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n. UilJ3' billa_.,

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v., tw.u..r,

VC"'-

"P• .a.wo

·~: ,· N.ow
s··

Repeats
compounds the libel,.. he aaJd.
Demand Retracdoo
Nixon said SWday, In makbw

1:.

Boy brldp.

Achievement

Begin Observance of Week

dlatrlb-

Nixon

Thinking Of A
1969 Auto?

·~~

I

SEE
CITIZENS NATIONAL FOR
A5\ NEW CAR LOAN_

r::-

li~ ,allonal 8 Ilk
, ·I
Memb.r of Federal Oepo•lt ln.uronce Corporation

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

MBGS THEAm
TOMGHT ONLY
OCTOBER 29
"LIVE A LITTLE, LOVE A
LIITLE"
(Technicolor)
Elvis Presley, Michele carey
COLORCARTOONS:
Animal Revue
Common Scents
Pink Panther
Year of the Mouse
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.

have threatened legal
against the 'l1mea .

C'QL. XXI
"

MARRIAGE APPLICATION
William Antho!lf Al'fl8onl, 27,
Durhan, Coon., real estate salesman, and Linda ~. Lemhi!', 23,
Rutland, teacher.

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

'

en tine

or

Jr., 60,

Philip B.

f1 2817 Jack~

son Ave., Pt.. PleasarX, dledTueaday to Holzer lloapltal.
Mr. Hennosy waa a ship fttter
and welder at the Marietta plant
for man,y years. He was a veteran ~ World War Two. ~ waa
born May 12, 1908 to Mason, tho
aon of the tate Philip H. and Ag-

llilll!r !IIIII

WEDNF&lt;&gt;nA Y, OCTOBER 3Q ,968

I

i
i'
I

.

l

i'

U. S. Ambassador W. AvereU Harriman walked out of the shortest
or
all the 28 sessions and sald each side hl.d made a brief !JtateANYONE FOR SOCCER? - MeJss CounfJ' haa Its first organized SO&lt;Cer team, a squad of 15
ment. "That'll alii can sa.y, 11 he llld.
girls of Meljrs High
-chad by Mrs. Pat Jordon ond Mra. Jo,y Bentley, They are shown durBoth sides announced they would resmne the talks next Wedneslqr pra&lt;dce In the Middleport park Tbooda¥. They wiU meet Kyger Creek Satur&lt;laJ, at 7 p, m. oo
day,
a day alter American voters pick their next president. There had
the Malp Field at Mlddl..,ort. Admlsaloo Is 25 cents lor student&amp; and 50 ceola for adulta. Making
been
hopes among diplc:mats that both aides could agree on the key
1Ct the squad are Oaarisse Porter, Peg Story, Cl.thy BaUey, Marta Hubbard, Marilyn Brown, Donissue
blocking progress on calling a tuUpeaee conference- Hanoi's
na Wilson. Mary Holman, Sandy Johnion, Lola Sauer. Melania Hackett. Debbie Crow, Nancy Hardemam for an eOO to U. S. bombing. The United States has said Hanoi
rlo, Llnlo Hackett, Katlzy MorPll ond Patsy Rarrl11. It ahould be quite a boll game Saturday night,
can get the halt only It it too de-escalates the war.
bd.cated by the Photographer of the above lctlon, ICatie Crow, who reported, 41 [ barely escaped
But Xuan Thuy, Hanoi's &lt;hie!
wlth my llfe, and was overjoyed Just to be able to walk away."
delegate, raised the clenched fist effect on the talks here.
1
' As tar as J'm concerned the
to newsmen after today's session, .,There will be no dls- election is not entering into the
POSTER CONTEST WINNERS - WIIUIOI'a o! a [lOsier conteal at the $)TICUH
cusslon ot any other matters discussions here in any shape,
School,
coOOucted ln conjunction with the proposed two mill wltmteer tire department levy on the
h8x-e before a complete U. S. form or manner. We have been
bellot
there
this November 5, show their entries, They are, front row, from left, StephaDI.a Ord,
dealt ng with the problems of
bmlblng hal~" he aald.
sixth
grade;
Kimberly Grueser, fourth grade; Mike Norton, third grade; back row~ Rhonda ~lh.
Before the meeting Harriman peace for the American people
sixth
grade;
Cheryl
Moore, sixth grade, and Lee Ord, flftll grade. Several posters of the entranta
had told newsmen the u
alec..: and that is the only thought any
are being displayed in business places. - Sentinel Photo.
tlon was not lnCluen~ t h e ., of Ul have," he said.
talks in 11 811)' shape, form or
manner." Harriman declined to
say if there might be secret sellsions before the scheduled meetPHILADELPHIA (IJPI)
Ins next Wednesday.
Lots oflnteroat - eopedall,y oo 1he Mdorallevel - lheee do¥•
M.
Nixon's
lead
over
Unconfirmed reports spread
Richard
to the lorlhcOilllqr Nov. 5 elecdons.
Hubert
H.
Hmnphrey
had
in
Paris that the United States
11'1 only I matter Practlcall,y o! hours nCM that Y&lt;JU con vote
narrowed
to
barely
3
percentage
was
contemplating
a
full
In lbeonteo ballot In tile election. The deadline Is 4 p. m. Thursday
points
as
ot
last
weekend,
a
poll
bombing
halt
against
North
at tho Board of Elo&lt;donl olllce located In the Masonic TI!Jqlle
hllicated Tuesday.
Vietnam- the price Hanoi has
bulldlnl! at Pomeroy.
The Slndlll'ller survey indica~ demanded for arranging peace
Aa of 4 p. m. Tuesday, 400 reolclenta lad cast able- ballots. ed H
hr
ha
ed. Ialka.
Thl
•• ,._, .r
....... .,_. '-t ·'-·• ••··•-~ ,,., ••··ump oy
• narrow
""· &lt;prf w ¥2ft rl!*o:.•• •.Nw·'!lkm 'IIIII~ L .....&amp;JIOiolt~pwu,~.~~ ·Mfllon'.r""edJe' .....-.t;t-·'pet"" cent.
In BaQPok. 'l;'t}ai Fore~
STOCKHOLM (IJPO - Americans today won the 19611 Nobel Prlzea lor both Physlca and chemlatry.
tee tiOtlqi fa rallDtna ilb6tit the same Is in oa.er presidential years, The telephone poll alio re&amp;'is- Minister Thanat Khoman re'tlie
most 'CO\'eted aWlrds ftl science went to Prot Lars Onsager of Yale University in chemistry alii to
~. In 19M, there wert 464 sucb votaa cast ond In 1980, alan a prool· tered pins lor third parcy turned today !rom Woshlowton
Prot
Luis W. Alvarez of. the Universlt;y of California at Berkeley in PhYslcL
tJ;I8 ablentee yoteB ca11t nn over 550.
candidate George C Wallace, and the United Nations and to1d
It
was
the 28th time the physics prize had been won by an American and the 15th time the chemistry
·\1,
l'DC:ideritally, your vot1Jw poll will be open trom 6:30a.m. to apparenUy at
newsmen: ''At this time talks
award
had
gone
to the United states since the Nobel awards began 67 years ago. Both awards, anncutced
p. m. next Tuesday.
Albert E.
pres- obout a halt are in the llnal
by the Royal Swedish Academ.y of Science, are worth $170,000.
BEN TURNER, FORMER MoJss Count,. resident and !ormer ident or the market research stages. There could be an
The Norwegian-born Onsager, 65, J, Willard Gibbs professor of theoretical chemistry at Yale, wu
county rt~treaentaUve, waa In Pomeroy Tuesday to visit his brother- finn which conducted the poll, agreement.''
cited for "the discovery of the reciprocal relations bearing his name which are fWKiamentalfor the
In Sllgon, President Nguyen
said it appeared Humphrey is
IIi-law, OWen Watson, hoopllaiJzed with PIIOW!Ioo!L
thermodynamics ot irreversible processes. ' ' Alwrez, 57, a San Francisco native, won the physics award
pining
lmotiB
wcmen
voters.
Van
Thieu of Soutll Vietnam
Ben, ..,.. UYI~t~ lo Lln&lt;aster, brOIJIIrt 11o,. an lnterestlqr metal
Cor
his pioneering work with particles sma.ller than the a tan.
RICHARD RUSSELL
Sindlinger said the percentage and his highest aides met
~ which aomo 50 years ogo wu uoed by raUroad emplo,yea of the
"You're kiddine." Alvarez said when he was awakened out ot a sound sleep to learn of tds honol'.
!(; and M. to pin admlaolon to the poy car, If you didn't have the of undecided voters as the before dawn today. Sources said
He said the prize money would go to pay off a mortgage on his home. But Alvarez ad:Jed he wished he
IS
tag, you didn't get onto the car to eet YOW' wlgtia - paid then in campaign entered its nna1 week tr.ey discussed Amerh:an propocould share it with the team or scientists who helped him with his research.
waa 11 very high," apparently sals for ending the bombing of
auld - Ben statea.
The AcadelJl)' said Alvarez had
because many voters were North VIetnam.
made "decisive contributions to
In Paris, Harriman declined
elementary particle physics." cyclotron."
WORK IS JUST ABOUTcompletedonthepotoUrt~o! the P&lt;meroy- waiUng to hear more of the
ed in billionths of a second.
Alvarez' research dealt with
These are the sub-atomic partilolaaon bridge, ond yea, VIrginia, It IS green. Wonder hew that hap- candidates' views on the issues. to detail to newsmen the state
onsager Is credited with lsypened?
HJs survey indicates fewer than of JEgOtlations. "This would not
cles which lle at 1he heart of particles called K • Mesons, ing the foundation for the thermo70 mUlion Americans will vote be the appropriate time," he
all mader. Prof. Erik Rylllerg, which 'Dare into existence and dynamJcs of irreversible proNov.
5,
compared
with
an
said.
permanent Academy secretary, then dis}utegrate into lighter par- cesses through his discovery of
Pomeroy ond llllddl..,ort olllclal• aro attemptlrw to pt slgno
e~cted
75
million
roue
weeks
But
Harriman,
a
former
said the choice of Alvarez ''unlike ticles in a space of time mea sur- a fundamental law In nature,
[lOoted '"'· the ,_ Route 7 b7'11111 deslpdng roada fiB' -.Isla
ago,
Sindlinger
said.
There
are
Democratic
governor
or
New
1o 1ake in order to reach the two cammtlliUes.
Newly named Ohio Bell com- many other times was absolute- :::·:·;.:.;;;;:;;::·:·:·:·:·:·:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.;::.··· which now is known under t h e
II you've Ovtll' driven the now road at olgh~ you probably realize about 117 million Americans of York, replied when newsmen
munU;y relations supervisor is ly clear" because "he is the leadname OC ·~ reciprocity relaasked if tOO American presidenTrick or Treat nlght in Ra- tions or Onsager. ••
that finding the tum-olfa Ia dllllcult. Juat think how !ruatradng It votiQg age.
Richard M. Russell, 517 Vlne- er in the fleld. ''
Of the 1,241 persons Inter- tlal elections were having an
- ~ms work deals With the smallcine will NOT be held Wed.
must be to a ftDlH'ealdent tr'yiq;r to get Into one of the bro towna.
lt has pl13ed a dominant role
laod Road, Bo,y VIllage. He will
viewed
In the Oct. 25-28
est
particles
in
nature
and
t
h
e
nesday
tonight
as
preLot' a hope the vlllqos continue their etrorts lor the markl,...
in the development ol theoreUbe reaponsJble tor statewide coSlndllnl!er telephone sur,.y, 740
vloosl,y announced . Racine
cal thermodynamics, stimulating
ordination, development a n d amazing machinery he has "ConaaJd they were registered and
A HCAR£F1JL" WOPD. ...
training ror the phone company•s structed to observe them," Ryd- Mayor Charles Pyles said that
BX[lel'lmoolaJinvesdgadooaoflrberg said. "He even discovered trick or treat in the Racine
Tonlgh~ "trlcl&lt; or treat" wUI be obaerwd throughout the CQD• plaoned to vote. Their candidate
speaker's bureau.
reversible processes within pb;y.
community will be held from
munltlea ot the eo&amp;n;y and tc.morrow night, numeroua Halloween preference waa: Wallace 12.3i
sics, chemistry and ~riD&amp;
Russell moves up to his new new particles in the big Berkeley
parties wiD be staged.
•
Nixon 36.8; HUJI'C)hrey 33.6j
6:30 to 8:30 p.m. tomorrow
sciences, Academy otrf.cial1 aaid.
post. etrectfve immediately, from
night
Thursday.
II you're driving, would you be good enough to take It ..BY undecided and other17.3.
lnformatlm assistant responsiThe latest Gal~ Poll, bosed
.;:;.;. ;.;.·:: . ..
with the toot? There'll be many excited yotqsters on the atreets.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·
ble for managementptj)Ueations.
too excited, maybe, to be as carolW of tro!llc oa they mlslt- on irtervtews colllucted beHe joined tile company In ColumHowewr, there'a Uttle tor us adulta to get excited about, ao tweeD Oct. 17 ond 21, shewed
bus in 1965 as a dlreetor repreThe Pomeroy emergency S9l8d
let's lhtok lor the )'OUIIpters and exerclae &lt;11utlon In driving, AftN Nixon loodlrt~ Humphrey 44 to 36
VETERANS MEMORIAL
aentatJn and came to Cleveland
answered a call at 3:37 p.m.
per cent with 15 per cent tor
all, tbeae YOUDI peq&gt;le ue the bluest asaet we have.
HOSPITAL
In 1966 to join the )luiJIIc relaTueada,y to tho Compton reBIWallace aitd S per cent
Admissions - William Fra- dence 011 Route 143. It was redooadopartment.
Belinda D. Deeter, 9, daugburdeclded. The Harris Poll gave
Born In Cheshire, where he st- ter of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest J . zier, Cheshire; Charles Jones, ported that a baby had ~&amp;&lt;aid­
Nixon 40 per con~ and
tended public schools, rmd was Deeter, Rt. 1 Long Bottom, was Harrisonville; Harriet Hyatt, Ra- ed.
Hlimpbrey 35 per cent with 18
a standout to baaketball, Rusaell admitted to Holzer MedJcal Cen- cine.
The child - not ~eel­
per cent {or Wallace an:l 1 per
Discharges - Sall.Y B y e r s, was taken to Holzer Hospital
Is a graollale 0( Ohio Unlverslcy ter, First Ave., at 7:30 p.m.
cent undecided.
and a' Navy veteran. Before be- Tuesday with &amp;e&lt;ond and third Carol Hayman, Richard Lyons, by a private car prior to t h e
coming a ,.telephone
he degree bums of the logs and John Pap, MarJorie Hof!lnan. squad's arrival.
\
taught science Ill the Rutland, hips. g,e was burning trash and
Ohio
achools.
MOSCOW (IJPO - Col. Georgy
her clothes caught !Ire. Her &lt;DIJ'T',•
A Mason, he has served as a
Berepvoi;, the world'• oldest
master ond a district educedooapacelban, rode Ruasta•s So,yua
aJ officer. He baa aJ., been acIPI&lt;e &lt;fjloule to a aale landing
Uve in Ohio Bell'• ~er's
In the Soviet Union today, the
Bur- Forep.an's Club, Uld
- · agency Tlao reported.
Its boaeball !elope.
bls tractor overturned. · He Is
llereti&lt;J"''io I 47-YeoM(d Wll'
Russell and his wife, the for- reported In good condldoo.
f1ero ond ~t pUot, """"' almoat
STAUNTON,
VL
(UPD- partner o! a Kf01CI of wealti\Y
mer Martlla Woods of Chealdre,
oxictly lliul' don lo opaeo last.
$1iro T. Agpew called 1CJOO the land speculatora" whUe aerviJW
have one daughter, CeCe, a stu~~,ins the Soyuz 3 craft the
New York Times Tuesda.Y night as a public otficial.
'
clout at Boy VIllage High Scbool.
Sovlell ' - ewntuall.Y to sold
to retract a "reckless" ecUtorial
Agnew
told about 31 000
He Is the son otlolra. Jobn Rus·'on a IIIIJIIIIid !light to the moon.
accusing him of a con.Oict of persons at StiWitan that on. of
seU, 22 West Main Slreet, Che·Ito precleceoiOI' Soyuz 1 had
Interest.
hia aides woo seeklnl! to
allire.
liraahed oo ·landing on ~rn 24,
"When a man's reputation Is with Times omdala reeudlllill
1~87, ldlllnl! c:oamwaut Col.
about by a IIOWSJIOI&gt;er the "ntalldoua and .-..kl..o
Vlldlmlr .Ktiiiiii'OV Iiiii cau*lnl!
in the list da.ys of a campaign, statements" In the editorial ud.
.I!! 18 Qt~ delaf fii' the Soviet
Two books In remembrance of ond when the man baa no "see II the Times Ia blc ......
Jliantlotl 'lllthl ~~ Wbllo
relatives have been p.t'e181Ud to - - r to ooawer 1he libel, to swallow its .Pride aid . . . .
the craft .... ~ telted
Minor damage WBI caaaed to the Mlddle[IOrt Public Library, it's a Httle untair," said the it's wroog."
•
IINitllllocL
a oar oper~tad by Michael E. one Ia "Maaterlow 1he Art of Repltilcon vice prealdentlal The 11meo' - . ,
2 wu laundJod bJat
Clrallle&lt;a, 17, IH. 2, Chealdre, French Cooking'' glvon by Mrs. candidate.
eally reJects the
mo do¥ belon llerego.
II - I·Gil the ~on Mary Elizabeth ~ower to feThe Times, however. renewed" Ubel" and said
toto apace Ia hla
the Wllltn! ~~ Rood, llx - membno&lt;e ol the blrttJdof ..m. IIa &lt;horae• lo Its !"iitlono today, the aceuaalloo
...........,. capaule.
lliltho ot a Dille noriiJ o f - ¥OrllrY . of her JIIO!ho&lt;, tl)e bJte clalmlow AiMw' • ...slness deal· no .._-t
lf t l ~ IIMI
1 11)11 dt, and r111 ootr aa em- Mrs. Mary Ell11bot11 TldMa. l~p oa IIOV8roor of 1\larylanol claim, ...t all&lt;\
ao a t:arpt wlllcie-for
NMtetL·
' .
The oecond bebh,-. children' a , _ him unlit "to stand ooe lr.bH!cy to
to traojlce ...... i!l&lt;h
TIJo, ~ Coualr lllerl!l'otle- volume, "Vol~• In the F'oc." atop """' !rom the prealdeJ&gt;- judgments
wao nolllled oftheacel- waa given by Mr11. J. E. 'Hart.- cy." The edltorlll accuaed In high
•1 ~· P.m. 'l!llti'e , 101, 'eausln ol illo author, EU.. ,, _, ol lavlrt~ . ..... the t1'111~"
ot .~l!a. oiJe!h,WIIIAIII.
''Polltl&lt;tll aiJ,y 'and llaondal
·'

Sc-

WASIIlNGTON - THE DEMOCRATIC NATIONAL Commldee
Monday night aald the Republican porcy "brought poildca to Its lowest depths in many years" with a television commercial that was
critical o! VIce Prealdent Huberlll Hlllllj)hrey.
The commercial was shown durtrw a networkentertairunent show
"Laugh In" - NBC and consisted of pictures ot the VIetnam War
and riots with Humphrey's picture &amp;\C)erlmposed over the 1cenes.

PT, PLEASANT -

· to mid 30, .....

ftrmer 'l'hur• • ' .

country.

HOUSTON - LYNDON BAINESJOHNSON, who rose from teocher
to President. will return to the school house when he leaves the White
House next January.
.
Johnson, the 36th U.S. President, will conduct a eorlos of poll·
tical 1cience seminars at Rice University next Jaooary. Dr. Joseph
Cooper, chairman of the Rice palttlcal science ~ent, nid
Monda,y dates for the semirars would be amounced liter, but Jotmson had accepted the school's invitation.

Hemo~.

-

PARIS (IJPD - The laat regular Vletlllm talks session before
the U. S. presidential election ended abruptly to:lay. North Vietnam's
chief delegate emerged with a clenched ftst and vowed no progress
UMard peace w1til America uneoOOlUaally ends its bombing of his

4

Dies Tuesday

,,...._

well Ccijtler willlo~- IDo
nll!rt- Low to tile tiHI'- Iii" 301

Bombing Halt is
Block Says Thuy

PRAGUE - CANDLF.'l OF PROTEST burned today In Proguo'a
rnaJn Wencealaa Square and occaslonal cries of uRusalaasgo homeu
echoed through the streets at the end of 1 14-hour demonstraUon
by about 5,000 students acatnst Soviet oce\C)I.tlon ot Czechoslovakia.
Jt was well after midnlght before pollee cars lDIIIlpd to 1catter
the last bands of the yourwsters who staged, dei!Pite the threat of
Russian retaliation, what was perhaps tbe mo1t bitter antl Kremlln
outburst in this rw.tion's history.

Mr. Hennosy

We•W+&gt;'.. ,

Cleor toni~~&amp;, i~

Last Peace Session Before
•
Election Ends Ill Stalemate

&lt;-

.

Elomo....,.

Nixon Has

Slim Edge

RALLY IS TONIGHT
The mmthly Melga Count,y Hollneos rally will be held tonii!IJ!
at the Rutland Church of I b e
Nazarene at 7:30 p.m. H "'Sounders of tho Raveoii1IOOCI
CllUrch of the Nazarene will be
the speaker. The choir Is asked
to be present at 7 p.m. for pracdce.

•
VIC

vau ~n

TO SERVE DINNER

An ele&lt;d011 dsy dlooer will
be aer..cl at the Letart Falla
Commwdty buildlfll on Nov. 5
starting at 11:30 a.m. by the
women of the Letart Falla United
Methodist Church. There will be
ham and chicken dinners as well
as short orders.

JUNIOR

\

\

Here's the swinging message. The brass·buttoned
cape, teamed with .the new narrow dress, Is the
greatest thing moving . Vicky Vaughn's great white
cape is fully lined in taffeta for swish and shape.
Oreu In navy or red. Both in Orion® knit bonded

nes Me Manon Henoosy.
He is survived by his wU'e,
Lois hrman Hemoay; a slater, Mrs. Margaret Snead; a
half.IJrolher, Clyde Hemosy, and
one half-sister, Mrs. El&amp;le Morgan, all of Charleston.
Funeral servJcea will be held
PLAN SALE
Thursday at 11 Lm. at the
The Meigs Communlcy Clasa
Joseph Catholic: Clllrcb in Ma- lor Menially Retarded Children
son with the Rev. Father H. A.
will hold a rummage aale fr&lt;lm
Ryan oll'lcl.atlna. Rosary aerv9 a.m. to 2:15p.m. Frida¥ at the
lees will be held at tbe Fogle· omcoo o! Columbia Gao of Ohio
song Funeral llomo Wemoada,y In Middleport.
at 7:35p.m. Friends may call alter 7 dds oventos. Burial will be
In ~c:rest Memorial Park.
THICK-TREAT SET
Trick or treat night in Racine
MEIGS GENERAL HOSPITAL
wW he obaei'Yed from 6:30 to 8 .
ADM!SSIONS - Myrtle Durst, p.m. Wedneaday. The alren will
Pomeroy; OWen Watson, Racine. aound to mark the opeolng and
DISCHARGES - Everett Dal- cloolng of the actlvldes.
ley,

to acetate. From our Slar Spangled collection. 5-lS.

a.

Come to Elberleld 1 llusy Roody To Wear Oof!Orlmontsee our beautiful selection of new Fall DreuetCasual and dressy dreues in junior petitu, juniors,
mines and half sius. Alao toke advantage of the
great savings onwo!Mns fur trimmed and casual coats,
dreues sweatera, akirts, dusters, alack., 1tre~c~
pants. Come in and look around, let us help you w1t
your selections.

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

tJfntlal y~,
~~

•
I

s.

Of 3 Pet.

I

t

Physics, Chemistry
Prizes to Americans

•

I

I.

Nixon·~ eJ~Pen&amp;e.

Sindllrt~er,

R usseII ,

Supervisor

At Ohw Bell

f
I
t1

."''t
II

I.

io
d

•

Navy Wins
Battles
On River

"1 noticed that tlwse people
at Moore's have their

, Beregovoi Home
Safe in Russia

Big Toyland Open••••
P.$.
Many famoUI brand toyt ore. avaUabl• on a first col'llle, flrat terved
ltaah. Many of them cannot be
re-ordered. Enough aaidl

CITY ICE AND FUEL CO.

Reported Satlded

In Good Cnndition

man."

A

c
lls
gnew a on

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..,....

1mes .......
••
...
:I~r.;":;::~l~~= To Retract Editorial

Plan I"

Trust your home heat to

Belinda Deeter, 9,

dl~~·~-:=.~~.a:u,Sicle,

your tort now and use MDore• 1 Lay-Awo)'

~

Two Books Given

And ...

TEXACO

0. 133

SAIGON - TilE BATTERED GREEN BERET
at Thucq:
Due threw beck a Comlmriat 1111ull today and U.S. para-rs
trapped obout 200 gueriUas oo a oearby peolnoulo, Dlllltu'!' spokesmen llid. 1bere were no American casualties..
To the north, U.S. B52s struck North Vlotoam to the helvleat
bmlblns raids to nearly a month ond amashed southern po~o
&amp;ICIPb'llnes to e&gt;Pioolons tllll aent amokealmoata mile hliiL Small·
or jeta !ound a breok In the moosoon We&amp;l/'er a!ld joined the Monday
attack, 11y1ng 139 mlaalona ogalnst the ponhlndle. In Sooth V I - ,
goverrment apokesmen reported one the heaviest outburts ol COIJ)oo
munlst terror action In recent weeks. In the three _.s Viet Cone
terrorists killed 23 South Vietnamese.

action

TOWER HIGH ON GOP
COLUMBUS (IJP0 - S e n.
Jobn G. Tower, R-Tox., Monday
night predicted presidential and
congresllional vt etories for the
Replj)licans Nov. 5 as be arrived here to stump tor the
Ohio aenate RopubiiCOD caodltlate.

at

•·

.

Devoted .To 'llae lntere.t. Of 'llae Meiga-MtUOR Area

It would be a wonderful tlrwe to chooae

992-5186
.IDDLEPORT 0.

e

-:-;.~·,!.S..," u-4 to refer to law-

eiii ConiuJY B. c.

Eyesores

••

You Know

·~,ifr•;f Diaklr1, ·Wae the name ot a Greek
~
ltafellllan who was aetJve ln tbe

As IIO.. rnor, he
NEW YORK (IJPil- The New
IIJProYetl
ddl
route.
In re_...
y~ Times today reprlnted an
to
public
uldclan,
Gov, Aaoow
odltorlal tl1ol $11ro T. Apew
his
"gutter
politics"
charge,
later
aWl
hla
aharO
of the
hinted wu llbeloua ond Richard
that
he
would
"demand''
the
lanll."
M. Nixon caUed "the lowest
Times print a retracUon to Its
Claim Tlmlrw oorerent
ldrd of sutter politics."
The
one point &lt;hall...... by
chargea
against
Agnew.
The editorial which tlrst
the
N
lxon-Agnew
attorney, ac-The
11mea
aald
lo
Ita
editorial
appeared In the newspaper's
Slturdly edition, accused Ag~ column today thlt an attorney cording to · tbe Tlmea, was that
new,
the Republican
vice representing Nixon and Agnew Agnew was governor when he
presidential candidate, of busi- tokl the new!IPIIPer Monday sold his share or the land on the
neas dealirws u a public official there wu only one factual point bridge ..,proach route. 1be
attorney said Apew was I
that have demonstrated "he Is under challenge by Nixon.
candidate tor governor at the
But
the
Republican
National
not ftt to stand one step aw~
Headquarters in a statement dme.
from the presidency."
The Times oot onl1 repeated
111e Times editorial saJd issued MondiJI challenged most
In
the orlgl.-1 editorial the
Nlxoo and GOP candidate for of the charges made in the
charge
that Agnew was goverpresidem, tpparently had not editoriaL
nor
at
the
time of the sale, but
The editoriel sald Agnew. as
checkal the background am:!
r~mptasized
it in separate
tssoclatea of Agnew before chief executive of Baltimore
County
arll
as
governor
or
editorial
comments.
The newa.
•electi~ the Maryland governor
paper
said
Agnew's
share
ol the
Maryland,
''has been tbe
as his r\lllllng mate.
land
waa
sold
at
aucUon
at
the
In Houston, Agnew said in a political ally and financial
same
price
he
paid
for
It
partner
of
a
grlql
of
wealthy
1tatement that the Times had
Tho Times editorial Hid
(Cmdnued trcm Pqe I)
..pulled the major blooper of the lard speculators."
Agnew
was st111 a partner with
The editorial said, "ln 1965
cam,paign'' In charging him
ing the location of Middleport on
with conflict of interests. "The Mr. Agnew joined with these lhe land speculators In a Virgin the Route 7 by • pi.SL
fact that the Times waited wrtil businessmen in purchasi('€ a
Officials commented that afa week befon the election to tract or land on the probable
ter dark it is difficult for even
distort the lacts and make Its approach route of a new,
local residents to fiOO county
Inaccurate charges against me parallel span of the Chesa.peake
road five to turn into Middle(Continued fr&lt;m Page I)
port. Out of area motorists would
Colwell.
find It Impossible to locate MidHEALTH, Ell UIJ,y and Comdleport without any signs, oftlpany Catherine Cotterill.
clals stated.
II(JME ECONOMICS - CONGrale said U.t he had underPT, PLEASANT- Observance plan a Halloween party at the SUMER EDUCATION, MontgomBlood,
by telephone trom the
church
this
evening
at
7:30
o•of Youtll Week began !lmday In
ery Ward, Vicki ~ncer, SlerHelghla United Met!K&gt;dlst Church clock. Members are asked to rl McCain, ~erry Hayes, Ter- State Highway Deparlment, that
signs such as desired by coun11111 Ia to oontlnue tllrou&amp;b next attend in Halloween costume and ri Miller.
cil
cannot be placed al~ the
bt1.ng
v18Uors
with
tbem.
amu,y. The church all!IO celeHOME IMPROVEMENT, The
The TiuriJdaY morning Bible S&amp;H Fouodatlon, Inc., SandraSa.Y- byi)ass. However, it was agreed
breted an old.faahloned Rally Day
under the theme, "Each 0 n e atudy at 10 o'clock will be re Debbie Heaton, MelindaAms- to make an additional call to
Dowler to secure more infOrmachanged !Oillewhat. Those attendBring One."
b~, Sandra Bishop.
tion. Council first requested the
A new church paper, tbe Ing are to .share in a covered
HOME MANAGEMENT, Tupdish meal ln the church dining perware, Sandra Newlun, Kalh- signs last April
Heights Highlights, waa
The discussion dlscJosed that
uted &amp;mday and «&lt;lltalned Item• room at noon.
io Chichester, Mary Ruth Sauer,
motorists
are having to travel
Heights
ladies
were
asked
to
~ interest to the members and
Carmel Murphy.
the oew highway to Rock $~rings
trlenda al the ctmch. The pro~ remember the World CommunHORSE, Merck &amp; Co., lllc.,
ject waa directed by Mrs. Nan- lt,. Day program In tho Christ Donna Manuel, Cynthia Gooch, and then must return downrt ver almost to Middleport again
cy Hamm. The paper probably Church, ~lscopal, November 1. Karen Grl!lith, Sl.aroo WIISOII.
in order to cross the PomeA total of 25 ladies became charwill be distributed quarterly,
HORTICULTURAL, A Ill a •
An Important meeting of t h e ter memberl or the reorganiz- Chalmers, Stanley Hutton, Ern- roy Mason Bridge with the wa.v
Charge conterenco will be held ed Women's !mciety ot World est Wrlteaal, Jim Lodwick, Wal- the highw~ Is now marked.
CouncU approved a secorx:l
wemesday evening by Con- Service t1111 past week. Additer Gebel.
reading of an ordinance which
fer«~ce ~pL Rft. Harry Eck- tional members will be acceptLEADERSHIP - The Sears would go into effect the first ol
els oC Buckhamon. A meeting ed thla week, Mra. Vada Cl'UJllll Roebuck Foundation, Jemy DP.an,
the year, permitting motorists
r1 the Pastor-Parish RelatiOJJs amouneed in the church buUeJanet Mees, Donnie Cheadle,
to purchase parking meter decommittee will be held at 7 do.
Richard Warner.
cals for their cars at the rate
Young people will ~ad In varp.m. The regular prayer and
PETROLEUM POWER, 0 II
of
$50 per year. The decals
ious
services
this
week
and
also
Bible stud;V will follow at 7:30
Company, Bob BaUOY, Ed d le
entitle
the purchaser to park
shared
In
the
UNICEF
trick
or
p.m. and the Charge conrerence
Croas, Don Smith, Alan Holter.
his motor vehicle at meters withIs acheduled lor 8:30 p.m.
treat coUeetions In the comPHOTOGRAPHY, Eastman Koout paying charges each time.
Members of the Win One Class munity Monda,y evening.
dak Company, Melanie D e a n,
The ordi~nce provides tor len·
•&gt;
Joey Neloon, Bl1! Kreba, KathY
er costs for the decals if they
Cheadle.
are purchased later in the year
POULTRY, Heisdorf &amp; Nelson
and there is to be an addltlonal
Fums, Inc., Karla Deal, Ron~ $5 charge for a new decal U the
nie Wood, Keruteth Wood, Noah
purchaser trades cars during
iiJo aell.
the year for which his permit
SAFETY, General Motors, Bob
is granted.
Bailey, Llnda Cotterill.
It was agreed to repair &amp;e¥SHEEP, WUson &amp; Co., Inc.,
era! alleyways where holes have
Brenda staniOY ·
devel~ed and il was reported
SWINE, Moorman Manuractur~
that the new pollee cruiser, orLng Company, George M o r a,
dered about a month ago, Is ex·
Richard Mora, Lester Parker.
pected in the near future.
PUBLIC SPEAKING, The Pure
Others attending the meeting
OU Division, Bob Bailey, Unda
were Councilmen George Baker
Cotterill.
and Dick Vaughan.
OlllO STATE JUNIOR FAD!
PARTICIPATION CHECKS, Linda Boal, Wendy Carper, Debbie
Jetrers, Teresa Chichester, Nan·
cy Sexson, Duane Will, Steven
(Continued !rom Page 1}
Stanley, Domrle Cheadle, Jemy
Nlxoo laDed to tovestlgate
Dean. Robert BallOY, Karla Beal, Agnew' 8 background to discover
Melanie Dean, Rhea Mora, Le- a cmDict between Agnew's
nora Michael, Florence Meeks, posldoo as a zoning board
Jennl!er Blakeslee, Kathie Chi- member and a ftnan&lt;lal portnor
chester, Cynthia Gooch.
to a land devel01&gt;111ent ftrm,
GENERAL FOODS COOK- Bolli Nixon and Agnew have
BOOK, Marge Rlgga.
said tbe charge is untrue 8Dd

,.I

'

Moore's has all the tamout brand toys you IH on
TV • , • Mattei, ldool,
Flahot·Pr leek Milton- Brad-

In Remembr!plee

Car Damage Minor

ley, Tonka, •nn•, Blazon, Remco anll Marx.

Moore's Famous Toys at Discount ·Prices I~
COME TO MOORE'S IN. PQMEID¥.:
•

TOYLAND HEADQUARTERS AT

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All-Stan@ .

· .· ~.Bows · to P.opular Den1and;
·. Nephews Do the Forecast

~~~~~~:·
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Pau

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,frleaujl, ~u're 1n
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t •week.
f,' .. . -~
uva

•,

Gregory Puts Future onto You,th
II ale&lt;ted president olthe United States, 1be flrat three things
Dick Gresorl' would do Is:
1 -· Paint tile White House
black.
2 - PUll all tile u. S. troops
out of Vietnam.
3 - send LBJ to VIetnam
all alone, armed with hls barbecue aauce gun.
Approximately 800periKII1a,lncludlng 600 Rlo Grande COllege
students, Jammed lh• college din-

lng hall Tuesday night to give
a courteous hearing to tbe Negro comedian, author. actor,
crusader for hUmiD rights, and
presidential candidate - he' B
rumlng '"' .. Independent tlckel
as a write-In with Mark Laoe
as bls running male.
To get his point across on
world and national problems,
Gregory was very blwat, yet his
humorous remarks kept the a!Jd..
lence's attention rrom beglming

to end.

During bis one - hoor Hcampalgn opeecb" 1he bearded Gne·

. , , attired In blue coverall•
and a U&amp;bl tan jacket, called
President John&amp;Oll "the bia9al
tyraut In tile hlstory of t h o
world," aud l8id •'George Wallace Is nothing but a big Uar."
He referred to litcbard Nlxtlol
as "Tricky Dick."
NOVEL CO!ITUMING was
The 36-year.old Gregocy, . .
displayed by members of the
Army veteran who lost hlolather
Meigs TOPS Knolchers Club
when he was eight years old at the annual Halloween paJ1;y
be was k!Ued by Nazi soldiers In
Tuesday night at the M e I g s
World War n- said the 111tnber
COlllltY Infirmary meeting
one problem In thls nation todiQ'
room. The prize winners, ais moral pollution.
bove, were Mrs. Betty GUkey,
He repeatedly emphasized thai
costumed as an elephant, seit was up to tbe younger generlected as the most orlgina.li
ation - "you kids" - to make
Mrs. Marion Michael, In witch
necessary changes and retun
HOSPITAL NEws ..
doctOr costuming, the ugliest,
sanity to thls nation. "Yoo can't
and Mrs. Betty File, the pig,
Formatioo of an F.Wcator&amp; for by, vice president tor Student buy morality. U must come !rom
the prettiest; At left, M r s.
Holzer Meclleal Center: VlllltMiller COmmittee to help InsUre Affairs; George Bush, Director wlthln, • said Grego)')'.
Ruth Needs or Cheshire, preslnl! hours 2-4 and 7.a p.m. Par.. Keep yoor eyes and ears opthe re-election of Congressman of Alumni RelaUons; Arthur Lan~
ldelll ol the Meigs TOPS
onto only oo Pediatric• Ward.
Clarence Miller was amounted ham, Director of Athletics; Dr.
en. Don't let ywrselt be proKnotc:hers, was the second
Bruce
CurtiS,
Director
of
Ptl,ysiAtlmlaslona
grammed.
You
have
a
trementhia week.
place Dlvlsloo 4 winner In the
llarl')' L. Sltatders,, 53$ Third
The committee is made up cal Education and Psychology;
dooo job to do In saving Amerstale In weight loos during '67.
Ave.; Odes D. Plr&amp;Olls, 512 Sec·
ot. aver 75 elementarY. sec- Clyde Evans, Director o1 Admis- ica.
9te received a trophy Cor her
ond Ave.; Mro, WDiard G. Cox,
ondary and college educators rep- sions; Bruce Harrison, vice uyou must solve the problems
60 pound loss at the TOPS
Rt. I Nortq; Mra. ~ L.
reseutins: each of the thirteen president for Developmentj Wil- created by us old fools. We couldArea Reoognilion Day held In
Clark, r.elltp.lla; llen1')' D.,JGi,i,.
counties of Ohio's loth Dlstrlet. liam Smeltzer, Director oC Fi- n't solve our problems. Yoomuat,
Columbus.
The goal ol the committee Is nam::e and Robert Rose, Treas- If this nation is to survive,,. he by us."
ministration for Ita proeecllrel New Hav•; Mra. Otto ·A_
to present information regarding urer. Bill Northup, principal of continued.
In speaking on tile gbelto prob- In bandling de~• at the llohrbatllb. Pl. Plea-; Clltto
the congressman's record and North Gallla lllgh School and
Grego)')' · said the big 11l0118Y lems across this natloo, Grei!DI'l' JJemoc:rat eonvendoii itiot Aug- E. Erwlll, South !Ide, w. Vo.;
thinking on educational matters. Clarence 'Thompson, County Slpt.
makers- capitalists- who hide said: "llon't walk In with $80 uot. "The old folks doa't Mra. Ardith T. Bartoo, PoineThe chairman oltllecommlttee ~ Schools, represent the ele- betdnd tile countl'y' s constltutioo bllllon and sa,y our problems to change. Tbe YllWil! lolklwanta I'll!'; Mro, Merle C. Harris, Rt.
Is IvanTrlbeol Albany. Mr. Tribe mentary and secondarY schools are the power makers, or deci- are solved. First, create an at- change. Baby, we're In trouble. I Raelne; Belinda D. lieetor,
Is an Instructor at9Juthern High In the county.
II' I up to you to get the j o b Rt. l Lmg Bottom; Mrs. Pull
sion makers. "It" s time these mosphere for blacks to trust
Representing Meigs COUnty on fools stop playing around," he
School In Meigs County,
done.
n
D. DeiiDey, Rt. 2 McArtlur; Benwhites, then we'll sit down and
Tribe, in llJU'IOOilCing tbe for. the adriiiOl'Y committee are Les- oontinoed.
Following hls remarks, some Jamln H. Cremeans, Rt. t Alh·
talk over our prablems."
matlon of the committee express- ter Manuel and Charles Tll,)'lor,
Be blasted labor unioos, statGregory criUclzed Chleago 600 remaiDed lor a quellllon and '"'Si ~rrrenee F. McManis, Welled strong support for what he Ealtern High School, and 1 v a n Ing that, "II lhey don't straight- "'-&gt;''r John Dalley and his ad- answer period. During thla per- ilOOi wood Dool!ft, Albbnd,,~
Gilligan
180-44.
OUtgoing
Sentermed, "Miller's positive rec- Tribe, Southern High School.
tod, members of tile Rlo Grande Mro. GeoriO L. Seholleld, 1t;tiiRichard Nixon captured the
:::::;:;:;::::;;.:::::~•Xir;::'~~~'f.::::-;::;:;:-,;;::::::::=::::
en up, crush them Ollt."
ator
Frank
J
.
Lauache
had
one
ord
on eWcation." The ConAs for democracy, Gregory
presidential mock electioo 'lUesCLEVELAND (IJPI)- The
COBege Snloke Slllu!i• - · - ton; Mr~. F4wiD L. Cr~
,, ' I,.
greasman has been a consistent·
LOCAL TEMPS
day on the Rio Grande College write-In vote.
said, "If it's as good as we 111
Vo.;
l!"",
natiCMI WOUld· face "economic per atarr took a ,Pck surviQ' ~ .
1be JludelltS approved Iaaue
supporter of measures designed
The temperature In Pomeroy's It Is, why then do we run all
:i;CblllpuS." •
oo G~'l remarks.
rest E. . WOO&lt;II, Jack*i'1i:,
,~
chaosn if HUbert Hwnp}lny is
"&amp;&gt;me 90 per cent of the Btu- c. BrOwning, Rt. 3 ll!Wer; lillitFinal tally showed the GOP No. I 234-66, but bart.i.Y awrov- to improve the edueationa.l sy s- do1mtoWil business district at over tbe world to jam it doWn
eleeled preildent, Michigan
tems of Sootheastern Ohio and has 11:30 a.m.
was 50 degrees the throats of other countries.
!.:andidale with 173 votes. Genrge ed Stale Issue No. 2, 148-140.
Gov. George Romnsy warned dento attending dlsqreed with nle E. HulcblnOOD, Rt. I
No.
Aleo
approved
was
lasue
actively
promoted
the
construcThe world is no longer tooled
most ottdaremarks," aald.Jer- up; Mrs. Wayne F. Wblte, Waunder sunny skies.
Wallace, Independent candidate,
~a _ . b here Tuesday.
finished second with 91, a n d 3, the Ferguson Act, 179-128.
tion of much needed vocational
"It aweare that tbe Humph- l'l' L. Updogral!, chairman ot the terloo; Mn. Charles W, Green·
BY a 211-110 c:wnt, the stu· training facUlties for our area, ••
Democrat Hubert Humphrey was
lee, Rt. ,l VInton.
rey and-crime program Ia to RGC eonvocallms committee.
dentl
favored the contlmatlon concluded Tribe.
last with 49.
'asut they were ccurteous, tbey
Blrtha
make the dollar so worthless
Representing Gallla County oo
Three • hundred and sevent;y· of bombing by the U. S. In VIetdid listen, antllhey formed their
MrL Patti D, Dllllf!l{, Rl. 2
DO one wiD want to steal it, ..
seven students and faculty mem - nam.
tbe adviaory committee are Rio
own oplnlona. .Tidswewereproud McArtlur, daugllter, 8:27 a.m.
he llald, addlns that llwnpl&gt;.
Final Issue was uno you fa- Grande educators, Dr, John Albers took part in the election,
of,"
said Updegral!.
Tltesday; Mro. Wayne F. White,
rey w1U ool be able to deal
Remarks ranging from "Wbo WateHoo, daughter, 6:45 p.m.
conducted by Prof. J. Sherman vor the return of skirts below
berti, vice president for acawith lnllatlon because be la
Porter's political science class. the knees?t' and the result was
lhe bell does he think be ls, to Tuesday; Mra. Charles W. ~­
demic affair&amp;i Dr. Herman Ko"lndebied to the union leadFive candidates were written 293
uhe'a got 101D8 Interesting lee, Rt. 1 Vinton, daughter, 4:·
enbip."'
ln - Dick Gregory ledthisgroop
polnta," were overheard ln the 50 a.m. Wecmesd~Qr.
with 47 votes. Sen. Eugene Mcaudience.
Discharges
up 2:20 a.m.; Steel Express up :::::::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::...:-.::::::'-:::.~:::::::::::;:::::::::::Carthy had 10, Nelson Rocke·
Mack Bemett. Mrs. C. Rl.f-.
5:45 a.m.; Racine I.oeks, Duncan
feller two, Paul Bryant a n d
FIVE.DAY FORECAST
mood BYer, Healer R. C l. ln e,
Bruee down 12:40 a.m.; ~een By United PresalltternaUonal Rita M. COllins, Kllll A. DoSI,
Woody Hayes one each.
City down 6:30 a.m.; Greenup
Jn the Ohio senatorial race,
Temperatures In 0 b l o Mrs. Gerald w. EdWar&lt;IJ, Job!l
BY United Press loternatlonal
William B. Saxile dereated John
Thursday through Monday wiU L. Grot:o, WW1am L. J 0 h n 0.
October
28,
1968 cance. 1 was really proud of my Locka, Alton Zephyr down 4:35
WASIUNGTON - GEORGE C. WALL ACE reported today he has
6
Thomal A, Layne, TheotlorO W.
old borne town and the church p.m.i Andrew P. CalhoUn up
spent $5.8 mUUon so far in his Lhird partY campaign ror the pres1- Dear Sir:
average abov e normal• with McCormick, Mrs. James H. NlchAs a product of Meigs County there.
p.m.; Northern down 7:35 p.m.j
dency, most of it received in contributions of less than $100.
Jane T, up 9:411 p.m.; Frank·
clally hlllll• ranging !rom the o l - James H. NlcbolSOD, ·IIrL
Directors of the American lnleperxlent Party eondldate's cam- and Pomeroy
Very sincere))'.
upper 50s to the middle 601
Joseph J, Pltllli&lt;ar, Mia. Buac
Wald
Radlord
lin B. up 11:211 p.m.; Buckeye
..., area, please permit
and
nlghutme
lowo
mostly
In
paign ftled with the clerk of the House the ft.rst report of Walla&lt;:e's me, throu~.. your newspaper, 10
~ State down 3:05 a.m.j I..ou1slana 1he 40s. Warmer TIJirtldl,y and aeD. S. Sottl"lors, Jamel M.
campaigning receipts and e""erxlitures. The document, covering the voice my appreciation ror the
Friday and a little eooler Simp- James R. Sl'ur&amp;lll. Sr,. ,
'ted ·-~~~~~~~-·
up 7 a.m.; Meldahl Lo~a, Red
Pl'. PLEASANT - Mrs, Daisy period trom Feb. 7 to Ocl 21, reported receipts totaling $6.2 mil- spirit display ed by the u m
RIVER
NEWS
Bird up 7:10 p.m.; Walter Cur· , lhroo8b the weekend. Preclp- Mra. Ar\hlr Tyler, (llorla J.
A. brrett, 95, or 1124 East lion a lXI disbursemerts of $5.8 million.
Methodist Church and Ordl
com- _
_
1,v down 7:50 p.m.; Ravenswood
ltatlm will to1a1 'h to '% lneh· WiltleD, Mrs. B, Charles WllMain St., Pomeroy, (ormerly of
munlty' In the ser vi ce oI
nup 11:35 p.m. i Cotton ~ei!li up
--'•"•
·-Ill, c. a. White, Marllball woCOLUMBUS- OffiO HIGHWAY DIRECTOR P. E. Mashetersald atioo and subsequent activities
GAUGES Galltpolia, , 12.0
Mason C~, died Tuesday In
es, •• ......., as a •.,.~era over llt. Barey L. Slundlra. Mrs.
2
of roU:40 a.m.; J. S. Lewis down 3
the Syracuse Nursing Home.
Tuesdly that motorists will be able, by 1971, to travel non--stq) oo In- ror Rev. Glen HUes, pastor of and 12.7 rum1ng 4 feet
the weeken4.
James T • Gordon and (Dfanlllli&gt;,
•
, a.m.; Joseph E. Walker up 9:50
Mrs. Sterrett was born at terstate 77 from dlM'ntown Cleveland toMariettaudpolnts swth.
the Church, last St.uldiJ arter- ers; Pt:. Pleasant, 2-s.Ol; Pome•• "'-~ 0 8_. P~·i AlhliDII doWn 6:50 LIIL
roy-Ma son, 20 .~; ~-. • •
Beech Hill on Dec. 9, 1872 daughMasheter said that's when the last secUono!tbe interstate facil- noon.
ter or the late George and Cor- ity, tlve miles in Summit county west of Akron, should be c~leted
The service was well plarmed, stat.; Kanawha Falla, 3.75 rialllll ID!anl "'"'• Mro.
N.
nelia Middlecoff Pullins. ~ewas and opened to tramc.
and comucted wtth grace and dig- lng; Charleston, 17.99 l'alllng.
-llis lllllln!anl llClll.
the widow of C. W. ~r retL
nlty throoghooL Bishop Ensley, , London, Marmot and Wlnllald,
COLD GRIPPED TilE EASTERN HALF olthe 111Umtoday. Snow and the officiary in charge, corP , are on the 11ill.
ACTION I'L9"SSID
&amp;lrvivlng are two sons, Lortribuled to the htsplnUoo and
BOAT Mf&gt;VEMENTS:
ain, of Pomeroy, and El.lgene, of flurries fell from the eastern Great Lakes to southern New Ez¥an1.
A dlvoroe action llledl&gt;y Henry
Pt. Pleasant; a daughter, Mrs.
GALLIPOLIS LOCKS- L. FlThe mercury drowed into the20sarx130aeast of tbe Mississippi spiritual richnesa, which was so
,Phelpo, Racine Rottto 2, aplnst
much ln evidence. And the rela- ore, down 5:10 p.m.; George T.
COrnelia Bankhead, of Elkins, River, while the West enjoyed summerllke warmth.
VIvian E. Phelps, same lddreu,
W. Va., and a sister, Mrs. Pat
lively large number ofguestmin- Price down 9 p.m.; Am. Breat
boa been dlsmlased In the Mello
COLUMBUS - RECOJID.SETTING END ToddS~eroiOhloUnl· isters symboUzed the respect in up 11:10 p.m.; Diana Bosworth
WUaon ol Leon.
Coui1V Common Pleea CGurt.
FuneraJ services will be held varsity today was named Mid-American Conference Lineman of the which Mr. HUes Is held by his down 7:411 a.m.; Elisha Woedl
F rlda,y at 2 p. m. In the Mohr. Week. Sharing top back honors were MlamiquarterblckKem Tholnp- fellCM clergymen.
up 9:45a.m.
T)IICKS CHANGED . ,
&amp;evens Funeral l1ome with the son arK!. Western Michigan defensive end Sam AntoN.zzo.
But, In my opinion, the finest
KANAWHA RIVER - L.oodoll.
Rev. Gaston Boyle odlciatl.ng.
Trick or Treot DlaM,ID ~
Snyder set one MAC record and tied another in catching 11 passe a thing or all was the contribution Solvay up 2:4:6 Lm.; Marmet.
Bltrial will be 1n Lone Oak Ceme- for 203 yards and one touchdown in the Bobcats' 42-12 J'CIJlP owr which was made by the local Mt. state down 6 p.m.; Morrta
Fall""'wlU be bold this . . .
from dirk to 8 p.m. lnllold ol
tery .
Dayton. The 203 yards established a new conference record, tqJplng Church and community. It was Harvey up 10:25 p.m.i L u c y
Friends may call at the rwter- the old mark of 193. The 11 receptions in one game tied an MAC plainly evident thiL the general Jane lAical doWn 7:05 a.m.; W.
TlllrldiY ....... ~ ...
aounced.
,,,
al home from 7 to 9 11urlday. record.
spirit was givillgi not gettingH. &amp;aver, Jr. down 8:40p.m.;
the IJ'pe ol spirit whlcb deter- H, E. Bowles dotm 9:10 p.m.;
mines character and lnlegrity. Franklin B, up 11:15 p.m.; BoaIt took time, energy, deter- ver up 1:15 a.m.; Jeflenon dmnl
miraUon. and patience for thel~ · 3:45a.m. Shepherds and thole intere~ on Thursday evenings, Nov. 7, on farm Oock condltklna.
ell church to IUTtll"«" such a
OmO RIVER - Lock 13, Jo1111
The thlrd takes up prOOJ.ced in improving sheep produc- 14, 21 and Dec . 12 !rom 7:30
smooth .. runntna: program, em- J. RoW~ dawn 7 a.m,; Lock 14,
tion and management will be to 9:30 p.m. at the Alexander tion management and colt eom- hrlcllll! such pertlclpetlon as the EdWani S. Bo•WOI'Ih up .8:45 p.
lnterested in participaUng in the Hlg!l School, Albany, one mile parlooos lor systems of lamb .,..Udllll! acolyte•, lheeourteous m.; ORCO up 6:35 p.m.; Char·
rourth of a series ot schools ol- eest ol Albany on U. S. Houle production In Ohio. The fourth uahera, the accompllahed organ- lea K. up 7:SO p.m.; S.M. Jtr*l
Includes prodoctlon, oelecUon, I at, the emeient choir director, up 5:50 a.m.; Lock .15, OVEC
rered by the Ohio Cooperative Ex- 5() .
management and promotion de- olll the dellgbtlul choir. All are down 6:30 a.m.; La&lt;t;y Milll""'
The
llrst
meeting
will
dlotensive Service to sheepmen in
cisions to best meet the pnaent to be hlghly commenled.
russ
the
sheep
lnWstry
Pres~
down 7:50 a.m.; Lo&lt;k 16, 91.
this area.
eat and Futureusingsheepbreed· and !uture demands lor lamb
But to top It all olf, the social Maryo up 1:55 a.m.; Robolt G, ·
OI'ENS SHOP - Tbo quarW'I oectC~lotl malll' ,.r. lltr
Resource personnel include lng tecbnology Lo secure repre- moot and waolllber.
arrangementa, which were made West and New MartlniVille down
Harry
(llock), canlert&gt;ury'o barber lbep has tai\tn on • ·effi&lt;l.iency
and
growth
sentative
Ralph Grimshaw, State Slteep~­
by tile Women's Soclecy .oiChrls5:30 a.m.; Lock 17, Foremost
look
IInce
Cllllel'bury retired 00 Sopt. 9olthJI )'1101' Wr OVIIr
potemial
and
etri
ciency,
ettecEnrollment
lbould
be
to
l&lt;tloloo ~cialist at Ohio stale
tLan Service at thra elementary down 4:05 a.m.; A. V. Crlasdown
the
Aru
Emmsloo
Center,
Box
59
yeers
as
a llarber. Tbe atructure Ia
U.. - e olilolon'o
ti.ve
uae
or
breeds,
and
methods
University; Dr. Charles Parkacllool for the reception. were 6:30 a.m.; Belltvllle Lock' BQ·
32,
JackOhio
or
to
the
lt&gt;BeltiV
Shop,
oparaled
by
Helen
MUhoan.
Mrs. Mllboan, wl1o
ot
Intensive
!lheep
prtNl.l.cUon.
er, Sheep Researrh, Ohio Agriboth magnificent aJXI mapni· ou La Fltte up 8 p.m.; Eastern
eot
-lloo.afllc:oa
by
The
second
meeting
will
dlolonnerly
betUwr
lluaiJte11
ooNye-Aw.,oPmedtlle-loi:atlon
cultural Research and Developmous. Preparations ror serving ~ 11:35 p.m.; Tuuny L. White
on Tueodlf wlthlllro. Harry Clnlerlioiry aaharllrlt cu1......,.1
ment center;- Wooster; Jamefl E. C\111 management experience• Nov- 4. A *ll enrollmeDI fee ouch a large CfC&gt;I'l with oo much up 1:45 \.m.; Beek!Ord up 8:55
will
be
used
to
delray
e
_
...
!.Ira. CUtertiUr,. Ia -led In the liMM'pltOiowbUe Judy Smtal. .
and
results
of
lniAmlfied
~
Uttle Jr., Area Extension Agent,
food, courteay, and efficiency, A.m.; Luther Herdman down 5:40
ror
tpeahn,
noteboollt,
re·
operations
Including
meeting
tho
a
obep l!!!'I)!.O.. llllllolto. M!lheln oland liltdllll ber. Tlit ~
AniJnAII, ~all')' at J&amp;ckSOI); and
was rather remarkable. And then. Lm.; omrard. ~.W 1Wa1Ung; Lock
lrelltmellta,etc.
oftheewet,
energy
recplrementa
or
Cll!lirlMtl'l' - r ohop -~ was purebeaed by• Jlr,
the senUment eJC)ressed by the 21, Polly R. down 12:13 a.m.;
, Jlr. KeMeth Ackerman, CowtFurther dolallo may be ...
maximum
use
of
pelliure,
~
alii
!&amp;a., W&amp;j'DOiinboall ontlthe lnlerior liu boon ~
gifts to 1he paotor and his wile, Lock 22, E'lleana Booworlltdolm
, lJ Extenslm ~ A&amp;rl~&gt;~lture
curtld b1 contactiJII ~ ...
conrtnement
of
ewea
and
lamba,
remodeled.
- Seldnel Photo.
'
a15(), was not without stgnUi- 6:10 LM.j LoCk 23, Phlllip~
! ,il""iaf'.l.thenl.
!
area
olftetl.
and
loeding
systems
lor
sheep
'"
THe lour sessions will be held

, ~aa !1, Willi. Stale If

m:mt.

Educators for Miller

Committee Organized

l

I

Nixon Cops Mock
Election At Rio

w;

,.!Jr'l&gt;.

w

No¥· ,

-.r

,,
,.

a.

L
I

Mrs. Sterrett

Dies Tuesday

I

'.,.\'

l

I

&lt;&gt;:«=&gt;:&lt;~=--» · "'~I:.-,.:.· ti:~ ~~ ~

=

-.n

Sheep Production School is Set

mw

n ........

: ' • over my fore&lt;~aUng
,~
• to my football..,.lse
, wa Alvin and Leander
,
·kaff!
·
· •• ~ Iii true Hoople tradl·
', """ tile boy a have some
~~ Picks for you-um.
'
ph!
Since Alvin la tile senior
, I!IMMber of the duo, we will
~~r glve his choices flrat.
..... ~~ .. what he has to say:
Here's tme for you, Uncle
¥nos, that'D 1 hake the
whole state of Ohio. 1. AlVin
{tbeTiae Wise) Hoople, prediCt
Michigan State Spartans
will . otay In hlgb gear and
undefeated Ohio
~
• 28-14, In the top Blg

Stale to whip Notre Dame,
"But that's ancient his·
so let's look al this Sol·

:;'l;

.. J?'a,. about Army to bop
Penn State! The Lions are

-~~game.

And here's another pip
f"!J:.'lu, Walch the Colorado
B
oes tnock the Kansas
Jayhawks off their lofty

higher-rated but Army Is
ettin' tougher every week.
!f!ve It to the Cadels, 21·14. ·
'And I got another doozy
for you. Rice, the club that
hasn't won a game all year.
will cUp Texas Tech, 19·12,"
Well, Leander, I must say
you earned at leasl a draw
with Alvin In tile department
of audacity. Your selections
are equally as starUlng as
hls.
And there, dear readers
you have an lnalght Into ho..;

f

perch, 19-13, Haw!"

Jove, Alvin, you are lndeedlm a brave lad, 1 don't
ow what Leander can do
to top those. Let's bear from
hlm.
"Thanks, Uncle Bulgy-er
-1 mean, Amos, for gtvin'
me a chance to pick agalftst
Alvin and also for the oppor·
tunlty to make up to tile

readers for some of the bum

the yotmger generation

~lectlons you've been g:tvin'
em I ' Uke last week, when
you wOuldn't Hsten to me
when I picked Michigan

Loa Week:

thinks these day&amp;-harrumph,
Now go on with the fore·

cast.

BIPt

Wnmc

IN

14

%81

'II

Te Date;

St. tl, New Mesloo 7
fl, Colo. st. u. 211

Tiel
I
ll

Pel.

•'IGII
.7!1'1

39, Oaks

N.C. Stale 11, Clem10u IS
N. Tel. St. l:t, CladnaaCI%%
Mich. 31, Nortltweatera 21
Mich. State :Ill, 0111o Slate 14

Defeated

leander's Picks
Oklahoma U, Kaaoao st. 11
So. CaW. :13, Orecon
Army %1, Pena Slale 14

s

Purdue 41, IWDola 7
Rlee 19, Tnu Teeh H
Oregoa St. %4, Stanford !1
Buffalo !3, Temple e
Tonneosee 18, trCLA 14
Texao 25, SMU %0
Arkaaoaa 21, Texas A&amp;M 8
Baylor 14, TCU 10
Miami
31, Toledo 7
Mempb s Sl17, Tllaa 11
Utah t, Brl&amp;ham Y oang 8
TulaH %1, Vonderllllt 15
Vlrlinla %1, So. Carolina ll
Wah Foreol %%, Marylud 0
CaWorala 31, Wuhla(loa 13
Oblo U. 41, Weolera Mich. 14
Keatueky %11, Weot Va. 11
Jntllana 31, WlaeotlaiD 1
Dayton 25, Xavier 12
Yale 33, Dartmoalh %1

10.1

•

This 01•' Typ•writer
Jockey compiled a .666
overage In aouth•rn Ohio
area high school games
laat week. We guened
olpht a! 12 gamn .
After
seven weeks, we
own a 58·32 record. Our
percentage i 1
for the

NCAA Board Places 3
Colleges On p roba ti•on rg;;

.6....

four miu•s last
wore:
Huntington
High • Milton, Moips Ironton, Coal Grove • Sauth
Point and Athena • Jackaon.
Here's this week 'a for ..
cast:
~ger Creek 48 Hannan
Trace O
Southern 8 Eutera 6
·Wahoma 13 Al•xandria 12
Millo• 36 Southwestern 12
North Go lila U Hannan 8
Charleston 19 Huntington
High 14
~t. Pleaaant 21 Ravenawood 6
Athena -48 Hel1onvill ...
York 0
Cool Growe 22 Chesapeake
14
Wellston 3.4 Golllpolls 20
Logan 22 lra11ton U
Melga 20 Jackson 12

WHk

,
ST. LOtJlS (UPJ)- College
. athletic teams won't be able to
- reat Nil' until the strong..wllled
councU of the National Coll•
~te AthleUc Association adWn-oa

s

~··

fii"J!jiiaii
'

·

; · ~I ·
.
~~lllhfa
,·
•

'" "

,

. ,

eJJloer
~en-e Coilcounc~f Phi
0
ep
· St.
Bo111venturo
~slty of New York alii
da stale University Tuesday and placed tllelr basketball
=on': probation for rules

:
action made the three
e eps ineligible for .POst
••..., baskell&gt;all tournom enI 8
the probation period. The
; : : . were made during the
c
I thre&amp;day 1111 meeting
in St. Louis, durlrw which
preparaUoos will be made lor
~ NCAA L1Mii1Bntlon In Los
~~ next Jll'lJII'y,

:urtrw

basketball coach "advlaed t
least one stucleaH.thlete ~
wHhhold lnfonnaUoo at the
time the student wu to be
interviewed by a representative
I
~. . tho NCAA committee on
infract1o0s.."
The other two schools were
eoch placed on proliotlon lor
one year,
The councU said Florida State
University baokotball coaches
"organized and conducted drills
and practice sesslms"
for
prospective athletic scholarship
wtmers
•
st. Bonaventure
Wlls censured
on growlds that "a represent&amp;live of the lnstlllltloo's athletic
1nterestaH provided a basketball
recruit with an eJ!Pen&amp;e-t»lkl
trijl to a basketball tour111D1ent
which was not in the area or the
recruit's home or Ute wlverstt;y

Fight Resul18

,.. ... ur J, Bergstrom, ani- caQus.
ltant execuUve director ot the
The council laid that St.
NCAA, said reports on viola- lloraventure
vlolaled NCAA

tlons at adler callepe. were rules by reimbursJn, the
OJIPOCied to be submitted ........
'--., a1urnnus or friend (or a- portion
IIJ the ISIOCiltlon's committee ot e~enses durlna tJl t"""
·~

oolntnctiona.

3 Members of
Tent Installed

Snowville 4-H

Club Has Party

B;y United Press International
PHILADELPillA (UP()

stanley uKitten" Hayward, 155,
Philadelphia, outpolnled Emne
Griffith, 156, New York (10).

e ........

The councn placed LaSalle oo
two yeats probation lor r&lt;por1o
ed riolatrons lncludltV a throat
by Iormor \Vsii;Jr basketball
Coach Jim Hardlntr last season
to "111 the llnanclal al4 to two
baollotball playera be....e of
their poor court play.
Report on the recent dlatrJct
Tbo reportalsollld a LoSallo comention held in Athena was
Bl ven durltV Mon&lt;lay DlaM' s
meeting on Tent 95, Daughters
of Unl011 Vetenna of the Civil
War, bal&lt;l ot tile D.A.V. HalL
Throe membera ol Tent 95
were eleeted to district olllces
and Installed during the oesslon.
'11le 8lowvllle 4-11 ell., enJoy. T~ are Mra. Pearl ~~
'jiBllor vlee president; Mr._ He~
etl a llaJloween party Salurdo.Y
..enllw at the bonle ot Mr. and en Miller. outside sent!rieli aid
..... Paul Stanley. o-allottJ Mra. Mlmlo Neutzllng, lnalde
oltbe Halloween tbem8werecar- aentlnel. OtherR who attended
wore Mrt. Lllllu stellflllll Mrs
' rled oat a~on~·
the - k '-Hamm.
.

COGDILL OUT
DETROIT {UPll- Gell Co~
dW, veteran pass recolver for
the Detroit Lions, has been
placed on waivers by the
National Football l.eogue club,
IIJIIOrently to make room on the
roster for
reactivation of
runnlug hack Nick Eddy.
Eddy, former Notre Dame .
star who has been out lor two
ae&amp;sDIUI with 1 knee injury
would ll1l In for baubock
Farr, injured last Sunday.

Mei

most

a.

Air. atltillra. Norman Woe&gt;!, Uti

K , 411~

a.,

IIIII a-le WOOd;

:~ ltlll BrOIII Staeley,

lam.

1!11riJ - · · FlorBJco lloolto,
a.~···
.•
WUson, Tamra,Cltttitlle,

"'Siaall I pour, renllemeu!'"

Barry Gets

By United Pr~ss International
Oakland fans who waited

more than a year to see Rick
Barry in a home unirorrn were
onl.v hall disappolnled at the
resuJt.
Barry. the rormer National
Basketball Association scoring
champion for crosHPay rival
San Francisco, scored 39 points
Tuesday night when the Oaks
made their home debut before a
crowd or 5,974. But the New
Orleans Bucs stole the show
with a 124-119 victory.
It was Ule rtrst loss ror
Oekland
after three road
victories while the Bucs boosted
their record to 2-1 to move
within a halr~e of the Olks
in the Western Division or the
American Basketball Assocfa ..
Uol\
James Jones led the visitors
with 26 points and steven Jones,
a former Oak, added 22 points.
Oakland coach Alex Hannum
disagreed with on official's
ruling in the final quarter and
played lhe rest or the game
under protest.
The Eastern Division leading
Minnesota Pipers ran their
r~cord to 2-0 b;y tripping the
Miami Floridians, 116-108, beCore 1,665 fans at Duluth. Connie
Hawkins had 34 poi!Ws to lead
the Minnesota attack and Willie
Morrell scored 24 (or Miami
now winless In three starts.
'
In the only other game
played, a slim turnout of 384
pe~e at Commack, N.y., saw
the New York Nets turn back
the Denver Rockets, 108-89. The
Nets were trailing by 16 points
when Willie Worsley came off
the bench to re.Piace Lavern
Tart, and worsley finished the
night with 23 points as New
York rallied for its second
triUIJlllh In three decisions.

Two Maigs COtu1t;y teemo will the II at place Hantl&amp;ll Trace Wlldbattle ror a piece or second place cato. Tbo Bobcats ""' 4-().11 In
glory In the Soutllern Valley Ath· SVAC play and 11anran Trace Is
letlc COnference this . S&amp;turda¥ 0-4-a
ni&amp;flt when the Southern Local
The North Gallla Plnteo
T&lt;rr.doea mMt Eastern in the clinched at least 1 second place
Eagloslalr,
lie In lite SV AC with a 42-U win
The winner of the Southern- 0 '"" Haman Tritce:wm.lhe "exEaatern Wt wW share second ceptitMI ol Kyger Creek and Ha~&gt;o
place In the Sol AC with the North nan Trace, 111 SVAC teams lave
Gallla Pirates o1 Gallia County. &lt;0l111Jieled their 1968 sv AC seaTbe Pirates are 3-2-0 and both sons.
Southern and Eastern are 2-2-o.
So the SV AC spoOlght falls on
The Kyger Creek Bobcatsj who Ti.l)pers Plains this week where
have already wrapped upthel968 Southern alii Eaatem eolllde.
Sol AC title, will travel to Mer- This is the tlrat yar or SVAC
cerville Thursday night to meet football ror Coach Bob Ashley at

EAST LANSING, Mleh. (UP()
- ff they ever make another

movle about Notre Dame football, Dull)' Dougherty should
get a leading role - as the

vJUalft.
Daugherty, Michigan Stale's
coach, Is the Roman Catholic
with the very Irish name who
apectalfzes In taming t h e
44
Fightlng lrlsh."
Last Saturday, he was at iLia
best. The outmanned and ootweighed !tartans upset nationally-ranked Notre Dame, 2117, earning Daoghert;y the honor ot United Press International coach of the week.

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

Pro Standings
ABA STANDINGS

By United Press International
East
W. L. Pet.
Mlmesota . . . . • . 2 0 1.000
Kentuclcy · · · · , . , 3 I ,750
New York .. . • ... 2 1 .667

Miami .
0 3 .000
Indiana · , · · · . , , , 0 0 .000
West
&lt;

&lt;

•••

•••

W. L, Pet.

Bradshaw

SVAC Studinga
SOUTHERN VALLEY
ATHLETIC CONFERENCE
(SVAC)
TEAM
w L ·T p OP
Kyger Creek • • . 4 0 0 134 22
North Gallla , •• 3 2 0 80 56
Southern ••••• 2 2 0 62 68
Eastern •••.• , 2 2 0 78 44
Southwestern • , 2 3 0 40 118
Hannan Trace •• 0 4 0 22 108
TOTALS
13 13 0 416 416
SV AC AND OPPONENTS
TEAM
W L T P
Bulfalo (Put'm) 7 1 1 237
•Kyger Creek
6 2 0 200
Glouster. , •• , . 5 2 0 Ill
Fed.-Hocklng. '.. 5 3 0 114
Soutbweatern ..• 4 4 o 69
North Gallla, ••• 4 4 0 98
Falrlalll ..••• , 4 4 o 130
Alexander • •.• •• 3 4 0 58
Wahama . , .. ... 3 5 I 148
Southern , ...... 2 6 0 102
Easlern ••....• 2 6 0 114
Hannan, W, Va. .. 2 7 0 63
Miller ......... I 5 I 30
Symmes Valley .• I 7 0 36
Hannan Trace .•. 0 8 0 40

OP
80
82
75
106
94
110
174
88

124
158
118
122
102
214
203

LAST WEEK'S RESULTS:

Eastern 36 Southwestern 14
Kyger Creek 26 Hannan, W. VL 0
North Ga.llia 42 Hannan Trace 14
AlexaMer 14 Southern 12
Spencer. W. VL 18 Wahama 14
Glouster 42 Federal Hocking 12
Fairland 42 oak HUI 22
South Point 34 Symmes Valley 0
Belpre 20 Parkersburg South 0
Buffalo (Putnam) 40
Cattlehburg, Ky. 0

Oakland , , · , ....• 31 .750
New Orleans . . . . .. 2 1 . 667
Dallas . . . . . . . - .. 0 0 .000
Los Angeles , , . . . . o o .OOO
Denver . . . , .. .... o 1 .OOO
Houston . .... ...•. 0 1 .000
Tuesday's Results
New York 108 Denver 89
Minnesota 116 Miami 108
New Orleans 124 Oakland 119
THIS WEEK'S SCHEDULE:
(Only games scheduled)
Thursday
Wednesday's Games
Kyger
Creek
at Hannan Trace
Denver at Kentucky
Friday
New Orleans at Los Angeles
Southern al Eastern
(Only games scheduled)
Wahama at Alexander
Fairland at Buffalo {Putnam)
NBA STANDINGS
Federal-Hocking
at Warren Local
By unJied Press lnternatlon.al
Symmes
Valley
at
oak Hill
East
Saturda,y
W. L. Pet.
Boston . . . . . . , , . 4 I ,800 Miller at Southwestern
Baltimore , , , . . . • 6 3 .667 North Gallia at Hannan, W. VL
NEW YORK (UP() - T h e Cincinnati . . . . • , . 3 2 .600
United Press International top Phlla . , , , . . • . . . 3 2 .600
20 small c:ollege loolball teams New York . .. ..• . 4 3 ,571
with first place votes and won- llelrolt . , . • • . . . . 2 3 .400
lost records in parentheses Milwaukee . . . . . . . 0 5 .000
(Sixth week).
West
Team
Polnli
W. L. Pet, Baltimore 129 Milwaukee 112
I. Son Diego st. C!6) (6~) 328 San Fran . , . , . , . , 3 2 .600 Los Angeles 125 Atlanta 124
2. North Dak st. (3) (7 ~) 287 Los Angeles . . . . . . 4 3 .57 1
(Ont;y games schedlled)
3, ChatiMooga
(6.0) 228 Atlanta ..... , . ..... ., .:JOO
Wedne~'s Games
I . Tampa
(5-l} 221 Chl.,.go . . . . . . , , , 3 3 ,500 San Francisco at Baltimore
5. N. !.lex. High (4) (7~) 209 San Diego . . . . . . . . 2 3 .400
New York st Clncimatl
AUanta at San Diego
6. Weber St.
(I} (6~) 135 Phoenix , , , . . . . , . 2 3 .4110
7. Morpn St.
(5.0) 126 Seattle • . . . ...... 2 5 .286 Phoenix at Seattle
TUesday's Results
Detroit at Boston
8, ~:astern Ky.
· , (5·1) 81
1
(Only games scheduled)
9. 'rext• A&amp;l
(5-1) 67 Chlcago 103 Bostoo 97
10. Troy St.
(I) (6.0) 35 New York 110 San Francisco 97
Second 10-11. Arkansas 91. Universlty ll6); 12. WesternKentucIcy CZ6); 13. WUlamatle (16); l4.
Northern Mlcblgan (13); 15. FlorIda A&amp;M (12); 15, Texas-Arllngton (11}; 17. tie, Ashland, Adam•
91. and Arkanoas Tech (10); 20.
tie, Kings Point, East Texas
St. ODd stale College of Arkan·
aas (ll).

College Ratings

- r n Local lllll U., T...,..
dooo wiU be oot lor ibat aocond
place Ue.
Caaeh Billy Ktncald'sl Eaclee
brolle a ob pme loolll(! streak
laot FrldQ night by downltw
Southwestern 38-14, ft wao tile
nrat win for the Eqles alnce theJ'
def- Hanran Trace 36-Sin iba
season' a opener.
Both the Tor-s and the
Easles have de!elted the same
SV AC oppononla and have lost to
the aame SV AC opponents.
Southern defeated SW.thwestern 22-12 and Haman Trace .24-0.
Eastern downed Southwestern 36-

Quits Post
LEXINGTON,
Ky.
(UPl)Clarlie Bradshaw has alwll)'s
hated quitters ai¥! made a point
ot saying he was not one when
he roslgned Tuesday night as
football coach at the University
or Kentucky.
Preachirw a hard-nosed doctrine cO\t)led with what he
stressed as "Inner toughness,"
Bradshaw came to Kentucky in
1962 to build a wiMing
tradition. But in six yeaa.rs, the
Wlldcall ctJIIII)Ued a 20..28-4
record and so far this season
are but 2-4..
"To those who have cared aa
we have cared I hope you know
I am not quitting," Bradshaw
said. "1 am resign!~ because 1
hooestly believe that It will help
to 1trengtben what we have
smrted alii I believe It to be In
the best Interest o( my tamlly,
our ~ches and roottall team."
He handed in his rosigm.tion
to acting unJversit;y President
Dr. A.D. Kirwan and informed
his players alter Tuesday's
pnctice seniM. His resigration
becomes errective the en::l. or
this season.

NEW

night since there lo 11t1 ochoal
F'rtdly on account ot• teac..rs'

m..tloe.
Mlller High Scholi &lt;JI Homloek
travel a to Gallla 00t1111 SaturdQ
night to meet Coach stave stiles
Southweatem HJah'rl•ra. Mill·
er Ia 1+1 ror the 11811011 aad
was idle thla ~It week. 8cJutb..
western Is 2-3-0 lnSo/ACplayand
4-4-0 In all game a. '!be H..,_
era were beaten 36-14 f'rlda)'
night at Eastern.
coach Mel carter's NorthGallla Pirates, lreoh lrllll lui
week"s 42-14 win over Hanlan
Tra~e w1U tnvel to Hala, W.
Va., to meet Ca.ch BUl Adl.m.t'
WlldCillo. Haman Is 2-7-ll Cor the
season and North Gallla 11 3--2-0
In Sol AC play and 4-4-0 In all
gunes.
Other SV AC opponents In action Friday nl&amp;fltlnclude Wahama
at AJexan::ler, Fairland at Buf.
lalo, W. VL, of Pu!mm County,
Federal Hocldqr at Warren Local
and Symmes Valley at Ook HUL

Pl"mltiiat-Heating
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MASON, W. VA.

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with a p11chase of 8 1allons of 1as

Regular

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CERTIFIED OIL COMPANY
Pomeroy, 0.

538 I. Main St.

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Ev•ry gallon aold with a Mon•y Back Guaront..

H&amp; R FIRESTONE STORE IN MIDDLEPORT

ANTHONY

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NEWVP

YORK (UP() _ Don
Ruck, publlc relations director
for the tgUonal lloekey League
today 1111s eleeted . to the newl~
created
poaitlon or vice pres; !louse.
Plans for iba annual Thank... ltle!ll ol tile NHL.
•' PriHI were liVeD to tliOie
Ruck, 4o, a native or Iron
· 1t11o ilore maaked, wllh the pnt.. &amp;ivltV dlimor wore made. Mrs.
Neutatlng won tile prize poclloge River, Mich.. ar:d 1 eraduate ot
being Pamola Wll- tile dolatad by Mrs. Hamm.
the University of ConnecUcut,
qUoat,
Wood, ODd u.
joined
the NHL OD Aj&gt;rlll, 1966,
lirlllaal. Charlo• Oborbolzer.
u pobllc relatiOIIS director.
, ~I ware played with pr\HI
. i!UI .. 1'lmn Staeley, 91evle
!loot ontl Rllmle Wood,
:A-ne ware the adolooro,
~ Jilr. lllll Mro. Fred llaaley and

-

..

, lbt 'Teeh n,.DIIle 13
nubln U, F1onaa II
Florida st. 11, v•. Teell •
Houoton l:t, Geerebt 21
Harvlld :13. Pena 11
Syracuoe 1!, Hol,y Crou 7
Nebraska !3, Iowa Slate 11
Colorado It, Kauu 13
LoulsvWe %1. Keat Slate Ill
Mlululppl II, LSU 17
Iowa 14, MIIUieoeta t
Mlsuurl i!7, Otla. Stale o
Nolie Dame 41, Navy 3

W. Tu. St 35, N. Mex. St. 7

· =•

,

~·

It alii n.- Trij!;a :IN.IiotJII&gt;.
em lost to Ncll'lh Glllla ~ Uti
to KJ,.r ~ ~.II. EuWD
loot 8-6 to NGrlll Gll!ta and lt-8
to Knor Creek.
Two otlwr SVAC taamo an In
actloa Satunlay ttlaiL No GaJl1a
COtu1t;y team Ia II aeUcll YrltllJ
'

Alllltama ts, MIN. Stale 1

PY popUlar request, I am

Wlnner

Will Share Second :Plae~!·:~··

. Alvin's Choices
Air Foree II, No. Carollaa 11

,:•

Southern~ Eastern

Paallbn-

eounv

No

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All-Stan@ .

· .· ~.Bows · to P.opular Den1and;
·. Nephews Do the Forecast

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•,

Gregory Puts Future onto You,th
II ale&lt;ted president olthe United States, 1be flrat three things
Dick Gresorl' would do Is:
1 -· Paint tile White House
black.
2 - PUll all tile u. S. troops
out of Vietnam.
3 - send LBJ to VIetnam
all alone, armed with hls barbecue aauce gun.
Approximately 800periKII1a,lncludlng 600 Rlo Grande COllege
students, Jammed lh• college din-

lng hall Tuesday night to give
a courteous hearing to tbe Negro comedian, author. actor,
crusader for hUmiD rights, and
presidential candidate - he' B
rumlng '"' .. Independent tlckel
as a write-In with Mark Laoe
as bls running male.
To get his point across on
world and national problems,
Gregory was very blwat, yet his
humorous remarks kept the a!Jd..
lence's attention rrom beglming

to end.

During bis one - hoor Hcampalgn opeecb" 1he bearded Gne·

. , , attired In blue coverall•
and a U&amp;bl tan jacket, called
President John&amp;Oll "the bia9al
tyraut In tile hlstory of t h o
world," aud l8id •'George Wallace Is nothing but a big Uar."
He referred to litcbard Nlxtlol
as "Tricky Dick."
NOVEL CO!ITUMING was
The 36-year.old Gregocy, . .
displayed by members of the
Army veteran who lost hlolather
Meigs TOPS Knolchers Club
when he was eight years old at the annual Halloween paJ1;y
be was k!Ued by Nazi soldiers In
Tuesday night at the M e I g s
World War n- said the 111tnber
COlllltY Infirmary meeting
one problem In thls nation todiQ'
room. The prize winners, ais moral pollution.
bove, were Mrs. Betty GUkey,
He repeatedly emphasized thai
costumed as an elephant, seit was up to tbe younger generlected as the most orlgina.li
ation - "you kids" - to make
Mrs. Marion Michael, In witch
necessary changes and retun
HOSPITAL NEws ..
doctOr costuming, the ugliest,
sanity to thls nation. "Yoo can't
and Mrs. Betty File, the pig,
Formatioo of an F.Wcator&amp; for by, vice president tor Student buy morality. U must come !rom
the prettiest; At left, M r s.
Holzer Meclleal Center: VlllltMiller COmmittee to help InsUre Affairs; George Bush, Director wlthln, • said Grego)')'.
Ruth Needs or Cheshire, preslnl! hours 2-4 and 7.a p.m. Par.. Keep yoor eyes and ears opthe re-election of Congressman of Alumni RelaUons; Arthur Lan~
ldelll ol the Meigs TOPS
onto only oo Pediatric• Ward.
Clarence Miller was amounted ham, Director of Athletics; Dr.
en. Don't let ywrselt be proKnotc:hers, was the second
Bruce
CurtiS,
Director
of
Ptl,ysiAtlmlaslona
grammed.
You
have
a
trementhia week.
place Dlvlsloo 4 winner In the
llarl')' L. Sltatders,, 53$ Third
The committee is made up cal Education and Psychology;
dooo job to do In saving Amerstale In weight loos during '67.
Ave.; Odes D. Plr&amp;Olls, 512 Sec·
ot. aver 75 elementarY. sec- Clyde Evans, Director o1 Admis- ica.
9te received a trophy Cor her
ond Ave.; Mro, WDiard G. Cox,
ondary and college educators rep- sions; Bruce Harrison, vice uyou must solve the problems
60 pound loss at the TOPS
Rt. I Nortq; Mra. ~ L.
reseutins: each of the thirteen president for Developmentj Wil- created by us old fools. We couldArea Reoognilion Day held In
Clark, r.elltp.lla; llen1')' D.,JGi,i,.
counties of Ohio's loth Dlstrlet. liam Smeltzer, Director oC Fi- n't solve our problems. Yoomuat,
Columbus.
The goal ol the committee Is nam::e and Robert Rose, Treas- If this nation is to survive,,. he by us."
ministration for Ita proeecllrel New Hav•; Mra. Otto ·A_
to present information regarding urer. Bill Northup, principal of continued.
In speaking on tile gbelto prob- In bandling de~• at the llohrbatllb. Pl. Plea-; Clltto
the congressman's record and North Gallla lllgh School and
Grego)')' · said the big 11l0118Y lems across this natloo, Grei!DI'l' JJemoc:rat eonvendoii itiot Aug- E. Erwlll, South !Ide, w. Vo.;
thinking on educational matters. Clarence 'Thompson, County Slpt.
makers- capitalists- who hide said: "llon't walk In with $80 uot. "The old folks doa't Mra. Ardith T. Bartoo, PoineThe chairman oltllecommlttee ~ Schools, represent the ele- betdnd tile countl'y' s constltutioo bllllon and sa,y our problems to change. Tbe YllWil! lolklwanta I'll!'; Mro, Merle C. Harris, Rt.
Is IvanTrlbeol Albany. Mr. Tribe mentary and secondarY schools are the power makers, or deci- are solved. First, create an at- change. Baby, we're In trouble. I Raelne; Belinda D. lieetor,
Is an Instructor at9Juthern High In the county.
II' I up to you to get the j o b Rt. l Lmg Bottom; Mrs. Pull
sion makers. "It" s time these mosphere for blacks to trust
Representing Meigs COUnty on fools stop playing around," he
School In Meigs County,
done.
n
D. DeiiDey, Rt. 2 McArtlur; Benwhites, then we'll sit down and
Tribe, in llJU'IOOilCing tbe for. the adriiiOl'Y committee are Les- oontinoed.
Following hls remarks, some Jamln H. Cremeans, Rt. t Alh·
talk over our prablems."
matlon of the committee express- ter Manuel and Charles Tll,)'lor,
Be blasted labor unioos, statGregory criUclzed Chleago 600 remaiDed lor a quellllon and '"'Si ~rrrenee F. McManis, Welled strong support for what he Ealtern High School, and 1 v a n Ing that, "II lhey don't straight- "'-&gt;''r John Dalley and his ad- answer period. During thla per- ilOOi wood Dool!ft, Albbnd,,~
Gilligan
180-44.
OUtgoing
Sentermed, "Miller's positive rec- Tribe, Southern High School.
tod, members of tile Rlo Grande Mro. GeoriO L. Seholleld, 1t;tiiRichard Nixon captured the
:::::;:;:;::::;;.:::::~•Xir;::'~~~'f.::::-;::;:;:-,;;::::::::=::::
en up, crush them Ollt."
ator
Frank
J
.
Lauache
had
one
ord
on eWcation." The ConAs for democracy, Gregory
presidential mock electioo 'lUesCLEVELAND (IJPI)- The
COBege Snloke Slllu!i• - · - ton; Mr~. F4wiD L. Cr~
,, ' I,.
greasman has been a consistent·
LOCAL TEMPS
day on the Rio Grande College write-In vote.
said, "If it's as good as we 111
Vo.;
l!"",
natiCMI WOUld· face "economic per atarr took a ,Pck surviQ' ~ .
1be JludelltS approved Iaaue
supporter of measures designed
The temperature In Pomeroy's It Is, why then do we run all
:i;CblllpuS." •
oo G~'l remarks.
rest E. . WOO&lt;II, Jack*i'1i:,
,~
chaosn if HUbert Hwnp}lny is
"&amp;&gt;me 90 per cent of the Btu- c. BrOwning, Rt. 3 ll!Wer; lillitFinal tally showed the GOP No. I 234-66, but bart.i.Y awrov- to improve the edueationa.l sy s- do1mtoWil business district at over tbe world to jam it doWn
eleeled preildent, Michigan
tems of Sootheastern Ohio and has 11:30 a.m.
was 50 degrees the throats of other countries.
!.:andidale with 173 votes. Genrge ed Stale Issue No. 2, 148-140.
Gov. George Romnsy warned dento attending dlsqreed with nle E. HulcblnOOD, Rt. I
No.
Aleo
approved
was
lasue
actively
promoted
the
construcThe world is no longer tooled
most ottdaremarks," aald.Jer- up; Mrs. Wayne F. Wblte, Waunder sunny skies.
Wallace, Independent candidate,
~a _ . b here Tuesday.
finished second with 91, a n d 3, the Ferguson Act, 179-128.
tion of much needed vocational
"It aweare that tbe Humph- l'l' L. Updogral!, chairman ot the terloo; Mn. Charles W, Green·
BY a 211-110 c:wnt, the stu· training facUlties for our area, ••
Democrat Hubert Humphrey was
lee, Rt. ,l VInton.
rey and-crime program Ia to RGC eonvocallms committee.
dentl
favored the contlmatlon concluded Tribe.
last with 49.
'asut they were ccurteous, tbey
Blrtha
make the dollar so worthless
Representing Gallla County oo
Three • hundred and sevent;y· of bombing by the U. S. In VIetdid listen, antllhey formed their
MrL Patti D, Dllllf!l{, Rl. 2
DO one wiD want to steal it, ..
seven students and faculty mem - nam.
tbe adviaory committee are Rio
own oplnlona. .Tidswewereproud McArtlur, daugllter, 8:27 a.m.
he llald, addlns that llwnpl&gt;.
Final Issue was uno you fa- Grande educators, Dr, John Albers took part in the election,
of,"
said Updegral!.
Tltesday; Mro. Wayne F. White,
rey w1U ool be able to deal
Remarks ranging from "Wbo WateHoo, daughter, 6:45 p.m.
conducted by Prof. J. Sherman vor the return of skirts below
berti, vice president for acawith lnllatlon because be la
Porter's political science class. the knees?t' and the result was
lhe bell does he think be ls, to Tuesday; Mra. Charles W. ~­
demic affair&amp;i Dr. Herman Ko"lndebied to the union leadFive candidates were written 293
uhe'a got 101D8 Interesting lee, Rt. 1 Vinton, daughter, 4:·
enbip."'
ln - Dick Gregory ledthisgroop
polnta," were overheard ln the 50 a.m. Wecmesd~Qr.
with 47 votes. Sen. Eugene Mcaudience.
Discharges
up 2:20 a.m.; Steel Express up :::::::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::...:-.::::::'-:::.~:::::::::::;:::::::::::Carthy had 10, Nelson Rocke·
Mack Bemett. Mrs. C. Rl.f-.
5:45 a.m.; Racine I.oeks, Duncan
feller two, Paul Bryant a n d
FIVE.DAY FORECAST
mood BYer, Healer R. C l. ln e,
Bruee down 12:40 a.m.; ~een By United PresalltternaUonal Rita M. COllins, Kllll A. DoSI,
Woody Hayes one each.
City down 6:30 a.m.; Greenup
Jn the Ohio senatorial race,
Temperatures In 0 b l o Mrs. Gerald w. EdWar&lt;IJ, Job!l
BY United Press loternatlonal
William B. Saxile dereated John
Thursday through Monday wiU L. Grot:o, WW1am L. J 0 h n 0.
October
28,
1968 cance. 1 was really proud of my Locka, Alton Zephyr down 4:35
WASIUNGTON - GEORGE C. WALL ACE reported today he has
6
Thomal A, Layne, TheotlorO W.
old borne town and the church p.m.i Andrew P. CalhoUn up
spent $5.8 mUUon so far in his Lhird partY campaign ror the pres1- Dear Sir:
average abov e normal• with McCormick, Mrs. James H. NlchAs a product of Meigs County there.
p.m.; Northern down 7:35 p.m.j
dency, most of it received in contributions of less than $100.
Jane T, up 9:411 p.m.; Frank·
clally hlllll• ranging !rom the o l - James H. NlcbolSOD, ·IIrL
Directors of the American lnleperxlent Party eondldate's cam- and Pomeroy
Very sincere))'.
upper 50s to the middle 601
Joseph J, Pltllli&lt;ar, Mia. Buac
Wald
Radlord
lin B. up 11:211 p.m.; Buckeye
..., area, please permit
and
nlghutme
lowo
mostly
In
paign ftled with the clerk of the House the ft.rst report of Walla&lt;:e's me, throu~.. your newspaper, 10
~ State down 3:05 a.m.j I..ou1slana 1he 40s. Warmer TIJirtldl,y and aeD. S. Sottl"lors, Jamel M.
campaigning receipts and e""erxlitures. The document, covering the voice my appreciation ror the
Friday and a little eooler Simp- James R. Sl'ur&amp;lll. Sr,. ,
'ted ·-~~~~~~~-·
up 7 a.m.; Meldahl Lo~a, Red
Pl'. PLEASANT - Mrs, Daisy period trom Feb. 7 to Ocl 21, reported receipts totaling $6.2 mil- spirit display ed by the u m
RIVER
NEWS
Bird up 7:10 p.m.; Walter Cur· , lhroo8b the weekend. Preclp- Mra. Ar\hlr Tyler, (llorla J.
A. brrett, 95, or 1124 East lion a lXI disbursemerts of $5.8 million.
Methodist Church and Ordl
com- _
_
1,v down 7:50 p.m.; Ravenswood
ltatlm will to1a1 'h to '% lneh· WiltleD, Mrs. B, Charles WllMain St., Pomeroy, (ormerly of
munlty' In the ser vi ce oI
nup 11:35 p.m. i Cotton ~ei!li up
--'•"•
·-Ill, c. a. White, Marllball woCOLUMBUS- OffiO HIGHWAY DIRECTOR P. E. Mashetersald atioo and subsequent activities
GAUGES Galltpolia, , 12.0
Mason C~, died Tuesday In
es, •• ......., as a •.,.~era over llt. Barey L. Slundlra. Mrs.
2
of roU:40 a.m.; J. S. Lewis down 3
the Syracuse Nursing Home.
Tuesdly that motorists will be able, by 1971, to travel non--stq) oo In- ror Rev. Glen HUes, pastor of and 12.7 rum1ng 4 feet
the weeken4.
James T • Gordon and (Dfanlllli&gt;,
•
, a.m.; Joseph E. Walker up 9:50
Mrs. Sterrett was born at terstate 77 from dlM'ntown Cleveland toMariettaudpolnts swth.
the Church, last St.uldiJ arter- ers; Pt:. Pleasant, 2-s.Ol; Pome•• "'-~ 0 8_. P~·i AlhliDII doWn 6:50 LIIL
roy-Ma son, 20 .~; ~-. • •
Beech Hill on Dec. 9, 1872 daughMasheter said that's when the last secUono!tbe interstate facil- noon.
ter or the late George and Cor- ity, tlve miles in Summit county west of Akron, should be c~leted
The service was well plarmed, stat.; Kanawha Falla, 3.75 rialllll ID!anl "'"'• Mro.
N.
nelia Middlecoff Pullins. ~ewas and opened to tramc.
and comucted wtth grace and dig- lng; Charleston, 17.99 l'alllng.
-llis lllllln!anl llClll.
the widow of C. W. ~r retL
nlty throoghooL Bishop Ensley, , London, Marmot and Wlnllald,
COLD GRIPPED TilE EASTERN HALF olthe 111Umtoday. Snow and the officiary in charge, corP , are on the 11ill.
ACTION I'L9"SSID
&amp;lrvivlng are two sons, Lortribuled to the htsplnUoo and
BOAT Mf&gt;VEMENTS:
ain, of Pomeroy, and El.lgene, of flurries fell from the eastern Great Lakes to southern New Ez¥an1.
A dlvoroe action llledl&gt;y Henry
Pt. Pleasant; a daughter, Mrs.
GALLIPOLIS LOCKS- L. FlThe mercury drowed into the20sarx130aeast of tbe Mississippi spiritual richnesa, which was so
,Phelpo, Racine Rottto 2, aplnst
much ln evidence. And the rela- ore, down 5:10 p.m.; George T.
COrnelia Bankhead, of Elkins, River, while the West enjoyed summerllke warmth.
VIvian E. Phelps, same lddreu,
W. Va., and a sister, Mrs. Pat
lively large number ofguestmin- Price down 9 p.m.; Am. Breat
boa been dlsmlased In the Mello
COLUMBUS - RECOJID.SETTING END ToddS~eroiOhloUnl· isters symboUzed the respect in up 11:10 p.m.; Diana Bosworth
WUaon ol Leon.
Coui1V Common Pleea CGurt.
FuneraJ services will be held varsity today was named Mid-American Conference Lineman of the which Mr. HUes Is held by his down 7:411 a.m.; Elisha Woedl
F rlda,y at 2 p. m. In the Mohr. Week. Sharing top back honors were MlamiquarterblckKem Tholnp- fellCM clergymen.
up 9:45a.m.
T)IICKS CHANGED . ,
&amp;evens Funeral l1ome with the son arK!. Western Michigan defensive end Sam AntoN.zzo.
But, In my opinion, the finest
KANAWHA RIVER - L.oodoll.
Rev. Gaston Boyle odlciatl.ng.
Trick or Treot DlaM,ID ~
Snyder set one MAC record and tied another in catching 11 passe a thing or all was the contribution Solvay up 2:4:6 Lm.; Marmet.
Bltrial will be 1n Lone Oak Ceme- for 203 yards and one touchdown in the Bobcats' 42-12 J'CIJlP owr which was made by the local Mt. state down 6 p.m.; Morrta
Fall""'wlU be bold this . . .
from dirk to 8 p.m. lnllold ol
tery .
Dayton. The 203 yards established a new conference record, tqJplng Church and community. It was Harvey up 10:25 p.m.i L u c y
Friends may call at the rwter- the old mark of 193. The 11 receptions in one game tied an MAC plainly evident thiL the general Jane lAical doWn 7:05 a.m.; W.
TlllrldiY ....... ~ ...
aounced.
,,,
al home from 7 to 9 11urlday. record.
spirit was givillgi not gettingH. &amp;aver, Jr. down 8:40p.m.;
the IJ'pe ol spirit whlcb deter- H, E. Bowles dotm 9:10 p.m.;
mines character and lnlegrity. Franklin B, up 11:15 p.m.; BoaIt took time, energy, deter- ver up 1:15 a.m.; Jeflenon dmnl
miraUon. and patience for thel~ · 3:45a.m. Shepherds and thole intere~ on Thursday evenings, Nov. 7, on farm Oock condltklna.
ell church to IUTtll"«" such a
OmO RIVER - Lock 13, Jo1111
The thlrd takes up prOOJ.ced in improving sheep produc- 14, 21 and Dec . 12 !rom 7:30
smooth .. runntna: program, em- J. RoW~ dawn 7 a.m,; Lock 14,
tion and management will be to 9:30 p.m. at the Alexander tion management and colt eom- hrlcllll! such pertlclpetlon as the EdWani S. Bo•WOI'Ih up .8:45 p.
lnterested in participaUng in the Hlg!l School, Albany, one mile parlooos lor systems of lamb .,..Udllll! acolyte•, lheeourteous m.; ORCO up 6:35 p.m.; Char·
rourth of a series ot schools ol- eest ol Albany on U. S. Houle production In Ohio. The fourth uahera, the accompllahed organ- lea K. up 7:SO p.m.; S.M. Jtr*l
Includes prodoctlon, oelecUon, I at, the emeient choir director, up 5:50 a.m.; Lock .15, OVEC
rered by the Ohio Cooperative Ex- 5() .
management and promotion de- olll the dellgbtlul choir. All are down 6:30 a.m.; La&lt;t;y Milll""'
The
llrst
meeting
will
dlotensive Service to sheepmen in
cisions to best meet the pnaent to be hlghly commenled.
russ
the
sheep
lnWstry
Pres~
down 7:50 a.m.; Lo&lt;k 16, 91.
this area.
eat and Futureusingsheepbreed· and !uture demands lor lamb
But to top It all olf, the social Maryo up 1:55 a.m.; Robolt G, ·
OI'ENS SHOP - Tbo quarW'I oectC~lotl malll' ,.r. lltr
Resource personnel include lng tecbnology Lo secure repre- moot and waolllber.
arrangementa, which were made West and New MartlniVille down
Harry
(llock), canlert&gt;ury'o barber lbep has tai\tn on • ·effi&lt;l.iency
and
growth
sentative
Ralph Grimshaw, State Slteep~­
by tile Women's Soclecy .oiChrls5:30 a.m.; Lock 17, Foremost
look
IInce
Cllllel'bury retired 00 Sopt. 9olthJI )'1101' Wr OVIIr
potemial
and
etri
ciency,
ettecEnrollment
lbould
be
to
l&lt;tloloo ~cialist at Ohio stale
tLan Service at thra elementary down 4:05 a.m.; A. V. Crlasdown
the
Aru
Emmsloo
Center,
Box
59
yeers
as
a llarber. Tbe atructure Ia
U.. - e olilolon'o
ti.ve
uae
or
breeds,
and
methods
University; Dr. Charles Parkacllool for the reception. were 6:30 a.m.; Belltvllle Lock' BQ·
32,
JackOhio
or
to
the
lt&gt;BeltiV
Shop,
oparaled
by
Helen
MUhoan.
Mrs. Mllboan, wl1o
ot
Intensive
!lheep
prtNl.l.cUon.
er, Sheep Researrh, Ohio Agriboth magnificent aJXI mapni· ou La Fltte up 8 p.m.; Eastern
eot
-lloo.afllc:oa
by
The
second
meeting
will
dlolonnerly
betUwr
lluaiJte11
ooNye-Aw.,oPmedtlle-loi:atlon
cultural Research and Developmous. Preparations ror serving ~ 11:35 p.m.; Tuuny L. White
on Tueodlf wlthlllro. Harry Clnlerlioiry aaharllrlt cu1......,.1
ment center;- Wooster; Jamefl E. C\111 management experience• Nov- 4. A *ll enrollmeDI fee ouch a large CfC&gt;I'l with oo much up 1:45 \.m.; Beek!Ord up 8:55
will
be
used
to
delray
e
_
...
!.Ira. CUtertiUr,. Ia -led In the liMM'pltOiowbUe Judy Smtal. .
and
results
of
lniAmlfied
~
Uttle Jr., Area Extension Agent,
food, courteay, and efficiency, A.m.; Luther Herdman down 5:40
ror
tpeahn,
noteboollt,
re·
operations
Including
meeting
tho
a
obep l!!!'I)!.O.. llllllolto. M!lheln oland liltdllll ber. Tlit ~
AniJnAII, ~all')' at J&amp;ckSOI); and
was rather remarkable. And then. Lm.; omrard. ~.W 1Wa1Ung; Lock
lrelltmellta,etc.
oftheewet,
energy
recplrementa
or
Cll!lirlMtl'l' - r ohop -~ was purebeaed by• Jlr,
the senUment eJC)ressed by the 21, Polly R. down 12:13 a.m.;
, Jlr. KeMeth Ackerman, CowtFurther dolallo may be ...
maximum
use
of
pelliure,
~
alii
!&amp;a., W&amp;j'DOiinboall ontlthe lnlerior liu boon ~
gifts to 1he paotor and his wile, Lock 22, E'lleana Booworlltdolm
, lJ Extenslm ~ A&amp;rl~&gt;~lture
curtld b1 contactiJII ~ ...
conrtnement
of
ewea
and
lamba,
remodeled.
- Seldnel Photo.
'
a15(), was not without stgnUi- 6:10 LM.j LoCk 23, Phlllip~
! ,il""iaf'.l.thenl.
!
area
olftetl.
and
loeding
systems
lor
sheep
'"
THe lour sessions will be held

, ~aa !1, Willi. Stale If

m:mt.

Educators for Miller

Committee Organized

l

I

Nixon Cops Mock
Election At Rio

w;

,.!Jr'l&gt;.

w

No¥· ,

-.r

,,
,.

a.

L
I

Mrs. Sterrett

Dies Tuesday

I

'.,.\'

l

I

&lt;&gt;:«=&gt;:&lt;~=--» · "'~I:.-,.:.· ti:~ ~~ ~

=

-.n

Sheep Production School is Set

mw

n ........

: ' • over my fore&lt;~aUng
,~
• to my football..,.lse
, wa Alvin and Leander
,
·kaff!
·
· •• ~ Iii true Hoople tradl·
', """ tile boy a have some
~~ Picks for you-um.
'
ph!
Since Alvin la tile senior
, I!IMMber of the duo, we will
~~r glve his choices flrat.
..... ~~ .. what he has to say:
Here's tme for you, Uncle
¥nos, that'D 1 hake the
whole state of Ohio. 1. AlVin
{tbeTiae Wise) Hoople, prediCt
Michigan State Spartans
will . otay In hlgb gear and
undefeated Ohio
~
• 28-14, In the top Blg

Stale to whip Notre Dame,
"But that's ancient his·
so let's look al this Sol·

:;'l;

.. J?'a,. about Army to bop
Penn State! The Lions are

-~~game.

And here's another pip
f"!J:.'lu, Walch the Colorado
B
oes tnock the Kansas
Jayhawks off their lofty

higher-rated but Army Is
ettin' tougher every week.
!f!ve It to the Cadels, 21·14. ·
'And I got another doozy
for you. Rice, the club that
hasn't won a game all year.
will cUp Texas Tech, 19·12,"
Well, Leander, I must say
you earned at leasl a draw
with Alvin In tile department
of audacity. Your selections
are equally as starUlng as
hls.
And there, dear readers
you have an lnalght Into ho..;

f

perch, 19-13, Haw!"

Jove, Alvin, you are lndeedlm a brave lad, 1 don't
ow what Leander can do
to top those. Let's bear from
hlm.
"Thanks, Uncle Bulgy-er
-1 mean, Amos, for gtvin'
me a chance to pick agalftst
Alvin and also for the oppor·
tunlty to make up to tile

readers for some of the bum

the yotmger generation

~lectlons you've been g:tvin'
em I ' Uke last week, when
you wOuldn't Hsten to me
when I picked Michigan

Loa Week:

thinks these day&amp;-harrumph,
Now go on with the fore·

cast.

BIPt

Wnmc

IN

14

%81

'II

Te Date;

St. tl, New Mesloo 7
fl, Colo. st. u. 211

Tiel
I
ll

Pel.

•'IGII
.7!1'1

39, Oaks

N.C. Stale 11, Clem10u IS
N. Tel. St. l:t, CladnaaCI%%
Mich. 31, Nortltweatera 21
Mich. State :Ill, 0111o Slate 14

Defeated

leander's Picks
Oklahoma U, Kaaoao st. 11
So. CaW. :13, Orecon
Army %1, Pena Slale 14

s

Purdue 41, IWDola 7
Rlee 19, Tnu Teeh H
Oregoa St. %4, Stanford !1
Buffalo !3, Temple e
Tonneosee 18, trCLA 14
Texao 25, SMU %0
Arkaaoaa 21, Texas A&amp;M 8
Baylor 14, TCU 10
Miami
31, Toledo 7
Mempb s Sl17, Tllaa 11
Utah t, Brl&amp;ham Y oang 8
TulaH %1, Vonderllllt 15
Vlrlinla %1, So. Carolina ll
Wah Foreol %%, Marylud 0
CaWorala 31, Wuhla(loa 13
Oblo U. 41, Weolera Mich. 14
Keatueky %11, Weot Va. 11
Jntllana 31, WlaeotlaiD 1
Dayton 25, Xavier 12
Yale 33, Dartmoalh %1

10.1

•

This 01•' Typ•writer
Jockey compiled a .666
overage In aouth•rn Ohio
area high school games
laat week. We guened
olpht a! 12 gamn .
After
seven weeks, we
own a 58·32 record. Our
percentage i 1
for the

NCAA Board Places 3
Colleges On p roba ti•on rg;;

.6....

four miu•s last
wore:
Huntington
High • Milton, Moips Ironton, Coal Grove • Sauth
Point and Athena • Jackaon.
Here's this week 'a for ..
cast:
~ger Creek 48 Hannan
Trace O
Southern 8 Eutera 6
·Wahoma 13 Al•xandria 12
Millo• 36 Southwestern 12
North Go lila U Hannan 8
Charleston 19 Huntington
High 14
~t. Pleaaant 21 Ravenawood 6
Athena -48 Hel1onvill ...
York 0
Cool Growe 22 Chesapeake
14
Wellston 3.4 Golllpolls 20
Logan 22 lra11ton U
Melga 20 Jackson 12

WHk

,
ST. LOtJlS (UPJ)- College
. athletic teams won't be able to
- reat Nil' until the strong..wllled
councU of the National Coll•
~te AthleUc Association adWn-oa

s

~··

fii"J!jiiaii
'

·

; · ~I ·
.
~~lllhfa
,·
•

'" "

,

. ,

eJJloer
~en-e Coilcounc~f Phi
0
ep
· St.
Bo111venturo
~slty of New York alii
da stale University Tuesday and placed tllelr basketball
=on': probation for rules

:
action made the three
e eps ineligible for .POst
••..., baskell&gt;all tournom enI 8
the probation period. The
; : : . were made during the
c
I thre&amp;day 1111 meeting
in St. Louis, durlrw which
preparaUoos will be made lor
~ NCAA L1Mii1Bntlon In Los
~~ next Jll'lJII'y,

:urtrw

basketball coach "advlaed t
least one stucleaH.thlete ~
wHhhold lnfonnaUoo at the
time the student wu to be
interviewed by a representative
I
~. . tho NCAA committee on
infract1o0s.."
The other two schools were
eoch placed on proliotlon lor
one year,
The councU said Florida State
University baokotball coaches
"organized and conducted drills
and practice sesslms"
for
prospective athletic scholarship
wtmers
•
st. Bonaventure
Wlls censured
on growlds that "a represent&amp;live of the lnstlllltloo's athletic
1nterestaH provided a basketball
recruit with an eJ!Pen&amp;e-t»lkl
trijl to a basketball tour111D1ent
which was not in the area or the
recruit's home or Ute wlverstt;y

Fight Resul18

,.. ... ur J, Bergstrom, ani- caQus.
ltant execuUve director ot the
The council laid that St.
NCAA, said reports on viola- lloraventure
vlolaled NCAA

tlons at adler callepe. were rules by reimbursJn, the
OJIPOCied to be submitted ........
'--., a1urnnus or friend (or a- portion
IIJ the ISIOCiltlon's committee ot e~enses durlna tJl t"""
·~

oolntnctiona.

3 Members of
Tent Installed

Snowville 4-H

Club Has Party

B;y United Press International
PHILADELPillA (UP()

stanley uKitten" Hayward, 155,
Philadelphia, outpolnled Emne
Griffith, 156, New York (10).

e ........

The councn placed LaSalle oo
two yeats probation lor r&lt;por1o
ed riolatrons lncludltV a throat
by Iormor \Vsii;Jr basketball
Coach Jim Hardlntr last season
to "111 the llnanclal al4 to two
baollotball playera be....e of
their poor court play.
Report on the recent dlatrJct
Tbo reportalsollld a LoSallo comention held in Athena was
Bl ven durltV Mon&lt;lay DlaM' s
meeting on Tent 95, Daughters
of Unl011 Vetenna of the Civil
War, bal&lt;l ot tile D.A.V. HalL
Throe membera ol Tent 95
were eleeted to district olllces
and Installed during the oesslon.
'11le 8lowvllle 4-11 ell., enJoy. T~ are Mra. Pearl ~~
'jiBllor vlee president; Mr._ He~
etl a llaJloween party Salurdo.Y
..enllw at the bonle ot Mr. and en Miller. outside sent!rieli aid
..... Paul Stanley. o-allottJ Mra. Mlmlo Neutzllng, lnalde
oltbe Halloween tbem8werecar- aentlnel. OtherR who attended
wore Mrt. Lllllu stellflllll Mrs
' rled oat a~on~·
the - k '-Hamm.
.

COGDILL OUT
DETROIT {UPll- Gell Co~
dW, veteran pass recolver for
the Detroit Lions, has been
placed on waivers by the
National Football l.eogue club,
IIJIIOrently to make room on the
roster for
reactivation of
runnlug hack Nick Eddy.
Eddy, former Notre Dame .
star who has been out lor two
ae&amp;sDIUI with 1 knee injury
would ll1l In for baubock
Farr, injured last Sunday.

Mei

most

a.

Air. atltillra. Norman Woe&gt;!, Uti

K , 411~

a.,

IIIII a-le WOOd;

:~ ltlll BrOIII Staeley,

lam.

1!11riJ - · · FlorBJco lloolto,
a.~···
.•
WUson, Tamra,Cltttitlle,

"'Siaall I pour, renllemeu!'"

Barry Gets

By United Pr~ss International
Oakland fans who waited

more than a year to see Rick
Barry in a home unirorrn were
onl.v hall disappolnled at the
resuJt.
Barry. the rormer National
Basketball Association scoring
champion for crosHPay rival
San Francisco, scored 39 points
Tuesday night when the Oaks
made their home debut before a
crowd or 5,974. But the New
Orleans Bucs stole the show
with a 124-119 victory.
It was Ule rtrst loss ror
Oekland
after three road
victories while the Bucs boosted
their record to 2-1 to move
within a halr~e of the Olks
in the Western Division or the
American Basketball Assocfa ..
Uol\
James Jones led the visitors
with 26 points and steven Jones,
a former Oak, added 22 points.
Oakland coach Alex Hannum
disagreed with on official's
ruling in the final quarter and
played lhe rest or the game
under protest.
The Eastern Division leading
Minnesota Pipers ran their
r~cord to 2-0 b;y tripping the
Miami Floridians, 116-108, beCore 1,665 fans at Duluth. Connie
Hawkins had 34 poi!Ws to lead
the Minnesota attack and Willie
Morrell scored 24 (or Miami
now winless In three starts.
'
In the only other game
played, a slim turnout of 384
pe~e at Commack, N.y., saw
the New York Nets turn back
the Denver Rockets, 108-89. The
Nets were trailing by 16 points
when Willie Worsley came off
the bench to re.Piace Lavern
Tart, and worsley finished the
night with 23 points as New
York rallied for its second
triUIJlllh In three decisions.

Two Maigs COtu1t;y teemo will the II at place Hantl&amp;ll Trace Wlldbattle ror a piece or second place cato. Tbo Bobcats ""' 4-().11 In
glory In the Soutllern Valley Ath· SVAC play and 11anran Trace Is
letlc COnference this . S&amp;turda¥ 0-4-a
ni&amp;flt when the Southern Local
The North Gallla Plnteo
T&lt;rr.doea mMt Eastern in the clinched at least 1 second place
Eagloslalr,
lie In lite SV AC with a 42-U win
The winner of the Southern- 0 '"" Haman Tritce:wm.lhe "exEaatern Wt wW share second ceptitMI ol Kyger Creek and Ha~&gt;o
place In the Sol AC with the North nan Trace, 111 SVAC teams lave
Gallla Pirates o1 Gallia County. &lt;0l111Jieled their 1968 sv AC seaTbe Pirates are 3-2-0 and both sons.
Southern and Eastern are 2-2-o.
So the SV AC spoOlght falls on
The Kyger Creek Bobcatsj who Ti.l)pers Plains this week where
have already wrapped upthel968 Southern alii Eaatem eolllde.
Sol AC title, will travel to Mer- This is the tlrat yar or SVAC
cerville Thursday night to meet football ror Coach Bob Ashley at

EAST LANSING, Mleh. (UP()
- ff they ever make another

movle about Notre Dame football, Dull)' Dougherty should
get a leading role - as the

vJUalft.
Daugherty, Michigan Stale's
coach, Is the Roman Catholic
with the very Irish name who
apectalfzes In taming t h e
44
Fightlng lrlsh."
Last Saturday, he was at iLia
best. The outmanned and ootweighed !tartans upset nationally-ranked Notre Dame, 2117, earning Daoghert;y the honor ot United Press International coach of the week.

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

Pro Standings
ABA STANDINGS

By United Press International
East
W. L. Pet.
Mlmesota . . . . • . 2 0 1.000
Kentuclcy · · · · , . , 3 I ,750
New York .. . • ... 2 1 .667

Miami .
0 3 .000
Indiana · , · · · . , , , 0 0 .000
West
&lt;

&lt;

•••

•••

W. L, Pet.

Bradshaw

SVAC Studinga
SOUTHERN VALLEY
ATHLETIC CONFERENCE
(SVAC)
TEAM
w L ·T p OP
Kyger Creek • • . 4 0 0 134 22
North Gallla , •• 3 2 0 80 56
Southern ••••• 2 2 0 62 68
Eastern •••.• , 2 2 0 78 44
Southwestern • , 2 3 0 40 118
Hannan Trace •• 0 4 0 22 108
TOTALS
13 13 0 416 416
SV AC AND OPPONENTS
TEAM
W L T P
Bulfalo (Put'm) 7 1 1 237
•Kyger Creek
6 2 0 200
Glouster. , •• , . 5 2 0 Ill
Fed.-Hocklng. '.. 5 3 0 114
Soutbweatern ..• 4 4 o 69
North Gallla, ••• 4 4 0 98
Falrlalll ..••• , 4 4 o 130
Alexander • •.• •• 3 4 0 58
Wahama . , .. ... 3 5 I 148
Southern , ...... 2 6 0 102
Easlern ••....• 2 6 0 114
Hannan, W, Va. .. 2 7 0 63
Miller ......... I 5 I 30
Symmes Valley .• I 7 0 36
Hannan Trace .•. 0 8 0 40

OP
80
82
75
106
94
110
174
88

124
158
118
122
102
214
203

LAST WEEK'S RESULTS:

Eastern 36 Southwestern 14
Kyger Creek 26 Hannan, W. VL 0
North Ga.llia 42 Hannan Trace 14
AlexaMer 14 Southern 12
Spencer. W. VL 18 Wahama 14
Glouster 42 Federal Hocking 12
Fairland 42 oak HUI 22
South Point 34 Symmes Valley 0
Belpre 20 Parkersburg South 0
Buffalo (Putnam) 40
Cattlehburg, Ky. 0

Oakland , , · , ....• 31 .750
New Orleans . . . . .. 2 1 . 667
Dallas . . . . . . . - .. 0 0 .000
Los Angeles , , . . . . o o .OOO
Denver . . . , .. .... o 1 .OOO
Houston . .... ...•. 0 1 .000
Tuesday's Results
New York 108 Denver 89
Minnesota 116 Miami 108
New Orleans 124 Oakland 119
THIS WEEK'S SCHEDULE:
(Only games scheduled)
Thursday
Wednesday's Games
Kyger
Creek
at Hannan Trace
Denver at Kentucky
Friday
New Orleans at Los Angeles
Southern al Eastern
(Only games scheduled)
Wahama at Alexander
Fairland at Buffalo {Putnam)
NBA STANDINGS
Federal-Hocking
at Warren Local
By unJied Press lnternatlon.al
Symmes
Valley
at
oak Hill
East
Saturda,y
W. L. Pet.
Boston . . . . . . , , . 4 I ,800 Miller at Southwestern
Baltimore , , , . . . • 6 3 .667 North Gallia at Hannan, W. VL
NEW YORK (UP() - T h e Cincinnati . . . . • , . 3 2 .600
United Press International top Phlla . , , , . . • . . . 3 2 .600
20 small c:ollege loolball teams New York . .. ..• . 4 3 ,571
with first place votes and won- llelrolt . , . • • . . . . 2 3 .400
lost records in parentheses Milwaukee . . . . . . . 0 5 .000
(Sixth week).
West
Team
Polnli
W. L. Pet, Baltimore 129 Milwaukee 112
I. Son Diego st. C!6) (6~) 328 San Fran . , . , . , . , 3 2 .600 Los Angeles 125 Atlanta 124
2. North Dak st. (3) (7 ~) 287 Los Angeles . . . . . . 4 3 .57 1
(Ont;y games schedlled)
3, ChatiMooga
(6.0) 228 Atlanta ..... , . ..... ., .:JOO
Wedne~'s Games
I . Tampa
(5-l} 221 Chl.,.go . . . . . . , , , 3 3 ,500 San Francisco at Baltimore
5. N. !.lex. High (4) (7~) 209 San Diego . . . . . . . . 2 3 .400
New York st Clncimatl
AUanta at San Diego
6. Weber St.
(I} (6~) 135 Phoenix , , , . . . . , . 2 3 .4110
7. Morpn St.
(5.0) 126 Seattle • . . . ...... 2 5 .286 Phoenix at Seattle
TUesday's Results
Detroit at Boston
8, ~:astern Ky.
· , (5·1) 81
1
(Only games scheduled)
9. 'rext• A&amp;l
(5-1) 67 Chlcago 103 Bostoo 97
10. Troy St.
(I) (6.0) 35 New York 110 San Francisco 97
Second 10-11. Arkansas 91. Universlty ll6); 12. WesternKentucIcy CZ6); 13. WUlamatle (16); l4.
Northern Mlcblgan (13); 15. FlorIda A&amp;M (12); 15, Texas-Arllngton (11}; 17. tie, Ashland, Adam•
91. and Arkanoas Tech (10); 20.
tie, Kings Point, East Texas
St. ODd stale College of Arkan·
aas (ll).

College Ratings

- r n Local lllll U., T...,..
dooo wiU be oot lor ibat aocond
place Ue.
Caaeh Billy Ktncald'sl Eaclee
brolle a ob pme loolll(! streak
laot FrldQ night by downltw
Southwestern 38-14, ft wao tile
nrat win for the Eqles alnce theJ'
def- Hanran Trace 36-Sin iba
season' a opener.
Both the Tor-s and the
Easles have de!elted the same
SV AC oppononla and have lost to
the aame SV AC opponents.
Southern defeated SW.thwestern 22-12 and Haman Trace .24-0.
Eastern downed Southwestern 36-

Quits Post
LEXINGTON,
Ky.
(UPl)Clarlie Bradshaw has alwll)'s
hated quitters ai¥! made a point
ot saying he was not one when
he roslgned Tuesday night as
football coach at the University
or Kentucky.
Preachirw a hard-nosed doctrine cO\t)led with what he
stressed as "Inner toughness,"
Bradshaw came to Kentucky in
1962 to build a wiMing
tradition. But in six yeaa.rs, the
Wlldcall ctJIIII)Ued a 20..28-4
record and so far this season
are but 2-4..
"To those who have cared aa
we have cared I hope you know
I am not quitting," Bradshaw
said. "1 am resign!~ because 1
hooestly believe that It will help
to 1trengtben what we have
smrted alii I believe It to be In
the best Interest o( my tamlly,
our ~ches and roottall team."
He handed in his rosigm.tion
to acting unJversit;y President
Dr. A.D. Kirwan and informed
his players alter Tuesday's
pnctice seniM. His resigration
becomes errective the en::l. or
this season.

NEW

night since there lo 11t1 ochoal
F'rtdly on account ot• teac..rs'

m..tloe.
Mlller High Scholi &lt;JI Homloek
travel a to Gallla 00t1111 SaturdQ
night to meet Coach stave stiles
Southweatem HJah'rl•ra. Mill·
er Ia 1+1 ror the 11811011 aad
was idle thla ~It week. 8cJutb..
western Is 2-3-0 lnSo/ACplayand
4-4-0 In all game a. '!be H..,_
era were beaten 36-14 f'rlda)'
night at Eastern.
coach Mel carter's NorthGallla Pirates, lreoh lrllll lui
week"s 42-14 win over Hanlan
Tra~e w1U tnvel to Hala, W.
Va., to meet Ca.ch BUl Adl.m.t'
WlldCillo. Haman Is 2-7-ll Cor the
season and North Gallla 11 3--2-0
In Sol AC play and 4-4-0 In all
gunes.
Other SV AC opponents In action Friday nl&amp;fltlnclude Wahama
at AJexan::ler, Fairland at Buf.
lalo, W. VL, of Pu!mm County,
Federal Hocldqr at Warren Local
and Symmes Valley at Ook HUL

Pl"mltiiat-Heating
Your Dapondeblo

LAN

'

~

Pipes
This wtntar!

•

WRAP-ON

•

ELECTRIC
HE4T

TAPE

PH. 773·5583
MASON, W. VA.

I

I

•

f
t
I

I.

..
t
~.

,r

FREE ROSE or other decorator flower
with a p11chase of 8 1allons of 1as

Regular

30.9

Ci arettes
........

30~

CERTIFIED OIL COMPANY
Pomeroy, 0.

538 I. Main St.

.

Ev•ry gallon aold with a Mon•y Back Guaront..

H&amp; R FIRESTONE STORE IN MIDDLEPORT

ANTHONY

I

Prevent Frozen

Pi(kens
Hardware

DE OF VAWE

DulorFor

PLUMBING
AND

HEATING

SINCERE THANKS
TO Mft CUSTOMERS

Ctllo!' .... Plulelta

lltaalor, (b.
....,Mra.llolla Qlllholoor,

. Grace

'J.:·.

'

4o50 up

.; : : . . - Cbarltl

wu.., ..... -

.,., ,,_,~. -~.llltlllrL

&lt;

15 ft. to 30 ft.

NEWVP

YORK (UP() _ Don
Ruck, publlc relations director
for the tgUonal lloekey League
today 1111s eleeted . to the newl~
created
poaitlon or vice pres; !louse.
Plans for iba annual Thank... ltle!ll ol tile NHL.
•' PriHI were liVeD to tliOie
Ruck, 4o, a native or Iron
· 1t11o ilore maaked, wllh the pnt.. &amp;ivltV dlimor wore made. Mrs.
Neutatlng won tile prize poclloge River, Mich.. ar:d 1 eraduate ot
being Pamola Wll- tile dolatad by Mrs. Hamm.
the University of ConnecUcut,
qUoat,
Wood, ODd u.
joined
the NHL OD Aj&gt;rlll, 1966,
lirlllaal. Charlo• Oborbolzer.
u pobllc relatiOIIS director.
, ~I ware played with pr\HI
. i!UI .. 1'lmn Staeley, 91evle
!loot ontl Rllmle Wood,
:A-ne ware the adolooro,
~ Jilr. lllll Mro. Fred llaaley and

-

..

, lbt 'Teeh n,.DIIle 13
nubln U, F1onaa II
Florida st. 11, v•. Teell •
Houoton l:t, Geerebt 21
Harvlld :13. Pena 11
Syracuoe 1!, Hol,y Crou 7
Nebraska !3, Iowa Slate 11
Colorado It, Kauu 13
LoulsvWe %1. Keat Slate Ill
Mlululppl II, LSU 17
Iowa 14, MIIUieoeta t
Mlsuurl i!7, Otla. Stale o
Nolie Dame 41, Navy 3

W. Tu. St 35, N. Mex. St. 7

· =•

,

~·

It alii n.- Trij!;a :IN.IiotJII&gt;.
em lost to Ncll'lh Glllla ~ Uti
to KJ,.r ~ ~.II. EuWD
loot 8-6 to NGrlll Gll!ta and lt-8
to Knor Creek.
Two otlwr SVAC taamo an In
actloa Satunlay ttlaiL No GaJl1a
COtu1t;y team Ia II aeUcll YrltllJ
'

Alllltama ts, MIN. Stale 1

PY popUlar request, I am

Wlnner

Will Share Second :Plae~!·:~··

. Alvin's Choices
Air Foree II, No. Carollaa 11

,:•

Southern~ Eastern

Paallbn-

eounv

No

T""'

I.

'o
d

·•

�'

'

._

\ _ Ti. Doib' SoadMI) ~.-...~. 0., 0&lt;:~ 30, 1968

.

-lr·.

.

'

'

'

'

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i

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:'
\

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•. •",
'

HOME OF 4, 000

LOW PRICES

.,

•

1gure on
Will Win The Election

We Don't Know Who

DON1

SAVE

SAVE
STAMPS
OR
GLUE

1 LB. CARTON

.

Doz.

OR
CRUNCH

IIOUGIITON'S

IAGNERS

CARNATION ALL FLAVORS

...
t.

l'

1 ••.

36e

•

INSTANT BREAKFAST
NESTLES
CHOC.QUIK
HERSHEYS

,.'

~

f

'

•

SPAGHEnl DINNER

8•··

PRESERVES

8 ••.

18 ••.

II oz.

18 oz. jar

can

12e

STRAINED

3 29e

BAIY FOOD
PIESRYES

5U
59e

TOMATO SOUP

KRAFT

47e

12 ••.

••

·:'

21e
37e

l•r

1ae
, lb. b•· 49e

DOG FOOD

•• ••· a2e

Gi""' Slao

~.~·

79e
·:.:·· 29e
bo. 1oe
All
3M

TOLIET TISSUE

\

CAMPBELL$

,.
.

·~.:··

1se

4 11
;:..

3te

~

No.1

VEGETABLE

~()111»••••••• ~:••
•

II
IHEN()ERSON, •• VA.

..
L~.

'

STOCK YOUR FREEZER

'

'.

.

.·FRESH DRESSED

.

SIRLOIN nP OR RUMP

'

RED
EMPEROR

JUICY

BEEF ROAST____~~-·
TENDE•st

CUBE STEAK...~:-

ARMOUR$

CHILE WITH lEANS '!:·· 37e
VIETTI
!:~ 63e
POB IAR-1 QUE
WELCH
. _
Uoa. 3JC ·
GRAPE JUICE
DEL MONTE

PRUNE

~UICE

MUSSELMAMS

APPLE SAUCE
SLICED PINEAPPLE

32

•••

:!

45e
19e

.!~ 45e
.

;

qt.

ORANG.E DRINK•••••- •••••

Flavors

CHARMIN

DEL MONTE

LOW SUDS

DASH

JELLO
DUNCAN HINES
CAKE MIXES
KEN-L·RA TIDN

KRAFT

AMERICAN CHEESE

CHOt SYRUP
ALL FLAVORS

KRAFT SQUEEZE

lUST
GRAPE JELLY
BLACDERRY JELLY

29e

69e

.

I.

LB.

~

.·~ -

pllon

. ·'

~

~

FOODLAND

LEACH..•............~:'..

EVERYDAY LOW PRICES
OJ.,

41:1Mt1EIIttl5 •••.•.•••••~~ '

FOOOLAND

.,_r,\, ..
.,..
;.-

~.

lb.

SALAD

~1.

ICtiNNERS.l:i~•••
14

y

DlltEIIING........... ~: .

CHICKEN

I

I
N

c

MMEICt MIL

,.

..

T.

FOODLAND SALTIN£

2

BANQUET TV.

.

.,

o
·
N
UTS
ICt
................
·

.,0

M
p
A
R
E

POWDERED

l

H

0

•

FOODLAND

s

c

$$$
$$$$

MARGARINE

CHOICE GRADE ·

I

OUR FAMOUS

·Ha .
A
W 111
P"M

.

.
•... •
Ia

�'

'

._

\ _ Ti. Doib' SoadMI) ~.-...~. 0., 0&lt;:~ 30, 1968

.

-lr·.

.

'

'

'

'

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..

-'·

i

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:'
\

.

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.

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'

l

'

,_ •

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f '

_:•

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l

~

•. •",
'

HOME OF 4, 000

LOW PRICES

.,

•

1gure on
Will Win The Election

We Don't Know Who

DON1

SAVE

SAVE
STAMPS
OR
GLUE

1 LB. CARTON

.

Doz.

OR
CRUNCH

IIOUGIITON'S

IAGNERS

CARNATION ALL FLAVORS

...
t.

l'

1 ••.

36e

•

INSTANT BREAKFAST
NESTLES
CHOC.QUIK
HERSHEYS

,.'

~

f

'

•

SPAGHEnl DINNER

8•··

PRESERVES

8 ••.

18 ••.

II oz.

18 oz. jar

can

12e

STRAINED

3 29e

BAIY FOOD
PIESRYES

5U
59e

TOMATO SOUP

KRAFT

47e

12 ••.

••

·:'

21e
37e

l•r

1ae
, lb. b•· 49e

DOG FOOD

•• ••· a2e

Gi""' Slao

~.~·

79e
·:.:·· 29e
bo. 1oe
All
3M

TOLIET TISSUE

\

CAMPBELL$

,.
.

·~.:··

1se

4 11
;:..

3te

~

No.1

VEGETABLE

~()111»••••••• ~:••
•

II
IHEN()ERSON, •• VA.

..
L~.

'

STOCK YOUR FREEZER

'

'.

.

.·FRESH DRESSED

.

SIRLOIN nP OR RUMP

'

RED
EMPEROR

JUICY

BEEF ROAST____~~-·
TENDE•st

CUBE STEAK...~:-

ARMOUR$

CHILE WITH lEANS '!:·· 37e
VIETTI
!:~ 63e
POB IAR-1 QUE
WELCH
. _
Uoa. 3JC ·
GRAPE JUICE
DEL MONTE

PRUNE

~UICE

MUSSELMAMS

APPLE SAUCE
SLICED PINEAPPLE

32

•••

:!

45e
19e

.!~ 45e
.

;

qt.

ORANG.E DRINK•••••- •••••

Flavors

CHARMIN

DEL MONTE

LOW SUDS

DASH

JELLO
DUNCAN HINES
CAKE MIXES
KEN-L·RA TIDN

KRAFT

AMERICAN CHEESE

CHOt SYRUP
ALL FLAVORS

KRAFT SQUEEZE

lUST
GRAPE JELLY
BLACDERRY JELLY

29e

69e

.

I.

LB.

~

.·~ -

pllon

. ·'

~

~

FOODLAND

LEACH..•............~:'..

EVERYDAY LOW PRICES
OJ.,

41:1Mt1EIIttl5 •••.•.•••••~~ '

FOOOLAND

.,_r,\, ..
.,..
;.-

~.

lb.

SALAD

~1.

ICtiNNERS.l:i~•••
14

y

DlltEIIING........... ~: .

CHICKEN

I

I
N

c

MMEICt MIL

,.

..

T.

FOODLAND SALTIN£

2

BANQUET TV.

.

.,

o
·
N
UTS
ICt
................
·

.,0

M
p
A
R
E

POWDERED

l

H

0

•

FOODLAND

s

c

$$$
$$$$

MARGARINE

CHOICE GRADE ·

I

OUR FAMOUS

·Ha .
A
W 111
P"M

.

.
•... •
Ia

�'
l(irst pound U10 low~r udklc ot lie will alw· ttJvu iWD;IH to iull
the H.k.om about 2" so the Rber LO make arrarcCIIKlf'ILI.
will absorb a mlxtura or glyeer..
In and water. Tlie mixture Can,..
11JE MASON IIONEMAKEn.\;,
slsts ol one--third glycerin and ~oween pa~ held II tile llcime
two-thirds water ancl should ex- or Mrs. Evelya stewart'• was
o &amp;all affair·. - will! Lautend about 3 to 5 Inches "' the
atem. The foliage should remain rene Lewis arrlvlow In a f!Q'in the mixture of gbcerine and per'• ootftt - today It mlgtil bO
water for about two week11 or called o hippie oulllt ·- bot til)'·
longer, When the material lllls how abe looked about 25 yeara

;Named Trilstee
PT. l'LEASANT .;. Tb~ West
Virginia ltoopltal Aasocllllon, at
' tl1e Greenbrier In White Sulphur
Springs, W. Va., recentl,y elected
Kathleen C. Mariihout a member
or lta bol.rd ·or truateea. ~ is
•lnlstrator ot Pleasant Valley
Hospital.
Attending the convention with
Most of our beautiful dowers
Mra. Marnhout as representa- wiD soon be gone. ChrysantheU ves o~ the Local Hospital Aux- mums are espedaUy pretty tllis
iliary were Mra. Ronald Given, time of the year. J "have packed
Mra. Jim Craddock and Mra. flowers~ and more nowers, to the
James Gibeau~ Mrs. Mornhout basement, but I can't keep them
reports thai eoch year tho Auxll· all.
lary baa received an aw'ard for
I would like to remind you of
oulltlindln, service. She &amp;aid she
cooncllor, Mrs. Mary C8pehnrl,
ls confident that "We have one or
attended the Blermerhassett Disthe ftnest aDd most pr'Oductive
trict
Student Council meeting at
groups in the state. 11
RavensWood High School. S I udents going were Student Council
GO TO RAVENSWOOD
MASON - Five Wahama stu- president, Gary Burdette, Cindy

dents, along with their guidance

PUF

LILT
SPECIAL
HOME
PERMANENT

FACIAL
TISSUES
LARGE

·" fected ''Scalter.o!~e-Week ln

ONLY )

801

BAN

Mr. and Mrs. Earl Johnson
and soo, Brian, of Ma11011, and
·.jheir daughter, Mils Allee F11e

ean bestow on a volunteer scoot-

Johnson of Columbua, spent the

SPRAY DEODORANT
v

.

·.~

f

JERGENS

ONLY

~ks

galore at.
~~-·~ the Mason Homemakers
llalloween party Friday evening
t·. at the home or M:rs. Evelyn
; 'Stewart In Mason with M r s.

;

, f Mrs. Laurene Lewis won the
I ~ door prize, andotlt.,rprlzeswere
l .awarded to Mrs. Evelyn McDu; lei

ol MaSOn, most original eoo~-Gime: Mrs. J. R. Marshall, fUn.
~., nleat; Mrs. John Roach, ugllest,
:1.·1ad Mickey Young, prettiest.
!I .' Ol!lcers electod tor the com-

[ IJir year were Mrl. R11 Fox,

ONLY

I

'

1

ONLY

;· president; Mrl. Evel,yn Slewart,
f. WCe prealdenti Mra. Lawrence
L- Roush, secretary; ldrt, J. R.
1' .¥orshall, lreaaurer, and Mra.
'' '1klberla Young, d!&gt;votlonal lead-

: er.
:. ·; 11te club snelnbers, by seer"
' ·~ voted tor on outslalidlng

. 'dub member and runner-up. Mrs.

·Mckey

WATCH
YOUR PAPER
FOR OUR

NEW
TOYLAND

Young and Mr&amp;.

Ray

Fox

ror the hc:llor, Botll were de-

REG.
SIZE

ONLY

14 01.
lillie

·.. -~~~: as outatandlng c I u b
/
Rumer-up wa111 DoroCutwrlght.

5TH and PEARL STS., RACINE

News, Notes

·-

FUL- VALU BUY!

29,

Hom,ecoming.

Vlalllng recently with Mr. and
Mro. Paul Fitzgerald at Kankakee, IWnolL, were MrS. Max~
lne Arnold, PollleriiY: Mrs. Mary
Aumiller, · Hartford; Mr. and

Mra. Reuben Stewart, Ma110rt. .
Mra. Fitzgerald waa the torIJler &amp;laama Arnold of Pome-

-·

f

f

SALTINE
CRACKERS

ARGO SLICED

6

2 10. 43c

16 oz.
loaves

'1

4

~~~!~

Frlskles Mix

FEED
251••

lAG

1.00

NESCAFE
INSTANT COFFEE

DINTY MOORE

R811&gt;ur~ at

Munclio, Ind.
Sit. and Mrs. 114nald L. Roush

~

't

II
d
0

Kraft

Miracle Whip
lalacl••••lng

SPARE RIBS

Permanent

FRENCH FRIES

3

'
LOW PRICE!

::~

1.00

----------------········-,--,··4

49c

LANDSUDE PRODUCE VALUES!

21b.39e ·
'

PRUIONE
ANTI· FREDE

1.79

eallon
Mrs. Tucker's

Golden Ripe

!;

59~

quart

FROZEN FOOD
Crinkle Cut

'; ft£(-~. 80NE.S

II

cans

LHn and MHty

FRES~PORK

rt

OYSTER
SlEW
3 10~···1 e 00

1.99

lb.

•

r
I

Hilton's

rQI'.

Mrs. Harry Grimm, Maoon,
returned bome alter visllingw!lh
her son and daughter-ln~aw anci
famlly, Mr. and Mrl. ~...

1 29

10oz.
jar

BEEF SlEW
11121•. can 49~

DOG

25~

lb.
bx.

FUL-VALU BUY!

FUL-VALU BUY!

I.

Pride Brand

FUL-VALU BUY!

PEACHES
Amounts

-~

I

FUL-VALU BUY!

Lener

I

Open ••· thru S.t.
9 to 9--Sun..y 10 h 7

PANCAKE MIX

lowing surgery. Her at ster and

brotber..fn..:law, . Mr. and Mrs.
l'ller Roush, visited her oo limday.
Mr. and Mrs. Reuben Stewart
vlallod In HWitington over the
weekend with their son, Gary,
a mualc majOr al Marshall Unl·
varsity and attended Marshall's

Oct. 31. Nov. 1-2

AUNI.IIMIMA

~~

'
I

10c OFF LABEL

2

•

Prices Effective

recuper~

ating from surgery at the Holzer
Hospital.
·
Miss Alma Dudding remains
a patient at the Thomas Mem~
orlal lloapllal In South Charlestoo. Sile Is uneble to walk lol-

I

We accept Fed. Food Stamps

8.ananas
. hple Cider=· 89C
Sweet Untreated Pure

.

I

I
I

Rivht reserv~ to limit quantitiesi

where they visited the Jolmsons'

..e...u,.

. ~~=~~ ilabl!! and A'*,~

SJ
_.The Store With A Hart"

R11 Fox .......,.ed a or ~11011 will leave November
be sent to Jamea Van- 2 for Frankfort, Derrnlll1l'. Sst.
Ia llletloeod In VIet.. Rouoh will be sla!loned In .Ger·
Yourw,Maaon,acknowl- mlll1)'.
ha•inl recelvod a box from
11.1•• carol Fruth, Maaon, and
cl..,, He alao lo olallmedln ll.lu' Soeya Yooker; New Haven,
- · at tile Charlowere Mrs. Kather- both
~ Ac:odem,y, vl(liled W
SWatzel. Mr1..- Edna ~. i&gt;orents
Laurene Lewio, Mrs, EIJz.
Mra. John ·Laper and children
Jefferl, Mn, Evelyn Me.;.
'!I ailed.her mother,
Mr1, Clara Willlam1,
earlwrlght Ia ~Gloecl&lt;ner, Mrs. • Elale
'Mrs. Lawrence R""sh,
and Mli,
n: ·lJOroth.Y Corl'litl&amp;li~ 1\ld.
'.at ·.
MrO. Edlib F 0 k,
the
.!llckoY ·YOUII&amp; ' Mro. Rob-

C~:~

w. u.

,/

Us McDaniel, Mason.
Mrs. R!Q' Tucker Is

} iJ-Roberta Young, Cllltoo, assist..
~ tng hostess.

BATH
SOAP

BOWLS

MASON -

co.

M8S0fi Area

In Droves to

jf

LARGE
PLASTIC -

a com.mJttee member oC Troop
200.

Spooks Come

: Mason Party

MASON

Flower Cit.v will demon..
strata decorations and nower
arrangements for the holidays,

pkgs.
of 3
loaves

R.

ONLY

C.n•IHITII'III

BREAD

us Hoi~-,· ' ""~nze·.··,D
. .~~lnJaw, Mr. and Mrs.
.. ' "ew !Iavin.
r3Sy '·• •t ' - '": · om ~,.,..,.,
,,...,... . Rou .,....,
·,.,
j!!lce s.l'vl'ee MIDJnl:lira. ·.·•..Mr.' and ~·· Clarence lhle
~~ ··Uon, Dept. or commerce,
vlalted in Ravenswood over the
"'&lt; ID Gallia County and through- ~ekend with Mr. lhle's sister,
:
•
Amanda Von Nest.
Mr. and Mrl. Charles Yooker
of New Haven recently took a
scenic trlp to Blackwater Falls
and to paris of Virginia.
Mr. and Mrs. James Loyd and
1011 ot Marlon, Indiana, recent!¥ returned home alter visiting
J
· her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Cur~

..... t"'•

sso.ao .........ICt •

Stone' 11

Pete bas lnlluenced IIIBl\V boys
In hlsllme and baa played avery
Important part In character .d e·
velopment and citizenship trainIng ol lhooe boys. Pole Is now

• ·tng h1a farm and his activities son, Michael, who is attending
· Iii acoutlng, has aloo been an Auto Dleoel Collese there.
obaerver lor tile U. s. Weather
Mr. and Mro. Clll'lon Ru.,ell
1
.Bureau.
or Mason were dlmer guests
, 'Thla year he recelvod lheJolm on limday with their daughter

FAMILY
SIZE
•

addition to operat-

3 ·ROOMS
New Furniture
ONLY $'299

HOUUM
Bake &amp; Serve

weekend In Nashville, Temessee

er.

... Pete. tn

younger-.

is the holiday foods workshop
whicll will be held on Nov. 13, at
1:30 p,m. in Lhe Appalachian
Power Company Auditorium.
Mrs. Virginia Black, home ec~
nc:mist, will demonstrate.
Also on that day, Mr. stone of

log."

.·,1!Ie Melio.Qollla-MaiiOil District.
; · Pete llartod In scouting aa
·· u asalatant scoutmaster In 1924
..but did oot register with tho Boy
,-Scoots o( America until 1928
Wilen he became acoubnaoter tor
:,\ ' ' years of what Ia now known
.; .. Troop 200, the oldest Boy
(' Seoul troop In tile natlan.
. '· Ht GpeDed his !arm, where he
ilao llvod since 1893, to- B o y
.: !lcouts and Girl Scouts lor con. ' ~rvallon proJects and camping
{111928.
'i·. McCormitk received the Drift
· 'liiver heaver awardod In M.G-M
• oijslrlcl lor hla service to boys
'· ··fil' 1941, Thls Is the hlgheat
award that a Boy Scoot ....,en

RAINCOATS
.,

when a workshop wiU be conduct,..
ed on Dec. 4, by Jane Cox, 4-H
Agent from Putnam COWlcy, The
workshop wUI be !rom 10 Lm.
untll 3 p.m. at APpelachlan Power Co. in Pt. PleasanL
Several types of foliage can be
dried by the glycerin method.
Especially pretty are the magnolia leaves, sourwood and beech.

· / Edwin R. (Pete) McCormick, out M-G-M district, "Pete" Me,._- lt. 2, Gallipolis, has been &amp;e- COrmick Ia known a!I''Mr. Scout-

REG. 1.29

..•

Foglesong, and Brent Clark.

fully absorbed the glycerin mb:·

ture, the leaves will cha~e color.
Most dried lollages oold by
the beautiful arrangements ilat Craft Fairs usualb cost about25
can .be made friHD drtod lollage, cents eacll. ao you can sec-to have
weeds, grasses, seed pods, as a fairly large arrangement of
.)Yell as n&lt;Mers. Now Is the time dried materials will average
to start gathering these materl· around $3,
als &amp;o they will be available
The next Item or impnrllm."e

Named
;t~couter OfWeek

'

BOX

Foglesong, Cheryl Bums, Kathy

lrli4o

.

' '

:.

,.,.

Yt~eta.le

II

•

�'
l(irst pound U10 low~r udklc ot lie will alw· ttJvu iWD;IH to iull
the H.k.om about 2" so the Rber LO make arrarcCIIKlf'ILI.
will absorb a mlxtura or glyeer..
In and water. Tlie mixture Can,..
11JE MASON IIONEMAKEn.\;,
slsts ol one--third glycerin and ~oween pa~ held II tile llcime
two-thirds water ancl should ex- or Mrs. Evelya stewart'• was
o &amp;all affair·. - will! Lautend about 3 to 5 Inches "' the
atem. The foliage should remain rene Lewis arrlvlow In a f!Q'in the mixture of gbcerine and per'• ootftt - today It mlgtil bO
water for about two week11 or called o hippie oulllt ·- bot til)'·
longer, When the material lllls how abe looked about 25 yeara

;Named Trilstee
PT. l'LEASANT .;. Tb~ West
Virginia ltoopltal Aasocllllon, at
' tl1e Greenbrier In White Sulphur
Springs, W. Va., recentl,y elected
Kathleen C. Mariihout a member
or lta bol.rd ·or truateea. ~ is
•lnlstrator ot Pleasant Valley
Hospital.
Attending the convention with
Most of our beautiful dowers
Mra. Marnhout as representa- wiD soon be gone. ChrysantheU ves o~ the Local Hospital Aux- mums are espedaUy pretty tllis
iliary were Mra. Ronald Given, time of the year. J "have packed
Mra. Jim Craddock and Mra. flowers~ and more nowers, to the
James Gibeau~ Mrs. Mornhout basement, but I can't keep them
reports thai eoch year tho Auxll· all.
lary baa received an aw'ard for
I would like to remind you of
oulltlindln, service. She &amp;aid she
cooncllor, Mrs. Mary C8pehnrl,
ls confident that "We have one or
attended the Blermerhassett Disthe ftnest aDd most pr'Oductive
trict
Student Council meeting at
groups in the state. 11
RavensWood High School. S I udents going were Student Council
GO TO RAVENSWOOD
MASON - Five Wahama stu- president, Gary Burdette, Cindy

dents, along with their guidance

PUF

LILT
SPECIAL
HOME
PERMANENT

FACIAL
TISSUES
LARGE

·" fected ''Scalter.o!~e-Week ln

ONLY )

801

BAN

Mr. and Mrs. Earl Johnson
and soo, Brian, of Ma11011, and
·.jheir daughter, Mils Allee F11e

ean bestow on a volunteer scoot-

Johnson of Columbua, spent the

SPRAY DEODORANT
v

.

·.~

f

JERGENS

ONLY

~ks

galore at.
~~-·~ the Mason Homemakers
llalloween party Friday evening
t·. at the home or M:rs. Evelyn
; 'Stewart In Mason with M r s.

;

, f Mrs. Laurene Lewis won the
I ~ door prize, andotlt.,rprlzeswere
l .awarded to Mrs. Evelyn McDu; lei

ol MaSOn, most original eoo~-Gime: Mrs. J. R. Marshall, fUn.
~., nleat; Mrs. John Roach, ugllest,
:1.·1ad Mickey Young, prettiest.
!I .' Ol!lcers electod tor the com-

[ IJir year were Mrl. R11 Fox,

ONLY

I

'

1

ONLY

;· president; Mrl. Evel,yn Slewart,
f. WCe prealdenti Mra. Lawrence
L- Roush, secretary; ldrt, J. R.
1' .¥orshall, lreaaurer, and Mra.
'' '1klberla Young, d!&gt;votlonal lead-

: er.
:. ·; 11te club snelnbers, by seer"
' ·~ voted tor on outslalidlng

. 'dub member and runner-up. Mrs.

·Mckey

WATCH
YOUR PAPER
FOR OUR

NEW
TOYLAND

Young and Mr&amp;.

Ray

Fox

ror the hc:llor, Botll were de-

REG.
SIZE

ONLY

14 01.
lillie

·.. -~~~: as outatandlng c I u b
/
Rumer-up wa111 DoroCutwrlght.

5TH and PEARL STS., RACINE

News, Notes

·-

FUL- VALU BUY!

29,

Hom,ecoming.

Vlalllng recently with Mr. and
Mro. Paul Fitzgerald at Kankakee, IWnolL, were MrS. Max~
lne Arnold, PollleriiY: Mrs. Mary
Aumiller, · Hartford; Mr. and

Mra. Reuben Stewart, Ma110rt. .
Mra. Fitzgerald waa the torIJler &amp;laama Arnold of Pome-

-·

f

f

SALTINE
CRACKERS

ARGO SLICED

6

2 10. 43c

16 oz.
loaves

'1

4

~~~!~

Frlskles Mix

FEED
251••

lAG

1.00

NESCAFE
INSTANT COFFEE

DINTY MOORE

R811&gt;ur~ at

Munclio, Ind.
Sit. and Mrs. 114nald L. Roush

~

't

II
d
0

Kraft

Miracle Whip
lalacl••••lng

SPARE RIBS

Permanent

FRENCH FRIES

3

'
LOW PRICE!

::~

1.00

----------------········-,--,··4

49c

LANDSUDE PRODUCE VALUES!

21b.39e ·
'

PRUIONE
ANTI· FREDE

1.79

eallon
Mrs. Tucker's

Golden Ripe

!;

59~

quart

FROZEN FOOD
Crinkle Cut

'; ft£(-~. 80NE.S

II

cans

LHn and MHty

FRES~PORK

rt

OYSTER
SlEW
3 10~···1 e 00

1.99

lb.

•

r
I

Hilton's

rQI'.

Mrs. Harry Grimm, Maoon,
returned bome alter visllingw!lh
her son and daughter-ln~aw anci
famlly, Mr. and Mrl. ~...

1 29

10oz.
jar

BEEF SlEW
11121•. can 49~

DOG

25~

lb.
bx.

FUL-VALU BUY!

FUL-VALU BUY!

I.

Pride Brand

FUL-VALU BUY!

PEACHES
Amounts

-~

I

FUL-VALU BUY!

Lener

I

Open ••· thru S.t.
9 to 9--Sun..y 10 h 7

PANCAKE MIX

lowing surgery. Her at ster and

brotber..fn..:law, . Mr. and Mrs.
l'ller Roush, visited her oo limday.
Mr. and Mrs. Reuben Stewart
vlallod In HWitington over the
weekend with their son, Gary,
a mualc majOr al Marshall Unl·
varsity and attended Marshall's

Oct. 31. Nov. 1-2

AUNI.IIMIMA

~~

'
I

10c OFF LABEL

2

•

Prices Effective

recuper~

ating from surgery at the Holzer
Hospital.
·
Miss Alma Dudding remains
a patient at the Thomas Mem~
orlal lloapllal In South Charlestoo. Sile Is uneble to walk lol-

I

We accept Fed. Food Stamps

8.ananas
. hple Cider=· 89C
Sweet Untreated Pure

.

I

I
I

Rivht reserv~ to limit quantitiesi

where they visited the Jolmsons'

..e...u,.

. ~~=~~ ilabl!! and A'*,~

SJ
_.The Store With A Hart"

R11 Fox .......,.ed a or ~11011 will leave November
be sent to Jamea Van- 2 for Frankfort, Derrnlll1l'. Sst.
Ia llletloeod In VIet.. Rouoh will be sla!loned In .Ger·
Yourw,Maaon,acknowl- mlll1)'.
ha•inl recelvod a box from
11.1•• carol Fruth, Maaon, and
cl..,, He alao lo olallmedln ll.lu' Soeya Yooker; New Haven,
- · at tile Charlowere Mrs. Kather- both
~ Ac:odem,y, vl(liled W
SWatzel. Mr1..- Edna ~. i&gt;orents
Laurene Lewio, Mrs, EIJz.
Mra. John ·Laper and children
Jefferl, Mn, Evelyn Me.;.
'!I ailed.her mother,
Mr1, Clara Willlam1,
earlwrlght Ia ~Gloecl&lt;ner, Mrs. • Elale
'Mrs. Lawrence R""sh,
and Mli,
n: ·lJOroth.Y Corl'litl&amp;li~ 1\ld.
'.at ·.
MrO. Edlib F 0 k,
the
.!llckoY ·YOUII&amp; ' Mro. Rob-

C~:~

w. u.

,/

Us McDaniel, Mason.
Mrs. R!Q' Tucker Is

} iJ-Roberta Young, Cllltoo, assist..
~ tng hostess.

BATH
SOAP

BOWLS

MASON -

co.

M8S0fi Area

In Droves to

jf

LARGE
PLASTIC -

a com.mJttee member oC Troop
200.

Spooks Come

: Mason Party

MASON

Flower Cit.v will demon..
strata decorations and nower
arrangements for the holidays,

pkgs.
of 3
loaves

R.

ONLY

C.n•IHITII'III

BREAD

us Hoi~-,· ' ""~nze·.··,D
. .~~lnJaw, Mr. and Mrs.
.. ' "ew !Iavin.
r3Sy '·• •t ' - '": · om ~,.,..,.,
,,...,... . Rou .,....,
·,.,
j!!lce s.l'vl'ee MIDJnl:lira. ·.·•..Mr.' and ~·· Clarence lhle
~~ ··Uon, Dept. or commerce,
vlalted in Ravenswood over the
"'&lt; ID Gallia County and through- ~ekend with Mr. lhle's sister,
:
•
Amanda Von Nest.
Mr. and Mrl. Charles Yooker
of New Haven recently took a
scenic trlp to Blackwater Falls
and to paris of Virginia.
Mr. and Mrs. James Loyd and
1011 ot Marlon, Indiana, recent!¥ returned home alter visiting
J
· her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Cur~

..... t"'•

sso.ao .........ICt •

Stone' 11

Pete bas lnlluenced IIIBl\V boys
In hlsllme and baa played avery
Important part In character .d e·
velopment and citizenship trainIng ol lhooe boys. Pole Is now

• ·tng h1a farm and his activities son, Michael, who is attending
· Iii acoutlng, has aloo been an Auto Dleoel Collese there.
obaerver lor tile U. s. Weather
Mr. and Mro. Clll'lon Ru.,ell
1
.Bureau.
or Mason were dlmer guests
, 'Thla year he recelvod lheJolm on limday with their daughter

FAMILY
SIZE
•

addition to operat-

3 ·ROOMS
New Furniture
ONLY $'299

HOUUM
Bake &amp; Serve

weekend In Nashville, Temessee

er.

... Pete. tn

younger-.

is the holiday foods workshop
whicll will be held on Nov. 13, at
1:30 p,m. in Lhe Appalachian
Power Company Auditorium.
Mrs. Virginia Black, home ec~
nc:mist, will demonstrate.
Also on that day, Mr. stone of

log."

.·,1!Ie Melio.Qollla-MaiiOil District.
; · Pete llartod In scouting aa
·· u asalatant scoutmaster In 1924
..but did oot register with tho Boy
,-Scoots o( America until 1928
Wilen he became acoubnaoter tor
:,\ ' ' years of what Ia now known
.; .. Troop 200, the oldest Boy
(' Seoul troop In tile natlan.
. '· Ht GpeDed his !arm, where he
ilao llvod since 1893, to- B o y
.: !lcouts and Girl Scouts lor con. ' ~rvallon proJects and camping
{111928.
'i·. McCormitk received the Drift
· 'liiver heaver awardod In M.G-M
• oijslrlcl lor hla service to boys
'· ··fil' 1941, Thls Is the hlgheat
award that a Boy Scoot ....,en

RAINCOATS
.,

when a workshop wiU be conduct,..
ed on Dec. 4, by Jane Cox, 4-H
Agent from Putnam COWlcy, The
workshop wUI be !rom 10 Lm.
untll 3 p.m. at APpelachlan Power Co. in Pt. PleasanL
Several types of foliage can be
dried by the glycerin method.
Especially pretty are the magnolia leaves, sourwood and beech.

· / Edwin R. (Pete) McCormick, out M-G-M district, "Pete" Me,._- lt. 2, Gallipolis, has been &amp;e- COrmick Ia known a!I''Mr. Scout-

REG. 1.29

..•

Foglesong, and Brent Clark.

fully absorbed the glycerin mb:·

ture, the leaves will cha~e color.
Most dried lollages oold by
the beautiful arrangements ilat Craft Fairs usualb cost about25
can .be made friHD drtod lollage, cents eacll. ao you can sec-to have
weeds, grasses, seed pods, as a fairly large arrangement of
.)Yell as n&lt;Mers. Now Is the time dried materials will average
to start gathering these materl· around $3,
als &amp;o they will be available
The next Item or impnrllm."e

Named
;t~couter OfWeek

'

BOX

Foglesong, Cheryl Bums, Kathy

lrli4o

.

' '

:.

,.,.

Yt~eta.le

II

•

�...

•
Dally SenUool, Middlcport-l'omeroy, 0., 0l'tober 30, l9GS

inois Democrats Nursing Slim Hopes
· Douglae.
David Merrick's not just . Soui shouter ArethaJo,ranklin's
luck)': he had the good judgment mJlllon.a.,ear career isn't hapto tum down u A Mother's Kiss- P1 - she wants a movle .•••

Rooney-alze.

BY JACK O'BRIAI'i

NEW YORK - The reconclllltiOII oC the bandleader Budd,y
Riches didn't take and the divorce ts on again .... All Bdwy ·

wtll turn out Dec. 4 at the Lamba

which bombed outa

000.
The Onassla wedding ma~ it
a Greek N. Y. season, oddly
etc., h given that Den of Equi- enough: Mykonos probably is the
Q''a aftedlona.te "Lambasting"' leading Greek restaurant for the
chic set and popular as it was,
.... f'lne man, Ben.
Guy Kibbee's daughter Lois now it's jammed .•.• The Golden
la collabing with Francis Farm- Room on Lexington Ave. a I so
er on the latter's autobiog .... grabbed onto the Greek renaisAlice Faye sa,ys she'd love to sance and played host to Ulo,
do another movie: ''But nobody Dagmar, Arlene Francis and
calls me ror one" ...• Dick Nix- Martin Gabel among other Inon's theme song "Nixon'! the stant Greeks .... Hanny YoungOne" was composed by Moose man said he took a Presidential
Charlap. And Moose is a lib- poll and with the first ballot,
eral .... Charlap's nickname is Humphrey led Nixon: Henny said
a fond sarcasm: he"s Mickey he ran into Helen Cabagan

Club when Dr. Ben Gilbert, ''Dr.
:sroac:twayn to all the theatres,
the Metopera, dozens of hotels,

WIFE PASSES THE BUCK
TO KEEP HER ..rMAGE"
Dear Helen:
As with all children, our two
get mlschievotui and sometimes
plain downright mean. I admit
they need discipline, occasion-

Z
'

ally a spanking.
But my wife refuses to discipline them. ~·11 yell her brains
aut. send them to their rooms,
and promise a good spanking
wbea J get home. Then she confroatl me with everything they
did wrong and tells me to go
and stnighlen them oot.
Helen, why should I always
be the vUWn who dishes o u l
punlahment? After a hard day
at work rd like to enjoy my
houae without aggravations, and
rd like to have my kids enjoy, not fear me. When my wife
tells me to "go up there a n d
spank them," the one rd like
to spank Is lllJ' wt!el
9te lla)'S It's a father's Wty.
1 lillY they should be disciplined when they are naughty, not
four or five hours later. What
. !I&lt;! JGU 1111)'? - JOHN
· Dear John:
I IIY your wife ia a cop-oot!
~·n win nothing but disrespect
rrom children who soon learn
she Is afraid of them. Wby not
turn her next •"discipline session" into a frank family discusaim? Tell her you'll be an ear,
but not a delayed whip and here.
after punishment (if really necessary) La immediate, or not at
all.
A psychologist might find hidden antagonisms here - a wire
who "gets even" with her Illsband by trying to mal&lt;e the lddo
fear him and love HER. B u l
long-diatance psychology is danprwl because It's often 'III1"'rlg..
So I'll stand on thia adrice:
Tell the liWe ga.l to fight her
own battles, and if she'd llltf!n
rather than yell, she woulm't
have 10 m&amp;JU' to fight! - H.
Dear Helen:
J think you overlooked some
algnificant aspects In the case
of the "Punished Preachers
Kid," whose father h a hell fire and damnation type.
Reaearch Indicates that preachers aa a group are beset by more
gullt-teeli.ngJ than the average
person. Perhaps this man "as
railed by guilt-obsesses parents
who used the whip too much, and
he follows In their footsteps,
as children often do - even
though they hated their homes.
Therefore,ltwillbealmostimpouible for the young lady to
avoid humiliating corporal punishment; or if she conforms entirely, then her two younger sis.
tera will get a double dose of the
father's wrath because he has a
psycllologlcal need to punish oth·
ers. He must pr(roe he is power ful in dealing with ''wrong'' so
God will approve or him.
Secondly, the idea of barebottom spankings for a 16-year-old
is loaded with slgnincanee. The
stmllaries to rape are l'lllller.
oua: Domination by the m a I e,
physical pain. humiliation, degra.
dation, etc. We can suspect thatlf
the rather &lt;)ertves perverted
pleasure from this, the harder the
girls work to avoid spankings,
the harder he will work at findIng excuses to continue hll punM
l1hment.
In short, the !ather is probob)f slek. I doubt he underRand&amp; himael£ or the rea8011s
for hit actions. Hla daughter
IDol,)' well be headed for U.e same
-ldnd ol BiCknesl. You should
f'lve directed them BOTH to'!U"tl 11¥chlatrJI, lnllead 0(
....,eedlng her with a u safe"
...... -JOE

Jl.r Joe:
. ~ 100're rl8h~ but yOtt

..

'

I

Jackie Gleasoo In Nov : ••• !!Dick
Nhr:m wtus, Billy Graham will
lead the prayers at the inaugura-

tlon.
Lee Marvin's big success must
be wearing hJm down: says he'll
buy a South Seas home for )lacetiona and to retire .... Right now
it's tougher than wartime to get
a N. Y. hotel room .•• Columbla Pix music publishing boss
Emil La.Vlola has a lullaby on his
hit parade: just welcomed a
daughter after four boYs In a
row. Named her Mary Anne.
Clint Walker and Oor.na Douglas of the TV aet expect to wed
.... Edward Schreiber won a 1964
Academy Award for a film short
{about Pablo Cauls); just the
title of his next film for Warners seems longer than his Oscar -shorlt "The Abode of Love,
the Conception, Financing and
Daily Routine of an English Harem in the Middle of the 19th Century.''
Yul Bryrmer gifted Katie Hepburn with a bike before starting "The Madwoman of Chail·
lot'' .... La Hepburn with penin-eheek replied, "I am oot in
the habit ot accepting bicycles
from men." ...• The Dover Deily on Lexington Ave. gets the
chic short-order set: Fred Astaire's sister Mrs. Kingman
Douglass, for Instance, does a
Iotta noshing there.
'"Cactus Flower" passed i t s
1,200th performance; Betsy Palmer's been lnltmoret.hanayear;
it's one of the two funniest comedies on Bdwy.

MIGHT be wrong, and that's why
I seldom write, "This Js sick"
ln my column. t can't chance a
guess based on what might be
an exaggerated letter, not when
it could split a family in two!
Moreover, even if psychiatry
were indicated, do you reall,y
think this type of man would
accept it for hlmsel( or h I s
chlldren'?
M.v "safe"answerdoesn'thave
nearly the fascination that your
tlleory offers, but it may bring
relief to a strained situation.
P.S. r\ow that "P.K," has hopefully calmed down, let's hear
from HER which .. advice" she
prefers. - H.
This column is dedicated tL
family living, so if you're havIng kid trouble or juat plata
trouble, let llelen help YOU.
MASON - Three new memSle will also welcome your own bers attended the Mason Mothamusing experiences. A-:ldress er's Club when the group met
Helen Bottel In care of t h I s recently at the home of M r s.
newspaper.
Lawrence foreman with Mrs.
Belva Lewis and Mrs. Gary
Roush assisting as hostesses.
They are Mrs. Charles Knopp,
Mrs. J. W. McMurray and Mrs.
Larry Noble.
The Foreman home was decorated for Halloween and many
guests attended masked. Mrs.
Larry Noble received the prize
MASON - Mrs. Ralph Goy, for not being Identified. Movies
district president, Mrs. Clyde were shown of the club's parRaeber, District treasurer, and ticlpatlon in a style show.
Mrs. VIrgil Sleeth, all o! HuntAttending the meeting were the
ington; Mrs. Keith Miller and officers, including the president,
Mrs. Stewart Baker of Glen- Mrs. Betty Lish; vice president,
wood, w. Va., were guests or Mrs. Gladdle ~art; secretary,
Women's 9lclety of Christian Mrs. Lois Weaver; treasurer,
Service of Clifton Charge of Unit- Mrs. Carol Proffitt, and these
ed Methodist Church.
members, Mrs. Mary Berry,
Mrs. Ray Fox welcomed the Mrs. Eleanor Ewina, Mrs. Donmembers and guests and intro- na Fowler, Mrs. Donna Gibbs,
duced charge president, Mrs. Mrs . 9taron Hotrman, M r s.
Ada Clarke, ~ Crabam.
Mayme Noble, Mrs. Lucille
The Cllft.on Charge was invited SWackhamer, Mrs. Pat Wilson,
to the Christ United Methodist Mrs. LaVera Yeager, and new
Charter meeting on October 28. members, Mrs. Knopp, Mrs. McThe charter will remain open Murray, Mrs. Noble and hostunW the December meeting. Mrs. eues.
Clarke introW.ced Mrs. Ga.Y, who
gave a very interesting talk oo QUICK QUIZ
work of the sociefiy. The one aim
Q-How Jar away can a
is to achieve 10 0neness" in the
dragonfly
see?
church. Rev. Mrs. Bernice Wink~
AThe
large
eyes of this
ler was introduced by Mrs. Fox,
insect are able to see motionwho spoke briefly to the group.
less objects almost six feet
Refreshments w e r e served away, and moving objects two
from a beautitully decorated ta- or three times that distance.
ble with a large pumpkin filled
Q-How many coinage
with fall flowers and favors of
mints does the United States
small pumpkins.
Mrs. Eunice Harts, Mrs. Laur- operate?
A-Mints now operate in
ene Lewis and Mrs. Frances OlDenver, Colo., and Philadeliver served on the refreshment
phia, Pa., and on a temporary
committee. Mrs. JuneBumsser - basis in San Francisco, Calif.
~ed on the decorating committee.
Q- How far can a dromedary camel travel in a day?
The Puits B e r g e r near
A-It can run across the hot
Grenoble, France, is consid · desert sands at about 10 miles
ered the deepest cave in the an hour, and can travel as far
world.
as 100 miles In a day.

New Members

Are Welcomed

Discount
DAyS Thursday
ONLY! Friday
BUY 2 Pr. Get

1

TO TIE
FIIST

144

ADULT CUSTOMEIS

Expensive.... It

Gift Buying Is
NATIONALLY ADVERTISED CANNON

*
*

ROWER

Hare To Bel .

REG. 2.50

STEEL PINS
BRASS PlNS

CLUTCH PURSES1.44

PINS

.00

WESTINGHOUSE

CLOCK RADIO 11.88
(Limit

3 OT. ELECTRIC

CORN POPPERS 3. 33

REG.1.

-

59

GIFT SETS
REG . 1.9B.BOUDIOR &amp; CURLER

BONNETS
6.66 JEWEL

(SAVE

4e _

' Rea. 10c sale

99~

1.00

REG . 2/1.96 BOXED .

ATIONERY.

REG. 5.95

Visitors Cnme
For Meeting

And Hanrahan - there's a of specific pockets or the state ,.
name to bring a tear ot where election day prospects
gladness to the eye of a Chicago can
generally
be
divined.
Among them:
precinct captain.
The llth Ward of Chicago,
Edward
V,
Hanrahan is
down by the stockyards, parked
rumi~ for state'a attorney of
Cook County, All indications are with South Side Iri shmen and
that he will win in style,
If Poles who have been voting
he does Mayor Richard .1, Democratic since they were old
Daley's magnificent Chicago enough to get into an election
political machine could emerge booth, boasting as their party
from an embarrassing election committeeman none other than
day as stro111 as ever, at least Daley himself•
Point of Pride
on its home grounds.
· - The straw poll conducted by
ll has been an uiXIerstandable
the Chicago Sun Times showed point of pride witll Daley to
inching
l4J
on bring the 11th in big on eleclioo
Humphrey
Richard M. Nixon, but still day. In 1960, when John F.
trailing · by 8.46 percentage Kennedy barely squeaked past
points.
Nixon In Illinois, there was no
George C. Wallace was well doubt of the issue in Daley's
back in third place, but hurting neighborhood. Kennedy got 76,89
Hwnptu'ey in the Chicago wards per cent of its votes and
he most needs and nipping at allowed only 23.11 per cent to
Nixon in the Chicago suburbs Nixon.
and downstate counties.
This year, Humphrey is ahead
Dirksen showed indications of as a Democrat should be in lhe
winning In a walkaway and 11th, but with only 41.01 per
Republican Richard B. Ogilvie cent of the vote, according to
appeared comfortably ahead of the Sun-Times poll. Wallace,
Shapiro.
whose law and order pitch
The poll hurt Democratic touches a raw nerve on the
feelings most In its examination

"{:•;;,!teilin and

town SIIJP)' White's ooml.c career gets
to the discordant tlllle or $500,- another boost - he atars with
es,,.

(lllJO -Now that
can ' be done about It,
DeJilocrats 1re getting
connrmatim of their
som.e encou'
tor their slim hopes.
..
wont fears hover over
I ~-l ~~ . fatea
of Hubert H.
:v 'li~hre,y •. who wants to mo11e
f Into the White House, samuel
H. Shapiro, wllo wants to keep
; ·\: hi.&amp; lease on the governor's
, . ll'!llu.lom and Illinois Atty. Gen.
~~ \VUUam G. Clark, who dre1ms
· · of replacing Everett M. Dirksen
in tJu~ U.S. Sena.te.
A week from election day,
· nothl~ very good can be said
for the chance !I of any of them
\ in Illinois.
'1
Slim Hopes
, The Democrats' slim hopes
are pegged on three men whose
•. rlllJ'leS ar~ far from household
words, even in Illinois- Powell,
Howlett and Hanrahan.
Paul
Powell
is Illinois'
· secretary of state and Michael
J. Howlett is its state auditor.
, Both appear likely to keep their
1 jobs after Nov. 5 and save the
· Democrats a foot in the door in
,Springfield, the state capital.

E.

SETS

STEAM IRON

1

68~

P.EG. UB

PROCTOR SILEX, ELEC.
REG. 11.50

BATH SCALES
'PARTS

KEEPERS

66

, REG. 1.49

ROT AIY TOOL IE
Reg. 2.79

COOKIE JARS

1.88

Hi BROWS

1.77

THE BEST
IN PIIONOf.

Hungarian, Now
Millionaire, Put on Show

The promoter of the Saturday (teacher) and Tannehill played victory in a furious third game.
It made Tamchill known in taWide World of ~rts (Channel doobles together In 1967 and
ble
teMis circles of the nation.
13) table tennis exhibition 16 won their match. At that time
But Miles, even at their last
yean ago was a pennilesa ref· Aiser, who is generous with help
confrontation earlier this ,year
ugee rrom the Hungarian revo- to younger players coming up,
continued
to ignore TaMehill' s
lutJon who married a smalltown urged his young partner to stay
existence.
girl from Indiana and toda.Y ls with the game. Alser thought
Coming up for Tannehill, on
a mllllonaire proprietor of a he could be a world caliber pla,yNov.
16-17, are the 196R Naaports and cultural eellter cen- er by age 19.
tional
Team Championships in
teriq ln Grand Central Slatton
In the show last Satur~, the
Detroit
where the two cou ld meet
•-; in }lrlew York CU;y.
''background
commentator,,.
again.
Miles,
however, may not
He Ia Geza Gadzag, who llke Richard Miles, 10 times nationbe
In
the
1968
event
ashe is playmost athletic-minded Uungari- a1 U. S. singles champion and
ing
less
frequently,
devoting
ans, was a ranked table tennis world ranked in the fifties, Is
more
time
to
promoting
t he
player in his naUve land In his an independently wealthy sportssport
on
television.
youth.
n'lan of New York Cll;y who writes
Tannehill is No. 2 on the four The "'Vanderbilt Invitational for national magazines. Miles,
man Ohio men's team, behind
Tournament,•• from wbJch theta- about 40, three years ago pracDal Joon Lee, No. 1, who lives
ble tennis exhibition was taped, ticed for a month and reached
now in Cleveland, and ahead of
and ran Saturday, actually took the men's alngles finals in the
place laat August. It was the U. S. Open at Detroit where he Don L.Yons, 32, Dayton, former
Ohio men's champion, and RiehM
~ second IUCh promoUon by Gad- lost to Bernie Bukiet, alto a forard
Ferrell, 19, Columbus.
~~It...-as the first; bowewer, · ·,mer Hungarian now ll11ina tn the
The
Ohio team will be heav .
·)., Utat Gadzag su~eeded ln "sell- U. s.
lly favored to bring the team
ina" for national televbion show- A year after that tournament
, lng.
Tannehill, then 14, defeated his championship to Ofllo for the
JoJtn Tannehill, then 15 yeara first ·~tg name" opponent. Jt first time since 1958. No Amer Ican player has defeated Lee in
old, ~ Middleport, as the na· came in the National T e a m
the three years he has been here.
tion's top ranked player under championships at Detroit. TanAnd Tannehill is informally rank 18 years old, participated In the nehlll, playing on an "lnternaed In the top five of the active
firlt Gadzag promotion in t h e tiona! I(J18d,,. met Miles, on the
players oC the nation.
aummer .of 1967 which was tele- New York team and upset him
Lyons and Ferrell are unrankvised rellooally In the New York two games to one.
ed
nationally but will be strong
area.
The match went like many
No. 3 and 4 pltQ"ers.
The chief European rrtars upsets in sports. Miles took the
brought to America by Gadzag !!rat game easily with his !anIn 1967 to play against Dal Joon tastlcally clever chopping and
Lee (who lost In the semi-linals other defensive tactics against
to Kjell Johannson or Sweden Tarmehill's all-hitting game.
In the Saturday show) and TanBut Miles eased ott in the secnehlll were Hans Alser, who won ond game, perhapl not wishing
the 1968 event, o! SWeden, and to make the kid !rom Ohio look
the Communist Jaroalava Stanek, too bad. The kld, given time to
&amp;aropean champion, of Czech- solve Miles' , strategy, caught
oslovakia:
fire, won the second game, and
Alser, a profeasionall)'mna&amp;t then squeaked out a deuce score

.~~~ERAL

STEAl·

A haunted house was a feature in the Halloween decoratloos lor a ilmda,y ochool .11"11¥
held Monda,y n!yjlt altho Pomeroy
First Baptist Church.
Jayne and Judy Cottrill, Darla Sheridan, George Sdnner,
and Jam and Jimmy woes had
charge oC · decorations lor the
party. Costumes were Judged by
Mrs. J, Edward Foster, llld Mr.
and Mrs. Jenkins Slusher with
~ prizes going to Marla Sheridan, the pretdest; Ricky Couch,
the ugliest; and Mrs. Thorne
Cottrill, the moot original. ·

ht -JI.

I

99

\&amp;Ave,~ I

without weight in these fine

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t
t
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Bandshell
Design
Dire&lt;ls lhe
Sound

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sulomatic 4·speed record chan1er.
Built-in AM radio has control switch for
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Toward Your

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INGELS FURNITURE
PH. 992·2635

I

For
Regular or
Dry Skin

MIDDLEPORT

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Bottle

44'r~
•••

•

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63C

'

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'

or Hand Lotion

~-

Bayer nurtu
Reg.98c
Bottle
of 100

1

..
~

13 oz.

Packed
Can Fresh Roasted

MIXED NUTS
Salted

'I
II
i.

'o
d

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AMBERTONE

3.60

..

!ltlmer, ChrlsUna a n d
Anita Sllerldan, and Todd

Benny

ill

....
d

llyoel~

Janice, Rlclq, Ronnie,
Jell, and Bob C&lt;luch, Orval WOes,
WUllam Sheridan, Jr., Mr. and
Mn. George 9dmer. Mrs. Tom
llyoell, and Mra. Harry BaUey.

\

'

99~

PAJAMAS

c~~&gt;ottt•• tamt llld

...,u.

- · · · Names lliW be kept coofttllr&gt;.
• ttal. Pttor to the Nov, 5 tlectlol, ro1ulta of tho poll (fig•
. URI onb') lliiU be lllliOlliiCOCL
,

DATELINE'S PRESIDENTIAL PoLL".

---Richud M, N.....

Where Shoet Are S.ns.ibly Priced

warmth

2 5.00

ounr

HOLDERS

77~

,

Ladles' Cotton
Flannelette

·

THE SHOE BOX

BLANKETS

Model F-60

S!eam &amp; Cry iror&gt;, automatic powe• •P•oy, cor&gt;lour
handle, W&lt;l!lh &lt;llr&gt;d wear
~~tllings
ir&gt;sure correct

Mrs. WUUam Sllerldan and
Mrs. Cottrill had charge of recreation, and ,the retreshmenta
were served by Mrs. Orval WUea
and Mrs.
Michael.
Attending the ()1.113&gt; besides
those named were Lola, Bomie,
Ru&amp;cy, and Guy Walker; A n n a
Kathryn Wiles, Joan CotlrlU,

A._;

8-W Width

IRON

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Party for Youth ts Held

• I1.1&gt;o111, 0111o, U63L AU blaalta •ho!tld li!ollllle t1to

MEMO

ELECTRIC

New Shipments For Thi

A presldenllll poll Ia bel~~g COIIIIucted 1)y Dateline,
. : whose weekly column _.-s ID the SUnda¥ Tlmel-&amp;ln!l. nel. Trl-county Area. rulderto wtalltng to ~-· their
oplnloo are Invited to nn out the 11111* belqw, IIIli aWl It
to Dateline, SuniQ Tlmel-&amp;lnllnel, ~ riw.l
Gal -

LOAFER

·.sO

If that is the way things wii'MI
to the Sun.'J'irnes poll, while
Nixon takes 35.19 and Wallace up on the night of Nov. 5, Daley
25.46. Dirksen's margin over will be nursing a massive bruise
Clark in the county was a to his ego.
But · in equally practical
prohibitive 56 to 41 per cent.
Adding up the Winois figures terms, Daley's distrel'iS could be
a week and a half before the eased mightily if Hanrahan.
election, the poll found Hum- until recently a U. S. attorney,
phrey with just over 50 per cent rolls O\'er Republican Ald.
or the Chicago vote, which four Robert 0' Hourkc.
years ago accoun~ for 34 per
cent of lhe lllinois total.
Nixon had a healthy 57 per
cent bulge In the suburbs,
where more than 17 per cent of
tho state's votes wiU probably
be cast Downstate, the repository for about half the illinois
vote, it was Nlxon with 46 per
cent. Wallace did not get past
16 per cent in an,y of the areas.

GOWNS

&amp;A8Y·CARE

STRAP

MlDOLEPDRT, 0 .

THE BEST
JNRADIOI

which the mayor ir; a muter,
that could mean Daley's Demo-

'Pe~niless

,z.,

•.

AND ADDRESS

SILEX, REG. 1

and

SOuth Side, was a solid second
at 30.94 per cent and Nixon
collected 28, 06,
Downstate along the Missi ssipPI river in Madison County,
where Humphrey was also
ahead- but again not as he
should be.
In recent decades, Madison
County has stood by the
Democrats through losses and
landslides. When Dwight D.
Eisemower was taking Adlai E.
Ste~enson's own Illinois rrom
him in 1952 and 1958, Madison
County gave tim "governor" 58
and 54 per cent of its vote.
But this yoor Uu~ Democrats
or Madiso1 · r·ounty can scrape
up only l~!.
oer cent of the
voLe for llu1•.;Jitrey, according

'

crats wl)!ll'd· "hav,v f: ,'Olld .......,
o! their r&gt;U't¥ 11111 .their &lt;IIY
more ftrmly ..,.,.,. tllolr th•bl
than they
~."

!\~cording to Lhe mathemaUu
of t:hi~ago pCMcr politics, at

'

I

- - - HIDrt IJ. , HilliiPhrOJ

418 SHEET

TOP .uri PAIIUH

S~lid

co lon ond f~;~nc.,
printed
patterns .
Worm
wll'lt•r sle41_pwea• ot dis•
c;g,unf prh:e1.

LOWER PRICED ntAN EYEII
4x85hllb
Glazed Hickory
Pecan
ChanY Planked
Rustic Walnut

. NAILS

. TO MATCH

... A4clre•• --.-~--~--

_,.

"
i

S~L-XL.

99

. -- -o-ao Wallaee

Ntlne-,----,..----

Ftne potnwole eatton
cord .... af in choice of
b . .t fa I ca lMs . lont
1IMve, f..,ll cut. Sla••

i'
I

�...

•
Dally SenUool, Middlcport-l'omeroy, 0., 0l'tober 30, l9GS

inois Democrats Nursing Slim Hopes
· Douglae.
David Merrick's not just . Soui shouter ArethaJo,ranklin's
luck)': he had the good judgment mJlllon.a.,ear career isn't hapto tum down u A Mother's Kiss- P1 - she wants a movle .•••

Rooney-alze.

BY JACK O'BRIAI'i

NEW YORK - The reconclllltiOII oC the bandleader Budd,y
Riches didn't take and the divorce ts on again .... All Bdwy ·

wtll turn out Dec. 4 at the Lamba

which bombed outa

000.
The Onassla wedding ma~ it
a Greek N. Y. season, oddly
etc., h given that Den of Equi- enough: Mykonos probably is the
Q''a aftedlona.te "Lambasting"' leading Greek restaurant for the
chic set and popular as it was,
.... f'lne man, Ben.
Guy Kibbee's daughter Lois now it's jammed .•.• The Golden
la collabing with Francis Farm- Room on Lexington Ave. a I so
er on the latter's autobiog .... grabbed onto the Greek renaisAlice Faye sa,ys she'd love to sance and played host to Ulo,
do another movie: ''But nobody Dagmar, Arlene Francis and
calls me ror one" ...• Dick Nix- Martin Gabel among other Inon's theme song "Nixon'! the stant Greeks .... Hanny YoungOne" was composed by Moose man said he took a Presidential
Charlap. And Moose is a lib- poll and with the first ballot,
eral .... Charlap's nickname is Humphrey led Nixon: Henny said
a fond sarcasm: he"s Mickey he ran into Helen Cabagan

Club when Dr. Ben Gilbert, ''Dr.
:sroac:twayn to all the theatres,
the Metopera, dozens of hotels,

WIFE PASSES THE BUCK
TO KEEP HER ..rMAGE"
Dear Helen:
As with all children, our two
get mlschievotui and sometimes
plain downright mean. I admit
they need discipline, occasion-

Z
'

ally a spanking.
But my wife refuses to discipline them. ~·11 yell her brains
aut. send them to their rooms,
and promise a good spanking
wbea J get home. Then she confroatl me with everything they
did wrong and tells me to go
and stnighlen them oot.
Helen, why should I always
be the vUWn who dishes o u l
punlahment? After a hard day
at work rd like to enjoy my
houae without aggravations, and
rd like to have my kids enjoy, not fear me. When my wife
tells me to "go up there a n d
spank them," the one rd like
to spank Is lllJ' wt!el
9te lla)'S It's a father's Wty.
1 lillY they should be disciplined when they are naughty, not
four or five hours later. What
. !I&lt;! JGU 1111)'? - JOHN
· Dear John:
I IIY your wife ia a cop-oot!
~·n win nothing but disrespect
rrom children who soon learn
she Is afraid of them. Wby not
turn her next •"discipline session" into a frank family discusaim? Tell her you'll be an ear,
but not a delayed whip and here.
after punishment (if really necessary) La immediate, or not at
all.
A psychologist might find hidden antagonisms here - a wire
who "gets even" with her Illsband by trying to mal&lt;e the lddo
fear him and love HER. B u l
long-diatance psychology is danprwl because It's often 'III1"'rlg..
So I'll stand on thia adrice:
Tell the liWe ga.l to fight her
own battles, and if she'd llltf!n
rather than yell, she woulm't
have 10 m&amp;JU' to fight! - H.
Dear Helen:
J think you overlooked some
algnificant aspects In the case
of the "Punished Preachers
Kid," whose father h a hell fire and damnation type.
Reaearch Indicates that preachers aa a group are beset by more
gullt-teeli.ngJ than the average
person. Perhaps this man "as
railed by guilt-obsesses parents
who used the whip too much, and
he follows In their footsteps,
as children often do - even
though they hated their homes.
Therefore,ltwillbealmostimpouible for the young lady to
avoid humiliating corporal punishment; or if she conforms entirely, then her two younger sis.
tera will get a double dose of the
father's wrath because he has a
psycllologlcal need to punish oth·
ers. He must pr(roe he is power ful in dealing with ''wrong'' so
God will approve or him.
Secondly, the idea of barebottom spankings for a 16-year-old
is loaded with slgnincanee. The
stmllaries to rape are l'lllller.
oua: Domination by the m a I e,
physical pain. humiliation, degra.
dation, etc. We can suspect thatlf
the rather &lt;)ertves perverted
pleasure from this, the harder the
girls work to avoid spankings,
the harder he will work at findIng excuses to continue hll punM
l1hment.
In short, the !ather is probob)f slek. I doubt he underRand&amp; himael£ or the rea8011s
for hit actions. Hla daughter
IDol,)' well be headed for U.e same
-ldnd ol BiCknesl. You should
f'lve directed them BOTH to'!U"tl 11¥chlatrJI, lnllead 0(
....,eedlng her with a u safe"
...... -JOE

Jl.r Joe:
. ~ 100're rl8h~ but yOtt

..

'

I

Jackie Gleasoo In Nov : ••• !!Dick
Nhr:m wtus, Billy Graham will
lead the prayers at the inaugura-

tlon.
Lee Marvin's big success must
be wearing hJm down: says he'll
buy a South Seas home for )lacetiona and to retire .... Right now
it's tougher than wartime to get
a N. Y. hotel room .•• Columbla Pix music publishing boss
Emil La.Vlola has a lullaby on his
hit parade: just welcomed a
daughter after four boYs In a
row. Named her Mary Anne.
Clint Walker and Oor.na Douglas of the TV aet expect to wed
.... Edward Schreiber won a 1964
Academy Award for a film short
{about Pablo Cauls); just the
title of his next film for Warners seems longer than his Oscar -shorlt "The Abode of Love,
the Conception, Financing and
Daily Routine of an English Harem in the Middle of the 19th Century.''
Yul Bryrmer gifted Katie Hepburn with a bike before starting "The Madwoman of Chail·
lot'' .... La Hepburn with penin-eheek replied, "I am oot in
the habit ot accepting bicycles
from men." ...• The Dover Deily on Lexington Ave. gets the
chic short-order set: Fred Astaire's sister Mrs. Kingman
Douglass, for Instance, does a
Iotta noshing there.
'"Cactus Flower" passed i t s
1,200th performance; Betsy Palmer's been lnltmoret.hanayear;
it's one of the two funniest comedies on Bdwy.

MIGHT be wrong, and that's why
I seldom write, "This Js sick"
ln my column. t can't chance a
guess based on what might be
an exaggerated letter, not when
it could split a family in two!
Moreover, even if psychiatry
were indicated, do you reall,y
think this type of man would
accept it for hlmsel( or h I s
chlldren'?
M.v "safe"answerdoesn'thave
nearly the fascination that your
tlleory offers, but it may bring
relief to a strained situation.
P.S. r\ow that "P.K," has hopefully calmed down, let's hear
from HER which .. advice" she
prefers. - H.
This column is dedicated tL
family living, so if you're havIng kid trouble or juat plata
trouble, let llelen help YOU.
MASON - Three new memSle will also welcome your own bers attended the Mason Mothamusing experiences. A-:ldress er's Club when the group met
Helen Bottel In care of t h I s recently at the home of M r s.
newspaper.
Lawrence foreman with Mrs.
Belva Lewis and Mrs. Gary
Roush assisting as hostesses.
They are Mrs. Charles Knopp,
Mrs. J. W. McMurray and Mrs.
Larry Noble.
The Foreman home was decorated for Halloween and many
guests attended masked. Mrs.
Larry Noble received the prize
MASON - Mrs. Ralph Goy, for not being Identified. Movies
district president, Mrs. Clyde were shown of the club's parRaeber, District treasurer, and ticlpatlon in a style show.
Mrs. VIrgil Sleeth, all o! HuntAttending the meeting were the
ington; Mrs. Keith Miller and officers, including the president,
Mrs. Stewart Baker of Glen- Mrs. Betty Lish; vice president,
wood, w. Va., were guests or Mrs. Gladdle ~art; secretary,
Women's 9lclety of Christian Mrs. Lois Weaver; treasurer,
Service of Clifton Charge of Unit- Mrs. Carol Proffitt, and these
ed Methodist Church.
members, Mrs. Mary Berry,
Mrs. Ray Fox welcomed the Mrs. Eleanor Ewina, Mrs. Donmembers and guests and intro- na Fowler, Mrs. Donna Gibbs,
duced charge president, Mrs. Mrs . 9taron Hotrman, M r s.
Ada Clarke, ~ Crabam.
Mayme Noble, Mrs. Lucille
The Cllft.on Charge was invited SWackhamer, Mrs. Pat Wilson,
to the Christ United Methodist Mrs. LaVera Yeager, and new
Charter meeting on October 28. members, Mrs. Knopp, Mrs. McThe charter will remain open Murray, Mrs. Noble and hostunW the December meeting. Mrs. eues.
Clarke introW.ced Mrs. Ga.Y, who
gave a very interesting talk oo QUICK QUIZ
work of the sociefiy. The one aim
Q-How Jar away can a
is to achieve 10 0neness" in the
dragonfly
see?
church. Rev. Mrs. Bernice Wink~
AThe
large
eyes of this
ler was introduced by Mrs. Fox,
insect are able to see motionwho spoke briefly to the group.
less objects almost six feet
Refreshments w e r e served away, and moving objects two
from a beautitully decorated ta- or three times that distance.
ble with a large pumpkin filled
Q-How many coinage
with fall flowers and favors of
mints does the United States
small pumpkins.
Mrs. Eunice Harts, Mrs. Laur- operate?
A-Mints now operate in
ene Lewis and Mrs. Frances OlDenver, Colo., and Philadeliver served on the refreshment
phia, Pa., and on a temporary
committee. Mrs. JuneBumsser - basis in San Francisco, Calif.
~ed on the decorating committee.
Q- How far can a dromedary camel travel in a day?
The Puits B e r g e r near
A-It can run across the hot
Grenoble, France, is consid · desert sands at about 10 miles
ered the deepest cave in the an hour, and can travel as far
world.
as 100 miles In a day.

New Members

Are Welcomed

Discount
DAyS Thursday
ONLY! Friday
BUY 2 Pr. Get

1

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FIIST

144

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REG. 2.50

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ATIONERY.

REG. 5.95

Visitors Cnme
For Meeting

And Hanrahan - there's a of specific pockets or the state ,.
name to bring a tear ot where election day prospects
gladness to the eye of a Chicago can
generally
be
divined.
Among them:
precinct captain.
The llth Ward of Chicago,
Edward
V,
Hanrahan is
down by the stockyards, parked
rumi~ for state'a attorney of
Cook County, All indications are with South Side Iri shmen and
that he will win in style,
If Poles who have been voting
he does Mayor Richard .1, Democratic since they were old
Daley's magnificent Chicago enough to get into an election
political machine could emerge booth, boasting as their party
from an embarrassing election committeeman none other than
day as stro111 as ever, at least Daley himself•
Point of Pride
on its home grounds.
· - The straw poll conducted by
ll has been an uiXIerstandable
the Chicago Sun Times showed point of pride witll Daley to
inching
l4J
on bring the 11th in big on eleclioo
Humphrey
Richard M. Nixon, but still day. In 1960, when John F.
trailing · by 8.46 percentage Kennedy barely squeaked past
points.
Nixon In Illinois, there was no
George C. Wallace was well doubt of the issue in Daley's
back in third place, but hurting neighborhood. Kennedy got 76,89
Hwnptu'ey in the Chicago wards per cent of its votes and
he most needs and nipping at allowed only 23.11 per cent to
Nixon in the Chicago suburbs Nixon.
and downstate counties.
This year, Humphrey is ahead
Dirksen showed indications of as a Democrat should be in lhe
winning In a walkaway and 11th, but with only 41.01 per
Republican Richard B. Ogilvie cent of the vote, according to
appeared comfortably ahead of the Sun-Times poll. Wallace,
Shapiro.
whose law and order pitch
The poll hurt Democratic touches a raw nerve on the
feelings most In its examination

"{:•;;,!teilin and

town SIIJP)' White's ooml.c career gets
to the discordant tlllle or $500,- another boost - he atars with
es,,.

(lllJO -Now that
can ' be done about It,
DeJilocrats 1re getting
connrmatim of their
som.e encou'
tor their slim hopes.
..
wont fears hover over
I ~-l ~~ . fatea
of Hubert H.
:v 'li~hre,y •. who wants to mo11e
f Into the White House, samuel
H. Shapiro, wllo wants to keep
; ·\: hi.&amp; lease on the governor's
, . ll'!llu.lom and Illinois Atty. Gen.
~~ \VUUam G. Clark, who dre1ms
· · of replacing Everett M. Dirksen
in tJu~ U.S. Sena.te.
A week from election day,
· nothl~ very good can be said
for the chance !I of any of them
\ in Illinois.
'1
Slim Hopes
, The Democrats' slim hopes
are pegged on three men whose
•. rlllJ'leS ar~ far from household
words, even in Illinois- Powell,
Howlett and Hanrahan.
Paul
Powell
is Illinois'
· secretary of state and Michael
J. Howlett is its state auditor.
, Both appear likely to keep their
1 jobs after Nov. 5 and save the
· Democrats a foot in the door in
,Springfield, the state capital.

E.

SETS

STEAM IRON

1

68~

P.EG. UB

PROCTOR SILEX, ELEC.
REG. 11.50

BATH SCALES
'PARTS

KEEPERS

66

, REG. 1.49

ROT AIY TOOL IE
Reg. 2.79

COOKIE JARS

1.88

Hi BROWS

1.77

THE BEST
IN PIIONOf.

Hungarian, Now
Millionaire, Put on Show

The promoter of the Saturday (teacher) and Tannehill played victory in a furious third game.
It made Tamchill known in taWide World of ~rts (Channel doobles together In 1967 and
ble
teMis circles of the nation.
13) table tennis exhibition 16 won their match. At that time
But Miles, even at their last
yean ago was a pennilesa ref· Aiser, who is generous with help
confrontation earlier this ,year
ugee rrom the Hungarian revo- to younger players coming up,
continued
to ignore TaMehill' s
lutJon who married a smalltown urged his young partner to stay
existence.
girl from Indiana and toda.Y ls with the game. Alser thought
Coming up for Tannehill, on
a mllllonaire proprietor of a he could be a world caliber pla,yNov.
16-17, are the 196R Naaports and cultural eellter cen- er by age 19.
tional
Team Championships in
teriq ln Grand Central Slatton
In the show last Satur~, the
Detroit
where the two cou ld meet
•-; in }lrlew York CU;y.
''background
commentator,,.
again.
Miles,
however, may not
He Ia Geza Gadzag, who llke Richard Miles, 10 times nationbe
In
the
1968
event
ashe is playmost athletic-minded Uungari- a1 U. S. singles champion and
ing
less
frequently,
devoting
ans, was a ranked table tennis world ranked in the fifties, Is
more
time
to
promoting
t he
player in his naUve land In his an independently wealthy sportssport
on
television.
youth.
n'lan of New York Cll;y who writes
Tannehill is No. 2 on the four The "'Vanderbilt Invitational for national magazines. Miles,
man Ohio men's team, behind
Tournament,•• from wbJch theta- about 40, three years ago pracDal Joon Lee, No. 1, who lives
ble tennis exhibition was taped, ticed for a month and reached
now in Cleveland, and ahead of
and ran Saturday, actually took the men's alngles finals in the
place laat August. It was the U. S. Open at Detroit where he Don L.Yons, 32, Dayton, former
Ohio men's champion, and RiehM
~ second IUCh promoUon by Gad- lost to Bernie Bukiet, alto a forard
Ferrell, 19, Columbus.
~~It...-as the first; bowewer, · ·,mer Hungarian now ll11ina tn the
The
Ohio team will be heav .
·)., Utat Gadzag su~eeded ln "sell- U. s.
lly favored to bring the team
ina" for national televbion show- A year after that tournament
, lng.
Tannehill, then 14, defeated his championship to Ofllo for the
JoJtn Tannehill, then 15 yeara first ·~tg name" opponent. Jt first time since 1958. No Amer Ican player has defeated Lee in
old, ~ Middleport, as the na· came in the National T e a m
the three years he has been here.
tion's top ranked player under championships at Detroit. TanAnd Tannehill is informally rank 18 years old, participated In the nehlll, playing on an "lnternaed In the top five of the active
firlt Gadzag promotion in t h e tiona! I(J18d,,. met Miles, on the
players oC the nation.
aummer .of 1967 which was tele- New York team and upset him
Lyons and Ferrell are unrankvised rellooally In the New York two games to one.
ed
nationally but will be strong
area.
The match went like many
No. 3 and 4 pltQ"ers.
The chief European rrtars upsets in sports. Miles took the
brought to America by Gadzag !!rat game easily with his !anIn 1967 to play against Dal Joon tastlcally clever chopping and
Lee (who lost In the semi-linals other defensive tactics against
to Kjell Johannson or Sweden Tarmehill's all-hitting game.
In the Saturday show) and TanBut Miles eased ott in the secnehlll were Hans Alser, who won ond game, perhapl not wishing
the 1968 event, o! SWeden, and to make the kid !rom Ohio look
the Communist Jaroalava Stanek, too bad. The kld, given time to
&amp;aropean champion, of Czech- solve Miles' , strategy, caught
oslovakia:
fire, won the second game, and
Alser, a profeasionall)'mna&amp;t then squeaked out a deuce score

.~~~ERAL

STEAl·

A haunted house was a feature in the Halloween decoratloos lor a ilmda,y ochool .11"11¥
held Monda,y n!yjlt altho Pomeroy
First Baptist Church.
Jayne and Judy Cottrill, Darla Sheridan, George Sdnner,
and Jam and Jimmy woes had
charge oC · decorations lor the
party. Costumes were Judged by
Mrs. J, Edward Foster, llld Mr.
and Mrs. Jenkins Slusher with
~ prizes going to Marla Sheridan, the pretdest; Ricky Couch,
the ugliest; and Mrs. Thorne
Cottrill, the moot original. ·

ht -JI.

I

99

\&amp;Ave,~ I

without weight in these fine

I

thermal weave napped blank-

'

ets.

t
t
I

New
Bandshell
Design
Dire&lt;ls lhe
Sound

SOLID-STA FE f'HONO WITH
81/ILF-IN SOLID-STAFE RADIO
The SPECTATOR • Model X525

The best of both- automstie portable
phono plus AM radio in one compact
cabinet. Band·shell dasign. PorU.matic
sulomatic 4·speed record chan1er.
Built-in AM radio has control switch for
both radio and phono. Blue, White or
YeUow·Gold colors .

Toward Your

Reg 98C

LAY IT AWAY FOR CHRISTMAS NOW!

INGELS FURNITURE
PH. 992·2635

I

For
Regular or
Dry Skin

MIDDLEPORT

Dispenser
Bottle

44'r~
•••

•

33C
63C

'

'

'

or Hand Lotion

~-

Bayer nurtu
Reg.98c
Bottle
of 100

1

..
~

13 oz.

Packed
Can Fresh Roasted

MIXED NUTS
Salted

'I
II
i.

'o
d

•

AMBERTONE

3.60

..

!ltlmer, ChrlsUna a n d
Anita Sllerldan, and Todd

Benny

ill

....
d

llyoel~

Janice, Rlclq, Ronnie,
Jell, and Bob C&lt;luch, Orval WOes,
WUllam Sheridan, Jr., Mr. and
Mn. George 9dmer. Mrs. Tom
llyoell, and Mra. Harry BaUey.

\

'

99~

PAJAMAS

c~~&gt;ottt•• tamt llld

...,u.

- · · · Names lliW be kept coofttllr&gt;.
• ttal. Pttor to the Nov, 5 tlectlol, ro1ulta of tho poll (fig•
. URI onb') lliiU be lllliOlliiCOCL
,

DATELINE'S PRESIDENTIAL PoLL".

---Richud M, N.....

Where Shoet Are S.ns.ibly Priced

warmth

2 5.00

ounr

HOLDERS

77~

,

Ladles' Cotton
Flannelette

·

THE SHOE BOX

BLANKETS

Model F-60

S!eam &amp; Cry iror&gt;, automatic powe• •P•oy, cor&gt;lour
handle, W&lt;l!lh &lt;llr&gt;d wear
~~tllings
ir&gt;sure correct

Mrs. WUUam Sllerldan and
Mrs. Cottrill had charge of recreation, and ,the retreshmenta
were served by Mrs. Orval WUea
and Mrs.
Michael.
Attending the ()1.113&gt; besides
those named were Lola, Bomie,
Ru&amp;cy, and Guy Walker; A n n a
Kathryn Wiles, Joan CotlrlU,

A._;

8-W Width

IRON

&amp; DRY

Party for Youth ts Held

• I1.1&gt;o111, 0111o, U63L AU blaalta •ho!tld li!ollllle t1to

MEMO

ELECTRIC

New Shipments For Thi

A presldenllll poll Ia bel~~g COIIIIucted 1)y Dateline,
. : whose weekly column _.-s ID the SUnda¥ Tlmel-&amp;ln!l. nel. Trl-county Area. rulderto wtalltng to ~-· their
oplnloo are Invited to nn out the 11111* belqw, IIIli aWl It
to Dateline, SuniQ Tlmel-&amp;lnllnel, ~ riw.l
Gal -

LOAFER

·.sO

If that is the way things wii'MI
to the Sun.'J'irnes poll, while
Nixon takes 35.19 and Wallace up on the night of Nov. 5, Daley
25.46. Dirksen's margin over will be nursing a massive bruise
Clark in the county was a to his ego.
But · in equally practical
prohibitive 56 to 41 per cent.
Adding up the Winois figures terms, Daley's distrel'iS could be
a week and a half before the eased mightily if Hanrahan.
election, the poll found Hum- until recently a U. S. attorney,
phrey with just over 50 per cent rolls O\'er Republican Ald.
or the Chicago vote, which four Robert 0' Hourkc.
years ago accoun~ for 34 per
cent of lhe lllinois total.
Nixon had a healthy 57 per
cent bulge In the suburbs,
where more than 17 per cent of
tho state's votes wiU probably
be cast Downstate, the repository for about half the illinois
vote, it was Nlxon with 46 per
cent. Wallace did not get past
16 per cent in an,y of the areas.

GOWNS

&amp;A8Y·CARE

STRAP

MlDOLEPDRT, 0 .

THE BEST
JNRADIOI

which the mayor ir; a muter,
that could mean Daley's Demo-

'Pe~niless

,z.,

•.

AND ADDRESS

SILEX, REG. 1

and

SOuth Side, was a solid second
at 30.94 per cent and Nixon
collected 28, 06,
Downstate along the Missi ssipPI river in Madison County,
where Humphrey was also
ahead- but again not as he
should be.
In recent decades, Madison
County has stood by the
Democrats through losses and
landslides. When Dwight D.
Eisemower was taking Adlai E.
Ste~enson's own Illinois rrom
him in 1952 and 1958, Madison
County gave tim "governor" 58
and 54 per cent of its vote.
But this yoor Uu~ Democrats
or Madiso1 · r·ounty can scrape
up only l~!.
oer cent of the
voLe for llu1•.;Jitrey, according

'

crats wl)!ll'd· "hav,v f: ,'Olld .......,
o! their r&gt;U't¥ 11111 .their &lt;IIY
more ftrmly ..,.,.,. tllolr th•bl
than they
~."

!\~cording to Lhe mathemaUu
of t:hi~ago pCMcr politics, at

'

I

- - - HIDrt IJ. , HilliiPhrOJ

418 SHEET

TOP .uri PAIIUH

S~lid

co lon ond f~;~nc.,
printed
patterns .
Worm
wll'lt•r sle41_pwea• ot dis•
c;g,unf prh:e1.

LOWER PRICED ntAN EYEII
4x85hllb
Glazed Hickory
Pecan
ChanY Planked
Rustic Walnut

. NAILS

. TO MATCH

... A4clre•• --.-~--~--

_,.

"
i

S~L-XL.

99

. -- -o-ao Wallaee

Ntlne-,----,..----

Ftne potnwole eatton
cord .... af in choice of
b . .t fa I ca lMs . lont
1IMve, f..,ll cut. Sla••

i'
I

�'
10 - The Dolly Seid.oel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., October 30, 1968

Washington••• ·
Report By a~nee MIHer
'

Plato once said, .. The punlab·
ment or wise men who reruse

to

take part in the affair• ol Y/1'i·
ernment is to live ww:ler t h e
~

government of untuSe men.

..

On election day, Nov. 5, It Ia
up to each or us to demonstrate
that representative government

is still the world's best politiCAl hope.
In the l964 presidential elec-

,.

.

,.

"The real ..rvlee Is not ron·
dered bJ' the er!Uc wro itlndl
aloof from !hi COIIIelll, but ~
the man onierl It and bearo

hlo port u ,mon ....,ld-"

Shootmg
• ill
Under Probing

Voting 11 "'"" an Olllf actloo.

Ill ll1lftll IOctlonl Ill SoutheaotIm Ohio It lo oven eaaler than
ol-re. Unleao yau live wltllrather than merell' Ond fault. ln the dey limits ct ..,. Ill our
He saJd: "It II not the man who larger dUes :rou need not evim
·
alta bJ' hlallreplace roodllll! hla be registered 1o - ·
And voting Is a Utile like 110evonilll! - r and A)'lng bad ...,. politico and poiiUdans tna to dlurch- It MIJ' be eome
are wro will eYer do llll!'lhlnR to tromle w get there, but It Jlveo
save us; ft 11 the man who goes you BUeh a i0QC1 teellq as J'OU
out into the r&lt;JUlll&gt;, hurJ,y-burll' leave.
Tcy that aood feeling - of
at the caucus, the prilllU)' • ~e
having
done your civic ~ - on
political meet:ing, andtherefacea
NoveM&gt;er
sth.
his fellows on eQJ.al terms.

tion some 43-million Americans
cast a ballot. 43-mlllion sounds
like a great many until you rea~

"' =

POINT PLEA$ANT - The Ma100 00U111;f Sherut . Department
and Stale l'ollce are iltvestlgatlng a brooking and enterlq and
llhooCII!g '• · which O&lt;curred at
Georp lliJ're Drive II at New
lla&gt;en earll' Tueoday IMrlllq.
Acconllng to olillcero S a Y r e

· . - that he ohot at a male as
he was near the restaurantwhleb
bad alread,y been entered and
lllOOOY taken from tile pinball
machine_ Sa,yre sold he felt he

had hit the man

a1

he seemed

;:~;:;::: :.:;;.:.·: ;: ::;:;:;:: ::::~:;:~:;~~l:l::;:l~~::;:;:;&lt;;:::;;:

PI'. PLEASANT -

'Throe

Ma.., Count;y men reported .
to Alhlllld, Ky. ,..Tuelldaf for
lnmction Into the armed oervices acC!OJ'dlna to Dene 9Nn-

mer of Local Selictlon BoaH
No. 24,

'lbe three men were Maur·
ice Clayton Jeflers, Jooeph
Dean Selle&amp; and Rlchar&lt;l Allen

;::~~~::::::;::::::::;., .......- :i:::::;;;;;(-ii!l!liti::::l:::l;:;:

oRDER SIGNED

PI', PLEASANT "'- M or&lt;ler ·
baa _

a1poc1

liY lhO c1rcutt •

Court and entored In the olillce
ct the circuit c:lork dlsmloslnl
- the ciYfl acdon
Patricia ani!
Sct&gt;tV Soladelln va, Charles liar-

or

~.

Plain Docamellt Blrtha
Genealogy Is documenied

by dellcale china on the Island
to staaer when the shot was of Rhodes. Families there
decorate theli" walls wllh
!I reel
Police arrived at the aeeae p 1a t e s commemorating the

ahort!Jo tllereafler but the per- birth of eaeh child.
BOn or persona had ned and a
check oC the area hospitals tailIn early days, Ottawa, cap·
of Canada, was a logging
ed to reveal
beinl treat- Ita!
community ot 10,000 people
ed for gunshot wounds.

lilY'"'"

and was known as Bytown.

'.

.

Toda;r's

;

,,., .

cap destfoyer e'~

Unl!..t.PreaalrU~,.u...l

u - The DaLly Sentinel, Middlcport-romeroy, o., October au, 1968

':._

,..,.....d and ....~ an

n manac
By

·~

Ameri-

thoulh thl

PLAY

.......

Unltoci'-States wtili· not at war.
,In 1948 an ·Arm,y tnn111ort

arrived in New York harbor
il-om ·(J 8 "'1"il' . with the nrot
follow.
·
·
relupo 1 to entor tho, nation
-·The moon h betWeen itl tirat unde~, the Dl·ll~ed Persons
quarter and full Pha...
Att.
·•
The p10rnlrc atan Ire
Jn 1965 AmerlcU plinesldll.:l
MereurJ, Mars 1nd J~lter.
48 South vtetrw.meae lee~·
The evening stai'a Ire saturn 1y boJnbine: tbe wrofte UeL
and Venus.
A thoiosht ~r the 111¥: Geor&amp;e
On this Ill¥ In hlsiDry:
~chao! Cohan Wt~, "No matter
In 1938 Orson Wells caused a what MIJ' lii&amp;IPOn. wlat over
panic with his radio dramaUza- ..._, llofall 1 orQ- m- that
lion of an invoslon of New c I'm · m!F,; glad to 11o llvllw,
Jersey by creatures from Mara. that I• aiL"
··
Tudl¥ Is Wednelldaf, OCt. 30,
the ·304th day of 1968 wttll62 to

In 1941 a German stanartne

AND

No Purchase Required To Play!
••
·-.
.•

Kroger

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79c

a hostess

Bulk sliced

l

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books
books
books
books
r •

• ·'

$2.29

3:-111. can

4 '

59c

lb.

Dutch Chocolate
79c

99c Ham _____

""'·

55c

lb.

Sausage
Whole Frtsh or Smoked
39t Sauerkraut 11. ••· 39t Picnics

Sticks

lkr.
IO.IVII

49c

f-Ib.
pail

79c

Sucher's Pure

99c

Lard

Ha111

39c
39c

lb.

lb.

3 lb.
can
I

Angel Food take

Cocktail

~f

I

Kropr Large Lemon Cvst•rd or
--

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Clot

f

$1

I
I

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a..n

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-

•

29c

•

Milk ___________ 7

Sputli1 ht

Lund•on Mut

h.

Kroger EY•por•t•d

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-- -- - - ---

$1.59

Del ,.,..,. Whole Ko..,.l Gold

89c Corn _____ 5

12-t:L
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Kroger Gradt A &amp;xtr• L.,...

Eggs ..... - 2
Tea Bags

~;:.~

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dor.

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Fast Fmt111 FavoriiBI

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Hl'!alth &amp; Beauty Aids

49c

...... kg.

KLEENEX

Facial Tissues
:liDO-ct. box
28c

DISCHARGED - ~erry Smith,
ft. Pleasant; Paul Gtrlach, Pt.
Pleasant; Mrs. Clifford Carder,
pt, l'leasant; Mrs. James John11011, Masou; Kerry Smith, GalUpolls Ferry; Mrs. Charles Edmonds, Glenwood; Mrs. 0 key
Keefer, Leon; Walter Selby, Pt .
Pleasant; Mrs. Walter Peterson
and son, Pl. Pleasant; Mrs. Daniel Christian, Pl. Pleasant;
Filena Lynch, Pt. Pleasant; Mrs.
Ralph Watterson, A.pple Grove;
Michael Hussen, Pt. Pleasant;
tilly Dudding, Pt. Pleasant.
BIRTH : Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Runion, Pt. Pleasant, a son.

KLEiiNEX JUMBO

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35e
l&lt;LEENEX

Napkins
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DEUiY TINTS I PRINTS

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0.1 Monte Mixtd
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CreamPies3

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B.nquot Pu.in or Mince

Hudlon Astorted Color•

Tawels ___ 3

Now

Cheese ____ _crtn. 59c
2-lb.

glont

rollr

89c Tide

l-Ib., 1-or.

-----·

box

68c

I~ pkt.

•

-- .. - ..-

1Wo COU·

plea have made applications for
marriage licenses In the offfce

c1 the counly clerk. Awll'ln8
were Frankie Edward Buck, 18,
Grinuns J,andlng, and Sandra Kay
Tucker, 16, Robertsburg, and
Floyd Rl¥ Knapp, 20, Letart,

Apples 4 49c

'&gt;/

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------

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51 S'lse Llrn. Deodormt

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Command

68c
53c

3-or.
lui..

68c

..... 68c
con

110 Sisa

Vam~

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35c

Oranges 10 '•r 79c

_4

tbo.

49c

...... 39c

Frorh

lb.

Pie

3Dinach

29c

P'rnh Heart&amp; of

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Pumpkin

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A.,o, CMNy, or Gropo

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Grapefruit

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~ ~iii:KYII- yPP VALUI lfAijjH)

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No~vel

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Tomatoes

lb.

FREE •oo

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tic Siu H•ir Drws•lnw

Ice Mdk Bars 2 ......
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hi ltd

Potatoes
25

U/Z/68

and RltO Mae Strange, 16, LeW1.

d

!unrltt·F...... Rllfl'le

C/ lllUU
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89c

12

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Florida White Duncan

tonight .

BUiferm

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L

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'I

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Lavoris

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Krotlf' Skim or 2%

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happy

59c

Chef'• Delight Rq. &amp; Plrrwnto

89c Pineapple_ 3 t-~~;..·..~ $1

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Ch eese ___ . _ ......
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b,l Mont1 Sllc1d, c,,,.h,d, Tidbit•

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89c Peaches 3 •-l•·;o~!.... 89c

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Gr...,

).lb•• 2-or.

.-'

..
L --

$1

Or-.Punch
Plno.-CIMorry,

27c

2....rl ""'·

C.lns

4 ::~ 89c Green Beans 4 ~~~; $1

Sausage
Surf

1-lb.

Dol - . Bluo Loko Cut or
F....,h Style

HOI'n'lel Vl1111na

LO&lt;HIC!ry

•

89c

lb.

DEL MONTE
BRAND FRUIT

Bread

K...,.r Hot

57c

22-o1, bottle

•

box

lb.

r

Thrill

•

•

Sucher or Hy1Ndt
"Country Style" Roll

KROGIR
BRAND WHITE

Spam -~-- 2

INSTANT

books

ter Smithson, Letart.

PI'. PLEASANT -

Bacon

Marhotffer Canned

Coffee

Another joy of Top \'aluc Siamp-sa\'ing:
the heautiful Redemption Centers \\·hert'
you select your gifts, and where courteous
people really u·anl to make you happy .

PT, PLLASANT - "Trick
or Treat" rright will be observed in Point P leasant on
Thursday from 6 until 8 p.m.
City police are urging motorists to use extreme caution when driving through clQ'
streets that night as children
in costumeli will be weaving
back and rorth acrosa t h e
streets.
The cit.Y of Henderson will
al80 observe Trick or Treat
on Thursday at the samehl:urs
while Mason and 1\ew Haven
will hold their trick or treat

:1-lb.

CHASE &amp; SANBORN

ADMmED - Mrs. Carroll
Casto, Pt. Pleasant; PhillipGrueaer, Jr., pt, Pleasant; Van Robbins, Pt. Pleasant; Mrs. Wal-

~·:·:;:.:-:·:·:·:-:.:.:·:·:·:

Bologna

l-Ib.

$1.52

lkr. iar

saving Top \'alue Stamps! Pictured are
a happy sample:

PLEASANT VALLEY IIOSPU AL
Oct. 30, 1968

....

Full Shank HaN $mekod

,..,_ 49c Whiting

:Spray

Delightful extras she might n&lt;&gt;t otherwise have ... that's one of the joys of

books
booki

29c

DIAL DEODORANT

Cascade

i

H&amp;D

12·01,

Instant t;offee

are the very foundation of our
representaUve form of government.
Some 60 years ago Teddy
Roosevelt emphasized the need
for persons to improve politics

I

Annour All Meat

FOLGER'S

Glass punch set, 20 pieces.
. .. 3 4/5
7 piece salad set by Gala..
. .. 2 1/5
Permanent floral arrangement .......... 2
Odagonallazy susan ....... : ...... 3 4/5
Mikasa "Carouul'' usual ~;hma
·45 piece service fat 8 ........... 11 2/5
Durable press lace table doth . · · · · · · .. 3
West Bend "Country Kettle" ··
· · · ·6 4 / 5

Ill_

lb.

$1.09

lb.

Holl Ro?.st _______

Potato (;hips
..!::!!- ,k,._-~49_c_

Cubed Ste~k

99c

Ill_

Ttnder•y aon.~Hs tktlton

Wieners

OFF)

Whole, Half, or First Cut Piece

t;aCOn

79c

ed States and the Bill oC Rights

i

Ground Round

DAN DEE TWIN PACK
UC)o...,EN WAVEi
(tic

Sweet Smoli!ed Bacon

$1.19

Lean &amp; Tender

Crlsco
can

lb.

.Emh&amp;-

10 a.m.- 7 p.m.

J.lb.

Thrifty

Jowl

lb.

99c

T-lione Steak

USDA CHOICI TENDERAY

Open Sunday

any Kroger Store. Coupon void after 11/2/68

"' sign.
21 didn't recognize it but signed aJ\YWiQ'.
S8 didn't recognize it and re111 &lt;0&lt;1 to sign.
OJt of 111 persons only 32
rec:ognized the BUI &lt;I Rights.
It is dift'icult to understand those
· who refused to sign after recognizing it.
It is very unfortunate that 79
of the 111 didn't recognize it.
The COnstitution or the Unit-

!

Tllrilty lr..r

lb.

Talllo11

Round Steak

Pomeroy

Thnlty

Sirloin Steal\ -- -- ...

Full Cut- Bone In
By The Piece

llze tllat at the time there were

This coupon good for 100 extra Top Value
Stomps with a purchase of $5.00 or more at

Start ~l•ying "lintO OcWI lintt Ewttd" ...
day. Win up to $~CI.DOI Adults •ly .,.
eligible to play. Limit GN pme ,.._ ,..
IUrlOn per store visit. FREE v-nt fldltb
aveilable at all Kroger storn an4 by writiet
Dansico As~«lat.s., Inc., P. 0. lox .,-C,
Birmingham, Michigan 41110.

Welt-Trimmed

_.,,r•-...,, ,-.. , krovar Co., 1HI
Wo r.Hrvt th rleht to
limit quanli»el,

J H-million Americans oC voting
age.
What happened to the other 11
mHlion'? Obviously a number of
persons have good, valld rea-

sons for not casting ballots on
election day. But I would venture to say that certainly not
71-million people had good reason to stay awa,y from the polls
tn November o( 1964.
In the past rew years we have
heard many stodea in which our
citizens have demonstrated a reluctlince to become lnvoiV:ed:
There have been news repOrts
ot muggers and murderen attacking others In plain sight and 00 one taking the tl me to
beCQme involved to try to help
the victim. You may wonder what
this !las to do with voting. But I
suspect the two are related. I
believe apathy could rost us our
freedom, our Nation, and all else
we hold dear.
This apathy Is not new, but it
does seem to be growing.
An example of persons no t
wanting to be involved Is that of
two teenagers in an Eastern city,
They rang doorbells to find out
just how much people know about the u. s. Constitution.
They gave each person a copy
cA a "petition." Actually it was
the BUI of Rights. Here are the
results of what happened:
15 Persoos recognh:edthedocumern and signed it.
17 recognized It and refused

UP
TO

••••

FRi!EIOO

---

jiXIU YOI' VALUI IYAIIPI
--~-.--.

..

....... 011Exp. lllJ/68

5 ~69C
FREE 50

·-

Jrl•llmA - "ALIII"AMJ"t:;1
-

~ &amp;totJoo- .............

-ow-.

Exp. lilt/A

,..........

~""'Gr.-­
Exp. 11/2/68

�'
10 - The Dolly Seid.oel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., October 30, 1968

Washington••• ·
Report By a~nee MIHer
'

Plato once said, .. The punlab·
ment or wise men who reruse

to

take part in the affair• ol Y/1'i·
ernment is to live ww:ler t h e
~

government of untuSe men.

..

On election day, Nov. 5, It Ia
up to each or us to demonstrate
that representative government

is still the world's best politiCAl hope.
In the l964 presidential elec-

,.

.

,.

"The real ..rvlee Is not ron·
dered bJ' the er!Uc wro itlndl
aloof from !hi COIIIelll, but ~
the man onierl It and bearo

hlo port u ,mon ....,ld-"

Shootmg
• ill
Under Probing

Voting 11 "'"" an Olllf actloo.

Ill ll1lftll IOctlonl Ill SoutheaotIm Ohio It lo oven eaaler than
ol-re. Unleao yau live wltllrather than merell' Ond fault. ln the dey limits ct ..,. Ill our
He saJd: "It II not the man who larger dUes :rou need not evim
·
alta bJ' hlallreplace roodllll! hla be registered 1o - ·
And voting Is a Utile like 110evonilll! - r and A)'lng bad ...,. politico and poiiUdans tna to dlurch- It MIJ' be eome
are wro will eYer do llll!'lhlnR to tromle w get there, but It Jlveo
save us; ft 11 the man who goes you BUeh a i0QC1 teellq as J'OU
out into the r&lt;JUlll&gt;, hurJ,y-burll' leave.
Tcy that aood feeling - of
at the caucus, the prilllU)' • ~e
having
done your civic ~ - on
political meet:ing, andtherefacea
NoveM&gt;er
sth.
his fellows on eQJ.al terms.

tion some 43-million Americans
cast a ballot. 43-mlllion sounds
like a great many until you rea~

"' =

POINT PLEA$ANT - The Ma100 00U111;f Sherut . Department
and Stale l'ollce are iltvestlgatlng a brooking and enterlq and
llhooCII!g '• · which O&lt;curred at
Georp lliJ're Drive II at New
lla&gt;en earll' Tueoday IMrlllq.
Acconllng to olillcero S a Y r e

· . - that he ohot at a male as
he was near the restaurantwhleb
bad alread,y been entered and
lllOOOY taken from tile pinball
machine_ Sa,yre sold he felt he

had hit the man

a1

he seemed

;:~;:;::: :.:;;.:.·: ;: ::;:;:;:: ::::~:;:~:;~~l:l::;:l~~::;:;:;&lt;;:::;;:

PI'. PLEASANT -

'Throe

Ma.., Count;y men reported .
to Alhlllld, Ky. ,..Tuelldaf for
lnmction Into the armed oervices acC!OJ'dlna to Dene 9Nn-

mer of Local Selictlon BoaH
No. 24,

'lbe three men were Maur·
ice Clayton Jeflers, Jooeph
Dean Selle&amp; and Rlchar&lt;l Allen

;::~~~::::::;::::::::;., .......- :i:::::;;;;;(-ii!l!liti::::l:::l;:;:

oRDER SIGNED

PI', PLEASANT "'- M or&lt;ler ·
baa _

a1poc1

liY lhO c1rcutt •

Court and entored In the olillce
ct the circuit c:lork dlsmloslnl
- the ciYfl acdon
Patricia ani!
Sct&gt;tV Soladelln va, Charles liar-

or

~.

Plain Docamellt Blrtha
Genealogy Is documenied

by dellcale china on the Island
to staaer when the shot was of Rhodes. Families there
decorate theli" walls wllh
!I reel
Police arrived at the aeeae p 1a t e s commemorating the

ahort!Jo tllereafler but the per- birth of eaeh child.
BOn or persona had ned and a
check oC the area hospitals tailIn early days, Ottawa, cap·
of Canada, was a logging
ed to reveal
beinl treat- Ita!
community ot 10,000 people
ed for gunshot wounds.

lilY'"'"

and was known as Bytown.

'.

.

Toda;r's

;

,,., .

cap destfoyer e'~

Unl!..t.PreaalrU~,.u...l

u - The DaLly Sentinel, Middlcport-romeroy, o., October au, 1968

':._

,..,.....d and ....~ an

n manac
By

·~

Ameri-

thoulh thl

PLAY

.......

Unltoci'-States wtili· not at war.
,In 1948 an ·Arm,y tnn111ort

arrived in New York harbor
il-om ·(J 8 "'1"il' . with the nrot
follow.
·
·
relupo 1 to entor tho, nation
-·The moon h betWeen itl tirat unde~, the Dl·ll~ed Persons
quarter and full Pha...
Att.
·•
The p10rnlrc atan Ire
Jn 1965 AmerlcU plinesldll.:l
MereurJ, Mars 1nd J~lter.
48 South vtetrw.meae lee~·
The evening stai'a Ire saturn 1y boJnbine: tbe wrofte UeL
and Venus.
A thoiosht ~r the 111¥: Geor&amp;e
On this Ill¥ In hlsiDry:
~chao! Cohan Wt~, "No matter
In 1938 Orson Wells caused a what MIJ' lii&amp;IPOn. wlat over
panic with his radio dramaUza- ..._, llofall 1 orQ- m- that
lion of an invoslon of New c I'm · m!F,; glad to 11o llvllw,
Jersey by creatures from Mara. that I• aiL"
··
Tudl¥ Is Wednelldaf, OCt. 30,
the ·304th day of 1968 wttll62 to

In 1941 a German stanartne

AND

No Purchase Required To Play!
••
·-.
.•

Kroger

P. 0. No. 153376

79c

a hostess

Bulk sliced

l

.,

books
books
books
books
r •

• ·'

$2.29

3:-111. can

4 '

59c

lb.

Dutch Chocolate
79c

99c Ham _____

""'·

55c

lb.

Sausage
Whole Frtsh or Smoked
39t Sauerkraut 11. ••· 39t Picnics

Sticks

lkr.
IO.IVII

49c

f-Ib.
pail

79c

Sucher's Pure

99c

Lard

Ha111

39c
39c

lb.

lb.

3 lb.
can
I

Angel Food take

Cocktail

~f

I

Kropr Large Lemon Cvst•rd or
--

14·11:.
Clot

f

$1

I
I

KI'Cigtr R~. ar Drip

!~~·

$1.89

a..n

Coffee
-

•

29c

•

Milk ___________ 7

Sputli1 ht

Lund•on Mut

h.

Kroger EY•por•t•d

Cotfee _________

-- -- - - ---

$1.59

Del ,.,..,. Whole Ko..,.l Gold

89c Corn _____ 5

12-t:L
cons

Kroger Gradt A &amp;xtr• L.,...

Eggs ..... - 2
Tea Bags

~;:.~

$1

Dar'n-Fresh Dairy Foods

dor.

$1 Peas ____ 5

l ·lb., 1·01:.

c.1ns

Fast Fmt111 FavoriiBI

E·'1 ,.

D o l - Swoot

I.

I; -1

I

$1

Hl'!alth &amp; Beauty Aids

49c

...... kg.

KLEENEX

Facial Tissues
:liDO-ct. box
28c

DISCHARGED - ~erry Smith,
ft. Pleasant; Paul Gtrlach, Pt.
Pleasant; Mrs. Clifford Carder,
pt, l'leasant; Mrs. James John11011, Masou; Kerry Smith, GalUpolls Ferry; Mrs. Charles Edmonds, Glenwood; Mrs. 0 key
Keefer, Leon; Walter Selby, Pt .
Pleasant; Mrs. Walter Peterson
and son, Pl. Pleasant; Mrs. Daniel Christian, Pl. Pleasant;
Filena Lynch, Pt. Pleasant; Mrs.
Ralph Watterson, A.pple Grove;
Michael Hussen, Pt. Pleasant;
tilly Dudding, Pt. Pleasant.
BIRTH : Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Runion, Pt. Pleasant, a son.

KLEiiNEX JUMBO

Towels
35e
l&lt;LEENEX

Napkins
29c

!kt.......

DEUiY TINTS I PRINTS

Tissue

0.1 Monte Mixtd
100-c:t.

----box

79c Vegetables 5

Dolo"""

Dot Monto

---·-·

box

Embauy Pancake

2

~;

Tissue ___ 4

2 zv. ....

. has agift

for maki!IQ

okvs.

CreamPies3

C,teese Spread ;;.;:· 59c

B.nquot Pu.in or Mince

Hudlon Astorted Color•

Tawels ___ 3

Now

Cheese ____ _crtn. 59c
2-lb.

glont

rollr

89c Tide

l-Ib., 1-or.

-----·

box

68c

I~ pkt.

•

-- .. - ..-

1Wo COU·

plea have made applications for
marriage licenses In the offfce

c1 the counly clerk. Awll'ln8
were Frankie Edward Buck, 18,
Grinuns J,andlng, and Sandra Kay
Tucker, 16, Robertsburg, and
Floyd Rl¥ Knapp, 20, Letart,

Apples 4 49c

'&gt;/

'

------

Baby Magic

- 9-oa.

39c

Brylcreem __

'

AI.L PURI'OSE WHITE
U. $. NO, I, SIZI A

All Fl•vors Country Civil

51 S'lse Llrn. Deodormt

Ice Cream _. v..••r. 59c

Command

68c
53c

3-or.
lui..

68c

..... 68c
con

110 Sisa

Vam~

lb.

35c

Oranges 10 '•r 79c

_4

tbo.

49c

...... 39c

Frorh

lb.

Pie

3Dinach

29c

P'rnh Heart&amp; of

Celery __ _

Pumpkin

-

.......

.,
..,. ..............
_,..'"""'-"""""""""'4

~-(1M
~

.....,..;-

, ;;.

Drill

....., DR. ll/2168

*

FREE 50
~-bottle K ....

J.o.Cal ~rult -

Jo.x,&gt;. 11/Z/118

lb.

8c

A.,o, CMNy, or Gropo

39c

Grapefruit

59c

~ ~iii:KYII- yPP VALUI lfAijjH)

.

No~vel

Frosh

bag

~-

..
~

Tomatoes

lb.

FREE •oo

•

tic Siu H•ir Drws•lnw

Ice Mdk Bars 2 ......
·"· $1

hi ltd

Potatoes
25

U/Z/68

and RltO Mae Strange, 16, LeW1.

d

!unrltt·F...... Rllfl'le

C/ lllUU
- _YALUI
1'1lAM"
........
_ ,__4

'

'o

iD
II

. .. · :·;.:.:.:-:-:·:!i-:· ..... ·&gt;··:·

ASK TO WED

Lotion or Powder

89c

12

Cider ___ \&gt;-tot. 79c

Florida White Duncan

tonight .

BUiferm

Fudga Bart or

Hi-Nu Milk 2 &lt;rtm.
'h-tol. 89c

XK

:;:~

Pies ____ 3

K,..r Brand Cotl•te

"""·

ftc Siu T•blets

89c

L

49c

boHto

Moo1onAs1.....

'I

II

Lavoris

3 ~~ $1

Krotlf' Skim or 2%

Calgo.n Bouquet

happy

59c

Chef'• Delight Rq. &amp; Plrrwnto

89c Pineapple_ 3 t-~~;..·..~ $1

~

69&lt; SIZE MOUTH WASH

Dinners

Ch eese ___ . _ ......
""'· 69c

b,l Mont1 Sllc1d, c,,,.h,d, Tidbit•

•

MORTON FROZEN

Kroger Sliced American &amp; Pimento

89c Peaches 3 •-l•·;o~!.... 89c

Pen Jel

Top Value Stamps

lb.

Dol Monte Y. C. Sllcod lo Hoi...

Hudson Allorlod Colors Toilot

--- · · - r ..

Chees!

Tropicol

0.1 Monte Tomato or Pineapple

Soold 5 - Assorto&lt;i

I

KROGER BRAND LONGHORN

Syrup _______ ~~ 69c Juice ____ 3 ;:.:· 89c
Juices

~·

...

&amp;
59c Drinks
___ 3 :::· 89c
Gr...,

).lb•• 2-or.

.-'

..
L --

$1

Or-.Punch
Plno.-CIMorry,

27c

2....rl ""'·

C.lns

4 ::~ 89c Green Beans 4 ~~~; $1

Sausage
Surf

1-lb.

Dol - . Bluo Loko Cut or
F....,h Style

HOI'n'lel Vl1111na

LO&lt;HIC!ry

•

89c

lb.

DEL MONTE
BRAND FRUIT

Bread

K...,.r Hot

57c

22-o1, bottle

•

box

lb.

r

Thrill

•

•

Sucher or Hy1Ndt
"Country Style" Roll

KROGIR
BRAND WHITE

Spam -~-- 2

INSTANT

books

ter Smithson, Letart.

PI'. PLEASANT -

Bacon

Marhotffer Canned

Coffee

Another joy of Top \'aluc Siamp-sa\'ing:
the heautiful Redemption Centers \\·hert'
you select your gifts, and where courteous
people really u·anl to make you happy .

PT, PLLASANT - "Trick
or Treat" rright will be observed in Point P leasant on
Thursday from 6 until 8 p.m.
City police are urging motorists to use extreme caution when driving through clQ'
streets that night as children
in costumeli will be weaving
back and rorth acrosa t h e
streets.
The cit.Y of Henderson will
al80 observe Trick or Treat
on Thursday at the samehl:urs
while Mason and 1\ew Haven
will hold their trick or treat

:1-lb.

CHASE &amp; SANBORN

ADMmED - Mrs. Carroll
Casto, Pt. Pleasant; PhillipGrueaer, Jr., pt, Pleasant; Van Robbins, Pt. Pleasant; Mrs. Wal-

~·:·:;:.:-:·:·:·:-:.:.:·:·:·:

Bologna

l-Ib.

$1.52

lkr. iar

saving Top \'alue Stamps! Pictured are
a happy sample:

PLEASANT VALLEY IIOSPU AL
Oct. 30, 1968

....

Full Shank HaN $mekod

,..,_ 49c Whiting

:Spray

Delightful extras she might n&lt;&gt;t otherwise have ... that's one of the joys of

books
booki

29c

DIAL DEODORANT

Cascade

i

H&amp;D

12·01,

Instant t;offee

are the very foundation of our
representaUve form of government.
Some 60 years ago Teddy
Roosevelt emphasized the need
for persons to improve politics

I

Annour All Meat

FOLGER'S

Glass punch set, 20 pieces.
. .. 3 4/5
7 piece salad set by Gala..
. .. 2 1/5
Permanent floral arrangement .......... 2
Odagonallazy susan ....... : ...... 3 4/5
Mikasa "Carouul'' usual ~;hma
·45 piece service fat 8 ........... 11 2/5
Durable press lace table doth . · · · · · · .. 3
West Bend "Country Kettle" ··
· · · ·6 4 / 5

Ill_

lb.

$1.09

lb.

Holl Ro?.st _______

Potato (;hips
..!::!!- ,k,._-~49_c_

Cubed Ste~k

99c

Ill_

Ttnder•y aon.~Hs tktlton

Wieners

OFF)

Whole, Half, or First Cut Piece

t;aCOn

79c

ed States and the Bill oC Rights

i

Ground Round

DAN DEE TWIN PACK
UC)o...,EN WAVEi
(tic

Sweet Smoli!ed Bacon

$1.19

Lean &amp; Tender

Crlsco
can

lb.

.Emh&amp;-

10 a.m.- 7 p.m.

J.lb.

Thrifty

Jowl

lb.

99c

T-lione Steak

USDA CHOICI TENDERAY

Open Sunday

any Kroger Store. Coupon void after 11/2/68

"' sign.
21 didn't recognize it but signed aJ\YWiQ'.
S8 didn't recognize it and re111 &lt;0&lt;1 to sign.
OJt of 111 persons only 32
rec:ognized the BUI &lt;I Rights.
It is dift'icult to understand those
· who refused to sign after recognizing it.
It is very unfortunate that 79
of the 111 didn't recognize it.
The COnstitution or the Unit-

!

Tllrilty lr..r

lb.

Talllo11

Round Steak

Pomeroy

Thnlty

Sirloin Steal\ -- -- ...

Full Cut- Bone In
By The Piece

llze tllat at the time there were

This coupon good for 100 extra Top Value
Stomps with a purchase of $5.00 or more at

Start ~l•ying "lintO OcWI lintt Ewttd" ...
day. Win up to $~CI.DOI Adults •ly .,.
eligible to play. Limit GN pme ,.._ ,..
IUrlOn per store visit. FREE v-nt fldltb
aveilable at all Kroger storn an4 by writiet
Dansico As~«lat.s., Inc., P. 0. lox .,-C,
Birmingham, Michigan 41110.

Welt-Trimmed

_.,,r•-...,, ,-.. , krovar Co., 1HI
Wo r.Hrvt th rleht to
limit quanli»el,

J H-million Americans oC voting
age.
What happened to the other 11
mHlion'? Obviously a number of
persons have good, valld rea-

sons for not casting ballots on
election day. But I would venture to say that certainly not
71-million people had good reason to stay awa,y from the polls
tn November o( 1964.
In the past rew years we have
heard many stodea in which our
citizens have demonstrated a reluctlince to become lnvoiV:ed:
There have been news repOrts
ot muggers and murderen attacking others In plain sight and 00 one taking the tl me to
beCQme involved to try to help
the victim. You may wonder what
this !las to do with voting. But I
suspect the two are related. I
believe apathy could rost us our
freedom, our Nation, and all else
we hold dear.
This apathy Is not new, but it
does seem to be growing.
An example of persons no t
wanting to be involved Is that of
two teenagers in an Eastern city,
They rang doorbells to find out
just how much people know about the u. s. Constitution.
They gave each person a copy
cA a "petition." Actually it was
the BUI of Rights. Here are the
results of what happened:
15 Persoos recognh:edthedocumern and signed it.
17 recognized It and refused

UP
TO

••••

FRi!EIOO

---

jiXIU YOI' VALUI IYAIIPI
--~-.--.

..

....... 011Exp. lllJ/68

5 ~69C
FREE 50

·-

Jrl•llmA - "ALIII"AMJ"t:;1
-

~ &amp;totJoo- .............

-ow-.

Exp. lilt/A

,..........

~""'Gr.-­
Exp. 11/2/68

�,.

J~

_ The DallJ Scnlinel, Mlddl'-oporl-1 1omeroy, 0., Oetclber 30, 1968

BARNEY

'

A LITTLE ·'HOMEWORK'. Watching Want Ads Bring T&lt;ip Gr~de Resui~·.

I!

I

"i

2 SIGNS

S , ,.,., Doy Bofore Pl.lhliution
Mol'do'!' Doodline 9 • · "'·
Co~~Cellorions &amp; ~ouoctiont

OP

Will M occoptod until 9 o ..... . l01
Dow ol Public .. ion
,-

REGULATI ONS
Tho P,X. Iishor renr••• tho ri9l-lt
to edit Of roioct on~ od1 doo.,.od ~·
jeclio...,blo. Tho publisher wi ll r'IOI;

b. rupon1lble far morot thoo one
lncorroct insortion.

conlt

p41

WOld tl1100 CO ... OCu•

inoorroono

Mol ibu Conv.
engine, P.G. tran s mission, rle.w W•I•W
tires, green exterior with white nylon top, green W'ifft·
vinyl trim.

. 25 por coni Q,aco"'"' or~ paid och
ortel od1 poid within 10 doyl
CARD OF THANK5 &amp; OBITUARY

51 50 1&lt;'&gt;1' SO word monimu"'

Eo

odditionol word 2c .

6LINO ADS
OFFICE HOURS
8,30 ,.' .,. ro 5:00 p . rn . Dailw
8:30 c;~.m. oe 12:00 Noon Satur,joy

In Memory
IN MEMORY of Che9ter Donohew, who passed away two
years ago, Oct 29, 1966.

I would not have you grieve
for me today,
Nor weep beside my vacant
chair.
Could you but know my daily
portion here
You would not, could not.
wish me there
I know now why he said,
'Ear hath not heard.'
r have no words, no alphabet.
Or, even if I had . I dare not

tell,

could not bear

yet

So, only this-1 am the same.

!hough changed.
Uke him. A joy more rkh

and strong,
Than I had dreamed that any

heart could hold.

-

Arxl all my life is one glad

song
Sometimes

when

are

you

talking to our Lon!
He turns and speaks to me

-&lt;lear heart.
In that rare moment you and

I are just
The distance of a word apart
And so, my loved ones, do
not grieve for me

Around

the

family

board

today,
Instead, rejoice, for we are
one in him,
And so I am not far away.

Sadly missed by wile,
Ruth Donohew.

10..30-ltc

Notice
AUCI'ION, this Thursday at 7
p.m., at Mason County fairgrounds. 6 miles north of Pt.
Pleasant, W. Va. Free door
prizes, loads and loads of
new and used mer&lt;handi,.
Dealers welcome. bring your

truck. New fumJture, buy at
)'our own price; Christmas
gifts, do your Christmas shopping here. You name it, we'll
have it.

POMEROY
992-2181

l0-30-2tc

'"' VONE interested in buying
or seUing barxl instruments

please call !192-3374. 10-3ll-3tc

Jack W, Carsey,
.

•

Mgr.·

LI.A&amp;. tWI'ICI
RAY llcDANIEL,
wbHI
Plaee ol NGdeiKII ill Jlll'tford, WM&amp;
Vlralnla, and "'ho .Ill a noa-Htldent
of tbe Slate ol ObJo, II henbJ ~
tilled u.at OD. that •tb du ot VC·
tobV. 1811, ADIA lldJANIEL. M-

HA~

Int: plalrllllf med
ber
"UU.n
aaaJDit b1m u
ddeDIU.nt In tilt
Court or Common PltU. Jlfelp Coun.
ty, Ohio, Cue No. lt$1 prQ'in'
tor dhorn rrvm Hid Bo7d Mc:Da!:t
lei on the pouunlb of tMU aqlllt!t

CMOOFLAG!&lt;P
E'•fRAIJCE" ••

IIIIJIA MCDANIII., PltlnHft
J, •• O'lrlen, AttorMJ

Pomeroy Motor Co.

For Sale or Trade

modeled kitchen, 10 baoem011t
and bar room, 115 Ebeneoer
St. Phone 992-M. 10-27.jltp

1967 INTERNATIONAL truck, 4
speed, '!'. ton, 1964 O!evrolet,
1967 Mustang &amp;-cylinder, 1speed. Financing avaDable. 57 CHEVROLET 10-ton truck;
Phone 11112-6547; afler 5 P-Ill
fine shape, new paint, good
Pbone 99Z-5748.
Nf.lfc tires. Ready to go. $!00. G_
A. Deem, Racine .

l6-29-3tp

Real Est1te For Sale

HOBSTETTER·
REALTY
GEO. HOBSTETTEII, POMEROY - 5 rooms, batb,
basement,

Emp!ovment Wanted

gas

heat,

For Rent

ing. 2 barns, 250 acres, good

and unfurnl!hed CHIHUAHUA puppies, Call 843fences. 2 houses, tree gas,
apartment&gt;- Close tAl 1&lt;hool
$50,000.00
2648.
10-29-litc
Phone 11112-004.
10-IJ.*
HELEN or VIRGIL TEAFORD
~SSOCIATES
IIZ-33IS
STEREO RADIO rombinatlon,
FURNISHED APAR'I'MEN'n
llh10-3tc
repossessed; beautiful cabiIn Middleport. All utilitiel
net, like new. Balance due
paid. Rowley &amp; Reed, Mid- 199, or make payments of
dleport, Phone 11112-2'176.
$5.14 per month_ Phone WJBuslnns ServiCII
~
2836.
lll-29-6lc DITCH DIGGING, water l!nes,

'!'RAILER LOTS, Bob's Mobllo 1968 ZIG ZAG portable ,.wing
Court, Syracuse, Ohio on Slate machine, sliglltly used. Does
Rt. ut, Phone 11112-21151.
everything without attach&amp;-11-16:
ments. In good condiUon;
15.98 per month or full price
TRAILER SPACE, ready tAl
of $51.80. For free home dem. hoot up, prlvale, plenty of onstration call 992-21138.
room for childreD tAl play.
10-29-litc
Phone 193-M4.
8-IHfc
1960 CHEVY convertible, V~
THREE bedroom apartment
standard shift, $150. Phone
with garage on Buttemut 11112-5552.
L0-2f.3te
Ave. Phone llfS.5127. IC..I~o
WORK CAR, 1949 Desoto.
BEAUTIFUL all new oledrle
George Hill, Racine. Phone
s.room apartment loeated In
lfi.2Ntc
9411-4381.
Pomeroy. Electric heating,
table top range, waD """'· GIRL'S BICYCLE, good condiSee lo approclate. Pl&gt;one lor
tion; good tires. Also, B-oat
appointment, IIIIU2'/l_ 10-21-11
clarinet. Phone 192-S358.
11).3(1.3te

WILL DO babysitting day or
night. Call 11112-5956. 10-2Ulc

leech beds, Paul Ander&amp;on,

Ma.. n, W. Va. Pbone m
5788.
104-301p
DOZER, BACKHOE, trencher
and !ruck service, sepUe
tanks, water lines, basements,
also topsoil. Henry Babr,
phone IIM-3988 or Roger Bahr,
phone !IM-3958.
10-UIIIp
C-

NoUee Ia hereby alqn that lldltll

four montbl.

.....

O.ted U.S. 2!1th day

3. ;;:;.~~·;;,

IM--:----- - -llto6
Sat .• - - - - - - - - - ·9 to 1

Ofl

r.ppolnted ExeeutrlJ: of the l:ltate of
Mary R. Ebenbaeh, deeea.ed. laM

Melp Cuunt,, Obto.

f~;~ur

monU!.t .
thlll

.....

Dated

,,

H.

21th du of October

Pon1eroy Home &amp; A '
. . E. Main

0'811tiiN

ProNte Julll,. of ...d County
10·3Ch 11-1; 11·13 ltc

NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT
Can No. 20019

NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT

Cn• No. 20015
Estate ol Byron Froncls Pormel••·
Deceosed.

Nolle• It h.,.1by plnn that Wilma
A, Porrnel••( ol Middle,PG!t, Ohio,
ha• b••n du y appgintecl Ek• ~ utrhc
of the Ettat•
f Br.ron Francit
Noti~:e is hereb'l' aiven that An·
Pormel••· dec•
d, ate of Meig•
de~ton B. Kibble of ReedsYi!lo,
Cou "'Y• Ohi
Ohio, hcu bun duly oppolnted E11e• ,
Crsdltors
re required to fil•
cLJtor of the Euote of Edno K.
th•ir ciol
.... lth 10id fiduciory
Stewart de ce cued, IGte of Reeds•
months.
within fa
ville, Meiy• County, Ohio.
Cr&amp;dil&lt;&gt;n ore required to fila
Doted
11 21tt day of October,
their daim• with •aid liduci11ry
1968.
E1tote of Edna K. Stewort, De·
ceaaed.

within four mon1fl1.

F . H. O'BRIEN

Probate Judge of sa id
County
10/23; 10/30; 11 / 6 3tc

Carmel News
By the Day
Mrs. Muriel Fields and Mrs.
Mabel Lax, Ft. Lauderdale, Fla.,
spent severzl days with Mr. and
Mrs. Douglas Circle, Larry and
Florence Circle.
Mrs. Ruth Swepston anddaugh·
ter, Janet, of Columbus visited
Ralph Lee and the Robert Lee
family Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Circle
called oo Mr. and Mrs. Oris
Smltll or Bashan recently.
Mr. and Mrs. George Perry
of Dexter, Mr. and Mrs. George
Circle of Ashland, Ky., and Mr.
and Mrs. Donald Pierce of AttJ..
ens visited Mary Circle during
a recent weekend.

Eunle Brinker and WUllam
carleton were cJiMer guests of

AUCI!ONEER

Bald Knobs spent a recent Sltur·
day at the Douglas Circle home.
Eunie Brinker, Betty Van Met.
er, Margaret Ann Carleton and

CampleCe Servlee
Pltoat . . . .
Rlelae, Cillo
otaBiadfw;d

abate Judg• of aaid

J0/ 2J

NOTICE ON FILING OF
INVENTORY AND APPIUISE-"'ENT
Th• Stot• of Ohla, M•le• County
Probot• Court

''

To tha E10ecutar' or Administrator
ol ti-le •••otel to such ol the follow•
lng: 01 ore r . . idenl• of the Stote of
Ohio, vhl-th• •urvivlng •pause,
th• nut of kin, th• b.n•flclarlu
und.r th• will; and to th• ottornsy
or ottorn•yt repret•ntlng qny of th•
ofllfementioned p•rsont:
Fran k Gaul, No. 19992, Ch••t•r,
Ohio,
You mrs hereb~ notifi•d that the
Inventory and Appr~risement gf th•
eatole ol the .::.forementioned, d•·
e•o••d, lot• of laid Count)', WOI
.fil•d . in thla CourJ. Soicl lnvut0r)'
ond Approiument will b. for keor•
iniJ hfors thl t Court M the 9th dor
of Nov., 1968, at I0100 o'clock A.M.
Any parson d•• irin11 to fil• ••c•ption• ther•lo mutt fil• them at 1•.::.•1
fi
day I prior to th• dot• ut for
h•o;ning.
GiY•n und.r rny hand and uol of
•aid Court, thl• 19th do~ of Oct .

WORLD ALMANAC
FACTS

v•

1968.

The inspiration for El·
bert Hubbard's essay, "A
Message to Garcia," which
sold 40 million copies and

is said to have been written

in an hour, was Lt. Andrew
S. Rowan, U.S. Army. During the Spanish-American
War, The World Almanac
notes, Rowan ~secured se·
cret information about in·
surgent forces from Gen.
Garcia after searching for

him through perilous Cuban
j~gles .

ily on Sunday evening_
The sea battle between the
Constitution and the Guer·

rlere lasted between 30 and 40
minutes.

Bryants Bud&amp;et Shop

~,.

RAY AND SI'RAW. Call ••
IHJ.JIIp

,

Next T• StiHier' 1 $tore

101 W. Meln

P. .e,.y

•

11!15 FORD pickup, all atru,
exceUent coJY.!Uion. flJGO,
Phone M 2848.
tN0-3te

.....

The only Important uses of
Latin today are in Catholic
Church rituals in writing
drug preocrlptlOJII, and in

naming plants and anlmalo
ocienWically.

PIOMM JIHI,. et
lo-30; U.t; 1M3 ate

..w~

?

lJ~TEAJ,

r

~

A.; the wife and . er,

IF II..E k)f,R€

GETfTI./6 WJ'RIED,l!lE
PRESEIJT r IO:V- D (1)IJSID€R. MOST VNJ..V..ete

adopted ~on ot one
Walt Wallet, lPlJ m~t&lt;
deliver

IIJOLilD BE ...

to

.;aiel

per~n

an urqent meGGaqe'

"'•
•

•,_

68
BUICK ...... $2895
Sk~lork VB 2 Dr. Hard Tap. A
reol cr•arn puff. Power ''"'a
. lng:, Auto. Trant. Low mllsog•.

... .

~.~~~r~~~
Jzr..~
Lilts new car intlde ond o\11.

t&lt;eeping Meigs
Gallio and
Mason Area
ln-~rmed As
Well As
Entertained

""
•
_,_, A~D ~LL ~~lNG M'i
OVJt.l 'S&lt;OD1N6 iF 'IOLIU,

UT Mo St.EoP IN

HE'G GOT KO UCI:!1SE,
WHICH M&amp;:INS HE'S ILLEGAL!

WHICH

ME4N~

HE'S Off 1'

) r---( TtiE COG POUND WtHCH M£4f1S
" ..,

L..AL

~CI

.

THAT BY lOMORQO!.tJ 1-fE 'll 8t

~· -··~ - 1

:

AM tx -DOG, OR

Annusl •ledlon 01 ..,._ Coua\J
A•rleultural Soc1eb' Dlndors wlll

()(XJG()t1E AS
1tiE BOI'S SA'f!

be held Tbu...t•,, Na•embu 14. 1-.
fNm 5:110 P.ll. lo lrOD P ... at U..
offlee ot tiM llotp CGuab' COI!lJIU.
li.onera in 1111 Court aou- ID Pom·

t·ror, OIUe.

..

I.
I
~

m

QuallfleaUOM for eUIIOdatel
("llrecwrt an t.bat tbtJ matt be a

quslWid .-oter If lleltl Ccnlllt:J aJMI

'

1111111 bn• • membulblp uoat m
IBid liodeU lor HU' 1NG.
€:aadlda1M' ,.UUOIII m\181 . . ru.t
With dHI Jectt\an' DOt lata ti&amp;U
:1.:00 P.)( .
NOTea..... f,

....

I

W_..,..,,,

calendu

daJ'I

Hf'ON

b

de&amp;e

IIIICUOft, an qU&amp;HAed. to YOM.
TU MelD Coaatr

r-

DON'T TELl.
ME 'YOU GOT
AN INTERVIEW
WITH HEl..EN
OF 1T«lV

o.t,. ,.,...... MldiDJ: memiMrlldp
ueke&amp;o a&amp; tM clND or 11M
U.
C'auntr rm, 01' at ltaK flften (11)

el

1

Alt'tCIIItVaJ. 8oc!ielJ'

.........

BJI: Doaald. &amp;. lleutu, ·

•o.u.

10o10.

u...

ae
L

:0

YOU HAVE HURD AIOUT,
YOU HAVE liEN EXPECTING

d

•

IT,IT IS NOW MIRII

66
MJSTANG .. _.$1895
VB Fast Bock 2 Dr. Hord Top .

A NEW CHURCH IS &amp;liNG BOR

Good el•on locol one o....ner
c:ar, 4 sp. thift.

-On the leyel of Min"'• splrltVIIII
needt.

BLAETTNARS

at 7130 P.M . In The for•r
Brown'• Morin• Building on

BUICK
PONTIAC
GMC TRUCKS
POMEROY

Fir~t
Stote

Servic.£• Rowta

124,

Frillier nlthr
Mlnersvlll•,

DAILY CROSSWORD

Ohio.,
Pastor -

Kan O.,lntton •f the

'YeneWCIOcl

s.,.nd

Church,

a_., ••

. A.t1WSS

1. Stylish

f1. Garment

Arabian

ELM GROVE DAIRY DISPERSAL

kingdom
10. One kind of
education

I ALE

12. CrlMesoi'
a ~rt
14. ln . -- of

Bulltnes!lman'!l Utlin,
in part
16. Blvckade
HI. Suffix wltll
1~.

MACHINERY

'

'!'fl:li" Colf.

GROVER SAUER, JR,, OWNER ,

' CARNAHAN AUCTION -~ERyitl''' ,Y, :'

J_ CARNAHAN
· D. SMi:FII ',
Lunch ~voileblt by J,.odioa of ~!coa UniHtl ~.., }:
dist (hurch.
·
.~_ ..- '·
~' · -lt :{ •
14;;. Rosponsiblo For Accldtlltt or Lo11 of
f'

I ,,..-

Jt,.,.;it1
•.

~,-~

'

'

falflor

of Judah

21. Remote
22. Hail
23. Tokyo,
1 old atyle

•

proboscitJ,

tively

25. Wight.
9&amp;P,rl,
· Man,etc.
21. Possealtivf
28. Nothing ·
29. Come lo

malurlly
31. Unllsof
meaHurr

"••tl!rd&amp;)'"s A••~~o· er
3fi . Convent

Wh~re

Reagan
reignK

26. Titlt'

40. Paradlst'

29. Poker

43. Mo&gt;llem

~4.

Propeot

pmble

6. UnempiO;'!'t"d

7.

30. Turn Up.'!id•·

Jackt't part

II. Kind of gun
11 . MeiOdle!&lt;

13 . Bering

..

ont&gt;'11

own
22. Set th•
mind
at east"

~~- Mr~. Ketti~

down

32.
33.

Recordln~:e

ID
II

HUMOT

mem~r

:w. Pack away

0

I I

title
4fl. Family

otTHI5 ~II&lt;:D WOUL-D 15E

member

) () j

4 7. Describing

instrumenb

~me

FaiTell'~;

document:o :

Lonlpn

abbr.

UN POPU"AI&lt;: 1'/lil-t

I
I ( XJ 0:

Now 111'1'&amp;11!18 tho circled !etten

to form the aurpriae anawer. u
~~~~':'"::--;;;-~~;:~su:;:r~ru~ted hJ'the above cartoon.

I.At. I THE "(I I I :r ]-IN-[ I II t
v..........,••

I

I....,..., INOW't

fLUKI

OUTLAW

IU'ITOIO

An••"'' fta.l aiiiOded p#!I'UJII dof!111'1
b-IllOW MIS llJ!OWS
\

dwellt!r
36. Election
. wln.nerw

,.

•

•

S1; BUll
38. Clock·
,I
~ftding :

"
' 39- Fry lightly -

tl .

Fr .

Om• l••llcr ~itDJIIY stllllW. for another. In this t~ample A ia used
fur Uw thrl..'f' L 'K. X rur lht• lwu 0':~, ell'. Sil\fCle IFttt•tll, a~·
trophW.It, the kongth 11nd tor!'"U•tlOI).

•!lu.:h dity thl" t·•idt

leltt'~

oJ. ~· ~ wor1Y

11rt

all hlnta.

are differmt.

A -t'ryptocranl· quntatloa
·j

J•

~~

~· ll T
•
•"llN
J

H

.1 .M A

P J W

Z C.'' t: M

.MJo;l': l ·~;.
.

l"t•""'•: r.d~t)' '"'

11

'

I

' '

' .

J.: ,. 'o T ·1 ~·~ o T' ~, ~; ' !i

PB

t

H J

KJo-: Z K V G ·· 11TH' .J

'fi.:&lt;.'~DTM
•

'

•

C1f'yfttttquutt&gt;: ALL THAT 18 HlJ M~N M.ll~T·
Ji.Jo:TR()GRAliJ:; n~ lT l&gt;H&amp;'j .NOT AU.\' A,N&lt;~t, ;. QfBB(JN' . ·'
\'

'

. J."

'!

'

,('o;

~,;·

'

f"

:o.!

... ··---

.. . "-· "'·-· .,_.__ -

SA ILOI&lt;:$.

NEBlNG

:u. tim

'

WIS~ ELMER DIDN'T ~AVE
LAilYNGITIS: I'M TIRED 0'
HIM
I
W&gt;IISTI.E

I

20. TakE- a~

H.M.S.
-t.

=

figura -

2. Part. of

3. Wading
bird

Unacramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to
form four ordinary words.

der·s

DOWS

11.

' king

..

for•
plod-

cu rtain
l. Photographer's
command,
in part

JllYWill~®IJ..J ::::.::!!:!-'

17. Pla&lt;.'t'

generi:-~

l!lw•et
19. Third

....·'

Mauoy Horrla ,j,j Llvo PTO, 3 pt- hitch, M.H: Bl.,..r, .
J.D. Grain Drill, formal! Cub with hy&lt;lroullc, J·~!'
Ll.,. S,..ldor, 3-14" M.H. 3 pt- Pl.,., A.C. 66
·' ..
b'lno, 2-14" J.D. 3 Pt., No. 5 J.D. Mawor, N.H; 61.1
Fl-!d Choooor, 3 Hoada, 2 Rubl&gt;tr Tirt4 Wego~a,. ~·
G;M.C. T~v~k US Ton, N.H. F.loll Chopper, ~60 ,~ril
F600 Truck.
·
-. ~

. -t9. Shooting
marbleK
50. Lowers the

atz:e. With
Junior
9. Ancient

Included art 10 First Coif Htlfors, 5 Froth Mow aiMI .
5 Clou-Up- 3 Surgt Poll Milkers and Pu01p • .110 G~!·
Solar Bulk Tonk Comploto. (Trucklnt Avalloblo)
'..

"Horblo It taklnc a bodJ bulldl"' oouno. 1hopo It "orlct
out b-r than w!Mn he tried to I"OW a beardl"

YOU~

CELL~I&lt; TOIII&lt;&gt;IITI

Due to Labor Problems, we are dlscontlnuiiiJ
the Dairy Operation on our farm, located woxlmately 2 miles east of Racine, Ohio, on State
Route 124.
31 HEAD.
•23 GUERNSEYS
• 8 HOLSTEIN$

wtlhU.

c-..Rty

'YE-:;'

'"

SATURDAY, NOV. 2, 1968, 11 A.M.

411,- o1 Oetober

, , H. O'HI ...

IAXJl-(_D

IT TAI&lt;E lD GET
'o'oU 10 ~y

Me, MD&gt;JIQ\16 !

LaiD U18Je

llcen••'

fldudu7

IAJI-\AT

:I'll 8UY '1tfJ MJYTHI&gt;JG.
'bJ IA)\/JT IF &lt;,tO'll MARRY

'"'

CAn lnd•pendenl Chutch)

........

debrllt with Pl.d
lour montbJ .
Da~ \bill &amp;cM.n

Cl.,k of told Court
By Hen"ietto O'Brien
Chief Dsputy Cl•rk
10/23; 10130 2tc

•'••ring. Automatic tront .

1191--.

'.

F. H. O'BRIEN
Jude• and ••·officio

Popular buck•t 1eot1, Power

Mrs. Allen Taylor on Sunday,

William T. Carleton called at
the l'lome or the Dan Smith fam-

niEIR ID·MON"Tl-!
BU51NE55 TRIP.

~·,

JO 11/6 Jtc

Reading More
Children read more for
son, Patrick, called at the home personal pleasure and Infor5 I tic of Clarence Koehler, Tuppers mation-aside from school
books---than ever before. Since
PJains, recently.
AIR CONDmONING RefrigerMr. and Mrs. Derrell Taylor 1925 the number of new hooks
ation aervlce. Jack's Refrig- of Creston, 0. 1 and Mr. and Mn. and new editions for children
eration, New Haven . bone Shelby Pickens and famll.y of fl.l.. have increased more than 400
per cent, according to the En8112-207!1_
4 I lie cine R. D., ..·isited with Mr. and cyclopaedia
Britannica.

FIII8T FLOOR apartment Very
nice lor two people or two GOOD YOUNG rabbit dog, good
people with small ohlld. Phone
breerl and good runner. Em- RF.AilY - 'I!X concrote dellvWILL DO sewing at home OIN28'/.
10-23-Uie
mett
stethem, Long Bottom.
e!'fd right to yOID' oroJect.
zippers, pockets, reggln~ .
Fast
and eaoy, Free estiPhone
Olesler,
~hemming, alterations, etc. POUR ROOM and bath, unfur10-31Hte
mates
.
Phone 992-11184_ GoegMrs. Freddie Thabet. Ma90n.
nilhed, 11150 Lincoln Heights.
leln
R•ady
- Mix Co., MiddlePhone 773-SSSL
4-30-lfc
Phone 11112-3314.
10-:19-tfc !1153 CHEVROLET pickup, $125.
port, Ohio.
I SO lfe
Phone
992-9934
and
ask
lor
REPAIR. REFINISH, recondi- TWO Fl/RNISIIEt) sleeping
Frank Roush.
10-38-31p BIJilr.ET PRICE fllrn1turo &lt;111
tion golf clubs, John Teaford.
rooms ; private kitchen, priour third Door budqet obop.
vate bath, private entranoe,
--~ utilities furnished; 10 mile 'J'WO coal stollen with cm- Baker Furniture. Middleport.
Ohio
t t1 tfe
lrols, Arnold Brolhen, PoBACK HOE and Dorer Servleo,
from town of Pomeroy, Box
meroy,
Phone
pond, basement, water line,
281/a, Rt 3, Pomeroy. Mn.
10-IJ-Ife ~FWING MACHINES. reoalr
oeptlc tank, R. w_ Onrdery,
Eleanor Batea. Phone 11112"''&lt;&gt;rvtce. all makes. WY J..
Long Bottom, Ohio. 11-27-J!Jie
'10'15.
I0-29-4tc POTATOES, Phone 843-DH
2284. 'nle Pabrle Shop, Pomeroy. Authorlled Sln•er Sales
VACANCY for two elderly peo- SMALL FURNISHED house In Clarence Prollltt, Portlandnn&lt;l Service. We Sharnen
I0-114c
ple. Pre!... private paid pa.
Middleport. Phone 111!2-5262_
Sclaors.
1-:19-Uc
Uenta- Phone Mason, TIS-5115.
10-29-tfc POODLE PUPPIES, AKC Toy
l~c
miniature, $'IS and up. stud C!GAilETTI!! vending ma""'10 • 50 TRAILER, extra nice,
and oervice. ABC !ftteroriMI,
,.rvlce and grooming. 1"-t
1'11ERE WILL be a gun Rhool
Phone 11112-21119.
10-~
MoMn, W. v•. Pbme mao.
1192-5443_
11 I lie
Sunday. Nov. 3 beginning at
ooon at the Forked Run ROOMS FOR tDurlsta, dean,
AKC Golden lletrlover JOippiM.
Sportsman aub. Everyone II
comfortable; a single, 13
nt Alb St., lllddleport. ·•
'"••trL'nee
welco~ .
10-zt.Ste
double_ Phone m.31!11.
M43.
. . . AUTOMOBlLE ln1111'111&lt;0 ben
I0-29-3tp
eancelledt Loet Your Oll&lt;!l'llWILL BUTCIIE'R a large young
IIlii
TII'I\EE
Bl!lDROOM
frill.
or'l
ean tn-!tM.
bee! in about sil weeki. AnyFor Sale
er, Expanclo llvlng room IIIII
I IS II•
one Interested In boylng half,
swnlng. Phone 99Ulllt.
pleose call 9111-M. 10-2f.3te
USED STOVES
IMS«e
Bryant• Second Floor
NOTIC:I OP APPOIMTMINT
WE WILL be bolding two aucGas Kitchen Stov•···-35.00
Cue No. m,CIQ
latah
et Dtwitt N ........... O.C.t...
SORRY
SAL
II
ooW
a
Mlri'J
Gas Heating Stov.... 35.00
Uonl per month slarling Nov.
Nouee Is berelw ctven tllat EdU.JI
Gal. She U8ed Blue Lustre 'til. Wekb. ef Rou~ a, AlbNI,, Ohio,
I. Sales will be on the fll'8t
Small Gas Hoator ____ JO.OO
Ni
and upbolatery e . _, IIU Mel dub' lpPOlDied A~
and lhlrd Friday nights of
&amp;ratm ot the ~t. fll Dto'rid N.
Both room Si u
Rent eledrlc llhampocw fl. R11.11•U 4eceued, lattl of Scipio
each month. Adllf\IS Auction
Gas H..,.,________ ___ ___ 2-00
Mel" Countt, Oblo.
Baker Furniture_
10-a«e T11wnatlip,
Cnd.Uon at'l recau1tll4 to IUt tlltir
Service, Rutland.
IO-Zt-4tc
Electric Heater .....-.. .. 10.00

407 PAGE
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

ro__ .

MATT6R a: FACT, 1F HE I.UAS HERE Rt~T 1011,
He{, \1.1-lE~'s
~RVSOOY ~~'? ~.:..
· ----~

•
•

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

GOEGLEIN GRAVEL

. H. O'BRIEN

Doted this 19th day of Odober
1968.

Betty Van Meter recently.
Mr. and Mrs.. Richard Abl.e8of

c_BRADFORD

l'DatertJ, 0

't

.. AND MY COMPANY
IN6/STS 1 GO ON

""'lEAH? WaL,I JU!;T Wi'H '!J.Iri a.D 1'/~Ailf W/Qfr AWAV ()llHAT 9t!Gil!e9.&gt; TIIIP!

-

WMPO

• Free Estimates
• Quality Concrete
• Certified Streneth
• Delivery
• Quick Service
• Finishing
• Sand &amp; Gravel
DIAL 992-3284

-GUARANI'E'EDPHONE 992-2094

Notlee U bueb;r Clven tbal lllla·
beth J:. Smith of 113 Prince Street,
AIU:andrie , Vh·...nte hu bHn 4uiJ'
Poa~eror.

THE BORN LOSER

5.55

lltU. of Mnr I . ,...,..,dl, 0..

of

•

992-21!3

PH,

Wheel Alignment

Cue No. IOOID

CHdttorJ ~ required to fll• their
clalml wllA .aid tldudtrJ wttllln

From tho Largest T~''"
Bull&lt;t&gt;zer Radiator To The
~esL HeaLer Core.

li)(PERT

APPOINTMINT

Q-.

Hockingport, Ohio
Phone 667-3370

BLAETTNARS

Dl Oetober

P. H . O•I.IIIN
Prob.... Jucllt of 11ld Cou"'Y
. \NO; 11..; 11·13 3te
HOTICI

'

Schawarul Marine

Sun. - --- - -----1110

near

stores. Only $3500.00
BABYSI'n'ING OR IRONING LARGE COAL furnace, good
'lf!DDLEPOIIT
- 3 Apartmenil,
condition; also Admiral TV,
to do in my hom&lt;, phone 9923
car
garage,
near store&amp;.
21 inches. Good condition.
• iW112.
I0-29-3tc
Out
of
high
water.
'IZ,OOO.OO
Phone 992-5890 or 11112-3927.
DAIRY
FARM
Now
operatI0-2ll-3tc
~-URNISHED

CueNo.IO.olt

M. .. - ·-" ul "'" · ,., ll. Alba.a1. Oblo.
b.. bHll dUl) ;.ppolnted A&amp;nlnlatratrlx of the :r..tate of Amla K.. •••·
,.u, dotceated, tat·· of Sdplo TIJ'IIJJI•hlp, Yelp County, Ohio.
Crettlton 11re required to JUe tbetr
claJm. with .aid flducJary within

IHIItlrSenlc'

On Display
115 Soon
To Arrive

APP'OINTMINT

.J

LI'LORPI-IAN ABBIE!! US DOGMTCH BACHELORS
WISHES T' MAKE 'lORE FEW REMAIN IN' DA'IS
HAPP'I- SO WE'LL LET '10' KETCH AN' MARR-1
V~AINON&amp; 'IO'DUIR.U,IN TH'SADIE HAWKINS
DA'/ RACE!.'

6-9~-18

fer PlalnHff
ICI JO; 1l d1 11 13: l1 20;
~1 :"; 11 • ft.c

lit•·b .... ""~" •. tutllll. Dectlled

ExtiiiENCEI

EYINRUDE
69's Are Here

other proper rellelJ aid CIUM 'IIIW
be for lllear1u1 oA or" Jfttr tiM lkh
d&lt;~~.)' ol Deeember, 1911.

OP

Di?AWIJ

eK.K R&lt;l:ltl nw;:

of dllt' and eztr.me erueHJ', .uad

NO TIC I

THE GOLDIE :M. Rice real esta!e located on OUver Slrell
In Middleport, Illelp County,
Ohio, will be IIOid to the blgbOPEN EVES. 8:00P.M.
est bidder on Saturday, Nowmber lnd- 11!18, at 10:30 A.
POMEROY. OHIO
M. at the olfice of Cmr,
crow &amp; Porter, Atlomeyll•
Pomeroy, Ohio. Real Eltate
ForS.Ie
Wanted
11 appraised at $1,500.00 and
LADY FOR house work. Lire EARLY American Stereo. AM
cannot be oold for less than
in if desired . Contact 0.
&amp; FM radio. Lovely maple
lhil amount Sale subject to
Hindy over Liberty Theatre
finis.b, 4 speed changer, pay·
the approval of the Probale
in Middleport. Phone 992ments of $6 per month or pay
Court, Melp County, Cillo.
5151.
111-30-tfc
balance due $92.118. Phone
Sybil Ebenbach, ElecutriX of
992-3218.
10-27-Qc
Eotate of Goldie M. Rice, DeANTIQUES, furniture, dlah01,
ceased.
10-28-llc
miscellaneous. Mrs. Howard SOLID STATE Stereo; 1968 walnut stereo console with 4Cecil, 800 W. Main St_, PomeTWO FAMILY boule, :1111 Race
speaker, 4-speed, automatic
roy.
1-1$-tlc
Sl.. Middleport. Phone 192chonger. Make payment&gt; of
H.
10-27-14tc
$5 or pay just $11.16_ CaD 11112Lost
3218.
I0-27-mc 56 CHEVY, 2 door Sedan, 301
FIVE-MONTH-OLD Polled Hereforo heifer. Lost In Tanners
cubic Inch, 4 barreD, 3 speed
riVE ronsecutlve lots In Beech
Run area. Anyone seeing the
on Door, good eondltlon. all
Grove cemetery. Phone 11112new exhaust syslem, $350.
heifer is asked to call 91116439.
10-27-61p
3774.
I0-27~tc
Pbone 192-7008.
I0-25«c
SIX ROOM house, newly re-

THAT'S

BOYD

1965 CHEVROLET Bi stayno.._ _________ .,.,_., ___ .,., _____ $1295

4 Door. Local l owner clean cor. Beautiful turquoise

It

Big Trad.-ln .411o~anc:e

L.ocal owner cor, 4 on the floar, good wideo -.{tal W.W. ~
tires, red vinyl interior, white finish, ra._' &amp; heater •.
Try it for performance.
.

finis, with clean interior . All good W.W. tires . Radio
end Heater.

htiOtliOOI

Bec~use you

SIEGLER and
TROPIC·AIRE Heaters

06 CHEVELLE 5S 396 H.T. Cpe. ___ ,.,._., _______________$1995

1i• contocuri~o

II conh. fM' W.,..d

,

va

5 conU p41 Waul o- inao rtion
ll"nilllu'" Ch&lt;l r9o 75(

l:l

Sovo No~l Install Nawl
COiotfiLETE LINE

65 CHEYELLE ________________ -·-·- -·-- ------------·-----~, _____ ,$1495

UTES

11'1'11

QftAUTY

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

SIINES ALIVE!!
TERRIBLE

·-

WANT AD
INFOAMA TION
OU.OLIN£S

FER60f

WHO HE IS?·

'

~

·•

•

•"

I

"....

...•

�,.

J~

_ The DallJ Scnlinel, Mlddl'-oporl-1 1omeroy, 0., Oetclber 30, 1968

BARNEY

'

A LITTLE ·'HOMEWORK'. Watching Want Ads Bring T&lt;ip Gr~de Resui~·.

I!

I

"i

2 SIGNS

S , ,.,., Doy Bofore Pl.lhliution
Mol'do'!' Doodline 9 • · "'·
Co~~Cellorions &amp; ~ouoctiont

OP

Will M occoptod until 9 o ..... . l01
Dow ol Public .. ion
,-

REGULATI ONS
Tho P,X. Iishor renr••• tho ri9l-lt
to edit Of roioct on~ od1 doo.,.od ~·
jeclio...,blo. Tho publisher wi ll r'IOI;

b. rupon1lble far morot thoo one
lncorroct insortion.

conlt

p41

WOld tl1100 CO ... OCu•

inoorroono

Mol ibu Conv.
engine, P.G. tran s mission, rle.w W•I•W
tires, green exterior with white nylon top, green W'ifft·
vinyl trim.

. 25 por coni Q,aco"'"' or~ paid och
ortel od1 poid within 10 doyl
CARD OF THANK5 &amp; OBITUARY

51 50 1&lt;'&gt;1' SO word monimu"'

Eo

odditionol word 2c .

6LINO ADS
OFFICE HOURS
8,30 ,.' .,. ro 5:00 p . rn . Dailw
8:30 c;~.m. oe 12:00 Noon Satur,joy

In Memory
IN MEMORY of Che9ter Donohew, who passed away two
years ago, Oct 29, 1966.

I would not have you grieve
for me today,
Nor weep beside my vacant
chair.
Could you but know my daily
portion here
You would not, could not.
wish me there
I know now why he said,
'Ear hath not heard.'
r have no words, no alphabet.
Or, even if I had . I dare not

tell,

could not bear

yet

So, only this-1 am the same.

!hough changed.
Uke him. A joy more rkh

and strong,
Than I had dreamed that any

heart could hold.

-

Arxl all my life is one glad

song
Sometimes

when

are

you

talking to our Lon!
He turns and speaks to me

-&lt;lear heart.
In that rare moment you and

I are just
The distance of a word apart
And so, my loved ones, do
not grieve for me

Around

the

family

board

today,
Instead, rejoice, for we are
one in him,
And so I am not far away.

Sadly missed by wile,
Ruth Donohew.

10..30-ltc

Notice
AUCI'ION, this Thursday at 7
p.m., at Mason County fairgrounds. 6 miles north of Pt.
Pleasant, W. Va. Free door
prizes, loads and loads of
new and used mer&lt;handi,.
Dealers welcome. bring your

truck. New fumJture, buy at
)'our own price; Christmas
gifts, do your Christmas shopping here. You name it, we'll
have it.

POMEROY
992-2181

l0-30-2tc

'"' VONE interested in buying
or seUing barxl instruments

please call !192-3374. 10-3ll-3tc

Jack W, Carsey,
.

•

Mgr.·

LI.A&amp;. tWI'ICI
RAY llcDANIEL,
wbHI
Plaee ol NGdeiKII ill Jlll'tford, WM&amp;
Vlralnla, and "'ho .Ill a noa-Htldent
of tbe Slate ol ObJo, II henbJ ~
tilled u.at OD. that •tb du ot VC·
tobV. 1811, ADIA lldJANIEL. M-

HA~

Int: plalrllllf med
ber
"UU.n
aaaJDit b1m u
ddeDIU.nt In tilt
Court or Common PltU. Jlfelp Coun.
ty, Ohio, Cue No. lt$1 prQ'in'
tor dhorn rrvm Hid Bo7d Mc:Da!:t
lei on the pouunlb of tMU aqlllt!t

CMOOFLAG!&lt;P
E'•fRAIJCE" ••

IIIIJIA MCDANIII., PltlnHft
J, •• O'lrlen, AttorMJ

Pomeroy Motor Co.

For Sale or Trade

modeled kitchen, 10 baoem011t
and bar room, 115 Ebeneoer
St. Phone 992-M. 10-27.jltp

1967 INTERNATIONAL truck, 4
speed, '!'. ton, 1964 O!evrolet,
1967 Mustang &amp;-cylinder, 1speed. Financing avaDable. 57 CHEVROLET 10-ton truck;
Phone 11112-6547; afler 5 P-Ill
fine shape, new paint, good
Pbone 99Z-5748.
Nf.lfc tires. Ready to go. $!00. G_
A. Deem, Racine .

l6-29-3tp

Real Est1te For Sale

HOBSTETTER·
REALTY
GEO. HOBSTETTEII, POMEROY - 5 rooms, batb,
basement,

Emp!ovment Wanted

gas

heat,

For Rent

ing. 2 barns, 250 acres, good

and unfurnl!hed CHIHUAHUA puppies, Call 843fences. 2 houses, tree gas,
apartment&gt;- Close tAl 1&lt;hool
$50,000.00
2648.
10-29-litc
Phone 11112-004.
10-IJ.*
HELEN or VIRGIL TEAFORD
~SSOCIATES
IIZ-33IS
STEREO RADIO rombinatlon,
FURNISHED APAR'I'MEN'n
llh10-3tc
repossessed; beautiful cabiIn Middleport. All utilitiel
net, like new. Balance due
paid. Rowley &amp; Reed, Mid- 199, or make payments of
dleport, Phone 11112-2'176.
$5.14 per month_ Phone WJBuslnns ServiCII
~
2836.
lll-29-6lc DITCH DIGGING, water l!nes,

'!'RAILER LOTS, Bob's Mobllo 1968 ZIG ZAG portable ,.wing
Court, Syracuse, Ohio on Slate machine, sliglltly used. Does
Rt. ut, Phone 11112-21151.
everything without attach&amp;-11-16:
ments. In good condiUon;
15.98 per month or full price
TRAILER SPACE, ready tAl
of $51.80. For free home dem. hoot up, prlvale, plenty of onstration call 992-21138.
room for childreD tAl play.
10-29-litc
Phone 193-M4.
8-IHfc
1960 CHEVY convertible, V~
THREE bedroom apartment
standard shift, $150. Phone
with garage on Buttemut 11112-5552.
L0-2f.3te
Ave. Phone llfS.5127. IC..I~o
WORK CAR, 1949 Desoto.
BEAUTIFUL all new oledrle
George Hill, Racine. Phone
s.room apartment loeated In
lfi.2Ntc
9411-4381.
Pomeroy. Electric heating,
table top range, waD """'· GIRL'S BICYCLE, good condiSee lo approclate. Pl&gt;one lor
tion; good tires. Also, B-oat
appointment, IIIIU2'/l_ 10-21-11
clarinet. Phone 192-S358.
11).3(1.3te

WILL DO babysitting day or
night. Call 11112-5956. 10-2Ulc

leech beds, Paul Ander&amp;on,

Ma.. n, W. Va. Pbone m
5788.
104-301p
DOZER, BACKHOE, trencher
and !ruck service, sepUe
tanks, water lines, basements,
also topsoil. Henry Babr,
phone IIM-3988 or Roger Bahr,
phone !IM-3958.
10-UIIIp
C-

NoUee Ia hereby alqn that lldltll

four montbl.

.....

O.ted U.S. 2!1th day

3. ;;:;.~~·;;,

IM--:----- - -llto6
Sat .• - - - - - - - - - ·9 to 1

Ofl

r.ppolnted ExeeutrlJ: of the l:ltate of
Mary R. Ebenbaeh, deeea.ed. laM

Melp Cuunt,, Obto.

f~;~ur

monU!.t .
thlll

.....

Dated

,,

H.

21th du of October

Pon1eroy Home &amp; A '
. . E. Main

0'811tiiN

ProNte Julll,. of ...d County
10·3Ch 11-1; 11·13 ltc

NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT
Can No. 20019

NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT

Cn• No. 20015
Estate ol Byron Froncls Pormel••·
Deceosed.

Nolle• It h.,.1by plnn that Wilma
A, Porrnel••( ol Middle,PG!t, Ohio,
ha• b••n du y appgintecl Ek• ~ utrhc
of the Ettat•
f Br.ron Francit
Noti~:e is hereb'l' aiven that An·
Pormel••· dec•
d, ate of Meig•
de~ton B. Kibble of ReedsYi!lo,
Cou "'Y• Ohi
Ohio, hcu bun duly oppolnted E11e• ,
Crsdltors
re required to fil•
cLJtor of the Euote of Edno K.
th•ir ciol
.... lth 10id fiduciory
Stewart de ce cued, IGte of Reeds•
months.
within fa
ville, Meiy• County, Ohio.
Cr&amp;dil&lt;&gt;n ore required to fila
Doted
11 21tt day of October,
their daim• with •aid liduci11ry
1968.
E1tote of Edna K. Stewort, De·
ceaaed.

within four mon1fl1.

F . H. O'BRIEN

Probate Judge of sa id
County
10/23; 10/30; 11 / 6 3tc

Carmel News
By the Day
Mrs. Muriel Fields and Mrs.
Mabel Lax, Ft. Lauderdale, Fla.,
spent severzl days with Mr. and
Mrs. Douglas Circle, Larry and
Florence Circle.
Mrs. Ruth Swepston anddaugh·
ter, Janet, of Columbus visited
Ralph Lee and the Robert Lee
family Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Circle
called oo Mr. and Mrs. Oris
Smltll or Bashan recently.
Mr. and Mrs. George Perry
of Dexter, Mr. and Mrs. George
Circle of Ashland, Ky., and Mr.
and Mrs. Donald Pierce of AttJ..
ens visited Mary Circle during
a recent weekend.

Eunle Brinker and WUllam
carleton were cJiMer guests of

AUCI!ONEER

Bald Knobs spent a recent Sltur·
day at the Douglas Circle home.
Eunie Brinker, Betty Van Met.
er, Margaret Ann Carleton and

CampleCe Servlee
Pltoat . . . .
Rlelae, Cillo
otaBiadfw;d

abate Judg• of aaid

J0/ 2J

NOTICE ON FILING OF
INVENTORY AND APPIUISE-"'ENT
Th• Stot• of Ohla, M•le• County
Probot• Court

''

To tha E10ecutar' or Administrator
ol ti-le •••otel to such ol the follow•
lng: 01 ore r . . idenl• of the Stote of
Ohio, vhl-th• •urvivlng •pause,
th• nut of kin, th• b.n•flclarlu
und.r th• will; and to th• ottornsy
or ottorn•yt repret•ntlng qny of th•
ofllfementioned p•rsont:
Fran k Gaul, No. 19992, Ch••t•r,
Ohio,
You mrs hereb~ notifi•d that the
Inventory and Appr~risement gf th•
eatole ol the .::.forementioned, d•·
e•o••d, lot• of laid Count)', WOI
.fil•d . in thla CourJ. Soicl lnvut0r)'
ond Approiument will b. for keor•
iniJ hfors thl t Court M the 9th dor
of Nov., 1968, at I0100 o'clock A.M.
Any parson d•• irin11 to fil• ••c•ption• ther•lo mutt fil• them at 1•.::.•1
fi
day I prior to th• dot• ut for
h•o;ning.
GiY•n und.r rny hand and uol of
•aid Court, thl• 19th do~ of Oct .

WORLD ALMANAC
FACTS

v•

1968.

The inspiration for El·
bert Hubbard's essay, "A
Message to Garcia," which
sold 40 million copies and

is said to have been written

in an hour, was Lt. Andrew
S. Rowan, U.S. Army. During the Spanish-American
War, The World Almanac
notes, Rowan ~secured se·
cret information about in·
surgent forces from Gen.
Garcia after searching for

him through perilous Cuban
j~gles .

ily on Sunday evening_
The sea battle between the
Constitution and the Guer·

rlere lasted between 30 and 40
minutes.

Bryants Bud&amp;et Shop

~,.

RAY AND SI'RAW. Call ••
IHJ.JIIp

,

Next T• StiHier' 1 $tore

101 W. Meln

P. .e,.y

•

11!15 FORD pickup, all atru,
exceUent coJY.!Uion. flJGO,
Phone M 2848.
tN0-3te

.....

The only Important uses of
Latin today are in Catholic
Church rituals in writing
drug preocrlptlOJII, and in

naming plants and anlmalo
ocienWically.

PIOMM JIHI,. et
lo-30; U.t; 1M3 ate

..w~

?

lJ~TEAJ,

r

~

A.; the wife and . er,

IF II..E k)f,R€

GETfTI./6 WJ'RIED,l!lE
PRESEIJT r IO:V- D (1)IJSID€R. MOST VNJ..V..ete

adopted ~on ot one
Walt Wallet, lPlJ m~t&lt;
deliver

IIJOLilD BE ...

to

.;aiel

per~n

an urqent meGGaqe'

"'•
•

•,_

68
BUICK ...... $2895
Sk~lork VB 2 Dr. Hard Tap. A
reol cr•arn puff. Power ''"'a
. lng:, Auto. Trant. Low mllsog•.

... .

~.~~~r~~~
Jzr..~
Lilts new car intlde ond o\11.

t&lt;eeping Meigs
Gallio and
Mason Area
ln-~rmed As
Well As
Entertained

""
•
_,_, A~D ~LL ~~lNG M'i
OVJt.l 'S&lt;OD1N6 iF 'IOLIU,

UT Mo St.EoP IN

HE'G GOT KO UCI:!1SE,
WHICH M&amp;:INS HE'S ILLEGAL!

WHICH

ME4N~

HE'S Off 1'

) r---( TtiE COG POUND WtHCH M£4f1S
" ..,

L..AL

~CI

.

THAT BY lOMORQO!.tJ 1-fE 'll 8t

~· -··~ - 1

:

AM tx -DOG, OR

Annusl •ledlon 01 ..,._ Coua\J
A•rleultural Soc1eb' Dlndors wlll

()(XJG()t1E AS
1tiE BOI'S SA'f!

be held Tbu...t•,, Na•embu 14. 1-.
fNm 5:110 P.ll. lo lrOD P ... at U..
offlee ot tiM llotp CGuab' COI!lJIU.
li.onera in 1111 Court aou- ID Pom·

t·ror, OIUe.

..

I.
I
~

m

QuallfleaUOM for eUIIOdatel
("llrecwrt an t.bat tbtJ matt be a

quslWid .-oter If lleltl Ccnlllt:J aJMI

'

1111111 bn• • membulblp uoat m
IBid liodeU lor HU' 1NG.
€:aadlda1M' ,.UUOIII m\181 . . ru.t
With dHI Jectt\an' DOt lata ti&amp;U
:1.:00 P.)( .
NOTea..... f,

....

I

W_..,..,,,

calendu

daJ'I

Hf'ON

b

de&amp;e

IIIICUOft, an qU&amp;HAed. to YOM.
TU MelD Coaatr

r-

DON'T TELl.
ME 'YOU GOT
AN INTERVIEW
WITH HEl..EN
OF 1T«lV

o.t,. ,.,...... MldiDJ: memiMrlldp
ueke&amp;o a&amp; tM clND or 11M
U.
C'auntr rm, 01' at ltaK flften (11)

el

1

Alt'tCIIItVaJ. 8oc!ielJ'

.........

BJI: Doaald. &amp;. lleutu, ·

•o.u.

10o10.

u...

ae
L

:0

YOU HAVE HURD AIOUT,
YOU HAVE liEN EXPECTING

d

•

IT,IT IS NOW MIRII

66
MJSTANG .. _.$1895
VB Fast Bock 2 Dr. Hord Top .

A NEW CHURCH IS &amp;liNG BOR

Good el•on locol one o....ner
c:ar, 4 sp. thift.

-On the leyel of Min"'• splrltVIIII
needt.

BLAETTNARS

at 7130 P.M . In The for•r
Brown'• Morin• Building on

BUICK
PONTIAC
GMC TRUCKS
POMEROY

Fir~t
Stote

Servic.£• Rowta

124,

Frillier nlthr
Mlnersvlll•,

DAILY CROSSWORD

Ohio.,
Pastor -

Kan O.,lntton •f the

'YeneWCIOcl

s.,.nd

Church,

a_., ••

. A.t1WSS

1. Stylish

f1. Garment

Arabian

ELM GROVE DAIRY DISPERSAL

kingdom
10. One kind of
education

I ALE

12. CrlMesoi'
a ~rt
14. ln . -- of

Bulltnes!lman'!l Utlin,
in part
16. Blvckade
HI. Suffix wltll
1~.

MACHINERY

'

'!'fl:li" Colf.

GROVER SAUER, JR,, OWNER ,

' CARNAHAN AUCTION -~ERyitl''' ,Y, :'

J_ CARNAHAN
· D. SMi:FII ',
Lunch ~voileblt by J,.odioa of ~!coa UniHtl ~.., }:
dist (hurch.
·
.~_ ..- '·
~' · -lt :{ •
14;;. Rosponsiblo For Accldtlltt or Lo11 of
f'

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Jt,.,.;it1
•.

~,-~

'

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falflor

of Judah

21. Remote
22. Hail
23. Tokyo,
1 old atyle

•

proboscitJ,

tively

25. Wight.
9&amp;P,rl,
· Man,etc.
21. Possealtivf
28. Nothing ·
29. Come lo

malurlly
31. Unllsof
meaHurr

"••tl!rd&amp;)'"s A••~~o· er
3fi . Convent

Wh~re

Reagan
reignK

26. Titlt'

40. Paradlst'

29. Poker

43. Mo&gt;llem

~4.

Propeot

pmble

6. UnempiO;'!'t"d

7.

30. Turn Up.'!id•·

Jackt't part

II. Kind of gun
11 . MeiOdle!&lt;

13 . Bering

..

ont&gt;'11

own
22. Set th•
mind
at east"

~~- Mr~. Ketti~

down

32.
33.

Recordln~:e

ID
II

HUMOT

mem~r

:w. Pack away

0

I I

title
4fl. Family

otTHI5 ~II&lt;:D WOUL-D 15E

member

) () j

4 7. Describing

instrumenb

~me

FaiTell'~;

document:o :

Lonlpn

abbr.

UN POPU"AI&lt;: 1'/lil-t

I
I ( XJ 0:

Now 111'1'&amp;11!18 tho circled !etten

to form the aurpriae anawer. u
~~~~':'"::--;;;-~~;:~su:;:r~ru~ted hJ'the above cartoon.

I.At. I THE "(I I I :r ]-IN-[ I II t
v..........,••

I

I....,..., INOW't

fLUKI

OUTLAW

IU'ITOIO

An••"'' fta.l aiiiOded p#!I'UJII dof!111'1
b-IllOW MIS llJ!OWS
\

dwellt!r
36. Election
. wln.nerw

,.

•

•

S1; BUll
38. Clock·
,I
~ftding :

"
' 39- Fry lightly -

tl .

Fr .

Om• l••llcr ~itDJIIY stllllW. for another. In this t~ample A ia used
fur Uw thrl..'f' L 'K. X rur lht• lwu 0':~, ell'. Sil\fCle IFttt•tll, a~·
trophW.It, the kongth 11nd tor!'"U•tlOI).

•!lu.:h dity thl" t·•idt

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all hlnta.

are differmt.

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C1f'yfttttquutt&gt;: ALL THAT 18 HlJ M~N M.ll~T·
Ji.Jo:TR()GRAliJ:; n~ lT l&gt;H&amp;'j .NOT AU.\' A,N&lt;~t, ;. QfBB(JN' . ·'
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NEBlNG

:u. tim

'

WIS~ ELMER DIDN'T ~AVE
LAilYNGITIS: I'M TIRED 0'
HIM
I
W&gt;IISTI.E

I

20. TakE- a~

H.M.S.
-t.

=

figura -

2. Part. of

3. Wading
bird

Unacramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to
form four ordinary words.

der·s

DOWS

11.

' king

..

for•
plod-

cu rtain
l. Photographer's
command,
in part

JllYWill~®IJ..J ::::.::!!:!-'

17. Pla&lt;.'t'

generi:-~

l!lw•et
19. Third

....·'

Mauoy Horrla ,j,j Llvo PTO, 3 pt- hitch, M.H: Bl.,..r, .
J.D. Grain Drill, formal! Cub with hy&lt;lroullc, J·~!'
Ll.,. S,..ldor, 3-14" M.H. 3 pt- Pl.,., A.C. 66
·' ..
b'lno, 2-14" J.D. 3 Pt., No. 5 J.D. Mawor, N.H; 61.1
Fl-!d Choooor, 3 Hoada, 2 Rubl&gt;tr Tirt4 Wego~a,. ~·
G;M.C. T~v~k US Ton, N.H. F.loll Chopper, ~60 ,~ril
F600 Truck.
·
-. ~

. -t9. Shooting
marbleK
50. Lowers the

atz:e. With
Junior
9. Ancient

Included art 10 First Coif Htlfors, 5 Froth Mow aiMI .
5 Clou-Up- 3 Surgt Poll Milkers and Pu01p • .110 G~!·
Solar Bulk Tonk Comploto. (Trucklnt Avalloblo)
'..

"Horblo It taklnc a bodJ bulldl"' oouno. 1hopo It "orlct
out b-r than w!Mn he tried to I"OW a beardl"

YOU~

CELL~I&lt; TOIII&lt;&gt;IITI

Due to Labor Problems, we are dlscontlnuiiiJ
the Dairy Operation on our farm, located woxlmately 2 miles east of Racine, Ohio, on State
Route 124.
31 HEAD.
•23 GUERNSEYS
• 8 HOLSTEIN$

wtlhU.

c-..Rty

'YE-:;'

'"

SATURDAY, NOV. 2, 1968, 11 A.M.

411,- o1 Oetober

, , H. O'HI ...

IAXJl-(_D

IT TAI&lt;E lD GET
'o'oU 10 ~y

Me, MD&gt;JIQ\16 !

LaiD U18Je

llcen••'

fldudu7

IAJI-\AT

:I'll 8UY '1tfJ MJYTHI&gt;JG.
'bJ IA)\/JT IF &lt;,tO'll MARRY

'"'

CAn lnd•pendenl Chutch)

........

debrllt with Pl.d
lour montbJ .
Da~ \bill &amp;cM.n

Cl.,k of told Court
By Hen"ietto O'Brien
Chief Dsputy Cl•rk
10/23; 10130 2tc

•'••ring. Automatic tront .

1191--.

'.

F. H. O'BRIEN
Jude• and ••·officio

Popular buck•t 1eot1, Power

Mrs. Allen Taylor on Sunday,

William T. Carleton called at
the l'lome or the Dan Smith fam-

niEIR ID·MON"Tl-!
BU51NE55 TRIP.

~·,

JO 11/6 Jtc

Reading More
Children read more for
son, Patrick, called at the home personal pleasure and Infor5 I tic of Clarence Koehler, Tuppers mation-aside from school
books---than ever before. Since
PJains, recently.
AIR CONDmONING RefrigerMr. and Mrs. Derrell Taylor 1925 the number of new hooks
ation aervlce. Jack's Refrig- of Creston, 0. 1 and Mr. and Mn. and new editions for children
eration, New Haven . bone Shelby Pickens and famll.y of fl.l.. have increased more than 400
per cent, according to the En8112-207!1_
4 I lie cine R. D., ..·isited with Mr. and cyclopaedia
Britannica.

FIII8T FLOOR apartment Very
nice lor two people or two GOOD YOUNG rabbit dog, good
people with small ohlld. Phone
breerl and good runner. Em- RF.AilY - 'I!X concrote dellvWILL DO sewing at home OIN28'/.
10-23-Uie
mett
stethem, Long Bottom.
e!'fd right to yOID' oroJect.
zippers, pockets, reggln~ .
Fast
and eaoy, Free estiPhone
Olesler,
~hemming, alterations, etc. POUR ROOM and bath, unfur10-31Hte
mates
.
Phone 992-11184_ GoegMrs. Freddie Thabet. Ma90n.
nilhed, 11150 Lincoln Heights.
leln
R•ady
- Mix Co., MiddlePhone 773-SSSL
4-30-lfc
Phone 11112-3314.
10-:19-tfc !1153 CHEVROLET pickup, $125.
port, Ohio.
I SO lfe
Phone
992-9934
and
ask
lor
REPAIR. REFINISH, recondi- TWO Fl/RNISIIEt) sleeping
Frank Roush.
10-38-31p BIJilr.ET PRICE fllrn1turo &lt;111
tion golf clubs, John Teaford.
rooms ; private kitchen, priour third Door budqet obop.
vate bath, private entranoe,
--~ utilities furnished; 10 mile 'J'WO coal stollen with cm- Baker Furniture. Middleport.
Ohio
t t1 tfe
lrols, Arnold Brolhen, PoBACK HOE and Dorer Servleo,
from town of Pomeroy, Box
meroy,
Phone
pond, basement, water line,
281/a, Rt 3, Pomeroy. Mn.
10-IJ-Ife ~FWING MACHINES. reoalr
oeptlc tank, R. w_ Onrdery,
Eleanor Batea. Phone 11112"''&lt;&gt;rvtce. all makes. WY J..
Long Bottom, Ohio. 11-27-J!Jie
'10'15.
I0-29-4tc POTATOES, Phone 843-DH
2284. 'nle Pabrle Shop, Pomeroy. Authorlled Sln•er Sales
VACANCY for two elderly peo- SMALL FURNISHED house In Clarence Prollltt, Portlandnn&lt;l Service. We Sharnen
I0-114c
ple. Pre!... private paid pa.
Middleport. Phone 111!2-5262_
Sclaors.
1-:19-Uc
Uenta- Phone Mason, TIS-5115.
10-29-tfc POODLE PUPPIES, AKC Toy
l~c
miniature, $'IS and up. stud C!GAilETTI!! vending ma""'10 • 50 TRAILER, extra nice,
and oervice. ABC !ftteroriMI,
,.rvlce and grooming. 1"-t
1'11ERE WILL be a gun Rhool
Phone 11112-21119.
10-~
MoMn, W. v•. Pbme mao.
1192-5443_
11 I lie
Sunday. Nov. 3 beginning at
ooon at the Forked Run ROOMS FOR tDurlsta, dean,
AKC Golden lletrlover JOippiM.
Sportsman aub. Everyone II
comfortable; a single, 13
nt Alb St., lllddleport. ·•
'"••trL'nee
welco~ .
10-zt.Ste
double_ Phone m.31!11.
M43.
. . . AUTOMOBlLE ln1111'111&lt;0 ben
I0-29-3tp
eancelledt Loet Your Oll&lt;!l'llWILL BUTCIIE'R a large young
IIlii
TII'I\EE
Bl!lDROOM
frill.
or'l
ean tn-!tM.
bee! in about sil weeki. AnyFor Sale
er, Expanclo llvlng room IIIII
I IS II•
one Interested In boylng half,
swnlng. Phone 99Ulllt.
pleose call 9111-M. 10-2f.3te
USED STOVES
IMS«e
Bryant• Second Floor
NOTIC:I OP APPOIMTMINT
WE WILL be bolding two aucGas Kitchen Stov•···-35.00
Cue No. m,CIQ
latah
et Dtwitt N ........... O.C.t...
SORRY
SAL
II
ooW
a
Mlri'J
Gas Heating Stov.... 35.00
Uonl per month slarling Nov.
Nouee Is berelw ctven tllat EdU.JI
Gal. She U8ed Blue Lustre 'til. Wekb. ef Rou~ a, AlbNI,, Ohio,
I. Sales will be on the fll'8t
Small Gas Hoator ____ JO.OO
Ni
and upbolatery e . _, IIU Mel dub' lpPOlDied A~
and lhlrd Friday nights of
&amp;ratm ot the ~t. fll Dto'rid N.
Both room Si u
Rent eledrlc llhampocw fl. R11.11•U 4eceued, lattl of Scipio
each month. Adllf\IS Auction
Gas H..,.,________ ___ ___ 2-00
Mel" Countt, Oblo.
Baker Furniture_
10-a«e T11wnatlip,
Cnd.Uon at'l recau1tll4 to IUt tlltir
Service, Rutland.
IO-Zt-4tc
Electric Heater .....-.. .. 10.00

407 PAGE
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

ro__ .

MATT6R a: FACT, 1F HE I.UAS HERE Rt~T 1011,
He{, \1.1-lE~'s
~RVSOOY ~~'? ~.:..
· ----~

•
•

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

GOEGLEIN GRAVEL

. H. O'BRIEN

Doted this 19th day of Odober
1968.

Betty Van Meter recently.
Mr. and Mrs.. Richard Abl.e8of

c_BRADFORD

l'DatertJ, 0

't

.. AND MY COMPANY
IN6/STS 1 GO ON

""'lEAH? WaL,I JU!;T Wi'H '!J.Iri a.D 1'/~Ailf W/Qfr AWAV ()llHAT 9t!Gil!e9.&gt; TIIIP!

-

WMPO

• Free Estimates
• Quality Concrete
• Certified Streneth
• Delivery
• Quick Service
• Finishing
• Sand &amp; Gravel
DIAL 992-3284

-GUARANI'E'EDPHONE 992-2094

Notlee U bueb;r Clven tbal lllla·
beth J:. Smith of 113 Prince Street,
AIU:andrie , Vh·...nte hu bHn 4uiJ'
Poa~eror.

THE BORN LOSER

5.55

lltU. of Mnr I . ,...,..,dl, 0..

of

•

992-21!3

PH,

Wheel Alignment

Cue No. IOOID

CHdttorJ ~ required to fll• their
clalml wllA .aid tldudtrJ wttllln

From tho Largest T~''"
Bull&lt;t&gt;zer Radiator To The
~esL HeaLer Core.

li)(PERT

APPOINTMINT

Q-.

Hockingport, Ohio
Phone 667-3370

BLAETTNARS

Dl Oetober

P. H . O•I.IIIN
Prob.... Jucllt of 11ld Cou"'Y
. \NO; 11..; 11·13 3te
HOTICI

'

Schawarul Marine

Sun. - --- - -----1110

near

stores. Only $3500.00
BABYSI'n'ING OR IRONING LARGE COAL furnace, good
'lf!DDLEPOIIT
- 3 Apartmenil,
condition; also Admiral TV,
to do in my hom&lt;, phone 9923
car
garage,
near store&amp;.
21 inches. Good condition.
• iW112.
I0-29-3tc
Out
of
high
water.
'IZ,OOO.OO
Phone 992-5890 or 11112-3927.
DAIRY
FARM
Now
operatI0-2ll-3tc
~-URNISHED

CueNo.IO.olt

M. .. - ·-" ul "'" · ,., ll. Alba.a1. Oblo.
b.. bHll dUl) ;.ppolnted A&amp;nlnlatratrlx of the :r..tate of Amla K.. •••·
,.u, dotceated, tat·· of Sdplo TIJ'IIJJI•hlp, Yelp County, Ohio.
Crettlton 11re required to JUe tbetr
claJm. with .aid flducJary within

IHIItlrSenlc'

On Display
115 Soon
To Arrive

APP'OINTMINT

.J

LI'LORPI-IAN ABBIE!! US DOGMTCH BACHELORS
WISHES T' MAKE 'lORE FEW REMAIN IN' DA'IS
HAPP'I- SO WE'LL LET '10' KETCH AN' MARR-1
V~AINON&amp; 'IO'DUIR.U,IN TH'SADIE HAWKINS
DA'/ RACE!.'

6-9~-18

fer PlalnHff
ICI JO; 1l d1 11 13: l1 20;
~1 :"; 11 • ft.c

lit•·b .... ""~" •. tutllll. Dectlled

ExtiiiENCEI

EYINRUDE
69's Are Here

other proper rellelJ aid CIUM 'IIIW
be for lllear1u1 oA or" Jfttr tiM lkh
d&lt;~~.)' ol Deeember, 1911.

OP

Di?AWIJ

eK.K R&lt;l:ltl nw;:

of dllt' and eztr.me erueHJ', .uad

NO TIC I

THE GOLDIE :M. Rice real esta!e located on OUver Slrell
In Middleport, Illelp County,
Ohio, will be IIOid to the blgbOPEN EVES. 8:00P.M.
est bidder on Saturday, Nowmber lnd- 11!18, at 10:30 A.
POMEROY. OHIO
M. at the olfice of Cmr,
crow &amp; Porter, Atlomeyll•
Pomeroy, Ohio. Real Eltate
ForS.Ie
Wanted
11 appraised at $1,500.00 and
LADY FOR house work. Lire EARLY American Stereo. AM
cannot be oold for less than
in if desired . Contact 0.
&amp; FM radio. Lovely maple
lhil amount Sale subject to
Hindy over Liberty Theatre
finis.b, 4 speed changer, pay·
the approval of the Probale
in Middleport. Phone 992ments of $6 per month or pay
Court, Melp County, Cillo.
5151.
111-30-tfc
balance due $92.118. Phone
Sybil Ebenbach, ElecutriX of
992-3218.
10-27-Qc
Eotate of Goldie M. Rice, DeANTIQUES, furniture, dlah01,
ceased.
10-28-llc
miscellaneous. Mrs. Howard SOLID STATE Stereo; 1968 walnut stereo console with 4Cecil, 800 W. Main St_, PomeTWO FAMILY boule, :1111 Race
speaker, 4-speed, automatic
roy.
1-1$-tlc
Sl.. Middleport. Phone 192chonger. Make payment&gt; of
H.
10-27-14tc
$5 or pay just $11.16_ CaD 11112Lost
3218.
I0-27-mc 56 CHEVY, 2 door Sedan, 301
FIVE-MONTH-OLD Polled Hereforo heifer. Lost In Tanners
cubic Inch, 4 barreD, 3 speed
riVE ronsecutlve lots In Beech
Run area. Anyone seeing the
on Door, good eondltlon. all
Grove cemetery. Phone 11112new exhaust syslem, $350.
heifer is asked to call 91116439.
10-27-61p
3774.
I0-27~tc
Pbone 192-7008.
I0-25«c
SIX ROOM house, newly re-

THAT'S

BOYD

1965 CHEVROLET Bi stayno.._ _________ .,.,_., ___ .,., _____ $1295

4 Door. Local l owner clean cor. Beautiful turquoise

It

Big Trad.-ln .411o~anc:e

L.ocal owner cor, 4 on the floar, good wideo -.{tal W.W. ~
tires, red vinyl interior, white finish, ra._' &amp; heater •.
Try it for performance.
.

finis, with clean interior . All good W.W. tires . Radio
end Heater.

htiOtliOOI

Bec~use you

SIEGLER and
TROPIC·AIRE Heaters

06 CHEVELLE 5S 396 H.T. Cpe. ___ ,.,._., _______________$1995

1i• contocuri~o

II conh. fM' W.,..d

,

va

5 conU p41 Waul o- inao rtion
ll"nilllu'" Ch&lt;l r9o 75(

l:l

Sovo No~l Install Nawl
COiotfiLETE LINE

65 CHEYELLE ________________ -·-·- -·-- ------------·-----~, _____ ,$1495

UTES

11'1'11

QftAUTY

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

SIINES ALIVE!!
TERRIBLE

·-

WANT AD
INFOAMA TION
OU.OLIN£S

FER60f

WHO HE IS?·

'

~

·•

•

•"

I

"....

...•

�'

.

' U - ThO Dlib'

' 1'

. ~-.

'

' l;f

.
li
S.ntlnol, Mlddlopon.,~~.

.

•'
t

0,; Oc:tober·3D, "1968

· The Election·in ohi6--No. 4 ·.

1

'

.

EDITOR'S NOTE: This is
-the rourth or sh: articles deal·
ing with the Nov. 5 general
election in Ohio. The previous

test, they· seem. remote. '
GOP leaders Jl()int 1o Mrs:
Bolton's agO as the primnr)l
factor whit-t! might lead lo her

articles roncerned the state
~reme Cour4 state Issues

defeat after 28 years in Con-

state legislature,

The
others will deal with the li.S.
Senate ard presidential elections in Ohio.
By RICHARD E. LIGHTNER
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (liPO - "If you
vote agains t her," said the ReP-

wht.ch might 'contrlbule to her
defea~ The suburllon CleV.land
district she las mothered for

14 consecutive terms Is no longer "waspish" an&lt;..l Republican.
The district now consists,
largely, of factory workers in

gress. She is 83.
"The best thing she could
have done was to have spent
the time on the Riviera instead
of campaigning," said one Republican. "She comes across real
bad on televisioiL"
Other Faclors
But there are other ractors

nationality grO~s who have
moved from the city. The poll·
ticians have names like ~
askar, McGettricK and Pokorny
and a large percertage of the
electorate are Roman Catholic
or Jewish.

Mrrt. Charlie carroll and rlm- and Mrs. Paul fluro and ·flmily,
loco!.
·
·· · - •
Mr. and Mr~. ~rUt Clr.roll
Mr. and Mrs. Clllfonll&lt;-·
arr;l Mrs. Bett,y 1\l;tia:S were It nut· or anci l'ami(JI or PomeroY'IItoute
land one day lasl weoll.
called on his parents, MI. and
' . '·-·
,
Mrs. casto, Portlarll, Mr"· Ru- Mrs. Homer IcenhoWer.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Ours and chanon, Longl!ollom, Mr, and
Mr. Slmoo Powell coU~oohlo
ramn.y, Mr. Theodore Willford, Mr.s. Oris Frodertck of Jndlln- slater, Mro. Marte Li(l!ronce.
toea~.; .li,nd Mr. Eldon Kraeuter apolls, Ind., vfstteci Mrs. S)'lvlt
Mr. ~d Wise and f&amp;, Sidcalled qn Mr. and Mrs. William OIJl)enler,
ney, or llllddleporunii·Mr. Jllall·
Ables am family.
Mrs. Vlck\, Johnsoa ot CleV&amp;- wood .Johnston called oo 'Mr. ind
Mr. and Mrs, Lawrence Bush Iand spent o:!ltekendwltbMr,and Mrs. C. C. Carter,L&lt;qBOUom.
and daughter Connie of Racine Mrs. Cecil Roseberry and Mrs.
'
Route called'
on Rev.
and Mrs. Roosh.
JOhn Buac::h,
Mra. Edra Bush and grandson,
Mrs. DorJs Sayre went to Port- Tommy Roseberry, visited her
. ChilAr's Atactlm4 Dllerl
land and took her mother, Mrs, si_ster, Mrs. Ollie Young, Pomis said to be the world's
Ethel Johnson, to see a doctor. eroy. .
driest spol-but the grogMr. Robert Ours, Mrs. Mae
raphers obvioully 41t,l~t't
Mr. and Mrs. t.wrence Johncheck our t•etotaler -Guilt'•
Van Meter, local, Mary Smith ston called on Mr. and Mr&amp; C. C.
refreshment cupboqrd, .
of Little HockilVl \llaited Mr. aiXI carter of Long Bottom and Mr.
'
'
'

Qld Town
Flat8 News

The two candidates, poles
· Jpart. are running on their Ac--

Vanik Favore~l 'to Win·22nd·'if Seat
and

. I '

.,

~

onls. Vanlk Is a liberal w)lo has
'•"""'rled Increased ". lederal
money for urban ahd social
problems while Mrs. Bolton Is
a ftacal conaerVIltlve who

Into
this district moved
Charlea A. Vanlk, 54, an influ-- preaches the virtues of thrift,
ential member of the U.S. patriotism and individual tniUa·
House of Representatives who tlve.
his represented Clevelar.:l eth- 1 Republicans and Democ::nts
nlc gr&lt;M.&amp;'Is fDr 14 years.
also say the 23rd Congressional
l
Vanlk chose MrBol
s.
ton s · District may switch to the Demdistrict after the Ohio General ocrats. Incumbent WOllam E.
Asaembly made his old district Minshall faces Clevelar.:l Counpredominantly Negro. As a re~ cil Pretiident James V. Stanton.
suit the Bolton- Vanlk contest
Democrats !eel Starton has a
Is one of four in the nation that good chance ot upsetting Minhas lncwnbents facing each oth- shB.ll on the basis of re-4pporer.
tiomnent of Minshall's district.

'

I(JI.

·tCi
CREAM
~~1. 59~

ublkan, "it's like \IOtifl8 against

Everyday Low Price

tnt American flag, apple pie (Jf
motherhood,''
rnstitution that she is, Frances P, Bolton, Republi('an, is in
trouble in her 22nd Congressional District, acl'ording to the
leaders of both politi cal parties.
The professionals fed U1erc is
an extremely good chance the
Democrats will pick up a seat,
that of Mr~. Bolton, and drop
the Republican majorits to I S-6
in the congressional delegat ion.
Politicians feel there are
otlalr possibilities for the Democrats to win, but with so much
lied into lhe prestidential con-

Stamps

100 Extra

$

WITH PURCHASE OF $10.00
(Except it•m• prohiblt.d b,. lewJ

I ·

Coupon Yelld Thru NO¥. 5 lo
All Columbus Un;t A&amp;P Sto&lt;01
One coupon NdHm.d witf, uch $10 puroheM

•

Fresh, Tender, Young

t

FRYERS

BIG BUYS on "Super-Right" Meats!

WHOLE, lb.

SUPER-RIGHT SMOKED··· FULLY

COOKEDH

Foote Shows
Net Profits

'I

GRAHAM STATION, W. \'a. Net earnings for the third CJ.Iarter of 1968 were $280,739 on
sales or $18,300,114 compared
with a loss in 1967 of S14, 766
on sales of$18, U9,253, the Foote
Mineral Co. announced Monday
from EXton, Pa.
Sales for the first nine months
increased from $60,877,271 in
1967 1o $61,444,&gt;36 in 1968. Net
earnings for the first n i n e
mmdu or 1968 are $2, 198,668
compared with $1,839,675 for
the same period of 1967.
Increased sales volumes of
mineral and chemical products
more than offset lower sales
from the uranium -vanadium operations at &amp;iprock which were
I closed around mld&lt;:Ytar-- aa pre~ vloosly reported. Meta1lurgical
sales were approximately t h e
same as the previous year despite the slowdown in steel ac! tivicy following that inWstry's
contract seWements at the end
~July.

•
Foote Mineral operates t h e
': plllrt here making metallurgical
: proW.cts formerly known as Va: nadlum Corp, of America.

'•

{

Sidney Durst

SELF-SERVICE,
·
PRE-PACKAGED MEATS
CAN BE A PROBLEM!
So you wonder.
The steak looks good, but 1s the bottom all bone and fat?
•

"

, n .- "' ..,. ...

:!!'•·

·•

•

i:
·:·

'We think we have the answer.

;; Absentee Votes
•'

j. Are Coming In
::

."' '

~

,•.SJ39
llenelen Rib Steaks
Delmonico Steakl •
••· S189
Beef Strips for Braising •••. 98&lt;
Sllort Ribs of Beef • • ••. Qc

Simple? as ABC.
Effective? No more gamble.

SUPU:-RI'-Hf TASTY

Chip Chop,U Ham • • ••. ate
Whole Hog Sausage c~:',;,"!:. &amp;9c
Meat Leaf llx ·~··;;::-. • ••. &amp;tc

PT. PLEASANT - Ab581ltee
voting for the November gen.
eral election is continuing this
week in the office of the circult clerk with Saturday, Nov.

t· At the close of the work day
.: Monday, October 28, Ill demo.:. erats had Voted at the oO'ice and
:: ts ballot&amp; the 104 democrat
j ballots sent out had been return-

or

~ ed. Nine1y-alx republicans had

~ ··Ill the office and 68 o(
: llle Ill republican bolloo mall: od aut had been returned.
Ablelltee ballot clerks a r e

M.ulne Nibert, democrat,
Qaarles Musgrave, republi-

:;1

STOKELY
WHOLE KERNEL

STOKELY

Red Kidney
BEANS

Iceberg Lettuce
LARGE
HEAD

l9U., THE GREAT ATLANTIC &amp; PACifiC l(ll. CO. INC .

19

C

Pumpkin Pies ICE CREAM
MARVEL VANILLA

sgc

lAKED
FRESH
DAILY

PlAIN, SUGARED OR CINNAMON

Donuts

SAVE
20•

gallon
carton

•• •••

&amp;russel Sprouts • • •
Louisiana Yams • • •

BIG BUYS on A&amp;P Groceries!

SPECIAL LOW PIICE- 5AYI JOe

FRESH TASTY

GREAT WITH HAM

WHY
PAY
lriOU1

STOKELY

Skl•lea Wle11n "!~·~~~::.ac
FriH Fllh Stlllb ~~~ ;:. He

BIG BUYS on AliP's Fresh Produce!

--(• Jane Parker Buys •)--

Each
Only

Pork 011. LOIN9t"~'.~•::':.ors ,._ Jlc
Sullua Meat PI• ; 5 ~ s1oo

.. 29'

LIGHT MEAT
CHUNK STYLE

•

can

Scot Lad

ll.rdseye '""'" '··~"· ..

4··.. 5100
Hash Browns • .3 .~=:: 5100
Cool Whip · • • • -:: 49'
Lom.,

\'

JOAN OF ARC

•

•

can

IN

.,..

Y4-ll. STICKS

PINEAPPLE GRAPEFRUIT OR PINEAPPLE PINK GRAPEFRUIT

46•01.

·

cans

IEFFUDE:NT '

'

'

'

'

Trick or Treat!

.

~

•

SC CANDY lARS • • 24!:. 8t
Ann Pace Harvest Mix • :: 35"
Ann Page Indian Corn . • ·:;;; 2t
Henhey Kisses • • • !: 7t
Kraft Caramels • • • ':: It
Candy Pumpkins·~~ •• ':&gt;: 2t

OUR FINEST QUALITY-AlP

Fancy Apple Sauce •

•

16·o•·1Sc
3,.!..... SJOO

Ragu lpaghelll Sauce • • • • •
AaP Golden Corn -:e':Z~ • • • • • 2.:!:' SJOO
Bdgl:il Sail Rinse • • ~ • • • • . ~sec

••·
&lt;
~

.•. - ---

\
.-..~-

-- .

REGULAR 49e

•

.
•
h
8
1
o
·
o
·
SPI nac ...............
·s.h· e·11·le 'ae
. ·ans..... 6 1 00
Pork -&amp;Beai$.....8~:,1. 00

~· $1

cans

scot Lad

SCOT FARMS

Ironing Board

BISCUITS

PADS
,(OVERS
and

Ih.

ScotLad

•

Only

for

300

cans

•

39e

......
...
IIi

...

be

&lt;&gt;'I

.all

DOLLAR
U.S. NO.1

.,

5

lb.

'9 '

~PECIAL SATURDAY ONLY; jNOf:. 2
~

·~

D

i

•

39e 3 ~oz. $1.00

......

Ill

al

JENO'S.

""ro

AND SAUSAGE

•a

.....

I'•

I•

POTATOES BANANAS
1 .0Jbs.39~

do

,,.

WITH CHEESE

GOLDEN RIPE

to
eel

With $3.00 Purchase

DOLLAR WISE FROZEN FOOD BUYS

can

·•! j

I

~

'

'

ASSORTED VARIETIES

300

'

FAMOUS HUNT'S

COlli

'

cans

UIIY'S

6 DEliCIOUS VARIETIES

T•dy Fred! Froan

son

MARGARINE

.Peac h.es.............. 5 1 00

8-oJ.o

Frozen Food Values!

SJ 1

''

II&gt;-

IRS. FILBERT'S

Col•y Cheese • ., • • •""79'
Pumpkin Pie Mix • • '::' 39'
FOR
A.,le Ci.er • • • • • o;:"tt
IOc OFF
thl•t
LAIEL ,......

qt.
bois.

TOILET·
TISSUE

'It

....

.. 15'

LONGHORN STYLE

pkgs.

ORANGE
DRINK

oct

el.

PENN. DUTCH STROGANOFf OR KLUSKI

• • •

EDON BRAND

REGULAR 98c

YOUR HALLOWEEN PARTY

•

~~~!·1.00

tb.

'

6'
1
2·ol.28c
Tuna Fish
••
FAB DETERGENT
$100
Egg Noodles • • • • • 5
73/&gt;
Kidney Beans •• • • 17-oi.1Sc JIHy Cake Mix • • •
Imperial Martarlne
$1
00
....
Dole Fruit Drink • • 3
DentureTablets •• . ....
,J----------·
·
.
1
\
o
&amp; P To•ato Sauce~ ,. ·
$1
00
Tomato Juice •.•• 4
.
2 ,:::43e
,,
A&amp; P Corn Oil Ma.rgarine.••.• 3;k~~-99e
CHICKEN-OF.THE-SEA-SAYE lie

lb.

Ia-

Why Pay More?

ggc

Dubuque

WAGNER

:. SJ

TOMATO JUICE

4

lb

ourFreshGrind
Everyday Low Price

GR. BEANS

46•01.

: 2, the Rnal day of balloting,

~.

$100'
.....

or better than the side you can see.

lirdsey• FroHn

'·

a·

.. .

1.00

Hall or Whole

~

STOKELY CUT

8-ol.

We put the best side down.
The side you don't see is guaranteed to be equal to

AlP FROZEN POTATOES

'I•

~

.

bots.

We have a policy.

Fordkoo~

·'

· $~

,,

"

ot Parkersburg.
&amp;lrvlving are his wife, Iva
C. Durst; two sons, Ralph Durst,
Gallipolis, 0., and Paul Durst
at. Charleston; one sister, Mrs.
Jessie Hussell, Mt. Alto, a n d
tour grandchildren.
Burial will be in the church
~; cemetery under the direction ol
•: the Cuto Funeral Home at Ev~~ ans, . W, Va.

Rib Roast.

It's a problem ... a problem we've given a lot of thought

COPYRIGHT~

•
:.
:.
~.
.:

Turkeys

You can see the top side of the meat but not the bottom.

5

,. _.

.
5
9e
Sucher Hams ..................... ~
39C
RoII Sausage ...................... · ........
...
Longhorn Cheese ...........~:·. 69e ...
59e
Grou nd Beef.......................

CATSUP
14oz.

PHONit 992 3480

"Wt! IIN'lbtlllcM'I'OUIJII.

STOKELY

Tasty l ..f lib Steaks or

U.S. Gov't. Grad• A- YoiUIIJ

Is this a good reason for shopping A&amp;P? It's one of many.

PT. PLEASANT - FWleral
aervice will be conducted Wednesday (today) at 2 p.m. in the
&amp;nith U.Uted Methodist church
for Sidney Rczy Durst, 68, Leon,
who died unexpectedly Monday
5:30p.m. at his home.
A retired farmer and construction worker, he was born April
25, 1900 at Leon Rt. 1, a son of
tile late Thomas and Mary ~r ­
ley Durst. He was a member of
the Smith United Methodist
Cll.lrch and Labor Union 1085

Slice On Top .

FULL BUTT HALF • • ···S8• SHANK PORTIONS •
CBNTBR SLICBS ••• ···18• BUTT PORTIONS • •

Fair and square? Sure because "We Care."

Dies Monday

I

NO CENTER
SLICES REiriOVED

Comw MIH and S11111nd 511.

DOL\AR BUYS

Look For The
Hall With The

OR

FULL
SHANK HALF

We Accept Federal ·.Pood Sta~rqM

Cut-Up 111. 32e

WHOLE

So Far in 68

SUPER MARKET - Open Daily 9 to 9:30..Sun. 12 to 9:30

12ln.

12 ...~ .
••••••••••••••••
•

�'

.

' U - ThO Dlib'

' 1'

. ~-.

'

' l;f

.
li
S.ntlnol, Mlddlopon.,~~.

.

•'
t

0,; Oc:tober·3D, "1968

· The Election·in ohi6--No. 4 ·.

1

'

.

EDITOR'S NOTE: This is
-the rourth or sh: articles deal·
ing with the Nov. 5 general
election in Ohio. The previous

test, they· seem. remote. '
GOP leaders Jl()int 1o Mrs:
Bolton's agO as the primnr)l
factor whit-t! might lead lo her

articles roncerned the state
~reme Cour4 state Issues

defeat after 28 years in Con-

state legislature,

The
others will deal with the li.S.
Senate ard presidential elections in Ohio.
By RICHARD E. LIGHTNER
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (liPO - "If you
vote agains t her," said the ReP-

wht.ch might 'contrlbule to her
defea~ The suburllon CleV.land
district she las mothered for

14 consecutive terms Is no longer "waspish" an&lt;..l Republican.
The district now consists,
largely, of factory workers in

gress. She is 83.
"The best thing she could
have done was to have spent
the time on the Riviera instead
of campaigning," said one Republican. "She comes across real
bad on televisioiL"
Other Faclors
But there are other ractors

nationality grO~s who have
moved from the city. The poll·
ticians have names like ~
askar, McGettricK and Pokorny
and a large percertage of the
electorate are Roman Catholic
or Jewish.

Mrrt. Charlie carroll and rlm- and Mrs. Paul fluro and ·flmily,
loco!.
·
·· · - •
Mr. and Mr~. ~rUt Clr.roll
Mr. and Mrs. Clllfonll&lt;-·
arr;l Mrs. Bett,y 1\l;tia:S were It nut· or anci l'ami(JI or PomeroY'IItoute
land one day lasl weoll.
called on his parents, MI. and
' . '·-·
,
Mrs. casto, Portlarll, Mr"· Ru- Mrs. Homer IcenhoWer.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Ours and chanon, Longl!ollom, Mr, and
Mr. Slmoo Powell coU~oohlo
ramn.y, Mr. Theodore Willford, Mr.s. Oris Frodertck of Jndlln- slater, Mro. Marte Li(l!ronce.
toea~.; .li,nd Mr. Eldon Kraeuter apolls, Ind., vfstteci Mrs. S)'lvlt
Mr. ~d Wise and f&amp;, Sidcalled qn Mr. and Mrs. William OIJl)enler,
ney, or llllddleporunii·Mr. Jllall·
Ables am family.
Mrs. Vlck\, Johnsoa ot CleV&amp;- wood .Johnston called oo 'Mr. ind
Mr. and Mrs, Lawrence Bush Iand spent o:!ltekendwltbMr,and Mrs. C. C. Carter,L&lt;qBOUom.
and daughter Connie of Racine Mrs. Cecil Roseberry and Mrs.
'
Route called'
on Rev.
and Mrs. Roosh.
JOhn Buac::h,
Mra. Edra Bush and grandson,
Mrs. DorJs Sayre went to Port- Tommy Roseberry, visited her
. ChilAr's Atactlm4 Dllerl
land and took her mother, Mrs, si_ster, Mrs. Ollie Young, Pomis said to be the world's
Ethel Johnson, to see a doctor. eroy. .
driest spol-but the grogMr. Robert Ours, Mrs. Mae
raphers obvioully 41t,l~t't
Mr. and Mrs. t.wrence Johncheck our t•etotaler -Guilt'•
Van Meter, local, Mary Smith ston called on Mr. and Mr&amp; C. C.
refreshment cupboqrd, .
of Little HockilVl \llaited Mr. aiXI carter of Long Bottom and Mr.
'
'
'

Qld Town
Flat8 News

The two candidates, poles
· Jpart. are running on their Ac--

Vanik Favore~l 'to Win·22nd·'if Seat
and

. I '

.,

~

onls. Vanlk Is a liberal w)lo has
'•"""'rled Increased ". lederal
money for urban ahd social
problems while Mrs. Bolton Is
a ftacal conaerVIltlve who

Into
this district moved
Charlea A. Vanlk, 54, an influ-- preaches the virtues of thrift,
ential member of the U.S. patriotism and individual tniUa·
House of Representatives who tlve.
his represented Clevelar.:l eth- 1 Republicans and Democ::nts
nlc gr&lt;M.&amp;'Is fDr 14 years.
also say the 23rd Congressional
l
Vanlk chose MrBol
s.
ton s · District may switch to the Demdistrict after the Ohio General ocrats. Incumbent WOllam E.
Asaembly made his old district Minshall faces Clevelar.:l Counpredominantly Negro. As a re~ cil Pretiident James V. Stanton.
suit the Bolton- Vanlk contest
Democrats !eel Starton has a
Is one of four in the nation that good chance ot upsetting Minhas lncwnbents facing each oth- shB.ll on the basis of re-4pporer.
tiomnent of Minshall's district.

'

I(JI.

·tCi
CREAM
~~1. 59~

ublkan, "it's like \IOtifl8 against

Everyday Low Price

tnt American flag, apple pie (Jf
motherhood,''
rnstitution that she is, Frances P, Bolton, Republi('an, is in
trouble in her 22nd Congressional District, acl'ording to the
leaders of both politi cal parties.
The professionals fed U1erc is
an extremely good chance the
Democrats will pick up a seat,
that of Mr~. Bolton, and drop
the Republican majorits to I S-6
in the congressional delegat ion.
Politicians feel there are
otlalr possibilities for the Democrats to win, but with so much
lied into lhe prestidential con-

Stamps

100 Extra

$

WITH PURCHASE OF $10.00
(Except it•m• prohiblt.d b,. lewJ

I ·

Coupon Yelld Thru NO¥. 5 lo
All Columbus Un;t A&amp;P Sto&lt;01
One coupon NdHm.d witf, uch $10 puroheM

•

Fresh, Tender, Young

t

FRYERS

BIG BUYS on "Super-Right" Meats!

WHOLE, lb.

SUPER-RIGHT SMOKED··· FULLY

COOKEDH

Foote Shows
Net Profits

'I

GRAHAM STATION, W. \'a. Net earnings for the third CJ.Iarter of 1968 were $280,739 on
sales or $18,300,114 compared
with a loss in 1967 of S14, 766
on sales of$18, U9,253, the Foote
Mineral Co. announced Monday
from EXton, Pa.
Sales for the first nine months
increased from $60,877,271 in
1967 1o $61,444,&gt;36 in 1968. Net
earnings for the first n i n e
mmdu or 1968 are $2, 198,668
compared with $1,839,675 for
the same period of 1967.
Increased sales volumes of
mineral and chemical products
more than offset lower sales
from the uranium -vanadium operations at &amp;iprock which were
I closed around mld&lt;:Ytar-- aa pre~ vloosly reported. Meta1lurgical
sales were approximately t h e
same as the previous year despite the slowdown in steel ac! tivicy following that inWstry's
contract seWements at the end
~July.

•
Foote Mineral operates t h e
': plllrt here making metallurgical
: proW.cts formerly known as Va: nadlum Corp, of America.

'•

{

Sidney Durst

SELF-SERVICE,
·
PRE-PACKAGED MEATS
CAN BE A PROBLEM!
So you wonder.
The steak looks good, but 1s the bottom all bone and fat?
•

"

, n .- "' ..,. ...

:!!'•·

·•

•

i:
·:·

'We think we have the answer.

;; Absentee Votes
•'

j. Are Coming In
::

."' '

~

,•.SJ39
llenelen Rib Steaks
Delmonico Steakl •
••· S189
Beef Strips for Braising •••. 98&lt;
Sllort Ribs of Beef • • ••. Qc

Simple? as ABC.
Effective? No more gamble.

SUPU:-RI'-Hf TASTY

Chip Chop,U Ham • • ••. ate
Whole Hog Sausage c~:',;,"!:. &amp;9c
Meat Leaf llx ·~··;;::-. • ••. &amp;tc

PT. PLEASANT - Ab581ltee
voting for the November gen.
eral election is continuing this
week in the office of the circult clerk with Saturday, Nov.

t· At the close of the work day
.: Monday, October 28, Ill demo.:. erats had Voted at the oO'ice and
:: ts ballot&amp; the 104 democrat
j ballots sent out had been return-

or

~ ed. Nine1y-alx republicans had

~ ··Ill the office and 68 o(
: llle Ill republican bolloo mall: od aut had been returned.
Ablelltee ballot clerks a r e

M.ulne Nibert, democrat,
Qaarles Musgrave, republi-

:;1

STOKELY
WHOLE KERNEL

STOKELY

Red Kidney
BEANS

Iceberg Lettuce
LARGE
HEAD

l9U., THE GREAT ATLANTIC &amp; PACifiC l(ll. CO. INC .

19

C

Pumpkin Pies ICE CREAM
MARVEL VANILLA

sgc

lAKED
FRESH
DAILY

PlAIN, SUGARED OR CINNAMON

Donuts

SAVE
20•

gallon
carton

•• •••

&amp;russel Sprouts • • •
Louisiana Yams • • •

BIG BUYS on A&amp;P Groceries!

SPECIAL LOW PIICE- 5AYI JOe

FRESH TASTY

GREAT WITH HAM

WHY
PAY
lriOU1

STOKELY

Skl•lea Wle11n "!~·~~~::.ac
FriH Fllh Stlllb ~~~ ;:. He

BIG BUYS on AliP's Fresh Produce!

--(• Jane Parker Buys •)--

Each
Only

Pork 011. LOIN9t"~'.~•::':.ors ,._ Jlc
Sullua Meat PI• ; 5 ~ s1oo

.. 29'

LIGHT MEAT
CHUNK STYLE

•

can

Scot Lad

ll.rdseye '""'" '··~"· ..

4··.. 5100
Hash Browns • .3 .~=:: 5100
Cool Whip · • • • -:: 49'
Lom.,

\'

JOAN OF ARC

•

•

can

IN

.,..

Y4-ll. STICKS

PINEAPPLE GRAPEFRUIT OR PINEAPPLE PINK GRAPEFRUIT

46•01.

·

cans

IEFFUDE:NT '

'

'

'

'

Trick or Treat!

.

~

•

SC CANDY lARS • • 24!:. 8t
Ann Pace Harvest Mix • :: 35"
Ann Page Indian Corn . • ·:;;; 2t
Henhey Kisses • • • !: 7t
Kraft Caramels • • • ':: It
Candy Pumpkins·~~ •• ':&gt;: 2t

OUR FINEST QUALITY-AlP

Fancy Apple Sauce •

•

16·o•·1Sc
3,.!..... SJOO

Ragu lpaghelll Sauce • • • • •
AaP Golden Corn -:e':Z~ • • • • • 2.:!:' SJOO
Bdgl:il Sail Rinse • • ~ • • • • . ~sec

••·
&lt;
~

.•. - ---

\
.-..~-

-- .

REGULAR 49e

•

.
•
h
8
1
o
·
o
·
SPI nac ...............
·s.h· e·11·le 'ae
. ·ans..... 6 1 00
Pork -&amp;Beai$.....8~:,1. 00

~· $1

cans

scot Lad

SCOT FARMS

Ironing Board

BISCUITS

PADS
,(OVERS
and

Ih.

ScotLad

•

Only

for

300

cans

•

39e

......
...
IIi

...

be

&lt;&gt;'I

.all

DOLLAR
U.S. NO.1

.,

5

lb.

'9 '

~PECIAL SATURDAY ONLY; jNOf:. 2
~

·~

D

i

•

39e 3 ~oz. $1.00

......

Ill

al

JENO'S.

""ro

AND SAUSAGE

•a

.....

I'•

I•

POTATOES BANANAS
1 .0Jbs.39~

do

,,.

WITH CHEESE

GOLDEN RIPE

to
eel

With $3.00 Purchase

DOLLAR WISE FROZEN FOOD BUYS

can

·•! j

I

~

'

'

ASSORTED VARIETIES

300

'

FAMOUS HUNT'S

COlli

'

cans

UIIY'S

6 DEliCIOUS VARIETIES

T•dy Fred! Froan

son

MARGARINE

.Peac h.es.............. 5 1 00

8-oJ.o

Frozen Food Values!

SJ 1

''

II&gt;-

IRS. FILBERT'S

Col•y Cheese • ., • • •""79'
Pumpkin Pie Mix • • '::' 39'
FOR
A.,le Ci.er • • • • • o;:"tt
IOc OFF
thl•t
LAIEL ,......

qt.
bois.

TOILET·
TISSUE

'It

....

.. 15'

LONGHORN STYLE

pkgs.

ORANGE
DRINK

oct

el.

PENN. DUTCH STROGANOFf OR KLUSKI

• • •

EDON BRAND

REGULAR 98c

YOUR HALLOWEEN PARTY

•

~~~!·1.00

tb.

'

6'
1
2·ol.28c
Tuna Fish
••
FAB DETERGENT
$100
Egg Noodles • • • • • 5
73/&gt;
Kidney Beans •• • • 17-oi.1Sc JIHy Cake Mix • • •
Imperial Martarlne
$1
00
....
Dole Fruit Drink • • 3
DentureTablets •• . ....
,J----------·
·
.
1
\
o
&amp; P To•ato Sauce~ ,. ·
$1
00
Tomato Juice •.•• 4
.
2 ,:::43e
,,
A&amp; P Corn Oil Ma.rgarine.••.• 3;k~~-99e
CHICKEN-OF.THE-SEA-SAYE lie

lb.

Ia-

Why Pay More?

ggc

Dubuque

WAGNER

:. SJ

TOMATO JUICE

4

lb

ourFreshGrind
Everyday Low Price

GR. BEANS

46•01.

: 2, the Rnal day of balloting,

~.

$100'
.....

or better than the side you can see.

lirdsey• FroHn

'·

a·

.. .

1.00

Hall or Whole

~

STOKELY CUT

8-ol.

We put the best side down.
The side you don't see is guaranteed to be equal to

AlP FROZEN POTATOES

'I•

~

.

bots.

We have a policy.

Fordkoo~

·'

· $~

,,

"

ot Parkersburg.
&amp;lrvlving are his wife, Iva
C. Durst; two sons, Ralph Durst,
Gallipolis, 0., and Paul Durst
at. Charleston; one sister, Mrs.
Jessie Hussell, Mt. Alto, a n d
tour grandchildren.
Burial will be in the church
~; cemetery under the direction ol
•: the Cuto Funeral Home at Ev~~ ans, . W, Va.

Rib Roast.

It's a problem ... a problem we've given a lot of thought

COPYRIGHT~

•
:.
:.
~.
.:

Turkeys

You can see the top side of the meat but not the bottom.

5

,. _.

.
5
9e
Sucher Hams ..................... ~
39C
RoII Sausage ...................... · ........
...
Longhorn Cheese ...........~:·. 69e ...
59e
Grou nd Beef.......................

CATSUP
14oz.

PHONit 992 3480

"Wt! IIN'lbtlllcM'I'OUIJII.

STOKELY

Tasty l ..f lib Steaks or

U.S. Gov't. Grad• A- YoiUIIJ

Is this a good reason for shopping A&amp;P? It's one of many.

PT. PLEASANT - FWleral
aervice will be conducted Wednesday (today) at 2 p.m. in the
&amp;nith U.Uted Methodist church
for Sidney Rczy Durst, 68, Leon,
who died unexpectedly Monday
5:30p.m. at his home.
A retired farmer and construction worker, he was born April
25, 1900 at Leon Rt. 1, a son of
tile late Thomas and Mary ~r ­
ley Durst. He was a member of
the Smith United Methodist
Cll.lrch and Labor Union 1085

Slice On Top .

FULL BUTT HALF • • ···S8• SHANK PORTIONS •
CBNTBR SLICBS ••• ···18• BUTT PORTIONS • •

Fair and square? Sure because "We Care."

Dies Monday

I

NO CENTER
SLICES REiriOVED

Comw MIH and S11111nd 511.

DOL\AR BUYS

Look For The
Hall With The

OR

FULL
SHANK HALF

We Accept Federal ·.Pood Sta~rqM

Cut-Up 111. 32e

WHOLE

So Far in 68

SUPER MARKET - Open Daily 9 to 9:30..Sun. 12 to 9:30

12ln.

12 ...~ .
••••••••••••••••
•

�.'
.\

I
~

:
--Dally Sentinel Mlddi_...~• .
. 16-u•
.
!
-

0.. Oelober 38, 1968

..Woman's oay•• was observed
s.nsay at NaOIDi Baptist Church,
Kerr St., Pomeroy.
TN! Rev. L. Simpson. pastor,
'
. servu:es,
.
conducted
the morrung
rollowed b)" a noon luncheon. The
afternoon program wened with
devotions with Mrs. Fannie Mae
West with Mrs. Kitty Saunders
of Gallipolis parUcipati~, and
prayer by Deacon WilHam Armstrong. A song service was led
by Mra. Armstrong, pianist.
Following 8 testimonial servh:e Evangelist and Mrs. James
Br~er spoke on missions.
There was a rea(il~. "Please

Don't Wake Him

1.\l," by Mra.

Ml.mie Greene, and several •e-lections durins: the program by
the jwlior choir.
Featured spee.ker or the observance was Mrs. Margaret
Armstrong of Gallipolis who used
"A Woman" as her topic. Em·
phasis of her talk was on love.
She used scripture b'om Revelations 12. Refreshments were
served.
Planning committee for the observance was composed or Mrs.
William L. Smith, Mrs. sarah
Greene, Mrs. Mary Quallti and
Mrs. Howard English.

A warm weleome 1o Mr.
who moved hero
!rom -Sterling, Ky.,laotweek. '!bt-'erealdeoiD the former
Cedric Clark home on SWih Third Ave. Ia Mlddlepl'".
Mr. C:OUWIOII 1o plant • ..,.rlntendent atlm!Hirial Electric, and
ll!e ....,le bave an 18 , _ old son who attend• achool at WDJiamo-

bur&amp; Va.
SPEClAL RECOGNITION came this JDonth lo Dorothy Bentz or
Raciae. an Avon representative.. Sbe was 1 ~ saleslady iD the area
and In recotlllltion of her outolondlngrecord111ogiven a diamlllll pin;
a •75 bond, and a caraage or ro1ebuds.
The presentation took place at an Avon conference held at the
Hotel MarliiL
.
IT PASSED US BY - THE GOLDEN wedding anniversary of Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Bemett. So. our belated cor«ratu1adollll I
The obsen..uce was quiet with just the family being there. Maxine came from Colmnbus, JeanandherhusbaOO, Vernon Rogers, and
their son, Jim, were in trom Qak Harbor, and the Warren Bennetts
atv:l their two, steven and Chuck, came trom Worthington.

Halfbween

Party Held

Mr. and Mn. Harold Hager,
Long Bottom, entertainedtsatur·
day night with a Halloweenparty.
The basement or the Hager
home, extensively decorated Cor
the party, ccmtalned a spook'
house, fortune telling booth, offered games, and a decorated
stage on which the costumeti
were judged were featured.
Judges were Roxie Farley, Jan
Sayre and Grace Thoma.
Co;tume winners were K a Y
Holtz, prettiest; NaJl(Y RidenOUr •
the ugliest; Kay Hager, the funniest; and Gail Thoma, the most
original . The door prize was won

by Ernie Writesel.
TED CADWALLADER, STUDENT atll!e Kentucky ChrlollanColKool.Aid and cookies were lege at Grayson, K,y., is acommutingpastor. He apenda his weekdays
sened by Mrs. Hager and Mrs. at Grayson ani then comes here on weekends to pastor the Bradbury
Sayre. Mrs. KathleenBissellwas Church of Christ His wUe, aho a stu:lert, atte~s Morehead Ualver ..
a co-bostess. Apple, candy, and sicy.
balloons were given as favors.
Plans are for the c&lt;q&gt;le to move into the new parsorage early
Guests at the party were Deb· next summer. Meantime there'• eoough furniture in the house for
bie Hager, Kay Hager, Brenda Mr. aOO Mrs. Cadwallader to live comfortably 90 weekerxls.
Flowers, Gail Thoma. L in d a
Thoma, Kay Holtz, Mary Holl2,
A REMINDER- The Middleport cunmunity HallaweenpartyanCindy Farley, Catb,y Farley, Ter · nually staged by Feeney • Bennett Post 128, American Legion. Is set
esa Sayre, I...orl Sa.Yre, Nancy for 7 o'clock tomorrow night at the MiddlEI)Ort Stadium. In the event
Ridenour, Avis Bissell, Todd Bis- of rain, the affair wUL be moved to the legion hall.
sell, Bellnda Deeter, Jeffrey
Firat. aecoOO and third place cash prizes will be awarded In the
Friend, Ernie Wrltesel, Randy categories of most original, prettiest. ugliest, and the funniest In
Friend, and Gene Stevens.
each of the age gr&lt;q)s which are lt&gt; to the nrst grade, d.nt through
the ftfth, and sixth on up.
The legionnaires will give trinkets aOO refreshments to each or
t1w costwned. So ror a real fun evening, join in Lhe march of the
masqueraders. Everybody's welcome, we're told by John Fultz, gen-eral chairman.

Vern LltUe was surprised Sunday with a lan)lllpa,.cy laoboen·
ance or hls 80th birthdl,y annher·
sary. The all~ evont was held
at the home or Mr. and Mrs. LltUe on Hamilton S~ In Middleport.
A turkey and 1wrn dinner waJ
followed by the presematllm of
gilts. Decorated blrlhda)o coke
was served and picttD"es were
laken durl~ the aflernoonAll of Mr. and Mrs. Little's
chUdren were there with the ex·
caption of one datehter, M r s.
Charles Wise (Geneva) of Crystal
Lake, ID .• who his been 111. She
sent a gift.
Daughters ani their husbands
present were Mr. anll Mrs.
Dwight Haley (Eulooda), Mr. and
Mrs, Jack Phllllpa(Vlvlalll, Mrs.
Robert Clonch (Kathleelll, Mr.
and Mrs. John Tyree (Delores),
all of Middleport, end Mr. and
Mrs. Wayne Little (Dorothy) of
Columbus.
Sons and their wives present

New Haven PTO Will

Hold Carnival Friday Rece tion Will Honor
p
NEW HAVEN - The New Ha· Mrs. KeMetll Holbrook, M r s.
ven P.T.O. will hold a Hallo- Willis Dudding, Mrs. Bonn t e

"

ween carnival Frida,y, Nov. I,
and Saturday, Nov. 2, at the
New Haven Elementary School.
On Friday evening the food and
novelty p s will be the only
ones op11. They wlH- open at
5 :30 p.m.
'The carnival wtll open 011 Saturday at 4 p.m. A T.V. set will
be given away on Saturday evenlng. There will also be a mystery clown, who Is unknown to
anyone and a prize will be glv en to anyone guessing who It is.
The booths to be held at the
carnival, their chairman a n d
committee are listed bel&lt;ow:
SWeet ~ Canlb. Mrs. Don·
ald Hartley, Mrs. Grayson wu.
r--hart ·
Uamsm, Mrs. Wayne ............,
Mrs. Lewis &amp;nnmer&amp;.
Baked Goods (Friday), Mrs.
Arlblr Hart, Mra. Wendell Kaylor (Saturday), Mrs. C h a r I e s
·••.
Rwah, ...
~ o. Le·'
~ey Roo~
Novelty, Mrs. Charles Smith,

MUGS TIIATRE
TONIGHT AND TI!URSDAY
October 30-31
NOT OPEN
FRIDAY TI!RU TUESDAY
November 1-5
PLANET OF THE APES
(Technicolor)
Chulton HealOn
Roddy McDowall
OLORC ARTOONS:
FrogPood
S..astbuckled
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.

-

•

Ch urc h w 0 men Friday

Ward.
Prizes, Mrs. Rupert Kent,
Mrs. Edwin Edwards, Mrs. DorBeY H. Roush.
Duck Pond. Mrs. James GU bert, Mra. Chester Curry.
Milk Bottles, Mr. and Mrs.
WUliam Russell .
Dart Game, Mr. and Mrs. Herman Ohlinger ·
SQJ.lrt the Candle, Mrs. Char·
les Zerkle, Mrs. George Carson.
Fish Pond, Mrs. Warren Eugene Weaver, Mrs. Robert wea.
ver.
Cake Walk, Mrs. Carl Gibbs.
~Room, Mrs. Robert Sayre, Mrs . Jack Needs.
COke Ring Toss, Mrs. Kemeth
Vickers, Mrs. Robert Layne. ank
Fortune Teller, Mra. l''r

A reception to honor the new
officers of Church Women United
of Meigs Coonty will be held Fri·
day following the afternoon otr
servance of World Community
Day at the Trinity United Church
of Christ, Pomeroy.
Women of Trinity Church,
aponsors or the reception, are
reminded to take cookies or sandwiches. The officers to be honored at the reception are Mrs.
Ben Neutzling, president; Mrs.
Karl OWen, vice president; Mrs.
Rachel McBride, secretary, and
Mrs. Gret.a Simpson, treasurer.
A sack lunch at noon will begin

the Friday observance. Mrs.
James Richards, district chair·
man of Church Women United,
will speak at 1:30p. m. Theofferp
ing will be used Cor "Christian
causeways" and the "Right to
Eat" projeds of the organiza-

tion.

•

Gift certificates will be available at the service. The certirlcates at $3 each can be designated Cor a blanket or five yards
of fabric, or can remain undesignated.
All women of Meigs CoWlt)'
churches are invited to attend the
observance.

Young,

Pocket Lady, Mrs. Richard
Grinstead.
Clown Bean Throw, Mr. and
Mrs. James Layne.
Grab Bag, Mrs. Harold Rose.
Ping Pong Bottle Game, Mrs.
Jooy Roosll, Mrs. Gary ROU8h.
Pemy Tos&amp;, Mrs. Dwight Sayre, Mrs. Herbert C. Richards.
Sllhwette, Mrs. Robert Gorrell.
Kitchen, Mrs. Donald B u mgardner, Mrs. James Hart, Mrs.
David Roush, chairmen, Mrs.
Robert Ohlinger, Mrl; Larry
Parsons, Mrs. Cedi ~can,
Mrs. Von Stewart, Mrs~ Robert
Nottingham, Mrs. Jim Hill, Mrs.
Denver Thompson, Mrs. Donald
Zerkle, Mrs. Ernie Roush. Mrs.
Albert Thompson, Mrs. G I e n
Marr, Mrs. Andrew Fields, MI'I.
Paui Fortney, Mrs. Sam H a 1stead, Mrs. John Brabham, and.
Mrs. Woy Roush.

Pock 235 Holds Wedding Plans
Party Monday
An awards presentation and
costmne judgif€ were highlights
of a Halloween party MoOOay
night at the grange tall ln Chester
for members or Chester Cub
Scout Pack 235.
Nat Carpenter, new cubmaster, attired as the Halloween
ghost, presented l bear badge
am a gold and a silver arrow
poirt to Don Eichinger arxlsilver
arrows to Kevin Barton and Dana
Flck.
Costume prizes went to Eichinger, the ugliest; Oarld Mills,
the prettiesti George Taylor, tile
funniesL Carpenter ani James
Hayes conducted games ani were
assisted by Don Mills, Maurice
Gagnon arxl Darrell Hawthorne,

committeemen.
Refreshments were served by
Mrs. Hawthorne and Mrs. car-

Let your

diamond
go modern

Are Completed
The marriage ofMlssSlna~

were Mr. and Mrs. MarYI~Little,
Mr. and Mro. Sidney ~·· and
Dooald Little, all of Middleport.
orlndchlldren altetdaa were
Brenda McGuire,. Mark Haley,
Dwight Haley, Jr.t Dale and Ronnie Clonch, Alberta Utile, Mark,
David, TIUIUII1, Kel]l'andJolumle
Tyree, and Rhonda ind Clndy_LitUe, Nlcldleport; Le&amp;ler and llaJ&gt;.
ny WI.., Crystall¥!LID.; Mr.
and Mrs. Gary DreMOr, Dayton; and Jndy Little, Colmnbua.
Great • grandchildren present
were Todd Little, Mlddlepor4
and LUcille Wlse, Crystal Lake.
David Jividen of Cheshire was also a guest.
Grandchildren urable to attend
but sending gilts ...re Mr. and
Mn. Leslie Wise, Middleport;
Mr. and Mn. Elber Bissell, Co-hmtbuSi Mr. and Mrs. L&amp;rry
Doan, canal Winchester, and. Mr.
and Mrs. Gen8 Butcher and Mr.
and Mrs. Charles A. Wise, Crys-tal Lake, DL

Talent Presentation
Features Fellowship
At Mt. Moriah Church
A talent presentation was a
hlghllt!ht oC the Fellowship Day
observance Sunday at the Mount
Moriah Baptist Church, Middle.
port.
Morning ser,·ices were follow·
ed by a dinner in the church dining
room served b)l the women ofthe
church. The afternoon program
opened with devotions by Mrs.
Lucy Hardaway and Mrs. Henri·
etta RobinsoJL Miss Carrie Ward

Supervisor is
At Convention
Mrs. William L. SmithofPom·
eroy attended the Ohio Baptist
General Association convertion
in Cleveland as representative of
the Ohio Baptist Girls Guild of
the Providence DistricL Mrs.
Smith is the district supervisor
or the Guild.
She was among the supervisors
from over the state who reported
on Guild activities. Mrs. Smith
also participated in theli£emembership services, which the Rev.
E. J . Johnson or Toledo conducted, by presenting Mrs. Harrison
Bentley of Rutlarxl with a 1 i f e
membership pin.
Mn. Bertha Scharbauer of C~
lwnbus is me membership chair·
man Cor the state.

extended the welc:ome alii served
as tnlstress of ceremonies for
the program.
There were two selections by
the women's chorus, "Brightly
Beams Our Father's Mercy,"
and "Precious Memories .. ; duets
by Lepo and Timmy Jackson, alii
Mrs. Carl Williarns and Mrs.
Campbell Harper who sang "Well
Done" and a solo, "Only a Look,'"
by James Hughes.
Mrs. ErvinBumgardnerplayed
a piano solo, "WhlsperiiWHope,"
and "Swing Low, SWeet Chariot"
was sung by Dolnlla Miller, Judy
McCloud and Susie samuel&amp;. Ervin Bumgardner, on his guitar,
played "God Will Take Care of
You" and "Just A doserWalk"
'
and the musical portion waa condueled by the men's c~rus d~
lng "What A Friend" and"Come
al"ll Go to the Lord."
Readings were given by Mrs.
John Moon, Mrs. Margaret
Bowles, Mrs. Mary Sharon. Mrs.
Myrtle Warren, Mrs. Arnold
Riehard and Jullua McCloud. The
benediction and closing remarks
were by the Rev. Robert Jackson.
Planning the ~·s events were
Mrs. Hardaway, Miss Ward,
Mrs. Pansy Banks, Cerl WUlluml, Hughes and Mrs. Richards.

..

Plan Supper

NElJlAY

M!DD~RT

.

EDfl'OR'S NOTE: Five countlel In the IJriWol Slaws, out
ora,072,bavevoltdwlththe winner Ill "l[~Y prellldentlal alectlon IIIIo cenlllry. are dlo.Y l p l h l i year?
llel'e Ia a 1o1m report !rom UPI oew"l""' 1!1 eaeh.area.

Just dial the fabric-wash
temper1ture. •altation,
rinu tamper•tur•. spin
speed art all set automlt·

..
\

ically • 2 -Position Cold

Water Selector sav" hot
w.tllr, shrlnkin1. fldlna
• Deep Action Aaitltor tor
thoroush. gentle cleaninl
• Autometic lint removal
- no tint tr•p.

'229.95
BAIER FURNITURE
..DDLEPORT, 0.

our exper;-s reset yo"r
diarroond in a modern se ttlng
. .. at , very low cost. Y&lt;•Ur
diamc. 1d wilf look lovelier,
and large' too.

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

It's the Season!
Lay Away AGift
Each Day!

i
,\.

~···-----·-·.

2-Hour

DRY QIANING

SIRYICl
IUPON REQUEST)

OwiiiNI.-clooo""'

1.

"'

-----

Ill' LOUIS CASSELS
,..
America's
five
weathervane
countle• ue pX.ntlng towud
·'
a Nboo vl&lt;lory.
But they aren't too definite about lt. ~e wind 1e1m1 to

. held !rom

·~···
will~

,,,

7:39 ·
p.m. ~ lhe eetertalnero will be Uricl' WW!e

hPt shilled toward Hubert Humphr_, rec4irtly, and the oolcome could be close.
The so-ealled weathervane countle1 han voted wl.th the
wtmer ln every presldelltlal electLon ln this century. Seatter·
ed widely across the naUon, they are Coos and aratrord CoonIlea, New Hampshire; Palo Alto Count,y, Iowa; Laramie County,
W)'OIIIIng, and Crook COWJI;Y, Orep.
Here are on..th&amp;-spot reports from UPI correspc:mdentl Gil

:;1~ 0

":&gt;

"

.

@
Nu,on
~

Certain

Challenge Humphrey.
Not to Wheel &amp; Deal
By United Preas International
support whichever candidate
Rlcbard M. Nixon oays . gets the blggeol popular vole II

Hubert

H.

Hwnphrey

went&amp;

next - · • presidential ele&lt;tion
1o be !brown IIIIo the Hooae ,.
the vice preslclaJI caa ''wheel
and daal" bla way lata t h e
Whll.l Hooae. Humphrlll' expreoaed oonfldenee he will beat
Nbon.
Nixcll dtallell((led the Demoeratle IIDDIInee Wednesday 1o

Hubert Humphrey lD join with
me in making tbla pledge."
Harking to the possibility that
no ooe gets an elecloral vote
the three-way race may result
~ty and the electioo goes
1o the House.
1n none ot the candidates
Predleting a -lng margin pWng enough electoral votes
11( 3 to 5 mllU... vllle8, Nlxm to win rutright. Nixon said:
aald, "I Bland reouiY lo pledp
"If Hubert Humphrey is to
lo support lor prealdert the enter the White House, it would
man who reteives the most have to be througll the back
votea tor that office, whoever door- thl'OOI(Ih the help of a
that man may be. I called upon third party to divide the
majority. I stand reacly right
lo abide by the decillion or

BILL ZIPF

ZipfWill
Speak at

.d
1\.. r.•
....
Cand' ate LllXOn u: ~r~~:,::e :~
· ·· :.~~~~==~ ·os .fiJvent
~peaks to 5,000
..

Will

'

Be Held on Friday
Insr.llatlon of om cars wW be
held at 8 p. IlL Friday whe• the
Meigs Cooncy Pomolll Gra.,.
meets ~at dte RockSprings Granp
Hall. All suoordtnate gnnges1re
Invited to take part Ia the lnatallatlon.
,
Laurel Grange will be hol!l
111'014&gt;· A report of the slate coDventlon held at DaytonwUibeglv-

CLEVELAND (UP0 - Repub- sitting in rows and rows of
Prea!dentlal No m I n e e empl;r seats.
Nbon's crowd of 5,000 iD the
Rlcbard NlJoJD bad a exrs,OOO-HI.t
audltorium oontrarrtprtonco W. .'\'W.night When
11e held a rally hire For the ed al!arply with VIce President
llrll lime Ia hls Clinpalgn, he Hubert Huinpbrey' a throng Ill
opoko lo a more than half em]&gt;- 10,000 which Jammed the suburi&gt;an Richmond Mall Mllllday
~ ball.

uean

Nlxonelleo,

en.

Make Elhrfel•s In Pomeroy
Your Shopping Center•••
Furnishings For Your H011e,
Wearing Apparel For Y• _
r
Fa11lly.
Elberfel•s 1., Pomtro r

wb o normally

lland Ia front or the podium
ebeerln&amp; were sent lo the back
"' !'mllc Hall to 011 ...... or
the emp1y -t•. Before the
candidate bei!&amp;D hla opeecb,
aeveral Ill the glrlo were diopatehed lo ·

Planned

SHOP ALL DAY THURSDAY
FROM 9:30 AM TO 5:00 PM

•

&gt;

wtaka." llllYI Doran ...Nhon aWl bu aamalJJeed. but•: . _
_._i
h wu before...
-4·
CROOK COUNTY, OREGON
./
RGn Beaamette. editor of' tbe CDIIII'd;J'aWMkJ.I Dnl J 21t,
lhe Central Oregonian, 1001 Nlxm 'lltmlng''Prtii.J lizaiiiJbut no laadallde." He tblaks HWIIj)br., balialel7 m&amp;do .,..
illnlado '"' Nixon's llnnJih, but "II ...Wd be a raal ~ If
Humphrey won."
Every ele&lt;tion year, a mock ballollnJI• held at doe blllli
r&lt;IJOOI Ia Prineville, the OOUIIIJ' aeat. OYer the yearo, ~
rrom the lludent voting have J)J"Oll'ed an excelleat bliCII ' .
11( how the OOIIIll!"• a.mllo will vole. 'lblt y-, PriDeYillo 11111l
calli 238 voles lor Nboln, 1f7 lor Hllll!lli&gt;Hl, 3f lor"+ .0 e.:
Wallace.

Weather

enttne

Sunny and warmer

r-•

night,

Gov. James A. Rhodes lntrodueed Nlxm, who Ia turn, lD·
trodueed Republican representat!vel WUitam Slanlon, WUIIam Minahal1 and Frances BolIIIJI 1o the crowd. He called
2)
(Cortlnued Cll -

By United Preao lnlenatlanal

NEW YORK - RICHARD M. NIXON might wiD by a landslide but
Ia IllY caae will win by a margin wide enough lo keep the dedsloo oot
of the H0111e of Representative~, the ,_predictions, guesses a n d
hunehes" of 482 members of the AmerlcanSode~ of New~ Edi-

I

showed~.
.
The Bulletin, the society's publication, said reports l'r&lt;1ln the
editor~ show lhe Rt!&gt;ubllcan ctndldate should win over Huber! H.
RUiq&gt;href and Georp C. Wallace,

tors

OKLAHOMA CITY - CURTIS E. LeMAY, skeptical or the Paris
oqOtlationo, belleveo the country could tabe a more direct route lo
peeea Ia Vietnam.
"I think the solulloo Ia very MIJio" he aald Wedneldoy nlghl
4•CIIJ 'II, Gim. Abrams, teD him to win aDd get out of the wa,y." He
Aid the allied c - r In Vletram, Gen. Creighton Abramo, boo
tho beat flihtlng forcoln American hlslory, but Aid Ills "!ruatraled" by aQdnbtratJon lhacklta.

appeared Wlllkely the election
110Uld have to be decided In
Congress.
Humphrey himself Hid in
Baltimore that be was "absolutely sure'' he would win the
election lf loyal supporters keep
working u the,y have in recent
d&amp;¥s.
Earlier, 1n New York City,
Humphrey campaigned bt the
garment district and other
areas, contldently proclaiming
the tide had turned in hls favor.
Ia other deYelopmenlo:
George c . Wallace- The for·
mer Alabama aovemor's third
parcy carnpaign met new
hecldlng Weduesdi.Y night In
Philadelphia. There were no
fiehta. as there were the night
, before in Detroit. but Wallace
JUpporters and hecklers e•changed angry sboutl during his
_ . , ..... s1 a me.thlnl !Uied
(Continued on page 2)

Contract

Sotd for
6 Hangars

lodltl ...

Friday. High - , . Ia tho ' -

60s oortheaat to low 101 IIOUCbwest. Fair and warmer tmaM
Low In low 401
to'50s south and. west.

-.t

RVE CENTS

I- Bar Failure Caused
Fall o Silver Bridge

f

o~'Win
~
.

·~:~::::::!~::~.''!:~:::::::~::::~:::::?.::?.:::~:;::;:::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:::;:;:;::::=:::::·:·::::~:·:·: :!~;

November 10th

VISITS PARENTS
M&gt;Jor E. JllJ'cO Miller, who Ia
otaUaned at Fort Sllerlden, 01.,
spent the weekend here with her
parents, Mr. · and Mrs. R, L.
Mlller and other releltves in
Middleport.

,.A

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1968

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT. OHIQ

~r====:=====::;::=:=:=:=====:=:=:=====:=:=:::========:===::=:::.::::=:=:=:=====:=:::=:=====:=======:========:===::========~~=t.~

Pholins

Installation

~-.

Devoted To 1Jw lnterats Of'IJw Meigs-MliMHI Area

VOL. XXI NO. 134 '

Annual

The IIUIUal homecomln8 or the
Enleqlriaa UDiled Molbocllot
Clllrch (!Drmerly ll!e E.U.B.)
wUI be held November 10.
Morning worship service 9:30
a.m. Basket dbmer at noon. The
alternom service, beginning at
1:38, will be a Slnl!lpiratlon leaturing the Uhrig Brothers of
Chillicothe, the Christys, and Jo.
cal talent.

...,

Victtiry

•

at

e

In ~arta, the moat powertul
elty Ill ancient G.....,., IDbabltantB lived uiJJer state S~.Veni·
··• olon from birth and babies with
birth defects were e~1ed to
the elements to dle.

0

~ "" "', 0 ubllcon Cou!ltJ CblirDWI ,.... J:l!lrl!l ~1.1
S:· ..-. ·~ t.J .D Nixon ltl'en&amp;CIJ, '~ pre"' '1•1 .race·.W
0 ;t:.,reUJ cloao, with Hllll!lli&gt;Hl plekin&amp; up t. doe Jut .........

PALO ALTO COUNTY, IOWA
Moot political oboervero rate Nixon olighlty ahead, but
add that II looka like a cloae contest. Humphrey has pined
,...,ccln the past 10 day a, picking up support froiD eeme BUJ&gt;·
portera 11( Sen. Eugeee J. McCarthy who provlooaly bad bo1colled the campalgo. A lllraw poll . - . - this week by the
Emmetlburg Oemocrat - Reporter gave Nixon f7. 8 per cent,
ll!uqJhrey 46.2 par cent, George c. Wallace 5 8 per cent 11( the
vote In the county.

•

~~

..

Second Daughter
Born

Now You Know ··

..

Dcrler, N.H. A sidewalk poll . - . - Wedaeldl1 In Slnf.
Humphrey 46.2 per cent, George c. Wallace 5.9per &lt;ont oflhe
!orll'o principal cl~. Rocbeller, showed NIJoJn and H11111J1br&lt;ly

t;_.

(j )

(.

LARAMIE COUNTY, WYOMING
RIIIUbliean &lt;llalriDIII Ed Morrilon claims Nixon wlu
carry the .0...~ eaall,y. But Oemocratlc chalrlnan Larry
SCbleek lnaista that ult'l goiQ1: to be elose." Sddeek contend&amp;
Hum»hrer will carry the count.Y ''il we get out a J.arp vote.''

STRAFFORD COUNTY, NEW HAMPSHIRE

t'"J

"' " ~'."" .lR

COOS COUNTY, NEW HAMPSHIRE
Looks fairly Ate lor Richard M, Nbm. A otraw poll COil•
dueled by the Mancbeller Union Leader showed Nixon with a
2-llaad over Humphrey In the!lnahreekollhe cam~. However, state Democratic Cbllrmaa William Craig clalmllhol
Humpbrey lo maldni! a - l a t e surp and'1t'tlettinc cloaer ud elolei- all the time.''
..Nixon rl.gh.t now would carry Strafford, but it would be
m18ht;r darn close," IQ'I Wayne Chick. an astute pojltlcal reporter who rover a the COIIIll¥ lor Faller's D.U, Democrat in

I, '

.

rumln&amp; about .....

BUl Zip!, !arm editor of the
Columbus Dispatch, will be the
speaker for the annual dinner
meeUng of the Meigs County
Dairy Service Unit Mmda,y evening, Nov . 11 at 7:30 p.m. at the
Eastern High School.
Virgil King, president of the
Dairy ServiceUnit,saidtheCount;y Dairy Princess contest will
be held at that time under the
chairlllall&amp;hip or Rex Shenefield.
Candidates must have graduated
!rom hlt!h school by June, 1969,
and be between the ages of 16
and 25 on JW1e 1, 1969.
Application blanks may be secured !rom the County Extensloo
Office or rrom members of the
Board of Directors.
Directors having tickets for
the event available are Presi.
dent King, DavidNease,JohnCOI·
' well, Wayne Rwah, David Kob·
Ientz. Harry Holter, Rex ~enefield, Harold Carnahan, Edison
Holloo, Oris Roush, ·vtrgll Atkina, Charles 'Ibelss, Edson
Roush, and James Meredith.

STOCKS OPEN HIGHER
NEW YORK (IWO - Slo&lt;ka
were Irregularly higher at the
slart lodly In Jalrly aclive trad1~.

Dies on Wednesday

dauglller or

Mr. and Mrs. Edward Smith of
COlulnbuli, waa returned. to her
._. 9lndBY after spendinll a
week hero with her grandpar·
ents, Mr. and Mrt. Arnold ltlebarda, Ia Middleport.

Point to

..~

0

how 1hil ele&lt;tion HOmo 1o be 1101n1r In each or theae

RETl'RNS HOME

Frl&amp;l••ln Wadlr
will I&gt;Ptsitlln
Flbric SeiiCiar

c;
"·.....

't,,f

11( a~

compl-.

Setllende Smith,

'.

" • '"'" ··...,.. · · .. .. .. · .. .. ·•· ,., · .. · • •......... ·· ........ · ..., .... ""'•'•'•'•''•'•'•'•'•'•"•'•X;~~&lt;--&gt;=-w···''•'•'•'•w,•.•,• ,;•'•''"'''"''''XV':;:?:'~

· • ..!.

I Five Wea,thervane Counties
-·-=

and Roicoo Ill wctls-TV; A Jitney supr will be held ~. IIDIO
day !rom f to 7 p.m. JiiooraTIIIJIISDAY
liooa and pme -.ia artlo be
WOMEN'S ASSOCIATION, Mid- In plaee at I p.in. on Nov. 15.
dleport Firol Unltod Preob11trMra. Mary K. ROoo preoldlan Church, 7:30 Tblraday nlalrt ed at the meellni ithlch _..s
at the c:hurChi .Mrs. Tom R P8• with the PTA prqer and the
program; Mrs. Jesab! !hlniak- ,pledeo 1o tho liar. Or~•
er devotions. Hostesses are Mrs. night was observed with Mrl:
William /o[orrto, Mrs. Rlcbard
.. - - Tblr·
owens, Mrs. Plumber Beeoon, Kermit
1ee11 grandparenla were Ia atMro. Garon ~obury, and Mrs. tendance.
JoeBalley.
..
Poems were read by M r a.
HALLOWEEN DANCE at l'llm- Roy Pooler and Mrs. Pearl Mol'a
eroy Junior Hlt!h School Thurs- g&amp;Ye 'IJC)Ialtons Ia behalf Ill tho
day, 8 to 11 p.m. Live mulde by teachers and parents. Nal care
"Experience '69." ~~ penter, new tubm&amp;ster of Pack
Meigs Girls' Athletic Asan.
235, ffas :Introduced. It waal'lOtHALLOWEEN
CARNIVAL, ed that a leader for the ac:out
'lblraday, beginning 6 p.m. at troop Is IIIII needed.
Room count was taken wttb
~acuse Grade School under
the reading circle book gdng to
1"1'A _,sorshlp.
FREE CLOTHING DIIJ, salva- the kindergarten. Mrs. David Holtion Army HQ., 10 a.in. Tbun· ter, Mrs. KemethAmtbary, Mrs.
day, 115 Butternut Ave., l'llm- Huy Holler, Mrs. Poullnellyaell,
Mra. Herbert MtlntYre. M r a.
eroy.
Reid
Young, and Mro. Walller
FRIDAY
IIIJII(Jinted
lo the November
were
FUN AND FOOD carnival Frihospitality
oommlttee.
day beglmlng :; p.m., Letart
Falla aebool, sponsored by PTA;
soup, chill, sandWiches, des.
serts, run booths.
MEIGS IDGH School ebeer·
leaders spon80r an after rootball game donee Friday nlt!hl
Is
to
at the Meigs JUnior Hlt!h auditorium In l'llmerDY, following
Mr. and Mrs. Terry D. l'lla·
the Melgs.Jaeksoo game, The
tin, Pomeroy, are annwncln&amp;
Jays will emcee.
the birth or their second cleu$bSATURDAY
ter, Amy Denise, on Oct. 19,
HlGH SCHOOL dance party
at Holzer Hospital. She welt!hSamrday, 8 1o 11 p.m. at the
ed BeYOil pounds and t b r e e
Meigs Junior Hlt!h auditorium
In Pomet'Q)' under school spon- ounces.
Grandparents are Mr. and
sorship. The Jays wlll serve
Mrs. Albert Smith, Akron, and
as master of ceremonies.
Mr. and Mrs. Alvle Pballn Ill
~- Mrs. Ella Fwerll',
Homecoming Pomeroy, Ia the great-grindmother. Thulr other daut!hter Is
Lena aae, age tlve.

Is

··

.,'"

'

~~~'WW.:If:l~l*~~~=m:~:w:::::?M::~*~~:~~f.ifi.~:W-:Wl~~~•=:t:::::::::f.:::~?.:::::~::::@:::~t~~:~:~l:::~:~]:;:]:::::=:::~:~::::::~~=:=:~~=::w:~:~:m:::~~tc::::::4=w-::M:::'$:}.::~::=::::::~::;:::::::::::::::~-::~:::=:=:=~:=::~::::@.:::::.o:::*~

' '
Lfl'ERAIIY

Club, 2 p.m. ~edneadoy, bo"!o
Ill Mlaa Beos Soilbom.
·
jVIU)WOOD GARDEN Club, 7:30 Wednesdi.Y night at the home ·
Ill Mrs. Hiram Fisher; Mro. Poul
Fisher, co-hOite&amp;a, for a ucorne
as you are" P4rO' •

!l.unmer!leld, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Rexal T. Summerfield,
Dinner
Sr., Reedsville, to Mr. Robert
Mavln Murphy, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Mavla E. Murphy, ReedsMeigs
Chapter,
D101bled
ville, will be an event or FrlAmerican Veterans. will observe
da.Y. Nov. 8.
Veterans Day with a dinner at ·
The ceremony will be P e r6:30 p. m_ on Thursday, Nov. 14,
formed by the pastor, Brian V.
at the hall, Jacob Turner, comEngel In the St. Paul Lutheran
mander, announces. Veterans of
The Junior Mothers Club met all wars and their familles are
ClJJrch, Pomeroy, at 7:30 p.m.
Mrs. Vernon Swartz. slater or Ocl 22 11 Eastern High School invited.
the bride, will be matron or hon- when plans were discussed tor
or. Serving as best man wlll be a jltne,y supper In December.
Officers were eleeted and a
Mr . ~erman Summerfield, couUNDERGOES SURGERY
food
oonunlltee named. R u I h
sla of the bride. Ushers will be
Dottle
Bryan, daughter of Mr.
Roger Barnett and Kemeth Cald~ Baer was elected president; Vera
aod
Mrs.
John
Bryan, Middleport,
Weber,
secretary;
Halel
Barn~
well, al110 a cousin or the bride.
underwent
surgery
at Veterans
The custom or open ctmch will hill, vice president, and DoroMemorial
Hos.PltaL
She
was adtby Ritchie, treasurer.
be obaened.
Mothers present were Dorothy mitted Sundoy alter hlvl~ been
penter. Mrs. Mary Fick's Den 1 Ritchie, Pat Smith, Ella Osborne, taken there by the Pomeroy emer·
entertained the grDICI' with a gloMerle Grllrllh, Eva Walker, Ha- gency SCI.tad. She Is ln room 105.
in-the-dark skeleton dance.
zel BamhDI, Helen Heaton,
!'11yllla Larkins, June Griffin,
Kelhr)'n Mora, Thelma Eagle,
Vera Weber.
One does not need to be a member lo attoncl. All JUnior-·
are Invited.
The aext meeting will be Nov.
19 at 1:30 p.m. at Eaotem Hi&amp;h
S.hool when plano lor the lit_ . In Oecember will be

Jr. Mother~

"

Fall Fes

Vern Little Surprised
On H1s BOth 13.'irthday

·woman's Ddy .Held
By Pomeroy Baptists

.

Cite~
..

WASHJNGTON (UPI) - An
llltertm report on the collapse
ol Ute Silver Bridge at Polnt
Pleasant, W. Va., confirmed
Wednesday what many had susplcioned for the past 10 months.
The report of government lnvutlgators said an ul..bar"
IDI()Ped. They added that there
was "no (Jlestion" a fracture
in one of U.e links which held
the bridge suspended from its
towers was "esaenttaJ to the
catastrophic stage of the collapse."
As ear l,y as two di.Y 1 after
the Oec. IS tragedy whlcb
claimed 46 lives, Dr. Tbomal
E. SteiiiRl, chairman or the
Oe~w Civil EngineerIng'' at 1ilitti~l! - 1\lellllft lilllltute In Plttoburl!h, &amp;peculated
on the cause of the collapse.
Lalli Failure 19fll
"Failures of l~ar suspensions are extremely uncommon," he said . ''The only notable one in recent Urnes was
that of the Tacoma (Wash.)
Narrows Bridge in 1940,.,
SteiiiRl aald that bridge was
of a particularly daring design.
In the Tacoma mishap on
Nov. 7, 1940, the suspension
snawed, dropping the bridge
into Puget Sound. Two trucks
and a ear fell into the water
but there was oo loss or life.
Stelson noted in Point Pleasant that i( a single "P' of an
);bolt suspension severed, the
whole bridge would !all.
"Within a period of one min~
ute," the National Transportation Safety Board reported,
''the entire l, 753-loot span U:lp~
pled laiD the river, dumping 31
cars lnto the water.''
Bridge Jnnovatlon Heralded
When the bridge was bullt, it
wu heralded as •;. shinlng example or man's engineering in~
gerult;y" and was a historic
first ror the area· it served.
The !llver Bridge was opened
May 30, 1928, Ia a pia cere.
many llltended by 25,000 Ohioans U.d West Vlrilniana. It
was the ftrst of it&amp; pardeu.Iar
design Ia America, piiRlOOrlag
1a tho use or heat treated 1-~&gt;ar
chain au.apelllion. It was al10
the firlll bridge Ia the M&gt;rld
coated with alumlnem paint
benet II pseudoiiYm, S II v e r
Bridge.
Tb1 unique .. _.atoo - 30.
fool 1-l&gt;ara reaembllna elongated dog bones plmed togalhtr In
I chain - W8 I Diver c8.1credlt-

ed from an engineering stand- break.
point
Even if a naw is found 1n the
The chain was linked togeth- metal, investigators said. new
er end...to.end by steel pins. The oludles would be . - to deboard reported one bar frac- termine why the fracWre ocur~
tured acrou the hole through red 40 years after the bridge
which the pin was inserted and was built.
the pin pulled loose, breaking
A Onal report would take at
the chain-like structure.
least another nine mmths.
C.au ae Still The Question
The report sa.ld there was no
But the board said it did not evidence the bridge was overkDow wbat made the chain loaded or that its towers were

weakened by oolllalont with
river barges
However, tile lnveattpton
oald they found metal !ra-.e
In other parlll of the brldtlw
wreckage alCIIll with ..
of"severe corrosion.''
They said 1110111 Ill tho traeturea &amp;hawed no eridenee f1
molal fatigue but the IIIII el!td
of corrosion on tbe brldp •11
yet tu be establtshed. "1

Red Cross Mail Drive
Is Begun this Week

9'

MARCIA THOMSON

Missionary in

Twin Services

Twin missionary services will
be held &amp;mday at the Pomeroy
a n d Middleport Churches of
Chrllll.
~g at U.e services will
be Miss Marcia ~ Thomson.,
mlalllanary lo Southern Rhodesia, Africa.
Miss Tttomaon will speak at
the Middleport Ciln'ch of Christ
at 10:30 a.m lilnday and at 1
p.m. there will be an informal
luncheon in her honor in the [ellllllshlp hall.
Mila TbomiUI will present ttu
Rhodealan misaioo challenp in
a sllde film presentation at a
service lo be held at 2 p.JD.
A twin service m the Atricu
mission work will be presented
by Miss Thomeon at 7:38 p.m.
&amp;u;day at the l'olllet'OY Cburch
of Cbrllll.
Robert Woods andRaulllnlolo.Yer, paator&amp; ol the Pomeroy and
Middleport church••· respectively, lavlte the public lo attoncllliiY
LOCAL TEMPS
The te~erature inPaneroy'l or all of the serriees.
Mill TbomSGI IP'acluitecl from
dow11town buainesa district at
11:29 a. DL lodly wao 5Sdegreeo the Ozark Bible Sehool Ia May,
1963 with 1 BSL de......
under sunny skills.

Causes of Violence

Meigs Counl;r rural route mall
patrons will Ia the next lew days
be recelviag letters oC appeal
lor lunda !rom the Meigs County
American Red Cross Chapter.
Paul · Caaci, chairman of 1he
ebapter's mall campaign for
bad1, asks patn11s to read the
later and make contributions,
IInce over $3,000 mulll berelaed
Ia order to continue the many
81r't'ices or the local chapter.
Casd points oot that the local
Red Cross Chapter Ia tbe only
meana of communication&amp; in casH ~ emergencies between the
man in uniform and his family.
"This alone is worth ywr do-

pend.l UJ&gt;CIIl local I'IIDcll ralted.

"Place your lift 1n .1he IDCI.oled envelopo, plaee • dx - lllamp on I~ and poll It," Caael

uraed-

Reeldenta contrlbutlaa f1 ..11( doe

more becoJDe members

local cl!apltr.
Tuesday night ..,rl&lt;era - -

ed over 3,000 letters lobe mailed
to rural patrons.

"Many patrons may han bea:l
overlooked. Howner, we're hopIng that even though lht7 don't
receive letters, they will mall
in their donations,'' aaJd Ca.scl..
Donations are lo be mailed to
the Meigs Dlwlt,y Amerlcaa Red
nation,"' Casct said.
COntinuing, easel said lhet Cross Chapter, POmeroy, Obio
the county blood program de- 45769
:~:::·: ~:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::.::;: ;:::::;:;:;::: ::; :;:;:::;:;:;:;:::x:::;:;::

WASIIINGTON (UPI) - Pollee Chief Thomas J. Cahill or
Sin FrancifH.'O urged Wednesday that the public S'l&gt;}lOI'IIhe
nation"s 320,000 law enforce-ment officers in the face of
growing crime and violence.
14
We are a tbin blue line,"
Clhlll told 100 oll!cers IP'eduatlng from the FBI National
AcadeJTU', "We cannot hold
thl s ll ne alone."

Partition Suit

Filed in Court
A suit to partitioo real estate
waa filed and Qvo divorces were
awarded In Meigs County Com·
mon Plots Court Wednesday.
The partition action was insdtut8d bY Cbarleo E. and Stella
Hall, Brecksville, Ohio. and RusaeU D. and Pauline Hall, Medina,
Clyde and Fay Hall of
Sunnyslope, Ariz., et 11., deferdanta.
Clllrord E. Brown ~· granted
a divorce !rom VIrgie P. Brown

...mill .

w: Reed-··Reed.

Court Ups

Award for
Easement
A jury of seven men and ft.w
women returned a Judgment lD
Javor of the dereDdant Ia a land
appropriation suit ln Nelp Colmty Common Pleas COUrt Wedne~
day at'ternoon.
The suit, derived l'run an OS.
fort by theSialoolOhlaloacqutre
an easement ror highway pur.
poses over pnper'Q' of Genna
Yates. et. aL t on Rcute 12t. t.

gan Monday.
'!bt Jury,at'terdeliberatlDIIhour and 50 mlllltoo, reiiD'IIed a
.iudtlmenl o!lllf,SOO !ortbeY-..
property. '!bt "' till .
amount waa 1111,000 ror ....,.:
1,..,
lbr land, 11111 ....: ·
!orreelcloo.
'!bt olud llliParlment ol IUP-'
Ways Md - - &amp;lola! .....
of $8,150 lbr doe land ...... . . ;

-.ooo

lfq&gt;rO"-Jit a l - I A ·'

m..

•nd Robert
' AIIOrllep
• dlvoroo lrom Haul F.
wen,.Barrard 'V, Fu11:1
GI.'OII lllglecl of du~ ind ex-and·w a r n n tnme cruel~ ,..... cbarpd In pello.
bolh~etiOGL
or Altorilo1

-

Jury

PLAN OPERETTA

~

1'\qli~ of ... ~· ~· . ~
EIOIMIIIIry &amp;:hool will preMiil lllilotl
4Cillltta,."

···n.e ' EarlJ Bb:d

~

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            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
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            <text>Newspaper</text>
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        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
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              <text>October 30, 1968</text>
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        </element>
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      <name>durst</name>
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    <tag tagId="1246">
      <name>sterrett</name>
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</item>
