<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="20152" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/20152?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-01T15:28:12+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="55755">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/b90ec68341d915b7c8bda352a4538561.pdf</src>
      <authentication>3422c8d4acfdd1729984ac222078c6cd</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="63791">
                  <text>.
·enttne ~~,

•

Now .You Know

•

at y

e

The dove Is one of about 290
species or pigeon.

Devo~

.VOL. XXI NO. 135

\

..creaalng elou""•s llld llljl4

:,:,1.

and not so
eel showera.

warm wiib

aauer-.

RVE CENTS

FRIDAY, NOVFMBER 1, 1968

--------------------

600 Republicans Pack Meigs County Garage
BY BOB )VINGE'M'
One of the largest political
gatherings In recent Meigs County history whooped it up for the
Grand Old l'arly Thursda,y night
at an annual fish fry and "presentation of candidates" event.
The crowd - standing room
only - was estimated at 600
persona. Thsre were 144 pounds
rl fish and 45 pounds ot ham
conlwned bytheenthusiasticparUsans In the county garage buildIng at Rock Springs.
Leslie F. Fultz, president rl
the Meigs County Republican executive committee, opened t h e
program by speaking for Richard M. Nixon and Spiro Agnew,
candidates for u.
President
and Vice President, and William
B. Saxbe, candidate for the senate.
Fultz al110 praised lOth District Coogressman Clarence E.
Miller who I• seeking re-election for Ids voting record and
for the fact he was the only one
ot over 400 representatives who
answered every roll call during
the last session of Congress.
Oakley C. Collins, state senator, outlined Ids views on government programs and noted Ids
high regard for Rep. Ralph
Welker who also Is seeking re.
election. Welker spoke briefly as

s.

WINNERS - Taking top honors for costumlr~ at the annual Syracuse Halloween Carnival
Thursday evening were six &lt;:ontestants, left to rlght, front row. Brenda Jett as a queen, Jody
Grueser as a llttle rag doll, and James Ferrell as an elephant; second row, Mark Williams as
a creature frOII1 outer space; Debbie Harden, wearing a prlaoner's suit with ball and chain, and
Susan Gooch as Phyllis Diller. Each winner was presented a gift or 50 cents by the PTA.

U. S. to Demand Talks Give
South Self-Determination
PARIS (UP0-U.S. Ambassador W. Averell Harriman said
today he will demand a political
solution to the VIetnam War.that will let the South Vietnamese peilple detenr: lne their
own future.
Firing the ~nl~ shot of the
new diplomat!~ war with Hanoi,
Harriman said the United
States wants a solution worked
out In future peace talks that
will be In accord with the
wishes of South Vietnam.
In a statement to the French
and foreign television networks
Harriman warned that the
second phase of the U.S.-North

VIetnamese talks will be tough which are difficult to attain"- a
going.
political solution "which would
"A cea.sl}-flre ' ' ,Ul!!fl.J.t§.,:: _. allll!'_ _\lle _PltOil_le. !lf. ~ .
he Bald. "As the President Vietnam to determine their own
Indicated, he eJ~P&amp;cts the other future."
side to join In a de-escalation of
This meant a plebiscite for
the war and eventually stop the South Vietnam which Hanoi and
fighting."
the National Liberation Front,
Hanoi Statement Pending
or Viet Cong, have resolutely
The Hanoi delegation 11&gt;- opposed. The restated U.S.
nounced It would also outline Its demand Is eJ&lt;P9cted to raise an
position at a news conference enormous obstacle In future
later today. Dlpl001atic sources peace talks.
said the Hanoi gro"' also would
One of the main reasons for
announce It sought a ceas~llre. the failure of the 1954 Geneva
Harriman said the second
phase · of the Paris talks wll1
have "simple objectives, but

Saigon Just

New Complication Luke Warm
J:
s
t h Dr
~n tre c
lVe :to:'s:~~th.:::~~:!::

SAIGON (lJPO - The Saigon

government said today It "did

I

By United Press International
President Johnson's new Vietnam peace mons Injected a
major new CJiestion Into the
presidential race today as the
candidates continued In the
stretch drive of the campalgn.
It was anybody'&amp; 1111ess what
aiJect halting the bombing ot
North Vietnam would have on
the race.
Hubert H. HUJllpbrey mainialned It would have little
effect. 'lbe other two presideDUal coalenders-Richard M.
Nixon and George C. Wallacedid not comment bow th8y
dlouiiiJt It would Influence next
Tuesday's balloting.
Humphre.V hailed. th\1 bOIIlbing
halt as "a prudent and ••• wise ·
decision." &amp;It he also aald,
"what this does Is help the
.cause of peace. I don't think It
ha. much to do. with the

· candidateS."

Althoaill obviOUJiy ,IOOilant
after Johplon'a t e 1 e vIsIon
IIJ88Ch Tlllrllday night. "Pve
been hcJPing for a month for
' this," he ll1d- HlllllPbi'ef Instatld It hllii 110 polltlcal lmpUca-

tton

~

llOIIIIIIent

willlheld immediate ·
Cll
the polltl~

•-:~:m:Of~the ~cement ol
hal~ liUt aa1d he

Thursday, he said the "strong
attitude" held by him and Ida
running mate, Gen. Curtis E.
LeMay, probably contributed to
Hanoi's wlllingneBB to move
toward a settlement.
In other developments:
LeMay - The former Air
Force chief ot staff sugeated
Thursday that President Johnson may have put pressure on
Gen. Creighton W. Abrams Jr.,
to agree that new condltlona
might permit a bombing halt.
''I understand the Pl'esaurea
that are brought 011 military
men from the boas," LeMay
said In Evansville, IDd.
Sen. EdmWid
MuakleMuskle, Humpbrey's running
mate, said the negotlatlons
spurred ~ the bonib1D8 halt
would cover such problems as a
cease - fire a transition gover~
.
1 and. satement, ..:.
u 88 election
guardl that a oewly elected
pernment would survive.
Gov. Spiro T. A&amp;new--The
MIJlland pemor and GOP
vice pre~~al ~ held
ltrite&amp;v seaal0111 with hla and
~·· advlsera In Netr York
Thurlday 1D · preparation for a
final ~ swiDa to take
him to Jlx states.

~·InN-· F~ . to 111• "llll'Y C'1:'J' ~
~ ~ 152 A~ stJ Cllne ma ~Ill

.. . ;..,

~ti.IOII

to )4elgs·.• a l Hoapltal Whete ,
a medical

he was dnltted as
'~c=:~ . w
patient.
--~ , .!fl' ,. t~ec:- ·.~

~

• •·

lnWashl~

One official communique said
at noon (11 p. m. ES'n Thursday
"this morning. .. the U n I ted
States unilaterally took the d~
clslon to stop the bOIIlblng over
the enUre territory of North Vietnam," The world "unilateral"
Indicated President Nguyen Van
Thleu dld not awrove of the halt.

.· . ' . .

: ·"'· · , · . ,EXPECT ~IG CRQWJ)

hers See

,.,

.I e&amp;C

Six Melga Local School Dlstrict teachers attended the joint
meetine of school maatera and
school w&lt;men's club at the Firat
Methodist Church In Athens on
Ttun:aday.
Olflcera of the ~heastern
Ohio Education Atlll. were~
ciucecl and spec:lal music was
Jjrovldtid by the Athen.a Wealey
Choir. Marvin E. Wilker • 11111 ~
a11t to ·the el~BC~iijve director and
administrator ot'l~rnala~lrs
of Blue Cross of Southwest Ohio,
showed colored alldes of Ids recent .trll to _the Mecliterranean,
particularly o( brael.
T..chers attellllq were Miry
-Bacon u4 ~ campbell of
. Meigs High
a~)I e 1 e n
,Willl""•• Cl,ro1yn S!bltll. N~
. Rollerti a111J RcJ11ert D,~ Rolierta

School;

;

,

of

~eroy El"'!'~

, .. ·,. · ,

School.

'

..

.O)ooo Jllllllll• '""" tum o.411eJ:• . Ml~.,t.
~· ,

ll

'I

~for . . .rt

--~H. f»u.r · ~. \: ,'.

~- .Gordoa

~~~i .,~~ :
f.•'\:~
...

..... ~
•.·

~

WASHINGTON (U PO - The
agreement between the United
States and North VIetnam to
bring the Saigon government
11rlll the VIet Cong Into the Paris
talks constitutes a major step
forward
on the long and
difficult road to peace-If Hanoi
is act!~ In good faith.
That was the view eJ&lt;Pressed
by top officials here, s&lt;me of
whom frankly admitted they
had their doubts.
President Johnson himself
said he "could be misled" by
the assurances he received
from the North Vietnamese and
others that Hanoi would not
take military advantage of the
total halt In bombing and
shelling or North Vietnam which
he has ordered.
Thai · faCt tblf ·s0111e of the
assurances Johnson received
apparently came from the
Soviet Union, which played a
considerable role In the delicate
negotiations, bolstered the hope
that
the arrangement 11&gt;nounced Thursday night would
lead to lowering the level or
warfare and eventual peace.
Major Points
The arrangement boiled down,
essentially, to two parts:
- There Is a firm "agre~
ment" that the Saigon goverr..
ment and the National Liberation Front (NLI'), the political
arm of the Viet Cong, are to be
admitted to the Paris sessions
as
soon as possible- next
Wednesday If the South Vletns(Contlnued on Page 10)

Subscribers are reminded that effective next Monday The
Daily Sentinel dell vered by carrier to homes will co~t 7 cents
dally, Monday thrqh Friday, totaling 35 cents. Newsstand
price wW be 10 cents dally. The Sunday Tlmes-&amp;!nUael r~
ma1na at 10 cents percopydellveredathome or on newsstands.
Steady Increases In costa of prlntlna, news gathering and
of s~t~~~lles In all the phases ofpW!llshtng have made this ama11
Increase necessary.
Carriers will share substantially In this Increase.
Motor route price of the Dally Sentinel and Tlmell-&amp;mtinel
wW be .L50 monthly effective Monday. This rate awlles only
to areas where carrier service Is not available.

w...
~.. ·~

Robert C. Hartenbach, sher-

By GEORGE HARGRAVES, SUPERINTENDENT
Meigs Local School District
One or the pr1me objecuvea of edu__..
.,...Oii In a soc1ety sue h
as ours Ia that of develq~tng active, Intelligent, Informed and
parUclpati~ citizens.
If a republic, based on democratic principles, Is to survlve It must have such citizens. They must know the ~eta about
thil operation rl gowrnment. They must also know scmet~
abOut the political ~cts of llfe and bow pollth:s and political
parties function In a society such as ours.
We have been tryl~ thi'CJUIIII regular class~ work and
through special programs this tall to better acquaint our Junior
and senior high · school students with those things that should
make them more knowledgeable cltbena. Last month we ducted primary and general elect!~ tOI' claas omcesln the
senior high achool. We went tbrcugh the entire process of pe-

tltiona, prilil!lry eleet!O!Is, cuqli}IJIIs, and a aeneral elecUm
An electi011 program has been conducted tn tha junior high
school alat
·
,
These practical e,.periences, we feel, contrlbote greatly
to 1be ,students' underalalldlni of the
proceaa and of
a001e ot the practical ~cts of political Hilt.
.
In our olaesea In cover1111eilt, ~ and CCiriteq)orary

_..etlon.

• tile
.,.. '.IIIII

natural~-

. the high schOol U..lthbeen a
~ whlch
awirliJWabout'\1: it
· . 1ehool
~ ~ ·al!llles claaHIIil~

ICIP!'pt

are

~it~~~· ~ ·tpr~tlil pmld¢11tl ct~·

~- ~

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

.

.

et and a film was lhown rela&amp;-

Iff, and Theodore Beegle, entt- ing to ls111e One which will be
neer, were unable to attend.
on the Nov. 5th ballot.
In other activity or the busiMagician Lee Jacoba proridness session, Chairman Fultz
reviewed the state judicial tick-

ed entertainment prececllna the
dinner, and a square dance fol
lowed.

PICTURED IS THE "ROYALTY" or the Halloween carnival of the Bradbury Elementary
School crowned during ceremonies Thursday night. Left to right are Keith Doss, ~. and Sandra
K. Miller, queen, presented flowers and gifts, and Lonnie Taylor, prince, and Ellen Darst, princess, presented gifts.

!M;ig;:G:iii:'''Ch:ii:] war in

lnog Impound ActioniGoes
South
on

:::: ZANESVlLLE, Ohio (UPO Four charges were filed In Musklngum County courts Thursday
alleging a state-wide violation or
Ohio laws In the proper disposltion of Impounded dogs.
The Humane Society of the Uni~
ed States charged that up to !00,000 dogs were illegally released
during the past two years In at
least 15 Ohio counties.
Frank J. McMahon, field service director or the grOtq&gt;, charged Muskingum County Dog Wardon Albert Hittle with unlawful
disposition of dogs over the past
two years. He also alleged failure to report weekly to the cOUDty board of commissioners and
with submitting fictitious reports
to the board on disposition of

Complete Training
Carl Hysell, Jr., patrolman of
the Pomeroy police department,
has completed a 130-hour police
school ar Logan.
Sgt. George Hicks and Patrolman Louis B. Vaughan attended
a three-day school from Oct. 21
to Oct. 23 at the Ohio State Patrol
Headquarters In Columbus. This
training dealt with operating and
maintaining the new breath anallzer. They wW be licensed
through the Ohio State Health D~
partment.

!&gt;f~:-:

dogs and 1\'ith failure topoat
ficlal n'otlee in the cowty courfi.
house or the dog's apprehension.
Three or the charges were filed
In Municipal Court and three others in Musklngwn West County
Court.
McMahon said he wished there
was a law to permit him to file
similar complaints against the
commissioners and pr0111ised to
take his charges to "each of the
counties and cities involved."
He said violations occurred In:
Brown, Clinton, Fairfield, Fayette, Gallla, Guernsey, Harrison,
Highland, Jackson, Knox, Logan,
M~lgs, Perry and Shelby counties.

First Messiah

Practice Set

The first rehearsal for the
presentation of George Fredrick
Handel's oratorio "Messiah"
will be held &amp;mday, Nov 3 at 5
p.m . at the Presbyterian Church,
Eighth and Main St. , Pt. Plea~­
ant.
All interested persons in the
Meigs, Gallla, Mason County areas are urged to participate In
this community endeavor.
LOCAL TEMPS
The "Messiah" will be preThe temperature In downtown sented the week before Christmas
Pomeroy It 11 a.m. Friday un- and will be conwctedby William
Warfield.
der aunny skies was 71.

Schools' Goal: Informed Citizens

~~~&amp;r~=i%''.,\·lilitOrtun-r:
.)"op~~·
rotP'
;;.. ~to. -.,:.. ~"'
.(;~~ "~At W~ld
. . ,·. ''•
. ~~
pradl~ . ~
. ~.ooo
Adrrilastoo - Heia7 Jb.an. eit
Ill

commissioners; Evelyn Lucke,
clerk of courts; Henry Ewing,
coroner; Howard E. F r a n k,
treasurer; Eleanor Robson, recorder, and Bernard V. Fultz,
prosecutor.

Issue
•
Now lS
Good
Faith

Spea.kiilg of Schools--No. 63

Israel Slides

s.

TAKEN .'f0 HOSPR.U.
"brlnl '!be ' IJlcldl~ emergency
•"e peace ~ l!BS ~~ed «t. 3:08. a.m..

11

for it. The half-hearted approval
came a full 11 hours after President Johnson amounced the halt

Conference which ended the
French Indochina War was the
C(!!ll!!l)191_.1 , llJIJIC!&amp;l~!ln to ai\Y
International pOlicing of free
elections.
Harriman eJ&lt;Pressed hope the
South Vietnamese government
will be present at Wednesday's
opening session of the full-scale
talks. He said Saigon ntaY not
be represented Wednesday because It may need some time
for organizing Its Paris mission.
Prepares Paris Mission
Saigon was known to be
lukewarm
toward
President
Johnson's bombing halt and a
spokesman said today the
United States "acted alone" In
stopping the bOIIlblng. However
the South Vietnamese goverr..
ment amounced Thursday It
would
send
a group of
technicians and other eJq&gt;erts to
Paris.

did Judge Earl E. Stephenson of
Portsmouth candidate for t h e
Court of Appeals.
c:ounzy candidates lntrocllced
by Chairman Fultz were Robert Clark and Ralph Warden Ours,

~-::-,

givi~ students s001e eJ&lt;Pertence in
the practil:al procedures of campaigning and s"'~ candidates,
We certainly hope that all the community Wlderstands that
what we are Interested In is not the sttliJOI'( of Individual candidates but providing an educational eJq&gt;erience for our young
people during this time when so much outside the classroom
s"""'rts the efforts we are lllaldlll to Instruct them Inside the
classrOOIII. Such an opportunity to tie Instruction to a natimal
campaign happens only once every four years and our social
studies teachers are attelllpti~ to make use of it. So If you
hear about posters or canwalgnlng of this nature, please understand that It Is a controlled e,.perlment In teaching YOUIII .
people about how politics function.
And there Ia an Important role you adults can perfOl'm In
teaching our YliWW people about citizenship. You can show them
that you accept the responalbUlty ofwtlllll for the candidates of
your choice next Tuesday. We, In our eff«!l'ts In school, are
neutral cone~ specific ca~, but we are lltensely
I!Ureated In our young peGp)e developing a sense of re.,.,.,_
a~e partlclpadooln our society.
WO!l't you llelp us by \'lltl~ on Nowrnbe.r 5 and showing
them that the adult cltbens of our area hava aiso accepted responsible ptrticlpat\on. In this way your •JU~~le can emphasize wbat we haV11 been ~ to do In our ~~
Your help. will be ll)preclated. J ClUJ' 111\deralanllitW ol our efforta will also be awreclated.

It certaln}y must, while

if

lb!iw· '

tonight with a eblllce o1
era welt portlcJa late ....,...
Low In the 501. Salurdi.Y e l -

To Tlae lntere&amp;t. Of 1Jae Meigi-Ma10n Area

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

..'

Weather

·

SAIGON (UPO - The war over
North Vietnam halted today. The
war In South Vietnam continued
and Communi at guerr111a rockets
hit Saigon and Hue on the natton'a
Independence day.
In line with President J.,.
son's bOIIlblng halt order to press
a drive toward peace, U.S. pilots
canceled raids against North VIetnam. American 7th Fleet ships
in Tonkin Gulf and Anny heavy
artillery on S o u t h VIetnam's
northern border broke off their
barrages.
The halt came at 9 p.m. (8 L
m. EST).
The 200,000 North Vietnamese,
whom military Intelligence has
estimated man Hanoi's nationwide air defense system, were
free tr001 attack pending progress in peace talks In Paris.
The U.S. pilots had flown nearly 100,000 strikes against North
Vietnam since Aug. 5, 1964, dropping more than 2 mUllon tona of
eJq&gt;losives.
In Saigon and in the amaller
cities of Hue and My Tho, Red
rockets killed at least 30 persons and wounded another 91 VIetnamese Thursday.
President Nguyen Van Thleu
or South Vietnam said the United
States acted by Itself In haltiDI
the bombardment or North Vietnam. He announced he would address his nation on radio and
television Saturday.

Early Votes
Total at 429

SCHOOLS
~fetes

cl~

'*'

::;: ·=o:r~

1

�'-,

!II-";':.',

1,•

~

J

"

., . . ·.

·

•,· ··

famed opera diva's solace is a
multi-miUlon..dollar trust fund. •.

(

-.
·-

~
::
::

.·..•.
.·•.
o'

FAIR EXCHANGE
OR BRffiERY?
•
Dear Helen:
We have twins Ulree years old,
and a baby five months old. My
husband says 1 can continue hav·
i.ng
diaper service only if I give
,·
up smoking. I won'tgiveup&amp;mok·
lng unless he quits his Frida,y
night poker game.
I say if I have to give up the
·: service, he must buy me six
•' dc.zen diapers but he only wanta
to buy two dozen. If he only
!(lOis me two do..e, PD need o
tlotlles dryer to k·aep Up, and
that's more expensive than adia. per service
I don't think he's (air, do you?
- MARSHA
Dear Marsha:
Fair or not, you'IJ work leas
and enjoy it more iC you give up
amoking. And when you make the
Big Sacrifice, especially (or your
lal!band., you'U find he'll do more
nice things ror you- even perhaps to taking yoo wt on Friday
• a:lgbts or buying you a dryer for
Chrlatmas. - H.
Dear Helen:
My husband is 75 years old.
I am 36. We hove o 12-year-&lt;&gt;ld
&lt;laughter. Do they allow children
In aenlor clUzen housing projects?- D.L.
Dear D. :
Two out ·or three in your rami·
1¥ aren't senior citizens. Even

'·
•..
..

.
.

:·

..

i

r
..•
:
..

though you

were uallowed," you

wouldn't be

happy In a 10&gt;lden

yeara complex. Your husband
ahould bow to tile majoricy. - H.
Dear Helen:
. My 16 - yoor -old daughter lo
pregnant. She haa been ROing
steady with an older boy lor a
year, and we think he is no good,
but lhe says he has never toucheel her. I've had several llgbta
witll her aboUt him.
She accuses my huaband, her
ltep(ather. h
Aid he came
borne drunk one night while I was
away. He awears this ian't true;
and my - r fir at said It happened on ooe dale, and then an-

.

.

.,._ ..-..

Captain

In thla parlod. wo oboerve Notional Voeltlona! Qddollco Week, wo oommend the Natlnolal Voca"Mil Qddonce Aoooclatim and Ita
thou"'"'' of membera Kl"'II the comtrJ lor
their awvlcea toward maldng Indlvldual urlcher llld our ecoOOIIQ'
· We join
with them tltls nek In urging ......,..,. to 1...,
more aboUt the auldance IIOl'\'lcet available !a

atz'"-·

our community.

The mayors of New Hav.., Harlfced and Maam, In reCOl!IIIU..,oltheabovelacll,prodalmad
the week of Octd&gt;er 2~6, as Vocational Guidance Week In the Bend Area, and urged citizens to obaerve the week b1 making them·
selves better acquainted wltlt the awvlooo of·
lered by professional e&lt;liiiiiOioro and the oxtent to wlllch ooch citizen WI benellt !rom
these servb:ea. Signing it were 'llwlmaa GriDstead, New !hlvon; William Kellf, Harllord,
llld Dayton ftiQ'IIOS, Muon.

same day•
Roo santoa ol the CUba and hi•

other, when 1 proved I waa home wife are safe at hmte again ..•
tllat n!gb~
Auat.rallln authorities are wor·
My hul!bMd &lt;k&gt;ea drink a lot. rTed over a proatie • increase
1 can't believe this, but 1 can't •nd blame it on Yanks getti11t
quite disbelieve it entirely.
rest &amp; rehabUltation leaves Crom
The misery is unbearable, aa
Vietnam ..• Luck,y double-omena:
. ll I side with my hullband, Fve seven years ago when Jerry OrJoat a daUihter, and U I aide with bach was about to open in the hit
my daughter, l'IJ have to leave
"Carnival," hi a wife Marta was
him. Helen, I love them both, expecting; dlttll apin as Jerry
though I see their (aulta. Now,
prepares to open in D. Merrick's
all I want to doll run away and "Promiaes, Promises.''
hide.
Finest ycung actress on B.JV
Last night she asked me to
· Roeemary Harris, Ia ex ·
tjiplf lor · an abortion biK:ailse pectinK
(She's Mrs. John Ehlea)
her ·atepfl.~f la 1he iatfter. Do
... The Bobby Kemedy apartment
you suwoae abe ia pinning it 011
at UN Plaza is being oft'ered at
hJm so she can pt out or tbis?
$150,000 more titan the aameOot
-NOWAY TO TURN
on another floori the K. mystlQJe
Deer NWTT:
makes up the extras .•• Joe Louis
It won't take long for an exJr., .... or tho greet llsf&gt;tchomp,
pert counaellor to catch yOW'
dofta his unlt'orm Nov. 15 (rom
daughter up, if she's J.yiq.IDeist
Fort Gordon, Fla., then Ira back
that ahe eoaault one. Should abe
to the u. or Denver ... Re ....·t
refuse, you can be pretfl sure
take pop'allatic -route to lame,
your husbaDd ill innocent. - H.
The Buddy Riches patched It
Dear Helen:
up ••. Carol Bruce's actress •
About thoae restaurants wbere
daughter JUlie Sh_.-d wed jazz
the waiters and waltresaea snub
guitarist Larry COryell ... Good
mamerly teena: If we parents
ateaka: at the Pen &amp; PencU ...
got I.Dto the act and boycotted
Joao Gilberta, the marvelooa
them,. they miKh1 get the mea.
Brazilian composer - autterlat sage laater.
singer at the Raid:!Ow Grill, is
Our 1011, after being ignored,
totall)' terrUlc; with his gentle
served alopplly, and so alowlf
voice llld tendor &amp;eyle, he manhe aDd hta date ware u hour
aae• to keeptltatplaylul room pinlate to their prom, left the exact
drop-quiet even mrlng tho dinchange on the plate. 1be waiter
ner show ••• More great mualc
held up the bill, counted the
to lollow: stan Getz and Chris
money and made anl.de remarks,
Connor: this Is a lovely room,
thlnldng to embarnea him beliar - twched lnaldo and out, 65
tore hll girl. But ahe bad alOoora straight up In Radio City,
readY been clued In. On the "01
They'll eock.tt..to-Kate Smith
out, be handed the waiter a heal·
Dec.
30 on ••La:uab-In" ••• comthy tip, I HOPE tile dam 1!11Y
edy team ol Sillier &amp; Meara
!ell aabamed, 001 ldoobt II. The
1111bbed a TV beer commerclal
food' 1 good but we are - BOY- because the od """'ey InsistCO'ITING.
Thl.i column ta dedicated to ed &amp;iller shave off hi a sldatuma;
llld the Stiller J&gt;II.YUI Ia bla pride
family Uyjng, oo II Y'*'re hav·
llld
joy.
lng ldd trouble or juat plain
Pr&lt;&gt;mcer
- dlreetor Stan Har·
trouble, Jet Helen help YOU.
ria
ol
"Thlt's
LICe" rec'd a
h wUl &amp;lao welcome your own
relllcWJ
check
!rom
the United
amusing experiences. Addreaa
Arab RepubUc for reaicllalt Oil
Helen BoueJ in care of tlda
an old Nat CUe TV ~c!al~ llld
newspaper.
Allan King nwle blm contrlbale
It to the United Jewloh ~ ...
Pot McCormick 11071 Dick Nix·

em'•

.

(JI,..,..._
Htll ,.,. ·the pid11tes w-t tool M our voc.tioa in '63,
wloich could 6o fflltd 'G'-Iot ,.,., aiHiien~~. witllouf teg&lt;~rl , • .,.,.

HaliEW ~CaJ

llrlcs

eentli,

3 -

F1i-1t

- · Army, of Melp

~==.:";"~
Cross lor Herolom, tiio llnlnze
star Modal,

Air Medal with
18 Olk Leal Clusters, the l'UI'·
pit lloort, the Good Conduct
Medal, the National DeiODIO SerYiee Medal, the Vletnam Service '
Medal, the VIetnam Campalp
Rlbboa, and tlte Army Aviator
111

dog

baa two

Dell

tricb:

erett M.
Be Isle

..

·-..

Atheni; Mfs.

:·······························

·&lt;

i• YOURVOTE i•
i•
FOR
i•
~•• HENRY !••

Burton, Oak Hilli Marvin F._
Marks. Jackson; Mrs. Raymood
G. McMa•way, RL 1 Wellston;
Cindy 'Ann Hughes, RL 1 Jlavena-

wood.

'

.

ffirths
,.
Mrs. Lorry R. Smith, Ew!Jvo
MAJOR S!EPIIEN C. KOVACS, Jr., rlsfl~ U.S. Army ROTC, Ohio Unlveroii;Y, Athens, reado
ton, son, 8:05 L m. 1'hui"sdly;
cltatlooa honorilv the late Clplaln Archie A. HQDIIII, clu'lng a cereDIOI\Y held Thursday alternoon
Mrs. Wlllar&lt;l G. Cox, tit. 1,
In Cl~ Ma._r Kemeth Motpn's otllce. Holdlrw t1te Vll'lowl medals preaGed poathumouely to
North..,_ ·daughter, 11:08 'L m.
Cli&gt;L Ha,ymon ere Mr. Morgan, left, and the wldoov of the VIetnam War hero. .
ThurSda)&lt;; ··Mrs, carl F. Swlaher, PL .Pleasant, daughter,, 10:5J
p. m. Thursday.
sented
the
Air
Medal
wltlt
18
clplent ol the Bronze star Medal
Discharges
Oak Leaf Cluster• '"for active
target attack wltlt a mlnlmum ol whleh was awarded to him ·~
Lorry
Hardesty,
ReneeK. 8efto
portlclpatiM
In
IDOre
then
25
pratectlm, he providedthelnltial hla untiring ell'orta and prolesaerW
miaslonl
over
boiiUle
ter·
nett,
Roscoe
R.
Allen,
Mr*- lllax
air SUJ)pOrt 1o the armored col· atma! abllii;Y. He cmsletently obrltory
in
aupporl
ol
countertnG.
Barnes,
Jemi~s Bias, Mrs.
Qdned outatandiDg r e s u 1 t a
wnn.
IUrgency OPOratlma. During all Verne Blazer, MrL Hoyt L.
"Though out or ammWIIUon, 1hroo8h hla energetic awltcatlon
these
mlaslona he dllll!ioYed the Clark, Mrs. F.dwJn L. Cremeans,
he remained lD the area makiq: of his extenllve knowledge In the
blgbell
order ol air discipline Mrs. Otto A. Rohrbaugh, Mrs.
simulated tiring attacks to de· OYer chang!ne altuaUms Inherent
and
acted
Ia accordance with the ~ A. S&amp;yre, MrL G. l.
ceive tbe enemy forces until the in a c:QIIIlteriDaurgency operation;
best
traditions
of the United Scholle!~, Mrs. Garland I( Slovgunohlpa arrived. Captain HOY- hla ell'orta materla!ly contrlhutSlates
Army.
er and Infant """ Mrs. JIIIIIOI F,
man's actions were in keeping ed to the United Slates mission
''Captain
Hayman is also the Wllllamson·,.nd ~ daullhter.
with the blgbest tradltims o1 the to the Republlco!VIolaamaalllllrecipient or the Pllrple Heart
mllltory service and rellect groat lng that country In ridding !tsell
w!llch
waa eatebllahedbyGeneral
credit upon hlmaei~ His unlt,llld or tho Col1111111111st tllreat to Ito
George Waahlngton at Newburgll,
lreedom.
tile United States Army,
"Captaln HeymM Ia al110 pre- New York, Aug, 7, 1782."
ucaptain Hayman ia also the

••
••
•••
•
:•
•
:
•

To Lead 4-H Oub
PT. PLEASANT -

By BRUCE

IIOSSAT, NEA

NEW YORK (NEAl

The incredibly frenzied Madison Square Garden demonstra·
Uon for Alabama's George Wallace surely gives him the rally

championship of the year, howevet'el!~ 'hls c~~ijid~oprt~}' ·be

·''' '1

;

• •

•

...

Not since some of the great and noisy outpourings for Barry
Goldwater in-1964 and the late John F. Kennedy in 1960 has
there been heard so much sound so long sustamed at a po·
litical gathering.
Bringing off a succesolul reUy at Madlaoa Square Garden
Is tradltloaaUy an achievement hallmark for any presldenUal
eanclldate. Wallate, beaming, elapplng to music, aow and
ihea aalutlog bls aboutlng, Kreamlng aupportera, knew very
weD be had made 11.
To any veteran Wallace-watcher in 1968, the New York
rally had to be put down as his own biggest show. But while
no other event of this year generated more frenetic support,
it also has to be said lhet the proportion ol anti-WeUacO
hecklers in the haD was eomparatively lower!'
Thousands more hecklers were in the area of the hall, but
by a process ol selection mystifying to reporters, only a rela·

tively small group found its way inside. They were placed so

high in the geUerles that their chants were measurable only
as gross sound. Those outside; perhaps inevitably, clashed
with the edgy New York police which surrounded tha Garden

in huge numbers.
Basically, the New York rally followed the Wallace pattern.
He taunted his taunters , and countless highly exercised Wallace partisans shook lbeir lists at the hosllle demonstrators
aDd yelled to lbem to go home.
There wiD be maay well-reported accounts of Wallace's

Conquest" of the Garden. Just a few details struck this re-

porter as unique to the New York occasion:
• A pro-Wallace demoottrator m01111ted the platform bearing the flag of Free Cuba. A Wallace aide solemnly folded It

All:,alec-

•

Garden

Washington Corr01pondent

to amall size and then the candidate himself gravely saluted

it.

• A trio of wild pro-WeUaceltea Immediately In !root of a
line .of ~Bme)l COJisli!Jltly sh~ erij:o1!91111!1111!1# :~ '::
Waved their ~ma. At one such &amp;mi-Wa\llng· mOilli!ilt;· a "r~- L
porter noticed one of the three waS wearing a small gun in a
holster. Nearby Secret Service men were informed. They
came over lor a look and one said:
"Oh, they're all right. They're police officers."

• In WaUaee's obvious enjoyment of his Garden success
it was hardly realized that at one pitch of frenzy he was
quite incongruously, clapping to the lune of "I'm a Yanke~
Doodle Dandy."
• A man wearlnc a typical eampalgn bat had pasted
around Its crown a sticker reading simply: "Shoot looters."
• The great aew hoD was eUve with probably more Conlederate Raga · thaD George Wallace has seen anywhere outside the solid South .
The onlooker could not forget, either, that, wild as was the
&lt;lamor Inside and outside the hall, It was happening in a elty
wher~ lear sears the streets as almost nowhere else in America, where strikes or slowdowns by teachers, policemen, fire·
men and others threaten to make it an unworkable, if not~ an
unlivable, place.
The eomlijloa or New York, like the eond!Uon of many other
cltleo, exPiilu Ia part tbe pbeaomeaon observed at Madlaoa
Square G'ardea. Tile lumulfuoas baD, IDled at once wHb the
unlettered joy of WaUace worsblpero look!Dg for qulek e~eape
from lear tind yet with the pain aud ucllaeu of people at both
exlnme1 espo.mg their halnds, was a eolor portrait of the
ehaos Ia the natloit outolde.
That portrait should ·give the shudders to whatever man
wins !be White House Nov. 5 and begins to try to govern next
January.

Vernon Star Duatera ~. Club
meeting with Berry lla)'ne8 e l ed president•
Elected to serve with Haynes
were Conllle Hofhnan, vice pres.
ldanl; Janet S&amp;yre, IIOCI'IIIat1i
Angela· Sayre, treaiUJ'er: H a r ..

••

•
••

FOR

MEIGS COUNTY

:

•

W•ll Be Appreciatetll
Pd. Pol. Adv. By Henry Ewing

:

:
•

:

··················~···~·········

lett 'lbomp~&lt;~~ and Eddie SoJr8.
smg leaders; Diane~.
reporter; Mro, Alberl'l'hplqiiCII,

':rJ....,., r-*~.-~s,
~ .'ioletent'Iefd&amp;. '" "'JF'.
. • _, ,
PLEASANT VAL....,, ,,HQSPITAL
ADMrrTED: Paul TI,Yior, PL
Pleasant; William H. ~Uie,
PL Pleasant.
DISCHARGED: Dory! Edwards,
HarUord; Valeria Porter, K
Pleaaant; Diana ~ Bullalo; lnlanl KIDB' twln .douatrterl,
PomeJQY, 0.

$2,995

Lemono VB 2 Dr. Hod T
~·k
. .
,
Popular bucket seats~ p;':,·, s:e:rr"'ngw ~ 0u' 'ma"1 1 ~• 1and out.
•

10 1 rc

rans.

car. 4 sp. shift.

·

65 Buick

op.

25

.:·: 68 Buick

Elootra Cu!tom 4 Dr. Hord Top. Only 7,935 eooy miles b
deolor'o ":''': Foctory Air Conditioned. Fully equlpp.'/.
Lrke new rnsrde and out.
·

65 Comet
·····
...

$4,495
$1,195

V8 Caliente 2 Dr. Hord Top. All, white finish with rod vinyl
1nter1or. Runs good.

, 64 ·Olds.

· $1,295

Dynamic "88" ~ Or. Hard Top. Extra clean low mii1111SJe
car. Power Steer~ng, Power brake a, and automgtic trans.

!,
r'·

62 ·Buick

$795

LeSabre 2 Or. Hard Top. Ono oLcleonest 62's anywhere
PS, PB &amp; AT.
•
.

: 62 Chevrolet : ${95·

.;.: .

......

BeiAij 4
\"

:·.

p.. Sedan, Tkio ~or ihows tho boot al &lt;eire. AT •

The only wa,y Ohio U. t an be
denied a Tangerine trip and
the outright MAC title Is by
losing to We"tern Michigan and
Bowlif'€ Green.
OU Heads MAC
Ohio U. leads the MAC pack
at 4-0. Miami is 4-1, Toledo3·1·1
and Bowling Green 2--1·1.
Miami need~ a road victory
against Toledo Saturday to keep
its hopes for a c~&gt;ochamplonship
alive.
Even if Ohio and Mlaml fin.
ish 5-1 in MAC play, the BOO..
cats would still get the Tangerine Bowl nod because they beat

Marshall is at Bowling Green
in the other MAC game. Win-less Kent State goeti owtside !he
conference for a read galne -at .
LouisviHe,
Miami, Toledo and Western
Michigan conclude their MAC
slate Saturday white Ohio,
Bowling Green, Marshall and

wlth a 147.4 average while S.W

lor, tun power equip., till and teleaetpe steeriag wheel,
radio, Uated claaa, • · - tlros, Comlortroallr..,.nd!tiOfto
lnr, antt..pln aa!e, 18,000 mlles. Oee ow-.-olda trade.

Jult Uke new.

-~

'.

~-

'lj

Rambler (formerly Rambler American 1.
These Include a new accelerator cable Hnk·
age and suspended accelerator pedal, new
''Clear-Power 24'' bl::.ltery, and parking lights
which remain on with hcadli_ghts. Shown is
the top-of-line Rambler Rogue 2·door hard top, one of five models offered in the series.

H&amp; R FIRESTONE STORE IN MIDDLEPORT

~
1

·J

61 CHEV.
4DOOR

VI AutO. tru•.

Cllarlel ~~ King
Route

403 Sunny Dollars Winn•rs
282 W. Ma;n
992-2995
Pomeroy, 0.

"OHIO'S OLDEST DODGE DEALER"

. 65.01ds
98 Hqf)S~'· .... : .............. $1895
p·
,

w-.

SUNOCO

ngs

.

·Wlitte on I(Cliil/~ t*&lt;ior1 f)lll power equip., radio,
·~~~
tirelt .~ .alr eOft!!JtJ~

BAILEY'S

American Motors' 1969 Rambler passenger
car series retains its compact body dimensions in keeping with the poHcy ot maintain ·
lng the design continuity of the popular.
low-price line . Numerous mechanical im .
provemcnts. common to all 1969 American
Motors cars, have been incorporated in the

mil-.

, •

care for top performance.

Popular Rambler Retains Compact Dimensions

Greim lla!oh Tilth llll4ddnl Int., power OCJII,pmen~ radio,
........ facotry' air., ""'
Sharp!
air.,, ~ mlloogo. Sharp!

';I

. .. we look into everything, with extra

',..,, ' .. H•· ·.oo ·.,

67 Olds De!til88 Hal. Se,d............ , .• $2695

"

Batteries, radiators, all around your car

RAMBLER

352 V8 . . - , auto. traaa., P.S.. white over blue with blue
Interior.
...,
'

.~i'

Why We're Always
Snooping Around . ..

The American Perennial Champion In
Economy, Gets A New But Very Familiar
Name For 1969

65 For~ LTD 4 Dr. H. T. -- • ·- • • ·-- ·- .$1495

I

CliO?

AMERICAN
MOTORS

,V8, auto. trans., radio, antl-tpln dllrar., wlllte with blue
lntarlor. A real nice one.

•

But w)llch

NOW!

haa a 180.0 mark.
Marietta (4-1), Mount Union
C:l-1) and Denison (2-1) are also
in the title picture.
other league games Saturda,y
pit Musldngtm at Denison,
Heidelberg at otterbein, Hiram
at Wooster, Kenyon at Otter·
beln and MarletD. at Mount UnIon.
Non-league tilts match Valparaiso at Wittenberg and Capital
at Ashland.

67 Olds FB5, 4 Dr. • • • •• ·- •••• ·.-. ·$2195

- · !-ctocy

daf.

Miami.

White over turquoJ.ae metallic ftnlsh with turquoise tnter.:

Each one a winner
at Karr &amp; Van Zandt

$1,895

. Hi1••

ule.

68 Olds 98 Lux11y Sedan - - - - - - - - - - •• $4600

TAKE YOUR PICK

eon ocal one owner

!1&amp;1••

Alth!Julb.
,llld ~
erlf the top ........ ...,.._ '
lng reoorda In tho 1111 T-.
uelther hal a 1fi1!B1aa ....
over 'Ole other.
(II2-t1-7) lo 3-t . , . .
Mlelllgon Slate wilUe "",...,.._
1Y (89-44-f) Ia 2~ aplnot the
Buckeyes.
Berrillll a tie, ..,. ol tho•
coachea wlli draw ...., Solur-

LET US

Baldwin--Wallace, which plays
only rOUJ' 0 h i o Conference
games, can wrap up the mythi·
cal OC title with a win over
Ohio Wesleyan at Berea. B-W
would finish 4..0 in conference
play.
Seals can stay under water
However, Ohio Wesleyan's for a good many minutes, if
14th straight win does not nee· necessary, but usually do so
essaril)' insure the champion- for not more than five minship as the Battling Bishops utes.
wm have three league games
left on their seven-game sched-

Kent State wrap it up Nov. 9.
"I'm looki~ forward to the
game myself," says Western
Michigan's Bill Doolittle. "They
seem to have everything -good
rurming backs, (Dick ConleyY,
Bob Hownard, Dave LeVeck&gt;,
an excellent quarterback (Cleve
Bryant), good receivers (TOOd
Snyder, Phll SWindell), a quick
line aoi a tough defense. They
should be one of the t~ranked
teams in the ration."
Ohio has defeated Marshall
48-8, Kent State 31-7, Toledo 40:Jl, William &amp; Mary 41..{}, Mi~
ami 24-7 and Dayton 42-12 last
saturday.
Baldwin-Wallace or Ohio WesIeyan rank either first or second in total oaense or defense.
Baldwin-Wallace leads the OC
in offense with a 443.8 average
compared to Wesleyan's 399.5,.
Wesleyan is tops in defense

G0 od 1 · I
·C

unbeaten Bobcats.

D
etroll. in the two close
UP! ~riB Writer
A decade aao- before Instant listings, San Francisco Is
figured by three OV"er Cleveland
roplay, - r e the AFL, -..e and P!ttaburgh Ia a allglrt choice
slop-action, belore $400,000 bon- over A11anta.
uaea, belore the lliper Bcnvl-lt
all bel!lll when the Baltimore
The Colt • Giant overtime
Colta came to New York for tho Pill&amp;, won by the Colts 23-17 on
1958 NFL tWe game.
an · 80,yard march cllmaxed by
]( there was one game which Alan Ameche's one-yard plunge,
stirred the hnaginatioo o1 tile
got the pro 1~ bonm counlry'a sports lana and lhe
snowbalUng, 11 hod to be the talk ahout It kept loolball in tile
sudden death overtime cham- spoUight for weeks.
plonsblp game between the
CoJta and the Giants. That's
But, even more important, it
why it's noteworthy that &amp;lnday was pirured in New York and
will be the first time since that lltirred the imagination or the
TV Executives- who &amp;arted
title game that the Colts will be
playing the Glantl in New York. pulling more emphasis on their
This time it's supposed to be telecasts and spending more
a routine victory for the Colts money to buy the rights and
even though Johnny Unitas more money promoting them.
whose reputation was
From 12 pro lecuns in 1959
the number hu jumped to
more by hia cool artistry in that t.....:k. ..
game than by any other single ............r and it's somewhat .ironic
factor, ls injured and Earl that the Dallas Cowboys, who
Morrall will direct tbe team. didn't exist when that 1958
'te game was played, now lead the
The Colla are 11 point ,_
-vor, a Gi
and should ~ Ill tltllt miless : ~ts bY, .~
in tile
they Buller a letdown iofter last Ca)illo! Division. Unless . tile
G~ts upset BaJUmore, Dallas
week•s key triumph over Los should stretch Its lead to t Angalea.
""
Seven other games are also games with just live remaining
scheduled a.nday with most ~ - two betwCM&gt;n the Cowboys and
"' Giants,
the favorites listed by lopsided
Balli
---•
-'
G
more ·~• a victory to
mara.ns. reen Bay is figured remain tied with Lo An 1 .
by 11 over Chicago, DaUa.s is the Centu dl 1 . s
ge es m
listed by two touehdowns over
ry v SJCII.
New Orleans
Mlnn aota i
Green Ba.r sOOuld take over
figured by 12 ~ We hlngtoos the lead (or the first time in the
St. Louis Is u.U: bya~O poln~ Central Division by beating
over Philadelphia, • llld Los Chicago as the Packers begin
Angeles Ia a 10-polnt ehoice over : : ::,.~ason march to the

66 Mustang $1,895
V8 Fast Back 2 Or Hord T

Kalamazoo wm

earn a Dec. 27th Tangerine
Bowl trip (or Ohio University's

By VITO STELLlNO

'!!""•··

· 68 Pontiac

(or Ohio University, Ohio Wesleyan and Baldwin-Wallace.
A road victory over Western

Michigan at

Wildcat Cu.otom 2 Dr. Hord Top. New Buick Trade. Low
mrleage. Lrke new all white with black vinyl interior.

alo our wogm train. It our pGIIUcal representatives allow theae
coeditlonll to contllllt thla will
probably be our future mnde ol
travel. The only new thins . the '"'t.dated, duated-olhpeeches
aDd promi101 of' '64 and '66, Ia
the leaertlrw or t1te neweat dale,
'68.
A lew olaurpotlUca!repreMfto
tatl ves dare to say they stand on
their recor&lt;la. AWAKEN, MEIGS
COVNTJPIS, let's look at those
records. Not ODB of them Clll
claim any accompllahmenta lor
Meigs t:oun~Y.
So, voters of MeJ&amp;s Co., let'a
leave TRlCK or TREAT - to tbe children, and Jet Ul u
reaponalble adulta, arlousb'
"eigh the iaauea and the · candidate• whlcb we wiJl chooae to
represent UL Are you •• votera
oatlslled to bear the ~· ol
educatlrw your children on!JI, to
toaa them to more Proapei'OUI
communities'/ 1111NK, THEN GO
VOTE NOV, 5TH.
Yours truly,

Brocldagton Ready

Hampered by an ankle b\lury

built

.,.

\aa

Mlchlpn Sale
lost dllenolve lineman Nick Jordall
IIIIo undo"""* knee 8111'eerl'
Tuesday.
Ha!lback To'!""Y Love, the
~· leading ground-plner,
mer ,..neroaCk liel'l'1 tllraam - · hollplt.allzed eetlf In the
week with tonsllltis llld lover
will aet the call.
but
lhould be ready.
Tbe Ohio Slate dofenoe hu deDefenalve
hallback Frllllk
teriorated lollowlng Ita brllllam
Waters
aul!ered
a sprained
performance againJt Purdue.
The Buckeyes held .PurGie ,to lmee aplnat Notre Dame. bu.l
Dilly 57 yerda ruahlnll llld set Ia eager to face the Buckeyes.
up both touchOOwns In their 130 atwmer.
Northwe118m llld Winola
pushed acroea 43 polnlo aplnll
the banged.up dolense wlllch had
CHECK YOUR
allowed Dilly 20 points In Ita first
three outings.
BATTERY

Tangerine Bowl
At Stake for OU

Colts-Giants in
!• Replay Contest

EWING

:
•

tlon ol olrlcera blgblllbled the

out of !be Big Ten Utle picture, the pall two weoka, haliback
It doe111't mean the ~ John Brockington will aleo be
can't aa1111ne the role as apo11. readY.
er.
Ha!iback Ted Provost Ia the
What - . , 1oom to knock latest casualt.v. Tbe defensive
all than Ohio Slate wlllch back, who led the 8Jckeyes
aherea the Big Ten lead with with seven lntereeption.a Jast
Michigan?
rear and has returned one oC
What - . , 1oom to knock his two steala for a 35-yard
all than Ohio Stale wlllch touchdown this season, suftered
kicked oil Its nine-came win- a wrlst in,jury in Wednelday's
nlng streak with 1 21-7 verdict practice.
over the ~a?
lf Provost can't make it, for~
Ohio State'a defenae baa been
alllng tile lait two weeka. Llnebocker Dirk Worden, end Merk
Dbevc and ha!lback Mike P&lt;J..
laakl oat out last Satunla,y• D
llnola pme. Dererudve ~ck
Tim AedoriCII wea b\lured In
the oeCOhd quarter.
With the po..lblo exception ol
Aederaon, au ere expected hack
COLUMBUS (UPD- There's
Saturday.
quite 1 bit It stake Saturday

••

!•• CORONER!••

Barry Hayne8 Named

Wallace Pours It on

11

JQQOB,

-nae

short kick, then drove In lor the hal excellent men to the
llrat twchdown enroute to a 21- bat! io. Their
Ia e~17 upset o1 Notre Dame.
cla!ly ..,Jck. ·'!bey talk - . t
However, 24 hour a before the their Y&lt;Mdh, but they have exOblo Slate-Michigan Slate claah perleoce at tNery crldcal poalDaugherty hes relroined !rom tim
oxcept
~r!Jack, •
moldng any predlctlmo.
Daugherlf said.
"WoodY (!layea) haa a great
MQbe the master ·JIII)'choloteam wltlt overall speed and gill Is using Oattery tltlo Ume
quickness. Rex Kern at fl.l&amp;r· to soften up the Buckeyes.
terback gives their oft'ense a
No t - . .
him
lot more fiexlbllli;Y. He can run
D~ _.ta DO l1lOIIIal
Less than 12 hoors later
Mlch•-- ~• and he cu pass. In (Bruce) 1-..n lollowtng the ~s·
~· o3Wite recovered the Jankowski llld (Jan) Wblte, he magnificent eflort ap!nat Nob-e
Dame.
"1 don't think these 18, 19 llld
20-yeer.old l'OCmBIIers will run
oul ol enthu&amp;lalllll. There lhould
be no llmlt to the amount of
spirit lhe,y can generate Saturdo¥ after Selurdo,y. The\ hallmark ol rur fine 1965 and 1966
teams was that the1 plQ'ed at
high levels ever)' Saturda,y," he
added.
Although Mlchlpa Slate Ia

man, Rt. 2 VInton; Ronlld M.

BRUCE BIDBP•T
Alabaman's finest Hour

measured on Nov. 5. ·

i.J

COLUMBUS (UP!) _ Willi
Ohio Slate on ~ard agajnst the
analdo kick, Michigan Slate's
1Jutl:y Daulherty oo doubt Ia
COCik1ne up more trickery for
Saturday's invasion ot Ohio st;a.
dlum.
At last Frida)' night's press
conference, Dalllherb' said the
~artana Would use an onside
kick but nobody believed

.'

1'1\l!nmer, Jiackoon;
Mrs. WQlllm D, SWeeney, IrontOll: Mrs. Ow8~ w. Reynolda.
Ashland, Ky,j Vickie L. ?rfce,
RL 2, VInton; Mrs. Maud&lt;! ,CUe-

Badp.

bush oolumn. By making a rapid

wed. • '. ' ' '
&gt;\dlftiBII;.,~ .

The Dilly Sentinel, Pomeroy-Middlepor~ 0., Friday, November I, 1968

Bucks 'on Guard' for Tricky Daugh~rty

,.,' .

Mrs. Floyd n. ruro, 1157 Second Ave.; ~s. 0\tJI\o' S. WootOn,
U2 Fourth AYO.; R!cktel4'Giblio,
RL 1 Golllj&gt;olls; Mri1 'VIdella
Sll,pe~, RL 1 Pab'lol; 1 Kent t.
Walker, Tln11111in; :Mrai•Carl F.
Swisher&gt; Pt. Plii'uanl; Mrti. ·Vl~&gt;o
cent E. Kn!gh~· Panero7r Mro.
Miles S. Dice, · Mldcll~t; Edwar&lt;l D. Lomber~ Jackaqd; Mrs.
Clyde McCoy, Sr., Jackaon; John
F. Groiird&amp;, ' JaekSG\; ~~. E¥-

Hayman,

Pmneroy, Ohio, Rt. 4
brlnga the onti-Nboan N.Y. Tlmea
Oct.
28, 1968
OOme; then burloolt ... Tbepan·
tie - raid at BarDord the other Door Sir:
dAY moved Dick Cavott'a com- . It il etSY to tell ''TRICK or
ment. .,It's nice aeeSaa tradl· TREAT'' season is here again
lor Meigs Countlana, Dilly t h e
Uooal ulues returniDI."
date Ia Nov, 5th.
Six blo8raplllol or Jackie
Have you ootlced how moat or
()noaala are
Into paperour incumbent repreaentatlws
back ... Mro. Onasala' Iormor
German ctwl A""m•rie Hulte are rldm8 ......-.1 oaooch odler'a
said at Sonrln 1111 ol the Clock coattalh? Hldlrw bebllld tired
!hat lho'a turn1n1 moat or bar maoko ol the same old Ioise
Prc'lmlolrw II we
: +• c • I'O)'ald.es over to a Ger· promlaea.
TREAT them q;lln on Nov. 5th,
man footer -pare!Up!ontotour Cldle111 OQII~ •• Rullla's we can e:xpect Che 11m.e old
TRICKS. All of them are aware
lho - do¥ week (endlrw t1te aU..
clef trad!t!ot!) cauaed a 25 par ol Meigs ~· prublelllo, aa
they bring It to our attention each
COIIt zoom In YOdloa Bales.
Kate Smith told Joe F rllllklln Ume they oat our vote.
AI yet IIODI of them haW tried
1111)' .... .....'t In 111&amp;111 'to concoct a ~on to cure our
elms: lhe once l1aned for a cafe IDa. Some ol 11i01r i'avorlte
dale llld It WOO I aellout; al she Tftt:AT8, darWIJJW juat '"'t olour
-eel the club ahelellllldbuot- reach, are VocaUceal Tnlnlng
ed her '101 In -on places- Centera, hlghwaya (of ~oufse,
and cleeklld It waa God'o ~or providJrw we vota oD certain iawarning her aplnot Micb Job• aueol and, OR, YEs, an airport.
forever.
Wo haWI alreadY hod a $100,000
dose ol that. The orQ alrlnga attached lo, that we cmne oc&gt; wltlt
The term "almighty dollar" half ollbe cost.
meaDs the power of capital
We were nenaskedtorejUven-

ru-.

11

~

Archie A.

Pre...tatlon waa ·made Thllrl4111' attennm In Ga!tlpolls CIIY
MaDager Kemeth D. Morgan'•
ottlee, by MaJor Steve Kovacs,
U.S. Arii\Y ROTC, Ohio University, Athena, to the widow of the
doceaeed, Mra. Mer1 L. HOYman. Ga!llpoUa. C8ptalo ~an
died In Vletaam 011 April 2, 1968,
while operatlng an aircraft ln
heltlle territory.
C8ptalo Heyman's Dlatlngulshed Flying Cross award reeds:
"For heroismwhllepa.rticipat.
lng In aerlal fllght evidenced by
voluntary actions aboVe and be..
yoed the call ol mtr: captain
Heyman dlatlngulahed hi)naell
Other shipowners swear oo a AIIIOilll lbe acandal01111 cletalla o1
wblle
aen1ng as alreraft comstack of drachmas that OnassJ.s• The Wedding: Jocklo'a lee! are
mander
of an observation hellfortune is but a fraction or tbe blper than Garbo's.
eopter.
He
was oot11led of an amDublln'l Bob Br~a 11011
billion ''they" s.y he Daunts ..•
bush
m
a
column
or United Slates
gave backstage congrats to Art
carney ... Who played the Irish- carriers.
"He proceeded to the ambush
Jewish lad's dad In a famed TV
slto,
estal&gt;Uahed CODtact wltlt tile
apecial .. He' • a line bor acht ol
a bboy ... Bill Hardy's tragedies friendly ground (orcea and volun·
mourit: the Gay 90a lounder rush- leered to make a target attack
ed bls wile ex-Ziegteld beauiY lor the lrlendly pos!tlono, UtiEvelyn back to Memorial Hos- lizing his mini • gun and door
pital lor l\lrlher treatment; and gunner, Captain Heyman, by overBID's brother Jack (also a re- Oying enem,y positions, attacked
tired Gay 90&amp; lactOOIIII) died tile alone the entire length of the am-

BERRY'S WORLD

'·.!'1{ .·

T0 Copter .Pilot Archi.·lt e A. Ha.·Y
' rna. _n · .. ::a,:'-..Vl.:~ih::;~~.

Vocaiional Guidance Week

B.v JACK O'BRIAN
NEW YORK - "Thw" Ba.Y the

_t.'

\.

_j

~.~.*-·~·

'Nii~ Medals'· · Awa;fded·~Posl~tt:Ofo~sly", .. iiosturA~ ~~.~ws.

EDITORIALS
'
Every )'OW1&amp;: man or woman will pta vocational guidance toda¥ will haVe a better chlnce
to land the job he or she will want tomouow.
In tod!IY'alall . changing and opecla!lzedWOt"ld,
the more help young - l e or cllaadnntoged
workers have, the better their -nun!~ lor
auccess In the world ot. work.
The employment picture conotantl¥ Ia changIng and becom!ng more complex, There are
now 23,000 dlllerent ldndl ol jobs to chooae
!rom, thou88llda of locattona, and millions o1
private and pubUc employera. Had aervtcea
to help job hunters make the rtlbt selection oot
Improved, too, the oollook would be CliO of
eonl\lalon and helple&amp;811018 lor moat. But, today, thousands of guidance counselors are workIng In schools, urdverlllties, otOte employment
omcea, private agencies and industry. These
proleaslona! counselors constantly llbi&lt;IY tho :lob
markets, know the ok!Uo needod to llli apeclllc p:~sitions, and can help you match your skllls
and aptitudes with work wlllch will give you the

Ji&lt;

PCIIIeroy
With
Tiado

'

'.

�'-,

!II-";':.',

1,•

~

J

"

., . . ·.

·

•,· ··

famed opera diva's solace is a
multi-miUlon..dollar trust fund. •.

(

-.
·-

~
::
::

.·..•.
.·•.
o'

FAIR EXCHANGE
OR BRffiERY?
•
Dear Helen:
We have twins Ulree years old,
and a baby five months old. My
husband says 1 can continue hav·
i.ng
diaper service only if I give
,·
up smoking. I won'tgiveup&amp;mok·
lng unless he quits his Frida,y
night poker game.
I say if I have to give up the
·: service, he must buy me six
•' dc.zen diapers but he only wanta
to buy two dozen. If he only
!(lOis me two do..e, PD need o
tlotlles dryer to k·aep Up, and
that's more expensive than adia. per service
I don't think he's (air, do you?
- MARSHA
Dear Marsha:
Fair or not, you'IJ work leas
and enjoy it more iC you give up
amoking. And when you make the
Big Sacrifice, especially (or your
lal!band., you'U find he'll do more
nice things ror you- even perhaps to taking yoo wt on Friday
• a:lgbts or buying you a dryer for
Chrlatmas. - H.
Dear Helen:
My husband is 75 years old.
I am 36. We hove o 12-year-&lt;&gt;ld
&lt;laughter. Do they allow children
In aenlor clUzen housing projects?- D.L.
Dear D. :
Two out ·or three in your rami·
1¥ aren't senior citizens. Even

'·
•..
..

.
.

:·

..

i

r
..•
:
..

though you

were uallowed," you

wouldn't be

happy In a 10&gt;lden

yeara complex. Your husband
ahould bow to tile majoricy. - H.
Dear Helen:
. My 16 - yoor -old daughter lo
pregnant. She haa been ROing
steady with an older boy lor a
year, and we think he is no good,
but lhe says he has never toucheel her. I've had several llgbta
witll her aboUt him.
She accuses my huaband, her
ltep(ather. h
Aid he came
borne drunk one night while I was
away. He awears this ian't true;
and my - r fir at said It happened on ooe dale, and then an-

.

.

.,._ ..-..

Captain

In thla parlod. wo oboerve Notional Voeltlona! Qddollco Week, wo oommend the Natlnolal Voca"Mil Qddonce Aoooclatim and Ita
thou"'"'' of membera Kl"'II the comtrJ lor
their awvlcea toward maldng Indlvldual urlcher llld our ecoOOIIQ'
· We join
with them tltls nek In urging ......,..,. to 1...,
more aboUt the auldance IIOl'\'lcet available !a

atz'"-·

our community.

The mayors of New Hav.., Harlfced and Maam, In reCOl!IIIU..,oltheabovelacll,prodalmad
the week of Octd&gt;er 2~6, as Vocational Guidance Week In the Bend Area, and urged citizens to obaerve the week b1 making them·
selves better acquainted wltlt the awvlooo of·
lered by professional e&lt;liiiiiOioro and the oxtent to wlllch ooch citizen WI benellt !rom
these servb:ea. Signing it were 'llwlmaa GriDstead, New !hlvon; William Kellf, Harllord,
llld Dayton ftiQ'IIOS, Muon.

same day•
Roo santoa ol the CUba and hi•

other, when 1 proved I waa home wife are safe at hmte again ..•
tllat n!gb~
Auat.rallln authorities are wor·
My hul!bMd &lt;k&gt;ea drink a lot. rTed over a proatie • increase
1 can't believe this, but 1 can't •nd blame it on Yanks getti11t
quite disbelieve it entirely.
rest &amp; rehabUltation leaves Crom
The misery is unbearable, aa
Vietnam ..• Luck,y double-omena:
. ll I side with my hullband, Fve seven years ago when Jerry OrJoat a daUihter, and U I aide with bach was about to open in the hit
my daughter, l'IJ have to leave
"Carnival," hi a wife Marta was
him. Helen, I love them both, expecting; dlttll apin as Jerry
though I see their (aulta. Now,
prepares to open in D. Merrick's
all I want to doll run away and "Promiaes, Promises.''
hide.
Finest ycung actress on B.JV
Last night she asked me to
· Roeemary Harris, Ia ex ·
tjiplf lor · an abortion biK:ailse pectinK
(She's Mrs. John Ehlea)
her ·atepfl.~f la 1he iatfter. Do
... The Bobby Kemedy apartment
you suwoae abe ia pinning it 011
at UN Plaza is being oft'ered at
hJm so she can pt out or tbis?
$150,000 more titan the aameOot
-NOWAY TO TURN
on another floori the K. mystlQJe
Deer NWTT:
makes up the extras .•• Joe Louis
It won't take long for an exJr., .... or tho greet llsf&gt;tchomp,
pert counaellor to catch yOW'
dofta his unlt'orm Nov. 15 (rom
daughter up, if she's J.yiq.IDeist
Fort Gordon, Fla., then Ira back
that ahe eoaault one. Should abe
to the u. or Denver ... Re ....·t
refuse, you can be pretfl sure
take pop'allatic -route to lame,
your husbaDd ill innocent. - H.
The Buddy Riches patched It
Dear Helen:
up ••. Carol Bruce's actress •
About thoae restaurants wbere
daughter JUlie Sh_.-d wed jazz
the waiters and waltresaea snub
guitarist Larry COryell ... Good
mamerly teena: If we parents
ateaka: at the Pen &amp; PencU ...
got I.Dto the act and boycotted
Joao Gilberta, the marvelooa
them,. they miKh1 get the mea.
Brazilian composer - autterlat sage laater.
singer at the Raid:!Ow Grill, is
Our 1011, after being ignored,
totall)' terrUlc; with his gentle
served alopplly, and so alowlf
voice llld tendor &amp;eyle, he manhe aDd hta date ware u hour
aae• to keeptltatplaylul room pinlate to their prom, left the exact
drop-quiet even mrlng tho dinchange on the plate. 1be waiter
ner show ••• More great mualc
held up the bill, counted the
to lollow: stan Getz and Chris
money and made anl.de remarks,
Connor: this Is a lovely room,
thlnldng to embarnea him beliar - twched lnaldo and out, 65
tore hll girl. But ahe bad alOoora straight up In Radio City,
readY been clued In. On the "01
They'll eock.tt..to-Kate Smith
out, be handed the waiter a heal·
Dec.
30 on ••La:uab-In" ••• comthy tip, I HOPE tile dam 1!11Y
edy team ol Sillier &amp; Meara
!ell aabamed, 001 ldoobt II. The
1111bbed a TV beer commerclal
food' 1 good but we are - BOY- because the od """'ey InsistCO'ITING.
Thl.i column ta dedicated to ed &amp;iller shave off hi a sldatuma;
llld the Stiller J&gt;II.YUI Ia bla pride
family Uyjng, oo II Y'*'re hav·
llld
joy.
lng ldd trouble or juat plain
Pr&lt;&gt;mcer
- dlreetor Stan Har·
trouble, Jet Helen help YOU.
ria
ol
"Thlt's
LICe" rec'd a
h wUl &amp;lao welcome your own
relllcWJ
check
!rom
the United
amusing experiences. Addreaa
Arab RepubUc for reaicllalt Oil
Helen BoueJ in care of tlda
an old Nat CUe TV ~c!al~ llld
newspaper.
Allan King nwle blm contrlbale
It to the United Jewloh ~ ...
Pot McCormick 11071 Dick Nix·

em'•

.

(JI,..,..._
Htll ,.,. ·the pid11tes w-t tool M our voc.tioa in '63,
wloich could 6o fflltd 'G'-Iot ,.,., aiHiien~~. witllouf teg&lt;~rl , • .,.,.

HaliEW ~CaJ

llrlcs

eentli,

3 -

F1i-1t

- · Army, of Melp

~==.:";"~
Cross lor Herolom, tiio llnlnze
star Modal,

Air Medal with
18 Olk Leal Clusters, the l'UI'·
pit lloort, the Good Conduct
Medal, the National DeiODIO SerYiee Medal, the Vletnam Service '
Medal, the VIetnam Campalp
Rlbboa, and tlte Army Aviator
111

dog

baa two

Dell

tricb:

erett M.
Be Isle

..

·-..

Atheni; Mfs.

:·······························

·&lt;

i• YOURVOTE i•
i•
FOR
i•
~•• HENRY !••

Burton, Oak Hilli Marvin F._
Marks. Jackson; Mrs. Raymood
G. McMa•way, RL 1 Wellston;
Cindy 'Ann Hughes, RL 1 Jlavena-

wood.

'

.

ffirths
,.
Mrs. Lorry R. Smith, Ew!Jvo
MAJOR S!EPIIEN C. KOVACS, Jr., rlsfl~ U.S. Army ROTC, Ohio Unlveroii;Y, Athens, reado
ton, son, 8:05 L m. 1'hui"sdly;
cltatlooa honorilv the late Clplaln Archie A. HQDIIII, clu'lng a cereDIOI\Y held Thursday alternoon
Mrs. Wlllar&lt;l G. Cox, tit. 1,
In Cl~ Ma._r Kemeth Motpn's otllce. Holdlrw t1te Vll'lowl medals preaGed poathumouely to
North..,_ ·daughter, 11:08 'L m.
Cli&gt;L Ha,ymon ere Mr. Morgan, left, and the wldoov of the VIetnam War hero. .
ThurSda)&lt;; ··Mrs, carl F. Swlaher, PL .Pleasant, daughter,, 10:5J
p. m. Thursday.
sented
the
Air
Medal
wltlt
18
clplent ol the Bronze star Medal
Discharges
Oak Leaf Cluster• '"for active
target attack wltlt a mlnlmum ol whleh was awarded to him ·~
Lorry
Hardesty,
ReneeK. 8efto
portlclpatiM
In
IDOre
then
25
pratectlm, he providedthelnltial hla untiring ell'orta and prolesaerW
miaslonl
over
boiiUle
ter·
nett,
Roscoe
R.
Allen,
Mr*- lllax
air SUJ)pOrt 1o the armored col· atma! abllii;Y. He cmsletently obrltory
in
aupporl
ol
countertnG.
Barnes,
Jemi~s Bias, Mrs.
Qdned outatandiDg r e s u 1 t a
wnn.
IUrgency OPOratlma. During all Verne Blazer, MrL Hoyt L.
"Though out or ammWIIUon, 1hroo8h hla energetic awltcatlon
these
mlaslona he dllll!ioYed the Clark, Mrs. F.dwJn L. Cremeans,
he remained lD the area makiq: of his extenllve knowledge In the
blgbell
order ol air discipline Mrs. Otto A. Rohrbaugh, Mrs.
simulated tiring attacks to de· OYer chang!ne altuaUms Inherent
and
acted
Ia accordance with the ~ A. S&amp;yre, MrL G. l.
ceive tbe enemy forces until the in a c:QIIIlteriDaurgency operation;
best
traditions
of the United Scholle!~, Mrs. Garland I( Slovgunohlpa arrived. Captain HOY- hla ell'orta materla!ly contrlhutSlates
Army.
er and Infant """ Mrs. JIIIIIOI F,
man's actions were in keeping ed to the United Slates mission
''Captain
Hayman is also the Wllllamson·,.nd ~ daullhter.
with the blgbest tradltims o1 the to the Republlco!VIolaamaalllllrecipient or the Pllrple Heart
mllltory service and rellect groat lng that country In ridding !tsell
w!llch
waa eatebllahedbyGeneral
credit upon hlmaei~ His unlt,llld or tho Col1111111111st tllreat to Ito
George Waahlngton at Newburgll,
lreedom.
tile United States Army,
"Captaln HeymM Ia al110 pre- New York, Aug, 7, 1782."
ucaptain Hayman ia also the

••
••
•••
•
:•
•
:
•

To Lead 4-H Oub
PT. PLEASANT -

By BRUCE

IIOSSAT, NEA

NEW YORK (NEAl

The incredibly frenzied Madison Square Garden demonstra·
Uon for Alabama's George Wallace surely gives him the rally

championship of the year, howevet'el!~ 'hls c~~ijid~oprt~}' ·be

·''' '1

;

• •

•

...

Not since some of the great and noisy outpourings for Barry
Goldwater in-1964 and the late John F. Kennedy in 1960 has
there been heard so much sound so long sustamed at a po·
litical gathering.
Bringing off a succesolul reUy at Madlaoa Square Garden
Is tradltloaaUy an achievement hallmark for any presldenUal
eanclldate. Wallate, beaming, elapplng to music, aow and
ihea aalutlog bls aboutlng, Kreamlng aupportera, knew very
weD be had made 11.
To any veteran Wallace-watcher in 1968, the New York
rally had to be put down as his own biggest show. But while
no other event of this year generated more frenetic support,
it also has to be said lhet the proportion ol anti-WeUacO
hecklers in the haD was eomparatively lower!'
Thousands more hecklers were in the area of the hall, but
by a process ol selection mystifying to reporters, only a rela·

tively small group found its way inside. They were placed so

high in the geUerles that their chants were measurable only
as gross sound. Those outside; perhaps inevitably, clashed
with the edgy New York police which surrounded tha Garden

in huge numbers.
Basically, the New York rally followed the Wallace pattern.
He taunted his taunters , and countless highly exercised Wallace partisans shook lbeir lists at the hosllle demonstrators
aDd yelled to lbem to go home.
There wiD be maay well-reported accounts of Wallace's

Conquest" of the Garden. Just a few details struck this re-

porter as unique to the New York occasion:
• A pro-Wallace demoottrator m01111ted the platform bearing the flag of Free Cuba. A Wallace aide solemnly folded It

All:,alec-

•

Garden

Washington Corr01pondent

to amall size and then the candidate himself gravely saluted

it.

• A trio of wild pro-WeUaceltea Immediately In !root of a
line .of ~Bme)l COJisli!Jltly sh~ erij:o1!91111!1111!1# :~ '::
Waved their ~ma. At one such &amp;mi-Wa\llng· mOilli!ilt;· a "r~- L
porter noticed one of the three waS wearing a small gun in a
holster. Nearby Secret Service men were informed. They
came over lor a look and one said:
"Oh, they're all right. They're police officers."

• In WaUaee's obvious enjoyment of his Garden success
it was hardly realized that at one pitch of frenzy he was
quite incongruously, clapping to the lune of "I'm a Yanke~
Doodle Dandy."
• A man wearlnc a typical eampalgn bat had pasted
around Its crown a sticker reading simply: "Shoot looters."
• The great aew hoD was eUve with probably more Conlederate Raga · thaD George Wallace has seen anywhere outside the solid South .
The onlooker could not forget, either, that, wild as was the
&lt;lamor Inside and outside the hall, It was happening in a elty
wher~ lear sears the streets as almost nowhere else in America, where strikes or slowdowns by teachers, policemen, fire·
men and others threaten to make it an unworkable, if not~ an
unlivable, place.
The eomlijloa or New York, like the eond!Uon of many other
cltleo, exPiilu Ia part tbe pbeaomeaon observed at Madlaoa
Square G'ardea. Tile lumulfuoas baD, IDled at once wHb the
unlettered joy of WaUace worsblpero look!Dg for qulek e~eape
from lear tind yet with the pain aud ucllaeu of people at both
exlnme1 espo.mg their halnds, was a eolor portrait of the
ehaos Ia the natloit outolde.
That portrait should ·give the shudders to whatever man
wins !be White House Nov. 5 and begins to try to govern next
January.

Vernon Star Duatera ~. Club
meeting with Berry lla)'ne8 e l ed president•
Elected to serve with Haynes
were Conllle Hofhnan, vice pres.
ldanl; Janet S&amp;yre, IIOCI'IIIat1i
Angela· Sayre, treaiUJ'er: H a r ..

••

•
••

FOR

MEIGS COUNTY

:

•

W•ll Be Appreciatetll
Pd. Pol. Adv. By Henry Ewing

:

:
•

:

··················~···~·········

lett 'lbomp~&lt;~~ and Eddie SoJr8.
smg leaders; Diane~.
reporter; Mro, Alberl'l'hplqiiCII,

':rJ....,., r-*~.-~s,
~ .'ioletent'Iefd&amp;. '" "'JF'.
. • _, ,
PLEASANT VAL....,, ,,HQSPITAL
ADMrrTED: Paul TI,Yior, PL
Pleasant; William H. ~Uie,
PL Pleasant.
DISCHARGED: Dory! Edwards,
HarUord; Valeria Porter, K
Pleaaant; Diana ~ Bullalo; lnlanl KIDB' twln .douatrterl,
PomeJQY, 0.

$2,995

Lemono VB 2 Dr. Hod T
~·k
. .
,
Popular bucket seats~ p;':,·, s:e:rr"'ngw ~ 0u' 'ma"1 1 ~• 1and out.
•

10 1 rc

rans.

car. 4 sp. shift.

·

65 Buick

op.

25

.:·: 68 Buick

Elootra Cu!tom 4 Dr. Hord Top. Only 7,935 eooy miles b
deolor'o ":''': Foctory Air Conditioned. Fully equlpp.'/.
Lrke new rnsrde and out.
·

65 Comet
·····
...

$4,495
$1,195

V8 Caliente 2 Dr. Hord Top. All, white finish with rod vinyl
1nter1or. Runs good.

, 64 ·Olds.

· $1,295

Dynamic "88" ~ Or. Hard Top. Extra clean low mii1111SJe
car. Power Steer~ng, Power brake a, and automgtic trans.

!,
r'·

62 ·Buick

$795

LeSabre 2 Or. Hard Top. Ono oLcleonest 62's anywhere
PS, PB &amp; AT.
•
.

: 62 Chevrolet : ${95·

.;.: .

......

BeiAij 4
\"

:·.

p.. Sedan, Tkio ~or ihows tho boot al &lt;eire. AT •

The only wa,y Ohio U. t an be
denied a Tangerine trip and
the outright MAC title Is by
losing to We"tern Michigan and
Bowlif'€ Green.
OU Heads MAC
Ohio U. leads the MAC pack
at 4-0. Miami is 4-1, Toledo3·1·1
and Bowling Green 2--1·1.
Miami need~ a road victory
against Toledo Saturday to keep
its hopes for a c~&gt;ochamplonship
alive.
Even if Ohio and Mlaml fin.
ish 5-1 in MAC play, the BOO..
cats would still get the Tangerine Bowl nod because they beat

Marshall is at Bowling Green
in the other MAC game. Win-less Kent State goeti owtside !he
conference for a read galne -at .
LouisviHe,
Miami, Toledo and Western
Michigan conclude their MAC
slate Saturday white Ohio,
Bowling Green, Marshall and

wlth a 147.4 average while S.W

lor, tun power equip., till and teleaetpe steeriag wheel,
radio, Uated claaa, • · - tlros, Comlortroallr..,.nd!tiOfto
lnr, antt..pln aa!e, 18,000 mlles. Oee ow-.-olda trade.

Jult Uke new.

-~

'.

~-

'lj

Rambler (formerly Rambler American 1.
These Include a new accelerator cable Hnk·
age and suspended accelerator pedal, new
''Clear-Power 24'' bl::.ltery, and parking lights
which remain on with hcadli_ghts. Shown is
the top-of-line Rambler Rogue 2·door hard top, one of five models offered in the series.

H&amp; R FIRESTONE STORE IN MIDDLEPORT

~
1

·J

61 CHEV.
4DOOR

VI AutO. tru•.

Cllarlel ~~ King
Route

403 Sunny Dollars Winn•rs
282 W. Ma;n
992-2995
Pomeroy, 0.

"OHIO'S OLDEST DODGE DEALER"

. 65.01ds
98 Hqf)S~'· .... : .............. $1895
p·
,

w-.

SUNOCO

ngs

.

·Wlitte on I(Cliil/~ t*&lt;ior1 f)lll power equip., radio,
·~~~
tirelt .~ .alr eOft!!JtJ~

BAILEY'S

American Motors' 1969 Rambler passenger
car series retains its compact body dimensions in keeping with the poHcy ot maintain ·
lng the design continuity of the popular.
low-price line . Numerous mechanical im .
provemcnts. common to all 1969 American
Motors cars, have been incorporated in the

mil-.

, •

care for top performance.

Popular Rambler Retains Compact Dimensions

Greim lla!oh Tilth llll4ddnl Int., power OCJII,pmen~ radio,
........ facotry' air., ""'
Sharp!
air.,, ~ mlloogo. Sharp!

';I

. .. we look into everything, with extra

',..,, ' .. H•· ·.oo ·.,

67 Olds De!til88 Hal. Se,d............ , .• $2695

"

Batteries, radiators, all around your car

RAMBLER

352 V8 . . - , auto. traaa., P.S.. white over blue with blue
Interior.
...,
'

.~i'

Why We're Always
Snooping Around . ..

The American Perennial Champion In
Economy, Gets A New But Very Familiar
Name For 1969

65 For~ LTD 4 Dr. H. T. -- • ·- • • ·-- ·- .$1495

I

CliO?

AMERICAN
MOTORS

,V8, auto. trans., radio, antl-tpln dllrar., wlllte with blue
lntarlor. A real nice one.

•

But w)llch

NOW!

haa a 180.0 mark.
Marietta (4-1), Mount Union
C:l-1) and Denison (2-1) are also
in the title picture.
other league games Saturda,y
pit Musldngtm at Denison,
Heidelberg at otterbein, Hiram
at Wooster, Kenyon at Otter·
beln and MarletD. at Mount UnIon.
Non-league tilts match Valparaiso at Wittenberg and Capital
at Ashland.

67 Olds FB5, 4 Dr. • • • •• ·- •••• ·.-. ·$2195

- · !-ctocy

daf.

Miami.

White over turquoJ.ae metallic ftnlsh with turquoise tnter.:

Each one a winner
at Karr &amp; Van Zandt

$1,895

. Hi1••

ule.

68 Olds 98 Lux11y Sedan - - - - - - - - - - •• $4600

TAKE YOUR PICK

eon ocal one owner

!1&amp;1••

Alth!Julb.
,llld ~
erlf the top ........ ...,.._ '
lng reoorda In tho 1111 T-.
uelther hal a 1fi1!B1aa ....
over 'Ole other.
(II2-t1-7) lo 3-t . , . .
Mlelllgon Slate wilUe "",...,.._
1Y (89-44-f) Ia 2~ aplnot the
Buckeyes.
Berrillll a tie, ..,. ol tho•
coachea wlli draw ...., Solur-

LET US

Baldwin--Wallace, which plays
only rOUJ' 0 h i o Conference
games, can wrap up the mythi·
cal OC title with a win over
Ohio Wesleyan at Berea. B-W
would finish 4..0 in conference
play.
Seals can stay under water
However, Ohio Wesleyan's for a good many minutes, if
14th straight win does not nee· necessary, but usually do so
essaril)' insure the champion- for not more than five minship as the Battling Bishops utes.
wm have three league games
left on their seven-game sched-

Kent State wrap it up Nov. 9.
"I'm looki~ forward to the
game myself," says Western
Michigan's Bill Doolittle. "They
seem to have everything -good
rurming backs, (Dick ConleyY,
Bob Hownard, Dave LeVeck&gt;,
an excellent quarterback (Cleve
Bryant), good receivers (TOOd
Snyder, Phll SWindell), a quick
line aoi a tough defense. They
should be one of the t~ranked
teams in the ration."
Ohio has defeated Marshall
48-8, Kent State 31-7, Toledo 40:Jl, William &amp; Mary 41..{}, Mi~
ami 24-7 and Dayton 42-12 last
saturday.
Baldwin-Wallace or Ohio WesIeyan rank either first or second in total oaense or defense.
Baldwin-Wallace leads the OC
in offense with a 443.8 average
compared to Wesleyan's 399.5,.
Wesleyan is tops in defense

G0 od 1 · I
·C

unbeaten Bobcats.

D
etroll. in the two close
UP! ~riB Writer
A decade aao- before Instant listings, San Francisco Is
figured by three OV"er Cleveland
roplay, - r e the AFL, -..e and P!ttaburgh Ia a allglrt choice
slop-action, belore $400,000 bon- over A11anta.
uaea, belore the lliper Bcnvl-lt
all bel!lll when the Baltimore
The Colt • Giant overtime
Colta came to New York for tho Pill&amp;, won by the Colts 23-17 on
1958 NFL tWe game.
an · 80,yard march cllmaxed by
]( there was one game which Alan Ameche's one-yard plunge,
stirred the hnaginatioo o1 tile
got the pro 1~ bonm counlry'a sports lana and lhe
snowbalUng, 11 hod to be the talk ahout It kept loolball in tile
sudden death overtime cham- spoUight for weeks.
plonsblp game between the
CoJta and the Giants. That's
But, even more important, it
why it's noteworthy that &amp;lnday was pirured in New York and
will be the first time since that lltirred the imagination or the
TV Executives- who &amp;arted
title game that the Colts will be
playing the Glantl in New York. pulling more emphasis on their
This time it's supposed to be telecasts and spending more
a routine victory for the Colts money to buy the rights and
even though Johnny Unitas more money promoting them.
whose reputation was
From 12 pro lecuns in 1959
the number hu jumped to
more by hia cool artistry in that t.....:k. ..
game than by any other single ............r and it's somewhat .ironic
factor, ls injured and Earl that the Dallas Cowboys, who
Morrall will direct tbe team. didn't exist when that 1958
'te game was played, now lead the
The Colla are 11 point ,_
-vor, a Gi
and should ~ Ill tltllt miless : ~ts bY, .~
in tile
they Buller a letdown iofter last Ca)illo! Division. Unless . tile
G~ts upset BaJUmore, Dallas
week•s key triumph over Los should stretch Its lead to t Angalea.
""
Seven other games are also games with just live remaining
scheduled a.nday with most ~ - two betwCM&gt;n the Cowboys and
"' Giants,
the favorites listed by lopsided
Balli
---•
-'
G
more ·~• a victory to
mara.ns. reen Bay is figured remain tied with Lo An 1 .
by 11 over Chicago, DaUa.s is the Centu dl 1 . s
ge es m
listed by two touehdowns over
ry v SJCII.
New Orleans
Mlnn aota i
Green Ba.r sOOuld take over
figured by 12 ~ We hlngtoos the lead (or the first time in the
St. Louis Is u.U: bya~O poln~ Central Division by beating
over Philadelphia, • llld Los Chicago as the Packers begin
Angeles Ia a 10-polnt ehoice over : : ::,.~ason march to the

66 Mustang $1,895
V8 Fast Back 2 Or Hord T

Kalamazoo wm

earn a Dec. 27th Tangerine
Bowl trip (or Ohio University's

By VITO STELLlNO

'!!""•··

· 68 Pontiac

(or Ohio University, Ohio Wesleyan and Baldwin-Wallace.
A road victory over Western

Michigan at

Wildcat Cu.otom 2 Dr. Hord Top. New Buick Trade. Low
mrleage. Lrke new all white with black vinyl interior.

alo our wogm train. It our pGIIUcal representatives allow theae
coeditlonll to contllllt thla will
probably be our future mnde ol
travel. The only new thins . the '"'t.dated, duated-olhpeeches
aDd promi101 of' '64 and '66, Ia
the leaertlrw or t1te neweat dale,
'68.
A lew olaurpotlUca!repreMfto
tatl ves dare to say they stand on
their recor&lt;la. AWAKEN, MEIGS
COVNTJPIS, let's look at those
records. Not ODB of them Clll
claim any accompllahmenta lor
Meigs t:oun~Y.
So, voters of MeJ&amp;s Co., let'a
leave TRlCK or TREAT - to tbe children, and Jet Ul u
reaponalble adulta, arlousb'
"eigh the iaauea and the · candidate• whlcb we wiJl chooae to
represent UL Are you •• votera
oatlslled to bear the ~· ol
educatlrw your children on!JI, to
toaa them to more Proapei'OUI
communities'/ 1111NK, THEN GO
VOTE NOV, 5TH.
Yours truly,

Brocldagton Ready

Hampered by an ankle b\lury

built

.,.

\aa

Mlchlpn Sale
lost dllenolve lineman Nick Jordall
IIIIo undo"""* knee 8111'eerl'
Tuesday.
Ha!lback To'!""Y Love, the
~· leading ground-plner,
mer ,..neroaCk liel'l'1 tllraam - · hollplt.allzed eetlf In the
week with tonsllltis llld lover
will aet the call.
but
lhould be ready.
Tbe Ohio Slate dofenoe hu deDefenalve
hallback Frllllk
teriorated lollowlng Ita brllllam
Waters
aul!ered
a sprained
performance againJt Purdue.
The Buckeyes held .PurGie ,to lmee aplnat Notre Dame. bu.l
Dilly 57 yerda ruahlnll llld set Ia eager to face the Buckeyes.
up both touchOOwns In their 130 atwmer.
Northwe118m llld Winola
pushed acroea 43 polnlo aplnll
the banged.up dolense wlllch had
CHECK YOUR
allowed Dilly 20 points In Ita first
three outings.
BATTERY

Tangerine Bowl
At Stake for OU

Colts-Giants in
!• Replay Contest

EWING

:
•

tlon ol olrlcera blgblllbled the

out of !be Big Ten Utle picture, the pall two weoka, haliback
It doe111't mean the ~ John Brockington will aleo be
can't aa1111ne the role as apo11. readY.
er.
Ha!iback Ted Provost Ia the
What - . , 1oom to knock latest casualt.v. Tbe defensive
all than Ohio Slate wlllch back, who led the 8Jckeyes
aherea the Big Ten lead with with seven lntereeption.a Jast
Michigan?
rear and has returned one oC
What - . , 1oom to knock his two steala for a 35-yard
all than Ohio Stale wlllch touchdown this season, suftered
kicked oil Its nine-came win- a wrlst in,jury in Wednelday's
nlng streak with 1 21-7 verdict practice.
over the ~a?
lf Provost can't make it, for~
Ohio State'a defenae baa been
alllng tile lait two weeka. Llnebocker Dirk Worden, end Merk
Dbevc and ha!lback Mike P&lt;J..
laakl oat out last Satunla,y• D
llnola pme. Dererudve ~ck
Tim AedoriCII wea b\lured In
the oeCOhd quarter.
With the po..lblo exception ol
Aederaon, au ere expected hack
COLUMBUS (UPD- There's
Saturday.
quite 1 bit It stake Saturday

••

!•• CORONER!••

Barry Hayne8 Named

Wallace Pours It on

11

JQQOB,

-nae

short kick, then drove In lor the hal excellent men to the
llrat twchdown enroute to a 21- bat! io. Their
Ia e~17 upset o1 Notre Dame.
cla!ly ..,Jck. ·'!bey talk - . t
However, 24 hour a before the their Y&lt;Mdh, but they have exOblo Slate-Michigan Slate claah perleoce at tNery crldcal poalDaugherty hes relroined !rom tim
oxcept
~r!Jack, •
moldng any predlctlmo.
Daugherlf said.
"WoodY (!layea) haa a great
MQbe the master ·JIII)'choloteam wltlt overall speed and gill Is using Oattery tltlo Ume
quickness. Rex Kern at fl.l&amp;r· to soften up the Buckeyes.
terback gives their oft'ense a
No t - . .
him
lot more fiexlbllli;Y. He can run
D~ _.ta DO l1lOIIIal
Less than 12 hoors later
Mlch•-- ~• and he cu pass. In (Bruce) 1-..n lollowtng the ~s·
~· o3Wite recovered the Jankowski llld (Jan) Wblte, he magnificent eflort ap!nat Nob-e
Dame.
"1 don't think these 18, 19 llld
20-yeer.old l'OCmBIIers will run
oul ol enthu&amp;lalllll. There lhould
be no llmlt to the amount of
spirit lhe,y can generate Saturdo¥ after Selurdo,y. The\ hallmark ol rur fine 1965 and 1966
teams was that the1 plQ'ed at
high levels ever)' Saturda,y," he
added.
Although Mlchlpa Slate Ia

man, Rt. 2 VInton; Ronlld M.

BRUCE BIDBP•T
Alabaman's finest Hour

measured on Nov. 5. ·

i.J

COLUMBUS (UP!) _ Willi
Ohio Slate on ~ard agajnst the
analdo kick, Michigan Slate's
1Jutl:y Daulherty oo doubt Ia
COCik1ne up more trickery for
Saturday's invasion ot Ohio st;a.
dlum.
At last Frida)' night's press
conference, Dalllherb' said the
~artana Would use an onside
kick but nobody believed

.'

1'1\l!nmer, Jiackoon;
Mrs. WQlllm D, SWeeney, IrontOll: Mrs. Ow8~ w. Reynolda.
Ashland, Ky,j Vickie L. ?rfce,
RL 2, VInton; Mrs. Maud&lt;! ,CUe-

Badp.

bush oolumn. By making a rapid

wed. • '. ' ' '
&gt;\dlftiBII;.,~ .

The Dilly Sentinel, Pomeroy-Middlepor~ 0., Friday, November I, 1968

Bucks 'on Guard' for Tricky Daugh~rty

,.,' .

Mrs. Floyd n. ruro, 1157 Second Ave.; ~s. 0\tJI\o' S. WootOn,
U2 Fourth AYO.; R!cktel4'Giblio,
RL 1 Golllj&gt;olls; Mri1 'VIdella
Sll,pe~, RL 1 Pab'lol; 1 Kent t.
Walker, Tln11111in; :Mrai•Carl F.
Swisher&gt; Pt. Plii'uanl; Mrti. ·Vl~&gt;o
cent E. Kn!gh~· Panero7r Mro.
Miles S. Dice, · Mldcll~t; Edwar&lt;l D. Lomber~ Jackaqd; Mrs.
Clyde McCoy, Sr., Jackaon; John
F. Groiird&amp;, ' JaekSG\; ~~. E¥-

Hayman,

Pmneroy, Ohio, Rt. 4
brlnga the onti-Nboan N.Y. Tlmea
Oct.
28, 1968
OOme; then burloolt ... Tbepan·
tie - raid at BarDord the other Door Sir:
dAY moved Dick Cavott'a com- . It il etSY to tell ''TRICK or
ment. .,It's nice aeeSaa tradl· TREAT'' season is here again
lor Meigs Countlana, Dilly t h e
Uooal ulues returniDI."
date Ia Nov, 5th.
Six blo8raplllol or Jackie
Have you ootlced how moat or
()noaala are
Into paperour incumbent repreaentatlws
back ... Mro. Onasala' Iormor
German ctwl A""m•rie Hulte are rldm8 ......-.1 oaooch odler'a
said at Sonrln 1111 ol the Clock coattalh? Hldlrw bebllld tired
!hat lho'a turn1n1 moat or bar maoko ol the same old Ioise
Prc'lmlolrw II we
: +• c • I'O)'ald.es over to a Ger· promlaea.
TREAT them q;lln on Nov. 5th,
man footer -pare!Up!ontotour Cldle111 OQII~ •• Rullla's we can e:xpect Che 11m.e old
TRICKS. All of them are aware
lho - do¥ week (endlrw t1te aU..
clef trad!t!ot!) cauaed a 25 par ol Meigs ~· prublelllo, aa
they bring It to our attention each
COIIt zoom In YOdloa Bales.
Kate Smith told Joe F rllllklln Ume they oat our vote.
AI yet IIODI of them haW tried
1111)' .... .....'t In 111&amp;111 'to concoct a ~on to cure our
elms: lhe once l1aned for a cafe IDa. Some ol 11i01r i'avorlte
dale llld It WOO I aellout; al she Tftt:AT8, darWIJJW juat '"'t olour
-eel the club ahelellllldbuot- reach, are VocaUceal Tnlnlng
ed her '101 In -on places- Centera, hlghwaya (of ~oufse,
and cleeklld It waa God'o ~or providJrw we vota oD certain iawarning her aplnot Micb Job• aueol and, OR, YEs, an airport.
forever.
Wo haWI alreadY hod a $100,000
dose ol that. The orQ alrlnga attached lo, that we cmne oc&gt; wltlt
The term "almighty dollar" half ollbe cost.
meaDs the power of capital
We were nenaskedtorejUven-

ru-.

11

~

Archie A.

Pre...tatlon waa ·made Thllrl4111' attennm In Ga!tlpolls CIIY
MaDager Kemeth D. Morgan'•
ottlee, by MaJor Steve Kovacs,
U.S. Arii\Y ROTC, Ohio University, Athena, to the widow of the
doceaeed, Mra. Mer1 L. HOYman. Ga!llpoUa. C8ptalo ~an
died In Vletaam 011 April 2, 1968,
while operatlng an aircraft ln
heltlle territory.
C8ptalo Heyman's Dlatlngulshed Flying Cross award reeds:
"For heroismwhllepa.rticipat.
lng In aerlal fllght evidenced by
voluntary actions aboVe and be..
yoed the call ol mtr: captain
Heyman dlatlngulahed hi)naell
Other shipowners swear oo a AIIIOilll lbe acandal01111 cletalla o1
wblle
aen1ng as alreraft comstack of drachmas that OnassJ.s• The Wedding: Jocklo'a lee! are
mander
of an observation hellfortune is but a fraction or tbe blper than Garbo's.
eopter.
He
was oot11led of an amDublln'l Bob Br~a 11011
billion ''they" s.y he Daunts ..•
bush
m
a
column
or United Slates
gave backstage congrats to Art
carney ... Who played the Irish- carriers.
"He proceeded to the ambush
Jewish lad's dad In a famed TV
slto,
estal&gt;Uahed CODtact wltlt tile
apecial .. He' • a line bor acht ol
a bboy ... Bill Hardy's tragedies friendly ground (orcea and volun·
mourit: the Gay 90a lounder rush- leered to make a target attack
ed bls wile ex-Ziegteld beauiY lor the lrlendly pos!tlono, UtiEvelyn back to Memorial Hos- lizing his mini • gun and door
pital lor l\lrlher treatment; and gunner, Captain Heyman, by overBID's brother Jack (also a re- Oying enem,y positions, attacked
tired Gay 90&amp; lactOOIIII) died tile alone the entire length of the am-

BERRY'S WORLD

'·.!'1{ .·

T0 Copter .Pilot Archi.·lt e A. Ha.·Y
' rna. _n · .. ::a,:'-..Vl.:~ih::;~~.

Vocaiional Guidance Week

B.v JACK O'BRIAN
NEW YORK - "Thw" Ba.Y the

_t.'

\.

_j

~.~.*-·~·

'Nii~ Medals'· · Awa;fded·~Posl~tt:Ofo~sly", .. iiosturA~ ~~.~ws.

EDITORIALS
'
Every )'OW1&amp;: man or woman will pta vocational guidance toda¥ will haVe a better chlnce
to land the job he or she will want tomouow.
In tod!IY'alall . changing and opecla!lzedWOt"ld,
the more help young - l e or cllaadnntoged
workers have, the better their -nun!~ lor
auccess In the world ot. work.
The employment picture conotantl¥ Ia changIng and becom!ng more complex, There are
now 23,000 dlllerent ldndl ol jobs to chooae
!rom, thou88llda of locattona, and millions o1
private and pubUc employera. Had aervtcea
to help job hunters make the rtlbt selection oot
Improved, too, the oollook would be CliO of
eonl\lalon and helple&amp;811018 lor moat. But, today, thousands of guidance counselors are workIng In schools, urdverlllties, otOte employment
omcea, private agencies and industry. These
proleaslona! counselors constantly llbi&lt;IY tho :lob
markets, know the ok!Uo needod to llli apeclllc p:~sitions, and can help you match your skllls
and aptitudes with work wlllch will give you the

Ji&lt;

PCIIIeroy
With
Tiado

'

'.

�.'

s .· -rJt
•. ·J.~ace · ·

· f WI•
and) us w ln to. : ~tf/v
· 'J

'Senllael, p..,,.rO:r-Mlddli!Pof,t,' 0. Pi~~. Nowmber 1, 1118

..;·
..
...
••. .
...
.•
&gt;

•

'

ALL YOU'LL NEED
· IS YOUR

CHANGE
PURSE

.....•.
.'
..

...

•

YOU

BAKERS
BUDGET SHOP

'

...'
'.
.0..,•'

MIDDL

'

••'
•''

0.

FLOWERS
FOR ALL OCCASIONS

l!R NIGHT M9-2951

Pom•roy Flower Shop
pMILLARD

vAN METER

SIClOr BowL
On that ounny day they lost to
Green Boy ol the National
Football Leegue, 33-14, at
Miami in the secoOO grand
confrontation between the rhal
leagues. The Raiders claimed
they'd take their revenge the
next time around:.
On Sunda.Y, Oaldand may lind
itself n&amp;thing more than a hasbeen in the American Football
League with hardly a chance to
qualify for another Stper Bowl
The
Raiders entertain the
rampaging Kansas City Chiefs
and a loss would just about
knock them out of contendon in
the Western Division.
The season started oft accord~
ing to plan for the Raiders as
they swept their first four
games to run their regular
season winning streak to l4
games, just one short of the
league record. Then they lost to
San Diego aM lost to Kansas
City before beating Cincinnati
~ast week, and toda)' they find
themselves tied for second
place with San Diego, a game
and a half behind the Chiefs.
Kansas Ctt;y, meanwhile, has
won six games in a row with
victories over Qaklan:t and San
Diego in the last two weeks•
Another success over the
Raiders would send the ChiefE
into the homestretch with
strong m&lt;Bnentwn.
The Raiders, however, with
the home field advantage, are
fnored by 2'h points while San
Diego Is picked by 16 points
over tfle Miami Dolphins.
The New York Jets, leaders
of the Eastern Division, are
prohibltive 19-potnt favorites
over Buffalo, but the only BW

-1','\

· !. ,-

· ··

ABA STANDINGS
11.Y Unllod Press International

w.

East

MlmeBOie • • , • • ,
Kentue!Q' . • • . • . .
New York . .. ....
Miami . .
&gt;

Indiana . .

..

&gt;

..

..

"

"

"

Wesl

L. Pet.

2
f
2
0

0 1.000
1 .800
I .667
3 .000

•••••••

·

·B.

• Big Selection

•Lay·A·Way

Plan
.• Keepsake

•Qualih

DIAMONDS

$39.95

TIFFIN CREDIT JEWELERS

. Maili St.

Pt.

W.

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

: - .~

Quality Memorials - Beaurifully IJesisned

'

00

..

•

NOW fw late Fall &amp; oarly spring aetting. We feah1re low
pnce1. Man~ o;;olon . . . Heo;~dqueSI Pinlc, Georglo Marble, Roy•
olty Blue, Pyromid Blu e, Co lon iol Ron. Wide 1toc:~,., Berlcele)'
Bl~~e, Barre. Do~o1'a Mahogony, Wiseontin Red, Cc:mod ion Pink.

LEGAR MONUMENT CO.
· 263 'II. Main

992·5314

POMEROY, 0.

Por the little swingers!
A solid-state portable
phono with a...

lbelr 1968 grid eampalgll by
blanking host Haman Trace 260 Thurlday nl&amp;bt. It WOI the ft.
nal Southern Valley Conference
game of the year tor- squads.
The Bobcats complelod their
campaign with BtYOD straighttriUitiPls, thua !lnlohing the year
wt:tl1 a 7 .:l mark. It DB the Bobcats &amp;e&lt;OIIdstralghtSV AC erown,
and eiJl(tth In tbe lasl 11 years.
Ham.an Trace'a record dropped 1o 0..1 In league play. Overall, the WUdeats finished with a
0~

It

r.ng

ding,

JVe

Over County

In the third period, with Blx
minutes left, Jon Rothgeb tallied
oo a 21-yard peos from ~­
dins. making lbe final CClWll rand
26-0.
Hannan Trace got to the Bob·
cats' rour late :In tbe game as a
result ot a twnble, but was held
on downs by Kyger Creek.
Perry Beebe and Roo ~­
leo lnterceplod HT aerials. steve
Daniela and AI Spaqler reooverod Bobcat fumbles, along with
HolU1 Myers.
Kyger picked up 165 yards
ruahing, and added 123 passing
wllll lour at BtYen. The winners
bad 16 first downs. Haman Trace
gut 21 yards ruahlng ()let) and
collll&gt;lelod !oor of eliiht lor 26
yards. The losers had eight first
downs.
Fisher led the winners in individual ruslttlQ!. Wayne Queen
and Ebert Montgomery paeod the

losers.

ruv.., .w;.t4 : .

'2o Konswn 6
Wool Goolltll30
.HIIblall!l 44 BUcko1e 6
'
..

NEW &amp; USED
BOGGS EQUIPMENT CO.,
TUpp~rs Plains, 0.

~7-3535

Spread packed, frozen or semi·llquld mamn
with a New Holland tank·type spreader!
·

I&gt;

Nixon Rally
ATHENS- James Drury, star
of the NBC television series,
41 The
Virginian," will head a

The Dally SenUnel, Pomeroy-Middleport, 0., Frklly, November 1, 1968

Plan Participation

··

chosriD

HOES
WENCH£$ • TRAILERS

Routo 7

5 -

Participation in the aH..county
Christmas nower show to be
staged Nov. 30 and Dec, 1 at the
Pomeroy Elementary School was
planned Wring Wednesday night's
meellng ol the Wildwood Garden
Club at the home of Mrs. Hiram
Fisher
. It was llMOunced that the Wildwood Club category for arranging, drawn during a recent meeting of club representathoes is
"My Ch nstmas
'
' _
Tree,'' featur
inl arrangement!! using evergreen. Club members are rel,panelble for rtlling the class
draWD for the show, UJe theme
of which is .,ChristJnas Ideals."
During the meeting conducted
bt Mrs. Karl Grueser, it was anDOUI'Iced that the club has been
invited to assist In the sponsorship of the Bend 0' the River
Garden Club, the new group comprimarily of Racine and

STOP IN __ _

large Republican raUy Seturtlay,
Nov. 2, speaking for Richard Nix·
on at the Ohio UnlversUy"s new
convocation center.
The rallywillbeginal7:30p.m.
alii Is being IIIJOIIIOred by the Athena County Yoong Republicans
and the Ohlo University Young
Republicans in cooperation wJth
the Athens Counll' RepublleanEx·
ecuUve Committee.
AU county and dlstrlct Republlesn candidates will be presented alongwllbmany stateotllclals.
MISB Martha Moore, National
CommiUeewoman, wW also attend.
Admission to the rally is tree
to the pubUc. Patrons sponsoring
the event wm have a reception
and dimer earUer at the Ohio
Unlverslt1 Inn.

SUIT FILFll
PT. PLEASANT - A elvll aetlon seeking the partllloa of real
estate has been !lied In theolllce
of the clreult clerk ol;rled Hazel
Marie LeMaster DeBoard and
James DeBoard vs. Willmina Lyons Clements.

New Oftieers of

Letart area women
The fall regional meeting to be
held at Eastern High School on
Nov. 16 was announced and members were reminded that reservations are to be in by Nov. 10
It was noted that the Wildwood
club look third place in Region
Ulor lts publicity book.
''Bulbs for Spring Bloom" was
the theme or the come as you
are meeting and party. Mrs.
Homer Holter was awarded the
prize for her party attire.
Topic of Mrs. David Nease's
paper was ' 4BigColorfromSmall
Bulbs," from Better Homes and
Gardens. She said tbat the Red
Emporer and the Darwin tulips
are very colorful while daffodils are excellent for naturalIzing.

FOR
EVERY OCCASION

MIDDLEPORT
BOOK STORE

You co n c:hoote from four Mew Hollond tonk-type tpreodert for
handling packed, frozen ar weml•llquld manure. The Model 3116
lodt lrom the right and hot a copacllv of 200 buthels or 856
gallons. The Moclel 3ol5, at~olloble In either right Of lth loading ·
vertlor11, hat a capoc:ltr of loiS bvthels or 590 vallont.

2-Hour
DRY WANING

'

FULTON-THOMPSON TRACTOR SALES
POMEROY:.

992·5101

SPRING

SIRV1CE
IUPON REQUESn
Our UIOilGeod Cloan1"9

CROW'S

Sales Goal Early
September aales of Series E
&amp; H Unllod States Savings Boods

STEAK
HOUSE

and Freedom :ilares in Ohio were
$23.3 mUlloo. The state attain·
ed 65:5 per eent of its 1968
aales goal September 30 when
Bood and Sllare purehaaes by

•

,,

Ohioans this year totaled $241.7
mlUloo.
, .·
~- T: Rtod, Jr., MOll•
Tb..U...io
CouriQ' Volunteer Savbtgs Bonds
Chairman, reported September
sales In tho eooozy were $25,592. The county aehl~ed 74.0 .
pur eon! of Its annual iilles goal
the OIXl of September. The Coon·
l;r Chairman nolod tbet reeeot
lol!lalatlon permits the rodeiiiiiUm at Savlaga Notes (Freedom
bres} in tbe same manner as
Sarles E. Boods.

Home

of

the Fabulous

•Fee•s
•See•s
•Fertilizers

Sugar Run Flour Mills
Pho• 992·2115.

Pomeroy, Ohio

GRINSTEAD IS ILL
HARTFORD - v,rnon Grinstead is m at his hmle here this

SANDWICH

.......

Order

By Phone

And T ako Em Homo

projects w e r e
planned during a meeting of the
Rock Springs Better Health
Club Tuesday night at the home
of Mrs. Maxine Arnold.
Mrs. W. A. Morgan, Mrs. Ar·
lee Abott, Mrs. F r e Q GoegIein, and Mrs. WUliam Folmer
were appointed to prepare holi·
day boxes for those in the community in service. The boxes will
be sent to Larry Good, Ho:lney
Hysell, Bill Radford, Don Cullums, and Jane Douglas,
Members are to take gifts for
HOperation santa Claus" at the
Southeastern Ohio Mental Health
Center at Athens. It was report~
ed that Meigs County has 45 women and 48 men confined to the
hospital, Gifts are to be taken
to the November meeting.
Reports were given on sick in
the community, cards sent, and
visits made. Mrs. Amos Leonard presented devotions using
the meditations, "Co ~ workers
with God" and 11Planning Life's
Garden." The Lord's Prayer and
I he flag pledge opened the meetIng.
Mrs, Abbott presented the program which included "Indian
Swnrner," read b)· Mrs . George
Skinner; uaeen StWlg Lately,"
by Mrs. Helen Goett; '' Antibiotics In the Right Place," by
Mrs. William Folmer; 04 Cancer.'' by Mrs. William Grueser,
aM "What Measures will stop
Heavy ~eeding," b_y Mrs. Mor•
galL

"Recipe for a Happy Home,"
by Mrs. Vena Whaley; "Many
Fearing Coronary 'Diseases Do
Not Have It," by Mrs. Am o a
Leonardi "Abnormal Heart Not
Alwa.vs Dangerous," by Mrs.
Harold Blackston; •• Cheer Up and
Smile," by Mrs. Mark Grueser;
"Heart Patients Worry too
Much," by Mrs. Hugh Bearhs;
"How to Tell Modern Day Him
rrom Her," by Mrs. Goegletn,
and "The ShaJ)e I'm In," by
Mrs. Ethel Grueser.
Mrs. Whaley coOOucted the contest which was won by Mrs.
Blackston and Mrs. Skinner.

992-5432

SYSTBS
Wohovelht

RIGHT RJRNACE

...

RIGHT IOILEit

.,_,_

IASEIOAID
To Rt your nud• ··~·
and boott your profits'
.• , our sc:..ntiflcally-formulated

A CUANIR

11
~lit to ta_ke all the hard knocks a ~oungster can give lt•'s made
It e.rtgh •mpact pol,.styrene_ Tfu~re are no tubes to b~rn out 10
WII ~n,e years ol depe'ldable performance Has
'
one 4·1n. speaker, afld abUIIt·m 45 RPM ~pier.

WAIMR ·HOMI

' I PHONI

Full Yur Guarantu on All Par1s and C.biHt
5

•••~~~~~j=~1~ ;~"~~~~~~!1 ~~~;;•:;:;.:~a~~~r~n~e: lor one full ,.a,
•nteed lor orte ~E!&lt;tr ;u;;amsl hH'dkage MO:. · 1 met.'• also IUM·
covers lree uchango&gt; or, _ 1
·
Ofo I, Inc. 1 auarentee
P!~_!binet bfOkeo m iun,:~a~~~. Ar"f~~ 01 ~:'.!~18 •h•••1•,• ddele~!AV!I!
.......,, exira.
se "8 ..... ,..

Thf~ Creaturs

of Quasar· TV

··w,rner Radio &amp; TV
Middleport, 0.

lEWIS
REPAIR SERVIa
.
.., 2-U74
IN Mill Si.
_,.,

,.,

Drew Webster Post 39, American Legion, Pomeroy girl Acouts,
and the members ol the Cradle
of Llbercy Chapter of tlle Children of the American Revolution.
Mrs. ]:;dna Hecox Melvin and
Mr. Leon Hecox, ancestors of
Pvt. Hecox, will speak during
the ceremonies. Local ancestors
are Mrs J. Edward Foster,
George ~Inner, and Artllur&amp;dn-

ner.
Chlldren or the retarded class at the RutlaOO Elementary School
wero entertained Tuesday afternoon with a Halloween party by Middleport Cadette Troop 185.
By special permission from school officials, the scouts were
dismissed from schooJ for the afternoon. There were games, dancing and groqJ singing, and the girls served cupcakes and Kool-Aid
to their guests.
Mrs. Ruth Powers, Mrs. Lowell Beaver and Mrs. John Kraw . .
sczyn accompanied the scout troop. Scouts going to Rutland for the
party were Margie Wamsley, Mary Krawsczyn, Nancy Buskirk, Tina
Nieri, Donna ffievtns, Pam Dodson, Jyl Beaver, Amy Hamm, Debbie
Schuck, Barbara Anthon~·. Susan Powers, Sonya Ohlinger, and Venida Gibbs.

BROWNIE TROOP 87
COSTUME PRIZES WERE awarded at a Halloween party for
Brownie Troop 87 held at the Middleport First Baptist (.llurch.
Winning prizes were Megan Miller, the prettiest; Sally Walters,
the ugliesti Martha Krawsczyn, the fuMiest, and .lonl Murry, the
most original.
The Brownies pla,yed upSet the fruit ' basket and ' mUsi·Ca.I •chi:i:rs,
and bobbed for apples. Troop committee members assisting with the
party were Mrs. Roscoe Wise, Mrs. HaymoOO Kloes, Mrs. William
Swisher and Mrs. William Walters. Mrs. Eugene Murray, leader of
lbe troop, planned the party,
Attending besides the prize winners were Becky Coleman, Trina
Gibbs, Paula Kloes, Valerie Lewis, Pam Powers, Sheila Sargent, Velvet SWisher, Jill Walburn, Jennifer Wise, Ann Fitch, Patty Boyles,
Tracy Burdette, Paula Ashley, Marcia Cale, Melody Vlliaklija, Terri Fife, AMette Starling and Debbie Queen.
JUNIOR TROOP 39
A FLY-UP AND COURT OF HONOR was planned for Monday
night when Middleport Junior Troop 39 met this week at the scout
house.
The fiy-1.1) ceremony will be conducted for Cindy Hindy, Welcomed Into the troop were Pamela Queen and Jacqueline Dray, who

recently moved here Crom Louisiana.
Work on a Christmas project was cont1nued and refreshments
were served by Patrol 1 following the meeting.

Children Given
Party Tuesday
A Halloween party (or chll-

dren ot the primary and junior
departments of the Middleport
First Baptist Church S u n d a y
School was held Tuesday night
in the fellowship hall.
Miss Jerry Pullen. Mr. and
Mrs. Manning Kloes, Mrs. Frances Bearhs, Mrs. Richard Owen, and Mrs. Willis A.nthon.v,
teachers, were in charge of the
party attended by approximately 40 children.
Receiving costume prizes were
Jo Anthony, the hardest to guess;
Pat . Riley, the funniest; Pam
North, the prettiest; and we s
Simons, the most original.
Refreshments of hotdOgs, cookies and Kooi-Aid were served.
Mrs. Pullen and Mrs. Roy Wallace provided the cookies.

13th Birthday

Is Celebrated
The 13th birthday anniversary
of VIcky Clelland was celebrated Wednesday night at her home
oo Lincoln Heliihts.
Gifts were presented to the
honored guest. Games were played with prizes being awarded
to the wlrmers. A Halloween
theme was carried out in the
decorations.
Q.aests were Edie Mees, Diana Carsey, Brenda Barton, Melanie Burt, and Ingrid Hawley.
Sending gilts but unable to at~
tend were Karen BaiQ' and Di-

ana Ridgeway, mana Carsey won
the door prize.

Rally Announced at
Rutland

;Jtuti)C!I.

~or Cattle Fee~s ~ help yoll' herd put on' profitable ~nels, iji!Jtkjy,
sea us . .Our_cattle _ratlotls ar~ · scientifi~lly ..fO'rmui~M~ -~lllll:fld' ·" "' . .
blended til provl4e '" the nutnents needed·to prot~alth;. tr~ePui•• .
~wth . and bjlost Milk Production. C~~~~-- ~-;I_J~ f~f'~~-~ ~~·
~.,:~ '(' ~·, .'',~:'{:~!'$~ ·,!.':~;; j ,
.. ',l.. ·1,
,.·, \ ., ., - . .

.

01110' V4lltf0

Nwn._,_,

,·

2121. ......

f.

COMPACT CONSOU SJIR(O roc·~369·~·,··

.***60

,. · · ..

I

''•.

.

Watt!i of Peak Music Power

fM/ AM/SierBO Radio

Six spealr:er sound sy1~m

•

RIDENOUR RADIO &amp;TV

;

"WE SEIVJQ WHAT WE SELL"

.•

'.

Chester, Ohio

yo.,

our exper;s reset
diaroond in a modern setting
... at ~ very low cost. Y&lt;•ur .
diamc.td will look lovelier,
and larg-e too.

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

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

AA·B·W

Brown and Black

-

lbe proie&lt;t.
Plants were removoo ·from the
planter boxes which mark the
entrance of the school building
and were reset cllring the del
in window boxes for care by the
junior club member&amp; during the
winter. SUps from the planta
will be used next spring for fillIng llle exterior planters, pro
vlded by the senior club.
Projects for the winter were
discussed. Plans were made (or
• program book and ror entering the publiclQI book CQntest.
for junior clubs.
Children In ~cial Education
1 are registered as the Wind-

Aluminum Fiber
Roaf Pah1t
Woter PI,.
Plostlc fiHing•
Triple Trod:
Storm W!t~dowt
.... c~,ollo"' Bothroo"'
F !xtu,. Sett

••

-.:m

come.
50TH ANNIVERSARY, Rutland
United Methodist Church ol&gt;
served at ali-day service beginning at 9:30 L m. Sunday; rolls,
butter and beverage provided for
a potluck dinner at noon; speakers Rev. Calvin Rodeheffer or
Portsmouth, district sll)erintendent, and Dr. L. L. Roush. Former ministers, 50 year members
will be recognized.
MONDAY
SALEM CENTER PTA, Monday, 7:30 p. m. Larry Morrison,
assistant s\C)erintendent, speaking on transportatioi'L A short
Thanksgiving program by fifth
grade of Mrs. NelsorL
POMEROY GARDF:N Club Monday, 1 p. m. at home of Mrs.
Edward Baer.
THEODORUS
COUNCIL 17,
Daughters or America, 7:30p.m.
Monday at lOOF Hall; charter
will be draped for Mrs. Grace
Stace.
REVIVAL CRUSADE, Danville
Wesleyan C h u r c h, Nov. 4
through Nov. 10; e\'llngelistlcand
special singers; Rev. and Mrs.
Edward Miller, Vienna, W, Va.;
C. E. Dozer, pastor invites the
public.
RIVERVIEW PTA,
Morxlay
evening, Nov. 4: at 7:30, at the
school; grades 6, 7 and 8 will
present a short Thanksgi vingprogram. Everyone Welcome,
TUESDAY
POMEROY CHAPTER 186,
Order of Eastern Star, 7:45Tuesday night, Pomeroy
Masonic
Temple.
ELECTION DAY soup dinner
at Racine American Legion Hall.
Soup, sandwiches and pie.
ELECTION DAY dinner, Letart Falls COmmunity building
by Letart Falls United Metho-

FIMCO TV
ANTENNAS
C.S.V. 10-COLOR
ALSO BLACK &amp; WHITE
$37.95 up

LAMAR TILLMAN

Tuppers Plal1s
HardWire

Services ore
In Progress
Lamar Tillman, evangelist of
the Beechwood Heights Church
of Christ in Parkersburg, W.
Va., will be speaker dw-ing a
two-week evangelistic and revival service being held at the
Long Bottom Christian Church.
The Rev. Mr. Tillman will
speak at 7:30 p.m. each eve~
lng begitming Nov. 3 and continuing through Nov. 16. There
will be special singing each evening, The public is invited to attend.

Club Dines at
Vienna,

W. Vo.

The Riverview Garden Club
dined at the Three Sons Restaurant at Vienna, W, Va., for its
~octOber meeting. ' Business included the naming or Mrs. Donald Myers and Mrs. Denver Weber to pian Thanksgiving favors
for the Elmwood Nursing Home
pat1ents, ami members are to
bring Christmas gifts ror patients
at the Athens state llospital to
the Nov. 18 meeting at the home
of Mrs. Claremont Harris.
Plans were also made to make
18 Christmas arrangements for
the Athens Stale hospital, with
Mrs. Carl Buckley directing this
p."oject..
Mrs. Buckley gave the blessing before the dinner. Other members attending were Mrs, Walter Brown, Mrs. Ernest Whitehead, Mrs. llennan Grossnickle,
Mrs. Claremont Harris, Mrs.
Harlis5 Frank, Mrs. Ronald Osborne. Mrs. Donald Myers, Mrs.
Gene Wilson and Mrs. Lyle Bal~
dersoll.l

ltlld·ltalt Phttl
wllll luiH-Ia
ltll·-ltatt ltdltl
Th• SPICTATOI:
Mode1X525
The but at both-automatic
portable phono, plus AM radio '
In one compact cabinet. Band· .
1hell destcn. Portamatic automatic 4-speed record changer. ·
radio and phono.

,.

~

.95 '

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

.

~

-,_

..

INGELS
FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT
OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT. wor.cWT&lt;'

Get A Better Picture
With A Better Antennal

NOW I
Get your antenna In sha,.
now

before bod weather

arrives. All Chaftnel and
speciallp designed col•r
antennas .

CHANNEL MASTER
and FINCO

Associated Radio_and TV
MILLER
992·3635

HARRY

·MAIN ST.

I

Lay Awoy For Christmas

,,

'

·
49

Built-In AM radio has control ;
switch for both ,

dist Church. Serving starting at
11:30 Lm.
MORSE CHAPEL ladies will
serve election day lunch at Old
Town Flats trustees building, beginning, 10 a.m. ~~ Slndwiches, cake, pie, beverages and
other items.
RACINE LEGION Auxiliary 602
ANNOIJNCE SALE
and 8 et 40, Meigs County Salon
Middleport
Garden Club will
710, serving election day lunch
hold
a
rummage
sale in t h e
and soup at Racine Legion Hall.
Slansbury
building
00 Mill St.
WOMEN OF Rutland United
Methodist Church will serve elec- Tuesday, Wednesday and Thurstion day lunches at American day,
Legion Hall in Rutland. Homemade sot1), pie, sandwiches, cole
slaw, other Items available •
ELECTION DAY lunches at Racine Methodist Church, sponsored by Wesleyan Service Guild.
Serving 11 L1IL to 6 p.m. Safllwlches, 8Ql.11, pie and coffee.
ELECTION DAY 8014&gt; sale,
Pomeroy U n 1 t e d Methodist
Church. Lunch will be served at
noon and a buaar will be held.
Serving wUl begin at 11 Lm.

.99

P"an veneers with
QUALITY dl0·8TA'fti . fhoiL ~k o,f li~o dis_:jnssong. Loft hd and

,,

OHIO VALLEY
PLUMBING &amp; HEATING

In genuine

Terrariums were made Wednesday by the Winding Trail Jun.
lor Garden Club, L'Omposed of
children in ~cial EducaUon 1
at the Pomeroy Elementary
School.
Winding Trail Garden Club
senior members, Mrs. Robert
Thomp!KJI'I and Mrs. Robert Lew.
is, auisted the youngsters. The
adult club pr~ided the containers, soil, moss and plants ror

SUNDAY
WEEKEND REVIVAL, Langs...
ville Church, Friday through
Sunday, 7:30 p. m. nlghlly; Rev.
Eugene Musser, pastor, i nvitea
the public.
REVIVAL, ~
Chrl&amp;tian Church, Nov, :J.Nov. 16, 7:30
p, m. i evangelist, Lamar nn. .
man; special music. Public wel-

Elastic Insert
For Fit

ean styled cabinet reflects on Italian in-

Phone 985-3308
•

The grave of Pvt. Truman Hecox, Revolutionary War soldler,
at Moond Cemetery near Chester, will be marked in ceremonIes at 2 p.m. Sllnday.
The special services, sponsored by Return Jonathan M e i g s
Chapter or the Daughters oflbo
American Revolutioo, will be participated tn by D.A.R. members,

Tloo FOSTEI o Z924P

··~.""""""~.......-Lewtilepeir service

-FOR-

Mark Old Grove

Majestic . Medilerron-

Hannum said.

•ROOFING

revealed with a gift exchange
and new names were drawn. Dw-·
ing the gift. exchange Mrs. Scott
Folmer arrived In costwne. The
Halloween theme was carried out
in a salad course served by the
hostess.

Ceremonies to

FRIDAY
FUN AND FOOD carnival Friday beiJimlng 5 p.m., Letart
Falls school, sponsored by PTA;
soup, chill, sandwiches, desserts, tun booths.
MEIGS HIGH Scbool cheerleaders sponsor an alter football game dance Friday n1ght
at the Meigs Junior High auditorium In Pomeroy, following
the Meigs-Jackson game. The
Jays will emcee.
SATURDAY
HIGH SCHOOL dance party
llolurday, 8 to 11 p.m. at tbe
Melp Junior High auditorium
in Pomeroy under school spon•
sorahlp. The Jays will serve
as master ot ceremonies.

LADIESHi BROWS

rookie Jim Eakins, Coach Alex

•HEAnNG '
•PLUMBING

Mrs. Hugh Bearhs will be hostess tor the November meeting
with Mrs. Arnold to have the
program and Mrs. Abbott the
conlesL
Mrs. Belva Sloan was a guest
at the meeting. Secret pals were

mens were judged with blue ribbons going to Mrs. VIdor Hy.
sell, Mrs. Fred Nease, Mrs.
Homer Holter, Mrs. Ken Nease,
Mrs. Edson Hollon, Mrs. Denver Holter, Mrs. Hiram Fisher,
and Mrs. Vernon Nease. Mrs.
Hollon and Mrs. mram Fisher
also won red ribbon awards.
Refreshments were served to
17 members and a guest, Mlu
Y uriko TsWl6do, by the hostesses, Mrs. Hiram Fisher and Mrs.
Paul Fisher.

diamond
go modern

\

0

All

sage similiar to those made at
the institute was shown.
was given by Mrs. Denver HolPlans were made to provide
ter. Sle emphasized the import- spring nowering bulbs for the
ance or using good soil, and Meigs councy Innrmary resileaving two-tbirds of the bulb dents for planting before freezabove the ground. The pot should ing weather.
then be placed. in a cool spot and
Gardening Ups ror this month
not watered until after Chrl Bt- were given by Mrs. vernon
mas.
Nease. She suggested planting
The nower demonstration ol new day lilies and other tulbs
the month was given by Mrs. remembering to water well, to
Fred Nease. ate made an Ike- hill roses, and to keep fallen

A thank-you note was prepared for Mrs. Charles Lewis for
her asslltance in club work.
Flower arrangements and speci-

your

aUon ..... IS director at P'OUP
sale a.
Hadnot, 28, wiU be replaced at
center by II-i Ira Barge or 8-11
M~aurai portable 1s sroorl and colorful in appearance and

A demoostratJon on how to

pot and get amBJ')'llis to fiower

leaves raked aw113'.

Church

~IDS

HYDRONIC

The Notre Dame club at
Chicago anDOWleed Kennedy's
selection Thursday, for the
award, given tor .. work in the
field ol sparta host exemplllylng
the spirit or Notre Dame!'
HADNOT RETIRES
OAKLAND, CaUt (!JPO-Jlm
Hadnot, most Yaluable player
and tGp scorer Jut season for
the O.klarlt oaks, his redred
to join the !root offtee starr at
the American Basketball Asooel·

bana arrangement using evergreen and gold mums in a brass
container. A black container witll
yellow mums was used in a second arrangement made by Mrs.
hyacinths, jOJlCp.lil s can ~ Nease.
A report was given on the therpotlod In pots and brought out at
different times for flowering in- apy program at the Gallia State
doors.
Institute on Oct. 24, and a cor-

Mrs. Homer Ho.lter•s paper
was "Spring Rulbs You Can
Flower Indoors for Winter Beau.
t;y." She pointed out that any
of the spring bulbs - narcissus

MRS. L R NEAL, CHAIRMAN of Neighborllood 1 of the Four
in
Rivers Girl Scout Council, has announced a service team meeting
for 10 L m. on Nov. 8 at her Middleport home. A neighborhood
A SWoday school rally will be
meeting has been scheduled ror 9:30 a. m. on Nov. 12 at the columbus
held ~day at 9:30 a.m. at the
and Southern Ohio Electric Co. social room. ·
Rutland Clureh at lbe Nazarene.
This will be followed by a
morning worahlp Btrvlce. Speelnl singers will be present and
lbere will be a slngspiratlon at
l t':t
2 p.m. The Rev. L I oy d E,
Grimm, Jr., pastor, extends an
lnvltallon to the public.

-

orlht

Terrariums are Made
By Jr. Garden Club

Flower Show

MIDDLEPORT TROOP 5
MEMBERS OF TROOP 5 MET TilURSDAY NIGHT at the Scout
House for a Halloween party, Costmnes were judged by Mrs, Dale
Walburn Wirming prizes were Vicki Slack, the prettiest; Kathy Baker. the ugliest; and Kellec- Burdette, the most original.
The girls bobbed for app]es and played balloon games during the
evening. sandwiches, p"' and potato chips were served. others atteOO.ing were Sheri Lane, Lisa Herald, Beth Vaughan, Becky Fultz,
Mllrllee C&amp;ssell, Melody Scaggs, Kathy Cobw'n, Pam North, Janie
Van Meter, Krista Morris, Cathy Manley, Cindy Glaze, and Taml
Hoffman

fREE
ESTIMATlS ~HEATING

Association.

•

Christmas Proiects are Planned
Christmas

Mei@s Aehieves

MRS, HYRE ILL
_ ~~·"""'
•~'.of
·'•""""""""'
- ·Mrs.
Mary
Hyre
2911 Jackson
Avenue,
manager
of the local Athens Mesthy, in charge or special sollcita~
sanger Office, is a medical pa...
tions.
The Girl Scouts will seek tient In Holzer Hospital. Mr.
$1,200 to maintain llle present George Lovell of AtheDolamalnprogram, to finance the organi- talnlng the of!ice during M r s.
.
zation of urgently needed addi- Hyre's Ulness.
PT. PLEASANT - New of. tional Scoot Troops, to provide
!leers of the Okeh 4-H C I u b training for volunteer leaders, to
wilo wUI take ofllee In Novem- provide professional staff assisSEE BROWNS PLAY
ber are DeUa Lue MeDanltl and tance to volunteers and the fa..
HARTFORD
- Mr. and Mrs.
Jody Kauft, junior leaders; Lora
ellttles from the council office Charles Aldridge and Mrs. Irene
Naah, aecretary; Chris Edward for local troops.
Kelley were in Cleveland last SunMcDaniel, treasurer; B r e n d a
day
to ... the Cleveland BrownsWinkle, reporter; Sherry andBDI
Atlanta Falcons pme.
Nash, song leadersi and Chester
ASK TO WFll
Calloway ani! Bwlla Henderson,
PT.
PLEASANT
- Philip EuCLUB ENTERTAINED
recreational leader.s.
HARTFORD - Mr. and Mrs.
Leaders of the group a r e geoe BaU, 22, Pl. Plea&amp;alll, and
Bernice Calloway and c..,qn Nancy Ellzabelb Gilley, 20, Pl. Brooks Edwards entertained the
Pies-. have made appliestion CB Rsdlo Club members at a
Winkler
tor a marriage license In tbe of. Halloween part;y at ~eir home on
five of lbe eoooey clerk.
ThursdaJ"eVenlng.
STROMBERG RETURNING
NEW YORK (UP0- The New
York Jets opened a spot in their
u....,, presumably lor lineback,.
er . Mike Str&lt;mberg, Thurlday
by assigning TullO rookie Karl
Henke lo the taxi oquad.
Stromberg has been Inactive
since injwing a knee five weeks
ROCKNE AWARD
NEW YORK (!JP0 - The
Knute Rockne Speetal RsCOJIIII·
tlon Award will be giwn Dee. 9
to Walter Kenned,y, commissioner of the National Basketball

ays
instantly!
ays all
4 speeds!

Ill•&gt;

Cleve. JFK 0
Clove. JOhn Marshall 12

55 , Qlmalod Falla 6
Qrorwe 28 i::haroi9D )4
·
Grand VaUey 4~ CU'dlnal 38
Neabury 34 ~. 1Q
WarronsYIIIe 34 !l!nqaYillli 32 ·

:;~~~cored twice'" the.... . Heading.0 U

and canto, on eo oo a 17.yardaertal from ~cling to stump, set
up by Flaher'alntereepted peso,
and qaln wllb 22 ........ lett
when Fisher hit paydlrt 111 a 48yard screen pass from ~­

record,

ago.

Full Year

w~'

~llohol

Slump with a 20-yard pa81, Gary
Flshor ran tbe extra poinll, and

4-BQubNamed

O~DER

]j,y. Unllod Prell

,

annan TrUce;;:~

Dr. Glmsman
ad • Dr

•

d

Genovo 46 P)1nalludng VaUey 0
Awn 16 Brookside 6
Feb:port 14 Berhshlre 8
North Qbnslod 58 Medina
ctearvtew 36 Welll~n 6

After huUdlng up a 20-0 haJf.
Ume lead, the Bobcats, as a
result or penalties and !umhles,
NBA STANDINGS
and Inspired play by the WUdBy Unllod Press Internallonal
cats, managed only one touchEast
down ln the second halt.
W L Pet.
First KC score came with
Baltimore •
7 3 , 700 6:56 left in the first period when
Boston . . , , , • , 4 2 ,667 steve Spaulding hit B a r t o n
Cincinmti , . , , • 4 2 , 667
Phlladelphla . . . . . . 3 2 .600
New York •• , ••.• 4 4 ,500
Detrolt • , . . . . . . 3 4 .429
MUwaukee . , •••• 1 5 .167
West
u
e
W L Pet.
Los Angeles o o • 4 3 .571
Phoen1x • oo
4 3 .571
san Francisco • • 3 3 .500
San Diego
3 3 .500
Chicago , , , . • . 3 4 .429
Atlanta . . . . . . . 3 4 .429
Sealtle .. . . . .. . 2 6 .250
PT. PLEASANT - Dr. Dan
Thursday's Results
Glassman has accepted the poPhoenix 112 Chicago 103
sition or County Chairman of the
Milwaukee 134 Detroit 118
fUnd • raising campalll)l to be
Only pmes scheduled.
launched trom Nov. 1-1.5th by the
Frlda,y's Games
Mountain Laurel Girl S c o u t
Philadelphia at Boston
Council throughout Mason COUnMilwaukee at Cincinnati
ty,
san Francisco at Atlanta
Assisting Dr, Glass will be the
Baltimore at New Yark
committee membersofGlrlSeout
Chicago at Los Angeles
Troops, Mrs~ Oo G. Bau.erle,
Only games scheduled.
Treasurer, and Dwayne Clatwor00

.

Bei&gt;edtcthie

Olklalll

Coach Howle Lee Miller's Ky1 3 .250 ger Creek Babesia eomplelod

W, L. Pet.
oakland
41.800
New Orleano •••• • 3 1 .750
Houston . . . , ••• , I 1 .500
Dallas
.. • .. .. 0 1.000
Los Angeles , , ...• 0 2 ,000
Denver . . . . , •.•. 0 3 .000
Thursday's Results
Indiana 122 Denver 100
Hoostoo 108 DaUas 90
Oakland 143 Loa Angeles 127
(Only games BCbedulod)
Friday'&amp; Geme
M1ami at New York
(Only game scheWlod)
0

.

.
f~·
·
:
~
~
.'~~~=~::::::
·
.
5~~::~a~:-r
Result$
. ctev~.
o.
A~

'

quarterback IIUJ)o
Llli&gt;onlca · e'llo.Yed bla !!est
aline Ia a mOJKh laSt week
wllen he threW Cor three
~owna ogalnat the Be..-lo.
-,

.

k
Bl
an
Chamns
r

ne

• Easy Credit

.

victory this YAr came over Clnclllilatl.
Now Yark.
Konsos Cll;r Ia bolstered by
In other Stmdi.Y pmes, the return at dtii, Tlylor ant
Booton Is tawred by S'h points Gloster RlebaniiiOII whUe the
at home over Denver and Raiders hi.., t h e IOQIM!'•
Hooaton Is tawred by 9 at
leodlng rusher In Hewrltl Dlxoll. ·

Pro Standings

~h . Sch ~ 1 ~· ~~·.-22_,~th Amliorst 'o _·.

D

•

POMEROY

�.'

s .· -rJt
•. ·J.~ace · ·

· f WI•
and) us w ln to. : ~tf/v
· 'J

'Senllael, p..,,.rO:r-Mlddli!Pof,t,' 0. Pi~~. Nowmber 1, 1118

..;·
..
...
••. .
...
.•
&gt;

•

'

ALL YOU'LL NEED
· IS YOUR

CHANGE
PURSE

.....•.
.'
..

...

•

YOU

BAKERS
BUDGET SHOP

'

...'
'.
.0..,•'

MIDDL

'

••'
•''

0.

FLOWERS
FOR ALL OCCASIONS

l!R NIGHT M9-2951

Pom•roy Flower Shop
pMILLARD

vAN METER

SIClOr BowL
On that ounny day they lost to
Green Boy ol the National
Football Leegue, 33-14, at
Miami in the secoOO grand
confrontation between the rhal
leagues. The Raiders claimed
they'd take their revenge the
next time around:.
On Sunda.Y, Oaldand may lind
itself n&amp;thing more than a hasbeen in the American Football
League with hardly a chance to
qualify for another Stper Bowl
The
Raiders entertain the
rampaging Kansas City Chiefs
and a loss would just about
knock them out of contendon in
the Western Division.
The season started oft accord~
ing to plan for the Raiders as
they swept their first four
games to run their regular
season winning streak to l4
games, just one short of the
league record. Then they lost to
San Diego aM lost to Kansas
City before beating Cincinnati
~ast week, and toda)' they find
themselves tied for second
place with San Diego, a game
and a half behind the Chiefs.
Kansas Ctt;y, meanwhile, has
won six games in a row with
victories over Qaklan:t and San
Diego in the last two weeks•
Another success over the
Raiders would send the ChiefE
into the homestretch with
strong m&lt;Bnentwn.
The Raiders, however, with
the home field advantage, are
fnored by 2'h points while San
Diego Is picked by 16 points
over tfle Miami Dolphins.
The New York Jets, leaders
of the Eastern Division, are
prohibltive 19-potnt favorites
over Buffalo, but the only BW

-1','\

· !. ,-

· ··

ABA STANDINGS
11.Y Unllod Press International

w.

East

MlmeBOie • • , • • ,
Kentue!Q' . • • . • . .
New York . .. ....
Miami . .
&gt;

Indiana . .

..

&gt;

..

..

"

"

"

Wesl

L. Pet.

2
f
2
0

0 1.000
1 .800
I .667
3 .000

•••••••

·

·B.

• Big Selection

•Lay·A·Way

Plan
.• Keepsake

•Qualih

DIAMONDS

$39.95

TIFFIN CREDIT JEWELERS

. Maili St.

Pt.

W.

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

: - .~

Quality Memorials - Beaurifully IJesisned

'

00

..

•

NOW fw late Fall &amp; oarly spring aetting. We feah1re low
pnce1. Man~ o;;olon . . . Heo;~dqueSI Pinlc, Georglo Marble, Roy•
olty Blue, Pyromid Blu e, Co lon iol Ron. Wide 1toc:~,., Berlcele)'
Bl~~e, Barre. Do~o1'a Mahogony, Wiseontin Red, Cc:mod ion Pink.

LEGAR MONUMENT CO.
· 263 'II. Main

992·5314

POMEROY, 0.

Por the little swingers!
A solid-state portable
phono with a...

lbelr 1968 grid eampalgll by
blanking host Haman Trace 260 Thurlday nl&amp;bt. It WOI the ft.
nal Southern Valley Conference
game of the year tor- squads.
The Bobcats complelod their
campaign with BtYOD straighttriUitiPls, thua !lnlohing the year
wt:tl1 a 7 .:l mark. It DB the Bobcats &amp;e&lt;OIIdstralghtSV AC erown,
and eiJl(tth In tbe lasl 11 years.
Ham.an Trace'a record dropped 1o 0..1 In league play. Overall, the WUdeats finished with a
0~

It

r.ng

ding,

JVe

Over County

In the third period, with Blx
minutes left, Jon Rothgeb tallied
oo a 21-yard peos from ~­
dins. making lbe final CClWll rand
26-0.
Hannan Trace got to the Bob·
cats' rour late :In tbe game as a
result ot a twnble, but was held
on downs by Kyger Creek.
Perry Beebe and Roo ~­
leo lnterceplod HT aerials. steve
Daniela and AI Spaqler reooverod Bobcat fumbles, along with
HolU1 Myers.
Kyger picked up 165 yards
ruahing, and added 123 passing
wllll lour at BtYen. The winners
bad 16 first downs. Haman Trace
gut 21 yards ruahlng ()let) and
collll&gt;lelod !oor of eliiht lor 26
yards. The losers had eight first
downs.
Fisher led the winners in individual ruslttlQ!. Wayne Queen
and Ebert Montgomery paeod the

losers.

ruv.., .w;.t4 : .

'2o Konswn 6
Wool Goolltll30
.HIIblall!l 44 BUcko1e 6
'
..

NEW &amp; USED
BOGGS EQUIPMENT CO.,
TUpp~rs Plains, 0.

~7-3535

Spread packed, frozen or semi·llquld mamn
with a New Holland tank·type spreader!
·

I&gt;

Nixon Rally
ATHENS- James Drury, star
of the NBC television series,
41 The
Virginian," will head a

The Dally SenUnel, Pomeroy-Middleport, 0., Frklly, November 1, 1968

Plan Participation

··

chosriD

HOES
WENCH£$ • TRAILERS

Routo 7

5 -

Participation in the aH..county
Christmas nower show to be
staged Nov. 30 and Dec, 1 at the
Pomeroy Elementary School was
planned Wring Wednesday night's
meellng ol the Wildwood Garden
Club at the home of Mrs. Hiram
Fisher
. It was llMOunced that the Wildwood Club category for arranging, drawn during a recent meeting of club representathoes is
"My Ch nstmas
'
' _
Tree,'' featur
inl arrangement!! using evergreen. Club members are rel,panelble for rtlling the class
draWD for the show, UJe theme
of which is .,ChristJnas Ideals."
During the meeting conducted
bt Mrs. Karl Grueser, it was anDOUI'Iced that the club has been
invited to assist In the sponsorship of the Bend 0' the River
Garden Club, the new group comprimarily of Racine and

STOP IN __ _

large Republican raUy Seturtlay,
Nov. 2, speaking for Richard Nix·
on at the Ohio UnlversUy"s new
convocation center.
The rallywillbeginal7:30p.m.
alii Is being IIIJOIIIOred by the Athena County Yoong Republicans
and the Ohlo University Young
Republicans in cooperation wJth
the Athens Counll' RepublleanEx·
ecuUve Committee.
AU county and dlstrlct Republlesn candidates will be presented alongwllbmany stateotllclals.
MISB Martha Moore, National
CommiUeewoman, wW also attend.
Admission to the rally is tree
to the pubUc. Patrons sponsoring
the event wm have a reception
and dimer earUer at the Ohio
Unlverslt1 Inn.

SUIT FILFll
PT. PLEASANT - A elvll aetlon seeking the partllloa of real
estate has been !lied In theolllce
of the clreult clerk ol;rled Hazel
Marie LeMaster DeBoard and
James DeBoard vs. Willmina Lyons Clements.

New Oftieers of

Letart area women
The fall regional meeting to be
held at Eastern High School on
Nov. 16 was announced and members were reminded that reservations are to be in by Nov. 10
It was noted that the Wildwood
club look third place in Region
Ulor lts publicity book.
''Bulbs for Spring Bloom" was
the theme or the come as you
are meeting and party. Mrs.
Homer Holter was awarded the
prize for her party attire.
Topic of Mrs. David Nease's
paper was ' 4BigColorfromSmall
Bulbs," from Better Homes and
Gardens. She said tbat the Red
Emporer and the Darwin tulips
are very colorful while daffodils are excellent for naturalIzing.

FOR
EVERY OCCASION

MIDDLEPORT
BOOK STORE

You co n c:hoote from four Mew Hollond tonk-type tpreodert for
handling packed, frozen ar weml•llquld manure. The Model 3116
lodt lrom the right and hot a copacllv of 200 buthels or 856
gallons. The Moclel 3ol5, at~olloble In either right Of lth loading ·
vertlor11, hat a capoc:ltr of loiS bvthels or 590 vallont.

2-Hour
DRY WANING

'

FULTON-THOMPSON TRACTOR SALES
POMEROY:.

992·5101

SPRING

SIRV1CE
IUPON REQUESn
Our UIOilGeod Cloan1"9

CROW'S

Sales Goal Early
September aales of Series E
&amp; H Unllod States Savings Boods

STEAK
HOUSE

and Freedom :ilares in Ohio were
$23.3 mUlloo. The state attain·
ed 65:5 per eent of its 1968
aales goal September 30 when
Bood and Sllare purehaaes by

•

,,

Ohioans this year totaled $241.7
mlUloo.
, .·
~- T: Rtod, Jr., MOll•
Tb..U...io
CouriQ' Volunteer Savbtgs Bonds
Chairman, reported September
sales In tho eooozy were $25,592. The county aehl~ed 74.0 .
pur eon! of Its annual iilles goal
the OIXl of September. The Coon·
l;r Chairman nolod tbet reeeot
lol!lalatlon permits the rodeiiiiiUm at Savlaga Notes (Freedom
bres} in tbe same manner as
Sarles E. Boods.

Home

of

the Fabulous

•Fee•s
•See•s
•Fertilizers

Sugar Run Flour Mills
Pho• 992·2115.

Pomeroy, Ohio

GRINSTEAD IS ILL
HARTFORD - v,rnon Grinstead is m at his hmle here this

SANDWICH

.......

Order

By Phone

And T ako Em Homo

projects w e r e
planned during a meeting of the
Rock Springs Better Health
Club Tuesday night at the home
of Mrs. Maxine Arnold.
Mrs. W. A. Morgan, Mrs. Ar·
lee Abott, Mrs. F r e Q GoegIein, and Mrs. WUliam Folmer
were appointed to prepare holi·
day boxes for those in the community in service. The boxes will
be sent to Larry Good, Ho:lney
Hysell, Bill Radford, Don Cullums, and Jane Douglas,
Members are to take gifts for
HOperation santa Claus" at the
Southeastern Ohio Mental Health
Center at Athens. It was report~
ed that Meigs County has 45 women and 48 men confined to the
hospital, Gifts are to be taken
to the November meeting.
Reports were given on sick in
the community, cards sent, and
visits made. Mrs. Amos Leonard presented devotions using
the meditations, "Co ~ workers
with God" and 11Planning Life's
Garden." The Lord's Prayer and
I he flag pledge opened the meetIng.
Mrs, Abbott presented the program which included "Indian
Swnrner," read b)· Mrs . George
Skinner; uaeen StWlg Lately,"
by Mrs. Helen Goett; '' Antibiotics In the Right Place," by
Mrs. William Folmer; 04 Cancer.'' by Mrs. William Grueser,
aM "What Measures will stop
Heavy ~eeding," b_y Mrs. Mor•
galL

"Recipe for a Happy Home,"
by Mrs. Vena Whaley; "Many
Fearing Coronary 'Diseases Do
Not Have It," by Mrs. Am o a
Leonardi "Abnormal Heart Not
Alwa.vs Dangerous," by Mrs.
Harold Blackston; •• Cheer Up and
Smile," by Mrs. Mark Grueser;
"Heart Patients Worry too
Much," by Mrs. Hugh Bearhs;
"How to Tell Modern Day Him
rrom Her," by Mrs. Goegletn,
and "The ShaJ)e I'm In," by
Mrs. Ethel Grueser.
Mrs. Whaley coOOucted the contest which was won by Mrs.
Blackston and Mrs. Skinner.

992-5432

SYSTBS
Wohovelht

RIGHT RJRNACE

...

RIGHT IOILEit

.,_,_

IASEIOAID
To Rt your nud• ··~·
and boott your profits'
.• , our sc:..ntiflcally-formulated

A CUANIR

11
~lit to ta_ke all the hard knocks a ~oungster can give lt•'s made
It e.rtgh •mpact pol,.styrene_ Tfu~re are no tubes to b~rn out 10
WII ~n,e years ol depe'ldable performance Has
'
one 4·1n. speaker, afld abUIIt·m 45 RPM ~pier.

WAIMR ·HOMI

' I PHONI

Full Yur Guarantu on All Par1s and C.biHt
5

•••~~~~~j=~1~ ;~"~~~~~~!1 ~~~;;•:;:;.:~a~~~r~n~e: lor one full ,.a,
•nteed lor orte ~E!&lt;tr ;u;;amsl hH'dkage MO:. · 1 met.'• also IUM·
covers lree uchango&gt; or, _ 1
·
Ofo I, Inc. 1 auarentee
P!~_!binet bfOkeo m iun,:~a~~~. Ar"f~~ 01 ~:'.!~18 •h•••1•,• ddele~!AV!I!
.......,, exira.
se "8 ..... ,..

Thf~ Creaturs

of Quasar· TV

··w,rner Radio &amp; TV
Middleport, 0.

lEWIS
REPAIR SERVIa
.
.., 2-U74
IN Mill Si.
_,.,

,.,

Drew Webster Post 39, American Legion, Pomeroy girl Acouts,
and the members ol the Cradle
of Llbercy Chapter of tlle Children of the American Revolution.
Mrs. ]:;dna Hecox Melvin and
Mr. Leon Hecox, ancestors of
Pvt. Hecox, will speak during
the ceremonies. Local ancestors
are Mrs J. Edward Foster,
George ~Inner, and Artllur&amp;dn-

ner.
Chlldren or the retarded class at the RutlaOO Elementary School
wero entertained Tuesday afternoon with a Halloween party by Middleport Cadette Troop 185.
By special permission from school officials, the scouts were
dismissed from schooJ for the afternoon. There were games, dancing and groqJ singing, and the girls served cupcakes and Kool-Aid
to their guests.
Mrs. Ruth Powers, Mrs. Lowell Beaver and Mrs. John Kraw . .
sczyn accompanied the scout troop. Scouts going to Rutland for the
party were Margie Wamsley, Mary Krawsczyn, Nancy Buskirk, Tina
Nieri, Donna ffievtns, Pam Dodson, Jyl Beaver, Amy Hamm, Debbie
Schuck, Barbara Anthon~·. Susan Powers, Sonya Ohlinger, and Venida Gibbs.

BROWNIE TROOP 87
COSTUME PRIZES WERE awarded at a Halloween party for
Brownie Troop 87 held at the Middleport First Baptist (.llurch.
Winning prizes were Megan Miller, the prettiest; Sally Walters,
the ugliesti Martha Krawsczyn, the fuMiest, and .lonl Murry, the
most original.
The Brownies pla,yed upSet the fruit ' basket and ' mUsi·Ca.I •chi:i:rs,
and bobbed for apples. Troop committee members assisting with the
party were Mrs. Roscoe Wise, Mrs. HaymoOO Kloes, Mrs. William
Swisher and Mrs. William Walters. Mrs. Eugene Murray, leader of
lbe troop, planned the party,
Attending besides the prize winners were Becky Coleman, Trina
Gibbs, Paula Kloes, Valerie Lewis, Pam Powers, Sheila Sargent, Velvet SWisher, Jill Walburn, Jennifer Wise, Ann Fitch, Patty Boyles,
Tracy Burdette, Paula Ashley, Marcia Cale, Melody Vlliaklija, Terri Fife, AMette Starling and Debbie Queen.
JUNIOR TROOP 39
A FLY-UP AND COURT OF HONOR was planned for Monday
night when Middleport Junior Troop 39 met this week at the scout
house.
The fiy-1.1) ceremony will be conducted for Cindy Hindy, Welcomed Into the troop were Pamela Queen and Jacqueline Dray, who

recently moved here Crom Louisiana.
Work on a Christmas project was cont1nued and refreshments
were served by Patrol 1 following the meeting.

Children Given
Party Tuesday
A Halloween party (or chll-

dren ot the primary and junior
departments of the Middleport
First Baptist Church S u n d a y
School was held Tuesday night
in the fellowship hall.
Miss Jerry Pullen. Mr. and
Mrs. Manning Kloes, Mrs. Frances Bearhs, Mrs. Richard Owen, and Mrs. Willis A.nthon.v,
teachers, were in charge of the
party attended by approximately 40 children.
Receiving costume prizes were
Jo Anthony, the hardest to guess;
Pat . Riley, the funniest; Pam
North, the prettiest; and we s
Simons, the most original.
Refreshments of hotdOgs, cookies and Kooi-Aid were served.
Mrs. Pullen and Mrs. Roy Wallace provided the cookies.

13th Birthday

Is Celebrated
The 13th birthday anniversary
of VIcky Clelland was celebrated Wednesday night at her home
oo Lincoln Heliihts.
Gifts were presented to the
honored guest. Games were played with prizes being awarded
to the wlrmers. A Halloween
theme was carried out in the
decorations.
Q.aests were Edie Mees, Diana Carsey, Brenda Barton, Melanie Burt, and Ingrid Hawley.
Sending gilts but unable to at~
tend were Karen BaiQ' and Di-

ana Ridgeway, mana Carsey won
the door prize.

Rally Announced at
Rutland

;Jtuti)C!I.

~or Cattle Fee~s ~ help yoll' herd put on' profitable ~nels, iji!Jtkjy,
sea us . .Our_cattle _ratlotls ar~ · scientifi~lly ..fO'rmui~M~ -~lllll:fld' ·" "' . .
blended til provl4e '" the nutnents needed·to prot~alth;. tr~ePui•• .
~wth . and bjlost Milk Production. C~~~~-- ~-;I_J~ f~f'~~-~ ~~·
~.,:~ '(' ~·, .'',~:'{:~!'$~ ·,!.':~;; j ,
.. ',l.. ·1,
,.·, \ ., ., - . .

.

01110' V4lltf0

Nwn._,_,

,·

2121. ......

f.

COMPACT CONSOU SJIR(O roc·~369·~·,··

.***60

,. · · ..

I

''•.

.

Watt!i of Peak Music Power

fM/ AM/SierBO Radio

Six spealr:er sound sy1~m

•

RIDENOUR RADIO &amp;TV

;

"WE SEIVJQ WHAT WE SELL"

.•

'.

Chester, Ohio

yo.,

our exper;s reset
diaroond in a modern setting
... at ~ very low cost. Y&lt;•ur .
diamc.td will look lovelier,
and larg-e too.

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

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

AA·B·W

Brown and Black

-

lbe proie&lt;t.
Plants were removoo ·from the
planter boxes which mark the
entrance of the school building
and were reset cllring the del
in window boxes for care by the
junior club member&amp; during the
winter. SUps from the planta
will be used next spring for fillIng llle exterior planters, pro
vlded by the senior club.
Projects for the winter were
discussed. Plans were made (or
• program book and ror entering the publiclQI book CQntest.
for junior clubs.
Children In ~cial Education
1 are registered as the Wind-

Aluminum Fiber
Roaf Pah1t
Woter PI,.
Plostlc fiHing•
Triple Trod:
Storm W!t~dowt
.... c~,ollo"' Bothroo"'
F !xtu,. Sett

••

-.:m

come.
50TH ANNIVERSARY, Rutland
United Methodist Church ol&gt;
served at ali-day service beginning at 9:30 L m. Sunday; rolls,
butter and beverage provided for
a potluck dinner at noon; speakers Rev. Calvin Rodeheffer or
Portsmouth, district sll)erintendent, and Dr. L. L. Roush. Former ministers, 50 year members
will be recognized.
MONDAY
SALEM CENTER PTA, Monday, 7:30 p. m. Larry Morrison,
assistant s\C)erintendent, speaking on transportatioi'L A short
Thanksgiving program by fifth
grade of Mrs. NelsorL
POMEROY GARDF:N Club Monday, 1 p. m. at home of Mrs.
Edward Baer.
THEODORUS
COUNCIL 17,
Daughters or America, 7:30p.m.
Monday at lOOF Hall; charter
will be draped for Mrs. Grace
Stace.
REVIVAL CRUSADE, Danville
Wesleyan C h u r c h, Nov. 4
through Nov. 10; e\'llngelistlcand
special singers; Rev. and Mrs.
Edward Miller, Vienna, W, Va.;
C. E. Dozer, pastor invites the
public.
RIVERVIEW PTA,
Morxlay
evening, Nov. 4: at 7:30, at the
school; grades 6, 7 and 8 will
present a short Thanksgi vingprogram. Everyone Welcome,
TUESDAY
POMEROY CHAPTER 186,
Order of Eastern Star, 7:45Tuesday night, Pomeroy
Masonic
Temple.
ELECTION DAY soup dinner
at Racine American Legion Hall.
Soup, sandwiches and pie.
ELECTION DAY dinner, Letart Falls COmmunity building
by Letart Falls United Metho-

FIMCO TV
ANTENNAS
C.S.V. 10-COLOR
ALSO BLACK &amp; WHITE
$37.95 up

LAMAR TILLMAN

Tuppers Plal1s
HardWire

Services ore
In Progress
Lamar Tillman, evangelist of
the Beechwood Heights Church
of Christ in Parkersburg, W.
Va., will be speaker dw-ing a
two-week evangelistic and revival service being held at the
Long Bottom Christian Church.
The Rev. Mr. Tillman will
speak at 7:30 p.m. each eve~
lng begitming Nov. 3 and continuing through Nov. 16. There
will be special singing each evening, The public is invited to attend.

Club Dines at
Vienna,

W. Vo.

The Riverview Garden Club
dined at the Three Sons Restaurant at Vienna, W, Va., for its
~octOber meeting. ' Business included the naming or Mrs. Donald Myers and Mrs. Denver Weber to pian Thanksgiving favors
for the Elmwood Nursing Home
pat1ents, ami members are to
bring Christmas gifts ror patients
at the Athens state llospital to
the Nov. 18 meeting at the home
of Mrs. Claremont Harris.
Plans were also made to make
18 Christmas arrangements for
the Athens Stale hospital, with
Mrs. Carl Buckley directing this
p."oject..
Mrs. Buckley gave the blessing before the dinner. Other members attending were Mrs, Walter Brown, Mrs. Ernest Whitehead, Mrs. llennan Grossnickle,
Mrs. Claremont Harris, Mrs.
Harlis5 Frank, Mrs. Ronald Osborne. Mrs. Donald Myers, Mrs.
Gene Wilson and Mrs. Lyle Bal~
dersoll.l

ltlld·ltalt Phttl
wllll luiH-Ia
ltll·-ltatt ltdltl
Th• SPICTATOI:
Mode1X525
The but at both-automatic
portable phono, plus AM radio '
In one compact cabinet. Band· .
1hell destcn. Portamatic automatic 4-speed record changer. ·
radio and phono.

,.

~

.95 '

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

.

~

-,_

..

INGELS
FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT
OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT. wor.cWT&lt;'

Get A Better Picture
With A Better Antennal

NOW I
Get your antenna In sha,.
now

before bod weather

arrives. All Chaftnel and
speciallp designed col•r
antennas .

CHANNEL MASTER
and FINCO

Associated Radio_and TV
MILLER
992·3635

HARRY

·MAIN ST.

I

Lay Awoy For Christmas

,,

'

·
49

Built-In AM radio has control ;
switch for both ,

dist Church. Serving starting at
11:30 Lm.
MORSE CHAPEL ladies will
serve election day lunch at Old
Town Flats trustees building, beginning, 10 a.m. ~~ Slndwiches, cake, pie, beverages and
other items.
RACINE LEGION Auxiliary 602
ANNOIJNCE SALE
and 8 et 40, Meigs County Salon
Middleport
Garden Club will
710, serving election day lunch
hold
a
rummage
sale in t h e
and soup at Racine Legion Hall.
Slansbury
building
00 Mill St.
WOMEN OF Rutland United
Methodist Church will serve elec- Tuesday, Wednesday and Thurstion day lunches at American day,
Legion Hall in Rutland. Homemade sot1), pie, sandwiches, cole
slaw, other Items available •
ELECTION DAY lunches at Racine Methodist Church, sponsored by Wesleyan Service Guild.
Serving 11 L1IL to 6 p.m. Safllwlches, 8Ql.11, pie and coffee.
ELECTION DAY 8014&gt; sale,
Pomeroy U n 1 t e d Methodist
Church. Lunch will be served at
noon and a buaar will be held.
Serving wUl begin at 11 Lm.

.99

P"an veneers with
QUALITY dl0·8TA'fti . fhoiL ~k o,f li~o dis_:jnssong. Loft hd and

,,

OHIO VALLEY
PLUMBING &amp; HEATING

In genuine

Terrariums were made Wednesday by the Winding Trail Jun.
lor Garden Club, L'Omposed of
children in ~cial EducaUon 1
at the Pomeroy Elementary
School.
Winding Trail Garden Club
senior members, Mrs. Robert
Thomp!KJI'I and Mrs. Robert Lew.
is, auisted the youngsters. The
adult club pr~ided the containers, soil, moss and plants ror

SUNDAY
WEEKEND REVIVAL, Langs...
ville Church, Friday through
Sunday, 7:30 p. m. nlghlly; Rev.
Eugene Musser, pastor, i nvitea
the public.
REVIVAL, ~
Chrl&amp;tian Church, Nov, :J.Nov. 16, 7:30
p, m. i evangelist, Lamar nn. .
man; special music. Public wel-

Elastic Insert
For Fit

ean styled cabinet reflects on Italian in-

Phone 985-3308
•

The grave of Pvt. Truman Hecox, Revolutionary War soldler,
at Moond Cemetery near Chester, will be marked in ceremonIes at 2 p.m. Sllnday.
The special services, sponsored by Return Jonathan M e i g s
Chapter or the Daughters oflbo
American Revolutioo, will be participated tn by D.A.R. members,

Tloo FOSTEI o Z924P

··~.""""""~.......-Lewtilepeir service

-FOR-

Mark Old Grove

Majestic . Medilerron-

Hannum said.

•ROOFING

revealed with a gift exchange
and new names were drawn. Dw-·
ing the gift. exchange Mrs. Scott
Folmer arrived In costwne. The
Halloween theme was carried out
in a salad course served by the
hostess.

Ceremonies to

FRIDAY
FUN AND FOOD carnival Friday beiJimlng 5 p.m., Letart
Falls school, sponsored by PTA;
soup, chill, sandwiches, desserts, tun booths.
MEIGS HIGH Scbool cheerleaders sponsor an alter football game dance Friday n1ght
at the Meigs Junior High auditorium In Pomeroy, following
the Meigs-Jackson game. The
Jays will emcee.
SATURDAY
HIGH SCHOOL dance party
llolurday, 8 to 11 p.m. at tbe
Melp Junior High auditorium
in Pomeroy under school spon•
sorahlp. The Jays will serve
as master ot ceremonies.

LADIESHi BROWS

rookie Jim Eakins, Coach Alex

•HEAnNG '
•PLUMBING

Mrs. Hugh Bearhs will be hostess tor the November meeting
with Mrs. Arnold to have the
program and Mrs. Abbott the
conlesL
Mrs. Belva Sloan was a guest
at the meeting. Secret pals were

mens were judged with blue ribbons going to Mrs. VIdor Hy.
sell, Mrs. Fred Nease, Mrs.
Homer Holter, Mrs. Ken Nease,
Mrs. Edson Hollon, Mrs. Denver Holter, Mrs. Hiram Fisher,
and Mrs. Vernon Nease. Mrs.
Hollon and Mrs. mram Fisher
also won red ribbon awards.
Refreshments were served to
17 members and a guest, Mlu
Y uriko TsWl6do, by the hostesses, Mrs. Hiram Fisher and Mrs.
Paul Fisher.

diamond
go modern

\

0

All

sage similiar to those made at
the institute was shown.
was given by Mrs. Denver HolPlans were made to provide
ter. Sle emphasized the import- spring nowering bulbs for the
ance or using good soil, and Meigs councy Innrmary resileaving two-tbirds of the bulb dents for planting before freezabove the ground. The pot should ing weather.
then be placed. in a cool spot and
Gardening Ups ror this month
not watered until after Chrl Bt- were given by Mrs. vernon
mas.
Nease. She suggested planting
The nower demonstration ol new day lilies and other tulbs
the month was given by Mrs. remembering to water well, to
Fred Nease. ate made an Ike- hill roses, and to keep fallen

A thank-you note was prepared for Mrs. Charles Lewis for
her asslltance in club work.
Flower arrangements and speci-

your

aUon ..... IS director at P'OUP
sale a.
Hadnot, 28, wiU be replaced at
center by II-i Ira Barge or 8-11
M~aurai portable 1s sroorl and colorful in appearance and

A demoostratJon on how to

pot and get amBJ')'llis to fiower

leaves raked aw113'.

Church

~IDS

HYDRONIC

The Notre Dame club at
Chicago anDOWleed Kennedy's
selection Thursday, for the
award, given tor .. work in the
field ol sparta host exemplllylng
the spirit or Notre Dame!'
HADNOT RETIRES
OAKLAND, CaUt (!JPO-Jlm
Hadnot, most Yaluable player
and tGp scorer Jut season for
the O.klarlt oaks, his redred
to join the !root offtee starr at
the American Basketball Asooel·

bana arrangement using evergreen and gold mums in a brass
container. A black container witll
yellow mums was used in a second arrangement made by Mrs.
hyacinths, jOJlCp.lil s can ~ Nease.
A report was given on the therpotlod In pots and brought out at
different times for flowering in- apy program at the Gallia State
doors.
Institute on Oct. 24, and a cor-

Mrs. Homer Ho.lter•s paper
was "Spring Rulbs You Can
Flower Indoors for Winter Beau.
t;y." She pointed out that any
of the spring bulbs - narcissus

MRS. L R NEAL, CHAIRMAN of Neighborllood 1 of the Four
in
Rivers Girl Scout Council, has announced a service team meeting
for 10 L m. on Nov. 8 at her Middleport home. A neighborhood
A SWoday school rally will be
meeting has been scheduled ror 9:30 a. m. on Nov. 12 at the columbus
held ~day at 9:30 a.m. at the
and Southern Ohio Electric Co. social room. ·
Rutland Clureh at lbe Nazarene.
This will be followed by a
morning worahlp Btrvlce. Speelnl singers will be present and
lbere will be a slngspiratlon at
l t':t
2 p.m. The Rev. L I oy d E,
Grimm, Jr., pastor, extends an
lnvltallon to the public.

-

orlht

Terrariums are Made
By Jr. Garden Club

Flower Show

MIDDLEPORT TROOP 5
MEMBERS OF TROOP 5 MET TilURSDAY NIGHT at the Scout
House for a Halloween party, Costmnes were judged by Mrs, Dale
Walburn Wirming prizes were Vicki Slack, the prettiest; Kathy Baker. the ugliest; and Kellec- Burdette, the most original.
The girls bobbed for app]es and played balloon games during the
evening. sandwiches, p"' and potato chips were served. others atteOO.ing were Sheri Lane, Lisa Herald, Beth Vaughan, Becky Fultz,
Mllrllee C&amp;ssell, Melody Scaggs, Kathy Cobw'n, Pam North, Janie
Van Meter, Krista Morris, Cathy Manley, Cindy Glaze, and Taml
Hoffman

fREE
ESTIMATlS ~HEATING

Association.

•

Christmas Proiects are Planned
Christmas

Mei@s Aehieves

MRS, HYRE ILL
_ ~~·"""'
•~'.of
·'•""""""""'
- ·Mrs.
Mary
Hyre
2911 Jackson
Avenue,
manager
of the local Athens Mesthy, in charge or special sollcita~
sanger Office, is a medical pa...
tions.
The Girl Scouts will seek tient In Holzer Hospital. Mr.
$1,200 to maintain llle present George Lovell of AtheDolamalnprogram, to finance the organi- talnlng the of!ice during M r s.
.
zation of urgently needed addi- Hyre's Ulness.
PT. PLEASANT - New of. tional Scoot Troops, to provide
!leers of the Okeh 4-H C I u b training for volunteer leaders, to
wilo wUI take ofllee In Novem- provide professional staff assisSEE BROWNS PLAY
ber are DeUa Lue MeDanltl and tance to volunteers and the fa..
HARTFORD
- Mr. and Mrs.
Jody Kauft, junior leaders; Lora
ellttles from the council office Charles Aldridge and Mrs. Irene
Naah, aecretary; Chris Edward for local troops.
Kelley were in Cleveland last SunMcDaniel, treasurer; B r e n d a
day
to ... the Cleveland BrownsWinkle, reporter; Sherry andBDI
Atlanta Falcons pme.
Nash, song leadersi and Chester
ASK TO WFll
Calloway ani! Bwlla Henderson,
PT.
PLEASANT
- Philip EuCLUB ENTERTAINED
recreational leader.s.
HARTFORD - Mr. and Mrs.
Leaders of the group a r e geoe BaU, 22, Pl. Plea&amp;alll, and
Bernice Calloway and c..,qn Nancy Ellzabelb Gilley, 20, Pl. Brooks Edwards entertained the
Pies-. have made appliestion CB Rsdlo Club members at a
Winkler
tor a marriage license In tbe of. Halloween part;y at ~eir home on
five of lbe eoooey clerk.
ThursdaJ"eVenlng.
STROMBERG RETURNING
NEW YORK (UP0- The New
York Jets opened a spot in their
u....,, presumably lor lineback,.
er . Mike Str&lt;mberg, Thurlday
by assigning TullO rookie Karl
Henke lo the taxi oquad.
Stromberg has been Inactive
since injwing a knee five weeks
ROCKNE AWARD
NEW YORK (!JP0 - The
Knute Rockne Speetal RsCOJIIII·
tlon Award will be giwn Dee. 9
to Walter Kenned,y, commissioner of the National Basketball

ays
instantly!
ays all
4 speeds!

Ill•&gt;

Cleve. JFK 0
Clove. JOhn Marshall 12

55 , Qlmalod Falla 6
Qrorwe 28 i::haroi9D )4
·
Grand VaUey 4~ CU'dlnal 38
Neabury 34 ~. 1Q
WarronsYIIIe 34 !l!nqaYillli 32 ·

:;~~~cored twice'" the.... . Heading.0 U

and canto, on eo oo a 17.yardaertal from ~cling to stump, set
up by Flaher'alntereepted peso,
and qaln wllb 22 ........ lett
when Fisher hit paydlrt 111 a 48yard screen pass from ~­

record,

ago.

Full Year

w~'

~llohol

Slump with a 20-yard pa81, Gary
Flshor ran tbe extra poinll, and

4-BQubNamed

O~DER

]j,y. Unllod Prell

,

annan TrUce;;:~

Dr. Glmsman
ad • Dr

•

d

Genovo 46 P)1nalludng VaUey 0
Awn 16 Brookside 6
Feb:port 14 Berhshlre 8
North Qbnslod 58 Medina
ctearvtew 36 Welll~n 6

After huUdlng up a 20-0 haJf.
Ume lead, the Bobcats, as a
result or penalties and !umhles,
NBA STANDINGS
and Inspired play by the WUdBy Unllod Press Internallonal
cats, managed only one touchEast
down ln the second halt.
W L Pet.
First KC score came with
Baltimore •
7 3 , 700 6:56 left in the first period when
Boston . . , , , • , 4 2 ,667 steve Spaulding hit B a r t o n
Cincinmti , . , , • 4 2 , 667
Phlladelphla . . . . . . 3 2 .600
New York •• , ••.• 4 4 ,500
Detrolt • , . . . . . . 3 4 .429
MUwaukee . , •••• 1 5 .167
West
u
e
W L Pet.
Los Angeles o o • 4 3 .571
Phoen1x • oo
4 3 .571
san Francisco • • 3 3 .500
San Diego
3 3 .500
Chicago , , , . • . 3 4 .429
Atlanta . . . . . . . 3 4 .429
Sealtle .. . . . .. . 2 6 .250
PT. PLEASANT - Dr. Dan
Thursday's Results
Glassman has accepted the poPhoenix 112 Chicago 103
sition or County Chairman of the
Milwaukee 134 Detroit 118
fUnd • raising campalll)l to be
Only pmes scheduled.
launched trom Nov. 1-1.5th by the
Frlda,y's Games
Mountain Laurel Girl S c o u t
Philadelphia at Boston
Council throughout Mason COUnMilwaukee at Cincinnati
ty,
san Francisco at Atlanta
Assisting Dr, Glass will be the
Baltimore at New Yark
committee membersofGlrlSeout
Chicago at Los Angeles
Troops, Mrs~ Oo G. Bau.erle,
Only games scheduled.
Treasurer, and Dwayne Clatwor00

.

Bei&gt;edtcthie

Olklalll

Coach Howle Lee Miller's Ky1 3 .250 ger Creek Babesia eomplelod

W, L. Pet.
oakland
41.800
New Orleano •••• • 3 1 .750
Houston . . . , ••• , I 1 .500
Dallas
.. • .. .. 0 1.000
Los Angeles , , ...• 0 2 ,000
Denver . . . . , •.•. 0 3 .000
Thursday's Results
Indiana 122 Denver 100
Hoostoo 108 DaUas 90
Oakland 143 Loa Angeles 127
(Only games BCbedulod)
Friday'&amp; Geme
M1ami at New York
(Only game scheWlod)
0

.

.
f~·
·
:
~
~
.'~~~=~::::::
·
.
5~~::~a~:-r
Result$
. ctev~.
o.
A~

'

quarterback IIUJ)o
Llli&gt;onlca · e'llo.Yed bla !!est
aline Ia a mOJKh laSt week
wllen he threW Cor three
~owna ogalnat the Be..-lo.
-,

.

k
Bl
an
Chamns
r

ne

• Easy Credit

.

victory this YAr came over Clnclllilatl.
Now Yark.
Konsos Cll;r Ia bolstered by
In other Stmdi.Y pmes, the return at dtii, Tlylor ant
Booton Is tawred by S'h points Gloster RlebaniiiOII whUe the
at home over Denver and Raiders hi.., t h e IOQIM!'•
Hooaton Is tawred by 9 at
leodlng rusher In Hewrltl Dlxoll. ·

Pro Standings

~h . Sch ~ 1 ~· ~~·.-22_,~th Amliorst 'o _·.

D

•

POMEROY

�Sentinel Pomeroy-Middleport, o., Frlda.Y, November 1, 1968
_...~...
'
bera from other area yuuw 1e1~

Youth Meeting
IA
. . STICE He /d Recent/y
CHIEF JU

FT

T

District Officer Speaker

•

:=..eott,.~

meetlnJ atoome

Rad!ord announced that a
singing group from tile llldlanola
church 1n eolumbua would be
Mary

present at a future meeting.
The group ls aWl taking or·
ders
for Christmas carda, the
The regular meeting ot t h e
CHIEF JUSTICE
proceed•
of which will Ill&gt; toRock ~rings United Methodist
SIHCE 1962
wards
sponsorship
of a toretan
A9116.5, ma"ied,
Youth Fellowship was held ~n­
1'1115 .&amp; 10n1 and
day evening at the church with child.
lOgrandchildre n
The program was in charge of
the president, Connie Radford,
General pro(
Connie
and Judy Radl'ord. T h e
I ice o t I a w
in charge.
(1928 -48 ) e• ~ oep t
The meeting opened with pra,y- theme of the program was "Can
while in Army
er by Mrs. llugh Bearhs. T h e I Fashion My Own World~' A
(19U--46)
scripture reading was taken from short skit waa presented and
Stott tep ru e~
Psalms 86, verses 1 through 12. questions regarding Important
lolin (19JJ .J.tl
Shohr Hll _ Srhool ld. Pre1ident (19&lt;(2)
The roll was called by Eddie decisions were asked members.
United Slole1 S en~:~tor ( 1946)
The meeting closed with the
Abbott, each member present
PREFERRED BY 3235
answering with a Bible verse. M. Y.F. benediction.
TO 938 IN 0Ff10AL
Songs were sung, led by the
REFERENDUM OF
song leader, Sharon Brawly.
Georgia was the last of the
The secretary's report was Confederate states to he reOHIO BAR ASSOCIATION
admitted to the Union, July
given by Mary Lou Radford.
LAWYERS
19, 1870.
(t
was
decided
to
invive
mem--·~~~ · ~11110.
..,

21 YUAS ON
SUPIIMI COUIT

Elllrth District was

Mrs.

Braxton returned

The DJatrlct Communl!l Ser-

to ClnctrmaU 'llle&amp;day after vis-

vice Chairman, Nrs. 0. A. Martin, waS speaker when the Ra·
cine Arneri can Legioo Auxiliary
met at the Post Home recently
w:lth Mra. Paul Lawrence, pres-

iting here a week with her al.s.
ter, Mrs. Con YCUlg. S h e
came especially for the CWiera1 services of. her brother, Fred
Jackson .

Mr&amp;. John Fultz and cblldreo,
Anita and Marc, are apending
the weekend in Portsmouth with

Mr. and Mrs. flarold Vogalaong
and daughter, Melinda.
Mrs. Richard Vaughan a n d
children are visiting in Charleston, W. Va.toda,ywlthhermother,
Mrs. Elizabeth Par1011s.

Ident. preoldlniiMrs. ldarlln spoke briefly on
the project of havln&amp; a party o1

or

I

he

amounced

..

Mrs. VIrgil Walkerwereappalnt.
ed 11 color I!UIJ'(Is and Mro. John
Boyd ao Junior ~.edYIUeo chairman.

for December 19.
Sneral member• are enroll.
ed in a CIYn Defense training
The unit will have 3' x 5' flap
elau belna: held at the Post Home for sale, UKI those deslrtng one
Wider the leadenblp of Walter may got In contact with M r a.
Cleland. Mn. - r t Beegle and;. John Boyd

At Racine Post Auxiliary

..--.-

penae involved.
AJm, members are being ask-

ed to coUect all jewelry, bap

-w~t;i

or purses to be taken to the De-

will ..be a
project for the Junior members.
A film wiD be oho!m at tile
Sallobury School on Nov. 12 con·
cemlng cystic flbroa11 and is
open to the public. The 8 et 4Q
0{ Melgo Cotnt,y 11 ..ry acUve
in this cause.
Racine was a quota unit at the
Fall Conference held at L a k e
Hope l.A)dge. A few menDera atcember party. This

NOVEMBER 5
1968

FOR MEIGS COUNTY CORONER

lxlJohn H. Rldgway,D.o.l
DEMOCRAT

ROBERT CLARK
FOR

MEIGS COUNTY COMMISSIONER
Second Term-Republican-Experienced &amp; Capable
YOUR VOTE AND SUPPORT DEEPLY APPRECIATED!

Pd . Pol. Adv .

Mrs. Sam Bolin of Athens and
Mrs. Edith Burrows of The
Plains were Sunday guests of
Mrs. Welby Whaley. Others vis.
iting with Mrs Whaley &amp;In~
were Mr . and Mrs. Dana Howett, Mrs. Gla&lt;b's Cuckler, and
Mrs. Karl Grueser ·
Mr . and Mrs. Bill Knopp and
Mr. and Mrs. Kemteth Story of
Dayton spent the weekend here
with Mr . and Mrs. Dana Howell.
I
Miss Yuriko TSWlado of Cal •
tornia is the guest of her sister,·
Mrs. Ernest Harris, Minersvllle.

(
TO SERVE LUNCH

Who Turned Off
The Lights?
YOU WILl: If you don't vote for
RENEWAL of the 1/2 mill levy for
POMEROY Village current expenses--The proceeds ol this levy are used only
~ ... _
to.J.~IJ~Litf!lll ig btl.. ,_.,_ .........-·..,. -. - SO VOTE

I

FOR THE TAX LEVY

A renewal of a tax for the benefit of Pomeroy Village for the purpose of Current
Expenses at o rote not exceeding one· holf mill for each one dollar of valuation,
which amounts to 5 cents foreoch one hundred dollars of valuation, for five years.

An election day lunch

\

wjlt' be

served at the Masonic l..od&amp;e Hall

in Chester sponsored by t h e
W,S, C.S. o( the Chester United
Methodist Ctwrch. The menu includes plate ll01ches, hot dogs,
sloppy joe&amp;, vegetable soup, pie,
cake, coffee and Kooi -Aid.

REVIVAL ANNOUNCED
The Racine Church of the Naz-

arene is having Rev. II. A. Wilcox, paster of the Point Pleasant Church of the Nazarene, as
guest speaker from November 4
through 10. Services will begin
at 7:30 p.m. The pastor and
congregation invite the public .

f'

-~

.-Jt·

,:. ~· ·

7.-.·' " ..

If\

~

S od hou s e s
onct: dutted ~he ,

Vote For

Ralph Warden_Ours
FOR
MEIGS COUNTY COMMISSIONER

SPEAKER ANNOUNCED
The Rev . William Mootgom.
ery or Waverly will beg u e s t
speaker Smday morning at the
Middleport First United Presbyterl.Jp ~u rctJ.
•· · •

Republican Candidate .. ... ... . . .......... Qualified &amp; ~xperienced
·. YOU!!, vo,~,E

plA l nll sLAte~

where wood WBI!I
'j t1t
scarce. They are
nuw all ~~:one , hut 0111~ has heen
reco muruct ed a t th e Harold Warp
l'ion eer Villagt&gt; at Minden. in
south central NebrBska. where
neBrly two millio n people have
marveled t&gt; t the ingenutty of our
pioneer forebears who built thia
greBL country of ou111 .

T

Mrs.
is
Auxiliary Hostess

&amp;

,SU~P,.C?R,'f . s1.N~~~~.LY S!!~1cm~, 1,,

' ' ''"

. , • •• , • '"'-'

Pd. Pol. Adv. •. t

FELLOWSHIP HELD
Adult fellowship groups of the
St. Paul Lutheran Church, Pom eroy, and the St. Paul Lutheran
Churcll, New Haven, W, Va. , had
a hayride and wiener roast Satur~ nigtrt at the Pete Thoren
home near Pomeroy.

Save Your Farm Program •••••

VILLAGE OF POMEROY

Remember:

Pd . Pol. Adv.

The Nixon-Benson Years?
-lllhen "Ianning the Iarmer" was 1111 for the money-lenders
and buyers of cheap farm raw material?
-When farm families "stren&amp;tflened their moral fiber" by
glvine up income?

LET'S LOOK AT THE RECORD SINCE 1900
Republicans

Democrats

Presidents

7

5

Year In Office

33

36

Wars

0

4

Balanced Budgets

20

7

Total Deficits

$20 Billion

$331 Billion

Personal Tax Increases I
Personal Tax Cuts

,_
; i•/·
'·t' ·''
~

•
fttf
,, ·,

14

8

6.

S.notor 0.•1op C.llios Is a VETERAN logislato•.

He is a WORKING levislator, hovint sr.onsored over
120 bills which have been enodeclinta ow, lncfudlnt
onr 30 measures during the 1967-68 session of the
Ohio General Assembly.
Senator Collins is an EXPERIENCED legislafar.
Third rankin9 senator in the kate of Ohio, he is Chairman of the Education, Health &amp; Welfare CommiHee,
member of the policy-ll'tokint Rules Co11miHee, and
member of Urban &amp; Hivhway AHairs Committee.

THIS TIME,
VOTE LIKE YOUR
WHOLE WORLD
DEPENDED ON IT.
For By Meill l

C 011 .,t~

Unite d C iti u nl F or

Nl"o""A~ ~w , D~:~ o

28-

'

IIi-

X
Miller , C hoir man

NOV. 5

State Sl11tor
OAKLEY C. COLLINS

C oll i n• f~:~r Sengte C ~:~mmitlee

MORNING STAR UNITED ..1120. Mld-WMI&lt; _ . . mottMETIIODIST CHURCH - Rev. ·ltlr; W ' ldll, 7;30 flo m.,Kra,
.WIDlam Alrooa, pastor; John ~ 110~. ctuo leoder,
loy Fnnda, 5wid!IY S,Chool Sq&gt;~ lble, ~~ Roy Van Meter, Alii. ·. POMERoy LOWER IJGIIT
SUI1iiiQ' S.IIOOI, 9o30 L m. Clwrch Sl4lt. &amp;molay SciiOOI, 9:4.5 L Dl.j Cliurcll - JlaTI-YilfO Rood woi-ohlp, io:46 L m.; JleY, Roy Tlllor, putor, Nara
aervlcaa llrat and tlllrd SuniiQ'
!q:l. llulldl,y .
tollowlrw SUnclll SchooL SOcond Pra,yar meeUJW, 7:30 P· m. Scbool, 9;30 a.m.;WOl'fldpaanand Fourth SlturciiQ' evonlnp, . Thuradll, Fred E. Smith, Ill· leo, 10;30 a. m.; Ennflw - 7:30 flo m., Clurch SerriceL
Ieider. Youtll FeUowoldp, 7:30 alilp, 7;30 flo , m, l'rller anol
P- "'- SUIJdl1,
Prolaa ·oervlco, Tburadll, 7:10
MT,
HERMON
·
.
UJ-l1TED
.
.
p.
m,
UNITED FAITII CHURCH of
BI!ETIIREN
IN
CHRIST
RA.v.
WESLEYAN
UNITED METIION - Setllemonl, SUnday School
Me:rze!Smlth,pastor.Sundat
DIST
CHURCH,
Had• - , If,
&amp;.t&gt;erlntendent, R o y JohnSon, .
School,
9:30
a.
m.;
Ruuell
SpenDale
McClure.
pastor.
SUIJdl1
Youtll m.e~~nr. &amp;:3o, SUnday.
cer, ~L; Alfred Wolle, aulot.- School, 9:30 L 111.1Worohlpar""
.
·am. Mor-.lling Sermon 11 I. m., Ice, 10:30 L m.t BJble Stu:l)r,
. SYRACUSE FIRST UNITED eYOn!JW Blrmon, 7:30p. m.,alter· W-.day, 7:30 p, lll.i U.M. Y.F.
PRESBYTERIAN - Rev. L1noon natlJW each Sunday. Clan meet- 7 p.m. eoch&amp;molay;Junlura.otr

"

'*I

ilorm.v

. .. · : · :
.
ALF!!ED UNrrED METHOCHRISTIAN SCIENCE Servlceo·
~ '! DIST, Poor I A. casto PO &amp;lor at ·315 Mala 81,_~, ~ Pl-dt.
1
!blday School at 9:aiJ, Uo~d &amp;mi!Jxa.U·o:'ltl.1 Weclooadlla .
1l' , DU!ln811', Supt. _ \foroldplllrV. a P.m. Allwelemna.
If !ceo at 10:45', wtm tho Rev. Cu').· to ' - Wedne'"""'
·•·- evening pray. CHURCII'-118v.
THE RUTLANI/
- CO!OIUNITY
Tllllapue :::

!-

f

f

l~· ,

.er HrVlce• at 7:45.

_

BETHANY UNITED METHO-

··, [DJST CHURCH- Rev. Paul A.

,f, ,....
Sellen, pastor.
9 30

...

tor. 9.mdiJ lebDol, 8:30 a.m..:

::~"':'ce."~':

ne&amp;dayprayer meellni. 7:30p.m. Stebbins, paator. Sundl1achool, lrw; 11 Lm., aJtematiJW SUrdi..Y
9:30 Lm.J wOHhlp service, 10:- momlrca. David Holter, c la • 1
-~•Sunday nll!ll -....... 7:30.
30 a.m.; Bible otud)' and prllj'er . leoder. Christian E-...-. 7:30

j

LOTTRDIGE UNITED IIETH· tor; Adn lllrlck, Sunday School
t OOIST- /l)'orlhlp,llntandtblrd !qJerlntendent. SUIJdl1 Sc-,
r t So:ndlla of each month, 10:t5 a. 9:30 L m.; Wonhlp nnlce,
aecorll and fourth &amp;aye, 10:30 L m. Youth •aDd Junior
; ~ 7:30 p. m. Sunday School, 9:46 youtl: oorvlce, 6:45 p. m. EYO~L m. Chrllllan El&gt;leovor, third n!qr worohlp, 7:30. Prayer and

fm.;

;saturda1 or each IIIClDh.

_
· C. LAUREL CLIFF FREE IIETJI..
,!:OllSI' CHURCH - Sunday Scf9:30 L m., JDOI'IIinK worsbJil,
110:10 L m., evenlor woc•hiP,
t 7:30 JTO
n moo' w.......... a.rtoL
""-J
"'
·1 Youtll Cruoadera, 6:30 flo m.
Pl'&amp;l'er meetlnro 7:80 p,m,
uradll, choir Practice, 7 flo
11. Eusene Gill, PaRlor; Phil
,VIse, !lcJt.
DEXTER CIIUIJCH OFClliiiSr
-Rnnnle RusoeU, pastor. No,.
mn C. Will,' •~t&gt;t- Sunday Sc-1
8:30 o. m.; WorobJil lenlce,
10:30 L m. Chrllllan &amp;ldeavor

-.... s. s.

aenlce, Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.

p. m. ever)' other SUn111f evenlqr. Jeu Sex- prealdert.

POMEROY Flll8l' BAFrlST
- . - WUts, !b&gt;diJ oebool
..__ Somdl,y oebool, 1:30 Lm.;
IIIOrlllDil ' worahlp, 10:10 a.m.;
BYF, 6 p.m. Blblo IIIUilr, Wed-

Pnyer meeting, 7:30 p.m. every
Wedneadoy. ll&lt;lud meeUJW, 7:30
e, m., ftrot
POMEROY
CHURCH OF CIIRIST - Rev, W.
II, Pllnin, peEr. Patrlek D.
Wond, !qt. SlildiQ' Sehool, 1:15
L m,; Worohlp, 10:25 L m.
Yautll choir rebearsal, Monday,
6:30 p, m, Mra. Mervin Jlllrl,
dlreetor; Senior chol.rrebearsal,
Tburaday, 7:30p.m., Mrs. Paul
Neuo, director. Tbur&amp;day, aU
ila,y, Buoy Bee qulltlnr parll In
cburch BOCtal room,
RUTLAND CHURCH OF

DIIdlr,

praloe, Wednooday, ?:SO.
UNtrED FAITH CHURCH- .
N - Sltllemenl - Rnbort E,
Sllllth, Sr., pU(I)r, lbldiQoSCbool
·~ Kenllllb llltooR.
Sunday
School, 9:80
~.... ..........
, .. llloj - and
1'"" -nee, 10' 30 a. m.
7:80 p, m. aach Sundl,)o,llfckeak .
pra,yer meetlqr, Wedneldll, 7130
p, 1llo
.

7 p.m.; choir praetlee,

8;30 p.m., W""'!adll·

praedce, WednelldQ, 8:15 .P.m.;
Senlot' Choir praetlee, 1burl!ldly,
7:30 p, m.; Weal01011 Service
Gulld, fourth Ml:olay Mch month
at 7:30 p. m.; Hippy HusUoro
c:luo meetlnl, fOIII'II\. F'rldaJ of
eech mmtll, 6 flo m.; W.S. C.S.,
oecond f'rklll each montb, 7:30
p. OLi Oflletal Boord, Mondl,y each month, 7:30 flo m.
PORTLAND UNITED METIIODIST CHURCH - W, Dale Moe1urc. putoo:, SUnclll School,
9:30 L m.; Worahlpaervtee, 7:30
p. m.;Ofllclalllaord, llrotSundll
each mcdh, 8:30 p. m.
OAK GROVE UNITEDMETHODIST CHURCH - W, Dale MoClura. paotor. Sun11Q' School,ltly)
9 30
:30 I. m.; Worship oer co, 1
L m., ftrat and third &amp;.uldays

Jh. UNION BAPTIST - Rev.
CecU Cox, paotor. SUnday School
ouporintondeoK, Ear I Stargy,
Sundll School 0 1:45 a.m.· Sundll
- worah,..,
0.. 7•30• W
ev"'-..'u""
• , edno5diQ'
lind Bible atudy 7:30
Pnyer
'
o.~TTON UNITED METII0- CHRIST - EugeDB Urderwood,
DIST CHURCH - W. Dale Mceach mcri
••;-.h.c,-,~
paotor; V, H, Braley, Sqlt.; SUn- · THE RUTLAND "METiiO~T
Clurc. pa1tor. Sunday School, dQ school, 9:30 L m.; com=~
10:30 a. m.1 Worohlp oorvlee, munion and worahJp service, 10:- CHURCH - Rev. C. J, IAJnley.
aM~..... Th
111ator. Church School, 9:30a.m.;
Senlceo weakll at 9-.,39 a.~ 9:30 L m., second and fourth 30
a.m.; prayer m....., ... oe.
urs- Worship service, 10:30 a. m,
·l'reacldqr, flrat and lhlrdSuJIIW Sunday each mcrih._
daJ, 7:30p.m.
l 1 - by Charlea RuaatU II OIESTER CHURCH OF THE
CHESTER METHODIST Charge
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST a.
m,
.
NAZARENE
_
Rev.
Herbert
Rev.
Pearl
A..
Cuto,
putor,
Pmneroy
- Harrisonville Road.
9130
CHiSTER:
Worablp,
9
a.
m.;
John
Webster,
pastor; Ray Ut~evening.
BRADFORD CHURCH OF Grate, paator. Worohill oorvlce,
. RACJIIE FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST - Cblrleo a-en, paa· 11 L m. and 7:30 p.m., Sunday. • SWtdQ School, 10 a.. m.; Ml't. tle, Sunday school sl418rirUnTHE NAZARENE "'niiQ'Scbool ' lor, Rfdlord Gilkey, &amp;;~~. !UI• Sunday School, 9:30 Lm. Rfch- Wald SpeDcer, Supt. FLAT- dent. Swxlay school, 9:30 a.m.;
1:30 I. m.; - . _ Woroldp, dill' Sc~, 9:30 a.m.; Mor!Uc ard Barton, ~. Cborles Bla- WOODS: Church School, SundloY, . morning wonhlp, 10:30; Sunday
IO:JO a. .. m.; Eoonl:w Worship,. Worohlp, 10:30 L m.; EveniJic oell, uoi.-~tPrayermeet.- 11 a.m., Jolm Bally, supt. Wor· evening service, 7; prayer meet7138 p. m. l'rllor oenlceo, 7:30
lldp Mrrfce alternates wtttl Al· ing, Wednesda.y, 7 p.m.
worllldp, 7 p,m. Wedneadoylllhle (JW, Wedneadoy, 7:30p.m.
p. .... Wotlnelldll. SUrlday Scbool . ~. 7:30 p. Ill.
fred ond Flatwondo. Service•
ST:-joJiNos LIITHERAN-Brl·
~ Paulino McC!lnl¢o11GAMZED cuURCH.'Cir'
HARRISONVILLE PRESBY; llulldl,y mon:1ng or evening, of
each week.
an E,.el, putor. Morning wor•
toek. - . 118v; Morrie M. Jeauo Chrlll of Wtter D 11 TERIAN - Mrs. Norma Lee,
SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST sblp, 9 a. m.; Sunday School,
PLAINS UNITED Sointo, Portland • Blc:liiO lload. Sundll School &amp;t&gt;ertntondeJc: Church - POmeroy, Mulberry 10:30 a. m,
;lo!ETHODIST - McrnlivWoroblp Sunday S.hoal, 9:30a.m.; 11om- jb:da,y School, 9:30 L m. ~ He1gbtJ Rood, north of Veterano
ST. PAUL'S LUTHERAN -32
'f:30 L m. at former EUB build- lJW WorsbJil, 10:30 a.m. !ilnday daY aarvlce, 8 p. m., the Re • • Memorial Holpltal. l'hlllljl Gag- . E. Second st., l'llmeroy, Sunday
""' ElQ)anded Sundll Schooloeo- O'IOIIJDK Hrrice at 7, w-...v ~Donahue 0{ Mlddlepod er, pastor, Wedneada,y, 7:30 p, Scb:tol,lO a.m.;Worahtpserrice
11 L m,
:.I• for nursecy to grade olx ovonlng ·· pnyor oenlce, 7:30. ·
' m., Bible Study andprayermeet· -SYRACUSE UNITED METHOehlldrenat Iormor Matlxxllotan- Puulr, Elder .F~~. J, ~ JEHOVAH'S Wfl'Ni!llSI!l!, Lar- (JW. Saturday: School,
... at 9:30 L m., Mro. J a m e I borlo · .
.
· t ry Clll'tllbln, pnskllllemlnlater, 10:30 L m.; Worship, 9:30 a. m. DIST CHURCH - Rev. Paul A.
FIBST UNITED Pft&amp;g~YTEk- Sellers, pastor. Swda,y School,
'Stout, cbUdren'&amp; o~nt.
SltldaJI Bible lechiN, 9;30a.m,;
IAN
Cil'tJRCH _ Mlddleport, 9:30 1. m., Ben Qul&amp;enberry,
. . Church Sc-, ldullaand
BRADBURY CHURCH OF Wateb TOWer
10:30 a. m,;
Guest
Minister, JIIIW8 Buchan- St.pt. Morning won hip, 10:30 L
joutll, 10:30 L m.; Junior blab, CIIRIST _ Sunday aebool, 9:30L Wednoiiiii.Y: Bible ~. 7 flo m.
an, Sunday School &amp;;&gt;erinten- m., ftrst and third Sunday&amp; each
aentor bi8J: and Y - ldulla m. Gl•lEvau, ~q:t. Clllrcb aar- Tburlldll: lflnllll7 achool, 7 flo
dent. Sunday School, 9:30 a.m. m~ Eveniog evaogeiistic
meet In tormerMethodlstChiD'eh 'Yieea, 10:30 Lm.; .venlnl IW· m. Service meel.rw, 8 P.m.
!!"'Sunday Church School. Boyd .reo, 7:30; Wotlneadll, prayer
MASON CHURCH OF CIIRIST- Worship Service, 10:30 a.m. service, 7:30 p. m., second and
Choir practice, 7:30 p.m. Wed- rourth Sundlls.
~~aclme•, youth ......... ~ndent; --• ceo, 7 :30 p.m.
liiUer
_
. st. - EYwiCII Weeldey,
CARMEL UNITED METHO.foot ldg!: cleso and IOIIlw adulll
..-w. Bible otud)' cluoeo,Sun- 110adoy.
DIST
CHURCH - ll!ov. Paul A.
IIJWln former EUBbulldll18,
W!AH-"' . tJim'Dl .~0- ~•1-0J!t~.Worshlpand-b· ,
ASBURY UNITI!D ' METHO'
VIneyard, a11&gt;1- Ad:lJ'(Il!:.~' I)IS'J' clrOBCH :;; 'l'HOCblnl; '0:10o5'S a. m,; SuniiQ' ennlqf DIST, llrra&lt;Uie - Rev. WendeD Sellers, Pastor. SWi!a)' ·School,
lllahpartoy,lastlo!A:ndlleoch 3G a.m., Firat and Soc:ond am. aanlee, 7:30.
Bible IIUdl' Studer, s-ator. &amp;n:ll,y Scltool, 9:30 L m.; Wayne Rou&amp;h, Sot&gt;!.
Youtll Followllllp ·each dqa 0{ each -~ 'll1lrd aDd cluaaa, Wednelldll, 7:30p.m, • 10 1. m.; can-oil Norris, Supt. Morning worship, 10:30 L m.,
Q:nday, 6 p. m.ln former Moth- FourthSundaya eachmonll:, WorGRACE EPI!ICOPAL-E. Main WCII"ohW oenlce, 11 L m.; MYF secord IJXI fourthSuflla,ysofeach
ndl&amp;t bullcllng. Dlolrletyoutllral• ahlp Hnlce at 7:30p.m.; Wed- St., l'llmerq)'.ClJarchoelDII•eb 8 p. DL Sunday. Pra,yer meeting month. Evenlt:evangelisdc
service, 8 p. . eoond a n d
t flrstMondi1oleochmonth.
110adll eveolnp ai7:30,_Pr.,er Sunday at 10:30 a.m. Third lb:· Wednesday, 8 p. DL
third Sundll •
:- LETART UNli'ED IIIE'l'HO· and Bible~·- __
dill' 11 each 110 lllOI'ti!Da
POMEROY CHURCH OF TilE
CHURCH - Firat and SocFREEDO)f GOSPEL ¥J&amp;"'ON oervlce, HoJ,y -lillian. 7:30 NAZARENE- Corner llniooand
ENTERPRISE UNITED METH·
SUndoy&amp; preachln&amp; 8 p.m.; -Bald Knaba, ~ortlltld--Buhan p.m.
MulbeiTJ'. Rev. Clyde V. Bender· ODIST - Rev. Wllllam Alr&amp;OO,
and Fourtl: amdillo &amp;1!1· ' }1014. Rev. E. J. Grllllth,putor.
SOUTH BE111EL UNITED aon. putor. Sunday School, 9:30 PasiOr. Ralph ~encer, ~t.;
Seimol10 a.m., WclroblpMI'· SUndl;y ·S.hool, 9:30 a. m.; llol- METIIODIST- Worship, Hcond a. m.; Haymond Walb11rn, !qt. Eldon Week&amp;, All8'~ Worshlpser11 a.m.; 'lllelldll. evonlap .,. Wllfred. Sq&gt;L SUIJdl1 worablp and !outth Sonlay, 10:30 L m.;
MorniD&amp; worship, 10:30 L m.; vices, 9:30 Lm.j Sunday Sch~
8 p.m., Pra,yorandBIIleiCIIdf, service, 7:30 p, m. l'rllerm- Drat aDd ihlrdSundayo, 7:30p.m. EveDlug Senice, 7:30 p. m. Mid- 10:30 a.m.j Youth FeUOI'I'shlp.
RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE llWo TUOadll, 7:30 p. m., Mil- ......... hool 9 ..
Youtll wee11 oorvlce, Wedneadll, 7:30 6:30. Wednesday: Choir, 6:15 p.
1
.Po m.
m.; Bible stul;ly, 7:30.
- Rw. Uoyd D. ....... Frocl!ri'ek. cia..
5
SUDd&amp;y
Jr., paator, SuD d • Y' YOuth Fellowohlp, FrldaJ, 7:SOp. at T~Qera Plalno Unlted Melho- . FOIIEST RUN UNITED METII·
CHURCH OF CIURST - Mid·
p1101, 9:30 Lm.; mornllli-11 m. Ernoll Doeter, lee4erl Roc- dill Cltureh.
ODIST - Rev. Wendell G. Slut- clleport, 5th and Main. Jack
10•30 a.m • 70UDI pOD.. err:ed•Jr,, pnsldent.
.
·
,
"
• ·• • ·
.
. .. 4S&amp;)'NBIN -CHIJIICR
CIUS'JER CHUIICH OF OOD- lor, putor. Worshill oorvlce, 9 Seltea, olQJt. Bible School, 9:30
oonlee, e.u p.rn.,, .,• .,.. OF.
......... .. v•n . ~ o - Cbe~B-·"' - - L m. i sUnday School, 10 L DL a. m.; MondJw wonhlp, 10:30 L
oonleea, 7:30p.m. Wo4- _ . .
. -...,.,.... - · :
. • ·• - - ·
~ _,_, _ _ • Mrs. Fred Nease, &amp;cal
m.; Eftning worship, 7:30p.m.;
Eu.tav
itJ1Dc -"&lt;a, 7•0n W Va. .~ licl:aol, '10 oJlt. Suodll Scbool, 1:80 L
11'01"·
YiNERSvJLLE U N I T E D Prayer oenlce, WedneadiQ', 7 flo
"'
~'""'- x:..W.·~•.U a.D.&gt;o,a ap.· ohlp oervlce, u a. m.; - . . . METHODIST - Rev. WendeD m, Rev. Raulln Ml!-'er, po.W.
HEATH tJNli'D) I'IUIIIk. aatJ!C., .1:30J!1.ill.:lllblt . -, 7;tAJ P. Ill. Prayer aerY•
CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE
Max E. ~·· SllldJ aDd ~ .~.;Wid- ~ '1l • lo 1:30 p. m, YouGI Blllller• pastor. Sunday School, - Mlddlepcirt. 118v. Audry llfller •
Jamea Bnwlniital. .........,, 1'110 p.111o Cbllller·'l'fl!: - . . . ,........,, 7:30 p. 111o I L m.; Kelllolh WigJI&amp;OI, Sq)L ,paator, Loater Taylor,s..,I.Sun·
aebool ~ ....., tiaJWr, . - '173..tlJ8.
~ o(JWI, .llrat 8alllrdlll' r1 fllorohlp aecvlce, 10 a. m.
day Scbool, 9:311 L m.; Mornb1g
oc:bool, 9:30a.m.; _,._ t,;ABLEToN CIIVRCH -ltbwa- MCIIIIIOIIIb.
SYRActlSE CHURCH OF THE .WOl'fldp, 10:30 a.m.; J:mfor So10:30 a.m.;~ ·"""· liald. .Siiiday ~. ttat
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRIS- NAZARENE - Rev. A. E. Miller, cl~, 6:30 flo lll.i NYPS, 6:fl p.
8p.m.Cbolr,.._ a.'m.,llalph'COrl. !qt.'Worlldp 11AN - Jameo - . putor; paotor, Bob Moon, Sunday · m. Sunda,y Evqellut!• meetlnr.
I
1\'IICMadll, 7p.tll.,....,. lllftlee. 101110 a.llloand?:IOP. . Paul
School SuiiL Sunda,y School c1a.... 7:30 p, m. l'rllor meoii:I!J, Wed·..
9:30 Lm.; Morn- neldQ" I 7:30 g. m.
· t~c:::· Ben Phil- Prayer 11. lllioi-11. Prayer m..U,., 9ilitlll - · amdof achool, es tor
f
W-adll. I p.m.
'1(-adll, 'll30~m.
t:JOa.m.;IDOl'IIIJIIWO&lt;oldp10:4S (JW Worship, 10:30 LDLI NYPS
THE SALVATION All!oiY -&amp;1·
Sunda,y
6:30
p.m.
i
EvanplloUc
Y8Y
Ra,y S. Wlldlw. ctllcer In
_
Senlce Sunday 7:30p.m.; Mid- charlo. Suadal, 10 a.m.,l!oUSILVER RUN FREE WILL w..k Prayer - · Wedneo- neu moolbw; 10:30 a. m. SunBAP'I1S'I' - JleY. Cludllllllldna, dill' 7:30p.m.; llfaalcoUy Meet- diQ' Scbool. Yooaw Pooplo'o Lo·
. - - . Rfdlord Flnk,!UIIIl iD1 Sec:on1 Wedneadoy. or each lim, 7 p, m.; Salvallon mooi!Jw,
_
7:80 p. m.; Tburaday, 1 10 3 p,
Scllool ~ Sunday 111011111 7:30p.m.
Ca.n~er
MASON
BAPTIST
CHAPELm.;
Ladleo liciDe Losgue; 7p.m.
Scllool, 10 a, 111.1 WCII'II:Ip, 7:30
Thli
Rev.
lllrold
Cunnllqfham,
,Prep
c!uaao,
p. 111. Pn,yer IDHIIar. Tlmadll,
putor.
ChArleo
Lam1oor1,
SunMT,
MORIAil BAPTIST--7110 p. m. Choir pnctlce, Tuoodill' School &amp;.,~ Corner Second · dlejlort, of Fourth and
'
d&amp;Y.1P. DL
and P1111oroy SIL, Ma1011, W. Main s t . - Jackaon,..-w.
lr WILLIAM ~WlfkCE, p;P.S.
,••
..
~ CHURCH-K1. . VL; Suaclo,y school, 9:45 Llllol Sunda) Scbool, 9:tiJ L m.;lllom'
h,.
'
bury
Rood. Tho ljeY. Ill Slllaa, worohlp arvlee, IL Wednea- lJW -lllllp, 10:311a. m., Anlold
loot
IIJem,
·' ·
Be yOtir Clllll · ·~tb delee·. put:qi-. llabll1 ·ou-1,
dill' •'NIIIar. !raiaiJW ualon, ?; ~aq:~,FIRST BAPI'IST Suodll Seboal, 1:30 L DL 11'.... pra,yer
Uve.
· ·
•·
arvlce, 7:t5.
R 0 C K SPIUNGS UNITED JleY, Som,.l J. Jllokaon, pdior, ·
""' ..,tee, 10:tAJ L m. aDd

r1aa

=..:n=

~'WEBS

atuctr,

'

.E

-u-

t·~:.::~~'

-or.

:;;u;:O:,

·~.;: ~:::·

Plul---

t:Ti

«

.....

au.,..,

Pd. Pol :

Adv. By Fa•m.,s1iodllll.hrey. '

Frank W. Porter, Jr.,

GOF.GLEIN READY-MIX CO.
PHONE 992-3284

MIDDLEPORT

'

'·'

•

LYONS MARKET
"MEMBER OF TilE BIG 3"

GENERAL MERCHANDISE
TUPPERS PLAINS
PIL 667-3280

BOGGS EQUIPMENT

TINY'S FOODLAND

SALES - ALLIS CHALMBERS - SERVICE
FARM - INDUSTRIAL - LAWN - GARDEN
TUPPERS PLAINS

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

R. H. RAWLINGS SONS CO.
.OIDO'S OLDEST DODGE DEALER
MIDDLEPORT, OIDO

OHIO VALLEY BAKING CO.
BAKERS OF HOLSUM BREAD
MIDDLEPORT. 0.

,

s. s. -

llli

ollerlmeJJ. Pn.Jer

METHODIST
C. J, IAm!ay,
7:30 ..-w;
lllrold-Blaeklloa,
church
hool
.,__._.........,.
"·-•10
- - - - · -.....
worahlp, 9:30 L m.; church
- · 10:15 a.m.; O\'lnl118 worabiP, 7:80; IIYF SU!Idol, 8:30
p.m. Pra,y,r mnU~ and Bible
otud)', W11tl1"'!1, 7:10p.lllo ~
mlnla~ve· P"'IICII -Uar.
~I ~ l1lldl' td9IJth, 7:•
80 p.m.

mo~

P rScbool,
- oervlee,
Sun10 a.1:30
ila.Y
m.,L!ln. Gor- · Bllller, !qt. Wonldp
Hrvice lla. m. B11111111 TnlnlJW vnk.,, flrat ond IIO&lt;Ond SundaJi II 5:80 flo m.; lin. Mary
' Wondo, pnllldert. .
BY9ELL i!UN }'BEE METHoDIB'I''- Bev,CediJ, Wlae,paa- a\, Sunda) SeiJool, 9;80 a. m.;
M-.w WCil"lblp, 10130;~
110l!oldp,..
y - Poopla'o

RAY RIGGS, INC.

MARK V STORE

Uncoln - Mercury - Comet - English Ford

593-6601
85 N. COURT ST.

MIDDLEPORT, OIDO

ATHENS. 0.

WILLIS ANTHONY

LEIVING COAL COMPANY
PRODUCERS AND DISTRIBUTORS
OF IDGH GRADE COAL
WEST COI.UMBIA, W. VA.

PLUMBING AND IlEA TlNG
992-2550
MIDDLEPORT
240 LINCOLN ST. _,

ROYAL OAK PARK

ARNOLD'S SOHIO SERVICE

FAMILY RECREATION

ATHENS RD.
POMEROY, 0. 992-6098
A FRIENDLY PLACE TO BUY

SWIMMING

RACINE FUL-VALU MARKET

CROW'S STEAK HOUSE
KENTUCKY FRIED CIDCKEN
POMEROY, OIDO

TilE STORE WITII A HART

11---------------·---------------t
RACINE, OIDO

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE ,

MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE

REXALL DRUGS
WE FILL ALL DOCTOR'S PliESCRIPI10NS
992-2955
POMEROY,

CHURCH AND OFFlCE SUPPIJES.GIFTS
992-:641
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

ATrEND TilE CIIURCH OF YOUR QIOlCE

. NEW YORK aOTHING HOUSE

o:

BEN FRANKLIN STORE
POMEROY

Pit 99:!-34111

TAKE SOIIEONE 'WITH YOO TO CIIURCII
IN POMEROY OVER 90 YEARS
KER111T WALTON.

BAP·

.PU·

EBERSBACH HARDWARKO.
EVERYTHING IN HARDWARE
POMEROY, 0.

Co·u~irmal\

RIDENOUR SUPPlY
&gt;

WEST MAIN ST.
POMEROY ,0.
SUPPORT THE CHURCH OF YOUR CHOICE

BAKERS OF GOOD BREAD
HUNTINGTON, W. VA.

Mouth
Warning Signclls

seritce,

Pel. Pol. "dv .

HOYT'S SOHIO SERVICE

m,,

P.!ft-

HUMPHiEYI

HEINER'S BAKERY

l!W:

1:10 p,

VOTE FOR

Wlttt the hope it will, In amne measure, foster and help sustain that which is COOd In ramu.,
and community life, this reatureissponsoredbythe business ftnna and organizations whose DaDlea
appear below.

-..

....... _.. ·w-...,,

FOR THE FUTURE OF THE FAMILY FAY ...

It's Tim's move, and he is taking a long tilllt'·tbinlcing It over.
In cheea, if you're a good pb1yer, you don't plllf quickly. If yo\1 do,
your opponent may outwit you.
.
Militaey stratel)', they say, is be!Ji.d .on the rules of cheu. So
are many of the "higher IJl'l'!ll" In business and finance. Yet, when
.it.~omes to llfe .it&lt;!elf, O'i. rules of cheea apply in only a limited way.
l'ii life, you can't be totally objective. You can't exist on Iogie.alone.
The Church teaches that though we •urely need logic In order
to live successfully, we al80 need comJIIUI8ion, tolerance, love,
under•tanding, and the strength that comes with faith .
Although life is not a game, we muat have the help and strength
of the Church to discover those rulu that will determine our
ultimate destiny.

'

.

MorniiW' wor..
L m.; ""•'"""· School,
m. D·-~·.:n:ill,
~
"""~
...,.
1'llt DANVILi..E WESLEY AN
. ~outll FellOwship, 6:30 p, m. CHURCH _ Charleo Dozer, pao-

! • ..,, :
.&lt;
- ,~:10:30 L

Strategy

;:.N~:.~:.~::·:!:

·. Directorv
fior
.J
~~ , ·. Area Churches .
~l
·:::::::::::m.~:;:;;; w.;:•w~::::--~Q..:·:~o::~{
~

',)- :..

rar

SOUTHERN OHIO NEEDS SENATOR COLLINS

NilON- AGNEW
~:~n.i P~:~id

SBILLIDIS

Ho segment of our socieiy or uction of our District
escapes his ottenfion . He toh1 pride in legislative
accomplishment for our area and. his con~tituen!s .
He believes by improving our sectton of Oh1o, he 11
helpinv move Ohio forward as a I 1 State in the Notion .

RE-ELECT

Authg ri nt:l

NET FARM INCOME--· You Can Trust the Democratic Party

He is an EFFECTIVE letislator. He warh fa brin1
to u • many equal advantages enjoyed by our financially stronger neithbors of narth.rn Ohio. Hh leadership and seniorify hove meant millions of additi.onal dollars in •tate funds for Improved education,
hithways, rec:rHtlanal facilities, state institutions,
and other improvements for Southern Ohio.

•

•

How has a11iculture fared under Democratic and Republican administrations?
What has happened to farm income under the Democrats and under the
Republicans?
Just look at the record in the chart below-and remember who your friends are.
He served fwo yeart In the Ohio House of Representatives and has served siJtt•n years in the Ohio
Senate.'

. " 7 - Thli llall¥ Sentinel, Pllllervy-lollddl-'o 0., Frldll, N.,..ber 1, liM
.:::::::O.i:::::!-m:::::?o::::::::::::::;t.&gt;;~~::'.:~·~ ..
.
- . ,-·.-.
OLD DEXTER CONGREGA-

\~'

J~
ttte Athens State Hoapital for the
55 veterana oonlloed there. The
par11 Is plaMed for Nov. 14 and
members are asked to make candy and cooldes and provide gilts
for game prize&amp;. A donation of
$5 was made to qply to the ex- tanded.
Flower bulbs of yellow have
been p!UIIed to make &lt;1 spring
11 Garden ot Gold" in OOservance
Co-Leader
r:6 the 50th anniversary of the
Amerlcao Legion.
A thank-you note was read
Queen of the Month
from the Harry Allen famJ.ly and
The Meigs Tops Knotchera get.~well cards were IW1t to sevcrowned Co-Leader Marie Birch- eral members who are ill. The
field this week as the umonthly par11 at the Chillicothe VoterDR. RIDGWAY IS WELL QUALIFIED
queen" with a nine pound loss.
Johnson
Cecelia Mitch was 11 Q.Ueen of
For The Position of Coroner- 8y His Educationthe week" with a five pound loss .
Frances Hysell had to take
al Back11ound and By His Experience - Accord·
home the pig, and Judy Snowden
Mrs. Garnet Jolmson wl.s hos..
ln1 To Recent State Law Requirements.
and Ruth Needs tied for t h e tess for the October meeting of
"trough." Frances Haggy lost the Ladies Auxlliary of the 011 ve
1. B. A.-Musldngum College, Hew Concord, Ohio.
10 pomds in three weeka to win Fire Dept. at the tlre house with
2. D.O.-Kirksville College of Osteopathy and Surtery
the 10 pound contesl There a.re Mrs. Ruth DUlon. Mrs. Eagle,
3. Hove been practicln~ medicin• In th• Pom•roy area
only three people left In the Mrs. Mary Alice Blae, Mrs. Nell
since 1954.
towel contest which ends in two Wllson and a guest. Mn. Eagle's
4. Attend yearly post-~raduate seulons .
5. Member of many organh:otions, religloua, civic and
weeks.
sister, attendi • •
medical.
New members joining t h 1 11
Games were conducted by Mrs.
6. As a qualifl•d licensed physician In the State of
month were Doris Hensler, Hel- WUson with prizes awarded to
Ohi"o, I would fill th• requirements for this oHic•,
en Hill and Frances Haggy .
Mrs, Dillon, Mrs. Blse, and Mn.
In accordance with a recently pou•d State low.
Jotmson. Door prlzea were won
by Mrs. Eagle and Mrs. Dll~
HAS 20 DAY LEAVE
lon. Plans were made to visit
YOUR VOTE WILL BE APPRECIATED!
HARTFORD Pvt. Denver the Elmwood Nursing Home ln
n, Gibbs is spending a 20-da,y November, when Mrs. Martha
Pol. Adv . Pd. Fo• By John Ridgway
leave with his rather, Charles
Durst will be the hostess.
"'--Gibbs, and hi&amp; sister, Doma.
Pvt. Gibbs had basic training at
Fort Campbell, K,y, , where he
spent 8 weeks andthenwastrans·
rerred to Fort Sill, Okla., for
8 weeks to complete Advanced
Individual Training in Artillery.
Alter his leave time ttome, Pvt.
Gibbs is guing to Fort Oil:, New
Jersey, the shipping center to
Germany. He Is expecting to be
in Germany 13 months.

Crowned

Vote For and Help Re-Ekct

I XI

ani lloopltal for unlll

nJRNITURE AND APPLIANCES.
. I'HQIIE 9~ .
CHESTER, 0.

'

F.J. WALLACE. JEWQt
BULOVA \I!ATCIIES- SALES A SI}MCE
SECOND
MIDDLEPORT

�Sentinel Pomeroy-Middleport, o., Frlda.Y, November 1, 1968
_...~...
'
bera from other area yuuw 1e1~

Youth Meeting
IA
. . STICE He /d Recent/y
CHIEF JU

FT

T

District Officer Speaker

•

:=..eott,.~

meetlnJ atoome

Rad!ord announced that a
singing group from tile llldlanola
church 1n eolumbua would be
Mary

present at a future meeting.
The group ls aWl taking or·
ders
for Christmas carda, the
The regular meeting ot t h e
CHIEF JUSTICE
proceed•
of which will Ill&gt; toRock ~rings United Methodist
SIHCE 1962
wards
sponsorship
of a toretan
A9116.5, ma"ied,
Youth Fellowship was held ~n­
1'1115 .&amp; 10n1 and
day evening at the church with child.
lOgrandchildre n
The program was in charge of
the president, Connie Radford,
General pro(
Connie
and Judy Radl'ord. T h e
I ice o t I a w
in charge.
(1928 -48 ) e• ~ oep t
The meeting opened with pra,y- theme of the program was "Can
while in Army
er by Mrs. llugh Bearhs. T h e I Fashion My Own World~' A
(19U--46)
scripture reading was taken from short skit waa presented and
Stott tep ru e~
Psalms 86, verses 1 through 12. questions regarding Important
lolin (19JJ .J.tl
Shohr Hll _ Srhool ld. Pre1ident (19&lt;(2)
The roll was called by Eddie decisions were asked members.
United Slole1 S en~:~tor ( 1946)
The meeting closed with the
Abbott, each member present
PREFERRED BY 3235
answering with a Bible verse. M. Y.F. benediction.
TO 938 IN 0Ff10AL
Songs were sung, led by the
REFERENDUM OF
song leader, Sharon Brawly.
Georgia was the last of the
The secretary's report was Confederate states to he reOHIO BAR ASSOCIATION
admitted to the Union, July
given by Mary Lou Radford.
LAWYERS
19, 1870.
(t
was
decided
to
invive
mem--·~~~ · ~11110.
..,

21 YUAS ON
SUPIIMI COUIT

Elllrth District was

Mrs.

Braxton returned

The DJatrlct Communl!l Ser-

to ClnctrmaU 'llle&amp;day after vis-

vice Chairman, Nrs. 0. A. Martin, waS speaker when the Ra·
cine Arneri can Legioo Auxiliary
met at the Post Home recently
w:lth Mra. Paul Lawrence, pres-

iting here a week with her al.s.
ter, Mrs. Con YCUlg. S h e
came especially for the CWiera1 services of. her brother, Fred
Jackson .

Mr&amp;. John Fultz and cblldreo,
Anita and Marc, are apending
the weekend in Portsmouth with

Mr. and Mrs. flarold Vogalaong
and daughter, Melinda.
Mrs. Richard Vaughan a n d
children are visiting in Charleston, W. Va.toda,ywlthhermother,
Mrs. Elizabeth Par1011s.

Ident. preoldlniiMrs. ldarlln spoke briefly on
the project of havln&amp; a party o1

or

I

he

amounced

..

Mrs. VIrgil Walkerwereappalnt.
ed 11 color I!UIJ'(Is and Mro. John
Boyd ao Junior ~.edYIUeo chairman.

for December 19.
Sneral member• are enroll.
ed in a CIYn Defense training
The unit will have 3' x 5' flap
elau belna: held at the Post Home for sale, UKI those deslrtng one
Wider the leadenblp of Walter may got In contact with M r a.
Cleland. Mn. - r t Beegle and;. John Boyd

At Racine Post Auxiliary

..--.-

penae involved.
AJm, members are being ask-

ed to coUect all jewelry, bap

-w~t;i

or purses to be taken to the De-

will ..be a
project for the Junior members.
A film wiD be oho!m at tile
Sallobury School on Nov. 12 con·
cemlng cystic flbroa11 and is
open to the public. The 8 et 4Q
0{ Melgo Cotnt,y 11 ..ry acUve
in this cause.
Racine was a quota unit at the
Fall Conference held at L a k e
Hope l.A)dge. A few menDera atcember party. This

NOVEMBER 5
1968

FOR MEIGS COUNTY CORONER

lxlJohn H. Rldgway,D.o.l
DEMOCRAT

ROBERT CLARK
FOR

MEIGS COUNTY COMMISSIONER
Second Term-Republican-Experienced &amp; Capable
YOUR VOTE AND SUPPORT DEEPLY APPRECIATED!

Pd . Pol. Adv .

Mrs. Sam Bolin of Athens and
Mrs. Edith Burrows of The
Plains were Sunday guests of
Mrs. Welby Whaley. Others vis.
iting with Mrs Whaley &amp;In~
were Mr . and Mrs. Dana Howett, Mrs. Gla&lt;b's Cuckler, and
Mrs. Karl Grueser ·
Mr . and Mrs. Bill Knopp and
Mr. and Mrs. Kemteth Story of
Dayton spent the weekend here
with Mr . and Mrs. Dana Howell.
I
Miss Yuriko TSWlado of Cal •
tornia is the guest of her sister,·
Mrs. Ernest Harris, Minersvllle.

(
TO SERVE LUNCH

Who Turned Off
The Lights?
YOU WILl: If you don't vote for
RENEWAL of the 1/2 mill levy for
POMEROY Village current expenses--The proceeds ol this levy are used only
~ ... _
to.J.~IJ~Litf!lll ig btl.. ,_.,_ .........-·..,. -. - SO VOTE

I

FOR THE TAX LEVY

A renewal of a tax for the benefit of Pomeroy Village for the purpose of Current
Expenses at o rote not exceeding one· holf mill for each one dollar of valuation,
which amounts to 5 cents foreoch one hundred dollars of valuation, for five years.

An election day lunch

\

wjlt' be

served at the Masonic l..od&amp;e Hall

in Chester sponsored by t h e
W,S, C.S. o( the Chester United
Methodist Ctwrch. The menu includes plate ll01ches, hot dogs,
sloppy joe&amp;, vegetable soup, pie,
cake, coffee and Kooi -Aid.

REVIVAL ANNOUNCED
The Racine Church of the Naz-

arene is having Rev. II. A. Wilcox, paster of the Point Pleasant Church of the Nazarene, as
guest speaker from November 4
through 10. Services will begin
at 7:30 p.m. The pastor and
congregation invite the public .

f'

-~

.-Jt·

,:. ~· ·

7.-.·' " ..

If\

~

S od hou s e s
onct: dutted ~he ,

Vote For

Ralph Warden_Ours
FOR
MEIGS COUNTY COMMISSIONER

SPEAKER ANNOUNCED
The Rev . William Mootgom.
ery or Waverly will beg u e s t
speaker Smday morning at the
Middleport First United Presbyterl.Jp ~u rctJ.
•· · •

Republican Candidate .. ... ... . . .......... Qualified &amp; ~xperienced
·. YOU!!, vo,~,E

plA l nll sLAte~

where wood WBI!I
'j t1t
scarce. They are
nuw all ~~:one , hut 0111~ has heen
reco muruct ed a t th e Harold Warp
l'ion eer Villagt&gt; at Minden. in
south central NebrBska. where
neBrly two millio n people have
marveled t&gt; t the ingenutty of our
pioneer forebears who built thia
greBL country of ou111 .

T

Mrs.
is
Auxiliary Hostess

&amp;

,SU~P,.C?R,'f . s1.N~~~~.LY S!!~1cm~, 1,,

' ' ''"

. , • •• , • '"'-'

Pd. Pol. Adv. •. t

FELLOWSHIP HELD
Adult fellowship groups of the
St. Paul Lutheran Church, Pom eroy, and the St. Paul Lutheran
Churcll, New Haven, W, Va. , had
a hayride and wiener roast Satur~ nigtrt at the Pete Thoren
home near Pomeroy.

Save Your Farm Program •••••

VILLAGE OF POMEROY

Remember:

Pd . Pol. Adv.

The Nixon-Benson Years?
-lllhen "Ianning the Iarmer" was 1111 for the money-lenders
and buyers of cheap farm raw material?
-When farm families "stren&amp;tflened their moral fiber" by
glvine up income?

LET'S LOOK AT THE RECORD SINCE 1900
Republicans

Democrats

Presidents

7

5

Year In Office

33

36

Wars

0

4

Balanced Budgets

20

7

Total Deficits

$20 Billion

$331 Billion

Personal Tax Increases I
Personal Tax Cuts

,_
; i•/·
'·t' ·''
~

•
fttf
,, ·,

14

8

6.

S.notor 0.•1op C.llios Is a VETERAN logislato•.

He is a WORKING levislator, hovint sr.onsored over
120 bills which have been enodeclinta ow, lncfudlnt
onr 30 measures during the 1967-68 session of the
Ohio General Assembly.
Senator Collins is an EXPERIENCED legislafar.
Third rankin9 senator in the kate of Ohio, he is Chairman of the Education, Health &amp; Welfare CommiHee,
member of the policy-ll'tokint Rules Co11miHee, and
member of Urban &amp; Hivhway AHairs Committee.

THIS TIME,
VOTE LIKE YOUR
WHOLE WORLD
DEPENDED ON IT.
For By Meill l

C 011 .,t~

Unite d C iti u nl F or

Nl"o""A~ ~w , D~:~ o

28-

'

IIi-

X
Miller , C hoir man

NOV. 5

State Sl11tor
OAKLEY C. COLLINS

C oll i n• f~:~r Sengte C ~:~mmitlee

MORNING STAR UNITED ..1120. Mld-WMI&lt; _ . . mottMETIIODIST CHURCH - Rev. ·ltlr; W ' ldll, 7;30 flo m.,Kra,
.WIDlam Alrooa, pastor; John ~ 110~. ctuo leoder,
loy Fnnda, 5wid!IY S,Chool Sq&gt;~ lble, ~~ Roy Van Meter, Alii. ·. POMERoy LOWER IJGIIT
SUI1iiiQ' S.IIOOI, 9o30 L m. Clwrch Sl4lt. &amp;molay SciiOOI, 9:4.5 L Dl.j Cliurcll - JlaTI-YilfO Rood woi-ohlp, io:46 L m.; JleY, Roy Tlllor, putor, Nara
aervlcaa llrat and tlllrd SuniiQ'
!q:l. llulldl,y .
tollowlrw SUnclll SchooL SOcond Pra,yar meeUJW, 7:30 P· m. Scbool, 9;30 a.m.;WOl'fldpaanand Fourth SlturciiQ' evonlnp, . Thuradll, Fred E. Smith, Ill· leo, 10;30 a. m.; Ennflw - 7:30 flo m., Clurch SerriceL
Ieider. Youtll FeUowoldp, 7:30 alilp, 7;30 flo , m, l'rller anol
P- "'- SUIJdl1,
Prolaa ·oervlco, Tburadll, 7:10
MT,
HERMON
·
.
UJ-l1TED
.
.
p.
m,
UNITED FAITII CHURCH of
BI!ETIIREN
IN
CHRIST
RA.v.
WESLEYAN
UNITED METIION - Setllemonl, SUnday School
Me:rze!Smlth,pastor.Sundat
DIST
CHURCH,
Had• - , If,
&amp;.t&gt;erlntendent, R o y JohnSon, .
School,
9:30
a.
m.;
Ruuell
SpenDale
McClure.
pastor.
SUIJdl1
Youtll m.e~~nr. &amp;:3o, SUnday.
cer, ~L; Alfred Wolle, aulot.- School, 9:30 L 111.1Worohlpar""
.
·am. Mor-.lling Sermon 11 I. m., Ice, 10:30 L m.t BJble Stu:l)r,
. SYRACUSE FIRST UNITED eYOn!JW Blrmon, 7:30p. m.,alter· W-.day, 7:30 p, lll.i U.M. Y.F.
PRESBYTERIAN - Rev. L1noon natlJW each Sunday. Clan meet- 7 p.m. eoch&amp;molay;Junlura.otr

"

'*I

ilorm.v

. .. · : · :
.
ALF!!ED UNrrED METHOCHRISTIAN SCIENCE Servlceo·
~ '! DIST, Poor I A. casto PO &amp;lor at ·315 Mala 81,_~, ~ Pl-dt.
1
!blday School at 9:aiJ, Uo~d &amp;mi!Jxa.U·o:'ltl.1 Weclooadlla .
1l' , DU!ln811', Supt. _ \foroldplllrV. a P.m. Allwelemna.
If !ceo at 10:45', wtm tho Rev. Cu').· to ' - Wedne'"""'
·•·- evening pray. CHURCII'-118v.
THE RUTLANI/
- CO!OIUNITY
Tllllapue :::

!-

f

f

l~· ,

.er HrVlce• at 7:45.

_

BETHANY UNITED METHO-

··, [DJST CHURCH- Rev. Paul A.

,f, ,....
Sellen, pastor.
9 30

...

tor. 9.mdiJ lebDol, 8:30 a.m..:

::~"':'ce."~':

ne&amp;dayprayer meellni. 7:30p.m. Stebbins, paator. Sundl1achool, lrw; 11 Lm., aJtematiJW SUrdi..Y
9:30 Lm.J wOHhlp service, 10:- momlrca. David Holter, c la • 1
-~•Sunday nll!ll -....... 7:30.
30 a.m.; Bible otud)' and prllj'er . leoder. Christian E-...-. 7:30

j

LOTTRDIGE UNITED IIETH· tor; Adn lllrlck, Sunday School
t OOIST- /l)'orlhlp,llntandtblrd !qJerlntendent. SUIJdl1 Sc-,
r t So:ndlla of each month, 10:t5 a. 9:30 L m.; Wonhlp nnlce,
aecorll and fourth &amp;aye, 10:30 L m. Youth •aDd Junior
; ~ 7:30 p. m. Sunday School, 9:46 youtl: oorvlce, 6:45 p. m. EYO~L m. Chrllllan El&gt;leovor, third n!qr worohlp, 7:30. Prayer and

fm.;

;saturda1 or each IIIClDh.

_
· C. LAUREL CLIFF FREE IIETJI..
,!:OllSI' CHURCH - Sunday Scf9:30 L m., JDOI'IIinK worsbJil,
110:10 L m., evenlor woc•hiP,
t 7:30 JTO
n moo' w.......... a.rtoL
""-J
"'
·1 Youtll Cruoadera, 6:30 flo m.
Pl'&amp;l'er meetlnro 7:80 p,m,
uradll, choir Practice, 7 flo
11. Eusene Gill, PaRlor; Phil
,VIse, !lcJt.
DEXTER CIIUIJCH OFClliiiSr
-Rnnnle RusoeU, pastor. No,.
mn C. Will,' •~t&gt;t- Sunday Sc-1
8:30 o. m.; WorobJil lenlce,
10:30 L m. Chrllllan &amp;ldeavor

-.... s. s.

aenlce, Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.

p. m. ever)' other SUn111f evenlqr. Jeu Sex- prealdert.

POMEROY Flll8l' BAFrlST
- . - WUts, !b&gt;diJ oebool
..__ Somdl,y oebool, 1:30 Lm.;
IIIOrlllDil ' worahlp, 10:10 a.m.;
BYF, 6 p.m. Blblo IIIUilr, Wed-

Pnyer meeting, 7:30 p.m. every
Wedneadoy. ll&lt;lud meeUJW, 7:30
e, m., ftrot
POMEROY
CHURCH OF CIIRIST - Rev, W.
II, Pllnin, peEr. Patrlek D.
Wond, !qt. SlildiQ' Sehool, 1:15
L m,; Worohlp, 10:25 L m.
Yautll choir rebearsal, Monday,
6:30 p, m, Mra. Mervin Jlllrl,
dlreetor; Senior chol.rrebearsal,
Tburaday, 7:30p.m., Mrs. Paul
Neuo, director. Tbur&amp;day, aU
ila,y, Buoy Bee qulltlnr parll In
cburch BOCtal room,
RUTLAND CHURCH OF

DIIdlr,

praloe, Wednooday, ?:SO.
UNtrED FAITH CHURCH- .
N - Sltllemenl - Rnbort E,
Sllllth, Sr., pU(I)r, lbldiQoSCbool
·~ Kenllllb llltooR.
Sunday
School, 9:80
~.... ..........
, .. llloj - and
1'"" -nee, 10' 30 a. m.
7:80 p, m. aach Sundl,)o,llfckeak .
pra,yer meetlqr, Wedneldll, 7130
p, 1llo
.

7 p.m.; choir praetlee,

8;30 p.m., W""'!adll·

praedce, WednelldQ, 8:15 .P.m.;
Senlot' Choir praetlee, 1burl!ldly,
7:30 p, m.; Weal01011 Service
Gulld, fourth Ml:olay Mch month
at 7:30 p. m.; Hippy HusUoro
c:luo meetlnl, fOIII'II\. F'rldaJ of
eech mmtll, 6 flo m.; W.S. C.S.,
oecond f'rklll each montb, 7:30
p. OLi Oflletal Boord, Mondl,y each month, 7:30 flo m.
PORTLAND UNITED METIIODIST CHURCH - W, Dale Moe1urc. putoo:, SUnclll School,
9:30 L m.; Worahlpaervtee, 7:30
p. m.;Ofllclalllaord, llrotSundll
each mcdh, 8:30 p. m.
OAK GROVE UNITEDMETHODIST CHURCH - W, Dale MoClura. paotor. Sun11Q' School,ltly)
9 30
:30 I. m.; Worship oer co, 1
L m., ftrat and third &amp;.uldays

Jh. UNION BAPTIST - Rev.
CecU Cox, paotor. SUnday School
ouporintondeoK, Ear I Stargy,
Sundll School 0 1:45 a.m.· Sundll
- worah,..,
0.. 7•30• W
ev"'-..'u""
• , edno5diQ'
lind Bible atudy 7:30
Pnyer
'
o.~TTON UNITED METII0- CHRIST - EugeDB Urderwood,
DIST CHURCH - W. Dale Mceach mcri
••;-.h.c,-,~
paotor; V, H, Braley, Sqlt.; SUn- · THE RUTLAND "METiiO~T
Clurc. pa1tor. Sunday School, dQ school, 9:30 L m.; com=~
10:30 a. m.1 Worohlp oorvlee, munion and worahJp service, 10:- CHURCH - Rev. C. J, IAJnley.
aM~..... Th
111ator. Church School, 9:30a.m.;
Senlceo weakll at 9-.,39 a.~ 9:30 L m., second and fourth 30
a.m.; prayer m....., ... oe.
urs- Worship service, 10:30 a. m,
·l'reacldqr, flrat and lhlrdSuJIIW Sunday each mcrih._
daJ, 7:30p.m.
l 1 - by Charlea RuaatU II OIESTER CHURCH OF THE
CHESTER METHODIST Charge
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST a.
m,
.
NAZARENE
_
Rev.
Herbert
Rev.
Pearl
A..
Cuto,
putor,
Pmneroy
- Harrisonville Road.
9130
CHiSTER:
Worablp,
9
a.
m.;
John
Webster,
pastor; Ray Ut~evening.
BRADFORD CHURCH OF Grate, paator. Worohill oorvlce,
. RACJIIE FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST - Cblrleo a-en, paa· 11 L m. and 7:30 p.m., Sunday. • SWtdQ School, 10 a.. m.; Ml't. tle, Sunday school sl418rirUnTHE NAZARENE "'niiQ'Scbool ' lor, Rfdlord Gilkey, &amp;;~~. !UI• Sunday School, 9:30 Lm. Rfch- Wald SpeDcer, Supt. FLAT- dent. Swxlay school, 9:30 a.m.;
1:30 I. m.; - . _ Woroldp, dill' Sc~, 9:30 a.m.; Mor!Uc ard Barton, ~. Cborles Bla- WOODS: Church School, SundloY, . morning wonhlp, 10:30; Sunday
IO:JO a. .. m.; Eoonl:w Worship,. Worohlp, 10:30 L m.; EveniJic oell, uoi.-~tPrayermeet.- 11 a.m., Jolm Bally, supt. Wor· evening service, 7; prayer meet7138 p. m. l'rllor oenlceo, 7:30
lldp Mrrfce alternates wtttl Al· ing, Wednesda.y, 7 p.m.
worllldp, 7 p,m. Wedneadoylllhle (JW, Wedneadoy, 7:30p.m.
p. .... Wotlnelldll. SUrlday Scbool . ~. 7:30 p. Ill.
fred ond Flatwondo. Service•
ST:-joJiNos LIITHERAN-Brl·
~ Paulino McC!lnl¢o11GAMZED cuURCH.'Cir'
HARRISONVILLE PRESBY; llulldl,y mon:1ng or evening, of
each week.
an E,.el, putor. Morning wor•
toek. - . 118v; Morrie M. Jeauo Chrlll of Wtter D 11 TERIAN - Mrs. Norma Lee,
SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST sblp, 9 a. m.; Sunday School,
PLAINS UNITED Sointo, Portland • Blc:liiO lload. Sundll School &amp;t&gt;ertntondeJc: Church - POmeroy, Mulberry 10:30 a. m,
;lo!ETHODIST - McrnlivWoroblp Sunday S.hoal, 9:30a.m.; 11om- jb:da,y School, 9:30 L m. ~ He1gbtJ Rood, north of Veterano
ST. PAUL'S LUTHERAN -32
'f:30 L m. at former EUB build- lJW WorsbJil, 10:30 a.m. !ilnday daY aarvlce, 8 p. m., the Re • • Memorial Holpltal. l'hlllljl Gag- . E. Second st., l'llmeroy, Sunday
""' ElQ)anded Sundll Schooloeo- O'IOIIJDK Hrrice at 7, w-...v ~Donahue 0{ Mlddlepod er, pastor, Wedneada,y, 7:30 p, Scb:tol,lO a.m.;Worahtpserrice
11 L m,
:.I• for nursecy to grade olx ovonlng ·· pnyor oenlce, 7:30. ·
' m., Bible Study andprayermeet· -SYRACUSE UNITED METHOehlldrenat Iormor Matlxxllotan- Puulr, Elder .F~~. J, ~ JEHOVAH'S Wfl'Ni!llSI!l!, Lar- (JW. Saturday: School,
... at 9:30 L m., Mro. J a m e I borlo · .
.
· t ry Clll'tllbln, pnskllllemlnlater, 10:30 L m.; Worship, 9:30 a. m. DIST CHURCH - Rev. Paul A.
FIBST UNITED Pft&amp;g~YTEk- Sellers, pastor. Swda,y School,
'Stout, cbUdren'&amp; o~nt.
SltldaJI Bible lechiN, 9;30a.m,;
IAN
Cil'tJRCH _ Mlddleport, 9:30 1. m., Ben Qul&amp;enberry,
. . Church Sc-, ldullaand
BRADBURY CHURCH OF Wateb TOWer
10:30 a. m,;
Guest
Minister, JIIIW8 Buchan- St.pt. Morning won hip, 10:30 L
joutll, 10:30 L m.; Junior blab, CIIRIST _ Sunday aebool, 9:30L Wednoiiiii.Y: Bible ~. 7 flo m.
an, Sunday School &amp;;&gt;erinten- m., ftrst and third Sunday&amp; each
aentor bi8J: and Y - ldulla m. Gl•lEvau, ~q:t. Clllrcb aar- Tburlldll: lflnllll7 achool, 7 flo
dent. Sunday School, 9:30 a.m. m~ Eveniog evaogeiistic
meet In tormerMethodlstChiD'eh 'Yieea, 10:30 Lm.; .venlnl IW· m. Service meel.rw, 8 P.m.
!!"'Sunday Church School. Boyd .reo, 7:30; Wotlneadll, prayer
MASON CHURCH OF CIIRIST- Worship Service, 10:30 a.m. service, 7:30 p. m., second and
Choir practice, 7:30 p.m. Wed- rourth Sundlls.
~~aclme•, youth ......... ~ndent; --• ceo, 7 :30 p.m.
liiUer
_
. st. - EYwiCII Weeldey,
CARMEL UNITED METHO.foot ldg!: cleso and IOIIlw adulll
..-w. Bible otud)' cluoeo,Sun- 110adoy.
DIST
CHURCH - ll!ov. Paul A.
IIJWln former EUBbulldll18,
W!AH-"' . tJim'Dl .~0- ~•1-0J!t~.Worshlpand-b· ,
ASBURY UNITI!D ' METHO'
VIneyard, a11&gt;1- Ad:lJ'(Il!:.~' I)IS'J' clrOBCH :;; 'l'HOCblnl; '0:10o5'S a. m,; SuniiQ' ennlqf DIST, llrra&lt;Uie - Rev. WendeD Sellers, Pastor. SWi!a)' ·School,
lllahpartoy,lastlo!A:ndlleoch 3G a.m., Firat and Soc:ond am. aanlee, 7:30.
Bible IIUdl' Studer, s-ator. &amp;n:ll,y Scltool, 9:30 L m.; Wayne Rou&amp;h, Sot&gt;!.
Youtll Followllllp ·each dqa 0{ each -~ 'll1lrd aDd cluaaa, Wednelldll, 7:30p.m, • 10 1. m.; can-oil Norris, Supt. Morning worship, 10:30 L m.,
Q:nday, 6 p. m.ln former Moth- FourthSundaya eachmonll:, WorGRACE EPI!ICOPAL-E. Main WCII"ohW oenlce, 11 L m.; MYF secord IJXI fourthSuflla,ysofeach
ndl&amp;t bullcllng. Dlolrletyoutllral• ahlp Hnlce at 7:30p.m.; Wed- St., l'llmerq)'.ClJarchoelDII•eb 8 p. DL Sunday. Pra,yer meeting month. Evenlt:evangelisdc
service, 8 p. . eoond a n d
t flrstMondi1oleochmonth.
110adll eveolnp ai7:30,_Pr.,er Sunday at 10:30 a.m. Third lb:· Wednesday, 8 p. DL
third Sundll •
:- LETART UNli'ED IIIE'l'HO· and Bible~·- __
dill' 11 each 110 lllOI'ti!Da
POMEROY CHURCH OF TilE
CHURCH - Firat and SocFREEDO)f GOSPEL ¥J&amp;"'ON oervlce, HoJ,y -lillian. 7:30 NAZARENE- Corner llniooand
ENTERPRISE UNITED METH·
SUndoy&amp; preachln&amp; 8 p.m.; -Bald Knaba, ~ortlltld--Buhan p.m.
MulbeiTJ'. Rev. Clyde V. Bender· ODIST - Rev. Wllllam Alr&amp;OO,
and Fourtl: amdillo &amp;1!1· ' }1014. Rev. E. J. Grllllth,putor.
SOUTH BE111EL UNITED aon. putor. Sunday School, 9:30 PasiOr. Ralph ~encer, ~t.;
Seimol10 a.m., WclroblpMI'· SUndl;y ·S.hool, 9:30 a. m.; llol- METIIODIST- Worship, Hcond a. m.; Haymond Walb11rn, !qt. Eldon Week&amp;, All8'~ Worshlpser11 a.m.; 'lllelldll. evonlap .,. Wllfred. Sq&gt;L SUIJdl1 worablp and !outth Sonlay, 10:30 L m.;
MorniD&amp; worship, 10:30 L m.; vices, 9:30 Lm.j Sunday Sch~
8 p.m., Pra,yorandBIIleiCIIdf, service, 7:30 p, m. l'rllerm- Drat aDd ihlrdSundayo, 7:30p.m. EveDlug Senice, 7:30 p. m. Mid- 10:30 a.m.j Youth FeUOI'I'shlp.
RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE llWo TUOadll, 7:30 p. m., Mil- ......... hool 9 ..
Youtll wee11 oorvlce, Wedneadll, 7:30 6:30. Wednesday: Choir, 6:15 p.
1
.Po m.
m.; Bible stul;ly, 7:30.
- Rw. Uoyd D. ....... Frocl!ri'ek. cia..
5
SUDd&amp;y
Jr., paator, SuD d • Y' YOuth Fellowohlp, FrldaJ, 7:SOp. at T~Qera Plalno Unlted Melho- . FOIIEST RUN UNITED METII·
CHURCH OF CIURST - Mid·
p1101, 9:30 Lm.; mornllli-11 m. Ernoll Doeter, lee4erl Roc- dill Cltureh.
ODIST - Rev. Wendell G. Slut- clleport, 5th and Main. Jack
10•30 a.m • 70UDI pOD.. err:ed•Jr,, pnsldent.
.
·
,
"
• ·• • ·
.
. .. 4S&amp;)'NBIN -CHIJIICR
CIUS'JER CHUIICH OF OOD- lor, putor. Worshill oorvlce, 9 Seltea, olQJt. Bible School, 9:30
oonlee, e.u p.rn.,, .,• .,.. OF.
......... .. v•n . ~ o - Cbe~B-·"' - - L m. i sUnday School, 10 L DL a. m.; MondJw wonhlp, 10:30 L
oonleea, 7:30p.m. Wo4- _ . .
. -...,.,.... - · :
. • ·• - - ·
~ _,_, _ _ • Mrs. Fred Nease, &amp;cal
m.; Eftning worship, 7:30p.m.;
Eu.tav
itJ1Dc -"&lt;a, 7•0n W Va. .~ licl:aol, '10 oJlt. Suodll Scbool, 1:80 L
11'01"·
YiNERSvJLLE U N I T E D Prayer oenlce, WedneadiQ', 7 flo
"'
~'""'- x:..W.·~•.U a.D.&gt;o,a ap.· ohlp oervlce, u a. m.; - . . . METHODIST - Rev. WendeD m, Rev. Raulln Ml!-'er, po.W.
HEATH tJNli'D) I'IUIIIk. aatJ!C., .1:30J!1.ill.:lllblt . -, 7;tAJ P. Ill. Prayer aerY•
CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE
Max E. ~·· SllldJ aDd ~ .~.;Wid- ~ '1l • lo 1:30 p. m, YouGI Blllller• pastor. Sunday School, - Mlddlepcirt. 118v. Audry llfller •
Jamea Bnwlniital. .........,, 1'110 p.111o Cbllller·'l'fl!: - . . . ,........,, 7:30 p. 111o I L m.; Kelllolh WigJI&amp;OI, Sq)L ,paator, Loater Taylor,s..,I.Sun·
aebool ~ ....., tiaJWr, . - '173..tlJ8.
~ o(JWI, .llrat 8alllrdlll' r1 fllorohlp aecvlce, 10 a. m.
day Scbool, 9:311 L m.; Mornb1g
oc:bool, 9:30a.m.; _,._ t,;ABLEToN CIIVRCH -ltbwa- MCIIIIIOIIIb.
SYRActlSE CHURCH OF THE .WOl'fldp, 10:30 a.m.; J:mfor So10:30 a.m.;~ ·"""· liald. .Siiiday ~. ttat
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRIS- NAZARENE - Rev. A. E. Miller, cl~, 6:30 flo lll.i NYPS, 6:fl p.
8p.m.Cbolr,.._ a.'m.,llalph'COrl. !qt.'Worlldp 11AN - Jameo - . putor; paotor, Bob Moon, Sunday · m. Sunda,y Evqellut!• meetlnr.
I
1\'IICMadll, 7p.tll.,....,. lllftlee. 101110 a.llloand?:IOP. . Paul
School SuiiL Sunda,y School c1a.... 7:30 p, m. l'rllor meoii:I!J, Wed·..
9:30 Lm.; Morn- neldQ" I 7:30 g. m.
· t~c:::· Ben Phil- Prayer 11. lllioi-11. Prayer m..U,., 9ilitlll - · amdof achool, es tor
f
W-adll. I p.m.
'1(-adll, 'll30~m.
t:JOa.m.;IDOl'IIIJIIWO&lt;oldp10:4S (JW Worship, 10:30 LDLI NYPS
THE SALVATION All!oiY -&amp;1·
Sunda,y
6:30
p.m.
i
EvanplloUc
Y8Y
Ra,y S. Wlldlw. ctllcer In
_
Senlce Sunday 7:30p.m.; Mid- charlo. Suadal, 10 a.m.,l!oUSILVER RUN FREE WILL w..k Prayer - · Wedneo- neu moolbw; 10:30 a. m. SunBAP'I1S'I' - JleY. Cludllllllldna, dill' 7:30p.m.; llfaalcoUy Meet- diQ' Scbool. Yooaw Pooplo'o Lo·
. - - . Rfdlord Flnk,!UIIIl iD1 Sec:on1 Wedneadoy. or each lim, 7 p, m.; Salvallon mooi!Jw,
_
7:80 p. m.; Tburaday, 1 10 3 p,
Scllool ~ Sunday 111011111 7:30p.m.
Ca.n~er
MASON
BAPTIST
CHAPELm.;
Ladleo liciDe Losgue; 7p.m.
Scllool, 10 a, 111.1 WCII'II:Ip, 7:30
Thli
Rev.
lllrold
Cunnllqfham,
,Prep
c!uaao,
p. 111. Pn,yer IDHIIar. Tlmadll,
putor.
ChArleo
Lam1oor1,
SunMT,
MORIAil BAPTIST--7110 p. m. Choir pnctlce, Tuoodill' School &amp;.,~ Corner Second · dlejlort, of Fourth and
'
d&amp;Y.1P. DL
and P1111oroy SIL, Ma1011, W. Main s t . - Jackaon,..-w.
lr WILLIAM ~WlfkCE, p;P.S.
,••
..
~ CHURCH-K1. . VL; Suaclo,y school, 9:45 Llllol Sunda) Scbool, 9:tiJ L m.;lllom'
h,.
'
bury
Rood. Tho ljeY. Ill Slllaa, worohlp arvlee, IL Wednea- lJW -lllllp, 10:311a. m., Anlold
loot
IIJem,
·' ·
Be yOtir Clllll · ·~tb delee·. put:qi-. llabll1 ·ou-1,
dill' •'NIIIar. !raiaiJW ualon, ?; ~aq:~,FIRST BAPI'IST Suodll Seboal, 1:30 L DL 11'.... pra,yer
Uve.
· ·
•·
arvlce, 7:t5.
R 0 C K SPIUNGS UNITED JleY, Som,.l J. Jllokaon, pdior, ·
""' ..,tee, 10:tAJ L m. aDd

r1aa

=..:n=

~'WEBS

atuctr,

'

.E

-u-

t·~:.::~~'

-or.

:;;u;:O:,

·~.;: ~:::·

Plul---

t:Ti

«

.....

au.,..,

Pd. Pol :

Adv. By Fa•m.,s1iodllll.hrey. '

Frank W. Porter, Jr.,

GOF.GLEIN READY-MIX CO.
PHONE 992-3284

MIDDLEPORT

'

'·'

•

LYONS MARKET
"MEMBER OF TilE BIG 3"

GENERAL MERCHANDISE
TUPPERS PLAINS
PIL 667-3280

BOGGS EQUIPMENT

TINY'S FOODLAND

SALES - ALLIS CHALMBERS - SERVICE
FARM - INDUSTRIAL - LAWN - GARDEN
TUPPERS PLAINS

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

R. H. RAWLINGS SONS CO.
.OIDO'S OLDEST DODGE DEALER
MIDDLEPORT, OIDO

OHIO VALLEY BAKING CO.
BAKERS OF HOLSUM BREAD
MIDDLEPORT. 0.

,

s. s. -

llli

ollerlmeJJ. Pn.Jer

METHODIST
C. J, IAm!ay,
7:30 ..-w;
lllrold-Blaeklloa,
church
hool
.,__._.........,.
"·-•10
- - - - · -.....
worahlp, 9:30 L m.; church
- · 10:15 a.m.; O\'lnl118 worabiP, 7:80; IIYF SU!Idol, 8:30
p.m. Pra,y,r mnU~ and Bible
otud)', W11tl1"'!1, 7:10p.lllo ~
mlnla~ve· P"'IICII -Uar.
~I ~ l1lldl' td9IJth, 7:•
80 p.m.

mo~

P rScbool,
- oervlee,
Sun10 a.1:30
ila.Y
m.,L!ln. Gor- · Bllller, !qt. Wonldp
Hrvice lla. m. B11111111 TnlnlJW vnk.,, flrat ond IIO&lt;Ond SundaJi II 5:80 flo m.; lin. Mary
' Wondo, pnllldert. .
BY9ELL i!UN }'BEE METHoDIB'I''- Bev,CediJ, Wlae,paa- a\, Sunda) SeiJool, 9;80 a. m.;
M-.w WCil"lblp, 10130;~
110l!oldp,..
y - Poopla'o

RAY RIGGS, INC.

MARK V STORE

Uncoln - Mercury - Comet - English Ford

593-6601
85 N. COURT ST.

MIDDLEPORT, OIDO

ATHENS. 0.

WILLIS ANTHONY

LEIVING COAL COMPANY
PRODUCERS AND DISTRIBUTORS
OF IDGH GRADE COAL
WEST COI.UMBIA, W. VA.

PLUMBING AND IlEA TlNG
992-2550
MIDDLEPORT
240 LINCOLN ST. _,

ROYAL OAK PARK

ARNOLD'S SOHIO SERVICE

FAMILY RECREATION

ATHENS RD.
POMEROY, 0. 992-6098
A FRIENDLY PLACE TO BUY

SWIMMING

RACINE FUL-VALU MARKET

CROW'S STEAK HOUSE
KENTUCKY FRIED CIDCKEN
POMEROY, OIDO

TilE STORE WITII A HART

11---------------·---------------t
RACINE, OIDO

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE ,

MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE

REXALL DRUGS
WE FILL ALL DOCTOR'S PliESCRIPI10NS
992-2955
POMEROY,

CHURCH AND OFFlCE SUPPIJES.GIFTS
992-:641
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

ATrEND TilE CIIURCH OF YOUR QIOlCE

. NEW YORK aOTHING HOUSE

o:

BEN FRANKLIN STORE
POMEROY

Pit 99:!-34111

TAKE SOIIEONE 'WITH YOO TO CIIURCII
IN POMEROY OVER 90 YEARS
KER111T WALTON.

BAP·

.PU·

EBERSBACH HARDWARKO.
EVERYTHING IN HARDWARE
POMEROY, 0.

Co·u~irmal\

RIDENOUR SUPPlY
&gt;

WEST MAIN ST.
POMEROY ,0.
SUPPORT THE CHURCH OF YOUR CHOICE

BAKERS OF GOOD BREAD
HUNTINGTON, W. VA.

Mouth
Warning Signclls

seritce,

Pel. Pol. "dv .

HOYT'S SOHIO SERVICE

m,,

P.!ft-

HUMPHiEYI

HEINER'S BAKERY

l!W:

1:10 p,

VOTE FOR

Wlttt the hope it will, In amne measure, foster and help sustain that which is COOd In ramu.,
and community life, this reatureissponsoredbythe business ftnna and organizations whose DaDlea
appear below.

-..

....... _.. ·w-...,,

FOR THE FUTURE OF THE FAMILY FAY ...

It's Tim's move, and he is taking a long tilllt'·tbinlcing It over.
In cheea, if you're a good pb1yer, you don't plllf quickly. If yo\1 do,
your opponent may outwit you.
.
Militaey stratel)', they say, is be!Ji.d .on the rules of cheu. So
are many of the "higher IJl'l'!ll" In business and finance. Yet, when
.it.~omes to llfe .it&lt;!elf, O'i. rules of cheea apply in only a limited way.
l'ii life, you can't be totally objective. You can't exist on Iogie.alone.
The Church teaches that though we •urely need logic In order
to live successfully, we al80 need comJIIUI8ion, tolerance, love,
under•tanding, and the strength that comes with faith .
Although life is not a game, we muat have the help and strength
of the Church to discover those rulu that will determine our
ultimate destiny.

'

.

MorniiW' wor..
L m.; ""•'"""· School,
m. D·-~·.:n:ill,
~
"""~
...,.
1'llt DANVILi..E WESLEY AN
. ~outll FellOwship, 6:30 p, m. CHURCH _ Charleo Dozer, pao-

! • ..,, :
.&lt;
- ,~:10:30 L

Strategy

;:.N~:.~:.~::·:!:

·. Directorv
fior
.J
~~ , ·. Area Churches .
~l
·:::::::::::m.~:;:;;; w.;:•w~::::--~Q..:·:~o::~{
~

',)- :..

rar

SOUTHERN OHIO NEEDS SENATOR COLLINS

NilON- AGNEW
~:~n.i P~:~id

SBILLIDIS

Ho segment of our socieiy or uction of our District
escapes his ottenfion . He toh1 pride in legislative
accomplishment for our area and. his con~tituen!s .
He believes by improving our sectton of Oh1o, he 11
helpinv move Ohio forward as a I 1 State in the Notion .

RE-ELECT

Authg ri nt:l

NET FARM INCOME--· You Can Trust the Democratic Party

He is an EFFECTIVE letislator. He warh fa brin1
to u • many equal advantages enjoyed by our financially stronger neithbors of narth.rn Ohio. Hh leadership and seniorify hove meant millions of additi.onal dollars in •tate funds for Improved education,
hithways, rec:rHtlanal facilities, state institutions,
and other improvements for Southern Ohio.

•

•

How has a11iculture fared under Democratic and Republican administrations?
What has happened to farm income under the Democrats and under the
Republicans?
Just look at the record in the chart below-and remember who your friends are.
He served fwo yeart In the Ohio House of Representatives and has served siJtt•n years in the Ohio
Senate.'

. " 7 - Thli llall¥ Sentinel, Pllllervy-lollddl-'o 0., Frldll, N.,..ber 1, liM
.:::::::O.i:::::!-m:::::?o::::::::::::::;t.&gt;;~~::'.:~·~ ..
.
- . ,-·.-.
OLD DEXTER CONGREGA-

\~'

J~
ttte Athens State Hoapital for the
55 veterana oonlloed there. The
par11 Is plaMed for Nov. 14 and
members are asked to make candy and cooldes and provide gilts
for game prize&amp;. A donation of
$5 was made to qply to the ex- tanded.
Flower bulbs of yellow have
been p!UIIed to make &lt;1 spring
11 Garden ot Gold" in OOservance
Co-Leader
r:6 the 50th anniversary of the
Amerlcao Legion.
A thank-you note was read
Queen of the Month
from the Harry Allen famJ.ly and
The Meigs Tops Knotchera get.~well cards were IW1t to sevcrowned Co-Leader Marie Birch- eral members who are ill. The
field this week as the umonthly par11 at the Chillicothe VoterDR. RIDGWAY IS WELL QUALIFIED
queen" with a nine pound loss.
Johnson
Cecelia Mitch was 11 Q.Ueen of
For The Position of Coroner- 8y His Educationthe week" with a five pound loss .
Frances Hysell had to take
al Back11ound and By His Experience - Accord·
home the pig, and Judy Snowden
Mrs. Garnet Jolmson wl.s hos..
ln1 To Recent State Law Requirements.
and Ruth Needs tied for t h e tess for the October meeting of
"trough." Frances Haggy lost the Ladies Auxlliary of the 011 ve
1. B. A.-Musldngum College, Hew Concord, Ohio.
10 pomds in three weeka to win Fire Dept. at the tlre house with
2. D.O.-Kirksville College of Osteopathy and Surtery
the 10 pound contesl There a.re Mrs. Ruth DUlon. Mrs. Eagle,
3. Hove been practicln~ medicin• In th• Pom•roy area
only three people left In the Mrs. Mary Alice Blae, Mrs. Nell
since 1954.
towel contest which ends in two Wllson and a guest. Mn. Eagle's
4. Attend yearly post-~raduate seulons .
5. Member of many organh:otions, religloua, civic and
weeks.
sister, attendi • •
medical.
New members joining t h 1 11
Games were conducted by Mrs.
6. As a qualifl•d licensed physician In the State of
month were Doris Hensler, Hel- WUson with prizes awarded to
Ohi"o, I would fill th• requirements for this oHic•,
en Hill and Frances Haggy .
Mrs, Dillon, Mrs. Blse, and Mn.
In accordance with a recently pou•d State low.
Jotmson. Door prlzea were won
by Mrs. Eagle and Mrs. Dll~
HAS 20 DAY LEAVE
lon. Plans were made to visit
YOUR VOTE WILL BE APPRECIATED!
HARTFORD Pvt. Denver the Elmwood Nursing Home ln
n, Gibbs is spending a 20-da,y November, when Mrs. Martha
Pol. Adv . Pd. Fo• By John Ridgway
leave with his rather, Charles
Durst will be the hostess.
"'--Gibbs, and hi&amp; sister, Doma.
Pvt. Gibbs had basic training at
Fort Campbell, K,y, , where he
spent 8 weeks andthenwastrans·
rerred to Fort Sill, Okla., for
8 weeks to complete Advanced
Individual Training in Artillery.
Alter his leave time ttome, Pvt.
Gibbs is guing to Fort Oil:, New
Jersey, the shipping center to
Germany. He Is expecting to be
in Germany 13 months.

Crowned

Vote For and Help Re-Ekct

I XI

ani lloopltal for unlll

nJRNITURE AND APPLIANCES.
. I'HQIIE 9~ .
CHESTER, 0.

'

F.J. WALLACE. JEWQt
BULOVA \I!ATCIIES- SALES A SI}MCE
SECOND
MIDDLEPORT

�, '- The~· tel

_J: ~ ,., •

f

'.

...

r

.

PCIIIII'Ol ,..........._ 0

l''

.

'

.

""''··· ....
_,..

""'!' ~!

. ..,,

'
. '

·~.-~f\',''1'

... . . ' .. .

.

'

-· .,· .

;,-

...

'

. .
~

~...

'

.

A LITTLE 'HOMEWORK' Watching Want Ad~ :u~ing. t.p·,· r{J'Grade ·Results
.
1

).'~ ... ·~

t, ••

'

-

,·

BAIINEY

NCJPE .. HE'S OVER
IN LUKEV'S BARN

'

·;·

,.

W&amp;Ht:; A.D

For Rent

For Sale

FURNISHED and llllflmiJsberl
aportments. Clooe 18 IIObool.
PboDe m5434.
10-JI.Ifc

EARLY American Sl2reo, AM
lc FM radio. Lo•oly maple
finish, 4 •peed &lt;hanger, P81·
....._, o,e411• 9 · ·"'·
menll of til per moolh or JN11
c."'"n .. r.... l CorrectlcM'II
Will ._e .cc. .. e4 \!Mil 9 •·•· far
FUIINISIIED APARTMENTS balance due $8Z.91. Pbolle
Do, J Pl611c.. lo~t
In Middleport. All allllllol
1192-3111.
1ur.ac
REGULATIONS
paid.
Rowley
"
Reed,
MJd.
The Publisher r•s•rv•• fhe rllht
to edit or ,.jaet any ad1 d.. ~n~~d obdleport, Pbone mma.
SIX ROOM bouoo, aow11 rejKtlonobl•. The p.,bllshr .will not :
IO.Ue
modeled kltdten, l!o ~&gt;aement
be responsible for mor• thon ons
fncorflcl ln••rtfon.
and bar room, 115
or
RATES
TRAILER LOTS. Bob's Mobfle st. Phone 91U566. lll47-tlp
F., Wont A.d ~rvic•
Court, Syracuoe, Olllo oo Slate
5 nnt1 ,., Word oM •u•n ion
Rt.
~. Phone . - 1.
Minill'lu"' Chc~rt• 7Sc
57 CHEVROLET ~fmt lnldl:;
12 c•nll p•• wonl thr•• ccn••cu1-tt-tfc fine shape, new paint, good
IIY• lntsrtiens.
tlrell. Ready to go. f300. G.
II c•nh par Word 1i-" cDnseculi"•
TRAILER
SPACE,
ready to A. Deem, Racine. IO.~tp
.In••"''"'
2S plf C lftl o .• count on poocl •d•
book up, private, plenty of
•IMI oci1 paid"''''"" 10 days
room
for chlldren lo play. URGE COAL furnace, good
CARD OF THAHK"S ll OBITUAI'lV
SI .SO lor 50 w01d "''";"'""' · Eo
Phone~1-1~
condition; also Admiral TV,
addltlot'lol "'ord 2c.
21 inches. Good condition.
BLIND •os
THREE bedroom aparlmelll
Phone 99U890 or 992-392'1.
with garage on Butternul
IO.zt.Stc
OFFICE HOURS
Ave. Plloae ~12'1. 10.14-tfc
1 :30 o'"' - to 5:00p.m. Do ily
8:30 o.m. to 12:00 Noon S.o turdoy
CIUHUAHUA puppies. Call 8f3.
BEAUTIFUL all new electrle
2648.
l().zt-41~
Notice
S.ruom a~t located In
Sl!AKE HAVEN win close lor
Pomeroy. Eleclrlc beallng, STEREO RADIO comt.inalfon,
tile season beflinnlng Mondav
table top range, waD .-. repossessed; beautiful cabiNov. 4. Specials for this Sal·
See to apprecla\2. Pllone lor
net, like new. Balance due
c'l'day and Sunday w!R be 40
appointment. 99UJ71. 10-21-11 199. or make paymenll of
cent "'"""" lor 30 cents . 30
$5.14 per month. Pbone 1192&lt;ent •undae for 211 cents and FIRSI' FLOOR aparlmellt. Very
2136.
10-Z9-6tc
45 cent banana split 35 cents.
nke for two people or two
'n1anks to the people for yoor
people with small child. Pllone 19611 ZIG ZAG portable sewing
patnmage.
19Z-D8'/.
10-!!-121&lt; macitlne, slightly used. Does
Rul!!en and Margaret
everything wltltout allacbBailey and employ...
FOUR ROOM and bath, unfur.
ments. In good condition;
11-1-1~
Dlsbed, 11150 Lincoln Heights. $5.91 per montll or (Uf[ price
Pirone 992-3874.
10.29-tfc
of $51.80. For free home demANYONE interested in buying
oliBtralfoo caD 1192-28311.
or selling band instruments TWO FURNISIIED sleeping
IO-Z8-41te
please call 9in-3374. 1~
rooms; private kitchen, private bath. private entrance, 1961l CHEVY convertfble. V-3
"'fttL DO sewing In my home
utltttles furnished ; l!o mile
standard abllt, $150. Pbone
tW Olrbtmas. Carolyn Lewfrom town of Pomeroy, !lax
192·5552.
IO.~tc
11. Plror1e !112·22'11. 11-1-1!1&lt;
2811., Rt. 3, Pomeroy. Mrs.
Eleanor Bales. Phone 1192- WORK CAR. 1949 Desoto.
WILL DO !Iewing at home 70'15.
I0-2Utc George Hill, Racine. Phone
zippers
f\OCk•ts. pegging.
94t-4381.
IO-Z8-6te
hPmming. alteratloM,
ete. SMAU. FURNISHED house In
Mrs . Fredliie Thabet. Ma!OD,
Middleport. Phone m-52112. C11RL'S BICYCLE, good condiPhone 773-5!\51
4-30-tfe
10-:111-tfc
tion ; good tireo. Also, [l.flat
clarinet. Phone 1192-53511.
REPAIR. REFINISH , reetmdl- POUR ROOM'S and bath In
16-31Hte
tl&lt;n golf dubs. Jolm Teaford.
Hartford. Call 8fl2.23'10 after
t-D.liltp
1 p.m.
11-l.atc GOOD YOUNG rabbit dog, good
breeC and good runner. Em8ACK HOE and Dooor S.rvke, 'DEAL FOR couple, furnished
mett stethem. Long Bottom.
pond. basement. water Jln~.
cottall!. lltree rooms and
Phone Olester, 985-3587.
ooptl&lt; tank. R. w. CoWdery,
bath In Syracuse. Close to
11).3().3!c
Long Bottom, Ohio. e-rrstore by main hfgbway. PrJ.
•al2 drive. Tom Olapman. 1953 CHEVROLET pickup, 1125.
VACANCY lor two elderly JlO!"
Pbono 111-5462.
11-I;Sit,;,,lJ*nr: m-9934 and aak for
pie. Prefer priva\2 pald !*- '"
F'rank Roush.
10.36-3tp
tlenll. Pbone Mason, '/73-51&amp;1. FOUil ROOM house. Laurel
IN-If&lt;
St., Pomeroy. newly renovat· 1965 GTO 4 speed positive
10.3!-llc traction, ' phone
ed . Call 1192-5293.
THERE WILL be a gun llhool
- -- 11).31-3!JI
&amp;mday. Nov. 3 beginning at THREE unfurnished apartnoon at the Forked Run
ments, each with tw:o bed- SPINET PIANO: Wanted, ,.,.
Sportsman Club. Everyone II
rooms . 399 South 11nrd St.. IIJ&gt;Illllible party to take over
welcome.
10.»6te
Mkldleport.
16-31·3tc low monthly payments on
spinet plano. Can be ,..., loWE WilL be holding two aucFor Sale
cally. Write Credit Manager,
UOIIS per month starting Nov. !!TEREO RADIO console, 4- P. 0 . Bo&lt; 276. Sbelbyvllle.
1. Sales will be on the first
Indiana.
11).3!-12tp
speed lntermiied changer, duand third Friday nights of
al vulume control, 4 speaker
each montb. Adams Auction
100 LB. HOG ready to butdter.
IOUIId syatem, lovely walnut ft.
Service, RutiBnd.
10.2t-4te
ntah. Take over payments of See at Roy Johnsons. Hysell
Run Road .
16-31·3te
~ per montll, or balance,
MUSIC EVERY Friday and
$11.14. Call 11112-3211. 11-l&lt;ltc
Satw'day at Jack's Club on
~·LOOR
DEMONSTRATOR,
Harrisonvllle ·Road off Rt.
19611
stereo
AM &amp; FM radio
MA'P'LE STEREO radio, 111111!
7.
16-31-2k
record player, 1114, 17 a
lovely rm!pie finish with AM
month. Pbone '~73-SN~l.
FM radio. 4 speakers, dual
11JRKEY SHO&lt;Yr, card or trap
llhll-ltp
volume eort.rol. Take over
shooting for turkeys. SUnpayments of $6 per montll or
day, Nov. 3, I p.m . Rutland
pay
just 192.30. Try It In your 1968 ZIG ZAG aewlog machine.
Gun Club.
10.31-31&lt;
This machine lllOI'lOgrams,
home. Call 992-3218. IH 6tc
buttonholes. etc. Pay $41.80
SINGING, SATURDAY, 7:30 GOOD HAY. mostlv timothy and
or 16.30 a month. Phone '1'13p.m.. Church of God, Chesl2r,
5940.
16-31.Jtp
clo•er; also building lois.
Ohio, featuring Singing Evan1'llone 911Ui111.
tt-1-3te
Jill TIIREE BE'DROOM tnJl.
gelist Juanita Scott of Asher, Expando living room 8Dd
land, Ky.
16-31·2k HAY AND STRAW. CaD 111awning. Pbooe ti!W311.
6'/ZI.
10-U.12tp
10.2Uic
REVIVAL. starting Nov. 3.
Church of God, Cbester. Ohio. TWO ooal stoken wltb eonSinging Evangelist Juanita
trois, Arnold Brothers, Po.
Real &amp;tete For Sale
Scott of Ashland, Ky ., preach.
meroy. Pllone 992-:IC48.
Jng each evening, 7:30 p.m.
10.1!-tfc
Everyone welcome. 10-31-6tc
POTATOES, Phone 84S.:a54
In Memory
Clarence ProiR!t, Portland.
GEO. HOBS'IEIIER, 11n1rer
IN LOVING MEMORY of Carl
10-l~c
POMEROY - 5 rooma, bath,
W. Kautz. knled Nov. I, 1!167.
basement. gas beat, near
POODLE PUPPIES. AKC Toy
stores. Only f3500.00
miniature, fl5 and up. Stud
What "" would gin to aee
IUDDLEPORT
- 3 Apartmenll,
service and grooming. Phooe
your 11111He.
3
car
garage,
near ltGIW.
To Ill and talk with you
IIIIM443.
II 3 tfc
Out of high water. 112,0011.00
awtdle.
'nle blow was sudden, the AKC C-oldea Retriever puppleo, DAIRY FARM - Now opera'ing. 2 b~. ~ ~. good
shock severe,
U4 Alh St., Mlddlepart. •
fences.
2 hou-, free
To part with you, 'ft loved
1441.
o.u.tlc
$50,000.00
so dear.
HELEN or VIIIGIL TEAFORD
BEAT WINTER TO
We often sit and think &lt;A you :
,\SSOCIATES
••1o1111
'nle thing! you ll8ed to say
THE PUNCH!
I~
and do;
Childrens Winter Caps 49c
We ~ why you hid to
Gloves
dlo
For The Family ...... 25c up
~us~.,..
Wltllout a chance to aay
Children's
DITCH DIGGING, water a-,
Sweaten .. _. _._._ ...... ... l .99 up
·~ £ )6.
leech beda, Paul AndmMil,
Women's
Mason, W. Va. PbaDe ,.,._
Flannel Gowns ____ .________ .99c
Sadly mfsoed by wtfe,
5711.
• 1UIIli
Mary, and ehfldrtn.
Bryants Bud&amp;et Shop
Roller!. Judy and Jay.
C!GAIIETI'E vending llliddJ&amp;
108 W. Moln
Pom•roll
tt.J.t~
992-S896
1Dd servlee. ABC Eilts pd ,
M-, W, Vo. PbaDe 'I7NIO.
SOLID STATE Stereo: lt61 wl!Mile
For Rent
nut stereo console with 4apeaker, Wpeer!, au1omatlc BUDGET PRICI!l furrdtatta •
THREJI! ROOMS and both fur.
.... lhlrd floor bllrlpl lllop.
changer. Make payrnenll of
...... d apart"""'~ 1311. .· 'lllulDater Furnltun. 'M' I t;.
$5 or pay just $11.11. CaD •
berrv. "'"'"· 09!-3714. lt-lltp 1211.
Ohio.
t • 1111
10-27.flc
fNFORMATION
DU.Dlltrii!S
5 •·•· D1y laf•• P"'-llc1tlofll

~

.

•.

...

'
~

•

M7.

HOBSTETTER~

REALTY

YOU HAVI HIARD ' AIOUT,
YOU HAVE IEIH !XPICTING
IT, IT IS NOW NI!AII

SIEGLER and
TROPIC·AIRE Heaters

A NH' CHUICH IS II! lNG IOfl

..

1;.
l!lig

Trado-ln Allawanco

POMEROY
"2-2181

ne- '

..•.
.

$avo Nowi lnotoll Howl
C:OMP!-.ETE LINE

Jaclc W. c;arsey,

o

8utll-

Mfr.

'

'

,..d••

Ma.,'•

DOZER, 8ACKHOE. "-hhr
8Dd lnldl: ... ..... leJIIIe
tanks, water Jines, b•..,,
also topooU. J1emJ Bahr,
phone 1115 Ill ctr RA&gt;pr Belir,
phoDe 1115 Ill"
10 II Dip

.

Service ... Frld.y night
7:30 P.M. In Th• for•r
Br-n'• MoriM Bwildlng 0t1
St~:~t• Rout• 12-4, Mlrwuvlll•,
Ohio.
Po•tor - lon Detrln/ton •f tile
oYan•wood
Secon
Bo,.lot
Chvrch.
(An lndo,.nclont Chuut.)

'

C. C. BRADFORD
AUC'nONBi!R
Complelo Boa ...
Ph- I4NII1
llldle. OMt
Crltt Brllldf•d

I 1 tfe
AIR CONDITIONING llefrtpr·
atlon servtee. Jack'• RefrlgeraUon, New Haven. booe
8fl2.211'19.
4 • tfe

' rinse
mob cor

'"•ndant

3.

M;J&lt; • •·: • ·• • • • • ·II to 6
Sot .•••••••••• ·9 to 7

ertlf. AutltoriJed Singer Sales
and Service. We Sharpen
Selason.
s.zt.tre

lnsur•-

i\tri'OMomtE lnsuzauce belli
eanceDed? Loot your Ofllll'llor'a license? CaD llt-29118.

• 11 1!'1!

llfl

Sun.- ' --····•

to

wort. Live
deoired. C&lt;lntact 0:
Hlndv over Liberty Tbeatre
in Middleport. Phone 11921'251.
I~Ue

SORRY SAL II now a Merry
Gal. She used Blue Lustre
rug and upholstery cleaner.
Rent electric shampooer 11.
Baker Fumllure.
10-2Utc
TWO FAMILY bouse, 2M Race

st.. Middleport. Pltone 992:11648.
10-n-14~

in il

ANTIQUES, furniture, dllllll.
mlocellaneous. '111'1. H01JII!'d
CecU, 1011 W. Main St., Pome'lfl1.
14-tle

Lost
CHEVY, 2 door Sedan, 301
FIVE-MONTII.OLD
Pollfd Her&amp;cubic loeb, 4 barreD, a speed
ford
heiler.
Loot
In Tannen
on floor, good condiUon, aD
Run
area.
Anyone
aeelng the
new elbaust sylllem, .-o.
heifer Is asked lo call fl9.
Phone m-71101.
1&amp;.2$«c

~

. 10.27-«e

3774.

1965 I'ORD pickup, all emas,
excellent condition. 11300.
Phone !Kt-28411.
I~

ot
®

2SIGNS
Of

QIIAUTY

LADIES TIMEX WAml In the
vU1age oF Syracule Wednel·
day evening. If found eall
9ft.2110ft. Clleryl Moo,..
11-l-31c

~- Pomeroy":y

Motor Co.

67 PONTIAC Firobird H.T. Cre...........

... ...... $2595

Four on the floor, 400 8 c:y ., LeMons, blue finish,
custom striping, blue vinyl int. , with bucket seats ,
stereo P.B. radio, 23,000 miles by local owner. Like
new 1st line wide oval W.W. tires .

66 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE CON ......

Sc•IWirztl •rlne
Hockisfport, Ohio
Phone 667-3370

Frvm the Loraost Trucl&lt; or
Bullrb10r Radfoli&gt;r ' To Tho
&amp;noll01t Heater Core.

BlAETTNARS
. lliXPEIT

PomOI'VJ'

Wheel Alignment

s·:ss·

• Free Estimates

-GtiAIIANil!D...
PHONE 992-2094

• Qua! lty Concrete

Pomeroy Home &amp; AUfol
... B. Mallt

p

• C.Ufled Sbenath
• Dellvel'J
. • Quick Service
•Finish in&amp;
• Sand &amp; Gravel

Wanted

LADY FOR bouse

. EIPEIIENCED
Witter Service

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

euy, Flee . . .
malel. Pbono - - . Golfo
lelD Ready - Mls CO., ~
port, Ohio.
I • lfa

SEWING MACHINES, repl!r
service, an mabl. WY S.
!1111. 'nte l'abrle Shop, Pom-

I

IYINRUDE
69's Are Hare

ad rlgltt kt your project.

aitd

TURI&lt;EV RAFflE

,..

Flr~t

F'aJt

CHANCES ONTH'

PARSON···

t

I

ot

READY - Mil eonuela deliY·

WIF TH' FELLERS,

llusiness Servic.es

splrlt~~ctl

s.m.

WMPO
INFORMADON
NEWS
presents
LOCAL REPORTS
DAILY

~.
11-1

OIAL 992-3284
HE'LL GO 10 NJY

£E#JG1J.IS RlR ... OW I:E
TO PROlE 1-\E CAIJ

GOEGLEIN GRAVEL

~Mel

407 PAGE
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

AT
7:SO A.M.
12 NOON

3 P.M.
AND

4:30 P.M.
I GC11 FOURTEfl't

Keeping
Meigs
.
.
- t;OIIia a·nd ,.
Mason Area
Informed As
Well As
~

~

MORE MUTT'S IN
lHAT CAGE -'I'CIO

~

Pltl(ll1' UP THE

'TAB FOR

1966 OLDS F85...................... ... . .
. ..... $1895
H.T . Cpe. DeluJCe trim . Vinyl interior. Med . blue col.

Entertained

LEGAL NOTICE

or. Power steering and automatic trans . Good W.W.
tires. Low mileage by local owner.

Pomeroy Motor Co.
OPIN IV IS. 8:00 P)II.
I'OMIROY, OHIO
UeAL NOTICI
1N THe

C~

PUAI COUIT,

MIOI COUNTY, 01110
.... 14.211

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

YIIUON PIIRY, .. .tl

"lbto..........
Korftl. ... el.
ta.

•UJB088

~~aetl br taw Court of Common Plu.l
ot 11e1J1 COWlb'. OIUo, I ril offer

e:u.mple

1. Nursery
rllyme

mother

2. Exhort•
3. Border
4. Recital

~.

alld Ute
vorUon of my lann now ln 111.1 ..-.
Millon to be foulld oo Ule nc:onl

now •• Pomeroy, Oblo. u C.urt
reeord and abo-.e •ld fum wu pur-

chotee :
o.bbr.

ehued from F. B. RoPn.
8&amp;1d tract ill bounded u follo-:
on Ute llOI'tll b)' Petu Woodrum1 on
the &amp;lilt bY J. A. ftutberford. &lt;fol·

5. Partot
BEATO
6. Where the

biiOIII

T!te torpedQ Is tile delldlle~ .

lnwlD( Raeeoon Creek \0 UM Holde
Sutphin ao acre trecUI U..nc. _._

,.... moN or 1111.
•toP&amp; II ~ prevlo\llb ,.ld
leawlJI&amp; II acru 11101• or lftl,
'hi'IU 01 51111: Call tor DO\ ....
tn1n two-tblrdll ol the appl'l.lle4 v•
lut~. \he properl.J belna ~~p~~nlad ••
IIIO.ot. ~&amp;aT C. HAIL'I'SNBACR
lbntft of ..... COiu:IU'

,

clouo

11. Bur·

mlllt have had Khool tuition
bills In mind.

weiJpoa e v e r developed (qc:•.
tea wutw, accard!ng to lbll
EncJC[opaedla Britannica.
.

D.

N.. W. ·
. ·.

1•01 II nu 1, I. II, B

OPTOIETJ,IST

•.

......

Ufblll a~
1. Metatlk

...,.

l9i·Heir
20. Troupe

for

21.

~of

Ye.....&amp;J''I A•IWir-

cake

23. Settler's
stake

31 . DeMit
,

%4. Snobbery ·
2~. Freneh

river
21. SIQU!o

.21 ..'Handed-:

!li'VU;er

32. Botad trein
. a:t. Uileouth

pei'IOn

88. lnd\an
~J . in Chaco

elemeat

ovU '

legally

'ifl· 38. Mother
ol
Iriah goda

~Jeasbore .·
ll.' Happineu

30. American

40. A~aa

a.ota

JJWJMJJ3~;-~,:::%~-=

IJnlcramble theBe (our JumbiH,
one letter to eMh aquan, to
form .Jour Ol'dinary wor4a.

Ian ~

DowN

estetl!:
BtlUit.ed IJI lbe To\ftldlp ol SaU.
bul')' , llelp County, ()lalao. S.ial in
S.CtJun 31, Town t, Raqe II ot UK

alone •~ld Ual!t to Charlie Sutpb!D;
thrlnoe nonb to the plMe of MilDHiD(, eonUinlnl 1'1 IC,., N tlw

....

13,' Jla.ll-

meso

at the atePt of Ole Court HOUH of
Mid Count,., Ill Ute vw.,e of Pomeroy, the loUowtnJ deecrlbed nal

Folk hero Johnny Apple·
seed was in reality John
Chapman C1774-1114&gt;), born
ln Leomincter, Mass., who
died In Indiana, The World
Almanac says. Apples are
not indigenous to the
United Stal2s and much of
Ch.apman's fame came
from having planted numerous orchards in Ohio
and Indiana, hastening the
spread of apples westward.

43.J;team
44. Newa,a.d

Fair, for

for Nle •t pubHe aU~::Uon on \be 2lrd
d.,- of N..,ember, 1• al JO:OO a.m.

Co~J~PU~Y'I

.

. DAILY CROSSWORD

Pl.tnuaD.t to a Writ o• Pan.IUOil ...

Ohlo

mOth

bravo

KJ
- ~ .urr-ou - ~ ·

II

..·II 11J

·

. .

omcy; HOURS lo30 To l"'J '1'0 6 (CLOSE AT. NOON.ON
.r.l\~ ' Ef.ST CO\JiiT $T., POMEROY

··3

The wholo family will
thank Dod when he
treats to dinn•r with
us. We spocialiu in

•\

{

'·

·New Furalturt

family feasts ,, .. from
tasty appetizers to de·
Iic ious d•uerts. Join
us soon.

.OILY

$299
·,'T

218 E. Main
992·9974
POMEROY. OHIO

Dolly 5r30 A.M. to 8:30 P.M.-Sunday 7:00 to 7o0.0

•

~LL

&lt;:k-

'EM, GIRlif1?

.. ...........$2095

Local I owner cor, new w·s·w tires, vinyl trim with
bucket seats, console, radio, P .S. &amp; P .B., auto. trans .
dark blue finish with white nylon top. A real sharpie.

au.

S.mni

-On the l•v•l of

I THOIJ6HT HE Mt6trr
Lli(E TO BUV SOME

HE

D·
.., UN
~

�, '- The~· tel

_J: ~ ,., •

f

'.

...

r

.

PCIIIII'Ol ,..........._ 0

l''

.

'

.

""''··· ....
_,..

""'!' ~!

. ..,,

'
. '

·~.-~f\',''1'

... . . ' .. .

.

'

-· .,· .

;,-

...

'

. .
~

~...

'

.

A LITTLE 'HOMEWORK' Watching Want Ad~ :u~ing. t.p·,· r{J'Grade ·Results
.
1

).'~ ... ·~

t, ••

'

-

,·

BAIINEY

NCJPE .. HE'S OVER
IN LUKEV'S BARN

'

·;·

,.

W&amp;Ht:; A.D

For Rent

For Sale

FURNISHED and llllflmiJsberl
aportments. Clooe 18 IIObool.
PboDe m5434.
10-JI.Ifc

EARLY American Sl2reo, AM
lc FM radio. Lo•oly maple
finish, 4 •peed &lt;hanger, P81·
....._, o,e411• 9 · ·"'·
menll of til per moolh or JN11
c."'"n .. r.... l CorrectlcM'II
Will ._e .cc. .. e4 \!Mil 9 •·•· far
FUIINISIIED APARTMENTS balance due $8Z.91. Pbolle
Do, J Pl611c.. lo~t
In Middleport. All allllllol
1192-3111.
1ur.ac
REGULATIONS
paid.
Rowley
"
Reed,
MJd.
The Publisher r•s•rv•• fhe rllht
to edit or ,.jaet any ad1 d.. ~n~~d obdleport, Pbone mma.
SIX ROOM bouoo, aow11 rejKtlonobl•. The p.,bllshr .will not :
IO.Ue
modeled kltdten, l!o ~&gt;aement
be responsible for mor• thon ons
fncorflcl ln••rtfon.
and bar room, 115
or
RATES
TRAILER LOTS. Bob's Mobfle st. Phone 91U566. lll47-tlp
F., Wont A.d ~rvic•
Court, Syracuoe, Olllo oo Slate
5 nnt1 ,., Word oM •u•n ion
Rt.
~. Phone . - 1.
Minill'lu"' Chc~rt• 7Sc
57 CHEVROLET ~fmt lnldl:;
12 c•nll p•• wonl thr•• ccn••cu1-tt-tfc fine shape, new paint, good
IIY• lntsrtiens.
tlrell. Ready to go. f300. G.
II c•nh par Word 1i-" cDnseculi"•
TRAILER
SPACE,
ready to A. Deem, Racine. IO.~tp
.In••"''"'
2S plf C lftl o .• count on poocl •d•
book up, private, plenty of
•IMI oci1 paid"''''"" 10 days
room
for chlldren lo play. URGE COAL furnace, good
CARD OF THAHK"S ll OBITUAI'lV
SI .SO lor 50 w01d "''";"'""' · Eo
Phone~1-1~
condition; also Admiral TV,
addltlot'lol "'ord 2c.
21 inches. Good condition.
BLIND •os
THREE bedroom aparlmelll
Phone 99U890 or 992-392'1.
with garage on Butternul
IO.zt.Stc
OFFICE HOURS
Ave. Plloae ~12'1. 10.14-tfc
1 :30 o'"' - to 5:00p.m. Do ily
8:30 o.m. to 12:00 Noon S.o turdoy
CIUHUAHUA puppies. Call 8f3.
BEAUTIFUL all new electrle
2648.
l().zt-41~
Notice
S.ruom a~t located In
Sl!AKE HAVEN win close lor
Pomeroy. Eleclrlc beallng, STEREO RADIO comt.inalfon,
tile season beflinnlng Mondav
table top range, waD .-. repossessed; beautiful cabiNov. 4. Specials for this Sal·
See to apprecla\2. Pllone lor
net, like new. Balance due
c'l'day and Sunday w!R be 40
appointment. 99UJ71. 10-21-11 199. or make paymenll of
cent "'"""" lor 30 cents . 30
$5.14 per month. Pbone 1192&lt;ent •undae for 211 cents and FIRSI' FLOOR aparlmellt. Very
2136.
10-Z9-6tc
45 cent banana split 35 cents.
nke for two people or two
'n1anks to the people for yoor
people with small child. Pllone 19611 ZIG ZAG portable sewing
patnmage.
19Z-D8'/.
10-!!-121&lt; macitlne, slightly used. Does
Rul!!en and Margaret
everything wltltout allacbBailey and employ...
FOUR ROOM and bath, unfur.
ments. In good condition;
11-1-1~
Dlsbed, 11150 Lincoln Heights. $5.91 per montll or (Uf[ price
Pirone 992-3874.
10.29-tfc
of $51.80. For free home demANYONE interested in buying
oliBtralfoo caD 1192-28311.
or selling band instruments TWO FURNISIIED sleeping
IO-Z8-41te
please call 9in-3374. 1~
rooms; private kitchen, private bath. private entrance, 1961l CHEVY convertfble. V-3
"'fttL DO sewing In my home
utltttles furnished ; l!o mile
standard abllt, $150. Pbone
tW Olrbtmas. Carolyn Lewfrom town of Pomeroy, !lax
192·5552.
IO.~tc
11. Plror1e !112·22'11. 11-1-1!1&lt;
2811., Rt. 3, Pomeroy. Mrs.
Eleanor Bales. Phone 1192- WORK CAR. 1949 Desoto.
WILL DO !Iewing at home 70'15.
I0-2Utc George Hill, Racine. Phone
zippers
f\OCk•ts. pegging.
94t-4381.
IO-Z8-6te
hPmming. alteratloM,
ete. SMAU. FURNISHED house In
Mrs . Fredliie Thabet. Ma!OD,
Middleport. Phone m-52112. C11RL'S BICYCLE, good condiPhone 773-5!\51
4-30-tfe
10-:111-tfc
tion ; good tireo. Also, [l.flat
clarinet. Phone 1192-53511.
REPAIR. REFINISH , reetmdl- POUR ROOM'S and bath In
16-31Hte
tl&lt;n golf dubs. Jolm Teaford.
Hartford. Call 8fl2.23'10 after
t-D.liltp
1 p.m.
11-l.atc GOOD YOUNG rabbit dog, good
breeC and good runner. Em8ACK HOE and Dooor S.rvke, 'DEAL FOR couple, furnished
mett stethem. Long Bottom.
pond. basement. water Jln~.
cottall!. lltree rooms and
Phone Olester, 985-3587.
ooptl&lt; tank. R. w. CoWdery,
bath In Syracuse. Close to
11).3().3!c
Long Bottom, Ohio. e-rrstore by main hfgbway. PrJ.
•al2 drive. Tom Olapman. 1953 CHEVROLET pickup, 1125.
VACANCY lor two elderly JlO!"
Pbono 111-5462.
11-I;Sit,;,,lJ*nr: m-9934 and aak for
pie. Prefer priva\2 pald !*- '"
F'rank Roush.
10.36-3tp
tlenll. Pbone Mason, '/73-51&amp;1. FOUil ROOM house. Laurel
IN-If&lt;
St., Pomeroy. newly renovat· 1965 GTO 4 speed positive
10.3!-llc traction, ' phone
ed . Call 1192-5293.
THERE WILL be a gun llhool
- -- 11).31-3!JI
&amp;mday. Nov. 3 beginning at THREE unfurnished apartnoon at the Forked Run
ments, each with tw:o bed- SPINET PIANO: Wanted, ,.,.
Sportsman Club. Everyone II
rooms . 399 South 11nrd St.. IIJ&gt;Illllible party to take over
welcome.
10.»6te
Mkldleport.
16-31·3tc low monthly payments on
spinet plano. Can be ,..., loWE WilL be holding two aucFor Sale
cally. Write Credit Manager,
UOIIS per month starting Nov. !!TEREO RADIO console, 4- P. 0 . Bo&lt; 276. Sbelbyvllle.
1. Sales will be on the first
Indiana.
11).3!-12tp
speed lntermiied changer, duand third Friday nights of
al vulume control, 4 speaker
each montb. Adams Auction
100 LB. HOG ready to butdter.
IOUIId syatem, lovely walnut ft.
Service, RutiBnd.
10.2t-4te
ntah. Take over payments of See at Roy Johnsons. Hysell
Run Road .
16-31·3te
~ per montll, or balance,
MUSIC EVERY Friday and
$11.14. Call 11112-3211. 11-l&lt;ltc
Satw'day at Jack's Club on
~·LOOR
DEMONSTRATOR,
Harrisonvllle ·Road off Rt.
19611
stereo
AM &amp; FM radio
MA'P'LE STEREO radio, 111111!
7.
16-31-2k
record player, 1114, 17 a
lovely rm!pie finish with AM
month. Pbone '~73-SN~l.
FM radio. 4 speakers, dual
11JRKEY SHO&lt;Yr, card or trap
llhll-ltp
volume eort.rol. Take over
shooting for turkeys. SUnpayments of $6 per montll or
day, Nov. 3, I p.m . Rutland
pay
just 192.30. Try It In your 1968 ZIG ZAG aewlog machine.
Gun Club.
10.31-31&lt;
This machine lllOI'lOgrams,
home. Call 992-3218. IH 6tc
buttonholes. etc. Pay $41.80
SINGING, SATURDAY, 7:30 GOOD HAY. mostlv timothy and
or 16.30 a month. Phone '1'13p.m.. Church of God, Chesl2r,
5940.
16-31.Jtp
clo•er; also building lois.
Ohio, featuring Singing Evan1'llone 911Ui111.
tt-1-3te
Jill TIIREE BE'DROOM tnJl.
gelist Juanita Scott of Asher, Expando living room 8Dd
land, Ky.
16-31·2k HAY AND STRAW. CaD 111awning. Pbooe ti!W311.
6'/ZI.
10-U.12tp
10.2Uic
REVIVAL. starting Nov. 3.
Church of God, Cbester. Ohio. TWO ooal stoken wltb eonSinging Evangelist Juanita
trois, Arnold Brothers, Po.
Real &amp;tete For Sale
Scott of Ashland, Ky ., preach.
meroy. Pllone 992-:IC48.
Jng each evening, 7:30 p.m.
10.1!-tfc
Everyone welcome. 10-31-6tc
POTATOES, Phone 84S.:a54
In Memory
Clarence ProiR!t, Portland.
GEO. HOBS'IEIIER, 11n1rer
IN LOVING MEMORY of Carl
10-l~c
POMEROY - 5 rooma, bath,
W. Kautz. knled Nov. I, 1!167.
basement. gas beat, near
POODLE PUPPIES. AKC Toy
stores. Only f3500.00
miniature, fl5 and up. Stud
What "" would gin to aee
IUDDLEPORT
- 3 Apartmenll,
service and grooming. Phooe
your 11111He.
3
car
garage,
near ltGIW.
To Ill and talk with you
IIIIM443.
II 3 tfc
Out of high water. 112,0011.00
awtdle.
'nle blow was sudden, the AKC C-oldea Retriever puppleo, DAIRY FARM - Now opera'ing. 2 b~. ~ ~. good
shock severe,
U4 Alh St., Mlddlepart. •
fences.
2 hou-, free
To part with you, 'ft loved
1441.
o.u.tlc
$50,000.00
so dear.
HELEN or VIIIGIL TEAFORD
BEAT WINTER TO
We often sit and think &lt;A you :
,\SSOCIATES
••1o1111
'nle thing! you ll8ed to say
THE PUNCH!
I~
and do;
Childrens Winter Caps 49c
We ~ why you hid to
Gloves
dlo
For The Family ...... 25c up
~us~.,..
Wltllout a chance to aay
Children's
DITCH DIGGING, water a-,
Sweaten .. _. _._._ ...... ... l .99 up
·~ £ )6.
leech beda, Paul AndmMil,
Women's
Mason, W. Va. PbaDe ,.,._
Flannel Gowns ____ .________ .99c
Sadly mfsoed by wtfe,
5711.
• 1UIIli
Mary, and ehfldrtn.
Bryants Bud&amp;et Shop
Roller!. Judy and Jay.
C!GAIIETI'E vending llliddJ&amp;
108 W. Moln
Pom•roll
tt.J.t~
992-S896
1Dd servlee. ABC Eilts pd ,
M-, W, Vo. PbaDe 'I7NIO.
SOLID STATE Stereo: lt61 wl!Mile
For Rent
nut stereo console with 4apeaker, Wpeer!, au1omatlc BUDGET PRICI!l furrdtatta •
THREJI! ROOMS and both fur.
.... lhlrd floor bllrlpl lllop.
changer. Make payrnenll of
...... d apart"""'~ 1311. .· 'lllulDater Furnltun. 'M' I t;.
$5 or pay just $11.11. CaD •
berrv. "'"'"· 09!-3714. lt-lltp 1211.
Ohio.
t • 1111
10-27.flc
fNFORMATION
DU.Dlltrii!S
5 •·•· D1y laf•• P"'-llc1tlofll

~

.

•.

...

'
~

•

M7.

HOBSTETTER~

REALTY

YOU HAVI HIARD ' AIOUT,
YOU HAVE IEIH !XPICTING
IT, IT IS NOW NI!AII

SIEGLER and
TROPIC·AIRE Heaters

A NH' CHUICH IS II! lNG IOfl

..

1;.
l!lig

Trado-ln Allawanco

POMEROY
"2-2181

ne- '

..•.
.

$avo Nowi lnotoll Howl
C:OMP!-.ETE LINE

Jaclc W. c;arsey,

o

8utll-

Mfr.

'

'

,..d••

Ma.,'•

DOZER, 8ACKHOE. "-hhr
8Dd lnldl: ... ..... leJIIIe
tanks, water Jines, b•..,,
also topooU. J1emJ Bahr,
phone 1115 Ill ctr RA&gt;pr Belir,
phoDe 1115 Ill"
10 II Dip

.

Service ... Frld.y night
7:30 P.M. In Th• for•r
Br-n'• MoriM Bwildlng 0t1
St~:~t• Rout• 12-4, Mlrwuvlll•,
Ohio.
Po•tor - lon Detrln/ton •f tile
oYan•wood
Secon
Bo,.lot
Chvrch.
(An lndo,.nclont Chuut.)

'

C. C. BRADFORD
AUC'nONBi!R
Complelo Boa ...
Ph- I4NII1
llldle. OMt
Crltt Brllldf•d

I 1 tfe
AIR CONDITIONING llefrtpr·
atlon servtee. Jack'• RefrlgeraUon, New Haven. booe
8fl2.211'19.
4 • tfe

' rinse
mob cor

'"•ndant

3.

M;J&lt; • •·: • ·• • • • • ·II to 6
Sot .•••••••••• ·9 to 7

ertlf. AutltoriJed Singer Sales
and Service. We Sharpen
Selason.
s.zt.tre

lnsur•-

i\tri'OMomtE lnsuzauce belli
eanceDed? Loot your Ofllll'llor'a license? CaD llt-29118.

• 11 1!'1!

llfl

Sun.- ' --····•

to

wort. Live
deoired. C&lt;lntact 0:
Hlndv over Liberty Tbeatre
in Middleport. Phone 11921'251.
I~Ue

SORRY SAL II now a Merry
Gal. She used Blue Lustre
rug and upholstery cleaner.
Rent electric shampooer 11.
Baker Fumllure.
10-2Utc
TWO FAMILY bouse, 2M Race

st.. Middleport. Pltone 992:11648.
10-n-14~

in il

ANTIQUES, furniture, dllllll.
mlocellaneous. '111'1. H01JII!'d
CecU, 1011 W. Main St., Pome'lfl1.
14-tle

Lost
CHEVY, 2 door Sedan, 301
FIVE-MONTII.OLD
Pollfd Her&amp;cubic loeb, 4 barreD, a speed
ford
heiler.
Loot
In Tannen
on floor, good condiUon, aD
Run
area.
Anyone
aeelng the
new elbaust sylllem, .-o.
heifer Is asked lo call fl9.
Phone m-71101.
1&amp;.2$«c

~

. 10.27-«e

3774.

1965 I'ORD pickup, all emas,
excellent condition. 11300.
Phone !Kt-28411.
I~

ot
®

2SIGNS
Of

QIIAUTY

LADIES TIMEX WAml In the
vU1age oF Syracule Wednel·
day evening. If found eall
9ft.2110ft. Clleryl Moo,..
11-l-31c

~- Pomeroy":y

Motor Co.

67 PONTIAC Firobird H.T. Cre...........

... ...... $2595

Four on the floor, 400 8 c:y ., LeMons, blue finish,
custom striping, blue vinyl int. , with bucket seats ,
stereo P.B. radio, 23,000 miles by local owner. Like
new 1st line wide oval W.W. tires .

66 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE CON ......

Sc•IWirztl •rlne
Hockisfport, Ohio
Phone 667-3370

Frvm the Loraost Trucl&lt; or
Bullrb10r Radfoli&gt;r ' To Tho
&amp;noll01t Heater Core.

BlAETTNARS
. lliXPEIT

PomOI'VJ'

Wheel Alignment

s·:ss·

• Free Estimates

-GtiAIIANil!D...
PHONE 992-2094

• Qua! lty Concrete

Pomeroy Home &amp; AUfol
... B. Mallt

p

• C.Ufled Sbenath
• Dellvel'J
. • Quick Service
•Finish in&amp;
• Sand &amp; Gravel

Wanted

LADY FOR bouse

. EIPEIIENCED
Witter Service

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

euy, Flee . . .
malel. Pbono - - . Golfo
lelD Ready - Mls CO., ~
port, Ohio.
I • lfa

SEWING MACHINES, repl!r
service, an mabl. WY S.
!1111. 'nte l'abrle Shop, Pom-

I

IYINRUDE
69's Are Hare

ad rlgltt kt your project.

aitd

TURI&lt;EV RAFflE

,..

Flr~t

F'aJt

CHANCES ONTH'

PARSON···

t

I

ot

READY - Mil eonuela deliY·

WIF TH' FELLERS,

llusiness Servic.es

splrlt~~ctl

s.m.

WMPO
INFORMADON
NEWS
presents
LOCAL REPORTS
DAILY

~.
11-1

OIAL 992-3284
HE'LL GO 10 NJY

£E#JG1J.IS RlR ... OW I:E
TO PROlE 1-\E CAIJ

GOEGLEIN GRAVEL

~Mel

407 PAGE
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

AT
7:SO A.M.
12 NOON

3 P.M.
AND

4:30 P.M.
I GC11 FOURTEfl't

Keeping
Meigs
.
.
- t;OIIia a·nd ,.
Mason Area
Informed As
Well As
~

~

MORE MUTT'S IN
lHAT CAGE -'I'CIO

~

Pltl(ll1' UP THE

'TAB FOR

1966 OLDS F85...................... ... . .
. ..... $1895
H.T . Cpe. DeluJCe trim . Vinyl interior. Med . blue col.

Entertained

LEGAL NOTICE

or. Power steering and automatic trans . Good W.W.
tires. Low mileage by local owner.

Pomeroy Motor Co.
OPIN IV IS. 8:00 P)II.
I'OMIROY, OHIO
UeAL NOTICI
1N THe

C~

PUAI COUIT,

MIOI COUNTY, 01110
.... 14.211

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

YIIUON PIIRY, .. .tl

"lbto..........
Korftl. ... el.
ta.

•UJB088

~~aetl br taw Court of Common Plu.l
ot 11e1J1 COWlb'. OIUo, I ril offer

e:u.mple

1. Nursery
rllyme

mother

2. Exhort•
3. Border
4. Recital

~.

alld Ute
vorUon of my lann now ln 111.1 ..-.
Millon to be foulld oo Ule nc:onl

now •• Pomeroy, Oblo. u C.urt
reeord and abo-.e •ld fum wu pur-

chotee :
o.bbr.

ehued from F. B. RoPn.
8&amp;1d tract ill bounded u follo-:
on Ute llOI'tll b)' Petu Woodrum1 on
the &amp;lilt bY J. A. ftutberford. &lt;fol·

5. Partot
BEATO
6. Where the

biiOIII

T!te torpedQ Is tile delldlle~ .

lnwlD( Raeeoon Creek \0 UM Holde
Sutphin ao acre trecUI U..nc. _._

,.... moN or 1111.
•toP&amp; II ~ prevlo\llb ,.ld
leawlJI&amp; II acru 11101• or lftl,
'hi'IU 01 51111: Call tor DO\ ....
tn1n two-tblrdll ol the appl'l.lle4 v•
lut~. \he properl.J belna ~~p~~nlad ••
IIIO.ot. ~&amp;aT C. HAIL'I'SNBACR
lbntft of ..... COiu:IU'

,

clouo

11. Bur·

mlllt have had Khool tuition
bills In mind.

weiJpoa e v e r developed (qc:•.
tea wutw, accard!ng to lbll
EncJC[opaedla Britannica.
.

D.

N.. W. ·
. ·.

1•01 II nu 1, I. II, B

OPTOIETJ,IST

•.

......

Ufblll a~
1. Metatlk

...,.

l9i·Heir
20. Troupe

for

21.

~of

Ye.....&amp;J''I A•IWir-

cake

23. Settler's
stake

31 . DeMit
,

%4. Snobbery ·
2~. Freneh

river
21. SIQU!o

.21 ..'Handed-:

!li'VU;er

32. Botad trein
. a:t. Uileouth

pei'IOn

88. lnd\an
~J . in Chaco

elemeat

ovU '

legally

'ifl· 38. Mother
ol
Iriah goda

~Jeasbore .·
ll.' Happineu

30. American

40. A~aa

a.ota

JJWJMJJ3~;-~,:::%~-=

IJnlcramble theBe (our JumbiH,
one letter to eMh aquan, to
form .Jour Ol'dinary wor4a.

Ian ~

DowN

estetl!:
BtlUit.ed IJI lbe To\ftldlp ol SaU.
bul')' , llelp County, ()lalao. S.ial in
S.CtJun 31, Town t, Raqe II ot UK

alone •~ld Ual!t to Charlie Sutpb!D;
thrlnoe nonb to the plMe of MilDHiD(, eonUinlnl 1'1 IC,., N tlw

....

13,' Jla.ll-

meso

at the atePt of Ole Court HOUH of
Mid Count,., Ill Ute vw.,e of Pomeroy, the loUowtnJ deecrlbed nal

Folk hero Johnny Apple·
seed was in reality John
Chapman C1774-1114&gt;), born
ln Leomincter, Mass., who
died In Indiana, The World
Almanac says. Apples are
not indigenous to the
United Stal2s and much of
Ch.apman's fame came
from having planted numerous orchards in Ohio
and Indiana, hastening the
spread of apples westward.

43.J;team
44. Newa,a.d

Fair, for

for Nle •t pubHe aU~::Uon on \be 2lrd
d.,- of N..,ember, 1• al JO:OO a.m.

Co~J~PU~Y'I

.

. DAILY CROSSWORD

Pl.tnuaD.t to a Writ o• Pan.IUOil ...

Ohlo

mOth

bravo

KJ
- ~ .urr-ou - ~ ·

II

..·II 11J

·

. .

omcy; HOURS lo30 To l"'J '1'0 6 (CLOSE AT. NOON.ON
.r.l\~ ' Ef.ST CO\JiiT $T., POMEROY

··3

The wholo family will
thank Dod when he
treats to dinn•r with
us. We spocialiu in

•\

{

'·

·New Furalturt

family feasts ,, .. from
tasty appetizers to de·
Iic ious d•uerts. Join
us soon.

.OILY

$299
·,'T

218 E. Main
992·9974
POMEROY. OHIO

Dolly 5r30 A.M. to 8:30 P.M.-Sunday 7:00 to 7o0.0

•

~LL

&lt;:k-

'EM, GIRlif1?

.. ...........$2095

Local I owner cor, new w·s·w tires, vinyl trim with
bucket seats, console, radio, P .S. &amp; P .B., auto. trans .
dark blue finish with white nylon top. A real sharpie.

au.

S.mni

-On the l•v•l of

I THOIJ6HT HE Mt6trr
Lli(E TO BUV SOME

HE

D·
.., UN
~

�•:to

,, '

~··

.,

10 ~ Tile Dolly Sentinel, POII\Ol'Oli-M~rt, 0., Friday, Nowmber I, 1968

'

"Over 250 in Masquerade Parade President
.Of China
over 250 muquenders C()ID·
Funniest: Kevin Smith arxl Eric
peted for the 36 cash prizes giv.. Curmingham, ftrsts; Chris Hutchen by Feeney .. Ht:nne ~. i'ost 128, ison and Wayne Allensworth.
AmeriCin Leglon, at the annua1
Wlnners ln the category for
communit,y Halloween party stag· children in the first through the
od Thur~ ni&amp;ht at the Middle- sixth grades, first, secoOO and
port olldlum.
third places respectively, includJohn Fultz andWUliamSwisher ed:
were chairmen for the party, and
Most original: Tom Walters,
other leglo1'1J'aires there to lerd Vicki Slack and Marc Haggerty,
a hand in managing the children
Prettiest: Terri Fife, Becky
were Commander Albert Roush, F'ultz and Julie Byer.
Chester Erwin, Lewis Long, He~
Ugliest: Doug Acree, AM Fitch
ry Clatworthy, sam Clark, Nor- and Sally Walters, secor.:!, 1 n d
man VanMeter, Don Roach, Char- George Batey a lXI _Jamie Scally,
les Byer and Lewis sauer. Don- third.
ald Lowery also assisted.
Each participant in the parade
of the masked was given a trinket and served refreshments or
soft drinks and donuts. Costumes
were jlliged by Mrs. Carroll
SWanson, Mrs. Joe Bailey and
Tom Kelly.
Winning prizes of $2, $1, and
SOc, first, second and third reBy United Press International
spectively, in the pre-school age
Americans across the countr,y
group were the follawil'"@:
expressed optimism today that
Most original: April King,
first; Frank Martin ard Alan Ar- President Johnson's decision to
nott. secoOO, and Randy Murray halt all bombi~ of North
Vietnam will help bring an end
and Larry Byers, third.
Prettiest: Mindy Long, Tony to the war.
Although some persons voiced
Kennedy and Dick Boyles.
dissatisCa:ction with the move,
Ugliest: Angela Baker, David
an overwhelming ma.iority or
Demoskey and Carl Allensworth.
scores or ordirary citizens
interviewed by United Press
International said they welcomed the bornbi~ halt as 1
TONIGHT THRU TUESDAY
step toward peace.
At the same time most said
NOVEMBEH 1-5
they felt there was an element
.. PLANET OF THE APES"
of politics in the move's coming
(Techn\color)
just nve days before the
Charlton Heston
presidential election. llut the
Roddy Mo[)Qwall
great majority asserted this
COLORCARTOONS,
would change few votes, and
Frog PoOO
certainly not their own.
S\Yashbuckled
Nashville lawyer Clarence ~l
SHOW STARTS 7 P, M.
Beaty J r, summed up the
predominant view of the bombing halt's peace potential wiUJ
the statement, "I think there
might be a chance this will
help."
Timing Suspicious
TONIGHT, SATURDAY
Politically. he said, "it's hard
and SUNDAY
to believe a president would do
a thing like this just to get
NOV , 1-2-3
votes ror another Democrat.
"THE BIBLE ..
But the whole thing looks kind
Ava Gardner -Peter O'Toole
of suspicious cofh.ing thl s close
Stephen Boyd
before the election
PLUS
"I don't think It will swing too
.,THE SILENT SCREAMER"
many votes because r think a
(2 Reel Color ~ecial)
1 big majority thinks it's just a

Funniest: Romie Cunntngtain,

Kath,y Baker aDI Dreama Ho,.fo.
ter, Mary Ault aDI Kathy Har·

rts, third.
In the category Cor participants sixth grade and It&gt; the wlt&gt;ners were:
Most Original: Barbara Fult.,
Craig Fire and David See, second,

and stove ldcGutrln, lltlrd.
Prettiest: Paul C111111ingh1m,
Penni Walters anti LtlllaGenrd.
Ugliest: Arnold Jolmson, Gene
Buokley and Rcpr De!tt.
Funniest: ·Debbie Gilkey ard
Vicky VuJakll.il, firsts, J o h n
Rile,y, aoo JOO;y McHame.

Nation Optimistic
at Bombing Halt

. MUGS lHEATRE

~~-----till--~

trick.

I

VOTE FOR

vote."
Beaty

declined to say who

would get that vote.
·About five out of every eight
persons canvassed gave the
move their unqualilled endorse-

Is Fired
HONG KONG (IIPI) - T h e
cantra1 Committee ol lhe Chi""'" CoaultuDIII paiV hal ftrod
Prell- Llu S1ao-dd 111&lt;1 &amp;trippeel him ol all his poriJ polls,
Paklng radio ttuld

lodoJ.

Mao

Tse-4ung presided over the meetIng lhat pve him victDry In hla

Cultural Revolutloo.
a vote by lite rubberotamp 9th
Nali&lt;rlal Par1j&lt; C&lt;llll"e•• wltlch
fa to be convened uat a 1ult.ble
Ume." But the Central Committee is the nder of Chl.na tmder
Chairman Mao and ita word Ia
law.
The announcement whldl referred to Uu as a urenegade,
traitor and scamp," hinted at
fUture punjahment for 1lle man
wltose deftance ol Mao brought
on ooe of the bloodiest power
otruglllea In history In a nation

that has knmmltttleelsethrough~
out Its centuries.
Uu has been Wlder bouse ar-

U. S. SENATOR

Frieda Young
Dies Friday

Roger Rood, 19
Dies Thursday

He attended schools at River.
view elementary at Reedsville
and Eastern High School, a n d
worked on guardraD construction
untU his lllness.
&amp;lrvivors include his mother
and stepfather, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles D. WUIIOil, Reed.wllle;
a brother, Jack Rood, Reedsville;
two sisters, Mrs. Frances Put-

nam, Hockingport, and M r •·

uor Cootrol.
D. came tD Harold A. Reeves,
213 North Secmd Ave., Middle·
port, a 0-5 night club permit to
sell beer, wine or splrttuooo llq·

uor by the_glass wtt112:30 a.m.
John Tyler, of all presidents
of the United States, had the
greatest number of children-

IS.

Shirley Barber, Rt. 1, Reeds-

hla father, Albert H. Rood.
FW18ral services will be conWllsm, and Mkhael Allen wu.
~cted Smds.Y at 2 p.m. at the
son, all at home; and his grandmother, Mrs. Nellie Frizzle, White Funeral Home, COOlville,
where friends Jll&amp;.Y caU after

He was preceded in death by

noon on saturday

Our checks can keep you warm!
Have you ever thought of how often you
could avoid cold, raw weather if you had a
Checking Account here to pay bills-even
make prepaid purchases- by mail? And
when you visit our "Full Service" bank on
bad wjnter days, you could do all of your
banking- checking, saving, safe deposit,
loan-in one trip to one place!

Open a Checking Account here NOW!

POMEROY
NATIONAL BANK
RUTLAND

POMEROY
Serving Meig:5 County for o11er 96 years
Member Federal Reserve S)•Stem

Open Friduy Nights 5:00 10 7:00

l

I

.

Winner in each 9tegory was se-

Captured Near

lected frCllll ooeh of the two

In addition, Utere are four roun.
ty ofrleea where incumbent Re-

Jewelry Store

.EXCELLENT SELECTION
Of FAMOUS

SWEATE
BY PURITAN,
RUGBY, JOciY
AND ARROW

The warr&amp;Dt against Stewart
.... alsnedby Gallla COUncy Pro•·

ecutlng AUI&gt;rnOY Jdlll A. EJ&gt;ling, w1to along with Clcy POllee
and the Gallla COUncy Sberill' •
Department worked 011 the caae
since about 3 a.m. today.

Wilson Nease
Dies Wednesday
MASON 73, Mason, died Wednesday eve-

ning while giving !roots to the

am

Good Faith
(Cor&amp;lnued frCllll Page I)
mesit'-\re ready by then.
- There is an underatandirw

tltot the 1J.lks cannot continue,
and bombiJW or the north may
be resumed, lC the enemy
resumes attacks
on South
VIetnamese cities or taUs to
respect the neutrality ot the
DemUitartzed
Zone between

North and South Vietnam.
It wu necessary to have an
"understanding" Instead of an

agreement or compact on the
secoOO point in order to avoid
· loss or face tor Hlmi, which
still ls rree to claim that the
CommWlists got Johnson to
order an "unconiitioMI" halt in
the air and r.W attacks.

Others felt North VIetnam
might wen be ogre&lt;~lng to
bru.der am more intenahe
lllks to pin smte naplto frGm
U.S. attackl at&gt;! rebuild their
strongth to contlllle a protracfo.

YOUTH TAKEN ILL
The POmeroy emervenqiJ'Illlll
answered a call at 6:55 p.m.
Marauder 8tadlum wltere
Paul Miller, Middleport, had become w. He wu taklll to Velerano MeJDOrlal Holjillal wltere
1te was admlltod fw treabDeltl.
lo believed to ba.. sullerod
an _.ncltlo attack.

no

$7;00

VETERANS.u&gt;MORJAL
HOSPITAL .

AND UP

Admiaslonl -

The Store ll'ilh Fashion

2nd Ave.

Mlddleptll'l, 0,

for

publican candidates are running
unopposed and the onl,y thing at

Dlodlarlel- Danna~ ....
vtekl
Lewlo IIU!IItll,
LevlDa D&gt;erlboclt, M7rll• ~
kina, Ooa~aa.

Br-.

didate. Oppos~ EpllnJl Is lfonald II , Calhoun, appointed by the
Democrats to oppose l=.'pling.
AI the May primary, lhe Democrats nominatod GaiJipolis Munl clpal ,Judge Hobert S. Bell
by a IYritC-in vote. Lkll nctz
withdrew from the race and t:&amp;lhoun was appointed.
Another native son, H. William Jenkins, who for the past
four years has been Gallipolis
Clt.f Solicitor, is the candidate
for the post of GaiUa County
Prose&lt;."Uting Attorney on t h e
Democratic ticket .

40 PAGES
POMEI!OY -MIDDLEPORT
VOL 3 NO 40

MRS. ~ FOLMER was aerylng apln as l ''J)ocltel
lady" Thurocll.Y night when the amual Halloween candval was
held at the Pomeroy Elementary School. A pocket lady wears
a large epron with many pocket&amp; each or whlch contatna a
prize. Tile y""""'blro pick a prize from a pockeL Mrs. Fol·

Crewson
Talks on
Poverty

mer las served aa a ''pocket lady" tor over 10 yel.rL

Craig Venoy, Danny WlU, most
orlgl.-.1; Gnog Smith, Trttd)'
R01.Ch, preWest.
Fifth grade: G. E. Guinther
alii Tommy anti Katrina Batey,
uglieot; Trlna DuH;y, Mitchell
Chlj)man, moat orlgtnali Patty
Heaton, Fae Reibel, prettiest.
Sixth grade: carol Lewis, Joe
Wisecup, ugliest; Michael Braun,

POMEROY -

prosperous should tolerate pov-

lor, prettiest.
Two klllktrgarten daases,
morning am afternoon: Brent
Sisson, Tod Johnson. ugliest;
John Hoffman, Anfy Riggs, most

original; lleldi Huber, Lori Rtt&gt;e,
preWest.
~cial Education: two wl~
nen, DebbJe Cimpbell, ugl1e¥t,
aDd Kathy caq,bell, p~ttiesl.
Thefe were game booths, food

RETIRES - Meigs Count,y native James Slyre, of 402
Third St., Kanauga, head of the bakery department at the Gallipolis State ln~Utute, retired last Thursday after completing
41 ye•rs servt~ with the institution. Sayre is shown here takIng freshly baked loaves ot'bread [rom the kitchen's new oven.

EXCITING TildE - Tbe &amp;Mual llalloween . ...,. ..,..
twne part;y Is an Ulll\llnall,y exciting time lor yoongsters and
Pomeroy elementary atudenta showed unusualb attractive
allll oriJinal oostuming 11ttlfodOY nigh!. Abqve, David Lewis,
R&lt;innte Citlll&gt;ms ind F1oyd Keru/ed,y,lelt t&lt;l'rlalrt, chat In tlletr
ftrat sracte room. - sentinel Pholo.

Retltes Th.urlday

James S+yre, Baker,

Is Inducted

{

Tho Melga CourtlY Selective
Service office located In the Ma
sonic Temple building in Pome.
roy will be cloaod from Ntw. Ito
Nov. 18, with the exception of
Nov. 6 am 13.
On those two dl\ra Ute ofl'iCf'
wW be open from 9:30 a.m. to
3p.m.
Meanwhile, lite board reportod
lite Induction ol one man andprelncmction pbyllcal IIUJilinations
for ellht others on Oct. 24 at
Fort·lla,yes, Columbus.
IDdueted wa1 Larry D. Circle,
a yolunleer. Underaolng ph,ysical
eumlnati&lt;Mll ,.re Jaek L. Mow.
ery, Darrell NlllPOr, CWlord D.
AohiQ, Herold W. Brinker, Arlltur o. Koenll, Daniel E. Stan.
Ill,)', Mlchul L. JolllaonarttiCIJn.
ton M. Dlntluaa.

TAX QUEl!TIONS

-y

NEW YORK -

SPIRO T. AGNEW SAID
that for Negroeo
the titles or America were "Uke livlrw in a coloney."
HThe black men aOO women of our urbaP ghettos_today exial
In an environment where nearly everything Is owned and controlled
by white peo,&amp;e - the banks, the businesses. the hoapitals, the
schools, the ttousiqr. lt ls like living ln a co~;ony. where the reaJ
owners maqage afiairs · ft&lt;m more cantortable surrouMstng tar

MEMBERS OF MEATCUTfERS District Unl01

ClEVELAND -

ravor

Local 427 voted Thuroda,y nigltt 646 to 191 In
of a new threeyear wage contract, averting a wldeapread walkout. ~t covered 4,300
mootcuttero and wri()J&gt;Ors employed by the major food cltatna

tltrotl8it0ut oor11te08t.Ohlo.
The union won a wage increase of 20 per cent over three years.
The taste wage Cor meetcutters prior to the new settlement was

$3.57 an boor. Tile contl-act also callod for longer vacatlono, heoltl!

and welfare improvements, a dental program aM lmpro~ I•
aunnee JU'ograms.

Ani $ave All 01 .
I

I

y.,.., S.l..llpi F•
'

-;

i

.

~

'.

"'

,,,

~

The ·Store •list O.r .F,rtt r.r~l~
,.
.......
;,

~

.

'

Sti.-i Aerts$ FrO., .
.

they

Sayre, a

ll' - he

born In Antiquity

Ill June 25, 1909- retired from

jho Gall""!!• State Jnstltqte on
Oct. 31 aner completing41'y eara
aervlce wttli-t~te lnolltution.
Last 1\leaday, several co workera honored s.rre with an
open house tor his efforts put
forth down through the years.
Sa¥re came to GaUia qKmty a-

/

m.

An t11111Ual tact lbont tho Por-

is a rormcr state senator .
J. Sherman Porter, Democnl,
I a opposod by incumbent State

tera' caudtdacy is that

Ja~nN

~man

POrter, III, is t b •
Senator Oakley &lt;;. &lt;;olllnsoflron. youngest state repreMnt&amp;Uve
ton, a Republican who has serv- eandidate. And, too, the POrter..
ed severaJ terms in the Ohio Porter dd&lt;et Is reported to be
Senate. His son, James ,!i)erman the only "father-&amp;m~• ticket in
Porter, Dl, lo oppo10d by Jn. the United StaLes.
cumbent Uepublican Ualph Wei ~
Uooppooed n..,.bllcan candiker o1 M~&gt;V
'S for Ute state dates at Tuesda.v's election a r •
'-'
these incumbents:Marjorieftlne·s race Is for hart, clerk ol court; Dr. DoftiJd
t
tate Senator R. Warehime, coroner; Of;y M.
pt.
.. . Welker Stewart, treasure'r; and Mra•
ra
~ Distrlct EvaJee S. Myers, county record~ t1
st.al
er.
•t.

·~

'

?,..

l

pJo.Yed ~ L~'• Furrdture Factory. ~r tT:fO years there, he
joined tho OHE kitchen staff on

AtJi. II, 11127.
He later moved to the bakery

department, am on Ma,y 1, 1952.
was appo~ he~¢. baker. He
held ihal pott until hlo retlrement1asl ....
Stanley M4Jt~ery, who hao

,_

~·

_.f' '

'·

'

'

.-·.

tor the past

-

Wll I

•

11 lfi?,

e managed a LIWe

ail team. In 1948,
lnqer of. the Amer;

Ican Loll . baooball IQllld In
Galllpolla, ,ad for lite nexllhree
or fonr y~o, managed lh• Gai-

dhlo

L-a baaeb'll!
!n 1954 l!llll955.
. managed a l!lrlo oofl.
...i.e ~o yeara .....
port In IIUJllllter

·

SUNDAY. NOVEM
_B
_E
_R_3_._,_19
_6_8_' _ _ __G_AL_ L_rP_o _LIS_ 1'1
_ ..:..
· P
_ LE
.::.Ni.::.':.:
AN_._
T_ _ __.:.:PR"-'I.::C.=.E_._IO::....::C:=E.:..N:.:.T_

Knorr Honored for Heroics
BY HOBEHT•WINGETT

POMEROY - A Pagctown area
msn, who!e heroic action i!l credIted with !"aYing the Jife of 15year-old Dennis Boggs at Marauder SladJum followingthegameagainst Wellston on Oeklber 18,
was recognized and praised during haJftime activities of the
Meigs game Friday night.
Garrett Knorr was honored
for acting with LU1usual deci·sion and speed to knock Boggs,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Lionel
Boggs or MlddJeport, from contact With a hot guy wire Jeading to the switch box for lights
at Marauder stadiwn.
Roggs had by chance taken
hold of tile wire in the muddy, slippery conditions following the game against Wellston
and the wire, apparently due
to the ex1remc rainy conditions,
carried a considerabJe charge.
Boggs , crying for help, was igoored by several persons who
thought the Meigs lligll sopho~
more was onJ,y Cooling.
•'
Mr. Knorr. however, realized the youth was in serJous
trouble and reacted quickly to
UteraUy ''roll . block" Boggs
free.

Knorr, alter knocking Boggs
free, jumped to his feet in aJ.
most the same motion and raced
to stop the Pomeroy l::mergen..
cy Squad truck that was in the
process of lea\'ingthe CieJdarea.
Boggs was taken by squadmen
to Veterans Memorial Hospital
where he was treHled, kept overnight ar~d released.
Knorr, a f1ainter and paper
hanger by profession who came
to the Meigs area several years
ago while working as a con.
struction worker at the Kyger
Creek Plant, said he was leaving tfle stadium area carrying
two cups or soft drinks when he
determined Boggs was in trouble.
"I guess the reason I realiz ed Dennis had come in contact
with hot wires is because or a
course I took once in emergen.
cy training as a volunteer rireman and because 1 saw a reiJow
e lectrocuted severaJ years ago
when I was working on a construction job," said Knorr.
"Anyhow," Knorr continued,
"When I saw Demis was i.n trou.
l;lle, 1 handed the two cups of
pop I was carrying lo some fellow and dived to knock tum free .

My fir Bl thought when I got up
off the ground was to find t h e
guy who had my soft drinks
and then about the same time I
took orr to stop the emergency

squad. ••
Knorr received a sklruled leg
himself rrom the incident and also
lost his glasses which still have
not been fowld. Lionel Boggs,
grateful father of the Middleport
youngster, went to the Knorr
home the day aner the accldent
to express his appreciation and
to give Knorr money to replace
his lost glasses.
Knorr was given a loud round
or appJause by Meigs Marauder
football fans Friday night Alter
he was presented a certificate of
commendation and reserved seat
season tickets for him and his
wtre to the 1969 Marauder home
fopthall games from Principal
James Diehl.
Mr. Knorr has also received
JeUers or praise from the Meigs
Board of Education and SUpt.
George Hargrave1, Jr.
Knorr's daughter, Diane, is a

Meigs Marauder varoill &lt;hlll!r·
leader . The Knorr&amp; ·also have a
son, Duane, a Rutland Higll graduate, who Js a freshman at 011f9
Uninralty.

ROBERT 'ND.LS

Mills Named
For Honor
MIDDLEPORT-Robert Mills,
who started ln 1953 as an as~
alstant scoutmaster and then became scootmaster in 1963, has

been

named

M-G-ld Dlatrkt

"8cou1flr of the Week •.,

trips to Michigan, Canada, Lake
Zaleski at McArthur, and Lake

Erie.

~- Bob recei•ed" hlo Scoutfir!a Key In 1980 'lfter receiving

ruu training.

ilob'a wilt, Joy~, hal hell)od

aetlvtuea, hlm 'lll hll ~~ l!OI'kbfbe
lng uride~ """ oittltualaa1952 l!t.
The MUla hllve a 1011, Da-.
·~, ~ Ja a cub acGU~
235 0\ (il)esqor. lollila

VOTEs AT 18th PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION - Tftotolll cotiflned to ltlo heme on Little Kypr
Rd., Hortie E. Shaver. Rt. l Cheshlre, 91-year~ld retired ranner, maintains an a\id interest ln
politics by way of television and newspaper. This past Wednesday, Mr. ~ver voted an absertee
ballot in the 1968 presidential election.

Retired Gallia Farmer

H. E. Shaver, 90, Votes In
18th Presidential Election

William McKlnlOY defeated [)em.
GALLIPQLIS - A G a I II a ocrat WiJiiam Jamlngs Bryan.
County retired farmer w h o a e He h¥ taken an active part iri
who was called On by city pollee
greatest desire was to vote in active politics, 011 all levels,
and together theY worked on the
another presidential electioo rea- aJl of his adult lite.
One of his fondest memories
case beginning 1 little after 3 a.
lized that desire this past Wedwhen
he
v«od
an
ahsen.ritla
nesday
was
when he Introduced Jollll W.
l
m. .
y.
•
11 was 3:09 a. m. Friday when tee ballot In lite 1968 J)l'ellden· Davis, a p(esidenti.al candldate,
at a polltieal raii.Y In 1923, at
City
Patrolman Joe Owens,
tia1 election.
patrolling on Second Avo., spotHe ls HorUe E. 91aver. Rt. Gallipolis. The late J. Earneat
ted Fitch In the jewelry store. He I Cheablre, wbo will be 91-yearo Halllda,y, father ol Galllpoits AI·
eaU~ Cor asais~-e. Respond-- of age in February -1969. It was
to"'!'Y John E. Hallldaf, was
1.: to the rear o{ the building, bla 18th presidential election, chaitman of the rally.
Davis was opposing Cl!lvln
where they picked "' .Stewart, and to the beot ol 111• knowledt!o
COOIIdae,
lite 30th prealdent ol
were Patrolman Gary Wallace, he has
Ia .every election.
lite
United
Siates. COOiidl!o poll.
offo&lt;lut,y patri),lman Jerry &lt;fa,ylor,
Mr. llla.,r ~ 1lli,m In Febed
15,725,016
popolar vot.o. to
· year lhe
alii GaU!a COunly ~ucy Sheri!! ~ l~?&amp;, ,',tl!l&gt; Phil Underwood.
firot COlltjltar,clal , tol........ ex" Davis' 8,385,586, .and had ,382
Voteo to Davis' UO
r;:i ',;,Aijpf.iteY ;.Efllng . ~~ opeiiOtl Ill America at Elf&lt;loral
lltlit l'ilcht'!Ul'bo '.'N"" Haven, Contr. That Will the Elactoral Vote a. · ,
Ctllltl ~ on ~r before F. w. Woolworth .
Tltottgh Coottlned to hla home
cltorge ~ ~I loOtri .... 111• llrst live ~ teo cent on Lillie K111r Rd., Mt: !ita·
Stel&lt;art and l'lteh Ire e;pecll!d ' ~ at 'Utl~ N.
l'er ml.tatami" an aCtive 'lutereat
1n
and
to !&gt;&lt;) ar~lgned op ~l)la,o"'l!' ,,, H\-0 fir at ,...,.ldentlal
formation next week In Gallla, ~ whlelt
Collllll' .comin... 1'1~•' c~ ~ 'tiao
BY UICK THOMAS

foiW

~

'" •

'

~,. /&gt;~

·;I

r'

of Middleport on October 18.

Four Minor

LOGAN, Ohio (UP!) ~ Ne. - ""
gotiations resumed late sat,urday between striking United Rubber workers and otr...
c ials of the Goodyear Tire
and Rubber Co. Plant here.
The walkout began earlY Saturday when the t:ont:ract for
some 950 employes eJIPired.
Bargaining started In September and day .. long sessions
were held the past week in
the wage dispute.

Accidents
GALLIPOLIS- City policein-

·

jury under $7,500 bond.
Charges against the two men
leadership, has gone on many were filod by Gallia Count.Y Proscamping excursions including ecuting Attorney Jotm A. Eplln.g
Mills' Troop 245, Wider Bob's

Princip&amp;l James Dlehl. Mr. Knorr was recognized Cor his
heroic action credited wtth sa vine the life of DeMis Bogp

ve stigated four minor accidents
Friday bringing the annual total
to 336 accidents in the city in the

Burglary
Suspect
Arrested

Herman James Fitch, 25, Rt. 1
Mt. Perr,y in a taxi and turned
him over to th~ GaUipolls police
department late Friday night.
Fitch was broughl toCallipolis
where he Is confined to the Gal·
lia cOunty, Jail ~ntll Monday when
lle is scheduled to 11Ppe8r in municipal court on a chatge of breakIng and entering;
·
IB:Ientitied as Fitch's accomplice, carl Eugene stewart. 19,
Rt. I Middleport, was captured
at the rear of tfle jewelry store
by Gal lipoli s police. He pleaded
nat guilty Friday in municipal
court and was held to the graiXI

KNORR REaJGNIZED - Garrett Knorr of near P town is presented letters oC praise and two reserved seat
tickets to the 1969 Meigs Marauders bene gameo by Meigs

Are Probed

Deputy Robert' Beegle captured

BJu' DevOe summer leaMills baa been aaslated In his
boo~ toom of W11ich hla
ettorta by Gene CoJeman a n d
Dalla!i PJ a member. 'I1dJ lArry Rice. Troop 24.1 II SJ&gt;OII·
' arQ.p of bat'o So,yro man- aored by lite Feene.Y Bettnett
w..i on' to lllll two Soutll· American Legion Post of Middlein,!tll!lhl~a

erty," Harry B. Crew son, Democratic Congressional candidate,
uid Saturday night.
~eaking at a Meigs County
Democratic rally and dinner in
Pomeroy, the candidate stressed
the need for a "cooperative and
dedicated" etrort in confronting
a~ solving the po\'erty problem.
''It is theresponsibilityofeach
citizen, private industry andgov.ernment to provide the opportunity cOr each member oC our society to develop to his fullest capabilities," Crewson said.
The economist pointed to the
1964 Ec:onomic Opportunity Act
which iildu(ied provisions for the
Job Col-ps anti the Head Start
Program, among others.
"Adlough some ma,y criticize
scwne of tflese attenu1ts at elim·
inatirw pvoer~·, several points
must be kept In mind concerning
these prQgrams, •• he told his supporters.
"First, the total amount spent
by the federal governmentonpoYercy· in this country in one year is
less than what we spend on the
(Continued on Page Two)

FIVE SECTIONS

GALLIPOLIS - A second suspect in the Friday morning burglary at Tawney's Jewelry Store
was apprt!helkled late Friday
night in Pomeroy.
Acting on a tip, the Pomeroy
PoJice Dtpartment arxl Sheritrs

l!ld was Orot em-

round 1!125,

decade, ttq; been narnod head
baker. Montj,omery assumed his
new ~ues oj. Friday ,
With the .;caption oCtwoyeara
Sa,yre IIJlODI Ill the U. S. Navy
- from ld~ ,13, 19H through
Jan. 16, 19te - he spent all hlo
time at tbi' GSL While In the
Navy, Sa,yr - you guessed it
"'

will continue to do a fine

natin of Meia:s Coun- job.''

W&amp;l

worked Wl~ SIYre

Elberfelds In Po.,mer·oy

or James to miss my fellow workers. ThOY
are great individuals. Pm sure

e, 59, o! 402 Thin! St., Ke-

ATLANTA - POUCE TODAY SEARCHED for the killer o
Deniel F. cannon Jr., 27, Columbus, Ohl~ who was killed Thura
day aa he stepped trorn a car In suburban College Park.
The rorm.er Marine sergeant an:! Vietram War veteran waa
training here as an assistant manager of a restaurant.

':·

.1

one fellow worker

away."

• or'

.

GALLIPOLIS - "He' B made a house. ru keep busy.''
at of 'dougt\' during hie U-7ear
Wh~n asked about leaving the
areer her&amp;t '' was the remark GSI, he said: Hrm really going

By United PreBS lnternatiooal

UNTIL 9:00

'

&lt;'

At GSI for 41 Years

SHOP FRIDAY and SATURDAY NIGHtS

'

"It is inconceiv-

able that a nation so affiuent and

Vlcl&lt;y Vaughan, most original;

One Volunteer

This leaves the county engineer's job as the onl,y other (.:onGallia l:ounty Hepublican t.:om- tested GaJIIa Count,y race. Inmislioner.
cumbent Democrat Lowell W.
Next to the EpHng - &lt;.:athoun . Dickason Is aeekinl re-election
race for judge, one of the hot- to his secmd term. His oppontest races in the county at next ent is Republican Glenn A. Smith
Tuesday's election is the bid for who woo the Republican nominaGallta &lt;.:ounty 9-leriff between in- tim by a write-in vote at theM~
cumbent Hepublican Sheriff Den- Jlrirnary.
ver A. WaJker, seekin~ re-elecJ. hrman Porter and his
tion to his second term, and son, James 9\erman Porter,
James M. Pratt, a former West ls the Democratic urather-800"
Virginia State PoJiceman, seek- team competing in the state sening the post for the first time
atorial - state representative
on tho Democratic ticket.
races respectively. The former

lkvnled To The Greater Middle Ohio Jlalley

Fourth grade: Brinley seth, the
Spoiler, Patzy Warner, qgllest;

am

nie) Jomsoo. son of the I a 1 e

Chauncey L. Johnson, long-Urne

tmts

prettiest.

staJWis, movies
other diver·
slons dw-lng the evening. Emcee
for the anrmal event was G J Y
Guinther.

.,-enkins' opponent at 1\lesday' s election Is htt.Y. Hamlin
c. King, Gallipolis' newest pracUcing atlorne,y, a Uepublican.
Before moving to Gallipolis last
January King was legal adviser for two years to the Ohio Department oC Agriculture.
Seeking their third consecutive term on the Board of GalHa Count.Y (;ommissioner is the
incumbent Democratic team of
L, Paul llaskins and Joe St.ewarl. Opposing them is the Itepubllcan combination of Arthur
Wheeler and CJarenee E. (John-

•

Jame• L. Fry,

I'OmerOl'; HarOld Slewart. Pomeroy; Paul Miller, Middleport.

BAHR CLO.

are candidates

~eoll"lceo.

cracte level.

rrom

•v Neck

team. also both natives of

GiJUpolls

Wl...,.a lncl-:
First grade: Lyle Moon, lr'aD'Ct,
Clllford Kennecb', Bjlider man,
!Ill leo!; Jilnml' SI\Yder, robot,

Administration of!lcials were
COLUMBUS (IIPI) - Six oi
divided in their view• as to the every 10 orltool districts in Ohlo
prospects tor major progreu Will have tax l11ue1 on ·.he baltoward peace.
lot Tuett"-l', accOrding .o sta,y.
Some fait lltat Hauol hid ner Brfib~ executln• secretaken enough punishment to be tar)' of the Ob1o QlncaU, •n Assoconvi need ol the need to ciation.
negotiate the beat poaolble
poilu cal settlement and then
work to subvert any nooCommunist goverrunert emerg.lng In the tiOOih.

people have tired.

• Pull Over

soil

I take Is the greatest totaloi complimentary votes.
Races exist Cor Ute county offices or commissioner, with two
to be elected, conunoo pleas
judge,
prosecuting attorney,
shcrlrr and engineer,
The contest dtat seems to be
attracting the most attention or
voters is the Common Pleas
Judge post on the non.partisan
Judicial Ballot.
Native son, John A. Epling,
who for the past four years has
b~n Gall ia ColUlty Prosecuting
Attorney, is the Republican can-

Wilson F. Nease, Maureen Hemesay, Debbie TIY·

ed struggle or which the
American govenanent ~

• Coat Style
• Crew Necks
• Turtle Necks

claues of each

Ron .cullmns. old lady, moat orlg1.-.Ii
Angela Barton, pink-·
One suspeet was captured. anVIcki Hood, bride, prettleot
other gut awa,y and tl!...,.o no
Secolld lfllde: Connie Romine,
official · - ol bow much wlteli, Brett Jones, wolf. ugliest;
waa llloieJI In a brealtlng and Ill·
Sherrl Mitch, Christmas stock..
1er1ng eati.Y t1t1s IIIOrlllntat lite
ing, David Burl, ,heldleSB man,
TawnOY Jewelry Sloro, Cf Secmost original; Maria Sheridan,
ond Ave.
Bo Pellt, Mary Barnltz, RodRitlAjlpreltended at the rear of lito
lrw Hood, prettiest.
store by oi(y pollee, carl &amp;tThlnl grade: Randy PhUI!j)o;
stewart, Rt. I Mlddl_.t, little old lody; illndy Houdaohel~
was charsodwllltbrealtlngaDIOil·
farmer, u.sttelt; Peggy Girolaml,
terlns. He pleaded not sull!;l' this scarecrow, Mark Mitch, jack-inmorning In GaiUpolls Munlcli&gt;al
box, moat orlgtml; Kim Batey,
Court anti wao held to lite grand
DP8.Y 1 Kim Krautter, rag doll,
jury Wider $7,500 boad.

View Pro!liOcta

ville; three stepbrothers, Charles David WUsoa, Jr. , Terry Lee

Reedavllle.

Middleport Man
.

ning from 7 to 9.

Reeves

IIOn.

Two native .sons are compct-

home anytime.

Issued

Pd. Fo, By
Fred W. Crow, Jr.
Meig_s chr., Saxbe
for U. S. Senator

llll!l

1.. in four maJor race11 for GalIta t:ounty ofth:es. ,\ rather and

Friends may oall at the 1\Jneral

Roger E. Rood, 19, Reedsville,
died Thursday at the UnJversity
to
Hospital, Columbus, following a
One new liquor permit issued
brle( lllness.
In
ldeigo Coun!;l' lo liJIICHii the
He was the son of lola Burns
24
new permits lsaued recently
WU son and the late Albert Rood,
and was born at East Uverpool. by the Ohio .~ent of Llq..

BY DICK TIIOM,\S
'G.-\LLIPOLJS - Native sons
a father-BOll team will high.
llibt local and state races at
~ Tuesda,y, Na,V, 5, general elec-

when lite -.1 HoDCOfeen PNV
was ·~ at lite ocltOol.
The canilv.lwaohlghilglttedby
the ap~ Ot )'OUillller&amp; In
costwnea ratW~Iitr from rod devIls to Little ~ P""'

Pat Holter, Mro. Kermit Walton,
Jack Welsh, Fred Morrow, Ralph
Werry anti TCllll GaaiOIL C a s h
prlzeo were Jive• the beot costwned in seve~ e~tegories. One

children during the Halloween
hour.
Mr. Nease was born June 30,
1895 in the Broad Run eommun-.
ity, the son of the late Bradford
and Sarah Nease. He1fasalsopreceded in death by his wire, Jessie
Marie, and a dl.ughter. Mra.
Mftrjorie Brinker. Mr. Neaaewas
a retired mainterance worker.
He is survived by two dauahters, Mrs. Marie starkey, DeDo.
ver, Colo., and Mra. Eileen MeCo,y, ~lpn~; raur grandchildren
two great-grandchUdren.
Funeral ~senices will be held
Saturday at 1:30 p. m. at the Fogl~sonz Funeral H(llle wlth' the
Rev. Ralph Mahoney of!lclatlng.
Burial wiU be In IOrk1antl CeJn&amp;.
tery, Friends may call this eve-

Night Club Pennit

CoiJlmon Pleas Court Judge Race Top Contest In Gallia

It wll '•Am lliJ pme" tbne
nu,rodll,l' alibi tor pupUo of the
Pcnero,y El~
Sehool

Jud&amp;lng eoatumea .were Mrs.

There remains the!ormali1;)'ot

ment
"I'm just terribly pleased and
1 hope it will lead to peace,"
said a Mimeapolis housewife, rest tn Peking Cor aome time,
Mrs. Nancy Eubank, who added probably slnee the Drat Indicashe will vote ror Hubert H. tion ot hi&amp; CaU from favor on
Humphrey as she had plamed. National Day celebrations Oct.
Another two out of elgtt said 1, 1966. He has DOt beeo seen
they approved of the move, but In pubUc since.
with reservations.
Qualified Endorsement
••1 am all ror It If It will
work,"
said
1
housewifeaccountant, Mrs. Dermis H. Hill
or Roswell, N.M. • .,but if the
North
VietMmese
do
n&lt;t
reciprocate, I think we should
Services are announced r 0 r
reswne the bambi~."' Mrs,
HIIJ, although a registered Frieda Elizabeth Mora Young, 75,
Democrat, said she will vote for Rl 1, Mlnerl\'ille, who died this
morning in Holzer Hoapltal.
Richard M. Nixon as planned.
&amp;e was preceded ln death by
One in eight said lhey opposed
her husband, George A r t h u r
an,y bombing half.
''I'm thoroughly a g a i n s t Young. Sbewaaanhonorarymemsomething like this," said ber oC the Chester Garden Club,
Harold R. Pritchett. a 27-year- member of the Chester United
ol.d graduate student at New Metbodl st Church, and a past
Mexico State University. "1 member of the grange,
9Jrvivors include these chilthink they're going the wrong
way. I think they're helping the dren, Marlin H. Young, cocoa,
other guy, just letUng them Fla.; Mrs. Paul (Jean) Sa,yre,
build '-" the forces even more. I Portland; Rekl A. Young, Min·
think
this was
something enville; six grandchlldren, ooe
sister, Mrs. Edith B. COUch,
schemed 1.4)."
Somewhat
over
half the Pomero,y; a brother, Pearl H.
wouldn't change ncy sample said Johnson's an- Mora, RL 3, Pomeroy, l!ld sevnmmcement was motivated by a eral nieces and ne~ews.
Funeral services will be held
desire to help I:Jwnpm-ey. But
another 25 p~ ,t ent were just as Monday at 2 p.m at the Ewing
sure politiCJ had nothing to do Chapel With the Rev. P. A. Casto officiating. Burial will be In
with ·tt: _.
the
Pine Grove cemetery.

WILLIAM B. SAXBE

FtviwAY FORIOCASI'
5oturdl.1
lhrw&amp;lt Wednott"-l' wiU IY~·
1180 • Utile aboYe normal with
hlil&gt;• noar 80 and n1a11t time
lowe In lite tOo. COOler saturday ond !llndo.y lheti warmlna
Mondo¥ and cooler opln lnlho
middle or next week. Scattered obowon Soturdar anti about
Tllett"-l' or Wodolltdll' expect·
ed to averap moojlltlrterlnelt.
Temper~·

derives much enjoyment in watchIng boxing anti baseball, eapeclally the Cinclmati Rods.
. ru. 11ife, the former Millie
EJ,y, preceded him In death two
years ago. He ls confined to his

borne but Is able to get ~t
on crutches.
Mr. hver has five soos and
(Continued on Page Zl

Probe Aeeldmt

first 306 days of Ute year.
Cars driven by Linda Hill, 50,
Rt. 2 Gallipolis, and Oahel Tribble, .J9, Rt. I Bidwdl, collided
in the Kroger parking lot at 5:oW
p. m, Frida.Y. Mrs. Hill backed
her car Into the Tribble car.
There was no damage to the Hill
car and minor to theTribbJecar.
An accident occurred at 11:42
p. m. Friday on the parking lot
near theSilake Slloppe, Second and
~carnore , when a car driven by
Gary L. Farmer, 18, Rl. 1 GaJJi polis, backed Into a parked car
owned by James B. Parsons, 22,
Rt. 1 Gallipolis. There was minor
damage to the Parsons car and
no damage to the Farmer car.
An accident was reported at
11:43 p . m. Fridsy onHedgewood
Dr. , involving vehicles driven
and owned by Mrs. Willard Leedy,
Chillicothe Rd., and Robert 0.
Scbopls, 4&gt;2 Hedgewood Dr, Damage was minor to the Schopis
car and no damage was done to
the Leedy car.
A hit-skip accident believed to
have occurred someUme Wednesday on state St. at the upper end
of the clt_y park was reported to
pollee Frida.f. An unidentified car
stnaek and damaged a parked ear
owned b,y Charles Derifield, 42, of
Rt. I Gallipolis.

District 8
Attorneys
Meet Nov. 9
JACKSON ~ Attorneys and
judges from 11 south.-centraJ Ohio
countie-s will meet at the Fairgreens Country Club near here
Satur~·. 1'\ov. 9, for the annual
program or District Eight of the
Ohio State Bar Association. The
Jackson County Bar Association
wUI be host in coq&gt;eration with
the Gallia and Vinton County Bar
AssociatiOI\
The District includes Adams,
Brown, Gallia, Highland, Jackson, Pickaway, Lawrence, Pike,
Ross, Scioto all.l Vinton Counties.
Jtxige Darrell R. Hottle, Hillsboro, Distrl&lt;-t executive committeeman, wlll preside at the after..
noon session which begins at 2
p, m. Marshall R Douthett, president of the Jac:kson County Bar
Associ1tiorl, will deliver a welw
come,
Topics and speakers rortheafternooo session are: .. JoiNter of

a lXI Actions," WOllam
2 Pedestrians Parties
Millard, Columbus; "Tilell.
and
"'setStruck by Car tlement N-'ttllll1l," Loulo. .
by

L.

Estate Tax In Ohio," by Jcn.
Anderson, Col.-.bus,
by

E. Gertler, ColdlbuL
A dlatrlct ~int88 1118111111111.
on the agetttll. !I ..Uo ftll', eJeo..
lion of a member ol u. Sliile,
Bar's Councn
·
tw;&gt;.joMr ,-

,

196L WIUiom L,
mou.,, lo lite
delegate.
Slate """
Moss,.
~lor

II•

Pr."qQ'IIIt,
Ilia lliik i•
the Clill~....·~:

I.

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="692">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11038">
                <text>11. November</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="63793">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63792">
              <text>November 1, 1968</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1438">
      <name>nease</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="605">
      <name>rood</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="109">
      <name>young</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
