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•
itJ-The Dol]JI Sentinel, Puneroy-MlddiOJ)Orl, 0., Frida~, June 7, 1968
....~
Mra. LeoRaaanweretheirclaugh'
&lt;ter and family or ColumbUs.
••
""
Atlending the Alblllll' Alumni
••
Bancpet from thl11 area were
Mr. and Mrs. Laverne Jordan,
••
Mr. and · Mra. Robert llolllday,
DALLAS &lt;UPI)-The way
•• •
Mrs. Ne!Uo Vale and · Mr. and
the
table loota can often make
"j
BY NELLIE VALE
Mrs. John Paul Henaler.
things
eaaler for somebody on
~diMerguestartMr.and
Mrs. Erma Vale &lt;t the Angel
a strict d1et and may mate
:~? - Mra. G, A. Radekin and daugh- of Mercy Nursing Home in AlJohnny loot more ldndly on
~. .. ter. Tina, were Mr. and Mrs.
the spinach.
blllll' spent Memorial Day at the
q
• Robert Hollidal and raml]JI &lt;t home of her daughter-in-law,
Psychologists find the way
: . WOOfter, Mrs. Nellie Vale and Mrs. Nellie Vale and to:andson,
foods are ~ and the table
settings do much to set the
; · aon, John, and Mrs. Famle Pet- John. Other guests were M l s s
mood of the meal, aays one
til
Peggy Fauber and Fannie Pet~
manufacturer
of tableware.
Mr. and Mrs. Harley Pickett tit
A dieter c&amp;n flDd hls strict
'· and - chUdren or Florida are
Columbia Grange recently vismeal more palatable in pleas·
vaeatlontng at the home oi his ited Laurel Gral180 and preaeniant surroundings. Things chll~
mo1her, Mr&amp;. Laura Krebs, and ed the literary program. The visdren do not Ute can be made
attractive with proper garnson, Bitt. Weekend guests of Mrs. it will be returned in two woeks.
ishes or colorfuJ table arrangeKrebs were Mr. and Mrs. Jan
ments.
Pickell and family or Dayton.
The manufacturer, Texa.sSTIVERSVILLE
The young people of Columbia
Ware, gave these sug_gestJ.ons:
c~ Church met at the chu•ch
Use much color, but coordinate
Mr. Clint Birch arxl Leota
on Smda)' evening and organized
the combinations; use cloths or
for the summer. Election of offi- spent a recent Sunday with Mr. mats 1n the family's favorite
cers was held and plans were arxl Mrs. Thomas Birch andiam- colors: vary the colors often;
use two Rets of dinnerware In
made lor the projecls lo be de- ils and with Mr. and Mrs. Joe
combinations:
add some extra
Lipps
and
family,
Vi.ncent,
Ohio.
VelCll&gt;ed.
ptece5
~&gt;uch
as
contrasting
cups·
Mrs. Betty Ables and Mrs.
The IIUMIBI Bible School will
or
salad
plates,
tor
Interest:
be held the third week or June. Mimie Carroll visited Charles don't be timid about combining
Mr. and Mrs. Wesley 8obo Carroll at Veterans Memorial plastic with earthenware or
and wife and Miss Beulah Low- Hospital in Pomeroy, Wednes- China or glassware--they ean
day. He is convalescing nicely.
be compAtible partners Jn table
1thor spent the weekend at tllelr
Mr. ard Mrs. Randall Talbott settings.
farm home here. On Sunday they
Another ldea.-have an occawere guests of Mr. and Mrs. or New Lexington were Sunday
sional
fo.mJJy buffet . It can POSTER DRESS bas eye
guests ot his parents, Mr . and
' Jarrot Hobo.
break.
the
pattern of table set- appeal no matter bow you
Mrs. Dell Talbott
John Vale of Akron spent the
tlng.s and give the famtly more look at II. Model IB Ashley
Mrs. Sharlee Evans and Paul- practice for guest buffets.
holiday weekend with his motller
Rhodes who demonslralea
ette Van Meter shopped in Parkhere.
a
nylon closure which Cl:lD
'Purge
&amp; boat's bilge occaWeekend guests or Mr. and ersburg Friday.
sionally by scrubbing lt out be operated one.banded as
Mr. aOO Mrs. Jim Midd1eswart
with a strong solution of wash- a boon to women wbo llve
an:l rantily vi sited her parents, ing soda. The soda dissolves
alone.
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Bush Sunday oUy accumulations so the bilge
afternoon.
is safer from fire, mechanical
TOMGHT AND SATURDAY
Ed Ward is residing with hi s maintenance ls easier and the
Langsville News
JU!&gt;E 7 - 8
son and famiJy, Mr. and Mrs. entire boat smells better.
Recognition of mothers In ob- .
Ardy Ward and SheUy, after havTHE GLORY STOMPEHS
servance or Mother's Day was a
ing spent the winter in East Liv(Technicolor)
feature or the church services at
erpool.
Dennis Hc.,per, J&lt;&gt;dy McCrea
the Langsville Church. Potted
Mrs. Elva Dailey and Mr. and
PLUS
Dowers were presented to the
Mr s. .lim Pape or Middleport
TEN UTILE INDIANS
youngest mother, Mrs. Sharon
spent
Mother's Day at the home
Hugh O'Brien, Shirley Eaton
Barr and to the oldest mofrler,
(Continued from page I)
of Mr. and Mrs. C&amp;rl Autherson.
Mrs. Hazel Wrighl Mrs. Wright
Sundly, Monday and Tuesday
Mr. and Mrs. Leon Donahue carpetbagger" when he moved
gave
her flower to Mrs. Rose
June 9 -II
called on Mr. and Mrs. Russell to New York five years ago to
Dermy
Moler who is a shut-in.
COOL HAND LUKE
run Cor the U.S, Senate,
Van Meter.
The church presented Bibles
(Techniculor)
Mrs. Larry Fitch an:J Cindy Kermedy toda,y received the
to
three who are graduating from
Paul Newman, Geo. Kennedy
visited Mr. and Mrs. Bob Cozart mournful affection of the
high
school, Ron Garby, Shirley
COLORCARTOONS:
and family on Thursday evening. nation's lar~st city .
Lcdlie, and Bill Fetcy.
Fastest car in the World
Mauy Pay Repsect s
Re&lt;:ent visitors of E. ll car·Mr. and Mrs. Duane Barr and
Rodent to Stardom
Today they came- rrom black
penter and family were Mr. and
and
son, Shawn, or Dak HiU,
SHOW STARTS 7 P. M.
Mrs. Rudy Durst, Mrs. FJva and Spanish Harlem tenements,
Daily, Mrs. Sylvia Allen, Virgil from Par k Avenue penthouses, Ohio, attended &lt;:hurch at Langsville and spent the day with hi s
and John Bogard, Mr s. BOI!Y {rom joyle ss Cone)' Island. They
parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Alpha
Ables, Dale Lawson, !om Durst, came from New Jersey and
Barr. Other dinner guests was
••
II ll
Mr. and Mrs. S. W. Durst arw:l el sewhere.
••• - •• .J
Mr.
and Mr s. Larry Barr and
MarJ Ann Camp, 30, or
Wesley Cozarl
son,
David.
TONIGHT, JUNE 7
Oldbridge, N. J., stood silently
Mr . and Mrs. ll E. Denny of
all night in rront of Fifth
DOUBLE FEATURE
A'•enue's rashionable boutiques, Wilk.e s\'ille, Ohio, spent Sunday
Wimer of 5 Academy Awards
looking at the twin spires or the with their daughter and son-inWHO'S AFRAID OF VIRGINI
massive cathedral. She brought law, Mr. arxl Mrs. Bru&lt;:e Mor.
VETERANS MEMO RIAL
WOOLF?
ris. Other dinner guests were
three chlldren with her. Llrda,
HOSPITAL
EllUbeth fiylor
Mrs. Judy Lloyd and boys, DaADMISSIONS - Mary Ross, lOi Billy, 7, and Jimmy, 5. The vid and Chris.
Richard Burton
Cheshire; Ralph Shoemaker, Gal- younge st two were lying in the
PLUS
Mrs. Leona Kennedy, who has
lipolis; Christine Branham, Pom- warm night air on a blanket been a medical patient at Holzer
Peter Sellers
spread on the widewalk.
eroy.
THE BOBO
"I just felt it was something I Hospital, is improved and is
DISCHARGES - Anthony HudBritt Eklarxi-Rossano Brani
now able to be at her home.
son, Mary Amey, Sandra Zirkle, had to do," she whispered. "I
Mrs. Jan Knapp and boys,
SATURDAY, JUNE 8
Miliord Eden, Bobby Molden, wanted my &lt;:hidren to see. I am Mrs. Larry Barr and son David,
trying to teach them to live by
DOUBLE FEATURE
Doris Lee, Warda Hubbard.
Mrs. Leta Fett:y and ~Irs. Alpha

.

;f.

Pleasant Table
Aids Dieters

Point Rock

+

.. Soeial Notes

~

it

MUGS niATRl

Kennedy

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

••mN Drivvln ·

----------·

..

the rules."

Jercy Lewis

Funeral services will be at 10 Barr attended a Tupper Ware
a.m., Saturday in the 110-year- party at the home of Mrs. HarLOCAL TEMPS
oJd church. The body then will . ley Johnson recently.
The temperature in Pomeroy's be borne by train to Washington
downtown business district at tor burial Saturday afternoon in
11 a.m. today was 73 degrees, ArUngton National Cerri.etcry.
ago, when the body of President
Wlder overcast skies.
Kennedy will be laid to rest Kennedy was borne by presidenttel jet to Washlngwn alter that
JD a gr&amp;Bsy hillside acros s the
Potomac
River
rrom the bleak da,y in Dallas, Nov. 22,
Lincoln Memorial, next to his 1963,
Last Plane Trip
brother, John.
Now
Robert Kennedy had
Sen. l::dward M. Kennedy oC
Massachusetts, whose three made his last, long airplane
older brothers died violently trip. The body was borne frl':m
serving their country, remained Los Angele s to New York
in the chancery of the cathedral Thursday. Kennedy was cut
throughoot much of the long down by an assassin early
nigh~
kneeling beside the Wednesday morning during the
casket It was grimly reminis- flusil of vil:tory in the California
cent of another seemingly Democratic primary, a triumph
endless night, nearly five years that propelled him into strong
contention for the presidency.

THE mG MOUTH
(Color)

PLUS
THE TEXICAN
Audio Murphy

Broderick Crawford

KING DAD

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Kingsbuf}r
News, Notes

TV

NOTES

Rolph carl, suPortntendent or
the carleton Church presented 1......;;.._;,;..._.._ _ _ _ _~
Mt10 Boonle Banks with a Bible
""" 19th 11 -"'•Sunday, '""'
'
a •·-tlon gilt !rom the church.
Mro. Wayne Boll left lor Scof,.
land, S. D., recently after she
received word ol the sudden
death or her sister, Mrs. WUHam Bl!rlle.

NEW YORK (UPJ) - You
can olart planntnr your 11011
lor til&lt; Jion. I, 1989 Tournamenl o! Rooea par&amp;da tn l'aea~"!
~-hi now 151nce
.dena, ""'
.... ., ue
the committe 1n chara:e hu announced that t.be theme wW be
"A 11me to Remember."

'Mrs. Winnie White, Harold ani

"Superteen" 1s a -one-hour
apOclal 1o ~e carried on ABC· TV Aug. 20 that will fe&amp;ture
nine .teen-age performers In
the pop-music fteld who have
been picked from talent com·
petitions conducted by 31 stationa around the country.
' ' •
The CBS "Daktarl" aeries
has added another new face
tor the coming se&amp;l!lon. Be~n­
year-old Ertn Moran of Burbank, CaUl., wtn be...,--ntl)llar
cast member tn th( role of a.n
orphan wbo ftnds a home in
the compound.

Sherman, visited Sunday evenil18
with Mr. and Mrs. John Dean,
John Walter arxl Richard.
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Harrison
and Scottie, Miss Bonnie Banks
and Phil Hurison were guests
B recent evening cl. Mr. and
Mrs. Olen HarrlsorL cake and
ice cream were served by Mrs.
Harrison honoring the elder Mr.
Harrison on his birthday.
Mrs. VIrgil King violted one
day recently with her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Webber Wood.
Carl Robert Hall spent a five
tUcy leave with his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. carl Hall and lamlly
recentl,y.
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Musser and Mrs. Zora Walker had
as recent visitors, Mrs. Frank
Musser and MrS. Allee King.
Mrs. Louise Harrison visited
one day recently with Mrs. EUzabeth Murray.
Mrs. Hazel Arnold, Walter arxi
Evalene, had as recent vtsitors
Mr, and Mrs. Nathan Arnold ot
Chesrer, and Mr. all:! Mrs. Robert Hanning and family of Day-

0

•

0

0

•

0

Preparing for its fourth season, ABC's "The FBI" series
has filmed for the first Ume
inside the otrlces of the Federal Bureau of Investigation tn
Washington, D.C. Star Efrem
Ztmballst Jr. was :ftlmed tn the
fingerprint section and the National Crime Information Center. PrevioU!ly, various sections of the bureau were du plicated on Hollywood stages.

• • •

CBS News· three-part series,
"The CJttes," an Investigation
ton.
of the country's blighted urban
Mrs. Charles King visited one nerve centers, will be aired on
day recently with Mrs. Richard successive dates, June 24, 25
and 26, trom 10 to 11 p.m.
Carruthers and family.
• • •
Mrs. Lenora Dean visited with
All races In the lnlerna·
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Paynter at
tiona! Triple Crown are run
carpenter recently.
on the grass, at 12 furlongs
Mr. aOO Mrs. Gary Gibson and each.
son, Brad, and Mr. an:l Mrs.
Sam Damron visited recently with
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Damron and
family at East Bank, W. VL
The Rev. and Mrs. Jay Stiles
oi Albany were welcomed to the
Carleton Church Sunday as the
new minister.
Miss Bonnie June Banks left.
ror Washington where she wiU
speOO the summer.

•

Now You Know

News ... in Briefs

United Pr..s International•
WILBERFORCE, OHIO - A THREE-DAY STRIKE bJ1 studO!Ita
at the predcninately Nepo Wilberforce Unlversicy wu aottled
early todl,y, and classes Were to resume during U. afternoon.
Prealde,. Rembert G. Stokes said settlament had been reached bot he was not authorized to say anytbil18 about the diapute. A
spokesman for the student council was scheduled to issue a stltement after classes today.
By

WASHINGTON - BEREAVED AND INIIIGNANT Ill the aosaaalnation of Sen. Robert F. Kenneczy, Congress and President JohniiOn
have moved quickly , to provlde what ~·y h~a . will be insurance
agalnat turther polltlcal murder.
The President Thursday signed Into law)egtalatlon authorlz1118 Secret Service protection or major cand~- lor thO prealdency
and vice presidency. The Houoe and Senate acted within houri o!
Kennedy's death to approve the protectloia. ·
'

'
.
TEIBEH, ISRAEU-QCCUPIED JORDAN - THIS TINY Cllrl•tlan
village today struggled to undera1and tllat one of its aoos Ia &amp;ecuoed
or shooting Sen. Robert F, Kennedy. For Sirhan Biahara Sirhan
was one of the quiet ones.
"A very gertle, polite, quite and hlD11ble boy, interested mainly In books" said a schoolteacher of the 2-l.year-ald -.firab who left
lor America a decade aan and came back In heedllnes that shocked
Telbeh.
,
sallm Awad, the principal or the village's Lutheran School,
said, "it Is beyond comprehe111lon how he coold have committed
such a terrible act on his own initiltlve without having been put up
to do ttds by some other pe~le."
"How he came to this is beyolli me," said Bishara Sirhan
The father, 52. shrugged his shoulders.

WASIIINGTON- ROBERT L. WALTERS, 14, ofRuasioU, Kan.,
a brown-haired eighth grader who wants to assemble dlctionaires
or deal ln secret codes when he grows up, Thuradl,y won the 41st
National ~elll118 Bee.
CorrecUy spelling "abalone," a type of shellfish, Walters
·emerged as the best speller IID008 the 75 contestants who took part
tn the tw&lt;&gt;&lt;lay competition sponsored by Scripps-Howard newspapers.

F1RE DOUSED
Middleport
firemen answered
A riDII- sale at the St.
Paul Lutheran Church will be a clll to SOUth Second St. Thurtcontinued tbroughSiturde,y moro- dal to extlngulah a Ore In a car.
ing with merchandise on l&amp;le at Owner ot the car wal!l not ide~
reduced prices.
tlfted at Middleport town hall.
SALE CONTINUES

VOL XXI NO. 33

By SCOTI' a BRUNS
LONDON (lJPI)- Jam eo Earl
Ray, the accused uoassln of
Dr. MarUn Luther King Jr.,
today waa half-dragged Into a
magistrate's court where he
waa ordered held wttllout ball
oo gun and paaaport violaUons
In Britain. U.S. elforts to
eXtradite him will come later,
poulbly tbla week.
Ray, a 411-year.&lt;Jid American
escaped convict, then was taken
ullder heavy guard to Brlxton
Prlson to awal* anotber hearing
June l l His appearance In
court laated only 82 seconds
durlr~~ which he either scowled
or acrewed his face lnto 1 halt
grln as he answered "no" to

I

two questions.
U. S. extradition efforts wlll
not have to watt until the
second hearing. Embassy orftclals said both the slates or
Minouri and Tennessee were
preparing extradldon papersjail break tn Mtaaourt and the
King murder charge In Memphis, Tem.
Decision Not Made
American sources Indicated
the decision had not yet been
made as to which, U either, Of
these states' possible extradition claims would be uoed. They
aald Ray could almpli{y things
1&gt;1 walvi118 extradiUon- though
he has not spoken on this
matter- or Britain could simply

deport him as an undesirable.
The British Foreign Otllt&lt;
said It Wlderatood U.S. authorities were 11 ln the process" of
applJil118 for Ray's extradition
and that such a request would
be "judged on its merits."
U, S. A88t Atcy, Gen. Fred ld.
Vinson, Jr., who flew to Lorllon
Sunday to try to &amp;peed up
extradition, met with senior
Seolland Yard officials after the
hearing to dlscuaa steps to be
taken towards extradition. The
forme! request will he made 1&gt;1
tile Slate DePartment through
the embassy.
Vinson met with Ray briefly
on
Sunday
but
American
sources said he dld not ask him

Search Everyone
whether he would waive extra·
Ray
was
brought Into court
dltion and the embesay said II
sWI does not know Ray's by 12 pollee guards, almost
shuiJllrw ao they propelled him
attltucle.
along
tntn a court room where
A !ormal reqiM!st for exlradl·
for
the
first time in memory
tlon would be made by the State
Department dlrecUy to the every person entering the
Brltls6 Foreign Otllce before or maglstrate's court was
after Ray ~~ for his searched by detectives. The
aecond hearll18 June 18. The detectives themselves were
embassy lnclicated such a armed which is unusual C0 r
request probably would not be Britain.
Magistrate Frank Millon,
ready within the next ''couple of
especially careful of Ray's ci vii
days."
Vinson refused to see news- rights championed by Kll18 in
men today and the embassy the United States, asked Ray tr
refused to disclose any informa- he objected to llmltil18 press
tion on Ray's activities, or even coverage1 of his hearing and iC
hls whereabouts before his be had a lawyer. He answered
arrest at 11:15 Lm. saturday. "No" to both questions.

LOS ANGELES (lJPO- Jimmy Brown, once one of
. JK'Ofea&amp;l&lt;nl football's greatest
stars, was lrt'ested Sunday
night after pollee found a young
woman lying seriousll' injured
under his I]III1ment balcony. ./
Pollee who responded to a pao
!rom neighbors reporting a fight
In the apartment said they
found blood on tho bedroom and
batllrown Door.

Hospital and then transferred to
Los Angeles Councy-USC Medical Center. Her condition wu .
described as good. She aulfered
a dlalocated shoulder and
auperftclal InJuries.
A aheritrs otncei spokesman
said of!lcers did not know what
happened In the apartment
"Only Brown and the girl
know and they aren't talldrw,
he said.
Brown made no statement
when he was released.
Pollee said they found Miss
Bohnchin on a concrete patio
about lS feet uJXler Brown's
second-Door apartment.
Brown, who won tho National
FootbioU League ruahll18 tiUe
efsht times, retired before the
start or the 1966 season to
become an actor. He has been
\D ..•.''lbl.. J)lrQ' .DQaen," "lee
StaUon Zebra" and "The

OPEN ROUSE TUESDAY - The Ohio Valley NiiiiNIW
Company's new plart1 825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, with modern
offset facilities, wiD be on display during open hoose activities scheduled Tuesday between 7 and 9 p, m. The public Is
Invited.

SERVING TIME:
SATURDAY-4 P.M. To 8 P.M.

SAIGON (lJP0 - Gen. WU.
Ham c. Weolmoreland today said
an OUted mUllary victory lit VIetnam is impossible um a claaslc
sense." He also warned aPtnst
e&gt;pe&lt;tlng an ear]JI Communist

PRICE $1.50
el BAR-B-QUE CHIOCEN

e FARMER BROWN'S BWD BUNS
e CREAMY COU SlAW
e DINNER ROLL
FARMER(~BOE")BROWN IS THE MASTER OF BAR-BQUE-BACKED BY 20 YRS. EXPERI!"'NCE-FARMER '
BROWN'S RECIPE BAR-B-QUE CHICKEN IS A TREAT
THAT CAN'T BE BEAT. DRIVE OUTDN SATURDAYOR SUNDAY AND GIVE IT THE TASTE TEST. TAKE
SOME HOME OR HAVE YOUR PICNIC AT THE
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ROYAL OAK P
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FIVE CENT$ ; :

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~·

-·-r

NEW ORLEANS - ARCHBL'SHOP Philip M. HaMan lold a local
Sunday that Sen. Edward M. KelltledJ, 1).1\faaa.,la befiW
11tf11C1 to withdraw !rom activo polltlcaluto. Bill Abbott or the NOif
Orlean• Ttme ..Pleayuna quoted Archlbbhop Hannan •• sayfnr.
"The natural reaction or the KellledJ family IIIII or cloae
lrlenda Ia to ell......,. Ted tram tho .,.,_ which has proved
filii 1o 1w0 of Ida oldar brolbtfL" Archlltlhllp .lfmu, 1 cloae
lrltlll oflha KmiiiY faJnlly, prealdod at pvollde senicoa lor San.
11011er1 F. 1\tmedf saturdiJ ~~at .Arllqjlon National Cemetery.

ALL BOYS INVITED
All boya over l37tarl &lt;t age
... laYited lo Jolll 11tt llelp
Calllttll ..a Tractor ()lltralor'l
Club Wilen the. llrat ~ II
bald a1 8 p.m. Tua....,, .bit
11, at tht extoaalllD olllca 011
1111•• ., 1leJat4l In l'OmflW,
ltciO' Mlliw 'liiU be clW ad¥11·

ot•

v....,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,,.
•.,~.,...:M~+~&gt;".i:i:•'·'»,• "•:0:•'.!,..~
......
·.~-.·.-.-.•.v.~·..............:-: ....... •:o:o:-.0:•.-••. o;-.-.;..
OHIO FIV&amp;DAY FORECAST
Mueh al:ovt IIOl'lllil ~t:l­
tureo Tualdl,y tbroU&amp;II SoturciiiJ In Ohio with hiiU lm'aging naar 90 and IoWa - .
70. Seatt01'Iid ~ ........a
llllter
..... of
. ..-•
, ....,;
w.-. averag•
lllil • lll&amp;rler lo a halt Inch.

""-'*"~~~--*~~=

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The trail, WU'IIIlnt! ID ,..,.._.; ·•
not sure lowwe In the nltlnc room'a
onnce
plaatlc
coated
chain
or
where
1111 Hved In a ~ ·
lake. It
buy
a
JIII)Ol'
or
IQI'
lila
Boa
at
roomlJic
....,., opread loU..., -:'
could take a mooth or eveJ
where pollee Mid 1111 did wilot ·
more. British law goes far to the newsstand.
protect the ci vii rights cham- ~. Thomas BuUer took blm Into 1111111' .Amerlcau tourlola ,._ .•
pioned 1&gt;1 the American leader custody. Behind him lay a traU went ~ It led 1o ·
-a ft1180rprlnt on a rl1Ie I London where "-&lt;• of IWe ·
Ray is accused of assassinating
in Memphia APril 4. VInson haa dros1Ped outside 1 Memphio amall ho(ela Slid Ray 11111 ha,.
•
told newsmen he came to aid !lc.,houae !rom wbero, through been 1 pat In !fal, '!'be a toilet-· K!Jw was shot; they remember did bla ......._
Ray's ''expeditious return."
Accordlrw: to pollee, Ray. 401 ! a white Mu.otanc !oond . - In bla rocm, locMd hlo door ID
had stepped off a British dolled in Allania; !raudulent c:ontraat lo the uauol Brltllh
European
A l r w a y s (BEA) passport owllcallono- uslrw the cuotam, waa ...,. loo lnt.erea.d
trident Saturday !rom Ltaboo at name or a cu.dlan policeman In mornlni! tea, kept 1o hlmoelf
London's Heathrow Airport. He -uncovered 1&gt;1 the mountleo; and llid ve17 Uttle.
Ian Col&gt;ln, writer IIIII jour-.
wore a Ught raincoat, a sports the name Raymon Georp
Sneyd
spread
1&gt;1
the
FBI
and
Hat,
llid In toclay'a Dill¥'
jacket, gray pants and horned
spotted 1&gt;1 an alert U.S. airline Telotl"'llh that Ray lllPU"'III1 ,
rhnmed glasses.
waa the 11118 Who kept ....,.,_,
He had a ticket for Brussels. counterman In Loo4an.
Uabon High ure
· (ContiJiued on Ptp B)
•
Ray never had a chance to

United Press International versal peace was ever to be.
Thousands o! Ohlooollepsand created.
VaBCO Lellao da Cunha said
unlverslcy stuclonts heard &amp;Indey praise &lt;t Sen. Robert F, lust for power, tear and love of
Kennedy - a man many oC them violence were the greatest dansupported pollticsi]JI and nearly gers America ne.eded to mar~
all discussed publlcll'.
come. He criticized those Who
At Bowling Green State Uni- believe that nothing can be averslty, some 1,500 graduating chieved without vlnlence.
students were told by Brazil's
"There are many earnest, but
ambassador to the United States timid -1• whn become blind
that a policy or non.~Jiolence and admirers of force.'' da CUnha
tolerance was needed if the wd- implored. "They lose their eour-

ap and - In power alomo tho
onJ.y solid growth &lt;II which lo
lin in our IIOcl.et;y !'
·~e are aU the JX)OI'er for
his (Kemedy'o) paalln&amp;" Dr.
James ca... ecmcatl&lt;ll edllor
&lt;t Satunlay Rev!"' magazine,
told 500 Ohio Wealeyan Unlvaratcy ll'aduatel.
Tho uaaaoinatlnn &lt;t Sen. Kenneczy and Dr. Martin Luther King
Jr. are "IQ'mhoilc or a pro.
!ound malahe lba! Ia IID8Winl

cle!eat.

1-10 Years in 3 Defendants
Peniten.tiary
Lomle Edward Fruler, Middleport, ' ~ been oientenced "' a
l-10 :rear ierm In the Ohio Stale
penitentiary 1&gt;1 ll8ip Common
Pleao JUdae John c. Buon.
Fruier, chortled with felonlou&amp; aaaault, waa returned to
Miolp Councy Iaiii waek from the
Uma state lkiiPitallobe IIBIIleneed. Frazier bad beal confined
...,.. lor more than twO 1ear1.
In other oommon ()leaa COOil't
aaiiYicy, Erneatlne Flocber haa
mod an action aaklng lor an n parte ........ COI'pul. '!'beeharaea her l8-7ear-old dauiblar, Slale Wfllpal, II ilelltl 1111·
lawtoily, roll.ralaed of her llbtr11 by F111 and WUIIa WUI.
Mra, Flacber elalml iJbt I I •
UUad to ihe culllooly of lite '--

..,,,

'•

F'med Saturday
Three defendanta were ·lined
and a fourth fo.felted a bond In
the court of Mayor Charles Legu In Pomeroy
Fined were Jeffery Folmer, 18,
Pomeroy, $10 and costs, for
speeding; Marvin Edwards, 31,
Harltonl, $10 and costa, speecl.
lng, ond William Reovoo, Albany,
~0 and costa, lnloldeotion, and
$25 and eoata, disturbing the
'peace.

at the vitals &lt;t a natloll," CUI
IBid.

. - KemlaiiY.

Medpr l!Yvl,

1llal oolm X, Martin Lulbar K1111
and l&lt;ennedy had 0 D I
tbillg In eo~ Flaleber bel told llllaml IJDiveraii;J alumni.
"They reioUzed they btiOIIIed
lo a racist ooelot;y IIMI tbe.Y _ ,
lr)1Dc lo do ~ . llwl 100 tl1elr eoomtry parllb ID
the opreadlng !!rea &lt;t revolutlooa aDd repreaalon,''tbtlldbor
and . . . , _ man aald at a
luncheon which - t h o lllaml
University Alumni ...........
u

America lDI.st ehaap or .,

to the barrlCidls," he llid.
"The blaeko, thepoor,tholll:llcau Americana, tho !'llerlo Rlcaaa, the 7llWII people, tho IDtellectuala, and DOW the citrD
are aU lllllrlns tbe barrl-.
of 10qal revolutloo."
In '1tl.ma, Dr. FrankiiD D.
Murphy, chancellor &lt;t tho Ualvoraii;J of Clll!ornla, LAI -...
10: .. Jirijtacell• 1111
1,800 grll&lt;llates with praise lor

r.....n. "

Sen. Kemeclr.
Then, he llid, .. Admlnllllra,.
tora, tacultiea and tru-s
come to grlpa with the VOl")' real
problem &lt;t a generatl&lt;11 which
wonts "' be tallu1d with, not talk.
od to."

1111•

Three Accidents Reported

p AR1S - MOLOTOV COCKTAIL BOMBS were thrown into two
GauiLat ]111'11 builclinga toclay at the alart or a biller twC&gt;-Week national electim bettie.
·
·,
The psol1ne bmlba marked the first reported violence Ia the
eamp!IJPI In which the tate of Prea!dtnt Charlo• de Gaulle'a "atrorw
110n" Flfth Replj&gt;llc was the main laoue at olake. Tho COUIIIJ:,y'a 28
mllilm votars eut their balloll June 23 and aaaln In nmoff voting
June 30 lor a now~ Auembl,y.

.' ' .

Legal e)ll)erts were
hnw long that might

ment.
Aeked If military victory was
poasible, Westmoreland then said
with a stern face, "Not in a
classic sense, because of our
national poll cy &lt;t not expanding
the war.

Frazier Draws

SUNDAY-11 A.M. To 6 P.M.

-~ ~

~

Classic Victory Out

News••• in Briefs

SATURDAY AND SUNDAY
JUNE 8 AND 9 AT ROYAL OAK PARK.

0 ..
...

~!C ...

By

~Trenda ue fa~le, bot II
"But the enemy can be atIa unreioUatle to expect a QUick
Fortuoe Cookie.''
and earlx cle!..t &lt;t the Hanot- trlled, the price can be raised
In July !965, Brown waa led 0110111)', • tho c1epartlng Amer- - and It Is being raiaed to the
accused of asiiUlt and battery icau oommanclor tn VIetnam told point that It could be tntolera.
In Cleveland by Brenda Ayres, newsmen lD a prepared state- ble to the enemy."
18. He received a jury trial and
was acquitted In J1010 !967,
Brown was acquitted ln a
paternicy suit brought 1&gt;1 Miss
Ayres, who claimed he was the
lather or her daughter.
Three accidents. none of which knee and right elbow. There were
resulted In serlousln.:lurles, were no arrests.
investigated over the weekend by
The other accident was at 6:15
Meigs eouncy SherliJ Robert C. a. m. Sunday on RDute 689, 3.8
Hartenbach's departmen4
miles north or Roote 160, where
The ftrat occurred Saturday a car driven 1&gt;1 Dorothy Belle
on County Road 5, 200 feet south Stone, Rl I, Langsville, struck
of RAinie 124, where a vehicle and killed a deer that crossed
driven 1&gt;1 Rmlald Eugene Cleland, onto the highway in !ront or her.
By United Preas !Dernatlonal
SAIGON - VIET CONG RAINED deadly rocl&lt;etl on SaJgon lor 22, Rt I, Langsville, went out or fhe driver was reported uni~
tho lOIII stral8ht dey toclay, South VlebJomeaelroops broke the pr- control when steering taUed. The jured and medium damage was
rlllaa' nine-day hold on a portion of tho Chol.on dlatrlct and 34 or the vehicle, traveUng south, went ~aused the 1968 model vehicle
o!f the right aide o! the road and she drove.
Communlata aurrendered In moaa, m!Utary spokesmen IBid.
The oow C&lt;lnmunlat rocket attack&amp; kWed eight persona and struck a tree, causl~ medium
wounded 33 otlters overnillhl. mllitary spoke11111en IBid. WhUe the damage to the car. No InJuries
rocketa tell oo the capital, government rangers and poUce continued were reported. There was no
A swnmer physical fitness
their awsep through a sllHIIock sectloo of Choion, the 1111 Chlneoe arrest.
program tor Meigs Local High
SundiiY, at 1:30 p. m. on Chesf,.
ouburb, and opokeamen Slid C&lt;lnmunist resistance had collapaed.
School D111trict students in
Tho apokeamen Slid today 34 VIet Corw aurrendered en masse SW&gt;- er Township Road 444 about 2.6 Grades 4 - 12 will be held for
day and another lvo were eaptureclln aweepaloday. More than 1,000 mlles oortbofCIIUilQ' Road36,..,.
eight weeks beginning ~
retuaeea were ioUowed back In the battered area lo recover what hides driven by Charles Lewis,
dey.
44, Pameroy, 8RI Daniel R. Spur.
cooda were lli_.,.e !rom the rubble o! their homes.
Charles Chancey, program
lock, 18, star Route, Pomeroy, director, said all boys and
FRANKFORT, KY. - FRANKLIN COUNTY Circuit Jedge Hen- collided on a curve.
girls are Invited. Mrs. Joy
There was heavy damage to
ry Mioiga s.tonay lriJI(ed a 31&gt;&lt;lay extension for a 6111 ocale public
Bentley and Mr. Chancey are
iarfiW bJ1 tho Kentucky Racing Commlaaton Into the disquallflcati~ both vehicles and a ,passenger in
lnslruclors. The program will
the Lewis car, Ruth BWICh, 39,
of d01&gt;11aed Kentucky Derby wlmer Dancer' a Image.
be 8 to 9 a. m. at Rutland
~- also ~~!held the Jurtedlction or tho raclrw commiaalon to su!Cered a bunv on til&lt; right
High, 9:15 to II: 15 L m.,
oder the colt'a trainer. Lou caWarls, and aoalatant trainer Robert
Mldclleport, and 11:30 L ITL
Barnard to at a hearll18 W-sclay after It waa revealed the
to 12:30 p. m. at Pomoroy
two had been cited 1&gt;1 the commtaalon tn Louloville lui Wednesday
High.
b" allepdlJI placing a lorelin subatance In the horae's feed

FARMER r'BO~") BROWN ANNOUNCES HIS
"DOWN ON THE FARM" CHICKEN BAR-B-QUE
TO BE HELD

loW tonlilll Ill 101 . .

70s.

Speakers Praise Senator Kennedy

Brown Booked on
Assault Charges

&amp;om the ljllrlment be!ore
lulmltdrw lo arreol
Brown was relt1oed earll'
IDda,y on ,12,500 ball Formal
· chargaa will be !lied al hla
arraignment June 13, autborltlt• aald.
Eva Miorle Bohnchln, 22, or
West Hollywood, the girl !oond
below Brown's apartment, was
taken to Zltizens Emerpncy

-Jac* Gaver

warm llld llmdd 111m. .

'I'IIo....,'

~~~O

MONDAY. JUNE 10, 19t

f._Q~ERQY-MIP,DLEPQR!. .OHIQ

Fllr,

·'

James Earl Ray Dragged Into British Court

~1111' · ~ -

Popular Patrick McOoohan
of Ireland actually was born ln
New York in 1928. The star's
parents ha.d emigrated from
Ireland but returned to thelr
native land shortly after Pat~
rick's birth. ' McOoohan, already well known to American
video audiences tor his "Danger Man" and "Secret Agent"
series, begins a new one, "The
Prisoner," on the CBS network. June 1. He creared the
new series, stars 1n It, ls executive producer and ha.s written
and directed several episodes.

Me~s-MQM)n Area

•

lor the Cleveland Browns
pined more yards than any
other rUMer in professional
football history, WBS booked 011
auiJI)Icion o! assault with lnumt
to commit murder and susplelm or battery aplnst a law
dlleer, Sher!ll'a cleputles llid
the massive Negro athlete

• • •

Weather

enttt\\ ~

Devoted To 'l7w lntere.tl Of The

.

Brown, 32, who as a fullback

The television special starring Brigitte Ba rdot that was
broadcast 1n France Jaat Dec .
31 has been acquired tor
American use during the 196869 oeaonn by NBC.

• \ •. !

at y

The Metropolitan Pollee or
London, formed In 11129, had Ita
original head'Jiartera In an area
Whleh once contained a palace
Uaed by Visiting king or Scot.
land centuries ago, hence the
pcpular name Scotland Yard.

i.

r

ROBERT KENNEDY'S grave site, beside his brother, Proal- John F. Kennedy, at ArHIV'
1on National Cemetery outside Waahlngtoo, D. C. Two of President Kenned)''a children also He
here. The tamlly aMounced loday the casket will be mewed later, and a llllllllorlal erected, lo a
site clooer to the resting place of President KOIIIIOC]J/,

Court Accepts Deskins' Plea of
Guilty to Manslaughter Charge
A plse or gullcy to the charge
of manslaughter was accepted

this morning by Meigs Common
Pleas Jedge John C. Bacon In
the case of the State of Ohio vs.
Carson Eugene Deskins.
Deskins, 30, ronnerly of Rt.
1, Langsville, and now of Gal·
llpolls, was tndleted by the January term Miotgs courey Grand
Jury to stand trlol on charges
of second degree murder In the
April 4 butcher knife stabblrw
death of Avel (Bud) Harvey, RD,
Dexter.
Deakina ioUegedly a1abbed Har-

vey with a butcher knife When been put before a petit jury IM&gt;o
tlle deceased man came Into the ginning this mornil18 until It waa
Deskins home while the accused decided Deskins could enter a
man and hls wtre were involved in _..plea to the lesser charge or
a domestic problem.
1111nslaughter.
Deskins, through hls attorney,
Fred W. Crow, Jr., had entered
a not gullcy plea to tile second
Judge Bacon, 1.1J00 the recomdegree murcher charge tn a pre- mendation or tile Prooecut1112 At.liminary hearing in eouncy COurt lorney Bernard v. Fultz, ruled
A meat culler at a GllliJlO(ts that oenlllncing or Deakins would
Supermarl&lt;e~ Deakins hao been be postponed unW Jilly 15 When
!roe on $5,000 cash bond since the he returns trmn 1!1\Bilmer camp
prioUmtnary hearing,
with the National Guard A proThe secon:l degree murder bation report will alao be precharge was scheduled to have sented at that time.

Politics as Usual in Six Weeks
WASIIINGTON (lJP0 - II may
he alx weeks or longer before
the 1968 presidential campaign
apln bollds up to the pitch it
had reached before the cloath
&lt;t Sen. Robert F. Kemeczy,
The assassin&amp;Uon of the second-nmnlng Democratic contender ta the obviOUs reason the remal.nlni: aiJI)Iranta lor -maJor
JI&amp;I'V nomlnationa wUI he more

...........

For lorteltirw a $15 bon! poat.Altboogh all &lt;t the candi-a
ed on charpa or clrlvlng left or prd&gt;abl,y Will HIIIDIO poliUcsl
conler was Lawrence Burrla, activity 1&gt;1 tilt .... of June, the
S!, Awle Grove.
lnlenoe adtemeot built up &amp;lrlnl
tho ion&amp; run &lt;t spring pri: . TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
Middleport emeriOIICl' scpad- maries IIIOl not be reached a.
..., look Lorena !fllydei, 189 pia until )!• before or non
Boech St., to Velarans - - &amp;lrlnl the national nomlrlallna
tal lklapltal SalllrdaJ allemoon cmventlona In August.
Abaut half of the Democratic
.....,. lhe wu admitted formedond
a !llllaller proportion Glthe
leal--.

'

RepubHcan delepllons ramatn
to be aelecled.
Keme&lt;ly'a death does not seem
to chan&amp;~&gt; the nomination prospects or either party. Vlee PresIdent Hubert lL Humphre,y atilt
Is the clear IlemocraUc leader; !ormer VIce President Rlcb-

Smouldering F'IJ'ell

ard M. Nlmn atiU Is the heavy
favorite lo win tho RBplblican
nominatim.
HUMPHIIEY LEADS VOTES
At tho time &lt;t the &amp;IBUalnatlon. lllun!&gt;l&gt;reywaaltallnR56ll,l,
dtlepte - · · K-*IY h a d
3931h , sen. ~ · J,
t117 255 and Gaorae c. Wailaee
2, with 1,312 lo nomi-

Mcc;;...

More than
50,000 at
Cemetery
WASHINGTON
(UP!)- Mora
llwl 50,000 IIIClUrDOrl llled
alowll' past a newl1 grave on a hDlalde II Arli......,
Natlnnal Cemolar)&gt; !bldll7 lo
pay t11e1r reapecta to Francis l&lt;ennedy,
IUs widow, Ethel, Cllllllo tho
grave with their eldll. - .
Joaeph. The widow of bla
brother, Mrs. John F. -.o~J,
was there with her twa
cldldren, Caroline and JGbtl.
Tho thouaando &lt;t men, and children whn vldta4 the •
temporary grave beneaib a
maaaoiia lreo &amp;utda.Y ~
.&lt;ally ropreaented tho mill'- fll
Americana Who IIIClUllled bla
death acroos the natlnn.
In Loa AD!IOies, .....,. ha
dl811,, lhe headligiJta blazlnl Ia
the almilsbt made It look lib a
tunet'al proceaaion.
AI the stadium, the Iladlerl
"""" black armband&amp;.
Ill Detroit, Clenland, New
YOI'k and countleas other diiM
bli ond amaH aeroaa tbla laDd
~lc, Protestant and Jellllll
l'itriJIIHIII lad ~ ..
tribute to him.
- ·led
"liltAt the
Bll]JIWblte
Grlbam
bla
pariOIIal !rlllld, ~ B.
John-. and a ..... "'
Prealdontlal friend&amp; and Ill

a

~

IIIOIIIOrial oerviot.

Thua, flap at halt IIIII
acroaa tho CGIIIItry and Ill

nalkllcrlef4rl-- ....
atanaa_ ........., db! -'-lAre Benned by Law
For the Iloptllllcana, with 1187 ea !Ill' Ita llnal rt"'elt lo
Middleport rest-a ware recpred tor - - , Nlml Rabllt FI'MCII ~ Ia l
national .., of _...,
warned today ey Cblet ot Pl&gt;l!ee · had 382, Gov. a-Id
Herllerl Gllkeythat smouldering 110, Oov. Nei-· A. Rocbfal, Sad~·
fires In trash Clllllalnerl and 1a- ltr 77 and Hln&gt;ld £. • PICNic IS 'nli!A\Y
elneratora will not be toleralod. / ; .
.......alnta ....
~·a - - - . . '!'be .bdGir-8laloir ....... .,..:
Otilt
b0111 recelvtdon..-and-. IIINIJ halt ot 'which C8llll tr.. ale will be bald ·Ill a.rel&amp;
Park
,..,...,,
....
I(~~
,,
In theae cypaa of fireL '!'be .U- cautor.la. will IJI to '"" of lilt
lage has an ordinance Mlnlnr -.,.., ellldlclataa al llltn 10 a.m. to-. II
w:; '•
auch !Ires, and It will be IIIIi 'be i . b" luck. AU .1oa1ar ........ -~ .
wa arelawlled:
forced, tho chief Ald.
~
nate.

a-

_.,....1m

'

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..til'*

�I

2 _ Th• llllb So&gt;mincl. t'onleroy-Micllllopor~ 1\, ~.Juno 10, 1968

•

SlRAIGHT FR~ WASHINGTON

Evacuee of Egypt is Home

By Stephen M. Young

United States Senator,

... dllllllll

'"

Spencer, Rothgeb Winners

By PAT HOUCK

"You have Sverythtng. You can
afford to pay the prices,'' foreign natlve vendors who expect
ID haggle over their too - high
prices, tell Americans who buy
in their countrY.
JoYce Robinson; daughter ol
Mr. and Mrs. James Robinson
of 838 Third Ave., found this
feeling about the United states
during a two-year stale Department assignment in C a 1 r o,
Egypt.
Joyce was one of 700 Americans evacuated !rom CIP,ro when
tlle Egyptians broke ofl' :relations
with lbe United states. The airport was closed because or the

.-.

.

,.'

~

'

..

'•J

"

'

I I II

·t· n .

WASHINGtdN - 11 is a shock-

I

bombing and the evacuation was
accomplished by way of train,

then ID Athens by boat.
carmen Del Molino, Spanish star of the swinging trapeze,
is only one of the many aerlal acts with the big Hoxie Bros.
~Ring Circus coming to Pomeroy on June 14 for performances
at 2 and 8 p. m. at the city lot. Advance tickets are being sold
oow b31 the Pomeroy VolWJteer F1re Department.

,.,
n
~
OW
Circus Comes to
Just as there's no explaining
Arnerlc:::a's taste 1n entertain~
ment, there's apparently no explanation for the mounting popul uity of the circus.

Some attribute the revived interest in the threilng show to
teJevision. others
I that perhaps the present
eration of
parents has an urge to share with
their youngsters the nosblgicappeal of sawdust and spangles that
they knew as youths.
Whatever the reason, veteran
showmen report business was
good in 1966, better In 1967, and
they anticipate another banner
yesr in 1968.
Cecil B. DeMille, famedlloll~­
wood producer, stated, "I found
the circus thernostuni(yingforce
In American life. Oneneedonlyto
observe a circus audience. Nothing perlui.ps so much as the circus evokes a fundamental simplicity in human nature.
"There is no age for a cir.
cus spectator. Boys of 7 and 70,
young men with open shirts and
sleeves rolled up, little boys and
girls - all with the same rapt

"
'

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,:.

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'

'

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'

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....... .

'•

fascination, all caught up in the
this, the most magical
of all worlds - the bands and
clowns, the swirling aerialists
and a shimmering' beauty every.
where. ••
Attending a circus performance is not just viewing ~ .•ac·
tion but something you ~xPM­
ence. You feel the circus with all
of your five 8enses. A wise sage
once Eoaid that the Impossible
takes a little longer, but in the
circus the impossible can hap·
pen oow, and oft,en does. It is
truly a magical land where good~
ness and beauty reign supreme,
and personal problems are quickly lor~tten as you become Alice
in Wonderland.
Circus Day is coming to Porn~
eroy on June S4. The wonders of
the great Hoxie Bros. 3-Ring
Circus will be tmloaded at city
lot and the Circus City will arise
to give performances at 2 and
8 p.m. Advance tickets to t h e
«Greatest Circus On Earth For
The Money," are being sold now
by the Volunteer Fire Dept.
magic of

The women and children had
left the city two weeks earlier,
when relations became strained. Joyce, bUSJ' working as a
teletype operator ln the embassy, didn't take it seriously Wl-

til she was !Did fD be ready fD
leave ln two boors.
The evacuees were forced to
walt five da,ys in Alexandria for
a suitable boat. When U arrived.
due to the anti-American feeling caused by Nasser's announce~
ment that Americans were re~
sponsibte for the bombing, there
were far too many people for the
boat to accommodate comforta~
bl,y. The trip !rom Alexandria
to Athens was crowded with Wl~
easy refUgees.
WAS A TYPIST
Joyce was wortdng as a t:yp.
ist for Ohio Medical Indemnity
in COlumbus when she heard a
radio announcement, "Would you
llke a change'? Would you like
to see the world? Join the Foreign Service.''
She had left Ohio State UniverM
sity after two years, deciding
phYsical therapy was not what
she wanted to do after all. And
after three years of working
for OMI, she was looking for
a change.

Joyce Robinson
NATIVE COSTUME- JoYce Robinson models a "Galabia"
o! Egyptian cottoo trimmed with braid. Mo&amp;t &amp;ewing in~ is
done by men who make a hand trimmed garment such as this
in a few hours. Joyce is wearing haOO tooled Egyptian saDdles
and holding an olive wood figurine !rom Jeruaalem.

Security clearnace took six
mmths but she was in Wash- dut_y in Athens, Greece. Without
ing!Dn, D, c. preparing lor the a car, she found it difficult to
worh in February of 1966. She get around in Athens but managM
was the first girl hired for 0010· ed side visits to lst&amp;mui, Turkey
munications in 11h years.
and Beirut, Lebanon.
When Joyce arrived in Egypt,
Joyce said Beirut was umore
she took one look around at the like home" than any other city
jJrirnltive conditions and t h e she tiad' worked in or visited.
poverty and ~d. "Pve made and was her favorite place, ..It
a mistake. There's nothing excit- is oriental, but modern," she
ing or glamorous about this." said. Belrut is sometimes callAt!er she got estabiished in the ed the New York of the Near
American compound, she reaJiz. Esst.
ed it wasntt that bad.
Family unity was one of the
After the evacuation, she re- strongest things Joyce discovmained in Greece for a month ered about the people in t h e
awaiting assignment. Whm a tem- COWltries she visited. If Uley
porary duty assignment to Jerus- called you 'ftriend, '' they con.
alem arrived, she was apprehen- sidored Y'f' as part of the famConference, and the main spon-- sive, unable to fully believe that ily, sometimes expect:Jng the imsor of the campaign, declared: the war was over.
possible as your dtty to them.
But the aaslgnment turned out They thought an American coold
"We have had a beautiful day ...
We accomplished fiUC purpose, to be a smooth one, aad it was a do anything.
which is to shake Up the do--noth- rewarding experience for JoyCf!
Ing honkies in goverrunent." His to walk where Jesus walked. and
Many, many or the native peolanguage ani that of several of to view the Holy Land.
ple she met wished to come to
his associates has been~;onsider­
Two months passed there, then ' America. To be poor in Amer·
ably more restrained as they assignment came for permanent ica is to have more, much more
have visited Co~esslonal offices on Gapltol Hill and have begun to appreciate, I hope, what
is already being done to aid the
poor people in this counlry.
What we must all realize, itrcluding Hev. Abernath,y, is that
the· t'ederal goverrunent is spendIng biUions o( dollars annually to
support some 100 programs that
help those who cannot help them·
By WAYNE G. BRANDSTADT, M.D.
selves. Almost $3 billion has
been exPended on Jow.rent public
Sometimes a previously be investi~ated. In some
housing. $4 billion has been spent well-behaved child of 5 or 6 cases, the child has become a
on urban renewal. Agrand total wiU throw a tantrum . AI· perfectionist IDe early in life.
of $140 billion has been spent though very few parents will He may be setting for himself
by the govermnent on various consult a P.hysician when thi s such high goals that he simply
welfare programs in the last happens, 1f the episode sug- cannot achieve them.
gests a marked change in the
Usually this is a child who
eighth years.
child's
personality.
it
should
prefers
the company of adults
And yet, leaders of the Poor
that
of children his own
to
Peoples Campaign ha'&gt;'e warned 73,088 persons were added to
age. Because :he cannot
that if Congress has not met their Uncle Sam's payroll. Instead oC h and I e his frustrations, he
demands prior Lo the national cutting out 25,000 jobs, a total of cries easily, goes into seclupolitical conventions, they will 190,325 were created.
sion or has a tantrum. If corrective
measures are not ap·
move their operations to the conBut even more bewildering was
plied, he may become an obvention sites.
the explanation given by the DiH seems a pity that so much rector or the Bldget when Sena- sessive-compulsive neW'otlc
within three or four years. Jf
energy, planning, determihation tor Williams asked him to ex· this
happens, consulfJltion
and money should be expended plain this discrepancy to the sen. with a child psychologist will
when the truth is that the Fed.. ate Committee on Finance. The be necessary.
eraJ government cannot end pov~ Director said it was very easy to
What Is needed when a child
crty - only the government, the explain. He - noted that when Mr • shows si~ns o! becoming a
private sectar and private indi .. Johnson made the statement that perfectionJst is a more reviduals working lob&gt;ether can end he was goi.rw to make the reduc- laxed home atmosphere. This
the economic and social inequi- tion of 25,000 in Federal em- can often be accomplished by
arranging more recreational
tie s in America. That should be ployment, he had In mind adding activities that i n v o I v e the
the goal of the Poor Peoples 225,000 emploYees. lie changed whole family-outings, games
Campaign - the bringlng about of his miOO and cut 25,000 from the or r e ad in g and singing to·
such teamwork and cooperation. figure he was planning to add. gether. It is also wise to en·
PAY ROLL PADDING and ad- Actually, since he added only courage more rrtendships
ministration rationale - In dis- 190,000 instead of the 225,000 he with other children by having
cussing expenditure reductionr~ had in mind, there was a re- them In your home and allowing him to visit them in'
cenUJ, Senator Williams ofDelaa duction of35,000 even more than theirs.
ware pointed out that President had been promised.
At the opposite pole, tanJohnson's promise of December
Senator Williams concluded: trums are sometimes caused
2, 1965, to eliminate 25,000 Fed-- 11 Following that Une of reasCXP by the parents demanding IDe
eral jobs prior to June 1966 ac~ lng, why did the Preoidont oot little of a child. If he does not
ually resulted in an increase in fix his mlnd on adding 1 million know what is expected of him
Federal employment of 190,325. employee&amp;, and then I sUJlPC)Se and has not yet learned to
During the month of December he would have claimed a reduction differentiate right from
in which the promise was made, o! 800,000. 11 I&amp; this klndottactic wrong, he will feel tbal he has ,
Federal employment Increased that is golng to bankrupt this been cast adrift in a complex ·
world that he does not under·
by 2,Rl9. Increases continued country, and ttat Is why we have
sfJlnd and his frustrations will
monthly until June 1966 when this credibili\Y gap.
mount to the breaking point.

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POOR PEOPLES CampaignBy the end of May, over 2,000
participants In the Poor Peo,'lles
campaign occupied the plastic
and plywood huts at the base of
theLlncoln Memorial here in
Washington, D. C. Their permit
to camp on Federal ground was
due to expire by mid..June, but
Campaign leaders said they intended to sta~r until their demands were met - although they
must know that most of their demands are impossible of attainment in this year of great fi scal

strain
First. they have asked thegOv·
errunenl to start massive new
programs to provide millions of
new jobs and hoosing units. Such
programs wooJd cost tens of bil~
lions of dollars each year, highly
improbable in 1968 when the Federal deficit is almost certain to
go over $20 billion. Second, they
have asked the go~'ernment to in.
stitute a guaranteed annual income, regardless of whether an
iOO.ividual has a job or nol This
is another fis cal improbability
and a welfare concept which has
been characterized by several
of the nation's leading economists as exacUy the wrong solution to unemployment Third,
Campaign leaders have asked
the government to liberalize welfare programs and regulaUons
so that recipients can regard assistance as "a right" andnol "an
act Or charity."
Th~ lobbying perfonnance of
the Poor Peoples Campaign to
date has been uneven. On his first
Jay in Washington, D. C., He'&gt;'.
Ralph Abernathy, head of the
Southern Christian Leadership

THE DAJLY SENTINEL
Ut:VOTf: n !0 INTli!L&gt;o'T Ot

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)On Jul,y 15, Joyce will be lllling tD Copenhagen, Denmark on

her next assignment. II will be a
big jump from the troubled desert lando ot Egypt ID the placid
low-lying city between the sea
and a series oftresh water lakes,
but me to wbich JoYce is looking
forward.

than others. In maternity wards
In public hospital&amp; 45 per cenl
or the women have had no prenltal care whatever. This increases by three-!oid the likeli·
hood or their giving birth prematurely. Mental retardation OC·
curs 10 times more often in very
small premature babies than in
those born at full term. Negro
women in Mississippi die in childbirth six times as often u white
women. In smne urban ghettos in
the north one child in ten dies In
infancy, Ten million A'mericans,
mostly children, suffer r rom
chron!c hunger or malnutrition
Also, those born In deep poverty
too often are the victims of
dietary deficiencies that aaect
development o( the brain. By the
time these children reach public
schools where they may receive
one hot meal a day, the damage
is dooe arxl lrreversible. T h e
health gap between the rich am
poor is a continuing national disaster. This is an unconscionable
situation and must oot be permitted In the richest natloninthe
world. Every effortmustbemade
to provide all Americans, regardless of their economic status,
with an adequate and balanced
diet. Otherwise, we condemn millions of Americans and thousands of babies born each year to
a lifetime of second - class citizenship.
VIETNAM REPORT
It ls with sadness the writer
reports that during the lanertwo
weeks ln May more than 1100
American GI's were killed in
combat in Vietnam or in bombing
missions over north Vietnam and
approximatel,y 5600 wounded. it
Is terrlb!JI unfortunate that while
our delegates are endeavoring to
secure peace and an end to the undeclared war savage fighting ani
kllling continues, establishing the
heaviest record or casualties of
any twOtWeek period in the war.

These sickening -.Ustlc:s fur·
ther eQhasite the sorrow
brought on by the moat~ar
war any American President ev·
er w'ged.
POOR CREDIT RISK
It JIUlll astonish the reader but
apparently royalty somedmes is
slower psylng and poorer credit
risk than some of t~~;e rest of us
common people. Al Bw'nett of
Anchorage, Alaska, big game
hunting guide, attained the acme
of happiness when an attache of
the State Department arrarwed a
bear hunt for his roYal maJesty
King t.jahendra or Nepal, then a
White House guest recelvlng red
carpet treatment including a state
bsnquel His lillie Himllayin
kingdom ls recipient of more
than $96 million of American topayers' money as economic aid.
While his royal highness was ln
Washington he asked for more.
He and Queen Ratna, witharetlr.ue of ten ladtes~ID-waiting and
courtiers, had a mountain of
bsggage.
The royal parts decided to enjoy an Alukan boar hunl This
was conducted for more than two
weeks under direction of guide
Burnett whose prestige soared to
the skies as an Alaskan hunting
guide favored by roy ai ~
v· Heper..
sonally advanced thousands of
dollars in lining up goods arx!
services required for the hunt.
At the conclusion or the hunt
his majesty said, "send me the
blil." Burnett did. His bill tor
$48,000 is stlil urpald. The Nepll
ambassador in Washington ex..
pressed regrets that the King has
been ill. Al Burnett, U. S. gulde
extraordinary also has regrets.
He is poorer now than he has
been in many years.
MAl VAN BO
Secretary of state Dean Rusk
talks about aggression trom the
north 8nd denies that we are iDvolved in a clv:ll war In Vietnam
One nonders what he has to say
about Mal Van Bo, north VIet.
.IIIJII'a ambassador to··rranceand
a distinguished scholar. He is
the most trusted emissary of the
Hanoi govermnent in any world
capital, and will be the power

behlnl the Hanoi deleptel at the
Paris conference.
In 1954, he waa a major in the
Vleinameae forces flahUrw for
llberaUon ot VIetnam !run
French colonill O)ipre11l011. Ho
was born in the Mekonl Delta
south of Sllgon. He waa wGUJW!ecl
ond ea,PIIIred by the French.
FoUmrlrw Dlen Bten Phu an:l
the French withdrawal from Jr.dochina, he was relused. Secretary Rusk, who dllhonestly
claims we are not involved 1D a
Vietnam civil war, should be told
that the nine generala who are
lhe power behind the Sli&amp;on mll·
itary regilne were born and
reared In north VletMftl, 111:1 all
!ought wltll the French 11'11\Y
agatnat their own aeek&amp;na: nationII liberation. Mil Von Bola artieulate llld able. SUJ'prlatrwb
enoogh, this leading diplomat of
Hanoi wrote the Mtion&amp;laathem
of south VIetnam. He Is the c~
fldant an1 cloae (rlend of Ho
Chi Minh. Bo is the man who in
October 1964 put out peace !eel·
era in behalf of north Vietnam.
These were rejeded at the time
by President Johnson. He ap.in
raised peace hopes laat. January
when he said "lithe United states
stops bombing north VIetnam,
talks -..~n•,.
.....e." -•o
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w• InNed
or uslrw the word "would",

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!lmday.

Okker do!eat.ed Jan -Erie
LundzviJI of s..edon 3-'; 6-3, 7~ '
lnd thon leaJJiecl wi"r MarlY
Riessen of Evanston, m., to
take the doubleo tr&lt;&gt;m Well
Germany' • Uwe Gottacbllk ltlld
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was out on a fielde~ s cholee,
:!ttencer was safe onanother. The
only hit ol the 1nn1ns was a sin-

gle by Bill Moore with two away.
Meigs scored Its first two nm11
in lbe ot the opening innIng when swan, the catcher, singled with two oots, ~ncer !oiiowed with a double and Lennie Van Meter singled. Meigs'
only other run was scored in the
second as Lonnie Bush slngled
'with one ou~ BIDie second and
The righthander lost his shutout ocored on a base !mock by Baer.
Other hits by the host&amp; In the
in the nilth when two-out
opening game were a double by
sl~les by Ed Klrl&lt;patrick, Plul
Schaal and Jim Fregosi PUihed Rothgeb In the boloom ot the fourth
and a aingle by ~cer In the
across 1 run.

Catcher Turns Outfielder

For Important Indian Win
By AL DALY

DUTCH WINNER
STOCKHOLM (IJPI)- Dutch·
man Tom Okker twtpl the
alngieo am doUbles dtieo of the
uSaltQoebaden" temls tour-

nament

THE CHAMP? - WeD, probehly. A. L. (Junior) Phelps, West Main-St., Pomeroy, may havs
set a new record In bowling this past winter wheD he bowled 750 league games, 27 Anoclatl.m
pmes. and 18 roll-off matches. PheiJ)I, a New York Central System railroader, bowled in leagues
It both the l'mlerO)' Bowl!~ LlnQ&amp; and the Masoo Bowling center. He received several of tho
trophies at the Pomeroy Lanes blnquel nu1ay rugnt. Trq)hiea won by Phelps dur1E1f the seaaon
lnchlded four tlrst, two secoo:ta, three for high game, one for third tor high aeries, one sponsor's
trCCJhY and two for most improved bowler. Wt'th hlm is Mrs. Phelps who won two tr~hles.

" &lt;

LISrS ACTIVrl'IES
MASON - Chief ot Pollee
Richard Ohlinger Ulled his tlo~ent•s activities cmJna !Ia.!'
as 19 citations and one peace
warrant issued IDd oae aceldut
investlgsted.

action New York took a twlt&gt;bili
UP! Sports Writer
!rom Cllllornia 8-1 and 3-2 and
When is a catcher an Wasldngton ~ped Minnesota 7·
outllelder'l When Cleveland 4.
Manager AI Dark decide&amp; fD get
In the Natiooal League
uother portslde swinger into Cinclrmati s~ped the cardinals
the lineup ard inserts a 7~6 In 12 Innings ln the seccnl
lack&amp;top Into lett field.
game ot. a doubleheader after
Duke Sim1, nonnally a the first-place cards had taken
eatcher; ·played lett field SUnday the opener 111-1). Adonia blanked
.ad scored both runs as the Chicago 'l-0 in their Dpener and
Jnttians blanked the league-- Chicago won the second game 6llldlrw Tigers 2-0 behind Luis 5. Pltlaburgh beat Houston 3-1,
Tilnt' • !oor-hit pitching.
Los Angeles edged Philadelphia
Sims, who hit a rmracorlng 4-3 and San Francisco beat the
double and a solo home rW1 Mets twice 5-4 11'11 4-1.
aplained, "This was only my
Sims' double in the fourth and
aecon:l Pine in the outf1eld In home run in the seventh gave
the majors. But Tiger Stadium'• l'iant s cOIIJ!ortabJe cutldon ·as
a good place tD hi~ Also the Cuban · riahlhsnder la&amp;l&gt;nmember, I hit pretty good toned his tlfth whitewash of the
bare last year and won a tew season.
games with home run1."
Bahnsen Collects Win
Keeo Pace Close
The Yankees took the 11rst
The Indians needed this game game as Roy White and Horace
11 a loss would have put them Clarke each drove in a pair of
Slh: games behind the Ti,ers. runs and rookie Stan Bahnsen
'111ey now trill by 31h ,
scattered 10 hits to gain his
In other American Leaaue sixth victory against two losses.

A bat day crowd of 56,614,
largest in the majora this
season, saw the Yankees Collar

thelr Orst game victory wit11
a ninth Inning squeaker.
Pinch-hitter Charlie Smith
cracked a two-out single In the
bottom of the inning to score
Bill Robinson rrom second.
Southpaw Steve Barber went
the first eight innings, but
reliever steve Hamilton collected lhe win.
The Selll!Dr&amp; broke 1 1·1
deadlock in the fourtJJ as they
sCored six runs · with two out.
Joe Coleman wert all the way
scattering seven hlts tor the
win. One of them was a two-run
hamer by Hannon · Killebrew,
his seventh of the season, The
two RBI's moved Killebrew to
within two or the 1,000 muk tor
his career.
~

tilth.

Athena

eight h i t •
who struck out six
and walked 9. f4&gt;eneer was in
trouble most of the game be.
cause of the walks, but managed

ott

got

~cer

Standings

CHICAGO (UP!) - Can tho
small IDwn Cllflornia boY who
has found happiness in PhDadelphla and Cincinnati lind happiness in the Windy CI\Y?
The happiness. was a season
debut win over tho PhDadolphlo
Phlllies and a follow up win st
ClnclnnaU over the Atlanta
Braves for sophomore Reda
pitcher Gary Nnian ot Orovllle,
Clift.
Nolan was fD 1!ll to lbe mound
IDday after hi&amp; third win In
111reo starts againat the Chicago
Cubs, 'wilo planned l&lt;j put Kon
Holtzman on the mooncL lloltzman is t-4 for the 1968 cam-

you'll be able to dial station-to-station calls.
Person-to-person calls. Collect calls.
Credit card calls. Any long distance call.

paign.

Ill Cincltutati ~, tho
Reds ltlld Ieaaue - leading st.
Louis Cardinals split a pair,

All by yourself.

Any
upholsterer.

JUNE 16TH IS EXPANDED DIRECT DISTANCE DIAL' ING DAY IN YOUR AREA. THAT'S THE DAY YOU'LL
BE ABLE TO PLACE ALL LONG DISrANCE CALL'l
YOURSELF - JUST BY DIALING THE NUMBER.
HEBE'S HOW IT WORKS:

whoknws
his stuff
lsln
the

FOil rERSOII·TCJ.PUSCJII.
CIIOIT CAIIO, COLLECT,ANY
IIPEI:IAL LIINQ DISTANCE CALl

FOIIITATICIII·
T~STATIOit

CAW

1. Oiall.
2. The area code.

[;

1. Diai"O."
2. The area code.

3. The local number. 3. The local number.
If u C(lerator Ilks, e:lve
her
call

)'OUr

number. Your

then

throuiiL

&amp;'Qel

ri&amp;ht

A IIPKI81 OPitfatOf will com.

the ltne. Give her the

on

fti!I&lt;'Jflhry

Information lnel )'0Uf call 10M
rilht throut:h.

REMEMBER, EXPANDED DIRECT DISTANCE DIALING DAY, JUNE 161'11. THAT'S THE DAY IT'LL START
TAKING YOU LEIIi TIME TO COMPLETE ANY LONG
DISTANCE CALL. AND TIJANKS TO GENERAL TEJ.E.
PIIONE. YOU'LL DO IT ALL YOURSELF, LOOK FOR
DET AILEo DIALING INSTRUC'l10NS IN YOUR .

illlfRAL TELEPHONE \II

&lt;'

ID escape with a minimum llllltber
at Athens nna.

Wakelleid na starting lurler
tor Athens, working 5 1-3 InnIns• before being replaced by
ROlli&gt;. The Atllens pitching stalf
combined tD slrlke oot six and
walked six.
Athens' big stickers ID the op..
ener were Levering, the llrll
baseman, and Abdella, the ahortstop, each with two slngleo. Other hitters for the visitors were
Repp, Kolllval, Wakelleld ltlld
Riggle each with a single.
SECOND GAME
Athena led 5-3 tp&gt;1ng infD the
bottom ot the filth Inning ot the
aeeond game when Melia I!Jj&gt;ioded lor three runs.

Ault opened the riJI,y with a
single and Baer and Van Meter
followed 'with back~.l&gt;ack slngleo. li\&gt;encer, who played centertleld ln Ule secood game, sacrificed Aalt home before Moore
alngled to 1core the otller two
run&amp;.
Meigs had tallied two ol It&amp;
runs In the llr st lmlng and the
other in the third.
The first lming runs came
wl:en Baer singled withoneaway,
stole seoond and scored on a
4fngle by Spencer. ~cer came
home on a two b&amp;Se error.
Ill 111e third, Van Meter walked with two oot and &amp;oored on
another two base error. ~­
cer singled after Van Meter bat-

ted and waa driven home by era comhlnocl 1D walk fllur 1114
Moore's double.
Jagels struek out two ud)tGIII·
Moore led the hitting tor Melli• aob tamed--on.
'
In lbe second contest with a
Perry went IJ:e dlllanco lor
double and ainglo in two lrlpo ID AtiMIIo, famed two ..,. l a 111e plate. Both ~ncer and Baer two walks. Abdella waa lop ldtai 10 had two hits, both alnglea. ter lor 111e violloro wllll I ....
Ault and van Meter aingled am ble ltlld aincle in tour trlpl to
Looalo Bush doubled.
the plate. EaiiOX, the coldlor,
Athens got one of ito runs In else had • pair of olngloo.
Ute first frame, added aoother
FIRST GAME
1
In the second, tallied three In Alben
1002021-111
tile fourth and 1&lt;0red ito llaal Meigs
2100005-IU
run in the seventh on a home
Wakolleld (LP), Repp (I) ...
run by Kostlvll.
Domloon. li\&gt;encer and Swatl.
Ingels, the starter tor Meigs,
SECOND GAME
worked unUI lbere wore two oot jlthen.B
110 300 1- UZ
and one oo In the top or the Meigo
202 030 0- 7 I 0
toorlh when he was relieved by I Perry IIDd E•-· Jqalo,-.
Rothgeb. The two Mellis pitch, i'Bb (4) (WP) am Bulb.

Baseball World in Stormy Weekend
By GARY KALE

were the ones involved most
directly in fWlel'al plans since
services were held in New York
IIIII the burill In Arli:wt&lt;&gt;n
cemetery.
The Boston Red sox and
Oakland Athletics voluntarily
postponed their games against
the Chlcag'"' White Sox m1
Baltimore Oriol'es when President Johnson dedared Swxlay
a national day of mourning for
the slain senator from New
York.
The chaotic occurrences dur~

UPI~ Writer
Baseball emerged today !rom
a stormy weeken:l In which
disputes over observances of
mourning for tt.e late Sen.
Robert F. Kennedy rocked lbe
sports pqmiace from the olflce
of Commissioner William Eckert down to the last rookie on
the bench.
Eckert's office was caught in
a crossfire between player.s and
club officials concerning when
ard whether particular games
would be played.
Baseball came in for a great
deal of critlcrism because of
Eckert's indecisive actions.
Wlthoot meaning to, he alierated ,·arious segments among
LOS ANGELES (UPJl-AII
owners, players aoo fans. His Don Drysdale has to do to get
flll)llrent motive was to please another da,y ot1 is to pitch six
everybody in the situation.
straight shutouts agatn and set
Pos1pones Two Games
another record for consecutive
When Sen. KeMedy died !rom scoreless innings.
an assassin's bull!!t, Eckert
The tall righthanded veteran
ordered the saturday postpone- or the Loa Angeles Dodgers was
ments of games in New York given Sundoy off by Manager
between the Yankees and Walter Alston after he broke
CaHfornia Angels and in Wash- one of the oldest marks in the
ington between the Senators and record book 5aturdey nigh~
Minnesota Twins. The two cities running his strl~ tD 58 2-3
consecutive shutout innings.
The 3l·.vear-old JJitcher went
CINCINNATI (UPJ) - The
into
saturday night's game
CinclnnaU Reds announced &amp;Illagainst
the Phillles under trying
day that Manager Dave BriocircumStances.
The Dodgers
IDI will enter Christ Hospital
for observaUon and examinaM won the game 5-3 but Drystioo of a persistenl cough and dale' s streak was snapped and
he didn't even finish the outing.
cold•
Drysdale and his wife, GinVern Benson, a coach, was
ger,
were personal frierxls of
named to direct the club aa it
the
late
sen. Robert F. Kenned,y
started on a road trip at Chiand
had
vlsitA&gt;d the Kenned,y
cago today. Minor League
Pitching Coack Ray libore home, But Drysdale's pitching
will join Jim Brag&amp;~~, Me I turn came on the day funeral
services were being held for the
Harder and Hal Smith on the
slain
serator.
Reds' coaching stafJ . The Ctn ..
"I ilgured Don had been
clmotl Manager io expected tD
under
a great strain and he
rejoin the club someume bedeserved
a day away from the
tore it returns home on June
stadium. It was tremendous
21.
that he coold have kept that
streak of consecutive scoreless

ing the weekend were in
marked contrast to the complete blackout of games that
folhJWed the assassi111Uon ol
Dr. Martin Luther Klrw two
. months ago. The start of the
baseball season was delayed in
memory of the slain civ:ll rights
leader and all games were
postponed on the day of his

Leaders

Kennedy mourning period.

Mets Refuse Game
Tbe New York Meta, backed

Board Chairnllll M. Donal~.
Grant refused to take tile field•
opinst the Gtanta in SID
Francisco even though Eekert
had decreed that •taU maJcr
league games on Saturday will
oot &amp;tort until after the

by

funeral.
funeral.''
san Francisco scheduled 1
Players and club oMdals
immediately began to argue "bat day'" which the Glints
over the right to.play duri.ng the considered a sellout 11 nearly
40,000 ticketa wore IJooll:lln In
advance promotion. 11Je cl.e
estimates it lost $80,000 ard
owner Horace Stooeham. reportedly nas geared to seek scme
sort of indemnlfi.cation frt:m the
innlngs going as long as he Mela am had asked Natlonll
League President Wuren GOes
did," Alston said
"I wanted the record bldly," fD !oriel! the game If New York
Drysdale said. .. But I'm ~ did oot take the llold.
The Mel&amp; did not 111m 1111 in
lieved that It's over now. When
unl!orm,
but lbe Glanta did not
the run scored, I just let dawn
completely. rm sure it was the jJre s s further charges.
Stoneham later said: "No
mental strain."
indemnl
ties will be aoughl II' •
Drysdale brUte a major
league record last Tuesday with all over. Forget about it."
Many la&amp;eball ligures ll'&amp;UO
his sixth straight shutou~
that
Eckert Bhould have tloaurpassi~ the record of Gtzy
clared
a moratorlmn on pmes
"Doc" White set In 1904 with
either on the day of Sen.
the Chicago White Sox.
l111erll or tile
Alter lhst game, Drysdale Kennedy's
111tiooal
dey
or mourning,
had 54 consecutive scoreless
Innings and needed onl.v 2 1-3 Players !ell a rtlt deopenod
ln.Dre. . fnnirlg8 to break 8Je mark thomsel.... lnd ........
of 56 set by Walter Johnson of over the sltuatiorL
the Washington Senators in
1913.
Drysdale had a shaky start Ill
he threw seven balls With his
first eight pitches but he retired
the side am went through the
second inning with less difficul~
ty. When he struck out Roberto
Pena in the third iMing, he had
the record and he kept the
scoreless string until the tldh

Alltime Record

By United Press International
Natiooal League
W. L. Pet GB
St. Louis
33 23 .589 ...
Los Angeles
32 26 .552 2
Atlanta
29 25 .537 3
San Francisco 30 26 .536 3
Cincinnati
27 26 .!09 ~~
Philadelphia
25 25 .500 5
Chleqo
26 28 .481 6
New York
24 29 •453 1'/,
Pillaburgh
21 29 . 420 9
Houston
22 32 .407 10
Sunday's Results
Loa Angeles 4 PhUsdelphla 3
AUanta 4 Chicago 0, 1st
Chicago 6 Atl1!111l 5, 2nd
inning.
with St. Louis taking the opener a !oor-hlt shutout wl:en the Car- st. Louis 10 Cincinnati 8, 1st
With two out in the fl1th,
Cin 1 St. Louis 6, 2nd, 12 lnns.
10.3 and Cincinnati the nightcap dlnalo erupted.
pinchhitter Howle Bedell hit a
7 ~.
Pittsburgh 3 Houston I
sacrifice O.y to drive in Tony
Perez Scored
san Fran 5 New York 4, 1st
Taylor with the run that ended
t.ee May opened the 12th 1ns.n Fran 4 New York 1, 2nd
the streak.
nlng ot the second game with
TOilaY's Probobie Pitchers
a aingle, his foorlh hit or the
Natiooal League
(Atl Times ED'I1
gsme, and then ,.., forced at
G. AB R. R. P&lt;:L
Cincillllti (Nolin 2-0) 11
oecond baoe by Tony Perez. Rose, Cin
54 225 41 80 .356 Chicago (lJoltzman 4-4), 2:30
Leo Cardenas doubled home Flood, St.L
56 23t 35 78 .333 p.m.
0 UD
Saturday
Billy Casper won his !ourth go![
Perez ott loser stave Carlton Alou, Pit
42 144 13 48 .333
St. Louio (Jaster 4-2) ot
,
BERCHTIS}ADEN, Germatoornament this year when he
alter Johnny BenCh weal down A.Jhnsn, Cln 52 214 36 70 .327 Atlanta (Niokro 5-4), 8 p.m.
I'J'
•
ll.Y (UPI)- Jtallan racing driver captured the "500" Festival by
swinging tor tho second out ot Alou, Atla
53 228 26 74 ,32! Pitt&amp;burgh (Velie 2-6) at san
.I
Lndovlco Seufiotti of ltal,y was I stroke with • 280
tho Inning.
·
Staub, Hou
53 206 22 66 .320 Frsncioco (Marlchal 1~2). 4
killed when his Porsche 910
TOLEDO (U~ No. 1 pill)'a crashed during trial rmts for
George Culver the last of six Grote, NY
49 161 i4 50 .311 p.m.
Why worry about money?
No. 2 here IDday ltlld every day Sunday's Grlllll Prix o! the
Red pltchero pl;ked up hlo ruth Helms, Cln
51 204 16 62 .30t New York (Seaver J-5) at Los
It wUI go away before you
lor lbe !ollowlng three dayo iD Mountains auto race.
know it.
win against five loo&amp;ea.
MUlan, Ada 53 204 16 62 .304 Angelea &lt;sutton 3-5), 11 p.m.
- 'IIIIo I&amp; actually best In tile
The Cardinal&amp; Jumped on Billy WUmo, Chi
54 220 26 6! .295 (Only gsmeo ocheduled)
lnternstlonai .........
TROON, Scotland (UPOMcCool ma)dng hio first start
American League
. Tae&amp;day'o Games
Columl:us, whlcb led the Jn- Mlke Bomllack defeated Joe
of the '......, tor live nmo In
·
G. AB R. ll Pel Clnch. .ti It Chicago
ternal!onal . _ e by -.oalf
tho !Irs!
of the oecond Hwrd, Wash 54 202 31 69 .342 St LouJo ot Atlanta, night
carr 7 and 6 to
his third
game over tho !IIUd Hens, in- British Amateur golf champie&amp;
game,
Y&amp;trskl, Boo 54 189 29 64 .339 Pitlaburgh at 8an Fran, night
vacled lbe nest IDday lor the ship.
Alm: Johnaon's two-base error CArew, Min 47187 22 55 .294 Houston at Philadelphia, night
opener ft a ttve.pme, four-dQ'
on Lou Brock's 11,y baiiiDcched HoriDn, Det 49173 26 50 .289 New York at Loo Ang, night
aerie
a.
PARIS (UPO - Ken Rosewlll
off the uprising. Julllll Javier White, NY
56 198 31 57 .288
SoutJ:vaw
Dave Roberts waa &amp;topped !eUow Auslrlliln Rnd
!allowed with a aingle scoring. Johnan, Bal 51173 24 49 ,283
American League
Brock
Hrrisn, Boo 42138 23 38 ,275
W. L. Pet. GB fD take the mound toailbl In Laver 6-3, &amp;.1, 2-6, 6--2 for the
881l'cb ol hlo olxth win In ei1Jbl men•a singles title in tile French
· Pinson Homered
Stroucl, Wash 41 1211 23 35 . 271 Detroit
35 20 . 636
decialona.
32 2t .571 3'h
Open tennis champioo&amp;hip&amp;.
111 the botlom ot the !ourth Uhlndr, Min 54 2ot 17 55 .270 Clovelllld
Mike Mlrahall, 'IIIIo II~
•-•·· Vsda Plnaon homered OIQ&gt;a, Min
56 213 23 57 .21111 Baltimore
30 24 ,556 41'2
• •. _ ,
u - ~..
Mlmeaota
28 27 ,509 7 baa .U wino am four io.,ea,
NEW YORK (UPJl-Dark
oft atarter Ray Wallltbum for
~• - a
111e Redo' nrst ruu. Tltey adclod Natiooal League: Hart IIIII Booton
26 28 .481 lllh too, was - - to _ .. hlln Mirage woo the $85,6!0 Molller
for the Mud Hens.
tour more In the sixth Inning 111 Mays, Giants II; Sllrll"ll, Olkland
25 28 .t72 9
Goose stakea by 10 lengths at
A twin bUI wao 1111 tor Taos- Belmont Plll'k.
26 30 .t64 9\1
1 alngle by Pete Ro&amp;e, 0 - l e Pirates, ll Aorm, Bravea am New Ylll'k
by Tommr_ JJelmo, 1 llin&amp;le by McCovey, Glanta 10.
Washington
2t 30 .144 101'.! day, wl111 ainelo - · 1111 for
Wednesday am Thursday IJ6.
PlniiOII ltlld Mack Jonea' llrat AmoriCID League: Howard, Cllltornia
25 32 .t39 II
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (U~
borne run ol the 1011011•
SenoiAin 22; Horton, Tipro 16; Chicago
22 30 .423 ll'h tween the IL'a two lop t.eamo ot Clark Graebner and Bob Lutz
thla peiDI iD 111t Wlljla(p.
Willi Joe Herner pltehlng Ill Killebrew, Twlna 12; Mdlullea,
SUnday'a Reaulto
bellt Ecuador's Pancho Guzman
Neither !Mm pl01ecl 5mciay and MJauo1 Olvera 6-3, 11-2, 7~
the oilltlh imln&amp; 111e Redo tied Sellltoro, 'Harreloon am Yu- Cle..,..... 2 Detroit 0
IS the lupe pelllponod Ill IC•
tho ,.,..... 11 6~ on May's lnlleid trzemokl, Red Sox 10.
New Yorlt 8 Cllllornla 1, 1&amp;1
IAI !Pve the United Sllteo the
don In deforeneo ID IJ:e • . - . American Zono Davis Cup Ulle.
hit 0 -le by Fersz am
Runs Bolted 1n
Now Yorh 3 Cllllornia 2, 2nd
day ot IIIOUt1llni for 111e late
~c:h's aacrlllre tl,y.
Natlooal League: Perez, Reda WashiJW~on7 Mlmeoota 4
SUnday
Soo. JJobert F, Kamaob' of Now
remarkable Dnllh for all those
tile
nrst
gsme,
the
Cardin35;
SllliD,
Cubt
and
Bolich,
Today'o
Proboblo
Pitchers
!ND!ANAPOUS, Ind. (UPJl111
York.
ltnailde
.,d outsldl surfacn sui)..
Ill seu1 13 bailors 00 111o plate Redo 3~; ll Aaron, Braveo,
(All Tlmeo ED'I1
to
constant
hlndllng,abraion,
IIIII poutad out eiiJbl hill II &amp;w-., t.lata, COpeda, Cardo
Osltland (Dob1011 2-6) II
~ plied up 10 ruua In tho IIIII Mayo, Gllnlo 31.
Cle..,..... (Siebert 6-tl, 7:30
filth innln8 ID wi»o oot 1b eitlt
AmeriCID Lol&amp;ue: Howard, p.m.
'run dollclt.
Senotoro t7; Powell, Orloleo 35;
Baltimore (llardin 74) at
Gerry Arrlao ,..1 working on Horton, Tiprs 33; Johnaon,
Waohin&amp;ton (Pueull 5-3), 8
Orloleo 31; llarralaon, Red Sox, p.m.
Killebrew, Twlna and Kooco,
Chicago CJolut t-0) at Now
Yanko 30.
York (Stottlemlre 7-tl, 8 p.m.
And 10 is
fevorlte ice
'
'
Pitching
Cllllornia
6-.2) at
cream or eotmg treet.
' Natlonll Loi&amp;Uo: Marichal, Booton (Culp - · 7:30p.m.
Sandwiches, Dinners, Snecka
j Glanta lo-2; Kooaman, MOll 9-2;
(Onl.v 11111101 ocheoUed)
car1111n, Carda 7.:1; Reed,
Tuollday'~ ~
end Soft Orinks - Sonny's the
IBravoo lllillfanda, CUbo 6-.2.
Mlmaaota at Detroit 2, twl·
mentoaeeet
Amoricaa lAIIuo: McLain,
night
, Tipra 9-2; lla!'dln, Orlaleo 7-2; Ookland II Cleveland, night
Bahnaen, Yanko &amp;;.2; Ferranoa- Baltimore It Waahlrwton, nigllt
Tii;
Ill, Twlna, Boll, Red Sox am Chi- It Now York, nJcht
0( ~~~~ Slnct DIS
Wrllhf; Anpli 5-2.
Cl1lilrnla .6 Betllin, nJcht

Nolan Seeks Victory in Chicago

THE WELL CHILD®

Child's Home Atmosphere
Plays Part in Tantrums

,, ,, ,

, ....

CONGRESSMAN
CLARENCE E. MILLER

••

·'

hope and opportuni\Y than they
could ever have in their native

11\! fact that poor Americans are ·
four times as likely to die before
the age of 35 as the average cltt~
zen. The effects of poverty begin
before bJrth. Poor women re·
celve prenatal care less often

'The Melp American Legion
bl&amp;eblll team oome.frombehlnd victorleo In both endo of
tllelr ... ..., .....,Il1g doUbleheader against Albena &amp;lnday afternoon ot the !b&gt;racu&amp;e Municipal
Park.
Melg&amp;, playing the ftrst gsmes
11 the Iormor aile ot the old
Dodo King Park alnce1954, IGOreel live runs in 111e slxtb lnaiDg
iD win the .....,Il1g conteot 8~
and got three nmo home In tho
llftb frame ol the oilier milch
iD win that one 7~.
Righthancler Tomtn)' ~c•or
ot Golllpolis went the distance
tor the willler&amp; In the llrll gsmo
and John Ingels and Jon Rothpb &amp;bared the !IIOWid duly tor
Meigs in the nightcap.
FDISr GAME
Meigs' bill olxth Inning rilly
followed two Atheno errors, lour
walks, one hit, and two flelclar's
ehotces. Louie Bush, third baseman for the ho11tl, ~ t h e
frame by being sale on an error
by lbe third ba&amp;eman.
Lot'llle lllob walked and Deanis AaitamEddleBaerllscwaiked with one oot. After Bill swan

Roberts On

M

d

.
Agamst
Hens Ollight

Weekend Summary

1mb,

Got a
finanf!ial

"'n

.C!rlihl

your

.

POMDOY
CEMEKI'
ILOCI CO•

...,._Store
'1

?
Tomorrow momifta
just give us a call
or siDp in. Get
the money quickly
to clean up debts,
take a vacation
and relax.
Our thrifty budget
loan plan may be
just the omawer
for you now.
Have lesa to pay out
and more for

fOUI'IOlf.

CITY
LOAN

.......,..

a Savings Co.
.. K. IIIIIll ..

••

... G.

�I

2 _ Th• llllb So&gt;mincl. t'onleroy-Micllllopor~ 1\, ~.Juno 10, 1968

•

SlRAIGHT FR~ WASHINGTON

Evacuee of Egypt is Home

By Stephen M. Young

United States Senator,

... dllllllll

'"

Spencer, Rothgeb Winners

By PAT HOUCK

"You have Sverythtng. You can
afford to pay the prices,'' foreign natlve vendors who expect
ID haggle over their too - high
prices, tell Americans who buy
in their countrY.
JoYce Robinson; daughter ol
Mr. and Mrs. James Robinson
of 838 Third Ave., found this
feeling about the United states
during a two-year stale Department assignment in C a 1 r o,
Egypt.
Joyce was one of 700 Americans evacuated !rom CIP,ro when
tlle Egyptians broke ofl' :relations
with lbe United states. The airport was closed because or the

.-.

.

,.'

~

'

..

'•J

"

'

I I II

·t· n .

WASHINGtdN - 11 is a shock-

I

bombing and the evacuation was
accomplished by way of train,

then ID Athens by boat.
carmen Del Molino, Spanish star of the swinging trapeze,
is only one of the many aerlal acts with the big Hoxie Bros.
~Ring Circus coming to Pomeroy on June 14 for performances
at 2 and 8 p. m. at the city lot. Advance tickets are being sold
oow b31 the Pomeroy VolWJteer F1re Department.

,.,
n
~
OW
Circus Comes to
Just as there's no explaining
Arnerlc:::a's taste 1n entertain~
ment, there's apparently no explanation for the mounting popul uity of the circus.

Some attribute the revived interest in the threilng show to
teJevision. others
I that perhaps the present
eration of
parents has an urge to share with
their youngsters the nosblgicappeal of sawdust and spangles that
they knew as youths.
Whatever the reason, veteran
showmen report business was
good in 1966, better In 1967, and
they anticipate another banner
yesr in 1968.
Cecil B. DeMille, famedlloll~­
wood producer, stated, "I found
the circus thernostuni(yingforce
In American life. Oneneedonlyto
observe a circus audience. Nothing perlui.ps so much as the circus evokes a fundamental simplicity in human nature.
"There is no age for a cir.
cus spectator. Boys of 7 and 70,
young men with open shirts and
sleeves rolled up, little boys and
girls - all with the same rapt

"
'

.

,:.

.

'

'

.
'

'

..
....... .

'•

fascination, all caught up in the
this, the most magical
of all worlds - the bands and
clowns, the swirling aerialists
and a shimmering' beauty every.
where. ••
Attending a circus performance is not just viewing ~ .•ac·
tion but something you ~xPM­
ence. You feel the circus with all
of your five 8enses. A wise sage
once Eoaid that the Impossible
takes a little longer, but in the
circus the impossible can hap·
pen oow, and oft,en does. It is
truly a magical land where good~
ness and beauty reign supreme,
and personal problems are quickly lor~tten as you become Alice
in Wonderland.
Circus Day is coming to Porn~
eroy on June S4. The wonders of
the great Hoxie Bros. 3-Ring
Circus will be tmloaded at city
lot and the Circus City will arise
to give performances at 2 and
8 p.m. Advance tickets to t h e
«Greatest Circus On Earth For
The Money," are being sold now
by the Volunteer Fire Dept.
magic of

The women and children had
left the city two weeks earlier,
when relations became strained. Joyce, bUSJ' working as a
teletype operator ln the embassy, didn't take it seriously Wl-

til she was !Did fD be ready fD
leave ln two boors.
The evacuees were forced to
walt five da,ys in Alexandria for
a suitable boat. When U arrived.
due to the anti-American feeling caused by Nasser's announce~
ment that Americans were re~
sponsibte for the bombing, there
were far too many people for the
boat to accommodate comforta~
bl,y. The trip !rom Alexandria
to Athens was crowded with Wl~
easy refUgees.
WAS A TYPIST
Joyce was wortdng as a t:yp.
ist for Ohio Medical Indemnity
in COlumbus when she heard a
radio announcement, "Would you
llke a change'? Would you like
to see the world? Join the Foreign Service.''
She had left Ohio State UniverM
sity after two years, deciding
phYsical therapy was not what
she wanted to do after all. And
after three years of working
for OMI, she was looking for
a change.

Joyce Robinson
NATIVE COSTUME- JoYce Robinson models a "Galabia"
o! Egyptian cottoo trimmed with braid. Mo&amp;t &amp;ewing in~ is
done by men who make a hand trimmed garment such as this
in a few hours. Joyce is wearing haOO tooled Egyptian saDdles
and holding an olive wood figurine !rom Jeruaalem.

Security clearnace took six
mmths but she was in Wash- dut_y in Athens, Greece. Without
ing!Dn, D, c. preparing lor the a car, she found it difficult to
worh in February of 1966. She get around in Athens but managM
was the first girl hired for 0010· ed side visits to lst&amp;mui, Turkey
munications in 11h years.
and Beirut, Lebanon.
When Joyce arrived in Egypt,
Joyce said Beirut was umore
she took one look around at the like home" than any other city
jJrirnltive conditions and t h e she tiad' worked in or visited.
poverty and ~d. "Pve made and was her favorite place, ..It
a mistake. There's nothing excit- is oriental, but modern," she
ing or glamorous about this." said. Belrut is sometimes callAt!er she got estabiished in the ed the New York of the Near
American compound, she reaJiz. Esst.
ed it wasntt that bad.
Family unity was one of the
After the evacuation, she re- strongest things Joyce discovmained in Greece for a month ered about the people in t h e
awaiting assignment. Whm a tem- COWltries she visited. If Uley
porary duty assignment to Jerus- called you 'ftriend, '' they con.
alem arrived, she was apprehen- sidored Y'f' as part of the famConference, and the main spon-- sive, unable to fully believe that ily, sometimes expect:Jng the imsor of the campaign, declared: the war was over.
possible as your dtty to them.
But the aaslgnment turned out They thought an American coold
"We have had a beautiful day ...
We accomplished fiUC purpose, to be a smooth one, aad it was a do anything.
which is to shake Up the do--noth- rewarding experience for JoyCf!
Ing honkies in goverrunent." His to walk where Jesus walked. and
Many, many or the native peolanguage ani that of several of to view the Holy Land.
ple she met wished to come to
his associates has been~;onsider­
Two months passed there, then ' America. To be poor in Amer·
ably more restrained as they assignment came for permanent ica is to have more, much more
have visited Co~esslonal offices on Gapltol Hill and have begun to appreciate, I hope, what
is already being done to aid the
poor people in this counlry.
What we must all realize, itrcluding Hev. Abernath,y, is that
the· t'ederal goverrunent is spendIng biUions o( dollars annually to
support some 100 programs that
help those who cannot help them·
By WAYNE G. BRANDSTADT, M.D.
selves. Almost $3 billion has
been exPended on Jow.rent public
Sometimes a previously be investi~ated. In some
housing. $4 billion has been spent well-behaved child of 5 or 6 cases, the child has become a
on urban renewal. Agrand total wiU throw a tantrum . AI· perfectionist IDe early in life.
of $140 billion has been spent though very few parents will He may be setting for himself
by the govermnent on various consult a P.hysician when thi s such high goals that he simply
welfare programs in the last happens, 1f the episode sug- cannot achieve them.
gests a marked change in the
Usually this is a child who
eighth years.
child's
personality.
it
should
prefers
the company of adults
And yet, leaders of the Poor
that
of children his own
to
Peoples Campaign ha'&gt;'e warned 73,088 persons were added to
age. Because :he cannot
that if Congress has not met their Uncle Sam's payroll. Instead oC h and I e his frustrations, he
demands prior Lo the national cutting out 25,000 jobs, a total of cries easily, goes into seclupolitical conventions, they will 190,325 were created.
sion or has a tantrum. If corrective
measures are not ap·
move their operations to the conBut even more bewildering was
plied, he may become an obvention sites.
the explanation given by the DiH seems a pity that so much rector or the Bldget when Sena- sessive-compulsive neW'otlc
within three or four years. Jf
energy, planning, determihation tor Williams asked him to ex· this
happens, consulfJltion
and money should be expended plain this discrepancy to the sen. with a child psychologist will
when the truth is that the Fed.. ate Committee on Finance. The be necessary.
eraJ government cannot end pov~ Director said it was very easy to
What Is needed when a child
crty - only the government, the explain. He - noted that when Mr • shows si~ns o! becoming a
private sectar and private indi .. Johnson made the statement that perfectionJst is a more reviduals working lob&gt;ether can end he was goi.rw to make the reduc- laxed home atmosphere. This
the economic and social inequi- tion of 25,000 in Federal em- can often be accomplished by
arranging more recreational
tie s in America. That should be ployment, he had In mind adding activities that i n v o I v e the
the goal of the Poor Peoples 225,000 emploYees. lie changed whole family-outings, games
Campaign - the bringlng about of his miOO and cut 25,000 from the or r e ad in g and singing to·
such teamwork and cooperation. figure he was planning to add. gether. It is also wise to en·
PAY ROLL PADDING and ad- Actually, since he added only courage more rrtendships
ministration rationale - In dis- 190,000 instead of the 225,000 he with other children by having
cussing expenditure reductionr~ had in mind, there was a re- them In your home and allowing him to visit them in'
cenUJ, Senator Williams ofDelaa duction of35,000 even more than theirs.
ware pointed out that President had been promised.
At the opposite pole, tanJohnson's promise of December
Senator Williams concluded: trums are sometimes caused
2, 1965, to eliminate 25,000 Fed-- 11 Following that Une of reasCXP by the parents demanding IDe
eral jobs prior to June 1966 ac~ lng, why did the Preoidont oot little of a child. If he does not
ually resulted in an increase in fix his mlnd on adding 1 million know what is expected of him
Federal employment of 190,325. employee&amp;, and then I sUJlPC)Se and has not yet learned to
During the month of December he would have claimed a reduction differentiate right from
in which the promise was made, o! 800,000. 11 I&amp; this klndottactic wrong, he will feel tbal he has ,
Federal employment Increased that is golng to bankrupt this been cast adrift in a complex ·
world that he does not under·
by 2,Rl9. Increases continued country, and ttat Is why we have
sfJlnd and his frustrations will
monthly until June 1966 when this credibili\Y gap.
mount to the breaking point.

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POOR PEOPLES CampaignBy the end of May, over 2,000
participants In the Poor Peo,'lles
campaign occupied the plastic
and plywood huts at the base of
theLlncoln Memorial here in
Washington, D. C. Their permit
to camp on Federal ground was
due to expire by mid..June, but
Campaign leaders said they intended to sta~r until their demands were met - although they
must know that most of their demands are impossible of attainment in this year of great fi scal

strain
First. they have asked thegOv·
errunenl to start massive new
programs to provide millions of
new jobs and hoosing units. Such
programs wooJd cost tens of bil~
lions of dollars each year, highly
improbable in 1968 when the Federal deficit is almost certain to
go over $20 billion. Second, they
have asked the go~'ernment to in.
stitute a guaranteed annual income, regardless of whether an
iOO.ividual has a job or nol This
is another fis cal improbability
and a welfare concept which has
been characterized by several
of the nation's leading economists as exacUy the wrong solution to unemployment Third,
Campaign leaders have asked
the government to liberalize welfare programs and regulaUons
so that recipients can regard assistance as "a right" andnol "an
act Or charity."
Th~ lobbying perfonnance of
the Poor Peoples Campaign to
date has been uneven. On his first
Jay in Washington, D. C., He'&gt;'.
Ralph Abernathy, head of the
Southern Christian Leadership

THE DAJLY SENTINEL
Ut:VOTf: n !0 INTli!L&gt;o'T Ot

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ltlliJJillO llo. OWEN, PIIRL.l.'ill£11

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)On Jul,y 15, Joyce will be lllling tD Copenhagen, Denmark on

her next assignment. II will be a
big jump from the troubled desert lando ot Egypt ID the placid
low-lying city between the sea
and a series oftresh water lakes,
but me to wbich JoYce is looking
forward.

than others. In maternity wards
In public hospital&amp; 45 per cenl
or the women have had no prenltal care whatever. This increases by three-!oid the likeli·
hood or their giving birth prematurely. Mental retardation OC·
curs 10 times more often in very
small premature babies than in
those born at full term. Negro
women in Mississippi die in childbirth six times as often u white
women. In smne urban ghettos in
the north one child in ten dies In
infancy, Ten million A'mericans,
mostly children, suffer r rom
chron!c hunger or malnutrition
Also, those born In deep poverty
too often are the victims of
dietary deficiencies that aaect
development o( the brain. By the
time these children reach public
schools where they may receive
one hot meal a day, the damage
is dooe arxl lrreversible. T h e
health gap between the rich am
poor is a continuing national disaster. This is an unconscionable
situation and must oot be permitted In the richest natloninthe
world. Every effortmustbemade
to provide all Americans, regardless of their economic status,
with an adequate and balanced
diet. Otherwise, we condemn millions of Americans and thousands of babies born each year to
a lifetime of second - class citizenship.
VIETNAM REPORT
It ls with sadness the writer
reports that during the lanertwo
weeks ln May more than 1100
American GI's were killed in
combat in Vietnam or in bombing
missions over north Vietnam and
approximatel,y 5600 wounded. it
Is terrlb!JI unfortunate that while
our delegates are endeavoring to
secure peace and an end to the undeclared war savage fighting ani
kllling continues, establishing the
heaviest record or casualties of
any twOtWeek period in the war.

These sickening -.Ustlc:s fur·
ther eQhasite the sorrow
brought on by the moat~ar
war any American President ev·
er w'ged.
POOR CREDIT RISK
It JIUlll astonish the reader but
apparently royalty somedmes is
slower psylng and poorer credit
risk than some of t~~;e rest of us
common people. Al Bw'nett of
Anchorage, Alaska, big game
hunting guide, attained the acme
of happiness when an attache of
the State Department arrarwed a
bear hunt for his roYal maJesty
King t.jahendra or Nepal, then a
White House guest recelvlng red
carpet treatment including a state
bsnquel His lillie Himllayin
kingdom ls recipient of more
than $96 million of American topayers' money as economic aid.
While his royal highness was ln
Washington he asked for more.
He and Queen Ratna, witharetlr.ue of ten ladtes~ID-waiting and
courtiers, had a mountain of
bsggage.
The royal parts decided to enjoy an Alukan boar hunl This
was conducted for more than two
weeks under direction of guide
Burnett whose prestige soared to
the skies as an Alaskan hunting
guide favored by roy ai ~
v· Heper..
sonally advanced thousands of
dollars in lining up goods arx!
services required for the hunt.
At the conclusion or the hunt
his majesty said, "send me the
blil." Burnett did. His bill tor
$48,000 is stlil urpald. The Nepll
ambassador in Washington ex..
pressed regrets that the King has
been ill. Al Burnett, U. S. gulde
extraordinary also has regrets.
He is poorer now than he has
been in many years.
MAl VAN BO
Secretary of state Dean Rusk
talks about aggression trom the
north 8nd denies that we are iDvolved in a clv:ll war In Vietnam
One nonders what he has to say
about Mal Van Bo, north VIet.
.IIIJII'a ambassador to··rranceand
a distinguished scholar. He is
the most trusted emissary of the
Hanoi govermnent in any world
capital, and will be the power

behlnl the Hanoi deleptel at the
Paris conference.
In 1954, he waa a major in the
Vleinameae forces flahUrw for
llberaUon ot VIetnam !run
French colonill O)ipre11l011. Ho
was born in the Mekonl Delta
south of Sllgon. He waa wGUJW!ecl
ond ea,PIIIred by the French.
FoUmrlrw Dlen Bten Phu an:l
the French withdrawal from Jr.dochina, he was relused. Secretary Rusk, who dllhonestly
claims we are not involved 1D a
Vietnam civil war, should be told
that the nine generala who are
lhe power behind the Sli&amp;on mll·
itary regilne were born and
reared In north VletMftl, 111:1 all
!ought wltll the French 11'11\Y
agatnat their own aeek&amp;na: nationII liberation. Mil Von Bola artieulate llld able. SUJ'prlatrwb
enoogh, this leading diplomat of
Hanoi wrote the Mtion&amp;laathem
of south VIetnam. He Is the c~
fldant an1 cloae (rlend of Ho
Chi Minh. Bo is the man who in
October 1964 put out peace !eel·
era in behalf of north Vietnam.
These were rejeded at the time
by President Johnson. He ap.in
raised peace hopes laat. January
when he said "lithe United states
stops bombing north VIetnam,
talks -..~n•,.
.....e." -•o
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w• InNed
or uslrw the word "would",

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!lmday.

Okker do!eat.ed Jan -Erie
LundzviJI of s..edon 3-'; 6-3, 7~ '
lnd thon leaJJiecl wi"r MarlY
Riessen of Evanston, m., to
take the doubleo tr&lt;&gt;m Well
Germany' • Uwe Gottacbllk ltlld
Harald Elachenbrolch, 8~, 6-.2.
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was out on a fielde~ s cholee,
:!ttencer was safe onanother. The
only hit ol the 1nn1ns was a sin-

gle by Bill Moore with two away.
Meigs scored Its first two nm11
in lbe ot the opening innIng when swan, the catcher, singled with two oots, ~ncer !oiiowed with a double and Lennie Van Meter singled. Meigs'
only other run was scored in the
second as Lonnie Bush slngled
'with one ou~ BIDie second and
The righthander lost his shutout ocored on a base !mock by Baer.
Other hits by the host&amp; In the
in the nilth when two-out
opening game were a double by
sl~les by Ed Klrl&lt;patrick, Plul
Schaal and Jim Fregosi PUihed Rothgeb In the boloom ot the fourth
and a aingle by ~cer In the
across 1 run.

Catcher Turns Outfielder

For Important Indian Win
By AL DALY

DUTCH WINNER
STOCKHOLM (IJPI)- Dutch·
man Tom Okker twtpl the
alngieo am doUbles dtieo of the
uSaltQoebaden" temls tour-

nament

THE CHAMP? - WeD, probehly. A. L. (Junior) Phelps, West Main-St., Pomeroy, may havs
set a new record In bowling this past winter wheD he bowled 750 league games, 27 Anoclatl.m
pmes. and 18 roll-off matches. PheiJ)I, a New York Central System railroader, bowled in leagues
It both the l'mlerO)' Bowl!~ LlnQ&amp; and the Masoo Bowling center. He received several of tho
trophies at the Pomeroy Lanes blnquel nu1ay rugnt. Trq)hiea won by Phelps dur1E1f the seaaon
lnchlded four tlrst, two secoo:ta, three for high game, one for third tor high aeries, one sponsor's
trCCJhY and two for most improved bowler. Wt'th hlm is Mrs. Phelps who won two tr~hles.

" &lt;

LISrS ACTIVrl'IES
MASON - Chief ot Pollee
Richard Ohlinger Ulled his tlo~ent•s activities cmJna !Ia.!'
as 19 citations and one peace
warrant issued IDd oae aceldut
investlgsted.

action New York took a twlt&gt;bili
UP! Sports Writer
!rom Cllllornia 8-1 and 3-2 and
When is a catcher an Wasldngton ~ped Minnesota 7·
outllelder'l When Cleveland 4.
Manager AI Dark decide&amp; fD get
In the Natiooal League
uother portslde swinger into Cinclrmati s~ped the cardinals
the lineup ard inserts a 7~6 In 12 Innings ln the seccnl
lack&amp;top Into lett field.
game ot. a doubleheader after
Duke Sim1, nonnally a the first-place cards had taken
eatcher; ·played lett field SUnday the opener 111-1). Adonia blanked
.ad scored both runs as the Chicago 'l-0 in their Dpener and
Jnttians blanked the league-- Chicago won the second game 6llldlrw Tigers 2-0 behind Luis 5. Pltlaburgh beat Houston 3-1,
Tilnt' • !oor-hit pitching.
Los Angeles edged Philadelphia
Sims, who hit a rmracorlng 4-3 and San Francisco beat the
double and a solo home rW1 Mets twice 5-4 11'11 4-1.
aplained, "This was only my
Sims' double in the fourth and
aecon:l Pine in the outf1eld In home run in the seventh gave
the majors. But Tiger Stadium'• l'iant s cOIIJ!ortabJe cutldon ·as
a good place tD hi~ Also the Cuban · riahlhsnder la&amp;l&gt;nmember, I hit pretty good toned his tlfth whitewash of the
bare last year and won a tew season.
games with home run1."
Bahnsen Collects Win
Keeo Pace Close
The Yankees took the 11rst
The Indians needed this game game as Roy White and Horace
11 a loss would have put them Clarke each drove in a pair of
Slh: games behind the Ti,ers. runs and rookie Stan Bahnsen
'111ey now trill by 31h ,
scattered 10 hits to gain his
In other American Leaaue sixth victory against two losses.

A bat day crowd of 56,614,
largest in the majora this
season, saw the Yankees Collar

thelr Orst game victory wit11
a ninth Inning squeaker.
Pinch-hitter Charlie Smith
cracked a two-out single In the
bottom of the inning to score
Bill Robinson rrom second.
Southpaw Steve Barber went
the first eight innings, but
reliever steve Hamilton collected lhe win.
The Selll!Dr&amp; broke 1 1·1
deadlock in the fourtJJ as they
sCored six runs · with two out.
Joe Coleman wert all the way
scattering seven hlts tor the
win. One of them was a two-run
hamer by Hannon · Killebrew,
his seventh of the season, The
two RBI's moved Killebrew to
within two or the 1,000 muk tor
his career.
~

tilth.

Athena

eight h i t •
who struck out six
and walked 9. f4&gt;eneer was in
trouble most of the game be.
cause of the walks, but managed

ott

got

~cer

Standings

CHICAGO (UP!) - Can tho
small IDwn Cllflornia boY who
has found happiness in PhDadelphla and Cincinnati lind happiness in the Windy CI\Y?
The happiness. was a season
debut win over tho PhDadolphlo
Phlllies and a follow up win st
ClnclnnaU over the Atlanta
Braves for sophomore Reda
pitcher Gary Nnian ot Orovllle,
Clift.
Nolan was fD 1!ll to lbe mound
IDday after hi&amp; third win In
111reo starts againat the Chicago
Cubs, 'wilo planned l&lt;j put Kon
Holtzman on the mooncL lloltzman is t-4 for the 1968 cam-

you'll be able to dial station-to-station calls.
Person-to-person calls. Collect calls.
Credit card calls. Any long distance call.

paign.

Ill Cincltutati ~, tho
Reds ltlld Ieaaue - leading st.
Louis Cardinals split a pair,

All by yourself.

Any
upholsterer.

JUNE 16TH IS EXPANDED DIRECT DISTANCE DIAL' ING DAY IN YOUR AREA. THAT'S THE DAY YOU'LL
BE ABLE TO PLACE ALL LONG DISrANCE CALL'l
YOURSELF - JUST BY DIALING THE NUMBER.
HEBE'S HOW IT WORKS:

whoknws
his stuff
lsln
the

FOil rERSOII·TCJ.PUSCJII.
CIIOIT CAIIO, COLLECT,ANY
IIPEI:IAL LIINQ DISTANCE CALl

FOIIITATICIII·
T~STATIOit

CAW

1. Oiall.
2. The area code.

[;

1. Diai"O."
2. The area code.

3. The local number. 3. The local number.
If u C(lerator Ilks, e:lve
her
call

)'OUr

number. Your

then

throuiiL

&amp;'Qel

ri&amp;ht

A IIPKI81 OPitfatOf will com.

the ltne. Give her the

on

fti!I&lt;'Jflhry

Information lnel )'0Uf call 10M
rilht throut:h.

REMEMBER, EXPANDED DIRECT DISTANCE DIALING DAY, JUNE 161'11. THAT'S THE DAY IT'LL START
TAKING YOU LEIIi TIME TO COMPLETE ANY LONG
DISTANCE CALL. AND TIJANKS TO GENERAL TEJ.E.
PIIONE. YOU'LL DO IT ALL YOURSELF, LOOK FOR
DET AILEo DIALING INSTRUC'l10NS IN YOUR .

illlfRAL TELEPHONE \II

&lt;'

ID escape with a minimum llllltber
at Athens nna.

Wakelleid na starting lurler
tor Athens, working 5 1-3 InnIns• before being replaced by
ROlli&gt;. The Atllens pitching stalf
combined tD slrlke oot six and
walked six.
Athens' big stickers ID the op..
ener were Levering, the llrll
baseman, and Abdella, the ahortstop, each with two slngleo. Other hitters for the visitors were
Repp, Kolllval, Wakelleld ltlld
Riggle each with a single.
SECOND GAME
Athena led 5-3 tp&gt;1ng infD the
bottom ot the filth Inning ot the
aeeond game when Melia I!Jj&gt;ioded lor three runs.

Ault opened the riJI,y with a
single and Baer and Van Meter
followed 'with back~.l&gt;ack slngleo. li\&gt;encer, who played centertleld ln Ule secood game, sacrificed Aalt home before Moore
alngled to 1core the otller two
run&amp;.
Meigs had tallied two ol It&amp;
runs In the llr st lmlng and the
other in the third.
The first lming runs came
wl:en Baer singled withoneaway,
stole seoond and scored on a
4fngle by Spencer. ~cer came
home on a two b&amp;Se error.
Ill 111e third, Van Meter walked with two oot and &amp;oored on
another two base error. ~­
cer singled after Van Meter bat-

ted and waa driven home by era comhlnocl 1D walk fllur 1114
Moore's double.
Jagels struek out two ud)tGIII·
Moore led the hitting tor Melli• aob tamed--on.
'
In lbe second contest with a
Perry went IJ:e dlllanco lor
double and ainglo in two lrlpo ID AtiMIIo, famed two ..,. l a 111e plate. Both ~ncer and Baer two walks. Abdella waa lop ldtai 10 had two hits, both alnglea. ter lor 111e violloro wllll I ....
Ault and van Meter aingled am ble ltlld aincle in tour trlpl to
Looalo Bush doubled.
the plate. EaiiOX, the coldlor,
Athens got one of ito runs In else had • pair of olngloo.
Ute first frame, added aoother
FIRST GAME
1
In the second, tallied three In Alben
1002021-111
tile fourth and 1&lt;0red ito llaal Meigs
2100005-IU
run in the seventh on a home
Wakolleld (LP), Repp (I) ...
run by Kostlvll.
Domloon. li\&gt;encer and Swatl.
Ingels, the starter tor Meigs,
SECOND GAME
worked unUI lbere wore two oot jlthen.B
110 300 1- UZ
and one oo In the top or the Meigo
202 030 0- 7 I 0
toorlh when he was relieved by I Perry IIDd E•-· Jqalo,-.
Rothgeb. The two Mellis pitch, i'Bb (4) (WP) am Bulb.

Baseball World in Stormy Weekend
By GARY KALE

were the ones involved most
directly in fWlel'al plans since
services were held in New York
IIIII the burill In Arli:wt&lt;&gt;n
cemetery.
The Boston Red sox and
Oakland Athletics voluntarily
postponed their games against
the Chlcag'"' White Sox m1
Baltimore Oriol'es when President Johnson dedared Swxlay
a national day of mourning for
the slain senator from New
York.
The chaotic occurrences dur~

UPI~ Writer
Baseball emerged today !rom
a stormy weeken:l In which
disputes over observances of
mourning for tt.e late Sen.
Robert F. Kennedy rocked lbe
sports pqmiace from the olflce
of Commissioner William Eckert down to the last rookie on
the bench.
Eckert's office was caught in
a crossfire between player.s and
club officials concerning when
ard whether particular games
would be played.
Baseball came in for a great
deal of critlcrism because of
Eckert's indecisive actions.
Wlthoot meaning to, he alierated ,·arious segments among
LOS ANGELES (UPJl-AII
owners, players aoo fans. His Don Drysdale has to do to get
flll)llrent motive was to please another da,y ot1 is to pitch six
everybody in the situation.
straight shutouts agatn and set
Pos1pones Two Games
another record for consecutive
When Sen. KeMedy died !rom scoreless innings.
an assassin's bull!!t, Eckert
The tall righthanded veteran
ordered the saturday postpone- or the Loa Angeles Dodgers was
ments of games in New York given Sundoy off by Manager
between the Yankees and Walter Alston after he broke
CaHfornia Angels and in Wash- one of the oldest marks in the
ington between the Senators and record book 5aturdey nigh~
Minnesota Twins. The two cities running his strl~ tD 58 2-3
consecutive shutout innings.
The 3l·.vear-old JJitcher went
CINCINNATI (UPJ) - The
into
saturday night's game
CinclnnaU Reds announced &amp;Illagainst
the Phillles under trying
day that Manager Dave BriocircumStances.
The Dodgers
IDI will enter Christ Hospital
for observaUon and examinaM won the game 5-3 but Drystioo of a persistenl cough and dale' s streak was snapped and
he didn't even finish the outing.
cold•
Drysdale and his wife, GinVern Benson, a coach, was
ger,
were personal frierxls of
named to direct the club aa it
the
late
sen. Robert F. Kenned,y
started on a road trip at Chiand
had
vlsitA&gt;d the Kenned,y
cago today. Minor League
Pitching Coack Ray libore home, But Drysdale's pitching
will join Jim Brag&amp;~~, Me I turn came on the day funeral
services were being held for the
Harder and Hal Smith on the
slain
serator.
Reds' coaching stafJ . The Ctn ..
"I ilgured Don had been
clmotl Manager io expected tD
under
a great strain and he
rejoin the club someume bedeserved
a day away from the
tore it returns home on June
stadium. It was tremendous
21.
that he coold have kept that
streak of consecutive scoreless

ing the weekend were in
marked contrast to the complete blackout of games that
folhJWed the assassi111Uon ol
Dr. Martin Luther Klrw two
. months ago. The start of the
baseball season was delayed in
memory of the slain civ:ll rights
leader and all games were
postponed on the day of his

Leaders

Kennedy mourning period.

Mets Refuse Game
Tbe New York Meta, backed

Board Chairnllll M. Donal~.
Grant refused to take tile field•
opinst the Gtanta in SID
Francisco even though Eekert
had decreed that •taU maJcr
league games on Saturday will
oot &amp;tort until after the

by

funeral.
funeral.''
san Francisco scheduled 1
Players and club oMdals
immediately began to argue "bat day'" which the Glints
over the right to.play duri.ng the considered a sellout 11 nearly
40,000 ticketa wore IJooll:lln In
advance promotion. 11Je cl.e
estimates it lost $80,000 ard
owner Horace Stooeham. reportedly nas geared to seek scme
sort of indemnlfi.cation frt:m the
innlngs going as long as he Mela am had asked Natlonll
League President Wuren GOes
did," Alston said
"I wanted the record bldly," fD !oriel! the game If New York
Drysdale said. .. But I'm ~ did oot take the llold.
The Mel&amp; did not 111m 1111 in
lieved that It's over now. When
unl!orm,
but lbe Glanta did not
the run scored, I just let dawn
completely. rm sure it was the jJre s s further charges.
Stoneham later said: "No
mental strain."
indemnl
ties will be aoughl II' •
Drysdale brUte a major
league record last Tuesday with all over. Forget about it."
Many la&amp;eball ligures ll'&amp;UO
his sixth straight shutou~
that
Eckert Bhould have tloaurpassi~ the record of Gtzy
clared
a moratorlmn on pmes
"Doc" White set In 1904 with
either on the day of Sen.
the Chicago White Sox.
l111erll or tile
Alter lhst game, Drysdale Kennedy's
111tiooal
dey
or mourning,
had 54 consecutive scoreless
Innings and needed onl.v 2 1-3 Players !ell a rtlt deopenod
ln.Dre. . fnnirlg8 to break 8Je mark thomsel.... lnd ........
of 56 set by Walter Johnson of over the sltuatiorL
the Washington Senators in
1913.
Drysdale had a shaky start Ill
he threw seven balls With his
first eight pitches but he retired
the side am went through the
second inning with less difficul~
ty. When he struck out Roberto
Pena in the third iMing, he had
the record and he kept the
scoreless string until the tldh

Alltime Record

By United Press International
Natiooal League
W. L. Pet GB
St. Louis
33 23 .589 ...
Los Angeles
32 26 .552 2
Atlanta
29 25 .537 3
San Francisco 30 26 .536 3
Cincinnati
27 26 .!09 ~~
Philadelphia
25 25 .500 5
Chleqo
26 28 .481 6
New York
24 29 •453 1'/,
Pillaburgh
21 29 . 420 9
Houston
22 32 .407 10
Sunday's Results
Loa Angeles 4 PhUsdelphla 3
AUanta 4 Chicago 0, 1st
Chicago 6 Atl1!111l 5, 2nd
inning.
with St. Louis taking the opener a !oor-hlt shutout wl:en the Car- st. Louis 10 Cincinnati 8, 1st
With two out in the fl1th,
Cin 1 St. Louis 6, 2nd, 12 lnns.
10.3 and Cincinnati the nightcap dlnalo erupted.
pinchhitter Howle Bedell hit a
7 ~.
Pittsburgh 3 Houston I
sacrifice O.y to drive in Tony
Perez Scored
san Fran 5 New York 4, 1st
Taylor with the run that ended
t.ee May opened the 12th 1ns.n Fran 4 New York 1, 2nd
the streak.
nlng ot the second game with
TOilaY's Probobie Pitchers
a aingle, his foorlh hit or the
Natiooal League
(Atl Times ED'I1
gsme, and then ,.., forced at
G. AB R. R. P&lt;:L
Cincillllti (Nolin 2-0) 11
oecond baoe by Tony Perez. Rose, Cin
54 225 41 80 .356 Chicago (lJoltzman 4-4), 2:30
Leo Cardenas doubled home Flood, St.L
56 23t 35 78 .333 p.m.
0 UD
Saturday
Billy Casper won his !ourth go![
Perez ott loser stave Carlton Alou, Pit
42 144 13 48 .333
St. Louio (Jaster 4-2) ot
,
BERCHTIS}ADEN, Germatoornament this year when he
alter Johnny BenCh weal down A.Jhnsn, Cln 52 214 36 70 .327 Atlanta (Niokro 5-4), 8 p.m.
I'J'
•
ll.Y (UPI)- Jtallan racing driver captured the "500" Festival by
swinging tor tho second out ot Alou, Atla
53 228 26 74 ,32! Pitt&amp;burgh (Velie 2-6) at san
.I
Lndovlco Seufiotti of ltal,y was I stroke with • 280
tho Inning.
·
Staub, Hou
53 206 22 66 .320 Frsncioco (Marlchal 1~2). 4
killed when his Porsche 910
TOLEDO (U~ No. 1 pill)'a crashed during trial rmts for
George Culver the last of six Grote, NY
49 161 i4 50 .311 p.m.
Why worry about money?
No. 2 here IDday ltlld every day Sunday's Grlllll Prix o! the
Red pltchero pl;ked up hlo ruth Helms, Cln
51 204 16 62 .30t New York (Seaver J-5) at Los
It wUI go away before you
lor lbe !ollowlng three dayo iD Mountains auto race.
know it.
win against five loo&amp;ea.
MUlan, Ada 53 204 16 62 .304 Angelea &lt;sutton 3-5), 11 p.m.
- 'IIIIo I&amp; actually best In tile
The Cardinal&amp; Jumped on Billy WUmo, Chi
54 220 26 6! .295 (Only gsmeo ocheduled)
lnternstlonai .........
TROON, Scotland (UPOMcCool ma)dng hio first start
American League
. Tae&amp;day'o Games
Columl:us, whlcb led the Jn- Mlke Bomllack defeated Joe
of the '......, tor live nmo In
·
G. AB R. ll Pel Clnch. .ti It Chicago
ternal!onal . _ e by -.oalf
tho !Irs!
of the oecond Hwrd, Wash 54 202 31 69 .342 St LouJo ot Atlanta, night
carr 7 and 6 to
his third
game over tho !IIUd Hens, in- British Amateur golf champie&amp;
game,
Y&amp;trskl, Boo 54 189 29 64 .339 Pitlaburgh at 8an Fran, night
vacled lbe nest IDday lor the ship.
Alm: Johnaon's two-base error CArew, Min 47187 22 55 .294 Houston at Philadelphia, night
opener ft a ttve.pme, four-dQ'
on Lou Brock's 11,y baiiiDcched HoriDn, Det 49173 26 50 .289 New York at Loo Ang, night
aerie
a.
PARIS (UPO - Ken Rosewlll
off the uprising. Julllll Javier White, NY
56 198 31 57 .288
SoutJ:vaw
Dave Roberts waa &amp;topped !eUow Auslrlliln Rnd
!allowed with a aingle scoring. Johnan, Bal 51173 24 49 ,283
American League
Brock
Hrrisn, Boo 42138 23 38 ,275
W. L. Pet. GB fD take the mound toailbl In Laver 6-3, &amp;.1, 2-6, 6--2 for the
881l'cb ol hlo olxth win In ei1Jbl men•a singles title in tile French
· Pinson Homered
Stroucl, Wash 41 1211 23 35 . 271 Detroit
35 20 . 636
decialona.
32 2t .571 3'h
Open tennis champioo&amp;hip&amp;.
111 the botlom ot the !ourth Uhlndr, Min 54 2ot 17 55 .270 Clovelllld
Mike Mlrahall, 'IIIIo II~
•-•·· Vsda Plnaon homered OIQ&gt;a, Min
56 213 23 57 .21111 Baltimore
30 24 ,556 41'2
• •. _ ,
u - ~..
Mlmeaota
28 27 ,509 7 baa .U wino am four io.,ea,
NEW YORK (UPJl-Dark
oft atarter Ray Wallltbum for
~• - a
111e Redo' nrst ruu. Tltey adclod Natiooal League: Hart IIIII Booton
26 28 .481 lllh too, was - - to _ .. hlln Mirage woo the $85,6!0 Molller
for the Mud Hens.
tour more In the sixth Inning 111 Mays, Giants II; Sllrll"ll, Olkland
25 28 .t72 9
Goose stakea by 10 lengths at
A twin bUI wao 1111 tor Taos- Belmont Plll'k.
26 30 .t64 9\1
1 alngle by Pete Ro&amp;e, 0 - l e Pirates, ll Aorm, Bravea am New Ylll'k
by Tommr_ JJelmo, 1 llin&amp;le by McCovey, Glanta 10.
Washington
2t 30 .144 101'.! day, wl111 ainelo - · 1111 for
Wednesday am Thursday IJ6.
PlniiOII ltlld Mack Jonea' llrat AmoriCID League: Howard, Cllltornia
25 32 .t39 II
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (U~
borne run ol the 1011011•
SenoiAin 22; Horton, Tipro 16; Chicago
22 30 .423 ll'h tween the IL'a two lop t.eamo ot Clark Graebner and Bob Lutz
thla peiDI iD 111t Wlljla(p.
Willi Joe Herner pltehlng Ill Killebrew, Twlna 12; Mdlullea,
SUnday'a Reaulto
bellt Ecuador's Pancho Guzman
Neither !Mm pl01ecl 5mciay and MJauo1 Olvera 6-3, 11-2, 7~
the oilltlh imln&amp; 111e Redo tied Sellltoro, 'Harreloon am Yu- Cle..,..... 2 Detroit 0
IS the lupe pelllponod Ill IC•
tho ,.,..... 11 6~ on May's lnlleid trzemokl, Red Sox 10.
New Yorlt 8 Cllllornla 1, 1&amp;1
IAI !Pve the United Sllteo the
don In deforeneo ID IJ:e • . - . American Zono Davis Cup Ulle.
hit 0 -le by Fersz am
Runs Bolted 1n
Now Yorh 3 Cllllornia 2, 2nd
day ot IIIOUt1llni for 111e late
~c:h's aacrlllre tl,y.
Natlooal League: Perez, Reda WashiJW~on7 Mlmeoota 4
SUnday
Soo. JJobert F, Kamaob' of Now
remarkable Dnllh for all those
tile
nrst
gsme,
the
Cardin35;
SllliD,
Cubt
and
Bolich,
Today'o
Proboblo
Pitchers
!ND!ANAPOUS, Ind. (UPJl111
York.
ltnailde
.,d outsldl surfacn sui)..
Ill seu1 13 bailors 00 111o plate Redo 3~; ll Aaron, Braveo,
(All Tlmeo ED'I1
to
constant
hlndllng,abraion,
IIIII poutad out eiiJbl hill II &amp;w-., t.lata, COpeda, Cardo
Osltland (Dob1011 2-6) II
~ plied up 10 ruua In tho IIIII Mayo, Gllnlo 31.
Cle..,..... (Siebert 6-tl, 7:30
filth innln8 ID wi»o oot 1b eitlt
AmeriCID Lol&amp;ue: Howard, p.m.
'run dollclt.
Senotoro t7; Powell, Orloleo 35;
Baltimore (llardin 74) at
Gerry Arrlao ,..1 working on Horton, Tiprs 33; Johnaon,
Waohin&amp;ton (Pueull 5-3), 8
Orloleo 31; llarralaon, Red Sox, p.m.
Killebrew, Twlna and Kooco,
Chicago CJolut t-0) at Now
Yanko 30.
York (Stottlemlre 7-tl, 8 p.m.
And 10 is
fevorlte ice
'
'
Pitching
Cllllornia
6-.2) at
cream or eotmg treet.
' Natlonll Loi&amp;Uo: Marichal, Booton (Culp - · 7:30p.m.
Sandwiches, Dinners, Snecka
j Glanta lo-2; Kooaman, MOll 9-2;
(Onl.v 11111101 ocheoUed)
car1111n, Carda 7.:1; Reed,
Tuollday'~ ~
end Soft Orinks - Sonny's the
IBravoo lllillfanda, CUbo 6-.2.
Mlmaaota at Detroit 2, twl·
mentoaeeet
Amoricaa lAIIuo: McLain,
night
, Tipra 9-2; lla!'dln, Orlaleo 7-2; Ookland II Cleveland, night
Bahnaen, Yanko &amp;;.2; Ferranoa- Baltimore It Waahlrwton, nigllt
Tii;
Ill, Twlna, Boll, Red Sox am Chi- It Now York, nJcht
0( ~~~~ Slnct DIS
Wrllhf; Anpli 5-2.
Cl1lilrnla .6 Betllin, nJcht

Nolan Seeks Victory in Chicago

THE WELL CHILD®

Child's Home Atmosphere
Plays Part in Tantrums

,, ,, ,

, ....

CONGRESSMAN
CLARENCE E. MILLER

••

·'

hope and opportuni\Y than they
could ever have in their native

11\! fact that poor Americans are ·
four times as likely to die before
the age of 35 as the average cltt~
zen. The effects of poverty begin
before bJrth. Poor women re·
celve prenatal care less often

'The Melp American Legion
bl&amp;eblll team oome.frombehlnd victorleo In both endo of
tllelr ... ..., .....,Il1g doUbleheader against Albena &amp;lnday afternoon ot the !b&gt;racu&amp;e Municipal
Park.
Melg&amp;, playing the ftrst gsmes
11 the Iormor aile ot the old
Dodo King Park alnce1954, IGOreel live runs in 111e slxtb lnaiDg
iD win the .....,Il1g conteot 8~
and got three nmo home In tho
llftb frame ol the oilier milch
iD win that one 7~.
Righthancler Tomtn)' ~c•or
ot Golllpolis went the distance
tor the willler&amp; In the llrll gsmo
and John Ingels and Jon Rothpb &amp;bared the !IIOWid duly tor
Meigs in the nightcap.
FDISr GAME
Meigs' bill olxth Inning rilly
followed two Atheno errors, lour
walks, one hit, and two flelclar's
ehotces. Louie Bush, third baseman for the ho11tl, ~ t h e
frame by being sale on an error
by lbe third ba&amp;eman.
Lot'llle lllob walked and Deanis AaitamEddleBaerllscwaiked with one oot. After Bill swan

Roberts On

M

d

.
Agamst
Hens Ollight

Weekend Summary

1mb,

Got a
finanf!ial

"'n

.C!rlihl

your

.

POMDOY
CEMEKI'
ILOCI CO•

...,._Store
'1

?
Tomorrow momifta
just give us a call
or siDp in. Get
the money quickly
to clean up debts,
take a vacation
and relax.
Our thrifty budget
loan plan may be
just the omawer
for you now.
Have lesa to pay out
and more for

fOUI'IOlf.

CITY
LOAN

.......,..

a Savings Co.
.. K. IIIIIll ..

••

... G.

�-11- The Daily Sentinel, Pomcroy-Ml.ddloport,

n., Monta,y, June 10, 1968

L.lllL NOTICI

Over 100 Guests Here for
Eastern Star Inspection
visiting TIOrtlv palrcno, pall matrons and pa!lt patrons ol Pomeroy Chapter, and pall malrcno
and paot patrons of other chapten were introcklc:ed and welcomed. The sunahine l\lr.d for
Estarl was taken by S a n d y
Smith and Linda Clalnther.-s.
The Rev. Glen IUies was soloist for the inopectlon and aang
4• How Great Thou Art." fnitla·
tion was held tor two candidates
at the conclusion o1 which the
distinguished &amp;~~eats commended
the officers on the exempltflcation ol the Initiatory work.
Mrs. Webb, the lnopectlng officer, complimented the chApter.
Refr~s:hmenta were served in
the dlninll room with Dorothy
Woodard and &amp;le Zirkle presidinll
at the punch bowl. A blue
Mexico.
Distinguished Masons present- and white color acheme was car~
ed included Louis Winters of
Amesville, a 52-year Mason and
a Knight of !he York Cross of
Honor; .1\lbert Woodard, Clarence struble, and Paul DarnelJ,
knights of the York Cross of
Honor; and Dale Smith, illustrious master of Bosworth Council, 46, Pomeroy.
MASON - Mr. and Mrs. ElVisiting worthy matrons and mer Van Meter of Clifton are

· Annual inspection of Pomeroy
Chapter 186, Order of the East~
ern Star, condurted Friday night
by Cora Webb, deputy grand matron of District 25, was attend~
ed by 100 members and ~ests
of other chapters.
Kathryn Jordan, worthY rna.
tron, and James Soulsby, wor .
thy patron, presided at the meet~
ing. Distinguished guests presented were Roberta K. Mtndllng, general Grand Chapter
chairman of the lnternationa1
Temple Fund, and a past grand
matron of the Grand Chapter of
Ohio: Mrs. Webb, deputy grand
matron of District 25; Naomi
King, Grand Ruth of the Grand
Chapter of Ohio; and Mary Grosvenor representing Arizona and
Clare Mosely representing New

Von Meter-Harris
Wedding Was Held

At Clifton Church

Kenny Roy Riggs
Observes Birthday
Mrs. Kenneth E. Riggs
of Rt. 1, Reed sville, entertained
~nday, June 2, with a birthday
party in honor of their son, Kenny Ray, who celebrated his first
birthday.
Guests attending were Mr. and
Mrs. Ray Riggs and daughters,
Maralynn and Caralynn Tracy,
David and Melanie Burt, Terti
Lynn Russell , Mr. and Mrs. David Riggs and daughter, Mary
Louise, Mr. and Mrs. Roger Epple and daughters, Sherry, Diana
and Vicki , Mr. and Mrs. Starling
Massar and Diana and Chuck,
Mrs. Leota Ma ssar, Mrs. Leone Babcock, Shirley and Drew
Cline, and Laura Harri s.
Mr . and

announcirw the recent marriage
of their daughter, Jennifer, to
Mr. Edward Harris oiGaUipolis,
Ohio.
The bride wore a white satln
with lace gown and a corsage of
carnations. Her maid of honor
was Miss Kathy Ann Roush of
New Haven whose gown featured
blue lace on white.
Mr. Terry Henry of Mason was
best man and Rocky Kerns of
Clifton was the rtna bearer. The
couple went on a wedding trip
to Maryland.
Buth the bride and groom are
graduate s of Wahama Hil!h
School. For the present they are
maki~ their home wlth his par ..
ents, Mr. and Mrs. James Harris of Gallipolis.
Approximately 75 persons attended the open wedding and reception which was held at the
CHfton Methodist Church.

Helen Help
US •••
By Helen Bottel

SLAMMER GETS WHACKED
Dear Helen:
1 have been happiQ&gt; married
for almost ten years, have three
children and a husband I thoul!ht
was kind and understanding.
Helen, I have always been what
he calls a "slammer." When I
get mad, I go around banging and
slamming things . Usually my husband pays no attention and leta
me vent my anger, but the other
'· nil!ht he went wi I d.
He started yelling he was sick
and tired of my childish antic•
and with that he pi eked me up,
turned me over his knee and
e.panked me long and hard on my
a Imost bare bottom.
I was ne"Ver so shocked and hurt
in my whole life and I haven't talked to him sin ce. The worst part
Is he seems quite happy go luc.
Icy . In fact he told me he feels
great since he had wanted to do
this for a long time.
I love him, but I can't ghe in
to him . If he tron't apologize,
what can l do? - SILENT PRIDE
Dear S. P.:
Laugh along wi.th '•Happy."
He " applauded" your histronics at the right time and place
after too many years as a silent audience. I think the whole
scene is hUarious and you will
too , when you stop smarting.
-

H.

Dear Helen:
A while ago I read an item ln
one ot the gossip columnw, quot~
: I ing some celebrity who said he
had a new girl friend who was
.. cute, blonde, and 65. "
It happens that I am cute, blonde
and 65, and the re Is a young man
in hi s 30s who wants to be my
boyfriend.
Js this a trend? And what are
the rule s?- NAME WITIIIJELD ,
OF COUHSE
Dear NWOC:
Thill Is a trend only among

young men who have a mother
- or an easy...money - complex.
The rules? Don't take him too
seriously or he lll81 take YOU
for your life savlngo. - H.
Dear Helen:
Why do some women cut down
other women just because they
do wrong themaelves?
This ooijOOd dame says awf\11 thinlls aboUt me in the neishborhood: ohe spreads lies and
people believe her. That's bew
cause I won't speak to her, aa
I wouldn't usocllte with her
kind.
Everybody knows she'll ohack
up with any man who snaps his
fingers. :!il.e's had three babies
born out or wedlock which &amp;he's
adopted oot. iile brags that ohe
goes to the shore every aummer
to work, but she onlt goes there
to work the street. But the way
she lies about what she has and
does, you'd think ahe was some-

thing!

WilY does ohe try to ruin

my

reputation and get me dlellked?
-NOT A LIAR

Dear Not:
Maybe she's a copycat. - H.
Dear Helen:
I get the blues, as every person alive does once ln a wtdle.
But I have a phlloJIOI)hy IIIB,)'be
It's auperstltion that sees me
through. I know aa aure ae rain
that something good will happen to counteract the bad, 10
even as rm depressed, rm still
- EXPECTANT
Qear Expectant:
A COMectlcut correspondent
sent a poem that ahould be dedicated to you: "Ah! That' a the
reason a bird can sing, On hh
darkest day he bellevesln spring!
-

H.

Thls column Ia dedicated to
family living, so lt you're hiving kid trouble or jull plain
trouble, let Helen help YOU.

Vacatloo church ~ehool will
bellln Thurfda,v at the Unitad
Methedilll Church. '11le ochool
will continue througb Junii2i:
Classes will be concllcted
dally from 9 a.m. to II a.m.
tor children from four years
old to those who have COII1&gt;1eted the sixth grade.

rled out In the table deooratlono. White tapers fionked a
nora! piece ol blue and white.
Gueoto were regi-ed by Beulah Ewing and Ella&amp;nith and blue
and white eylon n• jJin.ono were
presented to each of the &amp;~~oslo.
Ruth Moore, chairman tor the
aoclal hour, wu assisted by
Thelma Dill and Cadle Wickham.
Denzel Goeglein served as an
eoe&lt;&gt;rt for the Inspection. A gift
was presented to Mrs. Jor&lt;lan
from her ~eers, and the wor~
Plana have been completed for
thy matron gave gills to each
the
open church weddinll of Ml88
or her otlicers.
Joyce Elaine Clonch ol Middleport, Route I, to Mr. Ronald
Eugene Vance of Harrloonvllle.
The weddinll will be an event
o1 June 14 al 7 o'Clock In the
eveninll at the Hysell Run Free
Methodist Church. A half.l!oor
of nuptial music by Miss Julia
Hutchison and Gene Grate will
precede the ceremOI\Y. The Rev.
Eugene Gil! will oftlciale.
Miss Clonch has chosen Miss
Kathy Simmons as her maid of
A wiener roast was h e 1 d honor. Mi8S Cheryl Hutchison
Thursday at the home of Mrs. and Mlsa Brenda McGuire will
Richard Vaul!han, Middleport, for serve as her bridesmaids.
members or Girl Scout Troop 5.
Attendinll Mr. Vance will be
During a meeting which fol- Dave Peterson, and ~shers for
lowed the group made plans to the wedding will be David Jivijoin Troop 39 at the Middle- den and Rick Workman. L o r i
port community Par k Wednes- Clonch and Debra WeO:IIe will
day morning at 10:30 a.m. for be the nower girls, and Marty
work on the eyci!sl badge. Plans Dugan will serve as the ring
were also made for the girls bearer.
to distribute circulars for Westem Auto as a project to make
money for a skating party. Members are to meet at 9 a.m. Tuesday at the Vaul!han home to get
their circulars.
The regular weekly scout meetThe birthday of Freda Mitch
ing was schedUled for 10:30 a.m. was observed during a meet·
Thursday. Attending the ..toner lng of the Busy Bee Class of
roast were Tami Hoffman, Krista the Trinity United Church of
Morris, Kathy Harris, C I n d y Christ Thursday.
Glaze, Bed, Vaul!hon, Pam North,
Others attending were Mrs.
&amp;Isle Samuels, Melody Scaggs, Louis Reibel, Mrs. Wendell
Kathy Coburn, Kathy Coleman, Kautz, Mrs. Neva Seyfried, Mrs.
and !;beryl Woods.
Ona Meyers, Mrs. Lelia Mora,
Nine new members were wel - Mn. Ada Murray, Mrs. Katie
comed Into the troop from Mrs. Baer, Mrs. Ada Holter, and Mr s.
Jack Coleman's brownie group. Constance 911elds.
The fiy-&lt;~p was held at the girl
scout house with Mrs. Coleman
presenting the girls with BrownENROLLSm COLLEGE
ie wings and girl scoot plno.
MASON - Glen David Clark
The new members of ·~roop
enrolled In an auto.:.Hesel
has
5 are Kathy Coburn, Keiieo Burcollege.
He leaves for Nashville,
dette, Kathy Colemon, B e c k y
Fultz, Pam North, M e J o d y Tennessee on June 24. He is the
son of Mr. and Mrs. KeMeth
SCaggs, 9leryl Woods, MarUee
D.
Clark.
Cassell, and &amp;!ale Samuels.

Clonch- Vance
Wedding Set

For June 14

Troop 5 Girls
Enjoy Outing

At Vaughans

Birthday of Closs

Member Observed

More than 200 Attend
Wahama Alumni Event
MASON ·- More than 200 persona attended the annual Wahama
Alumni meeting on June 1 with
most of the evenire spent rem•
· tniactng.
A abort busineu meeting was
held to eleet the following orocera, With Ul~oing president
Junes stewart presidi~: WiiUun Gibbs, president: James
ProUltt, vtce president; Dorothy Russell, recording secre-tary;
Kathaleen Grinstead
Roush, corresponding secretary,
and Mabel Gibbs Gerlach, treas-

urer.
The board of directors include
Junes stewart, Lawrence Foreman, Ray Tucker, and Nancy
Marks PowelL
The following gift awards were
made by Lelah Jane Powell: Charlea Wallace, class of 1928, from
Naahville, Tem., for traveling
the farthes~ youngest alumnus In
teaching,
Phyllis Zicafoose
Greer, of New Ha veni oldest
teaching alumni, Mary Elizabeth
C&amp;pehart, Mason; Mrs. Emma
Ryan, the oldest a1umnus pres·
ent (class of 1929), and to Lois
Hart Bumgarner, New Haven,
and Danny Brown, Letarl
The Class of 1958 had the most
groduetes present (ten).
A. Keith McClung, Jr., a Char·
leston attorney who graduated
from W.H.S. , was guest speaker.
Hls topic was "Generation Gap. "
A "Dog Patch" theme was
used throughout Favors of corn
cob pipes were placed at each
plate, carrying out the same
theme as in the gym. An out~
house, depicitlng the West Vir·
ginia Moon, decorated one section. Guests entered the dance
noor through a vine covered
hallway and a typical mountai~
eer with his jug added to the
decor.
Out of town guests Included
Mr. and Mrs. Donald L. Hart,

Norrls~n.

5 - Th e Daily Sentinel, 11 orneroy-Middlcport,

C:•hiMitUI. Olltot May 11, 1111
Cantrflct ietlt L...l C.,., ftD, 11-411

UNIT ,IICI CONTIIACT
SPied proPOAI.Io will bl neetY't4 at
ta.. offlM of tbe S"te ID&amp;b••r JKo
netor of Ol!lo, Columbul. Dblo vn.UJ
10:00 A.ll., !u1ern Darlllht la'l'illt
Tbbe. T\aesdly, JUM ID, 1818. lor
UQJO•emuu 1\1;:
Parts NOI. l abel . ,. an . ,.....
u on• oontract ablt wtU be Goa·

Pa.; Mr. and Mrs.
Charles H. Wallace,' Nashvt.J.1e,
Tenn.; Mr. an::l. Mrs. Dames D.
•kl•red on the bu., of tta totll
Weaver, Hammord, Ind., Mr. and
amouat
No. 1
Mrs. Cloyd Bartholomew, lndl- · o.wa
OJllo, oa &amp;darN~
Cl.AL • 581 • /,o.QO.S.31) Stata HoUle
anapolts, Ind.; Mr. and Mrs. Eu- No. Ill. ill Oallpol., and o.re•n Towagene Rayburn, Muncle,Jnci.;Hmr- •hlPI• b) reRtrfaelnl wiUt uphatt
ard Icenhower. Upper Marlboro, CO:::~~ at WtdtJt.-Varlowl.
Md.; Mr. and Mrs. Howard PhU- fe~~s.r.'.'::.r: ~.au
lips, Arlington, Va.; Mr. and
..., No. t
Where there is lio
WashYelp count,, Ohio, on ledtou
Mrs. Homer Ice-cower,
•••
11110 • 7 • O.O().lA'f • ltlilc AO'tlttt No. the peoplt cast of! restnrint,
ington1 D. C.; Miss Beverly 7. 111 SalllbUI')' "Towa.hlp. bJ ruu.r- but blesaed is he who kteps
IMLDC with upiWt CODctnte.
staats, Akron; Mr • . and Mrs.
Pavement Wldlh-Varlow.
the l01.o.-Proverbs 29:18.
Joseph Kirby and Mrs. Diana ProJe!:i and Work ~1urs.a
f .. t ur a.40 KU...
SeU, Columbus; Rhoda Roush,
•.,.. l!&amp;te .., tor compldoa ot
Norwalk,• Mr. and Mrs. T.._,
• .m..n th., worir. lhall M u Mt forth ill UM
...,
blddilll propo111.•
S&amp;Jrre, Michael Gardner, Mr. and
Ba~h bidder diaD be r.qulftll lu
fl1e with hll bid • M!UilMI cbeok
Di
I
Mrs. James eh , Mr. and Mrs. tor an amount ••uaJ to fin ,., tHt
Max Eichinger, Mrs. Maxine ., "" lttd, but 1a ao •.eat motw tblll
ten tbouniUI doUan or a boad lor
Arnold, and Mr. James Stewart. t.n ,., cent ., hit ltkl, fap.ble to
aU or Pomeroy; Mrs. Bertha
!UPON REQUESn
Lievlng, Stow; Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. Martha Moore, Smlthburgj
Robert Ball, Thurman: Mr. and
o.r u'"'"' Good ct..rilnt
Mr. and Mro. Cline Erwin, SouthMrs. Paul Rood, WestervUlei
side: Mrs. William Rogen, Vi·
Miss Addle MacKnil!h~ Huntingenna: Mr. and Mrs. Dewey F.
ton; Mr. and Mrs. Michael Shaw, Smith, Jr., Portsmooth,andMrs.
9ft.S428
Mr. and Mrs. KemeUl Brewer,
Mabel Casto, Warren, Ohio.
Miss Sara Lou Daup. all of C4;
lurnbus; Mr. and Mrs. Leo Dick,
Thomas Ryan, both Lima: Mrs.
Kenneth Wyan4 Logan, Oh!c('Mr, .
and Mrs. Charles Sayre, Long
Bottom: Mrs. floYd MUler, Mar·
OFFICE HOURS 9:30 TO 12, 2 TO 5 (CLOSE AT NOON ON
ietta; Mr. and Mrs. T h om a s
Blaine, Mr. and Mrs. Michael
THURS.) - EAST COURT ST., POMEROY
Blaine, Mr. and Mrs. D a l e
Walburn, Miss Deborah Blaine,
ali or Middleport; Mr. and Mrs.
George MacKnight, Huntington;
Mr. and Mrs. carl Thomas Knapp
of Kenova.
Also Mrs. Margaretta Duncilll,
New Cumberland, W. Va.; MrL
Helen Wean, Mrs. Eileen Har~
rls, Nitro: Mrs. Dessie Radclifie,
Parkersburg: Mr. and Mrs. Edwin L. stein m, Poca: Mr. and
$30.00 hw•··•luo 11
Mrs. WOllam McWhorter, Mrs.
CIIYIIItlt Ttr•s
Leonard Krebs, Mr. arKl M r s.
Lawrence Gerlach, Jr., Miss
Kathryn Fruth, Mrs. Henry
Fruth, all Pt. Pleasant: Mrs.
George 'Weirirk, Ravenswood;

•r,;,

Coull''

proph•cu

2-Hour

DRY CLEANING

SERVICE

Robinson's

O.D.

N. W.

OPTOMETRIST

3 ROOMS

New Furniture
ONLY $'299

MAlON
FURNITURE CO.
MASON. W. YA.

•

Special low, off-season price!

Tuesday, June 11th. 7 to 9 P.M.

HERE'S THE CREW

.

Char1ene Davis
Blll Rizer
Gayland Bush
Fred Hofl'rnan •
carol MuUim
Eustice Wilson
Margaret f1Micum
Emma Lou Divis

per month,
36 months

Mr. and Mrs. Roger LuckO¥doo of Huntington were weekend
guests of their parents, Mr. and
Mra. James Brewington, Middle, port, and Mr. and Mro. A i v a
Luckeydoo, New Haven, W. Va.
Mr. and Mrs. WUliam F r e d
Smith, Sr. ot Bradbury have re.
turned to their home after spendIng the past week In Defiance
with her oon-in~aw and daul!hter, Mr. and Mrs. Ted ~ire•
and children, Tom and JUl. Weekend guests ot Mr. and M r 1.
Spires were Mr. and Mra. Lawrenee Baughman and son, Jeff.
roy, or Middleport, and R a y
Smith ol Cheohire.

Of(er expires July 31, 1.968
For mOl' I detlils. m1il this coupon to the AaN1nd LP-Gu 811lk Ptln1 r.nrul you.

---···················-······················
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:

All 37 of these tw•

1
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1I
I

Slim
Jlms will welsh .,._
tween
and

ton Tenles 1nd

Ashlltld LP·G•sthe mod1rn entrgy fuel!

Ashland

Name-

1

Addresa -

1
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1

City

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ASHLAND OILS.: REFINING COMPANY
BOX 471,

HIGHWAY 124'

POMEROY, OHIO

Sta1e

I

1

Phone

II

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Dlrectlone 1o home

:

:

Call your nearut Ashland LP-Gao Bulk Plant for a free
home heating eurvey.

I
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1

Sorry, only 0111 guen per penon.

:
1
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Your

Please send me more details on the special Forced Air
Heating OHer.

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1
:
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···································~·g·······

PHONE 992-2166

i!iCalendar!!

:·:

Weed, Mrs. Ruby Erb, Mro.
WolCe, Mrs. Clan Karr, Mrs.
Meinhart, Mrs. Neutzllng 1 aOO
Mrs. France&amp; Reibel, all mem.
bers or the class, and Mrs. Ula
Swann of Tuppers Plains, Mrs.
Frances Bearhs ot Middleport
and Mr·s. Roy Halter, Ann, Ja~
ice and Eddie Holter, Chest6r
Road.

Miss Dutton, Fiance,
Guests of Tea Friday
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Crow, Mr.
and Mrs. Harry &amp; Moore, and
Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Lochary
entertained &amp;mday afternoon with
a tea honoring Miss Ellen Dut.
ton and her tiance, James Kiehl.
Guests at the tea held at the
Crow horne in &amp;vracuse were
members of the Grace Episcopal Parish.
A yellow and green c o I o r
scheme was carried out in the
tea table decorations. The cen.
terptece, a heart formation of
fern surrounded at the base by
daisies, featured miniature bride
and groomandbridesmaidsfigur.
lnes. The arrangementwasfianked by green tapers ln silver hold~
ers. The Crow home was decorated with summer Oower ar.
rangernents.
Presiding at the silver oortee
service and the punch bowl dur.
ing the afternoon were Mrs. 0 ,
B. Stout, Mrs. David Miller •

Mrs. Harry Moore, Mi&amp;s Marte
Richman, and Mrs. Everett

Hayes.
Guests were Mr.andMrs. Dale
Dutton, Mrs. Fred Crow, Sr.,
Miss Vida· Ihle, Mrs. Theodore
Dlersbach, Mrs. Herbert Ew:ing,
Mrs. J. E. D. Hartlnger, Mr.
and Mrs. Leo story, Mrs. stout,
Mis s Blckman, Mr. and M r s.
Theodore Reed, Jr., Mrs. James
O'Brien, Mr s. Kenneth Amsbary,
Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Fioher.
Mr. and Mrs. John Mohler, Mr.
and Mrs. Paul Chapman, Mrs.
Cedric Clark, Mr. and M r s.
Charles Gibbs, Mr. and Mrs.
Everett Ha.yes, Mr. and Mrs. A.
R. Knisht, Mr. and Mrs. David
MU!er, Mr. and Mrs. Manning
Webster, Mr. and Mrs. Thereon Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. Jobn
N. Pearson, Mrs. Glen Tolson
and her guest of canton, Miss
Nancy Reed and Ca rson Crow.

MONDAY
DINNER AT DAV Home, Pomeroy, at 6:30 p.m., Monday, fol~
lowed by meeting and election
of otficers. All DAV members
and wives invited, Jacob Tur~
er, commander.
TUESDAY
EASTERN BAND Booster.s,
Tuesday, 7:30p.m.athighscho01.
Election of new officers. All
members asked to be present.
LADIES AUXIIJARY, Lewis
Manley Post 263, Tuesda,y, 7 p.
m. at Naomi Beptist Church.
WEDNESDAY
WIIITE ROSE Lodge Wednesday, 1:30 p.DL at Feeney·Bennett Post 128, American Legion
Home.
POMEROY CHAPTER 80, Royal Arch Masons, stated meeting
Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. Pomeroy Masonic Temple to elect and
Install otf'lcers for the 196869 year. Officers and companions invited.

RIPLEY, W. VA.,.PHONE372-2221

Thousands of people may now
enjoy 1he advantages of liearlng
again with a patented Invention
lhal hat NO bu11ons, NO 1ubea,
NO wires, NO bulky batteries.
Inatead of forcing amplified
sound throu8h the Impaired
outer or middle ear. the patent.
ed
"Tympano
Technique" em 1

Voice along Broadway
BY JACK O'BRIAN
NEW YORK - Mro. Samm,y
~ar, wife of the Jaclde Glea1011 91ow bandleader urHierwent
heart surgery •.• Barbra Qrel. oand's huttband Elliot Gould's on
the verge &lt;i a "big" movie deal
... Great old Negro IOIIIWl'ltero
Noble Sasle and F.uble Blake
have written a musical tribute
- with a beat - to Martin Luther King ... Warren Lyons ill
scouting Nicol Williamson (now
in .. Plaza &amp;Jlte") ror J o h n
Guare•s first Bdwy. play "House
of Blue Leaves;" Warren is columnist Leonard ~ons' son who
came up ll'lth a hit In his firot
try oft.Bdwy., '"Muzeeka," by
the aforenoted John GUare.
Julie Styne M'Ote ali the muSic tor·-_,Funn,y Girl" ln it a
Bdwy. hit original but he's very
unhappy at the was the film ver.
slon io givinl! all the soek-lt.«&gt;'em publicity to Fanny Brice's
old stage hit '"My Man,. ••• Hlp.
pies so all~ against war are
wesring old Weat Point and officers' jackets ... u&amp;anclly" is a
phone-answering service h e r e
whose owners (Including dancer
Swen SWenson) wtu produce ortBdwy. ohows with the profits
... Florence Henderson (on the
' 4 Persona1ity" TV taping) said
.. The things I'm most afraid or

are death and opening nJghtl."
The Henry Ford&amp; were Invited again to the LBJ llan ey ....
Hear tell the MiSJ Universe TV
ahow wound up backstaga In a
brawl among the pageant ~··
TV lode and the Miami Beaeh
1atherh Art ca.rMY•a won five
TV "Emmys;" Ids bon Jackie
Gleason - ROlle ..• Diner leav.
ing the Pren Box asked the
14daorman" to call him a cab
- hut he was a hil!h Bolivian
army officer, (Okay, call him a
revolution).
Hotdog stand near 31st &amp; 8th
Ave. has its own on • premi1es
Notary Public (with seal, and
mustard) ... Air India 11'111 Introduce ' 4Kosher curry dishes"
on transatlantic Olghts ••• Bachelor sonl!hitwrlter Cy Coleman

dined at the ~lndletost with carr
Grant graduate Dyan cannon ...
Four generations ol DooiiWea
celtl&gt;rated the blrlhda.Y of Geu.
Jimmy's wife Jc Jlnun,y o1
course. A110 toaltlng were .nm~
my's ..., Lt Co!. John Dooi!We,
just back from · Vietnun; Jimmy's sr andson Lt. James H.

Dooll1tle IIi .(.Oiiibt-Ualnlnl .In
Texas) and 111 eilltt-1NI' o I d
fourth . pneratl!lll of a Do~ ·"
tribe.
'
Ad for Beot'• Mil A•- 111partmenl otor• blnta • minch:

"HandJi\adl hUman hair;" (oaiJ .
"9.96) •• ; 'While the D a • I d
Hemmtnsi 'are conflllinl tolkllat
to whether the)' ever did 111U17, .
Mrs. H. (Gille IDmtllcutl) l1 dol-..
log writer Tom Marlklewlez •

SPRING SHOE S

HI BROWS
MAHOOANY

SEE US FOR YOUR
FilE AND AUTO
INSURANCE
20 Per Cent Dovtatlon. Our
Rates Do Not Raise After
Having A Claim As Some

Companies Do

Y. D. EDWARDS
INSURANCE AGENCY
PH, 99:1.2440
POMEROY

3.49
THE SHOE BOX
Where Shoes Are Sensibly Prlcocl
MIODLEPORT, 0.

Progress of Rev. Bennett
PT. PLEASANT -

Member a

o1 the IUckory Chapel and the

es are following with much tnr.~eat tM .PfOgreos of p Jlemer and former pastor.
"
Rev. ~ck Bennett, Jr., .soo
of Mr. and Mrs. Mack Bennett,
Sr., ol Jericho Road, city, graduated from Salem College on
May 19, and is now enrolled at
the United Methodlat Theological seminal')' at Delaware, Ohio,
Where he Is furthering his edllcation in the ministry. Rev. Bennett will alsoservealocalchurch
while continUing his studies. -Rev. and Mrs. BOID!etl and r----~=c:...::::..=:::....-----------,
three children, iillriO¥ Je'!!'&lt;·
Mike and Pam, have move"Ho
Delaware where th97 will make
their residence while he ts in
school. Mrs. BeMctt lo
forat
mer Imogene Hunt,

: ' ·,MARY JUNE'S , .
BEAUTY {HOP' :

1--~-~~~~~--~J

Are all air conditioners alike?

ABSOLUTELY NOTI

DUDS'N'

COitf-OP

I..AUNDRY

Ground Fro111 Good Pre111ler Beef

I

•'17•

DIFFERENT.

••

Asz_. is quality!
A - I s quiet through 19
A -

•

A •••

lb.

BIIF

IS

The Invention Is ealled Rz-110
and Is Ute reaull ol S3 years ol

lllelrlq

OUND

different techniques/
Is thermostatically controlled
for automatic operation/
Is pow.,-ed for big cooling/

·sc~t
If,.,.
,• . .

Sucher's Assorted

LUNCH

'

"'
lfudfel l'tlced
I

$119.95

.;

GRFATGOOD LOOKS

Congregations Following

experience by otarlon's Prelldent II Is made poulble by a
marveiOUII tranolstor, a llevelopmen! ol1he Bell Telephone Lab.
oralorieo-almllar to thole tiled
In U.S. satellites. It Is created
t--:;:---- ------ t by the lnvenlorl
D~=TlON : ol the world's
ducts
1 o u n dI
·
111'111
eyqlass
smoothly through I
L.SALLE Hotel
ald.
the maatol~ pro- I
MIDDLEPORT
1 Tile Ia. . II
ceu directly to
WED., JUNE 12· I trul7 • dramathe "hearing &lt;'e"'l
t P.M. - 1 P.M.
I matle step lorter." the Inner I ASK FOR MR. DILES : wll'd Ia bearJDc
earl Wear II and I llop,..aU.., Ven Stallli 1aid teclllloiO(I)'.
challertse YOtU'~Audlo-VInalo II W. Uaioool II aot oa1J
eJooesl friend to I
Allleu, 0 11'111
Ibrlnp you a
tell 11's a hear- 1 CaD CoUeel •
i1briJIJa« n e w
JDg ald.
..-:.-'"""----------'wvrld of sound,
For tllousands lhll new boDe but ai!IO the privacy llld COIIconcluc!llon method may prove •enleme Ylltl have wanled. U
to be Ute beat (IO!IIble way to you'd like to bloW mor. lbaat
belt Dell lo· nature's OWD em. this patented Listener llld 411For llllll)', even ihll new ,leC!JI. q~~ver If It maY l!elp you, wltb
lllqae may not be the - · no coat br oblipUoo, write •
Yotl muSt try 1111 JOU are ever dar · to Ollll'lon Eleetninlcs,
to lmO\f.
Inc., ll4!l A-1, I Wetlerl,y Road,
OeslninJ, N. Y, 111181.

f\
••

\

held for several years. Rev .
Bennett wa s granted permission
to start holding services and
the job of rejuvenation was be ~
gun. He spent seven years at
this church while also working
at the West Virginia Malleable
Iron CO. In Point Pleasant.
The church was painted and
repair s and Improvements made
and the church now presents
a neat and welcome picture to
motorists on State Rt.. 62. Rev .
Bennett completed 15 years oC
service at the local roundry when
he left the city to attend col lege. He Is a member or the
Hkkory Chapel church where
he attended regularly prior to
assuming the Spilman paatorate.
Two brothers or the minister
r eside in this area, Robert, of
Jericho road, an~ Jim , of Greer
road; and a sister, Mrs. Geral dine Thornton, lives . in GallipoMrs. El~ za Hunt, of Point Pleas. lis.
ant.
~- - -- ·---------~,.--· .,
The family was honored by I
members of the Spelter -charge I .'NME TO TRY
near ,llp.lem with a farewell din- .I A NEW HAIR
ner and g:tft sho~er ~lor to their I
leaving for Delaware, Rev . Ben- I STYLE!
I
nett served the charge Wring I
the five years he attended col - :
OPEN TUESDAY
:
lege.
1
EVENING 7 Tit 9
I
Prior to going to Salem, Rev.
I
Bennett spent seven yean of his
early ministcy Jn a successfUl I
revival or the ~timan church at :
t Phone 99f~ID
I
Hallwood, near West Columbia.
The church had fallen into dlouse and services
not been

With Nothinsln Either EAR

balance.

I
I

rs~~,~~,r·:,.,,, .,.,,,,,,,,,,.l•

NOWI YOU MAY
HEAR AGAIN

On new homes, the total cost can be included In your mortgage. For conversion or
replacement, the payments can be set up on
a 5-yoar FHA loan, or you can pay just 10%
down and take up to 36 months on the

Bill Hof!man
Shlr1ey Brown
Elbert McGhee
Charles Snodgrass ·
otho Mattox
Btll Gardner
Helen Davis
Marlo Bush
Maxine Walters

GIVE YOUR GIJE.!lS WHEN YOU REGISTER FOR THE
OPEN HOUSE.

'::Persona/
Notes !;::
.;.;

3 EASY-PAY PLANS

Erma L}'ons

suen Is 11 pod 11
your nelghbon.

i.!M;ddl:;~;;·:· :·.·· ,.,. ..,. ,•

Empire's new furnace Is slimmer, trimmertakes less space in your home. Blower is
quiet operating, and provides adequate
power so that air conditioning may be added
later. New ~!eel he~t exchanger gives you
more efficient, ~ower cost heating. The
matched burner assembly is designed to
eliminate the major cause of burner service
calls. You just set the room temperature you
want on the super-sensitive dial control . ..
and forget It I

Register at our Open House

was served by Mrs. Halter at
the conclusion of the evening.
Atrending were Mrs. Gladys
Curkler, Mrs. Deuaucr, Mrs.
Canterbury, Mrs. Edith Lanning,
Mrs. Bernice Ebenbach, Mrs.
Lillie Hauck, Mrs. Ethel William~
.son, Mn. Neva Seyfried, ltlss•
Erma Smith, Mrs. Reibel, Mrs.
Constance Shields, Mrs. B e s s

Mrs. KatJe YouQ.g entertained
recently wi.th a surprlae ·party···
honoring her son, Howard, on
his birthday.
Gifts presented to the honored guest included a decorated
cake from his daul!hter. Attending the party were Mr. and Mrs.
Lew!&amp; Hudson, Linda Young, and
Mr•. Betty Young.

One low package price, complete, if you act
nowl You get EMPIRE'S remarkable new
100,000 BTU LP-Gas forced air furnace, 7
warm-air room ducts, cold -air return duct,
central thermostat control, complete custom
installation by Ashland's home heating specialists, rent-free use of tank and meter.

To the person coming the closest to guessing the combined weight of the crew of
the Sunday Times-Sentinel.

10. UUUI

~ilman United Methodist church-

(completely installed, average 6-room home)
as low as 10% down

1

Costume prtzeR were awarded at a patio part,y gi ven by the
Happy Harvesters Class of the
Trinity United Church of Christ
at the Chester Road home of Mrs.
Ada Holter Friday night
Prize for the most comical
costwne went to Mrs. Beu Neutzling, dressed as a hippie, and the
prJze for the prettie$t costume
was awarded to Mrs. Mabel
Wolfe, attired as a Gower girL
All guests not in costume paid
a fine of 25 cents.
Mrs. Holter ent6rtained with
a patio supper preceding t h e
meeting. The Lord's Prayer In
Wlison and a devotional, "What
Is God Like?" 1 by Mrs, Holter
opened the business meeting co~
ducted by Mra. Eva Dessauer.
Mrs. Genevieve Meinhart Peport.
ed a balance of $164.74 in the
treasury._.......
It was agreed to serve a di~
ner on the first Thursday In
October to Galli&amp; County Salon,
Eight and Forty. Mrs, Carrie
Meinhart and Mrs. Dessauer will
send a box or "goodies" to Tom
Lind, son of Mr. and Mrs. Reino
Lind, .stationed in Vietnam.
Mrs. Ethel canterbury thanked
the class for cards sent to her
daugh~r, Mrs. Dorothy Radford,
d u r 1 n g her hospitalization.
Named as hostesses for the July
meeting were Miss Thelma
Grueser, Mrs. Edna Relbe1, arxl
Mrs. AmarrJa Kasper.
During the evening, Mrs. Roy
Holter, a guest, took movies of
the group. The program or the
evening featured pictures of last
year's hobo party held atthe Holter home. Also shown were pictures taken by Mrs. Holter on
her trip to Hawaii two years ago,
the Regatta parade of 1967, and
the Meigs County Fair.
Mrs, Meinhart presented Mr s.
Holter with a hostess gift:. The
door prize was won by Mrs.
Reibel. · · Strawberry shortcake

Given Howard Young

95

til 0 O

o., MOillay, June

Costume Prizes Awarded
During .Class Patio Party

Surprise Party is

LP·OAS FORCED AI
HEATI GSYSTE $569

MYSTERY
PRIZE

lbs.

ITATI 0"- OtttO

DIPAI.TMINT 0P HIOMWAYI

ONLY

REE

James DaMer
Margaret Lehew
Ruth Brown
Marie Foster
Charlene HoeQich
Hobart WUson
Dick OWen
Pat Houck
Chet Tannehill
Jotm Morgan
Don Wright
Robert Wingett
K111t1e Cr!:M'
Bob Hoenich
Dick Thomas
Bea Lisle
Vernon DeWeese
4rry Boyer
Artus Bunch

MOTICI TO CONTU.CTOII

1

to 9:3Go$Un.12

�-11- The Daily Sentinel, Pomcroy-Ml.ddloport,

n., Monta,y, June 10, 1968

L.lllL NOTICI

Over 100 Guests Here for
Eastern Star Inspection
visiting TIOrtlv palrcno, pall matrons and pa!lt patrons ol Pomeroy Chapter, and pall malrcno
and paot patrons of other chapten were introcklc:ed and welcomed. The sunahine l\lr.d for
Estarl was taken by S a n d y
Smith and Linda Clalnther.-s.
The Rev. Glen IUies was soloist for the inopectlon and aang
4• How Great Thou Art." fnitla·
tion was held tor two candidates
at the conclusion o1 which the
distinguished &amp;~~eats commended
the officers on the exempltflcation ol the Initiatory work.
Mrs. Webb, the lnopectlng officer, complimented the chApter.
Refr~s:hmenta were served in
the dlninll room with Dorothy
Woodard and &amp;le Zirkle presidinll
at the punch bowl. A blue
Mexico.
Distinguished Masons present- and white color acheme was car~
ed included Louis Winters of
Amesville, a 52-year Mason and
a Knight of !he York Cross of
Honor; .1\lbert Woodard, Clarence struble, and Paul DarnelJ,
knights of the York Cross of
Honor; and Dale Smith, illustrious master of Bosworth Council, 46, Pomeroy.
MASON - Mr. and Mrs. ElVisiting worthy matrons and mer Van Meter of Clifton are

· Annual inspection of Pomeroy
Chapter 186, Order of the East~
ern Star, condurted Friday night
by Cora Webb, deputy grand matron of District 25, was attend~
ed by 100 members and ~ests
of other chapters.
Kathryn Jordan, worthY rna.
tron, and James Soulsby, wor .
thy patron, presided at the meet~
ing. Distinguished guests presented were Roberta K. Mtndllng, general Grand Chapter
chairman of the lnternationa1
Temple Fund, and a past grand
matron of the Grand Chapter of
Ohio: Mrs. Webb, deputy grand
matron of District 25; Naomi
King, Grand Ruth of the Grand
Chapter of Ohio; and Mary Grosvenor representing Arizona and
Clare Mosely representing New

Von Meter-Harris
Wedding Was Held

At Clifton Church

Kenny Roy Riggs
Observes Birthday
Mrs. Kenneth E. Riggs
of Rt. 1, Reed sville, entertained
~nday, June 2, with a birthday
party in honor of their son, Kenny Ray, who celebrated his first
birthday.
Guests attending were Mr. and
Mrs. Ray Riggs and daughters,
Maralynn and Caralynn Tracy,
David and Melanie Burt, Terti
Lynn Russell , Mr. and Mrs. David Riggs and daughter, Mary
Louise, Mr. and Mrs. Roger Epple and daughters, Sherry, Diana
and Vicki , Mr. and Mrs. Starling
Massar and Diana and Chuck,
Mrs. Leota Ma ssar, Mrs. Leone Babcock, Shirley and Drew
Cline, and Laura Harri s.
Mr . and

announcirw the recent marriage
of their daughter, Jennifer, to
Mr. Edward Harris oiGaUipolis,
Ohio.
The bride wore a white satln
with lace gown and a corsage of
carnations. Her maid of honor
was Miss Kathy Ann Roush of
New Haven whose gown featured
blue lace on white.
Mr. Terry Henry of Mason was
best man and Rocky Kerns of
Clifton was the rtna bearer. The
couple went on a wedding trip
to Maryland.
Buth the bride and groom are
graduate s of Wahama Hil!h
School. For the present they are
maki~ their home wlth his par ..
ents, Mr. and Mrs. James Harris of Gallipolis.
Approximately 75 persons attended the open wedding and reception which was held at the
CHfton Methodist Church.

Helen Help
US •••
By Helen Bottel

SLAMMER GETS WHACKED
Dear Helen:
1 have been happiQ&gt; married
for almost ten years, have three
children and a husband I thoul!ht
was kind and understanding.
Helen, I have always been what
he calls a "slammer." When I
get mad, I go around banging and
slamming things . Usually my husband pays no attention and leta
me vent my anger, but the other
'· nil!ht he went wi I d.
He started yelling he was sick
and tired of my childish antic•
and with that he pi eked me up,
turned me over his knee and
e.panked me long and hard on my
a Imost bare bottom.
I was ne"Ver so shocked and hurt
in my whole life and I haven't talked to him sin ce. The worst part
Is he seems quite happy go luc.
Icy . In fact he told me he feels
great since he had wanted to do
this for a long time.
I love him, but I can't ghe in
to him . If he tron't apologize,
what can l do? - SILENT PRIDE
Dear S. P.:
Laugh along wi.th '•Happy."
He " applauded" your histronics at the right time and place
after too many years as a silent audience. I think the whole
scene is hUarious and you will
too , when you stop smarting.
-

H.

Dear Helen:
A while ago I read an item ln
one ot the gossip columnw, quot~
: I ing some celebrity who said he
had a new girl friend who was
.. cute, blonde, and 65. "
It happens that I am cute, blonde
and 65, and the re Is a young man
in hi s 30s who wants to be my
boyfriend.
Js this a trend? And what are
the rule s?- NAME WITIIIJELD ,
OF COUHSE
Dear NWOC:
Thill Is a trend only among

young men who have a mother
- or an easy...money - complex.
The rules? Don't take him too
seriously or he lll81 take YOU
for your life savlngo. - H.
Dear Helen:
Why do some women cut down
other women just because they
do wrong themaelves?
This ooijOOd dame says awf\11 thinlls aboUt me in the neishborhood: ohe spreads lies and
people believe her. That's bew
cause I won't speak to her, aa
I wouldn't usocllte with her
kind.
Everybody knows she'll ohack
up with any man who snaps his
fingers. :!il.e's had three babies
born out or wedlock which &amp;he's
adopted oot. iile brags that ohe
goes to the shore every aummer
to work, but she onlt goes there
to work the street. But the way
she lies about what she has and
does, you'd think ahe was some-

thing!

WilY does ohe try to ruin

my

reputation and get me dlellked?
-NOT A LIAR

Dear Not:
Maybe she's a copycat. - H.
Dear Helen:
I get the blues, as every person alive does once ln a wtdle.
But I have a phlloJIOI)hy IIIB,)'be
It's auperstltion that sees me
through. I know aa aure ae rain
that something good will happen to counteract the bad, 10
even as rm depressed, rm still
- EXPECTANT
Qear Expectant:
A COMectlcut correspondent
sent a poem that ahould be dedicated to you: "Ah! That' a the
reason a bird can sing, On hh
darkest day he bellevesln spring!
-

H.

Thls column Ia dedicated to
family living, so lt you're hiving kid trouble or jull plain
trouble, let Helen help YOU.

Vacatloo church ~ehool will
bellln Thurfda,v at the Unitad
Methedilll Church. '11le ochool
will continue througb Junii2i:
Classes will be concllcted
dally from 9 a.m. to II a.m.
tor children from four years
old to those who have COII1&gt;1eted the sixth grade.

rled out In the table deooratlono. White tapers fionked a
nora! piece ol blue and white.
Gueoto were regi-ed by Beulah Ewing and Ella&amp;nith and blue
and white eylon n• jJin.ono were
presented to each of the &amp;~~oslo.
Ruth Moore, chairman tor the
aoclal hour, wu assisted by
Thelma Dill and Cadle Wickham.
Denzel Goeglein served as an
eoe&lt;&gt;rt for the Inspection. A gift
was presented to Mrs. Jor&lt;lan
from her ~eers, and the wor~
Plana have been completed for
thy matron gave gills to each
the
open church weddinll of Ml88
or her otlicers.
Joyce Elaine Clonch ol Middleport, Route I, to Mr. Ronald
Eugene Vance of Harrloonvllle.
The weddinll will be an event
o1 June 14 al 7 o'Clock In the
eveninll at the Hysell Run Free
Methodist Church. A half.l!oor
of nuptial music by Miss Julia
Hutchison and Gene Grate will
precede the ceremOI\Y. The Rev.
Eugene Gil! will oftlciale.
Miss Clonch has chosen Miss
Kathy Simmons as her maid of
A wiener roast was h e 1 d honor. Mi8S Cheryl Hutchison
Thursday at the home of Mrs. and Mlsa Brenda McGuire will
Richard Vaul!han, Middleport, for serve as her bridesmaids.
members or Girl Scout Troop 5.
Attendinll Mr. Vance will be
During a meeting which fol- Dave Peterson, and ~shers for
lowed the group made plans to the wedding will be David Jivijoin Troop 39 at the Middle- den and Rick Workman. L o r i
port community Par k Wednes- Clonch and Debra WeO:IIe will
day morning at 10:30 a.m. for be the nower girls, and Marty
work on the eyci!sl badge. Plans Dugan will serve as the ring
were also made for the girls bearer.
to distribute circulars for Westem Auto as a project to make
money for a skating party. Members are to meet at 9 a.m. Tuesday at the Vaul!han home to get
their circulars.
The regular weekly scout meetThe birthday of Freda Mitch
ing was schedUled for 10:30 a.m. was observed during a meet·
Thursday. Attending the ..toner lng of the Busy Bee Class of
roast were Tami Hoffman, Krista the Trinity United Church of
Morris, Kathy Harris, C I n d y Christ Thursday.
Glaze, Bed, Vaul!hon, Pam North,
Others attending were Mrs.
&amp;Isle Samuels, Melody Scaggs, Louis Reibel, Mrs. Wendell
Kathy Coburn, Kathy Coleman, Kautz, Mrs. Neva Seyfried, Mrs.
and !;beryl Woods.
Ona Meyers, Mrs. Lelia Mora,
Nine new members were wel - Mn. Ada Murray, Mrs. Katie
comed Into the troop from Mrs. Baer, Mrs. Ada Holter, and Mr s.
Jack Coleman's brownie group. Constance 911elds.
The fiy-&lt;~p was held at the girl
scout house with Mrs. Coleman
presenting the girls with BrownENROLLSm COLLEGE
ie wings and girl scoot plno.
MASON - Glen David Clark
The new members of ·~roop
enrolled In an auto.:.Hesel
has
5 are Kathy Coburn, Keiieo Burcollege.
He leaves for Nashville,
dette, Kathy Colemon, B e c k y
Fultz, Pam North, M e J o d y Tennessee on June 24. He is the
son of Mr. and Mrs. KeMeth
SCaggs, 9leryl Woods, MarUee
D.
Clark.
Cassell, and &amp;!ale Samuels.

Clonch- Vance
Wedding Set

For June 14

Troop 5 Girls
Enjoy Outing

At Vaughans

Birthday of Closs

Member Observed

More than 200 Attend
Wahama Alumni Event
MASON ·- More than 200 persona attended the annual Wahama
Alumni meeting on June 1 with
most of the evenire spent rem•
· tniactng.
A abort busineu meeting was
held to eleet the following orocera, With Ul~oing president
Junes stewart presidi~: WiiUun Gibbs, president: James
ProUltt, vtce president; Dorothy Russell, recording secre-tary;
Kathaleen Grinstead
Roush, corresponding secretary,
and Mabel Gibbs Gerlach, treas-

urer.
The board of directors include
Junes stewart, Lawrence Foreman, Ray Tucker, and Nancy
Marks PowelL
The following gift awards were
made by Lelah Jane Powell: Charlea Wallace, class of 1928, from
Naahville, Tem., for traveling
the farthes~ youngest alumnus In
teaching,
Phyllis Zicafoose
Greer, of New Ha veni oldest
teaching alumni, Mary Elizabeth
C&amp;pehart, Mason; Mrs. Emma
Ryan, the oldest a1umnus pres·
ent (class of 1929), and to Lois
Hart Bumgarner, New Haven,
and Danny Brown, Letarl
The Class of 1958 had the most
groduetes present (ten).
A. Keith McClung, Jr., a Char·
leston attorney who graduated
from W.H.S. , was guest speaker.
Hls topic was "Generation Gap. "
A "Dog Patch" theme was
used throughout Favors of corn
cob pipes were placed at each
plate, carrying out the same
theme as in the gym. An out~
house, depicitlng the West Vir·
ginia Moon, decorated one section. Guests entered the dance
noor through a vine covered
hallway and a typical mountai~
eer with his jug added to the
decor.
Out of town guests Included
Mr. and Mrs. Donald L. Hart,

Norrls~n.

5 - Th e Daily Sentinel, 11 orneroy-Middlcport,

C:•hiMitUI. Olltot May 11, 1111
Cantrflct ietlt L...l C.,., ftD, 11-411

UNIT ,IICI CONTIIACT
SPied proPOAI.Io will bl neetY't4 at
ta.. offlM of tbe S"te ID&amp;b••r JKo
netor of Ol!lo, Columbul. Dblo vn.UJ
10:00 A.ll., !u1ern Darlllht la'l'illt
Tbbe. T\aesdly, JUM ID, 1818. lor
UQJO•emuu 1\1;:
Parts NOI. l abel . ,. an . ,.....
u on• oontract ablt wtU be Goa·

Pa.; Mr. and Mrs.
Charles H. Wallace,' Nashvt.J.1e,
Tenn.; Mr. an::l. Mrs. Dames D.
•kl•red on the bu., of tta totll
Weaver, Hammord, Ind., Mr. and
amouat
No. 1
Mrs. Cloyd Bartholomew, lndl- · o.wa
OJllo, oa &amp;darN~
Cl.AL • 581 • /,o.QO.S.31) Stata HoUle
anapolts, Ind.; Mr. and Mrs. Eu- No. Ill. ill Oallpol., and o.re•n Towagene Rayburn, Muncle,Jnci.;Hmr- •hlPI• b) reRtrfaelnl wiUt uphatt
ard Icenhower. Upper Marlboro, CO:::~~ at WtdtJt.-Varlowl.
Md.; Mr. and Mrs. Howard PhU- fe~~s.r.'.'::.r: ~.au
lips, Arlington, Va.; Mr. and
..., No. t
Where there is lio
WashYelp count,, Ohio, on ledtou
Mrs. Homer Ice-cower,
•••
11110 • 7 • O.O().lA'f • ltlilc AO'tlttt No. the peoplt cast of! restnrint,
ington1 D. C.; Miss Beverly 7. 111 SalllbUI')' "Towa.hlp. bJ ruu.r- but blesaed is he who kteps
IMLDC with upiWt CODctnte.
staats, Akron; Mr • . and Mrs.
Pavement Wldlh-Varlow.
the l01.o.-Proverbs 29:18.
Joseph Kirby and Mrs. Diana ProJe!:i and Work ~1urs.a
f .. t ur a.40 KU...
SeU, Columbus; Rhoda Roush,
•.,.. l!&amp;te .., tor compldoa ot
Norwalk,• Mr. and Mrs. T.._,
• .m..n th., worir. lhall M u Mt forth ill UM
...,
blddilll propo111.•
S&amp;Jrre, Michael Gardner, Mr. and
Ba~h bidder diaD be r.qulftll lu
fl1e with hll bid • M!UilMI cbeok
Di
I
Mrs. James eh , Mr. and Mrs. tor an amount ••uaJ to fin ,., tHt
Max Eichinger, Mrs. Maxine ., "" lttd, but 1a ao •.eat motw tblll
ten tbouniUI doUan or a boad lor
Arnold, and Mr. James Stewart. t.n ,., cent ., hit ltkl, fap.ble to
aU or Pomeroy; Mrs. Bertha
!UPON REQUESn
Lievlng, Stow; Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. Martha Moore, Smlthburgj
Robert Ball, Thurman: Mr. and
o.r u'"'"' Good ct..rilnt
Mr. and Mro. Cline Erwin, SouthMrs. Paul Rood, WestervUlei
side: Mrs. William Rogen, Vi·
Miss Addle MacKnil!h~ Huntingenna: Mr. and Mrs. Dewey F.
ton; Mr. and Mrs. Michael Shaw, Smith, Jr., Portsmooth,andMrs.
9ft.S428
Mr. and Mrs. KemeUl Brewer,
Mabel Casto, Warren, Ohio.
Miss Sara Lou Daup. all of C4;
lurnbus; Mr. and Mrs. Leo Dick,
Thomas Ryan, both Lima: Mrs.
Kenneth Wyan4 Logan, Oh!c('Mr, .
and Mrs. Charles Sayre, Long
Bottom: Mrs. floYd MUler, Mar·
OFFICE HOURS 9:30 TO 12, 2 TO 5 (CLOSE AT NOON ON
ietta; Mr. and Mrs. T h om a s
Blaine, Mr. and Mrs. Michael
THURS.) - EAST COURT ST., POMEROY
Blaine, Mr. and Mrs. D a l e
Walburn, Miss Deborah Blaine,
ali or Middleport; Mr. and Mrs.
George MacKnight, Huntington;
Mr. and Mrs. carl Thomas Knapp
of Kenova.
Also Mrs. Margaretta Duncilll,
New Cumberland, W. Va.; MrL
Helen Wean, Mrs. Eileen Har~
rls, Nitro: Mrs. Dessie Radclifie,
Parkersburg: Mr. and Mrs. Edwin L. stein m, Poca: Mr. and
$30.00 hw•··•luo 11
Mrs. WOllam McWhorter, Mrs.
CIIYIIItlt Ttr•s
Leonard Krebs, Mr. arKl M r s.
Lawrence Gerlach, Jr., Miss
Kathryn Fruth, Mrs. Henry
Fruth, all Pt. Pleasant: Mrs.
George 'Weirirk, Ravenswood;

•r,;,

Coull''

proph•cu

2-Hour

DRY CLEANING

SERVICE

Robinson's

O.D.

N. W.

OPTOMETRIST

3 ROOMS

New Furniture
ONLY $'299

MAlON
FURNITURE CO.
MASON. W. YA.

•

Special low, off-season price!

Tuesday, June 11th. 7 to 9 P.M.

HERE'S THE CREW

.

Char1ene Davis
Blll Rizer
Gayland Bush
Fred Hofl'rnan •
carol MuUim
Eustice Wilson
Margaret f1Micum
Emma Lou Divis

per month,
36 months

Mr. and Mrs. Roger LuckO¥doo of Huntington were weekend
guests of their parents, Mr. and
Mra. James Brewington, Middle, port, and Mr. and Mro. A i v a
Luckeydoo, New Haven, W. Va.
Mr. and Mrs. WUliam F r e d
Smith, Sr. ot Bradbury have re.
turned to their home after spendIng the past week In Defiance
with her oon-in~aw and daul!hter, Mr. and Mrs. Ted ~ire•
and children, Tom and JUl. Weekend guests ot Mr. and M r 1.
Spires were Mr. and Mra. Lawrenee Baughman and son, Jeff.
roy, or Middleport, and R a y
Smith ol Cheohire.

Of(er expires July 31, 1.968
For mOl' I detlils. m1il this coupon to the AaN1nd LP-Gu 811lk Ptln1 r.nrul you.

---···················-······················
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tween
and

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Ashlltld LP·G•sthe mod1rn entrgy fuel!

Ashland

Name-

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ASHLAND OILS.: REFINING COMPANY
BOX 471,

HIGHWAY 124'

POMEROY, OHIO

Sta1e

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Call your nearut Ashland LP-Gao Bulk Plant for a free
home heating eurvey.

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PHONE 992-2166

i!iCalendar!!

:·:

Weed, Mrs. Ruby Erb, Mro.
WolCe, Mrs. Clan Karr, Mrs.
Meinhart, Mrs. Neutzllng 1 aOO
Mrs. France&amp; Reibel, all mem.
bers or the class, and Mrs. Ula
Swann of Tuppers Plains, Mrs.
Frances Bearhs ot Middleport
and Mr·s. Roy Halter, Ann, Ja~
ice and Eddie Holter, Chest6r
Road.

Miss Dutton, Fiance,
Guests of Tea Friday
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Crow, Mr.
and Mrs. Harry &amp; Moore, and
Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Lochary
entertained &amp;mday afternoon with
a tea honoring Miss Ellen Dut.
ton and her tiance, James Kiehl.
Guests at the tea held at the
Crow horne in &amp;vracuse were
members of the Grace Episcopal Parish.
A yellow and green c o I o r
scheme was carried out in the
tea table decorations. The cen.
terptece, a heart formation of
fern surrounded at the base by
daisies, featured miniature bride
and groomandbridesmaidsfigur.
lnes. The arrangementwasfianked by green tapers ln silver hold~
ers. The Crow home was decorated with summer Oower ar.
rangernents.
Presiding at the silver oortee
service and the punch bowl dur.
ing the afternoon were Mrs. 0 ,
B. Stout, Mrs. David Miller •

Mrs. Harry Moore, Mi&amp;s Marte
Richman, and Mrs. Everett

Hayes.
Guests were Mr.andMrs. Dale
Dutton, Mrs. Fred Crow, Sr.,
Miss Vida· Ihle, Mrs. Theodore
Dlersbach, Mrs. Herbert Ew:ing,
Mrs. J. E. D. Hartlnger, Mr.
and Mrs. Leo story, Mrs. stout,
Mis s Blckman, Mr. and M r s.
Theodore Reed, Jr., Mrs. James
O'Brien, Mr s. Kenneth Amsbary,
Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Fioher.
Mr. and Mrs. John Mohler, Mr.
and Mrs. Paul Chapman, Mrs.
Cedric Clark, Mr. and M r s.
Charles Gibbs, Mr. and Mrs.
Everett Ha.yes, Mr. and Mrs. A.
R. Knisht, Mr. and Mrs. David
MU!er, Mr. and Mrs. Manning
Webster, Mr. and Mrs. Thereon Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. Jobn
N. Pearson, Mrs. Glen Tolson
and her guest of canton, Miss
Nancy Reed and Ca rson Crow.

MONDAY
DINNER AT DAV Home, Pomeroy, at 6:30 p.m., Monday, fol~
lowed by meeting and election
of otficers. All DAV members
and wives invited, Jacob Tur~
er, commander.
TUESDAY
EASTERN BAND Booster.s,
Tuesday, 7:30p.m.athighscho01.
Election of new officers. All
members asked to be present.
LADIES AUXIIJARY, Lewis
Manley Post 263, Tuesda,y, 7 p.
m. at Naomi Beptist Church.
WEDNESDAY
WIIITE ROSE Lodge Wednesday, 1:30 p.DL at Feeney·Bennett Post 128, American Legion
Home.
POMEROY CHAPTER 80, Royal Arch Masons, stated meeting
Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. Pomeroy Masonic Temple to elect and
Install otf'lcers for the 196869 year. Officers and companions invited.

RIPLEY, W. VA.,.PHONE372-2221

Thousands of people may now
enjoy 1he advantages of liearlng
again with a patented Invention
lhal hat NO bu11ons, NO 1ubea,
NO wires, NO bulky batteries.
Inatead of forcing amplified
sound throu8h the Impaired
outer or middle ear. the patent.
ed
"Tympano
Technique" em 1

Voice along Broadway
BY JACK O'BRIAN
NEW YORK - Mro. Samm,y
~ar, wife of the Jaclde Glea1011 91ow bandleader urHierwent
heart surgery •.• Barbra Qrel. oand's huttband Elliot Gould's on
the verge &lt;i a "big" movie deal
... Great old Negro IOIIIWl'ltero
Noble Sasle and F.uble Blake
have written a musical tribute
- with a beat - to Martin Luther King ... Warren Lyons ill
scouting Nicol Williamson (now
in .. Plaza &amp;Jlte") ror J o h n
Guare•s first Bdwy. play "House
of Blue Leaves;" Warren is columnist Leonard ~ons' son who
came up ll'lth a hit In his firot
try oft.Bdwy., '"Muzeeka," by
the aforenoted John GUare.
Julie Styne M'Ote ali the muSic tor·-_,Funn,y Girl" ln it a
Bdwy. hit original but he's very
unhappy at the was the film ver.
slon io givinl! all the soek-lt.«&gt;'em publicity to Fanny Brice's
old stage hit '"My Man,. ••• Hlp.
pies so all~ against war are
wesring old Weat Point and officers' jackets ... u&amp;anclly" is a
phone-answering service h e r e
whose owners (Including dancer
Swen SWenson) wtu produce ortBdwy. ohows with the profits
... Florence Henderson (on the
' 4 Persona1ity" TV taping) said
.. The things I'm most afraid or

are death and opening nJghtl."
The Henry Ford&amp; were Invited again to the LBJ llan ey ....
Hear tell the MiSJ Universe TV
ahow wound up backstaga In a
brawl among the pageant ~··
TV lode and the Miami Beaeh
1atherh Art ca.rMY•a won five
TV "Emmys;" Ids bon Jackie
Gleason - ROlle ..• Diner leav.
ing the Pren Box asked the
14daorman" to call him a cab
- hut he was a hil!h Bolivian
army officer, (Okay, call him a
revolution).
Hotdog stand near 31st &amp; 8th
Ave. has its own on • premi1es
Notary Public (with seal, and
mustard) ... Air India 11'111 Introduce ' 4Kosher curry dishes"
on transatlantic Olghts ••• Bachelor sonl!hitwrlter Cy Coleman

dined at the ~lndletost with carr
Grant graduate Dyan cannon ...
Four generations ol DooiiWea
celtl&gt;rated the blrlhda.Y of Geu.
Jimmy's wife Jc Jlnun,y o1
course. A110 toaltlng were .nm~
my's ..., Lt Co!. John Dooi!We,
just back from · Vietnun; Jimmy's sr andson Lt. James H.

Dooll1tle IIi .(.Oiiibt-Ualnlnl .In
Texas) and 111 eilltt-1NI' o I d
fourth . pneratl!lll of a Do~ ·"
tribe.
'
Ad for Beot'• Mil A•- 111partmenl otor• blnta • minch:

"HandJi\adl hUman hair;" (oaiJ .
"9.96) •• ; 'While the D a • I d
Hemmtnsi 'are conflllinl tolkllat
to whether the)' ever did 111U17, .
Mrs. H. (Gille IDmtllcutl) l1 dol-..
log writer Tom Marlklewlez •

SPRING SHOE S

HI BROWS
MAHOOANY

SEE US FOR YOUR
FilE AND AUTO
INSURANCE
20 Per Cent Dovtatlon. Our
Rates Do Not Raise After
Having A Claim As Some

Companies Do

Y. D. EDWARDS
INSURANCE AGENCY
PH, 99:1.2440
POMEROY

3.49
THE SHOE BOX
Where Shoes Are Sensibly Prlcocl
MIODLEPORT, 0.

Progress of Rev. Bennett
PT. PLEASANT -

Member a

o1 the IUckory Chapel and the

es are following with much tnr.~eat tM .PfOgreos of p Jlemer and former pastor.
"
Rev. ~ck Bennett, Jr., .soo
of Mr. and Mrs. Mack Bennett,
Sr., ol Jericho Road, city, graduated from Salem College on
May 19, and is now enrolled at
the United Methodlat Theological seminal')' at Delaware, Ohio,
Where he Is furthering his edllcation in the ministry. Rev. Bennett will alsoservealocalchurch
while continUing his studies. -Rev. and Mrs. BOID!etl and r----~=c:...::::..=:::....-----------,
three children, iillriO¥ Je'!!'&lt;·
Mike and Pam, have move"Ho
Delaware where th97 will make
their residence while he ts in
school. Mrs. BeMctt lo
forat
mer Imogene Hunt,

: ' ·,MARY JUNE'S , .
BEAUTY {HOP' :

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GRFATGOOD LOOKS

Congregations Following

experience by otarlon's Prelldent II Is made poulble by a
marveiOUII tranolstor, a llevelopmen! ol1he Bell Telephone Lab.
oralorieo-almllar to thole tiled
In U.S. satellites. It Is created
t--:;:---- ------ t by the lnvenlorl
D~=TlON : ol the world's
ducts
1 o u n dI
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111'111
eyqlass
smoothly through I
L.SALLE Hotel
ald.
the maatol~ pro- I
MIDDLEPORT
1 Tile Ia. . II
ceu directly to
WED., JUNE 12· I trul7 • dramathe "hearing &lt;'e"'l
t P.M. - 1 P.M.
I matle step lorter." the Inner I ASK FOR MR. DILES : wll'd Ia bearJDc
earl Wear II and I llop,..aU.., Ven Stallli 1aid teclllloiO(I)'.
challertse YOtU'~Audlo-VInalo II W. Uaioool II aot oa1J
eJooesl friend to I
Allleu, 0 11'111
Ibrlnp you a
tell 11's a hear- 1 CaD CoUeel •
i1briJIJa« n e w
JDg ald.
..-:.-'"""----------'wvrld of sound,
For tllousands lhll new boDe but ai!IO the privacy llld COIIconcluc!llon method may prove •enleme Ylltl have wanled. U
to be Ute beat (IO!IIble way to you'd like to bloW mor. lbaat
belt Dell lo· nature's OWD em. this patented Listener llld 411For llllll)', even ihll new ,leC!JI. q~~ver If It maY l!elp you, wltb
lllqae may not be the - · no coat br oblipUoo, write •
Yotl muSt try 1111 JOU are ever dar · to Ollll'lon Eleetninlcs,
to lmO\f.
Inc., ll4!l A-1, I Wetlerl,y Road,
OeslninJ, N. Y, 111181.

f\
••

\

held for several years. Rev .
Bennett wa s granted permission
to start holding services and
the job of rejuvenation was be ~
gun. He spent seven years at
this church while also working
at the West Virginia Malleable
Iron CO. In Point Pleasant.
The church was painted and
repair s and Improvements made
and the church now presents
a neat and welcome picture to
motorists on State Rt.. 62. Rev .
Bennett completed 15 years oC
service at the local roundry when
he left the city to attend col lege. He Is a member or the
Hkkory Chapel church where
he attended regularly prior to
assuming the Spilman paatorate.
Two brothers or the minister
r eside in this area, Robert, of
Jericho road, an~ Jim , of Greer
road; and a sister, Mrs. Geral dine Thornton, lives . in GallipoMrs. El~ za Hunt, of Point Pleas. lis.
ant.
~- - -- ·---------~,.--· .,
The family was honored by I
members of the Spelter -charge I .'NME TO TRY
near ,llp.lem with a farewell din- .I A NEW HAIR
ner and g:tft sho~er ~lor to their I
leaving for Delaware, Rev . Ben- I STYLE!
I
nett served the charge Wring I
the five years he attended col - :
OPEN TUESDAY
:
lege.
1
EVENING 7 Tit 9
I
Prior to going to Salem, Rev.
I
Bennett spent seven yean of his
early ministcy Jn a successfUl I
revival or the ~timan church at :
t Phone 99f~ID
I
Hallwood, near West Columbia.
The church had fallen into dlouse and services
not been

With Nothinsln Either EAR

balance.

I
I

rs~~,~~,r·:,.,,, .,.,,,,,,,,,,.l•

NOWI YOU MAY
HEAR AGAIN

On new homes, the total cost can be included In your mortgage. For conversion or
replacement, the payments can be set up on
a 5-yoar FHA loan, or you can pay just 10%
down and take up to 36 months on the

Bill Hof!man
Shlr1ey Brown
Elbert McGhee
Charles Snodgrass ·
otho Mattox
Btll Gardner
Helen Davis
Marlo Bush
Maxine Walters

GIVE YOUR GIJE.!lS WHEN YOU REGISTER FOR THE
OPEN HOUSE.

'::Persona/
Notes !;::
.;.;

3 EASY-PAY PLANS

Erma L}'ons

suen Is 11 pod 11
your nelghbon.

i.!M;ddl:;~;;·:· :·.·· ,.,. ..,. ,•

Empire's new furnace Is slimmer, trimmertakes less space in your home. Blower is
quiet operating, and provides adequate
power so that air conditioning may be added
later. New ~!eel he~t exchanger gives you
more efficient, ~ower cost heating. The
matched burner assembly is designed to
eliminate the major cause of burner service
calls. You just set the room temperature you
want on the super-sensitive dial control . ..
and forget It I

Register at our Open House

was served by Mrs. Halter at
the conclusion of the evening.
Atrending were Mrs. Gladys
Curkler, Mrs. Deuaucr, Mrs.
Canterbury, Mrs. Edith Lanning,
Mrs. Bernice Ebenbach, Mrs.
Lillie Hauck, Mrs. Ethel William~
.son, Mn. Neva Seyfried, ltlss•
Erma Smith, Mrs. Reibel, Mrs.
Constance Shields, Mrs. B e s s

Mrs. KatJe YouQ.g entertained
recently wi.th a surprlae ·party···
honoring her son, Howard, on
his birthday.
Gifts presented to the honored guest included a decorated
cake from his daul!hter. Attending the party were Mr. and Mrs.
Lew!&amp; Hudson, Linda Young, and
Mr•. Betty Young.

One low package price, complete, if you act
nowl You get EMPIRE'S remarkable new
100,000 BTU LP-Gas forced air furnace, 7
warm-air room ducts, cold -air return duct,
central thermostat control, complete custom
installation by Ashland's home heating specialists, rent-free use of tank and meter.

To the person coming the closest to guessing the combined weight of the crew of
the Sunday Times-Sentinel.

10. UUUI

~ilman United Methodist church-

(completely installed, average 6-room home)
as low as 10% down

1

Costume prtzeR were awarded at a patio part,y gi ven by the
Happy Harvesters Class of the
Trinity United Church of Christ
at the Chester Road home of Mrs.
Ada Holter Friday night
Prize for the most comical
costwne went to Mrs. Beu Neutzling, dressed as a hippie, and the
prJze for the prettie$t costume
was awarded to Mrs. Mabel
Wolfe, attired as a Gower girL
All guests not in costume paid
a fine of 25 cents.
Mrs. Holter ent6rtained with
a patio supper preceding t h e
meeting. The Lord's Prayer In
Wlison and a devotional, "What
Is God Like?" 1 by Mrs, Holter
opened the business meeting co~
ducted by Mra. Eva Dessauer.
Mrs. Genevieve Meinhart Peport.
ed a balance of $164.74 in the
treasury._.......
It was agreed to serve a di~
ner on the first Thursday In
October to Galli&amp; County Salon,
Eight and Forty. Mrs, Carrie
Meinhart and Mrs. Dessauer will
send a box or "goodies" to Tom
Lind, son of Mr. and Mrs. Reino
Lind, .stationed in Vietnam.
Mrs. Ethel canterbury thanked
the class for cards sent to her
daugh~r, Mrs. Dorothy Radford,
d u r 1 n g her hospitalization.
Named as hostesses for the July
meeting were Miss Thelma
Grueser, Mrs. Edna Relbe1, arxl
Mrs. AmarrJa Kasper.
During the evening, Mrs. Roy
Holter, a guest, took movies of
the group. The program or the
evening featured pictures of last
year's hobo party held atthe Holter home. Also shown were pictures taken by Mrs. Holter on
her trip to Hawaii two years ago,
the Regatta parade of 1967, and
the Meigs County Fair.
Mrs, Meinhart presented Mr s.
Holter with a hostess gift:. The
door prize was won by Mrs.
Reibel. · · Strawberry shortcake

Given Howard Young

95

til 0 O

o., MOillay, June

Costume Prizes Awarded
During .Class Patio Party

Surprise Party is

LP·OAS FORCED AI
HEATI GSYSTE $569

MYSTERY
PRIZE

lbs.

ITATI 0"- OtttO

DIPAI.TMINT 0P HIOMWAYI

ONLY

REE

James DaMer
Margaret Lehew
Ruth Brown
Marie Foster
Charlene HoeQich
Hobart WUson
Dick OWen
Pat Houck
Chet Tannehill
Jotm Morgan
Don Wright
Robert Wingett
K111t1e Cr!:M'
Bob Hoenich
Dick Thomas
Bea Lisle
Vernon DeWeese
4rry Boyer
Artus Bunch

MOTICI TO CONTU.CTOII

1

to 9:3Go$Un.12

�r. :

'

)

Ads·
Bring
Top
Grade
Results
Want
A LITTLE 'HOMEWORK' Watching

BARNEY

6 - The Dolly Sentinel, Pomei'OJ'•Iolldd!epao1, 0., 'lolallay, J-10, 1988

1.1••\L NOTICI

WAtn' AD
!NPOIMATIOM
DIAD~- Mil

2 SIGNs

J ,,,.. .,., ....... .IMIC...If'l
MeltiiiY ~liM t lolL

ea. ......,. • c..-nctleM
Wltl . . _.,... .. HI t •·•·
DIY .. Pvltllc.tttll
I . .UU,TIOIII
TM ,.....,_, ffttMI 1M

Mr

IIW • • tlettMd ...
IH+ftillab... TM pualttMr will Mt

.............. Mr ...............
tMtf'Nd 1n1trtllln.

lATII

Per W1nt Ad l1r'lk1

I cefttl .., W..... eM ll•rH•n

MiniMUm Cltlr.. nc
II ...... " ' nnl ...,.. .......

ttn lrllef't'-M·

11 Ctllb ,., WI,., ••• c~vtlft

lnttrtlefll.

U per ..... OIKM!ftl tft INN 1411
•"
. . ,... •'"''" 11 ...,.,
CUD Oil THAND a DetTUA.aY
t1.H .., If w.N

QUALITY

rlttll

....... ., ...fHt

·

OP

Pomeroy

BUIE.W,

Motor Co.

. .. save you time &amp; money. We
can supply mixed fertilizers &amp;
straisht materials you need- or

FERTILIZERS
apply them 1Df' you. Call today.

1965 CHEV. 2 TON HEAVY DIITY ..••..•..... ,$2495
825x20 - 10 ply tires, 2-.s,peed rear axle, 292 cu. in., 6
cyl. eng., extra clean and solid. Has 12 fl insulated van
body with rear and side doors.

PHONE
• 992-2181
611S · I1

1963 CHEVROLET ~. TON ..•......••....••• $995
700x17 tires. ll duty springs, solid. cab, covered body. Local
1 owner, low mileage.
1961 PONTiAC CAT. H. T. CPE. ............... $595
v..s motor, auto. trans., P.~. white tlnlsh, clean Interior.

Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
In Memory
IN MEMORY of my dear frlerMI,
Hattie M. Lawrence, who de-

........... wN If,

11.1'!10 ADI

tt•.,..rt· OfiPICI MOUII
IsM 1 .... tt I:M •• M. Dilly
. . . . . . . . lttlt ..............,

THE

parted this life June 10, 1965.

Pomeroy Motor Co. @)
_
OPEN EVE5. 1:00 p JA.
POMIItOY, Clti!O

HOU~Ilson: Erotic ~-""-"-'

Uf\oo

!. 1 !_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. . . .,

fish and supplies. Open 9 a.
For Rent
m. to 9 p.m. Tues&lt;lay tbrouP PLENTY of space lor one traD·
Saturday; Sunday and Moner with all facilities. In Syraday by appointment. First
cuse. Call 992-3t!K. 4-1!-tfc
road left, below Pleasant Pl.
Resort. Watch lor sip. Pb. FURNISHED and unfumlshed
67$-106$.
11-9-lotc
apartments. Close to school.
Phone 992-5143.
10-J.I.Ifc
WILL CARE FOR elderly men
and women, ambulatory or LARGE live room and bath
apartment, newly c!erora14!d,
bed patients, Mason Cllnlc,
fumaee hea~ Pomerov,
Mason.
6-7~P
Phone 99U30'1.
g.tfe
WILL CARE for elderly women
in my home. Phone 742-579!i. TRAILER SPACE, all utiUUoo
6-6-$p
avallable. Inqulre 15G Mulberry alter 3 or 5 p.m. Write P.
0. Box 425 Pomeroy. 6-2t-tfe
SHOOTINU MATCH Sunday,
June 9, noon to 4. Hams. bacon. baH of hog. ShotgUnS on- FURNISHED apartment, I" o
bedrooml, Middleport. Phone
ly. Rutland American Legion
1192-m4.
11-t-tfe
Rome.
11-5-41&lt;
TERMlTES SWARMING? They are re·productlves, not
your worker colony. Free Inspections and Information on
crawl space dangers. No
salesman, low overhead. 50
per cent savings. Allied Pest

Cmtrol.

Pomeroy,
Ohio.
Phone IIIS-58G9 evenings.

~p

WILL 00 sewing at home zippers, pockets, pegging.
hemming, alteraUons, etc.

Business Services

W 10:00 .\.M., Eattern DQ'DIIIt SP·
1111 11me. TuH&lt;laJ, June 15. 1811 for
lm-pronlnlllh laJ
Propoe .. N01 . 1 lnd J are ldf•r·
e4 u o•• coatract tn4 wUl bl
contltlei'ICI oa tbe bull of tbe
total amount bl4.

._......

POMEROY

lftlni'"U"'· ••·

,..,......_, til CMIWt .... ,.,.,..

NOTICI TO CONTIACTOitl
ITAl'l Ofl OHIO
DI ..AITMINT OP HIGMWAYI
CllulftbVI.o 01110, ,_, 11. INI
Contract lain L.. al CO" N•• tl-46t
UNIT P•tc:a CONTIACT
Sealed propoeala wiD be reeeil'ed
• at
the olftc•
of ColumbUI,
the State Ohio
Hllb,.,.
Dtnctor
of Ohio.
11ft. • _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.,._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. . .

Precious memories, how they
Unger,
How they ever aooct my soul.
In the sUilness of the midnight
Many sacred scenes unfold.

Highway en41"'1laMJ IQe Line
Atbeu, oaiHa, RoeldnJ, Melp Mollroe, MorJaft, Nobl• Ul4 Wuhln,ton
CollDUes. Ohlo. oa U.S. Bcr.!tel NOll·
8:1, 50. SU.te Route No. 13 hi Atberu
Coun\11 U. a. Route No. II. Stete
Rout-e No. UIO !D QaUla County; U.S.
Route No. Sll, Shtl aoutoe Noa:. !MI.
83, 180 ln HoekJnl CountJ; U.S . !LOUk
No. 33, state RGO.YI No. ' Ia 1hlll
County: Statf&gt; Rout~ No. 18 in Mo~ ·
roa eouatr• stat. aoute No. eo ta
Kor1an county: U. 8 .- Boat• No. Jl,
State Route No. MO Ia Noble Count11
Intentete Route No. Tl, U. S. Routol
N01. Jl, 110. IIOA, St.te JtOUte No. ft

For Sale

BLACK MINIATURE Poodle
Pups. $'15. West Highland
While Terriers $100, 11164
Farmall Cub Tractor, hydrau-

lic lilt, 3 point fast hitch, single plow, 5 f®t cutter bar
and disc $1100. Price linn. Little Barkaroo Kennels, Cool·
ville, Ohio, 66t-3654. 6-7-10lc
48 PASSENGER sehool bus,
good condition. new paint,
best ollet, Henry Bahr, phone
985-3SBB Chester.
6-7-31p

Pn"ement Wt4dl-VarlOUI.
"ProJeet t.eQt.h-41ol.ll 1111•·
Work Loarrtb.--CI.'fl Mllel.
,,....., Nt. I

•eur Inch ·aNI I l•t'- Leltt Line
Atbllll. Wathlnl(loll Couatltt.
fill 1J.S. Routel N01. 33, IMJ in AthiDI
memories
counb"1 Int.ent.ta Route No. 7'1, U.S.
Of this loving friend so true. noutee No1. 110. 50A, state Route No.
Precious memories robed in 7 Ia Wuhlllltoa CountJ, bJ I"P"Pb'ifll
Lane IJnet.
Pnement Wldtb-VerlOUI.
splen:lor.
Pro,ect Llnrth--t5.31 JOlla ,
Keep her always, Lord, with
WOI'k Lenath-IO·IM llllel.
''The date aet for contplaUon of
you.
thll worll thaD be u tel rorth lJl tbl
biddln• propoUI. ...
Each bidder ahall 1M nqu1n4 to
Amanda Wade Taylor
rue wtlh hll bid a e.rtl!led chid
Huntington Park, calif. ~nd t.hf' Ofu..... "t Ute DlvWlon JN..
but In no event mon
6 10 ltc oftbanhitt.nbid,tboueand
dollan or a boNJI
for ten 111r ce~tt ol tilt ltkl, pa,a.ble
to the DiredoY.
Bidden rnu•t apply. on the proper
IN LOVING MEMORY OF Kear- fol'lllll. for pnq~~t.UflcaUon with tiM
Hltlhwa' Credit Enrntner at Colum•
ney E. Ogdln, who passed away ·bua. Ohto, at leut 10 diJI belort tbl
one year ago today, June 10, date aet lo open blda.
The MlniiiiW'Il
to be "P8i6 to
1967.
all labor employed on thll contract
thaD be lD a«ordance with tbe "Scbe·
dule ot rrevaill~ Hourb'
Wall
No one knows the silent heart- BatH AaceMalned aa4 DlilrJniDed bJ
the Department of lnduetrla1 Rela·
ache,
tiOIUI applicable to State m~waJ 0.
For only those who have lost p,~rtmenl tmprovementa In aceordance
with Chapter 4.115 of tb.• BeriHd
can teU
Code of Ohio."
and apedtlcaUona .,. on ftll
or the ,grief Ulat is borne in tn Plan•
the Department of Hlfhwa)'l and
silence
lbe Orft~ of the Dl.'l'llloll Dftpaty
For the one we loved so well. Olrec\or.
The Dtrec:tor .-erne the J'llht to
Our hearts still ache with sad- n)ect uy and aU bide.

Obi•·

Hamm. Middleport, Ohio.

FARMS ln Meigs or lolaooo
County for oU and gas. Write
1c&gt; Chaweva Oll and G 11
Corp., 506 Cutler st., lolarlelta,

0.

S-»-IJip

W1nted To Buy

.-.

AIR CONDITIONio'IG

......,

$5.14 per monUt. Phone

m.

&amp;-4o4IC

11136.

above.

P~rt

. .ltll M1tk
IMNIN IMith

From the Laraest Truclt or
Bulltl&gt;zer Radlafllr To The
BSo:nalllest Heater Core.

-

C.'"'

CIHIII"'

lt. I PIMirrr
CALL COCX.YfU.I ......

EXPBT
·Wheel Alignment

F1oyd Wise. To each pallbearer, Re~. han Myers tor hls
consoling words and the Mar·
tin Funeral Home. Your kindnell will lllways be remembered. lolay God bless each one of
you.

lolrs. Floyd Wise and

•

Prl.. TOll
9.U J7

Sl..

650xi4
9JI .a
700.13
IO.U ,4a
700xl4
IOJI A3
7SOxi4
A.J
670x1S .
IIJI A7
Plul R_..... lt l•changt i

n.u

N•11onw~ Ouon-

-GUARAN'I'EEI),.

. !!

.POMEROY HOME AND
- .lUTO
NO't'ICI TO CONTIACTOitl
ITATI OP OHIO
DIPARTMINT OP HIDHWAoYI
COIUIIIbu.. Ohio Mer 11, 1961
centrad lalls Lafll COJIIJ No. 11-411

NICI COitTitACT
Sealed propoeall wiD bll received
.. UNIT

Pomeroy

MOTH PROOFING
lofaaon, W, Va.

'173-5543

EVINRIAlE
SALES AND SBRVICE

BEGINNERS
SPICIAL
$295.00
RED FISH BOAT

,pedfteatloDI

1ft

6-10

~,

Schwarzel Marine
Hockin_g~C)rt, Ohio

6 10 lip

Kt~~tucktl

Dtrbu?

A-Only one-Regret In
1915.

ProJeet abd Wor1r: lAqtb-IUIU

Co\Lab'

Road No, 3111 - o.oa. III:ITO&amp;AftON
OF KAUL ROAD I'OB Pa.OIBCr NO.

1~, In lllliabwT Towu~~Jlt, br nwri'actnt with upbalt CODCNM.
ra"mn.t Wid.tb-11 lolti.
ProJeet and Work ~-• felt
or 0.18 lml.
..,.. elate eet for com~a ef
tbll won lblll be .. en fortb tD
the blddlal prGPQIIl."
l:llch bld.der IIWl be nqulre4 to
flle with h1a bid a certllted ebee11:

for ID UlOIIJit oq"llll to flvO 111rcdt
If hll ~d, bat Ia ao evM'It more
tbla ten tbouuaCI dollart or a bood
for ten
cent .. till • .,, "PQ'Ibt.
to the J)lNc!tor.
Bidden mwt •PJIIJ, 01L 1bl pro-p., forma, lor prequa]Uicatloa wttll
lb• HlfbWI.J' Cndlt S.amJner It Columbu, Oldo, et taut 10 i4m befort the date Ht. to o-pen bldl.
ft4l lllDbnUIII wap to bo pMd to
aU labor IJnPloffl OD ttdl COD•
tnct 11110 be Ill aacor4aDce wltb ....
"Scbed.ule or PrtqUiaa: Hourb Wa1•
. . . Mclrt.ablold 11114 J)etermiM4
bJ the De"Pirtmlnt of tn4utrl.al Re·
lal:ktDI •P"PIJcabJo to StiWo m,b.'ft1
O.,attmant lmpro..-ementl In .ccotd·
Wltb Chapter 411J ol tbl ...

'·'

on it .'
due
home from
in
~he'!l&gt;

,.r

WMPO
INFORMATION
NEWS
presents

66 Buick .... $2,795
Electra 4 door sedan. Foe·

air conllUooed. Sui&gt;Orb
all while
finest One parl!cular local

tory

owner. Was $2,895.

66 GTO .. .. $2,495
Pontiac 2 dr. hardtop COIW"·
Juot arrived. 4 sp. shift. Poll.
trac. Sui&gt;Orb condition. one
very careful driver.

BLAEITNARS
BUICK

PONTIAC

LOCAL REPORTS~
DAILY
- Al
7:50 A.M.
12 NOON
3 P.M.
AND
4:30 P.M.

BUT NOTI-IIN' BEAlS L6ARMIN'

6V OOIM"I HER!&gt;I6EE HOW THIS

;;1-m f COT A ~EAL NERVOUS ',--- --'-;
:;mGG~. SO WAT~ li!
, BUT,

PAW '

WON'T

I="OU&lt;£···'?

l&lt;eeping Meigs
Gollio and
Mason Area
Informed As
Well As

81 I I ER 1-JtN 'TWE
LASER. CAJN ~.
WE OOJh WANT IT
'It)

Enterloined

GMC TRUCKS

DAILY CROSSWORD
r\()110!18
I. Doclaro
I . Larp

worm

. .....

I. Hun.... of
"'rlaln

t.G~uar-

tlvevole
u. CUI&amp;

nit
11. Bam·

DOWN
I. Combat

boollllo

IO.Kul

oncmt.DMcor'o

te.&amp;:'"
optlllnf

. cymbolo

II. Wlnpd

II. Oolltr,
Atno14

ll.llllbto

ctml-

0B

IT.~

thtpoor
4.Adolototnt
yean

8. Blundort.,.
.. flllltl1

llnle!

··-abbr.

T.Bplubod

"Safety belts? Too much fuss
and bother."

llllo

IIUn

-Miah"l Gonlao (1948·1968)

-

11.-)0o.
UNI :

OH.D~AR! I
TORE THE BAG!
SOMETHING!

UnKrunble thete four Jumble~t
one letter to eaeh square, to

form (our ordinary words.

SUNDAY·'• . . . .

Soot.

IS. Dart

SI.Bmudp

111. Work !lard

II. Ctctwo

IS. LawfUl
II. Iqo'o
wlfo

IO.Loooo
U.ladJM
ttau

at.

''Loon~

Towor''
ctty

d. Compoint

44.Toor

C]
(.be-n IOMerro•)

SUNDAY' J•...le• NAZIL YOCAL .· ,ALIIII U"fC
4-.rl Fllal lfl•y NfWd ttl '"- Nclptt•

JH1ny-IHOI1CAIII
CARl., lfE«R L~E WILL

eE

JOIII 115 ON 11tE 'llll1tACI!

"EI!~I~'S I WITH u~ UNTIL HIS PlANE 1$
DOlORES .,
I
HIM 10 0N1! OF 11tE GUEST

m•.

.....,

better~tep

rr I'GAIIJ 1

M~i'..!

ftle tn tbo Department of IOttlnJS
aMI U. Ofllel of tiM: DIYiffn '019ut' Dlnclor.
lo
'!'hi Dtnetor ....,... . . diM
l't'JHf. aDJ and aD blfll.
P. •· MA....,._

.. 101 ..1, lbl

Then llOU'd

I lJ.IIIJK 1 I!I.£W

I-ll'

DlldcTOa

children

~~~~

TRAILER

'· •. MAlHI,...

ID4

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

MASTE'RCRAFT

than t.1 tbcnUaNI llloDan or 1 bond
fer . . . . ., cent of till IJ,Id, pQ"abll
to 1hl J)lrldo?.
BMdiH mud Q"Plf, 0111 the ,ropo
.r romw. tor -preqalllllleattOD wlt1l
th• m«ttwn Clledlt Zumb'ler at Co- ' YIM4 Codll or Oblo,"'
turnw.. ()hlo, at lllut 10 4m »
P1uY aDd IPIOIIIcaUoDI IN on .
ron tll• ttate Mt to Q1)eft bllll.
flle In tho Deparit~aat of HJ.thwan
-n.e JnDlmatn . .,. to ,_ Pll4 1D uu1 lb OflleO of u. Dt'l'llln·· rtep.
all lahnr em.p1o,.d 011 tbll contrari
lltJ Dlnc&amp;Or.
eball be Ia HCICII'\t8eefl wtth . .
, _ DI.Hdar ,_.... tbo rllb' w
"kfledUhll e~r Pnn.lllnl Roa.riJ . . . .
rtJeet 1117 and •n 11t41.
Meertalnad ad IJWM......
fly Ute 01-pa~t rof Jallulb'lll ...
OtiiCTOII
laUOM applletble to State ~ftJ
1-101 ..n 1to
ue-partm.rtt Jmoronntenb tn .eeet'4·
anet wHh cttaptn 4111 ol till ...
1'illd Code of Ohio ...

PI&amp;!UI

SOMEOI-IE'S

LIITDIIN' t..lt

SAVE SPACE

Q-Ha any lll!v ewr won

the

P..-t Ne. ~
' ~-Melli Cov.nlJ', ObiO. 08 SICtlON
JI&amp;G - Old St.atl Boat. Mo. l a 0.00-0.'11. Old State Jtoute No. 143,
11'1 SalllbV.rJ' Towuldp, and ... tbe
VWap of lllddlepori. llr IWIIII1ac·
lilt With uPhllt conente.
PavemoDt Wldtb-Varlo1la.

•a•

??-Al-l HEAR
e&gt;REATHIN' !!

PUONBIII.am .

at the ortke of lhl State Hllbwu
Director of Ohio Columbua. Ohlo un·
Ul 10:00 A.M., Eutlm DIJ'Jlih\ SaY•
on• Time. l't.esday, lune 25, 11111, for
lrnprovemuta l.n:
Part. N01 . l to S blclwll'e u t
offered u oM coatrac1 aDd wlD
be colllider.d on lhe b.... of
llle toW amOUDt bW..
Pert No. I
M:fllp CouDtJ, Ollfo, oa a.d:loa
MIIG • 0.00 • tamporei'J :n111te to reUn• tralftc at PomeroJ•Jiuoa BrldJe.
1n the VUiafe of Pomer'OJ, Q" I'MUl'fldlll" -.:ltb. uphiJt coocnt.e.
Pavement Wldth- 14 JMt.
Pn!Ject aa4 Wort ~ftltb-t.IUJI
feet or 0.17 1111111.

lnt or l .BD Milea.
Pert IN. I
lltltl Co1UitJ, Ollia. on

CALL '/OO{f

~::::::::::::::::~ ~

FIRESTOfiE DLC 100
IHiW TRIAD-IILACKWALL

5.55

PnJect and Work Ler~llth - e.UU
fefl or 1.22 "Milet.
Ptrt N•~ I
H0ekJnjf CounlJ, Ohio, oft 8ectl01U1
HOC • !WII • (l.Jl...IT'J, lltate "Rotlk
No . 5H, In GreeD aad Wud TOWil·
1h1P1, by IPP~ • bltumlDOUI eold
ml• Nrbu c:oune.
PIYement Wldtb-VutooiProJect and Work LenJth - 21,700.1
feet ot Ul J(ll...
Pert No. I
VInton CcnantJ, ()blo, aD Sedlcnll
~ . 110 . !9.2BJ ru .IJ4l, state "Route
No. ItO, In Cltn\on and Vllrton Tow!lehiPJ. by apply\nr 1 bltmDlnOUI .r·
face treatm.nt.
Pa,.oment Widtb-11 feat .
Pr'O'oet and Work IAD,._.,.3a.O
rut or a.u Mtlet.
Ptrt 1111. 4
MelD COD.ntJ, Oblo, OD ~

dear husband and father, Re'Y.

~

our third Door budget lbop.

650xl3

coune.
Pu·ement Wldth--18 f.-1.

Business Servicn

Refrllar- BUDGET PROCZ

PH. 119:1.2143

ABC ClEANERS

N1. 1

AI-! DIDN'T

BLAET1NARS

Rll!ADV - lollX conerote dallv· SEWING MACl!INES, npalr
service. an mateo. WY 1erecl right 1c&gt; your projeet.
Fast and easy. FrM 4!1111- 2284. The P'abr!c Sbop, fom.
eroy. Autlootlled Slnglll' Sales
mates. Phone 911M214, Goes·
and Service. We Sbl!d'pen
leln Ready - Mb: Co., Mlddl&amp;Selssors.
.....,,
port, Ohio.
8 30 lfc

f~ce

RADIO II TV repair, reasonable prl&lt;'.e8. Antenna II BoosClnlof111anb
ter service. John Harrison,
701 Broadway St., Middleport, 1 WISH fD thank all my frie!Mis,
nelghbors and relatives torthe
Ohio. Phone ml522, open
flowers, food that was sent to
evenings.
6-WIIIc
u1 1t the time ot death of our

ANTIQUES, fumlture, dishes,
CURTISS "DAffiY BEEF''
miscellaneous. Mrs. Howard SAVE PI or more on aluminum
breeding ..rvlce. Call laancl
cecn. aoo w. Maln St., Pome. boats. All sizeS IO.IJ.13-14 Parker,
Pomeroy residence
l&lt;&gt;ot. can 99Z-2347, or 99Z-6151.
fOJ.
1-Z.tfc
m-2284
or
call otatlon 'l'llpo
i-~
pen Plal111 ft1-31lil. 8 Ulte
For S.le or Trade
1968 OLDS, 442, 4 speed, phone WALNUT STEIUXJ radio. Bes- APPALOSSA STUD service. By
tilul contemporary walnut steM9-3'111.
&amp;-4o4IC
reo with AM II MF r.UO, d6- appointment, phone 991-8112.
i-1..-P
lun lloalini! turntable, dual
Help Wanted
volume control. Four speed
C. C. BRADPORil
LADY for housework, oox*, Uve
automatic cbanger. Pay only
,\UcnONEER
In or out. phone ~1. 11 per month or balaDoe
Colllpleto flenkt
tact 0. IHndy over Liberty
m .a. Free home deiOOIIIIraWrite,
Pllaoe or Coetoet
Tbeatre, Middleport lor ID1Ir·
lloo. can 99Z-W.
11-1.ete
Crllt Br....
view.
~
llld8e.
Olllt
MAPLE STEREO. 1J8I model
I I tfe
WAITRESS and el!ll' hop. Apply
stereo. Lovely maple, AM II
In person. Crow'• 8leU
FM radio. Four speed a1JIG.
Hause.
..... maUc cbanger, 1...- speakor CIGARE'ITE vending madllnes
IIJIIIIem. Pay only $11.51 or
and oorviet. ABC Enterpril&lt;l,
monthly paymenll vi •· rr..
MaiOII, W. Va. Pbone 77U50.
home demonstratioo, call IDU.Ue
Auction
3Zll.
6-7.ete
CONSIGNMENT Sale: Complete
lnsurtnce
tine of farm madtlnery and RESTAURANT equipmenl. Call
AUTOMOBB.E tnsuranee beew
household Items. June 15 start.
RuUand Furniture, 7U.CII.
eanceDed? Loot your operatlog at noon. Sidcbill auctloll
11-Ntc
or'• license? can
on Leo Morris lal'ln, Rutland.
I II tfe
Oblo. Anyone wishing IG tell A NEW shipment of clothlne
any Item at the sale call 741has arrived. womeu's and
4841 or 74U817. Not respooClllldren's and Melt's WOI'l
·\ sible lor accidents. Lunch wtll
Uniforms. Also Ford ~
be served. Terms of llale plekup truck, 4.speed tra..
CUb.
l-Ute
ml.ulon. Jeflm Clolh!ng
Store. Rt. 33, pomeroy.
u.ete
For S.le or Rent
FIVE ROOM ho.- and bllll,
aluminum llldfng, storm wtn. CORN, 12110 bulhell, Dallu
Hill, Letart Falll, Phone lf7·
........ Pholle IIIUI1I.
21M.
~

.. •

FREE STORAGE

AthenJ Count,.. Ohio. on SeeU-.
ATH . 3!18 - 0.00. State Route No.
3511. tn Wlterloo Towmblp. bJ a~
plytnr a bllumtnou• coUI rni:J: 111r·

HAIR!!

'

ar

Baker Fumllure, Middleport,
Oblo.
? tl tie

Improvement&amp; in:
Putl Not, l to 4 tncluslve are
oftfl'ed u o11e contract aad wiD
be con.ldered on the bull of
tl'le tetal amoun' b\4,

lHA'T?

Atlwwlltw'.,.,_

aUon service. Jack's Refrtg.
eraUon, New Raven. hone
1182-J1'111.
4 • lfc

L..,,,

..•. . -·
'

DAD&amp;URN
HAIR!!

No

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

PHONE 667·3682

0.0. Rolootellor. Brobr
But they have gone to prepare
POMEROY - 1 story S rooms,
the"ll.Y
AM we'll meet them a g a i n
bath, coJTYenlent to stores, !&amp;some happy day.
vel lot. Make offer.
msw.
u s t1o
For God has told us that n«Xhing
DAIRY F\UIM, 292 acres, 150
can sever
Improved pasture, 80 In eullt.
1957 GMC hall-ton pldmp; also
A
Hie He created to live on
vaUon, 3 ponds, 3 gas welll,
two year old SI!Uill horse. Ph.
forever.
free gas, Income; z barns, 2
742-4435.
&amp;-4o4IC
So
let God's promise soften our 1lllO • 111 .a .00. Stall aoate Mo.
houses, baths, other bulldlnp.
881. In Bclpio Townlblp. bJ a,Ptr•
sorrow
FARMS WANTED
1968 ZIG ZAG portable, slllbtI bltamhiOUI IIUifiiCI truteeftt.
AOO give us new strength for lq
p;...ment Wldtti=--11 r•t.
HELEN oad VIRGU. TEAFORD
ly used; does everything withPnJeet u4 wo" LeDCUI -to.m.J
a brighter tomorrow.
Alloclllel-lb.m5
out attachments; In good con.
;rut or 1.04 lltl...
•....._ of
-n.e tllt- -" ror com-p.-.s,rac-, OMo
dillon, $5.98 per month, or
sadly missed by her SOIUI and thl• -n. thaD 1M •• ... forGt. Ill
the btddiJlt -pto~·'"
full price of $49.10. For free
daughters and families.
Each bld4.r .tltD bl nqutrd 14
bome demonstration, call 99Z6 10 lip ..... wtth ..... bM • etrtlDI4 elllae)::
for an amount equal to ftvt ,... c.2838.
8-4-81&lt;
.. .... IJ,td, "but tn no nent more

SMALL ACREAGE, no buflding,
state price and tull partlcolars. Write Bm: 8418 F 0&lt;1 the
Dally Sentinel, Pomeroy.
l-7.ete STEREO RADIO 0010blnaUon;
repossessed; beautiful cabl·
net, like new. Balance due
GOOD USED Elec. Roaater.
f87, or make payments of
Chester Fire Dept., Pbooe

each

lATER JEST
SPROUTED
HIS FUST

ME UP FER

::r.·

dty·fDIII .-tl!od. i'tO IIIIU. No fiiU .
odOf. UM rvtt tftt Nlllt diJ.

TUPPERS PLAINS, O,

MOTICI TO CONTIACTOII
STATI OP OHIO
DII"A.TMINT OJ HtDHWAYI
ColuMbu•. Ohkl ~Y 11, ttll
c..-.tr•ct ..,"
CopY Ne. 61-417
UNIT Patel CONTIACT
SealH roropoula will be reeetvtd
at the office of the State mlbwaJ
Director of Ohio Columbul. Ohio un·
UJ 10:00 A.M., llutenl DQ'Uiht Sn·
ln~r Time. Tuetdar. June 25, tiMI. for

f&gt;.1f.301c POODLE PUPPIES. AKC Toy
miniature. $'15 and up. Stud
service and grooming. Phooe

Wanted To l.Hse

levlvt tile Olillfttl blllltt of JOI!
Cluntd In JOUr own IIOIIIt r Vtn II

QYDEKUHN

P. B. MASHEID
DJRECI'&lt;&gt;R
1\Ule tl).l'r
Ito

GERT'S A GAY GIRL - Ready lor a whirl, alter cleQDlng
Phone '173-5651.
4-!o.tfe THREE ACRES, 5 room house,
carpets with Blue IAIBire.
new roof, bam, cellar, two
Rent elecltlc sham...-, $1,
HAPPY HOUR, Shenang Sprlnp cisterns and furniture $4500.
Baker FurnitUre.
11-1~ IN LOVlNG memor)" or our dear
Nito Club, 5 to 8 p.m. MonPhone 742-5613.
5-16-30tp
mother, Ella Ebersbach, who
day thru Friday. Ladles nlgbl
passed away three .years ago,
Real Estate For Sale
every Friday.
S.We LARGE HOUSE In Racine, 9
June 10, 1965.
rooms, one thiN! acre lot,
We feel sad when those we love
good locaUon, $8500. Phone
For Tr1de
Are caHed to live in the home
949-$75:.
i-29-12te
CASH FOR Antiques. Bill

HOBSTETTER
REALTY

plUI tax

w..-

Karen Griffith and Carmie and
Keith Jares.
6 10 ltc

For Sale

Mrs. Freddie Thabet. Ma11011,

ALL SIZES
$12.00

BdJe Lfllu.

FOUR ROOM HOUSE, bath,
basement, two large loll. In
Racine. Call 992-21139 or 949&amp; ROOMS AND BATII, 170 MW.
2951.
6-7~p
berry Ave., Pomeroy. em.
ne.sa,
tact Rose Sillson, phone 111- TWO BEDROOM home, bath
And
our eyes shed many tears.
%049 alter 5 p.m. Phone 111lull basement, garege: TwoGod only knows how we miss
:1131.
ll-l4lc
year-old home in Syracuse.
him
Phone 99Z-2ill.
f&gt;.~
At the end or Lhe first year.
SINGLE HOUSES, nlce loea·
A happy home we once enjoyed
tlon, apartments !urnlahed II FOR BE'ITER cleaning, to
But death has lefi a loneliness
unlumlsbed In Middleport,
keep colors gleaming, u s e
That none can ever fill.
phone llft.M.
'"'We
Blue Lustre carpet eleanor. Sadly missed by his wife, Anna,
Rent electric shampooer $1.
and two daughters, Maxine aNI
Baker Furniture.
&amp;-4o4IC
Janet Abo grandchildren,

----

TIRES

In Wuhi~D County, by lpP}fiD.I

Thank you Lord for precious

GOOD DAffiY HAY to cut on
shares. Alba Yost, Minersville.
I-WI&gt;

GUARANTEED REPAIRED
AS.SORTEO AWUSTMENT

LOOKV, PAW!!

EXPERIENCED
lt~llfor Service

BRING NEW
LIFE TO
YOUR
CARPETING

TIRES

,_

ONE

'IE WOKE

JNSISTENCf, NIKKI \10M

.QUICK QUIZ
Q-11 there any article ill
the ehllrter of datehood of
Tt%01 thllt grant• prillilege•
110t glven to other states 1
A-The opeclal prlvUeges

which are accorded to Tou•
by Ito constitution are the
rellel'Ved right to all publle
lando of ltie state, and the
rllht to subdivide Into not
more than ftve states.

A Ot)Jtl.,_ Q1:1taMn

KIN

HIIJJ

BC.OBNOU

BBIXOX

YN ZIDIC YZBV
ZIDKUXJK '!-UJ:BOXR

'ltiU"'f WA$11!1&gt; UP, 'Ttlllrf LEE •

.. --.-.

TORTE lru.UCTANTLY
INYITM TERRY TO
'STAY AT H15 CA'STlf
UNTIL A ~EPlACE •

Ma.T C. . .RETOR
MR!YE$.

SUNDAY'I Crn&gt;loll-• MAin A MAN'S TONOUII:
BIIAKJ:8 OU'I' HIS KA8'l'I:R'S UNDOINO.-SHAKll18PIWUI:

Publls~td to s1vellvealn cooperation with
The Advertlt~ln5': r.ounell, the National Safety CouncU,

The tntematlonal Newspaper Advertlslna becutlves.

I
()

'

I

I

HOW'S 71147' FER
QUICK THINKING 1

DOC?

�r. :

'

)

Ads·
Bring
Top
Grade
Results
Want
A LITTLE 'HOMEWORK' Watching

BARNEY

6 - The Dolly Sentinel, Pomei'OJ'•Iolldd!epao1, 0., 'lolallay, J-10, 1988

1.1••\L NOTICI

WAtn' AD
!NPOIMATIOM
DIAD~- Mil

2 SIGNs

J ,,,.. .,., ....... .IMIC...If'l
MeltiiiY ~liM t lolL

ea. ......,. • c..-nctleM
Wltl . . _.,... .. HI t •·•·
DIY .. Pvltllc.tttll
I . .UU,TIOIII
TM ,.....,_, ffttMI 1M

Mr

IIW • • tlettMd ...
IH+ftillab... TM pualttMr will Mt

.............. Mr ...............
tMtf'Nd 1n1trtllln.

lATII

Per W1nt Ad l1r'lk1

I cefttl .., W..... eM ll•rH•n

MiniMUm Cltlr.. nc
II ...... " ' nnl ...,.. .......

ttn lrllef't'-M·

11 Ctllb ,., WI,., ••• c~vtlft

lnttrtlefll.

U per ..... OIKM!ftl tft INN 1411
•"
. . ,... •'"''" 11 ...,.,
CUD Oil THAND a DetTUA.aY
t1.H .., If w.N

QUALITY

rlttll

....... ., ...fHt

·

OP

Pomeroy

BUIE.W,

Motor Co.

. .. save you time &amp; money. We
can supply mixed fertilizers &amp;
straisht materials you need- or

FERTILIZERS
apply them 1Df' you. Call today.

1965 CHEV. 2 TON HEAVY DIITY ..••..•..... ,$2495
825x20 - 10 ply tires, 2-.s,peed rear axle, 292 cu. in., 6
cyl. eng., extra clean and solid. Has 12 fl insulated van
body with rear and side doors.

PHONE
• 992-2181
611S · I1

1963 CHEVROLET ~. TON ..•......••....••• $995
700x17 tires. ll duty springs, solid. cab, covered body. Local
1 owner, low mileage.
1961 PONTiAC CAT. H. T. CPE. ............... $595
v..s motor, auto. trans., P.~. white tlnlsh, clean Interior.

Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
In Memory
IN MEMORY of my dear frlerMI,
Hattie M. Lawrence, who de-

........... wN If,

11.1'!10 ADI

tt•.,..rt· OfiPICI MOUII
IsM 1 .... tt I:M •• M. Dilly
. . . . . . . . lttlt ..............,

THE

parted this life June 10, 1965.

Pomeroy Motor Co. @)
_
OPEN EVE5. 1:00 p JA.
POMIItOY, Clti!O

HOU~Ilson: Erotic ~-""-"-'

Uf\oo

!. 1 !_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. . . .,

fish and supplies. Open 9 a.
For Rent
m. to 9 p.m. Tues&lt;lay tbrouP PLENTY of space lor one traD·
Saturday; Sunday and Moner with all facilities. In Syraday by appointment. First
cuse. Call 992-3t!K. 4-1!-tfc
road left, below Pleasant Pl.
Resort. Watch lor sip. Pb. FURNISHED and unfumlshed
67$-106$.
11-9-lotc
apartments. Close to school.
Phone 992-5143.
10-J.I.Ifc
WILL CARE FOR elderly men
and women, ambulatory or LARGE live room and bath
apartment, newly c!erora14!d,
bed patients, Mason Cllnlc,
fumaee hea~ Pomerov,
Mason.
6-7~P
Phone 99U30'1.
g.tfe
WILL CARE for elderly women
in my home. Phone 742-579!i. TRAILER SPACE, all utiUUoo
6-6-$p
avallable. Inqulre 15G Mulberry alter 3 or 5 p.m. Write P.
0. Box 425 Pomeroy. 6-2t-tfe
SHOOTINU MATCH Sunday,
June 9, noon to 4. Hams. bacon. baH of hog. ShotgUnS on- FURNISHED apartment, I" o
bedrooml, Middleport. Phone
ly. Rutland American Legion
1192-m4.
11-t-tfe
Rome.
11-5-41&lt;
TERMlTES SWARMING? They are re·productlves, not
your worker colony. Free Inspections and Information on
crawl space dangers. No
salesman, low overhead. 50
per cent savings. Allied Pest

Cmtrol.

Pomeroy,
Ohio.
Phone IIIS-58G9 evenings.

~p

WILL 00 sewing at home zippers, pockets, pegging.
hemming, alteraUons, etc.

Business Services

W 10:00 .\.M., Eattern DQ'DIIIt SP·
1111 11me. TuH&lt;laJ, June 15. 1811 for
lm-pronlnlllh laJ
Propoe .. N01 . 1 lnd J are ldf•r·
e4 u o•• coatract tn4 wUl bl
contltlei'ICI oa tbe bull of tbe
total amount bl4.

._......

POMEROY

lftlni'"U"'· ••·

,..,......_, til CMIWt .... ,.,.,..

NOTICI TO CONTIACTOitl
ITAl'l Ofl OHIO
DI ..AITMINT OP HIGMWAYI
CllulftbVI.o 01110, ,_, 11. INI
Contract lain L.. al CO" N•• tl-46t
UNIT P•tc:a CONTIACT
Sealed propoeala wiD be reeeil'ed
• at
the olftc•
of ColumbUI,
the State Ohio
Hllb,.,.
Dtnctor
of Ohio.
11ft. • _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.,._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. . .

Precious memories, how they
Unger,
How they ever aooct my soul.
In the sUilness of the midnight
Many sacred scenes unfold.

Highway en41"'1laMJ IQe Line
Atbeu, oaiHa, RoeldnJ, Melp Mollroe, MorJaft, Nobl• Ul4 Wuhln,ton
CollDUes. Ohlo. oa U.S. Bcr.!tel NOll·
8:1, 50. SU.te Route No. 13 hi Atberu
Coun\11 U. a. Route No. II. Stete
Rout-e No. UIO !D QaUla County; U.S.
Route No. Sll, Shtl aoutoe Noa:. !MI.
83, 180 ln HoekJnl CountJ; U.S . !LOUk
No. 33, state RGO.YI No. ' Ia 1hlll
County: Statf&gt; Rout~ No. 18 in Mo~ ·
roa eouatr• stat. aoute No. eo ta
Kor1an county: U. 8 .- Boat• No. Jl,
State Route No. MO Ia Noble Count11
Intentete Route No. Tl, U. S. Routol
N01. Jl, 110. IIOA, St.te JtOUte No. ft

For Sale

BLACK MINIATURE Poodle
Pups. $'15. West Highland
While Terriers $100, 11164
Farmall Cub Tractor, hydrau-

lic lilt, 3 point fast hitch, single plow, 5 f®t cutter bar
and disc $1100. Price linn. Little Barkaroo Kennels, Cool·
ville, Ohio, 66t-3654. 6-7-10lc
48 PASSENGER sehool bus,
good condition. new paint,
best ollet, Henry Bahr, phone
985-3SBB Chester.
6-7-31p

Pn"ement Wt4dl-VarlOUI.
"ProJeet t.eQt.h-41ol.ll 1111•·
Work Loarrtb.--CI.'fl Mllel.
,,....., Nt. I

•eur Inch ·aNI I l•t'- Leltt Line
Atbllll. Wathlnl(loll Couatltt.
fill 1J.S. Routel N01. 33, IMJ in AthiDI
memories
counb"1 Int.ent.ta Route No. 7'1, U.S.
Of this loving friend so true. noutee No1. 110. 50A, state Route No.
Precious memories robed in 7 Ia Wuhlllltoa CountJ, bJ I"P"Pb'ifll
Lane IJnet.
Pnement Wldtb-VerlOUI.
splen:lor.
Pro,ect Llnrth--t5.31 JOlla ,
Keep her always, Lord, with
WOI'k Lenath-IO·IM llllel.
''The date aet for contplaUon of
you.
thll worll thaD be u tel rorth lJl tbl
biddln• propoUI. ...
Each bidder ahall 1M nqu1n4 to
Amanda Wade Taylor
rue wtlh hll bid a e.rtl!led chid
Huntington Park, calif. ~nd t.hf' Ofu..... "t Ute DlvWlon JN..
but In no event mon
6 10 ltc oftbanhitt.nbid,tboueand
dollan or a boNJI
for ten 111r ce~tt ol tilt ltkl, pa,a.ble
to the DiredoY.
Bidden rnu•t apply. on the proper
IN LOVING MEMORY OF Kear- fol'lllll. for pnq~~t.UflcaUon with tiM
Hltlhwa' Credit Enrntner at Colum•
ney E. Ogdln, who passed away ·bua. Ohto, at leut 10 diJI belort tbl
one year ago today, June 10, date aet lo open blda.
The MlniiiiW'Il
to be "P8i6 to
1967.
all labor employed on thll contract
thaD be lD a«ordance with tbe "Scbe·
dule ot rrevaill~ Hourb'
Wall
No one knows the silent heart- BatH AaceMalned aa4 DlilrJniDed bJ
the Department of lnduetrla1 Rela·
ache,
tiOIUI applicable to State m~waJ 0.
For only those who have lost p,~rtmenl tmprovementa In aceordance
with Chapter 4.115 of tb.• BeriHd
can teU
Code of Ohio."
and apedtlcaUona .,. on ftll
or the ,grief Ulat is borne in tn Plan•
the Department of Hlfhwa)'l and
silence
lbe Orft~ of the Dl.'l'llloll Dftpaty
For the one we loved so well. Olrec\or.
The Dtrec:tor .-erne the J'llht to
Our hearts still ache with sad- n)ect uy and aU bide.

Obi•·

Hamm. Middleport, Ohio.

FARMS ln Meigs or lolaooo
County for oU and gas. Write
1c&gt; Chaweva Oll and G 11
Corp., 506 Cutler st., lolarlelta,

0.

S-»-IJip

W1nted To Buy

.-.

AIR CONDITIONio'IG

......,

$5.14 per monUt. Phone

m.

&amp;-4o4IC

11136.

above.

P~rt

. .ltll M1tk
IMNIN IMith

From the Laraest Truclt or
Bulltl&gt;zer Radlafllr To The
BSo:nalllest Heater Core.

-

C.'"'

CIHIII"'

lt. I PIMirrr
CALL COCX.YfU.I ......

EXPBT
·Wheel Alignment

F1oyd Wise. To each pallbearer, Re~. han Myers tor hls
consoling words and the Mar·
tin Funeral Home. Your kindnell will lllways be remembered. lolay God bless each one of
you.

lolrs. Floyd Wise and

•

Prl.. TOll
9.U J7

Sl..

650xi4
9JI .a
700.13
IO.U ,4a
700xl4
IOJI A3
7SOxi4
A.J
670x1S .
IIJI A7
Plul R_..... lt l•changt i

n.u

N•11onw~ Ouon-

-GUARAN'I'EEI),.

. !!

.POMEROY HOME AND
- .lUTO
NO't'ICI TO CONTIACTOitl
ITATI OP OHIO
DIPARTMINT OP HIDHWAoYI
COIUIIIbu.. Ohio Mer 11, 1961
centrad lalls Lafll COJIIJ No. 11-411

NICI COitTitACT
Sealed propoeall wiD bll received
.. UNIT

Pomeroy

MOTH PROOFING
lofaaon, W, Va.

'173-5543

EVINRIAlE
SALES AND SBRVICE

BEGINNERS
SPICIAL
$295.00
RED FISH BOAT

,pedfteatloDI

1ft

6-10

~,

Schwarzel Marine
Hockin_g~C)rt, Ohio

6 10 lip

Kt~~tucktl

Dtrbu?

A-Only one-Regret In
1915.

ProJeet abd Wor1r: lAqtb-IUIU

Co\Lab'

Road No, 3111 - o.oa. III:ITO&amp;AftON
OF KAUL ROAD I'OB Pa.OIBCr NO.

1~, In lllliabwT Towu~~Jlt, br nwri'actnt with upbalt CODCNM.
ra"mn.t Wid.tb-11 lolti.
ProJeet and Work ~-• felt
or 0.18 lml.
..,.. elate eet for com~a ef
tbll won lblll be .. en fortb tD
the blddlal prGPQIIl."
l:llch bld.der IIWl be nqulre4 to
flle with h1a bid a certllted ebee11:

for ID UlOIIJit oq"llll to flvO 111rcdt
If hll ~d, bat Ia ao evM'It more
tbla ten tbouuaCI dollart or a bood
for ten
cent .. till • .,, "PQ'Ibt.
to the J)lNc!tor.
Bidden mwt •PJIIJ, 01L 1bl pro-p., forma, lor prequa]Uicatloa wttll
lb• HlfbWI.J' Cndlt S.amJner It Columbu, Oldo, et taut 10 i4m befort the date Ht. to o-pen bldl.
ft4l lllDbnUIII wap to bo pMd to
aU labor IJnPloffl OD ttdl COD•
tnct 11110 be Ill aacor4aDce wltb ....
"Scbed.ule or PrtqUiaa: Hourb Wa1•
. . . Mclrt.ablold 11114 J)etermiM4
bJ the De"Pirtmlnt of tn4utrl.al Re·
lal:ktDI •P"PIJcabJo to StiWo m,b.'ft1
O.,attmant lmpro..-ementl In .ccotd·
Wltb Chapter 411J ol tbl ...

'·'

on it .'
due
home from
in
~he'!l&gt;

,.r

WMPO
INFORMATION
NEWS
presents

66 Buick .... $2,795
Electra 4 door sedan. Foe·

air conllUooed. Sui&gt;Orb
all while
finest One parl!cular local

tory

owner. Was $2,895.

66 GTO .. .. $2,495
Pontiac 2 dr. hardtop COIW"·
Juot arrived. 4 sp. shift. Poll.
trac. Sui&gt;Orb condition. one
very careful driver.

BLAEITNARS
BUICK

PONTIAC

LOCAL REPORTS~
DAILY
- Al
7:50 A.M.
12 NOON
3 P.M.
AND
4:30 P.M.

BUT NOTI-IIN' BEAlS L6ARMIN'

6V OOIM"I HER!&gt;I6EE HOW THIS

;;1-m f COT A ~EAL NERVOUS ',--- --'-;
:;mGG~. SO WAT~ li!
, BUT,

PAW '

WON'T

I="OU&lt;£···'?

l&lt;eeping Meigs
Gollio and
Mason Area
Informed As
Well As

81 I I ER 1-JtN 'TWE
LASER. CAJN ~.
WE OOJh WANT IT
'It)

Enterloined

GMC TRUCKS

DAILY CROSSWORD
r\()110!18
I. Doclaro
I . Larp

worm

. .....

I. Hun.... of
"'rlaln

t.G~uar-

tlvevole
u. CUI&amp;

nit
11. Bam·

DOWN
I. Combat

boollllo

IO.Kul

oncmt.DMcor'o

te.&amp;:'"
optlllnf

. cymbolo

II. Wlnpd

II. Oolltr,
Atno14

ll.llllbto

ctml-

0B

IT.~

thtpoor
4.Adolototnt
yean

8. Blundort.,.
.. flllltl1

llnle!

··-abbr.

T.Bplubod

"Safety belts? Too much fuss
and bother."

llllo

IIUn

-Miah"l Gonlao (1948·1968)

-

11.-)0o.
UNI :

OH.D~AR! I
TORE THE BAG!
SOMETHING!

UnKrunble thete four Jumble~t
one letter to eaeh square, to

form (our ordinary words.

SUNDAY·'• . . . .

Soot.

IS. Dart

SI.Bmudp

111. Work !lard

II. Ctctwo

IS. LawfUl
II. Iqo'o
wlfo

IO.Loooo
U.ladJM
ttau

at.

''Loon~

Towor''
ctty

d. Compoint

44.Toor

C]
(.be-n IOMerro•)

SUNDAY' J•...le• NAZIL YOCAL .· ,ALIIII U"fC
4-.rl Fllal lfl•y NfWd ttl '"- Nclptt•

JH1ny-IHOI1CAIII
CARl., lfE«R L~E WILL

eE

JOIII 115 ON 11tE 'llll1tACI!

"EI!~I~'S I WITH u~ UNTIL HIS PlANE 1$
DOlORES .,
I
HIM 10 0N1! OF 11tE GUEST

m•.

.....,

better~tep

rr I'GAIIJ 1

M~i'..!

ftle tn tbo Department of IOttlnJS
aMI U. Ofllel of tiM: DIYiffn '019ut' Dlnclor.
lo
'!'hi Dtnetor ....,... . . diM
l't'JHf. aDJ and aD blfll.
P. •· MA....,._

.. 101 ..1, lbl

Then llOU'd

I lJ.IIIJK 1 I!I.£W

I-ll'

DlldcTOa

children

~~~~

TRAILER

'· •. MAlHI,...

ID4

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

MASTE'RCRAFT

than t.1 tbcnUaNI llloDan or 1 bond
fer . . . . ., cent of till IJ,Id, pQ"abll
to 1hl J)lrldo?.
BMdiH mud Q"Plf, 0111 the ,ropo
.r romw. tor -preqalllllleattOD wlt1l
th• m«ttwn Clledlt Zumb'ler at Co- ' YIM4 Codll or Oblo,"'
turnw.. ()hlo, at lllut 10 4m »
P1uY aDd IPIOIIIcaUoDI IN on .
ron tll• ttate Mt to Q1)eft bllll.
flle In tho Deparit~aat of HJ.thwan
-n.e JnDlmatn . .,. to ,_ Pll4 1D uu1 lb OflleO of u. Dt'l'llln·· rtep.
all lahnr em.p1o,.d 011 tbll contrari
lltJ Dlnc&amp;Or.
eball be Ia HCICII'\t8eefl wtth . .
, _ DI.Hdar ,_.... tbo rllb' w
"kfledUhll e~r Pnn.lllnl Roa.riJ . . . .
rtJeet 1117 and •n 11t41.
Meertalnad ad IJWM......
fly Ute 01-pa~t rof Jallulb'lll ...
OtiiCTOII
laUOM applletble to State ~ftJ
1-101 ..n 1to
ue-partm.rtt Jmoronntenb tn .eeet'4·
anet wHh cttaptn 4111 ol till ...
1'illd Code of Ohio ...

PI&amp;!UI

SOMEOI-IE'S

LIITDIIN' t..lt

SAVE SPACE

Q-Ha any lll!v ewr won

the

P..-t Ne. ~
' ~-Melli Cov.nlJ', ObiO. 08 SICtlON
JI&amp;G - Old St.atl Boat. Mo. l a 0.00-0.'11. Old State Jtoute No. 143,
11'1 SalllbV.rJ' Towuldp, and ... tbe
VWap of lllddlepori. llr IWIIII1ac·
lilt With uPhllt conente.
PavemoDt Wldtb-Varlo1la.

•a•

??-Al-l HEAR
e&gt;REATHIN' !!

PUONBIII.am .

at the ortke of lhl State Hllbwu
Director of Ohio Columbua. Ohlo un·
Ul 10:00 A.M., Eutlm DIJ'Jlih\ SaY•
on• Time. l't.esday, lune 25, 11111, for
lrnprovemuta l.n:
Part. N01 . l to S blclwll'e u t
offered u oM coatrac1 aDd wlD
be colllider.d on lhe b.... of
llle toW amOUDt bW..
Pert No. I
M:fllp CouDtJ, Ollfo, oa a.d:loa
MIIG • 0.00 • tamporei'J :n111te to reUn• tralftc at PomeroJ•Jiuoa BrldJe.
1n the VUiafe of Pomer'OJ, Q" I'MUl'fldlll" -.:ltb. uphiJt coocnt.e.
Pavement Wldth- 14 JMt.
Pn!Ject aa4 Wort ~ftltb-t.IUJI
feet or 0.17 1111111.

lnt or l .BD Milea.
Pert IN. I
lltltl Co1UitJ, Ollia. on

CALL '/OO{f

~::::::::::::::::~ ~

FIRESTOfiE DLC 100
IHiW TRIAD-IILACKWALL

5.55

PnJect and Work Ler~llth - e.UU
fefl or 1.22 "Milet.
Ptrt N•~ I
H0ekJnjf CounlJ, Ohio, oft 8ectl01U1
HOC • !WII • (l.Jl...IT'J, lltate "Rotlk
No . 5H, In GreeD aad Wud TOWil·
1h1P1, by IPP~ • bltumlDOUI eold
ml• Nrbu c:oune.
PIYement Wldtb-VutooiProJect and Work LenJth - 21,700.1
feet ot Ul J(ll...
Pert No. I
VInton CcnantJ, ()blo, aD Sedlcnll
~ . 110 . !9.2BJ ru .IJ4l, state "Route
No. ItO, In Cltn\on and Vllrton Tow!lehiPJ. by apply\nr 1 bltmDlnOUI .r·
face treatm.nt.
Pa,.oment Widtb-11 feat .
Pr'O'oet and Work IAD,._.,.3a.O
rut or a.u Mtlet.
Ptrt 1111. 4
MelD COD.ntJ, Oblo, OD ~

dear husband and father, Re'Y.

~

our third Door budget lbop.

650xl3

coune.
Pu·ement Wldth--18 f.-1.

Business Servicn

Refrllar- BUDGET PROCZ

PH. 119:1.2143

ABC ClEANERS

N1. 1

AI-! DIDN'T

BLAET1NARS

Rll!ADV - lollX conerote dallv· SEWING MACl!INES, npalr
service. an mateo. WY 1erecl right 1c&gt; your projeet.
Fast and easy. FrM 4!1111- 2284. The P'abr!c Sbop, fom.
eroy. Autlootlled Slnglll' Sales
mates. Phone 911M214, Goes·
and Service. We Sbl!d'pen
leln Ready - Mb: Co., Mlddl&amp;Selssors.
.....,,
port, Ohio.
8 30 lfc

f~ce

RADIO II TV repair, reasonable prl&lt;'.e8. Antenna II BoosClnlof111anb
ter service. John Harrison,
701 Broadway St., Middleport, 1 WISH fD thank all my frie!Mis,
nelghbors and relatives torthe
Ohio. Phone ml522, open
flowers, food that was sent to
evenings.
6-WIIIc
u1 1t the time ot death of our

ANTIQUES, fumlture, dishes,
CURTISS "DAffiY BEEF''
miscellaneous. Mrs. Howard SAVE PI or more on aluminum
breeding ..rvlce. Call laancl
cecn. aoo w. Maln St., Pome. boats. All sizeS IO.IJ.13-14 Parker,
Pomeroy residence
l&lt;&gt;ot. can 99Z-2347, or 99Z-6151.
fOJ.
1-Z.tfc
m-2284
or
call otatlon 'l'llpo
i-~
pen Plal111 ft1-31lil. 8 Ulte
For S.le or Trade
1968 OLDS, 442, 4 speed, phone WALNUT STEIUXJ radio. Bes- APPALOSSA STUD service. By
tilul contemporary walnut steM9-3'111.
&amp;-4o4IC
reo with AM II MF r.UO, d6- appointment, phone 991-8112.
i-1..-P
lun lloalini! turntable, dual
Help Wanted
volume control. Four speed
C. C. BRADPORil
LADY for housework, oox*, Uve
automatic cbanger. Pay only
,\UcnONEER
In or out. phone ~1. 11 per month or balaDoe
Colllpleto flenkt
tact 0. IHndy over Liberty
m .a. Free home deiOOIIIIraWrite,
Pllaoe or Coetoet
Tbeatre, Middleport lor ID1Ir·
lloo. can 99Z-W.
11-1.ete
Crllt Br....
view.
~
llld8e.
Olllt
MAPLE STEREO. 1J8I model
I I tfe
WAITRESS and el!ll' hop. Apply
stereo. Lovely maple, AM II
In person. Crow'• 8leU
FM radio. Four speed a1JIG.
Hause.
..... maUc cbanger, 1...- speakor CIGARE'ITE vending madllnes
IIJIIIIem. Pay only $11.51 or
and oorviet. ABC Enterpril&lt;l,
monthly paymenll vi •· rr..
MaiOII, W. Va. Pbone 77U50.
home demonstratioo, call IDU.Ue
Auction
3Zll.
6-7.ete
CONSIGNMENT Sale: Complete
lnsurtnce
tine of farm madtlnery and RESTAURANT equipmenl. Call
AUTOMOBB.E tnsuranee beew
household Items. June 15 start.
RuUand Furniture, 7U.CII.
eanceDed? Loot your operatlog at noon. Sidcbill auctloll
11-Ntc
or'• license? can
on Leo Morris lal'ln, Rutland.
I II tfe
Oblo. Anyone wishing IG tell A NEW shipment of clothlne
any Item at the sale call 741has arrived. womeu's and
4841 or 74U817. Not respooClllldren's and Melt's WOI'l
·\ sible lor accidents. Lunch wtll
Uniforms. Also Ford ~
be served. Terms of llale plekup truck, 4.speed tra..
CUb.
l-Ute
ml.ulon. Jeflm Clolh!ng
Store. Rt. 33, pomeroy.
u.ete
For S.le or Rent
FIVE ROOM ho.- and bllll,
aluminum llldfng, storm wtn. CORN, 12110 bulhell, Dallu
Hill, Letart Falll, Phone lf7·
........ Pholle IIIUI1I.
21M.
~

.. •

FREE STORAGE

AthenJ Count,.. Ohio. on SeeU-.
ATH . 3!18 - 0.00. State Route No.
3511. tn Wlterloo Towmblp. bJ a~
plytnr a bllumtnou• coUI rni:J: 111r·

HAIR!!

'

ar

Baker Fumllure, Middleport,
Oblo.
? tl tie

Improvement&amp; in:
Putl Not, l to 4 tncluslve are
oftfl'ed u o11e contract aad wiD
be con.ldered on the bull of
tl'le tetal amoun' b\4,

lHA'T?

Atlwwlltw'.,.,_

aUon service. Jack's Refrtg.
eraUon, New Raven. hone
1182-J1'111.
4 • lfc

L..,,,

..•. . -·
'

DAD&amp;URN
HAIR!!

No

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

PHONE 667·3682

0.0. Rolootellor. Brobr
But they have gone to prepare
POMEROY - 1 story S rooms,
the"ll.Y
AM we'll meet them a g a i n
bath, coJTYenlent to stores, !&amp;some happy day.
vel lot. Make offer.
msw.
u s t1o
For God has told us that n«Xhing
DAIRY F\UIM, 292 acres, 150
can sever
Improved pasture, 80 In eullt.
1957 GMC hall-ton pldmp; also
A
Hie He created to live on
vaUon, 3 ponds, 3 gas welll,
two year old SI!Uill horse. Ph.
forever.
free gas, Income; z barns, 2
742-4435.
&amp;-4o4IC
So
let God's promise soften our 1lllO • 111 .a .00. Stall aoate Mo.
houses, baths, other bulldlnp.
881. In Bclpio Townlblp. bJ a,Ptr•
sorrow
FARMS WANTED
1968 ZIG ZAG portable, slllbtI bltamhiOUI IIUifiiCI truteeftt.
AOO give us new strength for lq
p;...ment Wldtti=--11 r•t.
HELEN oad VIRGU. TEAFORD
ly used; does everything withPnJeet u4 wo" LeDCUI -to.m.J
a brighter tomorrow.
Alloclllel-lb.m5
out attachments; In good con.
;rut or 1.04 lltl...
•....._ of
-n.e tllt- -" ror com-p.-.s,rac-, OMo
dillon, $5.98 per month, or
sadly missed by her SOIUI and thl• -n. thaD 1M •• ... forGt. Ill
the btddiJlt -pto~·'"
full price of $49.10. For free
daughters and families.
Each bld4.r .tltD bl nqutrd 14
bome demonstration, call 99Z6 10 lip ..... wtth ..... bM • etrtlDI4 elllae)::
for an amount equal to ftvt ,... c.2838.
8-4-81&lt;
.. .... IJ,td, "but tn no nent more

SMALL ACREAGE, no buflding,
state price and tull partlcolars. Write Bm: 8418 F 0&lt;1 the
Dally Sentinel, Pomeroy.
l-7.ete STEREO RADIO 0010blnaUon;
repossessed; beautiful cabl·
net, like new. Balance due
GOOD USED Elec. Roaater.
f87, or make payments of
Chester Fire Dept., Pbooe

each

lATER JEST
SPROUTED
HIS FUST

ME UP FER

::r.·

dty·fDIII .-tl!od. i'tO IIIIU. No fiiU .
odOf. UM rvtt tftt Nlllt diJ.

TUPPERS PLAINS, O,

MOTICI TO CONTIACTOII
STATI OP OHIO
DII"A.TMINT OJ HtDHWAYI
ColuMbu•. Ohkl ~Y 11, ttll
c..-.tr•ct ..,"
CopY Ne. 61-417
UNIT Patel CONTIACT
SealH roropoula will be reeetvtd
at the office of the State mlbwaJ
Director of Ohio Columbul. Ohio un·
UJ 10:00 A.M., llutenl DQ'Uiht Sn·
ln~r Time. Tuetdar. June 25, tiMI. for

f&gt;.1f.301c POODLE PUPPIES. AKC Toy
miniature. $'15 and up. Stud
service and grooming. Phooe

Wanted To l.Hse

levlvt tile Olillfttl blllltt of JOI!
Cluntd In JOUr own IIOIIIt r Vtn II

QYDEKUHN

P. B. MASHEID
DJRECI'&lt;&gt;R
1\Ule tl).l'r
Ito

GERT'S A GAY GIRL - Ready lor a whirl, alter cleQDlng
Phone '173-5651.
4-!o.tfe THREE ACRES, 5 room house,
carpets with Blue IAIBire.
new roof, bam, cellar, two
Rent elecltlc sham...-, $1,
HAPPY HOUR, Shenang Sprlnp cisterns and furniture $4500.
Baker FurnitUre.
11-1~ IN LOVlNG memor)" or our dear
Nito Club, 5 to 8 p.m. MonPhone 742-5613.
5-16-30tp
mother, Ella Ebersbach, who
day thru Friday. Ladles nlgbl
passed away three .years ago,
Real Estate For Sale
every Friday.
S.We LARGE HOUSE In Racine, 9
June 10, 1965.
rooms, one thiN! acre lot,
We feel sad when those we love
good locaUon, $8500. Phone
For Tr1de
Are caHed to live in the home
949-$75:.
i-29-12te
CASH FOR Antiques. Bill

HOBSTETTER
REALTY

plUI tax

w..-

Karen Griffith and Carmie and
Keith Jares.
6 10 ltc

For Sale

Mrs. Freddie Thabet. Ma11011,

ALL SIZES
$12.00

BdJe Lfllu.

FOUR ROOM HOUSE, bath,
basement, two large loll. In
Racine. Call 992-21139 or 949&amp; ROOMS AND BATII, 170 MW.
2951.
6-7~p
berry Ave., Pomeroy. em.
ne.sa,
tact Rose Sillson, phone 111- TWO BEDROOM home, bath
And
our eyes shed many tears.
%049 alter 5 p.m. Phone 111lull basement, garege: TwoGod only knows how we miss
:1131.
ll-l4lc
year-old home in Syracuse.
him
Phone 99Z-2ill.
f&gt;.~
At the end or Lhe first year.
SINGLE HOUSES, nlce loea·
A happy home we once enjoyed
tlon, apartments !urnlahed II FOR BE'ITER cleaning, to
But death has lefi a loneliness
unlumlsbed In Middleport,
keep colors gleaming, u s e
That none can ever fill.
phone llft.M.
'"'We
Blue Lustre carpet eleanor. Sadly missed by his wife, Anna,
Rent electric shampooer $1.
and two daughters, Maxine aNI
Baker Furniture.
&amp;-4o4IC
Janet Abo grandchildren,

----

TIRES

In Wuhi~D County, by lpP}fiD.I

Thank you Lord for precious

GOOD DAffiY HAY to cut on
shares. Alba Yost, Minersville.
I-WI&gt;

GUARANTEED REPAIRED
AS.SORTEO AWUSTMENT

LOOKV, PAW!!

EXPERIENCED
lt~llfor Service

BRING NEW
LIFE TO
YOUR
CARPETING

TIRES

,_

ONE

'IE WOKE

JNSISTENCf, NIKKI \10M

.QUICK QUIZ
Q-11 there any article ill
the ehllrter of datehood of
Tt%01 thllt grant• prillilege•
110t glven to other states 1
A-The opeclal prlvUeges

which are accorded to Tou•
by Ito constitution are the
rellel'Ved right to all publle
lando of ltie state, and the
rllht to subdivide Into not
more than ftve states.

A Ot)Jtl.,_ Q1:1taMn

KIN

HIIJJ

BC.OBNOU

BBIXOX

YN ZIDIC YZBV
ZIDKUXJK '!-UJ:BOXR

'ltiU"'f WA$11!1&gt; UP, 'Ttlllrf LEE •

.. --.-.

TORTE lru.UCTANTLY
INYITM TERRY TO
'STAY AT H15 CA'STlf
UNTIL A ~EPlACE •

Ma.T C. . .RETOR
MR!YE$.

SUNDAY'I Crn&gt;loll-• MAin A MAN'S TONOUII:
BIIAKJ:8 OU'I' HIS KA8'l'I:R'S UNDOINO.-SHAKll18PIWUI:

Publls~td to s1vellvealn cooperation with
The Advertlt~ln5': r.ounell, the National Safety CouncU,

The tntematlonal Newspaper Advertlslna becutlves.

I
()

'

I

I

HOW'S 71147' FER
QUICK THINKING 1

DOC?

�.

..

~

···-·

.. . .

.

..

BARNEY

'

Ads Bri~g, Top Grade Results
Want
.A LITTLE 'HOMEWORK' Watching
au._•,
.........
Pomeroy
2 SIGNs
FERTILIZERS
6 - The Dally Sentllllll, Pomel'UY·Mlddleport, 0., M~, J-10, 1968

'

ONE

'II; WOI&lt;E

ME UP fER

DADIURN

THAT?

HAl~!!

LltAL N011CI

WAtrf AD
!NFOIIMTIOM

t

•.•. IN¥ ....,. , . .lc......

QUALm
®
........ .

JIMMY .,....,,,. '

Cl~ &amp;

....

c.rncHtM

Motor Co.

Of

WIH .. ....... ...HI t 1.111. fW
DQ ................

,..............
.........
.............,...
"" .... ,....,

. . . save you l ime &amp; money. We
can supply mi•ed fertilizers &amp;
straight materials you need - or
iiPPIY them lor you. Call today .

IHULAfiONI

led&amp;........ Ttw ,ut.MIIM'
111cernct ••rtl••·
lATII

1965 CHEV. 2 TON HEAVY DUTY, , , ... , .. , , . ,$2495

wUI Ml

. . ,......"" .... ...,. tlulft ...

Ptr want A- hrvla
I ...... ,., W_,. Me l""rttel'l
MiniMUM Char.- fie

""11 ,,.,.
.......
" " " ,., Wenl

It ctlltt ..... -..rtl tl'llrM

....rt......

u ...........

111 c....cvth•

ILIND Atll
&amp;INR..... tk CIMif'WI ,., ~

Pomeroy Motor Co.

OfiiiiCI HOVII
tra1 e.-. .. I1H '-"'' DIIW

e.- tt

Notice

THE HOUSE of Wilaon: EIDiic
fish and aupplles, Open 9 a.
m. to I p.m. Tueoday lbrouah
Saturday; Sunday and MODday by appointment. Firat
road left, below Pleasant Pl.
Resort. Watch lor slgnl, Pb.
6'15-11165.
~tOle
WILL CARE FOR elderly men
and women, ambulatory or
bed patients, Mason Cllnlc,
Mason.
6-HOip
WILL CARE lor elderly women
in my home. Phone 742-5795.
6-6-etp

j

SHOOTING MATCH Sunday,
June 9, noon to 4, Hams, ba·
con, baH of hog. Shotgun&amp; on·
ly. Rutland American Legion
~!&lt;

Home.

TERMITES SWARMING? Tbey are re-producllves, oot
your worker colony. Free IJ&gt;.
apections and Information on
crawl space dangers. No
salesman, low overhead, Ill
per cent savings, Allled Pest
Cmlro),
Pomeroy,
Ohio.
Phone 9ft.586ll everdnga.

s.u-aotp

J

I

®

OPEN !!VIS. 8:00 P.M.
POMEROY, OHIO

11!M ...... s.t.r"'ltY

.

--

rrepo~~l

992-2181

•

Jack W. Caney, Mgr.
In Memory
I

IN MEMORY of Jill' dear !rierd,
Hattie M. Lawrence, who (le.
parted this life June 10, 1965.
Precious memories, how they

'

.

For Sale

For Rent

'

/)65 -11

1 owner, low mileage.
1961 PONTIAC CAT, ItT. CPE. ..... , ......... $595
v.s motor, auto. trans., P.~. white tlnhh, clean lnterlor.
..

D~HMt•t ... ,.... ...

........... """' ...
"M

PHONE

1963 CHEVROLET % TON ••••• , ••.....• , ••• $995
700x17 tires. ll du~ springs, solid cab, covered body. L&lt;&gt;cal

Hll'"'*"''•o

eM HI ,... •"'-"' 11 III•YI·
CAID Oil ntANKI &amp; NITUAIY
t .... .... .. ..... "''"'"'""'· ••.

·-·

POMEROY

825x20 - 10 ply Ures, 2-apeed rear axle, 292 cu. ln., 6
cyl. eng., extra clean and aolid. Has 12 ft. insulated van
body wl th rear aDI side doors.

NOTICI TO CONTI\ACTOU
ITATI Of OHIO
OIPARTMINT o• HIOHWAYI
c..umbus. 01'110, MIY 11, 1111
C.ntnct latH Lilli C1PY Ne .......,
UNIT PliCI COHTU.CT
Sealed · pr~all will tM l"ftei,tcl
' at the ofllea of the SUW ~...,
Oki!Ctor of Ohio. ColumbUI. Oblo unW 1D:OO A.ll.. &amp;ul.erll DQ'Hibt Ill•
1111 Time, '1'\l~cla:r. June 25, 191111 far
lmpronmeD'll la1
Preposlll NOI. 1 and 2 I" (liter·
ed u oae eontrad and will M
cond4•nd. on Ute baliJ of tha
total amount bid.

PLENTY of space lor ..,. trall· GOOD DAmY HAY to cut em
er with ali lacUIUes. In Syraaha~. Alba Yost, MlnerBcuse. Call 992-3904. 4-lS.tlc
vJDe,
~P

Unger,
How they ever flood my soul.
In the stillness of the midnight
Many sacred scenes unfold.
Thank you Lord for preciOUB
memories
Of this loving friend so true.
Precious memories robed in
splerdor.
Keep her always, Lord, with

FURNISHED and unfumlahed .BLACK MINIATURE Poodle
you.
apartments. Close to school.
Pups flS, West Highland
Phone ~143.
111-1a.tle
Terriers $100, 1961
Amanda Wade Taylor
Farmali Cub Tractor, hydrauHuntington Park, Calif.
LARGE flve room and bath
lic Jilt, 3 point last bitch, sin6 10 ltc
apartment, newly cle&lt;oratod,
gle plow, 5 loot cutter bar
furnace heal, Pomerov,
~
and disc 11100. Price firm. Ut..
Phone 91J1.530'1.
t.:·lfc
Ue Barl&lt;arDo Kennell, Cool- IN LOVING MEMORY OF Kear·
ney E. Ogdin, who passed away
viDe, Ohio, 1169-36M. 6-7-101c
TRAILER SPACE, all uillltlel
one year ago today, June 10,
available. Inquire 158 Mulber- 48 PASSENGER school b u a,
1967,
ry alter ! or 5 p.m. Write P.
good condition. new pa1nl,
0. Box 425 pomeroy, &amp;-:.tic
No one knows the silent heartbest offer, Henry Bahr, phone
ache,
~ Chester.
6-7-3\p
For only those who have lost
FURNISHED apartment, I w o
can tell
bedrooms, Middleport. Pbone FOUR ROOM HOUSE, bath,
Of
the grieC that is borne in
m.,l874.
6-t-lfe
basement, two large Iota, In
silence
Racine. Call 992-11139 or tHtFor
the one we loved so well .
6 ROOMS AND BATH, 110 Mul2951.
6-7-61p
Our
hearts
still ache with sadberry Ave., Pomeroy. Cooness,
tae1 Rose Sisson, phone 8IIJ. TWO BEDROOM home, bath
And
our eyes shed many tears.
2019 after 5 p.m. Pbone 8IIJ.
lull basement, garage: TwoGod only knows how we miss
2431.
6-t-lfc
year-&lt;&gt;ld home in Syracuse.
him
Pbone 119Z-2421.
S.28-30tc
At the eOO oC the first year.
SINGLE HOUSES, nice loc&amp;A happy home we once enjoyed
Uon, apartmenta lurnllbed .It FOR BETI'ER cleaning, to
But death has len a loneliness
unlum1sbed In Middleport,
keep colors gleaming, use
That none can ever fill .
pbone 191U&amp;?.
U.Wc
Blue Lustre carpet cleaner. Sadly missed by his wHe, Anna,
Rent electric shampooer $1.
and two daughters, Maxine and

Wbiu;

No. 1 -

N..IIWIY aMI RaM' 1 - LIM
A.theu, Qallla, Hoe~. llelp lionroe, 'Nior11ft. Noble 111d WuhlQton
Co\lllUH, Oblo, em U.S, Ro'.&amp;tll NOI.
33. DO, Stat. Route No. 11 Ill A.thet'lll
Counb'l U. B. Route lllo. IS, state
Route No. 110 In Qallta COUIIQ'I U.S.
ftouW No. SS, state Rout. NM. Ill.
13. 110 In Hoekllll" Coun~; U.S. Route
No. sa. Stltl Boule No. ' IB lhlll
CaulltJ; steW Route No. 'J8 In MOl!·
"" COUDb'l State Balltll No. 10 la
Morsaa countJ; U. 8. Route No. l1,
&amp;Ute ll.outl No. MO ID Noble oount11
Int.erwtate Route No. 7'f, U. S. Jtou.t.
N-. tt, 110. I!IOA, state aaut.e No. "
la Wulllnrton CountJ, bJ appl1ial

Business Services
TIRES

GUARANTEED REPAIRED
A.SSORTEil ADJUSTMENT
TIRES

ALL SIZES
$12.00

PanmeD1 Witltb-Vartau.a.
ProJee1 Le11,u..-a&amp;LM llllel.
Work Lenrtb-4119-'rl MUaa.
.,.,_., .... I
Peur Inc" ancl 6 lacb LIM LIM
Alblnll. walbbllton Countleil. Ohio.
an u.s. Rout.et NM. 33. 110 ln Athena
CGUDt11 Intentatl 1\ou\e No• .,.,, U.S.
RoutH No1 . 50, 5()A, State Route No .
' 1n WaahblftO• countJ, bJ applJI.nl
Lane Uuea.
Puement Wlclth-VarlDal.
Proler:t l..ellrth--45.31 Ji!llel,
Worll: Len.u-«1.14 llllel.
"Tile date 1111t for eompleUon of
tbll work abaD be u tet fmG lD the
blddLnt propoAl."
J:acb blddu eball be requiM4 to
file with hta bid a certtfted. cbeoll
1u1(1 t.ht OftK:., uf ~t DIYliiOII IN·
ef hit btd, bUt Ill no 'nent moN
tban ten thouiUid dolllrl or a bond
ror nr: ~~r cept of tilt bid, paJable
to the Dlreetos'.
Bidden muat apply, on the proper
fol'llll. for prequaWlc:aUon wtth the
Hlrhway C~lt z.amlner at Columbua, Oblo. al leut 10 41p ~ the
~tate aet to open bicll.
The Minimum ware to be palll to
all labor tmp)oyed on thla eontraet
.tlall be In aecon!llnce with lll.a ..Scbll.
dule of Prevaillnl HourlY
w.,.
Rates A.lcertlllled and DetennlDecl bJ
the Department of IDdUih'lal Re-...
t1on1 appllcabla to State Hllbwlf Department lmproW~ml!n\8 In acc:ordance
11'1th Chapter 4U5 of the BniHcl
Code of Oblo."
Plant and aped.ftcatiOIII an oft file
tn the {)flpartment ol J:{ifhwaya tad
the OHice of Ole Dlvl.llon DIPD\J
Dlrll&lt;!tar.
1'be Dtreetor reMrYfll the riJb1 to
nject any and all bkl•••;,
· ....,

Rniwe tilt ori1lntl Mtutt,of JOW : ·
Clnntd In Y0\11" oa•llolllll
Von kll If
dry·foam ll!llhlld. Mo muu. Mo t1111. No
odor. Uu "'I' tht Ulllt itt,,

pltu tu eacb

...... ,.,- ........
...,
-·
..., ..... 11 .... - l t ...

aYDE KUHN

lt. I ,_.,..,
....kl ........
CALL COOLVtu.l ........

PH.

Am CQN1)ITIONING Rerrlpr- BUDGET PRICIIl fumlture Cll .
our third lloor budpl llhop.
aUon aervlce. Jack'• llefrltBaker Fumltare. Middleport,
erallon, New Haven. bone
Ohio.
'
ll'e
IIIIZ-20'11.
4 I trc

NQTICI TO CONTaACTOll
IT'ATI O' OMIG
DIPAlTMINT OF HI.MWAYI
Colwmbvl, Qblo MIY Jt, 1NI
CMilrJc:t hiH L1911 COIIIY No. 61-42?

UNIT P.ICI CONTRACT
Suled propo;aall will be rteelved
at the otftee of till State ml!nnJ
ntnctor of Ohio Columblll, Ohio ua ·
til 10:110 A.M., Wattel':ll Daylllhl Ill•
ln~.t Time. TuetdaJ, .rune IS, ltlllll. for
tmprovementa Ia:
Part• Noe. 1 to ~ indulh'~ are
offeNd u one eo11.trad aDd wiD
be eollltdered on the bull of
tbe total •mount btd.
!'art No. 1
AU.ens County. Olllo. OD. 8eettoa
ATH . 3!11 - 0.00. statfl Route No.
:IH, In Waterloo Townahlp. bJ' IP.
plylnJ t hltumlnoua cold mb. Nr-

::::::=

a

MACHINEII, N!lllr
service, all mllktl. WY 12284. 'ftle Fabric Shop, Pomeroy. AullKWiled Singer Sales
and Servl&lt;e. We Bllarpen
Sclaora.
J.lt.lf&lt;o

READY • MIX eoncret. dellv· SEWING
ered rlgbl to your proJed.
Fast and easy. J.l'ree 0111matea. Pbone ~. Goetleln Ready • Mix Co., Middleport, Ohio.
f 30 trc

•Wheel Alignment

Prlct r ..
9.11 S1
9.11 .a
650x14
10.11 ,-a
700.13
10.11 A3
700.14
11.11 .4.1
750x14
11.11 A7
670.15
Plu• RocO,pol&gt;lo lxcho"'"

-GUARANJEEO.. .

NOTICI

Nationwl* GUirentM
•

HOME AND
- AUTO

TO CONTUCTOit

ITATI Ofl OHIO

DIPAaTMINT o• MIOMWAYI
Columbus. Ohio Mly 11, IHI
tontrac:t lain L...l Capy No. 611-411
UNIT N:ICI CONT.ACT
Sealed propo.U will be received
It lht olflce of 1be State lllllawi.J
Dlred~&gt;r of Ohio Columbo, Oblo untJI 10:00 A.M.• Eut.em DIJHIM Sa"t"•
ona: Tbne . T~oetdaJO, June IS, 11111, for
lmpro"t"t!ZDIDUI ln:
PaN Noa. 1 to 3 tnolual.... an
offert4 u oae COiltract. .ad wtD
be contldered on tbe bUll of
tile total 111101llli bid.
Part No. 1
Melp CountJ, Obla, 011 s.etlov

5-~

For Sale or Trade

FREE STOIAGE

AIC CLEANERS
W, Va.

pers Plains 687-3251. 62 301&lt;

----

-·

....,

_....

rial•• with 11111 ft4uelar)' wUbta loor

2114.

.......

Da~ thlll 11th d., oC MIIJ, 1MII.

r.

H. O'DIDI

PtoDIIe J11d . . ol llllld CINfttJ'

, ... a.l0-17

Mrs.

F1oyd

Wise and

children

6 10 lip

rejeet 111.1 •n4 eU btdll.
P. 1. MAMIITR
DIUCTOI.
1-101 &amp;-l'r lte

r.... u•. ._n..,~

MASTElCIAFT
TIAILER
I

'I
•

•

I-ll

Schwarze! Marine

I 1'1-llfoJI&lt;.l. 1!LiW

MEEK.!

IT

~IIJl

Hockin_gp~r:f, O~io
PIIONEtri-G'II

WMPO
INFORMATION
NEWS
presents

LOCAL REPORTS
DAILY
• AT •
7:50 A.M.
12 NOON
3 P.M.
AND
4:30 P.M.
l&lt;eeping Meigs
Gallic and
Mason Area
Informed As
Well As
Enlerlained

DAILY CROSSWORD
AClii088
u. AfllrmoI. Quar.
J, Declare

I.Lal'(l

-

UYOwle

II. Hunter of

DOWII
J.Comblt

c arnlYOru
JO.Iolut

I.Danetr'l

11. Goiter,

.....

11. Bam·

Arnold

C)'JJI....

Jt, Wlnpcl

,tho....

....,

G. Bllllldorlnr

lcot.
2:1, Dart

abbr.

. -..

T.llplulloir

llllo

IIIlA

fDrm tour ordinary words.

O!&gt;lnin&amp;'

fl . .Adoii8Cent

l.llbtb

"Safety belts? Too much fuss
and bother."
-Michul Gonlo• (/948·19681

--

li.Bldn

.

ll.llncJoo.

OH, DE,to,l:!! I
TORE TI-lE BAG!
60/.\ETJ.liNG!

UN&lt;ramble thele rour Jumblet.
one letter to each square, to

lllce

...u-

a. auto 1o

~rgMID~;:=:!:!.=:

Ala

, •. Cullo

worm

', ..............._,
,.._ ....,., ...w...,.

G.4DEA
SUNDAY·"•

__

.&amp;uw•

rOBi'GI

lll. wor• bard
28. Lawful
18.1ap'l

rn

III
ll )

wlfo
10. Loopo
ll.llldiOD

111111

••J

·-

....,. .. .,... L"'"
Mtftlnlltntor,

w........

1M PUII'll
AtterMY'S tor AIIWilfthtrater
..lDJ 1-111 1-tll 1-111 ..141 .111 • "

"'

C]

eerr.

c...._.. ..._....&gt;

•
SUNDAY'•

Jooodol&lt;" HAZIL

••••en

VOCAL TALICII IIPTIC

lf'MI llt•y N"'ed ftt •M .....,.,.,

pony-IHOITCAII

Q-lr thtrt any artie!• in
the charter of •tatthood of
Te:rat thai grantl l&gt;ri.,leger
not glv•n to other states?
A-The special prlvllegea
which are accorded to T•u•
by Ita constitution are the
reserved right to all public
lando of the slate, and the
right to rubdivlde into not
more than ftve states.

lN,15TfNct 1 Kll&lt;l&lt;l

\

QUICK QUIZ

TORTE treLUCTANTLY
INVITeS fERRY TO

What's yqur exa~~e?

STAY AT HIS CASTLE

A(lq;IJINfll......._

HliN

HIIU

SCSOBNOU

IBIXO.X

VN

UijnL A REPlACE·

VII IV

IIII~UXIMT-UIIBOXa

SIINDAY .. !'IJP.....Iol MA.NY A loiAN'I TONOUIJ:

'
Published to save IIYft In cooperation
with

IHAKilill otiT RIB liWITill\'8 UNDOIN0.-8JL\KIIIPIWUII

Tt1e Advertisi~~ Coundl, fhl National Safel:yCounr!l,
The lntemaUonal ..ewtpaper Advertllln&amp; Executive!.

..

,.

"

'

'
oI

o.

'

WITHTHENI .

eiLLY WANr JME
71:1STAYHOMI

MNRUDE

llftle:

NOTICI
"Btdl wU1 be neolve4 at tM oMe.. of Webder 111.\1 Fulb, PotaiMJ',
Oblo. uatiJ 'hetdaJ, June 11. 1 •
et IOtOO O'Cloell: A.ll. for tbll aaJa
of Ule Onea L.JDD Carr ptopertr.
lttuated tn tile vman of Ral"rl8Git~Je. Oblo. B~ m11 be IUlmdtted
If' · wrHID• or In pereon at tbO Om•
of lilt. Thll rll1rt ll r . - ,.a te 111Ject
or ell blda.
TMIMI C. Mortlft,

TI-IINKING- OF
RESIGNING

60NNAZ .

tin Funeral Home. Your kindPIIM ani! ~attoN an on
ness wUl always be remember- file In the Departrnllllt ol Rlidt-JI
tnd the Office of tbe ~on Doo
ed. May God bless each one of utt" Director.
Tile [)lnd.Gr re•rva tba diM te

you.

CHILDREN, I'M

A~D

~ROM

---

WALNUT STEIUOO radio. Jlelll).
tilul contemporary walnut st.. APPALOSSA STUD aervlce. By
appointment, phone IJ92.6112.
reo with AM &amp; MF' fadlo, de5-14-30tp
luXe floating turntable, dual
HelpWantM
volume control. Four apeed
c. C. IIIIADI"'RD
LADY lor housework, cool:, Uve
automatic changer. Pay only
AUcriONEEII
In or out, phone IIIS-o5Z51, COJ&gt;o
$1 per month or balance
Ctmplolt SerVIN
tact 0. !Iindy over Liberty
$78.82. Free home demonstr•
W..U.,
Phone or Omlod
'111eatre, Middleport lor inllr· Uon. CaliiJIZ.ml.
6-7.etc
Crllt
Btodfonl
view.
6UII
Baclat. Oldo
MAPLE STEREO. 11168 model
I 1 tic
WAITRESS and ear bop, App!J
stereo. Lm&gt;ely maple, AM 6
In person. Crow's Slelk F'M radio. Four speed autoRouse.
......
matic changer, lour speaker CIGA~ vending machines
aystem. Pay only $19.58 or
and service. ABC Enterprlaoa,
monthly paymenta .t 111. Fne
Muon, W. Va. Phone 'I'IJ.M43.
14-tfc
home demonstration, call •
Auction
3218.
6-7-«&lt;
CONSIGNMENT Sale: Complete
lniiJTance
tine of farm machinery IIIII RESTAURANT equipment. Call
AUTOMOBILE Insurance beell
household items. June 15 stanRutland Furniture, 7U-Ull.
eaneeDed? Lost your operatbig at noon. Sideldll auetlon
6-Wtc
or's license? Call 1192-M.
oo Leo Morris farm, Rutland,
• 11 tic
Oblo. Anyone wlBhlng to sell A NEW shipment of elolhln8
any item at the sale call 70.
bas arrived. Women's and
UOAL fiOTICI
fiOTICI 011 MP01NTMIN1'
4e4l or 74U817. Not rei)IODrltlldren's and Men's Work
c....... , ....
Uniforms. Also Ford Ill-ton lttiN .r CftMt...., II. WII'Nf, _..
·\ sihle lor accidents. Lunch will
be served. Terms of sale pickup truck, 4-apeed lralllNotlcl II Mreby IIJ.Mft tb.t P .. l
Cub.
.....,
missloo. Jeffers Clothillg werner. 91 PGIMIOI'• ObiO• ..., \tell
duly •ppolnUid Admlallltntor ef tbol
Store. Rt. 33, Pomeroy.
IRIUI of ChaaHJ' r. Werur. 4eo
etaled, l1t. of MIIP Cov.nb', Oblo.
1-t«e
For Sele or Rent
CNdlioJI IN nq1llJ'MIIl kJ flit tWf
CORN, 1200 bushels, Da1181
HID, Letart Falls, Phone 247·

l t70N1' THINK WENDY

MOTH PROOFING

Q-Hat onv Jl!!v ever won
tht Ktntuckv Derbv?
A~y one-Regret In
1915.

BLA£11NARS

19118 OLDS, 442, 4 apeed, phone
M9-S'Il1.
'-4-«c

FIVE ROOM boule and bllb,
aluminum siding, atorm wJn.
clolll, • . Pbollll 8Dflll,

LIITININ' 11:111

SAVE sPACE

srr-.

____

Pomeroy

Rm RSH BOAT

'

HOBSTETTER
REALTY

""

99~43

SPECIAL
$295.00

WILL DO aewlng at home Baker Furniture.
6-4-8lc
Janel
Also grandchildren,
zippers, pockets, pegglnl,
Karen Griffith and Connie and
hemming, alteratloDI, etc.
MBG • 0.00 • temporatJ route to N·
GERT'S A GAY GIRL - Reao
Keith Jones.
Ue"t"e traffle at Pomei'OJ'.JiuoD 81141••
Mrs. Freddie Thabet. Maaon,
For Sale
6 10 ltc
dy for a whirl, after c1...,mg
ul the Villar• of PomeroJ, bJ ftlll'"'
faclnl wlth up]Wt ~nent..
Phone 7'13,.5851.
4-10-tfc THREE ACRES, 5 room house,
carpels with Blue Lustre.
Pavement W14tll- l6 t.t.
new roof, barn, cellar, two
ProJed and Worll: lADftb-lAIS.I
JWrt electric sbampooer, $1,
fffi or o.:rr llill.
HAPPY HOUR. Sbenang Springs clslerns and furniture $4500.
Baker FurnitUre.
6-tMte Ir\ LOVING memory ol our dear
Part No. I
Nile Club, 5 to 8 p.m. MonPhone 74U613.
5-IS.301p
Melli CoUJitJ, ObJ0,---oi- Seettou
11\'!lher, Ella Ebersbach, who faee couru.
W\tlth- 18 t ..l.
MEO - old sta111 Bauto No. ltlday thru Friday. Ladles nlg1lt
passed away three years ago, Pl\vement
Projeet and Work Lenath - t.M1.1
Real
Estate
For
Sale
0.00.0.7'7, 014 State Rou.to No. tU.
het
or
1.22
loiDM.
every Friday.
u.tle LARGE HOUSE In Racine, 9
June 10. 1965.
In SllilbUI'J' Towulilp, and Ia t.bo
66 Buick . . . . $2,795
Pert Me·. '
Vtllap of IIOdclltport, by 1'UIU'fllc:·
Hocklnr CountJ, Oht~&gt;, on Sectioftl
rooms, one third acre lot,
iDI
With
uPhaU
eoDeJ"Ot..
Electra 4 dDIH' sedan.
• Mill • a .81ol.4'fl, State Rout.
We reel sad when those we love ROC
Pawmeat Wldth-Vartou.
good location, $8500. Phone
For Trade
No . 59!, In Green and Wtrd Town•
tor~ air condiUooed. &lt;oonorb
ProJect &amp;Del Work 1AII.c1b-U-.J
ah!JII, bJ apply\D( • bltumlnoaa cold
949-3'152.
..
s.:.121c
Are
called
to
lhe
in
the
home
fttl or :1.11 Mlln.
all white ftnish. ONoonfll!ulook' o.l
CASH FOR Antlquea. Bm
mill llllrlue eoune.
Pert No. I
above.
Pnement Wldtb-Varloaa .
One part!cul&amp;r IO&lt;al
Hamm, Middleport. Oblo.
M:e\p CoWJtJ", Oblo. on Cowltl
Geo. RoiJololter, Brobr
But they have gone to prepare ProJf!d and wan Lenrth - :lt,'FOG.I Bold
'No, 311 - O.oll, BZI'I'OBATION
&amp;-1~ POODLE PUPPIES. AKC Toy
owner. Was $2,895.
tHI or U 1 JIU•.
OF HAUL ROAD FOR PROJECT NO ,
the way
Part Mo. I
miniature. $'15 and up. Stud POMEROY - 1 story 5 rooms,
16(11), In lllllbllrJ Townlhlp, In' ,...
VInton 001llltJ'• Oblo. on a.otloD.I
AOO we'll meet them a g a I n
bath, convenient to atores, leaurfaelnl with uphtlt e011~.
service and grooming. Phooe
Vl"' . teo _ (9 .28) nuw. state Route
favement Wl4m.-11 ...t.
some
happy
day.
66 GTO ....
vel
lot.
Make
offer.
Mo . 180. tn cnnton and Vblton To"llm- ProJect and Work Le~l~Ul-f50. 4 t.ot.
1192-5443,
11 S tic
•hlpa.
by
appl)'lnl
a
bttum\nou•
.~t~r­
For
God
has
told
us
that
nothing
DAIRY F'AIIM, 291 acres, liill
or 0.11 .u..
PonUac 2 dr, hlrdtol) COIOPO·
faee treatment.
''Tbll date tet for eompl.UOD. of
can
sever
Improved
pasture,
80
In
cult~
Pavement
Wltlth-U
teet.
Wanted To Le1957 GMC hall-ton plcl&lt;up; also
thta work lbaU bo u a.t forib Ja
Just
arrived. 4 sp. shift. Pos.
A life He created to 1i ve on PrGJeet and wort: IAQth-ID.321.D the blddinl pn~,_at"
vatlon, 3. ponds, S gas wella,
FARMS in Melga or Muon
two year old small horse. Pb.
trac.
Superb condiUon. 0110
feet or l-8!1 Mllflll.
ICieh bidder abl11 bo nqv.lred lo
Ptrt Mo. C
forever.
free
gas.
Income;
2
barns,
2
County lor oil and gas. Write
fllo
wt.th
hll
bid
a
nrtlfled
ctJecll
very careful driver.
7~.
6-4-8lc
Mel1111 CountJ", Oblo, on Beetillllll
fur an amOUBt equal to flft peroc.M
So let God's promise soften our NBQ
• •1 .o .oo. state ftoate M'o.
to Chaweva 011 and G II
houses, baths, other buOdlngs.
., flit filii, bul ln no evnt more
eRI . In Sei.Jito Town•lllp, bJ 11tP'b'·
sorrow
Utu tea tllolliiDcl d:ollan or a bolld
FAIIMS WANTED
Corp., 508 Cutler St., Marietta, 11168 ZIG ZAG portable, a!lgbta bltamlno111 nrlt~ trutment.
for toft per cent ., lilt IJld, l*flbt.
Am give us new strength Cor tq
Pinment WII!Ui::-18 feet.
HELEN and VlRGIL TEAFORD
0.
Wf.JJip ly used; does everything withto tbl DlrMtor.
ProJect ID4 Work Lenath -1o.m.1
a brighter tomorrow.
Btclden mut appiJ. on tilt propAuodatea - tiJ.33!5
out allachmenta; in good COP·
,feet or , .04 Mlle..
ool er fonal, for p~IUoD wtth
BUICK
PONTIAC
""The data oet for eomptetion
the Rltbwa1 Credit EnmiDtr at Co·
Oblo
ditlon, $5.98 per month, or
Wanted To ·auy
thla
wort!:
abaU
be
a•
Ht
forlll
Ill
GMC
TRUCKS
Sadly missed by her son1 and
tumbal. Ohio. at leut 10 4lftl tiethe bld41nl pn'lpolll·'"
ton the cblte 11t to open bkll.
lull price of $49.80. For free
SMALL ACREAGE, no 'building,
daughters and Clmilies.
:Kaeb bi.Mer 1ball be -reqttlred to
1'ba )()nlmum ,..,. to Ill palct to
home demonstration, call 992610 Up file wttb lr.t. ht4 • eerlHied c11M11: an labGr emplo,-.d. on tbit COD·
slate price and I'U11 particufor 1n tmount eqUal to flft ""' c •
traet ahi.D be ill ucordallctl wltb OW
2138.
IJ.4.6Ic
lars. Write llol&lt; 8811 F 1&gt;&lt;1 the
01' .... ltkl, trot 'n 110 event moN
HScbedule of PrtnlliDI Hourb' Wqe
Business
Services
than ten tboueaad dollan or a boftd
RaMo ~ uu!. DetenDIDK
Dally Sentinel, Pomeroy.
tllr ton 11tf cent of Ma IJW, PUIIble
RADIO &amp; TV repair, re&amp;IIODbJ the Department of butu.trlal ReSTEREO
RADIO
combination;
6-7....
to the J)lNetor.
latiolll appUcable to Stat. llilbWOJ
able prices. AnteMa &amp; BoosCard of T111nb
Blddtrt muat apPlJ. on tile pro"PDepartment lmprovema&amp;l Ill MleOrd.•
repossessed; beautiful cabier form~, ror pfequUftcattOft with
.... w:tth CbaPtU 4111 of thl . .
ter service. John Harrison,
net,
like
new.
Balance
due
the
mJ!IwtY
eMit
bamlnet
•t
[!o..
I WISH to thank all my friends,
i "fiMd Code ot Oblo ...
GOOD USED Elec. RDaster.
701
Broedway
St.,
Middleport,
Jumh\11, Oblo. at leut 10 4lUI tJo.
J'lanl, aDd JIIOOIIIatlolll 11'1 •
$8'1, or make paymenta of
neighbors and relatlves _Corthe 101"11 the (late tet to oDell blda.
Che!!ter Fire Dept., Phoae
nte In tiM JHpubn!IDt of m.,...JI
Ohio.
Phone
992-2521,
open
.,..
lftftlmum
wata
to
1M
paJ4
e.
$5.14 per month. Ph4De 992dowers, food that WMI sent to til ltbl\r emP1071id Oft tb\1 eontrad aad tha OftiGO of U. DtYIIletll"DQ1185-33t2.
6-Htp
evenings.
6-WO!c
llty Director.
Z83f,
8-I-6IA:
us at the time or death of our abaD be ln acccmtaaeo wt.Ot lito
Tbo DSNtior •••n• the rttM •
..8c:he4ule ,.., PnnDI"' Bcn&amp;riJ W••t
reJect art7 and ID bids.
dear husb&amp;OO and father, Rev. Ratll
ANTIQUES. furniture, dishes,
tUcerlltlled
l1l4
Dlta~
P. I. MASHITft
CURTISS "DAIRY BEEF''
Floyd Wlse. To each pallbear- b]' tile Departrroent of ln4utr'lal a.
DtaiCTOI
mllcellaneous. Mrs. Howard SAVE $30 or more on aluminum
appHea'ole to state BllbRJ
breeding service. cau Leland
1-101 ..., ItO
er, Rev. Ivan Myera for his IIttau
boats. All sizes 111-1).13-14
Department tm11ronmenta Ia aocotd·
Cecil, 800 W. Main St., PomeParker,
Pomeroy
residence
ance
wltb
dtaptar
411!1
ol
tbo
.
.
consollng words and the Mar~
loot. Call 992-2347, or 992-6258.
'tOJ.
1-2&amp;-Uc
\1Md Code of Oh\o ...
992-2284 or call station Tup.

,

~&gt;J.iDIDN'T
CALL "iOI.J!!
??-AKKEAR
BREATH IN'!!
SOMEONE'S

BEGINNERS

Sin
6.10x13

5.55
.POMEROY

H-r Core.

SAUI:S AND IIBR'VICE
FIRESTOMI DLC 100
NEW TREAD-BLACKWALL

EXPERI'

mRECI'OR
:He

~eat

BLA:EnNARS

P, E. llA 88£'1 U

lun• lO.ll

From the Largest TI'UI!k
Bullcll ..r Radlltor To The

.

tM11111 MQII C..,.t Cleellllll

TUPPERS PLAINS, O,
PHONE 667-3682

...........

EXPERIENCED
11•11tor Service

BRING NEW
LIFE TO
YOUR
CARPETING

•

lo\~T C~RE10R

ARRIVfS.

�.

..

~

···-·

.. . .

.

..

BARNEY

'

Ads Bri~g, Top Grade Results
Want
.A LITTLE 'HOMEWORK' Watching
au._•,
.........
Pomeroy
2 SIGNs
FERTILIZERS
6 - The Dally Sentllllll, Pomel'UY·Mlddleport, 0., M~, J-10, 1968

'

ONE

'II; WOI&lt;E

ME UP fER

DADIURN

THAT?

HAl~!!

LltAL N011CI

WAtrf AD
!NFOIIMTIOM

t

•.•. IN¥ ....,. , . .lc......

QUALm
®
........ .

JIMMY .,....,,,. '

Cl~ &amp;

....

c.rncHtM

Motor Co.

Of

WIH .. ....... ...HI t 1.111. fW
DQ ................

,..............
.........
.............,...
"" .... ,....,

. . . save you l ime &amp; money. We
can supply mi•ed fertilizers &amp;
straight materials you need - or
iiPPIY them lor you. Call today .

IHULAfiONI

led&amp;........ Ttw ,ut.MIIM'
111cernct ••rtl••·
lATII

1965 CHEV. 2 TON HEAVY DUTY, , , ... , .. , , . ,$2495

wUI Ml

. . ,......"" .... ...,. tlulft ...

Ptr want A- hrvla
I ...... ,., W_,. Me l""rttel'l
MiniMUM Char.- fie

""11 ,,.,.
.......
" " " ,., Wenl

It ctlltt ..... -..rtl tl'llrM

....rt......

u ...........

111 c....cvth•

ILIND Atll
&amp;INR..... tk CIMif'WI ,., ~

Pomeroy Motor Co.

OfiiiiCI HOVII
tra1 e.-. .. I1H '-"'' DIIW

e.- tt

Notice

THE HOUSE of Wilaon: EIDiic
fish and aupplles, Open 9 a.
m. to I p.m. Tueoday lbrouah
Saturday; Sunday and MODday by appointment. Firat
road left, below Pleasant Pl.
Resort. Watch lor slgnl, Pb.
6'15-11165.
~tOle
WILL CARE FOR elderly men
and women, ambulatory or
bed patients, Mason Cllnlc,
Mason.
6-HOip
WILL CARE lor elderly women
in my home. Phone 742-5795.
6-6-etp

j

SHOOTING MATCH Sunday,
June 9, noon to 4, Hams, ba·
con, baH of hog. Shotgun&amp; on·
ly. Rutland American Legion
~!&lt;

Home.

TERMITES SWARMING? Tbey are re-producllves, oot
your worker colony. Free IJ&gt;.
apections and Information on
crawl space dangers. No
salesman, low overhead, Ill
per cent savings, Allled Pest
Cmlro),
Pomeroy,
Ohio.
Phone 9ft.586ll everdnga.

s.u-aotp

J

I

®

OPEN !!VIS. 8:00 P.M.
POMEROY, OHIO

11!M ...... s.t.r"'ltY

.

--

rrepo~~l

992-2181

•

Jack W. Caney, Mgr.
In Memory
I

IN MEMORY of Jill' dear !rierd,
Hattie M. Lawrence, who (le.
parted this life June 10, 1965.
Precious memories, how they

'

.

For Sale

For Rent

'

/)65 -11

1 owner, low mileage.
1961 PONTIAC CAT, ItT. CPE. ..... , ......... $595
v.s motor, auto. trans., P.~. white tlnhh, clean lnterlor.
..

D~HMt•t ... ,.... ...

........... """' ...
"M

PHONE

1963 CHEVROLET % TON ••••• , ••.....• , ••• $995
700x17 tires. ll du~ springs, solid cab, covered body. L&lt;&gt;cal

Hll'"'*"''•o

eM HI ,... •"'-"' 11 III•YI·
CAID Oil ntANKI &amp; NITUAIY
t .... .... .. ..... "''"'"'""'· ••.

·-·

POMEROY

825x20 - 10 ply Ures, 2-apeed rear axle, 292 cu. ln., 6
cyl. eng., extra clean and aolid. Has 12 ft. insulated van
body wl th rear aDI side doors.

NOTICI TO CONTI\ACTOU
ITATI Of OHIO
OIPARTMINT o• HIOHWAYI
c..umbus. 01'110, MIY 11, 1111
C.ntnct latH Lilli C1PY Ne .......,
UNIT PliCI COHTU.CT
Sealed · pr~all will tM l"ftei,tcl
' at the ofllea of the SUW ~...,
Oki!Ctor of Ohio. ColumbUI. Oblo unW 1D:OO A.ll.. &amp;ul.erll DQ'Hibt Ill•
1111 Time, '1'\l~cla:r. June 25, 191111 far
lmpronmeD'll la1
Preposlll NOI. 1 and 2 I" (liter·
ed u oae eontrad and will M
cond4•nd. on Ute baliJ of tha
total amount bid.

PLENTY of space lor ..,. trall· GOOD DAmY HAY to cut em
er with ali lacUIUes. In Syraaha~. Alba Yost, MlnerBcuse. Call 992-3904. 4-lS.tlc
vJDe,
~P

Unger,
How they ever flood my soul.
In the stillness of the midnight
Many sacred scenes unfold.
Thank you Lord for preciOUB
memories
Of this loving friend so true.
Precious memories robed in
splerdor.
Keep her always, Lord, with

FURNISHED and unfumlahed .BLACK MINIATURE Poodle
you.
apartments. Close to school.
Pups flS, West Highland
Phone ~143.
111-1a.tle
Terriers $100, 1961
Amanda Wade Taylor
Farmali Cub Tractor, hydrauHuntington Park, Calif.
LARGE flve room and bath
lic Jilt, 3 point last bitch, sin6 10 ltc
apartment, newly cle&lt;oratod,
gle plow, 5 loot cutter bar
furnace heal, Pomerov,
~
and disc 11100. Price firm. Ut..
Phone 91J1.530'1.
t.:·lfc
Ue Barl&lt;arDo Kennell, Cool- IN LOVING MEMORY OF Kear·
ney E. Ogdin, who passed away
viDe, Ohio, 1169-36M. 6-7-101c
TRAILER SPACE, all uillltlel
one year ago today, June 10,
available. Inquire 158 Mulber- 48 PASSENGER school b u a,
1967,
ry alter ! or 5 p.m. Write P.
good condition. new pa1nl,
0. Box 425 pomeroy, &amp;-:.tic
No one knows the silent heartbest offer, Henry Bahr, phone
ache,
~ Chester.
6-7-3\p
For only those who have lost
FURNISHED apartment, I w o
can tell
bedrooms, Middleport. Pbone FOUR ROOM HOUSE, bath,
Of
the grieC that is borne in
m.,l874.
6-t-lfe
basement, two large Iota, In
silence
Racine. Call 992-11139 or tHtFor
the one we loved so well .
6 ROOMS AND BATH, 110 Mul2951.
6-7-61p
Our
hearts
still ache with sadberry Ave., Pomeroy. Cooness,
tae1 Rose Sisson, phone 8IIJ. TWO BEDROOM home, bath
And
our eyes shed many tears.
2019 after 5 p.m. Pbone 8IIJ.
lull basement, garage: TwoGod only knows how we miss
2431.
6-t-lfc
year-&lt;&gt;ld home in Syracuse.
him
Pbone 119Z-2421.
S.28-30tc
At the eOO oC the first year.
SINGLE HOUSES, nice loc&amp;A happy home we once enjoyed
Uon, apartmenta lurnllbed .It FOR BETI'ER cleaning, to
But death has len a loneliness
unlum1sbed In Middleport,
keep colors gleaming, use
That none can ever fill .
pbone 191U&amp;?.
U.Wc
Blue Lustre carpet cleaner. Sadly missed by his wHe, Anna,
Rent electric shampooer $1.
and two daughters, Maxine and

Wbiu;

No. 1 -

N..IIWIY aMI RaM' 1 - LIM
A.theu, Qallla, Hoe~. llelp lionroe, 'Nior11ft. Noble 111d WuhlQton
Co\lllUH, Oblo, em U.S, Ro'.&amp;tll NOI.
33. DO, Stat. Route No. 11 Ill A.thet'lll
Counb'l U. B. Route lllo. IS, state
Route No. 110 In Qallta COUIIQ'I U.S.
ftouW No. SS, state Rout. NM. Ill.
13. 110 In Hoekllll" Coun~; U.S. Route
No. sa. Stltl Boule No. ' IB lhlll
CaulltJ; steW Route No. 'J8 In MOl!·
"" COUDb'l State Balltll No. 10 la
Morsaa countJ; U. 8. Route No. l1,
&amp;Ute ll.outl No. MO ID Noble oount11
Int.erwtate Route No. 7'f, U. S. Jtou.t.
N-. tt, 110. I!IOA, state aaut.e No. "
la Wulllnrton CountJ, bJ appl1ial

Business Services
TIRES

GUARANTEED REPAIRED
A.SSORTEil ADJUSTMENT
TIRES

ALL SIZES
$12.00

PanmeD1 Witltb-Vartau.a.
ProJee1 Le11,u..-a&amp;LM llllel.
Work Lenrtb-4119-'rl MUaa.
.,.,_., .... I
Peur Inc" ancl 6 lacb LIM LIM
Alblnll. walbbllton Countleil. Ohio.
an u.s. Rout.et NM. 33. 110 ln Athena
CGUDt11 Intentatl 1\ou\e No• .,.,, U.S.
RoutH No1 . 50, 5()A, State Route No .
' 1n WaahblftO• countJ, bJ applJI.nl
Lane Uuea.
Puement Wlclth-VarlDal.
Proler:t l..ellrth--45.31 Ji!llel,
Worll: Len.u-«1.14 llllel.
"Tile date 1111t for eompleUon of
tbll work abaD be u tet fmG lD the
blddLnt propoAl."
J:acb blddu eball be requiM4 to
file with hta bid a certtfted. cbeoll
1u1(1 t.ht OftK:., uf ~t DIYliiOII IN·
ef hit btd, bUt Ill no 'nent moN
tban ten thouiUid dolllrl or a bond
ror nr: ~~r cept of tilt bid, paJable
to the Dlreetos'.
Bidden muat apply, on the proper
fol'llll. for prequaWlc:aUon wtth the
Hlrhway C~lt z.amlner at Columbua, Oblo. al leut 10 41p ~ the
~tate aet to open bicll.
The Minimum ware to be palll to
all labor tmp)oyed on thla eontraet
.tlall be In aecon!llnce with lll.a ..Scbll.
dule of Prevaillnl HourlY
w.,.
Rates A.lcertlllled and DetennlDecl bJ
the Department of IDdUih'lal Re-...
t1on1 appllcabla to State Hllbwlf Department lmproW~ml!n\8 In acc:ordance
11'1th Chapter 4U5 of the BniHcl
Code of Oblo."
Plant and aped.ftcatiOIII an oft file
tn the {)flpartment ol J:{ifhwaya tad
the OHice of Ole Dlvl.llon DIPD\J
Dlrll&lt;!tar.
1'be Dtreetor reMrYfll the riJb1 to
nject any and all bkl•••;,
· ....,

Rniwe tilt ori1lntl Mtutt,of JOW : ·
Clnntd In Y0\11" oa•llolllll
Von kll If
dry·foam ll!llhlld. Mo muu. Mo t1111. No
odor. Uu "'I' tht Ulllt itt,,

pltu tu eacb

...... ,.,- ........
...,
-·
..., ..... 11 .... - l t ...

aYDE KUHN

lt. I ,_.,..,
....kl ........
CALL COOLVtu.l ........

PH.

Am CQN1)ITIONING Rerrlpr- BUDGET PRICIIl fumlture Cll .
our third lloor budpl llhop.
aUon aervlce. Jack'• llefrltBaker Fumltare. Middleport,
erallon, New Haven. bone
Ohio.
'
ll'e
IIIIZ-20'11.
4 I trc

NQTICI TO CONTaACTOll
IT'ATI O' OMIG
DIPAlTMINT OF HI.MWAYI
Colwmbvl, Qblo MIY Jt, 1NI
CMilrJc:t hiH L1911 COIIIY No. 61-42?

UNIT P.ICI CONTRACT
Suled propo;aall will be rteelved
at the otftee of till State ml!nnJ
ntnctor of Ohio Columblll, Ohio ua ·
til 10:110 A.M., Wattel':ll Daylllhl Ill•
ln~.t Time. TuetdaJ, .rune IS, ltlllll. for
tmprovementa Ia:
Part• Noe. 1 to ~ indulh'~ are
offeNd u one eo11.trad aDd wiD
be eollltdered on the bull of
tbe total •mount btd.
!'art No. 1
AU.ens County. Olllo. OD. 8eettoa
ATH . 3!11 - 0.00. statfl Route No.
:IH, In Waterloo Townahlp. bJ' IP.
plylnJ t hltumlnoua cold mb. Nr-

::::::=

a

MACHINEII, N!lllr
service, all mllktl. WY 12284. 'ftle Fabric Shop, Pomeroy. AullKWiled Singer Sales
and Servl&lt;e. We Bllarpen
Sclaora.
J.lt.lf&lt;o

READY • MIX eoncret. dellv· SEWING
ered rlgbl to your proJed.
Fast and easy. J.l'ree 0111matea. Pbone ~. Goetleln Ready • Mix Co., Middleport, Ohio.
f 30 trc

•Wheel Alignment

Prlct r ..
9.11 S1
9.11 .a
650x14
10.11 ,-a
700.13
10.11 A3
700.14
11.11 .4.1
750x14
11.11 A7
670.15
Plu• RocO,pol&gt;lo lxcho"'"

-GUARANJEEO.. .

NOTICI

Nationwl* GUirentM
•

HOME AND
- AUTO

TO CONTUCTOit

ITATI Ofl OHIO

DIPAaTMINT o• MIOMWAYI
Columbus. Ohio Mly 11, IHI
tontrac:t lain L...l Capy No. 611-411
UNIT N:ICI CONT.ACT
Sealed propo.U will be received
It lht olflce of 1be State lllllawi.J
Dlred~&gt;r of Ohio Columbo, Oblo untJI 10:00 A.M.• Eut.em DIJHIM Sa"t"•
ona: Tbne . T~oetdaJO, June IS, 11111, for
lmpro"t"t!ZDIDUI ln:
PaN Noa. 1 to 3 tnolual.... an
offert4 u oae COiltract. .ad wtD
be contldered on tbe bUll of
tile total 111101llli bid.
Part No. 1
Melp CountJ, Obla, 011 s.etlov

5-~

For Sale or Trade

FREE STOIAGE

AIC CLEANERS
W, Va.

pers Plains 687-3251. 62 301&lt;

----

-·

....,

_....

rial•• with 11111 ft4uelar)' wUbta loor

2114.

.......

Da~ thlll 11th d., oC MIIJ, 1MII.

r.

H. O'DIDI

PtoDIIe J11d . . ol llllld CINfttJ'

, ... a.l0-17

Mrs.

F1oyd

Wise and

children

6 10 lip

rejeet 111.1 •n4 eU btdll.
P. 1. MAMIITR
DIUCTOI.
1-101 &amp;-l'r lte

r.... u•. ._n..,~

MASTElCIAFT
TIAILER
I

'I
•

•

I-ll

Schwarze! Marine

I 1'1-llfoJI&lt;.l. 1!LiW

MEEK.!

IT

~IIJl

Hockin_gp~r:f, O~io
PIIONEtri-G'II

WMPO
INFORMATION
NEWS
presents

LOCAL REPORTS
DAILY
• AT •
7:50 A.M.
12 NOON
3 P.M.
AND
4:30 P.M.
l&lt;eeping Meigs
Gallic and
Mason Area
Informed As
Well As
Enlerlained

DAILY CROSSWORD
AClii088
u. AfllrmoI. Quar.
J, Declare

I.Lal'(l

-

UYOwle

II. Hunter of

DOWII
J.Comblt

c arnlYOru
JO.Iolut

I.Danetr'l

11. Goiter,

.....

11. Bam·

Arnold

C)'JJI....

Jt, Wlnpcl

,tho....

....,

G. Bllllldorlnr

lcot.
2:1, Dart

abbr.

. -..

T.llplulloir

llllo

IIIlA

fDrm tour ordinary words.

O!&gt;lnin&amp;'

fl . .Adoii8Cent

l.llbtb

"Safety belts? Too much fuss
and bother."
-Michul Gonlo• (/948·19681

--

li.Bldn

.

ll.llncJoo.

OH, DE,to,l:!! I
TORE TI-lE BAG!
60/.\ETJ.liNG!

UN&lt;ramble thele rour Jumblet.
one letter to each square, to

lllce

...u-

a. auto 1o

~rgMID~;:=:!:!.=:

Ala

, •. Cullo

worm

', ..............._,
,.._ ....,., ...w...,.

G.4DEA
SUNDAY·"•

__

.&amp;uw•

rOBi'GI

lll. wor• bard
28. Lawful
18.1ap'l

rn

III
ll )

wlfo
10. Loopo
ll.llldiOD

111111

••J

·-

....,. .. .,... L"'"
Mtftlnlltntor,

w........

1M PUII'll
AtterMY'S tor AIIWilfthtrater
..lDJ 1-111 1-tll 1-111 ..141 .111 • "

"'

C]

eerr.

c...._.. ..._....&gt;

•
SUNDAY'•

Jooodol&lt;" HAZIL

••••en

VOCAL TALICII IIPTIC

lf'MI llt•y N"'ed ftt •M .....,.,.,

pony-IHOITCAII

Q-lr thtrt any artie!• in
the charter of •tatthood of
Te:rat thai grantl l&gt;ri.,leger
not glv•n to other states?
A-The special prlvllegea
which are accorded to T•u•
by Ita constitution are the
reserved right to all public
lando of the slate, and the
right to rubdivlde into not
more than ftve states.

lN,15TfNct 1 Kll&lt;l&lt;l

\

QUICK QUIZ

TORTE treLUCTANTLY
INVITeS fERRY TO

What's yqur exa~~e?

STAY AT HIS CASTLE

A(lq;IJINfll......._

HliN

HIIU

SCSOBNOU

IBIXO.X

VN

UijnL A REPlACE·

VII IV

IIII~UXIMT-UIIBOXa

SIINDAY .. !'IJP.....Iol MA.NY A loiAN'I TONOUIJ:

'
Published to save IIYft In cooperation
with

IHAKilill otiT RIB liWITill\'8 UNDOIN0.-8JL\KIIIPIWUII

Tt1e Advertisi~~ Coundl, fhl National Safel:yCounr!l,
The lntemaUonal ..ewtpaper Advertllln&amp; Executive!.

..

,.

"

'

'
oI

o.

'

WITHTHENI .

eiLLY WANr JME
71:1STAYHOMI

MNRUDE

llftle:

NOTICI
"Btdl wU1 be neolve4 at tM oMe.. of Webder 111.\1 Fulb, PotaiMJ',
Oblo. uatiJ 'hetdaJ, June 11. 1 •
et IOtOO O'Cloell: A.ll. for tbll aaJa
of Ule Onea L.JDD Carr ptopertr.
lttuated tn tile vman of Ral"rl8Git~Je. Oblo. B~ m11 be IUlmdtted
If' · wrHID• or In pereon at tbO Om•
of lilt. Thll rll1rt ll r . - ,.a te 111Ject
or ell blda.
TMIMI C. Mortlft,

TI-IINKING- OF
RESIGNING

60NNAZ .

tin Funeral Home. Your kindPIIM ani! ~attoN an on
ness wUl always be remember- file In the Departrnllllt ol Rlidt-JI
tnd the Office of tbe ~on Doo
ed. May God bless each one of utt" Director.
Tile [)lnd.Gr re•rva tba diM te

you.

CHILDREN, I'M

A~D

~ROM

---

WALNUT STEIUOO radio. Jlelll).
tilul contemporary walnut st.. APPALOSSA STUD aervlce. By
appointment, phone IJ92.6112.
reo with AM &amp; MF' fadlo, de5-14-30tp
luXe floating turntable, dual
HelpWantM
volume control. Four apeed
c. C. IIIIADI"'RD
LADY lor housework, cool:, Uve
automatic changer. Pay only
AUcriONEEII
In or out, phone IIIS-o5Z51, COJ&gt;o
$1 per month or balance
Ctmplolt SerVIN
tact 0. !Iindy over Liberty
$78.82. Free home demonstr•
W..U.,
Phone or Omlod
'111eatre, Middleport lor inllr· Uon. CaliiJIZ.ml.
6-7.etc
Crllt
Btodfonl
view.
6UII
Baclat. Oldo
MAPLE STEREO. 11168 model
I 1 tic
WAITRESS and ear bop, App!J
stereo. Lm&gt;ely maple, AM 6
In person. Crow's Slelk F'M radio. Four speed autoRouse.
......
matic changer, lour speaker CIGA~ vending machines
aystem. Pay only $19.58 or
and service. ABC Enterprlaoa,
monthly paymenta .t 111. Fne
Muon, W. Va. Phone 'I'IJ.M43.
14-tfc
home demonstration, call •
Auction
3218.
6-7-«&lt;
CONSIGNMENT Sale: Complete
lniiJTance
tine of farm machinery IIIII RESTAURANT equipment. Call
AUTOMOBILE Insurance beell
household items. June 15 stanRutland Furniture, 7U-Ull.
eaneeDed? Lost your operatbig at noon. Sideldll auetlon
6-Wtc
or's license? Call 1192-M.
oo Leo Morris farm, Rutland,
• 11 tic
Oblo. Anyone wlBhlng to sell A NEW shipment of elolhln8
any item at the sale call 70.
bas arrived. Women's and
UOAL fiOTICI
fiOTICI 011 MP01NTMIN1'
4e4l or 74U817. Not rei)IODrltlldren's and Men's Work
c....... , ....
Uniforms. Also Ford Ill-ton lttiN .r CftMt...., II. WII'Nf, _..
·\ sihle lor accidents. Lunch will
be served. Terms of sale pickup truck, 4-apeed lralllNotlcl II Mreby IIJ.Mft tb.t P .. l
Cub.
.....,
missloo. Jeffers Clothillg werner. 91 PGIMIOI'• ObiO• ..., \tell
duly •ppolnUid Admlallltntor ef tbol
Store. Rt. 33, Pomeroy.
IRIUI of ChaaHJ' r. Werur. 4eo
etaled, l1t. of MIIP Cov.nb', Oblo.
1-t«e
For Sele or Rent
CNdlioJI IN nq1llJ'MIIl kJ flit tWf
CORN, 1200 bushels, Da1181
HID, Letart Falls, Phone 247·

l t70N1' THINK WENDY

MOTH PROOFING

Q-Hat onv Jl!!v ever won
tht Ktntuckv Derbv?
A~y one-Regret In
1915.

BLA£11NARS

19118 OLDS, 442, 4 apeed, phone
M9-S'Il1.
'-4-«c

FIVE ROOM boule and bllb,
aluminum siding, atorm wJn.
clolll, • . Pbollll 8Dflll,

LIITININ' 11:111

SAVE sPACE

srr-.

____

Pomeroy

Rm RSH BOAT

'

HOBSTETTER
REALTY

""

99~43

SPECIAL
$295.00

WILL DO aewlng at home Baker Furniture.
6-4-8lc
Janel
Also grandchildren,
zippers, pockets, pegglnl,
Karen Griffith and Connie and
hemming, alteratloDI, etc.
MBG • 0.00 • temporatJ route to N·
GERT'S A GAY GIRL - Reao
Keith Jones.
Ue"t"e traffle at Pomei'OJ'.JiuoD 81141••
Mrs. Freddie Thabet. Maaon,
For Sale
6 10 ltc
dy for a whirl, after c1...,mg
ul the Villar• of PomeroJ, bJ ftlll'"'
faclnl wlth up]Wt ~nent..
Phone 7'13,.5851.
4-10-tfc THREE ACRES, 5 room house,
carpels with Blue Lustre.
Pavement W14tll- l6 t.t.
new roof, barn, cellar, two
ProJed and Worll: lADftb-lAIS.I
JWrt electric sbampooer, $1,
fffi or o.:rr llill.
HAPPY HOUR. Sbenang Springs clslerns and furniture $4500.
Baker FurnitUre.
6-tMte Ir\ LOVING memory ol our dear
Part No. I
Nile Club, 5 to 8 p.m. MonPhone 74U613.
5-IS.301p
Melli CoUJitJ, ObJ0,---oi- Seettou
11\'!lher, Ella Ebersbach, who faee couru.
W\tlth- 18 t ..l.
MEO - old sta111 Bauto No. ltlday thru Friday. Ladles nlg1lt
passed away three years ago, Pl\vement
Projeet and Work Lenath - t.M1.1
Real
Estate
For
Sale
0.00.0.7'7, 014 State Rou.to No. tU.
het
or
1.22
loiDM.
every Friday.
u.tle LARGE HOUSE In Racine, 9
June 10. 1965.
In SllilbUI'J' Towulilp, and Ia t.bo
66 Buick . . . . $2,795
Pert Me·. '
Vtllap of IIOdclltport, by 1'UIU'fllc:·
Hocklnr CountJ, Oht~&gt;, on Sectioftl
rooms, one third acre lot,
iDI
With
uPhaU
eoDeJ"Ot..
Electra 4 dDIH' sedan.
• Mill • a .81ol.4'fl, State Rout.
We reel sad when those we love ROC
Pawmeat Wldth-Vartou.
good location, $8500. Phone
For Trade
No . 59!, In Green and Wtrd Town•
tor~ air condiUooed. &lt;oonorb
ProJect &amp;Del Work 1AII.c1b-U-.J
ah!JII, bJ apply\D( • bltumlnoaa cold
949-3'152.
..
s.:.121c
Are
called
to
lhe
in
the
home
fttl or :1.11 Mlln.
all white ftnish. ONoonfll!ulook' o.l
CASH FOR Antlquea. Bm
mill llllrlue eoune.
Pert No. I
above.
Pnement Wldtb-Varloaa .
One part!cul&amp;r IO&lt;al
Hamm, Middleport. Oblo.
M:e\p CoWJtJ", Oblo. on Cowltl
Geo. RoiJololter, Brobr
But they have gone to prepare ProJf!d and wan Lenrth - :lt,'FOG.I Bold
'No, 311 - O.oll, BZI'I'OBATION
&amp;-1~ POODLE PUPPIES. AKC Toy
owner. Was $2,895.
tHI or U 1 JIU•.
OF HAUL ROAD FOR PROJECT NO ,
the way
Part Mo. I
miniature. $'15 and up. Stud POMEROY - 1 story 5 rooms,
16(11), In lllllbllrJ Townlhlp, In' ,...
VInton 001llltJ'• Oblo. on a.otloD.I
AOO we'll meet them a g a I n
bath, convenient to atores, leaurfaelnl with uphtlt e011~.
service and grooming. Phooe
Vl"' . teo _ (9 .28) nuw. state Route
favement Wl4m.-11 ...t.
some
happy
day.
66 GTO ....
vel
lot.
Make
offer.
Mo . 180. tn cnnton and Vblton To"llm- ProJect and Work Le~l~Ul-f50. 4 t.ot.
1192-5443,
11 S tic
•hlpa.
by
appl)'lnl
a
bttum\nou•
.~t~r­
For
God
has
told
us
that
nothing
DAIRY F'AIIM, 291 acres, liill
or 0.11 .u..
PonUac 2 dr, hlrdtol) COIOPO·
faee treatment.
''Tbll date tet for eompl.UOD. of
can
sever
Improved
pasture,
80
In
cult~
Pavement
Wltlth-U
teet.
Wanted To Le1957 GMC hall-ton plcl&lt;up; also
thta work lbaU bo u a.t forib Ja
Just
arrived. 4 sp. shift. Pos.
A life He created to 1i ve on PrGJeet and wort: IAQth-ID.321.D the blddinl pn~,_at"
vatlon, 3. ponds, S gas wella,
FARMS in Melga or Muon
two year old small horse. Pb.
trac.
Superb condiUon. 0110
feet or l-8!1 Mllflll.
ICieh bidder abl11 bo nqv.lred lo
Ptrt Mo. C
forever.
free
gas.
Income;
2
barns,
2
County lor oil and gas. Write
fllo
wt.th
hll
bid
a
nrtlfled
ctJecll
very careful driver.
7~.
6-4-8lc
Mel1111 CountJ", Oblo, on Beetillllll
fur an amOUBt equal to flft peroc.M
So let God's promise soften our NBQ
• •1 .o .oo. state ftoate M'o.
to Chaweva 011 and G II
houses, baths, other buOdlngs.
., flit filii, bul ln no evnt more
eRI . In Sei.Jito Town•lllp, bJ 11tP'b'·
sorrow
Utu tea tllolliiDcl d:ollan or a bolld
FAIIMS WANTED
Corp., 508 Cutler St., Marietta, 11168 ZIG ZAG portable, a!lgbta bltamlno111 nrlt~ trutment.
for toft per cent ., lilt IJld, l*flbt.
Am give us new strength Cor tq
Pinment WII!Ui::-18 feet.
HELEN and VlRGIL TEAFORD
0.
Wf.JJip ly used; does everything withto tbl DlrMtor.
ProJect ID4 Work Lenath -1o.m.1
a brighter tomorrow.
Btclden mut appiJ. on tilt propAuodatea - tiJ.33!5
out allachmenta; in good COP·
,feet or , .04 Mlle..
ool er fonal, for p~IUoD wtth
BUICK
PONTIAC
""The data oet for eomptetion
the Rltbwa1 Credit EnmiDtr at Co·
Oblo
ditlon, $5.98 per month, or
Wanted To ·auy
thla
wort!:
abaU
be
a•
Ht
forlll
Ill
GMC
TRUCKS
Sadly missed by her son1 and
tumbal. Ohio. at leut 10 4lftl tiethe bld41nl pn'lpolll·'"
ton the cblte 11t to open bkll.
lull price of $49.80. For free
SMALL ACREAGE, no 'building,
daughters and Clmilies.
:Kaeb bi.Mer 1ball be -reqttlred to
1'ba )()nlmum ,..,. to Ill palct to
home demonstration, call 992610 Up file wttb lr.t. ht4 • eerlHied c11M11: an labGr emplo,-.d. on tbit COD·
slate price and I'U11 particufor 1n tmount eqUal to flft ""' c •
traet ahi.D be ill ucordallctl wltb OW
2138.
IJ.4.6Ic
lars. Write llol&lt; 8811 F 1&gt;&lt;1 the
01' .... ltkl, trot 'n 110 event moN
HScbedule of PrtnlliDI Hourb' Wqe
Business
Services
than ten tboueaad dollan or a boftd
RaMo ~ uu!. DetenDIDK
Dally Sentinel, Pomeroy.
tllr ton 11tf cent of Ma IJW, PUIIble
RADIO &amp; TV repair, re&amp;IIODbJ the Department of butu.trlal ReSTEREO
RADIO
combination;
6-7....
to the J)lNetor.
latiolll appUcable to Stat. llilbWOJ
able prices. AnteMa &amp; BoosCard of T111nb
Blddtrt muat apPlJ. on tile pro"PDepartment lmprovema&amp;l Ill MleOrd.•
repossessed; beautiful cabier form~, ror pfequUftcattOft with
.... w:tth CbaPtU 4111 of thl . .
ter service. John Harrison,
net,
like
new.
Balance
due
the
mJ!IwtY
eMit
bamlnet
•t
[!o..
I WISH to thank all my friends,
i "fiMd Code ot Oblo ...
GOOD USED Elec. RDaster.
701
Broedway
St.,
Middleport,
Jumh\11, Oblo. at leut 10 4lUI tJo.
J'lanl, aDd JIIOOIIIatlolll 11'1 •
$8'1, or make paymenta of
neighbors and relatlves _Corthe 101"11 the (late tet to oDell blda.
Che!!ter Fire Dept., Phoae
nte In tiM JHpubn!IDt of m.,...JI
Ohio.
Phone
992-2521,
open
.,..
lftftlmum
wata
to
1M
paJ4
e.
$5.14 per month. Ph4De 992dowers, food that WMI sent to til ltbl\r emP1071id Oft tb\1 eontrad aad tha OftiGO of U. DtYIIletll"DQ1185-33t2.
6-Htp
evenings.
6-WO!c
llty Director.
Z83f,
8-I-6IA:
us at the time or death of our abaD be ln acccmtaaeo wt.Ot lito
Tbo DSNtior •••n• the rttM •
..8c:he4ule ,.., PnnDI"' Bcn&amp;riJ W••t
reJect art7 and ID bids.
dear husb&amp;OO and father, Rev. Ratll
ANTIQUES. furniture, dishes,
tUcerlltlled
l1l4
Dlta~
P. I. MASHITft
CURTISS "DAIRY BEEF''
Floyd Wlse. To each pallbear- b]' tile Departrroent of ln4utr'lal a.
DtaiCTOI
mllcellaneous. Mrs. Howard SAVE $30 or more on aluminum
appHea'ole to state BllbRJ
breeding service. cau Leland
1-101 ..., ItO
er, Rev. Ivan Myera for his IIttau
boats. All sizes 111-1).13-14
Department tm11ronmenta Ia aocotd·
Cecil, 800 W. Main St., PomeParker,
Pomeroy
residence
ance
wltb
dtaptar
411!1
ol
tbo
.
.
consollng words and the Mar~
loot. Call 992-2347, or 992-6258.
'tOJ.
1-2&amp;-Uc
\1Md Code of Oh\o ...
992-2284 or call station Tup.

,

~&gt;J.iDIDN'T
CALL "iOI.J!!
??-AKKEAR
BREATH IN'!!
SOMEONE'S

BEGINNERS

Sin
6.10x13

5.55
.POMEROY

H-r Core.

SAUI:S AND IIBR'VICE
FIRESTOMI DLC 100
NEW TREAD-BLACKWALL

EXPERI'

mRECI'OR
:He

~eat

BLA:EnNARS

P, E. llA 88£'1 U

lun• lO.ll

From the Largest TI'UI!k
Bullcll ..r Radlltor To The

.

tM11111 MQII C..,.t Cleellllll

TUPPERS PLAINS, O,
PHONE 667-3682

...........

EXPERIENCED
11•11tor Service

BRING NEW
LIFE TO
YOUR
CARPETING

•

lo\~T C~RE10R

ARRIVfS.

�-.... • -

...

. ..

. ."

.
il

,)'

Weather
8 -

~he

Dally Scnlhwl, l'omcroy.Middleport, 0 .• Morlla,y, June 10, 1988

Nina, Pinta, Santa Maria
About to be 'Torpedoed'
HOLLYWOOD (UPJ)- Director Edward Dmytryk leaves lor
!lab' soon to lire torpedoeobelatedly- lnto the hulls o1 lhe
Nina, the Pinta and the Santa
Marla.
He's making a super epic
biography o! Christopher Columbus.
Dmytryk apent the last five
years researching the man who
discovered the Western Hemisphere and has come up with
some conclusions that will curl
the hair of Italian patriots.
"COlumbus was a bungler, a
con-man, a ladles' man and one
of the great liars of hls time,"
the directQr said.
A guy with a Ukranian name
o! Dmytry has a lot o! gall
putting
the
rap
on the

TONIGHT AND TUESDAY
June 10 • 11

OUR MAN FLINT
Jllmel Coll)ura

PLUS
IN LIKE FIJNT
James Colburn

discoverer of America, but he
says his movie will tell It Uke it
was back in the 15th arid 16th
centuries.
"Columbus was a very , bad
scientist," be said. ~•11Jat•s why
he discovered America. The
best scientific minds of his day
alreatb knew the world was
round.
Calculated Wrong
"The difference between him
and tlle others was Utat he
!igured China was ooly 3,500
miles from Europe across the
ocean and the otllers knew it
was at least 11,000 miles.
Thanks to Columbus' miscalculations, he made it safely to San
Salvador."
Much d. the picture, which
will star Marcello Mastrolana,
will debunk the Columbus cl
American textbooks.
"There never was a mutiny
among his crew," Dmytryk
said. u Nor were his men
cutthroats and convicts. History
shows onl,y four of the crew had
been taken from jails.
"And it is a phony story that
Spain's Queen Isabella pawned
her jewel s to send Columb~ls on

his first voyage. "Actually the

MEIGS TIIATU
TONIGHT AND Tl!ESD ,\Y
June 10 • 11

COOL HAND LUKE
(Tecbnicolor)
Paul Newman
and Geo. KeMedy
COLORCARTOONS:
Fastest Car in the World
Rodent to Stardom

SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.

whole trip cost only $14,000."
At those prices he was lucky
he got out of port.
Dmytryk will trace Columbus'
life from the time he wa s a
child in Genoa until his desth.
"A lot of our study has come
from Columbus' own kournals,"
Dmytryk e x plained. "He
cooldn't read or wrlte until he
was 21, and then it was
Portuguese, not Italian. His OM"l
papers are full of outright lies,
contradictions and the coloring
of the truth.

tries.
urm going to show him as a
human being wllh all lhe !aults
and !olbles o! a !lesh and blood
man ."
ian 't Dmytryk a!raid the
Italians will tar and leather him
lor
lambasting the great
explorer?
•1No . He Is more a Spanish
hero than an llalian bero. Alter
all, it was lor spain I h a I
Columbus saUed aDd made his
three discoveries and landings
in the New World.
"Which brings up another
point o! his bungling. lilstead o!
bringing hack guld, he returned
to Spain with corn. tobacco and
Indians. That didn't set too well
with the q.~een.
•• After his second trlp- which
didn't produce any gold either-·
the king wanted hi s nutty
navigator thrown into prison tor
debts and a variety of other
reasons. He eventually was
imprisoned, but that wa s after
his lhlrd trip.
"His third trip was made at
the insistence of Isabella who
j ust wanted to get him oot or
the way. And history records
Utere might have been some
romantic h~~ ~
Christopher and Isabella, too."

REAL SWINGER, Danielle
Laine demonstrates the
form sbe used to wiD at the
Seeond NaUonal Festival of
Freneb Majorettes lD Nice,

France. Danlelle, ZO, was
~rowned. queen of baton

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•

2 Cycles Normal and Short

• 3 .W~ih Water
· SeleCtions

II

• 2 Ainse Water
Selections

• 2 Spin Speeds
• 2 Agit!tion Speeds
• Stainless ·Steel Tub
• Matching "Silver

lining " Dryers. Too

Model MA690F

248.

5

A 1"'"11 driill witll 1 cor of
his own his 1 ri1ht to fool
flllotr prOIHI.
Unlortunottll, this pride
cen ond sometimes does llu
tile form or sllowinc oft llld
lsijnl chances. In such mes,
• cor becomes primlllll 1 1111
to lloYe fun wilh.
M1n1 IOUn&amp; people, ol
have excollant driYinl
records. The! know th1t on
automobile is dofinlloiJ not 1
1111. It's 1 powerlul rnochino
witll tile .....,.lrottd ...,...
ity to Wll and llllim.
Ytt, bt prOIHI o1,.. car ...
but, II tilt limo, ' - '
ot and operate il with care rtstrllnt llld inltllifenct. '
Perdoo tile prucllinc. 1101t
wo ~n lo tllink lhlt drif.
ina il serious bulintlt.

course.

Dlvls-Wa,..llll.
Phone 992·2966
114 Court St. PomWoy

MIDDLEPORT, 0.
DON'T
FORGET!
For LadW. Only

Special Shopping
Hours:
6:00 to 9:00 P.M.
1 r~uRs., JUNE 13

I

News, Notes

Gallipolis, 12.0

J'OY-MaiiOil, 21.60; lllnton, 2.10
stat.; Kanawha Falls, 5.30 !ailing; Charleston, 18.80 rising.
London and Marmet, are on the
sUI; Win!leld, running 2 !eet o1
rollers.
CALL ANSWERED
The Pomeroy emergency IQl8d
answered a call to the Elmer
Still residence on Nye Ave. at
12:47 a.m. &amp;mday from where
Still was taken to Veterans Mem.
orlal Hospital, given medical
treatmmt, and discharged.

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LINE OF DUTY - TIU'olfsb closed door, ell.)' pairOiman Gary E. Wallace 'talka toJimes p
llalley at 752 First Ave. aboot a blt-aldp accident saturday night invulving Halley'• car. ~
alter this picture was taken the o!llcer waa admitted to the house ani Halley surrendered a revulver to the policeman. The time was 12:45 L m. Sundey, The other patrolman, on the rl&amp;ht Is
John Altizer.

the 1-·'1.~ afternoon parade,
Word..of~mouth can help make
Heports o( committee chair- which begins in Middleport June
a su CCe ss of the Big Bend Re- day in a C of C business rnoet.
21 at 1 p.m., should make known
ing following lunch at Dailey' s men were heard and general
gatta Weekend June 21.22-23.
their intentions to participate by
planning advanced .
This was one of the methods Rcstaurnnt. Said Carsey:
It was pointed out that organ- contacting Chairman Tom Cas"We nood to give word-Of •
Regatta Coordinator and Pre sizations, bu sinesses and indi· sell . There will be an estimatIdent of the Pomeroy Chamber mouth puUidty of the regatta viduals planning to participate in ed 29 t~e presented
ol Commerce Jack Carsey urg- to fi-lends and relatives wherev .
in the various clas ses of t h e
parade competition. •
John Kerr, chairman of the
\''t'
rock 'n roll show reaturlng the
. \group, "Your Lovin' St. Bernard," said arrangements for
this part of the Friday activities have been confirmed and
the group will appear at 3 p.m.
and again at 7 p.m. The band
is also expected to participate

to the fullest Mon- er they may be ."

Dies Saturday

ELBERFELDS

Ray Trial

Father's Day

Is Next Sunda.r

HOSPITAL . NEWS

June 16th
Ladies &amp; Girls Pie•• Rncl:

0~ Thursday night this week. New York Clothing
WIU turn the store over to you for easy sh~l

ger, Rl. I Albany; William E.
Henry, Jackson; Mn. Richard L.
Pullin, St. Albans, w. va.; Mro.
llenry J. Mozzl, Riverdale, Dl.
Births
Mre. John F, Aelker, Rt. 1
Mlcldleport, daughter, 9 :55 a.m.

That~

Bartlett, Mra. Verne c. Blazer, Frederick V. Bouie, WU·
Uam A. Brewer, Mra. Joaeph W.
Clark, Mrs. Joseph F. CUmlng.
ham, Wendell J. Ervin, Orria G,
Fisher, Otia J. Jolm!oo, Dennis
P. Martin, Amette Miller, Mro.
Clarence C. Myers, Mra. Gilbert R, Planto, Mrs. Earl R.
Plummer, Mra. AudreY Poore,
Delmar W. Rhodea, Mra.
liam L. Rollins, Robert L, Soxem, Jr., Mrs. James L. Sm.Jth,
Mrs. Ralph G. Smith, Mrs. DoDaid B. Allen and ln!ant om, Mrs.
Michael II. Dum and 1n1ant lion,
Mre. Robert E. Law""' and inCant twin daugbtero, Ray Barker,
Joeee D. Beckett, Rufus R, IJu.
pre, James F, FooN, Mra. !IIerman L, Leeob', BUI,y B. Matthowa, Chrlllllpber.Pollho', Mra.
Cecll D. Price, Avery Wllllama,
J. Waldo Wileman, FAlwanl G.
RQDOlda, Mro. Stanley R. Lamley and ln!ant dauahter.

FREE GIFTS - D001. PRIZES

3 - $10.00 GIFT CERTII1CATE.~ liven away at
9 p. m. No purchase neceasary, Free registration.

New York Clothing House,' Pon.or

._

9(,11?'

-0

~ ut\OERFOot

srf.\\\~

Jerlu loclo
otCreelane
Acrylic Fiber

wu.

o

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0

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0

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Bill Mayer, chairman of the
Fred Crow. chairman of the art show to be held tn the St.
Frog Jump contest , SaJd nlcm · Paul's Lutheran Church, said a
bcrship cards for the Society large display will be avallabl~
for the Promotion or Bull Frogs, tor art lo-ver~J and only a free
In c. , Meig s Chapter, will go on wUJ offering will be accepted.
sale Wednesday morning, Per ~ Ladies of the church will serve
sons holding membership cards food.
will have to pay only half price
Bill Grueser, Frida.Y chair-

man, said the editor o! the Woilder!ul World of Ohio Mapzine
and other news media repre..
sentatives or Ohin and West VIrginia will be present.
Robert Wingett reported 111011
material for the Regatta Program
book has alreadY been turned
over to the printer but some
advertisements are ye~ be .
sold. It was also noted that com·
mercia! exhibit space Is atill available and cor,tacta to budnesses will be made yet this
week and also next week. The
commf!rclal exhibits wUL be lo-cated In the Junior hl&amp;h auditorium.

I,

rownm
Court for

SA1GON (U PO - A handful of Viet Cong firing from suburban
ric e paddies rocketed rush hour crowds today in their bloodiest
bar rage of Saigon, sending thou sand s of ci vilians into sc reaming panic and killing or wounding a record 135 Vietname se.
HOLL\'WOOD (UPO - For·
For 10 minute s 26 six·foot 122mm rockets rained on downtown
mer Cleveland Browns Cootbail
Saigon at daybreak in the 11th consecutive day of terror shelling
great Jim Brown appear• ln
aimed at b : ~aking tbe capital's will to fight.
court today answer charges of
assaulting a police officer in
Pani c swept the jammed kiUed more in a single day but
SmaU wonder that Mrs. Myron (Kathryn) Miller, one of Meigs connection with an incident
streets. The shrieking of victim s never claimed so high a toll of
County's mos t patriotic women, returned to her home in Grafton whlch hospitalized an attractive
rose from rul:.oble and smoke both dead and wounded.
a
The
rockets
slammed
into
model who was Brown' a trefor the annual Memorial Day service s.
from rocket bl ast s that ripped
In ca se you didn't know - I didn't - the only United States quent companion.
bulldings within two blocks or squar e mile area, cutting down
me n, women aOO ch ildren near National Cemetery in West Virglnia is located at Grafton and the
The district attorney' a omee
the presidential palace in the
the
pres
idential
palace,
the
U.S.
observance
of
Memorial
Day
there
has
become
an
event
to
merit
has
relused to !onnall,y charp
city' s center.
Embassy,
three
American
milinational
acclaim.
It
is
s
aid
to
be
the
only
celebration
of
its
kind
Brown with assault with iiUDt
One rocket burst into the
to commit murder, one of the
waiting room of Dr. Dan Van tary billet hotel s and govern- in the nation.
ment
buildings.
'['hey
hit
a
Each
year
since
1869
the
school
chlldren
of
Grafton,
dressed
charges on which he na
1
Chleu. "I saw several pregnant
doctor's
crowded
office,
houses,
in
white
and
each
carrying
a
mall
bouquet
Or
Oowen
and
an
AmboQM!l SJ!n\lll flig,hL
.
women and children rUMing
an
old
woman
seiling
bread
and
erl~n
Flag,
along
with
other·MU~iJW
untts,
have
perticiplted
In
Eva
Mlrle
Bohn-Chii1.
'22,
no
!rqm ,lloe bi!IJdj!1&amp;. ~ l!ill4 BUl
Mykelhost o! tulare, Cali!., a a motorbike rider p]1.1s other the annual Memorial Day parade. This year there were 2,000 found semi..conseioua and se-u.s. adviser . He heard the targets unseen from the rice school children taking part. Speaker for the oc casion was Richard r lously il\lured Sundey night
W, Homan, Sr. , vice commaOOer • in · chief of the National Veter- beneath the baJcmy of Brown's
moans of victims buried in tl1-: paddi es.
lleturn Fire
second-door apartment in West
ruins or the doctor's O{fice.
ans or Foreign Wars.
burial.
Again
the
dedicaUon
was
U.S.
spokesmen
said
the
Viet
The Grafton National Ceme·
Hollywood.
Hit Officers' Billets
When she wu questioned by
Explosion s ripped into wall s Cong fired the rockets from si x tery , e stablished in IS67, con- held. However , there were so
many unburied still lying oo the detectives at ber hoJPltal bed
or the Rex and ~lendid, two mile s east and east-northwest. tains some 2,035 graves of men
Allied artillery fired back but a or all wars, including the Kor- ground that a parade proces. Monday, she refused to nmne
COMING TO REGATTA - A rock 'n roll singing group, "Your Lovin' St. Bernard," wUI ap.
U.S. military officers' billet s.
later check found no guerrilla ean Confiict. or the total sen- slon had to move to another lo· Brown as her assailant.
pear in person for the 1968 big bei"Kl regatta. The group soon wiU cut its fir st major album. The
Maj. EMn Krellick of Hopkins~
catioo for the ceremonies.
shows, expected to be big attractioo to all ages, wlU be on Friday, June 21, at 3 p.m. and again
bodies.
Depocy DisL Atty. PhU!lpa
ville, Ky., said he "just rolled
ice graves 1,251 are bodies ot
Decoration of the graves with Mueller said be did not lsauo
Vietnam
governThe
South
at 8 p.m. The tallest boy above recenUy left the ~ ai"Kl has been replaced by a girl
both
Union
·
and
Confederate
orr the bed when they started
Dowers began in 1869 wben the the
ment announced shortly later Troops of the Civil War.
complaint because of
coming in. It was a rude
Vietname
se
civilians
thaf
more
Work on the cemetery began mayor asked all citizens to donate "insufficient evidence."
awakening.''
than allied troops were killed ln in 1867 and It was Intended to liberall,y to children who would
"There was not suftlciU
The shelling came shortly
call
at
thelr homes for t h e evidence to convict," he sald.
saigon
fighting
in
May.
dedicate the memorial site on
before Gen. William C. West·
"This is aside from the facl
May 30, 18&amp;8, to mark the day flowers .
moreland, ending four years'
appeared
on
behalf
of
Tiny's,
During this year's cerernontes, that the woman would not slsn
members
()(
the
Planning
ComAn ordinance establishing the
of May 30 in 1861, when Genercommand of U.S. forces ln
posiUon of e,Ppment Oj)Orator mission have recommended that which owns both lots in question. Vietnam, left by plane lor his
al B. F. Kelley entered Grafton a repllea of the Unknown Sol· the complaint.' '
COUncil
approved
the
report
and the salary to be paid was the change be made.
However, the former foalball
to start the llrst land engage- dler' s Tomb was dedicated.
new duties as Army chief or
of Mayor C. 0. Fisher for the
}lepresented among -the lnter- star recently turned actor, was
CouncU
acce]lled
the
bid
of
given alllhree re&lt;Predreadings
staff. "Good luck!"
called
ment of the Civil War. Howevred at the cemetery are 24 charged with one count or
for pa11age MondaY niBht when Dale Dutton, Mlcldleport, lor the month of May. It showed an in· Westmoreland to his successor,
er, a three day rain Ieft t h e
come
of
$1,321
in
fines
and
fees
.
Micldleport Councll met in regu- village dump pi'OJ)OrtY located
ground muddy and a postpone- states. The capacity of the cern ~ felony assault against a sher·
Gen. Creighton W, Abrams.
It
was
reported
that
repair
of
etary is 2, 123, with no unde- iff s deputy who said he waa
oo the fiood road. Dutton's bid
lar aeaslm at VUiege Hall.
Westmoreland had judged the
ment was necessary .
the
streets
or
the
town
torn
up
for
the
property
was
$2,000.
The ordiaanco wUl be an adroughed up by Brown when ha
shelling a publicil;y stunt,
Meantime, trains and army veloped area for expansion.
In
the
construction
or
the
sew·
Each
year
lhe
West
Virginia
dition to the present salary or- In another action Council at the
attempted to enter the apart..
however bloocl,y. Captured Comambulances bearing bodies from
age
disposal
system
has
begun
State
Legislature
appropriates
request
o!
Robert
IIetz,
Gallidinance
the vlllap. The rate
ment. Bail ol $1,000 was
munists said the harassment or
nearby battielleldo streamed Inand is expected to be completot. pay for an tiJ!lpment OJIOrl- polis, passed another resolution
to Gratton until bodies were pil- $2,000 to delray the l!liJIOIISeS recommended.
Saigon was designed to add
ed within the next few days.
(Continued on Page 8)
tDr will be $1.66 an hour lor providing for the vacating or an
punch to the bargaining power
CHARLESTON, W. Va. (1JP0 ed hlgb on the ground awaiting
Bills were approved for pay ~
one year's nperionce; $1.75 lor alley between two lots in the
o! Norlh Vietnam delegates - Go\'. Hulett C. Smith's office
two years exparieioee aJXi $1.85 Pearl and Beech st. areas. Bett ment.
meeting American diplomats in said Monday contracts totaling
for three years experlence. LaW·
prellmtnary peace talks in $6,682.938 have been awarded to
reece Manley has been serving
Paris.
two out of state construction
ao ecpdpment operator but haa
The shelling has intensified to companies for portions or a
ac:tepted new employment, it was
bridge to rep1ace the Silver
the extent that bomb shelter
reported.
builders have begun business in Bridge at Point Pleasant.
eouneU dlscuned another orAllied Structural Steel Co.,
the capi1al. Today's barrage
dinance being &lt;Msideredlorpaskilled 19 clvUians and wounded Hammon, Ind. , was givena$124,·
o&amp;p but Is e11110cted to take no
appreciation of his work wiu("
116 others. The barrages have 328 contract for two of four
Nearly 200 Meigs County Con-- with an outline or Meigs County the district
further action until late in Jwte.
pier s to be used on the new
servationists and frieOO.s ~ were pre sented to all past suThai ordinance, ~!readY given
Coru.ervalion project awards
bridge
south
o!
Point
Pleasant.
pervisors and present supeni·
served
the
25th
anniversary
of
two o! the th~ reQI!red readThe Title I summer project Slx weeks or instruction will be
were presented by Clyde Walker,
and another Cor $5,226,450 Cor
the founding of the Meigs SoU sors. Past supervisors present manager 1 Federal Lar.:l Bank to
lngl, will chanae lho zoning reg- in lhe Eastern Sehoul District gl.ven the student•· selected to
steel.
participate on the basis o! test
and Water Conservation District indudcd Dale Dye , W. S. Michael, first place winner Tom Hamm
ulalloo• lor pioperiY •t the cor- wlli begin Monday at Tuppers
The
Al
Johnson
Construction
MoOOI..Y evenin,g at Pomeroy Ju. Dorald Mora, Reid Youn,g, and and rumer--up Don Smith. Tom
ner o! Belich and Lolcusl Sts. Plains, Charles Taylor, direc- results. Taylor noted that only
Co.
,
MiMeapolb,
Minn.,
receivthose showing the greatest need
Clarence Price.
The properlY would be changed tor, announced.
Hamm' s project on erosion co.
ed two contracts for piers total- nior Hl&amp;h School with Karole! earPast supervi sors unable to at·
for
pre~school
instruction
could
nahan, one of the original super!Nm a residential categury to
Classes will be in reading,
Ing
$665,105
and.
$667,055.
be included in the summer pro·
tend were C. E. Humphrey, Dana trol will go to the District Con1 bullness category. A super
maUl, and physic-al fitness for
Bid s tor the West Virginia visors, the master of Ceremon- Hoffman, Ear1y Roush and John test to be held at A~,ns on June
oorvlce sWion is plOMed lor students selected on the basis gram .
approach to the Ohio River bridge ies.
22.
Kindergarten students as well
The Invocation was given by HamiD . Present supervisors retho location, It le reported, and Of need for remedial instrUC•
wUl
be
opened
Tuesday.
FollowClarence McKnight, area conas those ln the remedial p r oWayne Roush. Dinner was serv· ceiving p~ues included Thereon servatiOIJist wlth the SOU Con-tlon. The eighl week program
log
that
the
ani)'
remaining
co~
gram wlll be transported by bus
COLUMBUS (UPO - Amer- tract will be for the bridge deck. ed by the SalisbUry P. T. A., ani Johnson, Harold Carnahan, Roy servation service, introduced the
wlll conclude on August 14. ClassDAM.\GES ONLY MINOR ·
entertainment was furnished by Miller, Rex Shenefield, and Da- guest speaker, Paul' A. Dodd,
es will be held daily !rom 8:45 and · are asked to be ready to ica ls undergoing a far reach·
Minor damages were lncurred Lm. to 12:1&gt; p.m. with a lunch- board the bus at 7:30 a.m. lng social revolution and •~physi·
the Impacts, !eaturing TOOU11Y vid Koblentz.
Monday.
More
exact
bus
sched·
A special 20 • _vear service Project Coordinator. ~ckeye
to a car driven by Howard Kit- eon at noon.
Karr,
Titnii\Y
Gumpf,
Jeanne
clans who fall to recognize these
Hills Resource, Conservation and.
A charter for non..profitpurules will be developed.
chen, Jr., Marietta, 1\J.esday
Whitehead, Kirk Chevalier and award coveri~ the years 1948 Development ProjecL He point«
needs and change with the times
Bus transportation wUl be pro·
poses
was
granted
today
by
Teachers and aides will begin are actuall,y !ailing In their reto 1968 WIS presented to Clrl
morning when it struck the rear vided !or the approximatel,y 80
Rick Buckley.
Secretary
o!
Slate
T
e
d
W.
with
a
planning
and
orlentaUOD
Bilikam,
soil conservationist, in to the los&amp; of j)CI[)uiation, par.
ot a car driven by Mary Olive students tn grades ooe through
District Appreclation Awanls
sponsibUlty to thelr patients,"
tlculorl,y of the YOU111 - ' • ·
Brown to the Ohio Sociel;y for
_Weber, LOng Bottom, Route" l, eight from Tupper&amp; Plains and meeting on Wednesday at 10 a. according to Dr. Earl Lyons.
were presented by ThereonJohn-as
one of our most serioua ~
the
Promutioo
of
Bull
Frogs,
m. at the Tuppers Plains Sehoul.
Tenth ., District Cmgreesat ~ intersection of Nye Ave., the Riverview Schools.
son, chairman of the district,
Dr. Lyons, p r e - ol the
east
Ohio problems. He nl1811
Inc., Pomeroy.
and Cheater Road, .meroy poAmerican Oateopathic AssociaKindergarten will also be cOn·
to Edson Roush, Wallace Dame-- lnan Clarence E. Miller, 1n
quesUoos •• to lMM thio trend
The artieh~ B of lncorpora·
·uce oiald. 'rhere weFe no il\lur- dueted beginning on June 17.
wood, and Wayne and Uoyd Roush a telegram !rom Washington, can be reversed.
MEIGS GENERAL HOSPITAL tion, told the annual meeting
tioo
elate
that
lhe
organizatea and no charges:' ··
for outstanding conservaUonpro- D. C, earl,y today, lnlormed
Admbslons - CetU Clrcle, o! tho Ohio ()lteopelhte AasoRegionol jea[OIISiel ond poll•
tion wlll .. Promote the Ohio
grams on their farms . Johnson Ohio Valley I'Ubllshing Ce.,
Pomeroy; Richarll S m I t h, cllllion MondaY that lhe traditical
boondarieo camot be per!late Frog Jumping Champalso presented the anmal re- Publisher Rlchar&lt;! S. ()wen
Reedsville; &amp;&gt;pbla Du!I.Y, Pom- tional aystem must be changed
mitted 1o handi&lt;IP the JIOCIIII•
ionship."
that he will be unable to atand uid Medlcare was an ex·
port o! the dtstricL
DISCU&amp;~ AIRPonT
eroy.
Meiga County. WI muat 1111W
lniUal trustees ~e ~obert
Recognition was given to Mrs. tend tooil!ot's IJIIIII ...,.. acRoutine business was conduct- · GAUGES - Ga)llpoils, 11.9
Discharge - Emma McCOy. ample nece&amp;lll')' change.
change I, aald Doold, clllltpl ha..
Wingett, ~racuse ... ~ Fred
E\'ereU Colwell, wife ot one or tivities, due to 1ctiV!tle1 in
•'Medicare has brought witb
od, and Roy Miller, RD, Ches- and 17.0 running 16 !eet o! rollto start witll ~e.
W. Crow, Jr., Dale Warner and
the original dlstrlctsupervlsors, CoogreSI, COng. Miller aenl
ll a set o! basic reQIIremente
ter, di~tCussed prospects of an ers; Pt Pleasant, 24.20; Pome·
Halrcl work lo ,at ·tho loit
Gey
Qo!ulhe.
r
,
Pomeroy.
and to Ralph Berker, district his &lt;Mill'atulatiooo and belt
lor partlclpatlon and has lhtreairport bolng 'built in the coun- roy-Mason, 24.20; lllnlon, 2.00
OPEN MIXED
neodo.
Doold
ashod.
)'Gil , 'I
Crow, a member o! the law
cy when the Meigs Jll&gt;ard ol stat.i Kanawha Falls, 4.80 stat.;
supervisor ol the Soli eonoe ...... wlabea on the compan,y' 1 nnr
NEW YORK (UPI) - Prices fore provio!!ld more JOotlvatlon
wjlli~
to
IIG'k
to
...
..
!irm o! crow, Crow an&lt;! Portloo Service at lhe time the o([set plllt llld priltlJiB facUCcmamlssLQtWrs met Monlsa1wi*:h Cha.rleston, 18.~0 Calling. Lon- todaY OJIOiled mixo&lt;\ in aetlve tor healtb core !acilltieo to keep ter, Pomeroy, was listed aa
nece••ll'Y ctoln&amp;H .... .uil'lioito:
ltios.
t;hal"los Il Karr, Sr;, presiden4 don 11¥1 Marmet, on the sith trading oo the New York Stock up their atandard• in order to
district was orpnized.
out?"
etalut&lt;lry ageni.
Awarda cooaioUng of 1 plaque
Ralplo
ours and Robert Clark Win!lold, running 2 loot of roll· Exchange.
retain ac&lt;redltatlon." lie said. .:t:~::::~*:~~"!&gt;.:~~:~&gt;.&gt;.::::::::::~::·:~:~:~:::·::.~::~:~s·

Assault

Ordinance Approved by Council

Contracts for
Portions of

Bridge Sold

or

Conservationists Observe

Remedial Instruction
Work Starting Monday

.

25th District Anniversary

Be Sure To See Ill the Other Gift~
gestlons for F1ther's Dly. Shop Every ·

Floor. Look Around. Select What YoU

Need.

Elberfel•s In Pomeroy

Medical Field

River Gauges

or

or

w.

QfS,

attending. ·

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0

test .
Finals of the Crog jumping will
be held at 2:30 p.m. on 9.mday
and is scheduled to be the main
event that day , other than t h e
boat races which are to lrtart
at 12:30 p.m.

Or Wounded in Attack

,,

•

con ~

Revolution in

Discharge•
Mrs. Herman Adams, Clarence

John F. Aeiker, HI. I Mlcldleport; Laoro L, Roush, Rt. 1
MiddlOJO&lt;rl: Mra. Frelda M,
Spires, Rt. 3 Wellston; Miss ae;.
en M. Dempaey, Jackson; Floyd
S. DeLashmutt, Rt. 1 Wellston•
Mra. Robert 0. Thacker, Alh~
land, Ky.; Mro. Nora B. Harrell, Jackson; Clayioo L. lla-

.o the frog jumping

Speaker Sees

81nday.

Uam C. Aelker, Henderaon; Mrs.

~;,

Dies Sunday

Louis Sisson

Fa~9'er's Day

Other features of the saturday activities include the races
on the Ohio niver, The U. S.
Divisional Frog Jumping Cham·
pionship contest, a pie eating
contest, and home talent show.

to

,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,~,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,~,,,,,,i,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,B,,
,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,:,,,,,,,,,,,~,·~

W. R. Jeffers

Destroyed by Fue

Holzer Ho511ilal: Visitinghoura
2-4 and 7-8 p.m. Parente only oo
Pediatrics Ward.
Admiesioos
Miss Della Buckle, 88 Locust
St.; Connie J. Zeoli, 41 Central Ave.i COnnle ~ Maynard,
Rt. 2 Bidwell; Mrs. Henry Davis, Rt. 2 Cheshire; Lora M.
Pl,ymale, R~ 1 Crown Cll;)'; Mra.
William J. Smith, Bidwell; Mro.
Carl E. FJliott, 50 I Magnolia
Dr.; Jolon R, Wol!, Rt. 2 Gallipoiia; Leo B, Hartwell, Gallipolts; Mrs. Mollie M. Addns, Patriot: Mrs. Kermit J. Johnson,
Bidwell: L, Nell Ring, Rt 2
VInton; Cbarles A. Bales, Rt.
2 Gallipolis; WOllam E. :Main,
Rt. I Northup; Mark B. Ta,ylor,
Rt. 1 West Columbia; Mrs. Worthy E. Rogers, West Columbia;
Charmaine K. Sauer, Rt. 2 Pl.
Pleasant; Mrs. Cecil E. Roach,
l't. Pleasant; William J, Freeman, Galllpolls Ferry;.Mra. WU~

in the parade.
;t
Rounding out Friday aetbities will be a 9:30 p.m. record
hop under direction ofDrewWebster Post No. 39, American Legion.
No problems were foreseen
for the Eastern U. s. Divisional Championship Boat Races that
will begin at 1:30 p.m. satur&lt;lay
and &amp;lnday afternoons .

The Frog Jump committee is
making arrangements ror its
event along with the pie eating
event and home talent show, all
to be held at the high school
football stadium in Pomeroy from
5-9 p.m. A record hop lo begin
at 9:30 p.m . will conclude the
Saturday affairs.

Paddy
Rockets
Panic
Saigon
135 Vietnamese Killed , , , ,.,,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.

and

Craft

.

•

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

.. --·-- - - -

cd be used

charge May 29 inmunlci)lai coort he talked Holley into giving to
rtned. $50 and costs, 1entenc- him. Warrarta were served on
ed to five days in jati and had llalley 8lnday morning and he
hla license auspended lor six was lodged in jati.
moothB.
Charges ugatnst Halloy were
tiled alter an accldent at 10:09
p.m. Satur&lt;lay Involving a car
owned by CecU L Newell o1 1022
Secood Avo., perked In !ront of
Funeral services lor WU!ard
hlo residence.
Thare was moderate damal!ll ~ Jeffen, 38, Minersville, who
to the r!glrt 1ront o1 lhe Railey dJed Sunday at his residenc:e wW
car and to the !ell rear of the be held Tuesday at 2 p. m. at
Newell car. Witnesses closcrib- the Ewing Chapel with the Rev,
ed the Halley car and police 1111- Eugene Gill o!llclatlng. Burial
er located it at Railey's resi- wlll be in the Rock.Springs Cemetery.
donee.
He was preceded.indeathbyhts
When afticers went to the Hal lather,
John L. Jellers,andthree
ley home, they wereftretinlormbrothers,
Junes Marvin, Chared Halley wam't home. The house
was kept under surveUlance, how. les Howard and Lewis Eugene.
ever, and it was later discover. He was a member or the Laurel
ed that Halley was in the house. Cli!f Free Methodiot Cburch.
Survi vurs Include his wife,
A pleasuroboatownedbyChar-"
Pollee aald Halley reCused to
Audria;
children, Anita Louise
les Gaskill, Wellston, was detercome out and talk to litem. AdJeffers,
Deloris Jeffers, Willard
mined a complete loss when it
ditional police and sheril!' a deJ&gt;Jeffers
D,
Beatrice Bachtel, Roncaugbt fire &amp;~~~day at the Pomeutlea were called. Later Halley
roy levee.
talked to PI!. Gary E. Wallace nie Bachrol aJXi Cerol Bechtel,
ProperQt loss was set at $5,Funeral services Cor Louis E. througb an IJIIIIIUJialeirs window all at home; three brothers, Har000. Pomeroy firemen were on Slsaon. 56, Rt. 4, Pomei'O)', who and agreecl to 191 tbe policeman old, John aJXi Doreld Jelrers, ell
the scene. It waa reported the died une11110ctedl,y saturday e&gt;&amp;o come Into the house to talk to of -Pomeroy; hla mather, Mrs.
John L. Jeffers, Pmneroy, and
craft was Insured. The report nlng in Veterans Memorial Hoa. him.
indicated gasoline caugbtfire and pital, will be held Tuesday at 2
PI!. Wallace talked wllh Halley two sistera,EdnaNelgler, Racine
consumed the boat. Mr. Gasidll p. m. at the Bndlord Cbrlstlan and later came out wlth a re· and Louise Dodridge, Columbus.
is the husband of the Iormor Church with the Rev. Charles volver wblch l'tl. Wellace said Friends may cell at lhe funeral
home anytime.
t:dna Maxine Coats of Mlcldle- Rusaell om elating. Burial wUI be
port.
in the Riverview Cemetery.
He was the son of the late
John aJXi Nellie Jane Bailey Sisson, and was also preceded ln
death by a brother.
(Continued !rom page 0
Survivors include his wife,
lng him for data about jolni~ a
Audreyj two daughtera, Mrs. WU·
merceni-Y army in Africa. ltam (Bell.)' Jo) McCoy, WesterThere was a cover story about ville, aJXi Mrs. Richard (Donna
a lost mercenary brother. Jean) Payne. Mt. Vernon; two
Brussels was the place to go, brothers, Paul, Pomeroy; and
said Colvin. Ray was arrested CUI, Clinton; and elgbt grandSee all the new colorslnJerksSockalor men. Ideal Father's
en route trom Lisbon to
Da.x
Gilt. Black, gull blue, Jet olive, botUe green, white,
chUdren.
Brussels.
' ..Piilnpkln, rum, whiskey, tro hy, Cerollna blue, red, olive,
Friends may cell at the RawlIn the Midwest, the former ings-Coats Funeral Home uotfi
Jet brown, coffee, cinnamon mix, burgundy, butter, gold,
~lers of ex-convict Ray IDlY
blue,
olive mix, jet navy, ll&amp;ht gray, $1.00 psir.
12:30 p. m. on TUesdoY when the
have been rlibL illl' mlglrt body will be taken to lhe church.
have served himself more
lntelll~ently by going to Brussels via Paris where a strike
made
spaghetti o! airport
bureaucracy, Sl.Jpplng through
AUXIUARY TO MEET
France might have been easier.
The
ildie s auxiliary o! the RaInstead, Ra,y ended up in an
&amp;-by-12 loot cell In cannon cine fire deJIUbnent will hold
Street J&gt;Oll« station. Pollee said their regular meeting Tuesday
be haa been quite pro!ane aJXi ot 7:30 p. m. at the nre hoose.
uncooperative."
'

AMERICAN WIN
RATZEBURG, Germany
(UPO - PbUadelphla' s Veaper
Boat Club captured the coxed
lours event in the 12th
International Ratzeburg Rowing
Classic &amp;onday in six mirutes
and 46.13 seconds.
Russia's Ivanov took the
single sculls in &amp;even minutes
'
27.63 secoods.

!for dad. Come as you are, shop leisurely,
or 3 hours only.

XXI NO 34

'

'J

FIVE CENTS ·.

Spread the Word of Regatta

VETERANS MEMORIAL
HOSPITAL
Satur&lt;lay Admissions - WarJames P. Railey, 49, of 752
ren Cla.y, AJ.banyi Burton car.
son, Middleport; Aries Simpson, First Ave., Galllpolls, pleaded
Middleport; Freda Mossman, not gullcy Monday morning in
Minersville; Lorena Snyder, Mid. Gallillolis Municipal Court to
dleport.
charges of driving while intoxiSaturday Discharl!llS - Mar- cated, driving while unclor rev&lt;&gt;garet !WI, Marlon Michael, Lar- c&amp;tlon, and leaving the scene of
ry ~ncer, Kathy Sayre, NeUe an accident (hltsldp).
Graves, 9.11&amp;11. Woods.
Halley req.oested a Jury trial,
:omday Admissions - Randy date of which will be set later
Michael. Pomeroy; Etta Custer, lhls week. A jury will have to be
Racine; Wanda Hubbard, &amp;Yra- called.
cuse; Charles Lemley, MiddleJudge Robert S. Betz set bond
port; Ben Kesterson, Miners. lor Halley at a total of $1,236,
including $608 lor DWI, $308 lor
ville.
Rena drlvlng unclor revocatioo, and
&amp;mda,y Discharges McDaniels, Adria Jeffers.
$308 for hitaldp. Normall,y, bond
lor DWI ollenses Is $308, however, a second otJense requires
a $608 bond.
,
Pleasure
is
Halley was convicted m a DWI

JOE SIGNS
,
NEW YORK (UPQ-Fullback
BUI,y Joe, who last seasoo filled
In lor b\iured Matt ~ll, signed
his 1~68 contract with the New
York Jets,. It was announced
&amp;mday by Coach and General
Manal!llr Weeb Ewbank.

BAKER FURNITURE

,

Jury Trial Requested by Halley

and 12.8 running 19 !eel of roll ers; l't. Pleasant, 24.50; Pome-

THE WASHER WITH THE

..'-.
~ '
""

A thoogbt lor the day; Greek
author Aesop once said, "Sell
conceit may lead to self
destruction."

Mason Area

r

lx

ceasefire.

twirlers .

GAUGES -

/

4

Pf'C. Charle s Yonker is spencJ.
ing lea"e witl1 his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Charles F. Yonker of
New Haven. He is stationed at
Fort Lewis, Wash.
Mr . and Mrs. C-arl PoweJI and
Darla of IOOianapolis, Ind., Mrs.
Je s sie Yonker aiKI RaymonJ.YOI\ker and Charlene Hartley, Tampa, Fla., have been visiting Mr.
and Mrs. Charles F. Yonker.
Mr. and Mrs, John Aumiller
and sons of sandusky, Ohio, visited with Mr. aOO Mrs. Reuben
Stewart of Mason and Mrs. Mary
MEIGS GENERAL HOSPITAL
Aumiller, Hartford.
Saturday Admissions - None.
s.,&lt;;gt and Mrs. Eugene Fields
Saturday Discharges- Leopold and sons of Anchorage, Alaska,
Hysell .
have been \lisiting his parents,
&amp;mday Admissions - Blanche
Mr. and Mrs. Franklin Fields and
Haskins, Middleport; Alma Rupe, other relatives. They were en-Rutland .
route to Florida where Sgt.
&amp;mday Discharge s - None. Field s will be stated with the Air
Force.
REVIV AL BEGINS
Mr. and Mr s. Waldon Bennett
A revival meeting Ill Fairplay Roush, Salt Point, N. Y., visited
Chapel wUl begin today and con- Mr s. Roush's parents, Mr. and
tinue through the 16th. Falrplay Mrs. Fred ~encer. They came
Chapel is located just off Rt. lor the funeralofhi s grandCather,
32&gt; toward VInton. The Rev. Mr. Probe Roush.
Junior Malloy o! Wellston Is
Tommy Marr visited recently
the evangelist, wtJh the Rev. R. with Mrs. Rhoda Yeager.
D. Brown in charge.
Thomas H,yan, Lima. Ohio, visited o"er the weekend with his
mother 1 Mrs, Emma Ryan, am
attended the ahunni banquet.
Miss Sarah Doupe of Columbus
spent the weekend with Mrs. Helen Stewart and atterxled the alumni banquet.
Mrs. Dianne self and sons of
Columbus visited over the weekend with her parents, Mr. and
Mr s. Russell C&amp;pehart.

SPEED OUEEN.
TM

TiiJcL is tWil'l' lhL· ki"l.c of

162nd day o! 1968 with 204 to
follow.
The moon is MI.
The morning ataro are Saturn
w Veuus.
The evening star i 1 Jupiter.
On tide day In history:
In 1898 u.s. Marines began
the lnvallioo of C\lba in the
Spanish-American War.
Iii 1940 llallae Dictator Benito
_Mussollnl declared war on
France w Britain.
In 1942 the Gorman Geetepo
burned the tiiuo village o! Lidlce
In Czechoslovakia alter shootinl
173 men llll&lt;l deporting woman
and children to concentratioa
camps.
In 1967 the &amp;&gt;viet Untou broke
diplomatic relationa with llrael
alter llrael announced a msjor
victory over Syria as botb
Mideast nations accepted a U.N

"But that isn, IUIUsual. After
all, he was an Jta.Uan. lUa
characterizlllioo is based on
some llalians I !mow, charming
con men who are proud of their
abilicy to lie and cheat yoo oot
of a dollar.
Traditioo in Italy
ult' s a tradition 1n Italy
where the people have bad to
light lor centurieo to ootw:lt the
conquerors from other COUD·

p·.,rt.ly cloudy, wMrm and humid t.oni~'ht with seallcrod shoW·
erR iif!d thundDrsl.orms ,;prOMd·
inJ,:: ovor state. A litllo (:(ll)ler
Wednesday except HOUtheiUit. Low
tonll:ht in 611s.

Tl'XI N.

By United Prell International
Toda,y ie Monday, June 10, the

River Gauges

Silver

Now lou Know

Today's
Almanac

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