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'

I(

'Attend Dedication Of Federated
, rch Christia n Education Building

..te17 UIO attended the
�ce of tbe Edut·a..�Ill of tbe Federated
• a.out.,,
afternoon.
'
Ol1aD Prelude b)' Mrs. Ben
opened the scrvke folllir the invocation by the
Waldo 1. Bartels. Following
of one verse of "We
Be B"uildUII'' Rev. Bart.els
..,nlpture pertaining to the

Around And

About
Middleport

dedication .1r nd offered prayer
wh i le Mrs. Nl'ullhng played soft.
ly, "Sweet HoLtr or Prayer.''
John Mitch, president of the
chureh. spoke briefly stating that
the F'l'd l' ralcd Church h.ad be('n
serving the pcopll:' fur I IJ yc;irs."
T he me mbers hi111e tried to have
faith with !h(' Lord and 10 ltve up
to 11 1s tt'achini;s " H e atso
me n tioned the need of l h e
"hurch school. where children arc
taughl the word of God. ln dos­
mg he sa1cl hr was honored to
ha�e a part aij presidtnt in lhe
dedication

M ainly About

Presbyterian WYF
Held Weekly Youth

I

People
In Pomeroy

Chester PTA Carnival On October 29
. ftas Many W4'r�ing Committees For Event

II-Daily sentinel, Pomeroy·

Middleport, O., Oct 3, 1960

Committee&amp; for the Chester School Halloween Carnival have
r
Brother 0/ Ernest
en
� announced _ by the �-chairmen Mrs. Roy Holter and Mrs.
There wer1;1 20 youth present
arl �utz. It w�ll be held Saturday evening 7:30 October 29, Hughe, Died 9uddenly
Ir LUCtLLf HAWKIN&amp;
Sunday evening when the MYF
ly l"'RIDDil HOUDAstt:!'.L 1
BDrl � be th e fifth of its kind held in lhe school auditorium.
of the First United Presbyterian
Mr. and Mrs. Erne!l Hughes,
Be&amp;IMlng wi t h a grand marc h of Meh 1man , Mn, Paul Ba er and Mrs.
Mra. Myrlie Hieb ret11tned h ome
Mr . rnd Mrs. George Bow ers Chur c h ' M'ddl
1 epor t m et f0f th elr
Middleport were In in Charleston,
m
uer
a
in
ders
1
find
lo
Roy·
contest
Holter.
1.
aq
iday
ff01'"tal
Holzer
from
Fr
ere
h
w
of Springfi eld visited over the weekly serVlce.
Y•
�
., ,
the
et, ugliest and etC., th e
Basketball:
Bob Wood Paul W. Va. Jast Friday J1nd Saturday
week. end with Mrs. Howard Bow.
Following the openinl h)'Jll_n·: she bas Deu a pneurn•nia patient -�•t prettie
of
t
h
e
evening
can
be
spent
Bier,
Carl
goKautz
and Roy Holter . because of the death of Mr.
and
ia convale$!lllg nkeij.
ers.
Cheryl Fife w;is in charge of · &lt;ft' •
Spook" house or cat alley: Char• Hughes" brother, -Gor don R. Hug­
L W �cComas was in _ Colum• votio ns, an d t he group repeat&amp;d · CPL Clarence Wi.11 aAd diught. 1r,g thro�h �he spook bouJe or
parlicipa
g
of
one
s
th e game1, les a n d Sh irley Pyle , Mr, and Mn. h es .
bus las1 �aturday on busine ss
thei r Pu rpo.sc. Tbe 8cripture ..-.115 te.r of Jaelu:qnvUJe, l'Ja., visited havin g U11 i
ortu
n
es,
or
_
Wit
h
relatiVH•
Silturthiy
f
dancing.
Of Hnold Osborn e, Wyatt and Vir•
,
enroute
to
Mr. and Mr� Samuel J Hamer read by Pauy Lowery.
M r . Hughes, who had been a
thi:tir home after al vaeation trip : to courae, lh�re w ill be plen ty · of ginia Ch adwell, Russell and Juan- barber in Cha rleston since 1925,
i
and son of Pillsburgh. Pa. a r rived
·
Plans w
eats with the refresh men ts somds ita Spen cer.
Sunday . c 11 ening to spe nd the rid e this ;��ur�:d \ o:1 : h�� Ca ilf0f'ilh1 .
died suddenly. His 5e rvices were
ig
t
Y
I
and
sweet shop nea r by.
-------· J
oac
h
iin
sp('
n
t
Sal•
Mrs.
G
e
n
e
va
·
week �1th Mr. and Mrs. E . . R. home of Mr and Mrs. Harol
held
at a Charlesto n Funeral
d
Comm_itlees are as follows,
Tompkms and grandson, JJm Sauer Kathy Lacey w,s 1 ppoin
Home
with burial in Beckley, W.
' I- urday with ')!rs. Wil bur P ierce at
Collectm,:: pr izes from pare nts Tom
Honored
Bradbu ry.
.
Hamer.
Va,
as lmSi!,n t secretary of th e
and friends: Mrs. Dorothy Ritch ie
d,
Rev. Bartels, who was baptized,
Mrs. c. B. Forrest wc,it Lo e o s�Ip. 1 h e g roup _vote
mr. aJJd Mrft. Janie,s Shepherd Lucille Ridenour. Betty LoLI Dean '
d lo
T.hird Birthday
confirmt&gt;d and ordained in the GloustN to 11isit with rclativ ('JI.
;ase several road signs as a and family returned tiome Sund1y P a t Smith J o Anne Tut:
pure
.
Federated
Chun-h, and five. years Wh I' Ie s·hC IS away M_I' SS Cora C hu rch P
.
roject.
after a week·, v,,•, , with &lt;••,., ,·v,s IIe, Betty Boas, Mn. MeLaugh lin
Two p rt'
ago lh lli •s un dii)', ,,.,cam
..._
e Jts pasRupe IS sla) m;: with Mis� Vesta
c,,.,.. n.,,.
.,,.,,rs 'or th e group are in West Vtrglnla.·
an"
,;i Mn. Gillon.
I
.
'
tor, wai; surprised when Mr. McCoy
Mr.
and
Mrs. R. T. West enter•
' Mr · and M, s. Rich ar d y aui:: han
"
,.. r . and Mn. ThomH Hyi,ell of
'Refresh ments: Helen Wolfe • lalned with a family dinne r Sltur•
•nfitrh, on behalf of 1he churc h ,
Jud&gt;· err'.!!!,
·
.. student at 11,· o and Mrs. Ev,.,
... e tt Ba ch ner. Al*0 Clare. M'l&lt;:h1• arid 'Mr!. Noah Look Sin.a Bailey, Cl eo Smith , Janet day eve n
presented him with a beautiful Grimde n•lurnrd Sunda)' after
ing at their home on Unt&gt; tm · 1. 1 h t he group wa1 Rev. er of Westerville were Saturday Go0&lt;:h, Clarice Allen,
e
Mrs Joh n Ion Av e . in observanee of th e third
white rl e rgymHn robe a nd stole • spe ndi n.l! the wel'k;nd with her �owar3 ;uppell.
guosts pf Mrs. Pearl f:lyseJl and Fidt, An. Joh n Rose, Mrs. Noc• b'1rthd ay of
in aripreciatJOn of his work h P rE". mother, Mrs J.ucy Gre!!g
t h ei r iOn, Tommy.
•
·
, , nd
TUES., WED., THURS.
11·'h d
" relJI , ivea.
man Frederick, Mrs. Geo•ge
• F•ed•
•
Guests were MF. ,nd M,s. M"0 nt
.
famil&gt;·
an
r.
n.
/
&gt;I
d
M
Harry
Pl
'Smit
Th' &lt;I' r,'&lt;" tur ot' Ch n s t ian c.
h erick and Mrs Elwood Bower
"'d U·
e
Get Double Your
R
e
Miss P a u li n(' Zirkle who has
Jes
; rtM
en in ',ineinnah Saturday to a£
Sweet Shop: Mrs Ruth Karr \'ir• :e!�e!;y··. :��:� po
calion, Johll William Blaettnar, bee n working in the oHil-e
,
,
e
mbers
Go
,
NJMr.
a�,
·
ot
()r
·n( a meeting o{ Bethel , No. 82 gene Elberfeld. ,Carol Pooler, Mrs.
Purchase .In Stamps
�l)Oke on the church school work J . J . D . for t h
Raymond Hoce an d Mr . and I
C PaSt year le_ft
_ J I%
l ne- I nternational Ord.?r of
'
Job'g
K
h
M
and hrought out that i i is the for Ashland.
J
Margare
a,
,
,
t
Tuttle
and
Mrs. Benton Pon n of Pomeroy.
Ky. whcri:- s�c wllt I T,�
., l.ronton r.
,lU'.;biers.
M:./�olt:.
teaching and study part of the I be c�ployc� _at l hc K_mg s nauTommy's birt h day was also celeRoush's Shoe Store
'
..
chUl'('h, and should be t he prime ght�r s Hospital. She �as uco1�- 1 HI JOmbOr,ee
in
h
t
brated
r
e
nn
Begi
e
Depart
s
Middleport
&lt;!
.!t
Ti cket Sales : Mr . ie and Mrs.
i licv a nd , Mra. Wald11 J B,artels
interest of all. He staterf that they pam ed lo Ky. hy Miss Deloris
c
nt
of
the
United
MeL
h
odiHt
ind
.Mrs
I
B
Weed
A
altend�d
,
·
Bran non ; Door and tostume prizes:
number of member uf t he
have d.a"c11 for all ages from W cr.
urch , Sunday morni n g.
sn� of th'e First Bapti_st Chur:ch ·· pres1dell�s' Rleeting 1 of, the Colum. M a.i,c.ine Griffith . and Virgin ia ChIce
. .
kimlc�gartcn to adults and are
.
t�· 8 nrl Mrs �,i !lis
cream and cup cakes were
b
Ailshire uf uf Middleport were m Ironton �s, ijeg1�nal Women s G�tld to- Ch•d.well; Doughnuts and pa.per
_
planni ng a nurs!'ry dass. He also Dayton_ v1�1ted
s
erved by Tommy's molh.er, assist.
'
:
Frnlay
a
n d Satur- S aturrlay to attend
learwater
JU
·dff::
hi
cu�:
,C
,.
Laura Mae Hartung and
the Jr.
seid that the Christian Education
ed by "Mrs. C. F. Tompkim, superPomeroy, Ohio
M r. and Mrs. Herbert Jamboree held 1:t th e FiT$t Baptisl ,;.Mt. a,id �n. Joh n' H,.eutqr and 'I°tiflffla Case; Lo ud apeak er: Pa ul inten de nt, Mrs. Kermit Walton ,
board would be .l! li! &lt;l for su l:gcs- ��Yam�11h
ers
¥i'.!
!_�d
�dh
.
.lo�n·
Frey-ll"d
I
ChurC'h
of
T 9nd TUESDAY
D!&lt;tr
of
t
ai'ld
h
TONIGH
at
Robert
city.
Wood;
Poster
in
,.
.
I tions on way� of impr · i n g t he
Mrs. !-lllrnn
MeGhcc an d h e r
Re v. Luther Tracy was in �n ,J �f !-, 111r(' yi e guests of a n.4 pu_blicily: Mrs. Thelma Orr teacher, and Mrs. Roy Reuter a nd
"HOME f� ,- THE Hll.LS"
&lt;'hurch S&lt;'h01,l. l'·h,eh is rully brot
'.',lrs. V. D. Edwards, mothers.
.
h cr•JU· law
and sistl'r, Mr. charge of t he services, and cluse1 )Mr. _apd �rs. lfarvey \lanVunlten and Mrs. Ber nice Bailey.
(fee;itolor)
the foundat!un uf C'hrist1;1n hfe.
Prese nt were Charles Wright.
and Mrs. James Dou g lass of were conducted on the followlnt ah�J son 1 L ! . ,
.
Rober!
M· tch um and
Costum
e:
Wilma
Herrman , Ma,· ·
", Mr. and . Mn. Ahwt l:loffn.er dte
' MMI, Eleanor K nig h t, ;.1r. and M.irk Werry, David Edwards. Scott
Afl l· r the singing of 1 he s&lt;'ciw&lt;I I l�el!", W Va .. 1. eft lasl we ek for a subJcrts:
Eleal.l(lr Pa rker
Walton. David Huddleston, Scott
verse o( t h� 11bo�· e hymn, lh t ads t "':' O week s v1s1t in o ran,i::e, Texas
WEDNESDAY &amp; THURSDAY
•·why Be A Baptist . . led bY Mrs.:, and son, Gerald, of Zanesville, Mn. Paul Baer and Mr. a �d Mrs. Vanvranken, Steve Warner, Jeff
w11h
chtll•&lt;'s.
i
-��d,
'
\/ialJe
with
ay
d
:
relati
in
Yea
or ikrh_eatio_n was held with a
Cecil B. OeMilles
.
OV,
.
ight
Tracy
Milho
un
(mu::it select t h e and Sherr i Reuter, Jeff a n d Turri
,
·
.
Mr. Hnd Mr:i. ChMlcs
tlil -area.
McE!htn·
responsive htany led by the pa�
''THE GREATEST..SHOW
Jud
I
"Why Ent r A Ch , is
ges
a
so).
Jan
l"
V
oca
•
Jones and
An dy and Vicki
·,
Mr. ei, nd Mrs. L&amp;r•:1
·" WOife visit.
1. rir. The bulldlinL? was d ed kaled ny rctu c n rcl Fri dJ�' from Fort lio n, " led bY•,,ev Ly k ons
ON EARTH
D"�oratlng a n'd staging: Mr. and Vaugh an.
r
a
g
8
N
C
h
h
e
atu
.
_
c
a
eni
n
e
vi
i
ed
a
in reco1? n iti� n of l_he Sabbat h
i::
l{Technii�olor)
, - . w r·r I &lt;' Y a �
g t' 'l'he Plan bi M�:s. Robert Wood, Mr. and Mrs.
"W hy Read t h� Bible ' ; l ed b1 � � �� y y
with M�. and Mfr WIIJ Jlt111 Mc- Tom Jenks, Mr. and
'
school ;i s a vilal and integral part �lth th ri r d a ug h l cr and fanu ly, M rs. Ralph Z u ndel.
Betty Hutton - Corne! Wilde
Mrs.
Carl
Nkk:lea �nd l&lt;lns; R'ocky ••nd Larry. K II z. Mr. Brown and Blh
of lhe Churc h of Ch rist and that Captain an&lt;l Mrs Stanley Potter
Run ning lime: 2 h rs., 30 min.
"W h y Pray " led b Mr H
grade MEANY URGES OBSERVANCE
WASHINGTON UPI - AF[,..
the � hurc h is responsible for the a nd son, Kyle.
.M_r. and Mn. ·Dale ·Valentine and cI!s:_
Box Office closes 8:30 P.M.
rick and "W hY' Tithe led �Y ev,
Mrs. PoUH had flown here tor Lusher.
hirf\lly , cif P•rker1burg, • W . Vs.,
'
!natruct1on of t he younJl people
CIO P resident George Meany
FRIDAY 1'10T OPEN
Dance (music room}: Juanita Will Sunday urged both unions artd
wett ,Sunday JueUs o(.Mr and- M-_,,
m the doctrin es and duties of the her son, Kyle who st.iycd with
of
SATURDAY, OCT. I
Rev Donald A Boon P��:
r
t
·
Audrey McCoy and Mrs. Brown.
. Eldon Kraeuter and d'aughtfrt.
i,:01pel es Chrillt coll_lmanded to h is grandpare�Ls while the Pol• the Middleport · churc�•
employers to make observance of
''THE
ATOMIC SUBM.ARINE"
n
Cane uclt: Reid and Leota '"National Employ t he Handi­
Mrs. W.: D. Swltt . (Jo: :-"Aline
feed _the lambs, and in the faith ters were gethng settle� e t Fort charge of the recreation progra!
Dick
Foran - Bob Steele
'
that II ls not t he will of God t hat Bragg .and the McEl h m nys ac- Oth ers attendi ng from the locai SwaV:el) _ ltift _. _ Sunday , , f!)� . East Young, BiJJ an d Doris Grueser.
capped Week" a year around
- ·slsO ,
Cork Guns: Harry a n d Juanita practi ce.
Gr�n•1 eh, 'R. I., w&amp;e1-e she will
one_ of t h ese: llt�le . ones should c?1!1 pa med her to N. C. for t he c hurch were Linda Kautf, She
"HOUSE
OF INTRIGUE"
Lodwich, Horace a nd Dorothy Karr
peris h ; for worship m prayer and vmt.
·(Technieolor)
Simmons Jack Sigman Pat � res,pe, whll t �r . hust..n9 is 1ta• Ken and Norma Amsbar
y.
gift1 ; with pn1yer for all who
FLOIIENCE PLANS SWIM
Curt Jurgens - Da-wn Addams
wards. R�t h Ann Kloes, ' Darla Eb: Uoned with the �llVYat Davis
. Balloon dart game: M r. and :drs.
t_c arh_ t h�rc now and In yean_ to in M r . a nd Mrs. Domild Mills were er11bach and Marth a Fowler. AlsO 1 Field, R. , 1 . , She . was •ccompanled
PORTPATRICK,
Scotland
UPI
Sun.,
Mon,, Tuai., Oct. ,.10-1 1
Columbu9 last Satmday to· at•
there by Mr. Swift and Mr . . and Gary Dill, Mr. and Mrs. Harry - America's Florence Chadwick
lomc, with prayer t hat the build.iccumpa
nyi n g the yout h to lronl0n
"PLEASE
DON'T EAT
tend
Stat
the
e game.
Mrs. Du�ne Fre¥nd ot . .W�chtard, Grindstaff, Mr. and Mrs. Donald today began rinal preparations for
In� ma&gt;· c11er �l�nd for areal
TIIE
DAISIES"
was
Mrs.
Tony
Fowler.
Cpl.
Edw
Lee
ard
Mora,
Mcc
of
Mr.
oma
and Mrs. Earl Dean.
s
R. I. and Robert Cobb of Oa\'ls•
things of lhc Kingdom of God· Was h ln1?ton,
an attempt to become the first
________
(Technicolor)
Duck ponds: (will be two, Virgil woma n to conquer the 2l·mile
, ville, R. I .. who drove h�re for her
Lhat it may mini!ter to the better'. An n Heer D. C. afld Mi 9s Mary
Do
r
is
Day
- David Ni11cn
en of Aleklr n dria, Va.
and Betty Roush , Sam ahd Doroth y North Channel between Scot.la nd
.4 j '
SatL1rday.
mcnl of the homt ,· fo r frate,nal spent the
.
Colorcartoo
n
Wet'kend
Mic
wit
h
ael,
h Mr. and /t tee S mith Honored
Mr.
and M rs. Hobart and North Ireland.
-------union uf all people i n the com- Mn. L.
W. McComas a n d daug h• Un 89th Birthday
Newell. Mr. a nd Mrs. David Holt­
munity: for eultivalion of II fr uly ter, Dian
e.
Dian
returned to
er,
e
Mr-. and Mrs. Charles Wilder•
The
hirth
dirutian social life in the churrh.�
89t h
uay of
AH« Literary Club
h · sc h ool loday after
being ill for Smit h of Middlepo rt wasMiss
muth.
1111_!1 l'nr th e cn hg htment of t
celeb
rat,
ae rH , d Iil's.
Toss ball game: He nry and Opal
ed la11t ThurRday with an i n formal
mind, for the education of the
:
Following
Eichinger, Delmar 1md Kathry n
"'conscience for lhc perfecting of t h r: . Raymon Ko n kr igh t is at party by her neig h bor5 and friends,
Baum, Albert 'Mel h man, Mr. and
1h e whole bcin,, body, mi nd and J oeh n ome uf her daug h ter, M r11. Mem bers Of l he First Baptist Summ
OPTOM ETRIST
Lockwoo
er
�eces
d
Mra.
i
s
n Spri n gfield
William Frecker.
ur
e,d
n
i
soul.
h
Sm
East Court Street, Pomeroy
while _ sh� is rccupeuli ng from �� t�� e;�� a �� � ��
Guess your weigh l: I. 0. McCoy,
Tht'.! tirst meeti ne of the Middle•
�� w�::�
h
l'rayc r by lhe Hev., Bartels , the comp1 1c11tions following surger y b11 ked II special bi r thday eake for po'rt Llterary Chill, ilfler Its _sum• Charles anfl Maxine Grim th.
orm:�e Hours: 9 to 12, ! to 5 (Close at Noon on Thurs.)
Fortune TeHers: Mrs. Albert 1
third ve rse of the hymn, thl' bene• this summer.
tner recess will be held Wednes­
her.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
James
Lewts
diction, and postlude. concluded
or
Miss Sm it h receh•cd many nice day, October S · at the home of
the !t:rvice, then those Jjrese n t Columbue spent th e weeke nd gi�ta from her frtenft!J an11 neigh , :�n. Geoqe X..aher 1ft Jtutland.
Papen glve1 wtll be, "The V'Jlfi
m11ct_�. A . I.o ur of the lll'W building wit h Mr. and Mn. Howard ByerS. bor.t. ke cream, cake and co!fee
pe
M r. and Mr,1. Joe Hass a rid Wiif� served.
In wHJCh each depa1·tme nt hHd
from t he 40UtFloor." bf Jira, :Jtol.
it� own alta r wit h the ope n bible childre n or New Hcichmo nd spe n t
ney Downing, and "Advise and
the weeke nd with Mrs. Hass's
w11h ca n dhi11 on either sid e .
Conse n t," by MH, 0. B. Stout.
Annual dues of $3 wlll be re-.
ltefreshme nh of assorted rook• rnot h er, Mrs. W. F. Hawley.
,�id11/epor1 Scouts
Sunday
the
Huss
family
ccived
and
at the meeting and ' the roll
,
h•8 11un(• h 11nd coffee were serv ed
call rcaponme '!'fill be, "W.hy I
from a table with w hite li nen co­ Mrs. Hawley we re din ner g u ests Meet 7'on1orrow Night
•
on f,,,,101t1
Truop 24!'.I, Boy Scouts. of Mld· Vote."
\·1•r a nd cc11h!red with a fall ar• al the home of Miss Mild red Haw•
Icy
and
Mrs.
Nan
Moore
a
n
d
dleport,
daU•
will
meel
t
hi
s
evening
at
,-;;•
•
;;;.;.;;;_,;;;_
nn�eml'nt !n red, )'ell ow, i.:-reen
_..;;,;;;;;.;;;..
·
lh c Scout Hall at 7 p _ m.
and blaek with tall w h lte t�pers ghtcr, Elizabeth.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Vanderhoof
Pare nttr:' Night will also be held.
in braSli h ulclurs 8t1rround ed with
•
autum n lr11ves. on eit h er side. and ch ildre n of Waldo spe n t the The film of the t1ummer camp ing
Napki ns al.�o carried out the fall weekend wit h Elmer Miller on tr ip will be shown.
theme, Mis5 1-:rma Smil h presided Grant Street.
Mr. e nd Mrs. Carrol i,;. Mea­
Monarch Tube Steel Folding Table and 4 Matching Chairs
at lhf' r,unch bowl and Mrs. Al•
Utd
duwl'i
of Su n bcrry, Ohio called 011 lly,ell'• Enteru,in
berl Woodard at the cotlce ser•
regularly priced at e40,76
Mrs. R. C, Sam,hury yesterday.
Vk&lt;'.
Mrs. MH r tha R. Fry a nd Mrs. With Sund&lt;Jy Dinner
now. for a Umited time only
Mr. and Mrs . Homer Jlyscll en­
A b11�"".(1•t of white mums, t he An n Bailey were in C harlesto n ,
For Men and Boys
gilt of II. V. King co ntractors a nd W. Va. S;iturday ev&lt;'nin� lo at­ tertained with a di n nCJ' Sunday at
a ba&amp;kf'I of whill' glaclloli the gift tend a meeting of R&lt;'alsilk sales­ t heir home on At hc n5 noad.
Guests were Mr. and Mrs. Thom­
of the Hcv. and Mrs. lbrtels a nd men al the h ome of Mr. ·and Mra.
as Hysell of Clare , Mich., .Wrs.
pulm� were on either aide of th e Carl Norman.
Dixie P ierce, RtUdent at OU Noa h Looker of Westerville a nd
altnr l n the sa nctuary. Arrange.
Middleport, Ohl?
mf'nls Ill flowers wcrP also on the spen t the weeke nd wit h her par• Mrs. Pearl Hysell of Pomeroy.
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pianu and hack of the altar. Each ent5, Mr. and Mrs. Milla rd Pierce.
Mrs. Hele n Maag, teac her of
room in 1 h� new building was de­
corat.-tl wit h flower arrange. a llr111 grade claas returned to
Sturdy Samsonite construction . . . precision built
run lime sc hedule today. S in c·e
mcnb.
so
there's 110 wobble. Easy to set�up and take
t he beginning or school Mrs. L.
down. Wcar•res.istant \'inyl lable top and chair
W. CcComas has been assisting
with the arternoon clus for Mrs.
5��ts wipe clean with a dampcloth. Smo-o-01hly
Maag.
rm,shcd legs prevent hose lrom snagging and
· running . Choice of 4 new decorator colors.

Service Sunday

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On
W,'th

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Now YouKnow

VOL XII

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-Great!

j

•.� � But the date I'm

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and

DOUBLE
POLL PARROT
STAMP DAYS

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Thu rsda y

Octo ber
5th &amp; 6th

Mr. Rhodes tiriefly reviewed
the history and meaning of the
Oaa. TIJe Pott·now·hH three flags
whJch ha\le been fiown over the
C1pitol, a · 48-s&amp;ar one presented
bJ t�e late Cong. Thomas A. Jen­
kina when the Post lint occupied
its present home and two by
CODI, Moeller.
The . new flag was accepted by
Cmdr. Gilmore who entertai ned a
resolution of "Thanks" to Con�.
Moeller, which waa approved.

''

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M. W. COMPTON, O. D.

C&amp;SOE Plant
At Conesville
Gets ·3rd tmit

SAVE

B U ICK
AND

GO ON lllSPI.A Y

An expansion progr11m at The
Cone,ville Generating Station
whleh will require expenditures
approximating $20 million was to­
day announced by J. L. McNealy,
Vice Pre.'Jldent In Charge of Opera·
tirm, for Columbus and Southern
Oh,a Electric Company.
Construct.ion has started on the
third generating unit at' this sta·
tion. It's rated cai;raeity - will be
126.000 kllowattl. Thi• will in•
crease the rated capacity of the
Conesville Station to 375,000 kilo•
watll and tl)e Coq\Pany'1 total rrom
four statlo111 to 890,000 Jcilowatt 1.
The construction schedule calls
!or the atut. of the boiler erection
atiout February, 1961; steel erec•
ti&lt;1h aoon afle� and the new gen•
enting unit wlll be in auvlce In
the fourth qwarter of 1962.
Columbus and Souther0 Ohio
Electric Company 1erves more tJian
214,000 cuB"lktmen in 23 central
al)d soutfie111 Ohio counties . Elect•
rk enern ls produced · for these
ei11tomen at four ie-nerating 1ta•
U&lt;1na. Poston, In Athens County;
Pieway and Walnut In Franklin
County; and the Conesville Sta•
tlttn, lpx mlle1 south of Coshocton
· iii Coshocton County.

S am s o n i te Fo l d i n g Fu rn itu re
5 Pi e c e S e t •

lt U G I Y
JACKETS

. PON TIAC

Suburban Colts

AT

Blaettna r's
'

Mr. Rhodes also reviewed re•
l'ent Jeglalatlon affecting veteran s
and dependents. A aummary of
tbla legislation appeared recently
In The Dally Sentinel, excluaively,
he said, wbo added that future
intormatlon on veterans always
wlll � published in The Sentinel.
He noted a new policy on m­
ing veterans' daima by the Amer­
ltan 1..e111on. The Leglon will file
claims for all veterans but will
not contin ue followup aervice ·for
veterans who are not members.
Commander Elza Gilmore an •
9nounced the coming sale of M­
atar flags for outside use. All
re&amp;identa will be invited to pur­
,chase the "eir.cellent 3 ft. hy 5 ft.
njg at a minimum cost, the com­
mander said.
SN SO.Star FIii• on Pa.. Six

50th Anniversary S cial

WHEN THE '61

SMITH QOTHING CO.

IN

·;:,Pomeroy

I

Rutla,ul Teacl,er,
Attend Convention

Mis11 Sally Schaaf and Mrs.
Joh n Bacon of Middleport, both
teachers ln the kutland School,
were In Columbua over the we�k­
e nd to attend the annual Con •
ventlon of the Ohio Aeaoclatl on
of Special Education Teacher,.
Miss Sc haal is a member of lhe
board of directors or the orga n­
ization.

AuxU/ary Firemen To
Hold Meeting Tonight

Th e Firemen's Allxlliary will
meet tomorrow n la:ht for lta regu.
lar mcell n&amp; a nd masked Halloween
party at the home ol Mra. Everett
Bachner at 7:30.
The party will be h eld i n th e
recreation room of the Bach ner
home and Mrs. RllHell Mills is
assl!ti na; ho1teu.

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

We Feature A 2 Hour
' Quick Dry-Clea ning Se"ice
· At Our ,Pomeroy Store
.

obinson's
DERERS - DRY QEANEI�

I

Trl-Lualer Cleanera
PHONE WY-%-5130
IN MIDDLEPORT

Cri ve , l n
I. , \1•., soti
Jn

TON!GMT
John Wayne - William Holden
"111E HORSE SOI.DIEi\"
(Technicolor)
- al1JO Jerome Thor, Marcia Htmderson
"lllOT IN JUVEN!Llt PlllSON"
Aleo C..rtoan
-

TUIIOAV .... WIONISOAY
•�•�Y NIGHTS
Cilenn Ford - Anne Francis
"DON'T GO NEAR
THIil WATER''
(Technicolor)

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l&gt;ori1 Day. - Barry SuWvan
"J U L I E''
Alto Cartoon
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No more waiH1!9
for &amp;iding

lo d,yl

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• No bK-ng when appllu aa dl,.�d
• Drlff llug-frM, duet-tree In 20 mffiutNi
• A bettw Job In le11 11111., with I••• work
• lte•I· fading, "'"- • • • Ndu••· ohalkln1
_• ldNI for wood, m■1onry, stucioo,
UNetcle•elllngle·1ldl"9
.
,.

• .,_ _., -• ..,,,.,v wai.'
.,.. .... ..... D fl'IIHM. � '
•OATW.....-111t11!r --.1fl�: t,,.
eurfa•••• 1�f•� �,�-lrl,fll."i
UltaD MOUM Ml1i" \l'· ,.
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ORl)JllR YOU� SE'l' TODAY • ORDER SEVERAL

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.,_ ! ! I :

,;

King Builders Supplf ;��! )

Phone WY-2-3748 bey or Evenli!C r ·.· ·'"' : -) '.'
. i Ml4lilepott:;
,,
Bradbury Read
,to \
.

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MIIOS KOIPITAL
Admiuion1; .Aminda Parker,
.
Wnenrille.
1 'Dlachaqed: Walier Hamm,
.
��meroy. _

IA�I EI FURN.I TU RE
,, ' 'f ,;.:&amp;f_
Bl,IGHTEST (;ORN_E R IN
· TH'E,
MIDDLEPORT,
•,

• A· pew memorial award creat•
by lhe Rev. ,Edward W. W.
Lewli and bi&amp; brother, Lawrence
- Lewhl, ha1 been offered to Mld·
\ dleport High School and accept•
.,a by it.
Members of the school board in
- 1 regular meeting llat night vot•
� to actept the offer. The fund,
' from whkh only interest shall
,, ... � used to benefJt a deserving
: · 111n1or total• ,aoo. The acholar•
•Ip baaieally ia trom- funds deriVed in the eltate of the bite
lamet Allen ' Werner New Yort
·
" Central Railroad emPloyee.
.l -:. Rev. Lewi1 now a- prominent
Baptist miniaier of Saint Joseph
'i!.'.illlcldpn, J, the son of the late
, ,, G:,aqe H. 111d suaan Mae Lewls
of iilddleport, and bepn hi1
,fli-' 'ilbJnlitly Jn the F.lm Baptlat
· � ' here.
, · '\#Rev. Lewi• wrote to Middle•
·' ,
peir1. SUperlnt.endent of Schooll
, _f:,ee, MeJl0tqH, Ind to the Bo' ard
, j -.t ·��tion. U followa:
. , . My brother and I are desiroul" , Of. ·'offtrlDI to The Middleport
� 111,:b ,School Middleport, Ohio,
ed (,S500.00)
. tbe nan of "lve Hundr
·
as , the ,
11:nown
be"
to
,
�W,,
IAlwUI
Hay
Susan
and
H.
•·. ewo,,e
'
A.it'ard.
lhmo'tiill
. N 4,\oftdilioDI Of thi1 11ft are
1' . /. .
'"lef
• '!'II, ....,. ill llto ,w.,.i ' lllwl

eroy

Village

Council
the apent as Third Ward Fire
to Patrolman David
fin who today turned it

lit
, ay night offered
ii'.
�

Square Dancer.s Take Tape Session Practices
For Ninth Annual Festival Here October 8th

win, veteran member "
" department, and o( the

gency � rescuj! unit, was
ve served a 00-day trial
1
' to learn, in some coon- i
, n's opinion, whether or I
r--tthe dual duties as fire ,
� and patrolman would be
flict.
in
• ·f win told The Daily Sen­
t�Cit today that there was no
qufjtion of "conflict" insofar
iS :}i.e was concerned. In his
aP.t,pance before council I
Wli!Ji the appointment was dis­
�. that point was not
j
bni\iiht up.
. : Qfodwin, however, left be·
lo.ft
final action was taken,
an4 · :the appointment was
IIIJ/
i
ldfi · provisional subsequent
to · . departure.
� · e hesitation of conn- . ,:,
making the appoint)las led me to ·refuse
.' �,appointment," 9Cifciwln
.
"
-· todJly.
11ii appointment of a \llew fire
r:biff', was made necessary follow•
ln&amp;:,�tlie death of Jack Thomas, who
wa, ($lef at the time of his death .
C&amp;qpcil alao gave permissJOJl to
the :Y-oung Adult Clan of the Pom­
eroy Metbodiat Church to bold
claues in a room of the City Hall.
A' matter of the city repairing a
w�l on �he property of Bertha Sey•
frted, LLberty-av, was again dis•
cussed, It waa decided that it
Would be i llegal for- council to
have PIY�i to do with \ he wall
u.nl
b.!Hicomes I traffic har.ard.
ti!
.. r
d Utt' a riq1,1est· by Henty
Werry ,to"ilave two.foot tile sup•
plied for a dHch near h is home, it
was decided t0 inv�at"g
1 1le the
probl_em and present it at a fllture
mectmg.
Ali city owed bills are to be
paid to date it was determined at
the sh orl one hour long meeti ng.
Council gave Chief of Police Jed
Webster permission to buy four
new tires for th e police cruiser.
.Atten din il the session were Couneilmen Leslie Fultz, Dor Schaefer
DOJ� Collins, Franklin Rizer, HoY
Betzing and George Horak.
Mayor Charles Legar pr!!sidcd
over the meeting assisted by Clerk
Edna Sch oenleb.
1

· Racine'• New Tanker Truck

Come A' Runnin'

Men Banded Together Bring
Results Generally Rewarding

IY 10■ a. IYIR
When a group of men of a small community band together
fq� a common purpose, the results are most geilerally �eward­
ing. Such is the case of a group of men in Racine, known as
the Racine Volunteer Fire Department.
Several years ago this small Meiga County community knew
nothing of the \lalue that a well-organized volunteer fire de:
partment could mean to a smal1 town. Today, the citizens
watch with amazement at the progress their volunteer fire
deP3!tment has made in the past and i$ continuing to make
as the days and months roll by.
Other plans of this Cast growing
ltectntly, this volun teer fire de•
partment put into aervjce a 1,000 fire department Include a little re•
gallon tank truck to be uaed in Its modeling of its fire garage be•
fight against 'all types of fires Jn neath the town hall. With a few
the communlty- and surroundi ng minor changes and repairs, thti
department will be able tu house
area.
Up until about a week ago Ra· it5 llew truck.
Th is, and fflany atories just like
clQe W88 without an efficient wat•
ed Sllpply to combat fires outside it, shows what a 'elnd of deter­
tht• city llmiU, and had to rely on minded men with a· common faith
other fire departments of the can do. It's a fine example of th e
county to supply water by way of men who answer the call to
their tank trucks In case of rural "Come A'Runnin '."
fires.
Toda,-. ,fter �•ny montb1 of
¥•'td work r�na ltinda, tbe Rli.;·
elne V�h.tntdr Fire Department
Nls its rilucb neede/ tanker truck
to give JI ready water su_ppiy where•
ever it may be.
TJ;le truck itsell is a 19Mli Ford
F-600 p1m:h111ed with fund11 raised
by the firemen. Mounted on this
cha8Sis is a 1,000 gallon lank ob­
tained through an �bland Oil
Rev. John F. Wippel, a priest of
Distributor of Huntington, w. Va,
the
Steubenville Dl.ocese, has been
The truck was completely re•
bu.ilt by the men of the department appointed instructor in the School
to aav,: money on lts construction. of Philoaophy of The Cath11lic Uni­
It j,s still not complete as a few veraity of Amel'ica ai=cording to 11n
minor repairs and adjustments announcement by Rt. Rev. William
need to be made. However, it is J. McDonald, Rector of the Uni•
"ready to roll," .1nd' will be u¥d versilY SJ)eciflc field of Father Wippel's
to supply water to the pumpers
leaching
will be undergraduate
wh_,never need arises,
ysics,
Cosmology, and inter•
Metaph
is
$400
$600
imately
to
Approx
of
r
elian and Thom•
p
etation
Aristot
still needed to replace badly worn
lstic
texts.
·
tires, equipment, and other re•
A native of Pomeroy, Father
pairs, to have a fire lighting apparatua read)' to go ,anywhere on its Wippel attended Sacred Heart Pa•
own to light just about any type rochial School and St. John's Sem•
fire the department would en· iuary, Bloomingdale", Ohio, where
he rtceived a Basselin SchoJarehip
counter.
Plana for completing the truck to Catholic University.· Bas&amp;elin
to this stage include a radio, _POrt• Scholarahips are granted to young
able pump, and hoae. Where will men studying for the priesthood
the fund&amp; come from? That will who show 1u1uaual scholastic abil•
be up to the people of Racine and lly.
He received his A. B. de1ree
aurroundlng uea. they will have
to dig down a little deeper and from Catholic University in 1955
help this band of men who are dfl· and hia ill. A. in Philosophy the
tennined to give their town and following year. This p11St June he
in
the surrounding area a fire de• wu awarded the licentiate
partment to be proud of, .he1ldea Sacred Theology, shortly after his
hHillS men ready 24 hours a day or4i,nation In Steubenville.
f•lker Wippel is ·the 1,on ol Mr.
to helP: the people of their �urlsand Mra. Joaeph Wippel.
diction (D time of need.
_

Father Wippel
Is Instructor
In Philosophy

MISS SffMI'\:

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Miss Stemple Is
New Agent For
Mason �unty
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be The George H, and Susan
May Lew� Memorial Aw•rd. .
The prtncipal shall be kept m·
tact always, but the income from
the fund of five bundred dollars
shall be given e11ch year to a
1111duating senior who shall be,
In the opinion of the Faculty, "a
· good att1dent with sterling char·
acter,"
· When \he George H. and S11aan
May Le-wis Memorial Award is
made, It shall · be announced that
tbl1 award "wat1 created by thf:'!
Rev. Dt. F.,lward W. 1'1. Lewis,
M HS Claas ·ot 1934, and Mr. Lawrence ..L. LewJa, MHS ClaH of 193'7
in memory &lt;If their parenlll, Mr.
and lits. G�r1e H. Lewi!!, of
their "aunt, Mn, M111ie Ftazier
of their uncle, Jamu Allen werner, and , in honor of their aunts,
Mr,. E:lli:abelh B. Hysell and Mrs.
Garnet W. °'ark..,. and of theit
uncle, Edw11rd J. Werner.'.'
The- PVf'Pllt!I of ftte litter annwlKtmtnt Is ll9t lvat to ,iv.
f'KOtlnltlon to � �mtd, IMitt
lt ls also to enwvra.. others
lo Ntallltlllh tlmll..-, ltut ,....
hi,- _..,..,, l'llelMlf111' fuftdt.
M.l!n, communlflN heve wlplfln;tial ....wn-'t ■Inn by !NO'
pie whllt they lhlH .,- .., ' WIii
· lfhr they IIIW. · ,MuMl'NI , if
, , yO\ln■ ....,.ra INI abl• .. et..pd ,.i1... ..., � �

'

1udl public-minded lndivldu.alL
I have already been told •that
thl! amount Js very small, I know
it is; I wish It were more, I am
eager, however, to offer it to the
educntlonal syftlem of Middleport in gratitude, and ( am hope.
ful that your school 1_ulhorlties
will be willina; to aceept it under
I the aimple tenll&amp; liated above,
for I truly believe that others,
more able to abare th.an we, may
I aee the vision and importance of
such fund11, and establish t hem
in thtr yeara that Ue aheud.
I h:ad the personal joy of see•
Ing our endowment fund1 at the
church I served in Connecticut
jr.crease by mtJre than $100,000
I during the nearly elJht years
that I sen:ed there. Since I . �a\le
here in Michigan, I have had
1 keen
the .. gladneu1 of knowing that a
!und of not leu than $20,000
has been established for edura•
ti&lt;intl purposes alorie frorn our
church. So, I \[now lh at people
do dve when t hey know or o�portunltil'I! ,
In ri�her actions Ja9t, night the
, board of edu&lt;'l.tion with Prealdent
'Bruee Lloyd, · pre,idlni, �lected
Mn. Kathryn Rall, lit.legate to
r,;&gt;pruent the local boartt at the
State School Bo1rdil convention
In Columb�s. Novem�r 9, 10 atld

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&amp;INGLE COPY :::lie

...· oodwin Says He Won't 4£cept

·-

·wr·
1 iss Wanda Ruth Stemple
of
Au�ra, W. Va., has recently assumed _the politio� of Ho�e J)emenati',4i� Wr •Kuo• �
ty.
.
,. of Preston County,' Miu
A netJve
Stemple graduated from Aurora
High School fn 1956 and West Vlr•
ginia U n iversity in Ju n e 1960 wit h
a B . S . Degree m
, Home Ecmmmics.
Miss Stemple will be meeting
w ith homemakers clubs in the
near futllre to mllp out her pro•
gram in home demonstration work.
She also stated th at sh e is looking
forward to Worki ng with t he people
to promote extension work in Mason County.

Two Calls Taken
By Middleport
Emergency Unit

Middleport Emergency squad
received two calls for aid within
20 minutes late lest night and
early this morning.
At 12:40 the squad was called
to the Will Gilkey residence on
Leading Creek Road, near Rt. 7.
Mr. Gilkey· was suffering from a
medical ailment. A locaJ' physi•
cian was called,
While on the call to the
Gilkey home another was receiv­
ed' for treatment , for Bob Neil,
E. 2nd St., Middleport.
The Pomeroy squad was called
to his home and tranaported him
to Holzer Hospital before Mid­
dleport squadsmen cquld return
from their find $Ill.

ted
Ac�ep
Award
rship
&amp;hola
ial
Memor
Lewis
;
. For Middleport High School At Board . Meeting B&amp;E Probe Is
Opened By
ed
Pomeroy Police

NEW SPRED HQUU PAINt;
IDES ON DAMP 8URFAGE8

bvtlMm encf·CMh-11 Ohio: T•
d-,, d..,.., IN ....,,., with 11e­
utianll lltht rain otrllffll Muth,
hllh tn the u,;.r ..._ Ttnltht
Md W...,11Np, cleutty and mild,
lew ln tM SO..

•

4, 1980

•

A new IM&gt;- ,tar 011 wu pre1ented Monday nia:ht to the Drew
Webster Post or. behalf of Con.
gresaman Walter • Moeller by
County Vetenn,• Service Officer
C; J. Rhodes.
This flag has been Oown over
the Capitol of the United States
and is the second , Capitol fieg
elven th• Poat by Cong. Moeller.
. The other was a fl..ltar Oag,

:_m- ,

Met

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tu..day,

NO, 143

New 50-Star
Flag Received
By Local Post

MEIGS THEATRE

,r

ent1ne

·a t

l'eaiher

-----------·----·---:::::::::-=::::::::-:-:::::::-:::-::::::-::OctQIJer
��=-------------...;;..------ ·------------------------------------

I

BYf M

••

e

t.nl•lnN tat"' ffrlfttl the
n1m• -Sia.....,- frem Chenf MIi
Ont aut1k..- whe _,. ltoftl at
........u, 11.nt, A1N'H 11. 111 1 .
At th9 ... ef l2 the, fflilrtled
......,_ •flll fethw.J IO and nine
children ....,.ctlvely.

W,est

a ,es

, SLM
st:i\e Arrh . &amp; Ul»f
Oblo &amp; ntg:b
6\1,
lJlh
Cob101buA, Oh'•

. Pomriroy police officers are
inves�igating a breaking and
en tering today at U"iP. Preston
Motors Used · C.11r lot lit t he lower
end ol Pomeroy sometime last
night.
A car salesman discove red the
B &amp; E tb is morn i n g at 7:40 wh(m
h e arrived for work .
Notbing was rePorted taken
from the buaineui place wh ich
uses a trailer as an office. Entry
lnt&lt;; the tr11Uer was nJ,ade through
a wiNdow whieh had been broken
prior: to the trime.
Police arrested Lewis Surbe,
47, Hartford, w. Va., and wm.
iam AlexHnder, 49, Pomeroy, for
intoxlcaUon last night.

Dairy Contest Won By
Waobinirton Univen,ity
WATER.LOO, la. UPI - \1fHh•
ington State Un iversity won t he
NaUonal Inlerolleglate Dairy Judg•
ing .Contest M.onday de(eatlna: 26
1 other colleges in the competition
at the National Dairy c,tUe Cona,cis,

'

Boosters A8ked To

Bring
' AROther One

Middleporl's Athletic Boosters
meet tonigh t at 8 p. m. in th e
h igh sch ool with th e t h eme for
all members being "Bring a BOO$·
ler with you."
President John Krawsczyn said
importa n t pr.ojects to ··pep up
town spirit" will be dlscuSlled.

..
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�¥
SMITH: CALLER

Hill Climb Was
S
At
UCCeSS

Fairgrounds

The "Hill Climb" al the Meil;ls
County fairground was termed 1 a
success Sunday afternoon.
There were a number of r iders
on hand to try their luck at
climbing the h ill. The beautiful
36 inch tall trophy for the fast.est
time went to Ronald Coon of
Qiarlmton, W. Va. His time was
only 3:42. Some riders ne\ler
made It to the to p of' \Jf"e •. · hnt
spilling about half way up.
There were two fatheNon
teams riding. They were Ben
Comer and son Jun ior, age 14.
Junior has been riding hiUs since
age 11. Sunday he showed h is dad
u p as he walked away with a
t h ird place tr op hy while dad just
looked on.
The oth er father.son combina·
tion was Oakey Redma n and son;
again Junior beat dad. Jr. Red•
man took .a third place trop hy in
the middleweiJ!h t class a n d a
time of 3:88.
Trophies went to Ronald Coon,
Ch a rleston. W. Va .. in t he heavy
weight class for fastest time of
thc day.
Heavyweight class: First place,
Sea HUI Cllmb on Pape Twcr
GUILD TO MEET
The Portland Worthwhile Guild
will meet Thursday evenin g. Oct.
6 at e p, m. at th e home of
Louise Brewer. Each member is
asked to bring a gift of 50c for a
white elephant sale.

Neig h borhoods in Pomeroy, Mid• sport•scope. He has been on the
dleport and Gallipoli! may be staff of man y square dance camps,
wondering about h appy aquare such as Reudosa and Red River
dance so u.nds coming from certain in New Mexico, t he Ligh tning ··s"
at LeVeta, Colorado; Kirkwood
homes in their midst.
II so, t hese sounds are mere ly Lodge a�d Osage Beach in liis­
exlra tape sessirrni; in which 1qu.ire souri; and is the outside fatuity
dance rs are pre pari n g for the member for the U niYersily of
Nin lh A n n ual Mid-Oh io Vall ey Florida in a square dance short
Squa re Da n ce Festival to be held oou.ne . He h as taught square
in Pomnoy Junior High Auditor• dance claues in many cit ies rn
ium OC't. 8 wh1th the local Paw ·n Texas, Okbhoma and Loui5iana.
He has been featured ealler m
Taw Danl'e club is sponsori n g.
The homes bei ng used for tape many aquare dance festivab in ,11l­
sesa1ons include those of Dr. and most every 1tate in the United
Mrs. John Moore. Pomeroy Star States. He also calls reguarly to
Route,; Mr and :'wfr s . George Hae• three clubs in his home.town area.
kett, Jr .. South Seventh St., Mid•
The Mid.Ohio Valley Square
,lleport; Dr. and .\1rs. Ray Pickens, Dance Festival, spomored by the
South Third Ave .. :�tiddleport and KY OWVA (Ky., Qbjo, W. Va.J 1'ri•
Mr. and Mrs. Manning Kloes, in State Square Dance Asaociation,
Gallipolis.
has been gaining
ill reputation
Harper Smith, Jr. of Celina, over the put eia:ht years. It at•
Texas w ho ··invaded'" the Ohio tracts dancers from a 100-mlie
Valley twu years ago and left be· 1 rad i us and several from as rar
hind une of the mosl enj oyable as Cincinnati Dayton and Cleve.
and. memorable square da ncing ex• land in _O bi� and Wheeling and
�ene nces am?ng all the attend• Beckley, West Virginia. II is an
mg da ncers will return by popular event the Pomeroy Bend area c&amp;n
rf':luest as featured caller again well be proud to host.
thJs year.
The festival acheduie i.s as folHarper gave up a teaching ca• lows: 1 to 3 p. - m . Round Dance
rct&gt;r to de,·ote full time to teach- workshop with area dance le1ders
ing a nd calling the American participating. 3· to 5 p. m. Square
Square , Dance cle11en years ago. Dabce work■hop con ducted by
He has gain the reputation ol be- Harper Smith. 5 to 8 p. m. Free
mg among the top callers io tbe time for supper, rest and freshen•
ing up.
nation.
He has appeared on radio, TV.
A room will be provided in the
and in R. K. 0. Pathe Newsreel school building in which to change
-� I into evening clothes. 8 to 11 p. m.
Evening Dance Party conducted by
Harper ,Smith. The refreshment
stand will be or,erated during the
elllJrf, da)' hy lbe M�� -County.
4-H Clubs. .
_, .
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The Paw 'n Taw SQuare. Dan�
Club wlslles. 'to e:11.:.end an invita­
tion to spectators especially to
youth groups accompanied by their
leaders, to "iew thia colorful event.
Funeral ser\lices for Alice L. Check with club members or Mrs.
Carson. Ql, who died last even• John Hardy for admission pa�cs,
ing at t he Foster Rest Home fol·
lowing .an illness of several
months, will be held Wednesday
at 2 "p_ m. from t he RawlingsIC
ft
Coats Funeral Home with burial
cemetery near
in the Wrigh t
Lan gsv ille.
She was a member of the Finl
Baptist Ch urch . M iddleport.
Sunivors include her husband,
.&amp;'
Rnhert B. Carson, two grandsons,
Floyd Carson, Middleport RD, '
and Marlin Carson , Richmon�.
Mayor Kenn�th McEl h inney and
Ind. and four_ great grandc�l· C h ief of Police Herbert Gilkey
dren. Th ree sisters Mn. Jeas1e took a dim view today of early
Russell, Pomeroy HD ; Mrs. Mary Halloweening reported in Middle•
Price, Rutland .and Mrs. Horace - port last evt:ning.
Grover, Athens.
They joined in a statcmenl to
Two sons. Guy and Floyd pre- the over-eager, pranksters :
ceded her m death. .
"If this keeps up a 9 p. m. cur•
The Rev. Howard Klmgle, Rut- few, like lut year can be im•
land, will be in charge.
posed. It can even ' be made ear•
Frien d!'! will be received· at lbe lier."
funeral home any ltme.
Th e officials hoped a curfew
would not be necessary, and ask

Mrs. Carson
P sses Away
After Illness

Off• ials T ke
Dn
' . View Of
Early P•anks

Nat1on
• ,s postoff•ice Vo1u me Goes p Dori)"•n,r0

:�r.:�:��·.i'k�:;1:: :::.t�:t
new .!.�!.�n�,Of Activ ity; lmp�o���e_nts Made History Groups '
Meet Saturday
Marietta
,

A

hon's mail volume was reat hed
during fiscal year 1960 ending
June 30, wh ich continued the
steady upward trend of tJle past
fte\len years at a rate wh ich even
exceedll · the population growtt\,
according: to advance information.,
from the Annual Rfiporl •of t h e
Post Office Department which h ss
been made ;ivailable lo postmasters
J. W. Waddell of Middleport a nd
W. P. Lochary of Pomeroy.
Alth ough subject to last minute
revisions, the year's total has been
estimated as 63.6 biJlion pieces of
parcel post. It was stated that th is
would mean a n increase of nearly
25 per cent over the correspon d·
in g figures for 1953 when ann ual
volume was IS0.9 billion pieces.
During lh is same period. it was
pointed out. th e reven ue of t h e
Department al:m has sh own an. im•
pressive gain with an increase
from $2,091,714,DOD in fiscal year
1953 to $3,276,800,000 for fiscal
year 1960.
Here in Middleport, rceeirts of
t he po,t office climbed from $21,658.00 !J1 1953 to $26,303.00 last
year.
"There is not much we ca n do
about how much mall we have to
handle from day- to day or how
many people are making use of
the Pofttal Service," th e two Post•
masters stated, "but the wh ole
Department keeps busy In 4ev'is­
ing ways a nd mean&amp; for doin g t h e
j(lb not only more efficiently but
more economically. As we �all it
th at was the wa_y · ?resident Ei11en•
h ower outlined the principal o�
jeetkea ., the Department when
Postmaster General Arthur E.
Summerfield. wa1 beiDI
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!)e;Ohio._lnstitute on Locaf apd
State History will hold its .sixth
' annual ml'eting at t he Campus Mar­
tius Museum iu Marietta next !)at­
: urday.
The Association of Historic.ii So­
cieties of Ohio will h old its semi­
an n ual Fall meetin g at the same
tiine and place. Both organizations
I work wl&amp;llin the framework of the
I Ohio HiSi;o,rical Society.
Mej,gs Cou nty will ht represented
I by A. V. H1,.1:ell "A1ho is a member
of the Institute. Th e Meigs County
Piontcr and Historical Society has
been a member of the Assoc iation
since its organization .
j

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POSTMASTER GENERAL ARTHUR E. SUMMERFIELD op•·
erates a high speed facer-canceller, one of the many electrQmc
devices now being developed to help process part pf 64 bil­
lion pieces of mail that flows through more than 30,000 United
Sl,ates Post Offices annually. This specialized piece of equip•
ment faces each letter in the proper position for canceling,
locates and cancels stamps at the rate of 30,000 letters an hour.
back In 1953. and lhat's the w�y I ample. wl1ile the mail volume
we have been operating ever since. showed 11n increase of 16 biUion
..We can 't de ny that we still pieces handled annually, th e em­
make mistakes and th at the hu• ployment i nercase during this
man element still plays a vitally same p_er iod amounl)!d lo o nly 11
i mP.,ortant part In daily operations, per ce nt.
. . By way of &lt;'Xplaniition, it should
but /;be statistics in . the Del)art•
m entioned that the employmerit
be
pooitive
offer
report
ent's annual
proof tflal we are making progress figures - based on thousands of
s.. Midileport Meil ,_ Six
OU a tiaUo.n-widu basis. As ID U•

·,

Crooks lo Member
Of Marching Band
Walter G. CrooJJ,, SQII of Mr.
and YI'!'!. Walter R. Crooks, 725
Page-st, Middleport., is a member
of the bmed Ohio State ){arch ing
Sand w h ich appear• at all home
football games.
Crooks, a graduate r,f Middleport
1figh School where he was an out­
standing m.1.111ida.n, is a trumpet
player.
WOMEN TO MEET
Catholic ·womeii's Club of
the Sacred Heali Chu.rch will
meet Thursday, Oct. 8, at 8 p. m.
iD the cbllN:h auditorium.

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ftat Do We Want From Gnr Schools?

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eport Mail oIume Like
M"ddl
I
Hill Climb Was Success At
h
°
�.i·:..'":si::
':.:
,
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59
19
For i960
Jdiece,: i9'
Fairground Here Last Sunday N·at1on'"'-" Climbed During
l
,000.
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. atating Editorially

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· .:.�: · (&amp;lik&gt;r's Note: Durin g October an esti mat- keep up with i t .
Every improvem.: nt in roads o r water brings I
�.(001'00 Ohio citizens w i l l lake part i n lo-� ""'"ool district meelings of the State House · new prnblPm s J)f i .1crcased enrollment and
1
· · �nee on Education They will discuss inadequate funcf s :-ind school housing. Fami\Ve Want From Our Schools?" This lies from nearr ✓- Cincinnati move from the
al
� is one of a series dealirlg wltll some of city seek ing · ural or sen . i - rn r.il towns in
; r7'"llf fllijo.r education problems to be discussed . whk h to rear their children, and from which '
ni,-1. lllies has be� preP9-red as ,1 service to they can com_,ute for employment to out-of: ti
the S� House Con(erenc· (' by some of 1 he t he-country im. �1strial areas.
Ever•rlsiug subdivisions which literally
: : atttfs leading education writers. This artitlc
ri
erupt
chUdren contribute nothing In the
en by V.i.•ia " Franz, education w t~
�
_ll!
·
,
w
.
1l
way or property tu:es for school operation
r• �1effll.ont Cou , ,e r. )
until two years after construction. Con•
____
I
·
star,tly
expanding taxes are the premium
will
who
i The · m.Ullon more youngslC'rS
price residents must pay for edueation.
t
�nto Ohio's public. schools- in 1 970 are
Believing that the solutiou to the problems
I : nef an &gt;estilhilte. They are real; t hey have
of education today lies only in an inforr.,ed
; : �n born. To accomodate them, Ohio school
" f..l. iflsl�s will have to build at least 36,000 public, F..xecutive Head JalTies Wooldridge
l ' ,r l I
has put his faith in the peopl e of hjs dist rict,
AW dinrooms in tire next 1 0 years.
.
.
and of the state of Ohio, and has !.,egun an exJ. But hou s ing problems are not something
j
tensive program of public relations .
tb1t c.in be dealt with tomorrow. Last year
1
)
�
" I believe the more the public is informed
in Ohio 61,000 s tudents were attending school
t in non-classroom facilities or on double ses- about the schools," he said, "the better support the sl'hool.s will receiv:e. The Arneritrm
lions. "The 37,000 lucky enough to get a full
sl'hool system has done, and is doing, a good
day's education were auending class in con.
,.
job of educating our children; 'but a lot more
l
Yerted coal rooms, lockc1· rooms, auditoriums,
must be done to inform the public if we are
libraries, cafeterias and gyms.
view of a m�r­
SHOOTIN' THE 'SLANT - A worm's
to continue to improve , for people will only cycle clearing the lop of the hill at t�• Mo)oroycle Hill Climb
Hardest hit by the building shortages have
support school programs they understand ." Sunday afternoon at the l\lelgs County f'aiJll'6�.
been the so-called "bedroom communities,"
l n nearby Goshen, the poorest d,strict in
f,. �growing suburban areas where city workthe
county with the highest- operating levy,
ere live and where their children go to school.
Typical of their problems are those o! the Executive Head Robert Gower estimates that
a new building is needed every two years for
l • West Clermont Loca l School District.
an indefinite period if the Goshen Local Diss no district in the state of Ohio
• •• hasPerhap
trid is to keep up with enrollmen t.
been more touched by the problems of
He points out that' taxes from a typical
Increasing school enrollment t han has West
1 Clermont
$13,000 Goshen home cannot possibly sup•
i n Clermont County, just fifteen
'• mJles from Cincinnati.
port the education of the children from that
home; and that inrrcased tax resistance is alWith problems growing out of a recent
• consolidatlon,
ready evident iri the defeat of a bond issue
and an almost complete lack of
last spring, whif.:h necessitated abandonment
I Industry to help support schools, West Cler- of
building plans for another school to be
mont this year faces an enrollment of over
constru
cted by 1 962.
t 6200 pupils , an increase of 1 5 per cent
over
I Ile previous year.
County Superintendent Roy C. Thompson
11
.,
1
Despite
35
temporary
or
r:ented
classrooms,
aptly
sums up the situation when he says,
I
In addition to permanent buildings housing
"The phenomena l growth of population in
82 classroom11, distrJct schools this fall openClermont County due to expanding industries
ed to split sessions for all grades except those
in Cincinn ati and pleasan t living conditions
from three through seven.
i n Clermont County has created growing
Neither ne w buildings scheduled for comschool problems.
pleUon In the fall of 1981 or .future buildings
"Havin g practicaily no industry in Clerplanned fo'. the fa U of 1962. t,ill �Q!Yt• .!bJt ��Ul!lnt Cout\\l&lt;, il .is, "l!Poss ible lo raise
local
.
proble�, smce pupil re,1�.!,k ,�rs-. at
11onc
suffic
y
ient
·to
build
needed classrooms
1
such a rate that construc� - t)OS!l!bly for
the
continu
al,
•
increas
ed
enrollm 811t. � "
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Part'els, Orange.
Ell1e11 Stewart lo Homer Buckner. Loll;, Salisbury.
Ruby K. Vd\UHl. Wanda Young
Adami, Robert Ad ams, l!:rnest H.
1'.ouna:. Unda Young, Elmer o.
Young to Arthur w. an d rda H.
Young, P■rcele, Chesler.
Union Tfwit and Deposit Co.
lo Ellr.aheth s. Wlllinms, Mar• ·
iarl!!t S. Bowden, Anno c. Dar-

: · Land l'ransfers ' ,:;:t":; ::,�,

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Frank an d Mae Dorat to Mar' ton A. and Edna 8 . Hall; , Ml5 sq .
ft Lona Bollom.
;
12 e11e menllJ , Col■• &amp; Soulh
Ohio Elec. Co.
:
Len ora Koehler, Det. to Pearl
: Koehler,
of Tra n,., Or1nse.
t Weltha M . Clark to James O.
� and Ethel N. Cl11rk, {,ola, Scipio.
1 Anna Ba ird, 'COfflm. ·Ralph H.

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DAIL¥ CROS·S WOB R D .
ACaOU,
DOWN - 10. op-

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river
S. Orown.

of \he j
held
a. HIP
clll"4
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Couch
ti. Levfll
T. Ventllate
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or open.
work
edglnr
22, Deadly
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31. Gulde
frail).
bobbin
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32. llloth�
lllnber•
13. Armadillo
2'I' . Titanic·• ._ 8', Lon,Snl'
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at. Amerlcaq,
29. Or&amp;
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L O N o r J: L 'L � 'w
OU M&amp;&amp;t llmpl,J ll&amp;n.� tor·follOth•r. In thl1 HrnJ1t .A. ti' �lld
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=Ule lmrt,b l;hd fol'rl\ation ,;it thl wordll a.Ni all htatl.
,
Ult code latter. are dltfenlllt.

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"the Annultl Ptuid�t•s ft�1
• Uon. , and Du.es J,,e,IJ � 'tlle N.ew tll- F'�IIO'.n \laf�tl�tiJ)tdt't 1ed· the
nn W-omtn'a '€l_ulj&gt; was h eld . OD 11'.().UP in •
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rw.
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:oo ...,.e wJUt. .��
I 1, 1Ctd in whft� �d ' 44eonUd DJ"'· � � -� )11:eti�g
\lftb red "rOH\ btt4J, bdr a•�rvft, r�e-� � �ed.
·llr,.
:Udy and nuts we,t! HJ'v.ed. Mrs. · L. }_. )II�-��. •.. if). A.
,0. ffll'D, ¥rt. 1Ju•.
�obert McG]othl in 'prtlrided ·at the South, Mn,,
ioffee service and Mrs. James go Ju hll ng , Mrs. Herm .a n Lay�e,
Mrs. Philip Wolp er t. Mrs. Edwi n
lampton poure d tea.
Officers of the club and the hos- Stefn, Mn. J. L. Stewart, Mrs. R.
.eeses o f the tea formed the recep- F. Bryant, Mrs. Fred Bat,y, Mrs.
tion line and included M rs. Paul A. G. Mehlman, Mrs. Harry Layne,
Scally, president; Mrs. John Mor• Mrs. Lloyd l\oush and the hOJte■a.
The ne� meeting will be held al
gan, vice president; Mrs. Jen Abel,
treasurer ; Mn. Donald F. Roush, the home of Mrs. D. A. Smith on
corresponding secretary; and ho1- October 11.
lesses, Mn. "Donald Brown, Mrs.
FEq,.OWSHIP . DINNER
Rober t McGlothlin, )ilrs. Donal d
The ULCW a nd the ULCM of
Roush, Mrs. James. Hamp_ton and St. PauPs Luthera n Church held a
Mrs. John Morg_an. The lad_ies w�re Follow■hip Dinner meetin We d•
g
corsages of w�1te mums tied wi th nesday evening at the church. Fol­
red n!!l ,and r�bbon.
lowing the di11ner the groun ad•
ent of t tle even• j
ourned to the unctuary of � the
. The entertamm
me was prese-....J;iy Mrs. Paul B. cht1 rch for the program. Devotions
r,owel l who g.a�ree _ read ing�; were led by Robert Johnston.
Rev.
,,Mrs. Buzzy, the �ews Dispenser, Jack Weleh introduced the guest
Ma and th�, Alto by ,,Ed gar A. speaker, or. Herbert Stelling o(
Guest and A .Sad Tale by Jeff South Charlesto n. Dr , Stelling had
Hunter - _
been a Lutheran missionary doctor
Attend mg were Mrs. Pow ell, In In dia for five years. lie showed
Mra. George Thayer, Mrs. Paul films taken by him and hla family
Scally, Mrs. Glen Hart, Mn. Frank while in India.
Thompson, M rs. Charles Dodd ,
Attend ing were Mr. and Mrs.
Mn. Th omas Hoffman, Mrs. Phil
Batey, Mrs. Jack 'Flesher, Mra. 'Robert Johnston, N_ai,; and Vtcki,
Jess Abel, Mrs. Alton Bonney, Mn. Mr:. and Mrs. Donald Bumgardner,
ft
William Chialer, Mrs. Floy d C•r­ Cheryl an d Vicki, Mra. obert D.
Rou1h,
Mrs,
Roush
Nelson
and
mack, Mrs, Karl Wiles, Mrs. Ed ­
d y,
Ran
Mrs.
Thomas
d,
Grinstea
win Stein, Mrs. Louis KarJChnik,
Mrs. R. G. Greene, ilfrs. Kermit Mrs. Everett Roush and Kathy,
?dr. and Mrs. John Fry, Jim and
Ford a nd the hostesses.
Judy, Clarence Blessi nJ, Mr. and
W$WS MEETS
Hill,
'The WSWS ot the Bachtel EUB 'Mrs. Herman Layne, Nancy
Miss
eU
Jane
Lelah
and
PoW
Mr.
,
Church met recently at the church
Carroll
dams, Jr. 1.nd Bruce,
l(rs.
A
with Mrs. Laura Elliott serving as
lea d er using the topic "Ou r Unity Mr. and Mrs. William McFarland
M
in the Local Church." , This was and Raymon d, Mr. and rs. Bill
, y,,,f'cG�t,w, M: r.
M;rs.
Pow
ell,
J
followed with a discussion. Mn.
Elliott cond11cled . an. ifflPreulvt and Mrs. Lloyd Rouah, Irr. and
l'l M
candlelight aenice, "The Chu rch Mrs. Philip W9lpert, Mr. a do n.
Mt■
Pa11I
Roush,
David
.
R ush,
and the Lighted Lamp," Scriptute
Velm
Mrs.
a J\odth and Jane, Mr.
lesiOns were give� by Mrs. �maid
Ohlinger, Mrs. Ollii Good Wln and an d Mrs. Harold Johnson, Mrs.
William Powell, 'ltrs. Roland !Carr
'and Debbie, Mr■. Otto Grimm, Jin.
Edna Burris, Mr. an d
Layne, Mn. Orph a 10hll n�er, · ·v.
and ftln. Jl(ck Welch i nd p;r, 1
Mn. Herbert Stelling an_ d children.
BIRTH ANNOUNC•o
Mr, and Mrs. t.an')' Km• are · an•
Ii It enough ror state-leve1 pub• nouncing the birt'h of a ,on on
lie agencies to make availab1e to Sept. 28 at Holzer Hospital. The
pre11 an d ra dio the mi nutes of baby welshed B _po unds 7owicea
their meeting, or the texts of their at hirth and ,baa bee.n named Je trulea an d regulatiOl'ls? Or to per- fery Joe.
mil
te))orters to attend the
.a are Mr.
Mate 11n11I gr
. a nd ■rent
mee ti n ga.,
:.. •nd p.jtra,nd· Mrs. Jolm n)' iousn
Or ahould these aaenciel!t· hove a n.al Jri..ndparenta are Mr. and Mr•.
po11tlve respo nsibility to inform . Ralph Kini.
j\l
•OTA.RY
..
"
the publl•?
The Rotlr)' ' Club he1d ,Lidiea
Tbla was a problem st udied Jaat
·
,� - ennin, at their
we ek by the 11ovemor'a commit· Nia:ht on Thu�)'
tee on public Information, of �gul •r dinner m.eettn1·1t'tbe If■rt•
which
I a m a member. It mea n, ford Methtid.Jtt CliUl'th. Ttie ll'lltlt
·
· 'Rua..era were · M r. and Mn.
the difference between the p111ive 1pe1'•hOWed
" RH Sa'yre of Ripley.
a nd the active . For imaJJ. to.un
newapapen, paHIYe permisrion to 1lld11 ta�n · Of a �t trip
a tten d meeting, and lnapect rec- through �e Ntw Enclint' Stattl
oi'dt 11 11 pr■etical obsta cie to me- and the •Eaatem prbvfncei of Can·
d om of Information; rura l folk go ■da.
nnlnfdrmed beca\lff th•ir new.-n..!'hose ■ i1end1111 "ftre Mr. aild
ar- . ��
per doean't have. a latlt enoueh Mr■ . !&gt;ona �d '9.)..,,.
1'$.,eao"!J• �
.
Mrs. R
itaff to send a reporter.
· erffl1n .,.,.,.e, .111r. ■rm 111Q,

11::�t:•�1::.

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'l:
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-�iab,. 1!Q.lpr wt
'ee!d
'Wii;,;·
i_d,tsli._...,..,
fh:
the
Ill
� • � � 'neit

dina Week With

��� RJ!�:t: n!'::�.

,!!•rr,.:r.

f.

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ffl..ftQJ.;,
r,T..w mil»N
111.'ii:iiii

wrn.

DAILY CBl'PTOQUOTE - ..... ,._, � ..... ...

1 .

w.

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1t.To11y
llt, ROIJWlnlptro
•• IIQIOWI

i, .

l ;

HE GLlDF.S THROUGH THE AIR - Wllh both wheel, sllll
Pomeroy Chapter 188 OES will
off
the round as this rider goes over the top of the hlU and
meet in rcgul11r sellslon Tues day
aL '1:fS p. rn . , al the Masonic levels o [.f before hitting the ground again.
·
(Plehlr.s bw- Gronr Studio)
Temple. P11sl Matrons and patrons
will be honored. All members nrc
--- •------- • continued from rage" one
urJ:cd to attend.
Jeff Stevens, Duribar,
V•-: 11a,-4
.:.::�
.::.;:::;::..
_
Second place, James Drake, M al•
(kt• •
.
Next Tuesd ay evtning t h e I a, O .; Th ird PI ace, B. R, Hu·...
•
J
.
Church Scttlool Officer.11 an d Teach­ ton, Cha rleston, w. Va.
Medium Cl ass: First, Cltftor•
ers nr the Mid dleport Flr11t Baptiat
Church will moot at the home of S nyder, Pickerington, o.; Second,
Tom Cl ork , Lanc11ter an"
•' Third ,
Mr. and Mn. ruul Smart.
O.k.y R.d m. n Jr.
·. 11YY-"'. ·..11... 1
v · u.!lod Pn11.· I
October 5
Lightweight uasa: First, 'John
.
Today Is Tue■day;'• " October 4th,
A Drive-In Conference will he Toth, Glouster, O.; Second, "'3ud"
the 278th d� of
y ear wi t h 88
held Wed nesd ay at 4 p. m. at the
WIison, Columbus, 0., and Third, mQte to follow In itOO.
Washington School, Gallipolis, for Ben Colmer Jr., Charleston. ·
. . e moon � full.
Th
leachera in thl1 area. There wlll
The mo,nln•
Walchine the hill cllinb , waa
.,. ,•·r
.. 1, Ma,,·
be a d inner and dlacu■■lon fol. a thrill for the 300 plu■ ■5'-etll•
The, eve nInc ■t■?a are Me rcury,
lowing,
tora H it was the first eveqit of Venu�: Ju�lter an d Saturn.
The Pomeroy &amp;iiuespeare elub Its kind to be held in thi■ coanty.
q�'thl1
d•y Jn histor:v:
•
wi·11 meet we dne:r-'
•-r
d , lb•
uay at 2 P· m.
1K" ore the ri' der■ ,ta rte
In1122, Rq.thertol'Cr Hayes, 19th
al th� home· of Miu Ethel G arland , ma in comm ent he a· rfl wa■ ••you
l 0f
u It d St•tea,
Mln,ravitle. Roll c■II will be "wo• m•an th" 1n Delaware,
'rn
--1 ,,. go,ng 10 try· 10 w
aJ;
q 'ohlo.
men o( the Bib
s
ad
�::
wt:r
.1 � h 1!", i!,':'�r;::��c!r��:.r •
The Ladles Aid of the St. Paul's ba
. at • -��f•lr In !ilprlnJfleld, µ1 .
n
In . ]., · ifter much Uti1atlo1',
p:�:�i;r J�er�r:, .J.
Lutheran ohureh will meet Wednea.
r
uad tbe
'fte
1,JAi&amp;tcl. �te• Circuit Court of
day\ at 7110 . p. 11'1. In the cb�ch
was tben In �He of Injury I but·
the cl a im
of
�Ui dplleld
socJal 'l'Ooia:
waa not needed .
The p0111eroy •Band •Boosters M- ______ ----�- 'I'homla ldllOn th at he W11 tho
aole invent.or or the incandftlcent
aocl a tion wl\l meet In re1u11r le•
MOLZIII HOSPITAL
' ,
sloJl,• 1-U ti tel0 l&gt;, m. 11 Iha I
O I I M
Ad IHI
l1 lamp.
In ltsS, Adolf H itler 1uapend ed
Se nior Hl,:h School audltorlu1n. Loc:ke�t M��lep!rt• :Tho��• i
Pa rent, of all b and member■ ffl Quille n: Che■ hlre; Joh n eati-on", freedom of, the pre" in Germany,
In lNt the u. s,. war Producurac4d to a ttend.
' '\laetn•.
)
ion; ' lion BOllrd ..,... d ls10Ived.
Burna,
Ma
Dou(IIH
Oct.
z:
Octolltr S
A thousht for toda y: Americ an
; Lint •
The Guild of Gr■� Eplseop,I Robert Jettera, Dexter
poli tician Ad lill Stevenson a1ld:
Tucker,
Cheahlr
e.
Church win meet at the PatJah
to
Disth a raea Oct. l: Mn. FaJe "A wl1e man doe• not try
1-louse Wed ne,d■y at 8 P · m. wttb
'U
hUrey
hi■toey."
n
eu,
M
A
. I exander F
r■
Mn. W. 'R. Roberta and Mn. J Fugate, N
________
John Adkin■, Mrs. Benji min Knox
E. D. Hartinger 11 hoatea11e_1.
•
ul'
The cholr of the St. pf • Mr• Edwin Seller■, Mr■. lf'.•nn'Olh
pen
e
Will
ran
i
a ms and ·"son; Mrs.
J' ep
Lutheran Church will meet W:ed· ,
Mont,otnery and da uahter; Mn. Parente In Porneroy
ncad ay'at 7:80 p. m. at the ohurtb. ,
8ette Thomaa, emplQYtd at tllw
Don Bra inard and ■o n; M n.
Tile Co., Zt i'iffvllle Jt
Mmle
De
;
so
n
n
d
Mn.
n
a
lam McNlckle
Oct■ller I
·
vialtin1' at her
di"'"
n.etum Jona• Blanken•hi P and ■on � M n. Her• , .....
All Jll,embera of •
;;; ·;. a week
"'" Ave She
e
h
Spri
WII
.
tban llelp Oh1¥,ttir, OAR, affl man Clark, Ptlra. Charle■ Betz,
er 1u;'i of Mrl. Cllfford
the
dinn
Mra.
M
a
ra
a
ret
Arth11r,
Jerry
W11r.
aribd -to N at the il�ddleport
-andmothet, Oct.
Q•••ter)' at • .p. m. Situ* ner, ·Oary Glbbe, Mia■ lrene Loell· Jenkinson, her •·
n
e r
J
•
kt
n:: u�:
�r:. ::::: !d��� a
tl\e,A�•v:: ::J
PHlor, Willia m Barnett, Mi n Pat home, Eaat Ml.In Sl,. I n honor of
Ml. ·1:1al■le �u'nden.
·
�-----�---�I Turner, Mn. Karen Addll, it• her h u�b■nd, CIHfani'• �"
rett, .Phoebe s. LeverinJ, Salty phen Jenkl na, fd lchele Hac ett
OUier 111.em •.,. Jin. ienmn'
o ,.,.
,..__.
S. Tuft',, Ott add Gas, Sutton.
I aont1 ■olt&lt;i1'4tw 11\d daulhtet, llr.
lA:I • • : ,an. H · R · Bu 11.er•
Fred a Faehnlt" , Admnx . Ella Kittle, Jame■ Pal'k, Joe Call,
� 1 and. llrl. 1tabel1t-" RilMtU, Irontdin.
Whit e , Dec., to Lee Okey an d thur AJUion, Thom■s E. Ma
�---�.
, .
lulle Wood, Lota, Syraeu1e.
)'ION'T "!AIIT i
�ti
,
Clark and d auaht'ei+
Jin.
-� R·
Mtna M . Dud1eon lo Leo · W, v., �,
�•• ""'
R ou■h and daughie!',
II
and
u•' �
_ on, P■ reela, ,... - NJ_ler
G. Dudie
d
Colum L
°:,
:
�
'1�•Li
�
�
en
.MJ�n�::ill.�
:-e.°&amp;���t
�
ec
cd
u
mueh i
the y
ab,e'r.
, � ��
,_
'. d•y
J
' Oct. 1 1 Mr. 1nd Mn. Ned Prul�
d
ud •�11" w ••w
�';.., '�;d b�l�e� w�
�"
Affld. ror Tra na., Columbi a.
e.
Galltpollo, oon ; )(,. ••4 llJi. at, ' lom
� •l\1,1_ ���•
·
Robert and Danford Slout to Dwliht •Bevln. Galll poli1, dJutiF
all
�
Ohio Power Co., 138.81 coal, t
a
Columbia .
&lt;II
·
il,,ir
t'
.....,_
ooi
Ion
I,
t
Wool,
Hollli
Mrt.
I;
lk�
erDelth)
J■mn S. nnd Fs nll l• 1. De y■NI; � l: K n. Ada Duel&lt;,
air!- lt.Wtlet
Weet to Ohio Pow11r Co., Sill.SO worth,
1 l
'IMfflaf; yn)on,
·
coal, 1111ea1.
1 1 1 ,•� · '
\

,

liAhed cities as well II th� estabContinued fro� Page One
man-yean - are first worke d out I llahment of ne- w ones. City deunder two separate hea dings, cily I livery service has been started in
carriers and 'all other,' and then 80 i:omm unilies in add ition to lhe
comb ll_led for _the over-a�! percent- extension _o f literally hun dr� s of
, a_ge figures Just mentioned for rout;s wh1�h wer� alread)' 1n _operahon. Thia req uired the eq u_1v1 •
(1stal 1960.
.
"It sh o u ld 11l110 be menhoned lent o( Sl,QOO more leUer oarnen
that there has been a stea dy .11. nd to serve approx. ima tely 9,000,000
substantial increase in 'city car- more American families 1.nd uprlers' each year as compared with wards of '100, 000 more business
�W. rtu,:i.&amp;ine fro,:n 4:fli)'ff' icellt ln , CO�j:«rnl- . . • .
. w,y
i� lo ti.� per cent ui �e • Ja te.tl .
'Thete·f.f OiihaOI '(19 �
d
s
eiti1Di1.t,,. This l�•se lhJ � 'of tlU.ati11 �-- Bep�t 's
e■sential to 11:�p A,� ..th the evM•i��g , efficieq_cr � by
e vu-!expUtcf41g O'Owtb of e.1tab. 1 ah owinc _plll
U1e Ji.t1r

Et
R.,

""'"'

1 1 .=-:.:

,, '.I

•

m..t
AtUO
IO, O&gt;mpa,.:.

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s;-· ,,..,..'"'...,...,.,...,,
I : :; �i,;

Me1·gs &amp; Mason•
Conung Events
Oct. 4

\71:'
,l&lt;'fi,J �".iR�AR
I £1"
I rJ

IO. Pur-

n ual volum e h■n d led per man.y@ar
or employment - ,uludlno �"'
curlers _ Jiu been lncre111n1

t

!:i,.

, ·- _
•�•- = �.·il/il••.-�
-

"1\Cl
. ,
•i

w

N.

Mra. llli'

A CAP
. ITO'L IDEA

- ca.:ua

!,.he cor•
i£¥U.
re,� fti,UNlS WH Ui1
"(f ·i,; ·01 Co urse , true that •�I
the 1�ditlon1l service has made 1 t
n� ,&amp;o t,ake on many new em­
plo)'eel Ill� �al our total increu­
ed from ®�,QC) tn 1 �53 to 562,868
on. June 30, 1 960, but as pointed
out in the ori g inal 1960 report fig.
m-ea 1:he workload increase d\lring
the �ame pt:riQd Wu t11!!arly 25 per
cen t.
"In 1 'recent speec h on this sub.
J ect by the Poatmaster General he
brouabt out th,t · by 1W70 our PoPt1l a tion II expecte d to be 208,000,000
and that our annual mail volume
b s then will be mon lhan 00 billion pieces. The u. s. Bu.e,u of
S t.andard s, :'ln entirely separate or•
.
1mlutlon, eshma,tes that our m a il
volume wiU be doubled within
the nex.t 25 years, and it all fit.!
into the same picture.

�:�? ��j:t_� �UooE
t}1! ¥4

fj
*1

rt,- Mr.

»

FITID WITH SHOWER
The 'Ladi'ea Bible Class and Mrs.
E ciward Kells' class of tlie Hart•
ford Methodi■t ' ChurcH entertained
Mr.1.
with a layette shower for
George fl.me. in the churfh 1ocial
rooms Tuesday evening, The gre en
a nd yelloiv color theme wa s_u1,ed
in the ·decorations an d IOvely
flower arran11:ement,; were use,d.
The gift t1b1·e was covered with
an ecru lace clotll over treen Unen.
A small baby Ded decorated in
green and , yellow c.entered the
ta ble. Streamers• o! the same color
were also used . Mrs. J. H. Smith
_Jr., Misa /a pe t Zirkle and Miss
Ann Gibba: did the decoratin,:.
l,,Q.IJ
1
·th� �vepin·g was spent infornKil­
1Y •nd fOllowi nJ the opening of
the �any fta refreshments were
ed to ht honoree, Mrs. Jame■,
. Merri Johnson ot Gallipolis,
. Cha r1 e1 Smith of Maso n, Mn.
Fftd Batey, Mre. Phillip Baley,
�- · T�omas Horrman, Mrs. Wll•
!,ti!p · · cibba, Ilia Maribn Gibbs
pd �, H11ten· Roush, all of New
ilaveni .,_, Hugo Juhling, filrs.
WfIU•m 11'.cKntght, Miss Elizabeth
(ir,u,ea.r, Mra. William Kelly, Mr■:.
Geor-1,e Lerner, Mra. Mw.rl Gibb,,
�. �. O. Wei n, Mrs. Emil Knight,
,..,__
u..-.
"" Mrs. W· T·
..., Gib'·
.LIUI• ._.
'
St.one, Mn. .George Turnbull, Mrs.
Earl Fi.Ida, 111"1. William Fieldl,
r'i.nnicum, Mrs. Lero)'
Mrt.. f'rapk
,
J,Dltj, M�. :JlaY Fields an d De�
• .J Ke11, 11rs. R utter
, r,. 9
-w.4U"u
Kftllbt, Mr:I. J.. W. Ktll, Mrs. Stan�- Pftjfell, � ra. Ar(bur Wayla n.d
"n Rob;it
Ill111,, J• H, s nu' th Jr• · 1n
Either McKnight,
1r1e,
••u
,urod c ' pi;nan, Janet Zerk.le,
• '-·
lioUI An1_1 Gilbbtl, Jean 1'!rnbull,
Jlete.IJ. , •ltlf{le, Shirley Smith and
..,_
....l.,.n
.....,.v
, Rizer•
DAM PIOPOSlb
t
Tbe Town Council of Hartford
bas bMII .workinl a long Ume to

•t

t

';

/

'

, , .. 11

Triplett and family
){r_ and ltn. Wilham Bland and
Mn. Nina Bland ol Ak.ron came
Sa1urd1.y momin1 to .,i,.i! with Mr.
and Mn Guy �ynolds· and Mn.
Mineru Childen.
Mr. and Mn. Willlaw Kitchen
and daughter, Debbie. of Chilli­
cothe 1pe,nt the week end with her
Judy Clark who 11 alt.ending a mother, Mrt.
Robert Reibel, and
POX lthool m Toledo v11ited re­ other relativea.
cently with her mother and ramily,
Mn George Vaughan. Judy i• reMr and Mrs. Bemard Schramm
1id1n g wilh her uncle and 11ml, 1.nd hi.J 1111.e,-. Mn. Lula Shlpp1 ol
Mr and Mr1. Thomaa J. Hendrickl Zane■Yille vi1lted over the week
at 10f7 Creacues Avenue in Ore­ en d with Mr. and Mu. John Lyon,
aon, Ohio.
an d tam!l.1.

Week en d gue!ls with )Ir. and
Mrs. Ang ui. Howard of South
Third .\venue were his parentl,
Mr. and Mrs. Howar d of Kentucky.
Mr. and Mr1. William Rustell
an d daughter, Roberta. or Corning
and Mr. and Mn. Robert Jay of
Columbu1 spent the wc:,ek end with
Mr. and Mn. William Grueser, Don
and Debbie.
Rosetta Rich a rds spent the weell:
en d in Gallipolis with Mr. and
Mrs. Jack Carr •n d family.
Mr. and �rs. Al Hen dricks and
family of St. Albans spent the
week end with Mr. and Mra. L. E.

Of- Church Attend
District Meeting

I -�m'

::.

-:o::

BA.KER and SEyfRIED
your LENNOX dealer

20- Members Present At Oct,ober Meeting

""

COAL, OIL, GAS
FURN ACES

The paper, "Use Your Fall Catalogues"
Crary Davis who also passed out new catalogues for the mem•
hers to inspect.

'

PERFECT for PARTIES

• New Line Of Party Game Books

• Nut Cups
• Bridge Tullies
• Paper Napkins and Table Cloths To Match

=i!�'i:!i!t

• Decorated Paper Plates
• Doillies and Many Other Party Favors

�no��;

.�

Dutton's Drug $tore

FREE PARKING
, COATS BLDG.
MIDDLEPORT

---­
-

NOWI 500 gal. LP GAS SYSTEMS

., tho

,.

tile -

, . . ' •�
• , • · .,.,
"'-"II
-•-·
n• � .,...
fl__.., . ;�-¥_,...
-•

'f••

- - M� M

·

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• :i-,, .,./ : �·., ;

•·

!

lllaldng

Durini the business meeting
cond ucted by Mrs. Garen Stansbury a notice of t'he Fall Regional meeting to be held at Lake
Hope on October 12 was read .
1 Mrs. Edward Rsy of Lancaster,
ed itor of the Garden �ath, will
be speaker at the meeti ng.
I A nolice fro m Mra. Roy Holter
county contact chairman, a nnoun•
dng the Meigs County meeting to
be held at the Federated Church,
October 31, with reglatratlon beginning at 12:30 was read . Den;ionstratlons on "Christmas Ideas
Up to Dale'' will be given by
Mr,. Ja.me1 Jackso n.
A■ Mrs. Stansbury Is chairman

'PHONE Wl-t-3272

\

IM THIS
'

(

PAPER!

of the Johnny Applesee d High­
way fun d in thii district, she ask­
ed lhat all clubs in the area lo
notify her of their contributions
to the fund 10 that she may in­
clude them i n her report.
Pla ns were also discussed for
1 the arrangement of dried an-ange­
ments and fall flowers which will
be placed in the windows of the
Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio Electric Co. , for the week of Oct. 30.
During the social hour following the meeting, a silent auction ·
was bfld.
Arrangements of dahlias were
used throughout the French honre
for the evening and a sala"d. course
was served from the dini ng room
by Mrs. French who waa assisted
by Mrs. John KinCald ' a nd Mrs.
Walter Hayea t'o the members
and Mlaa Barbara Faye who was
a gu est of the meeting,

Nothing triggers so much shop­
ping action so fast as a good
value advertised in this paper.
Here is where the smartest

WARM MORN I NG
H E AT E R S

shoppers look to gel the most

where the smartest stores advertise to get the
best results fcir the least money. h pays to

'

How Heat Your Home or

watch 1he ads; it pays to advertise here!

Brooder Houses and Save l

'

ll'EWI

;

Metc.-ed bottled 111 ■ervice

1,

tO that you ca n heat your hoine

_,

___ . or brooder bou1ea at a

c:ost that 'trill·Fompefe

"t

I

� &lt;&gt;I fuell

with any

enjoy_ UUJ �
.
dern ,method of heafJJME -- M
1
1
UI 1lOWJ ,
Be the

fi1'11t to

FOR EVERY HEED

Rutland Fu rniture
)

Arnold Grate, Owner

PHONE SH-!-4811

RUTLAND.

O.

Room

I

,,

For New Ml!ffiWldlle

VI LLAG E C UT RATE

buying informalion in the shortest time. Here 1s

•

�,..

TOY CLOS E-OUT

Of Middleport Garden Club Monday Nite

MEET THIS EVENING
The l.ewi� Manley Auxiliary
Mrs. John Kincaid read the
Phone WY•2·3'11M.
No. 26 will meet t&amp;is cvcnini;: ot ,
"A ·Fresh Look in Dried
paper,
Baptist
Ml.
the
Moriah
at
.
7:30
POMEROY, 01110
arrangeShe told of
Flowers".
===
.
l•
h
o
hu
l
rt
C r• n M ld d p
demon­
snd
e
mad
hu
she
ments
�
;
;
�
;
�
;
�
�
�
:
;
�
��
-, I
"';;�
_,
strated with d ried arranging.

'"!!''·· •-,

=-=

IS HALF PRICE

rt

·�ue•

.�llf:,. =-· I= -��. ..�·-:t..�·
g-::.•='" �"""bod-

�1¥!�

Wed nesd ay, Oct. 5th

S H E SAW

r�

I

lllo .,..

tey.

Amona: tbOM rn A.then. ldt GetaJ411De 11,,JrneU, and their l)'IOd.
ni1ht to .attend the Guy Lombudo mn, ClyM, Jr:, and 111.u Grace
1how were Hr. and MN. lllllt,rd Der, of New c..tle, Pai., •�re
Pierce. llr. and Mn. Gerald All• week end futlU of Mn. Fieldln1'1
thony, 111'1. c. H. Wile. Jr. and brother and listn'·ln·llW', Mr. Ind
Mr. and Mn. Joe Davil of Ga lli- Mn. C. R. YOUD.I.
polia.
'J'hoR of tbe Mt. Moriah Blptiat
)In_ �Ila Cro11 e ntered PliPU· Cbw-ch who 1ttudM the BTU 1ft.
ant Valley H01pital today ror ,kin atltute which waa held at th, Na­
crafl on her ,,.�. She especta LO om J Baptlat Cb,Uttb were Venit.11
be hOtpital iud for two or lhrce Hod1ea, the dtlelf!""' and Mra.
day1 and will return at a liter Arnold Ricbarda, lilft'. Neille Win­
time fr,r major sur1ery..
st.on, Krt. Chu-lea .Jonea and Mn.
Erwin Baumpniner and daua:bter,
Mr. and Mn. Lawrence Fielding AlmL
and 110n, Clyde, and daUihl.er, Yn.

TO GET TH E BUYS

■, .

-1::

Mn. Lyde Weaver is a patien t at
Pie.aun t Valley Hospital
){i.u S)'!via Tovey or Saraaota,
Flori da, who has been viaitini with
her brolher-in•law and siner. 1lr.
and Mn. Willi. Anthony, lefl over
the week. end to visit in Detroit
with relativ es before retumlne: to
her home in Florida.
Mrs. Nelle Ford, who underwent
1urgery al Meia1 General Ho■pital
on Saturday Is reoovering nicely.
Mra. EJ-nettine Perry ta me Mon­
day to ■pend the week with Miaa
Vanatta Carroll and Mias Flo Hur ·

'

••

Pastor And Supt.

Given Sunday
f Henry Arnold

at•

"

Middleport

I

Saturday .
Mr. and Mu. c. H LUCH and
d1u&amp;hler, Mujorie. of Caledoni.a
,pent the wuk end with Mn. Lu
l"H' parenb, Mr and Mn Homer
Jonj'1 _ Mr. Jonea, who w11 retenl1)' h oapilaUr.ed II recoverinc nicely
at h11 home.

Local Members To
Celebrote Annual
National BPW Week

Birthday Party

e·

,._.....________.....______�---· -�---:

�,•

B. H. St:Jnl,i,rn
Missionary S i-ety
Met MondaY N•9·ht

■

•-

Around And
About

c.

,,. Vlrtlni. Carleton

ffi..

,

annual Homeomin; or the
,:'h e October meeting of the Me�gs County Ministe rial As- Tht'
e
sociation was held Monday mornmg at the Pomeroy First I Haz l Commu mty Church wu hel d
ay PRIDDII HOUDAlk,l!L"'f
Sunday, Sept. 25, with • large al •
Baptist church.
.
Mr and ':dn. John Walter■ of
lendance . A b.uket dinner Wall
Devotions b the Rev. Ralph
Zundel
host
pastor
oraned
,
.
'
"'
.
,erved on the l11wn al nooll and Columbus spent the weelll: end wi th
, ,
.
i
the ��e ti ng. , o !Iowing g1oup sm�m� o! �ake Tim � o ':3e hymn singing and muaiC' enjoyed Mr. W1Her'1 1i1ter 1nd brother­
Holy, Rev , iundcJ gave a medttat1on usmg as his topic, in the afternoon. The speaker w88 in-!Jtw, )fr_ and Mn. Jacob Belz..
"Grace of the Hol)" Sp1rit,'' and closed with prayer.
the Rev. N. L. Russell of Athena. Alsv visillna Sunday evenin 1 a t
Mr1. CliHord Jacobs, matron or -----'--'-----Attending were Rev. and Mrs. the Betz home were Mr. and Mra.
the county home , was present and Ca rd, \'ice prc.sid e n l ;
Ros.s
Van Meter, Jean and Linda, Guy Walters.
Rev. How
spoke in regard l o the religio w ca d H up pc l l , sel-relary a nJ trea li-• E ,;tell .11 Cozart, Marie Lawrence ,
llr. and M.n. Pete Quick left on
services at _ the homr. Mrs. Jacobs ure r ; Ht V . � red
l. G a n.I ner, as�ist- Mr. and M tti . J. S. Powell, Kathy Monday morning for their home In
W H much m fa vor of the services ant secretary _ tre llSV fc r ;
Rev . E u- Bissell, Mr. and Mrs. Allen Brew,
and expressed 9ppreciauon of the v e n e Brown, chairm :r n of the n- er .and liOII David, Wesley Cozart, TL!lsa, Okb., after spending in
elderly peop le o( the borne for the dio program, and Rev. G ard ner, I va Carpenter , Mr. and M n . Dell p.ast week with Mr. and Mn. Ra•
service. iYlrs. Ro lph C. Zun d el an- chairma n of the chaplain cy ' at the Tal bott, Mrs. Clint Smith, Mr. and mon Grim and othe r relative■•
nounced a Weekday Religious Ed u• Mei g;; G e ner al Hospital and the Mrs. 'Charles Hilton, Mrs. Earl
Tommy Lyons hu been con fined
cation meeting to be held at the County Home .
Jewett, Ben Allen, Mr. an d Mra. lo his home sJnce la1t Thunda y
parish house of Grace Epiacopal
A f ter th e mee ting �he group en• Eugene Ca rpenter, Mr, and Mrs. by illneS3.
Church on October 24 l t '7 : 30 p. m. j oyed lunch eon at the Circle Res Poul Hauber , Mr. and Mrs. Dana
and sai d the topic woul d be "The hi urant.
Rev. Raymon Konkright went lo
Carpenter, Mrs. Garnet Smith, Mrs.
Main Purpose of Week d ay ReHgi today to visit wllh his
d
camp,
Nellie
A
Jam&lt;lstown
Mrs.
Gluesen
Van
a
Attend in g were Rev. Poul Hoo ks,
ous Education Programs.' •
family, Mr. and Mn.
and
Meter
an
d
Rev.
L.
R.
Glueaencamp,
daughter
Rev. Ray Wining, Rev. Cly de Bartn
and to return Mrs.
all
of
Lockwood
John
d.
Portla
l!V
,
er,
.
Jett,
R
Rev.
.
Brown
Gardn
A letter was read by I he Rev,
Konkrigh
t to Middleport.
Eugene Brown, president, from Rev. Glazier, Rev. Carl Herring,
Ora Scarbraugh, Mrs. Robert
Mr. an d Mr1. Leo Swick or Col•
Geor ge V.11ughan url!(ing ministers Rev. Edmun d Life, Rev. Nyle Bor­ We dd le and Debbie Jean, Mr, and u,-,,UuJ: spent the wet'k end with
and people of the churches to al· d en, Rev. Gardner, Rev. Zundel, Mrs. Wilbur Bissell an d llalph, Mr�. Mra: Swick's father, C. H. \Ylse, -$[,
tend "Candidates Night" al the Rev. Morgan, Rev. Tibbs, and Mrs. Kathleen Bis1ell
an d chil d ren, and Ruth Wiae. They came etpet,­
Midd leport High School a udilorium Jacobs and Mrs. Zundel.
Mrs. Agne11 Polk, Mrs. Mauk- Bo­ ially .for Mr. Wise'■ birthday._
The next meeting on November 7 gard , Mrs. Greta Suttle and �ohn
October 20, iil 7:30 p. m. when can .
•'
will
be a tri •eounty meeting of the L., Mr. an d Mrs. John Bogard and
d ldates of both parties will be pre­
Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Emmllh left
Athens, Gallia and Meigs �ssocia• John, Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Ha)'man, Saturday to vi1it with relativff iD
sent.
tions at the TUppers Plalns EUB Mr. and irt.rs. Howard Allen and Cuya hoga fall.s.
Rev. Richard Morgan, pastor of Church.
Dwain, Mr an d Mrs. George Fred•
the Racine Methodist Charge, an d
Mrs. Robert Coats aud 1,b ugb.�r,
erick, Mrs. Mae Van Meter and
Rev. lra Tibbs, pastor of the Mt.
were in Parkel'lllburc on
Christine
daughters, Mr. and 'Mrs. James AnMoriah Church of God on Racine
derson,, Brend.11, Connie and Bon­
Route 2 wcrl' welcomed as mem•
nie, Mrs. James Lawr,mce, Mr. and
oc
I
bers.
Mrs. George Rupp, Joyce R•ndolph,
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Bissell, Mr. and
Election of cfficers was held
'
1
:•rs.
Willacd Pigott and Ch,rt,ne,
with Rev. Francis H. Glazier se­
s ident, Mrs. Ethel Larkins, Mn. Gladys
Willis
Mrs.
Anthony,
pre
. Jecte d as presi dent; Rev. Robert R.
was in eharge or Lhe business Ashworth, Naomi Aulherson, Mrs.
meetin g of the B. H . Sanborn Mis- Maxin e Durst, Robert Ours, Mn. TO' celebrate National BPW week
sionary Society when the group Nona Long, Mrs. Elva Hayman and the Middleport C1.ub will hold its
l&gt;ausl,1er Born To
met Monday night at the First Janice, Mr. and Mrs. Edgell, Mn. annual luncheon this Thursday
Mr. and Mr•, Baily
Baptist Church in Midd ltport.
Mil dred Bissell and children, Mr. at the Martin Restaurant in Mid•
Mr. and Mrs Raymond Baity of
Donations were made to the Sal- and Mrs. Charles Price, M r. and deport with
Mn. Marguerite
Li.ncoln Heighl.s are announcing vation Army, the American Bible Mrs. Clarence Baker, Mrs. Lotlle
Durst, Mrs. O. B. Stout a n d Mn.
the birth of an 8 pound 12 ounce Society and UNECEF.
Sheffield, Rev. an d Mrs. Edward Charlotte Perrin as hostesses,
daughter, Jill Renee , on Wednes­
,
Griffith, Mrs. Mae Pearson, Mr.
_
.
Mrs. �d1son Baker , chairman _of and Mrs. Richard Ables, Mrs. An­
day, Sept 28, al the Green Mem­
The luncheon will be held from
lhe �bite Cross_ work ,of the soc1e- I na Swan, Mr. and Mr11. Davi d 1 1 : 30 a. m. on with
orial Hospital in Xenia.
membera
ty, discussed this year s quot� �n d Yates, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Bissell coming and going ss they can.
Grand parents arc Mr. and Mr�. �he group made plans for f1lhng
Mrs. Nan Moore is chairman of
Russell Baily of Port William an d it. Mrs. Ba�er also announce d that and Karen, Davi d an d Bob, Mrs,
the committee arranging for the
.Mrs. James Fletcher of Zenia. The us� dothmg woul d be coll�c�ed O�car Babcock and Mrs. Charles
special activities for the week.
Massar,
all
of
Long
Bottom.
Baitys alim have a daughter, Karen this year for Cambell Christian
The group also have a d isplay in
Rae, age four.
center an d Bayconc.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Brewer and the wind ow of the Ohio Fuel Gas
The Baptist State Convention to Sylvia, Rev. and Mrs. Douglas Clr­ office.
be hel d in Marietta October i3-15 cle, Sue an d Larry, Mrs. Law rence
was aonounce d by the presi dent. Scarbraugh, Mrs. Laura McKenzie,
Following the report of the re• Mr. and Mrs. Harlow Ervin, Mr.
1
cen t meeting of lhe County Ceun• and Mrs, Dwight Hoback, Mr. and·
cil of Church Women the group de- Mrs. Charles Bush and chi1 dren,
cid ed lo assist in the pro j ects Virginia Arnott, Mrs. Horry Wll•
or
adopte d inclu d ing furnishing med- ford, Miss Florence Circle an d Mrs.
Mrs. Mary Lawrence and Mrs. i_ca l kits and night gowns which Mattie Circlt-, all o( Racine.
Jack Beehtle, superintend ent of
Mildred Arnold entertained with a will be sent for missionary work.
Methodist Ch'Jrch of Mid ·
Heath
and
Rev. and Mrs. N. L. Russell
birthday p.irty al the Lawrence
World Community Day. Novem­
a nd 'Rev. Raymon Konk­
leport
d
Harry
Mrs.
and
Mr.
d
Ann'an
afternoon
Mary
Sun
d
ay
home in Bashan
ber 4 a l the ChestP.r Method ist
honoring Henry Arnold , 18, so n uf _ Church and the World Day of Russell and Kelly Yvonne, of right, pastor of the church were
in New B011ton Sunday lo atten d
Mr. an d Mrs. Dares Arnol d .
rrayer in february, were also an• Athens.
dinner meeti ng of tJ;ae Ports•
the
nounced.
Mrs. Amanda (Wade) Taylor, of
Present were Mr. an d Mrs. Joe
l(t -,_Or Chttrttt' Stbool
�
PµJlen chairm:m
of Californi a, Mrs. Maude Bailey, Mlllf · " ""
t " ·
• del\b. ·
.
·· L■wrenee and daughters, • :Nancy, theMrt:;
:.r:,
.
·
'
LoV
�f the society _was _in nova, W . Va.; Mr. and M rs. Henry
•
}
r.
Debbie, Kathy • and JQ Ellen, Mr,
. .
.
.
chatge of the program w��rh m• Fredrick Westerville Ohio
Rev. Warren WIison, d 11tr1ct
Mr.
and Mrs. Dores Arnold an d Je:net,
·
'
a
clu�ed story ·o� lhc love gift box and Mrs.' E. E. H11ym�n an d t.ettil! ch airma n for 1 Religious Education
Bobby Arnol d, Miss Barbara Prince
which was orlgmally
called the Spen.cer, Syracuse; Mrs. Dah Stone in the district, was in charge of
·
d
M
P
'I
'I
II
an
rs a Y yse ·
·1 e boX; F o JIowmg the ded •'.ca t"ion of Vienna, W. Va.; John Taylor, the meeting and Rev. Stanley Mc­
m1
Praye� was led by Rev. Griffith
of the Circle love g!_f t ofrermg by Racine; Mrs. Helf"n Jeffers and Gilliard , d islrict
superinten dent
birthdaY cake• ice
a , er wh'eh
I
Mrs. Pullen the meetmg was closed Donna. Mrs. Nellie Eblin .i:nd Nan• spoke to the group.
cream an d _ pop were . served . The
with prayer hy Mrs. Paul Smart.
The rnain speaker was Dr.
cy and Wendell, Pomeroy; Rev.honored gue5t received several
Refreshments of pie an d coffee and Mrs. Ray Pidcock, Chauncey, Howard Browning, of the Theo. __ were serve d by the Pri�dlla Circle and Robert Bush, Lancaster.
��--logical School, Delaware.
with Mrs. Harold Thomas as ch:.iir,
man. Other, ,ec,jng. we,e ,,r,
Gene Coleman, at:rs. Hustlt'I Mc•
Clure, Mrs. Richard Hovatter, Mrs.
Gene Kauff an d Miss Fred d ie
Houdashelt.
The M iddleport Garden Club met Monday evening at the
The refreshmt"nts lobles were home of Mrs . M . L. French for its October meetinJ with 20
1\JEW owl USED
decorated in the Halloween theme
s responding to the roll call, "Material Suitable for
with pumpkins aud bl.ack cat cut­ member
Drying."
outs on , the table.
was given by _ Mrs .

Hc,rtford W. Va.
Sa.:i�tv N�v.�

t

o., Oel. 4, 1960-3 Haz,el Community

C.h urch Held Its
Rev. Glazier Sel,ected As President
At Meeting Of Mi nist,erial Association Homecoming Day

" It was In another speech about
the Po1l Olfi,fe Department that
another official expressed his senUmenli about the situation like
lbi1 , 'W, ar• pr oud of our record.
We hlYe no apologies to mali.e and
no rearet■ to expreSII. What h as
been done w&amp;S once aaid to be impossible. Now it is history.' Those
ar
y
ti
;n:l��ecT a !��g �:::t cited by
the P01trnaaten as recent ac•
complllhmeqts lly the Deportment
wfu th e following:
ale
·Ettab'l.lJlh:dd (he fint large-sc
r
program of automatic mail hand•
Un• by machinery on II nation•
wide basla.
Developed the "airlift" program
whleh 1peed1 up the delivery of
a pproxlrna tely one lf'tter out of
every 17 on a "space ova il1ble"
balls.
Contin ued witD the developmer,t
of fa11ter machines for letter sorl•
i ng an d for mail culling, facing
and cancelling.
Continued with plans for a new
au tomatic · postal sub•station which
will vend stamps, envelopes, post
cards a nd writi ng paper, and which
will have money changers for both
coins an d bUls.

I
Po�:.::'%�i1:"=�.r. 1:...:.:
�t ��.�".�
m,.
..
.
thia newapaper 1ubll!i'U,t1 to the e11clr:, llr. ..n.1- mo. ,l • L. sitwv-, IH-... · Htft
� lJII: 1mad.,
h
!t..!'
.!ven� ��� •e b�
_ fael ,
,; lftl
UPI. The preu llldcJptlort � Mr.
11,. ,
e town. .
. ·lime■ 1 - .,,
■at w:Pre;&gt;YJ�l ::,\ti!' or o:4
h1n . the stair · to 1erttt reporter■ to lftd
::iz..;
I r, �m.
1
�
:S alat
. . ' ft \,_ .., . Mt. tg•�·
me�t1na1 ant! ta dif into the � lln,. c,r1f• •�llt
•
Mii, iiia�� flil■ ot the Ci"RM1rva't:lon Departcord1. But amaller papen do not lloll'le Wri\iji""°n,
have UPI n:porta.
�'.Olili� ·�.4 ..}� JL f. lli��ur a nlr
.
Harry
I
llti
0.. 1, li.clc, f•11 .... 1�•
,lfia,
uit
,
.....,,
lea
m
.p,o�le
lhol
to
ti■wtl'
a
Th•
: Phil_lp ·Wo1pert. Earl crttlr: 1'rttff ·1hed ma lul tJ'eek to
Mr. and
with the l&lt;Mlb 'Ohio Ge neral
ae,nbJy. It , sbould create an O�io Clark, �v. ,tnd, ll"--r1. David � d.eW�iJttJ!.:.! �,a.m.;eo;ut� ,.l?e 'built
cifflelil pq_bttc�tlon, with .a . m�l- �an, �-;l.tgd � �n�A�•I IVJJi!t �In llat contai ning every newspaper Don J'enl:i� of' �t__Hu��nit(in
. · HarlfM ftersonal,
and radio atation in the ■late, ev- club, and the 1......,-...., JV. and
1C17ql' K.' l. Crltff l■" on the •let
ery publ!e library. and perh1p1 Mrs. 8'11,. .
lilt thtt week. Willi am Ffeld■, -one
Nit# iHI._,. -�.........
every 1ehool and every eleded pubot f{utfotd'1 O)Jt1t citilana la con'Ru....ll �hb bu ntumed ito UriQ• 1o hl1 111ed with lllneu, alao.
Uc serva nt.
b'!tni a p■tltnt , et The WltiUI\I band played here ,
It ■hould contain every •'-bltan- hlt home
.,
tlve reornJ■tlon · any ,tatt aien"" Ple111nt Van-, ROlfltal
Saturday .
,· n Bull
.111• �• PhlUJel, Mr,. •lloI•nd Vr ··�
l Mfl. Ch"arles Lanier of
adopts. Sub■tantlve te1i1u.lltlOn1, for
· 1■ and Mr. and Mn. Jarne■
example, are thoae 11:ovtml� aanl- NeutaUn, ut ·Po11)1ro)' and II". G■lll�
tary condition■ in barber ■bop■ Robert WJlktn■ _ of Li� · WeN Llt11 r tol 'Winfield were vlilitora In
1
and rutauri.nta. It ahould contain recenl pests qf Mr. and Mn. I. H•rUord SU1i, ■y.
·
_ ·
rulet of prJCtlee and procedure- L. -Stewart.
�- Claarle, D9dd •n.d , da:qbter
tbo■e , for Jnalante, whtcb ,et Ume
· H:O*L•
llnrit1 l n wblth to t,nter a n appear, Charlffte � jn llarlln,fto� :W.
�. Te:s:. UPI-A Mid•
,nee or In wtuch to file tPPllca· v.- ., Tl�ttq relative■ over th• l,fN_pil oW led ' poHce Friday and
.
wee�a. •
lion, and noU0tt.
' iie1'iittaH lwo pi'O'Wlen--a man
•
1
'l'onla �. daU(hw of �- and Ii 'Wo'mu--bld broken •to ,
The publicatioft ■hould indud•
everthln1 e )ae ,al hnporta.uce · to and Mn. Slnler CoUt,, •• • re- Mi, 1i�11..,. ir,:te policema n , let\.
�r naderi and radlo Us- cent patl., ,!,\H� . Holl,iJ,al. . ,... fthW,°IMn iell'ittd It ViU a
_
· lfr■• A. L., SmWI 1' • m1� L�l.t ·'Wbo '11n still there fl!Offl
, ,
td:m,
Penon.U,, l l� the type ot1 P\lb- patient at Plloant Vall-,. - --- i 'fftl)'' 1lie'l'W tht nlJ ht befffl.
fluld ptirmit --- P�I.
Ueetlon . llrb
•
•
'
'
·
· ··
,''LLii, a.a
-a
. llro, RJ-'-_., , A.t!...\e_,i
a..fll
• v.
· spqu In �
BI...(••
, Pl. p••
....,
.. tlon-ot 't/1
nii
1'1:1 aun.., ,m-,
, � ,:.._ ni..u. ::.� J
notebook. l1 th'.uld lllNl th1 �• o va8W¥._ , ""J'"""' i ..-�...,. ;-,:-t HI an4 Ji(r,. Okey- Roush, lietlitt. l'ftd'
,a!L .
'"'l\llllte■ of 11--• ftalllbll, hfl)O ' OYOl'
, 1111: , tit8 Iii',. 00111 Y11ger · ,�
Mr.
a
nd ·Mn. .t.oftB,�� �•':9 tiloi tbl fuiAiral of 111:r■. · )11,
lb', rellabUUy, eonveal&amp;n.c.! u4 �
·
:·.1
1
1 "tN. •f\lt llt• 19rK'.; il11 •11Hr 111 Mton; 'Alw'tda1 ot
econo iny.
in
d,
!:t-::
-,�:�
1
�
11n, Blllrtijl ,, · ,81,,.. - r�ltM
ernment doe■, n•• t¥,t alone ,the
.)olr ol 'tllo llffll' IO - illlorill•
!lff!'i• Sul..
:s l#IN .• W.elleton s.\ur:
t1oe:· tt'I � � � Ille_ · 10••�, 11q� • aut""1,...u-t it('� '
l!lf. .
.
""'nt �-�, Ill, .-i•-1 ,Hlll'iiMIO�.• �' •
Cbo,!ft Rile anJ
Iii' ,
.., &lt;lo It �
ma e, ,.- buaiaea■ tnj
tii,ilJI ,f, .,.._t at· 10P
MQC!lnl It. Ille -- .. ,....,..
,
"
.
'
.,
llolll
th�
M""9·
,•·
U..
it

Daily Sentinel, Pomeroy-Middleport,

RACINE

�-- -

"'

l ,:,

ftat Do We Want From Gnr Schools?

� �

eport Mail oIume Like
M"ddl
I
Hill Climb Was Success At
h
°
�.i·:..'":si::
':.:
,
:,Ji9':
h�:
i
59
19
For i960
Jdiece,: i9'
Fairground Here Last Sunday N·at1on'"'-" Climbed During
l
,000.
v

'

. atating Editorially

,

· .:.�: · (&amp;lik&gt;r's Note: Durin g October an esti mat- keep up with i t .
Every improvem.: nt in roads o r water brings I
�.(001'00 Ohio citizens w i l l lake part i n lo-� ""'"ool district meelings of the State House · new prnblPm s J)f i .1crcased enrollment and
1
· · �nee on Education They will discuss inadequate funcf s :-ind school housing. Fami\Ve Want From Our Schools?" This lies from nearr ✓- Cincinnati move from the
al
� is one of a series dealirlg wltll some of city seek ing · ural or sen . i - rn r.il towns in
; r7'"llf fllijo.r education problems to be discussed . whk h to rear their children, and from which '
ni,-1. lllies has be� preP9-red as ,1 service to they can com_,ute for employment to out-of: ti
the S� House Con(erenc· (' by some of 1 he t he-country im. �1strial areas.
Ever•rlsiug subdivisions which literally
: : atttfs leading education writers. This artitlc
ri
erupt
chUdren contribute nothing In the
en by V.i.•ia " Franz, education w t~
�
_ll!
·
,
w
.
1l
way or property tu:es for school operation
r• �1effll.ont Cou , ,e r. )
until two years after construction. Con•
____
I
·
star,tly
expanding taxes are the premium
will
who
i The · m.Ullon more youngslC'rS
price residents must pay for edueation.
t
�nto Ohio's public. schools- in 1 970 are
Believing that the solutiou to the problems
I : nef an &gt;estilhilte. They are real; t hey have
of education today lies only in an inforr.,ed
; : �n born. To accomodate them, Ohio school
" f..l. iflsl�s will have to build at least 36,000 public, F..xecutive Head JalTies Wooldridge
l ' ,r l I
has put his faith in the peopl e of hjs dist rict,
AW dinrooms in tire next 1 0 years.
.
.
and of the state of Ohio, and has !.,egun an exJ. But hou s ing problems are not something
j
tensive program of public relations .
tb1t c.in be dealt with tomorrow. Last year
1
)
�
" I believe the more the public is informed
in Ohio 61,000 s tudents were attending school
t in non-classroom facilities or on double ses- about the schools," he said, "the better support the sl'hool.s will receiv:e. The Arneritrm
lions. "The 37,000 lucky enough to get a full
sl'hool system has done, and is doing, a good
day's education were auending class in con.
,.
job of educating our children; 'but a lot more
l
Yerted coal rooms, lockc1· rooms, auditoriums,
must be done to inform the public if we are
libraries, cafeterias and gyms.
view of a m�r­
SHOOTIN' THE 'SLANT - A worm's
to continue to improve , for people will only cycle clearing the lop of the hill at t�• Mo)oroycle Hill Climb
Hardest hit by the building shortages have
support school programs they understand ." Sunday afternoon at the l\lelgs County f'aiJll'6�.
been the so-called "bedroom communities,"
l n nearby Goshen, the poorest d,strict in
f,. �growing suburban areas where city workthe
county with the highest- operating levy,
ere live and where their children go to school.
Typical of their problems are those o! the Executive Head Robert Gower estimates that
a new building is needed every two years for
l • West Clermont Loca l School District.
an indefinite period if the Goshen Local Diss no district in the state of Ohio
• •• hasPerhap
trid is to keep up with enrollmen t.
been more touched by the problems of
He points out that' taxes from a typical
Increasing school enrollment t han has West
1 Clermont
$13,000 Goshen home cannot possibly sup•
i n Clermont County, just fifteen
'• mJles from Cincinnati.
port the education of the children from that
home; and that inrrcased tax resistance is alWith problems growing out of a recent
• consolidatlon,
ready evident iri the defeat of a bond issue
and an almost complete lack of
last spring, whif.:h necessitated abandonment
I Industry to help support schools, West Cler- of
building plans for another school to be
mont this year faces an enrollment of over
constru
cted by 1 962.
t 6200 pupils , an increase of 1 5 per cent
over
I Ile previous year.
County Superintendent Roy C. Thompson
11
.,
1
Despite
35
temporary
or
r:ented
classrooms,
aptly
sums up the situation when he says,
I
In addition to permanent buildings housing
"The phenomena l growth of population in
82 classroom11, distrJct schools this fall openClermont County due to expanding industries
ed to split sessions for all grades except those
in Cincinn ati and pleasan t living conditions
from three through seven.
i n Clermont County has created growing
Neither ne w buildings scheduled for comschool problems.
pleUon In the fall of 1981 or .future buildings
"Havin g practicaily no industry in Clerplanned fo'. the fa U of 1962. t,ill �Q!Yt• .!bJt ��Ul!lnt Cout\\l&lt;, il .is, "l!Poss ible lo raise
local
.
proble�, smce pupil re,1�.!,k ,�rs-. at
11onc
suffic
y
ient
·to
build
needed classrooms
1
such a rate that construc� - t)OS!l!bly for
the
continu
al,
•
increas
ed
enrollm 811t. � "
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Part'els, Orange.
Ell1e11 Stewart lo Homer Buckner. Loll;, Salisbury.
Ruby K. Vd\UHl. Wanda Young
Adami, Robert Ad ams, l!:rnest H.
1'.ouna:. Unda Young, Elmer o.
Young to Arthur w. an d rda H.
Young, P■rcele, Chesler.
Union Tfwit and Deposit Co.
lo Ellr.aheth s. Wlllinms, Mar• ·
iarl!!t S. Bowden, Anno c. Dar-

: · Land l'ransfers ' ,:;:t":; ::,�,

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Frank an d Mae Dorat to Mar' ton A. and Edna 8 . Hall; , Ml5 sq .
ft Lona Bollom.
;
12 e11e menllJ , Col■• &amp; Soulh
Ohio Elec. Co.
:
Len ora Koehler, Det. to Pearl
: Koehler,
of Tra n,., Or1nse.
t Weltha M . Clark to James O.
� and Ethel N. Cl11rk, {,ola, Scipio.
1 Anna Ba ird, 'COfflm. ·Ralph H.

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L O N o r J: L 'L � 'w
OU M&amp;&amp;t llmpl,J ll&amp;n.� tor·follOth•r. In thl1 HrnJ1t .A. ti' �lld
·
� ''OIN41 L'a. X tor the lwo· O's, etc. Bln1le letten, •�
=Ule lmrt,b l;hd fol'rl\ation ,;it thl wordll a.Ni all htatl.
,
Ult code latter. are dltfenlllt.

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WOMAN, WOMAN, R1lLJ:I 'l'HJ:M l'l'IU,,.,
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'd�a
"the Annultl Ptuid�t•s ft�1
• Uon. , and Du.es J,,e,IJ � 'tlle N.ew tll- F'�IIO'.n \laf�tl�tiJ)tdt't 1ed· the
nn W-omtn'a '€l_ulj&gt; was h eld . OD 11'.().UP in •
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Old wh' ite
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7.,;,._
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cl�ib .
, . v :· (ioliWnl"D .
·m ,.w.n,-elD� •df ted in:{:tin's · in i;i 'bdme of�
rw.
,
lt)J): gt
�°"'·iuip' .llfe't;d · 'On !I.,
r. �
·
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w
n
e
1116
'n'ti=ror. �
OJtyJt°al
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iii
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,
J..qi
'y lf.
. 1� -.-n J1 ,1;1,e
w . ..... H. L.
:oo ...,.e wJUt. .��
I 1, 1Ctd in whft� �d ' 44eonUd DJ"'· � � -� )11:eti�g
\lftb red "rOH\ btt4J, bdr a•�rvft, r�e-� � �ed.
·llr,.
:Udy and nuts we,t! HJ'v.ed. Mrs. · L. }_. )II�-��. •.. if). A.
,0. ffll'D, ¥rt. 1Ju•.
�obert McG]othl in 'prtlrided ·at the South, Mn,,
ioffee service and Mrs. James go Ju hll ng , Mrs. Herm .a n Lay�e,
Mrs. Philip Wolp er t. Mrs. Edwi n
lampton poure d tea.
Officers of the club and the hos- Stefn, Mn. J. L. Stewart, Mrs. R.
.eeses o f the tea formed the recep- F. Bryant, Mrs. Fred Bat,y, Mrs.
tion line and included M rs. Paul A. G. Mehlman, Mrs. Harry Layne,
Scally, president; Mrs. John Mor• Mrs. Lloyd l\oush and the hOJte■a.
The ne� meeting will be held al
gan, vice president; Mrs. Jen Abel,
treasurer ; Mn. Donald F. Roush, the home of Mrs. D. A. Smith on
corresponding secretary; and ho1- October 11.
lesses, Mn. "Donald Brown, Mrs.
FEq,.OWSHIP . DINNER
Rober t McGlothlin, )ilrs. Donal d
The ULCW a nd the ULCM of
Roush, Mrs. James. Hamp_ton and St. PauPs Luthera n Church held a
Mrs. John Morg_an. The lad_ies w�re Follow■hip Dinner meetin We d•
g
corsages of w�1te mums tied wi th nesday evening at the church. Fol­
red n!!l ,and r�bbon.
lowing the di11ner the groun ad•
ent of t tle even• j
ourned to the unctuary of � the
. The entertamm
me was prese-....J;iy Mrs. Paul B. cht1 rch for the program. Devotions
r,owel l who g.a�ree _ read ing�; were led by Robert Johnston.
Rev.
,,Mrs. Buzzy, the �ews Dispenser, Jack Weleh introduced the guest
Ma and th�, Alto by ,,Ed gar A. speaker, or. Herbert Stelling o(
Guest and A .Sad Tale by Jeff South Charlesto n. Dr , Stelling had
Hunter - _
been a Lutheran missionary doctor
Attend mg were Mrs. Pow ell, In In dia for five years. lie showed
Mra. George Thayer, Mrs. Paul films taken by him and hla family
Scally, Mrs. Glen Hart, Mn. Frank while in India.
Thompson, M rs. Charles Dodd ,
Attend ing were Mr. and Mrs.
Mn. Th omas Hoffman, Mrs. Phil
Batey, Mrs. Jack 'Flesher, Mra. 'Robert Johnston, N_ai,; and Vtcki,
Jess Abel, Mrs. Alton Bonney, Mn. Mr:. and Mrs. Donald Bumgardner,
ft
William Chialer, Mrs. Floy d C•r­ Cheryl an d Vicki, Mra. obert D.
Rou1h,
Mrs,
Roush
Nelson
and
mack, Mrs, Karl Wiles, Mrs. Ed ­
d y,
Ran
Mrs.
Thomas
d,
Grinstea
win Stein, Mrs. Louis KarJChnik,
Mrs. R. G. Greene, ilfrs. Kermit Mrs. Everett Roush and Kathy,
?dr. and Mrs. John Fry, Jim and
Ford a nd the hostesses.
Judy, Clarence Blessi nJ, Mr. and
W$WS MEETS
Hill,
'The WSWS ot the Bachtel EUB 'Mrs. Herman Layne, Nancy
Miss
eU
Jane
Lelah
and
PoW
Mr.
,
Church met recently at the church
Carroll
dams, Jr. 1.nd Bruce,
l(rs.
A
with Mrs. Laura Elliott serving as
lea d er using the topic "Ou r Unity Mr. and Mrs. William McFarland
M
in the Local Church." , This was and Raymon d, Mr. and rs. Bill
, y,,,f'cG�t,w, M: r.
M;rs.
Pow
ell,
J
followed with a discussion. Mn.
Elliott cond11cled . an. ifflPreulvt and Mrs. Lloyd Rouah, Irr. and
l'l M
candlelight aenice, "The Chu rch Mrs. Philip W9lpert, Mr. a do n.
Mt■
Pa11I
Roush,
David
.
R ush,
and the Lighted Lamp," Scriptute
Velm
Mrs.
a J\odth and Jane, Mr.
lesiOns were give� by Mrs. �maid
Ohlinger, Mrs. Ollii Good Wln and an d Mrs. Harold Johnson, Mrs.
William Powell, 'ltrs. Roland !Carr
'and Debbie, Mr■. Otto Grimm, Jin.
Edna Burris, Mr. an d
Layne, Mn. Orph a 10hll n�er, · ·v.
and ftln. Jl(ck Welch i nd p;r, 1
Mn. Herbert Stelling an_ d children.
BIRTH ANNOUNC•o
Mr, and Mrs. t.an')' Km• are · an•
Ii It enough ror state-leve1 pub• nouncing the birt'h of a ,on on
lie agencies to make availab1e to Sept. 28 at Holzer Hospital. The
pre11 an d ra dio the mi nutes of baby welshed B _po unds 7owicea
their meeting, or the texts of their at hirth and ,baa bee.n named Je trulea an d regulatiOl'ls? Or to per- fery Joe.
mil
te))orters to attend the
.a are Mr.
Mate 11n11I gr
. a nd ■rent
mee ti n ga.,
:.. •nd p.jtra,nd· Mrs. Jolm n)' iousn
Or ahould these aaenciel!t· hove a n.al Jri..ndparenta are Mr. and Mr•.
po11tlve respo nsibility to inform . Ralph Kini.
j\l
•OTA.RY
..
"
the publl•?
The Rotlr)' ' Club he1d ,Lidiea
Tbla was a problem st udied Jaat
·
,� - ennin, at their
we ek by the 11ovemor'a commit· Nia:ht on Thu�)'
tee on public Information, of �gul •r dinner m.eettn1·1t'tbe If■rt•
which
I a m a member. It mea n, ford Methtid.Jtt CliUl'th. Ttie ll'lltlt
·
· 'Rua..era were · M r. and Mn.
the difference between the p111ive 1pe1'•hOWed
" RH Sa'yre of Ripley.
a nd the active . For imaJJ. to.un
newapapen, paHIYe permisrion to 1lld11 ta�n · Of a �t trip
a tten d meeting, and lnapect rec- through �e Ntw Enclint' Stattl
oi'dt 11 11 pr■etical obsta cie to me- and the •Eaatem prbvfncei of Can·
d om of Information; rura l folk go ■da.
nnlnfdrmed beca\lff th•ir new.-n..!'hose ■ i1end1111 "ftre Mr. aild
ar- . ��
per doean't have. a latlt enoueh Mr■ . !&gt;ona �d '9.)..,,.
1'$.,eao"!J• �
.
Mrs. R
itaff to send a reporter.
· erffl1n .,.,.,.e, .111r. ■rm 111Q,

11::�t:•�1::.

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-�iab,. 1!Q.lpr wt
'ee!d
'Wii;,;·
i_d,tsli._...,..,
fh:
the
Ill
� • � � 'neit

dina Week With

��� RJ!�:t: n!'::�.

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r,T..w mil»N
111.'ii:iiii

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DAILY CBl'PTOQUOTE - ..... ,._, � ..... ...

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1t.To11y
llt, ROIJWlnlptro
•• IIQIOWI

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HE GLlDF.S THROUGH THE AIR - Wllh both wheel, sllll
Pomeroy Chapter 188 OES will
off
the round as this rider goes over the top of the hlU and
meet in rcgul11r sellslon Tues day
aL '1:fS p. rn . , al the Masonic levels o [.f before hitting the ground again.
·
(Plehlr.s bw- Gronr Studio)
Temple. P11sl Matrons and patrons
will be honored. All members nrc
--- •------- • continued from rage" one
urJ:cd to attend.
Jeff Stevens, Duribar,
V•-: 11a,-4
.:.::�
.::.;:::;::..
_
Second place, James Drake, M al•
(kt• •
.
Next Tuesd ay evtning t h e I a, O .; Th ird PI ace, B. R, Hu·...
•
J
.
Church Scttlool Officer.11 an d Teach­ ton, Cha rleston, w. Va.
Medium Cl ass: First, Cltftor•
ers nr the Mid dleport Flr11t Baptiat
Church will moot at the home of S nyder, Pickerington, o.; Second,
Tom Cl ork , Lanc11ter an"
•' Third ,
Mr. and Mn. ruul Smart.
O.k.y R.d m. n Jr.
·. 11YY-"'. ·..11... 1
v · u.!lod Pn11.· I
October 5
Lightweight uasa: First, 'John
.
Today Is Tue■day;'• " October 4th,
A Drive-In Conference will he Toth, Glouster, O.; Second, "'3ud"
the 278th d� of
y ear wi t h 88
held Wed nesd ay at 4 p. m. at the
WIison, Columbus, 0., and Third, mQte to follow In itOO.
Washington School, Gallipolis, for Ben Colmer Jr., Charleston. ·
. . e moon � full.
Th
leachera in thl1 area. There wlll
The mo,nln•
Walchine the hill cllinb , waa
.,. ,•·r
.. 1, Ma,,·
be a d inner and dlacu■■lon fol. a thrill for the 300 plu■ ■5'-etll•
The, eve nInc ■t■?a are Me rcury,
lowing,
tora H it was the first eveqit of Venu�: Ju�lter an d Saturn.
The Pomeroy &amp;iiuespeare elub Its kind to be held in thi■ coanty.
q�'thl1
d•y Jn histor:v:
•
wi·11 meet we dne:r-'
•-r
d , lb•
uay at 2 P· m.
1K" ore the ri' der■ ,ta rte
In1122, Rq.thertol'Cr Hayes, 19th
al th� home· of Miu Ethel G arland , ma in comm ent he a· rfl wa■ ••you
l 0f
u It d St•tea,
Mln,ravitle. Roll c■II will be "wo• m•an th" 1n Delaware,
'rn
--1 ,,. go,ng 10 try· 10 w
aJ;
q 'ohlo.
men o( the Bib
s
ad
�::
wt:r
.1 � h 1!", i!,':'�r;::��c!r��:.r •
The Ladles Aid of the St. Paul's ba
. at • -��f•lr In !ilprlnJfleld, µ1 .
n
In . ]., · ifter much Uti1atlo1',
p:�:�i;r J�er�r:, .J.
Lutheran ohureh will meet Wednea.
r
uad tbe
'fte
1,JAi&amp;tcl. �te• Circuit Court of
day\ at 7110 . p. 11'1. In the cb�ch
was tben In �He of Injury I but·
the cl a im
of
�Ui dplleld
socJal 'l'Ooia:
waa not needed .
The p0111eroy •Band •Boosters M- ______ ----�- 'I'homla ldllOn th at he W11 tho
aole invent.or or the incandftlcent
aocl a tion wl\l meet In re1u11r le•
MOLZIII HOSPITAL
' ,
sloJl,• 1-U ti tel0 l&gt;, m. 11 Iha I
O I I M
Ad IHI
l1 lamp.
In ltsS, Adolf H itler 1uapend ed
Se nior Hl,:h School audltorlu1n. Loc:ke�t M��lep!rt• :Tho��• i
Pa rent, of all b and member■ ffl Quille n: Che■ hlre; Joh n eati-on", freedom of, the pre" in Germany,
In lNt the u. s,. war Producurac4d to a ttend.
' '\laetn•.
)
ion; ' lion BOllrd ..,... d ls10Ived.
Burna,
Ma
Dou(IIH
Oct.
z:
Octolltr S
A thousht for toda y: Americ an
; Lint •
The Guild of Gr■� Eplseop,I Robert Jettera, Dexter
poli tician Ad lill Stevenson a1ld:
Tucker,
Cheahlr
e.
Church win meet at the PatJah
to
Disth a raea Oct. l: Mn. FaJe "A wl1e man doe• not try
1-louse Wed ne,d■y at 8 P · m. wttb
'U
hUrey
hi■toey."
n
eu,
M
A
. I exander F
r■
Mn. W. 'R. Roberta and Mn. J Fugate, N
________
John Adkin■, Mrs. Benji min Knox
E. D. Hartinger 11 hoatea11e_1.
•
ul'
The cholr of the St. pf • Mr• Edwin Seller■, Mr■. lf'.•nn'Olh
pen
e
Will
ran
i
a ms and ·"son; Mrs.
J' ep
Lutheran Church will meet W:ed· ,
Mont,otnery and da uahter; Mn. Parente In Porneroy
ncad ay'at 7:80 p. m. at the ohurtb. ,
8ette Thomaa, emplQYtd at tllw
Don Bra inard and ■o n; M n.
Tile Co., Zt i'iffvllle Jt
Mmle
De
;
so
n
n
d
Mn.
n
a
lam McNlckle
Oct■ller I
·
vialtin1' at her
di"'"
n.etum Jona• Blanken•hi P and ■on � M n. Her• , .....
All Jll,embera of •
;;; ·;. a week
"'" Ave She
e
h
Spri
WII
.
tban llelp Oh1¥,ttir, OAR, affl man Clark, Ptlra. Charle■ Betz,
er 1u;'i of Mrl. Cllfford
the
dinn
Mra.
M
a
ra
a
ret
Arth11r,
Jerry
W11r.
aribd -to N at the il�ddleport
-andmothet, Oct.
Q•••ter)' at • .p. m. Situ* ner, ·Oary Glbbe, Mia■ lrene Loell· Jenkinson, her •·
n
e r
J
•
kt
n:: u�:
�r:. ::::: !d��� a
tl\e,A�•v:: ::J
PHlor, Willia m Barnett, Mi n Pat home, Eaat Ml.In Sl,. I n honor of
Ml. ·1:1al■le �u'nden.
·
�-----�---�I Turner, Mn. Karen Addll, it• her h u�b■nd, CIHfani'• �"
rett, .Phoebe s. LeverinJ, Salty phen Jenkl na, fd lchele Hac ett
OUier 111.em •.,. Jin. ienmn'
o ,.,.
,..__.
S. Tuft',, Ott add Gas, Sutton.
I aont1 ■olt&lt;i1'4tw 11\d daulhtet, llr.
lA:I • • : ,an. H · R · Bu 11.er•
Fred a Faehnlt" , Admnx . Ella Kittle, Jame■ Pal'k, Joe Call,
� 1 and. llrl. 1tabel1t-" RilMtU, Irontdin.
Whit e , Dec., to Lee Okey an d thur AJUion, Thom■s E. Ma
�---�.
, .
lulle Wood, Lota, Syraeu1e.
)'ION'T "!AIIT i
�ti
,
Clark and d auaht'ei+
Jin.
-� R·
Mtna M . Dud1eon lo Leo · W, v., �,
�•• ""'
R ou■h and daughie!',
II
and
u•' �
_ on, P■ reela, ,... - NJ_ler
G. Dudie
d
Colum L
°:,
:
�
'1�•Li
�
�
en
.MJ�n�::ill.�
:-e.°&amp;���t
�
ec
cd
u
mueh i
the y
ab,e'r.
, � ��
,_
'. d•y
J
' Oct. 1 1 Mr. 1nd Mn. Ned Prul�
d
ud •�11" w ••w
�';.., '�;d b�l�e� w�
�"
Affld. ror Tra na., Columbi a.
e.
Galltpollo, oon ; )(,. ••4 llJi. at, ' lom
� •l\1,1_ ���•
·
Robert and Danford Slout to Dwliht •Bevln. Galll poli1, dJutiF
all
�
Ohio Power Co., 138.81 coal, t
a
Columbia .
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·
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t'
.....,_
ooi
Ion
I,
t
Wool,
Hollli
Mrt.
I;
lk�
erDelth)
J■mn S. nnd Fs nll l• 1. De y■NI; � l: K n. Ada Duel&lt;,
air!- lt.Wtlet
Weet to Ohio Pow11r Co., Sill.SO worth,
1 l
'IMfflaf; yn)on,
·
coal, 1111ea1.
1 1 1 ,•� · '
\

,

liAhed cities as well II th� estabContinued fro� Page One
man-yean - are first worke d out I llahment of ne- w ones. City deunder two separate hea dings, cily I livery service has been started in
carriers and 'all other,' and then 80 i:omm unilies in add ition to lhe
comb ll_led for _the over-a�! percent- extension _o f literally hun dr� s of
, a_ge figures Just mentioned for rout;s wh1�h wer� alread)' 1n _operahon. Thia req uired the eq u_1v1 •
(1stal 1960.
.
"It sh o u ld 11l110 be menhoned lent o( Sl,QOO more leUer oarnen
that there has been a stea dy .11. nd to serve approx. ima tely 9,000,000
substantial increase in 'city car- more American families 1.nd uprlers' each year as compared with wards of '100, 000 more business
�W. rtu,:i.&amp;ine fro,:n 4:fli)'ff' icellt ln , CO�j:«rnl- . . • .
. w,y
i� lo ti.� per cent ui �e • Ja te.tl .
'Thete·f.f OiihaOI '(19 �
d
s
eiti1Di1.t,,. This l�•se lhJ � 'of tlU.ati11 �-- Bep�t 's
e■sential to 11:�p A,� ..th the evM•i��g , efficieq_cr � by
e vu-!expUtcf41g O'Owtb of e.1tab. 1 ah owinc _plll
U1e Ji.t1r

Et
R.,

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Me1·gs &amp; Mason•
Conung Events
Oct. 4

\71:'
,l&lt;'fi,J �".iR�AR
I £1"
I rJ

IO. Pur-

n ual volum e h■n d led per man.y@ar
or employment - ,uludlno �"'
curlers _ Jiu been lncre111n1

t

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, ·- _
•�•- = �.·il/il••.-�
-

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Mra. llli'

A CAP
. ITO'L IDEA

- ca.:ua

!,.he cor•
i£¥U.
re,� fti,UNlS WH Ui1
"(f ·i,; ·01 Co urse , true that •�I
the 1�ditlon1l service has made 1 t
n� ,&amp;o t,ake on many new em­
plo)'eel Ill� �al our total increu­
ed from ®�,QC) tn 1 �53 to 562,868
on. June 30, 1 960, but as pointed
out in the ori g inal 1960 report fig.
m-ea 1:he workload increase d\lring
the �ame pt:riQd Wu t11!!arly 25 per
cen t.
"In 1 'recent speec h on this sub.
J ect by the Poatmaster General he
brouabt out th,t · by 1W70 our PoPt1l a tion II expecte d to be 208,000,000
and that our annual mail volume
b s then will be mon lhan 00 billion pieces. The u. s. Bu.e,u of
S t.andard s, :'ln entirely separate or•
.
1mlutlon, eshma,tes that our m a il
volume wiU be doubled within
the nex.t 25 years, and it all fit.!
into the same picture.

�:�? ��j:t_� �UooE
t}1! ¥4

fj
*1

rt,- Mr.

»

FITID WITH SHOWER
The 'Ladi'ea Bible Class and Mrs.
E ciward Kells' class of tlie Hart•
ford Methodi■t ' ChurcH entertained
Mr.1.
with a layette shower for
George fl.me. in the churfh 1ocial
rooms Tuesday evening, The gre en
a nd yelloiv color theme wa s_u1,ed
in the ·decorations an d IOvely
flower arran11:ement,; were use,d.
The gift t1b1·e was covered with
an ecru lace clotll over treen Unen.
A small baby Ded decorated in
green and , yellow c.entered the
ta ble. Streamers• o! the same color
were also used . Mrs. J. H. Smith
_Jr., Misa /a pe t Zirkle and Miss
Ann Gibba: did the decoratin,:.
l,,Q.IJ
1
·th� �vepin·g was spent infornKil­
1Y •nd fOllowi nJ the opening of
the �any fta refreshments were
ed to ht honoree, Mrs. Jame■,
. Merri Johnson ot Gallipolis,
. Cha r1 e1 Smith of Maso n, Mn.
Fftd Batey, Mre. Phillip Baley,
�- · T�omas Horrman, Mrs. Wll•
!,ti!p · · cibba, Ilia Maribn Gibbs
pd �, H11ten· Roush, all of New
ilaveni .,_, Hugo Juhling, filrs.
WfIU•m 11'.cKntght, Miss Elizabeth
(ir,u,ea.r, Mra. William Kelly, Mr■:.
Geor-1,e Lerner, Mra. Mw.rl Gibb,,
�. �. O. Wei n, Mrs. Emil Knight,
,..,__
u..-.
"" Mrs. W· T·
..., Gib'·
.LIUI• ._.
'
St.one, Mn. .George Turnbull, Mrs.
Earl Fi.Ida, 111"1. William Fieldl,
r'i.nnicum, Mrs. Lero)'
Mrt.. f'rapk
,
J,Dltj, M�. :JlaY Fields an d De�
• .J Ke11, 11rs. R utter
, r,. 9
-w.4U"u
Kftllbt, Mr:I. J.. W. Ktll, Mrs. Stan�- Pftjfell, � ra. Ar(bur Wayla n.d
"n Rob;it
Ill111,, J• H, s nu' th Jr• · 1n
Either McKnight,
1r1e,
••u
,urod c ' pi;nan, Janet Zerk.le,
• '-·
lioUI An1_1 Gilbbtl, Jean 1'!rnbull,
Jlete.IJ. , •ltlf{le, Shirley Smith and
..,_
....l.,.n
.....,.v
, Rizer•
DAM PIOPOSlb
t
Tbe Town Council of Hartford
bas bMII .workinl a long Ume to

•t

t

';

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'

, , .. 11

Triplett and family
){r_ and ltn. Wilham Bland and
Mn. Nina Bland ol Ak.ron came
Sa1urd1.y momin1 to .,i,.i! with Mr.
and Mn Guy �ynolds· and Mn.
Mineru Childen.
Mr. and Mn. Willlaw Kitchen
and daughter, Debbie. of Chilli­
cothe 1pe,nt the week end with her
Judy Clark who 11 alt.ending a mother, Mrt.
Robert Reibel, and
POX lthool m Toledo v11ited re­ other relativea.
cently with her mother and ramily,
Mn George Vaughan. Judy i• reMr and Mrs. Bemard Schramm
1id1n g wilh her uncle and 11ml, 1.nd hi.J 1111.e,-. Mn. Lula Shlpp1 ol
Mr and Mr1. Thomaa J. Hendrickl Zane■Yille vi1lted over the week
at 10f7 Creacues Avenue in Ore­ en d with Mr. and Mu. John Lyon,
aon, Ohio.
an d tam!l.1.

Week en d gue!ls with )Ir. and
Mrs. Ang ui. Howard of South
Third .\venue were his parentl,
Mr. and Mrs. Howar d of Kentucky.
Mr. and Mr1. William Rustell
an d daughter, Roberta. or Corning
and Mr. and Mn. Robert Jay of
Columbu1 spent the wc:,ek end with
Mr. and Mn. William Grueser, Don
and Debbie.
Rosetta Rich a rds spent the weell:
en d in Gallipolis with Mr. and
Mrs. Jack Carr •n d family.
Mr. and �rs. Al Hen dricks and
family of St. Albans spent the
week end with Mr. and Mra. L. E.

Of- Church Attend
District Meeting

I -�m'

::.

-:o::

BA.KER and SEyfRIED
your LENNOX dealer

20- Members Present At Oct,ober Meeting

""

COAL, OIL, GAS
FURN ACES

The paper, "Use Your Fall Catalogues"
Crary Davis who also passed out new catalogues for the mem•
hers to inspect.

'

PERFECT for PARTIES

• New Line Of Party Game Books

• Nut Cups
• Bridge Tullies
• Paper Napkins and Table Cloths To Match

=i!�'i:!i!t

• Decorated Paper Plates
• Doillies and Many Other Party Favors

�no��;

.�

Dutton's Drug $tore

FREE PARKING
, COATS BLDG.
MIDDLEPORT

---­
-

NOWI 500 gal. LP GAS SYSTEMS

., tho

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tile -

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lllaldng

Durini the business meeting
cond ucted by Mrs. Garen Stansbury a notice of t'he Fall Regional meeting to be held at Lake
Hope on October 12 was read .
1 Mrs. Edward Rsy of Lancaster,
ed itor of the Garden �ath, will
be speaker at the meeti ng.
I A nolice fro m Mra. Roy Holter
county contact chairman, a nnoun•
dng the Meigs County meeting to
be held at the Federated Church,
October 31, with reglatratlon beginning at 12:30 was read . Den;ionstratlons on "Christmas Ideas
Up to Dale'' will be given by
Mr,. Ja.me1 Jackso n.
A■ Mrs. Stansbury Is chairman

'PHONE Wl-t-3272

\

IM THIS
'

(

PAPER!

of the Johnny Applesee d High­
way fun d in thii district, she ask­
ed lhat all clubs in the area lo
notify her of their contributions
to the fund 10 that she may in­
clude them i n her report.
Pla ns were also discussed for
1 the arrangement of dried an-ange­
ments and fall flowers which will
be placed in the windows of the
Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio Electric Co. , for the week of Oct. 30.
During the social hour following the meeting, a silent auction ·
was bfld.
Arrangements of dahlias were
used throughout the French honre
for the evening and a sala"d. course
was served from the dini ng room
by Mrs. French who waa assisted
by Mrs. John KinCald ' a nd Mrs.
Walter Hayea t'o the members
and Mlaa Barbara Faye who was
a gu est of the meeting,

Nothing triggers so much shop­
ping action so fast as a good
value advertised in this paper.
Here is where the smartest

WARM MORN I NG
H E AT E R S

shoppers look to gel the most

where the smartest stores advertise to get the
best results fcir the least money. h pays to

'

How Heat Your Home or

watch 1he ads; it pays to advertise here!

Brooder Houses and Save l

'

ll'EWI

;

Metc.-ed bottled 111 ■ervice

1,

tO that you ca n heat your hoine

_,

___ . or brooder bou1ea at a

c:ost that 'trill·Fompefe

"t

I

� &lt;&gt;I fuell

with any

enjoy_ UUJ �
.
dern ,method of heafJJME -- M
1
1
UI 1lOWJ ,
Be the

fi1'11t to

FOR EVERY HEED

Rutland Fu rniture
)

Arnold Grate, Owner

PHONE SH-!-4811

RUTLAND.

O.

Room

I

,,

For New Ml!ffiWldlle

VI LLAG E C UT RATE

buying informalion in the shortest time. Here 1s

•

�,..

TOY CLOS E-OUT

Of Middleport Garden Club Monday Nite

MEET THIS EVENING
The l.ewi� Manley Auxiliary
Mrs. John Kincaid read the
Phone WY•2·3'11M.
No. 26 will meet t&amp;is cvcnini;: ot ,
"A ·Fresh Look in Dried
paper,
Baptist
Ml.
the
Moriah
at
.
7:30
POMEROY, 01110
arrangeShe told of
Flowers".
===
.
l•
h
o
hu
l
rt
C r• n M ld d p
demon­
snd
e
mad
hu
she
ments
�
;
;
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;
�
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:
;
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strated with d ried arranging.

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IS HALF PRICE

rt

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.�llf:,. =-· I= -��. ..�·-:t..�·
g-::.•='" �"""bod-

�1¥!�

Wed nesd ay, Oct. 5th

S H E SAW

r�

I

lllo .,..

tey.

Amona: tbOM rn A.then. ldt GetaJ411De 11,,JrneU, and their l)'IOd.
ni1ht to .attend the Guy Lombudo mn, ClyM, Jr:, and 111.u Grace
1how were Hr. and MN. lllllt,rd Der, of New c..tle, Pai., •�re
Pierce. llr. and Mn. Gerald All• week end futlU of Mn. Fieldln1'1
thony, 111'1. c. H. Wile. Jr. and brother and listn'·ln·llW', Mr. Ind
Mr. and Mn. Joe Davil of Ga lli- Mn. C. R. YOUD.I.
polia.
'J'hoR of tbe Mt. Moriah Blptiat
)In_ �Ila Cro11 e ntered PliPU· Cbw-ch who 1ttudM the BTU 1ft.
ant Valley H01pital today ror ,kin atltute which waa held at th, Na­
crafl on her ,,.�. She especta LO om J Baptlat Cb,Uttb were Venit.11
be hOtpital iud for two or lhrce Hod1ea, the dtlelf!""' and Mra.
day1 and will return at a liter Arnold Ricbarda, lilft'. Neille Win­
time fr,r major sur1ery..
st.on, Krt. Chu-lea .Jonea and Mn.
Erwin Baumpniner and daua:bter,
Mr. and Mn. Lawrence Fielding AlmL
and 110n, Clyde, and daUihl.er, Yn.

TO GET TH E BUYS

■, .

-1::

Mn. Lyde Weaver is a patien t at
Pie.aun t Valley Hospital
){i.u S)'!via Tovey or Saraaota,
Flori da, who has been viaitini with
her brolher-in•law and siner. 1lr.
and Mn. Willi. Anthony, lefl over
the week. end to visit in Detroit
with relativ es before retumlne: to
her home in Florida.
Mrs. Nelle Ford, who underwent
1urgery al Meia1 General Ho■pital
on Saturday Is reoovering nicely.
Mra. EJ-nettine Perry ta me Mon­
day to ■pend the week with Miaa
Vanatta Carroll and Mias Flo Hur ·

'

••

Pastor And Supt.

Given Sunday
f Henry Arnold

at•

"

Middleport

I

Saturday .
Mr. and Mu. c. H LUCH and
d1u&amp;hler, Mujorie. of Caledoni.a
,pent the wuk end with Mn. Lu
l"H' parenb, Mr and Mn Homer
Jonj'1 _ Mr. Jonea, who w11 retenl1)' h oapilaUr.ed II recoverinc nicely
at h11 home.

Local Members To
Celebrote Annual
National BPW Week

Birthday Party

e·

,._.....________.....______�---· -�---:

�,•

B. H. St:Jnl,i,rn
Missionary S i-ety
Met MondaY N•9·ht

■

•-

Around And
About

c.

,,. Vlrtlni. Carleton

ffi..

,

annual Homeomin; or the
,:'h e October meeting of the Me�gs County Ministe rial As- Tht'
e
sociation was held Monday mornmg at the Pomeroy First I Haz l Commu mty Church wu hel d
ay PRIDDII HOUDAlk,l!L"'f
Sunday, Sept. 25, with • large al •
Baptist church.
.
Mr and ':dn. John Walter■ of
lendance . A b.uket dinner Wall
Devotions b the Rev. Ralph
Zundel
host
pastor
oraned
,
.
'
"'
.
,erved on the l11wn al nooll and Columbus spent the weelll: end wi th
, ,
.
i
the ��e ti ng. , o !Iowing g1oup sm�m� o! �ake Tim � o ':3e hymn singing and muaiC' enjoyed Mr. W1Her'1 1i1ter 1nd brother­
Holy, Rev , iundcJ gave a medttat1on usmg as his topic, in the afternoon. The speaker w88 in-!Jtw, )fr_ and Mn. Jacob Belz..
"Grace of the Hol)" Sp1rit,'' and closed with prayer.
the Rev. N. L. Russell of Athena. Alsv visillna Sunday evenin 1 a t
Mr1. CliHord Jacobs, matron or -----'--'-----Attending were Rev. and Mrs. the Betz home were Mr. and Mra.
the county home , was present and Ca rd, \'ice prc.sid e n l ;
Ros.s
Van Meter, Jean and Linda, Guy Walters.
Rev. How
spoke in regard l o the religio w ca d H up pc l l , sel-relary a nJ trea li-• E ,;tell .11 Cozart, Marie Lawrence ,
llr. and M.n. Pete Quick left on
services at _ the homr. Mrs. Jacobs ure r ; Ht V . � red
l. G a n.I ner, as�ist- Mr. and M tti . J. S. Powell, Kathy Monday morning for their home In
W H much m fa vor of the services ant secretary _ tre llSV fc r ;
Rev . E u- Bissell, Mr. and Mrs. Allen Brew,
and expressed 9ppreciauon of the v e n e Brown, chairm :r n of the n- er .and liOII David, Wesley Cozart, TL!lsa, Okb., after spending in
elderly peop le o( the borne for the dio program, and Rev. G ard ner, I va Carpenter , Mr. and M n . Dell p.ast week with Mr. and Mn. Ra•
service. iYlrs. Ro lph C. Zun d el an- chairma n of the chaplain cy ' at the Tal bott, Mrs. Clint Smith, Mr. and mon Grim and othe r relative■•
nounced a Weekday Religious Ed u• Mei g;; G e ner al Hospital and the Mrs. 'Charles Hilton, Mrs. Earl
Tommy Lyons hu been con fined
cation meeting to be held at the County Home .
Jewett, Ben Allen, Mr. an d Mra. lo his home sJnce la1t Thunda y
parish house of Grace Epiacopal
A f ter th e mee ting �he group en• Eugene Ca rpenter, Mr, and Mrs. by illneS3.
Church on October 24 l t '7 : 30 p. m. j oyed lunch eon at the Circle Res Poul Hauber , Mr. and Mrs. Dana
and sai d the topic woul d be "The hi urant.
Rev. Raymon Konkright went lo
Carpenter, Mrs. Garnet Smith, Mrs.
Main Purpose of Week d ay ReHgi today to visit wllh his
d
camp,
Nellie
A
Jam&lt;lstown
Mrs.
Gluesen
Van
a
Attend in g were Rev. Poul Hoo ks,
ous Education Programs.' •
family, Mr. and Mn.
and
Meter
an
d
Rev.
L.
R.
Glueaencamp,
daughter
Rev. Ray Wining, Rev. Cly de Bartn
and to return Mrs.
all
of
Lockwood
John
d.
Portla
l!V
,
er,
.
Jett,
R
Rev.
.
Brown
Gardn
A letter was read by I he Rev,
Konkrigh
t to Middleport.
Eugene Brown, president, from Rev. Glazier, Rev. Carl Herring,
Ora Scarbraugh, Mrs. Robert
Mr. an d Mr1. Leo Swick or Col•
Geor ge V.11ughan url!(ing ministers Rev. Edmun d Life, Rev. Nyle Bor­ We dd le and Debbie Jean, Mr, and u,-,,UuJ: spent the wet'k end with
and people of the churches to al· d en, Rev. Gardner, Rev. Zundel, Mrs. Wilbur Bissell an d llalph, Mr�. Mra: Swick's father, C. H. \Ylse, -$[,
tend "Candidates Night" al the Rev. Morgan, Rev. Tibbs, and Mrs. Kathleen Bis1ell
an d chil d ren, and Ruth Wiae. They came etpet,­
Midd leport High School a udilorium Jacobs and Mrs. Zundel.
Mrs. Agne11 Polk, Mrs. Mauk- Bo­ ially .for Mr. Wise'■ birthday._
The next meeting on November 7 gard , Mrs. Greta Suttle and �ohn
October 20, iil 7:30 p. m. when can .
•'
will
be a tri •eounty meeting of the L., Mr. an d Mrs. John Bogard and
d ldates of both parties will be pre­
Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Emmllh left
Athens, Gallia and Meigs �ssocia• John, Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Ha)'man, Saturday to vi1it with relativff iD
sent.
tions at the TUppers Plalns EUB Mr. and irt.rs. Howard Allen and Cuya hoga fall.s.
Rev. Richard Morgan, pastor of Church.
Dwain, Mr an d Mrs. George Fred•
the Racine Methodist Charge, an d
Mrs. Robert Coats aud 1,b ugb.�r,
erick, Mrs. Mae Van Meter and
Rev. lra Tibbs, pastor of the Mt.
were in Parkel'lllburc on
Christine
daughters, Mr. and 'Mrs. James AnMoriah Church of God on Racine
derson,, Brend.11, Connie and Bon­
Route 2 wcrl' welcomed as mem•
nie, Mrs. James Lawr,mce, Mr. and
oc
I
bers.
Mrs. George Rupp, Joyce R•ndolph,
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Bissell, Mr. and
Election of cfficers was held
'
1
:•rs.
Willacd Pigott and Ch,rt,ne,
with Rev. Francis H. Glazier se­
s ident, Mrs. Ethel Larkins, Mn. Gladys
Willis
Mrs.
Anthony,
pre
. Jecte d as presi dent; Rev. Robert R.
was in eharge or Lhe business Ashworth, Naomi Aulherson, Mrs.
meetin g of the B. H . Sanborn Mis- Maxin e Durst, Robert Ours, Mn. TO' celebrate National BPW week
sionary Society when the group Nona Long, Mrs. Elva Hayman and the Middleport C1.ub will hold its
l&gt;ausl,1er Born To
met Monday night at the First Janice, Mr. and Mrs. Edgell, Mn. annual luncheon this Thursday
Mr. and Mr•, Baily
Baptist Church in Midd ltport.
Mil dred Bissell and children, Mr. at the Martin Restaurant in Mid•
Mr. and Mrs Raymond Baity of
Donations were made to the Sal- and Mrs. Charles Price, M r. and deport with
Mn. Marguerite
Li.ncoln Heighl.s are announcing vation Army, the American Bible Mrs. Clarence Baker, Mrs. Lotlle
Durst, Mrs. O. B. Stout a n d Mn.
the birth of an 8 pound 12 ounce Society and UNECEF.
Sheffield, Rev. an d Mrs. Edward Charlotte Perrin as hostesses,
daughter, Jill Renee , on Wednes­
,
Griffith, Mrs. Mae Pearson, Mr.
_
.
Mrs. �d1son Baker , chairman _of and Mrs. Richard Ables, Mrs. An­
day, Sept 28, al the Green Mem­
The luncheon will be held from
lhe �bite Cross_ work ,of the soc1e- I na Swan, Mr. and Mr11. Davi d 1 1 : 30 a. m. on with
orial Hospital in Xenia.
membera
ty, discussed this year s quot� �n d Yates, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Bissell coming and going ss they can.
Grand parents arc Mr. and Mr�. �he group made plans for f1lhng
Mrs. Nan Moore is chairman of
Russell Baily of Port William an d it. Mrs. Ba�er also announce d that and Karen, Davi d an d Bob, Mrs,
the committee arranging for the
.Mrs. James Fletcher of Zenia. The us� dothmg woul d be coll�c�ed O�car Babcock and Mrs. Charles
special activities for the week.
Massar,
all
of
Long
Bottom.
Baitys alim have a daughter, Karen this year for Cambell Christian
The group also have a d isplay in
Rae, age four.
center an d Bayconc.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Brewer and the wind ow of the Ohio Fuel Gas
The Baptist State Convention to Sylvia, Rev. and Mrs. Douglas Clr­ office.
be hel d in Marietta October i3-15 cle, Sue an d Larry, Mrs. Law rence
was aonounce d by the presi dent. Scarbraugh, Mrs. Laura McKenzie,
Following the report of the re• Mr. and Mrs. Harlow Ervin, Mr.
1
cen t meeting of lhe County Ceun• and Mrs, Dwight Hoback, Mr. and·
cil of Church Women the group de- Mrs. Charles Bush and chi1 dren,
cid ed lo assist in the pro j ects Virginia Arnott, Mrs. Horry Wll•
or
adopte d inclu d ing furnishing med- ford, Miss Florence Circle an d Mrs.
Mrs. Mary Lawrence and Mrs. i_ca l kits and night gowns which Mattie Circlt-, all o( Racine.
Jack Beehtle, superintend ent of
Mildred Arnold entertained with a will be sent for missionary work.
Methodist Ch'Jrch of Mid ·
Heath
and
Rev. and Mrs. N. L. Russell
birthday p.irty al the Lawrence
World Community Day. Novem­
a nd 'Rev. Raymon Konk­
leport
d
Harry
Mrs.
and
Mr.
d
Ann'an
afternoon
Mary
Sun
d
ay
home in Bashan
ber 4 a l the ChestP.r Method ist
honoring Henry Arnold , 18, so n uf _ Church and the World Day of Russell and Kelly Yvonne, of right, pastor of the church were
in New B011ton Sunday lo atten d
Mr. an d Mrs. Dares Arnol d .
rrayer in february, were also an• Athens.
dinner meeti ng of tJ;ae Ports•
the
nounced.
Mrs. Amanda (Wade) Taylor, of
Present were Mr. an d Mrs. Joe
l(t -,_Or Chttrttt' Stbool
�
PµJlen chairm:m
of Californi a, Mrs. Maude Bailey, Mlllf · " ""
t " ·
• del\b. ·
.
·· L■wrenee and daughters, • :Nancy, theMrt:;
:.r:,
.
·
'
LoV
�f the society _was _in nova, W . Va.; Mr. and M rs. Henry
•
}
r.
Debbie, Kathy • and JQ Ellen, Mr,
. .
.
.
chatge of the program w��rh m• Fredrick Westerville Ohio
Rev. Warren WIison, d 11tr1ct
Mr.
and Mrs. Dores Arnold an d Je:net,
·
'
a
clu�ed story ·o� lhc love gift box and Mrs.' E. E. H11ym�n an d t.ettil! ch airma n for 1 Religious Education
Bobby Arnol d, Miss Barbara Prince
which was orlgmally
called the Spen.cer, Syracuse; Mrs. Dah Stone in the district, was in charge of
·
d
M
P
'I
'I
II
an
rs a Y yse ·
·1 e boX; F o JIowmg the ded •'.ca t"ion of Vienna, W. Va.; John Taylor, the meeting and Rev. Stanley Mc­
m1
Praye� was led by Rev. Griffith
of the Circle love g!_f t ofrermg by Racine; Mrs. Helf"n Jeffers and Gilliard , d islrict
superinten dent
birthdaY cake• ice
a , er wh'eh
I
Mrs. Pullen the meetmg was closed Donna. Mrs. Nellie Eblin .i:nd Nan• spoke to the group.
cream an d _ pop were . served . The
with prayer hy Mrs. Paul Smart.
The rnain speaker was Dr.
cy and Wendell, Pomeroy; Rev.honored gue5t received several
Refreshments of pie an d coffee and Mrs. Ray Pidcock, Chauncey, Howard Browning, of the Theo. __ were serve d by the Pri�dlla Circle and Robert Bush, Lancaster.
��--logical School, Delaware.
with Mrs. Harold Thomas as ch:.iir,
man. Other, ,ec,jng. we,e ,,r,
Gene Coleman, at:rs. Hustlt'I Mc•
Clure, Mrs. Richard Hovatter, Mrs.
Gene Kauff an d Miss Fred d ie
Houdashelt.
The M iddleport Garden Club met Monday evening at the
The refreshmt"nts lobles were home of Mrs . M . L. French for its October meetinJ with 20
1\JEW owl USED
decorated in the Halloween theme
s responding to the roll call, "Material Suitable for
with pumpkins aud bl.ack cat cut­ member
Drying."
outs on , the table.
was given by _ Mrs .

Hc,rtford W. Va.
Sa.:i�tv N�v.�

t

o., Oel. 4, 1960-3 Haz,el Community

C.h urch Held Its
Rev. Glazier Sel,ected As President
At Meeting Of Mi nist,erial Association Homecoming Day

" It was In another speech about
the Po1l Olfi,fe Department that
another official expressed his senUmenli about the situation like
lbi1 , 'W, ar• pr oud of our record.
We hlYe no apologies to mali.e and
no rearet■ to expreSII. What h as
been done w&amp;S once aaid to be impossible. Now it is history.' Those
ar
y
ti
;n:l��ecT a !��g �:::t cited by
the P01trnaaten as recent ac•
complllhmeqts lly the Deportment
wfu th e following:
ale
·Ettab'l.lJlh:dd (he fint large-sc
r
program of automatic mail hand•
Un• by machinery on II nation•
wide basla.
Developed the "airlift" program
whleh 1peed1 up the delivery of
a pproxlrna tely one lf'tter out of
every 17 on a "space ova il1ble"
balls.
Contin ued witD the developmer,t
of fa11ter machines for letter sorl•
i ng an d for mail culling, facing
and cancelling.
Continued with plans for a new
au tomatic · postal sub•station which
will vend stamps, envelopes, post
cards a nd writi ng paper, and which
will have money changers for both
coins an d bUls.

I
Po�:.::'%�i1:"=�.r. 1:...:.:
�t ��.�".�
m,.
..
.
thia newapaper 1ubll!i'U,t1 to the e11clr:, llr. ..n.1- mo. ,l • L. sitwv-, IH-... · Htft
� lJII: 1mad.,
h
!t..!'
.!ven� ��� •e b�
_ fael ,
,; lftl
UPI. The preu llldcJptlort � Mr.
11,. ,
e town. .
. ·lime■ 1 - .,,
■at w:Pre;&gt;YJ�l ::,\ti!' or o:4
h1n . the stair · to 1erttt reporter■ to lftd
::iz..;
I r, �m.
1
�
:S alat
. . ' ft \,_ .., . Mt. tg•�·
me�t1na1 ant! ta dif into the � lln,. c,r1f• •�llt
•
Mii, iiia�� flil■ ot the Ci"RM1rva't:lon Departcord1. But amaller papen do not lloll'le Wri\iji""°n,
have UPI n:porta.
�'.Olili� ·�.4 ..}� JL f. lli��ur a nlr
.
Harry
I
llti
0.. 1, li.clc, f•11 .... 1�•
,lfia,
uit
,
.....,,
lea
m
.p,o�le
lhol
to
ti■wtl'
a
Th•
: Phil_lp ·Wo1pert. Earl crttlr: 1'rttff ·1hed ma lul tJ'eek to
Mr. and
with the l&lt;Mlb 'Ohio Ge neral
ae,nbJy. It , sbould create an O�io Clark, �v. ,tnd, ll"--r1. David � d.eW�iJttJ!.:.! �,a.m.;eo;ut� ,.l?e 'built
cifflelil pq_bttc�tlon, with .a . m�l- �an, �-;l.tgd � �n�A�•I IVJJi!t �In llat contai ning every newspaper Don J'enl:i� of' �t__Hu��nit(in
. · HarlfM ftersonal,
and radio atation in the ■late, ev- club, and the 1......,-...., JV. and
1C17ql' K.' l. Crltff l■" on the •let
ery publ!e library. and perh1p1 Mrs. 8'11,. .
lilt thtt week. Willi am Ffeld■, -one
Nit# iHI._,. -�.........
every 1ehool and every eleded pubot f{utfotd'1 O)Jt1t citilana la con'Ru....ll �hb bu ntumed ito UriQ• 1o hl1 111ed with lllneu, alao.
Uc serva nt.
b'!tni a p■tltnt , et The WltiUI\I band played here ,
It ■hould contain every •'-bltan- hlt home
.,
tlve reornJ■tlon · any ,tatt aien"" Ple111nt Van-, ROlfltal
Saturday .
,· n Bull
.111• �• PhlUJel, Mr,. •lloI•nd Vr ··�
l Mfl. Ch"arles Lanier of
adopts. Sub■tantlve te1i1u.lltlOn1, for
· 1■ and Mr. and Mn. Jarne■
example, are thoae 11:ovtml� aanl- NeutaUn, ut ·Po11)1ro)' and II". G■lll�
tary condition■ in barber ■bop■ Robert WJlktn■ _ of Li� · WeN Llt11 r tol 'Winfield were vlilitora In
1
and rutauri.nta. It ahould contain recenl pests qf Mr. and Mn. I. H•rUord SU1i, ■y.
·
_ ·
rulet of prJCtlee and procedure- L. -Stewart.
�- Claarle, D9dd •n.d , da:qbter
tbo■e , for Jnalante, whtcb ,et Ume
· H:O*L•
llnrit1 l n wblth to t,nter a n appear, Charlffte � jn llarlln,fto� :W.
�. Te:s:. UPI-A Mid•
,nee or In wtuch to file tPPllca· v.- ., Tl�ttq relative■ over th• l,fN_pil oW led ' poHce Friday and
.
wee�a. •
lion, and noU0tt.
' iie1'iittaH lwo pi'O'Wlen--a man
•
1
'l'onla �. daU(hw of �- and Ii 'Wo'mu--bld broken •to ,
The publicatioft ■hould indud•
everthln1 e )ae ,al hnporta.uce · to and Mn. Slnler CoUt,, •• • re- Mi, 1i�11..,. ir,:te policema n , let\.
�r naderi and radlo Us- cent patl., ,!,\H� . Holl,iJ,al. . ,... fthW,°IMn iell'ittd It ViU a
_
· lfr■• A. L., SmWI 1' • m1� L�l.t ·'Wbo '11n still there fl!Offl
, ,
td:m,
Penon.U,, l l� the type ot1 P\lb- patient at Plloant Vall-,. - --- i 'fftl)'' 1lie'l'W tht nlJ ht befffl.
fluld ptirmit --- P�I.
Ueetlon . llrb
•
•
'
'
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· ··
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-a
. llro, RJ-'-_., , A.t!...\e_,i
a..fll
• v.
· spqu In �
BI...(••
, Pl. p••
....,
.. tlon-ot 't/1
nii
1'1:1 aun.., ,m-,
, � ,:.._ ni..u. ::.� J
notebook. l1 th'.uld lllNl th1 �• o va8W¥._ , ""J'"""' i ..-�...,. ;-,:-t HI an4 Ji(r,. Okey- Roush, lietlitt. l'ftd'
,a!L .
'"'l\llllte■ of 11--• ftalllbll, hfl)O ' OYOl'
, 1111: , tit8 Iii',. 00111 Y11ger · ,�
Mr.
a
nd ·Mn. .t.oftB,�� �•':9 tiloi tbl fuiAiral of 111:r■. · )11,
lb', rellabUUy, eonveal&amp;n.c.! u4 �
·
:·.1
1
1 "tN. •f\lt llt• 19rK'.; il11 •11Hr 111 Mton; 'Alw'tda1 ot
econo iny.
in
d,
!:t-::
-,�:�
1
�
11n, Blllrtijl ,, · ,81,,.. - r�ltM
ernment doe■, n•• t¥,t alone ,the
.)olr ol 'tllo llffll' IO - illlorill•
!lff!'i• Sul..
:s l#IN .• W.elleton s.\ur:
t1oe:· tt'I � � � Ille_ · 10••�, 11q� • aut""1,...u-t it('� '
l!lf. .
.
""'nt �-�, Ill, .-i•-1 ,Hlll'iiMIO�.• �' •
Cbo,!ft Rile anJ
Iii' ,
.., &lt;lo It �
ma e, ,.- buaiaea■ tnj
tii,ilJI ,f, .,.._t at· 10P
MQC!lnl It. Ille -- .. ,....,..
,
"
.
'
.,
llolll
th�
M""9·
,•·
U..
it

Daily Sentinel, Pomeroy-Middleport,

RACINE

�.-

•

1rates Ready For llot Yanks

l'ould Repeat Feat Of Four
. · �ht
33 Years Ago, If 'fhey Can
.
•
iii&amp;'IS&amp;UltGH (UPI) - The New York Yankees checked '

ALL-STARS

1

1

' lll)eDer. , -

*

" Th•, Yin-ee1, who swept the
'1ratei,_ Jn fo\lf' �traight Kamei; th!!
Unlie· tbe two teams mt!t in a
Vfot1d•· �es �k lb 1 927, named
.�e wthner Art Ditmar
to
pt the opener against Pittsrsh'• 20,game ace, Vern Law.
�f'". Stengel'• choire or Ditl!'r i, ' 11.ifear-Old right.hander
SP{i:14ii;�I�, Jil asi .. w8 1 some tn, of ■ iurpriie inu m u ch a s
Y� - .rrtanager had e,c press!'d
•tindluiihtl to go with his " blu l'
c"hi," ll'�tW, Whitey Ford, a s
U 1Monday.
8ten1eti1 • · �xPlain in g the sw , t r h
1
�
m Fercl to Dltm ar. said. •• 1 f i l?•
I'd better pick Dit m ar he•
eAUN al some times thi s year he
� W"On the fir.&amp;t game of an im ,pptla11t
aerie• for us."
•
Plrtt Game !wen
! ' Fi&gt;td lhlll •ill undoubtedly 11tart
third game when the Scrir1
1.0 New York where lhe mC right field fence work11 far
I hardship on a lefl•ha nded
�er than a right•hander.
-�
dHn■ken quoted
1he fint
� at · even money al1hough the
-Uikee■ rated 13 to 10 ravorite11
_ tbe Seriell, chiefly becau1m or
·� et, 1uperlor power.
-:- Dan ny Mlirta ugh, the stor k y,
11\le Pitt.lbdrBh manager who is
�ring tn hll rlnt World
Ur+u, 'didn't even wait for Sten•
Dt to announce his opening game
lineup before making hie publir.

!:

· -rm gomg t o go with my left•
hum.led l 1 111:i 1.1p" said the Pintea·
skipper, who ' already has .an­
nmm&lt;"ed that
Bob Friend will
piteb the �econd game, Wilmer
�l iw\l the tl11rd and Harvey Had•
dix '"probably" the fourth.

"in football yov'•• tot to ,tart
from the, 1rouM upl''

Oldtuners Plus
Youngsters Put
Colonels Over

PITTSBURGH UPI - Flett:
and f1r,u rus on the 1 960 World
Sf't1{'!&gt;
Ol'P(JNENTS-New York Yan.
ktcs (American League) vs. PitlB•
burgh P1rale1 (Nation.it League).
DATES-Oct. 5-6 .r+l P illiburgh;
Oct. 8•9· 10 (if ne�e1sary) at New
York; Oct. 1 2- 1 3 ( if necessary , at
Pittsburgh.
TIME OF GA:dES--All games
st11r1 at I p. m .. EDT, e1u:ept tor
Sunday g:ame. Oct. e, which start!
al 2:05 p. m, EDT.
ODDS-Yankees favored 6½ to
·s to wln Series; first game even
money.
PROBABLE FIRST GAME PTT·
CHERS-Art Oit mar (15-9) New
York, vs. Vernon Law (20-9) Pitl11bur,:!h.
W INNER-First team to win
four i,:ames.
MANAGERS - Ca�y Stengel,
Yankees, and Dann)' Murt.:lugh, Pi­
rales.
HADIO . TV - National Broad,
rasting Company. Airtime, 12:45 p.
m. EDT except Sunday, Oct. 9,
1 :45 p. m,, EDT.
ANNOUNCERS - rdel Allen an d
Bob Prince (TV ): Chuck Thompson
and Jark Quinlan radio).
F!kST GAME WEATHER-Fair
and sunny; temperature in the 60's.
U M l'IRli� S - Dusty Boge:ess (NL)
plate; John Stevens (AL), first
base; Bill Jackowski (NL), second
b11ire: Nestor Chylak (AL), third
bast•; Stan Landes (NL) and Jim
Honochick (AL) foul lines.
American League Seriell win•
ncrs - -35 times.
National League Serie■ winners
-2 1 times.
Previous Series parlicipation­
Yankel' S 24 times, Pirates 5,
Previou11 Serie9 meeting be·
twt"cn YankreH and Pirates-----Yan­
kl'ell won four stralght games in
1 927.
LaHt year·s Series winner-Los
Ang1•le1 Dodgers {NL) in six games
over Chicago White Sox (AL),

M urlaugh's left · handed lineup
has three !IOulh paw ,wingers cente r fil�ldcr Bill Virdon . left
rielder
Bob Skinner and catch•
er Smoky Burgeu. V inion will
lead off, 8hort1l0p Dick Grqat will
bat st&gt;t·ond . Skinner third and first
Stuart fourth.
[}ick
baseman
lligll1 fielder floberto Clemen te is
t ubbed for the hflh spot and he
will be followed by Burgess, third
LOlJISVIU.E, Ky. U PI-A pair
baseman Don lloal, 1econd hHe• of oldtimers end a young relief
man Bill Mazero1kl and Law.
pitcher wt&gt;re hailed today as
heroe11 of the 1,ouisville Colonels
that bea1 the odd8 and the hi�hly
ranked Toronto Maple Lears to
rapture minor leal(ue b11eball's'
bigge1t prize, the j u nior World
Series title.
Catcher Stan Lopata and firat
ba■eman Frank Torree, farmed
down from the parent Milwaukee
Braves afler )'ears i n the big
time, led an extra base barrage
LOS ANGELES UPI-Mlddle­ that beat the Leah, 5- 1 Monday
we i a ht champion Gene Fullmer of night and wrapped up the Series,
Wesl Jordan, Utah, hobbling on 11 four games t o lwo.
Bobby Hendley pitched brilliant
sore and etifr rla ht leg, today
e,c pre ssed hi, regrets that he ball to win the final game, but It
wou ld be unable to defend hi t was Ken Mackenzie, a Yale grad­
title Saturda)' night aB■irtst Su. uate from Gore Bay, Ontario,
who had saved two games and
gar Ray Robinson .
"lure 8Ckets .
Just 81 the Fullmer•Robinson won another in against the Leah
!B:Slt Two Gama
tight was be1;innlng to catch on t1;1 keep lhe Colonels in the run­
future football wltb bodng rans it was postponed ning against Toro nto, the Inter•
--- lllddh�port
1P-,leri ,11pllt laHt evening In 111m· Monday unlil Dec. 3 because the national Lea,::ue penna11t · winner
cham pion 1uffered a painful leg b�· l 7 games.
tJ!:.�t Wo.hama and G&amp;IUpoU1.
,.;, Tlle I, 7, �lh grade team, led Jnj ucy in lr■lnln.111.
Ii, fullback Allen Wallace, lto
Tbe fight had been 11ched1.1led
TACKLE NEEDS SURGERY
· 4 1peed1ter ran over W■• to kick off the fall 1t1Hon of Sat•
SAN FRANCISCO UPI-John
7-0th gradera N-0.
urd■)' ntabt televl1ion ABC bouts. ThomH, leH tackle of the San
-Middleport Reservea lo■t lf•lZ In■tead a 1ub1tltute TV bout was Francisco rortv Nincre, will un•
q uickly arran&amp;ed between two top dergo si1rgery f'r!rl�y for a small
G1Dlpoll1 Reserve1.
-·-- - ll1ht.wel1ht
contenders, Kenny fraeture U hi� left wrist. Doc•
Lande of Mlchla:an and Len Mat• ton expect lhl 24�-pound line•
'
• tor s1..k, - -For llulllJ
thew1 of Phlladelphla.
IT,an lo !,e out of action for at
Mlll I' BANLON
leas� three weeks.
WING I GIT IUB
DETROIT UPI-Len Haley h■s
been brought up by the DetroJt
� White or Deep raH Colon
Red WlnJ■ Crom Edmonton to
flll In f�r Gordie Howe In the
Site, 32
38
openln1 11111me1 of the National
' Hockey Leaa:ue 1ea1on. Howe,
who h11s pla)'ed in 169 consecu­
BY MILTON RICHMAN
tlvf' game■, 1ulfered ·a wrenched
PJTTSBUROH UPI - GenPral
left knee and tWl,tcd and sprain• Manager Joe Brown of the Pitts•
ed llgamenl1 In lalll Saturday's bura:h Plrate1 coldly i11formed
MIDDLIPOIT, OHIO
AJI-Stfr 11me.
lho Ne w York YankeeR t□diiy
that they can expect "no repeli •
lion" of the 1927 World Serlei..
,,,
, �
' - " , I J,.,o ,1../ -,
,.
, .»
That w11 a black year for
, ',, ,,
',, I
I
,
',/,l'f /
Pltt,burgh. Babe Ruth and Lou
Gehrig bl11sted 11everal "homers"
during halting pracllce before the
World Serles even began that
year. The Pirates looked on in
awe, never rea lly recovered and
lost the World Seriea ln four
straight gamc11.
"[f the Yankee, think the 1111m e
thina 11 going to happen now,"
)
Brown uld, "they can forget It."
our u1ed car deals .,.•
"Nobod y awe■ thh1 ball rlub,"
I
■aid the youthflll-looking 42. year­
old Pittsburgh GM, standing be­
hind the battlnt ca1e during 11
Plrnte workout. "That goes for
lhe 'mighty' Yanbe■ or anyone
else.
::11y, Pir1t., PefMd
'!
"Our rellow1 don't even leel
the Amerlcsn League le as good
8B the National League'', Brown
�oH
lle
Cadlllac
F-8�
Rambler
added.
"The Pirates don't think
I• •
,
anyone should beat them and
wh11l'1 more, they're convinced
'---"'
____
"
___
...;
____
no oue can."
____
__
I
'
,
Yankee manager C1te y Stengel
1uggoled llu,c one of tile reasons
'
hie club was able to defeat Bal­
., f1TO LOGIC
OUI
, '
thnore
in a crucial lour-game
1 0f
"�
eerie• recently waa becA.use the
youna: Orlole1 " were over·eager"
llill
... \'NI !!!. Ula U.I NALi I
r,..
but Brown lnal1ted that would
not be the c11e with lhe Pl.rate,.

*'

Fullmer Cancels
Scrap For Title
With Sugar Ray

'illft•

iF

J

I

t;·

■

-·""·. .

Priced At 1$2.98
TH� SHOE BOX

•

..,

..

· ■ntl ONI
' PACT 15 • • • ·

•

1:

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\

POM EROY, OH IO

- ......
,. �
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+ ...

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""' .!!!'1,i".\r

USED CARS

'S9 Pontiac C111hn11 2 Dr. · · $2495
'58 Mercury Monttry 4 Dr. · · $1 495
'S7 Plymouth v.a Savoy 2 Dr. $995
· 'S7 Olds
Super 88 - 4 Dr. · , , $1 595
'
Hard Tap

'S7 Cli1vrol1t lel I'. 4 Dr. · · $149S
'S7 ltNCk c,11·, ury 4 Door · · · · $139S
'S6 Olds1r oblla 88 - 4 Dr. $1 195
'SI Chev, Jlet � Air 4 Dr. · $1 89S
. '54 Callmac Serles 62 - 4 Dr. $109S
'S$ Okl111olll1 aa - 2 Door $895
• Door

..

..

_ .... _.� ......

'54 P111llac I cyl. Chhft•

$49S
�Q lllck S.,. Nani T., · · · · $29S

COME

TO

"MOORE'S" SERVICE CENTER

FOR A FREE CHECK-UP

WIt· h Dinner Saturuu-.1
,.1_,

Today's Sport Parade

Bing's Phone Call Of 12 Long
Years Ago PayingOffFinally

■

Thomas Jreal Honored
011 Third Birtlulav

hlfth.iai- oT

The third
Thomu
wut, ■on of Mr. and lln. R. T.
lVe,t wa, celebrated Saturday
whtn a family dlnnfll' wu laeld at
• the We■l home In hit honor.
,\llendin1 were Kr. and Jin,
Koit Weal of Zlilemlle, Kr. artd
Ji1ri. Raymond Hott, Mr. and Mn.
a.ntoa Ponn and lln. �•nr,

-

�' ���wgu

Check Our Prices On Bonded Brake Shoes

,... ... .... IIQn

S•lli••;a �
SMmi CI.Offlllll (O.
I
Jlldlll'f&amp; '
'
,

Boy••

£

WfalM

CAI COA TS
Pop. ·11nc�

KARACHI UPI-The government has finished · the second
staa:e . of it■ program for 1hiftin1
to ·the new capital area al Rawal•
1
pindi.
A total or 1,180 civil servanli
and their famlliea were transported in seven special -trains.
The bulk of the central govern•
ment civil service is sUU in Kar­
achi, but the
remainder will
shift norlh gradually as the new
capU a l is developed.

B£tl!"_,_ Y'S
�- K
·

Save Your Sal!,a Slips
MIDDLEPQflT

PAYMENTS
CUT
,.
.
AND Mo:R t MONEY too t
,

I

YES . • • You 1:an,cl11n up bills and- dHII,
cul your pa�_m1nl1 down and hav, �xtr_a
011h bnld,f1ar j,ther alhin11. "-' "" • • '" � '
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PHONI WY4�171 (
Hov'1 t to 5 - T�vr,. 9 tll _N_

,►" •

IAKEI FURNITURE

fer

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,­'

S.98

Jqme, Eber,bach
lloriored On Birtlulay

/

Mr . and Mn. Harold Ebersbach
11mtertaintld with a· chucken dinner
' Sunday at their home, Butternut
Ave., honoring their 10n, James, on
. hie 18th birthday. .,\ decorated
birthday cake, w11 served with the
dinner.
Pre■ent were Mr. and Mrs. Em­
·
meu Blackburn, Mr. and Mn. C. J .
Eberabach, Mlt1 Kamm kelton,
the honored guest, his 11ister, Darla
-,ind Iir. and Mra. Eberab1eh.

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� with matching candle ICOIICfl

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WAU. CLO«
--·M•y.....iil
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•..-v,NGS to

ffi:lt:

,._.,..,•&gt;

125 I. MAIN ITWl•T

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o

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�leland's

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Unlttd Preu h1t•rn1tlon■,
g i nns of the univerae.
than tho11e in the ul t ra ..,Cole1
DEL AN/ARlt, Ohio lUPIJ ' The siurtv of the¥ waves is portion of the s1rnctrum.
You don't redllt:e It, liut rlgtn coiled ndloastrononfy. fl fi �ld
So th.- optirtl leleacope tP.n
now you al'e being hombarde.d by th 31 mas 11o m e d ay help pr ov i de only iftrntify whal t hC' h u m � n
ellent, harmles.s electroma1netie the .:ituwe.r to h.pw the univtrsl! I e.,1, can !lee: Onl)' tho11e c11 I N,tia\
invaders frotn ot1ter ■paoe.
wu born Ttie fleld's pote11tlal obieeh that emit 01· r('flect visible
1lbey ar-e j1..11t rtdlo waves - h aa Y el hardly beeri imuincd
I li,ih l .
lllle lbe m■n,made kind tbtt arti
Out other objf!cts anti phenomijeuln� cflmPletl�n on a tr11ct
conv,:rl.ed \o SfJU�d and l_itht 'u a( 111J1 d owned by Ohio WH leyan en, give off wn.vc11 lonr.er than
.
you watch televl11on or haten to H niversity l fe� mUes north or optical
waves These are the PlPr•
the radio. But these celestlal In- Columbus is a unlatle ra c Hote )l"I- tromaenctic. or radio waves, Ra•
truders ooyer a much broader scope lhf' larljljlsl of ils lt;ind In diote.lescopes are deRigned to pick
apectrum than the man.ma� va- 1h'e � orld.
up the,e wavf's and hel p t he raRv • next �Prin!!:. this slrsnl!e- din stranamer idenlifv whei;;e tl\e
lookinf( ir,st-rument that covers w1 vn; came from and whof' sent
acres will begin tuning in on the thorn,
unl•,ersf'.
"lb1dio 11ttronr.m ,v l'!iv�s us 11
The object : To map the heav• broad t r window to Jor,k thrOU[(�."
ens.
Kraus expluined. "We hopP lo Pet
01-tio Slate Pror. John D . .1 clues to what is eoin� on al the
Kraus, head of the dhio st,te source of the radialion ,,
11ni\•e-r�ity - Ohio Wesleyan Ra"It may l:;e a gaseous nebula (a
«Jio Observatory, has cha t'"e of cloudlike mass for outside the
NEW YOFK UPI-Five new­ lhe construQtion and opt1ration of solll r system) or perh11pi; a col
liding ealaxv." he said. Sueh () 1 •
comer,, inc1uding Navy and Pur• the r"aiotelesoop1,
"Knowledge about the radio if'l'IS 11re often 'obscured or arc
d1.1e. moved Into the top 10 be•
htnd pace·scttin� Syracuse today spectrum is primitive compared beyond the view ol the optical
In the United Presa l nternatibnal t o what we know aJ)oi,t the op- teleuope.
tir.al spectrutn"
aal4 Kraus.
major' col14ge football ratin'21.
radioteleThe ('()nventional
''We'll
be
discoverina:
thiqg1
Syr1cyse
�ned iii N'o. 1 ·
.
scope Is a disb-shaped structure
about
the
ui1iverae
which
will
an•
rank ing 1ri thl! Aecond wtell)' b'al.
wilh a foC"al poil\t suspended at
loting o1 the UPI board qt Coach• 1-er and riiiee a lot of new as­
the tip nf met11I be11m� ahove the
es by tot,alirlg 16 fir11t placfi' �otes trmlomical queetion1."
Wba� kind of knowledge, will middle of th@ dish. The imr facc of
and S22 points, while Ml1Si1t1ippl
radioastronomy
open up? What the dish collects lh&lt;' waves and
remained secorrd with 12 fint
ne w QJJ.eallons :will be r,IBed? refle&lt;:t&amp; lhem •to eonvergencc at
place v.o les and 284 point,.
t e focal point. which transmits
The list of otber oont,ndef!! How can invisibl.e radio waves h
Instruments in the control room.
tell
scientists
what
ex
ists
out
how�ver, was revamped tf.1arply
By recordine: and ·an!IJyzin2:
in the wake of a weekend of up­ there?
what the nef'dles and lights re·gls­
set,.
Visible light waves take up only ter on the instrument ,panel. ra­
toWt, wlth 248 poinb, vaulted a very DBrT{)W region of the wave
diostronomers are able to draw 11
from eiJlihth to third place, Il­ apectrum - between the color■
fairly concise piclure or what
'
linof 1 118 held ontQ Its No. 4 red and pbrple. We aimply don't
their instrument has probed.
BpOt, and Ohio State 166 moved iee. what emits or refleets waves
from seventh to fir'th place.
any longer than those in the in•
:'But the classical ratioleh.'•
Navy sailed 111 the way from
scope i, an f'Xpensive item,"
18th to 6th place, Purdue jumped
Kraus said, "espeeially if you
from 24th to "7th, Missouri ■d·
want a big one."
vanced from 2oth to 8th, �inne­
A big one collects more waves,
aot11 went tro_m 12th to 9th and
gi \•es clearer pietu:-es and has
Ark,nsH mov�d from 17th to
betrer resolvin� power. Instead or
101h.
.
blurs. the raidoastronorncr wants
well-defined reception.
SIGN TWO COACHES
The dish type radi otelescope · is
CLEVELAND UPI-The Cleve­
userul provided it doesn't get too
land [ndi1na have signed coaehet
big. To build kin g•size ones, en·
COLUMBUS UPI - The weekly gineers are faced with over•
Mel Harder and Lake Appling
Ohio whelming struetural problems.
for another leason. The Indians United PreS!i International
(fint
ratings
coaches
school
high
also announced that lwo / other
Moving the dish with precision
coaches, Red Ktells and Ed F(u. pla,e votes and won,lost record!! required t1;1 effectively ,can the
Gerald, would not be. back next in parentheses):
sky would be impossible with a
Point, di@h
Tnm ·
year; ,
of more than 1 ,000 feet in
183
1 . Massillon (12. 4..-0)
diameter.
2. Bpringf.ield�"-tb (2 3•0) 125
So Kraus and his group came
105
Alliance (3-1)
up with the kind Ohio State is
4. Cin. Roger Bacon (3·0) 74,
eompletlng • one big enough to
71
5. Lfma (1 3-0-1)
do the job of the biggest dish,
8. 'Marion Harding (1 2·0-1) a2
FOR ALL PORTABLES
and inexpensive enough to make
49
, . Cagton McKlnley (3·1)
building it pra&lt;;tieable.
Transistor Type
46
8. Sandusky (4,0)
u'
9. Parma (3-0)
At one end of the open field"
and Regular
J9
IO, M11rletta (3-0)
that was once farmland stands a
Second Ten: 1 1 . CincinnaU Eld• pivotable .steel rectangle 260 feet
er; J2. ' r{iles (I); 13. Cincinnati I ojlg apd 100 reet high. I t SU!·
' '1&amp;. 'MRidletown; face consists of 11boul 3,ood thin
'PQFc'!"'n ; '1°'4.
16. Toledo St. Francis; 17. Ketter­ metal wires strung up and down,
,JEE P,'RKINP
· inl Fairmont; 1 8. Martins F"erry: forming the flat renector.
l!ilon� WY-!'!W
19. Toledo Central �atholic-; 20.
By lilting the reflector through
� Blaho SI.
Gal1ipo1is.
60 degrees - from almost (lat lo
almost upright - all but 15 per
cent of the sky can be scanned.
The flat refiector ie the only part
of the radiotelescope thal moves.
Across the Jield 500 lee( away
i■ I-tie stationary curved focusing
antenn,t, 360 feet lon1, 70 feet
tall, 1lnlilarly strung with wires
to receive and r.efle,ct the waves
orJ1in11ly bounced off the {lat re­
fleotor.
The parabolic curvature of the
focu.aina: reflector converges and
),
\
coneentratea the waves to a point
1 few reet in front·or the Oat re­
flector. ,
Ona or aeve,;at horn-shaped . ,e­
oelvers ·at" the focal point "lobble''
the concentrated beam a n d
transmit it to underground inPlu1 R414.,V#l4mlll )f-1;
1tnun�nt&amp;.
"What you get is a facsimile of
,l,U Jlol. llf. 11
the w■y the waves appeared at
their source," Kraus said.
1
'At thJ■ atage of radioastron­
·
S.N l!Ol, al l...
omy we're accumulating basic
ll4Kl
I,.'..: • •
spectral data and examples of
how the w1ve1 arc distributed
th�uah space. From there we
can begin findina: out how melter
l1 dlatrJbuted in the universe, and
open the w,ay toward . answering
question, like whether the uni•
verae la really expanding and, iC
ao, how."

8att.;rie$

Simply call our office about I bu$1' loa11. ,
S11 how you can square up and do bit­
ter. It costs you nothln1 to find out . . .
and the COIi II vory re11onable W JOU
want .the money.

r.� "�����. �-�,��o!

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Ma�illon llas
Top Rank Yet
In State Poll

Si-a
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Tey OJu' 1-'-y..Aw•Y

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Break Into Top
lo Gn'd Teams

l&gt;ITrSBURGH UPi - Manager
Harry (Cookie) Lava1etto, who
move d lhe Waahiqlop S,.qator1 .
from t il e ..\mm-li:•fl �l\l.9 �ll•r
to filth P.lac• i n 1980 h.jl been re,
hired for next 1ea,on WU� J "nice
raise" in salary.
calvin Grlf!Hh, Senatprs pre•i­
dent who ia here for the World
Series, mide the lmtOl!ncement
Monday night. He uid he Wis
"delig h ted" to have Lava1etto
back for 1961.
c;a ;;;;;
r ;;;;; ":';a;;a;��iiai••= i

MO DER N decora tor
WAI+' CLOCK ·.

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Mr. and :drs. Elias Stiles enter•
t■ined a group or relatives with
a dinner at their home, Rock
Sprinp Road, Saturday.
Guests were Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Young of Rochest@r, Pa.;- Mn.
Ellzab eth Young ot Beaver, Pa. ;
Miss Mildred Pullins, Ct&gt; lumbu.s;
MlS.!les Alberta lfl'Tlf"Anna Pullins,
Flatwoods, and Mr _ and Mrs. Rudy
Musser 11nd sons, Pomeroy.
Calling in the evening were Mr.
and Mrs. John Ginther a n·d son,
Jack, Chester.

es

Fi\f.t:-N-ftWCOJDefS

Lavagetto B.ehlred
By Senator Cl,dJ

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ljoqno,,,

. . . . . . where we install best quality.
,
Mufflers ot Lowest , Prices.

OP•N AN ACCOUNT - - - · USI DUil ClllDIT PLAN

Bmks Look Strong But Hayes
Seeks Cause ForSlow..Down

Stiles Entertained

R U G IY
J AC K E T S

Airplane-Type Shoelu ' ' . ' Seal COVIi" ' ' . . Car Mata.

H1'@ Radio T�eope In Ohio Will ARSwer

4-Daily Sentinel, Pomeroy-Middleport, 0., Oct. 4, 1960

) t.lr o( the second. half 1lurnp this
week�d. He had better, accord­
ing to !he ,couUng report of �•
slstant coach
Frank Kremblall,
ju1t back from a look-see at till•
, nois.
The, Buckeyea open Big T�
t'cmpeULion Ulil SaturdaJ,' a1ain1t
lhe I l lini at Champ1i,n.
The situation ii THtf&amp;ed with
lllinoi!I, Krembla1 u1•- "They
have a tende11cy to ttat1 Jlpwly,
tut then they come qR 1µ"on11 l'!Dd
r\!ally wear you down."
Ue pointed UII tlJe fact tha t
lllmoi1 led Welt V1r1inla 'J-0 at
the balf S11:tu r.ditf, bl.It punched
The Burkeyes did the same throuah _lhr.eit TPs tn the th.l:r.d
thing aftor runniag up a 21-0 q uart er ard wenl. 9n to shella
,e
lead over Southern MelhGditlt in tl. e M ounla ineer 03-0.
s
the first half of the opening
aame.
Hayes will try t o solve th@ put•

By OSCAll FllAL'IY
hat been one ol tht' Pirates' front
Pl1TSBURG}I UPJ - Binlil Cros• line hurlers.
by made a telephone call 12 YHta
the " Deacon," so called by his
ago and It makes the Pittsburgh team matea because he is an or•
.Pirates no wone than even mOnfly dained minia&amp;er of the Mormon
again111t the ml1h,y New York. Y•n- church Js typical of this
young
kees in Wedne1day'1 World Serie, Pirate team.
opener.
' Moat of your major re,ague base.
"Hello," &amp;aid the man with the ball teama are composed of men
golden ton■ils, "this i1 Ring Cro1- who learned the seam)' side .or
by. I'd Ju■t like you l.o kqow, Mn. life while riding the tank
town
Law� that we'd like to have yow- buse1. They rail into sn easy way
son, Vernon, pitch for Plttsbur11h of speaking which Is well 1prink•
Piralei.,"
led with cuss word■ and the habit
Mrs, Law - mother of )'oun11 ia contagious on the whole.
Vernon .Law - bubbled.
Not ao on the Pirates, although
NEW ORLEANS UPI-Mlddle,
"I 1ue11 you'd h■ve to 1ay that they compete with all the vim
weigh! Chico Vejar from Stam­ Crosby's telephone call waa the and vigor Or anybody's Gas House
ford. Co11n .. has 1lgned to fight tinal straw in our family's de• -gang. On the whole these are
·
welterwei�hl Ralph Dupas of cislon ll\at l'd aign with the Pi• Quiet youn men who know their
g
New Orleans on Oct. 24. Dupas, ratesi" the ran11y La w grinned as way to church and follow it stead­
lhird - rankcd in his division, has he played with a niilrant puppy Hy.
won, hl1 la1t five fii:hts.
alofli the thlrd base line at
"Swearing is only a habit."
Forbe1 Field, "It sure thrllled my says Law, who spends much of
mother. "
his spare time, a1!de from
hls
Today the boot is on the other hobbles of carpentry and
play.
lt'I
the lni the mouth harp, in speaking
pedal e:ii:tremlty and
"Deacon'' who Is thrlllina the Pi• to young peoples' groups. "I try
you
rate management as he pN'p'1 U11 to tell the youn1sters that
to carry their hopN into the open- don't have to talk that wa)' to be
"We have fellowa with much Ing game of the Series Wednesday. either I man or ■n athlete."
kovt• ..., Path
more experience than the Oriol•
Law, a quiet man, approaches
ea," he pointed out. "Our pltch­
There waa no ide■ in Law"• hi■ openinw: aame assignment with
self-control
ing stalf, with men like Vern mind when· he signed with the the same
ateady
I ,aw, Bob J&lt;� riend, Harvey Haddix, Pirates that- he'd ever pitch in the which marks his outside life.
"We learned
Wilmer M i z@ll and Elroy Face Serle1.
to
handle the
was preeaure this season in winning
have been 11ruund the majors ' "Out in Idaho, where I
much longer than most of the raised, we onl)' heard big league the National Lea.gue pennant," he
Baltimore pitchen. And fellows ba1eball on the radio," he aald. "I asserts. "Certainly we have to re .
like Dick Groat. Don Hoak, w11 eon1idered to be a much bet- spect the Yankees and their va1t
Smoky Burgess and BUI Mazer­ ,er football 1&gt;lsyer apd never real• World Serles experience. But we
oski al110 have a lol more exper• ly lilOl H!rloualy in terelted In base- aren't afraid.
" I thlnk we'll live a good IC·
leqC"e th.11n the other Oriole pl•)'· ball until the end of high 1chool.
crs.
Then the 1couta atarted comlni:: count of ouraelvee."
around, elgbt or 10 o/ them, and
De1lre Big F■etor
From lht WIY in which the min
"The)' don't figure lo be over• of couree I 1ot lntereated."
uid It, you'd better believe it.
Law, 1 ,trapping ■Ix. root ,three­
eager. The y know exarlly what's
at stake und what they have to Inch ri&amp;hl-t\ander who hails from
lll Y•I JAILIO
do to beat the Yankees. They feel Meridian, a 1m1Ll town near
Wllliall\,. Reeve,, 28, Albany, has
mind been placed -ift the county jail by
they can, and I do, too, although Boi1e, had the Plrate11 In
I won'l try to pred ict how many rliht from the first.
the Sheriff'• Department on a
"tn thoae days • they had
• chara:e of nttoxlcatlon.
games it wtll take."
aae
Urown thinks the key to the pltchln1 sun with I lot or
World Serle1 could be the Plr· on It and J 'fi1Ured I'd have the
belt chance to get up to the bli
ales' tremendous de1lre.
"Th,t hH been an important let1ue1 with a team like that," he
factor with us a11 year," he aaid. 11id 110berly.
"I can remember one .111me we
The theory para off. Law, a
played against the Dodger■ In quiet, blue--eyed man of Swedl1h
Lo.!1 Angeles during July. Danny and EnlllJ,h e�tr■ctlon, terved hi,
McDevitt had us shutout with two ■pprentlceanlp at way 1tatlon1
out and two strike, on Gino Cl­ like Sant■ ]\OIi, Davenport
and
moll in the ninth.
New Otlean1 and then came up to
"Cimoll got on and our next -the Pirates to ,t■y In 1951. There
four hlllers also had two strikea w�r, two ye■n out for 1erviee
on them. We were one 1lrike an� alnce l&amp;M thi1 long-Jawed IO·
away Crom loslng five tlmea. But year-old with the pin-point control
we tied the 1core with three runs
and won the ball 1ame with an. Middleport Lltsrary
nth.er run in the 10th. Thal might
give you an Idea about the de• Club To Mui Wed.
11.ra. Geor11e Laaber will enter,
1jre on thi, club."
taln the Middleport Llterat)' Qub
tlli1 Wedpeadty atlernoon at 2 p,
m. at her home In Rutlaa.d.
Roll call reaponae for the
meetlna will be "Why I Vote"
Prolram will be "'fte \riew from
the Fortieth Fl0or" livtn bJ '4n.
Rodney Downln1 ■nlil "Adv.I.le
ind Conaent" 1inn by Mr,. 0. 8.
Sto11t.
l'OMIROY, OHIO

TIME TO CHECK
THAT
''LEAKY'' MUFFLER?

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COLUMBUS uPI-For a team
lhst has blan ked its first two sea.
si:ted
son opponents. by fairly
scoreK, yo u would think it lack· ed nothin&amp;:.
Not so, 1ia)'1 Coach Wood)'
Hayes about his Ohio State B11okeyt'S;. The dean of the Bi8 Ten
coaches is in a dither about the
fact his team slows down I n the
second harr.
"I don ' 1 know how lo explain
it" he said after Saturday's 20·0
""'In over Southern Cal. "But thr
boys did seem to wear clown lh11t
1econd half."

MOORE'S

PHOHI WY-2•2...

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ONE MORE �y • • . • • . By Alan Maver

Joe Brown Sees His Gang As
'Poised,, Dedicated' Team

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"CHAULKIES"

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Facts, Figures
On 1960 World
Series Games

1
1

�� �d today. hoping to tear a page out of the past
is""'li the same thing thev did J3 years ago.
tiliUrgh Pirates, howevei had other ideas.
I
ed by the fastPst finish in their h istory, th e Yankees,
wtio won the last 15 games of their regular American League
llaPIUUoa, - were scheduled to take their first workout at
, lortiea: hW in preparation for Wednesday's World Series

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Pi.•e a la Mode
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The Lighter Side

Mrs. Kennedy
Resumes Career
In Journalism

CHASE HARDWARE

Phone WY 2,251 1
Mlddltpe,t
It,
�
.

4, 1980-5

ent' i1ial __,

,-,
' eimn,
three pe.r cent In ltlt t.Mrt were
4"18 mines prod lk'.btf 1,000 ton:11
or mort, 17 IHI llu.n in 1068. Ot
t � tGtal out.pal, N �r e&lt;ml •at
1bipPtd by nil OI' water, Sll per
cent by trutk and 1 1 per cent by
p�line.
Ohio ranked aecond among
the coke.producing 1t1te1 (third
in 19'8). OW.put lne:re&amp;led 37
per cent to 8-8 m1Ulon tons, valued at 1147,11 mUlfon� On Oettmbe_r I there •ere 14 plantl OPf.l:ratlhl 2.Jg(} OVHI {Ill alot-type)
one lut pllfll and 12:li I�-" ovrng
than In 1 95;3.
. .
The 1t1te I blgest drilllnc year
WU also rewr.df:d in ] �. A tota! of 1, 133 well com�lelmna were
made, Bf more than In �- Out•
JH increased
P� t of p lural
&amp;l1ghtly but crude petroleum pro­
duction dedined. No natural &amp;as
liquid1 ,ere recovered_ Proved
re11ene.• •• o f Dece(Dber 31 were
natural �Pl, 'JU,, '766 million cu­
bic feet; crude petroleum, 74. 1
mi lliGD b■rr.&amp;la; na&amp;uraJ &amp;a. li·
quid1, 1.6 million bafl'ela.
Total capacitin of the 9tate·s
11 aclivt refin� ind cracking
plant. wete US,000 and 173,000
b1rrel1 a day of crude oil and
ga90Une, re■pectiwly. Refineries
were at Canton, Cincinn,,ti, Cleve­
land, Cleve., Uma, Newark, Toi•
edo and WetLQa.
Ohie •• the leading :producer
&lt;if ferrq,,D!'flj ,rj(h tot,;1 output
qr 533,Qf)O lons, . .,. ,e,- ctpl high­
• tJa.a,r In JU81 Alrhgtlfh the
ifon .ad atee1 i� t.r,i1 idled
1$' the Ions stri¥, �piJ i,o11 pro­
ffilrt!!m i.Jl..u.1aKA U �r cent lo
1 L S million tons in 1smo.
Blut fW"Oatt capacity 1t the
state'1 22 planta 1n, ll.7f million
10Di on January i, lNO, lnneaR­
ina: 521.000 tons from th,e. ume
date in 1959.
WINTERii, Ttt. (UPI) - The
oomina: of hunlui, md football
&amp;easons left Ulil ·bewildering mes­
sage on a Winten ■tore 9indow:
"Shot,uo abeil . . . Beat Lake•
view." However, Wlnten won the
football game with Lakeview
without resorting to firearms.
AUfflN, Tn. (UPO - Clare
Ogden Davis, garden editor of
the Austin Amerlc1n-sbtffm1n,
went horn@ after writing a col•
lumn on how to battle army
wonm to f�. her own Lawn
nur.ly stripped by the- damaginf
larvae.

For comfortable home heat beyond city gas mains • • •

,.

VOTE FOR
George A.

MEINHARl

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Install ASHLAND METERED GAS and an,
EMPIRE AUTOMATIC FLOOR FURNACE!
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Here a,e two thinp you can do � 111&gt;w to �v• eoo­

1-i! + wiata­

nomical, dependable gaa beat in your
even though ,yoo live beyond cit; I'"' ip�lna.

�=

i.en

do
will imvid• YOUl'
homM with illltant, cmitfoftable heat • , • wa QO ll8fcl fat

·AahJand

Metaed Gu, and NCQnd:

1n .... �nfmn■

F1oor Furilace. Thia aure-fin oombinati,jn

ntensive insulation or remodeliQI•

_ -·

For mare !Jltom,atlon on Aahland Morei.ct· Ou '� a

' beal••
, , •....

compiet.o line of &amp;or tuma.., ... �i.., •tr

__,

THIRE'S A

Te -l"ll YUIii' Needs
W1 llem" All Hakes
':· r:.

�i' $'

leadm1 �itN pP.Jill�r ......
oiitput increued becau1■ ol lhe
demand ror refractory lime used
in 1teel miliJ .and build1n1, ch•,nical and indutlri1I lime. Producliun wu cent.red mainly in
Sandusky County, which 1Koun1ed for 29 and 34, per cent of lbe
An all-lime record for th.t va•
total output ind value. reaper•
lue of mineral production in Ohio tivt"ly. Export• were made C'h ief'11111 stt in 1 959. The figure was ly to Canada. with lesser quan1
1395.9 million. a 1 5 per cent In· tit1e1 to Mexico, Chlle. Bah.ama
creaae over 1958 and 112.9 mll­ I blands, Germ.11nr and India.
lion lllOre than in 11&amp;7, the pre­
T•tal output ., Mtt •• .,_ 17
vious record ye.ar.
plr cent du■ m•lnly ,_ hdJ;.f
Ralph Bernhagen. chier of thP
rDCk ult p,Nuction ,,.. fN
Oivl!ion of Geo1ogie■I Survey, re­
u ndlrwrouncl F■irporl MIM .t
cei ved thi1 information rrom -t he
Mertan
S•lt Co.. In Lab
Pittaburah office of the U. S.
C �nty. Output of Ml,ot"atN
Bureau of }Urte1, Pep1rtment of
.... •nd brm■ IIM w■a up, con.
the Interior.
structlen of ttie lnt.rnitional
wit
Sa lt. Co. vnderi rol.'nd
"lncr@_ued demand by the eon .
m iM n.., Clewel•nd �inu■d.
titructlon and iron and al.eel in­
dustries resulted in higher outProduction or nnd and gravel
put of coal, cement. at.one, u nd · in 19&amp;9 reached an all-lime high
and grave,! ■nd lime. Ohio's prin . or 38.6 million tona valued at
cipal nu nerals," Bernhagen was 145.1 million. The construction
infonned.
indu,try utilit.Gd 86 per cent as
"The y�ar was highlighted by growth in the volume of build•
continuing expansion of the ing and hi,hway
c:on11truction
1t1te's m ineral Industry. Ohio led conlinued. Sand produced for
la production or lime and clay industrial application, was valu­
■nd ranked fifth 1n '&gt;Ulput of coal ed at alm011 S5 million. T"ne prin•
an&lt;l salt. Jn addition, the state cipaJ 115e1. in decreasin&amp; order
was a leading producer of iron of value, were ferrou1 and non•
and steel . ferroa lloys and blHt ferrous moldin1, gl11s manulac�
lure and furnal'C' construction and
furnace slag."
repair.
Mineral production (excluding
pefl'oleum and naturat ;a1) wu
Despite a 1 1 6-day steel ,trik,e
- Smith
X.
8'llmfv '
reported from 111 counties except whkh stopped produceion in mid
klNNEDY'I PIT (IEW-Tbeare mm are kMping the K■1111edy
Fullon, Bernhagen said. Mi neral year, out-put of proeeUf'.d iron­
machine nmnlng smoothly ID tb,e srueJUng nc• for thti
valuea intToeased in '14 or the 81 blasl·furnace ■lag decrea� only
Whlto HOUJ1e: Brother Ro� ltannedy, team captain;
producing eountie1.
su,nny. dropping rrom &amp;.8 mil•
Brother--ln•Law Stephen l!I. Mmltb. � and tlnance:
''Thirtee,ti counties had total lion Ions in 195ft to 5.4 l8mO!ion
Ted Boreruion. principal rpeec;h tnt.ter and · apeecb editor:
mineral value exceeding $10 mil• ton1 in 1959. Value declined Jeu
John M. Bailef, poUcy adviNl'; �etb O'Donnell, arranse■
l ion," said Bernhagen. "Leading thar. one per cent and totaled
campaign schedule ; LaWt'flllGIII ()'BJten, di.rector of o,pnlza­
mineral-producing areas. in de­ $10.7 million,
Uona, and Pierre Sallnger1 pN&amp;►.radio.
(CfflNI �J
cre,asing order of value, were
Total output and value o( st.one
Harrison, Belmont, Greene and {lime1t.one, sandatone and calcar•
·
to the present Dem�ratic presi- Lake Counties."
eou1 marl) increased. Stone was
dential nominee and the Times-Highlights of the report fol. produted in 69 countie11, compar•
Herald merged with the Washing- low:
ed with " in 1858. Limestone
ton Post. But 1 suppose l h ia was
Production, shipments and v.a: accounted for more than to per
only coincidenlia l.
Jue of portland and ma80nry ce- cent or the, total output. Of the
Last Monday, Mn. Kennedy i n- ments increa,ed, reflecting in• 54 limestone producing eountle11
vited some of her sister j our- creased building and construction Sandu■ky, Erie and F'l11nklin led
naUsl9 in tor tea and shop tal k . activit y throughout the state.
in order of decreasing output.
The convenalion naturally touched Green County continued to ht, Sandstone was produced iii 13
on the recent controversy over how the leading cement-producing area counties. Major producing coun.
much she and Mrs. Nixon spend The bulk of the cement was eon• tie,,11 we,re Lorain, Scioto, Portage
for Clotl-tes.
sumed in Ohio and neighbori■g and Geauga.
'Mrs. Kennedy made it plain states.
Ohio ranted filth in the na­
"Production and Value of crude tion in the production of bitu­
that she has no inlention of enBy DICK WEST
W J\SHINGTON UPI - Mrs. gagin g in a wardrobe feud with I gypsum declined slightly compar­ minous coal. 'lbe output increas­
John F. Kennedy. the only poten• her Republican rival, arid I sort ed with 1958. Two mines in Ott■• ed IO per c-ent in quantity apd
the eight per cent In valtJe from
lial I first lady who was once a of regret this. It wOuld have wa County cotitinued as
1958. Strip minea lumi1bed TO
card-carrying journalist, resumed made good column material for state'1 only source.
Ohio remained aa the na,tion'a per cent, underground
mines,
her newspupcr eareer this weell: the both of us.
as an unpaid cnlumni!.I fot
the
Democratic: National Committee.
In a sense. Mrs. Kennedy and
I are now rolleagues · and I wish
to wekome her return to the fold.
However, 1 1-tope ti-tat ' her non•
salaried .!ltatus doesn't start a
new trend,
The title of her col umn, which
the committee i.s. dis�lbuting on a
Wfekl;yr b,:.js,�i, '.',C llmp't1i1?n Wile."
Thi!i ��u�d make a fine tille for a
radio soap-opeta but it has certain
drawbacks as a column heading.
ll means that in Noven'iber she
eit her will have to chani::e the
title or 1·r ,ire again.
Writes of Fru1tratlon
. In her first column . P.tn. Ken­
nedy wrote or "How Frustrating
It Ia'' to have to stay home and
tend to her knitting while her hus­
band is out campaigning. At least
I assume she hi-s been knitting.
The reason she can't join her
husband on the campaign trail is
because sl1e is expectina her see•
ond child in December. So, she
said, "I d�clded one way to keep
from feeling left out wa, to talk
lhrough lhis cOlumn to thP. friend•
Jy people all over the country I
would have met while C.&lt;1mpaign­
ing."
In her previous experience as
a journalist: Mrs. Kennedy con­
ducted an · inquiring photographer
column £or the Washington TimM•
Herald. She went around taking
pictures of truck drivers and ask­
ing them que1tion1 like "What do
you think of the new Paris fash­
ions?"
One or Mrs. Kennedy's former
c:o•workers told me ti-tat she was
rathel' sh)' in those days and
seemed to !ind this sort of thing
distasteful. On occaslon1, some of
her miile colleagues would lend
her- a hand.
J might add that Mrs. Kennedy
wH and i!I, a very attractiv·e,
bru�eue and I suspect this mlde
·
it easy to get voluhte,en.
married
got
she
ly,
Subsequent

lionta H,......r
SAN ANTONIO. Te,. (UPD PoHCt!! believe that a burglar who
raided a drug store recently has
1uffered one Biant hangover. His
loot included some liqa1;1r that
w,is condemned 10 y81rs ag_o by
elty health offical1Jt.�ecau11e it
'Will bellev� to corl'm . rat poi11111.

COLEMAN
FURNACE

Daily Senllnel, Pomeroy-Middleport, 0., Oct.

Ohio's Mineral
Output Value
Highest In '60

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&amp;IU IIIJlM � Of ff.H.. • • I ./

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Repubilc:m CUdldiite
for Bepreaelllallve
to The
General Aslembly·-

ASHLAND OIL &amp; lffiNl8Q COi,. .
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1rates Ready For llot Yanks

l'ould Repeat Feat Of Four
. · �ht
33 Years Ago, If 'fhey Can
.
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iii&amp;'IS&amp;UltGH (UPI) - The New York Yankees checked '

ALL-STARS

1

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' lll)eDer. , -

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" Th•, Yin-ee1, who swept the
'1ratei,_ Jn fo\lf' �traight Kamei; th!!
Unlie· tbe two teams mt!t in a
Vfot1d•· �es �k lb 1 927, named
.�e wthner Art Ditmar
to
pt the opener against Pittsrsh'• 20,game ace, Vern Law.
�f'". Stengel'• choire or Ditl!'r i, ' 11.ifear-Old right.hander
SP{i:14ii;�I�, Jil asi .. w8 1 some tn, of ■ iurpriie inu m u ch a s
Y� - .rrtanager had e,c press!'d
•tindluiihtl to go with his " blu l'
c"hi," ll'�tW, Whitey Ford, a s
U 1Monday.
8ten1eti1 • · �xPlain in g the sw , t r h
1
�
m Fercl to Dltm ar. said. •• 1 f i l?•
I'd better pick Dit m ar he•
eAUN al some times thi s year he
� W"On the fir.&amp;t game of an im ,pptla11t
aerie• for us."
•
Plrtt Game !wen
! ' Fi&gt;td lhlll •ill undoubtedly 11tart
third game when the Scrir1
1.0 New York where lhe mC right field fence work11 far
I hardship on a lefl•ha nded
�er than a right•hander.
-�
dHn■ken quoted
1he fint
� at · even money al1hough the
-Uikee■ rated 13 to 10 ravorite11
_ tbe Seriell, chiefly becau1m or
·� et, 1uperlor power.
-:- Dan ny Mlirta ugh, the stor k y,
11\le Pitt.lbdrBh manager who is
�ring tn hll rlnt World
Ur+u, 'didn't even wait for Sten•
Dt to announce his opening game
lineup before making hie publir.

!:

· -rm gomg t o go with my left•
hum.led l 1 111:i 1.1p" said the Pintea·
skipper, who ' already has .an­
nmm&lt;"ed that
Bob Friend will
piteb the �econd game, Wilmer
�l iw\l the tl11rd and Harvey Had•
dix '"probably" the fourth.

"in football yov'•• tot to ,tart
from the, 1rouM upl''

Oldtuners Plus
Youngsters Put
Colonels Over

PITTSBURGH UPI - Flett:
and f1r,u rus on the 1 960 World
Sf't1{'!&gt;
Ol'P(JNENTS-New York Yan.
ktcs (American League) vs. PitlB•
burgh P1rale1 (Nation.it League).
DATES-Oct. 5-6 .r+l P illiburgh;
Oct. 8•9· 10 (if ne�e1sary) at New
York; Oct. 1 2- 1 3 ( if necessary , at
Pittsburgh.
TIME OF GA:dES--All games
st11r1 at I p. m .. EDT, e1u:ept tor
Sunday g:ame. Oct. e, which start!
al 2:05 p. m, EDT.
ODDS-Yankees favored 6½ to
·s to wln Series; first game even
money.
PROBABLE FIRST GAME PTT·
CHERS-Art Oit mar (15-9) New
York, vs. Vernon Law (20-9) Pitl11bur,:!h.
W INNER-First team to win
four i,:ames.
MANAGERS - Ca�y Stengel,
Yankees, and Dann)' Murt.:lugh, Pi­
rales.
HADIO . TV - National Broad,
rasting Company. Airtime, 12:45 p.
m. EDT except Sunday, Oct. 9,
1 :45 p. m,, EDT.
ANNOUNCERS - rdel Allen an d
Bob Prince (TV ): Chuck Thompson
and Jark Quinlan radio).
F!kST GAME WEATHER-Fair
and sunny; temperature in the 60's.
U M l'IRli� S - Dusty Boge:ess (NL)
plate; John Stevens (AL), first
base; Bill Jackowski (NL), second
b11ire: Nestor Chylak (AL), third
bast•; Stan Landes (NL) and Jim
Honochick (AL) foul lines.
American League Seriell win•
ncrs - -35 times.
National League Serie■ winners
-2 1 times.
Previous Series parlicipation­
Yankel' S 24 times, Pirates 5,
Previou11 Serie9 meeting be·
twt"cn YankreH and Pirates-----Yan­
kl'ell won four stralght games in
1 927.
LaHt year·s Series winner-Los
Ang1•le1 Dodgers {NL) in six games
over Chicago White Sox (AL),

M urlaugh's left · handed lineup
has three !IOulh paw ,wingers cente r fil�ldcr Bill Virdon . left
rielder
Bob Skinner and catch•
er Smoky Burgeu. V inion will
lead off, 8hort1l0p Dick Grqat will
bat st&gt;t·ond . Skinner third and first
Stuart fourth.
[}ick
baseman
lligll1 fielder floberto Clemen te is
t ubbed for the hflh spot and he
will be followed by Burgess, third
LOlJISVIU.E, Ky. U PI-A pair
baseman Don lloal, 1econd hHe• of oldtimers end a young relief
man Bill Mazero1kl and Law.
pitcher wt&gt;re hailed today as
heroe11 of the 1,ouisville Colonels
that bea1 the odd8 and the hi�hly
ranked Toronto Maple Lears to
rapture minor leal(ue b11eball's'
bigge1t prize, the j u nior World
Series title.
Catcher Stan Lopata and firat
ba■eman Frank Torree, farmed
down from the parent Milwaukee
Braves afler )'ears i n the big
time, led an extra base barrage
LOS ANGELES UPI-Mlddle­ that beat the Leah, 5- 1 Monday
we i a ht champion Gene Fullmer of night and wrapped up the Series,
Wesl Jordan, Utah, hobbling on 11 four games t o lwo.
Bobby Hendley pitched brilliant
sore and etifr rla ht leg, today
e,c pre ssed hi, regrets that he ball to win the final game, but It
wou ld be unable to defend hi t was Ken Mackenzie, a Yale grad­
title Saturda)' night aB■irtst Su. uate from Gore Bay, Ontario,
who had saved two games and
gar Ray Robinson .
"lure 8Ckets .
Just 81 the Fullmer•Robinson won another in against the Leah
!B:Slt Two Gama
tight was be1;innlng to catch on t1;1 keep lhe Colonels in the run­
future football wltb bodng rans it was postponed ning against Toro nto, the Inter•
--- lllddh�port
1P-,leri ,11pllt laHt evening In 111m· Monday unlil Dec. 3 because the national Lea,::ue penna11t · winner
cham pion 1uffered a painful leg b�· l 7 games.
tJ!:.�t Wo.hama and G&amp;IUpoU1.
,.;, Tlle I, 7, �lh grade team, led Jnj ucy in lr■lnln.111.
Ii, fullback Allen Wallace, lto
Tbe fight had been 11ched1.1led
TACKLE NEEDS SURGERY
· 4 1peed1ter ran over W■• to kick off the fall 1t1Hon of Sat•
SAN FRANCISCO UPI-John
7-0th gradera N-0.
urd■)' ntabt televl1ion ABC bouts. ThomH, leH tackle of the San
-Middleport Reservea lo■t lf•lZ In■tead a 1ub1tltute TV bout was Francisco rortv Nincre, will un•
q uickly arran&amp;ed between two top dergo si1rgery f'r!rl�y for a small
G1Dlpoll1 Reserve1.
-·-- - ll1ht.wel1ht
contenders, Kenny fraeture U hi� left wrist. Doc•
Lande of Mlchla:an and Len Mat• ton expect lhl 24�-pound line•
'
• tor s1..k, - -For llulllJ
thew1 of Phlladelphla.
IT,an lo !,e out of action for at
Mlll I' BANLON
leas� three weeks.
WING I GIT IUB
DETROIT UPI-Len Haley h■s
been brought up by the DetroJt
� White or Deep raH Colon
Red WlnJ■ Crom Edmonton to
flll In f�r Gordie Howe In the
Site, 32
38
openln1 11111me1 of the National
' Hockey Leaa:ue 1ea1on. Howe,
who h11s pla)'ed in 169 consecu­
BY MILTON RICHMAN
tlvf' game■, 1ulfered ·a wrenched
PJTTSBUROH UPI - GenPral
left knee and tWl,tcd and sprain• Manager Joe Brown of the Pitts•
ed llgamenl1 In lalll Saturday's bura:h Plrate1 coldly i11formed
MIDDLIPOIT, OHIO
AJI-Stfr 11me.
lho Ne w York YankeeR t□diiy
that they can expect "no repeli •
lion" of the 1927 World Serlei..
,,,
, �
' - " , I J,.,o ,1../ -,
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That w11 a black year for
, ',, ,,
',, I
I
,
',/,l'f /
Pltt,burgh. Babe Ruth and Lou
Gehrig bl11sted 11everal "homers"
during halting pracllce before the
World Serles even began that
year. The Pirates looked on in
awe, never rea lly recovered and
lost the World Seriea ln four
straight gamc11.
"[f the Yankee, think the 1111m e
thina 11 going to happen now,"
)
Brown uld, "they can forget It."
our u1ed car deals .,.•
"Nobod y awe■ thh1 ball rlub,"
I
■aid the youthflll-looking 42. year­
old Pittsburgh GM, standing be­
hind the battlnt ca1e during 11
Plrnte workout. "That goes for
lhe 'mighty' Yanbe■ or anyone
else.
::11y, Pir1t., PefMd
'!
"Our rellow1 don't even leel
the Amerlcsn League le as good
8B the National League'', Brown
�oH
lle
Cadlllac
F-8�
Rambler
added.
"The Pirates don't think
I• •
,
anyone should beat them and
wh11l'1 more, they're convinced
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no oue can."
____
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,
Yankee manager C1te y Stengel
1uggoled llu,c one of tile reasons
'
hie club was able to defeat Bal­
., f1TO LOGIC
OUI
, '
thnore
in a crucial lour-game
1 0f
"�
eerie• recently waa becA.use the
youna: Orlole1 " were over·eager"
llill
... \'NI !!!. Ula U.I NALi I
r,..
but Brown lnal1ted that would
not be the c11e with lhe Pl.rate,.

*'

Fullmer Cancels
Scrap For Title
With Sugar Ray

'illft•

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Priced At 1$2.98
TH� SHOE BOX

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· ■ntl ONI
' PACT 15 • • • ·

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POM EROY, OH IO

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USED CARS

'S9 Pontiac C111hn11 2 Dr. · · $2495
'58 Mercury Monttry 4 Dr. · · $1 495
'S7 Plymouth v.a Savoy 2 Dr. $995
· 'S7 Olds
Super 88 - 4 Dr. · , , $1 595
'
Hard Tap

'S7 Cli1vrol1t lel I'. 4 Dr. · · $149S
'S7 ltNCk c,11·, ury 4 Door · · · · $139S
'S6 Olds1r oblla 88 - 4 Dr. $1 195
'SI Chev, Jlet � Air 4 Dr. · $1 89S
. '54 Callmac Serles 62 - 4 Dr. $109S
'S$ Okl111olll1 aa - 2 Door $895
• Door

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'54 P111llac I cyl. Chhft•

$49S
�Q lllck S.,. Nani T., · · · · $29S

COME

TO

"MOORE'S" SERVICE CENTER

FOR A FREE CHECK-UP

WIt· h Dinner Saturuu-.1
,.1_,

Today's Sport Parade

Bing's Phone Call Of 12 Long
Years Ago PayingOffFinally

■

Thomas Jreal Honored
011 Third Birtlulav

hlfth.iai- oT

The third
Thomu
wut, ■on of Mr. and lln. R. T.
lVe,t wa, celebrated Saturday
whtn a family dlnnfll' wu laeld at
• the We■l home In hit honor.
,\llendin1 were Kr. and Jin,
Koit Weal of Zlilemlle, Kr. artd
Ji1ri. Raymond Hott, Mr. and Mn.
a.ntoa Ponn and lln. �•nr,

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�' ���wgu

Check Our Prices On Bonded Brake Shoes

,... ... .... IIQn

S•lli••;a �
SMmi CI.Offlllll (O.
I
Jlldlll'f&amp; '
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Boy••

£

WfalM

CAI COA TS
Pop. ·11nc�

KARACHI UPI-The government has finished · the second
staa:e . of it■ program for 1hiftin1
to ·the new capital area al Rawal•
1
pindi.
A total or 1,180 civil servanli
and their famlliea were transported in seven special -trains.
The bulk of the central govern•
ment civil service is sUU in Kar­
achi, but the
remainder will
shift norlh gradually as the new
capU a l is developed.

B£tl!"_,_ Y'S
�- K
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Save Your Sal!,a Slips
MIDDLEPQflT

PAYMENTS
CUT
,.
.
AND Mo:R t MONEY too t
,

I

YES . • • You 1:an,cl11n up bills and- dHII,
cul your pa�_m1nl1 down and hav, �xtr_a
011h bnld,f1ar j,ther alhin11. "-' "" • • '" � '
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PHONI WY4�171 (
Hov'1 t to 5 - T�vr,. 9 tll _N_

,►" •

IAKEI FURNITURE

fer

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S.98

Jqme, Eber,bach
lloriored On Birtlulay

/

Mr . and Mn. Harold Ebersbach
11mtertaintld with a· chucken dinner
' Sunday at their home, Butternut
Ave., honoring their 10n, James, on
. hie 18th birthday. .,\ decorated
birthday cake, w11 served with the
dinner.
Pre■ent were Mr. and Mrs. Em­
·
meu Blackburn, Mr. and Mn. C. J .
Eberabach, Mlt1 Kamm kelton,
the honored guest, his 11ister, Darla
-,ind Iir. and Mra. Eberab1eh.

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� with matching candle ICOIICfl

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WAU. CLO«
--·M•y.....iil
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•..-v,NGS to

ffi:lt:

,._.,..,•&gt;

125 I. MAIN ITWl•T

"'�
o

a:

�leland's

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Unlttd Preu h1t•rn1tlon■,
g i nns of the univerae.
than tho11e in the ul t ra ..,Cole1
DEL AN/ARlt, Ohio lUPIJ ' The siurtv of the¥ waves is portion of the s1rnctrum.
You don't redllt:e It, liut rlgtn coiled ndloastrononfy. fl fi �ld
So th.- optirtl leleacope tP.n
now you al'e being hombarde.d by th 31 mas 11o m e d ay help pr ov i de only iftrntify whal t hC' h u m � n
ellent, harmles.s electroma1netie the .:ituwe.r to h.pw the univtrsl! I e.,1, can !lee: Onl)' tho11e c11 I N,tia\
invaders frotn ot1ter ■paoe.
wu born Ttie fleld's pote11tlal obieeh that emit 01· r('flect visible
1lbey ar-e j1..11t rtdlo waves - h aa Y el hardly beeri imuincd
I li,ih l .
lllle lbe m■n,made kind tbtt arti
Out other objf!cts anti phenomijeuln� cflmPletl�n on a tr11ct
conv,:rl.ed \o SfJU�d and l_itht 'u a( 111J1 d owned by Ohio WH leyan en, give off wn.vc11 lonr.er than
.
you watch televl11on or haten to H niversity l fe� mUes north or optical
waves These are the PlPr•
the radio. But these celestlal In- Columbus is a unlatle ra c Hote )l"I- tromaenctic. or radio waves, Ra•
truders ooyer a much broader scope lhf' larljljlsl of ils lt;ind In diote.lescopes are deRigned to pick
apectrum than the man.ma� va- 1h'e � orld.
up the,e wavf's and hel p t he raRv • next �Prin!!:. this slrsnl!e- din stranamer idenlifv whei;;e tl\e
lookinf( ir,st-rument that covers w1 vn; came from and whof' sent
acres will begin tuning in on the thorn,
unl•,ersf'.
"lb1dio 11ttronr.m ,v l'!iv�s us 11
The object : To map the heav• broad t r window to Jor,k thrOU[(�."
ens.
Kraus expluined. "We hopP lo Pet
01-tio Slate Pror. John D . .1 clues to what is eoin� on al the
Kraus, head of the dhio st,te source of the radialion ,,
11ni\•e-r�ity - Ohio Wesleyan Ra"It may l:;e a gaseous nebula (a
«Jio Observatory, has cha t'"e of cloudlike mass for outside the
NEW YOFK UPI-Five new­ lhe construQtion and opt1ration of solll r system) or perh11pi; a col
liding ealaxv." he said. Sueh () 1 •
comer,, inc1uding Navy and Pur• the r"aiotelesoop1,
"Knowledge about the radio if'l'IS 11re often 'obscured or arc
d1.1e. moved Into the top 10 be•
htnd pace·scttin� Syracuse today spectrum is primitive compared beyond the view ol the optical
In the United Presa l nternatibnal t o what we know aJ)oi,t the op- teleuope.
tir.al spectrutn"
aal4 Kraus.
major' col14ge football ratin'21.
radioteleThe ('()nventional
''We'll
be
discoverina:
thiqg1
Syr1cyse
�ned iii N'o. 1 ·
.
scope Is a disb-shaped structure
about
the
ui1iverae
which
will
an•
rank ing 1ri thl! Aecond wtell)' b'al.
wilh a foC"al poil\t suspended at
loting o1 the UPI board qt Coach• 1-er and riiiee a lot of new as­
the tip nf met11I be11m� ahove the
es by tot,alirlg 16 fir11t placfi' �otes trmlomical queetion1."
Wba� kind of knowledge, will middle of th@ dish. The imr facc of
and S22 points, while Ml1Si1t1ippl
radioastronomy
open up? What the dish collects lh&lt;' waves and
remained secorrd with 12 fint
ne w QJJ.eallons :will be r,IBed? refle&lt;:t&amp; lhem •to eonvergencc at
place v.o les and 284 point,.
t e focal point. which transmits
The list of otber oont,ndef!! How can invisibl.e radio waves h
Instruments in the control room.
tell
scientists
what
ex
ists
out
how�ver, was revamped tf.1arply
By recordine: and ·an!IJyzin2:
in the wake of a weekend of up­ there?
what the nef'dles and lights re·gls­
set,.
Visible light waves take up only ter on the instrument ,panel. ra­
toWt, wlth 248 poinb, vaulted a very DBrT{)W region of the wave
diostronomers are able to draw 11
from eiJlihth to third place, Il­ apectrum - between the color■
fairly concise piclure or what
'
linof 1 118 held ontQ Its No. 4 red and pbrple. We aimply don't
their instrument has probed.
BpOt, and Ohio State 166 moved iee. what emits or refleets waves
from seventh to fir'th place.
any longer than those in the in•
:'But the classical ratioleh.'•
Navy sailed 111 the way from
scope i, an f'Xpensive item,"
18th to 6th place, Purdue jumped
Kraus said, "espeeially if you
from 24th to "7th, Missouri ■d·
want a big one."
vanced from 2oth to 8th, �inne­
A big one collects more waves,
aot11 went tro_m 12th to 9th and
gi \•es clearer pietu:-es and has
Ark,nsH mov�d from 17th to
betrer resolvin� power. Instead or
101h.
.
blurs. the raidoastronorncr wants
well-defined reception.
SIGN TWO COACHES
The dish type radi otelescope · is
CLEVELAND UPI-The Cleve­
userul provided it doesn't get too
land [ndi1na have signed coaehet
big. To build kin g•size ones, en·
COLUMBUS UPI - The weekly gineers are faced with over•
Mel Harder and Lake Appling
Ohio whelming struetural problems.
for another leason. The Indians United PreS!i International
(fint
ratings
coaches
school
high
also announced that lwo / other
Moving the dish with precision
coaches, Red Ktells and Ed F(u. pla,e votes and won,lost record!! required t1;1 effectively ,can the
Gerald, would not be. back next in parentheses):
sky would be impossible with a
Point, di@h
Tnm ·
year; ,
of more than 1 ,000 feet in
183
1 . Massillon (12. 4..-0)
diameter.
2. Bpringf.ield�"-tb (2 3•0) 125
So Kraus and his group came
105
Alliance (3-1)
up with the kind Ohio State is
4. Cin. Roger Bacon (3·0) 74,
eompletlng • one big enough to
71
5. Lfma (1 3-0-1)
do the job of the biggest dish,
8. 'Marion Harding (1 2·0-1) a2
FOR ALL PORTABLES
and inexpensive enough to make
49
, . Cagton McKlnley (3·1)
building it pra&lt;;tieable.
Transistor Type
46
8. Sandusky (4,0)
u'
9. Parma (3-0)
At one end of the open field"
and Regular
J9
IO, M11rletta (3-0)
that was once farmland stands a
Second Ten: 1 1 . CincinnaU Eld• pivotable .steel rectangle 260 feet
er; J2. ' r{iles (I); 13. Cincinnati I ojlg apd 100 reet high. I t SU!·
' '1&amp;. 'MRidletown; face consists of 11boul 3,ood thin
'PQFc'!"'n ; '1°'4.
16. Toledo St. Francis; 17. Ketter­ metal wires strung up and down,
,JEE P,'RKINP
· inl Fairmont; 1 8. Martins F"erry: forming the flat renector.
l!ilon� WY-!'!W
19. Toledo Central �atholic-; 20.
By lilting the reflector through
� Blaho SI.
Gal1ipo1is.
60 degrees - from almost (lat lo
almost upright - all but 15 per
cent of the sky can be scanned.
The flat refiector ie the only part
of the radiotelescope thal moves.
Across the Jield 500 lee( away
i■ I-tie stationary curved focusing
antenn,t, 360 feet lon1, 70 feet
tall, 1lnlilarly strung with wires
to receive and r.efle,ct the waves
orJ1in11ly bounced off the {lat re­
fleotor.
The parabolic curvature of the
focu.aina: reflector converges and
),
\
coneentratea the waves to a point
1 few reet in front·or the Oat re­
flector. ,
Ona or aeve,;at horn-shaped . ,e­
oelvers ·at" the focal point "lobble''
the concentrated beam a n d
transmit it to underground inPlu1 R414.,V#l4mlll )f-1;
1tnun�nt&amp;.
"What you get is a facsimile of
,l,U Jlol. llf. 11
the w■y the waves appeared at
their source," Kraus said.
1
'At thJ■ atage of radioastron­
·
S.N l!Ol, al l...
omy we're accumulating basic
ll4Kl
I,.'..: • •
spectral data and examples of
how the w1ve1 arc distributed
th�uah space. From there we
can begin findina: out how melter
l1 dlatrJbuted in the universe, and
open the w,ay toward . answering
question, like whether the uni•
verae la really expanding and, iC
ao, how."

8att.;rie$

Simply call our office about I bu$1' loa11. ,
S11 how you can square up and do bit­
ter. It costs you nothln1 to find out . . .
and the COIi II vory re11onable W JOU
want .the money.

r.� "�����. �-�,��o!

e

Ma�illon llas
Top Rank Yet
In State Poll

Si-a
..,.
.._., TQ ,..,,
Tey OJu' 1-'-y..Aw•Y

- -··

�����',o�

t

Break Into Top
lo Gn'd Teams

l&gt;ITrSBURGH UPi - Manager
Harry (Cookie) Lava1etto, who
move d lhe Waahiqlop S,.qator1 .
from t il e ..\mm-li:•fl �l\l.9 �ll•r
to filth P.lac• i n 1980 h.jl been re,
hired for next 1ea,on WU� J "nice
raise" in salary.
calvin Grlf!Hh, Senatprs pre•i­
dent who ia here for the World
Series, mide the lmtOl!ncement
Monday night. He uid he Wis
"delig h ted" to have Lava1etto
back for 1961.
c;a ;;;;;
r ;;;;; ":';a;;a;��iiai••= i

MO DER N decora tor
WAI+' CLOCK ·.

--

...

Mr. and :drs. Elias Stiles enter•
t■ined a group or relatives with
a dinner at their home, Rock
Sprinp Road, Saturday.
Guests were Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Young of Rochest@r, Pa.;- Mn.
Ellzab eth Young ot Beaver, Pa. ;
Miss Mildred Pullins, Ct&gt; lumbu.s;
MlS.!les Alberta lfl'Tlf"Anna Pullins,
Flatwoods, and Mr _ and Mrs. Rudy
Musser 11nd sons, Pomeroy.
Calling in the evening were Mr.
and Mrs. John Ginther a n·d son,
Jack, Chester.

es

Fi\f.t:-N-ftWCOJDefS

Lavagetto B.ehlred
By Senator Cl,dJ

- ii&amp; .22"

ljoqno,,,

. . . . . . where we install best quality.
,
Mufflers ot Lowest , Prices.

OP•N AN ACCOUNT - - - · USI DUil ClllDIT PLAN

Bmks Look Strong But Hayes
Seeks Cause ForSlow..Down

Stiles Entertained

R U G IY
J AC K E T S

Airplane-Type Shoelu ' ' . ' Seal COVIi" ' ' . . Car Mata.

H1'@ Radio T�eope In Ohio Will ARSwer

4-Daily Sentinel, Pomeroy-Middleport, 0., Oct. 4, 1960

) t.lr o( the second. half 1lurnp this
week�d. He had better, accord­
ing to !he ,couUng report of �•
slstant coach
Frank Kremblall,
ju1t back from a look-see at till•
, nois.
The, Buckeyea open Big T�
t'cmpeULion Ulil SaturdaJ,' a1ain1t
lhe I l lini at Champ1i,n.
The situation ii THtf&amp;ed with
lllinoi!I, Krembla1 u1•- "They
have a tende11cy to ttat1 Jlpwly,
tut then they come qR 1µ"on11 l'!Dd
r\!ally wear you down."
Ue pointed UII tlJe fact tha t
lllmoi1 led Welt V1r1inla 'J-0 at
the balf S11:tu r.ditf, bl.It punched
The Burkeyes did the same throuah _lhr.eit TPs tn the th.l:r.d
thing aftor runniag up a 21-0 q uart er ard wenl. 9n to shella
,e
lead over Southern MelhGditlt in tl. e M ounla ineer 03-0.
s
the first half of the opening
aame.
Hayes will try t o solve th@ put•

By OSCAll FllAL'IY
hat been one ol tht' Pirates' front
Pl1TSBURG}I UPJ - Binlil Cros• line hurlers.
by made a telephone call 12 YHta
the " Deacon," so called by his
ago and It makes the Pittsburgh team matea because he is an or•
.Pirates no wone than even mOnfly dained minia&amp;er of the Mormon
again111t the ml1h,y New York. Y•n- church Js typical of this
young
kees in Wedne1day'1 World Serie, Pirate team.
opener.
' Moat of your major re,ague base.
"Hello," &amp;aid the man with the ball teama are composed of men
golden ton■ils, "this i1 Ring Cro1- who learned the seam)' side .or
by. I'd Ju■t like you l.o kqow, Mn. life while riding the tank
town
Law� that we'd like to have yow- buse1. They rail into sn easy way
son, Vernon, pitch for Plttsbur11h of speaking which Is well 1prink•
Piralei.,"
led with cuss word■ and the habit
Mrs, Law - mother of )'oun11 ia contagious on the whole.
Vernon .Law - bubbled.
Not ao on the Pirates, although
NEW ORLEANS UPI-Mlddle,
"I 1ue11 you'd h■ve to 1ay that they compete with all the vim
weigh! Chico Vejar from Stam­ Crosby's telephone call waa the and vigor Or anybody's Gas House
ford. Co11n .. has 1lgned to fight tinal straw in our family's de• -gang. On the whole these are
·
welterwei�hl Ralph Dupas of cislon ll\at l'd aign with the Pi• Quiet youn men who know their
g
New Orleans on Oct. 24. Dupas, ratesi" the ran11y La w grinned as way to church and follow it stead­
lhird - rankcd in his division, has he played with a niilrant puppy Hy.
won, hl1 la1t five fii:hts.
alofli the thlrd base line at
"Swearing is only a habit."
Forbe1 Field, "It sure thrllled my says Law, who spends much of
mother. "
his spare time, a1!de from
hls
Today the boot is on the other hobbles of carpentry and
play.
lt'I
the lni the mouth harp, in speaking
pedal e:ii:tremlty and
"Deacon'' who Is thrlllina the Pi• to young peoples' groups. "I try
you
rate management as he pN'p'1 U11 to tell the youn1sters that
to carry their hopN into the open- don't have to talk that wa)' to be
"We have fellowa with much Ing game of the Series Wednesday. either I man or ■n athlete."
kovt• ..., Path
more experience than the Oriol•
Law, a quiet man, approaches
ea," he pointed out. "Our pltch­
There waa no ide■ in Law"• hi■ openinw: aame assignment with
self-control
ing stalf, with men like Vern mind when· he signed with the the same
ateady
I ,aw, Bob J&lt;� riend, Harvey Haddix, Pirates that- he'd ever pitch in the which marks his outside life.
"We learned
Wilmer M i z@ll and Elroy Face Serle1.
to
handle the
was preeaure this season in winning
have been 11ruund the majors ' "Out in Idaho, where I
much longer than most of the raised, we onl)' heard big league the National Lea.gue pennant," he
Baltimore pitchen. And fellows ba1eball on the radio," he aald. "I asserts. "Certainly we have to re .
like Dick Groat. Don Hoak, w11 eon1idered to be a much bet- spect the Yankees and their va1t
Smoky Burgess and BUI Mazer­ ,er football 1&gt;lsyer apd never real• World Serles experience. But we
oski al110 have a lol more exper• ly lilOl H!rloualy in terelted In base- aren't afraid.
" I thlnk we'll live a good IC·
leqC"e th.11n the other Oriole pl•)'· ball until the end of high 1chool.
crs.
Then the 1couta atarted comlni:: count of ouraelvee."
around, elgbt or 10 o/ them, and
De1lre Big F■etor
From lht WIY in which the min
"The)' don't figure lo be over• of couree I 1ot lntereated."
uid It, you'd better believe it.
Law, 1 ,trapping ■Ix. root ,three­
eager. The y know exarlly what's
at stake und what they have to Inch ri&amp;hl-t\ander who hails from
lll Y•I JAILIO
do to beat the Yankees. They feel Meridian, a 1m1Ll town near
Wllliall\,. Reeve,, 28, Albany, has
mind been placed -ift the county jail by
they can, and I do, too, although Boi1e, had the Plrate11 In
I won'l try to pred ict how many rliht from the first.
the Sheriff'• Department on a
"tn thoae days • they had
• chara:e of nttoxlcatlon.
games it wtll take."
aae
Urown thinks the key to the pltchln1 sun with I lot or
World Serle1 could be the Plr· on It and J 'fi1Ured I'd have the
belt chance to get up to the bli
ales' tremendous de1lre.
"Th,t hH been an important let1ue1 with a team like that," he
factor with us a11 year," he aaid. 11id 110berly.
"I can remember one .111me we
The theory para off. Law, a
played against the Dodger■ In quiet, blue--eyed man of Swedl1h
Lo.!1 Angeles during July. Danny and EnlllJ,h e�tr■ctlon, terved hi,
McDevitt had us shutout with two ■pprentlceanlp at way 1tatlon1
out and two strike, on Gino Cl­ like Sant■ ]\OIi, Davenport
and
moll in the ninth.
New Otlean1 and then came up to
"Cimoll got on and our next -the Pirates to ,t■y In 1951. There
four hlllers also had two strikea w�r, two ye■n out for 1erviee
on them. We were one 1lrike an� alnce l&amp;M thi1 long-Jawed IO·
away Crom loslng five tlmea. But year-old with the pin-point control
we tied the 1core with three runs
and won the ball 1ame with an. Middleport Lltsrary
nth.er run in the 10th. Thal might
give you an Idea about the de• Club To Mui Wed.
11.ra. Geor11e Laaber will enter,
1jre on thi, club."
taln the Middleport Llterat)' Qub
tlli1 Wedpeadty atlernoon at 2 p,
m. at her home In Rutlaa.d.
Roll call reaponae for the
meetlna will be "Why I Vote"
Prolram will be "'fte \riew from
the Fortieth Fl0or" livtn bJ '4n.
Rodney Downln1 ■nlil "Adv.I.le
ind Conaent" 1inn by Mr,. 0. 8.
Sto11t.
l'OMIROY, OHIO

TIME TO CHECK
THAT
''LEAKY'' MUFFLER?

___.. ----------

COLUMBUS uPI-For a team
lhst has blan ked its first two sea.
si:ted
son opponents. by fairly
scoreK, yo u would think it lack· ed nothin&amp;:.
Not so, 1ia)'1 Coach Wood)'
Hayes about his Ohio State B11okeyt'S;. The dean of the Bi8 Ten
coaches is in a dither about the
fact his team slows down I n the
second harr.
"I don ' 1 know how lo explain
it" he said after Saturday's 20·0
""'In over Southern Cal. "But thr
boys did seem to wear clown lh11t
1econd half."

MOORE'S

PHOHI WY-2•2...

· · · -- · · · · ... --.----.._....-

ONE MORE �y • • . • • . By Alan Maver

Joe Brown Sees His Gang As
'Poised,, Dedicated' Team

t

l

.

-- -- ---------·-- ---------

"CHAULKIES"

--•

.

Facts, Figures
On 1960 World
Series Games

1
1

�� �d today. hoping to tear a page out of the past
is""'li the same thing thev did J3 years ago.
tiliUrgh Pirates, howevei had other ideas.
I
ed by the fastPst finish in their h istory, th e Yankees,
wtio won the last 15 games of their regular American League
llaPIUUoa, - were scheduled to take their first workout at
, lortiea: hW in preparation for Wednesday's World Series

'

I
.,

\
I

'

Pi.•e a la Mode
'

28C

·

1

II"""'

.......

The Lighter Side

Mrs. Kennedy
Resumes Career
In Journalism

CHASE HARDWARE

Phone WY 2,251 1
Mlddltpe,t
It,
�
.

4, 1980-5

ent' i1ial __,

,-,
' eimn,
three pe.r cent In ltlt t.Mrt were
4"18 mines prod lk'.btf 1,000 ton:11
or mort, 17 IHI llu.n in 1068. Ot
t � tGtal out.pal, N �r e&lt;ml •at
1bipPtd by nil OI' water, Sll per
cent by trutk and 1 1 per cent by
p�line.
Ohio ranked aecond among
the coke.producing 1t1te1 (third
in 19'8). OW.put lne:re&amp;led 37
per cent to 8-8 m1Ulon tons, valued at 1147,11 mUlfon� On Oettmbe_r I there •ere 14 plantl OPf.l:ratlhl 2.Jg(} OVHI {Ill alot-type)
one lut pllfll and 12:li I�-" ovrng
than In 1 95;3.
. .
The 1t1te I blgest drilllnc year
WU also rewr.df:d in ] �. A tota! of 1, 133 well com�lelmna were
made, Bf more than In �- Out•
JH increased
P� t of p lural
&amp;l1ghtly but crude petroleum pro­
duction dedined. No natural &amp;as
liquid1 ,ere recovered_ Proved
re11ene.• •• o f Dece(Dber 31 were
natural �Pl, 'JU,, '766 million cu­
bic feet; crude petroleum, 74. 1
mi lliGD b■rr.&amp;la; na&amp;uraJ &amp;a. li·
quid1, 1.6 million bafl'ela.
Total capacitin of the 9tate·s
11 aclivt refin� ind cracking
plant. wete US,000 and 173,000
b1rrel1 a day of crude oil and
ga90Une, re■pectiwly. Refineries
were at Canton, Cincinn,,ti, Cleve­
land, Cleve., Uma, Newark, Toi•
edo and WetLQa.
Ohie •• the leading :producer
&lt;if ferrq,,D!'flj ,rj(h tot,;1 output
qr 533,Qf)O lons, . .,. ,e,- ctpl high­
• tJa.a,r In JU81 Alrhgtlfh the
ifon .ad atee1 i� t.r,i1 idled
1$' the Ions stri¥, �piJ i,o11 pro­
ffilrt!!m i.Jl..u.1aKA U �r cent lo
1 L S million tons in 1smo.
Blut fW"Oatt capacity 1t the
state'1 22 planta 1n, ll.7f million
10Di on January i, lNO, lnneaR­
ina: 521.000 tons from th,e. ume
date in 1959.
WINTERii, Ttt. (UPI) - The
oomina: of hunlui, md football
&amp;easons left Ulil ·bewildering mes­
sage on a Winten ■tore 9indow:
"Shot,uo abeil . . . Beat Lake•
view." However, Wlnten won the
football game with Lakeview
without resorting to firearms.
AUfflN, Tn. (UPO - Clare
Ogden Davis, garden editor of
the Austin Amerlc1n-sbtffm1n,
went horn@ after writing a col•
lumn on how to battle army
wonm to f�. her own Lawn
nur.ly stripped by the- damaginf
larvae.

For comfortable home heat beyond city gas mains • • •

,.

VOTE FOR
George A.

MEINHARl

'----·

__./

;

,.

Install ASHLAND METERED GAS and an,
EMPIRE AUTOMATIC FLOOR FURNACE!
·, ,,- .
.

.' . '

'

Here a,e two thinp you can do � 111&gt;w to �v• eoo­

1-i! + wiata­

nomical, dependable gaa beat in your
even though ,yoo live beyond cit; I'"' ip�lna.

�=

i.en

do
will imvid• YOUl'
homM with illltant, cmitfoftable heat • , • wa QO ll8fcl fat

·AahJand

Metaed Gu, and NCQnd:

1n .... �nfmn■

F1oor Furilace. Thia aure-fin oombinati,jn

ntensive insulation or remodeliQI•

_ -·

For mare !Jltom,atlon on Aahland Morei.ct· Ou '� a

' beal••
, , •....

compiet.o line of &amp;or tuma.., ... �i.., •tr

__,

THIRE'S A

Te -l"ll YUIii' Needs
W1 llem" All Hakes
':· r:.

�i' $'

leadm1 �itN pP.Jill�r ......
oiitput increued becau1■ ol lhe
demand ror refractory lime used
in 1teel miliJ .and build1n1, ch•,nical and indutlri1I lime. Producliun wu cent.red mainly in
Sandusky County, which 1Koun1ed for 29 and 34, per cent of lbe
An all-lime record for th.t va•
total output ind value. reaper•
lue of mineral production in Ohio tivt"ly. Export• were made C'h ief'11111 stt in 1 959. The figure was ly to Canada. with lesser quan1
1395.9 million. a 1 5 per cent In· tit1e1 to Mexico, Chlle. Bah.ama
creaae over 1958 and 112.9 mll­ I blands, Germ.11nr and India.
lion lllOre than in 11&amp;7, the pre­
T•tal output ., Mtt •• .,_ 17
vious record ye.ar.
plr cent du■ m•lnly ,_ hdJ;.f
Ralph Bernhagen. chier of thP
rDCk ult p,Nuction ,,.. fN
Oivl!ion of Geo1ogie■I Survey, re­
u ndlrwrouncl F■irporl MIM .t
cei ved thi1 information rrom -t he
Mertan
S•lt Co.. In Lab
Pittaburah office of the U. S.
C �nty. Output of Ml,ot"atN
Bureau of }Urte1, Pep1rtment of
.... •nd brm■ IIM w■a up, con.
the Interior.
structlen of ttie lnt.rnitional
wit
Sa lt. Co. vnderi rol.'nd
"lncr@_ued demand by the eon .
m iM n.., Clewel•nd �inu■d.
titructlon and iron and al.eel in­
dustries resulted in higher outProduction or nnd and gravel
put of coal, cement. at.one, u nd · in 19&amp;9 reached an all-lime high
and grave,! ■nd lime. Ohio's prin . or 38.6 million tona valued at
cipal nu nerals," Bernhagen was 145.1 million. The construction
infonned.
indu,try utilit.Gd 86 per cent as
"The y�ar was highlighted by growth in the volume of build•
continuing expansion of the ing and hi,hway
c:on11truction
1t1te's m ineral Industry. Ohio led conlinued. Sand produced for
la production or lime and clay industrial application, was valu­
■nd ranked fifth 1n '&gt;Ulput of coal ed at alm011 S5 million. T"ne prin•
an&lt;l salt. Jn addition, the state cipaJ 115e1. in decreasin&amp; order
was a leading producer of iron of value, were ferrou1 and non•
and steel . ferroa lloys and blHt ferrous moldin1, gl11s manulac�
lure and furnal'C' construction and
furnace slag."
repair.
Mineral production (excluding
pefl'oleum and naturat ;a1) wu
Despite a 1 1 6-day steel ,trik,e
- Smith
X.
8'llmfv '
reported from 111 counties except whkh stopped produceion in mid
klNNEDY'I PIT (IEW-Tbeare mm are kMping the K■1111edy
Fullon, Bernhagen said. Mi neral year, out-put of proeeUf'.d iron­
machine nmnlng smoothly ID tb,e srueJUng nc• for thti
valuea intToeased in '14 or the 81 blasl·furnace ■lag decrea� only
Whlto HOUJ1e: Brother Ro� ltannedy, team captain;
producing eountie1.
su,nny. dropping rrom &amp;.8 mil•
Brother--ln•Law Stephen l!I. Mmltb. � and tlnance:
''Thirtee,ti counties had total lion Ions in 195ft to 5.4 l8mO!ion
Ted Boreruion. principal rpeec;h tnt.ter and · apeecb editor:
mineral value exceeding $10 mil• ton1 in 1959. Value declined Jeu
John M. Bailef, poUcy adviNl'; �etb O'Donnell, arranse■
l ion," said Bernhagen. "Leading thar. one per cent and totaled
campaign schedule ; LaWt'flllGIII ()'BJten, di.rector of o,pnlza­
mineral-producing areas. in de­ $10.7 million,
Uona, and Pierre Sallnger1 pN&amp;►.radio.
(CfflNI �J
cre,asing order of value, were
Total output and value o( st.one
Harrison, Belmont, Greene and {lime1t.one, sandatone and calcar•
·
to the present Dem�ratic presi- Lake Counties."
eou1 marl) increased. Stone was
dential nominee and the Times-Highlights of the report fol. produted in 69 countie11, compar•
Herald merged with the Washing- low:
ed with " in 1858. Limestone
ton Post. But 1 suppose l h ia was
Production, shipments and v.a: accounted for more than to per
only coincidenlia l.
Jue of portland and ma80nry ce- cent or the, total output. Of the
Last Monday, Mn. Kennedy i n- ments increa,ed, reflecting in• 54 limestone producing eountle11
vited some of her sister j our- creased building and construction Sandu■ky, Erie and F'l11nklin led
naUsl9 in tor tea and shop tal k . activit y throughout the state.
in order of decreasing output.
The convenalion naturally touched Green County continued to ht, Sandstone was produced iii 13
on the recent controversy over how the leading cement-producing area counties. Major producing coun.
much she and Mrs. Nixon spend The bulk of the cement was eon• tie,,11 we,re Lorain, Scioto, Portage
for Clotl-tes.
sumed in Ohio and neighbori■g and Geauga.
'Mrs. Kennedy made it plain states.
Ohio ranted filth in the na­
"Production and Value of crude tion in the production of bitu­
that she has no inlention of enBy DICK WEST
W J\SHINGTON UPI - Mrs. gagin g in a wardrobe feud with I gypsum declined slightly compar­ minous coal. 'lbe output increas­
John F. Kennedy. the only poten• her Republican rival, arid I sort ed with 1958. Two mines in Ott■• ed IO per c-ent in quantity apd
the eight per cent In valtJe from
lial I first lady who was once a of regret this. It wOuld have wa County cotitinued as
1958. Strip minea lumi1bed TO
card-carrying journalist, resumed made good column material for state'1 only source.
Ohio remained aa the na,tion'a per cent, underground
mines,
her newspupcr eareer this weell: the both of us.
as an unpaid cnlumni!.I fot
the
Democratic: National Committee.
In a sense. Mrs. Kennedy and
I are now rolleagues · and I wish
to wekome her return to the fold.
However, 1 1-tope ti-tat ' her non•
salaried .!ltatus doesn't start a
new trend,
The title of her col umn, which
the committee i.s. dis�lbuting on a
Wfekl;yr b,:.js,�i, '.',C llmp't1i1?n Wile."
Thi!i ��u�d make a fine tille for a
radio soap-opeta but it has certain
drawbacks as a column heading.
ll means that in Noven'iber she
eit her will have to chani::e the
title or 1·r ,ire again.
Writes of Fru1tratlon
. In her first column . P.tn. Ken­
nedy wrote or "How Frustrating
It Ia'' to have to stay home and
tend to her knitting while her hus­
band is out campaigning. At least
I assume she hi-s been knitting.
The reason she can't join her
husband on the campaign trail is
because sl1e is expectina her see•
ond child in December. So, she
said, "I d�clded one way to keep
from feeling left out wa, to talk
lhrough lhis cOlumn to thP. friend•
Jy people all over the country I
would have met while C.&lt;1mpaign­
ing."
In her previous experience as
a journalist: Mrs. Kennedy con­
ducted an · inquiring photographer
column £or the Washington TimM•
Herald. She went around taking
pictures of truck drivers and ask­
ing them que1tion1 like "What do
you think of the new Paris fash­
ions?"
One or Mrs. Kennedy's former
c:o•workers told me ti-tat she was
rathel' sh)' in those days and
seemed to !ind this sort of thing
distasteful. On occaslon1, some of
her miile colleagues would lend
her- a hand.
J might add that Mrs. Kennedy
wH and i!I, a very attractiv·e,
bru�eue and I suspect this mlde
·
it easy to get voluhte,en.
married
got
she
ly,
Subsequent

lionta H,......r
SAN ANTONIO. Te,. (UPD PoHCt!! believe that a burglar who
raided a drug store recently has
1uffered one Biant hangover. His
loot included some liqa1;1r that
w,is condemned 10 y81rs ag_o by
elty health offical1Jt.�ecau11e it
'Will bellev� to corl'm . rat poi11111.

COLEMAN
FURNACE

Daily Senllnel, Pomeroy-Middleport, 0., Oct.

Ohio's Mineral
Output Value
Highest In '60

....

&amp;IU IIIJlM � Of ff.H.. • • I ./

.. '

''

Repubilc:m CUdldiite
for Bepreaelllallve
to The
General Aslembly·-

ASHLAND OIL &amp; lffiNl8Q COi,. .
...
'
�- .,.
·,"

�-

'

.

•
•

�______________

.,.

·--

-- - ---- •-· - -

--

..- - ·-- � - · - ·

..

,'

,,

How They Fared Last Week

Daily Sentinel, Pomeroy-M iddleport, 0., Oct. 4, 1960-7

•==--·

Seolmel, Pomeroy-Middleport, 0., Oct. 4, 1 96-0

1

-

WANT ADS

FOR RENT

IOa CONSIS'J'�T DEPENDABLE IIESUL�
BATES

• outl per -..rd, one inl!l&amp;rtion. Mlolmum cbuge - 60 eenta
·�-·t Wlll&amp;I
prer WURi for three CQIINCIUUve iwrtiODL
"-

.,_,,, - one montb for 3(1 centJ per wol'd.
� '1 1'1111 rate of 4 oeata per word will be charged !or advertlal�
-.it.bin 10 day1 aner rece,.vwa: bill.
· .._: • ilD Advertianc - Should be rltP(l:1.l'd lznmf'diate)r, The
�el wW Dht be raponaible tor more lb.an noe iocOT­
ftO\ -...
• c..-d of Thanh 1.11d Sipc,clal Not.&amp;ce» of Ev1:qt.1 11.00. Obiluar1u
� ....llud at l Ce'lt per word.
t MO
3 DA '.'S
d i.lA V�
i DAY
VIORDS
16
80&lt;
00c
$1.30
'4.00
$1.2ll
,1...,
.. ...
711c
,1.00
$2.:111
$7 ;,o
,-per
,
d.iy
.
�
Aila ,._,N bJ 10 AJit will b, ln that
1

TRAILER SPAa

Center ot town - grass lawn.
WiH take 50 fl. trailer.
SEE

David C. Miller

If•··
..
■

,

"°'

PHONE
' , -�* ..,
r, I,. �ices _

WY-2-21 57

FOR--SALE
--­

.,.,..,. AND PEST C ON TROl.
- L P.... p,_
lrwu r• IIOME MADE ICE CREAM, Just
like you make at home. Jack's
heM
Nat.'-1.W.. P
R.
9-27-6tc
Dairy Bar .
-2
-'d 4 ....,,._ 'Statien WY I
4-2Mfc
1947 DODGE 4 door. Phone WY2�
2867.
____ 9-27--tltp
'

.,..._.ion.

.a: ,11ty

;,.....�•Qi:.!loM
�""""l
••.!!c:t.
1i1
�
-o, T•

u

&lt;I/J&gt;
lJ.•\!

.
TIW....,
�:
It.
0.lllpell•
•�
'
....,_ GI 6,,1611
•
,,
., 01 ..1241
."
.
WANTED - Fant
Presbyterian
'- Urt:h �ml&gt;ers. Preshyteri a. ns
.
C?i'
1-'ltO have slopped coming to
i. ·S uhd■y Sd1ool
and &lt;.:hurch .
plNN: attend the rewards are
�. peal
lO·Hitc
.....

1 h, -,,..

U,

., b.

,rs: , Auto Sales
..

l
' ._ Cl .. "Nd C■rw
"-" Mah.. alld Model■
�ITAN MOTOQ
■t Mal• It.
t•if�.
,v·
,
...
..,•.,. Ohle
1
1857 FORD MIO, 2 f.lr. hardt9p,
, w. w., Thunderbird, floor shirt
traµ,.. m■ny
other exlrn.
1
Phone Che&amp;ter YU5·3296.
9-27�tp
___
'M BUICK Super Hardtop Luoks
■nd runs like new. Pbone WY2·
2'178.
1 0-4 - fllp
-1957 c1n:v1toLET BEL AIR 4 dr.
one owner, low milei.Ke, power
brakes, �leering, R&amp;H, white
wall&amp;. 702 W. M11in St., Porne·
ro)'.
10·4·3tp

tGDftl e.

t-or !&gt;ale---

�. FUJ!;t. OIL and ,::01I Wa■ce1. cau for irM e1t1DM1•
i'Ohmbl 4 Abbotl lllddle,POR.
· 1-10-Utt

AUCTION
On SatW"day, Od. 8, 1960, 11t
1 :00 P. M, al my home back or
the Che1ter Methodlat Chuich, in
Cbe■ter, I will aell at 1ucllon the
lollowln.a:
Beauty Gaa Range, Servel Ro•
lrJ1erator, Drop Leaf lahlc, two
(linina room l1Dle1, M etal utlHty
cabinet, 1tep 1lool, 21 inch Cro1lcy
TV, 17 lncb Admiral TV, Sin11,er
&amp;ewin8 Machine, iiood, Electric
Waffle Iron, Portable electric
wuher, Sunbeam Iron, Quad GH
JfeaUna Stove, 3 Bed», Library
1'able, floor and Table Lamps,
la-b)' 13 Wool Uug, 9 b)' 12 Wool

111!&amp;-

'llJt following Antiques: China
Cupboard, Chert)' Che■t, Iron
Bed, Hall Tree, W.11h Stands,
Cb■lra. Marble Top UreHcr, Tele­
phone, Three Sl1111d1.
AJ10 dl1hci1, cooklna ulenal11,
bed doUa�nd many other Hems
too ,�ro111 to mention.
Totni,:' "Cub:
· Al..,....lM• fer Accidents
Jl.elreahmenta wlll be aerv ed by
Ulle Chtlltf D, of A. Lod&amp;e,
Ownu; Ellubtilh Wickham
AiatUoneer: l. O. McCoy
l(U-ltJ 1 '·

,VII.IC $ALII AUCTION
l"rfday, October 7, al 10 A. M.
at Lel.llrt Fall■, o., on Rt, 3S8, 12
mile■ from Pomeroy.
Sold· 1.-m and leavtn, county
110 mu�t ·;,y: GOOd Super C Far•
mal tracto, with 1-14'' bottom
ptowa, ,nd die, good Farmal
l,"ub Vactor with mower, culHva•
ton ■nd t-tt tandem disc, row
'h1Pr11er, waa:on on rubber
' I
1
-�•.r. lntern■tional man,.
_ �•• New ldH tranaplanl•
f «,� .,iatrOrm ,cores, 30" ludden,
Pl 1uU.e, Uvlna: room suite,
,
,�
f_9 111ite, kitchen table
''
....._:• halrt, led•, dreuer,, Tap­
� IU tan,11, coUee and end
lalllA, 1 _..11 wool rua: &amp;lid pad,
' thio#. �up, cbalra, roclttn1t.de1k,
_
..,icall
lllo
"
L
, . fldure,, diallea, dock■,
•
...,. ,, jiiano, rolls, lflWlft• ffll·
...Ill 'ltlinleu ,tetl. eook0,llotplata, lamp,, ,Weeper,
,�tr, pillow&amp; , drapes,
, ,.· ,w
,�rm
hundreds ol item,

''

,...,,.,,,,· )lad

rb, wscs

HAROLD C.RJM, Owner.
.....d Goddard, Aut.·t.

.»I-ate

- �NE.

r.ood

WY2-affl,

--

condition.
1()..t-3tc

RIVER
REPORT

( 1 4) For Rent

Ij __--

Middleport, Ohio
Phone WV-2-S 191

MOIJEHN unfurrushed 3 room,
;r nd bath apartmen t . Birch cab 1ncm erator,
int!tS,
disposal,
l11rge closets. Phone WY2-.5 141.
9-16-tk
- - -- - - �- ---THREE ROOM
apartment on
tondor Street, Pomeroy, also, 4
room ap11rlml!nl
on Second
Street, Pomeroy. Phone WY2•
2733.
---- 9-28-tfl"
SEVEN ROOM house in Harrison­
\'ille, good cellar and well, two
Car garage, large yard and
�.trden. See Mrs. Lana Gibson,
Harrisonville, Ohio.
9-28-61p

A!'Ai\ .1. &amp;a:NT5 - .furtulbed ano
unl unua,.td. Mdi't11ter•, M.1t!dJll
port. Phone WY 2·2821. 3 3 lf

I 1 7 I Help Wanted

---------l:'.rnplovmenr
Wc.,ted

(20 1 Business Services

■•

PEACHES,
brlris
cont1.inen.
Webater Fruit l'arm, Lona: llot­
tom, Ohio. Phone YUkon G-3201
8-16-Uc

I

'-,c:-_:-.,--,-:-,_�-========:-.::-,:-.:l /

POTATOES Cli1rence
Proffitt,
Portl11nd, Ohio.
l 0·◄· 121p DORCAS HOUSE for rent. Chris­
I -- · --- -- -----'
tine Bl:!egle, Phone WY2-J302.
' USED PIANO
9-29·61p.
Three nice used re•conditioned upI
right piano1. Priced right lo
sell. Otl¥,rs to ct}oose rrom $20.00
I up. Free dalivery .... Call Rutland
MAN to take over · g;;; �on.
Ji'urmture 0 SH2-481 l or after 5 p
J'hone WY2-9920.
9-23-tfe
' m. call SI12-4034.
9-29 ·61�
--------- __ -·
WANTED: Mechanic. Phone W Y2·
l-'OR SALE: Fresh Cow Guernsey
Y920.
9-23-tlc
and second ealf. William U lake,
1 Dorcas.
10-l •6tp I IOUS.EKE:J-:PElt for elderly man.
Slay nights. Apply in11nedh1lel)'
USED GARDEN traoto;; . no mow-·
!J uttnn Urug Store, Middleport.
en. Rotary IDQWff blades &amp;harIU-4-:itc
pened. C,mott mowin&amp; and
plow;n,t.
GRAVILY TRACTOR
Sa]t,, ano Sarvicf! !112 �- Main St
Phonti
WY 2·2975.
I fc,rr,ero.v ,
---- - -- -7-21 . tfL
BAHY SIT'rING done al home dur•
- --- - ----ing the day. Phone WY2-3ti02.
22 PUMI' Blf'Lt&lt;: :J O QO 12 ga sin
9·30-6tc
I gle l �.00. Bolh guns like m:w
rund1t1u11. 2 small garden trae•
tors. 8 two panel doors, 1 reel
lyµc µower mower $8.00. Cua) MUELLER FUrtNACE$, Wl!&amp;TING
faundry stove $4.00. Olen Young, . HOU5E appl lancff. Arnold lro­
ltcedsville, Ohiu, Success Road. . ther■, Syracu•, Ohio. Phone
Phon1· Cuulville 3712.
WY1-6JM.
l M Ut
_!.0� 31�
--- --AIR EIONDITIONING-:-REFRIGE.ft.
THE LATE T. H. IJAVlS pro•
1Uon service Jack'a Refrigera­
perly, brick two stor)', located : tion. New Haven. }'bone TU2·
Third and Coal
I al North
3 37
6-:13-tl
Streets, Middlt-port, m .. y be
-" ,
1
aecn 11ny evening.
9- 1 7•30tc
A 1CTIONI
Catnp�• S.rviM
1''0R SALE 100 lb. pap-er- sug-;r
Crltt l,radhmf
sackil. Phone WY2-J344.
Write, Phon• or Cont■Clt
. 9•28.flk
A. C. BRA D���Ri), RaclM, Ohla.
,
Singer Sewing M,-chine in ex·
ce!lenl condition. Portabl(! or
�ablnel $4'1.0U. Term, if de11ir­
ed. Phone WY2-2204.
9-28-6lc
WILL SACHIFICE-Singer zig za1
sewing machine, Makes bullon
holes, ,sews on butlona, over•
casts, bind hema .and dozens
or {anry vmbroider)' stitches.
Will sell to responslble parly
for 1 1 pa)'ments o f $9.35 per
rnonth. Phoue WY2-2204.
9-28,ttc

Gauges: Monlgomer)': 16.3 upper,
9. 0 lower: I 2 ft. open; G&amp;lllpolis:
17.5 upper, 9.2 lower, 2 ft. open;
Lark 23: 1 5.6 upper, 9.0 lower, 5
fl . open lrap. All movable dams
I up 13 thru 23 and 13 thru 21 are
closed off; 22 and 23 five feet open
on the trap.
j All Kanawha river dams on tile
I .si 11.
O hio JUvt'r Boats: Do.,,,. n : Ems•
w orth Albert _F. Holden, 8: 35 p.
m. 0· 12; Elil.iibeth , l : 13 a. m. 0-0;
Lol'k 9: Walter C. Beckjord, 6:40
a. m , 13-6 ; San ltirardo, 8:20 a.m.
0-2: Lock 1-1: Onward 1 : 50 a.m., o.
10; (;ona 4:20 a. m., 22-0; Franklin
Pierce. 8 : 1 5 a rn. 1-7; Lock 18:
Pennsylvania, 8 a. m,, 1 1·4; Lock
23: Trli.dcwind 4-::!5 p. ,p., 1:,-J ;
O\'tc, 6:3:) p, ni. 20-0; Mr. Criss.
l 0 : 45 p.' m .. 8-0; Tri-Stale, 1 1 :30 p.
m. 0-0; Uelen Z. I :50 a. m., 4-0;
M,1rti11 3:20 a. m., 1 - l .
U p al Gallipolis: City o Hunting .
tun. 2 a. m., motor vessel R. W .
Lee in low; Lock 23: Elger CliH.
1 :05 a. m., 0-2; Besver, 8:2� a. m.,
1 -0.

Call Dlca Sten.It

llefot • Y:�O A.Al.
Mlddle1t11r1 V,Y-2-2641
kAV' i'l flaEO STO�
At Ct.NIH
Ywon 5-214.t
NAMILL i;IRVICI il'ATIUN
lefore t:00 AM.
Alblny W-1

Zv•ry Oay lie.....

Market Report

OHIO VALLEY LIVESTOCK
HOGS - 1'1� to 220 lbs, 17:50 to
18; 220 to 250 lbs 17.M) to 18; Light
1 7 lo 18. 10; t'a1 Sows 12 lo l:);
Slags 12 to 14; Boilrs 8 to 14; Sows
and Pigs 60 to 100; Shoats 8 to 16.
CATTLE - Steers- 1 8 to 2-4 ;
Heifers 16 to - 22; Baby Beef 20 to
24.50; Fat Cows 12 to I :); Canners
9 to 12; Bulls 15 to 19; Milk Cows
100 lo 200.
VEAL' CALVES _ Tops 27.80;
Seconds 24 to 26; Medium 20 to 24;
Com. &amp; Hvs 20 to 26; Culls 15 to
20.
�
"HEEP - "e' wes G&lt;
, Lm s. 6 to IO:
Stock Ewes 4 Lo JO; )''al Shef'p 4 lo
" ' c· ulls 1 to 5 : Bucks 4 to 8 ; fst
w e 111ers 4 lo 8.
.
LA -,1US. - 1,ops 19 ; S�c ?nds 15
_
Lo 17, Lighl Wts. 12 tu 15, Common /
10 to 14.

Legal Notice

CaM No. 13,G65
CIIAHLES ROBERT NEAL,
652 Soulh Third Slreet,
Middleport, Ohio,
l'blntiff
vs.
JUNE NEAL,
:iti8 Marble Hoad,
Mech11n1csburi:, Pennsylvania,
Defendant
June Neal, whoae place of resi•
dence ia OA:IH Marble .Hoard, Mech·
·
b1,1rg, Penn&amp;ylnnia, will Lakti
tice \hat on August 19, 1900, the
unden1gned flied
his petition
against her in the Court of Com•
mon Pleas, in Meigs County, Ohio,
praying for divorce and other re­
Uel, on the grounds of gross ne.a•
lect of duty and extn me cruelty.
S111d cause will De for hearina: on
Dnd after the !Mt day of October,
ll:IUO.
CHAULES ROBt:RT NEAL
Plaintiff
WEBSTER and F'UL'rl
Allornl!ys for Plainllff
no au: (9l 6, 13, 2u, 27; (10) 4, 6tc

Conllnued from Page One
Members Paul Casci and Frank
Vaughan reported on the 8th
District Conference held Ill Wil­
kesville Oct. 2 where Stale Adj.
oseph S. De\Jlschle spoke and
Joseph S. Deutschle spoke and
to be aware of a Communistic
trend in :,outheasl Ohio.

Another Post project planned
is the annual "Gifts to the Yanks
Who Gave'' from which funds de­
rived are used to provide necessi•
ties a'nd gifts to hospitalized vet•
ersns of Ohio 11t Christmas.

People who wish to contribute
m�y lea\'e money with Mr. Casci,
Mickey Williams , or mail it to
Drew Webster Post, Pomeroy.
A buffet supper was served by
Mickey Williams and his kilchen
detail.

Khrush's Move

NEW YORK U PI - Soviet Pre­
mier Nikita Khrushchev asked
Prime Minister Harold M11cmill11n
of Britain today for another sum­
mit session on East-West questions
and was told the British leader is
busy .
..
Apparently reacting to 1:hru­
shchev's bitter attacks on the
U. S. and on the United Nations
Macmillt.n also turned down .�
invitation to a summit parly
Khrushchev is giving for U. N.
delegates tonii;ht.

British sources said Khrush­
chev senl word he would like lo
hold a noon conference with Mac­
millan today, following up lasl
week's fruitless Macmillan-Khrush­
chev talks and the prime minis•
The next meeting of the Post ter's subsequent talks with Presi­
will be Oct. 17. Vice Cmdr. Joe den Eisenhower in Washington.
Struble in a spirited talk stressed
The British delegation first said
need of a strong membership and
of securing the Legion quota or the meeting , was arranged tor J
p. m. A spoke11man later announc­
340 before Nov. 1 1.
ed that Macmillan had another engageinent and suggested that the
meeling wilh Khru,hehev be sel
later today or W ednesday.
There wa11 no immediate , ex•
planation of the British deleg11E
tion's about-face. New York PO·
lice had illreac!y begun security
precaLttions for the meeting al
Macmillan's Waldorf · Astoria suite
when the British spokesman said it
An induction ceremony for Cub had been delayed.
Khru1hchav
1imvllaneau1ly
Scout Pack 253 of Mason was held
Ht
up
his
own
venion
of the
at the Mason Grade School on
summit
by
inviting
virtually
all
Tuesday, Sept. 27, al 7:30 p, m.
leaden of the United N•tlon1 to'

•

Sc0Ut IndUCtlOn

Held Tuesday :..iVe

By M3S00 p3Ck

Conducting the ceremony were
Dennis Tulloh, cub maslvr, and
Larry Hurns, life scouter. New
Bobcats inducted were Terry .,,oreman, Johnny Zuspan, Charles Reed,
Carl Sr hwarz.. Eddie Lish, Francis ,
Queen illld Hobby Reed.
T he meeting o = ned with the I
.-�
flag salute and the reading of 11
poem. '!'hose attending participated
1 n group recreation followed b)' a
business meeling.
Mr. Tulloh empha sized th .I t c ub
Scouting ia a family organization
and urged bolh parents to attend
the training courses lo be offered.
The budget plan was f ully explain .
ed by Mr. Tulloh and it was announced that the pack meetings
will be held on the third Tuesday
of every month.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Charlie Carr, Mr , and Mrs. Dennis
Tulloh, Mrs. William Zusp.an, Mr.
and Mra. Joseph (..islt, Mrs. Carl
Schwarz, Mrs. Otis Q ueen . :,i rs.
J ames W ise, Mrs. Edwin Ualdwin,
Mrs. Harr)' Schwab, Mrs. Wayne
Green, Mrs. Lawrence Foterrum
and Mrs. Ernest Reed
Pack members attending were
Tomm)' Schwab, Richard &lt;.:arr,
f''rank Zu11psn, David Tulloh, Den­
ny Tulloh, Norman Reynolds, Gary
Green and Chuck Casto.
Parvnl11 and Cub Scout master of
the Pack attended an Adult Scout­
ers training mccling Saturday,
October J . 1i1t the Mason Grade
School from 9:30 a. m. until 12
Nuon.
Wilbur Di1ton, distril'I committee
chairman from Point Pleasant, pre .
sented instructions on how lo con­
duct Pack and Den meetinis. A
movie wa� shown.
Auending were Mn. Jam e� Wise,
Mrs. Ch11rlie Carr, Mrs. Wayne
Green, Mrs. Paul Burns, Mrs.
George H udson, Mrs, Otis Queen,
Mr. and Mrs. Jo1eph Lish and 7dr.
and Mrs. Dennis Tulloh.

Legal Notices

Bond for Ruth Thoma&amp; to bea:ln
the job as County Recorder, fill­
ing the term of her late hul!lb1nd,
John D. Thom111, was approved 'and
signed at a meeting of Melg1 Couo­
l_v Commiuloner, yesterday.
The three commiasioners decilf­
ed that bids be adv ertised during
the next 90 days for th� putchaae
of &amp;asoline to be used !or County
highway vehicles.
' All bills were to be paid in full
to dale.
It was abo decided t�al tne'syr­
acuse Horhe Ulitities Co. be per.
mithied to lay a gas line between
the Charles Grueser and Hiram
Fisher property.

Navy Oaims
Speed �ark For
Jet Fighters

WASHINGTON UPI-The U.
S. Navy today claimed a new
world record of 1,390.21 mile■
per hour for jet fighter planes.
The record would be near!)' 100
mile, an hour greater than one
submitted for recognition b)'
RuHia four montha ago.

WSAZ-TV Cha nne l 3
ChonMl l- -'f•ifa,

Voters In Dixie

WITH NIXON IN NEW JERSEY
UPI - Vice President Richard M.
Nlxon, cheered by his latest inv111fon of normally Democr11tic Dixie,
aet out today to convince voters in
heavily • Industrial northern New
Jeney that lhe Oemocartic farm
program could mean higher food
prices 1t the supermarket.

Accoml)ilnled by bi, wife Pat,
Nixon mapped a strenuous all-day
molorcad e through north Jersey
citiea where Democratic strenath
thl•
i&amp; admittedly runnint: high
year. GOl' leader•, howe ver, con-.
tended that Nixon's on-the-spot
campai1nin1 could lilt the state
into t he Republican camp.
A rousing airport crowd of 1,000
gr.eeted the Nixon, when
they
laod. ed at Newark ear1y today
after a fJi,ht r�m Charlotte, N. C.

Accident Probed

By Pomeroy Police�TJt� Pomeroy Police Department
lnve,tlll■ted a car . truck accident
al 9:.30 yesterday morning on Ea.!ll
Main-■t', tn PomerOy.

Navy Secretary William B.
Franke said "we have shown
A Utuck driven by James Sisson,
again that we are equal to any
the
challenge-that we will be sec­ 18, Pomeroy, and owned by
' G &amp; J, caught on fire from impro­
ond to no-one.''
per wirin1 and slopped in the mid­
The Navy mart was set Sept. dle of tbe &amp;treet.
Ui by Cmdr. John F. Jeff Davia,
A c.-r ,P.Uated by Mildred Mil­
• m.n1iva pu1y at th• Soviet a 39-year-old Annapolis graduate
leg1tion tonight. He •Ila Invited from Chicago, in a Mi:Donnell burn, '28. Middleport, ran into the
• Hcrel li1t of American bu1 I• F4H-J Phantom n fighter that bact of the truck when it stopped.
neumen.
will become operational aboard D amJ1,ge to µae truck was slight and
the, oar wis judaed a total los.!1.
Navy carriers late this year,
.
,
Meanwhile. it waa learned that
ll'here ' Were no arrests and only
Macmillan and . Secretary-General
Davis flew a 62-mile, 100 kilo­ minor, ruts were suffered by an oc•
at meter circular cour.!le in 40,9 cupant lri: the Milburn car.
Dag H.imm a n kJ old conferred
1 0 ·· 10 a. m. t0d ay.
second5. His true average Bpeed
-------was 1 ,4M miles an hour, but he
was occasionslly somewhat wN;le Kenn�y Hearteoe_d By
Teacher Exaniinations
of the course. The test was at an lllinol• Invasion
altitude or 45,000 feet over the
To Be Given Saturday
CHICAGO UPI-&amp;n. J , hn F.
National Tt"acher Examinalions Mojave Desert near Edwards Air Kennedy was wearied liut ''very
are scheduled to be given at Force Base in California.
hearte ned" today by his motorlz·
Marsha ll Colleg e on Saturday,
ed invasion of a southern Illinois
October 15, according to Robert Fines ,uked In
route Harry S. Truman followed
N. Melott, Assistant Registrar al
on his w•Y to the White House
Marshall.
Middleport Court
In 1948.
These t(!sts, given three times
Lfat night In Middleport Court,
T.he Democratic
presidential
a year in June, October and John Zerkle, in the ab11ence of
January, arc used to determine Mayor Kenneth McElhinney, fined ca�clJdat.e spent a half-day rest­
here, at least outwardly con­
the qualifications for teacher cer­ Delbert E. Swish er, GaUipolis, SS
lirication. According to the West and costs for running a stop · sigri; fid""1 in a prediction that he will
Virsinia Board of Education, any. Randy Rothgeb, Cheshire, $5 at1d repeat Truman's 1948 perform­
one holding a baccalaureate de• costs for recklesa operalion; Roger ance by defeating Vice Preaident
gree from an approved college is Norman, Harrisonville, $5 and coale Richard M. Nixon Nov. B, five
eligible lo quallfy for public for illegal muffler and Patricia wee ks lroin loday.
school tearhing in the stale by Humphrey, � and COSti for speedestablishini; competence th.rough ing.
BIRTH ANNOUNC&amp;D
the National Teacher Examina•
This morning, 'Mayor McElhin•
Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Ruschel ·
tlon.
ney fined William McHaffie, S&amp; and
anno·unclng the birth of a
costs tor diaorderly conduct and thdihler, Saturday at 4 : 37 p. m.
MOVE LOWER
intoxication. McHaffie 11lso waa TIM blibJ weighed 7 lbs. 7� oz
NEW YORK UPI-Stocks took flnl'd $15 and coat!! for resisting ar- and hU been named Lila Jaunit■
the line of least resistance and rest. Harold Wogan was asseued She h.a1 one brother Eugene and
moved fractionally lower at the ,$20 and costs for recklesa opera• 11:b?ee &gt;i1•tera, Susan, S1mdra and
.'
tlon.
)1,...... . . '
,
opening today.
_______ ,________________;___ . I
-,;r "r

AUCTIONI IR
IIASONAILI RATIS
NOTl\,.i; OF SALE UNDER
SATIS,ACTION GUARANTIE D
CHATTEL MORTGAGI
Call or write I, 0. McCoy
By v1rluc or a Chattel Mortgage
Che1rer, Ohio
8 22 ;Jotp executed and delivered Dy .I&lt;"toyd
:,tol&gt;art, Jr. and Grace Stobarl to
BULLDOZER t'OH IIIHE. Ponds, J'rc11lon Molon Inc. on March 26th,
basements 1111d luud�caping. Ph. llH:IU, Uuly assigned to the under•
Che11lt1r, YU 5·:J:!55.
H) 3 30tp a1�ned and f1let1 with the Clerk ot
t:ourt1 ol Meigs County, Ohio, on
PAINTING INSWE AND OUT. M11rch 28, l lHIO, and on which
de•
J•11penng. l&lt;'loor sanding and fin­ fault hu been made,
the under­
i11lung. Carl E. Nelson Hulland, signed will sell tbe goods
and
TWO PIECE Kroehler Uvirig roo m
Ht. I. Phone WY :!-ts9tl9.
ch11tteJs
described
in
said
mort·
suite, Platform rocker in aood
10 4 tltp .Bllite, to-wit: 1957 1-�0RD, 8 C.:ylind,
condlllon. Inquire mornln&amp; al
er, serlal No. B7UG 179337, Tu·
22&lt;1 W.alnut SI., Mltldl eporl.
dor, at Publlc Auction at Preston
10-4-atc
WASHINGTON UPl-A 72 (Q!&gt;I
Motors, Inc., 461 South Third Ave­
Seoul
rocket was tired high ovtff
nue, Middleport, Ohio in the Vil•
BEANS $LUO per bu. Brin&amp;: o�f
the
Atlantic
by the federal space
own container, C, W. Pr �fill,
la&amp;e ol" Middh:po1 t Mei&amp;&amp; County,
Portland.
Oluo, on October 5, 1960 .al 10:30 11.11:ency today lo lest the rocket
10.f. 2tp
and a special instrument for de·
a. m.
lecting nuclear explosions in
F'OR SALE 150 Player piano roll■
BARNl:ll-SIMPSON INS� RANCE
Mnim� sale price $600.
Goo&lt;/ condition. C11ll VIS-2441.
space.
A aeoU, Middleport. Fire, Aiato­
Terms of Hie: CHh in hand on
l0. 4·3lp
TIie rocket waa launched lrom
mobUe. .Bondi. Phone WY2- day of sale.
---·--· -- --the National Aeronautics and
2illll!.
8-27-tl
ON E PAlH ready trained Be111Lle1
The farm.r■ Bank &amp; Savlnp Space Administration base at
$�1.l-00 . · Sec C■rl Hoatk, D1i11ley
Company
Wallops bland, Va., al 1 1 :23 a. m.
Jltm !toad, Pomeroy, O.
Pomeroy, Ohio
EDT and NASA 1aid all four
IO◄ ·Jlp
(9) 20, 27; ( lOJ 4, 3ta ,tage■ fired :m ecessfully.
.
FOK SALE: FIVE ROOM HOUSE.
It was expected to rise to an al­
FOR SALE 4 HOOMS furniture
with b11th, nice loealfon. Melvin
titude ol nearly 4,000 mile&amp; and
ml'IUllllll: i\hgic Chef range,
hood, 1 1 1 Lu..:ulll SI., Ppmeroy.
travel 8,100 mile&amp; down rang&amp; be­
�hytax Washer, lii bson H.e·
19) I 30&lt;P
fore ending its tli&amp;ht ln the South
NOflta: OF SALE UNDER
frigeralor, 24" Sylvama TV.
Allanlic.
CHATTEL MORTG.AGI
ne w l'orl. Singer Sewing M1i1The rocket carried 78 , pounds
Mortga1w
By
virtue
or
a
Chattel
dunc. l21-7m Slrcd, Mlddlc­
executed and delivered by Earl of instruments provided b)' the
porl.
l 0•4 · 3tp
Kaul! 1m d Opal Kauff to the under­ Air Force for measuring radiation
69 AC�IS-On aood road oil
&amp;igned on May 20th, 1980, and fll. in space .
Roule 680 near PDgetown, II­
The rocket wu scheduled for
ed with the Clerk of Courls ol
room house, basement, barn,
Meigs County, Ohio, on :\f&amp;)' 20th, launclllna: Monday but lhe firing
Al IS IPICIALS
olher buildin,;:s, nice garden,
1900, and on which defauU h■■ Wall pomtponed because of tech·
S7 Mercury 60 H. P. $4ff.OO
apple trees. Terms $3500.00.
59 �rCUl'JI 70 H. p, $59$.0Q
been made, the undersigned will nic■l difficulties.
The Scout Is a solid-rueled
U H. P. Mercury Outfit S99J.00 120 AClllS-4� acres cultivated sell the goods and chattels describ­
iood pasture.
good 7-room ed in said mortgaae. to-wil: 1955 "workhorse" rockel assembly ex•
MITROPOLITAN MOTORS
house, cellar, gara&amp;e, large barn Studebacker, 8 Cylinder, Serl1! No. peeled to place 150-pound satel­
600 IHI Main St.-..t, P.nwrey
other buildings.
Caah price
8383952, G Pan. Coupe, at Bhlet• Utes in orbit at altitude, of about
Phone WY24170
,00,
$8000
tnar Auto , Company W arehou&amp;e, 300 miles at far Jess expense-than
8-20-Uc
961/a ACRIS-Y, mlle off Route Sprln&amp; Avenue, Pomeroy. Ohio, in earlier launchina:a. The coat or
7, 30 acre&amp; tractor land, 7-room the Vlllaa:c of Pomeroy, M eig1 the rocket l1 estimated at leas
house. barn, &amp;Unary, shed, olh·
County, Ohio, on October 5th, llMIO than saoo,ooo tompared to nearly
er buildin31. �Ill• Chalmera 11t 10:00 ' a. m.
$2 million for an lnteuontinenUII
50 FOOT TRAILER, 3 full 1lled
trador and �uipment. Ev ery­
balllatic mlpile.
bedroomt, full bath with 11uto­
Minimum q,le prlce 1250.00,
thing goH. C11h price $8000.00.
l'l short
m,uc wa1her. Maple Street,
Term,
of
sale:
C11sb
In
hand
on
ALIIRT M, tOX, Saleuwlal'I
Middleport. Phone WY2-Md0. BOX 229
PHON E WY2 ,2221} day ol •ale.
9-2Q.6tc
Th9 farmer■ l•nk &amp; S.•ln11 Select 'Sahara' For
WY:j.8830
Con,pany
l0-1·3lc
New Hlah School
P•mtrey, Ohio
Seven b'rick samples were alud­
SALE RESTAURANT 02
(9) 20, 21; 001 4, ate
led lut nl.aht and lhe "Sahara" a
WANTED TO HU Y-Coal 1!1 or I
Licen1e 6% s«r and Wine. '102
Ucht red 1t1le, wa■ ehoeen for
lnch furnace pl))e1, wm buy
W. Main St., Pomeroy. lltt-3tp
WOIKING ON SUI
the new hla:h 1cbool near Racine.
furnace lf nece1aary. Phune
TOKYO UPUJ-The u. s:-;iiiPAIUS 1,f Pl-A French navy
The selectlon wp made at a
W'\'2-3069.
10-1-3tc
tary newspaper Pacific Stan and Adm. Francit Lain!' ■ald Monday meetln1 of the Southern LocAI
Stripe• today ctlehratcd U.1 15th tb■t France m■y him� it.a firat School 8oird lilt nlcbt at the
yeu- or publication for American .ttom'it 1111bm,rine by 1868 wilh­ hl&amp;b IChoot. Seven firms had
&amp;JGHT ROOM HO\IS&amp;. two rtYI servicemen and thei:- !amilie■ st'a ou.t United Statea help, or by ,blltb nplfltnted. The board."
room aparlmenta. A. H. Bon,ei. tionei1 lrom the Philippine1 to 1966 lf tile project aalns Amer­ at.o bought fire eztl�hen for
I
P...... WYHl'IJ.
11-2-tle Alllkll,
lun au.,Port,
Une di1trict elementary achoola.
ELECTROLUX Vacuum CJ eanor.
Populur model No. SO 111 A-1
condition. Complete with all
attachments and throw away
p,per bags. P11y orf balance of
$41.00 or term!! c-an be arrnn;.­
ed. Pho11e WY2-220t.
9-28,ttc
--- - -· -----FOil SALE- 1980 FORD, lll'W
11ai11t, ta11c recorder, Webcord
for $80.00. Call WY2•674J8.
J0-4-;jtp

TELEV ISION GU IOi

New 50-Star Macmillan Turns Recorder Bonded V!!tp Cheered By
For New Duties Usually Democrat
Flag Received Deaf Ear To

Inc

'•r.e

,,'

4 :00
4:30
ti :00
5 :30
6:00
f · :5
6:25
6:30
6:45
f · IVI
r · ao
8:30
9:00
10:00
1 1 :00
11 : 1 0
- 1 :15
• 1 :00

Comedy Playbo111e
Hollywood
Ste■mboat Bill
Woody i"Jo,�·lecker
Meet Mr. Candidate
Jiffi fbaeker SI.ow
Wealnercast
News Picture
Huntley-Brinkley _\'t.eport
t.:annonnall
1,,ram1e
Hitchcoc'lc Present!
Thriller
Rivak, the Barbarian
News
We■therca!t
Jack Paar Sbow
Sign Ofi

5:4�
8:00
1:00
D:00
9:30
1�:00

Sign On
Conlinental Classroom
Today
Welcome Neighbors
, Mr. and Mre . • rTOrth
Dol.ll'h Re . Ml

' 0:30
t � :00
t ] :30
1 1 :&lt;15
1 2 i '.)
2: 30
!' · 00
' 80
4 : 00

Jlere:•

,,30

Cha!intl 3 - Wednn.:i11
--

5:00
l:�O
6,00
\: J !',
• JI
t:3e
1:46
1:00
7:30

s,so

9:00
10:00
10:30
9:30
l :UIJ
1 : lf'
lo II
l:ftll

Play Your Hunct.
0·dce la Risht ·
Conceotratlon
Pre Game Show
World series
Lorett11 YoLln&amp; Theater
Yol!ili Dr . .dal,,me
From Th@M!I Roo•..
Make Room for Daddy
Here'&amp; Hollywood
Steambolt o1U
Ouick Draw MeGraw
Mu!!ic m the Round
The .hn. Tlia..!ku Sb"
Wctberean
1"1!WI Pieful'P
lluntlev 1lrink1ie, &amp;eport
Mi!lnhunt
Waion Train
Price Is Ri.mt
Perry Como Show
NBC Special Report
Tombstone Territory
Tate
New1 Readllnftl
W't'athertut
1"ht:1 Jack Paar Sbn81,o, Off

Channel
8-1 'U1lii
"'SdO)
.
�
,•

, t f·.00 /l •meri,11n,�:n,1�f,io4 · ,
·
"" • s:�O ' Rln Tin' 'tfo
Satl I ruclsoo �at
1:so · Your 'Isl-",. fyO&lt;ici.
8:40 Weatl\er Tellet"
e:46 Ju'•n !'11)' llew.11
7:00 United Fund Show
7:30 World Series Spttial
8:00 The Rifleman
8:30 Wyatt iarp
9:00 Stagecoach West
10:00 Aicoa PrMenu
10:30 Open House
1 1 :00 The News Tonight
1 1 :10 Sca.nning the weather
1 1 : Hi Sports Report
1 1 : 20 Late ShOw

-.:oo

lllannel 8 - Waduesd■\
8,00 Cartoon Spectacular
1:30 Romper.,Room
D,30 Show Time

-

1:25 Your Eu• Reporter
.\1 :30 · }. .U;l.rri� �OU
12-;00 T� 1'ex1n
LZ:-30 . Queen ,Jor a Da)'
I :QO- A�c. • Faces
1 · 30 . Medic
2:00 Day In Court
2:30 Gale Storm Show
3:91) Bent thP Clock
3:30 V.: ho Do You Tnr:t
1:00 American Bandrtand
5:30 The Lone Ranger
t:OO San l• tlfldlc-J Beat
6:30 Your Esso Reporter
6:40 Weather Tellet
6:45 John Daly N'ewa
7:00 Four Just M en
7:30 Hong Kong
8:30 Nelson Family
9:00 Hawaii.an Eye
10:00 Bing Crosby Show
1 1 :00 Newa Tonight
l l : 10 Scannin g the Weath er
1 1 : 15 Sports R.eport
1 1 :20 Late Show

WHTN-TV Channel 13

Channel 1 3 Tue5do1

6:QO
f:10
a:3&lt;
1:00
1:00
l:1.;
8:20
8:30
7:30
8:30
8:30
9:00
9�0
10:00
J]:00
1 1 : 10
1 1 : 15

I Syracuse- Pomeroy
,...
Middleport
lndh-Jdual
327
4
1 . Young (Pomeroy-Syracuse) . . , . . . , . 16
35-4
4
2 . Hin dy ( M iddJepot·II . . . . . , , . , , . . . . , 1 6
312
6
3. Williams (Pomeroy-Syracuse) . . . . , . 1 5
334
5
4. Carroll (Middletx!rt) . . , . , . . . . . . . . . 15
336
5
5. White .(Pomeroy-Syracuse) . , , . . . . . 1 5
338
5
6. Hubbard (Pomeroy-Syracusa) . . . . . . , 1 5
352
6
7. Call (Middleport) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
374
8
12
8. Clatworthy (Middleport) . . .
Gallipolis
Athens
at
Logan
teams
the
week:
for
this
Games
at Pomeroy, Middleport at Jackson, Wellston at Nelsonville,
Kyger Creek at Eastern, Chauncey at Rutland, Huntington
East at Pt. Pleasant, Williamstown at Wahama, OU at Boston
University· (Saturday), Ohio State at I llinois (Saturday).
2.

MAILBAG
EDITOR'S

--

, : ,,;WCHS-TV C�an11 el 8

'If\e U/lghler Da1
Nlcrei Stonn
ldae of Nigh,
The 'l'.hree stooge11
Arth�tr J., 891-it,ti l�ll'ff
A Look lit tbe Weatlier
Sportsco[)e
Amos .and Andy
AdVentUre Hall of Fame
Dobie Gillis
Hall or Fame
Tom' Ewell Shops
Red sn1t9P Show
ThC Garty '"¥oore Show
1 1 'O'clock ;NeWS
A Look at tl\e Weather
Theater 1 3

Dear Sir;
There bas b een so much said
and written about the religious
question, as bearing upon the
candidacy of Senator Ke11nedy
for President o( the United Stat­
es that it seem, that we should
look at. this iHue in a proper and
logical way.
Since th e election of Washing­
ton for President 1 7 1 year&amp; ago,
lhere ha, never been II Catholic
in the White House,' although
nearly one-third of the
church
populntion in this country ate
memUers of the Catholic Church­
and for thal tnaalter there arc
more membe,;s of the Catholic
faith throughout the world than
all other Christian denominations.
In addition, so,ne of the more t?n•
lightened cowitries of the world
such as France, Spain, Germany,
Ital)' and other civilized countries
are overwhelmingly of the Catho­
lic faith, and have Catholics at
the head of Slate. "(his is true of
Scuth America, Central America
i nd Mexico, which c,)ontries are
, rree, dominantl� Calholir, and the
Presidents o! which
countries
are exclusively Calholic.
Now viewing such matters from
a practical ,md · sen1ible point or
view, 1here ' eonld be no question
but what a Calholic president of
the United States could better
deal with questions of Foreign Po­
licy than any one else r:ould do,
especially since otir forei,gn po­
licy is uppermost ill tlte minds of.
many of our leading state1men oJ
today,
It seems to be the thought of
some Protutant minfsters, mnSt
of whom are natural born Repuhli
cans, that If ·Sena1or Kennedv·
shou1d be elected President, lh11 t
he would be influenced by ' the
Church at Rome, but the Demo­
cratic candidate has made it clear
that his decisions will be of his
own that his oath Would forbid
otherwise. and that be .would

WJ E H
Brings You The

U_p To The
Minute

Masoh
Co1,1nty
I

,

NEWS

Scout Rocket
Probing Space
4,000 Miles Out

l 20bl l n�uronce

Won Lou Pt. SprHd
13)3
19
. , . , . . 61
57
23
1414

T..,.

, 1111es 0a11,

10 AM
11 :55 �.-.

...
5:01 PM
'.

(l I l Reol !:stare
---

&gt;

.\ ,\

I

/ .;

,'

live and act under the Conatitu­
tion of the United States, which
specifically sets forth that there
shall be a "separation of the
Church and State." That la the
poliq o! Senator Kennedy as re•
peated by him over and over
again. No one ever heard of
Rome trying to influence the Ro­
man Catholic countries named
above berause they too act UP·
on lheir own ae Senator Kennedy
would dD . •
To be more specific, Just t,.ke
a look at the 'lery finl amend­
ment to the &lt;.:onstilution of ihe
United States which states in sub
stance that Congress shall make
no law re1pecUng the eslllblish­
ment of religion. Our law ' further
provides in substanee that there
shall be no discriminatiol') In
this counltv on account of race,
color or p·reviou, condition of
servitude, which Senaior Ken•
nedy is trying to put into force
and efU!ct in a sirtistantial way.
Of course many or the Protest­
ant Ministers and people do nol
believe and agree with much of
the doctrine or the Catholic
Church, and it may well be said
that many Methodi8L� do not
agree with the doctrine of the
LulReran Church, nor do the
Presbyterians agree wilh the doc­
trine of the Baptist Church, and
the reverse of all this ls true;
\iul what does it all signify? No­
thing more nor leu than that
they all worship God in the 9ilme
spirit, and if they live u p to
their church doctrine they will '
al� •iO to tb.e ·same Heaven-and
thal is all that can be expected
o( any 'human being.
It js a sad commentary that so
many of our so called highly
respected ministers are making
bigot� t')f them4elvea. They don't
consider that Catholirs through•
oul. the world are just as patrio­
tic a,nd law abiding as any other
people on the race of the globe­
and h:ive the•.!iame love for coun­
try -as any other people. They
help pay our taxes, help fight our
wars; and. who ls there to say,
thilt lhis one·lhird of the religi­
ous populatiO' tl' ' bf ' !lie Unilect,. 'i°
- 8\'ates, ar'e not fine, law abiding ,
citizens. illS can be round, and ,
that one of i�, fine distinguished
members or that Church would
not make as greai a President as
our country couH:I furnish?
Two of our great Presidents­
J efferson and Lincoln were not
members of l!Dy chu.rch, yet they
aerved our country well. President
T-afl, a Unilarian, which church
teaches th11t Chri.sl wa&amp; not divine,
was not cl"iticised on account of
his religion, yet the record does
not disclose that any Hepublican
minister ever raised his voice
aeuinst him or asked any mem­
ber of hia congregation t(I vote
agaim't him because he Was a
· Unilai'i11n.
.
,minister
who
bas
made
him­
A
.
seU more or leu prominent as
well ar - obnoxloue. Dr. Norman
Vincent Peale, bu within t he
paat few days, made of himself
a highly disreputable bigot. Al­
ways a Republican, he c:.illed a
group or mini&amp;ters together for .
the purpose of influencing them
again1t Senator Kennedy, and in
doing so rendered our country a
disservice i.n trying to make reli­
gion an iBSUe when the Presldent
and Vice PreBident have repeated•
ly said that it is not an luue.
· You have heard no one say
but w'111t Senator Kennedy is
honorable, highly educated and
that · he J1 well qualified to ·mala:e ,
a gri!at President of the ' Unlte'd
State&amp;. No one c■n questiori but
what he J1 atroo1Iy Udlcated to
· tlie best Jntereata o1- hla country
and tbit hie declsom 1 1:!I Pntrldent
. ' ",:
will 'pc hlll OWDt

.

U'L Ari 11i11

',\'.)'LL NEVAI-I
GrT TH' KE."1'
an;. ONLESS
'/C'Gm; M&amp;
OJT!l

'l.\�OLINF AL�

;5' _ i[
· ==::::::::Tiltthou
;;;g;i;htt'

�utx,in had
, l 'll qlad vcu came
1 and to\d me what dehvel"Qd aH hi;
li1II•, l1r. SIU�happened, Clovia.

, flcl

NANCY
ROL� O 'S DAD
BOUGHT A
FOR E IGN

�---......

I'VE GOT A
F.OR E I C.N
CAR, TOO

'"f BE

MUC!-1

FOREIGN

CAR

'

Legal Notices

I 9a l Marine ::iupp11es

1 0- For Sol• or-�

- ·- -- --�"'

--

( 1 1 ) Wonted To Buy

ron

-------

-----

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"L L��w�-_;
'

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.. are just one of the .h�·tlmii
amliild'htr • · "·
'
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ltst
...
�a
iof••
lllf.
since
house

electric l'llfilt, Aidoinotlc features-Ilka 1'.
watchln, out, :Pi,lt the fun back In i:ookln1 i!I'!
· baking, AriiUhe, 'flan\l)els eieat,rlc,full ltilpl
• her kltchln i;lioinor � ,;oolet•)'llr '11111nd. ,
---- ·

I l 4 l For Rent

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THP.
10
C!U
AwJNE.'f:r W.Y O,ff!N IT UNNOTI
w/JIRJOW, � AT Tttl! u.�.A.F. FIGHTER �.

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-- - ---- •-· - -

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,,

How They Fared Last Week

Daily Sentinel, Pomeroy-M iddleport, 0., Oct. 4, 1960-7

•==--·

Seolmel, Pomeroy-Middleport, 0., Oct. 4, 1 96-0

1

-

WANT ADS

FOR RENT

IOa CONSIS'J'�T DEPENDABLE IIESUL�
BATES

• outl per -..rd, one inl!l&amp;rtion. Mlolmum cbuge - 60 eenta
·�-·t Wlll&amp;I
prer WURi for three CQIINCIUUve iwrtiODL
"-

.,_,,, - one montb for 3(1 centJ per wol'd.
� '1 1'1111 rate of 4 oeata per word will be charged !or advertlal�
-.it.bin 10 day1 aner rece,.vwa: bill.
· .._: • ilD Advertianc - Should be rltP(l:1.l'd lznmf'diate)r, The
�el wW Dht be raponaible tor more lb.an noe iocOT­
ftO\ -...
• c..-d of Thanh 1.11d Sipc,clal Not.&amp;ce» of Ev1:qt.1 11.00. Obiluar1u
� ....llud at l Ce'lt per word.
t MO
3 DA '.'S
d i.lA V�
i DAY
VIORDS
16
80&lt;
00c
$1.30
'4.00
$1.2ll
,1...,
.. ...
711c
,1.00
$2.:111
$7 ;,o
,-per
,
d.iy
.
�
Aila ,._,N bJ 10 AJit will b, ln that
1

TRAILER SPAa

Center ot town - grass lawn.
WiH take 50 fl. trailer.
SEE

David C. Miller

If•··
..
■

,

"°'

PHONE
' , -�* ..,
r, I,. �ices _

WY-2-21 57

FOR--SALE
--­

.,.,..,. AND PEST C ON TROl.
- L P.... p,_
lrwu r• IIOME MADE ICE CREAM, Just
like you make at home. Jack's
heM
Nat.'-1.W.. P
R.
9-27-6tc
Dairy Bar .
-2
-'d 4 ....,,._ 'Statien WY I
4-2Mfc
1947 DODGE 4 door. Phone WY2�
2867.
____ 9-27--tltp
'

.,..._.ion.

.a: ,11ty

;,.....�•Qi:.!loM
�""""l
••.!!c:t.
1i1
�
-o, T•

u

&lt;I/J&gt;
lJ.•\!

.
TIW....,
�:
It.
0.lllpell•
•�
'
....,_ GI 6,,1611
•
,,
., 01 ..1241
."
.
WANTED - Fant
Presbyterian
'- Urt:h �ml&gt;ers. Preshyteri a. ns
.
C?i'
1-'ltO have slopped coming to
i. ·S uhd■y Sd1ool
and &lt;.:hurch .
plNN: attend the rewards are
�. peal
lO·Hitc
.....

1 h, -,,..

U,

., b.

,rs: , Auto Sales
..

l
' ._ Cl .. "Nd C■rw
"-" Mah.. alld Model■
�ITAN MOTOQ
■t Mal• It.
t•if�.
,v·
,
...
..,•.,. Ohle
1
1857 FORD MIO, 2 f.lr. hardt9p,
, w. w., Thunderbird, floor shirt
traµ,.. m■ny
other exlrn.
1
Phone Che&amp;ter YU5·3296.
9-27�tp
___
'M BUICK Super Hardtop Luoks
■nd runs like new. Pbone WY2·
2'178.
1 0-4 - fllp
-1957 c1n:v1toLET BEL AIR 4 dr.
one owner, low milei.Ke, power
brakes, �leering, R&amp;H, white
wall&amp;. 702 W. M11in St., Porne·
ro)'.
10·4·3tp

tGDftl e.

t-or !&gt;ale---

�. FUJ!;t. OIL and ,::01I Wa■ce1. cau for irM e1t1DM1•
i'Ohmbl 4 Abbotl lllddle,POR.
· 1-10-Utt

AUCTION
On SatW"day, Od. 8, 1960, 11t
1 :00 P. M, al my home back or
the Che1ter Methodlat Chuich, in
Cbe■ter, I will aell at 1ucllon the
lollowln.a:
Beauty Gaa Range, Servel Ro•
lrJ1erator, Drop Leaf lahlc, two
(linina room l1Dle1, M etal utlHty
cabinet, 1tep 1lool, 21 inch Cro1lcy
TV, 17 lncb Admiral TV, Sin11,er
&amp;ewin8 Machine, iiood, Electric
Waffle Iron, Portable electric
wuher, Sunbeam Iron, Quad GH
JfeaUna Stove, 3 Bed», Library
1'able, floor and Table Lamps,
la-b)' 13 Wool Uug, 9 b)' 12 Wool

111!&amp;-

'llJt following Antiques: China
Cupboard, Chert)' Che■t, Iron
Bed, Hall Tree, W.11h Stands,
Cb■lra. Marble Top UreHcr, Tele­
phone, Three Sl1111d1.
AJ10 dl1hci1, cooklna ulenal11,
bed doUa�nd many other Hems
too ,�ro111 to mention.
Totni,:' "Cub:
· Al..,....lM• fer Accidents
Jl.elreahmenta wlll be aerv ed by
Ulle Chtlltf D, of A. Lod&amp;e,
Ownu; Ellubtilh Wickham
AiatUoneer: l. O. McCoy
l(U-ltJ 1 '·

,VII.IC $ALII AUCTION
l"rfday, October 7, al 10 A. M.
at Lel.llrt Fall■, o., on Rt, 3S8, 12
mile■ from Pomeroy.
Sold· 1.-m and leavtn, county
110 mu�t ·;,y: GOOd Super C Far•
mal tracto, with 1-14'' bottom
ptowa, ,nd die, good Farmal
l,"ub Vactor with mower, culHva•
ton ■nd t-tt tandem disc, row
'h1Pr11er, waa:on on rubber
' I
1
-�•.r. lntern■tional man,.
_ �•• New ldH tranaplanl•
f «,� .,iatrOrm ,cores, 30" ludden,
Pl 1uU.e, Uvlna: room suite,
,
,�
f_9 111ite, kitchen table
''
....._:• halrt, led•, dreuer,, Tap­
� IU tan,11, coUee and end
lalllA, 1 _..11 wool rua: &amp;lid pad,
' thio#. �up, cbalra, roclttn1t.de1k,
_
..,icall
lllo
"
L
, . fldure,, diallea, dock■,
•
...,. ,, jiiano, rolls, lflWlft• ffll·
...Ill 'ltlinleu ,tetl. eook0,llotplata, lamp,, ,Weeper,
,�tr, pillow&amp; , drapes,
, ,.· ,w
,�rm
hundreds ol item,

''

,...,,.,,,,· )lad

rb, wscs

HAROLD C.RJM, Owner.
.....d Goddard, Aut.·t.

.»I-ate

- �NE.

r.ood

WY2-affl,

--

condition.
1()..t-3tc

RIVER
REPORT

( 1 4) For Rent

Ij __--

Middleport, Ohio
Phone WV-2-S 191

MOIJEHN unfurrushed 3 room,
;r nd bath apartmen t . Birch cab 1ncm erator,
int!tS,
disposal,
l11rge closets. Phone WY2-.5 141.
9-16-tk
- - -- - - �- ---THREE ROOM
apartment on
tondor Street, Pomeroy, also, 4
room ap11rlml!nl
on Second
Street, Pomeroy. Phone WY2•
2733.
---- 9-28-tfl"
SEVEN ROOM house in Harrison­
\'ille, good cellar and well, two
Car garage, large yard and
�.trden. See Mrs. Lana Gibson,
Harrisonville, Ohio.
9-28-61p

A!'Ai\ .1. &amp;a:NT5 - .furtulbed ano
unl unua,.td. Mdi't11ter•, M.1t!dJll
port. Phone WY 2·2821. 3 3 lf

I 1 7 I Help Wanted

---------l:'.rnplovmenr
Wc.,ted

(20 1 Business Services

■•

PEACHES,
brlris
cont1.inen.
Webater Fruit l'arm, Lona: llot­
tom, Ohio. Phone YUkon G-3201
8-16-Uc

I

'-,c:-_:-.,--,-:-,_�-========:-.::-,:-.:l /

POTATOES Cli1rence
Proffitt,
Portl11nd, Ohio.
l 0·◄· 121p DORCAS HOUSE for rent. Chris­
I -- · --- -- -----'
tine Bl:!egle, Phone WY2-J302.
' USED PIANO
9-29·61p.
Three nice used re•conditioned upI
right piano1. Priced right lo
sell. Otl¥,rs to ct}oose rrom $20.00
I up. Free dalivery .... Call Rutland
MAN to take over · g;;; �on.
Ji'urmture 0 SH2-481 l or after 5 p
J'hone WY2-9920.
9-23-tfe
' m. call SI12-4034.
9-29 ·61�
--------- __ -·
WANTED: Mechanic. Phone W Y2·
l-'OR SALE: Fresh Cow Guernsey
Y920.
9-23-tlc
and second ealf. William U lake,
1 Dorcas.
10-l •6tp I IOUS.EKE:J-:PElt for elderly man.
Slay nights. Apply in11nedh1lel)'
USED GARDEN traoto;; . no mow-·
!J uttnn Urug Store, Middleport.
en. Rotary IDQWff blades &amp;harIU-4-:itc
pened. C,mott mowin&amp; and
plow;n,t.
GRAVILY TRACTOR
Sa]t,, ano Sarvicf! !112 �- Main St
Phonti
WY 2·2975.
I fc,rr,ero.v ,
---- - -- -7-21 . tfL
BAHY SIT'rING done al home dur•
- --- - ----ing the day. Phone WY2-3ti02.
22 PUMI' Blf'Lt&lt;: :J O QO 12 ga sin
9·30-6tc
I gle l �.00. Bolh guns like m:w
rund1t1u11. 2 small garden trae•
tors. 8 two panel doors, 1 reel
lyµc µower mower $8.00. Cua) MUELLER FUrtNACE$, Wl!&amp;TING
faundry stove $4.00. Olen Young, . HOU5E appl lancff. Arnold lro­
ltcedsville, Ohiu, Success Road. . ther■, Syracu•, Ohio. Phone
Phon1· Cuulville 3712.
WY1-6JM.
l M Ut
_!.0� 31�
--- --AIR EIONDITIONING-:-REFRIGE.ft.
THE LATE T. H. IJAVlS pro•
1Uon service Jack'a Refrigera­
perly, brick two stor)', located : tion. New Haven. }'bone TU2·
Third and Coal
I al North
3 37
6-:13-tl
Streets, Middlt-port, m .. y be
-" ,
1
aecn 11ny evening.
9- 1 7•30tc
A 1CTIONI
Catnp�• S.rviM
1''0R SALE 100 lb. pap-er- sug-;r
Crltt l,radhmf
sackil. Phone WY2-J344.
Write, Phon• or Cont■Clt
. 9•28.flk
A. C. BRA D���Ri), RaclM, Ohla.
,
Singer Sewing M,-chine in ex·
ce!lenl condition. Portabl(! or
�ablnel $4'1.0U. Term, if de11ir­
ed. Phone WY2-2204.
9-28-6lc
WILL SACHIFICE-Singer zig za1
sewing machine, Makes bullon
holes, ,sews on butlona, over•
casts, bind hema .and dozens
or {anry vmbroider)' stitches.
Will sell to responslble parly
for 1 1 pa)'ments o f $9.35 per
rnonth. Phoue WY2-2204.
9-28,ttc

Gauges: Monlgomer)': 16.3 upper,
9. 0 lower: I 2 ft. open; G&amp;lllpolis:
17.5 upper, 9.2 lower, 2 ft. open;
Lark 23: 1 5.6 upper, 9.0 lower, 5
fl . open lrap. All movable dams
I up 13 thru 23 and 13 thru 21 are
closed off; 22 and 23 five feet open
on the trap.
j All Kanawha river dams on tile
I .si 11.
O hio JUvt'r Boats: Do.,,,. n : Ems•
w orth Albert _F. Holden, 8: 35 p.
m. 0· 12; Elil.iibeth , l : 13 a. m. 0-0;
Lol'k 9: Walter C. Beckjord, 6:40
a. m , 13-6 ; San ltirardo, 8:20 a.m.
0-2: Lock 1-1: Onward 1 : 50 a.m., o.
10; (;ona 4:20 a. m., 22-0; Franklin
Pierce. 8 : 1 5 a rn. 1-7; Lock 18:
Pennsylvania, 8 a. m,, 1 1·4; Lock
23: Trli.dcwind 4-::!5 p. ,p., 1:,-J ;
O\'tc, 6:3:) p, ni. 20-0; Mr. Criss.
l 0 : 45 p.' m .. 8-0; Tri-Stale, 1 1 :30 p.
m. 0-0; Uelen Z. I :50 a. m., 4-0;
M,1rti11 3:20 a. m., 1 - l .
U p al Gallipolis: City o Hunting .
tun. 2 a. m., motor vessel R. W .
Lee in low; Lock 23: Elger CliH.
1 :05 a. m., 0-2; Besver, 8:2� a. m.,
1 -0.

Call Dlca Sten.It

llefot • Y:�O A.Al.
Mlddle1t11r1 V,Y-2-2641
kAV' i'l flaEO STO�
At Ct.NIH
Ywon 5-214.t
NAMILL i;IRVICI il'ATIUN
lefore t:00 AM.
Alblny W-1

Zv•ry Oay lie.....

Market Report

OHIO VALLEY LIVESTOCK
HOGS - 1'1� to 220 lbs, 17:50 to
18; 220 to 250 lbs 17.M) to 18; Light
1 7 lo 18. 10; t'a1 Sows 12 lo l:);
Slags 12 to 14; Boilrs 8 to 14; Sows
and Pigs 60 to 100; Shoats 8 to 16.
CATTLE - Steers- 1 8 to 2-4 ;
Heifers 16 to - 22; Baby Beef 20 to
24.50; Fat Cows 12 to I :); Canners
9 to 12; Bulls 15 to 19; Milk Cows
100 lo 200.
VEAL' CALVES _ Tops 27.80;
Seconds 24 to 26; Medium 20 to 24;
Com. &amp; Hvs 20 to 26; Culls 15 to
20.
�
"HEEP - "e' wes G&lt;
, Lm s. 6 to IO:
Stock Ewes 4 Lo JO; )''al Shef'p 4 lo
" ' c· ulls 1 to 5 : Bucks 4 to 8 ; fst
w e 111ers 4 lo 8.
.
LA -,1US. - 1,ops 19 ; S�c ?nds 15
_
Lo 17, Lighl Wts. 12 tu 15, Common /
10 to 14.

Legal Notice

CaM No. 13,G65
CIIAHLES ROBERT NEAL,
652 Soulh Third Slreet,
Middleport, Ohio,
l'blntiff
vs.
JUNE NEAL,
:iti8 Marble Hoad,
Mech11n1csburi:, Pennsylvania,
Defendant
June Neal, whoae place of resi•
dence ia OA:IH Marble .Hoard, Mech·
·
b1,1rg, Penn&amp;ylnnia, will Lakti
tice \hat on August 19, 1900, the
unden1gned flied
his petition
against her in the Court of Com•
mon Pleas, in Meigs County, Ohio,
praying for divorce and other re­
Uel, on the grounds of gross ne.a•
lect of duty and extn me cruelty.
S111d cause will De for hearina: on
Dnd after the !Mt day of October,
ll:IUO.
CHAULES ROBt:RT NEAL
Plaintiff
WEBSTER and F'UL'rl
Allornl!ys for Plainllff
no au: (9l 6, 13, 2u, 27; (10) 4, 6tc

Conllnued from Page One
Members Paul Casci and Frank
Vaughan reported on the 8th
District Conference held Ill Wil­
kesville Oct. 2 where Stale Adj.
oseph S. De\Jlschle spoke and
Joseph S. Deutschle spoke and
to be aware of a Communistic
trend in :,outheasl Ohio.

Another Post project planned
is the annual "Gifts to the Yanks
Who Gave'' from which funds de­
rived are used to provide necessi•
ties a'nd gifts to hospitalized vet•
ersns of Ohio 11t Christmas.

People who wish to contribute
m�y lea\'e money with Mr. Casci,
Mickey Williams , or mail it to
Drew Webster Post, Pomeroy.
A buffet supper was served by
Mickey Williams and his kilchen
detail.

Khrush's Move

NEW YORK U PI - Soviet Pre­
mier Nikita Khrushchev asked
Prime Minister Harold M11cmill11n
of Britain today for another sum­
mit session on East-West questions
and was told the British leader is
busy .
..
Apparently reacting to 1:hru­
shchev's bitter attacks on the
U. S. and on the United Nations
Macmillt.n also turned down .�
invitation to a summit parly
Khrushchev is giving for U. N.
delegates tonii;ht.

British sources said Khrush­
chev senl word he would like lo
hold a noon conference with Mac­
millan today, following up lasl
week's fruitless Macmillan-Khrush­
chev talks and the prime minis•
The next meeting of the Post ter's subsequent talks with Presi­
will be Oct. 17. Vice Cmdr. Joe den Eisenhower in Washington.
Struble in a spirited talk stressed
The British delegation first said
need of a strong membership and
of securing the Legion quota or the meeting , was arranged tor J
p. m. A spoke11man later announc­
340 before Nov. 1 1.
ed that Macmillan had another engageinent and suggested that the
meeling wilh Khru,hehev be sel
later today or W ednesday.
There wa11 no immediate , ex•
planation of the British deleg11E
tion's about-face. New York PO·
lice had illreac!y begun security
precaLttions for the meeting al
Macmillan's Waldorf · Astoria suite
when the British spokesman said it
An induction ceremony for Cub had been delayed.
Khru1hchav
1imvllaneau1ly
Scout Pack 253 of Mason was held
Ht
up
his
own
venion
of the
at the Mason Grade School on
summit
by
inviting
virtually
all
Tuesday, Sept. 27, al 7:30 p, m.
leaden of the United N•tlon1 to'

•

Sc0Ut IndUCtlOn

Held Tuesday :..iVe

By M3S00 p3Ck

Conducting the ceremony were
Dennis Tulloh, cub maslvr, and
Larry Hurns, life scouter. New
Bobcats inducted were Terry .,,oreman, Johnny Zuspan, Charles Reed,
Carl Sr hwarz.. Eddie Lish, Francis ,
Queen illld Hobby Reed.
T he meeting o = ned with the I
.-�
flag salute and the reading of 11
poem. '!'hose attending participated
1 n group recreation followed b)' a
business meeling.
Mr. Tulloh empha sized th .I t c ub
Scouting ia a family organization
and urged bolh parents to attend
the training courses lo be offered.
The budget plan was f ully explain .
ed by Mr. Tulloh and it was announced that the pack meetings
will be held on the third Tuesday
of every month.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Charlie Carr, Mr , and Mrs. Dennis
Tulloh, Mrs. William Zusp.an, Mr.
and Mra. Joseph (..islt, Mrs. Carl
Schwarz, Mrs. Otis Q ueen . :,i rs.
J ames W ise, Mrs. Edwin Ualdwin,
Mrs. Harr)' Schwab, Mrs. Wayne
Green, Mrs. Lawrence Foterrum
and Mrs. Ernest Reed
Pack members attending were
Tomm)' Schwab, Richard &lt;.:arr,
f''rank Zu11psn, David Tulloh, Den­
ny Tulloh, Norman Reynolds, Gary
Green and Chuck Casto.
Parvnl11 and Cub Scout master of
the Pack attended an Adult Scout­
ers training mccling Saturday,
October J . 1i1t the Mason Grade
School from 9:30 a. m. until 12
Nuon.
Wilbur Di1ton, distril'I committee
chairman from Point Pleasant, pre .
sented instructions on how lo con­
duct Pack and Den meetinis. A
movie wa� shown.
Auending were Mn. Jam e� Wise,
Mrs. Ch11rlie Carr, Mrs. Wayne
Green, Mrs. Paul Burns, Mrs.
George H udson, Mrs, Otis Queen,
Mr. and Mrs. Jo1eph Lish and 7dr.
and Mrs. Dennis Tulloh.

Legal Notices

Bond for Ruth Thoma&amp; to bea:ln
the job as County Recorder, fill­
ing the term of her late hul!lb1nd,
John D. Thom111, was approved 'and
signed at a meeting of Melg1 Couo­
l_v Commiuloner, yesterday.
The three commiasioners decilf­
ed that bids be adv ertised during
the next 90 days for th� putchaae
of &amp;asoline to be used !or County
highway vehicles.
' All bills were to be paid in full
to dale.
It was abo decided t�al tne'syr­
acuse Horhe Ulitities Co. be per.
mithied to lay a gas line between
the Charles Grueser and Hiram
Fisher property.

Navy Oaims
Speed �ark For
Jet Fighters

WASHINGTON UPI-The U.
S. Navy today claimed a new
world record of 1,390.21 mile■
per hour for jet fighter planes.
The record would be near!)' 100
mile, an hour greater than one
submitted for recognition b)'
RuHia four montha ago.

WSAZ-TV Cha nne l 3
ChonMl l- -'f•ifa,

Voters In Dixie

WITH NIXON IN NEW JERSEY
UPI - Vice President Richard M.
Nlxon, cheered by his latest inv111fon of normally Democr11tic Dixie,
aet out today to convince voters in
heavily • Industrial northern New
Jeney that lhe Oemocartic farm
program could mean higher food
prices 1t the supermarket.

Accoml)ilnled by bi, wife Pat,
Nixon mapped a strenuous all-day
molorcad e through north Jersey
citiea where Democratic strenath
thl•
i&amp; admittedly runnint: high
year. GOl' leader•, howe ver, con-.
tended that Nixon's on-the-spot
campai1nin1 could lilt the state
into t he Republican camp.
A rousing airport crowd of 1,000
gr.eeted the Nixon, when
they
laod. ed at Newark ear1y today
after a fJi,ht r�m Charlotte, N. C.

Accident Probed

By Pomeroy Police�TJt� Pomeroy Police Department
lnve,tlll■ted a car . truck accident
al 9:.30 yesterday morning on Ea.!ll
Main-■t', tn PomerOy.

Navy Secretary William B.
Franke said "we have shown
A Utuck driven by James Sisson,
again that we are equal to any
the
challenge-that we will be sec­ 18, Pomeroy, and owned by
' G &amp; J, caught on fire from impro­
ond to no-one.''
per wirin1 and slopped in the mid­
The Navy mart was set Sept. dle of tbe &amp;treet.
Ui by Cmdr. John F. Jeff Davia,
A c.-r ,P.Uated by Mildred Mil­
• m.n1iva pu1y at th• Soviet a 39-year-old Annapolis graduate
leg1tion tonight. He •Ila Invited from Chicago, in a Mi:Donnell burn, '28. Middleport, ran into the
• Hcrel li1t of American bu1 I• F4H-J Phantom n fighter that bact of the truck when it stopped.
neumen.
will become operational aboard D amJ1,ge to µae truck was slight and
the, oar wis judaed a total los.!1.
Navy carriers late this year,
.
,
Meanwhile. it waa learned that
ll'here ' Were no arrests and only
Macmillan and . Secretary-General
Davis flew a 62-mile, 100 kilo­ minor, ruts were suffered by an oc•
at meter circular cour.!le in 40,9 cupant lri: the Milburn car.
Dag H.imm a n kJ old conferred
1 0 ·· 10 a. m. t0d ay.
second5. His true average Bpeed
-------was 1 ,4M miles an hour, but he
was occasionslly somewhat wN;le Kenn�y Hearteoe_d By
Teacher Exaniinations
of the course. The test was at an lllinol• Invasion
altitude or 45,000 feet over the
To Be Given Saturday
CHICAGO UPI-&amp;n. J , hn F.
National Tt"acher Examinalions Mojave Desert near Edwards Air Kennedy was wearied liut ''very
are scheduled to be given at Force Base in California.
hearte ned" today by his motorlz·
Marsha ll Colleg e on Saturday,
ed invasion of a southern Illinois
October 15, according to Robert Fines ,uked In
route Harry S. Truman followed
N. Melott, Assistant Registrar al
on his w•Y to the White House
Marshall.
Middleport Court
In 1948.
These t(!sts, given three times
Lfat night In Middleport Court,
T.he Democratic
presidential
a year in June, October and John Zerkle, in the ab11ence of
January, arc used to determine Mayor Kenneth McElhinney, fined ca�clJdat.e spent a half-day rest­
here, at least outwardly con­
the qualifications for teacher cer­ Delbert E. Swish er, GaUipolis, SS
lirication. According to the West and costs for running a stop · sigri; fid""1 in a prediction that he will
Virsinia Board of Education, any. Randy Rothgeb, Cheshire, $5 at1d repeat Truman's 1948 perform­
one holding a baccalaureate de• costs for recklesa operalion; Roger ance by defeating Vice Preaident
gree from an approved college is Norman, Harrisonville, $5 and coale Richard M. Nixon Nov. B, five
eligible lo quallfy for public for illegal muffler and Patricia wee ks lroin loday.
school tearhing in the stale by Humphrey, � and COSti for speedestablishini; competence th.rough ing.
BIRTH ANNOUNC&amp;D
the National Teacher Examina•
This morning, 'Mayor McElhin•
Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Ruschel ·
tlon.
ney fined William McHaffie, S&amp; and
anno·unclng the birth of a
costs tor diaorderly conduct and thdihler, Saturday at 4 : 37 p. m.
MOVE LOWER
intoxication. McHaffie 11lso waa TIM blibJ weighed 7 lbs. 7� oz
NEW YORK UPI-Stocks took flnl'd $15 and coat!! for resisting ar- and hU been named Lila Jaunit■
the line of least resistance and rest. Harold Wogan was asseued She h.a1 one brother Eugene and
moved fractionally lower at the ,$20 and costs for recklesa opera• 11:b?ee &gt;i1•tera, Susan, S1mdra and
.'
tlon.
)1,...... . . '
,
opening today.
_______ ,________________;___ . I
-,;r "r

AUCTIONI IR
IIASONAILI RATIS
NOTl\,.i; OF SALE UNDER
SATIS,ACTION GUARANTIE D
CHATTEL MORTGAGI
Call or write I, 0. McCoy
By v1rluc or a Chattel Mortgage
Che1rer, Ohio
8 22 ;Jotp executed and delivered Dy .I&lt;"toyd
:,tol&gt;art, Jr. and Grace Stobarl to
BULLDOZER t'OH IIIHE. Ponds, J'rc11lon Molon Inc. on March 26th,
basements 1111d luud�caping. Ph. llH:IU, Uuly assigned to the under•
Che11lt1r, YU 5·:J:!55.
H) 3 30tp a1�ned and f1let1 with the Clerk ot
t:ourt1 ol Meigs County, Ohio, on
PAINTING INSWE AND OUT. M11rch 28, l lHIO, and on which
de•
J•11penng. l&lt;'loor sanding and fin­ fault hu been made,
the under­
i11lung. Carl E. Nelson Hulland, signed will sell tbe goods
and
TWO PIECE Kroehler Uvirig roo m
Ht. I. Phone WY :!-ts9tl9.
ch11tteJs
described
in
said
mort·
suite, Platform rocker in aood
10 4 tltp .Bllite, to-wit: 1957 1-�0RD, 8 C.:ylind,
condlllon. Inquire mornln&amp; al
er, serlal No. B7UG 179337, Tu·
22&lt;1 W.alnut SI., Mltldl eporl.
dor, at Publlc Auction at Preston
10-4-atc
WASHINGTON UPl-A 72 (Q!&gt;I
Motors, Inc., 461 South Third Ave­
Seoul
rocket was tired high ovtff
nue, Middleport, Ohio in the Vil•
BEANS $LUO per bu. Brin&amp;: o�f
the
Atlantic
by the federal space
own container, C, W. Pr �fill,
la&amp;e ol" Middh:po1 t Mei&amp;&amp; County,
Portland.
Oluo, on October 5, 1960 .al 10:30 11.11:ency today lo lest the rocket
10.f. 2tp
and a special instrument for de·
a. m.
lecting nuclear explosions in
F'OR SALE 150 Player piano roll■
BARNl:ll-SIMPSON INS� RANCE
Mnim� sale price $600.
Goo&lt;/ condition. C11ll VIS-2441.
space.
A aeoU, Middleport. Fire, Aiato­
Terms of Hie: CHh in hand on
l0. 4·3lp
TIie rocket waa launched lrom
mobUe. .Bondi. Phone WY2- day of sale.
---·--· -- --the National Aeronautics and
2illll!.
8-27-tl
ON E PAlH ready trained Be111Lle1
The farm.r■ Bank &amp; Savlnp Space Administration base at
$�1.l-00 . · Sec C■rl Hoatk, D1i11ley
Company
Wallops bland, Va., al 1 1 :23 a. m.
Jltm !toad, Pomeroy, O.
Pomeroy, Ohio
EDT and NASA 1aid all four
IO◄ ·Jlp
(9) 20, 27; ( lOJ 4, 3ta ,tage■ fired :m ecessfully.
.
FOK SALE: FIVE ROOM HOUSE.
It was expected to rise to an al­
FOR SALE 4 HOOMS furniture
with b11th, nice loealfon. Melvin
titude ol nearly 4,000 mile&amp; and
ml'IUllllll: i\hgic Chef range,
hood, 1 1 1 Lu..:ulll SI., Ppmeroy.
travel 8,100 mile&amp; down rang&amp; be­
�hytax Washer, lii bson H.e·
19) I 30&lt;P
fore ending its tli&amp;ht ln the South
NOflta: OF SALE UNDER
frigeralor, 24" Sylvama TV.
Allanlic.
CHATTEL MORTG.AGI
ne w l'orl. Singer Sewing M1i1The rocket carried 78 , pounds
Mortga1w
By
virtue
or
a
Chattel
dunc. l21-7m Slrcd, Mlddlc­
executed and delivered by Earl of instruments provided b)' the
porl.
l 0•4 · 3tp
Kaul! 1m d Opal Kauff to the under­ Air Force for measuring radiation
69 AC�IS-On aood road oil
&amp;igned on May 20th, 1980, and fll. in space .
Roule 680 near PDgetown, II­
The rocket wu scheduled for
ed with the Clerk of Courls ol
room house, basement, barn,
Meigs County, Ohio, on :\f&amp;)' 20th, launclllna: Monday but lhe firing
Al IS IPICIALS
olher buildin,;:s, nice garden,
1900, and on which defauU h■■ Wall pomtponed because of tech·
S7 Mercury 60 H. P. $4ff.OO
apple trees. Terms $3500.00.
59 �rCUl'JI 70 H. p, $59$.0Q
been made, the undersigned will nic■l difficulties.
The Scout Is a solid-rueled
U H. P. Mercury Outfit S99J.00 120 AClllS-4� acres cultivated sell the goods and chattels describ­
iood pasture.
good 7-room ed in said mortgaae. to-wil: 1955 "workhorse" rockel assembly ex•
MITROPOLITAN MOTORS
house, cellar, gara&amp;e, large barn Studebacker, 8 Cylinder, Serl1! No. peeled to place 150-pound satel­
600 IHI Main St.-..t, P.nwrey
other buildings.
Caah price
8383952, G Pan. Coupe, at Bhlet• Utes in orbit at altitude, of about
Phone WY24170
,00,
$8000
tnar Auto , Company W arehou&amp;e, 300 miles at far Jess expense-than
8-20-Uc
961/a ACRIS-Y, mlle off Route Sprln&amp; Avenue, Pomeroy. Ohio, in earlier launchina:a. The coat or
7, 30 acre&amp; tractor land, 7-room the Vlllaa:c of Pomeroy, M eig1 the rocket l1 estimated at leas
house. barn, &amp;Unary, shed, olh·
County, Ohio, on October 5th, llMIO than saoo,ooo tompared to nearly
er buildin31. �Ill• Chalmera 11t 10:00 ' a. m.
$2 million for an lnteuontinenUII
50 FOOT TRAILER, 3 full 1lled
trador and �uipment. Ev ery­
balllatic mlpile.
bedroomt, full bath with 11uto­
Minimum q,le prlce 1250.00,
thing goH. C11h price $8000.00.
l'l short
m,uc wa1her. Maple Street,
Term,
of
sale:
C11sb
In
hand
on
ALIIRT M, tOX, Saleuwlal'I
Middleport. Phone WY2-Md0. BOX 229
PHON E WY2 ,2221} day ol •ale.
9-2Q.6tc
Th9 farmer■ l•nk &amp; S.•ln11 Select 'Sahara' For
WY:j.8830
Con,pany
l0-1·3lc
New Hlah School
P•mtrey, Ohio
Seven b'rick samples were alud­
SALE RESTAURANT 02
(9) 20, 21; 001 4, ate
led lut nl.aht and lhe "Sahara" a
WANTED TO HU Y-Coal 1!1 or I
Licen1e 6% s«r and Wine. '102
Ucht red 1t1le, wa■ ehoeen for
lnch furnace pl))e1, wm buy
W. Main St., Pomeroy. lltt-3tp
WOIKING ON SUI
the new hla:h 1cbool near Racine.
furnace lf nece1aary. Phune
TOKYO UPUJ-The u. s:-;iiiPAIUS 1,f Pl-A French navy
The selectlon wp made at a
W'\'2-3069.
10-1-3tc
tary newspaper Pacific Stan and Adm. Francit Lain!' ■ald Monday meetln1 of the Southern LocAI
Stripe• today ctlehratcd U.1 15th tb■t France m■y him� it.a firat School 8oird lilt nlcbt at the
yeu- or publication for American .ttom'it 1111bm,rine by 1868 wilh­ hl&amp;b IChoot. Seven firms had
&amp;JGHT ROOM HO\IS&amp;. two rtYI servicemen and thei:- !amilie■ st'a ou.t United Statea help, or by ,blltb nplfltnted. The board."
room aparlmenta. A. H. Bon,ei. tionei1 lrom the Philippine1 to 1966 lf tile project aalns Amer­ at.o bought fire eztl�hen for
I
P...... WYHl'IJ.
11-2-tle Alllkll,
lun au.,Port,
Une di1trict elementary achoola.
ELECTROLUX Vacuum CJ eanor.
Populur model No. SO 111 A-1
condition. Complete with all
attachments and throw away
p,per bags. P11y orf balance of
$41.00 or term!! c-an be arrnn;.­
ed. Pho11e WY2-220t.
9-28,ttc
--- - -· -----FOil SALE- 1980 FORD, lll'W
11ai11t, ta11c recorder, Webcord
for $80.00. Call WY2•674J8.
J0-4-;jtp

TELEV ISION GU IOi

New 50-Star Macmillan Turns Recorder Bonded V!!tp Cheered By
For New Duties Usually Democrat
Flag Received Deaf Ear To

Inc

'•r.e

,,'

4 :00
4:30
ti :00
5 :30
6:00
f · :5
6:25
6:30
6:45
f · IVI
r · ao
8:30
9:00
10:00
1 1 :00
11 : 1 0
- 1 :15
• 1 :00

Comedy Playbo111e
Hollywood
Ste■mboat Bill
Woody i"Jo,�·lecker
Meet Mr. Candidate
Jiffi fbaeker SI.ow
Wealnercast
News Picture
Huntley-Brinkley _\'t.eport
t.:annonnall
1,,ram1e
Hitchcoc'lc Present!
Thriller
Rivak, the Barbarian
News
We■therca!t
Jack Paar Sbow
Sign Ofi

5:4�
8:00
1:00
D:00
9:30
1�:00

Sign On
Conlinental Classroom
Today
Welcome Neighbors
, Mr. and Mre . • rTOrth
Dol.ll'h Re . Ml

' 0:30
t � :00
t ] :30
1 1 :&lt;15
1 2 i '.)
2: 30
!' · 00
' 80
4 : 00

Jlere:•

,,30

Cha!intl 3 - Wednn.:i11
--

5:00
l:�O
6,00
\: J !',
• JI
t:3e
1:46
1:00
7:30

s,so

9:00
10:00
10:30
9:30
l :UIJ
1 : lf'
lo II
l:ftll

Play Your Hunct.
0·dce la Risht ·
Conceotratlon
Pre Game Show
World series
Lorett11 YoLln&amp; Theater
Yol!ili Dr . .dal,,me
From Th@M!I Roo•..
Make Room for Daddy
Here'&amp; Hollywood
Steambolt o1U
Ouick Draw MeGraw
Mu!!ic m the Round
The .hn. Tlia..!ku Sb"
Wctberean
1"1!WI Pieful'P
lluntlev 1lrink1ie, &amp;eport
Mi!lnhunt
Waion Train
Price Is Ri.mt
Perry Como Show
NBC Special Report
Tombstone Territory
Tate
New1 Readllnftl
W't'athertut
1"ht:1 Jack Paar Sbn81,o, Off

Channel
8-1 'U1lii
"'SdO)
.
�
,•

, t f·.00 /l •meri,11n,�:n,1�f,io4 · ,
·
"" • s:�O ' Rln Tin' 'tfo
Satl I ruclsoo �at
1:so · Your 'Isl-",. fyO&lt;ici.
8:40 Weatl\er Tellet"
e:46 Ju'•n !'11)' llew.11
7:00 United Fund Show
7:30 World Series Spttial
8:00 The Rifleman
8:30 Wyatt iarp
9:00 Stagecoach West
10:00 Aicoa PrMenu
10:30 Open House
1 1 :00 The News Tonight
1 1 :10 Sca.nning the weather
1 1 : Hi Sports Report
1 1 : 20 Late ShOw

-.:oo

lllannel 8 - Waduesd■\
8,00 Cartoon Spectacular
1:30 Romper.,Room
D,30 Show Time

-

1:25 Your Eu• Reporter
.\1 :30 · }. .U;l.rri� �OU
12-;00 T� 1'ex1n
LZ:-30 . Queen ,Jor a Da)'
I :QO- A�c. • Faces
1 · 30 . Medic
2:00 Day In Court
2:30 Gale Storm Show
3:91) Bent thP Clock
3:30 V.: ho Do You Tnr:t
1:00 American Bandrtand
5:30 The Lone Ranger
t:OO San l• tlfldlc-J Beat
6:30 Your Esso Reporter
6:40 Weather Tellet
6:45 John Daly N'ewa
7:00 Four Just M en
7:30 Hong Kong
8:30 Nelson Family
9:00 Hawaii.an Eye
10:00 Bing Crosby Show
1 1 :00 Newa Tonight
l l : 10 Scannin g the Weath er
1 1 : 15 Sports R.eport
1 1 :20 Late Show

WHTN-TV Channel 13

Channel 1 3 Tue5do1

6:QO
f:10
a:3&lt;
1:00
1:00
l:1.;
8:20
8:30
7:30
8:30
8:30
9:00
9�0
10:00
J]:00
1 1 : 10
1 1 : 15

I Syracuse- Pomeroy
,...
Middleport
lndh-Jdual
327
4
1 . Young (Pomeroy-Syracuse) . . , . . . , . 16
35-4
4
2 . Hin dy ( M iddJepot·II . . . . . , , . , , . . . . , 1 6
312
6
3. Williams (Pomeroy-Syracuse) . . . . , . 1 5
334
5
4. Carroll (Middletx!rt) . . , . , . . . . . . . . . 15
336
5
5. White .(Pomeroy-Syracuse) . , , . . . . . 1 5
338
5
6. Hubbard (Pomeroy-Syracusa) . . . . . . , 1 5
352
6
7. Call (Middleport) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
374
8
12
8. Clatworthy (Middleport) . . .
Gallipolis
Athens
at
Logan
teams
the
week:
for
this
Games
at Pomeroy, Middleport at Jackson, Wellston at Nelsonville,
Kyger Creek at Eastern, Chauncey at Rutland, Huntington
East at Pt. Pleasant, Williamstown at Wahama, OU at Boston
University· (Saturday), Ohio State at I llinois (Saturday).
2.

MAILBAG
EDITOR'S

--

, : ,,;WCHS-TV C�an11 el 8

'If\e U/lghler Da1
Nlcrei Stonn
ldae of Nigh,
The 'l'.hree stooge11
Arth�tr J., 891-it,ti l�ll'ff
A Look lit tbe Weatlier
Sportsco[)e
Amos .and Andy
AdVentUre Hall of Fame
Dobie Gillis
Hall or Fame
Tom' Ewell Shops
Red sn1t9P Show
ThC Garty '"¥oore Show
1 1 'O'clock ;NeWS
A Look at tl\e Weather
Theater 1 3

Dear Sir;
There bas b een so much said
and written about the religious
question, as bearing upon the
candidacy of Senator Ke11nedy
for President o( the United Stat­
es that it seem, that we should
look at. this iHue in a proper and
logical way.
Since th e election of Washing­
ton for President 1 7 1 year&amp; ago,
lhere ha, never been II Catholic
in the White House,' although
nearly one-third of the
church
populntion in this country ate
memUers of the Catholic Church­
and for thal tnaalter there arc
more membe,;s of the Catholic
faith throughout the world than
all other Christian denominations.
In addition, so,ne of the more t?n•
lightened cowitries of the world
such as France, Spain, Germany,
Ital)' and other civilized countries
are overwhelmingly of the Catho­
lic faith, and have Catholics at
the head of Slate. "(his is true of
Scuth America, Central America
i nd Mexico, which c,)ontries are
, rree, dominantl� Calholir, and the
Presidents o! which
countries
are exclusively Calholic.
Now viewing such matters from
a practical ,md · sen1ible point or
view, 1here ' eonld be no question
but what a Calholic president of
the United States could better
deal with questions of Foreign Po­
licy than any one else r:ould do,
especially since otir forei,gn po­
licy is uppermost ill tlte minds of.
many of our leading state1men oJ
today,
It seems to be the thought of
some Protutant minfsters, mnSt
of whom are natural born Repuhli
cans, that If ·Sena1or Kennedv·
shou1d be elected President, lh11 t
he would be influenced by ' the
Church at Rome, but the Demo­
cratic candidate has made it clear
that his decisions will be of his
own that his oath Would forbid
otherwise. and that be .would

WJ E H
Brings You The

U_p To The
Minute

Masoh
Co1,1nty
I

,

NEWS

Scout Rocket
Probing Space
4,000 Miles Out

l 20bl l n�uronce

Won Lou Pt. SprHd
13)3
19
. , . , . . 61
57
23
1414

T..,.

, 1111es 0a11,

10 AM
11 :55 �.-.

...
5:01 PM
'.

(l I l Reol !:stare
---

&gt;

.\ ,\

I

/ .;

,'

live and act under the Conatitu­
tion of the United States, which
specifically sets forth that there
shall be a "separation of the
Church and State." That la the
poliq o! Senator Kennedy as re•
peated by him over and over
again. No one ever heard of
Rome trying to influence the Ro­
man Catholic countries named
above berause they too act UP·
on lheir own ae Senator Kennedy
would dD . •
To be more specific, Just t,.ke
a look at the 'lery finl amend­
ment to the &lt;.:onstilution of ihe
United States which states in sub
stance that Congress shall make
no law re1pecUng the eslllblish­
ment of religion. Our law ' further
provides in substanee that there
shall be no discriminatiol') In
this counltv on account of race,
color or p·reviou, condition of
servitude, which Senaior Ken•
nedy is trying to put into force
and efU!ct in a sirtistantial way.
Of course many or the Protest­
ant Ministers and people do nol
believe and agree with much of
the doctrine or the Catholic
Church, and it may well be said
that many Methodi8L� do not
agree with the doctrine of the
LulReran Church, nor do the
Presbyterians agree wilh the doc­
trine of the Baptist Church, and
the reverse of all this ls true;
\iul what does it all signify? No­
thing more nor leu than that
they all worship God in the 9ilme
spirit, and if they live u p to
their church doctrine they will '
al� •iO to tb.e ·same Heaven-and
thal is all that can be expected
o( any 'human being.
It js a sad commentary that so
many of our so called highly
respected ministers are making
bigot� t')f them4elvea. They don't
consider that Catholirs through•
oul. the world are just as patrio­
tic a,nd law abiding as any other
people on the race of the globe­
and h:ive the•.!iame love for coun­
try -as any other people. They
help pay our taxes, help fight our
wars; and. who ls there to say,
thilt lhis one·lhird of the religi­
ous populatiO' tl' ' bf ' !lie Unilect,. 'i°
- 8\'ates, ar'e not fine, law abiding ,
citizens. illS can be round, and ,
that one of i�, fine distinguished
members or that Church would
not make as greai a President as
our country couH:I furnish?
Two of our great Presidents­
J efferson and Lincoln were not
members of l!Dy chu.rch, yet they
aerved our country well. President
T-afl, a Unilarian, which church
teaches th11t Chri.sl wa&amp; not divine,
was not cl"iticised on account of
his religion, yet the record does
not disclose that any Hepublican
minister ever raised his voice
aeuinst him or asked any mem­
ber of hia congregation t(I vote
agaim't him because he Was a
· Unilai'i11n.
.
,minister
who
bas
made
him­
A
.
seU more or leu prominent as
well ar - obnoxloue. Dr. Norman
Vincent Peale, bu within t he
paat few days, made of himself
a highly disreputable bigot. Al­
ways a Republican, he c:.illed a
group or mini&amp;ters together for .
the purpose of influencing them
again1t Senator Kennedy, and in
doing so rendered our country a
disservice i.n trying to make reli­
gion an iBSUe when the Presldent
and Vice PreBident have repeated•
ly said that it is not an luue.
· You have heard no one say
but w'111t Senator Kennedy is
honorable, highly educated and
that · he J1 well qualified to ·mala:e ,
a gri!at President of the ' Unlte'd
State&amp;. No one c■n questiori but
what he J1 atroo1Iy Udlcated to
· tlie best Jntereata o1- hla country
and tbit hie declsom 1 1:!I Pntrldent
. ' ",:
will 'pc hlll OWDt

.

U'L Ari 11i11

',\'.)'LL NEVAI-I
GrT TH' KE."1'
an;. ONLESS
'/C'Gm; M&amp;
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�utx,in had
, l 'll qlad vcu came
1 and to\d me what dehvel"Qd aH hi;
li1II•, l1r. SIU�happened, Clovia.

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NANCY
ROL� O 'S DAD
BOUGHT A
FOR E IGN

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I'VE GOT A
F.OR E I C.N
CAR, TOO

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MUC!-1

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CAR

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Legal Notices

I 9a l Marine ::iupp11es

1 0- For Sol• or-�

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( 1 1 ) Wonted To Buy

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.. are just one of the .h�·tlmii
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since
house

electric l'llfilt, Aidoinotlc features-Ilka 1'.
watchln, out, :Pi,lt the fun back In i:ookln1 i!I'!
· baking, AriiUhe, 'flan\l)els eieat,rlc,full ltilpl
• her kltchln i;lioinor � ,;oolet•)'llr '11111nd. ,
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AwJNE.'f:r W.Y O,ff!N IT UNNOTI
w/JIRJOW, � AT Tttl! u.�.A.F. FIGHTER �.

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Diles Return From
Visit With Son
And Daughter

,

Cub Scout Pack
246 Hehl Meeting
Saturday Night

Mainly �

People
In P.ome roy

ence Mi&amp;hl, llndbw7.
Ml. and Mn, Glen l:lumpbny
of Loui,.llle, Ky., vllited Sund.,wltb Mr. and Kr� Chari' Bu,t.

turned home Sunday after a visit
with relative• in Buffalo and
Sprln,tleld, Ito.

I I";.;;..,=:;:;-;;;;;=·==;;;;;-,

M:rt. Elilabelh Humphrey who
ha1 been the auesl of Mr. and
Mrt. Charle&amp; Buck for 1everaJ
month, left Saturday for a vitlt
i n Akron before returning to
her _bome, Lake worth; !'la. ·

Mr. tnd M11. L. D. Diles h1n
1
Appro:r.imately 43 1tte11ded th.e
rt-turned from Dearborn, Mi(:b.,
n
LUCI LLI ltAWKINS
Ar
•
where tbey vi11led wlth their IOl'.I meetln11 of Park 246 Cub Scout.a
Mr. and Mn. Dwtaht Losa n and
tnd daughler•in •law, Mr. and llrt �t Sflllabury . School Saturd.iY even.
TONIOtfT •ncl WIDNl50A Y
tons, Dwight Jr. and Mn. Flor­
David Dilea a nd daug h ter, Bev: me .
,AMIL Y NIGHTS
ence
Holley were Sunday even •
erly.
The n■r: ceremony by Deni one
Gltlnn l'ord - Anne Frtncis
n1 dinner guest, of Mr. and Mr1.
Jame1 Bearh a en tered H:ofler
I
J
I Mr. Dlle1 atte nded a footb.lll and Two and group slng,ing of the Ceorae Loga n, HemlMk Grove. Ho1pilal Monda)' mornin&amp;: frir
"DON'T GP NEAR
obi
game with h i! &amp;On at Ann Arbor Cub S('oul Booster song preceded In the evening the group allended urvatlon .
·
THE WATER''
,
I ai:ad al110 aaw the K1n.11s Clb• a potluck. dl_n ner.
churi:!h services at the Bearwal­
(Teebnicolor)
1 T1i;en baseba l l gtme in
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Young of
Detroit
. - allo .....
Following t he dinner, Dwight Lo­ low Church.
Rochesler, Pa., were weekend
A prelimin11ry Jl:•me was played gan Sr., Cubm
Dorla Day - ,Blrry Sulliva n
aater, an nounced
Mr. 1nd Mrs. Earl Brickles of &amp;uears 0,- Iii', "llld r Mra . . Elia1
bf'fore the regularly 1cheduled name:s or �ys
1
' J U L I E"
lo rf'cl'iVe awards Darwin were recent
·
dinner guests Stiles.
game in which Dilvid pitched. and said tb11t
award, which wen or Mr. and Mrs.
Alto Cartoon
Dwight Loga n .
The .e:ame between news re porten ordered did
not arrive, but wouJd
Mn. Eliiabeth You ng returned
and Radio and TV men wts won be presented
.
by Den Mothers at
Mr . a nd Mrs. Floyd J. Tracy ' to her home at Beaver, Pa.,
by the news men In l hree i nn• Oen meetin�s.
of Akro n were weekend gue:itta of Sunday after I weekt' vlait with
ings.
hia father, J E. Tracy and daugh­ Mr. a nd Mra. EU11 &amp;tilff,
Boys advance lo Wolf rank were
ler, Mrs. Eddie Smith.
The Diles ' were "110 guests Gert1ld Pullin
Pomeroy, Ohio
s and Mike Still· to
Mr. and Mn. Edward T. Bauer
of Rev. and Mrs. C. E. Hoyt and Se�r
r;mk Dwight Logan Jr. 'a nd
Miss Carolyn Meier, student of Marion were wieke nd gue1ta
TONIGHT
�on, David, Ypsilante, Mich. The
Ketth Evans; 1nd lo Lion s rank n urse •t St. Joseph Hospital
of her paren ts, Mr and Mra. Dick
"HOME FROM 'l'HE HlLLS"
l,loyt8 h ad moved to Mlcbig an, �illiam
Radford. One new boy : Parker11burg, spent the weekend Karr Sr.
("l'Khnicolor)
Se�t. I where Rev, Hoyt is now Ch arles
Jah nson waa admitted to with her parents, Mr. and Mn
Robert
Mitchum an d
·
assista nt pastor of the Baptlnt , h.c Bobc•t
Mr. and Mrs. Luther Frederick
ra nk.
Philip Meler
Elnnor Parker
Church of that city. For the paftl
of
Vinio
n a nd Mn. Guy Wallen
Mr. a n d Mrs. Pat Quinn and
WIDNISDAY &amp; THURSOA Y
2 ½ ye.rs he had been pasw1• Ot
J:! "eeivi ng arrow polnl!I und
O[ 1!1lddleport visited Sundar witt.
daua:ht
er
_o
,
Colum
bus
visited the.Ir aunt,
f
Cecil B. DeM illes
th e Weedaport Churc h in · 'N
:,r Wolf rank were Robert Bu":.
Mra. Harvey Woodard
ru1 ��- di)• wtth her parenta, Mr. and
·
'"fHE GREATF.sT SHOW
York whtle he allended the
- l •-�� one gold and o!\.e� .aih•er a
a�d dJughter Mn. Lijlle Hauck.
rl r
ON EAR.ffl"
� na. _ : . r
�•te-Rocheater Divinity · S
;:ht �.'!': lit, ' t�,n.� Urt -•� � �. uese�
(T�hnicolor)
'
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'Mr.
The Hoyt's son DavhJ
tWi '11�' )1�4l•I\I (J■ct) : �•- - h�Jdn. o,.., , 119,.olt :
i41:J
n - Corne! Wilde
junior in hlth - «hool ·
. � 7,r
�1•, ,r,,� ,two I
nday � A., . ,
•1'
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"";
out lor tbe f��..J:, �
' I hrs., 30 min.
, 1111\,.rl� wttb
- , :', � � .,_;'!, ' • f\. , ;_ :1 .
� ,
in.
8:30 P.M.
Yp1ilante hnlr\l� • '
· tfQT OPEN
church and · �.-:.11,i
-��d�
$1/1/!l:�, i;;'
. . I!¥ . lP •. .parents . 19.t Cul&gt;
V, OCT. I
livi ng in New Yirlr: state. ..,!IA, . :
Cb•rl,,-1on. w,ert'" Sunday 111.etta ,of
.
·
.�·#ho -�Ated' IQ f\llly in llr:,
·
SUBMAIUNE"
Welby Wl,.lley..
Enroute Mr. ana · Mn. �­
, :1 .\ �fan - Bob Steele
\J. � 'whicb.J.he Pack en• Mr.and�d,N�411'.rs.. Normin Fiaher
visited in Columbus wit h Mr. and oyc during th'e summer months
.
- 'lllO Mrs. Fred Bush tnd family and under the managemenl of William ret�).'Ded to their home m Senc"HOUSE
OF INTRIGUE"
c��•lle Monday afte� a week end
Mr. and Mn. Virgil Edwards.
B1rtel1, assistant cubmlllter ·
.
.
. (Teclmieolor)
vmt wtlh relatives in th e area
Curt Jurgen&amp; - Dawn Addams
Genrge R. (Dick) Youna was ap- , )tr. and Mra. Ch arles
Buck w�re
GUIST5 HERi
Sun., Mon., Tues., Oct. 9-10-11
i
P c treasurt'r to lluccced Sunday evening dinner guesta
of
Mr. and Mrs. Blake Curtla
;a:f
Olry Grant •nd To ny CUrt.is
"PLEASE DON'T EAT
nf
8
who11e eon, Wil- Mr. and Mn. Willard Ebersbach
Powel l, Ohio, were Sunday gutah Ham , '!,_
'l'HE DAISIES"
�� rom the Cub and daua:htera
... ..duatt:U
In Eatlman Color
at the home of Mr. Curlis' 11ncle Scouts. AU p.arcntJ1
(Technicolor)
were asked to
Mra. Wtlla�d Ebertbtch and
PLUS
end aunt, Mr. and Mra. A. V. How•
Dorla Day - David Niven
n
he C ubmaster I n regard Mn. Charles Buck vieited Sunda
y
l! ��� icout
ell, Plum Street, Pomeroy,
SeltctH Short Sul:-ltch
Coloroartoon
1 nsurance.
evenln1 wlth Mr. and Mr!. Clar.

1 !,\�,( N Driv e • l n

I

1,;· A.- troop ln1urancc plan was ex
'Diijned bx Milli who plans to send
�ormation of the plan to parents
'
-troo p inembcrs.

,1

f·

. 7

f -, ·

· AT-TEND CONC ERT
Xmon1 local residents attend111g
�e ,,GU)' �bardo Concert at
it!ib.tna Monday even ing were Yirs.
Tl'.,
Whaley,
Mn.
William
! S\NU., Mn. All11rd PraU M.rs.
1

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Dal� J;art Mn. Russell Wil'i
nd ifii's Carla Wilson, of 'Mid,

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Dutton's Hold Open Members Oil ,f;;ii-.;k
House Before
Lodge Entertained
Couples' Marriage Friends Sunday

l
•

Mr. and Mr:ii. Dale Dutton en­
lertainetl S11nilay a rternoon with.
Open HouSf In h.onor of Miss
Jean Lam.i .and Harry Moore
whose marriage will be a n event
or next Sunday.

Fur the otunHion the li\'lns
room 111 the o\.iuon home in Mid•
dleporl wall detoraled with ar­
rangements of hronze and yellow
thrysanth emu111s and an arrange•
mcnt o f pink roses were used on
the lea lablf'.

Gue.11\s for lhe afternoon were
memben of lhe Episcopal Pariah
and friends o f the honored couple
Punch., cookle11, min t.a antl roffee were served by Mrs. button
wM • wH -aHiated by Mn o B
8'6t/' Mr11 A. II. Carpente�, Mrs:
Cedrh: Clark, Mn, Theodore Heed
Sr., Mn. Everett Ha)'CS and Mn ·
Herbert Moore ·

THE BEST TIME
OF THE YEAR
IS RIGHT NOW!
Coverage

" . CLIN,fON FISHER
. ·. 'COMPANY
.. �\ , ' PAINT Service
. : :Hltf

HI-TOP SHOES
Sizes 0 112 to 3

, .,, ·d t l.; • -'

;, •, ,:,,,, ·• l«UbCI..IP'C,

Roush's Shoe Stol'.I

I DDLEP(;&gt;RT

r:

Middleport

Members of the Anlick Lodge
cnlertained a aroup of friend�
S�nda)' evening with a turkey
dinner and all the trimmin g11
prepared by George llobstelter
Jr., Vidor Hannahs and T· A
·
Downie.
Music by George l lidl on the cl·
el'lric aceordian a ml other recrea•
tion was enjoyed.
Attending wen• Alfred Phlltlps .
Jack Robson, Irving Karr, Will•
iiua Child§, El1Jworth Rowe, Al·
bert Coates, T- A. Downie Will­
iam Anders.on, Fred Crow, 'A lfred
Elberfe ld, IJarry Grindstaff Scoll
Lueas, Frank Joh.nslon, R'ichard
Jones. .
WIiiiam Wood�, Nola n Swack­
h amer, Clyde J1rkland, Mannin (t
�ebiter, k. E. Boice, Don �•tz­
mg, George Hobstetter Sr., VlctoP
Hann• h s, William Hobstetter, It
L. Jacobs, George Hobstetter Jr.,
Edward Slark, Frank B. Will,
Dick Seyler, Ethan Harper and
George Hall , ___
0

'I.: ' ..

' ' !'

the spccinl-size

BUICK
'

30 LB.

COAL

60

, At Your Fingertips

rAT E R

wr...

COAL

, , $1 79.95
. . . . $1 99.95

JGt=r1 1c BATHROOM

. . .

LB.

1 00 LB.

COAL

,,

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!.t· 1hla gem-then J'oot- -iat tbe
!uK,oi• •Vi,;ci, bolo�. C.. ;.. oloubl
UIM'i!ljiidal'• .U &amp;iol, tooP'Combin,
ins
and ease wilb Buick eont•
£ort- llM huur,I For an all.day ride
you pl rnore total head, Jq and bip
than in t� oompacta . • .
Ame
kind of Control Ann 1uspen1ion aa tbfl
tull..i1t1 '6� Bulcks. A:n.d' for git, ita
new •lumtq,um V.S 11M aluminum
Du-.l.P11h T\lrbi,ie Drin1• give you
ilGiCI! the pow per pound of moat
C?mp,1cll (mon CIYflP than many full- .
,1:ie ca.n)f But, the biggest new,. is th■t
a11 this 11 youra /or jll6' • 111hi,ptr
8blnle' dJe c»mpact,/ -o,tllMI II Ulrl DI

Looi:

••'ffllP

N?°°1

ibe

..

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0

$19-?5 and $29.95

•

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Dno""1 To Tit. lnteruta OJ TM Mei.,-MaM111 .treo

::-;::-���-------·-------;:::-::::7.::7.".':-:-.-:::::::-::�::-:-.:::".:'.-:-:�------------------

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VOL

XII

NO,

144

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, October
•

On The Home Front

'

T

5, 1960

.

·V '

SINGLl!l COPV -

I

l
. Ear �cGrath, Carpenter, who has been sentenced to an
md�termmate term in the Ohio State . Pe nitentiary frolll 1-20 •
yea 1 s by C?mmon Pleas Judge John
Bacon was taken to
BOSTON UPI-Traaedy stared
1urv1 vors were hOipilaiiz.ed.
his new residence yesterday atternoon.
air traveler• in the face today as
Moat of t he aurvi.,.ora were in
they took of( from Logan Inter- 1 th e tail section th at comprised
. Deputy Sheriff Clarence Shiel.ds motored to the Peniten­
Ua�y in Columbus with McGrath as the result of his sentence
national Airport where de1lh
the lounge and a few rc•r aeaia
atru&lt;'k with m1uive audden nen
F.r1day for the July death of 92 year old Ezra BraUon.
of the luxury airliner.
Tuelday night.
McGrath was tlrst charged wlth were sold. Average price oi steers
On the pier of Cott,i.Je Yacht
Anchored i n Wi n throp Channei
2nd degree murder but the char- was $24,87 per h.undred poundi·
C1ub i n Winthrop a few piles of
'
w11 a CoHl Guard "buoy tender
gea against hi� were redu5ed to for the heifers, $21 .81.
flol.sam remained, a man'• felt
with the Lail sectio n of a cn1bed
ma11slaughler m_ the finl dea:ree
hat and white 1hirt, a woman'•
Th is figure compares wllh the
Lockheed Electra turbo jet hang•
on recommendation of Prosecuting 1959 prices of $28.32 for aleera and
nnity kit and a piece of the up.
Ing over the side, cletrly visible
AUorney Jame1 O'Brien.
holstery from a plane w:at With
$2lU4 for heifers.
to the departing panen&amp;ers and
FIIE
ONE
HOUR
the
lefe nd:
Meics
County
consig
ners
were
. ,
c:rew1.
Wilham Reevea, 34, Albany, was Mra.
"Life jacket un der your seat."
Raymond Follrod, Clair
.
. Th e pride of the Eaalern Air•
arre�tc� by the . Mei11s Cou n ty Wagoner, Lloyd Bla,:kwood, Dennlll
The dead were kinec OY tne im·
Im�� fleet faltered on takeoff at
Department yesterday Palmer Howard Knight Emmt
Sheriff s
pact of the cras h and neve1 got
tw�hght Tuesday and plu nged inlo lime to u&amp;e "them , State polic� to­
morning for intoxication, released Findu n'11, Glenn Robinson,' William
,
Wmtbro p Bay, ,n mlet of Boa- day waahe:d blood off the pier
111 6 p. m., and returned on the McKelvey, Rex Smnmerfield, Char•
ton J:Iarbor. Only the tail section where the fiut . \'lcllms wc:re
same charge at 7.
les Sheets and Leo Story .
was 1mmedi1tely recovered.
MAYOR FINES THRIE
broui ht at dutk Tueada\ .
O�hers were A,1 W. Scroath, Hugh
_ There were 72 peraons aboard.
[t w,11 the fifth cruh {'( a
In Pomeroy Mayor Ch arlas Le· Leifheit, John l&lt;.elley, Charles Karr
S1xt1 one were dead or missing.
Lock heed Electra in the past 20
gar's. court last night Lewis Scar- Sr., Virljt'il Ki ng, Dale X,uti, M . E.
Fifty. one bodie, had bee n re- months.
be Wa� fined $5 and costs for in- Guthrie, W. S, Michael, Homer
Secret Air Force document•
1oxicat1o n, Wm. Heory Clela nd " Radford, Rex O'Brien and Wayne
A U.S. NAVY "TERRIER'.' MISSILE as sho wn mounted on a semi-truck, will be on dis­ covered by early morning, 10
an d . coats for recllless , operation Scott.
11 lost in lhe crash h ue been re•
pla�ln -�int Plea�ant , a�Ja_cent to the post of fice, for one day only , Sunday, Oct. 9. This is persona were mining and
--a nd W illiam Alexa ndria, $10 and
an, oper�tional gu�ded missile, of the U .S. Na vy and is a part of the armament of some guid­
costs for intoxication.
ed �issil� dest�oyers and ennsers �f the U .S . Pleet. The Tel'per is an all-weather missile.
$
ou
Terr•E;r
can strike at aircraft ten nules away a nd at altitudes above the range of convention­
Po,n eco,,
.
Roaer
anbarrcraft
�ns. Used for . shipboard ar:id b eachhead operationi:, "super radars" guide the
al
has filed suit in CommoD Pleas
missiles to their targets. Terner IS approximately 15 feet long and weighs one and one-ball
Court for divorce (ro,n Beu, Cul ·
ton.
luma. The grounds arc extreme
"
cruelty,
Crooksvi ll� ' s Volun�er Fire Department and E.mergency­
.
A · hearing on the divorce suit of
!les�ue
Umt 1s having Its share of tragedy with accidents, Jos­
Wilma Wine,, Cheshire, against
mg its second man in three weeks,
Earl W. Wines, same address, will
George ii. Bra nnon, Croolr:5- town inteneetio n, fatally injuring ·
be l\eld October 8.
ville Fire Chief, and know n to · one of the squadmen.
e
c
1
i
A divo[Ce su�t by Virginia R.
On
many Meigs Cou nty firemen, was
The babY and four me n •er4!
Duckworth agamft Robert Duck­ A,� :.�:i �!� ::. �; �:r�•��
kUled three weeks ago. He was injured. two critically. in the
worth has been dismissed accord• Chlcaa:o over the past week end to
ent of the Four River
electrocuted while working for crash. The emergency vehicle
atte nd the Great Lakea Regional
. Mrs. Joseph W�dd�ll , 2nd vice-presid
ing to co· urt I records.
l
Counc
Klamfoth
Scout
irl
was
David
Mrs.
Treasurer
w11.h
,
i
G
the Columbu1 a nd Sout her n Ohio overturned wilb il!I l't'ar section
Patrol
Air
civil
for
ference
n
Co
720 HEAD SOLD
, present at a meeting of the voluhteer workers for the "Scout
Electril! �ompa ny.
cras h ing through a plate glua
The Annual South.eastern Ohio Units.
According
to
U
n ited Press I n·
\IJindow.
Region
'InThe
Great
Lakes
A
U.
S.
Navy
"
T
errier
guided
Drivf'
which
is
to
be
held
the
week
of
October
9.
Feeder Calf Hle was held yester.
James C. Matheney, 41, Crooks
eludes CAP un ila from Ohio, Michi·
The meeting was opened by
miulle, will be on display In Point ternational, a Crookaville emergen
day at Athens.
neth Hartley, Robert Elberfeld,
cy vehlcle, rushing a sick baby to ,,ilJe, was pinned under the ve­
A total of 720 head of cattle gan, Kentucky, Indiana) Ollnoll!I Middleport Chairinan Mra. George
Ple1nnt, adjacent to tbe Po,t Of.
a Z 1me1ville hospital, collided hide. He ided al Bethesda Hospi­
and Wisconsin .
Htckett Jr., alon1 with EdilQII. i-..�r mit Walton , Richard Jones,
fioe, for one day only, Su nday, with a. car early today al a down• tal about an bour later.
'Paul
Casci,
Jim
O'Brien,
oa•e
Attend.mg the conference from Hob1tetter, Po�erqy chairman,.,
Coate,, Clyde Ociobet 9.
Harlan Enczl, 10 month old
The officers fro ni the scout Wamer Albert
this area were 1st Lt. Howafd A.
Kirklan\ , Walter GniHer, Joe
son
of Mr. and Mn. Andrew
wi
T'*'
ii
an
operational
guided
mill·
dlsc
lna
volunteen
cil
aed
n
Ofllcer
with
cou
Command
iley,
CAP,
D.il
Struble ·•nd . Willi.1 -.. .Swatzel.
Eric:s.i of near Croobville and
alle
e u. S. Navy anu is a part
a to better 1oca1 �og ·.
or the Mei,s County �d�;
Croetaville emereency 1qaadmen
Tlie tb,me tor tbil yeu'• �dt · �'1,ollciUnc tbe restilential aec­ ol �rqta.Dl,f�� of J!IOIQ.�. ,9.f .411�
Emmett Shuler; 1�11 otflctr; s
. .• •
' J .• � . . . ..t ·
��· ln� Pomieroy · wiU be lira. Nav
,fJ!�
11tdaai'd !morf, u, Ward Maun
ileitroyen
1fi'd
·cr«IUiB.
Arln11i HOwelt, linance dfflcer', I , WM!k 'wl11 be •� H9.11ot1° Uit
.
· ii-.di:. &lt;;,pnde, Mn. Robert Setty, The Terrier is an all-weatber mia­
d and Robert Shreves. 26. WIIM!
of Mid'dlei,ort', · ind JM BbMl't Serve the Futbre.-1o ,· · ... ··.
taken to Good SPlarttan Hospital
The volunteer workers for Mid- J.lra. Rirry Walson . M.r1. Robert slle, capable of striking: aircraft It
Fisher, Informatio n ofticer, Galli•
Mauller and Emory wen report·
p(llis.
dleport relidetitlal section are : Murray, Mrs. Dan 'White, Mrs. Jay more than 10 miles at an altitude
ed in serious condition.
HighllghUng: the seuion wa1 the Mrs. Har.old E. Hubbard, Mra. W erner, Mrs. Harley Hendricks, above the range o( conventional
-antiaircraft guns. Uaed for stiip.
speech by National CAP Cornman• Sherman Weiman, Mrs. Robert Mn. D. C. Hayes.
R utland �lllage council ordered
Sheppard, Mrs board a nd beachhead operations,
Mrs. James
der Bria, Gen. Stephen D. McElroy, Burkett, .Mrs. Paul Dianey, Mn.
Perkins ServicCI!
a 9:30 p. rii'. curfew every day of
Gordon
Wehrung,
Mn. Wendell ');uper radars" guide the mi&amp;ailes
USAF. The general u11ed for his Paul Theiss, Md. Burt Bodlmer
Harry Krebs, Point Pleasant, a
lhe week until further notice at
topic, the progrenive changea be· Mrs. Gene Han'is, Mrs. Wlllia.,; Gerlach, Mrs. Richard Neutzling, lo their targets. Terrier is ap·prox­ worker at the Va n11di11m Plant in WiU Be Held Oct.
ll regular meeting held last n ight.
Fu neral services for Mn. Del•
ing made in the Air Force and Its t.,ewia, Mrs. Kenneth Cook. Mra. Mrs. Harold Ebersbach, Mn. Vie• imately 1� leet long and weigha Gra h am Station WBL'i injured in a
The resolution i ncluded an ord­
n ia Perkins, age 67, who
died
relationship to the Civil Air Pa• Frank Wilson, Mra. Burl Boggeas tor Young, Mrs. George Hicks, one and one half tons.
fall
at
the
plant
o
n Monday,
er against loitering by persona of
Mo nday eveni n&amp; at her home in
Mn� William Everson, Mrs. Wen• Mrs W. Stivers. Mrs. Max Foltro1.
Krebs,
a
furnace
repairman.
has
The
Navy
Recruiters
at
Point
a ny age, not just teenagers. Sever­
During the afternoon of the fint dell Bunce and Mrs. Ray Cunn· mer, Mr� . Rosemary ,Arnold, Mra Pleasant have arranged for this been reported in good condition Letart Falls, will be held Tburs­
al act&amp; of vandalism have been re­ day, mtmbers attended claaaes re- ingbam.
Gene Se1denible, Mrs. Charlet1
missile to be taken from il"s plan­ at the Pleasant Valley Hoapilal d;i.y al 2 p. m. from the Letart
port� reeenlly.
For the business ■rea Mrs. Ri• Lytle, Mrs. Donald McKenrie, ned itinerary and make thls special where he is suflering from a lacer• Falls Methodist C h urch.
lated to t heir particular Job dasA warning siren will sound a l aificaUon !n the Civil Air Patrol. chard Bailey, Caah B.lhr, Mrs. Mr•. J�hn E . Hunnell, . Mrs. Har• one day stop in Point Pleasant, 10 ation of the right foreann ntend­
Burial will be in Lhe Letart
·
9: 1 5 p . m . and everyone is expect­ That evemng a banquet climaxed Re no Nieri and Mn. Charles old Triplett and Maurice Durst
cemetery.
that the people or Mason County ing from lhe E!Ibow to the wrist.
Captains for the outlying com• might become
ed to be off streeta unlesa upon the day's activities, Brig, Gen. Brad-bur)'.
Survivora are her husband,
Accordin&amp; to Plant Superintend­
better acquainted
in M eigs County are
munitlea
legitimate business.
childre n, Ethel
Pomeroy businel!IS workers are
ent Carl Adler, Krebs was cleaning Robert; t h ese
Howard T, Markey, USAF, waa
with their Navy.
In another actio n council decid• 1ue1t speaker that evening a nd de• Roy Mayer Carl
a shutdown furnace with a pave-­ Kessee, Cabin Creek, W. Va.;
Kraueter' Ken Mrs. John Moore, Sal isbury; Hel·
'
en Quivey, Bedford; Mn. Mared to oil the dump road to keep livered a n inapiring speech, local
mcnt breaker wh�n he la1t balance William, Cincinnati; Estel Per•
garet Burri, Letart Falls; Mrs.
du1t down and minor street re-­ delegalea ,eald.
and fell. He fell over some slag kins. Toledo, O.; Virgil. at home;
pairs were di&amp;Cuased.
131st Annivenary Of , R•th Lalhe&gt;, Salem Center and
Lewis, Weston, W. Va.; Edith
a nd into the furnace pil
Mra. James Sayre, Syracuse.
Prese nt were councilmen Paul
Shaffer,
Perrysburg, O.; Ernest,
Rutland Church Oct. 9
Patterson, Bob Canaday, Harvey Happy-Go
u.
S.
Air
Force. E ngl.a nd and
Cl
'
LITT\.E
LOWER
-Lucky
A
nh
The Rl!lland Church or Chrl'1
Erlewine, Frank Young and Her•
James C. of Pomeroy.
were
Stocks
UPI
YORK
NEW
,.rve
nlver
will
ob
t
131
its
aar,
a
' n
man Grate, Clerk \tern Weber .and To Be Reor
!lize4
Radio Club To Meet
Friends may call at the funeral .
fractionally lower in ■ moderately
MQor Wayne Turner.
A reora1nizatlieeting of the with a HomeeominC Sunday, Octoal anytime.
home
today.
opening
active
Thund1Jy Evening
Mal!IOn Happy-Go·
ky 4-H club ber 9.
begln
aervlce
ill
n
T
morning
1'be Pomeroy Bend C izens Ra·
W
h.e
will be held Wednesday at 7 p. m,
at 9.30. A baak�t" dinner will be dio Club will meet at tt.e v. D. EdJohn
Mn.
leader
home
of
the
ill
ated
Accident Investig
Turner for _ all persons 1ge, 10-21. held at noon in the ch urch bue- ward&amp; Insurance Office in PomEmployees at Kaiser Aluminum
ment. The 1fl4'rnoon service will eroY, Thursday evening at 7.
At Lakin By Patrol
and Chemical Corporations. Ra•
Anyone_ mtere�ted Is urged to begin at 2 with lhe Rev. H■asell
Anyone Interested ill becoming vt!nswood works have re11ched a
Euge ne v: Su.all, 39, Bancroltr
attend this meetmg. Requirementa
W. Va., Is reported ln fair co ndl• are that one project be completed Justice of the Waverly Church ot a member of the club is welcome million safe man hours for the
Chriat as guest speaker. Special en• to attend this meeting. All at.
tion at Pleasant Valley Hospital durmg
"!econd time in the plant's young
the year.
wlll be presented te nding Thursday's meeting: will be
tertain ment
auffering n eck. i njur ies received in
A warning against Halloween for I huilding permit. Persons
C. D.
-------h istory, , Works M1111ager
throughout the day. Everyone . ls charter members of the club.
waa iHued by Mayor doing an y repair work Ot' new
ID auto a�ident on .Monday.
vandalism
Smith, a nnounced toda:v.
'atiend,
to
invited
0. 0. Wright, M■aon , at a meet­ building amounting to over $200
MEIGS GENIRA L HOSP l'M. L
According to W. Va, State Po·
The target for whici, safety
CLUB
TO
MEET
-----,
Ing of the Town Council Monday must secure a permit from the
Perry,
Admiaaion&amp;: Mra. Samuel
Ji&lt;:e, Sta.at.a was involved in a one•
one-new
he
t
s
,
p
shaot
ogram
r
town recorder, Mrs. Lottie Roush.
Th e Rutland Red Devil Booster
eveni ng.
SALE ANlr!I.OUNCID
car accident. HII station wagon Pomeroy, and Ferne Haym,n,' Rama n•hour mark was hit
million
q.
Mrs. Roush may be reached at the
par•
that
ew
th
said
al
meel
tonight
Wright
Club
will
e
Mayor
The Northwestern Local Band
left llYl! hiahway as he watt travel- cine.
early Monday.
w11ter
department office.
for
le
All
n
lding.
i
bu
responsib
co
tettaion
beld
box
pre11
be
wlll
ents
rummage
a
sponsor
Ruschel
will
Alfred
Booalers
Mn.
Dischargea:
Ing State Route 62 near Lakin.
plans of the build·
man-hour
one•millioD
h
first
Detailed
e
T
any
by
damaaea done to property
The car, out o( control, -left the a nd daughtet, Pomeroy; Leo Mor- •lld btlke sale Friday a nd Saturday, boo1ler members are urged to be
in and an eati•
of
May
turned
in
be
must
establitil,ed
g
n
i
Was
mark
.
n
Hallowee
n
otficers
on
of
electio
or
aa
before
·an
present
youngster
lrlehway and went lnto a ditch, rls, Rutland, a,nd Cecil Hyul1, Poro• October 7 and 8 •t the Rutland
the project
of
eost
the
of
m11.le
19ri9.
will be held.
Amerjcan Legion Kall,
eroy.
turnina over.
extra
that
said
also
for 1
h
Wright
application
t
e
...J.___:,;.:__;__:::______
on
ven
i
g
be
program
Highlighting a safely
will be in force permit. Council moved to by a
al Ravenswood that has won num police protectio■
n season. He
tile across the alley on Firsl
erous corporatio n and national during the Hallowee
h at ·every citiien has •
t
reminded
and Second Alley to drain
Street
repre­
mark
awards, the ml.Il ion
sents
one-million
man- hours right to make a citi&amp;en's arrest a ditch at that locillity. •
damaging proper­
Pre1ent were Reeorder Mrs.
worked without a Lost time acci­ of anyone seen
.
Roush, Mayor Wright, Councilme n
dent inv91ving a n)' employee at ty in ■n ad or vandalism
In t h e meeti ng Council remind· W•lter Wi!rry, Olin Wolfe and
the mamouth aluminum produc­
o.rt,y
continued good view, W. Va,
ry.
One hundred and · two bounds and runn ing
reaidents of the requirementa Earl He n..c__
ed
_____
1. Pretty Gal, Bobby Ransom, ing facility.
4. Patricia Sue, Terry Rouah,
were cut lut Friday morning at throughout the day. The field
Nitro, W. Va.
day bre■k" In Tibbles' Woodl in judges were complimented on Rtcine.
2. Queen, T. R. Blankens h ip,
5. Susie, Harry Richards, Lona
tbe annual Fall Show and Trial&amp; their good job.
Ripley,
W. Va.
Show
Of
Btnch
Botto�.
laalllt1
eveilt1 tponsored by the Meigs
3. Thunderbird, Mel Cl.ark, West
Derby Male
Best in show, Lynn Creek Prln•
County Foxhu nten' 'Auodation.
1. Lyn n Creek Prince, Watts Columbla, W. Va.
Running was only fair, and the cess, Watts Bros., Shoals, w. Va.
4. Shamrock, Darryl Graham,
Black
Gold,
Bros,
sex,
oppoaite
Best
.
m
1.
l)unt was ealltd Off at 10
2. BIi Stoop, Crayton Chancey Coalton.
Clarence Graham, Coalton, O.
Sat Saturday, runnina waa excel•
whether they
·
�- Ti ny, T. R. Blanll:en1hip.
There ought to be a full turn· cumbent N;!presentative in congress they stand for and
Nttural Carriage, Ohio Prince,
All A• Female
'
le nt all day.
h ave Jived up to their promiaes.
Democrat,
a
District,
10th
the
from
state
d
n
a
�- Virglaia, Crayton Chan e(y.
out o[ local, district,
·
1. Beulah, Warden Oun, Loni R. •F . Gordon.
Pete Shields, Racine, wat mu3--Partic:ipa te: Allerid pr'eeincl
7. Delcie, Norn,an 1'1.aher, Sene• politicians at '"Candidates' Night" and h ia opponent, Oakley C. Col·
Pairs
ter of ceremqnlea for the show Bollom.
caucuses and politlcal meetings.
{)ctober 20 at 7 :30 p. m. in Middle­ lins, Ironton Republican.
1. V i ralnia and Bia: Stoop, Cray- ca.ville, o.
held ThundaY niCht -with Jack - 2. Honeymoon, Clarence Cra•
Mike your voice heard in selection
ofcounty
for
didates
n
ca
All
·
m.
auditoriu
8.
Winston,
Charles
Cornell,
School
port High
ton Chancey.
Coda, C1mbrida:e, 111 rin,:ma,ter · 'ham.
of
candidates and formation
of
to
opportunity
the
That was the word George fices will h ave
2. Lynn Creek Prince•• and Racine.
Herman
3. Ringie Cutchin,
and Leroy Pitier, F1lrtiew, W .
policy.
ctm·
\heir
diatribute
and
speak
to­
9. Judy, Keeter Jone,.
Vaughan, the sponsorer, h ad
Lynn Creek Prince, Watb Broa.
Va., Judie, A l•re:e crowd attend.- 8\lchan on, Marietta.
4-0ffer your services: offer
10. Rocky Run, Darryl Graham. day. He Silid every candidate had paign literature.
P.ack-Cra:,ton Chancey. .
4, Lady, Julia Thel,s, Addison.
ine Legion
ed the event at
services for essential chores
your
object
·primary
his
said
Vaughan
All A9"
indicated his ' ·desire to attend."
Beat Hound In Metea County,
15. Blondie, Herahel Rouah, Ra·
Hall.
l
work i n some pre eleclion
leg
and
Night"
'
"Candidates
the
11etting
in
start•
n
i
1. Big Tim, Carroll Cleek, ColVaughan, firm believer
Vlt1irii1, cr1;vton Chancey,
w, waa ma• cine.
John Green, F•I
'
own chOOJing.
your
of
job
public
ing at th e top, promised messages or1an ized was "lo increase
Pu"pp;ln A;.12 m01o
umbua, o.
All Ate Mlle
i.ct of hound• for the field
those wilt. charS--Enc0urage
thia
in
partleipation
and
interest
2. Diamond, wes Circle, Racine. from Republican Ca ndidate for
1. Little Sia, Warden Our1.
1. Black Gold,
evenUI.
· � Clarence Gra•
to dedicate
competence
and
acter
addHe
election."
important
very
and
Nixon,
.
M
Fairmont.
ard
President Rich
3. Sam, Bill Miller,
2. Martha Pickett, Herman Buch
An excellent banquet wal pre· ham.
i n public
careers
to
themselves
on
important
t
i
is
4 . , Spot.' Crayton Ch anCfly.
Democratic candidate John F. Ken ed, "not only
2. Ohio Prince, R. F. Gordon, anon.
pared and aerved by the Raelne
nt will never be
Governme
service.
basic
the
but
sce
e
n
al
n
natio
the
5, Scrapper, Chuck Miller, Rie· nedy.
i- Co1Stie Sue, Tem Rouah.
P'tA at 7:30 p. m. Friday with Cbeahire, O.
foundatlons of good govennent any better than the people ln it.
W. Va.
svllle.
Ne•
Salser,
Jerry
Val8ntln�,
4.
FairMIiier,
Chuck
Scrapper,
He said candidites for Stale
s.
•
n
Ceremo
of
Mult!r
Pete Sblfld1,
6-Always expreas your prefer•
6. Bti Milo, Gerald t.iark, West AudilGr, Republican James Rh odes are your local officltltt." Voters
well, W. Va.
Even if your (:h oiee ii limit· tea and Benw-d Fllltl of J'ome,- view, W, V1.
ence.
he followlng
t
mind
in
keep
should
Columbia. •
Male Pvpp� . 6-12 mos.
t. Ike, frank Picken,, Pukertand Democratic Jim Ferguson, both
· roy p pest apeake_r.
who are not ideal,
candidates
·
to
:
ed
aaid
he
7. Sail Vaua:hn, Corbett Cleek, promiaeQ to be on hand, This i&amp; Commandments for Voten,
I. Zeke, Wl,Pden Oun.
• Pollowina the banquet a round burl,
h ould choose the be!lt of the
s
you
newspa•
Rea4
formed.
n
I
1-Keep
'
Ricine,
2. Colater ' Joe, Teff'J Roush.
th.e on ly auite offi� to be voted
0. Spot, � Cbanct7
1 .Ra•
dance wa1 held.
itncl squire
·
pen and ma1uine1. L11ten to men offered.
ne,
8,
Jim,
Geor1e
Dtem,
Raci
3.
Ra
p
.
Kelter
Jon.
e
a.
f
thia year and is for the short
on
cine.
The
caller.
Whitey Beeale was
7--Stimulate others to vote.
speeches, discupiont, debates on
9. Minnie, Crayton Chancey.
4. Storm, lffl'J Saber.
term of •two years to bring it In
Dffllr ••I• /
mulfc wa, furnlthed by Ray&amp;--Consider It your moral duty
)'Out
form
n
The
TV.
and
radio
· 10, Lucky, WHh Armt, Miners-- line with other state offices.
5. Blim(d, J4trl'J 8aller,
W,tt,
I. L)rDD Cteell P.n,n(eu,
,t
.
·
vote. 1f we do not uae thta
to
opinion.
Byen' �4
�� fup _ Jn 1bow; Little Sia, vllJe.
Qtedous of prlvil�le&amp;,
we
. ltituriliy momlnc it . �real Bm.
ld•le"
Look
•••
ud
. ue
s wjiJ
,_,let and ea can
Cr&amp;)'tnn
.
Combioatlon, v••�.
1 �i�"- · lt
,.
,
t Otn\aii.. · 11u,
�
, '
�- _u,-.le cm ai;fu, Im· ' 2, 'Vlrgtnl,, Cra,ton
,
�
lllbli\lllilO,'' ' ' ,,, , ,.,,,. , ,,
.
.,;;
JI'"
«:·
·
t'r
·
,
�
.
·r . ., biii.d 'tiy , .' 1.lt''
' •
' •
.
•,
t
'
•
;.'�
I
·
1'P
�
,
.
\
!
.
11 • ,
1-;flHUii"�
,
,,
..,.....,
•.
iftJti\."'i'·. • 1;-1[f&gt;• .• , , ;
'tjili'i. 'm"..j\Hl
)· iiir-1 • 1l
•'IJ.� -· ,-...i
Jll'l!f,.
�Wl�;; .•
• t
•
'
J
•.
, \ I
. ' ' ' ,'
••
, "l ; ,t
�
,
.
' ' '
'

c.

I

I

I

Rutland Clamps
,-.30- Curlew
· Upon Everyone

Tr.agedy Strikes Crooksville
Fire Department Second Time

Civil Air Patrol
Members Att•nd
1'errier Missile
Chicago Meeting Girl Scout Council Officers
Help_ Plan Drive For Oct. 9 Display At
pt. Pl: easaftt
,s way
;

W�r,ker �jqred
In Fall Monday At
Vanadium Plant

6

Kaiser Achieves
Million Sa,e
Manhours Again

,f'•,

Mason Mayor Wams Against
Youth Halloween Vandalism

.:C.-------- 1

�•m•

r-r,1•·

'
'3?.r�- , .
-.•'l\i;�·rar • 'llllDII/' ' -··-

, ' "!11"•"
-Oiri�
Cha�'"'· 1l'aldl,-

''

covered, the FBI dMidoM:d loda,-.
� 1pokesman taid that shortly
after t he accident the FBI was
informed that two penona aboard
the .alrliner were carrying the se•
cret documents,
He uid that the FBI. working
with t he Office of Special ln\'el·
tiution of the Air Force, found
the miui ng papen and turned
them over to the OSI.
Cause of the cralh was not
known immediately.
Eyewitneaa
and survivors' report.I conflicted
as to whether the plane exploded
whe n it hit the water.

Moon Llthh Se4"le
Aa twili&amp;ht twned to dark ness
a nearly full m00-0 Oooded the ae•
of death and deatruclion. Bodies
tlill alrtpped b1 BJfety belll
floated on plane ieall. Debris
and wreckage bobbed in the wa·
ter (:hilled by death.
An:.one: lhe miuing were Pilot
C. W. Fittll of Atltnta and co­
pilot J,I_ J. Callaway. Two stew•
udel&amp;e•. Joan Berry of Prentis.I,
lfiu., and Patricia D1vl1 of Jack·
aonville, Fla., IU�iYOO.
The fNSJlll,.n included U
M.rlne recrulh hNcleod for ltoot
amp •t Parrk Island, S. c,,
and • .,...P ef Phi•:ldelphia
a,... '"" ntumln1 home fn1111
a convent..,. here.
Tom Keyes, 16. who wa, doing
bis homework in his ••ler1ide
horM, sa id he beard a boom that
sounded like a plane breaking
the sound barrier.
It was not until he heard fire
en,ine1 that be nn ouuide. "Peo­
ple were yellilll and tcteaming.
People were (loalina: aU over the
place. There were some wilhc,111
beads ' . . it . WU just terrible."
· The CAA at one time h,d im•
posed speed llmitat1on1 on Ott­
lh• bee&amp;IIH of atruct,iral deft•
"'"'tlendel, CM bead Elwood ll.
QUeaida aaid bi&amp; ,uney did Dot
plan to eround or curtail Elec•
tra Oigbb because of TueaclaJ
night's l!rash.
"There doesn 't aeem to be any
relation between this crash and
any ttructural problems with the
Electra" Q11esada said.

Mr.. Burdette
Died Last Night
About Midnight

Funeral services
for Robert
Thomas Jlurdette, age Tl, who
die&lt;I about midnight at Holier
Hottpital lut evening, will be held
Friday at 2 p. m. rrom the Ewing
Cbapel with bUTial followi ng in
the Beech Grove cemetery.
He 1n1 the son of th e late
James Albert Burdette and Eliza
Phmket. Burdette . Mr. Burdette
operated the Burdette fruit a nd
livestock farm with his son Ro­
bert in the Laurel C.,iff commu n•
ity. A member of the Rock
Springs Grange, he was widely
known In his community.
Surviving are hi1 wile, Ethel
EliuMtb; the so n at Laurel Cliff,
Robert D.; three daughters, Mrs.
Sanh B. Smith, Pomeroy; lbs.
Ebine B. Smith, Columbus, 0.,
Mn, Louise B . Cre.bs, West Salem
O .; 12 grandchildren; a brother.
W. L. Burdette, Logan, W. Va.;
a sister Eu n ice B. Beller, Pt. Plea•
sant, W. Va. and several nieees
and nephews.
Friends may call at the fu neral
home an1 time.

Off1"cers Elected
- ·- ·
By Booster Club
SPonsor Says Interest M ounting In Meeting
On October 20; Dick , Jack, Sending M�ges In Middleport

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Death's Pall Shrouds
Site Ol Electra Crash

'

McGrathB egins PrisonStay
Today In State Penitentiary

Meigs�unty Foxhunters Hold Annual Fall Show And Trials

$46.50
$57.9 5
$'69.95

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No,v! Full size living.in two new-size surprises

COAL H EATE RS

CIRCULATOR

�AGO BTU
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SPECIAL

THE' BEST OF, BOTH WORLDS

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K I NG HEAT

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In It.. ._.,hi 11 tl'lat ef the Am••
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Now You Know

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POSTPONI ROCKET SHOT
WASHINGTON UPI-The na­
Uonal space agency hu postpon­
ed the 11cheduled launc h ing or
a four-staae "Scout·• rocket de­
sig ned to detect nuclear e�plos­
lons ln space, for the third time.
The National Aeron•utlcs and
Space Adm lnlttrallon NASA al•
lr1h11ted the poslponemen Mon,
day to tec hn ical dlfflcullie&amp;.

$2.99 and $3.99 pr.

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Full ln111roncc

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IMPOS E DEATH s■ NTINCI
PARIS UPI- A French military
tribunal Monday
impO!U?d the
death sentence on Algeri iui Mo• I irt nnnounced By
hame� Azrar ror tt:e 11Ucmptl'd G-oldaberry Fa,niiy
11.ssa11srn at1on . M.11y 4 of Frenrh
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Goldsberry
Ah:erum N11l1on1I Assemb ly De• or Lincoln Heights are an noun ..
put Roberl ADdCH&lt;' lam.
ing the b i rth of a � lb. 8¼. o�.
_:'.'_
- · - -daught�. Diana Lynn 111 Holzer
Hospital, Sept. 28. GrandparentH
1;1rc Mr. and Mre. M11r1 h ull Golds­
berry and Mr. and Mri.. Lloyd
Davis, Chil licot he,

SKILLED PAINTERS
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Miss Elizabeth McKay , daughLer of M r . and M rs. Robert E .
McKay , Bowling Green , betam� ihe bndc c f M r . Steven Cope
Bartley, son or Mr: John E. Bartley of r i n d :ay, on Saturday ,
.
Augu_st 27 at the First Presbyterian Churi:h. Vow::, o f the dou­
ble ring ceremony were read by the �ev. J ames Trnutwe ill,

For Your

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MEIGS THEATRE

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New officers of the Middleport Athletic Boosters were elect•
ed last night and will be install·
ed later.
.
. Named president was Buddy
Thoma(; vice pruidenl Ch1rlea
Byer; financial secretary, Curtis
Jenkinson •nd �ding 5etTe­
lary, Bob MWs. ,
On recommendaUon from Coaeb­
John Thompson, wbo reported
'"football la really on t he w•Y
back here" the auociation voled
to underwrlte, 10 far as p011ible
purch■se of $2M lo needed grid
equipment.
Thompson uled the equipment
mainly to outfit I "l(l'Cnlp of fresh
man who tumtid. out Tuetd1Y eve,.
nin1. He now ha• 2t on lhe var1ity squad, 22: on the Frosh
group and 38 Junior Hip pllyera,
plus about 80 ln a Mth pde
program.
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