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BoOrd

You.. Pres-t

In. Pomeroy

Mi'ddJeport

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/mpressiue .
.h. Se·. •
Wors P

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Back to School Line of.

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Pomeroy

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Det~oled

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To The lnUresfJ 0/ The lffeip·MIUon .4no

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

liiO. 79

•

TUESDAY, AUGUST 9, 1966

FIVE

CEN11

"LADY WRANGLERS"

=

About

•

Columbus Firm Will.Build
Middleport WeHare Agency

The New Fall and

Around and

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VOl XVIII

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t'lie 1P' .,. ,...,... • 11'" ._, . _ ~~""~• • ~
liome
lore rotumll1r
•
rOSS
m
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en "" Olarlolll! Da,vklscm 8lld ser School of Nun,, bl,r. 'lbq :"""
Mr. and s. AUen Roush of
the
reaJIII1fi by Mar· lor their IDplc. Hew~
li"ef:fC"
lJO"""'"
.
·
.
·
Bradbu'!' ve retumedth frMom
eefS
I
lhe lllchnlaoll office employ· tty Has Alfected them Ill lbelr
••
T .,~,....
' •
vacalion.
e
uo·
. '
.
.
.. ~ ' .
johl anll achoolL" 'l11lf .U..
'Die , • accompa·~'~~~~
~-: euaaeo~ the ·vartoua pliaHI o1
1 rvlce :Cialmuslcalnumbefwaapre- dlrlstlanll)l .Ia their prablemo
Snllth on Au1Ust '21:
bp Mr. a
•. WJUiam The August meeling of the
,":::~~~ be assisted by
Howard
rly, former , Happy/Harvesters class of the All Impressive nrvtc. wu ~~· by Debbie Giueaer 8lld .fc&gt;und In their ~~:wlllllllt
and L. W. McComas.
Recent ests 0 Mr. and r~ated church '"'"'
held presented by the youth ol tho Kathy GruMer and Kathy Me- outalde world.
'
"""""'~~.... w• • the
WOrship Commission
Mrs Jame~Simp
and daugh- Friday evelling 81 the church)' Middleport Church of · Cbrlst Elhlnny, all hllh ochool · ltu• JleaqOJII 1.- lilt fll1~·'""
'
1•
Mrs · Fred
Dessauer,
• ce when "You th Sunday " was ob- dents·
Don Ne.....,
•··· · .,. RIIWIIrlP•
of llblh
au lhorized. to find
Miss carol Scott, Holzer Hoa- ter, · Sandy, were his mother, with ldent
ln char
e
,
niet SIIIICfay eveuing at ments_for Mr. Wil!larn Russell, pltal nurslllg student, spent the . Mrs. Mayme Hartenbach of "';;!votio~s taken fr;.., Psalm oerved during the mOI'IIllll wor~ Speakers lor the . ' IIIOI'IIIne J?D CuDDJncham, ~yne
H'PII W.'itlluJrch.
.
organtil, and choor
with her parents, Mr. Kent, Ohio, and .Mr. and Mrs.
Jed b Mrs Louts Rei· ahlp service Aug. 7.
..bjec:t were Mleaa Fros~ an Jtm Bu~, Mike k
,,·
Wayne_Gibbons, board who is moving to another
Mrs. PaUl Scoll.
Wolfe and daugbter, Su· 121 were
YIn ~f , 1 Need
employee of the Apes Corp. of Danny A~boll. and Jim~
icl)i(lriloan, prealded ., ith t h
August. It was reported
Mr. and Mrs. Noah Haskins sie, of Olmstead Falls, Ohio.
~· G~oup 91; ' ~. opened the M?,:s~::J :~~~Z,~~u::. Athena; Chrlatlne Jllbr, R'l o t1t1. 'Die Cllllinll pri!P' WP f'prayer given by the a rellgious painting hod
hospitalized. Mr~. Haskins Mr. and Mrs. _Robert Mil&lt;h
~ vez
ts from the and pianist waa Judy Wilder· Gr811de ~ege student, and Joy en by Ricky Tl1plell.
v, ' IMa&gt; Donahue. Reports
hung on lhe vestibule aud . Is in Holzer Hospital on Galhpo- 1 and sons, David and Stephen of "'"''ce a
P _ __
~--ts
·
various ·commlssion..-s
given by Mrs. Robert ....,
lis and Mr. Haskins is a patient : Wheeling, W. Va.,' visited over 1 1950 Florence Chadwick
of muth, a student at Ohio Unl·
II)Yen by chairmen. It was
memory of her husband. the at ChUlicothe Hospital whet&lt; 1the weekend with their par- San D.'
Calif
et 1 •_e_n_l..:ty.._._ _ _ _ _ _ __
1
010
nP'owced that speakers for
tate Robe&lt;t Coats.
be had recent surgery.
enls, Mr. and Mrs. P. L. Milch
n , ' ~ lor ··,w::.mlng book, "Appreciation From Chi~
·next two Sundays had been pro- \lnder new business ttems. Miss Dianna Criswell, student and Mr. and Mrs. John Seines. wo~n sli; Ch
1 13 hours ' dren Of Mount Lawn.,. were
.vidtd with James Brewington the chimes .are to be placed in nurse at St. Joseph's Hospital The}' were enroute home after the . ng
anne •
·l o apeak Sunday. August 14, and working condition and a
Nursing School, Parkersburg, a vacation trip to Florida. They 21 mmutes.
ked read by lbe leader. The hymn,
--- --- cussion of the roof repair
W.Va., is here for a two weeks visited wilh relatives in
St. In. 1963. a Jan1 1ai~a~ain "Stepping in the Light,"
and
8
P.•~~a--IB!!""'""'~""·',.,- made. The books are to be
visit with her parents, Mr. and Petersburg, Fla.
bandl~ .stag
m
d prayer from the year btok in
ited by Mrs . .lack Bachner.
. James Criswell.
Viclor Diehl, who resides on robbery on Engl_and, and rna • 'unison, concluded lbe devotions.
1 •
Rev . Mr. Donahue discussed
The Rev. and Mrs. Max Don- Grant St. is a patient at Veter· off With fl mll!Jon.
During the business session.
~ possibility of an evening
and children are spending ans .Ho~pilal in Huntington, W.
. member! were asked to save
~ Jce er study group session
the next two weeks on vacation. Va. for observ~lion and !r~t- A thought. for the ~ay . General Mills coupons to pur·
) this year and a decision will
He is the pastor of Heath Meth- m~nt. His famliy has VISI~ G~rma~ novelist 'Ibomaa
chase tablespoons for the
'! made at the board meeting in
Church. A group of par- him at the hospital. He will saad : H~man reason n
church kitchen. A nooa lunch·
1
,; ~ptember. Budget items were i~hioners from the Rev. Dona- be there several days.
only to wJII m~re strongly th~: eon hi be served to an oraani~
l discussed and evaluated for the Ihue's former pastorate at Shar- Mr. and Mrs. Val Reynolds rate, a~ ~he IS fate. What ?1" :r.atlon was discussd and it was Corne In ond 11lecl youn now-thoy ore olwaye
~ I seven month period ending Jan. on Methodist Church near De- . and ramily of Morgantown, W. bappenmg m the world today· agreed to s•rve the luncheon.
'lUick atlloult-lht valutl and quality anti alylll!fl
Mr. and Mrs. Dixon and son! Ist.
fiance, attended the morning IVa. spent the weekend with his ortltrrlflc.
Ricky ol Columbus were reworship service at
Heath parents, Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Paul Sellers and R~rnary, Mr. A get well card was sent to
)I
cent guests of his brother and
Church and included Mr;. Stet- Reynolds. They came for their and Mrs. Sam Pockens and Mrs. Gladyo CUckler at Holzer
~l
Blue Bell Sportswear line ls just what tustomen
sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Her·
la Pa lmer. Marie Hefflinger, daughters, Gywnn and Lynn, grandson. Ronme,.Mr. and Mrs. Hospital. The group satlJ Ha~
bert Dixon and family.
Eva Stevens and Laura Bab- who have been visiting their Rick Ash and H.lcky, Mickey, py Birthday to Mrs. Lena Huwant in fashion, colors and patterns-many of the
cock.
grandparents.
Demaris,
Sonia
and.
Tonia,
Mr.
ber,
Miss
Fn!da
Grueser,
Mrs.
II
Miss S.san Dixon left Sun$ reS/ enf 0
Recent guests of Mr. and M". Glenn Lambert
has and Mrs. Paul Barros and Sher- Lawrence Lanning and Mrs.
sportswear lteii1JI are tailored of Ko,atron maldnJ
I
day afternoon for the EUB
Mrs. James Brewington were gone to Berea to assist in the ri, Alisa, Gene and Eric, Mrs. Amanda Kaspar.
lbem year round sellers. Come in now and make
Camp Otter~ein, near Log~,
her sister, Mrs. Herman Kis- care of her daughter, Mrs. Donna Simms and Tomi!Jy and
1
where she wall serve as JUnior
•
sell of Columbus and Mrs. Ro- George Dootiltl~. ~:md
Rew Deatra of Columbus, Mr. and
Games were played and prlza
your oeledions-buy this line in women~ and pll
camp counselo~ for a week. She 1 Election of officers was held ger Luckeydoo, Huntington, W. baby.
IMrs. Harry Clark, Mrs. Norma es awarded to Mrs. Phil Meiusizes.
was a&lt;"eompamed to camp by when the .Junior Missionary So- Va ., who spent several
days
Baker and .Ricky and Angela; hart, Miss Lena Grueser, Mrs.
her pa~nts, Mr. and Mrs. Her· ciety of the Laurel Cliff Free here with ·her parents.
Mrs.
1Mrs. Nettie Moore, Mrs. LU- Dessauer, and Mrs. I.
V.
bert Doxon and son, Roger.
:Methodist church met recently Kissell also visited her olher
IJian Smith and Mark, Mrs. Ed- w..... Refreshments carrying
Rev. A. N. Grueser ()f Grove 1 in the recreation room ot the sister, Mrs. John Vroman.
1
ith Hood, Mrs. Thel~a Grueser, out a pink and white co I or
City was tile weekend guest of , parsonage: '
" .
'
The Rev. and Mrs. Ouane
/Cn!C
Miss Edna Edwards, Miss Don- theme were served by Misses
his skster-in-laW·: · Miss Gene- Group· smgmg of W1de, Wide W~eka~d have returned to their
01 Phelps, Raymond Knder and Maud and Freda Grueser tt 23
vieve Stobart and brotbe&lt; Rob- Is the Ocean." opened
t"" borne m Fl. L•uderdale, Fla . ,
UO
Y
BBen~~Q~u~ls~e~nbe~rry~._ _ _ _I.'m~e~m~he~rs~·--------""!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!..,..,!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!_ _ _ _ _ _r.J
ert.
.
'
meeting. An introduction to after a visit here with Mr. and I Members of the
Syracuse ~ ,the new study book. ''Black Mrs. James Weber, who .are
h h Jd
· · S
Mrs. Lucille B. Hawkins was i Gold " concerning Africa was spending the summer at their EUB churc e : P'_c~ac bunt.he Sunday dinner guests of Mr. give~ bY Mrs. James Giimore home here. The Rev. Wickard day a.t Kyger Cree Wit a asatld Mrs. Cbarl.es R. Karr Sr., superintendenL, who also pre- ia pastor of the Presbyterian, ket. dmner at noon_. ed d
..
:Naylors Run Hill.
sented reading .and
study Church in Ft. Lauderdale where I Games were en]o~
urlng
·
·
·.
the Webers are active mem- . the afternoon and wmners were
Miss Ramora Bo1ce of Day· awar ·
.
·~ Ricky Ash. Demaris Ash and
·'
ton spent the weekend with her Officers elected were VIcky bers.
.
De t s·mms s n races·
1
8
arents Dr and Mrs R
E Clark, president: Becky Wright. Tom Scally and son, T1mmy . ra
• poo
. . ·
• .
p
' ·
· ·
·
ta
nd N
G'll were in Pittsburgh Pa to at- R1cky Ash , sack race. Ricky
.
Boice.
strecre ry: pa . tsancfy
~' tend a ball game r~cenily
Ash and Bonnie Pickens, three
easurer. roJec · or
.e
·
ed
De
· A h and
Miss Rose Mary Raub
of : com1ng year were discussed. Mr. and Mrs. Donald Lowery 1egg race ;
marls s .
Columbus, spent lhe weekend Group singing ot How
Can and son, Danny, have returned Alisa Ash, foot .races;
R1cky
with •Her parents, Mr. and· Mrs. They Know, closed the meeting. from a vacation trip. ~o Virgi?- Ash and Demans Ash foot ract.&gt;
Joseph Raub and son.
Attending were Nancy, Darla i1 Beach and also v1s1t~d
m backw1n~.
Mrs. G. w. Herman (Jo.w- and Kathy Gill. Vicky, Ricky, Pennsylvania with relahve~~~~-Attendmg were Rev . and Mrs.
phlne Garrison) returned
to Sherry and Terry Clark, Becky
her home, Akron Saturday, af- Wright, Barbara and
Keith
ter a week's visit with her !lis- Klein, Wayne and Garry Pullins,
ter and brother-in-law, Mr. and Rodney Bailey, Diane Smith ,
~
··~....-.,
Mrs. Ross Hannahs.
Greg •Ehlin, Dennis Gilmore and
1
a gueot, Patty Ann Jeffers.
Mrs. William Pettit and Mrs. ,
I
Harold W. Lemley were Fro- '
day buaineos visitors in Parkersaurg, W. Va.
Mrs. WiUiam Pettit Olld Billy
.Joe and Christy Ann Jell Satur,
day night from. Parkersburg,
W. Va., lor a v!Slt to Ogden, A family picnic was held at
Utah, with her parents, Mr. , the home of Mr. and Mrs. Rearand Mrs. Harry B. Oilerton. ney Ogdin of near Wilkesville
They were accompanied to Par· I Sunday, August 7, in hooor of
kersburg by Mr. Pettot and bro- Mr. and Mrs. Sam Grim and
tiler Larry.
sons, Gary• and Ron of Athens,
Marine Lance Corporal Stan- who are l.eaving ne~t week .to
· ley B. Lemley left Friday even- make theor home m Phoemx,
ing for his base, Cherry Point. Arizona.
N. C., after 1 42 days leave In addition to the honored
with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. guests and the host and hostess,
Harold W. Lemley and family. oltending were Mr. and Mro.
Lemley recently returned after Denver Folden and Gary, Ak• •• • • •
IS mooths Jn Chu Lei, VietNam. ron; Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Ward.
Charles Eskew retumell to Gro•eport; Mr. and Mro. Her• •
:; ', .:.··.:x=c_'\:.~::; . ,
hit emplyment with the · New bert Jones, CUnnle and Keith,
York Central Railroad, after a Columbos; Mrs. Harold Miller.
i
· T* mooths absence due to a Athens; Mrs. Mile• Nelson.
broken leg.
Dexter; Mr. and Mrs.
Rex
Mrs. Denver Thoma, Mr 1. Shenefield and Carl
Everett,
e 1966 br
·.Cleland Hineo, Mrs. Max Meln· Langaville; Lue Etta Dillon,
)Jart and Mrs. Ray Swanger vfs. Charleston. W. Va.: Mr.
and • ••. Bur I ma,.;d you, not daddr's Stc111 Setvict monf' J
WOULD YOU PAY ...4.DC
ited Sunday afternoon with Mr. Mrs. C"t\ Shenefield, Albany,
and Mrs. Charles R. Karr Sr. and Mr.~ Mrs. Charles GrifNOT TO SNEEZE DUFIING
: ..,
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Kelly and fi lh and Karen, of Pomeroy.
THE WOFIST POLLEN MONTH
' , I
/ lamlly left Saturday, lor their
home; HollyO'ood, Fla., alter a Bi-Mon.t hly Meeting
OP THE BUMMIEFI?
WOek s vl91t with her patents,
.
Mr. and Mro. Allen Eichinger l1 Held by ChouBy no coincldance whatsoever, Kcosts Just $14.00 a
and other relativea.
The Youth Choir of the Laumonth--or lo11-to own whole-house Gas air c:ondHionMrs. · Ray Swanger of ftay. rei Cliff .Free Methodist church
_,, ... and to trade pollen-choked summer air for flHeredunne, N. J., Is apending a few ~eld thear br-monthly busmess
clean, usy-to-braathe air.
d.ays with Mrs. Cleland Hines se..11sion in the recreation roam
Would you part with $14.00 to llttpiGUIItland cool
and other friends and relatives. of the parsonage following choir
'"'7 nllltl ollho ltotteat month If tltiiiUmmarl
practice. Prayer by Louis Delhi
I ' •·
opened
the
meeting,
followed
A wholt· hcJusa Gas air condltlonlfll system c:osts
Karr• En~rrain
by scripture reading by Kathy
$14.00 I month-lncludinl normtl fnslllllllan of I
In Horwr of Son
Eblin. Plans were made for a
powerful 3-tan unit And thora'a no dawn JIIYillllll.
Mr. and Mrs . Charles R. Karr hymn sing at the church on
Sr., entertained with a dinner Sunday, August 21 at 2 p.m.,
WGuld Mlot worth $14.00 I month Ia IJeep IUIMW
Saturday evenin~ at their horne, and for a vesper service and
dust awor,taf.--forpt !lddflncwllllwindou _ . . ,
Naylors Run Hill honoring their wiener oast on Thursday, Aato avoid lhll'Gilr ond droftlllf • • • 11r condlllorwll
-ton, ~aries R. Karr Jr., on gust 25.
Whole-house Gas tllr c:onclltioniJII c:CJSts Just $14.00
his birthday.
Attending were Sue Tracy,
a monlh to own. It's tho c!Hnost, qulelwt,lanpst-IIYed,
Homemade Ice cream and Gre&amp; and Becky Eblin, Sandra
cheapost-to-opetlle whol•house coaliJII you can pt.
cake were served with
the and Brenda Gilmore, Karolyn
1
@Iii 1§10=110@8
Would you 1rw11t a loa cant at1mp to pt lhl whole
dinner to the honored guest and Soulsby. Roger Klein,
Betty
131 N.
St;, MldclletiOrt,
aloly If Gas air c:oncflllonlnJ-tlnd lilt 1J*1o1 price oftlf?
Mrs. Karr and aono, Rodney and Lane, Kathy Eblin,
Wayne
Just fill out this coupon and man nto us. Naturally, I
Jeffrey. Mou Kathy Fultz, Mrs. Leifheit, Darlene Michael, MarWllo!Mootoo Gil olr OOIIdJtlonJ111 fllf (loot $14.CJO a """""'
!hera's no abllptlan.
Chariea LyUe, Mr. and
Mrs. tha Bak,t, Louis Deihl, Roger
Richard Cloamhers and
aon, Statts L'lll Rev . and Mrs. Eu·
•
Eric, and the host and hoate11. 1ene Gill and daughtero.
·,

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h
C
urc
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Is Just In on the 2nd Floor

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Vic ley Clark

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1 P 'd
Junior Soci,efy

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Syracuse EUB
Ch hp. .
urc

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

H /d 5 do
e

Echoea of another century
wJU flll the streets of Pomeroy
Wedneaday, Auguot 10, with an
afternoon ·of genuine calUepe
music frbm the excurolon boat
"The ~ohn•ton Chaperone."

.
.:jt.

Th•

Is to

ar-

riv~ ..,.,ut lunch time and pro-

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.

BEAilJ'S WURLU

"Cha~rone"

1

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periodic mlllllc unUI ita
de!iwlure with a loed of recreatiQIHefkers that Right at I
p.m. on a four-htur excursion.

* . ..

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Family Picnic
Is Given at
Ogdm Home

I

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Losses in Portsmouth Fire

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Hero Proves Real Hero

,----~b~~~-~--:----GAS
~

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THE

,.....

-----------.,...._,
...

By
Mn.America

SEMINOLE

_

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~'--------------~----'

SCJ-95

tROW'S STEAK HOUSE
TH£ SHOE lOX In MIDDLEPORT

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Pomeroy

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The fire chief said the
men brought the pre-da-.m b~
under control in the lbrea stoq
building after about lbree bouii.

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(,'f!:Pilol (.~'ommen

~

All From One Carelessly Thrown
little Match

~

QIVOTED TO INTERESJ Of
AREA .
Richard S. Owen, PubliS!Ier
Chesler fannehill, Ed]tor
afternoon

i

excep1

St., Pomeroy, Ohio 45 789. Business Of
fice phonto

992-2156

F.ditorial

~&gt;hone

992-2157
Entered as second class mailing matter
at the post office at Pomeroy, Ohio .
National advertising representative

Bottlnelli Kimball. Inc , 343 Lexingtor
Ave .. New York Citv. Nf'w York

Subscription rates Delivered by car
rler where available, 35 cents per week

one year in advance at the Daily Senti
nel office $18.:m:

six months.

threto months $3 .90

By

$9.10

Motor Routf

where curier service not available ont

mouth $UO. By mail one year $10.00
Six months, $5.25 : Three months, $., 00

''

es.
..
But, and thll II the core of tilt
bw!iness, nobody In the world
_ and steel'• malllitmenl lllil
of all - can proteet both stet!
and all the rsll ol uo floc!m the
re&amp;ults ot an ooaentlally. foolitll
thrust that will cut tlltllll' 11111
ioet Into lhe natloruol pond belore the last ripples have llellled.
Tho oructal poial lltat llleel hu
"' oddly oYerfooked II the reallIJ lltat whether or not II GUJht to
be this way, allluduslry In tho
end Is no1 nearly 10 powerful Ia
Congroos •• Is organized labor.
Thus It II dilllcult .to anderltand
why apart from enrylhint el..
ateel aboold have chosen thlt
moment in Ume, In a bitter Conll'eB'ional elecliou year In whlcll
some soundly coDIIOI'Va.~ gal01
milht bt etpeeled, to hind labor
this political boon of an llislan&lt;e
of demonotrable lmlpousiblltiJ

. if
.• . I

f

By Wllltiam S. White

there are many- to abandon
their herewfore restrained poli·
des and join the big rush lo
eet all they can while the get-

'·

t, b'vents

WASHINGTON - The s!HI
industry has put the United

Saturday I and Sunday by The Ohio Val
ley Publlohing Company. 110 Mechani&lt;

~r

pratucei-the mol'&lt;! It aU looks
~be a wholly unnecessary war.
~'uily conceding the unquall·
States gOvernmenl collec~ively
fled
legal right of any Industry
and President Johnson specU~
to
refllllate,ltsell
in a free econoC'IIIY into a11 awkward fix by Its
my,
the
fact
remains
that this,
price mark-ups in deftance ot
like all other rlgbts, carries also
the Admifli!'itration's anti-infla·
an obligation for the ••e,..ise oi
lion guld•llnes.
a
high sense of respoMibtllty. •~
ln' thE' longer run, however.
is
simply impossible to argue ....
the chief sufferers are far more
allsUcally
thet so vut &amp; so ba·
likely to bt- steel iL'Ielf and bu~li·
sic
an
underpinnlll.ll
ql the whole
ness generally. For while the
eoonomy
can
bt
pperated
only on
precise right.o;; and wrongs
nt
a
narTOw
consideration
of
ita lesteel's price increases, standing
gal
rights.
alone, may be endlessly d~bata·
What rtially emerges here In
b!e, the ultimate consequences
the
end, therefore II 1 feeling
of this action cannol be in the
of
di•appalnted
wonc(er steel's
slightest doubt. ·
executives
cotild
have become so
It will embolden and heavily
insensitive
to
~
Inner realities
arm the mol"f' irresponsible Ia·
of
the
American
economy.
Nob&lt;&gt;
bor unions to more and more
dy
can
desy
lhtm
prloe
hlkextreme wage demands. Worse
Js,
if
they
wllh
tn
io
on
to
the
yet. it will put urider heavy com·
mt
with
thlo
otrlclly
lawful
and
petitive pressure the leaders of
thoroughly responsible unions- strictly ham-handed ere,..lse of
of which, in simple rairness, management's utdmate prlvlleg·

MI!IGS-MAS~N

Publlsbed every

'

,,

·" ,

,.
'I

o,

•
I

i• ··:. ' :.

Beautiful

I

I

I

II

. ·...

.

~ way . to

say

I
I
I

on management'• side.

I
I

2-cDally SentineL Pomi!IO)'-JIIddltport, 0., Aq.

'

9, 1868

ling may be good.

Example In Judgement

Steel has done

lOSS LEWIS, MILWAUKEE JOURNAL

can be no denying that infla·
lion Is upon us, and the wishful
thinkers, who hide their head in the
sands of the economy are gradually facing lhe threat that it poses to our coun·
try. Demands will begin to c-o~ thick
greatest pressure will be in the field of
non-essential spending. An editorial
writer in our neighboring state of West

Virginia has pulled out all the stops.
, alld demands to know what has been
accomplished by the war on poverty in
. bls state. He cites the fa ct that very lit.
tie of the money has effected any
change in those the $2 million was sup·
posed to help. He find s people taking up
collections of clothing, so that children
in poverty

familiP~

nm go lo school late

this month
The re ca n be no den.ving th at infla-

pert e('{)nomists who are supposed

lie and alway• desperately dlffi·
eult balance which the White
HOuse llu thus far· been able
to maintain between the com pet·
ing demands of business and

NEW YORK , 'UP!) - Joan
Bennett wa s a star in tht&gt; great
days uf HollywoQd when tht&gt;
journey to the studio wa11
a

leisurely lirnousillt' ride _from &lt;J
mansion to a dressing room ttw
size of a luxury hotel suite.
There w~re flowers from thf'
producer . thf' . support · of a

srpall

to

knbw the answers have been playing around with the economy, and it is not
coming out just like they planned . They
sometimes try to place the blame on the
rise In the cost of living, when lhe real

of

'

thi!ig,

a

cavrar

and

s turs as J()hn
Barrymore.
Spencer Tra cy. Ronald CHie-

man or Gregory Peck
That was lht&gt; Hbllywood one
would nut blame Mi ss Benne-tt
for. recalling wistfully as shf'
toils away the long hours in a
studio on a dingy stret&gt;t in

Manhattan in ABC-TV'•

We can not always go on the prlce
indexes, which are to a large ·degree deceptivt. In the normal course of events
when prioe~ rise, so has the income of ·
people, but uot in all cases. In 1965 the
prices poid for meat were only 4.3 per
cent of the total disposable income of
the. .average family. This .is abQut one
l!nrd less than the.6.3 percent Clf income
spent after World War U, according to
the American Meat Institute. According
to their findings, the ~dustry from the
farm. through. the packing plant. to the
retailer i~ on a free compebtive market.
The prices are determined by supply and ·
demand. When supplies go up the prices
come down, and .when they drop the prices Jlll up. Wilen · the · consumer staya
away from til~ higher priced cuts, the
price.s Qn lower priced meats go up. They
reali~e the control they can have
• llr' slnarl shopping, because there is an
estimated 165 pounds per person avail·
able during the current year.

Ill•

We take great delight In taking pot
shots at General DeGauUe, and his atti·
tude toward our country. There are good
reasons for that, but we would do well to
follow his example in the field of economks. He stateo, in what he calls the new
. economic stance of his country, our development and existence must not be at
· the discteation of others. That is why,
for ·eight years, we have entirely stopped resorting to foreign gifts, and credi~ and undertaken to pay debts that we
have lone accumulated. It is therefore
necessary to put our balance of payments in equihbrium, to insure the solid

day-

time serial. "Dark Shad o w s . ~·
She is une of i Is most
rmport&lt;mt fralured players.
ThE" economics of the world
of the daytime serial -per'mit of
n&amp; co.sseting. It is hard work .
And MJss Bennett. still slim
and elegant. was discovered in
a. tiny dre-ssing room just off
the ingenious set of what ABC
('ails "the first television
program styled in the tradition
or the gothic oovel. "
''Let 's find some pla ce tha t' s

air-conditioned ... she said.

Later, in one of the booth's in
which sponsor's watch the
programs, she tl:1lked with
eonsiderabte good humor about
her involvement in ''Dark
Shadows" and
the tough
schedule which. be in~ a good
trouper; "She is learning to Jive

Financial Gossip

Petm~nent Press Coming,

the government.

i

from

secretaries to dialogue COaches
and. if one eared for thai sort

cause is the unnecessary expenditures of

·•

army of aides

champagne lunch with sueh t·u-

tion is a long-term threat to the economy
ol our c-ountry, and the value of money,
which embraces billions of dollars invested in savines that is the tife blood of
liVine of millions of Americans. The ex-

·To Little Girls' Dresses
NEW YORK (UPII - Mother's

500 million yards this year.
biggest ironing task. thP klri 's
Rosenau said t ~f"r!:" i~ no orPschool clothes, is vanishirig be- · clse way of telling how much
causP of tM new textile art of permanent press Iabrie is gopermanent pres.'i.
ing into children 's garments.
This happy neWs Is conveyed But if his t.'Ompar.l 's experiby Gary Rosenau of Rosenau
ence is typical of other progres~ro.thers, lnc., of New York; a
sive firms , it Is a large amount.
leading •maker o( girls' dresses. In the fall of 1965, Rosenau
Permanent press, which, as Brothers · put permanent press
everybody knows, is a method in about 10 per cent of it1
of permanently treaUng gar- chlldres's dresses .
n1ents with heat J~sd resin so
Demand IIIJb
they will hold their press
This year, demand has been

through counUess washings. It

so high that 2ll per c.ent of total

was rirst introduced a few years

Jiles are in permanent press ,
requiring aboul two million
yards of .material. That should
go to thret million yards next
year, he said.
Rosenau Brothers has its own
permanent press ovens in its
main plant at Philadelphia
where it can " lxtke'' 7,500
dresses a day.
As permanent is used more
and more, the unit cost of tbe
process will go do""" sin~e the
principal cost i! the investmest
in the oven. The addition&amp;l cost
It not large anyway, only a few
pennies per garment. and Ule
saving of ironlng time In the

ago in better class sportswear
adUlt!. It required eonsiderable inve§tmenl by manufarturers but it soon spread to
cheap r garments.
Uled I• Drenes
No · it is being used in children's gannents, especially

·fot

dreoses for girls of school and
pre-school age, and undoubtedly
in time will make its way into
boys' washable slacks. shirts

and other · garments on a bit
scale.

The production of permanent\
press fabrics jumped from 25

million yards in 1!164 to 300 mil-

lion yards \a~St year and there · ~me Is enormous In a family
tre indications it w.ill n:ceed having several little girls.

labor to the undoubted longterm good of both.
Though President Johnson bas
that
wall no intention or following the prefew cedent laid down by the late
President Kennedy to have a
was
hot, eyeball-to-eyeball showdown
fighting with my agenl for
with steel's management, somegetting me into all this. But
thing
else, too, has surely beeD
now H.s simmered d9wn."
impaired. Thi• valuable and Ira·
In " D::Ifk Shadows" Miss
gile tiling Ia the ertraordlnary
Bennett (the eighth generation
sympathy so long IUSialned how
of onl:' or our mm!t famous
ever Improbably, between a Ill&gt;
acting families' plays Elizabeth eral Democratic PreJident and a
Stoddard Collins, mistress of business community which ill
the grea t stone mansion at the Johnson White Houae 1m1 found
center of much of the mystery • more uoderstandlnfl ear than
and mP:n ace of the program.
in a very long lime herttofore.
The more one Joolta at thla
"One day's work in this ·role
aHair,
Indeed - and looks at II
is about the equal of three days
ill
this
columnist'• caoe wilb
work ifl Hollywood," she said.
absolutely no antibuolneoa preju"Listen to this schedule: Wo
arrive at 8:30 a.m. And we go dice and with much akeptlclom
toward several Clll'l'elll labor
to lunch - lunch, mind you -at
with.

''lt was frant ic at first. "
s.aid, ~t i th a sniile
smoothed lhe years . " I
really desperate the first
weeks. l thought I'd die. I

· ;,Then we start taping the
lihow . And as soon as we finish
tOe taping we start .rehearsing
lor the · next day's episode Jn
order to keep the whole week
from being frantic I havt: to
study the script three ·hours on

Saturday and three hours bn
Sund~)' .

That leave~ ~o time
for a social life and I'm lucky
if l" .can squeeze In a 1play or a
movie · or a dinner date."

Miss Bennett said ··sHe had

KICTHfAD RISKS LIFE
AND WM8 TD Bf FIRST OOT OF
THE P\..4XT ~INIS LOT...

DOllOR
SAYS
11J Wayne G. BraiXhtadl, M.D.
Pyelonephritis is
infection that

a kidney
is cemmon in

children. Jl Is cauaed by
aerms that eneter the kidney
from below. Since this can occur more readlly in atria, II
is ~ore common in them than
. In boys. Cyatitls (inll onunalion of the bladder) iJ usoally
present in theoe chiJdren and
ICCOUnts for such I)'Dlptoma

1

...n llersell only twi~ In the I frequent urge to urinate and
show and thought. she looked burning pain on urlnallou. In
"ghastiy" because .tile overhead the acute stage the child mar
television lightflig made her have &lt;billa, lever and vomlq.
appear as though she had no II tile dlilea!e II not Cllllrolled
mooth. The lighting has !ince \ promptly easy fatisablllty, ap.
been adjusted. She finds ·it hard )athy and high blood pr...,.ro
to accustom herself to the
constant repetition of daytime
scripts.
"But you have to say the

lmay develop. Even with e~:cel­
· lent care recurrences are eom.

same tiling over and over
again." she explained, "because
you have to take Into consideration new viewers trying to
catch up with the story."
Miss Bennett spent a silent
moment looking back over her
long and distinguished career to
aee if there wu anything she
wanted mentioned.
"I could kick myseU," sho
said, with feeling, "for not
buying real estate In Hollywood
a!J those years ago."

kidney Infection Is a threat to
the child's health, For tbfs
reason a child with pyelonephrllis should have a thoroush
study of the orlnary tract with
tlclney X rayo and upi&lt;lralloll
of the inside of the bladder with
a cyatoscope.
A wide variety of urinary antisepttcs have been used to
treat this disease. In general
ouch anliblolfcs ao streptomy•
ctn, k8JWDycln, the tetracyeUnes, chlerampbenlcal, amp~
dUin and coiiJUn ll't more ef·
fecUve than the lllllla clrup.
Wben the infecttorr 11 bl'cUihl
under control II II important
to use a Pl'Oilllylactlc
druc
auch u methenamine Dlllld•
late fir sis to nine 01011the to

Hado's They'll Do It Every Time

\JD.ycuM?

sht

10:30 a.m. Mine is usually ~ 1
_ ~ f-~taine r q f soup . .:-fr,om a
~i ng machine. We report
batk .at the set at 11 :30 a.m.

value of our currency and to banish in.

flalion." They have done just that. Our
eountry does not need gifts from other
lands, but as long as it reties heavily on
government deficils to finance its wel fare programs, foreign aid, gifts and a
multitude of low interest loans to many
favored projects we are going tn be in
trouble. It is way past time to put our
eeonomy in order based on a sound dolIll'.-

HELEN HELP US!
- b y H•••n •~-~

tJon that can only hurt every.
body: Jl has upset the whole sub-

THER~

and rast for the government to do something before it is too late. Probably the

more than

.break the line against tile clear
and present danger of an lnOa-

·moo.

Any · chronie or

prevent

recurrina

YIIIJTH ASKED FUR IT!
TbiJ column Ia for young people, their problem• and pleasures, their troubles and fun.
As with the rest of Helen Kelp
Us!, It welcomeo Jaugho but
won't dodge a serious question
with a brush-off.
Send your teeo-age queJUODJ
to YOUTH ASKED FOR IT,
care of Hela Help US! thll
newspaper.
COUNTRY UVING
IS CROWDED.

Dear Relen:
I have to laqh at u- city
kids who ..., aboul a f e w
utrao In lbelr blekyarc! pooll.
What about me? I
haftD'I
llept In my bod an llliiiiJIIOr btcau.. '"" lift near a mountalD
lake where avtrJbody wanll to
ap8ld their ....tloo .,.. free.
People we blrdly even kllow
dn&gt;p In to say "hello" lltld lltld
up apendJnc 1 week. They aol
Gilly take
my bod. but ,I'm
stuck blbyaltllq their lddi aiiO lor free! Housel:teplnc and
-~~~ and pu!Unl ap
wtlh
P"lPle bao jwt aboUI got m•
mother down. Every year she
saya, "Thll summer wilt be dU·
lerent." But evm if h weeded out the dropper-bmers, what
would we do with the "regulars" who write ahead of lime
and say, "Gue88 what, we11 bt
coming your way again lbla
year.'' - SLEEPING BAG
BLUES
Dear SBB:
Whet! yoo llvo In 91C111ionland, you've aotta be toup sayo thla aal who did .:. and
WUD't - lor many yean Ia
Oregon. Up to a point, llDDIDer
company it ftm, but whlll people start IIWIIIDC lbemselvea.
)'lUI" mother'• reply lbould bt,
''Sorry, we thl~ have room
lor you." - H.
Dear Helea:
Tho WOillllll who Uveo nen
deor telll my mother every Ut.
Ue thing my brother, alllen
and I do. My oldeol alster wu
.blby-slttlng us once when .my
brother and 1 bad a leud. Our

llllflhbor told my Mom, but
cllanged the ollry around
and got uo In 1111 trouble. WI
C!lll't 10 CMitalde but wblt we
pt -SPIED UPON P.B. Htr
kldl fl&amp;lll • lot _ .. than ••
do.
Dear S.U.:
Htlpfully tntmoted llfilhbora

.he

.

Ilf'*

Note 18 your IIIO!Mr1
way to oure an illformer it
with her own medlclllt. L el
each of her reporta "romlnd•
yoo of IIOIDelhlnf HER
ldcll
....amtd up. - H.

l'Vii1Ek BOME NEEDm
Dear Helen:
My mother dletl liz monllll
aco and my real fttthtr died
. ~everaJ years blell:. I am u,.
Ins with my ateplalhtr. 1 have
110 other relatives.
St•eral limea a weelt
my
stepfather cumes home drunk
and aomellmel Jtt b r In 1 1
friends with him. Whta - J 1
.friendll are with him II II
frllhteoilll, but .. far DOl ..

Uust be sure there's plenty
of cold and golden Hudepohl
I for your next picnic, back·
I
I, yard · cookout, patio party~
I '
get-together .•• iil the handy
,: · i~pack of' no, return boUles.)

bad.

But when bl Ia al.,. with
me, he oflln blall me tar 1111
reaSOIL He IIHIIII lo llljoy II.
I don't !mow what will bt nu:L
· 1 have ho - Ill 111111 to and
I can'l atancl IIIII IIIUeb laae•·
Plwo belp. - · AF1WD AND

ALONE AT It
Dear Afraid:
No teen-qer It 18\'tr an •
lone. But lhe muatltt IOIIIIOill
other than a Iaraway columalsl
kllllw abe aetda help. U yau
don't have 1 ebureh. of your
own, thea diOOit a mfllltter'a
aame from tbe teltpboaa book,
llld calJ ,.. Ill IJIIIIIiDIDietl
He'U see to it 1111 eourt1 lnv•
tllate your cU. and, bopefully. arr11111e to plaat yoo Ia 1
pd foster home. - 1L
Dear lleltn:
You may fllld lbll IIDIIllnl
but I Ibid It embaJTulllll,
1ibal do Jill do . ..... ' you
are at - " t. hotlle and HI
a roach crawUnc • 1be wr
Tltil hal htlppened to Dll oral times. - .ROACH BIIOA-

. , .Molt"" 'fl1
~SVI~
Mlf'/IOIP

IIENNIN61tllt,l'f',
'

..

~·

.,,

'

'.
'

'.
~

CHEB
Dear R.I.:
Treat the roacll the •
yoa'd treat a f\Y - ldU It II yoo
can. A •traliblfonnrd apo
proaeh It bttllr 1han IIJibu.
........ alienee.
CaolrarJ 18 popular thh!k!JW.
tbe prw8ICe of eoell:rolellla ltn't I aymbol of flUb. Somllimea
••• the price people Pl1 ro r
In old balna ar l'lldlo
lllfuttd DalillborbOou. - lL

•·

By the way,
don't forget Ul.e
•
Wleners
0
0 buns
0 mustard
0 baked beans
0 potato chips
0 tomatoes
0 corn-on-the-cob
0 butter
0 salt &amp; pepper
0 relish
D paper'plates
0 napkins
D knives &amp; forks
w charcoal
0 lighter fluid
0 matches
0 ice &amp; cooler

.

'

. ...

~

• ._ • •

f

.

~

:

''

llv""

.•.;

..
•

I

Wben lbla peophylactlc trea._
lllenl is' dllconUntled the lll'll'll·
lbouJd· bo cheehd at lb onee
• ·lliOIIth ·ror another IJ IIIOIItbJ
beeauoe '·pylloueptiyrula It del·
lllltely not a disease to trillt
with. "

~Mil A . , tV"

;

BERRY'S WORLD

t
I

a

hurt . defect (Wolff • P~
1011 • Wltlte !lytldromel With a
beart. murmur. what It
tho
..... lllil ; whit are the C!ban. ""' for lmpnvemeo11
A - 1'lil c op.dlal Jttalt
deftel ' .. charll!lertled by ...
·taea 111 . 1u1 plllse mo
ar . IDOI'e btall per litfnute),
. · QUlnhflno;' protalne amkla
. IIIII dlgltalla hare bNn ftand
to ' bt benelleill In •bol!l lhat
older of' prefertnet. I'll liOn""
l!liJidrell lht attaob &amp;Nrl 1111
lll'tnl . . ., .....

ildlr.

,,..

i

I
d

,··.

•

Beautiful

~

..fjl

. II!
',

~~ ~

I&lt; .•

,·,

~

v..,

·~·-

i8oora - I&lt;COI'dJDily. - H.

a recurrence.

Q - Our 1-year.old ... has

.

... line, but _ , blftrllltll
start more feudi than !bey slop.
I hope your mother recognizee
the difference and llate111 - "

"

.,
.

.

.

'i

•
,.

.. · ·"~·

..

"r

. .._-:-·

'

.'
,"~.

-~ ,:!'""~ iHE H~.~PC ~ Blt~W :~G CO~PANY Of Cl,.....
' (,

·-;

;.

I"

.

"'·'

'

,.:

;':".~

'f' .'

fl.,.-..
.

...

'

."(

,,

'

�•.

,, n

.......

..
\

&lt;
(,'f!:Pilol (.~'ommen

~

All From One Carelessly Thrown
little Match

~

QIVOTED TO INTERESJ Of
AREA .
Richard S. Owen, PubliS!Ier
Chesler fannehill, Ed]tor
afternoon

i

excep1

St., Pomeroy, Ohio 45 789. Business Of
fice phonto

992-2156

F.ditorial

~&gt;hone

992-2157
Entered as second class mailing matter
at the post office at Pomeroy, Ohio .
National advertising representative

Bottlnelli Kimball. Inc , 343 Lexingtor
Ave .. New York Citv. Nf'w York

Subscription rates Delivered by car
rler where available, 35 cents per week

one year in advance at the Daily Senti
nel office $18.:m:

six months.

threto months $3 .90

By

$9.10

Motor Routf

where curier service not available ont

mouth $UO. By mail one year $10.00
Six months, $5.25 : Three months, $., 00

''

es.
..
But, and thll II the core of tilt
bw!iness, nobody In the world
_ and steel'• malllitmenl lllil
of all - can proteet both stet!
and all the rsll ol uo floc!m the
re&amp;ults ot an ooaentlally. foolitll
thrust that will cut tlltllll' 11111
ioet Into lhe natloruol pond belore the last ripples have llellled.
Tho oructal poial lltat llleel hu
"' oddly oYerfooked II the reallIJ lltat whether or not II GUJht to
be this way, allluduslry In tho
end Is no1 nearly 10 powerful Ia
Congroos •• Is organized labor.
Thus It II dilllcult .to anderltand
why apart from enrylhint el..
ateel aboold have chosen thlt
moment in Ume, In a bitter Conll'eB'ional elecliou year In whlcll
some soundly coDIIOI'Va.~ gal01
milht bt etpeeled, to hind labor
this political boon of an llislan&lt;e
of demonotrable lmlpousiblltiJ

. if
.• . I

f

By Wllltiam S. White

there are many- to abandon
their herewfore restrained poli·
des and join the big rush lo
eet all they can while the get-

'·

t, b'vents

WASHINGTON - The s!HI
industry has put the United

Saturday I and Sunday by The Ohio Val
ley Publlohing Company. 110 Mechani&lt;

~r

pratucei-the mol'&lt;! It aU looks
~be a wholly unnecessary war.
~'uily conceding the unquall·
States gOvernmenl collec~ively
fled
legal right of any Industry
and President Johnson specU~
to
refllllate,ltsell
in a free econoC'IIIY into a11 awkward fix by Its
my,
the
fact
remains
that this,
price mark-ups in deftance ot
like all other rlgbts, carries also
the Admifli!'itration's anti-infla·
an obligation for the ••e,..ise oi
lion guld•llnes.
a
high sense of respoMibtllty. •~
ln' thE' longer run, however.
is
simply impossible to argue ....
the chief sufferers are far more
allsUcally
thet so vut &amp; so ba·
likely to bt- steel iL'Ielf and bu~li·
sic
an
underpinnlll.ll
ql the whole
ness generally. For while the
eoonomy
can
bt
pperated
only on
precise right.o;; and wrongs
nt
a
narTOw
consideration
of
ita lesteel's price increases, standing
gal
rights.
alone, may be endlessly d~bata·
What rtially emerges here In
b!e, the ultimate consequences
the
end, therefore II 1 feeling
of this action cannol be in the
of
di•appalnted
wonc(er steel's
slightest doubt. ·
executives
cotild
have become so
It will embolden and heavily
insensitive
to
~
Inner realities
arm the mol"f' irresponsible Ia·
of
the
American
economy.
Nob&lt;&gt;
bor unions to more and more
dy
can
desy
lhtm
prloe
hlkextreme wage demands. Worse
Js,
if
they
wllh
tn
io
on
to
the
yet. it will put urider heavy com·
mt
with
thlo
otrlclly
lawful
and
petitive pressure the leaders of
thoroughly responsible unions- strictly ham-handed ere,..lse of
of which, in simple rairness, management's utdmate prlvlleg·

MI!IGS-MAS~N

Publlsbed every

'

,,

·" ,

,.
'I

o,

•
I

i• ··:. ' :.

Beautiful

I

I

I

II

. ·...

.

~ way . to

say

I
I
I

on management'• side.

I
I

2-cDally SentineL Pomi!IO)'-JIIddltport, 0., Aq.

'

9, 1868

ling may be good.

Example In Judgement

Steel has done

lOSS LEWIS, MILWAUKEE JOURNAL

can be no denying that infla·
lion Is upon us, and the wishful
thinkers, who hide their head in the
sands of the economy are gradually facing lhe threat that it poses to our coun·
try. Demands will begin to c-o~ thick
greatest pressure will be in the field of
non-essential spending. An editorial
writer in our neighboring state of West

Virginia has pulled out all the stops.
, alld demands to know what has been
accomplished by the war on poverty in
. bls state. He cites the fa ct that very lit.
tie of the money has effected any
change in those the $2 million was sup·
posed to help. He find s people taking up
collections of clothing, so that children
in poverty

familiP~

nm go lo school late

this month
The re ca n be no den.ving th at infla-

pert e('{)nomists who are supposed

lie and alway• desperately dlffi·
eult balance which the White
HOuse llu thus far· been able
to maintain between the com pet·
ing demands of business and

NEW YORK , 'UP!) - Joan
Bennett wa s a star in tht&gt; great
days uf HollywoQd when tht&gt;
journey to the studio wa11
a

leisurely lirnousillt' ride _from &lt;J
mansion to a dressing room ttw
size of a luxury hotel suite.
There w~re flowers from thf'
producer . thf' . support · of a

srpall

to

knbw the answers have been playing around with the economy, and it is not
coming out just like they planned . They
sometimes try to place the blame on the
rise In the cost of living, when lhe real

of

'

thi!ig,

a

cavrar

and

s turs as J()hn
Barrymore.
Spencer Tra cy. Ronald CHie-

man or Gregory Peck
That was lht&gt; Hbllywood one
would nut blame Mi ss Benne-tt
for. recalling wistfully as shf'
toils away the long hours in a
studio on a dingy stret&gt;t in

Manhattan in ABC-TV'•

We can not always go on the prlce
indexes, which are to a large ·degree deceptivt. In the normal course of events
when prioe~ rise, so has the income of ·
people, but uot in all cases. In 1965 the
prices poid for meat were only 4.3 per
cent of the total disposable income of
the. .average family. This .is abQut one
l!nrd less than the.6.3 percent Clf income
spent after World War U, according to
the American Meat Institute. According
to their findings, the ~dustry from the
farm. through. the packing plant. to the
retailer i~ on a free compebtive market.
The prices are determined by supply and ·
demand. When supplies go up the prices
come down, and .when they drop the prices Jlll up. Wilen · the · consumer staya
away from til~ higher priced cuts, the
price.s Qn lower priced meats go up. They
reali~e the control they can have
• llr' slnarl shopping, because there is an
estimated 165 pounds per person avail·
able during the current year.

Ill•

We take great delight In taking pot
shots at General DeGauUe, and his atti·
tude toward our country. There are good
reasons for that, but we would do well to
follow his example in the field of economks. He stateo, in what he calls the new
. economic stance of his country, our development and existence must not be at
· the discteation of others. That is why,
for ·eight years, we have entirely stopped resorting to foreign gifts, and credi~ and undertaken to pay debts that we
have lone accumulated. It is therefore
necessary to put our balance of payments in equihbrium, to insure the solid

day-

time serial. "Dark Shad o w s . ~·
She is une of i Is most
rmport&lt;mt fralured players.
ThE" economics of the world
of the daytime serial -per'mit of
n&amp; co.sseting. It is hard work .
And MJss Bennett. still slim
and elegant. was discovered in
a. tiny dre-ssing room just off
the ingenious set of what ABC
('ails "the first television
program styled in the tradition
or the gothic oovel. "
''Let 's find some pla ce tha t' s

air-conditioned ... she said.

Later, in one of the booth's in
which sponsor's watch the
programs, she tl:1lked with
eonsiderabte good humor about
her involvement in ''Dark
Shadows" and
the tough
schedule which. be in~ a good
trouper; "She is learning to Jive

Financial Gossip

Petm~nent Press Coming,

the government.

i

from

secretaries to dialogue COaches
and. if one eared for thai sort

cause is the unnecessary expenditures of

·•

army of aides

champagne lunch with sueh t·u-

tion is a long-term threat to the economy
ol our c-ountry, and the value of money,
which embraces billions of dollars invested in savines that is the tife blood of
liVine of millions of Americans. The ex-

·To Little Girls' Dresses
NEW YORK (UPII - Mother's

500 million yards this year.
biggest ironing task. thP klri 's
Rosenau said t ~f"r!:" i~ no orPschool clothes, is vanishirig be- · clse way of telling how much
causP of tM new textile art of permanent press Iabrie is gopermanent pres.'i.
ing into children 's garments.
This happy neWs Is conveyed But if his t.'Ompar.l 's experiby Gary Rosenau of Rosenau
ence is typical of other progres~ro.thers, lnc., of New York; a
sive firms , it Is a large amount.
leading •maker o( girls' dresses. In the fall of 1965, Rosenau
Permanent press, which, as Brothers · put permanent press
everybody knows, is a method in about 10 per cent of it1
of permanently treaUng gar- chlldres's dresses .
n1ents with heat J~sd resin so
Demand IIIJb
they will hold their press
This year, demand has been

through counUess washings. It

so high that 2ll per c.ent of total

was rirst introduced a few years

Jiles are in permanent press ,
requiring aboul two million
yards of .material. That should
go to thret million yards next
year, he said.
Rosenau Brothers has its own
permanent press ovens in its
main plant at Philadelphia
where it can " lxtke'' 7,500
dresses a day.
As permanent is used more
and more, the unit cost of tbe
process will go do""" sin~e the
principal cost i! the investmest
in the oven. The addition&amp;l cost
It not large anyway, only a few
pennies per garment. and Ule
saving of ironlng time In the

ago in better class sportswear
adUlt!. It required eonsiderable inve§tmenl by manufarturers but it soon spread to
cheap r garments.
Uled I• Drenes
No · it is being used in children's gannents, especially

·fot

dreoses for girls of school and
pre-school age, and undoubtedly
in time will make its way into
boys' washable slacks. shirts

and other · garments on a bit
scale.

The production of permanent\
press fabrics jumped from 25

million yards in 1!164 to 300 mil-

lion yards \a~St year and there · ~me Is enormous In a family
tre indications it w.ill n:ceed having several little girls.

labor to the undoubted longterm good of both.
Though President Johnson bas
that
wall no intention or following the prefew cedent laid down by the late
President Kennedy to have a
was
hot, eyeball-to-eyeball showdown
fighting with my agenl for
with steel's management, somegetting me into all this. But
thing
else, too, has surely beeD
now H.s simmered d9wn."
impaired. Thi• valuable and Ira·
In " D::Ifk Shadows" Miss
gile tiling Ia the ertraordlnary
Bennett (the eighth generation
sympathy so long IUSialned how
of onl:' or our mm!t famous
ever Improbably, between a Ill&gt;
acting families' plays Elizabeth eral Democratic PreJident and a
Stoddard Collins, mistress of business community which ill
the grea t stone mansion at the Johnson White Houae 1m1 found
center of much of the mystery • more uoderstandlnfl ear than
and mP:n ace of the program.
in a very long lime herttofore.
The more one Joolta at thla
"One day's work in this ·role
aHair,
Indeed - and looks at II
is about the equal of three days
ill
this
columnist'• caoe wilb
work ifl Hollywood," she said.
absolutely no antibuolneoa preju"Listen to this schedule: Wo
arrive at 8:30 a.m. And we go dice and with much akeptlclom
toward several Clll'l'elll labor
to lunch - lunch, mind you -at
with.

''lt was frant ic at first. "
s.aid, ~t i th a sniile
smoothed lhe years . " I
really desperate the first
weeks. l thought I'd die. I

· ;,Then we start taping the
lihow . And as soon as we finish
tOe taping we start .rehearsing
lor the · next day's episode Jn
order to keep the whole week
from being frantic I havt: to
study the script three ·hours on

Saturday and three hours bn
Sund~)' .

That leave~ ~o time
for a social life and I'm lucky
if l" .can squeeze In a 1play or a
movie · or a dinner date."

Miss Bennett said ··sHe had

KICTHfAD RISKS LIFE
AND WM8 TD Bf FIRST OOT OF
THE P\..4XT ~INIS LOT...

DOllOR
SAYS
11J Wayne G. BraiXhtadl, M.D.
Pyelonephritis is
infection that

a kidney
is cemmon in

children. Jl Is cauaed by
aerms that eneter the kidney
from below. Since this can occur more readlly in atria, II
is ~ore common in them than
. In boys. Cyatitls (inll onunalion of the bladder) iJ usoally
present in theoe chiJdren and
ICCOUnts for such I)'Dlptoma

1

...n llersell only twi~ In the I frequent urge to urinate and
show and thought. she looked burning pain on urlnallou. In
"ghastiy" because .tile overhead the acute stage the child mar
television lightflig made her have &lt;billa, lever and vomlq.
appear as though she had no II tile dlilea!e II not Cllllrolled
mooth. The lighting has !ince \ promptly easy fatisablllty, ap.
been adjusted. She finds ·it hard )athy and high blood pr...,.ro
to accustom herself to the
constant repetition of daytime
scripts.
"But you have to say the

lmay develop. Even with e~:cel­
· lent care recurrences are eom.

same tiling over and over
again." she explained, "because
you have to take Into consideration new viewers trying to
catch up with the story."
Miss Bennett spent a silent
moment looking back over her
long and distinguished career to
aee if there wu anything she
wanted mentioned.
"I could kick myseU," sho
said, with feeling, "for not
buying real estate In Hollywood
a!J those years ago."

kidney Infection Is a threat to
the child's health, For tbfs
reason a child with pyelonephrllis should have a thoroush
study of the orlnary tract with
tlclney X rayo and upi&lt;lralloll
of the inside of the bladder with
a cyatoscope.
A wide variety of urinary antisepttcs have been used to
treat this disease. In general
ouch anliblolfcs ao streptomy•
ctn, k8JWDycln, the tetracyeUnes, chlerampbenlcal, amp~
dUin and coiiJUn ll't more ef·
fecUve than the lllllla clrup.
Wben the infecttorr 11 bl'cUihl
under control II II important
to use a Pl'Oilllylactlc
druc
auch u methenamine Dlllld•
late fir sis to nine 01011the to

Hado's They'll Do It Every Time

\JD.ycuM?

sht

10:30 a.m. Mine is usually ~ 1
_ ~ f-~taine r q f soup . .:-fr,om a
~i ng machine. We report
batk .at the set at 11 :30 a.m.

value of our currency and to banish in.

flalion." They have done just that. Our
eountry does not need gifts from other
lands, but as long as it reties heavily on
government deficils to finance its wel fare programs, foreign aid, gifts and a
multitude of low interest loans to many
favored projects we are going tn be in
trouble. It is way past time to put our
eeonomy in order based on a sound dolIll'.-

HELEN HELP US!
- b y H•••n •~-~

tJon that can only hurt every.
body: Jl has upset the whole sub-

THER~

and rast for the government to do something before it is too late. Probably the

more than

.break the line against tile clear
and present danger of an lnOa-

·moo.

Any · chronie or

prevent

recurrina

YIIIJTH ASKED FUR IT!
TbiJ column Ia for young people, their problem• and pleasures, their troubles and fun.
As with the rest of Helen Kelp
Us!, It welcomeo Jaugho but
won't dodge a serious question
with a brush-off.
Send your teeo-age queJUODJ
to YOUTH ASKED FOR IT,
care of Hela Help US! thll
newspaper.
COUNTRY UVING
IS CROWDED.

Dear Relen:
I have to laqh at u- city
kids who ..., aboul a f e w
utrao In lbelr blekyarc! pooll.
What about me? I
haftD'I
llept In my bod an llliiiiJIIOr btcau.. '"" lift near a mountalD
lake where avtrJbody wanll to
ap8ld their ....tloo .,.. free.
People we blrdly even kllow
dn&gt;p In to say "hello" lltld lltld
up apendJnc 1 week. They aol
Gilly take
my bod. but ,I'm
stuck blbyaltllq their lddi aiiO lor free! Housel:teplnc and
-~~~ and pu!Unl ap
wtlh
P"lPle bao jwt aboUI got m•
mother down. Every year she
saya, "Thll summer wilt be dU·
lerent." But evm if h weeded out the dropper-bmers, what
would we do with the "regulars" who write ahead of lime
and say, "Gue88 what, we11 bt
coming your way again lbla
year.'' - SLEEPING BAG
BLUES
Dear SBB:
Whet! yoo llvo In 91C111ionland, you've aotta be toup sayo thla aal who did .:. and
WUD't - lor many yean Ia
Oregon. Up to a point, llDDIDer
company it ftm, but whlll people start IIWIIIDC lbemselvea.
)'lUI" mother'• reply lbould bt,
''Sorry, we thl~ have room
lor you." - H.
Dear Helea:
Tho WOillllll who Uveo nen
deor telll my mother every Ut.
Ue thing my brother, alllen
and I do. My oldeol alster wu
.blby-slttlng us once when .my
brother and 1 bad a leud. Our

llllflhbor told my Mom, but
cllanged the ollry around
and got uo In 1111 trouble. WI
C!lll't 10 CMitalde but wblt we
pt -SPIED UPON P.B. Htr
kldl fl&amp;lll • lot _ .. than ••
do.
Dear S.U.:
Htlpfully tntmoted llfilhbora

.he

.

Ilf'*

Note 18 your IIIO!Mr1
way to oure an illformer it
with her own medlclllt. L el
each of her reporta "romlnd•
yoo of IIOIDelhlnf HER
ldcll
....amtd up. - H.

l'Vii1Ek BOME NEEDm
Dear Helen:
My mother dletl liz monllll
aco and my real fttthtr died
. ~everaJ years blell:. I am u,.
Ins with my ateplalhtr. 1 have
110 other relatives.
St•eral limea a weelt
my
stepfather cumes home drunk
and aomellmel Jtt b r In 1 1
friends with him. Whta - J 1
.friendll are with him II II
frllhteoilll, but .. far DOl ..

Uust be sure there's plenty
of cold and golden Hudepohl
I for your next picnic, back·
I
I, yard · cookout, patio party~
I '
get-together .•• iil the handy
,: · i~pack of' no, return boUles.)

bad.

But when bl Ia al.,. with
me, he oflln blall me tar 1111
reaSOIL He IIHIIII lo llljoy II.
I don't !mow what will bt nu:L
· 1 have ho - Ill 111111 to and
I can'l atancl IIIII IIIUeb laae•·
Plwo belp. - · AF1WD AND

ALONE AT It
Dear Afraid:
No teen-qer It 18\'tr an •
lone. But lhe muatltt IOIIIIOill
other than a Iaraway columalsl
kllllw abe aetda help. U yau
don't have 1 ebureh. of your
own, thea diOOit a mfllltter'a
aame from tbe teltpboaa book,
llld calJ ,.. Ill IJIIIIIiDIDietl
He'U see to it 1111 eourt1 lnv•
tllate your cU. and, bopefully. arr11111e to plaat yoo Ia 1
pd foster home. - 1L
Dear lleltn:
You may fllld lbll IIDIIllnl
but I Ibid It embaJTulllll,
1ibal do Jill do . ..... ' you
are at - " t. hotlle and HI
a roach crawUnc • 1be wr
Tltil hal htlppened to Dll oral times. - .ROACH BIIOA-

. , .Molt"" 'fl1
~SVI~
Mlf'/IOIP

IIENNIN61tllt,l'f',
'

..

~·

.,,

'

'.
'

'.
~

CHEB
Dear R.I.:
Treat the roacll the •
yoa'd treat a f\Y - ldU It II yoo
can. A •traliblfonnrd apo
proaeh It bttllr 1han IIJibu.
........ alienee.
CaolrarJ 18 popular thh!k!JW.
tbe prw8ICe of eoell:rolellla ltn't I aymbol of flUb. Somllimea
••• the price people Pl1 ro r
In old balna ar l'lldlo
lllfuttd DalillborbOou. - lL

•·

By the way,
don't forget Ul.e
•
Wleners
0
0 buns
0 mustard
0 baked beans
0 potato chips
0 tomatoes
0 corn-on-the-cob
0 butter
0 salt &amp; pepper
0 relish
D paper'plates
0 napkins
D knives &amp; forks
w charcoal
0 lighter fluid
0 matches
0 ice &amp; cooler

.

'

. ...

~

• ._ • •

f

.

~

:

''

llv""

.•.;

..
•

I

Wben lbla peophylactlc trea._
lllenl is' dllconUntled the lll'll'll·
lbouJd· bo cheehd at lb onee
• ·lliOIIth ·ror another IJ IIIOIItbJ
beeauoe '·pylloueptiyrula It del·
lllltely not a disease to trillt
with. "

~Mil A . , tV"

;

BERRY'S WORLD

t
I

a

hurt . defect (Wolff • P~
1011 • Wltlte !lytldromel With a
beart. murmur. what It
tho
..... lllil ; whit are the C!ban. ""' for lmpnvemeo11
A - 1'lil c op.dlal Jttalt
deftel ' .. charll!lertled by ...
·taea 111 . 1u1 plllse mo
ar . IDOI'e btall per litfnute),
. · QUlnhflno;' protalne amkla
. IIIII dlgltalla hare bNn ftand
to ' bt benelleill In •bol!l lhat
older of' prefertnet. I'll liOn""
l!liJidrell lht attaob &amp;Nrl 1111
lll'tnl . . ., .....

ildlr.

,,..

i

I
d

,··.

•

Beautiful

~

..fjl

. II!
',

~~ ~

I&lt; .•

,·,

~

v..,

·~·-

i8oora - I&lt;COI'dJDily. - H.

a recurrence.

Q - Our 1-year.old ... has

.

... line, but _ , blftrllltll
start more feudi than !bey slop.
I hope your mother recognizee
the difference and llate111 - "

"

.,
.

.

.

'i

•
,.

.. · ·"~·

..

"r

. .._-:-·

'

.'
,"~.

-~ ,:!'""~ iHE H~.~PC ~ Blt~W :~G CO~PANY Of Cl,.....
' (,

·-;

;.

I"

.

"'·'

'

,.:

;':".~

'f' .'

fl.,.-..
.

...

'

."(

,,

'

�l

~ -

'\/

..

'I

North Viet Nam Plastered

WOON (UP!)
A
Ai
·
1
':O.w. flew a - mercan.
r Force Flll5 Thunderchiel
...,...
m- Jet
theybom?ers
said durmg the attack,,
::!l::ono
Mond ay agams
record! Col39
~ North Vie
.
.
·
IQilltary install til Na~, ~~~ Air Force long-distance helil!lpPiJ depot. e~ns, ue
copters . picked up one of the
·tiM linea ~ co~unlca- three pilots and addmg more
l\!jiOrled bta ·5· spo esmen drama to the rec?rd daydrescued
ed an Amertca.n plio_ t
y.
Three plenes were shot down . own .26 hoors prevmusly m
IP.okesmen refused to disclose North VIet Nam about 25 mtles
Whether they were victims of south of the Communist ~hiRussian-supplied surface·to-air nese border an~ 100 miles
missiles (SAM'S) or convention- northwest. of Hanoi.
el anU-aircraft fire. One pilot The ~J!ot . had parachuted
was ~scued and helicopters when his Air Force RFlOl
also picked up an American Voodoo photo reconnaissance
llrman downed in Sunday
alcb
r In
Sooth, rv
said
0

~

Area businessmen were
cautioned today to be on

~~~is~~~:u:of:~t!~?.,~

plane
was
shot
down jover North VietNam Sunday
Viet
N
S
d
A
during raids over
North mstead of the seven announced
un ay.
record 1by U.S. spokesmen.
1 am
seven U.S. planes were downed ' Pilots on Monday's raids
during those raids.
reported seeing eight surfaceToday's air losses brought to to-air missiles (SAMS) as they
329 the number of U.S. planes destroyed bridges, warehouses,
shot. down by North Vietnamese anti·a·trcraft si·tes, fuel dumps
durmg the two-year-old air war and surface vehicles at targets
against tlle north.
near Thanh Hoa Vinh HaiClaims Six Planes
phong, the Mu Gi~ Pass: Dong
Hanoi Radio claimed that six Hoi and Hanoi.
planes were downed over its The old record af 121
territory Monday. The radio missions was set by Air Force
broadcast also claimed that 'j and Navy raiders July l5 and
nine U.S. bombers were lost equalled the next. day.
',

c f cNames Action Committees for year

s~kesmen

w~nt

ney was reported In Hunt•
ingtonandCharlestonyos·
tarday.
5 ecret service agents
gava the following description of tho bills:
Federal Reserve Note
of the San Francisco FedAll bill
era
I Reserve
District,
1950
1
ser as.
s boar
the serial number

~t~~~o:~rsAi.s ~~:4~, P~~~~

~~:sb:~~~~~te has the fig-

~:f%~,..Y'i&amp;/k'W0.x&amp;still$.W;~

w·mds, Ram,
.

Moon c·Ireling Ph.oto Lab to beLannehed
CAPE KENNEDY (UPI) - SUrveyor
I spacecraft, the the lunar surface, the Orbltot
A flying pbotographlc labora-llunar Orbiter's main J'ob is to will swoop into a lower patb
tory was set lor launch today ]look for smooth landing areas than will carry ll within 21
on an attempt to swing into an 1 for the four-legged
ApollD miles of the moon every
orbit around the moon to in- moonships.
1 hours.
spec! nine potenti al Apollo as- If all goes well, the 85o-pound · Then, for a week while
tronaut landing sites.
craft will lire a braking rocket I moon revolves beneath it, tho
The picture-taking
moon Saturday to end its 238,944 mile lunar Orbiter's camera will
!me
I ll't1 e was sc I1eduIed
Ior 1voyage and sw In g Into an orbit 1photograpb nine separate arNt&lt;t
launch at 2 03 p.m., &lt;EDT), •around
the moon.
It
is along a belt following
the
atop an Atlas-Agena rocket
scheduled to snap its
first moon's equator £rom east
It marked another step in sencs of test pictures on Aug. west. Half of its pictures
America's drive to land men on 18.
be able to detect object!!
the moon by 1969.
I After circling the moon for small as a car table on
Although it will get a glimpse nine days in an orbit ranging moon.
of the moon's mysterious back [rom 125 to 1,150 miles above li-~;;_====--=--,
side and peer down at the dead -~---- - .
I 16 0 f 31 K'll I
MOUNT CARMEL
0 .
I '"
SHIRT
(UPI)
- Susan
Belts
22 months,
was K.found dead Not
COLUMBUS (UPil
_ At least

"c'arpent~~~

HI"t Central
Ohio AreaS

Middleport Loses 7-6 to Waverly in Oak Hill Tourney
Middleport, defending champ-

IDna, was ....d out of the Oak
Bill Poay TournameJtt Monday
night 7-8, by a determined, welleoached Waverly club, cham]&gt;loas of the Pike County Pony
League.
Down 4-0 alter two iunlngs,
Waverly took advantage of five
Middleport errors and to knot
the oount at 6-8 In the sixth, ·
then get home the winning run
Ia the bottom of the seventh oa
two auecessiva throwiag bob._-_

'I

~-- -

1

IJsin~:

DAY

TIJe Pomeroy Chamber
of
down Monday rught wh1 le Commerce prepared
Monday
taking part in Operation Paul i for the year ahead by appointRevere, 11 mil~s southeast. of ment of new commit.tees, with
Amtri~~n bastion of Ple1ku. newly re-el~ted President Jack
They -..rud both
cho~p.ers Ctrse~ callmg for a 12 ~ month
crashed ~ burned .. ~~ll~ng Pan r.om ea~h committee at
aeven Amencans and mJunng the next meetmg.

SERVICE

AUTO
BATTERY

BIKE BUY!

Drawmgs
• f
Facility are
GI'ven Approval

s31 95

95

s~t

Mrs. R

rec~d

II

DI'es m' West

Wall Paint
3

Faces FI.ri"ng
ByAider1nen

Line Scores

(6-4)1
")

and Roof. LP-Keal tF"

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!'fl. ~ :~:

(42 lnnlnist
, ,' .,,
Det
020 000 010 tJeZ- 5 ll.l.:

Nattoul League
(lsi game)

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ibe

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4

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=-~~ =~
~

Rchrd~

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a:!·~ ~~ •iorre~~v~:
G~ls ~
Cub~
indians

Sllh\ 1:Y

(Only games scheduled)

AmerLc.. League
Cleve
00 I 000 0011- 1 7 2
Boston
100 002 OOx- 3 10 I
Bell, Radatz (81 and Azcue;
SaRtiago (11-81 and Ryan LPBell (tZ-8). HRs---Azcue (6th),
1
fl&amp;iili-1 Scott !21st). __

'

SETTLES
QUESTJON.
I

"When you have an accident,
who is more likt~Jy lu nelp )'OU- .
:m i.ndrpendenl agen[ or a onecompany s:..les man·:" An impar- ·

!ial survey by a na1ionally rec

·:.

000 00 I OllO- I 7 0 1 1izctl re~c::&lt;~rch organiurton ~ .•
9 out of 10 indepe~ent ~ -·;
bore Kan City
031 020 OOx- 6 10 0 i pmved:
!gt:n\s help wi lh claims. A far ·'
1
Kaat, Siebler (3), Kllppstein ~ower percentRKC of otber asenta .. · .(5), Plelll 17) and Nixon; ~sll ~ Jo. We're 1mk- :f'CO&lt;Iem age nts.
~ ·.:. .:_

~peel

TO GET AWARD

TENNIS SHOES

PITI'SBURGH (UPI) -Pitoutfielder Roberlu Clewill be presented the
Bat Award,
eymbobc
of
the National
League
batting
cham 1 hi .... w
Gil
Pons _p, "' arren .. ..
presiden~, Ill ceremo~Ies
N
game against

For All The Family

.. -

-·

.. . 1. •••

DOWNING ' ·
Insurance Agency, Inc •.
Agents

~~Is

ew

,~J.~

Call us.

Roush's Shoe Store

I

-t.

Bill Childs

Rodney Downig :'
•

Mlddloprt, 0.

FLOWERS

1 30

Go flameless ... put on a happy face I
•

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DUDLEY'S

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Sitting tight 'til Fall so you can save
biaooanewcar? Don't!

Yooar OW. Deal..- Ia oayiag YES on every model!
........ • w.ll Ulllll!ll Pt.ll for a bla: bu' 021. • new Olda.
. . d , .r l'U. Blllftde.IM YES. !-.,ery OW.~

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Clemenlll led the league with

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·

:o •

MIJm

"I&amp; IMD1t wo'va
b"fon, DoD

New York at Pittsburgh- Minnesota at CeWornla, n!gbl the wlag-T eflense.
ville re-injured the hamstriDC
25 en,
Rlbeot (7-4) vs. Fryman (811). Chicago at Kansas City, night Brian Healy, who played un- Am.rteaa Leaguo: F Robin- musclo in hla rlgbl leg. ·
1:15 p.m.
Detroit at Washington, night
der Seaman at SandoW, Is alOrioles 13 . ~!tone
The Sooth bas lost &lt;lid Qluek
Los Angeles at Atlanta- Baltimore at New York
most cerlaln to draw the start,
Powell
'Orioles
McNeal,
Columbw! Brookhaven,
25
Kouft!X (18-5) vs. Lemaster (9- Clevelanl at Boston
los quarterback asslgnmeol Ia Colavito
24· Killebrew who is bothered by an old knee
B). : p.m.
the north's slot-T and 1 forma· Twlu.;.. Wb!Weld' Jodians '1!1.: Injury. Eod Fritz Reed, Lae&lt;:ao-1
9 05
San FrancisCo at CIRCinnaU- MARlCHAL S!DEUNED
lions.
.
RGDJ Batted ID
ler, bas a slight concussioa
Gibbon (3-8) vs. Pappas (6-8). CINCINNATI (UPI) -Juas Seaman Ia espected lA I'Ve Nalloul League:
Aaron, wblch could keep him out.
1:05 p.m,
Marichal, ace of the San the nod 111 Cleve B ry 8 1 I, 01 Braves 115· Clemente Pirates
Philadelphia at Sl Louls- Francisco Giants' pitching staH Canton • Glenwood, as the lead- 11• Tom' Braves ' Stargel~ TRADE McGUIRE
Bunning tl2-7) vs. Jaster t8-3). will be unable to piU:b In the er of the north's Oklahoma d&amp;- PJi.~~ea
JIIBys, Gtants 73_
DETROIT (UP!) -Tho Bailie p.m.
foor-game series agalnsl the fens•. lie will rua the unit from kerteaa League: B. Robin- more Coils Monday
Wednesday's Games
Cincinnati R&lt;)ds lhil week a safety posltioo.
SOli, Orioles 83 ; Powell, Orioles rookie end Johe McGuire ol
Houston at Chicago
because ol an .IDI~ ankle. . -tioul League IIIPd~JII a; F'. Robinson, Orioles 78; Syracuse to tile Detroit
New York .. at Plttsblll'1!h, night The Domlnicae righthander, By u.ttod Prell IDieruliaal Horton, Tigera 70; Killebrew, for a Mure drafl choice. ·
Los Angeles at · Allanta, night wbu b 17-4 this year, stepped
w. J.. Pel. GB Twlu 114.
McGwre, a &amp;-foot-3, •
San Fran at Cincinnati, night on a bell while running In .tho Collllllbus
83 51 .553 Pltchlnl
pounder, Is m:pected to replace
Philedelpbia at st. Louis, night outfield before Sunday's Gloats- Rochester
114 5S _.
Nolfonal
Letgue: Regaa, the m)ured Hon Kramer ud
AmOrleaa League
Cube game 8!"i sprained bis Toro•to
62 .54 .534 S Dodgon 10-1: Perry, Glanta 17- Jim Glbboa at tight~·
'W.L. Pct.GB ankle.
Toledn
t1t1 5I .ItT I S; Marlchal, Gl81118 17-41 PlUSONERS EXCHANGED
71 39 .645 ...
.
,
BuHalo
5I iii .513 ~ . Koufu:, Dodgen 1&amp;-6; Malooey, JERUSALEM (UPI) -Foor
Baltimore
60 50 .545 11 GIANTS CUT THREE
Ridunlllld
II rr , .• ~. Redo 12-t
Ieraeli and alx Syriae prls111181.S I
Delr&lt;&gt;it
59 52 .532 121&gt; FAIRFIELD, Conn. (UP!) - Jacksonvllle
li2 ·11 .480 10\i , . _ . . t.eape: McNelly, were e~chqed at a border
Cleveland
fil 53 .418 14 Three tackles, Lucian Veaezllt- Syracuse
43 7C .388 21~ Orioles 11-3; Santoni; Angels po!ll north of Lake T!berlal
Calilornla
67 55 .509 15 no of c. W. Post College, Bob
MaadaJ't a..lla
~i Walt; Orioles 1-3: Palmer, Mooday. Oee of the SyrlaM
Mtnaesota
St; St; .500 16
Meeker of Notre Dame and Ju: I Rdlalr 2, !st. 7 loillnp Orlqlea and BoawaD, Twins JU. was ldenllfled as MobamDI'Id
Chicago
50 61 .450 21\l. Dick Ilerzlag of Drake, were Jacksollvllle 3 Roeheeter 2, :lad
Orner Arifa, said 10 bove beeD
New York
50 Ill .450 21~ dropped !rom the New York Buffalo f T~eda I
Oldetl museum of modenl aa lllelllgenee ageal wbo w..
Kansas €ily 51 611 ,440 23 Glanla' ros!A!r Monday, culliD&amp; Syr_.. I R1clunond &amp;, 11 lila tlmel· ·IS ·tho AshmOlllll Muse- eentenced to 15 yearo Ill jail iQ'
'II'aehinglon
48 fl .417 25~ the squad Ill. 50 players.
Co!Ulllbua • TorooiO I ·.
. om at Olfonl University.
the lsrlll.lla Ia 1I1M.
Boston

:::h

MOORE'S IN POMEROY

I

southsquad

ODS

~0~

HOUSE
PAINT

==-------·-. -. --.1

•

Of ~IDI

River News

AtIanta Cop

stngfJd'"'

For Waverly, Vamey
twice, Swlnning singled !llld::
dQubled, and DeVito singled. ·'"'''?A
Middleport · . 220 002 -ti 1.. 5;;l
Waverly ..... 1101 131 1-7 6-iho;
Dell108key (LP), Ingels '( 5of"l
and B. Lewis. Dixon ud Chatil-· '
berll.
·.. ~ .,..

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g
IS
Ki kin
·S
db
tresse y

Nllllooal Leap
G. All. R. H. Pet.
M.Alou, Pill 'II 359 51 123 .343
CANTON UPI) - There Is a J'.Alou, AU 112 485 82160 .330 CANTON, Obio tUPI) - The
cllfferenee ol opinion betwem Clmnle, Pill 1113 429 418141 .329 South team put the empheslll
101330 47108 .S2'7 kickq In todlly's workouts,
11J UDttetl Press IDternaltooal
MondRf'l llesilts
two Ohio football coaches.
Carty, AU
National League
00 5 Waeh ,3, U,, lnns., night And ril!hUY so for they will SlarJ!ll, PI~ : : ~ :~~ ·~ while t!Je North plaened to coltW L. Pet GB Kan City 6 M!nnNOtiJ ·1 ntght oppose each other here at 8:30 Cepeda, 5
·
centrale •• the offense iD pre•
'
-•
' ·
Fr'd
ben the tlsl
Morgan, Hou 70 253 !4 80 .316 parati011s lor the Ohio AJI-Slar
Pittsburgh
M 46 .582 ... Boston 3 Clevela,.. I, nll!hl
p.m. 1 ay w
1111- Helms Cln
92 3&amp;7 50 !12 314 · Scb001 footb 11
Fr&gt;San Francisco 66 48 . .578 ... (Only games scheduled)
DUal Ohlo NortlrSouth football Santo.' Chi 102 369 6311&amp; ·.312 High .
a game
Loll Angelea 63 46 .578 llo I Tuesday'• . Probable Plt&lt;bero classic wlll be played at Faw- Allen, Pbll 110 332 7!103 .310 1da~0 :::ght
ill
tin
Plffiadelpbla 60 &amp;1 .541 41&gt;
Slarlblg Times (EDT)
cett StadlliDI.
.
11lams
w
eon
ue
1
It Louis
57 53 518 '
Minnesota at CallforRia- South Coach Dick Walker, of
Amerlcaa Leagoe
twiCe • • day drills
Cincinnati
57 St; :509 I Gflllll (8-12) vs. Lopez (4-10). ColliDibus • W at or I oo IJigh
G. All. R. B. Pet. 'lbursday. The North will
Atlanta
52 59 .468 12\l. 11 p.m.
School, setd be bases hil victory Oliva, Mlnn 110 427 6'1137 .321 practice Friday, but the Soulll
HoostoR
49 61 .445 15
Chicago at Kansas City- prediction oo a south sqORd that Kaline, Det 93 328 63104 .317 may don shorta to run lbrou&amp;b
315
New York
48 61 .445 15 Howard (i'&gt;-3) vs. Blanco (1-1). I II big and fast.
I'.Rban, Bal 108 39'1 86125 ·
plri!
:led 00 defenle
Cbloago
36 73 330 2'1\l. p m
North Coach Bob Seaman. of B.Rban, Bal 110 440 73 131 .298
ornlng 11111 olfeue
Monday's Hesulti
. ~lr&lt;&gt;ll at Washlnglon-WR· llfaealllon High School former- Vt.tae, Wu lUI 371 59110 .293 Mooday m and lbt Soutla
0
Cia tO San Fran 8, 1st, twlligh\ son (11-9) va. Kreutzer (o-1) . ty of Saldulk;y, said
team Berry, Chi
992114 36 63 .292
M8an Fran' Cblcl 5, 2nd, night 8:11&amp; p m.
that bits the hardest will wiD
Cal 88317 48 92 .290 Each team
expected
Allan ta 10 Loa Angeles 9' ntghl Baltimore at New York- and ... "That's
myd11)am."
365 11100
.288 bave two meo watching lrom
2'11'&gt;Cln lnnall Powell,
Borlun Bal
Del 104
1111321
48 82 :JJ!7
(Only games scheduled)
Palmer 112-5) vs. Peterson 18- Six-1oot-4,
poun
c
'W
' Cl 100 344 53 1111 .285 the sidelines Friday nll!ht beTaeoday's Probable Pllcherl 7). 8 p.m.
TaU tacllle Jim Pearaoo w~l be aJIIIOI', e
cause of !ljurtes.
tSiarll•g Times EDT)
&lt;;Ieveland at Bostoa-IIatgal the malnsiiiY of the south s 4-8
Home Jlunl
For the North, light
1
Bousto• at Cblcago--Giusli (7-6) vs. Jlennelt (1·1). 7:30 defeiiSI wblle Dayton-W r I« ht
Mike Kaydo, Ashtabula, re(11-11) vs. Ellaworth ti'&gt;-111). 2:30 p.m.
halfback Tony
Ma;
celved a shoulder inJ1111 aad
211 . 'Santo
p.m.
\Vecbelday's Gamee
the 100 In 9.1 seeo •
All ' Phllliea
Hart,' Gianls fullback Tom Cble- of Loull-

•

FABRIC and
VINYL DYE

HOUSE
PAINT

10
eecond on what Jibd 1o go 81
an Infield s•·••e, with every...,.
body oefe " the bell was play•
ed to second base. Both numers
advanced oo a passed ball, and
Dalton, after fanning, ran 10
first base when the catcher
dropped the ball. A wlld throw
to first, and a bad throw home
to catch Folll corning in let In
.::n:::
il and the gBIRe

.::bll::..::•..:fi~y..:b:.::ell::..:doWII=:_--W.::.•:::v:.::er:::Jy'...::woo=-:lt: .: .:l l:. tl!e=..bo:.:tl.::.o:::m:__.::the::..::w.::lnnl
::
=n,_g

LEADERS

Coaches have
Difference

•

The spokesmen said that U.S.
Two others. were employed,
Air Force Navy and Marine
and one reS!gnahon accepted
planes
153 targets up ' New Heart Working last mght by the North Gallla
USSe
Of
and down North Viet N rn tD .
Board. The board accepted the
All sizes in boys
aurpass the month-old
ol HOUSTON - A 37 - YEAR - resignation. of Nancy
Bass,
old Mexican woman was report- North Galha H1gh School.
TO RENEW CAR AND
121 m!sslons In one day. A ed .. r
.
.
m1ssi is
tt ks
P ogressmg sahs1actorily'•
and girls models.
HOME UPHOLSTERY
oo --•~'::loorsedmorne abeac f today with the aid of an artilic- . Etrumpltooyed tas physical fitness Mr!. Ruth E. Russell,
73,
by an """""'
urn
r
o
·al
heart
de
.
.
lied
b
ms
c
rs
a
North
Gallla
High
C
1.1
ssed
J
5
pluea
1
vtce ms1a
y Sch 1
an ose, a 1 ., pa
away
LARGE SPRAY CAN
00 ":ere Carol Ann Cottrell, Saturday in a San Jose hospitOTHERS, 39.95 up
'
. . Dr. Michael DeBakey.
lnteose Communist anti-air- Mrs. Esperanzoa del
Ville Rt. I Bidwell, and Frank Bul- al. Born May 24 • 1893 in Meigs PT. PLEASANT - It
was
craft fire brought down three Vasquez underwent four - hour ~ock, Rro Grande. Miss Cottrell County, she was the daughter anno~nced today that .plans ~nd
surgery Monday to beco
U IS a graduate of Morehead State of the late Emma and Harvey Idrawmgs for a 5o-umt housmg
third person in which ~nee ~; College, Morehead, Ky.,
and Russell. One son, Paul, also facthty for the elderly
have
REG. $2.49
DeBakey's artificial heart de- Bullock, a 1966 graduate of Rio preceded her in death.
' ~n approved. by the federal
vices were implanted. The oUt- Grande College and member of Surviving are her husband, ousmg ?uthonty and sent to
GauJ• readlnss:
Gallipolis er patients died within days of t!Je Redman basketball squad. Robert Russell; three brothers, the llousmg and Urba~ DeveiALL STAR
'Chicago Chief'
'Economy' Outside
Dam 11.7, 11.9, running llh feet their operation. DeBakey's de- The new basketball coach is Roy and Milton, both of Mid- j'me~t Admmtstr~twn m
LATEX
on the rol1ers, Pomeroy-Mason vice allows a tired human heart
dleport, and Edward, San Jose; elph!a for a rev1ew and final
20.10, PL Pleasant 23.70, Hin- to re.st and to heal itself while
two sisters, Mrs. Naomi Thomp- a~~roval.
,,
ton .72, Ka!!Bwha Falls 2.28, a "left ventricular bypass"
son and Mrs. Katy Pierce, both
Fort Randolph _Terrace. Is
. Charleston 11.79. London, Mar- pumps blood
of Columbus, and several nieces the name of the umque proJect.
me( and Winfield dams were
·
and nephews.
Total cost is estimated at $834,G1Uon
5.99
99
.79
Value _ _ gal,
'
gallon
Only
0ii' lhe sills.
Mrs. Russell was a member 000.
Boat . Movements:
New Hearings
of the Christian Church
of Pt. Pleasant's Housing AuthRiver - Onward down WASHINGTON _ THE IN
San Jose, a past deputy grand ority include Milton Miller, ClarPHONE
a.m.; Peggy Downev terstale Comm..-ce CommiSSIO~
matron of Eastern Star No. 34; ence Anderson, Paul . Rairden,
992·2848
7:30p.m.; F. H. Johnson (ICC) was asked Monday by
pa•t matron of the OES Cha!&gt;- James H. LewiS, charrman G.
d01~LC, 11:30 p.m.; Lady Mig- the u s. Justice Deparbnent ATLANTA (UP!) :_ The city ter 219 of Mill Valley,
past A. B1ggs and Sherwood Costen,
~ ~=:f;=14~, 5:40 a.m.; An- to hold new hearings before it board of aldermen win decide noble grand of Blythesdale Re- ""ecutive director.
up 14, 6:50 a.m.; allows the Pennsylvania and tonight whether to fire a traffic becca Lodge No. SO!i, a mem· l
down 15, 2:15 a. New York Central railroads to policeman accused of cursing ~er of Umt No. 284 of the Amer·
down .15, 3:55 a. consummate their
approved and waving a pistol at Mrs. tcan Legion Auxi~iary, and a
of St. LouiS up 15, 6 merger.
Henry Aaron, wife of the member ol the Mill
Valley
~ tun.(iliriJm B. up 16, B p.m.; Justice Department attor- Atlanta Braves' star center~ Outdoor Art c~ub. .
down 16, 3:20 a.m.; Deys, in a brief, asked that the fielder.
I Funeral services w11l be Friup 16, 3:45 a. hearings be held on
'bl
Negro state Sen. Leroy day at 3 p.m. •DST) at the Fo~nt down 16,_ 4:- damages to competitor:O~Jh: Johnson, acting as attorney for gleso~g Funeral home in MasAHqutppa up 16. :&gt; a. brief also said the com~ission Mrs. Aaron, said Monday he on . With Rev. ~arne~ Morrison
Bosworth down 16. ''shoukt consider allegations" will ask the board's police vffiCI~ tJng .. Bunal Will be
in
et:Jss Jr. up 17, lB:- that the merged carrier would committee to dismiss patrol- the RivervieW cemetery. Friends
~~~:!Dixi~~~e~!ui!p:;l7, 11 :45 p. be able to control the Norfolk man L. W. Bedgood for rnfay call
at the Funeral Home
~
down 17• 5 and Western Railroad (N&amp;W) "behavior unbecoming an offi- aRter 171 ?.m. on Thursday. Mr.
up 17 , 6:50
· cer.,
usse 1s a partner of the Ru!Jup 19, 6: 15
A Braves' spokesman said Be~l-Gooch Funeral Home
of
Elgcercl!lf up 20, 4:20 a. W ouhl Prosecute
.
ld
h'
Mill
Valley
where
services
were
.
11ve w11nesses 1o
down
1m 01e held tnd
.
20 6
down
: :·:·: WASHINGTON- REP. ROB- officer waved a pistol at Mrs.!..-;;;;;;;_;,'~Y;_·
23 12 30
Slate u~ 23 ' 5, IS ~- crt Sweeney, D-Ohio, asked the Aaron during a traffic jam at lr
~~! down 23, 6:50 a: Justice Department Monday te Atlanta Stadiw_n and sai.d, "11
De
down Greenup 7 prosecute Stokely Carmichael, blow y~ur_ brams out, mgger." j
R. down Greenup head of the Student Non-Vio- The mc1dent aHegedly ocOVEC up Greenup 1:10 lent Coordinating Committe.: curred July 30, when Mrs.
. J. Patten up Green- (SNCC) for advocating refusal Aaron said the officer insisted
a.m.; Luther Herdman to comply with the draft.
she move her car when the
6:45 a.m.;
Flag !be Cle~eland congressman road was bloc~ed .
Greenup 7:30 a.m.; sa1d. ?arm1chael had violated Bedgood. sa1d Mrs. Aaron
Qu~n up Meldahl 4:10 proVISions of the
Universal cursed h1m and refused tt
J. S. Lewis up Meldahl Military Training and Sen'ices answer when he questioned her.
up Mel- Act which provides a penalty A coalition of 2.2 Negro civic
Eastern
':;f'';.;;~rui~·l . : Alton Zephyr of up to five years and a $10,0001 dubs, led by the Atlanta Gras
~
4 a.m.; Western fine for anyone who "aids. a· Roots Council, suppor.ted the
Meldahl 5:45 a.m.
bets or counsels" others to re- demand that Bedgood be fired.
J~~~r,'~~· Dam Solvay fuse to cnmply wth t!Je law.
"We refuse to sit by and see
.~
p.m.; R. H. Bosour Negro women, or any
~~~o1jti'' : down 5:10p.m.: Jenk• No Malice
women lor that matler, so
1
a.m.; Elisha Woods
brazenly insulted and . tormentWill Convey
a.m .: New
Orleans AUSTIN, TEX. - CHARLES ed by such flagrant abuse of
a.m.; John J. Rose A. Whitman, Jr., lather of the the law," said Benny T. Smith,
Your
a.m.; Louisiana up 5:30 University of Texas student who president of the council.
Sympathy
killed 16 persons in a sniper at- "Many incidents of pistol
When Words
~e most wanted• fea_ture on a freezer ia automatic self-defrosting. It
Rl&gt;er -Beaver up tack, met Monday with the po- waving by gun happy police
eluninates
meuy do-It-yourself" defrosting forever. Saves you time fqr
1:40 a.m.; W. H. Sha· !iceman who killed his
son. have gone unnoticed and
Fail You
down Winfield 7 p.m.; He embraced the officer.
unreported like this one/'
other thinp. A lll!lf-defl'Oiting electric freezer gives you more usable space
Merrill down Winfield "I have no
anhno•ity," Smlt!J added.
to stock up on those frozen food and meat specials. Means fewer trips to
Charles Stevenson Whtlman tearfully told Ramiro
----the ~ store, too. .Make your next major appliance a self-del~
ll p.m. ; H. E. Bow- Martinez, 29. "In fact I have
WEATHER
electric freezer.
Winfield I a.m : He!- res~ct lor you for doing your Cooler 111 east early toni ht.
1
Wcnfceld 1:50 a.m.: . JOb. Th~ elder Whibnan said Hick today 70s nortbwo t 1!b
59 N. 2nd Ave•
. Sllearer down Winfield j 't was an "e~~tional meeting iD east and south, low :.:olgbt
Middleport, 0.
See v. our flameleaa electric appliance dealer tod.ayl t-h•
••
co.·
ANO tcMMnN OHIO llfCniC COMMNr
lor both of us.
IH5. Wednesday fair and eotl. l

will

~ ~epor;h o; ~ike,~~~

BICYCLES

'1\odel

ill the lop of the seventh, Vaa
Jobmoo slnlled wit!J one out
but eouldR't gel beyond secoad
base u Bob Lewis fanaed, and
Den Lewis, pinch hitting . for
__G:::reg=.::Wbl=ltc..,

ef the fiDal lrlllllt when
one out, F'olll walked, got

the rll!ht lleld IIna !bat II a J
rlghlflelder GulllaD of Waverly
dived for and lllk:raculOUBly
caught.
.bother -IIOUI de!eDalvt
play was made earlier by thirdsacker Varney of · Waverly.
LeadiBJ off the Middleport llflh,
Lee Floyd bll 1 IICOI'dler just
Inside the lhlrd bue bag which
Varaey dived for, sprawling,
oame up with the ball, a 1 d
throw Floyd out at llrsl base.

~:~ tha~"u:':~m&lt;~o"t'~: .~~a!'·

HUFFY

WORLD

1

bobble at secORd base on a
grouud ball 10 leadoU baller
Swinnlng, a bit batsman, pu~
tilg two em, 1 walk, and a bobble at third base on another
1!1'011"'1 bell.

C~c~b
~~~~
~~: a~~ld~:~~:~· i!:~"·N~~,h~;:

Werem~~~®@~for~~~~ ~~~~

l

Jived.

__::in~gs:.,.::.b:::ef:::ore::..:be::::lng~r:::eli::'e:::ved=--b~Y:___~.::':.•v::er::ly!..::lled=..::lt~·::::B:::al=n~at::..tt-tl::..:..

t. the bottom of the obtth oo

i ,cq~
was over.
r~:'!ol~~HM!ddleport bitten Wet&lt;! Soh!I'•'UI
aun aRd !lave Dodson eaell:'llliilit
Bingle, and Bob Lewis and Colil&lt;l&lt;u,
• eacb two singles.
.., :.~

Sentine~

MOORE'S

15·

righthander Joha lnlell with
the score 4-3, atill favorlnl Mid·
dleport Ill the fifth. lnlels aave
up a two-run slnlle 10 DeVIto,
first batter be faced, lhel! fan.
Ded Fall! 1o end the bmlng.
Middleport got """' agaia Ia
the obtth and went one up, at
11-tl ill the lislb oo Bob Lewlll'
lead off single, two BJTOnt, and
Jim Conde's single.
But the advantage wae ahol1-

;;IA&amp;

0

CINCINNATI (UPI) Glgao- Coker, ooddlng t.ward 1loe Gl- of the uploaloe lauched elf bJ added IIIIOibeP Ill tile eeeoad to Sa• Fran 100 311 1100- 6 12 1 Was
000 000 003 OllO- 3 lO};io
9
Dally
Pomeroy-Middleport, 0., Aug. 8, !96S-6
.
tic Willie McCovey of San uts' elubboUie and the 32,552 Tommy Harper's slnslt. Deroo eend him lo 1M ahowers.
Cine!
010 252 OOx-10 14 I \ 9Podres, Sherry 1 1, ,AJlUll"'!l:,
Franclsco Is u awesome lei- fans - largest crowd at Cros- Johnson followed with a linSedecki, Herbel (4), Priddy ( ), Wick~rsham ii), Gladdiq(-;i_
low to aay pitcher, but he bas ley Field In two yeant- would gle, his third slralgbt lilt, aad off'llle:::: ~ o;.J: lb"..!~~ (6) and Haller, Virgil 17); , (12), Lohch m) and McFa;;,:
11•
been downright murderous to agree.
Art Shamsky doubled ill a ruJL
s
_ Maloney, Davidson &lt;61, and I Iane : M&lt;{;orrn~ek . _eox &lt;Ul,.-_
those of the ClnclnnaU Reds.
Tito Fuente's error let In the two, more ill tho third on John Coker, Edwards &lt;6). WP- Kfme (9), Humphre)S (10) aruJ:.,
The Glsnb' first
baseman The Reds bad baiUed hack ' secood run aRd Card..,.. slam- soo s double and bolted the Maloney (12-4) . LP- Herbel ,4_ Casanova. WP-W~ekersham c6,"
gave ·another display Monday !rom a 4-1 deficit In tbe opener med his homer.
ecore at i&gt;-5 In the fourth 011 a 41 _ Cardenas (!Jth), Hart 2) . LP- Humphrey• 14-2 ). HR~::
night as the Reds split twl • by clobbering .three Giants
walk lo Harper and singles by (25 th), Helms (8th).
Howard il3th)
8
night doubleheader, winning the pllchero lor 14 hill!.
In the sixt!J Pete Roae dou- Coker, Baldschun and Rose.
j
-first lo-2 and losing the second Leo Curdenas' three-rua h&lt;&gt;- bled and Tommy Helms rapped The game saw Harper's 24 - (2nd game)
iOnly games scheduled)
'
.&amp;.
mer capped a five-run rally 19 Bob Priddy for hts Oljfht!J ho- game hlltillg streak ended. Hal lSan _Fran 410 0011 m- 7 12 n
..,
10 3
1
7
Cincinnati battied hack from the fifth lnnlns t!Jat proved de- mer of the season.
Lanierr making a leaping catch
M
STRIKE !,USSES
'
1
1
a 5-l deficit In the nlghteap to clsive.
Ted Davidson took over lor ol a line drive bid in the ninth
on. c ~me . I. •nry
WA,HING'~'ON •cPI) -Near:·
a i&gt;-5 deadlock and had visions .Sail Francisco had gotten It Maloney iD the siXth and al· for a hit. John had five hits . in
. ··
,,, workers were
of a sweep to gam
needed JIDI Maloney for SIX runs eo lowed only two hits the rest of mne tr1ps to the plate, dnvmg (B). d Cok
Ed d (9] C;y ;tnkes during &lt;he first . ~gi~;.
ground in the standings.
10 hila in the five Innings. Tbe the way to preserve Maloney's in three &amp;Rd scoring three.
WP__"~ D . ~r,(7-4l w~~_'_B ld: of 1966 - the l.rges &lt; number
But up stepped McCovey ia attack Included homers by Wll- 12th win.
Tooight Milt Pappas (9-8) is h c (;~~~
HR-McCo~ev for a comparable period sinclr
the seventh Inning tD poke the lie Mays, McCovey, Jim Hart Sammy Elllll didll' t have It scheduled to work for the Reds ~ ~·~
·
!955 , according to the Labor
ball out of the park to break and Len Gabrielson.
as he was bombed by t!Je G~ against Bob Eblin (6-8).
r ·
1 Department.
t!Je tie at the expense of reliev- The Reds bed a single run iD ants in the first !ramo of the The Reds wen'! have to face
,
-,
1
er Jack Baldschun, handed his the oecood and two in
the nightcap. The Gianls waited Juan Marichal (17-4). He lnjur- Los Ang
020 100 123- 9 13 1 !ned
fifth Joss 1n six decisions.
fourth before key rally, those until two ':'ere out and thea ed bis ankle Sunday at Chlca- Atlanta
510 000 004- 10 17 3
BIG CATCH - Cool evening temperatures are
"They knew they w•re out coming off starter Ray Sadeckl. lnmched five coRSeCutivo h!IB go and wlll be out for the ser- Sutton, M1ller (2), Brewer work•
1m lost dunng tbil!'etven credit for large bass . biting at Forked Run
tbere,n said Reds catcher Jim RoB Herbel was the victim and a walk for four fUll!! and iea.
t4), Regan &lt;7), Perranoski (9) Janua~g·.J~nee penod wa"S lesa:f
asd Roseboro, Johnson, Aber\
"'
Lake. Here are some caught recently by five AshA'
'STAR
oathy (7), Carroll (B), Ritchie 1than d~rmg the f1rst six month• .r
land, .Ky. Jllan, George Hardy, Tom Wells, Forest
C
1A1'
( ), Niekro (9) and Torre. WP i of 19ti•. however . The report
9
Whitt, Harold Conley and Joe Conley. The 12 bass
-Niekro (3· 3). LP-Perranoski did. not mclude the . currelll···
weighed 231&gt; pounds. Three weighed over 4 pounds
(4-6). HRs- Fairly 2 mh &amp; ~rhnes machm1sts stnke smce ..
~ach.
Major League Leaden
Bib) Jones tJ4thl Lefebvre ' 1 »egan July 8·
_ _ _....
By United Pnu 1Dternalt0811i
&lt;17th).
'
-- '·

Robinson's

Morri"son HI"red as Coacll
By North GaII"Ia o·IStric. t

bles by Middleport. .
Bobby Dixon, a smart, capable Iefthander, fanned
six,
walked only three batters, end
'bit two. He scattered si&gt; bits,
all singles.
Meanwhile, Middleport's starter, also a southpaw, Carl (Birdey) Demoskey, alter two machine-like first Innings, begaa to
get into (l'()uble in the lhlrd.
Altogether be fanned four walked 8, Is live aad two-t!Jircb Inn-

Pappas Vs. Bolin Tonight; Reds Split Pair Monday

\

mit Walton : Staff Members, Al l Martin, John Blaettnar: Staff
Monday in four feet of wa~r in 16 of the 31 persons killed this
8 neighbor's portable
Leonard, Willis Leadingham Members Bob Miller
Dairy
swim- weekend on Ohio roads were not IN AT 9 AM-OUT AT
5 PM.
Dale Warner Jack Kerr Bob Valley Dale Warner' Economing pool by her mother, Mrs . wearing seat belts,
Highway
Wingett, Joh~ Balettnar' , Paul my u;an.
'
Joseph Carpenter.
Safety Director Warren C. Nel·
Simon, Paul Chapman, J i m Industrial Development- Ex- By United Press lnlernallonal
The Clermont County sheriff's son reported Monday.
Moss.
emtive Committee,
William Violent thunderstorms br&lt;1u~ttt I office, said the tot apparently "Many of these deaths could
Public Relations Committee- Grueser, Fred Crow, Ted Reed; high winds and heavy rain
wandered away from home and 1have been prevented if
seat
Executive Committee, R 1 c k 1Staff Members, .John lllaettnar, centra! Ohio Monday night.
fell into the pool.
belts had been worn, •• he said. CLEANERS. POMEROY
on~. ~aUBe of the crashes were Committees appointed Iwith . Martin, ~Gberl Wingett, Rob· . Ted Reed, Ralph Graves, Lee In Circleville extensive dalm- ~ jiiii
,. bO
own.
the president an ex officio mem- ! ert Hoeflich._
I Fultz, Irving Karr,
Richard age was done to a lumber comCommunist ground fire also . bcr} were as follows:
Merr;bershlp and A~tendance Chambers, Harold Smith, . Mid- pany when one building was
hit seven Mllrine helicopters in Mfr~h&lt;mt.o;; and
Promotion C~mnuttee - Execuhve Com-~ west S~eel; .Wayne
Swisher' torn ap;Jrt, the roof of another
South Viet Nam's northrrn C~mmlttec - Executive Com· mlttee, Marg~ Hoffner, Hick Frankhn Rizer.
blown off, und a fence downed .
provinces Monday , killing one m1ttee, Jack Kerr, N. W.. Compby. winds with gusts up to 70 I
crewman and wounding seven. ton. Bob Jacobs, Kermit Walmiles per hour.
Four or the choppers were ton ; Staff Members,
Robert
slighUy damaged and Ulree Jacobs: Bob Cant, Ted Downie,
"It was sure some storm,"
spokesmen Paul Simon. Walter K. Stewart,
a Pickaway County sheriff's
''moderalely,••
0
lll.ld, but all managed to return Harold Lohse, Paul Chapman,
deputy said. "I just couldn't
1 to their bases
Metgs Gallia Cred 1t
Bureau,
.
.
.
.
begin to describe it, it was sure
~
·
!Bob Thompson, Kenny Hartley, M1ke Mornson , 26, Racme, a 1958 graduate of
Tnmble a lot of wind and rain."
Fly 449 SortieS
·Art Hoyt. C. F Tompkin!-1. and whose teams at Southern Local High School, and a 1962 gradu- In Columbus wlnds reached :
U.S. Air Force and Marine Stark's, all Pomeroy merchants. High School {Racine) posted a ate of East Tennessee College. 36 mph and electric power to
. pilots flew 449 sorties against Regatta Weekend Committee 42-2 record in two seasons, is He was head coach at Southern some. homes and traffic signals I
Communist targets tn the South - Executive Committee, Bill the new basketball coach
at Local 1962-64, and on the coach- was Interrupted for a s h o r t
Mlmday, des(l'()ying or damag- Grueser, John Blaettnar, Ker- Nort!J Gatlia High School.
lng stall at Wahama
High time.
.
.
Chev.
lng 338 VIet Cong structures
Th N th G .
School dunng the 1964-65 school Delaware regiStered wmds up
24 Mo.
and 18 sampans.
e or
a11_1a . Sch~ol year. Morrison during the past to 70 mph Monday and was
Guarantee
Ground action also picked up
Boa:d Monday mght m. special year has been employed by the dr~nchrd with .1.2 inches
of
Exch.
! today In the South where an
'l
sessiOn employ~ Morrison as city recreation department at ram but no serwus damage was
, outDumbered U S M .
'"
teacher at the high school and Fort Lauderdale Fla
reported.
36 Months • 19.95
\
·
·
arme
reconas
head
basketball
coach
'
·
~ na1ssance party held off an
·
The board also accepted the Th e wea th er bureau said the
.. aU:acking North Vietnamese
The board also employed Ar- resignations of two school bus thunderstorms would
move
Ford
fci'ce for 12 hours until
thur A. IPete) Nibert as teach- drivers,
John Stevens and eastward today, f?llawed . by
24 Mo.
relnforcemenls arrived at dusk
In
er at North Gallia High School. James Denney, and employed cooler weather w1th rnax1rnurn
Guarantee
ta chase the Reds back into the
Former North Gallia football six substitute bus drivers . Em- ~rnperatures m most places tn
Exch.
7
j.m,Je. At least 44 Communists
lhe
coach, Nibert returns to the played as substitutes were : Mur- ~ ~pper 0s or low 80s.
.
were kflled tn the action while
high school after a year's ai&gt;- rei Folden, Roy Mefford, Kail 1 dc~d~~,s at dawn today !D- 1
36 Months • 19.95
u~ . casualties were described
sence.
Burleson, Bill Wooldridge, Jim ~u a~d c:ve~and. sa, Columbus I
U' "light. 11
Denney and Bruce Gabriel.
mcmnatl 70.
Belair

two_ Army helicop.ters

J

....... -

. . . . - ,....,, oad dtl.t111 adolodioDI

YD. 01 ' lilt Dolt.• Uu Jugled lbe calender r. brlal
,.,. T_W ........ lllh• - - - Rocbc Oldo.

Doo._oti,...,YIS_ ....._.,., lhtlflt8

..

..

�l

~ -

'\/

..

'I

North Viet Nam Plastered

WOON (UP!)
A
Ai
·
1
':O.w. flew a - mercan.
r Force Flll5 Thunderchiel
...,...
m- Jet
theybom?ers
said durmg the attack,,
::!l::ono
Mond ay agams
record! Col39
~ North Vie
.
.
·
IQilltary install til Na~, ~~~ Air Force long-distance helil!lpPiJ depot. e~ns, ue
copters . picked up one of the
·tiM linea ~ co~unlca- three pilots and addmg more
l\!jiOrled bta ·5· spo esmen drama to the rec?rd daydrescued
ed an Amertca.n plio_ t
y.
Three plenes were shot down . own .26 hoors prevmusly m
IP.okesmen refused to disclose North VIet Nam about 25 mtles
Whether they were victims of south of the Communist ~hiRussian-supplied surface·to-air nese border an~ 100 miles
missiles (SAM'S) or convention- northwest. of Hanoi.
el anU-aircraft fire. One pilot The ~J!ot . had parachuted
was ~scued and helicopters when his Air Force RFlOl
also picked up an American Voodoo photo reconnaissance
llrman downed in Sunday
alcb
r In
Sooth, rv
said
0

~

Area businessmen were
cautioned today to be on

~~~is~~~:u:of:~t!~?.,~

plane
was
shot
down jover North VietNam Sunday
Viet
N
S
d
A
during raids over
North mstead of the seven announced
un ay.
record 1by U.S. spokesmen.
1 am
seven U.S. planes were downed ' Pilots on Monday's raids
during those raids.
reported seeing eight surfaceToday's air losses brought to to-air missiles (SAMS) as they
329 the number of U.S. planes destroyed bridges, warehouses,
shot. down by North Vietnamese anti·a·trcraft si·tes, fuel dumps
durmg the two-year-old air war and surface vehicles at targets
against tlle north.
near Thanh Hoa Vinh HaiClaims Six Planes
phong, the Mu Gi~ Pass: Dong
Hanoi Radio claimed that six Hoi and Hanoi.
planes were downed over its The old record af 121
territory Monday. The radio missions was set by Air Force
broadcast also claimed that 'j and Navy raiders July l5 and
nine U.S. bombers were lost equalled the next. day.
',

c f cNames Action Committees for year

s~kesmen

w~nt

ney was reported In Hunt•
ingtonandCharlestonyos·
tarday.
5 ecret service agents
gava the following description of tho bills:
Federal Reserve Note
of the San Francisco FedAll bill
era
I Reserve
District,
1950
1
ser as.
s boar
the serial number

~t~~~o:~rsAi.s ~~:4~, P~~~~

~~:sb:~~~~~te has the fig-

~:f%~,..Y'i&amp;/k'W0.x&amp;still$.W;~

w·mds, Ram,
.

Moon c·Ireling Ph.oto Lab to beLannehed
CAPE KENNEDY (UPI) - SUrveyor
I spacecraft, the the lunar surface, the Orbltot
A flying pbotographlc labora-llunar Orbiter's main J'ob is to will swoop into a lower patb
tory was set lor launch today ]look for smooth landing areas than will carry ll within 21
on an attempt to swing into an 1 for the four-legged
ApollD miles of the moon every
orbit around the moon to in- moonships.
1 hours.
spec! nine potenti al Apollo as- If all goes well, the 85o-pound · Then, for a week while
tronaut landing sites.
craft will lire a braking rocket I moon revolves beneath it, tho
The picture-taking
moon Saturday to end its 238,944 mile lunar Orbiter's camera will
!me
I ll't1 e was sc I1eduIed
Ior 1voyage and sw In g Into an orbit 1photograpb nine separate arNt&lt;t
launch at 2 03 p.m., &lt;EDT), •around
the moon.
It
is along a belt following
the
atop an Atlas-Agena rocket
scheduled to snap its
first moon's equator £rom east
It marked another step in sencs of test pictures on Aug. west. Half of its pictures
America's drive to land men on 18.
be able to detect object!!
the moon by 1969.
I After circling the moon for small as a car table on
Although it will get a glimpse nine days in an orbit ranging moon.
of the moon's mysterious back [rom 125 to 1,150 miles above li-~;;_====--=--,
side and peer down at the dead -~---- - .
I 16 0 f 31 K'll I
MOUNT CARMEL
0 .
I '"
SHIRT
(UPI)
- Susan
Belts
22 months,
was K.found dead Not
COLUMBUS (UPil
_ At least

"c'arpent~~~

HI"t Central
Ohio AreaS

Middleport Loses 7-6 to Waverly in Oak Hill Tourney
Middleport, defending champ-

IDna, was ....d out of the Oak
Bill Poay TournameJtt Monday
night 7-8, by a determined, welleoached Waverly club, cham]&gt;loas of the Pike County Pony
League.
Down 4-0 alter two iunlngs,
Waverly took advantage of five
Middleport errors and to knot
the oount at 6-8 In the sixth, ·
then get home the winning run
Ia the bottom of the seventh oa
two auecessiva throwiag bob._-_

'I

~-- -

1

IJsin~:

DAY

TIJe Pomeroy Chamber
of
down Monday rught wh1 le Commerce prepared
Monday
taking part in Operation Paul i for the year ahead by appointRevere, 11 mil~s southeast. of ment of new commit.tees, with
Amtri~~n bastion of Ple1ku. newly re-el~ted President Jack
They -..rud both
cho~p.ers Ctrse~ callmg for a 12 ~ month
crashed ~ burned .. ~~ll~ng Pan r.om ea~h committee at
aeven Amencans and mJunng the next meetmg.

SERVICE

AUTO
BATTERY

BIKE BUY!

Drawmgs
• f
Facility are
GI'ven Approval

s31 95

95

s~t

Mrs. R

rec~d

II

DI'es m' West

Wall Paint
3

Faces FI.ri"ng
ByAider1nen

Line Scores

(6-4)1
")

and Roof. LP-Keal tF"

,;_:,.U,

••

!'fl. ~ :~:

(42 lnnlnist
, ,' .,,
Det
020 000 010 tJeZ- 5 ll.l.:

Nattoul League
(lsi game)

i~'

ibe

~~

4

'

=-~~ =~
~

Rchrd~

=

a:!·~ ~~ •iorre~~v~:
G~ls ~
Cub~
indians

Sllh\ 1:Y

(Only games scheduled)

AmerLc.. League
Cleve
00 I 000 0011- 1 7 2
Boston
100 002 OOx- 3 10 I
Bell, Radatz (81 and Azcue;
SaRtiago (11-81 and Ryan LPBell (tZ-8). HRs---Azcue (6th),
1
fl&amp;iili-1 Scott !21st). __

'

SETTLES
QUESTJON.
I

"When you have an accident,
who is more likt~Jy lu nelp )'OU- .
:m i.ndrpendenl agen[ or a onecompany s:..les man·:" An impar- ·

!ial survey by a na1ionally rec

·:.

000 00 I OllO- I 7 0 1 1izctl re~c::&lt;~rch organiurton ~ .•
9 out of 10 indepe~ent ~ -·;
bore Kan City
031 020 OOx- 6 10 0 i pmved:
!gt:n\s help wi lh claims. A far ·'
1
Kaat, Siebler (3), Kllppstein ~ower percentRKC of otber asenta .. · .(5), Plelll 17) and Nixon; ~sll ~ Jo. We're 1mk- :f'CO&lt;Iem age nts.
~ ·.:. .:_

~peel

TO GET AWARD

TENNIS SHOES

PITI'SBURGH (UPI) -Pitoutfielder Roberlu Clewill be presented the
Bat Award,
eymbobc
of
the National
League
batting
cham 1 hi .... w
Gil
Pons _p, "' arren .. ..
presiden~, Ill ceremo~Ies
N
game against

For All The Family

.. -

-·

.. . 1. •••

DOWNING ' ·
Insurance Agency, Inc •.
Agents

~~Is

ew

,~J.~

Call us.

Roush's Shoe Store

I

-t.

Bill Childs

Rodney Downig :'
•

Mlddloprt, 0.

FLOWERS

1 30

Go flameless ... put on a happy face I
•

!.

'

DUDLEY'S

•o lAIC

,......._____,1

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• • - • ·· • -

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and

and

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1

Sitting tight 'til Fall so you can save
biaooanewcar? Don't!

Yooar OW. Deal..- Ia oayiag YES on every model!
........ • w.ll Ulllll!ll Pt.ll for a bla: bu' 021. • new Olda.
. . d , .r l'U. Blllftde.IM YES. !-.,ery OW.~

1

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~~-12t~;ba~W~~ng~a~ver~ag~a~lll~l~9tl5~.~;;;;;;;;~~N;·;~"d;A;••!·;M;I;dd;t;epo;rt~,~~··
Clemenlll led the league with

j

·

:o •

MIJm

"I&amp; IMD1t wo'va
b"fon, DoD

New York at Pittsburgh- Minnesota at CeWornla, n!gbl the wlag-T eflense.
ville re-injured the hamstriDC
25 en,
Rlbeot (7-4) vs. Fryman (811). Chicago at Kansas City, night Brian Healy, who played un- Am.rteaa Leaguo: F Robin- musclo in hla rlgbl leg. ·
1:15 p.m.
Detroit at Washington, night
der Seaman at SandoW, Is alOrioles 13 . ~!tone
The Sooth bas lost &lt;lid Qluek
Los Angeles at Atlanta- Baltimore at New York
most cerlaln to draw the start,
Powell
'Orioles
McNeal,
Columbw! Brookhaven,
25
Kouft!X (18-5) vs. Lemaster (9- Clevelanl at Boston
los quarterback asslgnmeol Ia Colavito
24· Killebrew who is bothered by an old knee
B). : p.m.
the north's slot-T and 1 forma· Twlu.;.. Wb!Weld' Jodians '1!1.: Injury. Eod Fritz Reed, Lae&lt;:ao-1
9 05
San FrancisCo at CIRCinnaU- MARlCHAL S!DEUNED
lions.
.
RGDJ Batted ID
ler, bas a slight concussioa
Gibbon (3-8) vs. Pappas (6-8). CINCINNATI (UPI) -Juas Seaman Ia espected lA I'Ve Nalloul League:
Aaron, wblch could keep him out.
1:05 p.m,
Marichal, ace of the San the nod 111 Cleve B ry 8 1 I, 01 Braves 115· Clemente Pirates
Philadelphia at Sl Louls- Francisco Giants' pitching staH Canton • Glenwood, as the lead- 11• Tom' Braves ' Stargel~ TRADE McGUIRE
Bunning tl2-7) vs. Jaster t8-3). will be unable to piU:b In the er of the north's Oklahoma d&amp;- PJi.~~ea
JIIBys, Gtants 73_
DETROIT (UP!) -Tho Bailie p.m.
foor-game series agalnsl the fens•. lie will rua the unit from kerteaa League: B. Robin- more Coils Monday
Wednesday's Games
Cincinnati R&lt;)ds lhil week a safety posltioo.
SOli, Orioles 83 ; Powell, Orioles rookie end Johe McGuire ol
Houston at Chicago
because ol an .IDI~ ankle. . -tioul League IIIPd~JII a; F'. Robinson, Orioles 78; Syracuse to tile Detroit
New York .. at Plttsblll'1!h, night The Domlnicae righthander, By u.ttod Prell IDieruliaal Horton, Tigera 70; Killebrew, for a Mure drafl choice. ·
Los Angeles at · Allanta, night wbu b 17-4 this year, stepped
w. J.. Pel. GB Twlu 114.
McGwre, a &amp;-foot-3, •
San Fran at Cincinnati, night on a bell while running In .tho Collllllbus
83 51 .553 Pltchlnl
pounder, Is m:pected to replace
Philedelpbia at st. Louis, night outfield before Sunday's Gloats- Rochester
114 5S _.
Nolfonal
Letgue: Regaa, the m)ured Hon Kramer ud
AmOrleaa League
Cube game 8!"i sprained bis Toro•to
62 .54 .534 S Dodgon 10-1: Perry, Glanta 17- Jim Glbboa at tight~·
'W.L. Pct.GB ankle.
Toledn
t1t1 5I .ItT I S; Marlchal, Gl81118 17-41 PlUSONERS EXCHANGED
71 39 .645 ...
.
,
BuHalo
5I iii .513 ~ . Koufu:, Dodgen 1&amp;-6; Malooey, JERUSALEM (UPI) -Foor
Baltimore
60 50 .545 11 GIANTS CUT THREE
Ridunlllld
II rr , .• ~. Redo 12-t
Ieraeli and alx Syriae prls111181.S I
Delr&lt;&gt;it
59 52 .532 121&gt; FAIRFIELD, Conn. (UP!) - Jacksonvllle
li2 ·11 .480 10\i , . _ . . t.eape: McNelly, were e~chqed at a border
Cleveland
fil 53 .418 14 Three tackles, Lucian Veaezllt- Syracuse
43 7C .388 21~ Orioles 11-3; Santoni; Angels po!ll north of Lake T!berlal
Calilornla
67 55 .509 15 no of c. W. Post College, Bob
MaadaJ't a..lla
~i Walt; Orioles 1-3: Palmer, Mooday. Oee of the SyrlaM
Mtnaesota
St; St; .500 16
Meeker of Notre Dame and Ju: I Rdlalr 2, !st. 7 loillnp Orlqlea and BoawaD, Twins JU. was ldenllfled as MobamDI'Id
Chicago
50 61 .450 21\l. Dick Ilerzlag of Drake, were Jacksollvllle 3 Roeheeter 2, :lad
Orner Arifa, said 10 bove beeD
New York
50 Ill .450 21~ dropped !rom the New York Buffalo f T~eda I
Oldetl museum of modenl aa lllelllgenee ageal wbo w..
Kansas €ily 51 611 ,440 23 Glanla' ros!A!r Monday, culliD&amp; Syr_.. I R1clunond &amp;, 11 lila tlmel· ·IS ·tho AshmOlllll Muse- eentenced to 15 yearo Ill jail iQ'
'II'aehinglon
48 fl .417 25~ the squad Ill. 50 players.
Co!Ulllbua • TorooiO I ·.
. om at Olfonl University.
the lsrlll.lla Ia 1I1M.
Boston

:::h

MOORE'S IN POMEROY

I

southsquad

ODS

~0~

HOUSE
PAINT

==-------·-. -. --.1

•

Of ~IDI

River News

AtIanta Cop

stngfJd'"'

For Waverly, Vamey
twice, Swlnning singled !llld::
dQubled, and DeVito singled. ·'"'''?A
Middleport · . 220 002 -ti 1.. 5;;l
Waverly ..... 1101 131 1-7 6-iho;
Dell108key (LP), Ingels '( 5of"l
and B. Lewis. Dixon ud Chatil-· '
berll.
·.. ~ .,..

.
g
IS
Ki kin
·S
db
tresse y

Nllllooal Leap
G. All. R. H. Pet.
M.Alou, Pill 'II 359 51 123 .343
CANTON UPI) - There Is a J'.Alou, AU 112 485 82160 .330 CANTON, Obio tUPI) - The
cllfferenee ol opinion betwem Clmnle, Pill 1113 429 418141 .329 South team put the empheslll
101330 47108 .S2'7 kickq In todlly's workouts,
11J UDttetl Press IDternaltooal
MondRf'l llesilts
two Ohio football coaches.
Carty, AU
National League
00 5 Waeh ,3, U,, lnns., night And ril!hUY so for they will SlarJ!ll, PI~ : : ~ :~~ ·~ while t!Je North plaened to coltW L. Pet GB Kan City 6 M!nnNOtiJ ·1 ntght oppose each other here at 8:30 Cepeda, 5
·
centrale •• the offense iD pre•
'
-•
' ·
Fr'd
ben the tlsl
Morgan, Hou 70 253 !4 80 .316 parati011s lor the Ohio AJI-Slar
Pittsburgh
M 46 .582 ... Boston 3 Clevela,.. I, nll!hl
p.m. 1 ay w
1111- Helms Cln
92 3&amp;7 50 !12 314 · Scb001 footb 11
Fr&gt;San Francisco 66 48 . .578 ... (Only games scheduled)
DUal Ohlo NortlrSouth football Santo.' Chi 102 369 6311&amp; ·.312 High .
a game
Loll Angelea 63 46 .578 llo I Tuesday'• . Probable Plt&lt;bero classic wlll be played at Faw- Allen, Pbll 110 332 7!103 .310 1da~0 :::ght
ill
tin
Plffiadelpbla 60 &amp;1 .541 41&gt;
Slarlblg Times (EDT)
cett StadlliDI.
.
11lams
w
eon
ue
1
It Louis
57 53 518 '
Minnesota at CallforRia- South Coach Dick Walker, of
Amerlcaa Leagoe
twiCe • • day drills
Cincinnati
57 St; :509 I Gflllll (8-12) vs. Lopez (4-10). ColliDibus • W at or I oo IJigh
G. All. R. B. Pet. 'lbursday. The North will
Atlanta
52 59 .468 12\l. 11 p.m.
School, setd be bases hil victory Oliva, Mlnn 110 427 6'1137 .321 practice Friday, but the Soulll
HoostoR
49 61 .445 15
Chicago at Kansas City- prediction oo a south sqORd that Kaline, Det 93 328 63104 .317 may don shorta to run lbrou&amp;b
315
New York
48 61 .445 15 Howard (i'&gt;-3) vs. Blanco (1-1). I II big and fast.
I'.Rban, Bal 108 39'1 86125 ·
plri!
:led 00 defenle
Cbloago
36 73 330 2'1\l. p m
North Coach Bob Seaman. of B.Rban, Bal 110 440 73 131 .298
ornlng 11111 olfeue
Monday's Hesulti
. ~lr&lt;&gt;ll at Washlnglon-WR· llfaealllon High School former- Vt.tae, Wu lUI 371 59110 .293 Mooday m and lbt Soutla
0
Cia tO San Fran 8, 1st, twlligh\ son (11-9) va. Kreutzer (o-1) . ty of Saldulk;y, said
team Berry, Chi
992114 36 63 .292
M8an Fran' Cblcl 5, 2nd, night 8:11&amp; p m.
that bits the hardest will wiD
Cal 88317 48 92 .290 Each team
expected
Allan ta 10 Loa Angeles 9' ntghl Baltimore at New York- and ... "That's
myd11)am."
365 11100
.288 bave two meo watching lrom
2'11'&gt;Cln lnnall Powell,
Borlun Bal
Del 104
1111321
48 82 :JJ!7
(Only games scheduled)
Palmer 112-5) vs. Peterson 18- Six-1oot-4,
poun
c
'W
' Cl 100 344 53 1111 .285 the sidelines Friday nll!ht beTaeoday's Probable Pllcherl 7). 8 p.m.
TaU tacllle Jim Pearaoo w~l be aJIIIOI', e
cause of !ljurtes.
tSiarll•g Times EDT)
&lt;;Ieveland at Bostoa-IIatgal the malnsiiiY of the south s 4-8
Home Jlunl
For the North, light
1
Bousto• at Cblcago--Giusli (7-6) vs. Jlennelt (1·1). 7:30 defeiiSI wblle Dayton-W r I« ht
Mike Kaydo, Ashtabula, re(11-11) vs. Ellaworth ti'&gt;-111). 2:30 p.m.
halfback Tony
Ma;
celved a shoulder inJ1111 aad
211 . 'Santo
p.m.
\Vecbelday's Gamee
the 100 In 9.1 seeo •
All ' Phllliea
Hart,' Gianls fullback Tom Cble- of Loull-

•

FABRIC and
VINYL DYE

HOUSE
PAINT

10
eecond on what Jibd 1o go 81
an Infield s•·••e, with every...,.
body oefe " the bell was play•
ed to second base. Both numers
advanced oo a passed ball, and
Dalton, after fanning, ran 10
first base when the catcher
dropped the ball. A wlld throw
to first, and a bad throw home
to catch Folll corning in let In
.::n:::
il and the gBIRe

.::bll::..::•..:fi~y..:b:.::ell::..:doWII=:_--W.::.•:::v:.::er:::Jy'...::woo=-:lt: .: .:l l:. tl!e=..bo:.:tl.::.o:::m:__.::the::..::w.::lnnl
::
=n,_g

LEADERS

Coaches have
Difference

•

The spokesmen said that U.S.
Two others. were employed,
Air Force Navy and Marine
and one reS!gnahon accepted
planes
153 targets up ' New Heart Working last mght by the North Gallla
USSe
Of
and down North Viet N rn tD .
Board. The board accepted the
All sizes in boys
aurpass the month-old
ol HOUSTON - A 37 - YEAR - resignation. of Nancy
Bass,
old Mexican woman was report- North Galha H1gh School.
TO RENEW CAR AND
121 m!sslons In one day. A ed .. r
.
.
m1ssi is
tt ks
P ogressmg sahs1actorily'•
and girls models.
HOME UPHOLSTERY
oo --•~'::loorsedmorne abeac f today with the aid of an artilic- . Etrumpltooyed tas physical fitness Mr!. Ruth E. Russell,
73,
by an """""'
urn
r
o
·al
heart
de
.
.
lied
b
ms
c
rs
a
North
Gallla
High
C
1.1
ssed
J
5
pluea
1
vtce ms1a
y Sch 1
an ose, a 1 ., pa
away
LARGE SPRAY CAN
00 ":ere Carol Ann Cottrell, Saturday in a San Jose hospitOTHERS, 39.95 up
'
. . Dr. Michael DeBakey.
lnteose Communist anti-air- Mrs. Esperanzoa del
Ville Rt. I Bidwell, and Frank Bul- al. Born May 24 • 1893 in Meigs PT. PLEASANT - It
was
craft fire brought down three Vasquez underwent four - hour ~ock, Rro Grande. Miss Cottrell County, she was the daughter anno~nced today that .plans ~nd
surgery Monday to beco
U IS a graduate of Morehead State of the late Emma and Harvey Idrawmgs for a 5o-umt housmg
third person in which ~nee ~; College, Morehead, Ky.,
and Russell. One son, Paul, also facthty for the elderly
have
REG. $2.49
DeBakey's artificial heart de- Bullock, a 1966 graduate of Rio preceded her in death.
' ~n approved. by the federal
vices were implanted. The oUt- Grande College and member of Surviving are her husband, ousmg ?uthonty and sent to
GauJ• readlnss:
Gallipolis er patients died within days of t!Je Redman basketball squad. Robert Russell; three brothers, the llousmg and Urba~ DeveiALL STAR
'Chicago Chief'
'Economy' Outside
Dam 11.7, 11.9, running llh feet their operation. DeBakey's de- The new basketball coach is Roy and Milton, both of Mid- j'me~t Admmtstr~twn m
LATEX
on the rol1ers, Pomeroy-Mason vice allows a tired human heart
dleport, and Edward, San Jose; elph!a for a rev1ew and final
20.10, PL Pleasant 23.70, Hin- to re.st and to heal itself while
two sisters, Mrs. Naomi Thomp- a~~roval.
,,
ton .72, Ka!!Bwha Falls 2.28, a "left ventricular bypass"
son and Mrs. Katy Pierce, both
Fort Randolph _Terrace. Is
. Charleston 11.79. London, Mar- pumps blood
of Columbus, and several nieces the name of the umque proJect.
me( and Winfield dams were
·
and nephews.
Total cost is estimated at $834,G1Uon
5.99
99
.79
Value _ _ gal,
'
gallon
Only
0ii' lhe sills.
Mrs. Russell was a member 000.
Boat . Movements:
New Hearings
of the Christian Church
of Pt. Pleasant's Housing AuthRiver - Onward down WASHINGTON _ THE IN
San Jose, a past deputy grand ority include Milton Miller, ClarPHONE
a.m.; Peggy Downev terstale Comm..-ce CommiSSIO~
matron of Eastern Star No. 34; ence Anderson, Paul . Rairden,
992·2848
7:30p.m.; F. H. Johnson (ICC) was asked Monday by
pa•t matron of the OES Cha!&gt;- James H. LewiS, charrman G.
d01~LC, 11:30 p.m.; Lady Mig- the u s. Justice Deparbnent ATLANTA (UP!) :_ The city ter 219 of Mill Valley,
past A. B1ggs and Sherwood Costen,
~ ~=:f;=14~, 5:40 a.m.; An- to hold new hearings before it board of aldermen win decide noble grand of Blythesdale Re- ""ecutive director.
up 14, 6:50 a.m.; allows the Pennsylvania and tonight whether to fire a traffic becca Lodge No. SO!i, a mem· l
down 15, 2:15 a. New York Central railroads to policeman accused of cursing ~er of Umt No. 284 of the Amer·
down .15, 3:55 a. consummate their
approved and waving a pistol at Mrs. tcan Legion Auxi~iary, and a
of St. LouiS up 15, 6 merger.
Henry Aaron, wife of the member ol the Mill
Valley
~ tun.(iliriJm B. up 16, B p.m.; Justice Department attor- Atlanta Braves' star center~ Outdoor Art c~ub. .
down 16, 3:20 a.m.; Deys, in a brief, asked that the fielder.
I Funeral services w11l be Friup 16, 3:45 a. hearings be held on
'bl
Negro state Sen. Leroy day at 3 p.m. •DST) at the Fo~nt down 16,_ 4:- damages to competitor:O~Jh: Johnson, acting as attorney for gleso~g Funeral home in MasAHqutppa up 16. :&gt; a. brief also said the com~ission Mrs. Aaron, said Monday he on . With Rev. ~arne~ Morrison
Bosworth down 16. ''shoukt consider allegations" will ask the board's police vffiCI~ tJng .. Bunal Will be
in
et:Jss Jr. up 17, lB:- that the merged carrier would committee to dismiss patrol- the RivervieW cemetery. Friends
~~~:!Dixi~~~e~!ui!p:;l7, 11 :45 p. be able to control the Norfolk man L. W. Bedgood for rnfay call
at the Funeral Home
~
down 17• 5 and Western Railroad (N&amp;W) "behavior unbecoming an offi- aRter 171 ?.m. on Thursday. Mr.
up 17 , 6:50
· cer.,
usse 1s a partner of the Ru!Jup 19, 6: 15
A Braves' spokesman said Be~l-Gooch Funeral Home
of
Elgcercl!lf up 20, 4:20 a. W ouhl Prosecute
.
ld
h'
Mill
Valley
where
services
were
.
11ve w11nesses 1o
down
1m 01e held tnd
.
20 6
down
: :·:·: WASHINGTON- REP. ROB- officer waved a pistol at Mrs.!..-;;;;;;;_;,'~Y;_·
23 12 30
Slate u~ 23 ' 5, IS ~- crt Sweeney, D-Ohio, asked the Aaron during a traffic jam at lr
~~! down 23, 6:50 a: Justice Department Monday te Atlanta Stadiw_n and sai.d, "11
De
down Greenup 7 prosecute Stokely Carmichael, blow y~ur_ brams out, mgger." j
R. down Greenup head of the Student Non-Vio- The mc1dent aHegedly ocOVEC up Greenup 1:10 lent Coordinating Committe.: curred July 30, when Mrs.
. J. Patten up Green- (SNCC) for advocating refusal Aaron said the officer insisted
a.m.; Luther Herdman to comply with the draft.
she move her car when the
6:45 a.m.;
Flag !be Cle~eland congressman road was bloc~ed .
Greenup 7:30 a.m.; sa1d. ?arm1chael had violated Bedgood. sa1d Mrs. Aaron
Qu~n up Meldahl 4:10 proVISions of the
Universal cursed h1m and refused tt
J. S. Lewis up Meldahl Military Training and Sen'ices answer when he questioned her.
up Mel- Act which provides a penalty A coalition of 2.2 Negro civic
Eastern
':;f'';.;;~rui~·l . : Alton Zephyr of up to five years and a $10,0001 dubs, led by the Atlanta Gras
~
4 a.m.; Western fine for anyone who "aids. a· Roots Council, suppor.ted the
Meldahl 5:45 a.m.
bets or counsels" others to re- demand that Bedgood be fired.
J~~~r,'~~· Dam Solvay fuse to cnmply wth t!Je law.
"We refuse to sit by and see
.~
p.m.; R. H. Bosour Negro women, or any
~~~o1jti'' : down 5:10p.m.: Jenk• No Malice
women lor that matler, so
1
a.m.; Elisha Woods
brazenly insulted and . tormentWill Convey
a.m .: New
Orleans AUSTIN, TEX. - CHARLES ed by such flagrant abuse of
a.m.; John J. Rose A. Whitman, Jr., lather of the the law," said Benny T. Smith,
Your
a.m.; Louisiana up 5:30 University of Texas student who president of the council.
Sympathy
killed 16 persons in a sniper at- "Many incidents of pistol
When Words
~e most wanted• fea_ture on a freezer ia automatic self-defrosting. It
Rl&gt;er -Beaver up tack, met Monday with the po- waving by gun happy police
eluninates
meuy do-It-yourself" defrosting forever. Saves you time fqr
1:40 a.m.; W. H. Sha· !iceman who killed his
son. have gone unnoticed and
Fail You
down Winfield 7 p.m.; He embraced the officer.
unreported like this one/'
other thinp. A lll!lf-defl'Oiting electric freezer gives you more usable space
Merrill down Winfield "I have no
anhno•ity," Smlt!J added.
to stock up on those frozen food and meat specials. Means fewer trips to
Charles Stevenson Whtlman tearfully told Ramiro
----the ~ store, too. .Make your next major appliance a self-del~
ll p.m. ; H. E. Bow- Martinez, 29. "In fact I have
WEATHER
electric freezer.
Winfield I a.m : He!- res~ct lor you for doing your Cooler 111 east early toni ht.
1
Wcnfceld 1:50 a.m.: . JOb. Th~ elder Whibnan said Hick today 70s nortbwo t 1!b
59 N. 2nd Ave•
. Sllearer down Winfield j 't was an "e~~tional meeting iD east and south, low :.:olgbt
Middleport, 0.
See v. our flameleaa electric appliance dealer tod.ayl t-h•
••
co.·
ANO tcMMnN OHIO llfCniC COMMNr
lor both of us.
IH5. Wednesday fair and eotl. l

will

~ ~epor;h o; ~ike,~~~

BICYCLES

'1\odel

ill the lop of the seventh, Vaa
Jobmoo slnlled wit!J one out
but eouldR't gel beyond secoad
base u Bob Lewis fanaed, and
Den Lewis, pinch hitting . for
__G:::reg=.::Wbl=ltc..,

ef the fiDal lrlllllt when
one out, F'olll walked, got

the rll!ht lleld IIna !bat II a J
rlghlflelder GulllaD of Waverly
dived for and lllk:raculOUBly
caught.
.bother -IIOUI de!eDalvt
play was made earlier by thirdsacker Varney of · Waverly.
LeadiBJ off the Middleport llflh,
Lee Floyd bll 1 IICOI'dler just
Inside the lhlrd bue bag which
Varaey dived for, sprawling,
oame up with the ball, a 1 d
throw Floyd out at llrsl base.

~:~ tha~"u:':~m&lt;~o"t'~: .~~a!'·

HUFFY

WORLD

1

bobble at secORd base on a
grouud ball 10 leadoU baller
Swinnlng, a bit batsman, pu~
tilg two em, 1 walk, and a bobble at third base on another
1!1'011"'1 bell.

C~c~b
~~~~
~~: a~~ld~:~~:~· i!:~"·N~~,h~;:

Werem~~~®@~for~~~~ ~~~~

l

Jived.

__::in~gs:.,.::.b:::ef:::ore::..:be::::lng~r:::eli::'e:::ved=--b~Y:___~.::':.•v::er::ly!..::lled=..::lt~·::::B:::al=n~at::..tt-tl::..:..

t. the bottom of the obtth oo

i ,cq~
was over.
r~:'!ol~~HM!ddleport bitten Wet&lt;! Soh!I'•'UI
aun aRd !lave Dodson eaell:'llliilit
Bingle, and Bob Lewis and Colil&lt;l&lt;u,
• eacb two singles.
.., :.~

Sentine~

MOORE'S

15·

righthander Joha lnlell with
the score 4-3, atill favorlnl Mid·
dleport Ill the fifth. lnlels aave
up a two-run slnlle 10 DeVIto,
first batter be faced, lhel! fan.
Ded Fall! 1o end the bmlng.
Middleport got """' agaia Ia
the obtth and went one up, at
11-tl ill the lislb oo Bob Lewlll'
lead off single, two BJTOnt, and
Jim Conde's single.
But the advantage wae ahol1-

;;IA&amp;

0

CINCINNATI (UPI) Glgao- Coker, ooddlng t.ward 1loe Gl- of the uploaloe lauched elf bJ added IIIIOibeP Ill tile eeeoad to Sa• Fran 100 311 1100- 6 12 1 Was
000 000 003 OllO- 3 lO};io
9
Dally
Pomeroy-Middleport, 0., Aug. 8, !96S-6
.
tic Willie McCovey of San uts' elubboUie and the 32,552 Tommy Harper's slnslt. Deroo eend him lo 1M ahowers.
Cine!
010 252 OOx-10 14 I \ 9Podres, Sherry 1 1, ,AJlUll"'!l:,
Franclsco Is u awesome lei- fans - largest crowd at Cros- Johnson followed with a linSedecki, Herbel (4), Priddy ( ), Wick~rsham ii), Gladdiq(-;i_
low to aay pitcher, but he bas ley Field In two yeant- would gle, his third slralgbt lilt, aad off'llle:::: ~ o;.J: lb"..!~~ (6) and Haller, Virgil 17); , (12), Lohch m) and McFa;;,:
11•
been downright murderous to agree.
Art Shamsky doubled ill a ruJL
s
_ Maloney, Davidson &lt;61, and I Iane : M&lt;{;orrn~ek . _eox &lt;Ul,.-_
those of the ClnclnnaU Reds.
Tito Fuente's error let In the two, more ill tho third on John Coker, Edwards &lt;6). WP- Kfme (9), Humphre)S (10) aruJ:.,
The Glsnb' first
baseman The Reds bad baiUed hack ' secood run aRd Card..,.. slam- soo s double and bolted the Maloney (12-4) . LP- Herbel ,4_ Casanova. WP-W~ekersham c6,"
gave ·another display Monday !rom a 4-1 deficit In tbe opener med his homer.
ecore at i&gt;-5 In the fourth 011 a 41 _ Cardenas (!Jth), Hart 2) . LP- Humphrey• 14-2 ). HR~::
night as the Reds split twl • by clobbering .three Giants
walk lo Harper and singles by (25 th), Helms (8th).
Howard il3th)
8
night doubleheader, winning the pllchero lor 14 hill!.
In the sixt!J Pete Roae dou- Coker, Baldschun and Rose.
j
-first lo-2 and losing the second Leo Curdenas' three-rua h&lt;&gt;- bled and Tommy Helms rapped The game saw Harper's 24 - (2nd game)
iOnly games scheduled)
'
.&amp;.
mer capped a five-run rally 19 Bob Priddy for hts Oljfht!J ho- game hlltillg streak ended. Hal lSan _Fran 410 0011 m- 7 12 n
..,
10 3
1
7
Cincinnati battied hack from the fifth lnnlns t!Jat proved de- mer of the season.
Lanierr making a leaping catch
M
STRIKE !,USSES
'
1
1
a 5-l deficit In the nlghteap to clsive.
Ted Davidson took over lor ol a line drive bid in the ninth
on. c ~me . I. •nry
WA,HING'~'ON •cPI) -Near:·
a i&gt;-5 deadlock and had visions .Sail Francisco had gotten It Maloney iD the siXth and al· for a hit. John had five hits . in
. ··
,,, workers were
of a sweep to gam
needed JIDI Maloney for SIX runs eo lowed only two hits the rest of mne tr1ps to the plate, dnvmg (B). d Cok
Ed d (9] C;y ;tnkes during &lt;he first . ~gi~;.
ground in the standings.
10 hila in the five Innings. Tbe the way to preserve Maloney's in three &amp;Rd scoring three.
WP__"~ D . ~r,(7-4l w~~_'_B ld: of 1966 - the l.rges &lt; number
But up stepped McCovey ia attack Included homers by Wll- 12th win.
Tooight Milt Pappas (9-8) is h c (;~~~
HR-McCo~ev for a comparable period sinclr
the seventh Inning tD poke the lie Mays, McCovey, Jim Hart Sammy Elllll didll' t have It scheduled to work for the Reds ~ ~·~
·
!955 , according to the Labor
ball out of the park to break and Len Gabrielson.
as he was bombed by t!Je G~ against Bob Eblin (6-8).
r ·
1 Department.
t!Je tie at the expense of reliev- The Reds bed a single run iD ants in the first !ramo of the The Reds wen'! have to face
,
-,
1
er Jack Baldschun, handed his the oecood and two in
the nightcap. The Gianls waited Juan Marichal (17-4). He lnjur- Los Ang
020 100 123- 9 13 1 !ned
fifth Joss 1n six decisions.
fourth before key rally, those until two ':'ere out and thea ed bis ankle Sunday at Chlca- Atlanta
510 000 004- 10 17 3
BIG CATCH - Cool evening temperatures are
"They knew they w•re out coming off starter Ray Sadeckl. lnmched five coRSeCutivo h!IB go and wlll be out for the ser- Sutton, M1ller (2), Brewer work•
1m lost dunng tbil!'etven credit for large bass . biting at Forked Run
tbere,n said Reds catcher Jim RoB Herbel was the victim and a walk for four fUll!! and iea.
t4), Regan &lt;7), Perranoski (9) Janua~g·.J~nee penod wa"S lesa:f
asd Roseboro, Johnson, Aber\
"'
Lake. Here are some caught recently by five AshA'
'STAR
oathy (7), Carroll (B), Ritchie 1than d~rmg the f1rst six month• .r
land, .Ky. Jllan, George Hardy, Tom Wells, Forest
C
1A1'
( ), Niekro (9) and Torre. WP i of 19ti•. however . The report
9
Whitt, Harold Conley and Joe Conley. The 12 bass
-Niekro (3· 3). LP-Perranoski did. not mclude the . currelll···
weighed 231&gt; pounds. Three weighed over 4 pounds
(4-6). HRs- Fairly 2 mh &amp; ~rhnes machm1sts stnke smce ..
~ach.
Major League Leaden
Bib) Jones tJ4thl Lefebvre ' 1 »egan July 8·
_ _ _....
By United Pnu 1Dternalt0811i
&lt;17th).
'
-- '·

Robinson's

Morri"son HI"red as Coacll
By North GaII"Ia o·IStric. t

bles by Middleport. .
Bobby Dixon, a smart, capable Iefthander, fanned
six,
walked only three batters, end
'bit two. He scattered si&gt; bits,
all singles.
Meanwhile, Middleport's starter, also a southpaw, Carl (Birdey) Demoskey, alter two machine-like first Innings, begaa to
get into (l'()uble in the lhlrd.
Altogether be fanned four walked 8, Is live aad two-t!Jircb Inn-

Pappas Vs. Bolin Tonight; Reds Split Pair Monday

\

mit Walton : Staff Members, Al l Martin, John Blaettnar: Staff
Monday in four feet of wa~r in 16 of the 31 persons killed this
8 neighbor's portable
Leonard, Willis Leadingham Members Bob Miller
Dairy
swim- weekend on Ohio roads were not IN AT 9 AM-OUT AT
5 PM.
Dale Warner Jack Kerr Bob Valley Dale Warner' Economing pool by her mother, Mrs . wearing seat belts,
Highway
Wingett, Joh~ Balettnar' , Paul my u;an.
'
Joseph Carpenter.
Safety Director Warren C. Nel·
Simon, Paul Chapman, J i m Industrial Development- Ex- By United Press lnlernallonal
The Clermont County sheriff's son reported Monday.
Moss.
emtive Committee,
William Violent thunderstorms br&lt;1u~ttt I office, said the tot apparently "Many of these deaths could
Public Relations Committee- Grueser, Fred Crow, Ted Reed; high winds and heavy rain
wandered away from home and 1have been prevented if
seat
Executive Committee, R 1 c k 1Staff Members, .John lllaettnar, centra! Ohio Monday night.
fell into the pool.
belts had been worn, •• he said. CLEANERS. POMEROY
on~. ~aUBe of the crashes were Committees appointed Iwith . Martin, ~Gberl Wingett, Rob· . Ted Reed, Ralph Graves, Lee In Circleville extensive dalm- ~ jiiii
,. bO
own.
the president an ex officio mem- ! ert Hoeflich._
I Fultz, Irving Karr,
Richard age was done to a lumber comCommunist ground fire also . bcr} were as follows:
Merr;bershlp and A~tendance Chambers, Harold Smith, . Mid- pany when one building was
hit seven Mllrine helicopters in Mfr~h&lt;mt.o;; and
Promotion C~mnuttee - Execuhve Com-~ west S~eel; .Wayne
Swisher' torn ap;Jrt, the roof of another
South Viet Nam's northrrn C~mmlttec - Executive Com· mlttee, Marg~ Hoffner, Hick Frankhn Rizer.
blown off, und a fence downed .
provinces Monday , killing one m1ttee, Jack Kerr, N. W.. Compby. winds with gusts up to 70 I
crewman and wounding seven. ton. Bob Jacobs, Kermit Walmiles per hour.
Four or the choppers were ton ; Staff Members,
Robert
slighUy damaged and Ulree Jacobs: Bob Cant, Ted Downie,
"It was sure some storm,"
spokesmen Paul Simon. Walter K. Stewart,
a Pickaway County sheriff's
''moderalely,••
0
lll.ld, but all managed to return Harold Lohse, Paul Chapman,
deputy said. "I just couldn't
1 to their bases
Metgs Gallia Cred 1t
Bureau,
.
.
.
.
begin to describe it, it was sure
~
·
!Bob Thompson, Kenny Hartley, M1ke Mornson , 26, Racme, a 1958 graduate of
Tnmble a lot of wind and rain."
Fly 449 SortieS
·Art Hoyt. C. F Tompkin!-1. and whose teams at Southern Local High School, and a 1962 gradu- In Columbus wlnds reached :
U.S. Air Force and Marine Stark's, all Pomeroy merchants. High School {Racine) posted a ate of East Tennessee College. 36 mph and electric power to
. pilots flew 449 sorties against Regatta Weekend Committee 42-2 record in two seasons, is He was head coach at Southern some. homes and traffic signals I
Communist targets tn the South - Executive Committee, Bill the new basketball coach
at Local 1962-64, and on the coach- was Interrupted for a s h o r t
Mlmday, des(l'()ying or damag- Grueser, John Blaettnar, Ker- Nort!J Gatlia High School.
lng stall at Wahama
High time.
.
.
Chev.
lng 338 VIet Cong structures
Th N th G .
School dunng the 1964-65 school Delaware regiStered wmds up
24 Mo.
and 18 sampans.
e or
a11_1a . Sch~ol year. Morrison during the past to 70 mph Monday and was
Guarantee
Ground action also picked up
Boa:d Monday mght m. special year has been employed by the dr~nchrd with .1.2 inches
of
Exch.
! today In the South where an
'l
sessiOn employ~ Morrison as city recreation department at ram but no serwus damage was
, outDumbered U S M .
'"
teacher at the high school and Fort Lauderdale Fla
reported.
36 Months • 19.95
\
·
·
arme
reconas
head
basketball
coach
'
·
~ na1ssance party held off an
·
The board also accepted the Th e wea th er bureau said the
.. aU:acking North Vietnamese
The board also employed Ar- resignations of two school bus thunderstorms would
move
Ford
fci'ce for 12 hours until
thur A. IPete) Nibert as teach- drivers,
John Stevens and eastward today, f?llawed . by
24 Mo.
relnforcemenls arrived at dusk
In
er at North Gallia High School. James Denney, and employed cooler weather w1th rnax1rnurn
Guarantee
ta chase the Reds back into the
Former North Gallia football six substitute bus drivers . Em- ~rnperatures m most places tn
Exch.
7
j.m,Je. At least 44 Communists
lhe
coach, Nibert returns to the played as substitutes were : Mur- ~ ~pper 0s or low 80s.
.
were kflled tn the action while
high school after a year's ai&gt;- rei Folden, Roy Mefford, Kail 1 dc~d~~,s at dawn today !D- 1
36 Months • 19.95
u~ . casualties were described
sence.
Burleson, Bill Wooldridge, Jim ~u a~d c:ve~and. sa, Columbus I
U' "light. 11
Denney and Bruce Gabriel.
mcmnatl 70.
Belair

two_ Army helicop.ters

J

....... -

. . . . - ,....,, oad dtl.t111 adolodioDI

YD. 01 ' lilt Dolt.• Uu Jugled lbe calender r. brlal
,.,. T_W ........ lllh• - - - Rocbc Oldo.

Doo._oti,...,YIS_ ....._.,., lhtlflt8

..

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.'
'&gt;

AdminIS• t ra'ti.•on IS• Aw...;.m·gReaeti·on o'·f ., . ....u I
.
.
nemp oyment
Market to 15% lncre ase in Acreage Lmut . ... h

/

Dolly Sentinel, P&gt;mb!fOy.JII!ddleport, 0., Aug. 9, 111611

IU

WASHINGTON lUPil -The
Johnaon administration today
awaited the wheat market's
reaclloo to a 16 per cent
expansion of the 1917 wheel
acreage allotment. ·
OfOclala were hopeful wheat
prlcea would remain IOlJDd
delpite market speculation in
recent weeks which has bid
cash prices to artificially high
levels.
Foiling prices would likely
hurt farmen more than it
would help consumers. Some
farmers have been holding
bock wheat In hopes market
'

. THESE THREE silots ha•e been chosen to tate part in the lint Apollo three·
They
man space fligh t, p anned u 1 Ioreronner to putlln
m1 • man on tbe m00n.
are, left to right, Virgil (Gus) Gr:isaom, the command pilot; Edward H. White, the
first American to wafk in space and RAIIW B. Cblffee. The Apollo-! flight "
acbeduled for early next year. NASA announced the selection of !be three pilots
In Downey, Calif..

.

M •

apparently for attemptmg to arl1cl~ ~nt1tl~

~~~:rw=e~~""~!ed::.:

DipS S1Ig l 1Y

to a reunion Oct. 13-16 m Los
Commissl~n
~ales. The CAB_ said the I""
subcomtmttee.
WASHINGT()N &lt;UP!)_- Un· ridea could he giVen between
The Increase was ordered lo employmenl ill the nation dip- Ocl. 9 and Oct. 22.
replenish dwindling U.S. wheal ped slightly to 3.9 per ?'nt lasll
reserves; to meet domestic and month .as the naUon s ~ork1 1
foreign food needs; to hedce force h1t a new ati-Ume b1gh,
the surplus supply against the ljle Labor Department report·
impact of drought here and ed Mooday.
abroad.
At the same time, bowevet,
Officials hoped the larger average earnlngo for faC\OrY
altotmenl of wheat acreage worken and the average fac.
would induct farmers to plant tory work week bolb dropped
more of the staple crop and not for the third consecutive month.
require any chBJige In s~pport Arthur Ross, commJssioner of
prices Jo spur new plantmgs. the Bureau of Labor Statlallc&amp;,
said the 3.9 per cent ullt!mploy·
1ment figure represented no significant change from the 4 per
cent monthly average for the
first half of 19116.
PT. PLEASANT
the

Federal
and a

Trade
house

=========:;
a..-.ac
0111 In I

nn••r•
DUftiiiOVIn'l

Market Report

.

explosive anti-Soviet article, Mlh&amp;Jk&gt;V ach1":'ed. fame last
was uoder arresl again today , year after. publ.'~allon oi an

__._

LIVESTOCK
SALES
co. FREE RIDES
PT.
PLEASANT,
W. VaA.
Satanlay, Aq. 1, IliA
WASHINGTON (UP!) -The
HOGS _ 175 to 220 23
10 Civil Aeronautics Board MooZli.IO; Heavies 22 _70 to 24.60 ,
Lights 20 to 24 , Fat sows 17
to 19_25; Boars 14 to II; Pigs
,
,
g to 18: SJDck Shoats
avg.
TranSIStor

Deaf Man Perfects
Midget
•
•
Heanng Aiel

MoscB": . s~m- 19 to 25 .

Property
Transfers

FLOWERP01' I-IAN6ERS
OR. . tJI' yOUR ,..TIO, FINU,
PORCH, !TO•

.... v

• flf&amp;ltlliN Cookcontrol lilllllcookll
lllllts-aulomalica!Jy tt

lfmill,..._

•'ntllllltl"and ... 6'
aarfltl units.

1

IJno&lt;roiUJethelefour.fomblo'
Aetltr lAt tlth sq•art, to
fear ordln•ry 'WOflh.

August. Spedall

$218·00 '

'.

General Telepboae Co.
of
Cllllo 1o Ullfletl 8ta!M, Easemeat, Letart.
Jalm Baprd llltlllarie . .

11

I

I r1 I I I

pod lo UDflld .....

~
I 11]]
:REYJES L
I I I KJ I I =~"::":::-..:.::.

•

l-·-

MiSI Amerjca

TEPEE

I

...,...)

(.-

Cadillac -

LOM: COUIIM -

.-..... s- ,.. .,..,.•.••• .....,. .flaJJir,. ..,

·
J.

.....-IHIDI'fllllllllfiAWAY

WY 2-5342

Rober Hoopllal:
Visiting
hours M and 7-8 p.m. Parents
only oo Pediatrics Ward.
PT. PLEASANT - Four cou· 1
Adadlllou
pies have made applications
Mrs. Charles A. Nuckles, 1113 for marriage licenses~ the ofAdrian Ave.; Mrll· Guy Jordan, flee of the County Cler .
~Second Ave.; Mrs. Raymood Applying were Richard AJ.
Scolt, 817 Fourth Ave.;
Mrs.
Fielder, Z4, CoU&amp;geville,
Denver H. ll'ouct, Rl 2 Crown
Nancy Alice Thompson, 21,
Clly; Mn. lloyd T. Jeffers, Hl
' Pleasant; Clayton
I Palrlot; Mrs. Fred Facemire, IStuller, , Hogselt, and tiell""ll
Rl % Patriot; Mn. Raymood
18, Gallipolll FerJ. I""JIIIIIJOD, Millon; GleiDI M.
Robert Stephen MaDelle,
Sayre, Jr., Pl. Pleasant; KimPl. Pleasan~ and Mary Louherly Jo Neville, Rl. 2
Pl.
Neal, l8, Pl. Pleasant;
Pleasant; Paul R. Cox, Rl. I
Raymand BeUomy, It,
PL PletiAIII; Miss Emma N.
Ohio, and Roberta

Mr. Advertiser:

WAIIIIJIGTON IUPI -The
- · will tbe ead ol 1
.....,d...,....,. elvD rlahll

Sgt. Byers Announces
New 120-Delay Program

deiJate bu faidt..ed

n::....•

==~

atW

I

This information is imP.Ortant to your business

use

~- Robert B~en. the Army is still availlble IUII'anlletl ........,. bid &lt;lily to ldoa I
Recruiter In Ulis area, bu u- school!DI t'UiiDI hiD £let!. po1illtill llvJnt the Jllitlee
llltlb&lt;ed lbat the Army has now Ironies to AJrenft ~ DepltiWWI pellll" lo
llltmdw:ed
the long-awaited Men can otiU qualify lor tra1a- ltdlllll school IIIli publle
'"12Hay Delay" program for inl in the Combat Arms, Metll- flelllt:Y tleui"Ptloa IUfll
tile ·benelll of young men enlist- cal Care ll: TrealmeDI, Mmla- before III09IJrc It I,
lD&amp; in the U.S. Army.
istraUon utflliiDy oilier flltl4l. IIMI 90IM Cll Pt I pet
Bqlnnlng immediately, the
-·• liroatf: t II rllbll
JIIOiram aUows Army appll· COMMI!KCIAL RADIO
bill.
ants k1 eatlst up to f111r SAIGON (UP!) South Viet Mrllen espeeted lbt .abow·
before being rolled to Nam will have cemmercill down roJJcaill today, tile 12t11
ICifve duty.
radio broadeut aenrlce - • day If tleblle,. Gf W""n-n~Y·
Tbe real value of the pro- lime in Oclober, the Viet Nam The ltM elvill'lf!bl! bill, wbidl
Fam, according to Sgt. Byers, R&gt;uUo IIUIIIWICetlloday. ThiN covered even lUre toitllory
il that young men who are lac- are now about 700,000 radio 1011 than the eurrent measure, tllOk:
lng an itmninent draft call and in tbe country.
ollly aine days of llouM debale.
&lt; roq~ire several months to com- GUARDS ESOAPE
But the l.lfl6 bill : : - ":;
plete personal arrangements be- BERLIN (UPf) _Two Com- two aubJecta bllh
po1lllt
:; be entering the Army, such as
. 1 Eut German border and emotional eoateDl
eompleting a summer school tDtlDI8
.
•
The HOUIIII dealt wltb - ol
,; terlll or working a few more guards short..,!rculted oeorcll- them Monday when il attlcbetl
IDOtllhs or for
other- Ugbts whDe 00 patrol Stulday u "llllkilt" rm tnsrt to
.lli'J
. and fled to the Americu lbt p9 ..
- - 1 fv
,, may now rece~ve a dnll clJui. of Weot llerliD. llttth .,.... Ia
• a 1I -.....,, llcalkot of ID which llllkel
fetlenJ adlon ,,.,_ aillcka
·~ them immune from the tfrlfi tmllormthemlltd lool&lt; their
lltd tomr dtrleted at
·• Immediately. However, it il wltll
·
and civil
1• •"' waaltl make
I!Dportant to DOle that Ill order IliON OONl'IIACT
'l'ht If be eligible for the beoeflll'ol .J£RUSALDI (UP!) -llir it illepllo tram Ire al8l8 ~
' tllJs· program, men must lliln crews of the !sraeU natleaal state to bletle cr IIIIo put tn
liP lor the prtFIIII no later airline El AI 8tllUJ lipid 1 v otlter civll dfiiUibiD..
1llU the day "BEI'ORE" they Dine-IIIOIItb CCIIIrtiCt lfllr Jleld- ... P"IJ!Itti 'lltJIIIit J'lllllll up
tbe1r draft DOIIco.
lag Ill 101111 o1 Ill* I . II to fl'ft JMr1 Ill Pl1loD. ...tltJO
s,t. Byera also pnillfs out !bat concerninl p ID lltd ltllllll 11M or both,
. • lbt deiiJ fl'GIIIID, o1 1i1o pad.
!lop. Wlll!lm C. Crania', ft.
. , . . . are no meetiDp to alle!ttl. BIGB DIIOIINlNGI
Fla., 8piiiS« II the ..,.....
' Mea who t!1111r the Arrlq t11t- TOKYO
jU P ])
- 1110111, llld II WGIIItl 11M lllfeal
:• ' tbe "!»Dey Delay" pro- Ja~ 111u-l pt111ce
re- parliclpiDII iD pooeeful ......._
~ 'II'QliCillally acerU&lt; longevity por1et1 today • pe:- have atralions.
· ·
jU[Allll while wallilll drowDed .... • olllln 1111 !lui be llld 111!011ld liYI the
': ·~}ll!llft!. cluly.
misaibc !rum lteadlfr. . . . federal governt11011! authority to
• the bwlito wbfcb aiaee I hal ..... " ' - Alii·
dawa • proleul[!!ll!
11aa lrltllliolaily 111- 1. Aulboritiel aoid n ,.._ qitators 11id 1o be illli'iilll
1111 ...... .... ,.. ......., ... it p ........ tho COI!IIIry •• li

In Gallia and Meigs Countlea

....;u.,

5

\

riiU .ill l!fl cilll.

..._

JMtele• ...
BJI'Clll T. Greenlee, Sr., Lee

Holcomb, Jolm w. Jachon, Mr9
Orll D. Lafl!e7, lfl'l. Ruaaell
Moore, .lctlm W........ _,., JobD

Columbus Iunday Dllpaflk - - - -.....- - - - - - ' I,IJI
•
Huntlngto• Herllld Wr.:trt!Ht - - - - - - - - - - - - - 616

w. Mullea, Mn. ,lllntld Pa~

Mra. Jlar7 .,........, .Jlrl.
Wootlrtlrr B, ' 1,11tn, MrS. · Gory

• • • Important because you

ate interesttflln liavlng tlie lar-

gest possible audience in your shopping arta 11ad and act
upon your advertising mes~c~g~ .

ncerve

era

Monday.

1,111

'ri . . .
.. ';~· , ' U

•

..
~---------~--:'
,~'1- ~li..i~~
..
~

''

I

·'

'

:

~•f:t•,

'

l·t

J• 9'0Cl

One year JU&amp;r.entea!
2· or 3-rlng stylo.

VINYL BINDER
LonJ lasting. Wlpta

clean, stays neat.

J• 00·

INDEXED NOTE BOOK
96 pa&amp;:es for 3 suDjects. 3-hofe punch.

88c
......
..

:.s

E. Wlnlont .... Infant tfliuebte',
Mn. Larry Q, IIHrbeU IDtl, ID-

IIIII 1011.

.

an ove plu&amp;

rn or~

paper. die·

tionary, assign ment bool-:.

Rll.
2.02
V1l111

SCHOOL

149

2 47

Smart studantl

make smart buys!
Economy -·m e pack
with nt\rrow or reg·
ular rules.

47c

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Super P,.mlum Quality

COCHRAN
PAINTS

tllnMIII Eleclrlt:
1

TABLE RADIO

· 1 - l t. . bb/
On • FIMITtlpl

1099

Deoorator Colors

.aw• HARDWARE

S.fe, plastic jar with
brush. 5 oz. size.

Z9c

· Ho,.ld C
, hooo,Mtro

Savings on pq, of
30. canvtnlent,. tool

Wrap-around
cover folds back
and under to

77I'C.

.....,.

save space in
limited areas .
Wnhable vinyl

cover stays neat.

MORE SAVINGS HERE!

h-ot,' 1&amp;.

MWdiiP . .
. ,..... WY 24511
' .

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• ·I· ·inct~~~tu

--

Lunch "ox

a.oz, lh•~

J.U

......

Colorflilprl~ta. ·

.,,

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.
.
I
.
m
t.
,
e.
S
e
Sunda~ Times ,, . ' U
. ' $!' ·. . .;\• .. .
!...-----------·
..
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88c

Buy 12 blue Ink r•·

tnrs-aet pen free.

VINYL BINDER

lr

ErDeat

L. Jones, Harrisonville. datllhl!tr, I:IJ a.m.
Monday; .,.... David L. IIJle,
Rl 4 Oak H111, 11011, 10:12 I.JII.

Athens lullday M 111npr

N..,..
rl&amp;bll-••·

w...-

Blrtlls

Mrs.

Svnd!ly lltxis teatlnel

PEN A CARTRIDGES

II

0.

POI'I'I!!roy Ohio

Canvas b1n:lers.
ruled M er. ind elt
g111rles 1ncluded.

Forlbe, LoDe
Malon;llollom;
Mn. Car~l~Au~lb-;i&lt;AnaWo.
II,
er11011,
Wfth ahoulder strap
F. Scott, Pomeroy; Mrs.
end handle. Colorful.
•
ll... tz. ..
L. Jones, llarrl!onvllle; Judith
A. Owens, Middleport; Cheryl Civil Action is
Lefobre, Pomeroy; Connie A. Filed In Court
Coolie, Middleport; John
C.
SANT
A
Boaedict, Rl. I Mt. Alto, W. PT. PLEA . . V . u - v - Keele Rl 1 action hu been flied In the ol·
•·· -·· ~~
•
ot the ctrcwt Clerk sl!l•ed II
Oak Hl11; Walter A. Patterson,
of West Virginia " ·
Ernest, Pa.; Ramen J. Meyers,
J Woods addt"'!!_~IDWD, I I
Rt. 2 Wellltml; Oren D. Light mu · T ~ttox address
DlspenHr with 1000
n..-, Hl 2 Soulb Point; "nmoand Carl E'. Wall,
Inch II, ¥2-ln. wide.
Jhy B. HDI, IIJllsdale, Mich.;
dba w. M. a. w
Mra. Jolin F. Marb, Jackson;
Transomerlca Instil'- II
Mn. Heracbel Crate, Rl I ~
•••
11'; Mn. Raymolld '!'Uck·
d;=~
er, llelpre; Mn. John S. Caul·
against ~e c
man, CoJnn"'•; Mrs. Carl E.
aum of $1,000 wltb InterWyatt, Ja&lt;bon; Mra. George est and costs.
Otworth, Rt. 2 Ironton.
I~;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

Art:

Comparison of Sunday Newspaper Circulation

...,..J.:.

Oldsmobile

"\'ou'U Ute Our Quality Way ~~ 'loiqR Bulli-"

Subscribers

House Makes
2-Edge Sword

GMAC Financing Available

·;kARR &amp; VAN ZANDT

10,209

Dept.

cx........r r )

g[ _.......,.

By

THE

._

John W. Brogan and Wiltla F.
ar01.... to Jalm and J~
Now uranp tht elreW lett.en · Haley, 1110 Aem, Rutland.
Jo!UI and Janet Haley to Jolin
W. BnJiiD and Wilda I. Brogaa,
100 Amo, Rullantl.

t ......nl•r'•

V-8 motor, auto. trans .. power brakes. power steering, power seat, radio, tinted glass, tilt steering wheel
bucket seata, floor console, like new w1s;w tire~ low
mileage. Real sharp.

- -= = - =

Dtllvtnd To

meat, .II Ami, IAIIIOIIver llllley lltd Nova Bail·
ey to Trustees o1 Buhan Fire

I.IBINIK

...

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Beige finish with like new But·kskin vinyl interior,

Middleport, 0,

ive.

==;:frill;;;..~u;;.~.~IISIII~~~.

Starfire Hard Top Cpe.

BAKER
FURNITURE

Sunday Times·Sentinel

f••

r=1

SPECIALI
64 OLDS

• ftLIII llt1c appllanol CIUtltt
~llllpsany appliance.

But in the • • •

...

~rgwm~-1/,J!!i~

jiUI'FC

Our Weekly

4 ....... ., . . . .

establish a magazine oppo•ing mer: '" which he c&lt;~llclzed CATTLE _ steers 19.80 to 21.·
the ruling Communist regime. SOviet government and said 10· Hellen; 17 to 20.50· Fat
Stalin ran Nazi-style concentra- ~ 16 to 18 80 . Canne~s 14 to
If you can hear people talk
The 3Z-year-old former leclu· lion camps ami deported his ws
· ·
.
aitd can't make out tbe words
rer at zadar University was political foes. The Kremlin :::: Bul~~ ~~~.~ :·~· s:~ clearly, then this will be your
picked up by zadar police protested ami Mihajlov was ws 3
. Cal
to' an"":er. A_n extremely am a II
Tuead
three da
before he
Stock Steer
ves 21.25
hearmg a1d using a tiny ener·
ay,
ys
. jailed 37 days and suspended 25.25: Stock Heiler Calves 20.- gized uni~ has been perfected
SybH Ebenlboch to William was scheduled to meet With from the Zadar faculty of 50 to 22.71.
.
by • man who himself iJ hard
P. Neul%llllg and Patricia J. fnends to diSCUSS . the home· philosophy.
VEAL CALVES - Top&gt; 32.· of hearing and haa been for
Neutzllng, Lob, Pomeroy.
based non-CommuniSt perloth· The author's coil e a g ues 80, Seconds 30.110: Medium 29.· oyer 10 ye~. With bla new
Jamea B. Phillips and Martha cal.
planned to go ahead with 20 to 341.00: Common and Heav- a1d, even wh1spers are crystal
Phillips ID Alben E RDseberry Authorities would not reveal TIJursday's meeting at Zadar · 26 to 31 70
clear. U Interested It Is sug.
h 'd ·
des
'"'
· ·
gested you write HEARING,
and Lou Irene Roseberry, Par- the eaact charges against on. I .' ': natic coast
~It&lt;! LAMBS - Tops 23.Sll.
32 E. 9th St., Erie, Pa. You
cols, Lebanon.
Mlhajlov, but there were fears MihaJiov s arrest. The meetmg l
will receive full information
C~arles F. Wildermuth
and the move againsl the controver· was planned to last three or In botany, a haulboy is
a at no cost or obligation wbalo
Kathryn L. Wildermuth, to Hen- 1sJaOiiiil..
au"'th"'o"'r"'w'""l'~on.ilyi-the=fi•ro•t•in=foiiiuriiiiida"'ai.ys"'.==iiiii===•'viiariiiiieti.yiioiifiisiitriiaiiwher=roiyii.==...isoiieiiviieiir.=Aoidiiv.= ==-iiiii
ry E. Cleland and Leona H. II'
Cleland, Lots, Pomeroy.
Everell Ray Wlndoor and Ellie Marie (Grtmm) Wiodaor,
to James J. Profftll and Cather·
Jne I. Proffitt, Parcels, Lebanoo.
Charleo V. Strauas IJid Eve171 C. Strauss, to Albert H.
Durst and Myrtle M.
Durst,
Lot, Pomeroy.
Delmar Herbert Whaley and
Evelya E. Whaley, lo '-rd
S&lt;arbroulh IJid Jo Ana BcarlmHtsh, 17 Acreo, Betlfurd.
Theodore E. Smitll and !leVI
L. Smith, to Oblo Powv Co.,
Euement, Salem.
John w. .Arbllulh IJid Ethel
Arbaugh, to H.n.,
Godfrey
and AliiUI Godfrey, Lot 13, 01·

e1gs

~

CU.

Imen!,

BELGRADE (UP!) _ Yugo- a series de&gt;igned to end the
olav author Mlhajlt ~ihajlov, "independenl" publicatwn bejailed last year for wr!tlng an fore. 1'. could gel 1n prmt.

----=========-:--~=========
_

prices would rise even more.
The Agriculture Department
announced the acreage expansion Monlay. Seeretary OrviUe
L. Freeman said the additional
8.9 million acres -along with 8
7.7 million mcrease set last
May -would raise expected
111117 production to 1.6 billion
bushels.
The newest increase will
bring the total of acres alloted
lor wheat to 68.2 million.
Department officials said it
would have a sUght effeet on
ri&amp;ing bread prlc.., uoder
investigation by the depart-

Miha]"lov in Trouble Again
Wt"tb Opposl.ti·on Mag"'71·ne

• &gt; '

day gave the alrUne• pel'!ll»
slon "' provide free transporla

.

. AnUquo while cuo·
1econcl h1nd. '

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. . . &amp;H

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H·Sheet Pencil Tablet ..................11c
Webster' e School, Offlee Dictionary ..lie
2-Pocket Vinyl Envy-Lope............... S7a
l-Inch Pointed Sclaaon ................ 2Sc
I.Jiundry Marld~P~n,lron-On Tepee . .S7o
~of t1
Cnyone .. ~ ....... :: •17a

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11"·1•.C-"¥

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AdminIS• t ra'ti.•on IS• Aw...;.m·gReaeti·on o'·f ., . ....u I
.
.
nemp oyment
Market to 15% lncre ase in Acreage Lmut . ... h

/

Dolly Sentinel, P&gt;mb!fOy.JII!ddleport, 0., Aug. 9, 111611

IU

WASHINGTON lUPil -The
Johnaon administration today
awaited the wheat market's
reaclloo to a 16 per cent
expansion of the 1917 wheel
acreage allotment. ·
OfOclala were hopeful wheat
prlcea would remain IOlJDd
delpite market speculation in
recent weeks which has bid
cash prices to artificially high
levels.
Foiling prices would likely
hurt farmen more than it
would help consumers. Some
farmers have been holding
bock wheat In hopes market
'

. THESE THREE silots ha•e been chosen to tate part in the lint Apollo three·
They
man space fligh t, p anned u 1 Ioreronner to putlln
m1 • man on tbe m00n.
are, left to right, Virgil (Gus) Gr:isaom, the command pilot; Edward H. White, the
first American to wafk in space and RAIIW B. Cblffee. The Apollo-! flight "
acbeduled for early next year. NASA announced the selection of !be three pilots
In Downey, Calif..

.

M •

apparently for attemptmg to arl1cl~ ~nt1tl~

~~~:rw=e~~""~!ed::.:

DipS S1Ig l 1Y

to a reunion Oct. 13-16 m Los
Commissl~n
~ales. The CAB_ said the I""
subcomtmttee.
WASHINGT()N &lt;UP!)_- Un· ridea could he giVen between
The Increase was ordered lo employmenl ill the nation dip- Ocl. 9 and Oct. 22.
replenish dwindling U.S. wheal ped slightly to 3.9 per ?'nt lasll
reserves; to meet domestic and month .as the naUon s ~ork1 1
foreign food needs; to hedce force h1t a new ati-Ume b1gh,
the surplus supply against the ljle Labor Department report·
impact of drought here and ed Mooday.
abroad.
At the same time, bowevet,
Officials hoped the larger average earnlngo for faC\OrY
altotmenl of wheat acreage worken and the average fac.
would induct farmers to plant tory work week bolb dropped
more of the staple crop and not for the third consecutive month.
require any chBJige In s~pport Arthur Ross, commJssioner of
prices Jo spur new plantmgs. the Bureau of Labor Statlallc&amp;,
said the 3.9 per cent ullt!mploy·
1ment figure represented no significant change from the 4 per
cent monthly average for the
first half of 19116.
PT. PLEASANT
the

Federal
and a

Trade
house

=========:;
a..-.ac
0111 In I

nn••r•
DUftiiiOVIn'l

Market Report

.

explosive anti-Soviet article, Mlh&amp;Jk&gt;V ach1":'ed. fame last
was uoder arresl again today , year after. publ.'~allon oi an

__._

LIVESTOCK
SALES
co. FREE RIDES
PT.
PLEASANT,
W. VaA.
Satanlay, Aq. 1, IliA
WASHINGTON (UP!) -The
HOGS _ 175 to 220 23
10 Civil Aeronautics Board MooZli.IO; Heavies 22 _70 to 24.60 ,
Lights 20 to 24 , Fat sows 17
to 19_25; Boars 14 to II; Pigs
,
,
g to 18: SJDck Shoats
avg.
TranSIStor

Deaf Man Perfects
Midget
•
•
Heanng Aiel

MoscB": . s~m- 19 to 25 .

Property
Transfers

FLOWERP01' I-IAN6ERS
OR. . tJI' yOUR ,..TIO, FINU,
PORCH, !TO•

.... v

• flf&amp;ltlliN Cookcontrol lilllllcookll
lllllts-aulomalica!Jy tt

lfmill,..._

•'ntllllltl"and ... 6'
aarfltl units.

1

IJno&lt;roiUJethelefour.fomblo'
Aetltr lAt tlth sq•art, to
fear ordln•ry 'WOflh.

August. Spedall

$218·00 '

'.

General Telepboae Co.
of
Cllllo 1o Ullfletl 8ta!M, Easemeat, Letart.
Jalm Baprd llltlllarie . .

11

I

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pod lo UDflld .....

~
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:REYJES L
I I I KJ I I =~"::":::-..:.::.

•

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MiSI Amerjca

TEPEE

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...,...)

(.-

Cadillac -

LOM: COUIIM -

.-..... s- ,.. .,..,.•.••• .....,. .flaJJir,. ..,

·
J.

.....-IHIDI'fllllllllfiAWAY

WY 2-5342

Rober Hoopllal:
Visiting
hours M and 7-8 p.m. Parents
only oo Pediatrics Ward.
PT. PLEASANT - Four cou· 1
Adadlllou
pies have made applications
Mrs. Charles A. Nuckles, 1113 for marriage licenses~ the ofAdrian Ave.; Mrll· Guy Jordan, flee of the County Cler .
~Second Ave.; Mrs. Raymood Applying were Richard AJ.
Scolt, 817 Fourth Ave.;
Mrs.
Fielder, Z4, CoU&amp;geville,
Denver H. ll'ouct, Rl 2 Crown
Nancy Alice Thompson, 21,
Clly; Mn. lloyd T. Jeffers, Hl
' Pleasant; Clayton
I Palrlot; Mrs. Fred Facemire, IStuller, , Hogselt, and tiell""ll
Rl % Patriot; Mn. Raymood
18, Gallipolll FerJ. I""JIIIIIJOD, Millon; GleiDI M.
Robert Stephen MaDelle,
Sayre, Jr., Pl. Pleasant; KimPl. Pleasan~ and Mary Louherly Jo Neville, Rl. 2
Pl.
Neal, l8, Pl. Pleasant;
Pleasant; Paul R. Cox, Rl. I
Raymand BeUomy, It,
PL PletiAIII; Miss Emma N.
Ohio, and Roberta

Mr. Advertiser:

WAIIIIJIGTON IUPI -The
- · will tbe ead ol 1
.....,d...,....,. elvD rlahll

Sgt. Byers Announces
New 120-Delay Program

deiJate bu faidt..ed

n::....•

==~

atW

I

This information is imP.Ortant to your business

use

~- Robert B~en. the Army is still availlble IUII'anlletl ........,. bid &lt;lily to ldoa I
Recruiter In Ulis area, bu u- school!DI t'UiiDI hiD £let!. po1illtill llvJnt the Jllitlee
llltlb&lt;ed lbat the Army has now Ironies to AJrenft ~ DepltiWWI pellll" lo
llltmdw:ed
the long-awaited Men can otiU qualify lor tra1a- ltdlllll school IIIli publle
'"12Hay Delay" program for inl in the Combat Arms, Metll- flelllt:Y tleui"Ptloa IUfll
tile ·benelll of young men enlist- cal Care ll: TrealmeDI, Mmla- before III09IJrc It I,
lD&amp; in the U.S. Army.
istraUon utflliiDy oilier flltl4l. IIMI 90IM Cll Pt I pet
Bqlnnlng immediately, the
-·• liroatf: t II rllbll
JIIOiram aUows Army appll· COMMI!KCIAL RADIO
bill.
ants k1 eatlst up to f111r SAIGON (UP!) South Viet Mrllen espeeted lbt .abow·
before being rolled to Nam will have cemmercill down roJJcaill today, tile 12t11
ICifve duty.
radio broadeut aenrlce - • day If tleblle,. Gf W""n-n~Y·
Tbe real value of the pro- lime in Oclober, the Viet Nam The ltM elvill'lf!bl! bill, wbidl
Fam, according to Sgt. Byers, R&gt;uUo IIUIIIWICetlloday. ThiN covered even lUre toitllory
il that young men who are lac- are now about 700,000 radio 1011 than the eurrent measure, tllOk:
lng an itmninent draft call and in tbe country.
ollly aine days of llouM debale.
&lt; roq~ire several months to com- GUARDS ESOAPE
But the l.lfl6 bill : : - ":;
plete personal arrangements be- BERLIN (UPf) _Two Com- two aubJecta bllh
po1lllt
:; be entering the Army, such as
. 1 Eut German border and emotional eoateDl
eompleting a summer school tDtlDI8
.
•
The HOUIIII dealt wltb - ol
,; terlll or working a few more guards short..,!rculted oeorcll- them Monday when il attlcbetl
IDOtllhs or for
other- Ugbts whDe 00 patrol Stulday u "llllkilt" rm tnsrt to
.lli'J
. and fled to the Americu lbt p9 ..
- - 1 fv
,, may now rece~ve a dnll clJui. of Weot llerliD. llttth .,.... Ia
• a 1I -.....,, llcalkot of ID which llllkel
fetlenJ adlon ,,.,_ aillcka
·~ them immune from the tfrlfi tmllormthemlltd lool&lt; their
lltd tomr dtrleted at
·• Immediately. However, it il wltll
·
and civil
1• •"' waaltl make
I!Dportant to DOle that Ill order IliON OONl'IIACT
'l'ht If be eligible for the beoeflll'ol .J£RUSALDI (UP!) -llir it illepllo tram Ire al8l8 ~
' tllJs· program, men must lliln crews of the !sraeU natleaal state to bletle cr IIIIo put tn
liP lor the prtFIIII no later airline El AI 8tllUJ lipid 1 v otlter civll dfiiUibiD..
1llU the day "BEI'ORE" they Dine-IIIOIItb CCIIIrtiCt lfllr Jleld- ... P"IJ!Itti 'lltJIIIit J'lllllll up
tbe1r draft DOIIco.
lag Ill 101111 o1 Ill* I . II to fl'ft JMr1 Ill Pl1loD. ...tltJO
s,t. Byera also pnillfs out !bat concerninl p ID lltd ltllllll 11M or both,
. • lbt deiiJ fl'GIIIID, o1 1i1o pad.
!lop. Wlll!lm C. Crania', ft.
. , . . . are no meetiDp to alle!ttl. BIGB DIIOIINlNGI
Fla., 8piiiS« II the ..,.....
' Mea who t!1111r the Arrlq t11t- TOKYO
jU P ])
- 1110111, llld II WGIIItl 11M lllfeal
:• ' tbe "!»Dey Delay" pro- Ja~ 111u-l pt111ce
re- parliclpiDII iD pooeeful ......._
~ 'II'QliCillally acerU&lt; longevity por1et1 today • pe:- have atralions.
· ·
jU[Allll while wallilll drowDed .... • olllln 1111 !lui be llld 111!011ld liYI the
': ·~}ll!llft!. cluly.
misaibc !rum lteadlfr. . . . federal governt11011! authority to
• the bwlito wbfcb aiaee I hal ..... " ' - Alii·
dawa • proleul[!!ll!
11aa lrltllliolaily 111- 1. Aulboritiel aoid n ,.._ qitators 11id 1o be illli'iilll
1111 ...... .... ,.. ......., ... it p ........ tho COI!IIIry •• li

In Gallia and Meigs Countlea

....;u.,

5

\

riiU .ill l!fl cilll.

..._

JMtele• ...
BJI'Clll T. Greenlee, Sr., Lee

Holcomb, Jolm w. Jachon, Mr9
Orll D. Lafl!e7, lfl'l. Ruaaell
Moore, .lctlm W........ _,., JobD

Columbus Iunday Dllpaflk - - - -.....- - - - - - ' I,IJI
•
Huntlngto• Herllld Wr.:trt!Ht - - - - - - - - - - - - - 616

w. Mullea, Mn. ,lllntld Pa~

Mra. Jlar7 .,........, .Jlrl.
Wootlrtlrr B, ' 1,11tn, MrS. · Gory

• • • Important because you

ate interesttflln liavlng tlie lar-

gest possible audience in your shopping arta 11ad and act
upon your advertising mes~c~g~ .

ncerve

era

Monday.

1,111

'ri . . .
.. ';~· , ' U

•

..
~---------~--:'
,~'1- ~li..i~~
..
~

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I

·'

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l·t

J• 9'0Cl

One year JU&amp;r.entea!
2· or 3-rlng stylo.

VINYL BINDER
LonJ lasting. Wlpta

clean, stays neat.

J• 00·

INDEXED NOTE BOOK
96 pa&amp;:es for 3 suDjects. 3-hofe punch.

88c
......
..

:.s

E. Wlnlont .... Infant tfliuebte',
Mn. Larry Q, IIHrbeU IDtl, ID-

IIIII 1011.

.

an ove plu&amp;

rn or~

paper. die·

tionary, assign ment bool-:.

Rll.
2.02
V1l111

SCHOOL

149

2 47

Smart studantl

make smart buys!
Economy -·m e pack
with nt\rrow or reg·
ular rules.

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COCHRAN
PAINTS

tllnMIII Eleclrlt:
1

TABLE RADIO

· 1 - l t. . bb/
On • FIMITtlpl

1099

Deoorator Colors

.aw• HARDWARE

S.fe, plastic jar with
brush. 5 oz. size.

Z9c

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Savings on pq, of
30. canvtnlent,. tool

Wrap-around
cover folds back
and under to

77I'C.

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save space in
limited areas .
Wnhable vinyl

cover stays neat.

MORE SAVINGS HERE!

h-ot,' 1&amp;.

MWdiiP . .
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a.oz, lh•~

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Colorflilprl~ta. ·

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I
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t.
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e.
S
e
Sunda~ Times ,, . ' U
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!...-----------·
..
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88c

Buy 12 blue Ink r•·

tnrs-aet pen free.

VINYL BINDER

lr

ErDeat

L. Jones, Harrisonville. datllhl!tr, I:IJ a.m.
Monday; .,.... David L. IIJle,
Rl 4 Oak H111, 11011, 10:12 I.JII.

Athens lullday M 111npr

N..,..
rl&amp;bll-••·

w...-

Blrtlls

Mrs.

Svnd!ly lltxis teatlnel

PEN A CARTRIDGES

II

0.

POI'I'I!!roy Ohio

Canvas b1n:lers.
ruled M er. ind elt
g111rles 1ncluded.

Forlbe, LoDe
Malon;llollom;
Mn. Car~l~Au~lb-;i&lt;AnaWo.
II,
er11011,
Wfth ahoulder strap
F. Scott, Pomeroy; Mrs.
end handle. Colorful.
•
ll... tz. ..
L. Jones, llarrl!onvllle; Judith
A. Owens, Middleport; Cheryl Civil Action is
Lefobre, Pomeroy; Connie A. Filed In Court
Coolie, Middleport; John
C.
SANT
A
Boaedict, Rl. I Mt. Alto, W. PT. PLEA . . V . u - v - Keele Rl 1 action hu been flied In the ol·
•·· -·· ~~
•
ot the ctrcwt Clerk sl!l•ed II
Oak Hl11; Walter A. Patterson,
of West Virginia " ·
Ernest, Pa.; Ramen J. Meyers,
J Woods addt"'!!_~IDWD, I I
Rt. 2 Wellltml; Oren D. Light mu · T ~ttox address
DlspenHr with 1000
n..-, Hl 2 Soulb Point; "nmoand Carl E'. Wall,
Inch II, ¥2-ln. wide.
Jhy B. HDI, IIJllsdale, Mich.;
dba w. M. a. w
Mra. Jolin F. Marb, Jackson;
Transomerlca Instil'- II
Mn. Heracbel Crate, Rl I ~
•••
11'; Mn. Raymolld '!'Uck·
d;=~
er, llelpre; Mn. John S. Caul·
against ~e c
man, CoJnn"'•; Mrs. Carl E.
aum of $1,000 wltb InterWyatt, Ja&lt;bon; Mra. George est and costs.
Otworth, Rt. 2 Ironton.
I~;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

Art:

Comparison of Sunday Newspaper Circulation

...,..J.:.

Oldsmobile

"\'ou'U Ute Our Quality Way ~~ 'loiqR Bulli-"

Subscribers

House Makes
2-Edge Sword

GMAC Financing Available

·;kARR &amp; VAN ZANDT

10,209

Dept.

cx........r r )

g[ _.......,.

By

THE

._

John W. Brogan and Wiltla F.
ar01.... to Jalm and J~
Now uranp tht elreW lett.en · Haley, 1110 Aem, Rutland.
Jo!UI and Janet Haley to Jolin
W. BnJiiD and Wilda I. Brogaa,
100 Amo, Rullantl.

t ......nl•r'•

V-8 motor, auto. trans .. power brakes. power steering, power seat, radio, tinted glass, tilt steering wheel
bucket seata, floor console, like new w1s;w tire~ low
mileage. Real sharp.

- -= = - =

Dtllvtnd To

meat, .II Ami, IAIIIOIIver llllley lltd Nova Bail·
ey to Trustees o1 Buhan Fire

I.IBINIK

...

'

Beige finish with like new But·kskin vinyl interior,

Middleport, 0,

ive.

==;:frill;;;..~u;;.~.~IISIII~~~.

Starfire Hard Top Cpe.

BAKER
FURNITURE

Sunday Times·Sentinel

f••

r=1

SPECIALI
64 OLDS

• ftLIII llt1c appllanol CIUtltt
~llllpsany appliance.

But in the • • •

...

~rgwm~-1/,J!!i~

jiUI'FC

Our Weekly

4 ....... ., . . . .

establish a magazine oppo•ing mer: '" which he c&lt;~llclzed CATTLE _ steers 19.80 to 21.·
the ruling Communist regime. SOviet government and said 10· Hellen; 17 to 20.50· Fat
Stalin ran Nazi-style concentra- ~ 16 to 18 80 . Canne~s 14 to
If you can hear people talk
The 3Z-year-old former leclu· lion camps ami deported his ws
· ·
.
aitd can't make out tbe words
rer at zadar University was political foes. The Kremlin :::: Bul~~ ~~~.~ :·~· s:~ clearly, then this will be your
picked up by zadar police protested ami Mihajlov was ws 3
. Cal
to' an"":er. A_n extremely am a II
Tuead
three da
before he
Stock Steer
ves 21.25
hearmg a1d using a tiny ener·
ay,
ys
. jailed 37 days and suspended 25.25: Stock Heiler Calves 20.- gized uni~ has been perfected
SybH Ebenlboch to William was scheduled to meet With from the Zadar faculty of 50 to 22.71.
.
by • man who himself iJ hard
P. Neul%llllg and Patricia J. fnends to diSCUSS . the home· philosophy.
VEAL CALVES - Top&gt; 32.· of hearing and haa been for
Neutzllng, Lob, Pomeroy.
based non-CommuniSt perloth· The author's coil e a g ues 80, Seconds 30.110: Medium 29.· oyer 10 ye~. With bla new
Jamea B. Phillips and Martha cal.
planned to go ahead with 20 to 341.00: Common and Heav- a1d, even wh1spers are crystal
Phillips ID Alben E RDseberry Authorities would not reveal TIJursday's meeting at Zadar · 26 to 31 70
clear. U Interested It Is sug.
h 'd ·
des
'"'
· ·
gested you write HEARING,
and Lou Irene Roseberry, Par- the eaact charges against on. I .' ': natic coast
~It&lt;! LAMBS - Tops 23.Sll.
32 E. 9th St., Erie, Pa. You
cols, Lebanon.
Mlhajlov, but there were fears MihaJiov s arrest. The meetmg l
will receive full information
C~arles F. Wildermuth
and the move againsl the controver· was planned to last three or In botany, a haulboy is
a at no cost or obligation wbalo
Kathryn L. Wildermuth, to Hen- 1sJaOiiiil..
au"'th"'o"'r"'w'""l'~on.ilyi-the=fi•ro•t•in=foiiiuriiiiida"'ai.ys"'.==iiiii===•'viiariiiiieti.yiioiifiisiitriiaiiwher=roiyii.==...isoiieiiviieiir.=Aoidiiv.= ==-iiiii
ry E. Cleland and Leona H. II'
Cleland, Lots, Pomeroy.
Everell Ray Wlndoor and Ellie Marie (Grtmm) Wiodaor,
to James J. Profftll and Cather·
Jne I. Proffitt, Parcels, Lebanoo.
Charleo V. Strauas IJid Eve171 C. Strauss, to Albert H.
Durst and Myrtle M.
Durst,
Lot, Pomeroy.
Delmar Herbert Whaley and
Evelya E. Whaley, lo '-rd
S&lt;arbroulh IJid Jo Ana BcarlmHtsh, 17 Acreo, Betlfurd.
Theodore E. Smitll and !leVI
L. Smith, to Oblo Powv Co.,
Euement, Salem.
John w. .Arbllulh IJid Ethel
Arbaugh, to H.n.,
Godfrey
and AliiUI Godfrey, Lot 13, 01·

e1gs

~

CU.

Imen!,

BELGRADE (UP!) _ Yugo- a series de&gt;igned to end the
olav author Mlhajlt ~ihajlov, "independenl" publicatwn bejailed last year for wr!tlng an fore. 1'. could gel 1n prmt.

----=========-:--~=========
_

prices would rise even more.
The Agriculture Department
announced the acreage expansion Monlay. Seeretary OrviUe
L. Freeman said the additional
8.9 million acres -along with 8
7.7 million mcrease set last
May -would raise expected
111117 production to 1.6 billion
bushels.
The newest increase will
bring the total of acres alloted
lor wheat to 68.2 million.
Department officials said it
would have a sUght effeet on
ri&amp;ing bread prlc.., uoder
investigation by the depart-

Miha]"lov in Trouble Again
Wt"tb Opposl.ti·on Mag"'71·ne

• &gt; '

day gave the alrUne• pel'!ll»
slon "' provide free transporla

.

. AnUquo while cuo·
1econcl h1nd. '

''\·~1

Z• 99
. . . &amp;H

i'' \, •

Blc

H·Sheet Pencil Tablet ..................11c
Webster' e School, Offlee Dictionary ..lie
2-Pocket Vinyl Envy-Lope............... S7a
l-Inch Pointed Sclaaon ................ 2Sc
I.Jiundry Marld~P~n,lron-On Tepee . .S7o
~of t1
Cnyone .. ~ ....... :: •17a

Cn-

11"·1•.C-"¥

St=:N .- FRANt&lt;LIN·
..

~(

•
•$"L

..

•

Free Padring

. •
,o~. 1, ,
Nea- ....
~·
.t·..

.~

'"

}.

........··..;.

.

�-

... . .. . . . ..

.,

•I,

'I

.

Business :serv·ices~;
Dally Sentinel, Pomeroy-Middleport&gt; 0., Aug. 9, 1968-9

1 ...
... '

.
!

Reel Estate For Sale
Business

PomerovJ
Motor Co. ·

~
'62 CHEVY II

. AUCTIONEER
Wrih. Phone or Ctntact

$1095

'61 RAMBLER

JIM CARNAHAN
RACINE. OHIO

i atri !.

'61 GMC

Ton 8 ft. Pickup. Wide body, 6 eyl. engi~e, Cab A-1
dltlon. White over red finish, beater, new tireS

k1.

' 4. '

•
!•

$1095

~

Pomeroy Motor Co.

.

!i

OPEN lVII. 9.00 P.M.

I'OMEIIOY, OHIO

.'
••

.

I

\2''1
; ~;=.:::;;~:;:=~~

1'

~-

==

ly kiNG

\'IMJlV WHir

'ltiRti . . CNt

:

DAOP-OUTf

til\

~ ~

.

WE WISH to expre11 our lin·
cere tbanka and appreciation
to ·all our frleods and neigh·
bors who helped In any way
at the death of our huBband
and lather, Joho W.
We are especially l!I'aleful to
the Raclne Emergency Squad,
the Ewing Funeral Home,
Fritz l!u&lt;:k and Rev. Charles ·
O'Conner. Alao !AI the many
friends, relaUves and neigh·
bors whO sent lood and flow· 18 YEAR old or older b o y,
era. Tho John Marr Family. high school l!I'•duate, for d.,.
liveries on 146 We!l Main St., I
"lip
Pomer07, 0. for the D&amp;D
Meat Distributor.
B 9 3tc
lott 1nd Found

1!~~~~~~~~~~:!1::=======~=~ Ia·j',:;;:::::::=::::::::::~.

Pom1r07.
t 32 lfc\ atofy
x 1110)frame,
.Close Itorooma
school,(4 bedI'k
KARL GRUESER, plumbing
rooms), front and back porch,
8lld
beat!D&amp;, MJnenvUle,
furnace heating, $9,5110.
I Oblo. Eod your oewer trouble.
-··• SYRACUSE
1 story lrame,
We bave aU 1lze sewer .......
- · Reasonable rall!l. CaU
5 rooms (3 bedrooms), oew !
WY Z-2974, daJ or nlgbl
bad1 and utiUty room, corner
Uc
lot
100 • tiiO). Onwer must
8 15
1
.. , $4,ooo.

I

!,

I

ALBERT M. COX, BROKER
. ·, . PHONE 112-3131,
i.
EVENINGS llti-3136•

Thlonks

;

(.'OD ·

MIDDLEPORT - Cerner lot2 story frame, 8 rooms C3
bedrooms) , bath, Ist
floor

modern, new furnace. close
BEATING, PLUMBING. Rural
lo schools. Only $6,500.
lloxol Bottle Gas. Arnold
Brothero, 611 E. Main St., SYRACUSE - Corner lot ( 150

$595

American Conv. Cpe. New tires, 1ood top, dark areen finhlh,
6 cyl., std. traM. Radio and heater.

•

ON ANNE Street~ Pomeroy ,0:,
for large, quick sale, real
bargain. Ph. 992-2792. I 9 6tc

COMPLETE SALES
MANAGEMENT

Nova 4 door, local owner. TurQuoise finish, power Jt.el!ll'l.ng
and brakes. Radio and heater, • real abarpie

II

Service~

EXPERIENCED

WHEll
AliGNMENT
and

BRAKE SERVICE

EXPERIENCED

WHEEl
,.UGNMEN
a

flY 2-2193

Pomeroy

and

BRAKE SERVICE
Phano t92.3576

W. Mliin St.
Pomerey
rormerly Grueser Body
Worb

NOW REPRESENTING

lThuro.·Fri..Sot.)

All Models
At Reduced Prices

BIG BEND
TRAILER SALES
ROUTE 124

TAKING RINTAL
RIIIRVATIOHI

y·

Rase Alignment Shop

BlaeHnars

-

MEIGS COUNTY
WITH FULL SERVICE

• SALIS•
• RENTALS•
eC.mpl.,. lo!alpmonte

IOUSH &amp; LYONS
C1mplngTrlllln
lllrten St.
MuH, w, Va,
--

77U611

SBUNG OUT
•2 USED CAU LEI'T

•PARTS~rOUTIOAID

MOTORS

Auto Clult af Southern Ohio

801 E. IYER
125 Falrl•n• Dr. Midcflt!Mrt

Coping with Unmanly Men

Children Must Not Just Go

•BOATS • MOTORS
•BOAT PAINT
•TOOLS
S..At

Metropolit1n Moton
Ew..lllll oiHI S.tunloy

Forest Run &amp;lock Co.
for The lest I•

Cinder &amp; Concrett ·
BLOCKS
t · I·8 · 121DcbBiocb
eCement • .Mortar e:Ue$al
Windows • Doora
•Door
Framea &amp; Other JI110111'J
Suplfllet.
I'HCINI HM061 POMIIIOY

OM Town Flats
Society Notes

AUCI'ION - We are
our thrift shop oo 3nl St.
Raelne, Oblo, SatUf!lay,
I31b 10 a. m.
Everytliing
must go. A large selection of
clothing, some furniture, n.
frigeratDrs, stoves, noveltles,
and antique ilems. Somelhlng
for you .., be there. Terms
cash. Not responsible for accidenla. Donna Hayman,
er, Tho llrldford AucUon Co.
cr1u Bradford, Auctioneer.
I 7 etc

'

), ;

"

••

...

a

3

ADAMS TRADING Poll
OJIIII I tlaya a week: . MoD-

ft.!'- .

daJ lbrouih saturdty. We

have ridlo IIIII lelevlaloo
pair, alio plenly ol ':.';~~

~·'''.;.:~
a£.1:~

i._
_o_._P_b.

.

~"""

Main S~ In HI
_'14US9l:.::::::____:.7_:21l::....:::Uc

For Rent

:.11S'!t

·:·t:i4
••' .

~

... .:

..

~i),

"

•

.....

, lj !' ~ .

."

.

·~ ·

eo.

aa

BOAT. and molor. C.. see
Norrla Monument
Works,
~07, 0.
I 7 3tp
lt FT. Fibergl... boat
til liP Mercuey motor and
trailer, 1111!2 model, A-I CODdllioo. Coalael GIII'J Glbbe,
M....,, W. Va., or caU 'mWI.
7 Sl 12tc

.

cucumbero. aaron.. ProfDU,

WINNIE WINKLI

,tr; '

I

ora retain brilliance in
pels eleaned with Blue
tre .. ReD! el~tric shw01pooer I
$1. Pomeroy Cement

Porlllnd. Oblo. Pb. HI 22M.

TliREE 11111 1c&gt;ur

itllbeil

!UOIII

rur.

apartmeutt. AU ~

111e pold. Phclal WY N7'll.

ftowle1 IIIII

P,

IlL

llled. Alter

caU WY Nm.
t I

I

7 lt Uc
VBNETIAN bllndl, au kinds.
Also repairs. Dale Wippel
Supply, ~ UDioD
Ave.,
7 ~ 3lllc
Pomeroy, Oblo.

�-

... . .. . . . ..

.,

•I,

'I

.

Business :serv·ices~;
Dally Sentinel, Pomeroy-Middleport&gt; 0., Aug. 9, 1968-9

1 ...
... '

.
!

Reel Estate For Sale
Business

PomerovJ
Motor Co. ·

~
'62 CHEVY II

. AUCTIONEER
Wrih. Phone or Ctntact

$1095

'61 RAMBLER

JIM CARNAHAN
RACINE. OHIO

i atri !.

'61 GMC

Ton 8 ft. Pickup. Wide body, 6 eyl. engi~e, Cab A-1
dltlon. White over red finish, beater, new tireS

k1.

' 4. '

•
!•

$1095

~

Pomeroy Motor Co.

.

!i

OPEN lVII. 9.00 P.M.

I'OMEIIOY, OHIO

.'
••

.

I

\2''1
; ~;=.:::;;~:;:=~~

1'

~-

==

ly kiNG

\'IMJlV WHir

'ltiRti . . CNt

:

DAOP-OUTf

til\

~ ~

.

WE WISH to expre11 our lin·
cere tbanka and appreciation
to ·all our frleods and neigh·
bors who helped In any way
at the death of our huBband
and lather, Joho W.
We are especially l!I'aleful to
the Raclne Emergency Squad,
the Ewing Funeral Home,
Fritz l!u&lt;:k and Rev. Charles ·
O'Conner. Alao !AI the many
friends, relaUves and neigh·
bors whO sent lood and flow· 18 YEAR old or older b o y,
era. Tho John Marr Family. high school l!I'•duate, for d.,.
liveries on 146 We!l Main St., I
"lip
Pomer07, 0. for the D&amp;D
Meat Distributor.
B 9 3tc
lott 1nd Found

1!~~~~~~~~~~:!1::=======~=~ Ia·j',:;;:::::::=::::::::::~.

Pom1r07.
t 32 lfc\ atofy
x 1110)frame,
.Close Itorooma
school,(4 bedI'k
KARL GRUESER, plumbing
rooms), front and back porch,
8lld
beat!D&amp;, MJnenvUle,
furnace heating, $9,5110.
I Oblo. Eod your oewer trouble.
-··• SYRACUSE
1 story lrame,
We bave aU 1lze sewer .......
- · Reasonable rall!l. CaU
5 rooms (3 bedrooms), oew !
WY Z-2974, daJ or nlgbl
bad1 and utiUty room, corner
Uc
lot
100 • tiiO). Onwer must
8 15
1
.. , $4,ooo.

I

!,

I

ALBERT M. COX, BROKER
. ·, . PHONE 112-3131,
i.
EVENINGS llti-3136•

Thlonks

;

(.'OD ·

MIDDLEPORT - Cerner lot2 story frame, 8 rooms C3
bedrooms) , bath, Ist
floor

modern, new furnace. close
BEATING, PLUMBING. Rural
lo schools. Only $6,500.
lloxol Bottle Gas. Arnold
Brothero, 611 E. Main St., SYRACUSE - Corner lot ( 150

$595

American Conv. Cpe. New tires, 1ood top, dark areen finhlh,
6 cyl., std. traM. Radio and heater.

•

ON ANNE Street~ Pomeroy ,0:,
for large, quick sale, real
bargain. Ph. 992-2792. I 9 6tc

COMPLETE SALES
MANAGEMENT

Nova 4 door, local owner. TurQuoise finish, power Jt.el!ll'l.ng
and brakes. Radio and heater, • real abarpie

II

Service~

EXPERIENCED

WHEll
AliGNMENT
and

BRAKE SERVICE

EXPERIENCED

WHEEl
,.UGNMEN
a

flY 2-2193

Pomeroy

and

BRAKE SERVICE
Phano t92.3576

W. Mliin St.
Pomerey
rormerly Grueser Body
Worb

NOW REPRESENTING

lThuro.·Fri..Sot.)

All Models
At Reduced Prices

BIG BEND
TRAILER SALES
ROUTE 124

TAKING RINTAL
RIIIRVATIOHI

y·

Rase Alignment Shop

BlaeHnars

-

MEIGS COUNTY
WITH FULL SERVICE

• SALIS•
• RENTALS•
eC.mpl.,. lo!alpmonte

IOUSH &amp; LYONS
C1mplngTrlllln
lllrten St.
MuH, w, Va,
--

77U611

SBUNG OUT
•2 USED CAU LEI'T

•PARTS~rOUTIOAID

MOTORS

Auto Clult af Southern Ohio

801 E. IYER
125 Falrl•n• Dr. Midcflt!Mrt

Coping with Unmanly Men

Children Must Not Just Go

•BOATS • MOTORS
•BOAT PAINT
•TOOLS
S..At

Metropolit1n Moton
Ew..lllll oiHI S.tunloy

Forest Run &amp;lock Co.
for The lest I•

Cinder &amp; Concrett ·
BLOCKS
t · I·8 · 121DcbBiocb
eCement • .Mortar e:Ue$al
Windows • Doora
•Door
Framea &amp; Other JI110111'J
Suplfllet.
I'HCINI HM061 POMIIIOY

OM Town Flats
Society Notes

AUCI'ION - We are
our thrift shop oo 3nl St.
Raelne, Oblo, SatUf!lay,
I31b 10 a. m.
Everytliing
must go. A large selection of
clothing, some furniture, n.
frigeratDrs, stoves, noveltles,
and antique ilems. Somelhlng
for you .., be there. Terms
cash. Not responsible for accidenla. Donna Hayman,
er, Tho llrldford AucUon Co.
cr1u Bradford, Auctioneer.
I 7 etc

'

), ;

"

••

...

a

3

ADAMS TRADING Poll
OJIIII I tlaya a week: . MoD-

ft.!'- .

daJ lbrouih saturdty. We

have ridlo IIIII lelevlaloo
pair, alio plenly ol ':.';~~

~·'''.;.:~
a£.1:~

i._
_o_._P_b.

.

~"""

Main S~ In HI
_'14US9l:.::::::____:.7_:21l::....:::Uc

For Rent

:.11S'!t

·:·t:i4
••' .

~

... .:

..

~i),

"

•

.....

, lj !' ~ .

."

.

·~ ·

eo.

aa

BOAT. and molor. C.. see
Norrla Monument
Works,
~07, 0.
I 7 3tp
lt FT. Fibergl... boat
til liP Mercuey motor and
trailer, 1111!2 model, A-I CODdllioo. Coalael GIII'J Glbbe,
M....,, W. Va., or caU 'mWI.
7 Sl 12tc

.

cucumbero. aaron.. ProfDU,

WINNIE WINKLI

,tr; '

I

ora retain brilliance in
pels eleaned with Blue
tre .. ReD! el~tric shw01pooer I
$1. Pomeroy Cement

Porlllnd. Oblo. Pb. HI 22M.

TliREE 11111 1c&gt;ur

itllbeil

!UOIII

rur.

apartmeutt. AU ~

111e pold. Phclal WY N7'll.

ftowle1 IIIII

P,

IlL

llled. Alter

caU WY Nm.
t I

I

7 lt Uc
VBNETIAN bllndl, au kinds.
Also repairs. Dale Wippel
Supply, ~ UDioD
Ave.,
7 ~ 3lllc
Pomeroy, Oblo.

�l

,,

. \;
'

'

•,'•

'

'

'
' '

"'

'

'·

'
I'

.
•

Aug. 12-13

'WAR·GODS OF THE DEE P'
(Color)
Vincent Pr it't', 'l'ab Hunter
"MOMENT TO MOMENT"
(Technicolm l
Jean

e

•

•

'

•

•

.enttne

..

Pomerey, O..to

Aug, 10.11

NOT OPEN
.fill DAY and SATURDAY

!

''

'

. '·.
'

About

'

Delle,.;t To T,., ~nlllr., 01 The MelpJium. ::4rM
\..
.-~-.~--~-------.--~---.-.---.--~-------------=~::::::~==~~==~~~:7--~------~::~::::~~-:7:~;;~~~;;;-----·~
NO. 80

V01. XVIII

POMEROY-MIDDI.EPORI', OHIO

.
• I.
AtrInes,

LAST TIME TONIGHT
"THE SINGING NUN"
- TecbnicolorDebbie Reynolds
Ricardo Montalban
Agnes Moorehe~!d

Colorc•rtOons

MISS DONNA DAILEY
WED. ond THURSDAY

Mr. and Mn. Floyd R. Dal~
ey of Raclae liDDOUDt!t:" 1bt eapfemenl of their daughter,
Mlos Donna Jeaa Dalley to
Mr. James William Oller. oo.•
ef Mn. Anna Grace Oiler.
Syncuse. Mill Dalley Is a
lJ65 rrodoalo of Racine Hlg.
S.hooi and lo pr.,ently ear
ployed by the Fed,.al Bureao
of Jn•esllgallan ID Washing.
lon, D. C. Mr. filler was grad·
oaled from RaciDe H lg •
s.bool In 11113 and Iram Warren Wilson Colleg• In Jane,

Seberg

Honor Blackman

CLOSED

Aug. 14 rhru Aug. 20th.
FIRST IN THE NATION with a Dew hlghwio;r emergeoey
ean system will be Maryland, whlth Is lilstalllog 32(
eall unlls on (3 miles of the Capitol Bellway, an later•
stole superhlgkway riDging Wa•hiDgton, D. C. A drl•er
In dlstreas will be no farther than a quarter of a mile
from one of lbe bright yellow boxes lopped by radio
antennas. Aid un be summoned simply by pushiDg a
botton lor police, ambulante, rlre or repair servl~e. The
Maryland Slate Pollee receive the signal. Cost of the
IDIIlal oyslem, scheduled lor complelioa In Seplember,
will be '379 million.

TONIGHT
'" NONE BUT THE BRAVE"
Fr4l nk Sinatra
lk
Cli nt Wa er
1Co lor l
- and-

'"THE GIRLS ON THE
BEACH'"

1161. Mr. Oller wiD
atlead
llorea CoHere tblo Iall.

)

'·

·. ·.

~"' . ~ ~~ ..

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 10, 1966

- . -----------------·~1

---------------------~----~--------------------------------------------~~0.
... ~..

,.:_,:

WASHINGTON tUPl' -Five !arbitration pro(Mlsal. He said he arbitration.
·
sliuck airlines and the machi- would recommend it.
The drlunatle breal&lt; In the
nlats union agree today to "We would definitely tell our long stalemate came when
submit their 34-day-old dispute membership this Is much better Chairman Harley 0. staggers,
to binding arbitration.
than leglslaHon lrom' the D-W.Va., pro(Mlsed the arbltra·
P.L. (Roy) Slemmer, pres- Congress," Slemmer told• the Uon plan al the oulset of the
14enl of the lnlemational House Comme""' Committee. flltb day of hearilgs by his
~ ss o Cl at ion of Machlnl!ts The airlines' chief negollator, group on a Senafe.passect..btn to
c~M), said however the 35,400 William , J. CUrtin, said thelleg!Biate an eod to the strike.
•trlklng. members of his union carriers / would, "of ~" lion plan at the outset of the
would bave to rallly the submit to voluntary, llnal; filth cia)'·of he~~ by his

I

·~

· ~ \\

at

group on a S.nafe.passed bill to strike were exhausted earlier.
legislate an end to the strike. I Under t11e procedure, Stag.
Staggers said the committee gers said the two sides would
would continue to consider the
whatever Issues they
Senate leg!Blation while arbltra- could, then the remaining
lion arrangements are made. unresolved Issues would be
Staggers said the arbitration submitted to final and binding
woUld be carried out under arbitration.
present provisions of the The committee was told that
Railway Labor Act, under a five-hour round of talks
which all avenues to avert the Tuesday between the two sides

resolv~

produced nothing.
untler While House auspices
'k
h
h July 29 was rejected by the
The slri e of mac lnlsls 81 strikers two days later by
grounded
almost a 3-to-1 margin.
No!'thwes~ Trans or · an
.
United Alrll~s since July th8• h Since tthebn,d : ,two ~~
cu~ off 60 per cent ol e '~eti no u g rom e r
nation I airline service.
. ,..... ons.

Eas~ N~llon~

strike betwiO!W Canpela·
the Presjdenl.

~ue:::

The
I&amp; act
even m~re re
the Senate becalll!e· all
be_rs m~, lland for
thJB year and labor

COngress" movea .reluctanl!y Tbe S.nate finally passed a have wiJIIIed the
to -stop',". the . strike Iller a modified bill that woold split would be oonsldered •

tentative

~nt worked out

res(Mlnsibllily lor ending the breakiJIC act.,

Bedford Elementary Closed
!In New District Revamping .
1

the

WORLD
About
Pomeroy

I

.

i A&lt;iion on the pro(Mlsal to do lgrades H of Salisbury a n d , roy . Yes 77 (63 parents. 14 oth· 1 elementary building.
Iaway wilh the Bedford elemen- Bradbury ~mentary schools : ers).
" It may be used at some oth1967 Car Price8 V p 1 tary school loealed along Route ,also will ~ moved to junior ~ - Move grades 1·8 to Salis· 1 er lime in case of increased en·
DIM'ROIT
BE
PRICE 1 33 near DarwiD, was taken by j high buikli.•J• of the district Ibury. Yeo li6 (48 parents,
18 l rollment, " uptained Hargraves.
the Meigs Local Board of Edu· beginning this lall.
Iothers).
The board of education also
- T
00
tag
1167 modeln cars d~e Ication Tuesday night at Salis- ' Closing ol Bedford elemen- - Keep grades 1·6 at Bed· ' decided that all teachers, cooks,
out next month wl be sharpY Ibury school.
tary followed a public meeting 1ford, yes, 22 115 parents,
7 custodians and bus drivers wbo
~1gbe., and another
proce The board, following voles ol of Bedford area residents in 1 others).
had been employed al Bedford
boost Is due for 1968.
a majority of the Bedford area late July. A seerel vote was
Keep all grades 1·8 at Bed- elementary will be
offered
The auto companies guard parents, deelded that grades 1-' taken then with 77 parents and lord. Y&lt;s 16 ( 13 parents, 3 oth· . work elsewh ere in the district.
thecr pric1111 plans as closely will be mo•ed to the Salisbury 19 non-parents participallng.
ers).
; .Teachers employed by the
as they do new designs , and elementary building and grades Proposal! v~ted upon during I George Hargraves, Jr., super- 1board "ere Mrs. Betty Deem,
there are ·rewer leaks. But 7-8 will be taken to a Junior the meeting, and the results, i intendent ol Meigs Local School ! English, Pomeroy High School ;
sou~es ,close to the industry , High S.hool.
l were as follows •
District, said lbe board bas no , Rick Hazleton. asst.
coach
predcct Price Increases between 1 It was further decided that - Move grades 7-8 to Pome-1 plan to dispose of the Bedford ;
(Continued on page 2)
$511 and $200 lor the 1967 mod· I
.
--- · - · - -CRASH SCENE - The demolished Oldsmobile,
above, in which Frederic~ R. Emmert, 61, of Mia;.
:d
I
dleport died Tuesday evening near Lakin IJ showD
Robert N. Swartz, a 36-year.
here in a picture taken by Sherif~ Robert C. Jlarold cbarges
barber wbo
arraigned
tenbach of Meigs County, Ohio. M left II ~e~
Bom.bard Crowd
on
ol WBI
bigamy
TuesVirginia Trooper Glen E. Seymour, who lnvestigat.
day, expta1ued wby be mared this third highway fatalit y ill Mason County Ill
MISS, - AN· .
rted Hvo women and only dl·
the last six days.
gry awhite·
bombard.
vorced one o[ lhem .
ed
oiowdb!en-agers
of 350 civil
rights
·
A 1arge cro wd of passengers
demomtralon:i with rocks. bot·
b '"As • child
l ts I., was
b rejected
ld ..
Ilea, pipes, Iirecracken TuesY:;,.yedptharen • •;:,a · 1 . from throughout the area Is
d
igh1 bluod I th I h d8
ma
ese girl• cause 1 expected tonight at 8 when the
e r ea
A native son of the county returns to open the bad • dIDD1lng,bea de•tre to be ··curslon
boat '" Chaperone"
and ·nbreaking upY ng
a rally.
~
!If. Ro~ Green ot the Meigs Counly Fair !tfonday night, August 15, at 8 p.m., want~, - to loog to •orne- , pulls away from the Pomeroy
'" MUil!tit •thrlslian Leade.rship
sotnFof
body.
boat levee on a four-hour
Conrerence repeatedly asked ers, .q.aCIDe, w a ress e arves es lVa
ors 1p ~..,.-~lti.llf.!t:tw~~~H·"' --:....~:j.$. light crui5e up the Ohio Rtver.
for polle!e Pl't1teeti0n, antt c tt·' Service and openl!lc· cereJI!.Onlet llpOIISOred by the Meigs
I Ticket holders (at $3.00 each)
waa demed. 'om.ers watched Collnly Mlnlstet'lal ABIOC!Ia•l
, ,
..
rS. 00 e
I will enjoy not only a change of
PT. PLEASANT - A Middleport man wu killed
complacently durillg the lm:l- lion.
have been Invited to participate
scenery, but a variety ol fond
"d
In " ed In
In the service and to share In
and drink three observation·
and three Pt. Pleasant res1 ents were JUr
a
dent at the courthouse "'Uare. In a new dell"rlure, the ser- the final benediction, convey-j
decks an' occasional serenade
headon collision Tuesday eve_ning at 6:25
Rt. 62, nllle
•
vice this ye~ will be held on lng their approval and blessi~g
on th~ steam calliope, and or- ,
miles north of here near Lakin State hosmtai.
Plant MotJrng In
Ithe midway m lront of'!" as- on what the asS&lt;ICiaUon feels 181 M Ch
Le
. chestra music for every kind ol 1,,
Frederick Raymond Emmert, 61, Middleport, aa ·'
.
1
Isoclatton's "chapel tent.' with an uniquely clean and whole- 1 rs- ar1es w18• sul"'rm- d 'n
employe of Philip Sporn plant, was dead at the ocene of
LEBANON, OHIO- CEDAR : seating and ushering supplied m f ·r
· I tendent of the Meigs County anc• g.
.
be
TROOPER SEYMOUR
massive internal Injuries according to Mason Count)'
Valley Plasllcs, a subsidiary or by the Meigs County Jaycees. so e ac_.
i Fair
Flower Show, announcoo Ad~ance-saie lc~ketsd ~ayshe ' - Coroner Dr.. Oliver Eshen- - - - " - - - -- - - - ' Blue Water Plastics Co. of st. .The Rev Mr Van Meier first
, today the show will be jodged obtained at Sta~k s an P WI r :
aur.
ROilllle suffered fractured·rtbs
Clair, Mlch., announced Tues- !·s.rved E B ·churches in the
by Mrs. Susie Poole, Marietta, &amp; Lohse DrugDtoress.toomeMroidy, l
WS
InJured in the other auto were DDd lacerations.
d
It
Ill
13 300
· ··
. going
-•·led j d
re,ember·
ay
W
occupy a
' Iarea of MacArthur
before
an ace'""'
u ge of t he Oh'10 and
dl Dutton's1 rug
George B. McClintock, 54: Wll· AcconilnC to State
PoilIll,
1
foot manufacturing plant :east for further stndy.
He
Association ol Garden I Clubs.
or !
rna McClintock. 52. and Ronnie Emmert was traveling IOUib lili
here.
!changed denclminalions, and In
W
Mrs. Poole Is lcrst v ce pre- Commerce. Tickets may also be
McClintock, 13. The . McClint- Rt. 62, reported to bo eorouwet
· The plant will be built by a Irecent vea" has .been engaged
SJdent of the OAGC and " ad· urchased at the levee before
oeks reside at 1103-2'1th St., Pt. Pleasant 1o altend a 4lbmer
group of 10 Lebanon business- 11n teaching and Inner-city work COLUMBUS (UP! ) - The visor to Region II. She has wcde ~
e
CLEVELAND (UP!) - The Point Pleasant. All are listed meeting at Genw Ball'l Beslalll"
men, ~th construction to start i In lhe Baston area, Where he Ohio Water Pollution Control experience in flower judging. "{'~;t~o;.eroy Chamber
of grand )ury report pinning the In good condition at Pleasant ant. The McClintock
famllJ
Immediately, and will be lea.. Ihow lives. .
Boord has wamed municipal of• . Entries In the flower show Commerce which Is s(Mlnsor- recent Hough race riOts
on Valley Hospital. Mr. and Mrs. was traveling north on Rt, IIC
ed to BluP Water Plastics.
Music for the Fair service ficials to get busy on sewage will be accepted by Don Reuter, ing the ev~nt for it• variety and Communists and other orgamz. JllcCiintoek are sulfering from and the two car9 mel 011
•
will be supplied by the choir treatment Iacilities-&lt;~r else. la1r board secretary. at h•s of· recreational value to the coun- 1ed groups today brought prom- lacerations and bruised chests. sharp cur.e.
Rocket Reafly
of the Heath Malhndlst Church, At its regular meeting here lice on the fairground s until 4 ly, reports that advance sale of ' ises ol new riot control Jaws.
The a~cldenlls slill Wider ltiCAPI! KENNF.DY - AN AT· assisted by members ot other Tuesday the board voted to lell p.m. Thuroday.
. tickets has been brisk.
"Consideration of new. riot·
MEN CALLED
vestlgation.
las-Agena rocket was set for ; Mlddle(Mlrl church choirs, dl- Olmsted Falls and Hardin Coun- Rules specify thai enlr~es
Ia laws will be I first or. Service officials an- Property datnagf Wal tot}
'!IIDther try today to shoot a reeled by ·Ben Ph!IS\ln.
ty officials .that unless they stop must be . setup and oompieled
SCHEDULE PICfURES
~r ~ busmess when the leJIIs- oo::~~ay the following men mated al $11,1100. Both au!Q,
Picture . snapping satellite In· Conducting the service will dumping . raw sewage mto between 9 a.m. a~. noon
Indwual semor pictures for lature convenes in January " have received their induction were .OidsmobJies, bd . . .
to an or~il around the moon to be a ministerial team _made up streams they may lace flnes of Wednesday and exhcbcts
Rulland High School senior.! Gov. James A. Rhocjes said.' calls from Meigs county; Mich- deroohshed.
,
.
IK'Out asu;onaul landing areas ol lhe assocllllion president, the up to S500 a day.
ed
~n .w~ be accepted will be taken at the high school
.
ael A. Neutzli , Pomeroy Fred· Mr. Emmerls rem&amp;lll8 will
and Jel 1 blrd's-eye v iew of Rev. Joseph Kraly, the
Rev. They gave Stark County com- for exhibit only, and not com· gym Monday and Tuesday, Aug- Mayor Ralph Locher pracsed di
L Rob~son Mlddle[Mlrt· be laken from the Moin-SIIIvthe Sur.eyor 1 robot. I
Chesler Lemley, the Rev . Nyle missioners 60 days in which to petition.
.
ust 15 and 16, If not personal· the grand jury as having '"the p eler
Butcher' Harrisonvil: ens Funeral home to Zanes-.tllt,
·. The 850-pound Lunar Orblb!r, Borden, the Re•. Paul .Sollers, seek an agreement with Canton Judging will be by the stand· ly contacted, students are Ia guts to do what other cities Je~ Ke..:ney w. Donahue, Jla· Ohio.
stalled on the liring pad by a[&gt; the Rev. Richard Martin, and officials on processing sewage ard system .begi~ng at I p.m.
at 2 p.m. on either Mon· have not done. It has Sl~led •cine; Clarence E. Jacks, tangs- The death of lllr., Emm«t
parent
trouble Tuesday, Envoy Ray Winlng.
. ill the Gambi'fm!a Dl!trl~t No. W~y. PreliUums and nb- day or Tuesday. One dollar out some of the ag1tators.
I ville;
John L. Bass, Syracuse; was Mason CQunty s. lentil.!'
was scheduled for a second All .cJergymen In the count; 21 or else 120 da~s In wbich . to bolllf · wiD be awarded lo the must be paio at the time the
IJerry A. Jordan, Long Bottom; the year, the third Withla launch attempt at 3:11 p. m.
dra.w up. plans fOr construction fU:st, second and third place picture is taken. Anyone hav·
TWO FINED
1Larry K. Hill, Lonl Bottom, days.
.:
•EDT).
of 111 own sysleill.
wcnners ID eac~ class.
ing questions is asked to call . Two hearings were beard ln 1and Jlobert
Balter Reedsvil· Killed oo AUJ. 3 were Oi!r
8
WY 2-3887.
Mayor C. 0. Fisher's
court 1 ._
·
'
Keith WaUJh, 18, of ~.
' BOARD TO MEET
Tuesday evening. Carl Edward 1
by a bus in Rt. 3 neat IJIThe regular August
Meigs General Bospltol
Moore, 22, Svracuse, was fined
set~ and Dora Douglas, 'tl,
of the South~n· Local Boord
Admtssioas Laura Walson, $15 and costs for Illegal exLOCAL TEIIIPS
Huntington, who dled tile . _ -.
.Edur:atlcm w•ll be held
RaciDe ; Sue Lehew, Mason.
lraust. snd Roy V. Howell Sr., Temperatur• 1n downtown day of Injuries received JulyJl ~
day, AufljlSt 11, at a .m. at tile . Discbarg•• Anna
Ellis, 173, Pome~oy, was fined $10 and Pomeroy at II Lm. ":'s 80 de- In an accident on Rt. 2 ..-r
Charolette Crawford.
costs lor IIDPI't1Per backing.
rrees under sunny skies.
Glenwood.
I

1

-

1

'I

1

1

~~g~~. c~=rc~ w~: hi~: Nati.Ve

I

"TwiRor
follsiaOI

Box Sprina

aloo$ft.IL

Son WI.II

QW~::~;;:~=::::· Large Crowd
Expected 'on
Chaperone

speak at service
.

GREN~.A·

Middleport. Man
- Killed in 4Vreck.

•r

''

More features, more tffitful
sleep, more for your IROIJeJ .
during the Limited Time ~~!

.I

i'

~

'

v

News Notes

. ;.;, .
At $49.95, only SIMMONS Could olfer a-*" ·
t ..... buylikethia-asuperiormattioesa~su .

Adjusto-Rellt.ooiJs for ertra comfort ..a.-~ ·

'

supi&gt;ort. 100% cotton felt npboktay for~·~ •
ant cuahioniDf!-long-w:earinr; dee!HIQilW ·:
damask cover-pre-built crush-~
tbat won't sag. All caetly quality detelll•.All
unbeatable ma~tre. .Jue at $49.95 ••• o~ ·
for a limitAld time apllJ. Come ill TODAY1

bora,..

FOR ALL THESE

....,,...•

FINANCIAL
SERVICES

'

.

-~·.

•

.Chteklng Accounts eSavinga Accounts
eBank By Mail ePorsonal Lo1ns eAuto Loans
e Mortgage Loans e Safe Deposit BoxII
·
e TraY111tn chocks e Bank Monty Orden

FREE CUSTOMER PARKING

''

Iwhen,!h~ Rev.il~aldel· Vat~ M~er,

t1· ~ay ~Y·

~0011·

'I

M p I

~n

To Judge Show

I

u

Board Orders
Se age Acti'on ..

sq~

O[e~~t,p~~e~; c'::'1m~r

j' ·
La
New Riot
Are Predt.cted

.rter

B

evening.
Mr. and Mr.s. Normu Mccain and daughters S h e r r y,
Faith and Amber, accompBDied by Mr. and Mrs. Ross Cleland of Chesler visited Mr.
and Mrs. James Smith at Char·
W. Va. Sunday.

""*"'

DIES IN STORM
CINCINNATI IUPI) - Mrs.
RoberiD Hay!look, 2'1, suburban
Woodlawn," was killed Tuesday
Jn a· two-car crash during 1
hard rainstorm. .

Daughter-in-law'•

BirtiUJo.y Ob•ertJed
Mr. and Mrs. Alli!D Elebinl·l

e: eolerlaloed wllll a

~~~::1

Clelllly
their borne,
Heigbll,at honorlllg
their
lm'-11&gt;-law:, Mn. Max
« , oo· her blrtl&gt;day.
Homeniade Ice cream and
deeor,ated, blrtbday cake
served ~~ the evenfl\1 .
Mr, and Mn. Gerald Kelly
Deonla ·and Darla, HoljywcJOil, I
Fla.; Mr.' and Mrl. John
New H!lvep, W. Va., Mr.
Mr•· Paul Elebblfer and Yal""
· June and Tamara, and t b
honored ·IIUO'I and Mr•. ~:::1
• and daughter, Becky, ·
rtf; and 'the, bosl'lnd .bostess.

ION· IS BORN

RUB 'N BUFF
Metallic Finiohos
In Tubes

Snap On Spray
Can Handles

Coppertone Palllt
In Spray Cans

KING BUILDERS SUPPLY CO.

Pic. and · !lin. Harold :·l de8CI·JI
ows are alll)llllllciDJ the
el an I lb: llnli 11 011 . .
·en Ray,. 11 Vefer8111 Me~'orlal ll
Hosptt.aJ, w~~. ·August
Grandparenli a~ Mr. and .
Einory Kig;y, · Spring
·

FASHION IS TAKING 1 ribbing lids faU "frolll IHI ...
word. Tranolaled IIIIo stoeldag Jlle m th~_ loDJieaa
rlbl of Orion aad Tyoora (leffl. Tltelr pour bciy .palter!'"
lnf mte them perfed parlaen to sweotees. Teain thea
wllb suede-like rraany ~.II, mld-ulf blgb ••d mact~
lleed. Hand110me Paloley-palleraed streleb nyloa - -

Pomeroy, and Mr. and M r
Denver Mpdows. Mason,
Va., Mrs.
and Mn. James

('!r.£

.
LEPORT 0
....
llave self-colored P.tllenlllg ~ailed. acaiDIIaa
D E
MIDD
, •
....
~ '111111 . . ...u ., 81 •It
_N_._2N_A_v_._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~ - ~~- ,
.
.
:
....

YOVTH KILLED
MASSILI:.ON, Obio (UP!)
Dante L. Barthel, 18, Louisville,
Ohio, was killed Tuesday night
when his car rolled over and
crushed him. The mishap oc~ on ~
road near
here. He was lravellnJ ,alone.

"".al

.CLUB TO 'MEET
The Pomefo)" Benil Citizens'
Band Railio Club auxlllary will
meet ·at 6:30p.m. Friday at the
borne of Lee" Enoch in Syracuse
for a plcnie supper•. · ·.•·•. ..

1

hlsh !IChool.

---

Eleventh M~cal will be Grandstand Showl ~==~:':!f~Der~· ~·

Before a silver gl~tered bact- da Brlckles, Mickey
Wolfe, A duet, "You're Joslin Love" Li'rT'LE ROCK, Ark. (UPI)
drop, the lith annual swnmer Sheila Childs and Patricia Loa- by Bill Young and Roberta ' - A segregationist
IIIIIIH ·:
musical of the Big Bend Mil&gt;- doo will be dancing the show Knutler will .paY tribute to the Johnseo who diaqrees with lbi -.
slrel Association will be
popularity of the mediCal pro- policies of his namesake ill lilt '
senled as the e•ening
opener as well as coup!., who !esslon In entertainment today. White House today emerged ·M stand attraction at the annual wm bact the first segment. Another old-time
segment the Democratic gubernatorial .
Meigs County Fair.
up the couple dancen will
.~ntrodU&lt;al by , Abee condidale who will oppose liliJCUrtain time Thursday and will ·be Calby Fullz, Richard Smith s After The Ball back· Jionalre Winthrop Rockefeller
Saturday nights AUJust 18 DDd Neese, Donna Crow. Mike MuJ. ed by waltzing couples In per- In November.
, will be 8:1S p.m. with
lord, Margie Harris, Bm Y"":"f", iod costuming. Marilyn Stumbo, Jim Johnson, a former
Sb-uble again emceeing the 30- Carole Anderson, Ray Alk1re, Patty Gaul, Gloria Buck, ~thy IIIIS8&amp; Supreme Court ~~-:_
act show.
·
Brenda Potts and Ralph Werry. Fullz and Donna Crow -•will Who organized the slate's .
. McEIIllnny will
be dance ''Ob, By Jingo" and\W. wbite cilizella COUDcil·
·
·
as "Secund Hand lee· Nease'o rendllloo .of "I've won the llOiillnatlon
and Misa Bnweri wlll ·
R1r19 on 'lily Fingers" I'll off Jlljmary elic!lloa , 8
vet-Ising 8erJIIn'o. "I Love &lt;\ PIIIIO,"
thai oegmem.
Franllllill a
·

'!"

.Jiake· AdvaQfage :. of , th~·

•

··~

·· :A~~"'' Furnitur~ .,Sdfe; ·
-. ·,·P~iCes .,on:tile ·2,.q-··
\ : ·. dnc(~tcl. :llo~ts" ·
'

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.

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out the .~~~~~.
~-~ ·.
1

to ~
!)liDtor
preseoted
b!i .\~tb

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Lisle lliOiD&amp; • ~_, "'-'·,;~
"'":'f~t:O:~~~IJie.,~~
Will 1
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.

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