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                  <text>....... ..... . •· ....

·"Love one another warmly as
brothors in Christ, atf be eager
• q,. -

College Scores

.......... .. 111'~· , .fru- - ()~ -

hal
•.. .. ... ..,.:"Olj

•

l
I

OOWlCl'&lt;l

saturda~

,.

thai

Now You Know
bare

knuckles

boxing match, John L. Sullivan
beat Jake Kilrain In a 75 rOl.Uld

tclc\- i~&gt;cd

by Sports Netwol·k, Int.

bout at Richburg, MJss.

1\ollleinz said S!';l,
lloward llugh('s, had

•

Weather

ent

at

e

On JuJ.y 8, 1889, In the lUI
championship

bonnet now I football
31 will be

\

I'

I

passed ror one toud
ran for another in t.
riyc minute~ or the fil"t
urda)' to gi\'c the (;ec
dogs a 17 ~ 3 \lit·toi-;
.:'w burn Tigers, the So
Confcn:•IWt.' t.•hampiom

ma.ior bowl bid.
\'ALl:: WINS lfi'
!\EW I!AVEN, Conn.
Brian l)owling arxl Ca

SAIGON (UPO- A South Vietnamese general today said
North Vietnamese troops are

1

scores as the Elis buri•
ton 12-17 Saturday and

the natiun 's longe sl cc
streak to 16 games.
St 1-'1 ·ens FWST
ANI\ ".llBOR, ~1kh.
A ·12 - }ard pas s fro
Carmel\ to c;Ien Doug
one ~ yud run b) 1:

Driver Hurt
In Accident

carelly spell ed a 1 2~
the l'niversit~· of Miehi
man foocball team Fri
and gave Toledo's f1
first loss in six starts
,,.fi-\ KlES WrN,
NEW COi\CO!W, 0
- Dave lltt imcrl sco1

"ONLf CHILD I JELIEV£1"

eight yard run witll an
a f1alf remaining in tl
quarter to give Musk in
win over Hobar t here
Heimerl' s toucllclown
41 - ~· ard drive tliat t
pia ~ s.
M.ark l'er kins of llo
ried th.e hall 35 time
yards to gi\'e l1im

commai"XIer of his nation's nve

northern provinces, told UPI
correspondent Per_ry Young the
drivlre across the border North Vietnamese are pushing
DernUitarized Zone (DMZ) de- south over the DMZ in
spite Paris talk arrarcements. company-sized wrlt.a.
"Now that we've stq)ped the
AlUBd force111. 100 miles south of
the frontier kllled 282 COOJmu- bombing (of Nortb Vietnam),
nlsts and, smashed a terror they are still operating in the
apree In the city of Da Nang in southern side," the general
said. He called it Hanoi's
weekend battlln&amp;
In Da Nang, Lt. Gen. Hoang "winter campaign plan."
According to diplomats In
Xuan Lam, South Vietnamese

twosome had a hand

" '

Three weekend accldenta, one The investigation is being continued. Conger reportedly escaped
driver when his car ran into a uninjured.
The other accident, alsoSaturcreek, were reported by Meigs
County Sheriff Robert C. Harten- day, occurred on Route 124 where
a car owned by Thurman Brew~
bach's Department.
Robert ll Roush, 35, Rt. 2, R&amp;- er, Jr., Rt. 2, Racine, slid orr
cine, wu removed to Veterans lhe right side of the highway,
Memorial Hospital by the Syra- st.nlck a corporation limits sign
cuse
emergency squadmen. at Racine and went some 800 feet
Rou&amp;li, travellng east In a 1961 into a field The driver report..
mOO.el car, lost control it on a edb lett the scene ai'XI railed to
curve above the roadside park. report the mishap. lnvestigatlo11
The car went between a tree and is being continued.
In other weekend activicy, the
a bush into a creek. There was
heavy damages to the front of department arrested two Albany
the vehicle and no charges were 1&amp;-year-olds and a Pomeroy teen-ager on charges in connection
reported.
Roush was admitted and treat- with the B&amp;E of the Howery GrQoo
ed for lacerations over the side eery in Carpenter last weekend.
Jailed were Phillip Stephen
of his face am lip (.:uts.
saturday, at 6:30 p. m., thede-- Lowry, Hiii-SL, Albany; Calvin
partmerl: was summoned to Coun- Mike Urblde, Hill-st., Albany,
ty Road 29 where Cornelius Con.- and Danny Michael Laudennilt,
of which resulted in injuries to a

~97 ~

PU\1\ STATE HOl

COLLECE P.-\H K, \td
Defensive linema11 Lin
pincou and Steve Smear
ed for o11e touchdow11 a
three otl1ersas third-rar
State nust1ed ~raryla1
Saturda;. to n·main unl
eight games.

FOR~N

OH,NO!DON't YOU
KNOW THERE'S A

IXMII.TEUR.!

\ t..AW AGAINSt

NOT B.A.D

WITH 1'HE:SE: NEW
I't-t.. CUT
GOI=JRSt
HAIR CLIPPERS WE't...l- 'YOURS DAD, YOU DON'T
131:: A\31...1" TO SHA\11:0
FIRST,
HAVE AS
'Wit...l.-15! MUCH TO
1...055!

ing so far this sea sOt\

WILL TRY A\.A
LOLIISVILLE, 1\y. (
Penn~ · An11 Early, who
her chan&lt;'e Saturday to
the first woman JOCkc}· i ,
tion's ra•.:ing his tor) to
major track when her m•
scratched, will try ag:

or

set

H5RE!

week.

Paris, Hanoi had agreed to deescalate its war machine in the
DMZ in order to get Paris
settlement talks un:lerway.
But in the past 48 hours, Lam
said,
the Communists had
shelled or launched grOWll
attacks against 45 cities or
military camps in the northern
provinces, most of them arouOO
Da Nang or to the south.
Attack Marine C8mp
The Communists sent a 15rouOO. mortar barrage into a
U.S. Marine slC)I)ly c~ nirth
of Da Nang today and attacked
South Korean soldiers guarding
a village on its southern
doorstep.
Battlefield reports said the
South Koreans drove off the
Reds in hand-to-haM combat,
killing 18. Seven Koreans died
am two were wounded in the
fighting east of Dien Ban, 16
miles south of Da Nang.
Olen Ban was the focal point
of two battles Sunday in which
Lam's South Vietnamese forces
reported killing 253 Communists. They took "'light'' losses
in one battle and suffered eight
kUled arxl 32 wowxled in the
secom.
The battling followed a Viet
Cong threat to turn Da Nang
itself into a battlefield. Before
dawn Sunday, ComrnUilists attacked a police station and
bombed. a bridge, a police
outpost and a Buddhist school
inslde the city, Four South
Vietnamese policemen were
killed and four were wot.Dlded.
.ciwetll,lmg througn the city,
South Vietmmese _police and
troops c~tured 13 Viet Cong
and arrested 109 other Vietna~
mese lCJW:IJ
in "~regular
situations."
A Marine patrol clash-ed with
CommwUst
infiltrators fotU'
miles southwest of the city late
Swday and killed 11 of them
while taking no losstos1 U.S.
spokesmen said
In Saigon, meartlme, Ameri·
can headquarters said U.S.

TEN CENTS

Marine and Air Force war·
planes had broken up a North
VIetnamese bunker camp inside
the Demilitarized Zone.
The pilots reported having
nine bunker dugouts ~stroyed,
five fires burniQg ·~00 four
North Vietnamese soldiers dead
Swxlay at the camp in the
southern half of the zone.
It was the 19th time allied
warplanes or artillery has
retaliated against Cmnmunist
violations of the DMZ since the

banbi'l&lt;

of North VIetnam
slc!&gt;ped Nov. I,
UOOer an arrangement announced by U, S, Secretary of
Defense Clark M. Clifford, the
Conununists had promised not
to •labuse" the DMZ if the
bombing of North V letnam
Slc!&gt;ped.

Strong
Advice
Given

PARIS (UPI)- The
United
States has told South VIetnam It
will not negotiate new talk
terms with Haooi and firmly
advised saigon to come to the
conference table, allied d.iplQoo
mats .said today.
Thye also said Washington
told Saigon it ••cannot constitutionally accept" the United
States taking a back seat to
South Vietnam at the bargai~
West MalnJit , rCllllsl'QY.
. :1101'•.U..l'oniADII. drl\'llls.l 190~ 1~,
tng table.
Authorities 'a rrested the trio
molel car, also lost control, went
High diplomatic sources said
over an embankmert, and rolled followi nv l nve stigation of the bur·
WashinKton'a firm advice to
over into a field, tearing down -glary by Sheriff Hartenbach' s desaigon apparently followed a
about 25 feet of fence on the partment, Officer George Hicks
Hanoi that North Vietnam will
and BCl Agent Henry.
Howard Ervin property,
not agree to South Vietnam's
Conger's car was demoltshed.
demand that the Vlet Cong get
:=:=:=:?.""-::::m:---:w.-:::·.:-s.:.-:w.&amp;&lt;$~~:~
less than equal status at the
The Rutland Volunteer Ftre
negotiatioos.
Department will hold its &amp;IP
South Vietnam has been
nua1 public turkey dimer
boycotting and stalling HanoiThursday starting at 5:30p.m.
Washington planned talks here
at Rutland Elementary School.
that would bring in Saigon and
Residents may purchase
the United States on one side
tickets anytime from n remen
am North Vietnam and the Viet
PRAGUE (UPI)- C&lt;&gt;llege stuor
at
the
door
Thursday.
Prc&gt;Cong on the other.
dents across the nation occupied
ceeds will be used to purchase
Demam Leadcr:;hip
their classroom buildings today
Besides demarding the Viet
a
new
tanker truck which will
In protest against the Czechobe put intooperationwithinthe
WASHINGTON - Tenth Cong be seated only as part of
slovak communist part,y abannext few weeks.
District O&gt;ngressman Clarence the Hanoi delegation. the South
doning its reform program Wlder Soviet invasion pressure. &gt;i-~~m~::-::?:=:=~::::::::: E. Miller hasaMooocedapproval Vieu.unese had dentanded it
of a $740,000 E. D. A. grant to the arll not the United States lead
TWO FINED
~ms v«M for a
city
of Jackson, Ohio. The funds the a.nti~rommunist team at the
Fined $10 and costs each by
three-day occupatl.oo of Prague's
through
the Economic.: Develop- table.
ancient Charles University a few Racine Mayor Charles Pyles SatThe dlpomats said the Ameriment
Administration,
aloog with
hours alter beln{ briefed m the urday night on speeding charges
can
message was given to
share,
will
be
used
to
the
local
were Bruce Neigler, 19, and Clif~
outcome Ot a vital party cenPresident
Nguyen Van Thieu of
expand
the
municipal
sewer
systral committee meeting that end- ford Dennis Ashley, both of RaSouth
Vietnam
in saigon.
tem
to
meet
the
needs
of
local
cine Route 2, They were arrest..
ed &amp;mda,y.
The
diplomatic
reports came
Industry.
Students in Bmo followed suit. ed by Mar•hall Al!red t.Yons.
The city or Jackson will match amid ' a new wave of unofficial
Campus strikes alreadY were in
that
Thieu
wou1d
FOUR FINED
the E. D. A f'unds to meet the $1. report6
progress in Olomouc and at the
reshuffie
his
cabinet
shortly
F~
detendallts
fined
Satur480,000
cost
or
the
project.
agricultural college In &amp;lchdoi,
day night by Pomeroy Mayor
Jackson cily officials say ade- before announcIng an end to the
near Prague.
Charles
Legar
were
Larry
Holquate
sewer facllitles will enable bo:fcott and acceptance or the
Although the main points of
singer, Racine, $5 and costs, the R J. Reynolds Food Company talks invitation.
the central committee's deciassured clear distance; Roger and the Ohio Stove Co. to increase
slons were ootlmmedlately made
Ours,
Racine, $15 and costs, prOOuction and add more than 100
~lie, early indications were
speeding; Gerald McDaniel, Pom- n~w employees. A lagoon and a
that many of the ambitious reeroy, $5 and costs, intoxication, new intersecting sewer will be
forms begun ln April were forand Michael Wright, Middleport, added toexistingwaste-treatmenl
maliyabandmed.
&amp;peedlng, $25 and costs.
facilities.
Mrs. Garnet M,3y Davidi(U.
77, Middleport, a former Mid·
dleport business woman, died
Sunday evening at the Hoi'Zer
Medical Center in GallipoiJs.
Mrs. Davidson for a number
c1 years operated a cafe In Middleport. She was a member of
the pyt.hian Sl !rters lodge at
WUkesvllle.
Born In Middleport, the daugh.
ter c1 the late Lay[ette and Cordelia Hysell McGuire, she was
preceded in death by her husband, Thomas Davidson; a chUd
who died In Infancy, and two
sisters and a brother. &amp;arvtv.
lng are two stepdaughters, Mrs.
John (Aiwilda) Werner, !diddleport; Mrs. Fr11tcl1 (Louise) Davis, Elmhurst, m., and several
nieces and nephews.
Funeral sorvlces will be held
at 2 p.m. Wemesdloy at the Rawlingo-Coots runeral Home with
tho Rev. c..Utoo Simons, pastor o1 ttioldlddloport Firat BapBOOK WEEK - "Go l'l&amp;eeo With _
.. lo tho theme rcr NoU~ Children' a Book Week
Uat
CJi.rdl, ol!lclatlng_ Burial
which started &amp;omy and ends Soturc~oy, ~ recentb
omployee 1 o1 Meigs - U o
will be In tile Gravel lUU comeSonlce Joln v...., .....,toyoo, Mro. Louise llre't!er, Portland, 1110011!1 tnm loft, In dl.,loytng
te17 at Cbeahlre. Friends nw.Y
the -.., alp. othen, loll to ri&amp;lrt. are RQI' Rowe, lllclno, 11111~ clrl- o1 tho ~e,
ull
at the !Uneral home 1111)' Umo
Llrr)' Morris, ~ville, stock clerk, 111111 Sheron l!tllllrwton. Pune~, - . . y , Realclelits are
alter
10 a.m. Tuesdloy.
llMWd to vlolt the -obUo heodqtartars aa Nye and E. Mlln, f omeroy lll)1lme thlo week
to~ mark tho

SCAL.PING?

y

AND THIS GOSS
WITH IT!

Students
In Protest

$740,000 EDA

Grant is Made

J

nw

TO CALL FOR THE
BUY ON YOUR lNSU,

Carrol K. Snow.
Peril Centrel He&amp;el I
Second Awe. ,h, "'"'
Httme Ph. 446-4511

OUR BOARDING

Galll,.llt, Ohl•

..

0

0

North Breaking Rules
Understood for DMZ

At:BniN, Ala (UPO
mm"t.• quarterbat.·k M

,,

•

r

·. ' .-1

Bl'LLIJO&lt;;S CLAIM

sensational

I

V

~~ 0 '

rangcmcnts to tclc~:as
in almost every dty
tion.

Yale's

...

J..:'.

Devoted To The lnter~ts Of The Meigs·MtJMJn Area

Partly cloudy Jn thO west Tuesdoy. Windy and oold- .
er tmlllht and Tuesdo¥. Low tonieht Jn tile Ul)lllr&amp; 201 and 301.

•

.1•1~~~ ·"

Mrs. Davidson

State, Regional Awards Presented
To Garden Clubs of Ohio Region 11
1

, ,

Presentation of state and regional awards and a demonstration on holiday decorations by
Mrs. Gilbert Cullen of Marietta
highlighted the fall meeting of
Region 11, Ohio Association of
Garden Clubs, held Saturda,y at
Eastern High School in Meigs
County.
Mrs. John Reese of Gallipolis, new regional director, pre.
sided at the meeting which wal
attended by over 150 garden club
members from six counties. The
session was hosl.ed by the Chester Garden Club, with Mrs. Reid
Young as the chatrmanoftheday.
Featured speaker at the mornin&amp;: session was Mrs. Albert
Pool of Marietta, the retiring
state president She reviewed
highlights of the recent state
convention and accomplishments
of the O, i'\ .G,C. over the put
year.
The awards included certifi·
cates for placing in the state pre·
sented to Meigs County Garden
Clubs, first in the state f o r
group Christmas shows, and the
Gallipolis Club, honorable mention in the state for a aingle
club Christmas show and the
first place award in Region ll.
Also receiving a st.ate award
was the Rutland Friendly Gar&lt;kmers, third, ror their work
with the special educatiorJ class
at the Rutlant Elementary School.
Regional awards for program
yearbooks wenl to the Muskingum Club in Marietta, first; Rutland, second; Marietta, third,
and Hill and Dale at Marietta,
!lonorable mention.
.Publicity book certificaU:ls presented by Mrs. Pearl Mora,
chairman, were awarded to the
Hill and IJate Club, honorable

Dies Sunday

My Si1

......
T.M.

t.,.

,

U.S. Pit. Off.

To Me
For
Confider

,.w

-...nee.

'

meeting are Mrs. Ken Nease, center. advisor of the Wildwood
Junior Garden Club, and Cindy Thmuu, left, and Su01n Gooch,
members or the junior club.
1

GAfiDEN CLUB MEMBERS ti'oot the six-county area
of Region 11 attending the meeti~ were registered by Mrs.
Wyatt Chadwell. seated right, aOO Mrs. Pearl Mora or the
Chester Garden Club. Shown here as they registered tor the

W~an

Says
$4,888Due

STATE AND REGIONAL omcers were present for the a.1J.day session hosted by the Chester
Garden Club. PictW'ed here, left to right, are Mrs. Albert Pool, Marietta, retirilll OAGC presl~
dent; Mrs. Paul Wendell Reed, Newark, first vice president and advisor to Region 11: Mra. John
F..eese, Region 11 diredori Mrs. Reid Young, Chester Garden Club chairman or the day for the
regioral meeting; Mrs. Paul Shoemaker, Cheshire, Region 11, secretary, and. Mrs. Karl Grueser,
Minersville, regioral treasurer.
Winding Trail of ~meroy, third;

mentloo ln the state and first In
the region; Muskingum, second;

and Chester, honorable mention.

Wildwood Garden Club of MeigJ
County third, and the Rutland
Friendly Gardeners, hooorable

mention.
Awar-ds In the Sears civic beautification contest were presented to the Gallipolis Club, first lr
the region, and the Middleport
Garden Club, second. Mrs. Eu.
g«Je Gloss accepted the cash a ward tor the Gallipolis Club, and
Mrs. Garen st.ansbury accepted
for the MiddlejJKJrt Club.
Regional awards tor single club
flower shows went to 1-1111 and
Dale, first; Cbeshire, second;

DAYTON - Some 2,000 employes at fhe National Cash
Register C&lt;&gt;. here walked &lt;tl
the job tod&gt;,y In what the NCR
Employes Independent Unioo
described 11 a wildcat strike.
The w!loo had reported progress ln contract negutlations
~~ and had called oa a
scheduled strike for today,
posq,ootng It until Dec. 2.

The GaUipolis Club took first
In the region in slngle c 1 u b
Christmal shows, and the Meigs
County Garden Clubs Christmas
show took first in the regioo in
group shows.
Therapy club awards went to
the Good Luck Club at Athens,
first; the Gallipolis Sate lnstilute, second, and the Rutland
Friendly Gardeners special education clau, third.
Mrs. ROOert. Thomp800 of the
Winding Trail Garden Club and
Mrs. Homer Holter of the Cllester and WUdwood Garden Clubs

•

Western Reds Carping "'
BUDAPEST (UPI) -

Conununist parties who will need
years to recover political losses
A suit asking $4,888 hu been
sullered when the Russlans inrued in Meigs County common
vaded Czechoslovakia are depleas court by Elh.abeth A.
manding greater influence over
Roullh, RD, Racine, against Fred
Moscow's foreign policy deW. Crow, Jr., as executor or
cisions.
the will ol Ruby C, Deiley, de non rulingConunwlistparceased.
ties complain they were gi~en no
The plainWf charges the B·
warning in· advance that Soviet,
mount asked is just compensaPolish, East German, Hunprian
Uon for caring for Ruby C. Delland Bulgarian military tntervene,y In the Roush home from Jan~'ventt Rodney Cremeans, 21,
tion was being planned to reuary 1, 1968 until her deadl on
Coolvllle, pleaded guilty to tn.
May 9, 1968. The pialntltr said
formatlm allldavits Jn Meigs
ohe look Ruby c. Oeliey Into her
Coonty common pl..s &lt;OUrt Sat.
home at the request of the de- urda,y charging him with lssuT1oc vehicles had mloor damceaaed woman"l!l attorney. The (ng two bad checlls
a&amp;e and the driver ot one at them
plaJ.ntitr fUrther claimed she carJudge John c. BsCOII dolor- wao cited to court following an
ed for Ruby C. Oelley at t h e
red sentenclq to De&lt;. 16 and / accidem m the IOW8r porking
Dolley home from January I,
permitted Cremeans to be re, lot In Pomeroy Saturday nl&amp;trt,
1963 unW the beglmlng 1968. leased m a PJ-'&gt; bond ~ Pomeroy poll"" saicl Komtelh
$1,000.
· Collins, 25, PomeniJ', attemptMARRIAGE APPLICATIONS
' IIIII to tNll from the lot, struclt
Gary Lee Durst, 22, ReedsLOCAL TEMPS
\ ; Ill the llfcto a car driven by
ville, macblnlst, and Ruth Jean
The temperature In M e I g 1 ~' llot!or Blsclt, 18, Rut.ianrL There
Landon, 21, Reedsville, clerk; Coonly common pleas court at
......, no bllurle"- Colima was
RQI' Allen Roush, 18, Masoo,
11:05 a.m. torllcy was 44 doclWd 111 &lt;htrll'll ol falling to
plwnber's helper, and UndaMa- grees, under overcast sides.
yield rlllhtotwar.
rie 0Wen1, 18, Pomeroy.

Tbe

Enters Guilty Plea
To Court Charges

Autos Damaged

or

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Western verse the retorm1 that broke

j
.,

were recognized aa the 1968 re~
eipient.s of the outstandlng gardener awards for Region 11.
Given special recognition at tbe
meetin&amp; were members of the
new Bend o'...the-River Garden .,
Club.
Reports were given by the regional chairmen who preaented
the awards. These included Mrl.
Cullen, flower show school• and
judges; Mrs. K. Barrows, hortl·
culture; Mrs. Gomer Phillipl ~
of Gallipolis and Mrs. H a r r y
Cokonougher, Athena, gardea
therapy; Mrs. C. E. SlDut, Al~
bany; publicity; Mrs. Earl Qend..
(Continued 011 Page 12)

'··

out in Czechoslovakia

downfall ol stallnlot,illolotor
tonin Novotny in January. ·
Since the invasion Aug. 21. &amp;be
western parties add. they hate
been given too little explanadoa..

In sum, they say, their - ·
gle against '1mperla1Um" bu ·
lost credlb'"b' beeaule II*
s~rlWall~r~cz~
slovak national IIOV"~t;y.

VETERANS MEMORIAL

HOSl'ITo\L
A-orlicm
Je117 \
Reuter, l'QlDeiQIF; Lorry !llll&gt;-

s.-,-

cer, Racine.

Dlsehlr&amp;el SlitiJnlol' erlne Won!, lollddi"'JCCI''Admllalnna QIDiliJ - Cbul.,
make, Cllll•aia..t Roue
RodDe; Jomeo Molldo...,b•l(-1
Rlily 11r111&amp;, Ponlond; p o.u
lbwart, West ColUIIIbla; G1Mra
Dlllon, RoedaYIIlo;
1~• Poa•o.t·
DladJer&amp;ft

~ -.

Slladu _

M.CIOUII, RCJbert Rorlla

�2 - 1'110 Dally Somlnel, Pomeror·lollddloport, 0., M&lt;&gt;ldoJ&lt;, NOlOmber 18, 1988

"Now We'd Like You to Go a Few Rounds
Wrth Thrs Fellow'"

" ........ ljlilir Sellllnel, ....,_.~ 0., ilonloy, N - r 18, 1988

ck- Wo1y.erine Match TopsNationalGrid futerest~~jL;···=·j~

Catonsville Nine: Path to Chaos
Tb•re ca.n be no doubting the sincerit

~nd lnlenstty ol belief

of the serf.. tyl~

offJce In Catonsville, Md., last May seized

records and burned them with ho~emade

\

I
•

f

Some groups and individuals around the
~~~ are . now attempting to elevate
be
atons\l"dle Nine " into a cause celere on the order of the Sacco-Vanzetti case

~~e 1920s or the Scottsboro Boys of the

Let it be repeated that there can be no
doubting the sincerity of these nine men
and women, nor their personal courage.
Rather than considering themselves lawbreakers, they look on themselves as martyrs to a higher law than any written by
men. They are ~onvinced that they are
right and that their cause is just and damn
the torpedoes of fascistic reprisal.
Precfs~ly therein Ues the grave danger
their attitude and their bebavior poses to
society-not merely an orderly societ) but
the humane society they so vehemently
espouse.
For H it is permissible for these people
JiDCerely believing the Vietnam war of
war iD general to be evil, to commit an illegal act in opP.O_Sition to it, tt would be
just as permiSsible for someone else sincerely believing in the misguJdedne8s of
those who oppose America's involvement

';:..

in Southeast Asia, to raid the headquarters
peace group and destroy its records
. lfdepth of belief and self·rlgbleous
\'tction are the only standards of judgme':'t, then the poUce in Detroit had no
busmess the other day arresting 11 young
men ~nd wom-:n and charging them with
carrying out e1ght separate bombings in
of a

Ca~nsvllle Nme." These are the nine
~thollc men and women, includin two
pnest-brothers, who stormed 8 draft ~rd

naro:n:.
In uorsthis. ac~. they have been convicted
· · D1stnct Court in Baltimore and
Mntenced to prison terms of from 2 to 3'f.z
yeariD11 eac!l. One of the priests was already
'"'"'•
ns time for pounng blood over the
n ea of
another draft board.

'

con·

·,~r

1.

an alleged "antiestablishment antigovern-

i

ment plot"
'
Nor can anyone complain about the
failure of authorities to arrest the men
who bombed a Negro church and killed
four. children in Mississippi in 1963--asswmng that they sincerely believed that
what the_y did was in the ultimate service
or mankind.
The act of conscience by the "Catons
yme Nine," of course, harmed no one
IS ~s. far removed from the latter atroeity
as ~t 1s from the stupid demonstratJon some
Umverslty of Cincinnati students planned
or pretended to plan-to burn a dog with
nal:alm.
. . et ~ premise beh.!nd all of these acts
IS Identical: The end justifies the means
That _wa~ lies chaos. Just as one atroc1iy
~ever JUstifies another, neither does one
lUegal act excuse another-not at least
so long as there remain ch~nels and
~eans o_f legitimate protest and redress
m America.
Most opponents of the war have attempted to use these legitimate means to
rnak~ th~mselves heard. They have failed
to wm. over the mass of Americans H.isw
tory Will decide whether that is America's
tragedy or ~e protesters'.
One thing Is certain, however. The more
they resort to acts of outright rebellion
more. the protesters damage, if noi
arnn. their causes, whatever they may be.

and

,
Today's Game of the Name

./

The '68 Election: Grist
For Mills of Historians

By WARD CANNEL
NEW YORK INEA)

Ni~ftz~:o~:en:ewt was the grea~ German philosopher

Ia pom
out ~at the h1ppopotam us is called
ppopo mus because It looks like one
it':,~ m~ ~veh got that wrong, On second ·thought maybe
looked Jik~e on~. e who was called Nietzsche bec~use .he

th hi
e

ly NOEL GROVE

NEA Staff Corrospo~~dent

WASHINGTON - (NEA) _
It is probably safe to predict

twice more.
Altogether there have been
44 U.S. elections for president, and the reins of power
have changed from one
party to another 16 times.
The longest continual control of the White House by
any one party since the Civil
War was by the Republicans,
who won the Off1ce every
election from 1860 through

Other-Women Heartache No
7,864. Why oh wtry can't 1 0 ~
love-blinded gals see You're just
anotller score for a man w h 0
wants to have his mate and cheat
her too?
.... And((, by a 100 to one
chance you win hirn, you'll soon
learn how the ••nagging'• wife
suffers: You'll be one!
Boot him oot and save your
~~ for a maternity home.

Let's put the blame where it
belongs: On the poor exarnpleaof
fathers and husbandal It they

t

-rune•

for

century Dlvtllon
W, L. T. Pet.

More QBs
Sidelined

chlld Wll8 bom. I suffered t b e
grJef he !!!peaks about. But one
day I saw what thb was doing
chlldra~.

Feeling 1111 sorrow and loneliness, they were

scared that they might

shared with my hulb&amp;bd was
still alive bt the chUdreo, and
I was being selfish to deprive

1'110 molt serloul iDJury wu
auf!erecl by Vlflll Carter, who
brcke hlo onkle on tha thfrd
p~ of tho ,...., bolt In the
~
16-13 loll to
A~ - carter '*I come o11
the tox1 sljllld beUuse . of
!Qiurioo 1o the J!eol'l' other
q-eko.
llollao' Don Meredllll llq&gt;ed
off w!ih 1 !rdurJ iD t11o
thlnl period of the CclwbQyo' t4,
3t f'llll .of WosbqtDi 11111 Cn1ti
llal'l!lll tlntohod ""
But. st1rr wu Iii iD
lho • ...., holt of Green llllf'•
h-7 &gt;ktor7 0101' Now Orlouo
IIlii ztko
tlni.hod
tho.....
'

•______::____

....._J

.
W.
Bolllmore • • • ..
Lol Anples . . . .
Son Fnnclaco ...

q.

The memory of my love haa

taken Its speciaJ place in 111)'
heart, and the fear we aJ I felt ot
being alone Is past.
This will happen to uLostn
and hfs children too, Tfme takes
care of almost everything, it
Dear Helen:
No wonder women and chil. you let ft ..•. And It you IQUare
dren are getting so out hand your sbouJders and get on with
living! - YOUNG WIDOW
The,y have lost all respect forth;
Thls column js dedicated to
SO-called head of the house. Peo.
fsmliy ltving, ao If yoo•re hav.
pie blame the woman for the ills
log kid trouble or just plain
of the world, but who lets her
troobte, tot Helen help YOU,
act spoiled and headstrong? Who
Sbe
will also welcome your own
lets her control the .......
_ ,ey,. de-

or

T. Pet.

No Special Significance
To Early Meri'struotion···· "

ll'l.!lt,

u

•

·· -

• ·

·

Ohio Unlvenlt;y, • 6 0 0
Mloml ... .. .... 510
-liiii!Green ..• 321
Toledo ....... ,321
Weotern llllehtpn, 2 4 0
Kentstate ...... !SO

!lmdaJ's Games

lor Will .CJwtnlle&lt;fafD tuid roaldo

am Hewttt.
IDll tho _...,..
,.eb
!our Ire¥ baaloata
ln 1lto IOIIliDr m....,.,
,. er

Sunday

1

nJIIlt u !lui Lol Anef!u Lakero

to d - SUttle, 105-14.
1'110 . cbmk Is a · ~
~· shot which otlte.ro

l'llllld

WLT WLT
Defiance . . . . . . 3 0 0 7 2 0
F!ndioy . . ....... I!O

rr

·- tho _,. ML~ NBA ........... ,

I

. _.._

·

t

'

• '

•

Yot•ll !liiHllllil

(OtiJJ"illlllOI &amp;c-ecil:
'
)
_.:, - ·ABA ~ANDIJtGS .I .
By Uplled Prell·llilernatlonaJ

121o the ·illtal.quarter, Hewitt,
had Mri!t' ~- ,... 1f Po!pto.
1111'101' !1cf aD .c.r.r•·u
tfto IIIH.U'\'1 .~with 28.
11a1 'l1toril Wll liolllla'0 Jdah

EIIil'

-=1."" ' .. . . '
1

"
·· ..
·
.:,.....,.n,

·='*f ,,,,,

• ...
-~

:!:

'

LaUln

ldtll 13 palato

apleet.

Iodlp , , . . . , 3
~If·

i

· O.kl•nd • . • •

d

8 .'273 S

.

w, t. )&gt;¢" GB
10 2 .1133

l'il
Diorfer . . . ··.. f" ts .444 4'il
Now Or~ .. 4 6 .444 4'il
IJGoiotllli: • . • • . 2 5 .28!1 W.
llollao . • . • · •• 2 I :Zatl 6lh

Lot Anplols , , ' 4 ,556

Dr,VLIN FIRST

·, J!IIISIIANE

(I}PD- Bruce

liPUD of Aullnlla .....ed hll

fl\oil --...

viotliry iD 18
~ SOmdoJ Wheb be ·,bot I
a.~
of 70 tAl llnlsh.with •
~. fOilild - · ol 281 11111 •
CflrOo oliOt , la'fuqlh .,.. Peler
:Tclwplol!d ' .of Brltala In the
" lliflj~D Jilte~Oilll Galt Cia..
1110.

..-

' ..ila.tl!&gt; ~ ~800 ,... hi!'

' f1r11

~ finish. Gil Bnwor
of· the ~ SWes ~ ID
tech place with a m liliiL
; i"

f'

. TlttDAILy SENTINEL

&amp;tnday'o Rolllltl
Indiana 114 New Yoti&lt; 81
'(~ ..... -·'""'
Maodii'•,Go!Jtoa
••· Now Orl.talli atllllln- , La.
•
KoiJiudq at M1aml
&lt;tJn~Uiame• -~L

. )'iHL · !II'ANDINGS

Ill' 1li!ft.,t rr,.siDtorllitlonal

2

•

··-~-0
NBA ST""""""'
l!y United Prell ~01111
East
1.

Canadians Get

Golf Cup Back

ROME (UPJ) - Canada tociay
held
the golf cup It pve t b e
W L P&lt;t. GB
'IIWld
16 yeal'l ago IIlii had
Boaton .... " ' 11 3'. 788
tried
In
voiD ever slnoe to got
Ba!Umore ..... 12 4 •750
back.
CIDc:ltDtL .... 11 4 , 733 Y.t
The Canadians dtd tt In the
Philltdelphto ... 10 4 , 714 1
most
dramatic ftnish in World
Detroit ....... 7 8 ,467 4lh
CUp
Tournament
history, by surgNew Y...k, • , •• 8 u ,353 6lh
Ing
abead
&lt;11
the
next to the last
Nllwallkee , , , • 3 10 •300 71,1,
hole
of
the
72
hole
event al the
West
nearby
7
,850yard
Olgtalaeourse
W L Pet. GB
And It was the Americans the)'
Lot Angeles ... 12 4 , 750
beat
san FriDeloeo' '7 8 .467 4lh
Canada flnlobocl the !our-r&lt;Wid
7 8 .438 5
toumameot,
called unUilast 7ear
san Dleso·. , •• , 6 9 ,400 6lh
the
Canada
Clip,
with a total ol
Phoerdx ...... S 8 .3115 Slh
569
while
Lee
TreviDo of El
Chicago •.. , , ,8 10 .375 6
Puo,
Tex.,
and
JuUWI
Boros ot
Seattle • • •••• s 14 .aoo s :
lllloi.Pineo,
N.
C.,
failed
In tlletr
Sundo,y's Resulto·
bid
lo
make
It
a
U,
S.
win
for
Lol Angelea 105 ~ 94
the
tent11
Ume
In
18yeoro.
Bostait 130 Phoenix-98
Only games ochoduied
loloado7'• Games
NEW RECORD
N o - achodulnd
BERLIN (IJPJ)... Erv Hall of

A-.. ,,,

"'rt1J811eld ••••••

s r

414

VillalloYa Unlverolt;y IIlii a 1188
O)Jmpte allver meclalllt, ltottered tile world
hrieo 1 - mark SUndi.Y
wltll a Ume of 7.6 ae&lt;Oilds
tlurlng an· IDvttaUOII&amp;! traok IIlii
field meet.

a-..

• . . . 68211' l!altiJnore .. ., ... s a 212
• . , • I 8' 1 11 Welt
SAFETY FEATURE
• • • • . , 4 10 8 Ill
W L T I'll.
COL'UMBUS, Ohio (UPJ).. A
·. ·. Ul I 8 lkelo .. ,; .. , 10 2 1 21 ._- 1'tlllllatloo ISitkfq; ,w - ·
'a.filito'
, - llochostor •• • • , , 7· 7 2 18 "I«J·· till• :lllt Of'...,.,. Wheel
J.
~ • ·; r • , A" 8 1 11
whleh baa re·aultod Itt
~ , , . ; , , , a.10 4 10 foljer
racll11 aocldento

w...;

.

har!lo••
it .......1)'1 1'biii'O Uaod, .,.., •

..~

Baldmore. 1be Rams
advanced to the Western
Conference Utle game because
they had the better record
with

agai.

Baltimore- but' then los{

to Green lll;r.

same Strategy
Albin, whose team is now 8-1-1
compared to Baltimore's 9-1,
ftgures it the same way this

Browns are 7-3.

Morral, Richardson Duo
MOtTall Dipped touchdown
paases of 79 an:l 29 yards to
Willie Richardson as Baltimore
year•
"SUre, we wanted to go tn for beat st. Louis, Pr&lt;BI!Pting card
seven, but getting a tie didn't coach Charley Wimer to
hurt us because we still have to eommem, "'Ibe Colts will go aU
the way unless they're jinxed."
beat Baltimore," he said.
Bob Etter' o 2~ field goal
Green Bey, which st.opj)ed
.
as
Ume ran out in the first half
New Orleans, 29-7, 11 in
gave
Atlanta the triumph over
s,upriiiJW good shlpe despite
Chi.,_
The clubs played a
lta 4-5-1 record. Since the Bears
scoreless
aecorxl halt carter
loat to Atlanta and are misal~
was
curJed
ott the field on the
Carter and Gale 5ayers, they
third
play
of
the thlnl period.
have little chance despite their
carroll
Dale
caught etgflt
5-5 mark. That leaves the
passes
Cor
161
yards
ar¥1 a TD
central DlvisJon race between
as
the
Packers
thumped
New
the Packers and the Minnesota
Orleans.
Bart
Starr
hit
or.
nine
VUdnp, who lead by tlh games
of
14
passes
before
beq
with a 6-4 mark after a 13-6
shaken up in the third pertod.
victory over Detroit.
Since the Vikings must play Zeke Bratkowsld took over.
Joe KaRl's only two passes of
Baltimore ard Los Angeles ~n
the
first half were Intercepted
their next two pmes (whUe
but
be
clicked on three straight
Green Bay is playing Washingat
the
outset
of the second half
ton and San Francisco), that
for"
65
yards
to
set
up
Vlkin2 Iaadsppeors sbaky,
In Dre Clpitol LMsion. Dallas Minnesota's only TO in the win
and New Yor1&lt; boosted their over Detroit. Jim Lindsey
scored it from the two.
marks to s-2 and 7-3 with
Trailing 17·13,Dallasexploded
dltrerent types of victories.
Dallas routed Washlnston, 44-24, for 31 points In the second half
whip
Washtngton. Den
and New yotl( ·· edaed wWe·s s ' 1o
Philadelphia, 7-11. Philadelphia ts Meredith was · Sidelined wtih ·a
knee injury late in the lhlrd
period but Craig Morton came
on a!KI threw 1 TD pass to keep
the Cowboys rolling.
Dallas, Tex., when the New
York Sunday News rq~orted in

RI~Cearned

ttoRosetrlpwtth
a 17-13 triumph owr tough
oregon State Satunlay. Oblo
State's Rex Kern llld Jlm Oti&amp;
each scored twice In rocking
ICMI, 33-27, and Mlchtpn

~!~~~:ls~ni!..9il~:

touclu:kmna to tie Red Grange' a
big Ten record.

:-!-t=";;,!~\'::1

encounter to Oklahoma, Kansas

e

Black &amp; Decker

GIFTS
THAT
PLEASE!
9

Blod&amp;Deder DeWALT

10" POWER SHOP
Strong,, .. ,'~"""-­

mounted dl,.&lt;lty to
!rome and mo11lve hub
fo1 greglftl rigidly .

10" Blode
CUll

a eq&gt;yrtgllt

S199
Sow, 1hope, dodo, 11.1rfoe1,

.~

• ••

....

le's retirement would be made
next February in the Yankees'
IIPrinB tnlnlrw c&amp;Jl1l at FL

.,

3

to

200

C/H

' ' "~ .

"

said MarKle when

contacted

by

United

PnlsB
JnternattOilll. "I am gotng to

11201

leg atond. Steel
co... tructlon.

e

Generol·purpQI;I drill. K!t tnc:lud" 8
piiCIIIO polith,
1h11rJ&gt;"n, buff

ond wnd.

1399

a day.
Gives you a real

"break."

retire as

ot now,"

II(Ondl.

DEWAlT DOES EVERYTHING IN WOODWORKING

coots less than a
eupofeoffee

Lauderdale, Fla.
"I am not going

Stop• loalln

Eltmi!'KJIII the bather of tonllrudlflll
your own po-r &amp;hop

-.-r

Phone

CITY LOAN

C/H

UIH-2

3/8" DRill KIT

1/2" COMPACT DRILL

Lorge (Qpotlly d ri ll Gnd mo11 wqnt.d

Small, b11l mlghly. l l'llh""'elgh\. Slide
handle gh•e• betNr
contra. Long life
beorlng1 .

ac:ceuorlll In '"'"'om plo1tk COli.
Gearing and chuclr.lor
blgglr. tovg111r jobl.

1999

sprlrw train!~ with the elQ)ectatton of plQirw. ''
Mamie said r.. would not
cOIIllllellt furth8r on the report
"untll I haw read the story in

2688

ee

~r"

the

but Burke said in
thl the report
M.elltle would retire "'is Jncon.
sistent with the .facts as we
know theJn. If
New

York

U205~

JIG SAW KIT

Mantle,

who celebrated his
37th birthday on Oct. 20, p~ed

Complete '"''"' durable p!Qiilt tall to
proiiKI tool1 McHe1 ~~:roll, alrolghl o..J
durv ed ( urt In wood ,
metol, ploeliu.

In 144 games for the Yankees
last season. He batted •237, hit

I I ~IlK...

1999

18 home runs and drove in 54

Clf"- -..

runs. Mantle has a career total
C/ H

THIS WEEK'S SPECIAL

JIG SAW WITH TABLE
Tobie

gi~IN

poutll

DELUXE JIG SAW

11Gblllly lor octurote, t~ll.

l,.;reotu .aw"t ~• r·
10llllty. 6 bladel ond

AT RAWLINGS

lncl~ded

2488

1967 HONDA Cl77
305cc, 4 speed, dream tourina, lara• saddle bags,
roll bar, mirrors, electric start•, larae windshield,
, · sharp as a tack, and lookina
for a heme.
•'

''

•:

WAS $595···

·$450

c....
The
Bulldl"t

-·

~:~

e t~,!!'· .....

CYCLE

~~,..

·_II;

Dick

season. The story was
heailllnecl on page 1 of the
tabloid
IIlii Mantle
was quoted as n.y1og "I just
can't hit any more."
'llle story added that the
omclal announcemeR of Mant-

' ' " ' " ' ' ' 'broko
puall•.

grind, buft, po1!1h. drill, rovle.
1ond, wire bru1h. Kroll cut,
jolnl, 1i11 or'"' " ·

FOR 10"

play next

~ of,$t,7t9,1P budpl Jl!l'

.\lllflre__ o
. ouar....
. . . ... .

stocy by

full

3 " d·~-

DeWAlT SAWS

Young that Mickey would not

.... .........., • &amp;tnilol, ,..,
IJit'"U. S. .'l'rOillitc· All i laiiCiD '

.••.

now 0.10, tying a teun record
set tn 1936 lor lutlllcy.
In the other game, Cleveland
took 1 long atep towards the
Century Divi•ion crown by
whipping Plttsburp, 45-24. The

obul&lt;iutllilllallppl,

1on-&amp;:Mtr Carolina. and TCU•

Mantle Not Out,· Yet

7 0

. • Elot
•,
· : W. 1., T, Pta;
N.W Yon "' . • • 11 s ~ ~
llloutzaal , • • • , . 9 4 3 21
.. ·-·: Bolb . . . . . . ·. 8 5 I 20
Toroato . • . • • . • 8 4 3 11
AfiL STANDINGS
· Chi¥ , , , . . . , 8 7 1 17 By UnltOd Pr001 lnlemlltOilll
;t . ' ... . 6 63 16
Ei"'ot
~ ,.
Walt
W L T Pto.
W, L. T, I'll. Horihey • , , , , , • , 8 4 I 17
, • •. • . 7 e 4 13· Pm&gt;Wnc,. • ,. .... s 8 1 11
•· • • • • &amp;8216

16-13, IIlii knocked out quarter·
back Vlflll carter lor the
season. AOO the Colts kept
rolllrw behln9 Earl Morrall
(remamber .Jo1mQY Unltasl IIlii
whipped the St. LOots C&amp;(d!Mis,
27~. to boost !hetr mark tG 9-1.
A Yeat" ago, the Colts riod the
best record In pro football for
the ftrot 13 games. But Allen,
who'd taken the tie in the Orst
game with Baltimore, woo his
gamble when the Rams beat the
Coltt in the secolll meeting
bltween the two · team•·· to tie
for the f'Allotal DivisiOn · load

NEW YORK (IJPJl- Tl» New
York Yankees are sati81led
loday that llllekey MlllUe wiD
trO to sprl~ mining next
Febnary with the intention of
p~lng another season.
"Thlt was our understandl~
OTIIERS
at the end of the 1968 season
WLT and that is our understalrllng
Ashland ....... . .. 8 2 0 110ft'," 1 spokesman Cor the
Akroll ... . ......... 6 2 1
Yonkees said Sunday afler club
X&amp;vler ............ 5 4 o President llllchael Burke talked
Dl3tOn •.••••••• • ••• 5 4 0 with the $100,00ll+year llllliiB"r. ·
4 0
lltnclmatl'. ........ 4 4 0
Burke tolepnoned M&amp;nlle in
JIIM C&amp;rrntl .. " ' ; , • 4 6 0
FWlay .. " .... " ' 3
Ohio Northam , , .•• , • 3 6 0
5 0
Y-stownSI.IIA&gt;, .• • .II
Central State • . .. .. .. 2 6 0
6 0

.
, ·
,f.Ut W L. ·'·l1ot Gil
. ..........
,. n' . ,. ' r ·.\delbert
caseTech ••••••••• • o

' '.
' palnll ·- .. ' . ' 2 • 8 '·
Sljfrlad
-''-"'--. ~ lot' 50
. . i:oltl. •'
8 5 ,MS 2
11 ~· ~":::
~
.,.!
'. • • ••.• , 4 4 .500 J'il
ciGiitfrloiJ28 ..,.. ~
HiW· York ..... 46 .400 3\t

. ..... ~ ~!'

omo
League Overoll

·

~·~••or•dl7polllli; nakJa~ .at'clneiu!aU .

•.

Rlul!ton . . . . . . 03 0 2 70

....

JNa.

··'

261

WDmlngton .•• • 1 I 0 2 6 1

~~~
Buketllall Aa~l.
~· Glii... . .
atloo Ylc1017, . ·
· . ~ 'at b-er · · ··
. ~1'Cllllad Pi!oonlr.,180.Q8~
al Bolli!rl , .
•.
'""' -

9 0 0 Ntntera.
MeanwhUe, the Packers, all
531 but counted out of the rate,
541 have another chance- cmn3 6 0 plbnetts of !be Atlanta Folcona,
190 who upset the Chicago Beare,
720

W, L, T, Pet.
WLT WLT
New Yon . . . . . 7 3 o .100 Bald. ·Wallace • , 4 U 0 8 I 0
Houlton ' ' • ' ' • s 6 0 .455 Marletta .••• • •• 61 0 7 2 0
Mloml • . . • . . 3 6 I .1133 OJOoWesi&lt;\YB11..... 5 1 0 7 1 0
"~ ,{~-·
,-1':7-o ~;Soo w~ ...... ~ . ~ . ~o .p ,o
9
MualdqjUill. .• , . 5 2 0 - .6 2 1
- . , . ' ' ·w~-. I I ·/OO
Wl-f1.,.,.32U 530
w. L. T. Pet. Clr&amp;Jltol .. . ..... 430 530
r--. .s c•~ ' .
9 2 0 .818 ML Union ....... 3 3 0 54 0
;;jlllll , ~; . • : .' .' 8 2 o .800 Denlsoo., . .. .. . 2 3 U 4 I 0
Son Dlqo , , • ' . . 8 2 0 .800 Kel1yoo ........ 2 3 0 5 I 0
llooiver '
4 s u 400 OttarbeiD . . . . . . 2 4 0 3 6 0
Cln~ ·. ·• "':' ' ·... '3 8 1 .:173 Oberlln ........ !50 251
&amp;tndoy•a Reoulll
Heidelberg,, •• ,0 6 0 2 7 0
. "l'etniiatl $8 ~ 21
Hlnm ........ , 0 7 0 1 7 0

r..,.. , ~~ Hewllt, emula~ ' llill·bt•;u•.ihJo6
tho. I'IU!er, atul!ed In 1 tiit· lllit.._.!CI# 31 Bo- 17
1a1i1 .In the IIIIM tAl. bel&amp;&gt; Lol, ·lilaltlin 38 DlnVor 17
~~ tAl Ito olihUt ... ,..... ~liJ!il 4J N"' Yorll32

w

which gave the Rams a 26-20 tie

League Overoll

Eut

::··:r-~

h.,•

coach, , apurned an attelq)t for

JIIID.OHIO

AFL !II'ANDINGS
By United Prell IDiernatlonal

1..

are tClOkirW: dangerous
Baltimore Colts
record in pro footbalL
the Los Angeles Rams'

WLTWLT with the san Francisco For-ty-

at Cleveland
Son Fraru:looo at Pltllburtrll

,. ' . newilt

Packers
and the
the best
Allen,

League Owroll

NOif Yon at Loa Anples

,

Allen is

victory with his team oo lhe 13yar&lt;HI.., Sunday and gol a 2().
yard field goal by Bruce
MID-AMERICAN CONFERE/;CE Gossett with 17 aeconds lett

Pblladelphla

ByDunkers .

George

pla,ylrw for ties, the Green Bay

Northwestern , , • 1 5 0 1 8 0
Wlsconaln .. .. • 4 6 0 0 9 0

- at Baltimore
New·Orl.eono
at Detroit

·IA1u3rs Saved

~ign:

lnllana . . . . . . . 420 630
Iowa ••••• • ••• S30 450
lollehtgon Stille,. , 1 5 0 4 5 0
Wlnots . ... .... 1 50 1 8 0

AtloQia at St. Louto
Dallas II cid....,
Grean Bll at Watbineton

.--.111

By VITO STELLINO
UPI Sports Wrltet
The 1968 Naltonal F~
League season is ~ to
look strangecy like the 1967

Minnesota • • .. • 4 2 0 5 4 0

AIIPI••

Ue

telma have gone Into tbelr
clash with perfect marko. Both
are 8-0.
Washtngton and Wuhlngton

Athletic Cont'erence c~ion.

9 I 0 .900
8 1 1 .889
4 5 1 .Ht
Atlanta .•.• .•••• 2 8 0 .200
Smday'a Results
Ctovellllll 45 Plttsburtrll 24
Dollal U .Wuhln&amp;tm 24
New Yon 7 PhiJad;dphla 6
Ba!Uiuore 27 St. Loula 0
Atluta 16 Cbl- 13
Groen, lll;r 29 NOif Orleans 7
lllmeoota II Detroit 6
Loo
20 Son Fnn. 20,

. -s·

er, working hard, and Uvlng CUI-

~.

perfect aealon.
The llarvoni-Yole game at
Cmtbrfdle, Masa., tor IV)'
~ Slllrem&amp;Cy marks the
ftrat time In 59 yeara the two

.

.c eotnl Dlvtston
By United P res• Jntenai!Oilll
.
'
W, L. T. Pet.
RIG tEN
lllmooota . • • . . 6 4 0 .800
League Overoll
Chleaio • . . . . . • 5 5 0 .500
WLTWLT
Green lla1 . . . . , 4 5 1 444 OhloState • .• . 600 800
Detroit • . . . . • • 3 6 1 .333 Mlchlgon, ••.• 600 810
~stal Dlvillon
Purdue .••• • •• 420 720

oJaltt NFL gameL

them of it.
Now we're a close ramfly,
having run, doing thlnp toaeth-

W, L. T. Pet.
8 2 0 .800
• •• 7 3 o .700
. , • 4 6 0 .tOO
• ' 0 10 0 .000

Western COnference

NEW YORK (UPJ).. Tho tGlJ
tOIItlruoo oo quarterbocko tn
tho Nat!Oilll Footboll ~
'lbrea of them were (Greed
1101! with Injuries Sunday Itt the

lose me too.
I came to under stand the Jove

BERRY

•

Dallu . . .
Nn ,York ,
W•eMnp· .
l'llll!J&lt;!ol~· '

!Wnoto and put the Wfi!Pa oo a

Stlite alao meet Jn an old ern coaference tide _lncl ·a ~
rivalry, but under dtt!erent bkl to etther the ora..- or
ctrc:umataneeo from . tile other Supr - 1 with 1 17-11 win .,.r
ugrud.ge•t games. '11111 pla7 It Auburn S&amp;turdl,y.
neutn1 !l&gt;d&lt;IM, W11h., with
Other major pmeo saturday
the 10181' usmnl-.: the Paclftc will match TemesHe and
Eight c:ollar.
Kentucky, 1\d,..H..,.ton, Jndlt..
Three C.Ddldltes ldle
na-Purdue, SMU-Ba)'ltH", LS1.1oo
Three major bowl cawlldltea, Tulane, Michigan Stat&amp;-NCJI'tb:o
Te&gt;ao (7·1·1), Geor8la (7-4-2) western, Oregon-Oregon Stille,
IIlii Alabama (7-2) are Idle, IJtol&gt;lltah State, North iroa..
GeorsJa dlnclled the Southeast- Wichita Stille, Syncu,..Weat
VIrginia, Stanlurd • Callforela,
Darlmouti&gt;-PennsyiVIIIIa, Clem•

j

BiB Eisht conference gamea,
'1 .kftoW It'• tl• lluad. . • · Cleveland , • . . 7 3 0 .700 Arkansas 11111 Texas Tech
WIIJ !"
St. l4,!lla . . • •. 5 4 1 .556 cCJrq)ete In a SouthWest coaterNew llrieans , . 3 7 o .300 ence battle, Yale and Harvard
Pltllburtlh , • • • . 2 7 I .222 clash tn an Ivy League game ol
Capitol DU!ston

Dear Helen:
I just want ._LOST'' to know
he is not alone. 1 lost 1111 husband sb: weeks before I1J¥ e1ghth

8); &amp;I'll Ohio UnlveraU;y, 9-0,
!Iaure• to dtopooe of Northern

,.,'h
c
l
,.,
~~:~!~~~uc"::· .l ose
0 ts on .l on,
r.
Rackers Mov zn.u.
• As
::"!...'c~e::! ~~s=
~'
TT
l
•
]'\I
•
l
Standings
vsua , zn 1 1atzona

&lt;:oarerence

Eutatn

USC VI UCLA
Soutbern callfornla, Pem
Stille 11111 Ohio Unl,.rslt;y all
put tllelr unblemlahed records
oo the Uno saturde,Y.
usc, · which haa llready
clblched tho Paetflo Eight UUo
Ind. a berth In the Rose Bowl,
must take ita 8-0 mark to
UCLA; Penn State, oliO 8-0,
seemlrw!Y rlsko tittle tn Ito
e-ent wtth Plttoburgh (1·

beao l11uod IIlii accepted by
saturday's ktckoll, others wW
depend ,.,.. the ooteome of key
games this week.

NFL STA!IDINGS
Ill' United Prell IDiernatlooal

cop.oot ... elther stde.

constant!y

mOat 91 the liauon'a coUeae•

Pro Sldndings

But this takes an unuaually
well-matched pair, and I agree
with ,... that too ollan Mom
gets the upper hand. - H.

to my

~= ~~:rRDS

- tho !111ol' {ootblll weekend of"tile

1 think you'll hear from many
wives - and husbands too who preier shared responaibil-

1

'!
Botlt are bltrhif . ranked
naUonally, Ohto State fs 8-0 1m'
the Columbus, Ollio, pme and
lollc:htpn'a Wolverines carey a
vlctc:l7~ skein or elgh:t ,.ames,
flshloned lifter 1 21·7 loll 1o
tautorala In the tlrst pme o1
the Seiaon.
.
Although ae"'ral - 1 lmlta..
1!0111 will have lliready hil'"

-1

Partner, yes. Ruler, oo!

No

-

season.

em Clll!ol'llla h!allltiltto whit to

Dear MTRMAU:

•

f--:::::-:-::--------=-::...:::::.:..:::.:::..::::.,
'S WORLD

I''

eJ7Where. - MARRIED TO A
REAL MAN AND LO&lt;E IT

lt;y:

.

A ~lh between uitdeiOblo S!IJW' and "'"'o-beaten
IIIICtdpn saturday lor the Big
Ten champtonohi» IIlii a SJ)OI In
tho Role
q&gt;poolte SOUth-

would take their rtgtrttu.l place
in the home as abiOlute ruler,
there would be lesa trouble ev-

that the place of the 1968
cide how the kids will be raJ sed· amusing experiences. Address
pres_idential election in
where vacations wUJ be spent·' Helen Bottel in care of this
B~t ~n any case, it adds up to the same thin Th
An:tencan political history is
what house to Uve in.
' newspaper.
of giVJDg names follows very definite rules g3nd ereqma~ter
qu1te secure.
mments.
utreMany a campaign has fea 1
THE WELL CHILD®
ee:oa:;&amp; ~ J::ple's
mast be easy to write and
~ured so~e aspect warrantdilldrea · - .__ oa reg straUoa blanka. For &amp;hat reason
ang mention and examination
.
-· aoways aamed for boato (Mary NID S s'
a quarter- or even a halfc~ntury ·later. But in thjs
!':.':·f~~!:
(t.,~•r':;Iarll,
etc.). Alld adolf; are !h.ayi
Wbe . •
y,
ey, Waller, FeDa etc)
wUd year there are at least
n ~t comes to naming commercial ve;t . . h
a half-dozen such surprises.
ever,~ dzfferent principle is employed.
ures, ow1880.
The major ones :
• • •
to:!:~ess bn~mthes must be n?t only memorable and in• The entry of Sen. Eu·
CHICAGO BECAME HU·
ve, u ey must also mspire confjdence
By WAYNE G. BRANDSTADT, M.D.
gene McCarthy into the race
~rt Humphrey's Waterloo,
oJ'~exabple, ~e are in receipt this week of a Prospectus
the unlikely case of a politi~
f1rst
and
last.
His
tarnished
En~rp~is~s~I'i:c.!fl a new company called "Fanny Hill
cal unlmo!""! challenging his
convention victory in the
own party s snc~mbent presi- face of violence at the conA mother writes that her
To our way _of thinking, that name fulfills ever
ir
Q-Two doetoro say that
dent, and playmg a major
daughter, 9, has started to
ment for a gomg commercial establishment
Y requ ev~ntion marked hls first seour
son, 6, has sinus trouble,
role in the incumbent's even - nous_ downturn in the poDs.
menstruate and wondeJs
At.
times, especlally after
l.!:p~ ~~':!"::. ;:::o~a:Jebw";ho could IOrget two such
tual withdrawal.
whether there could be any
And lt was the lack of a sub•
SWimml.ng
or a change iD
harmful results from start~tanti~l Democratic victory
It is also totally. i:-lorfll:ative. The purpose of the firm
• Th_e dropout of a major
the weather, he bas severe
m Chicago during the eleciDg so early iD life. Over 90
Repubhcan candidate, Gov.
as ank y~yllmo'!s Immed~ately upon seeing the title is tO
headaches. Also his ears are
rna e exra oJtation" movies.
'
tion Itself that signaled the
per cent of the girls wbo
Geo~ge Romney, after exvery sensitive to loud noises
tensive campaigning but be- Joss of the presidency for the
menstruate before they
1 ~d as or inspiring confidence-what could be sound .,
Would
siDus trouble caus~
party.
reach their teens are normal
fo~ he had entered his first
~kra::n ~s~tusd explains, Fanny Hill Presid:~t
this?
What
treatment do you
prrmary, all largely traceand their early maturation Js
a ea Y completed a whole paper wrapViolence has a way of
recommend?
able to his use of one unfor- haunting a city long afler it
of no special significance. In
A:...He&amp;dacheo caused by
tunate word _ " brainpasses.
Sever
a
1
organizathe
.rest, the cause may be a
TV' s "Dating Game," justlearnsiDusitis
are usually present
washed."
tio~s planning conventions in
bram tumor, which is usualed his wife is playing that older
on
arising
and persist until
Ch1cago next year have ally fatal, or an ovarian tumor
• The entry of Sen . Robconceit The Divorcing Game .. .. ert_ Kennedy, brother of a
II
or
12
o'clock.
Sinusltia
ready moved them else which should be removed
may also cause various
Nixon's expected tohangontoam.
where.
~Jam pr~side~t and the maunless lt ls found to be a
symptoms relsted to the
bas.sadors Sarge 9Jriver (Paris) JOr ch~nsmatzc figure in the
berugn cyst, in which case
And in the wake of public
ears.
Aggravation of the
campaigns.
and Llewellyn Thompson (Mosno treatment is necessary.
uproar comes the inevitable
trouble
!lfier swimming or 8
btte of humor. A sampling
• Dropout of the incum BY JACK O'BRIAN
rl.cow) ···· Menswear rtguresinsist:
In the normal but precocichange m the altJtude or the
NEW
&amp;""'
aJong with Rawls to the
be
15
its
face
toward
the
showed
~nt
who
bad
been
handed
ously developed child the
'DIL-•
YORK - Bistq, Junes bank.
.st lo keep Bdwy, browsers' dl per cent or males wear l'tirweather are common obseren~ of_ the Humphrey camonly treatment required is
..-~ I next news will involve
T
nundll ott the proslies who paes; yes You, Bruce! .. .. 1f you I~ the previous election the
vations, It is important to
pat~n tn a Peoria, Ill., holeI
sympathetic understanding
Diane Kellllecb-, .mo wrote .. The
he Pierre Hotel bought a
rade outside .
~ve all those Having Wonderful b1gg.est percentage and nu- dunng
determme
whether the troua
rest
stop
before
the
merical
_
margin
of
votes
Otller Slde" with him and runs titable
for Dick Nixon's execu~
and special attention to her
..u .. :~~
Competition for the lead role 7 lme postcardafrompals,you•re ever enJoyed by an Ameri- Hum~hrey group proceeded
ble Is due to allergy, lnfec.
sex educatioo. When sexual
Jd
ve .....,..;_..... room and when It was in the W. C. Fields auto-biograplo. a De1tlologist ... . There's a nock
lion or both. Several drugs
.
1 UIOrtedenterprlses .... Even
to Chicago.
can president.
desires occur before the de. a bl •·""''
.._ Ia a conglomerate these sent from Bloomingdale's a ser. Ical musical "W. C.., gets sillier.· 0f cIubs and even publications
are
available for temporary
"The Chicago pool of revelopment of sound judg•
. • AsaauiDatloa of a ma· A-•·
v1ce-entrance
union """'abbJe
at now being mentioned are Mickey
On e of the cb.Jllest longrun
relief but removal of the
.-.,11 ···· ,L..UU~~.Sllil:e
a fine y~··· ••PI
¥,porters
will
be
announc;ed,"
Jor presidential candidate
ment regarding their mean-"1!&gt;
ultl'
erre sent it rt..&amp;d back 1o
Bdwy
cause-not always easy-is
....
some press wag wrote on a
near Lou Rawls will head Bl
'61"
Rooney and GOO.rre:v Cambridge
· musicals may boast 8
Sen . Robert Kennedy.
'
ing, there Is always some
·the
only way to cure this
Ute ••~
.•
,.
....__k
oomey•s ·•· · The u~le on
o
sna~y
1
h
"
holel lobby blackboard "as
danger that the child will
·-~""""
TV series th ._._,_
''""''""VVU
·•••
ne or the biggest ex _ child
- spas of red ink as 8000 . • Marrin&amp;' of a nominat·
condition.
"'-ttl
e
-.m
Stem
pays
its
topless
fil
s_oon
as
next
of
kin
are'
noti
.
become pregnant.
..,,_.. • .....- s Diller dared to Go-Go
m stars is undergoing cobalt as meagre talents with multi _ z~g convention by riots and
fzed."
t reatments . .. While Tina Louise egos deel·de to abandon Jt.
flop ·•·· Sl1PPY ln-1
61 ' : "'"'"'er
VIolence , which had serious
....ute wtU Ia"""' said gaJs $50 8 ni"""t
~....
• •
• • •
"61'
he' II gotta get the bouncy. h
Oakw
Q-lo II true that female
eff~t
on
.that
party
nomi.
The
worst
of bad hobits
ad her hair styled at the Colood private school in
" POOR SPIRO AGNEW "
nee s candidacy.
infants have some uterine
ts
th~
one
that
permit&amp; you
as the line goes a r o u n' d
lage de Beaute, her shy violet nearby fuughkeepsie, N. y ., has
bleeding for the first few
• The Nhoa comebaet
to /tnd excUBe.t for the
husband Le 11 Crane camped in oot a scandal but an embarrass~ashington these days.
days of their live11 ?
.
rest pf 'em.
the next chair for a manicure ~ent for the bo.vs: a girL Carol from . the depths of defeai
Just as he was becoming
B;n~
bttter
renunciation
of
poA-There
Is
a
rue
but
while selecting a pair of mut- Gordon, 15, one ot the best ln
wel~·known, they made him
litical ambition , to electron
harmless occurrence. If u
a v1ce president."
ton chop sideburns from an as- the F:ast, may dofllkoaae .tJ,s temis as 37th president.
doesn't clear up within five
A sea turtle can ltay under
sortment ofmoustachesandother team ···· Ava Gardne,· and her
. Burning your bridges bedays, the child should be
Other incidents r o u n d e d
water from 30 to 40 miDutea
male hirsute accessories .
usual grab of males dug ()ne out the character of the '68
htnd you delights the
examined to delermiDe the
without comiDg up to breatJJe.
people who build bridges.
The Look Magazine cover _ songstress Nancy Wilson at the elec.tions. There was the incause of the bleeding.
piece on Mrs. Joseph P. Kenne- Copacabana ... . Hey - wasn't BJ::aln--out-again·in·again candy is one of the warmest., nicJack E. Leonard aupposed to dldacy of Gov. Nelson
eat, brightest, most touching and star at the Copa this seaaon? ~kefeller ; the assassinaOf course Meyer Davis' or- tz~n of Dr. Martin Luther
true renections or this wonderful
woman we've ever encountered chestra will play at Nixoo's In - King , followed by widespread riots which put the
·•·• As a Rose Kennedy-watcher augural; he' s been First Bal:on !aw and order stamp jn&lt;felfor more than a &lt;J.Iarter c en- at every inauguration ball since zb.ly on the campaign; the
buy, we can testi(y authoress Harding• s .. . . The aaluence or
Nixon selection of a political
Laura Bergquist has captured the ink: Allen Drury, was paJd $50_ unknown for his running
~ou~ding Mother with attractive 000 by McCall's mag t • mate ; the fight back to a
liiSlght and integrity, a rich trib.
not Printing his newest ~; photo.finish by Hubert Hum.
phrey.
ute to a lady Who ratlls one· reg- lse~~r "Preserve and p r 0Tex_tbooks on political
ularly .
'
ec. and
the 1 am e
"Hatr" Producer Michael But- mag aJ so .,....d
··• him $100,000 in campatgns for some time to
come are likely to devote
ler and Tommy of the Smothers
1966 for not serlaHzing hJs uea.
large swatches to thi• year
Bros, JUSt bought the Earl Car- pable of Honor" .. , Now he in - of ba!Oement and surprise
ro~l Theatre in L. ,, _ and after a hales another bonanza from the
of triumph and tragedy. '
$250,000 re-do, Will re-name it Conservative Book Club .•.. Our
• •
The Acquarius Theatre . . .. Of favorite entertainment apart
THE SCORECARD now
coorse, "Hair" wUI be its first from the election waa Helen Mac. reads Democrato 17, RepubUcant 18. The two teams
inv~sion .. . Gordon - ~ella Mac- Innes• "The Salzburg Atlalr ..
have
1plll cootcol of tlJe
Rae s daughter Heather wUJ be a gem of a spy - ch.Hier .... Sh.;.s
pret1dency
almost 50-50
among the L. .&lt;\."Hair" grubbers the most literate or aU eooae •
since
1128,
when
Andrew
but won't strip; the only gal in bump indters.
Jackson'• defeat of Joha
.
the Bdwy · version who refused
9ulncy Adamo marked what
ct!IHI •1 Hf..\ I•~lo go starkers, Lyn Kellogg was
ts generally regarded as the
,MII,tlte ~~publicans and Democrats ore ; to 0
the only one in the cast worih re"Seersucker" is the name beginning of our two-party
system. Also In that time
0' cotlllt/011 goYrrnment'- the1 MIGHT~~t"fpect us,.,to.~e
memberlng; of course she's gone of a type of fabric; it is also a
_::.:::::_::::::.:_:_::,::_~:
on to UdJer things,
~arne for the fellow who be- the Whlgo, leading oppool·
heves completely in a fortune
lion party to the Democrats
ch uck Barris, who produ ces teller.
before 1328, nabbed office

111!;{

r

f:er~full of.~~~ries for filming , such as " Fanny Hill M t
Fanny Hill Goes West " and "The H
ee sf
F asanova,
anny Hill."
•
ouse o
kn~ ~h~te ira~e blacks anything for success we do not
cotn1 docket of p~r~o~~c~i~fs~rhaps a listing on the
Nuturally, a name like th.
uld
so well in the past. That is ~e~~s noth have wor~ed out
e eac age has 1ts own
standards for labeling things.
If what we read in old book · t
were named Ebenezer and s IS _rue, a century ago boats
called Bowser and Fido.
Patlence, and adults were
And the same sort of practice wa
l"ed
names you could recognize reme:UtfP 1 dto commercial
In the old days of the A 'e
er ~n trust.
ample, successful buBines!m~f Accomphsh~ent, for exNaWpoleon pastr:ies, Chesterfield c~:sd~n~eMJJmg~on hbf!ots,
lth tbe comi!lg of tb A
orns c airs
names changed to confoerrn~~!n~:;!b!tion, standards jn
Guarantee Truss Co., and tbe Ice Cre a sC Pbles, Inc. , The
As the Age of Innoc
.
•.m o en.
called [deal Acme ze~l~~e .;rnved, ftrms were naturalJy
Today being the' A e ' aramou~t
directory has been rfwriof Commumcation, the business
names as Middlesex Hosp~f:r ~~ce more to include such
' oppy Joe's and , of course,
Fanny Hill Enterprises.
Needless to say we are n t .
But we applaud the chan o gomg to put any money in it.
arrival of Bobby &amp; Johge, a~d ~an ~ardly wait to see the
Togs, and Anastasia Brothnneyr ,mversJty, Christine Keeler
s nsurance .

Dear Helen:
[ am Jn love with a polleeman who Is now on his third
marriage. He pa.ys cblld support to his first wife, and 10
he can't leave hfs present wife,
as he needs her paycheck.
lie doesn't love her . Seys she
is alwa,u nagging him about other women. I know he is not a
cheat, Helen, as he has been
with me every night for f o u r
months. He tells hi's wife 1M&gt; haa
to work late.
When I suspected 1 was preg-

Dear Lin L:

WASHINGTON NCTE!BDCI&lt;

l.. '

l!Y
HE WANTS TO EAT HIS
CAKE AND HAVE IT TOO

nant, l called her up not letting her know who r was. She
sure didn't sound like she mistrusted him. 1Jte laughed at me.
M.Y man Slij'&amp; to be patient and
some da.Y we can be married.
My apartment his his home but
he also lives with his wife ~d
I'm wondering If he wanis to
have his cake and eat it too.
He seems so alncere and loving,.
but what will hawen later on
when I can't work? _ LOST IN
LOVE

:f'e

-.

�2 - 1'110 Dally Somlnel, Pomeror·lollddloport, 0., M&lt;&gt;ldoJ&lt;, NOlOmber 18, 1988

"Now We'd Like You to Go a Few Rounds
Wrth Thrs Fellow'"

" ........ ljlilir Sellllnel, ....,_.~ 0., ilonloy, N - r 18, 1988

ck- Wo1y.erine Match TopsNationalGrid futerest~~jL;···=·j~

Catonsville Nine: Path to Chaos
Tb•re ca.n be no doubting the sincerit

~nd lnlenstty ol belief

of the serf.. tyl~

offJce In Catonsville, Md., last May seized

records and burned them with ho~emade

\

I
•

f

Some groups and individuals around the
~~~ are . now attempting to elevate
be
atons\l"dle Nine " into a cause celere on the order of the Sacco-Vanzetti case

~~e 1920s or the Scottsboro Boys of the

Let it be repeated that there can be no
doubting the sincerity of these nine men
and women, nor their personal courage.
Rather than considering themselves lawbreakers, they look on themselves as martyrs to a higher law than any written by
men. They are ~onvinced that they are
right and that their cause is just and damn
the torpedoes of fascistic reprisal.
Precfs~ly therein Ues the grave danger
their attitude and their bebavior poses to
society-not merely an orderly societ) but
the humane society they so vehemently
espouse.
For H it is permissible for these people
JiDCerely believing the Vietnam war of
war iD general to be evil, to commit an illegal act in opP.O_Sition to it, tt would be
just as permiSsible for someone else sincerely believing in the misguJdedne8s of
those who oppose America's involvement

';:..

in Southeast Asia, to raid the headquarters
peace group and destroy its records
. lfdepth of belief and self·rlgbleous
\'tction are the only standards of judgme':'t, then the poUce in Detroit had no
busmess the other day arresting 11 young
men ~nd wom-:n and charging them with
carrying out e1ght separate bombings in
of a

Ca~nsvllle Nme." These are the nine
~thollc men and women, includin two
pnest-brothers, who stormed 8 draft ~rd

naro:n:.
In uorsthis. ac~. they have been convicted
· · D1stnct Court in Baltimore and
Mntenced to prison terms of from 2 to 3'f.z
yeariD11 eac!l. One of the priests was already
'"'"'•
ns time for pounng blood over the
n ea of
another draft board.

'

con·

·,~r

1.

an alleged "antiestablishment antigovern-

i

ment plot"
'
Nor can anyone complain about the
failure of authorities to arrest the men
who bombed a Negro church and killed
four. children in Mississippi in 1963--asswmng that they sincerely believed that
what the_y did was in the ultimate service
or mankind.
The act of conscience by the "Catons
yme Nine," of course, harmed no one
IS ~s. far removed from the latter atroeity
as ~t 1s from the stupid demonstratJon some
Umverslty of Cincinnati students planned
or pretended to plan-to burn a dog with
nal:alm.
. . et ~ premise beh.!nd all of these acts
IS Identical: The end justifies the means
That _wa~ lies chaos. Just as one atroc1iy
~ever JUstifies another, neither does one
lUegal act excuse another-not at least
so long as there remain ch~nels and
~eans o_f legitimate protest and redress
m America.
Most opponents of the war have attempted to use these legitimate means to
rnak~ th~mselves heard. They have failed
to wm. over the mass of Americans H.isw
tory Will decide whether that is America's
tragedy or ~e protesters'.
One thing Is certain, however. The more
they resort to acts of outright rebellion
more. the protesters damage, if noi
arnn. their causes, whatever they may be.

and

,
Today's Game of the Name

./

The '68 Election: Grist
For Mills of Historians

By WARD CANNEL
NEW YORK INEA)

Ni~ftz~:o~:en:ewt was the grea~ German philosopher

Ia pom
out ~at the h1ppopotam us is called
ppopo mus because It looks like one
it':,~ m~ ~veh got that wrong, On second ·thought maybe
looked Jik~e on~. e who was called Nietzsche bec~use .he

th hi
e

ly NOEL GROVE

NEA Staff Corrospo~~dent

WASHINGTON - (NEA) _
It is probably safe to predict

twice more.
Altogether there have been
44 U.S. elections for president, and the reins of power
have changed from one
party to another 16 times.
The longest continual control of the White House by
any one party since the Civil
War was by the Republicans,
who won the Off1ce every
election from 1860 through

Other-Women Heartache No
7,864. Why oh wtry can't 1 0 ~
love-blinded gals see You're just
anotller score for a man w h 0
wants to have his mate and cheat
her too?
.... And((, by a 100 to one
chance you win hirn, you'll soon
learn how the ••nagging'• wife
suffers: You'll be one!
Boot him oot and save your
~~ for a maternity home.

Let's put the blame where it
belongs: On the poor exarnpleaof
fathers and husbandal It they

t

-rune•

for

century Dlvtllon
W, L. T. Pet.

More QBs
Sidelined

chlld Wll8 bom. I suffered t b e
grJef he !!!peaks about. But one
day I saw what thb was doing
chlldra~.

Feeling 1111 sorrow and loneliness, they were

scared that they might

shared with my hulb&amp;bd was
still alive bt the chUdreo, and
I was being selfish to deprive

1'110 molt serloul iDJury wu
auf!erecl by Vlflll Carter, who
brcke hlo onkle on tha thfrd
p~ of tho ,...., bolt In the
~
16-13 loll to
A~ - carter '*I come o11
the tox1 sljllld beUuse . of
!Qiurioo 1o the J!eol'l' other
q-eko.
llollao' Don Meredllll llq&gt;ed
off w!ih 1 !rdurJ iD t11o
thlnl period of the CclwbQyo' t4,
3t f'llll .of WosbqtDi 11111 Cn1ti
llal'l!lll tlntohod ""
But. st1rr wu Iii iD
lho • ...., holt of Green llllf'•
h-7 &gt;ktor7 0101' Now Orlouo
IIlii ztko
tlni.hod
tho.....
'

•______::____

....._J

.
W.
Bolllmore • • • ..
Lol Anples . . . .
Son Fnnclaco ...

q.

The memory of my love haa

taken Its speciaJ place in 111)'
heart, and the fear we aJ I felt ot
being alone Is past.
This will happen to uLostn
and hfs children too, Tfme takes
care of almost everything, it
Dear Helen:
No wonder women and chil. you let ft ..•. And It you IQUare
dren are getting so out hand your sbouJders and get on with
living! - YOUNG WIDOW
The,y have lost all respect forth;
Thls column js dedicated to
SO-called head of the house. Peo.
fsmliy ltving, ao If yoo•re hav.
pie blame the woman for the ills
log kid trouble or just plain
of the world, but who lets her
troobte, tot Helen help YOU,
act spoiled and headstrong? Who
Sbe
will also welcome your own
lets her control the .......
_ ,ey,. de-

or

T. Pet.

No Special Significance
To Early Meri'struotion···· "

ll'l.!lt,

u

•

·· -

• ·

·

Ohio Unlvenlt;y, • 6 0 0
Mloml ... .. .... 510
-liiii!Green ..• 321
Toledo ....... ,321
Weotern llllehtpn, 2 4 0
Kentstate ...... !SO

!lmdaJ's Games

lor Will .CJwtnlle&lt;fafD tuid roaldo

am Hewttt.
IDll tho _...,..
,.eb
!our Ire¥ baaloata
ln 1lto IOIIliDr m....,.,
,. er

Sunday

1

nJIIlt u !lui Lol Anef!u Lakero

to d - SUttle, 105-14.
1'110 . cbmk Is a · ~
~· shot which otlte.ro

l'llllld

WLT WLT
Defiance . . . . . . 3 0 0 7 2 0
F!ndioy . . ....... I!O

rr

·- tho _,. ML~ NBA ........... ,

I

. _.._

·

t

'

• '

•

Yot•ll !liiHllllil

(OtiJJ"illlllOI &amp;c-ecil:
'
)
_.:, - ·ABA ~ANDIJtGS .I .
By Uplled Prell·llilernatlonaJ

121o the ·illtal.quarter, Hewitt,
had Mri!t' ~- ,... 1f Po!pto.
1111'101' !1cf aD .c.r.r•·u
tfto IIIH.U'\'1 .~with 28.
11a1 'l1toril Wll liolllla'0 Jdah

EIIil'

-=1."" ' .. . . '
1

"
·· ..
·
.:,.....,.n,

·='*f ,,,,,

• ...
-~

:!:

'

LaUln

ldtll 13 palato

apleet.

Iodlp , , . . . , 3
~If·

i

· O.kl•nd • . • •

d

8 .'273 S

.

w, t. )&gt;¢" GB
10 2 .1133

l'il
Diorfer . . . ··.. f" ts .444 4'il
Now Or~ .. 4 6 .444 4'il
IJGoiotllli: • . • • . 2 5 .28!1 W.
llollao . • . • · •• 2 I :Zatl 6lh

Lot Anplols , , ' 4 ,556

Dr,VLIN FIRST

·, J!IIISIIANE

(I}PD- Bruce

liPUD of Aullnlla .....ed hll

fl\oil --...

viotliry iD 18
~ SOmdoJ Wheb be ·,bot I
a.~
of 70 tAl llnlsh.with •
~. fOilild - · ol 281 11111 •
CflrOo oliOt , la'fuqlh .,.. Peler
:Tclwplol!d ' .of Brltala In the
" lliflj~D Jilte~Oilll Galt Cia..
1110.

..-

' ..ila.tl!&gt; ~ ~800 ,... hi!'

' f1r11

~ finish. Gil Bnwor
of· the ~ SWes ~ ID
tech place with a m liliiL
; i"

f'

. TlttDAILy SENTINEL

&amp;tnday'o Rolllltl
Indiana 114 New Yoti&lt; 81
'(~ ..... -·'""'
Maodii'•,Go!Jtoa
••· Now Orl.talli atllllln- , La.
•
KoiJiudq at M1aml
&lt;tJn~Uiame• -~L

. )'iHL · !II'ANDINGS

Ill' 1li!ft.,t rr,.siDtorllitlonal

2

•

··-~-0
NBA ST""""""'
l!y United Prell ~01111
East
1.

Canadians Get

Golf Cup Back

ROME (UPJ) - Canada tociay
held
the golf cup It pve t b e
W L P&lt;t. GB
'IIWld
16 yeal'l ago IIlii had
Boaton .... " ' 11 3'. 788
tried
In
voiD ever slnoe to got
Ba!Umore ..... 12 4 •750
back.
CIDc:ltDtL .... 11 4 , 733 Y.t
The Canadians dtd tt In the
Philltdelphto ... 10 4 , 714 1
most
dramatic ftnish in World
Detroit ....... 7 8 ,467 4lh
CUp
Tournament
history, by surgNew Y...k, • , •• 8 u ,353 6lh
Ing
abead
&lt;11
the
next to the last
Nllwallkee , , , • 3 10 •300 71,1,
hole
of
the
72
hole
event al the
West
nearby
7
,850yard
Olgtalaeourse
W L Pet. GB
And It was the Americans the)'
Lot Angeles ... 12 4 , 750
beat
san FriDeloeo' '7 8 .467 4lh
Canada flnlobocl the !our-r&lt;Wid
7 8 .438 5
toumameot,
called unUilast 7ear
san Dleso·. , •• , 6 9 ,400 6lh
the
Canada
Clip,
with a total ol
Phoerdx ...... S 8 .3115 Slh
569
while
Lee
TreviDo of El
Chicago •.. , , ,8 10 .375 6
Puo,
Tex.,
and
JuUWI
Boros ot
Seattle • • •••• s 14 .aoo s :
lllloi.Pineo,
N.
C.,
failed
In tlletr
Sundo,y's Resulto·
bid
lo
make
It
a
U,
S.
win
for
Lol Angelea 105 ~ 94
the
tent11
Ume
In
18yeoro.
Bostait 130 Phoenix-98
Only games ochoduied
loloado7'• Games
NEW RECORD
N o - achodulnd
BERLIN (IJPJ)... Erv Hall of

A-.. ,,,

"'rt1J811eld ••••••

s r

414

VillalloYa Unlverolt;y IIlii a 1188
O)Jmpte allver meclalllt, ltottered tile world
hrieo 1 - mark SUndi.Y
wltll a Ume of 7.6 ae&lt;Oilds
tlurlng an· IDvttaUOII&amp;! traok IIlii
field meet.

a-..

• . . . 68211' l!altiJnore .. ., ... s a 212
• . , • I 8' 1 11 Welt
SAFETY FEATURE
• • • • . , 4 10 8 Ill
W L T I'll.
COL'UMBUS, Ohio (UPJ).. A
·. ·. Ul I 8 lkelo .. ,; .. , 10 2 1 21 ._- 1'tlllllatloo ISitkfq; ,w - ·
'a.filito'
, - llochostor •• • • , , 7· 7 2 18 "I«J·· till• :lllt Of'...,.,. Wheel
J.
~ • ·; r • , A" 8 1 11
whleh baa re·aultod Itt
~ , , . ; , , , a.10 4 10 foljer
racll11 aocldento

w...;

.

har!lo••
it .......1)'1 1'biii'O Uaod, .,.., •

..~

Baldmore. 1be Rams
advanced to the Western
Conference Utle game because
they had the better record
with

agai.

Baltimore- but' then los{

to Green lll;r.

same Strategy
Albin, whose team is now 8-1-1
compared to Baltimore's 9-1,
ftgures it the same way this

Browns are 7-3.

Morral, Richardson Duo
MOtTall Dipped touchdown
paases of 79 an:l 29 yards to
Willie Richardson as Baltimore
year•
"SUre, we wanted to go tn for beat st. Louis, Pr&lt;BI!Pting card
seven, but getting a tie didn't coach Charley Wimer to
hurt us because we still have to eommem, "'Ibe Colts will go aU
the way unless they're jinxed."
beat Baltimore," he said.
Bob Etter' o 2~ field goal
Green Bey, which st.opj)ed
.
as
Ume ran out in the first half
New Orleans, 29-7, 11 in
gave
Atlanta the triumph over
s,upriiiJW good shlpe despite
Chi.,_
The clubs played a
lta 4-5-1 record. Since the Bears
scoreless
aecorxl halt carter
loat to Atlanta and are misal~
was
curJed
ott the field on the
Carter and Gale 5ayers, they
third
play
of
the thlnl period.
have little chance despite their
carroll
Dale
caught etgflt
5-5 mark. That leaves the
passes
Cor
161
yards
ar¥1 a TD
central DlvisJon race between
as
the
Packers
thumped
New
the Packers and the Minnesota
Orleans.
Bart
Starr
hit
or.
nine
VUdnp, who lead by tlh games
of
14
passes
before
beq
with a 6-4 mark after a 13-6
shaken up in the third pertod.
victory over Detroit.
Since the Vikings must play Zeke Bratkowsld took over.
Joe KaRl's only two passes of
Baltimore ard Los Angeles ~n
the
first half were Intercepted
their next two pmes (whUe
but
be
clicked on three straight
Green Bay is playing Washingat
the
outset
of the second half
ton and San Francisco), that
for"
65
yards
to
set
up
Vlkin2 Iaadsppeors sbaky,
In Dre Clpitol LMsion. Dallas Minnesota's only TO in the win
and New Yor1&lt; boosted their over Detroit. Jim Lindsey
scored it from the two.
marks to s-2 and 7-3 with
Trailing 17·13,Dallasexploded
dltrerent types of victories.
Dallas routed Washlnston, 44-24, for 31 points In the second half
whip
Washtngton. Den
and New yotl( ·· edaed wWe·s s ' 1o
Philadelphia, 7-11. Philadelphia ts Meredith was · Sidelined wtih ·a
knee injury late in the lhlrd
period but Craig Morton came
on a!KI threw 1 TD pass to keep
the Cowboys rolling.
Dallas, Tex., when the New
York Sunday News rq~orted in

RI~Cearned

ttoRosetrlpwtth
a 17-13 triumph owr tough
oregon State Satunlay. Oblo
State's Rex Kern llld Jlm Oti&amp;
each scored twice In rocking
ICMI, 33-27, and Mlchtpn

~!~~~:ls~ni!..9il~:

touclu:kmna to tie Red Grange' a
big Ten record.

:-!-t=";;,!~\'::1

encounter to Oklahoma, Kansas

e

Black &amp; Decker

GIFTS
THAT
PLEASE!
9

Blod&amp;Deder DeWALT

10" POWER SHOP
Strong,, .. ,'~"""-­

mounted dl,.&lt;lty to
!rome and mo11lve hub
fo1 greglftl rigidly .

10" Blode
CUll

a eq&gt;yrtgllt

S199
Sow, 1hope, dodo, 11.1rfoe1,

.~

• ••

....

le's retirement would be made
next February in the Yankees'
IIPrinB tnlnlrw c&amp;Jl1l at FL

.,

3

to

200

C/H

' ' "~ .

"

said MarKle when

contacted

by

United

PnlsB
JnternattOilll. "I am gotng to

11201

leg atond. Steel
co... tructlon.

e

Generol·purpQI;I drill. K!t tnc:lud" 8
piiCIIIO polith,
1h11rJ&gt;"n, buff

ond wnd.

1399

a day.
Gives you a real

"break."

retire as

ot now,"

II(Ondl.

DEWAlT DOES EVERYTHING IN WOODWORKING

coots less than a
eupofeoffee

Lauderdale, Fla.
"I am not going

Stop• loalln

Eltmi!'KJIII the bather of tonllrudlflll
your own po-r &amp;hop

-.-r

Phone

CITY LOAN

C/H

UIH-2

3/8" DRill KIT

1/2" COMPACT DRILL

Lorge (Qpotlly d ri ll Gnd mo11 wqnt.d

Small, b11l mlghly. l l'llh""'elgh\. Slide
handle gh•e• betNr
contra. Long life
beorlng1 .

ac:ceuorlll In '"'"'om plo1tk COli.
Gearing and chuclr.lor
blgglr. tovg111r jobl.

1999

sprlrw train!~ with the elQ)ectatton of plQirw. ''
Mamie said r.. would not
cOIIllllellt furth8r on the report
"untll I haw read the story in

2688

ee

~r"

the

but Burke said in
thl the report
M.elltle would retire "'is Jncon.
sistent with the .facts as we
know theJn. If
New

York

U205~

JIG SAW KIT

Mantle,

who celebrated his
37th birthday on Oct. 20, p~ed

Complete '"''"' durable p!Qiilt tall to
proiiKI tool1 McHe1 ~~:roll, alrolghl o..J
durv ed ( urt In wood ,
metol, ploeliu.

In 144 games for the Yankees
last season. He batted •237, hit

I I ~IlK...

1999

18 home runs and drove in 54

Clf"- -..

runs. Mantle has a career total
C/ H

THIS WEEK'S SPECIAL

JIG SAW WITH TABLE
Tobie

gi~IN

poutll

DELUXE JIG SAW

11Gblllly lor octurote, t~ll.

l,.;reotu .aw"t ~• r·
10llllty. 6 bladel ond

AT RAWLINGS

lncl~ded

2488

1967 HONDA Cl77
305cc, 4 speed, dream tourina, lara• saddle bags,
roll bar, mirrors, electric start•, larae windshield,
, · sharp as a tack, and lookina
for a heme.
•'

''

•:

WAS $595···

·$450

c....
The
Bulldl"t

-·

~:~

e t~,!!'· .....

CYCLE

~~,..

·_II;

Dick

season. The story was
heailllnecl on page 1 of the
tabloid
IIlii Mantle
was quoted as n.y1og "I just
can't hit any more."
'llle story added that the
omclal announcemeR of Mant-

' ' " ' " ' ' ' 'broko
puall•.

grind, buft, po1!1h. drill, rovle.
1ond, wire bru1h. Kroll cut,
jolnl, 1i11 or'"' " ·

FOR 10"

play next

~ of,$t,7t9,1P budpl Jl!l'

.\lllflre__ o
. ouar....
. . . ... .

stocy by

full

3 " d·~-

DeWAlT SAWS

Young that Mickey would not

.... .........., • &amp;tnilol, ,..,
IJit'"U. S. .'l'rOillitc· All i laiiCiD '

.••.

now 0.10, tying a teun record
set tn 1936 lor lutlllcy.
In the other game, Cleveland
took 1 long atep towards the
Century Divi•ion crown by
whipping Plttsburp, 45-24. The

obul&lt;iutllilllallppl,

1on-&amp;:Mtr Carolina. and TCU•

Mantle Not Out,· Yet

7 0

. • Elot
•,
· : W. 1., T, Pta;
N.W Yon "' . • • 11 s ~ ~
llloutzaal , • • • , . 9 4 3 21
.. ·-·: Bolb . . . . . . ·. 8 5 I 20
Toroato . • . • • . • 8 4 3 11
AfiL STANDINGS
· Chi¥ , , , . . . , 8 7 1 17 By UnltOd Pr001 lnlemlltOilll
;t . ' ... . 6 63 16
Ei"'ot
~ ,.
Walt
W L T Pto.
W, L. T, I'll. Horihey • , , , , , • , 8 4 I 17
, • •. • . 7 e 4 13· Pm&gt;Wnc,. • ,. .... s 8 1 11
•· • • • • &amp;8216

16-13, IIlii knocked out quarter·
back Vlflll carter lor the
season. AOO the Colts kept
rolllrw behln9 Earl Morrall
(remamber .Jo1mQY Unltasl IIlii
whipped the St. LOots C&amp;(d!Mis,
27~. to boost !hetr mark tG 9-1.
A Yeat" ago, the Colts riod the
best record In pro football for
the ftrot 13 games. But Allen,
who'd taken the tie in the Orst
game with Baltimore, woo his
gamble when the Rams beat the
Coltt in the secolll meeting
bltween the two · team•·· to tie
for the f'Allotal DivisiOn · load

NEW YORK (IJPJl- Tl» New
York Yankees are sati81led
loday that llllekey MlllUe wiD
trO to sprl~ mining next
Febnary with the intention of
p~lng another season.
"Thlt was our understandl~
OTIIERS
at the end of the 1968 season
WLT and that is our understalrllng
Ashland ....... . .. 8 2 0 110ft'," 1 spokesman Cor the
Akroll ... . ......... 6 2 1
Yonkees said Sunday afler club
X&amp;vler ............ 5 4 o President llllchael Burke talked
Dl3tOn •.••••••• • ••• 5 4 0 with the $100,00ll+year llllliiB"r. ·
4 0
lltnclmatl'. ........ 4 4 0
Burke tolepnoned M&amp;nlle in
JIIM C&amp;rrntl .. " ' ; , • 4 6 0
FWlay .. " .... " ' 3
Ohio Northam , , .•• , • 3 6 0
5 0
Y-stownSI.IIA&gt;, .• • .II
Central State • . .. .. .. 2 6 0
6 0

.
, ·
,f.Ut W L. ·'·l1ot Gil
. ..........
,. n' . ,. ' r ·.\delbert
caseTech ••••••••• • o

' '.
' palnll ·- .. ' . ' 2 • 8 '·
Sljfrlad
-''-"'--. ~ lot' 50
. . i:oltl. •'
8 5 ,MS 2
11 ~· ~":::
~
.,.!
'. • • ••.• , 4 4 .500 J'il
ciGiitfrloiJ28 ..,.. ~
HiW· York ..... 46 .400 3\t

. ..... ~ ~!'

omo
League Overoll

·

~·~••or•dl7polllli; nakJa~ .at'clneiu!aU .

•.

Rlul!ton . . . . . . 03 0 2 70

....

JNa.

··'

261

WDmlngton .•• • 1 I 0 2 6 1

~~~
Buketllall Aa~l.
~· Glii... . .
atloo Ylc1017, . ·
· . ~ 'at b-er · · ··
. ~1'Cllllad Pi!oonlr.,180.Q8~
al Bolli!rl , .
•.
'""' -

9 0 0 Ntntera.
MeanwhUe, the Packers, all
531 but counted out of the rate,
541 have another chance- cmn3 6 0 plbnetts of !be Atlanta Folcona,
190 who upset the Chicago Beare,
720

W, L, T, Pet.
WLT WLT
New Yon . . . . . 7 3 o .100 Bald. ·Wallace • , 4 U 0 8 I 0
Houlton ' ' • ' ' • s 6 0 .455 Marletta .••• • •• 61 0 7 2 0
Mloml • . . • . . 3 6 I .1133 OJOoWesi&lt;\YB11..... 5 1 0 7 1 0
"~ ,{~-·
,-1':7-o ~;Soo w~ ...... ~ . ~ . ~o .p ,o
9
MualdqjUill. .• , . 5 2 0 - .6 2 1
- . , . ' ' ·w~-. I I ·/OO
Wl-f1.,.,.32U 530
w. L. T. Pet. Clr&amp;Jltol .. . ..... 430 530
r--. .s c•~ ' .
9 2 0 .818 ML Union ....... 3 3 0 54 0
;;jlllll , ~; . • : .' .' 8 2 o .800 Denlsoo., . .. .. . 2 3 U 4 I 0
Son Dlqo , , • ' . . 8 2 0 .800 Kel1yoo ........ 2 3 0 5 I 0
llooiver '
4 s u 400 OttarbeiD . . . . . . 2 4 0 3 6 0
Cln~ ·. ·• "':' ' ·... '3 8 1 .:173 Oberlln ........ !50 251
&amp;tndoy•a Reoulll
Heidelberg,, •• ,0 6 0 2 7 0
. "l'etniiatl $8 ~ 21
Hlnm ........ , 0 7 0 1 7 0

r..,.. , ~~ Hewllt, emula~ ' llill·bt•;u•.ihJo6
tho. I'IU!er, atul!ed In 1 tiit· lllit.._.!CI# 31 Bo- 17
1a1i1 .In the IIIIM tAl. bel&amp;&gt; Lol, ·lilaltlin 38 DlnVor 17
~~ tAl Ito olihUt ... ,..... ~liJ!il 4J N"' Yorll32

w

which gave the Rams a 26-20 tie

League Overoll

Eut

::··:r-~

h.,•

coach, , apurned an attelq)t for

JIIID.OHIO

AFL !II'ANDINGS
By United Prell IDiernatlonal

1..

are tClOkirW: dangerous
Baltimore Colts
record in pro footbalL
the Los Angeles Rams'

WLTWLT with the san Francisco For-ty-

at Cleveland
Son Fraru:looo at Pltllburtrll

,. ' . newilt

Packers
and the
the best
Allen,

League Owroll

NOif Yon at Loa Anples

,

Allen is

victory with his team oo lhe 13yar&lt;HI.., Sunday and gol a 2().
yard field goal by Bruce
MID-AMERICAN CONFERE/;CE Gossett with 17 aeconds lett

Pblladelphla

ByDunkers .

George

pla,ylrw for ties, the Green Bay

Northwestern , , • 1 5 0 1 8 0
Wlsconaln .. .. • 4 6 0 0 9 0

- at Baltimore
New·Orl.eono
at Detroit

·IA1u3rs Saved

~ign:

lnllana . . . . . . . 420 630
Iowa ••••• • ••• S30 450
lollehtgon Stille,. , 1 5 0 4 5 0
Wlnots . ... .... 1 50 1 8 0

AtloQia at St. Louto
Dallas II cid....,
Grean Bll at Watbineton

.--.111

By VITO STELLINO
UPI Sports Wrltet
The 1968 Naltonal F~
League season is ~ to
look strangecy like the 1967

Minnesota • • .. • 4 2 0 5 4 0

AIIPI••

Ue

telma have gone Into tbelr
clash with perfect marko. Both
are 8-0.
Washtngton and Wuhlngton

Athletic Cont'erence c~ion.

9 I 0 .900
8 1 1 .889
4 5 1 .Ht
Atlanta .•.• .•••• 2 8 0 .200
Smday'a Results
Ctovellllll 45 Plttsburtrll 24
Dollal U .Wuhln&amp;tm 24
New Yon 7 PhiJad;dphla 6
Ba!Uiuore 27 St. Loula 0
Atluta 16 Cbl- 13
Groen, lll;r 29 NOif Orleans 7
lllmeoota II Detroit 6
Loo
20 Son Fnn. 20,

. -s·

er, working hard, and Uvlng CUI-

~.

perfect aealon.
The llarvoni-Yole game at
Cmtbrfdle, Masa., tor IV)'
~ Slllrem&amp;Cy marks the
ftrat time In 59 yeara the two

.

.c eotnl Dlvtston
By United P res• Jntenai!Oilll
.
'
W, L. T. Pet.
RIG tEN
lllmooota . • • . . 6 4 0 .800
League Overoll
Chleaio • . . . . . • 5 5 0 .500
WLTWLT
Green lla1 . . . . , 4 5 1 444 OhloState • .• . 600 800
Detroit • . . . . • • 3 6 1 .333 Mlchlgon, ••.• 600 810
~stal Dlvillon
Purdue .••• • •• 420 720

oJaltt NFL gameL

them of it.
Now we're a close ramfly,
having run, doing thlnp toaeth-

W, L. T. Pet.
8 2 0 .800
• •• 7 3 o .700
. , • 4 6 0 .tOO
• ' 0 10 0 .000

Western COnference

NEW YORK (UPJ).. Tho tGlJ
tOIItlruoo oo quarterbocko tn
tho Nat!Oilll Footboll ~
'lbrea of them were (Greed
1101! with Injuries Sunday Itt the

lose me too.
I came to under stand the Jove

BERRY

•

Dallu . . .
Nn ,York ,
W•eMnp· .
l'llll!J&lt;!ol~· '

!Wnoto and put the Wfi!Pa oo a

Stlite alao meet Jn an old ern coaference tide _lncl ·a ~
rivalry, but under dtt!erent bkl to etther the ora..- or
ctrc:umataneeo from . tile other Supr - 1 with 1 17-11 win .,.r
ugrud.ge•t games. '11111 pla7 It Auburn S&amp;turdl,y.
neutn1 !l&gt;d&lt;IM, W11h., with
Other major pmeo saturday
the 10181' usmnl-.: the Paclftc will match TemesHe and
Eight c:ollar.
Kentucky, 1\d,..H..,.ton, Jndlt..
Three C.Ddldltes ldle
na-Purdue, SMU-Ba)'ltH", LS1.1oo
Three major bowl cawlldltea, Tulane, Michigan Stat&amp;-NCJI'tb:o
Te&gt;ao (7·1·1), Geor8la (7-4-2) western, Oregon-Oregon Stille,
IIlii Alabama (7-2) are Idle, IJtol&gt;lltah State, North iroa..
GeorsJa dlnclled the Southeast- Wichita Stille, Syncu,..Weat
VIrginia, Stanlurd • Callforela,
Darlmouti&gt;-PennsyiVIIIIa, Clem•

j

BiB Eisht conference gamea,
'1 .kftoW It'• tl• lluad. . • · Cleveland , • . . 7 3 0 .700 Arkansas 11111 Texas Tech
WIIJ !"
St. l4,!lla . . • •. 5 4 1 .556 cCJrq)ete In a SouthWest coaterNew llrieans , . 3 7 o .300 ence battle, Yale and Harvard
Pltllburtlh , • • • . 2 7 I .222 clash tn an Ivy League game ol
Capitol DU!ston

Dear Helen:
I just want ._LOST'' to know
he is not alone. 1 lost 1111 husband sb: weeks before I1J¥ e1ghth

8); &amp;I'll Ohio UnlveraU;y, 9-0,
!Iaure• to dtopooe of Northern

,.,'h
c
l
,.,
~~:~!~~~uc"::· .l ose
0 ts on .l on,
r.
Rackers Mov zn.u.
• As
::"!...'c~e::! ~~s=
~'
TT
l
•
]'\I
•
l
Standings
vsua , zn 1 1atzona

&lt;:oarerence

Eutatn

USC VI UCLA
Soutbern callfornla, Pem
Stille 11111 Ohio Unl,.rslt;y all
put tllelr unblemlahed records
oo the Uno saturde,Y.
usc, · which haa llready
clblched tho Paetflo Eight UUo
Ind. a berth In the Rose Bowl,
must take ita 8-0 mark to
UCLA; Penn State, oliO 8-0,
seemlrw!Y rlsko tittle tn Ito
e-ent wtth Plttoburgh (1·

beao l11uod IIlii accepted by
saturday's ktckoll, others wW
depend ,.,.. the ooteome of key
games this week.

NFL STA!IDINGS
Ill' United Prell IDiernatlooal

cop.oot ... elther stde.

constant!y

mOat 91 the liauon'a coUeae•

Pro Sldndings

But this takes an unuaually
well-matched pair, and I agree
with ,... that too ollan Mom
gets the upper hand. - H.

to my

~= ~~:rRDS

- tho !111ol' {ootblll weekend of"tile

1 think you'll hear from many
wives - and husbands too who preier shared responaibil-

1

'!
Botlt are bltrhif . ranked
naUonally, Ohto State fs 8-0 1m'
the Columbus, Ollio, pme and
lollc:htpn'a Wolverines carey a
vlctc:l7~ skein or elgh:t ,.ames,
flshloned lifter 1 21·7 loll 1o
tautorala In the tlrst pme o1
the Seiaon.
.
Although ae"'ral - 1 lmlta..
1!0111 will have lliready hil'"

-1

Partner, yes. Ruler, oo!

No

-

season.

em Clll!ol'llla h!allltiltto whit to

Dear MTRMAU:

•

f--:::::-:-::--------=-::...:::::.:..:::.:::..::::.,
'S WORLD

I''

eJ7Where. - MARRIED TO A
REAL MAN AND LO&lt;E IT

lt;y:

.

A ~lh between uitdeiOblo S!IJW' and "'"'o-beaten
IIIICtdpn saturday lor the Big
Ten champtonohi» IIlii a SJ)OI In
tho Role
q&gt;poolte SOUth-

would take their rtgtrttu.l place
in the home as abiOlute ruler,
there would be lesa trouble ev-

that the place of the 1968
cide how the kids will be raJ sed· amusing experiences. Address
pres_idential election in
where vacations wUJ be spent·' Helen Bottel in care of this
B~t ~n any case, it adds up to the same thin Th
An:tencan political history is
what house to Uve in.
' newspaper.
of giVJDg names follows very definite rules g3nd ereqma~ter
qu1te secure.
mments.
utreMany a campaign has fea 1
THE WELL CHILD®
ee:oa:;&amp; ~ J::ple's
mast be easy to write and
~ured so~e aspect warrantdilldrea · - .__ oa reg straUoa blanka. For &amp;hat reason
ang mention and examination
.
-· aoways aamed for boato (Mary NID S s'
a quarter- or even a halfc~ntury ·later. But in thjs
!':.':·f~~!:
(t.,~•r':;Iarll,
etc.). Alld adolf; are !h.ayi
Wbe . •
y,
ey, Waller, FeDa etc)
wUd year there are at least
n ~t comes to naming commercial ve;t . . h
a half-dozen such surprises.
ever,~ dzfferent principle is employed.
ures, ow1880.
The major ones :
• • •
to:!:~ess bn~mthes must be n?t only memorable and in• The entry of Sen. Eu·
CHICAGO BECAME HU·
ve, u ey must also mspire confjdence
By WAYNE G. BRANDSTADT, M.D.
gene McCarthy into the race
~rt Humphrey's Waterloo,
oJ'~exabple, ~e are in receipt this week of a Prospectus
the unlikely case of a politi~
f1rst
and
last.
His
tarnished
En~rp~is~s~I'i:c.!fl a new company called "Fanny Hill
cal unlmo!""! challenging his
convention victory in the
own party s snc~mbent presi- face of violence at the conA mother writes that her
To our way _of thinking, that name fulfills ever
ir
Q-Two doetoro say that
dent, and playmg a major
daughter, 9, has started to
ment for a gomg commercial establishment
Y requ ev~ntion marked hls first seour
son, 6, has sinus trouble,
role in the incumbent's even - nous_ downturn in the poDs.
menstruate and wondeJs
At.
times, especlally after
l.!:p~ ~~':!"::. ;:::o~a:Jebw";ho could IOrget two such
tual withdrawal.
whether there could be any
And lt was the lack of a sub•
SWimml.ng
or a change iD
harmful results from start~tanti~l Democratic victory
It is also totally. i:-lorfll:ative. The purpose of the firm
• Th_e dropout of a major
the weather, he bas severe
m Chicago during the eleciDg so early iD life. Over 90
Repubhcan candidate, Gov.
as ank y~yllmo'!s Immed~ately upon seeing the title is tO
headaches. Also his ears are
rna e exra oJtation" movies.
'
tion Itself that signaled the
per cent of the girls wbo
Geo~ge Romney, after exvery sensitive to loud noises
tensive campaigning but be- Joss of the presidency for the
menstruate before they
1 ~d as or inspiring confidence-what could be sound .,
Would
siDus trouble caus~
party.
reach their teens are normal
fo~ he had entered his first
~kra::n ~s~tusd explains, Fanny Hill Presid:~t
this?
What
treatment do you
prrmary, all largely traceand their early maturation Js
a ea Y completed a whole paper wrapViolence has a way of
recommend?
able to his use of one unfor- haunting a city long afler it
of no special significance. In
A:...He&amp;dacheo caused by
tunate word _ " brainpasses.
Sever
a
1
organizathe
.rest, the cause may be a
TV' s "Dating Game," justlearnsiDusitis
are usually present
washed."
tio~s planning conventions in
bram tumor, which is usualed his wife is playing that older
on
arising
and persist until
Ch1cago next year have ally fatal, or an ovarian tumor
• The entry of Sen . Robconceit The Divorcing Game .. .. ert_ Kennedy, brother of a
II
or
12
o'clock.
Sinusltia
ready moved them else which should be removed
may also cause various
Nixon's expected tohangontoam.
where.
~Jam pr~side~t and the maunless lt ls found to be a
symptoms relsted to the
bas.sadors Sarge 9Jriver (Paris) JOr ch~nsmatzc figure in the
berugn cyst, in which case
And in the wake of public
ears.
Aggravation of the
campaigns.
and Llewellyn Thompson (Mosno treatment is necessary.
uproar comes the inevitable
trouble
!lfier swimming or 8
btte of humor. A sampling
• Dropout of the incum BY JACK O'BRIAN
rl.cow) ···· Menswear rtguresinsist:
In the normal but precocichange m the altJtude or the
NEW
&amp;""'
aJong with Rawls to the
be
15
its
face
toward
the
showed
~nt
who
bad
been
handed
ously developed child the
'DIL-•
YORK - Bistq, Junes bank.
.st lo keep Bdwy, browsers' dl per cent or males wear l'tirweather are common obseren~ of_ the Humphrey camonly treatment required is
..-~ I next news will involve
T
nundll ott the proslies who paes; yes You, Bruce! .. .. 1f you I~ the previous election the
vations, It is important to
pat~n tn a Peoria, Ill., holeI
sympathetic understanding
Diane Kellllecb-, .mo wrote .. The
he Pierre Hotel bought a
rade outside .
~ve all those Having Wonderful b1gg.est percentage and nu- dunng
determme
whether the troua
rest
stop
before
the
merical
_
margin
of
votes
Otller Slde" with him and runs titable
for Dick Nixon's execu~
and special attention to her
..u .. :~~
Competition for the lead role 7 lme postcardafrompals,you•re ever enJoyed by an Ameri- Hum~hrey group proceeded
ble Is due to allergy, lnfec.
sex educatioo. When sexual
Jd
ve .....,..;_..... room and when It was in the W. C. Fields auto-biograplo. a De1tlologist ... . There's a nock
lion or both. Several drugs
.
1 UIOrtedenterprlses .... Even
to Chicago.
can president.
desires occur before the de. a bl •·""''
.._ Ia a conglomerate these sent from Bloomingdale's a ser. Ical musical "W. C.., gets sillier.· 0f cIubs and even publications
are
available for temporary
"The Chicago pool of revelopment of sound judg•
. • AsaauiDatloa of a ma· A-•·
v1ce-entrance
union """'abbJe
at now being mentioned are Mickey
On e of the cb.Jllest longrun
relief but removal of the
.-.,11 ···· ,L..UU~~.Sllil:e
a fine y~··· ••PI
¥,porters
will
be
announc;ed,"
Jor presidential candidate
ment regarding their mean-"1!&gt;
ultl'
erre sent it rt..&amp;d back 1o
Bdwy
cause-not always easy-is
....
some press wag wrote on a
near Lou Rawls will head Bl
'61"
Rooney and GOO.rre:v Cambridge
· musicals may boast 8
Sen . Robert Kennedy.
'
ing, there Is always some
·the
only way to cure this
Ute ••~
.•
,.
....__k
oomey•s ·•· · The u~le on
o
sna~y
1
h
"
holel lobby blackboard "as
danger that the child will
·-~""""
TV series th ._._,_
''""''""VVU
·•••
ne or the biggest ex _ child
- spas of red ink as 8000 . • Marrin&amp;' of a nominat·
condition.
"'-ttl
e
-.m
Stem
pays
its
topless
fil
s_oon
as
next
of
kin
are'
noti
.
become pregnant.
..,,_.. • .....- s Diller dared to Go-Go
m stars is undergoing cobalt as meagre talents with multi _ z~g convention by riots and
fzed."
t reatments . .. While Tina Louise egos deel·de to abandon Jt.
flop ·•·· Sl1PPY ln-1
61 ' : "'"'"'er
VIolence , which had serious
....ute wtU Ia"""' said gaJs $50 8 ni"""t
~....
• •
• • •
"61'
he' II gotta get the bouncy. h
Oakw
Q-lo II true that female
eff~t
on
.that
party
nomi.
The
worst
of bad hobits
ad her hair styled at the Colood private school in
" POOR SPIRO AGNEW "
nee s candidacy.
infants have some uterine
ts
th~
one
that
permit&amp; you
as the line goes a r o u n' d
lage de Beaute, her shy violet nearby fuughkeepsie, N. y ., has
bleeding for the first few
• The Nhoa comebaet
to /tnd excUBe.t for the
husband Le 11 Crane camped in oot a scandal but an embarrass~ashington these days.
days of their live11 ?
.
rest pf 'em.
the next chair for a manicure ~ent for the bo.vs: a girL Carol from . the depths of defeai
Just as he was becoming
B;n~
bttter
renunciation
of
poA-There
Is
a
rue
but
while selecting a pair of mut- Gordon, 15, one ot the best ln
wel~·known, they made him
litical ambition , to electron
harmless occurrence. If u
a v1ce president."
ton chop sideburns from an as- the F:ast, may dofllkoaae .tJ,s temis as 37th president.
doesn't clear up within five
A sea turtle can ltay under
sortment ofmoustachesandother team ···· Ava Gardne,· and her
. Burning your bridges bedays, the child should be
Other incidents r o u n d e d
water from 30 to 40 miDutea
male hirsute accessories .
usual grab of males dug ()ne out the character of the '68
htnd you delights the
examined to delermiDe the
without comiDg up to breatJJe.
people who build bridges.
The Look Magazine cover _ songstress Nancy Wilson at the elec.tions. There was the incause of the bleeding.
piece on Mrs. Joseph P. Kenne- Copacabana ... . Hey - wasn't BJ::aln--out-again·in·again candy is one of the warmest., nicJack E. Leonard aupposed to dldacy of Gov. Nelson
eat, brightest, most touching and star at the Copa this seaaon? ~kefeller ; the assassinaOf course Meyer Davis' or- tz~n of Dr. Martin Luther
true renections or this wonderful
woman we've ever encountered chestra will play at Nixoo's In - King , followed by widespread riots which put the
·•·• As a Rose Kennedy-watcher augural; he' s been First Bal:on !aw and order stamp jn&lt;felfor more than a &lt;J.Iarter c en- at every inauguration ball since zb.ly on the campaign; the
buy, we can testi(y authoress Harding• s .. . . The aaluence or
Nixon selection of a political
Laura Bergquist has captured the ink: Allen Drury, was paJd $50_ unknown for his running
~ou~ding Mother with attractive 000 by McCall's mag t • mate ; the fight back to a
liiSlght and integrity, a rich trib.
not Printing his newest ~; photo.finish by Hubert Hum.
phrey.
ute to a lady Who ratlls one· reg- lse~~r "Preserve and p r 0Tex_tbooks on political
ularly .
'
ec. and
the 1 am e
"Hatr" Producer Michael But- mag aJ so .,....d
··• him $100,000 in campatgns for some time to
come are likely to devote
ler and Tommy of the Smothers
1966 for not serlaHzing hJs uea.
large swatches to thi• year
Bros, JUSt bought the Earl Car- pable of Honor" .. , Now he in - of ba!Oement and surprise
ro~l Theatre in L. ,, _ and after a hales another bonanza from the
of triumph and tragedy. '
$250,000 re-do, Will re-name it Conservative Book Club .•.. Our
• •
The Acquarius Theatre . . .. Of favorite entertainment apart
THE SCORECARD now
coorse, "Hair" wUI be its first from the election waa Helen Mac. reads Democrato 17, RepubUcant 18. The two teams
inv~sion .. . Gordon - ~ella Mac- Innes• "The Salzburg Atlalr ..
have
1plll cootcol of tlJe
Rae s daughter Heather wUJ be a gem of a spy - ch.Hier .... Sh.;.s
pret1dency
almost 50-50
among the L. .&lt;\."Hair" grubbers the most literate or aU eooae •
since
1128,
when
Andrew
but won't strip; the only gal in bump indters.
Jackson'• defeat of Joha
.
the Bdwy · version who refused
9ulncy Adamo marked what
ct!IHI •1 Hf..\ I•~lo go starkers, Lyn Kellogg was
ts generally regarded as the
,MII,tlte ~~publicans and Democrats ore ; to 0
the only one in the cast worih re"Seersucker" is the name beginning of our two-party
system. Also In that time
0' cotlllt/011 goYrrnment'- the1 MIGHT~~t"fpect us,.,to.~e
memberlng; of course she's gone of a type of fabric; it is also a
_::.:::::_::::::.:_:_::,::_~:
on to UdJer things,
~arne for the fellow who be- the Whlgo, leading oppool·
heves completely in a fortune
lion party to the Democrats
ch uck Barris, who produ ces teller.
before 1328, nabbed office

111!;{

r

f:er~full of.~~~ries for filming , such as " Fanny Hill M t
Fanny Hill Goes West " and "The H
ee sf
F asanova,
anny Hill."
•
ouse o
kn~ ~h~te ira~e blacks anything for success we do not
cotn1 docket of p~r~o~~c~i~fs~rhaps a listing on the
Nuturally, a name like th.
uld
so well in the past. That is ~e~~s noth have wor~ed out
e eac age has 1ts own
standards for labeling things.
If what we read in old book · t
were named Ebenezer and s IS _rue, a century ago boats
called Bowser and Fido.
Patlence, and adults were
And the same sort of practice wa
l"ed
names you could recognize reme:UtfP 1 dto commercial
In the old days of the A 'e
er ~n trust.
ample, successful buBines!m~f Accomphsh~ent, for exNaWpoleon pastr:ies, Chesterfield c~:sd~n~eMJJmg~on hbf!ots,
lth tbe comi!lg of tb A
orns c airs
names changed to confoerrn~~!n~:;!b!tion, standards jn
Guarantee Truss Co., and tbe Ice Cre a sC Pbles, Inc. , The
As the Age of Innoc
.
•.m o en.
called [deal Acme ze~l~~e .;rnved, ftrms were naturalJy
Today being the' A e ' aramou~t
directory has been rfwriof Commumcation, the business
names as Middlesex Hosp~f:r ~~ce more to include such
' oppy Joe's and , of course,
Fanny Hill Enterprises.
Needless to say we are n t .
But we applaud the chan o gomg to put any money in it.
arrival of Bobby &amp; Johge, a~d ~an ~ardly wait to see the
Togs, and Anastasia Brothnneyr ,mversJty, Christine Keeler
s nsurance .

Dear Helen:
[ am Jn love with a polleeman who Is now on his third
marriage. He pa.ys cblld support to his first wife, and 10
he can't leave hfs present wife,
as he needs her paycheck.
lie doesn't love her . Seys she
is alwa,u nagging him about other women. I know he is not a
cheat, Helen, as he has been
with me every night for f o u r
months. He tells hi's wife 1M&gt; haa
to work late.
When I suspected 1 was preg-

Dear Lin L:

WASHINGTON NCTE!BDCI&lt;

l.. '

l!Y
HE WANTS TO EAT HIS
CAKE AND HAVE IT TOO

nant, l called her up not letting her know who r was. She
sure didn't sound like she mistrusted him. 1Jte laughed at me.
M.Y man Slij'&amp; to be patient and
some da.Y we can be married.
My apartment his his home but
he also lives with his wife ~d
I'm wondering If he wanis to
have his cake and eat it too.
He seems so alncere and loving,.
but what will hawen later on
when I can't work? _ LOST IN
LOVE

:f'e

-.

�\

'',

f-

Fans Gypped'

College Results
By Unliod Press INeniOtionol
G.,., Ctl1 10 ~ 7
Yale t2 Prl..- 17
Army 26 Pittoburgtl 0
27 Cornell 6
Pom 13 Colwnbia 7
Honord 31 Brown 7
Col. 45 VL Militar)' 13
Lo~ette 14 Colglte 10
Union, NY 22 Hamilton 13
Rutgers 41 Holt· Cross 14
Amherst 24 Williams 17
Bucknell 31 Lehigh 27
Pem Military 22 Swarthmore 9
Northeastern 41 Telf1)le 26
Tennessee 31 Mississippi 0
Clemsoo 24 N. C. I 4
Florida St. 48 N, C. St. 7
Duke 18 Wake Forest 3
Penn St. 57 MarylaM 13
W. \'a. 30 Villanova 20
Morgan St. 34 Norfolk St 7
Georgia 17 Auburn 3
f1orida 16 Kentuck,}· 14

J. C. Smith 39 Fayettvill St. 14
E. Carolina 49 Marshall 20
E. Tenn. 24 Mid. Term. 21
f1a. i\&amp;M 33 Southern U. 24
Alabama 14 Miami 6
LSU 20 Miss. SL 16
RichmoOO 33 Sou. Miss. 7

I

Chattanooga 31 Furman 14
Soo. DL 23 Tampa 20
Wash. 9 Lee 14 Wash. Mo. 3
Wstrn Ky. H Akron 14, (tie)
MOrehead St. 46 Ky. St. 0

'(

Ohio St. 33 Iowa 27
Doytoo 10 Toledo 3

call!ornla 36 ~ 8
So. Cll. 17 Ore. St. 13
ldlho St. 16 Omaha 13
Nev. 21 San. Frtn. St. 7
Ari._ St. 47 Brghm Y011011 12
San Frndo 29 Webr St. IR
Stu!ord 24 UOP 0
CAL Aggies 38 Chico 7

~I

MASON BOWLING CENTER
SUNDAY MIXED
1. Luclrers; 2. 4-F's; 3. P&amp;W;
4. Shal'nrocks; 5. Lazy-4; 6. G&amp;A;
(Women) - Hlgh Game - R.
Dye, 180; Hlgh Series - P. Fer-

8, Pantasote,
High Game - D. Miller, 245;
High Series - D. Miller, 624.
TUESDAY WOMEN
1. Deadbeats; 2, Sluggers; 3.

Toppers; 4. Ma.ybeoots; S. Lucky
Striker; 6. Clown:;; 7. Alley Cats;
8. Shamrocks.
High Game - L. Boyles , 182;
High Series - N. Smith, 475.

pers; 4. Carrolls, B. Shift (tie);
6. King Pins.
High Game- Bud Tennant, 258;
High Series - Michael - 585.

Pw-due 9 Michigan 51. 0

Kansas 38 Kansas St. 29
Clpital 40 Otterbein 20
Marietta 42 Heidelberg 0
Defiance 35 Ken,yon 7
Ohio Wslyn 24 Mt. Union ll
Muskingum 6 Hobart 0
Woo9ter 23 Oberlin 7
E. Mich. 14 Wittenberg 7

Ashland 29 Findlay 6
Bldw~Wallace

28 Ohio No. 0
No. W. 7 Bawling Green G
Cntrl Mich. 3S Wayne St. 6
Hiram 28 Kalamazoo 12
Texas 7 TCU 21
Okla. St. 26 Iowa 29
Texas A&amp;M 24 Rice 14
OkiL 28 Missoori 14
Baylor 42 Tex. Tech 28
New Mex. st. 33 New Mex. 6
Wyoming 26 Tex. El Paso 19
Houston 77 Idaho 3
Waahington 6 UCLA 0
Arl•ona 16 Utah 15
Force 28 Tulsa 8
17
Tex. st. 22 Colo. · St
[
raska 22 Colorado 6

•

!

'

they didn't miss the lost minute
of the Oakland came, too.
MUliona ol television vtewera
were denied the spice of the
action Sun:lay when the National BrOidcaatlng ~ tuned
out tbe game with a mlnu&amp;e to

York thoiJRht lt was
chlld'a pby when ·the Jets took
a 32-29 load aoi!W into the ftnal
mllltte. A vietoey would haw
cllnched at least a tie tor their
first Eastern Division UUo.
New

A crowd o!
saw

the

,.tlooal

~318

in Ookland

ftnlsh. What the
television audlenee

Weekend Sports Summary

Satunlay
The Yomiuri Giants shut out the
WHEATON,
W.
(UP!)Ma
...
tourit!l
St. Louia cardinals, 2-8,
guson. 492; (Men): High Game rice
Benn
and
his
University
of
on
a
twH!Itter.
C. rerguson, 233; High Series
Ne vada t.eammates took team
- D. Miller, 556.
RERUN (UP!) - Er¥ Hall of
aOO irdividual homrs in the
Philadelphia
set a world 60National
Collegiate
Athletic
MONDAY MEN
Association
college
division
meter
indoor
hurdlea record
1. Sisk; 2. G. 0. Roush &amp;Som;;
cross
country
track
meet.
With
a
clocking
of 7,6 s~on:ls
3. Mason Co. Bank; 4. Miller's
which
bettered
the
established
Ins.; 5. W.O.W ., Siders Suppb
SPRINGFIELD,
Mass.
(UP!)
time
or
7.7
by
Eddy
Otoz of
(tie); 7. W, Va. Nalionat Guard ;

SPORN

xavier 23 Kent St. 7
Michigan 34 Wisconsin 9
Minnesota 20 Indiana 6

••

The New York Jets are sorry

- ~ri~eld College won the
Atlantil· c oast regional NCAA
college division soccer cham~
pionship by beating Mortclair
State of New Jersey 6-0.

TUESDAY MEN
1. Burton's Sunoco; 2. Coca
Cola; 3. Hlclanan; 'L Tom Rue
Motors; 5. J.K.M.; 6. Waddell
&amp; Reed; 7. St. Joseph; 8. A.B. C,
Cleaners.
High Game - H. Nelson, 23U;
High Series - D. Miller. 571.

STEELWORKERS
1. Tappers ; 2. Beatles, Nuts &amp;
Bolts (tie); 4. Duds , Ferros (tie);

6. Skips; 7. Bombers; 8. SWingers.
High Game - H. WhiUatch,
219; High Serie s
L. Salser,

GARDEN CITY, N.J. (UPl)Mer cer Coun13o· Community Col·

WEDNESDAY MIXED
1. Try !lards; 2. Tennant &amp;
Sayre; 3. GI.Jo's ; 4. Leftovers;
5. Hits &amp; Misses; 6. White &amp; Nelson; 7. Soos4J..Guns; 8. Hy-Fours.
(Women) High Game and Ser-

les -

B. Sayre, 222, 553. (Men)

High Game - E. White and D.
Miller, 199; High Series - Buck
Tennant, 544.

ROME

(UPO- ~

woo

its first World ClU&gt; golf trophy

by two strokes over the U.S. AI
aOO George Knudson
ccmblned ror Canada's winning

569wtaL

lege of Trenton. N.J., defeated
Florissant Valley ol St Loots 2PENSACOLA, Fla. {UPl)l to win the National Junior Kathy Whitworth gained the
College Athletic Association Pensacola Ladies Golf title with
soccer championship.
a 216.

Key Interest

LONDON (UPO - Bob Hewitt
of South Africa downed Bob
Lutz of Los Angeles 4-6, 6-2,6-4,
10-8, Saturday to win the men' s
singles title in the British h~oor
tennis championships.
NEW

YORK

Tbls spring, pants wltb
le's rBDglng from a sUg•t
nair to the elepbanl wldlb
will provide a key lnleresila
lhe sportswear category.

'"'ri
.

,iJomos, · ~ ll!l~· 38-17!:

Kan01s IC113' kelt Its hol!1j0111"e '
OOJdand . and · San
Diego in the Western Divisloo
missed was the Raiders' storing with 1 31-H triiii1Ph over
two touehdowna within a ntne- Bostoo; the Chirgers s~ 1
se&lt;OIIl span to walk oa the Deld 21..$ mud-spattered win over
with a 43-32 victory,
Buffalo; and Clnctmall mauled

Julian ~. president o!
NBC, apologized tor the urorgiveable error cc:mmltted by

humans who were concerned
about the children ellj)Octilll! to
see 'Heidi.' "

VIewers Protest
NBC switchboards were de1upd by pho.., calls demanding
an eJI,'Ilaation for the sudden
video curtailment ol 'this hey

A m e r I c a n Football League
game.

told over

Mill!lli, 311-21.
Namath Scores One
Lamonica's other TO to,ses
went nine yard&amp; to Warren

WeDs, 48 to DUly cannon oo a
pert&amp;ct screen am 22 1o Fred
BUetnlkol!. Joe Nomath Onally
broke out o! his oJUIDP with his
first touchdown pass in seven
games, a 5~yard8r to Don
Maynard.
Quarterback Pete Beathard
rah tor two touchdowns and
passed to flanker Mac Halk for
two more score&amp; for Hooston.
FlOyd Little accounted ror one
Denver tally on a 67-yard punt

Jets coach Weeb Ewblnk was
s I m tl 8. r 1 y bunbarded with
"what hiJ)pened?" .questJons.
Ewbank
kept the press
waiting 20 mil'lltea and then retur~
said, "For us, you can call it a
Len Dawson ubombed" BosMexican •ictory. We all gut out ton with touchdown passes of
ol it alive!' Defensive back 90, 77 and 43 yards, while Goldie
coach Walt Michaela coocurred, Sellers took the ster&lt;b out or
''U was • game where the most the Patri'!i!J with a 7~ punt
Cace mask violations ln my return for a tlrst period
e"')erience were c.Jled."
touchdown which gave the
Jim Turner's 26-yanl neld Chle!a the 1014 for good.
goal late in the fourth quaroor,
JaC(JIIS MacKinnon snared
his rourth or the game and 14th two John Hadl passes and
In the last three contests, sent converted them into scores of 18 '
New York into its 32-29 lead. and 62 yards in San Diego's
Then Duyle Lamonica threw llrot half rally. Bul!lllo lalllec!
his rQUrth touchdown pass of the on Bruce Alford's lle!d goals or
game with 42 secondt left to 25 and 16 yarda.
boost Oakland into the lead.
Paul Robinson, the AFL's
Preston Ridlehuber'1 two--yard leading
rusher, scored on
touctxlown vault with a recov- touchdown runs of 54, 15 and
ered fumble on the ensuing five yards as Clncinnltl won its
kickoff kUled off New York's third AFL game. Bob Grieae
last chlnee.
threw three touchdoWn passes
Hcuston. faced with )ouster ll lor Miami.

, -~ala'ot lnlei'CSL

·
'' ·' ,·zenllh Che.ailen&gt;Cl!elprtvl..
· ttecfwith
pu-en~e, MI-. 'ri
.,-r';&lt;,a••• Ed,......Cha.alior.
;, ,,m,•.·.·~i1dal'&lt;;ouiaon or Torch
.
: .• ,
.
1 da,y with Mr. and Mr•.
Mrs. George Bu~
\~..
Bucl!ler.
-~. . , '
uent at St. Joseph's ·noap'uailri' '· '-' Mr.•·. Bl~ Copii'O\'O waoa.paParkersburg.
.
·..: .. ;
. 1 tllmt ' at St. Joseph's HoiJI{talin
Mr. and Mra. Ta BoriDJ r&amp;. · Parkers~£
cently tnvelec! byplanotoPhoe"' ·• Mr, •1\d Mro, Cat! Barmart
Lx, Arlz., to visit with U.,itl!aiiJib- and Mrs. ': Gltry Bar~rt vial~
ter and !e&gt;llv, Mr. and Mra. Alan with Gltey,'Barmart al Fori Shaw,
DOL Mr. and M'ts. ·carroi! ftln. S. ~ Mrs, Gaey Barnhari remaladol'ph were recent tourists of dJe ed with her hulband.
Sky!tne Drl•e.
:.
Bell Bockley and R. E. wu.
Mr. and Mrs. BUI WUIIamo or Iiams visited with Lon Beich,
Lancaster spent a weekend at the BeUevllle, W. Va., recently.

5 -

i.f•·

Ira•

WUIIams-Balderson home.

,.

ae-

Christmas decorations in Tuppers Plains were discussed dur~~ the November meeting or the
Rose Garden Club at the home of
Mrs. John Arbaugh.
The planning committee, Mrs.
carl BarnhUI, Mrs. James stout,
Mrs. Kenneth Griffith aOO Mrs. J,
S. Davis, reported on progress
with the project taken on by the
club, but noted the need for outdoor lighting equipment. Persons
with lights to loan or donate for
the village decorationprojectare
asked to contact a member of the
committee,
The Christmas tree will be provided by Mr. and Mrs. Frank Goebel and on Saturday, Dec. 7, at 1
p, m. club members are to meet
at the Dairy Queen to erect ard
decorate the tree.
The home Christmas decoratIng contest was discussed and
persons interested in participating are asked to contact Mrs. John
Arbaugtl, or leave their name and
addreu at Lyon:; Store by
Dec. lB.
Caah prizes for first, secoll1
and third places wiU be awarded by the judges. Judging will
take place Friday evening, Dec.
20, between the hours or 7 and 8
p. m. Following the iu&lt;Jsing the
amolDlcement of the judges wlU
be made at ttle commwdty tree.
There will be carol singing and
children and adults ol the community are invited to join In the

- Mra. LYle Balderson
This iprlng's color picture
wiD · emphasize red, whlle
and blue, then branch out
Into strong shades and fem·
lnlne pastels, sueh as peach
and aqua.

cently Mr. WIIUams, acCODII&gt;antee! ·by triems ri-&lt;111 l,lncaster
al'll col.wnbus,flewoverlhlsarea
and took pictures or the BoDevilie-Reedsvilie Dim and other

The amating hearing aid thor filters out loud,
painfl.ll, sudd@n noise .•.
Sudden blasts of noise can be uncomfortable. Especially if your hearing aid doesn't
shut them out quickly.
The new Zenith Moderator eliminates this
painful discomfort.· And it gives you this prO·
tedion ovtomolicalfy
Ask us for o free demonstration. We think
we con save you discomfort.

VERE SMITH AUDIO-VISUAU, INC.
Atho••• Ohl• .5101

16 W. Union St.

Call Callocl

59~7708

Wllllaa 1. Ollu, Mgr., Ho1111rlng Aid Dept.

,.

'

(UPD- lrish

CHERRY mLL, N.J. (UPl)Ogden
Mills Phipps' Beau
Brwnmel swept to a H4 le~
triumph in lhe $312,669 Garden
State stakes.

Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. Visiting hours 2-4 and 7-8
p.m. Parents only on Pediatrics
Ward.
Admissions
Mrs . RobertE, McCarley,2012
Chatllam Ave.; Mrs. Dooovan L.
Fulks, S53 Hilda Dr.; Mrs. Bernie B. Smith, 47 Madison Ave.;
Mrs. Charles W. ~rlock, Rt. 1
GalllpoUs;
Mr&amp;.
Robert C.
Wauah, Rt. 1 GallJpolla; Arnold
L, ne-e, Rt. . ~ Bidwell; Dew~

Sunday

(UPO

Bert

Weaver shot a final roorJJ 68 to
win the Caracas Open Golf
Toornament with a 269.

BRISBANE,

Australia (UP!)
- Bruce Devlin woo the Dunlop
lnter~tional Golf Cllsslc with
." 1

a 281.
FUKUOKA,

I

. f.

J lij)On

J. Wilcoxen, Patriot Star Rt.;
Steven S, Hornsby, Rt 2 Galli~
..lis; Thelma R. Saxon, Gallipolis; Perry E. Livingston, U,
Pl Pleasant; Marshall W. Woot~
en, Rt. I Pt. Pleasant; Mrs. Grace
O. Glover, Pt. Pleasant; Mrs.
Howard S. Brewer, Rt. 1 Pl.
Pieasant; George W. Allen, Rt.

(UP!) -

National Bank Region No. 4

Ola.rter No. 9815

REPORT OF CONDITION OF

2 Pl Pleasant ; Mrs. Harold W.
Rickard, Jr., West Columbia;
Mrs. Wilbert R. Clooch, Rt I
Minersville; Mrs. Eleanor Withers, Pomeroy; James W. Weaver, Jr., Racine; Mrs. Clifford
T. Whittington, Harrisonville;
Mrs. Charles T. Fick, Rt. 1
Long Bottom; DooaJd H, Salmans ,
Tucker,
Wellston;
Zebadee
Grimms Landing, W. Va. ; Mu.
Karma L. Stepp, Rt. 2 Chillicothe; Miss Helen L. Jordan,
Rt 1 Greenup, Ky.; Mrs. Harold E. Harvey, Radcliff; Mrs.

The Racine Home National Bank
of Racine in the State of Ohio, at the close of business on October 30, 1968 published in response to call made by Comptroller of the Currency. under SecUoo 5211, U. S. Revised statutes,
ASSETS
Clsh, balances with other banks, and cash items
in process of collection .. ...... .. . . . . . . . . . . . .. . $ 339,610. 76
United States GQvernment obligations • • • • .. . , • •••• . •..• 1,280,707. 74
Obligations of States am political !Nbdivision9. . . • . . . . . • • • 32,573.12
other Securities . , , . . •. . ... , • • • . • . • . • • • • • • . . . . • .
12,521.00
Federal funds sold and Securities purchased
under agreements to resell .... .• . • . . . . . . • • . . . . . . 300,000.00
Loans and discoW'Its •• • . • •..•• • ••.••••..•.••• .... . 2,242,219.42
Bank premises, furnitw'e aJXI fixtures,
other
assets representing bank premises . • .•. ..• .• . ,~o • .
26,610.75
2.62t. 72
Other Assets, including U. S. sav. Bds.. • . . . • • • • . . • • . • . . .
TOTAL ASSETS , ... , . . . ....... . .... . . . . . . . . . . , .$4,236,867.51

am

I
;.

McGhees are
Honored at

LIABILITIES
Demand deposits of irdividuals, partOOr sh.ips,
arv:t corporations , . .• • .• . , .•• ·. . . . • . . . . • . • . . . • $ 972,798.39
Time and savings deposits of individuals, p.artnershJps,
an:i corporations . . . ..•. • ... •.. . • . , , • . ...•... 2,327,391. 84
Deposits or United States Govermnent. ... .... . . . . . . .. .
17,847, 95
J)epositi: O[ StateS aJ'KI political 9Ubdh1sfons , , , . , . . . • . • . 446,737. 87
6,220.50
Certified arv:l: officers' checks, etc• . . • . . • , • , . . .
TOTAL DF..POSJTS, ., . . , .. , , ,$3 1770,996.55

Total demand deposits .. ,. , ...

1,!42.604,71
Total time arv:l: savings deposits. . 2,628,391.84
Other liabilities including Unearned Interest . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 81,822. 00
TOTAL LIABILITIES, . ,, .. , , ,, . . . , .. ,, . . , .. , .. ,, $3,852,8!8.55

Common stock - total par value •. , .. . , •• , .... , . . , .. $125,000 .00
No. share s authorized - 5000
No. shares outstandilll: - 5000
Surplus . •••. . .••• .•.. . , . . .. • , . . . . . • • • . . . . . . . • 125, 000.00
L1ndivided profits . . . . . . . . . .. . , . . . , , . . . ....•..• , . 134,048.96

TOTAL CAPITAL ACCOUNTS , , , , • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . , , 384,048.96
TOTAL LIABILITIES AND CAPITAL ACCOUNTS , , , , . . . . .M6,~1..~
MEMORANDA
Loans as shown aOOve are after deduction of
valuation reserves or... . . . .... . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . • $8,320.16
SecuriUe!l as shown above are after deduction
of valuation reserves of. . . .. . . . . • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
650.00
I, .John T. Wolfe, Cashier, of the above-named bank do hereby de clare
that this report of cotk1ition is true and correct to Ule best of my knowledge
and belie f.

JOHN T. WOLFE , CASHIER

Is this the way you
look at electric heat?
r-------:--

Mr. and Mrs. David McGhee
of Columbus were guests ot honor &amp;mday, Nov. 10, at the home
ol Mr and Mrs. Allen Eichinger,
Mulberry Heights.
The McQiees will move to
Palmetto, Fla., at Leisure Lake
VWage oo Dec. l, after Mr. Me~
Qlee'&amp; retirement £rom employ.
ment at the Columbus Dispatch.
Grace was given by Roger W.
HyaeU preceding the potluck dinner. ln the iitlernoon the fam-

MAil.f.TDD,.Y , ~-----:--- --,

WCDIC KIIIFE FilE£ wH1111 Reddy KiLowatt Recommended
So did Reverend Ramsell 1I THIS
Deller pre~J~res a written estimate ofthebm lo con11ert your home to elec·

For years, Reverend Albert Ramsell of Canton,
Ohio "wouldn'l even lhink aboul electric heal.
I thought il would be loa expensive. Then I
got a cosl eslimate and swilched to electric 7
years ago. When I totaled my old fuel bills,
I found out electric heat doesn't cost me any
more than the old heat I had. Anybody who says electric heat is
expensive is talking from hearsay, nol experience." You can switch to
flameless electric heal-economically. And your heating bill will be
about whal you're now paying. let us prove it. Get a free estimatefrom us or your Reddy Kilowatl Recommended Dealer.

We, the urxlersigned directors attest the correctness of this report of
conditioo and declare that it has been examined by u&amp; and to the best of our
knowledge and belief is true and correcL

I

lric heatinJ. Olfer lvailablt to our wstoiners only. rhere is no obliption.

I

I
I
I
I
I
I
~
1

I
I

Directors

Move

IlY

Rm'.430 • 301 Clevolorid Ave., s.w.
Conlon, Ohio 44701
N•m•'----,-..::J
' ·~------~-

A~•ML------~----

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

s111

~~~

(51iij919wu CDMtAD

ip'

c.&lt;J,____

~
- . ,.

',

1:1

'"
L---~----~---~--~-----~--~
.... '

.!:!! to FLAMEI:.ES$

'.

...•~:•
"'
.I:••

••••
'•

.,t•.

.,.

••
...

\

..
'

pr;isented a giO to Mr. and

Mra. McGhee.
Present were Mr. and Mr&amp; .

Ohio Poweli:ompany

ALBERT HILL, JR,
CLARENCE PRICE

Sunday Dinner

•.

CAPITAL ACCOUNTS

J. DILLON CROSS

The Daily Sentinel, Pomeroy-Middleport, 0,, Monday, November 18, 196H

New Officers Elected

Decorations in
Tuppers Plains
Are Discussed

Dude captured the $50,000 added
Queens County Han:ticap at
Aqueduct by 1 head over
Chompion.

CARACAS

563.

lte!y.

~ding

1. Davis , Rejects (tie); J. Trip-

~ Ohio U. 60 Cincinnati 48

I',.

so In lllwr ot a regularly
schedule(\ ch1ldrea'11 program.

Week Ending November 16, 1968

Notre Dame 34 Ga. Tech 6

,. -ptinols 14 Northwestern 0

~

Bowling

By GARY KALE
UP! Sjlorts Writer

i&lt;f.~e.. ,

the Jeh
th8lr
nun)ber -~ two In 'lbe ·ftnol

,,

Roger W. Hysell, Jasm and Grant
o1 Mason; Mr. and Mrs. Cecil
Hysell, Roger Perry and Mrs.
Dora Phillips, Mr. and M r s.
Clarence CUrtis, Mr. and Mrs.
1llax Eichinger, Becky and Max
Jr., Mr. and Mrs. Paul Eichinger, Paula and Tammy, all of
Pomeroy, and the honored guests
and boots.
Mr, and Mrs. Byroo Hysell of
Colwnbus were unable to attend.

Mrs. WUUam Carr and Mrs.

Denver Rice were in Athens Wednesday for a meeting or the Zone
16 Mental Retardation ColUlcil
held atthe Good Shepherd Cturch.
Brian Dale Hayes, son oC Mr.
and Mrs. William llayea was tak.
en to Columbus FridaY for a
checkup at Chlldren'9 Hospital.
Mrs . Hayes andlhechild'sgrandparenta, Mr. and Mrs. 1\. W.
Hayes, made the trip.
Mrs . Paul Prottengeire a n d
daughter, Terri Marie, and Mrs.
Jessie Lake, West Jefferson,
have returned to their homes after visiting here with Mr. and
Mrs . Leu Kennedy, Sr. M r s.
Lake also visited in Ne190nVille
with Mr . and Mra. Michael Oh ~
linger and children. They returned to West Jeffer son Saturdav.

By Counci/17 Ladies
New officers were elected at
Thursday night's meeting of the
Past
Councilors, Theodorus
Council 17, Daughters of America, at the home of Mrs. sarah

festivities.
Members were remirw:Jed to
Meigs
give gifts for the Elmwood Rest
Home resident:; to Mrs. Griffith
before Dec. 21.
During the meeting col'll.ucted
by 1-.trs. Goebel, president, she
armounced that the Meigs County
Christmas show will be staged
James L. Hideoour, Esther
on Nov. 30 and Dec. 1 at the
Ridenour to Rollin K. Hawk, CherPomeroy
Elementary School.
yl Hawk, partels, Chester.
Melvin R Smitll, Olive L. Smith
Theme of the show will be
"ChrisUnas Ideas''. The class
to Clarence M. Imboden, Agnes
drawn for the club at a recent
M. Imboden, lots, Pomeroy.
meeting of dub representatives
Lionel Boggs, Adm ., Mary E.
was "Flower of the Snow," arl'rice , dec., to Bonnie Miller,
rangements I..'Ontainlng holly .
Charles Miller, I acre, Hutland.
The Christmas dinner andparHarry A. Miller, Mary Ellen
ty was planned for Dec . 18 at
Miller to Roger L. Walker, Garnet E. Walker, lots , Pomeroy.
6:30 p. m. at the Up-Towner in
Parkersburg. Those who have not
Sybil E:bersbach, Comm., .John
already made reservations are
Phillip Meier aka PhllipJ . Meier,
asked to contact Mrs. Clarence
dec., to Bernadine S. ME~f"e r, Pa~
ricia Suchoza, Phyllis Knopp,
Headley.
It was voted during the meeting
Mar~· T. Matller, Carolyn POOto begin meetings durlng.Jaooary
besek, Robert P. Meier, 1~ acre,
and February at 7:30 p. m. MemPomeroy.
bers responded to roll call with
James L Souders, Electa Sood·
a verse of the Bible gl vlng thanks.
ers, l'hyllis Knop~. Charles
Fund-raising projects w e r e Knq:~p, Mary T. Mat11er, Hobert
The traveling prize wa s won
planned
and officers forlhe 196~ - II, Mather, RobertP. Meier , Marby Mrs. Oscar Babcock, al"ll the
69
year
were elected during a il~·n Meier, Carolyn B. Podbesek ,
special arrangement orthemonth
recent
meeting
of the Tuppers
Alan Podbesek, Patrida Suc hoza,
was made by Mrs, Glen StooL
Flains-AJfred
Community
Wom - Bernard P. Suchoza to Bernadine
She used a horn of plenty with
fruit, vegetables, and nuts with en's Club held at the home of S. Meier, :1,4 acre, Pomeroy.
Bernadine S. Meier to Patricia
an arrallJement of chrysanthe- Mrs . Frederick Goebel .
A bake sale was scheduled for Suchoza, Phyllis Koopp, Mary T.
mums and ivy.
Mather, Carol yn Podbese k, RobRefreshments were served by Frida.Y, Dec. 6, at the L. L.
Lyons Grocery. Members were ert P. Meie r , lots , Pomeroy.
the hostess to 18members during
requested to have their baked
Hill Da,y, J::ula Day to Hobert
a concluding social hour,
goods at the store by 9 a.m . N. nark, Lola E. Clark, 55 acres,
Orders for Stanley products are II a r risonville-."&gt;c ipi o.
to be given to Ethel Arbaugh.
Walter W. White, Hettie M
Officers elected for the new White to Walter U. White, Imoyear were Patricia Bailey, preS- gene E. White, 78.86 acres, Salident; Sharon Boyles, v i c e isbury.
president; Janie Headley, record{ieneva Yates, et ai, to State of
ing secretary; Mary Longenette, Ohio, Journal Entry, Oli ve.
John E. Slavens, Jackson; Char · corresponding secretary; M i I ~
Maxine M. Allen s worth, Marles D. Koonce, Rt . 5 Jackson: dred Headley, treasurer: Patty ion AllensWOJ'tll to Dale NicholOlen R. Smith, Rt. 2 Sandyville , Life, news reporter, and Mamie son, Dorothy Nicholson, Jot, MidW. Va.; Mrs. James Newnes, Headley, historian.
dleport.
Rt. 2 Wellston; Mrs. Herbert E.
During tlw meeting conducted
Howard V. McCoy , Geraldine
Ponn. Wellston; Mrs. John H. by Mrs. Bailey, a report wa s G. McCoy lo Betty Q. Pierte, parMontgomery, Rt. 3 Alban_y; Mrs. given by Mrs. Life, chairman cels, 011\•e.
Elmer M. Francis, Sandyville, o( the committee for selection
W, Va.; Bryce C. Browning, Rt.
or suitable sites for a commun3 Dover; Mrs. Larry E. Ross, ity building. Sbe reported that
Jackson; Mrs. Cecil A. Hale, her committee has been workAshland, Ky.; Mrs. Rosie Bo- ing on the project and will re len, Rt. • JatkSOD; Mrs. Dale ,port· at tile December meeting.
L. Gillespie, Jackson; William
Mrs. Mamie Headley, chairR. Enos, Ravenswood.
man of the dirmer committee, re ~
Births
ported that the recent Wrke,y din Mrs . Harold E. Harvey, Rad- ner showed a profit or approxJ .
cliff, daughter, 7:S3 p.m . Sat- mately $11.&gt;.
urday; Mrs. Herbert E. Ponn,
Plans were made ror a lunchWellston, son, S:15 p .m. &amp;inday; eon and Christmas party to be
Mrs. Donovan L. Fulks , 5S3 Hil- held in Parkersburg, 1he place
da Dr., daughter, 1:57 a.m. Moo- to be announced later, oo Dec.
day; Mrs. CUtrord T. Whitting- 11 . Members are to take a $1
ton, HarrisonvUle, daughter, 2:- item for a gift exchange. Plans
32 a. m. Monday,
are to meet at the Dairy ~een
Dlscharges
in Tuppers Plains at 11 a.m.
Mrs. Jack A. Bates, Richanl and go to Parkersburg from
B. Brogan, Mrs. Herbert H. Cas
there, Members are asked to contle, Clyde J. Cook , Mrs. Gladys tact the telephone chairman ror
Dalley, John B. Downard, Kim- (urther information.
ba.ll K, Ferris, Henry G. Furst,
Martin R. George, Mrs. W i 1liam C. Gibbs, Sandra S. Groves,
James T. Lee, Si:., Garland L.
Genume r LO .Q-GLASS IS lhl! onl~
Knits Are on Scene
Lester, t:arroll E. Matthews,
plas11c wrnclow rnate~ral lh&lt;Jt came~
Knll dresses take shape on
John A. Pickens, Mrs. Floyd
12 rear guarantee. The name
Rife, Everette E. Saxon, Mrs.
tbe current fashion seeoe.
flD: 0 GLASS rs pr rn1ecl on the
edge lor your protectron.
Onille H. Sharp, Kenny R. Stew~ There are empire styles,
art, Mrs. Frances C. Taylor,
, ttortlw•r• &amp; L•"'••r Deot.
shaped b a r e b a e k styles,
~
herywhero
''
Mrs. Orpha Wooten, Mr&amp;. Rob~ smoeked mldrll£ styles and
Wup Bru
ert H. Eason and infant !IOJI , Mrs,
Chlufo
shaped bodydreBB styles wltb
Carlos E. SWisher and infant
a hlgb lurlle neek-all knit.
son, Mrs, Harold S. Baker, Mrs.
Charles C. Brohard, Mary A.
Elkins, Frank Grueser, Mrs.
Earl Reynolds, Tony R i f r I e,
George H. Ware, Mrs. Jotm H.
White, Mrs. Sadie Steele, Mrs.
Roy H. See and infant son, Mrs.
Nicl{Jofs L, Leonard and infant
son, Mrs. Everett Grant and in -

Property
Transfers

Pro;ects
For Funds
Reviewed

Diddle, Antiauitv.
Elected were Mrs. Margaret
Seidenabel, president; Mrs. Ad·
rla Sayre, vice president; Mrs.
Mabel Bearhs, treasurer, arv:l:
Mrs. Cora Beegle, secretary.
During the meeting col"llucled
by Miss F.rna ,Jes se, plans were
made for the annual Christma s
party to be held on Dec. 12
at the Trinity United Olurcll of
Chris t.. A dinner will be served
by the women of the church and
the party wiJI follow in the social
room there. Members will have
a $1 gift exchange. Named to
the committee to plan the affair
were Mrs. Mabel Wolfe, Mrs.
Eva Dessauer, and Mrs. Kate
Goodwin.
Mrs. Ca r rie Meinhart was r eported t·onfined to Holzer Ho s~
pital and member s s igned a card
ror her. Mr s . Nettle Hayes o~
ened the meeting by reading the
23rd Psalm. The Lord' s Prayer
and the pledge to tire flag were
given in unisorL
It was announced that tile January meeting will be at the home
of Mrs. Hayes,
Middleport.
Game s were played with prizes
being won by Mrs. Beegle, Mr s.
Seidensbei, Mrs. Wolfe and Mr s.

Shatterproof
Flexible
Long-Lasting

Miss Miller Joins
'Pioneer' Closs
Ona E1len Miller, daughter of

Rev. and Mrs. Audry W. Miller,
910 Broadway st., Middleport,
is a member or the "pioneer"
freshman class of Mount Vernon
Nazarene College, Mount Vernon,
a college organized0ct.12, 1968.
Miss Miller is a 1968 graduate of Middleport High School
where 9he was a member of the
band and was in the junior class
play.
Interesting

/

COIN
OP

wide-wale

corduroy,

up some figure prob·
lems. Sort clinging fabricsjersey, chiffon. crepe-em·
phasize figure irregularities .
Shiny textures-satin, taffets
- add weight while dull sur·
faces-linen, gabardine-are
more slenderizing.
cover

PICKENS

$229.95
M oclll WCD... fN

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MIDDLEPORT, 0.

3rd &amp; Ash Middleport, 0.

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Country Maid Sliced

BACON
We Grind Jtf

RCCOLA

From Fresh, Lean
Quality Beef!

Dubuque: Roll

SAUSAGE /
•

8PAK

75~

HUNT' S

GROUND BEEF

2 lb. 89~

TO JUICE
29~

HOUSE
CLEANING SPECIAL

pound
sal id

10J,,.

ROOM SIZE
RUGS
Rogula•
14.95

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Seal test

3

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gal.

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terry

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DUDS 'N SUDS

39~

SWinNING

wool tweeds- add
weight to the figure, but also

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GOSNEY

SHORTENING BUY!

cloth,

:I

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-36 lndMI wide -

Change Appearance
Fabric texture can change
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MONDAY, TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY AT MARK V

8

"'"

Ethel Smith.
A Thanksgt ving theme wu
carried out in the refreshment
table decorations. Attending besides those named were Mrs.
WI nona Cook, Mrs. Lottie Cohen,
Mrs. Ruby Erband Breo:laSayre.

59~

HOLSUM
LARGE SIZE

BREAD

WYLER'S

DRY
SOUP
Pkg.

only

Longhorn Cheese-----1!.69~
l6oz.391o
Ins t• P0tatoes Talerlan
ldaho.•••bag
't
Roasted Peanuts.:=~---1!.39~
Head Lettuce~:~~: •••••':!J 9~

W.VA.

TAKEN TO HOSm AL
The Racine emergency squad
waa called at 10:45 a.m . SUn~
da.Y to the home of Doris Wolfe,
70, Racine, from where she was

taken to Meigs General Hospital
and entered as a medical patient ,

SUPER MARKET -Open Daily 9 to 9:30-Sun. 12 to 9:30

N. W. COMPTON, 0. D.

·
We Accept Federal ·Food Stam.pa
CDnNr Mill and S••ncl 511.
PHONE: 992 3410
·

OPTOMETRIST
OFFICE HOURS 9:30 TO lZ, 2 TO 5 (CLOSE AT NOON ON
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Fans Gypped'

College Results
By Unliod Press INeniOtionol
G.,., Ctl1 10 ~ 7
Yale t2 Prl..- 17
Army 26 Pittoburgtl 0
27 Cornell 6
Pom 13 Colwnbia 7
Honord 31 Brown 7
Col. 45 VL Militar)' 13
Lo~ette 14 Colglte 10
Union, NY 22 Hamilton 13
Rutgers 41 Holt· Cross 14
Amherst 24 Williams 17
Bucknell 31 Lehigh 27
Pem Military 22 Swarthmore 9
Northeastern 41 Telf1)le 26
Tennessee 31 Mississippi 0
Clemsoo 24 N. C. I 4
Florida St. 48 N, C. St. 7
Duke 18 Wake Forest 3
Penn St. 57 MarylaM 13
W. \'a. 30 Villanova 20
Morgan St. 34 Norfolk St 7
Georgia 17 Auburn 3
f1orida 16 Kentuck,}· 14

J. C. Smith 39 Fayettvill St. 14
E. Carolina 49 Marshall 20
E. Tenn. 24 Mid. Term. 21
f1a. i\&amp;M 33 Southern U. 24
Alabama 14 Miami 6
LSU 20 Miss. SL 16
RichmoOO 33 Sou. Miss. 7

I

Chattanooga 31 Furman 14
Soo. DL 23 Tampa 20
Wash. 9 Lee 14 Wash. Mo. 3
Wstrn Ky. H Akron 14, (tie)
MOrehead St. 46 Ky. St. 0

'(

Ohio St. 33 Iowa 27
Doytoo 10 Toledo 3

call!ornla 36 ~ 8
So. Cll. 17 Ore. St. 13
ldlho St. 16 Omaha 13
Nev. 21 San. Frtn. St. 7
Ari._ St. 47 Brghm Y011011 12
San Frndo 29 Webr St. IR
Stu!ord 24 UOP 0
CAL Aggies 38 Chico 7

~I

MASON BOWLING CENTER
SUNDAY MIXED
1. Luclrers; 2. 4-F's; 3. P&amp;W;
4. Shal'nrocks; 5. Lazy-4; 6. G&amp;A;
(Women) - Hlgh Game - R.
Dye, 180; Hlgh Series - P. Fer-

8, Pantasote,
High Game - D. Miller, 245;
High Series - D. Miller, 624.
TUESDAY WOMEN
1. Deadbeats; 2, Sluggers; 3.

Toppers; 4. Ma.ybeoots; S. Lucky
Striker; 6. Clown:;; 7. Alley Cats;
8. Shamrocks.
High Game - L. Boyles , 182;
High Series - N. Smith, 475.

pers; 4. Carrolls, B. Shift (tie);
6. King Pins.
High Game- Bud Tennant, 258;
High Series - Michael - 585.

Pw-due 9 Michigan 51. 0

Kansas 38 Kansas St. 29
Clpital 40 Otterbein 20
Marietta 42 Heidelberg 0
Defiance 35 Ken,yon 7
Ohio Wslyn 24 Mt. Union ll
Muskingum 6 Hobart 0
Woo9ter 23 Oberlin 7
E. Mich. 14 Wittenberg 7

Ashland 29 Findlay 6
Bldw~Wallace

28 Ohio No. 0
No. W. 7 Bawling Green G
Cntrl Mich. 3S Wayne St. 6
Hiram 28 Kalamazoo 12
Texas 7 TCU 21
Okla. St. 26 Iowa 29
Texas A&amp;M 24 Rice 14
OkiL 28 Missoori 14
Baylor 42 Tex. Tech 28
New Mex. st. 33 New Mex. 6
Wyoming 26 Tex. El Paso 19
Houston 77 Idaho 3
Waahington 6 UCLA 0
Arl•ona 16 Utah 15
Force 28 Tulsa 8
17
Tex. st. 22 Colo. · St
[
raska 22 Colorado 6

•

!

'

they didn't miss the lost minute
of the Oakland came, too.
MUliona ol television vtewera
were denied the spice of the
action Sun:lay when the National BrOidcaatlng ~ tuned
out tbe game with a mlnu&amp;e to

York thoiJRht lt was
chlld'a pby when ·the Jets took
a 32-29 load aoi!W into the ftnal
mllltte. A vietoey would haw
cllnched at least a tie tor their
first Eastern Division UUo.
New

A crowd o!
saw

the

,.tlooal

~318

in Ookland

ftnlsh. What the
television audlenee

Weekend Sports Summary

Satunlay
The Yomiuri Giants shut out the
WHEATON,
W.
(UP!)Ma
...
tourit!l
St. Louia cardinals, 2-8,
guson. 492; (Men): High Game rice
Benn
and
his
University
of
on
a
twH!Itter.
C. rerguson, 233; High Series
Ne vada t.eammates took team
- D. Miller, 556.
RERUN (UP!) - Er¥ Hall of
aOO irdividual homrs in the
Philadelphia
set a world 60National
Collegiate
Athletic
MONDAY MEN
Association
college
division
meter
indoor
hurdlea record
1. Sisk; 2. G. 0. Roush &amp;Som;;
cross
country
track
meet.
With
a
clocking
of 7,6 s~on:ls
3. Mason Co. Bank; 4. Miller's
which
bettered
the
established
Ins.; 5. W.O.W ., Siders Suppb
SPRINGFIELD,
Mass.
(UP!)
time
or
7.7
by
Eddy
Otoz of
(tie); 7. W, Va. Nalionat Guard ;

SPORN

xavier 23 Kent St. 7
Michigan 34 Wisconsin 9
Minnesota 20 Indiana 6

••

The New York Jets are sorry

- ~ri~eld College won the
Atlantil· c oast regional NCAA
college division soccer cham~
pionship by beating Mortclair
State of New Jersey 6-0.

TUESDAY MEN
1. Burton's Sunoco; 2. Coca
Cola; 3. Hlclanan; 'L Tom Rue
Motors; 5. J.K.M.; 6. Waddell
&amp; Reed; 7. St. Joseph; 8. A.B. C,
Cleaners.
High Game - H. Nelson, 23U;
High Series - D. Miller. 571.

STEELWORKERS
1. Tappers ; 2. Beatles, Nuts &amp;
Bolts (tie); 4. Duds , Ferros (tie);

6. Skips; 7. Bombers; 8. SWingers.
High Game - H. WhiUatch,
219; High Serie s
L. Salser,

GARDEN CITY, N.J. (UPl)Mer cer Coun13o· Community Col·

WEDNESDAY MIXED
1. Try !lards; 2. Tennant &amp;
Sayre; 3. GI.Jo's ; 4. Leftovers;
5. Hits &amp; Misses; 6. White &amp; Nelson; 7. Soos4J..Guns; 8. Hy-Fours.
(Women) High Game and Ser-

les -

B. Sayre, 222, 553. (Men)

High Game - E. White and D.
Miller, 199; High Series - Buck
Tennant, 544.

ROME

(UPO- ~

woo

its first World ClU&gt; golf trophy

by two strokes over the U.S. AI
aOO George Knudson
ccmblned ror Canada's winning

569wtaL

lege of Trenton. N.J., defeated
Florissant Valley ol St Loots 2PENSACOLA, Fla. {UPl)l to win the National Junior Kathy Whitworth gained the
College Athletic Association Pensacola Ladies Golf title with
soccer championship.
a 216.

Key Interest

LONDON (UPO - Bob Hewitt
of South Africa downed Bob
Lutz of Los Angeles 4-6, 6-2,6-4,
10-8, Saturday to win the men' s
singles title in the British h~oor
tennis championships.
NEW

YORK

Tbls spring, pants wltb
le's rBDglng from a sUg•t
nair to the elepbanl wldlb
will provide a key lnleresila
lhe sportswear category.

'"'ri
.

,iJomos, · ~ ll!l~· 38-17!:

Kan01s IC113' kelt Its hol!1j0111"e '
OOJdand . and · San
Diego in the Western Divisloo
missed was the Raiders' storing with 1 31-H triiii1Ph over
two touehdowna within a ntne- Bostoo; the Chirgers s~ 1
se&lt;OIIl span to walk oa the Deld 21..$ mud-spattered win over
with a 43-32 victory,
Buffalo; and Clnctmall mauled

Julian ~. president o!
NBC, apologized tor the urorgiveable error cc:mmltted by

humans who were concerned
about the children ellj)Octilll! to
see 'Heidi.' "

VIewers Protest
NBC switchboards were de1upd by pho.., calls demanding
an eJI,'Ilaation for the sudden
video curtailment ol 'this hey

A m e r I c a n Football League
game.

told over

Mill!lli, 311-21.
Namath Scores One
Lamonica's other TO to,ses
went nine yard&amp; to Warren

WeDs, 48 to DUly cannon oo a
pert&amp;ct screen am 22 1o Fred
BUetnlkol!. Joe Nomath Onally
broke out o! his oJUIDP with his
first touchdown pass in seven
games, a 5~yard8r to Don
Maynard.
Quarterback Pete Beathard
rah tor two touchdowns and
passed to flanker Mac Halk for
two more score&amp; for Hooston.
FlOyd Little accounted ror one
Denver tally on a 67-yard punt

Jets coach Weeb Ewblnk was
s I m tl 8. r 1 y bunbarded with
"what hiJ)pened?" .questJons.
Ewbank
kept the press
waiting 20 mil'lltea and then retur~
said, "For us, you can call it a
Len Dawson ubombed" BosMexican •ictory. We all gut out ton with touchdown passes of
ol it alive!' Defensive back 90, 77 and 43 yards, while Goldie
coach Walt Michaela coocurred, Sellers took the ster&lt;b out or
''U was • game where the most the Patri'!i!J with a 7~ punt
Cace mask violations ln my return for a tlrst period
e"')erience were c.Jled."
touchdown which gave the
Jim Turner's 26-yanl neld Chle!a the 1014 for good.
goal late in the fourth quaroor,
JaC(JIIS MacKinnon snared
his rourth or the game and 14th two John Hadl passes and
In the last three contests, sent converted them into scores of 18 '
New York into its 32-29 lead. and 62 yards in San Diego's
Then Duyle Lamonica threw llrot half rally. Bul!lllo lalllec!
his rQUrth touchdown pass of the on Bruce Alford's lle!d goals or
game with 42 secondt left to 25 and 16 yarda.
boost Oakland into the lead.
Paul Robinson, the AFL's
Preston Ridlehuber'1 two--yard leading
rusher, scored on
touctxlown vault with a recov- touchdown runs of 54, 15 and
ered fumble on the ensuing five yards as Clncinnltl won its
kickoff kUled off New York's third AFL game. Bob Grieae
last chlnee.
threw three touchdoWn passes
Hcuston. faced with )ouster ll lor Miami.

, -~ala'ot lnlei'CSL

·
'' ·' ,·zenllh Che.ailen&gt;Cl!elprtvl..
· ttecfwith
pu-en~e, MI-. 'ri
.,-r';&lt;,a••• Ed,......Cha.alior.
;, ,,m,•.·.·~i1dal'&lt;;ouiaon or Torch
.
: .• ,
.
1 da,y with Mr. and Mr•.
Mrs. George Bu~
\~..
Bucl!ler.
-~. . , '
uent at St. Joseph's ·noap'uailri' '· '-' Mr.•·. Bl~ Copii'O\'O waoa.paParkersburg.
.
·..: .. ;
. 1 tllmt ' at St. Joseph's HoiJI{talin
Mr. and Mra. Ta BoriDJ r&amp;. · Parkers~£
cently tnvelec! byplanotoPhoe"' ·• Mr, •1\d Mro, Cat! Barmart
Lx, Arlz., to visit with U.,itl!aiiJib- and Mrs. ': Gltry Bar~rt vial~
ter and !e&gt;llv, Mr. and Mra. Alan with Gltey,'Barmart al Fori Shaw,
DOL Mr. and M'ts. ·carroi! ftln. S. ~ Mrs, Gaey Barnhari remaladol'ph were recent tourists of dJe ed with her hulband.
Sky!tne Drl•e.
:.
Bell Bockley and R. E. wu.
Mr. and Mrs. BUI WUIIamo or Iiams visited with Lon Beich,
Lancaster spent a weekend at the BeUevllle, W. Va., recently.

5 -

i.f•·

Ira•

WUIIams-Balderson home.

,.

ae-

Christmas decorations in Tuppers Plains were discussed dur~~ the November meeting or the
Rose Garden Club at the home of
Mrs. John Arbaugh.
The planning committee, Mrs.
carl BarnhUI, Mrs. James stout,
Mrs. Kenneth Griffith aOO Mrs. J,
S. Davis, reported on progress
with the project taken on by the
club, but noted the need for outdoor lighting equipment. Persons
with lights to loan or donate for
the village decorationprojectare
asked to contact a member of the
committee,
The Christmas tree will be provided by Mr. and Mrs. Frank Goebel and on Saturday, Dec. 7, at 1
p, m. club members are to meet
at the Dairy Queen to erect ard
decorate the tree.
The home Christmas decoratIng contest was discussed and
persons interested in participating are asked to contact Mrs. John
Arbaugtl, or leave their name and
addreu at Lyon:; Store by
Dec. lB.
Caah prizes for first, secoll1
and third places wiU be awarded by the judges. Judging will
take place Friday evening, Dec.
20, between the hours or 7 and 8
p. m. Following the iu&lt;Jsing the
amolDlcement of the judges wlU
be made at ttle commwdty tree.
There will be carol singing and
children and adults ol the community are invited to join In the

- Mra. LYle Balderson
This iprlng's color picture
wiD · emphasize red, whlle
and blue, then branch out
Into strong shades and fem·
lnlne pastels, sueh as peach
and aqua.

cently Mr. WIIUams, acCODII&gt;antee! ·by triems ri-&lt;111 l,lncaster
al'll col.wnbus,flewoverlhlsarea
and took pictures or the BoDevilie-Reedsvilie Dim and other

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Call Callocl

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,.

'

(UPD- lrish

CHERRY mLL, N.J. (UPl)Ogden
Mills Phipps' Beau
Brwnmel swept to a H4 le~
triumph in lhe $312,669 Garden
State stakes.

Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. Visiting hours 2-4 and 7-8
p.m. Parents only on Pediatrics
Ward.
Admissions
Mrs . RobertE, McCarley,2012
Chatllam Ave.; Mrs. Dooovan L.
Fulks, S53 Hilda Dr.; Mrs. Bernie B. Smith, 47 Madison Ave.;
Mrs. Charles W. ~rlock, Rt. 1
GalllpoUs;
Mr&amp;.
Robert C.
Wauah, Rt. 1 GallJpolla; Arnold
L, ne-e, Rt. . ~ Bidwell; Dew~

Sunday

(UPO

Bert

Weaver shot a final roorJJ 68 to
win the Caracas Open Golf
Toornament with a 269.

BRISBANE,

Australia (UP!)
- Bruce Devlin woo the Dunlop
lnter~tional Golf Cllsslc with
." 1

a 281.
FUKUOKA,

I

. f.

J lij)On

J. Wilcoxen, Patriot Star Rt.;
Steven S, Hornsby, Rt 2 Galli~
..lis; Thelma R. Saxon, Gallipolis; Perry E. Livingston, U,
Pl Pleasant; Marshall W. Woot~
en, Rt. I Pt. Pleasant; Mrs. Grace
O. Glover, Pt. Pleasant; Mrs.
Howard S. Brewer, Rt. 1 Pl.
Pieasant; George W. Allen, Rt.

(UP!) -

National Bank Region No. 4

Ola.rter No. 9815

REPORT OF CONDITION OF

2 Pl Pleasant ; Mrs. Harold W.
Rickard, Jr., West Columbia;
Mrs. Wilbert R. Clooch, Rt I
Minersville; Mrs. Eleanor Withers, Pomeroy; James W. Weaver, Jr., Racine; Mrs. Clifford
T. Whittington, Harrisonville;
Mrs. Charles T. Fick, Rt. 1
Long Bottom; DooaJd H, Salmans ,
Tucker,
Wellston;
Zebadee
Grimms Landing, W. Va. ; Mu.
Karma L. Stepp, Rt. 2 Chillicothe; Miss Helen L. Jordan,
Rt 1 Greenup, Ky.; Mrs. Harold E. Harvey, Radcliff; Mrs.

The Racine Home National Bank
of Racine in the State of Ohio, at the close of business on October 30, 1968 published in response to call made by Comptroller of the Currency. under SecUoo 5211, U. S. Revised statutes,
ASSETS
Clsh, balances with other banks, and cash items
in process of collection .. ...... .. . . . . . . . . . . . .. . $ 339,610. 76
United States GQvernment obligations • • • • .. . , • •••• . •..• 1,280,707. 74
Obligations of States am political !Nbdivision9. . . • . . . . . • • • 32,573.12
other Securities . , , . . •. . ... , • • • . • . • . • • • • • • . . . . • .
12,521.00
Federal funds sold and Securities purchased
under agreements to resell .... .• . • . . . . . . • • . . . . . . 300,000.00
Loans and discoW'Its •• • . • •..•• • ••.••••..•.••• .... . 2,242,219.42
Bank premises, furnitw'e aJXI fixtures,
other
assets representing bank premises . • .•. ..• .• . ,~o • .
26,610.75
2.62t. 72
Other Assets, including U. S. sav. Bds.. • . . . • • • • . . • • . • . . .
TOTAL ASSETS , ... , . . . ....... . .... . . . . . . . . . . , .$4,236,867.51

am

I
;.

McGhees are
Honored at

LIABILITIES
Demand deposits of irdividuals, partOOr sh.ips,
arv:t corporations , . .• • .• . , .•• ·. . . . • . . . . • . • . . . • $ 972,798.39
Time and savings deposits of individuals, p.artnershJps,
an:i corporations . . . ..•. • ... •.. . • . , , • . ...•... 2,327,391. 84
Deposits or United States Govermnent. ... .... . . . . . . .. .
17,847, 95
J)epositi: O[ StateS aJ'KI political 9Ubdh1sfons , , , . , . . . • . • . 446,737. 87
6,220.50
Certified arv:l: officers' checks, etc• . . • . . • , • , . . .
TOTAL DF..POSJTS, ., . . , .. , , ,$3 1770,996.55

Total demand deposits .. ,. , ...

1,!42.604,71
Total time arv:l: savings deposits. . 2,628,391.84
Other liabilities including Unearned Interest . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 81,822. 00
TOTAL LIABILITIES, . ,, .. , , ,, . . . , .. ,, . . , .. , .. ,, $3,852,8!8.55

Common stock - total par value •. , .. . , •• , .... , . . , .. $125,000 .00
No. share s authorized - 5000
No. shares outstandilll: - 5000
Surplus . •••. . .••• .•.. . , . . .. • , . . . . . • • • . . . . . . . • 125, 000.00
L1ndivided profits . . . . . . . . . .. . , . . . , , . . . ....•..• , . 134,048.96

TOTAL CAPITAL ACCOUNTS , , , , • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . , , 384,048.96
TOTAL LIABILITIES AND CAPITAL ACCOUNTS , , , , . . . . .M6,~1..~
MEMORANDA
Loans as shown aOOve are after deduction of
valuation reserves or... . . . .... . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . • $8,320.16
SecuriUe!l as shown above are after deduction
of valuation reserves of. . . .. . . . . • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
650.00
I, .John T. Wolfe, Cashier, of the above-named bank do hereby de clare
that this report of cotk1ition is true and correct to Ule best of my knowledge
and belie f.

JOHN T. WOLFE , CASHIER

Is this the way you
look at electric heat?
r-------:--

Mr. and Mrs. David McGhee
of Columbus were guests ot honor &amp;mday, Nov. 10, at the home
ol Mr and Mrs. Allen Eichinger,
Mulberry Heights.
The McQiees will move to
Palmetto, Fla., at Leisure Lake
VWage oo Dec. l, after Mr. Me~
Qlee'&amp; retirement £rom employ.
ment at the Columbus Dispatch.
Grace was given by Roger W.
HyaeU preceding the potluck dinner. ln the iitlernoon the fam-

MAil.f.TDD,.Y , ~-----:--- --,

WCDIC KIIIFE FilE£ wH1111 Reddy KiLowatt Recommended
So did Reverend Ramsell 1I THIS
Deller pre~J~res a written estimate ofthebm lo con11ert your home to elec·

For years, Reverend Albert Ramsell of Canton,
Ohio "wouldn'l even lhink aboul electric heal.
I thought il would be loa expensive. Then I
got a cosl eslimate and swilched to electric 7
years ago. When I totaled my old fuel bills,
I found out electric heat doesn't cost me any
more than the old heat I had. Anybody who says electric heat is
expensive is talking from hearsay, nol experience." You can switch to
flameless electric heal-economically. And your heating bill will be
about whal you're now paying. let us prove it. Get a free estimatefrom us or your Reddy Kilowatl Recommended Dealer.

We, the urxlersigned directors attest the correctness of this report of
conditioo and declare that it has been examined by u&amp; and to the best of our
knowledge and belief is true and correcL

I

lric heatinJ. Olfer lvailablt to our wstoiners only. rhere is no obliption.

I

I
I
I
I
I
I
~
1

I
I

Directors

Move

IlY

Rm'.430 • 301 Clevolorid Ave., s.w.
Conlon, Ohio 44701
N•m•'----,-..::J
' ·~------~-

A~•ML------~----

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

s111

~~~

(51iij919wu CDMtAD

ip'

c.&lt;J,____

~
- . ,.

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.... '

.!:!! to FLAMEI:.ES$

'.

...•~:•
"'
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••••
'•

.,t•.

.,.

••
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'

pr;isented a giO to Mr. and

Mra. McGhee.
Present were Mr. and Mr&amp; .

Ohio Poweli:ompany

ALBERT HILL, JR,
CLARENCE PRICE

Sunday Dinner

•.

CAPITAL ACCOUNTS

J. DILLON CROSS

The Daily Sentinel, Pomeroy-Middleport, 0,, Monday, November 18, 196H

New Officers Elected

Decorations in
Tuppers Plains
Are Discussed

Dude captured the $50,000 added
Queens County Han:ticap at
Aqueduct by 1 head over
Chompion.

CARACAS

563.

lte!y.

~ding

1. Davis , Rejects (tie); J. Trip-

~ Ohio U. 60 Cincinnati 48

I',.

so In lllwr ot a regularly
schedule(\ ch1ldrea'11 program.

Week Ending November 16, 1968

Notre Dame 34 Ga. Tech 6

,. -ptinols 14 Northwestern 0

~

Bowling

By GARY KALE
UP! Sjlorts Writer

i&lt;f.~e.. ,

the Jeh
th8lr
nun)ber -~ two In 'lbe ·ftnol

,,

Roger W. Hysell, Jasm and Grant
o1 Mason; Mr. and Mrs. Cecil
Hysell, Roger Perry and Mrs.
Dora Phillips, Mr. and M r s.
Clarence CUrtis, Mr. and Mrs.
1llax Eichinger, Becky and Max
Jr., Mr. and Mrs. Paul Eichinger, Paula and Tammy, all of
Pomeroy, and the honored guests
and boots.
Mr, and Mrs. Byroo Hysell of
Colwnbus were unable to attend.

Mrs. WUUam Carr and Mrs.

Denver Rice were in Athens Wednesday for a meeting or the Zone
16 Mental Retardation ColUlcil
held atthe Good Shepherd Cturch.
Brian Dale Hayes, son oC Mr.
and Mrs. William llayea was tak.
en to Columbus FridaY for a
checkup at Chlldren'9 Hospital.
Mrs . Hayes andlhechild'sgrandparenta, Mr. and Mrs. 1\. W.
Hayes, made the trip.
Mrs . Paul Prottengeire a n d
daughter, Terri Marie, and Mrs.
Jessie Lake, West Jefferson,
have returned to their homes after visiting here with Mr. and
Mrs . Leu Kennedy, Sr. M r s.
Lake also visited in Ne190nVille
with Mr . and Mra. Michael Oh ~
linger and children. They returned to West Jeffer son Saturdav.

By Counci/17 Ladies
New officers were elected at
Thursday night's meeting of the
Past
Councilors, Theodorus
Council 17, Daughters of America, at the home of Mrs. sarah

festivities.
Members were remirw:Jed to
Meigs
give gifts for the Elmwood Rest
Home resident:; to Mrs. Griffith
before Dec. 21.
During the meeting col'll.ucted
by 1-.trs. Goebel, president, she
armounced that the Meigs County
Christmas show will be staged
James L. Hideoour, Esther
on Nov. 30 and Dec. 1 at the
Ridenour to Rollin K. Hawk, CherPomeroy
Elementary School.
yl Hawk, partels, Chester.
Melvin R Smitll, Olive L. Smith
Theme of the show will be
"ChrisUnas Ideas''. The class
to Clarence M. Imboden, Agnes
drawn for the club at a recent
M. Imboden, lots, Pomeroy.
meeting of dub representatives
Lionel Boggs, Adm ., Mary E.
was "Flower of the Snow," arl'rice , dec., to Bonnie Miller,
rangements I..'Ontainlng holly .
Charles Miller, I acre, Hutland.
The Christmas dinner andparHarry A. Miller, Mary Ellen
ty was planned for Dec . 18 at
Miller to Roger L. Walker, Garnet E. Walker, lots , Pomeroy.
6:30 p. m. at the Up-Towner in
Parkersburg. Those who have not
Sybil E:bersbach, Comm., .John
already made reservations are
Phillip Meier aka PhllipJ . Meier,
asked to contact Mrs. Clarence
dec., to Bernadine S. ME~f"e r, Pa~
ricia Suchoza, Phyllis Knopp,
Headley.
It was voted during the meeting
Mar~· T. Matller, Carolyn POOto begin meetings durlng.Jaooary
besek, Robert P. Meier, 1~ acre,
and February at 7:30 p. m. MemPomeroy.
bers responded to roll call with
James L Souders, Electa Sood·
a verse of the Bible gl vlng thanks.
ers, l'hyllis Knop~. Charles
Fund-raising projects w e r e Knq:~p, Mary T. Mat11er, Hobert
The traveling prize wa s won
planned
and officers forlhe 196~ - II, Mather, RobertP. Meier , Marby Mrs. Oscar Babcock, al"ll the
69
year
were elected during a il~·n Meier, Carolyn B. Podbesek ,
special arrangement orthemonth
recent
meeting
of the Tuppers
Alan Podbesek, Patrida Suc hoza,
was made by Mrs, Glen StooL
Flains-AJfred
Community
Wom - Bernard P. Suchoza to Bernadine
She used a horn of plenty with
fruit, vegetables, and nuts with en's Club held at the home of S. Meier, :1,4 acre, Pomeroy.
Bernadine S. Meier to Patricia
an arrallJement of chrysanthe- Mrs . Frederick Goebel .
A bake sale was scheduled for Suchoza, Phyllis Koopp, Mary T.
mums and ivy.
Mather, Carol yn Podbese k, RobRefreshments were served by Frida.Y, Dec. 6, at the L. L.
Lyons Grocery. Members were ert P. Meie r , lots , Pomeroy.
the hostess to 18members during
requested to have their baked
Hill Da,y, J::ula Day to Hobert
a concluding social hour,
goods at the store by 9 a.m . N. nark, Lola E. Clark, 55 acres,
Orders for Stanley products are II a r risonville-."&gt;c ipi o.
to be given to Ethel Arbaugh.
Walter W. White, Hettie M
Officers elected for the new White to Walter U. White, Imoyear were Patricia Bailey, preS- gene E. White, 78.86 acres, Salident; Sharon Boyles, v i c e isbury.
president; Janie Headley, record{ieneva Yates, et ai, to State of
ing secretary; Mary Longenette, Ohio, Journal Entry, Oli ve.
John E. Slavens, Jackson; Char · corresponding secretary; M i I ~
Maxine M. Allen s worth, Marles D. Koonce, Rt . 5 Jackson: dred Headley, treasurer: Patty ion AllensWOJ'tll to Dale NicholOlen R. Smith, Rt. 2 Sandyville , Life, news reporter, and Mamie son, Dorothy Nicholson, Jot, MidW. Va.; Mrs. James Newnes, Headley, historian.
dleport.
Rt. 2 Wellston; Mrs. Herbert E.
During tlw meeting conducted
Howard V. McCoy , Geraldine
Ponn. Wellston; Mrs. John H. by Mrs. Bailey, a report wa s G. McCoy lo Betty Q. Pierte, parMontgomery, Rt. 3 Alban_y; Mrs. given by Mrs. Life, chairman cels, 011\•e.
Elmer M. Francis, Sandyville, o( the committee for selection
W, Va.; Bryce C. Browning, Rt.
or suitable sites for a commun3 Dover; Mrs. Larry E. Ross, ity building. Sbe reported that
Jackson; Mrs. Cecil A. Hale, her committee has been workAshland, Ky.; Mrs. Rosie Bo- ing on the project and will re len, Rt. • JatkSOD; Mrs. Dale ,port· at tile December meeting.
L. Gillespie, Jackson; William
Mrs. Mamie Headley, chairR. Enos, Ravenswood.
man of the dirmer committee, re ~
Births
ported that the recent Wrke,y din Mrs . Harold E. Harvey, Rad- ner showed a profit or approxJ .
cliff, daughter, 7:S3 p.m . Sat- mately $11.&gt;.
urday; Mrs. Herbert E. Ponn,
Plans were made ror a lunchWellston, son, S:15 p .m. &amp;inday; eon and Christmas party to be
Mrs. Donovan L. Fulks , 5S3 Hil- held in Parkersburg, 1he place
da Dr., daughter, 1:57 a.m. Moo- to be announced later, oo Dec.
day; Mrs. CUtrord T. Whitting- 11 . Members are to take a $1
ton, HarrisonvUle, daughter, 2:- item for a gift exchange. Plans
32 a. m. Monday,
are to meet at the Dairy ~een
Dlscharges
in Tuppers Plains at 11 a.m.
Mrs. Jack A. Bates, Richanl and go to Parkersburg from
B. Brogan, Mrs. Herbert H. Cas
there, Members are asked to contle, Clyde J. Cook , Mrs. Gladys tact the telephone chairman ror
Dalley, John B. Downard, Kim- (urther information.
ba.ll K, Ferris, Henry G. Furst,
Martin R. George, Mrs. W i 1liam C. Gibbs, Sandra S. Groves,
James T. Lee, Si:., Garland L.
Genume r LO .Q-GLASS IS lhl! onl~
Knits Are on Scene
Lester, t:arroll E. Matthews,
plas11c wrnclow rnate~ral lh&lt;Jt came~
Knll dresses take shape on
John A. Pickens, Mrs. Floyd
12 rear guarantee. The name
Rife, Everette E. Saxon, Mrs.
tbe current fashion seeoe.
flD: 0 GLASS rs pr rn1ecl on the
edge lor your protectron.
Onille H. Sharp, Kenny R. Stew~ There are empire styles,
art, Mrs. Frances C. Taylor,
, ttortlw•r• &amp; L•"'••r Deot.
shaped b a r e b a e k styles,
~
herywhero
''
Mrs. Orpha Wooten, Mr&amp;. Rob~ smoeked mldrll£ styles and
Wup Bru
ert H. Eason and infant !IOJI , Mrs,
Chlufo
shaped bodydreBB styles wltb
Carlos E. SWisher and infant
a hlgb lurlle neek-all knit.
son, Mrs, Harold S. Baker, Mrs.
Charles C. Brohard, Mary A.
Elkins, Frank Grueser, Mrs.
Earl Reynolds, Tony R i f r I e,
George H. Ware, Mrs. Jotm H.
White, Mrs. Sadie Steele, Mrs.
Roy H. See and infant son, Mrs.
Nicl{Jofs L, Leonard and infant
son, Mrs. Everett Grant and in -

Property
Transfers

Pro;ects
For Funds
Reviewed

Diddle, Antiauitv.
Elected were Mrs. Margaret
Seidenabel, president; Mrs. Ad·
rla Sayre, vice president; Mrs.
Mabel Bearhs, treasurer, arv:l:
Mrs. Cora Beegle, secretary.
During the meeting col"llucled
by Miss F.rna ,Jes se, plans were
made for the annual Christma s
party to be held on Dec. 12
at the Trinity United Olurcll of
Chris t.. A dinner will be served
by the women of the church and
the party wiJI follow in the social
room there. Members will have
a $1 gift exchange. Named to
the committee to plan the affair
were Mrs. Mabel Wolfe, Mrs.
Eva Dessauer, and Mrs. Kate
Goodwin.
Mrs. Ca r rie Meinhart was r eported t·onfined to Holzer Ho s~
pital and member s s igned a card
ror her. Mr s . Nettle Hayes o~
ened the meeting by reading the
23rd Psalm. The Lord' s Prayer
and the pledge to tire flag were
given in unisorL
It was announced that tile January meeting will be at the home
of Mrs. Hayes,
Middleport.
Game s were played with prizes
being won by Mrs. Beegle, Mr s.
Seidensbei, Mrs. Wolfe and Mr s.

Shatterproof
Flexible
Long-Lasting

Miss Miller Joins
'Pioneer' Closs
Ona E1len Miller, daughter of

Rev. and Mrs. Audry W. Miller,
910 Broadway st., Middleport,
is a member or the "pioneer"
freshman class of Mount Vernon
Nazarene College, Mount Vernon,
a college organized0ct.12, 1968.
Miss Miller is a 1968 graduate of Middleport High School
where 9he was a member of the
band and was in the junior class
play.
Interesting

/

COIN
OP

wide-wale

corduroy,

up some figure prob·
lems. Sort clinging fabricsjersey, chiffon. crepe-em·
phasize figure irregularities .
Shiny textures-satin, taffets
- add weight while dull sur·
faces-linen, gabardine-are
more slenderizing.
cover

PICKENS

$229.95
M oclll WCD... fN

BAKER FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

3rd &amp; Ash Middleport, 0.

FfJfJDVAIUBTHAT
Country Maid Sliced

BACON
We Grind Jtf

RCCOLA

From Fresh, Lean
Quality Beef!

Dubuque: Roll

SAUSAGE /
•

8PAK

75~

HUNT' S

GROUND BEEF

2 lb. 89~

TO JUICE
29~

HOUSE
CLEANING SPECIAL

pound
sal id

10J,,.

ROOM SIZE
RUGS
Rogula•
14.95

1

S Q95

BANQUET

TV
DINNERS
Seal test

3

MILK

FOR

v,
gal.

3 ~~.

terry

a

DUDS 'N SUDS

39~

SWinNING

wool tweeds- add
weight to the figure, but also

'-.

GOSNEY

SHORTENING BUY!

cloth,

:I

&amp;
'"f

-36 lndMI wide -

Change Appearance
Fabric texture can change
your appearance. Heavy,
rough, nubby t ex: t u res-

Just dial the f abric-wad!
temperature, agitation,
n Me temperature, spin
speed are all set automatically • 2 ·Posrtion Cold
Water Selector SB\111!5 hot
water. shrr nking. fading
• Deep Action Agrtator for
Urorough, gentle dean inK
• Automatic lint removal
- no lint trap

Laundry ~u~r-

o•m36C ' " ''

fant son.

I iii lmi!I!EI'l

Fri&amp;idaire Washer
with &amp;-Position
Fabric Select1r

MONDAY, TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY AT MARK V

8

"'"

Ethel Smith.
A Thanksgt ving theme wu
carried out in the refreshment
table decorations. Attending besides those named were Mrs.
WI nona Cook, Mrs. Lottie Cohen,
Mrs. Ruby Erband Breo:laSayre.

59~

HOLSUM
LARGE SIZE

BREAD

WYLER'S

DRY
SOUP
Pkg.

only

Longhorn Cheese-----1!.69~
l6oz.391o
Ins t• P0tatoes Talerlan
ldaho.•••bag
't
Roasted Peanuts.:=~---1!.39~
Head Lettuce~:~~: •••••':!J 9~

W.VA.

TAKEN TO HOSm AL
The Racine emergency squad
waa called at 10:45 a.m . SUn~
da.Y to the home of Doris Wolfe,
70, Racine, from where she was

taken to Meigs General Hospital
and entered as a medical patient ,

SUPER MARKET -Open Daily 9 to 9:30-Sun. 12 to 9:30

N. W. COMPTON, 0. D.

·
We Accept Federal ·Food Stam.pa
CDnNr Mill and S••ncl 511.
PHONE: 992 3410
·

OPTOMETRIST
OFFICE HOURS 9:30 TO lZ, 2 TO 5 (CLOSE AT NOON ON
THURS.)- EA'iT couar ST., POMEROY

"We !

"'lbi!IIM'III u.a Qr !W •

........, .. atA.OID ON fMt ID81 MIAMI UJJSIACJION eu ..a .. NUID

·Ebel'sbach Hardwa111, Main Sf., P""omeroy

i
\

IIDIIIBOIT, 0.

�..
•

7 -

' I

.t

fhe Daib Scnlinel, Pomeroy-MlQCiteport, u., m.uu,o~•.r , nuwcJuLftl' '"• . .. u ,

LBJ Could Try Again to Replace Warren

TIME IN THE
J

'•

,,

VA LEY AREAl

OHI
•

·-

IN

WRITING

l'
_v

',

uaran

I

0•••
FADE
CHIP
PEEL
RUST

Your Home Need
Not be Paid For
For You to Qualify

CANOY:ITRIPERS, Monday, 6:30 p m. at Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
PASf CHIEFS, Meigs Temple,
Pythian Sisters, will meet at
6:30 -day night at the Martin
Restaurant for a dirmer. From
there the group will go to the
home of Mrs . Elizabeth Allman
tor a social hour.

e from B. F. GOODRICH VINYL
'

WASIIINGTON (UPO - In the
two montlls President Johnson
has left In ornce, he still could
try
again to select Chief Justice
MOND.\Y
Earl
Warren's successor.
ANNUAL GHANGEoUicersand
There's
some talk that he
members conference, 8 p. m.
might
do
just
that, despite the
Monday, Rock ~rings ilall. All
defeat
he
suffered
when the
members bring donuts. Year's
Senate
failed
to
confirm
his
program will be discussed. Tickselection
of
Asl!lociate
Justice
ets are &amp;Yailable for the all Abe fortis to replace the 77grange banquet.
year-&lt;tld
Warren.
THEODORUS COUNCIL 17,
Johnson
obviousl.Y would like
Daughters of America, 56th anto
have
another
liberal as chief
niversary dinner, 6:30p. m. Monjustice
while
President-elect
da.y at the hall . Bring a covered
Ric-hard
M.
Nixon
would pick a
dish and table service
more
con5ervative
voice. Some
J.o.t: CLASS, Pomeroy United
~:~ay
that
this
is
the reason
Methodist Church, 6p m. Monday
Warnm,
a
Hepublican,
subml~
at the church for the annual
ted his resignation to Johnson
4 Thanksgiving dirmer.

Could Prove Costly

MIDDLEPORT GARDEN Club,
8 p.m. Monday at the Columbus
and Southern Ohio Flectrie Co.
Mrs. J. W, Morris, Mrs. John
Kincaid, and Mrs. J . E. Harley
wtll be the hostesses.
By BERNARD BRENNER
But Shuman added t h e er fa r m e r bargaining proUPJ Farm Editor
changeover c o u 1 d threaten grams.
JOINT COUNCIL meeting of
WASIUNGTON (UPO - AllY heavy losses to farmers who
St. Paul alii St. JOOn Lutheran
Shwnan , in hi s open letter to
Churches will be held at the St.. major move away from govern- have made big investments to the president-elect , added that
ment management of !ann pro- operate in a "fictitious" gov- Nixon could help boost farm
John Church at 8 p.RL
duction may call for temporari- ernment - propped market. He prices in the ll. S. by ordering
MIDDLEPORT PTA, 7:30 p.m.
ly big federal spending, a farm said farmers should not have a get-tough stand in trade neat the Middleport Elementary
leader warned the incoming to bear the losse s invol ved in gotiations with the European
School. The Ohio University PlayNixon administration.
correcting " distortions" of gov- Common Market.
ers w Ill _present "Scattered
But the cost would be worth ernment programs.
The F.uropean trade gr&lt;Jlt) in
Showers."
whUe, Charle s B. Shuman,
"Government programs got recent years ha s adopted tariff
MEIGS COUNTY Boord of
president or the American us irrto this mess, and it is the and other policies which tend
Retardation will meet MorwJa.y
Farm Bureau Federation, con- responsibility of t l1 e federal to squeeze down its imports of
night at 7:30 in the coort house
terded in an open letter to goverrunent
to help us make farm products.
otfice of the Meigs County ComPresident - elect Ril;:hard M. the change," Shuman said.
"Foreign sales (of tr. S. crop s)
missioners,
Nixon.
"These potential losses and can be doubled in four years if
RIVERV£EW GARDEN Club
"Our appeal to you, Mr. adjus tment expenses of farmer s the Slate Departme nt trade newill meet Monday at 7:30 p.m. at President, is for administration
should be indemnified b.\' land gotiator .~&gt; are instruc ted to inthe home of Mrs. Claremont Har- policy direction that will facntretirement or program tennina- sist that trade is a two - way
ris wttll Mrs. Herman Grossnick- tate and ease the transition tion payments from the federal
le as ~lrt.ess. Members are from the politi cal management treasury," the farm leader con- s treet - no more Volkswagen
or French wine imports until
to bring Christmas gifts for pa- o! farm production to a market- tended.
the Common Market variable
tients at Athens State Hospital . ing system based on conswner
Brighter !lopes
duties on U. S, farm e:q&gt;orts
demand," Shumand said.
TUESDAY
For the Farm Bureau , the are removed,'' Shuman said.
"This will require congres- nation's biggest farm organizaGROUP 0 of the Women's As50Ciation of the Middleport First sional as well as administra- tion, Nixon's election clearly
United Presbyterian Church will tive action and the price tag produced brighter h o p e s of
meet at 6 p.m. at the Martin Res ~ may be high for a time," Shu- movement toward the group's
taurant for a holiday dhmer. man added in the letter, pub- long-held goal of de-emphasizFrom there the group will go to lished in the current Issue of a ing federal crop controls, direct
the home of Mrs. Richard Karr Farm Bureau magazine.
farmer payments and price
Disastrous Situation
for a meeting,
Slt)ports.
REEDSVILLE W.S. C.S.
Shuman said the supply co~
, HARVEST DrNNER, 6 p.m. at
While Ni xon has rd detailed
The
Reedsville W. S.C. .S. met
the Salisbury Elementary School . trol and price support programs any proposed new long - range
at the home of Mrs. Rose ThomThe PTA meeting will follow of the outgoing administration farm program, he has said
as Thursday evening, Nov . 7,
the dinner. George Hargraves, had produced a "disastrous sit- major changes will be needed
The devotional program was the
superintendent of the Meigs Lo- uation." He urged a turn to- in the present control and payService
of Celebration of the
cal School District, will be the ward policies under which ment sy s tems.
meeting. The history of
Charter
fanners would be left free to
speaker.
Vice President Hubert H.
the former Evangelica l United
produce in respons e to econom- HUillphrey, on the other hand,
Brethren and Methodist WomWOMEN'S AUXIIJARY of Vet- ic demaM.
had favored continuation of the
en's group was given, also the
erans Memorial Hospital, 7:30
basic farm adjustment pro-purpose
of the new society. Char Tuesda,y night at the hospital cafgram&amp; now in use witfl some
ter members signed for the new
eleria. Orientation program for
modifications, including stronggroup. Business session conductnew members will be coMucted.
ed by Mrs. Mamie Buck I ey. The
West Virginia members with
society voted to purchase a new
Mrs, Mary Pickens as chairman
Bible for the church. CommitwW present a Thanksgiving protee
appointed to take car e of this
gram arxl serve refreshments.
project
is Mrs. Uorothy !Uebel ,
FRIENDLY CIRCLE Tuesday,
Mrs.
Nancy
Buckley , and Mrs.
8 p.m., at Trinity United Church
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Clark and
Mamie
Buckley.
Plans were
of Christ. Mrs. Bill Perrin, pr~
children were guests of Mrs.
remember
the Counb
made
to
Mrs. Thelma Giles was re- Clark' s mother, Mrs. SWishe r ,
gram leader, and Mrs. John WilHome
and
Children'
s
Home al
liam Blaettnar and Mrs. Phil cent visitor of Mrs. J. R. Mur- at Cheshire.
Christmas.
Several
prize
s wer e
phy
.
Globokar, hostesses.
Mrs. Joe Sayre, Mrs. Elmer
awarded in a game conducted
Bill McElroy and Bob and Tom Finlaw arxl son spe nt an afte rREEDSVILLE-LONG BOTTOM
Shafter were recent visitors of noon with Mrs. Hwe Harper. by the hostess. Refreshments
Homemakers CJ ub will meet
we r e served to above and Mrs .
Mrs. J . R. Murphy and family.
Mr. al"kl Mr s, Delmar Rhodes
Tuesday at 7 p.m . al the home of
Neil WILson, Mrs. Vivian HumBob
S21atfer
and
BUI
McElwere guest of Mr. arwJ Mrs. RichMrs. Pauline Myers. Program
roy visited with Mr. and Mrs . ard Rhodes alli children at Dun- phrey and Mrs. Ullian Pickens.
topic wUl be on new fabrics and
Christmas party will be at Mrs .
Robert Murphy ol Middleport, bar, W.Va.
finishes taught by Mrs. Margar Wilson's home Dec . 17.
Jan Knapp and Jo Smith were
MrS. Verna Haningal"kiMr. and
et Brown.
PERSONALS
recent visitors of Mrs. J . R. Mrs. Lilroy Haning of New AlWEDNESDAY
Mrs. Bessie Bowman and Mrs.
Murphy and famll,y.
bany, Ohio, visited Mr. al"kl Mrs.
BOSWORTH COUNCIL 46, RoyMr . and Mrs. J. R. Murphy, GUj· Bolen on Sunday,
Bertha Schreiber of Mason City,
al and Select Masters , will hold Peggy, Carmel and Barbara were
W. Va. visited with Mrs. Bess
Mr. and Mrs. Larry McGrath
stated assembly, Wednesda,y, 7:- !imday guests of Mr . and Mrs.
Larkins, Saturday .
and children visited Mr. arwJ Mrs.
30 p.m. at tbe Pomeroy Masonic Robert Murphy of Middleport.
Mr . and Mrs. Don Coleman
Earl McGrath.
Temple. All companions are urgMr . and Mrs. Harley T. Johnand family of Columbus spent
Dr, Lloyd Karr spent the weeked to attend.
son were recent visitora of Mr. erxl with the Harpe r s alii Sunday the weekend with Mrs. H e I e n
SYRACUSE THIRD Wednesday and Mrs. J. R. Murphy and fam Archer.
Mr. and Mrs. Harper and Dr.
Homemakers Club 10 LRL Wed- Ily,
Mrs. Alice Footty is visiting
Karr visited her daughter , Mrs,
ne~ at Syracuse Municipal
Mrs. J, R. Murph,y visited re with her son, Dain Foutty a n d
Park with "holiday decorations" cently with Mr. and Mrs. Ever - Janet VanCooney and family of
family of PennsylvanJa.
Beverly.
as topic. Mrs.JohnSeuvage, Mrs.
ett Lanttert.
Rev. Lamar Tillman, Park Guy and UqJe Harper called on
Harry L. Bailey arwJ Mrs. HerA family reunion was held at
ersburg, W, Va. and Ronald Os ~
man Lon:lon, leaders. Those at- the home of Lincoln Russell . Mr. arxt Mrs. Frank Paule.}' near
borne, Long Bottom, called on
Dextet-.
tending to take table service.
Mrs. Bess Larkins Monday eveThose attending were Mr . and
Mr. and Mrs. Don Updergraff
Beverage to be furnished by hosning.
Mra. Glenn ilaning, PagevUJe, of Alabamr. are visitingrelatives
tesses.
Mr. and Mn. Charles Ayers
Mr. and Mrs . Bill Earnheart, Lo- here.
CLASS 12, Heath U n i ted gan , Mra. &amp;lsie Aleshire, Tom
Mrs, John McMurray arxlthree of Belpre were recent viaitors
Methodist Church, 7:30 Wednesof Mr . and Mrs. VIrgil Buckley.
and Lettie &amp;le, Columbus, Mr · sons of Kansas were here visda.¥; Miss Bess Sanborn, devo- and M.ra. John Haning, Jane, and iting Mrs. Iva Donohue.
Mrs. Randal CouJsoo of Torch
tims; Mrs. James Criswell, pro..
Mra. llaning's sister or Dublin,
Mrs. carolyn Nutter called on spent a da.Y with Mr . and Mrs.
gram; Miss Nellie Zerkle, Mrs. Aunt Emma of California, Mr . Mrs, Minnie McGrath.
Ben Buckley .
Juanita Bachtel, Mrs. H a t t i e
Mrs. Roger Bahr or Chester
Mr, and Mrs. CharlteJonesand
and Mrs. Dale Russell, Jane
Smith, and Mrs. Carroll Swan- Ann, Jeff, and Susie of Colum- children c:ame to visit while Mr.
visited with Mr. and Mrs. James
son, hosteues.
Ruth and family Thursday .
bus, Mr. and Mrs. Clinton GU- Jones was in the hospitaL
PAST PRESIDENTS, Ladies key, Karen, Kathy and Tad af
- Mrs. I..,yle Balder!Kln
Albany, Mr. and Mrs. Harold,._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. ,
Auxlllary of Drew Webster Post
39, American Legion, meet at Gillogly, Vicki and Bruce orAl7:30 Wednesday night, home ot bany, Mr. and Mra. Franklin
Mrs. Pearl Knapp, 1803 Chest- Russell of Middleport, Mr. and
nut st., Gallipolis,
Mrs . Harley T, Johnaon, Mr.
and
Mrs, Harley E. Johnson,
THURSDAY
Tammy,
Cheryl and Terry, Mrs .
POMEROY Elementary PTA
J,
R.
Murphy,
Peggy, Carmel,
Jadl.es wUI meet Syracuae El~
and
Barbara,
Mrs. Howard
mentary PTA ladies, 7:30p.m.
Thoma.
Patricia
and
Mrs. CharThW'oday in basketball pme at
$30.00 ........... .
loy Smith.
Pomeroy Junior High Sehooi.
Robert Sloalfer ol U. S. Army
C..n~ltlltT-s
Adults 50 centa, chUdren 25
a_pent
Hveral days leave with hla
cents. Retreabmenta sold.
TWIN Cli'Y !luin-s will parents, Mr, and Mrs . Earl Shafmeet Thursday, Nov. 21, 7:30 fer, Linda and Tom. He loll Tuesp.m. in tho soeill roam o1 The day for For~ Ord, Cl'alllarnla
Colmnbu1 &amp; SouU.em Ohio Elec- where he be for three da,y1 then
to Vietnam for dutlea there.
lricCOJilPOIIY.

News, Notes

.)
•

OFFER GOOD

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ONLY!

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tion . Offer limited to home owners .

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you must be a qualified home owner and need
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NOT ICE : This is not an inducement for you to

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Mai I Coupon To :
Siding, Box 1000

Core of The Daily Sentinel , P~meroy

* LIBERAL

TERMS

NAME .................................... ..... Phone . .................
ADDRESS ........................................................... .... .
( ) I am interested in your special siding offer.

My home has: Soucco ( ) Frame ( )
Asbestos ( ) ln•ulatod Siding ( )
IN RURAL, PLEASE GIVE DIRECTIONS............

.... . . ..... ··········· ..... ... ..... ······· ..•...... .............. ... ....
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call: { ) Morning

Afternoon (

NO

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FIRST PAYMENT
.R

No Down Payment-first Payment Not Till January 1969 I
..

Farm Policy Switch

that the Warren retirement
carries
over to the new
administration. Under this theo-ry, Warren's letter was addressed to the "office of the
president, 11 and even If Johnson
burns it or removes It with his
other personal papers, Nixon

Nixon promised during his
campaign to appoint to the
court only "strict constructionists" of the cons titution. F riendly would seem to fill this bill,
since he recenUy c:alled for a
360-word amendment to the
Constitution to overcome some
of the recent decisions on selfinc:ri.minatioo.
A prominent Wa shington attorney
mentioned
for
the
nominati on is Cha r le s S. Rhyne,
58, the moving force beh int the
world
peace
throug h law
organi zation and o riginator of
the annual Law Day U.S. A.
celebration on May 1. H11yne is
a Republican.
If the President does not act,
it is po.~&gt;sible for Wa r r en to do
so. Althougl1 the chief jus ti ce
ha s given every irxlkation that
he wants to rt!tire a s soon as
possible, legal opinion appear s
unanimous that he could withdraw hi s .June. Ita retirement
letter to Johnson if he chooses.
Ques tion Carryover
If nothing at all happens,
there is disag r eement a s to
whether the Sup reme Cour t
matter will be pending busi ness
for the incoming pr e s idenL
S e n a t e Republican leader
Everett ~l Dirksen has said

,...J -·· - -· ....... .--·-·· .

,,

may still acL
But majorit_y leader Mike
Mansfield has said the letter is
btndl~ on the Johnson administration only. According to dlis
school or thought, a separate
retiremeri announcement would
have to go to Nixon.

Charter No. 8441

SERVICE
IUPON REQUESn
OurU,..IGoMCioon....

Robinson's Oea1ers

Natiooal Bank Region No. 4

REPORT OF CONDITION OF

The Citizens National Bank
oC Middleport In the State of Ohio, at the close of business ort.oetober 30, 1968
published in response to ca11 made by Comptroller of the Currency, under
Section 5211, U. S. Revised Statutes.
ASSETS
Cash, balances with other banks , arxl cash Items
in process of collection • . . , •. , . , , • • . . . , . , . , .. $ 465,282, 40
United states Government obligations . . . . . . . . . . • .. .. , 1,927,170. 00
630,468.39
Obligations of States and political subdivisions .•. , . . . , . ,
Other Securities , . . . . •... , . . . . . . . ••.•.•. , • . . . . 12,000.00
Federal fWKis sold and Securllies purchased
under agreements to resell • . , • .. . . .. . ••. , . . . • . 450,000 00
Loans and discounts , . . ... . .. ... . .• . . . , , , • . •... . 3,626,189, 03
Bank premises , furniture aOO fixtures, and other
assets representing bank premises , . , , • . . ... . .. , ,
57,475.22
6, 743.70
Real estate owned other than bank premises .. . ... ••. , • ,
Other assets, including ($None) direct lease financing, , •• , , • 8,463. 93
TOTAL ASSETS . . . . • . • . . ... . . ....• . ...•• • , •. • $711831792.67
LIABILITIES
Demand deposits of 1001 vidlB.ls, partnerships,
arxl corporations .. . . . .. • •• .... .•••. .. • .. . . $1, 423,744.75
Time and savings deposits of individuals, partnerships,
and corporations • • • . . . , • . . .. . . ... • , •... . , 4,582,671. 47
32,589.59
Deposits of United States Government . • . . .. . , .• , . , .
Deposits ot States and political subdi visions , • •... , . . . . 324,115.14
Certified and officer s' checks, etc. • , • . . • . . . • . . . . . . . 31,285.56
TOTAL DEPOSJTS .... . •...•. $61394,406,5\
Total demand deposits . . .. .. , , 1.735.212. 41
Total time and savings deposits. , ·t659,194..10
Other liabilities , including ($1\one) mortgages arxl other liens
on bank premises arxl c:ther real estate . . . , . •... . , .
90,651.08
TOTAL LIABILITIES . . . . . . , , ... .. , , . , , , . , , .. .. , f6,485,0$7.$9
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
Common stock - total par value .• , .•. , •• , • , , . • •• • , $100,000 .00
No. shares authorized - 2000
No. shares outstarlli.ng - 2000
S\1ll)lus , , •. , , ...• .. .. .. , , . . . , . . •.. . . • .. .. , , 300,000.00
Undivided profits . . . . • . , . . .. , . , . , .• . .. , , , ... , , , 298.735.08
TOTAL CA PITAL ACCOUNTS . . .. , . , . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1698,735 08
TOTAL LIABILITIES AND CAPITAL ACCOUNTS .. . ...•. $71183,792.67
MEMORANDA
Loans as shown above are after deduction of valuation
reserves of . . . • , . . .... , .•... ... . . ... , . .. • . $30, 446. 67
I, Harold E. Hubbard, Executive Vice President, of the aboV&amp;-ramed bank
do hereby declare that this report of cordition i s true and correct to the best
of m,y knowledge and belie(.
HAHOLD E. HUBBARD
We, the undersigned directors attest the correctness of this report o!
condition and declare that is has been examined by tiS and to the best of our
knowledge snd belief is true arll correct.
PAUL S. SMART
ROSE S. REYNOLDS
Directors
RODNEY DOWNING

•

Harrisonville

Hyou have only

News, Notes

BEAUTIFUL G-E ELECTRIC SKIL·

.

To get the Senate to appron
such a late-date selection,
Johnson migflt pick someone of
such stature that the lawmakers
could hardly refuse him. Or he
might pick a member of the
Senate, since senators usualiJ
fird it hard to vote against one
of their own. Another apprOflch
might be ror Johnsm, who has
already shown a talent for
getting along with hi s Republican successor, to get Nixon's
approval in advance- tacit or
otherwise.
Senators
being
mentioned

casually in this connection
include 'l'homas II, Kuchel, 58,
liberal california Republican
who ·lost his primary race for
re-election, and Sen. Philip A.
Hart, D-Mich., 55, a strong
suworter of Fortas' unsuccessful nomination.
Another possibility that the
speculators di scuss is for
Johnson to elevate Justice
Potter Stewart, 53, an Ohio
Republican whose constitutional
philosophy is more conservative
than Fortas', to the chief
justiceship.
other
speculation centers
arourw:l persons of impeccable
legal background, such as a
well-known judge or law school
figure. In this grotp are Prof,
Paul A. F re und or Harvard Law
School, an outstanding aulhori cy
on constitutional law; U.S.
Solicitor General Erwin N.
Gri s wold, a former dean of
llarvard law; and Judge Henry
J, Friendly of the 200 U. S.
Circuit Court of Appeals In New
York.
Note Age
A choice from this trio would
not tend to rejuvenate the
('Ourt, since Freurx:l is 60 aOO
Griswold 64 and FrierxUy 65.
But .Justi ce Oliver Werxlell
Holmes , one of the mos t
Ogures
in the
outstanding
history of the court, a ssumed
his job al age 61 aOO remained
30 years.

Society News

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Against Hail Damage

Could Pick Senator

On the Farm Front

Wolfpen

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100% WARRANTY

Senate.
- Considered more possibleat least by insiders at the
Slpreme Court- would be a
nomination of a chier justice by
Johnson between Jan. 3 when

Congreu reconvenes and Nixon's Jan. 20 Inauguration.

Reedsville

On The
FIRsT
10 HOMEs RE-SIDED
IN THIS AREA

·DENT
•CRACK
·ROT
·CHALK

rather than waiting until the
Republicans won the White
House.
If Johnson does try to pick
Warren's successor before Nixon Is inaugurated presidert,
there are two ways he could go
about It:
-The use of a recen
appointment, to be made berore
Congress convenes Jan. 3. This
appears the less likely way. It
would be a temporary appointment pending action by the

2-Hour
DRY ClfANJNG

3 ROOMS

New Furniture
ONLY

$'299

one telephone,
keep this ing
r-----------------------------------------------------------,
Weekly Running Record.
MO NDAY

TUESDAY

WEDNESDAY

TH URSDAY

FRIDAY

SATURDAY

SUNDAY

L-----------------------------------------------------------~
Put it by your telephone. And keep a running count of how
many times someone goes running across the house-or downstairs-to answer the phone, or to make a. call.
At the end of a week (or maybe by Wednesday) you'll know if
you should call us for an extension telephone.
An extension telephone would cost about 4 cents a day.
And that's a bargain-you pay about four
times that for your regular phone.

Over 40% of the families in America
have already retired from nmning.

MASON
FUINilURE CO.
MASOI, W. VA.

\

..

�..
•

7 -

' I

.t

fhe Daib Scnlinel, Pomeroy-MlQCiteport, u., m.uu,o~•.r , nuwcJuLftl' '"• . .. u ,

LBJ Could Try Again to Replace Warren

TIME IN THE
J

'•

,,

VA LEY AREAl

OHI
•

·-

IN

WRITING

l'
_v

',

uaran

I

0•••
FADE
CHIP
PEEL
RUST

Your Home Need
Not be Paid For
For You to Qualify

CANOY:ITRIPERS, Monday, 6:30 p m. at Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
PASf CHIEFS, Meigs Temple,
Pythian Sisters, will meet at
6:30 -day night at the Martin
Restaurant for a dirmer. From
there the group will go to the
home of Mrs . Elizabeth Allman
tor a social hour.

e from B. F. GOODRICH VINYL
'

WASIIINGTON (UPO - In the
two montlls President Johnson
has left In ornce, he still could
try
again to select Chief Justice
MOND.\Y
Earl
Warren's successor.
ANNUAL GHANGEoUicersand
There's
some talk that he
members conference, 8 p. m.
might
do
just
that, despite the
Monday, Rock ~rings ilall. All
defeat
he
suffered
when the
members bring donuts. Year's
Senate
failed
to
confirm
his
program will be discussed. Tickselection
of
Asl!lociate
Justice
ets are &amp;Yailable for the all Abe fortis to replace the 77grange banquet.
year-&lt;tld
Warren.
THEODORUS COUNCIL 17,
Johnson
obviousl.Y would like
Daughters of America, 56th anto
have
another
liberal as chief
niversary dinner, 6:30p. m. Monjustice
while
President-elect
da.y at the hall . Bring a covered
Ric-hard
M.
Nixon
would pick a
dish and table service
more
con5ervative
voice. Some
J.o.t: CLASS, Pomeroy United
~:~ay
that
this
is
the reason
Methodist Church, 6p m. Monday
Warnm,
a
Hepublican,
subml~
at the church for the annual
ted his resignation to Johnson
4 Thanksgiving dirmer.

Could Prove Costly

MIDDLEPORT GARDEN Club,
8 p.m. Monday at the Columbus
and Southern Ohio Flectrie Co.
Mrs. J. W, Morris, Mrs. John
Kincaid, and Mrs. J . E. Harley
wtll be the hostesses.
By BERNARD BRENNER
But Shuman added t h e er fa r m e r bargaining proUPJ Farm Editor
changeover c o u 1 d threaten grams.
JOINT COUNCIL meeting of
WASIUNGTON (UPO - AllY heavy losses to farmers who
St. Paul alii St. JOOn Lutheran
Shwnan , in hi s open letter to
Churches will be held at the St.. major move away from govern- have made big investments to the president-elect , added that
ment management of !ann pro- operate in a "fictitious" gov- Nixon could help boost farm
John Church at 8 p.RL
duction may call for temporari- ernment - propped market. He prices in the ll. S. by ordering
MIDDLEPORT PTA, 7:30 p.m.
ly big federal spending, a farm said farmers should not have a get-tough stand in trade neat the Middleport Elementary
leader warned the incoming to bear the losse s invol ved in gotiations with the European
School. The Ohio University PlayNixon administration.
correcting " distortions" of gov- Common Market.
ers w Ill _present "Scattered
But the cost would be worth ernment programs.
The F.uropean trade gr&lt;Jlt) in
Showers."
whUe, Charle s B. Shuman,
"Government programs got recent years ha s adopted tariff
MEIGS COUNTY Boord of
president or the American us irrto this mess, and it is the and other policies which tend
Retardation will meet MorwJa.y
Farm Bureau Federation, con- responsibility of t l1 e federal to squeeze down its imports of
night at 7:30 in the coort house
terded in an open letter to goverrunent
to help us make farm products.
otfice of the Meigs County ComPresident - elect Ril;:hard M. the change," Shuman said.
"Foreign sales (of tr. S. crop s)
missioners,
Nixon.
"These potential losses and can be doubled in four years if
RIVERV£EW GARDEN Club
"Our appeal to you, Mr. adjus tment expenses of farmer s the Slate Departme nt trade newill meet Monday at 7:30 p.m. at President, is for administration
should be indemnified b.\' land gotiator .~&gt; are instruc ted to inthe home of Mrs. Claremont Har- policy direction that will facntretirement or program tennina- sist that trade is a two - way
ris wttll Mrs. Herman Grossnick- tate and ease the transition tion payments from the federal
le as ~lrt.ess. Members are from the politi cal management treasury," the farm leader con- s treet - no more Volkswagen
or French wine imports until
to bring Christmas gifts for pa- o! farm production to a market- tended.
the Common Market variable
tients at Athens State Hospital . ing system based on conswner
Brighter !lopes
duties on U. S, farm e:q&gt;orts
demand," Shumand said.
TUESDAY
For the Farm Bureau , the are removed,'' Shuman said.
"This will require congres- nation's biggest farm organizaGROUP 0 of the Women's As50Ciation of the Middleport First sional as well as administra- tion, Nixon's election clearly
United Presbyterian Church will tive action and the price tag produced brighter h o p e s of
meet at 6 p.m. at the Martin Res ~ may be high for a time," Shu- movement toward the group's
taurant for a holiday dhmer. man added in the letter, pub- long-held goal of de-emphasizFrom there the group will go to lished in the current Issue of a ing federal crop controls, direct
the home of Mrs. Richard Karr Farm Bureau magazine.
farmer payments and price
Disastrous Situation
for a meeting,
Slt)ports.
REEDSVILLE W.S. C.S.
Shuman said the supply co~
, HARVEST DrNNER, 6 p.m. at
While Ni xon has rd detailed
The
Reedsville W. S.C. .S. met
the Salisbury Elementary School . trol and price support programs any proposed new long - range
at the home of Mrs. Rose ThomThe PTA meeting will follow of the outgoing administration farm program, he has said
as Thursday evening, Nov . 7,
the dinner. George Hargraves, had produced a "disastrous sit- major changes will be needed
The devotional program was the
superintendent of the Meigs Lo- uation." He urged a turn to- in the present control and payService
of Celebration of the
cal School District, will be the ward policies under which ment sy s tems.
meeting. The history of
Charter
fanners would be left free to
speaker.
Vice President Hubert H.
the former Evangelica l United
produce in respons e to econom- HUillphrey, on the other hand,
Brethren and Methodist WomWOMEN'S AUXIIJARY of Vet- ic demaM.
had favored continuation of the
en's group was given, also the
erans Memorial Hospital, 7:30
basic farm adjustment pro-purpose
of the new society. Char Tuesda,y night at the hospital cafgram&amp; now in use witfl some
ter members signed for the new
eleria. Orientation program for
modifications, including stronggroup. Business session conductnew members will be coMucted.
ed by Mrs. Mamie Buck I ey. The
West Virginia members with
society voted to purchase a new
Mrs, Mary Pickens as chairman
Bible for the church. CommitwW present a Thanksgiving protee
appointed to take car e of this
gram arxl serve refreshments.
project
is Mrs. Uorothy !Uebel ,
FRIENDLY CIRCLE Tuesday,
Mrs.
Nancy
Buckley , and Mrs.
8 p.m., at Trinity United Church
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Clark and
Mamie
Buckley.
Plans were
of Christ. Mrs. Bill Perrin, pr~
children were guests of Mrs.
remember
the Counb
made
to
Mrs. Thelma Giles was re- Clark' s mother, Mrs. SWishe r ,
gram leader, and Mrs. John WilHome
and
Children'
s
Home al
liam Blaettnar and Mrs. Phil cent visitor of Mrs. J. R. Mur- at Cheshire.
Christmas.
Several
prize
s wer e
phy
.
Globokar, hostesses.
Mrs. Joe Sayre, Mrs. Elmer
awarded in a game conducted
Bill McElroy and Bob and Tom Finlaw arxl son spe nt an afte rREEDSVILLE-LONG BOTTOM
Shafter were recent visitors of noon with Mrs. Hwe Harper. by the hostess. Refreshments
Homemakers CJ ub will meet
we r e served to above and Mrs .
Mrs. J . R. Murphy and family.
Mr. al"kl Mr s, Delmar Rhodes
Tuesday at 7 p.m . al the home of
Neil WILson, Mrs. Vivian HumBob
S21atfer
and
BUI
McElwere guest of Mr. arwJ Mrs. RichMrs. Pauline Myers. Program
roy visited with Mr. and Mrs . ard Rhodes alli children at Dun- phrey and Mrs. Ullian Pickens.
topic wUl be on new fabrics and
Christmas party will be at Mrs .
Robert Murphy ol Middleport, bar, W.Va.
finishes taught by Mrs. Margar Wilson's home Dec . 17.
Jan Knapp and Jo Smith were
MrS. Verna Haningal"kiMr. and
et Brown.
PERSONALS
recent visitors of Mrs. J . R. Mrs. Lilroy Haning of New AlWEDNESDAY
Mrs. Bessie Bowman and Mrs.
Murphy and famll,y.
bany, Ohio, visited Mr. al"kl Mrs.
BOSWORTH COUNCIL 46, RoyMr . and Mrs. J. R. Murphy, GUj· Bolen on Sunday,
Bertha Schreiber of Mason City,
al and Select Masters , will hold Peggy, Carmel and Barbara were
W. Va. visited with Mrs. Bess
Mr. and Mrs. Larry McGrath
stated assembly, Wednesda,y, 7:- !imday guests of Mr . and Mrs.
Larkins, Saturday .
and children visited Mr. arwJ Mrs.
30 p.m. at tbe Pomeroy Masonic Robert Murphy of Middleport.
Mr . and Mrs. Don Coleman
Earl McGrath.
Temple. All companions are urgMr . and Mrs. Harley T. Johnand family of Columbus spent
Dr, Lloyd Karr spent the weeked to attend.
son were recent visitora of Mr. erxl with the Harpe r s alii Sunday the weekend with Mrs. H e I e n
SYRACUSE THIRD Wednesday and Mrs. J. R. Murphy and fam Archer.
Mr. and Mrs. Harper and Dr.
Homemakers Club 10 LRL Wed- Ily,
Mrs. Alice Footty is visiting
Karr visited her daughter , Mrs,
ne~ at Syracuse Municipal
Mrs. J, R. Murph,y visited re with her son, Dain Foutty a n d
Park with "holiday decorations" cently with Mr. and Mrs. Ever - Janet VanCooney and family of
family of PennsylvanJa.
Beverly.
as topic. Mrs.JohnSeuvage, Mrs.
ett Lanttert.
Rev. Lamar Tillman, Park Guy and UqJe Harper called on
Harry L. Bailey arwJ Mrs. HerA family reunion was held at
ersburg, W, Va. and Ronald Os ~
man Lon:lon, leaders. Those at- the home of Lincoln Russell . Mr. arxt Mrs. Frank Paule.}' near
borne, Long Bottom, called on
Dextet-.
tending to take table service.
Mrs. Bess Larkins Monday eveThose attending were Mr . and
Mr. and Mrs. Don Updergraff
Beverage to be furnished by hosning.
Mra. Glenn ilaning, PagevUJe, of Alabamr. are visitingrelatives
tesses.
Mr. and Mn. Charles Ayers
Mr. and Mrs . Bill Earnheart, Lo- here.
CLASS 12, Heath U n i ted gan , Mra. &amp;lsie Aleshire, Tom
Mrs, John McMurray arxlthree of Belpre were recent viaitors
Methodist Church, 7:30 Wednesof Mr . and Mrs. VIrgil Buckley.
and Lettie &amp;le, Columbus, Mr · sons of Kansas were here visda.¥; Miss Bess Sanborn, devo- and M.ra. John Haning, Jane, and iting Mrs. Iva Donohue.
Mrs. Randal CouJsoo of Torch
tims; Mrs. James Criswell, pro..
Mra. llaning's sister or Dublin,
Mrs. carolyn Nutter called on spent a da.Y with Mr . and Mrs.
gram; Miss Nellie Zerkle, Mrs. Aunt Emma of California, Mr . Mrs, Minnie McGrath.
Ben Buckley .
Juanita Bachtel, Mrs. H a t t i e
Mrs. Roger Bahr or Chester
Mr, and Mrs. CharlteJonesand
and Mrs. Dale Russell, Jane
Smith, and Mrs. Carroll Swan- Ann, Jeff, and Susie of Colum- children c:ame to visit while Mr.
visited with Mr. and Mrs. James
son, hosteues.
Ruth and family Thursday .
bus, Mr. and Mrs. Clinton GU- Jones was in the hospitaL
PAST PRESIDENTS, Ladies key, Karen, Kathy and Tad af
- Mrs. I..,yle Balder!Kln
Albany, Mr. and Mrs. Harold,._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. ,
Auxlllary of Drew Webster Post
39, American Legion, meet at Gillogly, Vicki and Bruce orAl7:30 Wednesday night, home ot bany, Mr. and Mra. Franklin
Mrs. Pearl Knapp, 1803 Chest- Russell of Middleport, Mr. and
nut st., Gallipolis,
Mrs . Harley T, Johnaon, Mr.
and
Mrs, Harley E. Johnson,
THURSDAY
Tammy,
Cheryl and Terry, Mrs .
POMEROY Elementary PTA
J,
R.
Murphy,
Peggy, Carmel,
Jadl.es wUI meet Syracuae El~
and
Barbara,
Mrs. Howard
mentary PTA ladies, 7:30p.m.
Thoma.
Patricia
and
Mrs. CharThW'oday in basketball pme at
$30.00 ........... .
loy Smith.
Pomeroy Junior High Sehooi.
Robert Sloalfer ol U. S. Army
C..n~ltlltT-s
Adults 50 centa, chUdren 25
a_pent
Hveral days leave with hla
cents. Retreabmenta sold.
TWIN Cli'Y !luin-s will parents, Mr, and Mrs . Earl Shafmeet Thursday, Nov. 21, 7:30 fer, Linda and Tom. He loll Tuesp.m. in tho soeill roam o1 The day for For~ Ord, Cl'alllarnla
Colmnbu1 &amp; SouU.em Ohio Elec- where he be for three da,y1 then
to Vietnam for dutlea there.
lricCOJilPOIIY.

News, Notes

.)
•

OFFER GOOD

3 DAYS
ONLY!

LET- Yours free if you send in this

coupon now and as«. for a demonstra-

MAIL THIS FREE
GIFT COUPON TODAY!

tion . Offer limited to home owners .

If this coupon is returned within three .days, you

will receive the beautiful Electnc Sk1llet abso-

lutely FREE! To qualify for the FREE GIFT,

Free 3 Days Only!
MAIL COUPON TODAY
OFFER GOOD 3 DAYS ONLYl

you must be a qualified home owner and need
work done on your home NOW and .allow our
representative 0 few minutes of your lime to exe

plain our SPECIAL OFFER . THAT IS ALL!
NOT ICE : This is not an inducement for you to

buy. There is absolutely NO OBLIGATION on
your part.

ACT NOW .
Mai I Coupon To :
Siding, Box 1000

Core of The Daily Sentinel , P~meroy

* LIBERAL

TERMS

NAME .................................... ..... Phone . .................
ADDRESS ........................................................... .... .
( ) I am interested in your special siding offer.

My home has: Soucco ( ) Frame ( )
Asbestos ( ) ln•ulatod Siding ( )
IN RURAL, PLEASE GIVE DIRECTIONS............

.... . . ..... ··········· ..... ... ..... ······· ..•...... .............. ... ....
.... .... ................... . .......... ....
............... 8~~; --;i;;;~- ~o.......
call: { ) Morning

Afternoon (

NO

) Evening

FIRST PAYMENT
.R

No Down Payment-first Payment Not Till January 1969 I
..

Farm Policy Switch

that the Warren retirement
carries
over to the new
administration. Under this theo-ry, Warren's letter was addressed to the "office of the
president, 11 and even If Johnson
burns it or removes It with his
other personal papers, Nixon

Nixon promised during his
campaign to appoint to the
court only "strict constructionists" of the cons titution. F riendly would seem to fill this bill,
since he recenUy c:alled for a
360-word amendment to the
Constitution to overcome some
of the recent decisions on selfinc:ri.minatioo.
A prominent Wa shington attorney
mentioned
for
the
nominati on is Cha r le s S. Rhyne,
58, the moving force beh int the
world
peace
throug h law
organi zation and o riginator of
the annual Law Day U.S. A.
celebration on May 1. H11yne is
a Republican.
If the President does not act,
it is po.~&gt;sible for Wa r r en to do
so. Althougl1 the chief jus ti ce
ha s given every irxlkation that
he wants to rt!tire a s soon as
possible, legal opinion appear s
unanimous that he could withdraw hi s .June. Ita retirement
letter to Johnson if he chooses.
Ques tion Carryover
If nothing at all happens,
there is disag r eement a s to
whether the Sup reme Cour t
matter will be pending busi ness
for the incoming pr e s idenL
S e n a t e Republican leader
Everett ~l Dirksen has said

,...J -·· - -· ....... .--·-·· .

,,

may still acL
But majorit_y leader Mike
Mansfield has said the letter is
btndl~ on the Johnson administration only. According to dlis
school or thought, a separate
retiremeri announcement would
have to go to Nixon.

Charter No. 8441

SERVICE
IUPON REQUESn
OurU,..IGoMCioon....

Robinson's Oea1ers

Natiooal Bank Region No. 4

REPORT OF CONDITION OF

The Citizens National Bank
oC Middleport In the State of Ohio, at the close of business ort.oetober 30, 1968
published in response to ca11 made by Comptroller of the Currency, under
Section 5211, U. S. Revised Statutes.
ASSETS
Cash, balances with other banks , arxl cash Items
in process of collection • . . , •. , . , , • • . . . , . , . , .. $ 465,282, 40
United states Government obligations . . . . . . . . . . • .. .. , 1,927,170. 00
630,468.39
Obligations of States and political subdivisions .•. , . . . , . ,
Other Securities , . . . . •... , . . . . . . . ••.•.•. , • . . . . 12,000.00
Federal fWKis sold and Securllies purchased
under agreements to resell • . , • .. . . .. . ••. , . . . • . 450,000 00
Loans and discounts , . . ... . .. ... . .• . . . , , , • . •... . 3,626,189, 03
Bank premises , furniture aOO fixtures, and other
assets representing bank premises , . , , • . . ... . .. , ,
57,475.22
6, 743.70
Real estate owned other than bank premises .. . ... ••. , • ,
Other assets, including ($None) direct lease financing, , •• , , • 8,463. 93
TOTAL ASSETS . . . . • . • . . ... . . ....• . ...•• • , •. • $711831792.67
LIABILITIES
Demand deposits of 1001 vidlB.ls, partnerships,
arxl corporations .. . . . .. • •• .... .•••. .. • .. . . $1, 423,744.75
Time and savings deposits of individuals, partnerships,
and corporations • • • . . . , • . . .. . . ... • , •... . , 4,582,671. 47
32,589.59
Deposits of United States Government . • . . .. . , .• , . , .
Deposits ot States and political subdi visions , • •... , . . . . 324,115.14
Certified and officer s' checks, etc. • , • . . • . . . • . . . . . . . 31,285.56
TOTAL DEPOSJTS .... . •...•. $61394,406,5\
Total demand deposits . . .. .. , , 1.735.212. 41
Total time and savings deposits. , ·t659,194..10
Other liabilities , including ($1\one) mortgages arxl other liens
on bank premises arxl c:ther real estate . . . , . •... . , .
90,651.08
TOTAL LIABILITIES . . . . . . , , ... .. , , . , , , . , , .. .. , f6,485,0$7.$9
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
Common stock - total par value .• , .•. , •• , • , , . • •• • , $100,000 .00
No. shares authorized - 2000
No. shares outstarlli.ng - 2000
S\1ll)lus , , •. , , ...• .. .. .. , , . . . , . . •.. . . • .. .. , , 300,000.00
Undivided profits . . . . • . , . . .. , . , . , .• . .. , , , ... , , , 298.735.08
TOTAL CA PITAL ACCOUNTS . . .. , . , . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1698,735 08
TOTAL LIABILITIES AND CAPITAL ACCOUNTS .. . ...•. $71183,792.67
MEMORANDA
Loans as shown above are after deduction of valuation
reserves of . . . • , . . .... , .•... ... . . ... , . .. • . $30, 446. 67
I, Harold E. Hubbard, Executive Vice President, of the aboV&amp;-ramed bank
do hereby declare that this report of cordition i s true and correct to the best
of m,y knowledge and belie(.
HAHOLD E. HUBBARD
We, the undersigned directors attest the correctness of this report o!
condition and declare that is has been examined by tiS and to the best of our
knowledge snd belief is true arll correct.
PAUL S. SMART
ROSE S. REYNOLDS
Directors
RODNEY DOWNING

•

Harrisonville

Hyou have only

News, Notes

BEAUTIFUL G-E ELECTRIC SKIL·

.

To get the Senate to appron
such a late-date selection,
Johnson migflt pick someone of
such stature that the lawmakers
could hardly refuse him. Or he
might pick a member of the
Senate, since senators usualiJ
fird it hard to vote against one
of their own. Another apprOflch
might be ror Johnsm, who has
already shown a talent for
getting along with hi s Republican successor, to get Nixon's
approval in advance- tacit or
otherwise.
Senators
being
mentioned

casually in this connection
include 'l'homas II, Kuchel, 58,
liberal california Republican
who ·lost his primary race for
re-election, and Sen. Philip A.
Hart, D-Mich., 55, a strong
suworter of Fortas' unsuccessful nomination.
Another possibility that the
speculators di scuss is for
Johnson to elevate Justice
Potter Stewart, 53, an Ohio
Republican whose constitutional
philosophy is more conservative
than Fortas', to the chief
justiceship.
other
speculation centers
arourw:l persons of impeccable
legal background, such as a
well-known judge or law school
figure. In this grotp are Prof,
Paul A. F re und or Harvard Law
School, an outstanding aulhori cy
on constitutional law; U.S.
Solicitor General Erwin N.
Gri s wold, a former dean of
llarvard law; and Judge Henry
J, Friendly of the 200 U. S.
Circuit Court of Appeals In New
York.
Note Age
A choice from this trio would
not tend to rejuvenate the
('Ourt, since Freurx:l is 60 aOO
Griswold 64 and FrierxUy 65.
But .Justi ce Oliver Werxlell
Holmes , one of the mos t
Ogures
in the
outstanding
history of the court, a ssumed
his job al age 61 aOO remained
30 years.

Society News

and cool your home up to 20% in Summer.

Against Hail Damage

Could Pick Senator

On the Farm Front

Wolfpen

Five times thicker than any metal siding.
Will save up to 50% of Fuel Bills in Winter

100% WARRANTY

Senate.
- Considered more possibleat least by insiders at the
Slpreme Court- would be a
nomination of a chier justice by
Johnson between Jan. 3 when

Congreu reconvenes and Nixon's Jan. 20 Inauguration.

Reedsville

On The
FIRsT
10 HOMEs RE-SIDED
IN THIS AREA

·DENT
•CRACK
·ROT
·CHALK

rather than waiting until the
Republicans won the White
House.
If Johnson does try to pick
Warren's successor before Nixon Is inaugurated presidert,
there are two ways he could go
about It:
-The use of a recen
appointment, to be made berore
Congress convenes Jan. 3. This
appears the less likely way. It
would be a temporary appointment pending action by the

2-Hour
DRY ClfANJNG

3 ROOMS

New Furniture
ONLY

$'299

one telephone,
keep this ing
r-----------------------------------------------------------,
Weekly Running Record.
MO NDAY

TUESDAY

WEDNESDAY

TH URSDAY

FRIDAY

SATURDAY

SUNDAY

L-----------------------------------------------------------~
Put it by your telephone. And keep a running count of how
many times someone goes running across the house-or downstairs-to answer the phone, or to make a. call.
At the end of a week (or maybe by Wednesday) you'll know if
you should call us for an extension telephone.
An extension telephone would cost about 4 cents a day.
And that's a bargain-you pay about four
times that for your regular phone.

Over 40% of the families in America
have already retired from nmning.

MASON
FUINilURE CO.
MASOI, W. VA.

\

..

�~ '

I -

. .

...

~

.

. ,,

"

..

.. . . .

.

.
i

The Dally SentJnel, Middleport-Pomeroy 1 0 . ,

8, .:., ·1'tle ~b' Sentinel, Ponlel'O)'.Jollck!J..,n, o., ~, Nowmbar 18, 1968
FIVUAY FORECAST

Teachers Expected to
Bla~kllall :,eettlement
'

,~ . YOJ!K

J~..-\Jah

.fui.o-n.o Cl-

flllltsm.

'fllon IP,IIIIted to he ctanau
lhot tilt&gt; ,"ooUiemoli, """ U

IPProved 111 ,tho unlm teachers,
bt reJected bJ the local
~ boon! of ihe Jarpl,y
Ntlro and Puerto m.,. 9&lt;N•
~~~
.· BfOWIIIvUJO 1&lt;hool diJirlct

would

~~·~ml:~.: ·~

.a.r """'"

lhan 27 houn llf

nopllall1110

cllled

IGr

- · of the sll'lklllll
Uqlted
Fecler.Uoa of Teachora
. (VFT), IW'1IId aul In recorcl
""""""" toclaJ lei vote on tho

......

~

~,. u .

"'*-•at

Some OJPtelled
and others .-eel

t1lit torma.
CWoaoa Strike

•&lt;We

hoft llloWeci Ale&gt; 1111Df
damn lll,.s to pt In the "11
of tachhW tho chlldrea, • 11114
~ O'Neill, at, I Jlrookb'n

N-

'

f·i

I

y

r

r111C:!: ~

t,.

.,,

In tho wne mateh with Call·
fornla Tannohlllllsodefoatedthe

·.Buckeye table lemla pla1oro
~· the
q,oa Team
UUo to Ohio Souldl1 nlaht at Cd&gt;o
HaD Ill Detroit for the llrai tbno
In 10 fOlfB.
Two and a hol1 cla1o ot pilin&amp; plif ended at 10:30 p. m.
~ whan Jolm Tannohlll, 18,
o(~oport, dtr-tecl U, S. No.
2 ,.._ Jac~ H-..1, 32, Loa
'"~'• 21-15 and 21.-16 IGr the
tiaedod 111111 Ohio lndl'lllll81 vic-

. f«.Y . over

the Cllltoma team,
the
eholqJiona.
·ca~~~arn~a and Ohlo'a No. 1

·•

;: 1'

·•

-..una

(live Ohio

toallia-""

·~ """" IntO the llnllmatch ...,.
ddMted Fioh' bad.pOU- off
tw;) Now YOijc ~;teama, CU. ·
·~ GNnd· RJpldl,' and DIIDOla,

.. !

ail'~ """""'" rr... - -

'

'I

·~·w. . ~ : ~w 1

I

~ whoa 42 ·. ..,; bipu round

"":~:1 .....

'

Cleveland, u.

oo

.c ranc

Ohio Team ·Wins
U. S. IT Title
I

Rhody McCoy, tile dllllrlct
ldmlnlotrator, !old "'"'omen he
was "extremely loOIIdonllld iiY
the declalon im,&amp;toled on ua" and
lAid lha qreemenl was "Uio
heelnnlllg of Ule end IGr Oeeln
ayatem which ll·belna deeeJUa. HW-Brownl\'llle."
llzed Into 331ocll dlatrlcta.
fo lumina poiDI In u.. otrlke
&lt;wosiUon Abaa•
was the declalolt IIY on -""le
N&lt;HIO of the kefll&amp;ure• In the court dat 1llo ""'"" Ocean Hmdecemnllzed Oeean Hlll·llr&lt;JwD. Brownsville principals had _ ,
ovUle cllatrirt were present hired llloaaJb' because Ulolr
when Ll~ llliiOimCed 111o - • were not
a civil
terms of thio settlomenl.
s~ Hill. ·

Trembles

ClltTeDCy.

Bankers looked to Basel
m_,- markets toclaJ. Jlanlfers where u.s;, Brltlal(·1 West
awaited "ord on hair President Gennaa, Japanese ani other
Charles de Goullo with Alnorl· Clillllllal honldna i&gt;OIOl!ro thla
·can and allied aid will art to morniqr ended a weeklong
•lie hla eurrency from .POaaible crltla conference 011 the tranc.
There was unoftlclal word the
denJnatlnn.
TndltW In hncs In Western Weal Gentwlo, thla contll'e•t'a
~ CIIPilala nnaed lr&lt;ln rlcheot •lion, mlallt loU De
to hlahb' ........ In Gaulle .1. I .hiJUmi to Ave the
Brussels, n.nc1a1 source• said franc. Other np&gt;rto said tho
.Jielsian bonka hove slqlpod a French reJected the oll'er
prlftle tradlna In IriDes. In because the Germans wanted
..... polldcll po.yniOnt In
LlJbon, two major bonks
reAiaed todaJ to buy the French return.
t"·
The . slC*'POWer blnkera anIIIIIIIICed oo declalon. A spoke ..
man said only, "ilU.re La to be
a credit IGr France of the kind
&amp;hen to Britain In the past It Ia
1C&gt; to the French and oot to us
to' make the announcement.'!

.pala the ..itoa wuted ..,.ted.

1961 men'a clwlqJioo of Thailand, S. SuUvej, "ho Ia In collep In the U, S.
In the match wi111 Gnnd RipIda, Tlmohlll pllled revonae
tor 1 loll In the U. S. Nallonll
q,oa to J. Serosal&lt;, 19, a atuderll
at Boston Unlwralt;y, fonner All·
Aalan iuntw chomplon, wlnniJW
2-L
In team pb,J nino malehos are
.posaOU. threo.J&gt;Iayetl of '!J"h
....Una the Ulreo of lliqlllal:, I&amp;
Ul 1111 team wino live inlf&lt;haa.
·1'lmtohUllloo reeehOd his of•
lldi! . appclnWont to UleoiDen'a

No French announcement was
e~ected hoiGre De Gaulle's
pl'lmo minister makea a oche-

duled

noUomvlde

broedcast

tonlah~
In the money marketa- where
opeculatoro IDnd to sell weak
ciU'rency IIlii buy •trona m11101
- Frend1 tankina sources said

UNDERGOES SURGERY
~Elberfeld,

3496West.
entlle &amp;.d, Columbus. a form·
or POIIIOI'O)' realdeli, Wlderwent
ourgeey 'lburoda.y at Rlveralde
Hospital In Colwntius. He formerJ,y Uved oo
A'IO. In Pom01'0)' IIlii Is the l'llther of 1111·
tablo't.nnlateam the! Wulrtpro- mond c. Elberfeld of amter,
aonl tho United Stales DOXt.iprU. He l1 reported to be reclt)eratIIQit the 196horld taurDunonl lna aadalactorll,y.
In Munich, Germany,

'*''Ina

s.

VIETNAIII TODAY SAID It a~octsSouth
add Jofa sottlon»ntlllks bOre •'In
d10I tbne.'' Xuan ThiiJ', chief of the llonol deleptton to
the stilled talks, made tile slltemoat 1!1111 lrtervlow with the

exchanae

Miller likes
Reversal of

FundingUne
WftSIUNGTON-Tenth Dlalrlct
COOgreaiiDIOJI Clarence E. liDlor todl1 C&lt;lllmented oolflo Feelon! Higll- AdmlnlstraUoo'o
doclolon to reSIUDe Fedenl~
hlslmay lUndin&amp; obllpdiln&amp;. Tho

Cqreaaman Blldhewaapleeaed

fimdlng could go aheod. MIJ-

"very allble.' In London, the

tho!

oftAm weak BriUah pound rose

lor hod dl ..grood with the ortglnl1 order lhat slq&gt;ped ouch fUnd·
lrw,
Admlniatratlon spokoiDienlllld

on tho market an! UUie tradln&amp;
was done ln francs.
In Well Genn&amp;llj' IIlii Switzerlalll, smne banks· put Umlts
on the amourt of francs that
they lrOUld hiiJ', But In other

the •haJt in highway obllption

autbodt;y was made September
1st In an etlort to reduce opendCIIlltals, ouch aa C&lt;oponbqon, · Ina durin&amp; this fiscal year. The
crane
tradtq was generally actlon was st.t»posedly taken in
normal despite last week' s response to the Reverue and Exmlsai'IO aeUtng of the French

currency,

In Part 1, a spokesman Cor the
American
Chlae ~
Bank said, 11 1 would say eople

are Sittlug on their t.Ms
ng
for an announcement tonight by
the Premler.H

Bride-to-be
SlwtDead by

pendlture Control Act of 1968
which ellis IGr a $6 hiiUon red""lloa In _.tiog.
COQJJ"eaaman MWer In ~
tembor sold the Admlnlstralloa
was trying to urool the American
peaple"' by includl~ cute in the
highway program ,a ~rt of the
e~rdture cuts. Miller said,
11 11te highway program has nothtog to do with the regular fed..
oral budget. Ill fUnds ct111e from
truot lunda colloc~ frOIIJ motorIsts at the poollno pumjl' tnd lor

auto equJ,JmenL"

·

The new order by the Federal

Her Father

Highway AdmlniatratlooalsopermUa those states which are car

BAN JOSE, catll. (UI'O - A
YOUIIII hrtda.to-be was shot to
deoth by her !.other during an
argument over which etmrch abe
would be married In, pollee re~

ahead in their Interstate work to
begin obligating aplnlt 1970 ap-

portiolrnents which were
DOWICed Oclober 31, 1968.

~

nando Dado, who waa booked ror
lnveldgatlon of murder.
Wllnesses told pollee Ruth ar.

rl•ed - · Saturday with her
fiance, Ruey Rodrli!uos. 22, to
· dlacuss their marrln&amp;e, Dido, a
Bapllat,

lnalated

couple

lhe

should IIUilTl' In a B apt I 1 t

Church. But R~s, a Ro-

Melgtl

Property
Transfers
Me E. Bays to Ronald c.
IL
Greely, Betty J. Grody, 1" ocre,
SultolL

BonecPtter

Zond 6 Puts

New I .anding

AuaiiD - .
, • lef. Sho!IPI, who '~YIS. lnd
, the 1lilt l'ld11llt a. o "tor.
Mr. Boa,aCulllt wao 111 om~ the Morlada """""•
,co,, lnd a DIODiber of
lOG of -

cilurch.

aro bla Wlf8,

· two'

-ct

m

Gear to Use

-.u.

-ll..

,, .,, W, Va., Cll Fllb. II, 1911,

6Ut:land.

c-:;:118, Eloloe WhltetoE.a
L. Robsoo, 'lz acre, Sellabur7.
Edward C. Jorclon, Helen L.
toclaJuplanned.
JorclontoDelmar Slwnblla,oorAst-111aona8QIIIIWexcuralootoChrllllall8ted,SL Croix,
olliY Slwnblln, .28 ocre,Silem.
Vlrl)ln lllanda, Sun11af wheo a car theft aiiii&gt;Ocl aerlouoly
Earl R. Watklno, Ann LeeWat.woundail a
lr)'lna to arrest him on t h e - Bel&lt;h
IIIOSCOW (IJPO - The Soviet ktns to cora carman. lot. Syraotal.I[I'OUnda. U. s. Secret Sorvlee qenta, theF!IIand Puerto
Unloo amounced locJay 111 llpoe&amp;- .!'"'"• Sutton.
..,.., pollee lllld the ollootlnflllla liot ....,.ctecl with the vice
ahlp Zmd 6 had relllmed lllfeb'
ptoll~·ct•s vlalt
ID earth Iller 1 ~ 8niWld . MEIGS GENERAL HOSPn'AL
lhe ·
Admllllona Saturda:f - Nmo.
·LOGAN, QIDO- 1JNJTED RUBBER WORJiERS at Ulelocll
Tho Toao ......,eelllelt of
lJiacharpo S.lurdaj&lt;- OWen
Goooll'eir ~ II Rublior C&lt;l. pJd were bock Oil tho job todaJ ·; j Zond'o retura oald the IIJOCO- Wllloon, Nell Ford, Borah Roush,
WWI I - -)'Oir coatract Loeel 7t4 rillllildthe- pact
lhlp teatecl tor lho llrst Ume Eaunott MIIIIOJ, Georp Al1011.
1 more CIIII!Pia lnd premlllng
S.~ OIII!IIW a tw......,k atrlke. Thoplatll, whlcllmakel..
A4mJ.oallll1 SUnday - Doris
dOJIIII!ii [II'OI)uCta, 1llld the qreomont, eovar111e 950 Oll!»loyoa,
~ of - . _ 8UCh apace- Wollt, Racine,
1IOUid coat moro IbiD
m1W011. .
--~
macherges SUnday - Tlie lllclllleci' a
wa.so lilcto~oo of 20
· - 1llld
lnvqfyce.., ., ~~our the llrat )'ell';· u cents the .-~~.,...
Ia . ec1 111• •• "' 111 IOJ'OCbnaml·
, eonia:~ thlrtlf~·
. , i ' , . .. . ell lilllnll f!!rce u _.ad tor · In 1883 the. United Slates
LODGE TO IIEtT
tile ~- ola btllla· ......ted Ume and HI

"*'lro

ID&amp;U!Desa,
' . Bo .... bora at r.ntpoJio Fv-

Crouser •• 12 acre,

Wayne E. Peck, Heater Peck
to Alvin Dye, Madge Dye, lacre,

DORAilO, P. R. - UNDETERRED BY TilE SHOOTING of
pollee -.ti¥4! at hla botel- headquarters, Vlco Pnosldt11141aet
'!'· Aanow lllld he "ould · - hla vacatloo

~~ . PI', · PLEASANT - ct.,_
;· (BIU) - - . 62, Ga!U.JM"Ia
,....,., died~ 1n Pl.....,t
VIlle' ilolllltal- al~-

.aG

pnorol

'I[pe
'

.. ·wo
..·
' ·, ,_ ; 4

n
"!-

.

.

. . .......... lm. _ o f _ . .

P:.;obed By State Patrol
The patrol cited Mra. GrindTho GolllpoUsPoot,StileHlal&gt;way Pltrol, lnveatlpted seven · - to Galllpolla Munlcli&gt;al
occlddo OD Sllllrday and Sun- court Nov. 18 oo •
of
daf lndwlllv I fatal mlaba(l In ~rpoaalna.
An aeeldeni at 2 L m.. Setur·
Mots• Ccluncy,
Marcus M. HoEJUte, $3, ~ day , 00 the Bulltvllle- Rd.,
cuter, was ldUed In a one car two and thr-nlha mlloo DOrth
crash and Ore oo Rt. 33 at !lor- of Rt. 160 was lnveollgated Iller
win at t;18 p, m. Salunlay. (De.. da111ght Sallmlay momlna. No
taUs were in Swmy'a Times-- one was lnjured.
Offlcera aaid that Russell D.
Sentinel.)
Two poraooo were ll\lllred In RUmley, 19, Itt. 11 Glillipolls,

chirp

car &lt;lrl- IIOl1il "' Jobll A. cblilo ··
Un, ilJ, ~~a .....·n.ore wu mlnar
4llllage to the

car.

craahODSinol&lt;yRowRd. headed north, failed to negotlale
one and aeven--terdta mUea east a cruve. His car wert olf the
of Rt. 775 at 9 a. m. Saturday. road and struck two amall trees.
cats driven 111 William Deerina, There was minor ctamage to the
25, lrontoa, and Odell Collins, car,
Another accident at 2:30 a. m.
46, Cheupeake, calllded on a
was )lOt reported ..-1112:33p.m.
eurve at a hill crest.
Treated atHolzerMedtCilCen-

saturday.

It occurred on the

ter and released were Deerirw:, Woods Mill Rd., one and threefaclll c!'uta 1 IDd a passenger in

bla ~.car, Ec:lurd Meyers, 20,

If 1111 ..,.,.lor of !OW c.- II
I btltor·thln·IVIIIII lJcll
odlaol or callep otudotrt, JGU
11111 qualify lor blc lllinp 1111
your Automobilo lnour1ace,
State Auto MIIUII olf111 I

tenths miles north of RL 554. No
one WI 8 injured.
Offtcers reported that Cecil L.

lnQOn. severe facial laceratlODL Both ens were heavily Beach, 38, Rt. 1 Bidwell, failed

to negotiate a curve. His car
went otr the highway, over an
embankment and overturned ontc
Its right side. There was mod-ente damage to the car. No
Gallipolis. No one wu injured. charge was filed.
An accideot occurred at 8:20 p,
Tho pitrol lllld SU11n K
Clarke, SO, Gllllpolls, headed m, Saturday In Meigs CcJuncy on
north, was overtaldrw and passing Rt. 124, one and two-tenths miles
a car driven by Rose M. Grind.. west ot Rt. 325, No one was inateld, 34, RL 1, Racine, when jurod
Officers reported that Jesse
Mrs, Grlndatead pulled out In
the possltWilne In front of Mrs. Locke, 57, Lucasville, lost control of his dum,p-truckooa curve.
Clarke.
Mrs. Clarke drove ot! the lett The vehicle slid into 1 bridge
side of the higll- to avoid • and then went orr the left side of
colllsion with the Grind.stead car. the road. There was moderate
There wu minor damage to the damage to the truck.
The patrol cited Locke to Meigs
Clarke car and no damage to the
Cwmy Court Nov. 22onachar£e
other car.
of speed ln excess for road conditions.
A deer was killed at 4:05 p. m.

damqed. ,No charae was ftled.
v'l'hltre ·waa no contact between
two ears In an accident at 2:10
p. m. SlturdiJ' on Rt. 1 three
ard five-tentha mUea north of

IOOD

STUOE~T

DISCOUIIT

fllllltW up to 25",

----~~~~"'-192·11
IT4 Caurt St.

P

GOOD ITI.IDEfff DIICOUNT

......

Shooting Match

Sunday on Rt. 71 one arll three-

tenths miles north ol Cheshire.
n.e animal ran into the path or a

Set Saturday
A ohootlng mateh wUI be held
employees or Lakin State
Hospital behind the beef barn,

IIY tho

on Soturday, Nov, 23, atartlng
a.m. Follow the arrows

at. 10

on the dirt road adjacent to the
tree farm.

This is a project the

em~

Sensational
n
, ••. color 1V's
• picture

hospital grounds. The general
(lUbUc Ia Invited. Prizes will
consist ~ SJI'ld(ed ham1, canned
hams, and turlulfs.

2 Committee

Reports Out

tho.._,

al.t

on whiCh he serves are now al'lllable. They are the House Committee on Agriculture and the

Commloo PubUc Works.
Congressman Miller eamment-

ed that since Ute SqJrame Court
o~~HNm, one-vote dectston the
power in Congress has awitched

overwhellnln&amp;b' to urban dlalrlct
repres81Dtlvea. For this reuon
there is an evan grenter n8ed for
pul)llc Underallndlng of agricultural problems. Cq&gt;los of bolh
of these reporta, in llmJted supply, are 1 '4llable from CGngress.

man Mlller• s

Was~

oftlee.

HOW AT MARY JUNE'S

SHAREE K. SHAFFER
O_pen Mo~ Thw Sot.
Tu ... Evening lr Appolnt~~~ent

M'ARY JUNE'S
BEAUTY SHOP
PIM~dd~~.~67

a.~~ar Ladiol:zt,lloiwh•ra
wilJDIOet at 7130 p. · . #•
-~aklnl
ciesceq£~ro-·•
~Conlrll,
~~~&gt;r:::UI:·~=~-:..:·:·~Ea!:llem,~~i;t;;==::::=,
1llld Paclilc.
m.
bill. .'IUs llldtho_l_•• _ _

of

"

.

·- ·. .... ·

~

•

maul tt·l_; ~· .to ""''h
. Jibdlila • a.. nr ,.l !iv pGint.c:(
b iHG&gt;'I 'lllrfaee wiil. lolllir
--~ .and
motet tri:l-

, will 11o od

' .. ·;,

',

li inyl clad me 1a l cabinel '" gr.lined
W•ln ur (Oior Su per li1deo ll:iln se Tun ing. Svs lem.
~ pl!'~ k c r .

5'" • 3" Twm ·con r

HIGH STYLING

Z(' rulh \/Hf

and UHF Spollile D•ah.

FAMOUS ZENITH
HANDCRAFTED
QUALITY.. , As Low As

433

5

Full Zenith Que/ity performsnCB

ft~tUitll

Z ~nilh Supe r 50 H•ndcr•fted Co lor TV Ch•n is
- No pr1nle(J nrc Ui ts1 No rrrx h1 ti 10 rl ~ h ortcu l ~ ' H,lndwu cd
for unrivaled d epe nda bility

.,

TellllleMONMwi:JM'

Paul T. Grueser' Carolyn A.

Dado

......... I

llaniJa TbneL
DlpJCIIIata -rall,y llll41hefqroed. Wl'\'freshasourance
1r&lt;1n WaahiJwton tho! the VIet COn&amp;'• proiOIIee at u/e conreranee lllllo dooa oot meon recnantllon of tile auerrlllao, South
VltiiiiDI was OJPected to chlnae Ita llllnd lnd aend negotiators
to the Ja1ka hero, the d~cinata 1114.

For Oarence

'

ployees are undertaking In their
eftorta to raise funds for the
building of the chapel oo lhe

porter.
The victim was Ruth Dado.
21, one ol nint childr8n ot. Fer ~

Weekend Mishaps ·

a,._

AutboriUea said
abot his Ham Everett Collins, dec., to
tho back of th head Jay Hall Jr., LWian M. Hall,
--r n
•
parcel, Mlcldleport, Sellsbury.
:::;:.,._....t eUort to lhoot
Sybil Ebersbach, Exec., Goldie
IL
M. Rile, Dec. ,toDonaldR,Siyre,
BonY J, Sayre, Lot, Middleport.
Besole M. McKnight to W, E,

PARIS-

Vlelmm to and lie bqycott

,Services Set

The alphabet, movable type
and the printing press are
among man's oldest inventions.
But as tools for furthering
human knowledge they are as
modern as the most modern
computer.
Perhaps this is the reason
more people still get more
information from daily
newspapers than from any
other source.

foniKII

obout 111uradaJ,

Sev~en

WI SHJNGTON - Tenlh Dls__,
~ ~
Dadn Fortney, Norma Fortney, parlricl COn&amp;resSDiaD Clarence E.
.......,..e ran 1rom tile nvuae .
eels ou ve.
aot an automatic plltol and ran
'
Millar lllld Salllrday roporta on
lifter them, pollee lllld
Anlll M. !¥her, Admix., wn- acUvltleo of the two Comml-s

, , produced ~ the other vlc-

1«10• In lila cl!IIIIIPI4XIIhlp round
·~ _, in ~ IC&gt;Iet
of Bob Gllllko!f, Now YGI'k, 111
•.Doa 14'oaa ot 0a1t.ctn.

is more efficient than the
written word. fast readers can
read up to 1,500 words a
minute-ten times the average
rate for the spoken word.
Scanning can accelerate this
rate still more.
Perhaps some day men will
devise some electrouJc system
to program their own brains
more rapidly. Until they do, no
method is as efficient as the
written word.

Parla

market trading ln tranci was

the -

mar.,- In the catholic Church, .
'
er, .69 ac re, Pomeroy.
11 said
po~r a ·heated fU'IIllllent. the
'Ibomas F . Dye to Robert J.

t.J. He -JI'I Ullll'eteoted. '1'11&gt;iilhiJJ, U. s,,··No. I Junlw (Wider

comparison, the largest
electronic computer in use
today looks like a child's
plaything.
But in an era of "information
explosion," how do you
" program " information to the
human brain? Spoken language
is far too slow. The average
person speaks about 150 words
per minute. The mind can think
far faster than that.
In fact, man has yet to
devise a means of feeding
information to his brain that

the

COld and wlnterllke lhrcaiBh
the period.
Precllllt.Uon will avoreae
1-5111 to Uths ID&lt;h meJtod 11
aDOW d.urrlea inDOJ"thelltporlloa at the beginning of tho
period IIlii ..... thnJuihout

man Catholic, was determined to Grueser to Charlotte L. Schneid-

ali!lloa •"-lon. ted the 0 h I o

Man's brain, the human
computer, faces a problem.
Like man-made computers, the
brain can process data with
such lightning speed that men
are hard-pressed to devise
ways of feeding it information
fast enough.
In fact, the human brain has
been called the world's finest,
most expensive com outer. By

.. erop heJoor nonnal,willtdalb'
ltlah• lllllnb' tn the ,o, and
nl&amp;htllmo Iowa PMft)b' In the
20a.

-,.SIIopend tile loOaJ 80'11'niJW
boon! of the dlllrlel and Jllllle
a opeclo1 atllte lrultoe 1D nm It
-Name a. three m•n arbltraUoo ponol to rule '"' dlsputea In
the elt;v's ll))l'IWUna aebool

franc

of .....

0

v

, P ARm (UPO- The French
wobbled in EW"ope's

the

'""'""Iiiii ot tbrte
·. Ooiaa IIIIJ..IlrownavUJo prlncl-

o Goo

~bOr, "~o

ocbool
never should. hl?O atruck IIi tilt&gt;
Or.t J)lace."
Mlrvln Datz, a eolleque lilt
friend of O'NeW'a, pld he YOIDd
to reject the 'sattlemOd.
"I feel tile otrlke Ia totally
Julllllled," u1c1 Datz. ''You can't
hove leachlna Wider h•llnldaUon, horassmentand leor.''
In •cldlllon to auoPendiJW
Oeean Htn-BrownBvUJo
p r I n c I p lis, the settlement
~
'

·11'.~ 55.,000 llllpn.~ Wiled
~ , 111 a ~Uomo• 1D end
tf!lh' u....,e...oid .Rrl.ke dat hal
lop . """'' lhan 1110 miWIII
_ . . , In ·1!&gt;0 111U111's Jaraut
. p~ 1&lt;bool '11ota1 out of
~.u IGr Ill hut 11 dafs of the

81 United Preaa lnlemlUOIIll
,.__ealaOhloTuo.. ,
..., lhr\Joch S.lurdaj&lt; will ....

~ncl

few er serv1cr

Sunshin• " CoiOI" Pi(IUriP TubiP w1th l'U ro pmm

l )r ob ll· m~ .

.lCI Il"dled

rMe -eu lh rhmph or for ~t r eale r fJI Ciu re b r111 h tness wi th
reCde r rt'&lt; l ~. bllf\hl e r &amp;H'l'fl \, .1nd mor&lt;' br lil1~n 1 h l ur-.

Adv•nred Zenilh Colo r Demodulator Cin:uilrrfo r u n w r p;~~wd . trul;'-to -lde color p1ctu r e

. NEW ZENITH TWO-YEAR WA.RII!INTY
ON COLOR TV PICTURE TUIE
Zen11h l•dio Corpor111M w•r,.nu thl! color plfture tube in 1be
Zen11h Cokv T\1 tii'C l' iVPr t ,hown N:-re lo be lfft ltorn
m1te ri;ll ~rising fr om norm1l UW18f' lor IWQ yu~ lo;mo~m·~~~:~~~:.
!WI comumer ~rch11-11t. W1rran1r c:~ u rrp;ait of ~o;
or ~pl...:ll' ~nl wilh rrbuilt c:oi"H pidut"IP tubf..
1ind Z.rnith de•ler .1nywhrrt """""' m.~y liVI!'
lion , l1bor 1nd ~e•r\li(e d'l.lrllt'' ,.~ 1M
Zf'ntlh repl aci';m~!JI ·lube il Jho
111rm ol the g.n ginll IWO·';t'dr

�~ '

I -

. .

...

~

.

. ,,

"

..

.. . . .

.

.
i

The Dally SentJnel, Middleport-Pomeroy 1 0 . ,

8, .:., ·1'tle ~b' Sentinel, Ponlel'O)'.Jollck!J..,n, o., ~, Nowmbar 18, 1968
FIVUAY FORECAST

Teachers Expected to
Bla~kllall :,eettlement
'

,~ . YOJ!K

J~..-\Jah

.fui.o-n.o Cl-

flllltsm.

'fllon IP,IIIIted to he ctanau
lhot tilt&gt; ,"ooUiemoli, """ U

IPProved 111 ,tho unlm teachers,
bt reJected bJ the local
~ boon! of ihe Jarpl,y
Ntlro and Puerto m.,. 9&lt;N•
~~~
.· BfOWIIIvUJO 1&lt;hool diJirlct

would

~~·~ml:~.: ·~

.a.r """'"

lhan 27 houn llf

nopllall1110

cllled

IGr

- · of the sll'lklllll
Uqlted
Fecler.Uoa of Teachora
. (VFT), IW'1IId aul In recorcl
""""""" toclaJ lei vote on tho

......

~

~,. u .

"'*-•at

Some OJPtelled
and others .-eel

t1lit torma.
CWoaoa Strike

•&lt;We

hoft llloWeci Ale&gt; 1111Df
damn lll,.s to pt In the "11
of tachhW tho chlldrea, • 11114
~ O'Neill, at, I Jlrookb'n

N-

'

f·i

I

y

r

r111C:!: ~

t,.

.,,

In tho wne mateh with Call·
fornla Tannohlllllsodefoatedthe

·.Buckeye table lemla pla1oro
~· the
q,oa Team
UUo to Ohio Souldl1 nlaht at Cd&gt;o
HaD Ill Detroit for the llrai tbno
In 10 fOlfB.
Two and a hol1 cla1o ot pilin&amp; plif ended at 10:30 p. m.
~ whan Jolm Tannohlll, 18,
o(~oport, dtr-tecl U, S. No.
2 ,.._ Jac~ H-..1, 32, Loa
'"~'• 21-15 and 21.-16 IGr the
tiaedod 111111 Ohio lndl'lllll81 vic-

. f«.Y . over

the Cllltoma team,
the
eholqJiona.
·ca~~~arn~a and Ohlo'a No. 1

·•

;: 1'

·•

-..una

(live Ohio

toallia-""

·~ """" IntO the llnllmatch ...,.
ddMted Fioh' bad.pOU- off
tw;) Now YOijc ~;teama, CU. ·
·~ GNnd· RJpldl,' and DIIDOla,

.. !

ail'~ """""'" rr... - -

'

'I

·~·w. . ~ : ~w 1

I

~ whoa 42 ·. ..,; bipu round

"":~:1 .....

'

Cleveland, u.

oo

.c ranc

Ohio Team ·Wins
U. S. IT Title
I

Rhody McCoy, tile dllllrlct
ldmlnlotrator, !old "'"'omen he
was "extremely loOIIdonllld iiY
the declalon im,&amp;toled on ua" and
lAid lha qreemenl was "Uio
heelnnlllg of Ule end IGr Oeeln
ayatem which ll·belna deeeJUa. HW-Brownl\'llle."
llzed Into 331ocll dlatrlcta.
fo lumina poiDI In u.. otrlke
&lt;wosiUon Abaa•
was the declalolt IIY on -""le
N&lt;HIO of the kefll&amp;ure• In the court dat 1llo ""'"" Ocean Hmdecemnllzed Oeean Hlll·llr&lt;JwD. Brownsville principals had _ ,
ovUle cllatrirt were present hired llloaaJb' because Ulolr
when Ll~ llliiOimCed 111o - • were not
a civil
terms of thio settlomenl.
s~ Hill. ·

Trembles

ClltTeDCy.

Bankers looked to Basel
m_,- markets toclaJ. Jlanlfers where u.s;, Brltlal(·1 West
awaited "ord on hair President Gennaa, Japanese ani other
Charles de Goullo with Alnorl· Clillllllal honldna i&gt;OIOl!ro thla
·can and allied aid will art to morniqr ended a weeklong
•lie hla eurrency from .POaaible crltla conference 011 the tranc.
There was unoftlclal word the
denJnatlnn.
TndltW In hncs In Western Weal Gentwlo, thla contll'e•t'a
~ CIIPilala nnaed lr&lt;ln rlcheot •lion, mlallt loU De
to hlahb' ........ In Gaulle .1. I .hiJUmi to Ave the
Brussels, n.nc1a1 source• said franc. Other np&gt;rto said tho
.Jielsian bonka hove slqlpod a French reJected the oll'er
prlftle tradlna In IriDes. In because the Germans wanted
..... polldcll po.yniOnt In
LlJbon, two major bonks
reAiaed todaJ to buy the French return.
t"·
The . slC*'POWer blnkera anIIIIIIIICed oo declalon. A spoke ..
man said only, "ilU.re La to be
a credit IGr France of the kind
&amp;hen to Britain In the past It Ia
1C&gt; to the French and oot to us
to' make the announcement.'!

.pala the ..itoa wuted ..,.ted.

1961 men'a clwlqJioo of Thailand, S. SuUvej, "ho Ia In collep In the U, S.
In the match wi111 Gnnd RipIda, Tlmohlll pllled revonae
tor 1 loll In the U. S. Nallonll
q,oa to J. Serosal&lt;, 19, a atuderll
at Boston Unlwralt;y, fonner All·
Aalan iuntw chomplon, wlnniJW
2-L
In team pb,J nino malehos are
.posaOU. threo.J&gt;Iayetl of '!J"h
....Una the Ulreo of lliqlllal:, I&amp;
Ul 1111 team wino live inlf&lt;haa.
·1'lmtohUllloo reeehOd his of•
lldi! . appclnWont to UleoiDen'a

No French announcement was
e~ected hoiGre De Gaulle's
pl'lmo minister makea a oche-

duled

noUomvlde

broedcast

tonlah~
In the money marketa- where
opeculatoro IDnd to sell weak
ciU'rency IIlii buy •trona m11101
- Frend1 tankina sources said

UNDERGOES SURGERY
~Elberfeld,

3496West.
entlle &amp;.d, Columbus. a form·
or POIIIOI'O)' realdeli, Wlderwent
ourgeey 'lburoda.y at Rlveralde
Hospital In Colwntius. He formerJ,y Uved oo
A'IO. In Pom01'0)' IIlii Is the l'llther of 1111·
tablo't.nnlateam the! Wulrtpro- mond c. Elberfeld of amter,
aonl tho United Stales DOXt.iprU. He l1 reported to be reclt)eratIIQit the 196horld taurDunonl lna aadalactorll,y.
In Munich, Germany,

'*''Ina

s.

VIETNAIII TODAY SAID It a~octsSouth
add Jofa sottlon»ntlllks bOre •'In
d10I tbne.'' Xuan ThiiJ', chief of the llonol deleptton to
the stilled talks, made tile slltemoat 1!1111 lrtervlow with the

exchanae

Miller likes
Reversal of

FundingUne
WftSIUNGTON-Tenth Dlalrlct
COOgreaiiDIOJI Clarence E. liDlor todl1 C&lt;lllmented oolflo Feelon! Higll- AdmlnlstraUoo'o
doclolon to reSIUDe Fedenl~
hlslmay lUndin&amp; obllpdiln&amp;. Tho

Cqreaaman Blldhewaapleeaed

fimdlng could go aheod. MIJ-

"very allble.' In London, the

tho!

oftAm weak BriUah pound rose

lor hod dl ..grood with the ortglnl1 order lhat slq&gt;ped ouch fUnd·
lrw,
Admlniatratlon spokoiDienlllld

on tho market an! UUie tradln&amp;
was done ln francs.
In Well Genn&amp;llj' IIlii Switzerlalll, smne banks· put Umlts
on the amourt of francs that
they lrOUld hiiJ', But In other

the •haJt in highway obllption

autbodt;y was made September
1st In an etlort to reduce opendCIIlltals, ouch aa C&lt;oponbqon, · Ina durin&amp; this fiscal year. The
crane
tradtq was generally actlon was st.t»posedly taken in
normal despite last week' s response to the Reverue and Exmlsai'IO aeUtng of the French

currency,

In Part 1, a spokesman Cor the
American
Chlae ~
Bank said, 11 1 would say eople

are Sittlug on their t.Ms
ng
for an announcement tonight by
the Premler.H

Bride-to-be
SlwtDead by

pendlture Control Act of 1968
which ellis IGr a $6 hiiUon red""lloa In _.tiog.
COQJJ"eaaman MWer In ~
tembor sold the Admlnlstralloa
was trying to urool the American
peaple"' by includl~ cute in the
highway program ,a ~rt of the
e~rdture cuts. Miller said,
11 11te highway program has nothtog to do with the regular fed..
oral budget. Ill fUnds ct111e from
truot lunda colloc~ frOIIJ motorIsts at the poollno pumjl' tnd lor

auto equJ,JmenL"

·

The new order by the Federal

Her Father

Highway AdmlniatratlooalsopermUa those states which are car

BAN JOSE, catll. (UI'O - A
YOUIIII hrtda.to-be was shot to
deoth by her !.other during an
argument over which etmrch abe
would be married In, pollee re~

ahead in their Interstate work to
begin obligating aplnlt 1970 ap-

portiolrnents which were
DOWICed Oclober 31, 1968.

~

nando Dado, who waa booked ror
lnveldgatlon of murder.
Wllnesses told pollee Ruth ar.

rl•ed - · Saturday with her
fiance, Ruey Rodrli!uos. 22, to
· dlacuss their marrln&amp;e, Dido, a
Bapllat,

lnalated

couple

lhe

should IIUilTl' In a B apt I 1 t

Church. But R~s, a Ro-

Melgtl

Property
Transfers
Me E. Bays to Ronald c.
IL
Greely, Betty J. Grody, 1" ocre,
SultolL

BonecPtter

Zond 6 Puts

New I .anding

AuaiiD - .
, • lef. Sho!IPI, who '~YIS. lnd
, the 1lilt l'ld11llt a. o "tor.
Mr. Boa,aCulllt wao 111 om~ the Morlada """""•
,co,, lnd a DIODiber of
lOG of -

cilurch.

aro bla Wlf8,

· two'

-ct

m

Gear to Use

-.u.

-ll..

,, .,, W, Va., Cll Fllb. II, 1911,

6Ut:land.

c-:;:118, Eloloe WhltetoE.a
L. Robsoo, 'lz acre, Sellabur7.
Edward C. Jorclon, Helen L.
toclaJuplanned.
JorclontoDelmar Slwnblla,oorAst-111aona8QIIIIWexcuralootoChrllllall8ted,SL Croix,
olliY Slwnblln, .28 ocre,Silem.
Vlrl)ln lllanda, Sun11af wheo a car theft aiiii&gt;Ocl aerlouoly
Earl R. Watklno, Ann LeeWat.woundail a
lr)'lna to arrest him on t h e - Bel&lt;h
IIIOSCOW (IJPO - The Soviet ktns to cora carman. lot. Syraotal.I[I'OUnda. U. s. Secret Sorvlee qenta, theF!IIand Puerto
Unloo amounced locJay 111 llpoe&amp;- .!'"'"• Sutton.
..,.., pollee lllld the ollootlnflllla liot ....,.ctecl with the vice
ahlp Zmd 6 had relllmed lllfeb'
ptoll~·ct•s vlalt
ID earth Iller 1 ~ 8niWld . MEIGS GENERAL HOSPn'AL
lhe ·
Admllllona Saturda:f - Nmo.
·LOGAN, QIDO- 1JNJTED RUBBER WORJiERS at Ulelocll
Tho Toao ......,eelllelt of
lJiacharpo S.lurdaj&lt;- OWen
Goooll'eir ~ II Rublior C&lt;l. pJd were bock Oil tho job todaJ ·; j Zond'o retura oald the IIJOCO- Wllloon, Nell Ford, Borah Roush,
WWI I - -)'Oir coatract Loeel 7t4 rillllildthe- pact
lhlp teatecl tor lho llrst Ume Eaunott MIIIIOJ, Georp Al1011.
1 more CIIII!Pia lnd premlllng
S.~ OIII!IIW a tw......,k atrlke. Thoplatll, whlcllmakel..
A4mJ.oallll1 SUnday - Doris
dOJIIII!ii [II'OI)uCta, 1llld the qreomont, eovar111e 950 Oll!»loyoa,
~ of - . _ 8UCh apace- Wollt, Racine,
1IOUid coat moro IbiD
m1W011. .
--~
macherges SUnday - Tlie lllclllleci' a
wa.so lilcto~oo of 20
· - 1llld
lnvqfyce.., ., ~~our the llrat )'ell';· u cents the .-~~.,...
Ia . ec1 111• •• "' 111 IOJ'OCbnaml·
, eonia:~ thlrtlf~·
. , i ' , . .. . ell lilllnll f!!rce u _.ad tor · In 1883 the. United Slates
LODGE TO IIEtT
tile ~- ola btllla· ......ted Ume and HI

"*'lro

ID&amp;U!Desa,
' . Bo .... bora at r.ntpoJio Fv-

Crouser •• 12 acre,

Wayne E. Peck, Heater Peck
to Alvin Dye, Madge Dye, lacre,

DORAilO, P. R. - UNDETERRED BY TilE SHOOTING of
pollee -.ti¥4! at hla botel- headquarters, Vlco Pnosldt11141aet
'!'· Aanow lllld he "ould · - hla vacatloo

~~ . PI', · PLEASANT - ct.,_
;· (BIU) - - . 62, Ga!U.JM"Ia
,....,., died~ 1n Pl.....,t
VIlle' ilolllltal- al~-

.aG

pnorol

'I[pe
'

.. ·wo
..·
' ·, ,_ ; 4

n
"!-

.

.

. . .......... lm. _ o f _ . .

P:.;obed By State Patrol
The patrol cited Mra. GrindTho GolllpoUsPoot,StileHlal&gt;way Pltrol, lnveatlpted seven · - to Galllpolla Munlcli&gt;al
occlddo OD Sllllrday and Sun- court Nov. 18 oo •
of
daf lndwlllv I fatal mlaba(l In ~rpoaalna.
An aeeldeni at 2 L m.. Setur·
Mots• Ccluncy,
Marcus M. HoEJUte, $3, ~ day , 00 the Bulltvllle- Rd.,
cuter, was ldUed In a one car two and thr-nlha mlloo DOrth
crash and Ore oo Rt. 33 at !lor- of Rt. 160 was lnveollgated Iller
win at t;18 p, m. Salunlay. (De.. da111ght Sallmlay momlna. No
taUs were in Swmy'a Times-- one was lnjured.
Offlcera aaid that Russell D.
Sentinel.)
Two poraooo were ll\lllred In RUmley, 19, Itt. 11 Glillipolls,

chirp

car &lt;lrl- IIOl1il "' Jobll A. cblilo ··
Un, ilJ, ~~a .....·n.ore wu mlnar
4llllage to the

car.

craahODSinol&lt;yRowRd. headed north, failed to negotlale
one and aeven--terdta mUea east a cruve. His car wert olf the
of Rt. 775 at 9 a. m. Saturday. road and struck two amall trees.
cats driven 111 William Deerina, There was minor ctamage to the
25, lrontoa, and Odell Collins, car,
Another accident at 2:30 a. m.
46, Cheupeake, calllded on a
was )lOt reported ..-1112:33p.m.
eurve at a hill crest.
Treated atHolzerMedtCilCen-

saturday.

It occurred on the

ter and released were Deerirw:, Woods Mill Rd., one and threefaclll c!'uta 1 IDd a passenger in

bla ~.car, Ec:lurd Meyers, 20,

If 1111 ..,.,.lor of !OW c.- II
I btltor·thln·IVIIIII lJcll
odlaol or callep otudotrt, JGU
11111 qualify lor blc lllinp 1111
your Automobilo lnour1ace,
State Auto MIIUII olf111 I

tenths miles north of RL 554. No
one WI 8 injured.
Offtcers reported that Cecil L.

lnQOn. severe facial laceratlODL Both ens were heavily Beach, 38, Rt. 1 Bidwell, failed

to negotiate a curve. His car
went otr the highway, over an
embankment and overturned ontc
Its right side. There was mod-ente damage to the car. No
Gallipolis. No one wu injured. charge was filed.
An accideot occurred at 8:20 p,
Tho pitrol lllld SU11n K
Clarke, SO, Gllllpolls, headed m, Saturday In Meigs CcJuncy on
north, was overtaldrw and passing Rt. 124, one and two-tenths miles
a car driven by Rose M. Grind.. west ot Rt. 325, No one was inateld, 34, RL 1, Racine, when jurod
Officers reported that Jesse
Mrs, Grlndatead pulled out In
the possltWilne In front of Mrs. Locke, 57, Lucasville, lost control of his dum,p-truckooa curve.
Clarke.
Mrs. Clarke drove ot! the lett The vehicle slid into 1 bridge
side of the higll- to avoid • and then went orr the left side of
colllsion with the Grind.stead car. the road. There was moderate
There wu minor damage to the damage to the truck.
The patrol cited Locke to Meigs
Clarke car and no damage to the
Cwmy Court Nov. 22onachar£e
other car.
of speed ln excess for road conditions.
A deer was killed at 4:05 p. m.

damqed. ,No charae was ftled.
v'l'hltre ·waa no contact between
two ears In an accident at 2:10
p. m. SlturdiJ' on Rt. 1 three
ard five-tentha mUea north of

IOOD

STUOE~T

DISCOUIIT

fllllltW up to 25",

----~~~~"'-192·11
IT4 Caurt St.

P

GOOD ITI.IDEfff DIICOUNT

......

Shooting Match

Sunday on Rt. 71 one arll three-

tenths miles north ol Cheshire.
n.e animal ran into the path or a

Set Saturday
A ohootlng mateh wUI be held
employees or Lakin State
Hospital behind the beef barn,

IIY tho

on Soturday, Nov, 23, atartlng
a.m. Follow the arrows

at. 10

on the dirt road adjacent to the
tree farm.

This is a project the

em~

Sensational
n
, ••. color 1V's
• picture

hospital grounds. The general
(lUbUc Ia Invited. Prizes will
consist ~ SJI'ld(ed ham1, canned
hams, and turlulfs.

2 Committee

Reports Out

tho.._,

al.t

on whiCh he serves are now al'lllable. They are the House Committee on Agriculture and the

Commloo PubUc Works.
Congressman Miller eamment-

ed that since Ute SqJrame Court
o~~HNm, one-vote dectston the
power in Congress has awitched

overwhellnln&amp;b' to urban dlalrlct
repres81Dtlvea. For this reuon
there is an evan grenter n8ed for
pul)llc Underallndlng of agricultural problems. Cq&gt;los of bolh
of these reporta, in llmJted supply, are 1 '4llable from CGngress.

man Mlller• s

Was~

oftlee.

HOW AT MARY JUNE'S

SHAREE K. SHAFFER
O_pen Mo~ Thw Sot.
Tu ... Evening lr Appolnt~~~ent

M'ARY JUNE'S
BEAUTY SHOP
PIM~dd~~.~67

a.~~ar Ladiol:zt,lloiwh•ra
wilJDIOet at 7130 p. · . #•
-~aklnl
ciesceq£~ro-·•
~Conlrll,
~~~&gt;r:::UI:·~=~-:..:·:·~Ea!:llem,~~i;t;;==::::=,
1llld Paclilc.
m.
bill. .'IUs llldtho_l_•• _ _

of

"

.

·- ·. .... ·

~

•

maul tt·l_; ~· .to ""''h
. Jibdlila • a.. nr ,.l !iv pGint.c:(
b iHG&gt;'I 'lllrfaee wiil. lolllir
--~ .and
motet tri:l-

, will 11o od

' .. ·;,

',

li inyl clad me 1a l cabinel '" gr.lined
W•ln ur (Oior Su per li1deo ll:iln se Tun ing. Svs lem.
~ pl!'~ k c r .

5'" • 3" Twm ·con r

HIGH STYLING

Z(' rulh \/Hf

and UHF Spollile D•ah.

FAMOUS ZENITH
HANDCRAFTED
QUALITY.. , As Low As

433

5

Full Zenith Que/ity performsnCB

ft~tUitll

Z ~nilh Supe r 50 H•ndcr•fted Co lor TV Ch•n is
- No pr1nle(J nrc Ui ts1 No rrrx h1 ti 10 rl ~ h ortcu l ~ ' H,lndwu cd
for unrivaled d epe nda bility

.,

TellllleMONMwi:JM'

Paul T. Grueser' Carolyn A.

Dado

......... I

llaniJa TbneL
DlpJCIIIata -rall,y llll41hefqroed. Wl'\'freshasourance
1r&lt;1n WaahiJwton tho! the VIet COn&amp;'• proiOIIee at u/e conreranee lllllo dooa oot meon recnantllon of tile auerrlllao, South
VltiiiiDI was OJPected to chlnae Ita llllnd lnd aend negotiators
to the Ja1ka hero, the d~cinata 1114.

For Oarence

'

ployees are undertaking In their
eftorta to raise funds for the
building of the chapel oo lhe

porter.
The victim was Ruth Dado.
21, one ol nint childr8n ot. Fer ~

Weekend Mishaps ·

a,._

AutboriUea said
abot his Ham Everett Collins, dec., to
tho back of th head Jay Hall Jr., LWian M. Hall,
--r n
•
parcel, Mlcldleport, Sellsbury.
:::;:.,._....t eUort to lhoot
Sybil Ebersbach, Exec., Goldie
IL
M. Rile, Dec. ,toDonaldR,Siyre,
BonY J, Sayre, Lot, Middleport.
Besole M. McKnight to W, E,

PARIS-

Vlelmm to and lie bqycott

,Services Set

The alphabet, movable type
and the printing press are
among man's oldest inventions.
But as tools for furthering
human knowledge they are as
modern as the most modern
computer.
Perhaps this is the reason
more people still get more
information from daily
newspapers than from any
other source.

foniKII

obout 111uradaJ,

Sev~en

WI SHJNGTON - Tenlh Dls__,
~ ~
Dadn Fortney, Norma Fortney, parlricl COn&amp;resSDiaD Clarence E.
.......,..e ran 1rom tile nvuae .
eels ou ve.
aot an automatic plltol and ran
'
Millar lllld Salllrday roporta on
lifter them, pollee lllld
Anlll M. !¥her, Admix., wn- acUvltleo of the two Comml-s

, , produced ~ the other vlc-

1«10• In lila cl!IIIIIPI4XIIhlp round
·~ _, in ~ IC&gt;Iet
of Bob Gllllko!f, Now YGI'k, 111
•.Doa 14'oaa ot 0a1t.ctn.

is more efficient than the
written word. fast readers can
read up to 1,500 words a
minute-ten times the average
rate for the spoken word.
Scanning can accelerate this
rate still more.
Perhaps some day men will
devise some electrouJc system
to program their own brains
more rapidly. Until they do, no
method is as efficient as the
written word.

Parla

market trading ln tranci was

the -

mar.,- In the catholic Church, .
'
er, .69 ac re, Pomeroy.
11 said
po~r a ·heated fU'IIllllent. the
'Ibomas F . Dye to Robert J.

t.J. He -JI'I Ullll'eteoted. '1'11&gt;iilhiJJ, U. s,,··No. I Junlw (Wider

comparison, the largest
electronic computer in use
today looks like a child's
plaything.
But in an era of "information
explosion," how do you
" program " information to the
human brain? Spoken language
is far too slow. The average
person speaks about 150 words
per minute. The mind can think
far faster than that.
In fact, man has yet to
devise a means of feeding
information to his brain that

the

COld and wlnterllke lhrcaiBh
the period.
Precllllt.Uon will avoreae
1-5111 to Uths ID&lt;h meJtod 11
aDOW d.urrlea inDOJ"thelltporlloa at the beginning of tho
period IIlii ..... thnJuihout

man Catholic, was determined to Grueser to Charlotte L. Schneid-

ali!lloa •"-lon. ted the 0 h I o

Man's brain, the human
computer, faces a problem.
Like man-made computers, the
brain can process data with
such lightning speed that men
are hard-pressed to devise
ways of feeding it information
fast enough.
In fact, the human brain has
been called the world's finest,
most expensive com outer. By

.. erop heJoor nonnal,willtdalb'
ltlah• lllllnb' tn the ,o, and
nl&amp;htllmo Iowa PMft)b' In the
20a.

-,.SIIopend tile loOaJ 80'11'niJW
boon! of the dlllrlel and Jllllle
a opeclo1 atllte lrultoe 1D nm It
-Name a. three m•n arbltraUoo ponol to rule '"' dlsputea In
the elt;v's ll))l'IWUna aebool

franc

of .....

0

v

, P ARm (UPO- The French
wobbled in EW"ope's

the

'""'""Iiiii ot tbrte
·. Ooiaa IIIIJ..IlrownavUJo prlncl-

o Goo

~bOr, "~o

ocbool
never should. hl?O atruck IIi tilt&gt;
Or.t J)lace."
Mlrvln Datz, a eolleque lilt
friend of O'NeW'a, pld he YOIDd
to reject the 'sattlemOd.
"I feel tile otrlke Ia totally
Julllllled," u1c1 Datz. ''You can't
hove leachlna Wider h•llnldaUon, horassmentand leor.''
In •cldlllon to auoPendiJW
Oeean Htn-BrownBvUJo
p r I n c I p lis, the settlement
~
'

·11'.~ 55.,000 llllpn.~ Wiled
~ , 111 a ~Uomo• 1D end
tf!lh' u....,e...oid .Rrl.ke dat hal
lop . """'' lhan 1110 miWIII
_ . . , In ·1!&gt;0 111U111's Jaraut
. p~ 1&lt;bool '11ota1 out of
~.u IGr Ill hut 11 dafs of the

81 United Preaa lnlemlUOIIll
,.__ealaOhloTuo.. ,
..., lhr\Joch S.lurdaj&lt; will ....

~ncl

few er serv1cr

Sunshin• " CoiOI" Pi(IUriP TubiP w1th l'U ro pmm

l )r ob ll· m~ .

.lCI Il"dled

rMe -eu lh rhmph or for ~t r eale r fJI Ciu re b r111 h tness wi th
reCde r rt'&lt; l ~. bllf\hl e r &amp;H'l'fl \, .1nd mor&lt;' br lil1~n 1 h l ur-.

Adv•nred Zenilh Colo r Demodulator Cin:uilrrfo r u n w r p;~~wd . trul;'-to -lde color p1ctu r e

. NEW ZENITH TWO-YEAR WA.RII!INTY
ON COLOR TV PICTURE TUIE
Zen11h l•dio Corpor111M w•r,.nu thl! color plfture tube in 1be
Zen11h Cokv T\1 tii'C l' iVPr t ,hown N:-re lo be lfft ltorn
m1te ri;ll ~rising fr om norm1l UW18f' lor IWQ yu~ lo;mo~m·~~~:~~~:.
!WI comumer ~rch11-11t. W1rran1r c:~ u rrp;ait of ~o;
or ~pl...:ll' ~nl wilh rrbuilt c:oi"H pidut"IP tubf..
1ind Z.rnith de•ler .1nywhrrt """""' m.~y liVI!'
lion , l1bor 1nd ~e•r\li(e d'l.lrllt'' ,.~ 1M
Zf'ntlh repl aci';m~!JI ·lube il Jho
111rm ol the g.n ginll IWO·';t'dr

�....... - - ..... - .... ' ' 4 ' ... ··- , .• • ••, , ·· · - ••. 0¥' ., ••
~

'It

'

.

\'

'

.

·•·

'

.

·. . '' • .. r :

.

~;·1Jl,

'

~

.. '.

- .;.

...

'

....

•·

.

. ' .. .
'

. '

'.

10- Tilt Dolly Sontinel, Pomer&lt;&gt;Nlld!lioplll"i, 0., MonciiQ&gt;, Nowmber 18, 1988

A LITTLE 'HOMEWORK' Watching Want Ads Bring Top Grade.c ResultS
.,

5

01'

QtiAUTY

0111

RAlES
Mi nlft!VItl Chorgo 7~c:

llvo

inaorlh:~rn~.

II co"'• potr Word

1i11

1964 CHEVROLET BEL AIR I DOOR .•.• • •...• ,$995
6 cyl. std. trans., radio. Loc.:al 1 owner car, black finish,

col'teoculiYo

Ill tOft ion•

' 25 per cent Diaco~omt on poid adt

...._"'·

BLIND ADS.

luldllionel 2Se Chorgo poor Advo•·

;
','

OPEN EV15. 1:00 P.M;

OFFICE HOURS
8,30 '~'"· to 5:00 P·"'· Don,.
8:JO ~.m. to 12:00 Noo" Saturdoy

ForS.Ie

WILL DO sewing at home -

'

112.5(1. Ask for Dorothy or

Linda. Also open on Saturday
by appointments. Dorothy's
Beauty SaJon, Syraeuse,

Phone 992-3!182.

-

ll-17-3tc

CHICKEN BARBECUE SUNDAY NOV. 11 sponsored by
the Racine Fire Dept. lo be
held at the lire house starlIng at 12 noon.
11-7-8lc

,,

I,,
~.

j
,,

!I
,
I,

'.

I

i

, .

J.

i
t:

•I

Help Wanted

Musical Instruments
Ouollt)' homs - Groot Fof Gi¥ing

five gailed roan 4 yeilrs old,
four stocking feel, one I i v e

gaited, black stocking feel,

Norma

see Arnold Grate, RuUand,

Elettric Guitor..... .59.95

phone 742-!211, alter 5 p.m.

J Pick-up. With Co .. and All

Tho

Extrcu

MAHDOLIN ................ 20.00
UKELIN ................. 35.00
AMPLIFIER .......... ... .49.95
Bryants Budget

Shop
Pomoroy

108 W. Moln

992·5896

I NEED HELP. 20 hours $40.
Busy Fuller Brush lady needs
f'a!'ATOES, Phone IH3-ZZ54
3 people witll cars 1o denver
catalogues and take onlers. ClarODCe Prolflll, PorllancL
10-1&amp;-lfc
For appointment phone 74231184.
ll-17'6lc
POODLE PUPPIES, AKC Toy
minlature. $15 and up. Stud
MALE OR FEMALE, full Ume,
service
and grooming. PhiNie
day or night sblfts open, """:·
11!12-544!.
II S trc
tact Mr. Riffle at BBF, Union
and Congress, AlheDB. ll-111tc
AKC Golden Retriever puppies.
524 Ash Sl, Middleport JIIS.
Wanted
5443.
~·
ANTIQUES. furniture, dishes.
mlscellaneous. Mrs. Howard AKC Puppies, Scotties, Cockel'll,
Ceel!, 100 W. Maln St., PomePoodles. wesues and SchnauzroY,.
1-25-llc
ers, Barkaroo Kl's., Cool'o:!Ue,
Ohio, Phone 867-3854,
11-llh!Otc
For Rent
FURNISRED and unfurnished
apartments. Clooe to ochool. TRACTOR CHAINS, 3 heating
stoves, one good three point
Phone 1192-5454.
10-18-lfe
tractor blade. 18 head of cat.
FtiRNISIIED apartment.
4 tie, phone Chester 1185'3191.
11-~lp
rooms and bath. Marloll Reymlds, Ma11011, W. Va. Phone
~147.
11-lttfc '&lt;ENMORE automatic washer,
Frigidaire refrigerator; small
electric bathroom heater, all
STORAGE SPACE, storage lor
in good condition. Phone New
boatl, trailers, cars, campers,
ele. Write P.O. Bo1 339, J&gt;om.
Haven 882-2891.
11-15111p
eroy. Phone 99t2'l1ltJ or Dick Seyler.
ll-IS-12lc MAPLE STEREO radio console, 1868 model stereo AM r.
FM radio combination, t
FIIRNISHED APARTMENTS
speed automatic changer, BalID Middleport. AU utllilles
anoe due $16.21! or payments
pald. Rowley " Reed, MJd.
of $1 per month. Call m-ms.
dleport, Phone lllll-2776.
11-151tc
~e

phone 742-5501.

11·17-stc

,!164 FORD V 8, 9 pass. Wagon, Auto. Trans. Radio and
He&lt; .r. Good Condition, $900.
Call after 5 P.M. 992·5934.
ll-18-Btp

SKATE-A-Way holiday parties.
Thanksgiving, Friday, Nov.
22, New Yea.rs Eve, Tues.,
Dec. 31, 7:!0 to 1.2:30, Open

am Florence Spencer attended
lWteral services near Grantsville, W, Va., for CUrt Jones· ol

Mr. and Mrs. Diaries D.
Woode attended homecoming ser·
vices st the Enterprise United
Methodist Church Sunday afternoon and called at the James A.
sm lth home at Hemlock Grove.
The Women's Society of Christian Service will hold its regular
meeting on Tuesday evening, Nov.
I 9 at the home of Grace Swartz.

Available for parties, Monday, Tuesday and Thursday

nights, Saturday and SUnday
afternoons. Phone 965·3929 or
~11-17-30tc

WARM Morning coal stove witll
tan, beats 3 lo 4 rooms, used CIGARE'ITE vending machines
less than two months. Glenn
and service. ABC Enterprlse.s,
Jewell, Downington, 0. Phone
Muon, W. Va. Phone 'm-55U,
' &amp;-l-Ife
6118-3135.
IU4-12lc

Eden News

~'IVE

wood

COMPLETE SHOE REPAIR
ouUit, contact Wm. R. Thoma,
phone 992-3117.
Il·IJ.elc
1967, 12&lt;60 T11REE bedroom
lraller With I I Zll awning.
See at 810 S. 4th Middleport,
Phone 99:2012, • 11-I.Uie

01'

NOTICI

Af'POINTMINT
Cu~ No. 201128
S.tate of FriM.I 1. Voun,, PechiH
Nollre 11 hereby 6IV11n tlut Reid
A. Yttun&amp; of M:Jnerav!Ue. R.D. 1,
Obio, baa been d11b appointed Ell•·
eutor uf the Eatate of Frieda &amp;.
Y&lt;&gt;unJ, deeea.ed, lat• ol Kelp Coun·
ty, Obln.
Ctedltars &amp;re required to file their
claims with utd lldueiary wtthla

to11r monU:ui.

Dated this 8t.h day of No.ember
1108.

JOHN C. U.CON
Act1n1 Prou._, Jud"

Real Estate For Sale
O'BRIEN &amp; CROW
REALTY COMPANY
WE HAVE BUYERs FOR AU.
KIND OF PROPERTY.
WE HAVE SOLD DOWN AND
NEED HOMES AND FARMS
TO SELL (NO CIIARGE) IF
WE DON'T SELL YOUR PROPERTY.

HENRY CL1!:LAND
Office--..
Rea. - llliZ ZM1I

11·1711e

HOISTETTER
REALTY

'I'IWLER LOTS, Bob'• Mobile ~EVERAL NICE GUNS, · oontact Ralph Priddy, 118 Laurel
Court, Syracuse, Ohio oo Slate
St., Pomeroy or call 1192-3581.
Rt. 124, Phone 99Wtl51.
11"17-«c t:EO. HOBS'IEI fER, BROKER
1-11-Uc
'IIIDDLEPORT - 2 lamlly
T1WLER SPACE, ready to AUTOMATIC BIRD feeders. A
house, 2 baths, front porcb,
nice gift for t!Jat old person
book up, private, plenty of
large level lot. $5500.80
or Bbutin. Can be enjoyed an POMEROY - Nice 6 room
room for cblldren to play.
year
long. Homer Rice, Z96
Phor!e 99WIIH.
8-14-llc
frame, hot a:ud cold water..
RuUand St., Mlddleport, ph.
Outbuildings. One acre. •·FOUR ROOM HOUBE and bath,
992'l325.
11-17-31p
000.00.
unfurnished, 1650
LlncoiD
COUNTRY HOM!! - Old sturTWO TON CHEVROLET Flat
Heights. Phone 992-31'14.
dy 8 room home. I \!r baths,
Bed Truck, corn elevator,
10-29-lle
storm doors, wiudows, baseWarm Morning coal heater
ment, 50 acres. MlneraJa.
wltb circulating fan, tJi'lone
~'OUR ROOM hoUM, Laurel
fl3,000.00.
99U821, 11!12-5748 or 992-2318. FOR RENT - 200 acre farm.
St., Pomeroy, newly renovat11'17 Mp
ed. Call ~.
10-31-llc
Small farms needed.

IIELEN BDt1 VIRGIL TEAFORD
THREE ROOM furnished apan. FIVE WELL BRED tall 1&gt;0nies
suitable for harness show, ori- ASSOCIATES
ment, adults only. Pbone lllltSYRACUSE
ginal stock trom Ohlinger'•
5435.
11-U11c
11-17~
Stables. All wculd make exFURNISRED garage apartcellent 4-11 projects. Bo'' Mor
Business Services
ment on Lincoln Hill. Ulll!ties
ris, Leali'l;: Creek Road.
.HADIO
&amp; TV REPAIR and an1:-t7-4tc
paid. Adults only. Phone 99!.tennas lnllalled. John HarriMD.
11-U1il:
son, Phone lllll-2512. 11_, SOle
!965 MUSTANG two door hard·
top. $950. Gene Dodson. phone
SEVEN ROOM a p a - 1D
DOZER. BACKHOE, ltmw:bw
lllddleport, newly cleaned and
11!12-3935.
11·17~
and truck service, teplle
completely redecorated, front
tanks, water lines, baseme!U,
and back porches and enlrllll' ONE CONN B nat clarlnel $40,
also
Henry lllbr,
ceo. For informatioo eaU one Noble E fiat alto saxo· Pllone topooU.
1185-3988
or
Roger Bohr,
phone $115.
Bob Truasell.
lft.mO.
11-17-Uc
Phone 985-311511.
U·IHOtc&gt;
Phone 985-3929.
11-17-6lc
FOVR ROOM lurntshed apartC. C. BRADFORD
efficient and
DIItll. AU utWIIes paid. l'llone EXCELLENT.
AUC'nONEER
1112:1175,
11-15-tte economical . That's Blue LusComplete
Some.
tre carpet and upholstery
cleaner. Rent electric sham·
~IN'G rooms, 418 South
Radae, OMt
pooer
$1. Baker Furniture.
'l'hlrd Ave., Mlddleport, ~
Crill Bnewd
11-IWtc
t~Um.
11-J5.4ip
I I lfc

,....

....

By MARTHA HOLSINGER
.,," Fl ld 8 and
and M
r.
rs. oune
e

son, Belpre, visited Saturday
evening with Mr and Mrs Sol
'
·
Bigley and E'4llle' ... ~
· :•
Mrs Virginia Carte
Mrs
·
r,
FamJe Blgley and Mr. and Mrs.
Alva Holsinger Sr spent &amp;mday

.

•

On Display
!. ;:;.-;.;;;. ·;~··

Mol' • ·: • ·- • • • • • 11

to

Mr · and Mrs. Lewis JobniKil,
Indiana, spent several da.Ys recently with Rev. Elden Blake.

AP''OINTMINT
No. :10.111

c-

l1tate of I. c. Srysn, DI!HsMd
Notice I• hereb)' p.,.en thai LolliM
lwyan of MldCUI!!port, Ohio, bu Hell.
duiJ' lppolnted AdlllllliRtatdx of tho
&amp;.taw a1 E. c. Brnn decuMd, Lde
Mtllp Co1lnQr, Oblo.
Credltara artl HqulNd W ftle tba1r

ot atiddlepart,

datm• wnh •aid ltducUr7 wtthln
1 our moo.lhl.
Dated this ~t 41.1 of Oe&amp;ober

.....

.IOKN C. lACON
Acttne Probe.. .luCIM
et M.td C:euntr
11-4; 11·11;" 11·18 :tt.e

From u, Larpst Tru&lt;k or
liull..,zer Radlltor To Tho

Hockin&amp;port, Ohio
Phone 667·3370

Smallest Hooter Core.

Pomeroy

~PERT

Wheel Alignment

-5.55
-CUARAM'EEDPHONE 992-2094
Poineroy Home &amp; AUto
Ill E. M.m

Polllei'IIJ,_..0

SPECIAL
SNOW TIRE SALE

""r,·

Hoov(.
o.tra daop tnada,
four ull p I' nylon.
n5•14 Whhe Sldowolls

ONLY S!8.95

WMPO
• Free Estimates
• Quality Coacrete
• Certi fled Streneth
• Delivery

INFORMAnON
NEWS
presents

LOCAL REPORTS
DAILY

• Quick Service

AT
7:50 A.M.

• Flnlshina

• Sand &amp; Gravel
DIAL !1!12-3284

Mo11 popular slaea ovoilahlo.
Limited nuonLor ot thla prlco.
Fullr wuorantoed. Built by 11 big
the maker for .••

MOORE'S

124 W. MAIN

POMEROY

Otestnut Ridge
Social Events

To tho ENoculor or Adminhtrotor
of tM ostate; Ia svch af tho follaw•
lftoG 01 arl roa!denta of tho Stato of

with Mr. and Mrs. Clln- -slar.
ton Holsinger and family.
Mrs. Oorollzy 1\lercer brOUIIht
Slste Kerwin, Famie Bigley • her mother, Mrs. Flossie Ragan,
Martha Holsinger, LJ'dla Cheva- home !rom Columbus.
Uer,

Geraldine McCoy. Alvin
and Roxie Read, Bill Haselton,
Maralene Kimes and Rev. Elden
Blake eft nded the revival at
Stoned to Death
Long
Friday nljht.
After the Spanish conquest,
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Barber the Azte&lt;:s ottackad tho palaud grandson, CIUionl, Stratton, ace. Montezuma, the last Az~
Ohio, visited relatives here Sat- te&lt;: emperor of Mellico, tried
to calm them but was stoned
urday,

-m

to death.

RUN, ~EEP,

.lWrnte 10 Ill
i

'

'\
•I

·

I -~

The unlversJty ls the archive of the W'ettem mind,
It's the keeper of the Westem
culture, the IUII'.U. of our
heritage . . . ~ dwelliDg
place ol tile tree mibd.-Adhil
SteveDJOa.
.

Cler~

,"fi2! ~~erk

1111B;0

..I()UANALJST TO GET A

PQSTGRA.DUATE
EDUCATION

1"~~-"'!'-"'!'!'"'"!~!!1'1

U..ll'

65 CheYrolet.. _ Now $1345.

e.lah111 •UD okl lldtlctar)r wtUda tour
aw"tlul.
Datld tll1l Uth cla7 Oil NoYo:'ilba'
Jll68. .IOMN C. lACON,

Was $1595. Mollbu 2 Dr. Hord
Top. Ono c:areful owMf. Auto,
Trone. 6 cyl. Superb condl·
tlon. Antique gold with motc:hlng lntarlor.

Pr-.n .lu• nf IIIJJd Cwntr
lJ 18; u U; u 2 :tte

I FIGURE MOO'S JUST THE
FOR. /A. P!CTORW..

Pi.Ace

Temptatlolla ·a'f e ~ flle
whl&lt;h rub off mU&lt;b ··of the
rust of our self-coalldenee.Francots Fenelcia, Freach
writer.

8ldJlO Town- I

tu.

IMPLOYRR,

•SEO:ltiD H "...

• • •

Given under my hond ot1d .. al af
said Co11rt, this 13th doy of Nav•mo
bor, 1968.
JOHN C BACON
Acting J~dto and e~Hiclo
of •old C.urt
By Janet E. Morris

Croditora A•e requlre4 lo

AGATHA GRIHS8Y
Arm HER
MYS'J'ERlOOS

~~;!'~H(IA

TilJU hetd..to younelt •.ma
to your ttoclilng; hold to tllaf,
/111' by 10 doiilg you tDIII both yourself ond !/OW' Marers.-1 Tmlothu 4:16.

66 Buiclt.... -·-···Now S2295

Just Al'f'lv.d, Wildcot CuiiDIII
:z Dr. Hatd Top. Bolonged Ia
loc:al Goc:tor. Low ndloog• llh
rtew condition. Fully equlp,.d
with over,.thlng Lilt olr eondl•
tlonlng.

65 Buick..-...... _Now $1895
Wu 12095, Wlldc:.t Cu1t0111 2

Or. Hard Top. Ort1 c:orof11l local
owner. Powor StMrlng, Power
brokea. Auto. trana. Like new
white finish. Show1 e•cellent
care.

BLAETTNARS

BUICK
PONTIAC
GMC TRUCKS

. Ph. 992·2143
Pamero,., Ohio

G.KIUy

letter

9. More

5. Before
6. Alliance

Impolite
' Hi. Bee : comb.

rroma

glule

20. River em·
bankmenl
:16. Ouarant,.,

~

40. Suffix
tot long

Montana
Jl. Acmda

29. a
...•
letter
32, Cousin

,,

" · ,example
.... to•

~~·· ..
_ ,..

I

1

r//
ll'l ~ m&lt;u

"1l:fr/t-'+-+-1
l

(f

wp•

I'"

1&amp;. Draper'•

1..

43. OloSII

.........
uon

•4.

'"=;:'

1. Grumble-

z. l)ebriL'IJ

~
~

,·
"

:'liow arran1c the drded letters
to rorm the surprise anawer,u
!lugge11 ted by the above tartoon.

~r~

~

OF TALl&lt; .

Li

J'""""'': GlOOM

Ye.wrdey'•

I

ILDll

\.,.,.,." lf'Jutt lu;.·in11

11

IUIEAU

''"'1""'

o'IIN

jj

ACli.II.Ll'/, IT CQIICWIS SNOO!"/..
HE SUDil£NL~ 5EEMSTOI3EAFRAID
TO ,;t.EEPOIIT51Df AT N16HT...HE
KEEPS HEA!l!NG NOISES ...

Of COORSE 1
AHIMALI'9KHIATR'I? I'M VEIN
WOULD \W 1RI'
~INDEV
lO ilfLP HIM?
DO \W DEAL IN

I'LL TREAT AN~ PATIENT !.l!O HA~
A I'ROBLE.&gt;I AND A NICKa !

'

lottlurruool

GUZIU

hf'-IUGGID

~ ~~
iO ,. I"

r/-~t••

"L
I

42 Hideaway

_

~0":'5

1 -\n~wrr•

39. IE1lpnt"'
McCarthyl!l

~

THIS CAN MAKE FOFt

rLL

r·

38;;~ch
('h
I'~&gt;

r
~~

::..t.nlfut--t~rt--1
V/.lVL..

lLOTlt S:EllfYES
THAT HE WAS APPIC'Cli\CHED Oli STAGE

I"" V/.1-'
~.,~;;4~vr.1· ~~~/.t-+--t&gt;?il
(//

~.-+-'hHHV~/.

~

CCL1._

11-oo

PAILy CRYI"l''QUOIE- Hore'o bow lo work It'
~XYDLBAAXB

Ia I,OKOI'J:LLOW

Conway and Roger leaves her too little time for
Tim and Chuck!"

.I

35. Derrade

41. On• Of the

.....

~I=~~=-~~~M~I(~l~I~I~Xn)(llll)

r/."' '"

l"'..t;' ·

V) t

(]l.Otlf'

~~-

1

)

44. That male

f:2i£_

1~

I'

R.IGI·!'r,. AN'

rJ

tYOHRAM

or short

entry

zr
,,

ofa
wisecrack

system

i~E

j.jEAD FOR THE SIDELINE!

r
I IJ

37. Railway

30. Capital of

taw

gasp

22. Kind ot rac::e

0

events
36. Without

plll

CUT TO

LHYUW

sporting

priest

16. Aneathetk
19. Goalie" II

21 Junior's

34 . Popular

27. Nonentity
28. Gawked
29. Medicinal

....

20. Part of a

W•"erda)·'s A•s•·u

tium

26. Moslem

make-up

1··1: .

D

neon
Symbol
fo•
Jute ·

clock dial
14 . Where the

18. Cayii

'·'

2~ .

Mrs .• Cor

on a

11. conttn~ntal
boot

SUR VI

bol

to•

for short
13 . Number

15. 100
kopecks

'

"

eumple
11 . Math
course,

ramous

Unscramble these rour Jumblea,
one letter to each square, to
form rour ordinary word&amp;.

24. Sym ·

7. Narcotic
8 . Mr. and

11. Twoword11

!K:!Iiloquy
12. Provoke

...

J}lg~~®/IMJ ~~~-~~-' .-1 , _

DAILY CROSSWORD
23. Takes
3. 0ne of the
AIJII088
AsLalres
I. Concord.
•
breath·
4. Hebrf'W
per hap"
form

•

uJane Ellen has . discove_red . that IOing steady with

I'M WATCHING

AND '(OJ ENV UP W!lH AN
OBf()!EtiT ~!!

Utii:Wl.Gi TO

'•.:,'tl

E!:!!!'

'1tlJ 1 GIRL, AND 't'OU 'RE. SMART
fHOllc.l TO I&lt;1'10W IT!I B~K
THEIR SPIRIT, UTILE. BY liTTLE,

Enterlained

fl.,.Marine.

10)'
ship, decoMed,
Meic• CoiU.o*.)",
lUo ofOJWI,

•

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

•ot faf

NOTIU Oil AP'OifrfTMINT
Can No. ID.oat
l u • of .IHn Jtentey, DMOMoll
No«oo ill beub7 tl•ea Ut.at MJrUe
lilanley of AJban7, Oblo, Jl)) J. 0b1o.
hu been dUb' •I'PGblted Mm~J&amp;W.
tratrb: of Uae ll:l&amp;.lte af lohD lt.a•

0

4:30 P.M.

Oh!o, .,.!t:-tho surviving spouse,
tho next of kin, the beneflciorlu
undot the will; and to tho ottarnoy
Vance Wilbur received word ar ottorMyl ropr..entlng ony of tho
ol Ute death In Hamden of his oforutentfonod person•:
Jai'MI loul .. D. Smith, Pom•roy,
Wiele, Jack Leitch, Collowfng a Ohio, No. 19,993.
heart attack. Burlal was in HamYou are heteby notified thot tho
den.
lnvontory and ApprolsorMnt of the
eat,te ol the oforementloned, de•
~· Leo Ru8JJ @'at a week _. ·co~••
. 1la1o of 1ofd Coultly, woa
witl1 ': he'f sl 8 te,tf);'tn' rcOJ.umbu "·Ji.;1J I , this G6ur1, Sall '""_.,tory
S. ' and
eiiOI'IMnt will L• for Mar·
Mrs. Erma Nelson, who spent ln11 b. ore this Court on tM .5th
two weeks with her sister near
~~~,. of Doc:omber, 1968, al 10:00
o c:loek A.M.
Bucyrus, is now ftt home. Mrs.
Any ~rao" dulrlng to file e11Flossie Ragan Is staying with her cspt/ona thereta must file them ot
leo1t
doys prior to the dot•

Mr
s. Ginevra Foster spent I
week with her daughter, Mrs. Zel..

~
~

--..__--~..--- i
0

AND

407 PAGE
MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

5

WEll, MAYBE /JOT
100 WISE!

TO RIS£ MAKES A MAIJ
HEALll-IY, WEALTI-lV AIJD
IVISE'?

3 P.M.

GOEGLEIN GRAVEL

NOTICE ON PILING OF
INYt'NTORY AND APPRAISEMENT
Th• Stott of Ohio, M•le• Cou"ty
Prob•te Court

during the da_y, She is slowly improving after being a surglclll

IJOIJ'r '1tlU Kt.JOlU "THAT
EARLY 10 BED AIVD EARLY

12 NOON

Plus 2.19 foderol Tu

&amp;lnday
Of'

NEXT 'i'AP-.HARDL'i

ILAETTNARS '·

Ia Weyand and family in Columof Mid County
bus. She went eSJ)eciall.v lor the
11 Jl , ll 18; 11 ~ 3te
Mr · and Mrs. Mlke Kerwin wedding ot Comle weyand am
apel1t Thursday with Mr. and Mrs. Rallly Good on Nov. 2 at the Wey.
Darrell Hetzer
and home.
NOTICE Oil APPOINTMaNT
c- No. ao.o15
Mr. and Mrs Ivan Chevalier
Leorard Qulse.i-ry and ram.. ·
liteM el Rutr. I. Stark•Y• DoceiMII
NoUce b: hereby li•en that m.&amp;D· and Mr. and Mra Howard Nel~
ily of Norwalk !JPertseveraldays
or Jea.a Brookhart. of Boa II, Alson visited &amp;indiJ' with Mr. aod witlt Mrs. QuiseOOerry'smother,
ba~~~ , Oh.lo. bu bellln dllb ~pointed
Admllli.RratiU of lbe DlaW of Rutb Mrs. Alvin Go!!, New MatamorMrs. Lessle Mullln.s and family,
L SW.rkey, deee...d, ~ of Jl&amp;lp
t:nunl)', Oblo.
is.
Miss Hazel Wooten has returnl:redllofl s.re tOQ\llred to rue tbelr
Ra,ymmd
HolsingervisltedMr.
ed
to her emplOJ')llent in Athena
daiml wah said llduciU')' wtthill.
four monthl.
and Mrs. Alva Holsinger&amp;-. Mon- after a leave of absence,
Dated th.. 31 day of OC'lclber, 1 •.
JOHN c. lACON
day·
John Paul Henslar and SieJ&gt;hAdln1 Preblite JUII. .
Mr.
and Mrs. Paul Holsinger en or Newark spent a recent Sunet Nld &lt;:ovntw
ll-4; 11·11: 11-18 3k
and son, Hockingport, visited day with his mother, Mrs. Grace
NOTtCI

Schawarzel Marl••

····----···9to
..... -.--. ·1

-SO HE'LL BE

RUNNIN' A:Sif'.J'

Mat .. /I

115 Soon
To Arrive

been a patient in the Doctor's
Hospital -•th a heart attack II
"'
·
· e
patient at Holzer Medical Center,
was discharged Sunday.

MMIMMA.

GJU.SII TINY

e.ELONGSlO
U'L-IN

By MRS. ALTA CONE

M

U1 Columbus with relatives. Mr.
Holsinger's brother, Roy, has

EXPEIIENCED
ta•llfor Service

6-9%-18

SWartlz'.

Christmas Eve. Closed Chrl!tmas. Open Wednesday, Friday, Saturday, 7:30 to 10:30.

ROOM house, bath, bardInsurance
floors, two finished AVTOMOBR.E Insurance ben
rooms downst8irs, gas fureanceDed? Lost your operatnace, good neigbborboocl, call
or's license? can lllll-2918.
II9U4l3 after 5 p.m. 11-liite
• u llo

Rev. Moltatt olllciatlng.
Mr. and Mrs. Dinsmore Boyles

Coolville, 0., on Friday, and~
nlshed the music.
Mrs. Thelma Henderson has
returned from a week's visJhrith
her aOO-In--biw and daughter, Mr.
and Mrs. David Williams, at Tuc·
son, Arizora. The tl1p was made
, by plane.
Mr. and Mrs. Clair Follrod
and family were S1Diay psts
of his mother, Clara Foil rod,
and aunt, Nina Robinson. Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Robinson am
family of Belpre, also were recent visitors at the F'ollrod--Rol&gt;
inson home.
Mr. and Mrs. Murray Hq»kins
of Dayton. 0., came Sunday to
spend a week with Mr. and Mrs.
Vere Swartz and other relatives
here. Sarah Woode of 1\ppers
Plains was also a gue.st or the

Zippers, pockets, pegging, STEREO: Walnut console wtth
4-speed changer, 4-speaker 1955 CHEVROLET J1. Ton Truet
ht!mming, alterations, etc.
with overload, has all new sis: BUDGET PRICE furniture on
system.
Balance due $79.54 or
Mrs. Freddie Thabet. Mason,
ply commercjal tires, in ver~·
S5.
75
per
month.
Phone
1m
our third noor budget shop.
Phone 173-5651.
4-30-llc
good shape, $1250. Phone Ra·
3218.
ll-ls.6tc
Baker Furniture, Middleport.
veDBwood 273-4625. 11-11-3lc
Oblo.
? D 1fc
VACANCY for two elderly pee&gt;
ONE
MAGIC
CHEF
range,
wlth
pie. Prefer private paid paUgh! and clock. Good rondl- I'ONIES, YOUR CROICE OF SEWING MACIIINES, repair
tients. Phone M8BOn, ~185.
tion. l'l1one 11!12-!1262. IJ-11&gt;3lc four pony colts. Good color,
service, aD makes. WY s.
IIJ.I.Uc
$25 each. Eskey Hill, PomZ21H. The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
ll-171lc
eroy.
Authorized Singer Sales
.'PECIALS, $10 permanents !lAY and straw. Call l1!12-622'1.
and
Service. We Sharpen
ll+!Jtp
111.50, $12.50 for $10, $15 for ~--------.. 'I'WO RIDING HORSES. 0 n e Scissors.
S#-lfc

I

'

ForS.Ie

EYINRUDE
69's Are Here

th'

'READY - IIIIX concrm delttrered rlght to your project.
Fast and easy. Free elll4 .matea. Phone 992-12114, Goes·
leln Ready - Mil: Co., Middleport, Oblo.
I 311 lfe

I'OMEIIOY, OHIO

Notice

....
.......

AIR CONDmONING Refrlger.
auon service. Jack's RelrlgeraUon, New Haven. hone
8112-J079.
• • 1fc

Pomeroy Motor Co.

..~illtionol word lc.

992·2181

8uli~s Se~ces

spotless clean Interior, Good tires.

.... ec:la pGid within 10 da)lt .
CARD OF THANKS &amp; OBlTUARY
$1.50 f ... ~0 word mini"'"'"· Eo .

I

.

tln leading. Worship services
were held Sumey ewnl111 at 7:45 with the Rev. casro.
Effie Stout, a long time rest..
dent ot. this cmnmunu;r. passed
away at her home here Saturday
nighL Servtces were held at
Orange Christian Church here
Tuesday after110011 at 2 with the

Jack W. c;arsty,

Malibu Conv, V8 englne,P,G. transmlssion,neww-s4 tires,
green exterior with white n,ylon top, green with vinyl trim.

12 CODal .,., ... Old tftroo COntOCu·

hald at 10:45 with Garner GrU-

POMEROY

65 CHEVELLE . . . , . . ............. , ... , .. $1495

P:.01 Wont Ad S.r,.ice
5 conh ~· Word.,. Into" ion

Sunday School attendance oo
Nov. 10 was 72, the o«erlng ns
$22..30. Worship services were

Big Trad... ln Allowance

performance.

Business Ser-vices

,Spcial Notes

SIEGLER and
TROPIC-AIRE Heatess

Local owner car, 4 on th8 Ooor, good wide oval W. W. tires,
red Vinyl Interior, white finish, radio and heater. Try It tor

..~tlonoblo. Tk. r.ublithet' will not:

Alfred

$ave Now! lnotoll Now!
COMPLETE LINE

6ll CHEVELLE SS 396 11. T. CPE............ , , .$1996

to .cllr or ~lid 1111)' od1 doomed ob•
... rotpontlblo or rnoro tharo
lftCotroc:t Intortion,

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

2 SIGNS

D11y leforo Publle•ion
Monday Doad/;,. 9 a.~~t.
CaMollotiont &amp; Corrt~ctiont
Will •• •cc:optoi until 9 a.m. lor
Do, of Publicotlon
RI!:CiULATION5
The PuLiithor rotorvoa tho rlg.ht
jl.lfl,

:t BETTERGIT
IN TH' HOOSE AN'

START PAW'S
SUPPER, El\IINE:V·

WANT AD
INFORMATION
DEADliNES

HE'S IN
TH'JAILHOUSE

B'l'' OMf OF Ht5
ENEMIES' PEOPLE,

A. CtJPkl•ram Quolatloa
BLOB
ZLK

DSPQJQBQ

IF WLR US

JP

EPBIJPU

VSI

BSS :ZLK. - DSDBFLA

\'Htf.rday'8 CQ'Pioquote: MONEY SPEAKS SENSE IN A
LANGUA.GE ALL NATIONS UNDERSTAND.
APHRA

MA5QIJERA01~6

A:S

~ .~Mfi?/CA~

AGENT
ANO PLANNING TO
UAP ttiM .

B&amp;:HN

One letter aim ply standa for another. In thllam~e A W UMd
lh lh
L'8 X for the- two o·.. ete. 91nele ltttcn, apoetor ph~ :;: lenit,h and !armnUon of tbe worda ar. all bln.tl.

:eb :y

the code

letter~ are

different.

,, . ,
'

.:

-·

._;.,

... .., ,___. ....

�....... - - ..... - .... ' ' 4 ' ... ··- , .• • ••, , ·· · - ••. 0¥' ., ••
~

'It

'

.

\'

'

.

·•·

'

.

·. . '' • .. r :

.

~;·1Jl,

'

~

.. '.

- .;.

...

'

....

•·

.

. ' .. .
'

. '

'.

10- Tilt Dolly Sontinel, Pomer&lt;&gt;Nlld!lioplll"i, 0., MonciiQ&gt;, Nowmber 18, 1988

A LITTLE 'HOMEWORK' Watching Want Ads Bring Top Grade.c ResultS
.,

5

01'

QtiAUTY

0111

RAlES
Mi nlft!VItl Chorgo 7~c:

llvo

inaorlh:~rn~.

II co"'• potr Word

1i11

1964 CHEVROLET BEL AIR I DOOR .•.• • •...• ,$995
6 cyl. std. trans., radio. Loc.:al 1 owner car, black finish,

col'teoculiYo

Ill tOft ion•

' 25 per cent Diaco~omt on poid adt

...._"'·

BLIND ADS.

luldllionel 2Se Chorgo poor Advo•·

;
','

OPEN EV15. 1:00 P.M;

OFFICE HOURS
8,30 '~'"· to 5:00 P·"'· Don,.
8:JO ~.m. to 12:00 Noo" Saturdoy

ForS.Ie

WILL DO sewing at home -

'

112.5(1. Ask for Dorothy or

Linda. Also open on Saturday
by appointments. Dorothy's
Beauty SaJon, Syraeuse,

Phone 992-3!182.

-

ll-17-3tc

CHICKEN BARBECUE SUNDAY NOV. 11 sponsored by
the Racine Fire Dept. lo be
held at the lire house starlIng at 12 noon.
11-7-8lc

,,

I,,
~.

j
,,

!I
,
I,

'.

I

i

, .

J.

i
t:

•I

Help Wanted

Musical Instruments
Ouollt)' homs - Groot Fof Gi¥ing

five gailed roan 4 yeilrs old,
four stocking feel, one I i v e

gaited, black stocking feel,

Norma

see Arnold Grate, RuUand,

Elettric Guitor..... .59.95

phone 742-!211, alter 5 p.m.

J Pick-up. With Co .. and All

Tho

Extrcu

MAHDOLIN ................ 20.00
UKELIN ................. 35.00
AMPLIFIER .......... ... .49.95
Bryants Budget

Shop
Pomoroy

108 W. Moln

992·5896

I NEED HELP. 20 hours $40.
Busy Fuller Brush lady needs
f'a!'ATOES, Phone IH3-ZZ54
3 people witll cars 1o denver
catalogues and take onlers. ClarODCe Prolflll, PorllancL
10-1&amp;-lfc
For appointment phone 74231184.
ll-17'6lc
POODLE PUPPIES, AKC Toy
minlature. $15 and up. Stud
MALE OR FEMALE, full Ume,
service
and grooming. PhiNie
day or night sblfts open, """:·
11!12-544!.
II S trc
tact Mr. Riffle at BBF, Union
and Congress, AlheDB. ll-111tc
AKC Golden Retriever puppies.
524 Ash Sl, Middleport JIIS.
Wanted
5443.
~·
ANTIQUES. furniture, dishes.
mlscellaneous. Mrs. Howard AKC Puppies, Scotties, Cockel'll,
Ceel!, 100 W. Maln St., PomePoodles. wesues and SchnauzroY,.
1-25-llc
ers, Barkaroo Kl's., Cool'o:!Ue,
Ohio, Phone 867-3854,
11-llh!Otc
For Rent
FURNISRED and unfurnished
apartments. Clooe to ochool. TRACTOR CHAINS, 3 heating
stoves, one good three point
Phone 1192-5454.
10-18-lfe
tractor blade. 18 head of cat.
FtiRNISIIED apartment.
4 tie, phone Chester 1185'3191.
11-~lp
rooms and bath. Marloll Reymlds, Ma11011, W. Va. Phone
~147.
11-lttfc '&lt;ENMORE automatic washer,
Frigidaire refrigerator; small
electric bathroom heater, all
STORAGE SPACE, storage lor
in good condition. Phone New
boatl, trailers, cars, campers,
ele. Write P.O. Bo1 339, J&gt;om.
Haven 882-2891.
11-15111p
eroy. Phone 99t2'l1ltJ or Dick Seyler.
ll-IS-12lc MAPLE STEREO radio console, 1868 model stereo AM r.
FM radio combination, t
FIIRNISHED APARTMENTS
speed automatic changer, BalID Middleport. AU utllilles
anoe due $16.21! or payments
pald. Rowley " Reed, MJd.
of $1 per month. Call m-ms.
dleport, Phone lllll-2776.
11-151tc
~e

phone 742-5501.

11·17-stc

,!164 FORD V 8, 9 pass. Wagon, Auto. Trans. Radio and
He&lt; .r. Good Condition, $900.
Call after 5 P.M. 992·5934.
ll-18-Btp

SKATE-A-Way holiday parties.
Thanksgiving, Friday, Nov.
22, New Yea.rs Eve, Tues.,
Dec. 31, 7:!0 to 1.2:30, Open

am Florence Spencer attended
lWteral services near Grantsville, W, Va., for CUrt Jones· ol

Mr. and Mrs. Diaries D.
Woode attended homecoming ser·
vices st the Enterprise United
Methodist Church Sunday afternoon and called at the James A.
sm lth home at Hemlock Grove.
The Women's Society of Christian Service will hold its regular
meeting on Tuesday evening, Nov.
I 9 at the home of Grace Swartz.

Available for parties, Monday, Tuesday and Thursday

nights, Saturday and SUnday
afternoons. Phone 965·3929 or
~11-17-30tc

WARM Morning coal stove witll
tan, beats 3 lo 4 rooms, used CIGARE'ITE vending machines
less than two months. Glenn
and service. ABC Enterprlse.s,
Jewell, Downington, 0. Phone
Muon, W. Va. Phone 'm-55U,
' &amp;-l-Ife
6118-3135.
IU4-12lc

Eden News

~'IVE

wood

COMPLETE SHOE REPAIR
ouUit, contact Wm. R. Thoma,
phone 992-3117.
Il·IJ.elc
1967, 12&lt;60 T11REE bedroom
lraller With I I Zll awning.
See at 810 S. 4th Middleport,
Phone 99:2012, • 11-I.Uie

01'

NOTICI

Af'POINTMINT
Cu~ No. 201128
S.tate of FriM.I 1. Voun,, PechiH
Nollre 11 hereby 6IV11n tlut Reid
A. Yttun&amp; of M:Jnerav!Ue. R.D. 1,
Obio, baa been d11b appointed Ell•·
eutor uf the Eatate of Frieda &amp;.
Y&lt;&gt;unJ, deeea.ed, lat• ol Kelp Coun·
ty, Obln.
Ctedltars &amp;re required to file their
claims with utd lldueiary wtthla

to11r monU:ui.

Dated this 8t.h day of No.ember
1108.

JOHN C. U.CON
Act1n1 Prou._, Jud"

Real Estate For Sale
O'BRIEN &amp; CROW
REALTY COMPANY
WE HAVE BUYERs FOR AU.
KIND OF PROPERTY.
WE HAVE SOLD DOWN AND
NEED HOMES AND FARMS
TO SELL (NO CIIARGE) IF
WE DON'T SELL YOUR PROPERTY.

HENRY CL1!:LAND
Office--..
Rea. - llliZ ZM1I

11·1711e

HOISTETTER
REALTY

'I'IWLER LOTS, Bob'• Mobile ~EVERAL NICE GUNS, · oontact Ralph Priddy, 118 Laurel
Court, Syracuse, Ohio oo Slate
St., Pomeroy or call 1192-3581.
Rt. 124, Phone 99Wtl51.
11"17-«c t:EO. HOBS'IEI fER, BROKER
1-11-Uc
'IIIDDLEPORT - 2 lamlly
T1WLER SPACE, ready to AUTOMATIC BIRD feeders. A
house, 2 baths, front porcb,
nice gift for t!Jat old person
book up, private, plenty of
large level lot. $5500.80
or Bbutin. Can be enjoyed an POMEROY - Nice 6 room
room for cblldren to play.
year
long. Homer Rice, Z96
Phor!e 99WIIH.
8-14-llc
frame, hot a:ud cold water..
RuUand St., Mlddleport, ph.
Outbuildings. One acre. •·FOUR ROOM HOUBE and bath,
992'l325.
11-17-31p
000.00.
unfurnished, 1650
LlncoiD
COUNTRY HOM!! - Old sturTWO TON CHEVROLET Flat
Heights. Phone 992-31'14.
dy 8 room home. I \!r baths,
Bed Truck, corn elevator,
10-29-lle
storm doors, wiudows, baseWarm Morning coal heater
ment, 50 acres. MlneraJa.
wltb circulating fan, tJi'lone
~'OUR ROOM hoUM, Laurel
fl3,000.00.
99U821, 11!12-5748 or 992-2318. FOR RENT - 200 acre farm.
St., Pomeroy, newly renovat11'17 Mp
ed. Call ~.
10-31-llc
Small farms needed.

IIELEN BDt1 VIRGIL TEAFORD
THREE ROOM furnished apan. FIVE WELL BRED tall 1&gt;0nies
suitable for harness show, ori- ASSOCIATES
ment, adults only. Pbone lllltSYRACUSE
ginal stock trom Ohlinger'•
5435.
11-U11c
11-17~
Stables. All wculd make exFURNISRED garage apartcellent 4-11 projects. Bo'' Mor
Business Services
ment on Lincoln Hill. Ulll!ties
ris, Leali'l;: Creek Road.
.HADIO
&amp; TV REPAIR and an1:-t7-4tc
paid. Adults only. Phone 99!.tennas lnllalled. John HarriMD.
11-U1il:
son, Phone lllll-2512. 11_, SOle
!965 MUSTANG two door hard·
top. $950. Gene Dodson. phone
SEVEN ROOM a p a - 1D
DOZER. BACKHOE, ltmw:bw
lllddleport, newly cleaned and
11!12-3935.
11·17~
and truck service, teplle
completely redecorated, front
tanks, water lines, baseme!U,
and back porches and enlrllll' ONE CONN B nat clarlnel $40,
also
Henry lllbr,
ceo. For informatioo eaU one Noble E fiat alto saxo· Pllone topooU.
1185-3988
or
Roger Bohr,
phone $115.
Bob Truasell.
lft.mO.
11-17-Uc
Phone 985-311511.
U·IHOtc&gt;
Phone 985-3929.
11-17-6lc
FOVR ROOM lurntshed apartC. C. BRADFORD
efficient and
DIItll. AU utWIIes paid. l'llone EXCELLENT.
AUC'nONEER
1112:1175,
11-15-tte economical . That's Blue LusComplete
Some.
tre carpet and upholstery
cleaner. Rent electric sham·
~IN'G rooms, 418 South
Radae, OMt
pooer
$1. Baker Furniture.
'l'hlrd Ave., Mlddleport, ~
Crill Bnewd
11-IWtc
t~Um.
11-J5.4ip
I I lfc

,....

....

By MARTHA HOLSINGER
.,," Fl ld 8 and
and M
r.
rs. oune
e

son, Belpre, visited Saturday
evening with Mr and Mrs Sol
'
·
Bigley and E'4llle' ... ~
· :•
Mrs Virginia Carte
Mrs
·
r,
FamJe Blgley and Mr. and Mrs.
Alva Holsinger Sr spent &amp;mday

.

•

On Display
!. ;:;.-;.;;;. ·;~··

Mol' • ·: • ·- • • • • • 11

to

Mr · and Mrs. Lewis JobniKil,
Indiana, spent several da.Ys recently with Rev. Elden Blake.

AP''OINTMINT
No. :10.111

c-

l1tate of I. c. Srysn, DI!HsMd
Notice I• hereb)' p.,.en thai LolliM
lwyan of MldCUI!!port, Ohio, bu Hell.
duiJ' lppolnted AdlllllliRtatdx of tho
&amp;.taw a1 E. c. Brnn decuMd, Lde
Mtllp Co1lnQr, Oblo.
Credltara artl HqulNd W ftle tba1r

ot atiddlepart,

datm• wnh •aid ltducUr7 wtthln
1 our moo.lhl.
Dated this ~t 41.1 of Oe&amp;ober

.....

.IOKN C. lACON
Acttne Probe.. .luCIM
et M.td C:euntr
11-4; 11·11;" 11·18 :tt.e

From u, Larpst Tru&lt;k or
liull..,zer Radlltor To Tho

Hockin&amp;port, Ohio
Phone 667·3370

Smallest Hooter Core.

Pomeroy

~PERT

Wheel Alignment

-5.55
-CUARAM'EEDPHONE 992-2094
Poineroy Home &amp; AUto
Ill E. M.m

Polllei'IIJ,_..0

SPECIAL
SNOW TIRE SALE

""r,·

Hoov(.
o.tra daop tnada,
four ull p I' nylon.
n5•14 Whhe Sldowolls

ONLY S!8.95

WMPO
• Free Estimates
• Quality Coacrete
• Certi fled Streneth
• Delivery

INFORMAnON
NEWS
presents

LOCAL REPORTS
DAILY

• Quick Service

AT
7:50 A.M.

• Flnlshina

• Sand &amp; Gravel
DIAL !1!12-3284

Mo11 popular slaea ovoilahlo.
Limited nuonLor ot thla prlco.
Fullr wuorantoed. Built by 11 big
the maker for .••

MOORE'S

124 W. MAIN

POMEROY

Otestnut Ridge
Social Events

To tho ENoculor or Adminhtrotor
of tM ostate; Ia svch af tho follaw•
lftoG 01 arl roa!denta of tho Stato of

with Mr. and Mrs. Clln- -slar.
ton Holsinger and family.
Mrs. Oorollzy 1\lercer brOUIIht
Slste Kerwin, Famie Bigley • her mother, Mrs. Flossie Ragan,
Martha Holsinger, LJ'dla Cheva- home !rom Columbus.
Uer,

Geraldine McCoy. Alvin
and Roxie Read, Bill Haselton,
Maralene Kimes and Rev. Elden
Blake eft nded the revival at
Stoned to Death
Long
Friday nljht.
After the Spanish conquest,
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Barber the Azte&lt;:s ottackad tho palaud grandson, CIUionl, Stratton, ace. Montezuma, the last Az~
Ohio, visited relatives here Sat- te&lt;: emperor of Mellico, tried
to calm them but was stoned
urday,

-m

to death.

RUN, ~EEP,

.lWrnte 10 Ill
i

'

'\
•I

·

I -~

The unlversJty ls the archive of the W'ettem mind,
It's the keeper of the Westem
culture, the IUII'.U. of our
heritage . . . ~ dwelliDg
place ol tile tree mibd.-Adhil
SteveDJOa.
.

Cler~

,"fi2! ~~erk

1111B;0

..I()UANALJST TO GET A

PQSTGRA.DUATE
EDUCATION

1"~~-"'!'-"'!'!'"'"!~!!1'1

U..ll'

65 CheYrolet.. _ Now $1345.

e.lah111 •UD okl lldtlctar)r wtUda tour
aw"tlul.
Datld tll1l Uth cla7 Oil NoYo:'ilba'
Jll68. .IOMN C. lACON,

Was $1595. Mollbu 2 Dr. Hord
Top. Ono c:areful owMf. Auto,
Trone. 6 cyl. Superb condl·
tlon. Antique gold with motc:hlng lntarlor.

Pr-.n .lu• nf IIIJJd Cwntr
lJ 18; u U; u 2 :tte

I FIGURE MOO'S JUST THE
FOR. /A. P!CTORW..

Pi.Ace

Temptatlolla ·a'f e ~ flle
whl&lt;h rub off mU&lt;b ··of the
rust of our self-coalldenee.Francots Fenelcia, Freach
writer.

8ldJlO Town- I

tu.

IMPLOYRR,

•SEO:ltiD H "...

• • •

Given under my hond ot1d .. al af
said Co11rt, this 13th doy of Nav•mo
bor, 1968.
JOHN C BACON
Acting J~dto and e~Hiclo
of •old C.urt
By Janet E. Morris

Croditora A•e requlre4 lo

AGATHA GRIHS8Y
Arm HER
MYS'J'ERlOOS

~~;!'~H(IA

TilJU hetd..to younelt •.ma
to your ttoclilng; hold to tllaf,
/111' by 10 doiilg you tDIII both yourself ond !/OW' Marers.-1 Tmlothu 4:16.

66 Buiclt.... -·-···Now S2295

Just Al'f'lv.d, Wildcot CuiiDIII
:z Dr. Hatd Top. Bolonged Ia
loc:al Goc:tor. Low ndloog• llh
rtew condition. Fully equlp,.d
with over,.thlng Lilt olr eondl•
tlonlng.

65 Buick..-...... _Now $1895
Wu 12095, Wlldc:.t Cu1t0111 2

Or. Hard Top. Ort1 c:orof11l local
owner. Powor StMrlng, Power
brokea. Auto. trana. Like new
white finish. Show1 e•cellent
care.

BLAETTNARS

BUICK
PONTIAC
GMC TRUCKS

. Ph. 992·2143
Pamero,., Ohio

G.KIUy

letter

9. More

5. Before
6. Alliance

Impolite
' Hi. Bee : comb.

rroma

glule

20. River em·
bankmenl
:16. Ouarant,.,

~

40. Suffix
tot long

Montana
Jl. Acmda

29. a
...•
letter
32, Cousin

,,

" · ,example
.... to•

~~·· ..
_ ,..

I

1

r//
ll'l ~ m&lt;u

"1l:fr/t-'+-+-1
l

(f

wp•

I'"

1&amp;. Draper'•

1..

43. OloSII

.........
uon

•4.

'"=;:'

1. Grumble-

z. l)ebriL'IJ

~
~

,·
"

:'liow arran1c the drded letters
to rorm the surprise anawer,u
!lugge11 ted by the above tartoon.

~r~

~

OF TALl&lt; .

Li

J'""""'': GlOOM

Ye.wrdey'•

I

ILDll

\.,.,.,." lf'Jutt lu;.·in11

11

IUIEAU

''"'1""'

o'IIN

jj

ACli.II.Ll'/, IT CQIICWIS SNOO!"/..
HE SUDil£NL~ 5EEMSTOI3EAFRAID
TO ,;t.EEPOIIT51Df AT N16HT...HE
KEEPS HEA!l!NG NOISES ...

Of COORSE 1
AHIMALI'9KHIATR'I? I'M VEIN
WOULD \W 1RI'
~INDEV
lO ilfLP HIM?
DO \W DEAL IN

I'LL TREAT AN~ PATIENT !.l!O HA~
A I'ROBLE.&gt;I AND A NICKa !

'

lottlurruool

GUZIU

hf'-IUGGID

~ ~~
iO ,. I"

r/-~t••

"L
I

42 Hideaway

_

~0":'5

1 -\n~wrr•

39. IE1lpnt"'
McCarthyl!l

~

THIS CAN MAKE FOFt

rLL

r·

38;;~ch
('h
I'~&gt;

r
~~

::..t.nlfut--t~rt--1
V/.lVL..

lLOTlt S:EllfYES
THAT HE WAS APPIC'Cli\CHED Oli STAGE

I"" V/.1-'
~.,~;;4~vr.1· ~~~/.t-+--t&gt;?il
(//

~.-+-'hHHV~/.

~

CCL1._

11-oo

PAILy CRYI"l''QUOIE- Hore'o bow lo work It'
~XYDLBAAXB

Ia I,OKOI'J:LLOW

Conway and Roger leaves her too little time for
Tim and Chuck!"

.I

35. Derrade

41. On• Of the

.....

~I=~~=-~~~M~I(~l~I~I~Xn)(llll)

r/."' '"

l"'..t;' ·

V) t

(]l.Otlf'

~~-

1

)

44. That male

f:2i£_

1~

I'

R.IGI·!'r,. AN'

rJ

tYOHRAM

or short

entry

zr
,,

ofa
wisecrack

system

i~E

j.jEAD FOR THE SIDELINE!

r
I IJ

37. Railway

30. Capital of

taw

gasp

22. Kind ot rac::e

0

events
36. Without

plll

CUT TO

LHYUW

sporting

priest

16. Aneathetk
19. Goalie" II

21 Junior's

34 . Popular

27. Nonentity
28. Gawked
29. Medicinal

....

20. Part of a

W•"erda)·'s A•s•·u

tium

26. Moslem

make-up

1··1: .

D

neon
Symbol
fo•
Jute ·

clock dial
14 . Where the

18. Cayii

'·'

2~ .

Mrs .• Cor

on a

11. conttn~ntal
boot

SUR VI

bol

to•

for short
13 . Number

15. 100
kopecks

'

"

eumple
11 . Math
course,

ramous

Unscramble these rour Jumblea,
one letter to each square, to
form rour ordinary word&amp;.

24. Sym ·

7. Narcotic
8 . Mr. and

11. Twoword11

!K:!Iiloquy
12. Provoke

...

J}lg~~®/IMJ ~~~-~~-' .-1 , _

DAILY CROSSWORD
23. Takes
3. 0ne of the
AIJII088
AsLalres
I. Concord.
•
breath·
4. Hebrf'W
per hap"
form

•

uJane Ellen has . discove_red . that IOing steady with

I'M WATCHING

AND '(OJ ENV UP W!lH AN
OBf()!EtiT ~!!

Utii:Wl.Gi TO

'•.:,'tl

E!:!!!'

'1tlJ 1 GIRL, AND 't'OU 'RE. SMART
fHOllc.l TO I&lt;1'10W IT!I B~K
THEIR SPIRIT, UTILE. BY liTTLE,

Enterlained

fl.,.Marine.

10)'
ship, decoMed,
Meic• CoiU.o*.)",
lUo ofOJWI,

•

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

•ot faf

NOTIU Oil AP'OifrfTMINT
Can No. ID.oat
l u • of .IHn Jtentey, DMOMoll
No«oo ill beub7 tl•ea Ut.at MJrUe
lilanley of AJban7, Oblo, Jl)) J. 0b1o.
hu been dUb' •I'PGblted Mm~J&amp;W.
tratrb: of Uae ll:l&amp;.lte af lohD lt.a•

0

4:30 P.M.

Oh!o, .,.!t:-tho surviving spouse,
tho next of kin, the beneflciorlu
undot the will; and to tho ottarnoy
Vance Wilbur received word ar ottorMyl ropr..entlng ony of tho
ol Ute death In Hamden of his oforutentfonod person•:
Jai'MI loul .. D. Smith, Pom•roy,
Wiele, Jack Leitch, Collowfng a Ohio, No. 19,993.
heart attack. Burlal was in HamYou are heteby notified thot tho
den.
lnvontory and ApprolsorMnt of the
eat,te ol the oforementloned, de•
~· Leo Ru8JJ @'at a week _. ·co~••
. 1la1o of 1ofd Coultly, woa
witl1 ': he'f sl 8 te,tf);'tn' rcOJ.umbu "·Ji.;1J I , this G6ur1, Sall '""_.,tory
S. ' and
eiiOI'IMnt will L• for Mar·
Mrs. Erma Nelson, who spent ln11 b. ore this Court on tM .5th
two weeks with her sister near
~~~,. of Doc:omber, 1968, al 10:00
o c:loek A.M.
Bucyrus, is now ftt home. Mrs.
Any ~rao" dulrlng to file e11Flossie Ragan Is staying with her cspt/ona thereta must file them ot
leo1t
doys prior to the dot•

Mr
s. Ginevra Foster spent I
week with her daughter, Mrs. Zel..

~
~

--..__--~..--- i
0

AND

407 PAGE
MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

5

WEll, MAYBE /JOT
100 WISE!

TO RIS£ MAKES A MAIJ
HEALll-IY, WEALTI-lV AIJD
IVISE'?

3 P.M.

GOEGLEIN GRAVEL

NOTICE ON PILING OF
INYt'NTORY AND APPRAISEMENT
Th• Stott of Ohio, M•le• Cou"ty
Prob•te Court

during the da_y, She is slowly improving after being a surglclll

IJOIJ'r '1tlU Kt.JOlU "THAT
EARLY 10 BED AIVD EARLY

12 NOON

Plus 2.19 foderol Tu

&amp;lnday
Of'

NEXT 'i'AP-.HARDL'i

ILAETTNARS '·

Ia Weyand and family in Columof Mid County
bus. She went eSJ)eciall.v lor the
11 Jl , ll 18; 11 ~ 3te
Mr · and Mrs. Mlke Kerwin wedding ot Comle weyand am
apel1t Thursday with Mr. and Mrs. Rallly Good on Nov. 2 at the Wey.
Darrell Hetzer
and home.
NOTICE Oil APPOINTMaNT
c- No. ao.o15
Mr. and Mrs Ivan Chevalier
Leorard Qulse.i-ry and ram.. ·
liteM el Rutr. I. Stark•Y• DoceiMII
NoUce b: hereby li•en that m.&amp;D· and Mr. and Mra Howard Nel~
ily of Norwalk !JPertseveraldays
or Jea.a Brookhart. of Boa II, Alson visited &amp;indiJ' with Mr. aod witlt Mrs. QuiseOOerry'smother,
ba~~~ , Oh.lo. bu bellln dllb ~pointed
Admllli.RratiU of lbe DlaW of Rutb Mrs. Alvin Go!!, New MatamorMrs. Lessle Mullln.s and family,
L SW.rkey, deee...d, ~ of Jl&amp;lp
t:nunl)', Oblo.
is.
Miss Hazel Wooten has returnl:redllofl s.re tOQ\llred to rue tbelr
Ra,ymmd
HolsingervisltedMr.
ed
to her emplOJ')llent in Athena
daiml wah said llduciU')' wtthill.
four monthl.
and Mrs. Alva Holsinger&amp;-. Mon- after a leave of absence,
Dated th.. 31 day of OC'lclber, 1 •.
JOHN c. lACON
day·
John Paul Henslar and SieJ&gt;hAdln1 Preblite JUII. .
Mr.
and Mrs. Paul Holsinger en or Newark spent a recent Sunet Nld &lt;:ovntw
ll-4; 11·11: 11-18 3k
and son, Hockingport, visited day with his mother, Mrs. Grace
NOTtCI

Schawarzel Marl••

····----···9to
..... -.--. ·1

-SO HE'LL BE

RUNNIN' A:Sif'.J'

Mat .. /I

115 Soon
To Arrive

been a patient in the Doctor's
Hospital -•th a heart attack II
"'
·
· e
patient at Holzer Medical Center,
was discharged Sunday.

MMIMMA.

GJU.SII TINY

e.ELONGSlO
U'L-IN

By MRS. ALTA CONE

M

U1 Columbus with relatives. Mr.
Holsinger's brother, Roy, has

EXPEIIENCED
ta•llfor Service

6-9%-18

SWartlz'.

Christmas Eve. Closed Chrl!tmas. Open Wednesday, Friday, Saturday, 7:30 to 10:30.

ROOM house, bath, bardInsurance
floors, two finished AVTOMOBR.E Insurance ben
rooms downst8irs, gas fureanceDed? Lost your operatnace, good neigbborboocl, call
or's license? can lllll-2918.
II9U4l3 after 5 p.m. 11-liite
• u llo

Rev. Moltatt olllciatlng.
Mr. and Mrs. Dinsmore Boyles

Coolville, 0., on Friday, and~
nlshed the music.
Mrs. Thelma Henderson has
returned from a week's visJhrith
her aOO-In--biw and daughter, Mr.
and Mrs. David Williams, at Tuc·
son, Arizora. The tl1p was made
, by plane.
Mr. and Mrs. Clair Follrod
and family were S1Diay psts
of his mother, Clara Foil rod,
and aunt, Nina Robinson. Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Robinson am
family of Belpre, also were recent visitors at the F'ollrod--Rol&gt;
inson home.
Mr. and Mrs. Murray Hq»kins
of Dayton. 0., came Sunday to
spend a week with Mr. and Mrs.
Vere Swartz and other relatives
here. Sarah Woode of 1\ppers
Plains was also a gue.st or the

Zippers, pockets, pegging, STEREO: Walnut console wtth
4-speed changer, 4-speaker 1955 CHEVROLET J1. Ton Truet
ht!mming, alterations, etc.
with overload, has all new sis: BUDGET PRICE furniture on
system.
Balance due $79.54 or
Mrs. Freddie Thabet. Mason,
ply commercjal tires, in ver~·
S5.
75
per
month.
Phone
1m
our third noor budget shop.
Phone 173-5651.
4-30-llc
good shape, $1250. Phone Ra·
3218.
ll-ls.6tc
Baker Furniture, Middleport.
veDBwood 273-4625. 11-11-3lc
Oblo.
? D 1fc
VACANCY for two elderly pee&gt;
ONE
MAGIC
CHEF
range,
wlth
pie. Prefer private paid paUgh! and clock. Good rondl- I'ONIES, YOUR CROICE OF SEWING MACIIINES, repair
tients. Phone M8BOn, ~185.
tion. l'l1one 11!12-!1262. IJ-11&gt;3lc four pony colts. Good color,
service, aD makes. WY s.
IIJ.I.Uc
$25 each. Eskey Hill, PomZ21H. The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
ll-171lc
eroy.
Authorized Singer Sales
.'PECIALS, $10 permanents !lAY and straw. Call l1!12-622'1.
and
Service. We Sharpen
ll+!Jtp
111.50, $12.50 for $10, $15 for ~--------.. 'I'WO RIDING HORSES. 0 n e Scissors.
S#-lfc

I

'

ForS.Ie

EYINRUDE
69's Are Here

th'

'READY - IIIIX concrm delttrered rlght to your project.
Fast and easy. Free elll4 .matea. Phone 992-12114, Goes·
leln Ready - Mil: Co., Middleport, Oblo.
I 311 lfe

I'OMEIIOY, OHIO

Notice

....
.......

AIR CONDmONING Refrlger.
auon service. Jack's RelrlgeraUon, New Haven. hone
8112-J079.
• • 1fc

Pomeroy Motor Co.

..~illtionol word lc.

992·2181

8uli~s Se~ces

spotless clean Interior, Good tires.

.... ec:la pGid within 10 da)lt .
CARD OF THANKS &amp; OBlTUARY
$1.50 f ... ~0 word mini"'"'"· Eo .

I

.

tln leading. Worship services
were held Sumey ewnl111 at 7:45 with the Rev. casro.
Effie Stout, a long time rest..
dent ot. this cmnmunu;r. passed
away at her home here Saturday
nighL Servtces were held at
Orange Christian Church here
Tuesday after110011 at 2 with the

Jack W. c;arsty,

Malibu Conv, V8 englne,P,G. transmlssion,neww-s4 tires,
green exterior with white n,ylon top, green with vinyl trim.

12 CODal .,., ... Old tftroo COntOCu·

hald at 10:45 with Garner GrU-

POMEROY

65 CHEVELLE . . . , . . ............. , ... , .. $1495

P:.01 Wont Ad S.r,.ice
5 conh ~· Word.,. Into" ion

Sunday School attendance oo
Nov. 10 was 72, the o«erlng ns
$22..30. Worship services were

Big Trad... ln Allowance

performance.

Business Ser-vices

,Spcial Notes

SIEGLER and
TROPIC-AIRE Heatess

Local owner car, 4 on th8 Ooor, good wide oval W. W. tires,
red Vinyl Interior, white finish, radio and heater. Try It tor

..~tlonoblo. Tk. r.ublithet' will not:

Alfred

$ave Now! lnotoll Now!
COMPLETE LINE

6ll CHEVELLE SS 396 11. T. CPE............ , , .$1996

to .cllr or ~lid 1111)' od1 doomed ob•
... rotpontlblo or rnoro tharo
lftCotroc:t Intortion,

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

2 SIGNS

D11y leforo Publle•ion
Monday Doad/;,. 9 a.~~t.
CaMollotiont &amp; Corrt~ctiont
Will •• •cc:optoi until 9 a.m. lor
Do, of Publicotlon
RI!:CiULATION5
The PuLiithor rotorvoa tho rlg.ht
jl.lfl,

:t BETTERGIT
IN TH' HOOSE AN'

START PAW'S
SUPPER, El\IINE:V·

WANT AD
INFORMATION
DEADliNES

HE'S IN
TH'JAILHOUSE

B'l'' OMf OF Ht5
ENEMIES' PEOPLE,

A. CtJPkl•ram Quolatloa
BLOB
ZLK

DSPQJQBQ

IF WLR US

JP

EPBIJPU

VSI

BSS :ZLK. - DSDBFLA

\'Htf.rday'8 CQ'Pioquote: MONEY SPEAKS SENSE IN A
LANGUA.GE ALL NATIONS UNDERSTAND.
APHRA

MA5QIJERA01~6

A:S

~ .~Mfi?/CA~

AGENT
ANO PLANNING TO
UAP ttiM .

B&amp;:HN

One letter aim ply standa for another. In thllam~e A W UMd
lh lh
L'8 X for the- two o·.. ete. 91nele ltttcn, apoetor ph~ :;: lenit,h and !armnUon of tbe worda ar. all bln.tl.

:eb :y

the code

letter~ are

different.

,, . ,
'

.:

-·

._;.,

... .., ,___. ....

�:·- ..... •
.~

-

~··.

'·'.:

,. '

..

.. . .'

~

,.

..-

.

~-

\

Langsville

Tuppel'!l Plains
Soeiety News

Mrs. Evelyn Morqomery ea-.
tered Riverside Methodtat Hospita! It Columbus ret;:ently tor
treetment and surgery.
Mr. and Mrs. Blair Cadwallader and sons of Seamon spent a
weekeOO with her parents, Mr.
1UII Mrs. Alpha Barr.
Olarley Slnab..lry entered the
Meigs General Hospital as am•
ical patienl
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Morris

Ill' MRS.

EVELYN BRICKLES
Mr. and Mro. Murry H"'klno
ot Ol)'ton were Sundi.Y guest. of
her dater, Mn. Slrah Woode.
Evorett Watson was taken to
Holzer Hoepit.al, Gallipolis, Monday sutrerirw from a heart condldon.
Mr. and Mra. Clarence Nichal11
and two daugllters. Mrs. nome
Tippie of Athena, Rt. 5 and Mrs,
Marrium Hendershot of Lancaster attended the funeral Tues.
day of Mra. Nichols' sister, Mrs.
Ira Elki.Ps at A11hford, W, Va.,
near Charleston.
Mrs. Eulah Swan returned
home after several weeks' st.a)'
with her granddaughter, Mr. and
Mrs. Lawrence Hasberger and
1011 ol Parkersburg.
~. -4 and Mrs. Gary Landon
and son. who have been stationed
In Germany, are spending several days here wUh their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Don Landon and son, Jimmie aJJi Mr. and
Mrs. Carl Walton of Reedsville,
alter which Mr. Landon will
leave for duty In Vietnam. His
wire and son will stay here while
he is gone.
Miss Donna Shultz, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Don Shultz of
Columbus atxl granddaughter or
Mr. and Mrs. John Arbaugh. underwent knee surgery at the
Methodist Riverside Hospital,
Columbus. She is convalescing

lina.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul

Buckle~'

have bought the Lelah McClain
prqJerty and are remodeli~ it.
Mr. aR! Mrs. Fred Well11, Mrs.
LaW'a Lynch of Spencer, W. VL,
Mr. and Mrs. Earnest Wells of
South Gate, Calit, were here
vi&amp;itlng their sister, Mrs. Rushia
Shumway.

Mra. Roland Torrence and

~=:
~::

(•:

l:.
.I,,,
&lt;':

~~~

HOLIDAY DECORA110NS for the hmte were displayed
by Mrs. Gilbert Cullen of Marietta, guest speaker at the
regional meedng. ~e gave tips on maki'l( orramental pieces
with artiftcialanclfresh materials tor every occaaJoo.

centl,v vlalted hlo DKIIIter, Mro.
Slbbatll aehool attendance Nov. Cora Renshaw.
Miss Shirley Ledlie has enter- 10 at tile Free Metlloclllt Church
Goor(lla Diehl vlalted rocently
ed the Nationwide Beoucy S.hool waa123.
with her mother and allier-In- ·
In Columbus.
Mr. Cherlea O&gt;lckl Karr, wilD law, Mr. and Mrs Ed RUI118ll ~·
Mr. and Mra. Gordon carter was a paUent at Veterana MaJn. and Mr. and Mra. GtQ' Russell, •
ot Petoskey, Mich., visited her orlal Hoopllll, has - . re1um- Braol&gt;uey.
1lster, Mrs. Emma Ledlle, and
Mr. and Mra, Lawrence l!l&gt;lln ·:
odhDIII1&gt;.
daughter, Shirley, recertly.
Mr. and Mra . Ed Bauer, MBr- were In PorkerollurgMondi.Y.
Mrs. Clair Parkerson entered lm, and MilS Pllll.v Karr, CoRoy Howell, wilD Is empiQ¥ed,;
Holzer Medical Center as a med- bt!R&gt;ua, vlalted roeently wltll In Pem1¥1vanla, spent tile weelv
leal patient.
their -enta, Mr. and Mrs. Cher- end wltll hla family here.

ton.

UXTON

Elberfelds Is Headquarters For

WE HAVE A COMPLETE SELECTION OF BUXTON FINE LEATHER GOODS IN FABULOUS
COLORS. BUXTON IS EVERYTHING A BILLFOLD SHOULD BE, AND MORE. ONE THING
IT'S NOT. IT'S NOT A LOT OF EXPENSE.

THERE'S SOMEONE ON YOUR LIST WHO NEEDS

1ii
·:::

LADY BUXTON BILLFOLDS AND KEY~ TAINER$
•.·.

::::

Any Time

ADOLPH

Of The

SAYS:

Yeat

2 For 1 Sundae Sale
25c SIZE-ANY FLAVOR- THRU NOV. 24

Buy 1-Getl "Fr
-ATTHE --

DAIRY VALLEY
Acroaa Fro'" The Pomeroy-Mason Bridge

Lady Bux!on and Miss Buxton Billfolds help you get organized and keep you
that way. Convertible billfolds feature removable card·pholo cases and we
have lhem in enough colors and desiBns to please anyone and everyone . Get
marching Key-Tainers in 4 or 6 loop sizes to complete the order of thinBS ·
No more groping for loose keys, then lhe lock in rhe dark . Get a Key·Tainer
with built in flashlight.

It's a snap to open and close: has lh.e new self·centering snap. It's a snap
!o find what you want : sepGra!t compartments keep your thiiiiJS in order. Cards
and photos stay crisp . . . protected from pencil points, nail files, bobby pins.
Yet for all it holds, it's compact enough !o tuck into a carry-all. , . handsome
enough to carry alone. Select from matched French Clutches and Purses, Bill•
folds and Key-Tainers. Fine leathers in fabulous colors.

one word for your
Christmas
Buxton!

:::-

::::

~:~
~:

•
}

Robert E. Qullllam, State ConHrvationlst, Soil COnservation
Service, spoke brielly stating
that the Western Soil Conservation District had been In operation for 27 years and was serving 3,000 district cooperators.
Briel remarks were made by
Carroll Greene, state Soil Con~
servattoo committee, who stat ed that tUe drainage In West
VIrginia on such a large scale
would have been Impossible it
It was not for the Western SoU
Conservation and at current. prices Mason County uc.d spent $22
million In tile drainage practice.
A. G. Middleton, former District consenatlonlit, recalled
early days ~ the Soil Conserva(Contlnuod on Page 2)

LADY BUXTON JEWEL CASES
If you don't wear all your jewelry al lhe same time, you need a Lady Buxton
Jewel Case. Where else would you find enouBh drawer space for it all? Fea·
lures sarin lined lids, velvet lined !rays, wide roomy compartments, elegant
fittings. From pierced earring cases !o luxurious music box slyles or new
illuminated chests with mirrors.

··:·

MILLIONTH FOOT OF TILE - Charles C. Lewis, right,
an:l West Virginia Commissioner of Agriculture Gus Douglass
hold the mUlionth toot oC tile placed in Mason County farm
land Monday in special commemorative ceremonies at the
Lewis farm.

in money exchange markets
from threatened devaluation.
The reports said the Bank of where nervous speculators are
France
was
again dipping dumping it.
Premier Maurice Couve de
beavily Into shrinkingreserves'
of gold to keep the fra~ anoat Murvllle and Finance Minister
Francois-Xavier Ortoli met with
De Gaulle. Later in the da.y
Couve de MurviUe was eJI)ecled
to outline budget cuts designed
to build contldence In the
national economy and the franc.
In a speech in parliament, he
was ellllected to order cuts ln
fb' United Press International
YOUNGSTOWN - THE BOARD OF Education Mond._,. night subsidies to nationalized lndw;.
o(ftelally set Nov. 27 as the closing day for the city schWs here, tries.
In Frankfurt. Germany, a key
'(be aehoola wW be closed Wltil J&amp;n. 2 because ot a lack of q,eratcurrency trading center, a
ltW !Undo.
Voters rejected in the Nov. 5 election a 12-mill operating levy. banker reported jitters ard
It wu the li:UII time the levy had ~defeated at the polls. The heavy trading of francs.
"All the banks are nervous,"
27,000 school children 1n the 44 _public schools will have to make
he said.
I.e:&gt; the lo1t time IWxt IIPrlrw.
De Gaulle's chief lieutenant
pledged
in a nationwide broadNEW YORK - THE 1.1 MILUON STUDENTS In the nation's
cast
Mon&lt;lay
night France would
taqeat achool ay1tem 1111 most ot their 57,000 teachers returned
put
its
own
finandal
house ln
to clauro&lt;ono Ieday. Mambero of tile United Federation of Teach·
order,
He
stressed
however
the
era (liFT) voted Monlly 17,698-2,738 to accept an agreement ending
United
states
and
the
other
ridt
their clt)'Wide strike, latest in a series of three since schools opennations of the nm. - Commmrlat
eel s.s;L 9.
world were read;y to hei.P U'needUnder the ogreement lUilOUilCOCI by Mayor Jolon
Llndaay,
ed.
ttne prtndplo In the Ocean HW • Br01rnavtlle eliPOrlmental ochool
dJ1trict W0f8 IUij)Ondod aJona wfth the local governing board ol tho
1arp1y Nqro ani Puerto Rican district.

ELBERFELD&amp; IN POMEROY

P·•·

Twin City Shrine club members will host a stag meeting
with illustrious Potentate Rl chard E. Goudy attending Thursda.Y, Nov. 21 at the Pomeroy
Drew-Webster American Legion flaiL
The event wlll begin at 8
p.m. and entertainment wtll
be provided by the Putentate
and Plccadors. Refreshment&amp;
will be provided by the local
shrine dub and all memben
ol the Aladdin-r"emple are re.
quested to attend.

into a fourth day, military
spokesmen said today. Prime
Minister Tran Van Huong of
South Vietnam said the guerrillas were building for a new
offensive.
The rocket and mortar
barrages into three provincial
capltals and six towns Morklay
and today brought to 68 l h e
number of cities and town s
shelled since the United States
slq)pcd the bombing ol North
Vietnam Noll. 1.
Costliest of the attacks was a
three-round salvo into Phu Vinh,
a province capital 65 miles
southwest of saigon. It killed 19
Vietnamese soldiers and civillans and wowxled 20.
Battle Near Da Nang
U.S. headquarters reported a
aeries or battles south of the
northern allied military camp at
Da Nang Mond._,., kllli ng at
least 62 guerrillas am pushing
the Cmununist death toll there
in the past four days to 362.
Seven
U.S.
Marines
were
wounded in the battllng.
The
semiofficial
Vietnam
press agency today quoted
Huong as saying intelllgenc~
reports pointed to increased
Communist recruiting among
Vietmmese men and women.
young and old, as llart or a
••wtnter-spring plan. ..

Athens County
Men are Killed
ATHENS, Ohio (UPJ) - Two
AtheM County men died early
today when their car smashed
into a concrete divider at Ohio
7 near the junction with u.S.
50 at COOlville, about 15 mUes
trmn here.
VIctims were Donald L. Huffman, 42, Coolrllle, and Larry
Burt, 24, Utile HockJtw,
Injured were the driver, Larty 'Thompson, 20, and Tony Maynard, 19, both of Little Hocking.
Thon1)son was treated lnd re-

leaaecl and Maynard admltled at
SheltarlnK Arms Hospllll here.
There were no citations 11
the incident remabwd W'l!er In-.
vesUgaUon. Highway P•tralmen
l&amp;ld.

BOOSI'ERS TO MEET
The Meigs Athletic Boosters
VETERANS MEMORIAL
wll1 meet thlo eveni.Dg at 7:30
HOSPri'AL
PARIS- PREMIER THAN HUONG olSoulh VIetnam waa quot.at the hl8h achoolcaleterla. Head
Admi a&amp;ions - Osa McCtm.e, Baoketball Coach Carl Wolle will
ed in Sa1p todQ' 11 A,Ybw hia nation t.s ro Intention yet of end·
Rutland.
llw Ill boJcolt ol Parla ,....S.IIOOJ. X.,. ThuY, chief Hanoi delelntrodute hla I&lt;Jlada and a a1mt
Discharges - Claudia OWana, dr)ll wiU be pre801Uc1. Refrelh·
Jill8 to the atalleclllll&lt;a, told United Pres• llllenatloflll Monday the
C4Jmmtmllto will not a1leld urieaa the VIet Coni lo given recognl· Paul Stewart, Norma H a w~ menlo wlJJ be served. All Interthorne, Margaret Groce.
(Continued 011 Pop 2)
ested persma are Invited.

said.

"We have also suggested that
in case the representatives of
the Saigon administration have
not oome to Paris, a three-party
conference can be held, lnclud·
ing the Democratic Republic of.

'ThU)', who once described
Richerd
M.
Nixon as a
''bellicose man" took care f10t
to critieize the U.S. Prealden..,.
elect.
However, he aald Hanoi wlJJ
not soften its deman:la In IUQ"
way lfW Nixon. Other well·
informed di1JlmnaUc aourcet
said Hanoi was satlsfted that
Nixon had endorsed the bUle
Vietrw.mese policy decisiona ol
President Johnson.
(Continued on Page 2)

lo

uP u.s.

"If neither a four~ oor a
thre&amp;i)lrty conference Cll1 take
place, the responsibility rests
entirely 1.4)0n lhe U.S. side,"
Thuy aeld.
Touching on other matters,
such as the reunUlcation of
Vletra.m, he took pain11 to
appear mOOerate and Oexible.

Weather
Cloudy, windy and colder wltb
snow flurries through
day and locally heavy -

wecme...

squalls nortlleast near Lake Erie
and tonight . lllgh today In
the 30s . Low tonight in the 20•
and low 30s.

today

Area

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1968 '

. '

,,

r1

TEN CENTS

Mrs. Walton 1.:ppointed

To Office Of Cieri{

9 Cities
Shelled
By Reds

v.

Shop Monday Thru Thursday 9:30 to 5 p.m.• Open Friday and Slturday' 9:30 to 9

Of The Meig•-Mason

Mrs. Kermit (Jane) Walton,
Mulberry Hts., will succeed Edna
Schoenleb as Pomeroy vi II age
clerk beginning January 1, 1969.
Pomeroy council made the ap.
pointment Monday night in a reg.
ular session
Mrs. Walton, wife of Pomeroy merchant Kermit Walton,
wtll begin WQrk "Wlofficially,.
Immediately, so she will be able
to accept the full lrn:.d or t h e
clerk's duties in January.
Mrs. Schoenleb has resigned
effective Jan. l , "Because of
circumstances beyond m,y control." ~e had three years re·
maining or a (our-year term . She
will have completed 11 years
as clerk.
Council, upon recommendaUan
SAIGON (UI'O - Communist
troops shelled nine cities and u~-~:ox.v.•.,..,...... •.;.;.·.•.·.-.·
battled allies south of Da Nang ,.,.....,..,..,.wr.-NW'«·-·~·vo:o;.o. ....:......:.. · .•.•.•..;..

following a luncheon at Pleasant
POint Resort.
Wayne W. Jlughe11, Jackson
County, chairman of the Western S&amp;ll Conservation District,
was emcee for the program commemorating the event, with the
Rev. Valrl C. Wlnter, Jackson
County, giving the Invocation.
Gus R, Doug)ass, West Vir ~
glnia Commissioner ~ Agriculture, a native Mason COlUltian,
&amp;ad local land owner, addresa..
eel the group briefly. He said It
has taken a long Ume to get peo.
pie to see the benefit r1 soil
conservation and apply it. He
wanted to congratulate tarmer1
for their achievements in taking fine care of the land in Ma8011 COtmty and preserving lt ror
future generations through the
new tnnovaUona.
~ 1Joollas• lltlted Utere · was in·
excels ol 400 farms In Mum
Count;y and some or these !arms
had as high gross tnoome of lliU'

solution to the Vietnam problem, we are _prepared to hold a
four.party conference as agreed
upon with the representatives of
the U.S. goverrunent," Tbu,y

Lying

(Norttl) Vietnam, the South
Vietnam National Front for
Liberation and
the United
States,'' he added.

entt~ .

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

PARIS (UP!)- Banking
reports said Fnnce's eeonmnlc
crlsi1 worsened today. President
Cherlea de Gaulle held urgent
talk&amp; 011 how to save the franc

~::
.;.;

:.:~,~

Devoted To The lntere.ll

them, But never tlro-Way talks.
"In order to ftrxl a peaceful

•

at

e

The noisy scrubbird is found
in we stem and southwestern Aus.
tra.lla . The white, black and brown
blrd Inhabit&amp; dense undergrowth
of the region but is in danger
d becoming extinct.

Mon:lay at his residence in portrait of North Vietnamese
Choisy-le-Roi, a suburb sooth of President Ho Chi Mlrti and
Paris, primarily to counter a surrounded by vases of dowers
U.S. statement made last week and etchings of the Torjdnese,
about the agreement on mcpaJld.. CochlneBe aoo Annamite landed peace talks.
scapes, Thu,y said:
The
u.S. statemert was "Never have we agreed on a
Issued by the State Department two-party conference, as recent..
and said a Hanoi· Washington ly declared by a number of
agreement on tl:le exparlled Americans."
talks called merely for a uyour
Thuy uid there could be fourside-our side" arrangemett.
w~
talk11, with the Saigon
No Two-Party Talks
regime representatives takirw
Sitting
beneath 1 large part, or. three-Way talks without

•

Franc Worsens

There's just

::

Now You Know

In the &amp;tale.

LADY BUXTON
FRENCH PURSES and CLUTCHES

Grace for the luncheon served by the Chester Garden Club
members assisted by their daughters was given by Mr1. Lemard
E:rwin. Table decorations leatured arrangementsofmumswith
bittersweet, Ivy, gourd&amp;, and
hedge apples. Favors ot I o o t
bags were given. Mrs. Earl Dean
was chairman tor the IW1cheon.
The door prize11 provided by
f'rancis Florist. Pomeroy Florist, Dudley' II and Landmark were
awarded to Mrs. SlanlfU' Evans,
Gallipolis; Mrs. J. E. Harley,
Middleport; Mro. VIrginia Grtf.
fin, Athens; and Mrs. Wyman
Sheets, Gallipolis.
Mrs. B. K. Ridenour waa ln
charge of a sales table wlth all
proceeds being contributed to
tile Wakeena Fund. Dlapla,yed at
the meetin1 were com h u 1 k
dollo made by Mro. RnbertWood,
pilgrims made by Mra. Homer
Holter, and an arrangemM'It of
peeled wisteria vlne with red
velvet rosea made by Mrl. Roy
Holter .

Iit~i~iiiifi(:~:i:~:i~~=i=&gt;~&lt;tt?~~?)?i/i?fi~~t.t~~~Jff~~~?t\:i:~:i:?ii]V?f

laid In Mason COunl,v Monday af.
ternoon oo the C. C. Lewis Farm

Select a Buxton Key·Tainer wi!h !he new graceful ~utline. Features slide
opening lock, utility p~ckel, spriiiiJ closing, swivel removable locked loops
and key•rerurn reward service. Key·Tainers are available with slide, snap
or zipper closure and 2, 4, 6, B, or 12 loop styles. Stlect a leather and co·
lor to coordinau wilh Buxton Billfolds .

(Continued from Page l)

PARIS (UPO - Premier Tran Van Huang of South Vtetlwn
said today In Salam hh nation did not plan to end its boycott of
the recent "contu11ed declarations" by the North Vietnamese. He
IJII)arertly referred to a statement Monday by Xuan Thuy, chief
Hanoi delegate to the stalled talks, that the Communists will not
attend unless the Viet COng is given rerognitlon as a run confer~
ence member - 11omethlng Saigon rejected in advance.
An omcial at the Sligoo office of President Nguyen Van Thleu
was asked U Huong was speaking for his own political faction or
rar the Thieu goverrunent The otft.cial replied that the prime
minister was speakllll for the government.

P AJlli; (UPO- Xuen Thuy aet
in a crimson easy chair sipplrw
fragrant green Tonklnese tea
and with a smile called the
United States a liar.
Thuy, chief negotiator for the
North Vietnamese at the Paris
talks, went on to warn that
not be any
there
would
e~p~nded peace talks unless the
Viet Coog's National Liberation
Front (NLF') is recognized as
an iOOepenOOnt equal partner.
Thu,y granted an interview

BY MAXINE WALTERS
PT. PLEASANT - The 1,000,.
000111 foot of drainage die wao

KEY-TAINERS

Awards Received
By Garden Clubs

:l:l~*~~T~l?~~t=~~~~~~~~~~f~~~~~~:~:~:i:i:~:~{:~=~~~:i:~:~t:~:i:i:i:~i:~:i:i:i:i;i~~~i=~=~!i:i:i:i:fi:i:;:~:fi{:i~fi(:it~=

Ceremonies Held in
Laying of Farm Tile

No ma!!tr, his uses for a billfold. We have lhe style lo
sui! how much or how little he carries in a billfold, and
in the leather and color lo suit his personality. Selecl
from Thinfold , Stalesman, Organizer, and Convertible
Styles, as well as Biii·Tainers and 2· or J·fold wallets.
Pocket Cases and Zippered Billfolds 100 . Milano Cow·
·hide or Elephanl Ear Grained Buffalo Cal(. we luwe the
Brain and grade of leather he'll appreciate.

REGIONAL DIRECTOR Mrs. Jolon Reese of Galllpolto prosided at tile fall meeting or Region II, Ohio Association of Garden Clubs, held Saturday at Eastern High School in Meigs
County,

..

u.s.

Ho Chi's Negotiator Xuan Thuy Claims

VOL XXI NO 147

BILLFOLDS FOR MEN

MDGS THEATR£

•

La,.-s!!A ~i!f

,

Mr. Olin Rite, COlumbua, ,.... :

AND BOYS

Ylaited her mother, Mrs. Harry er, Marietta, flower shows; Mrs.
Edward Mizicho, Athens, slides;
Allison or Racine.
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Nichols and Mrs. Pearl Mora , publicity
apent several days visiting their book&amp;. Reports were also given
son, Mr. and Mrs, Charles Nich- by the county contact chairmen.
Mrs. Cullen, an accredited
olo and !amtly of Dlloola.
Mrs. John Torrence and Mrs. judge of the Ohio Association of
George Thomas of Columbus, Garden Clubs. demonstrated the
called on Mra.. Audrey Torrence making oC Christmas decorations
and visited their mother, Mrs. suitable for the home. Stc dis.
Myrtle Frost at St. Joseph Hos- played an assortment of colorful
pital, Parker~~burg, and reported holiday arrangements ranging
their mother was able to be in from door wreaths and swags to
1 wheel chair there now, after decorative wicker plaques for
hiving fractured her leg, Mrs. children's rooms .
The use or ornaments in mod Frost celebrated her 92J'll birthday last May.
ernistic piC&lt;"es was a feature of
her program, Particularly attractive was a swag of fresh
REDBIROO LOSE
F1!KUOKA, J11&gt;an (UPOgreenery wilh a center ring of
Aldra Taklhasi stopped St. fruit , and a lavender jeweled
Louis with a two-hitter Sunday holiday doth made by Mrs. Culas the Ymtiuri Giants defeated len. Several mantel pieces, tierthe Clrdl,.ls 2-0 for the ed anWJgements of ornaments,
Redbirds ftfth loss in 16 games and fruit wreaths were among
on their good-will tour of Japan.
the items disphcyed by the demlaau Shibata doubled hmne onstrator .
the rirst Giant run otf Nelson
~e concluded her program
Briles in the first iraling
with a demonstration on arranging fresll nowers in Madoms containers.
Regional chairmen appointed
TOMGHT AND TUESDAY
for 1968 and 1969 were Mrs . CulNOV. 18 • 19
len, flower show schools and judges; Mrs Michael J. Fry, CheshTilE DETECTIVE
ire, nature and conservation;
(Technicolor)
Mrs. Nellie Scarberry, Gallipo..
Frank Sinatra, Lee Remick
lis, roadside and civic beautifi COLORCARTIONS:
cation; Mrs. Herman Koby, Rio
Real Pink
Grande, junior garden club; Mrs.
Poor Little Butterdy
James Clark, Rio Grande, hortiFoolish Bunny
culture; Mrs . Phillips, garden
therapy; Mrs. Billy Houck, GalliSHOW STARTS 7 P.M.
polis, alld Mrs. C. E. Stout. AI-

~!·

nay.

leo Karr.

r~;~=========~:t==~·.l:l.·~·.·.·.····················8········ ...·.················"!·=·==::!=:::::=:=~:===:=:=:=:=:=:=:::::::;::: ..·.••·.·.·.·... ·.·.·.~·.·····················;.:"·~»=::0=·:·.·=·=·.·:·.·=·.·:·:.:.....................,:.•~:,:;;.!=;......_~...·.··········=··············...................... ····· ..........• ••··· ...........

&lt;!Ouehter, Mrs. Sa11J Caldwell,

.. /.'
- ·r .,..

aurger,v at Holzer HospitaJ.
Larry Barr is worklrw In

(·:

at hmle oow.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Halsey
of Dayton were Sunday guests
here of his sister, Mr. and Mrs.
Everett Watson and family,
Mr. and Mrs. David Ross and
Mr. and Mrs. Ramie Golden or
Athens were Sunday guests of
their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Way
Clark &amp;00 daughter Lirx:IL
Mr. ard Mrs. Wayne l\1-ickles
were calling on Mr. and Mrs.
Emmett Heiney of W h i t e 11
C ~ Sunday afternoon. Mrs.
Reta Barnhart went to join her
husband, Airman Gary Barnhart
who is stationed at South caro-

apert a weeken:J with their daughter arxl tamil,y, Mr. and Mrs.
Ron Wrigbt an:J son, Daniel, at
Basaet, VL
Alpha Barr recently enjoyed
a week's vecatioo Crom his em·
piO)'Il\ont with the C&amp;O Railroad.
Mr. and Mrs. Barr visited Mr.
and Mrs. Chester Messer aOO
children of Columbus, Mr. aoo
Mrs, Stanley Phlllip11 of Logan,
and Mr. and Mrs. Blair cadwal~
Iader of Seamon.
Mrs. Darrell Goff underwent

of Mayor Legar, unanimously approved Mrs. Walton {or the ap -

pointment . However, before mak·
ing his recommendation, the may ·
or read her application and one
from Mrs. Rowena H. Vaughan.
Mayor Legar said a verba( application had been entered in
behalf of Mrs . Thelma Lytle .
Mrs. Walton pointed out in
her application that she previ ·
ously had experience as treasurer for the city of Wellston.
Mayor Legar indicated it was
on the strength of this experience, plus the fact that Mrs.
Walton has oo other employ .
ment, that he decided to recommend her.
Cotmcil also again brought up
the possibiltty of combining the

duties or clerk and treasurer 1n
the village at the earliest possible date and agreed that the
solicitor should be contacted to
determine the legaJ problems Lnvolved.
In other activity, couneU reviewed an ordinance presented
by Mayor Legar regarding the
parking of stored or disabled
mooor vehicles, or vehicleparts,
on streets and even private prop.
erty inside town.
The ordinance proposal contained sections that would pro.
hibit the parking of WlOperative
motor vehicles on any proper ty, other than on a location where
a garage or repair shop for vehicles, is located.
The proposal also contained

sections where a vehicle lett
on public streets or right ~
ways over 24 hours in a disabled condition, or one parked
on private property over 72hourl,
in a similar state, may be Dr·
dered towed off and not released llltil towing and storage
charges arc- paid.
Council, however, decided Utat
the proposal needs further study,
and possible revision on the time
clauses, and also the part restricting the parking of dlaablod
vehicles to only garage or re·
pair shops.
No action on the first read·
ing of the ordinance was taken
and it was agreed that it wlll
be resubmitted at a later meet·
(Continued on Page 2)

The five-county meeting on
Leukocyte will be held Wednesday, Nov 20 , at the Epi.s~
copal Parish House, Porneroy, from 10 a .m. to 2:30 p.
m., according to C. E. Slakeslee, count.)· Extension agent.
Harry Barr, Extension Specialist, Ohio State University,
will discuss how leukocyte controJ will assist farmers in im.
proving herd health, feeding,
and management. All farmers
in the area are im•ited and to
bring a sample of milk with
them for testing.
Those wishing a dutch treat
lunch should call the extenston office to make reBerva-

·- '

tions.

White Devils

After Cassim
ATHENS, Ohio (UPO - Former heavyweight champion cassius Clay said here Mol'llay night
Uat "white devils" are trying
to prevent him from gaining exemption from the draft as a Black
MusUm minister.
Clay spoke at Memorial Au-

HONORED - Monday starU!d oot like any other d._,. for Franklin (Pete) Hepp, a Blaetbar
Auto Company employee. It concluded, however , with him hearing his fellow workers si~, ••For
He"s a Jolly Good Fellow." The occasion waaH$p's 50th arurlversary as an employee or the Pomeroy !inn. Above, Hepp holds a present ot an attractive watch as Blaettrar compaf\Y officials,
Fred Blaettnar and his son, John William Blaettnar Oank him. Hew started working for Bl.utt..
nar•s Nov. 18, 1918 when the finn operated a blacksmith shql, and sold Dort cars as a sldeUne.
Through the years, Hepp has seen the firm begin sellll"f!: Bui.cks in 1924, Pontiacs in 1933 and
GMC trucks 1 few years later. Hepp began his employment with Blaettnar, working during the
swnmer months, while he was still in school. He is the firm's head mechanic . - Sentinel Photo.

:~lo=~Oahl~::r:~~;Yanks

tour. Clay said the addresses are
designed to raise money to pay

Who Gave Canvass Planned

~~~~:s:ec:: ~::ii:~ Next Week by Drew Webster ~ost
tianity is hypocritlcal"lldphof\Y
in every sense of the word."
He urged the separation of the
races and predicted Negroes will
leave America in the fut1lre but
did not sa.y where they would go.

Commissioners to

Aceepl Maintenance

Plans for a door-to-door can ~
vass to raise funds 1n t h e
.. Gitts For the Yanks Who Gave
Program" were completed Monday night by Drew Webster Post
39, American Legion,
Members of the post, assisted by Boy Scoots, will m o v e
through the streets or Pomeroy

next Monday and Tuesday even-

Ings. A lool of bread will be
The Melp eount;y commis- left at each home and - Lesioners Monday awnwed reaolu- glomaires hope - a contribuUons accepting certain future tion Will be received at each

maintenance responalbUity for
various access aectlon1 of councy roads.
The aect1m1 are in connection wltll the oonst:ructlmln tile
new U. S. Route 33 and ROIU 7
areu. In other activity, t h e
commissioners awroved bllls
tor payment. AttendingwareRobert Clark and !IAiph W. Our a.

Casci for his work in member-ship. Cascl has qualified as .
member of the "Go Getter Chili!'
Hwmel also thanked members
ror their participation in the
Veterans Day program at Meigs
High School and thanked J o e
st.rWle, who represented the post
in a Veterans Day program for
the Pomeroy Elementary PTA.

Minersville Man

home.
The tund is used to remember veterans in hospitals durIng tile holiday season. The pro..
gram la carried out on a atateand
Jooeph It Hood, 57, Minersnatkl1al basis umually.
ville, waa admitted to Holzer
Two new members - Grover Medical Center, First Ave., at
C. Klein and Nlcllolas Sileam 10:40 p.m. Monday wttb a [rae.
were welcomed during Monday lured back . He woo tniured In a
night' a meeting .Presided over by !All It home. tna oondldoo Is
Commander Don Humel.
reported •• good.
Paul Cascl, Drat vice co mLOCAL TEMPS
Mrs. VIrgil F. Adkins, 54, Rt.
The temperature In POmeroy' a mander, reported that tile local 2 Letart, was a.dmiU:ed to the
downtoWn buslneoa district at post Ia 53 under Ita membership hospital at 1 p.m. Monday a11er
11:32 a.m. Ieday wu 36 de- quota for 1969. He aaked mem· a tall at her home. h sutler.
grees wltll light 8llOW nurrteo bora to work to · meet tbe goo[ ed a h'acturod len wrist. Sl1e
by Docentoer. llwDel thaDked to lilted In good &lt;Oildltlon.
ud overca~t llldes.

Injured In Fall

Guy Reuter and Virgie Hobstetter were reported conflned
to Veterans Memorial Hospital .
The saturday sociAl pthorlng
for November was announced for
Nov. 30. It will be a dance from
9 to midnight at the post home.
There will be a Uve orchestra
and an admission charge.
The death of Ed Brooks, AJ.
bany , a member f1 the post, wa1
reported .
Joe Stroole NJOOrU!d 011 a blnquet he attel'lded ln COlumbua
In obeervonce of tile 50th amJ.
"'' ersary ci the AmerlciD. lAilon.
on Nov. 9. Al10 attellCIID&amp; were

Lee Vaughan, Frllllk V........,and
George Hargraves. The lf'Mk"
waa Paul Harvo.Y.
A tape reCOI'dln8 of Harvo,y'o
talk taken at tile bonlplt woo

•

I
I

•

'I

".

llOIIIIced tllat four . . _ _ . will
be held acrooo tho -~~~ ......

.

memorato tile IDidon -

&gt;:r

plll'od by SIN&gt;Ie. stNllo .,_

-

...,.. The ,.,. lho 1:1111111
Dlllrlc:l will be at
Cll

·Lac&amp;-

April 23.
Reh'e-. , . _ _ . . ,

Elza Gilmore.

il.

&gt;:o

ill

!'•

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