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Weather

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Cooler wolll porUm ....,,. · ·
.:- In 1111· 50o woiiiD I!Oo oUt.

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Variable cloudlooos ond

caciloll'

Tueada,y wltllaleWi~Mworoel!oto

Devoted To 17ae lnterea~ Of17ae Mejg.-Mtu011 Ar•
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f!Y.fS:fNIS.

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~V~O~L.~X~XI~N~O~-~~~·----~-------·~c~·~~
. ~~-~~tf~-~Y~,~~I~DD~~~EPO~-~~T~·~O~H~IO~
.- ------------~M~O~N=DA~Y~·=Sl.ri~R9.1~
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Soviets May·S~itd

,

·'

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Ill

-F or Dubcel{ as jNew Premier
•

WI-\'(
kJOt?•

1 LOVE SCI-\OOL,
PO~T 'lOU, LUVABlE 1

B€CA.U.SC IT

~PRES~E'S

ME 1b COME' fACe TO FM:.c

WITH ALl

llU~

11-{11\JGS

4-\AVE 10 L~P-RIV

!

(A)g

DO 'rtX-1 REI\trzt;, FR.EI\K.'f,

1-@.1

MUCH IAJE DotJT KIVOW 7 I

PRAGUE (UPI)- Coolprom- In Brill~.. with Kremlin
loHillnlecl Gualav Husak, tile troubleshoolel' Vaslly KU!netSlovakian C&lt;lnmuulst loader, sov, the 'Cze~hoslovik news
_.rod toclay to bo omorpQ! , CTK reporlecl. .Husak Is
aa tile Kromlln'a choice to ta1&lt;e a doputy premier ani a
over part,y leldershij) lrilm member of tile Czecboslowk
Aloxanler llubc:ek to IIPoed l'artl Presidium.
On London, dlplr.mltlc &amp;OUr·
the Soviet Union call• tho
1
cos
sold Moscow bU ghen the
'n0rmallzaUon" ofCzechoslo.,...
·
Czeehoalowk
rulers an ultimaldL
to
too
the
Kremlin UM
tum
Husak, reconlly praised In the
Moscow presa, conferred tad~¥ uncondltlonally at o n e e or

Mf;AIJ

DO '1bU Hfl.VE AIJ'f l DEA KOLIJ MVc.H
I.U: HAV6 10 lEARJ.,J JUS:T 10 BE ·
CO/.JSIDGRED MODCRAlt.L'r STUPID?

lllce a virtual ·SoW!! tllke&lt;wer.
The sources slid tile Dubcek
regime was considered by
Mo1cow to
_dklng only hallhearted ma-aures to return
CzecbO.IOWI&lt;Iii to Iron percy
conli-ol.l
11\Q SOviet Union bas dellnecl
"normalization" .ts complete
IICJpRsslon ol aU "counter..
revolutionaries'~ in Czechoslova..
Ida ond has boon·. incriaslngq

I!'

Letterfrom the Booster President

imJ)atient witb the Oubcek reOecUon of the rlsing tide ot.
regime. Kuznetaov, a tlepufil' national anger.
Husak, in hill speeches, taa
foreign minister, was reported
Qpeared
to bo moce wUIIJW
rushed to Prague to speed
than some ot. the other leaders
things ,..,
to fuiDII tile conditions Mosccor
National Anger
demands
be carried out before
Some or the Czech resistance
foreign
~tloo
troq)s are
was mirrored toda¥ in the
withdrawn.
hirllered but not cowed CzechoScme observers had suggested
slovak press which reported
he
may be maneuvering himself
rowdyism and abuses by
into
a position to take over La
"foreign troops on our soU"-a
Czechoslo'l&amp;kia as did Janos
Kadar ln Hurwary after the

.

Many Contributed to Stadium Work
Dear Sir:

THE'f'Vf TAKEJJ EVERYTHIIJG llJE.
KIDS 00/JT ~\JJ A~D RJT IT lk.JTO
HU~DRE[:f; OF WOJ~AtJDS OF BOOKS I
11-\W WIVE. LIBRARIES FUll OF 11-lEM I

THt.V'lJ€ WRITTEAJ EI.JCYCloPEDIAS JUST
lOAD6D WITI-l TI-llo:;s U DO/Ji t:JJOV!
ffiEY HAVE ,DfCfiOJARI€) RJLl ~ LLQRDS
lVC CAIJ'T SPELL AIJD Htsro~ BOOIC.'&gt;
FUll Of DAlES IIJE KI\JOIJJ /JOllWJC.

Too orten tho silent decllcat1oa of 111811)' cltlzeno 1!011 1111noticed, ond ..o11 II true with
ilforta of tile nloinl1"'• t11 tho
Meigs Marauder• Albletlcllooat.
ora A8IOCiaUoo.
i
'
1bla F~ n1g1rt ·tile
..........,.., 111e 1968 fool.... ......, al bOrne, tlloro wUI
bit a Dew eooc:Nsioo otand 01&gt;er1tecl br the Alblollc Boollora
ID oorve tile QeclaiDra. T h Ia
· otand Ia poasible ''lOb' bocauoe
1111 a.,t IOIHilllb elfWII of 111811)'.
The 1lofal Crown Bottllna Com, . . of Middleport donated $300
to ·Ill¥ lOr.tile Cf tbe .....
lmll•· ~1'1 Walla, Joe SIBIDil, Dick 'l'loutzllng, Georae SIB1011, Gil)&gt; Morril, llelno L I n d
·1!1!1 Georp Donovan lold tho
biocka tor tile blllldln&amp; aosillecl
tir Coadleo To,ylor, Dlm1 and
. lllilneoJ, Bill Perrin, Bob Burtoli, Georlll HarsrBYea, T o !"

I'M SORRY
.I ASKEDI

AM.fr! 11-{f.Y HI\Vc .. .

LONG

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O.or 100 poop.lo a1allll&gt;d ·ln lhlo , Th~ Boostero meet escb Tuesproject. While opacoprecludeo do.Y night .at 7:30 p.m. at tile
lllOIIIlonlng tllem all, Larry Mor- cafeteria at the t~elga H I g b
ri11011 and hll stall, lind Mil- SChool In Middleport to tranoBoDilY ond her cooka deserve, act buslnoeo ond view the film•
ondberebyreceivo,aQOclaiVote'· Cf Jut week's Same· All momollballk1.
' boro are reminded to attend.
The ))111&gt;11&lt; obould fake 11110clal Dotlce ol tlte Cf
the grounds ai the ·stadium 111111
ol the concreto wall&lt;w~Q's at tlla
eatrance to tlle!leldFrldo.Yeilhl.
Re\'. Bill 'Perrin open! COUIII- ·
less boura all IUDIIIlor ..., 011
111110 projocta to slve tile !tlarauilera the beet stadium ond
playing lleld condltloaa In south-

pand a.nd a&lt;
control fron
Also avaihll
your shorteJ

*·

Only Bestfm

meanwhile distributed to foreign
newsmen a document they

described as a direct account of
the CzechOslovak-Moscow talks
on "normalization" o[ the
country.

...a

Asks Sane

Wort.

Return to

oFo _.......

:!·.

Makes Top Six in Ranking

,News••. in Briefo

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•:Jj~j~~1l~~l;~j~f-~f:1jl~i*~ij;ir:1~il1mi~~~~~~~li~ii~ii~t:~:~:~~~:~:t~~~~~:~:~:~ttt~it~t~t=r~:~=r~~~=~:~=r~
I 1ELL YOU, OOP, £3UZ.
HAS If BAD! HIS JOB'S

ENOUGH lO DRIVE
'IM MAD!

'S UP TO US T'I:ASE

TWAT 'IOU ARE/ I ,
GOrTA. AGREE. TRIM

HIS LOPIP AN' BEIN'

FRJ~NDLY SHOULD
CL~A.R TH' RCW&gt;

AS A HIPf'O UP

A lkEE!

Ill' Ualtod Preas Intenatloml
P APEETE, TAIIITI - FIIANCE'S SECOND IQdropD - b test
wu 10 aucceaaAil aclentiJta feel liD more thermonuclear eJPloaiOill
-IIIII .YO!Iro I &amp;011r11110DI oatclal sold tecJ11,
4
FTe..:b ~slo Gov. JOID Slcunnl oald tho two IDOIIIIm cJe.
nee deD*tlld S1a11J owr Morurol Alclll wu !llao lbwld to bo so
.........~ IIIII awlmmera could have IIPIIihed oalely In the Aloll
. , . _ aoly hclar1 Iller lbo blaat. It wu Frlnee'a . - . ! met In 16

. ;..e

--.

Tractor fMatnUmance 4-H Club,
was one or t11e top six boys In t11e
· written exam!nadon In tile Tractor Operator' 1 Contest at t b e
Ohln State JUD!or Fsir. Robert Is
tile 11011 cf Mr. and Mrs. Robert
:.-:.::::.'::::::-x::::~:::.-x~~:W*.W.:«.:X...;o;:

SEOUL (IJJ'I) - North Korea colebralecl Its 20th annlveraary today wltb anti.Amor1"'!11 -ches and bamora thai .'
11J10culatlon It was
readY to releaao,1111 u, &amp; 1111
sill&amp;&gt; Pueblo or Ita 82 crow-

_.,eel

111011.

But United N-s oatelals
kept buses 1lalllni at the borl-AS VEGAS, NEV. - SEN. EDMUND MUSIIIE IIYI Amorl.... der domllllart•ecl ...,. and a
....,.W atq&gt; f1!Ac1111 aotiiJIIIIly to tile IIIIIOII's prdll.,. ond 1111'1 boapllal reedY In ease tho Communllla decided to tum back
..... their """""'
.
.
tile
Amor!CIII.I thOY C81J)urecl
' Tile Jloinoa:atlc ,tee prooltlenll•l IDIIInoe told MWral lundrod
Jon.
23.
por...,. 11 1 recept1oo SUDt1eJ nlgbl that p~ ouch ••
A ipokeaman tor the •rlllilom ud Cl'laJo In the otreeto It wu DO! a Ume 10 act wllh omoKort1111 Forelan )f!nlatry said
loll.
hie .~JWei'IIIDOIII hal M ln!or" '., aDCA!/0 - MAYOR RICHARD J, DALE)', In tho OYO ot 1 hur- malkll ID ·~ rep&gt;rts tile

'.

nylon,
Lycrae

ri- •wMmw
tha ........,. 1111 hoJII!Ibw r~-~ -~~~-~~~~:-·~,:--~''•''&gt;!~
· ol!irlnl'llle
Pa} :rallc ~tiona! CooYolllloll, today llloecl mtmborl ol ---v~~«'·~.·.--·..«' "~~

•ilio

pioao, ICIIIO ol ......, wore nwohandled br pollee In tho wlnb'

••"·

, coo!oreoo• .......~1!01 - 11:30 ..... (!J7l'). WUliam Pickens
·
'I!Q!Id 'b t _ . o,wllbquoaiiOIIobr·
•
1a .pi oa!iJilo•.U. i:cwno.lli"" hill two~ Service is Set
,
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Mill~.

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BaiiiiY cf tile Harrisonville Road
Acoompanylng Robert to t h e
stale Fair were advi&amp;Qr Roy Miller and Tractor Maintenance Chi»
members Don Smith, Edwin
Cross, Gary Smith, Cecll Giles,
ond Jobll Mlrphy.
Participating In tllo Electric
contest at the Junior Fair were
Dormle CboacBe, 11011 or Mr. and
Mrs. Rn Cheadle.of C&amp;Jpenter;
steven SlaDIIIY, soo or Mr. onc1
Mrs. Duane stanlOY, HarriiUI·
ville; and Duane wm, son or Mr.
and Mra. Norman WUI of Rutlond.
Donnie Ia a member or tile
Carpenter Boys. ~ Club, Mr.
ond Mrs. ilorBIIY Jordan, advisors. stevBI) and Du8ne are mem~
bors ol tho Harrisonville Boys
4..H Club, adviaora Mr. and Mrs.
Vtrdl AtldnJ, Mr. Harold Maue,
Mr. Norlllllll Will, ond Mr. Ra.ymond~.

HOSPrl'AL

Adml1sima Soturdly - Judith
BaCOII, Middleport; Evelyn SleW·

Jllacharg8s !lalurdo.Y - Barbara Yoome. CU')Iiel Jowetl, Sirall Cong, Alto Bouah.
Admldloas ~ - !lllrl._,

no ·

t~

Lan.w•i JoJIPh Price,

.

•f

Ro11, ......,;

Cramlel, Roc!no.

Ill•~· · !lmdl1 - ~··

Lltdllltild,
'

you look fi
ite fashion

,.
r

- ·:.. ··' r.

While l.nflation has played hav-

oc with the accuracy of this often..used expression Harry
Qtock) Canterbury, Pomeroy barber, remembers when 25 cents
- two biU _ stretched to cov-

er the cost of a haircut and a
shave.

Canterbury, 78, Saturday oompleted a remarkable record or
511 -yoort-w·- • - . I n·
the same business locatioo on
Fomeroy's East Main st.
Asked how many heads of hair
he has cut in those almost 60
years or barllerlng, "Hock," as
he is known to hundreds oC res~

He hes uond the equipment
the Parker shop,
boot 4,000 "''Jal ._nun!ty .... all now sold with the exceptrli.tment must be achieved
tllrougb the ballot box ond tho

courts

and not through
chy and Violence."

"anar-

There is no excuee, he said,
for falluro to provide _ . 01&gt;portun!Uoa lor jobs, boualna ond
)latlce.
But, be aald, the "'unfortmate
thing thot seems to hang In moat
people•s minds is that something
called civil dloobodlmce Ia nece8181'1 to bring this about."

Tractor-Rig,

PeaY Riley, E\Wn

Car CoUide
The state Hlgbq Patl'OI Illvoatlpted 1 oolllsilll, at 5:10
p.m. Soturdly 011 lit 7, lbroo
mlloa natlh o( ~ luvol•inK I .... -~~~ b)' DorOti!J
m- !bltll, 48, Rt. 1 Rlc!ne,
and a ~.traper, cproted
~ IL .\11101, 511, Pari&lt;W, VL. , ,
;
lhll Mrl.
'110l111. - mok-

Wm Cllf' tho !Qb,

Control y&lt;
forced ban
Special hi!

two

bits."

AsJ!ew told Ids audience Cf a- which was Jn

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BY BOB HOEFLICH
uShave and a haircut -

tsts. n

irt,Maton.

wu- I'Oitl..,d; x-ta

Hock Canterbury, Barber,
Began as 'Lather Monkey'

ldents, quipped:
44'Jbat' I the $64 que8tion. n
Canterbury began working as
e r a lather monkey in 1906 in what
is now knoWn as the "'White..
housen ln Kerr's Run. He workCLEVELAND (IJPI) - Rapub· ed under barber Theodore Par~
Ucsn Vice Presidential oom!noo ker to get his trainlng.
~ro Agnew called tor "sane"
Finally he was ready to hang
return to law and order at the out his own barber pole. On
amual Cuyahoga County Repub. March 9, 1909, he opened his
Ucan Plenic here &amp;utda.Y.
East Main st. shop. The bulld'The Meryland gvvemor said lng was rented !or years from
that .. ln all cases, justice has the late 0, R. Faris. In 1922,
not been done to our citizens," the structure was moved slightbut added there was no excuse ly downriver and Canterbury
for extremists to ~~ant and rave moved with the building, which
ond tear clown that which ex- he purchased In the 1940's.

VETERANS MEMORIAL

LadUe~

HARRY (HOCK) CANTERBURY WRAPPED UP 59 years ani seven months as I PomeTO)' .....
ber ln the same E. Main SL location Saturday evening. Hie last custaner waa hh arardson, Phil
Radford1 Pomeroy Post OMce employe. Canterbury had h(lled to complete 60 yean in the tnde,
but is retiring upon the advice of his doctor.

Law, Ord

Robert Bailey, Pomeroy

Robert ~. Pomeroy, a
mombor of Tho Meigs Cotm\Y

rf:,

with the pace or normalization.
Before goi~ to Bratislava to
meet Husak he conferred in
Prague with President Ludvik
SVQboda, Premier Oldrich Cernik and Dubcek.
Defense Minister
Jn Prague, President Svoboda
today
received Col.
Gen.
Mertin..Dzur, the de[ense minis-ter, and Maj. Gen. Frantisek
Bedrich, head o[ tbe army's

s.-

Bioer,
Ilia.

:c&gt;

the Czechoslovah leaders the

degree of Moscow's impatience

main political admlnlotration.
CTK said
"again
thanked the army [or its
politically wise and patriotic
attitlXle in recent days and
informed the political officials
of the present situation."
' Czechoslovak political sources

-Ohio.
To asalot Coach ChanciiY ond

hlo stair In their work, ond ID
ibdw tile team 1111 - r t whlcb
It baa, tile Boostera this Yhave purchaond new physicalcoadltloalng oqulpmmt. selected b)'
Coacb Cboneo;y; a new llllid IJn..
!"' at a eoll In aco11 ol $500,
JiJdll&gt;.
~- llod ~ . ~
~ at ~ coli
oilli ~Sioi.UIJ aild 11114 Ill ...,...: ol $800, ·provldid maela lor t11a
·ti7
Bob TbompiOII, wllh leamo and snack a after t b 1
~· ~. FTecl ind Georae, lin- ..,..,, !nauranca lor tho movlo
. i4IIICl the oGIIcrele ftoor, D a n &lt;8lllel'l, J)llnt lor tile ond ZOIIII
Wldto .did lhe wlrln&amp; ond Ed ond center of tile lleld and oo ond
wllh h11 crew from Ohio oo.
' VIIIIIY Plumbing, did the plumbThe !Und~ols!ng projects lo
'Emmet Sl1111er .mg tile wa- detr'l!' tile c:oota lor those ond
, llir Hiles. MilJ1 olhers helped otllor projects are tile Hie af
oii t11a llroJoct ond ID all a sin- memborshij) dcketl, procoecll
Cf grlll1ude Ia from tlla conceoslon otands, fool· lllreby &amp;Ivan.·
ball programaondadselos(check
· AI lbo re.cent oiJunty lair, the your program covora this week
' Athletic Boi&gt;llora openeclond 01&gt;- for 1101110 ldlarloua carlcoturea)
··lll'llecl a !oocl ...,co1slon aiand. ond donalllllla from tile public.

Amazing ne
comfort. Sp

With gratitude lor printing thl1
letter, I remain,
Very tnlly :yours,
Bill Porter,
President,
Meigs Marauders
Athletic Boosters
Asaoc:latloo

Soviet mUUary Intervention
there in 1956.
Kuznetsov arrived last weekend apparentb" to lmpress on

· falled

tion o[ one uni~e wooden barber chair which was moved Saturday evening

Gaul, 13; Stephanie Radford, scwen; Brent Slason, fivet IUid KrJ-

to the Canterbury stal

home on the Athens Road.
C on t r a s t 1 n g
yesterday's ..trade" with to'day's,
Canterbury remembers that
a haircut was 15 c e n t e
in Pomeroy when he first
opened his shop and a shave was
10 cents. The prevalllng price in
Pomeroy today tor these servIeos Is $1.50 and $1.25, respec-

Canterbury is a charter member of the Pomeroy Flre Dwpartment and moved into biJn..
orary status 15 years ago when
he moved out of the village limits. He served a term ln Pomeroy Council in the late 19408.
And who was Canterbury'• ft..

nal customer Sahlrda,y evenina?
None other than hlsOIIIJ'IIrondu.e!y.
oon. 1'1111 lladlord, • omt111'h•·
Canterbury, the active k I n d r1 the Pomeroy Post Offtee.
tboogh now retired, also recalls
that ''in the old days'" his shop
opened at 7 a.m. eacll mornlng. He mlg)lt still bo working
at 1 or 2 a.m. the next morn~
lng.
Born in Pomeroy, the BOD of
Mr. and Mrs. Dave Canterbury, "Hack" lived for years
in the present home of Mr. and
Mrs. Ceward Calvert on E. Main
&amp;.. He later moved to the RoePreliminary hearings [or tMI
del proper-Qr an Nye Ave., before
building his present home on the cases in which manslaughter and
first degree murder charges are
Athens Road 15 years ago.
Canterbury had two sisters involved were postpmedagalnto.
and four brothers. All are de- day in Meigs C0Unt.Y Court.
SCheduled to appear were Wilceased. He is married to t h e
former Ethel Grueser and the liam Frederick Wyam, o4, Racouple has a daughter, Mrs. Dar~ cine, charged with the shotgun
othy Radford, and two grand- sliiJ'Ina of Mlcbaol Leo I1oUm,
children, Phil Radford and Mrs. 28, Parkersburg, on August 17,
3drley Sisson, all of Pomeroy and Mildred and Charles ~
Rl 2, Racine, charged with manHoule 3.
The couple has four great ~ slaugbler In the deatb or their
grandchildren who include Rick five-year.old son on August 20.
Oll'icials reported the hearings were postponed since courtappointed de[ense attorney James
B. O'Brien, named to repre&amp;ellt
all throe delendants, bas not yet
decided whether to accept t h e
cases.

Jittery Mideast
In Uneasy Quiet

wounded in positions along the
By United Press Intemadonal
Jittery Israeli ond Egyptian eastern canal edge they have
grnups todoy observed an occupied since the lightning 1967
emergency Unlted N a t i o n s war.
The Security COUncil ad~
coo....rlre order In the wake Cf
the blttereat &amp;loz Collal lighting journecl wllbout specifying a
Iince Jut year's Mldeaat War. new meeUng Ume for consider~
Twen1;y .one per 150111 were lng an Israeli complaint agalnlt
reported killed .... 49 - . . alleged EiiYPdan aggression
In • ~ hour duel with tank across the canal that predated
811111,
- · .... boavy &amp;mcla.v'l lighting.
artillery tile! Ol'llll!ed along a
It was tile moat serious
70-mlle Blreloh of tile canal violence olong lho canal since
SUDtleJ,
Jarael abellecl POrt !llez oil
Tbo Unllecl Nadana Seeurlty roftnorlos lall Oct. 24 In
C&lt;loJnoll Ialii lblday at tho roprloal lor tile sinking ol an
roctH~Itl ol -J8nel and tile llraell destroyer.
UDitecl Arab ROIU&gt;Ilc a n d
roportecl 'todl1
It "tleepljl
RYAN PROMOTED
r...... tb8 loio af IUe ond
MASON - Patrick J, )\Yan.
,...Jrod tho )IU1lo1 etrtclly to .... .af Mr..... Mrs. Edwanl
GbserYe the oaasoJiro callaol lor A. R;ra11. was pJ'OIDOieciiD ~
, bJ 1111 . ~ eouncll'o Q&lt;clallat nve Auaust IS near
Pll~ Lol, Vlllllam, - . bo Ia
• oemnc With tile 34th &amp;lsi_..
In · Cairo Ba1lllloll. 111o 20-roar-&lt;lld liiiiICildlon clallll 11 a 1965 ~~~~ ol WabaJIW,HigliSC-.

'·

Sisson, three.

Two Heanngs'
Postponed in

County Court

No new date had been set tor
the hearings late this momln&amp;.

Resurfacing
Bids Approved

by Commission
Resurfacirw;

of four

MeJia

County-maintained higllW'IfO b,y
force account was approWid by
the board of ~issioners 1hla
mornl.aH.
'l'1te caauni.ssioners awrOved
estimates of Engineer Theodore
Beegle lor resurlaciQ! of ().81
and C4 from Forest Acres Parlt
to Houle 143, a dlslance af S.l
mlleo, al a tolal cost of $1S,..
069, and also U mlleo o! Co17
and c-10 tor IIIIIJI'C)XImal ,;.7,·
616.5L
r
In actlvi\Y, the .........
al!IIIOI'I ...... ID &lt;GII&amp;ldor II . .
- - .P-'11011 bY
iii · .
~!&gt;WI~ wlol are
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&lt;;hicqgo Police Bai,ing-A Classic Red TechniqqJ.
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CRQML~

W~GTON

"'

Voice along Broadway
BY JACK O'BRIAN
NEW YORK - Brigitte B a rdot's new toy beau Is transatlantic sailor Eric Tabaly .... For a
great gentleman who brought such
golden sounds to tin ears (opera
in English, Toscanini'a aymph&gt;n-

·.

ies, Amahl, etc.) RCA-NBC's elder statesman Gen. David Sarnoff certainly doesn't deserve hospitalization for boil!! In his ears
.. •• And shingle a .... Camelot restaurant owner Mrs. Mark Singer
Is In N. Y. hospital alter major
surgery .•.. The next life - size
Jersey Justice will be in Bergen
Coun1;y .•.. Stanrord U, wants to
buy Britain's Cllveden (where
the Cliveden and Profuma sets
swung) for an European campus
•••. Changirle times: )lst a f e w
crin&amp;es ago Miami Beach had
algnl!l for Negroes to '"Sit From
· ·the · ·Badt or the Busi" the new
; •&lt;i'&gt;flfr'll' cambridge 1'V show h""
oootraeted oo originate all its ootput from This Year's Hotel, the
Hilton Plaza ..•. Cambridge per11011a!ly chooe thb lo&lt;atlon oo
blunt an old palnlul point.
"Flight 485" will fly yoo nowhere unless you're gorgeous:

,I
'

it's a new model agency employing only airline stewardesses .•.

Popular ahowbiz Dr. Emanuel
',''

,:,.

.i,

Greenberg is at Flower Sth Ave.
Hospital for a coronary ..• Gene
Baylos once battled with Jerry
Lewis for allegedly lifting hlsal·
ways-same material; at McGinnis' Act 48 Baylos defended Dean
Martin as a great comedian Md
the fact Gene worksottenonMartin's TV casuals perhaps doubtless had nothing to do with it without a doubl
LBJ's federal pension will be
abrut $50,000 a year (both from
Presidency and Senate) ..•. Harry Truman gets a similar double.
take-home from Capitol and White
House tenure .... Not Ike .... OvBrseas folks l!ltill think Western
manhalfl shoot up bad guys but
in Tucson, things are so quiet
Deputy &amp;berliJ John Golcott daylights as security oftleer for Bob
Mitchum's '"Young BUlie Young"
flick.
Blitdot llot away wlth bhre U&gt;otsles In ttie Monte carlo·cui no ....
~rley Bassey (due at the Waldorf's Empire Room) wUI escalate from UA Records to three
United Artists movies. T h e
Bdwy, prosties discovered t h e
marks are better heeled on 1st
and 2nd In the 70..
Hobbies: Irving Berlin paint !I,
Merv Griffin raises unsour

Helen Help

US. ••

By Helen Bottel

HOMEGROWN
EXCHANGE STUDENTS
Dear Helen:
The exchange student program
haa been a tremendous success.
Almost nery school now has exchange students from foreign
lando, llrlog ln local homes.
Why not make It national as
well aa intemational? We have
dlfl'erent races and religions in
tile Uolted Slates, and how better can we learn that the d i rferencea aren't that important,
tlwl 111 bringing theoe young
~e Into our homes, leltlng
our children visit theirs?
If people could organize t h e
"Home Grown Exchange p r agram" with as much enthusiasm
aad '-S..ae or welcome" as is
given to Foreign Exchange, it
would be another step toward
the defeat of raclam and bigotry In tile Uolted Slates, Right?
-MRS. T. C.
Dear Mrs. C.:
Right!
111i1 "home grown exchange
program" Ia already wtderwa,y
In Oregon, where "Project Brotherhood11 was formulated shortly
after the asaauinatlon of Dr.
Martin Luther King. 11 11 not
llmlted 00 exchanging Yiolll bebreeD black and white t e e nqers. Pllople ot any age, race,
or .-.lfglon may partlcljlate. The
riaitors are matched in terms of
bareR•, famil,y occUpations,
aau, etc., 10 that simUarltiea,
rather than differences are em.
jlhulzed. Color (or lack of It)
boalmol unimportant when ramOlea dlamver bow alike they are
lD attl-• and l!Oall.
Amther heartening thing: More
Md lnOr'S"" college ltudatll are reC~M:ati.DI dormitory room mates
ol Uereat nee• or reiJ.gtms,
Wo'n -chlng the time ll'a attll a t.., woy o i J - -

'·

colOr woa•t

getting there, of course, by mak·
ing it matter a great d e a I.

Though the right against discrimInation is slow and painfUl, It's
come an amazing distance in the
last few yean. If you don't thinh
so, re-read "Kingsblood RoYal."
-

H.

Dear Helen:

M.Y sister-In-law figures tears
will get her anything she wants,
and they have, where her h u sband is concerned. He's my
brother, and I hate to see him
led by the nose. They've been
married three months. S.e isn•t
babyish, but she knows crying
makes him give in. Sloold 1
make some pointed remarks about .. Where there's a 'wile'
there's a way?" - ON TO HER
Dear O.T.H.:
A raised eyebrow might help,
but young husbands usually have
to learn for themselves. This little gal will dry her tears about
the third Ume her man says,
.. Where there's a wail there's
a 'Na,y!'" Give him time. - H,

grapes, Bing raises alfalfa and
children, Morton Downey makes
and collects money, Mary Martin
and husband Dick Halliday do petit point, Johnny Carson sulks,
Joey Bishop lakes gee-whiz lessons, Donald O"Connor practices
Astaire sounds, Joey Heatherton
is a test pilot in a vitamin fac tory .... the new NBC schedule
doesn't mention lts veteran
sports•encyclopedia Bill Mazer .
ALL 21h networks slanted the
Chi. violence and tried to cop
out of oot showing the obscenely vicious provocations by blamIng Mayor Daley's ban on TV equipmenti but they had the equipment to use as soon as the cops
got tired of taking It on the chin,
face, head and pride from t h e
yawps Who Dung the vile&amp;t ver·
bal and physical ugly-objects at
all p:tlice .... One network maintained it kept its editorial Integrity intact and closed its convention night with a record of
"My Kind of Town, Clllcago Is"
while reeling off films of noggins being knocked by nightsticks.
The Mike Todd TV special no
doubt strangely did not include
his attempt to go bankrupt not
long before his one blg hit movie
(80 Days) which was circumvented by fllUlti-mllltonaire lawyer
Arnold Grant, who represented a
client claiming Todd owed something miniscule sueh as $16.50,
and proceeded to prove Todd bad
assets enougll NOT to go legally bust.
Hawaii Kat bas understandable
trouble luring top Hawaiian talent here in winter; ita proffered
bonus - warm winter coats ....
Exotic oriental lady !ilinks into
State Delicatessen three times a
week minimum, leaves furtively
with matzoh ball soup: Irene Kuo
of the licheee Tree restaurant
.... And you don't have to be Chinese to enjoy the Stage's Jewish
menu: CBS boss Bill Paley's a
regular early lresser (be's a
corned beef hash man) .... RCANBC's counterpart Robby Sarnoli also drops in for a nosh-

clllill•

Today's
Almanac

.,

,·:::_p, f.' .,,t•. '
.. ' ' '
·~··Ilia. to sueh' an ~me degree

By United Press International
Toda_y Is Monday, Sept. 9, tile
253rd day or 1968 with 113 days
to ronow.
The moon is between its full
phase and last ..,arter.
The morning star Is Mars.
The evening stars are Saturn
and Venus.
Those born today are Wlder
the sign of Virgo. American
scientist Joseph Leldy was born
Sept. 9, 1823.
On this day In history:
In 1776, the term uunited
States" was made ofticial by
the second Continental Congress.
In 1919, al11106t the entire
Boston poliee Coree went on
strlke, demanding recognition of
a new unloo. It ended Sept. 12

spice .... Has a flWlky make reaervaUons. even, like at The Col~
on.\', PavUion, 20 etc.

BERRY'S WORLD

·

·II!#

u;

.

DEAR DR. LAWRENcE: I
have an extra set of dea.lUNJ
and I'd like 10 know ~ to
teep them w~ they re not
Ill use: Can .lh8y juat be
wrapped Ill tlaaue .paper? Or
must they be kept motst?

ANSWER: ~llcdem~s
should be .tept moist at all
limes. II nOI, they have a
tendency to warp. rt may not
be noticeable to Ute naked eye,
but you'll notlee It quickly
enougb when you put them
back Ill your mouth.
A g o o d W&amp;7 to store
detttures Is Ill a'seated Plaltlc
bag Ill wblch there are lwo or

three cotton billls uturated
with aqueous ZepheriiL Zepherln Ia an antlaepllc and germlc~• • I&gt;UJ: ' j
..

aetdrl!"&amp;WI'llij teeth,

ocrub
them clean with band brush,
soap and warm (Dot bot)

e

0

.. ,..., Joe.

"Scrr, you d011'1 , . _ . W•IIDc:e w'lf l:flo NIGII« hll
Iitle! wilh Gu1 Holl?!

'

.. ~umbua; .

Mr· and Mrl. Chirle• Dlohl yta.
ltacl LalJor Da.y wlth'Mr.llltiMn.
Ivaa Dlotil IIIII (leoriJa Dlohl.
Mr; &amp;DOl .litrl, CllfOIICO Snu-

.

'

DEAR DR. LAWRENCE:
My husband got . bla flrlt :set

of den~s two montba ago.
He'a getting used to Utem,
thotllb be's troubled with
exceit saliva and does a lot
of apl":::!· What can be done
about
coruUUon?
ANSWER: New dentures
sometimes- at I m u I a t e extra
of saliva. But ,tills Ia
usually a lamporary nulaance,
and not a cause for concern.

now

Cerva'ntea' life wu as
fllle d with mlaadvetltbre
and vexatibu as .tl1at .ltl his
baplesa he~o, Don QU&amp;ollo:
In 1571, The World Alrnillae
notes, he fougbt at Lepinto
a~st the Turks maiming
his left hand, to
&amp;realer
glory, he said, of his right.
On retunting to Spain, he
waa enalave4 for five years
/II Algiers by the Barbar)'
pirates. And Ill 1805 ha
waa accused and acquitted

U\e

of murder.

I'd s~t sw~~••~~ ~ ,;;,.."'":.::;'~':!'.'"!:."'''"'·"~·,-':!i!.l~'.;.'...E_I£!_._

~~!ty ~~~~~~~,J
~:_t~0::.S:esb~

· , a ;tit :&amp;;i

lr PHIL PASTORET
place by gettJnc rid of _ ..
A frleud Ill Deed CAII't' if- '
oallva and creating better ford to be your enimy. · ·

suction.
Dentures t h a t are well·
scrubbed after eaUng -!II to
cause le11 salivary

• • •

• • •

now.

The luJndy-d&lt;mdu ~oan c1e:

JHJrlment at the bank tDIIl
gladly eztend a .IIOIM.ft.
PfOI'.,....t loan to 111. AU tDe

u

IU!td, lt says in 1111411 print,
cuh to ucurt the amount of . . town of 300; bUnt, and you
the loan.
miss the algn.

••

...

Mr,

IDtl

IIJ:a. Clarte1 , Heck
of Frost were' receilt" iueo\1 of
IIJ:a. Nelsel Wei.therman. .
Mr. .Dt MJ:a. Henrr T~¥!or of
LlW. Hocking, Mr;and!lfa. William Boao11 llltllunlly o1HuJ5.
lngtoa and Nel~ Weotlli~
local, were recent Sundi¥
of Mra. ~e Boao••· .

auem

__

.

'

IIIYOTED TO wrtaar Of'

....,,MUIQI'AJIIA
._.
..., ... ...., " n.
.,.'*'.....,...._c......,m--.
DCIU.ID .. ana, .......

......
....

~•

...

Joppa1~ew~

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

... ..__,, .... 0111, ....... .. . . .
~-~~

~

'*'-"~ ~................

_._..,.

_
..................... --. ... .

IW'-' ........... • •
1 ..
•'tl1" G1" a,t , .... II IMI 11• a.,. ...,
T.t;CIQ',"'-YA

....
................
........."_,..
.............................
....
'*"~

~

............... ..,... ......... .
~

.... 0.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0. , . .
tlUO. lk .......... .,.,...,.......

::=--.................... -.......

Q-What 1ti1Jilire fish
found in T/toilllnd7 1 ·

u

A-The climbing ~h.
Thts flab hal pric~y IP~
on Ita scaleo and can crawl on
the grou~ or &lt;limb trees. . ':

.,

.I

*·

other AFL clubs with the
exception ot Boston and Buffalo.
The NFL q,ens lte. season
next saturday wlth Atlanta at
Mlnne•ota. Six league games
are on next &amp;.nliJ'' s schedule.
As
the exhibition game
schedule came to a close, the
yoUDg AFL woond up with • 1310 advantage In the lnterleague
series with the more established
NFL, It was a major break-through for the AFL teuns who
were on the short end of a 3-13
mark in interleague play a year

FOREST IIJLLS, N.Y. (UP0 fectlng rorelgn pla.yers this
-The proa are dead In olngles. year, both Miu Wade and
Amateur• are assured ot both Okker elected oo pla.y ror pdze
IIKIIlOY lnatead of e&gt;pOIU!eB and
tltlesln the Orst $100,000 U.S.
Open tennis championships wlth l&lt;nocked off a total of $20,000 In
VIrginia Wide or England prizes ror Oolahlng ftrst &amp;mOllS
erowned as the new queen and the money players. They'll
Army u: Arthur Allhe rea&lt;b' oo retain amateur status in certain
do bailie U&gt;d'l)' against Tom tournaments averseas.
Ashe, playing for $15 a day as
Okker of the Netherland• In the
a legitimate American amateur,
men'l rlnal.
Not only that, but ..amateur•" walloped his way Into the men•s
aloo tile top prize money. olngles Onal SUnday wlth a 4~.
AI reststered players ~ a 8-6, 7-&lt;i, 6.2 victory over Davis
cockeyed International rule a!-

Weekend Summary
••

AII·Sbn ®

ago.

Nltional League
American League
W. L. PeL GB
W. L. PeL GB
SL Lolllo , ••. 90 55 . 621
Detroit .•. , •. 90 54 .625
San Fran. ••• ,78 66 ,542 ll'h Baltimore., •• 80 61 .576 7
Cincinnati, •.. 73 68 ,518 15
Bosooo , • , , , ,77 67 .535 13
Chicago. , •. ,75 71 .514 15'/, Cleveland, • , .76 71 .517 15'h
Atlsnll •..•. .. 73 71 .506 liM O&amp;k11nd .. , .• 74 71 ,510 16'!,
Plttaborgh • • . 70 7'S .490 19
New York .••• 73 70 .510 IIPh
PhUidelphls •. 67 76 .469 22
Mlmeoota ..•• 69 75 .479 21
Houstoo, , • , ,65 79 .451 24'h CallCornia,, •. 63 82 .434 27'h
New York • , • ,65 81 . 445 251h Chicago ,,, , .. 61 84 .424 29'h
Lo• Angeles . ,64 so , 444 25'h Washlogton, •. ,56 87 .392 33lh
Sunday's Rea;ults
Sunday's Results
SL Louis 3 San Fran 2, 11 lana. Mlnne•ota 3 Detroit
Loa Angeles 3 Cincinnati 2
Baltimore 3 Chicago 2
Chicago 10 Phlladelphls 3
New York 7 Waahlngton 2
AU1ob 4 Hoostoo I
Oaldand 10 Cleveland 2
Pittsburgh 3 N.,.. York o
caurornia 3 Boston 2
1'0dl¥'s Probable Pitchers
Today'&amp; Probable Pitchers
· All Tlntes EDT
All Tlntos EDT
San Frincisco (Sadeckl 12-15)
Bo•ton (Ellsworth 13-Gl at oak., Allanta {§!l!!!!LHl.. .8 p.n · iand ·(Dobaoo · 11-13), II p.m.
P • ~: Loa::]Angele• (Suttbn 7-14) at
lletrolt (Lollch 13-9) lit CallSt. Louis Ofughes 24) 9 p.m. Cornia (Bennelt 11.'1), II p.m.
Houston (Dierker 12-13 and
Cleveland (Tlant 19-9) at MinCuellar 6-lll at Clnclnlw.tl (Ma- neaota (Merritt 16-15), 9 p.m.
·' [ODOJI 12-9 and Queen G-1) 2, 5:Baltimore (Leonhard 6-7) at
30 P,Dl.
Washlogton (Bertalna 5-13), 8
l'lllladelphla (L. Jackson 1:1- p,m.
17l at Pittsburgh (Elllo 4-tl; 8
Only games scheduled
•
•. p.m.
Only pmes scheduled
;
Tueaclay's Games
Tuesday's Games
Chicago at N.Y. 2, twl-nlght
= San Fran at Aaanta. night
~ Loa AJw at St. Louls 1 night
Cleveland at Minnesota, night
~
Hou1too at Cincinnati, night
Baltimore at Washington, night
~ PhDa at Plttaborgh, night
Detroit at California, night
Boston at Ol.klarxl, night
,, N,w York at ChiciiO

claya Ylalt wltll !HOllis here IDtl

In Coohllle llltl.Cheater.

THE DAILY 8J!NTINEL

tat

oo, ~ ..... and .

Diques bave . Improved .and
tltne of trealment shortened.
I can'i thiDk of any iervlce
or commodll)' able to bout
of aucb a recOrd. Many servIces ancl commodiUea have
more than doubled Ill cost Ill
those same ~ara.

AFL's newest entry, 29-13
Friday night In the ooly
Weatern Division game played.
Chiefs Take on OUers
The bigge11t AFL ela11h ot the
young
season takes place
tordght In Houston's Astrodome
where the Kansas City Chiefs
tarwJe wltfl the Houston OUers.
A capacity crowd of 45,000 la
expected for the tlrat regular
season AFL game in the tamed
Indoor stad,ium.
National
Football League
teams were idle Sumay as were

The AFL won the final two
exhibition interleague games as
the New Yor-k Jets downed the
Detroit Lions 9-6 Saturday night
at Cleveland and Miami edged
AUanta 19-13.
Cop teammate Clark Graebner
Eagles Upset Giant•
r1 New York.
In NFL exhibitions Satorday,
Okker oollped 33-year-&lt;~id pro the lowly Philadelphia Eagles
Ken Rooewall ol Australia, 8~. ~.~)set the tumbling New York
6-4, ' G.JI, 6-.1, and as the last Giants 21~7, Baltimore downed
surviving money player won the the Dallas Cowboys 16-10 and
top prize of $14,000. Rosewall, the Washington Red.sldns beat
No. 2 mor.c;v man, won $9,000. the Pittsburgh Steelera 24-17,
Mlss Wade, a 23-year-old
ID an AFL exhibition game,
Briton who had lost eight of the defending champion oak~
nine previous matches against land
Raiders
stowed the
three.tlme Wlmbledon ctwnp Denver Broncos, 21-7.
~lie Jean King of Berkeley,.
Roohle hallback R. C. Gamble
Call!., turned the tables ln just spurted 45 yards for one
42 minute~ by polishing off touchdown and veteran Gino
BUlle
ro; , lhe $6, ooo Cljlpelletti booted three Oelds
women's ftrst prize, 6.4 6-2.
goals to account for tit&amp; Patriot
The only pro carried off scoring while Boston's defense
a piece or the top money was held the crippled Bills in check.
Andres Gtmeno or ~. lut
Paul Costa, a tight eOO
surviving money man in the carrying the ball for the ftrst
seml.f1nals of men's doubles time in (our seasons of pro ball,
wlth Ashe as a partner.
got the lone Buffalo ~Jchdown
Gtmeno won $2,261.72 for his on a six-yard scamper . arounJ
trip to tbe semis. He and Ashe end whic~ gave the Bills a 6-0
were tralling amateurs Graeb· lead In the opening minutes.
nor and Chuck Pasarell or
Peurto Rioo, 4--6, 6-3, 8-4, when
darleneas halted them &amp;mda,y.
The winner plays the final
against amateurs Bob Lutz of
Los Angeles and Sian Smith of
Pasadena, Calit., who beat Jim
McMm.as of Berkeley and Jim
Oellorne of Honnlulu In a 6-4, 63, 6.2 seml-rlnal.

. Pros Dead In Tennis Singles

'

Tuppers Plains
Society News

pr, AlbaQr, . - l.tJ)jor ;1111
·¥11 "lira.
!:.loon.~
Olin Rile, Coh)mbua, vlllted DollA "
1 .~
·
r~ · with hll lllCither, Cora
ROf •. Gill
a.Dabaw. .
c1o,y In
Mr., Wllllanr C&amp;r111011 wu lD
lira.
GaUij&gt;OII1 ro-,.ror a ,lllldlcil .
HarrU.
Anbell
Mr. and Mrs. Palll Archer,
,Hi1. Chartu lllx·

their..,,.,..

veteran Parilli lo the Jets as
backuo man oo Joe NIIIUith.
T h e rormer Uolverslty or
Winola back gave the Boston
brass something to gloat about
Sunday when he dlr~eted the
Patriots to I selson-opeolng u;.
7 victory over the Buffalo Bills.
The contest was the only game
played In the AFL's EaaU!rn
Division and left the Pats alone
on top of the conference
standings.
San Diego downed the Oedglh~
ClnchVllti Bengals, the

. ly )ViLLI~ LlWIENCE, D.D.S.

with

.ekuJ.

By STEVE SMILANICH
UP!.Sports Writer
Mike Taltaferro, the :rourti
man who stepped in when oldtimer Babe Partlll stepped oot,
mey be just the 6eld general
the Booton Patrlota oo
rebuUd their aaatng American
F - Lea&amp;ue roriiJIIts.
Tallaterro. a little-used quarterback who rarely got a chance
to display his talents whUe
riding the New York Jets bench,
was traded to tJie Patriots in
July, In a deal which sent

"'

•.

'. Plastic Dentures
. _: Musf bb;Kept Moist

par-.

~· Gilmore.

.

..·-.

YaUii!l a•NTAI. HlrAJ.TH

Social Notes

-en. -

•...

flill

a·

Laurel Cliff
BY BERTHA PARKER
Sabbath School .u.,.nce sept.
1 st tile F..,. Methodllt Chlir&lt;ll
wao 99, COUectloa was ~f-73.
Mr. and Mrs. Charlea Dlllhl,
RAipr and PeaY Staat, Charlo•
Anthoo11' Diehl, Mrs. Geortlla
Dlebl ·-theweddlngol Rev. "
Lewis Dlebl and Mill Judy Morrlo at the Blr&lt;ll Run U n l t e d
Matbodllll Church Slturdey afternoon Aug. 31, In Michigan,
Mr. and Mrs. Harmoo FOI
11J10D1 a weekend at their home
here.
Mr. and Mr1. Rcillld Drunnel
and chlldr011, MannUle, Ylalteda
!lmda.r with Mrl, Georxla Diehl,
and Mr. and Mro.tvanDlebl, Tex- .
ao,- are opendl•gtwo weeki
Ylaltlni relatives. c
Mr. and Mrs. A. G, Preltlln,
llunlln&amp;ton. Mre rllleol !bJda.y
gaoala of Dora IIQlly,
Roy
to III\1IQ)'Id
In JW~nsyttaala,lpellt ••• rlloJDI'I
with hll ramo, here.
.
Mr. Bonlla.y l'loploa, COlumbus, l'ormorl,y of th11 C011l11llll11Q',
allandocl clwrch ... !bJda.y
"enlnir atthe ~ cburch.
Mra. · ~ Doni, Milan.
Yillltad bet
Mr.llld Mra.

.

budgets.

!D·

. bellifiii\li"''e!:dal!le.

Sept. 9, 1968

::::~:::::::::&gt;.:::::*:::::::::::::::w.:::'-:::-::::::::::::=:::=::::::--.::~-:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::=::::::::;:::::::::::::-.::::::::::=::;::::;:::=:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.:::::::::::::::::::::::::::'.a:::'~:«-.: •'

.

.
," ..
by all ·~Jl'*t~ iu'ban •Uments plus aome
Providl~g It does not founder ,at !lie start,
oqljqtiely il\191\'il( ,l\IR; York City' sometltnes
the experunent · will ba the f~t ai!IP !It •.
•. seems to ,~ ., ·~ .alm~st perverse pride Ill
long-range plan to foster ueater clllHD
(tile .muiJ~ ' acqulre4 .lJi ,..enl years of terelt and Involvement In a school ',IYI~
grown too big and Impersonal under celitiil- .
, .Momelitum,we often· appears to keep the
ized control for even Ute moat dedicated
swollen n)e)rotHills &amp;oiDg, and New Yorkers
PTAer to cope wlth.
most e~aUy fJf all ~an come to view Ute magAllother area whe..., New York la strl)dlll
!lltude of .111 problems aa simply adding to out on II&amp; own Is In weU&amp;n!. Tlle most lmporU.. stlt\t!~jlvet.,Uuit ll!ake tlie ·cfty .a cJa•!';- tant or a aeries ot reforms Ia work illlleniiVea- ·
or c~7 ,ttielf, .
·:
··
·
Instead ot reducing paYJ.lenla by ~
It
·eome,ils a sdrprlae tbere!cire that
amount ol earnings should a welfare j:lletlt
the btaielt ~ city 1s tlie ll!oting growid for · . find work, Ute city la JIOI'I!Iltting clioDII to
~enll d"u~ to relllti-o«uce Ute hu·
keep llgnlflcant porU0111 of Utell- earnlnp.
m~: ei~ i~Jto FMelcb' ln&amp;Ututloni 'of the
After almolt a year of operaUon, weUart
urtiai1 ayswm ; ·
· ·
official• pronounce Ute reform a clear sueWith. the ' ~tne of clalset tills fall the
cess lD speeding lraltaiUon from dole to pay·
New Yort . .cti~~,....tba Jargelt
Ute
roll. Almost 2,000 people have gone to wcirll:,
counlr)l Wlllt 1\l mllliili) ,puplla-ill embark85 per cent In fuli-Ume loba, and lamlliel art
lng on a.dece~a!i,OD program sure to be
getting more money w6Ue the ell)' Ia l)lllltlcloJely wa~htd by educaton .ID every ~1:'
1ng Ieos on them.
city. Baik:aJJY,it IDvOJye~ &amp;reallY 1ncte wig
A frequentlY cited advautage of tile fedml
po'fers of l!3 local ocbOol dlatrlcla controllad
aYilem Ia. the role of local governmenll u
l.Ss by the ~entral Board ot E;ducaUon than
laboratories for ...,rorms and IDnovatiolll.
by the· people of the nellbborhoocls they
Tlie sysll!m hasn't been working well ot late
serve.
as stalaa and cities, paralyzed bf mountb!l
The plan ill to make Ute local boards, hlUtproblems, bave looked IDcreaalngty to 'Wulj:
erto largel7 adVIsory, eventually responsible
Jngtoa for balp.
.
for picldnl,lhelr ,OWl! sqperlntendenta, hlrlDg
Experlmenll such as New York's 11111 at
and dlamla~g teachers, mocl=g curricula
least be. poiDUng Ute way toward a revmat
and preparing ancf · mana g Utelr own
oftllls'trellcl.

but Gov. Calvin COOlidge nled wller.
that strlkers MJuld not be
DEAR DR. LAWRENCE:
permitted back 011 tile force.
Could
you
me why It costs
In 1943, American and BrlUah
ao
much
to
h a v teeth
forces
Cnlm . North Africa
stralgbll!ned? It's ®8tiDI ,us ,
Invaded Ital,y It Salerno.
hundreds of .dollar( to liave
In 1965, French Prelldent our daugbter's teetb llraigbtCharles de Gaulle hlDted he ened.
woold wllbdraw hls nadm rrom
ANSWER: It may c9me .as
NATO. He dld the Collowlng a surprise to you, but the cast
year.
of orlbodontlc treatment now
A though! ror the day- ls no more than It was 10
C&amp;rthaglnlan writer Dloqylllua years ago. And, Ill fact, many
the Elder once said: "Let they types of treatment coat much
leas. This Is because tech·
speech be better than silence,
or be sllent. ••

,. '

•

'rr, ,

ton

•
•

(NEA)&gt;•
J..O!Icl(,

major

Dear Helen:

We have been married t w 0
months and we do nothing but
fight. She doeSll't work. Sbe doesn't even cook or clean house. She
sleeps most or the &lt;1a3. 1 even
have to iron my own dothes.
What would you ~~~~ggest?- D~
ILLUSIONI'Jl IRJSBAND
Dear Husband:
.... An ultimatum! Tell y o u r
bride she either takes a crash
course in home economics, or she
eoe• home to mama where spoiled
little girl• beloog. - H.
1bls column is dedicated to
tamlb' living, 10 lr you're having
kid trouble or just plaln trouble,
let Helen help YOU. 91e wlllalao
welcome your own amuting experiences. Address Helen Bottel
lllltter. ADd we're 1D care of this nenpaper.

1

What happened Ill Cblcago was 'i '
~aUon Ill
balling used extenalvel7 rti)r, followers or Hilier, Leltlil, Mao,
Ho and Castro.
''
It ..:as 11 montba Ill Ute planning.
The police fell for lt.
,
The.., Ia no queollea hi tbal ~ JWGI••....,al "youlll"
rloten wiD aow aae llaelr Cllkaco tHIIDiijaea ,:wlllllaena~
freq,..cy.
.
It would
rea110118bl~ now for Ute DaUan's
pollee
departments to be better ,prepared than al Cblcago, wbare
the spec1ally trained riOt pollee were IDclted to react Ill precisely the way the rlolen pl811lled.
Yet there is little· eVIdence that adequate offlclDI plamtlng
is under way in this counfl'JI's 100 ~gelt clUes.
The Chicago Mcbnlques are doculnented Ill memorauda pie.
pared by professionals over the paat 40 years.
In these writings lt Ia speci1led that weJJ-traiDed agents ...,
provoke almost any pollee, mllitary or other security foree
by the use of certain staudordized classes of acUon.
AI Chicago, these lncluded:
·
• Dropping human excrement In baga on pollee and othen
in the streets below.
• Hurling cola bottles ftlled with urine at police olflcera.
• Attacking with cement balls from which nalls protruded.
• Throwing soap bars in which razor blades were em..
bedded.
• Slrlklng police wlth ibe jagged edges of broken bottles.
Eighty police were sent to hospltala.
The objective of these actions was fourfold:
To mab the police seem bumbllnc aud lncapible of keepIng order and control.
To make the pollee also seem like ruthless "fasctst" sadists
and to raise Ute thought Ill the publlc mind tbat lll)'lblng
would be better than such police law and order.
To make lbe rloten seem like modern day Robia Hoodo,
heroic. romantic, young martyrs, fighting agailllt a poweiful,
heartless ''estabUshment. ''
.
To discredit lbe United States internationally, to affect the
Paris talks.
Though the rioters were poorly co-ordinated at Cblcago,
they did their job weD . They were not able to disrupt the convention or damage any Important people. They did discredit
the police; they gained some nationwide sympathy.
Needless to say, it takes a highly diseipUned security force
to hold steady under this type of organized provocaUon.
Very few groups have such strong discipline.. The Chicago
police obviously do not.
Yet this reporter has seen this type of discipline in tbe
United States and in some countries overseas. He baa seen
security troops hold steady and not react though they wete
publicly reviled, struck. their feet stomped and though they
were made to look like villains by carefully trained girls who
deliberately pressed themselves (as long as cameras were
operating! against the sheathed bayonets of young soldiers
guarding a building. When attacked by mass flying wedges,
the secunty men used no more force than was necessary.
In the case mentioned above. as a result 9f the courageous
restraint of these security men, public sympathy shifted from
the rioters to the beleaguered security troops and what they
were protecting.
This is what could have happe~· at Chicago.

..em

" .,

:

. --., ..i{es.to-r-ing, Local Rule To. Neighborhood Level
·~

Monday,

Boston Wins; Chiefs Meet Oilers Tonight

...

. .

The Dolly Seldnel, Pomeroy-Mlc!dl.port, 0,.

Jean'

Nine Ohio

Grid Teams
In Openers

Toledo Cops
IL,fe:m~ant
I

.

COLUMBUS (UPI) - ,003 la
a mighty sllm percentage.
But tha1 was the difference to~
day In the first and second
place
standings or t h e
International Lea&amp;ue fioal po.•ltlons.
1'1lledo had a .565 ror rlrst
place and COlumbus had a ,562.
The Columbua Jell led the
league b,y U1 enn slimmer
margin - .0009 - going lnU&gt;
SUnday' a Clnal day or action, but
lost the first game of a twin
bill 7-3 oo the Jackoenvllle Meta
and that was It, since Toledo's
Mud Hens routed Rochester
17-ll.
CoiUJilbus .PUlled out the second game 2-1, but It was useleu
ao rar a• getting tile IL pen-

Hulme or New Zealan:l I e d nanL
Saturda,y
Steve Renko got the rlrat
BUENOS
AIRES
(UP!)- almoat aU the wey lD racing oo
game
win tor JackiOfiVUle and
,, · Arpmlne heavywef81Jt Oscar ricto&lt;y Ia the 39th Italian Grand
Jlm
9lellenback
was the loser.
-VallO poullled out a 10 - Prix auto race.
In the nightcap, Dan Sdmelder
round dec:lalon over Leotla
BUFFALO, N.Y. (UP!)- The l!lll the wln ror Columbus whlle
. , lfartln or 1'1lledo, Ohio.
Bostoo Patriot• opened thetr Bob Hendley was the loser for
tile roor.place rlnallllla.
CIOCAGO (IJPJ) Strong 1968 American Foolball League
Columbus will pi~ Roc:hellter
Slr9ftll beat C.wrod King season with a 16-1 victory over Tueada,y
In tile opener ol the IL
'Emperor 111 a nose to wln the the Bulralo Billa.
Governor'•
Cop pleyoffa.
N85,3SO ArlJJJstoa- Washlngtoa
FOREST mLLS, N.Y. (UPI)
FUturity,
- Vlrglob Wade of Britain
Kern Hurt; Smith
SOUT LAKE TAHOE, catlL ~aot Mra. Blllle Jean King of
(IJPJ) - DIU Tocl1le.Y woond .., Berkeley, CaUL, 6-4 6-2, to win
with a \&lt;Jill or 8,222 polob tu the . women's ai!lllel crowD Ia lnteroopts Aerial
eo1D1 wln the U.S. ObDJplc t h e rlrat U.S. Open teMl•
COLUMBUS (UP0 - The Ohio
chanlplonohl,po.
decathlon trans.
State Buc:keya1 CJIIOIIOdthelrthlrd
DETROIT (UP!)- BUI Seh,.. week of tralniDr ~ with sevlNDIANAPOLIS (UPI) - 1t. J,
macller pOOled C.¥Ored Mlu eral bQYs oo the Injured lilt.
Foyt or Houston """ tile Amolll them .... ......,....
Baidahl to an eaoy vlctor1 ln
Hoosier hwrJred allto r-aCe R
..,...-.c~c R8x Kem of Loll" the llfth ttmo as derendlng the 80th Gold C.., b,ydroplane
cuter; Ohio. WbD dlreeted the
" ehanJp Mario Andretll Onllhed rae a.
Red otrense IICflld most or tile
· " second.
11111
SalurdQ attemoon at the
AKRON, Ohla. (IJPI) - GarY
Buck•'
l!rll alklut l&lt;rlmmage,
' .
NEW YORK (IJPil- GallaJt Player of South Africa- .Bob
Kom
outrmld a muaele!Qjuey
Bl_, eoolq the $100,860 Goalby 011 ~ loorth hole of
rrom
a
back twist wh011 bit liY
IIIU'on !!liD• at All.uoc!Uct. their slddeD&lt;Ieath playoff SIJn.
a
ebarslnl:
l,lneman. The kUurJ
linlihl~ nino length• alleld or dQ to wiD the Wll'ld Serlt• or
....
!)\It
bel~Oitld
to be .loo -~
Coif tltla.
lrradta...

lou a.

!ll!dth.

Bnlce
da!OIIalve hallback, lnterceptld a JIUI liJ Sat.

UJ'&lt;llll"a ocrllnmap. SD!lf!l. CorGAllS Blut O.VU, Ia 'ainomber ... the unlf at osu.
'.

By United Press International
Nine Ohio c.olleg:late football
teams will see action this saturday.
Five of the games involving
Ohio teams · are out or state. '
only two games are set for
afternoon play, while the .·est
are oo be held In lhe eveolng beeause of the early season play.
First squads to klcll off the
new season will be the Akron
Zips at Butler and the Youngs~
town Penguins at Gustavus
Adolphus.
Night contest&amp; will •ee Richmond at Toledo, Miami at Xa·
vier, Kent state at Dayton, Alma at Bluffton and Ashland at
Adrian.
The second weekend of play
wlll ... the year's nrst fiood of
games lnvol vlng 24 of the 37
rootbott pla.ylng schools In Ohio.
Sixteen of the games will be
pla.red In Ohio.

: t;J. '. · V •· •••·;;~~·~-~·IGflW'Ud '

Blacks Jolt Patri8ts, 33-0
PARKERSBURG - CoachDlck
Wue's Pl Pleaaant Big Blacks
remained lri&gt;eaten here Saturdi.Y night by walloping Parkeroburg Soutll, 33--U.
The triumph loR the Waremen
with a 1-ll-1 -aon record. Friday nlghl, the Welt Vlrglnlans
will tangle with Melga' Mlrlll·
ders, derendlng SEOAL chamPloos, at POmeroy In me ~ tile
area's top achoolboy attractlaaa.
Maraoder COach Charlea Chancey, Collowlng an wdmpreaslve
1:1-l; victory over Wahama Friday night In the Melgo ill&amp;llopener, will be looldng for an lm-

-~-

- · ~-

.. My houae il only a baseball
throw away rrom the ....
fli!ld !"

proved perfo=-•IIY hls oquld
with the Big Black&amp; In town.
Wl-lt, hll eveolltg could bea
l&lt;al and palnful ....
At Parkeraburg, Black Knight
quarterback Pete McDermitt
aoored one U&gt;ochdown andpuaed
for another. ·
McDermitt ran roor yarda ror
tile ftrlt score, and Demlo NIbert went over trom one yard
cut for the seCODd one. Marcus
Rice ran 28 yards with a re.
&lt;OVered CUmbie oo make It 19-11
at halftime.
The Blacka scored In the third
period as Gary Park's tWO-¥ard

r========:=======:=:=====:======::=:=:===:=:=:=:=:::===:======:::::\ii

l: Player

Crown

run.

and In the rlnal . . - ...
Mdlermlll'l 40i'ard ""'chdliwa
pu1 to Dirk Jackaoa.
The pme WOI tile rlrllt ~ U.
......., ror the Patrlna In U&gt;elr
second year u a biab acbool.
POint Plealllllt . .. ... 0 19 6 7 - 11
Parkersburg Soutll .. 0 0 0 0- 0
PP - McDermitt 4 J'UII (JtawIIODkiclll
'
PP - Nibert 1 nm ()dck rd..

ed)
PP - Rice 28 run with rumble
(kick Called)

PP - Pari&lt; 2 run ()Ia,_
kick)
PP- Jackii&lt;Xl 40 frGm
McDermitt ()laWIIOilldck)

\ \ Dodgers Pin 3-2 Loss On Reds

leaptures
I
t
I
iii,

j)

AKRON, Ohio _&lt;UPO-Brltlah
Open champion Gary P 1 a y e r
sank his only birdie putt of the
day on the 22nd hole Sunday but
it was worth $50,000 and the
World Series or Golf title.
Player delealed Masters cham·
pion BOO Goalby for the
championship by canning an
eight root birdie putt on the
fourth hole of a sudden death
olayort
The Johannesburg, South Africa, native shot a 72 Sunda)' to
wind up the regulation 36-holes
with a 143. Goably moved into
the tJe with a one-over par 71.
40 This
was my first ... sudden
death win in a dozen," said
Player. '"and this was very
much on my mind." Player also
won Lhe tournament in 1965.
Goalby picked up $15,000
second prize money while PGA
champion J uliua Boros, who
carded a 72 tor a 144, earned
$7,500 ror third place.
u.s.
champion hee
Trevi~
who was never .,in
contention, shot a final rourr:J 74
over the 7,180-yard Firestone
Country Club course Cor a 13
over par 153. He won $5,000.

ClNClNNATI (UP!) The
Cincinnati Reds don't have to
worry much about the pressure
of a home-stretch pei'Ullnt race,
but the pressure is m them to
stay tn third place.
As the National League season begins oo be coooted by the
"magic numbers."' Cincinnati's
m1gic munber II one - one
game at a time.
The Reds hold a one-llalr
game lead over the Chicago
Cubs arx:l a mere game lead
over the Atlanta Braves in their
third-place spoL
Sunday's 3-2 loas to Loa Angeles didn't help Clncirmatl
much, but it kept Los Angeles'
hopes for better than a last
place finish alive.
Bottan or List
Los Angeles and New York

are both on the bottom of the
NL stack - 25lh games behind
the red-hot St. Louis cardinals.
Jim LeFebvre poonded INI
four hits, Including a homer in
the eighth Sunday, oo lead tile
Dodaers to the wia.
The Dodgers' Joe Moeller was
working on a two-hit shutout u.
Ill he got Into the ninth.
Then • single by Lee May
and a homer by Johnny Bench
sent him to the showers. With
one out, Jim Brewer came on
and retired the Reds to pr&amp;serve Moeller's nrst win aince
his recall from 51Jokane 10 day a

Culver's error arxl a palled bill
followed by Tom Haller's aao.
r!Rce lly.
Tjle

Dodpra got another nm

In the rourth oo a single 111 Len
Gabrielson and a dooble 111 Leo
Febvre, whose homer off rookie
Dan McGinn pw the Dodpra
their naaJ run.
The loas was against Culwr., '
hls 15th Ia 25 olllclal IJtarta.
The Dodpro collected 11 blta.
Cincinnati and Los Angelel eodJ
had two errors.
Tonight,
Clncl,..tl lw&gt;ata
eighthoplaee Houston in a ~
night doobloheader. Jim Maley, 12-9, and Mal 'l1*0. llol,
ago.
will go ror Clncinnltl, while
~en With Score
The Dodgers scored ln the Larry Dierker, 12-13, and Milia
opening rrame, when WU!Ie Da- Cuellar, 6-11, wlll hurl Cor the
vis singled, plua pitchei- George Aatroa.

L~

,,,'

'.
·'·
,•,

Taking in SW Open
John Tannehill, 16, of Middleport, Ia advertising, "Have
Bat, will Travel.,.
The U. S. and Canadian No.
1 table tennis player under 18
years old, Tannehlll has been
lnvtted to compete In, and con-

duet an lnstructlooal clinl&lt; Cor
junior pla,yera at U!e Southweat
Open three-star loornament Sept.

21 at Oklahoma City.
He wlll 1ly trom Columbuo
Friday, Sept. 20, and return limday, the 22nd.
Over Labor Day In Toronto
he woo the 1968 Canadian International 17 and Under tttle,
pl~ed on the victorious u. S.
MOHDAY thru FRIDAY
men's team against Canada and
10:30 A.M.· 1:00 P.M.
reached the aemi-llnals In open
AFI. standings
men's singles competition. TanBy United Press International
nehill, the yoongest pl~er In
East
history to hold the Ohio men•s
W. L. T. PeL alngles title, this summer also
Bo100n • . . . . ,I 0 0 1.000 has won men's open titles in
Hoosoon . • . . . . 0 0 0 ,000 Tennessee, Michigan and Wf.
New York • . •• 0 0 0 .000 nols.
&amp;
Ctn. st. Xavier 29 Cin. Walmt Miami . . . • .••0 0 0 .000
BuiJalo . . . • . • 0 1 0 .000 RACE EVEN
HDls 6
West
Greenhills 6 Cln. LaSalle 2
THORPE BAY, England (UPO
W. L. T. PeL - The U.S. and Great Britain
Marion Catholic 4S Woodmore
&amp;
San Diego
.I 0 4 .L OOO stand even at onwll in the "Lit12
.o 0 0 . •ooo tle Americas C\1)" tr(ll)hy races
Canton Lehman 38 Canton Lin- Oaldand •
Kaoaas City
.0 0 0 .000 with the Onal international cata~
coln 21
Cantoo JackiiOil 8 Cantoo C.C. 0 Denver • • • • • ,0 0 0 .000 maran race between the two naClnciNIIti . . . . • 0 I 0 . 000 tions set tor Tuesday.
Tusicy Valley 14 Daltm 12
Sunday. s Re&amp;ulll
Cardinal Mooney 8 AuatlntownThe Yankee Flyer won SunBostoo 16 Bulralo 7
day' a race wtth a time of 3
Fitch 3
Only pmes ICheduled
Brooklle.td 20 lllckory 7
hours 41 miootes. one mlnute
Monday's Games
and rour secoOOs ahead of Lady
Mineral Hldgo 20 Creatvlew 0
Kansas City at Houston
NOes 55 Cleveland East 6
Helmsman.
Fourth S. Locust Middleport
Only game scheduled
Warren Reserve 56 Ashtabula 0
lllaron 12 Sharpsville 6
Mohawk 6 Neshallllock 6 (tie)
New castle Union 12 !ilenango 7
AMERICANS WINNING
Portsmouth Notre Dame 56
SYDNEY, Australia (IJPI)
Wheelersburg 24
The touring Western Washington
Mantdleld SOnlor 32 Cleve. East
stare College basketbell squad
Tech6
will carry a 2-0 edge Into Ill
Norwalk st. Palll 26 Lucas D
cooclodlng game Tueada,y qalnst
Smithville 8 Lexlngtoo 2
the Australian Olympic team.
Mapleton 26 Cres!Ylew 0
The U.S. team made It two
BalleContalne 18 Lima C.C. 14
straight over the Auules ~
Weld Muoldngum SO Calclwell 0
day night as rorw.ro Dave HemBr~ 20 Trl-Valley 14
too hlt a Oeld anal wlth two
Belmont 41 Moadowvale 0
seconds remaining ror a 58-58
1&gt;ayt4o Roosevelt 20 WUbur
triumph.
Wright 6
Lakota 38 Twin Valley North U
!llg 'Walnut 27 Malvem 26
$300 ... $500 .. . $1000
Newar.k Cathnllc 61 Lancalter
or more on
Fenwick 0
just your own signature
Canloo Glentnllld 6 Boardman 0
and personal security.
Toledo l.lbM7 30 Dover 20
Easy to have
Poland 32 carroltoo 6
Valley Forp ~ Bedford 0
quickly. Thrifty terms.

awn

Take Part In 'Jug'
DELAWARE. Oblo (UP!)
Seven or the top 10-year -&lt;lid
pacing colll are expected oo be
entered In tile UU!e Brown Jug
to be run at the Delaware County Falrsrounds sept, 19.
A $1,000 entry roe ICCOmpaDlel tile entry blank.
The 23rd amua1 rum1ng or
the Jug seems eertain to have
1t11 largest )lUI' se aver w.ith more
than $92,000 expected.
JU&amp; Socletlt President H. C,
Tbomam said the group ar top
pacen la expected to include
Rum CUIJU&gt;mer and Bye a n d
Larp, bolll owned liY the KODnllwurth Farms ol Kings POint,
N.Y.
The,y are top lavorlte11•
Rum Cullomer 1111 clocked In
1:58 and 1:56 lD t11o heals or
tile Horseman Futurity at the
llldlanapolls mile track, willie
lll'e And Larl!ll aet a seaa011
llandard for bait.mile ovalo with
• 1:58 3-6 wln Ill tile Orange
County Cop It GollheD, N. Y.,

SONNY HAS.A
LUNCHTIME SPECIAL
FOR YOU ONLY

Pro Standings

Saturday's

HAMBURGER
MILK SHAKE

Grid Scores

6CX

REG. HOT DOG
MILK SHAKE

5CK

Ready
CASH

For FAJJ.
~

of

Q-WIIat u the . portilla~
the Louisiana Crecilc1P

A-TheY are . deseendanta
of e 1 r I y French and/or

Spanish Mttlen.

two monthe ....

~

Convenient to repay. Get
ready ·now for fall and
winter. Phone for a
quick 0. K.
Then stop for your money.

3 ROOMS

New Furniture
l·

'

.

OIILY

''

$299
'

!

J,.
r,J,

MCLURES
DAIRY ISLE

Seven Top Colts To

.,

CITY LOAN
a·SavinQ$

. 'oii!

·Co. -

�.. • f•
,, --l'

I.

...,

r .;··'"-.. · {f

1

~

"j

.,.

'

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3-

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v;:l

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'

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+

...

&lt;;hicqgo Police Bai,ing-A Classic Red TechniqqJ.
.

ly lAY

.

'

CRQML~

W~GTON

"'

Voice along Broadway
BY JACK O'BRIAN
NEW YORK - Brigitte B a rdot's new toy beau Is transatlantic sailor Eric Tabaly .... For a
great gentleman who brought such
golden sounds to tin ears (opera
in English, Toscanini'a aymph&gt;n-

·.

ies, Amahl, etc.) RCA-NBC's elder statesman Gen. David Sarnoff certainly doesn't deserve hospitalization for boil!! In his ears
.. •• And shingle a .... Camelot restaurant owner Mrs. Mark Singer
Is In N. Y. hospital alter major
surgery .•.. The next life - size
Jersey Justice will be in Bergen
Coun1;y .•.. Stanrord U, wants to
buy Britain's Cllveden (where
the Cliveden and Profuma sets
swung) for an European campus
•••. Changirle times: )lst a f e w
crin&amp;es ago Miami Beach had
algnl!l for Negroes to '"Sit From
· ·the · ·Badt or the Busi" the new
; •&lt;i'&gt;flfr'll' cambridge 1'V show h""
oootraeted oo originate all its ootput from This Year's Hotel, the
Hilton Plaza ..•. Cambridge per11011a!ly chooe thb lo&lt;atlon oo
blunt an old palnlul point.
"Flight 485" will fly yoo nowhere unless you're gorgeous:

,I
'

it's a new model agency employing only airline stewardesses .•.

Popular ahowbiz Dr. Emanuel
',''

,:,.

.i,

Greenberg is at Flower Sth Ave.
Hospital for a coronary ..• Gene
Baylos once battled with Jerry
Lewis for allegedly lifting hlsal·
ways-same material; at McGinnis' Act 48 Baylos defended Dean
Martin as a great comedian Md
the fact Gene worksottenonMartin's TV casuals perhaps doubtless had nothing to do with it without a doubl
LBJ's federal pension will be
abrut $50,000 a year (both from
Presidency and Senate) ..•. Harry Truman gets a similar double.
take-home from Capitol and White
House tenure .... Not Ike .... OvBrseas folks l!ltill think Western
manhalfl shoot up bad guys but
in Tucson, things are so quiet
Deputy &amp;berliJ John Golcott daylights as security oftleer for Bob
Mitchum's '"Young BUlie Young"
flick.
Blitdot llot away wlth bhre U&gt;otsles In ttie Monte carlo·cui no ....
~rley Bassey (due at the Waldorf's Empire Room) wUI escalate from UA Records to three
United Artists movies. T h e
Bdwy, prosties discovered t h e
marks are better heeled on 1st
and 2nd In the 70..
Hobbies: Irving Berlin paint !I,
Merv Griffin raises unsour

Helen Help

US. ••

By Helen Bottel

HOMEGROWN
EXCHANGE STUDENTS
Dear Helen:
The exchange student program
haa been a tremendous success.
Almost nery school now has exchange students from foreign
lando, llrlog ln local homes.
Why not make It national as
well aa intemational? We have
dlfl'erent races and religions in
tile Uolted Slates, and how better can we learn that the d i rferencea aren't that important,
tlwl 111 bringing theoe young
~e Into our homes, leltlng
our children visit theirs?
If people could organize t h e
"Home Grown Exchange p r agram" with as much enthusiasm
aad '-S..ae or welcome" as is
given to Foreign Exchange, it
would be another step toward
the defeat of raclam and bigotry In tile Uolted Slates, Right?
-MRS. T. C.
Dear Mrs. C.:
Right!
111i1 "home grown exchange
program" Ia already wtderwa,y
In Oregon, where "Project Brotherhood11 was formulated shortly
after the asaauinatlon of Dr.
Martin Luther King. 11 11 not
llmlted 00 exchanging Yiolll bebreeD black and white t e e nqers. Pllople ot any age, race,
or .-.lfglon may partlcljlate. The
riaitors are matched in terms of
bareR•, famil,y occUpations,
aau, etc., 10 that simUarltiea,
rather than differences are em.
jlhulzed. Color (or lack of It)
boalmol unimportant when ramOlea dlamver bow alike they are
lD attl-• and l!Oall.
Amther heartening thing: More
Md lnOr'S"" college ltudatll are reC~M:ati.DI dormitory room mates
ol Uereat nee• or reiJ.gtms,
Wo'n -chlng the time ll'a attll a t.., woy o i J - -

'·

colOr woa•t

getting there, of course, by mak·
ing it matter a great d e a I.

Though the right against discrimInation is slow and painfUl, It's
come an amazing distance in the
last few yean. If you don't thinh
so, re-read "Kingsblood RoYal."
-

H.

Dear Helen:

M.Y sister-In-law figures tears
will get her anything she wants,
and they have, where her h u sband is concerned. He's my
brother, and I hate to see him
led by the nose. They've been
married three months. S.e isn•t
babyish, but she knows crying
makes him give in. Sloold 1
make some pointed remarks about .. Where there's a 'wile'
there's a way?" - ON TO HER
Dear O.T.H.:
A raised eyebrow might help,
but young husbands usually have
to learn for themselves. This little gal will dry her tears about
the third Ume her man says,
.. Where there's a wail there's
a 'Na,y!'" Give him time. - H,

grapes, Bing raises alfalfa and
children, Morton Downey makes
and collects money, Mary Martin
and husband Dick Halliday do petit point, Johnny Carson sulks,
Joey Bishop lakes gee-whiz lessons, Donald O"Connor practices
Astaire sounds, Joey Heatherton
is a test pilot in a vitamin fac tory .... the new NBC schedule
doesn't mention lts veteran
sports•encyclopedia Bill Mazer .
ALL 21h networks slanted the
Chi. violence and tried to cop
out of oot showing the obscenely vicious provocations by blamIng Mayor Daley's ban on TV equipmenti but they had the equipment to use as soon as the cops
got tired of taking It on the chin,
face, head and pride from t h e
yawps Who Dung the vile&amp;t ver·
bal and physical ugly-objects at
all p:tlice .... One network maintained it kept its editorial Integrity intact and closed its convention night with a record of
"My Kind of Town, Clllcago Is"
while reeling off films of noggins being knocked by nightsticks.
The Mike Todd TV special no
doubt strangely did not include
his attempt to go bankrupt not
long before his one blg hit movie
(80 Days) which was circumvented by fllUlti-mllltonaire lawyer
Arnold Grant, who represented a
client claiming Todd owed something miniscule sueh as $16.50,
and proceeded to prove Todd bad
assets enougll NOT to go legally bust.
Hawaii Kat bas understandable
trouble luring top Hawaiian talent here in winter; ita proffered
bonus - warm winter coats ....
Exotic oriental lady !ilinks into
State Delicatessen three times a
week minimum, leaves furtively
with matzoh ball soup: Irene Kuo
of the licheee Tree restaurant
.... And you don't have to be Chinese to enjoy the Stage's Jewish
menu: CBS boss Bill Paley's a
regular early lresser (be's a
corned beef hash man) .... RCANBC's counterpart Robby Sarnoli also drops in for a nosh-

clllill•

Today's
Almanac

.,

,·:::_p, f.' .,,t•. '
.. ' ' '
·~··Ilia. to sueh' an ~me degree

By United Press International
Toda_y Is Monday, Sept. 9, tile
253rd day or 1968 with 113 days
to ronow.
The moon is between its full
phase and last ..,arter.
The morning star Is Mars.
The evening stars are Saturn
and Venus.
Those born today are Wlder
the sign of Virgo. American
scientist Joseph Leldy was born
Sept. 9, 1823.
On this day In history:
In 1776, the term uunited
States" was made ofticial by
the second Continental Congress.
In 1919, al11106t the entire
Boston poliee Coree went on
strlke, demanding recognition of
a new unloo. It ended Sept. 12

spice .... Has a flWlky make reaervaUons. even, like at The Col~
on.\', PavUion, 20 etc.

BERRY'S WORLD

·

·II!#

u;

.

DEAR DR. LAWRENcE: I
have an extra set of dea.lUNJ
and I'd like 10 know ~ to
teep them w~ they re not
Ill use: Can .lh8y juat be
wrapped Ill tlaaue .paper? Or
must they be kept motst?

ANSWER: ~llcdem~s
should be .tept moist at all
limes. II nOI, they have a
tendency to warp. rt may not
be noticeable to Ute naked eye,
but you'll notlee It quickly
enougb when you put them
back Ill your mouth.
A g o o d W&amp;7 to store
detttures Is Ill a'seated Plaltlc
bag Ill wblch there are lwo or

three cotton billls uturated
with aqueous ZepheriiL Zepherln Ia an antlaepllc and germlc~• • I&gt;UJ: ' j
..

aetdrl!"&amp;WI'llij teeth,

ocrub
them clean with band brush,
soap and warm (Dot bot)

e

0

.. ,..., Joe.

"Scrr, you d011'1 , . _ . W•IIDc:e w'lf l:flo NIGII« hll
Iitle! wilh Gu1 Holl?!

'

.. ~umbua; .

Mr· and Mrl. Chirle• Dlohl yta.
ltacl LalJor Da.y wlth'Mr.llltiMn.
Ivaa Dlotil IIIII (leoriJa Dlohl.
Mr; &amp;DOl .litrl, CllfOIICO Snu-

.

'

DEAR DR. LAWRENCE:
My husband got . bla flrlt :set

of den~s two montba ago.
He'a getting used to Utem,
thotllb be's troubled with
exceit saliva and does a lot
of apl":::!· What can be done
about
coruUUon?
ANSWER: New dentures
sometimes- at I m u I a t e extra
of saliva. But ,tills Ia
usually a lamporary nulaance,
and not a cause for concern.

now

Cerva'ntea' life wu as
fllle d with mlaadvetltbre
and vexatibu as .tl1at .ltl his
baplesa he~o, Don QU&amp;ollo:
In 1571, The World Alrnillae
notes, he fougbt at Lepinto
a~st the Turks maiming
his left hand, to
&amp;realer
glory, he said, of his right.
On retunting to Spain, he
waa enalave4 for five years
/II Algiers by the Barbar)'
pirates. And Ill 1805 ha
waa accused and acquitted

U\e

of murder.

I'd s~t sw~~••~~ ~ ,;;,.."'":.::;'~':!'.'"!:."'''"'·"~·,-':!i!.l~'.;.'...E_I£!_._

~~!ty ~~~~~~~,J
~:_t~0::.S:esb~

· , a ;tit :&amp;;i

lr PHIL PASTORET
place by gettJnc rid of _ ..
A frleud Ill Deed CAII't' if- '
oallva and creating better ford to be your enimy. · ·

suction.
Dentures t h a t are well·
scrubbed after eaUng -!II to
cause le11 salivary

• • •

• • •

now.

The luJndy-d&lt;mdu ~oan c1e:

JHJrlment at the bank tDIIl
gladly eztend a .IIOIM.ft.
PfOI'.,....t loan to 111. AU tDe

u

IU!td, lt says in 1111411 print,
cuh to ucurt the amount of . . town of 300; bUnt, and you
the loan.
miss the algn.

••

...

Mr,

IDtl

IIJ:a. Clarte1 , Heck
of Frost were' receilt" iueo\1 of
IIJ:a. Nelsel Wei.therman. .
Mr. .Dt MJ:a. Henrr T~¥!or of
LlW. Hocking, Mr;and!lfa. William Boao11 llltllunlly o1HuJ5.
lngtoa and Nel~ Weotlli~
local, were recent Sundi¥
of Mra. ~e Boao••· .

auem

__

.

'

IIIYOTED TO wrtaar Of'

....,,MUIQI'AJIIA
._.
..., ... ...., " n.
.,.'*'.....,...._c......,m--.
DCIU.ID .. ana, .......

......
....

~•

...

Joppa1~ew~

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

... ..__,, .... 0111, ....... .. . . .
~-~~

~

'*'-"~ ~................

_._..,.

_
..................... --. ... .

IW'-' ........... • •
1 ..
•'tl1" G1" a,t , .... II IMI 11• a.,. ...,
T.t;CIQ',"'-YA

....
................
........."_,..
.............................
....
'*"~

~

............... ..,... ......... .
~

.... 0.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0. , . .
tlUO. lk .......... .,.,...,.......

::=--.................... -.......

Q-What 1ti1Jilire fish
found in T/toilllnd7 1 ·

u

A-The climbing ~h.
Thts flab hal pric~y IP~
on Ita scaleo and can crawl on
the grou~ or &lt;limb trees. . ':

.,

.I

*·

other AFL clubs with the
exception ot Boston and Buffalo.
The NFL q,ens lte. season
next saturday wlth Atlanta at
Mlnne•ota. Six league games
are on next &amp;.nliJ'' s schedule.
As
the exhibition game
schedule came to a close, the
yoUDg AFL woond up with • 1310 advantage In the lnterleague
series with the more established
NFL, It was a major break-through for the AFL teuns who
were on the short end of a 3-13
mark in interleague play a year

FOREST IIJLLS, N.Y. (UP0 fectlng rorelgn pla.yers this
-The proa are dead In olngles. year, both Miu Wade and
Amateur• are assured ot both Okker elected oo pla.y ror pdze
IIKIIlOY lnatead of e&gt;pOIU!eB and
tltlesln the Orst $100,000 U.S.
Open tennis championships wlth l&lt;nocked off a total of $20,000 In
VIrginia Wide or England prizes ror Oolahlng ftrst &amp;mOllS
erowned as the new queen and the money players. They'll
Army u: Arthur Allhe rea&lt;b' oo retain amateur status in certain
do bailie U&gt;d'l)' against Tom tournaments averseas.
Ashe, playing for $15 a day as
Okker of the Netherland• In the
a legitimate American amateur,
men'l rlnal.
Not only that, but ..amateur•" walloped his way Into the men•s
aloo tile top prize money. olngles Onal SUnday wlth a 4~.
AI reststered players ~ a 8-6, 7-&lt;i, 6.2 victory over Davis
cockeyed International rule a!-

Weekend Summary
••

AII·Sbn ®

ago.

Nltional League
American League
W. L. PeL GB
W. L. PeL GB
SL Lolllo , ••. 90 55 . 621
Detroit .•. , •. 90 54 .625
San Fran. ••• ,78 66 ,542 ll'h Baltimore., •• 80 61 .576 7
Cincinnati, •.. 73 68 ,518 15
Bosooo , • , , , ,77 67 .535 13
Chicago. , •. ,75 71 .514 15'/, Cleveland, • , .76 71 .517 15'h
Atlsnll •..•. .. 73 71 .506 liM O&amp;k11nd .. , .• 74 71 ,510 16'!,
Plttaborgh • • . 70 7'S .490 19
New York .••• 73 70 .510 IIPh
PhUidelphls •. 67 76 .469 22
Mlmeoota ..•• 69 75 .479 21
Houstoo, , • , ,65 79 .451 24'h CallCornia,, •. 63 82 .434 27'h
New York • , • ,65 81 . 445 251h Chicago ,,, , .. 61 84 .424 29'h
Lo• Angeles . ,64 so , 444 25'h Washlogton, •. ,56 87 .392 33lh
Sunday's Rea;ults
Sunday's Results
SL Louis 3 San Fran 2, 11 lana. Mlnne•ota 3 Detroit
Loa Angeles 3 Cincinnati 2
Baltimore 3 Chicago 2
Chicago 10 Phlladelphls 3
New York 7 Waahlngton 2
AU1ob 4 Hoostoo I
Oaldand 10 Cleveland 2
Pittsburgh 3 N.,.. York o
caurornia 3 Boston 2
1'0dl¥'s Probable Pitchers
Today'&amp; Probable Pitchers
· All Tlntes EDT
All Tlntos EDT
San Frincisco (Sadeckl 12-15)
Bo•ton (Ellsworth 13-Gl at oak., Allanta {§!l!!!!LHl.. .8 p.n · iand ·(Dobaoo · 11-13), II p.m.
P • ~: Loa::]Angele• (Suttbn 7-14) at
lletrolt (Lollch 13-9) lit CallSt. Louis Ofughes 24) 9 p.m. Cornia (Bennelt 11.'1), II p.m.
Houston (Dierker 12-13 and
Cleveland (Tlant 19-9) at MinCuellar 6-lll at Clnclnlw.tl (Ma- neaota (Merritt 16-15), 9 p.m.
·' [ODOJI 12-9 and Queen G-1) 2, 5:Baltimore (Leonhard 6-7) at
30 P,Dl.
Washlogton (Bertalna 5-13), 8
l'lllladelphla (L. Jackson 1:1- p,m.
17l at Pittsburgh (Elllo 4-tl; 8
Only games scheduled
•
•. p.m.
Only pmes scheduled
;
Tueaclay's Games
Tuesday's Games
Chicago at N.Y. 2, twl-nlght
= San Fran at Aaanta. night
~ Loa AJw at St. Louls 1 night
Cleveland at Minnesota, night
~
Hou1too at Cincinnati, night
Baltimore at Washington, night
~ PhDa at Plttaborgh, night
Detroit at California, night
Boston at Ol.klarxl, night
,, N,w York at ChiciiO

claya Ylalt wltll !HOllis here IDtl

In Coohllle llltl.Cheater.

THE DAILY 8J!NTINEL

tat

oo, ~ ..... and .

Diques bave . Improved .and
tltne of trealment shortened.
I can'i thiDk of any iervlce
or commodll)' able to bout
of aucb a recOrd. Many servIces ancl commodiUea have
more than doubled Ill cost Ill
those same ~ara.

AFL's newest entry, 29-13
Friday night In the ooly
Weatern Division game played.
Chiefs Take on OUers
The bigge11t AFL ela11h ot the
young
season takes place
tordght In Houston's Astrodome
where the Kansas City Chiefs
tarwJe wltfl the Houston OUers.
A capacity crowd of 45,000 la
expected for the tlrat regular
season AFL game in the tamed
Indoor stad,ium.
National
Football League
teams were idle Sumay as were

The AFL won the final two
exhibition interleague games as
the New Yor-k Jets downed the
Detroit Lions 9-6 Saturday night
at Cleveland and Miami edged
AUanta 19-13.
Cop teammate Clark Graebner
Eagles Upset Giant•
r1 New York.
In NFL exhibitions Satorday,
Okker oollped 33-year-&lt;~id pro the lowly Philadelphia Eagles
Ken Rooewall ol Australia, 8~. ~.~)set the tumbling New York
6-4, ' G.JI, 6-.1, and as the last Giants 21~7, Baltimore downed
surviving money player won the the Dallas Cowboys 16-10 and
top prize of $14,000. Rosewall, the Washington Red.sldns beat
No. 2 mor.c;v man, won $9,000. the Pittsburgh Steelera 24-17,
Mlss Wade, a 23-year-old
ID an AFL exhibition game,
Briton who had lost eight of the defending champion oak~
nine previous matches against land
Raiders
stowed the
three.tlme Wlmbledon ctwnp Denver Broncos, 21-7.
~lie Jean King of Berkeley,.
Roohle hallback R. C. Gamble
Call!., turned the tables ln just spurted 45 yards for one
42 minute~ by polishing off touchdown and veteran Gino
BUlle
ro; , lhe $6, ooo Cljlpelletti booted three Oelds
women's ftrst prize, 6.4 6-2.
goals to account for tit&amp; Patriot
The only pro carried off scoring while Boston's defense
a piece or the top money was held the crippled Bills in check.
Andres Gtmeno or ~. lut
Paul Costa, a tight eOO
surviving money man in the carrying the ball for the ftrst
seml.f1nals of men's doubles time in (our seasons of pro ball,
wlth Ashe as a partner.
got the lone Buffalo ~Jchdown
Gtmeno won $2,261.72 for his on a six-yard scamper . arounJ
trip to tbe semis. He and Ashe end whic~ gave the Bills a 6-0
were tralling amateurs Graeb· lead In the opening minutes.
nor and Chuck Pasarell or
Peurto Rioo, 4--6, 6-3, 8-4, when
darleneas halted them &amp;mda,y.
The winner plays the final
against amateurs Bob Lutz of
Los Angeles and Sian Smith of
Pasadena, Calit., who beat Jim
McMm.as of Berkeley and Jim
Oellorne of Honnlulu In a 6-4, 63, 6.2 seml-rlnal.

. Pros Dead In Tennis Singles

'

Tuppers Plains
Society News

pr, AlbaQr, . - l.tJ)jor ;1111
·¥11 "lira.
!:.loon.~
Olin Rile, Coh)mbua, vlllted DollA "
1 .~
·
r~ · with hll lllCither, Cora
ROf •. Gill
a.Dabaw. .
c1o,y In
Mr., Wllllanr C&amp;r111011 wu lD
lira.
GaUij&gt;OII1 ro-,.ror a ,lllldlcil .
HarrU.
Anbell
Mr. and Mrs. Palll Archer,
,Hi1. Chartu lllx·

their..,,.,..

veteran Parilli lo the Jets as
backuo man oo Joe NIIIUith.
T h e rormer Uolverslty or
Winola back gave the Boston
brass something to gloat about
Sunday when he dlr~eted the
Patriots to I selson-opeolng u;.
7 victory over the Buffalo Bills.
The contest was the only game
played In the AFL's EaaU!rn
Division and left the Pats alone
on top of the conference
standings.
San Diego downed the Oedglh~
ClnchVllti Bengals, the

. ly )ViLLI~ LlWIENCE, D.D.S.

with

.ekuJ.

By STEVE SMILANICH
UP!.Sports Writer
Mike Taltaferro, the :rourti
man who stepped in when oldtimer Babe Partlll stepped oot,
mey be just the 6eld general
the Booton Patrlota oo
rebuUd their aaatng American
F - Lea&amp;ue roriiJIIts.
Tallaterro. a little-used quarterback who rarely got a chance
to display his talents whUe
riding the New York Jets bench,
was traded to tJie Patriots in
July, In a deal which sent

"'

•.

'. Plastic Dentures
. _: Musf bb;Kept Moist

par-.

~· Gilmore.

.

..·-.

YaUii!l a•NTAI. HlrAJ.TH

Social Notes

-en. -

•...

flill

a·

Laurel Cliff
BY BERTHA PARKER
Sabbath School .u.,.nce sept.
1 st tile F..,. Methodllt Chlir&lt;ll
wao 99, COUectloa was ~f-73.
Mr. and Mrs. Charlea Dlllhl,
RAipr and PeaY Staat, Charlo•
Anthoo11' Diehl, Mrs. Geortlla
Dlebl ·-theweddlngol Rev. "
Lewis Dlebl and Mill Judy Morrlo at the Blr&lt;ll Run U n l t e d
Matbodllll Church Slturdey afternoon Aug. 31, In Michigan,
Mr. and Mrs. Harmoo FOI
11J10D1 a weekend at their home
here.
Mr. and Mr1. Rcillld Drunnel
and chlldr011, MannUle, Ylalteda
!lmda.r with Mrl, Georxla Diehl,
and Mr. and Mro.tvanDlebl, Tex- .
ao,- are opendl•gtwo weeki
Ylaltlni relatives. c
Mr. and Mrs. A. G, Preltlln,
llunlln&amp;ton. Mre rllleol !bJda.y
gaoala of Dora IIQlly,
Roy
to III\1IQ)'Id
In JW~nsyttaala,lpellt ••• rlloJDI'I
with hll ramo, here.
.
Mr. Bonlla.y l'loploa, COlumbus, l'ormorl,y of th11 C011l11llll11Q',
allandocl clwrch ... !bJda.y
"enlnir atthe ~ cburch.
Mra. · ~ Doni, Milan.
Yillltad bet
Mr.llld Mra.

.

budgets.

!D·

. bellifiii\li"''e!:dal!le.

Sept. 9, 1968

::::~:::::::::&gt;.:::::*:::::::::::::::w.:::'-:::-::::::::::::=:::=::::::--.::~-:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::=::::::::;:::::::::::::-.::::::::::=::;::::;:::=:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.:::::::::::::::::::::::::::'.a:::'~:«-.: •'

.

.
," ..
by all ·~Jl'*t~ iu'ban •Uments plus aome
Providl~g It does not founder ,at !lie start,
oqljqtiely il\191\'il( ,l\IR; York City' sometltnes
the experunent · will ba the f~t ai!IP !It •.
•. seems to ,~ ., ·~ .alm~st perverse pride Ill
long-range plan to foster ueater clllHD
(tile .muiJ~ ' acqulre4 .lJi ,..enl years of terelt and Involvement In a school ',IYI~
grown too big and Impersonal under celitiil- .
, .Momelitum,we often· appears to keep the
ized control for even Ute moat dedicated
swollen n)e)rotHills &amp;oiDg, and New Yorkers
PTAer to cope wlth.
most e~aUy fJf all ~an come to view Ute magAllother area whe..., New York la strl)dlll
!lltude of .111 problems aa simply adding to out on II&amp; own Is In weU&amp;n!. Tlle most lmporU.. stlt\t!~jlvet.,Uuit ll!ake tlie ·cfty .a cJa•!';- tant or a aeries ot reforms Ia work illlleniiVea- ·
or c~7 ,ttielf, .
·:
··
·
Instead ot reducing paYJ.lenla by ~
It
·eome,ils a sdrprlae tbere!cire that
amount ol earnings should a welfare j:lletlt
the btaielt ~ city 1s tlie ll!oting growid for · . find work, Ute city la JIOI'I!Iltting clioDII to
~enll d"u~ to relllti-o«uce Ute hu·
keep llgnlflcant porU0111 of Utell- earnlnp.
m~: ei~ i~Jto FMelcb' ln&amp;Ututloni 'of the
After almolt a year of operaUon, weUart
urtiai1 ayswm ; ·
· ·
official• pronounce Ute reform a clear sueWith. the ' ~tne of clalset tills fall the
cess lD speeding lraltaiUon from dole to pay·
New Yort . .cti~~,....tba Jargelt
Ute
roll. Almost 2,000 people have gone to wcirll:,
counlr)l Wlllt 1\l mllliili) ,puplla-ill embark85 per cent In fuli-Ume loba, and lamlliel art
lng on a.dece~a!i,OD program sure to be
getting more money w6Ue the ell)' Ia l)lllltlcloJely wa~htd by educaton .ID every ~1:'
1ng Ieos on them.
city. Baik:aJJY,it IDvOJye~ &amp;reallY 1ncte wig
A frequentlY cited advautage of tile fedml
po'fers of l!3 local ocbOol dlatrlcla controllad
aYilem Ia. the role of local governmenll u
l.Ss by the ~entral Board ot E;ducaUon than
laboratories for ...,rorms and IDnovatiolll.
by the· people of the nellbborhoocls they
Tlie sysll!m hasn't been working well ot late
serve.
as stalaa and cities, paralyzed bf mountb!l
The plan ill to make Ute local boards, hlUtproblems, bave looked IDcreaalngty to 'Wulj:
erto largel7 adVIsory, eventually responsible
Jngtoa for balp.
.
for picldnl,lhelr ,OWl! sqperlntendenta, hlrlDg
Experlmenll such as New York's 11111 at
and dlamla~g teachers, mocl=g curricula
least be. poiDUng Ute way toward a revmat
and preparing ancf · mana g Utelr own
oftllls'trellcl.

but Gov. Calvin COOlidge nled wller.
that strlkers MJuld not be
DEAR DR. LAWRENCE:
permitted back 011 tile force.
Could
you
me why It costs
In 1943, American and BrlUah
ao
much
to
h a v teeth
forces
Cnlm . North Africa
stralgbll!ned? It's ®8tiDI ,us ,
Invaded Ital,y It Salerno.
hundreds of .dollar( to liave
In 1965, French Prelldent our daugbter's teetb llraigbtCharles de Gaulle hlDted he ened.
woold wllbdraw hls nadm rrom
ANSWER: It may c9me .as
NATO. He dld the Collowlng a surprise to you, but the cast
year.
of orlbodontlc treatment now
A though! ror the day- ls no more than It was 10
C&amp;rthaglnlan writer Dloqylllua years ago. And, Ill fact, many
the Elder once said: "Let they types of treatment coat much
leas. This Is because tech·
speech be better than silence,
or be sllent. ••

,. '

•

'rr, ,

ton

•
•

(NEA)&gt;•
J..O!Icl(,

major

Dear Helen:

We have been married t w 0
months and we do nothing but
fight. She doeSll't work. Sbe doesn't even cook or clean house. She
sleeps most or the &lt;1a3. 1 even
have to iron my own dothes.
What would you ~~~~ggest?- D~
ILLUSIONI'Jl IRJSBAND
Dear Husband:
.... An ultimatum! Tell y o u r
bride she either takes a crash
course in home economics, or she
eoe• home to mama where spoiled
little girl• beloog. - H.
1bls column is dedicated to
tamlb' living, 10 lr you're having
kid trouble or just plaln trouble,
let Helen help YOU. 91e wlllalao
welcome your own amuting experiences. Address Helen Bottel
lllltter. ADd we're 1D care of this nenpaper.

1

What happened Ill Cblcago was 'i '
~aUon Ill
balling used extenalvel7 rti)r, followers or Hilier, Leltlil, Mao,
Ho and Castro.
''
It ..:as 11 montba Ill Ute planning.
The police fell for lt.
,
The.., Ia no queollea hi tbal ~ JWGI••....,al "youlll"
rloten wiD aow aae llaelr Cllkaco tHIIDiijaea ,:wlllllaena~
freq,..cy.
.
It would
rea110118bl~ now for Ute DaUan's
pollee
departments to be better ,prepared than al Cblcago, wbare
the spec1ally trained riOt pollee were IDclted to react Ill precisely the way the rlolen pl811lled.
Yet there is little· eVIdence that adequate offlclDI plamtlng
is under way in this counfl'JI's 100 ~gelt clUes.
The Chicago Mcbnlques are doculnented Ill memorauda pie.
pared by professionals over the paat 40 years.
In these writings lt Ia speci1led that weJJ-traiDed agents ...,
provoke almost any pollee, mllitary or other security foree
by the use of certain staudordized classes of acUon.
AI Chicago, these lncluded:
·
• Dropping human excrement In baga on pollee and othen
in the streets below.
• Hurling cola bottles ftlled with urine at police olflcera.
• Attacking with cement balls from which nalls protruded.
• Throwing soap bars in which razor blades were em..
bedded.
• Slrlklng police wlth ibe jagged edges of broken bottles.
Eighty police were sent to hospltala.
The objective of these actions was fourfold:
To mab the police seem bumbllnc aud lncapible of keepIng order and control.
To make the pollee also seem like ruthless "fasctst" sadists
and to raise Ute thought Ill the publlc mind tbat lll)'lblng
would be better than such police law and order.
To make lbe rloten seem like modern day Robia Hoodo,
heroic. romantic, young martyrs, fighting agailllt a poweiful,
heartless ''estabUshment. ''
.
To discredit lbe United States internationally, to affect the
Paris talks.
Though the rioters were poorly co-ordinated at Cblcago,
they did their job weD . They were not able to disrupt the convention or damage any Important people. They did discredit
the police; they gained some nationwide sympathy.
Needless to say, it takes a highly diseipUned security force
to hold steady under this type of organized provocaUon.
Very few groups have such strong discipline.. The Chicago
police obviously do not.
Yet this reporter has seen this type of discipline in tbe
United States and in some countries overseas. He baa seen
security troops hold steady and not react though they wete
publicly reviled, struck. their feet stomped and though they
were made to look like villains by carefully trained girls who
deliberately pressed themselves (as long as cameras were
operating! against the sheathed bayonets of young soldiers
guarding a building. When attacked by mass flying wedges,
the secunty men used no more force than was necessary.
In the case mentioned above. as a result 9f the courageous
restraint of these security men, public sympathy shifted from
the rioters to the beleaguered security troops and what they
were protecting.
This is what could have happe~· at Chicago.

..em

" .,

:

. --., ..i{es.to-r-ing, Local Rule To. Neighborhood Level
·~

Monday,

Boston Wins; Chiefs Meet Oilers Tonight

...

. .

The Dolly Seldnel, Pomeroy-Mlc!dl.port, 0,.

Jean'

Nine Ohio

Grid Teams
In Openers

Toledo Cops
IL,fe:m~ant
I

.

COLUMBUS (UPI) - ,003 la
a mighty sllm percentage.
But tha1 was the difference to~
day In the first and second
place
standings or t h e
International Lea&amp;ue fioal po.•ltlons.
1'1lledo had a .565 ror rlrst
place and COlumbus had a ,562.
The Columbua Jell led the
league b,y U1 enn slimmer
margin - .0009 - going lnU&gt;
SUnday' a Clnal day or action, but
lost the first game of a twin
bill 7-3 oo the Jackoenvllle Meta
and that was It, since Toledo's
Mud Hens routed Rochester
17-ll.
CoiUJilbus .PUlled out the second game 2-1, but It was useleu
ao rar a• getting tile IL pen-

Hulme or New Zealan:l I e d nanL
Saturda,y
Steve Renko got the rlrat
BUENOS
AIRES
(UP!)- almoat aU the wey lD racing oo
game
win tor JackiOfiVUle and
,, · Arpmlne heavywef81Jt Oscar ricto&lt;y Ia the 39th Italian Grand
Jlm
9lellenback
was the loser.
-VallO poullled out a 10 - Prix auto race.
In the nightcap, Dan Sdmelder
round dec:lalon over Leotla
BUFFALO, N.Y. (UP!)- The l!lll the wln ror Columbus whlle
. , lfartln or 1'1lledo, Ohio.
Bostoo Patriot• opened thetr Bob Hendley was the loser for
tile roor.place rlnallllla.
CIOCAGO (IJPJ) Strong 1968 American Foolball League
Columbus will pi~ Roc:hellter
Slr9ftll beat C.wrod King season with a 16-1 victory over Tueada,y
In tile opener ol the IL
'Emperor 111 a nose to wln the the Bulralo Billa.
Governor'•
Cop pleyoffa.
N85,3SO ArlJJJstoa- Washlngtoa
FOREST mLLS, N.Y. (UPI)
FUturity,
- Vlrglob Wade of Britain
Kern Hurt; Smith
SOUT LAKE TAHOE, catlL ~aot Mra. Blllle Jean King of
(IJPJ) - DIU Tocl1le.Y woond .., Berkeley, CaUL, 6-4 6-2, to win
with a \&lt;Jill or 8,222 polob tu the . women's ai!lllel crowD Ia lnteroopts Aerial
eo1D1 wln the U.S. ObDJplc t h e rlrat U.S. Open teMl•
COLUMBUS (UP0 - The Ohio
chanlplonohl,po.
decathlon trans.
State Buc:keya1 CJIIOIIOdthelrthlrd
DETROIT (UP!)- BUI Seh,.. week of tralniDr ~ with sevlNDIANAPOLIS (UPI) - 1t. J,
macller pOOled C.¥Ored Mlu eral bQYs oo the Injured lilt.
Foyt or Houston """ tile Amolll them .... ......,....
Baidahl to an eaoy vlctor1 ln
Hoosier hwrJred allto r-aCe R
..,...-.c~c R8x Kem of Loll" the llfth ttmo as derendlng the 80th Gold C.., b,ydroplane
cuter; Ohio. WbD dlreeted the
" ehanJp Mario Andretll Onllhed rae a.
Red otrense IICflld most or tile
· " second.
11111
SalurdQ attemoon at the
AKRON, Ohla. (IJPI) - GarY
Buck•'
l!rll alklut l&lt;rlmmage,
' .
NEW YORK (IJPil- GallaJt Player of South Africa- .Bob
Kom
outrmld a muaele!Qjuey
Bl_, eoolq the $100,860 Goalby 011 ~ loorth hole of
rrom
a
back twist wh011 bit liY
IIIU'on !!liD• at All.uoc!Uct. their slddeD&lt;Ieath playoff SIJn.
a
ebarslnl:
l,lneman. The kUurJ
linlihl~ nino length• alleld or dQ to wiD the Wll'ld Serlt• or
....
!)\It
bel~Oitld
to be .loo -~
Coif tltla.
lrradta...

lou a.

!ll!dth.

Bnlce
da!OIIalve hallback, lnterceptld a JIUI liJ Sat.

UJ'&lt;llll"a ocrllnmap. SD!lf!l. CorGAllS Blut O.VU, Ia 'ainomber ... the unlf at osu.
'.

By United Press International
Nine Ohio c.olleg:late football
teams will see action this saturday.
Five of the games involving
Ohio teams · are out or state. '
only two games are set for
afternoon play, while the .·est
are oo be held In lhe eveolng beeause of the early season play.
First squads to klcll off the
new season will be the Akron
Zips at Butler and the Youngs~
town Penguins at Gustavus
Adolphus.
Night contest&amp; will •ee Richmond at Toledo, Miami at Xa·
vier, Kent state at Dayton, Alma at Bluffton and Ashland at
Adrian.
The second weekend of play
wlll ... the year's nrst fiood of
games lnvol vlng 24 of the 37
rootbott pla.ylng schools In Ohio.
Sixteen of the games will be
pla.red In Ohio.

: t;J. '. · V •· •••·;;~~·~-~·IGflW'Ud '

Blacks Jolt Patri8ts, 33-0
PARKERSBURG - CoachDlck
Wue's Pl Pleaaant Big Blacks
remained lri&gt;eaten here Saturdi.Y night by walloping Parkeroburg Soutll, 33--U.
The triumph loR the Waremen
with a 1-ll-1 -aon record. Friday nlghl, the Welt Vlrglnlans
will tangle with Melga' Mlrlll·
ders, derendlng SEOAL chamPloos, at POmeroy In me ~ tile
area's top achoolboy attractlaaa.
Maraoder COach Charlea Chancey, Collowlng an wdmpreaslve
1:1-l; victory over Wahama Friday night In the Melgo ill&amp;llopener, will be looldng for an lm-

-~-

- · ~-

.. My houae il only a baseball
throw away rrom the ....
fli!ld !"

proved perfo=-•IIY hls oquld
with the Big Black&amp; In town.
Wl-lt, hll eveolltg could bea
l&lt;al and palnful ....
At Parkeraburg, Black Knight
quarterback Pete McDermitt
aoored one U&gt;ochdown andpuaed
for another. ·
McDermitt ran roor yarda ror
tile ftrlt score, and Demlo NIbert went over trom one yard
cut for the seCODd one. Marcus
Rice ran 28 yards with a re.
&lt;OVered CUmbie oo make It 19-11
at halftime.
The Blacka scored In the third
period as Gary Park's tWO-¥ard

r========:=======:=:=====:======::=:=:===:=:=:=:=:::===:======:::::\ii

l: Player

Crown

run.

and In the rlnal . . - ...
Mdlermlll'l 40i'ard ""'chdliwa
pu1 to Dirk Jackaoa.
The pme WOI tile rlrllt ~ U.
......., ror the Patrlna In U&gt;elr
second year u a biab acbool.
POint Plealllllt . .. ... 0 19 6 7 - 11
Parkersburg Soutll .. 0 0 0 0- 0
PP - McDermitt 4 J'UII (JtawIIODkiclll
'
PP - Nibert 1 nm ()dck rd..

ed)
PP - Rice 28 run with rumble
(kick Called)

PP - Pari&lt; 2 run ()Ia,_
kick)
PP- Jackii&lt;Xl 40 frGm
McDermitt ()laWIIOilldck)

\ \ Dodgers Pin 3-2 Loss On Reds

leaptures
I
t
I
iii,

j)

AKRON, Ohio _&lt;UPO-Brltlah
Open champion Gary P 1 a y e r
sank his only birdie putt of the
day on the 22nd hole Sunday but
it was worth $50,000 and the
World Series or Golf title.
Player delealed Masters cham·
pion BOO Goalby for the
championship by canning an
eight root birdie putt on the
fourth hole of a sudden death
olayort
The Johannesburg, South Africa, native shot a 72 Sunda)' to
wind up the regulation 36-holes
with a 143. Goably moved into
the tJe with a one-over par 71.
40 This
was my first ... sudden
death win in a dozen," said
Player. '"and this was very
much on my mind." Player also
won Lhe tournament in 1965.
Goalby picked up $15,000
second prize money while PGA
champion J uliua Boros, who
carded a 72 tor a 144, earned
$7,500 ror third place.
u.s.
champion hee
Trevi~
who was never .,in
contention, shot a final rourr:J 74
over the 7,180-yard Firestone
Country Club course Cor a 13
over par 153. He won $5,000.

ClNClNNATI (UP!) The
Cincinnati Reds don't have to
worry much about the pressure
of a home-stretch pei'Ullnt race,
but the pressure is m them to
stay tn third place.
As the National League season begins oo be coooted by the
"magic numbers."' Cincinnati's
m1gic munber II one - one
game at a time.
The Reds hold a one-llalr
game lead over the Chicago
Cubs arx:l a mere game lead
over the Atlanta Braves in their
third-place spoL
Sunday's 3-2 loas to Loa Angeles didn't help Clncirmatl
much, but it kept Los Angeles'
hopes for better than a last
place finish alive.
Bottan or List
Los Angeles and New York

are both on the bottom of the
NL stack - 25lh games behind
the red-hot St. Louis cardinals.
Jim LeFebvre poonded INI
four hits, Including a homer in
the eighth Sunday, oo lead tile
Dodaers to the wia.
The Dodgers' Joe Moeller was
working on a two-hit shutout u.
Ill he got Into the ninth.
Then • single by Lee May
and a homer by Johnny Bench
sent him to the showers. With
one out, Jim Brewer came on
and retired the Reds to pr&amp;serve Moeller's nrst win aince
his recall from 51Jokane 10 day a

Culver's error arxl a palled bill
followed by Tom Haller's aao.
r!Rce lly.
Tjle

Dodpra got another nm

In the rourth oo a single 111 Len
Gabrielson and a dooble 111 Leo
Febvre, whose homer off rookie
Dan McGinn pw the Dodpra
their naaJ run.
The loas was against Culwr., '
hls 15th Ia 25 olllclal IJtarta.
The Dodpro collected 11 blta.
Cincinnati and Los Angelel eodJ
had two errors.
Tonight,
Clncl,..tl lw&gt;ata
eighthoplaee Houston in a ~
night doobloheader. Jim Maley, 12-9, and Mal 'l1*0. llol,
ago.
will go ror Clncinnltl, while
~en With Score
The Dodgers scored ln the Larry Dierker, 12-13, and Milia
opening rrame, when WU!Ie Da- Cuellar, 6-11, wlll hurl Cor the
vis singled, plua pitchei- George Aatroa.

L~

,,,'

'.
·'·
,•,

Taking in SW Open
John Tannehill, 16, of Middleport, Ia advertising, "Have
Bat, will Travel.,.
The U. S. and Canadian No.
1 table tennis player under 18
years old, Tannehlll has been
lnvtted to compete In, and con-

duet an lnstructlooal clinl&lt; Cor
junior pla,yera at U!e Southweat
Open three-star loornament Sept.

21 at Oklahoma City.
He wlll 1ly trom Columbuo
Friday, Sept. 20, and return limday, the 22nd.
Over Labor Day In Toronto
he woo the 1968 Canadian International 17 and Under tttle,
pl~ed on the victorious u. S.
MOHDAY thru FRIDAY
men's team against Canada and
10:30 A.M.· 1:00 P.M.
reached the aemi-llnals In open
AFI. standings
men's singles competition. TanBy United Press International
nehill, the yoongest pl~er In
East
history to hold the Ohio men•s
W. L. T. PeL alngles title, this summer also
Bo100n • . . . . ,I 0 0 1.000 has won men's open titles in
Hoosoon . • . . . . 0 0 0 ,000 Tennessee, Michigan and Wf.
New York • . •• 0 0 0 .000 nols.
&amp;
Ctn. st. Xavier 29 Cin. Walmt Miami . . . • .••0 0 0 .000
BuiJalo . . . • . • 0 1 0 .000 RACE EVEN
HDls 6
West
Greenhills 6 Cln. LaSalle 2
THORPE BAY, England (UPO
W. L. T. PeL - The U.S. and Great Britain
Marion Catholic 4S Woodmore
&amp;
San Diego
.I 0 4 .L OOO stand even at onwll in the "Lit12
.o 0 0 . •ooo tle Americas C\1)" tr(ll)hy races
Canton Lehman 38 Canton Lin- Oaldand •
Kaoaas City
.0 0 0 .000 with the Onal international cata~
coln 21
Cantoo JackiiOil 8 Cantoo C.C. 0 Denver • • • • • ,0 0 0 .000 maran race between the two naClnciNIIti . . . . • 0 I 0 . 000 tions set tor Tuesday.
Tusicy Valley 14 Daltm 12
Sunday. s Re&amp;ulll
Cardinal Mooney 8 AuatlntownThe Yankee Flyer won SunBostoo 16 Bulralo 7
day' a race wtth a time of 3
Fitch 3
Only pmes ICheduled
Brooklle.td 20 lllckory 7
hours 41 miootes. one mlnute
Monday's Games
and rour secoOOs ahead of Lady
Mineral Hldgo 20 Creatvlew 0
Kansas City at Houston
NOes 55 Cleveland East 6
Helmsman.
Fourth S. Locust Middleport
Only game scheduled
Warren Reserve 56 Ashtabula 0
lllaron 12 Sharpsville 6
Mohawk 6 Neshallllock 6 (tie)
New castle Union 12 !ilenango 7
AMERICANS WINNING
Portsmouth Notre Dame 56
SYDNEY, Australia (IJPI)
Wheelersburg 24
The touring Western Washington
Mantdleld SOnlor 32 Cleve. East
stare College basketbell squad
Tech6
will carry a 2-0 edge Into Ill
Norwalk st. Palll 26 Lucas D
cooclodlng game Tueada,y qalnst
Smithville 8 Lexlngtoo 2
the Australian Olympic team.
Mapleton 26 Cres!Ylew 0
The U.S. team made It two
BalleContalne 18 Lima C.C. 14
straight over the Auules ~
Weld Muoldngum SO Calclwell 0
day night as rorw.ro Dave HemBr~ 20 Trl-Valley 14
too hlt a Oeld anal wlth two
Belmont 41 Moadowvale 0
seconds remaining ror a 58-58
1&gt;ayt4o Roosevelt 20 WUbur
triumph.
Wright 6
Lakota 38 Twin Valley North U
!llg 'Walnut 27 Malvem 26
$300 ... $500 .. . $1000
Newar.k Cathnllc 61 Lancalter
or more on
Fenwick 0
just your own signature
Canloo Glentnllld 6 Boardman 0
and personal security.
Toledo l.lbM7 30 Dover 20
Easy to have
Poland 32 carroltoo 6
Valley Forp ~ Bedford 0
quickly. Thrifty terms.

awn

Take Part In 'Jug'
DELAWARE. Oblo (UP!)
Seven or the top 10-year -&lt;lid
pacing colll are expected oo be
entered In tile UU!e Brown Jug
to be run at the Delaware County Falrsrounds sept, 19.
A $1,000 entry roe ICCOmpaDlel tile entry blank.
The 23rd amua1 rum1ng or
the Jug seems eertain to have
1t11 largest )lUI' se aver w.ith more
than $92,000 expected.
JU&amp; Socletlt President H. C,
Tbomam said the group ar top
pacen la expected to include
Rum CUIJU&gt;mer and Bye a n d
Larp, bolll owned liY the KODnllwurth Farms ol Kings POint,
N.Y.
The,y are top lavorlte11•
Rum Cullomer 1111 clocked In
1:58 and 1:56 lD t11o heals or
tile Horseman Futurity at the
llldlanapolls mile track, willie
lll'e And Larl!ll aet a seaa011
llandard for bait.mile ovalo with
• 1:58 3-6 wln Ill tile Orange
County Cop It GollheD, N. Y.,

SONNY HAS.A
LUNCHTIME SPECIAL
FOR YOU ONLY

Pro Standings

Saturday's

HAMBURGER
MILK SHAKE

Grid Scores

6CX

REG. HOT DOG
MILK SHAKE

5CK

Ready
CASH

For FAJJ.
~

of

Q-WIIat u the . portilla~
the Louisiana Crecilc1P

A-TheY are . deseendanta
of e 1 r I y French and/or

Spanish Mttlen.

two monthe ....

~

Convenient to repay. Get
ready ·now for fall and
winter. Phone for a
quick 0. K.
Then stop for your money.

3 ROOMS

New Furniture
l·

'

.

OIILY

''

$299
'

!

J,.
r,J,

MCLURES
DAIRY ISLE

Seven Top Colts To

.,

CITY LOAN
a·SavinQ$

. 'oii!

·Co. -

�.

'
Pomero,-Middleport, 0., MondiiJ',

Sept.

8, 1968

'

"

' '
'
'

;'

I

'

tp·
'
, . ,,
. ~O.KY';· •••
. ' '

.

.,l~(.

/

'

I

l~.'
'

'

the 'roller_-skating donkey
','Pinky" is a donkey who is all 11 ham." He has
learned to roller skate and performs regularly at
the Banning, Calif., .rink. In addition, he has freewheeled his way through numerous parades, pi Iing
up a sizable collection of trophies. "Pinky's"
owner and trainer is Charles (Chick) Hoover, who
bought the donkey about nine months ago when
it was just four days old. Since the Hoovers are a
skating family, it was decided that "Pinky" should
try it, too. Chuck mode a set of steel shoes to fit
the donkey and attached them to a pair of beginner's skates. At first, "Pinky" staggered and
foundered like any beginner, but he soon learned
to stand up and daily practice has made him quite
proficient. What's ahead for the sure-footed
burro? He's learning to water ski, so if some day
you see an extroverted donkey scooting across the
water, it won't be a mirage---it wi II be "Pinky."

":;

JOINING other couples on the Door. " Pinky" and o cute ml" skate around the Ran·
nlac (CaUf. ) Roller Rink. The nimble donkey has been skating since he was about two

weeb old.

lsi,.............
cheahtre; t,resa L. Crothers,.' ·
Holzer llosJ)IIal: V ~.,.,.,..n Rt. 2 Ga!Upolls·, Wllllam D. Me- : ·

2-4 and 7..! p.m. ~ only on
Pediatrics Ward.
Admissions
Chauncey E. HarriiOII, H7
Garfield AYe,; Ike L. Reid, 233
Seeond Ave.; Mrs; Dwight N, severa, ·Sr., Rt. 2 Gallipolis, ; Mrs•
Jac:k D. McCloUIII!d, HI. 1 Cho·••-e; Mrs. Willard G• ~M~
~,. RL
1 Northup; Mrs, Sophia Thomas,
Rt , 2 Cbellhl re; Mrs. Paul E.
!lewart, 2H5 Eastern Ave. ; Kenneth W• Owon, Rt. 2 G.ulpoll •;
CharJes W, Meadows, Eureka
Star RL; Leaa M, White, RL 2
Ch~shl re; Mr s. James M. Pratt,
Romey; Mrs. Vnndeilinde ElII s, Rt. 2 Vinton; Mrs. Clara J.

ant:

s.

Wolfpen

Tammy, Cheryl aoo Terry, were
recent Sunday afternoon visitors
of hts parents, Mr. and Mrs. Har-

ley Johnson.
Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie MUbourne
and lamlly and Mr. and Mrs.

of their parents, Mr. aDd Mrs.
Joe Hatfield and Mr. campbell.
Mr. and Mro. Brady Knotts of
King Hill were recent sunday vis·
!tors of Mr. and Mrs. EU&amp;One
Haning.

Mr. and Mrs, Doyle KDBpp,
IW~ Kevin· and Ciarles, LangsvUle were recent vhlltor,s of Mr.
and Mrs. Chsrley Smith.
Jo Smith. IJ.Jda Shatter, Linda Smith and Hila Vanghan spent

a recent weekendcamplngatRoyal oak Park.
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Warner alii
!arnlly o! MinersviLle and Mr.

an:J Mrs. George Warner and

Mrs.

Thomas R. Buraaide,

Pomeroy, daughter, 10:24 a.m. :
Saturdl¥: Mrs. Lewis E. Leacb, ~
Jackson, son, 9:0 a.m . .sunday; :.
Mrs. James M. Pratt, P.ocin!l¥, ·
daughter, 11:28 a.m. ~Discharges

Mrs. Daniel L. Brieklea, Mra. ;
Garn~ L. Bryne, Mro. John H. ~
cotrman, C. E. Cramer, Mr •· •
Jacik D. McClellan, ~ J.
9anley, Ronn.l'e E, Vanscoy, Mrs. ,.

Froda E. Wouglt, Mrs. John L, ,
Leadman, Mrs. Herman A. An·:.
dor- Mrs. Joslle L.
son, Andrea J. Batey, Mrs. Carl ·
H. Beane, George E. BOIDIOII,
Mrs. Charles E. Brown, Clark i·
B. Cunun!ngs, Patricia C, FICIO!I, ,
Miss Hilda F. Halley, Doona M. ,
Hauck, George E. Hubbard, Mrs. ·•
L, Roger Hudsbn, Mill Roaemary ·
Jones, Mrs. Lawrence G. Jor ..
dan, Mrs. Julia N, Kirby, Mrs. ,
Dwi8llt B. Newland, !lelljl S. ·~
Neutllng, !.Ira. Froda S. Paint- • ·
er, Jotm B. IWfle, Hart H. Rue:- :':

Ander·:·

family were Sunday visitors of
Mr. and Mrs. Hennan Warner.
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Boush and ker, Oliver L. saunders, James :·
Rodney oi Gallipolis were recenl Soxtnn, Howard c. Sm!tll, !do. :"
Sunday visitors of Mrs. Joseph Delano Pinkerman, Mrs, Thomas ~
E. Guthrie and Infant daughter, :
Johnson.

' ·'·'
i'

I ,:
!':

I ,·,

Mr. Earl Fisher,

..

~

JUST ROLLING aloag, "Pinky" aad two frleads lake a few turns around the ri nk.
The mild-mannered animal Is a deUgbi for cblldren of aU ages.

Soap Halts Nail Biting
P rat II call y everybody
bows the value of scraping
lllllei'II&amp;UI over a cake of soap
before slarllllg a " dlrty" Job.
New the same Irick coul be
applied to a child's fingernails
to help discourage and cure
11811-lltllllg.

SEI US FOI YOUI ·
FilE Ut AUTO
INSUIAIKE
..... C4111_0ur
.... llo Nat Rolli Abr
Baq A Clolm AI Sumo
C
INikf

V. D. EDWAIDS

IIISIJIWICE AGENCY
PH. •w.to
POMEROY

Carmel News
By the Day
Mr s. Douglas Circle and Flor ence Cir cle called on Mrs. Dessie Patterson of Middleport recently,
Ralph Lee , Mrs. Robert Lee
and children, Bob, Bill and Bee ~
Lee , called on Margaret A n n
Carleton arxl !lon, Patrick, a recent Saturday evening.
Florence Cir cle visited Mr.
and Mrs. J ohn Circle oC Columbus r ecently.
Mr. and Mrs. Buren Duncan of
Florida were recent guests at the
Douglas Circle home.
Betty Van Meter , Eunie Brink-

NOWI YOU MAY
HEAR AGAIN
With Nothing In Either EAR

RELAXING alter a parllcuiarly strenuous day oo wheels, " Pinky" curls up oa a
louoge just Ute any olher member oftbe Hoover famUy.

er called at the home of Ernest
Cla r k, Racine,

Mrs. Elsie Circle, Florence
Cir cle arxi Mrs. Jim Patter son
and sons visited Mr. and Mrs.
Ernest Johnson of Belpre a _re.
cent Sunday.
Mr. and Mr s. Donald Pierce
of Athens wer e

at the home of

Mrs. Mary Circle a recent evening.
Mrs. Mabel Lax returned to
her home at Ft. Lauderdale, Fla.,
after a ten-day visit with Mr. and
Mrs. Douglas Circle and F1or.
ence.
Francis Fos ter and Margie sal-

TUFHJAY
per, 6 p.m.; bting a covered
POMEROY LIONS C L U B, dish and own table service; Miss
Tuesday, 6:30 p.m. Grace Epis- Lydia El&gt;ersbacb has the pro.
copal Church pariah house. wu . gram; Mrs. Glen JUles to re:::
llnm A. Leibersbart, COiumbuo, port on recent workshop st Camp
will speak on architecture , ot Francis Asbury.
various buildings In Meigs eoun.
EASTERN BAND Boosters, 7:·
cy.
30 p.m. Tuesday at high sclml.
AUXILIARY OF the Racine Committees for achaol year to
MONDAY
Fire
Department meets at 7:30 be appointed. Members urged to
MEIGS SALON 710, 8 and 40,
Tuesday
at the lire house.
meeting 6:30 p, m. Monday, home
attend.
omo
ETA
Pm Chapter, Beta
of Eunice Brinker, Bashan Road.
WEDNEIDAY
CHURCH COUN CIL, SL Paul Sigma Phi Sororlcy, at 8:i5 p.
POMEROY
SHAKESPEARE,
IAitheran Church, Morday, 8p,m. m. Tuesday. COlumbus a n d
Cld&gt;,
1
p.m.
WednesdQ,
lunch,
Southern Ohio Electric Co. soat the church.
eon
at
Crow'a
Steak
House;
then
POMEROY GARDEL'l CLUB, cial room, TWlla Matheno)' has
Monday, 2 p. DL at the home of the cultural program; pledges to the home ol Mrs. T. A. Hen·
nosy; Mrs. Hemeey to prewill &amp;en$.
Mrs. Harvey Van VrankeiL
MJDDLEPORT BUSINESl.and the program.
REGULAR MEETING, Meigs
POMEROY CHAPTER 80, Roy.
Chapter DAV, 6:30 p.m., lunch Professional Women•s Club, 6:preceding business session at 30 Tuesday evoning at tile Mar. al Arch Mall'ma, 7:30 waes7:30 p.m. Veterans of all wars tin Restaurant; buaiuess meet- dl¥ night at the Pomeroy Ma·
bnited; Jacob Turner, command~ Ing and prognun follows at the IHIIic TemJ)Ie, Dale E. Sm!tll,
COlumbia Gas ol Ohio n!llce. high priest. .
er.
WOMEN'S $XIETY of Chrle·
POMEROY P,T. A., Ptblday,
7 :30 p.m. Pomeroy El omontary Uan Service, Pomeroy IJn!led
TIIURSlAY
Methodist Cherck, potluc:k supSchool ,
AFTERNOON cmcLE, I p,
BETHEL 62, International Qr.
der of Jabs Daugtrters, 7:30 p.

...

Fisher

I

NoteSJ{j :. ;~ ~..!=-'~Mr~

Mr, and Mrs. Vlrtrfl ROse.
Miss Mary Am Fields of CoIumbus spent tho w~ hire
with her parents, Mr. and Mrs.

and ·Mrs. W• D, Grimm n d
dau!~. Mr. and Mrs. Carl
Mc,Kenzie, Mrs. Flora McKenzllj of W01hington, Pa.; Mr. and

Joe Fields.

M·ra. W. H. Crouser, Mr. and

Miss illetla Ohlinger, daughtor af Mr. and Mrs. Cuorad Qh.
l!D~or. and Miss Janice Elkew,
daUghter, of Mr. and Mra. Char·

II s. CoeU Crouser af ~

1

.

DRY OUNING
SERVIa
(UPON REQUESn

Our Uaaol Good Clunl.;,

Robinson's CIIGIIB

··

Pomeroy

j

Mrs. Clarence Struble. Mr. Struble was discharged Friday from
tile Galllpolls Medical Center
THESE YOuntriJL EXIUBlTORS were ribbon w1mers In
jwdor divisions ot' the Rutland Friendly Gardeners weekend
flower shotv. Both Rosemary Snowden, left, .and Judy Snowden,
right, daughters of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Snowden, won first

· recent visitors in Charleston,
W, Va., with Mr. and Mra. FL'll~
ton B. COVert and Mr. and Mrs.
Donald Covert and son, Donnie.
The COverts took the MUhoan
girls on a tour ol points at InProtect Eyes pf Beach terest in West Virginia.
To avoid 18 a -hInkle 1
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Wararoaad lhe eyes It's a good
ner,
Ruth, Margaret, Dobbie and
Idea to prolecl thai area with
a leneh of eye cream at the Beth ot Oberlin were recent' viaitors of his mother, Mra. J!l:obbeach.
ert Warner, Mulberry Ave.

Summertlme," a r r a n g ements with !rults or vegetables
- Mrs. Wolfe, Mrs. Wllltord,
Mrs. Davia, and Mrs. WUUam..
son.
"Dance, Balerlna Dance,"
ltresslng rhythm, - Mrs. Titul,
Mrs. Snowden, Mrs. Willford,
and Mra. Terrell ·
"The BeautitulGardenofPray·
er." tbtngs suitable f9r a ehurch,
- Mrs. Robert Lewis of the

•'

.

where he has beon a patient 11M
the pall few weeks.
'
Peggy and Heidi MUhoan wm&gt;

ter of Mr. and Mrs. Joe Bolin, received a red ribbon tor her
entry ln the "School Da.ys 11 category. Youngest exhibitor in
the junior division was Craig Bolin, three-year-old son of
the Joe BoliDs.

place awards lor artistic arrangements. Brenda !!olin, ciaugh·

.'
'

.

•
•
•

~------------~ .'=
••
•
••

..
•

Winding TraU Garden Club, Mrs.
Davia, Mrs. Bolin, and Mrs.
Williamson.
'-'IboroUghly Modern MUJte,"
lntorprattve dos!gr.. - M r s.
Titus, Mrs. Williamson, Mrs.
Howard Birchfield, and Mrs. Ter-

DAVID DAVIES

,. . ."

'Mrs. Terrell, Mrs. May, and

SLIC. BACON
l·LB.
49~

79~
,.

20CT.
PKG.

..•

ROSEDALE BRAND

WI EN

ft1ln.o

PKG.

Mrs. Bolin.
u On TOll of Old Smoky," tan
Une arrangements- Mrs. Blrchllald, Mrs. Bolin, Mrs. Stewart,
1!111 Mro. Charles King.
, Mrs, Snowdon took the blue

XI GAMMA MU SORORITY,
Thursday, 6:30 p .m •• Columbus
and Southern Ohio Electric COmpany, tor a potluck dlrmer.

ribbon in ttle d81Ssent1tled ''H(II}oo
.;-• tor · her rose centerpiece on
a formal luncheon table. Tho

rod ribbon wert to Mrs. Blrch4eld, Mrs. Davis took the white.
and Mrs. Martin, the yellow.
In the lllvttatloncategory, Mrs.
TerreU took !Irs~ and Mrs, Char·
lao LeWis alao of the Winding
TfaU Gordon Club, took second
~·

their Interpretive arrange-

mi.nts in ~·Ebb Tide..,

Ribbon winners In the junior
clhislon were Rosemary Snow·
don, Tere11 Brown, and cntg

MRS. ROBERT SNOWDEN, right. waa not only short ehalrman but a four-time blue ribbon
winner at the amua1 fall nower sflow of the RutlaDd Gardeners staged over tbe weekend. Here
she ls with her entry in the ''HOM¥" class, a pink rose centerpiece for a formal luncheon table.
Smiling approvingly of the judge' s selection for the first place award is Mrs. Fred Williamson,
presldeat of the club.

Dinner, Rummage Sole
Scheduled in October

Two t'und..,alslng projocta, a eel and prizes won by Mrs. Smllh,
Bolin, llrst, second · and third, ~ and~ rummage sale, were Mro. Ben Neutzllng, Mrs. Soy.
respeetlveiJ Jn ••Playmate"; and plannad by the !laPP¥ Harvesters tried, Mrs. Meinhart, and Mrs.
ludlth ~ llrit, and Brenda Friday n!glrl at tho Trln!cy Unit- Ethal Wllllnmsoo.
Mrs. Louis Reibel, Mrs. LanBolin, . . . . . .. the "School ed Church of Chrlat.
Mrs. Pldllp Meinhart reported ning and Mrs. Mabel Wolfe were
Dil,yJ 11 elaaa.
'
011 tho Gallla Councy Sal.,., Elgllt the hoste&amp;SeJ.
HORTICULTURE DIVISION
and Fort;y, dlmer to be served on
IN THE HORTICULTURE dlvl- Oct. 3. Named to the committee
~~oat ribbon wbmara, blue, red, for the dinner were Mrs. NeinPerfume Hair
., wblte, 1111 yellow, napectlveJy, bart, Mrs. Ella &amp;nlth, Mra. Fred
Keep your hair fresh smellwere 11 tollows:
Desaauer, Mrs. Clara Karr, Mra. Ing by regular shampoos, A
ll)'brld
Mrs. Snowden, · i.a1IT1lllce Lanning, Mrs. N e v a drop of your favorite perfume
,..... Bobltt Lewis, Mro. Char- Seyfrlad, and Mrs, Ullle Houck. or toilet water lD llie rinse
lu Lewit, and Mrs. Robert
The rummage sale was sched- water will do wonders for
femlDIDe sweetness.
""-uled ror Sepl. 19 and 20 In lhe
Floriilun!la - Mrs. Robert Elbert'eld building on E, Main
- n ; - · and Mrs. Mar- St. Pi1111 were modo for a covUn, tllir&lt;L No llrot or IDurth orad dloll dlmer to bl held In Qc.
~ea wereuardadbythejudp. -... I t - reported that a box
, Zinnia - MrL Cliorlao Lew· had been sent to Joey Gilmore
. it, Mrt, Ruasall Utile o1 the who Ia stationed In Okinawa.
lllilland Gordon Club, Tero~ II wu JII'Oi'"'"ad by Mrs. Smith
~ and Judith !!noWden.
and Mra. Laming.
Unclaatllled- Mrs.·S-n,
The Lord' I PrlQ'Of ID wd, Jiri. 'ThllniP- and M,ra. l&lt;riJ&gt;Iolre from the Psal~D&amp; by
Mrs. Dellauer, ~ lfOUPIIng.

LEATHER

9.99

-

IHE

r,_ -

tngot•'JN~TheeEYery~,··
the - . . . Mra. Del-..er read u ' irtlclt entitled "I
TruA,' YOUI .. and,...,ci,_ the

tillae~~.;rF;;
aild !1111'•, and

yellow

-.
--

·~·

-

CLOSEOUT ON All
SAVE. 50.00 to 100.00i
•

•

·- EASY TERMS

'I

•

ir t b e

. ·' '

The Comb in Pu!Jiic

"

The cbarmlDg and elegant

woman never combs her hair

lD pubUc. Natur.Uy, it goes
without saying that if you are

at a restaurant or any public

SUPER MA'RKET • Open Daily 9 to ~:30~Sun.12 to 9:30

place, and a stray strand falls
IDio your face, excuse your·
self and go to the powder
room for a quick repair job.

"We Reoorvt '!be 111&amp;111 To Limit Qaulltl..-

We Accept Federal Food Stamps
Comer MiD •ncl Snoncl Sts.
PHONE! 992-3410

MIDDliPOIIT,

o.

Get the Red Out
To neutralize a ruddy, Dorid
complexion, use a make·up
foundation that obliterates ev·

ery trace of redness from your
skin, such as one recently
la un c he d by a well·known
firm. This is a newly minted
shade which will also block
out dark clreles under the
eyes or olmply give the skin a
clear, porcelain finish.

Adams Breacl.•••••••••••• ~:a~z. 16~
Sealtest Ice Milk••••••••• ~c~~'- 49~
lbs•••••••••••••• 2 2s•,.
Leight
Folger's CoHee.~:~:~••••• ~ra~z. 1.19
Cake Mix MQ~~~~·~~~euow, o,vus Food •••••••~2 9~
lSWATT

'

lor

c

OJI01Iad

~~:;':~
,'
IAU.O .
tYJt ""'-· ·-• ~ona,'"""'""l¥
. er.

OPEN'FRI. Md SAT •.NIGHT$

Mr. . and Mra. Dann.7 ~...ev~q.

Mr. and Mrs. Jack Cramer!
and Jackie and Dan of Marl'"~
were weekand auesta of Mr. and

11

-·-•. e•- ·

,)·.INGELs· FU .

2- Hour

Ing.

old · Wolfe, and Mrs. Bruce Da-

Brown, Mrs. WWiamson. and

···lilli--ill·

lea Eskew, began training ~
the Neloonv!Ue Southoastorn
Oldo School of Pracl!cal Nurs-

Ing TrsU Garden Club, Mrs. Htr-

Mro, Davis,

token.

at

"September Sorw," arrangements using dried materials and
weathered "ood - Mra. Jamea
Titus of the Rutland Garden Club,
Mrs, John Terrell of the Wind-

WUI!am Willford, Mrs.

or.
~,. '
l'ollowlnc tho ..._ a - ; ,: ·
pmes were pliiJ'ecl andJi...._. ::;·

and • . • • • • • • · ·
·

Mrs. Frances EskeW bU re· ter, / Columbua; Mr. and Mra.
turned from a vlalt In Akrollwilll . Charles Ba.Yloas of Nitro; Mr.

· .....utlt'uHlhlo,' " dostgnawlth '
w'ater shoWing - Mrs. BrOII'Il,

•I

..J

I!! Personal

Robert Snowdon, Mra. Tom Stow·
art, Mrs. Joe Bolin, and Mrs.
Charles King.
u5ome Enchanted Evening,"
with emphasis onpurples- Mrs.
Fred Williamson, Mr.s. B 111
Brown, Mrs. Toin Martin, and
Mro. Charleo King.

Mrs,

, :~:

:::;

SWeet Rosie O'Grady,"' at•
ranaementa uslng roses - Mrs.

"The Green, Green Gran o1
Home," all foliaae pieces -

...... Mansfield. Ohio; Mr.

Mr. and Mre. ~ ,..•..,,
iDptoa,
lie Bups, Gorrllm,
Mr. ,
,,
Mrt. Clarenee Well1, - . Iii:;.
and Mr. aDd· 111'1. W. E. CrcliiJ" .;

';t·;~::;~;::,:· ='='·' ' ' ';,,;,:~ ::;:.;.:::~E

11

'r~L

i

.•,

'

nor - Mrs. Martin, Mrs. Bolin,
Mrs. Stewart, and Mrs. s...,.-

m. Thursday, potluck dlmer.
Members are to take a covered
dbh and their own table service.

--Mr.

The IIIIUII Crooser bolllecom- Wheelinl;
Bessie
!ng ...
the
!Jhert;J; Mr ; ,and Mrt.IIQmand
and Mrs.
E. Crouser, liiJt. .
land, Route I, ~- .
Mrt. Homer Carte, Jr. and..,.
Altendlng were Mr. and Mrl. of Walkvkw, W. VL; Mr. and
'&lt;ex CrouserJS. and Mrs. Rob. flrl. r-.)rd Jarratt and anndert Crou11r iiid' 11111, Charltl· ehlldral, 'l lr. aec1 Mra. Dorrell
ton, w. Va.; Mr. and Mrl. EY- Jarrett lAd l'amliy, illllovllle;
or!¥ Croooer and dautlhlers ,_ Mr. lnd , ~Irs. [MrJ WoiiJ and

ot local gardeners were effec-o
Uvely displayed In the numerous
entries of a show staaad by the
Rutland Frlondl,y Gardener• saturday and ~ In the Rutland
Elementary Scixlol ludltortum.
The 97 oxlllblts, carr)'lng out
the show ttleme, ••With a Sona
lit My Heart, u were attractively
arranged before a areen back·
drop. Judglog the show was Mrs,
Earl Bender of Marietta, an ac·
credited judge of the Ohio Ass&lt;&gt;clat!on of Gardon Clubs.
Ribbon winners, ftnt through
fourth, reopecttvely In the art!otle arru,emera category were
as tollowa:

via.

~,

Homecoming Held Sunday In Rutland ·
1ott11.
Ballv .- . - :
bald at
!Ia-. 01119;PL:,.,.•.
w.
"Crauoer u;d !ami!¥ ,_ - ;

The Oolror' al'l'lll8fng talents

merts in Early American

COME IN AND SAVE •JN.THESE

your:

'

MondiJ', sept. 9, 1968

"America," mass irrange.

·calendar

ser of Raci ne called on Wavie
Cirde recently.
Mrs. Ethel Orr of Che s ter
spent a day with herdaughteraOO
family, Mrs. Robert Lee.
Mrs. Betty Van Meter and Mrs.
EWlie Bri nker attended an ox
roast at M~ Zion recently and
vi sited with Old t'riends.
Mr. ard Mr s. HayrnanBar nitz ,
Mr . and Mrs. Gary Allan Barnitz
and fam ily, aU ofPomeroy,apent
an evening with Mrs. Eunle Brink·
er aM ramtly in observance or
Mrs. Brinker' s birthday. 1 c e m. Monday olgM, Maaonic Tern ..
cream and cake were served. The J)le.
cake was baked by Carol Ann
WOMEN'S SOCIETY
or
Ilar nilz.
Christian Servtte, Heath MethMargaret Ann carleton and odl st Chur ch, 7:30 p.m. Monson, Patrick, Betty Van Meter day.

Sertinel, POQIOf07•Mfddleport, 0.,

relL

·: :· S~c ;~/·· · ,· · · · '· · ,· · :

The invention ~ called IU-8110
and ~ the result of 33 years of
experience by otarlon's Pres~
dent. It is made possible by a
and Eunie Brinker spent an eve-marvelous transistor, a develop.
CANDYSTRIPERS, Veterans
men! of the Belt Telephone Lab. ning with Erma! Schreckengost Memorial HosJ)IIal, Monday, 6:30
in Parkersburg.
oratories-similar to those used ~~~..!""-..!!I'!'-... p.m. Any girl, 16 or over, InterIn U.S. satellites. It Is crested
Vote Us As
osted tn joining JruiJ' attend.
eel
"Tyq&gt;ano • - - - - - - - - - - - · • by the inventors
.......... "
I r
SPECIAL
I of the
,
Your
TIJESDAY
.~..,ue ocm I
DEMONSTRATION
I
worlds
Choice!
LADIES AUXILIARY, Lewis
duets
I 0 u n dI
nnt
eyeg1ass
Manley Post 263, Amerl'can L&amp;1m00thty through I
LISALLE Hotel : hearing ald.
g!qn, 7 p.m. Tuesday, Mount
tile maatold pro- I
MIDDLEPORT
1
The IU_., is
Slop In
M.lriatt Baptist Cbur ell, Mlcldio.,... cllreclly to
WED., SEPT. 11 1 1ru1y a drama- Today
port.
tile " hearing cerr1
2 p .M.•• 5 p .M. .
I malic step for.
POMEROY LIONS CLUB, 6:lor," the Inner I ASK FOR MR. DILE$ : ~ani In bearing
Gosney's
30 p.m. TueadsJ, Grace F!&gt;fsearl Wear It and I KepreseaUng Vere Smlllo 1aid teclmology.
~ Clurcll par!IIJ lblle. W,
Duds 'N' Suds
AllliJo.VIsaab II W. Ulllonl II not ODly
challenge
A.
Uebolsbacb, archlteet, lpelk.
COIH·OP LAUHD~I"(~ friend to I
Athens, o. 15101
1brings you a
er; Paul Kloos, PI'Oil'aD;l chalrleD liB I hoar· I Call Colleet ltS-71t1
flhrllll!llf De w
IQIII,
iDI old,
-------------.Jworld ui sound,
F• lholllando this new bone but also the privacy and conconducllon method may prove venience you have wanted. U
lo be the best possible way to you'd like to know more about
hear 11e0t to nature's own earl. this patented Listener and dlaFat 111111)1, even this new tech- cover if it may help you, with
ldque may not be the answer. no cost or obligation, write toYou mUll try it Jf you are ever day to otarlon ElectnJIIICI,
to know.
Inc., Box A· I, t Weslerly !load,
O.Sinlng, N. Y. 10581.
'

'l'houaanda of people may now
enjoy the advantages of hearing
again with a patented lnvenlj!"'
thai baS NO buttons, NO tubes,
NO wires, NO bulky batteries.
IDslead of forcing amplified
IGUIId through t~e impaifed
outer or micldle ear, the patent.

May

of Clnchmali and Mrs. Paul
Pierce and Rand)' of Minersvllle
were supper guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Larry Johnaon and lluJU)y.,
They aha vJsitedGenevaShumaie
at Veterans Memorial Hoepltal.

'

ant· Charieo H. Stone, Pl. Plooa·
RusaeU. L. Clark, N"" Ha- ·
ven'· 'llte Rev. Lowell E. KeenlY'"

lliUf

Talents on Display at Flower Show

·

Klnnu, Rt. 1 Pt. Pleaaant; James ;•
S. McKinney, Rt I Pl. Plooa-·

Ma~; Mrs. Thomaa H. Fowler,"
o ••
Rt. l Pt. Pleasant; Mra. 1•• ,_,_.
er HudBOD, Rt. 2 Pt. P1eaaant:;
Galli ..
Mrs. Eugene c. Dune~,
•,
polls Ferry; Mrs. Elther.F.KI8·
1111, Middleport; Mrs. Thoms• ·
R. Burnsides, PomeJ'O)'; Mrs. Of •.
vllle 0. Johnson, Rl 1 D..,..r;
Charles W. Curfman, Sr., RL I
Pomeroy; Muttah A. SWI, coal
Alh·
ens· Glenda G. Pldllips,
~e·, Mrs. Le1Vf11 E, Leac~
Lambert, Rt 1 Crown Cit;y; Jot- . Jackson; Mrs. Delbert A. Lon&amp;
l:'oul....... Rl 3 Ironton·, Miss Helen M.
oph Ho Gill man, Rt o I ~'fiUI,!,MIRj
William w. Webb, Sr., Patriot Dempsey, Jaekaon; Edwin T.
Star R•.; J oy L• "·-•
-uey, Rt. 2 Edwards, Ironton; Miss Helen
E. COmer, Jack11011, Harry W,
Farrand, Ironton; Mrs. Zel~
Welt, Jackson; MrS. PlrlUip G, ·
Delong, Chlillcotbo; Mrs. Char·
lea W. Barker, Ravenswood; Mrs• .
Harry R. Weiland, Jackson.
Births
Mr. and Mrs. Harley Johnson,

Richard Jeffers Br.ld daughter of
Columbus were weekend vi-sitors

·.

The

I -

1' 1t

•

"',~~ ;tUt

,

Dorm

I~ a ~ 'at Holzer

· and ihit

iiorothr Rad-

of "'"· Ethel

also Ill In llol-

...-i.frae.

: ;,r;:~;ta.::::. ;::

WHTN·TY
.
~CflAltNU 13
9:00 .p.m.
'

,.

......

"oJ~ ·DQI
.•·

'

S..uce.
&lt;

5. .1. 00 ·
callS •

.•
.
•

-~

�.

'
Pomero,-Middleport, 0., MondiiJ',

Sept.

8, 1968

'

"

' '
'
'

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I

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tp·
'
, . ,,
. ~O.KY';· •••
. ' '

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.,l~(.

/

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'

the 'roller_-skating donkey
','Pinky" is a donkey who is all 11 ham." He has
learned to roller skate and performs regularly at
the Banning, Calif., .rink. In addition, he has freewheeled his way through numerous parades, pi Iing
up a sizable collection of trophies. "Pinky's"
owner and trainer is Charles (Chick) Hoover, who
bought the donkey about nine months ago when
it was just four days old. Since the Hoovers are a
skating family, it was decided that "Pinky" should
try it, too. Chuck mode a set of steel shoes to fit
the donkey and attached them to a pair of beginner's skates. At first, "Pinky" staggered and
foundered like any beginner, but he soon learned
to stand up and daily practice has made him quite
proficient. What's ahead for the sure-footed
burro? He's learning to water ski, so if some day
you see an extroverted donkey scooting across the
water, it won't be a mirage---it wi II be "Pinky."

":;

JOINING other couples on the Door. " Pinky" and o cute ml" skate around the Ran·
nlac (CaUf. ) Roller Rink. The nimble donkey has been skating since he was about two

weeb old.

lsi,.............
cheahtre; t,resa L. Crothers,.' ·
Holzer llosJ)IIal: V ~.,.,.,..n Rt. 2 Ga!Upolls·, Wllllam D. Me- : ·

2-4 and 7..! p.m. ~ only on
Pediatrics Ward.
Admissions
Chauncey E. HarriiOII, H7
Garfield AYe,; Ike L. Reid, 233
Seeond Ave.; Mrs; Dwight N, severa, ·Sr., Rt. 2 Gallipolis, ; Mrs•
Jac:k D. McCloUIII!d, HI. 1 Cho·••-e; Mrs. Willard G• ~M~
~,. RL
1 Northup; Mrs, Sophia Thomas,
Rt , 2 Cbellhl re; Mrs. Paul E.
!lewart, 2H5 Eastern Ave. ; Kenneth W• Owon, Rt. 2 G.ulpoll •;
CharJes W, Meadows, Eureka
Star RL; Leaa M, White, RL 2
Ch~shl re; Mr s. James M. Pratt,
Romey; Mrs. Vnndeilinde ElII s, Rt. 2 Vinton; Mrs. Clara J.

ant:

s.

Wolfpen

Tammy, Cheryl aoo Terry, were
recent Sunday afternoon visitors
of hts parents, Mr. and Mrs. Har-

ley Johnson.
Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie MUbourne
and lamlly and Mr. and Mrs.

of their parents, Mr. aDd Mrs.
Joe Hatfield and Mr. campbell.
Mr. and Mro. Brady Knotts of
King Hill were recent sunday vis·
!tors of Mr. and Mrs. EU&amp;One
Haning.

Mr. and Mrs, Doyle KDBpp,
IW~ Kevin· and Ciarles, LangsvUle were recent vhlltor,s of Mr.
and Mrs. Chsrley Smith.
Jo Smith. IJ.Jda Shatter, Linda Smith and Hila Vanghan spent

a recent weekendcamplngatRoyal oak Park.
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Warner alii
!arnlly o! MinersviLle and Mr.

an:J Mrs. George Warner and

Mrs.

Thomas R. Buraaide,

Pomeroy, daughter, 10:24 a.m. :
Saturdl¥: Mrs. Lewis E. Leacb, ~
Jackson, son, 9:0 a.m . .sunday; :.
Mrs. James M. Pratt, P.ocin!l¥, ·
daughter, 11:28 a.m. ~Discharges

Mrs. Daniel L. Brieklea, Mra. ;
Garn~ L. Bryne, Mro. John H. ~
cotrman, C. E. Cramer, Mr •· •
Jacik D. McClellan, ~ J.
9anley, Ronn.l'e E, Vanscoy, Mrs. ,.

Froda E. Wouglt, Mrs. John L, ,
Leadman, Mrs. Herman A. An·:.
dor- Mrs. Joslle L.
son, Andrea J. Batey, Mrs. Carl ·
H. Beane, George E. BOIDIOII,
Mrs. Charles E. Brown, Clark i·
B. Cunun!ngs, Patricia C, FICIO!I, ,
Miss Hilda F. Halley, Doona M. ,
Hauck, George E. Hubbard, Mrs. ·•
L, Roger Hudsbn, Mill Roaemary ·
Jones, Mrs. Lawrence G. Jor ..
dan, Mrs. Julia N, Kirby, Mrs. ,
Dwi8llt B. Newland, !lelljl S. ·~
Neutllng, !.Ira. Froda S. Paint- • ·
er, Jotm B. IWfle, Hart H. Rue:- :':

Ander·:·

family were Sunday visitors of
Mr. and Mrs. Hennan Warner.
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Boush and ker, Oliver L. saunders, James :·
Rodney oi Gallipolis were recenl Soxtnn, Howard c. Sm!tll, !do. :"
Sunday visitors of Mrs. Joseph Delano Pinkerman, Mrs, Thomas ~
E. Guthrie and Infant daughter, :
Johnson.

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Mr. Earl Fisher,

..

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JUST ROLLING aloag, "Pinky" aad two frleads lake a few turns around the ri nk.
The mild-mannered animal Is a deUgbi for cblldren of aU ages.

Soap Halts Nail Biting
P rat II call y everybody
bows the value of scraping
lllllei'II&amp;UI over a cake of soap
before slarllllg a " dlrty" Job.
New the same Irick coul be
applied to a child's fingernails
to help discourage and cure
11811-lltllllg.

SEI US FOI YOUI ·
FilE Ut AUTO
INSUIAIKE
..... C4111_0ur
.... llo Nat Rolli Abr
Baq A Clolm AI Sumo
C
INikf

V. D. EDWAIDS

IIISIJIWICE AGENCY
PH. •w.to
POMEROY

Carmel News
By the Day
Mr s. Douglas Circle and Flor ence Cir cle called on Mrs. Dessie Patterson of Middleport recently,
Ralph Lee , Mrs. Robert Lee
and children, Bob, Bill and Bee ~
Lee , called on Margaret A n n
Carleton arxl !lon, Patrick, a recent Saturday evening.
Florence Cir cle visited Mr.
and Mrs. J ohn Circle oC Columbus r ecently.
Mr. and Mrs. Buren Duncan of
Florida were recent guests at the
Douglas Circle home.
Betty Van Meter , Eunie Brink-

NOWI YOU MAY
HEAR AGAIN
With Nothing In Either EAR

RELAXING alter a parllcuiarly strenuous day oo wheels, " Pinky" curls up oa a
louoge just Ute any olher member oftbe Hoover famUy.

er called at the home of Ernest
Cla r k, Racine,

Mrs. Elsie Circle, Florence
Cir cle arxi Mrs. Jim Patter son
and sons visited Mr. and Mrs.
Ernest Johnson of Belpre a _re.
cent Sunday.
Mr. and Mr s. Donald Pierce
of Athens wer e

at the home of

Mrs. Mary Circle a recent evening.
Mrs. Mabel Lax returned to
her home at Ft. Lauderdale, Fla.,
after a ten-day visit with Mr. and
Mrs. Douglas Circle and F1or.
ence.
Francis Fos ter and Margie sal-

TUFHJAY
per, 6 p.m.; bting a covered
POMEROY LIONS C L U B, dish and own table service; Miss
Tuesday, 6:30 p.m. Grace Epis- Lydia El&gt;ersbacb has the pro.
copal Church pariah house. wu . gram; Mrs. Glen JUles to re:::
llnm A. Leibersbart, COiumbuo, port on recent workshop st Camp
will speak on architecture , ot Francis Asbury.
various buildings In Meigs eoun.
EASTERN BAND Boosters, 7:·
cy.
30 p.m. Tuesday at high sclml.
AUXILIARY OF the Racine Committees for achaol year to
MONDAY
Fire
Department meets at 7:30 be appointed. Members urged to
MEIGS SALON 710, 8 and 40,
Tuesday
at the lire house.
meeting 6:30 p, m. Monday, home
attend.
omo
ETA
Pm Chapter, Beta
of Eunice Brinker, Bashan Road.
WEDNEIDAY
CHURCH COUN CIL, SL Paul Sigma Phi Sororlcy, at 8:i5 p.
POMEROY
SHAKESPEARE,
IAitheran Church, Morday, 8p,m. m. Tuesday. COlumbus a n d
Cld&gt;,
1
p.m.
WednesdQ,
lunch,
Southern Ohio Electric Co. soat the church.
eon
at
Crow'a
Steak
House;
then
POMEROY GARDEL'l CLUB, cial room, TWlla Matheno)' has
Monday, 2 p. DL at the home of the cultural program; pledges to the home ol Mrs. T. A. Hen·
nosy; Mrs. Hemeey to prewill &amp;en$.
Mrs. Harvey Van VrankeiL
MJDDLEPORT BUSINESl.and the program.
REGULAR MEETING, Meigs
POMEROY CHAPTER 80, Roy.
Chapter DAV, 6:30 p.m., lunch Professional Women•s Club, 6:preceding business session at 30 Tuesday evoning at tile Mar. al Arch Mall'ma, 7:30 waes7:30 p.m. Veterans of all wars tin Restaurant; buaiuess meet- dl¥ night at the Pomeroy Ma·
bnited; Jacob Turner, command~ Ing and prognun follows at the IHIIic TemJ)Ie, Dale E. Sm!tll,
COlumbia Gas ol Ohio n!llce. high priest. .
er.
WOMEN'S $XIETY of Chrle·
POMEROY P,T. A., Ptblday,
7 :30 p.m. Pomeroy El omontary Uan Service, Pomeroy IJn!led
TIIURSlAY
Methodist Cherck, potluc:k supSchool ,
AFTERNOON cmcLE, I p,
BETHEL 62, International Qr.
der of Jabs Daugtrters, 7:30 p.

...

Fisher

I

NoteSJ{j :. ;~ ~..!=-'~Mr~

Mr, and Mrs. Vlrtrfl ROse.
Miss Mary Am Fields of CoIumbus spent tho w~ hire
with her parents, Mr. and Mrs.

and ·Mrs. W• D, Grimm n d
dau!~. Mr. and Mrs. Carl
Mc,Kenzie, Mrs. Flora McKenzllj of W01hington, Pa.; Mr. and

Joe Fields.

M·ra. W. H. Crouser, Mr. and

Miss illetla Ohlinger, daughtor af Mr. and Mrs. Cuorad Qh.
l!D~or. and Miss Janice Elkew,
daUghter, of Mr. and Mra. Char·

II s. CoeU Crouser af ~

1

.

DRY OUNING
SERVIa
(UPON REQUESn

Our Uaaol Good Clunl.;,

Robinson's CIIGIIB

··

Pomeroy

j

Mrs. Clarence Struble. Mr. Struble was discharged Friday from
tile Galllpolls Medical Center
THESE YOuntriJL EXIUBlTORS were ribbon w1mers In
jwdor divisions ot' the Rutland Friendly Gardeners weekend
flower shotv. Both Rosemary Snowden, left, .and Judy Snowden,
right, daughters of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Snowden, won first

· recent visitors in Charleston,
W, Va., with Mr. and Mra. FL'll~
ton B. COVert and Mr. and Mrs.
Donald Covert and son, Donnie.
The COverts took the MUhoan
girls on a tour ol points at InProtect Eyes pf Beach terest in West Virginia.
To avoid 18 a -hInkle 1
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Wararoaad lhe eyes It's a good
ner,
Ruth, Margaret, Dobbie and
Idea to prolecl thai area with
a leneh of eye cream at the Beth ot Oberlin were recent' viaitors of his mother, Mra. J!l:obbeach.
ert Warner, Mulberry Ave.

Summertlme," a r r a n g ements with !rults or vegetables
- Mrs. Wolfe, Mrs. Wllltord,
Mrs. Davia, and Mrs. WUUam..
son.
"Dance, Balerlna Dance,"
ltresslng rhythm, - Mrs. Titul,
Mrs. Snowden, Mrs. Willford,
and Mra. Terrell ·
"The BeautitulGardenofPray·
er." tbtngs suitable f9r a ehurch,
- Mrs. Robert Lewis of the

•'

.

where he has beon a patient 11M
the pall few weeks.
'
Peggy and Heidi MUhoan wm&gt;

ter of Mr. and Mrs. Joe Bolin, received a red ribbon tor her
entry ln the "School Da.ys 11 category. Youngest exhibitor in
the junior division was Craig Bolin, three-year-old son of
the Joe BoliDs.

place awards lor artistic arrangements. Brenda !!olin, ciaugh·

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•
•

~------------~ .'=
••
•
••

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Winding TraU Garden Club, Mrs.
Davia, Mrs. Bolin, and Mrs.
Williamson.
'-'IboroUghly Modern MUJte,"
lntorprattve dos!gr.. - M r s.
Titus, Mrs. Williamson, Mrs.
Howard Birchfield, and Mrs. Ter-

DAVID DAVIES

,. . ."

'Mrs. Terrell, Mrs. May, and

SLIC. BACON
l·LB.
49~

79~
,.

20CT.
PKG.

..•

ROSEDALE BRAND

WI EN

ft1ln.o

PKG.

Mrs. Bolin.
u On TOll of Old Smoky," tan
Une arrangements- Mrs. Blrchllald, Mrs. Bolin, Mrs. Stewart,
1!111 Mro. Charles King.
, Mrs, Snowdon took the blue

XI GAMMA MU SORORITY,
Thursday, 6:30 p .m •• Columbus
and Southern Ohio Electric COmpany, tor a potluck dlrmer.

ribbon in ttle d81Ssent1tled ''H(II}oo
.;-• tor · her rose centerpiece on
a formal luncheon table. Tho

rod ribbon wert to Mrs. Blrch4eld, Mrs. Davis took the white.
and Mrs. Martin, the yellow.
In the lllvttatloncategory, Mrs.
TerreU took !Irs~ and Mrs, Char·
lao LeWis alao of the Winding
TfaU Gordon Club, took second
~·

their Interpretive arrange-

mi.nts in ~·Ebb Tide..,

Ribbon winners In the junior
clhislon were Rosemary Snow·
don, Tere11 Brown, and cntg

MRS. ROBERT SNOWDEN, right. waa not only short ehalrman but a four-time blue ribbon
winner at the amua1 fall nower sflow of the RutlaDd Gardeners staged over tbe weekend. Here
she ls with her entry in the ''HOM¥" class, a pink rose centerpiece for a formal luncheon table.
Smiling approvingly of the judge' s selection for the first place award is Mrs. Fred Williamson,
presldeat of the club.

Dinner, Rummage Sole
Scheduled in October

Two t'und..,alslng projocta, a eel and prizes won by Mrs. Smllh,
Bolin, llrst, second · and third, ~ and~ rummage sale, were Mro. Ben Neutzllng, Mrs. Soy.
respeetlveiJ Jn ••Playmate"; and plannad by the !laPP¥ Harvesters tried, Mrs. Meinhart, and Mrs.
ludlth ~ llrit, and Brenda Friday n!glrl at tho Trln!cy Unit- Ethal Wllllnmsoo.
Mrs. Louis Reibel, Mrs. LanBolin, . . . . . .. the "School ed Church of Chrlat.
Mrs. Pldllp Meinhart reported ning and Mrs. Mabel Wolfe were
Dil,yJ 11 elaaa.
'
011 tho Gallla Councy Sal.,., Elgllt the hoste&amp;SeJ.
HORTICULTURE DIVISION
and Fort;y, dlmer to be served on
IN THE HORTICULTURE dlvl- Oct. 3. Named to the committee
~~oat ribbon wbmara, blue, red, for the dinner were Mrs. NeinPerfume Hair
., wblte, 1111 yellow, napectlveJy, bart, Mrs. Ella &amp;nlth, Mra. Fred
Keep your hair fresh smellwere 11 tollows:
Desaauer, Mrs. Clara Karr, Mra. Ing by regular shampoos, A
ll)'brld
Mrs. Snowden, · i.a1IT1lllce Lanning, Mrs. N e v a drop of your favorite perfume
,..... Bobltt Lewis, Mro. Char- Seyfrlad, and Mrs, Ullle Houck. or toilet water lD llie rinse
lu Lewit, and Mrs. Robert
The rummage sale was sched- water will do wonders for
femlDIDe sweetness.
""-uled ror Sepl. 19 and 20 In lhe
Floriilun!la - Mrs. Robert Elbert'eld building on E, Main
- n ; - · and Mrs. Mar- St. Pi1111 were modo for a covUn, tllir&lt;L No llrot or IDurth orad dloll dlmer to bl held In Qc.
~ea wereuardadbythejudp. -... I t - reported that a box
, Zinnia - MrL Cliorlao Lew· had been sent to Joey Gilmore
. it, Mrt, Ruasall Utile o1 the who Ia stationed In Okinawa.
lllilland Gordon Club, Tero~ II wu JII'Oi'"'"ad by Mrs. Smith
~ and Judith !!noWden.
and Mra. Laming.
Unclaatllled- Mrs.·S-n,
The Lord' I PrlQ'Of ID wd, Jiri. 'ThllniP- and M,ra. l&lt;riJ&gt;Iolre from the Psal~D&amp; by
Mrs. Dellauer, ~ lfOUPIIng.

LEATHER

9.99

-

IHE

r,_ -

tngot•'JN~TheeEYery~,··
the - . . . Mra. Del-..er read u ' irtlclt entitled "I
TruA,' YOUI .. and,...,ci,_ the

tillae~~.;rF;;
aild !1111'•, and

yellow

-.
--

·~·

-

CLOSEOUT ON All
SAVE. 50.00 to 100.00i
•

•

·- EASY TERMS

'I

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ir t b e

. ·' '

The Comb in Pu!Jiic

"

The cbarmlDg and elegant

woman never combs her hair

lD pubUc. Natur.Uy, it goes
without saying that if you are

at a restaurant or any public

SUPER MA'RKET • Open Daily 9 to ~:30~Sun.12 to 9:30

place, and a stray strand falls
IDio your face, excuse your·
self and go to the powder
room for a quick repair job.

"We Reoorvt '!be 111&amp;111 To Limit Qaulltl..-

We Accept Federal Food Stamps
Comer MiD •ncl Snoncl Sts.
PHONE! 992-3410

MIDDliPOIIT,

o.

Get the Red Out
To neutralize a ruddy, Dorid
complexion, use a make·up
foundation that obliterates ev·

ery trace of redness from your
skin, such as one recently
la un c he d by a well·known
firm. This is a newly minted
shade which will also block
out dark clreles under the
eyes or olmply give the skin a
clear, porcelain finish.

Adams Breacl.•••••••••••• ~:a~z. 16~
Sealtest Ice Milk••••••••• ~c~~'- 49~
lbs•••••••••••••• 2 2s•,.
Leight
Folger's CoHee.~:~:~••••• ~ra~z. 1.19
Cake Mix MQ~~~~·~~~euow, o,vus Food •••••••~2 9~
lSWATT

'

lor

c

OJI01Iad

~~:;':~
,'
IAU.O .
tYJt ""'-· ·-• ~ona,'"""'""l¥
. er.

OPEN'FRI. Md SAT •.NIGHT$

Mr. . and Mra. Dann.7 ~...ev~q.

Mr. and Mrs. Jack Cramer!
and Jackie and Dan of Marl'"~
were weekand auesta of Mr. and

11

-·-•. e•- ·

,)·.INGELs· FU .

2- Hour

Ing.

old · Wolfe, and Mrs. Bruce Da-

Brown, Mrs. WWiamson. and

···lilli--ill·

lea Eskew, began training ~
the Neloonv!Ue Southoastorn
Oldo School of Pracl!cal Nurs-

Ing TrsU Garden Club, Mrs. Htr-

Mro, Davis,

token.

at

"September Sorw," arrangements using dried materials and
weathered "ood - Mra. Jamea
Titus of the Rutland Garden Club,
Mrs, John Terrell of the Wind-

WUI!am Willford, Mrs.

or.
~,. '
l'ollowlnc tho ..._ a - ; ,: ·
pmes were pliiJ'ecl andJi...._. ::;·

and • . • • • • • • · ·
·

Mrs. Frances EskeW bU re· ter, / Columbua; Mr. and Mra.
turned from a vlalt In Akrollwilll . Charles Ba.Yloas of Nitro; Mr.

· .....utlt'uHlhlo,' " dostgnawlth '
w'ater shoWing - Mrs. BrOII'Il,

•I

..J

I!! Personal

Robert Snowdon, Mra. Tom Stow·
art, Mrs. Joe Bolin, and Mrs.
Charles King.
u5ome Enchanted Evening,"
with emphasis onpurples- Mrs.
Fred Williamson, Mr.s. B 111
Brown, Mrs. Toin Martin, and
Mro. Charleo King.

Mrs,

, :~:

:::;

SWeet Rosie O'Grady,"' at•
ranaementa uslng roses - Mrs.

"The Green, Green Gran o1
Home," all foliaae pieces -

...... Mansfield. Ohio; Mr.

Mr. and Mre. ~ ,..•..,,
iDptoa,
lie Bups, Gorrllm,
Mr. ,
,,
Mrt. Clarenee Well1, - . Iii:;.
and Mr. aDd· 111'1. W. E. CrcliiJ" .;

';t·;~::;~;::,:· ='='·' ' ' ';,,;,:~ ::;:.;.:::~E

11

'r~L

i

.•,

'

nor - Mrs. Martin, Mrs. Bolin,
Mrs. Stewart, and Mrs. s...,.-

m. Thursday, potluck dlmer.
Members are to take a covered
dbh and their own table service.

--Mr.

The IIIIUII Crooser bolllecom- Wheelinl;
Bessie
!ng ...
the
!Jhert;J; Mr ; ,and Mrt.IIQmand
and Mrs.
E. Crouser, liiJt. .
land, Route I, ~- .
Mrt. Homer Carte, Jr. and..,.
Altendlng were Mr. and Mrl. of Walkvkw, W. VL; Mr. and
'&lt;ex CrouserJS. and Mrs. Rob. flrl. r-.)rd Jarratt and anndert Crou11r iiid' 11111, Charltl· ehlldral, 'l lr. aec1 Mra. Dorrell
ton, w. Va.; Mr. and Mrl. EY- Jarrett lAd l'amliy, illllovllle;
or!¥ Croooer and dautlhlers ,_ Mr. lnd , ~Irs. [MrJ WoiiJ and

ot local gardeners were effec-o
Uvely displayed In the numerous
entries of a show staaad by the
Rutland Frlondl,y Gardener• saturday and ~ In the Rutland
Elementary Scixlol ludltortum.
The 97 oxlllblts, carr)'lng out
the show ttleme, ••With a Sona
lit My Heart, u were attractively
arranged before a areen back·
drop. Judglog the show was Mrs,
Earl Bender of Marietta, an ac·
credited judge of the Ohio Ass&lt;&gt;clat!on of Gardon Clubs.
Ribbon winners, ftnt through
fourth, reopecttvely In the art!otle arru,emera category were
as tollowa:

via.

~,

Homecoming Held Sunday In Rutland ·
1ott11.
Ballv .- . - :
bald at
!Ia-. 01119;PL:,.,.•.
w.
"Crauoer u;d !ami!¥ ,_ - ;

The Oolror' al'l'lll8fng talents

merts in Early American

COME IN AND SAVE •JN.THESE

your:

'

MondiJ', sept. 9, 1968

"America," mass irrange.

·calendar

ser of Raci ne called on Wavie
Cirde recently.
Mrs. Ethel Orr of Che s ter
spent a day with herdaughteraOO
family, Mrs. Robert Lee.
Mrs. Betty Van Meter and Mrs.
EWlie Bri nker attended an ox
roast at M~ Zion recently and
vi sited with Old t'riends.
Mr. ard Mr s. HayrnanBar nitz ,
Mr . and Mrs. Gary Allan Barnitz
and fam ily, aU ofPomeroy,apent
an evening with Mrs. Eunle Brink·
er aM ramtly in observance or
Mrs. Brinker' s birthday. 1 c e m. Monday olgM, Maaonic Tern ..
cream and cake were served. The J)le.
cake was baked by Carol Ann
WOMEN'S SOCIETY
or
Ilar nilz.
Christian Servtte, Heath MethMargaret Ann carleton and odl st Chur ch, 7:30 p.m. Monson, Patrick, Betty Van Meter day.

Sertinel, POQIOf07•Mfddleport, 0.,

relL

·: :· S~c ;~/·· · ,· · · · '· · ,· · :

The invention ~ called IU-8110
and ~ the result of 33 years of
experience by otarlon's Pres~
dent. It is made possible by a
and Eunie Brinker spent an eve-marvelous transistor, a develop.
CANDYSTRIPERS, Veterans
men! of the Belt Telephone Lab. ning with Erma! Schreckengost Memorial HosJ)IIal, Monday, 6:30
in Parkersburg.
oratories-similar to those used ~~~..!""-..!!I'!'-... p.m. Any girl, 16 or over, InterIn U.S. satellites. It Is crested
Vote Us As
osted tn joining JruiJ' attend.
eel
"Tyq&gt;ano • - - - - - - - - - - - · • by the inventors
.......... "
I r
SPECIAL
I of the
,
Your
TIJESDAY
.~..,ue ocm I
DEMONSTRATION
I
worlds
Choice!
LADIES AUXILIARY, Lewis
duets
I 0 u n dI
nnt
eyeg1ass
Manley Post 263, Amerl'can L&amp;1m00thty through I
LISALLE Hotel : hearing ald.
g!qn, 7 p.m. Tuesday, Mount
tile maatold pro- I
MIDDLEPORT
1
The IU_., is
Slop In
M.lriatt Baptist Cbur ell, Mlcldio.,... cllreclly to
WED., SEPT. 11 1 1ru1y a drama- Today
port.
tile " hearing cerr1
2 p .M.•• 5 p .M. .
I malic step for.
POMEROY LIONS CLUB, 6:lor," the Inner I ASK FOR MR. DILE$ : ~ani In bearing
Gosney's
30 p.m. TueadsJ, Grace F!&gt;fsearl Wear It and I KepreseaUng Vere Smlllo 1aid teclmology.
~ Clurcll par!IIJ lblle. W,
Duds 'N' Suds
AllliJo.VIsaab II W. Ulllonl II not ODly
challenge
A.
Uebolsbacb, archlteet, lpelk.
COIH·OP LAUHD~I"(~ friend to I
Athens, o. 15101
1brings you a
er; Paul Kloos, PI'Oil'aD;l chalrleD liB I hoar· I Call Colleet ltS-71t1
flhrllll!llf De w
IQIII,
iDI old,
-------------.Jworld ui sound,
F• lholllando this new bone but also the privacy and conconducllon method may prove venience you have wanted. U
lo be the best possible way to you'd like to know more about
hear 11e0t to nature's own earl. this patented Listener and dlaFat 111111)1, even this new tech- cover if it may help you, with
ldque may not be the answer. no cost or obligation, write toYou mUll try it Jf you are ever day to otarlon ElectnJIIICI,
to know.
Inc., Box A· I, t Weslerly !load,
O.Sinlng, N. Y. 10581.
'

'l'houaanda of people may now
enjoy the advantages of hearing
again with a patented lnvenlj!"'
thai baS NO buttons, NO tubes,
NO wires, NO bulky batteries.
IDslead of forcing amplified
IGUIId through t~e impaifed
outer or micldle ear, the patent.

May

of Clnchmali and Mrs. Paul
Pierce and Rand)' of Minersvllle
were supper guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Larry Johnaon and lluJU)y.,
They aha vJsitedGenevaShumaie
at Veterans Memorial Hoepltal.

'

ant· Charieo H. Stone, Pl. Plooa·
RusaeU. L. Clark, N"" Ha- ·
ven'· 'llte Rev. Lowell E. KeenlY'"

lliUf

Talents on Display at Flower Show

·

Klnnu, Rt. 1 Pt. Pleaaant; James ;•
S. McKinney, Rt I Pl. Plooa-·

Ma~; Mrs. Thomaa H. Fowler,"
o ••
Rt. l Pt. Pleasant; Mra. 1•• ,_,_.
er HudBOD, Rt. 2 Pt. P1eaaant:;
Galli ..
Mrs. Eugene c. Dune~,
•,
polls Ferry; Mrs. Elther.F.KI8·
1111, Middleport; Mrs. Thoms• ·
R. Burnsides, PomeJ'O)'; Mrs. Of •.
vllle 0. Johnson, Rl 1 D..,..r;
Charles W. Curfman, Sr., RL I
Pomeroy; Muttah A. SWI, coal
Alh·
ens· Glenda G. Pldllips,
~e·, Mrs. Le1Vf11 E, Leac~
Lambert, Rt 1 Crown Cit;y; Jot- . Jackson; Mrs. Delbert A. Lon&amp;
l:'oul....... Rl 3 Ironton·, Miss Helen M.
oph Ho Gill man, Rt o I ~'fiUI,!,MIRj
William w. Webb, Sr., Patriot Dempsey, Jaekaon; Edwin T.
Star R•.; J oy L• "·-•
-uey, Rt. 2 Edwards, Ironton; Miss Helen
E. COmer, Jack11011, Harry W,
Farrand, Ironton; Mrs. Zel~
Welt, Jackson; MrS. PlrlUip G, ·
Delong, Chlillcotbo; Mrs. Char·
lea W. Barker, Ravenswood; Mrs• .
Harry R. Weiland, Jackson.
Births
Mr. and Mrs. Harley Johnson,

Richard Jeffers Br.ld daughter of
Columbus were weekend vi-sitors

·.

The

I -

1' 1t

•

"',~~ ;tUt

,

Dorm

I~ a ~ 'at Holzer

· and ihit

iiorothr Rad-

of "'"· Ethel

also Ill In llol-

...-i.frae.

: ;,r;:~;ta.::::. ;::

WHTN·TY
.
~CflAltNU 13
9:00 .p.m.
'

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......

"oJ~ ·DQI
.•·

'

S..uce.
&lt;

5. .1. 00 ·
callS •

.•
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•

-~

�,..,

•

· ,.,.. lJallY

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&gt;'
Sentinel, Pome['OJI·Middleport, 0., Morday, Sept. 9, 1988

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. ,;~: . LITT-LE '·HOMEWORK' Watchittg. Wal1t Ads Bring Top::~rade ResultS\
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WAift' AD

t 11.11111, DIY· __,.,. Pvltllcatloltt
. . . . liM

c.-.1 ........

a.-.

t

Pomeroy

&amp; Cernct~Mtt

' Will IN eca .. lill ...... I ...... fw
O.y ., f'VItltcallltft
R-\IILATtOWI

.

Motor Co.

Tht PulttiiMr ,...,.., tM rttflt

te _...

N Nfolct ' " ' . . . . . . . . . .
Will Mt

...... ..... n. ,........,
" .o....
e n•"
t.r IHN
11'1 ........

thin - .

I:ATII
''

• • Want Aid ..rYica

wm .... ,..."'"

1 ..... ..,

Mlf1lr.u... Cha,..

7k:

''" ,....,......

11 ...... ,.,. ..,.. fliii'H ........

11 cellfll ,er Wlnl llx HftMC1jlfiW
IWMrttMt&amp;.
U .... lent Dlll...nt .. ...~ M1
-

.,.. ,., . ....., ........._. ...
. . ,.Ill •""'" 11 ... ,..

C:A•D OP TMANitl

&amp;

OIITUA.Y

........... -.N ...

aLIND ADI
._......_, Uc CM,.. ,., .WV.r-

~-. O"ICI HOU•I
t~•

a.M. to t:CM J.M. Dtlty

tt• •·• ..

tu,._,

11:M . . . . . . .

Notice
NO TRESPASSING or

R.

lruntlni

on my properly. Addie
Barton, Rl. I, Racine, Ohio.

~tp

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67 CHEV. BEL AJR .•••..•••.••••.....••$2395
Less than 16,000 miles by local owner. VB engine, Powerglide trans., radio, ivory over blue finish. Whitewall tires
stlow little wear. f tioor.
66 CHEVELLE . • . •.••..••••.. , , , , •••• •$1995
4 door HT, local (lWner, low mileage car, beige finish
with matching interior, w-s-w, like new, V8, auto. trans.,
P. s. , radio and heater.

1965 GMC PICKUP . .................... ,$1195
8 1-'t. Fleetside, good tires, 6 cyl. engine. Priced below
. market price,

Pomeroy M,ofor Co.
OPEN EVES. 1:00 P.M.
'POMEROY, Ot!IO

-~---------·~----~-~.~"!.-111111
For Rent

P'OR TRADE-Cash fir an- TRAILER SPACE, ready to
book up, private, plenty ol
tiques. William Hamm, Midroom for clllldren 1o play.
dleport.
~-~
Phone 992-3904.
1-14-lfc
WILL DO sewing at home ...
zippers, pockets, pegging, GOOD rent In the ""untry, st.
hemming, alterations, etc. rooms and bath, three bedMrs. Freddie Thabet, Mason,
I'OODJS, large basement, play
Phone 773-5651.
4-311-tfc room and garage, has oU
heat and is lnsulated, drilled
HAPPY KOUR, Shenang Springs well and spring bouse, large
Nlto Club, 5 1o 6 p.m. MoDgarden and 50 aeres Of feDdQ thru Friday. Ladles night
cod pasture for a pony ar cow
..ery Friday.
U.tlc
if desired, school bus slops
at the door. Located hi a
NOW OPEN from 10 A.M. lo 10 quiet, peaceful valley a few
P.M. the S&amp;W Drive In on minutes drive from Racine.
the by-paBS Rl. 7. Soft lee Call Esther West, IMt-28111.
&lt;n!am. good food, specials oo
~
Monday and Thursday.
~ FURNISHED GARAGE apart.
ment on IJnooln mn. Utllltleo
REMINDER to Racine res~
paid; adults ooly. Phone 11111dents. Water bills to be paid
SIIIII.
&amp;.Jt.lle
by the 15th of each month at
Racine Department Stoce. A!'" THREE ROOM furnlabod apart.
plleations for water taps. also
ment, pbone 8!1W980. 8-25-lfc
water deposits must contact
VUJage Clerk, Mae Cleland.
'I'RAILER LOTS. Bob'a MobBe
lf3.31c
Court, Syracuse, Ohio .., Stale
Ill. 124, Phone 99HIIII.
WILL DO PAINTING, plwnbing,
a.!l..tfc.
oarpenter and electric work
by cOntract or by boor. Phone
Cbeahire 367-7652.
9-8-12lp Business Opportunity
EXTRA INCOME OPPORTUN'·!ARD SALE. ll'ousehold and
ITY. ReUable man or woman,
no
selling, refill and collect
mise.. Satnnlay, Sept. 14, 144
South Pearl St., Middleport, from new 1ype eoin operale4
dispensers in yoUr area. BeOhio.
11-Mtc
oome our dlalributor. Must
have car, references, $650 to
Lost and Feund
'1950 cash Investment, securFOUND. charm bracelet near ed by equipment and InvenRizer 011 Co.. in Pomeroy.
tory. Ten hours weekly can
Phone 992-2'19'1.
~
net excellent income. For
personal Interview, write, InWanted To Buy
cluding phone number, to CalSENG. diggers, ginseng $12 lb., Ton Supply Company, Inc.,
llll8ke root $150 lb., Col. Seal 8011 Bryan Ave., Lexington,
P,25 lb. Bill Baney, Reeds- Kentuclcy IOMI.
U«p
ville.
»«c

For Sale
SOUD STATE stereo, 18111
walnut eonsole model, radio
equipped, with 4-speecl lliJ!o.
matlc changer, 4-speaker
sound system. Pay ODiy
177.33, ar monthly paymenla.
Call 9112.'1218.
JUte

ForSIIe

also Early American IMng
room l!lllte. can t9UISI
5 p.m.
. N4le

an.

IIOOd COIIdllton,

price able, jiiJone 9IIJ 31311. 8+atp

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Wheel Allgnlflenl

614-992·2181

5.55

Dorcas

HOBSTETTER
·REALTY·

GEO. RVBSJEijER,BROKER
POMEROY - 2 f1oora 30 x 90,
stone ""notructlon, e•cellent
far atorage. f2500.011
MIDDLEPORT - Business ol
your own, now operallng. Opportunlly for couple. f20,0011.

Barbara and Tom Brutvan and ·
daughter, J,emiter, of Chagrin
Falls visited the past week with
Harry Wolfe, Otis Knopps, the Ernest Grimms and the the D l c k
Sterrett lamii.Y of Galllpolls.
Guests o1 Charles and Bonnie
Thelss were Wilmer and Louise
Dailey of Ocla, F1a., and Jesse
and Joy Perkens and son, Rick
arx1 family of Beaver Falls, Pa.

Visiting recently with Bill aoo
Joyce Hoback and tami1y were
their daughters, Janice of Washington, D. C., and Nancy, F1orida.
Mr. and Mrs. Omar Dalley
~nt a week in East Liverpoo]
on business and vlsltedwiththelr
children, Lawrence Bailey and
family, Fay Czech and lamii.Y
and Thelma MDier and family.
Mrs. Alice Beegle of Duluth,
Minn, Is spending a co~.ple ot
weeks with her grandsons, Randy
and Jerr Wendorf, while their
mother, June, is wcationtngwlth
her lather, Clptaln Harold Beegle
on the Great Lakes.

Jlm_IJI! ..rtevJI)e, . Jl!lo ls stationed at Clnnon Air Force Bose
in New Mexico as a medical tech-nictan. and his family spent a
month with his mother, Naomi

Neville.

Guests of ~ and Charley
Beegle were Am s brother, John

••t

,._..a

FI1IINISHED and unlumltboll
•Jlll tmaJta. Close 1o odloal. 14 FT. SKIF1', U moklr, oan,
Pltolle • 5134,
JI.IJ.tl&amp;!
phone MHZ71
f.4.tk
TRAILER SPACE, aU ntUJ!!eo 42 INCH SIMPLEX Ironer, good
avaUable. lnquJre l.5e Mulber·
as new, f:!O, phone lliU30'7.
ry after 3 or 5 p.m. Write P.
J.Wie
0 . Bo• 425 Pomeroy. 5-»tfc
USED PIANOS, (ll)fl studio uprlgbt, one large regular uprlgbt, RuUand Funtltunl Co.
Pbone 7u.t211.
tUtp

CARRIR

·wANDD
IN MIDDliPOII'.

PHONE 992-2094

-·

lh7 Booth of Jllddleport, Oblo, hM
..... dvlp &amp;PPOtDieil Alleillar7 Ad·
ndlliltntrbt of 0. w.tate of IUIIel
Alfnd Bootb. deeeued , latl of ...
uwba Coullt7, w.n Vlri1Dla.
CNdJtan ~ Z'Wf,lllre4 1o file Glelr
cla&amp;Ju wt.U!. 1&amp;14 ~ wttblli

~~~

IIEWING

MACIIINES, ftJIIIIr

oenkl!, Ill makel. WY S.
:liM. 'l'lle l'abdC Shop, ·l'omeray. Aathor11ed lllupr Saleo
lnd Ser*e. We 8barpeft

Sclllora.

Nl4c

MALONEi
!.W-A

~I&gt;eVEUJf,IIEIJI"

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.,1' .'

•

E. Mala

....

OC!fANF~

,

...,..., S.Wiltl

LI'L ABNER

'68's Red!JCad

69 MODELS

I:

AVAilABLE
SOON

i

'P&amp;wie)_•.• .

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From tho Largoo! Truclt or
Bulllb18J' Radiator 'I'D-- ·Till
&amp;nallest Heater Core.

Schwarztl
Marfnt

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1

BLAETTNARS

Hocki!llport, Ohio ·

Levison and wile, of PIUsiJur81&gt;,
PHONE 667-3370
and her sister, idta Roth, PIU•
burgh, who spent two weeks visiting with the Beestes and her and Mrs. Earnest Johnaan, ..,.
niece, Janice Deem, and lamib' route home from a tour ot the ·
at Portland.
weot Where they vlst!edwlttith\llr
Chuck Wagner, who 1a with the daughter, Patcy Smith, and tamu. s. ArlnY and who wiU be sta- Uy Ill Oklahoma.
tioned In Hawaii, vioited wilh
Dale and Bennie Johnaon and
Tommy aoo Pam Theiss.
Uncle Otto Bradford Ia back In chlldnn of JJ•bon, 0., vi ailed
Mr. and Mra. ,
the v. A. HOIIIItalla ClnclMIU. with his
Earnest
Johneon, and hta alater, 1
He has had two dll!erent heart
pacers since he has been there Bernice LevaHey, and
route to their new home at Loog
but is said to be In satisfactory
Beach,
cant
condition. Cards can be sent to
Edna and Otis ~ attanded 1
him in care of the hospital.
the Knopp reunion at Cedar Lekas •
Recent vlsltorsofMr. and Mrs.
near Ripley, W. VL, a recent
Robert Prollltt were Mi. a n d
Bunda1.
Mrs. Russall Harrison and IUIMrs. Garnet (Smllh) Enlne of
ily of Xenia, end Mr. and M r s.
Glenn Madox and children, Da'rid Florida Is Ylaltlng ber brother,
Wayne Hoback. She eatertalned
and Mark, Clevelai'MI.
with a birthday dinner In hlo
Naoml Neville enjoyed a va~
honor. Those present were his
tlon with her claughterandson-l~&gt;o
law, Janet and Arthur Warner, brother, Ross Hoback, of Galli·
polio, Floyd Roback of Conneaut, 1
arxl children. 'Ibey traveled by
camper and visited at Myrtle hla sister, (Jooephlne) Mr. and
Smith, Dl&gt;le and lliiY
Beach,
c., st. Peteraburlaud Mrs. Paul
Smilh,
Marineland in Florida and returnains.
Beckie and Rickie Promtt and
Billie Beiog)e went by bus to New
York wbel'e they visited Niagara
Falls and attended the Morman
Pageant at Mayra, N. v. This
is an open a1r event that lasts
five days each year. The aJght
they attended there were :iOOO in

-onta.

l'lmlb•"'

s.

PH. 993-2143

Pomon11

WMPO

·j

INFORMAnON
NEWS
presents
LOCAL REPORJS
DAILY .

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7:50 . A.M.
12 NOON

3 P.M.

AND .

&gt;·

4:30 P.M.
l&lt;eeping

Meig~

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Gallic and

Mason Area
lnfor.med 'As

Well As
Enterloined
NOTH11"1' 11"1 HERE 'CEPT

JJ.lck Promtt spent a week with
c~liWell all!~ Rick
allf1filf Seegle also'ltieooed 1he .
V8 Foot Back 2 dr, IW'dtop••
Blue water reunion in Lexington,
Jog
Mich.
Ne" Pontiac trade-In
If you're jogging-and Just
BW Cornell who Is stationed
original owner. I apd. lralll.l about everybodY IS tbese daya
Show• belt of care.
-bere'a a speclal comfort Up
with the Ar!ny at ChicagO, DL,
for you from tract stan. UDspent a week with his family.
MAllY MORE
George and sarah l.oJJisWorth
der your joggln~a &amp;lid Inaide your ane
. llimbly
and twin daughters, Denise and

'1l-IAT PILE O' STRAW ANO

A BlJ'iOLE 0' RAGG lHAT ·-·
~· LIZARDsH ...

iHAT~. ,~'!I

in Comfort'

BUICK

GMC

Ph. 992-2143

L-.!:::::.l:.:o~h::l•~-~ -

cuse and Sylvia B,yera ot Middleport attenled the Byen reunion
at Dawes Aubarboretum, near
Newark, Ohio.
Faye and Rober! Proffitt attended the 71at 1Mual bean din-

event.
Sharon 11lelss, student nurse
at White Cross MethodlltRospltal, Columbus, spent a week end
with her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Theiss, Donna, David and

·

Kenneth, Jr •

Recent euesta of Mr. aoo Mrs.

Blythe Theiss were 1helr dau8h·
ters, Arline, an:t Mr. lid Mrs.

(Avice) Vernonlfarrlaooandchll·
dren, Shetry and Gene, ol eo.
lumbuo.
Capt. and Mrs. Clll!ord Johnson of Sewickley, Pa., vtalted,f~Ul

hls brotherandsillter-tn-lalr.:Mr.

by Kate Osann

dust auper-absorbent baby
powder. The powc!er wW keep
;your clotblng ·ftom aliCklnl
and your feet from blll'lllllg.

Lockup
your car

ner at Limerick, Ohio, which Ia
held In honor of all old veterana
ol the ClvU Wai. Two veterans
were present among the epproxl ..
mately 500 who attended the

4

TRU CK~

dof·
a kid.

People are usually surprised to lind out
how many criminals started liS' teen-aged
car thieves. But that doesn't seem to
stop them from leaving their f!8l'S unlocked
and the keys in them.
·
Last year 76% of stolen cars were left
unlocked; nearly baH also had ignition
keys in them! Even a kid can steal-a
car with a key in lt. Maybe t~u!t' s why
more than half the car thieves in this
country are under 18.
,
To steal your ell' and start a life of ·

crime, young car 'thie~s ~eed your help.
·Don't give it to them. Lock your C~~r.
Take y~ur keys. '
k

'·.

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TUO

attanclance.

.•,

CONTAa
, FAYE lWI.EY
Ml.tl..ort,O• .

WWARJ&gt;1lfl;'

SALES AND SERVICE

mateo. Phone 11112 - . Goelleln Ready • IIU Co., Middle.
part, Ohio.
• • lie

BUDGET PIUCB fatullate 411
our lldrd floor budpt abop.
Baler P'amllure. N!ddJeport,
Oblo.
f D tie

T~­
CAP6!JLG

EXPERIENCED

EYINRUDE

Pomeroy Home &amp; IWIOI

Diane, of Greealleld spentSunlay
and Monday with his cousin, EaNOTICI Ofl AI'POtNTMIINT
ther West.
CU. No. laB
lit... .. .leiiMI AlfNtl ....... a..
Ray and Laura Byera, local,
Ralph and Mary RadcUll ol SyraNotlee !I; benll, Ill•• tbat LeoDA

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.1.

-GUARANTEED-.

LEGAL NOTICE

....,_....

The Dally Sentinel, Pomeroy.
N-«p

I;XPEilT

C.all Pomeroy

...

MACHINE: Tbls aewlng machine designed espe.
Real Estate For Sale
dally to meet an your sewO'BRIEN lr CROW
Ing requlremenla for many
REALTY
COMPANY
years. Makes beautiful dePOMEROY
2
atory frame, 3
signs. Sews on bultonl, etc.
bedrool!l8,
bath,
basemen~
P.ay only fl5.98. or monthly
large
carport,
2
lots.
$1.250.011.
pa ymenu. Call !192-3218 and
nsk for free demonstnltlon. POMEROY - 2 atory !ramO, 2
apartments, 3 room house,
~
large cement block praee,
extra
Iota. fG,OIIO.OII.
SPI!lCIAL STEREO, 1161 l!lariJ
STORYS
RUN - 3S &amp;&lt;n!ll, on
Aunerican stereo radio ...,..
blacktop
road, I room bouaet
blnaU111. Beautiful oolld 3 outbuildings, needo lots or
11111t with 4 apeed ehqer.
repair. $1100.011.
Pay balanee of t91.1J or um.
HENRY a.ELAND
thly paymenll of •• Allo
Office - llfllflhalt
have repcm111ed stereo In
Res. - • • •
walnut cabinet, f apeaJrer
9-84lc
oound IJIID, f apeed .. dual
YOiume c:onlrol. Balanee tf•
"U1 or moothly pa)llltllll
...
of fli. Phone mma. t.1-«e

KENNEBEC Potatoes, Charles
HIUon, Portland.
8-Jf.Jitc

.

6LEVA~LII&lt;'e

~Jl6E' OO~fE

USED BEATING equipmeDI,
-.
one gas Door funlaee, 80,0011
Buslnea Services
BTU, fiiO; one gu upllo fur·
naee 110,000 BTU, fl&amp;; f gu CJGAI!Im'E vending n.aeldta '
clrc:ulatlng haatera willl faD,
and aavfee. ABC Enleijilxs,
fliO and up; one coal llobr
M111011, W. Va. Phone malll.
wilb conlroll f/5; ooe oU
CODVOI'Ilon l1urnto- ,f&amp;O; used
coal furnacea, blowers. Amlns•. ~rence
old Brothera, Pomeroy. phone AUTOMOBILE lbllmrmdll&lt;&gt;'""""· bee!!
11112 Zt48.
N-Ile
eaneeDed? Loot ,.ur operator's lkense? can 1191-2988.
COUNTRY HOME, 1I89eD n1011111
I II lfe
bath, lurnlabod, one acre Jot,
alwnlnum skiing, olorm wtndoiVI and doorl, complete D8W
floor mvetlug. Good abape.
Only If Maeole4 hi bu1lni
By EIJNA KNOPP
contaet. Ida M. Ounl, Bol: 1M,
Edith Grimm aoo daughters,
Poriland, Ohio.
f.Uip Patty Tarr and children, Shawn
and Beth Ann ol Ceyahoga Falls,

~E:wJNG

AKC Golden Retriever puppies,
524 Ash St., Mlddleport. fD.
5443.
e#-lk

.

TWO END TAB! ES, one colfee
table, 'llle bU rug. an 111

EARLY AMERICAN stereo,
110 ACRE farm, good koam
lovely maple flnlah, with Inbouse, large bam, 40 ......
stant on radio, AM &amp; FM, 4tiOable, balance pasture and
speed changer, dual volume
timber. One mUe off Ul, MJ..
oontrol. Balance of $111.02, or
neravUie, Ohio. P~ 1112monlltly payments of ...
1633.
Mite
Phone lm-3218.
M«c

POODLE PUPPIES, AKC Toy
mlnlature. m and up. Stud
aervlc:e and grooming. Phooe
11112-5443.
II S tie

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All

Business Services

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WHIRLPOOL WASHER li dryer, coppertone, UNci S -a.,

PI7J'ATOES, WATERMELONS, MII&gt;JlLEPORT RT. I - 51
ANTIQUES. furniture, dlahes.
Pets For Sale
Acres, large 8 room house. .ll!o
phone M:J.2254 a.._ Prof.
D&amp;lad. WI foUl dar ol 8ql nb ,
~Oaneous, Mrs. Boward llCIINAUZERS, &lt;lodters, Jloocl.
hatba, front and hack porches,
!Itt, Porlland.
WHfe
Cod!, 8011 W. Main St., Pome- lea and WeaUes 'White Scol•• H. O'HIIN
good basement, farm pond,
p....... Jlldtt ., ..... Ceullly
roy.
1-:25-Uc
tleo', also breedln&amp; atodr:.
drllled well and minerals.
NJ •»J .a 3k:
Barkaroo Kennels, Coolville, 19611 STEREO, lovely walnul
$13,0011.00.
conaole with AM and FM raOIIDINANCI MO. fP..4I
0. 45721.
..~
Helo Wanted
dio, automatk floating tum HELEN and VIRGU. TEAFOIID
All oni1Danet to P80BIBIT PAJI&amp;.
CAR HOPS, apply In penon at
INC oN &amp;A8'I' smc or lOUTH
table. Take over payments of .\SSOCIATES
t'OURTH ITiliZT Ul WW LDf·
Q'ow's Steak House, PmneSYRACUSE
For Sale
OOLN fmlB&amp;T AND HIGH 8CBOOL.
fli.OII per pmth or pay bal•
It ordalrled .,. u.. Coulldl ol
rey,
a...uc GENTLE MARE PONY and ance due, f!01.21. TbiB oet
lbe VDJan of lllddJioport. • foDOft:
SR. J. Ttu.t; Parkin~ wQ1 be ,_..
roll, cheap, Vernon Weber,
sold much hlgber. Try It In
•·'btled Oil u. IE-' .... ol. l'oartll
FUlL TIME and part Orne
llulland. Pbone 74U825.
BusliiiiQ Services
Street from UDeola itnet t;o 1M
your home, Call I9Z 28!8.
Hlab kbool &amp;mnu.n.
work. Phone 9112-11943. ~tp
IHO-ete
M«e RADIO AND TV REPAIR, house
S.O. D. Wbonv Ylolat. 1b111 Ckealls, antenna aaJe and ID- dinaace aJW1 btl flDe4 DR mon tbUo
MALE OR FEMALE, full ar IT'S terrific the way we're sell- 10 PAYMENTS ol fli or fit
lllallalion. Jolm Harrison, 701
S.C. DL Tbil 0~ II W t1M1
part time night or day, apply
llulUl. . .uan u4 ~ ol t;be
Ing Blue Lustre lot cleanlng
cash. Must sen 1161 sewing
Broadway St., Middleport, 1U1deat.
at tbli VW... of ~
In person BBF, AtheM, Ohio.
rugs and upholltery. Rent
machine. Fully equipped to
phone 911J.25ZZ.
7-14-Uc port. ..........eDC:J' . , . . ~
ltl llmDIGLI.Wi .......
9-8-lltc
electrk shampooer $1. Baker
zig zag, make huttCIIholeo,
lee. IV. nu. C:WlDUce 4&amp;11 .._
aad ~ Ill fo!'H frOia ........
Furniture.
9-Hte
sew on bultona, etc. J IDOIIIIII CURTlS9 bnedlnc aa ;lee cf .n.et
Aqul D. ua.
21 dlfl.....,t breeda, ea!Ue lfr..
.,_.. tbe llrd 4I;J' ot AUfUd :W.
Male Help Wanted
old. Call m.D.
M«e
.IOIIN W. DULl
DOUBLE YOUR Income. Sales- BRACE younelf for a tlril
• fJf f breeds of pt bucb,
Pnai~IM ., Ceuncll
the lint Orne you use Blue TEMCO NATURAL GAS t'lrcu..... .,.._, Clerll
111811, lull or part time In your
by eaDIDg Parker M42M, Po- Att.th
II) .JI It
Lustre.
Rent
electric
shamarea. Contact business a n d
latlng heater. wan thermolltat,
meroy or
Coolville.
pooer,
Baker Furniture.
professional people. If y o u
85,0011 BTU. Call IMH47l.
~
U«c
have previous selling or inM«e
tangible experience, this is an
C. C. BRADFOIID
tmusual money making oppor- ANTIQUES, cut glass, furnl.. SIX ROOM bouse, bath, fin.
AUCI'IONEI!R
ture, phone 11112-2747. tutc
tunity for you, mo weekly
Caa;hl Sonlee
ished or unlumlshed, In SJI'&amp;guarantee to man meeting oor
cuse, on Rl. 124 out of ldsh
requin!menis. Write lmmedl· CORNER END table, mahotl·
Crill Ill. . . .
water. Lovely view ol river..
any,
e•eellenl
condition.
p
• • Oldt
ately to Manager. Drawer 146,
Phcme 11112 ll565.
J.Wtc
Phone
moo
after
7
p.m.
Painesville, Ohio 1411'17.
I 1 tie
JU!p NINE ROOM house, one and 1
9-8-31p
llall bath, desirable Joeal!cm Am CONDITIONING Refriger10 x 7ll Sears traDer awning,
ation service. Jacl:'a RefrlgIn
Middleport. Near schools.
For Sale or Trade
mow loading kll. $140. Brand
enUan, New Raven. bone
Call 19U498.
Mllp
U81 MUSTANG, f.eyllnder, S.
new. Phone 11112-21101 or 1112IIIIUI79.
f I tie
apeed, 1966 Obevrolet Caprice,
241'7.
~tc
SIX
KNIFE
oom
chopper
"-110;
automatic, pow.,. lleerlng and
piclrup hay baler f400. Phone READY • MIX ClCIIIOfela dell•brllrll, flrlanclng avallable, FIVE ROOM hoDJe, ,bath, 1J
1Hf.278S.
f.f.Wp
ered riPt to your pro,lecl.
pboDe 119U547 after 5 pbooe
a&lt;res. Sell on land contract.
1'111 and UIJ, , . . eatl~741.
7-U-Ih
HelpWanhld
Write Box 668C. In care of

For Rent

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IN.OIIMTICMI

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ON '!'OUR. KHEES,
VARLETS"~
JN 'THE PRfsENCE.

0' RQ'(,q,L'T'f·"

HAMEL'i

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&gt;'
Sentinel, Pome['OJI·Middleport, 0., Morday, Sept. 9, 1988

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. ,;~: . LITT-LE '·HOMEWORK' Watchittg. Wal1t Ads Bring Top::~rade ResultS\
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WAift' AD

t 11.11111, DIY· __,.,. Pvltllcatloltt
. . . . liM

c.-.1 ........

a.-.

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Pomeroy

&amp; Cernct~Mtt

' Will IN eca .. lill ...... I ...... fw
O.y ., f'VItltcallltft
R-\IILATtOWI

.

Motor Co.

Tht PulttiiMr ,...,.., tM rttflt

te _...

N Nfolct ' " ' . . . . . . . . . .
Will Mt

...... ..... n. ,........,
" .o....
e n•"
t.r IHN
11'1 ........

thin - .

I:ATII
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• • Want Aid ..rYica

wm .... ,..."'"

1 ..... ..,

Mlf1lr.u... Cha,..

7k:

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11 ...... ,.,. ..,.. fliii'H ........

11 cellfll ,er Wlnl llx HftMC1jlfiW
IWMrttMt&amp;.
U .... lent Dlll...nt .. ...~ M1
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.,.. ,., . ....., ........._. ...
. . ,.Ill •""'" 11 ... ,..

C:A•D OP TMANitl

&amp;

OIITUA.Y

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aLIND ADI
._......_, Uc CM,.. ,., .WV.r-

~-. O"ICI HOU•I
t~•

a.M. to t:CM J.M. Dtlty

tt• •·• ..

tu,._,

11:M . . . . . . .

Notice
NO TRESPASSING or

R.

lruntlni

on my properly. Addie
Barton, Rl. I, Racine, Ohio.

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67 CHEV. BEL AJR .•••..•••.••••.....••$2395
Less than 16,000 miles by local owner. VB engine, Powerglide trans., radio, ivory over blue finish. Whitewall tires
stlow little wear. f tioor.
66 CHEVELLE . • . •.••..••••.. , , , , •••• •$1995
4 door HT, local (lWner, low mileage car, beige finish
with matching interior, w-s-w, like new, V8, auto. trans.,
P. s. , radio and heater.

1965 GMC PICKUP . .................... ,$1195
8 1-'t. Fleetside, good tires, 6 cyl. engine. Priced below
. market price,

Pomeroy M,ofor Co.
OPEN EVES. 1:00 P.M.
'POMEROY, Ot!IO

-~---------·~----~-~.~"!.-111111
For Rent

P'OR TRADE-Cash fir an- TRAILER SPACE, ready to
book up, private, plenty ol
tiques. William Hamm, Midroom for clllldren 1o play.
dleport.
~-~
Phone 992-3904.
1-14-lfc
WILL DO sewing at home ...
zippers, pockets, pegging, GOOD rent In the ""untry, st.
hemming, alterations, etc. rooms and bath, three bedMrs. Freddie Thabet, Mason,
I'OODJS, large basement, play
Phone 773-5651.
4-311-tfc room and garage, has oU
heat and is lnsulated, drilled
HAPPY KOUR, Shenang Springs well and spring bouse, large
Nlto Club, 5 1o 6 p.m. MoDgarden and 50 aeres Of feDdQ thru Friday. Ladles night
cod pasture for a pony ar cow
..ery Friday.
U.tlc
if desired, school bus slops
at the door. Located hi a
NOW OPEN from 10 A.M. lo 10 quiet, peaceful valley a few
P.M. the S&amp;W Drive In on minutes drive from Racine.
the by-paBS Rl. 7. Soft lee Call Esther West, IMt-28111.
&lt;n!am. good food, specials oo
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Monday and Thursday.
~ FURNISHED GARAGE apart.
ment on IJnooln mn. Utllltleo
REMINDER to Racine res~
paid; adults ooly. Phone 11111dents. Water bills to be paid
SIIIII.
&amp;.Jt.lle
by the 15th of each month at
Racine Department Stoce. A!'" THREE ROOM furnlabod apart.
plleations for water taps. also
ment, pbone 8!1W980. 8-25-lfc
water deposits must contact
VUJage Clerk, Mae Cleland.
'I'RAILER LOTS. Bob'a MobBe
lf3.31c
Court, Syracuse, Ohio .., Stale
Ill. 124, Phone 99HIIII.
WILL DO PAINTING, plwnbing,
a.!l..tfc.
oarpenter and electric work
by cOntract or by boor. Phone
Cbeahire 367-7652.
9-8-12lp Business Opportunity
EXTRA INCOME OPPORTUN'·!ARD SALE. ll'ousehold and
ITY. ReUable man or woman,
no
selling, refill and collect
mise.. Satnnlay, Sept. 14, 144
South Pearl St., Middleport, from new 1ype eoin operale4
dispensers in yoUr area. BeOhio.
11-Mtc
oome our dlalributor. Must
have car, references, $650 to
Lost and Feund
'1950 cash Investment, securFOUND. charm bracelet near ed by equipment and InvenRizer 011 Co.. in Pomeroy.
tory. Ten hours weekly can
Phone 992-2'19'1.
~
net excellent income. For
personal Interview, write, InWanted To Buy
cluding phone number, to CalSENG. diggers, ginseng $12 lb., Ton Supply Company, Inc.,
llll8ke root $150 lb., Col. Seal 8011 Bryan Ave., Lexington,
P,25 lb. Bill Baney, Reeds- Kentuclcy IOMI.
U«p
ville.
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For Sale
SOUD STATE stereo, 18111
walnut eonsole model, radio
equipped, with 4-speecl lliJ!o.
matlc changer, 4-speaker
sound system. Pay ODiy
177.33, ar monthly paymenla.
Call 9112.'1218.
JUte

ForSIIe

also Early American IMng
room l!lllte. can t9UISI
5 p.m.
. N4le

an.

IIOOd COIIdllton,

price able, jiiJone 9IIJ 31311. 8+atp

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Wheel Allgnlflenl

614-992·2181

5.55

Dorcas

HOBSTETTER
·REALTY·

GEO. RVBSJEijER,BROKER
POMEROY - 2 f1oora 30 x 90,
stone ""notructlon, e•cellent
far atorage. f2500.011
MIDDLEPORT - Business ol
your own, now operallng. Opportunlly for couple. f20,0011.

Barbara and Tom Brutvan and ·
daughter, J,emiter, of Chagrin
Falls visited the past week with
Harry Wolfe, Otis Knopps, the Ernest Grimms and the the D l c k
Sterrett lamii.Y of Galllpolls.
Guests o1 Charles and Bonnie
Thelss were Wilmer and Louise
Dailey of Ocla, F1a., and Jesse
and Joy Perkens and son, Rick
arx1 family of Beaver Falls, Pa.

Visiting recently with Bill aoo
Joyce Hoback and tami1y were
their daughters, Janice of Washington, D. C., and Nancy, F1orida.
Mr. and Mrs. Omar Dalley
~nt a week in East Liverpoo]
on business and vlsltedwiththelr
children, Lawrence Bailey and
family, Fay Czech and lamii.Y
and Thelma MDier and family.
Mrs. Alice Beegle of Duluth,
Minn, Is spending a co~.ple ot
weeks with her grandsons, Randy
and Jerr Wendorf, while their
mother, June, is wcationtngwlth
her lather, Clptaln Harold Beegle
on the Great Lakes.

Jlm_IJI! ..rtevJI)e, . Jl!lo ls stationed at Clnnon Air Force Bose
in New Mexico as a medical tech-nictan. and his family spent a
month with his mother, Naomi

Neville.

Guests of ~ and Charley
Beegle were Am s brother, John

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FI1IINISHED and unlumltboll
•Jlll tmaJta. Close 1o odloal. 14 FT. SKIF1', U moklr, oan,
Pltolle • 5134,
JI.IJ.tl&amp;!
phone MHZ71
f.4.tk
TRAILER SPACE, aU ntUJ!!eo 42 INCH SIMPLEX Ironer, good
avaUable. lnquJre l.5e Mulber·
as new, f:!O, phone lliU30'7.
ry after 3 or 5 p.m. Write P.
J.Wie
0 . Bo• 425 Pomeroy. 5-»tfc
USED PIANOS, (ll)fl studio uprlgbt, one large regular uprlgbt, RuUand Funtltunl Co.
Pbone 7u.t211.
tUtp

CARRIR

·wANDD
IN MIDDliPOII'.

PHONE 992-2094

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lh7 Booth of Jllddleport, Oblo, hM
..... dvlp &amp;PPOtDieil Alleillar7 Ad·
ndlliltntrbt of 0. w.tate of IUIIel
Alfnd Bootb. deeeued , latl of ...
uwba Coullt7, w.n Vlri1Dla.
CNdJtan ~ Z'Wf,lllre4 1o file Glelr
cla&amp;Ju wt.U!. 1&amp;14 ~ wttblli

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IIEWING

MACIIINES, ftJIIIIr

oenkl!, Ill makel. WY S.
:liM. 'l'lle l'abdC Shop, ·l'omeray. Aathor11ed lllupr Saleo
lnd Ser*e. We 8barpeft

Sclllora.

Nl4c

MALONEi
!.W-A

~I&gt;eVEUJf,IIEIJI"

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OC!fANF~

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...,..., S.Wiltl

LI'L ABNER

'68's Red!JCad

69 MODELS

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AVAilABLE
SOON

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'P&amp;wie)_•.• .

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From tho Largoo! Truclt or
Bulllb18J' Radiator 'I'D-- ·Till
&amp;nallest Heater Core.

Schwarztl
Marfnt

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BLAETTNARS

Hocki!llport, Ohio ·

Levison and wile, of PIUsiJur81&gt;,
PHONE 667-3370
and her sister, idta Roth, PIU•
burgh, who spent two weeks visiting with the Beestes and her and Mrs. Earnest Johnaan, ..,.
niece, Janice Deem, and lamib' route home from a tour ot the ·
at Portland.
weot Where they vlst!edwlttith\llr
Chuck Wagner, who 1a with the daughter, Patcy Smith, and tamu. s. ArlnY and who wiU be sta- Uy Ill Oklahoma.
tioned In Hawaii, vioited wilh
Dale and Bennie Johnaon and
Tommy aoo Pam Theiss.
Uncle Otto Bradford Ia back In chlldnn of JJ•bon, 0., vi ailed
Mr. and Mra. ,
the v. A. HOIIIItalla ClnclMIU. with his
Earnest
Johneon, and hta alater, 1
He has had two dll!erent heart
pacers since he has been there Bernice LevaHey, and
route to their new home at Loog
but is said to be In satisfactory
Beach,
cant
condition. Cards can be sent to
Edna and Otis ~ attanded 1
him in care of the hospital.
the Knopp reunion at Cedar Lekas •
Recent vlsltorsofMr. and Mrs.
near Ripley, W. VL, a recent
Robert Prollltt were Mi. a n d
Bunda1.
Mrs. Russall Harrison and IUIMrs. Garnet (Smllh) Enlne of
ily of Xenia, end Mr. and M r s.
Glenn Madox and children, Da'rid Florida Is Ylaltlng ber brother,
Wayne Hoback. She eatertalned
and Mark, Clevelai'MI.
with a birthday dinner In hlo
Naoml Neville enjoyed a va~
honor. Those present were his
tlon with her claughterandson-l~&gt;o
law, Janet and Arthur Warner, brother, Ross Hoback, of Galli·
polio, Floyd Roback of Conneaut, 1
arxl children. 'Ibey traveled by
camper and visited at Myrtle hla sister, (Jooephlne) Mr. and
Smith, Dl&gt;le and lliiY
Beach,
c., st. Peteraburlaud Mrs. Paul
Smilh,
Marineland in Florida and returnains.
Beckie and Rickie Promtt and
Billie Beiog)e went by bus to New
York wbel'e they visited Niagara
Falls and attended the Morman
Pageant at Mayra, N. v. This
is an open a1r event that lasts
five days each year. The aJght
they attended there were :iOOO in

-onta.

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PH. 993-2143

Pomon11

WMPO

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INFORMAnON
NEWS
presents
LOCAL REPORJS
DAILY .

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7:50 . A.M.
12 NOON

3 P.M.

AND .

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4:30 P.M.
l&lt;eeping

Meig~

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Gallic and

Mason Area
lnfor.med 'As

Well As
Enterloined
NOTH11"1' 11"1 HERE 'CEPT

JJ.lck Promtt spent a week with
c~liWell all!~ Rick
allf1filf Seegle also'ltieooed 1he .
V8 Foot Back 2 dr, IW'dtop••
Blue water reunion in Lexington,
Jog
Mich.
Ne" Pontiac trade-In
If you're jogging-and Just
BW Cornell who Is stationed
original owner. I apd. lralll.l about everybodY IS tbese daya
Show• belt of care.
-bere'a a speclal comfort Up
with the Ar!ny at ChicagO, DL,
for you from tract stan. UDspent a week with his family.
MAllY MORE
George and sarah l.oJJisWorth
der your joggln~a &amp;lid Inaide your ane
. llimbly
and twin daughters, Denise and

'1l-IAT PILE O' STRAW ANO

A BlJ'iOLE 0' RAGG lHAT ·-·
~· LIZARDsH ...

iHAT~. ,~'!I

in Comfort'

BUICK

GMC

Ph. 992-2143

L-.!:::::.l:.:o~h::l•~-~ -

cuse and Sylvia B,yera ot Middleport attenled the Byen reunion
at Dawes Aubarboretum, near
Newark, Ohio.
Faye and Rober! Proffitt attended the 71at 1Mual bean din-

event.
Sharon 11lelss, student nurse
at White Cross MethodlltRospltal, Columbus, spent a week end
with her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Theiss, Donna, David and

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Kenneth, Jr •

Recent euesta of Mr. aoo Mrs.

Blythe Theiss were 1helr dau8h·
ters, Arline, an:t Mr. lid Mrs.

(Avice) Vernonlfarrlaooandchll·
dren, Shetry and Gene, ol eo.
lumbuo.
Capt. and Mrs. Clll!ord Johnson of Sewickley, Pa., vtalted,f~Ul

hls brotherandsillter-tn-lalr.:Mr.

by Kate Osann

dust auper-absorbent baby
powder. The powc!er wW keep
;your clotblng ·ftom aliCklnl
and your feet from blll'lllllg.

Lockup
your car

ner at Limerick, Ohio, which Ia
held In honor of all old veterana
ol the ClvU Wai. Two veterans
were present among the epproxl ..
mately 500 who attended the

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dof·
a kid.

People are usually surprised to lind out
how many criminals started liS' teen-aged
car thieves. But that doesn't seem to
stop them from leaving their f!8l'S unlocked
and the keys in them.
·
Last year 76% of stolen cars were left
unlocked; nearly baH also had ignition
keys in them! Even a kid can steal-a
car with a key in lt. Maybe t~u!t' s why
more than half the car thieves in this
country are under 18.
,
To steal your ell' and start a life of ·

crime, young car 'thie~s ~eed your help.
·Don't give it to them. Lock your C~~r.
Take y~ur keys. '
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attanclance.

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CONTAa
, FAYE lWI.EY
Ml.tl..ort,O• .

WWARJ&gt;1lfl;'

SALES AND SERVICE

mateo. Phone 11112 - . Goelleln Ready • IIU Co., Middle.
part, Ohio.
• • lie

BUDGET PIUCB fatullate 411
our lldrd floor budpt abop.
Baler P'amllure. N!ddJeport,
Oblo.
f D tie

T~­
CAP6!JLG

EXPERIENCED

EYINRUDE

Pomeroy Home &amp; IWIOI

Diane, of Greealleld spentSunlay
and Monday with his cousin, EaNOTICI Ofl AI'POtNTMIINT
ther West.
CU. No. laB
lit... .. .leiiMI AlfNtl ....... a..
Ray and Laura Byera, local,
Ralph and Mary RadcUll ol SyraNotlee !I; benll, Ill•• tbat LeoDA

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-GUARANTEED-.

LEGAL NOTICE

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The Dally Sentinel, Pomeroy.
N-«p

I;XPEilT

C.all Pomeroy

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MACHINE: Tbls aewlng machine designed espe.
Real Estate For Sale
dally to meet an your sewO'BRIEN lr CROW
Ing requlremenla for many
REALTY
COMPANY
years. Makes beautiful dePOMEROY
2
atory frame, 3
signs. Sews on bultonl, etc.
bedrool!l8,
bath,
basemen~
P.ay only fl5.98. or monthly
large
carport,
2
lots.
$1.250.011.
pa ymenu. Call !192-3218 and
nsk for free demonstnltlon. POMEROY - 2 atory !ramO, 2
apartments, 3 room house,
~
large cement block praee,
extra
Iota. fG,OIIO.OII.
SPI!lCIAL STEREO, 1161 l!lariJ
STORYS
RUN - 3S &amp;&lt;n!ll, on
Aunerican stereo radio ...,..
blacktop
road, I room bouaet
blnaU111. Beautiful oolld 3 outbuildings, needo lots or
11111t with 4 apeed ehqer.
repair. $1100.011.
Pay balanee of t91.1J or um.
HENRY a.ELAND
thly paymenll of •• Allo
Office - llfllflhalt
have repcm111ed stereo In
Res. - • • •
walnut cabinet, f apeaJrer
9-84lc
oound IJIID, f apeed .. dual
YOiume c:onlrol. Balanee tf•
"U1 or moothly pa)llltllll
...
of fli. Phone mma. t.1-«e

KENNEBEC Potatoes, Charles
HIUon, Portland.
8-Jf.Jitc

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6LEVA~LII&lt;'e

~Jl6E' OO~fE

USED BEATING equipmeDI,
-.
one gas Door funlaee, 80,0011
Buslnea Services
BTU, fiiO; one gu upllo fur·
naee 110,000 BTU, fl&amp;; f gu CJGAI!Im'E vending n.aeldta '
clrc:ulatlng haatera willl faD,
and aavfee. ABC Enleijilxs,
fliO and up; one coal llobr
M111011, W. Va. Phone malll.
wilb conlroll f/5; ooe oU
CODVOI'Ilon l1urnto- ,f&amp;O; used
coal furnacea, blowers. Amlns•. ~rence
old Brothera, Pomeroy. phone AUTOMOBILE lbllmrmdll&lt;&gt;'""""· bee!!
11112 Zt48.
N-Ile
eaneeDed? Loot ,.ur operator's lkense? can 1191-2988.
COUNTRY HOME, 1I89eD n1011111
I II lfe
bath, lurnlabod, one acre Jot,
alwnlnum skiing, olorm wtndoiVI and doorl, complete D8W
floor mvetlug. Good abape.
Only If Maeole4 hi bu1lni
By EIJNA KNOPP
contaet. Ida M. Ounl, Bol: 1M,
Edith Grimm aoo daughters,
Poriland, Ohio.
f.Uip Patty Tarr and children, Shawn
and Beth Ann ol Ceyahoga Falls,

~E:wJNG

AKC Golden Retriever puppies,
524 Ash St., Mlddleport. fD.
5443.
e#-lk

.

TWO END TAB! ES, one colfee
table, 'llle bU rug. an 111

EARLY AMERICAN stereo,
110 ACRE farm, good koam
lovely maple flnlah, with Inbouse, large bam, 40 ......
stant on radio, AM &amp; FM, 4tiOable, balance pasture and
speed changer, dual volume
timber. One mUe off Ul, MJ..
oontrol. Balance of $111.02, or
neravUie, Ohio. P~ 1112monlltly payments of ...
1633.
Mite
Phone lm-3218.
M«c

POODLE PUPPIES, AKC Toy
mlnlature. m and up. Stud
aervlc:e and grooming. Phooe
11112-5443.
II S tie

.... 0....,.,_,,..

.......

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All

Business Services

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WHIRLPOOL WASHER li dryer, coppertone, UNci S -a.,

PI7J'ATOES, WATERMELONS, MII&gt;JlLEPORT RT. I - 51
ANTIQUES. furniture, dlahes.
Pets For Sale
Acres, large 8 room house. .ll!o
phone M:J.2254 a.._ Prof.
D&amp;lad. WI foUl dar ol 8ql nb ,
~Oaneous, Mrs. Boward llCIINAUZERS, &lt;lodters, Jloocl.
hatba, front and hack porches,
!Itt, Porlland.
WHfe
Cod!, 8011 W. Main St., Pome- lea and WeaUes 'White Scol•• H. O'HIIN
good basement, farm pond,
p....... Jlldtt ., ..... Ceullly
roy.
1-:25-Uc
tleo', also breedln&amp; atodr:.
drllled well and minerals.
NJ •»J .a 3k:
Barkaroo Kennels, Coolville, 19611 STEREO, lovely walnul
$13,0011.00.
conaole with AM and FM raOIIDINANCI MO. fP..4I
0. 45721.
..~
Helo Wanted
dio, automatk floating tum HELEN and VIRGU. TEAFOIID
All oni1Danet to P80BIBIT PAJI&amp;.
CAR HOPS, apply In penon at
INC oN &amp;A8'I' smc or lOUTH
table. Take over payments of .\SSOCIATES
t'OURTH ITiliZT Ul WW LDf·
Q'ow's Steak House, PmneSYRACUSE
For Sale
OOLN fmlB&amp;T AND HIGH 8CBOOL.
fli.OII per pmth or pay bal•
It ordalrled .,. u.. Coulldl ol
rey,
a...uc GENTLE MARE PONY and ance due, f!01.21. TbiB oet
lbe VDJan of lllddJioport. • foDOft:
SR. J. Ttu.t; Parkin~ wQ1 be ,_..
roll, cheap, Vernon Weber,
sold much hlgber. Try It In
•·'btled Oil u. IE-' .... ol. l'oartll
FUlL TIME and part Orne
llulland. Pbone 74U825.
BusliiiiQ Services
Street from UDeola itnet t;o 1M
your home, Call I9Z 28!8.
Hlab kbool &amp;mnu.n.
work. Phone 9112-11943. ~tp
IHO-ete
M«e RADIO AND TV REPAIR, house
S.O. D. Wbonv Ylolat. 1b111 Ckealls, antenna aaJe and ID- dinaace aJW1 btl flDe4 DR mon tbUo
MALE OR FEMALE, full ar IT'S terrific the way we're sell- 10 PAYMENTS ol fli or fit
lllallalion. Jolm Harrison, 701
S.C. DL Tbil 0~ II W t1M1
part time night or day, apply
llulUl. . .uan u4 ~ ol t;be
Ing Blue Lustre lot cleanlng
cash. Must sen 1161 sewing
Broadway St., Middleport, 1U1deat.
at tbli VW... of ~
In person BBF, AtheM, Ohio.
rugs and upholltery. Rent
machine. Fully equipped to
phone 911J.25ZZ.
7-14-Uc port. ..........eDC:J' . , . . ~
ltl llmDIGLI.Wi .......
9-8-lltc
electrk shampooer $1. Baker
zig zag, make huttCIIholeo,
lee. IV. nu. C:WlDUce 4&amp;11 .._
aad ~ Ill fo!'H frOia ........
Furniture.
9-Hte
sew on bultona, etc. J IDOIIIIII CURTlS9 bnedlnc aa ;lee cf .n.et
Aqul D. ua.
21 dlfl.....,t breeda, ea!Ue lfr..
.,_.. tbe llrd 4I;J' ot AUfUd :W.
Male Help Wanted
old. Call m.D.
M«e
.IOIIN W. DULl
DOUBLE YOUR Income. Sales- BRACE younelf for a tlril
• fJf f breeds of pt bucb,
Pnai~IM ., Ceuncll
the lint Orne you use Blue TEMCO NATURAL GAS t'lrcu..... .,.._, Clerll
111811, lull or part time In your
by eaDIDg Parker M42M, Po- Att.th
II) .JI It
Lustre.
Rent
electric
shamarea. Contact business a n d
latlng heater. wan thermolltat,
meroy or
Coolville.
pooer,
Baker Furniture.
professional people. If y o u
85,0011 BTU. Call IMH47l.
~
U«c
have previous selling or inM«e
tangible experience, this is an
C. C. BRADFOIID
tmusual money making oppor- ANTIQUES, cut glass, furnl.. SIX ROOM bouse, bath, fin.
AUCI'IONEI!R
ture, phone 11112-2747. tutc
tunity for you, mo weekly
Caa;hl Sonlee
ished or unlumlshed, In SJI'&amp;guarantee to man meeting oor
cuse, on Rl. 124 out of ldsh
requin!menis. Write lmmedl· CORNER END table, mahotl·
Crill Ill. . . .
water. Lovely view ol river..
any,
e•eellenl
condition.
p
• • Oldt
ately to Manager. Drawer 146,
Phcme 11112 ll565.
J.Wtc
Phone
moo
after
7
p.m.
Painesville, Ohio 1411'17.
I 1 tie
JU!p NINE ROOM house, one and 1
9-8-31p
llall bath, desirable Joeal!cm Am CONDITIONING Refriger10 x 7ll Sears traDer awning,
ation service. Jacl:'a RefrlgIn
Middleport. Near schools.
For Sale or Trade
mow loading kll. $140. Brand
enUan, New Raven. bone
Call 19U498.
Mllp
U81 MUSTANG, f.eyllnder, S.
new. Phone 11112-21101 or 1112IIIIUI79.
f I tie
apeed, 1966 Obevrolet Caprice,
241'7.
~tc
SIX
KNIFE
oom
chopper
"-110;
automatic, pow.,. lleerlng and
piclrup hay baler f400. Phone READY • MIX ClCIIIOfela dell•brllrll, flrlanclng avallable, FIVE ROOM hoDJe, ,bath, 1J
1Hf.278S.
f.f.Wp
ered riPt to your pro,lecl.
pboDe 119U547 after 5 pbooe
a&lt;res. Sell on land contract.
1'111 and UIJ, , . . eatl~741.
7-U-Ih
HelpWanhld
Write Box 668C. In care of

For Rent

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IN.OIIMTICMI

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ON '!'OUR. KHEES,
VARLETS"~
JN 'THE PRfsENCE.

0' RQ'(,q,L'T'f·"

HAMEL'i

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Sig.rts ~btOO~bive M

· Tnph~ey·

Calls for
·:eWDay in America

'I,

PIIILADELi&gt;HJA

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NELSONV ILLE - The Trl • nounced that there will be openCount;y Technical Institute has ings available Cor tun - time
gotten t11.derwa,y with a record sludenta In Retail Mldmanageftrst year enrollment for such an ment., Accounting. Executive
lnstilution. Two hundred My stu- Secretary, lndu strial Engineerdents representing 10 technical l.ng Technology and Ceramics
areas, and practical nursing, Engineering Technology.
A large number or late enwere enrolled last Wednesday.
Abbreviated classes were held rollees In FlectronJes has enThursday and Friday with full abled the school to biro an addiUonal Instructor In Electronics,
claases conunenclng today .
OutOOor Recreation and Wild~ Roy Magie ol Logan, tills creatlife Technology drew the high- Ing new aludont openings In the
est raunber oc enrollees, witll electronic engineering tecbnlcal
Forestry and ComjW!r Pro- progra m. Students may enroll In
gramming close.
thesE! areas until September 16.
Although classes have n o w
Dietary O'ond Service) Tech·
atartod, Director John Ught an- oology Ia slated to begin the

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Five Injured In
Unusual Accident

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Five persons were iniured in
ap unu.sual accident at 6:45 p.m.
Saturda,y at the residence or JunIor McKinney, Sand IIIli Rd.,
seven miles east of Pt.. Pleas-

ant

•..

.l:'

...t:.

&lt; i/'•
r~

·:~··

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accused

the

ggod

F'med Saturday

DCIYfs.WIIU ....

........

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

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tD0o ITUIIllfl' DIICQUffT

to yield the

Two from Meigs

right-of~way.

MUGS THIATRE
TONIGHT AND TUESDAY
SEPT. 9 ·10
Elvll ProsiO)' _In
SPEEDWAY
(Teelldoolor)
Elvia Presley, N~~~cy S!noira
FEATUREI'TE: .
Down 11lo Hatch
, Iarkey~
Mou10 11ory of
II there aDoctorlntbellouae?
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.

ur.

ln Freshman Oa""
Two Metes cwn!lans are

1!\

Mrs.:N b"tt . ,

Dies . turda'y

'""'ll'i

!="
c::~= =~
.......,

~-"'"

Dlst llr
51 nko. .,......., n-'•·
-~
U.S. Navy deatroyers ott the
coaat or North Vietnam aank or
damlpd 58 Communist s14Jpl,y ·

or!._ rllfpillaedck to croasomberthe
linea.
we
ets are m
• of
Local 16, American Fodor-

~10, precoded her
'
·
..Funorlf.loeirvtet~ wUl bo held

With tho Rev. C. S. 'l1lon1p.oon ·_.,. aj!
ot!lclellng. Burial Willbe,lnUJne lndolUf.

oak cemetery.

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tr-•

wu:

On Center

Three Defendants

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day

,ru11

Frlend1 IIII.J' call at a.•'flmer. at 11!1.Jn. Tuiadoy "the Luthlr·
a1 home after 8 p .m. iii&lt;II.J', . an Clii&amp;h .111 Parkarlf&gt;urg.

.

era aald

M1dfioi4,~5Jiedo'l~!

=

flihl north .~ town:, ·~ IB ~;,h· ,n
Vletnomese, IJciiiUnu,lll~
.,
In throe Giber :~:•
·1114 north ol ·tho
29 ;l,

:Jiili.a

Vletpomeae !Cidlera • aii.r
·I'
C&lt;mmunlitll and C!!Piul'ou
et,
apollo am eo aakl. 'l1lo ao~r'""fi!*·.•
10111!1~ wore deaerlbed ·• • l¥i'o
·
.

1(lara Salser
!· ' · .

-

'Dies

,

•I ....

Sunday

r.

aald the unlversl\l' "Ulepll,y''
entered Into a contract With a
Clevelaod janltorlal firm to ser vice the now building.
The non - academic employes
clalmod a wortd111 agreement
entered Into about ooo yeer a10
forbids hiring of oulllde llrma.

·'· ·

laura Mae

life Y)~

The working agreemeat explres

Oct. 2.
Negotlatiooa were scboduled
toda.Y between union and school

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sEE ouR NEW sELECTioN:·oF . BLousEs
ARRANGED
. .
FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE
IN NEI DISPLAY SHELVING
q
.
,.
·:~

wothee llh • honlcy I

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'of:'

representatives.

,•

live grealoinndehll4rell.
Friendo IIII.J' &lt;Ill ot the~·
Funeral Home untU 1 p.m. Tliefol
day when tho body wUI bo ~
to llle church.

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Funeral serYiceo lor CJUt
Solser, 77, Raclno, wh~ diC
, ~ _In tho Meigs Geonral Hop;
pita!, wm be hold TuesdaY at 2
p.m. at tho carmel EIJB Cbur~.
with burial In the Drmel • IBry. She Wll I member or the'
church.
..
SUrvlvorsincludoherhlil11onil,
Ben; rour chUclren, Poul, or.~
boi&gt;;Y; lklbert, Parl&lt;er......,1 Wolfe, Racine, and Grace ,..,.,
in New Jersey; two !lltiBrl, Mr"Ada Warner, PomerQI', and Mra.
KaUe Curtis; Columbus; twobrclthoro, Edaen Roush, Bacilli; and
Stanley Roush, ~rlowfteld, Ml.oaourl; eipt grandchildren,, IIIII

Outsta~dlit S~IJ&amp;·
Jor
Fall
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Now You Know

~
~. Munlc~
andDooniy
Employes
Unloa, AFL-CIO,
who ~~~~&lt;«,~«"'''~~0&lt;&amp;l&amp;ll~&amp;&lt;~&lt;S3~3~~~~&amp;~~~~~~~~~~&amp;l~~~~"~~~~&amp;~~x;~~~~~~~~~~~~~

e.nttne

at y

The UnleatknowJ!cr¢urepoa·
aoaBIJII a bac-ls the panciaka
pygmea, a flab pwtng to an av·
eiage length o1 three eia111a ol
ID Inch. 11 Is native to tho Pllll·
lj)plne Islands.

Devoted To

TUESDAY. SEPTEMBER

POMEROY.MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

' VOL XXI NO. .97

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The lnteresll Of The Meiga-Mason Area
10~ 1968

&lt;P $-o "

cooler

Wedllesdoy.

Y&lt;,~O. ,~

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Progress Noted in

Special Qccqs10.
.
.Floral Print:
Shirt

Green-Eyed

,G

.FIVE CENTS
0

"1"'-.

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,_;::,;,:::,,,,~,.:~*'""'''''''''~::;:::::::::::=:::::::::::::::::s:-::,:,:,,x.;:::::::::&lt;&gt;;::*~,

Partial Shutdown
'News••• in Briefo --At Least--(JJ'"
Old
Plant
Seen
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. w ···}::&gt;'u.&lt;,:&lt;:Y..x..

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By Unltod.Preaalnlernotlonal
.
COLUMBUS - OIDO'S PUBUC SCHOOLS cpenod to "an ..,.
·.l '
JpreC«&lt;oniBd" number of children thla y~. State Sehoul Sq&gt;erlntendont Marlin
Eaaox told the state l!olrd or Education at Its
Monday m~ Euex eotlmaiBd the enrollment at more than 2.8
BY HOBERT HOEFIJCH
, mWioa in 848 dlatrlctL "11ds Ia an estimated 28.253 p~U increase
Prosreas in the coq&gt;eratlve venture by Middleport and Pom&amp;oftr last year.'' the superintendent told the board at lts monthb' roy to produce all or most ot the water for both towqs In three new
wells were reviewed Monday night in a replar meetlug or Mlddl&amp;01
board IIJPI'OVoiel grants totaling more than $5. 8 mUiloo port counen.
for vocational education prOjects in the state. including' Meigs
The towns have Joined ln drUllng lhree wens In Middleport ln
and Mad River :rwt'· locals, $143,850 each.
an attemrt to solve water department problems or both communiCHICAGO - WHO WAS RESPONSIBLE tor the violence durlow ties. The wells are In the uea or the munlclpal park.
Meetlog with council to discuss sewage and water problems
the Democratic National ConveiXion - television? demonstrators?
Richard Gress or the Middleport l!olrd of Public Aflllrs
was
pellce? all or them? A toderal grand Jury has been ordered to make
and Harold Chase, village maintenance s~erviaor.
a sweeping atudy or the queatioo and indict thoae It th!!N respon.
The three deep wells have John Zerkle wm look Into the
s!blo.
ChleC Jllige William J. Dftllll/.'!ll of the U.S. District Court been drilled In Middleport, With owlleatlon and will recommend
ordered the IDYeotlptlen ~- He gave the order shortly after · l'omero,y to ahere equall1 In the If any objection Is to be llled.
Clerk·Treasurer Gene Grate
Mayor Richard J. Daley, appeeriJII at hlo llrst newa conterenct! at cost of the wells, pumps and
which be answered questions a1xut the vlo1enee. charged the news other equipment. It Is hoped that read a letter rrom the o b I o
modla with presenUIII a "dlatorted" picture
what happened. the wells Will basically supply Bureau or Workmen's COmpen·
the water needs ot both Pomeroy sation Indicating tbat a paymett
•
of $4,800 hod been, made by the
SEOUL - THE RELEASE OF THE 82 USS Pueblo cr~n and Middleport.
H Jones WUllam H. Eberabocb, Jobn McNamara. Jolm ll
ABOVE IS A GROUP or the IIWil' local, StaiB and national
ll'om North Korea may be delayed due to disagreement over ·tho . If 10, then Middleport .wiD 00 bureau to Chief llirbert Gilkey
s;ires, ·Mus Bess Wetberhol4 Oliver Hartley, Curth C.
celebrities who met under the aged maple tree which has
.wordqe of tho prjipoaed U.S. apology ror the spy ship Incident, a longer have to continua purchal- of the pollee department ai comWUliams, Bob carsoo, Adj. Gea. Frink Hendersoa. Herbert
been
removed trun the yard of Jones Memorial Clinic in
Ing water from Pomeroy ala coal pensa11on rrom March 15, 1965
Seoul newspaper said foda.y,
.
R. Mooney, J. J. Saslavsky, aittllll lett to right: Jobn B.
Middleport. 'This photograph was taken on Decoration Day,
a n d UDIU February 12, 1987. Thla
The lndel)elldent Hankook Dbo, one or Sooth Kol'ea's national ot about $1,000 a
DowJUng, Tom W. Jones, Mrs. Joho
Doninc, Otdo Goftr·
Ma.Y 30, 1927, under the tree which held a noatalg!c oote lor
papera, said In a front page atudy the Ua!tod SlaiBa had agreed In Fomeroy wiD oot have to opor- payment was tor a parUal dlaanor,
Gov.
Vic
Donahey,
Mrs.
Tom
W,
Jonea,
U.S. sen. Fraak
Middleporters. Most of those pictured, 1C not aU, are deceas-.
North Korean waters ato 111 pllltt to aucb an exton- billt,y, Grate aald.
principle to admit the Pueblo' a. vlolaUon
H.
Jooes,
CDql. T. A. JeDdna.
D.
Willis,
Mrs.
Charles
ed. They ~•: standing left to righ4 Fred C. Hunker, James
eooncn dlseuaaed tho lnaurslve degree, and both communi ·
and apologize tor It
Harley, William L. Hysell, J, W. Fisher, FrodShlflo4 Olarles
ance coverage on foor taxicabs
Uea will beDef'lt.
Gress lndlcatod thet the Mid· operated In the comrnuaiiY- two
NEARLY ALL OF NEW. YORK ,CITY'S 900 public ochools were
disport
Board or Public Atralra by Delmar HaWley and two by
cloaed foda.y by IBachet s oo strike In dellonce of a court order, r&amp;has
mot
with the Fomeroy Board Norman Hawley. A check wiU
oultlow In an exiBndod summer vacation Cor tho c!t,y's 1.12-Willoo
or
Public
Af!alrs oo details of be made at once to lnaure that
(Codlnued on Pap 8)
the operal!ng agreement be· Uabllizy ooverage lo being PrD·
More than one Middleport restween the two town• oo U.. well vldod.
ident has been touthed by nosGrate was lnslruetsd to write
arrangement.- II Ia hoped that' a
talgia in recent days as one of
tell or the throe wells c~ be the Ohl&lt;&gt; Valley Health Services
Middleport's . oldest trees has
made yet lbla month.
Foundation with headquarters In been ln the protess of being
Middleport Council alao a. Athens or approval by the vii - removed from the former home
greed' to send vlllap employe, !age In the roundatlcm'a
to ol the late senator and Mrs. Tom
Gerald Anthony, or the malnten- become the pea'a comerehen.
. w. Jones, South 'JblntAv.o._
ance -deptrllnellt to • ~.llour atvOiiellllipllmtni ageii;',, ·- ·
The huge maple - oldei than
aanltati'"' ;ongineeriJII achool In
Durinl! tha discussion w I t b any living resident ean remem·
Jackaon Dooniy, AllthonywUithen Gress It waa polntad out tllel ber - la being removed to pro.
Pomeroy' 1 board or )III&gt;Uc a!- Wtu pli-mti aerv!ce of about 10 be qualllled to do water testing one r~sldent at Ieaot hal never vide space tor an addiUon to the
Mellday rdalrt accepted bldl addiUonal cuatomers In addiUon and other teehnlcal duties re- paid a sewage charge slnce the Jcmes Memorial Clinic operated
fit the
J. HW&gt;er General Con- to prOVIding better aervlce Cor qutred by tho water and sewage raiB ordinance was put Into or. by Dr. R. R. Pickens.
rect.
'
iractlng ComPHIY of Parkers- present uaera. Tho BoarclorPIIb- operations.
Mrs. IL 0. Ewing recalls that
The report of Ma.Yeil' C. 0.
Greaa aald that the Boud or well over 50 years ago her tam~
llurs to lnotall new water lines lie Af!alrs alao aald the larger
II' Unloo-Ave. and In Miners- Uno In tho Minersville area wUl Fisher tor Auguat waa approv- PUblic Af!alrs wUl Investigate l[y occupied the Jones property
rUle.
permit Installation or lire plugs, ed. 11 obowed $636 col)ectod In regulations and may disconnect and the tree - which h o I d s
· ·The Huber llrm bid $27,688.. should the loWnahiP asree!Ai In· lines and toes and $216 In mer- the resident trom any sower line. many memories for those famil60 to provide and lnllall 5,170 stall tham. The oxtenslm Will cbanl pollee charges Cor a IolBl Local regulations r~ro that Iar wt!h Us role In politics residents mull uae sewer lines was large at that time,
it. of elllhl-lnch AC pipe In Min- turtber sene as a "cushion" of $852.
A
letter
from
the
Ohio
DeIf
they are available and mull
oraville, llOillplola With all lips tor the remainder or the SJaiBm
Often the shade ol the huge
partment
of
Uquor
Control
was
PI.J'
the levied charge.
and 11•1111.
bY easing pressure problem• or
tree provided a cool spot r o r
Gress alao asked tor !oglala.
· Tile bid of lnllalllng 1,750 tile past. &amp;Jch problamo mdsl· read atatlng that llarold Reeves
perhaps, pealed poliUcal rallies
applied
ror
a
D..S
permit
lion
setting a -or deposit roe
has
of alx,lncb Uno oo Union· ed because there .were oo linea
and meetlnga stasoc1 by the late
Avit., COIIJI)Itie with lips al!d or adequate IIJe on tho _.m (night elm license) for the ror- for buslnassea such as a serv~ Senator Jones. Uudor the tree,
U~a. waa $9,000. The v!llage end rt the a,yatem above U.. ,... mer nOme 'Reataurllll balldlng Ice otaUon, $15; roataurllll, 335;
governors and national mtielals
on North Second St. Council has car ·wash, $100 and beouiY per.
wUt -'&lt;lo the mateiilh tor •u.r worko plant.
were entertained.
111e UJI!!&gt;IS-Ave. ..Wk. Tile· line.
Other bidders on the water Uno until Sept. 25 to Ole an objee- lor, $12. The deposit Ia to proIf granted the magic power
(Continued 011 Page 8)
· on uaiOn.An. WID replace preS. projects wore Earl Werner or lion. 11 wail agreed that ~or
~ speech, the huge tree Wldoubtllllly lnedelfUile ppe, OGme of Bradbury and D, V, Weber Con· Fisher · lllld Council Presli!ent
odly could relelo IIWil' colorful
wblch Ia two:lncb In site, and otructlon CorlqNuly
RoodS·
Ialka about the celebrities who
114• cr¢ecl a ,........ prob- v!lle.
·
met under Its branches.
lem.
In other actlvley, the board OC·
But trees are like daisies Put ~ thi work to bo done ceptod a bid of $:,825 by I b e
they doo'l tell - and as the fa1n MlrierMDe wiD be _an ex- Pomeroy Motor Colllpoll)' to aell
mous Kilmer lines 'oonclude:
tena~Qh or the present line, sild 1 1969 3-4 1011 truek. Ollly other
Middleport VIllage 1\mds as apectlvebo, locludo:
'"Poems are made by fools
tho niinalnde&lt; Will be rJPiace- bid C11 the truck waa from Malae or Aug. 31 totaloiel $136,774.58,
General, $2,639.87, $3,758.53, like me - But only God c a n
JIIOIII
aome pipe two,jachea In · Et,dpment Compllll'.
Clerk • Treasurer reported to $25,566.83; cemetery, $220, make a tree."
~~ze; '\c~ to tho board.
Attending wereboordmembers councD 1\!Qnda,y rdalrt$522.81, $1,090.55; parking memE LARGE MAPLE, MINUS Its giant bruchos, Is - . In the ,ann at the Jones Memorial
,. 'll!e . . . line wiD 1'1111 .11&gt; tho vi- Willlam Beronlck, president, E.
Receipts, dlslluraemellll and IBr, oo recelpla, $28.80, $44.·
C!nfty ptthe Pl)mei'Ol' Junk Com- F. ll&lt;lblnaon and James~ tho balances In eeeh IIJnd, re- 91; fire ~pment, $2,110, $2,Clinic. The tree is believed to have been Qne of the oldest in Middleport.
•,-' ~ 1n
aoa, Jl&gt;fll1)&gt;ora,andCierkDorlncla
318, 359.52; awlmmlng Po o I,
···· · ··· · ·· · ·.·.·, • .·.·.·.·.·.·.·. ·.··········· ····~·· ··:·:.;·
11 waa ._ted the oxtenslcm WUaon.
I
$732.62, $1,615.77,$60D.74; plan.
.
n1ng commlaalon, no receipts,

~':

or

IOopnaa
.
'a lOQ per: l'tlll
d4c~on poi,yeau.r wldi&gt;pe4 croom.
Size 32-38. White, blue; groon, gold.

CONTOUR SHIRT
Long sleeve, l q polniBd collar,
100 per cent cotton, monotoae pat.,
ley pri!L Sizes 32-38. Gold, -D.

.-

"Lift Prui"
'Callfllr ·
··r Shirt

"Life Press"

Short Sleeve Shell

"

'.:,

olde

..

crepe

or

Fund Totals Reported

·.,r.

MJn!trmue.

.

Nixon Has

.
D
mnsHannv'"'=~=.!~~1.B30.64.
i~eorge .·. u r
· r r.; =:7!:F.sJ~2 ~1~~:.: New Gain

Plan for Merger

::~r

CLEVELAND (UPI) - Tho
heed of the Cleveland • baaed
Brotherhood or Loccmot:lve Firemen aiMI E..u-nen has announced hil uniCII'I general policy
COIIIIJllttee umnimoualy ~~&gt;Prov­
ed a meraor With lllree other
railroad untooa.
H. E. Gilbert, president or the
60,000......ember wdoo. Aid a ref..
erendum among members of all
Cour unions Ia ..,. bel Jill~

bell 774.70, $28,607.21 ; water, $5,clurlng hla temre 18 boae
537.09, $6,570.56, $14,984.94;
coininlsaioner and he aent water meiBr clepoalltruaiB,$108,
' •. '

of

hfa clvll rlgbta

$209.50, $2,769.25; waiBr construetloo, oo reeelpto, $5,494,.
10, $18,829.Q8; sewlnl con'slructloo, $66.66, $328.02, $25,715 , general bond retirement, no
reeeli&gt;la, nodlslluraementa, $10,. 178.07.
·a
Hocelpla tor tho month of Alii·
. , Wallace had cold .
~· retllrend .
uat totaled ..16,637.14 c:omporod
to total dlsllursemenia &lt;if $25, •
844.35.
troqla : , 1$&gt; two Kenlucky
""""'\unltleo ~enforce the 1!54
Sq&gt;reme COurt deaegrega 00
declal'!ll whDe he wao go,.roor.
Nelther ·wallace DC!r lilY or
hla lidos coul4 be reached !oc
tmmedlaiB Cornni,n~
.

FIJ!E noosm

J;,__..

Jlor C~

Cctmblnatloo or - · eombl,..

Uon.

Rail Unions Like

clLIIed ln the 'troahman clan of
MARRIAGE APPUCATlON
Kentucky Ouiot!an ColllflO at
K - Paul Loe, 20, Clltlon,
Grayaon, K,., will ell bepn Ita W. Va., melnteence 1IIOI'ker IDd
50th year or instruetiCII 00 Sept.
Ellh• BeU iqpll, 18, Ill. 2,
2.
l'omeni,J.
They are Clarles N. llclnlpn,
Pomeroy, Route 3, I.Dd Dlmv'
FAwtn Eqns, MJddlepc-1: Route
LOCAL TEMPS
Tllo ~llllln
L Aho attending KenllaeiQ&lt; Cbrl.,
t!an College apln thlo JOII' Ia dow-a bttlliMA ~Jll it
Roland E. Ruaaell, !ftdd!!pO"t 11:211 a.m. _ , .... 71 deine•
Route l.
Ullder_ut.•.

I .

border prlnL Sizto 3Ul Brown

Constructim ot about nve miles
or new nne Is part of the project.
COnstructioo should be completed by November I, 1968.

m.

veniL 100

c.

feel

'

Lone Sleeve, .cawel'tlt.le collar,,

assorted solid colors.

The l'omOJ'O)' Fire Dopartmont
aeawared a call Saturdi.J' aller·
noon to the Ellen 1!2Jerabach home
on Lalley St. Fire Cblet llemy
Werry reported minor dalnapo.
Trasb waa beq buraed 11011' a
porch, which . . . the porch,
the chief aalcl.

\nov•

fl'lr•

Jewel neck, button boc~,
65-3~ lortrel-cotton prints
With Wuhes Slain Away
miracle Oa!sh. Sizes 3238. Green or blue print,

a

Water Lines

11W11111-

t19 ~·

.:::

·'

Huge Tree Cut Down in Middleport

Beauty Title
Long sleeve, dwblo button

,. ,.

or

,.

'

Tomboy Wins'

"'

CloUdy and
IIIIIIPI lijlll .
atx&gt;weraln tho .....-aL .:-ill • ··,•''~''tc
a.O 60a. Moatly ~loudyaadoool~ .'

mont!'-

New Substation Planned

$tudents

.'l'

kiJ!ed
or

Stop Work

(jood

''

Oies

Pickets

,o;News

..._

Mr •-Armstead

ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. (UPI)
- Judith Am Ford, 18, Is a
groan - eyed admJUecl tomhoy
who prefers blue jeans and sweatshirts to dresses, hates getting
up eerl1 and wwld like to aee a
woman president.
Judi, aa she likes to be called, believes In giving 18-yeer.
olds the vote and ls a champ..
im gymnaBt.
&amp;mda,y abe began her rel&amp;n as
Miss America oC 1969.
The former Miss nunota, the
first Miss America In 11 years
to have blonde hair, met t h e
press earl1 ib1day after t w o
PLAN DEGREE WORK
Work Will be In tho master hours ol sleep.
"I don't know wiQ'," ahe said
masoos degree Tuesday night
wboo Racine Masonic Lodge 461 with a smile In her green eyes,
t1Jrt I just love to sleep."
meets at the temple.
Judi of Belvidere, ru., wore a
whits satin eveniJII gown, gold
PTA TO MEET
The !&gt;fracuae PTA wU1 Intro- earrings, sUver crown and long
duce parenta lllld tsachers at aeulet robe trlmmoiel In ermine
their regular meeting Tuesday as she answered newsmen' a quesUona In a lOft, firm voice.
at 7:30 p.m. at the school.

RL 7 Noted

1111!',·
..'.,

"' ' ·

'i\" '. ,

Tho car went out or cootrol,
struck the bicycle ~d thoo ll!t
a tree. The other persons Jn.tttr~
ed were passengers In the car.
The vehicle waa reJI(Jrtedly own ~
ed by Minnie I,yona, Rt, I Pl.
Pleasant.
PICNIC IS THURIDAY
Condltlm or the two Injured
The amual stag picnic ol the
McKinney boys was reported to- Twin Cill' Shrine Club wiD be
day as satisfactDry.
held Thursday, Sept. 12, at the
::itrine Park, Racine. at 6 p.m.
Those who pl~ to aUend are
asked to call 992-3016 OG that
fond may be prepared.

Accident on

..

lntelltaenco ......Oo S.W ~ to the 11alllelleld, ·• war . ·~ ·- ~ laniuocked ~11 Unoo In
thoro wu oo alan tile c..nm... mo,inlquo ~ Jt wao 0111! it tile ...JZi llils!ll..,.; j.
nlato wore nlualeriJII !oc 1 Sll~ •lorael! catobea by ~~~·" ' , 1be heo.ltot lllbllllllllll' Sol&amp;00 -..aho deapiiB weekend
- •
aon., eom.roiel 2$ ~·· north ot
boWea on throe aides ottho cop.
the eoplc.l (li!ID o!OO&amp;ed c.mUol.
· •
'
.'
munl•t inlllti'otiOII e...rtclorl\'&lt;lm
Jbe1r ~pploal..t !ollowoiel hold···
Dnd!ocll• in two dayo, Amerl•
&lt;!llll'lera onnouncemellll u.t 2u
~~-.
,eon l'orotroopa .111!1 ~ ~
C&lt;mmunlal soldiers died In all&lt;
.:&gt;up
'103 ·VIet Ccnc qatnot' 31. U.S.
bottlea IJ'()UIId Sllgon durinl! the
Pr/ PLEAI\ANT _; llabort AD'and 31 wliundod.-·
weekend. VIet CUW ten;orlam drew Armalel4. 87, or US·B
SoUth or lho ctey, Amerlcao It&gt;Inside the ctzy ldlled 12 peraons Flrll St. cBoiel 9laclal 11 5:30 L
rontrymen the 9th Dlvlslon·r&amp;and wCIWIIIOd 80, 1)0110 of them m. at home Iller • lone IDDeO.:· peNd ldlllilg II!IOII&gt;or A7 Cia·
AmerlcanL
. Boro,
'6, 1901
~s, , mullisll •whllo ~"!'low ~ve men
The lntelllaence sources lllltl -.!Do, Mr. -"'molead ~-tile lljiD . ~eel, and cilher Paratroop.
they woolll have 48 houn' ,...,.. a1 the Jato TIIJiunan and Jealle , : ~
lng rt the Rods were proparlow !lanka Armsttad. •He
.Us- ···
I capital ll1ack bocauie DIDII of todlan rl tho CltbW •I'Iall!ltaJ
' eS l
the main Ioree [!Uilrrllla unlb BIDk and a member Or t h e
are I two • day march ....,.. SlmpldDa Mau..ull Church. &amp;Jr.
Sa
·
·
852 bombers hit u.O.o bhwaca vlvlng are hla wtre, Georllma
today, the U.S. command said. BeU Armatoad; two IUII,II&lt;lb·
Mu.()elleNeebllt,d,orParkSooth Vletnomeae beadqlllJ'o ert Jr., Columbus, 01!11 Fred- 'erll&gt;!ll&amp; w. va., the Iormor
tera said their Brlr. Gen: T....,.. rick or Pt. PIOUIIII; oae dau8b· Mal'1 · Merllla Graeser or IIIJn.
Quan AD. his Wife, an American IBr, Mrl. Patricia !lie Fultz, Pt. orsvllle, cBoiel Solurdl,y Iller IIU!colonel and three U. S. hoUcop. PlOUIIII; ona slater, Mn. Pa111· rer1111 ' cerebral bemorrlla&amp;e.
IBr crewmen were ldlled Sunday lne Goode, l!rooki1n, N.Y., lllld
h
lo iul'VIvoiel l&gt;l' her huo·
when their chq&gt;per was ahotdotvl elllhl grandchlldr011•
. i.D4 and fOur chlidrll!o all at
ln the Central Hlglllands. An waa
Funeral aervtce wm "' bild •
lmd an liUDI. Mrs. G, M,
the llrst South Vlotmmese II""' Wodneado,y at 2:30 p.m • .111 tbe ., · ~- or Mlddl-'" H a rperoral of the war alaln by Camino- Mohr-8tevena FIIIIOrld Home enta, 1\ho, IQII!Iro" ll&lt;lbert Grue..

seeking slC)p()rt trom the same
type of voter as wooed by
George C. Wallace- " for the
votes or people who want at
best to slow thing&amp; down when
it comes to programs that offer
the way out o! tension and
trouble in AmericL ••
" So we are !aced with thirdparty extremism," Humphrey
said. "And we are !aced, in the
Republican party, with the old
ATHENS. OldD (UPI)- Three
coalition which pre!ers to
plcketlq
unlverslb' emplQI'es
remain silent when it comes to
auceusllllln
BlojJplngwwk
were
human
rights
and human
at
Ohio
Unlveralzy'o
$8.~ mil·
opportunU,y."

second quarter on Dec. 3. M r s .
Plasecky wUI he setting up the
Dietary Technology program and
will send Information to persons
lniBreaiBd In the roods Industry.
Ught ls urging all peraons
working the afternoon and night
shift to cheek on the schools'
part-time da,y programs that will
be arranged to fit the Individual
needs. He reminds veterans that
they are eligible for bmeflts 1C
they aUend either full or part time. students just graa.tated
from high school are eliglble for
a 2~A seleCtive serviee classification that wUl enable them to
finish the two years oC technl~
cal training.
The lnsUtute wUI 10011 lll·
llOWlCe its evening school ached~
ule that will permit persons now
working da,y shlO to take claaaes In tho evening. To be placed oo the evening division mailIng llst for a schecklle of cours.
OS, wrlle to Tri-C&lt;Iun\l' Teclmlcal Institute, Route 1, NeliOIIv!lle. Information oo both da,y
and evening clasaea can be gOt.
ten by calling Nelsoovllle 7S33SH.

.

~ON (UPI)- u.s. J!lllltaQo '. boot• !err~ ,J ~.:.;..tii ~ Ol.~c~ar. u.$. bootbera_..,

Republican j of

Admitted to Holzer Hospital
were : James S. McKinney, 14,
laceratioos and abrasJons of the
face; and Willlam D. McKinney,
17. sons of Mr. and Mrs. Alpha
McKI!mey, Rt 1 Pl. Pleasant.
Treated at Pleasant Valley
Hospital, Pt. Pleasant, and re.
leased were: Donna J4'ons, 20,
Injured rls!l&gt;t eye; Debbie McKinney, 15, laceration on t h e
knee; and Patricia Chapman, oo
age glv111, Injured right eye.
Meigs County Sheri« Robert
WOllam D, McKlnnOY, accordC.
Hartenbach' s department lnIng . to the hospital report, waa
ve
stigated
a mishap on Hoote 7
Injured when he was hit by a
at
2:13
a.m.
today and aha ia
car, driven by Debbie McKinprobing
a
car
theft
that occurred
ney, while he was riding his
sometime
last
night.
bicycle.
The car m.s reported stolen
Debbie McKinney, according
apparently
smnetime before 2 :~
to reports, was learnlngtodrive.
30 Lm. tmn a Route 7 Dlte club
parking lot. The1960mode1Chevrole4 Is owned by Minter V.
Fryan, Jr. , Pickerington, Ohio.
The accidertoccurred one mile
northeast of Pomeroy and involvPT. PLEASANT - A major
ed a vehicle driven by Delmar
new s ubstation at Grimms LandBaer, 30, Belpre, who struck aM
Ing, to serve new coal oper~
killed a POllY belonging to Layton
tiona at Elmwood and other cus-~re. There was approximately
lomers in that .,-ea, has been
$400 damage to the Baer car.
announced by Appalachian Pow·
No injuries or ar re st6 were reer Comparzy.
ported.
The station and other associated equipment will represent an
investment or more than $330,000, • ~c ording to George Hervey , Hunti~ Dhislon Manager o! Appalachilin.
"The location of the substaK1111 oporotor of ywr cor II
tion was chosen because of ita
1 bottor-thon·avenge hllh
Three defendants were fined convenience to future industrial
IChool or colltlt student, yoo
saturday night in the court oC
nuy quo!ify for bll savin1s on
growth we roresee along the~
Pomeroy Mayor Charle s Legar. awha River between our P o i n t
your AutomDbila Insurance.
Clarence Lee, 22, Pcmeroy,
Sllte Auto Mulual offers 1
Pleasant and Bancroft substawu fined $100 and costs and was tions," Hervey said.
IOOD STUDENT DISCOUNT
given a three day jail sentence
llllli,. up to 25%.
The new substation will reo.
on charges oc driving while intoxi·
Cll• . . . . . ,.,,....
ceive power at 138,000 volts
cated. William Reeves, Pomeond reduce it to 69,000 volta
roy, was fined $50 and costs on
Cor tnnsmisslon to customers..
intoxication charges and Thomas
I
Wickllne, Racine, wu fined $5
and
costs on charges of tailing .
Phonem...

.114 C&gt;•rt St.

· ·

vlco presldert: was to address a
rall,y after parading througll the
city's downtown area. This was
In lddidoo to his two television
sessions here.
The vice . 11resklent., who
started
hitting Nixon hard
durlog a speech to a na.tionaJ
B'nai B'rith convention in
Washington Sullla,y, toda,y apln

Tri-Co Tech Enrolls Record 250

'i

' ~·,I

future. He · plaMod to ooncer&gt;-

GOP Prealdendal oomlnee Rich· trate ror the time bellll more
ord M. Nll&lt;on has had the oo televlsoiel questi...:.n.HnCID1JIII&amp;n pretty much to swer sessions, two of which he
hlmselt for the put week. set up ln Phlladelphla toda.Y.
starting 1the ·taborlous eigbt-Now . his Democratic op.
ponent, Hubert H. Humphrey, week journey to election day,
plana to go alter him at run tilt Humphrey sounded a basic
campalgn theme:
from coast to coast.
"The choice in 1968 is this:
Humphrey's basic gospel em·
bodied a .. new day" in Alnerlca Are we going to accept as
if he Ia elected. If this was not Inevitable the confiict and
criUclam of his present super- hatred which are becoming a
ior. President Johnson, it was part of our everyday life? Or
aaylng things would be marked- are we going to stand It&gt;
11 better with Humphrey ln tho together and say: This can be
done in America. We can make
White House.
This was a long day for the this country work.
''That Is the choice: Between
vice president, stretching from
PhiladelPhia to Denver and Los one America arrJ an America of
Angeles. At this atage of his apartheid. That is the choice:
travelling campaign- the begin- Between the America of the old
ning stage- the vice president era and the America of the new
had rew conCetti and ticker tape day...
The speech was prepared for
parades with giant rallies in
convenient ballparks in his delivery in Philadelphia's John
F. Kerun:dy Square, where the

•\

li
~.

(UPI)

. ~.,.,.:

'

.(.

'.:,....-

PomerQYoVkldJOI)Ort, 0., -~, 5epL 8,1H8

"Lift Pros"
Catour Slllrt
Lalli

~

lle'eve, buttm &amp;-Mn·callar,

rOka

bael!. Kodei.Oombod pe......aprepWUYOilOIConl
ebodc 011 while tJ1'0IIIIcl. SIHI SQ.
38. Gold, JIUI• Aprlrot.

''

/

NEW YORK {UPO- Richard
M. Nll&lt;on llllJie&amp;rS to have
widened hh lead over Hubert ll
Humphrey in the presidenttal

Flag Display

fw~;;;·· ·ii;rtt

Is Requested

\\....\ In Accident \\».. Granted Funds

Mlyor Charles Logar called In·
day ror tho dlspll,y or American
t1aga In the communlt,y .., Wedneado,y and Thursday this week
contest dwing the past week. when funerals or two servicemen
SJndli•r's daily survey report- wiU be bold.
edM~.
Residents are uked to display
An even sharper gain was their flags II halt mall wllbre
reglsiBred by tho third party posidble.
candidate, former Gov. Georp
Tllo first toneral WIU be at 2
C. Wallace, the survey reported p.m. Wodneada;y tor Marine Pic.
on the ba,ll&amp; or tslephone 'lbomal H, Lind, Pomeroy, ldlJ.
interW.ews elatucted with 1,877 ad Aq. 26 Ill Vlelnem.
ad11lta of vot1ow age In the four·
The aoonnd· wiD be II 1 p.m.
day perind Se!&gt;L 5-8.
Thurodoy Jor Pic. Wtulam Leilia
The aurvw, published by Plckeol, 19, ' Radne, died
&amp; eo., a market Friday at the U, S. Naval Hitspltreaearcb organbatlon bued In al In Fortamoutb, VL He W'U in
NOrwood, Po. ukad this que .. the
Arm,y.

Sledl!ower

Uoru uWbo would you yourself

.ant to aee elected prealdent U ,
the
wore ~ lodi.J"'"
. ' ed wltb
'~1,844 '
3~ . 2,

~

u. s.

Four Programs

~

A Meigs County woman was
injured In the only tral!lc acct.
dent lnvestigaiBd Monda,y by the

State Highway .PatroL
Eliza Ann Lemley, 48, or Rut·
laod, aullerod laceraUons and
bruises ofthebody. She was treated at the Gallipolis Medical Center !klapllal, and releesecl.
The accident occurred at 3:10
p.m. Moncla.Y on Rt. 7, two miles
nortll
Addl11011. Mrs. Lemley,
beadod north, polled out .t o pass
~ car then pulled bock In
and tho vshlele went orr the right
aide "' the highway and struck •
talepbone pole.
· Tile pole, owned by Ohio Bell
Telepbme eo., was
rtf.
There wu moderate "'D'!''It to
. the car. No cllarll" •• ll1eci.

or

b,_

WASHINGTON - Tenth Dlltrlct Congressman Clereace E.
Miller has .,_,.eod tundlnc lor
four programs at the Soutberll
Ohio Manpower Trainln8 C«Ar
at Jackaon has - . app1'0\'oielle'
tho u.
Department of Labor
and by the Olllce or Health,
cstion and Welfare.
The Poderal p.....-.t vldea the ilulk or the b
theM P&lt;Oill'aml under the Vlapowar llevelopmoot and Traln-

s.

lnsA&lt;t:

mo.

Tbese IDclude both tralnlnC el•

lowiDcel til ...
and

tralnlna to

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      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
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          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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      <name>salser</name>
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