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bqr for a more alert llallaoal ad.

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ad lh a Cldeaao hotel elovalor

lbortiT atler arrlvlllflalthellom...111. ~ C'aWillllon. The
like: fl58 111d l'l'Odlt' cards.
A delopQ lnlo the diVI
. - at the CCIIrad HUtm, the
lleadllwter• hotel tn Cbleaao to
purchue 1 mWl ser~er.
The price: w;. It waa chronieplatad IIIII port 0( a aet. No
oale.
Tho larger LOop hotels were a
aolnl tl1rouslt miHI')' tho
malo force 0( delosateo hit town
over tho weekend. And becouao
o1 an apdd problem: Qle.ell
who had promiiiOCI to check out
by a eertatn doUI decldod te oto1
over a few more days te wateb
the Democrlllc tlln .
In 1 o m e cues, corwantkll
guests had mallad room dopoalte

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1tn CCiul!\f Commlolionero Man.
"-" .,ljltllded Welfare Dlractor
Tllomaa G. Cor IS
days atter ~him with
live - s ol charpt IIIII alkbqr hlo rellinallon.
The «&lt;IDDIIiillonera dlarpl
Brl-.m wltll lnaubordiDatkm
IIIII ........ aclmlnlatratloO o1 bb

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ly GAYNOR MADOOII
PLANTA110N MASIIED Y4118

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Yams and Peean!ol-sA Delicious Dish
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ehael Soldemam, clapartment cJI..

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g. dlnctlool; add lilt aDd orqe peel (omit butler). Fold
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Juice•••••••••.2 49C
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cans

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COMPOSITION
·THEME

3202.

Lot.

Jlant

size

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TOILET TI-S.·SUE

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roll
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No.1 Grade

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�llY .IIERIIDfAH SMim
Upt Willie lb!ao R~~ ·.,
·11aib,.Ua at rile •llemOeftltc ·
cOnv..,Uc:il:
·
One of the - · loiOdiDi

ooiUmnlats, Wllo Ia rorenr ull·

bqr for a more alert llallaoal ad.

mlaliilrallail, had hla pockillpl~k­
ad lh a Cldeaao hotel elovalor

lbortiT atler arrlvlllflalthellom...111. ~ C'aWillllon. The
like: fl58 111d l'l'Odlt' cards.
A delopQ lnlo the diVI
. - at the CCIIrad HUtm, the
lleadllwter• hotel tn Cbleaao to
purchue 1 mWl ser~er.
The price: w;. It waa chronieplatad IIIII port 0( a aet. No
oale.
Tho larger LOop hotels were a
aolnl tl1rouslt miHI')' tho
malo force 0( delosateo hit town
over tho weekend. And becouao
o1 an apdd problem: Qle.ell
who had promiiiOCI to check out
by a eertatn doUI decldod te oto1
over a few more days te wateb
the Democrlllc tlln .
In 1 o m e cues, corwantkll
guests had mallad room dopoalte

--In

Millia~~n, linWII .'

· Leader ill Dead

i•
r
I

aay 0111 Vtlncl Ho lmowa wheN to bo If ho'a rrnc
•'• "I'U
·
to
nood a dootor o~ a Wtdlllldaraftlfnoonl
•
•

•i

'na AMEBI~ANS

~

·-

1

I Ia~ tr

""

"

...........

1 tat':., ...

.,u

25~
'

.NO•.. 16

\

lOlAS
~'

15 Days Suspension
COLtJMBUS (UPI) - Fronk.
1tn CCiul!\f Commlolionero Man.
"-" .,ljltllded Welfare Dlractor
Tllomaa G. Cor IS
days atter ~him with
live - s ol charpt IIIII alkbqr hlo rellinallon.
The «&lt;IDDIIiillonera dlarpl
Brl-.m wltll lnaubordiDatkm
IIIII ........ aclmlnlatratloO o1 bb

.

ly GAYNOR MADOOII
PLANTA110N MASIIED Y4118

~ , _ _ _ , eloppe4

\

Brittenham Given

Yams and Peean!ol-sA Delicious Dish
'

'

"== . --,
...
~

=--EA&amp;':'~Iut

craw onqe Jllel .

·Sudden
'

Beauty

dtpartmenl ... , . , IJliiCIWod MJ.
ehael Soldemam, clapartment cJI..

Tout JIIC8III In buiW over low heal Mix aupr tmd cln·
DIIIII'D; lOu wllb pecllll. Prepare yams IICCordinC to pact.
g. dlnctlool; add lilt aDd orqe peel (omit butler). Fold
""""" tbe augand pecana Into ll1&amp;lbed yams. SpriDkle reilllllnlnc • tap. Four ~-

rector ol118r101lal aonlcoa, aetbqr dlractor •-..n 1llrlher ....

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· ..:,·· ~-

Juice•••••••••.2 49C
Flakes•••• ~~- 27C
. Ilk••••••••• 7 1.00
46 oz.

cans

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~

.ASSORTED COLORS-HUDSON

I~Colfee

~.
/

·cafe..........::QZ-1.19
391-

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···~..

.

COMPOSITION
·THEME

3202.

Lot.

Jlant

size

"

83~
't

,
"

'

TOILET TI-S.·SUE

4

!

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Hlt•s_':
.

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LETtUC£,, ·.
,

· ASSORTED COLQRt-C-JN ·

roll
pq,

L1r1t $Ill•

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""19'v
No.1 Grade

Rea. 25t

�Copyollht, Tilt K - C... 11111
.. ._... .... rilht lo limit ......till.

Stokely Brand

ALL KROGER STORES

,~ppJ·esauce ·

·Will Be Open
Monday, Sept. 2
10 am-7 pm

-·

No. •

For Y'our Shopping
Convenience!

'

No Purchil!le

Pick up , _ FREE "Lucky
Idiot ot K._ _,., FREE
ovollollle by wrlflnt D P. 0. lu'B-WY, limoi ......... ~
'Stort ,..,... loiloyl

Pomeroy Kroger Store

10

,

_,_

Beans -----·-· 7 ":..* $1

•7 p.m.

Whole Beans • 3 ~· 89c

'

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Limas ----···
+'

Coffee

.....

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'I

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TENDIRAY
BOSTON

VOLUME NO. I DN SALE THIS WQK

$1M . .
, .... -$1M

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Start Your Set Today!

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----·-Honeydews ------- ..:.79'
...._._c.......
Cranshaw ------··

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Perch -----------·- plog, .,.;
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Bucket Steak - .... ,. ..... .. 99c

ToothPaste 2

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

Vol. No. 1 only
.

Krotef't "F•m...,•· lhei or ·port("

=$1

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COUIITIIY OVIN DOIIU11

Uressing ............... ...,., 45c
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P~ecoa .. - - •.• p~o,_ • 9c

Pork Loin _..... _. __ lb. 79e
C...,lty Club

(l-It. "" Q.lf)

Canned Ham _. __ . :;,.•· $4.49
Sucho&lt; Smobd Wloolo

Picnics
S.rvt I

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(SIIco4- lb. 41c:)

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wll1o ... .... 1Mdo110 of

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Instant Coffee

Facial Tissue
28¢
.

........

$1.39

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wlltl lflls Md ,......,... If
ony T-oy Botton Roll A or'I·Z C.... Rib R-

.._ 39c

12-lb. p1og. $1.29) _,.._.

Bacnn ------------- .....
"'· 65¢

Bak1n·o Hens • •• . .. 39c

... -

49e ~. No. 2 $1.49

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1! Clooice ·ploi:os

II EXTRA TOP

YA~UE

STAMPS

with llolo ......... Md ......,_If

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WHOLE HOG SAUSAGE

Pick 0'Chick • • • •

(b.

49c

Dolicioul Picnic Frlorl

Chicker, ,
'
81ttt Portlol'l lb. -55f

Ham

choice

~ .=, 'SI.89
f•ll 511""" Hall
~··

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RIM
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Pea11 _______ _ 4 "::89c

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llollonoon

CIOUimtY OVal ,ASTRY

. Juice ______ . _ 3

Stokoly Hon.y Pod

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Peas ----- - - 4 "'"·*
.... 89c

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

Meat _... _. _ !!: 49c
..,.......
Sausage __ 5

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Roll Roast

Tissue ---

.........

Stalooly lllolko

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IATMOitl MARGMINE

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with !lola · - ont1 ........., If ·

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Fraa~~n

FLORIDA CHIP STEAKS

~::g·

n..~c

Exp.

8/SI /fill

I

�Copyollht, Tilt K - C... 11111
.. ._... .... rilht lo limit ......till.

Stokely Brand

ALL KROGER STORES

,~ppJ·esauce ·

·Will Be Open
Monday, Sept. 2
10 am-7 pm

-·

No. •

For Y'our Shopping
Convenience!

'

No Purchil!le

Pick up , _ FREE "Lucky
Idiot ot K._ _,., FREE
ovollollle by wrlflnt D P. 0. lu'B-WY, limoi ......... ~
'Stort ,..,... loiloyl

Pomeroy Kroger Store

10

,

_,_

Beans -----·-· 7 ":..* $1

•7 p.m.

Whole Beans • 3 ~· 89c

'

~.
,.,.,.•

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

SlobiJ ....

Limas ----···
+'

Coffee

.....

_, .....

••••••••••
'

&gt;'

-

I

--- ........... "

I

118 IIXTRA 10P YALUI STAMPS

'I

I

Eorp. 8!1V118

.

i-•,r" ..y.. '

.

\

•

'

I

•:

TENDIRAY
BOSTON

VOLUME NO. I DN SALE THIS WQK

$1M . .
, .... -$1M

.,

l·s·

Start Your Set Today!

~

_

'

' FrosiMro "lreaded .

'

lor

, ....... 1......

..

,...
.
·Bibb LettUce
'
.
.....

.

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Celerx----~-----~.;.~29t_ : l . _eey · .~-.~·'•• -·-· :-.
j_.. st ••-

.

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3 $1
----·-Honeydews ------- ..:.79'
...._._c.......
Cranshaw ------··

z.n.. go.

Perch -----------·- plog, .,.;
Sto '"''"'"· P:llltt If
.
·"· ('atf'ISh,.' -·--------·· p~o,lb.• . 49c

'

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...
Cantaloupe

.

Bucket Steak - .... ,. ..... .. 99c

ToothPaste 2

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

Vol. No. 1 only
.

Krotef't "F•m...,•· lhei or ·port("

=$1

" ' . . ' Ql •••

...,.
COUIITIIY OVIN DOIIU11

Uressing ............... ...,., 45c
~ELES$

.
. .
1141. 6'~·
Foamy
~----.. ~ I

.... _..................... "

'

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...... """
.

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.. ....r :., ~···1

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g·

P~ecoa .. - - •.• p~o,_ • 9c

Pork Loin _..... _. __ lb. 79e
C...,lty Club

(l-It. "" Q.lf)

Canned Ham _. __ . :;,.•· $4.49
Sucho&lt; Smobd Wloolo

Picnics
S.rvt I

s..,.

(SIIco4- lb. 41c:)

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

Sllctd

1ilu.
,_. fiR·~
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111 IX'I'IIA 10P YALUI iTAMPI
wll1o ... ~ pood 1M "

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IIIAL1M &amp; IMinY AIDS

J!loi&gt;. 1111/GII

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111 IXTU 'RIP VALUI ST.PS
wll1o ... .... 1Mdo110 of

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Eorp. lill/81

Instant Coffee

Facial Tissue
28¢
.

........

$1.39

.

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.a w. . 'f)- ~~
. ~ ·-_·
Pe.,.
l

Lemons _. 6 .... 39c
~-

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50..1. . . . .. '
.

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111:1 EXTRA TOP VALUE STAMPS
wlltl lflls Md ,......,... If
ony T-oy Botton Roll A or'I·Z C.... Rib R-

.._ 39c

12-lb. p1og. $1.29) _,.._.

Bacnn ------------- .....
"'· 65¢

Bak1n·o Hens • •• . .. 39c

... -

49e ~. No. 2 $1.49

••

Qvooo 51lRd

1! Clooice ·ploi:os

II EXTRA TOP

YA~UE

STAMPS

with llolo ......... Md ......,_If

t ...... .....
WHOLE HOG SAUSAGE

Pick 0'Chick • • • •

(b.

49c

Dolicioul Picnic Frlorl

Chicker, ,
'
81ttt Portlol'l lb. -55f

Ham

choice

~ .=, 'SI.89
f•ll 511""" Hall
~··

'Breasts
RIM
. ~""-····-

IGLD ~T'IIIIGI~

'' .

K..,.r S.lad

Pea11 _______ _ 4 "::89c

). '

,.

. . . . . . . IMiisLloil .... ~ ~

• IXTU 10P YAWl STAMPS

I'

.I

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89c

-

Ri&amp;bt

llollonoon

CIOUimtY OVal ,ASTRY

. Juice ______ . _ 3

Stokoly Hon.y Pod

.,

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Heads Up ~ ,11.8.._
.....
..,..
fiiiM ,.,.us I .
'1'1
•
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...,.2 .....

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St.... y PiM•pplt

Peas ----- - - 4 "'"·*
.... 89c

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

Meat _... _. _ !!: 49c
..,.......
Sausage __ 5

•

.......

Roll Roast

Tissue ---

.........

Stalooly lllolko

"·'

-----

IATMOitl MARGMINE

I

'i ' .•

J1 ... .....

I

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$1 IIIII DIIODOUin' .

•

----

'

Healtlt~.lll«!dll
A~.
.
.

3- Sl
5=- Sl
~.1.. .....,.,
..A.·•

• EXTRA 10P VALUE STAMPS

·~ '

~V~getables
•

' '

Ht.l

~.

~

•

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Beans. ---·----

"'I

. S..UI' .. j....

~~ 47e

II EXTRA TOP ~~.UE,RAMPS
with !lola · - ont1 ........., If ·

JT}J.11t. pkl,

Fraa~~n

FLORIDA CHIP STEAKS

~::g·

n..~c

Exp.

8/SI /fill

I

�.

.

:. . .. l it'~

its

oi deep anxiety in our countr)'.
· It is a time for 1·eal concern.
There have been extraordinar)
ads of violence throughout the
ration and thispatternofincreas~
h~ .'violence in our streets and
d~· slums is no doubt due in
part te the constantly recurrirw

acts or \"lolence - the torturing
.... killing - in our waging'
undeclared war in south Vietnam.
However, this is also a time of
great opportunity for Americans.
We must renew faith among our
people In the greatadventuretbat
1&amp; America. Our involvement in
a civU war in south Vietnam has
to date resulted In the loss of
28,000 priceless lives of Ameri·

an

can fighting men aOO the wourd-

trc

of more than 154,000. The
war goes on despite the fact that
we have alreadl' e:q&gt;loded more
tons ot bombs on north and south
Vietnam than we did in Europe

and Asia throughout all ol World
War U. Furthennore, the cost
to taxpayel'S of each day's fl.ght~
lng In Vietnam nears $100 million. We must end the continuing
escalation of the war and adopt
a poUcy of diserwagemenL We

shoold immediot.]J' halt all bombing of north \"ietnam. We must
achieve an hooorable pea ce and
ceasefire am bring home 600.000
American fighting men involved
by our President in this l1111q:Ju.
Jar, immoral, undeclared war. IC
this course of action is adapted.
thi s nation's hour of greatness
will have Just begun. Then we
would move forward with equal
justice and equal &lt;gJOrtunity for
all li S the foundation of pearc at
home and peace abroad. Most ot
aU, we must insure there wi11 be
no more Vfetnams and that nev·
er again will Americans become
mt.red in a la!Kl war in Asia.
SOCIAL SECURITY

This August marks the 33rd
amlversary oi the social secur·

the greatest lOKislatlve,
achievement In the h~tory ofour
Republic. This law is an iJIWrlnt

of President Franklin D. nooseveh lor the benefit andwellareqf
Americans which will endure for
centuries. When the writer took
his oath as a first term Congressman our nati011 was In the
throes of the Hoo,·er depression.
Banks in 48 states were closed.
Businessmen did oot know wheth-er checks in their pockets were
good. Fourteen million worth)'
and industrious men and women
walked city streets jol;lless.
Farmer s were not maki~enough
to pay taxes and interest on their
mortgages. ·The ertire fina(lciaJ
and economiC' structure of the
United States had coUapsed. Then
came the memorable changes
achieved by President Roosevelt
with the s~port of the newly
elected Congres5. Never again
will there be a great depression!
Social security is an actuarily
sourxl insurance system. Robert
J. Myers, Chief Actuary, reports
the surplus in the olcf..age, sur·
vivors arw;t disabilib' insurance
program totaled $27, 7billionlast
May and the total surplus will
amount to $40 billion by .June 20.
In Ohio, 1,181,000 men, women
and children r eceived social security checks totaling $1 billion
$126 million during 1967. Every
month nearly $105 miHion in social security checks are ca shed
and spent. It will be more this
year. In our nation nearly 24 mll~
lion men, women and children received more than $2 biJJion in
social security checks each
month and $21 billion $407 million for all of 1967. Depressions
are a thlng of the past with thi s
huge sum going to so many fami~
lies and being spent month atter
month.

Dr.
.,
• · Sta.au .·.
Joms
•

I "'

~~~ · d "twosl~.ri, · Mra.MU ·
POINT PLEASAN'r' - . ;;.~ wi1, • ·ouV.r •or 11t. 2 Pl. PtOasant aNi
ilam H. Downer recenti.Y Joined :ills.· Ada Cntg or:~burg,,
til~ &amp;tall ot Ute Taylor C!&gt;ltp. i '!·, Vi.
, .

PBciOr ~llnlc

~

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..

a, 101 COCHNAR

lic that rederal rundsa.-edirectly

NEA Automotive Eclitar
· PRAGUE, Czechoslovakia. (NEA)-To those of you who
are thinking about a pleasant
drive through the Bohemian
forests of Czecboslovakia.
wartling:
Have no fear of the border
Juatdi (a Kennedy half&lt;k&gt;llar
worb nuuly wonders). Concera yourself not with an
Amoric:an-haliOI pop u I a e e
I pnotleaUy everybody in this
country has a relative In the

Statal.

r~ng

No, unfortunately, it is the
· mundane you must worry
about. Uke, where do you
find cuollne of a aulfieiently
blgh oetane 1o propel a West·
om·built auto without a eonIIIUI~ erralle shudder?
I had picked up a Mercedes
2211 in Munleh. about 200
miles from Prague, with the
intention of spending a week
or 10 prowling about Czech•·
llo\latia. Just before the
Czech-German border the
. lank was filled with a decent
German product. 1Mobil. I
think it was), which kepi the

R u s s Ia n Moskvltehes and
Chalkas, the latter being re·
served for 'II IPs. One gives a
wide berth to anyone In a
Challta; the occupants could
be a high-level commissar or
a top minister. Oddly, It
would not be Communist
party chief Alexandre Dubcek, who pilots his own fouryear-old Skoda.
Chaikas are also popular
with visiting journalists, alnee
lower-echelon offkials might
mistake them for lnfluentials.
Czechoslovakia is an antique

rar moving for several days.

are filled with a great aasort·
ment of prewar cars, incJud·
lng 1929 Opels, 1935 Mercedes.
1930 Model A Fords. old Locomobiles, Dod g e s, Austins,
Auto-Unions, Fiats. Renaults
and original Volk!IWagens.
presumably left over from the
German occupation.
And the cars all run, too.
Most Czecboalovak ear owners
double ao extraordinarily good
meebanlcs. Regular breakdowns are not uncommon and
where does one find a part for
a 1932 Fiat?
Czechoslovaks appear 1o be
careful drivers although, with
only about 300,000 automobiles
in a country with 14 million
people. the accident rate is
tiigb. Too, there are no super·
highways and the new maca·
dam roads are often cluttered
with ox-earls, bleycles and
pedestriana. One does not
drive fast in the People's Republic.
Czcehs do appreciate fine
machinery. My Mercedes ! a
raro bird bere) was closely in ·
specled by most passers-by
and several times I opened
the en~lne com~artmenl for
interested observers.
Hertzky hasn't arrived in
Czechoslovaklajjs yet (though
it operates in Yugoslavial so
Tuz•• and other local agen-

The time eventually came
wben more petrol wu needed
10 naturally I pulled up to \he
neuest pump in Prague and
tonped off. Well, ever shut
off the i~ition and find that
your car insists on running
like a broneo? Even a sturdy
Mercedes &lt;an't put up with
too much bucking and wheez·

.'

''

..

lng.
In diacussing my plight
with an American newsman, 1
learned that Czech gasoline is
about 78 oetane-about 20
octane less that what a Wealern motor can tolerate. For
a lix-eyllnder. highly tuned
. lllen:edes. it is disastrous. He
told me that I could buy 100
· oetane at one of a hlllf-dozen
pumps In all . of Czechosio·
:. 'vatla.
Wltb a crudely drawn map,
of Prague,
the
·~filh~uj!~d~~e~r~er~d~:t
h r spied
u g h the
had the tank

•.
:

many are also common, as are

0

than 120
(al&gt;oul
and

al 715 Main !ltreell I

,;-: '

'

·

PLEAS.\NT VALLEY HOSPITAL

~r'J\

p11t a visitor In the drlv·
fl(!at.

.,.
•

'.

'-

Good
things
-go with ...

SWartz, Henderson; Darron Bostic, Gatllpolis Ferry; Mrs. ,James
Barker, Glenwood.

IN BRAZil.
RIO DE JANEffiO (UPO -

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Arrest recorded at the ~ourtb
jail was James Thomas Brown.

20, McCullough Rd., Pt- PIOioanL charged with hit and run
Monday at 11:30 p. m. when he

'

' '

r

t'oundatl~, was in Brazil Tuea- night, all trcm MIIJOII c~y. on
day lor discussions with govern- charges of !helL The youths al~nl olliclals concerning wild-...--JocecUy took a tire and wheel vel-

life conservation prograrnsalOQI

the Arnaznn.

'

..

·Welle1ley Farm•• ~ ••• l/2 gal. 69~
FUDGIIICIL B ••••••••.6 pk. 2.9.
f/2 gal. •t~......... gal. 89~
~u•tont ~ann,cL •II flawora ... 10 cana'l.
CHIPI~ Marlc V llrancl •• 1... llg. 59.
·Dalay F,.ah •••••••••• 6 111. I.M
••••• or Sl•l•ac can 26~
teo •••••••••••••• 3oa.lar 99~
•••••••••••••12 can caae 1.00

the secondary roadway.

.

i

..,. Clly~. .DAYID DAVIES 20 ct.

_;, ·; ~ ·.'

The Mason C&lt;&gt;unty aherlll's
Charles A. Lindbergh, represent- department and state Police arlng the Worldwide Reoearch
rested five juveniles Monday

'

.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . ,. . . . h

. . I'

struck a ell' on Ute· Herllerson
ferry and left the scene.

·

MOIIOII IV
•••••••••••••••• each 39~
POl Pla•.•••.-..•••.•....••••••• 5..1.00.
FRIIICH FRill, •••••••••• 2 llt.laag 3.!1

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303
CANS

PINK LIQUID DETERGENT

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LB.

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REIJ~RO$$

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.P.,.. I''I .0' ft.......................or:. 29~
~GAL. 39~· .
Liquid
' e OR SPAGHEtn

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F.IU.~O

STA-FLO

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ADMITTED: Mrs .. James Barteen mlles south or PL Pleasant
ker , Glenwood; James Upton, Le.
which resulted In $450 prcipert.Y
m; Mr s. Charles Martin, Jr.,
damage but no persoral Injury.
GallipoliA Ferry; James Lewis,
The mishap occurred when a
Pt:. Pleasant; &amp;!san Harrison.
southbound car driven by James
pt, Pleasant; stlaron Rowles, Buf.
E. Craig, 52, RL I Rol&gt;ertsburg,
falo; Mrs. DougJasMJtcheU, Hen~
and a north boond car driven b.Y
derson .
Johnnie E. DonOhue, 20, RL 1,
DISCHARGED : Howard Plants,
Gsllipolls t"erry; Bryan Blan- Letart, met ln a sharp cW"ve on

kenship, Gallipolis Ferry; Riley

'\

·I

PT. PLEASANT - The sheriffs department Investigated a
two vehicle mishap Tuesda)' evening on 13 Mile Creek Road, nf.

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uec1 at $46 tor 1 eompacU(Il
machine owned b.Y the Slate Road

BANANAS

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SQUI~REL

SEASQN

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OPENSSEPT.6

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PETERS·
VICTOR FIELD .LOAD·
.
.

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car burr's nirvana . The streets

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M880ft ~tiftty
O _

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Probed in

.. .,

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One Accident

provided to help low lncome fam~
llies to buy and own their homes.
BETTER DAYS AHEAD
·At thi s time Camilies with i~
The presenl Congress enacted
rrom $3000 per
into law the besthoustngbillever comes
year to $7200 per year are eligi~
ble. The family benefiting woold
pay not more than 20 per cent of
its ln«lllle In mortpge· instllli-A
ments, Aoot11er federal housing , •
pr&lt;Jfil:ram wiiJ subsidize thebuilcJ..
ing of aparbncnt houses.

eylinder w h i c h produces
about 30 h.p. They last for
years and years. Skodas built
in 111411 are not uncommon.
A step up Is the Tatra, a
!our-door elght-eyllnder sedan
and graced with the strangest
front and r e a r ends in
l!uro!&gt;f. The styling, such as
It Is, 1s about a decaae old but
it stUI looks as if it was
copied from a Buek Rogers
comie strip, elrca 1946. This
Item handles like a heavy
tank.
Wartburgs from East Ger·

.·''

to win Congressional approval Point Pleaoant, w. va.
, ,. . .
. . : . ..
Dr. Jlowner Is 25 year a 0( '')loj!trtment ani! J!li'kecl 1 noer the' ·
This should start a real building
boom as the program will build age, a patlve of Elldna, W. VL, · Wl"le Valley a.urchnd ~so tho . '
or restore 26 million housing un- and his porento are Clpl. and theft of a opere ttre end whe..l
its within from five to ten years. Mrs. William F, Downer, who and ba!terr !r&lt;rn a pick lip trdc:k
Six mUiion of these housing units still rqslde In Ell!ln•·
11 the M~ Alto Texaco ,81111011..
Dr.
Downer
r
..
elvecl
hls.pre'l'1lli jUYeniiOs wiD appear lri Juwould be subsidized and guaranteed directly by the federal gov.. med training !rom the Gl..VIile venlle court or Frldll'emment for families with low in. Siate College, and r.Jmer Junior
comes. This ls 1000 per cent College, of DavenJ)Ol't. Jowa. He
more than all the units subsidized
received Ills doctorate degree In
and provided for by our govern-- June 1968 !rom thr Palmer Colment during the last ten years. lege o( Chlropract' c, Davenport,
Then, 20 million other housing Iowa and interened in the Palmer
units arc expected Lobe financed Clinic.
and buill b.}' prhale enterprise
Dr. Downer recently received
and private fund s but backed by his license to pracdce from the
federal support. The cost to our newly created West VIrginia Chitaxpayers for the coming three ropractic Board ol Examiners.
years is $5 billion $300 million. Dr. Downer is a Methodist, sin~
This spending is amply justified. gle, and ls residing In the apartAt that, it is less thanone~fifth of ment over the Taylor Clinic.-The
the billions of dollars our govern- addition ol Dr. Downer to lhe
ment is blowing ltJ in smoke each Taylor Chiropracticclinicbrlngs
year in carrying on Presidem the stall up to three doc:tors to
Johnson's urrJedaredand url)op~ serve Point Pleasant. and ~,;Ur.
lar v.ar in Vietnam. Millions of rounding area. Miss Opal Jett
jobs will becreatedandtllerewill is clinic r eooptlonlst.
be miHions of decent homes for
needy families. This is the first
time In the history of the Repub-

.Cars -Built to Last .
In Eastern Europe

•

~

1, !A El'nilit ol !IL ~~and
Dorma~· ~·~ofSivamilb;

.

.

�.

.

:. . .. l it'~

its

oi deep anxiety in our countr)'.
· It is a time for 1·eal concern.
There have been extraordinar)
ads of violence throughout the
ration and thispatternofincreas~
h~ .'violence in our streets and
d~· slums is no doubt due in
part te the constantly recurrirw

acts or \"lolence - the torturing
.... killing - in our waging'
undeclared war in south Vietnam.
However, this is also a time of
great opportunity for Americans.
We must renew faith among our
people In the greatadventuretbat
1&amp; America. Our involvement in
a civU war in south Vietnam has
to date resulted In the loss of
28,000 priceless lives of Ameri·

an

can fighting men aOO the wourd-

trc

of more than 154,000. The
war goes on despite the fact that
we have alreadl' e:q&gt;loded more
tons ot bombs on north and south
Vietnam than we did in Europe

and Asia throughout all ol World
War U. Furthennore, the cost
to taxpayel'S of each day's fl.ght~
lng In Vietnam nears $100 million. We must end the continuing
escalation of the war and adopt
a poUcy of diserwagemenL We

shoold immediot.]J' halt all bombing of north \"ietnam. We must
achieve an hooorable pea ce and
ceasefire am bring home 600.000
American fighting men involved
by our President in this l1111q:Ju.
Jar, immoral, undeclared war. IC
this course of action is adapted.
thi s nation's hour of greatness
will have Just begun. Then we
would move forward with equal
justice and equal &lt;gJOrtunity for
all li S the foundation of pearc at
home and peace abroad. Most ot
aU, we must insure there wi11 be
no more Vfetnams and that nev·
er again will Americans become
mt.red in a la!Kl war in Asia.
SOCIAL SECURITY

This August marks the 33rd
amlversary oi the social secur·

the greatest lOKislatlve,
achievement In the h~tory ofour
Republic. This law is an iJIWrlnt

of President Franklin D. nooseveh lor the benefit andwellareqf
Americans which will endure for
centuries. When the writer took
his oath as a first term Congressman our nati011 was In the
throes of the Hoo,·er depression.
Banks in 48 states were closed.
Businessmen did oot know wheth-er checks in their pockets were
good. Fourteen million worth)'
and industrious men and women
walked city streets jol;lless.
Farmer s were not maki~enough
to pay taxes and interest on their
mortgages. ·The ertire fina(lciaJ
and economiC' structure of the
United States had coUapsed. Then
came the memorable changes
achieved by President Roosevelt
with the s~port of the newly
elected Congres5. Never again
will there be a great depression!
Social security is an actuarily
sourxl insurance system. Robert
J. Myers, Chief Actuary, reports
the surplus in the olcf..age, sur·
vivors arw;t disabilib' insurance
program totaled $27, 7billionlast
May and the total surplus will
amount to $40 billion by .June 20.
In Ohio, 1,181,000 men, women
and children r eceived social security checks totaling $1 billion
$126 million during 1967. Every
month nearly $105 miHion in social security checks are ca shed
and spent. It will be more this
year. In our nation nearly 24 mll~
lion men, women and children received more than $2 biJJion in
social security checks each
month and $21 billion $407 million for all of 1967. Depressions
are a thlng of the past with thi s
huge sum going to so many fami~
lies and being spent month atter
month.

Dr.
.,
• · Sta.au .·.
Joms
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~~~ · d "twosl~.ri, · Mra.MU ·
POINT PLEASAN'r' - . ;;.~ wi1, • ·ouV.r •or 11t. 2 Pl. PtOasant aNi
ilam H. Downer recenti.Y Joined :ills.· Ada Cntg or:~burg,,
til~ &amp;tall ot Ute Taylor C!&gt;ltp. i '!·, Vi.
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PBciOr ~llnlc

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a, 101 COCHNAR

lic that rederal rundsa.-edirectly

NEA Automotive Eclitar
· PRAGUE, Czechoslovakia. (NEA)-To those of you who
are thinking about a pleasant
drive through the Bohemian
forests of Czecboslovakia.
wartling:
Have no fear of the border
Juatdi (a Kennedy half&lt;k&gt;llar
worb nuuly wonders). Concera yourself not with an
Amoric:an-haliOI pop u I a e e
I pnotleaUy everybody in this
country has a relative In the

Statal.

r~ng

No, unfortunately, it is the
· mundane you must worry
about. Uke, where do you
find cuollne of a aulfieiently
blgh oetane 1o propel a West·
om·built auto without a eonIIIUI~ erralle shudder?
I had picked up a Mercedes
2211 in Munleh. about 200
miles from Prague, with the
intention of spending a week
or 10 prowling about Czech•·
llo\latia. Just before the
Czech-German border the
. lank was filled with a decent
German product. 1Mobil. I
think it was), which kepi the

R u s s Ia n Moskvltehes and
Chalkas, the latter being re·
served for 'II IPs. One gives a
wide berth to anyone In a
Challta; the occupants could
be a high-level commissar or
a top minister. Oddly, It
would not be Communist
party chief Alexandre Dubcek, who pilots his own fouryear-old Skoda.
Chaikas are also popular
with visiting journalists, alnee
lower-echelon offkials might
mistake them for lnfluentials.
Czechoslovakia is an antique

rar moving for several days.

are filled with a great aasort·
ment of prewar cars, incJud·
lng 1929 Opels, 1935 Mercedes.
1930 Model A Fords. old Locomobiles, Dod g e s, Austins,
Auto-Unions, Fiats. Renaults
and original Volk!IWagens.
presumably left over from the
German occupation.
And the cars all run, too.
Most Czecboalovak ear owners
double ao extraordinarily good
meebanlcs. Regular breakdowns are not uncommon and
where does one find a part for
a 1932 Fiat?
Czechoslovaks appear 1o be
careful drivers although, with
only about 300,000 automobiles
in a country with 14 million
people. the accident rate is
tiigb. Too, there are no super·
highways and the new maca·
dam roads are often cluttered
with ox-earls, bleycles and
pedestriana. One does not
drive fast in the People's Republic.
Czcehs do appreciate fine
machinery. My Mercedes ! a
raro bird bere) was closely in ·
specled by most passers-by
and several times I opened
the en~lne com~artmenl for
interested observers.
Hertzky hasn't arrived in
Czechoslovaklajjs yet (though
it operates in Yugoslavial so
Tuz•• and other local agen-

The time eventually came
wben more petrol wu needed
10 naturally I pulled up to \he
neuest pump in Prague and
tonped off. Well, ever shut
off the i~ition and find that
your car insists on running
like a broneo? Even a sturdy
Mercedes &lt;an't put up with
too much bucking and wheez·

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lng.
In diacussing my plight
with an American newsman, 1
learned that Czech gasoline is
about 78 oetane-about 20
octane less that what a Wealern motor can tolerate. For
a lix-eyllnder. highly tuned
. lllen:edes. it is disastrous. He
told me that I could buy 100
· oetane at one of a hlllf-dozen
pumps In all . of Czechosio·
:. 'vatla.
Wltb a crudely drawn map,
of Prague,
the
·~filh~uj!~d~~e~r~er~d~:t
h r spied
u g h the
had the tank

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many are also common, as are

0

than 120
(al&gt;oul
and

al 715 Main !ltreell I

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PLEAS.\NT VALLEY HOSPITAL

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p11t a visitor In the drlv·
fl(!at.

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Good
things
-go with ...

SWartz, Henderson; Darron Bostic, Gatllpolis Ferry; Mrs. ,James
Barker, Glenwood.

IN BRAZil.
RIO DE JANEffiO (UPO -

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Arrest recorded at the ~ourtb
jail was James Thomas Brown.

20, McCullough Rd., Pt- PIOioanL charged with hit and run
Monday at 11:30 p. m. when he

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t'oundatl~, was in Brazil Tuea- night, all trcm MIIJOII c~y. on
day lor discussions with govern- charges of !helL The youths al~nl olliclals concerning wild-...--JocecUy took a tire and wheel vel-

life conservation prograrnsalOQI

the Arnaznn.

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·Welle1ley Farm•• ~ ••• l/2 gal. 69~
FUDGIIICIL B ••••••••.6 pk. 2.9.
f/2 gal. •t~......... gal. 89~
~u•tont ~ann,cL •II flawora ... 10 cana'l.
CHIPI~ Marlc V llrancl •• 1... llg. 59.
·Dalay F,.ah •••••••••• 6 111. I.M
••••• or Sl•l•ac can 26~
teo •••••••••••••• 3oa.lar 99~
•••••••••••••12 can caae 1.00

the secondary roadway.

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..,. Clly~. .DAYID DAVIES 20 ct.

_;, ·; ~ ·.'

The Mason C&lt;&gt;unty aherlll's
Charles A. Lindbergh, represent- department and state Police arlng the Worldwide Reoearch
rested five juveniles Monday

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. . . . . . . . . . . . . ,. . . . h

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struck a ell' on Ute· Herllerson
ferry and left the scene.

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MOIIOII IV
•••••••••••••••• each 39~
POl Pla•.•••.-..•••.•....••••••• 5..1.00.
FRIIICH FRill, •••••••••• 2 llt.laag 3.!1

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CANS

PINK LIQUID DETERGENT

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~GAL. 39~· .
Liquid
' e OR SPAGHEtn

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STA-FLO

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ADMITTED: Mrs .. James Barteen mlles south or PL Pleasant
ker , Glenwood; James Upton, Le.
which resulted In $450 prcipert.Y
m; Mr s. Charles Martin, Jr.,
damage but no persoral Injury.
GallipoliA Ferry; James Lewis,
The mishap occurred when a
Pt:. Pleasant; &amp;!san Harrison.
southbound car driven by James
pt, Pleasant; stlaron Rowles, Buf.
E. Craig, 52, RL I Rol&gt;ertsburg,
falo; Mrs. DougJasMJtcheU, Hen~
and a north boond car driven b.Y
derson .
Johnnie E. DonOhue, 20, RL 1,
DISCHARGED : Howard Plants,
Gsllipolls t"erry; Bryan Blan- Letart, met ln a sharp cW"ve on

kenship, Gallipolis Ferry; Riley

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PT. PLEASANT - The sheriffs department Investigated a
two vehicle mishap Tuesda)' evening on 13 Mile Creek Road, nf.

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uec1 at $46 tor 1 eompacU(Il
machine owned b.Y the Slate Road

BANANAS

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SEASQN

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OPENSSEPT.6

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SH-'.LS
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PETERS·
VICTOR FIELD .LOAD·
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car burr's nirvana . The streets

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Probed in

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One Accident

provided to help low lncome fam~
llies to buy and own their homes.
BETTER DAYS AHEAD
·At thi s time Camilies with i~
The presenl Congress enacted
rrom $3000 per
into law the besthoustngbillever comes
year to $7200 per year are eligi~
ble. The family benefiting woold
pay not more than 20 per cent of
its ln«lllle In mortpge· instllli-A
ments, Aoot11er federal housing , •
pr&lt;Jfil:ram wiiJ subsidize thebuilcJ..
ing of aparbncnt houses.

eylinder w h i c h produces
about 30 h.p. They last for
years and years. Skodas built
in 111411 are not uncommon.
A step up Is the Tatra, a
!our-door elght-eyllnder sedan
and graced with the strangest
front and r e a r ends in
l!uro!&gt;f. The styling, such as
It Is, 1s about a decaae old but
it stUI looks as if it was
copied from a Buek Rogers
comie strip, elrca 1946. This
Item handles like a heavy
tank.
Wartburgs from East Ger·

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to win Congressional approval Point Pleaoant, w. va.
, ,. . .
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Dr. Jlowner Is 25 year a 0( '')loj!trtment ani! J!li'kecl 1 noer the' ·
This should start a real building
boom as the program will build age, a patlve of Elldna, W. VL, · Wl"le Valley a.urchnd ~so tho . '
or restore 26 million housing un- and his porento are Clpl. and theft of a opere ttre end whe..l
its within from five to ten years. Mrs. William F, Downer, who and ba!terr !r&lt;rn a pick lip trdc:k
Six mUiion of these housing units still rqslde In Ell!ln•·
11 the M~ Alto Texaco ,81111011..
Dr.
Downer
r
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elvecl
hls.pre'l'1lli jUYeniiOs wiD appear lri Juwould be subsidized and guaranteed directly by the federal gov.. med training !rom the Gl..VIile venlle court or Frldll'emment for families with low in. Siate College, and r.Jmer Junior
comes. This ls 1000 per cent College, of DavenJ)Ol't. Jowa. He
more than all the units subsidized
received Ills doctorate degree In
and provided for by our govern-- June 1968 !rom thr Palmer Colment during the last ten years. lege o( Chlropract' c, Davenport,
Then, 20 million other housing Iowa and interened in the Palmer
units arc expected Lobe financed Clinic.
and buill b.}' prhale enterprise
Dr. Downer recently received
and private fund s but backed by his license to pracdce from the
federal support. The cost to our newly created West VIrginia Chitaxpayers for the coming three ropractic Board ol Examiners.
years is $5 billion $300 million. Dr. Downer is a Methodist, sin~
This spending is amply justified. gle, and ls residing In the apartAt that, it is less thanone~fifth of ment over the Taylor Clinic.-The
the billions of dollars our govern- addition ol Dr. Downer to lhe
ment is blowing ltJ in smoke each Taylor Chiropracticclinicbrlngs
year in carrying on Presidem the stall up to three doc:tors to
Johnson's urrJedaredand url)op~ serve Point Pleasant. and ~,;Ur.
lar v.ar in Vietnam. Millions of rounding area. Miss Opal Jett
jobs will becreatedandtllerewill is clinic r eooptlonlst.
be miHions of decent homes for
needy families. This is the first
time In the history of the Repub-

.Cars -Built to Last .
In Eastern Europe

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1, !A El'nilit ol !IL ~~and
Dorma~· ~·~ofSivamilb;

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�CJric!.®~ ~It It mY ,·
~ .llllit their, coowlllllall
'-'' will be abl~ to'~"!*' II all
...... the plain trutl!
thai 1M !

u

Demoerela are dl~ · Wll!dn ,

. thOmse!VOI wilh a ~ Ollil

,

""'""'.In

a blilerneia not ....,
IIIII centu17,
' Jt lJ I JIO(ldcal 1Datnlm!t111aJ•
IQI in deep orlaiLDivl ..... 'lllth•
In tile · Rapd&gt;llcan l!!lfV are b)'
comparlsoa insl&amp;nlllcanl.. Ani
tbl• Ia, potenu,edcall,y, a,pretly
ltronl pointer toward the Ukell·
hood &lt;J( a R-.ucan victory In

NOSE JOB on this Boeing '10'1 was NASA modllleillon to
llouse anteDDBI used In alrcrafi.W-Ipaeecraft voice relay
aad data reception. Eight ol the special plaits wDI be
used In tbe Apollo project to put a maa on tbt m- and
rellorn him safely to earth.

CLEVELAND (UPl) - Former
Cleveland Browns great Jimmy

Brown today was sued ror divorce
by his wife 9Je after a stormy

nlne..year marriage. The Browns
t11ve three children, twtns, Kim
and Keven. 8, and Jan1e11 Jr., 6.
Brown ls

now

a mavie star

I

and hia annual income Is ellllmsted at ~so.ooo. Mrs. Brown
cl1arpd gross neglect &lt;J( dut1 .
In her petldoo, which wu ftled
In Common Plea• Court.
Brown wu arrested in June
in Well lloll,ywood, Calif., when
Eva Marie IJom - Chlm, a - -

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tlful22-¥tar-oldmodei, waa!ollnd

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-of a10 0-year-Did .
economically -h8ate1f ·
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Wilbur Young

LAMP

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METAL BASE
ADJUSTABLE

Hosts Annual

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·o of A Will

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Participa'te

s

Family Reunion
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EACH .

Blue D111im
Full Cut
Tapered Leas
Sizes 6-12

I 1ant
AN ~TIA~ION-Bri!
shadeacof pmk, red, VIOlet.
and black and white feature
abstraet Pl}Jl~. of ,tbla ll!!Jacjl, , •
outfit In • l'lorenc..,;~t&amp;ly,-•

sed all,.
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--=:--::-:~=-=~
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Sure

• • •
wav lo leU !he hip-

pie sezu aporl: If II ohoWI
onv sign of amllilioll al all,
it's a ~irl.
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• .,.. bottle-!e4 crealul'fli
from cradle t9 'AVe: baby1

BARBS
ly PHIL PASTOII.ET
Of course, kids are in revolt
in every genenllpn, but at
least our generation'• motben
made us wash before we pro-

milk, pop, gin, hoi water, pUl
and back to the milk bOttle.

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. Dinner Giveh

&lt;

., ' :,..;COOLING IT AT HOME IS A BREEZE
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STUDY

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.DO-IT-YOURSELF

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GOosiNfCI

'lelcrciTope·'

the .Admlnlatration's policy In
VleljUUD. But lhlalaa total.,et.
simplification. The tnJe queatlon
is not Llndon Johnson, or FAipne
Mccarthy, or Who ts 8011W ID he
the Vlco-Prealclentlal clesllnoe

tested.

Separate Ballots
The first elecUon In which
.t he electors cast separate ballots for tbe president and vice~sldent was that of 1804,
jmder provisions of the 12th
Amendment.

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with classll slmpilciQI• II the

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The true queJtlon dellnealtoelf

Mra. B"""" Ia aokln&amp; 'rulllody

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'.'We·found that·

the anti.Jollnson Democrats"""'

llba B...a ~era In Cleveland

., ' Ill

Club

here.

l&gt;ut Wll aeqaltted. Mlsa ~ers
had adau&amp;lclerandchargec!Brown
with bolng 1M talller. Apln, he

found--

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wltdoo &lt;J( conscience and conviction between ltalefhnd moderate
wings tbat Ia com.IJIIfal-lo to what
It untlorweniiOO yearuao 'lntile

belten outside lila motel room.
She refused ID prosecute, but
B"""" WSI clw'pd with aiSaulllng a cleplty aherltr.
Brown, 32, wu charged with
uoault and battery In 1965 ""

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groat, llh&amp;IN&gt;linl house Ill the
Democrats Ia Ulldoraolnl a cm-

the la1110 hero one or
who Ia to be liOIIIinlted for Pr...
lclent. The "man- II, of
courae, Vice President 8Jbert
llUmphrey. In a rar ...,..., genu.
lne ....... Ia unfolding bore
Ia a hiJtorlc coilisiGI l&gt;et..the men who bello"' In nal!OMI
power and in ita !rank _.else
and those who are in Olght !rOm
IMJWOr In tile OQJaliY honest conviction thsl power Is in ltoelfa
tiling ol peril and ol evil ,
To express it another way, the
atruale here Is lor the mind and
purposes o! llhst Ia in theory,
but only theory, tile IDOit lnlluentlal pulitlcal pariJI ever nlsed
up In tilla counlr7. The ahortllalill.
the ~lne, way to put It II ID
sa.v tbat the pro.Jollnsoa Democrats are mcirtaiJ,y-at lrips with

For Divorce

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~:m"~ IP1I fad Ia 111at I b o

sense Ia

Sues Jimmy

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ora Ill Lincoln and Douglas.
OnlY In the most -rllcW

Sue Brown

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WITH AN EXHAUST FAN
a bouse-not simply move it
around.
Place the fan in a winclow
at one end of a room. Windows
near the fan should be closed,
otherwise the air movement
will be tbro~ these adjacent
windows ins ad of tbrougb
tbe room because of this short
circuiting.
Open windows farther away
from the fan so !hal air movement will be over a lonfndlstance. For night cooling stall
the fan in a window ~site
the bedroom, rather
n in
the bedroom itself. This way
lhe bedroom wiU be the first
room to receive the cooling
breezes from outside.
In a two-story house. install
the fan on an upper noor.
Warm air tends to rise and
cool air wlU be closer to the
ground. This is the air that
will fill the house as the upstairs air is vented out.
While r.•u can get massive
window ans. the sort that will
do the best Joll is tbe built-in
attic fan . If you own your own

ly MI. FIX
Tbere are undeniable adY~OI to air condlUonlng
a's bome. But against the
ltdvail~ must be weighed
the expense and the number
of days out Of tbeo;•ar when it
II re8Jiy Meded. ndoubtedly,
the warmer your climate the
mOll! use you will get out of
the lllatallaUoa.
If you live in a fairly ternperate zooe in which warm
wealber exists only in the
summer anc1 really bot daysw b II e UllCOmfortable - are
rare, then 1.ou miJbt consider
aimpler ancl cheaper methods
Of teeplng tbe house cool.
No matter where you live,
your boule will be cooler if
silrrounded by graur areas
rather than pavemen and If
your living q11arters are
shaded by trees.
Remember that nights tend
to be cooler and you should
Gperate on the principle of filling your bouse with night air,
alld closing II against the
warmer air during the day
Elllauat fans wsed at nipht ' .
will &amp;:::: stuffy air out o a ,o •
dwe~ al[owlng it to , be'
repl
by cooler air rushUig
in from outdoors.
of.;· &gt;.
Start using the fan

My.te and size
window
mounted

ran ~
ex.~

MrL eou,ie WUIIalbiWIIbono

C.'

~"" l!ndaJ, Auluat 26 witb I
'i!dnDiir .at her lllddlop&gt;rt homo

In
..__·~~
I:,.
;.Vlllfl• . '

home you should eoilaider ooe.
It acts as a central ventllat·
lng oystem. It seta aU the air
in the bouse in moUoa, dntw·
lng it up tllrougb atUc and exhausllng it outside tbro~
outlets. It draws cooler
tbrougb d o o r s and windows
lhrougbout the r e 1 t of tbe
house.
Even the warm air In tbe
house is cooler thaD the air
stored in the atUc. Thus, by
the time the fan ts flntshed
with its job it has cooled oil
the attic, 1110, which in turn
will belp to keep the rest Of
the hoU.: cool durtog tbe day ..
Get a fan t h a t II large
enougb. A ~ o o d atuc fBII
should be ab e to change the
air In tbe house In a ~nute to
a minute and a ball. ans are
rated according to cubic-foot
displacement. F I g u r e the
cubic feet in your house by
measuring-multiplying width.
length and height You need
not figure the basement or the

PreMnt . .

of llor 112nd-

tho

til.- .....

Mt; ltlll .... QIPrp CUio lOW

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;,,..,. ~·"'~.and
lira. a.ttM Budde,y
. · Mr. 111!11

, OIId~Ot·~........

r Tttl ·111!!'11!11 ill allen-. call~
'

FRAMED
Authentic 'otiette ...,.
productions of lint
palntlnga.

attic.
,_.,..,.. E....,nto A..J

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�CJric!.®~ ~It It mY ,·
~ .llllit their, coowlllllall
'-'' will be abl~ to'~"!*' II all
...... the plain trutl!
thai 1M !

u

Demoerela are dl~ · Wll!dn ,

. thOmse!VOI wilh a ~ Ollil

,

""'""'.In

a blilerneia not ....,
IIIII centu17,
' Jt lJ I JIO(ldcal 1Datnlm!t111aJ•
IQI in deep orlaiLDivl ..... 'lllth•
In tile · Rapd&gt;llcan l!!lfV are b)'
comparlsoa insl&amp;nlllcanl.. Ani
tbl• Ia, potenu,edcall,y, a,pretly
ltronl pointer toward the Ukell·
hood &lt;J( a R-.ucan victory In

NOSE JOB on this Boeing '10'1 was NASA modllleillon to
llouse anteDDBI used In alrcrafi.W-Ipaeecraft voice relay
aad data reception. Eight ol the special plaits wDI be
used In tbe Apollo project to put a maa on tbt m- and
rellorn him safely to earth.

CLEVELAND (UPl) - Former
Cleveland Browns great Jimmy

Brown today was sued ror divorce
by his wife 9Je after a stormy

nlne..year marriage. The Browns
t11ve three children, twtns, Kim
and Keven. 8, and Jan1e11 Jr., 6.
Brown ls

now

a mavie star

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and hia annual income Is ellllmsted at ~so.ooo. Mrs. Brown
cl1arpd gross neglect &lt;J( dut1 .
In her petldoo, which wu ftled
In Common Plea• Court.
Brown wu arrested in June
in Well lloll,ywood, Calif., when
Eva Marie IJom - Chlm, a - -

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tlful22-¥tar-oldmodei, waa!ollnd

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-of a10 0-year-Did .
economically -h8ate1f ·
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Wilbur Young

LAMP

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METAL BASE
ADJUSTABLE

Hosts Annual

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·o of A Will

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Participa'te

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Family Reunion
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EACH .

Blue D111im
Full Cut
Tapered Leas
Sizes 6-12

I 1ant
AN ~TIA~ION-Bri!
shadeacof pmk, red, VIOlet.
and black and white feature
abstraet Pl}Jl~. of ,tbla ll!!Jacjl, , •
outfit In • l'lorenc..,;~t&amp;ly,-•

sed all,.
..,.........

--=:--::-:~=-=~
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Sure

• • •
wav lo leU !he hip-

pie sezu aporl: If II ohoWI
onv sign of amllilioll al all,
it's a ~irl.
~

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• .,.. bottle-!e4 crealul'fli
from cradle t9 'AVe: baby1

BARBS
ly PHIL PASTOII.ET
Of course, kids are in revolt
in every genenllpn, but at
least our generation'• motben
made us wash before we pro-

milk, pop, gin, hoi water, pUl
and back to the milk bOttle.

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. Dinner Giveh

&lt;

., ' :,..;COOLING IT AT HOME IS A BREEZE
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STUDY

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.DO-IT-YOURSELF

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GOosiNfCI

'lelcrciTope·'

the .Admlnlatration's policy In
VleljUUD. But lhlalaa total.,et.
simplification. The tnJe queatlon
is not Llndon Johnson, or FAipne
Mccarthy, or Who ts 8011W ID he
the Vlco-Prealclentlal clesllnoe

tested.

Separate Ballots
The first elecUon In which
.t he electors cast separate ballots for tbe president and vice~sldent was that of 1804,
jmder provisions of the 12th
Amendment.

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with classll slmpilciQI• II the

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The true queJtlon dellnealtoelf

Mra. B"""" Ia aokln&amp; 'rulllody

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'.'We·found that·

the anti.Jollnson Democrats"""'

llba B...a ~era In Cleveland

., ' Ill

Club

here.

l&gt;ut Wll aeqaltted. Mlsa ~ers
had adau&amp;lclerandchargec!Brown
with bolng 1M talller. Apln, he

found--

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wltdoo &lt;J( conscience and conviction between ltalefhnd moderate
wings tbat Ia com.IJIIfal-lo to what
It untlorweniiOO yearuao 'lntile

belten outside lila motel room.
She refused ID prosecute, but
B"""" WSI clw'pd with aiSaulllng a cleplty aherltr.
Brown, 32, wu charged with
uoault and battery In 1965 ""

W81

·~

groat, llh&amp;IN&gt;linl house Ill the
Democrats Ia Ulldoraolnl a cm-

the la1110 hero one or
who Ia to be liOIIIinlted for Pr...
lclent. The "man- II, of
courae, Vice President 8Jbert
llUmphrey. In a rar ...,..., genu.
lne ....... Ia unfolding bore
Ia a hiJtorlc coilisiGI l&gt;et..the men who bello"' In nal!OMI
power and in ita !rank _.else
and those who are in Olght !rOm
IMJWOr In tile OQJaliY honest conviction thsl power Is in ltoelfa
tiling ol peril and ol evil ,
To express it another way, the
atruale here Is lor the mind and
purposes o! llhst Ia in theory,
but only theory, tile IDOit lnlluentlal pulitlcal pariJI ever nlsed
up In tilla counlr7. The ahortllalill.
the ~lne, way to put It II ID
sa.v tbat the pro.Jollnsoa Democrats are mcirtaiJ,y-at lrips with

For Divorce

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~:m"~ IP1I fad Ia 111at I b o

sense Ia

Sues Jimmy

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ora Ill Lincoln and Douglas.
OnlY In the most -rllcW

Sue Brown

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WITH AN EXHAUST FAN
a bouse-not simply move it
around.
Place the fan in a winclow
at one end of a room. Windows
near the fan should be closed,
otherwise the air movement
will be tbro~ these adjacent
windows ins ad of tbrougb
tbe room because of this short
circuiting.
Open windows farther away
from the fan so !hal air movement will be over a lonfndlstance. For night cooling stall
the fan in a window ~site
the bedroom, rather
n in
the bedroom itself. This way
lhe bedroom wiU be the first
room to receive the cooling
breezes from outside.
In a two-story house. install
the fan on an upper noor.
Warm air tends to rise and
cool air wlU be closer to the
ground. This is the air that
will fill the house as the upstairs air is vented out.
While r.•u can get massive
window ans. the sort that will
do the best Joll is tbe built-in
attic fan . If you own your own

ly MI. FIX
Tbere are undeniable adY~OI to air condlUonlng
a's bome. But against the
ltdvail~ must be weighed
the expense and the number
of days out Of tbeo;•ar when it
II re8Jiy Meded. ndoubtedly,
the warmer your climate the
mOll! use you will get out of
the lllatallaUoa.
If you live in a fairly ternperate zooe in which warm
wealber exists only in the
summer anc1 really bot daysw b II e UllCOmfortable - are
rare, then 1.ou miJbt consider
aimpler ancl cheaper methods
Of teeplng tbe house cool.
No matter where you live,
your boule will be cooler if
silrrounded by graur areas
rather than pavemen and If
your living q11arters are
shaded by trees.
Remember that nights tend
to be cooler and you should
Gperate on the principle of filling your bouse with night air,
alld closing II against the
warmer air during the day
Elllauat fans wsed at nipht ' .
will &amp;:::: stuffy air out o a ,o •
dwe~ al[owlng it to , be'
repl
by cooler air rushUig
in from outdoors.
of.;· &gt;.
Start using the fan

My.te and size
window
mounted

ran ~
ex.~

MrL eou,ie WUIIalbiWIIbono

C.'

~"" l!ndaJ, Auluat 26 witb I
'i!dnDiir .at her lllddlop&gt;rt homo

In
..__·~~
I:,.
;.Vlllfl• . '

home you should eoilaider ooe.
It acts as a central ventllat·
lng oystem. It seta aU the air
in the bouse in moUoa, dntw·
lng it up tllrougb atUc and exhausllng it outside tbro~
outlets. It draws cooler
tbrougb d o o r s and windows
lhrougbout the r e 1 t of tbe
house.
Even the warm air In tbe
house is cooler thaD the air
stored in the atUc. Thus, by
the time the fan ts flntshed
with its job it has cooled oil
the attic, 1110, which in turn
will belp to keep the rest Of
the hoU.: cool durtog tbe day ..
Get a fan t h a t II large
enougb. A ~ o o d atuc fBII
should be ab e to change the
air In tbe house In a ~nute to
a minute and a ball. ans are
rated according to cubic-foot
displacement. F I g u r e the
cubic feet in your house by
measuring-multiplying width.
length and height You need
not figure the basement or the

PreMnt . .

of llor 112nd-

tho

til.- .....

Mt; ltlll .... QIPrp CUio lOW

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;,,..,. ~·"'~.and
lira. a.ttM Budde,y
. · Mr. 111!11

, OIId~Ot·~........

r Tttl ·111!!'11!11 ill allen-. call~
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FRAMED
Authentic 'otiette ...,.
productions of lint
palntlnga.

attic.
,_.,..,.. E....,nto A..J

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••••••••••••• •

JELLY
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PLAStiC

t; ~TORCI'S

HAIIURGEI
OR HOT DOG

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YOUR SAVINGS

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PIG.

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GALA '

APliN$
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. · HEAT tJA .lAt,., .
SLICE and SERVE
THE BUY OF THE YEAR

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••••••••••••• •

JELLY
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PLAStiC

t; ~TORCI'S

HAIIURGEI
OR HOT DOG

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YOUR SAVINGS

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PIG.

11~1"1 .""''

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SLICE and SERVE
THE BUY OF THE YEAR

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LISTERIN.:E
OUTHWASH
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LIST 1.98

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YOUR CHOICE
GLEE TOOTHP
T¥H
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WHITE
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LEMON':Otl
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aSpirin.at
any price,,
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lOO JABLETS
lEG. 59~

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LISTERIN.:E
OUTHWASH
.

LIST 1.98

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YOUR CHOICE
GLEE TOOTHP
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DDENBE
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WHITE
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LEMON':Otl
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aSpirin.at
any price,,
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lOO JABLETS
lEG. 59~

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�News
B,MSON -

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Seventy-six women were happy.

The Homemaker's council, alof \ltaoon, Gallla and Meigs Coonways
in need o( song leaden • .
ties thoroughly enjoyed their bus
tour which took them from Point recommends Katherine NeWberPleasant to West Virginia's State ry, Letart, and Jane Johnson of
Capitol, Hawk's Nest LOOge, Old West Columbia.
Stone ChUrch at Lewisburg, Bluestone Dam and on to Grandview

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&amp;ate Park where we viewed
'*Honey in the Rock," from the
picturesque amphitheatre.
The action o! lhe play takes
place in the state otVirginiadur lng lhe years 1861 through 1863.
unoney in the Rock's famous

1very calorfUI - John Morgan's
tight for his dreams of a new
state (West \'lrginla);

the dances to origtnaJ music add on their bh1hda.Ys -

one year

much 10 the evening's entertain- she sent 900 cards - and over
ment. It was the 389th perform- the years has sent thousands she Is now seriously ill at the
ance.
The scenery at Grandview Slate Thomas Hospital in South CharPark In breathtaking. The park, eston, W. Va. Even while hoRsituated on a plateau in the Ap- pitalized, she thought of her
palachian Mountains, Is 2,555 friend, Glacb s Thomas' birthfeet above sea level. New Rher da,v on Friday .
flows in a horse shoe bend at
Her sister, Mrs . .Eber Roush,
this scenic spot and trains wind Mason and niece, Mrs. Edward
their way aloog the banks at the Ryan of Mason, visited with her
foot or lhe moontaln.
over the weekend .

Another breathtaldng view is
lhat at Bluestone Dam - when
one fl&amp;Zes down at the plcnlc
area below - dOtatls o! th•
area below are small In size.
We visited briefly at the Old

...

Stone Presbyterian Church at
Lewisburg. 'Ibis Is the oldest
church buildlng unrestored as
to ita exterior and in continuoua use, west of the AJleghanies.
The old church was erected in
1796. The building was reportedly made possible by the gen.
erosicy and leadership o! Col.

.1o1m stuart.
Col. Stuart and his wife, who
• 1111 the daugltle&lt; o! Col. Charles
Lewis, gave the land for th~

cillrch site.
For those of you have not had
a vacation - perhaps because
of lack of time and money - well

It's not too late.

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Whitey

gan's add a bit of humor to the
colorful entertaining proWctioo.
This two aet musical drama
written by Dr. Kermit Hunter, is
MI~ AI.MADliDDINGo!Nltro,
indeed moat interesting. The a formeJ· resident or Mason, alcOlorrui beautiful costumes or ways remembered her Bend area
the Civil War period along with friends and slight acquaintances

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Hawkins, an old friend orthe Mor-

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Indian dance is depleted and is

THE

C ONGREGATIO~

or the

Mason Methodist Church voted

oo ~ndol'. August 25, to change
the name of the church to Christ
rnlted Methodist. The o t h e r

BUNS

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HOLSUM

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BREAD 5••~.::· 1. 00 ·

8 CT.
PKG.

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So O.r.Entp!Oyoos Co" Efti,Y

BIG BUYS on ''Super-Right" Meats!

''

WEEKI

Rog. 2 fo• 43c &amp; Lou ,tmou11h

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......

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Greclo A

SEVERAL
FLAVOR$

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Eood Stamps
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~enerous

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Bitt Pll'titll
thick Celter su...
· ·.Whole or Sha•k Half
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.~~ ~ i*'Pie:i~· ~ ioyal, dedicated people...
•~ ~~~.
belleve,in what thtir company staml~ for.
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September 8.

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Homemakers Club

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Oojll!ll~ ot ~ within tile company.

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·GROUND
BEEF

7~~~~1.00

INSTANT COFFE·E10 oz. 1.09
691-¥
DETERGENT
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Jlc
Snlkld ...... low,la
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Sulllll Dillll'l ...:.... • 2• •
Sllrl.. Wlall ';'.:::' I Jo" '1"Fn111 Shr_, &amp; =...
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11"
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LARGE.JUICY-BLACK

CRISP ICEBERG

Grapes

Bead
Lalluce

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BIG BUYS
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A &amp; P Dairy Yaluea!

on. A
&amp;P Groceries!
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S~EClALI-

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::~~-~: «:~ -i"~:-~-~-k

RICH NUm FLAVOR

Swiss

·

leaos ~-PlUa ·. . •
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A &amp; P IRAND

Fruit Drinks • • • •3~ '1•

lOW PRICEI - !Welle From Herclwoocl

'· .~~~VM9~E7-;-:~HE~stf'LE

HUGE NO. 4 SIZE

=1&amp; -69c

~19c

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Jaltle

lb.

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46 oz.

AbP Stealr Values!

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FOLGERS

CATSUP

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OEL MONTE

20 oz.

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3 lbs•.

HURON

STOKELYS

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None PrieM L ·
Higher! , 8 •

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54 oz.
can

11ant
slze box

• 11t.55c

SUGAR SWEET WHITE

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OUR OWN
FRESH &amp; LEAN

OXYDOL

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BIG BUYS on A &amp; P's Fresh Produce!

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39~ :~b. 69C

ORANGE DRINK
EVAP. ILK
ORANGE DRINK

• tto.Dc

c1n

SHORTENI .

FUL-VALU BUYS!

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2% size

SNOWDRIFT

POTATOES

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WAGNERS 1\EG. &amp; LOW CAL.

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SHOWBOAT

·PORK &amp;
BEANS

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GOLDEN RIPE

BANANAS

I Ito.

Sluka -..:.:- • lb. sac
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Ull • • • • ....~.::~ lb.39c
Pm c~r.,";;"c,':' lb. 'Jtc . hiiiHIIo Stuks
lb. 1188
~-~, ··-· • . ' .1':l-Ib. ~""f'; IIIUII ..... ••
lb. De
S'Jifii;Pnll ~~ Buea ,.._ •
litef Stub ...,,..,..,. 2 ,.. s1s,
IJIIIII Wi111r1 :"::;: .._57c
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,....., ""8•
6aaald HI_. ":::' t!,SS't 'Pitt Slelka s.m,._... ••·Sic,
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ol~wborii
started aa teellllgl!l'8
and
have profited from
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Shank
Portions

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'Beef Real ......
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Chuck&lt;qt lb. 71c

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.. Fer !ftore ~ • ~~.UP bas-b!en fortunate
to ~~e iucll people.~;

10 lb.
bag

t

'

that the Methodist Youth Fellowship o! the church will be meeting weekly starllns on ~nday,

bus. It was conditioned, and It Joe Pickens and children, Miss
worked and there was no bus Mary Ann Kinnaird, and Mrs.
trouble. Everyone sang and they Abigail Thompson.

\'

~

REV. KEENEY has announced

tired ladies and children when Schell and daughter, Mrs. J. A,
we arrived back In Polint Pleao- Stephens and daughter, Mr. and
ant. No one complained, on our Mrs. George Thompson, Mrs.

'

'

'

I ean reeommertd seetnguHonNEW HAVEN - The Jericho
, ey in lhe Rock" on trfdoy, Aug. Homemakers held a picnic on
ult 30 at 8:30 p.m. and while In ~ndoy at Krodel Park, POint
Beckley see their craft fair, Pleasant.
Augull 31, Sept I and 2 at the
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
National Goard Armory. Their Charles Thompson and sons, Mr.
!air compares to that or Cedar and Mrs. Philip Pickens, Mr.
and Mrs. Garland Walker and
Lakes.
Well, baek to the bua tour : I daughter, Mr. and Mro. Paul
can tell you there were a lot of Pickens, Mr . and Mrs. George

'

c·ooKED BAM'S. '
f •

Hold Picnic Sunday

."SUPER-RIGHT" QUALITY - SMOKEb
,.
.

'

WE'LL BE OPEN
ALL DAY
LABOR DAY
WITH

.

., . ', AI.P Will It Clostcl

:

, ,,•

'

,

'

"&gt;'11..,,'

- ,

'"

Lowell Eddie Keeney.

.' &lt;

'

'

names among several suggested
were Asbury United Methodist
and Grace United Methodist. Pas· tor ol the church is the Rev .

,.

I

·,

•

.

~

II

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•

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�News
B,MSON -

,.

Seventy-six women were happy.

The Homemaker's council, alof \ltaoon, Gallla and Meigs Coonways
in need o( song leaden • .
ties thoroughly enjoyed their bus
tour which took them from Point recommends Katherine NeWberPleasant to West Virginia's State ry, Letart, and Jane Johnson of
Capitol, Hawk's Nest LOOge, Old West Columbia.
Stone ChUrch at Lewisburg, Bluestone Dam and on to Grandview

•.

&amp;ate Park where we viewed
'*Honey in the Rock," from the
picturesque amphitheatre.
The action o! lhe play takes
place in the state otVirginiadur lng lhe years 1861 through 1863.
unoney in the Rock's famous

1very calorfUI - John Morgan's
tight for his dreams of a new
state (West \'lrginla);

the dances to origtnaJ music add on their bh1hda.Ys -

one year

much 10 the evening's entertain- she sent 900 cards - and over
ment. It was the 389th perform- the years has sent thousands she Is now seriously ill at the
ance.
The scenery at Grandview Slate Thomas Hospital in South CharPark In breathtaking. The park, eston, W. Va. Even while hoRsituated on a plateau in the Ap- pitalized, she thought of her
palachian Mountains, Is 2,555 friend, Glacb s Thomas' birthfeet above sea level. New Rher da,v on Friday .
flows in a horse shoe bend at
Her sister, Mrs . .Eber Roush,
this scenic spot and trains wind Mason and niece, Mrs. Edward
their way aloog the banks at the Ryan of Mason, visited with her
foot or lhe moontaln.
over the weekend .

Another breathtaldng view is
lhat at Bluestone Dam - when
one fl&amp;Zes down at the plcnlc
area below - dOtatls o! th•
area below are small In size.
We visited briefly at the Old

...

Stone Presbyterian Church at
Lewisburg. 'Ibis Is the oldest
church buildlng unrestored as
to ita exterior and in continuoua use, west of the AJleghanies.
The old church was erected in
1796. The building was reportedly made possible by the gen.
erosicy and leadership o! Col.

.1o1m stuart.
Col. Stuart and his wife, who
• 1111 the daugltle&lt; o! Col. Charles
Lewis, gave the land for th~

cillrch site.
For those of you have not had
a vacation - perhaps because
of lack of time and money - well

It's not too late.

(

.•

'

.

..

'

Whitey

gan's add a bit of humor to the
colorful entertaining proWctioo.
This two aet musical drama
written by Dr. Kermit Hunter, is
MI~ AI.MADliDDINGo!Nltro,
indeed moat interesting. The a formeJ· resident or Mason, alcOlorrui beautiful costumes or ways remembered her Bend area
the Civil War period along with friends and slight acquaintances

.'
'

{

I• •

Hawkins, an old friend orthe Mor-

'.,'.

.

H

Indian dance is depleted and is

THE

C ONGREGATIO~

or the

Mason Methodist Church voted

oo ~ndol'. August 25, to change
the name of the church to Christ
rnlted Methodist. The o t h e r

BUNS

• ,

HOLSUM

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BREAD 5••~.::· 1. 00 ·

8 CT.
PKG.

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So O.r.Entp!Oyoos Co" Efti,Y

BIG BUYS on ''Super-Right" Meats!

''

WEEKI

Rog. 2 fo• 43c &amp; Lou ,tmou11h

•

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......

-

Greclo A

SEVERAL
FLAVOR$

'

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· We accept' 'Fed,
Eood Stamps
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thick Celter su...
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belleve,in what thtir company staml~ for.
.
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September 8.

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Homemakers Club

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Oojll!ll~ ot ~ within tile company.

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BEEF

7~~~~1.00

INSTANT COFFE·E10 oz. 1.09
691-¥
DETERGENT
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BIG BUYS
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A &amp; P Dairy Yaluea!

on. A
&amp;P Groceries!
'

S~EClALI-

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RICH NUm FLAVOR

Swiss

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Fruit Drinks • • • •3~ '1•

lOW PRICEI - !Welle From Herclwoocl

'· .~~~VM9~E7-;-:~HE~stf'LE

HUGE NO. 4 SIZE

=1&amp; -69c

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CATSUP

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20 oz.

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HURON

STOKELYS

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Higher! , 8 •

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can

11ant
slze box

• 11t.55c

SUGAR SWEET WHITE

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FRESH &amp; LEAN

OXYDOL

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BIG BUYS on A &amp; P's Fresh Produce!

J '-" '"[. .

39~ :~b. 69C

ORANGE DRINK
EVAP. ILK
ORANGE DRINK

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SHORTENI .

FUL-VALU BUYS!

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SNOWDRIFT

POTATOES

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WAGNERS 1\EG. &amp; LOW CAL.

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BEANS

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BANANAS

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Pm c~r.,";;"c,':' lb. 'Jtc . hiiiHIIo Stuks
lb. 1188
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and
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to ~~e iucll people.~;

10 lb.
bag

t

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that the Methodist Youth Fellowship o! the church will be meeting weekly starllns on ~nday,

bus. It was conditioned, and It Joe Pickens and children, Miss
worked and there was no bus Mary Ann Kinnaird, and Mrs.
trouble. Everyone sang and they Abigail Thompson.

\'

~

REV. KEENEY has announced

tired ladies and children when Schell and daughter, Mrs. J. A,
we arrived back In Polint Pleao- Stephens and daughter, Mr. and
ant. No one complained, on our Mrs. George Thompson, Mrs.

'

'

'

I ean reeommertd seetnguHonNEW HAVEN - The Jericho
, ey in lhe Rock" on trfdoy, Aug. Homemakers held a picnic on
ult 30 at 8:30 p.m. and while In ~ndoy at Krodel Park, POint
Beckley see their craft fair, Pleasant.
Augull 31, Sept I and 2 at the
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
National Goard Armory. Their Charles Thompson and sons, Mr.
!air compares to that or Cedar and Mrs. Philip Pickens, Mr.
and Mrs. Garland Walker and
Lakes.
Well, baek to the bua tour : I daughter, Mr. and Mro. Paul
can tell you there were a lot of Pickens, Mr . and Mrs. George

'

c·ooKED BAM'S. '
f •

Hold Picnic Sunday

."SUPER-RIGHT" QUALITY - SMOKEb
,.
.

'

WE'LL BE OPEN
ALL DAY
LABOR DAY
WITH

.

., . ', AI.P Will It Clostcl

:

, ,,•

'

,

'

"&gt;'11..,,'

- ,

'"

Lowell Eddie Keeney.

.' &lt;

'

'

names among several suggested
were Asbury United Methodist
and Grace United Methodist. Pas· tor ol the church is the Rev .

,.

I

·,

•

.

~

II

•• • •
•

.
..
• . . .""''
~

, ·.

. ~~= ·.
.

'

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BO
,.

PLAID

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Carl Alber\. H
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er, ,sparking
monium
Ooor.
bert'
loud

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ol

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Daley,

Mayor

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stage manager

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4-11 ctu

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JellllJ' Dea

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Wri'IIP'MI up
ter. M
e is
member ol
, • think so" ..,., ~d •
,&lt;;ow:) House Cut
thouoh•t It
prcibabll •·
nald Mora
l&lt;ri'IIP'MI
• ~ tt ' ' "I
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ember of the Fl
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ne hitehead,

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