baths, both rented.
JI1ent of pennonenl, part-time 01' .olble, Box 333, Pomeroy, Ohio. FARM SALE, Saturday, Oct.
NO'I'ICI: II h&amp;nbJ' IJ,YOD tbet 111
pooer $1. Baker Furniture.
untel!lr firemen or t1.1ht111.1 contPAII• ~llfiUIIDCI ol 0 Re.olu.Uoo of tho
lnl'ome $132.00 per month .
!ll-20-6tp
26 at 11 a.m. I have sold my
lt'P to oPOrlt. th"' -.me.
( :nunc:ll of tbl!l VUJa.a'e ol Pomero:r,
10.21·6lc
Saki Llll belnl: 1 renelll'al ol u
$5500.00,
Uhlo. puoed on tiM 15tll diY ot lllb',
farm located 21&gt; miles north
nlltl"l tu o1 one bslt (~l mill to
1988, tben will be .ulnailtH to a
HELEN
or
VIRGIL
TEAFORD
run
for
nvoe
year•
st
•
rate
not
••·
phone
1112of Rutland just off Rutland RATS, MICE gone forever . 'Get
COAL HAULfNG.
vot-e of the people o! •aJ.d VWfiiO
ceftdlnl v., miU lor each on11 dollar
111 1 GI:NERAL. D.IICTION to be
ASSOCIATES
JII!.33ZS
lll-11·12tp
and Harrisonville Ruad. Walch
IIIIlS.
of ¥alu.allon. which llDIDUIItl to filrll
tleld ill lho Vilhp of Pomorv7, Ohio,
Star'. 21&gt; lb. lt .69 SUgar Run
\t:fll.ll for cach ono hundred doll:sn
SYRACUSE
at the r....W placo1 of YOtlnl tbeM
[or sale signs. WUI sell the
of nluoUon. Jor Fh•e )'.:liBMill, Ebersbach Hdwe ., Pick·
tu, oa 'I'IIeodtiY, tbo 5lb d.sy of No·
10.21).2tc •
The Pelll lor oald. Election will be
WILL DO aewlng at home following personal property.
u~mber, IMII, t.ha qu1111Uon o:l I•YJ"·
ens, Mason.
10 21 611&gt;
.,pen 1t 8'30 n'docll A.M. aDd ,.milt.
1111. J.a o.cc ... of tbe ten mlll limlll·
!lppers, pockets, pegging,
One 641 Foro tractor, plaw,
open unUI 1:30 o'clock P .M. Eut.rn
tlon, for the benefit of Pomeroy VllS\111\dard Time of 101d daJ,
lq-e for lh11 pur..- of pru\1dlq
hemming, ilterat!ons, elc.
mower, diSc harrow, two wa- 1r PAYMENTS of $5 or S4t
Business Services
By order of uao Bond of Kloctlou ,
snd mainlfl1nllll tl.ro IPP«rltul, op.Mra. Freddie Thabet, Maaon,
of Meip Coun\7, Ohio.
gons on rubber, Windrow hay
solloncn, blllldln&amp;l uul altu. or.
casll. Must sell 1968 sewing ll!TCH DIGGING, water lloes,
lMMITT 0. WILL
mon'o compt~ll&amp;IUoa permanent.
Phone 773·5651.
4-30-tlc
loader, some horse drawn
leech be&lt;ls, Paul Anderson.
c~lrmoll
machine , fully equinped to
..-.n umo or voh.talar7, ud oOier
DOROTHY
~
JOHNITON
tools, 1957 GMC pickup truck,
ffn protection apporatu•.
Mason, W. Va. Phone 713zig zag, make huttonho~es.
DlrocJ•r
Slid tu MIDI: • nnow.al ot u
REPAIR, REFINISH, reeondl·
1000 ljales of hay aad oome
['~olod. OCtobol' l, lNI.
5188.
lo.a.,'IO!p
l·•ltt1114 tu. of onct mill to run for
sew on buttons. etc. Five
10
1;
10
1*'
10
:111
10
II
Uc
flvo
yean st • nte not o:..coo4llll 1.0
lion golf clubo, John Teaford.
loose 'bay, 200 r..t of hay
months
old.
can
992-2836
u·tlll for each one doll.n ot vU1.11llon,
..~p
rope, garden tiller, tobacco
wlllc-h amount. to ton eenf-1 lor ooch
11).21J.j)lc DOZER, BACKHOE, trencher
~.one hundred doU..~ of valuoUoa., for
MOTIICI
OF
ILICTiotl
ON
TAX
sticka, ladders, grlndst.ne,
and truck service, oeptlc
t'lve y•or•.
NOTICI OF IL.ICTION ON TAX
LIY\" IN IXC:IIS Of' THI
Tho PolU for nld Slec:Uoll trW 1M
BACK HOE and Dozer Servl~.
one 4 year old Guernsey CtJW. 11163 STEREO. Lovely walnut
tanks, water lines, basemenLs,
TIN MILL. LIMITATIOfll
LIYV IN IXC:IJI Of' THI
open at &amp;:30 o'doc:ll A.ll. 1nd nmaln
TIN MIL-L L-IMITATION
~ OTIC&amp; U hereb)' atvon that 1111
poad. basement, water line,
Two piece living room suite,
open unW I :JO o'cloc:k P .M. Butera
a!ao topsoil. Henry Bohr,
NOTICE l1 llor.by flMil that lrl
rurauaneo of a ReooluUon of lbo
console with AM &amp; FM radio,
ISIIDdard Ttme of 11ld daJ'.
aepli&lt; tank, R. W. Orwdery, odd chairs, stands, chests or
l~oord of Tow1111blp Truoteaa of tba
purouance of I B... htU011 of the
phooe
!1115-3888
or
Roger
Bahr,
By ordor ot UMI Bo1rd of ~UDDI.
automatic floating turn Lable.
'lown•biP of Colu.mbt:s, Ollio. p. . .d
(.;ouncll of the vm.,e of Pomorn.
Long Bottom, Ohio. f.27-31lto
Co11DV, ObJo.
drawers, dressers, beds and
phone -:ill.
10.z..:IOtp Uhlo, puled on th11 t:ltb day of July , ''" tbll! 5Lb day ol Sept-ember, lMII, ot MelllIMMITT
0. WILL
Take over payments or $5 per
111811, thor• '1¥1.11 be IUbmltted Lo o
11:1ere will be aubmHted Lo • •oto of
bedding, wardrobe, chifforobe,
Ch•lrMon
the
people
of
.._ld
Columbia
TOWD•
~ote
of
tho
P&lt;8DPie
or
IAill
Vill&amp;IO
month or pay balance due,
DO~OTMY ~ ~NITON
VACANCY 1m' two elderly peoI'L o GENERAL ELECTION to be hllld
~hlp at • U&amp;NDAL ELECTION t.o be
three llxl2 rugs, rollaway bed
C. C. BRADFORD
Dlroctor
'106.43.
Try
it
in
your
home,
htld
In
the
Towublp
of
CoiWD.bl.o,
In
the
Vllll1e
ot
Pomeroy
,
Otdo,
at
ple. Prefer private paid pa..
Doted Octobor 1, 11118.
complete, old buffet, some
AUCI10NEER
Olllo, al the ne1u.1ar plrocee of vot.1n1
the rqullr placee "'' v0Unt" tbereln ,
call 992-2836.
IO·:W.Otc
J(l 7; JO 1.. ; 10 J1; 10 :II tte
Honll. Phone Mason, 7'1'»185.
on Tu•daJ. tb• 5th daY of Novemtherein, oD TuNdiY, the !ltb day cl
clothing, 5 gas heeaters, MayComplete Service
l&gt;er llil80. the QUf!ltlon of ..V)'inl .
Jliovernber , lMII, the
qu..Uon of
l~tlc
tag wringer washer, Burnside
p .........
In C.xeeu of Ulo tau mill limitiUOn ,
1'11\'Yirll, In eace• of ~ t.en mill
ForS.Ie
J966 RED FORD Futuri Sports
lor lbt IM!Defll ol Pomero,- VW11e
l.mlt.llon, for the benefit of COlllm·
stove, kllchen cabinet, poll
Ractae.
ObiG
BEAUTIFUL
all now electric 3for
tAo
pu.rpoH
of
c-urroent
c~tpenu..
bll
Tow11.1hlp
lor
the
purpooe
of
ptU·
Coupe, buc)&lt;et seats, CrulleSaid tu: beln1 : • nmewal of Ill
11tdln1 sml malnll.lnllll fJ.H api)U'atlll,
and pans, glass door cupboard,
CrtU Bradford
1'0001
II&amp;Jartmelt located tn
Wanted
u:lltinl I•• o! 011e hall HU mi.U to
appllsnC"ea. b1111411141 or Ct. UION ·
amal!c, new tires, Garnet
round oak table, two breakfast
Paneroy. Electric heating,
I I lie 111n tor f"'or yean at • r111e DOl ell · for, or the estobllahment 1nd maiD·
A GENEROUS PERSON to
Ruuah , pbone 1112-3'1'18.
ll!t'dlnl VI rolll for esch one 4ollt.r
u•oanc.., of H.n• of lln alrorm lela·
sets, lawn chairs, copper kettlble top range. waU oveJL See
donate a gas heater for the
•rapa or the parment of per111anent,
"' v11lu.aU~n. wblch 1mount:s t.u fin
lO.:I'Hic
r
ent.
tor
e•ch
uno:t
hundred
dollsn
part-t.l.me
a.r
"Voluntoer
finm.an
or
to ewrectate. Phone lor aptle,
iron
kettle,
hand
earl,
Affi
CONDmONING
Refrlger.
25r40 Chester meeting room
ut vahutlo"• for Four ye1ra.
tuo fllbllDI ~ompanlea to •perat.
pointment,
992-5271.
!amps,
5
old
style
bath
tubo,
atlon
service.
Jack's
Refrlg·
of the Cub, Boy aad G i r I
Tho Poll1 for utd Electlon wl.ll be
\.he IUDCI.
NINE ROOM HOUSE, Z baths,
Sakt tu bolnt: on odc11Uoul tu.
""n
1t e:JO o'cloett A.M. o.ad remain
10 21 If
eraLion,
New
Haven.
bone
Burnside
stove
and
many
ar~
Seouts. Contact Nat Carpenof one mill to run tor tour J'lll'l
open unUl 1:30 o'clock P.M. J.utorn
outbuildings, 13 acres ground,
.,.
a
rata
not
ex.celldlnl
1.0
mUI
for
882-Z079.
4 e lie
Stsndard Time or llid. diJI.
tlcles not llsted. Charley
ter, Long Bott.m, Phone 98&gt;'1&amp;,000. Call Mary Lyollll 992By onler ol thto Boord of ElecUonl,
o'c:h olll! dollor or "oluaUon. Wbleh
Stone, owner. Terms cash.
35M or Bob Mills , Star Route,
Pmounl.l to ton cento lor each on-e
of
Meta C.ulll)', Ohio.
!298.
10-21J.j)tc
IMMin 0 . WILL
tu.n.tlred dolllra of valuation for I'DUt
READY • !IIJX concrete deUV·
Not responsible for theft or acPhone 9111&gt;-4!!0.
!1).20-!tp
CholrnMII
yean.
DOROTHY M. .IOMNITON
cidenta. Bradford Auction Co. 7ldl FOOT overhead wood ga.. ered right to your projecl
The PoU. for said &amp;lec:Uoa wW bo
upen •t e:JO o'clock A.JI. o.ad nmain
Dl...c:tor
Fast and eaay. Free eoll·
Bo1 116, R:::c;il:::, Ohio. Phone
CABETAKER, free rent, dial
Datod October 1. 11111.
open \IJIW I:JO o'e*k P.ll. Ealt.enl
rage door, 4 inch clearanee.
Slandard Tlmll ol AW. 411.
mates. Phone 992-3284, G~,J­ 10 7; 10 14; 10 :Il l 10 18 ..t.e
949-3821.
111-=lc
5113-7253 Athens, collect.
B)' onkr ol t.be Bosrd of ltlocUou,
complete with hardware aad
Ieln
Ready
·Mix
Co.,
Mlddle111-l&amp;.!tc
oJ atai.p Coun.lf, Oblo.
door jams, t211.00. Brown's
aMMITT o.wtL.L
port, Ohio.
8 Ill tic
Ch•I.....HOTICI Of' ILICTIDN ON TAll
Trailer Park, MloerovUie.
ForS1Ie
DOROTHY M• .IOMNJ.TOM
\.IV'f IN IXCUI Of' TMI
RIDE TO ATHENS, musl leave
Phone 992-3324.
10.1~
n1rect0t'
TIN MILL LIMITATION
$30.00 . . . . . . .ct •
COAL
FURNACE,
new
gas
wa·
UUDGET
PJUCE
lurnlture
on
Pomeroy by 5 A.M. Phone
Dated Octotar 1, l.M8.
NOTICE Ia hereby liven t.blt in
ter heater, an materials in
our third Door budget shop. purauance of • Reoolutlon of the 10 'fl 10 1tJ 10 21; 10 • 4&amp;c
Ctlnttltltt ,.,••
IIU147.
Ill-lUI&lt;:
Council ol lhc Vllls1e of Syrseuu:,
2 story frame house, windows, ONE RIDING HORSE, galled,
Baker Furniture, Middleport. Ohio. pg~d on tha 5th day of SepStrawherry Roan, pbone 7ft.
tt·mber. 1988. there wUl be lllbm!tled
doors, etc. See at N. Second
Ohio.
t t1 tfe
ANTIQUES, furniture, dlsheo,
Q- Has the manna of the
to • .. ote of the people ol 11ld. VU Ull after 5 phone 74Ul63.
Ave.
Middleport
by
Blue
Su·
Io.l• •t o GENERAL BI..ECTION to
Bible been identified?
milcellaneoll5. Mrs. Howanl
10.1~
N! held lro the Vl11s1e o.f Syruuae.
noco Station.
10..1.8-3tc:
A-Some historians say
SEWING MACHINES, repair Ohio.
Cocll, 800 W. Maln St., Porno11 the refUit.r pll« of votiDI
manna was a gluey sugar
therein, o" 1\letdsr . the 5th day of
service,
all
makes.
WY
2ray.
l.JS.tfc
W. YA.
!'l:ovember, 1988, the queaUon
of
SOLID STATE Stereo, 1968 wal- TWO coal stokers wltb con2284. The Fabric Shop, Pom. I ~Y)'Inl• In ei&lt;COIIII Of t.be ten m\11 from the tamarisk shrub.
trots, Arnold Brothers, Pol1m1tstton , tor the benefit of Syn nut console model. Radio
eroy. Authorized Singer Sales fl'""
Vlllaae ror the purpo.e of proWanted To Buy
m...,,
Phone
119H448.
•
equipped with 4 speed autoand Service. We Sharpen ,·Jdlnf 1nd malntllnlnl fire opparsGINSENG, 133 lb. Golden Seal
tnae•.
appllsll&lt;'ea.
OOI!dlnp .
and
10-18-«e
mutic changer, 4 speaker
Scissors.
S-29-lfc o.lte• thereJor. and \hCI pl yment of
$2.50, Snake Root •uo, May
po:rman•nt, psrt time or volon ts.-,.
sound system, pay only $7'1 .33
t.o oper•te tho ume.
Apple 1\001 40 ceuta. Bill
or monthly payments. Call POTATOES, Phone 843-2254 CIGARETI'E vending maeb!Da firemen
Satd tu belnl: an additions! tilt
Bailey, Reedav!lle.
of
Two
mil
.. to run for f1ve yean.
C!arenoe Proffitt, Portland.
1192-3218.
10. 1&amp;.6tc
and service. ABC Enterprlaes. Mt 1 rate "ot
e"eModlnl :1.0 lllillll for
10.16-tfc
.,och one dollar of Ysh.tatlon, which
Mason, W. Va. Pbooe TIS-5543. Amounll
to twent)' cent. fOJ: ooc-h

HOBSTETTER
REALTY

EXPERIENCED
1141n Service

Pomeroy

WMPO
INFORMATION
NEWS
presents

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

A'JJ, C'M00 1 1 VJAS
OIJL't' KJDDIIJG I

Keeping Meigs
Gallia and
Mason Area
Informed As
Well As
Enterlained

~E5

, A NEW HI6~WAI' IS BEING
OPE'N.E'D TOD,\'{ I WITH 16 MIL!-5

LENGmwiSd

OF l"16e0&gt;/ 5Til&lt;TCHING f""" I(JoGsTON
To SHAD~SIO£! WE WANT ~---- &lt;
~OU To OFFICI AT• I

•

68 FIREBIRD • • • • $3,195

......

Hi'E A~E

THE 5L ISS O~S!

FACT~ ARE f&lt;1CTS,
9tiERl~ SAOO!

~LPI-IA OMEGA Ati '

2 dr. HIU'dtoi&gt;. Flmoua 400 cu.
ln. 350 horoep"""" engine.
PerfDrmance chalq&gt;lon. 4 sp.
tranL Extra aharp.

JQ411 MOSSY
.ARE. Q!!!! Ali' THf
'iJA~E ~}
SO IT 'PEARS

1' ME YOu GOT

65 DODGl: •••••• $1,295

t!Q~!

'h ton pic~. Long wheelbooe
- 8ft.bodJ!.Oneowner.Showa
good care.

66 FORD WAGOH. $1,795
Bronco. Popular 4 dr.iw. Good tirea.

BLAETTNARS
BUICK
PONTIAC
GMC TRUCKS
POMEROY

3 ROOMS

New Furniture
ONLY $'299

~.

h

-

DAILY CROSSWORD
AVIIOIS

MASON

For Sale or Trade

Ideal For Children

t96'r INTERNATIONAL truck, 4
speed, '1/o ton, 1964 Chem&gt;let,

1917 Muatang kyllnder, a.
speed. Financing available.
Phone 992-6541; after 5 p.m.
Phone 992-6748.
J.2f.dc

TURTLE SOAP

h Floou
G'"' Both lnd.,.c•••"'
Soap 'In' 5po"f•
Shop_.d Llh T,ntlo
Fit• '" Ho"d. !oar to Vao
G, . . , Gift for Children

ea. 39c
Como In a"d Sao Thom

For Sale or Rent
LARGE 4 BEDROOM house,
near all schools, in Racine.
Phone 949-4073.
I0.2(HIIc

Bryants Budget Shop
108 W. Moin
Pomoro'
992·5896
~:ARL Y

Help Wanted
GRILL COOK, Apply in person,
Craw's Steak House, Pome-ray.
IO.IJ.6tc

For Rent

AMERICAN Stereo.
lovely maple finish. instant
on radio, AM &amp; FM, 4 speed
changer, duJl volume controL
Balance of $91.(12 or monti:Jly
payments or 16, Phone 992·
3218.
111-tft.Gtc

POODLE PUPPIES, AKC Toy
miniature.
and up . Stud
service and grooming. Pboae
1192-5443.
11 s tfe

~trc

m

AKC Golden Retriever puppl08,
524 Aah St., Mlddloport. fm.

MO.

Insurance
AUTOMOBILE Insurance ean~lled? Lost YOUr operat.
or's license? Call 992-2961.
e 11 lie

&amp;-:IJ.tfe

Real Est1te For S1le
OSE STORY frame. three bed·
rooms, bath. large lot. [ui!
basement, on Pomeroy-Harrisonville Road . Rodney Downing, Broker. Phone 992-1342.
IO.lft.Gtc

FIVE ROOMS and bath on four
FURNISHED and unfurnished
level lots. One room cellar,
apartments. Close lo school. rHREE young heifers, two Holnice lawn and fruit trees. 300
Phone 992-5434.
111-18-«c
stein, one Jersey . Phone 742yards from highway. Close w
5252.
10.18-6tp
school. Priced reasonable.
FURNISHED GARAGE apartContact
Ben Quisenberry in
ment on Lincoln Hill. Utilities 1'WO FAMfLY boose, 294 Race
Syracuse. Phone 992-2954.
l-J
1dullS only . Phone IWJSt., Middleport, Phone 99210.21).6tc
3489.
f.I9-Uc
5684.
10.14-12tp

onl' hundred dollan of v11u111on, for
1-'l\'e

)'elnl.

Tbo Palla for uld l:leetlon will be
r.pen •I 1:30 o'chx:ll A.M. and re 11\ain ape" until 1:30 o•ctock P .N .
t:~~etem Standard 11me of llld day .
Br order ol Uto Boord of Electlon1.
d NeiP Coullt)'. Ohio.
IMMin 0. WILL
Chllrman
DOIIOTHY M. JOHNSTON
1 _ Olr.ctor
Lltof'OG October t , INa.
10 7; 10 14; 10 ll; 10 :18 ..tc:

•

'"•'• ot
NoUce Q

With

,_. WIM

"..••"
lltflor M. Cl•rk..
...

DMOMOd
hereby ,ctven that C•rl•

C'l11rk Kle in wbooe P011t Office Ad·
dreu 11 211 1i. Tblrd Ave ., Middle.
('&lt;&gt;rt, Ohio h11 bHn duiJI sppoJntod
1111 .Adm!nl•tr•lrU. with tho WJ.d ln·
ro:ud or the Ell1te o~ &amp;thor H.
(lull, lrote ol
Mlddlopart,
Melp
~ ount;r, Ohio, decoaaod .
F. H. O'lo.IIN
.lUll,. of Hlo P'rob•M ~rt
10· 1·; lD-:111; Jo-28 31c

Q-WJ1ere is the yrare of
the Unknown Revoluti!JIIary

SoldUir?
A-The grave Is in the
churchyard or the Old Presby.
terian Meetinghouse, Alexan·
dria, Virginia.

Cheddar,

UUo

Swlsa, etc.

12. Therefore
13. SucceulveJy
14. Headgear

9.

8. Beth'&amp; son
Meaau~

~{!J~U&amp;-!'!.,=t: "'"t..c

....

UaocrambletheoefourJumbl..,

24. Ecata.

ono letter to OKh - . to

form tour ordlnar,- wor41.

25. Piece
out
26. LaJr
28. Mar·

Df land

21. Sa.tllty

BALOT

I I
'lVITWE
II

I

-·

II I

CHORBO

3$.Raort

38.0ulde4
311. !Cxdama·

i

I

-··pol

···42.

I aJ
WHAT 'YOU CAN'T
~eN 'IOU eAT
'lOUR: CAKE.

tlO

II

V 'I

No .. orranp the cln:ledlellen

....[ I I 1 ]

to fonn the IUfllrioo .,...... u

~~===~~~~~~~~_J~,
Priol'" SORPUEmm ~~n I

tloD of
dlollke

tUdbythe~automL
~( I T
(A.._. IO-Iti'I'OW)

-

fli. Ctlut'U part
.

.ft. Colljecture

f~r·•

t7.Abo..U

IJ........ _ .. U..en

48.Pauou

1--·

n.., d

Dl&amp;uoi - "

eloM cal 111iUW'r q,._ DAYI

DOWN

l.Talk

3. Divtded

Reod I hem •·arefully. You'll find people who quit high school
nverage $45 a week lf'.'i:t than people who fini~h.
For the kin&lt; I or job you want, get the education you need.

A~q

IIMI'ely

t. UDtOOked

SWIIBBUA:N,

DAU.Y CRYI.'TOQVOIE-IIen'a laow to -rk It:

11o

Take the world as it la, not
aa it s h o u 1 d be.-German
proverb.

Naples
6. Best pa.rt
ll. One of the
Jofift801!."

30. State in
India
S2. For pro and
amateur
31.Klndot

t•n, Attomeya at

10 111 lf IOJ 10 J1

famlly
22. Moalem

moldli!J'•

NOTICI 01' IALI
Tbo aru!.lorollftod wlll offor for eol•
nt the office of Crow, Crow o\ Por-

Do~;~~.-.

6. Limburger,
7. Exasper·
ating kind
of tape

21. Member
of lhe

TetHINQ'• Aluwer
,...._ J.nen
10. Butcher
31 . Junlor'8
37. Poker atakt
17. Con&amp;tructed
ahop Item
vehicle
-to. Wind
scenery
14. Di&amp;eotbeque 34. Man on
UNazi
caper
18. Octavian's
the copy
detector
16. Klng of
month
deale: abbr.
43. Male sheep
21. Gym Items
15. Dl&amp;pute
Buhan
44. ParBOa blrd
23. Equipped
1&amp;. Customer~
36. GoddeSII of
46. Neighbor
20. Long- claw
volcanoes
ot BuJg.
27. s-sbapect

THE BESf ARGUMENT
AGAINSI' QUITIING SCHOOL IS
RIGHT IN THE WANT ADS.

LEGAL NOTICE
L:sw,
PomerQ)' ,
Ohio, t!IJ .creo, more or 1... In
klpto Town~htp, lleip Cou.nl:r, Ollie
••uepllnl "i ol miDOnlal, owned br
tbe lito Weber F . IJolt. Said Nal
..Ute &amp;a bo •old 011. Oc:tobtir II.
, , . 11 10;30 A..N . for DOt leu tluln
IJMI oppn1Nd. price of 110.1100.00.
liale aubJ«t to the fiiPPronl ot the
Probate Court of M•il• Countr, Oblo.
WILLIAM D. CMILDI,
.Wmlrllttr~tor of tt.
tttaM of w...r •· Melt,

Bay of

U5. Son of Odin
18. Metal

LIOAL NOTICI
NOTICI 0' AP',OINTMINT
No. 20,111
Admh•lstrotriJt

5. Preflx with
mDV&amp;ble,
moblle, etc.

. .

co.

I

I. lllaAd

-er.

AXYDLBAAXa

AdvNtts •nll: cnr•!rohu!NI !ror th,.. publoc aood m i:OO~Jc:ratron w1\h Tho ~dvortiainl Council
ilnli II"· holo ••"·''"'"''' ~ ~ ""'" I"·'P"" .O.d~erlisinl [~ecutives.

•

to LOMO .PJ:LLOW
OM teller -)ll)o lllotldii&lt;W
In tlltl ..,plo A to t« tile Uaree 118, X tor the two 0'., etc. BIDI" 1ttten. a.po
tropllta. tho leDIIh IIDII (onnaUOD o1 tile - - aU -

-

da7111!' ~ .~are dllf-.

WN
)(

ll

JXJ'U,

EPXI'P
XK

RLE

'$$

IIIIK

SLAOUA•

TALER

XRBL

FHKBL'J.-KNAHK

Y.......,.. C.)pl• ....•: MAX'S JNCLIN.ATJON TO INJUS ..
TICII IL\Kiill DIDIOCIU.CY tme"SURY. - REINHOLD
lfiBBI1HR

I

'

.,

�-,

Of Middleport
Dies Saturday
Funeral services ror F r e d
Jackson, 88, Middleport, who died
Slturdl,y tn the Metgs General
Hospital, wiD be held Tuescloy at
2 p. m. at the Mt. Moriah BIDtl st
Church with the Rev. Robert
JacksOfl ortlciating. Burial will
be in the Middleport Hill Ceme-

tery.
He was born at Masoo, W.Va.,
and was a retired coal miner. He
was the son or the late Dan and
Meivtrw. Nease Jackson and was

Church and a deacon In the church

for several years.
Survivors include a daughter,
Mrs. Helen Harper, Pomeroy;
two brothers, David, Middleport;
Douglas, Rendville; four sister.s,
Mrs. La:1ra Young, Middleport;
Mrs. Cora Young, Erie, Pa. ; Mrs.
Kate Braxton, Clncirmati, and
Mrs. Goldie Evans, Cleveland;
one granddaughter, tlu'ee greatgrandchildren, aOO four great..
great-grandchildren.
FrieOOs may all at the Rawl-

irws-Collts Funeral Hmle trom 2
to 4 and 7 to 9 p. m. today and until 12:20 on Tuesday when the
body will be taken to the church

to lie in state.

Memoirs

(Continued from Page 1)

lhrou&amp;ll Saturday will average

time Iowa will average tn the
j()a. II will be cooler Wedneoday and warmer Thur llday, then
cooler at the end of the week.
Sc:sllered ahowero In I h e
mimlle ol tho woell and again
toward&amp; the end or the week
are expected to bring about a
half an Inch of ralnfaU,

Pfc. Cremeens
Loses Leg to

also preceded in death by his
wife, Bertha; one son, two broth-

ers, arxl one sister. He was a
member of the Mt. Moriah Baptist

Pmtor Tours

a llttle above normal w 1 t h
highs In Ute mid 60s. Thenll!hl

Enemy Mine
Pfc. Larry Cremeens, 20, sm
oC Mr. and Mrs. Brlce Cremeens,
Rl. 1, Ewlngton, and husband of
Roxie Monnett Cremeens, Lancaster, was wowtded in action
In Vietnam on Saturday, Oct.
19.
According to the Marine's
mother. word was received over
the weekend by the Gallla Countian' s wife that he had stepped
on an enemy mine. It was reported his right leg was amputated below the knee.
Pfc. Cremeens, who arrived
in Vietnam only three weeks ago,
entered the service on April 3,
1968. He Is a 1967 graduate of
Nortll GaiUa High School where
he was a member of the Pirate
football squad.
YOWlg Cremeens• wife told her
mother-in-law that her husband
has been removed to a hospital
In Japan.
Pre. Cremeens was a member of India Co., 3rd Bn., Fltth
Marines.

dlate military action.
Kemedy wrote that Gen.
Curtis LeMay, then Air Force
chieC of starr and now George
Wallace's vice presidential ca,n..
cHdlte, argued strongly with the
Presiden! that military attack
was "essential,"
When the Presldert asked the
likely response of thP. Russians,
Robert KeMedy wrote, LeMay
insisted there would be none,
Vernon F. Tannehill, 82. lather
The President was skeptical and
of
Daily Sentinel Editor Chestold LeMay the Russians could
ter
Tannehill of Middleport, died
not "do nothing" about a U.S.

Father Dies in

Lerumon, Ore.

attack on Cuba-that they
would reply either in Cuba or
BerUn.

'

..

~

'·
&lt;

Kennedy said his brother was
distressed that, with the excep..
tlon of Gen. Maxwell D. Taylor,
his military advisers "seemed
to give so litUe consideration to
the implications of the steps
they suggested."
He said the
experience
eJt't)hllsized the need for "civilian direction and control" and
tor raising "probing questions"
to military recommendations.
McN1m1ra for Blockade
Then Defense Secretary
Robert S. McNamara was an
earlv advocate of the "blockade" tactic finally used, Kennedy reported.

'

'

.

'

''

He described h o w other
prfi!C)&amp;ratlons were far advanced
for an attack against Cuba
should the blockade rail
As the crisis Wlfolded, Robert
Kennedy reported, his brother
"was not sanguine about t h e
results. •. each hour the sUuaUon
grew steadily more serious, The
feeling grew that this cup was
not going to pass alii that a
direct military confrontation
between the two great nuclear
powers was inevitable."
Robert Kennedy said his
brother's final conclusion was
that w a r was averted by
making it firmly clear to Russia
that the llnlted States could not
tolerate an offensive missile
baae in Cuba, while at the same
time refusing to push Huli:sia to
the extent that her own vital
ucurity was affected.
He quoted his brother as
u.ylng: "If anybody is around
tD write alter thi.s, they are
aolng to understaOO that we
made every effort to find peace
and every effort w give our
.tversaries room to move. J am
not going to push the Russiaru;
1n inch beyond what
is

necessary,"
DEDICATES AIDPORT
JACKSON, Ohio (UPD- Gov .
James Rhodes Sunday dedl.cated the Jackson County Airport,
which has been named Cor him,
a Jackson County native. ~­
aored by the Southeastern Ohio
Regional Council, the dedication
wu attended by 2,500 persons.
TO MEET TUESDAY
The Jwtior Auxiliary of t h e
Drew Webster Post No. 39, AmerIcan Legion, Pomeroy, will meet
1t the legion hall at 7:30 p.m.
TuesciOY.

Saturday night In Lebanoo, Ore·

gon, following a year -long i lines s,
of a heart attack.

He is l!lurvived by his wife,
two other sms, Eugene,
Oakland, Calif., and Sherman,
PrinevUle, Ore., and a daughter, Mrs. ~rley Kroessin, Lake
Oswego, Oregon, and nine grandctdldren.
V, F. Tannehill, a ll[elong
member or the Methodist Church,
wu born near Wakefield, Kansas, farmed in western Kansas
wrtU 1926, when he moved his
family to Lmgvlew, Wash., where
he worked in lumber mills until
retirement in 1951.
Edith;

Wallace
(Contlnued from page 1)
what type of federal. help he
fnored or how recipients would
be chosen.
Gov. ~ira T. Agnew- Agnew
made no public appearances
S u n d a y while Nixon-Agnew
headquarters In New York
contirued to deny that the
Maryland governor's campaign
appearances were being restricted. Democratls meanwhile,
conUrwed to chide Agnew for
his remark that 'If you've seen
one city slum, you've seen them
aD." Agnew had two scheduled
awearances in Texas today
before returning to Maryland.
Musk.ie- The Maine sen1tor
accused
Nixon
Stntay of
"trying to play both emls
against the middle" by courting
Southern segregationists with
one line aM Northern liberals
w-ith another.
LeMay - LeMa, briefed Wallace on his trip to Vietnam
SWliay and continued to criti~
cize the Johnson administrations's conduct or the war.
Polls-Two polls made public
Sunday had Nixon ahead in the
presidential race. Tbne magazine said he holds a commanding lead and the New York
Dally News' straw pd.] had him
runnlrw 4 per cert ahead or
Humplu-ey in New York.
j

MAN FINED
William H. Gardner, 59, Cheshire, was Rned $10 and costs Monday morning by Middleport Mayor
C. 0. Fl sher on conviction ot an
Intoxication charge.

' ' •, •• ' • •
~

-o~ · ~"

"'.., '\ ., -.,- ., - • • • • • • '
~

son, AmerIcan philosopher
and e...ylst.

r----------------~~

N. W. COMPTON, 0. D.
OPTOMETRIST

On1CE HOIJRS 9,30 TO 12, 2 TO 5 (CLOSE AT NOON ON

THURS.) - EAST COURT ST., POMEHOY

,

•

•

~"

It's Mild Hong Kong Flu

Houuh Area
~'

In Cleveland
The Rev, Charles Simons, pas,..
tor of the Middleport First n.p..
tist ChlD'ch, returned home Saturday from Clevelml whore he
attemed the annual Ohio B-.,tist
Conventioo Wednesday through
F"ridl,y, which included 1 "semirmr"' in the ri&lt;Jt..¥rrecked Hough
area.
Among the speakers at the
event were Dr. Culbert RutenbeJ",
president of the American Baptist
Conventionj Dr. Roger Fredrickson, pastor of the First Baptist
Church, Sioll)[ F'alls, S. D, , and
Dr, Robert Bonthlus, dJrector of
the clergy internship program of
T11E FARMERS BANK AND SAVINGS CO. has been pre.
Case Western Reserve Universisented an award Cor "100 per cent Participation" in the Ohio
ty.
Bankers Insurance Fund Customer Service and Em,ployee Ben&amp;Friday evening a joint banquet
fit Programs. Participating in the ceremonies were, above(L to
with the General Baptist Assn. R), Deck Webb, special ~resentatlve for Turner &amp; Shepard,
meeting at the same time lnc. 1 administrator of O.B.L F., Ted Reed, Jr., presidento1 the
closed the convention. Speaker at
Farmers Bank &amp; S8vir18S Co., and Evelyn Laming, teller. Webb,
that dinner was Mayor Carl B,
in making the presentation said, "Recipients of the plaques
Stokes or Cleveland.
such as th~se have expressed by theirparticipaUonin this Ohio
Frida.Y afternoon seminars
Bankers Association program a deep concern and appreciation
were held and the one attended
for the welfare of their customers and e~T~Dloyees." The Cusby the Rev. Mr. Simons included
t&lt;mer Service Program means the bank offers mortgages paya tour through the Hough district
ment protection, mortgage lire, and credit life insurance prowhere a housh-.g development is
grams for enrolled customers.
undenvay and a visit to the office of Economic ~portunity
SGT. 5TEVI'l'IS RATrn
where its director spoke on the
staff Sergeant Leroy Stevens,
programs being carried out.
son of Mr. and Mrs. Albert SteThe Rev. Mr. Slmons met at
vens
of R, R, 2, Gallipolis Ferthe Clevela..t meeting, the Rev.
ry,
has
attained the &amp;rategtc
and Mrs. Carver Williams, now of
Air
Connnand
(SAC) rating of
Kenton, former pastor of the
master
tectmician.
He is a gradPomeroy First Baptist Church,
uate of Point Pleasant (W, Va.)
There were 700 registered deleHigh School.
gates and 300 unregistered ones
at the meeting. A long term proTwo of seven accidents lnvesgram on conventions of the futigated
over the weekend by the
ture was adopted.
Galllpoll• Pos~ stale Highway
Patrol, occurred in Meigs County. No one was in.)Jred in either.
There was heavy damage to a
truck
operated by Altoo AJtizer,
(Continlled from page 1)
25, Sandridge, ~. Va,, In an
encore, was followed by the love- accident at 4:40 a.m. &amp;lnday on
ly "Here, There and Every- Rl 33, ooe mile north of Darwhere," one of the many beauti~ win . No charge was nled.
ful compositions by the Beatles.
The patrol reported that AlThe program closed with the Bra- tizer, headed south, struck a
zilian love so~. "A.zulao."
bridge abutment, went through
Following the concert, the ar- the bridge, and struck a guard
tists were honored at a reception raiL The truck had heavy dam given by the concert association's age. The abutment was crackboard or directors at the home or ed.
Mr. am Mrs. l\, Kimball Suiter.
The oU1er incident, logged as
Among the guests at the recep- an accident, was a fire at 8:25
tion were Miss Bill Belanger of a.m. Saturda,y on Rt. 33, one
the Huntington Herald Dispatch, mile south or the Meigs-Athens
Miss Jean Carlo Davis of Hunt- County line.
ington, w. Va., and Dr, and Mn.
Officers reported that Randy
Donald 1\t Thaler. Mrs. Thaler Boley, 18, Columbus, was headis president of the French Art ed south when his engine backColony.
fired through tbe carburetor and
The next area concert will be started a fire. There was modheld the evening of Oct. 28 in erate damage to the wiring unPortsmouth, where Amin Feres, der the hood.
bas:s baritone, will appear on the
stage of the Portsmouth High
School. The next local concert
VETERANS MEMORIAL
will be presented by D o n a I d
HOSPITAL
Gramm, bass baritone, Feb. 9.
ADMISSIONS S.~TURDAY
Ernestine faber, Pomeroy; Addie Barton, Racine; MasonSpenc~
er, Racine; Michael Pooler, Mid~
d]eportj James Reed, Corning.
D~CHARGES SATURDAY Helen Bartels, Emmett Barrels,
Paul Sisson, Harry Gil:bs, Edith
Two triple fatality accidents
McCoy.
and the death of an Akron YOUth
ADMISSIONS
SUNDAY
early today pushed Ule weekend Mahlon Eblin, Pomeroy; Dessie
traJ'fic death toll in state to Kuhn, Cheshire; Lucille Lam27 persons.
bert, Rutland.
HILTON'S
The total was nine more than
DLSCHARGES
SUNDAY were killed in highway accidents Pamela Cole, Dennis Boggs, Evethe week be£ore, the Highway Lyn Holter, Hazel Shivler, Homer
Patrol-United states Internation- Goeglein.
al survey showed.
Both triple fatality accidents
occurred Frlda;y night. One was
in Selma, the other near Barnes TONIGHT AND TUESDAY
vllle. One other rooltiplc death
OCT. 21- 22
accident was reported in the 6
p.m. Friday tD midnight !imday
WA.L T DISNEY
period. Of the fatalities none was
NEVER A DULL
In southeast Oldo.
MOMENT

NEW YORK (UI'O - A threatened police s!DwWwn with nearly 4,500 men calling f,n ••stck"
feU sbort of Its mark tnday.
The 22,000 - member Patrolmen's Benevolent Association
(PBA) had predicted that 20 per
ce111 ol Its membership would
report '"sick". But only 933
pairolmen phoned they were

•

Rev. R. J. L. Guppy, who discovered the ash In 186G on TrinIdad.

'·

stricken wtth .. Hong Kong Flu"
or aome otber ailment.
The fiRUI'e could rise, however, because some precinct
switchboards were having trou-.

ble keeping up with the calls.
But tbe total was expected w
fall far &amp;ltort of tbe predicted
20 per cent. Tho PBA c.Ued the
slowdown to back demands ror

N0 w

e

The guppy was named Cor the
higher salaries ror clt;y police-

men.
Pollee otnclals were concerned about the posslbUicy oftrwblo
at school a closed by the clcyw1da teachers' strike. They aaid
a ..glpndc" law enforcement
problem could reoull If awble
enpted. at the schools.

at

VOL. XXI NO 128

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

IS THE TIME TO IUY AND
PLANT •••

For Next Spring Flowersl
Tulips, Daffodils, Hyanciths, Crocus, Anemones and Dutch Iris. Select
yours now from the fine selection in the Housewares Department on the
First Floor. Have beautiful flowers next Spring and for the years ahead.
Visit on the Main Floor in the Housewares Department-- there's lots of
bargains in the October Sales.

----------------------------Elberfelds In Pomeroy

Meigs County

SHOP

Folk Singers

frozen Food Special

Harvest Time or Rosedale

TURKEY
DRUMSTICKS

lh.

BACON

29~

l-Ib. pkg.

Die~

AID GIVEN
The Pomeroy emergency s(Jlad
answered a call at 10:12 p. m.
S&amp;tw"day to the home of Barbara
Coate5, Charter Oak Hollow. She
was given medical treatment at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
where she was taken by the squad,
and later was discharged.

Von Oy~e
Dorothy Provine
DISNEY CARTOONS:
For Whom The 8ull1 Toll
Figaro &amp; Cleo
Feudln' Fightin'
Hiwoy Hedden
Goon h Wild
Admission SSe &amp; SOc

SHOW STARTS 7 PM

OYSTER
STEW

~~~oz. 29~

jar

lb.

BUSH'S SHOWBOAT

SPAGHETTI

303 can

1

SCOT LAD WHOLE KERNEL

YELLOW
CORN

Wellesley Farm

SCOT LAD TOMATO

ICE CREAM
All Flavors
~ gal. crt.

SOUP

59~

can

...~wece.lll:a.. ~~ .
Mra. Stella Grueser, RD 1, Minersville, who were given certificates by Farm Bureau President
VirJII King.
Other SO-year members of the
organization who were unable to
1Uend are Porter Midkiff of the
llemlock Grove area; Halliday~
Atkins Farm, Rutland; Mrs. llurley Nelson, Langsville, and Mrs.
EvereU Colwell, of Vinton.
Other awards presented roUowing the dinner were 30 year pins
to C. E. Blakeslee of Pomeroy
lnd Mrs. ZibaMidkiffo!Chester,
1nd 25 year pins to Thomas Sayre
of Portland, Alfred and Charles
Fnnk of Pomeroy, and Mrs. John
L. Wolfe of Racine. Mrs. Bessie
HJsell of Pomeroy aOO Lloyd and
Wl.)'ne Roosh of Racine were unlble to be present to receive 25
year pins.
Pins were also awarded to new
.Umbers in 1968 including MiltQp Circle, Racine; Roy Parker,
Obteter; carl Shenefield, LaiJJ"'.
Yt'~e; P. J, Pauley, P~
Clirlstine Branham,;?'
J0.eph W. Leach ,

Racine; Joe N. Sayre, Rutlardj
-Work be continued toward
Max Hill, Racine; John Cleek,
correcting damages from strip
Portlandj J, Malcolm Hamm, Athmines aOO to prevent further larx:l
ens; Larry Ritchie, Minersville; damages.
Charles Stock, Albany; William
Approved on the state level
Harri s, Racine; Clifford Young,
were resolutions to strive for
Pomeroy; Clifford Hill, P&lt;ITI~ more research lO market dairy
eroy; Robert Welsh, Rutland; El- products, all tell!llhOne compan-~m.o. .J&gt;..-~ 1 .. P.omeroy.;--RoleAd ... iss..made to ri•e area service to
E. Russell, Middleport; David aU adjacent operations, and that
R. Riggs, Pomeroy; Kermit Wal- present law be amended tQ ex~
ton, Pomeroy; Kenneth Cole, Ra- emDt the compulsory use of slow
cine; Wilbur Robinson, Cool- moving vehicle emblems on
ville; Charles ~aun, Racine, and minor roads during daylight
Boris Marks, Long. Bottom_
hours.
The federation, in Its business
Resolutions approved on the
session, unanimously approved national level included that the
resolutions to be pursued by the
(Continued oo Page 6)
group for 1968-69 of the county,
state and national level,
Approved for the coonty level
were:
- Be it resolved that
-Laws be amended to better
enable law enforcement officers
Tht: , .
to carry out their dutie:s.
- Laws be amended so U1atth~!
Acl'
law enforcement oificers and •
coorts have the power toproperl·
punish offenders,
-The state Hlghwa,',: '"
tion schedule in Me• restored to it rties as pr'"
and COP"
At.hP"

CAP Wantinr

Reported Valuable
consultant from the Econo"'ompany visited the Pome1 Middleport elementary
grades 1-3, recently
on the new phonetic
reading now being
"fades.
'roach has been
the first sixq consultant's
o1y and ben"" questions
_ since the pro-

15~

14 oz.
bot.

·f:l~Jii;:r:: (r&gt;?~=~:~ :::)~:~:&lt;}&gt;::::r:····
:t

17~

.99

and

MARKET • Open Daily 9 to 9:30-Sun. 12 to 9:30
We Aca!pl fl•tlt·t·ul fj,. ..J

C mer Mill and Seaond Sts.
"We

MIDDLEPORT, 0 .

~t Consultants' Visit

i/

WORK
BOOTS

Where Shoe• A1e Sen1ibly Priced

f

.'itt~mps

PHONEs 992-3480
fol.lllll Q

s= n"

KILLED IN CRASH
HEBRON, Ohio (UPD - Stephen W, Jacks, 23, Granville, was
tWt Mon- killed Tuesday in a one . car
..,r the chair- crash on Ohio 79 here.
.ill King, was complan.'! for the annual
.45- of the unit whl ch will
neld Monday, Nov. 11, at
i :30 p.m. at the Eastern High
The Meigs Count;y Teachers
School.
Association has endorsed Sen.
Bill Zfpt, Farm Editor of the
Oakley Collins and Rep. Ralph
Columbus Dispatch, will be the
Welker for reelectlon.
speaker. Tickets are available
~rs for the annual meettrom the otncers and directors Ing laat Friday at Eastern lllgh
~ tho looll unit Including VlrScln:&gt;l Included Babetta Breu1111 King, David Nease, John Col- haua, Ohio Elilcation Assoclawell, Wa,yne Roush, David Ko- Uon coordinator rl classroom
blenu, Harry Holter, Rex !blne- teachers and departmental servfield, Harold Carnshan, EdiSilll Ices and Dr. Edward Jirik, ofthe
Hollon, Oris Roush, VIrgil At- Ohio Education Associatlon's dekins, Jim Meredith, C h a r I e a partment of lnatructlooal ....,_
Theiss, and Edaon Roush.
ices.
The corust for tbe 1969 Melgo
Mlaa Breuhauslp0keoo1beunCounty Dairy Prlnceoo wiU be lcy of loacl10rs on Ill level a and
held at the annuallllOOIIng. Candi- Dr. Jirik opoke oo tbe Individdates mull be stria who are be- ual lnatructlon program and the
tween tho apo ~ 16 and 25 in-aervtce program tor teachers.
and wlll have ~~'""'ued from
He alao opol&lt;o m the ._silty
hlllll school a1 that time. At of Wiley IUiliJIIg teachers. T h e
some time durlne thlllr l i - lpOikera wore introduced by Jom
the girl• must have lived on a
Mora, wbo was acting J)roSnllt
farm 011 which milk was pro.. chairman.
&amp;iced. t\ilpllcatlon blanka ma,y
lluriDa Ute eli-&lt;IIIY seallon, lnbe IO&lt;IIred !rom the COIIIlly ax- llructlnnol por1oc11
IDIIII1
tonllon t!lilco.
- • - . hold. !pekera ""

~~,

Temperatures will average

near or a few degrees below
normal in Ohio Thursday
through Monday. Daytime high
readings will generall,y be near
60 while the overnight I o w
temperatures will average about 40. Sea.sonable temperatures will prevail at start of
period, with cooler latter part
of week and warming agaJn a
little &amp;mda,y and Moo~ . Rainfall will average about three
quarter s inch, occurrlltg as
showers daily except SUnday.

Dan Smith is
Heading New
OAPSE Unit
Dan Smith, of RD, Racine, is

or

the new president
the Southern t .ocal School District Cm&amp;pter of the Ohio As.sociatlon of

Public School Employees following a meeting Thesda,y night at
Southern High School.
Members of the organization
are custodians, cooks, secretaries, bus drivers, clerks and other non-certlflcated employees of
the district. Non - teaching
employees or the district were
formerly associated with the
county -Wide OA PSE organization.
but effective this year, there is
a chapter In each or the three
districts of the countY.
other officers elected at the
session were Jesse Brinker, vice
president, and Eleanor Wingett,
secretary - treasurer. Memberslrlp €kles are $1 for each worka
tng month and all non-teaching

employees of the district who
are not already members may
join by sending their dues to
Mrs. Wingett In &amp;Yracuse before
Nov. 10.
The Southern Local organiza ..
(Continued on Page 6)

Marines
Win By

178-0
SAIGON (UP0- ~.S. Marines
today killed 178 Communists
caught near the Thuong Due
Green Beret camp. Not 1.
LeaU1erneck was hurt in the
fighting, military spokesmen
said.
The battling near Ue 5Pecial
Forces camp, whieh 81®0 Nortb
Vietname..sc lOWers falled to
take in a 1s":d"ay si ege earlier
this month, apparently ended 1.
two-week lull in major ground
a&lt;'tion in South Vietnam.
Some diplomatic observers
had cited the lull as part ol.
pattern surrounding American
efforl!i to get Ha.noi to agree to
mutually de-escalate the war.
Marine patrols late Tuesday
night spotted about 400 Comrr.unists lurking near the Thi.IOllg
nu&lt;' camp, which guards the
western approaches to the allied
bastion city of Da NaiJg. 360
miles above saigon.
Callln Bombers
The Leatherneck patrols aig.
nalJed for artillery and air
strikes.

The Marine ground troopo
Pulled back. Mllltary 8(&gt;0ke8lllell
said the Communist troops were
virtually defenseless against the
rain of bomb.~; and artillery
shells that slammed down on
their posltioos.

Fred Latham Dies
Friday in Warren
Fred Latham, Sr., 70, husband
or the former Beulah Gimher ot
Meigs County, died Friday at his
home in Warren following a It.
gering illness. Besides his wife,
several children survive.
Attending fUneral service&amp; in
Warren Morday were Mrs.. Ednl
Stiles, a sisler-in-law of Mr. La-tham, and Mr. and Mrs. E. E.
Stiles, Middleport

Teachers Back Collins, Welker

u-

COLUMBUS- POUCE HERE AND AT Ports

-··

...·a, ao

,,n award·• totaling fl.-

VATICAN CITY - VA·ncAN OFFICIAlS REACTE.O with diobellet today tD Clnllnal Richard J"""'s Cushl~s statement that the
Cormer Jacqueline KennedY could marry "whcmever she wants."
Mogr. Fausto Vallalnc, the oatclal Vatican ·spokesman, roat!lrmed
the V1Uean post don that the tormer American Firat Llcb' is In 111
.. irregular position'' with the Rrman CAtholic lhareh because of her
marrtaae to the divorced Aristotle Onlssla,
ill blrred from
claarc:b ucramen11.
"I qree with the cardinals' statement that only God knows who
t 1 a .u.r/' he 111d. ••at whoever contravenes the llw of the
cburd) incurs her sanction&amp; u

am

flllllliP'Oif, 0.

. ·:· :·:-:-:-.. ·.·.·.· .

Five Day Forecast

Need Here

iith

E

search today tor Richard Tingler, 28, chargedwithft
der and armed robbery in the beating-shooting deat
qers at a dairy store here Surx:la.y night.
Tingler was ldentined from police photographs by th
vtvor a• the man who robbed the store of $562 am killed
time employees, Susan Pack, 18, and James W, Stevens, 1
Phyllis Crow, 34, lived through a beating and attempted stra
Pollee went to Porll!lmouth Tuesday on le1rning that Tingler once 1
there. Their findings were not revealed.

THE SHOE BOX

Coun"

Applicf'·

By United Press
ATHENS, OIUO - A NEW BOTT
eib efll)loy Ill to 200 persons will be co
tl.on scheduled for the spri~ of 1969,
'!be Athens Botlli~ Co. will bottle Pep,
initillly employ 80 persons arxl will have a •
600 bottles a minute.

·.;.;.;.;.:

In Great

.e-

CATSUP

RVE CENTS

Blood is

,oorporaled In Sop-

SCOT LAD

chanse 'l'lllnda, and

MRS. NELL(E VALE, center, committee chairman, presented gifts to these two outstanding
members oC the Middleport Business and Professional Women's Club at the Meigs High School in
Middleport Tuesday night. On the left is Mrs. Wilma Sargent, "Woman of the Year,'' ardon the
right is Mrs. Betty Conkle, " Woman of the Week." Selection by a committee or the club is based
on outstanding communJty service, The MJddleport BPW Club is currently observing National BPW
Week.

according to Meiga Lo..pt. George Hargraves,

303 can

perature

chance ol - · In Ute north
portion.

Another sign of developments in the search for peace came from
Saigon where V, S. Ambassador Ellsworth Bunker met toda:y with
Replacement blood Is seriousPresident Ngu;yen Van Thieu for the second lime in two day s and the
ly
needed at the upcoming bloodsixth time since last Wednesday .
mobtle visit of the American Red
It was believed Bunker wa s filling inThieuon the peace develop- Cross Monda,y from 1-6 p.m.
ments aOO on U. S. efforts to get the Saigon gave mment to the Paris at U1e Pomeroy elementary
conference table with the Hanoi rcpresentati\res and envoys from the school.
National Liberation front (NLF), the political branch of the Viet
Red Cross officials here said
Coog.
a large number or persons have
had blood supplied to them or to
Harriman made an l.m passioned P.~ca (QJ:· peace in hi s meeting
their relatives in the PMt and
today with the Hanoi grolt): "Pee'"' - "'enefi ' ·, everyone," he said.
awarently have made no attempt
"War onl)' prevents the people f"'"
'ietnam and people of South
to replace it .
Vietnam from having the or
1 the growing prosperity
The quota Cor the Monda,v viswhich most of many uf il 'Y·"
it is 83 wtits, but Lhis does not
Include the deficit of approximately lOU pints whJch has boon
accumulated by persons not providing replacements.
The Meigs Chapter of t h e
American Red Cross is also
continuing to urge re.sidents to
support the current fund drive.

SWEET
PEAS

BOYS AND YOUTHS

.99

Three of seven living 50-year
members of the Meigs County
Farm Bureau Federation were
accorded special recognition at
a Golden Armiversary dinner
meeting Tuesday night at U1e Sallsbury Elementary School. The
diMtJr was a sell-out.

~'Racine;

SCOT LAD

At today's meeting Harriman told the Hanoi repr~sentatives
Washington was ready to move quickly toward peace. "II is time
for you to act," he said. "The choice is yours.''
High diplomatic sources in LoOOon said the Soviet t:nion had intervened to transmit the U, S. proposals to Hanoi and that the ~orth
Vietnamese goverrunent ''means business."

50- Year/Members Honored

Una, of near Chester; Vernon
Nease, of Nease Settlement, and

MARGARINE

Borden's Como
Combination
COFFEE AND
COFFEE CREAMER
2 oz.

49~

ECONOMY WISE

27 on Weekend

(T u:hnlc:a lor)

PRESENTED CERTIFICATES ....... Three of the seven living original members of the Meigs
County Farm Bureau Federation were presented certificates Cor 50 years of membership at the
orgaJJization's Golden Arurlversary dinner meeting Tuesday evening. Farm Bureau Federation
President Virgil King, sttmding, right, presented the certificates to Mrs, Emma Findling, seated,
and standing, Vernon Nease, left., and Mn. Stella Grueser. -Sentinel Photo.

IN THE

Death Toll at

MEIGS TH£ATRE

\

EARl
WEE!&lt;

-.ro

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1968

PARIS (UPO - U. S. and North Vietnamese negotiators failed
today to reach agreementoncondltionsforabombi~ pause. But U.S.
Ambassador W. Averell Harriman said - aM tllen denied - they
would meet again Thursda~·.
Harriman told newsmen after emerging from the 27lh publicly
announced meeting at the former Majestic Hotel: "We have adjourned
our meeting and we are going to meet again tomorrow." It would
have been an unprecedented special session.
But the chief North Vietnamese delegate, Xuan Thuy, said just
minutes later that the next meeting would not be held until next
Wednesday - appanmtly meaning a week's delay in the Hanoi reply
to Washlngton peace efiorts,
When Harr iman got back to the U, S. Embassy, just a mile away
{rom the Maje stic, he said the next meeting was scheduled for Wednesday. A tape recording of his earlier statement showed he iOOccd
had said talks would be held Thursday.
There have been _persistert reports lately that Harriman and
Thuy have been meeling secretly. When delegation spokesmen were
confronted with the apparent inconsistency of Harriman's remarks
they natly Insisted the next talks would be held a week from tcxiay.

------------------~---------~,

Accidents in

en tine'

lncreaolng ciOUIIaeoo and oool
tonight 101tb
llkoly In tho
north portion. Lowa In tho 401.
Mostly elou&lt;lr with little tem-

Bombing
Pause up
To Hanoi

I

•

LBS

Two of Seven

Weather

Devoted To The lnteres~ Of 1'lw MeiK•-Maoon Area

·· ~
~

A r r i e n d may well be

reckoned the masterpiece of
nature.-Ralph Waldo Emer-

I-

Now You Know

8- The Dolly SenUIIOI, PomoJW·Middlepor~ 0., Mondoy, Octd&gt;er 21, 191111
~···@~~-~~-,,~.
FIVE-DAY FOJlECAST
Temperatures ·T u e s d a y

Fred JaCkSOn ·

~ -~

of directora is comRobert WIIIIIOII. Mrs.
S. Stout, Jack Welsh, the
Rev, BUI Perrin, Vernm Webster, Horace Karr, Thomas Kelly and Harold Sauer. Ted Reed
Ia treasurer and George . Hargraves Ia advisor to the board.
All Meigs Countlans Interestad ln the ••Dollars for Scholu-s"
prDRfam are urged w allond
M&lt;JDda.y nt,hl'o meetlng.
• ..1

,

~

·-.

'
....... ~ .

--- .

~-- --- -·-··- ·- ·

..., ...

_

~ ·- ·.

A II~ tD tbe Vlet.tl:&lt;! come wtthin a
-lflng a breakthrough
._.:rtiaUons, former U. S.
· "'basoador George W. Ball said
Tuesday at Ohio unJverllcy.
.. II a breakthrough is not
achieved before the next president takes office, It will be achieved at a reasonably early
point in tbe term ot a new president, if the American people
select the rfaht man,'' BaU said.
The former United Nations representative reslped lthrller this
month to join tho prelldantlal
caJII,(JIIlan ~ VIce I'HIIdto!l Huhrt 1L llwnpbrey.
Ball dltl 1101 apeclllcally ,..y
Humphrey should be elected and
chose 1101 w dlocuaa politico
durlne hio KOII!Iedy Leduro Series address.

ror

the secondary level included John
Redovian, Jr., pl!ij'chology and
adolescence; Sandra Boothe,
more et!ective use ofthe library;
John Mora, visual aids; Carolyn
Heines, speech and therapy; Betsy Horky and Phyllis Miller, 1·emedial reading, and Jwe Lee,
J:QPU evaluation servt~s.
Elementary sesslm speakers
were Lucille StvackhatnC~r, mu-

sic; Margaret Ella Lewis, art;
Patricia Jonlan, plo'slcal educatioo; Carolyn Heines, speech
and theraPY and Rita Slavin, science.
Robert Morria, outgoing presIdent. was in charga of t h 1
meeting. New omcers elected include Howard Nolan, pres!-;
Larry Ritchie, soerelory; Bornlee Cerpenter, treasurer, and
ROOert Bowen, Gr-. Slttle, Nellie VIIs, Robert Boogie, Robert

Teachers votedtosupportL.-b
Ord, a local teaeher, m the

Southeastern Ohio Encull¥e
CouncU .
John Riebel, super-~
the Eaotern Locel Sc:OOol Dtotrlct, extended lll"OOtinga and Robert Bowen, ....,cy super:r.tonden~ spoke oo the OOIIIIty oaurt
of atutiY, Billy Kincaid, Eastem
staff member, gave tbe invoea-

tlon.
Selectlorul by the Eastern Doni,
directed by Chorloa Y00111, ap.
81ed the meet1Qg m:~ .,.. ,
aldta under tho dlroctlon .,

r

1'11YUla Heckett ....... pre-od,
The Eastom Local IIMd Boaol-

Tho-----·

er s IIBI'Yed a hlleblaa,

m~ Included !W&gt;ra lllttrriLeoh ' Onl, 01&gt;-

soo, chairman;

chalrman and c.r1a Olin a.
1'11YIIla Hackett, Elmo Lao11t,

Ord am Nolan Slllehhamer, ... Jolin !llora, Boll--' Alit ......
ecutlvo commlttoo.
Iller and !nee Webar.

I

'

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