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•

Now You Know

PTA' of
'

In Greek mythology, siren• were
creatures, half - bird, hair- woman, who lured 681lors to lhelr
destruction by the sweetness of
their~ •

•

.'.. f

..

.
VOL XX

'
0·

'

$15·

MARY J-S
BEAUTY · SHOP

ntot througll rciurtll reljlellvei.Y, .

Holiday Season Depicted tn Show

Middle·port, Ohio

•
I

Member of Middleport Merchant Glft·A·Rama

BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
The Ho!ldiQ' seaaon In all Ita
glory ,... depleted In a lovely
Chrisbnas Rower show staged
saturdiiY and Sunday at the Film-

1"'"--------------!"'"--------------.

JOIN •••

eroy Elementary School by the
Meigs COIII1Q' Garden Clubs.
The show - an annuel evenlomder the chairmanship o( Mrs,
Margaret E I Ia Lewis - heel
''somethlrw
for ofeverybody."
While
the number
exhibits althougil they appeared to be omcountshle - was reduced this
year, the quality Was the ''best
yet. u
Garden club members throughout the county who participated
In the ~how foomd the competition e,a,..mely keen as they
compared their entrleo with attractive arrB~Wements prepared
by their fellow garden club members.
From the clever, original entries in a new class-TheMom-

Not only did ahow visitors recelw a real treat with the attractive ar~ents prepared
lor their viewiJW, but were given ''lciaw on the eake" wtth SUC!b
features as a table ol sample
gift wr8JII)IJW, special dlspiiQ'B
lncludiJW an outsland~ holtdiQ'
item area prepared by Mrs. Geneva Nolan, and a weathered wood
exhibit by the Wildwood Junlon.
Club, a commercial dispiiQ' by
Landmark plus a horttcuJturediviBion showing •eimens, w,r..
looo types of houseplants and

evergreen ground covers.
Here to judge the show was Mrs.
PaUl Wendell Reed or Newark,
not ooty an accredited judge d
the Ohio Assoclatim ol Garden
Clubs, but also state chalnnand
nower show awards. Sbe was accompanied by Mrs. Fred Moll-

lng After, a show lnnovattoo Which
featured jomk and pop art - to
the sophisticated Interpretative tor

OUR 1968

Christmas
Club

or

Dover,

an awrentlce

......._ -·

judge.

den club members tumed In
Blanding perform
s with e
tries which were eyo · ajchl In
beauty, originality and va ety.
New green backdrops provided

Mrs. Mlcbael J. Fry ol
Cheshire, a member of the Mid·
dleport Garden Club, was the
recipient ol the "Best d Show''
award for her exhibit presentIng an aura of rellgloo In the
"Midnight Watch" category,
In the artistic arrangements division where clubs drew for the
classes In Which thelrmembera
exhibited, the ribbon winners,
lieted first, seconcJ, third ' ind
fourth respectively, were as follows:
Trlnunln8 the · Chrlslmal
Tree," the Che . .r G.irdenClull,
Mrs. Reid Youilg, Mrs. Wyatt
Chadwell, Mrs. Altona Karr and
Mrs. Donald Mora.
~~candle ln the Window," Tlri~
llglrt Garden Club, Mrs. Eva Robson, Mrs, Mary Heines, Mrs. T.
A. Hennessy, and Mrs, Gersld
The Star Gardeft Club met r..
WildermUth.
"Birthday of a KIJv, • Middleport AmaleurGardeners, Mrs. L.
by Mr•. Robftt Jewe11. The CWI
~. Reynolds, Mrs, Harold l.dlse,
Creecl and. tollaet - • &amp;1Mrs; Maxine Coats Gaskill, and by tha club ~.. , .. rOD
Mra. c. E. Blakeslee.
can wu 1111wend by elallt memo
ben and ..,. auell, Mr1. Florenct~ by namlnl a bulb
. thfll' '
d Jib to Ifill',
Mrs. laneheNI!I..,wuelectec1 2bd. Ylce Jirtllldellt to 1111 the
vacancy loft br a reBIIJIIIltlm,
The
br-Awl
were11tate
revlaed
lD
oolnclde
with the
ralle ol

teresttow contrast with the red
velvet stage curtains at the Puneroy butldlow which always seem
to give the annual show a ho~'
flavor.

TONIGHT and TUESDAY
NOY.27-28

w-., and Thv....,
Nov. 29.:10
NOT OPEN

port.

.

"" ..wu
- fes!l
"""·bJ -.....
1. •Jame•·.

==-&amp;ted
~t rO:.~lll4=
IIBY• ·or

, . ii!MI"' 19
, ~ each.

s.vera1

-

•

=~ ~ Mra. ·G8rild
Dell~• . ~ ....,

THE FARMERS BANK
and SAVINGS CO.

.u ~ 'l'lltii'ObP
JoiDed ~ ~ilihM~ J'n.t-'.

eaJond bJ

erm~
,· ... ' ·· ·. ' · ...: ,,:·''

' · ' ··

• '
·•
"\&lt;.
.
Pitly
pulf' no.......... . , ..... ..·.x. a.oo ,

U9

11bllllderl!lrd Bow

·

ts.es

and Arrow Sen . . . . Bile
g;....,
., .• H!llllemllker Jet Aetton
.tbs
·~

..

..

.•

MEM8.1t FEDERAL !¥SERVE SYSTEM

OHIO

ON SALE ALL
K
Rail's Ben Frank lin

.:

·.:-::
~·

'

·

w-•-•

.lZ.H lUte-Bite SIJW.Refrlgeraton or Sllivei.t.llr'

1:es ~ GltarJaas.Tane It-Play 11 .•..... uo
5.8, .{.~.e; Bond 007 Eleetrle DnwiDg Seta UO

.

t:OO ''l'lil~'!l Checker and Chess ~ . . . . uo
Dreu
· · "'
· " •' US
..
'· ·.Up Seta .,, ··;.'
.
lilti~Sevim
. s;w; SeU . . 1.119
ir a~..,,~.-..~·~p ·~ci!J. ·.... . .. . ·•·o•

·IFi\::t~~~:~

Member Ptderal Dtpo~itlnsur-e Corp.

POMEROY

.

Nichol.., with Mrs; OrlGDNeia .

reetlvlng llrll, )it._ :.llaberi

4.91

.

ot rau

e:'::-.d~t\,ncl
1!111. ~o~.... Jame•NicbDIIIOI!.~..
Blatclle Ntii!OIJ and Mrt; 86.

$500:

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHTS 5:00 to 7:00

••

~

••

WORLD

Pup 'D Popple&amp; Pull Toys . . . 3.19

5.95 Dalay ~alty Seal Sollie Mywtery Gaol . . 4-P
t.ll! Fbller Pilee. Beada-Creatlve Bloeu .. .. '88e

prclplpiiDa ·~ .,..

$5.00 $10.00
.... .

.

!.~9 Gund Plaet Pandas, Kltty·Puppy . . . . . 1.69
59e United State&amp; Jig Saw Puales ........ . 14e
3.95 Mt. Fixer Tool T•n . . . . . . . . . ..... 2.89

llll"

DON'T DELAY! JOIN OUR CHRISTMAS CLUB TODAY!

,

US Playlkool Magaetie Spelling Jl4llrda . . !.35
u•-•·ture Do"·
..._
Ble He-Weet !llllllll
... . • - . . • . • . • • .
$,..

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'1&gt;.

.,,
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' :• • ' • • '

'1""
'
oU'V

A. PRIAIJL
PUIS (UPI)-Parls newspapers tnc1a,y led an · oiltrai'&gt;d
ooslanght on President Charles
de Gsulle's blasts against the
United States, Greet Britain
and c
.
:rife Fr ch governmoot wat
lliaclng for e olficlal reaction,
which woul come after the
al!ected
ernmants had a
chance to
the complete
text ot De sulle's 92-mlnute
sellllalmal news can!erence.
"De Gsulle Threatens to
Wrech EEC If Five Insist on
Britain," said the headline In
the lnternatloi181 Herald Tribune. EEC Is the European
Commm Market, which has
live other members besides
France.
"De Gaulle oat!sRed with
Antlaoclal Polley," reported the
bamer In the CoJIIIIIIIIIst
L'Humanlte.
''De Gaulle: Neaot!atlnns
With Britain Would Deatroy the
Common Market" read the
headline over a frmt editorial mtlcizlng the aenenl
In L' Auroire.
.
'-.1
Vlll'lacy Q(Targets
In hia rehearsed - s canteruce De Gaulle:
'
-Bitterly .altacliid llle. U.S.
dollar;

BY TilE UP!
LISBON - SEARCH PARTIES
dlafng for bodies with b a r e
bands and bulldozers In t h e
~muck or Lisbon's "val-

'

ley

or

deith"

look a short re-

IIDite today for maas fullerels
Ill Ylctlms or terrible Roocla.
Tl!en th,.y relllrned to t h e I r
painful talk. . .
Olllelals aald 3l6.bodlea have
, been rec:overed. ~ so
. from Qllntai, a ~ of 150
...,. called "the
Ylllqe"
by rell&amp;looa Pj)rtuguese. T lie
' "astronOmical" nwnher of col' 1 )lpsed and IOVerely
damlised
b!llldlngs haa not even been ci!J. collated and no lllUley eaUmete
/ has been maAie an' cilunqeo.
Tjoausands mill' bp· 11\lUred - liP
me Jmows for sure how maay,

mare.vr

~Slammed
ll1

In a harsh statement before
1,100 newsmen, dlplomata and
politicians, De Gsulle warned
the United states ihat even Its
"Incredible power'' would not
save the dollar from devaJua..
lion unless Wasblngtm sloptll!d

NearIy $1' 300
Contributed
A total ol $1,2114.75 waa contributed to the Meigs Counl;y
Tuberculosis and lloalth Asso·
elation In the first tMI weeks
d the annual Chrlsbnas seal
sale.
Mrs. ll!ann(JW Kloos, executive
secretary, reported that the
amooml was received In 735 returns on 1be 3,700 letters which
went aut m Nov. 14 to Meigs
COIII1Q' famUies,
TIIo seal-.ue Is ibe only fund
rslalng project ot the assoc...
tlon which comes out aprogfam.
ol asllstan~ to tubercular persons ~ ol adu~ and
tubercoilfn teal~ Olhel:s.
.
·
·

Hoffman
Aw!lfded
.
.
' ••

"t-

Afrlnan,
1-C George·
. ,
I "
iltatloi1ed at

In

----'-'--• -- · -- ·- - - - - - --·
. ~·· ··-

-·-- --- - - ~· ·~ ·

...·- - -··-·-··-

- ~ -·~····-------··-·

-

·- ---· . - --- --

.,

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Plans

Final

arrqeme*

Pomeroy Mer
Christmas Paraole
were made by tile .
Chamber of

":! %.tC:~:...~; Miss Hayman Frank Roush llith Drivers

u.;,Th;:m
lhe ·State ~.
Prime Mlnlater Harold Wilson
or Britain was expected to tell

Dies Monday Service Set

Parade Units

Funersl services for Frank
Miss Althea Hayman, 92, a for- Roush, a fonner resident d this
mer resident or the Letart area county, whodledSaturdiQ' at stanof Meigs County, died Monday dish, Mich., will be held at 1.!30
In Clearwater, Fla.
p.m. WedneadiQ' at the EwiJv
Miss HIQ'man was a librarian Funeral Home with the Rev. Wenat the Cleveland Public Ubrary dell stutler olllctatlng, · ·
for a number d yesrs and was
Mr. Roosh was a brother d the
a member ol the Euclid Awnue lata Harry Roush or l'llmeroy
Methodist Church In Cleveland. and Is survived by several nieces
Several e'"'slns survive tn- and nephews, lncludq Hugh and
clud'- Mrs. Lewis Berry, Mrs. un-·-h Porn
Mr8
•
"'"
~ms """" •
eroy;
GloM Tolson,· Canton·, Charles Eve'·"" Seelig ' Columbua, and
and Jam Hayman, Columbus; Mrs. Emma Jo Packard, CllnMrs, Ralph Corlt, !oil's. Witkin- ton, PL
1011, Kan68s City, Kan68s, and
Burial will be In Beech , ,ve
Mrs, Anne Swenaon,Bakersfleld, Cemetery, Friends miQ' call at
Calif.
the fllneral home at anytime,
The bool1 wHI arrive In Columbus vlaplanethlaevenlng, Grave~·t be hel
Veter111a Memorial HoiiDital
s lde aervlees wu
d st U
~ _ S&amp;rah J - c,...
a.m. Wednesdlll' at the Letart 110
Howell c...
Falla Ce...
. tecy unolel",the dlrecClay!m
'
.,,.
..__
.ton;• Portland;
Steven Sa,yre, Msaon; Neltion ol the EwlrW r11110.ral Heme. He Hanllllll, Pomaroy; Terry IAIde, Aiheaa• ~ames ~lbadl, .
, ·.
ale~&lt;!Jr~Bucballlilll&gt;O!ii;. ,
,,
• i&gt; •
• ·~ ,, . •
. J~ ¥IIlia. •.

Meeting Set
All omits taking part In the
annual Christmas parade 1o be
stalled Salurda.Y In Pomeroy by
the PomerQy Chamber or Commuce are to be at the Pomt~­
roy ~ SchoOl by 12 ' 15 p.m.

.::::.~":.~ :-~
needeol !or•jhe parecle which

are

wDI

move at 1 p;m. !Jchools,
school~~ and aU or-

...~.

IDil buflneaiiiiiOII

or

llie area , ere being liked to
lalul .llU't- Thole taking part are

ukad ·~

~. PIID Glohokar,

l'ommiY, ~.

~~Yl's Hon~n's trlatl
w~~~S.:..~~\:
. .'
.

Parliament todiQ' ·that although
De Gaulle's voice may be the
loudeat on the continent, It dnes
not speak for the rest of the
Common Market. The prime
mtnlster waa expected to 8111'
that Brltatn would press her
appUcaHon to join the market.

re110rter, said U.S. -olficlals
ware privately shrugging ol! De
Gsulle's attacks on the United
States and the doiiar aa
reRectlng the rruatratlona or hio
declining years.
(They s I the French leader's el!orl· to rally gold
speculators against the dollar
were doomed to failure•

. •

·&gt;

•

=.::

.

·-••un
: .. ·· '•;PI~
.~ Francel~,
. ·, ·. c....,
..........DAY':• ~
• :rbOirial, :James BatliY .,..

: ·' :F.fel ' c~· dif !IIUille t1b- ~~~. · · .· · ·
·::~:-1=~~
' ''- cum ,

. ....:..:. · .. . ~ .w-· 111
....,u
; -IIW•
·· '
' The )&amp;elgs
· 1101&amp;•
~\lnjiMII
. · ~=~
~·t
·mest at; ..l
'""'
• ·at
wutiii'E. J: 11111
. ' .•
" IJ. ,
, ....
_ to·tlslt.....
..,.. ·,,•
f•i'i•.·
I

I

-.:-----":-------~-""
I.

WASHJNGTON (UP!) - Defense Secretary Robert S,
McNamara is preparing to step
down as admlnlalrator ol the
mlll¢!oat military esl$111\&gt;meot the world has ...,r seelj,
probably to take the presidency
of the World Bank.
Knowledgeable sources, . reporHng this Monday night, said
that no official annooncament of
any change at the Pentajpo was
expected soon, nor did the
secretary's departure from the
post he has held longer than
any other man appear likely "In
the lmrnediate future.,.
This Is a particularly critical
ttme of the year for the Defense
Department since It Is In the
process of making maJor
decisions on Its proposed fiscul
1969 budget, Which President
Johnson must present to Con.
gress In January. These decisions Involve lmg-range CJ~ea­
tlons of atrete&amp;Y and resources
and It was not likely the
secretary wuuld leave before
they are thrashed out.
Desires Change
But It Is known 11181
McNamara has wanted to leave
his dllflcult and exacting post
for some months. . Official
sources emphasized that he was
not leaving because of any
disagreement wlih President
Johnaon over policy In VIetnam

DeGaulle's Hometown Outraged

1.69 Pla)'lkool Cobblert Beoebes . . . . . • . . . 1.411

The club . _ lD 1(1111 stx
tablestate
arr._.,..g
to tbti .Albllolpital"'"Gbrtlllmal.
81111
·- ............d""~~·... SCDro

•'

iJIJ

""'~
MEMBERS OF ELEANOR CIRCLE or Middleport's He~ Met!Kicllst
Church dlspliQ' a number
pt handmade Items to be sold when the annual bazaar Is held from 9 a,in, to 5 p.m. Thursday.
,From left to right are Mrs. Robert Byer, treasurer; Mrs. Charles Ass Bradbury, circle ba'zaar chetrman, sad Mrs. Lee Smith, circle president. Also taking an equal role In bazaar activities will be members or Class 12 headed by Mrs. Norman WIQ'Isnd, president. There will
be bak~ goods lor sale and. a luncheon will be served from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m.

By ALLAN

3.19 Fisher Prl~ · Slloopy Slllffers . .. .. .. . UO
39.95 Aurora Four Lane Rldng Sen . , . . . 3U8
6.115 liarble Doll
. Rouses ..• . . . ••. •. . . . . . s.11
... .
..
' . •
4.95 vv, t!llen!. Double Qolster
Gun Setl . . .. 3.00
·

Secretary to MIQ'or, $160
In Its Rrst reading, provides
for the selary changes to he month, $185 monih.
Clerk, Bd, Public Al!alrs, $175
el!ectlve as or Dec. 1 with the
exception of the pollee depart. month, $240 monih.
The ordinance provides f o r
mont which will out be al!ected until Jan. 1. Employes o1 payment of $1.80 an hour for a
the waterworks operations will clerk for the waterworks with
be llNil under a salary sched- the TIOI'k Week not to exceed
ule
to Nov, 20, · ·
35 houro. Water' miter reeders
Increases lor various empJuy. and repairmen are to receive
es and the salaries now being $2.15 an hour wlih ttme and a
received are (first figure Is pres- half payment for hooq:s over 40.
An llJIIIrentlce In lhe water.
ent salary, second is Increased
salary):
works operation wiU receive
Chief or Pollee, $345 month, $1.75 an hour and extra help In
the waterworks operation wW r.,.
$380.
Regular Patrolmen, $276 celve $1.50 hour. Salary for an
e&lt;J~lpment operator and mechanmontb, $305.
Extra Pollee, $1.45 hour, $1.- Ic Is $320 a month wlih a P'Q'·
ment or $2 an hour for hours
65 hour.
Street Employes, $1.40 hour, over 40 esch week.
Unal!ected by the ordinance
$280 mmthly (40 hours with $1.(Continued On Page 4)
75 _over 40 hours).

rmoacti'&lt;e

2.50 Cngll&amp;la 11ppy Jllllllet . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.18

3.85 Cragstu

McNamara about
To Step Down

The ordinance, as approvea

CUT PRICES IN OUR TOYLAND!

w--.

...

ings by town council Monclay night.
The ordinance is expected to survive second and third readings.
Some d the salary increases wiJI go into eUect on Dec. 1, some
on Jan. 1, The ordinance also sets up a salary schedule tor new
employes since the village has acquired a waterworks and is in
the process d completing a sewage disposal system.

.

Eva Roblnlon, 111!1 resi!J!Ial ellreclal'.
IIIJ'a, NOI'IIlBII ww..t Mrl. Orion Neii!OIIo Mrl, C, £, SIDut alid
Mrl. ll1allohe NeiiOii, 11bo'tGured
lhowtd ~·a., bad
taken and save 111 !Mer•IIIDC re.

.

Most Middleport Village employes will receive a paY increase
provided in an ordinance given the first of three required read-

c81ftf

~ ~ ~%.~

$250

BY BOB HOEFUCIJ

Vice President ~~~~~_k=e~
::ru:EI~
_h~
_rf-.e_:~ld~s~ox:l.~~-,!Wiom-·elllell!r~oy~a
·
:a:..=·~=~=
Yout,.Chrlstmas Shopping

SHOW STARTS 7 P: M.

;

Sets Up Scales
For New People

Named 2nd

"HUllRY SUNDOWN"
CTechn,icokil')
Michael Oaine, Jane Fonda
Colorcal"ttooiJ:
Million Hao'l
Spoody Ghost Town

I:t.oo

_,,

Mrs. Nelson ·

MEIGS THEAm

25c SOc - .$1.00 $2.oo
Pay Each Week
·= .. == · = .
Receive Next Nov·. '$12.50 $25 $5U $100

In the "Flreptkt '' Ail~·
elaas ~ tile 118$ or Weathered wood.
.
Junior prdeaetl ~~lbbillll
In the artistic~~~~~~ 'dl"
Ylsloo were Sandra ROalb, 1M
Ann Nease, Carol Lewis llld
Stephen Nease, Rnl tllrol¢
lourlh, In the category "UpOIIbe
Housetop," and · Carol Lewla,
Rrot, J1cma Nease, aeeOIIII, 1M
Ann Nease, tblrd, andl'la7YII•
hoan and Stepben N._., t.YIIw fOr
fourth place In "Ml Chrllilllwl
Card," a holldll)' aelllle u'raat!ement. Roma Neale took first,
Stephen Nease, aeeond and tblrd
and tee Ann Nease, fourth;tnlbe
horticulture class fill' evel'81eeo
speclmell8,
In the edueatlanal cafegwJ, holldlll' gift wraps were Judled and
ribbon winners In 11181clllinve
Mrs, Audra Well,llrat,llri.Mtchael Fry, sec:md, loll11 Harrle
Marie 5mlth, tblrd, and lira.
WyaU Chadwall, f!llll'lh.
Horticulture nldblt wlrllera
were Mrs. Charles ill~alse,
Rrst and lourlh, ¥ra. Helen
Ne._e, . ieC!11111, .!ftd Mr8;' Rio*
C.~r, third, J!t lhe clail tor
broad leaf evet'lfl!9 spo~;
Mrs. Pearl Mora, !!rat, Mta,
Jean Nease, second, Mrs. Helen
Carper, third, and Mrs. Mary
Nease, fourth, In narrow leaf
speclmena; Mrs. Msrpret Ella
Lewla, Rnl 1!111 -~ for
sroo1111f corira, Mrs..IWY N,ut

"White Christmas," R•lflsnd Mrs. Mildred ze111er, lira. An·
na Hart, and "- Goldie - .
Garden Club "- ..... Tl~·
Mrs. Ruy Sno-n. Mrs. Robson, "The F9sUve BOord," Wlndl!w
and a three "Ill' tie for fourth Trsll Tarden Club, lira. Robert
place lD Mrs. Cuah Johnston, Lewis, Mrs. Robert 'fbomp1011,
Mrs, Robert CanadiQ', and Mrs, Mrs. Lloyd Moore, and Mrs. Guy
Paul Wlnn.
Sluller.
"A Carolltv WeWIUGo,"l'llm· "Welcome Frlends,"RoleGar·
eroy Garden Club, Mra. 1tuy den Club, Mrs. Patrlcla Goebel,
Betzltv, ·Mrs. Mary Grueser, Mra. Harold Massar, Mrs, o. J,
Mrs. Nines Brown, With Doma Pennlrwtlln, Mrs. Norman Me•
W, . - s, and Mrs. MariUerlte Cain and Mrs. James Stool.
Karr t.Y11w for fourth.
Wlnnara In ·the ooen olooses of
"By the Chimney Wllh care," the artistic ll'l'aJWOIIIonts dlvlSlar Garden Club, Mrs, VIrgil . slon listed first through f001111
Atkins, Mro, Grover Sloot, Mrs. respectively, were as follows:
Robert L. Jewell, and Mrs. James
"We Gather Together," a - Nichol8111,
plete holldiQ' dinner tsble set"Star In the Sky," Rutland t!ng, Mrs. Robert Lewis, }Ira.
Friendly Gardeners, Mrs. Joe Jolm Terrell, Mrs. Edna-ftee,
Bolln, Mrs. Thomas Martin, and Mrs. Margaret Ella Lewis.
Mrs. DomaWUIIamaonwlthMrs.
"The MorniJw After," a class
Robert Snowdon and Mrs. William for Junk art, Mrs. Robert Lewis,
Willford t'IJW tor fourth place,
Mrs. C, F. Kltv, Mr&amp;,Mary!hl"Midnlglrt Watch," Middleport ·Ier, with Mrs. Margaret Ella
Garden Club, Mrs, Michael J, Lewis, Mrs, Dwight lolllhoan,
Fry, Mrs. James Titus, Mrs, Mrs, ,Robert '11¥11npsoo and Mrs.
Jolm Kincaid, with Miss Harrle Lloyd Moore lyiJv for fourth.
Marte Smith and Mrs. Carl J,
"The stockbvs Are Hung," a
Horky t,yq for fourth place.
mantle lll'l'lU1gement, Mrs. Pearl
"Sleigh Bells R(JW," WUdwuod Mora, Mrs. WyattChadWilll,Mrs.
Garden Club, Mrs. Dwight Mil- Mary Nease, with Mrs. Audra
hoan, Mrs, Mary Nease and !drs. Well, Mrs. ltuy BetziJW and Mrs,
Jean Nease.
Eva Robson tyiJv for lourlh,
"The WaSsail Bcnrl," the WalkRibbon wlnneralnthefnYitatlm.In Garden Club, ¥fa, ·Mina Hart, . e1 artlallc ~~Ill! etuseio;
were Mrs. llobeCn, ~~rt~, Mrs.. illltMri. ~it()Ore;boll!~'*
. . Thoma• Mart~!~, . ~. Mrl• . for tollage ~~~~~~~.'!)Ill lifts.
.iellll Neale, IJII;rd, and, ill-11- Jbllli ·Genbllo!IDDro nm;~- LliVd
Terrell, lourlh, In 111!1 ~- Mqore, sec!ood, Mrs.lllirallollrli,
tlve class, .''What Cblistmaa third, with MI.SIL,yoUab&gt;erabacll
Meilnl lD Me,"·and Mta.lolldlatl and Mrs. ~rllll Kar'r ·~·
. Fry•. Mrs. EciDa Lee, !lin. ~ tor fourth !n ~ llO....rilv lloule
SpenCer and lira, Joe struble, plam exhibits, •
·

and Madonna arrangements, gar-

an appropriate setting !or the
many entries and provided an ln-

.....

"

from Ankara and nv~
"(;Jarllleatlon or tile slluatioll IDlOrmed Greek sources.oaldlli•
hours ot nel!llllatlons wlih wW come within the ~. ellher dramatic r em a r k Indicated
Turkish omclals, He held a
UlnJualt asreement or In a Greece Indeed had received an
series ot emergency can!eren. nepilve .WBY. It there lo no !'itfn!atwn althouglllt wao not
ces with top Greek ollldals In acreement, there &lt;add be Ve"r7 ; Willing to odmlt It lnunecllately.
what BJIP8Ill'ed to be the most
dramaUc developments, not
All lndlcstlons were In Athens
crucial ~or ihe crisis.
excludfns war,"
.11181 the Greeks would not or
The Greok .spokesman did not
The 8Pikesman did not &lt;add not mest the deadline set
mention ihe Ankara reports ihat ampllt7 his atstement, bqt by Turkey unlosa there was a
Turkey had - an ultimatum.
last minute speedup,
lnatsad. he oald:

today

Pay Boost Ordinance Wins
Approval in First Reading

MRS. PEARL MORA, l'llmeroy Slar RoUte, left, and Mro. Rose Reynolds, Middleport, riSbt, exhibit their Madonna arrm.ements which...,., blue ribbon• In the Cluistmas flower show d Meigs
COIII1Q' garden clubs, Numerous Madonna-thorned arrangements were featured at the annual ahow.

•

THE SHOE BOX

TUESuA Y NOVEMBER 28 • '1967

•

By ANTHONY TOBIN
poulbllley of war.
United Press International
Turkey baeked up ihe ultimaTurkey delivered an ultima- !lUll by sending eight Turkish
tum to Greece today to accept
warships to within 15 mlles or
Turkish terms lor a settlement the Medlterrall\lan Island 40
of the Cyprus crisis by 11 a.m.
mUas ol! Turkey's south coast.
EST or face unspecified "necea- Turkish jets roared over Cyprus
S8r7 measures," lnlormed sour- and Its population or 600,000
ces reported In Ankara.
peraons.
In Athens a Greek liOYem.
U.S. presidential peace envoy
ment spokesmen mentioned the Cyrus Vance rushed to Athens

A family dinner ,PilV was held
'l'hlnkailvlng DIQ' at the home
1"":"7"'7':"":"''""'!~-:-:---.· ,tJt Mrs. Harry Plckeas or RaHal iday Special
cine.
Allandlngwere Mr. and Mrs.
Reg. $20.00
NOW Warren Plckms, Mr. and Mrs.
Ernest Whitehead, Jean Jane
and Jull, Mr. and Mrs. IJ.,';ver
OPEN TUESDA\' ·
Waber,_Davld and Mark, Reed ...
EVENING 7 TIL 9
ville;. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Sauer, MarY Ruth and Juy; Mlddl.,.
port, Mr. and Mrs. WWiamMeredlth and sona, Charles, a student at Marietta College, a n d
Erakln, brother ot Mn. Harry
Pickens, visiting here f r o m
Phone 992-3867 Middleport
Fr811kfort, Ind.

PERMANEN.l

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

NO. 160

.

.·

Greel{s Face War Ultimatum over Cyprus

·. Din'ner Pqrty Held
Thanksgiving Day

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In Accident
Cited
A parked car, a passing v.,.
hicle and a driver wl1h no room
to paas added up to an accident
at 6:50 a.m. MondiQ' In Melp
County, according to the Stsle
HlibwaJ Patrol.
The accident occurred m Rt.
aa,
two and !our-tenth• mDe•
north o1 the Jun~- or Rt. 124..
""""
Tooo drivers were
cited.
Ol!lcers reported that James
P, Y10111g, 28, West Columbia,
wa• · parked partly on the roodwq, An om!olmtlned car w a I
the parked velllcle wlllll
G, Euton, 54, Mlner&amp;o
ville, eanie UliOII the scene.
~ wu unable to ll1op and
tllll:t
11aa 111 room to poa 1 be-

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the ~ ear, The Eutoo car
mPdl the loft rear ril. the
Yfll!lll vehl~e. 'l1lere wu min~ ·daillailo! lD YCIWIB's car and

"tate'

ilimlet to 'the Eutoo

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-HOLLYWOOD-(N E'.A)The following Is an excerpt
fl'jlm 'the : sc:rlpt . of "Star!" .
.which is now being shot ilt
:lllth Century-Fox:
GERTIE, (SINGS)
TOJENNYl'M
·. BEHOLDEN
HER HEART WAS BIG
AND GOLDEN
1she is Hipped to sitting
position)
BUT SHE WOULD MAKE
UP HER MIND.
GERTIE Is ftipwd left to
right, sitting, from feet of ·
ACROBAT 13 to feet of ACROBAT 112, then to the arms
of ACROBAT 11.
Gertie is played by Julie
Andrews, and thls business of
being ftipped about by acrobats is a new twist for her.
And it should be noted immediately that she acrobats
beautllully. Maybe you've
lllpped over Julie before, but
now you'll have a chance to
flip over her ftips.

. ' .\ ly WAYI'!J G. BRANDSTADT, M.D.
Q4 love .haey~· : J?oes it over a projon~E'd wriod 'may

•

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commtnrs to Wornt G. Jrom/statlt,
M.D., in canr al tltis pof»t. Wflile
Dt. lrond!totlt CO'IIIIOf answer ifldi·
ridwlletltrs II. wilt onwer letters of
ffltltol int.rest In future columns.

Q-1 have been tdlng Thorazine for several years. Is It
harmful to take it for so long?
A-Too large a dole taken

BARBS

QUICK QUIZ

By PHIL PASTORET

Q--Is the exact time of
George Washington's death
recorded?

If you want to puzzle most
any city youngster today, get
a piece of coal. somehow, and
ask him what it is.

'
~ooking

..

we d say what our pipe·
loving colleague smokes
most of is matches.

• • •

Q--What is the actual
shape of the moon'1 orbit?

A-Like e v e r y orbit in
·space, it is an ellip~e. The ec·
centricity of this ellipse is, on
the average, one part in 18.

Q-How manw named bones
are in tht human body?
A-About 206.

others don't invite the relatives.

• • •

There's a cutain logic
which admits that Santa
could arrive via the chimney, but no kid in his right

mind can conjure Santa
emt1'ging from an apart-

ment house thermostat.
(HewSfHI,., fnlttprhe Assn.}

Debs' Imprisonment
During World War I, Eugene
Debs made a speech condemning government prosecution for sedition. He was arrested and sentenced to a 10year rrison term for vlolation o the Espionage Act.

~&amp;WID~; tJ.J ,...,,IJ .-J , _
I &gt;V Ill NIH l\f\N(ll tl UHI !Hl!lll~

UM&lt;ramblotheee four Jumbleo,
oM letter to eaeh aquare, to
form four ordiftary words.

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OoN••-n~-n•­

J II

I

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CONDEMNED TO

'OU't:&gt;

JI
WEUOB

il

mI

Now ll'l'1lftll! the circled letters

rr ~
I~~~;;.A~~~:"';~~;;;;·..,'unested
by the above cartoon.
1-=::.- 1To ( I r JoF rI I Jrr r J
to fonn the surprise answer,

(A.Mw~n

J"'"l"''" ATONI

CIIANK

nMILT

EUI

tomorrow)

INDUCE

&lt;

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story building where Negroes
ran go to buy groceries, have
their clothes cleaned and get
mstructions on how to use their
Mlsslsslppl ..htte people to
newly won voting rights.
work
together," he said.
The Medgar Evers- CommuHe
saJd he hoped the Center
nity Center, tompleted only a
would
set "an example to show
few months ago, has become
our
people
in other places what
as much a symbol a.s the town
they
can
do
::
1tse1t of the ' slowly C'hanglng·
'
The ·center includes a groracial cumate in Mississippi.
Ibe building was named in cery store, restaurant and
honor of the Negro leader slain laWldrr and cleaners on the
by a sniper's bullet at Jackson bottom fioor. along with Evers'
Jn 1963. It serYe:s as headquar- office and living qua.rten. The
ters for his brothel', Charles large room upstairs Is used for
Evers. probabi)· the most in- teen·ase dances, voter educafluential polJtlcal voice among tion classes and rlvil rlghts
meeting&amp;.
the state's Negro population.
The center is located about
Evers has been a.ccused by
a quarter mne from the heart some of setting up his own
of the white business section, little empire for personal liKlbut the psychological distance t.lves, but has won the grudg~
between the Negro and white ing admiration' of a numbel'
communities has been decrea s- ot whites for his accomplishing graduall)' for months.
ments and general approach to
Fayette. about 20 miles north racial problems. ..~Jthougb he
of historic Natchez. is the seat has led numerous ma.rc~ and
of Jefferson County - one of boycotts. he Is an outspoken
a clump of predominantly black critic of the "black power"
counties chosen by Evers as movement and fa.r less militant
the focal point of a new Negro than the leaders of other Negro
movement to "Involve oursel\"E'!; factions in the state, such as
In local pontics."
the MIS&amp;Isslpp! Freedom DemEven die-hard segregation- ocratic Partr.
Ists cannot deny the success of
Several whites moved from
Evers' etrort.s. The initial crack Fe.yett-e 1 population 1.600 of
in the county's long-establlsh- which about 75 per cent Is
ed white power structure came Negro) because of the stepped ...
last year when a young Negro
up Negro voter registration
was elected to the school board. drlve. But mnny others are

gains to a combination of factors including the 1965 Voting
Rights Act, asslgnment or federal registrars to 30 of the
state's 82 counties, increased
efforts by Evers and other civil
rights ftgwes, and a subtle but
slgniflcant shtftlng of attitudes
Rmong many whites.

Cit. Example
Evers, who succeeded his
slain brother as state field sec·
retary or the Natlonal Associ-

Hatlo's They'll Do It

®

011

T10T~ER AA~D,IN PRACTICALLY
TilE NEXT BREATI-I, 11-IE C~ILD l-IAS,
GROWN A YEI\R OLDER· ..
T~E W~Y

YOU KEEP YOUR
ROOM IS AWFUL: .. YOU /&gt;cr
UKE AN IRR.ESPONSI&amp;E'CI ,.
"·AND YOU FIFTEEN!!: I"

"Things have to get a lot
worse before I sell everything
and pull out," saJd a prominent
buslnessman.
Despite the changes, Even
said Mississippi's NellJ'(le8 re ...
all"ze they stnt have ''a long
way to go ."
"It's got to be a step at a

time, lltUe by lltlle," he sold.

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AII·SUI'I ®

NewRule OK'd

English performer who graduated from the music halls to
being the toast of Broadway.
Her greatest triumph was
"Lady in the Dark" (the show
which introduced Danny Kaye)
and her big number in that
was "Jenny."

Timely Quotes

"Jenny" is a dream se-

If he continues his present
policies a n d h i s peculiar
views and arguments are
persuasive to President Johnson, the secretary may well
lead this country into a third
world war.
-Sen. Stephen M. Young, D·
Ohio, calling for the 'fsignation of Secretary of State
Dean Rusk.

The bleeding hearts of this
country have had their AO&amp;Y-//
too long.
-FBI Director J. Edgar
H0011er, calling for tighter
parole controls.
We agreed among ourselves
in the Pentagon, in 1954, '55
and '56 when we first con·
slderetl going into Southeast
Asla, that we were really going to war with China.
-Retired Lt. Gen. James M.
Gavin, critic of U.S. policu
in Vietnam.

quence, and the setting is a
dreamlike circus. Against a
stark white background is the
stark black apparatus of the
acrobats- plalforms, ladders,
nets. Five acrobats in vivid
reds and pinks cavort on the
center platform, and Julie does
her stulf with them.
She wears all black, sequined even on her gloYOs and
shoes. She sits on the feet of
one acrobat, who lies down
with .his legs up. As she sings,
she IS ft1pped to another set
feet and then on, through
Blr, mto the arms of a
t d. A~ she. ft1ps she sm~s
an radiates m typical Julie
A rews style.
One take is spoiled when
J ·e inadvertently looks down
-" rry about that, ducks,"
she says. Another one is
spoiled as an acrobat goofs"Now, hurry up, get it ri~ht,
please," Julie says, laughing.

JULIE ANDREWS, the star of "Star," hells out a song
while perebed on a palr of strong feet. Julie plays
Gertrude Lawrellee In the Olm.

Others are canceled by choreographer Michael Kidd, who
is fussy. Ditto director Robert
Wise.
Julie is patient through it
all, through the 15 takes need·
ed. Between each one, a hair-

dress~r

rushes up to tame

Julie's rambunctious curls.
"This is the most difficult
thing I've done," Julie said,
when the shot was over. "But
it has tightened up my mus- .
cles-an1 given me a lot of
bruises. Imagine, 15 takes on
this bloody thing."
Pro:!ucer Saul Chaplin and
musical director Lennie Hayton came by to congratulate
her.
"Hello," Julie says. "You
see before you just a shadow
of my former self."

Chaplin says that Julie Is a
much better performer than

Gertrude Lawrence was.
"Gertrude Lawrence wasn't
a great singer or dancer," he
says. "Gertrude Lawrence
was a great nothing. She
couiJn't dance or act and her
sing:ng was painful. But, on
sta~e . she was maglc. We
obvwusly can't show how bad
she was, because in Julie we
have a great singer and a
pretty good dancer.
"And she is doing fine with
acrobatics, too. That's because of her early training,
when she did everything.
"And you know somethingold-timers will see this pic·
ture and thev'll say, 'Julie
sounds just like Gertie.' The
memory plays tricks.''
But the eves don't-and I
saw what i saw, whlcli Is
Julie Andrews, the acrobat.
(HtWifHJpet

Enttrprise Assn.l

A politician, like a woman,
can always change his mind.
-Arkansas Gov. Winthrov

CLEVELAND (UPI) - T h e .
Browns defenae holds the distinction of being ll!e tltlh against
'IIIIIch 'Sonny Jurgensen or the
Wallhtngton Rodsktns has gained
more than 400 yards passing.
But the Browns feel they are
Ukely to be joined In this elusIve groop by the next live
teams the Redsktns play.
Two do.Ys after they barely
eacaped with a 42-37 victory
over the Redskin&amp;, Browns •
fenders were sWl shaking their
heads over Jurgensen.
The defeat &amp;mday virtually
eliminated the Redsklns from
the Capltal Dlvlalon race, but
the vlclora felt the Redsktns
would be a C&lt;llltender as soon
u they 801 SOOle olefenae to go
with Jurgen1111 and his three
outstanding receivers, Charley
T~Q&lt;Ior, Jerry Smith and Bobby
Mltcbell,
Defensive tackle Jim Kanlckl
sa1d Jurgensen p)IQ'ed better
against the Browns than lillY
.. 9larter!&gt;ack he bad f4ced.
"He gets rid or the ball raster
than anybody, and he alWIQ'S
llnows where his protection Is,"
Kanlcld said.
Despite Jurgensen's impresalve statistics, (32 completloos
In 50 attempts for 418 yards
and three twchdollna) Kanlckl
sa1d the defenalve Uno "did a

Rockefeller, refe-rring to
his brother, New York Gov.
Nelson Rockefeller, who
has said he will not run for

Jurgen1111,"
"We got to him live times,
He's only been dumped 10 times
In his last 14 games," Kanlckl
explained,
A Good Rumer
The 270-pound defensive taoIde said he approved or Coach
otto Graham's declslnn to move
Taylor out to the flank.
good job agalnat

president.

You know I have to believe
in what I'm doing, because
$200 doesn't come that easy
for a olchoolteacher.
-Raymond Vanskiver, teocher in Wichita, Kan., paying
his filing fee as a Republican candidate for governor.

11 H8

W&amp;l

I

,llOd nDJD8f 1U

Ksnlckl sa1d, "But I'd radler
100 him back In cloae than
where ha Is now. They can get
the ball out to him 4n the open
more easily and he Ia more

He has a most engaging
candor and openness, and he
has a wonderful sense of
humor. But when you match
what he has done . against
what he says, you realize after
awhile that he Is a consum·
mate prevaricator. That
means liar.
-Richard Nolte, former
ambassador to Egwt, on

of enforcing the rule In the
hands or tile umplru. PrevloutIJ', It an umpire c8118ht a
plteber throwjng in Ulepl pitch
he would merely warn the
olfendlng hurler.
The · rule chal!se pits aharp
~ Into the Ieglslatllln, Now
the umpire will warn the
pitcher &lt;HICe. A IOCOlld violation
will bring aulomatlc ejection
from the pme with a fine and
auspenaloo up to the league
prealdent,
How w1U tills alfect such
reprted spitball pitchers u
Gaylor Perry of the San
Francisco Giants, Dick Farrell
or the Phlladelphla Phlllles,
Jack Hamilton. or the Calltornla
Angels, Ron Kline of ll!e
Mlme&amp;Ota Twins and Larry
Sherry or the Houstoo Astros?
Cot Deal former miiJor
lellllle pitching coach sald the
rule change "won't s!Dp cheat-

- ~A ·

dangerous."

Llnebackor JohnnY Brewer
T~Q&lt;Ior and MltcHII are so
alualve when they haVe the ball,
and Jurgensen throWa 80 9llckll', that the Browns had to reduce their blitzing.
On one or tho lew blitzes the
Browns used, Brewer snatched
a deflected pass and ran 70
sa1d

EXTRA-HEAVY TRAFFIC clog1 a Tokyo alreet, buill'• an oul of the ordinary OCCIU"·
reaee, erowded as the world'• 1ar1e11 city 11. Tanb lumbering along among lbe cara
are Jlllrllclpatincla lhe 17th annlvenary p11rade of the Japaneae SoU Defense Forees.

President Nasser.

for a twchdoWn. Paul
Wiggin tackled Jurgen1e0 just
as he threw the ball, end Jim
Houston knocked lt Into Brewer's
Yards

hands.

Rookie defenalve back Ben
Davis called Miltbeu a formidable opponent:
"It's hard to judge his speed
when he COIT\OS orr the Uno or
scrlnunagie, t ou think be's !PIng run speed, and suddenly
he'U burst on you,i'
"I think It's almost !mposslble
to defend agalnat the short

passes," Davts said. "Because
Jurgenson throws

80

9llckly,

and you have to keep yourself

protocted against the long pass
to Mitchell."

BOBCATS TOP FROS!l
ATHENS, Ohio (UPI) - The
Ohio Uoiverslty varsity whipped
the freshmen Bobcats 73-55Monday Dil!lrt. The varsity basket.
ball squad openslts23-t!amo aea.B&lt;Hl here Saturdo.Y afternoon a.galnst Northwestern.

ll!e Paelllc ·~&amp;oat Leaaue,; who
prevlooaly coachad' witll HOUIIoQ; , Kanaaa CII.Y SDd the Nri'
York Yankoea. The lmpllcatloo
Is that ' I piteber can llllll go to
the back or the neck or arms to
thrOW a wet one.

In -.nptlng to speed up the
game, the managera and
genjri!l man81!111'1 pas aed aiDlll
a number .or resolud&lt;Hls to
league preatdentl Joe C1'&lt;Hlln
and Warren Giles.
One proposal SO¥S only an
umpire llll1 .,.....me a bas&amp;bill, thus ellmlnallng tile
hitter's preroptlve. Alao, long
and
repeated corwersatlllna
between pltchars and eatchers
would be stopped. A . batter
would be r8Qllred to run, not
walk, back to the plate otter
bunting

rout.

Pinch • hlttera

would have to be on the bench,
not In tile bullpen, · wllen the
previous batter completes hls
turn and golf carts would be
used for tranBJlOrtlng relief
pitchers !rom distant bullpens.

'

"They've rot tile Jacky boaket,
that•• alii"

Buck,eye
C&lt;-' 'Capta1ns
•
'-"'-'

chanJl1ng

otter free

Are Named

Coaches favored the OJI)OI'Iment and said It would make
the work or otrlclala euler and

coLuMBus (UPI) Lin&amp;backer Dirk Worden or Lorain
and offenalve tackle Dave Foley of Ctnctnnatl have been

Southern Cal Selected
Nat"10na} Champ By UPI (

The aMOUI!cement came at
Mondo,y night's annual appreelation banquet here.
F"mal College Poll
Some 47 players received
Varsl"' "0'• aw·~s ~th 1o or
~" "'
them "'going to aenlors.
NEW . YORK (UPI) - The
Worden, voted by tho squad
United Pross International final as Its most valuable player,
major college football ratings was a defensive standoot ill
for 1967 with first place votes
aeason, as the Bucks ended tl&gt;e
and won-Jo.st.tled record In
year
will! a 6-3 mark.
paren1heaes:
other awards wont to guard
Team
Points Alan Jack or Wintersville on
1. x-Southern Cal (27(9-1) 340 olrense and end Dave Whitfield
2. Tennessee (6)(8-1)
295
r M Ill
3. Oklahoma (1) (8.1)
204 o ass on for defense. Both
4, x-Noire Dame(B-2)
184 ar;hsopbornoalres.
e 8IUlU award for the IDp
5, x-Wyornlng (10.0)
162
player
the homecoming game
6, x..Jndlana (9-1)
155 llllllnst Inllllnols
went to sopho7, Alabama (7 -1-1)
106 more halfback Dave
Brungard
8, x-Oregon St, (7 -2)
82 of youngstown, The most valu9, x-Purdue (8-2)
80 able lrosh was quarterback Rex
10, x-UCLA (7-2-1)
73 Kern or Lancaster.
Second 111- 11. x-Penn State
The main apeaker at the din(1) (581; 12. x-Syracuse (33);
B k
c h W"""'·
13. x-~,;glorado (28); 14. •· ~:.:.aswhouc~c:c the;
Minnesota (27); 15, x-Florlde talns for next year earlier than
State (20); 16. Mlam1 (Fla.) has been tho practice for the
(18); 17. x-North Carolina State past few years. H~Q&lt;es satd tile
(16); 18, x-Georgls (12); 19. x- captains were aelected now so
llouston (6); 20. x-Arlzona Szate that seniors had a chance to
(4).
vote
x-Completed regular season
H8.res predicted a better 1968
schedule,
season than tills year's mark
"because we save out 47 letters'
this year and 37 lettermen will
return, And besides, we have
The Basilica of the Assump- the best freshman team returntion of the Blessed Virgin Ing vie have ever had, so
Mary in Baltimore, Md., is things are looking up.••
the oldest Catholic cathedral
Hayes paid tribute to the
in the Unil&lt;'d States.
squad for Its strong, roor
stral~t win finish commenting,
"Yru learn to win by sticking
together and that's what tills
team dld ••
"·
'

COLUMBUS (UPI)- Toledo's touchdowns for 96 points.
brtUlant ""'""rback Jom
In team statiatlcs, It was ToSehllelder hu claimed the total ledo with both total orrenae and
olfenae tide In the Mld-Amerl- total defenae crowns. The 9-1
can Conference tills year.
Rockets averaged 368,2 yards a
He ran for 2,012 yarda and pme, while holding -ants
passed for 1,650. ·
to 198.4 per oonteat.
Schneider either ran or
Miami IDpped the league 1n
paased will! the bill 322 times rushing ol!...ae with an average
In 10 games to gl.ve him the to- or 225,3 yards a game, Toledo
tal ollanse title arid completed waa tops In rushing defenae,
127 paaaes or 245 ror the crown yielding an average or 97 yards
In that departmenl
a contest.
The rushing title went to Don
The Rockets also topped the
Fitzgerald of Kent State, !illo lellllle In pasalng orrenae with
picked up 891 yards In 230 ~- 131 completlllns In 264 attempts
rlos for a 3.9 yard per c
for an average or 169;7 yards
average.
a game,.
~
Ken Crots, snothar Toledo ~ent State gave
only 98,6
standout, won the MAC place y~ throo&amp;!l-air per game
klcklnil title and alao set a new to laild--UrO crown In the peasNCAA record for C&lt;Hlaecutlve 1ng delenae deparbnenL
corwerslnna In one season with
The Rockets also wm the
35,
sc:orlng two with 36 twchdowns
Roland Moaa, alao of Toledo1 and 35 extra points for 26.6
won the sc:orlng twe with lij points per pme.

ments

throWa.

;!.~te~.::U~ ~~~ 6~~

Toledo QB Wins
Offensive Title

ci1ICAGO _(UPI) - ln81ana,
Pur\IM, WII"UUIOll and Iowa
.... rated llie flM&gt;rilols In the
Bll T• baakelbaiJ Cllllloreoce
IIIII Y-, In an llltormal ralln8
by the coaches here.
.
Coaebes also llllUVfed a Bll
Ten olllclatlllg oxperlment at
~ 25 liOII-«Hlference pmea cllrlng December,
Tho OJq)Ol'iment will bring a
third olllclaJ Cillo the Qoor UD·
der Instructions to maintain the
"two man mechanlca or operatiOIIS." One man w1U cover each
end o1 the noor and ooe man
tile center, with the area asslllll-

ACQUffiE STAR
DETROIT (UPI)- Len Chappell, 6-loot, 8-lnch former Wake
Forest star. was &amp;Cfllired
Monday by the Detroit Pistons
or the National Basketball
Association In a deal with the
Clnclnnati Royals. The Pistons
announced tl&gt;at ll!ey obtained
Chappell ror cash and a thirdround draft choice,
MAY NAMED
TAMPA, Fla. (UPI)- William
H. May,
chairman or the
KentuckY Racing Commission
and the Natlooal Association of
State Racing Cornrnlssloners,
was nam'!d president and chief
executive otrlcer or the Florida
Downs snd Turf Club Monday.
May prevloualy was chairman
of the board of the track.

By ·JOE cARNICELLI
UPI Spo Write
rts
r
NEW YORK (U""- "-~ern
' •r- """"'
Callfomla's Trojans. whose
ultlmate
1ate was ........
~.....,
dec lded by a sue ces.•·•
•w extra
point, todaY became tho elite or
college football tills aeaaon
when the 35-mernber United
Press lntsrnatlonal Board or
Co h
ed th
ac es """"'
em 19"'
national champloos,
John MeKay's Trojans, ellalodged from the No. 1 ranking
In their next to last pme of the
season, brunced back to defeat
top ranking UCLA 21-20 and
regain IDp honors. Their posldsured Satur•·.. ~..
~· was as
""' ""
second place Tennessee scored
an unimpressive 17-7 victory
over KentuckY (2.'!) and Purdie
(No. 3) and UCLA (No. 4) feU
victim to upsets.
Southern Calltornla, with a 3-0
loss to Oregon State the only
blur In Its 10-g~U~~es: was named
No. 1 on 27 coaches ballots and
received 34ll points to easily
. outdistance secood ranked Tel&gt;nessee. The natlooal champiOJ&gt;.
ahlp ls the second for the
Trojans, who meet Indian• Jan.
1 In the Roae Rowl. Th~ey" also
won the title In 1962.
Tennessee In Second
TelDlesaee, unbeaten slncco an
opening game loss to U LA,
received slx first place votes
and 295 points to caplllre second
place handily. The Volunteers,
now 8-1 with their SOIIIOllllnale
apinst Vanderbilt Saturdo,y,
face third ranked Oklahoma 1n
the Oranp Bowl.
The Sooners, the Big El.ght
Conference champions, IID!shod
third with one first plsce vote
snd 204 points. The only loss In
nine games for Coach Chuck
Fairbanks' team was a 9-7
declalon to Texas,
Notre Dame, the 1966 cham-

pion and a hea'f)' favorite to
repeat again In 1967, took fourth
place, 1Is .,
...
,...,.eat
ranldng since
being upended by Purdue In the
third wook of the Feason, The~
Fighting Irish, woo practically
forfeited all hope for tho
natiOilal title when they were
ripped 24-7 by Southern Cal,
ended with a 8-.2 mark by
rutlastlng Mlamla (Fla.) 24-22
last Frido.Y nlgbt. "
Wyoming, the Western Athlotic Conference champion and
the only ml\lor unbeaten, untied
team In the nation, finished
tltll!, the hllhest ralln8 Ia the
school's hlatory, The Cowbo,ys,
10.0 and scheduled to meet
Louisiana State In the &amp;!gar
Bowl, received 162 points, 22
less than Notre Dame.
lnltlateSurprlsos
Sixth place went to surprtalng
Indiana, which pUlled orr one or
ll!e season's biggest upeels and
8ll1ned Its first Rose Bowl bld
by slllppfng l'urGle 19-14
Saturdo.Y•
The llooslars, their etgtt.
w!nn1ng streak llliiiPI!ed

tllllDO

the week before by M1nnllliots
and appearing to be out or the
nmn1ng fiH' the Rose Row!,
finished 9-1 and wound up In a
three-way tie with Mlnne&amp;Ota
and Purdue for the Big Ten
chsmPinnshlp.
'
Alabama, wblch had tte
unbeaten string broken by
T...,.saee this was
awarded seventh place. The
Crimson Tide, now 7-1-1, race
Auburn In their traditional
season llnale Saturdo.Y and take
on Texas A&amp;M 1n the Cotton
Bowl.
Orep State's upset speclalists took the No. 8 ranking
after Wmplns Purdue and
Southern Cal and tying UCLA.
, Purdue dropped to ninth after
Ita loss to Indiana.

LEADING GOLFER
CINCINNATI (UPI)-K~ Wbltwortll no the leadlns
winner 011 tile Ladle•
PnlleuiOilal Golf AtsocfAtlnn
circuit IIIII year with olllclal
eamlllp of $32,931 .so, It wu
.......cod Maiolo, by the
LPGA. Mlaa Wbltwortll'a total
o1 $44,004 In olflclal and
unolllclal eam1ns1 beat the
reeord of $41,tK.SO aet by
Sandra Haynie In 1967,

Kentucky
Cops 138-100
.ABA v.·ctory
By United Press Intern-d·naJ

....,
A new coach and a ll8W
player added up Monday nlsbt
to a new look for the Kentucl!;y
Colonels In tho American
Basketball AtsoclaUon.
Scoring almost at will, the
Colonel• gave Gene Rhodes,
their ll8W - · ... , a ____.,__
~"
.......JWa
1311-100 victory over the New
Jeney Americana. And lt ,...
Loula Dampier, treah from the
ArmJ, who Jed the barrlli!O w1111
25 po!Rts ae tile Colonels scored
tholr alxth victory Ill 19 games.
ToRY Jackson scored 31
polnta, Jneludlng 24 on free
fllrows, but they weren't nearly
enou~ to prevent tlle Amortcans from sutrorlng their lOth
loss In 18 pmes. The Arnericans are In fourth place and the
Colonels In tlflh place In the
Eastern Division of the ABA.
Art Becker scored 30 points
and Joe Harnood had 22 to lead
the Houston Maverocks to a 10 l87 triumph over the Plttabur~
Pipers In the only otber MondiQ'
nl.ght game, Connie Hawks led
the Pipers with 16 points despite
a 4-for-13 nlsbt from the free
throw line.

Fire can ploy havoc fli ~
body'a plana, whothtr lhtiJ

havelnturencaornotMW

oureyou'recomp"*piO- ····
tectad ln thne day&amp; · llf
rlalng coat., S..rour oft-4 ·
man for compll!e dtliill. ·
on a tpeclal fire Inoure1101
program tailored In your ·
needs. Be In Auto-Ownn

,.circle tf p~on.••

SERVING MEIGS
COUNTY SINCE 1161

DOWNING

a Rolly Pock

An.wer .to Pr.vlou1 Puule

What Makes Joe Morrison Run?
Joe would receive an extra game's salary, around fl,OOO.
ly MURRAY OLDERMAN
A&amp;Sll111lng the Glants reach and wln their conference playolf
NEA Sports Editor
(a ridiculous assumption just three months ago), they then
NEW YORK-After paying obeisance to the platitudes self· would qualify to meet the winner of the Western Conference

Jesshess, desire, spiritual evaluatlon~the professional · gets lot the NFL championship on Dec. 31. The lndlvtdu&amp;l shares
down to the haslcs of winning. He plays for money.
for the winning team in that game will be around $9,500. Last
The motiY&amp;tlon in professional football was never stronger year it was $9,813.63 for the Green Bay Packers against
·
than it Is right now. For the chosen few-the winners-the . Dallas.
Now
let's
stretch
Joe's
luck
a
little
further.
The
Giants
win
payolf for success In 1967 will be the greatest in history.
the
NFL
championship
that
qualifies
them,
and
Joe,
for
the
That's why Y!IU find guys Hke Joe Morrison busting a gut
to get in 011 it. Joe Morrlson Is a professional. This season he NFL-AFL World Championship playolf, or .supetbowl, scheduhas been Ranker but 'moved to running hack when Tucker led for Miami, Fla., on Jan. 14.
Each man on the team winning the Superbowl gets ,15,000.
·
·
Frederickson was burt.
We've
Joe this far. Let's give him the ,15,000, not
At 30, Joe has also been a spllt..nd tight-end, fullback and
if
the Giants have made it to this point.
. ·
. ·even -:orked one season on deleilae. He played on New.Vork
means that Jos as a key man on,the Giants
Glant teams that won division titles In 1959, 1961, '62 and '63,
season artistically, too. Quite likely, he'd be
so he knows what It's like to caah a championshl~ game
Pro Bowl in Los Angeles on Jan. 21, liJayJng
check.
'·
Conference .team. ff the East wlna, faci on
"It looks real. rilce," says Joe, ~~under tile Christmas trllt!.''
'fl,500
for
Joe . . He'~ up to ~.ooo in post.-season
season$, he bu worked ·himself Into a conlfortmatch·
his
salary.
wh0re he gels tJ,ot)O a ga111e (a nice t_ound
mofte~ ~~~~uages cop~e o! th~ fr~tr11tlon he .felt
years· when. the~ was Jio auxlllary payoit fo~ , :

a

'TIME YOU STAATED 'TJ.
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BE~RY'5 WORLD

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_ee S~e~
.
•
·D
. , 1~ ·.· "·u ~:

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'&lt;

Jurgensen Best
Tosser·· Browns

COMMANDER NAMED
WABSAW (UPI)- Geo, Jan
Raczlunosld baa been named
commander of ll!e PoUah A1r
Force1 tile Ponce 110118 8lllllC.Y
PAP 8D110Wiced Maiolo,. The
command, wbleb w1U be based
In Poznan, will like over the
tunct10111 or the lnapectorap o1
ll!e air forcea. wblcb Rcazkow.
ski beaded before DelMarian !Weballkl
commander ol the

.L

•

MEXICO CITY (UPI)- Remember tile alogen: "Don't
bpfCtorate It you bpfcl to
rate?'•
Orssnlzed ~seball felt that
~
long before MadlllOII
Avenue came up with the
odmon!Uon and the spitball and
_,. lllepl pitches have been
outlawed alnce · 1920, The only
trouble waa that some pllebera
reUed 011 the spitball and fiouted
the rule despite , vehement
protests from opposing managers,
Major league otrlclala bope
they prt an end to the IUepl
pitch Maiolo,, approving a rule
chanp which forblda a pitcher
from twchlng his lliOilth or lips
While oo tile lll&lt;&gt;llld.
Urnplrea &amp;Ioree Rule
By adDpllng the rule change
only 0110 hour otter 1t wu
aubmltted by a nwor league Ing."
Try Harder
general managers and lleld
••The j&gt;ltchors w1U cheat, &lt;&gt;illl'
managers following a meeting
earUer In the do.Y, the rules It'll be harder," said the new
committee placed the aull!orlty manall'l!r or Oklahoma Cl\y In

rude Lawrence, the famous

ation for the Adva.ncement of
Colored People, predicted the
majority or w.hJtes would
change "whee they find out
what we're really after."
"The only way we're going
to get anywhere in MJ.ssistJ1pp1
is for MlssJssippl Negroes and

-

By DICK JOYCE

When you see "Star!" you'll

Mississippi
Center Is Sym!Jol
01 R11tilll Ch11nge

•

UPI Sports Writer

probably say, "That must be
a double." Maybe she is doubled ln some scenes, but in the
one I watched, there was no
double. Julie dld it all.
In "Star!" Julie plays Gert-

Most people attributed Negro st&amp;ylng.

~L¥

TH15MimiCO
ASOVE ALL OTHERS.

10

'l'

"

4

Some folks have nuts at the
table every holiday, while

l

·'I·&lt;· "' •

A-Yes. On the night of
Dec. 14, 1799, an attending
physician stopped the clock
near his bed at 10:20 to By WILLIAM I. VAUGHN
record the moment of the
FAYRITE, Miss. mPD first president's death. This
On
the southern fringe of thJs
clock Is In the AlexandriaWashington Masonic Lodge at small southwest Mississippi
town stands e modem two
Alexandria.

at his nsh tray,

I MVTAG

'J
.

•

'

•'

contaio any vitamins? His it cause dark pigmented areas
any food, Vallie'! Will It cause ,to appear on the hands and
diabetes.
..
i f&amp;ee. · It may also cause lnA-AUboagh lloaey contains ·· somnla, restlessness, mental
a small amount of vitamins 8 confqsion, convulsions, nasal
and C, I would not rely on It congestion, blurred vision and
to supply your vitamin needs. waterlogging of the tissues.
It Is an excellent source of Your doctor should be nolisugar and can be ~ommend- lied promPJly if these or any
ed as a part of YOIU" diet pro- other unusual symptoms ocvlded it Is bellliced In other cur.
respects. As fill: dlabetel!, It Is
Q-lf the doctor prescribed
caused not so much by what
you eat as by the ·q1!8J1tlty.' In ort e Thorazine tablet every
other words, ovei'Mting !l'lth four hours to keep a patient
and the nurse gave eight
Its resultant oVemlghl ·Is a quiet
10
of these tablets a day
or
cause of diabetes In many per- what could
happen?
sons who are over 40.
A-ll Is always dangerous
to
take more of a drug than
Q-1 am a young married
your
doctor prescribes. For
woman with no children. I
possible
results see previous
use an artlllclal sweetener to
answer.
keep my weight down. Does it
cause any harmful elfects? 1
Q-My doctor gave me Mephave heard that It causes ste- rospan, then he changed to
rility. Is this true?
Etrafon tablets. What a r e
A-Artlllclal sweeteners these pUis for? Would they
have no food value. Used in make me constipated?
moderate amounts they are
A-Meprospan is a susharmless. A recent study lndl· tained-action meprobamate. a
cates that calcium· cyclamate widely used tranquilizer. Etin large amounts may cause rafon is also a tranquilizer.
you to be allergic to sunlight Neither drug should c a u s e
while you are taking ll If. constipation.
sw~teners caused sterility,
(Hewspoper fnterpris. Aun.)
many women could throw
PIHse sen~ your Qutstiofts and
away their contraceptive pills.

0

' 3- n.o DollY Senitnel. Pllmeroy-Middleport, o•• Nor, ~. 1967

I

By !liCK KLEINER .
' NEA Hoilr~ Cllrrespqndenf ,,

A

l~~~~::J:~~

�_

_.,._

'
••

MAILBAG

f'i.li '

'!

I

·Artificicit Sweeteners
r"''"'•:Jlpve No food Value

.' .

'

' ~.

-HOLLYWOOD-(N E'.A)The following Is an excerpt
fl'jlm 'the : sc:rlpt . of "Star!" .
.which is now being shot ilt
:lllth Century-Fox:
GERTIE, (SINGS)
TOJENNYl'M
·. BEHOLDEN
HER HEART WAS BIG
AND GOLDEN
1she is Hipped to sitting
position)
BUT SHE WOULD MAKE
UP HER MIND.
GERTIE Is ftipwd left to
right, sitting, from feet of ·
ACROBAT 13 to feet of ACROBAT 112, then to the arms
of ACROBAT 11.
Gertie is played by Julie
Andrews, and thls business of
being ftipped about by acrobats is a new twist for her.
And it should be noted immediately that she acrobats
beautllully. Maybe you've
lllpped over Julie before, but
now you'll have a chance to
flip over her ftips.

. ' .\ ly WAYI'!J G. BRANDSTADT, M.D.
Q4 love .haey~· : J?oes it over a projon~E'd wriod 'may

•

)

'

I

commtnrs to Wornt G. Jrom/statlt,
M.D., in canr al tltis pof»t. Wflile
Dt. lrond!totlt CO'IIIIOf answer ifldi·
ridwlletltrs II. wilt onwer letters of
ffltltol int.rest In future columns.

Q-1 have been tdlng Thorazine for several years. Is It
harmful to take it for so long?
A-Too large a dole taken

BARBS

QUICK QUIZ

By PHIL PASTORET

Q--Is the exact time of
George Washington's death
recorded?

If you want to puzzle most
any city youngster today, get
a piece of coal. somehow, and
ask him what it is.

'
~ooking

..

we d say what our pipe·
loving colleague smokes
most of is matches.

• • •

Q--What is the actual
shape of the moon'1 orbit?

A-Like e v e r y orbit in
·space, it is an ellip~e. The ec·
centricity of this ellipse is, on
the average, one part in 18.

Q-How manw named bones
are in tht human body?
A-About 206.

others don't invite the relatives.

• • •

There's a cutain logic
which admits that Santa
could arrive via the chimney, but no kid in his right

mind can conjure Santa
emt1'ging from an apart-

ment house thermostat.
(HewSfHI,., fnlttprhe Assn.}

Debs' Imprisonment
During World War I, Eugene
Debs made a speech condemning government prosecution for sedition. He was arrested and sentenced to a 10year rrison term for vlolation o the Espionage Act.

~&amp;WID~; tJ.J ,...,,IJ .-J , _
I &gt;V Ill NIH l\f\N(ll tl UHI !Hl!lll~

UM&lt;ramblotheee four Jumbleo,
oM letter to eaeh aquare, to
form four ordiftary words.

;

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'
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•

.,...,..,..,._

OoN••-n~-n•­

J II

I

I
CONDEMNED TO

'OU't:&gt;

JI
WEUOB

il

mI

Now ll'l'1lftll! the circled letters

rr ~
I~~~;;.A~~~:"';~~;;;;·..,'unested
by the above cartoon.
1-=::.- 1To ( I r JoF rI I Jrr r J
to fonn the surprise answer,

(A.Mw~n

J"'"l"''" ATONI

CIIANK

nMILT

EUI

tomorrow)

INDUCE

&lt;

~

.\f ..•

story building where Negroes
ran go to buy groceries, have
their clothes cleaned and get
mstructions on how to use their
Mlsslsslppl ..htte people to
newly won voting rights.
work
together," he said.
The Medgar Evers- CommuHe
saJd he hoped the Center
nity Center, tompleted only a
would
set "an example to show
few months ago, has become
our
people
in other places what
as much a symbol a.s the town
they
can
do
::
1tse1t of the ' slowly C'hanglng·
'
The ·center includes a groracial cumate in Mississippi.
Ibe building was named in cery store, restaurant and
honor of the Negro leader slain laWldrr and cleaners on the
by a sniper's bullet at Jackson bottom fioor. along with Evers'
Jn 1963. It serYe:s as headquar- office and living qua.rten. The
ters for his brothel', Charles large room upstairs Is used for
Evers. probabi)· the most in- teen·ase dances, voter educafluential polJtlcal voice among tion classes and rlvil rlghts
meeting&amp;.
the state's Negro population.
The center is located about
Evers has been a.ccused by
a quarter mne from the heart some of setting up his own
of the white business section, little empire for personal liKlbut the psychological distance t.lves, but has won the grudg~
between the Negro and white ing admiration' of a numbel'
communities has been decrea s- ot whites for his accomplishing graduall)' for months.
ments and general approach to
Fayette. about 20 miles north racial problems. ..~Jthougb he
of historic Natchez. is the seat has led numerous ma.rc~ and
of Jefferson County - one of boycotts. he Is an outspoken
a clump of predominantly black critic of the "black power"
counties chosen by Evers as movement and fa.r less militant
the focal point of a new Negro than the leaders of other Negro
movement to "Involve oursel\"E'!; factions in the state, such as
In local pontics."
the MIS&amp;Isslpp! Freedom DemEven die-hard segregation- ocratic Partr.
Ists cannot deny the success of
Several whites moved from
Evers' etrort.s. The initial crack Fe.yett-e 1 population 1.600 of
in the county's long-establlsh- which about 75 per cent Is
ed white power structure came Negro) because of the stepped ...
last year when a young Negro
up Negro voter registration
was elected to the school board. drlve. But mnny others are

gains to a combination of factors including the 1965 Voting
Rights Act, asslgnment or federal registrars to 30 of the
state's 82 counties, increased
efforts by Evers and other civil
rights ftgwes, and a subtle but
slgniflcant shtftlng of attitudes
Rmong many whites.

Cit. Example
Evers, who succeeded his
slain brother as state field sec·
retary or the Natlonal Associ-

Hatlo's They'll Do It

®

011

T10T~ER AA~D,IN PRACTICALLY
TilE NEXT BREATI-I, 11-IE C~ILD l-IAS,
GROWN A YEI\R OLDER· ..
T~E W~Y

YOU KEEP YOUR
ROOM IS AWFUL: .. YOU /&gt;cr
UKE AN IRR.ESPONSI&amp;E'CI ,.
"·AND YOU FIFTEEN!!: I"

"Things have to get a lot
worse before I sell everything
and pull out," saJd a prominent
buslnessman.
Despite the changes, Even
said Mississippi's NellJ'(le8 re ...
all"ze they stnt have ''a long
way to go ."
"It's got to be a step at a

time, lltUe by lltlle," he sold.

'

J. '

•,.

''

AII·SUI'I ®

NewRule OK'd

English performer who graduated from the music halls to
being the toast of Broadway.
Her greatest triumph was
"Lady in the Dark" (the show
which introduced Danny Kaye)
and her big number in that
was "Jenny."

Timely Quotes

"Jenny" is a dream se-

If he continues his present
policies a n d h i s peculiar
views and arguments are
persuasive to President Johnson, the secretary may well
lead this country into a third
world war.
-Sen. Stephen M. Young, D·
Ohio, calling for the 'fsignation of Secretary of State
Dean Rusk.

The bleeding hearts of this
country have had their AO&amp;Y-//
too long.
-FBI Director J. Edgar
H0011er, calling for tighter
parole controls.
We agreed among ourselves
in the Pentagon, in 1954, '55
and '56 when we first con·
slderetl going into Southeast
Asla, that we were really going to war with China.
-Retired Lt. Gen. James M.
Gavin, critic of U.S. policu
in Vietnam.

quence, and the setting is a
dreamlike circus. Against a
stark white background is the
stark black apparatus of the
acrobats- plalforms, ladders,
nets. Five acrobats in vivid
reds and pinks cavort on the
center platform, and Julie does
her stulf with them.
She wears all black, sequined even on her gloYOs and
shoes. She sits on the feet of
one acrobat, who lies down
with .his legs up. As she sings,
she IS ft1pped to another set
feet and then on, through
Blr, mto the arms of a
t d. A~ she. ft1ps she sm~s
an radiates m typical Julie
A rews style.
One take is spoiled when
J ·e inadvertently looks down
-" rry about that, ducks,"
she says. Another one is
spoiled as an acrobat goofs"Now, hurry up, get it ri~ht,
please," Julie says, laughing.

JULIE ANDREWS, the star of "Star," hells out a song
while perebed on a palr of strong feet. Julie plays
Gertrude Lawrellee In the Olm.

Others are canceled by choreographer Michael Kidd, who
is fussy. Ditto director Robert
Wise.
Julie is patient through it
all, through the 15 takes need·
ed. Between each one, a hair-

dress~r

rushes up to tame

Julie's rambunctious curls.
"This is the most difficult
thing I've done," Julie said,
when the shot was over. "But
it has tightened up my mus- .
cles-an1 given me a lot of
bruises. Imagine, 15 takes on
this bloody thing."
Pro:!ucer Saul Chaplin and
musical director Lennie Hayton came by to congratulate
her.
"Hello," Julie says. "You
see before you just a shadow
of my former self."

Chaplin says that Julie Is a
much better performer than

Gertrude Lawrence was.
"Gertrude Lawrence wasn't
a great singer or dancer," he
says. "Gertrude Lawrence
was a great nothing. She
couiJn't dance or act and her
sing:ng was painful. But, on
sta~e . she was maglc. We
obvwusly can't show how bad
she was, because in Julie we
have a great singer and a
pretty good dancer.
"And she is doing fine with
acrobatics, too. That's because of her early training,
when she did everything.
"And you know somethingold-timers will see this pic·
ture and thev'll say, 'Julie
sounds just like Gertie.' The
memory plays tricks.''
But the eves don't-and I
saw what i saw, whlcli Is
Julie Andrews, the acrobat.
(HtWifHJpet

Enttrprise Assn.l

A politician, like a woman,
can always change his mind.
-Arkansas Gov. Winthrov

CLEVELAND (UPI) - T h e .
Browns defenae holds the distinction of being ll!e tltlh against
'IIIIIch 'Sonny Jurgensen or the
Wallhtngton Rodsktns has gained
more than 400 yards passing.
But the Browns feel they are
Ukely to be joined In this elusIve groop by the next live
teams the Redsktns play.
Two do.Ys after they barely
eacaped with a 42-37 victory
over the Redskin&amp;, Browns •
fenders were sWl shaking their
heads over Jurgensen.
The defeat &amp;mday virtually
eliminated the Redsklns from
the Capltal Dlvlalon race, but
the vlclora felt the Redsktns
would be a C&lt;llltender as soon
u they 801 SOOle olefenae to go
with Jurgen1111 and his three
outstanding receivers, Charley
T~Q&lt;Ior, Jerry Smith and Bobby
Mltcbell,
Defensive tackle Jim Kanlckl
sa1d Jurgensen p)IQ'ed better
against the Browns than lillY
.. 9larter!&gt;ack he bad f4ced.
"He gets rid or the ball raster
than anybody, and he alWIQ'S
llnows where his protection Is,"
Kanlcld said.
Despite Jurgensen's impresalve statistics, (32 completloos
In 50 attempts for 418 yards
and three twchdollna) Kanlckl
sa1d the defenalve Uno "did a

Rockefeller, refe-rring to
his brother, New York Gov.
Nelson Rockefeller, who
has said he will not run for

Jurgen1111,"
"We got to him live times,
He's only been dumped 10 times
In his last 14 games," Kanlckl
explained,
A Good Rumer
The 270-pound defensive taoIde said he approved or Coach
otto Graham's declslnn to move
Taylor out to the flank.
good job agalnat

president.

You know I have to believe
in what I'm doing, because
$200 doesn't come that easy
for a olchoolteacher.
-Raymond Vanskiver, teocher in Wichita, Kan., paying
his filing fee as a Republican candidate for governor.

11 H8

W&amp;l

I

,llOd nDJD8f 1U

Ksnlckl sa1d, "But I'd radler
100 him back In cloae than
where ha Is now. They can get
the ball out to him 4n the open
more easily and he Ia more

He has a most engaging
candor and openness, and he
has a wonderful sense of
humor. But when you match
what he has done . against
what he says, you realize after
awhile that he Is a consum·
mate prevaricator. That
means liar.
-Richard Nolte, former
ambassador to Egwt, on

of enforcing the rule In the
hands or tile umplru. PrevloutIJ', It an umpire c8118ht a
plteber throwjng in Ulepl pitch
he would merely warn the
olfendlng hurler.
The · rule chal!se pits aharp
~ Into the Ieglslatllln, Now
the umpire will warn the
pitcher &lt;HICe. A IOCOlld violation
will bring aulomatlc ejection
from the pme with a fine and
auspenaloo up to the league
prealdent,
How w1U tills alfect such
reprted spitball pitchers u
Gaylor Perry of the San
Francisco Giants, Dick Farrell
or the Phlladelphla Phlllles,
Jack Hamilton. or the Calltornla
Angels, Ron Kline of ll!e
Mlme&amp;Ota Twins and Larry
Sherry or the Houstoo Astros?
Cot Deal former miiJor
lellllle pitching coach sald the
rule change "won't s!Dp cheat-

- ~A ·

dangerous."

Llnebackor JohnnY Brewer
T~Q&lt;Ior and MltcHII are so
alualve when they haVe the ball,
and Jurgensen throWa 80 9llckll', that the Browns had to reduce their blitzing.
On one or tho lew blitzes the
Browns used, Brewer snatched
a deflected pass and ran 70
sa1d

EXTRA-HEAVY TRAFFIC clog1 a Tokyo alreet, buill'• an oul of the ordinary OCCIU"·
reaee, erowded as the world'• 1ar1e11 city 11. Tanb lumbering along among lbe cara
are Jlllrllclpatincla lhe 17th annlvenary p11rade of the Japaneae SoU Defense Forees.

President Nasser.

for a twchdoWn. Paul
Wiggin tackled Jurgen1e0 just
as he threw the ball, end Jim
Houston knocked lt Into Brewer's
Yards

hands.

Rookie defenalve back Ben
Davis called Miltbeu a formidable opponent:
"It's hard to judge his speed
when he COIT\OS orr the Uno or
scrlnunagie, t ou think be's !PIng run speed, and suddenly
he'U burst on you,i'
"I think It's almost !mposslble
to defend agalnat the short

passes," Davts said. "Because
Jurgenson throws

80

9llckly,

and you have to keep yourself

protocted against the long pass
to Mitchell."

BOBCATS TOP FROS!l
ATHENS, Ohio (UPI) - The
Ohio Uoiverslty varsity whipped
the freshmen Bobcats 73-55Monday Dil!lrt. The varsity basket.
ball squad openslts23-t!amo aea.B&lt;Hl here Saturdo.Y afternoon a.galnst Northwestern.

ll!e Paelllc ·~&amp;oat Leaaue,; who
prevlooaly coachad' witll HOUIIoQ; , Kanaaa CII.Y SDd the Nri'
York Yankoea. The lmpllcatloo
Is that ' I piteber can llllll go to
the back or the neck or arms to
thrOW a wet one.

In -.nptlng to speed up the
game, the managera and
genjri!l man81!111'1 pas aed aiDlll
a number .or resolud&lt;Hls to
league preatdentl Joe C1'&lt;Hlln
and Warren Giles.
One proposal SO¥S only an
umpire llll1 .,.....me a bas&amp;bill, thus ellmlnallng tile
hitter's preroptlve. Alao, long
and
repeated corwersatlllna
between pltchars and eatchers
would be stopped. A . batter
would be r8Qllred to run, not
walk, back to the plate otter
bunting

rout.

Pinch • hlttera

would have to be on the bench,
not In tile bullpen, · wllen the
previous batter completes hls
turn and golf carts would be
used for tranBJlOrtlng relief
pitchers !rom distant bullpens.

'

"They've rot tile Jacky boaket,
that•• alii"

Buck,eye
C&lt;-' 'Capta1ns
•
'-"'-'

chanJl1ng

otter free

Are Named

Coaches favored the OJI)OI'Iment and said It would make
the work or otrlclala euler and

coLuMBus (UPI) Lin&amp;backer Dirk Worden or Lorain
and offenalve tackle Dave Foley of Ctnctnnatl have been

Southern Cal Selected
Nat"10na} Champ By UPI (

The aMOUI!cement came at
Mondo,y night's annual appreelation banquet here.
F"mal College Poll
Some 47 players received
Varsl"' "0'• aw·~s ~th 1o or
~" "'
them "'going to aenlors.
NEW . YORK (UPI) - The
Worden, voted by tho squad
United Pross International final as Its most valuable player,
major college football ratings was a defensive standoot ill
for 1967 with first place votes
aeason, as the Bucks ended tl&gt;e
and won-Jo.st.tled record In
year
will! a 6-3 mark.
paren1heaes:
other awards wont to guard
Team
Points Alan Jack or Wintersville on
1. x-Southern Cal (27(9-1) 340 olrense and end Dave Whitfield
2. Tennessee (6)(8-1)
295
r M Ill
3. Oklahoma (1) (8.1)
204 o ass on for defense. Both
4, x-Noire Dame(B-2)
184 ar;hsopbornoalres.
e 8IUlU award for the IDp
5, x-Wyornlng (10.0)
162
player
the homecoming game
6, x..Jndlana (9-1)
155 llllllnst Inllllnols
went to sopho7, Alabama (7 -1-1)
106 more halfback Dave
Brungard
8, x-Oregon St, (7 -2)
82 of youngstown, The most valu9, x-Purdue (8-2)
80 able lrosh was quarterback Rex
10, x-UCLA (7-2-1)
73 Kern or Lancaster.
Second 111- 11. x-Penn State
The main apeaker at the din(1) (581; 12. x-Syracuse (33);
B k
c h W"""'·
13. x-~,;glorado (28); 14. •· ~:.:.aswhouc~c:c the;
Minnesota (27); 15, x-Florlde talns for next year earlier than
State (20); 16. Mlam1 (Fla.) has been tho practice for the
(18); 17. x-North Carolina State past few years. H~Q&lt;es satd tile
(16); 18, x-Georgls (12); 19. x- captains were aelected now so
llouston (6); 20. x-Arlzona Szate that seniors had a chance to
(4).
vote
x-Completed regular season
H8.res predicted a better 1968
schedule,
season than tills year's mark
"because we save out 47 letters'
this year and 37 lettermen will
return, And besides, we have
The Basilica of the Assump- the best freshman team returntion of the Blessed Virgin Ing vie have ever had, so
Mary in Baltimore, Md., is things are looking up.••
the oldest Catholic cathedral
Hayes paid tribute to the
in the Unil&lt;'d States.
squad for Its strong, roor
stral~t win finish commenting,
"Yru learn to win by sticking
together and that's what tills
team dld ••
"·
'

COLUMBUS (UPI)- Toledo's touchdowns for 96 points.
brtUlant ""'""rback Jom
In team statiatlcs, It was ToSehllelder hu claimed the total ledo with both total orrenae and
olfenae tide In the Mld-Amerl- total defenae crowns. The 9-1
can Conference tills year.
Rockets averaged 368,2 yards a
He ran for 2,012 yarda and pme, while holding -ants
passed for 1,650. ·
to 198.4 per oonteat.
Schneider either ran or
Miami IDpped the league 1n
paased will! the bill 322 times rushing ol!...ae with an average
In 10 games to gl.ve him the to- or 225,3 yards a game, Toledo
tal ollanse title arid completed waa tops In rushing defenae,
127 paaaes or 245 ror the crown yielding an average or 97 yards
In that departmenl
a contest.
The rushing title went to Don
The Rockets also topped the
Fitzgerald of Kent State, !illo lellllle In pasalng orrenae with
picked up 891 yards In 230 ~- 131 completlllns In 264 attempts
rlos for a 3.9 yard per c
for an average or 169;7 yards
average.
a game,.
~
Ken Crots, snothar Toledo ~ent State gave
only 98,6
standout, won the MAC place y~ throo&amp;!l-air per game
klcklnil title and alao set a new to laild--UrO crown In the peasNCAA record for C&lt;Hlaecutlve 1ng delenae deparbnenL
corwerslnna In one season with
The Rockets also wm the
35,
sc:orlng two with 36 twchdowns
Roland Moaa, alao of Toledo1 and 35 extra points for 26.6
won the sc:orlng twe with lij points per pme.

ments

throWa.

;!.~te~.::U~ ~~~ 6~~

Toledo QB Wins
Offensive Title

ci1ICAGO _(UPI) - ln81ana,
Pur\IM, WII"UUIOll and Iowa
.... rated llie flM&gt;rilols In the
Bll T• baakelbaiJ Cllllloreoce
IIIII Y-, In an llltormal ralln8
by the coaches here.
.
Coaebes also llllUVfed a Bll
Ten olllclatlllg oxperlment at
~ 25 liOII-«Hlference pmea cllrlng December,
Tho OJq)Ol'iment will bring a
third olllclaJ Cillo the Qoor UD·
der Instructions to maintain the
"two man mechanlca or operatiOIIS." One man w1U cover each
end o1 the noor and ooe man
tile center, with the area asslllll-

ACQUffiE STAR
DETROIT (UPI)- Len Chappell, 6-loot, 8-lnch former Wake
Forest star. was &amp;Cfllired
Monday by the Detroit Pistons
or the National Basketball
Association In a deal with the
Clnclnnati Royals. The Pistons
announced tl&gt;at ll!ey obtained
Chappell ror cash and a thirdround draft choice,
MAY NAMED
TAMPA, Fla. (UPI)- William
H. May,
chairman or the
KentuckY Racing Commission
and the Natlooal Association of
State Racing Cornrnlssloners,
was nam'!d president and chief
executive otrlcer or the Florida
Downs snd Turf Club Monday.
May prevloualy was chairman
of the board of the track.

By ·JOE cARNICELLI
UPI Spo Write
rts
r
NEW YORK (U""- "-~ern
' •r- """"'
Callfomla's Trojans. whose
ultlmate
1ate was ........
~.....,
dec lded by a sue ces.•·•
•w extra
point, todaY became tho elite or
college football tills aeaaon
when the 35-mernber United
Press lntsrnatlonal Board or
Co h
ed th
ac es """"'
em 19"'
national champloos,
John MeKay's Trojans, ellalodged from the No. 1 ranking
In their next to last pme of the
season, brunced back to defeat
top ranking UCLA 21-20 and
regain IDp honors. Their posldsured Satur•·.. ~..
~· was as
""' ""
second place Tennessee scored
an unimpressive 17-7 victory
over KentuckY (2.'!) and Purdie
(No. 3) and UCLA (No. 4) feU
victim to upsets.
Southern Calltornla, with a 3-0
loss to Oregon State the only
blur In Its 10-g~U~~es: was named
No. 1 on 27 coaches ballots and
received 34ll points to easily
. outdistance secood ranked Tel&gt;nessee. The natlooal champiOJ&gt;.
ahlp ls the second for the
Trojans, who meet Indian• Jan.
1 In the Roae Rowl. Th~ey" also
won the title In 1962.
Tennessee In Second
TelDlesaee, unbeaten slncco an
opening game loss to U LA,
received slx first place votes
and 295 points to caplllre second
place handily. The Volunteers,
now 8-1 with their SOIIIOllllnale
apinst Vanderbilt Saturdo,y,
face third ranked Oklahoma 1n
the Oranp Bowl.
The Sooners, the Big El.ght
Conference champions, IID!shod
third with one first plsce vote
snd 204 points. The only loss In
nine games for Coach Chuck
Fairbanks' team was a 9-7
declalon to Texas,
Notre Dame, the 1966 cham-

pion and a hea'f)' favorite to
repeat again In 1967, took fourth
place, 1Is .,
...
,...,.eat
ranldng since
being upended by Purdue In the
third wook of the Feason, The~
Fighting Irish, woo practically
forfeited all hope for tho
natiOilal title when they were
ripped 24-7 by Southern Cal,
ended with a 8-.2 mark by
rutlastlng Mlamla (Fla.) 24-22
last Frido.Y nlgbt. "
Wyoming, the Western Athlotic Conference champion and
the only ml\lor unbeaten, untied
team In the nation, finished
tltll!, the hllhest ralln8 Ia the
school's hlatory, The Cowbo,ys,
10.0 and scheduled to meet
Louisiana State In the &amp;!gar
Bowl, received 162 points, 22
less than Notre Dame.
lnltlateSurprlsos
Sixth place went to surprtalng
Indiana, which pUlled orr one or
ll!e season's biggest upeels and
8ll1ned Its first Rose Bowl bld
by slllppfng l'urGle 19-14
Saturdo.Y•
The llooslars, their etgtt.
w!nn1ng streak llliiiPI!ed

tllllDO

the week before by M1nnllliots
and appearing to be out or the
nmn1ng fiH' the Rose Row!,
finished 9-1 and wound up In a
three-way tie with Mlnne&amp;Ota
and Purdue for the Big Ten
chsmPinnshlp.
'
Alabama, wblch had tte
unbeaten string broken by
T...,.saee this was
awarded seventh place. The
Crimson Tide, now 7-1-1, race
Auburn In their traditional
season llnale Saturdo.Y and take
on Texas A&amp;M 1n the Cotton
Bowl.
Orep State's upset speclalists took the No. 8 ranking
after Wmplns Purdue and
Southern Cal and tying UCLA.
, Purdue dropped to ninth after
Ita loss to Indiana.

LEADING GOLFER
CINCINNATI (UPI)-K~ Wbltwortll no the leadlns
winner 011 tile Ladle•
PnlleuiOilal Golf AtsocfAtlnn
circuit IIIII year with olllclal
eamlllp of $32,931 .so, It wu
.......cod Maiolo, by the
LPGA. Mlaa Wbltwortll'a total
o1 $44,004 In olflclal and
unolllclal eam1ns1 beat the
reeord of $41,tK.SO aet by
Sandra Haynie In 1967,

Kentucky
Cops 138-100
.ABA v.·ctory
By United Press Intern-d·naJ

....,
A new coach and a ll8W
player added up Monday nlsbt
to a new look for the Kentucl!;y
Colonels In tho American
Basketball AtsoclaUon.
Scoring almost at will, the
Colonel• gave Gene Rhodes,
their ll8W - · ... , a ____.,__
~"
.......JWa
1311-100 victory over the New
Jeney Americana. And lt ,...
Loula Dampier, treah from the
ArmJ, who Jed the barrlli!O w1111
25 po!Rts ae tile Colonels scored
tholr alxth victory Ill 19 games.
ToRY Jackson scored 31
polnta, Jneludlng 24 on free
fllrows, but they weren't nearly
enou~ to prevent tlle Amortcans from sutrorlng their lOth
loss In 18 pmes. The Arnericans are In fourth place and the
Colonels In tlflh place In the
Eastern Division of the ABA.
Art Becker scored 30 points
and Joe Harnood had 22 to lead
the Houston Maverocks to a 10 l87 triumph over the Plttabur~
Pipers In the only otber MondiQ'
nl.ght game, Connie Hawks led
the Pipers with 16 points despite
a 4-for-13 nlsbt from the free
throw line.

Fire can ploy havoc fli ~
body'a plana, whothtr lhtiJ

havelnturencaornotMW

oureyou'recomp"*piO- ····
tectad ln thne day&amp; · llf
rlalng coat., S..rour oft-4 ·
man for compll!e dtliill. ·
on a tpeclal fire Inoure1101
program tailored In your ·
needs. Be In Auto-Ownn

,.circle tf p~on.••

SERVING MEIGS
COUNTY SINCE 1161

DOWNING

a Rolly Pock

An.wer .to Pr.vlou1 Puule

What Makes Joe Morrison Run?
Joe would receive an extra game's salary, around fl,OOO.
ly MURRAY OLDERMAN
A&amp;Sll111lng the Glants reach and wln their conference playolf
NEA Sports Editor
(a ridiculous assumption just three months ago), they then
NEW YORK-After paying obeisance to the platitudes self· would qualify to meet the winner of the Western Conference

Jesshess, desire, spiritual evaluatlon~the professional · gets lot the NFL championship on Dec. 31. The lndlvtdu&amp;l shares
down to the haslcs of winning. He plays for money.
for the winning team in that game will be around $9,500. Last
The motiY&amp;tlon in professional football was never stronger year it was $9,813.63 for the Green Bay Packers against
·
than it Is right now. For the chosen few-the winners-the . Dallas.
Now
let's
stretch
Joe's
luck
a
little
further.
The
Giants
win
payolf for success In 1967 will be the greatest in history.
the
NFL
championship
that
qualifies
them,
and
Joe,
for
the
That's why Y!IU find guys Hke Joe Morrison busting a gut
to get in 011 it. Joe Morrlson Is a professional. This season he NFL-AFL World Championship playolf, or .supetbowl, scheduhas been Ranker but 'moved to running hack when Tucker led for Miami, Fla., on Jan. 14.
Each man on the team winning the Superbowl gets ,15,000.
·
·
Frederickson was burt.
We've
Joe this far. Let's give him the ,15,000, not
At 30, Joe has also been a spllt..nd tight-end, fullback and
if
the Giants have made it to this point.
. ·
. ·even -:orked one season on deleilae. He played on New.Vork
means that Jos as a key man on,the Giants
Glant teams that won division titles In 1959, 1961, '62 and '63,
season artistically, too. Quite likely, he'd be
so he knows what It's like to caah a championshl~ game
Pro Bowl in Los Angeles on Jan. 21, liJayJng
check.
'·
Conference .team. ff the East wlna, faci on
"It looks real. rilce," says Joe, ~~under tile Christmas trllt!.''
'fl,500
for
Joe . . He'~ up to ~.ooo in post.-season
season$, he bu worked ·himself Into a conlfortmatch·
his
salary.
wh0re he gels tJ,ot)O a ga111e (a nice t_ound
mofte~ ~~~~uages cop~e o! th~ fr~tr11tlon he .felt
years· when. the~ was Jio auxlllary payoit fo~ , :

a

'TIME YOU STAATED 'TJ.
"CT GROWN·UP·--

summ

..

;.\':r~·~ve~~ ~

II) 1101 lr NU.. loc. "'·-, • •

,

, . "How wOiil~ ,ou like tti be c~~Grotd wit~ 'pOlice
.'· · · . .r btilfolity' ?"
· ·
.
,

' '"

J

'

'

eSpoociTimer
a Finish u...
• Porldnp_Test

1_/2

SnoTrae

PRICE

WHISPER-

o DEEP POWERFUL TRACTION- winter tread with tr•...ll:
tion bars to grip-and-go in the deepest mud or snow.
swerve-free stops, too.

EXPRESS ACCfSSORIES

1/2
PRICE
--------·

a Liquid i'onrc.r

o SELF CLEANING .•• WHISPER-QUIET- wide, flat
deslened so that traction elements

••oo~orvan

a T-p Con'lor
eSior... Tink

out mud and snow- keep tread open, always
· action. Variable pitch and sipe design hushes

road noise.
o AIR RETAINING LINER- chlorobutyl rubber, to let .

BEST SELECTION

practically forget inflation worries.

o SAFER WINTER DRIVING- studies prove ~
tires stop better, track straighter than rqular

INTdEBIG
BEND AREA-

ll)llr

,
' wi

15·19

Come! Look· Shop!

USE MOORE'S
LAY-AWAY PLAN!
)

Tullol• ttYIOII c,-.1

•W.tn-.n
11.80 .... 'hJi.

"

•.' '·

Middleport, Ohio

TOY CLOSEOUT

e S.C:IIT¥1 Tel!t

'

Insurance Agencyl,, ,

RACNG ACCESSORI£S

BE~RY'5 WORLD

'

.'

_ee S~e~
.
•
·D
. , 1~ ·.· "·u ~:

w

'&lt;

Jurgensen Best
Tosser·· Browns

COMMANDER NAMED
WABSAW (UPI)- Geo, Jan
Raczlunosld baa been named
commander of ll!e PoUah A1r
Force1 tile Ponce 110118 8lllllC.Y
PAP 8D110Wiced Maiolo,. The
command, wbleb w1U be based
In Poznan, will like over the
tunct10111 or the lnapectorap o1
ll!e air forcea. wblcb Rcazkow.
ski beaded before DelMarian !Weballkl
commander ol the

.L

•

MEXICO CITY (UPI)- Remember tile alogen: "Don't
bpfCtorate It you bpfcl to
rate?'•
Orssnlzed ~seball felt that
~
long before MadlllOII
Avenue came up with the
odmon!Uon and the spitball and
_,. lllepl pitches have been
outlawed alnce · 1920, The only
trouble waa that some pllebera
reUed 011 the spitball and fiouted
the rule despite , vehement
protests from opposing managers,
Major league otrlclala bope
they prt an end to the IUepl
pitch Maiolo,, approving a rule
chanp which forblda a pitcher
from twchlng his lliOilth or lips
While oo tile lll&lt;&gt;llld.
Urnplrea &amp;Ioree Rule
By adDpllng the rule change
only 0110 hour otter 1t wu
aubmltted by a nwor league Ing."
Try Harder
general managers and lleld
••The j&gt;ltchors w1U cheat, &lt;&gt;illl'
managers following a meeting
earUer In the do.Y, the rules It'll be harder," said the new
committee placed the aull!orlty manall'l!r or Oklahoma Cl\y In

rude Lawrence, the famous

ation for the Adva.ncement of
Colored People, predicted the
majority or w.hJtes would
change "whee they find out
what we're really after."
"The only way we're going
to get anywhere in MJ.ssistJ1pp1
is for MlssJssippl Negroes and

-

By DICK JOYCE

When you see "Star!" you'll

Mississippi
Center Is Sym!Jol
01 R11tilll Ch11nge

•

UPI Sports Writer

probably say, "That must be
a double." Maybe she is doubled ln some scenes, but in the
one I watched, there was no
double. Julie dld it all.
In "Star!" Julie plays Gert-

Most people attributed Negro st&amp;ylng.

~L¥

TH15MimiCO
ASOVE ALL OTHERS.

10

'l'

"

4

Some folks have nuts at the
table every holiday, while

l

·'I·&lt;· "' •

A-Yes. On the night of
Dec. 14, 1799, an attending
physician stopped the clock
near his bed at 10:20 to By WILLIAM I. VAUGHN
record the moment of the
FAYRITE, Miss. mPD first president's death. This
On
the southern fringe of thJs
clock Is In the AlexandriaWashington Masonic Lodge at small southwest Mississippi
town stands e modem two
Alexandria.

at his nsh tray,

I MVTAG

'J
.

•

'

•'

contaio any vitamins? His it cause dark pigmented areas
any food, Vallie'! Will It cause ,to appear on the hands and
diabetes.
..
i f&amp;ee. · It may also cause lnA-AUboagh lloaey contains ·· somnla, restlessness, mental
a small amount of vitamins 8 confqsion, convulsions, nasal
and C, I would not rely on It congestion, blurred vision and
to supply your vitamin needs. waterlogging of the tissues.
It Is an excellent source of Your doctor should be nolisugar and can be ~ommend- lied promPJly if these or any
ed as a part of YOIU" diet pro- other unusual symptoms ocvlded it Is bellliced In other cur.
respects. As fill: dlabetel!, It Is
Q-lf the doctor prescribed
caused not so much by what
you eat as by the ·q1!8J1tlty.' In ort e Thorazine tablet every
other words, ovei'Mting !l'lth four hours to keep a patient
and the nurse gave eight
Its resultant oVemlghl ·Is a quiet
10
of these tablets a day
or
cause of diabetes In many per- what could
happen?
sons who are over 40.
A-ll Is always dangerous
to
take more of a drug than
Q-1 am a young married
your
doctor prescribes. For
woman with no children. I
possible
results see previous
use an artlllclal sweetener to
answer.
keep my weight down. Does it
cause any harmful elfects? 1
Q-My doctor gave me Mephave heard that It causes ste- rospan, then he changed to
rility. Is this true?
Etrafon tablets. What a r e
A-Artlllclal sweeteners these pUis for? Would they
have no food value. Used in make me constipated?
moderate amounts they are
A-Meprospan is a susharmless. A recent study lndl· tained-action meprobamate. a
cates that calcium· cyclamate widely used tranquilizer. Etin large amounts may cause rafon is also a tranquilizer.
you to be allergic to sunlight Neither drug should c a u s e
while you are taking ll If. constipation.
sw~teners caused sterility,
(Hewspoper fnterpris. Aun.)
many women could throw
PIHse sen~ your Qutstiofts and
away their contraceptive pills.

0

' 3- n.o DollY Senitnel. Pllmeroy-Middleport, o•• Nor, ~. 1967

I

By !liCK KLEINER .
' NEA Hoilr~ Cllrrespqndenf ,,

A

l~~~~::J:~~

�.......

~.--

-..

~

. . . . .... . . .
"~;

.•

-The Doll Se

lc

o.,

• 28, 1967

o iday S

r c

o Y~ ! 0 O •
..... u • •

~--- ~

•I•

ppl

New

~·

- -~-- - ~ - ~ · --

_ ......... ..

- __

. . ,. _................ . ..
~·

...

ro e

n blwed•

oe

Wih

......

h w ver ,

reath on Disp a
AtS reAIIWek

count a

• or Mrs.

In e(lUl

also vi led
Fa Haught

IIY

Pliid

tlu!reon

term•

or

of

!tall
1111

s

RAN

YS:

u

or

ment

$8,676 A ar e

ee Season

D n Ri e

u

PT. PLEAS
ha e been
oC the
Mason C

'89· 0

·-

r. IKl Mr •

ne

R.

/

'ev il

e n
all s.

Alden

Sti ersv • e'

ucks

-

He
two
RieDard

New

0 To
Fla

n
ins,

s. Ha-

orenee T
e , and Mrs. BerZanes ille were
ard Mr •

port

Pop orn Bo

Pomeroy to

c i it

chase
OBINSOIN'S
CLE NERS

Old Town

216 E. d P•omer

Fl ts Even
This
Po

meet at

UDLE 'S

BUYS HERE
,...

ke a

are

11

qu 'ty drup

porml

barflim," but

your ,..,I&lt;I'IJ,tloat
....UC&gt;Otloa lo ladieat..L
.. to &amp;U

DECEM
·TSPECI LS
--~~- "

3

b•esi'd4ts... "' t
c&amp;

5coffTICI n
erful Sea n-Adolph

c

elill

GOOD U ED

obby Joe Wo e
Racine Route and
Mr • S
Pow II, local, called
Mr. ard Mr •
•

I

R

You Can

Portu.

ston.

IIR

•

---

RUTLAN
USED
-4211

�.......

~.--

-..

~

. . . . .... . . .
"~;

.•

-The Doll Se

lc

o.,

• 28, 1967

o iday S

r c

o Y~ ! 0 O •
..... u • •

~--- ~

•I•

ppl

New

~·

- -~-- - ~ - ~ · --

_ ......... ..

- __

. . ,. _................ . ..
~·

...

ro e

n blwed•

oe

Wih

......

h w ver ,

reath on Disp a
AtS reAIIWek

count a

• or Mrs.

In e(lUl

also vi led
Fa Haught

IIY

Pliid

tlu!reon

term•

or

of

!tall
1111

s

RAN

YS:

u

or

ment

$8,676 A ar e

ee Season

D n Ri e

u

PT. PLEAS
ha e been
oC the
Mason C

'89· 0

·-

r. IKl Mr •

ne

R.

/

'ev il

e n
all s.

Alden

Sti ersv • e'

ucks

-

He
two
RieDard

New

0 To
Fla

n
ins,

s. Ha-

orenee T
e , and Mrs. BerZanes ille were
ard Mr •

port

Pop orn Bo

Pomeroy to

c i it

chase
OBINSOIN'S
CLE NERS

Old Town

216 E. d P•omer

Fl ts Even
This
Po

meet at

UDLE 'S

BUYS HERE
,...

ke a

are

11

qu 'ty drup

porml

barflim," but

your ,..,I&lt;I'IJ,tloat
....UC&gt;Otloa lo ladieat..L
.. to &amp;U

DECEM
·TSPECI LS
--~~- "

3

b•esi'd4ts... "' t
c&amp;

5coffTICI n
erful Sea n-Adolph

c

elill

GOOD U ED

obby Joe Wo e
Racine Route and
Mr • S
Pow II, local, called
Mr. ard Mr •
•

I

R

You Can

Portu.

ston.

IIR

•

---

RUTLAN
USED
-4211

�.'
·~-

--·-···· ·····-··. - ......... .•___________
.,.

.. __

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..... - .. . .

....

-•

•

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0

--

~

·

- - P·• ••

•

' _

......

0

~-

•-

, ~ .. -

-- - · - · ' " · "

•

WHAT
WUZTHAT

DADBURN

'THE
WANT A_~
II.POIMATION
DIADLINU
1 p. "'· l)ay tte•oro flubJ....,Ieftt
Mond•Y ·oeMIIInl I •· ln.
(IMIIIItloftl &amp; !COrndiORI
Will be IICC.phld Ul!.tll t .J, 11'1 , tor
D•~ of PubUc,tlon

RIOULA'r'IONS
T!'lr! Pu~Ult'ler re ..r :·tl the rltht to
t'dU or rl'ject an.v a~ deemed obectlon•llll. Th1 PIJbllth., will not
~~~ responsible for mo,.. thin OM In·
c?rrec: Insertion.

For lent

-4

J'OUR ROOM AND BATH
APAR'l'IIEN'r, anlarallhed,
~

u

unit p1r Word •'• tonHcUtlve

;nlf)rtionl.
25 !M'f unt DIHIMIRt on ,_let 1 ·'
1 :1('1 Jt:l paid within 10 dlyJ.

CARD Of THANKS &amp; OIITUARI

'1.so tOT so word minimum. El
, :.;&lt;1 :tion•l word 2c.
ILIND ADI
,'\ ~Zrtit ! onal

lSc

Cheri•

per

Advt'r .

tllltmtnt .

OFFICE HOURI
1:10 1. m. to S:tt p. m. Dally
1.3 J 1 m. to 12:00 NMII StiUnf(Jy
IT' S EASY TO PLACI A
WANT AD

,HONI tt2.·lU6

'

Notice

!

l
f

HOLIDAY SPECW. ON ~
WAVES from NOY. 11 lllnal1i
Dec••• $II - .~~.~~. ....
- flO, 'II - ..... Ralll'l

BeauiY SIJop, , _ , - -

,.,..,

11-lNfl'P

NO HUNTING or Trespassing
on my property at any time.
Leroy Lawrence

11·2W'I'P

--Public S1le

'.'

WenttciTolur
WANT TO BUY OR 'I'RADE
JOB TAHK, CiiJ*IlJ from Gill
to tine a-will plloft, llllllt
.. Ill fllr tlllldltlaa. for hut.
me
emUet, M. "'·
llunJim. Ellie Rldp Road,
1lbltmllll, o. 46111.
11-Jt.ltle

"'*·

•

A IISUI

or

direct

85

one owner ear

from

owner. Call
II-%1'·STC

IIUII05.

HelpWeniM
RAVE !MMBDIATE OPENING

..

FOR SECRETARY IIIII reo
cepllonllt, uperlenee or &amp;

inw colleie lra!Din£ prefer.
rod but not eaenUal. Write
8os IIIII L givlnl quallflel.
lions and schooling, lmmodJ.
ate ...,. -ary.
11.-.n'C

....

A GOOD RENT ON Tamen
Run. llleiDe, RD t, 3 W
niOIII llolated !lome, pnp,
J'1IDIPIII room. on heat, 1art1o
~. balb, bot and cold
water, IJII'Ini, driDed well,
llld larp prdea, . . . llllllllh
avallllble on or before JIJIIo
llrJ I, 1111, Either 'lfelt,
.,._ •• ••••
11-IM'I'C

JI'OR RENT-Adulta. 110 pets,
Nice I room apt., fumllbed.
J'OR RENT~ bedroom traO-

w, lldultl,

110 petl.

J'OR SALK OR TRADE - for
tnctor, .., Jqur.
lAG ... llaltet, t mll01
Mil cl Mii'AIIeport on Route
f.
II·~

SIX 110011 IPII'Imilll, J W
- · Jmflnllhed, I ciOHII
..... 1111 . . . IIIII, ....
1110111, illllllde .... Pbaae

II I lfc

...

4 - ijMIIIIo ...
Pbaae • • .

nnt!IIIIIBD
I and I -

...

~.

• 17 tic

APAB'I'IOI!m
•.faiD:e IIIII,

out r1 Ill lloadt, I lllodlt
from PwlwiiDJ ... Ollce.
PriYIIe ....... c. ..

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

p.

ID,

RESTAURAN'I', fldJy equipped
In Rudand 8CI'IIII from Rutland FUrniture, ... ArDold
Gnle at lbe Jl'urnllure store.
ll.zui'C

--4 room apartment furnllbed.
1'11ane - . - .

•

It tic

QUALin

••••

1963 INTERNATIONAL . . ..... ... .. .. . .. .
Scout, 4 cyl. Full metal cover, 2 wheel drive Good tires,
heater.

1963 VOLKSWAGEN .. . . . .. .. . . . . . .. . .. . . .89i'

2 J)r, l)eluxe wnyl interior, good
· Heater. Black finish.

whit~wall

tireS

radio and

•
191.! CHEVROLET . .. .. . .. . .. .. . .. .. .. . $1095
Super Sport HT Cpe. Bucket seals, V8 engine, automatic
trans. P. steering, radio and beater.

P~meroy

Motor Co.

OHN EVES. 9100 P.M.

t-17-tfe

POMEROY, OHIO

J&lt;Jbn W. VanMe-

WEREYOU SATISFIEO
WITH YOUR FUEL OIL
SERVICE LAST YEAR?
IF NOT, CALL

Pomeroy L•ndm•rk

. J.rlck W. CarHit, Mer·

1968
EARLY
AMERICAN
For~le
STEREO,
handsome
maple
li.U.TP'C
console with AM &amp; FM radio, PIGS, PRONE MloiJM.
114m
FIVE ROOM HOUSE, I am 4 speed BSR intermlx chang.
gi'GIIIId, near Rutland. newly er, resume paymenta of til
cleeorated inside and out, per month or pay balance REPOSSESSED 18a lllereo radio romblnatlon. AM·I"M ra..... see Arnold Grate, Rut- due $1116.24, call m.a.
dio, 4 speakers. AU lpeed
land.
11.-.m
u.rr.trc changer.
See and hell' In
your home before buying.•
WAN'!' A GOOD BUY? SJNG. MIXED HAY, toe I bale, allo
'
- 11t1111 ric, IIIII GIIC IDe·
•uo
per weet or pay balance··
ER ~ewing machine, 118'( tor Contac:l, M. W. ~ · of $111.12. Call tft.$'124.
model, iilled only 5 months, EaiJe Ridge Road 1flnln.
114-TP'C
Itt dial fGr zig zap, fancy
vllle Ohio Gnl 'n·l•lfl'C
llitchel, butlollboles, biJncl.
•
- Beautiful coklred conhems, etc., will ldl for tl'1. POODLE PUPPIES, AKC To)' LOOK
sole
TV.
20-lnch screen. Wu
nothing down, t8 monthly,
miniature, rtS and up. Stud
ts31.85, now $4111.15. Get new
can Ravonnrood 2'/So111191.
service and grooming. Pbaae
Standard encyclopedia Itt
11-zuTC 1192-0443.
II I tk
free. Try In your home. CaD
IIU'/SI.
11·26-'fti'C
SINGER SEWING MACHINE t8e7 SEWING MACHINE. ful·
In lovely sewing table, doeJ
ly equipped to zig rag, fancy UNCLAIMED FREI'Gin', 8
all regular sewing, pl111 dial
design, dam, mf in zippen,
new zig zag !ewing machJnes
equipped for fancy Zig Zig etc. Layaway, Bal- tsz.•
with 20 year factory guarandeslps, buttonholes, over· 70. Phone..-.
tee nadonally
advertised
cull, etc., only I monthly
117tlc
brands
to
be
sold
for
storage
paymenll ol $U'I per week,
and freight. totals of t45
11-4TP'C
each, can be paid at t5 per
•
LOSE WEIGHT safely with Del
FIICIIIth, we will deliver to )'0111'
!IJNGER SEWING MACHINE,
A·Diet tablelll. On!¥ lie. NeJ.
home to 11ew oo them to mate-.
sew1 forwanl and reverse.
aon'l Drug.
t 11 111c sure that you are completely
dg zag equipped to buttonsaUafted, call • • ·
hole, 11101101n1m, dam, ~ .• POTATOES. Clarence Prolftli,
ll..J't.ti'C
tew1 lib new, pay oil S pay.
Portland. Phone 84U2$4.
menlll •
each,
!lllcme
11 1 tfc
11168 STEREO, lovely walnut
~~~-~··
11-21-'fti'C
console with AM' It FM radio,
SINGER MODEL 18, In nice this 11el sold much hiBher,
TWO CHEVY TWO DOOR
walnut sewing table. 1oiU this set has record •torace,
HARD TOPS, lila Stick Shlfl
alii nllll !lire new, fully
take over paymenll ol t5 per
11164 Mag Wheelli, orlced equipped to zig zag, ~
month
or pay balance due ·
reasonable. Mason maa. . gram. buttonhole, etc. Pay 10
$113.48. Try il In your hoille,
II..S.TFC paymmll t$.50 each « tsO
call 9111-2838.
ll·l't.fi'C
cash. Phone 112-85.
MINIATURE Schnauzers ready
11 7 tfc
1967 FORD Galaxy 500, 4 door
Chrlstmll Eve.. I beautiful
sedan, power brakes and pomale Seottle, ready now, KNAPP SHOES Cliff's Shoe
wer steering, V~ automatic,
Spitz pups !'08tdy Nov. 30, or- Repair. Compiete 111oe Sen·
3500 miles. priced to seD.
der early. Llule Bartwoo Ice Middleport
11 s *P
Call 82472. After 5 call
Keune!, Coolville,
phone
·
·
992-5748.
11·26-TP'C
11'1-1154.
II..S.'I'I'C COLDS RAY fever 1111111 •
•
Houn ol relief in e'fer'/ IJina.
IIIII 4 clOOr-'Cusklm JI'ORD, I 11me capsule. :n.u value FURNITURE, AnUques and CoJ.
lectors ltemll, two vJollns and
eyllndet, new' tlrel, run1 aood Gilly a. Summon fDr.
one guitar over 100 years ol~
..,., 11150 IntemaUonal " ton IIIBC)', New Haven.
Miscellaneous itema. phon~
pickup, needs lrlnlmisllon
10 21 J2tp
after 5 p.m.. ~ Long
repair f/5, 12 Gaup shotgun.
Botlo"'.
11·28-'I'I'C
BI'OW!Iint IUiomaUc rib 1111'· SINGER TOUCH It 11E1J, •
reD, lib new, :noo. Phone series. Lovely two tone pas.
PICK your pup now. Will hold
Coolville 11'1-1154. li..S.'ITC tel blue. Fully equipped to
until Cbrlstmu, A.K.C. Recbuttonbole, fancy dellp, ek.
Jstered Dachsbouncl, poodle,
4 ROOMS, BATH, atonp auiGmlllc bobbin nllll. on,.
A1111rlan terrier, toy los terbillldlng, out of lllclt Water. inally tDI ....... - rler. C. lc M. Keune!. . Five
needs repair, a good invest. and - - baJinre 1'J ,,_
Polnta, Pomeroy.
11·26-'I'I'C
ment for
Phone 1na IID)!Ied. bone
lft.25a.
u......,.
117tfe

phone...

.1.•.

•a•.

a..l Estlle For s.le

........,,II,

peclla.

AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
cuaranteed, J'tiU]Ir tnel, IIJ eaiiCelled? lAIII JGUr aplflto
sizes f!UO each, ~ Jolll ......~,Call . . . .
W. VanMeter, ~
t IS tfc

--.

""'11rlil!IE8,1!!11

ua.'I'PC

I

RADIATOR .

·

l'rQI!! tbe Wlell I'Nca or
Bulldom Radiator To 'l'bf
Smallest Beater Core.

Elmer E. White, 404l2 So. 4th St., Ironton

Rep,..ntatm In This Area 20 Yean
V. V. Johnson &amp;Son
'
322 -4th Ave., Huntington

HONDA

.....

BwnNARS
,. ,..,•..

- RADIATOR·..·

LUMP COAL

· wu &amp; saYia
NICIIT

,.01'1.~1

MOtt THRU FRI.

•"•"'·
c:or.efruck
eau~w.r

RT. 7 At TM Mtlg1 end
Ollila County Line

Rlwllngs Honda Sales

1

All New Radlatw Shap

JAYMAR COAL CO; . eear

. CALL

DICK IAWUNGI

c. IIIUIII'OilD

SERVICE·
..

QPEN 7 TO 7

II OHI II' 1'111!

AUCI'IONEER
Cr. .lole enloo
Wrlle, ..... tf Qoetod

• .Cc

Svr1cu.., Ohio
.For Free Elflmaltl
and
eAiumlnum Awnings
eAiumln.um Sldl"ll .
DOORS
eAiuminilm lalllllfll eCar Ports
• Pltlot ellown In IMulatlon
or Call Collect 53U811

Services Offered
A.

'

EXPERI~aD .

STORM
WINDOWS

11·-.STC

eAnyType

I

WYMU'I

.

lllrH GOBLE FOlD

.
IIIIDDLIPoai'. Q1110
PH, ~
I 'fl't UIH
0.
Clll* .......
~:~
-.
~
·
~,·~~~2~
----~~--~-.!
~--~~~~~~
Uelei, Cllilt
NOTICI TO IIDDIRI
S I tic IN mE COMMON PLEAS The Ohio
De)lllrtment of Natur&amp;l '
LIOAL lrfOTICI
COURT, MEIGS COUNTY,
Re~rcea, tbrou11h the Division of
Beule Allender, who1e lall known
I

omo

AIR CONDmOICING RefrigerNo 14 199
•
'
ation service. Jack'• RefrlgRUTH
A
:
HENRY,
eraUon, New Ha-. .._
aa.n.
4 s t1c R. D. 3, 1\1..1-

Parkl and

Recreation.

pulWIInt

to and In accordance wtth the pro.
Yb•.on• of Sectloa 11501.09 and 1501. ·
.Din of the Ohio Revled Cade, pro·

Pote' lo conb·net h.· r tbe operation uf

a rtarl:na and mlleeUaneoua refreth·
ment eOneeff'llon ot Forked Run State
Park, Mel.j"a County, Oblo.
An alternate bid propcu:al may be
aubm!tted to Include a beach refreah-

Mldifl....,.

EEK AND MEE¥
~D IT E\IEI.l. tX.'CUR. 10 'rl:XJ
THAT 'IWR£ Sfml/JG A VERI'
SAD fXAMI:l.E FOR All 'R1E
'rtU.G F.'ECPLE BV JUST L'I'IIJG
AAWND .00100 I..PTHIIJG. A/..l
~--.--. Tf(C liME 7

place of telldence wa• Pl\ta:bW'Jh,
J'tonn~:vlnnla, Is hereby notlfiecl that
on the 18th day Gf Nove-anMr, 1Pi'r,
Juhn Allender, belnl plalDUff, fll·
td her peUtlon at.aln•t her 11 defendant ln the Cowt of Common
i'leaJ, Metr• CGunty, Ohio, Cue NG.
HI.Zll, pra)'inl for divorce from. 1114
Jse111e Allender on the groundl of
l:'toat ne1lect of duty and utreme
crue-lty, and other proper ntUef;
said cau•e will be for hearlnJ on or
Btter &amp;he 6th day of January, 11188.

POmeroy, \IUIV'
MIX
_..........,
deu...
PlalnUff,
READY t.VI••.:u;:.c'11'1''"
ered right lo your projed.
Yl.
rnent st 11ntl In the contract.
-•
Free
..CARL
F
HENRY
~metal bid PtoPOiall will .be reFlit 8nu eaay.
~ '
•
t
eelved in tho office of the Dlvl•lon of
males, ~ 112-3214:, Goit• address anlmOWD,
Parlu and Reueatlon until l:OO p.m..
John Alltndtr, Pltlnttff
•
Decembor 12, l!MJ7. Bldl will be pub· J. B. O'lrion,
Jeift Re
• Mil Co., Middle- .
Defendant.
l!ety opened thereafter by the Chief
A"ernty fer P!ah'ltlff
II u. ,..,..
NOTICE BY PUBLICATION
or hlt author1zed agent The rlgbt lt 11·21 11-28 12-5 12-11 1219 12:11 '
port ' Ohio •
• "" ""
"'""'' to "'Jeot any and •II bl...
Carl F. Henry, whose place Tbc contract will be for a term of
LIGAL NOTICI
1 1068
Robert F.. Gallalher, whose Jut
•
of
residence
is
unknown,
but
i:eurrcr::::•
::-o~fanuano
to
·
3
BUDGET PRICE furniture on
place of retldenee wa1 PaJtr..
.
The Dlvltbn of Parkl and Reerea· known
Of
Own
ho
I
t
k
Place
res'
craburJ,
We1t Vlribtia. II hereb7
our third floor bullgel abop. W se aS n
. tton will furnlth docka, one bulldlnA notified that
on the 18th 4aJ of No·
dence
was
c~
Casa
Villa
Mo11pproxlmatety
32 feet bl' 20 teet. 1s
vember,. 1961, Orntl Gallagher, btBaker Furniture. ~dleport.
rowboat. With oan. and one refriger·
I Street, Co- ated Ice bowe. On the alte:rJlate bid. lnl pJa,ln.tlff, ' flied ."" her MUUdb
teI 3969 East Man
Oblo.
' 1 21 tfc
nealn1t him ·a. defe'n dant tn" tJM,
1umbus, Ohio, will take notice one
permanent retre•hment •tand aP· Court of CGmmon Pleat of Melli
proximately ll feet by 18 feet will be
Ohio, Cue No. 14,212 priJCURTISS DAIRY BEEF Jlreed.. on the 30th day of October, 1967, furnllhed . The coneeallonalre wIll Count)',
Inl for diYofte from "td Robert
•' d fil d h
aft other equipment, m.ereban·
inl. servfl,;IC'
for anyone Ill)'- l he undersJ8n
e er pe. fumlah
dlle. mat forlall, utilities and labor ne. E. Gall.ajher on the JroundJ of (l'OII
neglect ot duty and extreme cruelwhere. CaU Parker . . . . tition against him in the Court ceuny to operate the coneea•lon to ty,
plainUlf alto pray1 for other
.
~
PI eas of Meags
. approved
•tandnd.l.
proper relief; 1ald cau.e will be for
Pomeroy ....... C!letter. u( ~ntmon
ftequetll for bi4. propol.al f 0 r m. hearilll
on or alter the dth dQ' of
Notify by 1 a. na. for IDOI1IInl · Count~ . 0 ., praying for divorce, ~~~~d
.::::at~:O. 1 ~00~1Y9~~o~hi! January, 1968.
Orma o.tlla1htr, Plaintiff
--'ormanee ........ I p. m restoration to former DEUn(", DePirtmentl Bulldinll. ColumbUio Ohio J . 1. O'lrlen,
Attorney for PlelnHH
afternoon ler\'lce. No premo and other relief, on the grounds
FRED E MORR, Dl"''"'
Iaing alter I p. m. fGr the of gross neglect of duty and ex.
"" 1&lt;. ••· "· ,.., •. '"
Allie day.
to rt 111te treme cruelty. Said cause wlll
be for hearing on and after lhe
,.
SEWING MACIIINES, repair 13th day ol December, 1967.
. .
ltJo .. . - - .
service, all mabl. WY 1Ruth A. Henry,
. --~ hllliif.
.t~W Jllller abW'
:aM. The Fallrlc Shop. I'D
Plaintiff
.;.. :ilitil ~.... ffewir
.«~ Sportl
eroy. Authoriled Slnpr w.· Crow, Crow &amp; Perter,
t:•~~a..\ 1fMr
"•
1'1........ I'll.
r(so Natar;al
and Service. We Sbarpen Alloomeys for Plaintiff
.,.
1:45 ~ Show, Wed..J'it. Scissors.
:1-2&amp;-tfc :;o~ ~~(II) 7, 14, 21, 28 (12) 5, :.:
1:45 hlrira'QI lll!pqrl, Tbatl
1:011 Newt
'"!t~rru:.~re:
1:15 Coffie Wltb Jlllllt'
mates. O'Coallor's Tne and
ACIIOIII
411. Olrl'a
12.1'1&gt;1o,
10;00 SWap• -·-...._._ Call . .
1. BFopao
......
le!ll!ia,
U:
II Medlt•'Jona
.........,ape· "'"""''
1. oocl ohnr H. Hlna:l
football,
10:30 BruJt¢1 l&gt;attJ •
4141 4)J' llllrk1S47, Olester, o.
10. PlrtalniDr
etc.
•ll:OO OllliJ.•Newi
11 11 llllp
loplozia
DOW!(
1
11:05 Tlnzi• Cauntry o~ioeutli&lt;
Servict110ffwN
'~r
11:111 Tint• Country llylllllllme
CHIIIV~A
snJD .W.. · 12.
2. Mac&amp;WI
12:00 NatlOrw • Obit NIWI
Pbaae MWMS.
u 7a
1'- ,.,..
Kr.
a. p4INmllfl!l
lhlp'•
12:1$ Local Newl
12:2$'S~ Report
'
·:aa.IIUMI·
ELE(l'I'R(lUJX Salol and llerf. U.llomaii
I!IODO)'
I. SIII!Dlion
11:10 G~ Star, Fri. ·
,......._.
U.l'l!not:
I Pulllle
Ice• .,._ factory hfltiJift.
N.Z.
'nouc.
83. Jl'at
JT.'l'apto
12:30 Larr{ ~ersoa SlltW·
u. Roman
tatlve. Ph. lfN'IIO.
11. ~
T..........
aplii
·(1:01 !!Iva: Repotl)
21.
let
aolltlly
It II a.p
a.~
Z: 00 Oblo NIWI . ·
30.Kllldof
IralA!
3:00 Ol1io NIWI '
duck
IS.Affo' ......... D.....
,.__ - 11,JIIioMtlcol
I!OftiJat
,
••
Kottle
n.IIIWie
3:0s lilies xu.Jc ·
......_ ............ - t.an.llko
.,.

.....

.

10 DO!

G£r A UTI!.£
PEACe, MAIJ I

J3
..;. ·S2--

ll•lt

J. 611JEE6LI!',

1&lt;11. ww...- "OAOO'{S"
PA'ol'lfi' '&amp;M FOQ MY

D&lt;Jti'T WOOl&lt;'( ANNIE I MOXIE
N&amp;VER NEEDS I=R\ENm; 11:)

!:ill:? tm,1 KEEP A SEd&lt;El f
.f41iRE • WITH THE
FIDOLES IS ~.

UNLe£b •. ,.. '?

UNLE'SS
THEY

~~

Kl'EP, TWEYD DO A
AARA·I&lt;IRI 'FORE
"'ME'i'D LOSE

1llf!il'

lt\COM~!

J6'Zr

o..-..

----

u.::c

.....
ba~ . . .
work, hauling, llarlall JWtD
olds, M-. l'llane 'I'INI•
II. lllr

21.-

Nm ··

a. Sua [lOll

--..-.
:e...
_
,. ..
-·
."',_
-lt.Culile

•• Twlllo4

BEST PRICE paid for lllaDdJng timber, poplar, .......
nUl, IJCIIIIOI'e, ub, 1!IL ,._
estimates. No job too' . . . .
too lillie. Call Marlall ..,._
olds. Bol, fll, Muon, 11'. v•.
Plule 27W147.

1~11

11. Jlulit.

u.
a

1:011

IT. 014 wel&amp;bt

tor ....I

H.ntsalioo41
lt.OocupiDI:

4:~ kllllc'l .,. Sporlll -

4J.IIIillcll

DAlLY ~UO'l'B-Bin'1 bw to ·.walnt:
.ll'IDLSA.t.Xa
Ill LOJI'O •• LLOW
Olialeltol' ...... i i i - f&lt;il' IIIGIIior•la
A .. -

llila---

. ,,., Malllil' •QJodrol

O'IB

' .
A Olftlir•
• •l'rMri
q..
'
/

Ull:lfD

'

li'L~li'III:D

Dill:

'

,tq··
.

.-),}'
"

,.

DIE . ',QII;

.

ll''ri(D.~'I(II.

'·

'

:NIIJ!:f.• ..
'!

-

'

\'

'1:11 ,.. .Gooll Life

f&lt;il' ~ tlll'llo II.. X fW llio ~.. t14. lll!lio ~ ....
'"""'""'tllli'-.......
fol ii~w,..-ww..
~~oa~-o ............-.,.., a11, .~
....
-~ , - . ~
...,a..---~

.

..

1:15 Bieri Off :~.
. liJIID,lY
1:01 Jllp Oa ...,..... ....
,,., Baplllt . 1lllil' '

oat.lopt

Xlf

SJar!__~ l'n!llstant Hour

' .(::It Sporll 1lorlnd'llp

.O,()wn--

.

!i.MER!

10:110 TOP Tell Show
U:ot Nooli NIWI Report .
U:ll Rev. Geoqe 11rJ1n* ··.
11:311 A.S.c,..Pete $1ieJdl
12:45 MFIIOII Co. A&amp;rl· , ' ·
1:00 Nen
. '
1:15W .

lliot

D:f.,ll:
.
DILtl:

COMES

1:10 Nitloaal New
t:ll Alldmlon'l -

alloy
Olliamelilal
Willi

..

I'M IN
L.UCI&lt; ...
HER I!:

. 4:311 Local NIWI
5:00 Sporlll Scope .
. 5:15 SliD Off
.
SA'nJRDA.Y

14: "

·. ,,45~·-a;ilb
I
., J
.,~. 1;11 llllliloi.·l'fiWI
,,. ~. Arlllrew Pnlil .

,,.,,

· f'IO NIWI
..•;. SimdiJ Sbow .
ll:ot Country ~
~:;w ' PIIIliiJ Worlldp Boar

. U:IO · ~~ev. Merlin ,..... ,.
'1:10 Rev. l'.ddle .,....
!:30 Clevelancl F~
' ''" Scoreboard Raui1111J

I

HERe, WHO
~MOW,

BE 'TRUS'TW,

'lllol

wwo

CAM

.

~&lt;NOW~
~

OH, YOUR MAR~
'OIL\. 13ADG.E.; ~M, WW0
BROUGHT YOU HER!\ , · .
FROM :rH~ Bla HOUIIE,

Clti IHE.

!!LUFF · ···~

"OTHERS"~

-SIT

4:00 NeWI .

8. Spill tNW

"crn-leRfi&gt;"

I)JCKTRACY

"'"""'

ofntl

plll!t

THE

OTHER;

'

DAILY CROSSWORD . --

11.=
GUm-

..,~,At&lt;O
"T~E.

.. ..

.ttt•

-··
t
U
r
n
·=-

OH? AIJD JUST IAJHAT
ARe yO() 1RYIIJG 10 DO?

PllESIDfNT OF ~M~l.6~M.lTED
eNTE~ZPRrses ·-•

........

.M.P.n

DIG I.WAT I'M ~1/JG

To 'M~. HollACE

a:d
,.................

.

IJO, AS A M/lit1bR OF

FACT I lkJSPIREi THEM I 1HEV

~

I

G POfmAC GRAND PRIX, E'I1IYL1!:NE GLYCOL llue t ROOM H&lt;XJSE, 11!1111 seD,
low mileage, power lteerlng, permanel!t anllfMue, ft.JI
full buemeat, Fill -~~~
power braka. bidet seata, per gallon. PGateloJ Rome
fenclnl, chicken houle. lovely
automatic ll'llllmlllllon, new
IUmlillldlnp, Pbaae ,....
lOIII IIe
and Auto.
llrel, phone lfi..JI'H (1t
11-.
1t IJ •• NEIGLER Building Supply for .
lfUI..
114ne GUARANTEED IJSED 'nla.
building aood homes, lollg .
ts.ta up. Pomeroy Home and FOR SALE, I'IVE ROOM lime loan available. Call tile
SOLID STATE STEREO. IMI Auto.
NeJcler Store. 9414228. aoaIt Ill Ill;
lllUSI!:, balb. I bedreoml,
walnut stereo console with 4
ed Sundays. Keep Ametlca
nice lot and ........ priced
speaker, 4 !peed automaUc RATS, MICE ellmlnlltecl lor·
Free and go to chUI'I!h 00 the
reiiiOIIIble,
phone
•
•
·
changer, take over paymenlll ever. ''Gel Star" 112 lb. .tt•.
ll*fi'C Lords Day.
of t5 per month or pay bal·
ti·28-TP'C
Ebenba&lt;h Hdwe., SUIII' Run
ance f71.20. Call 911U118 .
MW. Pickens• lldwe.. Malon. FOUR room boose, bath and
11-2'1.ti'C
II IS Slllp
half, gas furnace. t4500. Ann
St., Pomeroy. Cal( 821115.
u.zs.m:;
STEREO RADIO CONSOLE. PILE II loll and lolly, CGIIin
stereo with AM It FM radio
retain llriD~ irl Clllpsll
clelm:e Ooatlll!l turntable per·
cleiDid w1t11 Blue ......
teet condition, take over pay. J!~DI electric .......,_ fl,
· lnsur1nc.
menta of t8 por FIICIIIth o r ! Biter Purnllun. · ti...'IC
balance '111.10. CaD 192-321 .
..,,- - 11-2'1
FACTORY REPAIRED

•

QartKb~.:,:~~=re;.~~m~ln:um~~~~~~
CHA~ES. UsLE

.......

•

e

'

11!-mJ
ALBERT M. Cal:, Broker

Budget plan, metered llctett
and treat&lt;~! fuel.

.

6

SALI!S'LADY

992·218l COLLECT

• POM~ROY
tn-2111

- -TwO -IIIOF'J,

~

'

a.usiness·ServiCe$,

~~

room home, batll,_ cellll', ps·
furnace, block garage. Out
of high water. $8,000.00
POMEROY - Five room home.
bath, ceDar, enclosed back
por&lt;;h. corner Jot. ~.5oo:!ID .
BRADBURY - On Rt. 1430ne story home, Aluminum ·
siding, storm doors and win.
dows, 5 rooins, bath, level
Jot. $5,500.00.
COUNTRY HOME - LEBAN·
ON TWP. -ONE ACRE2 story 7 room home, 4 bedrooms. hall bath, cellar,
storm doors and windows,
several other buildings.
$11,500.00.
HELEN TEAFORD,

ter, Syracuse, . . . . .

Ol'qon's onion prodi!CIIO Ia
J'UIINI8RID ... llllnllhll Yalued at about t6 miUion a
~ to IIChaol ,.... 1671 Collier'• Bncyclo-

......... ••tre

.POJI!Eru~Y

Of!

ONE three room apartment.
all new, all electric, range
unit and wall oven, stainless
For S1le
steel sink, completely modSEWING MACHINE: SINGER
em, Phone 992-52'11.
slant needle sewing machine
equipped to zig zag, balance
CO!J C:, IIIC
$16.56 or terms can be arran·
OOH"'' Pump 10UI' IIUQilh
gel!, call im-3218. 11·2'1-6'l'C
septle lallk, get Klean l!llll AD
lllplle tank cleaner, Land- THE proven c..P.,t cleaner
Blue Lustre Is eaay on the
mark J'arm Bureau.
budget. Restores forgotten
ll·II.$1'C
colors. Rent electric shamJ'ACI'ORY REPAIRED WIDE pooer $1. Baker F'11rnlture.
11·2'1-6'l'C
OVAL 'l'IRES, gual'lnteed.

:ne.so eacb,

AUC'I'ION, Saturday, Dec. 2,
10 a.m. on account of other
busines• interests the entire
lllock of the Neigler Grocery
will be sold. This is an clean
new merchandise: a chan~
to buy your Christmas IIJ'OC·
erles and candies at your
price. Also will sell one 114
ft. self service display case
(unless sold before sale), and
other articles. Be sure to be
there. Located in the vU!age
of Antiquity I12 miles up d~e
river from Racine, Ohio, on
State Route 338. Harriet
Neigler owner. Terms cash.
Not respo!lllible lor aecidents.
Sale conducted bv the Brad·
ford Auction Co.. Racine.
Ohio
ll·zs.3'1'C

......

ft.Mf'C

S cents " ' Wo1'41 OM Insertion
M!ntmum Chars• 7Sc
1'1 untl per ortl "'"" contecutive II"Uri':ons.

2 SIGNS

l!pltlmealll. Rowley ' IIIPI.
Pllane
Iller • p...
10 :n .tic

. .. . . ._._,.,'- ·-·····

TH' LEETLE FELLER
JEST KNOCKED A
TEACUP OFF'JII TH'
TABLE AN' IT BUSTED
. TO

I' . ,

..

Pl1ltNISIIE» 81111 Ulllundllled

Ill Pomerey,

ItATil
For W•nt Ad lervlce

RACKIOT?

~·· · ·--·-M·

.~~

,:l

~

'I

'

.

�.'
·~-

--·-···· ·····-··. - ......... .•___________
.,.

.. __

~---.-

..... - .. . .

....

-•

•

""' "

""'"'"

0

--

~

·

- - P·• ••

•

' _

......

0

~-

•-

, ~ .. -

-- - · - · ' " · "

•

WHAT
WUZTHAT

DADBURN

'THE
WANT A_~
II.POIMATION
DIADLINU
1 p. "'· l)ay tte•oro flubJ....,Ieftt
Mond•Y ·oeMIIInl I •· ln.
(IMIIIItloftl &amp; !COrndiORI
Will be IICC.phld Ul!.tll t .J, 11'1 , tor
D•~ of PubUc,tlon

RIOULA'r'IONS
T!'lr! Pu~Ult'ler re ..r :·tl the rltht to
t'dU or rl'ject an.v a~ deemed obectlon•llll. Th1 PIJbllth., will not
~~~ responsible for mo,.. thin OM In·
c?rrec: Insertion.

For lent

-4

J'OUR ROOM AND BATH
APAR'l'IIEN'r, anlarallhed,
~

u

unit p1r Word •'• tonHcUtlve

;nlf)rtionl.
25 !M'f unt DIHIMIRt on ,_let 1 ·'
1 :1('1 Jt:l paid within 10 dlyJ.

CARD Of THANKS &amp; OIITUARI

'1.so tOT so word minimum. El
, :.;&lt;1 :tion•l word 2c.
ILIND ADI
,'\ ~Zrtit ! onal

lSc

Cheri•

per

Advt'r .

tllltmtnt .

OFFICE HOURI
1:10 1. m. to S:tt p. m. Dally
1.3 J 1 m. to 12:00 NMII StiUnf(Jy
IT' S EASY TO PLACI A
WANT AD

,HONI tt2.·lU6

'

Notice

!

l
f

HOLIDAY SPECW. ON ~
WAVES from NOY. 11 lllnal1i
Dec••• $II - .~~.~~. ....
- flO, 'II - ..... Ralll'l

BeauiY SIJop, , _ , - -

,.,..,

11-lNfl'P

NO HUNTING or Trespassing
on my property at any time.
Leroy Lawrence

11·2W'I'P

--Public S1le

'.'

WenttciTolur
WANT TO BUY OR 'I'RADE
JOB TAHK, CiiJ*IlJ from Gill
to tine a-will plloft, llllllt
.. Ill fllr tlllldltlaa. for hut.
me
emUet, M. "'·
llunJim. Ellie Rldp Road,
1lbltmllll, o. 46111.
11-Jt.ltle

"'*·

•

A IISUI

or

direct

85

one owner ear

from

owner. Call
II-%1'·STC

IIUII05.

HelpWeniM
RAVE !MMBDIATE OPENING

..

FOR SECRETARY IIIII reo
cepllonllt, uperlenee or &amp;

inw colleie lra!Din£ prefer.
rod but not eaenUal. Write
8os IIIII L givlnl quallflel.
lions and schooling, lmmodJ.
ate ...,. -ary.
11.-.n'C

....

A GOOD RENT ON Tamen
Run. llleiDe, RD t, 3 W
niOIII llolated !lome, pnp,
J'1IDIPIII room. on heat, 1art1o
~. balb, bot and cold
water, IJII'Ini, driDed well,
llld larp prdea, . . . llllllllh
avallllble on or before JIJIIo
llrJ I, 1111, Either 'lfelt,
.,._ •• ••••
11-IM'I'C

JI'OR RENT-Adulta. 110 pets,
Nice I room apt., fumllbed.
J'OR RENT~ bedroom traO-

w, lldultl,

110 petl.

J'OR SALK OR TRADE - for
tnctor, .., Jqur.
lAG ... llaltet, t mll01
Mil cl Mii'AIIeport on Route
f.
II·~

SIX 110011 IPII'Imilll, J W
- · Jmflnllhed, I ciOHII
..... 1111 . . . IIIII, ....
1110111, illllllde .... Pbaae

II I lfc

...

4 - ijMIIIIo ...
Pbaae • • .

nnt!IIIIIBD
I and I -

...

~.

• 17 tic

APAB'I'IOI!m
•.faiD:e IIIII,

out r1 Ill lloadt, I lllodlt
from PwlwiiDJ ... Ollce.
PriYIIe ....... c. ..

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

p.

ID,

RESTAURAN'I', fldJy equipped
In Rudand 8CI'IIII from Rutland FUrniture, ... ArDold
Gnle at lbe Jl'urnllure store.
ll.zui'C

--4 room apartment furnllbed.
1'11ane - . - .

•

It tic

QUALin

••••

1963 INTERNATIONAL . . ..... ... .. .. . .. .
Scout, 4 cyl. Full metal cover, 2 wheel drive Good tires,
heater.

1963 VOLKSWAGEN .. . . . .. .. . . . . . .. . .. . . .89i'

2 J)r, l)eluxe wnyl interior, good
· Heater. Black finish.

whit~wall

tireS

radio and

•
191.! CHEVROLET . .. .. . .. . .. .. . .. .. .. . $1095
Super Sport HT Cpe. Bucket seals, V8 engine, automatic
trans. P. steering, radio and beater.

P~meroy

Motor Co.

OHN EVES. 9100 P.M.

t-17-tfe

POMEROY, OHIO

J&lt;Jbn W. VanMe-

WEREYOU SATISFIEO
WITH YOUR FUEL OIL
SERVICE LAST YEAR?
IF NOT, CALL

Pomeroy L•ndm•rk

. J.rlck W. CarHit, Mer·

1968
EARLY
AMERICAN
For~le
STEREO,
handsome
maple
li.U.TP'C
console with AM &amp; FM radio, PIGS, PRONE MloiJM.
114m
FIVE ROOM HOUSE, I am 4 speed BSR intermlx chang.
gi'GIIIId, near Rutland. newly er, resume paymenta of til
cleeorated inside and out, per month or pay balance REPOSSESSED 18a lllereo radio romblnatlon. AM·I"M ra..... see Arnold Grate, Rut- due $1116.24, call m.a.
dio, 4 speakers. AU lpeed
land.
11.-.m
u.rr.trc changer.
See and hell' In
your home before buying.•
WAN'!' A GOOD BUY? SJNG. MIXED HAY, toe I bale, allo
'
- 11t1111 ric, IIIII GIIC IDe·
•uo
per weet or pay balance··
ER ~ewing machine, 118'( tor Contac:l, M. W. ~ · of $111.12. Call tft.$'124.
model, iilled only 5 months, EaiJe Ridge Road 1flnln.
114-TP'C
Itt dial fGr zig zap, fancy
vllle Ohio Gnl 'n·l•lfl'C
llitchel, butlollboles, biJncl.
•
- Beautiful coklred conhems, etc., will ldl for tl'1. POODLE PUPPIES, AKC To)' LOOK
sole
TV.
20-lnch screen. Wu
nothing down, t8 monthly,
miniature, rtS and up. Stud
ts31.85, now $4111.15. Get new
can Ravonnrood 2'/So111191.
service and grooming. Pbaae
Standard encyclopedia Itt
11-zuTC 1192-0443.
II I tk
free. Try In your home. CaD
IIU'/SI.
11·26-'fti'C
SINGER SEWING MACHINE t8e7 SEWING MACHINE. ful·
In lovely sewing table, doeJ
ly equipped to zig rag, fancy UNCLAIMED FREI'Gin', 8
all regular sewing, pl111 dial
design, dam, mf in zippen,
new zig zag !ewing machJnes
equipped for fancy Zig Zig etc. Layaway, Bal- tsz.•
with 20 year factory guarandeslps, buttonholes, over· 70. Phone..-.
tee nadonally
advertised
cull, etc., only I monthly
117tlc
brands
to
be
sold
for
storage
paymenll ol $U'I per week,
and freight. totals of t45
11-4TP'C
each, can be paid at t5 per
•
LOSE WEIGHT safely with Del
FIICIIIth, we will deliver to )'0111'
!IJNGER SEWING MACHINE,
A·Diet tablelll. On!¥ lie. NeJ.
home to 11ew oo them to mate-.
sew1 forwanl and reverse.
aon'l Drug.
t 11 111c sure that you are completely
dg zag equipped to buttonsaUafted, call • • ·
hole, 11101101n1m, dam, ~ .• POTATOES. Clarence Prolftli,
ll..J't.ti'C
tew1 lib new, pay oil S pay.
Portland. Phone 84U2$4.
menlll •
each,
!lllcme
11 1 tfc
11168 STEREO, lovely walnut
~~~-~··
11-21-'fti'C
console with AM' It FM radio,
SINGER MODEL 18, In nice this 11el sold much hiBher,
TWO CHEVY TWO DOOR
walnut sewing table. 1oiU this set has record •torace,
HARD TOPS, lila Stick Shlfl
alii nllll !lire new, fully
take over paymenll ol t5 per
11164 Mag Wheelli, orlced equipped to zig zag, ~
month
or pay balance due ·
reasonable. Mason maa. . gram. buttonhole, etc. Pay 10
$113.48. Try il In your hoille,
II..S.TFC paymmll t$.50 each « tsO
call 9111-2838.
ll·l't.fi'C
cash. Phone 112-85.
MINIATURE Schnauzers ready
11 7 tfc
1967 FORD Galaxy 500, 4 door
Chrlstmll Eve.. I beautiful
sedan, power brakes and pomale Seottle, ready now, KNAPP SHOES Cliff's Shoe
wer steering, V~ automatic,
Spitz pups !'08tdy Nov. 30, or- Repair. Compiete 111oe Sen·
3500 miles. priced to seD.
der early. Llule Bartwoo Ice Middleport
11 s *P
Call 82472. After 5 call
Keune!, Coolville,
phone
·
·
992-5748.
11·26-TP'C
11'1-1154.
II..S.'I'I'C COLDS RAY fever 1111111 •
•
Houn ol relief in e'fer'/ IJina.
IIIII 4 clOOr-'Cusklm JI'ORD, I 11me capsule. :n.u value FURNITURE, AnUques and CoJ.
lectors ltemll, two vJollns and
eyllndet, new' tlrel, run1 aood Gilly a. Summon fDr.
one guitar over 100 years ol~
..,., 11150 IntemaUonal " ton IIIBC)', New Haven.
Miscellaneous itema. phon~
pickup, needs lrlnlmisllon
10 21 J2tp
after 5 p.m.. ~ Long
repair f/5, 12 Gaup shotgun.
Botlo"'.
11·28-'I'I'C
BI'OW!Iint IUiomaUc rib 1111'· SINGER TOUCH It 11E1J, •
reD, lib new, :noo. Phone series. Lovely two tone pas.
PICK your pup now. Will hold
Coolville 11'1-1154. li..S.'ITC tel blue. Fully equipped to
until Cbrlstmu, A.K.C. Recbuttonbole, fancy dellp, ek.
Jstered Dachsbouncl, poodle,
4 ROOMS, BATH, atonp auiGmlllc bobbin nllll. on,.
A1111rlan terrier, toy los terbillldlng, out of lllclt Water. inally tDI ....... - rler. C. lc M. Keune!. . Five
needs repair, a good invest. and - - baJinre 1'J ,,_
Polnta, Pomeroy.
11·26-'I'I'C
ment for
Phone 1na IID)!Ied. bone
lft.25a.
u......,.
117tfe

phone...

.1.•.

•a•.

a..l Estlle For s.le

........,,II,

peclla.

AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
cuaranteed, J'tiU]Ir tnel, IIJ eaiiCelled? lAIII JGUr aplflto
sizes f!UO each, ~ Jolll ......~,Call . . . .
W. VanMeter, ~
t IS tfc

--.

""'11rlil!IE8,1!!11

ua.'I'PC

I

RADIATOR .

·

l'rQI!! tbe Wlell I'Nca or
Bulldom Radiator To 'l'bf
Smallest Beater Core.

Elmer E. White, 404l2 So. 4th St., Ironton

Rep,..ntatm In This Area 20 Yean
V. V. Johnson &amp;Son
'
322 -4th Ave., Huntington

HONDA

.....

BwnNARS
,. ,..,•..

- RADIATOR·..·

LUMP COAL

· wu &amp; saYia
NICIIT

,.01'1.~1

MOtt THRU FRI.

•"•"'·
c:or.efruck
eau~w.r

RT. 7 At TM Mtlg1 end
Ollila County Line

Rlwllngs Honda Sales

1

All New Radlatw Shap

JAYMAR COAL CO; . eear

. CALL

DICK IAWUNGI

c. IIIUIII'OilD

SERVICE·
..

QPEN 7 TO 7

II OHI II' 1'111!

AUCI'IONEER
Cr. .lole enloo
Wrlle, ..... tf Qoetod

• .Cc

Svr1cu.., Ohio
.For Free Elflmaltl
and
eAiumlnum Awnings
eAiumln.um Sldl"ll .
DOORS
eAiuminilm lalllllfll eCar Ports
• Pltlot ellown In IMulatlon
or Call Collect 53U811

Services Offered
A.

'

EXPERI~aD .

STORM
WINDOWS

11·-.STC

eAnyType

I

WYMU'I

.

lllrH GOBLE FOlD

.
IIIIDDLIPoai'. Q1110
PH, ~
I 'fl't UIH
0.
Clll* .......
~:~
-.
~
·
~,·~~~2~
----~~--~-.!
~--~~~~~~
Uelei, Cllilt
NOTICI TO IIDDIRI
S I tic IN mE COMMON PLEAS The Ohio
De)lllrtment of Natur&amp;l '
LIOAL lrfOTICI
COURT, MEIGS COUNTY,
Re~rcea, tbrou11h the Division of
Beule Allender, who1e lall known
I

omo

AIR CONDmOICING RefrigerNo 14 199
•
'
ation service. Jack'• RefrlgRUTH
A
:
HENRY,
eraUon, New Ha-. .._
aa.n.
4 s t1c R. D. 3, 1\1..1-

Parkl and

Recreation.

pulWIInt

to and In accordance wtth the pro.
Yb•.on• of Sectloa 11501.09 and 1501. ·
.Din of the Ohio Revled Cade, pro·

Pote' lo conb·net h.· r tbe operation uf

a rtarl:na and mlleeUaneoua refreth·
ment eOneeff'llon ot Forked Run State
Park, Mel.j"a County, Oblo.
An alternate bid propcu:al may be
aubm!tted to Include a beach refreah-

Mldifl....,.

EEK AND MEE¥
~D IT E\IEI.l. tX.'CUR. 10 'rl:XJ
THAT 'IWR£ Sfml/JG A VERI'
SAD fXAMI:l.E FOR All 'R1E
'rtU.G F.'ECPLE BV JUST L'I'IIJG
AAWND .00100 I..PTHIIJG. A/..l
~--.--. Tf(C liME 7

place of telldence wa• Pl\ta:bW'Jh,
J'tonn~:vlnnla, Is hereby notlfiecl that
on the 18th day Gf Nove-anMr, 1Pi'r,
Juhn Allender, belnl plalDUff, fll·
td her peUtlon at.aln•t her 11 defendant ln the Cowt of Common
i'leaJ, Metr• CGunty, Ohio, Cue NG.
HI.Zll, pra)'inl for divorce from. 1114
Jse111e Allender on the groundl of
l:'toat ne1lect of duty and utreme
crue-lty, and other proper ntUef;
said cau•e will be for hearlnJ on or
Btter &amp;he 6th day of January, 11188.

POmeroy, \IUIV'
MIX
_..........,
deu...
PlalnUff,
READY t.VI••.:u;:.c'11'1''"
ered right lo your projed.
Yl.
rnent st 11ntl In the contract.
-•
Free
..CARL
F
HENRY
~metal bid PtoPOiall will .be reFlit 8nu eaay.
~ '
•
t
eelved in tho office of the Dlvl•lon of
males, ~ 112-3214:, Goit• address anlmOWD,
Parlu and Reueatlon until l:OO p.m..
John Alltndtr, Pltlnttff
•
Decembor 12, l!MJ7. Bldl will be pub· J. B. O'lrion,
Jeift Re
• Mil Co., Middle- .
Defendant.
l!ety opened thereafter by the Chief
A"ernty fer P!ah'ltlff
II u. ,..,..
NOTICE BY PUBLICATION
or hlt author1zed agent The rlgbt lt 11·21 11-28 12-5 12-11 1219 12:11 '
port ' Ohio •
• "" ""
"'""'' to "'Jeot any and •II bl...
Carl F. Henry, whose place Tbc contract will be for a term of
LIGAL NOTICI
1 1068
Robert F.. Gallalher, whose Jut
•
of
residence
is
unknown,
but
i:eurrcr::::•
::-o~fanuano
to
·
3
BUDGET PRICE furniture on
place of retldenee wa1 PaJtr..
.
The Dlvltbn of Parkl and Reerea· known
Of
Own
ho
I
t
k
Place
res'
craburJ,
We1t Vlribtia. II hereb7
our third floor bullgel abop. W se aS n
. tton will furnlth docka, one bulldlnA notified that
on the 18th 4aJ of No·
dence
was
c~
Casa
Villa
Mo11pproxlmatety
32 feet bl' 20 teet. 1s
vember,. 1961, Orntl Gallagher, btBaker Furniture. ~dleport.
rowboat. With oan. and one refriger·
I Street, Co- ated Ice bowe. On the alte:rJlate bid. lnl pJa,ln.tlff, ' flied ."" her MUUdb
teI 3969 East Man
Oblo.
' 1 21 tfc
nealn1t him ·a. defe'n dant tn" tJM,
1umbus, Ohio, will take notice one
permanent retre•hment •tand aP· Court of CGmmon Pleat of Melli
proximately ll feet by 18 feet will be
Ohio, Cue No. 14,212 priJCURTISS DAIRY BEEF Jlreed.. on the 30th day of October, 1967, furnllhed . The coneeallonalre wIll Count)',
Inl for diYofte from "td Robert
•' d fil d h
aft other equipment, m.ereban·
inl. servfl,;IC'
for anyone Ill)'- l he undersJ8n
e er pe. fumlah
dlle. mat forlall, utilities and labor ne. E. Gall.ajher on the JroundJ of (l'OII
neglect ot duty and extreme cruelwhere. CaU Parker . . . . tition against him in the Court ceuny to operate the coneea•lon to ty,
plainUlf alto pray1 for other
.
~
PI eas of Meags
. approved
•tandnd.l.
proper relief; 1ald cau.e will be for
Pomeroy ....... C!letter. u( ~ntmon
ftequetll for bi4. propol.al f 0 r m. hearilll
on or alter the dth dQ' of
Notify by 1 a. na. for IDOI1IInl · Count~ . 0 ., praying for divorce, ~~~~d
.::::at~:O. 1 ~00~1Y9~~o~hi! January, 1968.
Orma o.tlla1htr, Plaintiff
--'ormanee ........ I p. m restoration to former DEUn(", DePirtmentl Bulldinll. ColumbUio Ohio J . 1. O'lrlen,
Attorney for PlelnHH
afternoon ler\'lce. No premo and other relief, on the grounds
FRED E MORR, Dl"''"'
Iaing alter I p. m. fGr the of gross neglect of duty and ex.
"" 1&lt;. ••· "· ,.., •. '"
Allie day.
to rt 111te treme cruelty. Said cause wlll
be for hearing on and after lhe
,.
SEWING MACIIINES, repair 13th day ol December, 1967.
. .
ltJo .. . - - .
service, all mabl. WY 1Ruth A. Henry,
. --~ hllliif.
.t~W Jllller abW'
:aM. The Fallrlc Shop. I'D
Plaintiff
.;.. :ilitil ~.... ffewir
.«~ Sportl
eroy. Authoriled Slnpr w.· Crow, Crow &amp; Perter,
t:•~~a..\ 1fMr
"•
1'1........ I'll.
r(so Natar;al
and Service. We Sbarpen Alloomeys for Plaintiff
.,.
1:45 ~ Show, Wed..J'it. Scissors.
:1-2&amp;-tfc :;o~ ~~(II) 7, 14, 21, 28 (12) 5, :.:
1:45 hlrira'QI lll!pqrl, Tbatl
1:011 Newt
'"!t~rru:.~re:
1:15 Coffie Wltb Jlllllt'
mates. O'Coallor's Tne and
ACIIOIII
411. Olrl'a
12.1'1&gt;1o,
10;00 SWap• -·-...._._ Call . .
1. BFopao
......
le!ll!ia,
U:
II Medlt•'Jona
.........,ape· "'"""''
1. oocl ohnr H. Hlna:l
football,
10:30 BruJt¢1 l&gt;attJ •
4141 4)J' llllrk1S47, Olester, o.
10. PlrtalniDr
etc.
•ll:OO OllliJ.•Newi
11 11 llllp
loplozia
DOW!(
1
11:05 Tlnzi• Cauntry o~ioeutli&lt;
Servict110ffwN
'~r
11:111 Tint• Country llylllllllme
CHIIIV~A
snJD .W.. · 12.
2. Mac&amp;WI
12:00 NatlOrw • Obit NIWI
Pbaae MWMS.
u 7a
1'- ,.,..
Kr.
a. p4INmllfl!l
lhlp'•
12:1$ Local Newl
12:2$'S~ Report
'
·:aa.IIUMI·
ELE(l'I'R(lUJX Salol and llerf. U.llomaii
I!IODO)'
I. SIII!Dlion
11:10 G~ Star, Fri. ·
,......._.
U.l'l!not:
I Pulllle
Ice• .,._ factory hfltiJift.
N.Z.
'nouc.
83. Jl'at
JT.'l'apto
12:30 Larr{ ~ersoa SlltW·
u. Roman
tatlve. Ph. lfN'IIO.
11. ~
T..........
aplii
·(1:01 !!Iva: Repotl)
21.
let
aolltlly
It II a.p
a.~
Z: 00 Oblo NIWI . ·
30.Kllldof
IralA!
3:00 Ol1io NIWI '
duck
IS.Affo' ......... D.....
,.__ - 11,JIIioMtlcol
I!OftiJat
,
••
Kottle
n.IIIWie
3:0s lilies xu.Jc ·
......_ ............ - t.an.llko
.,.

.....

.

10 DO!

G£r A UTI!.£
PEACe, MAIJ I

J3
..;. ·S2--

ll•lt

J. 611JEE6LI!',

1&lt;11. ww...- "OAOO'{S"
PA'ol'lfi' '&amp;M FOQ MY

D&lt;Jti'T WOOl&lt;'( ANNIE I MOXIE
N&amp;VER NEEDS I=R\ENm; 11:)

!:ill:? tm,1 KEEP A SEd&lt;El f
.f41iRE • WITH THE
FIDOLES IS ~.

UNLe£b •. ,.. '?

UNLE'SS
THEY

~~

Kl'EP, TWEYD DO A
AARA·I&lt;IRI 'FORE
"'ME'i'D LOSE

1llf!il'

lt\COM~!

J6'Zr

o..-..

----

u.::c

.....
ba~ . . .
work, hauling, llarlall JWtD
olds, M-. l'llane 'I'INI•
II. lllr

21.-

Nm ··

a. Sua [lOll

--..-.
:e...
_
,. ..
-·
."',_
-lt.Culile

•• Twlllo4

BEST PRICE paid for lllaDdJng timber, poplar, .......
nUl, IJCIIIIOI'e, ub, 1!IL ,._
estimates. No job too' . . . .
too lillie. Call Marlall ..,._
olds. Bol, fll, Muon, 11'. v•.
Plule 27W147.

1~11

11. Jlulit.

u.
a

1:011

IT. 014 wel&amp;bt

tor ....I

H.ntsalioo41
lt.OocupiDI:

4:~ kllllc'l .,. Sporlll -

4J.IIIillcll

DAlLY ~UO'l'B-Bin'1 bw to ·.walnt:
.ll'IDLSA.t.Xa
Ill LOJI'O •• LLOW
Olialeltol' ...... i i i - f&lt;il' IIIGIIior•la
A .. -

llila---

. ,,., Malllil' •QJodrol

O'IB

' .
A Olftlir•
• •l'rMri
q..
'
/

Ull:lfD

'

li'L~li'III:D

Dill:

'

,tq··
.

.-),}'
"

,.

DIE . ',QII;

.

ll''ri(D.~'I(II.

'·

'

:NIIJ!:f.• ..
'!

-

'

\'

'1:11 ,.. .Gooll Life

f&lt;il' ~ tlll'llo II.. X fW llio ~.. t14. lll!lio ~ ....
'"""'""'tllli'-.......
fol ii~w,..-ww..
~~oa~-o ............-.,.., a11, .~
....
-~ , - . ~
...,a..---~

.

..

1:15 Bieri Off :~.
. liJIID,lY
1:01 Jllp Oa ...,..... ....
,,., Baplllt . 1lllil' '

oat.lopt

Xlf

SJar!__~ l'n!llstant Hour

' .(::It Sporll 1lorlnd'llp

.O,()wn--

.

!i.MER!

10:110 TOP Tell Show
U:ot Nooli NIWI Report .
U:ll Rev. Geoqe 11rJ1n* ··.
11:311 A.S.c,..Pete $1ieJdl
12:45 MFIIOII Co. A&amp;rl· , ' ·
1:00 Nen
. '
1:15W .

lliot

D:f.,ll:
.
DILtl:

COMES

1:10 Nitloaal New
t:ll Alldmlon'l -

alloy
Olliamelilal
Willi

..

I'M IN
L.UCI&lt; ...
HER I!:

. 4:311 Local NIWI
5:00 Sporlll Scope .
. 5:15 SliD Off
.
SA'nJRDA.Y

14: "

·. ,,45~·-a;ilb
I
., J
.,~. 1;11 llllliloi.·l'fiWI
,,. ~. Arlllrew Pnlil .

,,.,,

· f'IO NIWI
..•;. SimdiJ Sbow .
ll:ot Country ~
~:;w ' PIIIliiJ Worlldp Boar

. U:IO · ~~ev. Merlin ,..... ,.
'1:10 Rev. l'.ddle .,....
!:30 Clevelancl F~
' ''" Scoreboard Raui1111J

I

HERe, WHO
~MOW,

BE 'TRUS'TW,

'lllol

wwo

CAM

.

~&lt;NOW~
~

OH, YOUR MAR~
'OIL\. 13ADG.E.; ~M, WW0
BROUGHT YOU HER!\ , · .
FROM :rH~ Bla HOUIIE,

Clti IHE.

!!LUFF · ···~

"OTHERS"~

-SIT

4:00 NeWI .

8. Spill tNW

"crn-leRfi&gt;"

I)JCKTRACY

"'"""'

ofntl

plll!t

THE

OTHER;

'

DAILY CROSSWORD . --

11.=
GUm-

..,~,At&lt;O
"T~E.

.. ..

.ttt•

-··
t
U
r
n
·=-

OH? AIJD JUST IAJHAT
ARe yO() 1RYIIJG 10 DO?

PllESIDfNT OF ~M~l.6~M.lTED
eNTE~ZPRrses ·-•

........

.M.P.n

DIG I.WAT I'M ~1/JG

To 'M~. HollACE

a:d
,.................

.

IJO, AS A M/lit1bR OF

FACT I lkJSPIREi THEM I 1HEV

~

I

G POfmAC GRAND PRIX, E'I1IYL1!:NE GLYCOL llue t ROOM H&lt;XJSE, 11!1111 seD,
low mileage, power lteerlng, permanel!t anllfMue, ft.JI
full buemeat, Fill -~~~
power braka. bidet seata, per gallon. PGateloJ Rome
fenclnl, chicken houle. lovely
automatic ll'llllmlllllon, new
IUmlillldlnp, Pbaae ,....
lOIII IIe
and Auto.
llrel, phone lfi..JI'H (1t
11-.
1t IJ •• NEIGLER Building Supply for .
lfUI..
114ne GUARANTEED IJSED 'nla.
building aood homes, lollg .
ts.ta up. Pomeroy Home and FOR SALE, I'IVE ROOM lime loan available. Call tile
SOLID STATE STEREO. IMI Auto.
NeJcler Store. 9414228. aoaIt Ill Ill;
lllUSI!:, balb. I bedreoml,
walnut stereo console with 4
ed Sundays. Keep Ametlca
nice lot and ........ priced
speaker, 4 !peed automaUc RATS, MICE ellmlnlltecl lor·
Free and go to chUI'I!h 00 the
reiiiOIIIble,
phone
•
•
·
changer, take over paymenlll ever. ''Gel Star" 112 lb. .tt•.
ll*fi'C Lords Day.
of t5 per month or pay bal·
ti·28-TP'C
Ebenba&lt;h Hdwe., SUIII' Run
ance f71.20. Call 911U118 .
MW. Pickens• lldwe.. Malon. FOUR room boose, bath and
11-2'1.ti'C
II IS Slllp
half, gas furnace. t4500. Ann
St., Pomeroy. Cal( 821115.
u.zs.m:;
STEREO RADIO CONSOLE. PILE II loll and lolly, CGIIin
stereo with AM It FM radio
retain llriD~ irl Clllpsll
clelm:e Ooatlll!l turntable per·
cleiDid w1t11 Blue ......
teet condition, take over pay. J!~DI electric .......,_ fl,
· lnsur1nc.
menta of t8 por FIICIIIth o r ! Biter Purnllun. · ti...'IC
balance '111.10. CaD 192-321 .
..,,- - 11-2'1
FACTORY REPAIRED

•

QartKb~.:,:~~=re;.~~m~ln:um~~~~~~
CHA~ES. UsLE

.......

•

e

'

11!-mJ
ALBERT M. Cal:, Broker

Budget plan, metered llctett
and treat&lt;~! fuel.

.

6

SALI!S'LADY

992·218l COLLECT

• POM~ROY
tn-2111

- -TwO -IIIOF'J,

~

'

a.usiness·ServiCe$,

~~

room home, batll,_ cellll', ps·
furnace, block garage. Out
of high water. $8,000.00
POMEROY - Five room home.
bath, ceDar, enclosed back
por&lt;;h. corner Jot. ~.5oo:!ID .
BRADBURY - On Rt. 1430ne story home, Aluminum ·
siding, storm doors and win.
dows, 5 rooins, bath, level
Jot. $5,500.00.
COUNTRY HOME - LEBAN·
ON TWP. -ONE ACRE2 story 7 room home, 4 bedrooms. hall bath, cellar,
storm doors and windows,
several other buildings.
$11,500.00.
HELEN TEAFORD,

ter, Syracuse, . . . . .

Ol'qon's onion prodi!CIIO Ia
J'UIINI8RID ... llllnllhll Yalued at about t6 miUion a
~ to IIChaol ,.... 1671 Collier'• Bncyclo-

......... ••tre

.POJI!Eru~Y

Of!

ONE three room apartment.
all new, all electric, range
unit and wall oven, stainless
For S1le
steel sink, completely modSEWING MACHINE: SINGER
em, Phone 992-52'11.
slant needle sewing machine
equipped to zig zag, balance
CO!J C:, IIIC
$16.56 or terms can be arran·
OOH"'' Pump 10UI' IIUQilh
gel!, call im-3218. 11·2'1-6'l'C
septle lallk, get Klean l!llll AD
lllplle tank cleaner, Land- THE proven c..P.,t cleaner
Blue Lustre Is eaay on the
mark J'arm Bureau.
budget. Restores forgotten
ll·II.$1'C
colors. Rent electric shamJ'ACI'ORY REPAIRED WIDE pooer $1. Baker F'11rnlture.
11·2'1-6'l'C
OVAL 'l'IRES, gual'lnteed.

:ne.so eacb,

AUC'I'ION, Saturday, Dec. 2,
10 a.m. on account of other
busines• interests the entire
lllock of the Neigler Grocery
will be sold. This is an clean
new merchandise: a chan~
to buy your Christmas IIJ'OC·
erles and candies at your
price. Also will sell one 114
ft. self service display case
(unless sold before sale), and
other articles. Be sure to be
there. Located in the vU!age
of Antiquity I12 miles up d~e
river from Racine, Ohio, on
State Route 338. Harriet
Neigler owner. Terms cash.
Not respo!lllible lor aecidents.
Sale conducted bv the Brad·
ford Auction Co.. Racine.
Ohio
ll·zs.3'1'C

......

ft.Mf'C

S cents " ' Wo1'41 OM Insertion
M!ntmum Chars• 7Sc
1'1 untl per ortl "'"" contecutive II"Uri':ons.

2 SIGNS

l!pltlmealll. Rowley ' IIIPI.
Pllane
Iller • p...
10 :n .tic

. .. . . ._._,.,'- ·-·····

TH' LEETLE FELLER
JEST KNOCKED A
TEACUP OFF'JII TH'
TABLE AN' IT BUSTED
. TO

I' . ,

..

Pl1ltNISIIE» 81111 Ulllundllled

Ill Pomerey,

ItATil
For W•nt Ad lervlce

RACKIOT?

~·· · ·--·-M·

.~~

,:l

~

'I

'

.

�I

'!
'

wa. the
-P~!Willled · at a

UWbat is Value?";.

program topic
recent meotlns of tile-,.Upha Dmleron Chapter of Delta KIIJll)a
Gamma Socl!'fY atllloFirat Presbyterian Church at Well~.
The dls~etlon between fac111al :iJdgment and value )ldgment was discussed by A n n a
Maude Fehrman. She spoke of
placing values on the 1ITOIIB oJ&gt;,

Jacts, putting too much emphs- aloilal values

sla. on minor details, and noted tile ln\portance of appreclat.
lng the beauty and IJI)Odnosa In
IIQCiol;r. In '·conelualon, she urg.
ed tile members to consider 11te
main values lo life.
Parsonal values were discuss.

ed by Eena Adams who gave
a self-test aimed at motivating
the membership to an analysis
of values. She talked of profes-

Tapping Ceremony
Held at Wahama

and attributes and
described Delta KIIJll)a Gamma
aa an International honorary organlzatlnn for women .Wcators.
A report was given Wring the
business sessloll presided over
by Fay Sau8r, prealdant, m
books to be placfld !D local libraries In memory of deceased
members. The memorial group
Includes Lois CecU, Eva Simms,
Ethel Garland, and &amp;san Park.
. Jean Evans reported on t h e
spreading danger of drug addiction and L.S.D. tbrougb the
''glamorous a n d attractive"
preaentations on national television shows. The chapter, · to direct letters to NBC, CBS,
and ABC lo protest of some pro.
grams being shown.

MASON - The National Hon- Scholarship - made by StephHostesses tor the dinner meetor Sociei;Y ofWahamalllghSchool en Fowler; Leadership - made Ing were Reba Kisor, Gertrode
conducted its semi-annual Induc- by Alan Hart; and Service- made Trace, and Jean Evans.
tion ceremony Tuesday, Novem- by &amp;le Bumgarner.
Meigs County members atlenclber 21. The old members enFinally, the Induction I o o k ing were Martha Husted, Geneva
tered the gym to the proces- place, Four members of the Sen~ Joachim, Mrs. Sauer, Carolyn
sional, " Climb Every Moun- for class and five members of Smith, LucUle Smith Boaaleo
tain," played by Becky Burris. the Junior class were tapped: ~tory, Beatrlee Rinehiu-t Nef..
Each member played a signif- They were: Seniors, Harry Van lie Vale, Theodosia Frecker
icant part In t h e tapping, Meter, Karen Staats, Barbara Ruth Euler, and Genevieve SW:
First of all, Rita Brabham led Roush, Diana Roush, Jwliors: bart.
the s111dent body with the Flag Dreaml Stevens Susan Watldns,
Salute. Secondly, Sandy Greer Dli!UIY Rizer, Gary Fields, and
carried out the SocieQr's em· Cheryl Bumgarner. Each memblem, th e keystone torch at ber was presented with a canwhich time she read the
em, " The Master's Touch."

po- dle, a rose, and a membership

Nert, Gloria Gibbs presented
an important ehallenge to t h e
s111dent body and gave a brief

introduction to the speeches on
the fou r req..lired q.J.alities: Character - made by Judy Lathey;

Neutzlings Host
Holiday Dinner
Mr. and Mrs , Ben Neutzling

entertained at their Pomeroy
home Thanksgiving Day with a
dinner party.
Guests were Mr. and Mrs.
Herman Rurt of Belpre; Mr,
and Mrs. Gene Riggs and son
ot Chester ; Mr. and Mrs. Gene
Hester of South Point; Mr. and
Mrs. Marvin Burt, Jeff, RandY
Melanie, and David, and Mr, 8.nd

Mrs. Ray Riggs, Caralynn and
Maralynn Tracy , Pomeroy,

Henr y Cla y. A m er i c an
statesrnnn, was the man who
said "I would rather be right
than be president.01

MEIGS THEATRE
TONIGHT, Nov. 28
" HURRY SUNDOWN"

rTeehnicol&lt;&gt;r)
Michael Oalne, Jan e For¥la
Colorcertoons:
lslililon HSpeody Ghost Town
SHOW STARTS 7 P' M.

w--. ond

Thursday
Nov. 29-30

card, Mr. Foley led the new
members in tlte traditional

pledge.
The Society plans an additional tapping and a "College Bow!H
type program next sQ;inK, omcers are: President, Gloria
Gibbs ; Vice President, Sandy

Around,
Pomeroy

Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Fields
and son o! Chicago, Ul., and
Mr. and Mrs. David Eskew and
daughter, Kandi, of Newark, re-

Gibbs· Secretary. Sue Bumgar- turned to !heir homes Sunday
ner; Treasurer, -Rita Brabham. after a holiday weekend visit
here with Mr, and Mrs. Charles
Eskew. The Jerry Fields family also visited with Mr. and

Medicare Terms
Explained at
Meeting of Club

Mrs. Joe F ields, and the David
Eskew familY were guests ot
Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Erlewine,

Rutland.
Mrs, Patty Neutzling and son,
Billy, and Mr. and Mrs. Jesse
Haggy and sons, Steve and Danny, have returned from a holiday visit in Columbus with Mr.
ana Mrs. Rodney Spencer and

A program on heaJth insurance
terms and medicare was pre sented by Thelma Cozart and family.
Mary Ann Fleld of Columbus
Elva Dailey when the Portland
spent the weekend here with her
Great Bend Home Demonstration parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Fields.
Club met at the home of CaroLeslie Burnside of Atltens was
lyn Price.
a weekend visitor of his mother,
Shirley Johnson opened the Mrs. Fl{).rence Burnside.
Sp-4 and Mrs. Terry Stalnakmeeting with a reading on
er
have spent past 2 weeks here
Thanksgiving. Pennies for
spent
the 'past two weeks here
friendship were taken. Plans
with
his
parents, Mr. and Mrs.
were made for the Dec. 14 meetHarley Stalnaker, and other relIng to be held at thehomeofMrs. atives. Before leaving for CorJohnson with a gift exchange, pus Christy, Texas, the couple
A potluck dinner was served also visited In Cheshire, Marby Mrs. Price to those named Ietta, Elba and Columbus, and
above and Henrietta McDade , in Williamstown, W, Va. Before
Margaret Yost, Margaret West, coming here on leave, Sp-4 StaJ.
Melod,v West, Brian and Bruce naker had been stationed at Fort
BeMing, Ga.
Johnson, Ethel Johnson, Mryna
Mr. and Mrs. Patrick ~ion
Ransdale, Carman Hall, Jean and children, Pat and Cindy,
Sayre, Evelyn Foreman, David ot Columbus were holiday weekForeman, and Kathleen Ward. end guests of Mr. and Mrs. Karl
Grueser, Minersville. Visiting
Sunday with the Gruesers was
Florida 's population, which Mrs. Gladys Cuckler, Pomeroy.
Mrs, Sam Bolin of Athens,
ranked last in the Union in
and
Mr. and Mrs. Leo Williams
1850,_ is now in lOth place, acof
Jackson
were Sunday ~ests
cordmg to the Encyclopaedia

of Mrs, Welby Whaley.

Britannica.

Mrs. Sherry Johnson and children, Tommy 1 Paul, Mark and
Belinda, spent the weekend in
Hurricane, W, Va,, guests of

NOT OPEN

Mrs. Earl Searles. They visit-

DISCOVER AWORLD
OF BANKING SERVICES

ed relatives Jn the Hurricane
area.

Diek Clark, employed In
Youngslnwn, spent the weekend
here with his parents, Mr. and

Mrs. William Clark.
Mr. and Mrs. Ray E. Gibbs
w e r e Thanksgiving weekend
guests of their granddaughter

Mrs. Tim Swan, and family of
Columbus.
Oris Ginther of Pomeroy star
Route is a patient at Holzer
Hospital. He suffered a heart
attack last week,

Mr. and Mrs. W. G. Baro.
nick of Mulberry Heights have
returned from a visit with rei·
atives in western Pennsylvania.

Their Thanksgiving guests were

·'

week.

Mrs. Gertrude Cabeen hes re-turned after a week's visit b1
Columbo&amp; with Mr, and Mrs.
Joe Cabeen, Mr.- and Mrs. Hanley Cone, and Mr, and Mrs.
Thomas Watkins and children.
Mr. and Mrs, Cabeen returned
his mother to Middleport Saturday and remained here for the
weekend.

Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Slater of
Jacksonvllle and Mr. and Mrs.

daughter, Connie Len Harbour,
to Jon Peter Ka.rscbnik, son ot
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis S. Karschnik of New Haven, w. Va.

Miss Ruth Carson, They also
visited bt Colwnbus with Mr.
and Mrs. James Carson.
State University. spent the weekend here with his parents, Mr.

and Mrs. Raymond Cunningham.
His parents, accompanied by
Eric and Alan, and Mrs . Oscar
Roush went to Columbus Wedne sday tor Jon,

Jeffrey Thornton was honored
recently with a party in observ~
ance of hi s birthday anniversary.
Games were played with prizes
beir.g awarded to Greg Huffman,
Jimmy Powell, Jim O'Brien, and
Eddie Cwnmlns.
Gifts were presented to the
honored guest, and cup cakes,
ice cream, nuts and kool~aid
were served. Attending besides
those named above were Mrs,
Grace Huffman , Brady, Jr. aJX1
Beth Ann; Mrs. Rita Hill, Eric
and Teresa, Mi ss Roberta Roberts, Eddie Roush, Jennifer and
Derek Badgely, Sara and Eric
Diddle, Darla aOO Greg Dec!,
Timmy, Butch and Lisa Stewart,
Barry Allen, Darla While, Chris
and Nick Bostic, Rex Thornton,
Pauline Bostick and Kimberly

LOIS ANN SISSON
The engagement and approaching marriage of Mi ss Lois Ann
Sissoo, daughter of Mrs. Leona
Sisson and the late Everett Sisson ol Long Bottom, to Charles
E. Cline, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Russell Clin(' 'Jf Franklin Ohio
is announced.·. ·
'
'
The double ring ceremony will

take place Dee. 23, 2:30 p.m. at
the Keno ChuiTh of Christ, It
will be an open church wedding
and the public is cordially Invited.
Miss Sisson is a graduate ot

Eastern High School. She Is now
employed at the Bureau of Pub~
lie Dept., Parkersburg, W, Va.
Mr. Cline is a graduate of

Rio Grande College where he
is majoring in chemistry,

Games were led and refreshments served by Mrs, Huffman,
Mrs. Hill, Mrs, Opal Cwnmins,
Mrs. Hazel Roy, and Jetfrey's
mother, Mrs . Florence Thorn-

Family Reunion is
Held on Saturday

Inn.

A family reunion and postThanksgiving dinner was h&amp;ld
SaturdeY at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Wlnn.
Guests of the Wlnns, together for the first time In six years,

Thanksgiving is
Dinner Party Day

were Mr. and Mrs. Maurice
Thomson, and Ma • ana M r s,

A Thanksgiving dinner parcy

was held at the home of Mr. and

Robert Thomson anc1 Gregg,
Cleveland; Mr. and Mrs. Doug.
las Thomson, steve and Jeff of

Mrs. Lindsey LYons of Tuppers

Plains.

Columbus; . Mr. and Mrs. D. L,

Guests were Mr. and Mrs. Starling Massar and famiJy, Mrs.
Leota Massar, Mr. and Mrs.
David fiiggs .".nd daughter, Mr.
and Mrs. Lawrence Hasbargen
and son, L:unar Lyons and Mrs.
Ulah Swan ot Tuppers Plains;
Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Bab-

Jaques of Point Pleasant; Mrs.
James Johnson of Marmet, W.
Va.; Mrs. John Hayman and Peggy of Leon, W. Va.

REGISTRATION ENDS SOON
PT. PLEASANT -Registration
lor the 1968 Masoo County school

cock of Long Bottom and
and Mr. and Mrs. Marion Riggs
giving floral piece for the table
was a gift to Mrs. Lyons from

POMEROY WOMAN'S CHRIStian T....,.a"~ 'lltliiiMI
at 2 p.m. Tuosdei at tile Untied Melhodllt Church. M r 1. Jooepb Cook will be tho Pl'OIII'IDI
IoadOr.
SPEC1AL MEETING Tuesdlil',
Mrs. David ' 1ease, Mrs. D a·I e
7:30
p.m., Bosworth
461
Warner, Mr . Mark Evans, Mrs.
R. and s. M., to confer Royat
Mastera Delll'90. All companlona
uraed to atlebd.
MElG&gt; TOPS WeliJitl Notchero
Gauges - Gallipolis, 12.2 and .will meet at 7:30 Tuesday nl&amp;ht
20,6 running 30 feet of rollers; . ·at tile Melga Count¥ lnl!rlllllr)'.
Pl. Pleasant, 25.14; PomeroyOIUD ETA PIU CHAPTER al
Mason, 23.02; lllnton, 1.35 atal,; Beta Sigma_ Phi Sororiey will
Kanawha Falls, 5.53 falling; meet at 8:15 p.m. In the CoCharlestoo, 18.46 falling. Lon- lumbuo and Swtbern Ohio Eleedan, oo the sill; Marmet, nmnlng trlc Co. social room. A demHOLZER HOSPITAL: VIsiting one-loorth footofrollersandW!n- oolllratloo wjll be glvtlll by
lleld, rurmlng one foot.
Marilla Curl. Momller• __are to
hours 2-4 and 7-8 p.m. Pareato
Boat Movements·
take bazaar lteml for dleplay,
only on Pediatrics Ward.
Galllpolls Locks:_ ORCO down
MIDDLEPORT
LITERARY
ADMISSIONS
5 a.m.; Western up 7:40 a.m. Club will meet Wednesday afMrs. Richard W, Danner, 12
Kana,.ha River _ Marmet, temoon at the homo of Mtaa
Evans Hts., Mrs.BryanSaunders James R. Hines up 12:25 a.m.; Beu Sanborn. ,t;'r•· James EoThe ProudTow-.
Patriot Slur RL; Mrs. John E:: Beaver down 6:30 a.m.; Win- ler.,will
lleld,
Alan
R,
Merrill
up
3:20
or
by
Barbara
W. Tuchman.
Mayes, Rt. 2 Gallipolis; Noah
p.m.;
R.
E.
Bo10les
down
8
p,
Members
are
to
respond
ID roll
T, Clark, Rt. 2 Crown City; Mrs.
m.;
ML
State
up
4
a.m.;
Lolls
call
llllh
an
event
remembered
Duane R. Church, New Haven;
Shearer down 5:25 a.m.
frOm 111o book.
Clayton E. Athey, New Haven; C. Ohio
River _ Lock 14 St.
PUBLIC SOUP supper, Ra.
Mrs. Cecil E. Roach, Pt. Plea- Marys up 11 p.m.; Kenova up ciDo Me1bedlat Church, Wodnessalt; Mrs. Ronald E, Escue, Pt. 1:55 a.m.; Vulcan up 6:05 a.m.; day, Nov. 29, atartlng 4:30. SandPleasant; Mrs~ Dale V. Wood, Lock 16, Onward up 9, 50 p.m.; wlchea, pie. corn bread, bean
Pt., Pleasant; Mrs. Robert W, Reliable up 12:20 a.m.; William and vesetable ooup1 ~eo;
BOSWORTH COUNCIL 4~1. R.
Sloan, Rt. 1 Pomeroy; Mrs. Gary H, Zimmer up 4:20a.m.; PellllY
E, Freeman, Pomeroy; Pamela Downey down 6:35 a.m.; OVEC and S. M, annuallnllpOCtion, woclA. Jeffers, Middleport; Mrs, up 7 a.m.; Lock 17, Je!l'erson nesday, 7:30p.m. Elmore W 11Gertrude Nelson, Rt. 1 Dexter; up 2:15 a.m.; Polly R. dolm 7 Items lnlpeetlon olllcer of 6111
a.m.; Lock 18, Elgercllll down Arch, lnapoetlng. Work In lloyMrs. Oris L. Smith, RL 1l.ong 6:30 a.m.; Lock 19, Express al Maaters degree. Dinner, 6:30
Bottom; Mrs. Orris E. Harris, up 4:10 a.m.; Helen z. down p.m. for companions and ladles.
Rt. 1 Minersville; Charles R. 6:45 a.m.; Lock 20, Esso Welt
WEDNESDAY
Parks, Rt. 1 Ray; Mrs. James Vlrlllnla down 6:05a.m.; Andrew
ADULT CHom rebearaal at
J, Jackson, Ravenswood; Mrs. P. Calhoon up 6:50a.m.; Green- the St. Paul Lutheran Church.
Jerry L, Nickels, McArthur; up Locka, J, S. Lewis up 12:·
TIIIJiiSIJAY
Mrs. Robert E. Cassidy, Ash- 10 a.m.; Warren llougland up
12:50 a'.m.; Cypress up 2:o a,
ANNUAL CHRISTMAS Bazaar,
land, Ky.; Benjamin F. Gue, m.; Rose G, up 3:30 a.m.;5 J, Heath MethOdllt Clllreh, MlddlsChesapeake; Mrs. Harold Bee- E. Vickers up 4:25 a.m.; Mel- port, Thursday, cburcl! baa"'
gle, Inglis, Fla.; Mrs, Cobble dahl Locks, A. J, Patton up 1 mont; cpons at 9 a.m., serving
Lee, Ashland, 1\y.; Mrs. Oren p.m.; George T. Price down 2 or lunches will begin at 1_1. .8,
L, King, Cottageville, W, Va.; p.m.i Voss-It up 3:05 p.m.; AI- 81. Soiulbaltllllrdt lieu'• Clllll
,Mrs. Jarnes · v, Lawrence, Rt. 5 ton ~ephyr down 9:35 p.m.; Ra.- llld aoup oold by fila ,..n.
... ·
F1UDAY
Athens; Mrs. Albert I. Reed, venswood down 12:10 a,m,
BAZAAR by the women of the
RL 2 Wellston; Luther F. EndiRock
Springs Methodist Church
cott, Genoa, W, Va.; Mrs. Louts
Friday and Saturday from 9 a.m.
E. Unrue, Rt. 2 Ironton; Mrs.
until
4 p.m. at Duke Cleaners,
Willie Hale, Rt. 2 McArthur·
Seeood st., Pomeroy. Gift Items
Mrs. Keither W. Bishop, Flat-'
for aale will lnclnde homemade
woods, Ky.; Mrs. Earl B. £u..
eandles, dolls, and rancy work.
banks, Jackson; Mrs. James D.
A bake sale will be held oo SatPettit, RL 1 Oak Hill; Mrs. Henurday.
ry J, Bloss, Jackson; John W,
Ingalls, Wellstoo; Miss Margaret Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Barnhouse
L. Lewis, Rt. I Pl. Pleaaant. and sons spent tbe weekend with
BffiTHS
Mr. and Mrs, Winnie Bailey.
Mrs. Jerry L, Nickel!, McMr. and Mrs. Clarence Baker
Arthur, daughter, 1:02 p. m, spent several days receltly with
Monday; Mrs. James J. Jackaon; Mr. and Mrs. Fred Clutter and
Rt. 2 Ravenswood, daughter, 1:51 David al Elyria while Mr. Baker
p.m. Monday; Mrs. Richard W. was andergolng .observation at the
Danner, 12 Evans Hts., son, 3:38 Cleveland Clinic.
p.m. Monday; Mrs. Gary E. Free- Mr. and Mrs. George Reed visman, Pomeroy; daughter, 4:20 p. Ited an evening recently with Mr. Mr. and Mrs, William Harman
m. Monday; Mrs, Robert W. and Mrs, Byrl Griffin and family. and family entertained TllankaSloan, RL 1 Pomeroy, soo, 4:25 M188 Sharon Baker, Waahlnglon, giving dey with a family dinner
p.m. Monday.
D. C., spent the weekend with ber part,y at their home In ColurnDISCHARGES
parerts, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence bus.
1\yle D, Baxter, Mrs. Howard Baker and family.
Guests were Mrs. Thelma AsbW. Brewer, Bobble E, Clutter, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Kearns and worth al Pomeroy, Mr, and Mrs.
Mrs. Lucy Cremeens, Jerome family al Hartfor&lt;l visited Sunday Ralph Dorst and daughter, Mary
P, llooghman, Barbara I. Flsber, with Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Barrln- Ann of Galllpollo, Mr. and Mrs.
Roger D. Jenkins, Mrs. 'John ger.
Francis Dverturt a1 Bradbory,
J, Mullins, Clyde R. Radellfl,
Raymond Barton has returned and Mrs, Fanchon Overturf, Mr.
John M. Halko, Floyd W, Siders, home frun tbe Holzer Hospital. and Mrs, Carl Overturf, Buleh
Charles E. Taylor, Lisa Carcle
and Melfldy, Lawrence Hufi'Jnan,
King, Mrs, Harold 0, Geo110 and
and Mr. and Mrs. James Dowling
Infant son.
and Joey, all al Columbus.

excess levy election will end Dec.

must register 39)days prior to
the election, it tliey are notal ...

ready registered.
Voters will be asked to approve a five-year extension d.
the 100 percent levy passed in
1965. Sixty per cent of the voters
must favor the levy for It to be
extended.

. Miranda, faintest of Uranus'
ftve known satellites, escaped
detection until 1948.

.,..

Our bank has been providing every

riage licenses In the office t1

and invite you and your family to visit the music department on the 2nd
floor. See the wonderful, dependable RCA Victor Color Television Black
and White Television in Console and Portable Models. This year in' partie·
ular see the RCA Victor Tape Recorder, They're fine ()er(ormera b1
. batte~y opor~ted model~ ancf tne At;-UC type. He sure !o ask about also
the fme quahty RCA V1clor Rad1os with Golden Throat Sound, Transistors,
Clock Radios and AM·FM Models.
·

the county clerk.
Applying were Larry David Hensley, 20, Hwllington, and Judy
Faye Holmes, 18, Pt. Pleasant.
Jon Peter Karschnlk, 20, New

financial service lor many years . That's

Haveo, and Constance Len Harbour, 19, Mason.

HUSH PUPPIES FOR ALL THE FAMILY

able financial advice available.

i"' .~~ ,.

\

1

1o'l

t\ o •

~ ~-~

. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER29, 1967

G-M 2 of 7 Counties

woogma,

OHIO - A FO_B,.
mer Harvard dean said Tb o
Peace Corps and poverty pro11'11L1 are ''two very lnfluenttal
programs of our time.''
Jobn 1!, Mgnro, -~ of
flreabman atudles It Milos Col,
laae, Btrmlnglwn, Ala., llld

"U ttllO Peace Corps) aild pov--

.,.ey program are two very

ln-

Ouenttal Pll&gt;t!l'arna of our time.
And the thoUght • provoking even re~lo - . part or It
Ia IIIII It wao our IIOVemment
and nat our lnetltullono of hiP.
er learning that broo&amp;llt It .a.-

bout."

GENEVA- BRITAIN GRANTed Independence today to South
Arabia .and the Cl'OWII colOI\Y of
Aden, ending 129 tears of colonIal rule lo the territory.
A formal Independence agrosment 1V8s oiped only 11 hours
belore the proclamatloo of In~ce In tile new nation;
calling Itself the Peoples Republic of South Yemen.
PARIS - WE'Sl'ERN FINANdal experts met today ID dedde tile conditions for grantIng Britain $1,4 bUllon In creelIt to shore up the devalued pound.
Preeldent Charles de Gaulloconvonecl his cabinet to decide 11011'
much to help, as Gaulliota contlnufld to fume over France's
part In Britain's action.
T~e French cabinet would decide how much Franee would cOil~ to the $1.4 billion to be
Dl!ll&gt;llated through tho lnterna·
tlOl)al MqJM!tary Fund (IMF). Many llnanctal experts blamed
rraneo .for lore!DI! Britain ID

dlWilue tl!e'JiOund.· .

.
"

SPENCER HOSPIT AU ZED
Ed Spencer, Mjddleport Pollee
patrolman! 10as taken to Veteraaa HospiJal In Huntington Mon. day and enterfld as a medical
patient IUs room nurnbor Is 333.

In 1968 Development
WASHINGTON - Rep. Cllrence E. Miller (allo - llllh Dlatrlet)
aald ll&gt;day 1be AWalachlan l!e81onal Commission haa deoJcnated a
seven-"'lf area of SOLtbeastem Oblo as one ai.IIOVOII In tile nation
ID be developed aa a Health llemoDIIIration Area.
The sevencoantleo, Alllena, Jaek::·1011, .HocldJW, Lawrence, Vtnk. .a, lmprovemert tt the cea."
··'~.
Melso, and Gallla, ha.., been aUo- He added, "I will eoatlnuo ID
CONG, CLARENCE E. M!IJ.ER, allo, 10tbDistrlct,dlscuasesdealgeatloo al Meigs, Albens,
calad r\j)pelacblan Commlsoloo support programs al tills nature
111,
Jaeklon, Lawrence, VlniDn, and Hocklrw Counties as a Health Demonstration Area by 1be • '·
fUnds al " million for flseal 1968 that contrltolle to 1be pennanont
In tbe development al medical development
of Soutlleastem palachlan Regional Commission. Left Ia Pat Flemming, National Co-Chairman al the AW~lachiall' ,!j'
Commission, and rlgbt Is Albert Giles, Ohio Director ol Ai&gt;Palacbla.
' ·
trs!nlng and service facilities.
Oblo,"
As a part of this decision, the It Is anticipated that tbe total
Commission granted •oo,ooo to f41 mlllimprosrarn will be complan the proJect's development. pleted over a n....year perifld as
UNIJSUAL VISITOR - JAWS Jolfero, Hock St&gt;rlrcs Road, dlsFinal dedalon as to 11011' tbe $2 fUnds are made awllable.
playo the large pheaoart IIIII Mondey afternGCl1 epparently
mlllloll will be uaed will depend Paymelt ot the federal .fUnds Ia
swooped over a blllclosetotbe.Jeffershouse, crasbfldtl&gt;rougb
" - what additional state, local contingent """' congressional
the rlass In a s!orm door and door, and though woondfld made
and other Federal fUnds are made pasoage al the A&amp;&gt;Palachlan
ltoelf at home. Wblle the pheaaart ""' probably surpr!Hcl at
available
to assist In various pro- Apprnprlatlon Bill, one a1 many
whet happened, that was ootblrw to 1be aurprlse a1 Mr. and
.teeta
of the total area plan.
delayed by the eeOIIOIIl.)' ffght beMrs. Jeffers when they returned homo after working in lbelr
'11lo Ai&gt;Pilaehtan Commlllslon's tween President Johnson and
next door used clotblng sliore to find tile door glasses amasbfld,
action
'"'s taken as a result ot a Congress.
and tbelr living room cluttered with tile debris, They lhougbt
comprehensive development pro- ·
•
perbaps a burglar bad boon at ...,.k, Soon, however, tbey dlogram
to
Improve the general medoovered the pheasant. A quick checkofthegamelaws sholrfld it
ical posture of the area. Thla proIa legal te take posseS8loll oll$red phe11enl under sucb cirUnited Press International
Caglayangll told newsmen, "We
gram 1V8S propolled and submltled
cumstances. There _probably already has been a dinner of
The govenunents al Greece and will make a declaration shortby the Ohio Valley Health Founde·
phea18111 ot the Jeffers home.
Turkey indicatecl ll&gt;day they were ly." He gave no sign what tile
tion, an organization composed al
witllin hours of setlllng the Cyp- declaration would say or wht111
civic and medical leaders from
be laau!!ds crisis whlcb brought them to it wouldJets
-astern Ohio, The proposed
Circle Capital
ol war TuesdeY. TurkAt Nlcoola, three Turkish jets
PI'OilJ'IIIIl reconunended 31 specific
apln flew over Cyprus circled over the Cypriot capllal
is
projeets, with a total final coat ot
as a
~ minute snags deas Vance and Makarloa mot.
Vfrgll Atldns, deput;y ~!ely $41 million,
veloped,
Other Turkish planes were
Grange master, notedtodaythe
Miller said, "The cOiiiiiiiaCypi-lot olllclalo reported six reported to have streakfld over
amual COUII\1-wlde D!llcer'a
slon's action today is a big step
other Torklsb fighter violations north and central Cyprus, two
Conference of the grange will
forward In the medical developor alrspace over their disputed at a time at aboot 5,000 to 7,000
be held. Thorsday at 8 p.m. at
mont of Soatheaatem Ohio. The
CJUCAGO (IJPI) - Newton N, Mediterranean Island nation.
feeL
the RocL~ G
hall
~. former Federal Commu·
Bot
e&gt;idenee
III&gt;P""red
In
Tbo _
pro;:s:,r tile
lotailmpatt of this program will n!Citiooo Commission chalrtnan,
00&gt;111ou will be ~84
slplflcamiy a!l'ect every clti- TuolldeJ nllht urled, flreo Athanl, Ankara and Nicosia
and
degree Wj11 be • .....,..,.,_,
·- W~IILII!UUk&gt;o, and w!Ugre¥- . tlallel"'l!~at.". f!!r alb-;\r~ !hill lndlc.tod tile war threat
may &amp;o atii-tlDr ID fade.
MOJI1llllfled !lltlleO!dilmoman1,7 coolrlbull ID tbe lcq-rarco
•llliW
In Nlcoala, where Vance
nor witll lleld wurk. A10ards
Funeral amtcoa tor Henry
· "Dna hour 0( 14ievlalon time
arrived
b7 apectal plane after
Eichinger, of Cheater, w h odled
for outstanding service t h 0
now coats wlltleai candidates
days
of
sltuttllng betwetlll
paa1 yeu will be prelllll!ted to
In Holzer lloepltal oarb' today,
about f200,000," Mloow 'aald.
Athena
and Ankara In search of
bavo
teutatlvety
set
for
"With
talevlolon'1
rising
coats,
d
grllllll8rs an granges.
SaturdeY aftel'IIOOIIwlth tbe Rev.
tho only canclidetes who wUI ba a peace formula, the American
nd
P. A. Casto oil! elating. Burial
able ID on televleloo will mediator promptly met In tile
particularly tile o!l'lcors, are
wUI be In the Pine Grove Come.
be wealtlly 01101, or onea wi111 palace for an hour with
Prealdent Makarioa of Cyprus.
_. ..,
tory at Minersville.
vall llnanclal resources."
ur- '"I attend.
He,... pootmaater atCbeater,
Telovlalon ne111111'ko should Cypriot oources reportecl the
a gr.Wate or Middleport IIIIJit
Jdve presidential candldeteo an beardfld archbishop of the
Fwr suits he.., been llled in
School, World War 2 .vetoraD,
1"1
hour of flree limo a week the Greek Orti-. Clalrch bad
member of tile l'latioDal Leaaue
!all four weeki before an been balking at publiclY agree. Meigs County C0111111011 Pleas
or Postmaater s, Cbeater F 1 r o
aloetloll, he said. It t h o y m. lng to Turkish terms that Court.
Deputment, and of tile CMs- E1enD 11011Yictlooa were re- not, tbe FCC aboutd see IIIII Include the ,..ck pollout from
New actions Include an actlm
· Cypru• of 12,000 Greek troops.
tor Malhoc1lst Church.
corded ill MlddlopurtMayorC,O, thOU' do, be said.
to portion real estate by EthSecond Meeting Scbecllloci
He ,... preceded In death 10' Fl 8her'1 court Tue""•• - • Minow, who. aa FCC cbalrman
el
Rife, RD 1, Dexter, agalnat
UP! correspondent John La.,_
hla Oral wife, tile former Loll"""' ···~•· frOm 1961 to "1963, aald, " ,The
lse Hettaalmer, and hla parenta,
Fined ...,.., James P, RllOioh, United States is tile only ton reporlfld Vance and Maka- Richerd L. and Linda Rife, RD 1,
Rev. 1111d Mr1, Charles HI!IIIY 63, Cheahlro, $10 and coats and country In the world wilere rlos emoraed from t11e1r meet- Dexter, and James D. Rife and
ElchiD&amp;&gt;er, who were ldlled 1n Carla E. Gibson, 20, lllaaon, $II canclidetes n~~at boo' televlelon Ing with oo comment to Roberta Rife, both minors, and
newsmen. Vance said !hay Howard E. Frank, as treasurer
an auto aecldent at Clrclevlllo and eolia, both oospefldlngchar- time."
.
would mont again later today. of Meigs Camt;y.
In 1933.
geo; IlanrQo Lee Staalo, u, ~
But Lawton aald both men were
&amp;lrvlvors lnclode hli w I f e, dlopurt, and Herbert Leo Clark,
VIcki Turner, a minor, bas flismlilnl after tllelr seoslon.
Oual; four ehlldron, Charleo, 30, Cbeahlro, each $10 and colla
FIREMEN CALLED
At Ankara, UP! correspon- ed suit for dlvurce from Blaine
WallliiL&amp;IDn. D, C.; Dennis an d m lllopl exllaUII e~Mki~Ls•,
Mlddlepurt
Volunteer
Firemen
dents reported a new feeling In Turner m grounds of gross oog"-ld, at home, and a dallbtile
Turkish cepltal that tbe lect al duiy and extreme cruelty,
MASON - "~ W, JobnBCII, , tor, Laun Jean, at homo; 0 n e Charlol Haary Schuler, 33, RL 1 were summoned at 1:47 p, m,
~·•·
&amp; ,.
Cc&gt;- l\llddlelJOI'I, $II and colts, l'lllllling Tuesdlll' to the Carpenter area t.:yprua ertll&amp; JIUU' De ove.- The plaintiff asks for custody of
57, MaBCII, dladrtal TuoHpltaedaYiln Vet-- ~A:z
hi) stop Jlge; Paul CllniDn Pierce, to aasist In comrolllng a forest althoulllt more dlpltllllatic action one minor child.
erano Memo
os
• lle1V8o lumbul, and a olster, EYfbn 25, l'llmeroy, $10 and coots, fail- fire IIIII wu threatening sewral waa to be expected. Turkish
In anotllor actloo, Howard
1ng ID stop within an assured
Foreipl Minister lhllll Sabri Frank, as county treasurer haa
a fonner Ollll&gt;loyoe of the Henry Jonoe, Dayton.
homoa. Firemen said tile blaze
Coal Co.
Frifllde may callllflle Ewclear dlllarlce, and William c.
asked a judJiment o1"',093,57for
He was born Fob, 22, 1910 the lng Funeralllmiie llllJIImo,
Manley, 57, Syracuse, $5 and was In the Yiclnll;y oftlla McCom·
alll!lled taxe• OWed~ Also, a suit
as propert,v. DlvlslonolForeatry
VETERANS MEMORIAL
son al tho late Martin and Mae
•- , •
- - 1&gt;ac1c1rc.
co...
.....,...,...
bas been lllfld by Anna 1\lao COlo!l'lctals
broagbt
In
oquljment
to
HOSPITAL
CITED TO COURT
Bonds were forfelled by El·
Oliver Johnlon. He 1V8s born In
lins, Rt. 1, Rutland, against wn . .
douae
tbe
fire.
Vie
Bahr,
Chester,
ADMlSSIONS - Lottie Shemetd,
Maaon Cooney,
A !i)'racuse man was cited Into deana Slblth, ~6, RL 1, Middlellam
El- COllins, Napa, Calll.
The deceufld Ia survlvfld by his Middleport Mayor C. 0, Fisher's port, fl8,78 for 'nmnlng a red was In charge ot the divlaloo op- !iYracuse; Georgia Pullins, Pom- for s._-t under the Reciprocal
eroy; Aw Gllke)', Harrisonville;
wife, Fnntes; tllroe de~ra, Court 111 Im»ropor bacldatl lfgbl; COM!t &amp;lo Candlff, 21, eratloos.
Aaroomont Act.
VIcki j, llolslrcvr, Racine.
Boanio and Mary at borne, and clllr8&lt;! follow!JV a m1oor aeel- Colllmbul, $18,70, Ulegal oxLOCAL TDIPS
DISCHARGES -Pbj!Upllonovan, A ault by Judy uuerman against
Mrs. Shells R4usb,Radford,DI.; deDI" In an alloy bel1lnd North haul!, and Monte E. Hoover, 19,
The temperature lo Pomoroy's Mary Walsh, Patricia McCurry, Roy Lee Crisp resulting from a
alx ....., GtOrp Jr., Belp~; .Second-Ate.,II12:1JP.IILoTuol• l'lllneroy, and Rager Lee Hall,
18BG adiDmobUo accident has
Jameo, Vlolnam; Charlea, Fl. day, Middleport pollee
18; pt, Plouent, each $18,78 for doW!Iknm bull'*SI dislrl~ at Pearl Markina, Gerald Selletl, been dlarnlssed on awlicatloo al
11:10 .. rn. todaY was 38de8rt0• Nellie Traey,EdlthGral1am, WllSmith, Arklnlaa; Richerd, Fl. William c. Manley, 57, after he speedq,
tbe plaintiff.
diBnJpD.
111111Y lidos,
under
Jaeklon, S. C.: lili!Ward, IoGar- baeked bla truck-Into a car OWJImany, and Michael, II homo, and ad by c. J, Sauer,Brownell-Ate.
two sisters, Mrs, Martha Bart- Mlddlepurt, 'lboro ,.., minor
loy, Blacklick, Oblo, and Mrs. damage te Sauu'a 'car and m.
Goldie qle1, Mason.
to 1be truck.
Funenl 8ervices are lnctllllplete pendtni arrival al hi&amp; lj)llB
lo servlee. ArrUwemOntl IIIII ... MEIGS GENERAL HOSPlTAL ;
announced by F'aiJOIIO!W Fune\'11 Admlllllolll - Ncille.

dai- ·.

Turkish Jets Buzz
Palace Peace Talks .

,,,·_,,H .

Free TV
Urged in
Top Race

·Services Set
Ten"tati•vely

0 St d

n a Ur ay

gfti.\t·

Four Actions

11 Co

R::a::~m~:

n ViCte

d

Jn Heariil
• as

Filed in

Meigs Court

$100

Mr. Johnson

G1C. White

Squad for ' .. ·

Dles Tuesday Of Mason
F~eral senlces for Grover

I,

c. ~· Sr., 74, who diad at
hl1 r aldenee at 3 p.m. Tuea.
day,
be held Friday at 2
p.m.
the Rt&lt;l&gt;ruoh Church of
Chrl at Long llottl&gt;m with evanIlls Denver Hill and Vemon
'olllelatlng.
al will be lnthoWhlto
oomolel')' at Long Bottom
his late wife, Loclo
G
s White. He waa a member pf tile Church of Chrtat for
65 years.
lilrv}rw• loclude tllese eblldrll1. Mrs. Thelma Eddy, Wooster: i 'N:I~ Ballird, Loni B o (.
tom; Mae JOQel South Charloa.

~r~~~

Donna Jean Baker, Killalso 20 groodehlldnll, two
~grandeblldron: fo!lr bl'lllher•l Wateman WblleL..Long Bollom; ih! White, 1'ayl, W, Va.;
be

WoOdrow

Wddlepoi'l, • n d

Wldte, st. Albana, W,

Va., llld I 'IIIIer, Edith KJle,

~~ ~

eall at tile E10.
until 110011 on
P~ wllili the body will be
lllbn ID the clllrch.

lnli Punon1 Home

Inhalator

Dies Tuesday ·

:'8;

arro•

Driver

.

Dllebareo•-Nme.
'

Home,

After W

~r..

B~e

is R~captured

Elberfel~ ~ggest, .too, a

•

record player as a gUt. Perhaps a portable model ·
for the boy or girl in your family or a. Clmsote Stereo with Aft\·FM and
FM Stereo Radio for the entire family tQ
)'es,
'enJoy visit .
to Elberfelds mu~rc d~partment and .a first ' hand look at all {lie wonderful '
gift ltema by RCA VIetor.
-.·...
. . , ,, ,,
·
·
· '·

enjoy.

TO UNDERGO SURGERY
Mrs. Cells lllte Ia conllnod
~he~~~:nn;~ : . :
Her mom llllllber-11122. Than!&lt;&amp;- .

THE SHOE BOX
Where Shoes Are Sensibly Priced
A-\IDQLEPORT, Q,
Member of Middleport Morch1nto GIFT-A-RAMA

------------·----------~

1r£
'~iti~r
ot

yoJ•)t

"''""

JUir,fl,

..

'

•··

'

'

a

Elb.e..rfelds,·,·~l-·,~·-·m
. _.•e.:_:'roy

Hlte
Rutland, and Mr1. Mildred 16orrllofDoxter.
· '-~---------~....:._.,....._

'

._..,.._......,_...;...~-----.J
~­

.,

I

SE Ohio Given $2 Million
For Pilot Health Facilities

IORLD

Ora Wblle.

RCAVICTOR

ASK TO WED
PT. PLEASANT - Two eooples
heve made applications for mar-

[')

POMEROY-MIODLEPORT,OHIO

....

' r

'

\1

i~~

'

.

c·'

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

c..;.;;cn

Elberfelds Are Headqqarters
For Dependable•••

L

VOL XX NO. 161

Harmon Family is
Host far Dinner

Look for the shoe

They like the experience and depend -

•

9. Voters In the special election schedUled for next Jan. 9

Mr. and Mrs. Marion Riggs,

with the dog inside

River
News

.

~--~~------------------------------~--------~--------~------------------------~~------------~~ P\a.~%0

Joppa
New's Events

Snuthern Local High School of
Racine. He is now a senior at

Dugan.

and Mrs. Harold Hicks and chil-

Joe struble, Mrs. Allan Leo!&gt;.
ard, Mrs. Dayton Strlekland,
Mrs. Don Collins Mra. K.A. Graeser, Mn, Stacy Arnolcl, Mri. Allen Barris.
Others proaentiDg flltts were
Mrs, Opha Offutt, Mro. ww.
ard Rines, ~s. Gaile Kin§! Mrs.
Charleo MWJen, Mrs. ., e n e
Mitch, Mrs. LaiiTtlllce S m I t h,
Mrs. ThollU\t Weber, Mrs.
George Heines, Mrs. Ellen KUllnger.r. ~ss JUCIY Williams, Mrs•.
PhU l&gt;l!ley, Mrs. KOMeth Mc:,.,IU81111n\. Mrs. Helen Stewart,
rothy IIUSaoll, and Mrs, Loulaolleinea.
Cake and pmch ware servfld
by tile hoStesses.

llhodee, cme or tile -.
,den of 11lo old 11111'ld, II a
lmlnze llllue more 111111 100
feet bl8b of tile BUll god, Hellos.

ron""

Jeffrey Thornton
Is Honored at
Recent Party

and family of Logan. The Thanks-

10111 of Mr. and :Mrs. Don Grueaer, F~ Run._,... held recently at tbe 'Irlnllf United
Church of &lt;lhrlst.
Mre. Larry ' Heines, Mrs. v,
D, Ed\yarde, Mrs. Paul EichInger, Mrs. PhliUp Werry, and
Mrs. Don Thomas were holteases for the shower, ·
Ablue 'and white color scheme
,... carried out In tho decora.
t19lis 10hlcb featured mlnlalure
footballs aa mantel pieces, a
sliork repllca, and streamers.
Gifts were ,placed In two decorated bassinets.
Garnes were played wltll prizes belngwonbyMrs.FrfldNeaae,
Mrs. John Terrell, and M r i.
Mark Evans.
Gueats at 1he shower were
Mrs. Paul Chapman, Mrs. MaxIne Arnold, Miss Sally Bartels;
Miss Louise GUmore, Mrs. Charles BamUton, Mrs. Frfld Neaae,

TUESDAY
SOUTHERN LO&lt;al Band Boosters, opecial meeting at 7:30p.m.
Tuesday at the high school. ·
WILLING WORKERS Claas of
the Enterpt1so E. U.B. Church
wUI meet at the home of Mrs,
James Will ThurBclay evening,
LADlgj AUXIUARY of Drew
Webster Polt 39, American Legion, will meet at 6 p. m•.'1\lesday at the hall for a.covereddlsb
dinner. Tbere will be a $1 gift
exchaJwe. Business meetlrc will
follow the dinner.
RACINE AMERICAN Legion
Auxiliary will "bold its "'8Ular
.meeting Tuesday, Nov. 28, at
7:30 p, m. at the poat home.

at

e

'l'lte ramfld co1ouua of

•
en tne

•

Now You Know

Hospital

Jon Cunningham, student at Ohio

terest is in a savings plan or an auto loon.

why so many people prefer to bank here.

are

son, father of Mrs. Gibbons, and room.

You'll find our bank a good source of
financial services .. . whether your in-

CONNIE HARBOUR
NEW HAVEN - Mr, and Mrs.
stanley llarlxxlr, Mason,
announcing the engagement and approaching marriage of their

The open church wedding will
Kenneth KirkendaleofNew Phila- be Saturday, December 23, at
deJphia were Sunday guests of 6:30 p.m. a! the Mason MethoMr. and Mrs, William Slater and dist Church. The Reverend LoBill.
well Keeney will perform the
Mr. and Mrs, Wayne Gibbons dollble ring ceremony. Following
have returned after a week's the wedding, a reception will
visit in Bucyrus with J, E, Car- be ll'e!d in the church social

Mr. and Mn, Wheeler Allen
dren of CheLyan, W, Va. and
Mr. and Mrs. James Hicks of
Huntington, W. Va.
Mrs. Nellle Tracy was t h e
Thanksgiving guest of her son
Dr. Everett Tracy in Columbus:

-A layette aliOll'er tor Kelly Don Eciear Arnold, Mrs, Don L a li.and Kemeth Sean Grueser, twin nin&amp; !&gt;Irs. Jolm Terrell, M r s.

I

'

EVENTS

-Given Twi'n Sons

Mrs. J, E. Harley returned home
Sunday after a· week's visit In
Sprlngf'10ld with her son, Dr.
John Harley, and family.
Melanie YQUng., doughier a1 Mr.
and Mrs. Joe YQUng, Jr. ofCambrldge and gnind~ughter ii J,
A. Young, Sr., Middle.J)Orl, is a
patient at the BetMsda Hospital
In ZarJesville,_She underwent an
emergency awendeetomy last.

.

MEI.GS

:. Ldyette Showe·r ·

Around&lt;·
'
.
.
Middlepprt

.

'

"' '

.
'

'.

'
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·. Jil:~:o i

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