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                  <text>- .The DiliJ' Sentinel, Mlddl-"·l'tlmerQY, 0., Sep. 26, 1988

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~'IIII!IIA(IIol Welell
l,o "100 Rl!loi1'0 iin'l -.11 for

Voice al~~g Broadway

··~

Bt .·JACK O'BRIAN
orllllllizlnl a trade IP"WP CjU!ckNEW YORK - Mlo's loneiJ' IJ' rojoded • 'Fuhlon - ·
1n H'-'. ma.y try Landon tor Guild'' •... Tbo rumor that clly
a year •••. Top pi ~r boa welfare clleats are orllllllizlng
aclmozz trolble: her latest nose a uuo~oou . Mmtt down .... Host'bob Is slipping .... Night club • ing TV'&amp; 11Model ol the Year,.
restaurant owner&amp; contldent bb:
In new-modhalrdo,¥00Jitl
would zoom up after Labor Da,y alnlor John Davidson almoll won
Ot didn't) now ore more jittery .... At tho EoiiY 35lil Amlveroar.v
than at tax • time .... Andrea bash at the Algonquin, ·~e
Dnun, who won Wwood stardom &amp; Clyde" co-author David N.,..
britfiy In an airline TV com- man, long-hairedandmod-thread-

_..,t

mercial (II that any WIIJ' to run
an airllne - you bet it lsi)
Ia back In the tube via Dial

Soap .... Men's fashion wrlteu

ed, looked very bonny.

Add SIIIIIPY Whlte tD t h e
lengthening list of gllted TV
clowns; he's made It lor years

IJO'.:r:lloqld

\

Bert lle!rnol41• IIO!d
~~~ 10.. $16,.
. / Me•c-9••
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,200 ·H~ar Financing of FHA Homes E :.

000 .... Wl1ve will IIIIo -

In the cafes, but ..,. ho'o a eolorlat Doug KJnsmon bur ·hi•
man for all media .... The AI· dlllblllllllllerlalo now a.tFred_.un Is almoll .L probolill orldi'o ... 5'/lll!it noor eonw.

- lhe lall hole! eloee 1D Times
Square whorolhe oervlcolocloua. the tood good, and mood
merry and mameriJ, lho loiJiu&gt;
Cllietl¥ pleasant as you llip a
pre-d!Mer clriM before lhe .,.,
Cllietor, elegant Oak Room ••••
Tbe 6lh Avo. Dolly, which calli
it&amp;ell 11 Uttle 21," hal one dish
price. tasged at,6.75: blintzes
and SOW" cream, stutrod with Beluga Maloasal Caviar; oi vay,
that 1 1 chici

cle Hall II - ? .... A ,_,.
..., Dulfln H-.a (.olaror"Tbe

G-")-'tllrorddlnPalm reatourant but
ho'o lbero reculorll now thai
he'o found the eellulotd Wllllet.
Dwf8ht 1lamlon far )'an dl.
reeled the Perr.v Como """"•;
Perr,v, liiDidni far ~ JIOOple, hired Dwlsht'o )'011111! bl'CIIher Mac for his next 1V JPedal (In wblch Parr.v will moko
~ Awardl 1D wimoro In

"Our job Is 1D oupplemont,

lni at Tile

· - lo&lt;al flnanelng. ..
Tiito WOI 0 key, ~ by
MUton RouJI1, 1\Wp County
Farmers -

a public
moetiJ1c ... - ~ ot tho
Pomeroy Junior IIIah Scbool.
ZOO per10111

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Slipovers and c:ardigona. Hegulor 11zes and extro 11ze1.

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WORK UNIFORMS

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SHIRTS SALE 4.49. Sins 14" to 20 in yow coHocl
PANTS SALE 5.49. Sizes 29 to 50 in your coHoct leg

WOMEN'S SKIRTS
B.autiful selection. Hund,.ds to choose from and In your
correct siae s.

3.95 SKIRTS. ....... .
. .. .............. SALE 3.49
5.95 SKIRTS.. ....... .
. ..... ... .SALE 4.99
7.95 SKIRTS............ .
. . . . SAL£'6.99
8.95 SKIRTS............................. .
.. . ... . .SALE 7.49
10.95 SKIRTS .............. .. .
..... SALE 8.99
12.95 SKIRTS ............ .... ....... ..
... . .. .SALE 10.49

WOMEN'S DUSTERS
Emboas•d cottons and Cordono Stripes. Solid colors and floral
patNms. Siz•• 12 to 18 and 38 to 44. Big sel•ction. New fall
styles. Sp•clal for thi1 s~:~le.

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Forni green-8/aci..-Dorl!; Olive- Charcoal Grey

YOUNG MENS PERMANENT PRESS

$5.39

pair

BOYS SIZES 6 to 20

'Gift sett lor Mon.

Solid colors. Plaids, strlpu, check&amp;. A truly excellent selection of just the ahirta boys wont thia year for scf.)ol and
sportswear . .4.11 are permanent preu . Smartly styled and ready
lor you to buy.

REG. 3.49 BATH TOWELS ........................ SALE 2.19
REG. 1.89 HAND TOWELS .................................SALE 99c
REG. 79c WASH CLOTHS ..................................SALE 59c
REG. 2.49 BATH TOWELS.... c......................SALE 1.39
REG. 1.39 HAND TDWELS..................................SALE 79c
REG. 69c WASH CLOTHS....................................SALE 39c

WATCHES
AND CLOCKS

2 for $5.00
SIZES 3 ta 7

SPECIAL
OUR MOST POPULAR STYLES

BOY'S LONG SLEEVE SPORT SHIRTS
Rich plaid patterns. Permanent preu . Button down Ivy style

WOMEN'S WHITE UNIFORMS
trrlyl~;~n

,.n....

Jerseys. Shifts and Caachman Styles

REGULAR SIZES 6 to 20 ......................... :...........5.99
HALF SIZES 14l1 to 24l-1 ......................................6.99

SALE

In regular and half sizes ond for this •ale they are reduced In
price.

4.95 DRESSEL ... . .......... .............................. FOR 4.1111
5.95 DRESSES..... .
. ......................... ... FOR 5.00
7.95 DRESSES....... ........... . ................. ......... FOR 7.00
8.95 DRESSES............... ,... ...............
.... .. FOR 8.00
10.9S DRESSES.................................. ......
. . FOR 9.00

CASUAL SLACKS
Well known brands. Permanent p,.u. 50" Fortrel Polyester,
50% Cotton. Topered leg. cuffed bottoms, on uam pockets.
Belt ICtOps . Sitos 29 to 36 woist.

MEN'S FLANNEL PAJAMAS
Coot style top with notched collar. Size A (36·32 cheat) B
(3B •.f0), · C (-42·44), and D (46-48), Solid colon and ltnctrt
printed patterns .

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2.95 SKIRTS. .....SALE 2.49
3.95 SKIRTS.. ..SALE 3.49

5.95 SKIRTS...... SALE 4.99
7.95 SKIRTS...... SALE 6.99

Slade• and matching lcnit t~;~p. Sh:es 3 to 6lc ond 1 to 14. On sale

1.95 SLACKS SETS.....................................................I.69
2.95 SLACKS SETL ................. .... .............. ........... 2.49
3.95 SLACKS SETS............................. .... ..... . ..........3.49

In small sizes 9 months to 2.f months ond 1

)If.

m~;~nths

$8e89

2.00
2.75
3.00
3.75

to 6.-:

FALL SAUl EYECATCHER STOCKINGS
Seamle .. mesh. Stretch, CantNce, 17 Slim

Rot~. 2.00 Eyocatchor MESH·PANTYHOSE ......SALE 1.59

3.98
2.'*1
3.9S
3.98

NYLON LONG GOWNS····· · - · · · ·
BATISTE SHIFT GOWNS······ · · · ·
CAPRI LONG PAJ , .!lAS·-·· -···-·
WALTZ GOWNS ·· · · · · · · · · · · · · · REG . 3.98 Slee .. eleu OUSTERS AND SHIFTS · . ·

- SALE
·SALE
-SALE
·SALE
·SALE

3.29
1.87
2.77
3.29
2.77

-------------------------·-·--·~
Re9.
Rea.
Ret.
R•g.
Reg .

79c Girls Printed Ruffled Panties·- • · · ·Sole 3 for 2.001
3.00 doa. Birdseye Diopers, 71"x27" • • · ·SLCIIe 2.59 doz .
1.95 Sunsuits, slz.. 9 thru 24 mos. --- ---.· -Sal• 98c
1.95 Clnd 2.95 Crawlers, ala•• 9 thN 24 mos . •• -Sals 98c
1.95 and 2.29 Plisu Pojamaa, .Si.us 1 tluu 4 -- Sole 98c·

--------------------------REG.

z.;s FALL HANDBAGS·· · · · · • • • · ·

· ·- -SALE

Uf

REG. 1.00 SCARFS, SQUARES AND OBLONGS • · · • • •• -69o

BOYS SIZES 6"to 16

HONDO SCHOOL TROUSERS
tfo'"'o ltr Mt. Wran_Jier. Pennonent pr•••· True Western strle.
Slim fit, ... cuffs. . .It loops. Brown, blac•. Ioden vr••n, Llue.

This Sale

99

17.95................5ALE 14.79

10.95.................SALE 8.79

18.95................ SALE 15.49

$5.00

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,SALE P6.49

$19.95 , • , , , , , , , , , • , , , , , •• , .• , • , • , ,SALE $17.49

$16.95

0

$15..95
$13.95
$12. 95
$11.95

, •••• , •••.• , • ••••• , •• , , , •• , .SALE ~4.49
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SALE .12.49
. • • • . • . . • • • • • • • • • • . .. • • .. • .. SALE $11. 49
••••.••.••••.• , • , ••••••••• , ,SALE .10.49

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0

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0

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0

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0

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SALE $16.49

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$11.50 , •••• , •• , •.• , , , ••••• , , , •• , •• SALE$ 9.49

$10.95 , ••••••••••••••..•••••• , • , •• SALE$ 9,49
$ 9.95 •• . •••• • • •••••...•• • •••••••• s~ 8.49

COCOA
MATS
18.30

100" Nylon Pile. Non Slcid

Rubber bar:k . 2r• wide. ldeol
fo.. Hallwopa, Bedroom• and
Entrance•._ Stairways. R.d,
Avoeotdc., Delge, Brawn.

65~

Pine qualltp. Terrific dura•
billty. Goocl carpet protect--·
~;~ra. 3 pattorna.

$4.39

per ft.

SALE! MEN'S BROADCLOTH PAJAMAS

wcir•i O.,t. on the Main Floor. Tulipt, Crocuses, Hya-

.JOO"

cotton, ~osh 'n wear. Coat ••rle top. Smart patterns
•n o biG select1on. Sanforized shrunlc, SIRs A, 8 , C or.d 0 .

2 pairs $5.00

WESTERN STYLE JEANS
Sizes 29 to 38 wollf. Slim fitting with tap•r lev. Na cuffs.
Wide belt loops. Sanforized shrunk Wheat Ioden ar••n Llue
block .
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SALE $3e44

~3~P~C.~L~US~T~RO~-W~A-RE--,-----G-A_T_O_I_____ I

ROACH HIVES

Ballpraof unbreak.abl• b~;~wl•.
Sot COIItlats of one eoch
-4qt., 2 qt., 3 cup slr:ea.

Clean. Ea•y to usa. Ecana.
mlcal. Kill• reoch. .,
fish, crlckats. 3 HI.,•• In •
bu.

,u._,.

$1.59 ° set
I

KING SIZE TRAY TABLE SETS

MENS AND BOYS DEPARTMENT 1ST FLOOR

MEN'S AND BOYS SOCKS
Liated her• ar• a few of the tnanr wolues In the complete
Men• and 8oy1 Hosiery line.

MENS HANES COTTON CREW SOCKS.
White, Colored topo. Sin• 10 to 13 ..............................69c
JERKS SOLID COLOR BANLDN CREW SOCKS
Big seloctian. Shes 10-13 ........... ................................. 1.00
MENS KIRBURY BANLDN DRESS SOCKS. Sio01 10 to
13. Excellent selection of colon.

13.95................5ALE 11.49

26.95 ................SALE 22.49

SALEI · BEmiNE AND
DOEHLEI CHAIRS
$299.00 Mr. &amp; Mrs. Chair and. Oltoman ••••••Sale IJ224.0o
11239.00 Yr. r. Mra. Chair and 01toman ••••• ,Sale $189.00
$1.99,00 Mr. r. MrL Cbalr lllld 01toman •••••• Selo •us.oo
$'198.00 Rllck4Loo_. , , •••• , , , , •• • • , .Sale •182.00
$189.00 ReclJDII' ••••••••••••• ·•••••••• Sile •158.00
$119.00 Beck • 0 • ' - r , , • , , ••••••.• ,Sale $lt6.00
•169.00 Rllckera lllld Beclloers , , , •••• •• • -~• •138.00
$U9.00 Swi\'Ol Beckers and I.QuJwe Cbalro ••• Sale $13LOO
$149.00 Swi\'Ol Rllckero and l.QuJwe Chair• , , .Sale $1.23.00
$139.00 Rock4Loungero • , , , , , • , , , , • , , .Sale $118.00
$1211.00 swtnl Becken and Becllnero •••••••Sale $101.00
$llt00 SwlvtJ Rllckera and Becllnero •••••••Sale$ 91.00
•109,00 SWIYQ Rllckera and Lc!uqpo Chairs , • , ,Sale$ 89.00
t 99.00 Becl.l.ners •••• , ••• • , ••••••••••Sale • · 82.00
8 98.00 Becl!Mro end Lounge Cbalra •••••• ,Sale. 8LOO
• 94.00 BecJiners , , • , ............... ,Sale • 16.00
$ 89.GO Recllaers .. ••• •• •.••••••••• , .sate' 72.00

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169.00-66" DELUXE..............-_..•...:............SALE 14-4.00

4 m~ol trays In o rack with "" rolling coatera. Evening
Stor[•"•rn, Avocade with yellow and white hlal!f•·

$12.95 ° ...

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BASE CABINETS

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10.00
12.00

13.011

11.00
19.00
23.00

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80.~-40"ir72'' S.,..r Siof Kitchett Co~lneta .•S.Ie u;oo

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For Kitchen, ,Offl .. er D••·-r ···· ..···············-··S..Ie[4j.OO

...,, ,..... or.

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WhH•,

ta...,..... ••4
&lt;

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Asked It the
or permitting the
_,
p&amp;rchaso a home
down PIYmOnl ~:
:c ,..
lstactory. McDorm
··-•
borrowers are encoUraged toM"
oomelhlnl dowa. , He ocldod that
the homo purcbuad by the borrower is btapected once or twice
a year by the F .H.A. fD blOke
aure that it Ia being properly
malntalnod.
,
Tho F .H.A. JlrocoodS as
would IUIY olber te..tlng agon.
cy, if the lxlrrower does not
make r~red payments, Me-

'lorman ltated.
Frank W, Poriar, l'l&gt;melvr

· w11o wu 1110 cMiral
l!llfO In ..,ulng liP the meets '11111rldl1 niglll, .... help.
I explain F .H. A. fiMnclnr!JWt.er poiDied out that the

-

prooont 1tomeoraborrowerrni4"
be oonslderod unsuitable far ,..

number ol reuons,

therbJ' JDik..

lng 11&gt;e borrower ellilble for
a loaD tbroUI!h F ,H,A. from tbal
re'llirement standpoint.
On the eommeat tbal F.H.A.
homo&amp; mull be modest, Poriar
said that lile term modell woold

clopeod upon the olze or the lam·
(Continued on P.,.. lOl

If the "PI.Yabllityu 1ndl cate:..

that ho Ia able to carry that
rate or uurell.
lb a later lntervlew, James
McDorman, state director of the
F ,H.A., oald that liJlPIIcants

must meet certain financial re-.
CJ,drements. The lnterest rate ol
lho loan cannot be cblngod but,
McDorman pointed out, it would
be changed at a time in the
period or the loan when t h e
Farmers Home Adrninlltra~
tim reels that the borrower is
far enougb along with his lool1
that It shwld be rewritten and

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A•ocMo
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FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 27. 1968

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•

FIVE CENTS
DELMAR BAUM, CIIE'iTER building cootractor, displayed photocn~&gt;hs oflho Blum addldoo
at the new hoosing meeting in P&lt;Bill!roy Thursday evening. The addition la located on Route 1 near
tho Ohio Department of Highway"

'Second Driver in 36 ~ Hours
Dies in Highway Accident
By DICK THOMAS
Funeral Home In Rutland.
was at 11:2S L m. Wednesday
RIJJ!Ioncl L. SidWell, 20, Co- Tho Slate ·Hli~U~ay' Patrol r.,. on Rt. 1, north of Pomeroy. n..
I_~ Ololo,,, became !lfolio . por1od lhat SidWell, headed east vld Semuel Yateo, 75, Mlddl.,.
~,t,y's.. soeond traffic l'lilallly oo Rt. 124, was golnl®wtierldo .,Mt. was ld.Ued Instantly in a
ln~eso thaD 36 hours In o onee~ cra1h at 6 p. rn. Thursday

09 Rt. 124, .one: and one-tenth
.nilJe west of Rt. 325.
Meigs Colllit,y Coroner Henry
EWing said Sidwell's death was
ciused by a Crushed chest. The
body was l&amp;ken to tho Marlin

when his car went off the right
side or the highway. The vehicle
struck· a concrete bridge abu~
ment and spun around intherold·
way.
Officers said that Sidwell's
196S Chevrolet was demollehed.
Meigs County'~ other folallt,y

head-on coUislon.
Mr. Sidwell worked as a dairy
herdsman for the Wilmington
College e)ll)erimental farm, was a
member of the Middletown

Friends Meeting, and a 1966graduate or The Friends Boarding
School In Barnesville.
Born August 28, 1948, at
Salem, Ohio, the son of Floyd

victim lived most or his life In
Columbiana.
Surviving In addition to his
parents, are his maternal grandoo
father, Lewis J. Kuhn of Colum·
blana; his paternal graqarenta,
By United Press Jnternatlonal
Mr. arxl Mrs. Oliver Sidwell or
NEW YORK - A GRINNING SEN. EUGENE J. McCOrtby, his Winona; five sisters, Mrs. C.
. cheeks tanned rrom three weeka on the French Riviera, sounded
like an,y other American tourist discussing tlle U. S. presidential
race. "lt seems a UUle mixed up. The candidates seem to be busy
ie&gt;islns lhotr romorks," he oald. Ani of the three 101&gt; callildates:
ol1 Hli:lert H. Humphrey's chances: "1 guess lt's pretty bad,
lan."t it?"; on Georae C. Wallace: "I think his campaign is based
more on tear than Jt is on hate. And It's an intrusion Into political
lite that I'd rather not see," and on Richard M. Nlmn: "He hasn't
quite developed It (fear) yet, has ho?"

Freeman's

Top Aide

IASBO~ - TilE AGE OF SALAZAR ENDED today. President
.Amerlco 11toma.z called Ia Marcelo Caetano to be sworn in as pr&amp;mier of Portugal to ri!&amp;Jlace strongman Antonio Sllazar, stricken
by a brain hemorrhage II days ago.
The change bore the stamp of Salazar'• 40 years otpCMer.
Cletano, 62, )(q had oorved Salezar. He wrote the )IOilticillbeory
~t fitted Sllazar's strongman rule and often was cited as heir •
Parent. He was an admirer of Muss&lt;ilnl..

Co!D-ing

RUTLAND - Harry B. Crew.
son, Athens, Democratic -c o n·
gresslonal candidate from the
Tenth Dlotrlct, hoa annnunced
a diotrlct-- dlmer meeting
will be held here at lbe school
MADISON, WlS. '"- THE UNIVERSITY ofWiocoosin sayolt bas Thohdoy, Oct. 10, at 7:30p.m.
t - lhe sl!oU of the world's lorgest rodent - a &amp;-root, 5IJO.t&gt;oand
The speaker will he John A.
- beaver that is 10,000 years old. Zoologist Jbhn E. DaJJman said Baker, assistant secretary f1
Thursday the skull or the extinct gloat
was uncoverod r&amp;- the lle[lartment ot AgrlculQire
and chalrn\an of lho Rural Area
'-"••- 011 a form oear Cottage Grove.
'\
Tho skull, Dallman oeld, Is a foot 1 - Tbo avenge size of DOYelopmonl Boord. Tormed by
' . , ·,.,tho skull of todiQ''a biavor Is &amp;boot live inchoo, and the animal martr as the right band ol Sac·
, Weighs . 50 jiOWidS - one-tenth tho size or lis huge [lrel!ocoosor. rotar,v • of Agr!cultui'o Orv!Ue
, ,. .
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Freemsn, Bokor loaloolodlarp
' &lt; , ~ Tul;EDITOROF\ CNJIO'SSEMI-OFftClfii,NEWSPAi&gt;ERAl~ or the Farmers Home AdmJDio.
• rim ~""" today lh, lilliMif},t.ast !leas a oriala "lrill!'llad In ita , trallon.
,
viole~ce." Hd&lt; ~ Kq Husielll'··bf,,l~ said lhe United Nallooa
Crew11011 aald the dimoc Ia
baa one loot chani!o"'ll,settle It
, . ' · ·• ., , •
, ljiCIIIsored by the YOWIB DomoHasoanleii Hatkal's'lleekl¥ cOl~ ""'1HuoMln'o ~nt'cime
C)..,olMelgaColml;)', Char. ~ J...,.U Premier Levi E~ W"\""'ldiQ' lul\,•••l'dOwa, 1 ~viet loo Klnl; cbalrmall, !'1111 by the
Middle, Eaat .Peace plan. lanell lM!Ieto aalc! 1lt ,qlloo! for' • ..-n' Mt1P Coo~Q,Ilo'I"!Cr•llc or~­
poalllons l1eld bolor! lhe. 1¥67 ~. 1\1. J~em. ,~ltn to- ' ·halloo, Jadi Crisp; · ~man.
aut.mree llrull ~ woreldiiOd
~· 1IQ!Iil!l!l Than·
Tlcketa fO!"· IM, ~-t.
car blla !!line near lhtt G"ua sttiiJ. . , .,· ,.
, · lnl 'may be obtoillo&lt;l lro!n the
, " '·
••
• . . ' ..... '
,
&gt;' Don!oerallc . ~ d!alrtnoa In

tbelr

40.00-30".63" P.loO. c~ ..~·-····'·-·-···~····: ...$01• 3UO

· &lt;10.00 Sid.• WI. . ~tk
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enttne

Grant 'fa,ylor, MlrrsvWe, Md.;
Mrl. T. Stllolejo Wht!O; Aoi$tin,
Minn. i Miss Erma Sidwell, Orrville, and Karen and Margaret,
at home, and a brother, Richard, ot Barnesville,
Funeral services will be Sunday at 2 p. m at the Middletown
FrieMs Meeting. calling hours
will be Saturday evening at the
Seoderly-BeUbart Funeral Home

inl!

~~·~~me~'~aia:llei'~l~~·J',

ANOTHER ACCIDENT
TilE PATROL Investigated another . Meigs County accidert at
11:15 p. m. Thursday on Perry
Rd., two arQ three-tenths miles
east or Rt. 689. Both drivers had
minor injuries but were not treat·
ed.
Oatcers reported that cars
driven by Shirley L. D&amp;rst, 22,
Rt. 3 AI~ and LarryW. Birel&gt;field, 17, Rutlam, collided on a
hUlcrest. Both cars had moderate damage. No charge was flled.
The patrol cited Noah Brewer,
57, Rt. 2, Vinton, to Gallipolis
Municipal Court Sept 27 on a
cblrge of foiluro to yield the
right of w.y after an accident at
2:15 p. m. Thursday on Rt 160,

HankyPanky
Now Seen as

Probability

COWMBUS (IJP0- omclals
tn.;,sdptlng a $10,588 shorlatio
In Ohio State Fair 1\mds bl-..
nearly ruled oot the possli&gt;Ulty
or clerl cal error.
Asstatarrt s t a t e Treaaurer
Robert Gardner, who is ileaolill!
lhe probe, said audits In the
audl~'• ofOce, the treiiSUI'er's
ornce and lho Ohio Eloposllloos
Comrillosl011 lolled 1D show In)'
elericil mistakes.
4
' 1be lorpr we &amp;Q, the pOaslbUlt,y or elericil error bec:omoo
very r...U," Gardner llld.
Bur he oal4 tt" had not been
~l.tob' r!ll-9 out. ·
. Tlit d !IOIIII¥ dl_.ared from
i"ectlipto '4bn ,ln ilurl~ the loot
the
l' CoaP-ei~
OOJ!ipri
..
the~llib
DlotrlcL
.
'
'
or, lho folr', SepL I
•'
- --'

~jl'loii\CII

\

, , ~~~,~~~~:z~;~~[=~~:i~~~i~~!:~r~~~~=::) Debate
Humphrey of "thrashl.ng In the wind," today firmiJ' reiectod
the Democratic nominee's challerwe to take him on in a non-

televised dobote.

In Vinton.
Brewer, according to the pa-.
trol, pulled out in front of a car
driven south by Dottie L. McMahon, 25, Rt. 2 Gallipolis. No
o~ was in)lred. There was mOO.
erate damage to the McMahon
car and minor ta Brewer's car.

Nixon in

ti

McKinley
Era--HHH
PORTLAND, Ore. (UPO Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey today charged tbal Richard
M. Nlxon's economic policles
would take America •1Jack to
McKinley,..
In remarks ror delivery to
lhe Porlland Clcy Club, t h e

...

...-chodp!e
eltboooall

Contributions Voted

Program."

William

SWisher,

Homer Morris
Dies Thursday
Homer Edred Morris, 70, ol'
RFD 1, Racine, passed away
Thursday on the way to Veter-

ans Memorial Hospital In the
Racine emergency 8CJ.l8.d..
He was precoded in death by
his parents, and Is IIUfvivod by
a brother I Harry R., or Akron.
The deceased was a member
of the Meigs Couni.Y Coon Hunters Clllb.
Funeral services wUI be Saturday at 2 p.m. at the Ewing
chapel in Pomeroy with R e v.
Charles S:lmon otnciatlng, BurEisenhower - Nlxm admhd.stra- 1&amp;1 will be in lbe Beech Grove
Uon. the United Blales was hit Cemetery.
by three rece111ons In seven
LOCAL TEMPS
years, a growth rate ooiJ' about
The temperature in POmeroy's
half oC lhe biltorlcal avenp, downtown business dlotrict at
and near tripllnl or WIOIIIIIiCIY· 11:28 Lm. was 65 degrees, un.
Democratic presidential nominee aaid America has been more
prosperous under the Kennedy Jolmsoo admlrdltratloo than du.lnl the Eisenhower era.
And he Indicated that II
elected In November, he oould
get America 011 the rood tD
record prosperity lhat confd ...
vh1ual ellmloallon or poverty
by 1976.
He charged lbat doclni t b •

der sunny aides.

mML

'

By United Pre•s International
As prospects brighten for a
chJld welfare chairman, was
asked to confer with Tom Kel . race-to.faee debate between the
ly, Meigs !Ugh School guidance two leadlnl presidential candi·
dates, Richard M. Nixon and
counselor.
Purchase of a new desk and Hubert H. Humphrey already
five chairs for the legion hall have exchanged views on at
was approved, and Lewis Long, least one issue- U.N. involve~
Henry Clatworth.v, and Chester ment ln the Vietnam War,
Nixon said Thursday he would
Erwin were appointed to make
the purchase. Two electric heat- participate in a debate with
ers will also be purchased for Humphrey if third party candi·
lhe hall. Additional paneling was date George C. Wallace were
not included. Humphrey, exdiaeussed.
Elbert Smith and Herman Cau~ pressing delight at Nixon's long
dell were reported confined to sought agreement to debate
Holzer Hospital Homer Hawkins him, sent the GOP candidate a
and Henry Reitmire are both telegram asking that a special
representative be designated to
home trom the hospital.
The membership drive was work out arrangements.
The informal, perhaps even
discussed and it was noted that
Wlconscious,
exchange on Viet32 veterans have paid dues to
nam
and
the
U.N. spanned half
dote. Dues may be peld to any
a
continent.
officer, Doo Roach served reU.S. Interests &amp;d'fer
treshments.
Nixon, campaigning In st.
Louis, said U.S. Interests In
Judgmenl~ Awarded
VIetnam might suffer consideraJudgments on cognovit notes ble damage were the world
have been awarded the Econo- organization to become involved
my Savings and Loan Co. of ln the war issue. He told 5,000
Pomeroy In Meigs County com- high school students tho U.N.
could be turned into a weapoa
mon pleas coort.
'Jbe rirm was granted a judg- against the United states and
ment of $1,014.24 in an action a- addod:
'"The United states, in my
gainst James J, and Wilma Smith,
IlL I, POrlland, and one of $782 opinion, camot sWmlt ita
{rpm Donald F. and Mary Hen- security and its Mure to the
(Continued on Page 10)
drlcks, Syracuse.

Speaking of Schools--No. 58

Students Learning Political Game
By Goorp llarll"IYOI, ~
Melp Loeal Schools

al the outnOt bav1118 a colunm loot FridaY. The
roaooo for thlo II quite simple.
Tbe proiiUre ol ~
In our oellool ·IYIIem ~
COIIIIImod all !be time, t bat
'll!'"'d have bo!e~ li)llll Ill 1n"ll·
Gardner. lnl a column. Thlo bao " - ' "
m!lht bave - od ooiJ' a CCIQP!e ol tlmea dur·

a:-::.to

Seems
;~::wir~:~;}}{{}~:~{~::;:;(;::'t\{:::~;:;: :t;=: :;:;:;: ;:;:;:;:;: :;:;:;:;~;:;:;:;:;~{~ ;~:}}} ~ Lil&lt;. e Iy
Nixon said he would not even answer a telegram Humphrey
sent fD him Thursday nlsht proposing a dellate between the two
men that would not be carried by radio or TV. "This ls just
some or the kidatutr one &amp;oe• throi.Jih when he ls behilll.'' Nhl:on told reporters before departing LouisvUle. Ky., ror Tennes-

Feeney - Bennett FOot 128,
American Legion of MiddJeport made donations to t b e
Four Rivers Girl Scout Council and Salvation Army Wednes·
day night.
Commander Albert R o u a h
presided over the meeting at the
hall when the group also revJewed the uNeed-a-Lift Scholarship

in ColumbJalll, near Youngstown

.rata

.

'

POMERQY.MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

boovor

. ...DELUXE' ULTRA' MODERN KITCHEN CABINE-Tf
.

at y

. News••• in BriefS

WALL CABINETS
12.00-16:: WALL CABINITS... :.....................$ALE
14.00-~4 . WALL CABIMET$.......................... ULE
16. 00-~" WALL CA:IINI!T&gt;$.......................-.SALI!
2q.,00 -u" OVER SIMI(, WA~L CAIIMETS....W:I!
24.00-54" DYER SIMI' WALL CAIIMETS. •..SALI!
21.00-66" OVER SINK WALL CAIIMETS....SALE

Tho8l1ifeurtng F .H,A, loans
must have oul!lclent lnoome tD
repay the loans. ••Their character mullt show they p a y
their bills, n Roueh stated.
The ellglbUit;y of a resident
to receive a loan is made by

F ,H, A, does 111&lt;0Ul"181l ClliCk
PIYmenl of lOIIIs but wlllloao
for a Period or up to 33 yoara,

,,

•

and Florence Kirk Sidwell, the

~-00-24" BASE C:AIINETS ............................SAI.E 21.00
· .00-30" BASE CABIMETS.................•.........SALE 3~.00

ELB'ERFILDI. ~ IN
.
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52•.

TRAY TABLE SETS •lth clurahlo white ,lattlc tropa with
,.Uow and green floral dealgn.

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72.~"'40"a66" Gloaa ,.,.., 'Cutch.._...-..·---... S.Ie ca 00
•"11166" Gl ·~·' ~
,
h
· S.l ~·
-.,.
. r i lf'C ····-·-·········· • 42,00

$9.95 ....

.

:

129.00-66" $TANDARD..................................SALE 112.00
149.00-5-4" DEi.UU.....................................SALE 129.00
98.00-5-4" sllMDARDc...........................•. - .....SALE tw.Oii
79.00-42'' STANDARO...................................... SALE 64.00

Comfortable to wear .......................... ·········-········· ............69c

ADLER WHITE WOOL ATHLETIC SOCKS.
Will not shrin •. Sins 9~ to 13 ...................... -.............. 1.25
DAVIS 4-D CUSHION FOOT WORK SOCKS
.
Solid color. Grey ar white. Sloe 10 to 13........ 3 p•ln 1.7~

.•

•.••
•''

Rock.,.s-Rock·o-Lovngers-R•cllnen-Occaslonal and
Mr. and Mrs. Chairs. Larg• ••l•ctlan of colors and flilr..
tics In any style of furnltur•·

.

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22.95 ................SALE 18.79
. 26.50 ................5ALE 21.69

120.00-5-4" Del. Pool Fom..l Plpotic Topo ....S.Io 96.00
116.00-5f 0.1 . Pott For•..! Plaotlc Tops ....S.Io 93.00
80.00-42' O.luxo Paot ForM..! Plaotlc Tops S.ll64.00
,.

ci.ntht, Daffodils, An•name1, Dutch Iris and others.

MIXING BOWL
SETS

YOUNG MENS

12.95................ SALE 10,49

SALE! HOUSE HOLD PRODUGTS SINKS

S.Ject pour Dutch Flower Bulttt now . In th• Hou ...

rower's appllcatfon.
The Meigs representative
also ltated tb8t homea built
with Farmers Home Admlnlotrotloo 1lmds mull be modest In
abe and price.
Polntlnl out the F .H. A. lo out
eompetlng wllh baMs and IMdlni -des, Roulh said
tbal generally lniereot Ia nul·
nln8 about flvo and me • elJidb
per cent. This 11 l&gt;uod upon
"PI.Yablllty" of the bolt011er,

McDorman ret&gt;&lt;&gt;

Devoled To The Interest. Of The Meigi·Mllllon Area

VOL. XXI NO. 110

20.95................SALE 17.49

SALE! YOUNGSTOWN
KITCHEN SINKS
.

pair

LINGERIE
REG.
REG .
REG.
REG .

8.95...................5ALE 6.99

$24.95 ••• , ••••. , ••• , • •• •. , •• , ••••• SALE ~L49
$22.95 •...••....••• •• ..•••••.••••. SALE .19.49
$20.95 •••••••••••••• • •• , ••.•• , , • , .SALE $17.49

Thickset, heavy duty corduroys In nav,. blue, ton and grey.
All alae• 32 to SO wahl . Roomy proportioned fit .

REG. 99c PAIR ..... ..............,. ........ . .....SALE 79c PAIR

3 pairs $2.35

SALE $1.00 yd .

CARPET
RUNNEl

$5e89
MEN'S CORDUROY WORK PANTS
SALE THIS WEEK· END... .............. . ........

15.95................SALE 13.4?

SALE PRICES ON LUGGAGE

MENS WOOL PLAID
Sizes I-4Y.! to 17. Lant tall1. 2 buttan through flop poclleta .
Lined neck band. Buffalo plaid pattern In your choice of colors

to 6x

DRESSES....
..... ..... ..
. ...............SALE
DRESSES..........
........... ....... ,.SALE
DRESSES.......... . . ... ...... .... .. . .....SALE
DRESSES........
.. . .. .. . . . . . .
... .SALE

Siaes 9

ZipCer front coot •tyle. 2 elash pocket•. 2 button thru flo
poe etl. Warm ond serviceable. Colorful plaids.
p

SALE!

7.95.................... 5ALE 6.49

$39,95 , ...........................SALE t35. 49
$34.95 •••••.••••.. , , ••••••••••••.••SALE $30.49
$36.95 •.•..••••.••.• , •••. • , , • , ••••SALE $33.49

buod upoo the
lnformalloo
provided upon the 1)0IOntial bor·

carried by • - ·
'111" borrower lhM would pay
a hllhor rate or lnterell lhroul!h
lbo 'bank .for the remainder of
lilo 1oo11 period, McDorman aald.
Roulh earlier had also atated
that tho lool1s ore transferred
111 a bank whoa F .H. A. fools
lhal lho home purchaser con
carry lho 10111 I!Jider normal
banking reguiatloos. This oometimea, or perbaJtl many times,
McllormaD oild, Ia oomo 12yoars
anA.- lho loan Is mado.

'

14.95 ................SALE 12.39

complete selection or lugpge includes all styles ror WOomen - WeekeMers, Pu.Umans, BeauQr Cases, and Tote Bq:s.
For Men Companion, Two Suiter, Three Suitor end Attache Cues.

0

.

5.95 ....................SALE 4.79

Unl·Mold - Travel Joy - Dlscovery Airway Luatle gives
you the ultlmale in quality, value and styling-

$30,95 •

••
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11.95 .................. SALE 9.69

•

e

SPECIAL

UPHOLSTERY
FABRICS

SALEI AIRWAY LUGGAGE

FLANNEL SHIRTS

GIRLS DRESSES
2.95
3.95
4.95
5.95

MENS ALL WOOL PLAID

ZIPPER JACKETS

GIRLS SLACK SETS

B'

,,'

Sal• pric•• on our tftflre stock of lobi• Lamps~ Chose

$18.95 • , ••• • .••• ••• •• ••• . • •••••• , .SALE $17.49
$17.50 • , •••..•••••••• •.. .••••.. , , .SALE .16.49

2 pairs lor $7.00

On Sale-Sius 3 ta 6x ond 1 to 14

Blue cornflower de~lgn. S.t conalata of: 10 Inch ••lll•t,
~-1~ cup Peter Pana (with co.-era) lY.i qt. co.-erN laldnt
Dlah, -4 qt. Courad Saucepot.
Qt. Cav,.red Saucepof,

frorn our fine selection.

Que

SALE! 103 PAIRS YOUNG MENS 7.50

ANOTHER BIG SHIPMENT

WOMEN'S POPULAR PRICED DRESSES

$1.89

eveni~

SALEI TABLE LAMPS

SALE!
Remnant Lan&amp;th

DN WELL
KNOWN BRANDS OF

MRS. VELMA DoUGLAS, LEt'T, AND MJ&lt;b. MAXINE ARNOLD lilteD 11 Dick Flnlaw, Pomeroy, polrts out on a miniature model home, reatures offered by hla ~in new homes. Finlaw was one or two local contractors exhibiting at tlle new housing meetiiw In Pmteroy 'lb.ursda.Y

CORNING WARE SE·JS

FIELDCREST TOWELS

BARGAIN PRICES

$14.95

three men ot Melga Couni.Y,
mak:lng up a local committee,

however, and can run as high as
ro secure fund a seven and one-tourth per eeat

lo&amp;ns.~

REGULAR $29.95

cholc• of Four Pattornl. All Hrat

LONG SLEEVE SPORT SHIRTS

•

SPECIAL

-.ust hM'• need

.urces, Howtwer,
be pointed out Lhat F .H. A. does
reelizo tbal IDIUIY tlmeo YOUill!·
er families j)llrt.lculariJ' lind It
dWicult lo secure new houolni
or to [IUrchase a home already
constructed because oC the dlf.
ficult,y In po,ying abort I o r m

Fully ver'llllotttel for cooler, Foster, drier honlnt. Adj' 1111t1 lu:am
23" to 36", Sturdy all steel construction. Folds flat or 1terage

SPECIAL CROUP OF DISCONTINUED PATTERNS

Another 1hipment of the .. popular comb Coddy Jean• for men
gnd vouna men, Slus 29 to 38 wahl. Has exclvtlv' comb 09C•
ket. Slim cut, Fast bock ltyllng, Green, gold, brown. 50"
Polyester, 50" Cotton.
·

not abl ,
through oth(H

MEJAL IRONING 1ABLE ,

In the Cosmetic Depart•nt. Well known ltrGnda.
Gift sets for WoNn and

HALF-PRICE I

STOWAWAY JEANS

.. .... SALE 3.49
.. ......... .SALE 3.99
.... SALE 4.99

3.95 DUSTERS....... .
4.95 DUSTERS. ........
5. 95 DUSTERS... ... .

Well •nolll'n brands. Ret_u lor
SSe to $3.00 o box. While
they lut.

length .

'

SALEI GIFT SETS

CHRISTMAS CARDS

are

RID-JID ADJUSTABLE

126 BOXES OF

s lee\le I ength .

3.95 SWEATERS ............. .......... ........... . ... SALE 3.49
5.95 SWEATERS....
..... . ......... SALE 4.99
7.95 SWEATERS... .....
. .... ........... SALE 6.99
8.95 SWEATERS.......
. ... .. ............ SALE 7A9
10.95 SWEATERS .....
. .............SALE 8.99
12.95 SWEATERS .
. ......... SALE 10.49
I

ON FRIDAY AND ON SATURDAY THE STORE IS OPEN UNTIL 9 IN THE EVENING
BIG YANK PERMANENT PRESS
WHILE THEY LASTI
HALF-PRICE

re~

for new houeilll., Roush aald,
polntlnl oal tballl ·inuotbe oho1m
lhat the pre...t bauolnl of the
family Is aot oultable.
He furlher stated lhat loaill
are made only lo rosldonta&lt;lwito

Elberfelds In Pomeroy End of the Month Sale •••• All Over The Store II
For this s nl• vou cnn 10ve on all Womens Sweaters. Terrific
selections of the segson'smost popular style1 and tolorl.

~

In order tD Cllalll) for F .H. A.

FRIDAY (27th), SATURDAY ) (28th), MONDAY (3011a) ,..,.,

SALE I WOMEN' SWEATERS

Dlgbt,

whea he ocldresoed an oatimated

'

'•

Ad!ninlltratloo

nprolli!latlT• Tlwrildl1

loaa,

''

not

I mull

~oslze

ItO! In IIIIa coiWM far

~It~

le~ ·,J'OUI'"

'-L,

'

-:t.,f.::
.._
,
r

IW~·

!~

point of Mlecting twelve cllaa
offlcers. The experience Involved Is the Important lhlni ben.
The opportunicy tu become ,
qualnted with lhe two ~ - .
cept, )IOiltlona, primaries, lhe goneral election Ia the l1l!ll
value or IIIII prGt!ram. Clloa or~
l!eeri eouJcl bo selected ,In llf• ·

cf-

teenmlllltnbyothlr-

cectures, but the ~tuc~t~nta -:::1
not be 'PYOIJ lho
8&gt; ~
how lho ltltem workt. ' 'lil

t
o
....
•-l""' - •

lhat llllt-ll11'!1llflliftllla
lbo.olfcii;l
lt.

�,'

., of

'

Tennessee

·,, here Wtth
Mri. Clar·~

3 -

The Dally Sentinel, Pomor.,-Mlcldleport, 0., Frldl,y, September 'ZI, 1968

All-Start®

Pirates· Scor~ ·First

Jenkins Gets

To for Win

Athens &amp;I Molp
Frell!man Fullback Steve Jon- Ironton al Gallipolis
kino acor.ed doorthperlodtouch&gt; JackBon at Welllton
down aDd extra points on a nan to Nolsonvl)le-York at~
live Soulhem'o Reoervos a ~ ' Berne Union al Vlnlon C&lt;1iJI9
win OVf'lr tM hoM: Snut:hwe.tern Southwestern •t Southern LDdJ
Hlgl!landor re_.o team Thura- Fodera! Hocklni at Wahama

Kyger Creek Romps, 28-6
TilE bAlLY SDn'INEL
~ZVoftD TO unU:ar or
H

·

• •, . . . .

a.-,......
... •'
..........
...,_........,.,'ftllo
Y.u" ...........
IICHAIDI.OWIN,~

FOODLAND OFF1CIA!S - Two Foodlaod chlln oMclalo
were at Tiny's 'Foodland No.3 in Henderson when it opened for

'·'

CONFERRING - Andrew DeCoy, right, manager of Tiny's new Fooiland No. 3ln Henderson,
which officially opened Wednesday, talks with two of his co-owners, James Rickman, left, who
heads the Tiny's Foodland and Bargaln1and operation in Mldd1eport, and Odis (Tiny) Burris,. oper.
ator of Tiny's Foodland in Kanauga. The other owner is Gary Northup.

'

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•.~ ( !

.. . 0 1

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' D1

L

t
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f
,)
·I

·fl•\ir I.
: I
NEW FOODLAND - There Is 6,000 square reet of door space tn this Tiny's Foodlard No. 3
that opened this week in Herderson, just across the Shadle Bridge from Point Pleasant.

Friends Like These
'
One Does Without
.·

..... ............. _.·

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:

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W~SIIINGTON

(UPI)-There
is little comfort for a.n,yone in

what President Johnson's com-

I

I~
'

mJssion on national violence has
heard so Car.
Boiled down, It Is this: you
are safer in New York's vast
and shadowy Central Park at 4
a.m. than in your own bed,

safer in a crowd or alme with a
stranger than with your friends
or relatives.
That Is the pldure tllat has

emerged thu_, fa.r in testlmOflV
from law enforcement speciaUsts.

Today the panel turned to
professionals in the clinical
aspects of human behavior,
psychiatrists and criminologists.
They included Dr. Joseph Satten
ol the Menninger Clinic in
Kansas and Leon lladzinowicz

.

~

'

ol lhe Institute of Criminology
at Cambridge University .
Prof. James Vorenberg of the
Harvard Law Sctoo.l told the
investigators Wednesday twothirds of the nation's murder
and rape victims were friends
or former friends of their
assailants.
Sleep ln Park
lie stated, and Undersecretary of State Nicholas deB.
Katzenbach agreed, HYou are
safer from murder at 4 a.m. in
Central Park than you are at
horne in bed."
Katzenbach
was chairman
and Vorenberg was executive
director of Johnson's crime
commission, which has oow
passed out of existence. Botil
wished the violence commission
more success with its efforts

than their conunission had.
"Most murders, rapes and
aggravated assaults are committed noL by strangers but by
friends, relatives or acquaintances," Katzenbach testified.
"The rate of anxiety has
probably gone up faster than
the crime rate," Katzenbach
said. But he said he believed
the wrong people are anxious.
Poor Hit Harder
&amp;lburban dwellers tend to be
most concerned about crime
while the crime commission
report showed 11 lt is not the
well-to-do who most often fall
victim to crime, it ls the poor
and the slum dweller."
Figures showed persons earning under $6 ,000 are conslderably more likely to become
victims of rape, rol:t;ery or

Doesn't Anyone Hove a Compass:&gt;

I

I

•'

'fen. CIQ, llllr Ylft.
MNrr,u.. ntal: Dill_.. IIJ _....

.........u.w. • -.., ...... ,.,

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

... .......,. ll

eM llllll ............. ....

lila - - . t~Jt, 'nftt ........... ...

.......... ., . . 011 , . .

'lL-.
!lila - • ll.lf.'I'IIN ..... .....
MMr. . ll'k'e . . . . . . . . . ,......

....

!l&gt;auldlns

acored the Bobcats
last touchdoWn 011 a 25 yard run
and Ron ~len, 15()-jJOUild sonlor, rsn the PAT to put I h e
Bobcats ahead 28-4,
Will! aboot a minute to go In
the first hllf, Jon Rotbgeb, 200pound Junior end, took a 48 yard
pall from !;l&gt;auldlng but the play
wa1 called back on account ol

a clipping penallY.
Kyger Creek's second team
dominated play In the second
half as the teams rougtrt: to a
scorele" deadlock the final two
periods. The Pirates' biggest
threat In the second half came
when Alan Hall, 160i)OIIlld junior, intercepted a Jackie Henson pass and rambled 50 yards
before stump ran him out or
bounds on the 17-yard line. The

..

Plrales bogpi1 down on the Ky.
ger Creek alx. yard line aDd
falled to 1tcore.
Tlll'lllng In
performancea on· del0111e for the
Bobcats were Mike TboiiiJIIOII,
150-j)OIIIId Junior, John HUJbes,
235 - pound oenlor, and Barton
Stump, The Kyger Creek defenoe
limited the Pirates to a mJnua
nine yards rushing In the IIOCOild

hall.
Kyger Creek rolled up 16 ftrst
downs to six ror tlle Pirates. The
Bobcats had 223 yards rushing
and completed elgbl o! 14 paS&amp;es for 144 yards and a net
367 yBI~S. The Pirates bad 87
yards rushing and completed two
ot nine passes for 27 yards and
114 yards net.
North Gallla drew 30 yards In

PenaJties and Kyger C r e e k

HOME DECORATOR

Columbus Mayor Against Clay Fight
Ohio (UPO- today appeared dim.
Cl.,.- said he l'l&amp;sn't
Boxing c001mission clerk Cl~&gt;­
"begglng nobody to fight," but vis !'l'ogawlek told United Press
Mayor
M. E.
Sensenbrenner International Thur sda.y night
promised a battle if Clay wants there was a breech of commisCOLUMBUS,

Cassiu11

to return to the ring here.
sion rules in granting the
"I'Jil not interested in an,y- permit application for the fighL
· bocly who is not interested in
The commission's s e v e n
fighting for the United States of members were to huddle tonight
America," SensenbreMer said in city hal1 to discuss the
when he called tor a city boxing permit application and whetber
commission meeting to review or. not it would be approved.
the prOIJ(Ised fighL
Clay, mesnwhlle, left ColumClay, and prmnoters Bubbles bus ThW'sday and returned to
Holloway and BUI C1Dl1mins Jr., Chicago.
IMOUnced WedDeoday plana for · He had not heard of the
a Nov. 11 fight at the state mlyor's objection until told by
talrgrounds c o 1 l s e u m here United Press International.
againat an unnamed opponent.
"I was down at the invitation
It was to have been Clay's of promoter Bubbles Holloway,"
nrot professional light In 18 Clay said. "That's the ooly
months,
reason I was there,
But, prospects lor the !lghl
"I told tllem II they could get

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bother of installing real beam•. lightweight, made of non-burning
1111terial that la$1s a lifetime. Can be instaUed indoors or out

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Mount&amp; In 8" opening, anodized
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INSERT PANEL

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you unlimited Jmssibilities wlleth~r
you use fabric or one of the nt..'W
insert matciiab. Price is for one
7" x 20" shutter only, unpnlnred,
len lwdwaR and fabrh: in~erl.
Installation and decoratiilg mate~ avoilable.

HER-MAR

47.77
White Fonpln woodgrain bi;SC ,
. with coW flesh on white Formp ·
Washablo interior, ~elf-closing ,
and
shelf. Includes

UNFINISI(ED FURNiTURE

T

Carpcttcs let you be the decorator
with supercushloncd luxuey squ·
are~ that wrap your home in com·
fort and be1uty. Mix or match
colon, make custom cub ... eYen
add a tile at a time. AcryUc Rbers
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Avocado, Mo~s Gn:en, Gold, Red,
Beige, Blue, and Charcoal

Iii

0

·o

0
0

it, which J didn't believe the)'
could, J would fight. I'm not
begging nobody to !lghL M,
religion says we don't force
ourselves into places where we
are not wanted."
Clay is appealing a conviction

--..---

=-

pound senior tackle, was eJected from the game early in the

first period.
The Pirates had two players
injured. Checked over at Holof failing to report for military zer Medical Center and reservice. Qa.y claimed in his leased were Cary McClaskey and
trial he was a Muslim minister - Alan Hall .
and consequently a conscien- North Gallta
6 0 0 0- 6
tious objector.
82000-28
Kyger Creek
The appeal is pending before
the U.S. Supreme Court.

We're Going All

STANDINGS

Oul Says Woody
COLUMBUS (UP!) - WOO&lt;ly
Hayes plans to throw everything his Buckeyes have at
Southern Methodist Saturday and hopes its enough to otop
the Mustangs.
••we'll show all we've got Md
hope lt's enough,'• Ha,yes said
Thursday night. "We•ve got to
·g et back into that win column.
This team coming in here is a
good one ... hits you fast . u
osu will start nine s o p h omores, three oC them in deep
defensive spots.
uThey're good ones and those
three sophomores in the secondary have been there pretty
nearly every day since last
spring," says a confident coach
mo•s starting his 18th season
Saturday.

By United Press International
Natlonal League
W, L, Pet : GB
Amertean League
W, L, Pel GB
x~. Louis
95 64 .597
x-l&gt;etrolt
103 56 .648
San Francisco 86 73 .541 9
Baltimore
91 70 ,565 13
Cincinnati
82 77 .516 13
Chicago
81 78 ,509 l4
Boston
85 74 ,535 t8
1
Pillsburgh
80
79 .503 15
Cleveland
85 75 .531 18 h
Atlanta
80 79 .503 15
New York
81 78 .509 22
Oakland
80 79 .503 23
Los Angeles
74 85 .465 21
Philadelphia
74 85 .465 21
Minnesota
78 81 .491 25
New York
72 87 .453 23
California
66 93 .4t5 37
Houston
Chicago
65 94 ,409 38
71 88 .447 24
x-Cllnched pe~mant
Washington
62 96 .392 !01h
(No games scheduled)
x-CUnched peMant
Today's Probable Pitchers
Ttltrsday•s Results
(All Times EDT)
Baltimore 7 Cleveland 1, night
(only gameo acheruled)
Philadelphia (James 4-4) at
~s Probable...·~Pltchets ' NeW Y,?r h. (McAndrew 4-3), 8
(All Times EDT) '
p.m.
Minnesota (Kaat 14-)2) at Oak·
Pittsburgh (Moose 8-IO)at Chiland (Jlobson 11-14), 10:30 p.m. cago (Holtzman J0-14), 2:30p.m.
San Francisco (Perry 15-15)
Chicago (llorlen ll-t4l at CalFight Results
Ifornia (Messersmith 4-1), 11 at Cincinnati (Culver 11-16) 8:By United Preas International
p.m.
05p.m.
NEW YORK (UP0- Buster
Washington (Coleman 10-16) at
Los Angeles (Osteen 12-18) at
Mathis,
223, Grand Rapids,
Detroit (!Uiler 9-4), 8 p.m.
Atlanta (Slone 7-4), 8:05 p .m.
Mich
.,
stopped
James J. Woody,
Houston (llierker 12 -14) at st.
Cleveland (Hargan 8-15 or Bai203¥.t,
New
York
(6); George
ley 0-1) at Ba!Umore (Nelson Louis (Gibi!OII 21-9), 9 p.m.
1h, Canada, stopped
Chuvalo,
208
Bronco !Porta S1a. Wagon. Pcipuw- 4 wheel drive. Bucket seats.
4.:Z), 8 p.m.
Sa.btrda,y•s Games
Manuel Ramos, 206, Mexico (5).
Sholto good care.
New York (Verbanlc 6-6) at Philadelphia at New York
Boston (Ellsworth 15-7), 7:30 p. Pittsburgh at Chicago
m,
San Francisco at Clncimati
· lewis Repair Service ·
Saturday's Gamea
Loa Angeles at Atlanta
Mlmesota al Oakland, twilight Houston at S1. Louis
•HEAnNG
V-8 Impala 2 dr. Hard Top. Elllrl sharp, Gold with bloc.k top and Chicago at CaiUomla, night
RETURNS TO U. S,
•PLUMBING
black Interior, PS. PB, 283 Eow
Washington at Detroit
MASON - Marine Stall Ser·
•ROOFING
New York at Boston
geant stuart M. Lawhorn, 29, son
(Only games scheduled)
of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Lawhorn,
-FORand husband of the former Miss
Allee F. McDaniel of llartiord,
Cllallna 2 Dr. Hard Top, Only 2,345 euy miles, A real cresmhas returned to the U. S. with
puft Power Steerlqf, Power brakes. Auto. tran~.
the 27th Marine Regimental J.and.
lng Team (RLT .:Z7) which has
.
WY 2·23M
ROOKIES PLAY
t:M Mill S\,
Ml4ldltpor
NEW
YORK
(tJPO-Four completed elglrt months combat
rookies with an exeellent chance dul;y In South VIetnam.
to stick In the National Hockey
"400'' 2 dr. Hard Top, Popular too cu. ln. 360 horsepower _
League are expected to see
4-ap, trans. Like new COIIdltiOIL Poaltl ve tractiOIL
act:l011 Friday night When the
New York Raq:ers entertain
1he Slanley Cup cl!amploo
Mmtreal canadleno In an
oxhlbltlon game.
Wildcat Custom 2 clr. Hard Top; Smart all black vlnjil cuotom
Forwards Walt Tkaczuk aDd
baterlor with center arm rest. Tnde-ln on new Bulck from one
Juka Widing and defensemen
ol aur repeat custome,ra;
Allan Ramlllllo and Brad Park
IU'e the promising RalQJer
)'(UitRitera,

USED CARS

66 FORD

S1,795

65 CHEVROLET

S1,69S

68 PONTIAC

SAVE

68 FIREBIRD

$AYE

68 BUICK

Dectra Cusam t clr, Hard

$AYE

Meigs Junior

Ea.stern •t Glouster

High Slips By

Meigs

tor trans., OrariBe and O.eater•

Robert Hawk, Delorea Hawk,
Maxine Hunnell, Carl E. H-._
Paul Hawk, Bet~&gt; Hawk, 11e11y
WUbW' Imboden, Frances Im- Stivers, William E. stivers, NorThe Meigs 7-Sth grade (IJot-- boden to Robert Imboden, Hope ma Hawthorne, Darrell HawbaU team, led by the clutch hll- Imboden, .28 acre, Rutland.
thorne to Dorolh,y Hawk, 86.4 A.,
ning o! Quarterbeck Andy VaughRobert bnboden, Hope Imbod-- Orange and ·Chester.
an, edged visiting Gallipolis 1._
Thurston H. Clark to Allll
en to Frank G. Smith, Wanda L.
12 Thursday afternoon at Mid- Smith, .28 acre, Rutland.
Clark, 3, 21 acres, Olive,
dleport Stadium.
Christopher C. Qlne IDJoaepb
Clarence Gilmore, Freda GU·
Vaugtan scored the first TD
more to Steven K. Little, •71 ac- Gilkey, parcel. Mlddleport.
on a short carry and then Gal- re, salisbury•
Myra E. Stephenson, JunesiL
lipolis came beck tO tie the
Charles Asa Bradbuey. Jeatute Stephenson tD James B. stepheD-~
score at 6-6 when John Walters Anne Bradbury to Joseph Young, son, lots, Pomeroy,
hit p~Jdirt.
Naomi Nevil1e to Rllcine Home
Jr. , Mary Jane Kitchen, parcels,
After Vaughan's secon:l six- Scipio.
Nstional Bank. lot, Racine.
pointer, Chuck Faulk ran the exLarry J. Roush by AviceFrecJc...
Milford H. Hawk, Dec. to Dor~
tra points giving Meigs a 14-6
othy Hawk, Robert Hawk, Max- er, Atty. Ln Fact, to Charles fl
lead.
ine Hunnell, Paul Hawk, Betty Faulk, BettY L Faulk, 1 acre.
Gallipolis' Walters then talStivers, Norma Hawthorne, cert. Chester.
lied again to close the gap to
1._12, but Galllo Called oo Its
extra points attempt.
The win lert Meigs with a reeord of 1-l, having lost to Wahama in the season opener. It was
Gallia's first ouUng,

Property

Gallia, 14-12

Meigs-Gallipolis
Reserves to Play
The Meigs Marauder reserve
!ootball team will host Gallipolis this Saturday at 8 p.m.
at Marauder stadium In Pomeroy.
Meigs, coached by Dick Well
and Fenton Taylor, is l-1 on
the season witll a win in its 09ener against Wellston and a setback at the hands oC Pt:. Pleasant last week. The GAllS reserves, coached by John Ecker, are 1~, having beaten Jack800 20-14 last week.

Chew the BEST in the

Early Meaaure
Early civilization had a
measurement called the cubit.
Common in Biblical times,
this was the length of the
forearm from the tip of the
middle finger to the elbow.

NEW FOIL PACK

1967 Pontiac
1961 Ford
1966 Plymouth

$2495
$1895
$1895

1966 Rambler

$1595

Ventura, 2dr. H.T, Auto. Trans., P.S. &amp;P.B., Low Mlleage,

Galaxie 500, t dr., seclan, low mUeage.

Fury Convertible. atd. trans.

Top, CIJoleeottwo tOII'·mll- cara.

One with only 7,3i8 easy miles. Factory air coodltloned. Fully
equipped.

65 MERCURY

t-n

.,.

The Southern ....rve IIQiad,
c.ial Grove It Symmes VaDIQI
made up mootl,y ol freohmen aDd
Upper Arlll\iiOft at Portsmouth
a few aopbomores, andSoulhwelt- PL Pleaoant - ~·
ern were loc:ked In a defenaive Huntington High - (ten
Ml until Jlridna tallied the
!lingle olic.polnter. It waa the
Tbe name "Bull Moose" for
ftrst reserve game r1 the 181- the Progressive party In 1112
IOil for Coach Russ Harper's lo derived f r o·m Theodore
Roosevelt's remark at the be~
Tornadoo&lt;Pid.
ginning of the campaign : ••1
feel as fit as a bull moose."

lEWIS
REPAIR SERVICE

S1,995

65 BUICK

c1a1

-.a:

bad 55. Danny Logue, big 2.10 -

bus.
Mr. and Mrs . Rush Philson
and Erich of Southern Pine. N.
C., are spending a week with
his parents and grandmother,
Mr. and Mrs. Ben Philson and
Mrs. Mina Lewis.
Mr. and Mrs. Glen Harpold
and Mrs. Carrie Scarry t1 East
Uverpool called on relatives
and (rlends here Saturday.
Roger Birch of Bellevue was
a weekend guest ot his parenta,
Mr. and Mrs. Elza Birch.
Mrs. Am COe returned after a
visit in Akron with Mr. and Mrs.
John Davis and family for ten
dayo .
Mr . and Mrs. Gerald Simp..
son, Cori and Mark, spent &amp;Inday with Mr. and Mrs. Rex Car-

,. ...

,_.,,....,. ' .... u ,_ ........

lyle In Columbus.
Mrs. Isabel Slmp&amp;On apent tile

S1, 195

ClasBlc tell' Sedan, auto.

tnns., &amp; cyl

1964 Dodae
1964'
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880, 4 dr, Sedu. P.S. &amp; P.B., Auto. Trula. New car

WHITEWALLS

0
0

.

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Cuaam 2 dr. Sedan, Std. Traaa., VB, one

ow-.

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0

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4-DRAWER CHEST

Smooth -unJ"'d 5dc.,:t. kiln '-'ri\•J, \\'CKtcrn knl)lty t'lnc.
slain or llnl'-h in dl.!f.'OI'lltor ~·':"Jon.

added.

•

.....Hll'-l..........
-- ~ 0.

BY MRS. FRAN CIS MORRIS
Mr. Mason ~ncer is a patient at Veterans Memorial HoSpital. Mr. ErnestSmlthwaotaken
to Hol zer Hospital.
Rev. Arthur Cleland is a surgical patient in Pleasant Valley
Hospital,
The Booster &amp;mday School
Class met at the First Baptist
Church Thursda.Y evening, Sept,
19, with a program around the
table. Mrs. Marie Roush. vicepresident read Luke 6:1-13 and
gave the prayer. Readings were
given by members and closed
with the Lord's Prayer. The next
meeting is to be at the home of
Helen Simpson. Potluck refreshments were served.
Mrs. George Neigler entered
Holzer Hospital &amp;mday. Her
daughter, June, a nurse In Columbu.s, is here to care for her
mother.
A recent corn roast and cookout was enjoyed at tfie Roush
camp on the rlver bank at WatJOn'&amp; farm. Those present included Mrs. Albert Smith of Akron, Mrs. Ellen Couch, Mrs.
Sandy Phalen and daughter, Pomeroy; :Mr. and Mrs. Linley Hart,
local ; Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Roush and Nancy, Columbus; Mr.
and Mrs. Otis McClintock, local; Mr. and Mrs. Dale Hart,
who are on furlough from Island
of Cypress. They left &amp;mday,
Sepl 15, for Florida to be in
school for six months.
Mrs. Ray La Pari of Algonac,
Mich., visited an afternoon with
Mr. and Mrs. Owen Watson.
Weekend guests of Mr. and
Mrs . Owen Watson were Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Roush of Columbus; Mrs. Cecil Foss and daughter, Loretta J!urkhart o! Cold
Springs, Ky,; Mrs. Allen Couch
of Pomeroy, and Mr. and Mrs.
Linley Hart, local.
Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Gayman
of Mariarma, Pa., spent the weekend with Mrs. Esther Piper and
Mrs. Helen Younce.
Mrs. Carrie Nease returned
trom a visit with Mr. and Mrs.
Brooks Pickens and children_
Monaca, Pa., Mrs. Bessie Pickens, Rochester, Pa.; Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Needham, Steubenville; Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Kinsey, Wierton, W, Va ., and Mr.
and Mrs. David Nease, CoJum-

Katzenbach said the fears ol
m · ddle-Income earners and the
3Jlluent may stem in part froni.
the pWlicity ginn to attacks on
prosperous members of a
community, particularly U the
crime has racial or sexual
overtones.
On the subject o! civil
disorder, Katzenbacb said small
numbers of
agitators
are
infiltrating massive peaceful
demonstrations seeking to turn
policemen Into 11 lnstruments of
violence and repression."
He said: ••we have seen and
will see more el1'orts of small
groops o! agitators mlxed In a
large and peaceful deDlOIIstration to so enrage tbe pollee tbilt
they strike out at tnilo.O.. and
gullt;y alike."
The pollee - l d be foolish to
accommodate them, Katzenbaeh

.\.'

. . . IIHl................. tiWW'.
._..d............... . _ . .

Racine Social Events

burgl ~ry.

.

c:.,.r,11t.......,

ll,, , _ . , , Olllo, ..,.., . . . . . . . . . . ....•

business this week under management of Andrew DeCoy. Posing here in tront of the me1tdisplayis Bob Geisler, warehouse
director, lett. and BW Frazee. meat director.

..

I

0111o

'
Kyger Creek
o.)lOIIed North in the 5V AC Is Soothwestem aDd ter ended, Kyger Creek loading
Galllat1'e first touchdown Thurs- the Highlandera meet Southern 8~.
daY night at Kyaer Creek b u I Local tmdght at Racine. A win
The Bobcalo drove I n t o
came back to do1m the Plrate11 fat, the lllghlandors will p u t North Gallla territory late In
28-6 •• the Bobcats scored all them In a ftrst plrce tie with the ftrst period, and with 11:45
their polnto In the ftrst half. Kyger Creek. In ITro weeks, left to play In the Hoond perThe win was the second con- the lllghlandoro meet the Bob- !~took a 14-4 land ao Gary
secutive tn Southern Valley Ath~ cats at Kyger Creek.
, ~. 168-pound senior, ram ~
IeUe Conference tor Bobcats ot
Turley George, 145 - junior,\Jblpct 25 yards to score the touchCoach Howard Lee Miller and put the Pirates ahead 6.0 with dollm. The try for the PAT was
vaulted them Into first place In two mlnutes gone in the first no good.
the 5V AC with a 2.0 record. quarter when h' raced up the
Steve !;l&gt;auldlng, 141 • pound
h was North GaUia's second middle for North Gallla'a only Junior quarterback, &amp;®red the
consecutive SV AC loss. The Pir- touchdown. The try for the PAT next Bobcat toochmwn !rom 17
ates are 2.:Z 111 the SVAC and was no good ,
yards out but the try for the
tn all games. North Galli!l travWith 8:40 !ell to play In lhe PAT wa1 no good. 8 a r ton
ela to Alexander next Friday (irst period, the Bobcats went stump, l60..pound senior. reni&amp;flt while Kyger Creek trav- ahead 8-G when Perry Beebe, covered a Pirate tumble on the
el1 to E11tern for their third 150 - pound senior, drove over North Gallla 25 fo set up the
SVAC contest In defense of their from the one yard line to score touchdown. It Will Kyger Creek
1967 sv AC Championship.
and Gary Fisher, ran the PAT. 20-4 with tO: tO left to play In
The only otherundefeatedteam That was the way the first quar. the first half.

.,

H.~a~l~

R.

'.

. ·~·

, "QHIO'S
~·

'•

.~awUngs

·. Co.

PL~EST

••••

DODGE DU.LER"

'

�,'

., of

'

Tennessee

·,, here Wtth
Mri. Clar·~

3 -

The Dally Sentinel, Pomor.,-Mlcldleport, 0., Frldl,y, September 'ZI, 1968

All-Start®

Pirates· Scor~ ·First

Jenkins Gets

To for Win

Athens &amp;I Molp
Frell!man Fullback Steve Jon- Ironton al Gallipolis
kino acor.ed doorthperlodtouch&gt; JackBon at Welllton
down aDd extra points on a nan to Nolsonvl)le-York at~
live Soulhem'o Reoervos a ~ ' Berne Union al Vlnlon C&lt;1iJI9
win OVf'lr tM hoM: Snut:hwe.tern Southwestern •t Southern LDdJ
Hlgl!landor re_.o team Thura- Fodera! Hocklni at Wahama

Kyger Creek Romps, 28-6
TilE bAlLY SDn'INEL
~ZVoftD TO unU:ar or
H

·

• •, . . . .

a.-,......
... •'
..........
...,_........,.,'ftllo
Y.u" ...........
IICHAIDI.OWIN,~

FOODLAND OFF1CIA!S - Two Foodlaod chlln oMclalo
were at Tiny's 'Foodland No.3 in Henderson when it opened for

'·'

CONFERRING - Andrew DeCoy, right, manager of Tiny's new Fooiland No. 3ln Henderson,
which officially opened Wednesday, talks with two of his co-owners, James Rickman, left, who
heads the Tiny's Foodland and Bargaln1and operation in Mldd1eport, and Odis (Tiny) Burris,. oper.
ator of Tiny's Foodland in Kanauga. The other owner is Gary Northup.

'

..:·o,

•.~ ( !

.. . 0 1

•'
•

...... ·'..

'

'

.

I

' D1

L

t
'

f
,)
·I

·fl•\ir I.
: I
NEW FOODLAND - There Is 6,000 square reet of door space tn this Tiny's Foodlard No. 3
that opened this week in Herderson, just across the Shadle Bridge from Point Pleasant.

Friends Like These
'
One Does Without
.·

..... ............. _.·

.

:

.

W~SIIINGTON

(UPI)-There
is little comfort for a.n,yone in

what President Johnson's com-

I

I~
'

mJssion on national violence has
heard so Car.
Boiled down, It Is this: you
are safer in New York's vast
and shadowy Central Park at 4
a.m. than in your own bed,

safer in a crowd or alme with a
stranger than with your friends
or relatives.
That Is the pldure tllat has

emerged thu_, fa.r in testlmOflV
from law enforcement speciaUsts.

Today the panel turned to
professionals in the clinical
aspects of human behavior,
psychiatrists and criminologists.
They included Dr. Joseph Satten
ol the Menninger Clinic in
Kansas and Leon lladzinowicz

.

~

'

ol lhe Institute of Criminology
at Cambridge University .
Prof. James Vorenberg of the
Harvard Law Sctoo.l told the
investigators Wednesday twothirds of the nation's murder
and rape victims were friends
or former friends of their
assailants.
Sleep ln Park
lie stated, and Undersecretary of State Nicholas deB.
Katzenbach agreed, HYou are
safer from murder at 4 a.m. in
Central Park than you are at
horne in bed."
Katzenbach
was chairman
and Vorenberg was executive
director of Johnson's crime
commission, which has oow
passed out of existence. Botil
wished the violence commission
more success with its efforts

than their conunission had.
"Most murders, rapes and
aggravated assaults are committed noL by strangers but by
friends, relatives or acquaintances," Katzenbach testified.
"The rate of anxiety has
probably gone up faster than
the crime rate," Katzenbach
said. But he said he believed
the wrong people are anxious.
Poor Hit Harder
&amp;lburban dwellers tend to be
most concerned about crime
while the crime commission
report showed 11 lt is not the
well-to-do who most often fall
victim to crime, it ls the poor
and the slum dweller."
Figures showed persons earning under $6 ,000 are conslderably more likely to become
victims of rape, rol:t;ery or

Doesn't Anyone Hove a Compass:&gt;

I

I

•'

'fen. CIQ, llllr Ylft.
MNrr,u.. ntal: Dill_.. IIJ _....

.........u.w. • -.., ...... ,.,

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

... .......,. ll

eM llllll ............. ....

lila - - . t~Jt, 'nftt ........... ...

.......... ., . . 011 , . .

'lL-.
!lila - • ll.lf.'I'IIN ..... .....
MMr. . ll'k'e . . . . . . . . . ,......

....

!l&gt;auldlns

acored the Bobcats
last touchdoWn 011 a 25 yard run
and Ron ~len, 15()-jJOUild sonlor, rsn the PAT to put I h e
Bobcats ahead 28-4,
Will! aboot a minute to go In
the first hllf, Jon Rotbgeb, 200pound Junior end, took a 48 yard
pall from !;l&gt;auldlng but the play
wa1 called back on account ol

a clipping penallY.
Kyger Creek's second team
dominated play In the second
half as the teams rougtrt: to a
scorele" deadlock the final two
periods. The Pirates' biggest
threat In the second half came
when Alan Hall, 160i)OIIlld junior, intercepted a Jackie Henson pass and rambled 50 yards
before stump ran him out or
bounds on the 17-yard line. The

..

Plrales bogpi1 down on the Ky.
ger Creek alx. yard line aDd
falled to 1tcore.
Tlll'lllng In
performancea on· del0111e for the
Bobcats were Mike TboiiiJIIOII,
150-j)OIIIId Junior, John HUJbes,
235 - pound oenlor, and Barton
Stump, The Kyger Creek defenoe
limited the Pirates to a mJnua
nine yards rushing In the IIOCOild

hall.
Kyger Creek rolled up 16 ftrst
downs to six ror tlle Pirates. The
Bobcats had 223 yards rushing
and completed elgbl o! 14 paS&amp;es for 144 yards and a net
367 yBI~S. The Pirates bad 87
yards rushing and completed two
ot nine passes for 27 yards and
114 yards net.
North Gallla drew 30 yards In

PenaJties and Kyger C r e e k

HOME DECORATOR

Columbus Mayor Against Clay Fight
Ohio (UPO- today appeared dim.
Cl.,.- said he l'l&amp;sn't
Boxing c001mission clerk Cl~&gt;­
"begglng nobody to fight," but vis !'l'ogawlek told United Press
Mayor
M. E.
Sensenbrenner International Thur sda.y night
promised a battle if Clay wants there was a breech of commisCOLUMBUS,

Cassiu11

to return to the ring here.
sion rules in granting the
"I'Jil not interested in an,y- permit application for the fighL
· bocly who is not interested in
The commission's s e v e n
fighting for the United States of members were to huddle tonight
America," SensenbreMer said in city hal1 to discuss the
when he called tor a city boxing permit application and whetber
commission meeting to review or. not it would be approved.
the prOIJ(Ised fighL
Clay, mesnwhlle, left ColumClay, and prmnoters Bubbles bus ThW'sday and returned to
Holloway and BUI C1Dl1mins Jr., Chicago.
IMOUnced WedDeoday plana for · He had not heard of the
a Nov. 11 fight at the state mlyor's objection until told by
talrgrounds c o 1 l s e u m here United Press International.
againat an unnamed opponent.
"I was down at the invitation
It was to have been Clay's of promoter Bubbles Holloway,"
nrot professional light In 18 Clay said. "That's the ooly
months,
reason I was there,
But, prospects lor the !lghl
"I told tllem II they could get

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bother of installing real beam•. lightweight, made of non-burning
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Mount&amp; In 8" opening, anodized
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5 99
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Surface mounted. Stainlell~ steel
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INSERT PANEL

SHUTTERS

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A n~w dccoratin!!: idea that orfcn
you unlimited Jmssibilities wlleth~r
you use fabric or one of the nt..'W
insert matciiab. Price is for one
7" x 20" shutter only, unpnlnred,
len lwdwaR and fabrh: in~erl.
Installation and decoratiilg mate~ avoilable.

HER-MAR

47.77
White Fonpln woodgrain bi;SC ,
. with coW flesh on white Formp ·
Washablo interior, ~elf-closing ,
and
shelf. Includes

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T

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with supercushloncd luxuey squ·
are~ that wrap your home in com·
fort and be1uty. Mix or match
colon, make custom cub ... eYen
add a tile at a time. AcryUc Rbers
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Avocado, Mo~s Gn:en, Gold, Red,
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Iii

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0
0

it, which J didn't believe the)'
could, J would fight. I'm not
begging nobody to !lghL M,
religion says we don't force
ourselves into places where we
are not wanted."
Clay is appealing a conviction

--..---

=-

pound senior tackle, was eJected from the game early in the

first period.
The Pirates had two players
injured. Checked over at Holof failing to report for military zer Medical Center and reservice. Qa.y claimed in his leased were Cary McClaskey and
trial he was a Muslim minister - Alan Hall .
and consequently a conscien- North Gallta
6 0 0 0- 6
tious objector.
82000-28
Kyger Creek
The appeal is pending before
the U.S. Supreme Court.

We're Going All

STANDINGS

Oul Says Woody
COLUMBUS (UP!) - WOO&lt;ly
Hayes plans to throw everything his Buckeyes have at
Southern Methodist Saturday and hopes its enough to otop
the Mustangs.
••we'll show all we've got Md
hope lt's enough,'• Ha,yes said
Thursday night. "We•ve got to
·g et back into that win column.
This team coming in here is a
good one ... hits you fast . u
osu will start nine s o p h omores, three oC them in deep
defensive spots.
uThey're good ones and those
three sophomores in the secondary have been there pretty
nearly every day since last
spring," says a confident coach
mo•s starting his 18th season
Saturday.

By United Press International
Natlonal League
W, L, Pet : GB
Amertean League
W, L, Pel GB
x~. Louis
95 64 .597
x-l&gt;etrolt
103 56 .648
San Francisco 86 73 .541 9
Baltimore
91 70 ,565 13
Cincinnati
82 77 .516 13
Chicago
81 78 ,509 l4
Boston
85 74 ,535 t8
1
Pillsburgh
80
79 .503 15
Cleveland
85 75 .531 18 h
Atlanta
80 79 .503 15
New York
81 78 .509 22
Oakland
80 79 .503 23
Los Angeles
74 85 .465 21
Philadelphia
74 85 .465 21
Minnesota
78 81 .491 25
New York
72 87 .453 23
California
66 93 .4t5 37
Houston
Chicago
65 94 ,409 38
71 88 .447 24
x-Cllnched pe~mant
Washington
62 96 .392 !01h
(No games scheduled)
x-CUnched peMant
Today's Probable Pitchers
Ttltrsday•s Results
(All Times EDT)
Baltimore 7 Cleveland 1, night
(only gameo acheruled)
Philadelphia (James 4-4) at
~s Probable...·~Pltchets ' NeW Y,?r h. (McAndrew 4-3), 8
(All Times EDT) '
p.m.
Minnesota (Kaat 14-)2) at Oak·
Pittsburgh (Moose 8-IO)at Chiland (Jlobson 11-14), 10:30 p.m. cago (Holtzman J0-14), 2:30p.m.
San Francisco (Perry 15-15)
Chicago (llorlen ll-t4l at CalFight Results
Ifornia (Messersmith 4-1), 11 at Cincinnati (Culver 11-16) 8:By United Preas International
p.m.
05p.m.
NEW YORK (UP0- Buster
Washington (Coleman 10-16) at
Los Angeles (Osteen 12-18) at
Mathis,
223, Grand Rapids,
Detroit (!Uiler 9-4), 8 p.m.
Atlanta (Slone 7-4), 8:05 p .m.
Mich
.,
stopped
James J. Woody,
Houston (llierker 12 -14) at st.
Cleveland (Hargan 8-15 or Bai203¥.t,
New
York
(6); George
ley 0-1) at Ba!Umore (Nelson Louis (Gibi!OII 21-9), 9 p.m.
1h, Canada, stopped
Chuvalo,
208
Bronco !Porta S1a. Wagon. Pcipuw- 4 wheel drive. Bucket seats.
4.:Z), 8 p.m.
Sa.btrda,y•s Games
Manuel Ramos, 206, Mexico (5).
Sholto good care.
New York (Verbanlc 6-6) at Philadelphia at New York
Boston (Ellsworth 15-7), 7:30 p. Pittsburgh at Chicago
m,
San Francisco at Clncimati
· lewis Repair Service ·
Saturday's Gamea
Loa Angeles at Atlanta
Mlmesota al Oakland, twilight Houston at S1. Louis
•HEAnNG
V-8 Impala 2 dr. Hard Top. Elllrl sharp, Gold with bloc.k top and Chicago at CaiUomla, night
RETURNS TO U. S,
•PLUMBING
black Interior, PS. PB, 283 Eow
Washington at Detroit
MASON - Marine Stall Ser·
•ROOFING
New York at Boston
geant stuart M. Lawhorn, 29, son
(Only games scheduled)
of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Lawhorn,
-FORand husband of the former Miss
Allee F. McDaniel of llartiord,
Cllallna 2 Dr. Hard Top, Only 2,345 euy miles, A real cresmhas returned to the U. S. with
puft Power Steerlqf, Power brakes. Auto. tran~.
the 27th Marine Regimental J.and.
lng Team (RLT .:Z7) which has
.
WY 2·23M
ROOKIES PLAY
t:M Mill S\,
Ml4ldltpor
NEW
YORK
(tJPO-Four completed elglrt months combat
rookies with an exeellent chance dul;y In South VIetnam.
to stick In the National Hockey
"400'' 2 dr. Hard Top, Popular too cu. ln. 360 horsepower _
League are expected to see
4-ap, trans. Like new COIIdltiOIL Poaltl ve tractiOIL
act:l011 Friday night When the
New York Raq:ers entertain
1he Slanley Cup cl!amploo
Mmtreal canadleno In an
oxhlbltlon game.
Wildcat Custom 2 clr. Hard Top; Smart all black vlnjil cuotom
Forwards Walt Tkaczuk aDd
baterlor with center arm rest. Tnde-ln on new Bulck from one
Juka Widing and defensemen
ol aur repeat custome,ra;
Allan Ramlllllo and Brad Park
IU'e the promising RalQJer
)'(UitRitera,

USED CARS

66 FORD

S1,795

65 CHEVROLET

S1,69S

68 PONTIAC

SAVE

68 FIREBIRD

$AYE

68 BUICK

Dectra Cusam t clr, Hard

$AYE

Meigs Junior

Ea.stern •t Glouster

High Slips By

Meigs

tor trans., OrariBe and O.eater•

Robert Hawk, Delorea Hawk,
Maxine Hunnell, Carl E. H-._
Paul Hawk, Bet~&gt; Hawk, 11e11y
WUbW' Imboden, Frances Im- Stivers, William E. stivers, NorThe Meigs 7-Sth grade (IJot-- boden to Robert Imboden, Hope ma Hawthorne, Darrell HawbaU team, led by the clutch hll- Imboden, .28 acre, Rutland.
thorne to Dorolh,y Hawk, 86.4 A.,
ning o! Quarterbeck Andy VaughRobert bnboden, Hope Imbod-- Orange and ·Chester.
an, edged visiting Gallipolis 1._
Thurston H. Clark to Allll
en to Frank G. Smith, Wanda L.
12 Thursday afternoon at Mid- Smith, .28 acre, Rutland.
Clark, 3, 21 acres, Olive,
dleport Stadium.
Christopher C. Qlne IDJoaepb
Clarence Gilmore, Freda GU·
Vaugtan scored the first TD
more to Steven K. Little, •71 ac- Gilkey, parcel. Mlddleport.
on a short carry and then Gal- re, salisbury•
Myra E. Stephenson, JunesiL
lipolis came beck tO tie the
Charles Asa Bradbuey. Jeatute Stephenson tD James B. stepheD-~
score at 6-6 when John Walters Anne Bradbury to Joseph Young, son, lots, Pomeroy,
hit p~Jdirt.
Naomi Nevil1e to Rllcine Home
Jr. , Mary Jane Kitchen, parcels,
After Vaughan's secon:l six- Scipio.
Nstional Bank. lot, Racine.
pointer, Chuck Faulk ran the exLarry J. Roush by AviceFrecJc...
Milford H. Hawk, Dec. to Dor~
tra points giving Meigs a 14-6
othy Hawk, Robert Hawk, Max- er, Atty. Ln Fact, to Charles fl
lead.
ine Hunnell, Paul Hawk, Betty Faulk, BettY L Faulk, 1 acre.
Gallipolis' Walters then talStivers, Norma Hawthorne, cert. Chester.
lied again to close the gap to
1._12, but Galllo Called oo Its
extra points attempt.
The win lert Meigs with a reeord of 1-l, having lost to Wahama in the season opener. It was
Gallia's first ouUng,

Property

Gallia, 14-12

Meigs-Gallipolis
Reserves to Play
The Meigs Marauder reserve
!ootball team will host Gallipolis this Saturday at 8 p.m.
at Marauder stadium In Pomeroy.
Meigs, coached by Dick Well
and Fenton Taylor, is l-1 on
the season witll a win in its 09ener against Wellston and a setback at the hands oC Pt:. Pleasant last week. The GAllS reserves, coached by John Ecker, are 1~, having beaten Jack800 20-14 last week.

Chew the BEST in the

Early Meaaure
Early civilization had a
measurement called the cubit.
Common in Biblical times,
this was the length of the
forearm from the tip of the
middle finger to the elbow.

NEW FOIL PACK

1967 Pontiac
1961 Ford
1966 Plymouth

$2495
$1895
$1895

1966 Rambler

$1595

Ventura, 2dr. H.T, Auto. Trans., P.S. &amp;P.B., Low Mlleage,

Galaxie 500, t dr., seclan, low mUeage.

Fury Convertible. atd. trans.

Top, CIJoleeottwo tOII'·mll- cara.

One with only 7,3i8 easy miles. Factory air coodltloned. Fully
equipped.

65 MERCURY

t-n

.,.

The Southern ....rve IIQiad,
c.ial Grove It Symmes VaDIQI
made up mootl,y ol freohmen aDd
Upper Arlll\iiOft at Portsmouth
a few aopbomores, andSoulhwelt- PL Pleaoant - ~·
ern were loc:ked In a defenaive Huntington High - (ten
Ml until Jlridna tallied the
!lingle olic.polnter. It waa the
Tbe name "Bull Moose" for
ftrst reserve game r1 the 181- the Progressive party In 1112
IOil for Coach Russ Harper's lo derived f r o·m Theodore
Roosevelt's remark at the be~
Tornadoo&lt;Pid.
ginning of the campaign : ••1
feel as fit as a bull moose."

lEWIS
REPAIR SERVICE

S1,995

65 BUICK

c1a1

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bad 55. Danny Logue, big 2.10 -

bus.
Mr. and Mrs . Rush Philson
and Erich of Southern Pine. N.
C., are spending a week with
his parents and grandmother,
Mr. and Mrs. Ben Philson and
Mrs. Mina Lewis.
Mr. and Mrs. Glen Harpold
and Mrs. Carrie Scarry t1 East
Uverpool called on relatives
and (rlends here Saturday.
Roger Birch of Bellevue was
a weekend guest ot his parenta,
Mr. and Mrs. Elza Birch.
Mrs. Am COe returned after a
visit in Akron with Mr. and Mrs.
John Davis and family for ten
dayo .
Mr . and Mrs. Gerald Simp..
son, Cori and Mark, spent &amp;Inday with Mr. and Mrs. Rex Car-

,. ...

,_.,,....,. ' .... u ,_ ........

lyle In Columbus.
Mrs. Isabel Slmp&amp;On apent tile

S1, 195

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tnns., &amp; cyl

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1964'
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WHITEWALLS

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4-DRAWER CHEST

Smooth -unJ"'d 5dc.,:t. kiln '-'ri\•J, \\'CKtcrn knl)lty t'lnc.
slain or llnl'-h in dl.!f.'OI'lltor ~·':"Jon.

added.

•

.....Hll'-l..........
-- ~ 0.

BY MRS. FRAN CIS MORRIS
Mr. Mason ~ncer is a patient at Veterans Memorial HoSpital. Mr. ErnestSmlthwaotaken
to Hol zer Hospital.
Rev. Arthur Cleland is a surgical patient in Pleasant Valley
Hospital,
The Booster &amp;mday School
Class met at the First Baptist
Church Thursda.Y evening, Sept,
19, with a program around the
table. Mrs. Marie Roush. vicepresident read Luke 6:1-13 and
gave the prayer. Readings were
given by members and closed
with the Lord's Prayer. The next
meeting is to be at the home of
Helen Simpson. Potluck refreshments were served.
Mrs. George Neigler entered
Holzer Hospital &amp;mday. Her
daughter, June, a nurse In Columbu.s, is here to care for her
mother.
A recent corn roast and cookout was enjoyed at tfie Roush
camp on the rlver bank at WatJOn'&amp; farm. Those present included Mrs. Albert Smith of Akron, Mrs. Ellen Couch, Mrs.
Sandy Phalen and daughter, Pomeroy; :Mr. and Mrs. Linley Hart,
local ; Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Roush and Nancy, Columbus; Mr.
and Mrs. Otis McClintock, local; Mr. and Mrs. Dale Hart,
who are on furlough from Island
of Cypress. They left &amp;mday,
Sepl 15, for Florida to be in
school for six months.
Mrs. Ray La Pari of Algonac,
Mich., visited an afternoon with
Mr. and Mrs. Owen Watson.
Weekend guests of Mr. and
Mrs . Owen Watson were Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Roush of Columbus; Mrs. Cecil Foss and daughter, Loretta J!urkhart o! Cold
Springs, Ky,; Mrs. Allen Couch
of Pomeroy, and Mr. and Mrs.
Linley Hart, local.
Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Gayman
of Mariarma, Pa., spent the weekend with Mrs. Esther Piper and
Mrs. Helen Younce.
Mrs. Carrie Nease returned
trom a visit with Mr. and Mrs.
Brooks Pickens and children_
Monaca, Pa., Mrs. Bessie Pickens, Rochester, Pa.; Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Needham, Steubenville; Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Kinsey, Wierton, W, Va ., and Mr.
and Mrs. David Nease, CoJum-

Katzenbach said the fears ol
m · ddle-Income earners and the
3Jlluent may stem in part froni.
the pWlicity ginn to attacks on
prosperous members of a
community, particularly U the
crime has racial or sexual
overtones.
On the subject o! civil
disorder, Katzenbacb said small
numbers of
agitators
are
infiltrating massive peaceful
demonstrations seeking to turn
policemen Into 11 lnstruments of
violence and repression."
He said: ••we have seen and
will see more el1'orts of small
groops o! agitators mlxed In a
large and peaceful deDlOIIstration to so enrage tbe pollee tbilt
they strike out at tnilo.O.. and
gullt;y alike."
The pollee - l d be foolish to
accommodate them, Katzenbaeh

.\.'

. . . IIHl................. tiWW'.
._..d............... . _ . .

Racine Social Events

burgl ~ry.

.

c:.,.r,11t.......,

ll,, , _ . , , Olllo, ..,.., . . . . . . . . . . ....•

business this week under management of Andrew DeCoy. Posing here in tront of the me1tdisplayis Bob Geisler, warehouse
director, lett. and BW Frazee. meat director.

..

I

0111o

'
Kyger Creek
o.)lOIIed North in the 5V AC Is Soothwestem aDd ter ended, Kyger Creek loading
Galllat1'e first touchdown Thurs- the Highlandera meet Southern 8~.
daY night at Kyaer Creek b u I Local tmdght at Racine. A win
The Bobcalo drove I n t o
came back to do1m the Plrate11 fat, the lllghlandors will p u t North Gallla territory late In
28-6 •• the Bobcats scored all them In a ftrst plrce tie with the ftrst period, and with 11:45
their polnto In the ftrst half. Kyger Creek. In ITro weeks, left to play In the Hoond perThe win was the second con- the lllghlandoro meet the Bob- !~took a 14-4 land ao Gary
secutive tn Southern Valley Ath~ cats at Kyger Creek.
, ~. 168-pound senior, ram ~
IeUe Conference tor Bobcats ot
Turley George, 145 - junior,\Jblpct 25 yards to score the touchCoach Howard Lee Miller and put the Pirates ahead 6.0 with dollm. The try for the PAT was
vaulted them Into first place In two mlnutes gone in the first no good.
the 5V AC with a 2.0 record. quarter when h' raced up the
Steve !;l&gt;auldlng, 141 • pound
h was North GaUia's second middle for North Gallla'a only Junior quarterback, &amp;®red the
consecutive SV AC loss. The Pir- touchdown. The try for the PAT next Bobcat toochmwn !rom 17
ates are 2.:Z 111 the SVAC and was no good ,
yards out but the try for the
tn all games. North Galli!l travWith 8:40 !ell to play In lhe PAT wa1 no good. 8 a r ton
ela to Alexander next Friday (irst period, the Bobcats went stump, l60..pound senior. reni&amp;flt while Kyger Creek trav- ahead 8-G when Perry Beebe, covered a Pirate tumble on the
el1 to E11tern for their third 150 - pound senior, drove over North Gallla 25 fo set up the
SVAC contest In defense of their from the one yard line to score touchdown. It Will Kyger Creek
1967 sv AC Championship.
and Gary Fisher, ran the PAT. 20-4 with tO: tO left to play In
The only otherundefeatedteam That was the way the first quar. the first half.

.,

H.~a~l~

R.

'.

. ·~·

, "QHIO'S
~·

'•

.~awUngs

·. Co.

PL~EST

••••

DODGE DU.LER"

'

�.
~~" ~

~

'

-

T\10

'Dol~ Senll~l, P~·Micldlepoft.

o., Frldly, September 27, . 19~8 '

Boile rm al{e rs, ;m,~~~~;~~y~~IWII·K·;II:I:IJ~IMIIW:IMII~-.

.

..

Irish Ready
America selectioo and finished
third in last season's 11eisman

B)' PETE ALFANO
UPl Sports Writer
Jim Seymour may hold the
key to success for r-.:otre Dame
against Purdue Saturday- un-

less, of course, the Boilermakers' Lero)' Ke)es l'an hold the

All-America end in check.
Seymour, along wilh teammate Terry llanratt:,-, made a

(

sensational \' a r s i t } debut
against Purdue two years. ago
b) snari~ 1:1 passes as the
Irish surprised the unsuspecting

Boilermakers, 26-14..

The lanky 6-foot-4, 205.pound
end has sln~e gone on to
greater gloQ' by snagging 94
career passes, including nloe in

week's (llening game
triumph over Oklahoma, and
tallying 1 ~ touchdowns, breaking
the ~otre Dame reo.:ord of 12 set
b~ Leon llarL
On SaturdaJ when the No. l
ranked Irish and 1\o. 2 rated
Boilermakers meet at South
Bend, Ind., in the rubber game
or Seymour's three-ye:-r career,
he will again receive special
recognition, this time (rom
Ke)'es, b e t t e r known as
last

.. -

,

' '

I

..
'I.

Trophy award

ballollng, may
ver} well play tile entire game
saturda}, both on offense and
defense, in an effort to stll)
Seymour and llanratty. The
versatile pedormer !'.p&amp;r~ed the
Boi1crmakcrs' opening game
victor) 0\'er Virginia by scoring
one
touchdown, passing for
another score and latching onto
eight or Mike Phip:ls' aerleal.s
in a H-G rout.
llowe\'Cr, Coach .la~k Molle~
kopf also n·members lhat
Keyes Is a better than avera~-:e
defensive back, who helped
Purdue to a 28-21 win over U1e
Irish last season when he

doubled oo derense midway
through the game :md made
Se~·mour's life miserable,
In games Involving the other
top 10 teams, third . ranked USC
should haH: J1tUe difficulty wilh

Northwestern, f o u r

l h-ranked

Purdue's

Penn State tangles with Kansas
State, fifth-ranked UCLA is
f&amp;\'Ored O\'er Washington State
while shtl1-ranked Kansas has
its hands full 1o;ith Indiana.
Seventh-ranked •\.ial&gt;anu:~ meets

Notre
favorite.

Southern Mi s sissippi, eighthranked Nebraska will be under-

"Mr. Ever}1hing."
Dame is a six.;&gt;oint

Keyes,

who

an

was

All-

dog lO Minnesota, whHe LSU is
a touchdown pick over Hice and
lOth ranked Miami (Fla.) is
seven over Georgia Tech.

Now

Nadonwlde

National LeaBua UmPire TOm
Goi'INI' wao named 1:11' Commissioner William D; l:ckert
today to wrk behind the plite
1n the opening game ol the 1968
·World Serle• In st. Louis 01:1. 2.
Other umplreo named to the
crew to handle the oerlea
between the St. Louis Cardinali
and Detroit Tlgero, were SliD
Landi a and Doug HarvoY Of the
NL and Jim Honoehlek, Bill
Ki.:Oamon and Blll Haller o( tbe
American League.

"

''·

'

.

eo&amp;ch Bill
i.liimp
Wildcats jloWnojl tlio ~ a n,)i ' ~ .
Trace Wlid!'l'll 27,12 tbut*
nll!lll at Met~ei'tllle fo~ 1ho Weal
·VIrgbllana' ' ilj!"'!ld · WID of tho
......, agalnit.threo loa.. a.
Fbr Coech Nell ReiiiAir'o HIDnan Trace wUd""", It tllao tho
fth cmae&lt;•1ti110 \OIS. Last week
the Wildcats dropped" llflleaker
to Symmes Valley 8-6, the aame
team that Harman swamped 30-8
Adolrie1'

.~._.

Renewal

J

,. ,,

W4Id.$ts. Drop·~7-12 .Tit.

·&amp;.mo Ill the Jut hall. DOO .IIv• two touChdowns for llamln '"'
Doldo

scored llalilln'o 'llrif
liouchdo!m oo a 40.y8ni run ORd
acored the PAT oo a. pus to
ilve them ID 8~ iood.
Doo l'lj'ne scored the nell
i

'j.:

.

.

Homlrn

Traee'l nnt tou&lt;h- ·
the third peliod
1ll!en
Jim
Chapman
Intercepted
Larry ThompiOII ORd . , 10 •
a
~aman
pass
.(ad
ran
65 yard1
Jarder from ·Tom ~awton. Forto
score.
The
try
lor
tile
PAT
est stsrkey rambled 35 yards
waa no ~Plod.
· for Haman's last aeon.

,&amp;sM!s, a nlne yardh . i r 'o m dcnm came In

Everett

5 · - · T~· ~lb StntiJ!ol, POIIll'rtJY-Midd1II)Ort, 0., Friday, September '27, 1988

~e:=~~(), ~~

pWnd Hnlor 1

dledl • ' • Along with being lull
BY JACK O'BRIAN
· .. . · ,..
two weeks agu.
NEW YORK - Doris Day'a ol rsncor agalnot the netwrk,
Hannsn led If~ at the half .lOll Terry Ia now her 11l811aS9r Jolmn.y CarJOD'I al10 tull~chlc:
and 21·12 alter three perloda. (alnce husband Marcy Melcher He and JOUIIe were houaeauests
PALMER COMPETES
ol Clsudettt&gt; COlbert In BarbaLONDON (UPD-- Arnold PaJ. Haman Trace acored both touch ..
dos • . . Walter MatthaU's winmer, the two-time champion,
ning the war ol aubtle lha!ta with
will meei Brian Huggett ot
Barbra stretsand, h11 tllm coBritain in his first-round match
star In uneno, DollY" .•• '"Barin the Piccadilly World Match
bra
bad moments of llkeabillb',"
Play Championship at Wenthe IUmmed up • , • Gig Young's
worth Ocl liJ.
pals IUSPBet his next Mrs. Gig
other opening-round pairings
By
Helen
Bottef
will be Sall,y Kellermsn •.• Peare: Peter Thomson, Australia,
ter
Fonda' a :p~bllcproclamations
v s. Gary Player, South Africa;
are as outdated as those of the
DOUBTING
THOMAS
HAS
spending
around
a
thousand
lor
Billy Casper, U.S., vs. Bob
8o.year.olds silting In the srutlyeverything'?
Charles, New Zealand; and U.S. REASON FOR DOUBT
club readlng-roomli the lad's
Dear
Helen:
When
our
daughters
are
marOpen champion Lee Trevino vs.
caUow views are more ''then't
Il!ll
it
possible
for
a
woman
to
ried,
the
lnvitaUon&amp;
wlU
include
Tony Jacklin, Britain.
love her husband, yet all but UJe whole family. And we're not than unow" even if camouflaged
In what he IUIIPBds are topical
throw him at another woman? wealthy!
It appears to me that my wile
Small chUdren aremorethriU- wlgarltlea • , , Barberlhip on
OPEN SEASON
arranges to be somewhere else ed by a wedding than are many Hth between 2ild &amp; 3rd mes a
CLEARWATER, Fla. (UP{)..
whenever thls divorcee friend adults, and they otten behan splendid slogan: "Beautil)' Am.\ squad of 23 players were of hers Is around. The friend better! There's nothing sweeter erica - Get a Haircut."
present when the New York
You can't get Oylters Rocke.is a knock-out. ::he is not b~r­ than a bridal snapshot with a
Yankees opened their Florida
dened witb morals, and has let young relaUn. rd be tempted feller In any Roekefoller center
Instructional League season me know that she might be in- to send my regrets If the bride restsuranl: no like the family
Jnda.Y,
terested. rm as human as the indicated the wedding was a "no name dragged throush the cash
Among the first-year pl~ers
next man, but rm resisting be- ehlldren" alftlir. - Mrs. J.S.L. registers . , . Richard Burton
is Samoa..OOrn first baseman
will star Ill a moYie titled "Hangcause: 1. I am not an adUlterer Dear Helen:
Tony Solaita, who led the
at heart; and, 2. I can't figure
'You printed letters from moth- ing Elizabeth Taylor," but of
country in homers this year
ers or chlldren who 'had to get course It's about an historical
out my wife.
with 51 in the Carolina League.
I know she loves me. I am married." They shbuldnJt teer Uz, not the hiP-current one •• •
blessed with tbat rate lemale who self.pl!;v, Alter all , they now It does seem a trifle early to
thinks of her man before she ha"e aons..J.n-law and grandchil- see Christmas adVertising already; mostly Yule cards.
thinks of heraelf. Could It be dren.
'1latlng Game" and ..Newly- 1.-..--------~
..
,.
Fellin! baa Dipped biB ethereal weds."
she ligures rm missing some~
But what or the parents whose
thing that every man should ex- daughters refuse to get married? enthusiasm over (of all people)
perience; or is s h e putting Our chlld was raised properly BroOklyn's Marty lnglea ..•
temptation in my Wlf.Y to test my In a lamll,y that prayed and piB,)'· Folksinger Bob Dylan and manstamina?
ed together. Her young man Is ager Albert Grouman aren't so
Or, a thought just struck me, a wonderful fellow, one we would !olkay Clllddenl1 ... DIUo COnnie
does she want a rest from be- be glad to welcome as a son. Francis and her canny helmsclubs and skipper of the Giants' ing a wife'? An excuse lor separ- But she won't even see or call man, George &amp;:beck , . . The
farm club at Phoenix this year,
ate beds? - DOUBTING TOM hlJn - he doesn't know ahe Is star role of a Sioux Indian In
is reported to have the Job all Dear Tom:
expecting. ~e simply broke up Columbia's "15 Flags" is exbut locked up as Herman's sucWhy, for Pete'&amp; sake, don't with him and gave no explana- pected to go to a Negro,
ces s or. Also believed in the run- you ask your wife? Two mar- tion.
Barbara Winters winds up
ning is Coach Wes Westrum, riage rule&amp; you evidentJy hann•t
We will never see our first s!nglng with Paul Martell's band
who skippered the New York learned are: On emotional mat- grandchild. I go to bed each at Roseland lor more lmporlsnt
Mets for one and one-half sea- ters, don't ever try to outguess nlgtot crying, though I try to work - school teaching • • •Old
sons.
a woman; and don't ask another put on a brave front when we Fred Allen comic Petsr Donald
Franks let WiBle Mays man- woman to do your guessing for visit her at the '"home.'' There lo Out ol Pol,ydln!e Hosplln! alage the team
in Houston you! _ H.
In the
sppms tp be ,no medication lor ter a stroke and a atreteh
1
Wednesday night. Mays, -tt is Dear Helen:
'
a broken heart. My greatest con- lriteniive·..c~u-e
believr.:d, has been told he c~ . "Puzzled Bride to Be" want- solation is round in prayer.
The Beatlea want~ open their
:•ave the job on a permanem ed to know how she could avoid So~etlme&amp; I hate to leave the own private school for their own
basis if he wants it, but the children at her wedding and re- church for I feel secure there. private children , , , Peter Uatlstar center fielder has said on ception. I'm thoroughly disgust- I sta,y tor hours. talking to the nov's bullseye about pla.Ywright:
Get your an~enna In shape
nwnerous occasions he thinks ed at the trend toward omitting Lord.
Harold Pinter: uu he ever wrote
now before bad weathfl
he ~an play at least two more children from family atraira.
I would take the baby myselt, a play everyone could WlderI
.
seasons.
Even though it coats more to
but I am so tired and I long lor stand, It wooid be a dlaaster for
arrives. All channel and
leed them, what•s another $50 the freedom I shall have this him." ... Patty Duke now wants
sp•cially d.tiigned color
for dinners when you're already year. You see, the youngest at her blUing shilled to "Pat Duke"
our six children started school . . . Another ex-ldd star, Robin
antennas.
DDCTCRIS MAILBAG in September. I have looked for- Morgan, turned up onplo:ketllnea
ward lor 20 years to the time 1 at the Mlas Amerlea eootest In
could get out and perhaps join A.C. • •• After seven years as
charitable organizations or )1st ''The Saint," Roger Moore tllmed Its !lnaleplsode ..• It's a most
visit with mends.
Helen, what Is the anawer for entertaining eacaplat aeries and
mothers like me? The day ot even if Roger is tired, Lew
this child's birth will be a black Grade should filld another awashBy W.t.YNE G. BR.t.NDST.t.DT, M.D.
daY every year of my life. - buckling !DOdem actor to TVcanonize.
One or the best or these is Mrs. L,D,C.
Q-What are the symptoms
H.t.RRY MILLER
Songs In the new Copa lhoW
Dear
Mrs.
C.:
betamethasone
valerate
(Vall·
of psoriasis and what is the
sre
by
Fay
Tlshman
of
the
N.Y.
Seems to me you're hiding be·MAIM ) L
992-3635
POMEROY
sane Cream).
cause? Has any cure been
hind aelli&gt;ll;v and prB,)'er when conatrudlon - clan •.• The Dr.
A 5 per cent crude tar ointfound?
ment, one of the oldest treat- ycxf should try direct action. Sanley Btrnbaums divorced;
A-The typleal psoriatic
ments used, is messy but is TeU the young man he is about Mrs. B.'s the dsu8bter of our old
plaque has a dull red base.
still highly effective. ~·or scalp to become a father. He may ~Ive
The scales are silvery and the
lesions a greaseless tar prep- your problems wlth some direct
outlines of the lesions are disaration with hexachlorophene action cl hls ow;.1 • • • 'Mtat ia,
tinct. The cause is unknown.
IAiphosyl Shampoo) Ia help- If he can brook through the guilt
Although there is no cure,
ful.
Another local preparation
muc:h can be done to keep the
that
has worked well lor many which ma,y now be stlnlng your
disease under c on t r o I. Aldaughter, - H.
though s o m e cortisonelike victims Ia anthralln.
This column Ia dedicated to
Obeae victims usually lm·
drugs, when ta.ken by mouth,
famib'
living, ao If you're having
prove
when
they
bring
their
will cause temporary improvekid
lr&lt;d&gt;le
or Jult plaiD lr&lt;d&gt;le,
weight
down
to
'!jll'lllal.
Since
ment, they cannot be recome
m
o
tlo
n
a!
problems
may
let
Helen
help YOU. !lie will
mended because their prolonged use causes undesirable cause the lesions to spread, a also welcome your own amuslng
side effects and when they are mild tranqc:Jlllzer IJ someUmes -leneea. Address Helen Bot- ~
discontinued the disease re- advisable. Because psoriasis tie In &lt;are ol tills -apaper,
turns in an aggravated form . Is a mUd disease thai wiU not
ll Pli.T~rr'!\r~n,r~
These drugs may, however, affect your health, It does not
~ ~
'.I
~
be used externally in creams . pay to use heroic methods ol
I
.
--=4
treatment that may be harm·
They work best when covered
with an airtight plastic film . lui In themselves.
Although some victims are
THE FIRST PREMIERE SHOWING OF THE ALL,NEW LINCOLN$,
sensitive to ultraviolet rays,
most are helped by exposure
to the sun and clear up in the
MERCURYS, MONTEGOS, CDUGERS, AND COMETS AT • • - - •••
summer. By the same token,
a sun lamp in winter may be
RAY RIGGS INC., ATHENS, OHIO.
beneficial. You should wear
s dlod..
gloves when doing any manual
4" 1peolt•r ond to,. •witch
work lo prevent Injuries, be·
z.,o-ln v•rnl•r •lld•ofole tuning.
-,
cause even mild trauma may
aggravate the disease. When
'
the lesions seem to be clesr·
StOI! In and Look The!ll Over and Test Drive Oila of YDII Choice. While-:•
ing up you must avotd ~over­
treatment. At this stage oetro·
Yciu'r~ here Be S11e and Recister Far lhe Drawina of the New r..rcurr \. - ,
latum jelly may be aU you
need to use-lhe mlldest treat·
Marquis to be Given Away in November. Also·U..'2 Radios
ment that works Is always the
n:Z.5291
best
·BY Ray· Rias attii.,Drawiq
Fri. 8 Pll· : ~ 27. II•
.., .....~•; •.,,. . ·;: .
' · .,
N"d not IHt pres.,.t to wtn.
,

CINCINNATI

Now, NatK:lnwide Insurance

guarantee renewal of auto ·
suranct for five years (after
is in effect 60 days).
ouol•fr . just pay the prtmiums
a valid license for every
l••·;,;,,g member of your ramily .
· me about it

Ken Williams

P J. Pauley

WILLIAMS
an• PAULEY
NATIONWIDE
Po......,

UP!) -

Herman Franks begins his final
series as San Francisco manager tonight when the Giants
play the Cincinnati Reds in
their last three games of the
1968 season.
Gaylord Perry (15-15) pltche•
for the Giants, who ha'¥e locked
up second place for the fourth
straight year, against George
Culver (11·16).
The Reds are still fighting to
ftnish in third place, a spot
worth about $1,500 a man from
the World Series pool Second
place is e)Q;Iected to net the
Giants about $2,500 a man.
Franks announced earlier in
the season that 1968 would erx:t
his managerial ' tour if the
Giants did oot win the pennant.
If he holds true to his word
Sunday wUI be his final game
in San Francisco O.anneb.
Clyde King, former relief ace
with three National League

STEAK
HOUSE.

US•••

•of

SAN OWlet:

I

.&lt;

J

Get A Better Picture
With A Better Antennal

NOW I

secif&amp;f.

CHANNEL MASTER
and FINCO

Mildest Treatment
Best Against Psoriasis

1969

SIZE

FELT
MOCCASINS

•

SHOEBOX

•'

,·'

I
I

Where Shoes Are S.nsi~ly PricH

1

MIDDLEPORT, 0 .

i

\
'

(

[

"'

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'

j_,

I

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I

MERCURYS LEAD THE
-----

n n n

n

.L!.'Il

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER-27

MOTOROLA

WE-NER

to~ ·~~~ ;;,; :

I!DIO &amp; TV

(: '
1.,,

i'

'

,I

!

5to8

:. Pl'~ PLEASANT - _,Ameri- "You are rich ln1fde- you can

are

OIDI
die moot beloved chll, dJ'tn ol God" was the opening
statement ol a talk cJven by
Dr. Marla Zogralldou to momber1 ot the Maaon CoUnty fte...
tlrld Teachers Atlioclation at
lllolr meeUng st the conference
room at Tu.Endle-Wel Manor last

Sept.

:

..

I

j

,,

I

'

•, •

•

'HAY~

~.~Guat
YISI~~=~...b.~ta~
·anER

saturday.

1

ANY OF T"ESE SALESMEN SHOW YQV AROUND-RAY RIGGS- :~
HA~OLD IATSON·~RLON AN11;~-QAVf~ fftGGS..:JOHN ADAMS OR
.'
RAY WHALEY. ·

.

. t' I
,"'
. .
'. ~

help ...
Mro. Garne!te Klnberllng,
president ol the Counl;v Aasoclatioo corlllletod a bualnen aeiBion
at which reportl were gtveit by
Mn. Leta B. Fogle10f18, chalrman of the state wellare commlttee and Mrs. Cary H. a..,.burn, count;y chiJrman or the
leghlatlve committee.
Mrs. Fogleaong and Mrs. Rayburn recently aUe.nded a alate
workslql meeting ,at Jackson's
MUI at which 29 oountlea were
repreaented. Mro. Vurl R a ndolph wae: named aaltstant secrotary by Mra, Klnberllng woo
onnounced that the next scheduled
meeting will be NO¥ember 16,
Following the progrsm .M r s.
Klnberllng ORd Mrs. ,FocleiiOili
served refreshmentfito Dr. Zl'f!raOdou, Mrs. Tho
V. Watteraon. Mrs. Vaual Hanes, Mlas
Helen Cobb, Mrs. Vurl Randolph,
Miss Ulllan Perry, Miss Allee
Roa&lt;h, Mra. l&gt;ri1ht Ottllnger,
Mra. Gelda Lamer, ""s. Amle
Wilcoxen, Mrs, Cary Rayblm
~ and a guest, Mrs, Lila Vander-

Dr, Zogra!ldou, a ~.11 Pl'eaently wrklng with reUrdod ORd emotlonall,y dlaturbed · cHldren at Laldrl Ho.lpltal,
lll1&lt;*e ol the Jo:r• ·ORd hsrdah!ps
ol har life Ill Europe until 1955
Wben lhe ciDie to live in Amerlea.
· .'•llr. Zogralldou stated that aha
loot aU her pooaeaslona In liltltJ: Gortnany bot her medical
tfcdnlng whleh llhebrouglotto Amorlca In 1955, She feela many of
lhe ehlldr111 at Lakin Hospital
hlve a great potential lor learnlD&amp; ORd ao they Improve, she
feela gteaUy rewarded for fl.forti,
.
·I!J urcJng retired teachers to
oome ol their free time
oi.J talent• In YObmteer .....I&lt; at
Lakln, ahe mode this llfpoal: pool,

•

· Dr. Denman Obtained
For Services in '69

1

•1

Associated Radio and TV .

SHOES FOR BOYS .t.ND GIRLS

•'

·cROW'S

Season Against Giants

Auto
1118Umnce.

Recalled. to Teuchers

Voice along Broa~way

Helen Help

.

, . •.

.

~dship~&gt;"in EW'Dpe · ~

pored 10
·
for
cats' oniy other scon !,., ,:
fourth period. Aslbl tho try
lioe PAT !ailed.
· . •Each team had 10 nrot diMIDr.!
and the Haman Trace WU!Jc~·=
had 160 yards rulliln8 · li! Uf.r.
lor the vlalting Haman ~
Haman
8 6 7 6 :..:. ~ 2"=
friend, Judge lf¥mlin BarohB,)', a n. Trace
0 0 6 6 - , 12::,
great criminal lawyer when we
·,..
'•
opee!allzed In another sort o1 , ,-----~----E
or1me thsn· Bdwy •• ,A u.s. avlattou exec Is running suns to
Israel out ol Manila , , • Qage
manager Mike TurCJie of "Man
ol La Men&lt;ha" and Mimi TurCJI.e or 11Fickller on the Roof''
expect a little gabbler In Jan,
The Feds now ha"e miles of
mm proving the so-called "kids"
rumlng the diagra&lt;ellll hippieriots are card -&lt;arr)'lngpoiiUcal
vandals wrokeepturnlngupwherever ehaos can be created ..•
HolM
t"M. .·
NAACP heed Roy Wilkins aharea
our conviction that the Chicago
Fabuloul
pollee riots were positively pro.
vokod 1:11' p...-eso!aoal plan , , •
And (aside !rom clo"" D I &lt; k
Gregory) did not Involve Negro
leaders.
Yep, one war's mer: ZIIUick
had to lry 15 aerlps before he
c:ould fll'l the Japanese to oka,v ·
his "Tora, Tora, Toral" tUm
about the Pearl HarOOr attack
.. •Let's just reriDI the old horror-newsreeell •. , Helen O'COn•
nell at the Rainbow GrUI asns to
some second - generattou DorOrderly l'honll
"
seys: Tommy Dorov m (son of
.,...., T·,_ ~..
...... ......·•
the trombonist) and JotmDone¥,
..... ~
a cousin; John' a cilre&lt;tor ofTV'a
fft ~~··
'.·

Reds Close Out 1968

G11aGlllfeeS

214 E. 2nd

ron

}

·,

,:·•'
••

:f

·:·

&lt;:
..

0:.

••' ·

.;:·

•1.

PT, PLEASANT - Dr, Harry
Many local residents plan to
Demnan, tnternationalb.' known drive to Ravenswood Monda,y,
lay oVIql8ilst who wDI be spesk- Sept. 30, to attend the second
lrw ln the Parkeraburg District scheduled service tn the F i r s t
of the Iormor Metllod!st Church United Methodist Church there
nul week, ba1 aceeptod an lnYI- at 7:30 p, m.
taUon to. apeak in a revival aervOther services amounced lor
lco In tile Heights united Moth"' Dr. Denman are Tuesday at st
dilll Church here next June.
Mary's United Methodist Church;
'.~ .KPown as "Methodi•m's most Wednesday at the Wayside Church
pq:Jular 11.)' preacher,'' Dr. Den- tn Vienna; Thursday, Lion's Club
mln aerwd u GenBr.l Secre- luncheon at 12:15 p. m. and Sev~ or the Board of E.a..ellsm enth street (fanner EUB) Church
tho lltljJodiBt Church lor more in Parkersburg at 7:30 p. m., and
tlllll 2S ,..,...
I
Frldl)' In the Parkersburg Tr!J&gt;.
HJa tlrst service.In the Park- ll;v United Metllndlst Church at
ersbura area will be tn the st. 7:30 m.
Poul'l chureh In' Pl!lkersburg
Dr. Demnan has been speaking
9uai101', Sept. 29, ll 10&lt;45 L m. tn the Pennsboro United Metho'{1!!1 Hrvl~ wiU lollow a break· dist Church all this week.
jist SPBiklne e - e n t In the
Wllmor C&amp;feterlo at 7:30 L m.

.•

••

·I:

,;:Archers
·-:,

·~ ·

.....

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"
·:.
'..• To

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Set
Up
.,•
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. ge
:l 'New Ran
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PLEASANT VALLEY HOSJ&gt;fr AL
Admitted - Patricia Hudson,
Point Plea.Santj Mrl!l. W 11 s o n
Grimes, Point Pleusnt; RantiY
Mealse, Gallipolis Ferry; Mrs.
Albert ~ngton, MaiOiti Mrs.
Charles Grueser, Minersville,
Dlamlssed - Mrs. Joseph Ellis, Charles Hall, Milford LyY&amp;re, Thomas Darst, Herbert
Webb, Janey Dunea,y, John Click.

Thomas V. Rice, Rt, 3 Wellaton;
Mrs. James K. Dunfee, WUlow
Wood; Mra. Pearl B. P r t c e,

Coalton; ll'lerett c. Sturg!U', Rt.
3 Jaek1011; James E. Morrow.
Pt. Pleaaant.
Dllchargil&amp;
Mrs. Carl Aakew, Mrs. James
S. Blakeman, Barbara Bowen,
Homer E. Cook, OVel L, Ewing,
Sr., Mrs. Millard Hammond,
Mrs. W~ne L, Harrison, &amp;!san
Heaton, Mrs. Charlo• A. Roberts, Wendell S. Rouoh, Carolyn M. 9&lt;eens, Paul D. Sturgeon, Mrs, Clyde Ta,ylor, Mra.
Margaret A, Wallace, Martin
E. Welll, James R. Ferguson.
Mrs. Richard L, Harrington and
Infant dsughter, Mrs. Edwin V,
Jones and Infant daughter.

30 Individuals Placed
PT. PLEASANT - Jack L.
Srnlt11, manager of the Point
Plea181it loCal office ol the West
Vlrlllnlo Department ol Employ.
ment Security, this week reported the placement of 30 individuals In galn!ul employment durIng August.
There were 448 per10na reglltered for work, .146 females,
131 veterans. New a_wllcationa
received dUring thl1 month totaled 63 females nnd 54 veter-

Democrats Will

p,

,~

Holzer Medical Center: VIsIting hours 2-1 ORd 1~ p.m. Parents O!il,y '"' Pedlalrlcs Ward.
Admlaalenl
M!li Linda L. Tbumpaon, 650
Fourth Ave.; Mra. Delmar R.
Gingerich, 628 Fourth Ave.;
James W. Walters, Rt. 2 Bidwell; Mr1. Mar&amp;uertle IIske, Bt.
1 Gallipolis; Adhony Childers,
Rt. 2 Vinton; Mrs. Steve B,
Stiles, Rio Grande; Gerald B,
Hall, Crown Cl!;v; Mra. BOI'!DOnd
H. Fields, New Haven; M r s.
Paul L, Barkl&lt;\1', Ill, 2 Latsrl;
Melis&amp;a L. Blain, Ft. Pleasant; Mark A. Venoy, Jack L.
Eanes, Hnward S. Grace, o. Robert Perkins, all Welloton; Mrs.
Ml\Yien P. Cleary, Ironton;
I.AJther E. Dtckess, Kitts IIlli;

Spo1180r Dinner
PT. PLEASANT - The Maaon
Democratic Organizations are sponsoring a dinner
dsnce Oet. 12 al .the local Na.
County

tf.ooal Guard Armory.

Dinner will start at 6:30 with
the danee following from 10 p.
m. until l a.m. The Mel Gillis-

pie Orchestra has been engaged
to play for the function. Persms

wishing to purchase tickets may
contact any m~mber of the Mason County Democratic Organizations.

Series E&amp;H Sales
At $26 Million
August 1968 sales or Series E
and HUnited Stales savings Bond a
and Freedom Shares in Ohio
were · ~ · nilllloii '· m~ktng
purchases in the state this year
at $218.3 million by August 31,
or 59.1 per cent of its aMual
sales goal.
Theodore T. Reed Jr. , Meigs
County Volunteer Savings Bonds
Chairman, reported August sales
of Bonds and Shares in the county totaled $18,906, or 67.7 per
cent of its 1968 sales goal at
month's end.

ans (181).
One year ago there were 916
perBODI registered for work and
39 placements had been made.
Qtalltied Job COrp&amp; recruits
are still being selected for the
Pollee Training Sc:hool o! Kilmer Job Corps Center. Here information regarding this train~
ing is available at the Local
Employment O!!lce,
There Is also in session at
this time a psychiatric aide class

150 Area Scouts Expected
Some 150 area Boy Scouts . The hlghligtlt will be the campfrom the M.G.M. DiStrict are , fire sesaloo for parents and
expected to attend the annual fall friends of scooting from 8 to 9
camporee to be held at Camp Ki- p. m. saturday.
ashuta near Chester this week- Road Money
end.

•
log, tlrst•ld relay arxl others.

ollne taxes and other special
levies on · m~tor vehicles and
operators provide all the federal funda and most or the
state and local funds used for
road tmprovement In the

';

SYSTEMS
•• hue tht

RIGHT FURNACE

.....
RIGHT BOILER

United States. accordlnB to
the American Petroleum Instl·
tute.

Completes Basic
At Fort Knox, Ky.

-

HYDRONIC
BASEBOARD

BAILEY'S

Pf. PLEASANT - Pvt. E2
William w, Henry, aon of Lee
Henry of Gallipolis Ferry, and
the late MaXine Henry, has completed nine weeks or lratn\ng at
Ft. Knox, r..v.
He waa then stationed at FL
g}l, Okla., for 9 weeks of ape~
c!al training In the Artillery
Unit. He then spent JS daya
leave with his family and friends.
He returned to FL Carson, COlo.
with Artillery Unit, Fifth Infantry Div. For friends wishing to
write his address is as follows:
A.fi~O, PVT. E2 William W,
Henry, US 51647055, Ft. Carson, Colo.

SERVIU MARS
THE DiffERENCE

!o-Tto

A CLEANER
WARMER HOMI

f

Plan Fall Festival
Saturday, OcL 5

will keep you coming

OHIO VALLEY
PLUMBING &amp; HEATING

back and your car
running smooth •

BAILEYS SUNOCO

ldwilrd leer, OW!t.r
232 I. leeancl

282 W. Mo;n
Pomeroy
992-2995

263 W. Main St.
Pomeroy, 0.

•

ANNOU
:

_THE 1969 PL

, :, '&gt;'•. _;

Pf. PLEASANT - The Point
PiNIIIII Aretiery Club hal re, cltted the permloslan of the
'Pintaoote plant to .e allblllh a
ohl!otln&amp; range 0., Ita ...,.....
,&amp;a area. The local 'dub will be
, re-ilb!e for the upkeep of
~ ·~~a rlnae whieh wlil be opc11
•1 aoiJ;r ·to members of the dub and

·&lt; :•omilolu ot Pantaaots.
·~t .'" ·Pottntlal areherl are welcome

io lllool

the rlllllt with lilY elub
- . - . mrto la oo the visiting
piriGQ 11111 be \)OVered by I h e

' Tiii

·

lo&lt;al club hold Ita month-

. 41· ..,..Ui,g at tho bame ol Pres-

. • l\lenl

lAster Bird, 110 EncJiab

IIOid. OO!cll'o ror 1969 wert

noitdnoted IQII eltct!Oor will

....u.. ..

be

• tilt 01:1. 10.
•" T\10 dub hal KheJlded I I I
. !'tlllmploelhlp ahoOI fer sept. 29
·81 .1 }1.111., &amp;I IIJt new rep.
lJ1,. ·anneal ''lllrile,r - · · will
.llo helcl Get. J7 at I p,m,
Stveril · melilbero were
..;011 lito ~-orpnl:tat!Da, Ino!udti!tl .Manfoi'd (Butch) Boutr
11111 .rom ORd BttV ~eb.
Rofrubmelila .wen oer'ied to
,9Jir\OO lf\d ~riret Crouch,

·llcin

IIIII Nang NDU ood

tam-

:illt eoorn ....Opel, caoto and

' ~ s,b ""· iolar1 Dorlllnpr,
·,!!IIi&gt; anti IM4' ' ~. J • Ok
' lflrbert; lloWird .~. Jbun
··~ ~ oild ' !At arid iiottlo •
Bird and family.

' '

P0111a1oy

LEGAR MONUMENT CO.

..

......,..,lnluraneo).

992-2036

Professional altenlion

-.

::~

PHONI

Come In and Set Ovr CompMte
lint of Ga•Fir.cl or Oil.flred,
Cast~NI'I or Stell loUeu • , •
Or Col! io• FREE ESnMATES.

Now showing at your·
ne!Qhborhood.Piymouth dea1ers.
· . .tfl;

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.

The c::.,S.that ,VOn oYer ¥4 o1 ~ million competitive owners
to Plymoillb In the past two years, are back again lor another
unbeatibfi year, New Plymouth Furys. Sparts car llaT!acudas.
Vallanlo. PluJ Jhci,big tuccesSIIIJ ot the mid·s;~ wotld : Belvedere,
Satellite', QTX\ ' and•Fjoad RuMer, loo. Unbeatalile cars.
.... Unbeatable. bily1. -From unbeatable guys,' Now!
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fREE
ESTIMAHS ~IIEATINI

TULSA, Okla.. (UPJ)-Oas-

Contests will include panr.:ake
Oipping, fire - building coordinated wltb water boiling, blindfolded compas.a course tentpegmak-

PT. PLEASANT - The Parent·Teacher Association of Henderson School will sponsor Its
annual tall festival at t h e
school Saturday, Oct. 5. Hours
of the e"ent are from 5 to 9 p.
under the MDTA, consisting of
m.
16 trainees at Lakin State HospitAmong the many features wm
al. When the training is complet- be games, door prizes, a sweet
ed, these trainees will be refershop and a sandwich concession.
red to Lakin Stat.: Hospital for The PTA Invite• the p.Ibllc to
employment.
attend.
This otrlce Is currently partle!patlng In the otaOing of a
Refrigeratloo and Air Conditioning class at Parkersburg,
under the MDT A.
Smith says that other training is auilable II interested
people will ask for information.
It Is through the interest shown
by applicant&amp; ror training and the
need for. qualified workers by
employes that training programs are possible.

•

feature this year in plorcr scoot,; chosen by tbe coothese contests is that tile judgi~ tl!stants' own unlt~J..
'A neatly desl.cned l!lt•h wl11 be
and COUI'Jseling will be done by a
select group of senior and ex~ awarded ~ch boy attending.
Thl.! unique

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AU1MOIIIZID DIALEIII

�.
~~" ~

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T\10

'Dol~ Senll~l, P~·Micldlepoft.

o., Frldly, September 27, . 19~8 '

Boile rm al{e rs, ;m,~~~~;~~y~~IWII·K·;II:I:IJ~IMIIW:IMII~-.

.

..

Irish Ready
America selectioo and finished
third in last season's 11eisman

B)' PETE ALFANO
UPl Sports Writer
Jim Seymour may hold the
key to success for r-.:otre Dame
against Purdue Saturday- un-

less, of course, the Boilermakers' Lero)' Ke)es l'an hold the

All-America end in check.
Seymour, along wilh teammate Terry llanratt:,-, made a

(

sensational \' a r s i t } debut
against Purdue two years. ago
b) snari~ 1:1 passes as the
Irish surprised the unsuspecting

Boilermakers, 26-14..

The lanky 6-foot-4, 205.pound
end has sln~e gone on to
greater gloQ' by snagging 94
career passes, including nloe in

week's (llening game
triumph over Oklahoma, and
tallying 1 ~ touchdowns, breaking
the ~otre Dame reo.:ord of 12 set
b~ Leon llarL
On SaturdaJ when the No. l
ranked Irish and 1\o. 2 rated
Boilermakers meet at South
Bend, Ind., in the rubber game
or Seymour's three-ye:-r career,
he will again receive special
recognition, this time (rom
Ke)'es, b e t t e r known as
last

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Trophy award

ballollng, may
ver} well play tile entire game
saturda}, both on offense and
defense, in an effort to stll)
Seymour and llanratty. The
versatile pedormer !'.p&amp;r~ed the
Boi1crmakcrs' opening game
victor) 0\'er Virginia by scoring
one
touchdown, passing for
another score and latching onto
eight or Mike Phip:ls' aerleal.s
in a H-G rout.
llowe\'Cr, Coach .la~k Molle~
kopf also n·members lhat
Keyes Is a better than avera~-:e
defensive back, who helped
Purdue to a 28-21 win over U1e
Irish last season when he

doubled oo derense midway
through the game :md made
Se~·mour's life miserable,
In games Involving the other
top 10 teams, third . ranked USC
should haH: J1tUe difficulty wilh

Northwestern, f o u r

l h-ranked

Purdue's

Penn State tangles with Kansas
State, fifth-ranked UCLA is
f&amp;\'Ored O\'er Washington State
while shtl1-ranked Kansas has
its hands full 1o;ith Indiana.
Seventh-ranked •\.ial&gt;anu:~ meets

Notre
favorite.

Southern Mi s sissippi, eighthranked Nebraska will be under-

"Mr. Ever}1hing."
Dame is a six.;&gt;oint

Keyes,

who

an

was

All-

dog lO Minnesota, whHe LSU is
a touchdown pick over Hice and
lOth ranked Miami (Fla.) is
seven over Georgia Tech.

Now

Nadonwlde

National LeaBua UmPire TOm
Goi'INI' wao named 1:11' Commissioner William D; l:ckert
today to wrk behind the plite
1n the opening game ol the 1968
·World Serle• In st. Louis 01:1. 2.
Other umplreo named to the
crew to handle the oerlea
between the St. Louis Cardinali
and Detroit Tlgero, were SliD
Landi a and Doug HarvoY Of the
NL and Jim Honoehlek, Bill
Ki.:Oamon and Blll Haller o( tbe
American League.

"

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.

eo&amp;ch Bill
i.liimp
Wildcats jloWnojl tlio ~ a n,)i ' ~ .
Trace Wlid!'l'll 27,12 tbut*
nll!lll at Met~ei'tllle fo~ 1ho Weal
·VIrgbllana' ' ilj!"'!ld · WID of tho
......, agalnit.threo loa.. a.
Fbr Coech Nell ReiiiAir'o HIDnan Trace wUd""", It tllao tho
fth cmae&lt;•1ti110 \OIS. Last week
the Wildcats dropped" llflleaker
to Symmes Valley 8-6, the aame
team that Harman swamped 30-8
Adolrie1'

.~._.

Renewal

J

,. ,,

W4Id.$ts. Drop·~7-12 .Tit.

·&amp;.mo Ill the Jut hall. DOO .IIv• two touChdowns for llamln '"'
Doldo

scored llalilln'o 'llrif
liouchdo!m oo a 40.y8ni run ORd
acored the PAT oo a. pus to
ilve them ID 8~ iood.
Doo l'lj'ne scored the nell
i

'j.:

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Homlrn

Traee'l nnt tou&lt;h- ·
the third peliod
1ll!en
Jim
Chapman
Intercepted
Larry ThompiOII ORd . , 10 •
a
~aman
pass
.(ad
ran
65 yard1
Jarder from ·Tom ~awton. Forto
score.
The
try
lor
tile
PAT
est stsrkey rambled 35 yards
waa no ~Plod.
· for Haman's last aeon.

,&amp;sM!s, a nlne yardh . i r 'o m dcnm came In

Everett

5 · - · T~· ~lb StntiJ!ol, POIIll'rtJY-Midd1II)Ort, 0., Friday, September '27, 1988

~e:=~~(), ~~

pWnd Hnlor 1

dledl • ' • Along with being lull
BY JACK O'BRIAN
· .. . · ,..
two weeks agu.
NEW YORK - Doris Day'a ol rsncor agalnot the netwrk,
Hannsn led If~ at the half .lOll Terry Ia now her 11l811aS9r Jolmn.y CarJOD'I al10 tull~chlc:
and 21·12 alter three perloda. (alnce husband Marcy Melcher He and JOUIIe were houaeauests
PALMER COMPETES
ol Clsudettt&gt; COlbert In BarbaLONDON (UPD-- Arnold PaJ. Haman Trace acored both touch ..
dos • . . Walter MatthaU's winmer, the two-time champion,
ning the war ol aubtle lha!ta with
will meei Brian Huggett ot
Barbra stretsand, h11 tllm coBritain in his first-round match
star In uneno, DollY" .•• '"Barin the Piccadilly World Match
bra
bad moments of llkeabillb',"
Play Championship at Wenthe IUmmed up • , • Gig Young's
worth Ocl liJ.
pals IUSPBet his next Mrs. Gig
other opening-round pairings
By
Helen
Bottef
will be Sall,y Kellermsn •.• Peare: Peter Thomson, Australia,
ter
Fonda' a :p~bllcproclamations
v s. Gary Player, South Africa;
are as outdated as those of the
DOUBTING
THOMAS
HAS
spending
around
a
thousand
lor
Billy Casper, U.S., vs. Bob
8o.year.olds silting In the srutlyeverything'?
Charles, New Zealand; and U.S. REASON FOR DOUBT
club readlng-roomli the lad's
Dear
Helen:
When
our
daughters
are
marOpen champion Lee Trevino vs.
caUow views are more ''then't
Il!ll
it
possible
for
a
woman
to
ried,
the
lnvitaUon&amp;
wlU
include
Tony Jacklin, Britain.
love her husband, yet all but UJe whole family. And we're not than unow" even if camouflaged
In what he IUIIPBds are topical
throw him at another woman? wealthy!
It appears to me that my wile
Small chUdren aremorethriU- wlgarltlea • , , Barberlhip on
OPEN SEASON
arranges to be somewhere else ed by a wedding than are many Hth between 2ild &amp; 3rd mes a
CLEARWATER, Fla. (UP{)..
whenever thls divorcee friend adults, and they otten behan splendid slogan: "Beautil)' Am.\ squad of 23 players were of hers Is around. The friend better! There's nothing sweeter erica - Get a Haircut."
present when the New York
You can't get Oylters Rocke.is a knock-out. ::he is not b~r­ than a bridal snapshot with a
Yankees opened their Florida
dened witb morals, and has let young relaUn. rd be tempted feller In any Roekefoller center
Instructional League season me know that she might be in- to send my regrets If the bride restsuranl: no like the family
Jnda.Y,
terested. rm as human as the indicated the wedding was a "no name dragged throush the cash
Among the first-year pl~ers
next man, but rm resisting be- ehlldren" alftlir. - Mrs. J.S.L. registers . , . Richard Burton
is Samoa..OOrn first baseman
will star Ill a moYie titled "Hangcause: 1. I am not an adUlterer Dear Helen:
Tony Solaita, who led the
at heart; and, 2. I can't figure
'You printed letters from moth- ing Elizabeth Taylor," but of
country in homers this year
ers or chlldren who 'had to get course It's about an historical
out my wife.
with 51 in the Carolina League.
I know she loves me. I am married." They shbuldnJt teer Uz, not the hiP-current one •• •
blessed with tbat rate lemale who self.pl!;v, Alter all , they now It does seem a trifle early to
thinks of her man before she ha"e aons..J.n-law and grandchil- see Christmas adVertising already; mostly Yule cards.
thinks of heraelf. Could It be dren.
'1latlng Game" and ..Newly- 1.-..--------~
..
,.
Fellin! baa Dipped biB ethereal weds."
she ligures rm missing some~
But what or the parents whose
thing that every man should ex- daughters refuse to get married? enthusiasm over (of all people)
perience; or is s h e putting Our chlld was raised properly BroOklyn's Marty lnglea ..•
temptation in my Wlf.Y to test my In a lamll,y that prayed and piB,)'· Folksinger Bob Dylan and manstamina?
ed together. Her young man Is ager Albert Grouman aren't so
Or, a thought just struck me, a wonderful fellow, one we would !olkay Clllddenl1 ... DIUo COnnie
does she want a rest from be- be glad to welcome as a son. Francis and her canny helmsclubs and skipper of the Giants' ing a wife'? An excuse lor separ- But she won't even see or call man, George &amp;:beck , . . The
farm club at Phoenix this year,
ate beds? - DOUBTING TOM hlJn - he doesn't know ahe Is star role of a Sioux Indian In
is reported to have the Job all Dear Tom:
expecting. ~e simply broke up Columbia's "15 Flags" is exbut locked up as Herman's sucWhy, for Pete'&amp; sake, don't with him and gave no explana- pected to go to a Negro,
ces s or. Also believed in the run- you ask your wife? Two mar- tion.
Barbara Winters winds up
ning is Coach Wes Westrum, riage rule&amp; you evidentJy hann•t
We will never see our first s!nglng with Paul Martell's band
who skippered the New York learned are: On emotional mat- grandchild. I go to bed each at Roseland lor more lmporlsnt
Mets for one and one-half sea- ters, don't ever try to outguess nlgtot crying, though I try to work - school teaching • • •Old
sons.
a woman; and don't ask another put on a brave front when we Fred Allen comic Petsr Donald
Franks let WiBle Mays man- woman to do your guessing for visit her at the '"home.'' There lo Out ol Pol,ydln!e Hosplln! alage the team
in Houston you! _ H.
In the
sppms tp be ,no medication lor ter a stroke and a atreteh
1
Wednesday night. Mays, -tt is Dear Helen:
'
a broken heart. My greatest con- lriteniive·..c~u-e
believr.:d, has been told he c~ . "Puzzled Bride to Be" want- solation is round in prayer.
The Beatlea want~ open their
:•ave the job on a permanem ed to know how she could avoid So~etlme&amp; I hate to leave the own private school for their own
basis if he wants it, but the children at her wedding and re- church for I feel secure there. private children , , , Peter Uatlstar center fielder has said on ception. I'm thoroughly disgust- I sta,y tor hours. talking to the nov's bullseye about pla.Ywright:
Get your an~enna In shape
nwnerous occasions he thinks ed at the trend toward omitting Lord.
Harold Pinter: uu he ever wrote
now before bad weathfl
he ~an play at least two more children from family atraira.
I would take the baby myselt, a play everyone could WlderI
.
seasons.
Even though it coats more to
but I am so tired and I long lor stand, It wooid be a dlaaster for
arrives. All channel and
leed them, what•s another $50 the freedom I shall have this him." ... Patty Duke now wants
sp•cially d.tiigned color
for dinners when you're already year. You see, the youngest at her blUing shilled to "Pat Duke"
our six children started school . . . Another ex-ldd star, Robin
antennas.
DDCTCRIS MAILBAG in September. I have looked for- Morgan, turned up onplo:ketllnea
ward lor 20 years to the time 1 at the Mlas Amerlea eootest In
could get out and perhaps join A.C. • •• After seven years as
charitable organizations or )1st ''The Saint," Roger Moore tllmed Its !lnaleplsode ..• It's a most
visit with mends.
Helen, what Is the anawer for entertaining eacaplat aeries and
mothers like me? The day ot even if Roger is tired, Lew
this child's birth will be a black Grade should filld another awashBy W.t.YNE G. BR.t.NDST.t.DT, M.D.
daY every year of my life. - buckling !DOdem actor to TVcanonize.
One or the best or these is Mrs. L,D,C.
Q-What are the symptoms
H.t.RRY MILLER
Songs In the new Copa lhoW
Dear
Mrs.
C.:
betamethasone
valerate
(Vall·
of psoriasis and what is the
sre
by
Fay
Tlshman
of
the
N.Y.
Seems to me you're hiding be·MAIM ) L
992-3635
POMEROY
sane Cream).
cause? Has any cure been
hind aelli&gt;ll;v and prB,)'er when conatrudlon - clan •.• The Dr.
A 5 per cent crude tar ointfound?
ment, one of the oldest treat- ycxf should try direct action. Sanley Btrnbaums divorced;
A-The typleal psoriatic
ments used, is messy but is TeU the young man he is about Mrs. B.'s the dsu8bter of our old
plaque has a dull red base.
still highly effective. ~·or scalp to become a father. He may ~Ive
The scales are silvery and the
lesions a greaseless tar prep- your problems wlth some direct
outlines of the lesions are disaration with hexachlorophene action cl hls ow;.1 • • • 'Mtat ia,
tinct. The cause is unknown.
IAiphosyl Shampoo) Ia help- If he can brook through the guilt
Although there is no cure,
ful.
Another local preparation
muc:h can be done to keep the
that
has worked well lor many which ma,y now be stlnlng your
disease under c on t r o I. Aldaughter, - H.
though s o m e cortisonelike victims Ia anthralln.
This column Ia dedicated to
Obeae victims usually lm·
drugs, when ta.ken by mouth,
famib'
living, ao If you're having
prove
when
they
bring
their
will cause temporary improvekid
lr&lt;d&gt;le
or Jult plaiD lr&lt;d&gt;le,
weight
down
to
'!jll'lllal.
Since
ment, they cannot be recome
m
o
tlo
n
a!
problems
may
let
Helen
help YOU. !lie will
mended because their prolonged use causes undesirable cause the lesions to spread, a also welcome your own amuslng
side effects and when they are mild tranqc:Jlllzer IJ someUmes -leneea. Address Helen Bot- ~
discontinued the disease re- advisable. Because psoriasis tie In &lt;are ol tills -apaper,
turns in an aggravated form . Is a mUd disease thai wiU not
ll Pli.T~rr'!\r~n,r~
These drugs may, however, affect your health, It does not
~ ~
'.I
~
be used externally in creams . pay to use heroic methods ol
I
.
--=4
treatment that may be harm·
They work best when covered
with an airtight plastic film . lui In themselves.
Although some victims are
THE FIRST PREMIERE SHOWING OF THE ALL,NEW LINCOLN$,
sensitive to ultraviolet rays,
most are helped by exposure
to the sun and clear up in the
MERCURYS, MONTEGOS, CDUGERS, AND COMETS AT • • - - •••
summer. By the same token,
a sun lamp in winter may be
RAY RIGGS INC., ATHENS, OHIO.
beneficial. You should wear
s dlod..
gloves when doing any manual
4" 1peolt•r ond to,. •witch
work lo prevent Injuries, be·
z.,o-ln v•rnl•r •lld•ofole tuning.
-,
cause even mild trauma may
aggravate the disease. When
'
the lesions seem to be clesr·
StOI! In and Look The!ll Over and Test Drive Oila of YDII Choice. While-:•
ing up you must avotd ~over­
treatment. At this stage oetro·
Yciu'r~ here Be S11e and Recister Far lhe Drawina of the New r..rcurr \. - ,
latum jelly may be aU you
need to use-lhe mlldest treat·
Marquis to be Given Away in November. Also·U..'2 Radios
ment that works Is always the
n:Z.5291
best
·BY Ray· Rias attii.,Drawiq
Fri. 8 Pll· : ~ 27. II•
.., .....~•; •.,,. . ·;: .
' · .,
N"d not IHt pres.,.t to wtn.
,

CINCINNATI

Now, NatK:lnwide Insurance

guarantee renewal of auto ·
suranct for five years (after
is in effect 60 days).
ouol•fr . just pay the prtmiums
a valid license for every
l••·;,;,,g member of your ramily .
· me about it

Ken Williams

P J. Pauley

WILLIAMS
an• PAULEY
NATIONWIDE
Po......,

UP!) -

Herman Franks begins his final
series as San Francisco manager tonight when the Giants
play the Cincinnati Reds in
their last three games of the
1968 season.
Gaylord Perry (15-15) pltche•
for the Giants, who ha'¥e locked
up second place for the fourth
straight year, against George
Culver (11·16).
The Reds are still fighting to
ftnish in third place, a spot
worth about $1,500 a man from
the World Series pool Second
place is e)Q;Iected to net the
Giants about $2,500 a man.
Franks announced earlier in
the season that 1968 would erx:t
his managerial ' tour if the
Giants did oot win the pennant.
If he holds true to his word
Sunday wUI be his final game
in San Francisco O.anneb.
Clyde King, former relief ace
with three National League

STEAK
HOUSE.

US•••

•of

SAN OWlet:

I

.&lt;

J

Get A Better Picture
With A Better Antennal

NOW I

secif&amp;f.

CHANNEL MASTER
and FINCO

Mildest Treatment
Best Against Psoriasis

1969

SIZE

FELT
MOCCASINS

•

SHOEBOX

•'

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Where Shoes Are S.nsi~ly PricH

1

MIDDLEPORT, 0 .

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MERCURYS LEAD THE
-----

n n n

n

.L!.'Il

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER-27

MOTOROLA

WE-NER

to~ ·~~~ ;;,; :

I!DIO &amp; TV

(: '
1.,,

i'

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,I

!

5to8

:. Pl'~ PLEASANT - _,Ameri- "You are rich ln1fde- you can

are

OIDI
die moot beloved chll, dJ'tn ol God" was the opening
statement ol a talk cJven by
Dr. Marla Zogralldou to momber1 ot the Maaon CoUnty fte...
tlrld Teachers Atlioclation at
lllolr meeUng st the conference
room at Tu.Endle-Wel Manor last

Sept.

:

..

I

j

,,

I

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•, •

•

'HAY~

~.~Guat
YISI~~=~...b.~ta~
·anER

saturday.

1

ANY OF T"ESE SALESMEN SHOW YQV AROUND-RAY RIGGS- :~
HA~OLD IATSON·~RLON AN11;~-QAVf~ fftGGS..:JOHN ADAMS OR
.'
RAY WHALEY. ·

.

. t' I
,"'
. .
'. ~

help ...
Mro. Garne!te Klnberllng,
president ol the Counl;v Aasoclatioo corlllletod a bualnen aeiBion
at which reportl were gtveit by
Mn. Leta B. Fogle10f18, chalrman of the state wellare commlttee and Mrs. Cary H. a..,.burn, count;y chiJrman or the
leghlatlve committee.
Mrs. Fogleaong and Mrs. Rayburn recently aUe.nded a alate
workslql meeting ,at Jackson's
MUI at which 29 oountlea were
repreaented. Mro. Vurl R a ndolph wae: named aaltstant secrotary by Mra, Klnberllng woo
onnounced that the next scheduled
meeting will be NO¥ember 16,
Following the progrsm .M r s.
Klnberllng ORd Mrs. ,FocleiiOili
served refreshmentfito Dr. Zl'f!raOdou, Mrs. Tho
V. Watteraon. Mrs. Vaual Hanes, Mlas
Helen Cobb, Mrs. Vurl Randolph,
Miss Ulllan Perry, Miss Allee
Roa&lt;h, Mra. l&gt;ri1ht Ottllnger,
Mra. Gelda Lamer, ""s. Amle
Wilcoxen, Mrs, Cary Rayblm
~ and a guest, Mrs, Lila Vander-

Dr, Zogra!ldou, a ~.11 Pl'eaently wrklng with reUrdod ORd emotlonall,y dlaturbed · cHldren at Laldrl Ho.lpltal,
lll1&lt;*e ol the Jo:r• ·ORd hsrdah!ps
ol har life Ill Europe until 1955
Wben lhe ciDie to live in Amerlea.
· .'•llr. Zogralldou stated that aha
loot aU her pooaeaslona In liltltJ: Gortnany bot her medical
tfcdnlng whleh llhebrouglotto Amorlca In 1955, She feela many of
lhe ehlldr111 at Lakin Hospital
hlve a great potential lor learnlD&amp; ORd ao they Improve, she
feela gteaUy rewarded for fl.forti,
.
·I!J urcJng retired teachers to
oome ol their free time
oi.J talent• In YObmteer .....I&lt; at
Lakln, ahe mode this llfpoal: pool,

•

· Dr. Denman Obtained
For Services in '69

1

•1

Associated Radio and TV .

SHOES FOR BOYS .t.ND GIRLS

•'

·cROW'S

Season Against Giants

Auto
1118Umnce.

Recalled. to Teuchers

Voice along Broa~way

Helen Help

.

, . •.

.

~dship~&gt;"in EW'Dpe · ~

pored 10
·
for
cats' oniy other scon !,., ,:
fourth period. Aslbl tho try
lioe PAT !ailed.
· . •Each team had 10 nrot diMIDr.!
and the Haman Trace WU!Jc~·=
had 160 yards rulliln8 · li! Uf.r.
lor the vlalting Haman ~
Haman
8 6 7 6 :..:. ~ 2"=
friend, Judge lf¥mlin BarohB,)', a n. Trace
0 0 6 6 - , 12::,
great criminal lawyer when we
·,..
'•
opee!allzed In another sort o1 , ,-----~----E
or1me thsn· Bdwy •• ,A u.s. avlattou exec Is running suns to
Israel out ol Manila , , • Qage
manager Mike TurCJie of "Man
ol La Men&lt;ha" and Mimi TurCJI.e or 11Fickller on the Roof''
expect a little gabbler In Jan,
The Feds now ha"e miles of
mm proving the so-called "kids"
rumlng the diagra&lt;ellll hippieriots are card -&lt;arr)'lngpoiiUcal
vandals wrokeepturnlngupwherever ehaos can be created ..•
HolM
t"M. .·
NAACP heed Roy Wilkins aharea
our conviction that the Chicago
Fabuloul
pollee riots were positively pro.
vokod 1:11' p...-eso!aoal plan , , •
And (aside !rom clo"" D I &lt; k
Gregory) did not Involve Negro
leaders.
Yep, one war's mer: ZIIUick
had to lry 15 aerlps before he
c:ould fll'l the Japanese to oka,v ·
his "Tora, Tora, Toral" tUm
about the Pearl HarOOr attack
.. •Let's just reriDI the old horror-newsreeell •. , Helen O'COn•
nell at the Rainbow GrUI asns to
some second - generattou DorOrderly l'honll
"
seys: Tommy Dorov m (son of
.,...., T·,_ ~..
...... ......·•
the trombonist) and JotmDone¥,
..... ~
a cousin; John' a cilre&lt;tor ofTV'a
fft ~~··
'.·

Reds Close Out 1968

G11aGlllfeeS

214 E. 2nd

ron

}

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,:·•'
••

:f

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PT, PLEASANT - Dr, Harry
Many local residents plan to
Demnan, tnternationalb.' known drive to Ravenswood Monda,y,
lay oVIql8ilst who wDI be spesk- Sept. 30, to attend the second
lrw ln the Parkeraburg District scheduled service tn the F i r s t
of the Iormor Metllod!st Church United Methodist Church there
nul week, ba1 aceeptod an lnYI- at 7:30 p, m.
taUon to. apeak in a revival aervOther services amounced lor
lco In tile Heights united Moth"' Dr. Denman are Tuesday at st
dilll Church here next June.
Mary's United Methodist Church;
'.~ .KPown as "Methodi•m's most Wednesday at the Wayside Church
pq:Jular 11.)' preacher,'' Dr. Den- tn Vienna; Thursday, Lion's Club
mln aerwd u GenBr.l Secre- luncheon at 12:15 p. m. and Sev~ or the Board of E.a..ellsm enth street (fanner EUB) Church
tho lltljJodiBt Church lor more in Parkersburg at 7:30 p. m., and
tlllll 2S ,..,...
I
Frldl)' In the Parkersburg Tr!J&gt;.
HJa tlrst service.In the Park- ll;v United Metllndlst Church at
ersbura area will be tn the st. 7:30 m.
Poul'l chureh In' Pl!lkersburg
Dr. Demnan has been speaking
9uai101', Sept. 29, ll 10&lt;45 L m. tn the Pennsboro United Metho'{1!!1 Hrvl~ wiU lollow a break· dist Church all this week.
jist SPBiklne e - e n t In the
Wllmor C&amp;feterlo at 7:30 L m.

.•

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·I:

,;:Archers
·-:,

·~ ·

.....

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·:.
'..• To

.....
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Set
Up
.,•
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. ge
:l 'New Ran
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d;~

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PLEASANT VALLEY HOSJ&gt;fr AL
Admitted - Patricia Hudson,
Point Plea.Santj Mrl!l. W 11 s o n
Grimes, Point Pleusnt; RantiY
Mealse, Gallipolis Ferry; Mrs.
Albert ~ngton, MaiOiti Mrs.
Charles Grueser, Minersville,
Dlamlssed - Mrs. Joseph Ellis, Charles Hall, Milford LyY&amp;re, Thomas Darst, Herbert
Webb, Janey Dunea,y, John Click.

Thomas V. Rice, Rt, 3 Wellaton;
Mrs. James K. Dunfee, WUlow
Wood; Mra. Pearl B. P r t c e,

Coalton; ll'lerett c. Sturg!U', Rt.
3 Jaek1011; James E. Morrow.
Pt. Pleaaant.
Dllchargil&amp;
Mrs. Carl Aakew, Mrs. James
S. Blakeman, Barbara Bowen,
Homer E. Cook, OVel L, Ewing,
Sr., Mrs. Millard Hammond,
Mrs. W~ne L, Harrison, &amp;!san
Heaton, Mrs. Charlo• A. Roberts, Wendell S. Rouoh, Carolyn M. 9&lt;eens, Paul D. Sturgeon, Mrs, Clyde Ta,ylor, Mra.
Margaret A, Wallace, Martin
E. Welll, James R. Ferguson.
Mrs. Richard L, Harrington and
Infant dsughter, Mrs. Edwin V,
Jones and Infant daughter.

30 Individuals Placed
PT. PLEASANT - Jack L.
Srnlt11, manager of the Point
Plea181it loCal office ol the West
Vlrlllnlo Department ol Employ.
ment Security, this week reported the placement of 30 individuals In galn!ul employment durIng August.
There were 448 per10na reglltered for work, .146 females,
131 veterans. New a_wllcationa
received dUring thl1 month totaled 63 females nnd 54 veter-

Democrats Will

p,

,~

Holzer Medical Center: VIsIting hours 2-1 ORd 1~ p.m. Parents O!il,y '"' Pedlalrlcs Ward.
Admlaalenl
M!li Linda L. Tbumpaon, 650
Fourth Ave.; Mra. Delmar R.
Gingerich, 628 Fourth Ave.;
James W. Walters, Rt. 2 Bidwell; Mr1. Mar&amp;uertle IIske, Bt.
1 Gallipolis; Adhony Childers,
Rt. 2 Vinton; Mrs. Steve B,
Stiles, Rio Grande; Gerald B,
Hall, Crown Cl!;v; Mra. BOI'!DOnd
H. Fields, New Haven; M r s.
Paul L, Barkl&lt;\1', Ill, 2 Latsrl;
Melis&amp;a L. Blain, Ft. Pleasant; Mark A. Venoy, Jack L.
Eanes, Hnward S. Grace, o. Robert Perkins, all Welloton; Mrs.
Ml\Yien P. Cleary, Ironton;
I.AJther E. Dtckess, Kitts IIlli;

Spo1180r Dinner
PT. PLEASANT - The Maaon
Democratic Organizations are sponsoring a dinner
dsnce Oet. 12 al .the local Na.
County

tf.ooal Guard Armory.

Dinner will start at 6:30 with
the danee following from 10 p.
m. until l a.m. The Mel Gillis-

pie Orchestra has been engaged
to play for the function. Persms

wishing to purchase tickets may
contact any m~mber of the Mason County Democratic Organizations.

Series E&amp;H Sales
At $26 Million
August 1968 sales or Series E
and HUnited Stales savings Bond a
and Freedom Shares in Ohio
were · ~ · nilllloii '· m~ktng
purchases in the state this year
at $218.3 million by August 31,
or 59.1 per cent of its aMual
sales goal.
Theodore T. Reed Jr. , Meigs
County Volunteer Savings Bonds
Chairman, reported August sales
of Bonds and Shares in the county totaled $18,906, or 67.7 per
cent of its 1968 sales goal at
month's end.

ans (181).
One year ago there were 916
perBODI registered for work and
39 placements had been made.
Qtalltied Job COrp&amp; recruits
are still being selected for the
Pollee Training Sc:hool o! Kilmer Job Corps Center. Here information regarding this train~
ing is available at the Local
Employment O!!lce,
There Is also in session at
this time a psychiatric aide class

150 Area Scouts Expected
Some 150 area Boy Scouts . The hlghligtlt will be the campfrom the M.G.M. DiStrict are , fire sesaloo for parents and
expected to attend the annual fall friends of scooting from 8 to 9
camporee to be held at Camp Ki- p. m. saturday.
ashuta near Chester this week- Road Money
end.

•
log, tlrst•ld relay arxl others.

ollne taxes and other special
levies on · m~tor vehicles and
operators provide all the federal funda and most or the
state and local funds used for
road tmprovement In the

';

SYSTEMS
•• hue tht

RIGHT FURNACE

.....
RIGHT BOILER

United States. accordlnB to
the American Petroleum Instl·
tute.

Completes Basic
At Fort Knox, Ky.

-

HYDRONIC
BASEBOARD

BAILEY'S

Pf. PLEASANT - Pvt. E2
William w, Henry, aon of Lee
Henry of Gallipolis Ferry, and
the late MaXine Henry, has completed nine weeks or lratn\ng at
Ft. Knox, r..v.
He waa then stationed at FL
g}l, Okla., for 9 weeks of ape~
c!al training In the Artillery
Unit. He then spent JS daya
leave with his family and friends.
He returned to FL Carson, COlo.
with Artillery Unit, Fifth Infantry Div. For friends wishing to
write his address is as follows:
A.fi~O, PVT. E2 William W,
Henry, US 51647055, Ft. Carson, Colo.

SERVIU MARS
THE DiffERENCE

!o-Tto

A CLEANER
WARMER HOMI

f

Plan Fall Festival
Saturday, OcL 5

will keep you coming

OHIO VALLEY
PLUMBING &amp; HEATING

back and your car
running smooth •

BAILEYS SUNOCO

ldwilrd leer, OW!t.r
232 I. leeancl

282 W. Mo;n
Pomeroy
992-2995

263 W. Main St.
Pomeroy, 0.

•

ANNOU
:

_THE 1969 PL

, :, '&gt;'•. _;

Pf. PLEASANT - The Point
PiNIIIII Aretiery Club hal re, cltted the permloslan of the
'Pintaoote plant to .e allblllh a
ohl!otln&amp; range 0., Ita ...,.....
,&amp;a area. The local 'dub will be
, re-ilb!e for the upkeep of
~ ·~~a rlnae whieh wlil be opc11
•1 aoiJ;r ·to members of the dub and

·&lt; :•omilolu ot Pantaaots.
·~t .'" ·Pottntlal areherl are welcome

io lllool

the rlllllt with lilY elub
- . - . mrto la oo the visiting
piriGQ 11111 be \)OVered by I h e

' Tiii

·

lo&lt;al club hold Ita month-

. 41· ..,..Ui,g at tho bame ol Pres-

. • l\lenl

lAster Bird, 110 EncJiab

IIOid. OO!cll'o ror 1969 wert

noitdnoted IQII eltct!Oor will

....u.. ..

be

• tilt 01:1. 10.
•" T\10 dub hal KheJlded I I I
. !'tlllmploelhlp ahoOI fer sept. 29
·81 .1 }1.111., &amp;I IIJt new rep.
lJ1,. ·anneal ''lllrile,r - · · will
.llo helcl Get. J7 at I p,m,
Stveril · melilbero were
..;011 lito ~-orpnl:tat!Da, Ino!udti!tl .Manfoi'd (Butch) Boutr
11111 .rom ORd BttV ~eb.
Rofrubmelila .wen oer'ied to
,9Jir\OO lf\d ~riret Crouch,

·llcin

IIIII Nang NDU ood

tam-

:illt eoorn ....Opel, caoto and

' ~ s,b ""· iolar1 Dorlllnpr,
·,!!IIi&gt; anti IM4' ' ~. J • Ok
' lflrbert; lloWird .~. Jbun
··~ ~ oild ' !At arid iiottlo •
Bird and family.

' '

P0111a1oy

LEGAR MONUMENT CO.

..

......,..,lnluraneo).

992-2036

Professional altenlion

-.

::~

PHONI

Come In and Set Ovr CompMte
lint of Ga•Fir.cl or Oil.flred,
Cast~NI'I or Stell loUeu • , •
Or Col! io• FREE ESnMATES.

Now showing at your·
ne!Qhborhood.Piymouth dea1ers.
· . .tfl;

. -

.

The c::.,S.that ,VOn oYer ¥4 o1 ~ million competitive owners
to Plymoillb In the past two years, are back again lor another
unbeatibfi year, New Plymouth Furys. Sparts car llaT!acudas.
Vallanlo. PluJ Jhci,big tuccesSIIIJ ot the mid·s;~ wotld : Belvedere,
Satellite', QTX\ ' and•Fjoad RuMer, loo. Unbeatalile cars.
.... Unbeatable. bily1. -From unbeatable guys,' Now!
~

(;

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~~~
"··~}
. . '
'c.

.

('

fREE
ESTIMAHS ~IIEATINI

TULSA, Okla.. (UPJ)-Oas-

Contests will include panr.:ake
Oipping, fire - building coordinated wltb water boiling, blindfolded compas.a course tentpegmak-

PT. PLEASANT - The Parent·Teacher Association of Henderson School will sponsor Its
annual tall festival at t h e
school Saturday, Oct. 5. Hours
of the e"ent are from 5 to 9 p.
under the MDTA, consisting of
m.
16 trainees at Lakin State HospitAmong the many features wm
al. When the training is complet- be games, door prizes, a sweet
ed, these trainees will be refershop and a sandwich concession.
red to Lakin Stat.: Hospital for The PTA Invite• the p.Ibllc to
employment.
attend.
This otrlce Is currently partle!patlng In the otaOing of a
Refrigeratloo and Air Conditioning class at Parkersburg,
under the MDT A.
Smith says that other training is auilable II interested
people will ask for information.
It Is through the interest shown
by applicant&amp; ror training and the
need for. qualified workers by
employes that training programs are possible.

•

feature this year in plorcr scoot,; chosen by tbe coothese contests is that tile judgi~ tl!stants' own unlt~J..
'A neatly desl.cned l!lt•h wl11 be
and COUI'Jseling will be done by a
select group of senior and ex~ awarded ~ch boy attending.
Thl.! unique

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AU1MOIIIZID DIALEIII

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16:j,:;~~~:: :=~~,~=~~~==:=~~=;~~:;~::;;::~··•t27,
., ~
a. m.; 1968
llllddloPm:l

~

Directory for
Area Churches

llolhodf'ot

m. SII1Qy ...li!.W-·
7:30 p., ru.; Oftlt;lal Bo.rd

..._,, 6 p,
lld,p,

POmoi:'aiY
Y.._, Fellowllblp,Suo·

meetlrv, nrst SII1Qy ot IIUllllh,
6 p. m.; WSCS aecond MCllldo.y ot
liT.
HERMON
UNJTEil
month, 7:30 p. m.i Eleanor Clr·
BRETHREN
IN
CHRIST
- Rev.
cle, second 'l11Urlday; Class 12
r.fenzel
Smith,
paator.
Sua
day
third Wodnelday. A1!m-. Clr·
School,
9:30
a:.
m.;
RuaseU
~""'
cle, seeCllld T!llroday an.rnoon.
ALFRED METHODIST, Pearl a. m.; Swdi.Y School. 10:30 a.m. Ctdr praetice, 1 p. m. Wednes- cer. S~~JL; Alfred Wolfe. aulsl.ant. Morntna Sermon 11 a. m..
A, Casto, pastor. S&gt;nda,r SeboOI Youth semce, Sunday, 6:30 p. do.y.
m.;
Preaebl~ evei-y Sunday, 7
e..,mng sermon. 7:30p.m., alterat 9:30, Lloyd Dillinger, &amp;lpL
UNITED FAITH CHURCH of natlrv each· SuoQy. aa .. meetP.m.
Worship services at 10:45 with
Nease Settlement, Sunday School Ing 11 a.m., alternating SuoQy
the Rev. Casto. Wecklesda.Y eveTHE RUTLAND COMMUNITY Superintendent, R o Y Johnaon, mornings. David Holter. c 1 a • s
ninK pra.yer services at 7:45. CHURCH-Rev. Amo8 Tillis pas- Youth meeting, 6:30, Surda)'.
leader. Christian Endeavor, 7:30
SYRACUSE FmST UNJTEil p. m. every other Sunday evetor. &amp;tnda,y school, 9:30 a.m.;
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE services
Lee Burnem, superintendent; PRESBYTERIAN- Rev. Linson ning. Jean Sexson, preaident
at 315 Mam st. , Pt. Pleasant,
worship service, 11 a.m. Wed- stebbins, pastor. &amp;mda.Y •c:bool, Prayer meeting, 7:30 p. m. every
Sulliays 11 L m.; Wednesdays
nesday prayer meeting, 7:30p.m, 9:30 a .m. ; worship aervh:e, 10:· Wednelday. Board meettrw. 7:30
8 p. m. All welcome..
30 a.m. Bible Ibid)' and pra,yer p, m.. nrst MODQy of month.
SUndQY night worship, 7:30.

!:... ' . !'
'

R...

Hartman;
S.••~~~:!;~~:..~
Scllool,
9;80 ..
fee, 10:30 a. m.; Evenlaa wor-

service, Wednesday, 1 p.JI"'

WTTRIDGE UNITED METH·

THE DANVILLE WESLEY AN

CHURCII - Charles Dozer, pasODIST - Worship, tirstandthird
tor; Adra SWick, Sunday School
SUPtays of each month, 10:45 L
Slt;&gt;etintendenL Su!Xiay School,
m.; second aOO fourth Sundays,
9:30 L m.: WorshiJ&gt; aervlce,
7:30 p. m. SunQy School, 9:45
10:30 L m. Youth and Junior
L m. Christian Endeavor, third
youth service, 6:45 p. m. Eve-saturday of each month.
nillt worship, 7:30. Prayer and
praise, Wednesday, 7:30.

LAUREL CLIFF FREEMETHODISf CHURCH - SundQY School
9:30 a. m., morning worshiP,
10:10 a. m., evening worshiP.
7:30 p. m.; W84besday, Christian Youth Crusaders. 6:30 p. m.
and prayer meedng, 7:30 p.m.
Thw-sday. choir practice, 7 p.
m. R. Eugene Gill, pastor; Phil

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·'·

Wise. SWt.
DEXTER CHLRCH OF CHIU.Sl'

,.

- Ronnie Russell, pastor. Norman C, WU4 s""t. 9,mdQY School
9:30 a. m.; WorshiP service.
10:30 L m. Chrbtian Endeawr
SuncJa.y evening.

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RACINE FIRST CHURCII OF
THE NAZARENE - SnndaySchool
9:30 a. m.; Morning Worship,
10:30 L ma; Evening Worship,
7:30p.m. Prayer service11, 7:30

p. m. WodnesdOY. SundOY School .
Superintendent, Paulino McCIIDtnck. Putol', Rev. Morris M.

POMEJ!OY FIRST BAPTI... ·
Caner Williams, pastor. Jobn
WOes, SundaY School Superintorolent. SundOY School, 9:30 a.
m.; Morning worship, 10:30 a.
m.; BYF, 6 p. m, Bible study,
Wednesday, 7 p, m.; Choir prac-

tice, 8:30 p. m. Wednesday,

MT. UNION BAPTIST - Rev.
Cecil Cox, pastor. SundQY School
superintendent, Larry Clark.
S~.~Jerintendent Kenneth Matson. Sunday School, 9:45 a.. m.; Sunday
Sunday School, 9:30 a. m.; wo:r- evening worship, 7:30; Wednes-

UNITED FAITH CIIURCHNease S.1tlement - Robert E.
!mith, ,..., pastDr. SundQY School

shiP service, 10:30 a. m. and
7:30 p, m. each Sunday. Mid-week
prayer meeting, Wednesday, 7:30

p.m.

day pra.yer and Bible stu!y, 7:30
p.m.

SUTTON MIITHOD!ST - Rev,

W. Dale McClurg, pastor, SunKENO CHURCH OF CHRLST- day School, 10:30 a, m.j Worship
Norman McCain, superintendent. Service, 9:30 a. m., seoonll and
Services weekly at ~30 a. m. fourth Sunday each month.
Preac~,

flrat and t!JirdSundQY

CHESTER CHURCH OF THE
of month by Charles Russell at
NA
ZARENE - Rev. Herbert
9:30a.m.
Grate,
pastor. Worship service,
BRADFORD CHURCH OF
11
L
m.
and 7:30p.m., Sunday.
CHR:5T -Charles Russell, paa~
Sunday
School,
9:30 a.m. Richtor. Richard Gilkey, SUJ&gt;t. Sun·
day School, 9:30 a. m.; Morning ard Barton, Supt., Charles BisWorship, 10:30 a. m.; Event~ sell, al!lsistant supl Prayermeetwurship, 7 p.m. WednealayBlble if1t, Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
study, 7:30 p. m.

~ORGANiZED CHURCH o'f·
·
f Latte D
J esus Cl1r1st
o
r
ay
Saints, Portland - Racine Road.
Sunday School, 9:30 a. m.; Morn· w bJ
'ln
r;:.,..;a....
;_ng or:s p, 10 :""'a. m • .._.......,.
evening service at 7. Wednesday
evening prayer service, 7:30.
Pastor, Elder Frederick J. Sto-

Wolfe.
niPPERS PLAINS LINJTED
METHODIST- Morning Worship
9:30 L m. at former EUB bW.ldiJ1t, E)~Janded Surxlay School session for nursery to grade six
children at former Methodist anbarL
.
.
nex at 9:30L m., Mrs.J ames
Stoat, children's Sl()erlnterxtent.
Sunday Church School, adults and
BRADBURY CHURCH OF
youth, 10:30 L m.; junior high, CHRJSr- SundQY achool, 9:30 a,
senior high and young adults m. Glen.Evana, SUpt. Church sermeet in former Methodist Church vices, 10:3{) a.m. ; evening serlor Sundo,y Church School. Boyd vice, 7:30; Weckleaday, prayer
Hackney, youth superintendent; services, 7:3D p.m.
r ·post high class and senior adults
~ meeting In fonner EUB bullding,
GRAHAM UNITED laiih'HO-

HARRISONVILLE PRESBYTERIAN - Mrs. Norma Lee,
SuOO
School Supe 1 rot

r nte enL
Sunday School, 9:30 L m, Su~
day service, 8 p. m., the Rev.
Max Do h
of Middl
ki
na ue
eport
spea ng.
ay

JEIIOV All'S WITNESSES, Lar•
ry Carnahan. presidi~Wminister.
SwldllV: Bible lecture, 9:30a.m.;
Watch Tower study1 10:30 a. m.;
Wednesday: Bible study, 7 p.m.
Thursday: Ministry achool, 7 p.
m. Service meeU.rw, 8 p.m.

MASON CHlJRCH OF CHR!STMlUer St. - Evenon Weekley,
pastor. Bible study elaases,&amp;m..

10a.m. Worshlpandpreaeh~ Hobart VIneyard, supt Adult Bl· DIST CHURCH - Preaching, 9:- lug, 10:55 a. m.; Sundo,y evening
Bible stwty
ble Clus party, last Moo:la,yeach 30 a.m., Firat and Second &amp;Jn. service, 7:30.
month. Youth Fellowship each dayJ of each month; 1bird and classes, Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.
Sunday, 6 p. m. in former Meth- Fourth &amp;mda3s eachmonth, WorMORNING
STAR UNITED
odist building. District youthral- ship service at 7:30 p.m.; WedMETHODIST CHURCH - Rev.
ly tlrst Monday of each month.
neada,y evenings at 7:30, Prayer
William Alrson, pastor: J o h n
LET ART UNll'ED METHO- and Bible study .
Ihle, ~t.; Roy Van Meter, Asst.
D!Sl' CHURCH - First and SecFREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION S141t. Sund1v ~rhool, 9:45 L fr\ ;
ond Sunda,ys preaching, 8 p.m . ~ -Bald Knobs, Portlafd.Bashan
Third and Fourlb SundQYB, Sun- Rood. Rev. E. J. Grilftth,pastor.
SOUTH
BETHEL UNITED
day School 10 a.m., Wonhipservice 11 a.m.; TUesda3 evenings
at 8 p.m., Prayer and Bible atudy.

RUTLAND CHURCH Of THE
NAZARENE _ Rev. Lloyd D.
Grimm, Jr., pastor. S u n d a y
School, 9:30 L nL j morning worship, 10:30 L m.; ywrw peoples
service, 7:30p. m.; ewangellatlc
Wed ·•···
se rvl ce&amp;, 7:30 p. m.
ne......,
evening service, 7:30 p. m.

SuOOay School, 9:30 L m.; Hoger Wilfred, Sl()t. Sunday worship

METHODIST - Worship. second
and fourth Sunday1 10:30 a. m.;
service, 7:30 p. m. Prayer meetfirst and thirdSWldlys, 7:30p.m.
lrv, TuosQy, 7:30 P. m., Mil- 5unQy School, 9:30 L m. Youth
ford Frederick, class leader. Fellowship, 6 p, m. each Sundly
youth Fellowship, Friday, 7:30 p.
at Tuppers Plains United Methom. Ernest Deeter, leader; Hog- dist Church.
er Wilfred, Jr., presidert.
OLD DEXTER CONGREGA·
MASON ASSEMBLY CHURCH

OF GOO - Secood St., Mason,
W. Va. SI.Qla.y SchoOl, 10 a.m.
Morning ltOI'ship, n a. m. EvanMIDDLEPORT HEATH UNITED gellatlc. aerv!ee, 7:30 p. m..Blble
METHODIST- Max E. Donahue, Study and pt'1111r aorvlee, Wedmlnlster; Jamea Brew1ngWa, nelday, 7':30 p.m. Chester·rea-:
~ sehoul superintendent. nJinl, pastDr. Phooe 773.5;1.33,
Church aohool, 9:30a.m.; mom- . CARLETON CHlJRCH -KIDgalng ""rllblp, 10:30 a.m.; youth bury Road, SUJM!ay School, 9:30
meeting. ~, 6 p.m. Choir ro- a. m., Ralph Carl. Supt. Worship
hearaal WQiesday, 7 p.m., choir service. 10:30 a. m. and 7:30 Pa
director, Ben Philson. Prayer '1 m. alternately. Prayer meetbtg,

..

!·

.''

lenice, Wednelda.Y, 8 p.m.

Wednesday, 7:30p.m.

•

i• The Sermonelte

Humility is Mark of
.•
: Service to the Christ
•
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By REV. PAlL A. SELLERS
Pastor - Syracuse United
Method1st Church

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A PERSONAL TESTIMONY:
DO WE HAVE SIJCII?(Acts 20,
I~

ttServt111: the lord with all
hwnilit,y of mind, and with many
tears and temptations, which
befell me by the lymg in wait
of tbe Jews. " Acts 20: 19

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There was no egotism that
~ moved the apostle to give them

:

lhis perfect photograph of his
~ own apiritual character as a servanl of Christ, we feel profourdb' thanklu.l to hm1 ror it, as it
~ 8J,vea us t true p1 cture of what
f every servant of the Lord Je-lUI Christ Should be. Let UB
care6dl,y look It over.
!lE WAS HUMBLE, "Serving
·! lhe Lord with all hwnlllt.Y" 19.
' tbere is 1M) r0001 for pride, or
Hlftab boutlug where the Spirit
ot Lhe 11 meek and lowly in heart"
J'UJeL 'I11e Lord can never be
ae~ved In IIQO•.other wo.y but In
t

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"all !Jotmll[IJ olmlnd." Broke...
Dial ol. JPirlt Is an esaential eCJDo
dllioo ...o ol ~ship w I I h

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dli)l,

TIONAL

CHURCH - Rev, WU-

Iard Dutcher, pastor. Mrs. Worley Francis, Swday School ~L
Sunday School, 9:30 a. m. Church
services first and third Sunday

following SundQY School. Secord
and Fourth Saturday evenings,
7:30 p. m. , Church services.

CHESTER CHURCH OF GODThe Rev. ChesterBryant,pastur.
Sunday School, 9:30 a. m.; WCB'shlp service, 11 a. m.; EYenil:w:
worship, 7:30p.m. Prayerae"lce, TUelday, 7:30 p. m. Youth
Service, Thursday, 7:30 p. m.
Monthly sJrvs, ftrst Saturday of
each month.

HEMLOCK GROVE Christian
Church - James Qulae~,
pastor; ROY Whaley, sup(. Com·
munlon and worsblp senice, 9t30

or Man'" couJd fetter the tongue
Him, arxl tbere can be no real of this !aithful witness. A fullservice for Him out of the com- orbed Gospel had been revealed
munion of the Holy Ghost. His hu- to him aOO at any personal cost
mility is further seeninhiswork- he was determined that not one
lng with his buds for the Sl.ilport ro,y or It should be hlrolered from
o( himself and thoSe who were shining tbrOUjlh blm. How about
with him. ;:He was not ashamed to you &amp;rd. the light or Jesus is ' It
call himself 1-the leaJt of the sblnlug oot of your litO dall)1
AposUes" lilt to declare that it Maey will go
out to win •
was '"by gr11ce of God I am what prize in this world for worldly
I am."
things an:l pa,y out money to wln
HE WASCOMPASSIONATE. He something they ~ Ia precious
served the Lord "with many tears and valuable, but the treaaqre ot
and temptl:ti.Dill aOO ceased not to "eternal life" lies hidden in the
warn everyone night am day with open field of God's word, and al·
tears. His ministry was not a though every searcher IDI)' fi1111
cold. fonnal, glas~yed busi- this prize not Just one but everyness. Hla words were moiat with one in this world, but few there
tenderneaa. We might 11 well be that seek lL The treasure ~
throw stone• at the people, as eternal life is Cree and most Wheartless worda of wisdom. We uable.
. - to speak tile trulh with
Perhaps the most Ceroclous
Low. We can weep over our own animal in creation is the Hamsorrows and losses, and U the ster RaL When It lakes a grip,
interests ol Jesus Christ were rather than )'l.eld It will allow i~
l.a real to ua we would also weep self to be beaten in piecea with
over Hi&amp;. Servar&amp; of Ga:l. II your a stick. If It seize• aman1 s hand,
heert right'?
it must be killed before It will
HE WAS COURAGEOUS. "I qultlto bold. H'"' Ukotblo"hlmhaw not ahunMd to declare unto ster rat" is our own proull, un-you the whole counsel or God" )'ieldiug, slnM oalt Thot Hlf.
says Paul the Apostle, ""No fear Ish l!llrl~ ttat would dlrv tDaid

au

POMEJ!OY TRINITY UNITED
CHlJRCH OF CHRIST- Rev. W.
H. Perrin, pastor, Patrick D.
WCllld,
SonlliY School, 9:15
a. m.; worshiJ), 10:25 a. m.
Youth choir rehearsal Monday,
6:30 p, m. Mro• .;;;.in Burt,
dlrectm'; Senior cllolr n!Jearoal,
•• p, m., Mrs, ~...
T ..~--•-~
~......,, 7:Neaae, diredor. TtturadaJr, all
Qy, Busy Bee qulltlrv part;y In
church soolal room.
RUTLAND
CHURCH
OF
CHRIST - Ro,y W. Carter, pas-

so-.

r-

C..nmunlon and worship service,
10:30 a. m,; PrQYer meet!~,
Thursda,y, 7130 p.m. V. H. Bra•

SUJJL

CHESTEJ! METHODIST Charge '
- Rev. Pearl A. Casto, pastor.
CHESTER: Worshlp, 9 a. m.i
SUnday Scbool, 10 L m.; Mrs.

(

a. m.

with hQ'-

11

m., Bible Study andprayermeetlng. Saturday: Sabbath School,
10:30 a.m.; Worship, 9:30 a. m.

The hub of a railroad-the classification yard. Could
you, without training or experience, take charge here?
Could you sort and '!spot" thousands of cars, hav~ t~em
ready 1!1 the right time on the right track to go out with
the ritlht train?
But every day your mind performs an operation even
more compllll'. You sort and classify your thoughts and
Impulses. You decide what is· right and wrong. You determine which actions are urgent, and which can be deferret!. You resolve that some goals are important,, and
others are secondary, And every decision affects your
life, and the lives of others!
Preparing men and women-and boys and girls-to
make the right decieions is one of the great functions
of the Church. There are sound Christian standards by
which life's choices should be oorted. There is confidence
and strength for those who seek, learn and practice the
true Way of Life.

1'HE CHURCH fOR ,All
All FOR THE CHURCH
Th~eChun:h

mthe grut-

m tactor oo urlh for the
b1.1ildin1 ol eban.cter 1111d
I(IOCI dlltenlhlp II t. •
lllon.hou. ol 'P•r&amp;tu•l
.,.)utt W&amp;lhoul 11 llrof\1

Church, nealher dtm«·

racy nor clvlllulloa can
survive '111ere
Jovr
IOUnd ~ wh)'.,....,

•ft

peNOll. should

attend ..,

vice• ref,lllrly al\d

~up­

port the Chureh. 1beJ'
1r.: llll'or hill' own .U..
(2) !'or h1a cbildrn '1
ukt (3) For thuakeof
hLI «Jmmunit)t .nd naIIOB It) For the Mb of
the Chun:h 1t.lf, which

need. hit 1n0nl and ma•
teriaii1Jpport. Plan to 10

a

'* you-r Bible daiJJ'.
lo daun:h niUiarly

a.m.

C~r JHI JCflrNr

moRh.
Evening evangelistic
vi
7
ser ce, :30 p. m.. &amp;erond and
fourth Sundays.

SYRACUSE CHURCH OF THE
A. E. Miller,
pastor. B o b Moore, SUnday
School SupL SundQY School ciao ..
ea for all ages. 9:30 Lm.; MornIng Worship, 10:30 a.m.; NYPS
SuoQy 6:30 p.m. ; Evangelistic
Service SuoQy 7:30 p.m.; MidNAZARENE- Rev.

week Prayer meeting Wedneadl¥ 7:30p.m.; Missionary Mee~
lng Second Wedneoday of each

montb 7:30p.m.

EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN

Saw

senice aDd

suck the life out of the new heaven-born nature, wlll not quit its

bold unUllt his boenput todeath.
Have yoo put the '"old man" of
sin to death in your life an:l
taken on the new man as the Ute
to live •. Are we serving Evil or
Good, la Jesus Christ our Saviour
am Lord. anlllveinourheart?lf
not let us do It now. He can be
your 111v1our now.

Thoughts
So then, as we have oppor·
&amp;unity, lei us do good to 1111
men, tmd tspecicllly · to thOit
who &lt;11'&lt; of I,M llousthold of
foilh.-Gatati4m 6:10.
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GOEGLEIN READY-MIX CO.

.'

SALES MIDILEPORT, 0,

omo•s OLDEST DODGE DEALER
MIDDLEPORT, OIDO

MIDDLEPORT
Rivers Girl Scout Council. Mrs.
Gioeckner, ways and
BOOK STORE
chairman, announced a Christfor the last
In NOvember.
·~;:=~~~=====l~ma:o~ba~zaa~r~ten~ta~U~v~e~ly:s:•:h:edul:ed~

I

weel(

·N. W. COIAPTON,O.D.
OPTOMETRIST

RAY RIGGS, INC.

~

UDcoln - Mer&lt;:UI'l'- C&lt;mot- El!lihh f'Ord ..•
&amp;IJ3.8601
.'
8&amp; N. COURT ST.
A111ENS, 0.

Sparlding

l)lame)Dda

ut in IUJnd-Crafkd Callunbi4

mountinll of ISI/.;,tu ~IY.

WILUS ANTHONY

TIFFIN CREDIT
JEWElERS

PLUYIIII!!G Allll HEA'I!NG
.
19M&amp;&amp;O
2tO LINCOLN ST.

.·

ARNOLD'S SOHIO SERVICi .
A~RD.

99~:

POMEROY,O.
/1 FRQ:NDLY !!LACE TO BUY ,

CROW'S STEAl( HQUSE

RACINE Fll-VALU
MARKET
'
.
THE STORE'W1111 A HART1 :
RAC!ijE.OIUO '

From $39,95

KENTIJCKY ·FRIED CIUCICEII

.•

, , .·POii!ROY,'omo

.

New Furnltu.re
,ONL~ $2ff
~· .....~·-· ii

ed refre•hmenls tD those named and Jennifer Anderson, Arm
Barnltz, Donna Roock, Beverly
Stump,
Katy Well,
and Sue lyM
ZirLong, Carol
McCullough,
kle.

Homemakers
Announce

omcE HOURS 9:30 To 12, 2 TO 5 cct.OsE AT NOON oN
THURS.) - EIIST COURT ST., POMEROY

BAKERS OF HOLSIJM BREAD
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

F Alii!LY RECREATION
SWIIOIING

•• Fa/J.Events

·••

••

••
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Fall everts were announced by

Mrs. George Skinner, c~
council member, when the Hock
Spl'i"*s llomemakers Club met
wcdriesday at the home or Mrs.
:\inos Leonard. .
Mrs. Skinner reported that &amp;he
aMual rural health conference
wlU be held on Oc~ 1 at the Par·
1sh llouse in Jackson. The tour
of Co\wnbwi lor Meigs Counlj'
women pltnned by the Extension
Service Is scheduled ror OcL 17
with reservations to be mtde be-fore Oet. u. The lour w!U Include · 1 behlrd-the-scenes look
.. at Lazarus aott a visit to German
VIllage.
· Mrs. Jdm Goett ml Mra. Sklr&gt;ner were ramedtoattendtheNov.
19 lndero tralnirv
on
••Ente.r.tabdna It Christmas". A
progrim Utled '"Know Y o u r
County Officials" was announced
for JarKW'y. ·
The prograin topiC seleeled for

p......-am

JtlllllY aiJ! February WaS "COl·
add You," with Mr&amp;. Lewis

·

Jllil Mrs. Fret! Goel[eln,

lll!es wtre · paid and
Hrted by
'ID )llrL

werft•

·.,.

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

Christian Temperance Union will
meet at 7:30 Frlda,y nll!hl ai tile
home of Mrs. VIctoria Slacey, Third st.; Middleport.

111E MEIGS High School cheer·
leaders will · !JI)onsor an after

~ltern 111gb

SATURDAY
A IIIGH SCHOOL dance party

be held this Saturda) night
from 8:30 LO 11 ;30 p.m. at the
Meigs High School auditorium
in \llddleport. The Jays will eml!CC the dan&lt;:C which is sehoul
spommrcd.
EOLIN I'M.flLY reunion, sat
urdal at Hock Springs Fairgruund~ . Ead1 ramlly to take
basket dinner and table service
ror dinner at 12 noon.. Social
acti\ities dul'i~ aftcrnou~

will

8

SATl'Ril\Y
BAKE SALE
will be held
saturday begiming at 9 a. m.
at the nines bulldlng in !lo'linersvllle by the Women'H Society of Christian Service of the
Mlner.sville Methodist Church.

Sl
Pll~U(.

~1),1\

CIIJCKE~

barbcl'UC ,
Sunda) , L1 a.m. lo 6 p, m., un
parking lot in Pomero3 under
sponsorship of Drew \\ cbster
l'o~t J9 1 :\mcrican Legion..

Second Daughter

Born to Gruesers
Mr. and Mr s. Bill &lt;.rucser,
Mjncrsville, arc announcing the
birth or a daughter on Aug. 31
at Holzer 11ospita1 named Dawna Hae.
They have two other children,
Danny and Diane. Mr. and Mrs.
George Grucser or Minersville
and Mr. and MrS. William f'ields
· of Hartford, W. Va., are grandparent8. Mrs. Mollie Guinther or
Syracuse is a great grandmother.

SPEAKER ANNOUNCED
TOO Rev. VI. Luther Tncy or
Rio Grande wm be speliker at
the SUnday morning worship ser·
vice of the Pomeroy First Dap-

Ust Church. He will also. N&gt;O&amp;k
at the' Oct. 6 service.

PT. PLEASANT - In I quiet
but preUy ccremonybeCoremembers or the immediate familles,
Miss nebecca GaU Jones, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Gail Jones
of near Leon, became Ute bride
of Mr. Frank CurUs Kidwell, son
or Mr. and Mrs. !-rank Kklwell,
or Burraio.
Rev. Charles Higginbotham ofriciated at theWednesdayevenirq:::
ceremony in the Leon Baptist
Church.
(i i ~;en in marriage by her father, the bride was dressed in a
street length dress or white lace
and matching accessories. She
carried an Irl"h linen handkerchief loaned to her by her cousin,
\Ir s, ttobert Straight. of Pt.
Pleasant. The handkcrchier was
uriginall:o owned by the late Mrs.
\1argaret · ·~urse" Kelle~, who
had loaned the handkerchier to
more lhan 100 brides over t h e
.} ean., It wa§ mad~ in Ireland.
1\cr cor!iage was pink carnations.
llc1· atletldant was Miss BeU.y
llus sell of Leon who was dressed
io a blue slrtoet length dress. The
Rroom wa~ dres sed in his Arm)
uniform .
The bride ts a graduale uf Pt.
Pl~asa.nt lligh School, class of
1967, and also attended the Gal·
lipoli~ Business School. She i:s
employed as sccretar~ In the office s of the l'nion (.;arbide Mas~
l'utnam mine at Elmwood.
llcr husband is a graduate or
Buffalo lligh School, class of
I

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Pomeroy Group feY'

Entertain Oct. 29
Plans for cnlcrtalning the pa:;t
matrons of Evangeline Chapter,
Middleport, 1vcrc made when the
past matrons of Pomeroy Chapter 186, Order of the Eastern
Star, met Tuesda} night at the
home of Mrs. Glenn Dill, Syracuse.
The past matrons part) was
planned for Ocl. 29, Discussed
at the meeting was the possibility of serving meal s at Mason!c
functions. Mrs. A1fred Crow presided at the meeting. c"ames were
played wllh prizes being won by
Mrs. Hartwell CUrd, Mrs. Fred
Blaettnar, and Mrs. .JamesSoulsby. Mrs. Dale Smith corducted
the games, and Miss
Maud
Grueser gave d~votlons.

Service Held for
Miles M. Lesher

be made by Oct. 22. Plans were
made for ..,.Ung things tD tile
Slutheastem Ohio Health Center

1967. lie was employed by the Upton Construction Company at
Leon prior to entering the military service. Ue has completed
training In ~cial Forces and has
had training at Fort ('.ampbell,
Ky., Fort Sill, Okla. , and For1
Benning, Ga. ile is scheduled to
go to Fort Lewis, Wash., on
termination or his leave.
Following the wedding, a reception was held at the home or
the bride's parents ror relatives
ard friend s.

Pledge Made

By Church

at Athens tor the country ratr
on Oct. 10.
A cooking demonstration was
announced for Oct. 9 at 7:30p.m.
at Middleport. The topic will be
me
..910rtcuts at Chrlstmat." Mem~
bers are to take guests.
Mrs. Vernon Nease gave a
Lowest Prices
demonstration on arranglngfiowOn Used Equipment
ers in kitchen utensils. She used
peace roses in a pitcher, pink
begonias tn a tea pot, and sweet
i
peas and roses In a ladle to
hang on the wan .
TRACTOR
Asslating with the judging of
GRAIH
fiower arrangement• on display
DRILL
at the meeting wu Mrs. J o e
~ OH
111oren, a former member of
1 RUBBER
the cltJb. Blue ribbons ror ar'
rangements went to Mrs. Vic--'11 HEW IDEA
tor Hysell, Mrs. Denver Hol ter, Mrs. Homer Holter, Mrs.
~ MAMURE
Edison Hollon, and Mrs. K e n

f
,y

•

f

Nease.

Hollon.

\

The pledge to the flag led by
Mra. Grueser, and devotions by
Mrs. Vernon Nease with scripture from Mattllew and prayer
opened the meeting. Members
responded to roll call with a
comment on a troublesome weed.
uShould You Save Seeds" was
the topic used by Mrs. Grueser,
:ile said that seeds from di-

~.~~::S

~-

IHTER·

TJS'l' _ C'Jd'rlel w. stgvea, ,.._

RACINE
PLANING
:MU
.
.'
BVIU)ING SUPPLII!S ' II!I.LWOIIK
OENEIIAL cONTRAcrlNG

tor. E41... - · SltldqSebDol

HATIOHAL

ALLIS·
CHALMERS
SALE5-PARTS
SERVICE

.

·llhlp; lOti&amp;. Swt!litl lllblo SlltdY
....... 7:10 P.

m..w•.a.r
.....
,.me., 7a80 ,.m.

~~'~!il"lllftl

1

v'

-

-..

Canasta Club of
Middleport Meets
Mrs. Don Lowery alli Mrs.
Kenneth Cale were guests when
the Middleport canasta Club met
Wednesd&amp;)' night at the home of
Mrs. Millard Wildermuth.
During the evening" s play,
prizes were won by Mrs. Lionel
Boggs, Mrs. RlchardGreas, Mrs.
Lowery. am Mrs. Charles Bradbury. The hostess served a dessert course to those named arMi
Mrs. E(lna Russell and Mrs. RcJI&gt;
ert Schmoll.

1
I

Sugar Run Mill
Has These Famous
Paints

••o'IH•••
HIGH STANDAIID

~:;~:;d Of

HOUSE PAINT

s.nce 1s1o

1
1

I

II
I

!
I
1

&lt;

Please Check!

OUR
PRICES
ARE

•

HIGH STANDARO
HOUSE PAINT

• ALUMINUM
METALCOTE

LOW III

• RED METALCOTE

.......

... . ,.
Ph. 992·2115 .

Mulb•rry A.v• .

Pomeroy

~----------------------

SWINE FEEDING

Colo.

BIG SPECIAL O.f'FER!

FREI

FINANCING
UNTIL JUNE 1969
ALL NEW HOLLAND

6 EQUIPMENT

PIG STARTER

...

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anlnull b••-.:
.I

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1I

I1

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SUGAR RUN MILLS

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Fresh New Supply Just Arrived!

I .. . ., . ,. , .•..
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~;:=~-'--'-'-'------· ,.. "-:~::

If(' 7·10

1

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HAY
.
JALER/

Sure!

I
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I

Cook.

~

Baa Equipment Co.

• PI!ONE m.:;Jrz,B '

lqoe~lll. SundiJ Charcb
s.boo(;.,,u
a. m,; .....,.._.

\

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

SWEET

992-2955

f

Rout• 7

I

1

FORAGE 'SPREADER

~HARVESTER

Blue ribbons for speclmen exhibits were awarded to M r s.
Fred Nease, Mrs. Hiram Fisher, Mrs. Dern·er Holter, and Mrs.

SUpport of the community youth
movement was pledged by the
Pomero;) Fir!it Ba.ptisl Church at
the Wednesday night quarterly
business meeting of the church.
The church voted to support
the .}OUlh movement which CODsists of combining fellowships In 1
four churche s. Read at the meeting Y;&amp;s a letter to the trustee&amp; I
from the World Missions cam- I
paign thankiRR the church for
pledges. It was decided that the
church trustees should attend the
new housing meeting held TlmrAday night
ltepair work on the roof has
been completed it was reported.
Heport s were given by the bolrd
rb( trust.oos . the du.OOJLS, "anQ .the .
pulpit committee. Orwl Wiles
moderated tl 1~· n· ·eting which opened with pn: .
Jy Mrs. Joseph
A potluck fellowship supper
preceded the meeting.

'•

~

Funeral services for Miles M.
Lesher, 2561 Van Buren, Ogden,
Utah, who died Wednesday, were
MEETING CAN CELLED
conducted there tOOay.
The October meeting of t h e
Mr. Lesher is survived by his
Women's Soclet) of Christian wife, Edith McMaster Lesher,
Service of the Enterprise United and two sons, WWiam CurUs or
Methodist Church his been ca• Utah, and Donald of Denver,

celled.

School. Reserva-

Uona for the luncheon are to

To Frank C. Kidwell

game dance party with the Jays
following the Meigs-Athens tootball game this Friday night rrom
10 to 12 p.m. at the Meigs Junior Uigh in Pomeroy.

r

prepare the soil to the proper
depth. and maintain food and water supply.
Gardening Ups for thiS rnontll
were given by Mrs. Vernon Nease
who suggested that lawna be seed··
ed where needed, new evergreen•
be ae1 oot, and Qy IU!ea and
peonies be plantA&gt;d.
The door prize wu won by
Mrs. Fred Nease. Mrs. K e n
Nease and Mrs. llenry Thoma•,
the co.-hostess, served refresh·

~DRUGS

WE F1LL ALL DOCl'OR'S

Mornlrv Worohlp, 10:30; EYol1liW
worllblp, 7:30; Yootre People'a
Service, S:Up.m.; ~-· ·
11]1, Tlllr.....,, 7]38 p, 1"•
MJDDLEf()RT FIR$T BAP·

l

OHIC&gt; VALLEY BAKING CO.

R. H. RAWLINGS SONS CO.

ROYAL OAK PARK

Rov, c.cll J. Wjae, [)U•
tor. SUnday School, 8:30 a. m.;

.

ALLIS CHALMERS - SERVICE
FARM- INDUSTRIAL- LAWN- GARilEN
TUPPERS PLAINS
PH. 687.au5

PRODUCERS AND DISTRIBUTORS
OF HIGH GRADE coAL
WEST COLUMBIA, W. VA.

.lao.._

.J'1. d\'!ll'IJtJ,

BOGGS EQUIPMENT

TINY'S FOODLAND

LEIVING COAL COMPANY

~ ·-

.

RelieloUI and Scenjc
Varion Sins

Karl Grueser, president; Mn.
VIctor Uyooll, vice president;
Mrs. IUram Fisher, secretary;
and MrL David Neaae, trea111.r~
er.
Presontod at the meeting wao
a letter !rom the Galllpolle lnatltutlon regarding the therapy
program to be preaented at 1 p.
m. on Oct. 24 at Cottage 7.
Members were asked to take

Mrs. Ma&amp;On 1-'lshcr spok• on
planting bulb IS, ~e suggested~ '
the planter start with /!()0&lt;) bulbi,

Kooi-Aid and cookies.
The fall m..Ung of Hcglon II
wa• annoonced ror Oct. 26 at

:ID:::;mco~oMEN's Rebecca Jones is Wed

Preferential tea plans were - Each member was asked to make
made when the Ohio Eta Phi five hems and baked goods for
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi SOr - the bazaar.
m ~I\ SI~Ci al ~lL . o I i v e
ority met Tue&amp;da,y nlgtlt at the
The proJect or remembering Chun:h, LcHlf. Rottom, at l :JO
Columbus and SOuthern 0 h l o Meigs County aervicemen In\' let~ p. m. Public in\ited as well as
Electric Co. social room.
nam was discussed and It w~s singers.
Lois Clelland, chairman of decided to contribute money ror
M0~1l,\ Y
the social committee whlchplans use in purchuing items for the
SOllTHER~ 1\TliLETU.: ROOSl·
the tea, reported that it will be boxes. Twila Matheney and Marers meeting, Monda,y, i:30 p.m.
held oo Sunday, Oct. 27, at, the ilyn SWan are chairmen or the
at high schOOl in Racine; Elson
home of Vikki Gloeckner, Mul - project. r\ box will be sent to
. Spencer~ _president. All , distr,ict
berry Heights...
a diffe't'eM serviceman o a qJ h
reKidents interested Jn athletics
, carolyn Grllesor. pruidtlnt, month. ~
bad charge ot the meeting jj\lrThe cultural program on sell uned to attend.
tng which time the chapter voted analyals was presented by RU.a
to make a donation to the Four Lewis. Rosetta Redovian serv ~

yDUI'I -lualveiJ

Wood•• prestdlrL.
HYSELL RUN tREE METI!Oo

dram~, ~tty

PICTURES &amp;
PLAQUES ..

Tea Planned ·Oct. 27

m~s

MIDILEPORT, omo

your · [10Wer1 aiOI!II nne. ol
Moat -~rlllos a~ that ihu •
...,.nence 111 • m. allprding Fine Arts Include P,lllitlinl,
scope•.-Jobn F. Kennedy, drawing, ' oeulpture, . ,illllllC,
Pl"'lideDI.

••MEMBER OF 11IE BIG 3''
GENERAL MEROIANDISE
TUPPERS PLAINS
PH. 667-32110

MIDDLEPOR1

PHONE 992-3284

Happineu II tbe fuU use of

36111 U.8.

Pomeroy

Mlln

MILLARD

LYONS MARKET

MARK V STORE .

RUTLAND FUIST BAPTIIT Rn. Samuel J •
pastor.
PriJ'tr aent.ee, 9:30 a. m.; SUn- ·
dQY Sellool, 10 ...... Mra. Gertrude, Buller, !qJL Worohlp'·
urvloe, 11 a. m. BIPIII TrainIng Ull[an, ftrlll and 10®1111 Stll•
dQ.Ys ot 5:38 p. m.; Mrl. Wary

lJI't,Yer

w.

NEW SHIPMENT

- Mick!leport. R8v, Allllr)' Miller,

q

!'R NIGHT Mf.ffll

WEST MAIN ST.
POMEROY, 0.
SUPPORT THE CHURCH OF YOUR CHOICE

BAKERS OF GOOD BREAD

, paotor. Loiter TQ.Yior, Supt. Suo..._, SChool, 9:30 a.m.; Morning
Worob!j&gt;, 10:30 a. m.; Jlmlor Soelety, 6:30 p. m.; NYPS, 6:45 p,
m. Sundo.y EYarveUatlc meellrv,
7:30 p, m. PrQ.Yer meeting, Wed-.
nalday, 7t80 p. m.
THE SALVATION ARMY -ED·
voy Ray S, Wining, otncer In
charge, Sunday, 10 a.m., Holiness meeting; 10:30 a. m. Sun..._, Sehool. Y- People's Lesion, 7 p. m.; 8alvatlm meeti.Jw,
7:30 p. m.; Tlllrsday, 1 w 3 p,
m.; Ladle• Home League; 7 p.m.

sermon, Richards, sup(.

992-2039

HOYT'S SOHIO SERVICE

HEINER'S BAKERY

CHRIST - Elden R. Blake, flU• Prep clUMI.
tora Sunday Sehool, 10 a. m., . liT, MORIAH BAPTIST -lllld·
Wlmle Hole~. aupl. Morning dleport, corner ~ Fourth and
aennon, U a. m. Even.ilw serv- Main st. Rebert Jacksm, pastor•
cle Chrlllllll Endeawr, 7:30 p, Sunday SChool, 1h~ a. m.; Mornm., Mrs. J.alda Cbevaller, prest- Ing worohlj), 10:311 a. m., Amold
delt.

FLOWERS

~omeroy Flo-r Shop

neaday.

!qJL

2:4-22

Wllh tlie ' - II will, In ....,. measure, !oater and help sustain llat whleb Ia iood In~
and community life, this !eatuteluponsoredb!'tbo buslneu ftrms and orpnlutloos'wlloaeappear below.

CARMEL UNITED METHO..
DIST- OIIUR&lt;lll' •- Rev. P1llll,..,_
ASBURY UNITED METIIO.. ' !lefklro, paator. SuoQy Sehool,
DIST, Syracuse - Rev. Wero!ell
9:30 a. m.; WQYOe Rouah, &amp;IlL
stutler, paslor. SwKiay School,
Morning worship, 10:30 L m.,
10 L m.; carroll Norris. Supt.
seoonland ro1111hSundayaofelch
Worship service, 11 L m.; MYF
month.
Evening e\'I.Jlgeliatic
6 p. m. SuoQy . Pn,yer m..Ung
service, 8 p. m. second a o d
Wednesday, 8 p . m.
third SuoQy each month.
POMEROY CHURCH OF THE
ENTERPRISE UNITEll METHNAZARENE - Corner Union and
ODIST
- Rev. William Alroon,
Mulberry. Rev. Clyde V. Hero!orson, pastor. SunQy Sebool, 9:30 Pastor~ Ralph !lJencer, &amp;IlL;
a. m.; RaymCllld Walburn, ~ Fldon eeks, An't. Worship aer..
Morning worship, 10:30 L m.; vices 9:30 Lm. ; Sunday School,
EveDI.~ Service, 7:30 p. m. Mid- 10:30 Lm.; Youth Fellowship,
week service, Wednesday, ?:SO 6:30. WodnesQy: Choir, 6:1S p,
m.i Bible Study, 7:30.
p.m.
CHlJRCH OF CHIRST - MidF'OREST RUN UNITED METH·
ODIST - Rev. Wendell G. Slut- dleport, 5th and Main. Jack .
ler, pastor. Worship aeniee, 9 Scltes, sup(. Bible School, 9:30 ·
L m. j Sunday SChool. 10 L m. a. m.; Morning wurllblp, 10:80 a.
m.: EvealDg worship, 7:30 p, m,;
Mrs. Fred Nease, &amp;IlL
Prayer eerrice, Wednesday, 7 p.
MINERSVILLE U N I T E D
m.
Rn. Raul1n M;fer, pastor.
METHODIST - Rev. Wendell
CHI!llCH OF 'I1IE NAZARENE

FRIDAY
New offtcera were Installed and
DANCE FRIDAY atRaolneJunlnr lllill School following hOme plans were made for a theraiU'
lfllll8 wtlh ScMhwestorn witli tho program at the Gallipolis Slate
Ravens proriding mu1lc; SOuth- IDstllule al Wodne...._, nlt!ht'o
meeting of tile WildWood Garden
trrfBand Booatera I.POIIIOJ'L
PAST MATRONS, EvllllPilne Club lleld at the home of Mro.
Chapter, Order of the Eastern Ken Neaae.
Mra. Vernon Neaae Installed
Star, will mest at 6 p.m. Frithe
officers presenting &lt;miiPs
..._, nlihl at the Masonic TemIn
colora
symbolic rA. their of~
ple, Middleport, for a potluck
nces
to
each
one. They are Mrs .
dlmer. Memben are to take

QUALITY
PRINT SHOP

FOR ·ALL OCCASIONS

an, Sunday School Superinte~ Sellers, pastor. Morning wordent. Sundal' School, 9:30 Lm. ship, 9:30 a. m.; Sufklay School,
Worship Service. 10:30 a.m. 10:30 a. m. Wythe Theiss, Supt.
Choir practice, 7:30 p.m. Wed- Youth Fellowship, 6:30 p. m.

m.; Kemelb Wlggens,
Worship senice, 10 L m.

Saturday
II P.rer

Luke
14:25-33

BETH ANY UNITED METROGuest Minister' James Bucha~ DIST CHURCH - Rev. Paul A.

9 L

Aft"""""

'
~-. l"f, 8~, Vi!

Wednesday

FIRST UNITED PRESBYTEJ!1AN CHURCH _ Middleport,

stuUer1 pastor, Sundl)' School,

·
0
Mi•• Mary Virginia Reibel presented an inaplrltlunal proeram
Mrs. 1\'lta Jean llill·hlc of~ ualoi uThoiJghtl ~·rom something to~ On" ~Dr. Mafpret Blair
per.s Plains was hosh.'tu; recently Johns ioN!, at I meeting of the Wonlen•a Guild ol THnlQ' United
for the Scylentber m~ctlng of Chqrch of 'Christ Wednesday night.
.
.
·
the \ ·otmg Wives Club, presid·
Miss Reibel revieW~ Dr. Johns"'-'' philoaopiw: olhowto llve e:v..
ed over br Mrs. Janice \'oung.
ery day, preparing for whatever life might brlrw ip the ·ft)' ot trillfl
Plana were completed for the and sorrtM. It was her (llfln(oo that·~~~·~ ,.Uh,atori~
mailing or C'hristmaa pad~ases up reserves ot 5 yrnp&amp;thy, ~age (which the a~orcalled the stetirto servicemen in \' ielnam. Mem- ins wheel of life), calmness, conftdenee (In earned attribute), and a
hers not present at thi~ meeting sense of humor.
,
,
,
who wpuld like information on
The only place to find happineas, Dr. Johnstone aa.id, "Is where
. this \ maU~r are to call a-Ira. you an•, Find It ever) d'ay and coiled happy memories by commit. You.P'·
ting something, by seeirw somethlns: pretb. by doing &amp;OIIIethlq for
Nex.t month the llallO)Yeen parsomeone," Miss Reibel said, quoting the author.
1.1· wtll be held at Mfs. Cblorlo
During the meeting presl~cd over ill' Mrs. Albert Woodard, glfta of
·Gaul'S home on ~mner Road.
money were voted tor the World Clothing Fuad, st. Louis, Mo., .for
Decorat\(18 and rood committees
school children, aOO to' the Trinity Circle ror the continuing proJect
were choSen.
of upkeep of the lighted crosa on Lincoln Hill.
Ritchie and the co •
T() TAKE SERVICE
hli.it"ess, Mrs: Nancy Colllno,serAT THE REQUEST of Patrick Wood, the guild agreed to hive
ved refreshments to the follow- charge of the opening Sundaj School service on Sunday, oct. 13.
iQe not mentioned above; Mrs.
Mrs. LOOts Reibel, Mrs. w. It Perrin and Mrs. cart Kautz were
Jol\flet t'onnolly, Mrs. JoY c e asslgred to handle it.
Ritchie, Mrs. Oay Ann Burke,
Committees were named for the reception which will be held tol~
Mrs. Caroisn Tripp, MrS. Ter- lowing the World Community Day observance at the Trinity United
esa Collins, Clntzy and ltobin l."hurch on f'rida), !\:0\. 1. 'llte reception will honor Mrs. Ben Neutz..
Rltchie, Beth Ritchie and Mrs. ling, who will be installed as president or Meigs County Chureh
Marilyn Robinson.
women l nilL-d at that meeling.
(iuUd members were reminded or lhc onnual hulida~ bazaar to
be held on WtodncsdB&gt;, \ov. 13. Sttll'" tallll•s ot ncl&gt;dlework. baked
goods, and a nnon lundumn wall bl' fl•:uun•d al the bat&lt;iar which is
open to the public. Membet' !i wen• askl'd 111 (Hl'lnltl' arudes for the
bazaar.
~
The annual lhank offeriru; servict• was anntJUnct-d for Sun:ta:v,
Nov. 24 at the wor$lp houf. Areas of Christian suclal actions were
explored
b) Mrs. Pearl Mora during the de\utianal period. llow to
Printed For All Occasions
pr&amp;)'
for
peace
and the presidential election were dlscus.sed. This
50 .. $2.75 '100 .. $3.50
wa1 followed by a prayer in unison for help in beeoming more rt.•o~::;:•r
sponsible citi1ens.
In obsenance of Constitution Day, Mrs. Mora read "Freedom is
Somethtilg We Attain, Then Sustain". The call to worship, Pt~alm 17,
and the h~mn, "Dear Lm'd and Fatheror~ankind.'' l'Umplmt.'d the dt:Mill St . .992.3345
votlons. The offering was received by Mn. Thomas Young.
AutUmn O.owers with pheasant dgurlnes Oankc&lt;l by green tapers
decorated the retreshmenl table. Mrs. Perrin, Mrs. Carl Billlkam,
Mrs. Paul Werner, and MrL Kenneth Hauls, members of Frienclly
Circle, served a salad course.
:

· M¥,.

leaden.
SYRACUSE llNITED METRO..
SEVENtH DAY ADVENTIST DIST CHURCH - Rev. Paul A.
Church - Pomeroy, Mulberry Sellers, pastor. Sunday Sehoo1,
Heights Road, north (1 Veterans 9:30 a. m. , Ben Quisenberry,
Memorial -pita!, PhUllp Gag- S"'t Morning worsb!j&gt;, 10:30 a.
er, pastor. Wednesday, 7:30 p. m., first aoo third Sundays each

;

(

m. 9Jnday evening &amp;ervice, 7:30; 1blradQY evening aervlee,

Wald Spencer, SIQJI, FLATWOOD6: Church Sebool, SuodQY, 7:30~
11 a.m., .101m Bally,~ War·
ST. JOHN'S LUTHEJ!AN-Briob!j&gt; oervlce allmlatts withAl· &amp;II Ervel, putor, Morning 1101'·
fred and Flatwoods. Servtees ship, 9 a. m.; SUixlay School.
Sunday marnirv or evening, of 10:30 a. m.
each week,
ST. PAUL'S Ltm!EJ!AN - S2
GRACE EPISCOPAL- E. Main E. Second st., Puneroy, SuodQY
St., Pomeroy- SuoQy worob!j&gt; Scbool,10 a.m.;Worsb!j&gt;aervloe
senice, 10:30

)

PI-·

tor. Sunday School, 9:30 a. m.;

ley.

llhlp, 7:30 p, m. Pro.yer and
Praise aervtce, 'Dm'IMia,y, 7tSO
p, m.
.,
THE Rl!rLAND "\IETHDDIST
CHlJRCH - Rev, C, J. Lemley,
pastor. Church Sehool, 9:30 a.m.;
WorshJp aervlee, 10:30 a. m.
RACINE METHODIST - W,
IJOle MeClurg, pastor. SUndly
School, 9130· a.m.; Worshl.P sen•
ice, 10:30 a. m.; JUnior choir
practice, Wednesday, 3:20 p. m.i
5eol.or eholr )JI'actlce, 'dturlday,
7:30 p. m. 11oWJ1 HuaUer ClaOI
meeting, !ourlb Fri&lt;W ot each
month at 6 P. m, Wnleyan Sen·
cle Guild, !ourlb Mellldo.y ot each
tnOI1Ih, 7:30 p, 111.; Jlmlor Hlgll ,
MYF, 4:30 p. m. eaeb SUndiQ';
Senlor High MYF, 5:30 P• m.,
each SuoQy,
PORTLAN!' METHODIST Rev. w. Dalo MeCIUl'll. pastor.
Sunday SChool, 9:30a.m.; Wor•b!J&gt; oervloe, 7:30 P. m.
OAK GROVE METHODIST W, Dale MoOurg,
SUndly
Sehoul, 10:30 a. m.; Worob!J&gt;
senfce , 9:30 L m., first and
tb1rd Sunday eaeb month.
ZION CHlJRCH OF CHRISJ'Polileroy-Harrisonville Road
Jolm Webster, putor; Re.y LltUe, SuoQy achool oupor!JItandent. Suoda;r sohool, 9:30 a.
m.; worship aervice, 10:30 a.

scasc.froc plants ciln be ~ayod ,
and aftor dryim: well th"y !fhoukl,.
~put In gla.11s cont»IMrs . Ac:~\1
cording to Mrs. (;rucser hybrid
seeds usually produce flowera
which arc not true to form.

nail~ Sl.!ntlild, t•omot'Ol·Middlcptwl, :l\: h·ida3, SW(cntbcr :l'i• ~9GK

Installation
of
Officers
~~:wv~"""'·"~~~~;;7:7'1 Prog.fam is Given !'Social
:.
l Giub Meets at i
'Jd
·
f
ch
·
·
.h
Iii Calendar! Held Wednesday by Club
·; Ritchie Home ~ . Gu I
0 .
urc
l'hl·

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16:j,:;~~~:: :=~~,~=~~~==:=~~=;~~:;~::;;::~··•t27,
., ~
a. m.; 1968
llllddloPm:l

~

Directory for
Area Churches

llolhodf'ot

m. SII1Qy ...li!.W-·
7:30 p., ru.; Oftlt;lal Bo.rd

..._,, 6 p,
lld,p,

POmoi:'aiY
Y.._, Fellowllblp,Suo·

meetlrv, nrst SII1Qy ot IIUllllh,
6 p. m.; WSCS aecond MCllldo.y ot
liT.
HERMON
UNJTEil
month, 7:30 p. m.i Eleanor Clr·
BRETHREN
IN
CHRIST
- Rev.
cle, second 'l11Urlday; Class 12
r.fenzel
Smith,
paator.
Sua
day
third Wodnelday. A1!m-. Clr·
School,
9:30
a:.
m.;
RuaseU
~""'
cle, seeCllld T!llroday an.rnoon.
ALFRED METHODIST, Pearl a. m.; Swdi.Y School. 10:30 a.m. Ctdr praetice, 1 p. m. Wednes- cer. S~~JL; Alfred Wolfe. aulsl.ant. Morntna Sermon 11 a. m..
A, Casto, pastor. S&gt;nda,r SeboOI Youth semce, Sunday, 6:30 p. do.y.
m.;
Preaebl~ evei-y Sunday, 7
e..,mng sermon. 7:30p.m., alterat 9:30, Lloyd Dillinger, &amp;lpL
UNITED FAITH CHURCH of natlrv each· SuoQy. aa .. meetP.m.
Worship services at 10:45 with
Nease Settlement, Sunday School Ing 11 a.m., alternating SuoQy
the Rev. Casto. Wecklesda.Y eveTHE RUTLAND COMMUNITY Superintendent, R o Y Johnaon, mornings. David Holter. c 1 a • s
ninK pra.yer services at 7:45. CHURCH-Rev. Amo8 Tillis pas- Youth meeting, 6:30, Surda)'.
leader. Christian Endeavor, 7:30
SYRACUSE FmST UNJTEil p. m. every other Sunday evetor. &amp;tnda,y school, 9:30 a.m.;
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE services
Lee Burnem, superintendent; PRESBYTERIAN- Rev. Linson ning. Jean Sexson, preaident
at 315 Mam st. , Pt. Pleasant,
worship service, 11 a.m. Wed- stebbins, pastor. &amp;mda.Y •c:bool, Prayer meeting, 7:30 p. m. every
Sulliays 11 L m.; Wednesdays
nesday prayer meeting, 7:30p.m, 9:30 a .m. ; worship aervh:e, 10:· Wednelday. Board meettrw. 7:30
8 p. m. All welcome..
30 a.m. Bible Ibid)' and pra,yer p, m.. nrst MODQy of month.
SUndQY night worship, 7:30.

!:... ' . !'
'

R...

Hartman;
S.••~~~:!;~~:..~
Scllool,
9;80 ..
fee, 10:30 a. m.; Evenlaa wor-

service, Wednesday, 1 p.JI"'

WTTRIDGE UNITED METH·

THE DANVILLE WESLEY AN

CHURCII - Charles Dozer, pasODIST - Worship, tirstandthird
tor; Adra SWick, Sunday School
SUPtays of each month, 10:45 L
Slt;&gt;etintendenL Su!Xiay School,
m.; second aOO fourth Sundays,
9:30 L m.: WorshiJ&gt; aervlce,
7:30 p. m. SunQy School, 9:45
10:30 L m. Youth and Junior
L m. Christian Endeavor, third
youth service, 6:45 p. m. Eve-saturday of each month.
nillt worship, 7:30. Prayer and
praise, Wednesday, 7:30.

LAUREL CLIFF FREEMETHODISf CHURCH - SundQY School
9:30 a. m., morning worshiP,
10:10 a. m., evening worshiP.
7:30 p. m.; W84besday, Christian Youth Crusaders. 6:30 p. m.
and prayer meedng, 7:30 p.m.
Thw-sday. choir practice, 7 p.
m. R. Eugene Gill, pastor; Phil

·'

·'·

Wise. SWt.
DEXTER CHLRCH OF CHIU.Sl'

,.

- Ronnie Russell, pastor. Norman C, WU4 s""t. 9,mdQY School
9:30 a. m.; WorshiP service.
10:30 L m. Chrbtian Endeawr
SuncJa.y evening.

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RACINE FIRST CHURCII OF
THE NAZARENE - SnndaySchool
9:30 a. m.; Morning Worship,
10:30 L ma; Evening Worship,
7:30p.m. Prayer service11, 7:30

p. m. WodnesdOY. SundOY School .
Superintendent, Paulino McCIIDtnck. Putol', Rev. Morris M.

POMEJ!OY FIRST BAPTI... ·
Caner Williams, pastor. Jobn
WOes, SundaY School Superintorolent. SundOY School, 9:30 a.
m.; Morning worship, 10:30 a.
m.; BYF, 6 p. m, Bible study,
Wednesday, 7 p, m.; Choir prac-

tice, 8:30 p. m. Wednesday,

MT. UNION BAPTIST - Rev.
Cecil Cox, pastor. SundQY School
superintendent, Larry Clark.
S~.~Jerintendent Kenneth Matson. Sunday School, 9:45 a.. m.; Sunday
Sunday School, 9:30 a. m.; wo:r- evening worship, 7:30; Wednes-

UNITED FAITH CIIURCHNease S.1tlement - Robert E.
!mith, ,..., pastDr. SundQY School

shiP service, 10:30 a. m. and
7:30 p, m. each Sunday. Mid-week
prayer meeting, Wednesday, 7:30

p.m.

day pra.yer and Bible stu!y, 7:30
p.m.

SUTTON MIITHOD!ST - Rev,

W. Dale McClurg, pastor, SunKENO CHURCH OF CHRLST- day School, 10:30 a, m.j Worship
Norman McCain, superintendent. Service, 9:30 a. m., seoonll and
Services weekly at ~30 a. m. fourth Sunday each month.
Preac~,

flrat and t!JirdSundQY

CHESTER CHURCH OF THE
of month by Charles Russell at
NA
ZARENE - Rev. Herbert
9:30a.m.
Grate,
pastor. Worship service,
BRADFORD CHURCH OF
11
L
m.
and 7:30p.m., Sunday.
CHR:5T -Charles Russell, paa~
Sunday
School,
9:30 a.m. Richtor. Richard Gilkey, SUJ&gt;t. Sun·
day School, 9:30 a. m.; Morning ard Barton, Supt., Charles BisWorship, 10:30 a. m.; Event~ sell, al!lsistant supl Prayermeetwurship, 7 p.m. WednealayBlble if1t, Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
study, 7:30 p. m.

~ORGANiZED CHURCH o'f·
·
f Latte D
J esus Cl1r1st
o
r
ay
Saints, Portland - Racine Road.
Sunday School, 9:30 a. m.; Morn· w bJ
'ln
r;:.,..;a....
;_ng or:s p, 10 :""'a. m • .._.......,.
evening service at 7. Wednesday
evening prayer service, 7:30.
Pastor, Elder Frederick J. Sto-

Wolfe.
niPPERS PLAINS LINJTED
METHODIST- Morning Worship
9:30 L m. at former EUB bW.ldiJ1t, E)~Janded Surxlay School session for nursery to grade six
children at former Methodist anbarL
.
.
nex at 9:30L m., Mrs.J ames
Stoat, children's Sl()erlnterxtent.
Sunday Church School, adults and
BRADBURY CHURCH OF
youth, 10:30 L m.; junior high, CHRJSr- SundQY achool, 9:30 a,
senior high and young adults m. Glen.Evana, SUpt. Church sermeet in former Methodist Church vices, 10:3{) a.m. ; evening serlor Sundo,y Church School. Boyd vice, 7:30; Weckleaday, prayer
Hackney, youth superintendent; services, 7:3D p.m.
r ·post high class and senior adults
~ meeting In fonner EUB bullding,
GRAHAM UNITED laiih'HO-

HARRISONVILLE PRESBYTERIAN - Mrs. Norma Lee,
SuOO
School Supe 1 rot

r nte enL
Sunday School, 9:30 L m, Su~
day service, 8 p. m., the Rev.
Max Do h
of Middl
ki
na ue
eport
spea ng.
ay

JEIIOV All'S WITNESSES, Lar•
ry Carnahan. presidi~Wminister.
SwldllV: Bible lecture, 9:30a.m.;
Watch Tower study1 10:30 a. m.;
Wednesday: Bible study, 7 p.m.
Thursday: Ministry achool, 7 p.
m. Service meeU.rw, 8 p.m.

MASON CHlJRCH OF CHR!STMlUer St. - Evenon Weekley,
pastor. Bible study elaases,&amp;m..

10a.m. Worshlpandpreaeh~ Hobart VIneyard, supt Adult Bl· DIST CHURCH - Preaching, 9:- lug, 10:55 a. m.; Sundo,y evening
Bible stwty
ble Clus party, last Moo:la,yeach 30 a.m., Firat and Second &amp;Jn. service, 7:30.
month. Youth Fellowship each dayJ of each month; 1bird and classes, Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.
Sunday, 6 p. m. in former Meth- Fourth &amp;mda3s eachmonth, WorMORNING
STAR UNITED
odist building. District youthral- ship service at 7:30 p.m.; WedMETHODIST CHURCH - Rev.
ly tlrst Monday of each month.
neada,y evenings at 7:30, Prayer
William Alrson, pastor: J o h n
LET ART UNll'ED METHO- and Bible study .
Ihle, ~t.; Roy Van Meter, Asst.
D!Sl' CHURCH - First and SecFREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION S141t. Sund1v ~rhool, 9:45 L fr\ ;
ond Sunda,ys preaching, 8 p.m . ~ -Bald Knobs, Portlafd.Bashan
Third and Fourlb SundQYB, Sun- Rood. Rev. E. J. Grilftth,pastor.
SOUTH
BETHEL UNITED
day School 10 a.m., Wonhipservice 11 a.m.; TUesda3 evenings
at 8 p.m., Prayer and Bible atudy.

RUTLAND CHURCH Of THE
NAZARENE _ Rev. Lloyd D.
Grimm, Jr., pastor. S u n d a y
School, 9:30 L nL j morning worship, 10:30 L m.; ywrw peoples
service, 7:30p. m.; ewangellatlc
Wed ·•···
se rvl ce&amp;, 7:30 p. m.
ne......,
evening service, 7:30 p. m.

SuOOay School, 9:30 L m.; Hoger Wilfred, Sl()t. Sunday worship

METHODIST - Worship. second
and fourth Sunday1 10:30 a. m.;
service, 7:30 p. m. Prayer meetfirst and thirdSWldlys, 7:30p.m.
lrv, TuosQy, 7:30 P. m., Mil- 5unQy School, 9:30 L m. Youth
ford Frederick, class leader. Fellowship, 6 p, m. each Sundly
youth Fellowship, Friday, 7:30 p.
at Tuppers Plains United Methom. Ernest Deeter, leader; Hog- dist Church.
er Wilfred, Jr., presidert.
OLD DEXTER CONGREGA·
MASON ASSEMBLY CHURCH

OF GOO - Secood St., Mason,
W. Va. SI.Qla.y SchoOl, 10 a.m.
Morning ltOI'ship, n a. m. EvanMIDDLEPORT HEATH UNITED gellatlc. aerv!ee, 7:30 p. m..Blble
METHODIST- Max E. Donahue, Study and pt'1111r aorvlee, Wedmlnlster; Jamea Brew1ngWa, nelday, 7':30 p.m. Chester·rea-:
~ sehoul superintendent. nJinl, pastDr. Phooe 773.5;1.33,
Church aohool, 9:30a.m.; mom- . CARLETON CHlJRCH -KIDgalng ""rllblp, 10:30 a.m.; youth bury Road, SUJM!ay School, 9:30
meeting. ~, 6 p.m. Choir ro- a. m., Ralph Carl. Supt. Worship
hearaal WQiesday, 7 p.m., choir service. 10:30 a. m. and 7:30 Pa
director, Ben Philson. Prayer '1 m. alternately. Prayer meetbtg,

..

!·

.''

lenice, Wednelda.Y, 8 p.m.

Wednesday, 7:30p.m.

•

i• The Sermonelte

Humility is Mark of
.•
: Service to the Christ
•
I,.

('

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'

,r

I

fr

i

'~

By REV. PAlL A. SELLERS
Pastor - Syracuse United
Method1st Church

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'f
I

A PERSONAL TESTIMONY:
DO WE HAVE SIJCII?(Acts 20,
I~

ttServt111: the lord with all
hwnilit,y of mind, and with many
tears and temptations, which
befell me by the lymg in wait
of tbe Jews. " Acts 20: 19

'
I'
l'

There was no egotism that
~ moved the apostle to give them

:

lhis perfect photograph of his
~ own apiritual character as a servanl of Christ, we feel profourdb' thanklu.l to hm1 ror it, as it
~ 8J,vea us t true p1 cture of what
f every servant of the Lord Je-lUI Christ Should be. Let UB
care6dl,y look It over.
!lE WAS HUMBLE, "Serving
·! lhe Lord with all hwnlllt.Y" 19.
' tbere is 1M) r0001 for pride, or
Hlftab boutlug where the Spirit
ot Lhe 11 meek and lowly in heart"
J'UJeL 'I11e Lord can never be
ae~ved In IIQO•.other wo.y but In
t

I

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1

"all !Jotmll[IJ olmlnd." Broke...
Dial ol. JPirlt Is an esaential eCJDo
dllioo ...o ol ~ship w I I h

'•

...

..)

dli)l,

TIONAL

CHURCH - Rev, WU-

Iard Dutcher, pastor. Mrs. Worley Francis, Swday School ~L
Sunday School, 9:30 a. m. Church
services first and third Sunday

following SundQY School. Secord
and Fourth Saturday evenings,
7:30 p. m. , Church services.

CHESTER CHURCH OF GODThe Rev. ChesterBryant,pastur.
Sunday School, 9:30 a. m.; WCB'shlp service, 11 a. m.; EYenil:w:
worship, 7:30p.m. Prayerae"lce, TUelday, 7:30 p. m. Youth
Service, Thursday, 7:30 p. m.
Monthly sJrvs, ftrst Saturday of
each month.

HEMLOCK GROVE Christian
Church - James Qulae~,
pastor; ROY Whaley, sup(. Com·
munlon and worsblp senice, 9t30

or Man'" couJd fetter the tongue
Him, arxl tbere can be no real of this !aithful witness. A fullservice for Him out of the com- orbed Gospel had been revealed
munion of the Holy Ghost. His hu- to him aOO at any personal cost
mility is further seeninhiswork- he was determined that not one
lng with his buds for the Sl.ilport ro,y or It should be hlrolered from
o( himself and thoSe who were shining tbrOUjlh blm. How about
with him. ;:He was not ashamed to you &amp;rd. the light or Jesus is ' It
call himself 1-the leaJt of the sblnlug oot of your litO dall)1
AposUes" lilt to declare that it Maey will go
out to win •
was '"by gr11ce of God I am what prize in this world for worldly
I am."
things an:l pa,y out money to wln
HE WASCOMPASSIONATE. He something they ~ Ia precious
served the Lord "with many tears and valuable, but the treaaqre ot
and temptl:ti.Dill aOO ceased not to "eternal life" lies hidden in the
warn everyone night am day with open field of God's word, and al·
tears. His ministry was not a though every searcher IDI)' fi1111
cold. fonnal, glas~yed busi- this prize not Just one but everyness. Hla words were moiat with one in this world, but few there
tenderneaa. We might 11 well be that seek lL The treasure ~
throw stone• at the people, as eternal life is Cree and most Wheartless worda of wisdom. We uable.
. - to speak tile trulh with
Perhaps the most Ceroclous
Low. We can weep over our own animal in creation is the Hamsorrows and losses, and U the ster RaL When It lakes a grip,
interests ol Jesus Christ were rather than )'l.eld It will allow i~
l.a real to ua we would also weep self to be beaten in piecea with
over Hi&amp;. Servar&amp; of Ga:l. II your a stick. If It seize• aman1 s hand,
heert right'?
it must be killed before It will
HE WAS COURAGEOUS. "I qultlto bold. H'"' Ukotblo"hlmhaw not ahunMd to declare unto ster rat" is our own proull, un-you the whole counsel or God" )'ieldiug, slnM oalt Thot Hlf.
says Paul the Apostle, ""No fear Ish l!llrl~ ttat would dlrv tDaid

au

POMEJ!OY TRINITY UNITED
CHlJRCH OF CHRIST- Rev. W.
H. Perrin, pastor, Patrick D.
WCllld,
SonlliY School, 9:15
a. m.; worshiJ), 10:25 a. m.
Youth choir rehearsal Monday,
6:30 p, m. Mro• .;;;.in Burt,
dlrectm'; Senior cllolr n!Jearoal,
•• p, m., Mrs, ~...
T ..~--•-~
~......,, 7:Neaae, diredor. TtturadaJr, all
Qy, Busy Bee qulltlrv part;y In
church soolal room.
RUTLAND
CHURCH
OF
CHRIST - Ro,y W. Carter, pas-

so-.

r-

C..nmunlon and worship service,
10:30 a. m,; PrQYer meet!~,
Thursda,y, 7130 p.m. V. H. Bra•

SUJJL

CHESTEJ! METHODIST Charge '
- Rev. Pearl A. Casto, pastor.
CHESTER: Worshlp, 9 a. m.i
SUnday Scbool, 10 L m.; Mrs.

(

a. m.

with hQ'-

11

m., Bible Study andprayermeetlng. Saturday: Sabbath School,
10:30 a.m.; Worship, 9:30 a. m.

The hub of a railroad-the classification yard. Could
you, without training or experience, take charge here?
Could you sort and '!spot" thousands of cars, hav~ t~em
ready 1!1 the right time on the right track to go out with
the ritlht train?
But every day your mind performs an operation even
more compllll'. You sort and classify your thoughts and
Impulses. You decide what is· right and wrong. You determine which actions are urgent, and which can be deferret!. You resolve that some goals are important,, and
others are secondary, And every decision affects your
life, and the lives of others!
Preparing men and women-and boys and girls-to
make the right decieions is one of the great functions
of the Church. There are sound Christian standards by
which life's choices should be oorted. There is confidence
and strength for those who seek, learn and practice the
true Way of Life.

1'HE CHURCH fOR ,All
All FOR THE CHURCH
Th~eChun:h

mthe grut-

m tactor oo urlh for the
b1.1ildin1 ol eban.cter 1111d
I(IOCI dlltenlhlp II t. •
lllon.hou. ol 'P•r&amp;tu•l
.,.)utt W&amp;lhoul 11 llrof\1

Church, nealher dtm«·

racy nor clvlllulloa can
survive '111ere
Jovr
IOUnd ~ wh)'.,....,

•ft

peNOll. should

attend ..,

vice• ref,lllrly al\d

~up­

port the Chureh. 1beJ'
1r.: llll'or hill' own .U..
(2) !'or h1a cbildrn '1
ukt (3) For thuakeof
hLI «Jmmunit)t .nd naIIOB It) For the Mb of
the Chun:h 1t.lf, which

need. hit 1n0nl and ma•
teriaii1Jpport. Plan to 10

a

'* you-r Bible daiJJ'.
lo daun:h niUiarly

a.m.

C~r JHI JCflrNr

moRh.
Evening evangelistic
vi
7
ser ce, :30 p. m.. &amp;erond and
fourth Sundays.

SYRACUSE CHURCH OF THE
A. E. Miller,
pastor. B o b Moore, SUnday
School SupL SundQY School ciao ..
ea for all ages. 9:30 Lm.; MornIng Worship, 10:30 a.m.; NYPS
SuoQy 6:30 p.m. ; Evangelistic
Service SuoQy 7:30 p.m.; MidNAZARENE- Rev.

week Prayer meeting Wedneadl¥ 7:30p.m.; Missionary Mee~
lng Second Wedneoday of each

montb 7:30p.m.

EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN

Saw

senice aDd

suck the life out of the new heaven-born nature, wlll not quit its

bold unUllt his boenput todeath.
Have yoo put the '"old man" of
sin to death in your life an:l
taken on the new man as the Ute
to live •. Are we serving Evil or
Good, la Jesus Christ our Saviour
am Lord. anlllveinourheart?lf
not let us do It now. He can be
your 111v1our now.

Thoughts
So then, as we have oppor·
&amp;unity, lei us do good to 1111
men, tmd tspecicllly · to thOit
who &lt;11'&lt; of I,M llousthold of
foilh.-Gatati4m 6:10.
i •

•

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GOEGLEIN READY-MIX CO.

.'

SALES MIDILEPORT, 0,

omo•s OLDEST DODGE DEALER
MIDDLEPORT, OIDO

MIDDLEPORT
Rivers Girl Scout Council. Mrs.
Gioeckner, ways and
BOOK STORE
chairman, announced a Christfor the last
In NOvember.
·~;:=~~~=====l~ma:o~ba~zaa~r~ten~ta~U~v~e~ly:s:•:h:edul:ed~

I

weel(

·N. W. COIAPTON,O.D.
OPTOMETRIST

RAY RIGGS, INC.

~

UDcoln - Mer&lt;:UI'l'- C&lt;mot- El!lihh f'Ord ..•
&amp;IJ3.8601
.'
8&amp; N. COURT ST.
A111ENS, 0.

Sparlding

l)lame)Dda

ut in IUJnd-Crafkd Callunbi4

mountinll of ISI/.;,tu ~IY.

WILUS ANTHONY

TIFFIN CREDIT
JEWElERS

PLUYIIII!!G Allll HEA'I!NG
.
19M&amp;&amp;O
2tO LINCOLN ST.

.·

ARNOLD'S SOHIO SERVICi .
A~RD.

99~:

POMEROY,O.
/1 FRQ:NDLY !!LACE TO BUY ,

CROW'S STEAl( HQUSE

RACINE Fll-VALU
MARKET
'
.
THE STORE'W1111 A HART1 :
RAC!ijE.OIUO '

From $39,95

KENTIJCKY ·FRIED CIUCICEII

.•

, , .·POii!ROY,'omo

.

New Furnltu.re
,ONL~ $2ff
~· .....~·-· ii

ed refre•hmenls tD those named and Jennifer Anderson, Arm
Barnltz, Donna Roock, Beverly
Stump,
Katy Well,
and Sue lyM
ZirLong, Carol
McCullough,
kle.

Homemakers
Announce

omcE HOURS 9:30 To 12, 2 TO 5 cct.OsE AT NOON oN
THURS.) - EIIST COURT ST., POMEROY

BAKERS OF HOLSIJM BREAD
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

F Alii!LY RECREATION
SWIIOIING

•• Fa/J.Events

·••

••

••
••
•

••

Fall everts were announced by

Mrs. George Skinner, c~
council member, when the Hock
Spl'i"*s llomemakers Club met
wcdriesday at the home or Mrs.
:\inos Leonard. .
Mrs. Skinner reported that &amp;he
aMual rural health conference
wlU be held on Oc~ 1 at the Par·
1sh llouse in Jackson. The tour
of Co\wnbwi lor Meigs Counlj'
women pltnned by the Extension
Service Is scheduled ror OcL 17
with reservations to be mtde be-fore Oet. u. The lour w!U Include · 1 behlrd-the-scenes look
.. at Lazarus aott a visit to German
VIllage.
· Mrs. Jdm Goett ml Mra. Sklr&gt;ner were ramedtoattendtheNov.
19 lndero tralnirv
on
••Ente.r.tabdna It Christmas". A
progrim Utled '"Know Y o u r
County Officials" was announced
for JarKW'y. ·
The prograin topiC seleeled for

p......-am

JtlllllY aiJ! February WaS "COl·
add You," with Mr&amp;. Lewis

·

Jllil Mrs. Fret! Goel[eln,

lll!es wtre · paid and
Hrted by
'ID )llrL

werft•

·.,.

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

Christian Temperance Union will
meet at 7:30 Frlda,y nll!hl ai tile
home of Mrs. VIctoria Slacey, Third st.; Middleport.

111E MEIGS High School cheer·
leaders will · !JI)onsor an after

~ltern 111gb

SATURDAY
A IIIGH SCHOOL dance party

be held this Saturda) night
from 8:30 LO 11 ;30 p.m. at the
Meigs High School auditorium
in \llddleport. The Jays will eml!CC the dan&lt;:C which is sehoul
spommrcd.
EOLIN I'M.flLY reunion, sat
urdal at Hock Springs Fairgruund~ . Ead1 ramlly to take
basket dinner and table service
ror dinner at 12 noon.. Social
acti\ities dul'i~ aftcrnou~

will

8

SATl'Ril\Y
BAKE SALE
will be held
saturday begiming at 9 a. m.
at the nines bulldlng in !lo'linersvllle by the Women'H Society of Christian Service of the
Mlner.sville Methodist Church.

Sl
Pll~U(.

~1),1\

CIIJCKE~

barbcl'UC ,
Sunda) , L1 a.m. lo 6 p, m., un
parking lot in Pomero3 under
sponsorship of Drew \\ cbster
l'o~t J9 1 :\mcrican Legion..

Second Daughter

Born to Gruesers
Mr. and Mr s. Bill &lt;.rucser,
Mjncrsville, arc announcing the
birth or a daughter on Aug. 31
at Holzer 11ospita1 named Dawna Hae.
They have two other children,
Danny and Diane. Mr. and Mrs.
George Grucser or Minersville
and Mr. and MrS. William f'ields
· of Hartford, W. Va., are grandparent8. Mrs. Mollie Guinther or
Syracuse is a great grandmother.

SPEAKER ANNOUNCED
TOO Rev. VI. Luther Tncy or
Rio Grande wm be speliker at
the SUnday morning worship ser·
vice of the Pomeroy First Dap-

Ust Church. He will also. N&gt;O&amp;k
at the' Oct. 6 service.

PT. PLEASANT - In I quiet
but preUy ccremonybeCoremembers or the immediate familles,
Miss nebecca GaU Jones, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Gail Jones
of near Leon, became Ute bride
of Mr. Frank CurUs Kidwell, son
or Mr. and Mrs. !-rank Kklwell,
or Burraio.
Rev. Charles Higginbotham ofriciated at theWednesdayevenirq:::
ceremony in the Leon Baptist
Church.
(i i ~;en in marriage by her father, the bride was dressed in a
street length dress or white lace
and matching accessories. She
carried an Irl"h linen handkerchief loaned to her by her cousin,
\Ir s, ttobert Straight. of Pt.
Pleasant. The handkcrchier was
uriginall:o owned by the late Mrs.
\1argaret · ·~urse" Kelle~, who
had loaned the handkerchier to
more lhan 100 brides over t h e
.} ean., It wa§ mad~ in Ireland.
1\cr cor!iage was pink carnations.
llc1· atletldant was Miss BeU.y
llus sell of Leon who was dressed
io a blue slrtoet length dress. The
Rroom wa~ dres sed in his Arm)
uniform .
The bride ts a graduale uf Pt.
Pl~asa.nt lligh School, class of
1967, and also attended the Gal·
lipoli~ Business School. She i:s
employed as sccretar~ In the office s of the l'nion (.;arbide Mas~
l'utnam mine at Elmwood.
llcr husband is a graduate or
Buffalo lligh School, class of
I

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Pomeroy Group feY'

Entertain Oct. 29
Plans for cnlcrtalning the pa:;t
matrons of Evangeline Chapter,
Middleport, 1vcrc made when the
past matrons of Pomeroy Chapter 186, Order of the Eastern
Star, met Tuesda} night at the
home of Mrs. Glenn Dill, Syracuse.
The past matrons part) was
planned for Ocl. 29, Discussed
at the meeting was the possibility of serving meal s at Mason!c
functions. Mrs. A1fred Crow presided at the meeting. c"ames were
played wllh prizes being won by
Mrs. Hartwell CUrd, Mrs. Fred
Blaettnar, and Mrs. .JamesSoulsby. Mrs. Dale Smith corducted
the games, and Miss
Maud
Grueser gave d~votlons.

Service Held for
Miles M. Lesher

be made by Oct. 22. Plans were
made for ..,.Ung things tD tile
Slutheastem Ohio Health Center

1967. lie was employed by the Upton Construction Company at
Leon prior to entering the military service. Ue has completed
training In ~cial Forces and has
had training at Fort ('.ampbell,
Ky., Fort Sill, Okla. , and For1
Benning, Ga. ile is scheduled to
go to Fort Lewis, Wash., on
termination or his leave.
Following the wedding, a reception was held at the home or
the bride's parents ror relatives
ard friend s.

Pledge Made

By Church

at Athens tor the country ratr
on Oct. 10.
A cooking demonstration was
announced for Oct. 9 at 7:30p.m.
at Middleport. The topic will be
me
..910rtcuts at Chrlstmat." Mem~
bers are to take guests.
Mrs. Vernon Nease gave a
Lowest Prices
demonstration on arranglngfiowOn Used Equipment
ers in kitchen utensils. She used
peace roses in a pitcher, pink
begonias tn a tea pot, and sweet
i
peas and roses In a ladle to
hang on the wan .
TRACTOR
Asslating with the judging of
GRAIH
fiower arrangement• on display
DRILL
at the meeting wu Mrs. J o e
~ OH
111oren, a former member of
1 RUBBER
the cltJb. Blue ribbons ror ar'
rangements went to Mrs. Vic--'11 HEW IDEA
tor Hysell, Mrs. Denver Hol ter, Mrs. Homer Holter, Mrs.
~ MAMURE
Edison Hollon, and Mrs. K e n

f
,y

•

f

Nease.

Hollon.

\

The pledge to the flag led by
Mra. Grueser, and devotions by
Mrs. Vernon Nease with scripture from Mattllew and prayer
opened the meeting. Members
responded to roll call with a
comment on a troublesome weed.
uShould You Save Seeds" was
the topic used by Mrs. Grueser,
:ile said that seeds from di-

~.~~::S

~-

IHTER·

TJS'l' _ C'Jd'rlel w. stgvea, ,.._

RACINE
PLANING
:MU
.
.'
BVIU)ING SUPPLII!S ' II!I.LWOIIK
OENEIIAL cONTRAcrlNG

tor. E41... - · SltldqSebDol

HATIOHAL

ALLIS·
CHALMERS
SALE5-PARTS
SERVICE

.

·llhlp; lOti&amp;. Swt!litl lllblo SlltdY
....... 7:10 P.

m..w•.a.r
.....
,.me., 7a80 ,.m.

~~'~!il"lllftl

1

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-..

Canasta Club of
Middleport Meets
Mrs. Don Lowery alli Mrs.
Kenneth Cale were guests when
the Middleport canasta Club met
Wednesd&amp;)' night at the home of
Mrs. Millard Wildermuth.
During the evening" s play,
prizes were won by Mrs. Lionel
Boggs, Mrs. RlchardGreas, Mrs.
Lowery. am Mrs. Charles Bradbury. The hostess served a dessert course to those named arMi
Mrs. E(lna Russell and Mrs. RcJI&gt;
ert Schmoll.

1
I

Sugar Run Mill
Has These Famous
Paints

••o'IH•••
HIGH STANDAIID

~:;~:;d Of

HOUSE PAINT

s.nce 1s1o

1
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Please Check!

OUR
PRICES
ARE

•

HIGH STANDARO
HOUSE PAINT

• ALUMINUM
METALCOTE

LOW III

• RED METALCOTE

.......

... . ,.
Ph. 992·2115 .

Mulb•rry A.v• .

Pomeroy

~----------------------

SWINE FEEDING

Colo.

BIG SPECIAL O.f'FER!

FREI

FINANCING
UNTIL JUNE 1969
ALL NEW HOLLAND

6 EQUIPMENT

PIG STARTER

...

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anlnull b••-.:
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SUGAR RUN MILLS

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Fresh New Supply Just Arrived!

I .. . ., . ,. , .•..
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~;:=~-'--'-'-'------· ,.. "-:~::

If(' 7·10

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HAY
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JALER/

Sure!

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Cook.

~

Baa Equipment Co.

• PI!ONE m.:;Jrz,B '

lqoe~lll. SundiJ Charcb
s.boo(;.,,u
a. m,; .....,.._.

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992-2955

f

Rout• 7

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FORAGE 'SPREADER

~HARVESTER

Blue ribbons for speclmen exhibits were awarded to M r s.
Fred Nease, Mrs. Hiram Fisher, Mrs. Dern·er Holter, and Mrs.

SUpport of the community youth
movement was pledged by the
Pomero;) Fir!it Ba.ptisl Church at
the Wednesday night quarterly
business meeting of the church.
The church voted to support
the .}OUlh movement which CODsists of combining fellowships In 1
four churche s. Read at the meeting Y;&amp;s a letter to the trustee&amp; I
from the World Missions cam- I
paign thankiRR the church for
pledges. It was decided that the
church trustees should attend the
new housing meeting held TlmrAday night
ltepair work on the roof has
been completed it was reported.
Heport s were given by the bolrd
rb( trust.oos . the du.OOJLS, "anQ .the .
pulpit committee. Orwl Wiles
moderated tl 1~· n· ·eting which opened with pn: .
Jy Mrs. Joseph
A potluck fellowship supper
preceded the meeting.

'•

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Funeral services for Miles M.
Lesher, 2561 Van Buren, Ogden,
Utah, who died Wednesday, were
MEETING CAN CELLED
conducted there tOOay.
The October meeting of t h e
Mr. Lesher is survived by his
Women's Soclet) of Christian wife, Edith McMaster Lesher,
Service of the Enterprise United and two sons, WWiam CurUs or
Methodist Church his been ca• Utah, and Donald of Denver,

celled.

School. Reserva-

Uona for the luncheon are to

To Frank C. Kidwell

game dance party with the Jays
following the Meigs-Athens tootball game this Friday night rrom
10 to 12 p.m. at the Meigs Junior Uigh in Pomeroy.

r

prepare the soil to the proper
depth. and maintain food and water supply.
Gardening Ups for thiS rnontll
were given by Mrs. Vernon Nease
who suggested that lawna be seed··
ed where needed, new evergreen•
be ae1 oot, and Qy IU!ea and
peonies be plantA&gt;d.
The door prize wu won by
Mrs. Fred Nease. Mrs. K e n
Nease and Mrs. llenry Thoma•,
the co.-hostess, served refresh·

~DRUGS

WE F1LL ALL DOCl'OR'S

Mornlrv Worohlp, 10:30; EYol1liW
worllblp, 7:30; Yootre People'a
Service, S:Up.m.; ~-· ·
11]1, Tlllr.....,, 7]38 p, 1"•
MJDDLEf()RT FIR$T BAP·

l

OHIC&gt; VALLEY BAKING CO.

R. H. RAWLINGS SONS CO.

ROYAL OAK PARK

Rov, c.cll J. Wjae, [)U•
tor. SUnday School, 8:30 a. m.;

.

ALLIS CHALMERS - SERVICE
FARM- INDUSTRIAL- LAWN- GARilEN
TUPPERS PLAINS
PH. 687.au5

PRODUCERS AND DISTRIBUTORS
OF HIGH GRADE coAL
WEST COLUMBIA, W. VA.

.lao.._

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BOGGS EQUIPMENT

TINY'S FOODLAND

LEIVING COAL COMPANY

~ ·-

.

RelieloUI and Scenjc
Varion Sins

Karl Grueser, president; Mn.
VIctor Uyooll, vice president;
Mrs. IUram Fisher, secretary;
and MrL David Neaae, trea111.r~
er.
Presontod at the meeting wao
a letter !rom the Galllpolle lnatltutlon regarding the therapy
program to be preaented at 1 p.
m. on Oct. 24 at Cottage 7.
Members were asked to take

Mrs. Ma&amp;On 1-'lshcr spok• on
planting bulb IS, ~e suggested~ '
the planter start with /!()0&lt;) bulbi,

Kooi-Aid and cookies.
The fall m..Ung of Hcglon II
wa• annoonced ror Oct. 26 at

:ID:::;mco~oMEN's Rebecca Jones is Wed

Preferential tea plans were - Each member was asked to make
made when the Ohio Eta Phi five hems and baked goods for
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi SOr - the bazaar.
m ~I\ SI~Ci al ~lL . o I i v e
ority met Tue&amp;da,y nlgtlt at the
The proJect or remembering Chun:h, LcHlf. Rottom, at l :JO
Columbus and SOuthern 0 h l o Meigs County aervicemen In\' let~ p. m. Public in\ited as well as
Electric Co. social room.
nam was discussed and It w~s singers.
Lois Clelland, chairman of decided to contribute money ror
M0~1l,\ Y
the social committee whlchplans use in purchuing items for the
SOllTHER~ 1\TliLETU.: ROOSl·
the tea, reported that it will be boxes. Twila Matheney and Marers meeting, Monda,y, i:30 p.m.
held oo Sunday, Oct. 27, at, the ilyn SWan are chairmen or the
at high schOOl in Racine; Elson
home of Vikki Gloeckner, Mul - project. r\ box will be sent to
. Spencer~ _president. All , distr,ict
berry Heights...
a diffe't'eM serviceman o a qJ h
reKidents interested Jn athletics
, carolyn Grllesor. pruidtlnt, month. ~
bad charge ot the meeting jj\lrThe cultural program on sell uned to attend.
tng which time the chapter voted analyals was presented by RU.a
to make a donation to the Four Lewis. Rosetta Redovian serv ~

yDUI'I -lualveiJ

Wood•• prestdlrL.
HYSELL RUN tREE METI!Oo

dram~, ~tty

PICTURES &amp;
PLAQUES ..

Tea Planned ·Oct. 27

m~s

MIDILEPORT, omo

your · [10Wer1 aiOI!II nne. ol
Moat -~rlllos a~ that ihu •
...,.nence 111 • m. allprding Fine Arts Include P,lllitlinl,
scope•.-Jobn F. Kennedy, drawing, ' oeulpture, . ,illllllC,
Pl"'lideDI.

••MEMBER OF 11IE BIG 3''
GENERAL MEROIANDISE
TUPPERS PLAINS
PH. 667-32110

MIDDLEPOR1

PHONE 992-3284

Happineu II tbe fuU use of

36111 U.8.

Pomeroy

Mlln

MILLARD

LYONS MARKET

MARK V STORE .

RUTLAND FUIST BAPTIIT Rn. Samuel J •
pastor.
PriJ'tr aent.ee, 9:30 a. m.; SUn- ·
dQY Sellool, 10 ...... Mra. Gertrude, Buller, !qJL Worohlp'·
urvloe, 11 a. m. BIPIII TrainIng Ull[an, ftrlll and 10®1111 Stll•
dQ.Ys ot 5:38 p. m.; Mrl. Wary

lJI't,Yer

w.

NEW SHIPMENT

- Mick!leport. R8v, Allllr)' Miller,

q

!'R NIGHT Mf.ffll

WEST MAIN ST.
POMEROY, 0.
SUPPORT THE CHURCH OF YOUR CHOICE

BAKERS OF GOOD BREAD

, paotor. Loiter TQ.Yior, Supt. Suo..._, SChool, 9:30 a.m.; Morning
Worob!j&gt;, 10:30 a. m.; Jlmlor Soelety, 6:30 p. m.; NYPS, 6:45 p,
m. Sundo.y EYarveUatlc meellrv,
7:30 p, m. PrQ.Yer meeting, Wed-.
nalday, 7t80 p. m.
THE SALVATION ARMY -ED·
voy Ray S, Wining, otncer In
charge, Sunday, 10 a.m., Holiness meeting; 10:30 a. m. Sun..._, Sehool. Y- People's Lesion, 7 p. m.; 8alvatlm meeti.Jw,
7:30 p. m.; Tlllrsday, 1 w 3 p,
m.; Ladle• Home League; 7 p.m.

sermon, Richards, sup(.

992-2039

HOYT'S SOHIO SERVICE

HEINER'S BAKERY

CHRIST - Elden R. Blake, flU• Prep clUMI.
tora Sunday Sehool, 10 a. m., . liT, MORIAH BAPTIST -lllld·
Wlmle Hole~. aupl. Morning dleport, corner ~ Fourth and
aennon, U a. m. Even.ilw serv- Main st. Rebert Jacksm, pastor•
cle Chrlllllll Endeawr, 7:30 p, Sunday SChool, 1h~ a. m.; Mornm., Mrs. J.alda Cbevaller, prest- Ing worohlj), 10:311 a. m., Amold
delt.

FLOWERS

~omeroy Flo-r Shop

neaday.

!qJL

2:4-22

Wllh tlie ' - II will, In ....,. measure, !oater and help sustain llat whleb Ia iood In~
and community life, this !eatuteluponsoredb!'tbo buslneu ftrms and orpnlutloos'wlloaeappear below.

CARMEL UNITED METHO..
DIST- OIIUR&lt;lll' •- Rev. P1llll,..,_
ASBURY UNITED METIIO.. ' !lefklro, paator. SuoQy Sehool,
DIST, Syracuse - Rev. Wero!ell
9:30 a. m.; WQYOe Rouah, &amp;IlL
stutler, paslor. SwKiay School,
Morning worship, 10:30 L m.,
10 L m.; carroll Norris. Supt.
seoonland ro1111hSundayaofelch
Worship service, 11 L m.; MYF
month.
Evening e\'I.Jlgeliatic
6 p. m. SuoQy . Pn,yer m..Ung
service, 8 p. m. second a o d
Wednesday, 8 p . m.
third SuoQy each month.
POMEROY CHURCH OF THE
ENTERPRISE UNITEll METHNAZARENE - Corner Union and
ODIST
- Rev. William Alroon,
Mulberry. Rev. Clyde V. Hero!orson, pastor. SunQy Sebool, 9:30 Pastor~ Ralph !lJencer, &amp;IlL;
a. m.; RaymCllld Walburn, ~ Fldon eeks, An't. Worship aer..
Morning worship, 10:30 L m.; vices 9:30 Lm. ; Sunday School,
EveDI.~ Service, 7:30 p. m. Mid- 10:30 Lm.; Youth Fellowship,
week service, Wednesday, ?:SO 6:30. WodnesQy: Choir, 6:1S p,
m.i Bible Study, 7:30.
p.m.
CHlJRCH OF CHIRST - MidF'OREST RUN UNITED METH·
ODIST - Rev. Wendell G. Slut- dleport, 5th and Main. Jack .
ler, pastor. Worship aeniee, 9 Scltes, sup(. Bible School, 9:30 ·
L m. j Sunday SChool. 10 L m. a. m.; Morning wurllblp, 10:80 a.
m.: EvealDg worship, 7:30 p, m,;
Mrs. Fred Nease, &amp;IlL
Prayer eerrice, Wednesday, 7 p.
MINERSVILLE U N I T E D
m.
Rn. Raul1n M;fer, pastor.
METHODIST - Rev. Wendell
CHI!llCH OF 'I1IE NAZARENE

FRIDAY
New offtcera were Installed and
DANCE FRIDAY atRaolneJunlnr lllill School following hOme plans were made for a theraiU'
lfllll8 wtlh ScMhwestorn witli tho program at the Gallipolis Slate
Ravens proriding mu1lc; SOuth- IDstllule al Wodne...._, nlt!ht'o
meeting of tile WildWood Garden
trrfBand Booatera I.POIIIOJ'L
PAST MATRONS, EvllllPilne Club lleld at the home of Mro.
Chapter, Order of the Eastern Ken Neaae.
Mra. Vernon Neaae Installed
Star, will mest at 6 p.m. Frithe
officers presenting &lt;miiPs
..._, nlihl at the Masonic TemIn
colora
symbolic rA. their of~
ple, Middleport, for a potluck
nces
to
each
one. They are Mrs .
dlmer. Memben are to take

QUALITY
PRINT SHOP

FOR ·ALL OCCASIONS

an, Sunday School Superinte~ Sellers, pastor. Morning wordent. Sundal' School, 9:30 Lm. ship, 9:30 a. m.; Sufklay School,
Worship Service. 10:30 a.m. 10:30 a. m. Wythe Theiss, Supt.
Choir practice, 7:30 p.m. Wed- Youth Fellowship, 6:30 p. m.

m.; Kemelb Wlggens,
Worship senice, 10 L m.

Saturday
II P.rer

Luke
14:25-33

BETH ANY UNITED METROGuest Minister' James Bucha~ DIST CHURCH - Rev. Paul A.

9 L

Aft"""""

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~-. l"f, 8~, Vi!

Wednesday

FIRST UNITED PRESBYTEJ!1AN CHURCH _ Middleport,

stuUer1 pastor, Sundl)' School,

·
0
Mi•• Mary Virginia Reibel presented an inaplrltlunal proeram
Mrs. 1\'lta Jean llill·hlc of~ ualoi uThoiJghtl ~·rom something to~ On" ~Dr. Mafpret Blair
per.s Plains was hosh.'tu; recently Johns ioN!, at I meeting of the Wonlen•a Guild ol THnlQ' United
for the Scylentber m~ctlng of Chqrch of 'Christ Wednesday night.
.
.
·
the \ ·otmg Wives Club, presid·
Miss Reibel revieW~ Dr. Johns"'-'' philoaopiw: olhowto llve e:v..
ed over br Mrs. Janice \'oung.
ery day, preparing for whatever life might brlrw ip the ·ft)' ot trillfl
Plana were completed for the and sorrtM. It was her (llfln(oo that·~~~·~ ,.Uh,atori~
mailing or C'hristmaa pad~ases up reserves ot 5 yrnp&amp;thy, ~age (which the a~orcalled the stetirto servicemen in \' ielnam. Mem- ins wheel of life), calmness, conftdenee (In earned attribute), and a
hers not present at thi~ meeting sense of humor.
,
,
,
who wpuld like information on
The only place to find happineas, Dr. Johnstone aa.id, "Is where
. this \ maU~r are to call a-Ira. you an•, Find It ever) d'ay and coiled happy memories by commit. You.P'·
ting something, by seeirw somethlns: pretb. by doing &amp;OIIIethlq for
Nex.t month the llallO)Yeen parsomeone," Miss Reibel said, quoting the author.
1.1· wtll be held at Mfs. Cblorlo
During the meeting presl~cd over ill' Mrs. Albert Woodard, glfta of
·Gaul'S home on ~mner Road.
money were voted tor the World Clothing Fuad, st. Louis, Mo., .for
Decorat\(18 and rood committees
school children, aOO to' the Trinity Circle ror the continuing proJect
were choSen.
of upkeep of the lighted crosa on Lincoln Hill.
Ritchie and the co •
T() TAKE SERVICE
hli.it"ess, Mrs: Nancy Colllno,serAT THE REQUEST of Patrick Wood, the guild agreed to hive
ved refreshments to the follow- charge of the opening Sundaj School service on Sunday, oct. 13.
iQe not mentioned above; Mrs.
Mrs. LOOts Reibel, Mrs. w. It Perrin and Mrs. cart Kautz were
Jol\flet t'onnolly, Mrs. JoY c e asslgred to handle it.
Ritchie, Mrs. Oay Ann Burke,
Committees were named for the reception which will be held tol~
Mrs. Caroisn Tripp, MrS. Ter- lowing the World Community Day observance at the Trinity United
esa Collins, Clntzy and ltobin l."hurch on f'rida), !\:0\. 1. 'llte reception will honor Mrs. Ben Neutz..
Rltchie, Beth Ritchie and Mrs. ling, who will be installed as president or Meigs County Chureh
Marilyn Robinson.
women l nilL-d at that meeling.
(iuUd members were reminded or lhc onnual hulida~ bazaar to
be held on WtodncsdB&gt;, \ov. 13. Sttll'" tallll•s ot ncl&gt;dlework. baked
goods, and a nnon lundumn wall bl' fl•:uun•d al the bat&lt;iar which is
open to the public. Membet' !i wen• askl'd 111 (Hl'lnltl' arudes for the
bazaar.
~
The annual lhank offeriru; servict• was anntJUnct-d for Sun:ta:v,
Nov. 24 at the wor$lp houf. Areas of Christian suclal actions were
explored
b) Mrs. Pearl Mora during the de\utianal period. llow to
Printed For All Occasions
pr&amp;)'
for
peace
and the presidential election were dlscus.sed. This
50 .. $2.75 '100 .. $3.50
wa1 followed by a prayer in unison for help in beeoming more rt.•o~::;:•r
sponsible citi1ens.
In obsenance of Constitution Day, Mrs. Mora read "Freedom is
Somethtilg We Attain, Then Sustain". The call to worship, Pt~alm 17,
and the h~mn, "Dear Lm'd and Fatheror~ankind.'' l'Umplmt.'d the dt:Mill St . .992.3345
votlons. The offering was received by Mn. Thomas Young.
AutUmn O.owers with pheasant dgurlnes Oankc&lt;l by green tapers
decorated the retreshmenl table. Mrs. Perrin, Mrs. Carl Billlkam,
Mrs. Paul Werner, and MrL Kenneth Hauls, members of Frienclly
Circle, served a salad course.
:

· M¥,.

leaden.
SYRACUSE llNITED METRO..
SEVENtH DAY ADVENTIST DIST CHURCH - Rev. Paul A.
Church - Pomeroy, Mulberry Sellers, pastor. Sunday Sehoo1,
Heights Road, north (1 Veterans 9:30 a. m. , Ben Quisenberry,
Memorial -pita!, PhUllp Gag- S"'t Morning worsb!j&gt;, 10:30 a.
er, pastor. Wednesday, 7:30 p. m., first aoo third Sundays each

;

(

m. 9Jnday evening &amp;ervice, 7:30; 1blradQY evening aervlee,

Wald Spencer, SIQJI, FLATWOOD6: Church Sebool, SuodQY, 7:30~
11 a.m., .101m Bally,~ War·
ST. JOHN'S LUTHEJ!AN-Briob!j&gt; oervlce allmlatts withAl· &amp;II Ervel, putor, Morning 1101'·
fred and Flatwoods. Servtees ship, 9 a. m.; SUixlay School.
Sunday marnirv or evening, of 10:30 a. m.
each week,
ST. PAUL'S Ltm!EJ!AN - S2
GRACE EPISCOPAL- E. Main E. Second st., Puneroy, SuodQY
St., Pomeroy- SuoQy worob!j&gt; Scbool,10 a.m.;Worsb!j&gt;aervloe
senice, 10:30

)

PI-·

tor. Sunday School, 9:30 a. m.;

ley.

llhlp, 7:30 p, m. Pro.yer and
Praise aervtce, 'Dm'IMia,y, 7tSO
p, m.
.,
THE Rl!rLAND "\IETHDDIST
CHlJRCH - Rev, C, J. Lemley,
pastor. Church Sehool, 9:30 a.m.;
WorshJp aervlee, 10:30 a. m.
RACINE METHODIST - W,
IJOle MeClurg, pastor. SUndly
School, 9130· a.m.; Worshl.P sen•
ice, 10:30 a. m.; JUnior choir
practice, Wednesday, 3:20 p. m.i
5eol.or eholr )JI'actlce, 'dturlday,
7:30 p. m. 11oWJ1 HuaUer ClaOI
meeting, !ourlb Fri&lt;W ot each
month at 6 P. m, Wnleyan Sen·
cle Guild, !ourlb Mellldo.y ot each
tnOI1Ih, 7:30 p, 111.; Jlmlor Hlgll ,
MYF, 4:30 p. m. eaeb SUndiQ';
Senlor High MYF, 5:30 P• m.,
each SuoQy,
PORTLAN!' METHODIST Rev. w. Dalo MeCIUl'll. pastor.
Sunday SChool, 9:30a.m.; Wor•b!J&gt; oervloe, 7:30 P. m.
OAK GROVE METHODIST W, Dale MoOurg,
SUndly
Sehoul, 10:30 a. m.; Worob!J&gt;
senfce , 9:30 L m., first and
tb1rd Sunday eaeb month.
ZION CHlJRCH OF CHRISJ'Polileroy-Harrisonville Road
Jolm Webster, putor; Re.y LltUe, SuoQy achool oupor!JItandent. Suoda;r sohool, 9:30 a.
m.; worship aervice, 10:30 a.

scasc.froc plants ciln be ~ayod ,
and aftor dryim: well th"y !fhoukl,.
~put In gla.11s cont»IMrs . Ac:~\1
cording to Mrs. (;rucser hybrid
seeds usually produce flowera
which arc not true to form.

nail~ Sl.!ntlild, t•omot'Ol·Middlcptwl, :l\: h·ida3, SW(cntbcr :l'i• ~9GK

Installation
of
Officers
~~:wv~"""'·"~~~~;;7:7'1 Prog.fam is Given !'Social
:.
l Giub Meets at i
'Jd
·
f
ch
·
·
.h
Iii Calendar! Held Wednesday by Club
·; Ritchie Home ~ . Gu I
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LEFT FER
'TATER

WANt AD
UfpOitMATIOtt
OIAM.tMU
I

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DIY Mihre l"vllllclfleftl

MIMfY

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C1nnll.ttiMII &amp;

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Pomeroy
Motor Co.

66 CIIEVELLE . , .................... .. $1995
4 door Hardtq, local owner, low mileage car, beige nnish
with malrlling interior, w-s·w, like oow, VS, auto. trans.,
P.S., radio and heater.

u !Mt c.nt DIMwllt .. . ,.Iii Ml

63 CIIEV ROLET . . ..................... $699
Sit)er Si&gt;ort Coupe, VB ongine, 4 speed trans., radio.

t..

62 CHEVY ll . . . . . . ... ... , .. . ....... $699
Hardtop Co141e local owner car. Red finish, standard trans.,

11 CIMI ,., WM'II , .. cenMCIItl. .

IJIMrtlellt.

Utd .en ,.kl wlftlln 1t diYt.
CA.aO Oil TNAN.I &amp; OIITUA.IY
11.M .., II word mt11tmum. 111.
............ Wlnl

ILt•o ADI
,.,...,....., tJc C'*'te " ' ....,..,...

radio.

OPPIC:I HOUII
... 1.a .. l:lt ·•·"'· DalfJ
fall I.M M lt1M JileiH leN,.,

Pomeroy Motor Co.

".......

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Call Pomeroy

Business Services
.'

···~r~~~~~:-~r.~~:~:~
h~lstering

Ropolr. Learn
store old antlqu. '""'"""
and how to t.ullcl your own
modem llwlng room 1ulte

from start

EXPERIENCED

tO finlah. Clou•

DUO BOAT

•• wtU be conducted oM

614-992·2181

Fors.le

ayeftlftg .ach week • .,., a
p~~rlod of 10· w. .ka for men
or women. Small tuition
may be paid on paynMnt
plan, Visit tha first clan

'lOUSE STOONTS ~EAVE \1&amp; K~OW !!

BOA~D »RUI~ER

F15HiMG 8ijf WITH

M-F • '• ••••• '-' ·
Sat.- ----- • - ••

·

Tt4ri:IER

Hacklrwport, Ohto

~par

From the Lorges\ Truek or.
Bull&lt;i&gt;ltl' . ~r To Tho

!Clallesl Hoo~r Coi'O.

·BLAET~NA~ '

. PH. 992-2lf3

' PHONE 66MJ70 .

Wheel Alignment

-GUARANTEEDPHONE '992-2094

•Free Estimates
. • Quality Concrete
. • Certified Strenath

Flying squirrels do not actually fty, they merely glide.
Some squirrels have been
known to glide nearly !50
feet.
CARNIVAL By Dick Turner

• Delivery

• Quick Service
• Finlshinc
• Sand &amp; Gravel
DIAL 992·3284
GOEGLEIN GRAVEL
407 PAGE
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Good Eating

WMPO
INFORMATION
NEWS
presents

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The Almanac

By United Pre0 fDtenJatlonaf
MIIOJ COUNTY, OHIO
TodliY to Fric~Q', SopL 21, lbo
Lena V. Jluion, 11111 lliiUDOU cowt.
Akron, Ohio oH301J
211st
da.1 ~ 1968 with 9~ to
J·ay K. Smith, 1115 PardH A-nn••·
Akron, Oblo, 44301; aDd
follow.
R111H II. Cle._pr, 1211 Wtt&amp;o.
Tbe m0011 II batweeil Ill new
Avt-nue. ~Oillo M3011, .

...

J)baH and flrll

v.:Jw.m B. t..l1du, et ••··
Dt (eDdantl.

Keeping Meigs
Gallic ond
Meson Area
lnfo~med As
Well As

fiiUUr•

The IIIOl'lllua star Ia Wan
Tbe ovenlntl,star• are v....a
and Saturn.

On thll daJ In hlitor7:
In 182~. In Elf8land. George

Sjopbtnoon OIJOrated lbo llrll
locomotive to haul a p u traln.
fn 1939, after 19 diQ'o ~
reollllng heavy air rolda and an

·-od

artillery

- - . lbo

Eniertcined
A

tllouihl for tbe dfiy-

Ainerlcin

~ .• ~llllam

ilfauldla, pnee laid: "Look 11110
heroic cWindorr ~ Waroaw ID lnfonlrynwl'l IIJOI lind W
lUI
to 1he N!lzli.
In . 1940, GOrma.v' llal1 and and ru tell hoW mum - ""'
Jepan lllned • 10-yeit mutual
lid pact. . .
.
AU true crabs run or i!tove
b · 1961, !IYtta brOke , aW., slde.wlse. That Is, .au er~a
(r!Nh the utdt*l Arab Repillle In which the tall Ia alwaya
ln a nv&lt;!lt lfd bi army Ollleero. tucked I o rw a r d and never
used for 'htimmlllg,

HOBSTETTER
REALtY

.

AND

lllowancel"

LI!OAL NOTICI
IN TMI COMMON PLIAI COUitT Ofl

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to think bi1, Dad, but lt'e not

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POmeroy I'

.

5.55

FOUND I

,.

II' 50METI-ll~' IS l!&gt;UC3GIN'

USED ·
CHRI~ 'CRAF.T OUT·

without chart• or obllga·

HELP WANTED

~rtrll..

NOW OUISPLAY ·

tlort. for Information Wflt.

IIROWNING 12 gauge full cboke
to Knott• Upholstarl"f at
onea, 1163 S.nncl A¥a.
&amp;botgun, ventUiated Bighla and
Gallipc~lla, Ohio or Coli
rib; fired only 15 limes, 110
•46-:1917.
scratches or blemishes of llll1
OPEN EVES. 1:00 I' .M.
Card Of Thanks
ldnd; also Wlncbester pump
Rullstete For Sale
I'OMEIIOY, OHIO
WE WISH to extend our thKIWi ""
12 gauge shotgun, modified
to one and all for the kind·
choke, fired IWlce, new; DO POMEROY • IIARRISOrMLLE
I!Gad, one story frame, llll'ee
ness and sympathy extended
scratches or blemlshea. Phone
bedrooma, bath, nice 1o1, full
us during the illness a n d
IJ92.893f, aBk for Wally.
For Rent
For Sale
basement,
Rodney llownJD&amp;',
deal!! of our son and brother.
f.U.8Ic
broker. Phone 111111342.
Carson A. llite. Special thanks FI'R'DSfiF:n GARAGE apart- POODLE PUPPIES, AKC Toy
miniature. $75 and up. Stud
ment on L:ncoln Hill. utilities
to the Martin Funeral Home,
Nl«e
!954 l"'RD FlOO, 8 cyllnder,
service
and grooming. Phooe
paid
;
adults
only.
Phone
992Athens Hospital, family and
excellent running condiUon
992-5443.
II 3 If&lt;
3489
6-19-tfc
friends, pallbearers; t h 0 s e
and tires, Phone 1192-2740.
Business S.rvlces
sending food and floral offer9-~tc
AKC
Golden
Retriever
puppies.
'fRAILER
LOTS,
Bob's
Mobile
CURTISS
breeding servloe ol
ings, and everyone who help.
521 Asb St., Middleport. 9IJ.
Court,
Syr&lt;lCUSe,
Ohio
on
State
21
different
breeds, eattle aired in any way.
5443.
8-2S-Ifc
Rt
.
124,
Phone
992-2951.
es
or
4
breeds
of 11081 bucb,
1965 VOIJKSWAGEN staUon waR. E. Hlte and Family
8-11-llc
by
callJng
Parker
m=tt, Pogon. square back model, e•·
9-2'7-llc
KENNEBEC Potatoes, Charles
meroy or 667-3251 Coolville.
eellent condition; motor erHllton, Portland.
I-Zt-2Sic
FURNISHED TWO BEDROOM
~
~llcnt condiUon. Clean InNotice
APARTMENT,
Middleport,
side
and
out.
New
Ures. Phone
1 WILL NOT be responsible for
992-9941.
,__
phone 992-3871.
8-9-tfc POTATOES, WATERMELONS,
c. C. IIIWIJI'OIID
any debts contracted by anyphone 8U.2254 Clarence ProfAllCiiiiNBEk .
one other than myself.
fitt, Portland.
8-29-lfc JI'OUR ROOM houlle. bath and
TRAILER SPACE, ready to
Complele Senlee
C. W. CUrfman
hook up, private, plenty of
.....
I
full size baaement, two loll.
Rt. I, Pomeroy. 9-26-3tp
room for children to play. FARM. 321&gt; ACRES, 6 room
Crllt . . . . .
Call lm-21139 daytime, 949house, bath. gas heat, firePhone 99:1-3904.
8-14-tfc
Br I 1, OMt
2951
evenings.
f.~
GUN SHOOT Sunday, Sept. 29,
place, drilled well, good bnlld• l tre
I till. Circle, X. full card, FIRST FLOOR furnished apartJngs. Barn equipped for Grade
No. 6 &amp; 712 shot. prizes ham
A milk. With or without farm
ment , adults, 212 South Flftb
and bacon, at lzaak Walton
equipment. Bowman's Run or
Ave., Middleport, phone 1192Farm. Sponsored by Chester
Forest Run Road, Lee John5435.
9-22-llc
Fire Dept.
9-26-3tp
son, Rt. I, Racine. Phone
9-19-tfc
FOUR ROOM HOUSE, bath1 949-2248.
WEE wash wittle cars wegu- coal furnace, call 742-5113.
Jarly. Self service and auto9-22-llp SIX ROOM HOUSE and three
malic. Mason Car Wash.
lots. call Jacob Turner. Ph.
9-~to
992-3681.
9-:!Uip
~·ouR rooms, bath,
garage,
Phone daytime 992-~903 eveea •• in~-yoa'Jl find our
WILL accept furniture on down
nings 992-3702.
9-211-ltc STEREO RADIO, combination
•~d•icha, &lt;J.iJy apec:i•h,
payment on mobile home.
unil wilh AM &amp; FM radio, 4
pu
are ndly IJOod F•t are
Bring the famll, here on
Dick's Mobile Home Sales, THREE ROOM HOUSE, bath,
speaker soUJJd system, 4:
•oderetely priced, Yov'll
SundDp. T reot them to
five miles south of Ravens·
speed, dual volume control.
our B.-.e•ted Chicken.
like our coffee, tool
phone Sam Arnold. Syraruae,
wood ·~ Rt. 2. Will accept
_
9-25-tfc
beautHul
maple
console.
As992 2360
~ prckup or panel _
on, ,
·
~pa~_ olffor~
lliiir)layment ·~)e· . .; ::"'\!"'::&amp;:r·.--,.-.. - .- · ··;:·.:
.au
m~.l - • , 1-'
I.;:.,,D.I.ULJ!..
IIi[:
· ~211-fu: ,"· · foUate "r Rent') "&lt; 50 x 10 TRAILER. like new,
218 E. Main
Phone 992-997~
l'ooioroy
two bedrooms, 181 Locust St., STEREO-RADIO console, 4
SHOOTING MATCH Sunday,
ta
8:30
P.M.-S..nolay
7:00
ta
7:00
Doily
5:30A.M.
speed intermixed changer, duPomeroy, phone 992-!619.
Sept. 29, 12 to 4. !lamB, ba&lt;·
9-:aute n! volume control. 4 speaker
on, hall of hog. Shotguns onoound system. l&lt;Ively walnut
ly. Ruliand American Legion
finish. Payments of $5 per
For Sale
Business Services
Home.
9-~
Male Help Wanted
month or Nt.l4, &lt;aD 89!-3218.
NEED CASH.. Sell famous
9-IU!e llALF RUNNER beans, Charles Affi CONDmONING RefrigerHlltoo. Portland.
.9-25-24te
ation service. Jack's Refrlg.
BAND EVERY Friday and Sat- Knapp Aerotred Shoes. Full
eraUon, New Haven. hone
urday at Jack's Club on IIBr- or part time. High commisREFINISHED ANTIQUE
882-2079.
4 e ttc
riannville Road off Rt. 7.
MILK
COW,
Montie
Sanders,
sions plus bonus. Complete
FURNITURE
Country music by Gayle Mc- line for men and women,.
Rt. I, ReedsvUie, Phone 667GOOD CONDITION
READY • MIX conorete delivDonald and his Driftm.
31'15.
~c
Equipment furnished free.
3 DRESSERS·· · ·•o. S18.00
ered rtght to your projeet.
9-2$-31c Write to Gordon Rae, District
ROUND OAK TABLE · I'S.OO
Fast and easy. Free esti14 HEAD of cattle, 11 00111, 7
HALL TREE WITH
Sales Mgr., 3584 Darbyshire
SEAT &amp; MIRROR ••• ·1'5.00
mates. Phone 99Z-3284, GoegBELEN'S Beauty Shop penna- Drive, Columbus, Ohio 43221.
to freshen early spring, MarSECRETARY DESK. -$50.00
ieln Ready - Mix Co., Middle1101!1 wave special Sepl. ll6
vin Stone, RuUand, Oblo
~tc
MAHOGANY DROP
port,
Ohio.
I SO tfc
thrnugh Oct. 5. Regular $15
9-:M-3tc
LEAF TABLE ••••• $60.00
for $12.50. $1.2.50 for $10, $10
LOVE SEAT
for $11.50. Pbone 992-28911 ask
APARTMENT HOUSE, 4 room BUDGET PRICE furniture on
BJYants
Budget
Shop
Our third ftoor budget obop.
for Helen or Judy.
9-~
apartment upstairs, ti r o om
Hut To Stiffler'• Store
Middle Aged Man
Baker Furniture, Middleport,
apartment down. Nice toea·
108 W. Moln
Pomeroy
To Work On
Old4.
T 2S tre
RUMMAGE SALE, Friday and
lion, Middleport. Pbane lmSaturday, 9 am to 5 pm, Jn
Poultry Farm
5435.
9-27-tfc
FARM. Approximately 175 aeSEWING MACIIINES, repair
Elberfeld building n..t 1o
res, two story house, bam.
Paid Vocation,
servl~. all makes. WY !L&amp;Z In Pomeroy, Sponsored
etc., all buildings Jn poor '!'- TON Ford stake bed truck,
Good Wages, Plus Bonus
2284.
The Fabric Shop, Pomby Ladles Auxiliary ol the
$200. Phone IMt-2'101. 9-27-3te
condition, located In RuUand
House Available
eroy.
Authorbed Singer Sales
Bashan Fire Depl. 9-25-sti:
township, Meigs County, call
Apply In P•non
and
Service. We Sharpen
Middleport 992-2881 after I PALOMINO MARE, can be reLancaster
Scissors.
:1-29-lfe
l"'R TRAD~ash for angistered. f200. Phone 99'UOIJ6.
p.m.
9-U-IIe
Poultry Farm
tiques. William Hamm. Mid9-27-«c
CIGARETTE vending maeblnes
dleport.
~
SAVE BIG. Do your own n1i
and service. ABC EnterjJrlael.
and upholstery cleaning with STEREO RADIO COIISOle, 4W1nted To Buy
Mason, W. Va. Phone~.
WILL DO sewing at home - ANTIQUES, furniture, dl&amp;bes.
speed intermixed changer, duBlue Lustre. Rent electric
"-lie
Eippers, pocket.&lt;. pegging, mlscellaneouo. 1\frs. Howard
al VOIUJne cOntrol. 4 - lpeaker
sbampooer. Baker Furniture.
hemming, alt~atlons . etc. Cecil, 1100 W. Main St., Pomesound system, lovely walnut
W3-6lc
Mrs. Freddie Thabet. Mason, 'ffiJ.
Insurance
finlllt. Paymentl of $1.25 per
14-lfc
Plmne 773-5651.
4-30-tfc
week
or
$79.35.
Call
992-3218.
AUTOMOBILE
tnsuran~ beel
:JI62 XL JI'ORD convertible,
9-27-«c
•.an~lled? Loot your OIM!I'It·
good shape. Five new tln!s.
For Sale or Trade
liEPAffi. REFINISH, recondior's license? can 992-29M.
Call
992-5934.
H4-6lc
tion goll clubs. Jobn Tealord. l9ti7 INTERNATIONAL Truck,
I II Ue
STEREO RADIO, a&gt;mblnation
9-2t-30tp 4 speed, '10 ton, 1964 Chevrolet :961 ZIG ZAG console HWing
unit, with AM &amp; FM radio ;
1987 Chrysler New Yorker. air
twin speaken, daal volume
machine. This maeblne mates
C&lt;llldltionod, power steering,
HAM SHOOT. Racine Gun Club.
control. Modern maple maple,
buttonholes, darns, emb., moQUICK QUIZ
Sunday, Sept. 29. from I p.m. power brakes, 196'1 Mustang,
Balan~ $98.11! or $8 p e r
r.ograms. many fancy cJe..
I cyl. 3 opeed, 1914 Buick, 4
lo 5 p.m. 12-16-20 guage.
signs. Take over payments of · month. can 9JI2.3Z18. t-Z'l-ltc
Q-How dld "Hobson's
dooo' automatic. power steerHams, Bacon. Half of HOI!.
15
per
month
or
pay
balance
choice" come to mean: no
Off Route 114 on Bashan Rd . Ing, power brakes, linaneing
choice al am
due $41.22. W'lll dl!&lt;oomt for
Real Estate For Sale
avallahle. Pbone 911US47 af.
A-The orilllnal Hob a on
cash. Call 9112-2838. , _ _
!I-J6.3k:
fer I pm Pirone 99U748.
was a .hostler in England.
When ridero came to this
9-:M-Ifc STEREO RADIO combination,
BACK HOE and DoZer Servlu.
stable to rent hones, be In·
pond, basewnt. water Jtne.
lovely walnut llnilb, 4-&lt;Ipeed
slsted that they take the next
Pets For Sale
,.p~~c tank. R. W. Cowllery,
hOrae In tum, never allowing
BSR automatic changer, pay
a
hone to be ridden out of
Long Bottom. Ohio. 9-27-30tc "CHNAUZERS, Cockers, Pood15 per month or balance due
les and Westies 'White Scotrotation
• .So "Hoblon's
GEO.
IIOIIS'I'B'I'1'
11rt1oer
$68.441. Call 992-2836. 9-IUI&lt;!
eholce," in effect, meant no
ties', also breeding otock.
POMEROY
I
111C1D1
irame,
lost
Barkaroo Kennels, Coolville, JUST TAKEN IN, 11181 ttereo
sllower, balemenl, caaveolenL choice at ·an.
LOST. ""' male hound dogs 1
0. 45122.
8-18-IOte AM &amp; F¥ radi&lt;I conoole, big
Altlng . . . . .
Q-Whlch is the Mtion's
'
Blao Tick and I Brenlie' Plott
lo.-gest-tount~
in arto7
4..peed automaUc cium&amp;er, MIDDLEPORT - 7 111C1D1 bome,
wJtb rllain conar. Reward.
A-San
Bernardino
County.
bath, 181 furnace, full beNFor S.le
lovely walnut finllb. 'l'al&lt;e
Smile oo small boy's face.
CaiU., with an area of 20,131
FALL CLEARANCE ON ALUM- over payments of $11Jl per
- · nklo COl'Jiel' lot out ol square miles.
Phone 9-26-3te
llilh •ater, tlf,OOI.OO INUM FISHING BOATS, 10,
month or pay balance due
Q-lto Christian art, what
81
ACBII:II - 1 .,om.., 4 bed12, 13 foot. Kingsbury Boat $102.71. Will dileount for &lt;alb·.
dot&amp;
1/ie ~ !fi'IIDO!izt7
For bnt
1'001111, l ~ batba, full .....
s.Ies. on County Road 18, Call 99'1-2836.
9-2Uie
A.....:'rhe Holy Spirit.'
ruRNISHED and unlurnl•hed
ment, 2nd boule, bu I rcioma;
pne mile west of Rt. ~. phime
1
•partments. Close to school.
2
baml, ~ mwdl!!l
ti9U258.
9-J.5.14te GREEN beans and pepper~,
.Pbone !ln-5434.
10-18-tfe.
road. ...ll!ll.Of" .
21 FOOf cabin cruiser, 1011 ~p
bring container, pick your
For,'le"'
511.;-·~i~J··.
-~j)R ~ TI$AFOIIIl
\ .•
gra;Y morjnc moiof;· sleeflr' own. $2 husbel. Joba Cleel, ·, ¥SOCIA'uUiillel
• ,,,
tfiAILEII SI'Aqi,
1966 CADILLAC - ~ Doolx. Read, ship to shore, nl!l'
Porlland, Phone lf31246. one
avail.: b!e. InqUire lii6 MulberIYIAallll:
.tlle.
Phone 992-2118, ·
ning water, Pirone I!J.243l. .
half mile .below RaYeiWwaOd
r. :- ftr r 3 o.-: 5 p.m. Write P.
'·
11
'
.
9-21-ac
Ferry.
Ill . .
0 o,. 42-j Pomeroy. ~29-llc
, ,9--274te

htllltor

.
lr PHIL PASl'oiltf.;
BAf.I· BS
.

. Befote
to have.

·'l':!N:ID ,

defernrJJie(l
wyrd in a ..
.be sur•

,

........

DAT'STHE

LAST

THING
WE'D DO~

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U, t'rido.Y,

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A ttfTLE 'HOMEWORK''
.

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LEFT FER
'TATER

WANt AD
UfpOitMATIOtt
OIAM.tMU
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Pomeroy
Motor Co.

66 CIIEVELLE . , .................... .. $1995
4 door Hardtq, local owner, low mileage car, beige nnish
with malrlling interior, w-s·w, like oow, VS, auto. trans.,
P.S., radio and heater.

u !Mt c.nt DIMwllt .. . ,.Iii Ml

63 CIIEV ROLET . . ..................... $699
Sit)er Si&gt;ort Coupe, VB ongine, 4 speed trans., radio.

t..

62 CHEVY ll . . . . . . ... ... , .. . ....... $699
Hardtop Co141e local owner car. Red finish, standard trans.,

11 CIMI ,., WM'II , .. cenMCIItl. .

IJIMrtlellt.

Utd .en ,.kl wlftlln 1t diYt.
CA.aO Oil TNAN.I &amp; OIITUA.IY
11.M .., II word mt11tmum. 111.
............ Wlnl

ILt•o ADI
,.,...,....., tJc C'*'te " ' ....,..,...

radio.

OPPIC:I HOUII
... 1.a .. l:lt ·•·"'· DalfJ
fall I.M M lt1M JileiH leN,.,

Pomeroy Motor Co.

".......

~.
Call Pomeroy

Business Services
.'

···~r~~~~~:-~r.~~:~:~
h~lstering

Ropolr. Learn
store old antlqu. '""'"""
and how to t.ullcl your own
modem llwlng room 1ulte

from start

EXPERIENCED

tO finlah. Clou•

DUO BOAT

•• wtU be conducted oM

614-992·2181

Fors.le

ayeftlftg .ach week • .,., a
p~~rlod of 10· w. .ka for men
or women. Small tuition
may be paid on paynMnt
plan, Visit tha first clan

'lOUSE STOONTS ~EAVE \1&amp; K~OW !!

BOA~D »RUI~ER

F15HiMG 8ijf WITH

M-F • '• ••••• '-' ·
Sat.- ----- • - ••

·

Tt4ri:IER

Hacklrwport, Ohto

~par

From the Lorges\ Truek or.
Bull&lt;i&gt;ltl' . ~r To Tho

!Clallesl Hoo~r Coi'O.

·BLAET~NA~ '

. PH. 992-2lf3

' PHONE 66MJ70 .

Wheel Alignment

-GUARANTEEDPHONE '992-2094

•Free Estimates
. • Quality Concrete
. • Certified Strenath

Flying squirrels do not actually fty, they merely glide.
Some squirrels have been
known to glide nearly !50
feet.
CARNIVAL By Dick Turner

• Delivery

• Quick Service
• Finlshinc
• Sand &amp; Gravel
DIAL 992·3284
GOEGLEIN GRAVEL
407 PAGE
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Good Eating

WMPO
INFORMATION
NEWS
presents

tqC!L.,!E.PQR~
. lAitY; '

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,.

.,

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AJ s
7!50 ·A!M.
12 NoON

.

4:30 P.M.

The Almanac

By United Pre0 fDtenJatlonaf
MIIOJ COUNTY, OHIO
TodliY to Fric~Q', SopL 21, lbo
Lena V. Jluion, 11111 lliiUDOU cowt.
Akron, Ohio oH301J
211st
da.1 ~ 1968 with 9~ to
J·ay K. Smith, 1115 PardH A-nn••·
Akron, Oblo, 44301; aDd
follow.
R111H II. Cle._pr, 1211 Wtt&amp;o.
Tbe m0011 II batweeil Ill new
Avt-nue. ~Oillo M3011, .

...

J)baH and flrll

v.:Jw.m B. t..l1du, et ••··
Dt (eDdantl.

Keeping Meigs
Gallic ond
Meson Area
lnfo~med As
Well As

fiiUUr•

The IIIOl'lllua star Ia Wan
Tbe ovenlntl,star• are v....a
and Saturn.

On thll daJ In hlitor7:
In 182~. In Elf8land. George

Sjopbtnoon OIJOrated lbo llrll
locomotive to haul a p u traln.
fn 1939, after 19 diQ'o ~
reollllng heavy air rolda and an

·-od

artillery

- - . lbo

Eniertcined
A

tllouihl for tbe dfiy-

Ainerlcin

~ .• ~llllam

ilfauldla, pnee laid: "Look 11110
heroic cWindorr ~ Waroaw ID lnfonlrynwl'l IIJOI lind W
lUI
to 1he N!lzli.
In . 1940, GOrma.v' llal1 and and ru tell hoW mum - ""'
Jepan lllned • 10-yeit mutual
lid pact. . .
.
AU true crabs run or i!tove
b · 1961, !IYtta brOke , aW., slde.wlse. That Is, .au er~a
(r!Nh the utdt*l Arab Repillle In which the tall Ia alwaya
ln a nv&lt;!lt lfd bi army Ollleero. tucked I o rw a r d and never
used for 'htimmlllg,

HOBSTETTER
REALtY

.

AND

lllowancel"

LI!OAL NOTICI
IN TMI COMMON PLIAI COUitT Ofl

''

3 p;M,

to think bi1, Dad, but lt'e not

"I

---

all

POmeroy I'

.

5.55

FOUND I

,.

II' 50METI-ll~' IS l!&gt;UC3GIN'

USED ·
CHRI~ 'CRAF.T OUT·

without chart• or obllga·

HELP WANTED

~rtrll..

NOW OUISPLAY ·

tlort. for Information Wflt.

IIROWNING 12 gauge full cboke
to Knott• Upholstarl"f at
onea, 1163 S.nncl A¥a.
&amp;botgun, ventUiated Bighla and
Gallipc~lla, Ohio or Coli
rib; fired only 15 limes, 110
•46-:1917.
scratches or blemishes of llll1
OPEN EVES. 1:00 I' .M.
Card Of Thanks
ldnd; also Wlncbester pump
Rullstete For Sale
I'OMEIIOY, OHIO
WE WISH to extend our thKIWi ""
12 gauge shotgun, modified
to one and all for the kind·
choke, fired IWlce, new; DO POMEROY • IIARRISOrMLLE
I!Gad, one story frame, llll'ee
ness and sympathy extended
scratches or blemlshea. Phone
bedrooma, bath, nice 1o1, full
us during the illness a n d
IJ92.893f, aBk for Wally.
For Rent
For Sale
basement,
Rodney llownJD&amp;',
deal!! of our son and brother.
f.U.8Ic
broker. Phone 111111342.
Carson A. llite. Special thanks FI'R'DSfiF:n GARAGE apart- POODLE PUPPIES, AKC Toy
miniature. $75 and up. Stud
ment on L:ncoln Hill. utilities
to the Martin Funeral Home,
Nl«e
!954 l"'RD FlOO, 8 cyllnder,
service
and grooming. Phooe
paid
;
adults
only.
Phone
992Athens Hospital, family and
excellent running condiUon
992-5443.
II 3 If&lt;
3489
6-19-tfc
friends, pallbearers; t h 0 s e
and tires, Phone 1192-2740.
Business S.rvlces
sending food and floral offer9-~tc
AKC
Golden
Retriever
puppies.
'fRAILER
LOTS,
Bob's
Mobile
CURTISS
breeding servloe ol
ings, and everyone who help.
521 Asb St., Middleport. 9IJ.
Court,
Syr&lt;lCUSe,
Ohio
on
State
21
different
breeds, eattle aired in any way.
5443.
8-2S-Ifc
Rt
.
124,
Phone
992-2951.
es
or
4
breeds
of 11081 bucb,
1965 VOIJKSWAGEN staUon waR. E. Hlte and Family
8-11-llc
by
callJng
Parker
m=tt, Pogon. square back model, e•·
9-2'7-llc
KENNEBEC Potatoes, Charles
meroy or 667-3251 Coolville.
eellent condition; motor erHllton, Portland.
I-Zt-2Sic
FURNISHED TWO BEDROOM
~
~llcnt condiUon. Clean InNotice
APARTMENT,
Middleport,
side
and
out.
New
Ures. Phone
1 WILL NOT be responsible for
992-9941.
,__
phone 992-3871.
8-9-tfc POTATOES, WATERMELONS,
c. C. IIIWIJI'OIID
any debts contracted by anyphone 8U.2254 Clarence ProfAllCiiiiNBEk .
one other than myself.
fitt, Portland.
8-29-lfc JI'OUR ROOM houlle. bath and
TRAILER SPACE, ready to
Complele Senlee
C. W. CUrfman
hook up, private, plenty of
.....
I
full size baaement, two loll.
Rt. I, Pomeroy. 9-26-3tp
room for children to play. FARM. 321&gt; ACRES, 6 room
Crllt . . . . .
Call lm-21139 daytime, 949house, bath. gas heat, firePhone 99:1-3904.
8-14-tfc
Br I 1, OMt
2951
evenings.
f.~
GUN SHOOT Sunday, Sept. 29,
place, drilled well, good bnlld• l tre
I till. Circle, X. full card, FIRST FLOOR furnished apartJngs. Barn equipped for Grade
No. 6 &amp; 712 shot. prizes ham
A milk. With or without farm
ment , adults, 212 South Flftb
and bacon, at lzaak Walton
equipment. Bowman's Run or
Ave., Middleport, phone 1192Farm. Sponsored by Chester
Forest Run Road, Lee John5435.
9-22-llc
Fire Dept.
9-26-3tp
son, Rt. I, Racine. Phone
9-19-tfc
FOUR ROOM HOUSE, bath1 949-2248.
WEE wash wittle cars wegu- coal furnace, call 742-5113.
Jarly. Self service and auto9-22-llp SIX ROOM HOUSE and three
malic. Mason Car Wash.
lots. call Jacob Turner. Ph.
9-~to
992-3681.
9-:!Uip
~·ouR rooms, bath,
garage,
Phone daytime 992-~903 eveea •• in~-yoa'Jl find our
WILL accept furniture on down
nings 992-3702.
9-211-ltc STEREO RADIO, combination
•~d•icha, &lt;J.iJy apec:i•h,
payment on mobile home.
unil wilh AM &amp; FM radio, 4
pu
are ndly IJOod F•t are
Bring the famll, here on
Dick's Mobile Home Sales, THREE ROOM HOUSE, bath,
speaker soUJJd system, 4:
•oderetely priced, Yov'll
SundDp. T reot them to
five miles south of Ravens·
speed, dual volume control.
our B.-.e•ted Chicken.
like our coffee, tool
phone Sam Arnold. Syraruae,
wood ·~ Rt. 2. Will accept
_
9-25-tfc
beautHul
maple
console.
As992 2360
~ prckup or panel _
on, ,
·
~pa~_ olffor~
lliiir)layment ·~)e· . .; ::"'\!"'::&amp;:r·.--,.-.. - .- · ··;:·.:
.au
m~.l - • , 1-'
I.;:.,,D.I.ULJ!..
IIi[:
· ~211-fu: ,"· · foUate "r Rent') "&lt; 50 x 10 TRAILER. like new,
218 E. Main
Phone 992-997~
l'ooioroy
two bedrooms, 181 Locust St., STEREO-RADIO console, 4
SHOOTING MATCH Sunday,
ta
8:30
P.M.-S..nolay
7:00
ta
7:00
Doily
5:30A.M.
speed intermixed changer, duPomeroy, phone 992-!619.
Sept. 29, 12 to 4. !lamB, ba&lt;·
9-:aute n! volume control. 4 speaker
on, hall of hog. Shotguns onoound system. l&lt;Ively walnut
ly. Ruliand American Legion
finish. Payments of $5 per
For Sale
Business Services
Home.
9-~
Male Help Wanted
month or Nt.l4, &lt;aD 89!-3218.
NEED CASH.. Sell famous
9-IU!e llALF RUNNER beans, Charles Affi CONDmONING RefrigerHlltoo. Portland.
.9-25-24te
ation service. Jack's Refrlg.
BAND EVERY Friday and Sat- Knapp Aerotred Shoes. Full
eraUon, New Haven. hone
urday at Jack's Club on IIBr- or part time. High commisREFINISHED ANTIQUE
882-2079.
4 e ttc
riannville Road off Rt. 7.
MILK
COW,
Montie
Sanders,
sions plus bonus. Complete
FURNITURE
Country music by Gayle Mc- line for men and women,.
Rt. I, ReedsvUie, Phone 667GOOD CONDITION
READY • MIX conorete delivDonald and his Driftm.
31'15.
~c
Equipment furnished free.
3 DRESSERS·· · ·•o. S18.00
ered rtght to your projeet.
9-2$-31c Write to Gordon Rae, District
ROUND OAK TABLE · I'S.OO
Fast and easy. Free esti14 HEAD of cattle, 11 00111, 7
HALL TREE WITH
Sales Mgr., 3584 Darbyshire
SEAT &amp; MIRROR ••• ·1'5.00
mates. Phone 99Z-3284, GoegBELEN'S Beauty Shop penna- Drive, Columbus, Ohio 43221.
to freshen early spring, MarSECRETARY DESK. -$50.00
ieln Ready - Mix Co., Middle1101!1 wave special Sepl. ll6
vin Stone, RuUand, Oblo
~tc
MAHOGANY DROP
port,
Ohio.
I SO tfc
thrnugh Oct. 5. Regular $15
9-:M-3tc
LEAF TABLE ••••• $60.00
for $12.50. $1.2.50 for $10, $10
LOVE SEAT
for $11.50. Pbone 992-28911 ask
APARTMENT HOUSE, 4 room BUDGET PRICE furniture on
BJYants
Budget
Shop
Our third ftoor budget obop.
for Helen or Judy.
9-~
apartment upstairs, ti r o om
Hut To Stiffler'• Store
Middle Aged Man
Baker Furniture, Middleport,
apartment down. Nice toea·
108 W. Moln
Pomeroy
To Work On
Old4.
T 2S tre
RUMMAGE SALE, Friday and
lion, Middleport. Pbane lmSaturday, 9 am to 5 pm, Jn
Poultry Farm
5435.
9-27-tfc
FARM. Approximately 175 aeSEWING MACIIINES, repair
Elberfeld building n..t 1o
res, two story house, bam.
Paid Vocation,
servl~. all makes. WY !L&amp;Z In Pomeroy, Sponsored
etc., all buildings Jn poor '!'- TON Ford stake bed truck,
Good Wages, Plus Bonus
2284.
The Fabric Shop, Pomby Ladles Auxiliary ol the
$200. Phone IMt-2'101. 9-27-3te
condition, located In RuUand
House Available
eroy.
Authorbed Singer Sales
Bashan Fire Depl. 9-25-sti:
township, Meigs County, call
Apply In P•non
and
Service. We Sharpen
Middleport 992-2881 after I PALOMINO MARE, can be reLancaster
Scissors.
:1-29-lfe
l"'R TRAD~ash for angistered. f200. Phone 99'UOIJ6.
p.m.
9-U-IIe
Poultry Farm
tiques. William Hamm. Mid9-27-«c
CIGARETTE vending maeblnes
dleport.
~
SAVE BIG. Do your own n1i
and service. ABC EnterjJrlael.
and upholstery cleaning with STEREO RADIO COIISOle, 4W1nted To Buy
Mason, W. Va. Phone~.
WILL DO sewing at home - ANTIQUES, furniture, dl&amp;bes.
speed intermixed changer, duBlue Lustre. Rent electric
"-lie
Eippers, pocket.&lt;. pegging, mlscellaneouo. 1\frs. Howard
al VOIUJne cOntrol. 4 - lpeaker
sbampooer. Baker Furniture.
hemming, alt~atlons . etc. Cecil, 1100 W. Main St., Pomesound system, lovely walnut
W3-6lc
Mrs. Freddie Thabet. Mason, 'ffiJ.
Insurance
finlllt. Paymentl of $1.25 per
14-lfc
Plmne 773-5651.
4-30-tfc
week
or
$79.35.
Call
992-3218.
AUTOMOBILE
tnsuran~ beel
:JI62 XL JI'ORD convertible,
9-27-«c
•.an~lled? Loot your OIM!I'It·
good shape. Five new tln!s.
For Sale or Trade
liEPAffi. REFINISH, recondior's license? can 992-29M.
Call
992-5934.
H4-6lc
tion goll clubs. Jobn Tealord. l9ti7 INTERNATIONAL Truck,
I II Ue
STEREO RADIO, a&gt;mblnation
9-2t-30tp 4 speed, '10 ton, 1964 Chevrolet :961 ZIG ZAG console HWing
unit, with AM &amp; FM radio ;
1987 Chrysler New Yorker. air
twin speaken, daal volume
machine. This maeblne mates
C&lt;llldltionod, power steering,
HAM SHOOT. Racine Gun Club.
control. Modern maple maple,
buttonholes, darns, emb., moQUICK QUIZ
Sunday, Sept. 29. from I p.m. power brakes, 196'1 Mustang,
Balan~ $98.11! or $8 p e r
r.ograms. many fancy cJe..
I cyl. 3 opeed, 1914 Buick, 4
lo 5 p.m. 12-16-20 guage.
signs. Take over payments of · month. can 9JI2.3Z18. t-Z'l-ltc
Q-How dld "Hobson's
dooo' automatic. power steerHams, Bacon. Half of HOI!.
15
per
month
or
pay
balance
choice" come to mean: no
Off Route 114 on Bashan Rd . Ing, power brakes, linaneing
choice al am
due $41.22. W'lll dl!&lt;oomt for
Real Estate For Sale
avallahle. Pbone 911US47 af.
A-The orilllnal Hob a on
cash. Call 9112-2838. , _ _
!I-J6.3k:
fer I pm Pirone 99U748.
was a .hostler in England.
When ridero came to this
9-:M-Ifc STEREO RADIO combination,
BACK HOE and DoZer Servlu.
stable to rent hones, be In·
pond, basewnt. water Jtne.
lovely walnut llnilb, 4-&lt;Ipeed
slsted that they take the next
Pets For Sale
,.p~~c tank. R. W. Cowllery,
hOrae In tum, never allowing
BSR automatic changer, pay
a
hone to be ridden out of
Long Bottom. Ohio. 9-27-30tc "CHNAUZERS, Cockers, Pood15 per month or balance due
les and Westies 'White Scotrotation
• .So "Hoblon's
GEO.
IIOIIS'I'B'I'1'
11rt1oer
$68.441. Call 992-2836. 9-IUI&lt;!
eholce," in effect, meant no
ties', also breeding otock.
POMEROY
I
111C1D1
irame,
lost
Barkaroo Kennels, Coolville, JUST TAKEN IN, 11181 ttereo
sllower, balemenl, caaveolenL choice at ·an.
LOST. ""' male hound dogs 1
0. 45122.
8-18-IOte AM &amp; F¥ radi&lt;I conoole, big
Altlng . . . . .
Q-Whlch is the Mtion's
'
Blao Tick and I Brenlie' Plott
lo.-gest-tount~
in arto7
4..peed automaUc cium&amp;er, MIDDLEPORT - 7 111C1D1 bome,
wJtb rllain conar. Reward.
A-San
Bernardino
County.
bath, 181 furnace, full beNFor S.le
lovely walnut finllb. 'l'al&lt;e
Smile oo small boy's face.
CaiU., with an area of 20,131
FALL CLEARANCE ON ALUM- over payments of $11Jl per
- · nklo COl'Jiel' lot out ol square miles.
Phone 9-26-3te
llilh •ater, tlf,OOI.OO INUM FISHING BOATS, 10,
month or pay balance due
Q-lto Christian art, what
81
ACBII:II - 1 .,om.., 4 bed12, 13 foot. Kingsbury Boat $102.71. Will dileount for &lt;alb·.
dot&amp;
1/ie ~ !fi'IIDO!izt7
For bnt
1'001111, l ~ batba, full .....
s.Ies. on County Road 18, Call 99'1-2836.
9-2Uie
A.....:'rhe Holy Spirit.'
ruRNISHED and unlurnl•hed
ment, 2nd boule, bu I rcioma;
pne mile west of Rt. ~. phime
1
•partments. Close to school.
2
baml, ~ mwdl!!l
ti9U258.
9-J.5.14te GREEN beans and pepper~,
.Pbone !ln-5434.
10-18-tfe.
road. ...ll!ll.Of" .
21 FOOf cabin cruiser, 1011 ~p
bring container, pick your
For,'le"'
511.;-·~i~J··.
-~j)R ~ TI$AFOIIIl
\ .•
gra;Y morjnc moiof;· sleeflr' own. $2 husbel. Joba Cleel, ·, ¥SOCIA'uUiillel
• ,,,
tfiAILEII SI'Aqi,
1966 CADILLAC - ~ Doolx. Read, ship to shore, nl!l'
Porlland, Phone lf31246. one
avail.: b!e. InqUire lii6 MulberIYIAallll:
.tlle.
Phone 992-2118, ·
ning water, Pirone I!J.243l. .
half mile .below RaYeiWwaOd
r. :- ftr r 3 o.-: 5 p.m. Write P.
'·
11
'
.
9-21-ac
Ferry.
Ill . .
0 o,. 42-j Pomeroy. ~29-llc
, ,9--274te

htllltor

.
lr PHIL PASl'oiltf.;
BAf.I· BS
.

. Befote
to have.

·'l':!N:ID ,

defernrJJie(l
wyrd in a ..
.be sur•

,

........

DAT'STHE

LAST

THING
WE'D DO~

�.

~·~-~~~&gt;u~~ :·:ll~l, -~··:-~.:~,:"IJ.::::·:·;,.:;o~...:;r~ri=da~,~·,~s.p;·;::•c;.m~bc:·~r~2~7,~1~tl~G;MI!!!!!!"!~~~~

·Balt'8•·~Juitti~g

!Betty RoseJ
t

overcoat with •I
: its own dickey.. . l

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House. Frank Gress, Pomeroy musician, pl~s nightly at the Palmer EDT.
House and urr:toobtedly will do a bit or remiruscif'€ with the Hobstet·

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Debate

RESIDENTS OF THE MEIGS LOCAL School District interested
in business education arc invited to attend a meeting in room 110 at
the Meigs High School in Middleport at 7:30 p. m. Tuesday.
A l1e_£ision is to be made on what coors~s will be offered togeth-er with thl time and evenings the classes wtll meet
Courses offered will be in session for 20 weeks with two, twohour classes each week. A nominal fee will be charged.

(Continued fr'"" Page I)
vote oC 100 nations in the U.N."

A MIDDLEPORT VILLAGE OFF1CI " I. MorDay nightlodged~m­
plalnts against the use of mini-bikes and midget autos on the stdewalks of the community.
Couocil took no action on the matter, but might, if offenses continue. So - a word to the wise•..
THE MEIGS MARAUDEH MASCOT WILL MAKE his initial appearance of the season at the Meigs - Athens game tonight.
This year John Lehew, son of Mr. an:i Mrs. William Lehew of
Pomeroy, will be in the mascot role. He suc,:eeds Bob Jone~,
JOOn will be riding his poey, "Sky nocket," when he makes h1s
pre-game and half-time appearances. John has done his saddle and
bridle in gold to further the maroon and gold (colors of the Marauders) in his mascot role.

GOT YOUR GOLDEN C,\RD

YE1~

It's )'OUrs for the asking, if you're 65 or over and a resident of
I the Meigs Local School District.
The card will entitle you to free admission to any school event
I
I inchxUng football and basketball games this school year.
I
There Is no charge whatsoever involved for the card. Just phone
I the superintendent's office, 992-2153, and te11 secretary Donna Hauck
I that you'd like one of the card s.
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WINTER lS FOR THE VERY YOUNG. Most of us approach it
as we grow older.
I
However, Mrs. Robert Warner of Pomeroy passes on Beulah
I Fenderson Smith's poem which creates a rich image or what winter
J was in our tender years:

1 griml)'

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I Groovy fashion love! Beautiful
I Star Ctleck wool/nylon. wear·
I ina: a matching snap-in dickey.
I And boasting a snuggly pile
~lining. Perfect compani~n for
1every one of your busy days
:now! Two.row buttoning; patch
. ,ackets. Maroon; Blue ·

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45.00 I

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BAHR
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! CLOTHIERS i
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MIDDLEPORT, D.

The ones who call the winter time rorlorn,
Must not have heard a small girl' slaughter ring,
When squirrels frisk about her feet for corn;
When sparrows sway on icy boughs and sing,
A paean of praise to her who gave them bread,
Nor have they watclled a snowman slowly rise
From drifts, to wear a slouch hat on his head.
Then twinkle back at her rrom coal·chip eyes.
They have not seen a sled streak down a hill, .
A blur of scarlet snowsuit Dashing by,
Then watched her siL. entranced and statue-still
ln wonderment that little girls can fly!
AOO they, who think the winter months are bleak,
Have not seen snow-stars melt on Susan's cheek.

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River Gauges
GAUGES - Gallipolis, 12,5
and 12.5 ruming 2 reel of roll.
ers; Pt. Pleasant, 24.62 ; Pomeroy-Mason, 20.98; Hinton, 0.53
stat. ; Kanawha Falls, 2.40 railing· Charleston, 18.27 Calling.
~don, Marmet and Winfield,

are on sill.
NAMES
HEQUESTED
Names of Meigs County serv-

icemen stationed in Vietnam are
a women's club for
Chri stmas packages. Contact
Mrs. J anice Young, Rt. 1, Reedsville, Ohio, or phone Coolville,
667-3462.

needed b)'

MAS.ON

DRIVE· IN

TONIGHT, SATURDAY
AND SUNDAY

SEPT. 27- 28 - 29

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Can you tell me of a handier
way to keep a close check
on your finances?
That is, a handier way than having a personal or family checking account herewith handy checkbook stubs as a running
record of expenditures; handy canceled
checks that automatically become easy-tofind receipts!
Start checking here NOW!

"VALLEY OF THE DOLLS"
Part) Duke

(Color)
AND
Frank Sinatra
"TONY i(Q.ME"
(Color)

tor

tbe presidency, pr(II)Osed
establishment ol an international military force under U,N,
command to police the world'a
troobled
areas, pardcularly
Vietllam.
"Nowhere would a Urdted
Nations peace-keeping force be
more welcome than in Vietnam
to administer free elections and
verify the withdrawal or foreign
troops," said Humphrey In an
address to members of the
Commonwealth Club or Sun
Francisco.
Later Thursday, Humphrey
received some valuable reinforcements from two strong
advocates of an expanded U.N.
peace-keeping role.
Ball Joins Humphrey
George Hail, a frequent critic
of the administration's Vietnaft'l
policy, resigned Thursday as
ambassador to the U.N. to join
the Ilumphrey campaign as a
foreign policy adviser.
Ball's predecessor at the.
U.N., Arthur J. Goldberg, also
said he would work for the vice
president .. because I profoundly
belie\'e that Hubert Humphrey
is a man of peace and justice"
who "'will take tile necessary
steps to bring the war in
Vietnam to an early and
honorable conclusion."
In Washington, Secretary of
&amp;ate Dean Rusk reacted to the
Humphrey proposal by saying
the
United States
,.would
welcome" a U.N. peacekeeping
force in Vietnam when hostJli.
ties there end.
As Nixon and Hwnphrey
talked of a debate that would
exclude him, Wallace continued
to work in his MontgOmery,
Ala., t4icc in preparation for
a n o t h e r Midwest campaign
swing starting Monday;
Gov.
George Romney of
Michigan, evidently alarmed by
inroads Wallace may be m~ng
in his state, launched a bitter
attack on the former Alabama
governor. Romney called Wallace a "racist" and :'builder or
hate•• whose election would
destroy the nation.
ln other political developments:
Edmund Muskie- The Democratic vice presidential candidate said in Detroit that any
'"mistake" in regard to VIetnam
was made in 1954, not during
the Johnson administration. The
Maine senator said "in 1954 we
probably madr a mistake in not
taking advantage or the Gene-va
Convention to reach a seWement ln Vietnam.
Spiro T. Agnew- The GOP
vice presidential candidates,
who is opposed to capital
punishment, Thursday reversed
an order for the execution of
ttle convicted sla,yer of a police
officer. The Maryland governor
returns to the campaign trail
today with a speech at the
Nationa,l Press Club ln Washington, D.C.

Matched forever

POMEROY
:~WNATIONAL BANK

You 'll both wear your

Keepsake wedding

RUTLAND

rings with everlasling

pride ... never
forgening the most
imponanl day of
your lives.

Memher Federal Reserve System
Member FDIC
LAD'W ' .

!i% paid on Cc•tificates or DepOsit In
Multiples of $1,000.00

to 7:00

FRIDAY

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.......... :.•n.,.
c:;.-.ltWI~

All Accounts Insured Up To $15,000 Utidar
The Fad&lt;&lt;'• I ~it lnsur..,.. Corporation

oees wt what It baa
of aeetng. ,.

day, sayll1t he wanted to free
himself to aid VIce President

Hubert

n.

Humphrey's

debate o! the four~-dd 23nl
General . Assembl,y.
~eech S&lt;:heduled Soon
Ball had been scheduled to
make .the speech in five days,
A Johnson appearance could
draw to the assembly leaders of
the other summit powers.
"1-topef\Jlly a meeting of the
foreign ministers could lead to
a meeting of the heads of state
and government of the' four
major powers," 11lant said in
his aMual report on Ule state of
the world to the assembly.
He said he believes a four
power summit "is needed at the
present time to counteract the
serious setback to the detente in
East.-West relations that has
resulted from recent events •..
despite present adverse circumstances, big power agreement
may be possible."
Diplomats talked of a Johnson
speech because there was doubt
here that the U.S. Senate, now
tied I.!P in a filibuster over the
nomination
of Justice
Abe
Forla:; as chief justice, would
act in time to confirm tile
nomination of BaH' s successor.
Johnson named J.
Russell
Wiggins, Editor or the Washington Post, to succeed Ball.
Speculate On Reasons
Diplomats here t.alked chiefly
of why Ball quiL One of the
ambassador's intimates said
Ball resigned arxi joined Humphrey's campaign In order to
keep
a1ive
his hopes or
becoming secretary of state.
Publicly Ball has denied he
s eeks the office.

Indian

K eepse k e •
fltADITIOH-.L

WI:DOINO ltl, ....

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MONTGOMERY, AlL (UPI}
- Ja-Neen Welch Is a striking,
shapely coal-eyed blonde who
hinted sh'e wants to marry
George c. Wallace. She is part
French, part Cherokee.
Wallace spoke!lmen say she
wanted to put the Indian sign 011
the former governor's presidenlial campaign.
Dick Smith, a Wallace campaign aide, pooh..poohed any
romance between the IOOianapQlis advertising woman and the
third party presidential candl-

'
TillS IS TilE WAY ONE SEcttON of the auditorium looked as resldonts crowded
hlbits In the Pomeroy Jlllllor Hlgll S&lt;:hool j\udltorl\lfll Thureday night to vlow what six eoatnctoro
had to o!fer in the way or new heine conatructlon.

about"""

New housing was the topic and Meigs Courtians were interested I Over 200 resldents· turned out at the Pqrn'roy Junior
High School Thursday night to hear .about fin&amp;Jlclng new homes

through the Fanners Home MrnlnlslrltlOI\.

,

.

Arter hearing abo~t the ftna'nclng plan, t~e poteritlal new
home owners browsed about the auttltorium vieWi11t displays
by sb: h001e building firms.
A,pparently residents were impress with what they saw
and heard because at the cloae of the meeting 59 families or
individlllls had indicated interest in pursuing a loan.

~~~~~~~~!i~(=~~=}i=~~=~=;~~i\??~~;~i~~~;~;~~~?=~=;=~=~:~=~:~:~::~~=::~:t:~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~~=~:t~=~~~~~:~~~~~~~~mt~~t~}?

FHA Homes
(Continued from Page 1)
Uy involved in the partl"'!la ·
loan and · the houolna' ....,.tremonts of that family •.
He pointed out that · F.IJ,A.
does ofler lJouslng 011 JUne term
repayrnent plans, at a low rateof

interest with no down payment.
POrter said that another meet.
1ng will be .called in a weok or
10 days. At tbat time, there will
he derical help 011 hood to pro-·

27 Attractions
Offered in Area

the loan IIR!llcatlons.
After the moalng last nll!lll,
59 famlllas lndlcat.od interest
in proceeding with a loan appllcatloo, and 16 had earlier
signed ouch an interest thraogli
Porter.
Four out..t- building
contractors haCI displays at last
night' a meeting and two ·lqc«J
~ract.ora - Delmar Baum and

Members oC the Tri - Cowlt;y
communily Coocert Aasoclatlon

Richard Hayman's Manhattan
Papa Orchestra, Nov. 1; T he

wiU have An opportunlly to enjoy 27 attractions presented in
30 concert a throughout the area.
Neighboring associations in

Whlt-Lo Singers, Jan. 14; Kyung
Wha Chung, violinist. Feb. 5;
Joeeph Sopher, tenor, March 23. Richard Finlaw - ·were presMARIETTA- Camerata Sing- ent.
Thoae who were unable to at.
ers; Oct. 10; Dorian ~ntet,
tend
last night' 1 meeting, and
Feb. 26; Leonard Pennarlo, pt.
anist. March 20.
·
are interested, shoold - Mr.
LANCASTER - Jean-Paul So- Porter.
villa, pl.anlst, Nov. 3; Colwmus
~mphonY, Jan. 19; Dick S&lt;:hory,
percussion group, March 16.
ZANFSVILLE Columwo
!IY:RPhoiiY, Oct. 17; Lee Luvlsl,
Dec. 8; HAlbert DeCormler Fol~ . Mrs. Ella L. Russell MorSingera, Jan. 28i salvatore A£- ris, a forlner li!Oigs Coon\)'
cardo, vlollnlst, Fob. ZB.
!dent, died Sept. 14 in a Colo-.
IN GALUPOLIS
rado hospital following a long
CONCERTS SCIIEDULED on Ulness.
tho Trl-Cowlty series, which will
9te was bom Sept. 22, 1880,
all be presented at the Gallla in Bracl&gt;tii'Y, lbe daughter of
Academy HIP School on Swt- tho late John and Marc:ella S!nith
day afternoons, are: Aci;llss and Ruaaell, and had taus1tt school
Crofut, Oct. 20i Donald Gramm, in Bra&lt;llu17 and Middleport ·beFeb. 9; Lee Evans Trio, March fore going to Colorado.
9, and the Tipton Trio, April
Mrs. Morris was a residerlt
27.
o1 Pueblo from 1911 until movA complete calendar of area lna' to Canon City, Colo. in 1946; '
ooncerlo, slvlng the exact time Her husband, Clarence ~r:t1,
and place ol eaeh concert, wUI died in 1942, and tl!elr Ruabe mailed to each member with soll Morris, in 1965.
,
his membership card.
9te Is survived ~ two daugh-

Waverly, Portsmouth, Ashland,
Ky., Parkersburg, W.Va., Martetta, Lancaster and Zanesville
have again extended reciprocity
to subscribers to the Trl-Coun-

ty series. Their memberohip
cards will be honored at all or
tho following concerto:
WAVERLY - Whittemore &amp;
Lowe, duo pllllllsls, Oct. 15; Ted
Alan Worth, organist, -Nov. 10i
The Revelers, malo®iu'fet,Feb.

Ella Morris
Dies in West

rei:

bass baritone, Oct. 28i T h e
Mar lowes, Wo pianists, Dee. llj
Tbe Revelers, Jan. 13i Don
Slirley Trio; jazz ensem~le,

Marcb 8.
ASHLAND, KY. William
Warfield, baritone, Nov. 7; Dorian Q.dntet, Feb. 27; NormanLu-

belli Choir, March 25; Tbe Romeros "'artot, guitsrlsts, April
(date to he annoonced).
PARKERSBURG, W. VA, -

ters,

Communists Smashed

Mrs.

Frances

Washington, D. C., and Mra. Hel-

ters, Mlaaea Jane and Ruth Ander- all of Colorado Sprlngo.
their howitzers and fired
9to was a sister of Fisher Rua'4beehlve rounda"-filled with
sell, ol tho late Clarence Grill
tiny darts olmllar to carpet
and Max Russell.
tacks - infll the Commlllllot

SAIGON (UPI)- U.S. Green
Beretl and South Vietnamese
paratroops leveled darl-4lled
artillery and bla- apart

Weather

W-

!Ia!"s:

and tonight, continued cool.
u)gh thlo aftemoon !rom ,tho
mid 60s to tho low 70s. U&gt;w ~
night 40 to 50. Mootly Sllllll'
and lillie change in t,mpera-

today

ture·Saturda,y.

VETERANS MEMORIAL
HOSPrrAL
Admitted - Tbolina Hawley.
&amp;Yracusei Don Gorby, LangiV1lle;

Laara Grant, Vinton.
. Discharged - Kathryn camp..
bell, Allee Russell, Velma
oady, Roy PearBOII, Leona. ~ .

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This Week Save-·
In Our Storewide E9,J 'v/~he .Montft Sale'·
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"GUJ::SS WHO'S CO!o!ING
TO DINNER
(Te&lt;:hnlcolor)
Sidney PoUter, ~encer Tracy

Katharine Hepburn
,
STOOGE: Mllllce in the Palace
COLORCARTOONl Bee! Fore.
and Arter ·
ADMISSION: 85&lt; ood 50c
SIIOW ST&lt;\RTS 7 P.M.

.

Dev11ted To The l;reater Middle Ohio Valley

1,

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Elbjrfefd_~ :·1· ~omer'o. y
.

Use Our'• Free
,, .
·Across ;'frOIII
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t~• sfteet

lntrance•.

Fair CXIIIIIIMied eool lhrouKh ·
&amp;lndoJ 60s nor1li
to 70s !IOiitll.

':;:;'!1

Monday. !Ugh

THREE SECTIONS

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 19¢8

POMEROY-MIDDWORT

PRICE 10 CENtS

CAWP()US..PT. PLEASANT

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WUilam Wyinl,

54, Racine, accused ot first de
gree murder in the Augast 1:

ahotian sleylng of li

Par~en

burg man, pleaded not guilt
arratsned in Meigs CouD
ty Common Pleas Court Satur·
lillY morning.
Wyant, charged with shoollni
!dlchael Lee ~ 28, Parkerlburg, after Dotson and foor
&lt;ODipllllons had gone flllhe Wyant residence In Racine, WBJ
I'IPI'BBented by Attorney James
O'Brian.
Jadge Bacon c:ontlnued tho
bond oet earlier by Count;r Court
Jlulp Frank w. POrter, Jr.

a

cUing

THESE nvE GmLS WERB SEf\.~.
on .
poowt u.n. Hllbv on tho
q-n's Doat of tho Wahama lligll SCbool HOI!IocOiiilne Parade Friday. The thtle oenipr candidates and the junior and sophomore atte1Xlart1· rode on the, effective Quat which wu not in the
float competition ot the parade.

,Mir.Ctiw

Mrs. Dale Roach 0C New Jlaven:
Members ~ the court were
Mary ' Archer, daughter ot Mr.
and Mrs. WOllam V. Archer,

Lelcq1. and Betty Y o a n g,
daughter o1 ·wntiam Young,
New Haven, seniors; ~err)'
Workman, junior, and Linda
Holbrook, sophomore, attendants.

New Otlicer8 Named
By Members of JAC
SHARON ROACH

PT. PLEASANT -

Annual Tag Day
....,.·-Sa"-__Ja
· y' .
N''CAt
lUru

c .

".

~s

~tober 15th
·COLUMBUS- Bldsareoched'l!ed to be opened here Oct. U,
llf the Ohio Deportment al Hlgh' ljayo for relocating and lmprovlll&amp; a section o1 Ohio 233 in Gallla and Jack..., &lt;lOUIIIleo. illgh""' Director P. E. Masheter
lfld oatlmat.od cost of tho proIs $210,000.
The J.3...Ue proJect lies beqrean a point one mile oorthwesl
ol the Gallla - Jack0011 coun\1
tiiio ood . a point less than a
D]ile IOUtheasl of tho Callia JJ&lt;kiOII CCJUIIIy line.
The lli'OJect InclUdes widenthe rooctwo.Y to 36 foot, eliminallng tho existing bridge, rals1118 llt'ade and improving allgnlllaniiiHI dr"'-"·
Tho .r..olng with Count;r Rcl
48 wiU aloo be lmprovecL Traldc will be matptaJnec:L

lfc!

nw

Now ofll.

were elected recenUy

· ~~;t

the JAC Club at the LetartGrallt
School.

They are president, K e v J a
~old e. _~•!:!' president, Patlr
·- Wolle; •ecretary, Mar J I y 11

..

Grimm;

To be Opened

took t• · ."d place honor's

CROWNED QUEEN FRIDAY

Itam Reeves, RD, Albany, again
p i - not &amp;Uilt.Y to a charge

Bids

con Mascot at the rear of the vehicle
to the Wahama Homecollling Parade.

ntshl at the game wao iN""'
Roach, dauKhter of Mr, arid

a pNIIlnlilar)' hearing, It

was

THE PEP CWB lloat entry ftlled wllll singing and cheermembers oC tho Wahama HliloS&lt;:hoo]PopClub with the Fa!-

.

.

11110,000. Wyant waa returned to·
tho custody of 9terlll Robert
C. Hartenbach for further eonllnement in jail when he ·.,.. not
able to provide bond.
Ill another arNienment, llfOW·
lng out of tho !ll'and jury activity
last Monday and Wednesday, WU-

of Indecent lliP&gt;ouro. Bond waa
oet at $1,000. .
During lbe oame morning seoslon, where .Prolecnllng Attorlioy llernU'd V, Fultz rO]Ireoented the State, Paul Kuhn. Rt. 2
Racine,
aentenced to a l20 year •Ill in the Oblo Penillinlory for violation of probatloo.

ill~

-;:;::!l:--:;:•:::::::~;;:(.:;:~::::*~::;:;:::=::o:::::=::;;:::;:=::::~.

treasurer,

THE SOI'IIOMORE CLASs VOWEDIIIItlJ-Jijalo-.Jd
"skunk" FederaJ Hocldrw In their aeecmd place fl~tfn. the an11&amp;11 HGmecomlng Parade. A replica of a skunk on the float enr
phasized the message.

Patricll

ldDlDLEPORT - 'llto aimua! Keeter; reporter, Kermelh Bland,
tas diiY or the Meigs Hlgh·Sc:itciol and song leader Is Carol Grimm.
Band baa been set fOI' Saturday, ltandy Paroons closed the meellng by reading a verse of scrtp..
Oct. 5.
Mothera f1 band rMmbera will lUre.
vlolt the wslness houses threugh0111 the diatrid from Tuesday
NO FENDER BENDERS
thraogll Friday to receive conGALLIPOLIS
- No lralflc actrlbutlonl !rom lhooe establishments.
Bend members wUI be in Rutlied, Pomeroy and Middleport all
day Soturday to solidi CWida for
the 11mual drive,

cidents were reported Friday

In Gallipolis. II markodlheclty'o
third c:onsecutlve accident-tree
day. Police have lnvost1811ted 293
aecldentsln the flrlll271 days of
tbe year.
·

11IIS ~NTRY BY THE JUNIOR CLASS wm lrot place llonorl Friday when the annual hom&amp;eoinlng patede or Wahama Hl8b S&lt;:hool moved from New Haven through the towns downriver to
the school Tbe weU-odone

d&lt;~tt featured a moving "Sncq7y'' taken (rom the Charlie Brown comic
strip ll1d "SnoqJy's" doghouse. A football player inside the doghouse apparertly rq1resented the

Wahamo Friday night O!)llooent, Federal Hocki!W.

Gallia Educators Name Dele•uateS
e
To Southeastern Meeting Nov. 1
GALLIPOLIS -

Delegates to are not

education aaapclatlon meetings
were eleeted Frl~ at the Call
meet1ng · of the Gallla Count;y

EdueallOil Aoood.otlon at ·K,yger
Creek High School.
. O.leglltos fll the Southeastern
Ohio Edueallon Aoooc:lallon meet.
l1ii li&lt;n'· 1 at Allltllo are !dlss
Maril.Yn Reese, K,yger Creekj
J14ward Naekamp, N!lrl!\,(iallla;
lllrl, ' Eltz~ ~~: Adela•
.We; Mills Dal!Q' Gluablii'n, lllllwell-Porw; :u.t Jose.llh D. ear-.

-.-stem. . \

Max Haf!ell,'. Haman Trace,
and Ml-0: Ruth T. Georae, North

Gellla,

...,.e lllllled Cleliolatea "-

the Ohio

aPmst

teachera, using
as an example that if he voted

against a bini sanc:tuary to be
paid lor by the sales tu,lt llOOid
not follow that he hales birds.
Hia father, J, !lterman Porter, eandldate r..- state senator,
sald be objeeted fll tho 17 and
.... half mill mlnlmum to partlelpatAO in the state school foondallcin and added if ba
bad there ht 1111Uld n o t
bave BPiotased tho blghly - paid
bJg
prllpor\Y
- ·lowat
tbe '"""
expense
or 1tda area•s
ly.paid propen;y .........
Rep. ·Ralph Welker emphasized tllal· loa ns chairman ol the

cornmtttee or
Elimeation.A:oooct.U... statAO government
'

meot1nr Doe. t-il at Colum!Hia,

Open friday and · Saturday·Nlaht• Until 9

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Generally dear lh the sooth

.

THRU THURSDAY, OCT. 3

Maa~

en Anderson, andtwogranclclall8!l-

or

MEIGS THEATRE

tntint

tmts

Weather

Court
Hears
\,Vyant
In Plea
POMEROY -

cess tl'le vast amount of paper
wor~ whleh wUl be Involved in

Comnwnist attacks today on ranks.
date. ,
Count caoualtlel
guarding the
Miss Welch ••popped up two two ootposts
Cambodian
border
northwest
AI
daybreak,
the defenders
or three times on the campaign
Solgon,
killing
282
guerrillas
!oond
33
bodies
on the barbed
trail and now she's sa.ying all
·
against light losses of their own. wire and 103 outside.
these
things.''
Smith said
The
two
attacks
about
25
Thursday. "The governor knows
miles apart were the latest in a
NOW YOU KNOW
nothing about her."
Harvard Unlveol~ bas the
Wallace headquarters here series against border outpoltl
issued a statement saying Miss oo guerrtlla routes toward nation'a largest acldemlc llbraWelch's remarks were "Cahe, Solgon, whore antl-lnllltratlon ry, !OIIOIIed by Yol!i, the Unipatrols are on tt.elr toughest versity of ntlnola, ColuPibla Ununtrue am calculated to dalvOfSlty; and the University. al
alert
since 1\lay.
mage the candidacy of George
North
Vletnameae
f
o
r
·e
e
a
!dlchiCan.
c. Wallace." Wallace himself
slammed 1,000 mortar and
had no comment.
rocket rounds into tho U.S,
MEIGS GENERAL HOSPri'AL
In The Running
~cial
Forces camp. at. 11Jien
Admltl&lt;ld - Clarence Frali&lt;,
Heports linking Ml ss Welch
ai'KI
Wallace, whose
wife, Ngon as a prelude tO eharglag !i'&amp;Taeuae.
Lurleen, the governor of Ala.. with tear gas Into I!!• outpoal's ' Discharged - Joe WU11011,
Sf.; Ellen Wli8CX10 Solem YatAOs,
bama, died of cancer earlier barbed wire_
UPJ
correspondent
Kate
Pope
Moore,: and EHzabolh WUthis year, appeared Thursday tn
sald
the
Amerl,ean
and
South
several newspapers. Contacted
In Indianapolis, where she runs VIetnamese delE!nders leveled
an antique
shop and an
advertising agency, Miss Welch
said she .. wouldn't mind being
the next Mrs. Wallace," but
·.;
was not at liberty to sa.v
whether they would be married.
Miss Welch, who claimed she
had extrasensory perception,
said u1 predicted I would be
.
.
.
! . .·
there when he was elected
1
president. It came to me in a ·
vision.
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~a NO. 35

PORTSMOUTH- AmlnFeres,

l .,.,
un
0r
• ..,

+

·. 32 PAGES

8; Columbus Boycholr, March
4.

s•

•

power

o.mo-

cratic presldentiul campaign
against
Republican nominee
!Uchard M. Nixon. It took eyes
and ears froln Thant who
proposed Thursday a U,S.Soviet-British-French summit to
oCfset a recent " serious set.
back" in East.Westrelatloos.
Diplmnatic sources said Ball's
resignation might n\XIge along a ·
summil They · said It created
the opportunity for President
Johnson to make the main
American speech In the general

Love

u..

.

uubau

Scottish scholar, Andrew l.allg,
once laid: "the eye of. eactr man

Elberlelds 111
·Pomeroy
-

Srrving Me1gs County for over 96 ye~rs

·,

Nixon spoke only houra after
Humphrey, hJa Democratic rival

~~ ·
POMEROY

'

The ambassador quit Thurs-

Edison, of cOW"sc, serves on the Savings Bond Comm1ttee o, e
association and that committee will also meet during the convention.

I
I

I
I
t

I'

UNITED NATIONS (UP!lGeorge W. Ball's resignatioo as
U.S. envoy to the UnJted
Nalions stole· attention today
Crom U.N. secretary General
Thant's plea for an East-West
summit. But diplomats said
Ball's action 1118)' have helped
anange
such a summit.
EDISON llobstetter, president, and George Hobstetter, ~f the
Ball
was
e~ccted to discuss
Pomeroy National Bank, left today for Cllicago. where they will at·
his
surprise
resignation at a
tend the American Bankers' Assoc-iation Convention.
new
s
conference
at U Lm.
The convention will be held at the Hilton Hotel and at Palmer

'

Thoughts

·May Aid Summit

I
I

I

'

Speciw
guests
""" had bdef
;
.
)
remlrks were:
.
J. ~au Porter JD, candidate for Jtate repn~tin, ~~ ..
lUred ~~hers tlllll lha ~·

F\ve YouthS F"med ;
I

,Jn Juvenile Court :i

.

lhe ·· houJe whldl takes c:are ol
the teachers' retirement.

San. Qakley

c.

CoUins called 91b. Son. Bill 350
uhiJt.Ortct• and added tile sales
tax wao..lhe only way fll pay for
It- """' otller' tax woold haYO

-

a.liiurden •

. .

..

hid brief
eel

inS~try...

I

to ~.'llii&gt;er-

sented special music.
Officers of the Gallla Count;y
Education Association are Rober! Powell, Vinton Elemt~~tary,

pres1denti Emer1011 Shlmp, Hannan Tra.ce High, president-elect;
Marjorie Payne, Bidwell-Porter
Elementary, secreta.r.Yi !lie Lu.
man. Cadmua FJementary, treas-.
urer, and James P, Burleson,

past president.

13 Show in Court
POMEROY - Thirteen de- Pomeroy, $10 and costs, speed- :
fendants appeared before Meiga lng; Dana COill!!l, Loag Bottom,
County Judge Frank W. Porter Illegal sale d liquor and no llctFriday and eight other torfelt- uor permit, $100 and costs, fine
ed bonds.
Fined were Stanlord Cozart,
Long Bottom, $5 and costs, unoare vehicle; Clyde Harrison,
Middleport Route 1, $10 and
costs, speeding; Robert Fagg,
Middleport, no operator'• license, 30 days in jail with 25
~s

suspended, six montbs probation and $10 and costs, and
another $10 and costs on charges
d. driving left to center; Russell L, Cullums, Pomeroy, stop
sign, $10 and costs; Karen F .
GUkey, &amp;fracuse, $5 and costs,
defeetlve equipment; Myrtle McCoJOOer, George ~llen, Bessie
M. Dowell, and Tom King, all of
!dlddloport, and Natbaniel Mc -

Comber, Cheshire, all charged
with asaauit and battery were
assessed costs; Mariel J. Will ,

suspended and defendant placed
on probation for 60 days; Floyd

Barnhouse, Pomeroy,

was as-

sessed costs only on a cbarp
of driving while under suapen ..

siOIIForfeitlng bonds were Christine Branham, Pomeroy, $150,
charged with drlvlni while intoxicated; Joaej)h D, Fannin,
Grayson, K,y., $27 .50, left ol
center; Larry G, King, Htmtlngton, $27.50, speeding; DeWC!J' M,
Gore, Rutland, $157,50, .permit.
t1ng an unlicensed driver to~
erate a motor vehicle; Cbarlea
E. Curnette, Gallipolis, $27.50,
speeding; Harry R. Oiler, Middleport, $27.so, stop sign; George
w. Cain, Athens, $32.50, speedlng, and Joe R. McDonald, Trimble, $27.50, speeding.

·
·,
::
., :

.

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