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n.D: Sentinel, ~ornerQr:MiddlllP'Irlo

It - 'The

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~ 1968

o., -n.,lldly, SepL

•¥~~~~~ntese '· Are ·

Mass Burials Folio~ Teheran's
Deadliest Killer Earthquake
TEHRAN (UPD-llodies in
white Moslem shrouds were

Lnto mass graves by
snorting bulldozers. Fierce was
the .afternoon llwt.
shoved

I'

Walltng children appealed to
Allah ror the return of their
loved ooes, dead in the red

earth rubble or a single room
horne. Icy was the black desert
night.
·.&lt;\nd still the mangled ground
trembled. The toll in the world's

worst killer eart:h(Jlake since
19:19 today rose past 20,000 dead
and 50,000 injured. More than
100,000 persons lacked homes.
Authorltles battled against time
to avert Carnine, epidemics and

Rescue w 'o r k e r s tearing

Iran

recovered

said

more

they

than

might freeze.

droogh:t.

I

Frightened survivors refused
take refuge in the few
to
;:;:;:::::::::::;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::·::.
structures still standing after
Meigs County escaped the
the
weekend's two massive
long tmllday weekend without
quakes and Monday's lighter
any ma.ior highway accidents
temblors.
or fatalities.
Extra food, blankets, clothing,
Many residents were held in
medical assistance and disinfec~
their own communities for the
tants were rushed in under the
da,y by conununity celebrapersonal direction of the ~all
tions. Towns having observan .
ces included Syracuse, Racine,
Pomeroy and Chester. Parades
were featured and went otr without incident.
In Pomeroy, a water show
was staged by the Athens Boat
and Sd Club as a part of the
observance.

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Mayor Legar

Urges Traffic
Safety Effort

4

chlriJ:e.

gavethe
a magnift..
&amp;ee 'of

other otters, au

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.

Passes Away

NEW HAVEN- Funeral services for William Henry Capehart, New llaven, who died early this morning at Veterans Memorial llospitlll, will be h e I d
Thursday at 2 p.m. at the United Methodist Chureh of New Haven with the Rev. Paul Fortney
officiating, Burial will be in Graham Cemeter}'.
He was born Feb. J:l, 1906,
at Syracuse, Ohio, the son of
the late Abney and Edna AJmeda Capehart. He was a retired
employee of Kaiser Aluminum
and had been in ill health for
some time.
&amp;irvlvors lnclude his wife,
Opal Lelvlng Capehart, N e w
Have11; four sons, William, Rutland; Burford, Shade; Irwin, BeaJ
Alr Force Base, California, and
Edward of Columbus; t h r e e
daughters, Mrs. Juanita Abbot,
Pi. Pleasant; Mrs. Lenora McKnight, Pomeroy, and Mrs. Huth
S'lane, Middleport; two step sons, Garland Roush, Columbus,
and Delbert Roush, Guysville; one
brother, Walter Capehart, St.
Joseph, :Missouri; 30 grandchUdren and five great - grandchildren.

soila!a

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Molden Sentenced

SAIGON (IJP0,- Two motoro
r blk.,..idl- O&gt;rrorlsts, strlkil)g

on the aniiliersary of

'"'....'

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sOuth .

Vietnam's 1967 preatden!li!
· eleeUona,
t&lt;llly
burled a
' srenade
into the
gateway
flnvance to a US. AID bul1ding
'ln SO!gon,
Si:x periODS were WQ\Inded, aD
Vietramese. Earller , reports
that at tesst two win'e klliod
proved to be erroneOus.
The grenade e&gt;iJloded in !root
of the
Agency
(or
lnterDational
Development
bU!Idllll! at tho ·helgbt ·o r the
ifternoon rush hour on Baigon' s
Le Van iloyet thorGughfare.
One year lBO today, Nguyen
Van Thleu and Np,yen cao Ky
were elected president and vice
president in South Vietnam's
rlationwide presidential elections.
At least three of the 8~

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United Pre11 Jnternatlelljai
Richard M. Nllaln ~ hio
preaidentlal •~~~~~Paten todo,y
CCiminced Repobllcin &lt;unl~ hal
JlUt Ida bid lor the Whita ll'ou;e
"on an I.UJbeat note" and aimQd
With I ·•114mride poll ' tfiat
··-hi··~
The Republican !&gt;l'esldentlal
esndldlib&gt;'s !!rat stop on ·a I!YOo
de.Jo trip to slx cltloo was
Chicago, Where he scheduled a

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OPEN A
CHECKING
ACCOUNT

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VOL. XXI NO. 93

Woven ctieck.·, pialds and 1trlpe.• In' the molt' popular
colo,s and color co1nblnatfons. Also a big s•lectfon
of colorful .itchen prlnt1 .

ALL CANNON FIRST QUAC:.ITY

3:: f.OR 1. 00
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WASHINGTON (IJPO - Lawmakers re1UJ'IIed reluctantly
today lor a post-convention
...,....Ilona! session llWll'
members thought llkel,y to
. produce as much host as llsb~

senstorlal maiiA!rs, like
the COii!lrmoUon of Abe F'o~Ua
a• Chief Justice of the United
Democrat's nerve 1 were states.
frl.yed frfllll their vloleni:&lt;&gt;GOP House 1 - r Gerald R.
-'""' convention ln Chi- Ford, Mich., said In
J u b f J a u t Republleans were bUrvleW: 11 1 belleve Ill r&amp;- ·
polallng to the Democratic malniJii buslne85 u fer as the
lltherilw ·~ e&gt;ideuce that It Ia Houn ln concerned can be
lime for a """CODC!licled within lllfo or jhree
Political Jo&lt;keylng " " oure weeka, certainly IIY Oet L"
to nt ln u mem~s wrancled
A more common gue11 amq

over such renWnlng Juues •• membera waa

•lllllnc rd aid

to college
olliclenls who riot, control of gun

iti

l
.v'

and. a~pelllllllg equal stoke 011 Nov. 5-two llnal
llille requltiments for prealden- weeka. to calnpOip. Only 34 of
.tlil tolo'fial~ delilleL
. the 100 Seaob&gt; seoto are up lor
· Par,t """ throulb the lelJii!Jo. srabs lhlo year so tho electlou
.tift intl1 were otlter bWa to problem. is DOt 10 aeute there.
Ji.qp ..mo-:e ...J;llm_., lnto the
On Past m;perieDce, ·hoWever,
:Will', taut~• !Um everybody l!&amp;ured the Republi~e8 J0Qi1111
a 120,000 can and Democntlc conventions
Cl!lliiw m the - n t tor the •l(lll'led· the sblrt of the
fl!OO',· cmtbue liio ~ CIIIIPIIIotns. whennor the
.. ,.,, uil' .itltilb"'~!Mot"' -xf,
bO, ·n.t ia part
·
&amp;1111 deolera In UID.
o1 what Senate Democratic
tllklng of leader Mike Mansfield meant
l
on illal mlibl coatlnue up when he aald illat allhoujjh
(i!
llilaw, with time out lor there "" .not an owrwhelming
hi Noocnbet electlona. llouao · work lood remaining, tho
"
a warrt8d to wind _. "paeousitr" could be excesloglslatlw and
live.
~lter11 and let the House qull.

wltb

loattan .....

10.
l!".dDDi..ld

Se)lt

Sen.

wu

vlee pr..,ldenlfll
(CClnUJIIoli m PapS)

Democratle

Mal~

Auto Titles

-... tonliiit
· - and
·a
n d -Lowl
-Tbursdt,y.
toolgiii moatJ,y iJJ the 601. CCIIItllllled · warm and bumld Tburaday.

tend

to

:,'brt~~~~r:~;'::::

1lUrina the tho JlGicl
!allied 785 cerWI&lt;ateo ol dtlo;
258 notet!ms of llan; 170 mem- er, Amette Kal&amp;ht. Clarem.ce Turorancllms; 186 c:aneellatton1 at 1~, Aullln Phllllps, WWiam J,
Hen; 507 appHeatJons, dlc!avita Smith, Paullne Darst, Beatrice
and
and 10 certi- Weed, Torey Oblinger, Dwiliht
fied copies. Of the total re- Carl, Msry King, Clelr SOrsoo,
ceipt&amp;, the counl;)'"s ahere la Amoa Ttllla and Hell French.
!IoWen reported that local su$1,199.25 while the alate's share
perintendents
at a recent meetIs $383.25.
ing indicated a texl&gt;ook study ln
the fields ot science and readIng abould be C&lt;ll~Glcted. T h •
board authorized therefore em~
ployment ot a conaultant on a
port..Ume bolla lor a study oo
emplo,l'meat driving a truck.
readlDg teMn ao'ls.
Residents ....,. mall or leave
Routine billa were appNYed
their contributions at the ol!lce
lor payment. AIIAmdlng the meetof Sberill' Robert Hortenbacb ..00
of.
will ... that tho family receives ing at the
lice ln the counl:7 IIJI!rmary were
tbiiOIIIIII u It •• llB I lied
.!IoWen and board member•
Rouah, Gonion Collins, George
Percy, Harold Lohse and Virgil

••lli8nmont•

.. iiatthe - -

superlnlendent'•

Inducted by Army
llarey Darid ·Leooar&lt;l. ... or
· lllr, and Mrs. llarey Leonard,

Cheater, waa tnmcted Into 111e

u,

s. Armi

Oil Aug. 20 and Ia
curreatly ~ Ida bselc

~- ~val
II Iii I!Jelnlen-

10Uih
'1'llrM
· WILuAIIII. PI;CKI!NS, .,.,.., lain ihe U; S.. t4voJ .e e,- ,
pilal at POrismwth,
)lbeH be Ia !n a dftp ...,.. Brealhbw Ia ~· for blm
JMdjllieand three llmeo aillee be
became W three weeka
his heart has stopped. He il ssld
to be a vletlm cir baclarlal meDliWitla,

va:.,
wtib' •
aao

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training at Fort Js&lt;klon, S. C,
He II a sradllate ~ Eutern IIIah
School,
claas ol 1165.
.I
,,
1111 - . . ... l'vl. Harey
David Leonir&lt;l, US 51885M7; CO.
. A, Snl Bn., Ill Tng, BDE.;
Fort Jackocin, S. C. ~207.

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JII'J~ ~p·ed

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broUiflliUop~ tor you'tills
s~
In • ~ IJI!I!UP. .

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1 'f' ,.fall. tl$,h1011, f~ ,wear; 'Com•:,~·~· ~·
/ fn~ls Wll~;,ou II _ftnd ¢ Tile Be,~~ t .. ,
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b,...,.... ,. corpor"*"

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,FIVE CENTS

i.

KERMIT WALTON, Pomeroy bualneuman, has been
ramed Pomeroy's representadve on the Meigs County Board
of Health. He repllces Charles Persinger, who resigned re.
cently before
Florida.

moving to

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.;..~:.::;.;ell~ · ·Polities

laid today ha tried to erplaln
the American election cam.
palp to the North Vietnam delegation to the war talks here but
that it was impossible COr per~

to

lOIII ln a -roUed aoclety
understand It
"I h&amp;d to poJnt out to them
that bOth the two parties wanted peace very DWch but at 1he
same Ume It bed to be an hon-

orable peace, u he said. Hanoi
hal been reported going liow
in the Paris-Vietnam talks ln
belle! the election C8lllpll!gn
would force an end to the war.

Miller to Attend
Beton Dinner Event
WAllii!NGTON - Telltii ,District ConsreslllWI Clareoce E.
Miller will continue to v t 1 t t
throughout the District 1B IIlllCh
•• poostble doing the 2od session of the !lOiii C&lt;ngreas whlch
haa julll recoovened.
Tho C&lt;ingresllll8ll Ia to be ln
Morgan ~ Friday evening
where he wlllpresentallqwhich
hal !1cnm over the. N.U...'a CapItol thelalrboordmemben. On
Solurdljo0 September 7 0 he will
llteJxl the IOOth Amual Bean
Dlmer at Wllkelvllle sponiOred by Ameriesn Legtoo I'Ust
Number 476. He io oehecllled to

to

The image ol the new militant
school mar'm or master was
made a reality to nelll'l,y 100,000
Mlchipn school chlldreu. Molll
~ tbe state's schools were to
open today but classes failed .t o
a1ar1 on lime ln eil!III school
districts Tuesday. Ten dlllricts
were threatened with delays
tocta,v and two more might not
open Thursday.
The Michigan Education AsiOclatlon, which represents teachers ln 516 school distric:ts, ssld
teaehers would 1101 ~ without COiltracto In eil!III dlllricto.

The MEA said el&amp;ii8S were
delayed ln six districts IIY
mutual agreement with sehool
boards, and one school board
reJected the teachers' otrer to
work ..tthout a contract during

Old Style
Found IJad ne:atiy~:k
WASHINGTON (UP0 -

Gaylord Nelson,

~Wis. .

Sen,

.o.led teachers strike.

legielatton today aimed at rolormilll! or abolishing natlooal
political conventions. He coDed
them "antiquated and undemocratic."
"I think a IilaJortty or t h e
American public, regardless of
party, is fed It&gt; with our quadrennial political part,y conveDotions, •• Nelsoo told the Serate.
The lawmaker introduced a
b!U to creab&gt; a 30 - member
commJssion which would prc:pJse

a new 11yateD. tor .iomtnatilli:
presidential esndlds!Q. 'The
panel woold lllillmlt to Coqrress
by Aua 1, t96tl, a plan tor a natiomrlde presidential primacy or

a reformed convention system.
4

City's 1.1 millloo
school children moY not get
back to school m time next
Monday because ol a threatened

Nilson said. the plan sboold
'guarantee fair ai'KI represeJrta.-

tive dolepte selectioo and,..,._
lDat1rw procedures." .
"Under the pitiless ey"e ottel&amp;viaion. IIIII in the face of a serious
world crtsls1 tbe nominatln&amp;~
ventiona lave been tDpOaed as
(Contlrued oo Page 8)

~ata!wt2p.m.

The United FederaUoo of
Teachers, representing all b.lt
10,000 of New York's 60,000

New Red
Attacks
Criticized
PARIS (UI'Il- U.S. Ambassador
W,
Averell Harriman
eherged today that renewed
Communist attacks in South
V l e t n a m had accomplished
unotldng except misery tor the

people."
llarrlmau, llll his way to the
2oth sessim ol the Paris talks
m VIetnam wldch _..t Ms,y
13, laid he woold have lillie to
say to tho North Vlolaamese

...,Uatora.
''[ am demandi.a&amp;' that the

teachers, mel With the ol
eWcatiOJl Tueildly In .. olfort
to resolve the deadlock. Tho
issue ilwolves the firing ol Ill
white teachers aad edmlnllfra.
tors Iaiii •Jll1111 11Y a N...,
adminiltrator ot a
.,....

lchool.
In other dev~o:
AI Eut Haven, Conn., 3110
leachera v - not lo retum to

111elr
board

joba today,

of

reJe&lt;tloB iiio

eclleatloa'l

11te1t

offer.

No ..................,... - .

locked~ ' iiii:tl flu~ ....
Louta, nt, aalll aide - .
will report to woric. has
been delayed there lor 24,000
studerts. Tbe teacber• want
moremmey.
At Ealll Chicago, Ind., 400
teachers were expected to
strike again today ln a cantraet
dlliJIUie wltb the al:hool board.
This -.!d leave only 100
regular teachers for clasaroom
aosignmenta, 'The board bu

.,

cftered an acroas.U..e-board pay
hike of $313 amually, far llhorl
"' the $8,000 minimum tho
teachers demand.
At West Homestead, P&amp;. 1 ~
' Pilloburgb, schools - . cloMII
~ day Tuelldly. Teacbllra
want to raise the iiiiD1mwu
lllarllng pay from 115,400 lo
$6,500 s year.

72 Mishaps

Probed in
Past Month
There were 13 more accideatl
inveatlgatecl IIY the Slate lllai1WOJ
Patrol ln Auguat tlan in July,
acc01'l11111 to the monthly "''''J'tof
tho GaiiQ&gt;olis Patrol Poo~ whldl
lilted 72 acciderts ln Au&amp;uat
COJqlared to 59 in July,
PM fatal accident wu I"EEPPO'¥ed laat month, ralaliW 111e y.rl,y
to five in eight mmiiia.

North VIetnamese llqi their Jame• E. FraDdin. 39, Itt. 1,
P1"'1MRJnda and answer a very Galllpolia, wu k!Ued Alii. 3 m
olmpie
IPOstiOD whidl ilia ftt. 7 lOUth ol O&gt;eshin.
Pre- asked ••• what woold
The patrol llso Upled 19 ot
the
?2 accidents
lJUUl'f"Qpe
~
ll
the
butri&gt;lng
(~
North
Scboolo ot li&amp;Otp CouniY ap. Lee Lee, Robert h•er, J\oaa elude Fred Miller, Leliiit;crtoVle!Dam)
'"
nwl
Ollllrel)"1''
he
aecldeula
with
a
ofiZ parTuelldly w1tb admlnlstn- Tribe, Coanee . Wllllame, \Ill&amp;- ela I'Uwell, 11ac1ne Elem-r:r:
oald.
oonallilared.
lora ~ "amoolb aaliln«'" sail lllrpOr, ft.l'Uls Greer &amp;1111 Gtrald N...., blab sciDJI;f!Qyd
Lui m011th the patrol . . llarrlman laid the
, lor liio -port.
·
Jl018 Lee.
Diddle, $'rseuse, and ·llell ,._
nllllll
,...
ulllng
North
Vltlna1,160
houri patrdlq the . . . .
.E!1r91Jment !Iaure• _. not .nuitor IIIah - Mauriee Loll, Ire!'; Junior blab.
of
GIIUa
and llaii!J Ca.......
moae
soldlon
OJJIIrel7
ln
available 'l'lleeda7 but...,.. ... , ~; Herbert l'arker Da.catetarta poriiOJlJlel are Holan
111
South
VIICJiam.
He
laid
.tllal
Jlllde
283
arreota, I f - 1111
~ 'toii:-.NWJPIIed 1110'1DIO rid Baoid.·imaWolte,Jr•
Juaulta Juatlco,lAiart;
_ ,,
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lanl iloadashoJt, ·Tu_., Geraldl!lo Clovaland, Clara Pow- .... ' ' ' I D - wllb 1llo - - lnclliclil1f
~
ol the VIet Calla'• ..tdelo de!eCI warnl!lp &amp;1111.
WJUiam
-rlll'len; WlertPriee,lblb oU, RadlleEieDltlllary;AIIIaOIItll'lldo.
or, ~ Circle, blab ochool; Naitoual iJbenllm ~ ..atllla to 74 ~Radlle
- Ed 11 a 1!1- Wlngolt. Evel,)o!l Moon, (NLF) '"Widell ·i s demanding liD
VETERANS MEIIIORIAL ·,
Prico,
·)fuJo EastenloJ, Jull. i1llleJieiDnt and neutral -

First !Jay Smooth Sailing

t

.s-

cammu-

ail ~ J~ma~z . fas,lill{
. t : .'••cltQ!eat IJrtwlnl lilt the ·cimpas r,
;&gt;

,,'
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ftcials.

state maetlna of Slljl8rintendentl
ln Columbus oo Sept. 26 and 27
and a lltate c:lerka' meetlnl in
Columbua oo Sept. 24. Bow•
Is clerk of the couDl;y boanL
CouniY School !llperv!IOrO
Mrs. Grata !little and Mrs. Nel-

lie Vale were authorized to ata state superv1801'1 conference ln Columbus on Oct. 3 aDd
Receipts lor the ol!lee of Mro. 4.
Bu1 driver eertlftcates were
Eve11n Lucke lor the month o1
loaued
Darlene Reed, Oaear
August as tho result of autoJROUve acll'fiUea totaled .1,582.50, Pennlnlton, Dan Smith, Dallas

Bring $1,583

•loodlne•• with - . .

or

The board authorized CouniY
SUpt. Robert Bo!ren to attend a

EdmudS.

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Mullldie-1111

By Unl~ Press lntenaUonal
Teacher strikes arxl bol'c:OU.s today_blocked or threatened to .PQat.
pone the bock - to - school walk lor thou811lds ~ Americu liChool
children. The teachers wut more money &amp;Ill or better world..a8; ~
ditions, lncludirw JDOr'e a flY ln how their jr,~s ue nm.
Gary D. Wlllts, held ol the t4tional EdllCIItlon A l _ _ . l
field crew ot 30 contract barpiners and trouble lhoaters 1114
strikes....,. be atCectl11fiOO,OOO teachers and three miUloo - ·
this year. Lut year, teacher. strikes hit 126 school dbtrl$ '11ll1
year 300 to 400 districts will have strlkew, ICCOI'dlll to NEA "'-

tion.

became..,..

the

mata

H,.

Teachers
In Turmoil

the 0 h i o
Assoclatlon
t.onv
COlumbua on Nov.
!3 ami 14 Tuesday n1lllt by the
\lelgs CouuQ&gt; Boord of Educa-

-:::.,•

!:~!~

,., Jctne a~d

,

madeJi,i"Lto

blm•apa-

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around Oct. 19.
That woold glw H01110 membora-aD ol whose oeata are at

Harold Roush

.•'

WaUace prot.IJb' wcdd hfa rice .Prtd1
n.IIJ

Variablf

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~

vtca&amp;lon In Miami -ell . .
•tartbw hlo !lnol drive l&lt;ll' iiio
preslclency. A IPC)kesman · ~

1ft

tntiram

,atfonal
D.,..,;~,

•

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JOrill .._ . , -ted ,.,.
to carey Loutata.., loll ..,._
_ , , Ala., Tue"""' far a

.'Mar- ,._,

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State

Ma.-J,...,..

With a checking account, you
con keep on acc:urate record
of expenditures. Start banking

lie Pay 5\ On Certificates ol Deposit

f•· r .•

.firm'•

Member

and lllrPI7
A achlnetodo

today with your occounl.

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:,. .·-.. 111...- ell'ederu

p!D'ely

an

be

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Tho Senate then eoold atay
Into the wtntei' to wreolle ..tth

,,., ..,.. .....,....u,ed at ODee..

Colors

worl\ed

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Humphrey-The vice presE. \ ·Slndlljlpr, the !dent
declde'd . Tuelldilo teo
preaide... ssld .p olls ~rrllj)l C8Jllllalln slrategjo

.~ Leonard is

· Styles

The vice prealdert and his ..U.,
Muriel, celebrited their 32nd
weddi.W annlverl&amp;l}' Tuelldly
..tth a amall !101'11 at home. •
Gov. JoiLII McKeithen- Tho
Loutela• governor aakl Tueothe
d..,. he "oold ~
Humphrey • Mualde ticket ln
Novembsr because tile South

zau•.ancud•ie lliJd Uo6 had no ments:
clptnlon.
Albert

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not later than mid-October,

ente can: remain at their son•a
bedlidl. The II8Dlor' Plckllll ....
lnlured ln Ill ...tdont IIJd Ia
!1111 well. He bad Olll,y -

ELMER BURNS
COLOR CENTER
992-5611

rellect a cjeir pr,tereqce
the . - - just DOIIIlno(ed
and "lhlsl• the!lrst~ ln20
years illat It has illlt
out
illal lVII'·"·· .
•
·1n oth8r politico! develo!&gt;-

Board
Names
Roush

Co:ngress in
Touchy Mood

8J1I)Oai tor -

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fOl' oJ lho National Se.curtQ&gt; c_.:

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Pf"'MFI?OY.MIQDLEPQRT, OHIO. --------------~~~~~~~~~~~-----.-----'
WEDNESDAY', SEPTEMBER 4, 1968

friends hare today 118Ued an

~

I

.....Uch
asked who they wouJII voto for
U the el,oclillll were held ' illal
day, 33.7 per oelit cholieNU.O,
28:5 per cent VIce freslclent
Hubort.' HU1111&gt;hrq, 15,7 George
wlltace.. 9,5 por · cent a .

·had been spurned IIY leaders ~
the
Democratic
conventioil.
.., . South .... 1."'1101¥ flnored
durl111 tho cmvent1011; the
lalicatlon was we were not
needed,'' he said. McKeithen
wu among the eullest &amp;f4tportera tor Hunwhrey'l ranu.t.
pon, but he sald he and the vice
president were "acre• apart''
phlloiJCll&gt;hicall,y,
George C. Wallace- The third

ent.tnl \,\~

m-

Brtnds

I

_.d. .

wbat

to

mat~ ~n tmDiodll~e~,y' aliM a -IIIMI ln Mlnne- &amp;1111117
llrm. .O f 1;n,i perlonl ~onal .,..;,.Jtloa pnenll1 .Waahington fl!day' fOr a J]lloetiJW.

eo., a

·illiam Pickens Stricken

I I

• \

c.-lp

li'!" cin¥&gt;01BR

IIY ~r &amp;

The commoo house lJ,y . . . blta humans. lila often confllied
with the liable lJ,y whlch can bll&lt;o
and whlcll !requeatl,yvtalll illman
dwell!nga.

slate, metal, conand tile.

ANNOUNCE MEETING
Worshiptu1 Master James M.
Souhby today announced Pome-roy Lodge 164, F&amp;AM, will meet
in regular session at 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday at the Masonic Temple in Pomeroy. Hefreshments
will be served ronowing the meet-ing. All master Masons are invited.

.,

Now You (\Jlow

ASPHALT
PLASTIC ROOF
CEMENT FOR

NOW is the time to

New York. He noted ·lllat the
GOP' go,.rnor, o! Cellf!&gt;rnlo,.
NijW York, Mlchll!&amp;n, . ?hl0.
the , Democrstlc .National C... Mso-'chuoetts. and P00D17ha...aton.
. .
nla. havo)&gt;itapied to
"We 111ri .
actlvtl,y, tor hiln.
deflnlb&gt;l,y on an IiPbeat nole, not
"ThiB Ia tO · me a lOI7
beeauae of what lliJpeneil at , formidable . £X'Ol!ll o1 caJIIIIOiaD.
U. Democratic: cooventlon but era," he
becalioe .of
happened II
NlllOII'B hopes W.re !&gt;olstered
our• and Just after ItA!," laid by :the reaqlta ola p.mllc opnloo
!!Win Tuellday at a reception in · poll conducted over the "eekend .

.

in roofs ol com110Si·

'

nJJ,r at Ill ~ro.ktton where
pOllee and ...iwF Il,monio!rator. 1ctas""' ~it .week during

IIY

'.-r

Leaks,
Joints and De-

~

\ .:J..;, .

Nixon Opens ··Campa:-~n

v• •,.

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Devoted To 'l7u! lnfer&amp;ll Of The Meigi·Mtuon Area

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~···

/ '; 5HERWIN1
WiLLIAMS
' .. ' PAINTS

River Gauges

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News Briefs

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potted !~ · tho scene, The
Military inb&gt;lltgence sources
w'oilndod 8\llnl ssld he nred 'safd the COmmunists ·Daay have
allot' into' c4he air to try to stop temperarl)y (oregone an lll-4)Ut
o«enslve in l'lvor of terrorist
the me'\o ''i'llty escaped,
Blame Terrorists
strikes Jnsldu the city.
Police .said they, believed the
Bomb Infiltration
. Incident .waa the ·wOrk of the
AttaCking comrriunist poSiViet Corig: The llrenade landOO tions wl.thln a two-day mttch or
in a ., Pie!'IT.' .in the wall the capital, u, s, )!52 bOmbers
surroonding, the U.S. Aaency lor M o n d a y and early today
lntJr"'tional'
'llloveloj&gt;mert . dropJied 250 tons ,of bombs .onto
bU!Idina. Several ·dozen Ameri- f suspecl&lt;ld. cOmmunist ln!Utra•
can and ' VletmmeBe empJoyea tion ·corriDor (rom CarilbQdia 1
were inside.
! shakllll! the ClJlital ao4.ratillng

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WUbur Moi!leil has bej!ll sentenced to aBrve 7a six D'Kintha
stay ln the Meigs eow,ty Jall
and a one to three 7ear term in
Witneue&amp; a~ the two
the Ohio Ponltentlar)o Iller apterrorists sped lwa.y on their
pearing before Judge John
motorbike. National Policemen
Bacon ln !lie Meigs COIIR\Y Comand soUth 'vietname.se soldiers
mon Pleas Court on bad check
quickly blocked o!1 a six-block
charges.
,
area around the buUding bst
Molden was given a six
there was no trace of the two
county jail sentence oo the first
men,
of five counts contained in t h e
The explosion came as Saigon
information affidavit. The peni.
w~s beginning 10 relax after a
tentiary sentence was given on
~se weekelld in w!!l;h j;h~
the other four bad c h e c k
counts. The time spent in die wounded were seriously burt-a capital wen\ OJl I! fuD;·mllitary
Vietnamese guard, a nationld · alerf . in ·~tattoO : ot ·. ,.
&lt;.'Ollllty jail will apply · to tile
aM a woman, UPI COinmunt1.t atta~k ·whicli never
policeman
penitentiary sentence.
correspondent Kate Webb r:-.,.. cam~
FESTIVAL PLANNED
NEW IIA VEN - 'I'h&lt;lre wUJ be
an old-time festival Sept. 7, a1
the Broad Hun School, Letart,
W, \'a., with homemade ice
{Continued !rom ~ I)
cream, beef soup made in large including nearly 120 policemen, wete treated It hospitals al'kl rekettles outside, san~ehes, pie, leased. Most Wli're not seriously hurt.
·
cake, coffee and sort drinks to
The one remaining was . a YOWW policemb, hit In the race with
be sold. Proceeds in the past
a brick.
have been used to pay members'
All o( the 583 persons arrested during the battles were tree on
way .w county 4-H camp .
bond, authorities said.
MEIGS GENERAL HOSPITAL
TOKYO - PREMIER PHAM VAN DONG of North VIetnam said
Saturday Admissions - None.
Morliay
his country wUl fight until the last American leaves South
Saturday Discharges- Chules
Vietnam.
·..
Fields, Della Curtis.
Pham
spoke
at
a
meeting
in
Hanoi
atteDded
by
President
Ho Chi
&amp;lnday Admissions - None.
Minh
to
celebrate
the
23rd
anniversary
otN,orth
Vietnam's
declai-,&amp;anday Discharges - None.
.
.
Monday Admission - Jessie tion of independence, Radio Hanoi 1ald.
"Our
entire
V~etnamese
peopie_Uf:
'
d
etei'Dlfned
to
fight,
uptU
Price, Hutland,
complete
victory,
..
Pham
said,
"unUl
DOt
·&amp;
siogle
U.S.
aggresSOr
f9
Monday Discharge - Joe wu.
left
in
South
Vietnam.
;,
:•.
'
son, Sr.

Mayor Charles Legar today
urged a cooperative traffic safeTONIGHT, SEPT. 3
zy effort to assure a safe begin"THE SCALPHUNTERS"
ning to the school year.
(Technieolor)
In setting aside September 1_7
Lancaster, Shelley Wir1tert as "School's Open: Drive Care..,AT!
fully" week in Pomeroy, the mayStoo•et or asked that "parents, motorists and ehildren cooperate in
Brother Bet; Opercaper
making the first days of class
aeddent and injury free, and
WEDNESDAY &amp; THURSDAY
that thhl serve as an example
The bod.Y will lie in state at
SEPT. 4 &amp; 5
for the entire scbool year."
· the cburcll from 1 Lo 2 p.m.
NOT OPEN
Mayor Charles Legar issued Friends may call at the FogleFRIDAY &amp; SA11JRDAY
the proclamation to coincide with 8QJ1.g FWJeral Home after 3 p.
TWO C,\SES !lEARD
SEPT. 6 &amp; 7
the opening or Pomeroy schools m. on Wednesday.
One defendant was fined and a
"THE WILD RACERS"
.today and the OMUal bsck to
second defendant forfeited a bond
(Technicolor)
VETERANS MEMORIAL
school safety campaign of t h e
in weekend court activities of
AND
HOSPITAL
Automobile Club or Soutllern
Pomeroy Ma,yor Cllarles Legar.
"DID YOU HEAR THE ONE
SATURDW ADMISSIONS
Ohio.
Fined $5 and costs on intoxiABOUT THE TRAVELING
Edward Barton, Racine; Harold c;~tion .charges was Austin AlThe prociii.IJlation read:
SALESLADY?"
.,Parents should coun&amp;el their Adams, Racine; Dana Wickline, len, Pomeroy, and David Dob(Technicolor)
elemenf,ary school age children, Racine; Edith Meco:Y, SyracUse; bins, Bidwell, forfeited a $25
Phyllis Diller • Bob Denver
especially those attending class Howard SLsk, Mason.
bond posted on charges or runSHOW ~TARTS 7 P.M.
SATURDAY DISCHARGES for the first tin'le, on the safest
ning a red light.
route to and from school, and Paul, Thomas, David and KenMEIGS MARRIAGE LICENSES
of Ule· importance or obeying neth Klein, Jack ClelarKI, Jr.,
Rhoda
Hackett,
Harry
Pickens,
David stewart Heaton, 18, Pornschool safety patrols, a d u I t
Lawrence
Weddle,
Rebecca
Fuleroy
Route 3, and Janet Carol
guards and all traffic signs and
ton,
Frankie
Statrord,
Kristy
Mat·
Frank,
19, Long Bottom Route 1.
signals.
son,
~neva
Shumate,
Mary
BisCharles
Samuel Nichols, 23,
''Motorists must be extra. causell,
James
.Jeffers,
Martha
Athens
Route
2, and .&amp;lsan Di·
tious, assisting the patrol a n d
Searles.
·
ane
Tolley,
20,
Albany Route 3.
Msrtin - Jesn SirrlJ!lO•nsl guards, obeying school zone
SUNDAY
ADMISSIONS
sarGeorge Peppard
speed signs and being alert for
- ·- ·· I"Rouc:H MGHT IN JERlcHo"f the (J.Iick stops ot school buses. ah Congo, Racine; Golda Wyant,
~ /
i
/(
,() • &lt;;Ill ,- U
41
Pomeroy;
Alma
Simpson,
Mid·
(Technlcolor)
Children must obey the inAND
struction of their parents an d dleport.
SUNDAY DISCHAI&lt;GED- Lu"TAMMY AND THE
teachers, and respect the authbert
Theiss, Walter ·Lewis, Fay
MILLIONAIRE"
ority of the patrols and other
.. • t .
Barnett.
(Color)
guards."
MONDAY ADMISSIONS- Hilflei&gt;bie Watson - Denver
I
da Warth, Hartford, W. Va.;BarFrank McGrath
HOLD LAST MEETING
The Meigs 4-H Pleasure Rid- bara Y oong, Pomeroy; F r e d
WEDNESDAY &amp;
ers had their last meeting of Mourning, Middleport; William
SEPT. 4 &amp; 5
the year at the Fairgrounds on Capehart, New Haven.
James Coburn
MONDAY DISCHARGES August 26, at 1 p.m. There were
"WATERHOLE NO, 3"
16 members and ten visitors Harold Adams, Virgil Roush,
(Tectmi.color)
present. Mrs. William B, Downie, John Massie, John Groce.
AND
advisor, distributed the fair pr~ .,
Bobby Vee-Jackie DeShannon
mium money. Ten of the mem"C'MON, LET'S LIVE
bers went on a trail ride to the
GAUGES - Gallipolis, 12.2
&gt;raruwi ..
Cra~:h
A LITTLE"
E. J. Hill farm, where refreshand 12.3 rwutlng 2 feet of rollments were served.
ers; Pt. Pleasant, 24.10; Pome-roy-Mason, 20,50; Hinton, 0.50
stat.; Kanawha Falls, 2.60 falling; Charleston, 18.00 rising.
London, Marmet. Winfield are
on the sill.

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·\Vounaed ByGren

pqUtel,y declined, Inch- 1 237pound swordftah and a catch or
eels.

W. H. Capehart

After lllness

. but

An
Sport
Conner first
cent 36 - P&amp;Uil

had

bodies by !ate Monday.
Mass Burials
Govenunent officials in Tehran conft.rmed the reports but
officially announced a death
figure or 12,000- the number
already buried.
Disease from unburied corpses and the brutally cold nights
both threatened injured survi~
vors. Officials feared many
.sheltered only by flimsy tents

•

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Iran. , A rescue airlltt pilot
sal4 the regl.on appeared .,hit
by an atom bomb." other pilots

reported 1lugb graveyards" ot
disintegrated villages with no
20,000 sign of life.

disaster area zone in northeast-

.

tj

~

through some of the wont..ftit
regions of the 1,300-s(Jiare-mile
em

-'

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'i,,

_..,.011118;

tor biiiL.

Cl....... .

..........·l l&amp;h
a.,
-

.AJ.

~~~~~~~~;

q drMO:~

ADYISSIOK\- carrte . . _ .
tlury1 putJ•ndt~
...

'"lllue IJJ liio
tall - - "' _ . . ln v~ hive bad.., .......,•• pie Cneif; ~

,hi ,laid.

"'

. .' ,,"

troSPrrAL

Vftmam••

are

r..

..,., tiJer have kWod

~.!:~

--~

.

st ...

ROulll,-

"3' a ti

",

I

I'

�'•

1

•j

•t

j.

before they are eligible for parole miJSt · ·

sweat out their time as before

cnme and pumshment m Amenca.

come start toward a saner philosophy of

1

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pleted its work on the once-devastated atoll
and •t has been pronounced ftt for human

"

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habitation once again

Only 150 natives were taken from Blldni,

though a total of about 500 MicroneSians re·

I

gard lt ai their traditional home. Most peo-

•

ple would never have been aware of Bikini,
or would long ago have forgotten about It,

bad not the name been borrowed for a swlm·
swt Ulat shocked many senslbilities.
Such ar.e our values.

Hazardous to HealthZ
News Item Pollee in Bloommgton, Ind ,
found a cache of four pounds of mariJuana
and three pounds of horse manure m a suit
grinding the manure to mu w1th the mari-

juana to "stretch" it

Not usmg the stuff ourselves, we don•t
know lf 1! is tbe practice of other pot peddlers
to enhance thetr wares With this mteresting
add11ive But 1f so, it might be adVJsabie for
the Food and Drug Adrilinistration to investi·
gate the haUucogenc1c, or mmd-bendlng, prop.
erties of this common product, which 1s manufactured in more places than on the farm.
We can see it now-a required warning
prmted on every campaign poster:
"Caution· Political speeches may be hazardous to your health.'

Sniffing Gasoline Fumes
Can Cause Brain Damage
By WAYNE G. BRANDSTADT, M.D.
The foUy of gasoline sniffing
bas been weD-publicized. Loss
of consc10usness has been observed in some persons who
have persisted m this pastime

l

baby lo develop his own
adrenal hormone Prednisone
(Melicorlen) is • synthetic

cortisone.

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.·1·I

THE GI'DBALVIEW

By LEON !&gt;ENNEN, NEA Foreign News Analyst
NEW YORK (NEA)
'{be KGB, Russia's secret police, Is reported to have
launched a new campaign of repression agamst Soviet ctUzens
accused, among other things, of building a secret "pro-Lib·
eral" organization.
Known as the "Union of Social-Christian 1-"beration " tbe
clandestine group Is believed to have branches In Lenl~grad
Moscow and Kiev, the capital of the Soviet Ukraine.
'
Accordmg to a Soviet CJtnen, one of a number of Russians
who recently viSJted the Wes~ the KGB's new wave of terror
IS "evoking memories of Stalin's purges In tbe 1930s.''
The Kremlin leaders, he said, are lncreaalngly worried by
their lnabiUty to col'" wllb growing dlaaldence 1!11\0ng y9ung
Rutaians and tile ap111rge of natloaalfsm' among Ukrainians
aJJd other aatlonanttea eomprlslng the Soviet Unloa.
The Russian visitor dlsclosed that two students from Leningrad's merchant seamen's school and three scientists who
bad been at the Montreal Expo '67 Soviet exhibit were recenUy
tried m Lemngrad ostensibly because they were memhers of
the ouUawed "Union of Social-Christian Liberation." They
were also charged with lmporting and distributing iUegal
Western nterature.
The late of the scientists is unknown. The seamen were
sent lo a forced labor camp
As a result of the trial, the political comm1ssars in Russia's
merchant fleet, the Communist party's ideoiogJcal watchdogs,
have begun to purge "unrellable elements" from the crews
of ships sailing to forelga countries, Including Norlb V1etnam.
Many olricers and ordinary seamen have already been ex·

''

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Do It

Noland Cla,y,

gar at the convention and naturally they dlscussed Times critic Clive Barnes and his tireless,

David would 881 tiresome, cov.
erage ~ ballet-tlleatre-{XIIIIics,
etc. 01 Whea does he sleep?'" Merrick asked &amp;llzberger and 1/lM
answered his owu ~J~estion: "I
know - 911 opening nights,"
In tbree -ate intertiews
on her '1&gt;ufty'' rum set, Susannah York gave three dUrerent
ages; her out- her birth certifl..
cate was burnt in the London
blitz ... !ile says .... Steve Mc-

Qleen pi'CIUdly confessed he ~t
elgarets several months ago,
thinks he's kicked 'em ror good·
goodl

'

friskers made cor.
no one brought guns, knives,
etc,, Into the Chi, convention ball
Securit,y

tain

I

but PI_!Cket Jadves openly were
peddled at IIOUYenit counters In-

I

pelled from the Communist party and the Komsomol (youth
organization) and sent lo wort on domestic ablpping r011teS.
"A slri&lt;l redme baa &amp;een lmpesed on those lallliJJ on lor·
elgn-bound sbfps," the Rusalan vlaltor oald. "Anycine eaqld
accer,ting literature !rem lorel«ners, even from forelp, Oem·
mun sta, will lose hla jab and face crtinlaal charJel. '
Another young Russian visitor who recenOy compleled his
military service m the Red arm,Y !old of group~ of soldlers
who listen surreptitiously lo foreJgJJ broadcasta ~'!"' Volee
of Amenca, Radio Liberty and the British Broa
ling ,Co.
While m the Red army, the young Russian and his friend
formed small "preSSIIJ'C! groups" against the rigid military
discipline. Now all residents In Moscow, the group member•
have continued tbeir secret association. Their aim IS · 1o
"spearhead a revolt against tbe corruption In tbe Soviet I)'S·
tern and government.''
None of tbe Russian visllors envisaged a popular pro-liberal
upsurge In tbe Soviet Union.
"Russia ls not on the verge of revolution," the former Red
army man said.
•
However, he and blo friend userted t!Jal tH -wave of
Slallnlal purgea haa beea a fallure u a form of llloet lhenP7
Intended lo ernll ,the JroWIBJ preuure for lhe demoenttzatloa of poUIIcal Ufe In Rusla.
Courageoll$ yoong people-whether Russians Ill' Ukrainians
-are only the "tip of the Iceberg." But the!' represent the
most outspoken amoug the large maaa of Soviet cttlzena who
seek greater freedom.
ll~ear-old

A·

QUICK QUIZ

J18Che tad with Gregoey Peek In

.... Boston• a brilliant baton, Eric
Lelnadorf, seeretJ,v wed Vera
Graf - allddler
Davtd Merrtek chatted with
N, Y. ,l'lmes publisher !llizber.

column

,,'

He dld not Intimate either lo his close friends or lo the
pleading professlonall that he would accept a draft; but would'
not plunge inlo the race and compete for the prize.
.The politician who tried hardest lo persuade him was
Mayor Richard J. Dale)' of Chicago. He, and not Jesse UJJI'IIb
of California or any other, was the prime mover, Daley ealllid
Kemedy several times. He tried lo win over some ~ey dele·
gatlons. so be could confront Kennedy with weighty evidence
of snpport. He tried lo get Kennedy lo postpone bls !IJjaJ dis'
claimer of Interest.
·
In Ill'! end, of eouna, Daley laDed. Kennedy's frlenda on
the scene say. Privately ~ cannot be sure bow Ted would
haV!&gt; responded bod D~y been able lo offer him proof a COil• '
veptlon majorlty:~JVould bact blm. But the mayor never mustered it, And 11\e Ktilllledy Intimates spent most of their time
trying to make the senator's firm decislon palatable 1o Democratic leaders who Were frustrated In their 'll'1ah to ..... ldla
alalld for the presidency thla tim&amp;.
Tb~ ..,.I, self-pouened yoq IIUJII 1lldq In i1Ya1uJ11Deri
believed lbl1 wu DOt tH lour. Bwt ao polltle81 ftalllhu'idl·
lq 68 Jut -eall of lbe C!Jfe&amp;(O _OOIIvelllleD eell4 deUC
!bet annUler !Joar for blm wiii~Jm~t~&amp;J~y eo111•·

Soviet Purges Its Liberals

Voice along Broadway

u..u;

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many.

Secret Police Crack Down Again

Q-Wbat lJ .moot by pelvic
tn1lammatory d J s e a s e, uremercial gasolines co n t a i n thral stenosis and cysloscopy
1etraethyl lead, serious i~ad With urethral dilation?
A-PID Is a general term
poisoning may result from this
habit. Small amounts of lead lor mfiammation of the uterus
absorbed through the lungs (endometritis), uterine tubes
(salpingitis) or ovaries (oophcan cause permanent brain
oritis) The cause is an Infecdamage.
'lt"Is la'J' 'bettl!r to emulate tion following delivery or eomPilcating a venereal disease
Fefclld~nd the bull and smell
Urethral stenosis is a narrowthe flowers •lor kicks. Their
ing
of the urethra. A cystolragrance is sweeter than that
of gasoline and their harmful scope is an mstrument that
ls passed lnlo the bladder so
side elrects are nil.
that its walla can be seen.
Q-Ia hot dsys when I go Dilation or stretching the ureinlo an air-conditioned store I thra is standard irealment for
lmmediately get severe ab- a urethral stenosis.
(HBspoper frtf«ptiM Ann J
dominal cramps and have
loose bowel movements. This
PJ.a. Nrtd your IIIHIIfiGIIJ olld
also bappens In winter when, comme11t1
ta WorM G ltOndstotlt,
after sleepmg under an elec- M.D, in ar,.
t•i• ,.,.,.,, Whitt
tric blanket, I get up in a cold Dt, lramlsfadt ofconiiOt
•MWer Wihouse. What causes this and -,ld,ol .....,,, .. will .,..,
lttt«J
what will belp?
of ,...,.,, imw.Jf 1ft t.fure coJ"IMJ.
A-You ._ve a very irrlla·
bie colon Chilling the abdomen usually aggravates this
I condition. The trealment is
not eaay and usually requires
the attention of a gastroenBY JACK O'BRIAN
&lt;1: great architect Edward Durterologist.
NEW YORK - Sb&gt;kely Car- rell Slooe, nlgbtl,y at tbe PotQ-In a recent
you michael's sister Jwtv "crosaed ting !iled In Brtdgehanwton ....
said that choleslyramine had OYer" and wed a ..pite London Duo at llick IUclgel,y•a Soutbamp.
&gt;educed the blood cholesterol fur designer, Marc Masalm .... ton spa, Sonny Tufts aud Patriclevel of a number of persons LBJ campalgnlug lor a maJor ia Havens-Monteagle (Patricia
with hardeaing of the arteries Taxu DeW&amp;JIIIPU of his own?
My doctor never heard of lt. . .. Good Qleen Uz' colt Hope. Haveno-Mmt.eqle!?l't.l .... Reversing the proceclJre, Jo.teph
Does It have an1 other name?
tw Veuture millllt l'W1 in tile Bel- (Cal&lt;h 22) Haller'o pi"' "We
A-lila sold Wider the trade mont• a Man O'War race Oct. 19·
Bombed In New Haven" not even
names Cuemid and Queatran. DK&gt;re Uddish negotiations
4Je Cll Bdwy, until Oct. 16, aJ.
Q-la 1 reeeot article you VJetnam.'s .••• Flomuala Flana- reaey baa been peddled as a Jl8·
said that taking cortisooe dur- gan or the I&lt;J¥'ely ULovers" hit Jl8rbock fur a bue.ft&amp;ure ~
ing pregnancy would interfere drama sends word from bome
with adrenal function of the tbal Dublin's In tile mldat ~ a $100, 000; a record, aud certainly
fetus How would it do this? Is garbage strike .... Banclleader for a firlloi&gt;l"'LBJ doesn't scare easily, he
Meticorten m this class?
King Qu1is' wife served the pa- got 3,000 Ufe~tenlng letters
A-Cortisone ,. d e r l v e d
from the adrenal glanas. An pers; the former Ethelyn But- in CliO lllOJitb .... EJ:.Catlf Gov,
ezcess of adrenal hormone m ler wants another go at her sing. Pat Brown was a veeJ)ilOtsibUrv only a CCIIYentlon ago but bio
the baby's blllOd s up pI I e d ing-&lt;lancing career.
Artist Bob Dash -mod to have '68 Cbi, Job was low!,y aud we
through the umbilical cord removes the stimulus lor tbe dealgns m Maria Slooe, ex...Ue never saw him on camera mce
Now a recent report indicates

that, because almost aU com-

R~ I Ul· ll DOWN

"The Stalldng Moon.. has suc:b a
fascinating background, Grosset
&amp; llunlap in Nov. will release a
hard-&lt;OVer pl~aboutthe
tiny

brave .... Eveeytime

poasport lllllld~
A-A passport II valid for
three yean. It may be renewed to be valid for tho remalnder of t he ftve-1ear
p~ from the original date
of lulie.

'

Comedlo; bot be dl~p)lj'o bll dan-

ely daubs al a rival French oaterie, Charles V .... ~ two
rearlesa TV heroes, s.. qu.

zara ot "Run For YCNI' t...U"e-•
aud Rd&gt;ert v......., or (foa

know, Ill name ' • - • .. al·
rea4y? That's lome!) ran for
their Uvea In CzeeWJorm'd•
where lllq ...... ~

'''IOm!••·l J

1111alc pleue) - Ro~co BUII'ano. ~ oD · u wJQhb.~
F4l8d we hcli)O we I'"JIIfllllber .
:,
-~ '-'
to tune In "Dial M (or Mulde"
~· _,.,4'
b. Sept. 8 m CBS-TV, two of
our favorite brtiilant b.........U
Wili be ltarred - Jlcibb1 Haekett and Charlle Shavel-1 .••• us..,
(!J"eta of 111 American Wtre"
wasn't doing loo weD al the "''"" .
ofllce 10 the ads erased A n n e
Jadt1011's photo and inserted the' '
- naer and ta.., or FAy wu. '

•'!Oil•

be

oct time to -

about aur mar.

rtage. We lWI bee pUing a1ons
pna;y waD unW IIJe bi1&gt;J came.
He oald bableo llllko blm narv..,. aud llbe&lt;lqok up lliil Ullcb ~

~bol-d""'
;_~=be-n:.:
lfU ~

Q-WIJo wiil tlu! ;firrlAmerlccm prUidem to IIIOfTJ
dtirltlg hil tmil of otlci1
A-John Tyler, wtio 11\U·
rled IIIIi Julia GardinV In
New York City, June 2&amp;,
1844.

He has ........ Ill "dati'' ...
ev017 woOio..M IuiUiill,y idri a
- r or Uk'a fl'lend 1o are for
Dltl
• ~ He. IIIII 111{1~fliiL
1 Q8 IIIIUIIICl'IIJI ~ ._, lUll-

portua.

,

•

Ho keel* ll1fnl be'B m 01' t
badi apln•"'lilllllllinlb,"bUt·
,•
~ apljJ. Ho poJIJU
CIUt that 111 !!I'1Jr a-., IIIIo - ·'
llellda's, hlo. ,II f01111!1
an, and llbe naadt bllJL
.. out tbol hit - - - . . , ...
ai6111oi"~ CIJ lllihiiedblm,
bot lt'o II-i "'IIII
lle'l t..,.

be .-.

I've""'""'

~-but

gage .... Wdc IJubomlr Ia a
li!JbiiP•small smash as a painter -b u t
keeps bla job as a walter at La , f""""--.:--":'---:-----:::--_..;.-""""~-.----.....;:;.e;,

Bide ,., Jack loleQlllllllJII, Irish, tileThe
C&lt;Jpa caD't
"' reservai!Gna
for- lha hll.nJIGk.
Is J)I'Oilleer or uHorsemaa Pau en Tbe Temptations - but em
lb', a CeJebratJ.oo." bal8d on N. Y. boOel - t take •am In
tile ll!e and worka ~ Wm, Butwwbow Jllllht n n TY • Rodlo
ler Yeats, lrtalunan, tile cut Mlrroi- ortl&lt;le'o oOullld, "llllw
wll I be entlrel,y Irlab, incldOJJ. Ho Stole lUI Bride ~ Frank
tal mulic by John Dull',y, lrilh!lnatra,"- ... 'llliaut Tv
mao, aud lha dlre!ctor (puncbline llick
~ ' 'Mil'ci.· 111111111 ,. .

llama , .. Julia! Prow@II

TillS IIIATE IS NO IIELPI\IATE
Dear llelen:
l(y bnebend moved cut over a
Je&amp;r 1110, and moved l!aek home
with hia Dllllher. Sold
1IIJJt.

Q-For bolo lo7lg II G U.S. -

~

bear "Around the World" pll¥ed
on radio or TV, Liz Taylor gats
half the publisher• a royalties ....
Christine Blddleofthe Pbilly Bfdo.
dles now is a $SO per bour model
with the Wilhelmina Aaouc7 bare;
Wilhelmina gets tile most beaJJ.
tltul models; used to be one herself.
Kim Stanley's Nyack home Ia
skidding loward the i';Yadi Sav.
ingo &amp; Loan if the brllllaol Kim
doesn't bother with tile DJOrt.

Helen Help· ·~ ·)~J

__

•!•' ; !•!

0
J•

·~L 4 J!)68
; ; •' ; • I •,•!•! !:!f-0::'::::•:•:•,•:•!•!•,•:•:•:•'•!•!• •'•!•.;

• : ' ; ,•

I he 20-}c'Br-ol.d native of
Oklahoma City has lhe most
Jmprcssi\IC credentials among
the Nl.. rooldcR • with a , 279
batting average, 1:! homers, two
U •Pies, 34 doubles and 72 runs
baltt.'d in.
Bcn&lt;:h hll Ius sc(ond gam~?
l) 111,::: lwo-ruo hom~• w1th two
out In the ninth inning in as
rna•\\' games Tucsda~ nlght
althou~;h
the Cardinals pulled
out a 5-3 11-nmmg \il'tor.)! and
mc1 cased their IC8!,'11C lead to H
games.
lloerncr Adds Win
Curt I loOO s ingled home the
lie-breaking run 1n the 11th

I 1'1 S&amp;&gt;ot1:5 Wntcl'
lotuuu Bcmh or the Clnchl--

:,

heard

case, along With Instructions for drying and

THE DOCTOR SAYS

:"&lt;·..

"''"'

t• Hed.., 1s making 8!i much or a

umwaJ
\Cal

I'BlC (OJ rooktc of th(:
hotKll!i as the St. Louis

( 11 du1als

arc making of the

~atwnaJ

League pennant race.
Hcnch's seledJOn has become
almost automatic m recent
\vceks as he has staged a late.
season spurt While pllther len)
Koosman of the.• 1\:cw \ ork
Mcts, the { mt mnati catcher's
Plincipal rhal f01 the award,
has lost foor st1 aighf games
and "slumped" to a Hi-10

:,"M

have been expendable pawns m a game

called Mamfest Destiny. as played by various
and, fmally, the Amerlcans.
Now, after 22 years. the Bikinians are to be
allowed to return to their tiny rmg of islands
in the Pacific, whence they had been removed m 1946 to make way for the testing of
nuclear bombs Through no fault of our own,
since the last nuclear blast m 1958, the amaz·
mg restorative power of nature has com-

).1

:il!

who have less than three months to go before parole are permitted to partiCipate. Unmarried men and those with years to serve

Uke the American Indian and other SOcalled primitive races, the people of B1kln1

_, - -

•'

AI·Sbrs

ff&lt;J

John Brodie To Lead 49ers

Reds Lose 6th Straight

~ lfi'

·,'.t". ' CHICAGO(~ v,
It wu tile ,emopo~~J~. plea of VIce Maldent J!umpllj'eJ,
COJIIman~ 11 P"'ll&lt;l,lntlal ll&lt;IIIIWO; !'bleb wil$lnteliclell
to
together the •Democrats as· tllfy ~ (rom the ~ .
b
conventloo doln'l! am the ~~~ ~~ ~•!lib hire. ·' ,
Y!~• If there wu any -llng bond,! Utt.~· It appe~ ,
to anse, from another s~thii taD
loye-llate rita'
tlonship llie DemOCfatic pilrty..,and PerllaP• the natiCJII.Ii!-bU
with the Kennedys,
,.
·•
, , &lt;i!
Four years ago In Atlantic City II was the same. After.thst
convention, In » pale · IIIIIOd of near-lndlflerenee, had• 0011· I
tetrid liB blgh prize on President Joliitson;-lt gree~ 1:\obatt
F: Kennedy' with a deep-Oowlng wave ilt feellrig ln:r*t"ltiute·tO
hla asaasalnaled l!rother, John. 1•1
' ·
~
fa, •• aliaoll •aabellevaltle re.ib.w , of tbl&amp; ICI!JM!, ... IIIIi
CODVOIItfOD delePfel Walel..f 8 ftliii If lie iiiJia ~ Jtea!'
and ~· lor Jl mlauta let !heir damm....P fee1Dn
forth iad w~M ,,...,. the \errlble aofJiJodtfe1 tliiHiid "
gri)IJled IJlem Ia the la\emltloW ampillt..ater fer fo.,~•- ,
The onlooker went away from Atlantic City Im6w1't!l ~~ ·•.
the Kennet!,y p~enolnenon was the most powerfultlil;,ilorvlalble,
there. 4Jid'il0 It wu again In Chicago. .
.
'"': :
No one dqubted then that the Robert Kennedy wli9
tbostt ever-renewing waves of sound In 19114 would lise aome·
how In hla dead brother's place. He did and, but for a seccmd
assassin's bullet, be could have been standlllflln Humphrey'•
stead at tbla convention.
•
This time the sqrvlving brother, Sen. Edward M. KeMedY
of Masaacbusetta, was beard 'only as a voice filling the 1W1
over wires from his eastem home. Once more, however, the
force WAI felt.
Wllalever bappeDI to HtiinllbreY ud tbla badly laOiolmil
~ Ia Uie moalh1 ahead, tdo liconlrovertlble latt II lilaC
'l'iod XeJUJOdy II 'tile man of liB futare •
Po•slbly he could have b@.en the lnan of liB present, -but ~
chose not lo lhlnt·ao.
His praclical role In !be outcome of Ibis convention llbould ·
not be misunderstood. His friends tell lhia reporter !bet at no
time did be ever le)ld any leading Democrat the , lalniNt
comfort lllat he w~llld Jump lnlo the struggle for the 1il!8
nomination. He rebuffed all personal pleas-and tbei'e were

v

Tehachapi, only minimum-security inmates

Bikini Lives Again

'

BRUCE II OSSAT . ,
-·; u••• Wiishilfgloft Cornti!O",.;,t '

is to ease their transition back lnlo society.
The state will make a two-year follow-up
study of the men alter they are paroled lo
determine the effects of the progriiiJl.
Revolutionary as the esperiment is in tbe
United States, lt is about as timid as it could
be compared with what bas long been the
practice m a number of wther countr1es. At

But a lot of them now have a new incentive '
for good behavior and self-~ehabilitatfon.
What IS being tried at Teha...pJ is a wei·

allegedly clviliZed nattons over the decades
-Ule Spamsh, the Germans, the Japanese

I ht.• lla•lj :-\cut mel, ~llddlcport-l,ornt&gt;ro~

;~m~$cJ)r:bem.~rat~~~
~:.. Mari·
. of the' Future:.

A Step Forward In Prison Practice
It ,.... only been in operation a couple of
mouths, but Olllcials of the Slate Correctional
I~aUtutlon at Tehachap!, Calli, bave tenia·
lively, pronounced an experlmeJIIal lam8y
vlaila\ion program a succeaa. ~
Under the program, tbe first cil its ldnd in
the nation, certain prisoners are allowed to
spena weekenas with their wives and children
In apartments formerly occupied by prison
personnel.
The a1m of the program, by enabling prisoners to be with tbeir famllies m privacy and
lh a more or less normal, homelike setting,
'

3 ~

:r-:!;.···::·· ,•'•,•:•,'' .;.•'•' !•:•:;,•:;, ,•: ;.;. ;.;:;' .•!0:;!•' ';!; ' •,•!•

•

rerord.

an.er two walks and a wild pilch
and Hoger Maris, who also had
lhre~ doubles, dro\lc 1n the
second run of the rrame with a
sacrlnce Qy, Joe lloerncr, who
pilched only 1-3 of an mnmg,
1·e~eived crecht for the victol"},
raismg his record to
Pete
Hose homered Cor lhc Reds'
rirst run.
rhe ( lucago Cubs downed the
san l'ranCISl'O (JJ8RlS 3-3, lhe
Atlanta Br~ves shaded the New
York Mcts 7-6 after a 4~ loss,
the Pittsburgh I'U'ates beat the
llou ston Astros 3-2 and the Los
An~;cles Dodgers dc(eatloid the
Pluladclph1a l,lulhes J0-9 1n
other Nat•onal League games.

t-2.

1\m.ertcan League games.
the Roston ned Sox beat the
Mumcsota rwws 4-1, the New

In

-

STANDINGS

\ ork
Yankees downed the
Raltlmore Onoles 6-J, thc
\'.ashmgton ....xmators mpped the
C111cago Wh1tc Sox 2~1, the
B.) llnlted Press International
Uc\eland lndtans swamped the
National League
\\, L. P&lt;:L GB Caldorma ,\ngels i-2 and the
W, L. Pet GB Detro1t
!Hi 5:? .li:?9
Detrou
l'igcr s
topped the
St. Louis
89 51 ,636
Baltimore
80 60 .571
8
Oakland t\thletJC's 6-3.
San Francisco 74 64 536 l4
Boston
75 65 .537 13
Lrrue Banks hll a tw~run
Cinclnnah
i1 65 522 16
Cle\eland
75 68 ,5:?4 1-11
homer m til(.' seventh mmng and
Chicago
73 68 .518 JGih
Oakland'
il 70 501 17
Handy llundle)' d1 ovc 111 tlu cc
Atlanta
71 i1 500 19
New\ork
70 69 .SIH 17
1·uns lo l11ghll,::ht a 12-/ut ( ub
Pittsburgh
68 72 .486 12
Minnesota
67 73 .H9 21
attack that enabled I crguson
Philadelphia
61 80 . .t33 27
65 74 .468 23',1 Cali forma
lenk1ns to Win hiS J7111 game ur
Houston,.
G4 77 .454 25•h Chicago
58 82 .414 30
the season.
Washtngton
New York
65 79 .451 26
SG 82 . 406 31
lomm1e Aaron's two-run sinLos Angeles
60 79 . 432 2812
Tuesday's Results
gle 1n the 12th mmng !'fas the
New York 6 Baltunore I, rughl b1g blow In th(' Bra\es' vktory
Tueadey's Results
st. Louis 5 Cm 3, night, 11 mns. Boston ~. Mumesot.a I, mght,
PIUstiurgh 3 Houston 2. mght
called, 5 mns,, ram
Los Ang 10 Phiia 9, rught
Washmgton 2 Clncago I, nl!,-rht
New York 4 Atla 3, 1st, twf.
Detrml 6 Oakland 3, night
MaJor 1 eague Leaders
AUa 7 N, Y. 6, 2nd, night 12 ins. Cleveland ] Califo1 ma 2, rught By l: nitcd Pr css Intcrnallonal
Chicago 8 San Francisco 3
WednesdB.}''s ProbableP1tchers
Natmnal I l:'aJ..'l..IC
(&lt;\II T1m es EDT)
Today'a Probable Pitctlers
C. \B 1!. II. Pet
(All Times EDT)
Delroh (lltller B-5) al Oakland nose, lln
123 516 81 liS 34J
Los Angeles (9.1Uon 6-J 4) at
(Dobson 11-12), 11 p. m,
.\lou, Pit
125 469 4!J 158 334
Phlladelphia (1.. Jackson 12-16),
Cle.,.eland (Tiant 18·9) al lah~ Johnsn, tin 123 i06 66 164 .324
8p.m,
fornia (Harrelson 1-4), 11 p, m. !\lou, \Ua
1"39 liH 64 180 3ll
St. louis (Briles Ji ..9} at CinBoston (Bell 10-10) at Mmne- McC'ov), ~'F 124 428 69 12.S 2&lt;i9
clnnilti (Maloney ll -9), 8 p.m . sota (Chance 13-13), 9 p, m. t lood, Sl. I 131 'i4R 66 163 2'14
Chicago (r 1sher 7-9) at Wash- Staub, I lou
140 .:iJ5 49 L.. 3 294
San Francisco (McCormick JO.
13 and I Herbel 0-!1) at Chicago ington (Bertama 5-13), 8 p. m. M1llan, \tla 128 489 41 14':1 :!97
:'\ew \ ork (Bahnsen 14-9) at Jones, 1\:'\
12K 438 i4 llfl 297
(Nlekro 13-9 and Holtzman 9.
Baltimore (Mcl':ally 18-R), Bp. m. Bckert, ( h• 139 580 84 169 .2'01
H), 1,30 p.m.
(OnQ&gt; games scheduled)
Jhursdll)'s c.ames
\men can I eague
ducago at WashtngtOn, mght
Thursday's Schedule
C. \ll H. II Ptt
No games scheduled
Onb games sch(.&gt;tiuled.
Oliva, M1n
128 470 .H 136 2R!J
Ystrski, Bos 135 436 73 130 2R.:i
Andrws, Bos J2 j 453 67 129 zx,_,
t.
llwd, \\as 13:i 512 ill H5 2H3
!~TERN ~TIO~ AL LE,\Gl'E
lhlndr,
Min 130 488 12138 283
By l!nlted Press lnternatmna)
Cater,
Oak
126 420 3/i 119 2H3
1/. L. Pee GB
l
f ~
Da"lilo,
Cal
i32
!-91 4,j 13~ .281
. Toledot
62 .566
Horton,•
Oet
129
4;j';' 50 !28 2RO
.ij &amp;tuffibtt""" ~ 7f61
.558
Jl
Carew,
Min
IUR
4110
43 II.! 2HO
Jacksonville 72 65 .S26
6
•
(pnris,
Oak
•
138.:058
7.J 15) 27H
74 67 ,525
6
Rochester
By Umted Press lnternabonaJ
!lome Hun~o~
Although Columbus 1s 11 . Syracuse
70 72 .493 ro
!';ational i Cat'l..IC Me( ovey,
67 74 .475 !3
!IIITieS behind Toledo In the LoulS\IIle
San
Fran 32, \ li en, Ph1l 28,
61 79 .448 16
International League peiVI81lt Buffalo
Banks,
(.hi 27, II. Aaron, \tl,
58 83 .4JJ 22
race, the Jets are actUally one Richmond
26,
Sll.nto
and \\il11ams, lh a 23
Tuesday's Hesults
~e up in the loss column and
Amertean
I eab'l..l(' r. llow.
Ken Larsfn kept their Pennant Toledo 7 Burralo 2, night
ard,
Wash,
39,
llarrelson, Bos
Columbus 4 IUchmond J, night
10pes alive Thesday mght.
33,
Horton,
Det
31, Jaekoon,
.. Larsen (JQ.-6) spun a twD- Syracuse 1 Hochester, 0, 1st,
Oak
26;
Powell,
Ual
and t rec.
twi-light, 7 mnings
1itter as the Jets topped the
han,
Det.
21
Richmond Bra\es 4-l lo boost Syracuse 3 ltochester 2, 2nd,
Runs Ratted In
mght
their seasoo reco'rd to 77-Gij
Nahonal
League Me( 0'\o l'),
Toledo has four more v1ctories, LoulSVllle 5 Jacksonnlle 2, 1st,
San
Fran
R5,
Santo, lh• R3,
tw1~hght, 7 IMtngs
81, bul has lost 62 games.
Williams,
(hi
X2, Perez, t m
Larsen lost his bid for a shutout LoUisville 8 Jacksonville 4, end,
80,
AHen,
Phll
77
rught.
'f~!l Dave Nicholson clubbed
American I eague · llarrclson,
~b 31st homer in the second
&amp;1&lt; 102, F, lloward, \\ash. 9H,
inning. The big righthanded
Northrup, Uet 79, Powell, Bal
slugger now leads the league in
78;
!lorton, IJet. 72.
home runs.
l»itching
In other act1on Toledo defeatNataonal
League Marich&lt;:~!,
ed Buffalo 7-2, Syracuse beat
San rran 24-7, Kline, Pitt, ll Rochester 1-0 and 3-2 in a nn4; (,ibson, St L. 20-6; !{egan,
night dOubleheader, ard Louis~
Chi. 10-4; Blass, Pitt, 13-5
ville took a pair from JacksonAmerican I eague: McLain,
vDle 5-2 and s-4.
Det. 27 ..S; McNally, Bal 18-8,
Culp, llos ll-5; ~:llsworth, Bos.
SPORTSCASTER SIGNS
13-6; Tlant, Cleve. 18-9; John,
, ST, LOUIS {UPI)- Dan Kel·
DAY10N (UP!) - The much Chi IO..S.
le), veteran Canachan sport,.scaster, ~m halllle the play-by- beleagured Ohio Pcnltentiar)
play of the St. Louis Blues rece•ved an eo:lorsemcnt Tueshockey
team
nexl season. day from one of Its graduates
Kelley, 31, his announecd for who wanted to go back.
l.awrence Joseph Barrett, 74,
the canadian Broadcastm,g
told
the M.?ntgomery County
Corp. in covering the world
Common
Pleas Court the 134hoG~ championships, am ca.
year
old
penitentiary •• is the
Oidian f'ooCball League
best 1 have been m."
' ~ DAILY SENTINEL
So BarretL will soon begin
llt\'OTtV TV ltiTU.I::lil' 4,11...... SoM_!Q'UU
serving another stretch behind
llt:IIAtlll S, O'a-t:~, 1'\!lt.l'iKI:I
the penitert.iary's ancient walls.
l'lll•u:r t-.ol, EoiiiW
.....u........, ~ .......... '""'
~~e was sentenced to a 14.0-5
011 .. , ...., J'niiiii.t,.. (~, ue liiiMIIIMt
year
term for deti'audlng an
a,,~' ....... UNI.I111111M•C.•

over the Mcts after rom Seaver
rcgtstCI cd Ius 14th "'" of the
seasoo for New Y01 k m Ihe
opener. 'I he Braves s&lt;:Qrt.&gt;d a
th1rd run an lhc mning evcntually the dcuslvc run
when 1he Mets r!ll k'd Cor a pa 1r
ln their hatr or the l:?lh-on
Marty Martinez' mfield siJlSl:lc.
J.L Ma1tin hit his tl111'd
homer or the season W1lh one on
and drove in a lhtrd run w1th a
forccout in the opene r as Ll~~:
Mets dealt Milt Pappas h1s lith
loss ol the season.
WJllle Star.gclJ hit has ~!nd
homer or the season In the
seventh anmng to g •vc the
l'trates their v1ctory, Dock lll1 s
went 7 ::!-3 11\tHng!'. to WlA IH S
fourth game although Luke
Walker Mnished up.
Len Gabnelson's two-run double ellmaxed a three-run rally
m the
mnth mnmg as the
Dodget s ralhOO fur e1ght run~ an
the last two mmngs fm thear
win wha:h snapped the Jllulhcs'
five-gam e w1nmng ~ t1 cak. !\en
Royer h1t two homc.r!-:. and Wi llie
Crawfot d and B11l sudak1:; one
each for the Dodg:cr~ wh1lc Uon
Lo{'k home• cd fm the l'hilltcs.

1

:

Jets Remain

!:' lit'

Oose S¢onrf •

...

Endorsement

Given Ohio

Penitentiary

gam••·

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, _ na-:.11*1.

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~

mnl&lt;eeper. He allegedly ran up
two motel biDs totaling $154.48
so h~ would be arrested.
,,
But he wasn't arrested ~ so he
tW'ned himseiC in. Barrett as~

be PJ'II8ecuted ao a felon. lie
told
the court be wanll&gt;d · to lie
""""~
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. . . pj!IJ ...,. ltl.M. ..... 0. , _
~ ,..,- bac~ tq tlje pOnil(ntoary ~
;:~~J ~"'*-:::.:
./11'-IIICI sJ)ent, most bt tih

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" ~ , ....u&gt;,;r ..... ~~........... ...

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Top-Seeded
Tennis King
Eliminated
1 Oil ! S!

IJII LS

\ \

01'0

- Cl1fF Dr ;~dah: ur '&gt;out II \fll(3
has set batk 11 1 ~ !-':arne of tenm s
.!tl )Ca l :-. - CH IS 11 lOU''
1he .!7-~car-nld sha1 pshuutcr
With a tl\o-fl..,tcd batkhand
wrerked top- sn•{h!d Jll o kuQ::
b~

Hod I &lt;tu'r of \ustralla 1n 1 1vc
sets 1ue~a\, r.1tl 1 sla\-lllwthebat kl OUII La( ta s of a SOil that

c\en mos t of tl1c.&gt; hals d•sda•n
tllcsr da~"·
'lontral\ to what C\Cr}One,

am

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~

oiCMmr.

w... r•n
mtl 1'"

Trophies.
Presented
Winners
I rophle.!. ha"c been presented

to

w1 nncrs of the club tournament

sponsored by the Women's 1\sso&lt;: lat•on of the Pomeroy C.olf Club
t h1s summt:r,
\\i mnc1 s mdudc. "
l hampionshlp naght, /\nna Howell mackwood, w1nncr, \udre) Ilctz 1ng,
1 unncr-up; lirst fl1gbt, Beulah
Strauss, Winner, 13crmcc Uurst,
runner~up, second fi1ght, Nellie
Brown winner, I rankiC llunnell,
I unne1 ·UJ),
Sunday a Sl'Ol&lt;: h foUJ some was
held at the dub. \1alc players
were usL'Ci as substitutes for
women
pl3.)cn m some mstan&lt;:cc' \\ mners 1ncludt.-d f\u.&lt;:.sell B1own, Jol1n Wa}n~..: rcaford,
low gross, fa} C llussell, 1\gne s Brown, !01'. net, Dav•d fcnk~
•ns, Beulah Strauss, seeond lor.
net, lorn llcnne..,sy, Don liunnel,
low putts, nearest to pm on numUe• 7 for v.omen, John Wa}ne
I caro• d, nca1 ~:st to pw on numbc• 7 for men, Hu ssell Brown,
longes t dn .e for women, llcnny
n•nnen, lungcst drne for ffil.!n,
r\rt Strauss.
\ putlu&lt;:k :;upper was scnt.'CI
and women
golfers p1 esentcd wcddmg g~fts to \nna !lowell

m.;sl'if, l1as been
thtnk1ng all thL•se ~car~, i
reaillcd ~ uu don't ha 1 e to 1 us h
l11e nt.'t all the tim( LO 1\ln o n
fa st glh:-. 1f .;ou 11a\(' ~round
"-lrnke:-. that ate ,.;oud rnough,"
t&gt;aid 01 j ':idale.

Ulackwood.

\\ 1dc Open Hate.
rhe\ we• e cm•nL•ml~ good
cnouJ-:11 to blast \\rtmblcdun open
lhamp l a•c•, -l-1,, (, . . -\, :J.r,, (j.J,
h-1. to g11&lt;: lllfl a bc1tl1 111 tfK•
qual tct-lmab of Lhe S!UII,U(/Ulop
profcs:-.10nal PIIH' into a w•dc
open 1~111gdmg.
La\cr ms l!. tcd h1o; se r vltl' let
him down and that, •fldced,
&lt;Ontnbuted to the w1ldc~l up set
of the ~c&lt;u lie was almost
Jllttful Ill the la s t 11\0 st:b. tr) 1ng
to hold ofT nn sdale 1\lulc
runmng up In~ total do.1ble
faults an the match to H. I IW
&lt;ame 1n the last ~ct.
Army L1eut. A.rthur \l:ihC of
H1chmond,
\ 'a,, and {lark
{,raebnL·r of !'\ew \01 k, both
amateur&lt;: and surprJfle !.Cm J~
finaJ1sb at W•mblcdon, romped
1nto the quarter-fmal s along
With pro John ~cwrombe or
Australia.

llunllngton High at l.alhpolis
PI
Pleasant al Parkersburg
South
~\thens at Manella
&lt; oal Grf)ve at ( ercdo-1\enova
&lt; oshocton at Ironton
Oah IIIII at Jackson
Morgan at I ogan
Me1gs at Wahama
\\arren Lo&lt;:al at Nelson.,.•lle\urk
Wellston at\ mlon lounl)
llannan TI ace at F.a~tern
Kyger lreel{ al I aarland
No rth (.alii a at Sout~rn I neal
llannan, \\, Va., at Southwcst-

Ocl

24 1929, rtrst da) m
wh1ch pamc seized th~ stock
market m the 1929 crash 1.s
popularly known as
Black

Thursday "

Dolla1 sales for the month of

'•

'

COLt MDloS (UP!)
The
seven M1d-Amencan Conference athletic directors will
g1ve pnme considcrahontoan
lflVltalion to pla) m the Tangetlne Bowl.
1 he ~ad W$fo entended "'~ ~~~~
w.nner or ·lho .MAc. :lcNii~
championship 10 meet the wmner of lhc Southern Conference
1n a bowl game 1n Orlando,

Ha.
The athletic directors w•ll ex·
plm c the fcasabJhly of such a
bowl tie-up and present 1ts
re commendation
to
t he
league's l01.1neJI of Presi-

dents.
Also on theagerdaat Thursday' ); meeung 1s a discussion
of admJmstra.tl\c changes for
the com1n~ ~ear.

:·:

···:· ·.· .

•'•

::·:·.· :·:·

''•

.····

:·:·

Memlx-rs of the Southeastern
Ohw I ootball Olfic1als AssOCiation arc reqmrcd to meet at Athens on Sundll, Sept. 8, beguuung:
at 12:30 p. m, llle scsslOnwlll be
held at the Athens Country Club.
All area gnd coaches are invited to attend the annual meet-

same pcnod a)carago, with total
sales for the year also up slightly in rigures released bj the Ohio
11'11(.
1
Dl?parlment of llcp.JOr Control
(_ L (I olm) Ecker 1 s presiTotal wholesale sales for the dent of the Jackson Chapter of
month were up 75.47 per cent
the SEOI 0&lt;~.
from $3,635,069 73 a year ago
to $6,378,541 47 for July, 19GB
netall sales were up 26.73 per
cent rrom JUSt over $13 million in July, 1967 to $16,534,430.91 in July, J96R Total sales
for the month were up 37 35 per

Brown May

wllltw ..on

1918

cent to $22,9l2,972.3H .
lmmlgratloa Lctws

OHIO'S NEWEST FAD!

AND

HEATING
Ph- WY 2·2550

.9

29e
Plus Tax
OIL

•

.,.

\'

l'old with a Money Beefi:

I
\

PLUMBING

REGULAR All
GAS CIGARETTES

\

MINI BIKE

Your O.,.ndablo
De•l•r For

There are about 700 dtffer
ent erounds m the Jmnugratton lllws for deporhng or expelling ahens from the Umted
States. accordmg to the Encyc::lopaedJa BrtlannJca

J

triOtS,

ANTHONY
Plumbing-Heating

C&lt;*, CIJ)t
~

CLE\UAND (lPI)- Cleveland teams have not feared well
o"er the )Cars agamst the
Green Ba} Pa&lt;:kcrs, who move
in S8lurda~ mght to meet the
Browns m the se&lt;:ond half of
the annual pre-season double~
header here.
1 he Brcmns ha"e downed the
Packen but three limes 1n regular season pla.,y I he last time
that happened was 1956. Slnec
then Grel!n Bay has rcga l! tercd

Seheduled Sunday

July were up sharply over t h e

'

'

Jinx Saturday

Official• Meeling

July Up Sharply

!

End Green Bay

ecn

Uquor Sales in

fiul the former Miami Amer•&lt;-'&amp;11 I ootblll Lcab'UC club~&gt;
to meet player
s 1gnal caller wuldn't get scrambled
the
team rollmg w pre-. lim•ts.
The New York Giants cut
cxh1bilion games.
offensive guard Bookie Bolin, a
t.dd Jtccci vcr
Broche failed to do much seven-year player, defensJvc
better as san l'rancisco dropped end Je!I Smith and tight end
four of five starts, but Nolan Dock KOiite. The Bu!Ialo BUis
sa1d he moved the team more reached the At L's 40oplayer
cons1stcntly. Nolan bulwarked limit by slashing four players,
Brodie's pass-cat&lt;:hmg brigade Including llliilack Wl'I,Y C&amp;rlton,
as the I ort,y fli incr s acqu1rcd a member of the original 1950
speedster Chfton McNeil from team. Carlton holds the cJub
the Cleveland Browns earlier ground gaining record of 3,368
lh1s week for a lugh draft yards.
McDonald Out
chOI&lt;:e
Ray McDonald, Idaho's cele-Trull became cq&gt;endable wlth
fullback of several
Houston when the 01lers ob- brated
tained Pete Beathard from the seasons ago, Called to last with
Chtefs and was reduced in the Washington Reds kIn s.
stature with Boston after Mtke S1gned for a $70,000 bonus
Taliaferro 1mpressod coach contract 1n 1967, McDonald
M1ke
llolovak
as
starting never 11 ved up to the expectaquarterback material. Taliafer- tions of performing in the
ro was Joe Namath's urxlerstu- Jimmy Brown fashion.
Washington also drq~ped cendy on the New York Jets three
ter Dave Crossan and defenshe
seasons.
Other veterans were dropped back J 1m Burson al'll placed
by the wa} s1de as National and orrens1ve tackle Mitch Johnson
on the uuured waiver list.
Johnson dislocated h1s hip ln
last Thursday's pre- season
game w1th Detroit arxl will be
out eight weeks,
Elsewhere,
the Baltimo~
Colts reduced their roster to 44
as J1m Welch, prtmarUy a
safety man, and defensive tt.ck
George Harold lost their Jobs;
The Philadelphia Eagles placed
defensive end Len Persin on the
UlJUI'Y list, alter he urderwent
surgery for torn ligaments of
the left knee, aoo waived
linebacker Fred Brown. The St.
LOUIS Clrdinals traded rwming
s1x straight w1n.s agamst the back Charley Bryant to the
Browns, mdud1ng a Playoff Atlanta Falcons ror a future
Bowl victory m 1963 aOO the draft choice aOO Karl Noonan
Naoonal ~ ootball League c ham- was named to replace 11\Jured
plonsh.tp contest in 1965.
Jack Clancy at split end with
The last meet1ng between the Miam•
two teams, last )e&amp;r in Milwa~
kee, wa s a d1saster from beginning to end ror the Browns, who
Ree1aim
stumbled to a 55-7 loss.
Erme Green, currently on the
Cleveland InJured hst, scored
the onl} Browns touchdown of Players On Waivers
the game.
The New York Jets arl.i DeCINCINNATI (UPI) l'lul
troit Lions fill the first half of Brown, ooaeh or the Cincimatl
the doubleheader b11l, starting Bengals, hopes the 11 men he
at 6:30 p.m.
placed on waivers will be pus.
Bad news st1ll awa1ts three ed over so he can reclaim them
members or the Browns squad lor bis wd squad.
with the announcement of who
Those placed on wahoers inwlU. depart to trim the noster to clude l~ker John N~
the--r-equired 43. It ls expected
~ctlon u.~~- ­
to &lt;:Om.e duru'lg practice her~ gala' pre-se&amp;.fOR game•. AliUtadl •
tnda,y,
Ted Waohlngton, tigbl end Bill
Peterson, guard Frank R o y,
Oanker Bob Longo, l!lpJit end Ray
Johnson, defensive back J o h n
C\ CLJSTI; KILLED
Guillory,
tight end Midtey McDOUGLAS, Isle of Man (l!PD
Carty,
end
Will Pern, opllt end
- Two motorc,&gt;cle racers were
k1lled m separate crashes Ed McCall and tack!• Bobby Kelly,
Tuesda~ on the opemng da} of
the Manx Grand Prix. Peter
Ray, 22, was k1Jied duruJg the
lightweight e"ent and Roger TWO INJURED
PfOLADELPlllA (UP0 .1 The
Perner, 29, becamt: the secoOO
Philadelphia
Eagles cut their
fatalit) 1n the JUmor race,
roster to 46 players, three above
the player hmit, by placing
The famed Lafayette Esca- rookie defens1vc end Len Persen
drllle consasted of volunteer on the reserve hst and waiving
U S. pilots flying French air· hnebacker rred Brown. Both
planes They accounted for 57 were uuured m Momay• s 22-20
enemy aircraft from 1916 to VICtory O\ler the Boston Pa-

field,

(I Ia,}

Browns Hope To

Friday's Games

m allack~torcbeoberl'OIIIJII""
wltb EddleGup,rls"over,dJJi!e, ·: hiii!JIII
~ IIDd deacf'
~Julie).

wnrl..

""'mrlhin~:

Uy (,AHY KAI.I::
UPI Sports Writer
Geoq..,'O Mtra may have to
play second fiddle, but Hs better
than being in the shoe:; ot
unemployed Don '1 rull.
Mira, reserve quarterback
With the San I ranc1sco I orty~
Nmcrs, lost out to veteran John
Brodie ag~un as coach Dick
Nolan decided to go wath the
man who cngtnccrod a mUhon
dollar contract wath the dub
~&gt;cvcral years ago.
Trull, the top t:ollcgtate
passer at Baylor an J962-63,
never realized h1s full potenUal,
first With llouston and Ulen waUl
Boston. lie was a rescne to
(.;eorge Blanda most of his Oller
career and when sent to the
Patnots played m the shadow of
Babe Paralh.
Nolan, a former defensive
halfback w1Ul the New York
Giants and later on the Dallas
coa(h tn.g staff, gave the 2~year~
old Mira an vpportumty to find
,qold In lhc }orty-Niner back-

MEIGS COUNTY'S ONLY AGENT

llodel

C·Z-20-2~

Deluxe Model

t-2-50-2% H.P,

H.P.

157.95
184.00'

OTHER MODELS . AVAILABLE

&gt;

'&gt;

�'•

1

•j

•t

j.

before they are eligible for parole miJSt · ·

sweat out their time as before

cnme and pumshment m Amenca.

come start toward a saner philosophy of

1

'

(

pleted its work on the once-devastated atoll
and •t has been pronounced ftt for human

"

'

habitation once again

Only 150 natives were taken from Blldni,

though a total of about 500 MicroneSians re·

I

gard lt ai their traditional home. Most peo-

•

ple would never have been aware of Bikini,
or would long ago have forgotten about It,

bad not the name been borrowed for a swlm·
swt Ulat shocked many senslbilities.
Such ar.e our values.

Hazardous to HealthZ
News Item Pollee in Bloommgton, Ind ,
found a cache of four pounds of mariJuana
and three pounds of horse manure m a suit
grinding the manure to mu w1th the mari-

juana to "stretch" it

Not usmg the stuff ourselves, we don•t
know lf 1! is tbe practice of other pot peddlers
to enhance thetr wares With this mteresting
add11ive But 1f so, it might be adVJsabie for
the Food and Drug Adrilinistration to investi·
gate the haUucogenc1c, or mmd-bendlng, prop.
erties of this common product, which 1s manufactured in more places than on the farm.
We can see it now-a required warning
prmted on every campaign poster:
"Caution· Political speeches may be hazardous to your health.'

Sniffing Gasoline Fumes
Can Cause Brain Damage
By WAYNE G. BRANDSTADT, M.D.
The foUy of gasoline sniffing
bas been weD-publicized. Loss
of consc10usness has been observed in some persons who
have persisted m this pastime

l

baby lo develop his own
adrenal hormone Prednisone
(Melicorlen) is • synthetic

cortisone.

\

I

.·1·I

THE GI'DBALVIEW

By LEON !&gt;ENNEN, NEA Foreign News Analyst
NEW YORK (NEA)
'{be KGB, Russia's secret police, Is reported to have
launched a new campaign of repression agamst Soviet ctUzens
accused, among other things, of building a secret "pro-Lib·
eral" organization.
Known as the "Union of Social-Christian 1-"beration " tbe
clandestine group Is believed to have branches In Lenl~grad
Moscow and Kiev, the capital of the Soviet Ukraine.
'
Accordmg to a Soviet CJtnen, one of a number of Russians
who recently viSJted the Wes~ the KGB's new wave of terror
IS "evoking memories of Stalin's purges In tbe 1930s.''
The Kremlin leaders, he said, are lncreaalngly worried by
their lnabiUty to col'" wllb growing dlaaldence 1!11\0ng y9ung
Rutaians and tile ap111rge of natloaalfsm' among Ukrainians
aJJd other aatlonanttea eomprlslng the Soviet Unloa.
The Russian visitor dlsclosed that two students from Leningrad's merchant seamen's school and three scientists who
bad been at the Montreal Expo '67 Soviet exhibit were recenUy
tried m Lemngrad ostensibly because they were memhers of
the ouUawed "Union of Social-Christian Liberation." They
were also charged with lmporting and distributing iUegal
Western nterature.
The late of the scientists is unknown. The seamen were
sent lo a forced labor camp
As a result of the trial, the political comm1ssars in Russia's
merchant fleet, the Communist party's ideoiogJcal watchdogs,
have begun to purge "unrellable elements" from the crews
of ships sailing to forelga countries, Including Norlb V1etnam.
Many olricers and ordinary seamen have already been ex·

''

'

'

Do It

Noland Cla,y,

gar at the convention and naturally they dlscussed Times critic Clive Barnes and his tireless,

David would 881 tiresome, cov.
erage ~ ballet-tlleatre-{XIIIIics,
etc. 01 Whea does he sleep?'" Merrick asked &amp;llzberger and 1/lM
answered his owu ~J~estion: "I
know - 911 opening nights,"
In tbree -ate intertiews
on her '1&gt;ufty'' rum set, Susannah York gave three dUrerent
ages; her out- her birth certifl..
cate was burnt in the London
blitz ... !ile says .... Steve Mc-

Qleen pi'CIUdly confessed he ~t
elgarets several months ago,
thinks he's kicked 'em ror good·
goodl

'

friskers made cor.
no one brought guns, knives,
etc,, Into the Chi, convention ball
Securit,y

tain

I

but PI_!Cket Jadves openly were
peddled at IIOUYenit counters In-

I

pelled from the Communist party and the Komsomol (youth
organization) and sent lo wort on domestic ablpping r011teS.
"A slri&lt;l redme baa &amp;een lmpesed on those lallliJJ on lor·
elgn-bound sbfps," the Rusalan vlaltor oald. "Anycine eaqld
accer,ting literature !rem lorel«ners, even from forelp, Oem·
mun sta, will lose hla jab and face crtinlaal charJel. '
Another young Russian visitor who recenOy compleled his
military service m the Red arm,Y !old of group~ of soldlers
who listen surreptitiously lo foreJgJJ broadcasta ~'!"' Volee
of Amenca, Radio Liberty and the British Broa
ling ,Co.
While m the Red army, the young Russian and his friend
formed small "preSSIIJ'C! groups" against the rigid military
discipline. Now all residents In Moscow, the group member•
have continued tbeir secret association. Their aim IS · 1o
"spearhead a revolt against tbe corruption In tbe Soviet I)'S·
tern and government.''
None of tbe Russian visllors envisaged a popular pro-liberal
upsurge In tbe Soviet Union.
"Russia ls not on the verge of revolution," the former Red
army man said.
•
However, he and blo friend userted t!Jal tH -wave of
Slallnlal purgea haa beea a fallure u a form of llloet lhenP7
Intended lo ernll ,the JroWIBJ preuure for lhe demoenttzatloa of poUIIcal Ufe In Rusla.
Courageoll$ yoong people-whether Russians Ill' Ukrainians
-are only the "tip of the Iceberg." But the!' represent the
most outspoken amoug the large maaa of Soviet cttlzena who
seek greater freedom.
ll~ear-old

A·

QUICK QUIZ

J18Che tad with Gregoey Peek In

.... Boston• a brilliant baton, Eric
Lelnadorf, seeretJ,v wed Vera
Graf - allddler
Davtd Merrtek chatted with
N, Y. ,l'lmes publisher !llizber.

column

,,'

He dld not Intimate either lo his close friends or lo the
pleading professlonall that he would accept a draft; but would'
not plunge inlo the race and compete for the prize.
.The politician who tried hardest lo persuade him was
Mayor Richard J. Dale)' of Chicago. He, and not Jesse UJJI'IIb
of California or any other, was the prime mover, Daley ealllid
Kemedy several times. He tried lo win over some ~ey dele·
gatlons. so be could confront Kennedy with weighty evidence
of snpport. He tried lo get Kennedy lo postpone bls !IJjaJ dis'
claimer of Interest.
·
In Ill'! end, of eouna, Daley laDed. Kennedy's frlenda on
the scene say. Privately ~ cannot be sure bow Ted would
haV!&gt; responded bod D~y been able lo offer him proof a COil• '
veptlon majorlty:~JVould bact blm. But the mayor never mustered it, And 11\e Ktilllledy Intimates spent most of their time
trying to make the senator's firm decislon palatable 1o Democratic leaders who Were frustrated In their 'll'1ah to ..... ldla
alalld for the presidency thla tim&amp;.
Tb~ ..,.I, self-pouened yoq IIUJII 1lldq In i1Ya1uJ11Deri
believed lbl1 wu DOt tH lour. Bwt ao polltle81 ftalllhu'idl·
lq 68 Jut -eall of lbe C!Jfe&amp;(O _OOIIvelllleD eell4 deUC
!bet annUler !Joar for blm wiii~Jm~t~&amp;J~y eo111•·

Soviet Purges Its Liberals

Voice along Broadway

u..u;

~

many.

Secret Police Crack Down Again

Q-Wbat lJ .moot by pelvic
tn1lammatory d J s e a s e, uremercial gasolines co n t a i n thral stenosis and cysloscopy
1etraethyl lead, serious i~ad With urethral dilation?
A-PID Is a general term
poisoning may result from this
habit. Small amounts of lead lor mfiammation of the uterus
absorbed through the lungs (endometritis), uterine tubes
(salpingitis) or ovaries (oophcan cause permanent brain
oritis) The cause is an Infecdamage.
'lt"Is la'J' 'bettl!r to emulate tion following delivery or eomPilcating a venereal disease
Fefclld~nd the bull and smell
Urethral stenosis is a narrowthe flowers •lor kicks. Their
ing
of the urethra. A cystolragrance is sweeter than that
of gasoline and their harmful scope is an mstrument that
ls passed lnlo the bladder so
side elrects are nil.
that its walla can be seen.
Q-Ia hot dsys when I go Dilation or stretching the ureinlo an air-conditioned store I thra is standard irealment for
lmmediately get severe ab- a urethral stenosis.
(HBspoper frtf«ptiM Ann J
dominal cramps and have
loose bowel movements. This
PJ.a. Nrtd your IIIHIIfiGIIJ olld
also bappens In winter when, comme11t1
ta WorM G ltOndstotlt,
after sleepmg under an elec- M.D, in ar,.
t•i• ,.,.,.,, Whitt
tric blanket, I get up in a cold Dt, lramlsfadt ofconiiOt
•MWer Wihouse. What causes this and -,ld,ol .....,,, .. will .,..,
lttt«J
what will belp?
of ,...,.,, imw.Jf 1ft t.fure coJ"IMJ.
A-You ._ve a very irrlla·
bie colon Chilling the abdomen usually aggravates this
I condition. The trealment is
not eaay and usually requires
the attention of a gastroenBY JACK O'BRIAN
&lt;1: great architect Edward Durterologist.
NEW YORK - Sb&gt;kely Car- rell Slooe, nlgbtl,y at tbe PotQ-In a recent
you michael's sister Jwtv "crosaed ting !iled In Brtdgehanwton ....
said that choleslyramine had OYer" and wed a ..pite London Duo at llick IUclgel,y•a Soutbamp.
&gt;educed the blood cholesterol fur designer, Marc Masalm .... ton spa, Sonny Tufts aud Patriclevel of a number of persons LBJ campalgnlug lor a maJor ia Havens-Monteagle (Patricia
with hardeaing of the arteries Taxu DeW&amp;JIIIPU of his own?
My doctor never heard of lt. . .. Good Qleen Uz' colt Hope. Haveno-Mmt.eqle!?l't.l .... Reversing the proceclJre, Jo.teph
Does It have an1 other name?
tw Veuture millllt l'W1 in tile Bel- (Cal&lt;h 22) Haller'o pi"' "We
A-lila sold Wider the trade mont• a Man O'War race Oct. 19·
Bombed In New Haven" not even
names Cuemid and Queatran. DK&gt;re Uddish negotiations
4Je Cll Bdwy, until Oct. 16, aJ.
Q-la 1 reeeot article you VJetnam.'s .••• Flomuala Flana- reaey baa been peddled as a Jl8·
said that taking cortisooe dur- gan or the I&lt;J¥'ely ULovers" hit Jl8rbock fur a bue.ft&amp;ure ~
ing pregnancy would interfere drama sends word from bome
with adrenal function of the tbal Dublin's In tile mldat ~ a $100, 000; a record, aud certainly
fetus How would it do this? Is garbage strike .... Banclleader for a firlloi&gt;l"'LBJ doesn't scare easily, he
Meticorten m this class?
King Qu1is' wife served the pa- got 3,000 Ufe~tenlng letters
A-Cortisone ,. d e r l v e d
from the adrenal glanas. An pers; the former Ethelyn But- in CliO lllOJitb .... EJ:.Catlf Gov,
ezcess of adrenal hormone m ler wants another go at her sing. Pat Brown was a veeJ)ilOtsibUrv only a CCIIYentlon ago but bio
the baby's blllOd s up pI I e d ing-&lt;lancing career.
Artist Bob Dash -mod to have '68 Cbi, Job was low!,y aud we
through the umbilical cord removes the stimulus lor tbe dealgns m Maria Slooe, ex...Ue never saw him on camera mce
Now a recent report indicates

that, because almost aU com-

R~ I Ul· ll DOWN

"The Stalldng Moon.. has suc:b a
fascinating background, Grosset
&amp; llunlap in Nov. will release a
hard-&lt;OVer pl~aboutthe
tiny

brave .... Eveeytime

poasport lllllld~
A-A passport II valid for
three yean. It may be renewed to be valid for tho remalnder of t he ftve-1ear
p~ from the original date
of lulie.

'

Comedlo; bot be dl~p)lj'o bll dan-

ely daubs al a rival French oaterie, Charles V .... ~ two
rearlesa TV heroes, s.. qu.

zara ot "Run For YCNI' t...U"e-•
aud Rd&gt;ert v......., or (foa

know, Ill name ' • - • .. al·
rea4y? That's lome!) ran for
their Uvea In CzeeWJorm'd•
where lllq ...... ~

'''IOm!••·l J

1111alc pleue) - Ro~co BUII'ano. ~ oD · u wJQhb.~
F4l8d we hcli)O we I'"JIIfllllber .
:,
-~ '-'
to tune In "Dial M (or Mulde"
~· _,.,4'
b. Sept. 8 m CBS-TV, two of
our favorite brtiilant b.........U
Wili be ltarred - Jlcibb1 Haekett and Charlle Shavel-1 .••• us..,
(!J"eta of 111 American Wtre"
wasn't doing loo weD al the "''"" .
ofllce 10 the ads erased A n n e
Jadt1011's photo and inserted the' '
- naer and ta.., or FAy wu. '

•'!Oil•

be

oct time to -

about aur mar.

rtage. We lWI bee pUing a1ons
pna;y waD unW IIJe bi1&gt;J came.
He oald bableo llllko blm narv..,. aud llbe&lt;lqok up lliil Ullcb ~

~bol-d""'
;_~=be-n:.:
lfU ~

Q-WIJo wiil tlu! ;firrlAmerlccm prUidem to IIIOfTJ
dtirltlg hil tmil of otlci1
A-John Tyler, wtio 11\U·
rled IIIIi Julia GardinV In
New York City, June 2&amp;,
1844.

He has ........ Ill "dati'' ...
ev017 woOio..M IuiUiill,y idri a
- r or Uk'a fl'lend 1o are for
Dltl
• ~ He. IIIII 111{1~fliiL
1 Q8 IIIIUIIICl'IIJI ~ ._, lUll-

portua.

,

•

Ho keel* ll1fnl be'B m 01' t
badi apln•"'lilllllllinlb,"bUt·
,•
~ apljJ. Ho poJIJU
CIUt that 111 !!I'1Jr a-., IIIIo - ·'
llellda's, hlo. ,II f01111!1
an, and llbe naadt bllJL
.. out tbol hit - - - . . , ...
ai6111oi"~ CIJ lllihiiedblm,
bot lt'o II-i "'IIII
lle'l t..,.

be .-.

I've""'""'

~-but

gage .... Wdc IJubomlr Ia a
li!JbiiP•small smash as a painter -b u t
keeps bla job as a walter at La , f""""--.:--":'---:-----:::--_..;.-""""~-.----.....;:;.e;,

Bide ,., Jack loleQlllllllJII, Irish, tileThe
C&lt;Jpa caD't
"' reservai!Gna
for- lha hll.nJIGk.
Is J)I'Oilleer or uHorsemaa Pau en Tbe Temptations - but em
lb', a CeJebratJ.oo." bal8d on N. Y. boOel - t take •am In
tile ll!e and worka ~ Wm, Butwwbow Jllllht n n TY • Rodlo
ler Yeats, lrtalunan, tile cut Mlrroi- ortl&lt;le'o oOullld, "llllw
wll I be entlrel,y Irlab, incldOJJ. Ho Stole lUI Bride ~ Frank
tal mulic by John Dull',y, lrilh!lnatra,"- ... 'llliaut Tv
mao, aud lha dlre!ctor (puncbline llick
~ ' 'Mil'ci.· 111111111 ,. .

llama , .. Julia! Prow@II

TillS IIIATE IS NO IIELPI\IATE
Dear llelen:
l(y bnebend moved cut over a
Je&amp;r 1110, and moved l!aek home
with hia Dllllher. Sold
1IIJJt.

Q-For bolo lo7lg II G U.S. -

~

bear "Around the World" pll¥ed
on radio or TV, Liz Taylor gats
half the publisher• a royalties ....
Christine Blddleofthe Pbilly Bfdo.
dles now is a $SO per bour model
with the Wilhelmina Aaouc7 bare;
Wilhelmina gets tile most beaJJ.
tltul models; used to be one herself.
Kim Stanley's Nyack home Ia
skidding loward the i';Yadi Sav.
ingo &amp; Loan if the brllllaol Kim
doesn't bother with tile DJOrt.

Helen Help· ·~ ·)~J

__

•!•' ; !•!

0
J•

·~L 4 J!)68
; ; •' ; • I •,•!•! !:!f-0::'::::•:•:•,•:•!•!•,•:•:•:•'•!•!• •'•!•.;

• : ' ; ,•

I he 20-}c'Br-ol.d native of
Oklahoma City has lhe most
Jmprcssi\IC credentials among
the Nl.. rooldcR • with a , 279
batting average, 1:! homers, two
U •Pies, 34 doubles and 72 runs
baltt.'d in.
Bcn&lt;:h hll Ius sc(ond gam~?
l) 111,::: lwo-ruo hom~• w1th two
out In the ninth inning in as
rna•\\' games Tucsda~ nlght
althou~;h
the Cardinals pulled
out a 5-3 11-nmmg \il'tor.)! and
mc1 cased their IC8!,'11C lead to H
games.
lloerncr Adds Win
Curt I loOO s ingled home the
lie-breaking run 1n the 11th

I 1'1 S&amp;&gt;ot1:5 Wntcl'
lotuuu Bcmh or the Clnchl--

:,

heard

case, along With Instructions for drying and

THE DOCTOR SAYS

:"&lt;·..

"''"'

t• Hed.., 1s making 8!i much or a

umwaJ
\Cal

I'BlC (OJ rooktc of th(:
hotKll!i as the St. Louis

( 11 du1als

arc making of the

~atwnaJ

League pennant race.
Hcnch's seledJOn has become
almost automatic m recent
\vceks as he has staged a late.
season spurt While pllther len)
Koosman of the.• 1\:cw \ ork
Mcts, the { mt mnati catcher's
Plincipal rhal f01 the award,
has lost foor st1 aighf games
and "slumped" to a Hi-10

:,"M

have been expendable pawns m a game

called Mamfest Destiny. as played by various
and, fmally, the Amerlcans.
Now, after 22 years. the Bikinians are to be
allowed to return to their tiny rmg of islands
in the Pacific, whence they had been removed m 1946 to make way for the testing of
nuclear bombs Through no fault of our own,
since the last nuclear blast m 1958, the amaz·
mg restorative power of nature has com-

).1

:il!

who have less than three months to go before parole are permitted to partiCipate. Unmarried men and those with years to serve

Uke the American Indian and other SOcalled primitive races, the people of B1kln1

_, - -

•'

AI·Sbrs

ff&lt;J

John Brodie To Lead 49ers

Reds Lose 6th Straight

~ lfi'

·,'.t". ' CHICAGO(~ v,
It wu tile ,emopo~~J~. plea of VIce Maldent J!umpllj'eJ,
COJIIman~ 11 P"'ll&lt;l,lntlal ll&lt;IIIIWO; !'bleb wil$lnteliclell
to
together the •Democrats as· tllfy ~ (rom the ~ .
b
conventloo doln'l! am the ~~~ ~~ ~•!lib hire. ·' ,
Y!~• If there wu any -llng bond,! Utt.~· It appe~ ,
to anse, from another s~thii taD
loye-llate rita'
tlonship llie DemOCfatic pilrty..,and PerllaP• the natiCJII.Ii!-bU
with the Kennedys,
,.
·•
, , &lt;i!
Four years ago In Atlantic City II was the same. After.thst
convention, In » pale · IIIIIOd of near-lndlflerenee, had• 0011· I
tetrid liB blgh prize on President Joliitson;-lt gree~ 1:\obatt
F: Kennedy' with a deep-Oowlng wave ilt feellrig ln:r*t"ltiute·tO
hla asaasalnaled l!rother, John. 1•1
' ·
~
fa, •• aliaoll •aabellevaltle re.ib.w , of tbl&amp; ICI!JM!, ... IIIIi
CODVOIItfOD delePfel Walel..f 8 ftliii If lie iiiJia ~ Jtea!'
and ~· lor Jl mlauta let !heir damm....P fee1Dn
forth iad w~M ,,...,. the \errlble aofJiJodtfe1 tliiHiid "
gri)IJled IJlem Ia the la\emltloW ampillt..ater fer fo.,~•- ,
The onlooker went away from Atlantic City Im6w1't!l ~~ ·•.
the Kennet!,y p~enolnenon was the most powerfultlil;,ilorvlalble,
there. 4Jid'il0 It wu again In Chicago. .
.
'"': :
No one dqubted then that the Robert Kennedy wli9
tbostt ever-renewing waves of sound In 19114 would lise aome·
how In hla dead brother's place. He did and, but for a seccmd
assassin's bullet, be could have been standlllflln Humphrey'•
stead at tbla convention.
•
This time the sqrvlving brother, Sen. Edward M. KeMedY
of Masaacbusetta, was beard 'only as a voice filling the 1W1
over wires from his eastem home. Once more, however, the
force WAI felt.
Wllalever bappeDI to HtiinllbreY ud tbla badly laOiolmil
~ Ia Uie moalh1 ahead, tdo liconlrovertlble latt II lilaC
'l'iod XeJUJOdy II 'tile man of liB futare •
Po•slbly he could have b@.en the lnan of liB present, -but ~
chose not lo lhlnt·ao.
His praclical role In !be outcome of Ibis convention llbould ·
not be misunderstood. His friends tell lhia reporter !bet at no
time did be ever le)ld any leading Democrat the , lalniNt
comfort lllat he w~llld Jump lnlo the struggle for the 1il!8
nomination. He rebuffed all personal pleas-and tbei'e were

v

Tehachapi, only minimum-security inmates

Bikini Lives Again

'

BRUCE II OSSAT . ,
-·; u••• Wiishilfgloft Cornti!O",.;,t '

is to ease their transition back lnlo society.
The state will make a two-year follow-up
study of the men alter they are paroled lo
determine the effects of the progriiiJl.
Revolutionary as the esperiment is in tbe
United States, lt is about as timid as it could
be compared with what bas long been the
practice m a number of wther countr1es. At

But a lot of them now have a new incentive '
for good behavior and self-~ehabilitatfon.
What IS being tried at Teha...pJ is a wei·

allegedly clviliZed nattons over the decades
-Ule Spamsh, the Germans, the Japanese

I ht.• lla•lj :-\cut mel, ~llddlcport-l,ornt&gt;ro~

;~m~$cJ)r:bem.~rat~~~
~:.. Mari·
. of the' Future:.

A Step Forward In Prison Practice
It ,.... only been in operation a couple of
mouths, but Olllcials of the Slate Correctional
I~aUtutlon at Tehachap!, Calli, bave tenia·
lively, pronounced an experlmeJIIal lam8y
vlaila\ion program a succeaa. ~
Under the program, tbe first cil its ldnd in
the nation, certain prisoners are allowed to
spena weekenas with their wives and children
In apartments formerly occupied by prison
personnel.
The a1m of the program, by enabling prisoners to be with tbeir famllies m privacy and
lh a more or less normal, homelike setting,
'

3 ~

:r-:!;.···::·· ,•'•,•:•,'' .;.•'•' !•:•:;,•:;, ,•: ;.;. ;.;:;' .•!0:;!•' ';!; ' •,•!•

•

rerord.

an.er two walks and a wild pilch
and Hoger Maris, who also had
lhre~ doubles, dro\lc 1n the
second run of the rrame with a
sacrlnce Qy, Joe lloerncr, who
pilched only 1-3 of an mnmg,
1·e~eived crecht for the victol"},
raismg his record to
Pete
Hose homered Cor lhc Reds'
rirst run.
rhe ( lucago Cubs downed the
san l'ranCISl'O (JJ8RlS 3-3, lhe
Atlanta Br~ves shaded the New
York Mcts 7-6 after a 4~ loss,
the Pittsburgh I'U'ates beat the
llou ston Astros 3-2 and the Los
An~;cles Dodgers dc(eatloid the
Pluladclph1a l,lulhes J0-9 1n
other Nat•onal League games.

t-2.

1\m.ertcan League games.
the Roston ned Sox beat the
Mumcsota rwws 4-1, the New

In

-

STANDINGS

\ ork
Yankees downed the
Raltlmore Onoles 6-J, thc
\'.ashmgton ....xmators mpped the
C111cago Wh1tc Sox 2~1, the
B.) llnlted Press International
Uc\eland lndtans swamped the
National League
\\, L. P&lt;:L GB Caldorma ,\ngels i-2 and the
W, L. Pet GB Detro1t
!Hi 5:? .li:?9
Detrou
l'igcr s
topped the
St. Louis
89 51 ,636
Baltimore
80 60 .571
8
Oakland t\thletJC's 6-3.
San Francisco 74 64 536 l4
Boston
75 65 .537 13
Lrrue Banks hll a tw~run
Cinclnnah
i1 65 522 16
Cle\eland
75 68 ,5:?4 1-11
homer m til(.' seventh mmng and
Chicago
73 68 .518 JGih
Oakland'
il 70 501 17
Handy llundle)' d1 ovc 111 tlu cc
Atlanta
71 i1 500 19
New\ork
70 69 .SIH 17
1·uns lo l11ghll,::ht a 12-/ut ( ub
Pittsburgh
68 72 .486 12
Minnesota
67 73 .H9 21
attack that enabled I crguson
Philadelphia
61 80 . .t33 27
65 74 .468 23',1 Cali forma
lenk1ns to Win hiS J7111 game ur
Houston,.
G4 77 .454 25•h Chicago
58 82 .414 30
the season.
Washtngton
New York
65 79 .451 26
SG 82 . 406 31
lomm1e Aaron's two-run sinLos Angeles
60 79 . 432 2812
Tuesday's Results
gle 1n the 12th mmng !'fas the
New York 6 Baltunore I, rughl b1g blow In th(' Bra\es' vktory
Tueadey's Results
st. Louis 5 Cm 3, night, 11 mns. Boston ~. Mumesot.a I, mght,
PIUstiurgh 3 Houston 2. mght
called, 5 mns,, ram
Los Ang 10 Phiia 9, rught
Washmgton 2 Clncago I, nl!,-rht
New York 4 Atla 3, 1st, twf.
Detrml 6 Oakland 3, night
MaJor 1 eague Leaders
AUa 7 N, Y. 6, 2nd, night 12 ins. Cleveland ] Califo1 ma 2, rught By l: nitcd Pr css Intcrnallonal
Chicago 8 San Francisco 3
WednesdB.}''s ProbableP1tchers
Natmnal I l:'aJ..'l..IC
(&lt;\II T1m es EDT)
Today'a Probable Pitctlers
C. \B 1!. II. Pet
(All Times EDT)
Delroh (lltller B-5) al Oakland nose, lln
123 516 81 liS 34J
Los Angeles (9.1Uon 6-J 4) at
(Dobson 11-12), 11 p. m,
.\lou, Pit
125 469 4!J 158 334
Phlladelphia (1.. Jackson 12-16),
Cle.,.eland (Tiant 18·9) al lah~ Johnsn, tin 123 i06 66 164 .324
8p.m,
fornia (Harrelson 1-4), 11 p, m. !\lou, \Ua
1"39 liH 64 180 3ll
St. louis (Briles Ji ..9} at CinBoston (Bell 10-10) at Mmne- McC'ov), ~'F 124 428 69 12.S 2&lt;i9
clnnilti (Maloney ll -9), 8 p.m . sota (Chance 13-13), 9 p, m. t lood, Sl. I 131 'i4R 66 163 2'14
Chicago (r 1sher 7-9) at Wash- Staub, I lou
140 .:iJ5 49 L.. 3 294
San Francisco (McCormick JO.
13 and I Herbel 0-!1) at Chicago ington (Bertama 5-13), 8 p. m. M1llan, \tla 128 489 41 14':1 :!97
:'\ew \ ork (Bahnsen 14-9) at Jones, 1\:'\
12K 438 i4 llfl 297
(Nlekro 13-9 and Holtzman 9.
Baltimore (Mcl':ally 18-R), Bp. m. Bckert, ( h• 139 580 84 169 .2'01
H), 1,30 p.m.
(OnQ&gt; games scheduled)
Jhursdll)'s c.ames
\men can I eague
ducago at WashtngtOn, mght
Thursday's Schedule
C. \ll H. II Ptt
No games scheduled
Onb games sch(.&gt;tiuled.
Oliva, M1n
128 470 .H 136 2R!J
Ystrski, Bos 135 436 73 130 2R.:i
Andrws, Bos J2 j 453 67 129 zx,_,
t.
llwd, \\as 13:i 512 ill H5 2H3
!~TERN ~TIO~ AL LE,\Gl'E
lhlndr,
Min 130 488 12138 283
By l!nlted Press lnternatmna)
Cater,
Oak
126 420 3/i 119 2H3
1/. L. Pee GB
l
f ~
Da"lilo,
Cal
i32
!-91 4,j 13~ .281
. Toledot
62 .566
Horton,•
Oet
129
4;j';' 50 !28 2RO
.ij &amp;tuffibtt""" ~ 7f61
.558
Jl
Carew,
Min
IUR
4110
43 II.! 2HO
Jacksonville 72 65 .S26
6
•
(pnris,
Oak
•
138.:058
7.J 15) 27H
74 67 ,525
6
Rochester
By Umted Press lnternabonaJ
!lome Hun~o~
Although Columbus 1s 11 . Syracuse
70 72 .493 ro
!';ational i Cat'l..IC Me( ovey,
67 74 .475 !3
!IIITieS behind Toledo In the LoulS\IIle
San
Fran 32, \ li en, Ph1l 28,
61 79 .448 16
International League peiVI81lt Buffalo
Banks,
(.hi 27, II. Aaron, \tl,
58 83 .4JJ 22
race, the Jets are actUally one Richmond
26,
Sll.nto
and \\il11ams, lh a 23
Tuesday's Hesults
~e up in the loss column and
Amertean
I eab'l..l(' r. llow.
Ken Larsfn kept their Pennant Toledo 7 Burralo 2, night
ard,
Wash,
39,
llarrelson, Bos
Columbus 4 IUchmond J, night
10pes alive Thesday mght.
33,
Horton,
Det
31, Jaekoon,
.. Larsen (JQ.-6) spun a twD- Syracuse 1 Hochester, 0, 1st,
Oak
26;
Powell,
Ual
and t rec.
twi-light, 7 mnings
1itter as the Jets topped the
han,
Det.
21
Richmond Bra\es 4-l lo boost Syracuse 3 ltochester 2, 2nd,
Runs Ratted In
mght
their seasoo reco'rd to 77-Gij
Nahonal
League Me( 0'\o l'),
Toledo has four more v1ctories, LoulSVllle 5 Jacksonnlle 2, 1st,
San
Fran
R5,
Santo, lh• R3,
tw1~hght, 7 IMtngs
81, bul has lost 62 games.
Williams,
(hi
X2, Perez, t m
Larsen lost his bid for a shutout LoUisville 8 Jacksonville 4, end,
80,
AHen,
Phll
77
rught.
'f~!l Dave Nicholson clubbed
American I eague · llarrclson,
~b 31st homer in the second
&amp;1&lt; 102, F, lloward, \\ash. 9H,
inning. The big righthanded
Northrup, Uet 79, Powell, Bal
slugger now leads the league in
78;
!lorton, IJet. 72.
home runs.
l»itching
In other act1on Toledo defeatNataonal
League Marich&lt;:~!,
ed Buffalo 7-2, Syracuse beat
San rran 24-7, Kline, Pitt, ll Rochester 1-0 and 3-2 in a nn4; (,ibson, St L. 20-6; !{egan,
night dOubleheader, ard Louis~
Chi. 10-4; Blass, Pitt, 13-5
ville took a pair from JacksonAmerican I eague: McLain,
vDle 5-2 and s-4.
Det. 27 ..S; McNally, Bal 18-8,
Culp, llos ll-5; ~:llsworth, Bos.
SPORTSCASTER SIGNS
13-6; Tlant, Cleve. 18-9; John,
, ST, LOUIS {UPI)- Dan Kel·
DAY10N (UP!) - The much Chi IO..S.
le), veteran Canachan sport,.scaster, ~m halllle the play-by- beleagured Ohio Pcnltentiar)
play of the St. Louis Blues rece•ved an eo:lorsemcnt Tueshockey
team
nexl season. day from one of Its graduates
Kelley, 31, his announecd for who wanted to go back.
l.awrence Joseph Barrett, 74,
the canadian Broadcastm,g
told
the M.?ntgomery County
Corp. in covering the world
Common
Pleas Court the 134hoG~ championships, am ca.
year
old
penitentiary •• is the
Oidian f'ooCball League
best 1 have been m."
' ~ DAILY SENTINEL
So BarretL will soon begin
llt\'OTtV TV ltiTU.I::lil' 4,11...... SoM_!Q'UU
serving another stretch behind
llt:IIAtlll S, O'a-t:~, 1'\!lt.l'iKI:I
the penitert.iary's ancient walls.
l'lll•u:r t-.ol, EoiiiW
.....u........, ~ .......... '""'
~~e was sentenced to a 14.0-5
011 .. , ...., J'niiiii.t,.. (~, ue liiiMIIIMt
year
term for deti'audlng an
a,,~' ....... UNI.I111111M•C.•

over the Mcts after rom Seaver
rcgtstCI cd Ius 14th "'" of the
seasoo for New Y01 k m Ihe
opener. 'I he Braves s&lt;:Qrt.&gt;d a
th1rd run an lhc mning evcntually the dcuslvc run
when 1he Mets r!ll k'd Cor a pa 1r
ln their hatr or the l:?lh-on
Marty Martinez' mfield siJlSl:lc.
J.L Ma1tin hit his tl111'd
homer or the season W1lh one on
and drove in a lhtrd run w1th a
forccout in the opene r as Ll~~:
Mets dealt Milt Pappas h1s lith
loss ol the season.
WJllle Star.gclJ hit has ~!nd
homer or the season In the
seventh anmng to g •vc the
l'trates their v1ctory, Dock lll1 s
went 7 ::!-3 11\tHng!'. to WlA IH S
fourth game although Luke
Walker Mnished up.
Len Gabnelson's two-run double ellmaxed a three-run rally
m the
mnth mnmg as the
Dodget s ralhOO fur e1ght run~ an
the last two mmngs fm thear
win wha:h snapped the Jllulhcs'
five-gam e w1nmng ~ t1 cak. !\en
Royer h1t two homc.r!-:. and Wi llie
Crawfot d and B11l sudak1:; one
each for the Dodg:cr~ wh1lc Uon
Lo{'k home• cd fm the l'hilltcs.

1

:

Jets Remain

!:' lit'

Oose S¢onrf •

...

Endorsement

Given Ohio

Penitentiary

gam••·

-....
, _ na-:.11*1.

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liollt;«lftkm' ....s:

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,....,..u....a. .. _.uif-.o
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~

mnl&lt;eeper. He allegedly ran up
two motel biDs totaling $154.48
so h~ would be arrested.
,,
But he wasn't arrested ~ so he
tW'ned himseiC in. Barrett as~

be PJ'II8ecuted ao a felon. lie
told
the court be wanll&gt;d · to lie
""""~
.,..
. . . pj!IJ ...,. ltl.M. ..... 0. , _
~ ,..,- bac~ tq tlje pOnil(ntoary ~
;:~~J ~"'*-:::.:
./11'-IIICI sJ)ent, most bt tih

',.,. • • ~ •• tl_!ai.U, . . . . . c.&amp;-.~t.a.
" ~ , ....u&gt;,;r ..... ~~........... ...

...... ""'"..

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.......

&gt;

"

Top-Seeded
Tennis King
Eliminated
1 Oil ! S!

IJII LS

\ \

01'0

- Cl1fF Dr ;~dah: ur '&gt;out II \fll(3
has set batk 11 1 ~ !-':arne of tenm s
.!tl )Ca l :-. - CH IS 11 lOU''
1he .!7-~car-nld sha1 pshuutcr
With a tl\o-fl..,tcd batkhand
wrerked top- sn•{h!d Jll o kuQ::
b~

Hod I &lt;tu'r of \ustralla 1n 1 1vc
sets 1ue~a\, r.1tl 1 sla\-lllwthebat kl OUII La( ta s of a SOil that

c\en mos t of tl1c.&gt; hals d•sda•n
tllcsr da~"·
'lontral\ to what C\Cr}One,

am

lud11~

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~

oiCMmr.

w... r•n
mtl 1'"

Trophies.
Presented
Winners
I rophle.!. ha"c been presented

to

w1 nncrs of the club tournament

sponsored by the Women's 1\sso&lt;: lat•on of the Pomeroy C.olf Club
t h1s summt:r,
\\i mnc1 s mdudc. "
l hampionshlp naght, /\nna Howell mackwood, w1nncr, \udre) Ilctz 1ng,
1 unncr-up; lirst fl1gbt, Beulah
Strauss, Winner, 13crmcc Uurst,
runner~up, second fi1ght, Nellie
Brown winner, I rankiC llunnell,
I unne1 ·UJ),
Sunday a Sl'Ol&lt;: h foUJ some was
held at the dub. \1alc players
were usL'Ci as substitutes for
women
pl3.)cn m some mstan&lt;:cc' \\ mners 1ncludt.-d f\u.&lt;:.sell B1own, Jol1n Wa}n~..: rcaford,
low gross, fa} C llussell, 1\gne s Brown, !01'. net, Dav•d fcnk~
•ns, Beulah Strauss, seeond lor.
net, lorn llcnne..,sy, Don liunnel,
low putts, nearest to pm on numUe• 7 for v.omen, John Wa}ne
I caro• d, nca1 ~:st to pw on numbc• 7 for men, Hu ssell Brown,
longes t dn .e for women, llcnny
n•nnen, lungcst drne for ffil.!n,
r\rt Strauss.
\ putlu&lt;:k :;upper was scnt.'CI
and women
golfers p1 esentcd wcddmg g~fts to \nna !lowell

m.;sl'if, l1as been
thtnk1ng all thL•se ~car~, i
reaillcd ~ uu don't ha 1 e to 1 us h
l11e nt.'t all the tim( LO 1\ln o n
fa st glh:-. 1f .;ou 11a\(' ~round
"-lrnke:-. that ate ,.;oud rnough,"
t&gt;aid 01 j ':idale.

Ulackwood.

\\ 1dc Open Hate.
rhe\ we• e cm•nL•ml~ good
cnouJ-:11 to blast \\rtmblcdun open
lhamp l a•c•, -l-1,, (, . . -\, :J.r,, (j.J,
h-1. to g11&lt;: lllfl a bc1tl1 111 tfK•
qual tct-lmab of Lhe S!UII,U(/Ulop
profcs:-.10nal PIIH' into a w•dc
open 1~111gdmg.
La\cr ms l!. tcd h1o; se r vltl' let
him down and that, •fldced,
&lt;Ontnbuted to the w1ldc~l up set
of the ~c&lt;u lie was almost
Jllttful Ill the la s t 11\0 st:b. tr) 1ng
to hold ofT nn sdale 1\lulc
runmng up In~ total do.1ble
faults an the match to H. I IW
&lt;ame 1n the last ~ct.
Army L1eut. A.rthur \l:ihC of
H1chmond,
\ 'a,, and {lark
{,raebnL·r of !'\ew \01 k, both
amateur&lt;: and surprJfle !.Cm J~
finaJ1sb at W•mblcdon, romped
1nto the quarter-fmal s along
With pro John ~cwrombe or
Australia.

llunllngton High at l.alhpolis
PI
Pleasant al Parkersburg
South
~\thens at Manella
&lt; oal Grf)ve at ( ercdo-1\enova
&lt; oshocton at Ironton
Oah IIIII at Jackson
Morgan at I ogan
Me1gs at Wahama
\\arren Lo&lt;:al at Nelson.,.•lle\urk
Wellston at\ mlon lounl)
llannan TI ace at F.a~tern
Kyger lreel{ al I aarland
No rth (.alii a at Sout~rn I neal
llannan, \\, Va., at Southwcst-

Ocl

24 1929, rtrst da) m
wh1ch pamc seized th~ stock
market m the 1929 crash 1.s
popularly known as
Black

Thursday "

Dolla1 sales for the month of

'•

'

COLt MDloS (UP!)
The
seven M1d-Amencan Conference athletic directors will
g1ve pnme considcrahontoan
lflVltalion to pla) m the Tangetlne Bowl.
1 he ~ad W$fo entended "'~ ~~~~
w.nner or ·lho .MAc. :lcNii~
championship 10 meet the wmner of lhc Southern Conference
1n a bowl game 1n Orlando,

Ha.
The athletic directors w•ll ex·
plm c the fcasabJhly of such a
bowl tie-up and present 1ts
re commendation
to
t he
league's l01.1neJI of Presi-

dents.
Also on theagerdaat Thursday' ); meeung 1s a discussion
of admJmstra.tl\c changes for
the com1n~ ~ear.

:·:

···:· ·.· .

•'•

::·:·.· :·:·

''•

.····

:·:·

Memlx-rs of the Southeastern
Ohw I ootball Olfic1als AssOCiation arc reqmrcd to meet at Athens on Sundll, Sept. 8, beguuung:
at 12:30 p. m, llle scsslOnwlll be
held at the Athens Country Club.
All area gnd coaches are invited to attend the annual meet-

same pcnod a)carago, with total
sales for the year also up slightly in rigures released bj the Ohio
11'11(.
1
Dl?parlment of llcp.JOr Control
(_ L (I olm) Ecker 1 s presiTotal wholesale sales for the dent of the Jackson Chapter of
month were up 75.47 per cent
the SEOI 0&lt;~.
from $3,635,069 73 a year ago
to $6,378,541 47 for July, 19GB
netall sales were up 26.73 per
cent rrom JUSt over $13 million in July, 1967 to $16,534,430.91 in July, J96R Total sales
for the month were up 37 35 per

Brown May

wllltw ..on

1918

cent to $22,9l2,972.3H .
lmmlgratloa Lctws

OHIO'S NEWEST FAD!

AND

HEATING
Ph- WY 2·2550

.9

29e
Plus Tax
OIL

•

.,.

\'

l'old with a Money Beefi:

I
\

PLUMBING

REGULAR All
GAS CIGARETTES

\

MINI BIKE

Your O.,.ndablo
De•l•r For

There are about 700 dtffer
ent erounds m the Jmnugratton lllws for deporhng or expelling ahens from the Umted
States. accordmg to the Encyc::lopaedJa BrtlannJca

J

triOtS,

ANTHONY
Plumbing-Heating

C&lt;*, CIJ)t
~

CLE\UAND (lPI)- Cleveland teams have not feared well
o"er the )Cars agamst the
Green Ba} Pa&lt;:kcrs, who move
in S8lurda~ mght to meet the
Browns m the se&lt;:ond half of
the annual pre-season double~
header here.
1 he Brcmns ha"e downed the
Packen but three limes 1n regular season pla.,y I he last time
that happened was 1956. Slnec
then Grel!n Bay has rcga l! tercd

Seheduled Sunday

July were up sharply over t h e

'

'

Jinx Saturday

Official• Meeling

July Up Sharply

!

End Green Bay

ecn

Uquor Sales in

fiul the former Miami Amer•&lt;-'&amp;11 I ootblll Lcab'UC club~&gt;
to meet player
s 1gnal caller wuldn't get scrambled
the
team rollmg w pre-. lim•ts.
The New York Giants cut
cxh1bilion games.
offensive guard Bookie Bolin, a
t.dd Jtccci vcr
Broche failed to do much seven-year player, defensJvc
better as san l'rancisco dropped end Je!I Smith and tight end
four of five starts, but Nolan Dock KOiite. The Bu!Ialo BUis
sa1d he moved the team more reached the At L's 40oplayer
cons1stcntly. Nolan bulwarked limit by slashing four players,
Brodie's pass-cat&lt;:hmg brigade Including llliilack Wl'I,Y C&amp;rlton,
as the I ort,y fli incr s acqu1rcd a member of the original 1950
speedster Chfton McNeil from team. Carlton holds the cJub
the Cleveland Browns earlier ground gaining record of 3,368
lh1s week for a lugh draft yards.
McDonald Out
chOI&lt;:e
Ray McDonald, Idaho's cele-Trull became cq&gt;endable wlth
fullback of several
Houston when the 01lers ob- brated
tained Pete Beathard from the seasons ago, Called to last with
Chtefs and was reduced in the Washington Reds kIn s.
stature with Boston after Mtke S1gned for a $70,000 bonus
Taliaferro 1mpressod coach contract 1n 1967, McDonald
M1ke
llolovak
as
starting never 11 ved up to the expectaquarterback material. Taliafer- tions of performing in the
ro was Joe Namath's urxlerstu- Jimmy Brown fashion.
Washington also drq~ped cendy on the New York Jets three
ter Dave Crossan and defenshe
seasons.
Other veterans were dropped back J 1m Burson al'll placed
by the wa} s1de as National and orrens1ve tackle Mitch Johnson
on the uuured waiver list.
Johnson dislocated h1s hip ln
last Thursday's pre- season
game w1th Detroit arxl will be
out eight weeks,
Elsewhere,
the Baltimo~
Colts reduced their roster to 44
as J1m Welch, prtmarUy a
safety man, and defensive tt.ck
George Harold lost their Jobs;
The Philadelphia Eagles placed
defensive end Len Persin on the
UlJUI'Y list, alter he urderwent
surgery for torn ligaments of
the left knee, aoo waived
linebacker Fred Brown. The St.
LOUIS Clrdinals traded rwming
s1x straight w1n.s agamst the back Charley Bryant to the
Browns, mdud1ng a Playoff Atlanta Falcons ror a future
Bowl victory m 1963 aOO the draft choice aOO Karl Noonan
Naoonal ~ ootball League c ham- was named to replace 11\Jured
plonsh.tp contest in 1965.
Jack Clancy at split end with
The last meet1ng between the Miam•
two teams, last )e&amp;r in Milwa~
kee, wa s a d1saster from beginning to end ror the Browns, who
Ree1aim
stumbled to a 55-7 loss.
Erme Green, currently on the
Cleveland InJured hst, scored
the onl} Browns touchdown of Players On Waivers
the game.
The New York Jets arl.i DeCINCINNATI (UPI) l'lul
troit Lions fill the first half of Brown, ooaeh or the Cincimatl
the doubleheader b11l, starting Bengals, hopes the 11 men he
at 6:30 p.m.
placed on waivers will be pus.
Bad news st1ll awa1ts three ed over so he can reclaim them
members or the Browns squad lor bis wd squad.
with the announcement of who
Those placed on wahoers inwlU. depart to trim the noster to clude l~ker John N~
the--r-equired 43. It ls expected
~ctlon u.~~- ­
to &lt;:Om.e duru'lg practice her~ gala' pre-se&amp;.fOR game•. AliUtadl •
tnda,y,
Ted Waohlngton, tigbl end Bill
Peterson, guard Frank R o y,
Oanker Bob Longo, l!lpJit end Ray
Johnson, defensive back J o h n
C\ CLJSTI; KILLED
Guillory,
tight end Midtey McDOUGLAS, Isle of Man (l!PD
Carty,
end
Will Pern, opllt end
- Two motorc,&gt;cle racers were
k1lled m separate crashes Ed McCall and tack!• Bobby Kelly,
Tuesda~ on the opemng da} of
the Manx Grand Prix. Peter
Ray, 22, was k1Jied duruJg the
lightweight e"ent and Roger TWO INJURED
PfOLADELPlllA (UP0 .1 The
Perner, 29, becamt: the secoOO
Philadelphia
Eagles cut their
fatalit) 1n the JUmor race,
roster to 46 players, three above
the player hmit, by placing
The famed Lafayette Esca- rookie defens1vc end Len Persen
drllle consasted of volunteer on the reserve hst and waiving
U S. pilots flying French air· hnebacker rred Brown. Both
planes They accounted for 57 were uuured m Momay• s 22-20
enemy aircraft from 1916 to VICtory O\ler the Boston Pa-

field,

(I Ia,}

Browns Hope To

Friday's Games

m allack~torcbeoberl'OIIIJII""
wltb EddleGup,rls"over,dJJi!e, ·: hiii!JIII
~ IIDd deacf'
~Julie).

wnrl..

""'mrlhin~:

Uy (,AHY KAI.I::
UPI Sports Writer
Geoq..,'O Mtra may have to
play second fiddle, but Hs better
than being in the shoe:; ot
unemployed Don '1 rull.
Mira, reserve quarterback
With the San I ranc1sco I orty~
Nmcrs, lost out to veteran John
Brodie ag~un as coach Dick
Nolan decided to go wath the
man who cngtnccrod a mUhon
dollar contract wath the dub
~&gt;cvcral years ago.
Trull, the top t:ollcgtate
passer at Baylor an J962-63,
never realized h1s full potenUal,
first With llouston and Ulen waUl
Boston. lie was a rescne to
(.;eorge Blanda most of his Oller
career and when sent to the
Patnots played m the shadow of
Babe Paralh.
Nolan, a former defensive
halfback w1Ul the New York
Giants and later on the Dallas
coa(h tn.g staff, gave the 2~year~
old Mira an vpportumty to find
,qold In lhc }orty-Niner back-

MEIGS COUNTY'S ONLY AGENT

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'•· 't''

viii',)'

By MAJOR AMOS B. HOOPLE

-•.
~~

hriving Grafton, the

°

,,

I ,

~
.~.

, t11''I
,.

What does the 1968 season
have in store? Our preliminary
s11rveys, computations, and on·
the-spot in•estigations indicate
that, like upset-laden 1967,
this fall's campaign is well nigh
unpredictable.
However, my dear readers,
consider your good fortune in
ha.,ing available to you the
peerless Hoople System which
compiled · a phenomenal .700
average {300 ¥ i c tori e s, 130
misses) in 1967-har-rumph!
And, consider if you will, this
remarkable record was achieved
while prognosticating only the
top college encountersmatching the best coached, the

; '

.'

:· : :-:-:·:·:·:·: :.:···:·:·:·· · :-:·:·: :·:·:·:·:·:~·-::::::::::::::::::·.
After several years or coaxlng, Major Hoople has agreed
to forecast area high school
football games for the first
time ever. Nobody wanted the
job locally - too much to lose
and nothing to gain - especi·
ally if the home team is picked to lose. The Ole' Boy 'has
received a copy or area sched·
ules, and has been workl.ng on
this week's slate ror over a
month.
Here's how The Major sees
•em Friday night:
Huntington High 46 • Gallipolis 0
Pl. Pleasant 13, Parkers.
burg South 6
Marietta 28, Athens 6
Ceredo-Kenova 27, c 0 a 1
Grove 7
Coshocton 6, Ironton 0
Jackson 54, Oak Hill 0
Logan 6, Morgan 0
MeJgs 33, Waharna 0

Nelsonville-York 26, Warren
Local 12
Wellston 62, Vinton County
8

Eastern 22, Hannan Traee U
Fairland 30, Kyger Creek
12
Southern 16, North Gallia 12
Southwestern 20, Hannan, W.
Va ., 8
· :::·:::~=~=·=·=·=·:·:·:· :· : ·:·:;;.;; :.:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:::::::::::::::::::

\ ·J.· .

'

.;

/'. ' ·''

'

..

ble r~r the armed serylc:eo irhQ
by aome •means have been able

w stay home with their parents
and !amity,
Their parent or ·~nta are

.

most evenly matched 1ndepend~
ent e I evens and those from
the m a j or conferences-urnkumph! .
.
To thiS sparkl•ng record add
the astonishing upsets pegged
for you by the Hoople System
last yeor- H o"' s ton to stun
M1chigan State, Northwestern
to shock powerful Miami (Flo .),
underdog Tennessee to end
Alabama's 25· gome unbeaten
strin to nome just a few.
g, .
, .
In th1s ero. o1 new. po It
1 •cs,
h
d
new leaders 1p, new 1 eos~ your
d
h
correspon ent as no des~re t o
dwell on the post, so on to the
new!

eertalnly able to care for them-

selv8s ttnaftetally,

Egad! A man of lesser intestinal fortitude than this
writer would be tempted to toss

in the towel before the first
kickoH~

However, the mort
challenging the .~ask, the more
appealing it is to a Hoople!

A word of waming to Ohio
State foes: my old ptlpil Wood1
Hayes tells me the freshman
squad was his best ever and
enough of them will matric'u·
late to the varsity to keep the
Buckeyes in the Big Ten title
chase. Ivy Leagurers hod best
keep both eyes on my beloved

The schedulemakers have
outdone themselves this year,
with oil of the major clubs see·
ing action in the first two
weeks against first class appo· Yale- Boolo-Boolo-where the
brilliant Brion Dowling wi_ll
sition .
'
lead
the Bulldogs os coptoin
Houston, the total offense
and quarterback .
leader in '67, opens with resur+
Out in sunnr California, O.J.
gent Tulane and follows with
(Orange
Juice) Simpson is get·
rugged T uas. N.C . State starts
ting
ready
to put the squeeze
with tough Woke Forest and
on
Trojan
opponenh, while
then tangles with traditional
o
personal
assault on
making
ri•ol North Car o I in a, while
the
Heismon
Trophy.
Terry Hanrottr and his friends
at Notre Dome toke on bruisNeither time nor space pering Oklahoma and Purdue's mit me to run down the sched Boilermakers, featuring Leroy ules and merits of the many,
Keyes, on succeeding Satur· many other fine teams that will
days .
thrill you this year.

dom ·while the oilier ones ata.v
home aDd Ollloy their freedom
and wealth?

The Hoople forecasting
Force has been fortunate in
securing the Sel"t'ices of Chet
.Thinkley, the hu~an computer,
this season . ''Think" earned his
human computer appellation

while working ot the NASA
lab in Cleveland. He continu·
oily confQunded his co-workers
with lightning like mental gyrations that solved i n t r i c a t e
mathematical problems foster
than the computers could
crank out the answers. All of
my regular ossistants-Dr. I.
M. lnorbit, Red Board Daily,
and Hannibal Wottabur~ill
be back on dutr.
'
The opening game on the TV
tube matches strong Georgia
and Tennessee. The winner will
be- well, watch this newspaper
for my forecast of the games

of Saturday, Sept. 14.
Custom '• Origin
Rice has always been known
as a symbol of good crops and

a full larder. Legend has it
that pelting a bridal couple
with rice insured their pros·
perity and happiness.

M

Like The
.Amazingly Low
Food Prices At ••••

'

Why must the leai fortunate
boys rtght for the country' s free-

HARD AT WORK

Things Aren't What
They Used to Be ...
BUT SOME THINGS GET BETTER

...

i'

(married and unmarriect) ellgl,

HOOPLE, N.D.--{NEA)-Yes, friends, there is indeed a Hoople, Nort•
Da~ota, a perfectly charming little community of 334 upright, honorable
vir]
" us citizens. Located on the Great Northern Railroad, some 1S mile·
town hip was settled-hok·
k.aH y one of my illustrious
ance,.ton.
, er.'od"1ca 11y, to escape t he
pressures of industry, the hus ~
tie-bustle of Wall Stre:et and
to feel the pulse of the p~ople,
I slip away for o fortnight in
this rustic retreat.
' .
But, !O COin
phrase, all
~~ th1ngs mus! c~me to o.n
en~ . And. the nl~ In the a~r
th1s mom1ng rem1nded me 1t
was time to end this pleasant
sojourn in capti¥oting Hoople
and get about the business of
capturing the elusi¥e collegiate
pigskin winriers.

-·

It hu .,Ju,st oe&lt;!urn4.• to me
there COuld be oth~r young ~

Football's Foremost Forecaster ,

from

1

, . ,.

..

, .

near 01111 ,dear 1(1 hli par-

.

'i.

. ')

hal •:Molg.•
eo, bof Rllled
fn'"'""•
th8 VIet Nam
W'f, ,who waa .. : &amp;li&gt;' ' &lt;h!ld,

Area Grid Battles This Year

·(,;:

OPEN
·SUNDAY'

Is a protenlonaJ or non.prolesolonal peraon IUII-ll_Wng his
obligation w the community or
w the coontry by doing oveeything In his power to stay out
of the servjce?
1 pray God will forgive IllY
bitter leellngs lor I know In
time I will overcome them.
I know also I ean be proud
or m,y brother who was not. a ·
draft-dodger, but a ywng - man
very dedicated to his country
and willing w die lor It and ita
people.
Sincerely,

Rachel M. Sllerldan

Thoughts
Teach me , 0 Lord, the way
of thy statutes; and r will
keep it tv the end.-Psafms

119:33.

• •

•

Upon

our children- how

they are taught-rests the
fate-or fortune--of tomor·
row's world.- B.C. Forbes,
American businesa editor.

10:00
A. I.

TED KWALICK Is called the beolllght end In eollell~te
loolbaU by Penn State coaeh Joe Palerao and tbe Nlltlny
Llono are again etpeeied to dominate lhe eastern crld- ,
Iron ...,ne. Kwallek and his teammate! wiD be deleadlnJ ·· •
the Lambert Trophy, awarded for last ynr's 8-2 1e110D :
reeord.
....,.. r

TIL

ll"abbed Miss Crider's da1181\tlt,
Sabrina, and fied to the

ba!t'

ment.

'

. •

nee.

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Crackers -- lb. box 37c
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$
SCOTT
BIG ROLL

Light Chunk

p

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MAID

MIX OR

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bog ,

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ALTINES

21/2

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32 01, ·

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2o 1 , ,.

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•••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••• ·I••· ...

Prices

---------Plr.ls--]
I

ElhctiYt
Stpt. 5-6-7

AT_ M'PERS

Right
Reserved
to
Umit

Quantities

'

..•...·

:::
..
-:.

DAIRY FOODS ARE GOOD FOR YOU!

ow Best Grade

"~~

Johooon'• Floor Wax

YELLOW ONIONS

Assoited
Flavors

MICHIGAN

CELE'RY
.

'

'

BUTTERMILK
1/2 gal.
carton

1/2 filion

2

'bellS.

._.,,"'

..

.. ,
•

•

I

~~ 29~

3

Healthful Low Calorie

ICE ,CREAM

lib. BOX

·

·

27 01 ,
•••• •••~••••• ·••••• ••••••• can

NEW CROP

AT ltUTLANO

t.
. :~

11 ••· .

•••••••••••••••••••••••• pkg.

•

U.JJ!~~-'~!!tEJJ
RUTLAND I
DEPT. STORE I

Kollogg's

)'

P.M.

and Mlas Crider's · brothii,
JBJDes, 34.
~
On seeing the police, Mltelllll

Pollee oald Mitchell~
mother and uncle.
ly shot Crider in the buetnllll
"I have two bullets left in the ol the hoose during an ar1•·!
gun . .. • I am going to kill her:• ment, then shot Miss Crider
Wlnston Mitchell, 27, scream· In the back ao she tried to
ed at pOllee who surrounded the
hoose in tills New York C I t y Both Miss Crl!ler 01111 h o r
suburb.
brotJler war~ taken to a ~~­
Police had come to arrest Mit- pltal, where their condltinno were
cl&gt;ell in connection with the shoot- reported as saUIICactory,
Ing ~ Mary Ellen Crider, 22,

DEL

;
I

,

.

NEW CASSEL, N. Y, (UP!) -

J

•l

7:00
-

Two· Year-Old in Hostag![. ·
A man took a 2-year.old 81r1
hostage Tuesday nl_.t and barricaded himself In Ute basement
~ a rooming house against po.
lice trying to arrest him for
allegedly shooting the chllcrs

;

GQLDEN

. .,,p,

TINY'S

2 CGmoaiiiiiiAI&lt;aU- to Ml"WJtiU

UiiAUU..0. . -

. 'Ill !POll~ I.

t.'II UP TO 20

ON~ TOT~ fOOD 11U · %

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By MAJOR AMOS B. HOOPLE

-•.
~~

hriving Grafton, the

°

,,

I ,

~
.~.

, t11''I
,.

What does the 1968 season
have in store? Our preliminary
s11rveys, computations, and on·
the-spot in•estigations indicate
that, like upset-laden 1967,
this fall's campaign is well nigh
unpredictable.
However, my dear readers,
consider your good fortune in
ha.,ing available to you the
peerless Hoople System which
compiled · a phenomenal .700
average {300 ¥ i c tori e s, 130
misses) in 1967-har-rumph!
And, consider if you will, this
remarkable record was achieved
while prognosticating only the
top college encountersmatching the best coached, the

; '

.'

:· : :-:-:·:·:·:·: :.:···:·:·:·· · :-:·:·: :·:·:·:·:·:~·-::::::::::::::::::·.
After several years or coaxlng, Major Hoople has agreed
to forecast area high school
football games for the first
time ever. Nobody wanted the
job locally - too much to lose
and nothing to gain - especi·
ally if the home team is picked to lose. The Ole' Boy 'has
received a copy or area sched·
ules, and has been workl.ng on
this week's slate ror over a
month.
Here's how The Major sees
•em Friday night:
Huntington High 46 • Gallipolis 0
Pl. Pleasant 13, Parkers.
burg South 6
Marietta 28, Athens 6
Ceredo-Kenova 27, c 0 a 1
Grove 7
Coshocton 6, Ironton 0
Jackson 54, Oak Hill 0
Logan 6, Morgan 0
MeJgs 33, Waharna 0

Nelsonville-York 26, Warren
Local 12
Wellston 62, Vinton County
8

Eastern 22, Hannan Traee U
Fairland 30, Kyger Creek
12
Southern 16, North Gallia 12
Southwestern 20, Hannan, W.
Va ., 8
· :::·:::~=~=·=·=·=·:·:·:· :· : ·:·:;;.;; :.:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:::::::::::::::::::

\ ·J.· .

'

.;

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'

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ble r~r the armed serylc:eo irhQ
by aome •means have been able

w stay home with their parents
and !amity,
Their parent or ·~nta are

.

most evenly matched 1ndepend~
ent e I evens and those from
the m a j or conferences-urnkumph! .
.
To thiS sparkl•ng record add
the astonishing upsets pegged
for you by the Hoople System
last yeor- H o"' s ton to stun
M1chigan State, Northwestern
to shock powerful Miami (Flo .),
underdog Tennessee to end
Alabama's 25· gome unbeaten
strin to nome just a few.
g, .
, .
In th1s ero. o1 new. po It
1 •cs,
h
d
new leaders 1p, new 1 eos~ your
d
h
correspon ent as no des~re t o
dwell on the post, so on to the
new!

eertalnly able to care for them-

selv8s ttnaftetally,

Egad! A man of lesser intestinal fortitude than this
writer would be tempted to toss

in the towel before the first
kickoH~

However, the mort
challenging the .~ask, the more
appealing it is to a Hoople!

A word of waming to Ohio
State foes: my old ptlpil Wood1
Hayes tells me the freshman
squad was his best ever and
enough of them will matric'u·
late to the varsity to keep the
Buckeyes in the Big Ten title
chase. Ivy Leagurers hod best
keep both eyes on my beloved

The schedulemakers have
outdone themselves this year,
with oil of the major clubs see·
ing action in the first two
weeks against first class appo· Yale- Boolo-Boolo-where the
brilliant Brion Dowling wi_ll
sition .
'
lead
the Bulldogs os coptoin
Houston, the total offense
and quarterback .
leader in '67, opens with resur+
Out in sunnr California, O.J.
gent Tulane and follows with
(Orange
Juice) Simpson is get·
rugged T uas. N.C . State starts
ting
ready
to put the squeeze
with tough Woke Forest and
on
Trojan
opponenh, while
then tangles with traditional
o
personal
assault on
making
ri•ol North Car o I in a, while
the
Heismon
Trophy.
Terry Hanrottr and his friends
at Notre Dome toke on bruisNeither time nor space pering Oklahoma and Purdue's mit me to run down the sched Boilermakers, featuring Leroy ules and merits of the many,
Keyes, on succeeding Satur· many other fine teams that will
days .
thrill you this year.

dom ·while the oilier ones ata.v
home aDd Ollloy their freedom
and wealth?

The Hoople forecasting
Force has been fortunate in
securing the Sel"t'ices of Chet
.Thinkley, the hu~an computer,
this season . ''Think" earned his
human computer appellation

while working ot the NASA
lab in Cleveland. He continu·
oily confQunded his co-workers
with lightning like mental gyrations that solved i n t r i c a t e
mathematical problems foster
than the computers could
crank out the answers. All of
my regular ossistants-Dr. I.
M. lnorbit, Red Board Daily,
and Hannibal Wottabur~ill
be back on dutr.
'
The opening game on the TV
tube matches strong Georgia
and Tennessee. The winner will
be- well, watch this newspaper
for my forecast of the games

of Saturday, Sept. 14.
Custom '• Origin
Rice has always been known
as a symbol of good crops and

a full larder. Legend has it
that pelting a bridal couple
with rice insured their pros·
perity and happiness.

M

Like The
.Amazingly Low
Food Prices At ••••

'

Why must the leai fortunate
boys rtght for the country' s free-

HARD AT WORK

Things Aren't What
They Used to Be ...
BUT SOME THINGS GET BETTER

...

i'

(married and unmarriect) ellgl,

HOOPLE, N.D.--{NEA)-Yes, friends, there is indeed a Hoople, Nort•
Da~ota, a perfectly charming little community of 334 upright, honorable
vir]
" us citizens. Located on the Great Northern Railroad, some 1S mile·
town hip was settled-hok·
k.aH y one of my illustrious
ance,.ton.
, er.'od"1ca 11y, to escape t he
pressures of industry, the hus ~
tie-bustle of Wall Stre:et and
to feel the pulse of the p~ople,
I slip away for o fortnight in
this rustic retreat.
' .
But, !O COin
phrase, all
~~ th1ngs mus! c~me to o.n
en~ . And. the nl~ In the a~r
th1s mom1ng rem1nded me 1t
was time to end this pleasant
sojourn in capti¥oting Hoople
and get about the business of
capturing the elusi¥e collegiate
pigskin winriers.

-·

It hu .,Ju,st oe&lt;!urn4.• to me
there COuld be oth~r young ~

Football's Foremost Forecaster ,

from

1

, . ,.

..

, .

near 01111 ,dear 1(1 hli par-

.

'i.

. ')

hal •:Molg.•
eo, bof Rllled
fn'"'""•
th8 VIet Nam
W'f, ,who waa .. : &amp;li&gt;' ' &lt;h!ld,

Area Grid Battles This Year

·(,;:

OPEN
·SUNDAY'

Is a protenlonaJ or non.prolesolonal peraon IUII-ll_Wng his
obligation w the community or
w the coontry by doing oveeything In his power to stay out
of the servjce?
1 pray God will forgive IllY
bitter leellngs lor I know In
time I will overcome them.
I know also I ean be proud
or m,y brother who was not. a ·
draft-dodger, but a ywng - man
very dedicated to his country
and willing w die lor It and ita
people.
Sincerely,

Rachel M. Sllerldan

Thoughts
Teach me , 0 Lord, the way
of thy statutes; and r will
keep it tv the end.-Psafms

119:33.

• •

•

Upon

our children- how

they are taught-rests the
fate-or fortune--of tomor·
row's world.- B.C. Forbes,
American businesa editor.

10:00
A. I.

TED KWALICK Is called the beolllght end In eollell~te
loolbaU by Penn State coaeh Joe Palerao and tbe Nlltlny
Llono are again etpeeied to dominate lhe eastern crld- ,
Iron ...,ne. Kwallek and his teammate! wiD be deleadlnJ ·· •
the Lambert Trophy, awarded for last ynr's 8-2 1e110D :
reeord.
....,.. r

TIL

ll"abbed Miss Crider's da1181\tlt,
Sabrina, and fied to the

ba!t'

ment.

'

. •

nee.

Support
.Your
·High

ORANGE JUICE
6 oz.
CAN

MATCH!

BEANS
CORN, whole or cream s~le
PEAS
MIXED YEGETABLES
303
cans

Sunshine Hydrox
Cookies - 2 lb. pke. 99c
Nabisco Premium
Crackers -- lb. box 37c
Strietmann Honey
Grahams - - -lb. bx. 39c

...

·fLOUR ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
TUNA••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
PRES ERyES.......................
NESTEA
POP TAR's
GLO COAl
Z01too Strawberry

Heotlo's Lemon

PEANUT
BUTTER

J,OWElS

25 lb.

Gold Modal All Purpo••

·

~··

30!' all

$
SCOTT
BIG ROLL

Light Chunk

p

MINUTE
MAID

MIX OR

Sale I

bog ,

'

ALTINES

21/2

··~

2·

·

.,
;
•

32 01, ·

~

I

2o 1 , ,.

t

•••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••• ·I••· ...

Prices

---------Plr.ls--]
I

ElhctiYt
Stpt. 5-6-7

AT_ M'PERS

Right
Reserved
to
Umit

Quantities

'

..•...·

:::
..
-:.

DAIRY FOODS ARE GOOD FOR YOU!

ow Best Grade

"~~

Johooon'• Floor Wax

YELLOW ONIONS

Assoited
Flavors

MICHIGAN

CELE'RY
.

'

'

BUTTERMILK
1/2 gal.
carton

1/2 filion

2

'bellS.

._.,,"'

..

.. ,
•

•

I

~~ 29~

3

Healthful Low Calorie

ICE ,CREAM

lib. BOX

·

·

27 01 ,
•••• •••~••••• ·••••• ••••••• can

NEW CROP

AT ltUTLANO

t.
. :~

11 ••· .

•••••••••••••••••••••••• pkg.

•

U.JJ!~~-'~!!tEJJ
RUTLAND I
DEPT. STORE I

Kollogg's

)'

P.M.

and Mlas Crider's · brothii,
JBJDes, 34.
~
On seeing the police, Mltelllll

Pollee oald Mitchell~
mother and uncle.
ly shot Crider in the buetnllll
"I have two bullets left in the ol the hoose during an ar1•·!
gun . .. • I am going to kill her:• ment, then shot Miss Crider
Wlnston Mitchell, 27, scream· In the back ao she tried to
ed at pOllee who surrounded the
hoose in tills New York C I t y Both Miss Crl!ler 01111 h o r
suburb.
brotJler war~ taken to a ~~­
Police had come to arrest Mit- pltal, where their condltinno were
cl&gt;ell in connection with the shoot- reported as saUIICactory,
Ing ~ Mary Ellen Crider, 22,

DEL

;
I

,

.

NEW CASSEL, N. Y, (UP!) -

J

•l

7:00
-

Two· Year-Old in Hostag![. ·
A man took a 2-year.old 81r1
hostage Tuesday nl_.t and barricaded himself In Ute basement
~ a rooming house against po.
lice trying to arrest him for
allegedly shooting the chllcrs

;

GQLDEN

. .,,p,

TINY'S

2 CGmoaiiiiiiAI&lt;aU- to Ml"WJtiU

UiiAUU..0. . -

. 'Ill !POll~ I.

t.'II UP TO 20

ON~ TOT~ fOOD 11U · %

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WiNC.HESTEI ·Ot PETERS
BOX ONLY ..

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COSTUME JEWELRY, RADIOS, WALKIE .TALKIES,
RECORD PLAYERS, TYPEWRITERS, TV., WATCHES, .
CAMERAS, TAPE RECORDERS, ·TAPES
AND MANY NEW ITEMS

•
·;:;
~

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.

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WE HAVE A NICE
. SELECTION OF
ALLUM. STORM
DOORS .WITH SCREENS

.

10.00

OPEN SUNDAY
10 TIL 7
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WOODBURY
SHAMPOO

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ICE CREAM FRE
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Aladdin
thermos Bottles

6

Sl.

qt.

Pint
Size

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COSTUME JEWELRY
ROSS·
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NECKLACES &amp; EARRING .
SETS

ONLY

. ,;t"'
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CHILDREN'S CRAFT.

'~:.

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WALKIE TALKI·ES

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AND KEY RINGS

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,-

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'

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'

COSTUME JEWELRY, RADIOS, WALKIE .TALKIES,
RECORD PLAYERS, TYPEWRITERS, TV., WATCHES, .
CAMERAS, TAPE RECORDERS, ·TAPES
AND MANY NEW ITEMS

•
·;:;
~

,.,..,,.
.

. .' ..
,

-. ~~
.- ~
- -'!II P,~~

:,. ....... A ./.

"

ASST.

i.

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INDPROO
CIGARETTE
LIGHTERS

1'

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fr-·;o;.
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BILLFOLD S'ETS ·

CIS

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~

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- -- ...........--

-~~

WE HAVE A NICE
. SELECTION OF
ALLUM. STORM
DOORS .WITH SCREENS

.

10.00

OPEN SUNDAY
10 TIL 7
\

.

..
.

.

'

'
I

'

'

.

'

WOODBURY
SHAMPOO

'

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ICE CREAM FRE
:I

·..

Aladdin
thermos Bottles

6

Sl.

qt.

Pint
Size

.'
'

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COSTUME JEWELRY
ROSS·
I
NECKLACES &amp; EARRING .
SETS

ONLY

. ,;t"'
J
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CHILDREN'S CRAFT.

'~:.

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SETS

WALKIE TALKI·ES

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(t'OIIIinnod rrom l'ag&lt; 0
c.·asting ionigbt, informed· sourcea reported, aoo a probable teature
wilt be I r«iPort so the naUoo by P,rime Minister Oldrich Cernik on
tt.e government's efforts to come to terms with ·OCCll)ing forces.
Cernik's report to chizens who once demanded boiilterously to
Marvin w. McGUin, Jr., 12,
know "the truth" about Soviet requirements but have since quieted Rt 4, Pomeroy, died In Chiltheir public outcry would come exactlY two weeks aft:cr the Soviet· dren's Hospital, Columbus TUeslet CX"cupat?on.
day,
He was a stratgtrt A student
WINDS ESTIMATED AT 90 MILES AN HOUR slammed Wichita, at Braclmry elementary school
Kan., during the night while the city was collecti~ more than 11,2 and a Salvation Soldier In the
inches of rain during a six·hour period. The Wichita rain was part Salvation Army.
of widespread shoWer and thunderstorm system that deluged the cenHe is survived by his partral part of the 111tion.
ents, Marvin W. ud BettY Irene
In the Rockle11 harbingers of winter came In the form of snow Young McGuire, Sr., and these
llld Crost. More than an inch of rain fell during a six..hour period on brothers and sisters, Lyme, Tera
Eau Claire, Wis., Mason City, l«M"a, and McComb, Miss. Within a ry, Recka, and Ragena, all at
three-hour period, St Joseph, Mo., reported more than an inch of home; Cheryl Morris, Reynoldsrain.
burg; Connie Hudi!OII, Cleveland;
Patsy Rande, Columbus; RicbCOLUMBUS - CARL GUESS, WHO WANTED to be a baseball ard McGuire, North Garollna;
pitcher but fount tllat career cut short with arm trouble, will retire Howard Searles, Pomeroy, aod
in January after 34 years as clerk of the Ohio House of Representa- by hts grandmother, Katie Young,
tives.
Minersville.
Guess began hh career in politics in carroll County, ard, in 192H,
He was preceded in death by
was elected to the first of two four-year terms as cOWlty commis- a sister, Malena McGuire.
sioner. He followed that with four terms as a state representative
Funeral sei"Vices will be held
but resigned in 1936 to become house clerk.
Saturday at 1 p.m. at Ewing
Funeral Home. The Rev. RabSEOUL - SOUTH KOREA'S LARGEST newspaper said toda.y in• and Ray Wining will olflclsome progress is expected soon in negotiations to free the U. S. in- ate. Burial will be in Pine Grove
'telligence ship Pueblo and its 82 crewmen held by Communist North Cemetery. Friends may call anyVietnam. The ne~spaper Dong..a llbo said the United States made a time.
"tlexible proposal on how to apologize to North Korea" for the Pueblo incident in a meeting at the truce village of Parunun.iom Aug. 28.
"The result of the next session between the United States aOO
North Korea J11lY lead to release of ttte Pueblo crew," the newsCall Answered
paper said.
The Middlll)ort emergency
CHICAGO - MAYOR RICHARD J, DALEY, DISPLEASED with squad reported answering a call
television coverage of violence during the Democratic National Con- to lhe Owen Fink residence at
vention, wants to use the same medium to respoOO to criticism of Cheshire Route 2 at 11:28 p. m.
police actions against antiwar demonstrators.
Tuesday. The 16-year·old son or
Daley said at a one-minute news conference Tuesda.y he had Mr. and Mrs. Fink was iU and
asked the three major television networks Cor one hour or prime was taken to Holzer Hospital
time Sept. 11 or 12 "for the purpose of balancing the one-sided por~ where he was admitted Cor medtrayal of lhe controversial events that were telecast" during last ical treatment, squadmen said.
week's Democratic convention.

'

Dies Tuesday

,,'
I

,,

'
P;ro-be

'R

-

.

'

then
MOO-··
Allll?"l!h cold,...theriiiiiiiiiU'
d!U'' Scatleredah!"'eraThur..
bo BeVeral wj!ek8 awa,y 0 1'01110-

es· u'm·es

dll)' or Frld&amp;J and again about
Mondly, e:Q&gt;Ocled to overoge
one-l~alt;lnch or mOre. '·

Chief o~ Police ~Ohn Taylor rePorted. today that b~s stol~· :::::::;::::::~!&gt;.::;:::::::::::::=::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::-.:x:...:
approxlmatsly $16,000, Including throe $5,000 u. ·s. goverl'lilenl
BAlKE ACQUli'TED·
savings bonds and three .22 callber·guno over the Lebo&lt; Doy woiekCINCINNATI ' (UP!) - Com·
end holiday at the hmle of Alfred GabrleUi and Mrs. Giis Gabrielli 'nion Plioli Judge William· R.
at 740 Second Avo., Gallipolis.
. Malthews TUO!Idv a"''li¥· doIn addition to thethreegover~&gt;Chief Ta,ylor nld entry was . sepb R. Ralke, 26, of second •
ment bonds, the burJiors took a,- mode throogh the back door of degree murder In the Mil)' 25 fa,
proximately $7Uin cash includ- the boose. ,The burglorsransack- tal ehoolln&amp; ~ Robert Houoer
ing $560 in currency alld $1871n ed tlie entire hooao, according to Jr., 29, at a noolaur!lnl- Ralke
""'cia! bills.
Chief Ta,ylor.
· oo11te1- a plllol /!lschar&amp;ed
The looters also took two . 22
accidentally aftl!rlloooerhlthlm.
callberrevolversandone.22callber rille. In their haste, bowever, the burglars missed approJdmatoly $1,019 which they left in
the house.

,
The breaking and entering OC·
curred while the Doml]y w•• gone
over tile holiday. Jt was r~orted
at I "- m. TUeoday when they returned hom._ They had been gone

Leave

!rom theBureauorCrimlnalldentiflcatlon and Jnves~-tion,
"~"""
~·
don, Ohio, arrived in Gallipolis
Tuesday morning to assist police
in their investigation.

Police Officers in
Special Training
Two Pomeroy police omcen
are attending a three-day train-

ing course in Columbus and another Is participating In the 120hour pollee school at Logan,
Chief Jed Webster said todo,y,
Richard Dal'is and L. B,
Vaughan arc taking a breath analyzer course, offered by the
Ohio Slate Patrol, In Columbus
and Officer Carl Hysell is enrolled in the pollee training

LOCAL TEMPS
Tho temperature in do!ntlowll
Pomeroy tt 11 L rn. Wadnesdly
under
...., s'"-s
~ was 72 •grees.

•anted

£'
'-7-.

clo·~

Mrs J

ftCObs

•

.
A leave of absence untll next
January I, was granted, MilJacobs, malroo ol the county

s~~=.::~~O PHe'::;y~stlgator ol""':"!.~. thloneMofga ~board

by Mort Reed

'
Nhr.·on
.
~
(Continued rrom- i)
•-

=:::: .::dac~~~es

: : : ; 1:-:!o

order and. a white backlash.

The Pomeroy emergency squad
answered a &lt;.: a'\1 to 1760 Chester
Road Tuesday ·1 ev~ning. Louise
Partlow who had become unexpectedly 1ll was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital where
she was admitted for medical
treatment.

wt

Don't Be a Loser

I won't bore you with dry,
arithmetica1 procedures to
prove my point, but anyone
contemplating counterfeiting
as a hedge against inflation
should forget it, With the
Treasury Department's bat·
ling average in apprehensions
and convictions, such an endeavor is about as practical as
11)'1ng to catch a speeding bul·
let in your teeth.
_ Counterfeiting is fighting a
losing battle against modern
methods of detection, but it is
one bot likely to be eradicated
completely with our present
system of circulating cur·
rency.
Each year the Amerlcan
people are victimized by
passers of forged government
checks and counterfeit money ,
which usuaUy results in a fi·
nancial loss to the person rec e i vi n g them. Storekeepers
and cashiers who fail to examine money carefully or who
cash checks without asking
for proper identification from
tbe holder are inviting their
own losses .
Only with the public's cooperation, together with the
aid of our many fine police
departments. can the U.S.
Secret Service hope to eventually eliminate the crime of
c ounterfeiting .
If you are one of those who
can't be bothered or rind it in·
convenient to exercise caution

while participating in a cash
transaction, try this on for
slzt, If you don't. you can be·
come innocently involved in
an embarrassing sit ua'Uon
!bat could take ils toll in prestige ao well as cash. The !pilowing may cause you to
change your mind :
To counterfeit coins. paper
currency , postal money orders, postage stamps, revenue
stamps, bonds, securities or

·HUGIIFS NOMINATED
ne.-odc Gav. Harold Huglloa ~ Iowa boa been nomina1811
far the seat being vaCIIId b7 ~llean Bourke B.
the 71~oar.,.d
""'"" IIIIo II retiring 11 the
1111141( the ..... reat ........

lllf:bDI-·

other obligations of the United
States is to manufacture or reproduce these obligations with
intent to defraud and consti·
tutes a federal offense.
Possessing or passing a
counterfeit obligation is equally unlawful and the making,
possessing or passing can result in fines up to $5,000 and

15 year's imprisonment.
For the same offense with
minor coinage, such as cents
and nickels, the fine can go as
high as $1,000 and three years
in prison, Slugs, tokens and
other objects intended to be
used as money in pay phones,
coin-operated vending machines, parking meters and
turnstiles can bring a fine of
$1,000 and one year in jail.
Forgery of government
checks or bonds can result in
fines up to 11,000 and imprisonment for 10 years.
I might add there are penalties and imprisonment pro·
vided for anyone withholding
knowledge of the making, pos·
sessing or passing of counterfeit currency or slugs, tokens
or other objects intended to be
used as money .
There is a difference be·
tween reproductions of federal
obligations for the purposes
mentioned and the reproduction of the same obligations
for legal purposes, prpvided
the latter are Jll&amp;de and used
within the guidelines set forth
by the Treasury Department
Printed reproductlo"' ol paper curreocy, checks, bonds,
revenue stamps and securities
of the United States and foreign governments are permis·
sible only for numismatic. educational, historical and newsworthy purposes,
However, there are two important restrictions that must
be observed before putting
. these reproductions into print:
II) They must be reproduced

in black and white; 12) they
must be of a size Jess than
three..fourths or more than one
and one-half times the size of
the original instrument and all
illustrations must appear in
articles, books, journals.
newspapers, magazines or al·
bums and no individual fac similes of such obligations are
permitted.
Plates and negatives, inp
eluding glossy prints, of all
paper currency and other obligations, must be destroyed
after final use, with the ex·
ception of coins. Photographs
or printed illustrations of any
United States or foreign coin
may be used for any purpose,
including advertising.
Now all this may sound like
a lot of legal chatter, but if
you read it you will become
informed, and "an informed
public is alert to the forces of
crime" (from an original
quote by James J , Rowley.
director of the U ,S, Secret
Service) .
While it is possible to accidentally stray be y o n d the
guidelines provided for the
control of government obliga·
tions , it is also possible to rectify your mistake by destroymg the illegal material and
starling over. Counterfeiting
in any form or for any reason
is inexcusable.
In the word• of the late Rob·
ert H. Jackson, an associate
justice of the United States
Supreme Court and former as·
sistant general cow,sel of the
U.S, Treasury:
·•counterfeiting is an offense never committed by ac·
cklenl nor ignorance, nor in
the heat of passion, nor the
extremity of poverty_ II Is a
crime expertly designed,' by
one who possesses technical
skill and lays out substantial
sums for equipment"

Bernice C. Nicholson, 77, RD1,
Rutland, died this morning in
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
She is sunived by her husband, Marion; four sons and a
daughter. Funeral services will
be announced by Martin Funera1
Home,

*""

JET SETTER, bul llle'U
lrovel

of ftnt eloal;

Ia fit,, ....u .. rtUUtltt&amp;
lbe ....... Turld ww.....
30, of Nonroy ....... It·
eepted

bJ Suadl.. ~l . .

Alrlla01 Syotem u a

PRINCIPAL BURIED
MARYSVILLE, Ohio (UP0 Charlea E. Brobeck, t5, Moryaville Junior lll8h School principal, was burled here loda,y _
A natiYe of Richwood, Brobeck
died Mooday.
ENDORSE GILUGAN
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The United Electrical, Radio and Machine
Workers ol American Dlotrlct
Cooncll 7, haYing members at
Cleveland, Cooneaut, Niles, D!IY(00, St. Marya, Yellow Sprlnga
and
has WI8JIImoualy
endorsed Jolm J. GUIIpn, Dernocrallc nominee for the U. S.
Slrlate-

-•ky,

NEW LINK INSf ALL ED
CLEVELAND (UP!) - T h e
Cleveland Electric Olumlnating
Co, Put Into oervlco TUeoday a
345,000 - volt power line linkIng cEra Juniper sublllallon In
Waltoo Hilla with ~ Ohio F.dlsoo eo. Star subotallon near
Wadsworth. It wat a protectiYe
move ln case of an emexgeney.

'

Seall\I")WWd~plpe

)hOlr.'~nient

~

ol

:lll•onwayanthdetherp~orctessboUqflcodmbe- :=."7~. 91~~;~1:30.

th:

LongBOttom, 12:13al:15

til:

inspected·tegularl,y."
Chief Werr:v sugpsted the following check Ust to usure JJ.Bfe,
etrlclent operation ol home heat~ equJpment:
.,
_ Be ceriain the beater is
vented to a good chlnmey.

.
POrtland, 1:3p.,2i15
Great Bend, 2:304
AppJe Grove, 3:15..3:t5·
AntlCJ(i\Y, f-t:30
Racine Bank, 4:45.-6:30
~racuse P. 0., 6:t5--8:15

Gov. ~fro Agnew- Tho GQP
vice presidential candidate ilet
aside campaign activity Tuelldly to work on state busineJB at ·
his office In Annapolts, Md.
Agnew was leavi~W iodly for a
thnoe-day swing throuah WIscon sin, l..,a, Pennsylvania and
New Jersey.
,.
Sen. Eugene J, McCirthyThe Mirmesota Democrat askecl\
his supporters in Iowa Tuesday
to withdraw his name as 1
foorth , party candidate In the
November election. But Mccarthy, defeated by H~hrey
for the Democratic presld.entlal
nomination,
len &lt;11&gt;0n lhe
possibility that the might leeye
his name on d)e balJot in other
states if It woold help antiwar
c1ndidates for the House and
Senate. Friday was the deadilno
for withdrawal In I'""'-

,,,
•WED. &amp; THURS.

Ml11 W

trn

reportedly II
womu 1o .. ..,.

eepted for -~ trllalq loy
a major -'rllao.

''

SEPT. 4 &amp; 5

Geolf&amp;pble Ceater
Tbe geographical center of
the United States lncludinK

Alaska and Hawaii, lain Butte

County, S.D., 17 miles welt
of Castle Rock and 14 miles
east of the junction of lbe
borders of South Daltola, Montana and Wyoming.

OPEN
10-11 M, T, W, TH,
TIL 11,30 ftl. &amp; Sot.
12-11 Svnday

DAIRY ISLE.
Middleport·

4th &amp; Locust
i

nAI$.:'
&gt; •\ '

RED

••

22.95

5 UllOUICIIlT _. _, _ 5
' ...

s6.so

CIET .. .. ......

I,LUMINUM WITH Fa- .

'

~

'•

::LON IUCKET -····
ILUMINUM-1Jfl ~~·

S4.35

&amp;11101 IUCIET •_.... _.

$~1.51,
. - ·.
$.1: ,, . , ,.:s··, .

5 ~, , IU~lT : ·-.·

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IUTLIID ILICl ROOF
•

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PIClEIS IUCl ROOF
OOIJIII .. .:..... ........... . ... .

'

Chloe Freeman;

F~e

Jeffers,

. ,.,

I.UL lOCKET

5

9 S/

,,

0111 SPECIAL UTILRY
t
111
PAINT For ,wood. metal or floors. Try if1.ow! ..-...'_---.•·• ....~ .·.

·.·

·f-9J

'

..,ce School to principal at Beoch
School; Mro. F, F. Earl, Waha· Hill SchoOl to replace Estel Lew·
rna Jr. and Sr. High, and F. F. ts_ ·w.ho did not report tor work
E;arl, PL Pleasant High SchOOl. on August 26; Harley Clcul ·from
Substitute teachers hired were 1ubstitute teacher... to re~
Clara G. Mohr and ~, R. Schur- t.Pchei' it OrdMne, school;
Maudellen Henry from iub.11titute
ma11teacher to regular teaeher at
Teachers trlnsfi!rred were North Point Pleasant.Eteulentai-y
MarioP Sayre, from substitute . lc~ool; .
teacher to regular teacher at f.t,. , ·School secretartes·J:!.lred we;e
Pleasant Jr. High, tO replace Beo- Nancy. Fields, Hartford elementJalnln franklin IV, who did not .ary, and .Ora Mae Hunt, ML Fl..,acknowledge 11!1Polnment; Lydia er School
Sanders from teacher at 01'6=
Tille I ESEA teacher aides empiDyod were Judy Ann stover, SUIP
nystde elementary; Charlotte K13
eoon, Mason elemeiXary; Ruth
Wllllamooo, ·Beech IIlli.
Ti-anster ESEA TiUeiteach-'
er aide: Clari~ Je8n Wallace
traosferred ·from teacl;ler aide to
school secretary at Ma'son alementary; H01¥atd Cole, Special
Educatton teacher was placed al
Columbia, treapasaing properlY Central School,andMaqFrances
Ward was transferred as ESEA
cA. Ralph Warner.
The grand jurors were excused Title I teacher aide Crom Beech
after their worll on Tuesda.V 1 sub- Hill to North Point Plea,.nt.
Mrs. Katheryn King, register·
ject tO recall any Ume their
eel
nurse, was employed as psy111ervices are deemed necessary
chiatric
aide tns_tructor aide inby the prosecuting attorney or
structor
at $4 per hour lnd Mrs.
the court.
Lorene
J.
~,licensedprac-On roll call of the grand Jur:v
Tueoday 9,30 a, m. It was loond tical nurse, was named assistant
that five jurors were absent. at ·$Z,75 per hoor,
Teachers reslgnatlOOB acceptJudge James Lee 'IhoD1pson ap~
pointed spectal jury oommtoslon- ed by the board were: Wayne
ers, Josephine Hane$ and Clara Bergdoll, Wahama Jr. and Sr.
lee Gault, to nu the ncandea. High School; Golda Lerner, New
New jurors namedwerepeWayne Haven Schoo]; Freda Henderson,
ClatworiiiY, William Rardin Jr., Pt Pleasant High School; Estel
Fay Pancake, Vlrg!nlaVolghtand Lewis, Beech Hill principal, and
Ama Frances Handley wbo re.. John Cogars, band director at
placed Mar:v lollflllaff, J. w. Hannan.
COok, Jr., Walter D. Ridenour, , School secretaries resigning
Jr., JIU' E. Stone and Sarah z. were Maxine Keefer, Mt. Flower
school and Irma Dodson, HartFoster,
Other jurors were Art E. Hart- ford. Patrie Clatworthy resigned
ley, foreman, Mrs. George Mc- as teacher - aide at North Pt.,
Causland, Okey L. Keefer, Ray Pleasant elementary.
Virgil Burris, Jr. was named
Boston, Dooald F. Roush, Hershel Slank, Donald sturseon, assistant football coach, head
track coa&lt;:h and Jr. High basketMary Allee Morrl1011, Albert stephens, Mary M, Mowery andPlrl ball coach at Wahama Jr. and Sr.
High School with a $50 per month
L. Burris.
ste:~plem ent granted, and Donald
,,
'
Upton was named a!lsllltant varalty basketball ard head golf
coach at Wahama Jr. and Sr. High
with a $50 per montll supplement
abo.
Board member Dr. Leonard
on Saturday. On li\mdajrtheywere
and G. A. Biggs, repreBrown
the guesta of Rev, and Mra. wusenting the proposed Pt. Pleas..
Uam Rodahaver of Alverton, Pa,
ant Cultural - l~reation Center
Mr. and Mrs, William Rus- committee, had a heated discusoall and 110118, David, Brian and
Dwaln dtllii&lt;ihed ' reteiltly ~~ sion when the matter or 1he etJmmlttee requesting 'permission to
Martha's Vineyard, Mass.
use a section of Ordnance School
Mr. and Mrs. EdwlnStelnwere
property
as the site for the conin New York recently 011 buslstruction of tile center Will
ness. They also visited Mr. and
Mrs, Philip Wolpert at Fanwood, brought to the attention of the
board.
N, J.
Dr. Brown· opposed the sctlool
Phil Cooke was a recent guest
board
and the city entering an
o1 a fraternity brother, David
agreement
to use the school
Phillips at Ocean City, N. J.
grounds as site of the new center,
Mr. and Mrs. Garland GoodWin,
Glouster Point, Va. are visiting
here with Dr. R. F . Bryant. Mrs,
R. F . Bryant romalns quite Ill
in Holzer Hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Pomeroy
and children have returned to
the borne ol hor parenlo, Mr,
and Mrs. Donald F. Rouoh, atter haYing visited hlo parents
In Pennaylvanla. They will return to their home at Alb"""'rPT. PLEASANT ·_ •A $14, q.~e, New Mexico.
576.67,
clvll action w&amp;i l!led In
Mark Grlnstood, soo of Mr.
the
office
. ol the clrcult' clerk
and Mra. Foster Grlnstaad, has
Saturday
as
the apparent resul*
entered West VIrginia Tech,
or
an
automobile
acddent on
MmfJIOD&gt;ery, w. va. as a rreahApril
13,
1968
on
•
Mal Maman. Hewlllbemajoringlndrafl·
son
CouiJIY
road,
'
lni and 4ellsnlnll.
.
styled
Laddie
The
acllon
io
SfG 2 and Mrs. Terr:v !WI
and daUghter ol Newp&gt;rt, R. !, H. Siders, Violet Marie Sidon,
vlllled jtere with her parlllls, and Violet Marie Siders, next
Mr, and Mr'a. Eugene Humall, · ol friend for Lad!llo H. Siders,
Miss Ethel Riddle ~ llarrls- Jr., an infant, vs. James R.
bur&amp; Pa • .vtllted hOfO rocontiY and Doma Finley, Chesapeake,
Ob!o.
with Rav. Mrs. At~nh Miller.
The bill
complaint staled
Mr. and Mrs. Henry H. Buck,
that
James
Finley,
negligenUy
Jr,, Si181! and Margarot Am
end
unlawiUUy
drove
a Jee p
have nimed from their ~M~me m
truck
against
a
station
wagoo
lla..o He11!hti to Ssllsbury, N.
operotd
by
Laddie
,
H.
Sldera
C., wltere Mr. Buck Is emjiQyInjuring tho ·plalniii!S BeVerocy
and permailenti.Y. The plalntll!o
Zapoed.The .RlnCllll ~lalect
judgement ~~~ t.J&gt;
tee Is spokelt by some 12,0110 aaked
I
n
tho aJII!lWil of $1{,llldlans In the northern part
576.67.
of~. llieldco. ·
'

J;,, and Sr. H\ilh

oi

New Haven Social Events
Gard"'

r'
.d ~-~" ."~"'
. , en,
Clubat
... ~ ~
"
· , ;#MI bome~ ltfl. W. !OF; Stone
·\tth Mrl.' ~ames MacKftlght and
lira. N. 0, Weln aa co-hostess81- Tito 'meeting was opened by
tbe prelideut, Mrs. Patrick Rll·
«1'- The roll call ,.., anowered

. wlth .. Give one rule for good
el~ maDners•.,

Mrs. Rq Prollllt o-ed oololldeo of the blue and red
tlbbon winners flower arranga.
~. ~the recent Dower show.
.~ dlocussed the report and
&gt;,orttlclsms ol the judges of the
· .ltmr. Plana were discussed ccn1~. tho Club'a Cltrlstmas
f&amp;Zaar and !h&gt;w to be held
-~ lirot part ol Decamber.
:11Jooe ~ were Mrs. L.
JIOUIII, !rrs. Ra:Y Pro1fitt,
;
~Jir•- Fred Batey, Mro. William
£ldaler, Mrs. Lee Gibbs, Mrs.
'jluotd JoJmBOD, Mrs. H a r r y
Mra. J. V_ McGrew, Mrs.
OI!Unpr, Min Lelah J.
, Mrl. Patrldr.RUey, Mrs.
Roulh, Mrs. LloydJIOU&amp;h, ,
ilftL D. A, Smith, &amp;Uesta MrL
·~ JamesandclaughiMr, JehIQo, aiep,.. Barrlngar and the
li0otell8s.
,
• , . . HOlliS CORN ROAST
' Tile llllfBr1 Cllil be!d a com
'·. Jaul a( lhli picnic lite allllo
, ~ Mr. E4wln 'Steln. Those

9J'tCI

RUTLAND ROOF PAINT TIME

COlTill&amp;

Felony tndlctments were returned against Joseph M. Trippelt, Aohton, charging lelonlouo
OIU)' of the properlY of R a y
Crooklwn; Mary Jane Trippett,
Aohlon, felonious entry of I h e
properlY of Rllj'Crookham;Fred·
erick Mourning, Ashton, felooloua Ollt&lt;Y of houoe ofl\a:Y Crookham; Leiter Larry Rlftle, ·Map
1100, felonious entry ol properey

t
. o

IT'S •••

•••

m., fin felonies and four mls-

demeanon.

Nf;W HAVEN GARDEN CLUB

-----------------------·--·--·
, McCLURES

(Continued from 0
antiquated and un-democratic.
"There is grave doubt as to
whether they rt~tresent public
opinion, and there Ia wideepread
lack or confidence in their ablli..
ty to make the decisions ao erg..
cial to the More or America,"
he nid.

~m:

turned alnetruebllls TUeoday 5p,

BY MRS. CARROLL ADAMS, JR.

"

MUST IE GOOD WE'VE SOLD RUTLAND PA'NT FoR 30
MARRIAGE APPLICATION
Robert Lee Reeves, 18, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, Krogei' checker. Uld
Sheila Ann Cowan, 16, Middl,;.
port, studenL

PT. •J'LEASANT - The grand
jury of the September tern! of
!dason County Clrcult Court re-

.:.•

ll

'

Berinett, Wahania

9 True .Indictments '

5brlmpUn; Herman Lee Bolea,
Pl. Pleaoanl, encaplng from the
Maoon , eounzy jail; Helen wu.
oon, Mason, contributing to 4eUnqueney of minors by oelling
non4ntoxicating beer to oald minors, and HarOld R. Ruasell, West

.
1

4, 1968

·Grand JUry·BringS 1n
.

Phelps, PomllO)", Ohio, a•sault
an4 ballel'f upon one Dixie Lee

lrllaee ld~~or llllllc jell.

lbe

or

West C&lt;!l~ felonlouoaosaull
... ooe P4ullne Hsll.
Misdemeanor
lndlctmenta
nre returned agalnot Wylie L.

ONLY ...

q., . Sept.

'

By MAXINE WALTERs ,
PT,' PLEASANT - The regular session or the Mason COUnty
Board Education .s~heduled for
7,30 p, m. TUeodll)' got lmderwll)'
at 8:45 p. m. due to a lack of quoram until boonl memberTedStevens aFttved at that time. 1.
, ~rlor .fo Stevena' atrivil only
two .board members, Dr,~
Brown and . ~arry ~lder,s, ,Ore
pre.eQt. Absent were niembers
Bill Howard and Earl Keefer.
Teachers employed dur'lflll the
late oesslon were Wllilam M.

~

Politics ·
Rutland is Dead

with CIJI II) the chlmrte¥

W=~~·~:~ . ~;(;!i&lt;i~~~&lt;l':';l:l'f''~@.::X';:&lt;*1m&lt;'.~&gt;.ll':l1mt&lt;mlml&gt;.ll':l1mf&lt;~l8!!l...~·

veterans seniee o«icer, Glenn
Johnson; paid two animal claims,
and transferred $50 from the
Soldiers and Ssllors Relief Commis.l im Memorlal Day expenaea
tund to ~~other expenses.''

Taken to Hospital

enlng

If .there Ia a c l· - 1\li-

roy Fire Chief Henry J. Wwrt ialder the vent pipe, .be """'
...... , ur-' aroa, reoldenl
_1 to the vent Is clear of ~rio.
-oov
•rmalte
,thel•
amual
l!llf!Q' ~hock
- Be sure the thltM~ Is
of home heating e(J!Jpment now. elean. :Blow smoke lntoth8 cl8an..
, , "c:OinJ&gt;Otent lnepeetlnil of,lllr- out,,~ to mak, ,1111re It 'II
na~i, Wiitar ·healers, lnclner- drawllig.
.,
ators and room lieatera a)lollld , - Be ou~ the v*rt pipe ave• ·
1)01 be
~." Chle!. Werry up, not ..... frorO,the heaiOr' to
nld. "Piumbetl andhealln!!con- the c~.
, ,
tractoro oormslly are bullest
- Uoe a nfe!Y lhlmbiJtok-.p
when the Orst '·cold wHther hits, , the pipe from &amp;1!11)8 toom ·hlto
and lonri dangerous d!li.r• could the chimneY.
face Uiose 1lbo walt to have With -ent Or !1iaJ!ter where-It
Inspected and en!Airt·the cbbnn«Y. : ' ·
neceasary repair• nW!e.
- Diin't uao a c:oOklng r ' !'MallY ho""! heating prol&gt;- forroom 'h eatlni. ,
,
·,
lema can be prevented by check_ Have a 1111;ua.., .,.;.~Pt\.ln, ..;.. ......~ .... --..a
1
'
~ ~: ") ,,,
"'"
,.....,,.
"-pm""
or
prop'
·
otal!
iny
heatlni
er. ldia~ent, proper . ventll&amp;. :make necesoarj ad)lstioWill!;Dr
Ullll, . silo coiolectlons and propL;
"" oporatioo
nf~ shut •
of! device•... he ad4ad; "
. uAny heating IJIPIIanct un
FDDY'S SCHEDULE
get out ~ adjustmonl and oboUid
Mr. Edcl,y'o ochodule for Frlbe ohocked lonnuaJcy. Venia car- day, Sept. 6,ls aa followo:

real tllreat'• to both major
•
111 e
pa rtJes a nd may .orco
emplQJ'ee, as acting matron dur~ presidential election into the
1111 the period of Mrs. Jacobs' aba House of Representatives. The
sence.
Maine se~ator, speaklng to
In other ~&lt;:Uvtty, the commb~ newsmen at 1 golf cpurse near
sioners paid billS. met the new his seaside home in Ke1Ul8bunk
era TUe--v.
The
commissioners
appointed
Mildred Circle, a .,.,...cy
home
""'w•uBfJ

fU~hooJ.

j

:Heating ~ecks No:w.

Tht Dally Sentinel, Ml~cport-Pomeroy,

Toraldoea • '
DJSeli~RGED: Dwaln Moyoo,
PLEASANT VALLEY IIOSPll' AL
The
heavily
populated are•
Henderaon;
Tammy
Pearaon,
pt.
ADMIM'ED: Mrs. Roy W.
of S 0 Uthe T D lllinoil ·iS ·.aUPleasant;
Robert
McNtil,
Pl.
Brinker, Maaoni Mrs. H1ram Potmated to &gt;bav;l more severe
ter, Pl. Pleannt; Mrs. J. S. Pleasant.
tornadoes per unit .of ,POJ!UlaColley, Sr., Hender8011i M r I.
tion than any other part of the
The world's most precious United States. , Tile most dJs.
olallng he i'ell the entire ochool
Walter Selby, Pt. Pleasant; Mro.
coral is the red coral
Medi,III'OUnd shooild be kept for school
Arnett Roush, ft. Pleasant; Nor~ terranean waters, aeeording astrous of all time occurred
PT. PLEASANT - Ullle Mae man
playg;round purpote1 or enlarge.
Bland, Red a&gt;use; Oslalru to the Encyclopaedia Britan· there In 1925, with • loss of
7f2 lives, •
,
ment of the school. Biggs argued Lltchlleld, 7t, .llenderi!OII, died 9ewart, J'l. Pleasant.
nlca.
Tuesday
In
Holzer
Hospital.
She
however, tlil.ttheprCIPQaedcenter
Would be ot much beneOt to the was born In Henderson on May
school as well as UIC\I.Wholeeoun- 24, 1894, a daushler or tho late
cy, Instead ofbeirwawetandmud- Charles lllld Nancy Clonch Jeffers. 91e· ·attended the Vaught
dy playgrCJUII:I as It is oowt
FlMJl1, alter much ·heatedclla- Memorlnl M-ot Church.
lilrvlvlng are her husband, WUcusslon. SUpt. L Bcooka Smith
son
li!mery Litchfield; ..., oon,
recommended that a meeting be
Homer
Litchfield, Hoitdersoo;
held with tlio Ordnance School
one
daughter,
Mrs. Vlr;gJnla &amp;Jod.
PTA membe!'! to obtain their
grass,
Henderson;
three broth~
LOWER PRICES-BETTER VALUES
views on the matter and tben the
'
matter be brooght..,aga\nbefore ers, Byrd Jeffers, Galllpolls, 0 .;
the bola. SmJth' s recbmmeoda-- Mack J-ers, ~ringfleld, Ohio;
·Uon was)pproved.
Charlie Jeffera, CUlton, w. Va.;
'A cnntract for a gas healing one slater, Mrs. Erma Misner,
system at HaMan High Schoo~ in 'Atliena, Ohio, and five grandthe amount or $3,983 was p·...ard- children.
ed to Clt,y and Ice Fuel, low bid- .. Funeral services will be held
der on the job.
Thursday 2 p.m. In the MohrUon S14ll Smith's recommen- stevens Funeral Home with the
dation, the board voted to give Rev. Normal Nash officiating.
tile PPHS Big BlackBeckersper.. Burial will be In SUncre• cem.
miuton. to erect dressing a n d - eter:v.
shower rooms on the east side of
LADIES NEW
' Sarders Memorial stadium and to
donate $3000 t.oward the $16,500
FALL MODELS
White House
GARMENT
building which wlll be 120 reetby
Tbe President's house ln
50 feet with 'tt.e payments to coma Washington was painted white
to hide the marks of fire on
ply with state regulations.
BAGS
Tile next regular sessionorthe the walls; which were all that
remained standing after the
With non - tilt steel
board is scheduled tor Sept, 10 British had fired it in the War
frame,
easy sliding
at 7:30p. m.
of 1812, The name White House
rust'i)roof zipper.
for the building dates from
this era,
In lovely new pastel
colors, sizes S-M-L.
Compares at $3.59.

Teachers Employed by. Mason ·Board

.'

.

\'

;

, ·

MONEY CLIPS

1:

·'jf·

l1tc UaU)· Scnllncl, MiddleporL..\'omc:i'oy, 0,. ScpL 4, 1968

~f~'l'l

~

•

'.,a,'

.'

"

:·:,. •r

¥..,.

.

!~~=~ llArey
were Rlchard ·ont
Miller, LewRllasoll Cepehart,

·Fole,y, Doaald F . Roush
l!n\I·I'.&lt;IWin SteinBJRTHJ)AY PARTY

i

~~~LI!&gt;T~.ad~Bal-srlnger!?Sa~·
'

oeln-

the

111'.

Dies Tuesday

Quilted

DUSTERS

Stolen from

Hannan 16gh
PT, PLEASANT - Approxlmalely $1,000 In cash waa re-

ported stolen from a sale it
~ High SchOol during the
weekend. The theft was diiCO'I·ared Tuesday morning by cuslndlan, Gordon Ball.
The sherifi''s department and
state police, . innstlgating otr'ia
cera, reported entry to the building was made by prying open the
[rant door and then prying open
the school office door. The safe
had been drilled open and the
ca&amp;h, receipts from thB Haman
High football game Saturday
night were taken. Several checks
were scattered aboot the door
b~ ,none . ·IY" reported , lfiken.

'. , 'iift.

bio

WITH pOp VP Fi.tr1N~S ..
'

•

.J

••

l

•

. ON DISPLAY. ,
,

•

~

Each
Holds 16
Garments

WRINGER
WASHER
You 111 thiN diiWII
Nora:e VHQ fllllu111i

I

,!

!

iI
I

,,

,II I
I

I

'j
I

• Huge 12-lb. capacity for
family·size loads
• Heavy-duty Y.. hp. I'IOtor-

ruJge(t Bor1J·Warnar

transmission.

• Large self.indexinl Wrlneer
Assembly,.

• Trlple·ICtian aaitator lets
clothes cleaner-faster.
• four easy-rolling

enters.

EARLY
AMERICAN PRINT

CARYL RICHARDS
PROFES&gt;IOHAL

Just Wonderful

LOUNGE

HAIR SPRAY

~.

49C

Beautiful authentic
e a r 1 y American
print lounge pillows,
shape retaining.

can

PT. PLEASANT-Orderssigned by the eircutt court and enter·
ed In the o!!lce of the circuit
clerk are:
Grantinri Q( a divorce.to Fred
Ta,ylof. from Delores Am Ta,ylor and he was awarded the care
and custodY of their infant IKil;
dlomlooal of the div~ce action
-stYled Cheryl 9Je Greene vs.
George Greene, Jr. and di.smis~
.'Ia! of the dvil action scyled
Huntingtoo Truot and Savings
vs. J.M.H. BayiJsa~ et al.

PILLOWS

$100
each

Ladies American Made

SPORT SNEAKERS
In white and black

ma&lt;io&gt;"\Jt'llt~

For $14,577

'

.I

each

Recu1a1 95c Family Size

""" COLGATE

ll!.O

~cr--...!:..)

TOOTH
PASTE

Sizes

Only

5-10

Assorted Indiana Avocado

Ho1sehold ·Glassware
S1'l';cone Covered

44

CSef

Includes compotes, lruit
disheo, candy bowls,

~:~:•.

2diSheS,5 Y o c

Presco

INGELS

FURNITURE

992·2635
Middleport, Ohio

construction.

ea.

3ii4 x4'/4 double.

~~~--------!ea~-~
Ladies Sheer Seamless

Layaway Now

Stretch Nylon
PANTY

Guaranteed &amp; protected

14•88

---

NEW

HOSE

Lo-.ly

FALL

~O~!!s.

wool•

and laminated fabrics. A small
down payment will hold your
coat in layaway until you need

In lovely beige, cinnamon
shades, petite, average, taiL

il

o

•

·~

' ,.·

cation.

.

FOR MEN

BIJEFS

'

IONIATA

COMPLitE TO ', F.LOOI! · .

-v.EIQ

school kitchen and candy room,
but noUdng was taken. Virgil
Siders, Sc ., is principal of Hanp
nan High School.
Arrests recorded at the county jail were: Beatrice L. stanley, 46, Mason, bad check ·warrant; Del1ord D. Bragg, 59, Mason, and Sheridan Russell, 72,
Mason, both charged with intoxi-

' yUmmy:
sh.oes
for little "·ladie(
'f
• - •'
~·
• •• '
&gt;

,,

INIOIRIGiel•
IVIIIY HIGH CiUAUTY)

In MMon Court

of

...

About '$1,000

Divorce Granted

ol

or

'

Civil Action

On Docket

Mrs. Litchfield

i.oo

, ~.LIO . I110 T~ 1.7'1 . .

IOXER
SHORTS
TEE SHilTS

64caa.

FOR BOYS
BRIEFS

TEE

SHIRTS

5&amp;c

r

�&lt;:::/ :·;-:-:":~:: .~,.:~ ~ ·~. . :,-::~ ~.: :···'"
'

l-1 ......

'

~arvin ~c(;uire
'
'

llrit'l:..

9 -

(t'OIIIinnod rrom l'ag&lt; 0
c.·asting ionigbt, informed· sourcea reported, aoo a probable teature
wilt be I r«iPort so the naUoo by P,rime Minister Oldrich Cernik on
tt.e government's efforts to come to terms with ·OCCll)ing forces.
Cernik's report to chizens who once demanded boiilterously to
Marvin w. McGUin, Jr., 12,
know "the truth" about Soviet requirements but have since quieted Rt 4, Pomeroy, died In Chiltheir public outcry would come exactlY two weeks aft:cr the Soviet· dren's Hospital, Columbus TUeslet CX"cupat?on.
day,
He was a stratgtrt A student
WINDS ESTIMATED AT 90 MILES AN HOUR slammed Wichita, at Braclmry elementary school
Kan., during the night while the city was collecti~ more than 11,2 and a Salvation Soldier In the
inches of rain during a six·hour period. The Wichita rain was part Salvation Army.
of widespread shoWer and thunderstorm system that deluged the cenHe is survived by his partral part of the 111tion.
ents, Marvin W. ud BettY Irene
In the Rockle11 harbingers of winter came In the form of snow Young McGuire, Sr., and these
llld Crost. More than an inch of rain fell during a six..hour period on brothers and sisters, Lyme, Tera
Eau Claire, Wis., Mason City, l«M"a, and McComb, Miss. Within a ry, Recka, and Ragena, all at
three-hour period, St Joseph, Mo., reported more than an inch of home; Cheryl Morris, Reynoldsrain.
burg; Connie Hudi!OII, Cleveland;
Patsy Rande, Columbus; RicbCOLUMBUS - CARL GUESS, WHO WANTED to be a baseball ard McGuire, North Garollna;
pitcher but fount tllat career cut short with arm trouble, will retire Howard Searles, Pomeroy, aod
in January after 34 years as clerk of the Ohio House of Representa- by hts grandmother, Katie Young,
tives.
Minersville.
Guess began hh career in politics in carroll County, ard, in 192H,
He was preceded in death by
was elected to the first of two four-year terms as cOWlty commis- a sister, Malena McGuire.
sioner. He followed that with four terms as a state representative
Funeral sei"Vices will be held
but resigned in 1936 to become house clerk.
Saturday at 1 p.m. at Ewing
Funeral Home. The Rev. RabSEOUL - SOUTH KOREA'S LARGEST newspaper said toda.y in• and Ray Wining will olflclsome progress is expected soon in negotiations to free the U. S. in- ate. Burial will be in Pine Grove
'telligence ship Pueblo and its 82 crewmen held by Communist North Cemetery. Friends may call anyVietnam. The ne~spaper Dong..a llbo said the United States made a time.
"tlexible proposal on how to apologize to North Korea" for the Pueblo incident in a meeting at the truce village of Parunun.iom Aug. 28.
"The result of the next session between the United States aOO
North Korea J11lY lead to release of ttte Pueblo crew," the newsCall Answered
paper said.
The Middlll)ort emergency
CHICAGO - MAYOR RICHARD J, DALEY, DISPLEASED with squad reported answering a call
television coverage of violence during the Democratic National Con- to lhe Owen Fink residence at
vention, wants to use the same medium to respoOO to criticism of Cheshire Route 2 at 11:28 p. m.
police actions against antiwar demonstrators.
Tuesday. The 16-year·old son or
Daley said at a one-minute news conference Tuesda.y he had Mr. and Mrs. Fink was iU and
asked the three major television networks Cor one hour or prime was taken to Holzer Hospital
time Sept. 11 or 12 "for the purpose of balancing the one-sided por~ where he was admitted Cor medtrayal of lhe controversial events that were telecast" during last ical treatment, squadmen said.
week's Democratic convention.

'

Dies Tuesday

,,'
I

,,

'
P;ro-be

'R

-

.

'

then
MOO-··
Allll?"l!h cold,...theriiiiiiiiiU'
d!U'' Scatleredah!"'eraThur..
bo BeVeral wj!ek8 awa,y 0 1'01110-

es· u'm·es

dll)' or Frld&amp;J and again about
Mondly, e:Q&gt;Ocled to overoge
one-l~alt;lnch or mOre. '·

Chief o~ Police ~Ohn Taylor rePorted. today that b~s stol~· :::::::;::::::~!&gt;.::;:::::::::::::=::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::-.:x:...:
approxlmatsly $16,000, Including throe $5,000 u. ·s. goverl'lilenl
BAlKE ACQUli'TED·
savings bonds and three .22 callber·guno over the Lebo&lt; Doy woiekCINCINNATI ' (UP!) - Com·
end holiday at the hmle of Alfred GabrleUi and Mrs. Giis Gabrielli 'nion Plioli Judge William· R.
at 740 Second Avo., Gallipolis.
. Malthews TUO!Idv a"''li¥· doIn addition to thethreegover~&gt;Chief Ta,ylor nld entry was . sepb R. Ralke, 26, of second •
ment bonds, the burJiors took a,- mode throogh the back door of degree murder In the Mil)' 25 fa,
proximately $7Uin cash includ- the boose. ,The burglorsransack- tal ehoolln&amp; ~ Robert Houoer
ing $560 in currency alld $1871n ed tlie entire hooao, according to Jr., 29, at a noolaur!lnl- Ralke
""'cia! bills.
Chief Ta,ylor.
· oo11te1- a plllol /!lschar&amp;ed
The looters also took two . 22
accidentally aftl!rlloooerhlthlm.
callberrevolversandone.22callber rille. In their haste, bowever, the burglars missed approJdmatoly $1,019 which they left in
the house.

,
The breaking and entering OC·
curred while the Doml]y w•• gone
over tile holiday. Jt was r~orted
at I "- m. TUeoday when they returned hom._ They had been gone

Leave

!rom theBureauorCrimlnalldentiflcatlon and Jnves~-tion,
"~"""
~·
don, Ohio, arrived in Gallipolis
Tuesday morning to assist police
in their investigation.

Police Officers in
Special Training
Two Pomeroy police omcen
are attending a three-day train-

ing course in Columbus and another Is participating In the 120hour pollee school at Logan,
Chief Jed Webster said todo,y,
Richard Dal'is and L. B,
Vaughan arc taking a breath analyzer course, offered by the
Ohio Slate Patrol, In Columbus
and Officer Carl Hysell is enrolled in the pollee training

LOCAL TEMPS
Tho temperature in do!ntlowll
Pomeroy tt 11 L rn. Wadnesdly
under
...., s'"-s
~ was 72 •grees.

•anted

£'
'-7-.

clo·~

Mrs J

ftCObs

•

.
A leave of absence untll next
January I, was granted, MilJacobs, malroo ol the county

s~~=.::~~O PHe'::;y~stlgator ol""':"!.~. thloneMofga ~board

by Mort Reed

'
Nhr.·on
.
~
(Continued rrom- i)
•-

=:::: .::dac~~~es

: : : ; 1:-:!o

order and. a white backlash.

The Pomeroy emergency squad
answered a &lt;.: a'\1 to 1760 Chester
Road Tuesday ·1 ev~ning. Louise
Partlow who had become unexpectedly 1ll was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital where
she was admitted for medical
treatment.

wt

Don't Be a Loser

I won't bore you with dry,
arithmetica1 procedures to
prove my point, but anyone
contemplating counterfeiting
as a hedge against inflation
should forget it, With the
Treasury Department's bat·
ling average in apprehensions
and convictions, such an endeavor is about as practical as
11)'1ng to catch a speeding bul·
let in your teeth.
_ Counterfeiting is fighting a
losing battle against modern
methods of detection, but it is
one bot likely to be eradicated
completely with our present
system of circulating cur·
rency.
Each year the Amerlcan
people are victimized by
passers of forged government
checks and counterfeit money ,
which usuaUy results in a fi·
nancial loss to the person rec e i vi n g them. Storekeepers
and cashiers who fail to examine money carefully or who
cash checks without asking
for proper identification from
tbe holder are inviting their
own losses .
Only with the public's cooperation, together with the
aid of our many fine police
departments. can the U.S.
Secret Service hope to eventually eliminate the crime of
c ounterfeiting .
If you are one of those who
can't be bothered or rind it in·
convenient to exercise caution

while participating in a cash
transaction, try this on for
slzt, If you don't. you can be·
come innocently involved in
an embarrassing sit ua'Uon
!bat could take ils toll in prestige ao well as cash. The !pilowing may cause you to
change your mind :
To counterfeit coins. paper
currency , postal money orders, postage stamps, revenue
stamps, bonds, securities or

·HUGIIFS NOMINATED
ne.-odc Gav. Harold Huglloa ~ Iowa boa been nomina1811
far the seat being vaCIIId b7 ~llean Bourke B.
the 71~oar.,.d
""'"" IIIIo II retiring 11 the
1111141( the ..... reat ........

lllf:bDI-·

other obligations of the United
States is to manufacture or reproduce these obligations with
intent to defraud and consti·
tutes a federal offense.
Possessing or passing a
counterfeit obligation is equally unlawful and the making,
possessing or passing can result in fines up to $5,000 and

15 year's imprisonment.
For the same offense with
minor coinage, such as cents
and nickels, the fine can go as
high as $1,000 and three years
in prison, Slugs, tokens and
other objects intended to be
used as money in pay phones,
coin-operated vending machines, parking meters and
turnstiles can bring a fine of
$1,000 and one year in jail.
Forgery of government
checks or bonds can result in
fines up to 11,000 and imprisonment for 10 years.
I might add there are penalties and imprisonment pro·
vided for anyone withholding
knowledge of the making, pos·
sessing or passing of counterfeit currency or slugs, tokens
or other objects intended to be
used as money .
There is a difference be·
tween reproductions of federal
obligations for the purposes
mentioned and the reproduction of the same obligations
for legal purposes, prpvided
the latter are Jll&amp;de and used
within the guidelines set forth
by the Treasury Department
Printed reproductlo"' ol paper curreocy, checks, bonds,
revenue stamps and securities
of the United States and foreign governments are permis·
sible only for numismatic. educational, historical and newsworthy purposes,
However, there are two important restrictions that must
be observed before putting
. these reproductions into print:
II) They must be reproduced

in black and white; 12) they
must be of a size Jess than
three..fourths or more than one
and one-half times the size of
the original instrument and all
illustrations must appear in
articles, books, journals.
newspapers, magazines or al·
bums and no individual fac similes of such obligations are
permitted.
Plates and negatives, inp
eluding glossy prints, of all
paper currency and other obligations, must be destroyed
after final use, with the ex·
ception of coins. Photographs
or printed illustrations of any
United States or foreign coin
may be used for any purpose,
including advertising.
Now all this may sound like
a lot of legal chatter, but if
you read it you will become
informed, and "an informed
public is alert to the forces of
crime" (from an original
quote by James J , Rowley.
director of the U ,S, Secret
Service) .
While it is possible to accidentally stray be y o n d the
guidelines provided for the
control of government obliga·
tions , it is also possible to rectify your mistake by destroymg the illegal material and
starling over. Counterfeiting
in any form or for any reason
is inexcusable.
In the word• of the late Rob·
ert H. Jackson, an associate
justice of the United States
Supreme Court and former as·
sistant general cow,sel of the
U.S, Treasury:
·•counterfeiting is an offense never committed by ac·
cklenl nor ignorance, nor in
the heat of passion, nor the
extremity of poverty_ II Is a
crime expertly designed,' by
one who possesses technical
skill and lays out substantial
sums for equipment"

Bernice C. Nicholson, 77, RD1,
Rutland, died this morning in
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
She is sunived by her husband, Marion; four sons and a
daughter. Funeral services will
be announced by Martin Funera1
Home,

*""

JET SETTER, bul llle'U
lrovel

of ftnt eloal;

Ia fit,, ....u .. rtUUtltt&amp;
lbe ....... Turld ww.....
30, of Nonroy ....... It·
eepted

bJ Suadl.. ~l . .

Alrlla01 Syotem u a

PRINCIPAL BURIED
MARYSVILLE, Ohio (UP0 Charlea E. Brobeck, t5, Moryaville Junior lll8h School principal, was burled here loda,y _
A natiYe of Richwood, Brobeck
died Mooday.
ENDORSE GILUGAN
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The United Electrical, Radio and Machine
Workers ol American Dlotrlct
Cooncll 7, haYing members at
Cleveland, Cooneaut, Niles, D!IY(00, St. Marya, Yellow Sprlnga
and
has WI8JIImoualy
endorsed Jolm J. GUIIpn, Dernocrallc nominee for the U. S.
Slrlate-

-•ky,

NEW LINK INSf ALL ED
CLEVELAND (UP!) - T h e
Cleveland Electric Olumlnating
Co, Put Into oervlco TUeoday a
345,000 - volt power line linkIng cEra Juniper sublllallon In
Waltoo Hilla with ~ Ohio F.dlsoo eo. Star subotallon near
Wadsworth. It wat a protectiYe
move ln case of an emexgeney.

'

Seall\I")WWd~plpe

)hOlr.'~nient

~

ol

:lll•onwayanthdetherp~orctessboUqflcodmbe- :=."7~. 91~~;~1:30.

th:

LongBOttom, 12:13al:15

til:

inspected·tegularl,y."
Chief Werr:v sugpsted the following check Ust to usure JJ.Bfe,
etrlclent operation ol home heat~ equJpment:
.,
_ Be ceriain the beater is
vented to a good chlnmey.

.
POrtland, 1:3p.,2i15
Great Bend, 2:304
AppJe Grove, 3:15..3:t5·
AntlCJ(i\Y, f-t:30
Racine Bank, 4:45.-6:30
~racuse P. 0., 6:t5--8:15

Gov. ~fro Agnew- Tho GQP
vice presidential candidate ilet
aside campaign activity Tuelldly to work on state busineJB at ·
his office In Annapolts, Md.
Agnew was leavi~W iodly for a
thnoe-day swing throuah WIscon sin, l..,a, Pennsylvania and
New Jersey.
,.
Sen. Eugene J, McCirthyThe Mirmesota Democrat askecl\
his supporters in Iowa Tuesday
to withdraw his name as 1
foorth , party candidate In the
November election. But Mccarthy, defeated by H~hrey
for the Democratic presld.entlal
nomination,
len &lt;11&gt;0n lhe
possibility that the might leeye
his name on d)e balJot in other
states if It woold help antiwar
c1ndidates for the House and
Senate. Friday was the deadilno
for withdrawal In I'""'-

,,,
•WED. &amp; THURS.

Ml11 W

trn

reportedly II
womu 1o .. ..,.

eepted for -~ trllalq loy
a major -'rllao.

''

SEPT. 4 &amp; 5

Geolf&amp;pble Ceater
Tbe geographical center of
the United States lncludinK

Alaska and Hawaii, lain Butte

County, S.D., 17 miles welt
of Castle Rock and 14 miles
east of the junction of lbe
borders of South Daltola, Montana and Wyoming.

OPEN
10-11 M, T, W, TH,
TIL 11,30 ftl. &amp; Sot.
12-11 Svnday

DAIRY ISLE.
Middleport·

4th &amp; Locust
i

nAI$.:'
&gt; •\ '

RED

••

22.95

5 UllOUICIIlT _. _, _ 5
' ...

s6.so

CIET .. .. ......

I,LUMINUM WITH Fa- .

'

~

'•

::LON IUCKET -····
ILUMINUM-1Jfl ~~·

S4.35

&amp;11101 IUCIET •_.... _.

$~1.51,
. - ·.
$.1: ,, . , ,.:s··, .

5 ~, , IU~lT : ·-.·

~.i

.,
,,,

IUTLIID ILICl ROOF
•

o

o

•

o •

•

•

•

•

•

'

o

o

•

o

I

0

0

0

e

0

·

~2.5:./·
..

PIClEIS IUCl ROOF
OOIJIII .. .:..... ........... . ... .

'

Chloe Freeman;

F~e

Jeffers,

. ,.,

I.UL lOCKET

5

9 S/

,,

0111 SPECIAL UTILRY
t
111
PAINT For ,wood. metal or floors. Try if1.ow! ..-...'_---.•·• ....~ .·.

·.·

·f-9J

'

..,ce School to principal at Beoch
School; Mro. F, F. Earl, Waha· Hill SchoOl to replace Estel Lew·
rna Jr. and Sr. High, and F. F. ts_ ·w.ho did not report tor work
E;arl, PL Pleasant High SchOOl. on August 26; Harley Clcul ·from
Substitute teachers hired were 1ubstitute teacher... to re~
Clara G. Mohr and ~, R. Schur- t.Pchei' it OrdMne, school;
Maudellen Henry from iub.11titute
ma11teacher to regular teaeher at
Teachers trlnsfi!rred were North Point Pleasant.Eteulentai-y
MarioP Sayre, from substitute . lc~ool; .
teacher to regular teacher at f.t,. , ·School secretartes·J:!.lred we;e
Pleasant Jr. High, tO replace Beo- Nancy. Fields, Hartford elementJalnln franklin IV, who did not .ary, and .Ora Mae Hunt, ML Fl..,acknowledge 11!1Polnment; Lydia er School
Sanders from teacher at 01'6=
Tille I ESEA teacher aides empiDyod were Judy Ann stover, SUIP
nystde elementary; Charlotte K13
eoon, Mason elemeiXary; Ruth
Wllllamooo, ·Beech IIlli.
Ti-anster ESEA TiUeiteach-'
er aide: Clari~ Je8n Wallace
traosferred ·from teacl;ler aide to
school secretary at Ma'son alementary; H01¥atd Cole, Special
Educatton teacher was placed al
Columbia, treapasaing properlY Central School,andMaqFrances
Ward was transferred as ESEA
cA. Ralph Warner.
The grand jurors were excused Title I teacher aide Crom Beech
after their worll on Tuesda.V 1 sub- Hill to North Point Plea,.nt.
Mrs. Katheryn King, register·
ject tO recall any Ume their
eel
nurse, was employed as psy111ervices are deemed necessary
chiatric
aide tns_tructor aide inby the prosecuting attorney or
structor
at $4 per hour lnd Mrs.
the court.
Lorene
J.
~,licensedprac-On roll call of the grand Jur:v
Tueoday 9,30 a, m. It was loond tical nurse, was named assistant
that five jurors were absent. at ·$Z,75 per hoor,
Teachers reslgnatlOOB acceptJudge James Lee 'IhoD1pson ap~
pointed spectal jury oommtoslon- ed by the board were: Wayne
ers, Josephine Hane$ and Clara Bergdoll, Wahama Jr. and Sr.
lee Gault, to nu the ncandea. High School; Golda Lerner, New
New jurors namedwerepeWayne Haven Schoo]; Freda Henderson,
ClatworiiiY, William Rardin Jr., Pt Pleasant High School; Estel
Fay Pancake, Vlrg!nlaVolghtand Lewis, Beech Hill principal, and
Ama Frances Handley wbo re.. John Cogars, band director at
placed Mar:v lollflllaff, J. w. Hannan.
COok, Jr., Walter D. Ridenour, , School secretaries resigning
Jr., JIU' E. Stone and Sarah z. were Maxine Keefer, Mt. Flower
school and Irma Dodson, HartFoster,
Other jurors were Art E. Hart- ford. Patrie Clatworthy resigned
ley, foreman, Mrs. George Mc- as teacher - aide at North Pt.,
Causland, Okey L. Keefer, Ray Pleasant elementary.
Virgil Burris, Jr. was named
Boston, Dooald F. Roush, Hershel Slank, Donald sturseon, assistant football coach, head
track coa&lt;:h and Jr. High basketMary Allee Morrl1011, Albert stephens, Mary M, Mowery andPlrl ball coach at Wahama Jr. and Sr.
High School with a $50 per month
L. Burris.
ste:~plem ent granted, and Donald
,,
'
Upton was named a!lsllltant varalty basketball ard head golf
coach at Wahama Jr. and Sr. High
with a $50 per montll supplement
abo.
Board member Dr. Leonard
on Saturday. On li\mdajrtheywere
and G. A. Biggs, repreBrown
the guesta of Rev, and Mra. wusenting the proposed Pt. Pleas..
Uam Rodahaver of Alverton, Pa,
ant Cultural - l~reation Center
Mr. and Mrs, William Rus- committee, had a heated discusoall and 110118, David, Brian and
Dwaln dtllii&lt;ihed ' reteiltly ~~ sion when the matter or 1he etJmmlttee requesting 'permission to
Martha's Vineyard, Mass.
use a section of Ordnance School
Mr. and Mrs. EdwlnStelnwere
property
as the site for the conin New York recently 011 buslstruction of tile center Will
ness. They also visited Mr. and
Mrs, Philip Wolpert at Fanwood, brought to the attention of the
board.
N, J.
Dr. Brown· opposed the sctlool
Phil Cooke was a recent guest
board
and the city entering an
o1 a fraternity brother, David
agreement
to use the school
Phillips at Ocean City, N. J.
grounds as site of the new center,
Mr. and Mrs. Garland GoodWin,
Glouster Point, Va. are visiting
here with Dr. R. F . Bryant. Mrs,
R. F . Bryant romalns quite Ill
in Holzer Hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Pomeroy
and children have returned to
the borne ol hor parenlo, Mr,
and Mrs. Donald F. Rouoh, atter haYing visited hlo parents
In Pennaylvanla. They will return to their home at Alb"""'rPT. PLEASANT ·_ •A $14, q.~e, New Mexico.
576.67,
clvll action w&amp;i l!led In
Mark Grlnstood, soo of Mr.
the
office
. ol the clrcult' clerk
and Mra. Foster Grlnstaad, has
Saturday
as
the apparent resul*
entered West VIrginia Tech,
or
an
automobile
acddent on
MmfJIOD&gt;ery, w. va. as a rreahApril
13,
1968
on
•
Mal Maman. Hewlllbemajoringlndrafl·
son
CouiJIY
road,
'
lni and 4ellsnlnll.
.
styled
Laddie
The
acllon
io
SfG 2 and Mrs. Terr:v !WI
and daUghter ol Newp&gt;rt, R. !, H. Siders, Violet Marie Sidon,
vlllled jtere with her parlllls, and Violet Marie Siders, next
Mr, and Mr'a. Eugene Humall, · ol friend for Lad!llo H. Siders,
Miss Ethel Riddle ~ llarrls- Jr., an infant, vs. James R.
bur&amp; Pa • .vtllted hOfO rocontiY and Doma Finley, Chesapeake,
Ob!o.
with Rav. Mrs. At~nh Miller.
The bill
complaint staled
Mr. and Mrs. Henry H. Buck,
that
James
Finley,
negligenUy
Jr,, Si181! and Margarot Am
end
unlawiUUy
drove
a Jee p
have nimed from their ~M~me m
truck
against
a
station
wagoo
lla..o He11!hti to Ssllsbury, N.
operotd
by
Laddie
,
H.
Sldera
C., wltere Mr. Buck Is emjiQyInjuring tho ·plalniii!S BeVerocy
and permailenti.Y. The plalntll!o
Zapoed.The .RlnCllll ~lalect
judgement ~~~ t.J&gt;
tee Is spokelt by some 12,0110 aaked
I
n
tho aJII!lWil of $1{,llldlans In the northern part
576.67.
of~. llieldco. ·
'

J;,, and Sr. H\ilh

oi

New Haven Social Events
Gard"'

r'
.d ~-~" ."~"'
. , en,
Clubat
... ~ ~
"
· , ;#MI bome~ ltfl. W. !OF; Stone
·\tth Mrl.' ~ames MacKftlght and
lira. N. 0, Weln aa co-hostess81- Tito 'meeting was opened by
tbe prelideut, Mrs. Patrick Rll·
«1'- The roll call ,.., anowered

. wlth .. Give one rule for good
el~ maDners•.,

Mrs. Rq Prollllt o-ed oololldeo of the blue and red
tlbbon winners flower arranga.
~. ~the recent Dower show.
.~ dlocussed the report and
&gt;,orttlclsms ol the judges of the
· .ltmr. Plana were discussed ccn1~. tho Club'a Cltrlstmas
f&amp;Zaar and !h&gt;w to be held
-~ lirot part ol Decamber.
:11Jooe ~ were Mrs. L.
JIOUIII, !rrs. Ra:Y Pro1fitt,
;
~Jir•- Fred Batey, Mro. William
£ldaler, Mrs. Lee Gibbs, Mrs.
'jluotd JoJmBOD, Mrs. H a r r y
Mra. J. V_ McGrew, Mrs.
OI!Unpr, Min Lelah J.
, Mrl. Patrldr.RUey, Mrs.
Roulh, Mrs. LloydJIOU&amp;h, ,
ilftL D. A, Smith, &amp;Uesta MrL
·~ JamesandclaughiMr, JehIQo, aiep,.. Barrlngar and the
li0otell8s.
,
• , . . HOlliS CORN ROAST
' Tile llllfBr1 Cllil be!d a com
'·. Jaul a( lhli picnic lite allllo
, ~ Mr. E4wln 'Steln. Those

9J'tCI

RUTLAND ROOF PAINT TIME

COlTill&amp;

Felony tndlctments were returned against Joseph M. Trippelt, Aohton, charging lelonlouo
OIU)' of the properlY of R a y
Crooklwn; Mary Jane Trippett,
Aohlon, felonious entry of I h e
properlY of Rllj'Crookham;Fred·
erick Mourning, Ashton, felooloua Ollt&lt;Y of houoe ofl\a:Y Crookham; Leiter Larry Rlftle, ·Map
1100, felonious entry ol properey

t
. o

IT'S •••

•••

m., fin felonies and four mls-

demeanon.

Nf;W HAVEN GARDEN CLUB

-----------------------·--·--·
, McCLURES

(Continued from 0
antiquated and un-democratic.
"There is grave doubt as to
whether they rt~tresent public
opinion, and there Ia wideepread
lack or confidence in their ablli..
ty to make the decisions ao erg..
cial to the More or America,"
he nid.

~m:

turned alnetruebllls TUeoday 5p,

BY MRS. CARROLL ADAMS, JR.

"

MUST IE GOOD WE'VE SOLD RUTLAND PA'NT FoR 30
MARRIAGE APPLICATION
Robert Lee Reeves, 18, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, Krogei' checker. Uld
Sheila Ann Cowan, 16, Middl,;.
port, studenL

PT. •J'LEASANT - The grand
jury of the September tern! of
!dason County Clrcult Court re-

.:.•

ll

'

Berinett, Wahania

9 True .Indictments '

5brlmpUn; Herman Lee Bolea,
Pl. Pleaoanl, encaplng from the
Maoon , eounzy jail; Helen wu.
oon, Mason, contributing to 4eUnqueney of minors by oelling
non4ntoxicating beer to oald minors, and HarOld R. Ruasell, West

.
1

4, 1968

·Grand JUry·BringS 1n
.

Phelps, PomllO)", Ohio, a•sault
an4 ballel'f upon one Dixie Lee

lrllaee ld~~or llllllc jell.

lbe

or

West C&lt;!l~ felonlouoaosaull
... ooe P4ullne Hsll.
Misdemeanor
lndlctmenta
nre returned agalnot Wylie L.

ONLY ...

q., . Sept.

'

By MAXINE WALTERs ,
PT,' PLEASANT - The regular session or the Mason COUnty
Board Education .s~heduled for
7,30 p, m. TUeodll)' got lmderwll)'
at 8:45 p. m. due to a lack of quoram until boonl memberTedStevens aFttved at that time. 1.
, ~rlor .fo Stevena' atrivil only
two .board members, Dr,~
Brown and . ~arry ~lder,s, ,Ore
pre.eQt. Absent were niembers
Bill Howard and Earl Keefer.
Teachers employed dur'lflll the
late oesslon were Wllilam M.

~

Politics ·
Rutland is Dead

with CIJI II) the chlmrte¥

W=~~·~:~ . ~;(;!i&lt;i~~~&lt;l':';l:l'f''~@.::X';:&lt;*1m&lt;'.~&gt;.ll':l1mt&lt;mlml&gt;.ll':l1mf&lt;~l8!!l...~·

veterans seniee o«icer, Glenn
Johnson; paid two animal claims,
and transferred $50 from the
Soldiers and Ssllors Relief Commis.l im Memorlal Day expenaea
tund to ~~other expenses.''

Taken to Hospital

enlng

If .there Ia a c l· - 1\li-

roy Fire Chief Henry J. Wwrt ialder the vent pipe, .be """'
...... , ur-' aroa, reoldenl
_1 to the vent Is clear of ~rio.
-oov
•rmalte
,thel•
amual
l!llf!Q' ~hock
- Be sure the thltM~ Is
of home heating e(J!Jpment now. elean. :Blow smoke lntoth8 cl8an..
, , "c:OinJ&gt;Otent lnepeetlnil of,lllr- out,,~ to mak, ,1111re It 'II
na~i, Wiitar ·healers, lnclner- drawllig.
.,
ators and room lieatera a)lollld , - Be ou~ the v*rt pipe ave• ·
1)01 be
~." Chle!. Werry up, not ..... frorO,the heaiOr' to
nld. "Piumbetl andhealln!!con- the c~.
, ,
tractoro oormslly are bullest
- Uoe a nfe!Y lhlmbiJtok-.p
when the Orst '·cold wHther hits, , the pipe from &amp;1!11)8 toom ·hlto
and lonri dangerous d!li.r• could the chimneY.
face Uiose 1lbo walt to have With -ent Or !1iaJ!ter where-It
Inspected and en!Airt·the cbbnn«Y. : ' ·
neceasary repair• nW!e.
- Diin't uao a c:oOklng r ' !'MallY ho""! heating prol&gt;- forroom 'h eatlni. ,
,
·,
lema can be prevented by check_ Have a 1111;ua.., .,.;.~Pt\.ln, ..;.. ......~ .... --..a
1
'
~ ~: ") ,,,
"'"
,.....,,.
"-pm""
or
prop'
·
otal!
iny
heatlni
er. ldia~ent, proper . ventll&amp;. :make necesoarj ad)lstioWill!;Dr
Ullll, . silo coiolectlons and propL;
"" oporatioo
nf~ shut •
of! device•... he ad4ad; "
. uAny heating IJIPIIanct un
FDDY'S SCHEDULE
get out ~ adjustmonl and oboUid
Mr. Edcl,y'o ochodule for Frlbe ohocked lonnuaJcy. Venia car- day, Sept. 6,ls aa followo:

real tllreat'• to both major
•
111 e
pa rtJes a nd may .orco
emplQJ'ee, as acting matron dur~ presidential election into the
1111 the period of Mrs. Jacobs' aba House of Representatives. The
sence.
Maine se~ator, speaklng to
In other ~&lt;:Uvtty, the commb~ newsmen at 1 golf cpurse near
sioners paid billS. met the new his seaside home in Ke1Ul8bunk
era TUe--v.
The
commissioners
appointed
Mildred Circle, a .,.,...cy
home
""'w•uBfJ

fU~hooJ.

j

:Heating ~ecks No:w.

Tht Dally Sentinel, Ml~cport-Pomeroy,

Toraldoea • '
DJSeli~RGED: Dwaln Moyoo,
PLEASANT VALLEY IIOSPll' AL
The
heavily
populated are•
Henderaon;
Tammy
Pearaon,
pt.
ADMIM'ED: Mrs. Roy W.
of S 0 Uthe T D lllinoil ·iS ·.aUPleasant;
Robert
McNtil,
Pl.
Brinker, Maaoni Mrs. H1ram Potmated to &gt;bav;l more severe
ter, Pl. Pleannt; Mrs. J. S. Pleasant.
tornadoes per unit .of ,POJ!UlaColley, Sr., Hender8011i M r I.
tion than any other part of the
The world's most precious United States. , Tile most dJs.
olallng he i'ell the entire ochool
Walter Selby, Pt. Pleasant; Mro.
coral is the red coral
Medi,III'OUnd shooild be kept for school
Arnett Roush, ft. Pleasant; Nor~ terranean waters, aeeording astrous of all time occurred
PT. PLEASANT - Ullle Mae man
playg;round purpote1 or enlarge.
Bland, Red a&gt;use; Oslalru to the Encyclopaedia Britan· there In 1925, with • loss of
7f2 lives, •
,
ment of the school. Biggs argued Lltchlleld, 7t, .llenderi!OII, died 9ewart, J'l. Pleasant.
nlca.
Tuesday
In
Holzer
Hospital.
She
however, tlil.ttheprCIPQaedcenter
Would be ot much beneOt to the was born In Henderson on May
school as well as UIC\I.Wholeeoun- 24, 1894, a daushler or tho late
cy, Instead ofbeirwawetandmud- Charles lllld Nancy Clonch Jeffers. 91e· ·attended the Vaught
dy playgrCJUII:I as It is oowt
FlMJl1, alter much ·heatedclla- Memorlnl M-ot Church.
lilrvlvlng are her husband, WUcusslon. SUpt. L Bcooka Smith
son
li!mery Litchfield; ..., oon,
recommended that a meeting be
Homer
Litchfield, Hoitdersoo;
held with tlio Ordnance School
one
daughter,
Mrs. Vlr;gJnla &amp;Jod.
PTA membe!'! to obtain their
grass,
Henderson;
three broth~
LOWER PRICES-BETTER VALUES
views on the matter and tben the
'
matter be brooght..,aga\nbefore ers, Byrd Jeffers, Galllpolls, 0 .;
the bola. SmJth' s recbmmeoda-- Mack J-ers, ~ringfleld, Ohio;
·Uon was)pproved.
Charlie Jeffera, CUlton, w. Va.;
'A cnntract for a gas healing one slater, Mrs. Erma Misner,
system at HaMan High Schoo~ in 'Atliena, Ohio, and five grandthe amount or $3,983 was p·...ard- children.
ed to Clt,y and Ice Fuel, low bid- .. Funeral services will be held
der on the job.
Thursday 2 p.m. In the MohrUon S14ll Smith's recommen- stevens Funeral Home with the
dation, the board voted to give Rev. Normal Nash officiating.
tile PPHS Big BlackBeckersper.. Burial will be In SUncre• cem.
miuton. to erect dressing a n d - eter:v.
shower rooms on the east side of
LADIES NEW
' Sarders Memorial stadium and to
donate $3000 t.oward the $16,500
FALL MODELS
White House
GARMENT
building which wlll be 120 reetby
Tbe President's house ln
50 feet with 'tt.e payments to coma Washington was painted white
to hide the marks of fire on
ply with state regulations.
BAGS
Tile next regular sessionorthe the walls; which were all that
remained standing after the
With non - tilt steel
board is scheduled tor Sept, 10 British had fired it in the War
frame,
easy sliding
at 7:30p. m.
of 1812, The name White House
rust'i)roof zipper.
for the building dates from
this era,
In lovely new pastel
colors, sizes S-M-L.
Compares at $3.59.

Teachers Employed by. Mason ·Board

.'

.

\'

;

, ·

MONEY CLIPS

1:

·'jf·

l1tc UaU)· Scnllncl, MiddleporL..\'omc:i'oy, 0,. ScpL 4, 1968

~f~'l'l

~

•

'.,a,'

.'

"

:·:,. •r

¥..,.

.

!~~=~ llArey
were Rlchard ·ont
Miller, LewRllasoll Cepehart,

·Fole,y, Doaald F . Roush
l!n\I·I'.&lt;IWin SteinBJRTHJ)AY PARTY

i

~~~LI!&gt;T~.ad~Bal-srlnger!?Sa~·
'

oeln-

the

111'.

Dies Tuesday

Quilted

DUSTERS

Stolen from

Hannan 16gh
PT, PLEASANT - Approxlmalely $1,000 In cash waa re-

ported stolen from a sale it
~ High SchOol during the
weekend. The theft was diiCO'I·ared Tuesday morning by cuslndlan, Gordon Ball.
The sherifi''s department and
state police, . innstlgating otr'ia
cera, reported entry to the building was made by prying open the
[rant door and then prying open
the school office door. The safe
had been drilled open and the
ca&amp;h, receipts from thB Haman
High football game Saturday
night were taken. Several checks
were scattered aboot the door
b~ ,none . ·IY" reported , lfiken.

'. , 'iift.

bio

WITH pOp VP Fi.tr1N~S ..
'

•

.J

••

l

•

. ON DISPLAY. ,
,

•

~

Each
Holds 16
Garments

WRINGER
WASHER
You 111 thiN diiWII
Nora:e VHQ fllllu111i

I

,!

!

iI
I

,,

,II I
I

I

'j
I

• Huge 12-lb. capacity for
family·size loads
• Heavy-duty Y.. hp. I'IOtor-

ruJge(t Bor1J·Warnar

transmission.

• Large self.indexinl Wrlneer
Assembly,.

• Trlple·ICtian aaitator lets
clothes cleaner-faster.
• four easy-rolling

enters.

EARLY
AMERICAN PRINT

CARYL RICHARDS
PROFES&gt;IOHAL

Just Wonderful

LOUNGE

HAIR SPRAY

~.

49C

Beautiful authentic
e a r 1 y American
print lounge pillows,
shape retaining.

can

PT. PLEASANT-Orderssigned by the eircutt court and enter·
ed In the o!!lce of the circuit
clerk are:
Grantinri Q( a divorce.to Fred
Ta,ylof. from Delores Am Ta,ylor and he was awarded the care
and custodY of their infant IKil;
dlomlooal of the div~ce action
-stYled Cheryl 9Je Greene vs.
George Greene, Jr. and di.smis~
.'Ia! of the dvil action scyled
Huntingtoo Truot and Savings
vs. J.M.H. BayiJsa~ et al.

PILLOWS

$100
each

Ladies American Made

SPORT SNEAKERS
In white and black

ma&lt;io&gt;"\Jt'llt~

For $14,577

'

.I

each

Recu1a1 95c Family Size

""" COLGATE

ll!.O

~cr--...!:..)

TOOTH
PASTE

Sizes

Only

5-10

Assorted Indiana Avocado

Ho1sehold ·Glassware
S1'l';cone Covered

44

CSef

Includes compotes, lruit
disheo, candy bowls,

~:~:•.

2diSheS,5 Y o c

Presco

INGELS

FURNITURE

992·2635
Middleport, Ohio

construction.

ea.

3ii4 x4'/4 double.

~~~--------!ea~-~
Ladies Sheer Seamless

Layaway Now

Stretch Nylon
PANTY

Guaranteed &amp; protected

14•88

---

NEW

HOSE

Lo-.ly

FALL

~O~!!s.

wool•

and laminated fabrics. A small
down payment will hold your
coat in layaway until you need

In lovely beige, cinnamon
shades, petite, average, taiL

il

o

•

·~

' ,.·

cation.

.

FOR MEN

BIJEFS

'

IONIATA

COMPLitE TO ', F.LOOI! · .

-v.EIQ

school kitchen and candy room,
but noUdng was taken. Virgil
Siders, Sc ., is principal of Hanp
nan High School.
Arrests recorded at the county jail were: Beatrice L. stanley, 46, Mason, bad check ·warrant; Del1ord D. Bragg, 59, Mason, and Sheridan Russell, 72,
Mason, both charged with intoxi-

' yUmmy:
sh.oes
for little "·ladie(
'f
• - •'
~·
• •• '
&gt;

,,

INIOIRIGiel•
IVIIIY HIGH CiUAUTY)

In MMon Court

of

...

About '$1,000

Divorce Granted

ol

or

'

Civil Action

On Docket

Mrs. Litchfield

i.oo

, ~.LIO . I110 T~ 1.7'1 . .

IOXER
SHORTS
TEE SHilTS

64caa.

FOR BOYS
BRIEFS

TEE

SHIRTS

5&amp;c

r

�;.

,,

·,

,.

';I

II -

,10

Tht tiii"lf Sc.riU.ncl. Mlddlepon..Pomeroy 0

~..~·-~

196tl

· -

"'

·

..,.

'~

:j.

' .,

'

..:'D«ltf.l QU~~n GQiltg fntt).: ~?fiJi
· ~kl _ gq,~~\.Cacl,

Contfess
ard · But thc!n an Alaskan, a The Delta' Queen nrst undct·wcnlr.
the Delta Quc:en hi GOlDs - as Missourian ancl a Texan l'&amp;me ·long Coat&gt;t (iuard tu;rutiny lo &lt;k..,
Cast u a l~ile-e~a· rlver- to the: rescue oC the Mississippi ·termi~ thai she complied with

'•

boat ner ffent - rilthi through River steamer. •
the 1969 a~ 1970 seasQ~:~s.
senator E. L. Bartlett. ol AlasThe (:lnctruatl .. ba&amp;ed Queen ka intr(lduced a bill in the Senawearcd, just ' short Ume ago. ate to exempt the Queen trom the
to be headed nowhere but to the sea law, am Rep. Leonor K. Sulmothball Oeet because , of the Uvan roHowod suit in(h~?: llouseof
broad pro,isions or the safety.. Representatives. President Johnat-sea law that ensnared the last son (the Texan) signed the bill
steamboat still making longtrips into law.
on the rh·ers of America's heartHowever, the whole matter was
land.
oot as simple as it might seem.

a

Uecau~e

~~ &amp;~b~,~~~

Set&amp;son
~

,,'

., li

'

•

'

...

gram."

f~. ·

"The people who wrote it
d i d n ' t understand the program," Poage added.
Under the existtPg law, rarmers who cooperate with volun;, tary federal production control
~ programs for commodities like
corn, wheat and &lt;:otton become
eligible for federal price sup-

•••

•nd

port loans plus two types of di- FOOd St.amp bills lhis month.
rect payments.
If the SCJoisions tannot be set
One set of PIJ'ments rcim- IJcfor~ his return from Peru
burses farmers for le8\'ing part
of their acreage out of production while the s'ccond set forms
part or the price support on
commodities produced on the
remaining land.
Big payments to some big
farms under this s~ stem have
drawn considerable fire. The
House has already \'Oted to put
a $20,000 per farm celing on
Pl.\ ments next )'car, although
farm leaders hope to eliminate
that restriction in a HouseSenate conference.
Poage sa i d the payments
should not be viewed as "welfare" ror farmers.
In paying farmers to keep
production in balance with demand, he argued, "the goverllmenl is, in effect, buying a
prO[Jerty right rrom farmers to
promote the "'general we Hare by
balancing supply and demand."
Likened 'ro Slum ClearanCe
Poage likened this to a situation w h e r e the government
mi~ 1 1 t bey a large tract or land
for a slum clearance project. In
that case, he said, the price
paid for the land would be tile
same whether it was owned bl
one big holder or 100 smaller
proprietors.
Poage added he h({.led to arr~ 11 as soon as possible" for
a Hoose - Senate conference to
draft compromise Farm and

Greene ;~lne steamers,.@Ol P~
lie ~·- Landing,
45202,

Cia~~tl~

. ' t} .

Ohio,

ned to st--ek rlearan~c ror the

_

TOWELS

'
Garber's Strained

.·

PEACHES

-We accept Fed. Food Stamps.
t

~

·

. , .·:..

"·
GREI
~

5

ICE MILK
· ~ Pl.
Several Flavors.••••••••••••·• ~·
.

TO

'"

.J

·POTA

HOLSUM

'

ON

.. ·&lt;,.
Lesser Amounts
2. foi 4ac

ICE MILK

TO

All
Flavors

••: "u ·
•.

Mrs. Tom Homnan, Mrl. Del- Vlcl\l Burnprdner as chairman.
ton S.,re, Mrs. Frank Young,
Members and guests attending
.Mrs. Robert Cooke, Mrs. Eu- were Harriett J...a.yne, Holly
. gene Huftll, Miss Ethel Hid- Layne, Kim Flelds, Mar s h a
die, Mr. Dor~ Lee Roosh, Oev. Sclrouse, Denise C111111ngham,
l'lwl Fol1ney and Mr. and Mrs. Vicki Bumgard-ler, _,\Ucla JelStein.
Cera, Jane llart, Debbie Paugh, .
PICNIC HELD
Debra Morrls1 Beei\Y P a or i' h,
A picnic was held by the Kin· Jackie Paugh 1 Brian Ruiiell,
: cllrprten, lsi and 2nd gr&amp;do · BJ:ilce •lclamJ, David Ruoll0\1,
: cla:i~es :wrthe School or Lester ~. Qhllnger; T!Jruny Ph.st. Paul Lutheran Church in 1"-', Jl~ Cllllllln8ham. ~rs.
•:," lliJiijojo"'~ Morpret Ann Buck. WOllam Rtll&amp;eli, Mra, Joel'augh,
. ' fllll'ioret
Is moving' with her Mrs, Jionald Bumgudner and
.• .
•
Mrl. ~carroll Adams. Jr.

ca..

!:t

Crinkle Cut ,.

l••al .r\:..~.1
,
~

IU'I~

CAK·ES

~·-

'

·

Re&amp;.
39c

•

•

·

•
•

· ·,.

,

FRENCH FRY
·
.

l......_

• ',.

Breaded

MEDIUM

s

EGGS

'

··"·:

Large
Golden Ripe

BANANAS.............~·. JOe

.

"

'

....

'

'

,"

LEMONS•••s~~~~!: ............ !~~49e

.

.

POTATOES
'

l'l(OZENJ'()(Jl) ~PEC1~s.J&gt; ':. }

BAKERY Bf!Y?

%gal.
crts.

U.S. GRADE A

'

.25C

~;l:'rt.Sl&gt;~:~~;,.,.r.:;-·it.:: ~:~~ ~~d ':'~d~~-,:

· .

'·'

' J
" ··

e

SEALTEST

THAT GOOD 'PREMIER
GlADE TENDER BEEF

.00

loaveJ

eee

46 oz.
can

D
16 oz.

1.00

JUICE

.

e

OUR FRESH
GROUIID • • • • • • ee • • • • • • • •

KRAFT TASTY QUALITY

.VALUES QV Of/R B{G PRODUCE

II., S. HO.

cans

e

'

!.

&lt;'&lt;".....

BEA
303

101-\'
ee
•••

BISCUITS
e ee ee
e
.
FROZEN FRENCH FRIES ••••••••• 3 !~!~ •1
·-·· . " - MC)IlON fV DINNERS~~ ••••• ::•••• L39~
MORTON POT PIES••••••••••••• 5 "'' 1. 00
lb 591GROUND BEEF
\0
LONGHORN CHEESE ••••• ••••••• •••• !be69~

. STOKELY CUT

.

'

·'

These Everday Low Prices Save You Money!
PILLSBURY
··
0R BALLARD &lt;tee e

Swansdown Cake Mix-------------:.. ______...~~

Fui-Valu Buy!

(

':.:,.-_:~~

.

CELEIY!~~J~~~--

· ~oz

.Sept. 5-6-7

Argo Plnea,p~i Jultt ~!·;~!!~~~-----.:. __ ._ 46 ::~~~t

fAIR

ER
Spray
can

'

Prlw Effective

Pinto and Great Northern. Heat and .S .rvt

B

GREER

night reserv~ to limit quantitieS .

Maxwell Hnse Instant Coffee ______ _: ____ l~i:f9e Hurst's Fully Cooked Beans.-------------45 ;:; ~··

7~

9~

CL

''The Store With A Hart'~ .

~af.t Tomato Juice------------------- 3~::; f,~'l9

- ~·

.

'

Open Mon. thru ~~- .
9 to •~sunday 10 .L. · ..
GOOD VALU BUYS SURE TO PLEASE! :f.~· _
_.:. ·

CATSUP

Lady Colby

WINDOW

'
5TH and PURL $TS., RACIN~
'

laby _
, ..,________ 2 jars23e

STOKELY

1

39e

let•Jer Cookles----3 pkes.$.1

HUDSON

can

•

Inner Packaeas For Freshness
Zesta Crlckers-- lb..ilox
Several Varieties
..

15~

PORK and
BEANS

\

Dot Food MeaL 25 lb. bac1.89

SALAD DRESSING

SHOWBOAT

'

Best Brand

KRAFT
MIRACLE
WHIP

59~

Reg.
'

HI-C Drinks- 3..46 oz. cans $1

. FOIL

300

each

. All Flavors

FOOD

'

WASTE BASKETS

Producer's Milk ____ .;, __ 89e

DOG &amp; CAT

'

·10 oz. 1
'
19
ff
Co
ee
••••••••••••••••
Jar
•
Nescafe Instant
Choc. Drops, Pecan
Rae. 53c 391Keebler Cookies Sanclies, Party Cookies. • • • • • • • • • • •• lb. \'
• • fec t an t Spray••••••••••••••••••••
Germ Safe-Reeular 99c
Larce
591&gt;"
D1511
13 oz. can
Liquid
quart 191&gt;
Sta-Fio Starc h••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
•••• "
Custom Canned Pop••~~~~~:v:.s•••••••• 10 cans
• f res h 01 eo•••••••••••••••••
Quarters
Da1sy
•.••• 6 lb.
1.7 oz.
Nestea Instant Mix •••••••••••••• 10 pkcs.
roll
Como Toilet Tissue••••••••••••••••••4 pq.
Frlskies Dog Food•••••••••••••••••• 6 cans·

and

Twin Pack Gallon

14

"

(RIGID TOP)

\

. THRIFI'Y EVERYDAY
, LOW PRICES!

DIAMOND
ALUMINUM

can

•

SAVE YOU MON'E·Y

25~

''·

_,.,..,

OUiR..·PRICES

family to Salisbury, 1\. C.
TOIVN COUNCD. MEETING
Those attending were J o d y
.. The New Haven Town COWlcil
ASSORTED COLORS
', met on Monday evening in regu- Harless, Beth La.rne, K a t h y
, ·~ lar session with Mayor Thomas Roush, Slane Hesson, RodneJ'
• Grinstead presiding. Others In Vickers, Troy Hesson, Billy Pow, attendance were Helen Fields, ell, Eric Bumgardner, Jimm.v
Fui-Valu Buy!
'
i'ecorder, Jack Hess, G a r Y Powell, Al Sprouse, D~vid Hose,
Roosh, R, G. Greene, L e w i s Harold Rose, Margaret ..\M Buck,
&amp;unmers and Arthur Thabet, Mrs. John Fry, Mrs. William
I':OlUlcilm«rfl· Also attending were Powell, Jr., Mrs. Phil Batey,
Donald Ohlinger and Willtam Mrs. Donald Bumgardner and
jumbo
Kimes.
Mrs. Jack Hesson.
They voted to pay bills due. MRS. HENRY BL1 CK HONORED
roll
Mter much discussion it was
Mrs. Henry H. Buck, Jr. was
decided to reb.lrn to the origi. honored with a going away party - - - - - - - - nal schedule for the collection held at Sl. Paul Lutheran Church
JO-BO BRAND
oz.
ot garbage, aS it proved to be in New Haven on Monday evenlng.
too much Cor two days work. Gar· Mr. and Mrs. Buck and children
bot.
bage will be collected on Mon. are fn01jing to Salisbury, N. C.,
day from Fifth. Street to the where they will resid,e at 429
RI-ver. One Tuesday from Fifth Hudson St. Mrs. Buck was preStreet to Haven Heights, from sented a gift from the Church
¥.Liley View to Miller's Market Women.
on Finh street and Including old
Games were played and prizu. S. Route 33. On Wednesday es awarded. Those in attendance
from Miller's Market to the were Mrs. Robert Layne, Mrs.
only
Clt.y limits.
William Powell, Mrs. Herman
They discussed the street pav. La.yne, Mrs. Donald Bumgarding project and decided to contact ner, M.rs. Davld Roush, Mrs.
Mr. William Rairden, town at- A. L. Sprouse, Mrs. J. V, Me.
torney. A special meeting was Grew, Mrs. Harry Layne, Mrs.
held on Tuesday evening and af. Lloyd Roush, Mrs. John r r y,
ter reporting on the meeting with Mrs. otto Grimm, Mrs. Harold
the attorney Uley voted to re· Johnson, Mrs. William Russell,
ject th~ street paving project Mrs. Carroll Adams, Jr., Mi&amp;s
in its entirety because of. a Lelah J, Powell, Mrs. Velma
misrepresentation from the COO· Roush, Mrs. Jack Roush a n d
tractor.
Mrs. Buck.
~
Mr. Tom Parsons was grant.
PROCRESSJVE DINNER
ad an increase in salary. He is a
The Luther League of st. Paul
~ town policeman.
Lutheran Church held a Progres.
WIN ONE CLASS
slve Dinner on SUnday evening.
The Win One Class or the Unit- The group met for the first
.- ed Methodist Church met for a course at the picnic site at the
covered dish dinner and corn home of Mr. and Mrs. Edwin
roast atthepicniesiteatthebome &amp;eln with David Russell as chair.
fl Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Stein. man of the course. Devoti011a
JnvocaUoo was given by Miss were led by VIcki Rumgardter,
Ethel Riddle.
president. Scripture lesson was
Those attending were Mr. and read by Marsha Sprouse, a hymn
Mrs. George Ingels. Mr. and was read by Denise Cunningham
HALVES
Mrs. Donald Duncan, Mr. and and a prayer by Vicki BumgardNo.2% can
Mrs. James ·N. Roush, Mr. and ner. The main course was held
Mrs. Harry Pickens, Mr. and at the Mult~..purpose room of the
· -Mrs. Paul Rlckar~f. and Mrs. church with Becky Paugh chair- _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __._ _..,_ _ _.;,...,
'·_ _ _ _,..
; Harry · Niller, Mr. tnd Mrs. man. The dessert was held on the

'

I

PLASTIC BUCKETS

,.

Any ·waY . ~~ · loGIC ·. at it • • •

BUYS!

12"x25'

.

'

action as quickly as possible
thereafter;.

about Sept.. 15, he said, he plan--

Ful-Valu

·~Cit-New Haven SOcfiii'Evelits ·· ·- --~~~~ize

.

.

'

~1.,. ·~

•

' .I

'

other 'lhan Cinci~tL Eight!.:~/&gt;~
Wut depar,, f,1.·00i St.. l,py~ar . ,-.
frOrQ .McJJ'112hb,' and ORe frOm ·
New '• Orl~hs • . 'llle ~·smtl ru.{s ·:
!rom J•'e)lrlllti'y 7 through Novel1h
ber 30, 1969, bd the Orst Cullblown cruise is -the trip to the
t,lardi Gra~. _J.'eb~ry lJr ; '·
For ~rth.er lnl'orm_atiOn write

Democrats' Farm Plank 'Missing the Point
\.

.

Ttl~ 19G9' ~~We ihi:J!.~¢os.·~~·

On the Farm Front
WASHINGTON (UPO Drafters
o! a key Democratic platform
proposal to limit federal pa,r ments to big farmers did not
understand
how
government
farm programs work, a key
congressional Democrat prot! 1 tests,
rhe platform adopted in Chicago last week called ror a
stud;&gt; or the effects of limiting
payments to farmers. II added
,.
that, "if necessary, we suggest
graduated open--end limitation of
payments to extremely large
.,
corporate farms that participate
in government programs."
A limitation on payments to
very large farms would be
"better than an abrupt cut~!f
of payments, but it's 11 cut~Cf
nonetheless," said Chairman W.
R. Poage, D-Tex., of the !louse
Agriculture Committee.
Platform Misconceived
Poage was interviewed here
before his departure Sunday to
attend an Interparliamentar~
Union meeting at Lima, Peru.
He said the platform proposal
was "based on a complete mis-.- conception of our farm pro-

.

·
c;r
out- ·
comO of the law 'Wttlch .rcPficved trip~ ~nd Cor thQ nrlit
the l~uecn, the Groene ' (.lne: has of lllC!'I i¥91 orlgtJllto in

ju~;t now scheduled .fi.ve add)..
The original sea law would have tional trips in November· of. this
put the Queen out of service Nov: year and I&amp; :roiea5lng its 1969
2, 1968..' The rrw legislation ex.. schedule. The ~ti-0116) Novcmtends that period until Nov. 2, bcr 1968. Cr:'Ul.~s (~ ~~ays)
1970.
originate m_. st. Louis, Memphla
By that time the (irccn Line
New Orleans, and covers the
will have buill a new boat, apd lower Mlsalssippi ltlver where ..
hopes to &lt;{jcrate both the Qu~cn ~ummc,r •lingers longest. T.. e'se
and U1c new vessel in ihe river. trips aru upcn for'. ~II'€ now
va&lt;:atlon service.
and good ~:~pa&lt;.·c is aVailable.

an safely meaSUl'e&amp;.

The Dally Sentinel, Mlddlcport.Pomoroy, 0., SepL 4, !968

~

J

.

.

PIEMIEI
GRADE
.

.

,

.

.

..

'

'

.

~:r

.··~·~·•••,.J•••·••··~r4:•••~••• .
,:.-,,.

'

~

,0 43. j.

U.S. NO.1
NEW WHITE......

lb

'

· •

�;.

,,

·,

,.

';I

II -

,10

Tht tiii"lf Sc.riU.ncl. Mlddlepon..Pomeroy 0

~..~·-~

196tl

· -

"'

·

..,.

'~

:j.

' .,

'

..:'D«ltf.l QU~~n GQiltg fntt).: ~?fiJi
· ~kl _ gq,~~\.Cacl,

Contfess
ard · But thc!n an Alaskan, a The Delta' Queen nrst undct·wcnlr.
the Delta Quc:en hi GOlDs - as Missourian ancl a Texan l'&amp;me ·long Coat&gt;t (iuard tu;rutiny lo &lt;k..,
Cast u a l~ile-e~a· rlver- to the: rescue oC the Mississippi ·termi~ thai she complied with

'•

boat ner ffent - rilthi through River steamer. •
the 1969 a~ 1970 seasQ~:~s.
senator E. L. Bartlett. ol AlasThe (:lnctruatl .. ba&amp;ed Queen ka intr(lduced a bill in the Senawearcd, just ' short Ume ago. ate to exempt the Queen trom the
to be headed nowhere but to the sea law, am Rep. Leonor K. Sulmothball Oeet because , of the Uvan roHowod suit in(h~?: llouseof
broad pro,isions or the safety.. Representatives. President Johnat-sea law that ensnared the last son (the Texan) signed the bill
steamboat still making longtrips into law.
on the rh·ers of America's heartHowever, the whole matter was
land.
oot as simple as it might seem.

a

Uecau~e

~~ &amp;~b~,~~~

Set&amp;son
~

,,'

., li

'

•

'

...

gram."

f~. ·

"The people who wrote it
d i d n ' t understand the program," Poage added.
Under the existtPg law, rarmers who cooperate with volun;, tary federal production control
~ programs for commodities like
corn, wheat and &lt;:otton become
eligible for federal price sup-

•••

•nd

port loans plus two types of di- FOOd St.amp bills lhis month.
rect payments.
If the SCJoisions tannot be set
One set of PIJ'ments rcim- IJcfor~ his return from Peru
burses farmers for le8\'ing part
of their acreage out of production while the s'ccond set forms
part or the price support on
commodities produced on the
remaining land.
Big payments to some big
farms under this s~ stem have
drawn considerable fire. The
House has already \'Oted to put
a $20,000 per farm celing on
Pl.\ ments next )'car, although
farm leaders hope to eliminate
that restriction in a HouseSenate conference.
Poage sa i d the payments
should not be viewed as "welfare" ror farmers.
In paying farmers to keep
production in balance with demand, he argued, "the goverllmenl is, in effect, buying a
prO[Jerty right rrom farmers to
promote the "'general we Hare by
balancing supply and demand."
Likened 'ro Slum ClearanCe
Poage likened this to a situation w h e r e the government
mi~ 1 1 t bey a large tract or land
for a slum clearance project. In
that case, he said, the price
paid for the land would be tile
same whether it was owned bl
one big holder or 100 smaller
proprietors.
Poage added he h({.led to arr~ 11 as soon as possible" for
a Hoose - Senate conference to
draft compromise Farm and

Greene ;~lne steamers,.@Ol P~
lie ~·- Landing,
45202,

Cia~~tl~

. ' t} .

Ohio,

ned to st--ek rlearan~c ror the

_

TOWELS

'
Garber's Strained

.·

PEACHES

-We accept Fed. Food Stamps.
t

~

·

. , .·:..

"·
GREI
~

5

ICE MILK
· ~ Pl.
Several Flavors.••••••••••••·• ~·
.

TO

'"

.J

·POTA

HOLSUM

'

ON

.. ·&lt;,.
Lesser Amounts
2. foi 4ac

ICE MILK

TO

All
Flavors

••: "u ·
•.

Mrs. Tom Homnan, Mrl. Del- Vlcl\l Burnprdner as chairman.
ton S.,re, Mrs. Frank Young,
Members and guests attending
.Mrs. Robert Cooke, Mrs. Eu- were Harriett J...a.yne, Holly
. gene Huftll, Miss Ethel Hid- Layne, Kim Flelds, Mar s h a
die, Mr. Dor~ Lee Roosh, Oev. Sclrouse, Denise C111111ngham,
l'lwl Fol1ney and Mr. and Mrs. Vicki Bumgard-ler, _,\Ucla JelStein.
Cera, Jane llart, Debbie Paugh, .
PICNIC HELD
Debra Morrls1 Beei\Y P a or i' h,
A picnic was held by the Kin· Jackie Paugh 1 Brian Ruiiell,
: cllrprten, lsi and 2nd gr&amp;do · BJ:ilce •lclamJ, David Ruoll0\1,
: cla:i~es :wrthe School or Lester ~. Qhllnger; T!Jruny Ph.st. Paul Lutheran Church in 1"-', Jl~ Cllllllln8ham. ~rs.
•:," lliJiijojo"'~ Morpret Ann Buck. WOllam Rtll&amp;eli, Mra, Joel'augh,
. ' fllll'ioret
Is moving' with her Mrs, Jionald Bumgudner and
.• .
•
Mrl. ~carroll Adams. Jr.

ca..

!:t

Crinkle Cut ,.

l••al .r\:..~.1
,
~

IU'I~

CAK·ES

~·-

'

·

Re&amp;.
39c

•

•

·

•
•

· ·,.

,

FRENCH FRY
·
.

l......_

• ',.

Breaded

MEDIUM

s

EGGS

'

··"·:

Large
Golden Ripe

BANANAS.............~·. JOe

.

"

'

....

'

'

,"

LEMONS•••s~~~~!: ............ !~~49e

.

.

POTATOES
'

l'l(OZENJ'()(Jl) ~PEC1~s.J&gt; ':. }

BAKERY Bf!Y?

%gal.
crts.

U.S. GRADE A

'

.25C

~;l:'rt.Sl&gt;~:~~;,.,.r.:;-·it.:: ~:~~ ~~d ':'~d~~-,:

· .

'·'

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" ··

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SEALTEST

THAT GOOD 'PREMIER
GlADE TENDER BEEF

.00

loaveJ

eee

46 oz.
can

D
16 oz.

1.00

JUICE

.

e

OUR FRESH
GROUIID • • • • • • ee • • • • • • • •

KRAFT TASTY QUALITY

.VALUES QV Of/R B{G PRODUCE

II., S. HO.

cans

e

'

!.

&lt;'&lt;".....

BEA
303

101-\'
ee
•••

BISCUITS
e ee ee
e
.
FROZEN FRENCH FRIES ••••••••• 3 !~!~ •1
·-·· . " - MC)IlON fV DINNERS~~ ••••• ::•••• L39~
MORTON POT PIES••••••••••••• 5 "'' 1. 00
lb 591GROUND BEEF
\0
LONGHORN CHEESE ••••• ••••••• •••• !be69~

. STOKELY CUT

.

'

·'

These Everday Low Prices Save You Money!
PILLSBURY
··
0R BALLARD &lt;tee e

Swansdown Cake Mix-------------:.. ______...~~

Fui-Valu Buy!

(

':.:,.-_:~~

.

CELEIY!~~J~~~--

· ~oz

.Sept. 5-6-7

Argo Plnea,p~i Jultt ~!·;~!!~~~-----.:. __ ._ 46 ::~~~t

fAIR

ER
Spray
can

'

Prlw Effective

Pinto and Great Northern. Heat and .S .rvt

B

GREER

night reserv~ to limit quantitieS .

Maxwell Hnse Instant Coffee ______ _: ____ l~i:f9e Hurst's Fully Cooked Beans.-------------45 ;:; ~··

7~

9~

CL

''The Store With A Hart'~ .

~af.t Tomato Juice------------------- 3~::; f,~'l9

- ~·

.

'

Open Mon. thru ~~- .
9 to •~sunday 10 .L. · ..
GOOD VALU BUYS SURE TO PLEASE! :f.~· _
_.:. ·

CATSUP

Lady Colby

WINDOW

'
5TH and PURL $TS., RACIN~
'

laby _
, ..,________ 2 jars23e

STOKELY

1

39e

let•Jer Cookles----3 pkes.$.1

HUDSON

can

•

Inner Packaeas For Freshness
Zesta Crlckers-- lb..ilox
Several Varieties
..

15~

PORK and
BEANS

\

Dot Food MeaL 25 lb. bac1.89

SALAD DRESSING

SHOWBOAT

'

Best Brand

KRAFT
MIRACLE
WHIP

59~

Reg.
'

HI-C Drinks- 3..46 oz. cans $1

. FOIL

300

each

. All Flavors

FOOD

'

WASTE BASKETS

Producer's Milk ____ .;, __ 89e

DOG &amp; CAT

'

·10 oz. 1
'
19
ff
Co
ee
••••••••••••••••
Jar
•
Nescafe Instant
Choc. Drops, Pecan
Rae. 53c 391Keebler Cookies Sanclies, Party Cookies. • • • • • • • • • • •• lb. \'
• • fec t an t Spray••••••••••••••••••••
Germ Safe-Reeular 99c
Larce
591&gt;"
D1511
13 oz. can
Liquid
quart 191&gt;
Sta-Fio Starc h••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
•••• "
Custom Canned Pop••~~~~~:v:.s•••••••• 10 cans
• f res h 01 eo•••••••••••••••••
Quarters
Da1sy
•.••• 6 lb.
1.7 oz.
Nestea Instant Mix •••••••••••••• 10 pkcs.
roll
Como Toilet Tissue••••••••••••••••••4 pq.
Frlskies Dog Food•••••••••••••••••• 6 cans·

and

Twin Pack Gallon

14

"

(RIGID TOP)

\

. THRIFI'Y EVERYDAY
, LOW PRICES!

DIAMOND
ALUMINUM

can

•

SAVE YOU MON'E·Y

25~

''·

_,.,..,

OUiR..·PRICES

family to Salisbury, 1\. C.
TOIVN COUNCD. MEETING
Those attending were J o d y
.. The New Haven Town COWlcil
ASSORTED COLORS
', met on Monday evening in regu- Harless, Beth La.rne, K a t h y
, ·~ lar session with Mayor Thomas Roush, Slane Hesson, RodneJ'
• Grinstead presiding. Others In Vickers, Troy Hesson, Billy Pow, attendance were Helen Fields, ell, Eric Bumgardner, Jimm.v
Fui-Valu Buy!
'
i'ecorder, Jack Hess, G a r Y Powell, Al Sprouse, D~vid Hose,
Roosh, R, G. Greene, L e w i s Harold Rose, Margaret ..\M Buck,
&amp;unmers and Arthur Thabet, Mrs. John Fry, Mrs. William
I':OlUlcilm«rfl· Also attending were Powell, Jr., Mrs. Phil Batey,
Donald Ohlinger and Willtam Mrs. Donald Bumgardner and
jumbo
Kimes.
Mrs. Jack Hesson.
They voted to pay bills due. MRS. HENRY BL1 CK HONORED
roll
Mter much discussion it was
Mrs. Henry H. Buck, Jr. was
decided to reb.lrn to the origi. honored with a going away party - - - - - - - - nal schedule for the collection held at Sl. Paul Lutheran Church
JO-BO BRAND
oz.
ot garbage, aS it proved to be in New Haven on Monday evenlng.
too much Cor two days work. Gar· Mr. and Mrs. Buck and children
bot.
bage will be collected on Mon. are fn01jing to Salisbury, N. C.,
day from Fifth. Street to the where they will resid,e at 429
RI-ver. One Tuesday from Fifth Hudson St. Mrs. Buck was preStreet to Haven Heights, from sented a gift from the Church
¥.Liley View to Miller's Market Women.
on Finh street and Including old
Games were played and prizu. S. Route 33. On Wednesday es awarded. Those in attendance
from Miller's Market to the were Mrs. Robert Layne, Mrs.
only
Clt.y limits.
William Powell, Mrs. Herman
They discussed the street pav. La.yne, Mrs. Donald Bumgarding project and decided to contact ner, M.rs. Davld Roush, Mrs.
Mr. William Rairden, town at- A. L. Sprouse, Mrs. J. V, Me.
torney. A special meeting was Grew, Mrs. Harry Layne, Mrs.
held on Tuesday evening and af. Lloyd Roush, Mrs. John r r y,
ter reporting on the meeting with Mrs. otto Grimm, Mrs. Harold
the attorney Uley voted to re· Johnson, Mrs. William Russell,
ject th~ street paving project Mrs. Carroll Adams, Jr., Mi&amp;s
in its entirety because of. a Lelah J, Powell, Mrs. Velma
misrepresentation from the COO· Roush, Mrs. Jack Roush a n d
tractor.
Mrs. Buck.
~
Mr. Tom Parsons was grant.
PROCRESSJVE DINNER
ad an increase in salary. He is a
The Luther League of st. Paul
~ town policeman.
Lutheran Church held a Progres.
WIN ONE CLASS
slve Dinner on SUnday evening.
The Win One Class or the Unit- The group met for the first
.- ed Methodist Church met for a course at the picnic site at the
covered dish dinner and corn home of Mr. and Mrs. Edwin
roast atthepicniesiteatthebome &amp;eln with David Russell as chair.
fl Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Stein. man of the course. Devoti011a
JnvocaUoo was given by Miss were led by VIcki Rumgardter,
Ethel Riddle.
president. Scripture lesson was
Those attending were Mr. and read by Marsha Sprouse, a hymn
Mrs. George Ingels. Mr. and was read by Denise Cunningham
HALVES
Mrs. Donald Duncan, Mr. and and a prayer by Vicki BumgardNo.2% can
Mrs. James ·N. Roush, Mr. and ner. The main course was held
Mrs. Harry Pickens, Mr. and at the Mult~..purpose room of the
· -Mrs. Paul Rlckar~f. and Mrs. church with Becky Paugh chair- _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __._ _..,_ _ _.;,...,
'·_ _ _ _,..
; Harry · Niller, Mr. tnd Mrs. man. The dessert was held on the

'

I

PLASTIC BUCKETS

,.

Any ·waY . ~~ · loGIC ·. at it • • •

BUYS!

12"x25'

.

'

action as quickly as possible
thereafter;.

about Sept.. 15, he said, he plan--

Ful-Valu

·~Cit-New Haven SOcfiii'Evelits ·· ·- --~~~~ize

.

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~1.,. ·~

•

' .I

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other 'lhan Cinci~tL Eight!.:~/&gt;~
Wut depar,, f,1.·00i St.. l,py~ar . ,-.
frOrQ .McJJ'112hb,' and ORe frOm ·
New '• Orl~hs • . 'llle ~·smtl ru.{s ·:
!rom J•'e)lrlllti'y 7 through Novel1h
ber 30, 1969, bd the Orst Cullblown cruise is -the trip to the
t,lardi Gra~. _J.'eb~ry lJr ; '·
For ~rth.er lnl'orm_atiOn write

Democrats' Farm Plank 'Missing the Point
\.

.

Ttl~ 19G9' ~~We ihi:J!.~¢os.·~~·

On the Farm Front
WASHINGTON (UPO Drafters
o! a key Democratic platform
proposal to limit federal pa,r ments to big farmers did not
understand
how
government
farm programs work, a key
congressional Democrat prot! 1 tests,
rhe platform adopted in Chicago last week called ror a
stud;&gt; or the effects of limiting
payments to farmers. II added
,.
that, "if necessary, we suggest
graduated open--end limitation of
payments to extremely large
.,
corporate farms that participate
in government programs."
A limitation on payments to
very large farms would be
"better than an abrupt cut~!f
of payments, but it's 11 cut~Cf
nonetheless," said Chairman W.
R. Poage, D-Tex., of the !louse
Agriculture Committee.
Platform Misconceived
Poage was interviewed here
before his departure Sunday to
attend an Interparliamentar~
Union meeting at Lima, Peru.
He said the platform proposal
was "based on a complete mis-.- conception of our farm pro-

.

·
c;r
out- ·
comO of the law 'Wttlch .rcPficved trip~ ~nd Cor thQ nrlit
the l~uecn, the Groene ' (.lne: has of lllC!'I i¥91 orlgtJllto in

ju~;t now scheduled .fi.ve add)..
The original sea law would have tional trips in November· of. this
put the Queen out of service Nov: year and I&amp; :roiea5lng its 1969
2, 1968..' The rrw legislation ex.. schedule. The ~ti-0116) Novcmtends that period until Nov. 2, bcr 1968. Cr:'Ul.~s (~ ~~ays)
1970.
originate m_. st. Louis, Memphla
By that time the (irccn Line
New Orleans, and covers the
will have buill a new boat, apd lower Mlsalssippi ltlver where ..
hopes to &lt;{jcrate both the Qu~cn ~ummc,r •lingers longest. T.. e'se
and U1c new vessel in ihe river. trips aru upcn for'. ~II'€ now
va&lt;:atlon service.
and good ~:~pa&lt;.·c is aVailable.

an safely meaSUl'e&amp;.

The Dally Sentinel, Mlddlcport.Pomoroy, 0., SepL 4, !968

~

J

.

.

PIEMIEI
GRADE
.

.

,

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.

~:r

.··~·~·•••,.J•••·••··~r4:•••~••• .
,:.-,,.

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U.S. NO.1
NEW WHITE......

lb

'

· •

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.,

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\

BARNEY

12 - . Tho Dolly SenUnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., SepL 4, 1968

ALITTLE 'HOMEWORK' :Wa~hing, Want A.~,, ~ T?p frade Result!i

.,I
I

. ......
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.........................
... .. ......._
'

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C•ACIII...... &amp; CWNCHHi

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INUt.ATtOIII

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

---

••Iter Nlftt an

1M , ....,

..._ •

INM•n•le. TM

will

. ....s

fl• Wl!nt M llnoke
I anti " ' Wenl " " NartiMI
MlfiiMUM Cllll'tl 7fc,"""'~
It C'tftlt ..... ~ "''"..,
·

, .......rta.-.

11 cellh ... , WIN! till
....,.liM.
U ,_, 1MM DIHwnt

p

.... He

adl _. ... wtthln II da .

CAID 01'

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

ti-lt .. ,

TMANU

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H

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A H

~t~lfiiiiiUM.

.

• LIND ADI
AHitleMI lie CM,.. !Nf Afttlr·

...........

tu,...

Notice
Game Assn ., will have

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Of'

QUALITY

1965 FORD . , , • , , , , . ... , , •• . , ... , •. .•• $1595
Galaxle 4 door, black tlnlsh, clean Interior, good w-s-w
tires, VB ~ogtne, auto. trans., power steering, r~t-he&amp;ter,
sharp 1 owaer car.
1962 CADO..LAC , . • • . . . . . . , , • , .• SPECIAL $999
HT Coc&gt;e, good whtte wall tires, tull power equipment~~
c1udlng 6 was seat, power wiOOows, spotless interior, R&amp;:H.

1964 CORVAIR .. ... ... . . . ... .. .... ... , . ,$995
Spider, 2dr. black8nlsh,goodtires, 4 spd. Radio and h~r•

hd

ROUND WOOD
ALL SPECIES

OHIO PALLET CO.
992-2689
POMEROY, OHIO

..,.ac

OPEN EVES. I:DD P.M.
'POMEROY, OHIO

!!liS TRIUMPII Bonneville

very

Important JI\Oeting Friday ai
7:30 p.m. at the Sec-ond Ward
For Rent
ForSele
Fire House. All members are
tl\
STORY
homo, 3 bedrooms,
urged to allend.
9+31&lt;: TRAILER SPACE, all utilities
bath,
utility
room, storm
available. Inquire 156 Mulberdoors,
and
windows,
siding,
ry after S or 5 p.m. Write P.
NO TRESPASSING or hunting
two
car
garage,
garden
spot,
0 . Box 425 Pomeroy. 5-2&amp;-tfc
on my property. Addie H.
drilled well, two clrrterna,
Barton, Rt. I, Racine, Ohio.
plus
several other features.
FURNISHED
GARAGE
apart9-4-lllp
Located on nice lot approsl·
ment on Lincoln Hill. Utllltlea
mately I 12 miles !rom Rutpaid; adults only. Phone 992FOR TRADE-Cash for anland on the Rutland-Harrl3489.
6-19-tfc
tiques. William Hamm, Mid·
aonville Road, Phone 7ft..
clleporl.
8-28-30tp
4622.
S-1-«&lt;:
THREE ROOM furnished apartment, phone 992-5990. 8-25-lfc
THERE will be a gun shoot
HOUSE on Hamillon St., corSunday, September 8. begin·
ner tot, phone 992-5108 or 912TRAILER
LOTS.
Bob's
MobUe
ning at noon at the Forked
2684.
H-31&lt;
Court,
Syracuse,
Ohio
on
Slate
Run Sportsman Club. Every·
111.
124,
Phone
992-2951.
one Is welcome.
9-1-ltc
8-11-tfc SPECIAL STEREO, 11161 Early
American stereo radio eom1 WD..L not be responsible for
blnatlon. Beautiful solid slate
any debts other than my own. FURNISHED TWO BEDROOM
unh with 4 speed changer.
APARTMENT,
Middleport,
Hallie Robertson, Syracuse,
Pay balance of $99.12 or monphone
992-3874.
8-11-tfe
Ohlo.
9+31p
thly paymenls of 16. Also
have repossessed stereo In
BAND Friday and Saturday at TRAILER SPACE, ready to
walnut cabinet, 4 speaker
hook up, private, plenty of
Jack's Club on Harrisonville
Mand system, 4 speed dual
room for children to play.
Rd. off lit 7. Gayle McDonvolume
control. Balance ol
Phone 992-3904.
8-14-lfc
ald and his Drifter's Country
$84.11 or monthly payments
Musle.
9+3tc
of $5. Phone 992-3218. 9-l-6tc
FURNISHED garage apart.
ment, 212 S. 5th Ave., MidBAND every Friday from 9
dleport.
Adults. · Phone 992- FIVE ROOM house, close to
p.m. to 2 a.m. Shenang
town , hospital and school In
5435.
!l+tfc
Springs Nile Club. 9-l-4tc
Pomeroy. Phone 992-2271.
9-1-lltc
GOOD rent in lhe country, si1
WILL DO sewing at home rooms and bath, three bed·
\ zlppm.
pockets, pegging.
rooms, large basement, play 1965 RAMBLER In good con·
,?',:Jhemming, alterations, etc.
dilion, Phone 992-2271.
room
and garage, has oil
'Mnl. Freddie Thabet. Mason,
S-1-lll&lt;
heat
and
is
insulated,
drilled
77S-5651.
4-30-tfc
,,,II ~ Phone
well and spring house, large
'
garden and 50 acres of fen- 57 CHEVROLET. Phone Mason
., HAPPY HOUR, Shenang Springs
773-5312 Mason after 6 p.m.
ced pasture for a pony or cow
Nile Club, 5 In 6 p.m. Mon.
S.l-31c
if desired, school bus stops
day thru Friday. Ladies night
at the door. Located in a POODLE PUPPIES. AKC Toy
every Friday.
U-tfc
minlalure. 175 and up. Stud
quiet. peaceful valley a few
"'
service
and grooming. Pbooe
minutes
drive
from
Racine.
IIOW OPEN from 10 A.M. to 10
992-5443.
II ! tfc
Call Esther West, 949-2889.
P.M. the s&amp;W Drive In on
9+6tc
the by-pass Rt. 7. Soft Ice
AKC Golden Retrtever puppies,
eream, good food. specials on
524 Ash St, Middleport. 912~ ROOM furnished apartment,
Monday and 'nrursday.
5443.
6-:ZS.tfc
front and back entrance, all
11+30tc
conveniences. upstairs. back
porch. Phone 992-3134. 9+3tc JOHN DEERE 420 dozer with
Wonted To Buy
blade and winch, $800. Phone
ANTIQUES. lumllure, dishes.
~8-~~
ml9cellaneous. Mrs. Howard
Cecil, 800 W. Main Sl., PomePets For Sale Pood- KENNEBEC Potatoes, Charles
roy.
1-2&amp;-t!c SCHNAUZERS, Cod:ers,
les and Weslies 'White Sootffilton, Portland.
8-:!t-ZS~
lies', also breeding stock. POTATOES. WATERMELONS.
GIRL'S bicycle, English type
Barkaroo Kennels, Coolville,
preferred. Phone 94&amp;-2227.
phone 843-2254 Clarence Prof9+3tp
0. 45723.
8-18-301c
fitt, Portland.
8-:!t-l!c
CAR HOPS, apply in person at
Crow's Steak House, Pomeroy.
8-2&amp;-tlc

2 STORY house in llaelne, 6
rooms, bath, large porch, ga-

ForSele
5 ROOMS and bath on nice lot
on lit. 33. Call 992-5901.
7~c

FULL TIME and part tJme
work. Phone 992-8943. 9-4-lltp
TOY LADIES earn $25.00 an
evening demonstrating toys
and gilts. No Investment, col'
or catalog. Car ahd phone
necessary. Write Toy Ladies
Party Ptan, Jotwtown, Pennoylvanla.
9+31p

GENTLE MARE PONY and
eolt, cheap, Vernon Weber,
Rutland. Phone 74U625.
~

FIVE ROOM HOUSE and bath,
attached garage. one - thin!
acre ground, ~ Broadway,
Middleport. Phone 119U41'1.
~I&lt;

w.nt.d
COMBINATION
housekeeper,
.companion, cOO&lt; tn stay witb
elderly lady . Must be able lA&gt;
live ln. Prefer someone who
can drive. Car fumisbed. Fine
bome, good wages and permanent position lor the right
party. Reply giving n&amp;llltl
address aad phone number to
Boz liZ Middleport. 8-:&amp;lfc

For S1le or Tr1de
1111'1 MUSTANG, 1-q'lindor, S.
speed, 111M Cbevrolet Caprice,
automatic, power steering and
brolre.l, financing avaDable,
plloae IIIJ.e47 after 5 phone
111..1'141.
7.Jt..lfe

rage,

workshop,

basement.

gas heat, shade, ideal location ror children. See Willie
Davis or Phone 941-3023.
9-l-4tp
~ 9ti8

STEREO, lovely walnut
console with AM and FM radio, automali&lt;" fioatlng tum
table. Take over payments of
$5.00 per month or pay ba).
ance due. $101.Zl. This set
sold much higher. Try II In
youl" home. Call 992-1836.
1-4-81&lt;

MALE BASSET hound p u p s.

EFFICIENCY two bedroom
'fUrnllbed apartment, la-DII.
H-tfc

16 INCH Sorrel Pony, 7 years
old. $50.00. See at Jake Lee's
pasture at Racine, Ohio.

PVIUIISIIED and unlurnlaheol
IIJIIrll6ents. Close tD ICbooL
. . . . . . . 11!4.
1.JI.Ifc

••

I

'

..,.ac

CONTACT
,fAYE MAtUY
Milldllpllrt, o.

SChwarzil
Marine

•'
~

•:•.

Hockinaport, Ohio ·

PH. 99llo~3 .

PIIONE 667-3370
CARNIVAL By. Dick Turner

9+31&lt;
60 OLIVER

machine

tractor

and

mowing

cultivators

$250.00, Ill ion GMC

1956

good shape. $200.00. G. A.
Deem . Racine, Ohio. 9-t--3lc

pli.CI

BATH, 1-2/3
ACRES. QUARTER MILE
FROM POMEROY CORPOR·
ATlON
LIMITS.
CALL
WEEKENDS ONLY 992-29&amp;9.
9-3-ltc

phone 949-1272.

AT

of

t.

1t Wnt W_,.ll,tfoa Stl'fltf
........ OfiJe ...,..
1 Sll I 1: I It; I lh I IIJ I

Real Estate For Sale

HOBSTETT.ER
REALTY
OI!ORGE ROBBIE I IEK

"That ol' Miss Pool I had for a teacher lut t•a~ want
to summer ochool but she didn't l~arn muc
he's
ria;ht back in tho third arado!"

APPOINTMIN1'

lat.,. et Precta PtteMr, Deceawtl
Notice II berebY 1111en tbat Ioree
!llllll, of Route 3, Pom.aro,-, hal
been duly appointed Eueutrll: of
Lbe Elltate of Freda Flac:her, ,._
nued, lat~ of Pom~roJ,
Me...
C:ounly, Ohio.
CI"Miton are required. to file \hetr
daiiR.I with aald JidudarJ wtthln

.Q.aeine Soeil\1 Events.
'""

l&lt;otJf montha.
Dated UU. 28th d.uy ol Au.flll&amp; 1981

By MRS. FRANCIS MORRIS

M. O'IIUIN
Probat. ,lu-.. .r Mid County

F.

School, recently presented attemance awanls to Judy llouBh,

NOTICI OP API"OINTMINT
E•taN of Prank Oaul. Deaalacl
Nott~ It bel'tlbJ liven that Eldon
Gaul, of Cheater, Otuo, hu bftn
duly appolntetl Executor of the &amp;\ate of Frank Gaul, deee ..etl, late

Jane Roush, Beverly Stobart, mil

Beegle, Romie Grimm, Sus t e
Biggs, Mary Bllgs, BreD

Meip Qtunt,. Obl.o.

---

Business Services
1\ADIO AND TV REPAIR, bouse
calla, antenna. sale and Installation. Jobo Harrlaon, 701
Broadway St., Middleport,
phDIIe 99'M522.
Hl-tfc

CURTISS bnedlng service Gl
21 clllferenl breeds, cattle sires or 4 breeds of goat bucb,
by calling Parker 912-2264, J'o.
IIW'Ol' or 667-3251 Coolville.
1-25-Sotc

1933

-

AUCI10NEER
Camplete llervke
n.. tiN1I!l
Crill lln&lt;lferd
Radne. Oltlo
5 1 lfc

SEWING MACHINES. repair
oervlce,
maket. WY 12784. 'l1lo Fabric Shop, POIII'
~my. Authorized Sllll!l!r Sales
and Servtee. We Sllarnen

an

sa.tfc

\

1.\E; IlLS£&gt; FILLS "THE
Y'!ICE 1!-llll'.l LEFT
B'r' 1£.ETI-\ 1HIIT
FIILL OUT!

!&gt;0 I IAXXJlD SA 'r'
lliAT YOU MIGHT
CollitOER.A DEIJTIST

Black cat!

He run plunkdab in front

~T Of A
~c ~lc'-.!nST I

10 1310

ot u5!

••
•'

!•
••
•
••

I,.

••
'
~•

UTTLE ORPHAN ANNIE

IAA'·IAT ~IOULD
YOU LII-'E US

LISTEN' WE ~ THE

LE~Vl A5
S~WII.IW?

To

.f...,.
Coo apeirt a lew dais in Columbus
with relatives and attinded t h e

··~t...·'

IF lHE 1&lt;0 WE

GOT BElOfiGS. T'

I

THIS OL' WITCH

•''

Slllte Fair.
• .,
Mr. and Mrs. CltesterSimpROII
rebirned home alter 1 vtolt at
Woodafteld
with their ion 1 n d
Vegas, Nev., Mr. and Mrs.
Steve Cleland and aon of Pt. dlllgbter-h..Jaw, Mr, and Mrs.
Pleasant, W. Va., and Mr. and Brian Simpson and children.
Mrs. Rlchlnl Young and son of
Racine.
Gue&amp;ts of Mr. and Mrs. Ben
Larry Taylor and chlldren of

ll/8"1 -·--

·

---

AI~Staro

NEW YORK cUPI) - Five
members or the New York
Yankees were selected lor the
ftrst Ali~Star ga.me In 1933.
They were Babe Ruth. Lou
Oehrlll. Letty Gomez. Tony
X..zzerl and Ben Chapman.

Floyd Jones of ML Vernon, 0.
Word was received here of the
death of Mrs. Chub Ova) Pickens
of Canton. She wu burled there.

Mr. and Mr&amp;. Fnnk Clelaod
were ple~lsantly surprised b~
their children recently in observ.
ance of their 30th wedding anni·
venary. Followl!w the dhmer
they were presented a beautlMly
decorated cake Which was served
Oklahoma City has weather ~ with home-made ice cream. Preseel 28 tornadoes since 1892 says ent. in addldon to Mr. and Mrs.
Cleland, were Mr. ard Mrs.
the Natlon&amp;J. aeoa:raphie.

... BUT IF IT"S
A SUCCESS,

WHAT'U.~

DO WITH THE
PK:TURES?

land.
Sunday afterooon guests at
Mrs. Ada Bays and Mrs. Ethel
Wheeler were M.r. alii M r a.
Charles Covey and Mr. alii Mr1.
Earl Covey of' Belpre.
Mr. am Mrs. Jack Shill!\ and

....

son, John,andMn.Shan~!smoth­
er, Mrs. John R Boomer", Park- ·
ersburg, w. VL, vialted.Mrs. Es·
lher Piper, MrS. Helen Younce

and Mrs, Crill Bradford, Sundl¥Mr, and Mrs. Donald Bradford
of Dotrolt visited over a recoil!,
weekend With relatives.

DAILY CROSSWORD
. A&lt;JII088

Mr. George Benton Cron of
Birmingham, AlL, and motber,
Mrs. A. B. Cross, &amp;POnt a day

I. Bpoody

6.Froin~

dls~e

9.Ml-·

with Mrs. B,ybll MlleL
Mra, WUIIIm Aaderoonandaon

...t

of BalUmore, M:l., Miss Hilda

llertpa;.

13. Umptft'M

cry

V.•.
with their aunt, Mrs.

let Jones of Wheellne, ~w.

abbr. ·&lt; 111. Made -:-:

-.t ....

....

Mr:

;11[~~~-

Ii
· nde

reiOiute' ·..-

...

·~'r.

,·

18. Doo!ey'a. .
tl~ ~ ' -~ ·

... Bien\illtOB

""=~Uil.
ftlftt

•: '4

ft~ VItn

.

&lt;'1:...• ••• · ••••

19. So: Srot.

3.An~:·
nte ·- e

:n. Motht-r

.

.f. Tellurium :
aym.

n. Flower
&amp;. Prevent

lrttm

'&gt; &gt;

fllldtt

fled

lOOt

I

HI Nil I f\HN&lt;llll

,

d lltl!l I I I

u-ramblelhelt four Jumble,
oae letter to euh aquare, to
form four ordinary wortla.

22.81pl-

T.iruttro •

8. Garden

JJtDMOOlYE;-IJ.J .... "'-' ,_

or

23.Skln-

ntest

9. Rf•ldentl or 21&gt;. A boy.

· Rantoon

oort

•

an4
hll

do&amp;

13. A11terh1k . ,

:rf.~H

15. Obler,na

:II. Haw•r,

17. Direct.
ttOm the

oJillnal
HOU~

cable,

· etc.

:u. Pinch

32. Enouc~ :

archaic

33. neld

. u. French river
311. Drone

38. Bramln• :

,ALLEa

hitter

lT~ ~leUea

IUI&lt;&gt;t.,
clltttcUll
ft. !Clio put

"; j

2. Off balance

11. Tape ora

14. Houae
member:

s,ybll Miles.
Dr. Kathryti PhUaon oiBtackaburg, Va., Is S~ I WMk
wtth Mr. and Mrs. ThOraonJoh,.

, Shirley Nelgler 11 In Columbus
With her aliter. June Nelgler,
~ tho SIIIAI Flit.
Marf Sboeto ol DoytDn, v,.u
Grhnm ollJetart Falls bel )Irs.
Luther Johnson ot Rolaoke,· y&amp;, ~
otsltecl Mrs. Frallkle Nell!ir.
Mrs.· Bert Hwae o1 CollllllbUs
visited Mr. and·;Mrs. Ralph Nelli"'
lor, Jl', 1nil oilier relatl.es.

.

10. Deteeunr
device
12. Japane&amp;e

Gamble ol Doyton, Mrs. WUitam
Teeman. son and daughter, of
Trideillhla, W. Va., Mrs. Chlr·

a day

--·"THEN WE GIVE SA00 A BUM
'bTEER. AH0 "f"HAT'LL MEA/'1 HE'U.
lEAR LJS ~ FRawlpMB fOR
&lt;tiETTIM' HIM Of'! A WILD QQQ§_E
CHASE!~

Petrel were Mr&amp;. Anna Jones,
Mrs. carmen Heatherman and
daughter, Am. of Batavia, N, Y.,
Mr. Dick savaeeofUvonla,N,Y,,
and Mrs. laaac Taylor of Rut-

apent

C. C. BRADPORD

:\)·
',li)i

Mr. Frank Cleland, superin- Galllllolls, Mr. aod Mrs. I van
tendent of Firat Baptist Church Powell and dllughtera o! Las

IHo: 11-11; t-11

o••••••
••a

Entertained
••

Brobr
Credltora an required lO rue their
POMEROY - ; rooms, bath, ~~:"lalm w:llb uill lldlltla.I"J' wUbiJI Sayre am Charles Knighting,
four monUIIo.
·
Rev,, am Mrs, W. D. McClurg,
level lot near stores.
Dl\ed U11J 30th 411' of AUJUII 1118
pastor
of the local Methodist
P. H. 0'8111N
SYRACUSE - 8 room brick,
Probate Judie of Mid Covnty
Charge have moved Into the new~
bath. slorm doors and win- H; 8-U: i-18
ly redecorated parsonage. A
dows, forced air heat. ! lev·
Charge--wide even house was held
NOTICI DF A,.,OINTMaNT
el Ioiii.
aatate fll .len• L":UIM D. lmltll, De·
Sumay,
8S ACRES - Large 7 rooms, Cf'IMd.
Rev. and Mrs. H. L. McDaniel
Notke b hanbJ liven that J"ranll
bath, cellar. bam, well, cis- w. Portlr. Jr•• of Bo:. 4811, Pomeroy, or GuysviUe, former pastor or
C"blo, bu been duly appoiJltetl ke·
tern. minerals.
c.ul.or of Ute Ziti~ of lane Lout.
the local Methodist charge, visIIELEN or VIRGO.. TEAFORD D. SDliLb, dfleeated, lita uf Melp ited with friends here and attendCountr. Ohio.
ASSOCIATES
ltWIZ5
Credttora are required to rt1e tbelr
ed senices at the church last
rlala wiUl uid. fiduciary wUbllll
SYRACUSE
Sunday,
loor inObtba.
Dated. llli8 11M-b dU of A IIJUII 1118
Crltt Bradford received word
P. H.
P...uta .IVdtt ot ukl cou•ty
or the death of his aunt, Mrs.

Sclason.

Keeping Meigs
Gallic and
Mason Ar~a . ·_
Informed As
Well As

U.L " '· OIL

Cue No. 1&amp;,181

t~f

:I

12 NOON .
3 P.M.
AND
4:30 P.M.

. PORNIY INDUiftlll. INC.

9-1-61&lt;:

l

7:50 A.M.

You are nqllired to ..,... tbl
uJd PeUUon br the dar of Au,...,_
II. 1988, OJ' JudPliiDI bJ Ute PlaiU.
tiH wlll lie reDdlrcd IPlnn ~ .

u F'l'. SKIFF. 3.6 motor, oars.

0

LOCAL REPORTS
DAllY

phil interut at tbe n&amp;e Df 1 pu
ecnl per 1nnum; Aid acU011. belnl
11Ue4 UPOII rour eoaHnlon of fiiDdl
ol the underd&amp;ned.

NDTic:l Of'

;:

presents

M..W. Couat)', ohia, praJiDI for
Jud,meal 1n the amoaat ot a.300.11

.........

'

,,

INFORMlTIOtf
NEwS

JNI, tbe lllldu'ISflled, PorMJ IDdQio
&amp;rlu, ~.. flle4 ill PeUUoa qalut
pou in tbe Court of C.mmon Pleu.

ly1 Oenltl A. Mellee.

7 ROOMS AND

-

Pomeroy -

WMPO

reeldeD.OI II altbowa, will tat. ....,
tin tlltot 011 the 21th cbJ td .JalJ',

IN MIDidOin'

early

::
,..
{

.

whoM

TOGO TO
HARVARD?

•.

IIIMr ..... llfntiJ
A.ddHtl UftiiMW!l.

CARRIR

Sept. we . give ems -....
Red worms real ~ the sealOll, lbanb for YOID' past
. belp, lolm Jlahlet, Leading
()eel~;
Road, MlddJepart,
Oblo. ~ IIIZ-tlll.

AYt~:u

Till ltiCIM HlnMI N...... l I I *
RHIM1 0"11

Plwne 985-3326, Margarel 10 PAYMENTS of $5 or $41
cash. Must sell 11161 sewing
Groce, Long Bottom. 11-30-61&lt;
machine. Fully equipped to
zig zag. make buttonholes, ·
BRACE yoursell for a thrUI
sew on buttons, etc. 3 month&amp;
the first time you use Blue
1-4-Cic
Lustre. Rent electric sham- old. Call 992-2136.
Am CONlliT!ONING Rerrt!!Ol'pooer. $1. Baker Furniture.
aUon service. ,Jaek'o Refrig»-61&lt; 19ti8 SCHULT Mobile Home,
eration, New Raven. bone
brahd new, 12150, two bed·
!a-211'11.
4 I de
rooms, will sell or trade In
ll!VEN Beagle pups, Phone
IIIIUI69 after 5 p.m.. 7 Uber· on good property. S. D. Bus·
I)' Ave., Pomeroy.
..l-3tp kirk, 646 Plum Street, Mid- READY - MIX concrete dellvmd right · to your projeet.
dleport .
f.4-3lp
Fast and etiiJI. Flu eatlGRAVELY tractor with moll
malel .. Plwne 992-m4, GoegHelpW1nted
attachments, Phone I!IU143.
leln
Ready - Mb: Co., Mlddl..
11-1..11&lt;
port, Ohio.
• liO de
AFRICAN NIGHTCRAWLERS,
BVOOET PRYCE furniture on
60 for $1, theae are larger
our third floor budget shop,
- · due to 1aet &lt;&gt;I ,.
Baker
Furniture, Middleport,
11po1110, 1168 Is my last year
Oblo.
? 21 de
In the baH buslnes•. All nJgbterawiers must go In

::

,.,. c.a•• caJrrallr.

-...
Elmer · Slenerth,

-Eli'- WOULD

'1111\1 LIKE

::

" feNitft cor~~tretllln

- ....

ARBIE AND SLATS .

•~

69 MODELS

NOTICI OP PUILICAYION
llerntr IINI!IItr...., lfte.,

..

:•'"

·''•'•'

•'
••
o'

lncu,llntfl!t
Insurance bee•
eaneelled? Lost your onerat.
or's lleense? Call 992-21161.
I IS lfe

Pllllltlff,

MUSI-IID?M CAl/.. ,

I ,•

~UTOMOBD..E

WAifi'ID
.

For Rent

EltPEIIENCEt
'
.
••lttor Service

All '68's Red~~~;ed

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto!

torcycle. Pbcme Cberrter 11116- CIGARETTE vending machines
1350 or see at Newell's Sun; and servlee. ABC Enterprlm,
.... Mason, W. Va. Phone 'I'IS-SS4!.
..!
OCO
·
...,.
S-9-tfc

•liCE PONiEs, your ehoke Gl
10 head $40. Eskey Hlll, Pomeroy, Phone 911U810. 9-1-31c

POiNG AT
TH!i I!OT1b\l
OfTI'IOSEA!

SALES AND SERVICE

Business Services

&amp;-4J v-111

Help Wanted

-

EYINRUDE

... E. MDI

mo-

1984 DODGE V-1 wagon, 45,544 mllea, clean. 1162 Fonl
Galule 1100, nice. 1951 Chevy
Impala V-8, reel and willis,
also Maytag wrtns&lt;l' type
wuber and !win laundry
tubs, 311 years old, both for
f60. Dale Barr, Reedsville,
Oblo.
t-1-ztp

.

-GUARANrEEDPHONE 992·2094

DELIVERED TO
VOLKSWAGEN In good ~­
lion, ean be seen II IG6\l
Sprlag Ave., or eall !J92.3121.

.

·s.ss

PER TON

Fors.le

.

$P.ERI'
Y(hftl Alignment

·ss.oo

614·992-2181

.

SU:WHAT

\t'U'VE l!f'.ti&gt;J

AND ~Are'(, WITIIlfJ
I.ON6-6 LA55 VIEWr
5115 THE MA~r:R OF

i'·

Maximum Dlamet•r 10 ln.
Minimum Dlamet•r 2 ln.•
Mlnl01um Lonoth 4 1..1

Call Pomeroy

.

AN' COME
'TO SUPPER

- ·au:,slft·ess ·Serv1ces

WANTED I

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

Pomeroy Motor Co.

DP .. CI MOUU
I"' a.M. t1 1111 J.l'll. DillY
ttM •·• te 1t:W MMII ..

THE MEIGS County Fish

2 SIGNS

.

(,000/1'0\
L.i'a:'K TO

THEM THAR

~STOL5

.

.. :

I ,••• Drr ........ PviiUCI

ROBIN MALONE

REXILI

I

[j

tXJ

..•
TA~KATlve

!"!!CSSN Mletfl 8E.

1-(10 BACK T' -nE. RAG
PICKER AN' \IJE•O.AIM

StiE 1,1./AS RESCUED BY
"THE REST O' tEf;t

GANG WHICH BUST 11"1

HERE

�'

•

.,

'

'.'

\

BARNEY

12 - . Tho Dolly SenUnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., SepL 4, 1968

ALITTLE 'HOMEWORK' :Wa~hing, Want A.~,, ~ T?p frade Result!i

.,I
I

. ......
.:=.~-. J
.........................
... .. ......._
'

...._ DMIII- t •.-.
C•ACIII...... &amp; CWNCHHi

,

INUt.ATtOIII

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

---

••Iter Nlftt an

1M , ....,

..._ •

INM•n•le. TM

will

. ....s

fl• Wl!nt M llnoke
I anti " ' Wenl " " NartiMI
MlfiiMUM Cllll'tl 7fc,"""'~
It C'tftlt ..... ~ "''"..,
·

, .......rta.-.

11 cellh ... , WIN! till
....,.liM.
U ,_, 1MM DIHwnt

p

.... He

adl _. ... wtthln II da .

CAID 01'

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

ti-lt .. ,

TMANU

..,., ,..
H

..,,,.

A H

~t~lfiiiiiUM.

.

• LIND ADI
AHitleMI lie CM,.. !Nf Afttlr·

...........

tu,...

Notice
Game Assn ., will have

\I

\, /,'

.,

.,,.

... ,

Of'

QUALITY

1965 FORD . , , • , , , , . ... , , •• . , ... , •. .•• $1595
Galaxle 4 door, black tlnlsh, clean Interior, good w-s-w
tires, VB ~ogtne, auto. trans., power steering, r~t-he&amp;ter,
sharp 1 owaer car.
1962 CADO..LAC , . • • . . . . . . , , • , .• SPECIAL $999
HT Coc&gt;e, good whtte wall tires, tull power equipment~~
c1udlng 6 was seat, power wiOOows, spotless interior, R&amp;:H.

1964 CORVAIR .. ... ... . . . ... .. .... ... , . ,$995
Spider, 2dr. black8nlsh,goodtires, 4 spd. Radio and h~r•

hd

ROUND WOOD
ALL SPECIES

OHIO PALLET CO.
992-2689
POMEROY, OHIO

..,.ac

OPEN EVES. I:DD P.M.
'POMEROY, OHIO

!!liS TRIUMPII Bonneville

very

Important JI\Oeting Friday ai
7:30 p.m. at the Sec-ond Ward
For Rent
ForSele
Fire House. All members are
tl\
STORY
homo, 3 bedrooms,
urged to allend.
9+31&lt;: TRAILER SPACE, all utilities
bath,
utility
room, storm
available. Inquire 156 Mulberdoors,
and
windows,
siding,
ry after S or 5 p.m. Write P.
NO TRESPASSING or hunting
two
car
garage,
garden
spot,
0 . Box 425 Pomeroy. 5-2&amp;-tfc
on my property. Addie H.
drilled well, two clrrterna,
Barton, Rt. I, Racine, Ohio.
plus
several other features.
FURNISHED
GARAGE
apart9-4-lllp
Located on nice lot approsl·
ment on Lincoln Hill. Utllltlea
mately I 12 miles !rom Rutpaid; adults only. Phone 992FOR TRADE-Cash for anland on the Rutland-Harrl3489.
6-19-tfc
tiques. William Hamm, Mid·
aonville Road, Phone 7ft..
clleporl.
8-28-30tp
4622.
S-1-«&lt;:
THREE ROOM furnished apartment, phone 992-5990. 8-25-lfc
THERE will be a gun shoot
HOUSE on Hamillon St., corSunday, September 8. begin·
ner tot, phone 992-5108 or 912TRAILER
LOTS.
Bob's
MobUe
ning at noon at the Forked
2684.
H-31&lt;
Court,
Syracuse,
Ohio
on
Slate
Run Sportsman Club. Every·
111.
124,
Phone
992-2951.
one Is welcome.
9-1-ltc
8-11-tfc SPECIAL STEREO, 11161 Early
American stereo radio eom1 WD..L not be responsible for
blnatlon. Beautiful solid slate
any debts other than my own. FURNISHED TWO BEDROOM
unh with 4 speed changer.
APARTMENT,
Middleport,
Hallie Robertson, Syracuse,
Pay balance of $99.12 or monphone
992-3874.
8-11-tfe
Ohlo.
9+31p
thly paymenls of 16. Also
have repossessed stereo In
BAND Friday and Saturday at TRAILER SPACE, ready to
walnut cabinet, 4 speaker
hook up, private, plenty of
Jack's Club on Harrisonville
Mand system, 4 speed dual
room for children to play.
Rd. off lit 7. Gayle McDonvolume
control. Balance ol
Phone 992-3904.
8-14-lfc
ald and his Drifter's Country
$84.11 or monthly payments
Musle.
9+3tc
of $5. Phone 992-3218. 9-l-6tc
FURNISHED garage apart.
ment, 212 S. 5th Ave., MidBAND every Friday from 9
dleport.
Adults. · Phone 992- FIVE ROOM house, close to
p.m. to 2 a.m. Shenang
town , hospital and school In
5435.
!l+tfc
Springs Nile Club. 9-l-4tc
Pomeroy. Phone 992-2271.
9-1-lltc
GOOD rent in lhe country, si1
WILL DO sewing at home rooms and bath, three bed·
\ zlppm.
pockets, pegging.
rooms, large basement, play 1965 RAMBLER In good con·
,?',:Jhemming, alterations, etc.
dilion, Phone 992-2271.
room
and garage, has oil
'Mnl. Freddie Thabet. Mason,
S-1-lll&lt;
heat
and
is
insulated,
drilled
77S-5651.
4-30-tfc
,,,II ~ Phone
well and spring house, large
'
garden and 50 acres of fen- 57 CHEVROLET. Phone Mason
., HAPPY HOUR, Shenang Springs
773-5312 Mason after 6 p.m.
ced pasture for a pony or cow
Nile Club, 5 In 6 p.m. Mon.
S.l-31c
if desired, school bus stops
day thru Friday. Ladies night
at the door. Located in a POODLE PUPPIES. AKC Toy
every Friday.
U-tfc
minlalure. 175 and up. Stud
quiet. peaceful valley a few
"'
service
and grooming. Pbooe
minutes
drive
from
Racine.
IIOW OPEN from 10 A.M. to 10
992-5443.
II ! tfc
Call Esther West, 949-2889.
P.M. the s&amp;W Drive In on
9+6tc
the by-pass Rt. 7. Soft Ice
AKC Golden Retrtever puppies,
eream, good food. specials on
524 Ash St, Middleport. 912~ ROOM furnished apartment,
Monday and 'nrursday.
5443.
6-:ZS.tfc
front and back entrance, all
11+30tc
conveniences. upstairs. back
porch. Phone 992-3134. 9+3tc JOHN DEERE 420 dozer with
Wonted To Buy
blade and winch, $800. Phone
ANTIQUES. lumllure, dishes.
~8-~~
ml9cellaneous. Mrs. Howard
Cecil, 800 W. Main Sl., PomePets For Sale Pood- KENNEBEC Potatoes, Charles
roy.
1-2&amp;-t!c SCHNAUZERS, Cod:ers,
les and Weslies 'White Sootffilton, Portland.
8-:!t-ZS~
lies', also breeding stock. POTATOES. WATERMELONS.
GIRL'S bicycle, English type
Barkaroo Kennels, Coolville,
preferred. Phone 94&amp;-2227.
phone 843-2254 Clarence Prof9+3tp
0. 45723.
8-18-301c
fitt, Portland.
8-:!t-l!c
CAR HOPS, apply in person at
Crow's Steak House, Pomeroy.
8-2&amp;-tlc

2 STORY house in llaelne, 6
rooms, bath, large porch, ga-

ForSele
5 ROOMS and bath on nice lot
on lit. 33. Call 992-5901.
7~c

FULL TIME and part tJme
work. Phone 992-8943. 9-4-lltp
TOY LADIES earn $25.00 an
evening demonstrating toys
and gilts. No Investment, col'
or catalog. Car ahd phone
necessary. Write Toy Ladies
Party Ptan, Jotwtown, Pennoylvanla.
9+31p

GENTLE MARE PONY and
eolt, cheap, Vernon Weber,
Rutland. Phone 74U625.
~

FIVE ROOM HOUSE and bath,
attached garage. one - thin!
acre ground, ~ Broadway,
Middleport. Phone 119U41'1.
~I&lt;

w.nt.d
COMBINATION
housekeeper,
.companion, cOO&lt; tn stay witb
elderly lady . Must be able lA&gt;
live ln. Prefer someone who
can drive. Car fumisbed. Fine
bome, good wages and permanent position lor the right
party. Reply giving n&amp;llltl
address aad phone number to
Boz liZ Middleport. 8-:&amp;lfc

For S1le or Tr1de
1111'1 MUSTANG, 1-q'lindor, S.
speed, 111M Cbevrolet Caprice,
automatic, power steering and
brolre.l, financing avaDable,
plloae IIIJ.e47 after 5 phone
111..1'141.
7.Jt..lfe

rage,

workshop,

basement.

gas heat, shade, ideal location ror children. See Willie
Davis or Phone 941-3023.
9-l-4tp
~ 9ti8

STEREO, lovely walnut
console with AM and FM radio, automali&lt;" fioatlng tum
table. Take over payments of
$5.00 per month or pay ba).
ance due. $101.Zl. This set
sold much higher. Try II In
youl" home. Call 992-1836.
1-4-81&lt;

MALE BASSET hound p u p s.

EFFICIENCY two bedroom
'fUrnllbed apartment, la-DII.
H-tfc

16 INCH Sorrel Pony, 7 years
old. $50.00. See at Jake Lee's
pasture at Racine, Ohio.

PVIUIISIIED and unlurnlaheol
IIJIIrll6ents. Close tD ICbooL
. . . . . . . 11!4.
1.JI.Ifc

••

I

'

..,.ac

CONTACT
,fAYE MAtUY
Milldllpllrt, o.

SChwarzil
Marine

•'
~

•:•.

Hockinaport, Ohio ·

PH. 99llo~3 .

PIIONE 667-3370
CARNIVAL By. Dick Turner

9+31&lt;
60 OLIVER

machine

tractor

and

mowing

cultivators

$250.00, Ill ion GMC

1956

good shape. $200.00. G. A.
Deem . Racine, Ohio. 9-t--3lc

pli.CI

BATH, 1-2/3
ACRES. QUARTER MILE
FROM POMEROY CORPOR·
ATlON
LIMITS.
CALL
WEEKENDS ONLY 992-29&amp;9.
9-3-ltc

phone 949-1272.

AT

of

t.

1t Wnt W_,.ll,tfoa Stl'fltf
........ OfiJe ...,..
1 Sll I 1: I It; I lh I IIJ I

Real Estate For Sale

HOBSTETT.ER
REALTY
OI!ORGE ROBBIE I IEK

"That ol' Miss Pool I had for a teacher lut t•a~ want
to summer ochool but she didn't l~arn muc
he's
ria;ht back in tho third arado!"

APPOINTMIN1'

lat.,. et Precta PtteMr, Deceawtl
Notice II berebY 1111en tbat Ioree
!llllll, of Route 3, Pom.aro,-, hal
been duly appointed Eueutrll: of
Lbe Elltate of Freda Flac:her, ,._
nued, lat~ of Pom~roJ,
Me...
C:ounly, Ohio.
CI"Miton are required. to file \hetr
daiiR.I with aald JidudarJ wtthln

.Q.aeine Soeil\1 Events.
'""

l&lt;otJf montha.
Dated UU. 28th d.uy ol Au.flll&amp; 1981

By MRS. FRANCIS MORRIS

M. O'IIUIN
Probat. ,lu-.. .r Mid County

F.

School, recently presented attemance awanls to Judy llouBh,

NOTICI OP API"OINTMINT
E•taN of Prank Oaul. Deaalacl
Nott~ It bel'tlbJ liven that Eldon
Gaul, of Cheater, Otuo, hu bftn
duly appolntetl Executor of the &amp;\ate of Frank Gaul, deee ..etl, late

Jane Roush, Beverly Stobart, mil

Beegle, Romie Grimm, Sus t e
Biggs, Mary Bllgs, BreD

Meip Qtunt,. Obl.o.

---

Business Services
1\ADIO AND TV REPAIR, bouse
calla, antenna. sale and Installation. Jobo Harrlaon, 701
Broadway St., Middleport,
phDIIe 99'M522.
Hl-tfc

CURTISS bnedlng service Gl
21 clllferenl breeds, cattle sires or 4 breeds of goat bucb,
by calling Parker 912-2264, J'o.
IIW'Ol' or 667-3251 Coolville.
1-25-Sotc

1933

-

AUCI10NEER
Camplete llervke
n.. tiN1I!l
Crill lln&lt;lferd
Radne. Oltlo
5 1 lfc

SEWING MACHINES. repair
oervlce,
maket. WY 12784. 'l1lo Fabric Shop, POIII'
~my. Authorized Sllll!l!r Sales
and Servtee. We Sllarnen

an

sa.tfc

\

1.\E; IlLS£&gt; FILLS "THE
Y'!ICE 1!-llll'.l LEFT
B'r' 1£.ETI-\ 1HIIT
FIILL OUT!

!&gt;0 I IAXXJlD SA 'r'
lliAT YOU MIGHT
CollitOER.A DEIJTIST

Black cat!

He run plunkdab in front

~T Of A
~c ~lc'-.!nST I

10 1310

ot u5!

••
•'

!•
••
•
••

I,.

••
'
~•

UTTLE ORPHAN ANNIE

IAA'·IAT ~IOULD
YOU LII-'E US

LISTEN' WE ~ THE

LE~Vl A5
S~WII.IW?

To

.f...,.
Coo apeirt a lew dais in Columbus
with relatives and attinded t h e

··~t...·'

IF lHE 1&lt;0 WE

GOT BElOfiGS. T'

I

THIS OL' WITCH

•''

Slllte Fair.
• .,
Mr. and Mrs. CltesterSimpROII
rebirned home alter 1 vtolt at
Woodafteld
with their ion 1 n d
Vegas, Nev., Mr. and Mrs.
Steve Cleland and aon of Pt. dlllgbter-h..Jaw, Mr, and Mrs.
Pleasant, W. Va., and Mr. and Brian Simpson and children.
Mrs. Rlchlnl Young and son of
Racine.
Gue&amp;ts of Mr. and Mrs. Ben
Larry Taylor and chlldren of

ll/8"1 -·--

·

---

AI~Staro

NEW YORK cUPI) - Five
members or the New York
Yankees were selected lor the
ftrst Ali~Star ga.me In 1933.
They were Babe Ruth. Lou
Oehrlll. Letty Gomez. Tony
X..zzerl and Ben Chapman.

Floyd Jones of ML Vernon, 0.
Word was received here of the
death of Mrs. Chub Ova) Pickens
of Canton. She wu burled there.

Mr. and Mr&amp;. Fnnk Clelaod
were ple~lsantly surprised b~
their children recently in observ.
ance of their 30th wedding anni·
venary. Followl!w the dhmer
they were presented a beautlMly
decorated cake Which was served
Oklahoma City has weather ~ with home-made ice cream. Preseel 28 tornadoes since 1892 says ent. in addldon to Mr. and Mrs.
Cleland, were Mr. ard Mrs.
the Natlon&amp;J. aeoa:raphie.

... BUT IF IT"S
A SUCCESS,

WHAT'U.~

DO WITH THE
PK:TURES?

land.
Sunday afterooon guests at
Mrs. Ada Bays and Mrs. Ethel
Wheeler were M.r. alii M r a.
Charles Covey and Mr. alii Mr1.
Earl Covey of' Belpre.
Mr. am Mrs. Jack Shill!\ and

....

son, John,andMn.Shan~!smoth­
er, Mrs. John R Boomer", Park- ·
ersburg, w. VL, vialted.Mrs. Es·
lher Piper, MrS. Helen Younce

and Mrs, Crill Bradford, Sundl¥Mr, and Mrs. Donald Bradford
of Dotrolt visited over a recoil!,
weekend With relatives.

DAILY CROSSWORD
. A&lt;JII088

Mr. George Benton Cron of
Birmingham, AlL, and motber,
Mrs. A. B. Cross, &amp;POnt a day

I. Bpoody

6.Froin~

dls~e

9.Ml-·

with Mrs. B,ybll MlleL
Mra, WUIIIm Aaderoonandaon

...t

of BalUmore, M:l., Miss Hilda

llertpa;.

13. Umptft'M

cry

V.•.
with their aunt, Mrs.

let Jones of Wheellne, ~w.

abbr. ·&lt; 111. Made -:-:

-.t ....

....

Mr:

;11[~~~-

Ii
· nde

reiOiute' ·..-

...

·~'r.

,·

18. Doo!ey'a. .
tl~ ~ ' -~ ·

... Bien\illtOB

""=~Uil.
ftlftt

•: '4

ft~ VItn

.

&lt;'1:...• ••• · ••••

19. So: Srot.

3.An~:·
nte ·- e

:n. Motht-r

.

.f. Tellurium :
aym.

n. Flower
&amp;. Prevent

lrttm

'&gt; &gt;

fllldtt

fled

lOOt

I

HI Nil I f\HN&lt;llll

,

d lltl!l I I I

u-ramblelhelt four Jumble,
oae letter to euh aquare, to
form four ordinary wortla.

22.81pl-

T.iruttro •

8. Garden

JJtDMOOlYE;-IJ.J .... "'-' ,_

or

23.Skln-

ntest

9. Rf•ldentl or 21&gt;. A boy.

· Rantoon

oort

•

an4
hll

do&amp;

13. A11terh1k . ,

:rf.~H

15. Obler,na

:II. Haw•r,

17. Direct.
ttOm the

oJillnal
HOU~

cable,

· etc.

:u. Pinch

32. Enouc~ :

archaic

33. neld

. u. French river
311. Drone

38. Bramln• :

,ALLEa

hitter

lT~ ~leUea

IUI&lt;&gt;t.,
clltttcUll
ft. !Clio put

"; j

2. Off balance

11. Tape ora

14. Houae
member:

s,ybll Miles.
Dr. Kathryti PhUaon oiBtackaburg, Va., Is S~ I WMk
wtth Mr. and Mrs. ThOraonJoh,.

, Shirley Nelgler 11 In Columbus
With her aliter. June Nelgler,
~ tho SIIIAI Flit.
Marf Sboeto ol DoytDn, v,.u
Grhnm ollJetart Falls bel )Irs.
Luther Johnson ot Rolaoke,· y&amp;, ~
otsltecl Mrs. Frallkle Nell!ir.
Mrs.· Bert Hwae o1 CollllllbUs
visited Mr. and·;Mrs. Ralph Nelli"'
lor, Jl', 1nil oilier relatl.es.

.

10. Deteeunr
device
12. Japane&amp;e

Gamble ol Doyton, Mrs. WUitam
Teeman. son and daughter, of
Trideillhla, W. Va., Mrs. Chlr·

a day

--·"THEN WE GIVE SA00 A BUM
'bTEER. AH0 "f"HAT'LL MEA/'1 HE'U.
lEAR LJS ~ FRawlpMB fOR
&lt;tiETTIM' HIM Of'! A WILD QQQ§_E
CHASE!~

Petrel were Mr&amp;. Anna Jones,
Mrs. carmen Heatherman and
daughter, Am. of Batavia, N, Y.,
Mr. Dick savaeeofUvonla,N,Y,,
and Mrs. laaac Taylor of Rut-

apent

C. C. BRADPORD

:\)·
',li)i

Mr. Frank Cleland, superin- Galllllolls, Mr. aod Mrs. I van
tendent of Firat Baptist Church Powell and dllughtera o! Las

IHo: 11-11; t-11

o••••••
••a

Entertained
••

Brobr
Credltora an required lO rue their
POMEROY - ; rooms, bath, ~~:"lalm w:llb uill lldlltla.I"J' wUbiJI Sayre am Charles Knighting,
four monUIIo.
·
Rev,, am Mrs, W. D. McClurg,
level lot near stores.
Dl\ed U11J 30th 411' of AUJUII 1118
pastor
of the local Methodist
P. H. 0'8111N
SYRACUSE - 8 room brick,
Probate Judie of Mid Covnty
Charge have moved Into the new~
bath. slorm doors and win- H; 8-U: i-18
ly redecorated parsonage. A
dows, forced air heat. ! lev·
Charge--wide even house was held
NOTICI DF A,.,OINTMaNT
el Ioiii.
aatate fll .len• L":UIM D. lmltll, De·
Sumay,
8S ACRES - Large 7 rooms, Cf'IMd.
Rev. and Mrs. H. L. McDaniel
Notke b hanbJ liven that J"ranll
bath, cellar. bam, well, cis- w. Portlr. Jr•• of Bo:. 4811, Pomeroy, or GuysviUe, former pastor or
C"blo, bu been duly appoiJltetl ke·
tern. minerals.
c.ul.or of Ute Ziti~ of lane Lout.
the local Methodist charge, visIIELEN or VIRGO.. TEAFORD D. SDliLb, dfleeated, lita uf Melp ited with friends here and attendCountr. Ohio.
ASSOCIATES
ltWIZ5
Credttora are required to rt1e tbelr
ed senices at the church last
rlala wiUl uid. fiduciary wUbllll
SYRACUSE
Sunday,
loor inObtba.
Dated. llli8 11M-b dU of A IIJUII 1118
Crltt Bradford received word
P. H.
P...uta .IVdtt ot ukl cou•ty
or the death of his aunt, Mrs.

Sclason.

Keeping Meigs
Gallic and
Mason Ar~a . ·_
Informed As
Well As

U.L " '· OIL

Cue No. 1&amp;,181

t~f

:I

12 NOON .
3 P.M.
AND
4:30 P.M.

. PORNIY INDUiftlll. INC.

9-1-61&lt;:

l

7:50 A.M.

You are nqllired to ..,... tbl
uJd PeUUon br the dar of Au,...,_
II. 1988, OJ' JudPliiDI bJ Ute PlaiU.
tiH wlll lie reDdlrcd IPlnn ~ .

u F'l'. SKIFF. 3.6 motor, oars.

0

LOCAL REPORTS
DAllY

phil interut at tbe n&amp;e Df 1 pu
ecnl per 1nnum; Aid acU011. belnl
11Ue4 UPOII rour eoaHnlon of fiiDdl
ol the underd&amp;ned.

NDTic:l Of'

;:

presents

M..W. Couat)', ohia, praJiDI for
Jud,meal 1n the amoaat ot a.300.11

.........

'

,,

INFORMlTIOtf
NEwS

JNI, tbe lllldu'ISflled, PorMJ IDdQio
&amp;rlu, ~.. flle4 ill PeUUoa qalut
pou in tbe Court of C.mmon Pleu.

ly1 Oenltl A. Mellee.

7 ROOMS AND

-

Pomeroy -

WMPO

reeldeD.OI II altbowa, will tat. ....,
tin tlltot 011 the 21th cbJ td .JalJ',

IN MIDidOin'

early

::
,..
{

.

whoM

TOGO TO
HARVARD?

•.

IIIMr ..... llfntiJ
A.ddHtl UftiiMW!l.

CARRIR

Sept. we . give ems -....
Red worms real ~ the sealOll, lbanb for YOID' past
. belp, lolm Jlahlet, Leading
()eel~;
Road, MlddJepart,
Oblo. ~ IIIZ-tlll.

AYt~:u

Till ltiCIM HlnMI N...... l I I *
RHIM1 0"11

Plwne 985-3326, Margarel 10 PAYMENTS of $5 or $41
cash. Must sell 11161 sewing
Groce, Long Bottom. 11-30-61&lt;
machine. Fully equipped to
zig zag. make buttonholes, ·
BRACE yoursell for a thrUI
sew on buttons, etc. 3 month&amp;
the first time you use Blue
1-4-Cic
Lustre. Rent electric sham- old. Call 992-2136.
Am CONlliT!ONING Rerrt!!Ol'pooer. $1. Baker Furniture.
aUon service. ,Jaek'o Refrig»-61&lt; 19ti8 SCHULT Mobile Home,
eration, New Raven. bone
brahd new, 12150, two bed·
!a-211'11.
4 I de
rooms, will sell or trade In
ll!VEN Beagle pups, Phone
IIIIUI69 after 5 p.m.. 7 Uber· on good property. S. D. Bus·
I)' Ave., Pomeroy.
..l-3tp kirk, 646 Plum Street, Mid- READY - MIX concrete dellvmd right · to your projeet.
dleport .
f.4-3lp
Fast and etiiJI. Flu eatlGRAVELY tractor with moll
malel .. Plwne 992-m4, GoegHelpW1nted
attachments, Phone I!IU143.
leln
Ready - Mb: Co., Mlddl..
11-1..11&lt;
port, Ohio.
• liO de
AFRICAN NIGHTCRAWLERS,
BVOOET PRYCE furniture on
60 for $1, theae are larger
our third floor budget shop,
- · due to 1aet &lt;&gt;I ,.
Baker
Furniture, Middleport,
11po1110, 1168 Is my last year
Oblo.
? 21 de
In the baH buslnes•. All nJgbterawiers must go In

::

,.,. c.a•• caJrrallr.

-...
Elmer · Slenerth,

-Eli'- WOULD

'1111\1 LIKE

::

" feNitft cor~~tretllln

- ....

ARBIE AND SLATS .

•~

69 MODELS

NOTICI OP PUILICAYION
llerntr IINI!IItr...., lfte.,

..

:•'"

·''•'•'

•'
••
o'

lncu,llntfl!t
Insurance bee•
eaneelled? Lost your onerat.
or's lleense? Call 992-21161.
I IS lfe

Pllllltlff,

MUSI-IID?M CAl/.. ,

I ,•

~UTOMOBD..E

WAifi'ID
.

For Rent

EltPEIIENCEt
'
.
••lttor Service

All '68's Red~~~;ed

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto!

torcycle. Pbcme Cberrter 11116- CIGARETTE vending machines
1350 or see at Newell's Sun; and servlee. ABC Enterprlm,
.... Mason, W. Va. Phone 'I'IS-SS4!.
..!
OCO
·
...,.
S-9-tfc

•liCE PONiEs, your ehoke Gl
10 head $40. Eskey Hlll, Pomeroy, Phone 911U810. 9-1-31c

POiNG AT
TH!i I!OT1b\l
OfTI'IOSEA!

SALES AND SERVICE

Business Services

&amp;-4J v-111

Help Wanted

-

EYINRUDE

... E. MDI

mo-

1984 DODGE V-1 wagon, 45,544 mllea, clean. 1162 Fonl
Galule 1100, nice. 1951 Chevy
Impala V-8, reel and willis,
also Maytag wrtns&lt;l' type
wuber and !win laundry
tubs, 311 years old, both for
f60. Dale Barr, Reedsville,
Oblo.
t-1-ztp

.

-GUARANrEEDPHONE 992·2094

DELIVERED TO
VOLKSWAGEN In good ~­
lion, ean be seen II IG6\l
Sprlag Ave., or eall !J92.3121.

.

·s.ss

PER TON

Fors.le

.

$P.ERI'
Y(hftl Alignment

·ss.oo

614·992-2181

.

SU:WHAT

\t'U'VE l!f'.ti&gt;J

AND ~Are'(, WITIIlfJ
I.ON6-6 LA55 VIEWr
5115 THE MA~r:R OF

i'·

Maximum Dlamet•r 10 ln.
Minimum Dlamet•r 2 ln.•
Mlnl01um Lonoth 4 1..1

Call Pomeroy

.

AN' COME
'TO SUPPER

- ·au:,slft·ess ·Serv1ces

WANTED I

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

Pomeroy Motor Co.

DP .. CI MOUU
I"' a.M. t1 1111 J.l'll. DillY
ttM •·• te 1t:W MMII ..

THE MEIGS County Fish

2 SIGNS

.

(,000/1'0\
L.i'a:'K TO

THEM THAR

~STOL5

.

.. :

I ,••• Drr ........ PviiUCI

ROBIN MALONE

REXILI

I

[j

tXJ

..•
TA~KATlve

!"!!CSSN Mletfl 8E.

1-(10 BACK T' -nE. RAG
PICKER AN' \IJE•O.AIM

StiE 1,1./AS RESCUED BY
"THE REST O' tEf;t

GANG WHICH BUST 11"1

HERE

�• ,. &gt;

'l'tle Dilly Sentinel, Mlddlcport-Jiom~ero)', 0 ,, sepL -l, 196M

Washington••
Report By Clarence Miller
Allllollgb

some

chlldren might

den,y It, this is an exciting time
for them with the return to
achool. But unfortunately nearly
a mUllm ldih school age yooths
will drop out or school this year
before receiving their high school

diploma.
These million youths wUI sac-

rifice their ruture opportwlities
tor temporary £reedoms lllld satlslactiona.
A high school diploma rna;y not
be a !ree ticket to the good life,
but it is a ticket to a better
chance for the good life.
It' a true that some high school
dropouts make it up the ladder
to a good Job, but most of them
do not. The jobs that are usual ly available to the dropout are
those of short duration, with low
lncome and llttle future for ad-

Fiscal69
Holzer llo!ipiiBJ:-

2-4 and 7 ..$p.m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward. ·
Admissions
able to young people to help them
Miss 1\JVla M, Blal&lt;e, No, l
finance a college education.
Court St.; Lawrence V. Unroe,
r\ booklet entitled You Can Rt. 2 Crown "City; James B."
Go To College is available rrom Bloomer, 25 Madison Ave.; Lou
my Washington office. This out- A, Whittington, pt, Pleuant:
lines a number of means that Dreama D, Honaker, Daniel H.
can be used to nnance higher ed- Varien, Ma~; Mrs.. Donald E.
ucation. We would be very glad GolleeR, New Haven; Tammy R.
to send a copy to anyone who Is King, Jackson; Mrs. · Oscar E.
interested.
Hayburn, Wellston; Miss Rose~
Agaln, to those who are per - mary Jones, Coalton; Mrs. John
haps contemplating dropping oot D. Kelle)', Ironton; William E.
of school this year, let me urge Hurley, Rt 2 Ashland, Ky.; Mrs.
you to remain in high school, Fred S. Painter, Ravenswood;
get a diploma, and then share in Harold F. Deck, Wellston.
the full rich life it can help
Discharges
bring.
Mrs. Robert K. Burwell, Mrs.

Willi..,
. · 11.

Mro. Pllllllp •

D. Radford, Rebecca E. Ruuoh,
Mary M. Solqln, Heary E. Slew-

art, M,rida D. Slaver, Mrs. Jim.

aid L. Twyman, Ethel M. Young,

l

previded ut tbe Fraaklurt
(Germany I

Zoo.

Iowa:
\
$970,000 has been awr&lt;~~~&lt;i·

·

ated_lor flood cimrol al ~theno. ·

the TOm Jenldns
Reservoir. ·
·
·
$5,000 authorizediA&gt;rOoociCIXI·
lrol· at R01evUie,
,·
And $5,066,000

'IJIItho~lzed lor

anthem. ·

«J1111ruetlon far nav!gatlonalpur.
· $100,000 has bee~ ~rizOd, . pasea at the Willow Island Locka
also lor Ooocl c:altrol, at·DIIIIXI · ' and Dam. .
.
The fUnds ore 101: ei&gt;n.lri.etlm,

Tentll Dlo.
E. Reservoir In l&gt;ilio'kto..m &lt;:ouncy.
Ia !or - - and ")alnleon This
nance,
. ,
final III'P,.q,tiatlcia• lor the U,
$12,610,000 ··has been owtltOry.~....
S. Army Corps or Engineers
civil works programs for ns~ lzed for CIXIIIruetlon at tlie Han·
The
word
vacclnatton stems
nlbol Locks and Dam m the Olllo from the ~atln· ••vaeea:•
cal year .(969 as relates to SOUthRiver. · ,
\
meaning "a cow,." beca1;11e
eastern Ohio.
WASIIINGTON · -

·

I

"Now

, En«lioh Inch
An English inch was three
dry, round barleycorns lald
end to end; according to the
pronouncement of King Edconstnadion, and the operaUon
ward II 0307-27).

lrf . '
·
:' 4&gt;" •,

A difference in the total on your tape.

P.ALM. BEACH

on

w~r~~&gt;or

quake ..... II,,,,-;:·,

1920.

I'(; A

the

.

;l.

~ROG~R

Grapes

you can see in the total on your tape.

We think you'll be totally pleased.
IIIIC

H•ad

-.

••

19c

zatb
.;.,·

0

ggc
4

Steak

0

Tip Roast

"· ·.,r:'~~-----

SPECIAL LOW PRICE!

11'1&gt;....

• • • • c••

SPECIAL THIS WEEK!- MARVEL BRAND

Potato Stix •:,~,~ . . 3 ;::; s1oo
Shoestring Potatoes·~~~',~ ~~~ 10c
A &amp; P Rtll Beans
•• o •• 3 fo• $1.00
Charmin Napkins • , . :,":o 10c
Jergenos Bath Soap . • '::!' 10c
Sparkle Desserts :::, • :;;~ 8•
Kidney Beans :::, , • , '!: ltc
St_.Hecl Olives ·~~:~· . '";;:· 59•
Our Own Tea Bags , • :;•:; 5tc
Instant M'1lk w""'
"0 "" • '""&lt;
NON-FAT
pq, 5159
A&amp;P Instant CoHee . ·~ 510'

• • •

, KROGER FROZIIN

4 .. .-... s~.. ..... 29c

Orange Juice

SPECIAL LOW PRICE!

• • • •

==-..-. -.: -. . . o·

....

S•ishlnt

-

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

'"""''59~

.

I

.

. , , . ,

._ ..
io"":; .1~' ' · ·
~

·~·
:,;:,.,,
...
'
.,
.' y
·~)

'

·~

y

&gt;'

•

....... _

.

. '

'

.

.

-

,,

\

.

.

+

f

'-$Pie.&amp;
. Sp~n
'

'

:.29e
''

••• lh.

Sl09

lb.

·~~i

$1.49

Leg-0-Lamb ~~. 89c

Sweet Bacon

Smoked Jowl
s..g.,

lb.

Cake

39c

c,..k Sllclll Endo &amp; Piocto

Bacon .... ~ 99c

8nnd Colt...

Cheese ...

2·1b.

crtn.
Sto..,lv Br•nd

Scope --·--- bottlt 6·7c
12-oz,

~~cu

Strawbemes
4 ::: $1
.........
Pound
Cake _"-. 69c
Ctolllry Clui&gt; All ,....... .....
Ice
Cream •• .,~ 59c
'-Miii&lt;Mti ' '
Fudge Bars . ::· 55c

folgers .......

!!

$1.39

.. w---e
_,., rtmv Rinse or

Shampoo
"

114&lt;,.

Frooh Htortt t1

CeJ~~Y -~ ---. - ~ '29c
' T:"R!Iif,.

·.

..... •&gt;·
.,9c

••• bottlt

Pears

lie--~ Not

HairSpray 2 !!:::· $1
.
...."
.J
· ergens __ .. :::,: 78c
IUSIUoJ....,..&amp;_
Baby Powder ,._ 79c
II.., lloo Lttfon

v... Camp

Pork &amp; Beans 6 :;..sao $l

No.2lf2

Dl lplflltr

-

.
Drinks •• . . . 2
·-~

.....pp es

q,fiji ~
..

.

'

'

....'IH'·
j

I

~- - -,

~ '.\:·'"

'.'
'

l&gt;-tolo.

$1

,..... C.Nronoi.o

. _ :9ma~ . 3 ...._ 69c Strawberries
...-..
_,;,.
l".;i;trO~;;
'
.
~
'
9~~ ·, ,.,. .......... ..... ~
A I' ·

··

.

"

ftli1CM'• ".., ........ .

.

..

•

..... ..,. 0*-i

' 11\... _

0

Hrdrox A,Hies,. : .. :.....

.·~

M

PURC:WIIIIf'-7«--'

cto.

ltellltr TtWI HtiH com~u

'•

100
·5o ......
m.. ....... .__ · o
·.
50.' :.=."1'if~-~-- t-. ·.'J ;
50 .- .. ""'-....... l:~'~'

•

'

',

10~

I

AlcP Ral'dwood C:hal'co•l • • • • • • • IO~Soc
Bounty .J11111bo Towels
• • • • • • • • 3..,.;,stoa
Pilgl'lm rann Dill Chips~~~.~· • •
,... SJOO
• !f 3 •uvn-.;aA
" Vl' lint UYtl , • Z"-&gt;·•· 31•
C1t FOld t ·ar:A.JI
C1t Food ~-~:~r.~~~·~·· u•••. . 2•:t:.•·Jic

D'

100 ~='~:::
Jtill:ll ........

• .,.

I. .ivers . __ . _ 59c

Cube Steak

cans

K,..,- Enper"'"

Milk . --.. - 4 ·~ 65c
~

K r(ISJ •r Assort.cl y

..... .

ql.

&amp;9c

•n.tv

Cake Mix ___ 4 ::. $1

Bartlftt 120 Slu

\'&gt;

Chlcklft

Lt.,.., T..-,

lb.

, "W, V1. Stat• F1ir PriJe L•mll"

11.11 SUo Mout!owtoh

'

2-~ 37c

e:::..~· 43c

Freth Frylnt

Vac P.c Drip, Reg., EIKtrlc Ptrfc

=
:=- .:":" "-~990.-c
......

Camay Soap

450EXTRA

.10

.

K...,...

......
60.....
iJt;

Detergent. Fab ·ar

,

All~

0

!" I ...... Smobd

Picmcs .. _ lb. 39c

VHinlln C ............

TilE THIS UIIIP TO
YOUII FIIIEIDLY II P FOI
ioiUS'IiUID ITIMPSI
¢HECIC ITEM$ YOU IUYI ·

Fish Sticks ~;. 98c

Sto!celv Vetlaw Cling Silted &amp; H•lve~

Ivory Soap

:·; Litva Soap

F ................,

Tom. Juice ..... 4:: $1
Peaches • • • • • • • • 5~$1
A'Ja x · · · · · · · · . . . ·~~:..... 99c

Dessert Topping

-

• • • • •

4

Lard

-

.......Zes.tSoap

WHY PAY MOREl- SULTANA BRAND

Salad Dressing
sc Candy Bars •

w.:-

KROGER
.Open Sunday

PLAID STAMPS·

~ 89c

Puro

99c . Turkeys . _ "'· 39c

fQM£RoY . c~. fl ··

-.... "" .... 21c .

• • • • 4~$1

Hunl's Tomalo Juice
Heinz Tomalo Soup •
Ice Cream R~~~~~~y • • • •

II&gt;.

irea.r·....s....... Sl

..,..,.,.1

Prieft good tflru S1t., Stpt. 7fh
I• ALL Col.mbvo U•~ A&amp;P'o Ooly.

SPECIAL LOW PRICE!

WHY PAY &gt;AOREl

Steak

U.S.O.A. lf'TPidad K....., Wishbone

Cool Whip

L

'·

Steaks . ~~- $1.99

Thrifty

Sirloin

lb.

Pork Loin_ .... 79c

WHY PAY &gt;AORE7- YELLOW CLING, SL(CED OR HALVES

22-ol.
loaves

29

lb.

Qu•-lllcod

L

0

19

BoooloooSIIioln

.......

Well-Trimmed

t

'!.... 10~

50%·---.
Ham Loaf

If% Laon l'rtM Port.

Florida Chip

Whole Legs '" 49c

10 a.m.•7p.m.

BIG BUYS on A&amp;P Groceries!

F,.,.l,. Chlclcon

Breasts ~~ Rl~. 59c

P....... Ltbtll',_

Sweel Peas • •
• • • • •
Del Monle Peaches • • • • • z:_... Z9~
Campbell's Pork a Beans . "·•••. . 14~

While Bread

F,.oh

T-Bone -

leriiiCrea11 Pies •• • 1,.,5100
AlP Slluesb IIC Polaluel ':;ltc

Meat Loaf .. 69c

Weiners . ·~;. 75c

0

ctn.

"Quick-Fix.Meatl''

Koiul'o AU Moot Slcinits

,

32·n.49c

19c 69c 79c

SPECIAL LOW PRICE! - lONA BRAND

ENRICHED

Spiced . . . ::;: 63c

IIRDS EYE 6• OFF LAIEL

U.S. NO. I

E•ct.

Dutch Loaf~;: 69c
IC.thn'• Lunchlu MHt

... - -

Honeydew White
Melons
Potatoes

Head
Lettuce

K.....~,..._.

·-FOOD
STAMPS!

Frozen Food s!

1••

JUMBO SIZE

CRISP ICEBERG

Start this week.

YOUR
CHOICE

59c

f~DERAL ·

,.

will make a total difference

•• Jane Parker Buys~

Qq

&lt;fLu~reheon Meats"

ThrlftiJ BJV»Ul

lb

and lots of "Big Buys"

JANE PARKEI -

I

6

'10-•5-~- ..

'

. ,.

C~-

'• .

. , . LtM - · . , . ' - ......

Tailless

•

Tokay or Seedless

._...o.:.,.•

Tenderay Takes The
Guesswork Out Of Buying
Beef/Guaranteed Te/Ukrl

HI6HER '·

OM

. ··' 50

Frooh F,.,.into Chld&lt;en

PRICED

39C

.

. '200--'IOO..:;.•
Y··~··-···. I _!Inner.I Win
.·..
. .
'500·-

•tour

lccepts

...Lase

lb.

The combination of A&amp;P's every-day low prices

'·'

'

HONE

A&amp; P's Produce Buys!

r:o•uT ATLA .. II C .. PACIOIC IU CO

I

'

l'Ol', 0., Sept. 4, 1968.

GARDENS,

. - ~

I

You want savings on your total food bill.

nor

·, . ,

F'-- (UPll- Bob Murphy . became the 10th -!Ucilng mOIIIY

'

lb.

You don't want to save on just a few items.

·, ......

,

ra

Cut-U11 Whole Frren o • • • ,. . asc
SPECIAL!- ROUND OF BEEF
Frrer up . . . o • • • lb• •
Frrer Breasts • • • o
WHY PAY MORE?- SUPER-RIGHT QUALITY
Frrere sPLIT oR QUARTERED • •
~~.
Raadlnc Chloe•• l't. To • 1.1. • ,.. ate
....,•• Kell•eal • o ,.. ac
71•
Sirloin Till Roast • , SlOB Boilla1 Beef ·~~!~:·
Sultana Meat Plel 5:: ·s1aa
•..L Steaks IEMI·IONUESS
....
IUn STYLt
lb. H Boneless Round Steak' 060~"' •• 18• P.....
...
F111Hr QuMI PIDII :: S12t
Boneless Round Steak ~~i SlOB L..L
r•r• Ro-.&amp;
... PICNic
STYL£
Ground Round Steak • 89• Boneless Beef Slrlll•••:~.e ,.. 85• Frue1 Sllrlm11 :!'i::~ '::;.- 51st
Sirloin Till Steak •
,~ 5119
Ru11111 Roast of Beef • '"·91• lreadad .llllf ~= Z.t.,SJst
Tentltr Culle Steaks • • "·51P• Wh,ole H,l ll·.....~;.~~~.·y _69,c , Flau•er flllall- ~~~ ~~ •

And that's what really counts, isn't it?

CO~U ICHT

· ·

..

,
1\f(1RP~ ~V.,.CES

lb.

•

' ..'... '

180,000

c

I

•

•

"Super-Right" Quality- Whole

Smoked Picnics .

--·----- ----- ·-

.... . . 'I;·

'· .

The
In ~~~':!: ~r:

BIG BUYS on "Super-Right" Meats!

Boneless Roasl

'. ..

f

~.:.·:,~·

Tlielldlji wllh oM•Ial earnllisa
Edward, Jenner was the' fli'st
ot
$94,,745, ~most ~lrd 91
to discover and make use ·of which
lie colleCted for 'Mooday'a
Inoculation among farm
victory
1n lhe. Th!Jnderhtrd .I'll!
workers who had ·develo~
cowpox, accordiDg to the E:n. classic. Billy Cllropor io·still 'No.
cyclopaedia Britannica. '
1 wilh earnings of $151;3.29. ;

$140,000 Is authorized r 0 r
'The clvll works functloos 11
studiea ~ the Mu&amp;klngum River
the Army COrps of Engineers
provides for water resources Basin.
$655,000 was authori!ed lor
development, Including Investioperation
and maintenance of the
gations and surve_ys, planning.
14 reservoirs of the Muskingum

care

J•

l.

- The Daily . jlenllnel, lll'lddlePOfw.~e

' ';

FRESH FRYERS

Why Pay More?

are make-believr propli

Ohio River.
$6S,ooo rO.

tr.lct C00grCSI$MaD Clarence
Miller ha&amp; reeelved details

Beroard J, Games and Want
daughter.

'

pkl(.

or blm..l! lor th• weights

·

Mrs. 118,1 ·R, Zeigler, Robert D,

r----------·1'..•'•,.•~

PlAIN 01

STRONG-ARM pose make•

u autliorized by the u~ S.
ConJ!reos.
The ll!lPropriatlona are asfol.

·;

" .

•
VIIIII
POPPYSEED
• •
4 '" ...
•••. 35•
Brow• Sucar Buns • •
45•
llazetl Donuts .
• • "'"
Blackberry g~,..y Pie

c:orlUa look tough, but ht&gt;'s
really making a monkey

$~,700,000 auihorl'ed !or the
a,~ Lod&lt;s and Dam on the

!Octloli•.'i!ID&lt;I:.!Ba.ld.purpose pro-

·'"1 ... ,, .

Flag Raloing i '· ,, ,
The first ol!ldal ra\!i!f,t ol
the new l!O-slar Amerlcari '(lag
. was from the flag poleS·,a~ lh•
east and west• Ironto .ill ,the
national CapJto!. AI the••a!l'e
hour, the new nag was ralied
over Ft. McHenry' N1tlonai
Monument in Baltimore, Md.,
bll'lhpiOce of the n a tl oli,al

Rlyer R'iervolr. sY~·

COli•

,lrol, rtver andharllor, boocn.Pro::

Program
Outlm•ed

Remy, Clint D, Fitch, Andrea
Riggs, Virgil J: FilliJlger, Jerry
L, Lewis, Mrs. William A. Gard.
ner and infant daughter. M r s.

ground:

,.'

and maintenance of Roocl,
-Jo~

vancement. It is usually estimated that a high school graduate
will earn $63,000 more during
his working years than hls dropout countf!rpart.
The dropout problem is wideb recognized, but all too oflen
nothing is done about it. Everyone is looking to someone else
to take the responsibility . It may
seem strange ror me to talk
in this column about the dropout problem, but someone must
take the initiative. The problem,
I believe, can only be solved
through a concerted effort of
all parts of our society - parents, individuals, school systems, local and stat.e governments, private enterprise, and
the Federal government.
Her e I&amp; some further b a c k-

studies show that most dropouts leave school because of a
lack or interest. School leaders
and individual commwrity leaders can assist in meeting this
problem by assisting in person al erunseling or young person5
who are considering dropping
out. School systems will be glad
to furnish names and addresses
of such students to interested lndlvl~als who want to lend a
helping hand.
Many students drop out because
they come from poor families
where funds are desperately
short. Local businesses can assist greatly by adording young
persons an ppportunlty fof part~
..time jobs aDd for part-time .iOb
iraining and vocational education to help the youth when he
gradJates from school. T h e y
might assist by job counseling
with a young person to help him
see the opportunities which will
be open to him with a h i g h
"'chool diploma that might be
closed off if he drops out.
OUler students drop out of
school because it is hard ror them
and there is no one who cares
enough to help them through with
the difficult subject£. This is a
very clear opportunity for indi viduals to offer assistance in
tutoring yoongsters who need
their help.
One major reason many young
people reject school is that they
themselves feel rejected by so. t!let;y . A kind word, a pat on the
back, a helping hand can mean a
lot to these youngsters.
Sometimes the expressioo or
interest and concern on the part
oi others will turn the tide.
The dropout problems is a concern we must all share and work
to solve. Government cannot do
It alone.
In this same regard, to those
who do not reel they can continue on to college, there ar e a
great many opportunities avail-

. ....
;,·

I!

'

'•

Pea·rs .. • • • .. .. 6 ,., 49c

•

!'potf5tht Instant

Coffee ---- ....... ·~·
1•r $1
U.S. No.I, Size A
All-Purpose White

Potatoes
25
lb•

ball

..

•

�• ,. &gt;

'l'tle Dilly Sentinel, Mlddlcport-Jiom~ero)', 0 ,, sepL -l, 196M

Washington••
Report By Clarence Miller
Allllollgb

some

chlldren might

den,y It, this is an exciting time
for them with the return to
achool. But unfortunately nearly
a mUllm ldih school age yooths
will drop out or school this year
before receiving their high school

diploma.
These million youths wUI sac-

rifice their ruture opportwlities
tor temporary £reedoms lllld satlslactiona.
A high school diploma rna;y not
be a !ree ticket to the good life,
but it is a ticket to a better
chance for the good life.
It' a true that some high school
dropouts make it up the ladder
to a good Job, but most of them
do not. The jobs that are usual ly available to the dropout are
those of short duration, with low
lncome and llttle future for ad-

Fiscal69
Holzer llo!ipiiBJ:-

2-4 and 7 ..$p.m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward. ·
Admissions
able to young people to help them
Miss 1\JVla M, Blal&lt;e, No, l
finance a college education.
Court St.; Lawrence V. Unroe,
r\ booklet entitled You Can Rt. 2 Crown "City; James B."
Go To College is available rrom Bloomer, 25 Madison Ave.; Lou
my Washington office. This out- A, Whittington, pt, Pleuant:
lines a number of means that Dreama D, Honaker, Daniel H.
can be used to nnance higher ed- Varien, Ma~; Mrs.. Donald E.
ucation. We would be very glad GolleeR, New Haven; Tammy R.
to send a copy to anyone who Is King, Jackson; Mrs. · Oscar E.
interested.
Hayburn, Wellston; Miss Rose~
Agaln, to those who are per - mary Jones, Coalton; Mrs. John
haps contemplating dropping oot D. Kelle)', Ironton; William E.
of school this year, let me urge Hurley, Rt 2 Ashland, Ky.; Mrs.
you to remain in high school, Fred S. Painter, Ravenswood;
get a diploma, and then share in Harold F. Deck, Wellston.
the full rich life it can help
Discharges
bring.
Mrs. Robert K. Burwell, Mrs.

Willi..,
. · 11.

Mro. Pllllllp •

D. Radford, Rebecca E. Ruuoh,
Mary M. Solqln, Heary E. Slew-

art, M,rida D. Slaver, Mrs. Jim.

aid L. Twyman, Ethel M. Young,

l

previded ut tbe Fraaklurt
(Germany I

Zoo.

Iowa:
\
$970,000 has been awr&lt;~~~&lt;i·

·

ated_lor flood cimrol al ~theno. ·

the TOm Jenldns
Reservoir. ·
·
·
$5,000 authorizediA&gt;rOoociCIXI·
lrol· at R01evUie,
,·
And $5,066,000

'IJIItho~lzed lor

anthem. ·

«J1111ruetlon far nav!gatlonalpur.
· $100,000 has bee~ ~rizOd, . pasea at the Willow Island Locka
also lor Ooocl c:altrol, at·DIIIIXI · ' and Dam. .
.
The fUnds ore 101: ei&gt;n.lri.etlm,

Tentll Dlo.
E. Reservoir In l&gt;ilio'kto..m &lt;:ouncy.
Ia !or - - and ")alnleon This
nance,
. ,
final III'P,.q,tiatlcia• lor the U,
$12,610,000 ··has been owtltOry.~....
S. Army Corps or Engineers
civil works programs for ns~ lzed for CIXIIIruetlon at tlie Han·
The
word
vacclnatton stems
nlbol Locks and Dam m the Olllo from the ~atln· ••vaeea:•
cal year .(969 as relates to SOUthRiver. · ,
\
meaning "a cow,." beca1;11e
eastern Ohio.
WASIIINGTON · -

·

I

"Now

, En«lioh Inch
An English inch was three
dry, round barleycorns lald
end to end; according to the
pronouncement of King Edconstnadion, and the operaUon
ward II 0307-27).

lrf . '
·
:' 4&gt;" •,

A difference in the total on your tape.

P.ALM. BEACH

on

w~r~~&gt;or

quake ..... II,,,,-;:·,

1920.

I'(; A

the

.

;l.

~ROG~R

Grapes

you can see in the total on your tape.

We think you'll be totally pleased.
IIIIC

H•ad

-.

••

19c

zatb
.;.,·

0

ggc
4

Steak

0

Tip Roast

"· ·.,r:'~~-----

SPECIAL LOW PRICE!

11'1&gt;....

• • • • c••

SPECIAL THIS WEEK!- MARVEL BRAND

Potato Stix •:,~,~ . . 3 ;::; s1oo
Shoestring Potatoes·~~~',~ ~~~ 10c
A &amp; P Rtll Beans
•• o •• 3 fo• $1.00
Charmin Napkins • , . :,":o 10c
Jergenos Bath Soap . • '::!' 10c
Sparkle Desserts :::, • :;;~ 8•
Kidney Beans :::, , • , '!: ltc
St_.Hecl Olives ·~~:~· . '";;:· 59•
Our Own Tea Bags , • :;•:; 5tc
Instant M'1lk w""'
"0 "" • '""&lt;
NON-FAT
pq, 5159
A&amp;P Instant CoHee . ·~ 510'

• • •

, KROGER FROZIIN

4 .. .-... s~.. ..... 29c

Orange Juice

SPECIAL LOW PRICE!

• • • •

==-..-. -.: -. . . o·

....

S•ishlnt

-

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

'"""''59~

.

I

.

. , , . ,

._ ..
io"":; .1~' ' · ·
~

·~·
:,;:,.,,
...
'
.,
.' y
·~)

'

·~

y

&gt;'

•

....... _

.

. '

'

.

.

-

,,

\

.

.

+

f

'-$Pie.&amp;
. Sp~n
'

'

:.29e
''

••• lh.

Sl09

lb.

·~~i

$1.49

Leg-0-Lamb ~~. 89c

Sweet Bacon

Smoked Jowl
s..g.,

lb.

Cake

39c

c,..k Sllclll Endo &amp; Piocto

Bacon .... ~ 99c

8nnd Colt...

Cheese ...

2·1b.

crtn.
Sto..,lv Br•nd

Scope --·--- bottlt 6·7c
12-oz,

~~cu

Strawbemes
4 ::: $1
.........
Pound
Cake _"-. 69c
Ctolllry Clui&gt; All ,....... .....
Ice
Cream •• .,~ 59c
'-Miii&lt;Mti ' '
Fudge Bars . ::· 55c

folgers .......

!!

$1.39

.. w---e
_,., rtmv Rinse or

Shampoo
"

114&lt;,.

Frooh Htortt t1

CeJ~~Y -~ ---. - ~ '29c
' T:"R!Iif,.

·.

..... •&gt;·
.,9c

••• bottlt

Pears

lie--~ Not

HairSpray 2 !!:::· $1
.
...."
.J
· ergens __ .. :::,: 78c
IUSIUoJ....,..&amp;_
Baby Powder ,._ 79c
II.., lloo Lttfon

v... Camp

Pork &amp; Beans 6 :;..sao $l

No.2lf2

Dl lplflltr

-

.
Drinks •• . . . 2
·-~

.....pp es

q,fiji ~
..

.

'

'

....'IH'·
j

I

~- - -,

~ '.\:·'"

'.'
'

l&gt;-tolo.

$1

,..... C.Nronoi.o

. _ :9ma~ . 3 ...._ 69c Strawberries
...-..
_,;,.
l".;i;trO~;;
'
.
~
'
9~~ ·, ,.,. .......... ..... ~
A I' ·

··

.

"

ftli1CM'• ".., ........ .

.

..

•

..... ..,. 0*-i

' 11\... _

0

Hrdrox A,Hies,. : .. :.....

.·~

M

PURC:WIIIIf'-7«--'

cto.

ltellltr TtWI HtiH com~u

'•

100
·5o ......
m.. ....... .__ · o
·.
50.' :.=."1'if~-~-- t-. ·.'J ;
50 .- .. ""'-....... l:~'~'

•

'

',

10~

I

AlcP Ral'dwood C:hal'co•l • • • • • • • IO~Soc
Bounty .J11111bo Towels
• • • • • • • • 3..,.;,stoa
Pilgl'lm rann Dill Chips~~~.~· • •
,... SJOO
• !f 3 •uvn-.;aA
" Vl' lint UYtl , • Z"-&gt;·•· 31•
C1t FOld t ·ar:A.JI
C1t Food ~-~:~r.~~~·~·· u•••. . 2•:t:.•·Jic

D'

100 ~='~:::
Jtill:ll ........

• .,.

I. .ivers . __ . _ 59c

Cube Steak

cans

K,..,- Enper"'"

Milk . --.. - 4 ·~ 65c
~

K r(ISJ •r Assort.cl y

..... .

ql.

&amp;9c

•n.tv

Cake Mix ___ 4 ::. $1

Bartlftt 120 Slu

\'&gt;

Chlcklft

Lt.,.., T..-,

lb.

, "W, V1. Stat• F1ir PriJe L•mll"

11.11 SUo Mout!owtoh

'

2-~ 37c

e:::..~· 43c

Freth Frylnt

Vac P.c Drip, Reg., EIKtrlc Ptrfc

=
:=- .:":" "-~990.-c
......

Camay Soap

450EXTRA

.10

.

K...,...

......
60.....
iJt;

Detergent. Fab ·ar

,

All~

0

!" I ...... Smobd

Picmcs .. _ lb. 39c

VHinlln C ............

TilE THIS UIIIP TO
YOUII FIIIEIDLY II P FOI
ioiUS'IiUID ITIMPSI
¢HECIC ITEM$ YOU IUYI ·

Fish Sticks ~;. 98c

Sto!celv Vetlaw Cling Silted &amp; H•lve~

Ivory Soap

:·; Litva Soap

F ................,

Tom. Juice ..... 4:: $1
Peaches • • • • • • • • 5~$1
A'Ja x · · · · · · · · . . . ·~~:..... 99c

Dessert Topping

-

• • • • •

4

Lard

-

.......Zes.tSoap

WHY PAY MOREl- SULTANA BRAND

Salad Dressing
sc Candy Bars •

w.:-

KROGER
.Open Sunday

PLAID STAMPS·

~ 89c

Puro

99c . Turkeys . _ "'· 39c

fQM£RoY . c~. fl ··

-.... "" .... 21c .

• • • • 4~$1

Hunl's Tomalo Juice
Heinz Tomalo Soup •
Ice Cream R~~~~~~y • • • •

II&gt;.

irea.r·....s....... Sl

..,..,.,.1

Prieft good tflru S1t., Stpt. 7fh
I• ALL Col.mbvo U•~ A&amp;P'o Ooly.

SPECIAL LOW PRICE!

WHY PAY &gt;AOREl

Steak

U.S.O.A. lf'TPidad K....., Wishbone

Cool Whip

L

'·

Steaks . ~~- $1.99

Thrifty

Sirloin

lb.

Pork Loin_ .... 79c

WHY PAY &gt;AORE7- YELLOW CLING, SL(CED OR HALVES

22-ol.
loaves

29

lb.

Qu•-lllcod

L

0

19

BoooloooSIIioln

.......

Well-Trimmed

t

'!.... 10~

50%·---.
Ham Loaf

If% Laon l'rtM Port.

Florida Chip

Whole Legs '" 49c

10 a.m.•7p.m.

BIG BUYS on A&amp;P Groceries!

F,.,.l,. Chlclcon

Breasts ~~ Rl~. 59c

P....... Ltbtll',_

Sweel Peas • •
• • • • •
Del Monle Peaches • • • • • z:_... Z9~
Campbell's Pork a Beans . "·•••. . 14~

While Bread

F,.oh

T-Bone -

leriiiCrea11 Pies •• • 1,.,5100
AlP Slluesb IIC Polaluel ':;ltc

Meat Loaf .. 69c

Weiners . ·~;. 75c

0

ctn.

"Quick-Fix.Meatl''

Koiul'o AU Moot Slcinits

,

32·n.49c

19c 69c 79c

SPECIAL LOW PRICE! - lONA BRAND

ENRICHED

Spiced . . . ::;: 63c

IIRDS EYE 6• OFF LAIEL

U.S. NO. I

E•ct.

Dutch Loaf~;: 69c
IC.thn'• Lunchlu MHt

... - -

Honeydew White
Melons
Potatoes

Head
Lettuce

K.....~,..._.

·-FOOD
STAMPS!

Frozen Food s!

1••

JUMBO SIZE

CRISP ICEBERG

Start this week.

YOUR
CHOICE

59c

f~DERAL ·

,.

will make a total difference

•• Jane Parker Buys~

Qq

&lt;fLu~reheon Meats"

ThrlftiJ BJV»Ul

lb

and lots of "Big Buys"

JANE PARKEI -

I

6

'10-•5-~- ..

'

. ,.

C~-

'• .

. , . LtM - · . , . ' - ......

Tailless

•

Tokay or Seedless

._...o.:.,.•

Tenderay Takes The
Guesswork Out Of Buying
Beef/Guaranteed Te/Ukrl

HI6HER '·

OM

. ··' 50

Frooh F,.,.into Chld&lt;en

PRICED

39C

.

. '200--'IOO..:;.•
Y··~··-···. I _!Inner.I Win
.·..
. .
'500·-

•tour

lccepts

...Lase

lb.

The combination of A&amp;P's every-day low prices

'·'

'

HONE

A&amp; P's Produce Buys!

r:o•uT ATLA .. II C .. PACIOIC IU CO

I

'

l'Ol', 0., Sept. 4, 1968.

GARDENS,

. - ~

I

You want savings on your total food bill.

nor

·, . ,

F'-- (UPll- Bob Murphy . became the 10th -!Ucilng mOIIIY

'

lb.

You don't want to save on just a few items.

·, ......

,

ra

Cut-U11 Whole Frren o • • • ,. . asc
SPECIAL!- ROUND OF BEEF
Frrer up . . . o • • • lb• •
Frrer Breasts • • • o
WHY PAY MORE?- SUPER-RIGHT QUALITY
Frrere sPLIT oR QUARTERED • •
~~.
Raadlnc Chloe•• l't. To • 1.1. • ,.. ate
....,•• Kell•eal • o ,.. ac
71•
Sirloin Till Roast • , SlOB Boilla1 Beef ·~~!~:·
Sultana Meat Plel 5:: ·s1aa
•..L Steaks IEMI·IONUESS
....
IUn STYLt
lb. H Boneless Round Steak' 060~"' •• 18• P.....
...
F111Hr QuMI PIDII :: S12t
Boneless Round Steak ~~i SlOB L..L
r•r• Ro-.&amp;
... PICNic
STYL£
Ground Round Steak • 89• Boneless Beef Slrlll•••:~.e ,.. 85• Frue1 Sllrlm11 :!'i::~ '::;.- 51st
Sirloin Till Steak •
,~ 5119
Ru11111 Roast of Beef • '"·91• lreadad .llllf ~= Z.t.,SJst
Tentltr Culle Steaks • • "·51P• Wh,ole H,l ll·.....~;.~~~.·y _69,c , Flau•er flllall- ~~~ ~~ •

And that's what really counts, isn't it?

CO~U ICHT

· ·

..

,
1\f(1RP~ ~V.,.CES

lb.

•

' ..'... '

180,000

c

I

•

•

"Super-Right" Quality- Whole

Smoked Picnics .

--·----- ----- ·-

.... . . 'I;·

'· .

The
In ~~~':!: ~r:

BIG BUYS on "Super-Right" Meats!

Boneless Roasl

'. ..

f

~.:.·:,~·

Tlielldlji wllh oM•Ial earnllisa
Edward, Jenner was the' fli'st
ot
$94,,745, ~most ~lrd 91
to discover and make use ·of which
lie colleCted for 'Mooday'a
Inoculation among farm
victory
1n lhe. Th!Jnderhtrd .I'll!
workers who had ·develo~
cowpox, accordiDg to the E:n. classic. Billy Cllropor io·still 'No.
cyclopaedia Britannica. '
1 wilh earnings of $151;3.29. ;

$140,000 Is authorized r 0 r
'The clvll works functloos 11
studiea ~ the Mu&amp;klngum River
the Army COrps of Engineers
provides for water resources Basin.
$655,000 was authori!ed lor
development, Including Investioperation
and maintenance of the
gations and surve_ys, planning.
14 reservoirs of the Muskingum

care

J•

l.

- The Daily . jlenllnel, lll'lddlePOfw.~e

' ';

FRESH FRYERS

Why Pay More?

are make-believr propli

Ohio River.
$6S,ooo rO.

tr.lct C00grCSI$MaD Clarence
Miller ha&amp; reeelved details

Beroard J, Games and Want
daughter.

'

pkl(.

or blm..l! lor th• weights

·

Mrs. 118,1 ·R, Zeigler, Robert D,

r----------·1'..•'•,.•~

PlAIN 01

STRONG-ARM pose make•

u autliorized by the u~ S.
ConJ!reos.
The ll!lPropriatlona are asfol.

·;

" .

•
VIIIII
POPPYSEED
• •
4 '" ...
•••. 35•
Brow• Sucar Buns • •
45•
llazetl Donuts .
• • "'"
Blackberry g~,..y Pie

c:orlUa look tough, but ht&gt;'s
really making a monkey

$~,700,000 auihorl'ed !or the
a,~ Lod&lt;s and Dam on the

!Octloli•.'i!ID&lt;I:.!Ba.ld.purpose pro-

·'"1 ... ,, .

Flag Raloing i '· ,, ,
The first ol!ldal ra\!i!f,t ol
the new l!O-slar Amerlcari '(lag
. was from the flag poleS·,a~ lh•
east and west• Ironto .ill ,the
national CapJto!. AI the••a!l'e
hour, the new nag was ralied
over Ft. McHenry' N1tlonai
Monument in Baltimore, Md.,
bll'lhpiOce of the n a tl oli,al

Rlyer R'iervolr. sY~·

COli•

,lrol, rtver andharllor, boocn.Pro::

Program
Outlm•ed

Remy, Clint D, Fitch, Andrea
Riggs, Virgil J: FilliJlger, Jerry
L, Lewis, Mrs. William A. Gard.
ner and infant daughter. M r s.

ground:

,.'

and maintenance of Roocl,
-Jo~

vancement. It is usually estimated that a high school graduate
will earn $63,000 more during
his working years than hls dropout countf!rpart.
The dropout problem is wideb recognized, but all too oflen
nothing is done about it. Everyone is looking to someone else
to take the responsibility . It may
seem strange ror me to talk
in this column about the dropout problem, but someone must
take the initiative. The problem,
I believe, can only be solved
through a concerted effort of
all parts of our society - parents, individuals, school systems, local and stat.e governments, private enterprise, and
the Federal government.
Her e I&amp; some further b a c k-

studies show that most dropouts leave school because of a
lack or interest. School leaders
and individual commwrity leaders can assist in meeting this
problem by assisting in person al erunseling or young person5
who are considering dropping
out. School systems will be glad
to furnish names and addresses
of such students to interested lndlvl~als who want to lend a
helping hand.
Many students drop out because
they come from poor families
where funds are desperately
short. Local businesses can assist greatly by adording young
persons an ppportunlty fof part~
..time jobs aDd for part-time .iOb
iraining and vocational education to help the youth when he
gradJates from school. T h e y
might assist by job counseling
with a young person to help him
see the opportunities which will
be open to him with a h i g h
"'chool diploma that might be
closed off if he drops out.
OUler students drop out of
school because it is hard ror them
and there is no one who cares
enough to help them through with
the difficult subject£. This is a
very clear opportunity for indi viduals to offer assistance in
tutoring yoongsters who need
their help.
One major reason many young
people reject school is that they
themselves feel rejected by so. t!let;y . A kind word, a pat on the
back, a helping hand can mean a
lot to these youngsters.
Sometimes the expressioo or
interest and concern on the part
oi others will turn the tide.
The dropout problems is a concern we must all share and work
to solve. Government cannot do
It alone.
In this same regard, to those
who do not reel they can continue on to college, there ar e a
great many opportunities avail-

. ....
;,·

I!

'

'•

Pea·rs .. • • • .. .. 6 ,., 49c

•

!'potf5tht Instant

Coffee ---- ....... ·~·
1•r $1
U.S. No.I, Size A
All-Purpose White

Potatoes
25
lb•

ball

..

•

�:
II -

The' llllUy SOntll!l!l,

l\llddloport.f'~y, o., Sill~

\

·f, 1968

Portsmouth District Methodist
Women's Leadei-sllip Meet Held

'i

.
,

·'

\!{,.

I :

,.

,.
f

'.,

.

, ..

'

.'

'
.. .

'
'

,

·~-- d·

'

..

,'...

'

,.

.1&gt;,

•

.~It .llli/.' ~- 1.:..U, ~.;

(

~cconted

Now You ·l\now

_V'.O_L.-'-X-'X'--1:N~.=O:.._.9:...::4_·--------'-~PO-=-M-:-E-'RO:..:Y_-M....:c:IDDLEPORT. OHIO

Miss Beegle

J
I&lt;

·Held in Columbus

.tOll:,:

"""

,

Attends Ohio

. . . . .,l/!

Hill School

Of Leon Holds

Annual Reunion

YRC Meeting .

Ca lendo r.!/

·"'

lttr..uclq

Ca1non's New NO-IRON

7rh Birrhday

Of Julie Byer

Timely Quotes

Middleport. ..
Personal Nofes ..

Double Bed Size Fitted Bottom Sheats or the
Double Bed Size Fiat Sheets.

~

r

BED SHEETS

Is Celebrared

3.89

Twin Bed Size Fitted Bottom Sheets tire
Twin Bed Size Flat Sheets. · . · · .. ·

•·· Pomeroy...
..
: Personal No res i

3.59,

Pillow Cases, 42136 Inches •••• ·1.99 pair
ON SALE ON

ELIEIFELDS ILAIN FL(NMI

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

Miss Hoffman
Wins Master

Churches Plan

SPECIAL FALL

Music Degree

-Annual Evenr

17th Anniversary

Announce Speaker

Of Club Observed

3.60

Veterans are

.....,.....
.V..·

.

4x8 Sltttt

To Sell Rummage

'

AM BERTONE

...

LOWER PIIC$TftAN

....

Honored at Picnic

DRIVE·IN '

.

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1968

i·

N·ew ·Richard M. Nixon
TV Audience Charmer
~ Nixon

CHiCAGO (1.11'1) -

open! an hour deftly
fleldlllr CFestions from a panel
Nhoa woo Is cborm Itself on of eight persons aeleded by tbe
televlllloa. lJ8]It ll1d benterlng state Republican committee.
CIDI \ moment, a1 serious as an The llve telecast was. carried
Army reerultlng poater tlle over
11
ltatlons covering
DOXt.
Dlinolo, Mlosourl ond part of
The Republican prelll-al lildlalla.
DOIIlJnee'1 eue on camera, an ·
Warm Receptlm
abllliJo to Joke publlely oboot Warmed by the lariiOII, moat
himself- aU lids ond a great GIXhualastfc receJ]tlon he has
deal of llllb-.e comment received In lids political year
""" dllp!IQ'ed here Wemesday when he came Into Cldcago
nighl Ill tlle 18111e 1V - o Wemesday afternoon, onc1 blghwhere eight ;rears &amp;80 Nixon 4' pleased by the results of his
bod his llrst of lour famous telecsll, Nboo reiiiDled his iel
campalan dol&gt;ateo with tlle late campaign toda,y with another

there f 1 · a new Richard M.

.1o1m F. Ktmeoly.
'Wtieground'' state on his
Iii 1960, Nixon .... sweaty acheclde.
llld irritable 81 he stood aeross
NiXon wu bound lor Sen

a -

slap from

KomedY

The nomlnee"s televhdon perfonnaiu:e was that of a pollsbed
.l)l'ofeslllonal.
In tlle
dark
recesses ot the studio where the
audlenee filled U-ahaped bleachers, .# ft"Oman leaned to her
husband and whispered, ••He' s
as good a1 Ed aillivan."
'lbere ill a certain inner
conflict In tlle IIOIIllnee about
tile advantages of admitting
"newness" Iince he obvioullly
does not want to admit tlle old
version wa1 interior. Here is
how he handled tho matter alter
a (Jlestloner asked abbut Ute

view~

are

Revised Version
u1
suppose what you're
referring to is, in the vernacular, is there a new Nixon or an
old one and I suppo1e I could
say which Humphrey sbould we
Uaten to toda,y.
· ·~ut l do want to say tldsthere certainly is a new Nixon.
I dorJ't mean that rm not
growing qlder. My wile tells me
that my hair is &amp;Ding back and
I should get a piece here and
there, and I realize, too, that In
terms ot what has hePPened
over the years, as a man gets
older, he learns something.
(Continued 011 Page 6)

lllblfnr.

:Beton a studlo audience ot

nJsb!,
SAIGON (UPI)-Tlte VIetnam I, 1961, to 27,509 killed, 171,809

First Ohio
Transplant

alreadY

exceeded

~se

than 200,000 men killed, .....,S..
ed or lost In actlon,
beadQ.larters llll.d today.
The dlscloeure came In tlle
weekly casualty totels which
.-ed 408 U.!!- servl&lt;!emon
ldlled and 2 513 · 1IOUllded last
week, tile hi;l;,at toll otnce lbe
Communltlts' May..limo IWIUI18l'
alrenlllve.
11 broughl lho liUIIber of
Aine~can eaiUaltl.ea since Jan.

' total o!

u.s. mont said.

n.

nlai.

or

or

News... in Briefs

.;,......y........,

r.·

Rldt!e;
Driver Suffers
.

•Minor Injury
'

·
Whllt tho nalure l"-lbo lnJucy
WU not teJx&gt;rted, Jo)lo L, Dodderer', 24, Columbus, badamlnclr

fiiJul7 but '!&amp;' not ll'eated lfler
a eat i'ec~ at 8:30 a.DL
W.,..oldy on RL 33, five ond
- - . mUoa north ot Rt.
124:.

· 'lbl ~ lllsiPn.Y lfatrol ,llld
a dtor r4'1 -lho hlllllriQ' ln1o ·
lbo Pllh of Dodderer' •
beund ear. Swervlns to miss ibe

....u..

..amal, ·DoddbJerraaoll.therlaht
·aide of lho llllllnoiOI' ond lhnRI8b
a &amp;1IOrd rsll ond almce.
There . ... Dklderate dama&amp;e
to lbe .... • 'l'lrlll]llald
poata

ran

- · -ed -

ond IO· Ieet

"' r..... cnmet1 by H. E. 111gp,

Rt. S Pomeroy, was also damIIIIIL No cllarp was llled.

Julia Bryant

of Muolc, won WedneadiQ' night's prsllmlnary telent canpetitlon

ot

them

were hit l'fhlle beating

air the ground assaul~ tlle war
over 16 other girls.
susan Alane Tll0111Pson, 20, o1 Des Moines, l'"'a, was iudged communl(JJO seld.

boot In lho swftn ault ..tegory In a !laid o! 17 beautle~ A crowd of · The shellings enapted before
as
the
Communists
6,027 penoons wis on hand at Conwntlon Hall lor the llrst o! tllree dawn
apparently tried tD keep tlle
m,hta or prellmlnery COIJIIIOtltlon.
·
oulpoats bullY while lnllltrators
1
LONDON - SCOTLAND YARD HAS UNCOVERED a plot by moved tllrOQBI! tlle night aloog
armed e - s t a to oo1ze - - buildings alii tlle U. S. alii a favorite 70-mi.le corridor
Russian . - . ,11ea derl!W an anll·Vletoam war rally Oct. 27, tlle bombed repeatedly in recent
London Times oald today,
weeks by American BS2 bomThe report &amp;aid the utremiats •ere DWie lCJ at American bers.
stuclenta IDd 11draft dodgers" in BrUain who were backed b)' "foro1sn Oltl&gt;ltel." The Times and t!Je Evening News sold lho oxtremAdult and student ticket.B
lata had plhored Drearma and lldotov cocktails tD dla""t C(JIIIlor
tlle 1\leigs - Wahama 1111111e
lliunlcatlona.
to be played Friday at Waha·
ma Dl81 be purchl.sed at tlle
WASIUNGTON - HUBERT H. HUI\IPIIREY, opening his upbUI
om.ce
of Principal James
e•znpe'gn tor the presidency to all dissident Democrats 1 aeekJ the
Diehl 11 Mldc!leport High
bocklJW ot Son. Edward M. Kennedy. The man
to mold
School until 1 p. m. Friday.
tlle R~~~q~hrey • KeDDOdy detA!nte Ia Lawreaee f'. O'Brien.
Persons planning w attelll
O'Brien, ftumpltrey'a: c•mpaip m&amp;Japr and ~lcked chairare
achised to purcha8e their
man of the Democ:ratlc Nttlonol C&lt;lnmlttee, said Wednesday he
tickets
in ad\'&amp;Dce to avoid a
would periOIItllly contaet KeDDOdy to detA!rmlne what role lho Maowalling
une at tile wlllllow,
aaehusetta se•tcr would. pl8y ID HUIJ1)hrey'a C'llm,ptip Tite former

•••lined

posllnaster pnorol waa a key c-'iD strlleRIII tor John F. Ke"'
ned,y In IHO and was Robert Kennedy's -'111 mamger umll

iDoral!ll "' I!Dlztr lloapltel.
Mrs. : llf1ln! wU borD Sopt.

a....-.

lid., lho

.' ......... ot lbe late ond
· ICMblria• 'Gaattien" TQlor. A
· D1, Woitior,

1968-69 School Counts Announced
an enrollment of 603 atudents. 238 in the seve- grade; 224 in
The number ln each class intlle eighth grade and 240 ninth
chides 203, lothi 213, 11th, arxl graders, and 29 In special educaschool districts.
Biggest ot the districts Is the 192, 12th grader~
tion.
Jn addition there are 32 specMeigs Local District with nearly
The total elementary school en3,000 students enrolled in classes ial education students at the rollment of the Meigs DlstrJ'ct is
high 1chool.
this year.
.
1,453 includl~ 343 at Pmneroy;
The .;mtor high school of the 315 at Middleport; 196atRutland;
The high school at Middleport
eigs District - located thil!l 126 at Salem Center; 141 at Har- a part of a new consolidated
year
ln Pomeroy facilities has an risonville; 138 at Bradbury
program this year - has tbree
enrollment
ot 782. This include&amp; 194 1t Salisbury. In eddltion, tlle
grades, lOth, Uth and 12th with
special education students t.
elude 24 at Puneroy and 12 at
Enrollment figures have been

compiled by Meigs County's three

t

am

Actor Murphy
LOS ANGELES (UP!}- Audle
Murphy, the most decorated
u.s. soldier in World War II,
blwnes a more recent war tor
bankrupting him.
The actor testified in superior
court Wednesday that he was

Mrs. Nicholson
Dies Wednesday
Funeral services for Bernice
C. Nicholson, 77, RD I, Rutland,
who died Wednesday morning ln
the Veterans Memorial Hospital,
wlll be held Frlda,y al 2 p.m.
at the Martin F\QleraJ Home with
the Rev. Cecil Co:x officiating.
Burial will be In the White Oak
Cemetery.
~ was a member or the Ml
Union Church, of the DexOOr
Church Ladles Aid, and of ~
Grange No. 778.
&amp;lrvlvors include her husband,
Marlon; a daughter, Evelyn 9dlllng. VermUlion;!ourSOIII, Waid,
RDI, Dexter; Dale, Middleport;
Ernest, Rutland, and Marion, Columbus; 13 grandchildren, and
t b r e e great - grandchlldren.
Friends may call at the fUneral
home anytime.

allil Pl'eeedi!IINl'

~~~~
1111

puC&gt;Ilri!&gt; el(eci,!IDI&lt;iW lhe J1101Do
]toi' ot, dil Ollir&lt;il' Oliil &amp;llldol'

. so~ it ns .iivolted '\hat'~

.....

! · ~ 'l'll"'l.iir ~'pqle oflhe

...,, ....,L;

··~~1•·:•¥~

=

'Busted':r.~~re..:.!•ointll~

By Arab-Israeli War

Dool'l of tile Middleport Church
o! lho Nazarene wlll be opened
troJn 7 yo .9 L m. each morning
In order to encourage prayer In
tlle ~·
The church boord hos agreed
to open each of Its sessionl!l with
1 season of prayer at lho altar
111t1 to have tlle church opened
each morni!W to encourage not
only Nua.renes but other realdonie of lho C&lt;IIIJIUIIIity to otop
In tile chureh tor pra,yer derlJW
tile two hour perlocl.
Tile board al10 hu adopted '
o eburch tlthbw p . . _ Bqlnnina a1 once •• of tho lao! boJik.
bw day of each lllOIIIh, 10 per
cent &lt;(· aU IMlmea Into the
ctwreh, u~t bulldi!W pa.ymeDI
. , _ . , Is to be l]lven to mllalona or to some · other Interest
~lbo aenorolchurchutlleho11)1
lieom• belit,
.
' ~,tlthi~W ]ll..., . . , Ia 'uoo·wli,'

NEW HAVEN - Mro. JUlia
V. llrplll, 84, wbo U&gt;ed bore
......,. , . . , died wemeadiQ'
It~

be loolll on Pages 8 alii 9. -Sentinel Photo.

broke and was under constant
scrutiny from federal and state
tax collectors.
Murphy, 41, said he lost
$260,000 In an Algerian o II
venture when the six-day ArablaraeU war broke out in tbe
Middle East In JIDle 1967. He
said he hoped to "re8U1Tect the
venture."
Appearing as a judgment
debtor, Murph,y told &amp;Jperlor
Court COmmissioner Hman 0.
Danotl he is unable to pay ot!
$13,260 due on a $15,000
promissory note he signed Nov.
13, 1964 In lavor of tlle First
National Bank of Dallao.
A judgmcrt against tlJe actor
was entered NOY. 26, 1966.
The war hero said he has no
foreseeable Income In 1988 and
that all relllcllals from past
JDOIVI.es and television roles are
confiscated by the otate tax
board belore they reach him.
Murphy received 24 medals
including the
Congressional
Medal of Honor lor Ida Oljllolts
In Africa and ~rope during
World War D.
Aller tlle war he starred In
his film biollJ'aphy, "To Hell
and Back," and appeared In

dlstr!ot. EarollJneat In tllese toelude Middleport, 54; PomerO)',
64, tud Rutlanl, 35.
In tlle Eastern Local School
District, enrollment has been recorded at 928. St..,tents enrolled
in each of the schools includes
~pers PlaJna Elementary, 216;
Riverview, 142; Chester, 265, and
Eastern High School, 270,plus35

klmergart.en plt)il:... from thedt ...
atte~ claasea at
ter.
The Southern Local School m..
trlct baa an enrollment of 1,14:2,
inchldi- Syracuse Elemenl:ar7,
160; Lotort, 153; RaclneEie.,....
tary, 209; Junior high, sevtllllt
and elghtll alii ... olxtlJ . . unit, 207; Southern Hlllh Schoal

a..:.

trlct

at Racine, 363, and 60

,._.oa

Ten Stntions
To Broadcast
MU Contests

HUNTINGTON, W. Va. (1.11'1) .
-Ten Ohio and West Vlrginla · ·
radio stations have alg:Dad to ·
carry Marshall Unlveralcy - .
ball and baskelball broodcasto
this year, according to Alldetj~
Director Eddie Barrett.
The play - by - J&gt;]..,. will ~
handled by Marshall ~ 1&amp;rormatloo Oirector Gone Non&gt;- ....
house and color man· will be
B!U Farrell of WSAZ, 1!wJt1De.
ton.
The board of directors ot the
The stations In tlle networll
Meigs County Jaycees Wednes- are: WSAZ llunllngtoa, WCAW
da,y evening made preliminary Cbarleaton,
WLOG
Lopn,
J&gt;]ans ror the slxtll amua1 Meigs WWNR Beek.ley, WElF M,..,._
Count;y Junior Miss Pageant.
ville, WHAR Clarksburg, WBTB
The pageant will be held Nov. W!Ulamson, WPARPorker-1,
21 at the 1\lelgs Junior H l g h WJEH AM-FM, r.mPlu•, ObJo.
School auditorium ln Pomeroy.
Jim !\lees and Earl Ingels gave
reports on advertising abd pro.
grams tor the event. II: was declded tbat the programs are to
be purchased !rom tlle ~allty
Print !IJap In Middleport.
Martha Husted a111 n.e1- o_
The Jaycees announced all sen- Campbell, pres!- - eleet llld
ior girls attending one of three secretary, respectivel,y, of U.
Meigs County high schools Inter- Meigs Local School District_
ested
ln entering the pageant Teachers Assn., and AvteeFreo:.:
mmerous westerns.
should write tlle 1\lelgs County ker o! the GeUla .J.ocal Toa.-4.
Ja,ycees, P. 0. Box 605, Pome- Assn., were delegat+s ~ the!(·
roy.
respective usodatkllll at a
Attending tlle mOilllng at tlle meetiug at Keat state Unlver.U,,
church do titlle that a pnorol Rm !lc:Dade realdence In Mid- Ken~
tithing program tllrouihout tlle dleport were Cborles lluJnJ)hHlghlight.s of tlJe meotlnl held
· church wwld h8lp sc::me who reio, Blll Mdlentels, Vlnc'"'t from Aug. 25 lbnJuil&gt; Alii· U
may not 6Jlly understend lho 111- Knight, Tom Martin, Earl In- were talks by leadlag _..., 4 a
•
gels, Ralph Werry, Jim !\lees and ltatf menMrs such u IJb...
.antqes of tlthln8.
'
Also to strengthen tlle prayer IIIII Richard llayes.
by Koom, prealdenl &lt;lllbo
program ol the dm'ch, th&amp;t..rd
'llle next regular member meet- tiona! Emcatleu Aom., lldOJ,Dr_
agreed to ldopt1blradiQ'evonlng Ing WID be Soplembor 11 at
True, 111\YcholOIIIII &lt;(
u cotl8ge pra,yer meeting m,hi. 8 p.m. In tlle meeting room st lho
The cotl8ge pra,yer meetlep will Pomer&lt;IY town hall.
One evenlntl, 15
be held in homes around the com.. earrled 725
mlllllty each TlluradiQ' oven!,.;
. POMONA TO IIIEET
Y.....-lna
U&lt;ll&gt;tiel lho ftr1t 'lbursday of
1\lelp Colriy p..,... Grange !bey eoalerred with
oacb month, which ..W be oet wtU meet In reau!ar seaslOD Fri- lbe
li'.Glcatleu
ulde tor boord meei!JWL
day at 8 p. m.atl:heRock!Prlnas abU tJIIIr clftlat1He&amp;.
The board 1110 hal tiel aside G,.... llaU wben tho otata COCJlo.
Tho-Sept. 8 os "Back to School"
Inc and stole contaata andnatl.,.. broaabt • ...... C'D!C1Dt
IIIQ'. Eoch periOD ol·oc- 1&amp;0 . aJ Crochetl!W contalle wtll bo II8JIIO O.E.A.. - lbo .
preaent &amp;llldol'wtll .....,.lvelpOD- held. Eloctiell ol olllcaro lrir lho ••Obly Exeellllice
ell ond each toacher .PTOMDI wtU 0118uln]): two ;rears will also be
recohe an atiud In I'OCOIJlitloo he1d. AI! memben ...., uriod to
&lt;ll aonlce Ill lbo chlldreu of tho· atteed.
~lm'ch and lbo &lt;OaiJIIUII\Iy 1o 1
SALE
-..
" '
'llle
, Tile balM ·d~•'ll'• Sept. ts
MARRIAGE Al'PIJCATIOII

Jaycees

Plan for
Pageant

Teachers At

Kent Meetings

,, .,··.. . ·4··
(

. •'

y......-,

·

&amp;I

'

..,.,

'

.

- f
.f"

,.,

'dlll'lltlllbo

.,.··

,.,.. ...

,~ ,. ~·,;.·r·
;

Benard erou,· %2,
atock , clerk, ud
GloriA J - ~- 18,land, r ..........

· lit 1 - • Allcll

p....modOD
' . io.lii -

.::::r s.l!Or" ~ · · ·

,

·.:.

~· _.... ' ;
·~,_"' , . ..

-

Herbert

s.o.

..,

..

,~

·•

~Aa~svllla,

'

attending kindergarten btl!W hold
In Racine tor lho enllre dlstrlc:i.

Prayer Period Announced

troae4Y atruek.

Dies Wednesday

' ' . .. 1881.'

Wahama. Additional pictures ond atorles relatleg totlle!C&gt;..,._
ing season are oo Page 7 of tooay•l!l editloo, and achedules wUJ

in

War has cost America more wounded and 1,197 nrluing- a Korea as well as those suffered

200,615, the announc&amp;- by the French In the Fri!IJchIndochina War. Vietnam ls the
'Communist losses lal!lt week third eoaWest war the United
has rough! against
were 4,f76 killed, bringing tllelr Slates
torelgn
troops,
behind World
tote1 lor tlle war to 390,105.
South Vletnameae helllQlartefa Wars I and
Last week's CIISU&amp;lty figures
seld 284 government IOidlets
were k!Ued ond 1,187 wounded, represented the losses In a
but no tolals lor tlle enllro war aeries or battles along the
Cambodian border,
in the
are available.
northern
war
zone
and
ComnmExceed Korean Cesualtle•
shelllngs
key allied
U.S. battletleld losaes have
CLEVELAND (UPI) Del·
bases including Da Nang.
lett Howard lAwson,
Akron, :;~:~t~:~:~:~:~:~:~:~:r~:~:~:~~:~:~:~:~~:;:f:~~:~:~:~:~:~:~:!:r~~=~=~:~;~:?f~:~~:::~{~t{?~::{~?~~)::~{::~(~t~~'Ole American losses were the
51, Ohio's lrst heart transplant
highest
since the week ending
reclplenl, wail reported today w
J\Ule
1
when
438 Gls were killed
be olttiJW IC&gt; In bed In lho Clev..
and 3,870 wounded.
land Cllldc ond progressing satIn ac:tlon toda,y Communlat
illldorf]y. .
!Drees
bombarded eight south
~-"ffe,..ee~Wct the heart ot • 25- ~~j:~ti~~~~l~~~t:~1~~tt}~~~~~!i~~~i:~;ii~li~ii~f:~~tf)~~=:~t~::{:~:t:J~:!:)~:~:::::r~=r~:~:~:~:}
Vietnamese
outpoats ~arding
who nsldllldln
Sellon's
western
fiank against
Lobar Day tralllc accident.
Ill' United Press """""'tiona!
lnflltratton
and
tried
unsuccessS'l'OCKHOLI\I- SWEDEN 'TODAY GRANTED ASYLUM tD seven
Two a&amp;her- persona r~cet ved her
tulJy
to
ovetnU1
one
or them,
lddneys In 1 double traDaplant. more American Arm¥ runawayl!l who lett their units to protest the
military
reports
said.
A hoapltel spokeSDWt said to- Vlellllm War. But two otllera were looindgullty ot peddling marijllllll,
Typhoon Bese' 75-mile..an~r
_. all three redplerts were In senteaeed to two' llllll1lh1 In jall ond ordered eJII)eUed lnlm SWeden.
Joseph Edward NorWood, 2(), of NeWPOrt Beach, Csllt, alii winds forced cancellation or
IIUsfactol'Y tOIIlltion and "p~
John llowUng, 20, of Soli Diego, Collt, pleaded gul]t,y tD charges of U.S. Navy alr rolds Into Nortll
crenlqr as e'ljpected. n
Rabort a.Pper, 29, of Miner- Illegal pos..alllm and distribution of narcotics. They were ieUed Vlemam.
Conununlsts m1 Outposts
va, a o~rmarkel clerk, and Alr- ond ordered eJII)Olled until 1975 ll'ben tlley may return.
Seven government soldiers
man 3-C Chirleo Muucly, 20, of
BorMley, Mlth., recel&gt;ed the .
ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. - A DETERMINED VIRGINIA music were wounded fn the series of
' lddDe,ys of Mrs Barbora Smltll ma.ior and 1 blue eyed blonde lnlm Iowa Ire tlle opening round win- Conununlst atlad.s in flau
of Wolnut
Ark.
nero In · tho Miss America PIINIIL Cherie Suzarme Davis of Cllllon Nghla Province, lying betwe"'
Forge, Va., 1 19-year--old jwdor at tbe Shenandoah Consenatory the capital and Cambodia. Five

Successful

GMNG INSTRUCTIONS - Tlte Meigs Marauder lootboll
team, like the Southern and Eastern High squads, wiU open its
1968 1eason this Friday night. Above, Marauder Coach Olaries
Chancey teviews plans with his Meigs team for its lid-Utter at

War Cost at 200,000

hi1 makeup, lho air condltlonlng

3011 JOI'IOIIO Wedneede7

a.m., EDT.

charge •"ddat Nixon's

baaed this year oo expediency.''

In

Studio Que &lt;ll Stellon WBBM1V, He eomplatned 111en oboot
IDt]

Francisco and a speech toolght
at Sonia Clers Unlverolty.
He was to leave at about 9

(Toch::"")

f

Shorrera ear11 klnlllj, - : : : •
ed by poi'IIJ dcJudl- .... '
·ritll lows In lho 511•, uespt
around 80 In lbo ~xll ,_
Pardy cloudy alii c:ocHr
day.

"'

Devoted To Tlw Inh!r~ts Of'l'lw Meigs-Mason Area

~

Baptismal Rite .

· Weather.

en tit;

at y

e

The !llihost known deatll tDil
In earthqlakes thla century was
180.000 In Kansu, China, Jn a.
quike that. occurred Dec. 10,
1920.

.~

p,m. .

•

''"'

{i~

.

the Portlmouth District 11 Unit- eome a member or the new Woshort reports on the studies tor
· The wtddlllr of 'i uss
made
wllll pearls ond
od llletllodist Women•s Soclet;y of men's Soclet;y II she IIUIJPOriS tlle
the year. The missJon study ls m
Se~er~ . ond Mr•. DeMia ~ ' bJ , her IJlCllhe~. Her only jew. atonea, and ..,. carriOd a :f,~Cii..
Chrllllan Senlce.
new Pllrpose by her gilts, her
Soutbeast Aala. Most o! tlle coon""'• IOIOJM!zed at 2:30
~r, -.:aa I silver cron neck- 91et of white J&gt;C1(D poms \l'1P
Three leadeJ;"ahlp trainlnK ses- prayers and her service."
tries in this group have been
~.
Selll,
I,
at
llle
'Be~:
~&lt;e. • &amp;lit~ !he' l!rlclesroom. white Bible, •.SII 'ot.f!!ob~o
Iiana were set up in dlfl'erent
EverYv_ loCal president should
colonies of larger countries, and
, ,. United lfelhoillst Church of..,. .. The ~s .shoidder length veil sister, Mrs. Roy Honcli'tcko,;, l ..,
...
parts ol the district for the have rec~lved this special pro- now several of them have re.
Racine, ·
'
, ~en ··~ a lace pela) J&gt;]ateou
Miss Dixie Circle 'ier..d:;fc
convenience .and trainlngotelect.- gram to be used tor October,
ceived their independence. ThJa
The . bY. Paw A. Soltero,
maid ot honor tor lho ~IM
ed leadership ol the organiza- charter month for her Society. Study asks what can the ch11rch
lllllor of lho brkle, 'read ll!o ·
wore a itreet !ell&amp;!!! ~• •.:Ji',.,
don.
This meeting should lnclude the do to meet the changing prob, VOWI of !he
.cere-•
pale J&gt;]nk crepe, Her lbOr)
The meeting was opened by Agape Meal or Love Feast. This
lems? What does the church con·I
,111Cl117·
~
muole
wu
i&gt;llll'held In place by a . ~ ·
the president, Mra. James Rich- meal ls a ce1ebratton of what
tribute to their Christian talth?
ed bJ" !\Irs. Paul P6well,
&gt;
petal heatlpl... aeconted ,; l.t·h
ards ot Rio Grande, The medi- God has been doing in the world;
The splrllual growth study Is
Given In mar-~ bJ" ho r
llljltluna! rites lor Bryan pearls, and she catrled a iiou'
tatlon or celebratioo was given and to ask His blessings on ef- on John. this stresses God's
mother,
Mra
..
:
~
Sellera;
AnthonY
Korn:, son of Mr. and quet of piD!k J)OIIl poms.
· f~
TO
OBSERVE
511TH
W~
ANNIVERSARY
Mr.
sill
by the ~lrltual Growth Secre- forts tor better housing, peace
mission is for the whole worldi
Mrs.
Everett
E.
C.n!weU
will
obsene
tllelr
50tll
wedtliJ1I.,..
the
brldi'
na
attired
In
a
white
1\lra.
George
Kprn,
Jr.,
3
38
Terry
Riebel
o!
Racine;
a
!lOU5
tary, 'M ba Amabell Eaton of and education. The Agape symalso tllat you cannot gjve !Ish!
nlversary
Sunday
lltemoon
wltll
open
house
at
tllelr
Vinton
.
Karl
Rood,
Columbus,
were
consin
of
the
bridegroom,
..
.;~·
Proctorvllle. Sbe encled with a boUzes tU!Ity with ecumenical
unless you have it yourself; our
home, Tlle.Y were married on Sept. 9, 1918, at GaUlpolls ond
"' dueled ~day at the St. James as beSC man tor Mr. ~ ·~ •
New Idea of Worship ol the Lord's groups in this country and abroad.
church should be a Livingchurcb
are t!te parents of seven -thUdren. 1bey ue Mrs. Pauline H¥'llle Leas CathoUc Church 1n Is tlle 1011 oll\lr, ond lllfl• l:;!!iiJ ··
Prayer, which had appeared in It provides an ~portunity for
as our Christ Is a L 1 v in g
sell,
Mrs.
lJncla
G~her,
and
Mrs,
Helen
Werry,
all
of
Pom_.
ColiPDbul.
.
Eynon, He alao ~r;-ved u u.p..,
the Metbodl.st Woman ~zine. eommwUon and fellowship to- Christ.
eroy; Mrs. Teana Kearns, Coi1Dilbus; Miss Marie Cerdwell,
·'
~sors
were
Mrs:
Harold
lor
tbe bride's mother and ,..,.••
This carried out the theme of gether. Thls includes the SlaTwo important dates were givAlliance,
&amp;Ill
BeiUIY
C&amp;rdwellalll
Mrs.
The!JIIa
FlshUr
of
VIn(Erlene)
1\YseU
of
Colwnbua,.ond
t4'Mn.
Guests were rql-ld
lhe meeting, .. The W o r d lorn or Peace toast when con~
en - Portsmouth District Anton.
Friends and relatives are invited to call at the Cardwell
her
1&lt;11;
l!:dward
1\Yiell,
also
of
b.Y
Miss
Donna Theiss.
Afresh.'"
cerns for our world and one
home II\¥ time alter 1 p, m.
nual ~ring meeting will be held
Columbua.
.
.
For
her
daughter's w~
A report and "thank you" was another are lilted to God.
at Bigelow Church, Portsmouth,
Others
attending
~ere
M
r
a.
Mrs.
seuera
wore a blue taf..
given by Mrs. Sam Boyd, of VinThe president gave the womApril 24, 1969 with Mrs. IUchRuth
'I'tlDmas
ot
Chicaso,
Dl.i
leta
sheath
with
a ehUron overlon, ror being chosen to attend en suggestions of thlngs needard Bauer, wife of the former
llr.
and
!lrs.
J!s.y
Guinther,
Allla,y,
and
white
accessories.
Mr1.
:.:'·s~·~,;~,,,,,,,,,,,
the School at Missions this sum- Jng to be done in a new socieDistrict &amp;lperintendent, as t h e
BOlla,
Ronald,
Jeltrey,
ond
KelE;Jonon
was
in
a
blueacelatebiindmex, on the Martha FellowshJp. l;r. Each member should have a
Miss Shirley Beegle, dele- l,y, Chesteri Mr. and Mn. Jake ed shift and wore wtllte aeeeamain speaker. The ArulUaJ 0 h i o
The district otncers each gave copy of the constitution and byPte
of the 1\lelgs County Young llhornas and daughter, Jean, MlJS sorlea.
West Conference will be held in
a preview or the needs or the laws; there are no set dues, a
REpubllcan
Club, attell]ed tlle Mary FrancJs, Pomeroy.; MJss
Ma,y, 1969 at Camp SaJnt Marys,
A reception b::IDoring tile ecu.
local society, putting emphasis woman pays whatever she can
Ohio
League
or Young liepubl]. Kim Jqsell, Columbus, and Mra. ple was held In tlle chUrch soCial
near Lima, wtth the C e I i n. a
on group responsibility ,
through a pledge; every Socief3'
can Clubs convenUon at t h e Christina O'Donnell, great-great room, Assildng were Mrs. BOn..
·i.
church as host.
.cJnce the uniting of the Meth- should have a budget; local trea~
Sheraton
- Cleveland Hotel in aunt of Bryan· Anthony, and Mrs. nie Theiss, Mrs. Bei'D.IeeThelJa,
After lunch Mrs. Howard Stockodist Church and the EvangeU- surers must hav~ the name on
WEDNESDAY
Cleveland.
A"'BUst 23, 24 and George Korn, Sr., A&gt;meroy.
ham showed the beauty or interMrs. Joseph]neSmlth,lllri.BeUt
cal United Brethren Church, the their Soclel;Y's checks changed
2.1.
MIDDLEPORT
Amateur
Garpretive music to a familiar hYmn.
The annual reulllon ot tlle IIlli
A
family
party
1n
celebration
T)lelss,
and !\Irs. PoweU w11o
Women's organization Is a new to the new name to make them
William Saxbe, Republican can- of tlle baptism was held at lho l!"eslcled at tlle JlWICh bowl.
The audience then participated, School of Leon, W, Va., was held deners Club will meet Wednesgroup. It Is a new society, witb legal; locaJ ministers should see
the interpretation was through recently at the MlddJeport Road- day at 8 p, m. 11t the home of Mra. didate tor V. S. Senator, was the Kom home. Mr. onc1 Mrs. Kom · Mr. ond Mrs. tcynoo are rea new name, a new constitution that some or the Women's SOcJeEddie Burkett.
ke.vnote speaker at the mOl"n- have another 11011, Bret Allll. aiding it fta:clne R. D.
the use or the hands in a grace- side Park.
and by-laws, and with new mem- ty officers are on church com- t'ul mamer.
WILDWOOD GARDEN CLUB i~W session. The luncheon speaJ&lt;..
Following the basket dinner
bers. October Is designated as missions, spirlblal growth on
Workshops or elected leader- at noon, the group spent the al- wlll meel al 8 p. m. Wedne.W.,. er was .K~~cky Gov. Louis B.
Charter Month when every Worn- evangelism, missionary educaship sessions were conducted for terman viewing old school pic- at tlle home of Mrs. Dwight Mil· Num, and the bar.quet speaken's Sociecy oC Christian Serv- tion on mission commission, and
the local officers by each district tures and reminiscing. Among hoan widJ Mrs. Wald Whw:lon as er was Spiro Agnew, vice presf..
ice should have a special pro- the president is now a member
dentlal candidate. He was introofficer.
those attending the reunion was the assisting hostess.
gram concerning this new or- of the administrative board of
duced b.Y Gov. James A. Rhodes.
Many questions and answers a- WalUe Barnett of Leon, w. Va.,
ganjzation, combined with a spe- the church Instead oC the offlJanice Wolfe, formerly . of
THURSDAY
bout the new Society were dis- who taught at tlle Hill School two
cial session for signing the new cial board. Members were told cussed.
Meigs
County, now an assialant
PAST CHIEFS, Magnolia Temterrna, 1915-16 and 1916-17. The
charter - the old Woman's SO- that all material tor the Socieple,
Pythlan
Sisters,
will
meetat
Ohio
Attorney General, wu
The meeting closed w:ith t h e terms began in October and endclety Is no more. Every woman t,y will be received by the local
elected
secretary of the OLYRC
7:30
p,
m.
Thursday
at
the
home
ed In March.
Agape Meal as the benediction.
must sign if she wishes to beduring
~
convention.
Others here for the reunion of Mrs. George Heines, Hemlock
Grove.
were Mr. and Mrs. Gus Steele,
::. :: :::::·:-::·. ·=·.&lt; ::::' .· . .·.:&gt;:·:::-·-: .·.:-: :-: ...
Jeannie Dray, Vance and Karen
REVIVAL at Christian Union
Don't wrinkle - a blend .at 50 percent selected Ametfcan
·.·
of Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs. J. Church, Hal"tford at 7:30 p.m.
cotton and 50 percent polyester. Over 130 threads per
..
square Inch aYWage..
C. Burl!:e and Kath,y, Nitro, w. each evening. Donald Pfeifer,
I don't know very much
Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hill, Chillicothe speaker. Services op..
about the governor.
Red House, w. Va.; Dewey Barn- en to public from SepL 3 through
.
-sen.
f:ugene J. McCarthy,
ett, Leon, W.Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Sept. 9. The Rev. John Coppock.
Miss Werxly Nickels or Bay
asked
to comment on the
Lewis Triplett, Mrs. Joan Bailey OOst paator.
selection of S~lro T. Agnew
Village was the guesl of Mr. and
and MJney Long, Mrs. c a r r I e
EVANGEUNE CHAPTER, OrIll the Republrcan vice pres.
Mrs. Robert Kt~ and family
Roush, Mrs. Elfie Montgomery, der or the Eastern Star, 7:30 p.
idential candidate.
over the holiday weeke.-.1 Joi~P
Mrs.
Iva
Turner,
all
of
MiddlenL
Thursday
at
the
Ma!!onlc
TemThe seventh birthday anniver- ing the King family and Miss
The time has come for us
port, and Mr. and Mrs. Earl Ed- ple, MiddlEport.
sary ol Julie Byer was observ- Nicl!:els for dimer Sunday were
to
leave the valley of despair
wards
of
Langsville.
LAUREL
CUFF
Better
Healtll
ed Frlda,y afternoon w!tll a party
Mr1. Oleva Cotterill, Mrs, Aland climb the mountain so
rt
Club,
Thursday,
7:30
p,
ln.
at
the
~:::::::~:::
:.:::::
::::::·:::::.;-:::::::·:·:·:
=:=:·
.
:·:·:·:
:·:-:-:··!.
at the home· of her parents, Mr. bert Milhoan and Mrs. WilHam
that we may see the glory of
home
of
Mrs.
Allen
Eichingerj
Mrs. Bob Byer, Middleport. King and children, Debbie,
the dawn of a new day for
new ottlcers to be elected; all America, a new d a w n for
Game1 were played with priz- Cathy, Sherrie afl:l Kevin. Mr.
members aa.ked to attend.
es being won by Becky Fultz, and Mrs. Robert King and son,
peace and freedom to the
PAST CHIEFS; Magnolia Tem- world.
Marianne
Welsh,
Kimberly Tim, were Ohio State Fair "isitple, Pythfan Sisters, 7:30 p. m. -Richard M. Ni.zon.
Payne, and Patzy Brown.
~
~
ors last week.
Thursday at the home of Mrs.
Rings and suckers were givGuests of Mr. and Mrs. RobMr. and Mrs. Robert Turner
George
Heines.
en as favora, and Mrs. Byer arx! daughter, Debbie, North Robert Bowen over the holiday wee~
IU'Ved lee cream and cal!:e to inson, were weekend guests or
em were Mrs: Gomer Bowen of MEIGS COUNTY Young RepubA mari who can jump six
those named and Terry McDan- his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joe
Me Arthur snd Mrs. George Mar- lican Club, Thursday, 8 p. m. at
MARLENE HOFFMAN
feet high on earth could jump
iel, Joy Beaver, Angela Payne, Turner. sandy, who has been
the
organization's
headQl&amp;rters
tin ard daughter, Julie, Colum36 feet high on the moon.
in the Hotel Martin.
and Larry Byer. Friday even- here visiting her grandparents,
bus. Sunday guests or the BowIng guests of the Byers at a
ens were Denver Carman am
and Michael, who has been vaca&amp;
family party were Mrs. Charles tioning with £rie00s in Tennes'
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Frecker and
FRIDAY
Byer, Kenny Lee and John, and see, returned to North Robinson
Rodney. Sunday Mr. Bowen vis&amp;
SOUTHERN BAND Boosters to
Mr. and !lrs. T. G. !illldore. Monlay with their ptrents.
Ited in Chillicothe with his fath- sponsor dance Friday following
er, Gomer Bowen.
first home football game with
Mrs. Larry Flowers and Var.essa Meade returned to ColumWilliam Koesel of ClevelaOO North Gallla at tlle Jr. High
bus over the weel!:end after a
ard Mrs. Frank Calbetzar of School; ''The Next ln Line" to
two-week visit here with her par~
Streetsboro were weekend vtslt.. furnish music.
ents, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Roush.
ors of Mrs. Welby Whaley. Su•
BIG AFTER Footbell Game
Mr. Flowers drove toMJddleport
day guests of Mrs. Whaley were dance parcy wlll be held at tlle
Saturda)' for his wire and VanesMr. and Mrs. Bill King of New- Wahama High School auditorium
Marlene Ka,y Hoffman, daugb.
sa.
ark am Mr. and Mrs. Bill Sl\Y- rollowlng the Wahuna- Maraudter of Mr. and Mrs. Leslie HoffBecky Roush, who has been cOnder and daughter of lancaster. ers football game. Dandng from
fined to Holzer Hospital tor the man, LangsviUe, received her
Mr. and Mrs. WUliam Jacobs 9:30 p. m. w midnight The Jays
master's degree in muslc rrom
past
week,
was
released
Tuesday
have
returned to Jacksonville, will emcee,
The annual Harvest Festival
the Austin Peay state Univeram
is
rec~erating
at
home.
F1L,
a1ter
spending a week here
d. the St. John and st. Paul
ldEIGS COUNTY WOMEN'S
sity, ClarksvlUe, Term. on Aug.
Sgt.
Donald
Matlleny,
statiOII\!d
with
his
parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Chrtstiu Temperance Union,
Lutheran Churches will be held
16.
in Vietnam for the past 15 months,
Harry Jacobs. Whlle here they A&gt;meroy u n I t e d Metl1odlst
9mda,r.
MiSB Hoffman started teacharrived
home
Thesday.
He
has
attended
tlle Ohio Slate Fair. Clurch, 7:30 Friday evening.
Activities of tlle day will Ining elemertary music, grades
Camp
Lebeen
transferred
to
Sal'llra
Franz
ot Cohunbus was
clude wonship services at St.
one through six, on Aug. 19 at
Jeune,
N.
C.,
and
his
wife
and
guest
ofherparenta,
the
weekend
Paul at 9 a.m.; &amp;mday school
Leadwood, Mo.
SATURDAY
children
are
in
the
process
of
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Hansford
franz,
at &amp;.. Paul at JO a.m.; worship
IDGH
SCHOOL
dance parcy Sat·
While
at
Austin
Peay,
she
reservices at st. Jolvl at J J a. moving to Jacksonville, N. c. ceived the highest scholastic av- Condor St.
l.D"day, Pomei"O)' Junior H 1 g h
Mr. arwJ Mrs. Ray Reuter of
Jennings Marshall am his fim., and a noon potluck on the
&amp;udlb&gt;riuDt' rrom 8:30 b&gt; 11:30 p.
erage in liermajorneldofmusic
ance,
Nancy Bowling, of Louis-.
Canton
were
weekend
visitors
lawn at the St. John Church.
DL Jays wUJ emcee.
was presideru ol Sigma AI~
A musical program will be here of Albert Van Cooney and Iota her senior year, and 1VU vOle, Ky., were holiday weekeod
preaented In the afternoon be- Mrs. Val Reuter. Mrs. Reuter a member of Kappa Delta Pl. rueata of Mrs. Russ Wetsoo and
SUNDAY
dming at 2 p.m. There Will be accompanied them to Canton for ~e was also chosen for list- other relatives.
Q
ANNUAL
HOMECOI\IING at tlle
Mrs. Olan Genheimer hu re~eled.ions by guest soloists, 1 visit,
ing in • 'Who's Who Among Stu~
Rock ~rlogs United Methodist
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Mourning
turned here after spei.dlng the
J.l&amp;.rtets, and the church choir,
Church, Sllllda,y; bosket dinner at
dents
In
Universities
and Colof Elyria and Mr. and M r s.
past 10 days in Boston. MrL Gen-.
along with a ]zymn sing.
leges.''
noon, lol.lowed by a program b&amp;James Mourning and children,
helmer and Mrs. Rick Vantca,
g!Mlna at 1:15 p. DL
Miu
Hoffman,
a
1963
graduate
Dale, Julie and Michael, of ~
CleYflland, &amp;.ce&lt;:mpanled to Boslumbus were weekerll guests of or Rutland High School, was a- ton, Mr. and Mrs. Pete Vanl.ca
warded a graduate asslstantsh.Jp
Mrs. Golda Mourning.
who have moved trom Cleveland
at Austin Peay tor work on her
Mr. aOO Mrs. Frank Varian
to the Massachusetts city where
.. ,
master's degree. !Jie has a toam son and Mr. and Mrs. Clar~
Mr. Vanica wiUattendtheMasaaThe Rev. Carl NoaloOtCbamence Varian of Columbus spent tal of 219.9 houro with a qual- chuseU. Institute of TecbnoiOI)'. bero, Ariz., will p pst •.POlkThe 17th anni ~usary of t h e the holiday weekend here with Ity point average ratio ot 3.369.
or at lho Pomeroy Lower lJ8]It
...-v-~
Middleport Canasta Club was ~ their mother, Mrs. Gertrude VarCoord! TburadiQ' at 7:30 p.m.,
terved Thursday uight with a din- ian.
"' tlle lllplc of hla ""rll wllb
A rum.._ sale ww be held lho N.._,. - . , , , The Rev.
ner parcy at Oscar's in GaUlMr. and Mrs, Gordoo Harris
polis,
b.Y tlle Ohio Ell Phi ~ of RO¥ Tqlor, J)Utor, weleomea
or Columbus were holiday guests WWI
Beta Sl&amp;Jna Phi Serortty Friday lho PlbUc.
f oUowing the diMer, the group of their parents, Mrs. C. M. Her.alii Saturda!' In lho belldlng ne.rt
returned to the home of Mrs. Ed- nesy and R. W. Harris.
••
4x1Sh••~ .
to
tlle L. " z. SiNW&gt; In Pomeroy
M Russell tor an evening of card
Mr. and Mrs. George Doolittle
Children's woor and toys ,. 01 ~
playing.
Mrs. Norm1n Hum- an:J children, Cormie, Stephen,
included
in ftenas to be sold.
Phreys an:J Mrs. Donald ~ery and Krlsty, returned to Berea
WNIGRT &amp; 'f!IURSDAY
were tuesls and prize winners. Monday after a week's vi sit here
World War l veterans were
SEPTf'5
Othen wfnahtg prizes were Mrs, with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. honored at a. picnic held at the
NOTOP£N'.
'
&gt;
fA
SO
N
Richard Gress and Mrs, Millard Glen Lamlx-rL
recreation farm ot Feeney..J3enWUdermuth, Mrs. R o b e r t
Mr. arxJ Mrs. Bruce Uoyd and Dett Post 128, American Le,Jon,
FIIIDAY I&lt; SATURDAY
Schmoll, MrL Charles Bradbury :mn, Mike, of McConnelsville SWiday.
TONIGHT &amp; TIIURSDAY
SEPT. 8 &amp; f
1
and Mrs. Uonel Boggs are the were Middleport visitors MonSEPT4&amp; 5
t . '111E WJLp RACEits"
The picnic staged as a. ftrst
other members ot the club.
day.
event in obserw.nce or the 50th
JlllleiCobum
Mrs, Ed Niewoehner ot 01,)100 annlvergry or the foulllhwottbe
"WATERIIOLE NO. s•
has spent the past two weeks here American Legion honored lhree
''DID YOII HEAR 'I'IQ!:.ONE
(Technloolw)
with
her
brotlier-in-law
tnd
sis..
AB0n mE TRAVEJJNQ '
veterans attendirw, John Kaurr.,
The six true grain plants, or
AND
SALESLADY?"
cereals, of the world are corn, ter, Mr. and Mrs. James We• • charter memborolf'eeiiOJ'-l!eJ&gt;.
llobl&gt;.Y. V-'actde ·Doslll...,.
&lt;Te&lt;Mloolw) ·
wheat, barley, rice, oats and er. Visitirw with the Webers nett Post; Jacob Tur,.r and Wal~
"C'MON. LET"S 1JVI;
rye.
over t~ Weekend was E. A. Paul- er Bunce, both acUve memben
PlllDII'. lllller • 11a!&gt; ~
A U1TLE"
in ot D.yton.
ot the post.
~ STAR'IlS 7 P.M.

doubl"'""'!

,..

-.),

~ .,·$e;f/er~ ~~'fiJorf Marriage ~(:
· Js&lt;·~v~ri:t ~,d~tS~pternber 1· , ~~.·&lt;

One hundred and 1we111;y - o1x 10118 •
president, Including the two re.
women represented HVen coun~·
Article No. 4 ot the COnstitu- ports a year,
tles at Thursday•s meeting oC tton state&amp;: "A woman can beThe District Officers aan

~·

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.

·,,

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