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Warm and Cloudy 


Harm to day with a chance o f 
sho wers 
thro ugh 
to mo rro w. 
High 
y esterday , go ; 
lo w, 61. 
High to day mid so s; lo w, mid T h e C ir c l e v il l e H e r a l d 


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Artists, full lo cal news co v er* 
a« e. 
Wed n esd ay Sep temb er 2 0 , 19 6 7 
2 4 Pag es 
lOe Per Co p y 
8 4th Year 
_ _2 2 1 


Night of Violence 
Ends in Dayton 
CORPUS CHRISTI, Tex . (AP) , 
— The hermit knew the hurri­ 
cane 
was 
co ming 
but 
he j 
wo uldn’t run—no t until a judge 
made him do it. 
A handful o f stalwarts co m ­ 
mitted themselv es to ride o ut 
the blast in an o ld two -sto ry 
ho use in an island fishing v il­ 
lage. 
Refugees streamed no rthward 
in cars and trucks o r lied to 
ho meto wn shelters where they 
sang and danced, “ almo st like a 
fiesta.” 
'rile.se 
were 
so me 
o f 
the 
answers to a civ il defense o ffi­ 
cial’s questio n: 
“ Ho w do y o u 
get ready fo r so mething like 
this?” —the all-inclusiv e “ this” 
meaning Hurricane Beulah, a 
mo nster o f a sto rm slo wly trun­ 
dling to ward the lo wer Tex as 
co ast. 
Mo st residents o f Po rt Aran­ 
sas were ev acuated Tuesday , 
and ferry serv ice was sto pped. 
ITic o nly o ther entry , a farm 
ro ad do wn Padre Island, wras 
cut by rising waters Tuesday 
night. 
“ There are abo ut 20 perso ns 


i 
nmm 
t a : 


MCNAMARA ANNOLNC i<S ANTI-15ALUSTIC MISSILE! SYSTEM—Making a majo r po lit v speech 
at the Nth annual co nference o f United Press Internatio nal edito rs and publishers in San Fran­ 
cisco , Secretary o f Defense Ro bert S. McNamara anno unces (left) that the U.S. at the end o f 
this y s*ar will star! building a $5 billio n anti-ballistic missile sy stem fo r defense against Red 
( hina. Outside (right) abo ut SOU demo nstrato rs parade. 


Weed Crop Crops Up Again 


Burning-Smoke-Odor Law 
Defeated by City Solons 


Circlev ille City 
Co uncil 
ap­ 
pro v ed 
six o rdinances 
and de­ 
feated a sev enth during a 9 0- 
minute sessio n Tuesday night. 
Suffering defeat fo llo wing a 
third reading by a v o te o f 5-2 
was an o rdinance which wo uld 
restrict the burning o f rubbish 
and help to eliminate o bno x io us 
o do rs caused by burning gar­ 
b age . 
Prio r to a v o te, May o r Ben 
Go rdo n to ld so lo ns he’d v eto the 
measure if it were passed. He 
o bjected to a clause in the pro ­ 
po sed o rdinance that wo uld pro ­ 
hibit the burning o f leav es o n 
city streets. Go rdo n said “ y o u 
can pass all the o rdinances >o u 
want, but peo ple will still burn 
their leav es o n the streets.” He 
also o bjected to a pro v isio n that 
pro hibited 
burning within 
30 
lect o f a building. 
Vo ting in fav o r o f the o rdi­ 
nance were Ro bert Turuer, third 
ward, and J o hn J enkins, sec­ 
o nd ward Bo th ex pressed their 
disappo intment that the meas- 


Council Briefs 


Manry's Yawl 


Headed Down 


Mississippi 


So licito r 
Kenneth 
Ro bbins 
to ld co uncil they “ co uldn’t get 
any better legislatio n (o n weeds) 
than they 'v e go t no w." Sco lding 
the city fathers, Ro bbins said 
there sho uld be “ less talk and 
mo re pro perty o wners* names 
mentio ned" who let their weeds 
get o ut o f co ntro l. Ile said that 
he had asked a so licito r friend 
what Ins city was do ing 
abo ut 
the weed pro blem and he 
was 
(o bi “ We talk abo ut them fro m 
the first o f August until the first 
fro st." 


Catholic Dies 


After Torture 


By Red Guards 


G M Pads 


Output While 


Ford Is Idle 
HONG KONG (A P) — Pro - 
Mao ist Red Guards in .Shanghai 
tied 
a Chinese Catho lic to a 
cro ss and then sto ned him and 
burned him w ith ho t ii ens, a 
Ho ng Ko ng businessman repo rt­ 
ed to day . 
The 43-y ear-o ld Chinese busi­ 
nessman, who recently returned 
fro m Shanghai, said the 
Red 
Guards first arrested the man 
late in August when I hey saw 
him wearing a crucifix 
The 
Red 
Guards 
then to o k 
him to a scho o l building they 
were using as a barracks and 
tried him o n charges o f billo w­ 
ing “ running do g religio n” in­ 
stead o f the tho ughts o f Chair­ 
man Mao Tse-tung, he said. 
A big cro wd o f stu d en ts and 
f.cd Gu ard s at the trial sho uted 
thro ugho ut, “ Kill him and cruci­ 
fy him !” The businessman said. 
After the trial, the Christian 
was tux ! to a cro ss Hie Red 
Guards put up in the scho o l 
J aril. 
First they threw sticks and 
sto nes at him. Then so me Red 
Guards heated iro n ro ds and 
burned him, he said. 
The businessman, who gav e 
his name but asked that it no t 
be used to pro tect relativ es still 
in China, said the “ Christian" 
a g o n i z e d 
scream s 
f iiiaily 
bro ught Co mmunist Chinese au­ 
tho rities 
who fo rced 
the 
Red 
Guards to giv e him up. The man 
repo rtedly died later iii a Shang­ 
hai ho spital. 
The llo ng Ko ng man said he 
was to ld the sto ry Ix ith by wit­ 
nesses and by Shanghai po lice 
so urces. 


DETROIT (AP) — A to p Unit-i 
cd Auto Wo rkers Unio n o fficial 
say s General Mo to rs Co rp. is 
“ stealing as much o f the mar­ 
ket” as it can while Fo rd Mo to r 
Co . is idled by a UAW strike. 
GM is “ piling o n as much 
pro ductio n 
as 
po ssible,” 
said 
Leo nard Wo o dco ck, a UAW v ice 
president and head o f the un­ 
io n’s GM department. The co m ­ 
pany denied the charge. 
With Fo rd shut do wn by so me 
I GO,(HK) UAW wo rkers in .suppo rt 
o f demands fo r a new co ntract, 
I Wo o dco ck said GM s pro ductio n 
! o f HNW mo del cars “ is greater 
I no w' than at any time in o ther 
j mo del starts." Wo o dco ck said 
he to ured 13 cities hav ing GM 
i plants last week, meeting with 
I lo cal unio n o fficials. 
“ Our pro ductio n schedule to ­ 
day is unchanged since befo re 


j the selectio n o f a strike target,” 
a GM spo kesman said. 
The UAW has named Fo rd as 
the target fo r a labo r co ntract 
that wo uld 
replace the 
three- 
j y ear pact which ex pired Sept. 6 
and 
set 
a 
pattern 
fo r settle- 
j ments 
at 
GM 
and 
Chry sler 
J Co rp. 
Co ntracts at 
the latter 
also ex pired Sept. G, but the un­ 
io n has co ntinued wo rking with­ 
o ut a co ntract. 
Labo r 
demands 
include 
a 
I guaranteed 
annual 
inco me, 
a 
J share 
ut 
co rpo rate 
pro fits, 
a 
I “ substantial” pay hike, bo o sts 
I in fringe benefits and unpro v ed 
. wo rking co nditio ns. Bo th unio n 
and Fo rd o fficials hav e indicat- 
' eel tin* strike wo uld last a mo nth 
I o r lo nger. 
Fo rd 
and 
I i AVV7 
nego tiato rs 
a"uin 
put no neco no mic 
issues 
( un the agenda fo r their meeting 


I to day . 
Fo rd s unio n 
wo rkers to day 


I began drawing their first strike 
; benefits—ranging 
fro m 
$20 
a 
week to r an unmarried wo rker 
j to $9 0 fo r a wo rker with a fault- 
j Iv . The benefits are ex pected lo 
drain appro x imately $4 millio n 


I weekly fro m the unio n’s strike 
fund, currently co ntaining $6? 
i m i l l i o n 
I 


Frank Barnhill, finance chair­ 
man 
and 
first ward 
co uncil­ 
man. to ld the so lo ns that 
a re­ 
quisitio n metho d sho uld be es­ 
tablished fo r the city . He po int­ 
ed to the city serv ice depart­ 
ment as an ex ample where re­ 
quisitio ns sho uld be helpful. He 
no ted 
that 
requisitio n 
fo rms 
sho uld be left with the audito r 
and the sy stem wo uld aid in 
a 
mo re effectiv e o peratio n o f city 
go v ernment and spending. 


Barnhill also info rmed co un­ 
cil that he had receiv ed sev eral 
co mplaints co ncerning two fen­ 
ces that had been erected in his 
ward; o ne in the v icinity o f At­ 
water Scho o l and the o ther 
iii 
the 
Garden 
City 
and 
Circle 
Driv e area. He said the o bjec­ 
tio nable fence in Garden 
City 
was a matter “ to r the selling 
co mpany ” and 
in 
this 
case 
wo uld be the J . B. Sto ut Co . 


Israeli Guns 


Sink 3 UAR 


Patrol Boats 


Roundtown 


, 111111 ll M ll ll 111111111 •< 11111111111111111' 


POLICEMAN 
Wes 
Barto n 
came to the aid o f the senio r 
SOS Club o f Circlev ille 
High 
Scho o l y esterday , but no t in the 
manner o ne might supjMi.se o f a 
law ut fleer . . . 
Barto n and his wile do nated 
a ro aster to the club to r use in 
their bo o th at Circlev ille 
High 
Scho o l fo o tball games, 


£ A V $ 


Pope Paul Said 


Much Improved 


VATICAN CITY (AP) — A 
new medical ex aminatio n bas 
sho wn that Po pe VT is greatly 
reco v ered fro m his illness, He 
may be able to preside jierso nal* 
ily o v er Un* o pening ceremo ny o f 
the wo rldwide sy no d o f bisho ps 
Sept. 29 , Vatican so urces said 
to day . 
The ex aminatio n, the info rm­ 
ants said, was co mpleted Tues­ 
day by Pro f GugUclmo Gualdi 
o f the radio lo gical clinic o f the 
Univ ersity 
o f 
Ro me 
at 
tile 
Po pe’s apartments in the Vati­ 
can. 


Keeping Score 


On the Rainfall 
GAME pro tecto rs get 
so me 
queer questio ns directed 
their 
way . . , To m Weldo n, Picka­ 
way 
Co unty ’s 
game 
pro tecto r 
believ cs he has had o ne o f the 
o ddest queries o n reco rd , . .One 
day he receiv ed a pho ne call 
fro m 
un 
unidentified 
perso n 
wanting to kno w if he needed a 
fishing license if he just used a 
cane po le and dead bait. 


KSin lMll l u r ill U n t o 
I*« • I lu ll 
I miHok u t S a 
o i. 
'I i 
t r i n a l fo r s e p t 
lo d a t e 
V t 0 1,11 I m St Bl 
t o <1,0 * 
lll' IIII N ll 
til 
ISH ll 
N o r m a l at o rt- J a n u a r y I 
m il h itler J a n u a r y I 
l l l v e r 
N (tartan 
s lintel ,. 


Warm and Cloudy 


W arm today with a chance ai 
showers 
through 
tom orrow. 
High 
yesterday, KO; 
low, 
si. 
Utah today mid sos; low, mid 
♦•os. 
T he Circleville Herald 


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for state, 
national 
and 
world 
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age. 


Wednesday September 20, 1967 
24 Pages 
10c Per Copy 
84th Year— 221 
Hurricane Toll Rising 


Many Sing, Dance B e rt U t e N ig h f o f V io le n c e 
While Stern, Rages £ 
E n d l 


a***£& 


MCNAMARA ANNOUNCES ANTI-BALLISTIC MISSILE SYSTEM—Making a m ajor policy speech 
at the nth annual conference of United P ress International editors and publishers in San F ra n ­ 
cisco, Secretary of Defense Robert S. M cN am ara announces (left) that the U.S. at the end of 
this y ear will start building a $5 billion anti ballistic missile system for defense against Red 
China. Outside (right) about 200 dem onstrators parade. 


Weed Crop Crops l/p Again 
Burning-Smoke-Odor Law 
Defeated by City Solons 


it 
was sim ilar to an existing 
ordinance. He noted, however, 
tho defeated ordinance specified 
types of containers to be used 
for b u r n i n g and placed a 
restriction on the location 
for 
burning leaves etc. 


JEN K IN S com m ented that he 
“ couldn’t understand the may* 
o r’s feelings’’ on the ordinance. 


★ 
★ 
Council Briefs 


Seem s 
a vin 
days. 
Boyd 


Circleville City 
Council 
ap ­ 
proved 
six ordinances 
and de­ 
feated a seventh during a 90- 
m inute session Tuesday night. 
Suffering defeat following a 
third reading by a vote of 5-2 
was an ordinance which would 
restrict the burning of rubbish 
and help to elim inate obnoxious 
odors caused by burning gar- 
barge. 


P rior to a vote, M ayor Ben 
Gordon told Solons he’d veto the 
m easure if it w ere passed. He 
objected to a clause in the pro­ 
posed ordinance that would pro­ 
hibit the burning of leaves on 
city streets. Gordon said “ you 
can pass all the ordinances you 
w ant, but people will still burn 
... 
their leaves on the stre e ts." He I. S w m s„ Bs 
ho* ‘‘ e v z o n e s 
also objected to a provision that 1 “v,n« ' * '« * Problem s 
lie*, 
prohibited 
burning 
within 
301 ^ 
s. ;} com plaint lodged 
by 
f , 
, „ 
Boyd Horn, fourth w ard coun- 
Of a budding. 
J 
Qf( 
^ 


Voting in favor of the ordi- discussion of the annual proli 
nance w ere Robert Turner, third |cin 
w ard, and John Jenkins, sec ] 
_____ 
end w ard Both expressed thoir 
disappointm ent th at the m eas- 


Catholic Dies 


After Torture 


By Red Guards 


HONG KONG (AR) — Pro- 
Maoist Red G uards in Shanghai 
lied 
a Chinese Catholic to a 
cross and then stoned him and 
burned him with hot lions, a 
Gong Kong businessm an report­ 
ed today. 
The 43-yearold Chinese busi 


ure 
failed. 
T urner 
noted that • In agreem ent with T urner, Jen- 
considerable tim e was spent in kins felt the ordinance would 
drafting the legislation and that also help elim inate 
obnoxious 


CORPUS CHRISTI, Tex. (A P) 
— The herm it knew die h u rri­ 
cane 
was 
com ing 
but 
he 
wouldn’t run—not until a judge 
m ade him do it. 
A handful of stalw arts com ­ 
m itted them selves to ride out 
the blast in an old tw o-story 
house in an island fishing vil- 
age 
Refugees stream ed northw ard 
in ears and trucks or fled to 
hom etown .shelters where they 
sang and danced, “ alm ost like a 
fiesta.” 
These 
w ere 
som e 
of 
the 
answ ers to a civil defense offi­ 
cial’s question: “ How do you 
get 
ready for som ething like 
this?”—the all-inclusive “ th is” 
m eaning H urricane Beulah, a 
m onster of a storm slowly tru n ­ 
dling tow ard the lower Texas 
coast. 
Most residents of P o rt A ran­ 
sas w ere evacuated T uesday, 
and ferry service was stopped. 
The only other entry, a farm 
road down Padre Island, was 
cut by rising w aters Tuesday 
night. 
“ T here are about 20 persons 


left over th e re ,” said a deputy 
sheriff. "They are pretty well 
cut off now and J don’t thing 
they could get out if they w ant­ 
ed to.” 
He said they w ere in “ an old 
two-story house th a t has w ith -J nigher than IOO miles per hour ^ 
f V 
stood a num ber of hurricanes s<nt 
rv t‘ within IO mile^ of 4 ( 
*,' t' \ 
and they think they will be all Brownsville today, indicating a 
rig h t.” 
slight turn tow ard the T exas 
Refugees 
fleeing 
northw ard i Coast, 
drove as far as San 
Antonio, 275 
This 
placed 
the 
eye, 
the 


in Dayton 


W ednesday 
BRO W N SV ILLE, 
Tex. 
( A P i 
- H urricane Beulah slashing at hirn(,fl 
W'**1 
T exas and Mexico with winds m orning after a street corner 
rally protesting the slaying of a 
vice squad detec- 


DAYTON, Ohio (AP)—Day- j m an C harles T ate at the rally , 
ton’s 
renewed 
racial 
trouble attended by about OOO persons. 


a 
live led to vandalism , window 
breaking and som e looting on 
the city’s west side. 
A survey by police W ednes­ 
day m orning disclosed no fur- 


Solicitor 
Kenneth 
Robbins 
told council they “ couldn’t get 
any better legislation (on weeds) 
than they’ve got now.” Scolding 
the city fathers, Robbins said 
there should be “ less talk and 
m ore property ow ners’ nam es 
m entioned” who let their weeds 
get out of control. Ile said that 
he had asked a solicitor friend 
what his city was doing 
about 
the weed problem and lie 
was 
told “ H e talk about them from 
the first of August until the first 
frost.” 


F rank B arnhill, finance ch air­ 
m an 
and 
first 
w ard 
council­ 
m an, told the solons that a re- 
I quisition method should be 
es­ 
tablished for the city. He point- 


Youth Changes 
Murder Story 


CINCINNATI (A P )—G ary Lee 
M cKee’s 
attorneys 
say 
they 
have changed their m ind and 
now w ant the 17-year-old M arine 
recruit to take a lie detector 
test on his statem ent about the 
tale 
of 
two 
m issing 
F airfax 
boys. 
McKee told a m inister and 
police a t San Diego, C alif., last 
T hursday he killed the youngs 
ters. L ater he repudiated his 
the tran sfer and appropriation statem ent. 
The 
boys, 
John 
of money were as follows. 
Hundley and Jam es M cQueary, 
A SI,500 appropriation from j have not been seen since Oct. 
the Street C onstruction 
Main­ 
tenance and R epair Fund for the 
installation of a traffic light at 


odors caused by som e residents 
I who burn their garbage. 
Topping the list of ordinances 
gaining the city solons’ approv­ 
al was legislation granting the 
Shell Oil Co. authority to cut the 
I curb and install en trances and 
exits along the site of a propos* 
led service station on W. Main 
I St. 
The service station is to be 
constructed on land purchased 
from the Ankrom L um ber Co. 
The legislation w as passed fol­ 
lowing its second reading under 
a suspension of the rules. 
Five legislative 
acts .gaining 
council 
approval 
dealing with 


then 
Attys. 
Ja m e s 
L. 
O strander 
and John A. IJoyd Jr. said late 
the intersection of S. Court and T uesday they have re c o n sid e r 
Ohio Sts.; a $175 appropriation ed their original advice to the 
for the purchase of a new ad* 
(Continued on P age 2) 


“ We w ant justice,” he added. 
Shortly after the rally broke 
up, 
reports 
of trouble began 
trickling into police headquart­ 
ers. 
O’Connor described it as “ a 
general hell-raising situation.” 
He said rocks w ere throw n at 
autos, a few people in cars w ere 
assaulted and that a few blocks 
along Third Street were shut 


m iles from Brownsville, moved 
W eather B ureau said, at Boca 
in 
heavily 
loaded 
ears 
and 
Chica, a land extension of se v e r-1 
disturbances, but o ffic ia l 
trucks, som e of them towing big 
a1 m iles east and slightly north reP°r^ed about IMI ai rests and a 
pleasure boats. 
' of Brownsville. 
few n,inor injuries as young Ne* off to traffic. 


In 
Brownsville 
about 
5,000 
T hree m ore persons died as a gr° Ha" 8’L dalJ s<J ab° Ut in thc 
A 
state 
li'-uor 
^ or'* 
wa!» 
persons—about one-tenth of the j 
0ff froIn 
st(>rni when a 31 ea 
luesuay. 
looted ease by case and m e r 
population, gathered in schools, 
j tornado struck Palacios 
about 
F)ne case 
arson vvas rt*P°rf- chandise also 
was taken 
from a 
churches and toe civie center to 
halfway between Houston and 
Police Maj. G rover O’Con- drujr store, grocery 
and jew elry 
escape the hurricane. 
Corpus 
Christi 
on 
M atagorda I nor* A niattress in a house was j store, polio* 
A total of 1,161 persons crow d­ 
ed into the auditorium of the 
civic center, the largest shelter 
in Brownsville. 
In fam ily groups, they drew 
together in circles of chairs, 
w atching 
their 
children 
play 


said. 
Police moved into the area 
with two van-type trucks, round- 
„ 
_____ 
__ 
^ 
ing up troublem akers. 
strayed and 
the tornado forced ^ i o National G uard rem ained 
“ There 
was confirm .ilion of 
evacuation of a hospital. 
on standby alert at nearby Troy gunshots but they w ere not di- 


Winds at 
daylight w ere ISH ilS 
,K,liCC fT 
,F)p.<M' 
wllh 
T * reefed 
at 
police,” 
O’Connor 


Bay. The sheriff’s departm ent, 
m aking the death report, said 
four of five buildings w ere de­ 


soaked with gasoline and set 
afire, but dam age was slight. 
About 250 
m em bers of the 


and 
feeding 
them selves 
from ^ P 
*n the hurricane m eaning ln)U^ e(j aroaj which was report 
gear 
clam ped 
down 
on 
the sai(J 
..,t was a vcry m inim a, 


its strength had fallen from e a r­ 
lier 
estim ates 
of 
up 
to 
IO') 
m .p.h. but it rem ained one of 
the m ost m uscular storm s ever 
recorded. 
With the tnree killed at Paia- 


ed quite at 3 a.m . today. 
The trouble spot, along a 12- 
block 
area 
of 
West 
Third 
Street, was the scene of racial 
disorders last July and rioting 
in Septem ber 1900 which was 


portable ice chests filled with 
food and drink. 
“ It’s alm ost like a fiesta,” 
said Leroy ll. H averhill J r., 28, 
a social w orker. “ People are 
laughing and enjoying getting 
together. The w orst p a rt will 
com e tom orrow when m any of 
them will go hom e and find 
their houses gone.” 
Roderick Devine, 38, lived in 
a prim itive 
shelter of 
plank, 
driftwood and rocks n ear the 
north end of P adre Island, the 
pencil-thin strip of sand th a t 
stretches along the T exas coast. 
At first he refused officials’ 
request to leave. Then Justice of 
the P eace Johnny R oberts g a v e 
_______ 
_ 
^ ___________^ 
him a d irect order to leave th* \ fun 
fjrs^ ^ v some 
jn Barbee, a Negro becam e fright- 
island or take a chance on going I — ; 
-------------------- 
**- ■ I 
* ---• 
to court. 
Devine finally le ft—but he re ­ 
fused 
a 
helicopter 
ride 
and 
hiked across the bridge with his 
cat. 


d os. the toll of Beaulah reached finally put down with National 
27 since it form ed 12 days ago in Guard help, 
the A tlantic Ocean. 
qrie latest unrest in tile pre- 
T om adoes 
are 
a 
frequent dom inantly Negro area began 
com panion 
of 
hurricanes 
and building 
up a tter 
Robert 
El* 
the W eather B ureau said they wood B arbee, 41, of Findlay was 
could be expected as far as 80 shot in the back tw ice early 


thing,” he said, explaining that 
there were two cases of private 
guards at business places firing 
shots 
into 
the 
air 
as 
gang 
gathered at scattered points. 
Most ofthe arrests w ere on 
charges of disturbing the peace, 
inciting to riot and 
b re a k in 1 
and entering. 


m iles from the center. 
More than 30,000 Texans fled 
far inland or took refuge in 
hometown shelters. The flight 


Sunday night as he fled from 
vice squadsm an R obert S. Col­ 
lier. 
Collier, 30, w earing 
plainer* 
was orderly and appeared to be flies, had stopepd barbee, 
ap- 
m ostly cheerful, even taken a s, parently thinking he had a gun. 


neighboring M atam oras, M exi-jcned and fled 
co, officials reported fear a n d 1 
The “ gun’’ turned out to a 
confusion 
as residents scram - smoking pipe in 


Delay Decision 
On Rate Hike 
For Medicare 


ness m an, who recently returned ^ 
thc cjtv servjce depart- 
from Shanghai, said Me 
cd m ent as an exam ple where re ­ 
exam ple 
quisitions should be helpful. He 
noted 
that 
requisition 
form s 


M cKee fam ily because of cov­ 
erage the ease has received in 
news m edia. 
In th eir statem ent they said 
McKee broke em otionally d u r­ 
ing M arine training and “ F a b ­ 
ricated the false confession as 
a m eans of getting back to Cin- 
I einnati. 
We 
are hopeful th at 
the M arine authorities will take 
this disturbed condition into con­ 
sideration in resolving the m att- 


DETROIT (A P) — A top Unit- ] cr of his future.” 
ed Auto W orkers Union official 
McKee 
rem ained 
today 
in 
says G eneral M otors Corp. 
is I H am ilton County Jail pending 
“ stealing as much of the m ar 


GM Pads 


Output While 


Ford Is Idle 


k et” as it can while Ford Motor 
Co. is idled by a UAW strike. 
GM is “ piling on as m uch 
production 
as 
possible,” 
said 
Leonard Woodcock, a HAW vice 
president and head of the un- 
G uards first arrested the man 
late in August when they saw 
him w earing a crucifix 
should be left with the auditor I ion’s GM d epartm ent. The com* 
The 
Red 
G uards 
then took ( an(| the system would aid in 
a I pany denied the charge. 
m ore effective operation of city 
governm ent and spending. 
him to a school building they 
w ere using as a b arrack s and 
tried him on charges of follow­ 
ing “ running dog religion” in­ 
stead of the thoughts of C hair­ 
m an Mao Tsc tung, he said. 
A big crowd of students and 


With Ford shut down by some 
160,000 UAW w orkers in support 
of dem ands for a new contract, 
Woodcock said GM s production 
‘is g reater 
B arnhdl also inform ed coun­ 
cil th at he had received several of 1968 model cars 
com plaints concerning two fen- now than at any tim e in other 
ees that had been erected in his! model sta rts.” Woodcock said 
bed G uards at the trial shouted 
w ard; one in the vicinity of At- he toured 13 cities having GM 
throughout. “ Kill him and cruel-1 w ater School and the other 
in j plants last week, m eeting with 


rem oval to California w here he 
is 
w anted 
by 
the M arines on 
a 
charge 
of 
being 
absent 
w ithout official leave. 
M cKee is also from F airfax, 
one of C incinnati’s eastern sub­ 
urbs. 
Police 
Clue! 
Jam es 
Finan 
jf F airfax said a lie detect­ 
or test e a rlie r Tuesday showed a 
16-year-old boy im plicated in the 
m issing 
youngsters’ death 
by 
McKee knew nothing of the case. 
The 16-year-old boy form erly 


Manry's Yawl 


Headed Down 


Mississippi 


bled for shelter. 
The presence of her eye over 
a little bit of land m ade her 
course still uncertain. 
At one point, the W eather Bu 


W ASHINGTON ( A P ) — The 
a holder of I nation’s elderly are supposed to 
find out by O ct. I w hether the $3 
a month they now pay for doc- 
tor-bill insurance under m edi­ 
care will be increased for the 


sailor 
and 
adventurer 
who 
crossed the A tlantic in a 13-foot 


thc victim ’s belt. 
Collier an eight-year \e te ra n 
of the force, was charged with 
m anslaughter Monday. He plead­ 
ed innocent at his arraignm ent coming two y ears, but the an- 
reau predicted the eye would and was released on his own nouncenient m ay be delayed, 
strike Corpus C hristi, 160 m iles recognizance. 
It was learned the adm inistra- 
up the coast from Brownsville 
The Dayton Alliance for liac- tion is considering asking Con­ 
and preparations for the blow' ial Equality (D A R E), objected gress to extend the date by 
I already neared completion. 
to Collier’s release, and called which John .W G ardner, seen* 
“ She s about the biggest, nas- the rally Tuesday night. 
tory of H ealth, Education 
and 
“ The 
erackertop 
who 
shot W elfare, 
is 
required 
to 
an 
your brother was freed and there nounce the new- rate. 
was no bail." said DARE chair- 
Sources said dep artm en t offi­ 
cials would like to see the date 


Hest storm I’ve ever seen,” said 
the veteran pilot of a Navy bur- 
ST. LOUIS, Mo. (A P )—R ob-j ricane hunter plane after flying 
ert 
M anry, 
a 
new spaperm an, j through tile eye. 
The W eather B ureau issued a 
tornado w arning for the area 
boat 
and 
is 
“ rediscovering from Corpus C hristi to Baffin 
A m erica” 
in 
a 
27-foot 
yaw l, Bay, about 30 m iles south of 
planned to resum e his cruise Corpus C hristi. One tornado was 
today. 
sighted 30 m iles south of Corpus 
M anry left his Job as a copy Christi, 
editor on the Cleveland Plain 
F or com parison, iam ous hut- 
D ealer to sail the A tlantic in 
his 
13-foot 
“ T inkerbclle” 
two 
y ears ago. He w rote a book 
about th a t trip and will w rite 
another about his cu rren t y e a r­ 
long sailing tour. 
M anry 
sailed 
to 
E ngland 
alone. 
Mrs. M anry; sons Robin, 
16, 
Douglas, 13, and the fam ily dog 
are m aking this trip. 
The fam ily stopped off in St. 
Louis to have the 
re 
had 
dow n the Illinois 
River. 
He I storm hit 


ricane C arla, which struck the 
Texas coast Sept. l l , 1961, had 
winds 
e s t i m a t e d 
at 
175 
m .p.h.—only 
slightly 
higher 
than Beulah. Although a half 
million persons fled inland, 40 
persons died and dam age was 
estim ated at $500 million. 
Ham radio operators reported 
the tiny town of Valle Hermoso, 
Mexico, 
15 
m iles 
south 
of 
Brownsville, was alm ost wiped 


Mid-East Expert 


Is AP Speaker 


COLUMBUS, 
Ohio 
(A P) 
C arven Hudgins, form er C airo i m any pending m edicare propos* 


extended 
until 
Congress 
has 
com pleted action on medicare 
provisions in the Social Security 
bill—probably not until N ovem ­ 
ber. 
D epartm ent 
officials 
sac 


iuis to have the yaw l’s m ast out as the hurricane winds swept ton 
Hudgins travels 
m ounted. M anry said the m ast through. 
M any 
resident 
had of miles each year v 
d to be taken down to sail been 
evacuated 
before 
the w 
«nnt<»r 


lived in F airfax, but his fam ily said he is using the auxiliary ] 
No deaths or injuries w ere re­ 
moved to Indianapolis this year. 


tv him !” Tile businessm an said. I tile 
G arden 
City 
and 
Circle 
A fter the trial, the C hristian Drive area. He said the objee- 
vvas tux! to a cross the Red turnable fence in G arden 
City 
put lip 
in the school 


and 
Red 
and 


G uards 
J arc!. 
F irst they threw sticks 
stones at him . Then some 
G uards heated iron rads 
burned him , he said. 
The businessm an, 
who gave 
his nam e but asked th at it not 
Ik; used to protect relatives still 
in China, said the “ C hristian” 
a g o n i z e d 
scream s 
finally 
brought Com m unist Chinese au­ 
thorities 
who forced the 
Red 
G uards to give him up. 'I In* m an 
reportedly died later iii a Shanor I rai,*e Fo 
hoi hospital. 
The Ilong Kong m an said he 
w as told the story both by wit­ 
nesses and by Shanghai pollee 
sources. 


was a m atter “ for the selling 
com pany” and 
in 
this 
ease 
would be the J. B. Stout Co. 


local union officials. 
"(Mu* production schedule to­ 
day is unchanged since Indore 
the selection of a strik e ta rg e t,” 
a GM spokesm an said. 
The UAW has nam ed Ford as 
the targ et for a labor contract 
BARNHILL 
said 
the 
other th a t would 
replace the 
three- 
fence 
problem was also a 
m at- y e a r pact which expired Sept. 6 
and 
set 
a 
pattern 
for settle­ 
m ents 
at 
GM 
and 
Chrysler 
(Continued on Page 2) 


illllilllllllllllllllllillllllllllllllillill 
Roundtown 


illlllllM lllllllllllllllllllllltlllllliiill 


POLICEMAN 
Wes 


Keeping Score 


On the Rainfall 


Corp. 
C ontracts at 
the latter 
also expired Sept. 6, but the un­ 
ion has continued working with­ 
out a contract. 
Labor 
dem ands 
include 
a 
Barton j guaranteed 
annual 
income, 
a 
aid of the senior share of corporate 
profits, 
a 
“ substan tial” pay hike, boosts 
iii fringe benefits and im proved 
working conditions. Both union 
and Ford officials have indicat­ 
ed the strike would last a month 
or longer. 


SOS Cluli of Circleville 
High 
School yesterday, but not in the 
m anner one m ight suppose of a 
law officer . . . 
B arton and his wile donated 
a ro aster to the club lor use in 
their booth at Circleville 
High 
School football gam es. 


ll.iiiif.UI fur ZI Hour 
JVriotl 
I ih U iik n t S a. lit. 
Trad* 
V« I ii.* I for S r p t . lo d a lf . 
I 
ii 
Nor ih .i I for H<*U*. to dale 
...... 
I S I 
• I I-'.II I NT I* .(ii IN * ll 
N orm al aine** January I 
ll.un 
Vim.*! hind* January I 
ZS.3.1 
IU Vi* i 
2.1(1 
Nun rlat* 
7:19 
h u n irl 
,, 
7:3.7 


GAME protectors get 
som e 
queer questions directed 
their 
way . . . Tom Weldon, P icka­ 
way 
County's 
gam e 
protector 
believes he has had one of the 
oddest queries on record . . .One 
day he received a phone call 
irom 
an 
unidentified 
person 
w anting to know if lie needed a 


Israeli Guns 


Sink 3 (JAR 


Patrol Boats 


TEL AVIV (A P) — 
israeli 
tank gunners sank three E gyp­ 
tian patrol boats carrying about 
45 arilled and helm eted soldiers 
today after Egypt tw ice tried 
to ferry them down the blocked 
Suez 
C anal,an 
Israeli 
arm ed 
forces spokesm an said. 
About 75 E gyptians in fatigue 
uniform s 
jum fied 
from 
each 
craft into the eanal after tanks 
fired on 
them 
at daw n 
and 
again 
about 
2^a 
hours 
later, 
sources said. They w ere seen 
struggling in the w ater and sev* 
Ford 
and 
UAW negotiators 
j e**al casualties w ere reported, 
again put noneconom ic 
issues 
An E gyptian official in Cairo 
on tin* agenda for th eir m eeting denied the Israeli claim , ch arg ­ 
ing th at the Israelis opened fire 
without 
provocation on 
E gyp­ 
tian 
i>ositions 
across 
the 
100-yard wide canal. Ile m ain­ 
tained no Egyptian boats were 
on the w aterw ay. 
Israeli observers 
iii Tel Aviv 
accused E gypt of attem pting to 
create tension to coincide with 
the opening sessions of the U.N. 
j G eneral A ssem bly in New York. 


engine and will not do m uch ported im m ediately 
sailing 
on the M ississippi, hut 
E arlier 
Beulah 
had 
the m at is cluttering the deck. 
M anry sailed from Cleveland, 
through the G reat L akes 
and 
down tile Illinois to St. Louis. 
Ile will go on across the Gulf 
of M exico to the B aham as Is­ 
lands. 
The fam ily will spend Ja n u ­ 
ary through M arch in the Ba­ 
ham as then sail up the A tlantic 
seaboard and through the St. 


chief of bureau and now cduca 
tion editor for the Associated 
Press, 
will 
be 
the 
principal 
speaker Oct. 14 at the fall m eet­ 
ing of The A ssociated P ress So 
eiety of Ohio in Cleveland. 
Hudgins, 43, is an expert on 
the Middle E ast and was ex­ 
pelled from Egypt by P resident 
N asser because N asser object­ 
ed to Hudgins' stories on 
the 
brew ing A rab-Israeli war. 
Now working out of Washing* 
thousands 
isiting m a­ 
jor education centers and re ­ 
porting on m eetings of educa­ 
tor; 


als could require a rate* increase 
above w hatever increase the de­ 
partm ent m ight now find neces­ 
sary. 
One proposal, now tieing hot Is 
debated, would add the cost of 
prescription drugs to m edicare 
benefits. 
A dm inistration 
offi­ 
cials have said this would m ean 
raising the ra te by 50 cents to 
$1. The governm ent contributes 
an equal am ount. 
G ardner said last week he is 
against adding drugs to medi 
care before he gets a final task 
force report on the issue next 
June I. 
The Social Security package. 
The APSO m eeting will fie! j” ( ^ d in g m edicare, has passed 
been hel(1 at the Sheraton Cleveland I ine ,,ouse aml now is »» 
Sen- 
blam ed for 24 d e a th s-2 3 in the 1 Hotel Oct. 14-15. 
(Continue*! on Page 2) 
-j, 
!_______________ 
Brownsville Mostly Deserted; 


Water, Debris HamperT ravel 


BROWNSVILLE, 
Tex. 
(A P) 
As H urricane Beulah’s Bere* 
Law rence Seaway, returning to est winds raked this southern- 
Cleveland. 
“ We’re 
iii hock up to our 
necks to m ake this trip ,” said 
M alin, “ but I think the result­ 
ing Ixiok m ay in* revealing.” 


today. 
F ord's union 
w orkers today 
began draw ing their first strike 
benefits—ranging 
from 
$20 
a 
week lur an un m arried worker 
to $30 for a w orker with a fam i­ 
ly. The benefits are expected to 
drain approxim ately $4 million 
w eekly from the union’s strike 
fund, currently containing $67 
m illion 
| 


Pope Paul Said 


Much Improved 


most Texas city today, police 
patrolled the streets incessant­ 
ly—tile streets not blocked by 
debris. 
One point they couldn’t get to 
was 
a 
residential 
fire. 
The 
house lit up the sky as it burned 
to the ground like a brilliant 
sunset even as torrents of rain 
fell. 
Pow er was out all over the 
virtually 
isolated 
city. 
T ele­ 
phone com m unications w ere al- 
] most 
non existent, 
and 
police 
lined up to m ake radio tele- 
1 phone calls to re|M>rt the wide- 


ate. 
HEW officials say an ex ten ­ 
sion of the Get. l 'd a t e m ight 
save a lot of adm inistrative con­ 
fusion. 
An “open enrollm ent” period 
of Uiree m onths is supposed to 
begin Oct. I for elderly persons 
to join tile voluntary doctor bill 
were 
shattered. 
Roofs 
w ere insurance plan 
But flu- period 
dam aged. Police w atched two would have to be reopened if no 


VATICAN CITY (A P ) — A 
new m edical exam ination has 
shown that Pope VT is greatly 
recovered from his illness. He 
may be able to preside |K*rsonal- 
ily over the opening ceremony of] spread dam age, 
the worldwide synod of bishops 
Sept. 29, V atican sources said 
today. 
The exam ination, the inform ­ 
ants said, was com pleted T ues­ 
day by Prof Guglielm o G uakii 
of the radiological clinic of the 
U niversity 
of 
Rome 
at 
the 
Pope s apartm ents in the V ati­ 
can. 


huge sheet iron buildings as the 
pounding 
winds 
(iceled 
them 
like they w ere potatoes. The 
sheet iron rolled into odd-shaped 
pieces under B eulah’s fury. 
A huge tow er supporting a 
m am m oth 
sign 
was 
held 
by 
4-Inch and 6-inch steel tubing 
which flipped iii the winds like 
light fishing rods. O ther bill­ 
boards shredded in the wind like 
brittle paper. A huge lum ber­ 
yard shed was split in half. A 
w arehouse 
was edged into a 
street. 
At least a third of this old bo­ 
der city’s streets w ere blocked 


extension w ere prov id cd and Au­ 
rate had to be changed because 
of congressional action 


D A S S 


by debris dropped by Beulah. 
The Brownsville W eather Bu- j G iant royal palm s, signboards, 
reau station w as shut down and 
abandoned, part of its roof gone. 
But the police reported it took 
F irst, 
their ra d a r tow er 
was 
som e doing to get the m en out. 


trees, dem olished buildings and 
accum ulations of trash blocked 
flu* throughfares. 
W ater was curb deep at some 
points. T here was little or no 
toppled, then they lost their pre ' flooding in the city, but winds 
m ary pow er, then the em ergen- jdid their dam age, 
ey power, then flu* telephones. 
Only police patrols and lire- 
Windows 
by 
d ie t thousands 
men w ere on the streets. 


Deaths 
Sliming 


MIL A N D R E W C. THOMAS 
Prominent 


Walnut Twp. 


Farmer Dies 


Mr. 
Andrew C. 
Tho mas, 
a 
pro minent Walnu t Twp. farm er, 
died 7 :30 a. rn. Wednesday in 
Berger 
Ho spital 
fo llo wing 
a 
lengthy illness. He was G2. 
He was a member o f the St. 
Jo seph Chu rch and the BPOE 
Lo dge 7 7 . 
Bo rn Ju ly 17 , 1905 in Circle­ 
v ille, he was the so n o f Ev erett 
and Catherine licker Tho mas. 
Su rv iv ing are his wido w, Wil­ 
ma No thstine Tho mas, Ro u te 3; 
two so ns, Dav id, Ft. Lau der­ 
dale, Fla., and W. Ev erett, To ­ 
ledo ; and two grandchildren. 
Fu neral serv ices 
are being 
co mpleted by the Mader Fu ner­ 
al Ho me. 


MIL ll DD DRESBACH 
Air. Ju dd Dresbach, Ro ute I. 
Ashv ille, died ll a.m. to day . 
Fu neral 
arrangements 
are 
bo ing co mpleted by the Bas­ 
tian Fu neral Ho me. 


E LIZA B ET H II. SHE P ill,R D 
Mrs. Elizabeth ll. Shepherd. 
7 7 . Newark, died Tu esday 
in 
the Licking Co u nty 
Memo rial 
Ho spital, Newark. She fo rmerly 
liv ed near Kingsto n. 
Bo rn Sept. 24, 1890 at Webbs* 
Ville, Ky ., she was the dau ghter 
o f Jo hn and Srilda Webb Black. 
She is .surv iv ed by her 
hu s­ 
band. Orrie Shepherd; 
three 
children, Jane Hicks, Tampa, 
I la., 
Blady s 
Seto n, Co u tland, 
Va. and Mo rto n Hicks o f New­ 
ark. 
Su rv iv o rs 
also 
inclu de 
o ne 
stepdau ghter. 
Mrs. 
Lawrence 
Nu tter, Ypselanti, Mich.; eight 
grandchildren; fo u r great-grand­ 
children; fo u r sisters, Mrs. Al­ 
ma Mullins, Kingsto n; Mrs. Re 
becca Daniels, Blain, Ky .; Mrs. 
Martha 
Baldridge. 
Richmo nd, 
Va.; Mrs. Delpha Shepherd, Co ­ 
lu mbu s; and o ne bro ther. Ches­ 
ter Black, Leinx gto n, Ky . 
Serv ices will he 1:30 p.m. Sat­ 
u rday at the Hill Fu neral Ho me 
Kingsto n with Rev . Ro bert May ­ 
wo o d o fficiating. Bu rial will be 
in White Chu rch Cemetery . 
Friends may call at the fu n­ 
eral ho me beginning at 7 p.m. 
Thu rsday . 


OSP Aircraft 


Brings 29 to 


Muny Court 


Circlev ille 
Mu nicipal 
Co u rt 
I 
co llected S637 fro m o u t-o f-co u n-1 
tv mo to rists cau ght speeding by ; 
the Ohio State Patro l aircraft 
Tu esday . 
Other cases o n tile Mu nicipal 
Co u rt 
do cket 
inclu de 
R a y 
Greeno , 121 S. Scio to St., charg­ 
ed with failu re to hav e a v alid 
o perato r’s license. He pleaded 
gu ilty 
befo re 
Ju dge 
S terling! 
Lamb and was fined $25 and 
co sts with the fine su spended. 
B.H. Stev enso n, 7 4, Ro u te 4.; 
was 
charged 
by city 
po lice, 
with failu re to y ield the right o f 
I 
way . He pleaded no co ntest be- j 
to re the co u rt and was fined $25 
plu s eo sts — $15 o f the fine be­ 
ing su spended. 


Mainly 


About People 


“ To ll 
R o ads 
in 
P ick a w ay 
Co u nty ” will be the su bject, o f i 
the Pickaway Co unty H isto rical, 
S o ciety m eeting to be held in the 
St, 
Philips 
Parish Ho u se 
o n 
Thu rsday , September 21, at 
8 
p. rn. Dr. W. L. Spro u se has 
prepared 
an 
interesting 
pro ­ 
gram to sho w ho w' many o f o u r 
impo rtant ro ads o riginally were 
established with hu mble begin-; 
nings. This will be an inter­ 
esting and 
enlightening 
pro ­ 
gram. Plan to attend — Bring a 
Friend. 
—ad. | 


Do n’t 
fo rg et 
P o rters car 
wash! 
Circlev ille^ o nly fu lly ! 
au to matic car 
wash. 
Open 8 ■ 
a rn. to 9 p.m. 
—ad. 


Arson Suspected 


In House Fi re 


Hie 
state 
arso n 
squ ad has 
been called to inv estigate a fire 
at a pro perty o wned by Ralph 
Self in Era. 
The fire was disco v ered sho rt­ 
ly befo re 10:2*1 p. in. Tu esday . 
It was the seco nd fire at the 
pro perty this mo nth. 
A blaze Sept 
ll nearly de­ 
stro y ed 
a 
ho u se trader 
and 
three ro o ms w'hich had been at­ 
tached to tile trailer. The ru ins 
was believ ed intentio nally set 
afire y esterday acco rding to the 
Pickawav Co u nty Sheriff’s De­ 
partm ent. 
Hie Mt. Sterling Fire Depart­ 
ment w ai called to the scene o f 
the blaze. 
Depu ty Sheriff Richard Clark 
inv estigated the blaze. 


M ARKETS 


Ho g prices, ail net, were re­ 
ceiv ed by 
the 
Bo wling Sto ck 
Yards Co . here to day as fo l­ 
lo ws: 
200-220 
bs., 
$19 ,15; 
220-240 
lbs., $18 90 ; 240-200 lbs., $18 .40, 
200 280 lbs., $17 .9 0; 280 JOO lbs., 
$10.9 0; 300350 lbs., $10 40; 350 
400 lbs., $15,40; 
190*200 lbs,, 
$18 .9 0; 180-190 lbs., $18 .40; IOO- 
180 lbs., $17 00 
CASH prices pele to termer* In 
Circlev ille: 


M R. D E N N Y 1 ). S H E L B Y 
Mr. Denny Delano Shelby , 87 , 
o f 322 E. Mill St. died 6 a.rn 
Wednesday in his ho me. 
Ile was bo rn Sept. 20. 1880 in 
Circlev ille, the so nc o f Ev an 
and Elizabeth Rice Shelby . 
The wido wer o f Daisy No lze 
Shelby , he is su rv iv ed by a 
dau ghter, Mrs. Hilgar Mettler 
o f the ho me; and a sister, Mrs. 
Charles Sampso n, E. Franklin 
St. 
Serv ices will be 3 p.m. Friday 
in 
the 
Defenbau gh 
Fu neral 
Ho me with the Rev . 
Pau l 
1. 
Wachs o fficiating. Bu rial 
will 
be in the Fo rest Cemetery . 
Friends may call at the fu n­ 
eral ho me beginning no o n Thu rs­ 
day . 
An 
Elks 
Memo rial Serv ice 
will be co ndu cted 8 p.m. Thu rs­ 
day at the fu neral ho me. 


Court News 


R eal 
E state T ran sfers 
Delaware Co nstru ctio n Co . to 
Elizabeth To lbert, lo t 7 2 Ridge­ 
wo o d Su bdiv isio n, Sectio n 4, Cir­ 
clev ille. 
Ro bert W. Ku rtz to Elaine IL 
Ku rtz, u ndiv ided o ne-half inter­ 
est 0.9 3 acres, Circlev ille 
Kno llwo o d Dev elo pment 
Co . 
to Do nald J. and ELise My ers, 
lo t 47 Garden City Su bdiv isio n, 
Circlev ille 
Jannie A. VanFo ssen (deceas­ 
ed) by ex ecu to r to Charles E. 
and Helen L. Arledge, part lo ts 
1489-1490-1491 Abernathy ’s Addi­ 
tio n, Circlev ille 
D iv o rces .Asked 
Ru th Ann Ev ans, 526 N. Co u rt 
St., v s Geo rge William Ev ans, 
526 N. Co u rt St.; petitio n alleges 
gro ss neglect; no children; co u ­ 
ple was m arried Fo b. 4, 1967 . 
Elaine Ku rtz, 551 N. Picka­ 
way St., v s Ro bert W. Ku rtz, 
551 N. Pickaway St.; petitio n 
alleges gro ss neglect and ex ­ 
trem e cru elty ; fo u r children at 
ho me; co u ple was m arried Aug. 
12, 1946. 
Eu la 
Mae 
McKenzie, 
329 
Barnes Av e., v s Martin McKen­ 
zie Jr.; petitio n alleges gro ss 
neglect; o ne child; co u ple was 
m arried May 19, 1959. 
Frank R. Bro wn v s Virginia 
Mae Bro wn, Lo ndo nderry ; peti­ 
tio n alleges gro ss neglect and 
ex trem e 
cru elty ; 
o ne child, 
co u ple was m arried March 7 , 
1953. 
No rma J. Hill v s Tho mas C. 
Hill; petitio n alleges gro ss neg­ 
lect and ex trem e cru elty ; fo u r 
children; co u ple was m arried 
Feb. 21, 1938. 
Div o rce Granted 
Harry E. Ju stice v s Bo nnie 
Lo u Ju stice; o n gro u nds o f gro ss 
neglect; 
o ne 
child; 
cu sto dy 
granted to mo ther o f plaintiff; 
plaintiff o rdered to pay a week* 
ly supjKjrt. 
Apcpal Dismissed 
Kina Ro dgers, wido w o f claim* 
ent, v s Bu reau o f W o rkmen’s 
Co mpensatio n; case settled, dis* 
missed by agreem ent o f parties 
inv o lv ed. 
Fo reclo su re 
Albee Ohio Ho mes, Niles, v s 
.Sherman Mu rphy 
and o thers, 
Orient; balance du e o n no te o f 
$13,624 is $11,312; real estate in­ 
v o lv ed is lo t 38, Willo w Bro o k 
Acres; Scio to T wp. 


(Co ntinued fro m Cag e I) 
ding machine fo r the au dito r’s 
o ffice; 81.(MXI fo r the Serv ice De­ 
partm ent’s 
gaso line 
acco u nt; 
and two o rdinances, o ne appro p­ 
riating $7 12 and ano ther $460, to 
be credited to tile General Ap­ 
pro priatio n Ordinance o f the city 
fo r the fiscal y ear 1967 . 
All fix e “ mo ney o rdinances” 
were u nanimo u sly passed u nder 
a su spensio n o f the ru les fo llo w­ 
ing a first reading. 
* * * 


RICHARD 
Gerhardl, Circle* 
atto rney , was o n hand at the 
co u ncil sessio n to make ano ther 
pitch fo r the city 's acqu isitio n 
o f the Natio nal Gu ard Armo ry 
o n E. Franklin St. 
Gerhardt said the city wo uld 
ho o bligated in no way what­ 
so ev er 
if 
a 
reso lu tio n 
were 
ado pted to sho w an interest in 
the bu ilding fo r a co mmu nity 
center o r YMCA etc. 
Co u ncilman Tu rner to ld Ger­ 
hardt that the apparent lack o f 
interest 
by 
the 
city 
fathers 
sho u ld indicate the m atter has 
been 
co mpleted. Tu rner said 
that no t o ne perso n o r o rganiza­ 
tio n had made it kno wn 
they 
wo uld like u se o f the bu ilding if 
it were acqu ired by the city . 


Altho ug h 
there 
w a s 
no t 
a c­ 
tio n taken, Jo hn J enkins c o m ­ 
m ented that the po ssibility o f 
acquiring the arm o ry sho uld be 
lo o ked into if it w a sn ’t to co st 
the city any thing . 
Gerhardt said a reso lu tio n o f 
interest is needed in o rder that 
o fficial co rrespo ndence can be 
set u p between the city and the 
federal go v ernment. He reiter­ 
ated his statem ent hat he civ 
wo uld he u nder no o blicatio n. 


★ 
★ 
Council Briefs 


(Co ntinued fro m P a g e I) 
ter o f safety . The fence 
was 
co nstru cted 
o n 
the 
so u thast 
co rner o f Atwater and Cedar 
Heights Ro ad and was fo rcing 
children to walk in the street en­ 
ro u te to scho o l. 


Tho Circlev illo Herald, Wed. Sept. 20, 1067 
C ircle ville , O hio 
Beulah Lashes. .. 


Community Fund in Action 


EDITOR’S NOTE: This is o ne 
o f a series o f articles designed 
to acqu aint residents o f Picka­ 
way Co unty with the fu nctio ns 
o f Co mmu nity Fu nd participat­ 
ing agencies. The campaign this 
y ear wil bel co ndu cted Sept. 25 
to Oct. 9. The go al is $50,000. 


(Co ntinued fro m P a g e f) 
eastern Carribhean and Mex i­ 
co ’s Yu catan Peninsu la and o ne 
when 
a 
15-y ear-o ld 
girl 
was 
swept fro nt her su rfbo ard by 
ro lling wav e to Freepo rt, Tex ., 
so u th o f Ho u sto n. 
The 
W eather 
Bu reau 
said 
Hu rricane 
Beu lah’s 
center 
wo uld pass ju st 
east o f the 
mo u th o f the Rio Grande and 
thence no rthward, ju st o ffsho re 
o f Padre Island, a |>encil-thin 
strip that ru ns alo ng the co ast 
fro m 
Bro wnsv ille 
to 
Co rpu s 
Christi. 
Fo recasters 
said 
the 
ey e 
wo uld remain o v er the chu rning 
Gulf o f Mex ico u ntil it crashed 
inland 
in 
the Co rpu s Christi 
area late to day . 
With the lo cu s o f Hie sto rm 
still o v er w-ater there was little 
likeliho o d that is fo rce wo uld 
diminish du ring a charge u p the 
co ast. 
Hu rricanes 
draw 
their 
strength fro m warm sea waters. 
Beu lah u pro o ted giant palms, 
battered bu ildings and flailed 
Rio Grande Valley citru s gro v es 
as she su rged to the co ast. 
The sto rm ’s blast kno cked o u t 
all po wer in Bro wnsv ille. The 
city ’s lights blinked o u t in seg­ 
ments acro ss the city as the 
sto rm ’s fu ry grew. 
Rain fell in heav y bu rsts. Up- 


Mer Ho spital pro v ide the inter- o ds are pro v ided by trained 
I 
inatio ii and m aterial to 
help wo rkers. Trnaspo rtatio n to the ^n„.„ 
children clinic 
‘ .............. 
impassable. 


ADVICE — Shary n Blecha (left), a m em ber o f the bo ard, and Ann H o ffm an, secretary , pro ­ 
v ide info rmatio n o n family planning to a y o u ng girl seeking adv ice. 


Family Planning Is Added 
To Community Fund 


sto rm ’s ey e v eered to ward Co r­ 
pus Christi, a handfu l cd still* 
wo rts agreed lo ride o ut the' 
sto rm in an o ld two -sto ry ho u se 
at Po rt Aransas, a fishing v il­ 
lage 
They 
inclu ded 
depu ty 
sheriffs and u tilities wo rkers. 
“The water is already up to 
the du nes, st) I imagine they ar” 
o n the seco nd flo o r no w,” a dep­ 
u ty said. 
Ro derick Dev ine, 38, a Padre 
Island hermit refu sed to leav e 
his cru de hu t o f 'plank, drift 
wo o d and ro cks u ntil a ju stice o f 
the peace o rdered him lo do it. 
Then Dev ine tu rned do wn a heli­ 
co pter ride and walked acro ss a 
bridge to the mainland, car­ 
ry ing his o nly co mpanio n, a cat. 
In the big civ ic center au dito ­ 
riu m at Bro wnsv ille, mo re than 
1,000 perso ns sat in chairs cir­ 
cled into family gro u pings, feed­ 
ing themselv es fro m ice chests, 
riding herd o n their children 
and watching am ateu r singers 
and dancers o n stage. 
“ It’ almo st like a fiesta,” said 
“ Ifs 
alm o st like a fiesta,” 
said a so cial wo rker, Lero y If. 
Ilav erlah Jr. 
But when the po wer failed and 
the air co nditio ning went o ff, 
Ilav erlah said, “ It ll get stifling. 
No bo dy can take mo re than 24 
ho u rs o f this.” 


May o r Ben Go rdo n said that 
he, to o , had receiv ed calls o n 
tile fence and after inv estigat­ 
ing the m atter asked that city 
co u ncil “ co ndemn the land and 
widen the street” fo r the child­ 
ren’s safety . The m atter was re­ 
ferred to the Safety Co mmittee 
headed by Jo hn Jenkins. 


In reply to a qu estio n jx » sed 
by Co u ncilman-at-Large Dav id 
Crawfo rd, Barnhill said tile re­ 
su rfacing o f Nicho las Driv e co st 
$6,37 3.50 and tile N. Co u rt St. 
pro ject co st a to tal o f $4,313. 


F ire Chief Bernard W o lfe an­ 
no unced that the new pum per 
o rdered by the city is scheduled 
fo r d eliv ery o il D ec. 1 9 . 


Ev ery child a wanted child! 
Tho se wo rds carry a priceless 
meaning to parents and children 
alike. What abo u t the child who 
fees 
u nwanted? 
Despair, 
a 
feeling o f wo rthlessness, 
mis­ 
gu ided env y may set in to u n­ 
dermine the child’s fu tu re. 
Ev ery child a wanted child is 
the go al o f the Pickaway Co u nty 
Family 
Planning 
Asso ciatio n. 
This gro u p, fo rmed early this 
y ear to pro mo te Planned P ar­ 
entho o d, has been ho lding a reg­ 
u lar clinic sessio ns since May . 
The pu rpo se o f the Asso ciatio n 
is to pro v ide info rmatio n, m a­ 
terial, and edu catio n regarding 
family planning and birth co n­ 
tro l so that the health and in­ 
tegrity o f the family u nit can 
be maintained, the indiv idu al 
can be gu aranteed the right and (deliqu ency 
freedo m to cho o se ho w he wish- children. 
es to liv e, and each family u nit 
can be planned co nsistent with 
the indiv idu al’s o wn creed and 
mo res. 
Clinic sessio ns held the sec­ 
o nd and fo u rth Mo nday o f each 
mo nth fro m 7 ‘J p. iii. at Ber- 


patients 
space 
their 
and co ntro l the size o f their lam 
- 1 
ilies as they desire. Serv ices o f­ 
fered inclu de a Pap sm ear and , 
pelv ic ex aminatio n do ne by the 
phy sician in attendance befo re 
i 
any medicatio n is giv en. Medi-1 
cal checku ps are do ne at inter­ 
v als .set by the ex amining phy -1 
sician. Edu catio na ne! training 
o f patients in birth co ntro l meth- 


Two Sentenced 


By Juvenile Judge 


Caro l Hawley , age 19. Orient, 
was sentenced to o ne y ear at 
die Mary sv ille Refo rmato ry fo r 
co ntribu ting to the neglect 
o f 
her three children du ring a ses­ 
sio n o f Pickaway Co u nty Ju v e­ 
nile Co u rt. 
In a related case William Mc­ 
Who rter, age 
13, 
Orient, was 
sentenced to o ne y ear 
in 
the 
Pickawav Co u nty jail and fined 
$1000. fo r co ntribu ting to the 
Caro l 
Ilawlev ’s 


Co uncil Clerk 
Ro bert Shad- 
ley info rmed so lo ns that pro per 
ty o wners o n E. High St. 
had 
been serv ed no tice o n the o r- 
dianace requ iring the installat­ 
io n o f cu rbs and gu tters. 


Fo u rth 
Ward 
Co u ncilman 
I Bo y d Ho rn also to u ched o ff a 
! series 
o f 
co mplaints 
lo dged 
against the N & W and Pennsy l­ 
v ania Railro ad Co mpanies fo r 
neglect o f cro ssings within the 
I city . ‘ 


Frank Arledge, a resident o f 
215 S. Pickaway St., lo dged a 
co mplaint befo re co u ncil co ncer­ 
ning a pro blem created by the 
tem po rary u se o f the Natio nal 
Gu ard Armo ry by bo th Circle­ 
v ille and Lancaster u nits. He 
said 
the 
traffic 
in 
the alley 
so u th o f his ho me as well as at 
the rear was co ngested 
mo st 
o f the time. He asked that bo th 
alley s be made o ne-way . 
He 
po inted o u t the alley ru nning 
east and west is already 
o ne- 
I way 
fro m 
the 
Presby terian 
; Chu rch to the Po st o ffice. 


Hog Stealing 


Charges Filed 


Charges 
hav e 
been 
lo dged 
against an adu lt and two ju ­ 
v eniles who hav e admitted steal­ 
ing 31 ho gs fro m farm ers in the 
no rthern part o f the co u nty . 
The adu lt, Nelso n Click, 18, 
Orient, entered a plea o f guilty 
to charges to day in Mu nicipal 
Co u rt. He was bo u nd to the 
grand ju ry u nder $5 0 0 bo nd. 
Acco rding to Pickaway Co u n­ 
ty Depu ty Sheriff Geo rge Lin­ 
der, the trio admitted taking IO 
ho gs fro m the farm o f Jam es 
Walker, 20 ho gs fro m Selmer 
Lay man 
and 
o ne 
ho g 
fro m 
Haro ld Gliek, the father (if the 
adu lt inv o lv ed. 


New Citizens 


MISS * OWE 
Mr. and Mrs. Fo rrest Lo we, 
808 Mapelwo o d Av e., are the 
dau ghter bo rn 7 :55 
p.m. Tu es- 
dau ghter bo rn 7 :55 .pm. lies- 
day in Berger Ho spital. 
MISS ALTER 
Mr. and 
Mrs. 
Eddie Alter, 
Massilo n, are the parents o f a 
6-po und 14-o unce (lau ghter bo rn 
2:45 this mo rning in Ault rn an 
Ho spital, Canto n. Mr. and Mrs 
Haro ld Sharpe, 
and 
Mr. 
and 
Jo hn Alter, all o f Williamspo rt, 
are the new grandparents. 


Evangelist To Speak 
At Nazarcne Church 
Rev . Pau l Merry man, ex *ango * 
j list, will be gu est minister at 
I the Chu rch o f the Nazarene, and 
i will co ndu ct night serv ices start­ 
ing 7 :30 p.m. Sept. 25 thro u gh 
I Get. I. 
Rev . Merry man is a gradu - 
; ate o f Trev ecea Nazarene Co lo b 
lege, Nashv ille, Tenn., and fo l­ 
lo wing a pasto rial ministry 
in 
State Co llege, Pa., no w dev o te 
himself to itenerant 
ev ange­ 
lism. 


Ju dge Cline ru led that tile sen­ 
tences be filled at the end 
o f 
their term s fo r fo rgery impo s­ 
ed by the Co mmo n Pleas Co u rt 
The children inv o lv ed, ages 1- 
y ear, 2 y ears 
and 2 mo nths, 
were tu rned o v er to the perm a­ 
nent cu sto dy o f the Pickaway 
Co u nty Welfare Department. 


Child Bruised 


In Auto Mishap 


Circlev ille Po lice inv estigated 
an accident at tile intersectio n 
o f E. 
Main St. and Washingto n 
St. at 4:09 p.m. 
Tu esday 
in 
which a 5 y ear o ld girl su stain­ 
ed a mino r inju ry . 
Driv ers o f the cars inv o lv ed 
were Marie Wilkins, 57 , 152 Fair- 
v iew Av e , and Bo nnie Chatto s, 
i 
33, Sto u tsv ille. Inju red w'as Lo t ! 
tie IXM Chatto s 5. She su stain-1 
cd a bru ised arm. 


Post Conviction 


Review Dismissed 


A petitio n fo r a po st co nv ic­ 
tio n rev iew filed by Jo hn M ar­ 
v in ho mas has been dismissed 
by Pickaway Co u nty Co mmo n 
Pleas Co u rt Ju dge William Am­ 
mer. 
Tho mas was sentenced to the 
Ohio State Penitentiary 
fo r 
a 
term o f 10 to 25 y ears fo r arm ­ 
ed ro bbery . He was implicated 
in the ho ldu p o f Go u rmet Co r­ 
ner December, 1966, 


Last Nile “ Wh« *s Afraid o f Virg inia Wo o lf” 


K*»«- Co rn 
Shelled Co rn 
tmy btntng ., 
Wheat 
. . . . 
Ry e 
SJwltz 
Oat* 
Effs 
H aney 
Heav y Hen* 
Hu ller 


n u 
1.13 
2 ,55 
1.30 


.es 
Ti 
.20 
1.00 
.13 
.Ti 


STAUTS 
TOMORROW 


Bio ddfljy * bared.**' 
tateM, ufisquaf est 
fo e play 
Sndi* 
hdpptn%s • / * * • # * 
en the btg wide % 


tutor Lcreen I 
#l 
lOBiir ftEo ro ao 
JANI (ONDA 
A fy- 
Ii FU iii Mi M 
. - 
* lU™FMirw* v™ 
f 


STARLIGHT 2 ? 
W O N D E R F U L 
:O L O R H IT S 


RICHARD 
EIKE 
8ULVA 
jOHnso n 8 0inmER K o scinn 
&V M IK I 
GREET! 


V A 
SUZAHPA 
I 
HIGH 


TICNNICOLOR UtHNlSCOPt. 


PUBLIC NOTICE! Sale o f Fu rnitu re Sto ck o f 
SEYMOUR FURNITURE 


at 707 East Mound Street 


I hav e been au tho rized by the ho lder o f the mo rtgage o n 
the nierhcandisc o t Hey mo ur Fu rnitu re to dispo se o l the sto ck 
qu ickly as po ssible. 


Merchandise is mainly high qu ality so fas, chairs, tables, 
lamps and dinettes, carpets, m attresses and bo x springs, au d 
many miscellaneo u s items, 


I will be at the sto re ro o m at 707 E. Mo und Street fro m 9 to 
5:30 Mo nday thro u gh Friday bi so rt o u t, mark do wn au d scil 
the fu rnitu re and o ther items. 


All sales arc cash, o r I will arrange mo nthly pav ment plan 
fo r y o u. 


AH merchandise is so ld “ VS Is” and ut the sto re, Yo u may 
hau l it bo rne in y o u r car o r tru ck, o r I will arrange lo hav e it 
deliv ered to y o u at small ex pense to y o u . 
BOB GRIFFITH 


N O IL: Du ring this sale I will no t hav e mu ch tint* in de- 
v o l.- in m y carpet bu siness, but hav e reserv ed my ev enings 
to sho w carpet sample* in y o u r ho me Ut any o f inv cu sto mers 
desiring new ru gs o r wall to wall earpet. 
Bo b 


t* 


sessio ns is made av ail­ 
able to tho se wo men who need 
it. Call 47 4-4801 fo r mo re info r­ 
matio n. 
Who is eligible 
fo r 
Family 
Planning serv ices? All m arried 
perso ns, perso ns co ntemplating 
m arriage no t a mino r, o r m i-1 Palacio s, 50 miles no rtheast o f 
no rs 
co ntemplating 
m arriage Co rpu s Christi o n Matago rda 
with parental co nsent who are Bay . 
u nable to o btain birth co ntro l 
in the 


Ho spitals were o n emergency 
po wer. One 
residence 
cau ght 
fire, cau se u nkno wn. 
The 
W eather 
Bu reau 
said 
tides u p to 15 feet and to rrential 
rains 
threatened 
dangero u s 
flo o ding 
fro m 
Bro wnsv ille 
to 


serv ices fro m a priv ate phy si­ 
cian. ho spital, o r clinic shall be 
co nsidered eligible. These serv ­ 
ices shall be giv en to tho se per­ 
so ns v o lu ntarily seeking them 
co nsistent with their o wn per­ 
so nal 
beliefs. 
No 
patient is 
denied serv ice becau se o f in­ 
ability to pay . 
Using co u nty po pu latio n as a 
gu ide, abo u t 
150 17 5 
perso ns 
co u ld be ex pected to requ est the 
serv ices o f the 
Family 
Plan- 


159 -mile stretch fro m 


Pumpkin Show 


Food Booth 


Standards Set 


the co ast ex cept pastu res o f the 
hu ge 
King 
Ranch, 
lu shly 
grassed co astal prairie so flat 


Bro wnsv ille to Co rpu s Christi I 
Pau l Ro an, city Health Co m- 
there is little immediately alo ng missio ner anno u nced to day that 
all o rganizatio ns 
o r 
perso ns 
planning to hav e a fo o d bo o th 
at the Circlev ille Pu mpkin Sho w 
there is no barrier fo r winds o r mu st meet certain requ irements 
tides. 
su ch as: licensing, hav ing min- 
So me 15 to 30 miles inland .intu rn sanitary facilities, T. B. 
alo ng this u no bstru cted co ast- testing fo r all perso ns handling 
line 
lie 
a nu m ber 
o f small fo o ds and fire prev entiv e meas- 
to wns, amo ng them Ray mo nd 
u res- 
Ville. San Manu el, Rachal, Enci 
no . Falfu rrias Kingsv ille Dris- 
ning Clinic. So far, abo u t 9 per co ll and Ro bsto wn 
cent o f tho se perso ns hav e at­ 
tended clinic sessio ns, co ming 
fro m Circlev ille, Williamspo rt, 
and su rro u nding area. 
Besides ho lding clinic sessio ns 
twice each mo nth and pro v iding 
serv ices to the patients to date, 
the Pickaway Co u ny t Fam ily 
Planning Asso ciatio n has train­ 
ed sev eral wo rkers and regis­ 
tered nu rses, set u p an appo int- 


is 
a city o f 


A m o re co m plete list o f r e ­ 
q u irem en ts is av ailable at the 
City Health 
D epartm ent in the 
city building . 
Applicatio ns fo r licenses mu st 
be applied fo r ten day s prio r to 
o pening. The license fee mu st 
acco mpany the applicatio n. 


190,000. Inland u p the v alley lie I 
resPJ>nsi^ e 


Z t ? 
™ CHntaininf r at license. All 
as 
.mn km- 
qu ai ter- millio n i specte(| fo r 
an(jsafety 


Co rpu s 
Christi 
mo re than 200000. 
Bro wnsv ille has a 
po pu latio n 
o f mo re than 50,000 and Mata- 
mo res, 
ju st 
acro ss 
the 
Rio 
Grande, a po pu latio n o f abo u t 


least 
ano ther 
peo ple. 
At 2:50 a.m . wind 
in Bro wns- 
ments and reco rds schedu le.se-; Ville w’ere clo cked at 104 m.p.h. 
lected 
a 
16-perso n 
go v erning 
bo ard, secu red insu rance fo r its 
wo rkers, co ntacted respo nsible 
perso ns thro u gho u t the entire 
co u nty as 
well 
as 
interested 
co u nty o fficials, su pplied info r­ 
matio n and limited adv ertising 
o n requ est, and pu rchased need­ 
ed minimal su pplies. Phy sicians, 
nu rses, and wo rkers all v o lu n­ 
teer their time and skills. 
The 1967 -1968 
go al 
o f 
the 
Family Planning Asso ciatio n is 
to pro v ide serv ices to sev enty 
fiv e patients. Yo u r Co mmu nity 
Fu nd do llar will help finance 
necessary medical su pplies and 
labo rato ry 
tests, 
info rmatio n 
and 
training 
literatu re, 
and 
g» » n« ral clinic facilities. 
Ho w abo u t helping ev ery child 
bo rn to be a wanted child — 
thro u gh y o u r gift to the Co m­ 
mu nity Fu nd. 


Po lice said their cars were 
ihe 
o nly 
o nes 
attempting 
to 
trav erse Bro wnsv ille streets. 
They repo rted sev eral u tility 
po les o n fire, “ho t lines” ev ery ­ 
where, palm trees ablaze and 
fallen trees all o v er the city . 
The 
W eather 
Bu reau 
said 
Beu lah’s 
IGO 
m.p.h. 
central 
winds 
co u ld 
increase 
to 
17 5 
miles an bo u r by tile time they 
hit the beach. 
Already she was o ne o f the 
fiercest tro pical blo ws in histo ­ 
ry . Hu rricane Janet hit Chetu- 
mal, Mex ., o n Sept. 28, 1955, 
with 
winds 
reco rded 
at 
17 5 
m.p.h. befo re instru m ents blew 
o ut. 
Ex cept 
fo r 
abo u t 
a 
do zen 
Co ast Gu ardsmen, tile so u th end 
o f Padre Island was repo rted 
co mpletely abando ned. But at 
the 
no rth 
end, 
befo re 
tile 


measu res befo re o pening by tho 
City Fire Chief and the City 
Sanitarian. 
a a a 


BOOKLETS o n 
mo bile ty po 
fo o d serv ice bo o ths are av ail­ 
able at the City Health D epart­ 
ment. 
Stu dents wo rking 
in 
fo o d 
bo o ths can o btain T. B. tests 
at tile high scho o l Sept. 26 and 
the test will be read Sept. 28 
at the high scho o l. 
All stu dents desiring 
T. 
B. 
tests m u st hav e a signed co n­ 
sent slip fro m 
their parents. 
These slips will be av ailable at 
the high scho o l. 
Adu lts may o btain T. B. tests 
at their family phy sicians, Co u n­ 
ty Health Department and the 
City Health Dept. A resident o f 
the city may o btain the test o n 
Sept. 30 9 a.m. • 12 no o n at the 
City Health Dept, and retu rn fo r 
reading Oct. 2, 2 p. in. - 8 p. rn. 


THEY’RE HERE 


1968 MERCURY’S 


COUGARS & COMETS 


I DBK Mercury 
( y c lo n e Ci.T. 2 -Do o r H ardto p 


See and Test Drive One This Weekend 


Friday and Saturday - 8 A.M. to 9 P.M. 


Don Thompson Mercury Inc. 


1 3 50 N. COURT ST. 


Deaths 
Burning 


>115. ANDREW C. THOMAS 
Prominent 


Walnut Twp. 


Farmer Dies 


Mr. 
Andrew C. 
Thomas, 
a 
prominent Walnut Tup. farm er, 
died 7:30 a. rn. Wednesday in 
Berger 
Hospital 
following 
a 
lengthy illness, fie was 62. 
He was a member of the St. 
Joseph Church and the BPOE 
Lodge 77. 
Born July 17, 1905 in Circle­ 
ville, he was the son of Everett 
and Catherine licker Thomas. 
Surviving are his widow, Wil­ 
ma Nothstine Thomas, Route 3; 
two sons, David, 
Ft. 
Lauder­ 
dale, Fla., and W. Everett, To­ 
ledo; and two grandchildren. 
Funeral services 
are being 
completed by the Wader Funer­ 
al Home. 


HIL .ll DI) DRESBACH 
Mr. Judd Dresbach, Route I, 
Ashville, died ll a.m. today. 
Funeral 
arrangements 
are 
boing completed by the Bas­ 
tian Funeral Home. 


ELIZABETH II. SHEPHERD 
Mrs. Elizabeth ll. Shepherd. 
77, Newark, died Tuesday in 
the Licking County 
Memorial 
Hospital, Newark. She formerly 
lived near Kingston. 
Born Sept. 24, 1890 at W ells­ 
ville, Ky., she was the daughter 
of John and Srilda Webb Black. 
She is survived by her 
hus­ 
band, Orric Shepherd; 
three 
children. Jane Hicks, Tampa, 
Fla., 
Blady* 
Seton, Coutland, 
Va. and Morton Hicks of New­ 
ark. 
Survivors 
also 
include 
one 
stepdaughter, 
Mrs. 
Lawrence 
Nutter, Ypselanti, Mich.; eight 
grandchildren; four great grand­ 
children; four sisters, Mrs. Al­ 
ma Mullins, Kingston; Mrs. Re 
becca Daniels, Blain, Kv.; Mrs. 
Martha 
Baldridge, 
Richmond, 
Va.; Mrs. Delpha Shepherd, Co­ 
lumbus; and one brother. Ches­ 
ter Black. Leinxgton, Ky. 
Services will be 1:30 p.m. Sat­ 
urday at the Hill Funeral Home 
Kingston with Rev. Robert May­ 
wood officiating. Burial will be 
in White Church Cemetery. 
Friends may call at the fun­ 
eral home beginning at 7 p.m. 
Thursday. 


OSP Aircraft 


Brings 29 to 


Muny Court 


Circleville 
Municipal 
Court 
collected S637 from out-of-coun­ 
ty motorists caught speeding by 
the Ohio State Patrol aircraft 
Tuesday. 
Other cases on tile Municipal 
Court 
docket 
include 
R a y 
Greeno, 121 S. Scioto St., charg­ 
ed with failure to have a valid 
operator’s license. He pleaded 
guilty 
before 
Judge 
Sterling 
Lamb and was fined $25 and 
costs with the fine suspended. 
B H. Stevenson, 74, Route 4. 
was 
charged 
by city 
police 
with failure lo yield the right of 
way. He pleaded no contest be- 
tore the court and was fined $25 
pius costs — $15 of the fine be­ 
ing suspended. 


Mainly 


About People 


“Toll 
Roads 
in 
Pickaway 
County” will be the subject, of 
the Pickaway County Historical 
Society meeting to be held in the 
St. 
Philips 
Parish House 
on 
Thursday, September 21, at 
8 
p. rn. Dr. W. L. Sprouse has 
prepared 
an 
interesting 
pro­ 
gram to show how many of our 
important roads originally were 
established with humble begin­ 
nings. This will be an inter­ 
esting and 
enlightening 
pro­ 
gram. Plan to attend — Bring a 
Frieod. 
—ad. 


Don’t 
forget 
Porters 
car 
wash! 
Circleville’* only fully 
automatic car 
wash. 
Open 8 
a m. to Si p m 
—ad. 


Arson Suspected 


In House Fire 


The 
state 
arson 
squad has 
been called to investigate a fire 
at a property owned by Ralph 
Self in Era. 
The fir#* was discovered short­ 
ly before 10:26 p. rn. Tuesday. 
It was the second fire at the 
properly this month. 
A blaze Sept. ll nearly de­ 
stroyer! 
a 
house 
trader 
and 
three rooms which had U-*-n at­ 
tached to the trailer. ’Hie ruins 
was believed intentionally set 
afire yesterday according to the 
Pickawav County Sheriffs De­ 
partm ent. 
The Mi. Sterling Fire Depart­ 
ment was called to the scene of 
the blaze. 
Deputy Sheriff Richard Clark 
investigated the blaze. 


MARKETS 


Hog prices, all net, were re­ 
ceived by 
the 
Bowling Stock 
Yards Co. here today as fol­ 
lows: 
200-220 
bs., 
$19.15; 
220-240 
lbs., $18.90; 240-260 lbs., $18.40; 
200 280 lbs., $17.90; 280 300 lbs., 
$10.90; 300 350 lbs., $16.40; 350- 
400 lbs., $15.40; 
190*200 lbs., 
$18 90; 180-190 lbs., $18.40; 160- 
180 lbs., $17.00. 
CASH prices paid to farmer* in 
Orclrvtile: 
Ear Corn ......................... 
I.Jo 
Shelled Corn ........................... 
1.13 
Soybeans ............................... 
2.53 
Wheat 
......................................... 
1.30 
Rye ,. ........... 
1.28 
Spelt* ........ 
.. 
.65 
OM* ........... 
.72 
> tff» 
..................... w................20 
Barley 
................... 
1.00 
Heavy Hen* ............ 
. . . . . . . 
.13 
cr 
. . . . . . 
.Ti 


MR. DENNY I). SHELBY 
Mr. Denny Delano Shelby, 87, 
of 322 E. Mill St. died 6 a.rn 
Wednesday in his home. 
Ile was born Sept. 20. 1880 in 
Circleville, the sonc of Evan 
and Elizabeth Rice Shelby. 
The widower of Daisy NoJze 
Shelby, he is survived by a 
daughter, Mrs. Hilgar Mettler 
of the home; and a sister, Mrs. 
Charles Sampson, E. Franklin 
St. 
Services will be 3 p.m. Friday 
in 
the 
Defenbaugh 
Funeral 
Home with the Rev. 
Paul 
I. 
Wachs officiating. Burial 
will 
be in the Forest Cemetery. 
Friends may call at the fun­ 
eral home beginning noon Thurs­ 
day. 
An 
Elks 
Memorial 
Service 
will be conducted 8 p.m. Thurs­ 
day at the funeral home. 


Court News 


Real Estate Transfers 
Delaware Construction Co. to 
Elizabeth Tolbert, lot 72 Ridge­ 
wood Subdivision, Section 4, Cir­ 
cleville. 
Robert W. Kurtz to Elaine It. 
Kurtz, undivided one-half inter­ 
est 0.93 acres. Circleville 
Knollwood Development 
Co. 
to Donald J. and Elise Myers, 
lot 47 Garden City Subdivision, 
Circleville 
Jannie A. VanFossen (deceas­ 
ed) by executor to Charles E. 
and Helen L. Arledge, part lots 
1489-1490-1491 Abernathy’s Addi­ 
tion, Circleville 
Divorces .Asked 
Ruth Ann Evans, 526 N. Court 
St., vs George William Evans, 
526 N. Court St.; petition alleges 
gross neglect; no children; cou­ 
ple was m arried Feb. 4, 1967. 
Elaine Kurtz, 551 N. Picka­ 
way St., vs Robert W. Kurtz, 
551 N. Pickaway St.; petition 
alleges gross neglect and ex­ 
trem e cruelty; four children at 
home; couple was m arried Aug. 
12, 1946. 
Eula 
Mae 
McKenzie, 
329 
Barnes Axe., vs Martin McKen­ 
zie Jr.; petition alleges gross 
neglect; one child; couple was 
m arried May 19. 1959. 
Frank R. Brown vs Virginia 
Mae Brown, Londonderry; peti­ 
tion alleges gross neglect and 
extrem e 
cruelty; 
one child, 
couple was m arried March 7, 
1953. 
Norma J. HUI vs Thomas C. 
HUI; petition alleges gross neg­ 
lect and extrem e cruelty; four 
children; couple was m arried 
Feb. 21, 1958. 
Divorce Granted 
H arry E. Justice vs Bonnie 
Lou Justice; on grounds of gross 
neglect; 
one 
child; 
custody 
granted to mother of plaintiff; 
plaintiff ordered to pay a week­ 
ly supjiort. 
Apepal Dismissed 
Nina Rodgers, w idow of claim- 
tnt, vs Bureau of W orkmen’s 
Compensation; case settled, dis­ 
missed by agreement of parties 
involved. 
Foreclosure 
Albee Ohio Homes, NUes, vs 
Sherman Murphy and others, 
Orient; balance due on note of 
$13,624 is $11,312; real estate in­ 
volved is lot 38, Willow Brook 
Acres; Scioto Twp. 


(Continued from Page I) 
ding machine for the auditor's 
office; $1,000 for the Service De­ 
partm ent’s 
gasoline 
account; 
and two ordinances, one approp­ 
riating $712 and another $460, to 
be credited to tile General Ap­ 
propriation Ordinance of the city 
for the fiscal year 1967. 
All fixe “ money ordinances” 
were unanimously passed under 
a suspension of the rides follow­ 
ing a first reading. 
* * # 
CH II XBI) 
Gerhardt, C ircle- 
attorney, was on hand at the 
council session to make another 
pitch for the city’s acquisition 
of the National Guard Armory 
on E. Franklin St. 
G erhardt said the city xvould 
be obligated in no way what­ 
soever 
if 
a 
resolution 
xx ere 
adopted to show an interest in 
the building for a community 
center or YMCA etc. 
Councilman Turner told Ger­ 
hardt that the apparent lack of 
interest 
by 
the 
city 
fathers 
should indicate the m atter has 
been 
completed. 
Turner 
said 
that not one person or organiza­ 
tion had made it known 
thex 
xxould like use of the building if 
it xvere acquired by the city. 
Although there was not ac­ 
tion taken, John Jenkins com 
melded that the possibility of 
acquiring the armory should be 
looked into if it wasn’t to cost 
the city anything. 
Gerhardt said a resolution cl 
interest is needed in order that 
official correspondence can be 
set up between the city and the 
federal government. Ile reiter­ 
ated his statem ent hat he civ 
would be under no oblication. 


★ 
★ 
Council Briefs 


(Continued from Page I) 
tor of safety. The fence 
xvas 
constructed 
on 
the 
southast 
corner of Atwater and Cedar 
Heights Road and was forcing 
children to walk in the street en­ 
route to school. 


Mayor Ben Gordon said that 
he, too, had received calls on 
tile fence and after investigat­ 
ing the m atter asked that city 
council ’’condemn the land and 
widen the street” for the child­ 
ren’s safety. The m atter was re­ 
ferred to the Safety Committee 
headed by John Jenkins. 


ADVICE — Sharyn Blecha (left), a m em ber of the board, and Ann Hoffman, secretary, pro­ 
vide information on family planning to a young girl seeking advice. 


Community Fund 
in Action 
Family Planning Is Added 
To Community Fund 


The Circleville Herald, Wed. S e p t. 20, 19(17 
C ircleville, Ohio 
Beulah Lashes • • • • 


(Continued from Page I) 
eastern Carribbean and Mexi­ 
co's Yucatan Peninsula and one 
xvhen 
a 
15-year-old 
girl 
w as 
swept Irom her surfboard by 
rolling wave to Freeport, Tex., 
south of Houston. 
The 
W eather 
Bureau 
said 
Hurricane 
Beulah's 
center 
xvould pass just 
east of 
mouth of the Rio Grande 


storm ’s eye veered toward C or­ 
pus Christi, a handful of stal­ 
warts agreed to ride out the 
storm in an old two-story house 
af Port Aransas, a fishing vil­ 
lage 
They 
included 
deputy 
sheriffs and utilities workers. 
“The water is already up to 
the I the dunes, so I imagine they an* 
and on the second floor now,” a dep- 
thence northward, just offshore uty said. 
of Padre Island, a pencil-thin 
Roderick Devine, 38, a Padre 
strip that runs along the coast | island hermit refused to leave 


EDITOR’S NOTE: This is one j ger Hospital provide the infor- 
of a series of articles designed 
to acquaint residents of Picka­ 
way County xvith the functions 
of Community Fund participat­ 
ing agencies. The campaign this 
year xvii bel conducted Sept. 25 
to Oct. 9. The goal is $50,000. 


mation and m aterial to 
help 
patients 
space their 
children 
and control the size of their fam ­ 
ilies as they desire. Services of­ 
fered include a Pap sm ear and 
pelvic examination done by the 
physician in attendance before 
any medication is given. Medi- 


txis are provided by trained i 
xvorkers. Trnasportation to the 
clinic sessions is made avail­ 
able to those xx-omen xvho need j 
it. Call 474-4801 for more infor­ 
mation. 
Who is eligible 
for 
Family- 
Planning services? All m arried 
persons, persons contemplating 


Carol Hawley, age 19. Orient, 
group, formed early this was sentenced to one year at denied service because of in -j 
Some 15 to 30 miles inland .inturn sanitary facilities, T. B. 
to promote Planned P a r - 1 tile Marysville Reformatory for 
ability to pay. along this unobstructed coast- testing for all persons handling 
contributing to the neglect 
of 
Using county population as a line 
lie 
a number of small foods and fire 
preventive m eas­ 
lier three children during a sos-1 guide, about 
150-175 
persons 
towns, among them Raymond ores. 
sion of Pickaxxay County .lux e- 
could be expected to request the Ville. San Manuel, Racbal, Encl-1 
A more rom plete list 
of re* 
nile Court. 
services of the 
Family 
Plan- no. Falfurrias Kingsville Dris- quirements 
is available 
at the 
ning Clinic. So far, about 9 per coll and Robstoxvn. 
cent of those 
persons have at- j 
Corpus 
Christi 
is a city ol 
tended clinic sessions, coming more than 200000. 


In reply to a question posed 
by Councilman-at-Large David 
Crawford, Barnhill said the re­ 
surfacing of Nicholas Drive cost 
$6,373.50 and the N. 
Court 
St. 
| project cost a total of $4,313. 


Fire Chief Bernard Wolfe an­ 
nounced that the new pumper 
ordered bv the city is scheduled 
for delivery on Dec. 19. 


Council Clerk 
Robert Shad- 
ley informed solons that proper 
ty owners on E. High St. 
had 
been served notice on the or- 
dianace requiring the installat­ 
ion of curbs and gutters. 


Fourth 
Ward 
Councilman 
Boyd Horn also touched off a 
series 
of 
complaints 
lodged 
against the N & W and Pennsyl­ 
vania Railroad Companies for 
neglect of crossings within the 
I city. 


Every child a wanted child! 
Those xvords carry a priceless 
meaning to parents and children 
alike. What about the child xvho 
fees 
unxvanted? 
Despair, 
a 
feeling of xvoiihlessness, 
mis­ 
guided envy may set in to un­ 
dermine the child's future. 
Every child a wanted child is 
the goal of the Pickaway County 
Family 
Planning 
Association. 
This 
year 
enthood, has been holding a reg­ 
ular clinic sessions since May. 
The purpose of the Association 
is to provide information, m a­ 
terial, and education regarding 
family planning and birth con­ 
trol so that the health and in­ 
tegrity of the family unit can 
be maintained, the individual 
can be guaranteed the right and 
freedom to choose hoxv he xvish- 
es to live, and each family uuit 
can be planned consistent xvith 
the individual’s own creed and 
mores. 
Clinic sessions held the sec­ 
ond and fourth Monday of each 
month from 79 p. in. at B er 


New Citizens 


MISS BOWE 
Mr. and Mrs. Forrest Lowe, 
808 Ma pel wood Ave., are the 
daughter born 7:55 
p.rr. Tues- 
daughter born 7:55 .pm. ues- 
day in Berger Hospital. 
MISS ALTER 


cal checkups are done at in ter m arriage not a minor, or mi- 
vals set by the examining phy­ 
sician. Educationa nd training 
of patients in birth control moth- 


Two Sentenced 


By Juvenile Judge 


nors 
contemplating 
m arriage 
xvith parental consent xvho arc 
unable to obtain birth control 
services from a private phvsi- 


from 
Brownsville 
to 
Corpus 
Christi. 
Forecasters 
said 
the 
eye 
would remain over the churning 
Gulf of Mexico until it crashed 
inland 
in 
the Corpus Christi 
area late today. 
With the locus of tile storm 
still over xvater there xvas little 
likelihood that is force would 
diminish during a charge up the 
coast. 
Hurricanes draxv 
their 
strength from warm sea xvaters. 
Beulah uprooted giant palms, 
battered buildings and flailed 
Rio Grande Valley citrus groves 
as she surged to tile coast. 
The storm ’s blast knocked out 
all power in Brownsville. The 
city’s lights blinked out in seg­ 
ments across the city as the 
storm ’s fury grew. 
Rain fell in heavy bursts. Up­ 
rooted trees and ripped branch­ 
es littered Brownsville streets. 
Some .streets xvere impassable. 
Hospitals xvere on emergency 
power. One 
residence 
caught 
fire, cause unknown. 
The 
W eather 
Bureau 
said 
tides up to 15 feet and torrential 
rains 
threatened 
dangerous 
flooding 
from 
Brownsville 
to 
Palacios, 50 miles northeast of 
Corpus Christi on Matagorda 
Bay. 
In the 159-mile stretch from 
Brownsville to Corpus Christi 


his crude hut of 'plank, drift 
xvood and rocks until a justice ot 
the peace ordered him to do it. 
Then Devine turned down a heli­ 
copter ride and walked across a 
bridge to the mainland, c a r­ 
rying his only companion, a cat. 
In the big civic center audito­ 
rium at Broxvnsville, more than 
1,000 persons sat in chairs cir 
cled into family groupings, feed­ 
ing themselves from ice chests, 
riding herd on their children 
and watching am ateur singers 
and dancers on stage. 
“ It’ almost like a fiesta,” said 
“ It’s almost like 
a 
fiesta,” 
said a social worker, Leroy IL 
Haverlah Jr. 
But xx hen the poxver failed and 
the air conditioning xvent off, 
Haverlah said, “ It ll get stifling. 
Nobody can take more than 21 
hours of this.” 


Pumpkin Show 


Food Booth 


Standards Set 


Paul Roan, city Health Com- 
cian, hospital, or clinic shall be there is little immediately along ■ missioner announced today that 
considered eligible. These serv 
ices shall be given to those per­ 
sons voluntarily seeking them 
consistent xvith their oxvn per­ 
sonal 
beliefs. 
No 
patient is 
denied service because of in- 


the coast except pastures of the 
huge 
King 
Ranch, 
lushly 
grassed coastal prairie so flat 
there is no barrier for winds or 
tides. 


all organizations 
or 
persons 
planning to have a food booth 
at the Circleville Pumpkin Show- 
must meet certain requirem ents 
such as: licensing, having min- 


In a related case William Mc­ 
Whorter, age 
18, 
Orient, was 
sentenced to one year 
in 
the 
Pickaway County jail and fined 
$1000. for contributing to the 
deliquency of Carol 
Hawley’s 
children. 
Judge Cline ruled that the sen­ 
tences be filled at the end 
of 
their term s for forgery impos­ 
ed by the Common Pleas Court. 
The children involved, ages 1- 
year, 2 years 
and 2 months, 
were turned over to the perm a­ 
nent custody of the Pickaxxay 
County Welfare Department. 


from Circleville, Williamsport, 
and surrounding area. 
Besides holding clinic sessions 
twice each month and providing 
services to the patients to date, 
the Pickaxvay Counyt Fam ily 
Planning Association has train­ 
ed several xvorkers and regis­ 
tered nurses, set up an appoint* 


Brownsville has a 
population 
of more than 50,000 and Mata- , 
morns, 
just 
across 
the 
Rio 
Grande, a population of about 
100,000. Inland up the valley lie 
toxvns and farm s containing at 
least 
another 
quarter- million 
people. 
At 2:50 a.m . xxind> in Browns- 
ments and records schedule.se- Ville were clocked at 104 m.p.h. 


Child Bruised 


In Auto Mishap 


Circleville Police investigated 
an accident at the intersection 
of E. Main St. and Washington 
St. at 4:09 p m, 
Tuesday 
in 
.. 
. . . 
.which a 5 year old girl sustain- 
Mr. and 
Mrs. 
Eddie Alter, ecj 


Frank Arledge, a resident of 
215 S. Pickaway St., lodged a 
i complaint before council concer­ 
ning a problem created by the 
tem porary use of the National 
Guard Armory by both Circle­ 
ville and Lancaster units. 
He 
said 
the 
traffic in the alley 
south of his home as well as at 
the rear was congested 
most 
of the time. He asked that boUi 
alleys be made one-way. 
He 
pointed out the alley running 
east and xvest is already 
one­ 
way 
from 
the 
Presbyterian 
Church to the Post office. 


Hog Stealing 


Charges Filed 


Charges 
have 
been 
lodged 
against an adult and two ju­ 
veniles who haxe admitted steal­ 
ing 31 hogs from farm ers in the 
northern part of the county. 
The adult, Nelson Gliek, 18, 
Orient, entered a plea of guiltx 
to charges today in Municipal 
Court. He was bound to the 
grand jury under $500 bond. 
According to Pickaxvay Coun­ 
ty Deputy Sheriff George Lin­ 
der, the trio admitted taking IO 
hogs from the farm of Jam es 
Walker, 20 hogs from Selmer 
Layman 
and 
one 
hog 
from 
Harold GUck, the father of the 
adult involved. 


Massilon, are the parents of a 
6-pound 14*ounce daughter born 
2:45 this morning in Ault rn an 
Hospital, Canton. Mr. and Mrs 
Harold Sharpe, 
and 
Mr. 
and 
John Alter, all of Williamsport, 
are the nexv grandparents. 


Evangelist Ta Speak 
At Naxarcnc Church 
Rev. Paul Merryman, evange­ 
list, xviii he guest minister at 
the Church of the Nazarene, and 
will conduct night services start­ 
ing 7:30 p.m. Sept. 25 through 
Oct. I. 
Rev. M erryman is a gradu­ 
ate of Treveeca Nazarene Colob 
loge, Nashville, Tenn.. and fol­ 
lowing a pastorial ministry 
in 
State College, Pa., now devote 
himself to itenerant 
evange­ 
lism. 


a minor injury. 
Drivers of the ears involved 
w-ere Marie Wilkins, 57, 152 F air­ 
view Ave , and Bonnie Chattos, i 
33, Stoutsville. Injured was Lot­ 
tie J ahi Chattos 5. She sustain­ 
ed a bruised arm. 


Post Conviction 


Review Dismissed 


A petition for a post convic­ 
tion reviexv filed by John M ar­ 
vin homas has been dismissed 
by Pickaway County Common 
Pleas Court Judge William Am­ 
mer. 
Thomas xvas sentenced to the 
i Ohio State Penitentiary 
for 
a 
term of IO to 25 years for arm ­ 
ed robbery. He xvas implicated 


' in the holdup of Gourmet Cor­ 
ner December, 1966. 


I letted 
a 
16-person 
governing 
board, secured insurance for its 


I xxorkers, contacted responsible 
persons throughout the entire 
county as 
well 
as 
interested 
county officials, supplied infor­ 
mation and limited advertising 
on request, and purchased need­ 
ed minimal supplies. Physicians, 
nurses, and xvorkers all volun­ 
teer their time and skills. 
The 1967-1968 
goal 
of 
the 
Family Planning Association is 
to provide services to seventy 
five patients. Your Community 
Fund dollar xviii help finance 
necessary medical supplies and 
laboratory 
tests, 
information 
and 
training 
literature, 
and 
g“n«ral clinic facilities. 
Hoxv about helping every child 
born to be a xvanted child — 
I through your gift to the Com­ 
munity Fund. 


Police said their cars were 
the only 
ones 
attempting 
to 
traverse Brownsville streets. 
They reported several utility 
poles on fire, “ hot lines” every- 
xvhere, palm trees ablaze and 
fallen trees all over the city. 
The 
W eather 
Bureau 
said 
Beulah’s 
IGO 
m.p.h. 
central 
winds 
could 
increase 
to 
175 
miles an bour by tile time they 
hit the beach. 
Already she xvas one of the 
fiercest tropical blows in histo­ 
ry. Hurricane Janet hit Chetu- 
mal, Mex., on Sept. 28, 1955, 
with 
winds 
recorded 
at 
t75 
m.p.h. before instruments blew 
out. 
Except 
for 
about 
a 
dozen 
Coast Guardsmen, the south end 
of Padre Island was reported 
completely abandoned. But at 
the 
north 
end, 
before 
the I reading Oct. 2, 2 p. in. • 8 p. rn. 


City Health 
Department in the 
city building. 


Applications for licenses m ust 
be applied for ten days prior to 
opening. The license fee must 
accompany the application. 
The person being responsible 
for the booth must sign for the 
license. All booths will be in­ 
spected for health and safety 
measures before opening by tho 
City Fire Chief and the City 
Sanitarian. 
a * * 
BOOKLETS on 
mobile typo 
food service booths are avail­ 
able at the City Health D epart­ 
ment. 
Students working 
in 
food 
booths can obtain T. B. tests 
at tile high school Sept. 26 and 
the test will be read Sept. 28 
at the high school. 
AU .students desiring 
T. 
B. 
tests must have a signed con­ 
sent slip from 
their parents. 
These slips will be available at 
the high school. 
Adults may obtain T. B. tests 
at their family physicians, Coun 
ty Health Departm ent and the 
City Health Dept. A resident of 
the city may obtain the test on 
Sept. 30 9 a.m. * 12 noon at the 
City Health Dept, and return for 


Last Nite “ Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf” 


STARLIGHT 2 
STAUTS 
TOMORROW 
W O NDERFUL 
COLOR HITS 


BhxkJa'jy's bare:.!, 
rarest unsquar^ 
love play find f 


happness 
• • j 


enfhebKj wid^ *• 
| color screen I * * • #l 


R08IRT REDFORD 


JANI FONDA 
HCNNIMIM 


RICHARD 
ELKE 
8HLVA 
JOHIlSOn 80ITHT1ER H08CMA 
RIDEL 
l\ GREED 


SUZAnnA 
LEIGH 
TECHNICOLOR TttHNiSCOH. " 
fig 
? 


PUBLIC NOTICE! Sale of Furniture Stock of 
SEYMOUR FURNITURE 


at 707 East Mound Street 


I have been authorized by the holder of the mortgage on 
the merhcandise of Seymour Furniture to dispose of the stock 
quickly as possible. 


Merchandise is mainly high quality so l.is, chairs, table*, 
lamps and dinettes, carpets, m attresses and box springs, and 
many miscellaneous items. 


I will lie at the store room at 707 E. Mound Street from 9 to 
5:30 Monday through Friday to sort out, m ark down aud .scil 
the furniture and other items. 


AII sales are cash, or I will arrange monthly payment plan 
for you. 


All merchandise is sold “ AS IS” and at the stu n . You may 
haul it home in your car or truck, or I will arrange to have it 
delivered to you al small expense to you. 
BOB GRIFFITH 


NOIL: During this sale I nill not have much Ulm to de* 
vote to my carpet business, hut have reserved my evenings 
to show car(>et samples in your home Ut any of mv customers 
desiring new rugs or wall to-wall carpet. 
Hob 


THEY’RE HERE 


1968 MERCURY’S 


COUGARS & COMETS 


I DRH Mercury 
Cyclone G.T. 2-Door Hardtop 


See and Test Drive One This Weekend 


Friday and Saturday - 8 A.M. to 9 P.M. 


Don Thompson Mercury Inc. 


1350 N . C O U R T ST. 


* a 
nuts 
I v 
O f 
OVER 


500 FOODS 


YOU CANT BEAT THIS GREAT TEAM 
Royal Blue Low Prices and Monarch High Quality Foods 
It’s The Total That Counts 
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Peppermint Oil Offers Trip' 
The Circleville Herald, Wed. Sept. 20, 1907 
Circleville. Ohio 


A new drug called “ 68” hit the Amer­ 
ican market some weeks ago and caus­ 
ed a momentary uproar in hij>py cir­ 
cles. It was alleged to give a shorter 
but wilder hallucinatory “ trip” than 
LSD. 
L» st week the U. S* P'*ood and Drug 
Administration examined the drug and 
concluded that it was nothing but con­ 
centrated peppermint oil. The only 
thing it will do is eventually rot the 
user’s teeth. “ I have a feeling that 
there are going to be a lot more of 
these fake drugs coming along,” said 
an FDA official. 
Inasmuch as LSD is a colorless and 


odorless drug, no doubt many users 
have been tripped up by fake LSD. 
Some people have wild imaginations 
if they’re told they’re taking a drug 
like LSD, they might actually exper­ 
ience hallucinations. 
In tests given at several universities 
a number of years ago, some students 
were given coffee to drink before they 
went to bed but were told it was a non­ 
caffeine drink. Others were given a 
non-caffeine drink, but were told it was 
coffee. 
More students who took the real cof­ 
fee got a good night’s sleep than did 
those who mistakenly thought their 
non-caffeine drink was coffee. 


Laff- A- Day 


The Brain Needs Workouts 


“ The brain is like a miracle,” lec­ 
tured the old-time schoolmasters to 
their pupils- “ A muscle becomes flab­ 
by if it is not exercised, and if you don’t 
think and use your brain, you will not 
have much of a one left.” 
In recent years, most theorizing on 
the subject has discountd the notion 
that the brain can be compared to 
a physical muscle that must be exer­ 
cised to be kept in shape. But now sci­ 
entists at the University of California 
declare that, from their studies of rats 


and mice, animals subjected 
to the 
most mental stimuli actually exper­ 
ience a temporary enlargement of the 
brain and a change in important brain 
ingredients that might be permanent. 
These findings suggest, then, that the 
old-time schoolmasters were right. The 
question may not be scientifically set­ 
tled for some time, but until then the 
best advice probably is to think. There 
was never any scientific evidence that 
it did any harm. And for some it would 
be a novel experience. 


According to Boyle 


By JAMES F. DONAHUE (l o r Hal Bo y li) 


(J) Kin f Ft.mrM by n d ieo t#. In #.. » #*7. Wo rld rn Ku ro wrv o d 
“ Why don’t you just get the TV fixed? ” 


Try and Stop Me 


By BENNETT CERF 


'Peace Poster' City 


Latest word from New York City — 
“ Fun City” — is that subway riders 
soon will be able to read posters op­ 
posing the Vietnam war. 
The left-wing Students for a Demo­ 
cratic Society, rebuffed by the Transit 
Authority, went to court and got a rul­ 


ing that such posters must be accepted 
as ads. 
Posters can only be refused for dis­ 
play if they present a serious and im­ 
mediate threat to the safe and efficient 
operation of the subways, Federal 
J udge Dudley B. Bonsai ruled. 


The Business World 


By J OHN C UN N IFF 


NEW YORK (A P) — Walter 
W. 
Heller retired in 1(164 as 
chairman 
of 
the 
President’s 
Council of Ec(Miom;c Advisers 
but his advice has continued to 
flow as if he had an open con­ 
duit to WasJ dngton. 
From Minneapolis, where he 
is a professor and a banker, 
Heller has continued to influ­ 
ence 
public matters, bringing 
som e fame to his bank and 
school and it is assumed, wis­ 
dom to those who listen to bis 
advice. 
In the opinion of some New 
Frontiersmen, at least, Heller 
has a leg itim ate cb im to the 
status of oracle, for he was 
chief economist when the Ken­ 
nedy administration challenged 
some conventional views on tax­ 
es. 
In the early years of this 
decade Heller recommended a 
tax cut although the budget was 
glowing red, the economy was 
already fairly prosperous and a 
conflict in Vietnam w-as burning 
up more and more money. 
Heller believed then that the 
economy was capable of still 
more capacity if freed from the 
rein of restrictive taxes. As % 
result, taxes in 1964 and 1965 
were cut by about $20 billion. 
As forecast, the demand for 
goods rose, production expand­ 
ed, and more rather than less 
tax r« » venue poured iii. The tax 
base had grown. 
Thi.s was not unique, lor taxes 
had been cut several times be­ 
fore t i spur an economy capa­ 
ble 
of noni"fl'-tionarv 
expan 
sine. But for various reason.s die 
1964 tax cut wa-, tile mo^t dra 
O’atle (i.^e of the concept. 
Unfortunately 
Heller 
could 
not spur hi; own econoniv 
He 
resiL-ned in 19<;i 
ch im in ' that 
in order t 
advji.e th. 
fi-deral 
I *» verrim« -nt on fimnt ■ - he had 
to tx.rro'' 
' .-o in thr( «• years 
to feed ll ' family 
1'hi- 
v.eek 
H-Uei 
th. 
man 
who eof t^ve*- 
e;im< 
,,ijt wth 
s« » ine 
=-.ird. in l;ivor of 
ta 
In his role a- euonomi.st with 


The Herald 


A GalVio Newspaper 


I* 
I- 
R O D K N F F L S 
P u blish e r 


the National CHty Bank he urged 
that: ‘ If Congress fails to enact 
the 
surtax, 
brisk 
expansion 
threatens to turn into gallop­ 
ing advances that would make a 
ti per cent rise in the consumer 
price index the very least we 
could expect in 1968.” 
‘‘If Congress prudently passes 
the IO per cent surtax, it will 
sharply improve 1968 prospects 
by: 
“ —Bringing the expansion of 
demand back to a sustainable 
rate; 
“ —Opening up enough breath­ 
ing space for monetary policy to 
operate 
effectively 
without 
a 
drastic new credit squeeze; 
“ —Providing 
more 
elbow 
room 
for 
the 
most 
urgent 
domestic problems.” 
Heller has held some of these 
views on the present economy 
for many months. Even before 
the J ohnson admini.stration sug­ 
gested a surtax last J anuary, 
Heller had been recommending 
the sam e thing. 
Heller is saying, in effect, dial 


to attempt to spur more output 
from 
the 
present 
economy 
might produce only inflation in­ 
stead. 
Nevertheless, 
he 
feels, 
the 
federal government needs a su r 
tax to fight “ the good fight 
against inflation 
and 
ghettos, 
side by side with war in Viet­ 
nam .” 
He 
CMicedes 
that 
Congress 
may look at events differently, 
but 
he 
ignored 
the 
vastly 
changed political climate when 
he observes- 
“ One wonders why Congress, 
which had the gumption to en­ 
act som e $15 billion of tax in­ 
creases 
in 1950-1951 to finance 
the Kbrean conflict, should now 
balk at a much more modest in­ 
crease.” 
These then are some ol the ar 
guments for a tax increase by 
the man who built a big reputa­ 
tion on a big tax cut—who per­ 
haps 
helped 
to 
produce 
the 
boom now forecast, a boom the 
administration feels can become 
inflated and perhaps burst. 


O 
LD LADY ABERNATH Y hadn’t seen her young g rand­ 
son since his christening and w hen she heard he w as 
being sent up to her country place to spend his ninth birth­ 
day w ith her, she w as so 
delig hted 
she 
put 
fiv e 
dollars in the collection 
plate 
that 
Sunday 
at 
church. 
The Sunday after her 
g randson w ent back hom e 
she put in ten dollars. 
* 
* 
* 
The fabulous success of 
that anemic-looking Eng­ 
lish model Twiggy has been 
the cause of much talk in 
the fashion world. One less 
successful American model 
in a Seventh Avenue dress 
house was overheard la­ 
menting, “ I once looked ex­ 
actly like her —but with m y rotten luck, I w as only nine years 
old at the time.” 


* 
* 
* 
A teacher in Beverly Hills asked her class, “ If a person w-as 
bom in 1940, how old would that person be today? ” One know­ 
ing lad piped up, “ You’ve left something out, Teacher. Is it a 
man or a woman? ” 
♦ 
* 
KA.MFI S KIITUPS: 
From Rutgers: 
Miniskirted Miss to Disapproving Grandmother: “ When you 
were a girl, granny, did you not also set your cap for the right 
m an? ” 
I). G.: “ Ye.s, I did- but not my knee cap.” 
From Oberlin: 
“ Ho'*' come your uncle dusts off his plate before every meal ? 
“ F o rc e of h a bit. H e u se d to be a ba se ba ll u m p ire .” 
id 196 7 , by Ben n ett 
Cert. D istribu ted by Kin g Featu res Sy n d u ate 


Speaking of Your Health 


By Lester L. Coleman, M . D. 


ROSTON (A P) — Supermar­ 
kets have become so big and 
crowded 
that 
many 
have es­ 
tablished 
one-way 
traffic 
in 
their aisles. This can cause tre­ 
mendous 
problems, 
especially 
tor unwarry males who are un­ 
familiar with su|>erniarkets any­ 
way. 
Like for Ted Lumpke who was 
39 when his wife got sick and he 
had to go to a supermarket for 
the first time. As soon as he got 
his grocery push cart he made a 
wrong 
turn 
down 
a 
one-way 
aisle 
Women 
began 
shouting 
at 
him: “ One way, one way” and 
giving him dirty looks as they 
steered their push carts past 
him. 
The 
store 
manager 
cam e 
rushing down the aisle waving 
his arms. “ You can’t push your 
push cart east on this aisle,” he 
said. “ This is a west aisle.” 
“ Where 
are 
the 
eg g s? ” 
Lumpke asked, 
“ Row G. Siection A, Shelf 3. 
eggs, 
beans and 
bacon,” the 
manager said. 
Lumpke backed out and went 
to How G bul it was one way 
west at his end and he wanted 
to go east. He went around the 
store and came to Row G at its 
other end and there he saw a 
sign saying Row G was one way 
east. 
Tliat is impossible, Lumpke 
thought, because if Row G were 
one way east at the west end 
and one way west at Ute east 


end, then nobody could get into 
Row G. 
Lumpke found the store man­ 
ager. “ There’s something wrong 
witti the signs on Row G,“ he 
said. “ Tliey’re west at Ute east 
end and east at the west end.” 
“ That’s imi>ossible,” the man­ 
ager said. 
“ Come 
and 
look,” 
Lumpke 
said. 
The 
manager came, 
looked 
and saw the signs. 
“ It means nobody can get into 
Row G,“ Lumpke said. “ And 
w'hat’s worse, it means anybody 
who might be in Row G riglit 
now can’t get out” 
The manager thought about it. 
“ Y es,” he said. “ But, of cour.se, 
that’s 
im possible,” 
and 
he 
walked away. 
So Lumpke threw caution to 
the wind and pushed his push 
cart in vitiation of the west sign 
east on Row G. 
The shelves were almost bare 
and covered with dust. There 
was dust on the floor and foot 
prints, and grass had grown up 
in places between the broken li­ 
noleum.. 
The sign mixup must have oc­ 
curred 
months 
ago, 
Lumpke 
thought, even years. 
He pushed his cart over the 
cracked 
floor 
between 
the 
stripped and dirty shelves, the 
thrill 
of the 
explorer in his 
heart. 
He found the starved, 
emaciated woman against an 
empty carton of beans, 
“ Thank 
God,” 
she 
said. 


“ They’ve fixed the signs. I’m 
the Ione survivor of a shopping 
party trapped in 1%1 when the 
sign.s were mixed up. I’ve been 
existing 
on 
eg g s, 
bacon 
and 
lH*an.H for six years.” 
“ But the sign.s liaven't been 
changed,” Lumpke said. 
The woman’s 
thin, 
cracked 
face turned white, “ But how did 
you get in? ” she asked. 
“ I w'cnt ea.st at the west end,” 
Lumpke .said, and the woman 
could only look at him in won­ 
der. 
“ Come 
with 
m e,” 
Lumpke 
said. He heltK'd the poor woman 
to the west end of the aisle 
where they met the store man­ 
ager. 
“ Here,” 
the 
manager 
.said, 
“ you can’t come out. TTiis is the 
west end of Row G, an east 
aisle.” 
“ But if we can’t come out by 
going west al the east end 
or 
east at the west end,” Lumpke 
said, “ then we shall have to 
stay here forever.” 
“ I can’t help that,” the man­ 
ager said. 
“ Without a chaperon? ” Lump­ 
ke asked indi.gnanlly “ In a su­ 
permarket. tho last bastion of 
middle-class morality? ” 
The 
manager, 
r e a l i z i n g 
I.umpke had appealed lo a high­ 
er law, let them out. “ The pure 
of heart always win in a super­ 
market,” Lumpke said. 
“ I hope you plan to pay for 
the eg g s, bacon and beans,” the 
manager told the woman. 
Big and Little Switches 


By J OHN CHAMBERLAIN 
ROME — If Europe is having 
trouble adjusting itself to the 
America 
of 
Lyndon 
J ohnson, 
it can perhaps best be explain­ 
ed by reference to what Broad­ 
way calls the switcheroo. It is 
complicated, however, by the 
fact that there have been two 
switches, a big one and a little 
one 
The big switch is that Amer­ 
ica, which was the decisive ele­ 
ment 
in 
World 
War 
II, the 
rehabilitator of nations under 
the Marshall Plan, the bold im­ 
proviser of the Berlin airlift, 
and the originator of the com- 
jHiler revolution, can’t lick a 
ra.'Tag and bobtail Asiatic jun- 


Views on Television 


By CYNTHIA LOWRY 


AP Television-Radio Writer 


K U DAVIS 
Efiitur 


A d_uj^ n*w*p*p« r 
eoRmolidi. Ung 
turn Circleville H^rtld and tte Daily 
Unioi. Herald. 
Entered ai eeciittd claia metier 
at the Cu-rieelii* PoM Offtee under 
the art 
, , l M« rcfi 3. 187'* 
He» -ond 
(iaaa poatogr ptid at fJ rclcvUI*. 
CJfttu. 
Pu h llah ed ev ci v aftern o o n 
except 
Su n d ay of th e Herald Ru Ud lfif J IO 
Nu rtli Cu u rt itreet, Circlev HJe. Obto 
ny tlM Clri;k ‘v iiie Pu biiaiUiic Co m­ 
p an y . 


nrM C K IPTlO A 
F lu e EH 


By carrier In ctrciavtDa 50c per 
waeli. By mall In Pickaway CcruA- 
ty. U t 
per 
year. 
Elaewhcre 
ta 
Ohio, 111 par year. 
Ou tald e Ohio, 
118 
Mall retae apply only when 
rurnar aervlce ta not available. 
Telepkowes 
Hu ain eaa 
47 4-8111 
Newt 
4 7 4 4 U8 
Poetmaaler: 
Bend fomt fiji lei 
Box 
44P. 
ClrctevUle, 
Ohio, till IS. 
National Advcrtlid^ Repreacnta- 
live. 


AMERICAN NEWSPAPER 
REPRUENTATIVEl. 
INC. 
AUanta — ChlOT# e — Detrelt 
I.<ae Au tfeJee — New York 


NKW YORK ( AP, - J ack 
Webb, 
an 
actor 
who 
neither 
."ings nor dances but dues have 
a television series on NBG, was 
a 
guest 
on 
Tuesday night’s 
“ J erry I.ewis Show,” also on 
NBG. 
.S(i what (lid he do? He was in 
a little sketch satirizing lus pro- 
rain “ Dra'4n(t ’ 
David Hedison an ad >r w'lio 
reitber .-.inus 
nor dances 
but 
dcM-s bu vc a television si t ies on 
AHC, was a guest on Tuesday 
ni:'ht’ 
“ Hollywood 
Palace,” 
ds-. or ABG 
So what did he do' He was rn 
a 
little 
sketch which satirized 
his program 
“ Vova *• to the 
Bottom of the Sea * 
Television usuail.v 
runs into 
Its stormiest weather when it at­ 
tempts satire, but always seem 
to find televh.ion—from 
enter- 
tauiment program 
to coininer- 
I isis—its In st and easiest tar- 
et 
But by now it has become 
almost a ritual to use TV stars 
to kid Uieir own pnjduci. 
It wa;-!, as a matter of fact, 
about time someb« xJ3 |X>ked a 
little fun at “ Voyage to Hie Bot­ 
tom ol the ,Soa” and it.s mon* 
st« r of tlie week 
“ Hollywood 
Palace .s” inonsier, Rock 
Man, 
WMS not really more ridieulous 
than feome preheiited seriously 
in the adv» iiture series. 
Milton Berle was host on the 
“ P aiiiie” variety show, moved 
this si*asi>n bi a new night and 
time sfxit. 'rile program, essen­ 
tially a vaudeville show, has it.s 
own style and is in no way 
a 
Carlton of the Ed Sullivan hour. 
I-era H(» rne, who sang two 
songs, WBK given a glittering 
background and one production 
number with Neile Adams danc­ 
ing with the chonts iKiys had 
Mdish and class 


NBG’s “ I Dream (rf J eannie” 
introduced 
a 
new 
character 
Tuesday, 
J eannie’s 
sister-Bar- 
Bara Eden in a black wtg-who 
is a mean, .selfish ‘.enie, unlikt 
Barbara Eden’s 
g<x)d 
blonde 
genie. 
The series now is in its third 
season, suege.sting that it must 
have a devoted following. But it 
is hard to get involved in 
the 
[irogram since all the humor is 
pegged on ..pedal effects and 
camera trick . 
It is not terri­ 
bly funny, for instance, to see a 
v'oung astronaut puzzling hi.^ 
u 
fierior officer when in a twin 
l.ling of a g enie’s e>-? ,hi clothe., 
are m aeically ehan.qed. 
“ Pa.s.’word” 
after six years 
di.sappeared this week on CBS 
and in its place ha- come “ Live 
is a Many Splendorecl 'Ihing,” 
based on a novel. It Is the -tory 
of a Eura.sian girl coming to the 
United States and meeting her 
father’s 
American 
fam ily. 
It 
will take more expo: ure than a 
couple of days to find out if it 
ha.s anything more to offer tliari 
the rest of the aflernfxtn soap 
o|>eras. 
But 
“ Password.” 
a 
bright and literate gam e that in 
volvwl the audience, undoubted­ 
ly will be missed by many view­ 
ers. 
Art Stark, for years tlie pro 
ducer of J ohnny Carsoii’i televi­ 
sion shows including “ The To­ 
night Show” is the new produc 
cr of ABC’s “ Good Company.” 
J ohn Aaron quit the new teries 
after a disag reem ent with Da­ 
vid Susskind, the executive pro- 
(J ucer, over the proposed injec­ 
tion of controver.sial issues In 
tile 
celebrity 
interview 
pro­ 
gram. 


Some 50 million bad cherk^ 
are written each year 


Is there any way to correct 
unusually large ears that stick 
out from the head? 
'I'he outer ear is made up of 
cartile.ge. It is for this reason 
that no amount of pressure ex­ 
erted on it can possibly alter 
its shaj>e. The ear will jump 
back to its former jtosition. 
Plastic surgery 
is 
the only 
way to change the size and the 
api>earanee of the ears. Any oth­ 
er technique with special hor­ 
mone 
cream s 
and 
adhesives 
cannot |x>ssibly solve the prob­ 
lem. 
The techniques 
for 
plastic 
urgery 
of 
the ears 
have ad­ 
vanced considerably in the la.st 
two decade.s. It is now almost 
always possible to predict 
ac­ 
curately the eventual outcome 
of the surgery. 
Psychological a>peets of large 
ears mu:4 be stre.ssed, especial­ 
ly in boys 
who cannot cover 
their ears with long hair. As I 
•said tbi . 
I forgot 
completely 
that long hair i.~ no longer the 
private property of girls. It is 
ho(H*d that the young mod will 
eventually 
outgrow 
the 
long 
hair that may hide large floppy 
car- that might cau;^e him em- 
harras-inent. 
'I’he (;pJ iation i- reinarkalily 
painlc! 
-md 
ah 
It i 
usually 
pl rfornu d under local ane ;the- 
la and r« (luires 
only a 
short 
pt'riiKl id tiii'c for complete re­ 
covery 
Finding «i pla tie 
ur con who 
i. pang ul.:<rly interested in the 
problem 
.jf 
congenital 
“ lop 
ear” (I* pi-nd, 
U|>on th?* advice 
of one 
own per-onal physician. 
He knows th* training and ca- 
pabilitn 
of th* 
men at local 
ho pitals 
'rill 
aiLanta.,..! id a plastic 
repair of 
protruding 
ears 
is 
gr* al and -.hould b* dune before 
th* child I 
made aware of his 
deformity. 


\Miy 
hs» d 
In a 
husiMtal 
tasteh 
and unappetizing? 
ll i 
hardly fair to exfject 
gournn t I iMjkin.c in hospitals. I 
know of 
no 
larize 
institution 
that • un (joshibly do mass cook- 
in.4 with WUU -auces and choc­ 
olate .-iidfleH. 
A coik I ho pital L not in com 
fM'titioii with Maxim’' of Paris, 
Ghauveroii iii New York or the 
Pumji Room in ( ’liveago. I don’t 
beli.-ve that anyone ever enter- 
a ho-pital for the special self 
iiidub em * 
of e\quisite cuisine 
FuixJ ■'Nerved in tvosptials to 


day has as a prime 
objective 
nourishment, 
palatably 
served 
in pleasant surroundings. All of 
this is related to the major ob 
jectives of a hospital—to treat 
medical and surgical problem^ 
with the greatest facility and 
grcate.st care and to help pa­ 
tients make the most rapid re­ 
covery. 
Wlien patients who have been 
very ill, or have had recent sur­ 
gery, begin to complain about 
the f(XKl, they are almost ready 
to be discharged from the bos 
pital. It is an excellent sign of 
recovery when Uic 
complaints 
pour in about 
the 
“ ta.sieless ’ 
food and the cold coflee. 
When the patient is well on 
the way to recovery, 
and the 
hospital food does not complete 
ly satisfy his appetite tor sub­ 
tle cooking, food can be brought 
from home 
or 
even 
directly 
from a fine restaurant. 
If paitent loses sight 
of the 
real contribution being made to 
him 
by the medical, 
nursin.g 
and administrative .-» taff of Un 
hospital then he indeed 
over­ 
looks their significant contribu­ 
tion to his recov(*ry. 


C hildren and 
adults need a 
nourshing breakfast. 


Mothers Hands on Plow 
NF'W DELHI (AID — Women 
in rural India are going to learn 
the latest *icientific agricultural 
rn elf md s. 
The southern -.late of Madras 
ha.s led the way by starting a 
one-week course training about 
80 women at a time in Imtlur 
farming method^ 
Mrs. 
S a r o J i ll i 
Varadap* 
pan, chairman of the Madra.-* 
State social welfare board, who 
is conducting the course, said it 
was lim e women took up thu 
challenge 
of 
India’s 
chrome 
foodgrain deficiency. 
“ The hand tliat rock.s the cra­ 
dle rules the world, and it h 
time our hands arc put to th* 
plough,” she said. 


Among 
tile 
biggest 
«»e n s 
known to man are kilns for fir 
iiig ceramic tile I' S < er.uiii. 
tile makers use kilns that mea 
lire more than IOO feet lon.e and 
have temperatures ex< ceding 
OOO degne-s Ceramic tiles 
are 
carefully '-tacked on specially 
made long train: 
that 
travi I 
through the oven tunnels al al 
most imperceptible rales, sunn 
times taking mon* than 48 hours 
to m« k« the lr ii* 


Scanning 


Editions 
Of the Past 


3 7 YEARS ;\GG 
SEPT. 193 0 
Gov. Franklin I). Roosevelt, 
New York, joined liberals and 
came out for the repeal of the 
Eighteenth Amendment. Ile ad­ 
vocated 
a 
new 
amendment 
granting each state the right to 
.sell 
intoxicants 
through 
a 
state agency, while preserving 
Federal 
protection 
for 
states 
that were drv. 


Election of officers for the up 
per 
classes 
of 
Circleville. 
High School were held. Named 
to the 
president 
offices 
were 
Seniors. 
Rol>ert Rooney; 
J un­ 
ior*., 
Albert 
Hoffman; 
Sopho­ 
more" Haul Wallace. 


Enrollment 
of city 
"cluxjl.s, 
high and elementary, was 1535. 
Due to the large increase 
in 
high school enrollment, 
Mi.ss 
Marian Hitler had been secured 
by the Board of Education 
lo 
teach the overflow of students. 
Mi.s" Hiller, a local girl, 
was 
an honor graduate, valedictor­ 
ian of her cia-', and scholastic­ 
ally honored 
at college 
being 
the winner of a Phi Beta Kaiipa 
Kl V. Sh* taught business arith- 
rn. tic, English and Social civics. 


( ii lid id at* - 
for 
cheerleading 
WI re Doris PeU-r.s, J ane Hitler, 
Robert Room y, Koliert WUson, 
I ay Davi:s, Katherine 
Brown, 
( ‘harlotle (’askey, Edward I*he- 
bus, Gaylord Rose, J am es Drum 
and Dudl.-y Wills. 


J wo Pl* Raw ay County homes 
Wen* quarantined for infantile 
paraly-i 
in a two-day |K*riod. 


I d I . WI', who had been re- 
cuper.iliiie at his br<» ther Leon’s 
home in New J ersey siaee 
a 
narrow 
escape from drowning 
on the liner “ Paris” returning 
from Eurofie, arrived in circle- 
villi from New VorK for a brie! 
visit with his mother. Mrs. B. 
Friedman. 


Tile 
Cliftona 
Tin alec 
was 
showing the all talking feature 
■'Swel l Mama ’. . . 


'Ult heaviest rain of the year 
tell 
a 
recorded 
l.^i.'i 
mch« *s, 
tile m o4 rain that had ever fal 
l-ii in Pnkaway County at any 
one lim e during the suninuT. 
Ak a rt suR of 
tile rain, 
the 
therimmieter tumbled to 7.1 de 
g ree 


gle outfit called the Vietcong. 
It pours in half a million men 
supported by a couple of billion 
dollars a month, but for all its 
alleged might it can’t handle an 
old man like Ho Chi Minh and 
his collection of brushfire stra­ 
teg ists. De Gaulle insults this 
A^merica, and LBJ doesn’t even 
retort by murmuring Bien Bien 
Phu. Europeans may not con- 
sciouslv analyze the strange sit 
nation in term s of a categorical 
expectancy, 
or 
a 
historical 
cliche, that has suddenly been 
overturned. Yet this is surely at 
the bottom of the note of con­ 
tempt that com es ino Eurpean 
talk abut America, 
The little switch has been pro 
vided by Israel, which has 
a 
population that is just about a 
fourth of that of New York City 
For the two thousand years of 
the Diaspora, or J ewish scat­ 
tering, Europe has thought of 
the J ews as merchants and mon­ 
ey-changers and bankrollers for 
indignent sovereigns. Now- the 
J ews, as Israelis, have taken on 
the attributes of Richard the 
Lion-hearted. 
They have used 
tanks like a PaUon or a Gilder- 
ian. and aircraft like a Mar.shal 
Tedder or a Hap Arnold, llioug h 
they were supposed to be incur­ 
ably urban, they becam e a na­ 
tion of farmers, and then a na­ 
tion of soldiers on top of that. 
The 
reality 
of 
Hie Israeli 
switch was not expected in the 
chancellories of the West when 
Nasser was rattling his rockets 
last May. When the Italian Fan- 
fani suggested that Israel sure­ 
ly wouldn’t w'ant to risk bring­ 
ing on an atomic holocaust by 
hasty action, he was firmly told 
that if he was w-orried about 
World War HI he had better 
s|K*ak to the Arabs, H ie Israe­ 
lis were going to open the Gulf 
of Aqaba, and that was Blat. 
Fanfani was wrong in believing 
that Israel’s commitment to ac- 
tiofi was a fake. and when the 
dread day of battle cam e in 
Sinai it did not magnify into 
World War III. 
So now, when the Israeli dip­ 
lomats tell their opposite num- 
b(*rs in the West and al the UN 
that 
tfiey 
won’t 
make peace 
witli anyone 
save 
the 
Arabs 
face to-face 
( “ 'Phey know our 
telephone number"), it behoovi*.s 
the 
Fanfani" 
and 
the 
Dt'an 
Rusk." 
to 
listen. 
'Hie Arabs 
might do well to listen, too 
'rile Israeli peace protHisUiuii 
is conciliatory enough. For rec­ 
ognition of the right to live, aud 
to use the Suez Canal, the Israe­ 
li victors Would return the east 
bank of Suez to the Egvptiaiis 
along with the Sinai oil wells. 
I "rad would want to keep some 
key spot." in .Sinai that are need* 
(d to guarantee aecevn to the 
Gulf of Aqaba |M>rl of Eilat and 
protection against a futiir* Arab 
mobilization. After beating 
thi* 
Arab" on the field of buttle, thi-; 
would seem fair. Hut the i>oint 
i" that, having iiceoiupli lo (I a 
world shakm*' 
"''itch 
in 
thcif 
liublic imaue He- I i a* Ii' aren't 
likely to be euiliered out 
Of 
what they consider to be mini 
mal g('ore,rflt» hic security. 
As miglil have Im'cii written In 
Ecclesiastes, there is a time to 
turn things over to a committee 
and a time to act on im ’r own. 
'rile Israeli.s sense that the time 
to act on your own i.s when you 
bold the card" Why should the-. 
I(‘t LBJ or Harold Wilton play 
their haiur 
Bul the Americans, who have 
held 
high cards of their own 
ever .since 
1945, have a das- 
perate yearning to 
turn their 


game over to a committee that 
has no clear objectives beyond 
an inchoate desire for peace. 
No wonder we 
have lost the 
world’s respect because of our 
incredible switcheroo. 
As it might also be WTitten 
in Eccle.siastes. there is- not only 
a time to switch but also a time 
lo switch back. One hopes that 
when the tale of our tim e is 
told, it will not be recorded that 
the America of LBJ couldn’t tell 
the 
difference 
between three 
aces and a pair of thre(s. 


l O D A Y 


In History 


Today is Wedne.sday, Sept. 20, 
the 263rd day of 1967. There are 
102 days left in the year. 
Today’s highlight in history: 
On this date in 1946, President 
Harry Truman asked Secretary 
of Commerce Henry Wallace for 
hi.s 
resignation 
following 
a 
spc'ech Wallace made criticizing 
U.S. policy toward Russia. 
On tliis date: 
In 1797, the American Frigate 
Old Ironsides was launched at 
tile Boston Navy Yard. 
In 1850, Congress voted to ban 
the slave trade in the District of 
Columbia. 


In 1873. 
the 
panic 
of 
1873 
reached a climax when the New’ 
York Stock Exchange closed its 
doors. 


In 1881, V'ice President Chester 
A. Arthur t<M>k the oath of office 
a.s 21st Pre."ident following the 
death of President J am es Gar­ 
field. 


In 1938, a hurricane swept over 
l<ong Island, New J ersey and 
New England, Uking an csti- 
mated 682 lives. 


In 1963, 
President J ohn 
F. 
Kenntxly 
addrc"***? ! 
the 
U.N. 
G(meral As.senibly and proposed 
a joint American-Hussian exped­ 
ition to the moon. 


Ten years ago — Gov. Orval 
Fauhus of Arkansas obeyed 
a 
federal court order and wiUi- 
drew National Guard troops who 
had been 
barring 
.Negro 
"til 
dents 
from 
entering 
Central 
High School in Little Rock. 
Five years ago—J am(? s Mere- 
diUi wa." kejjt Irom enrolling at 
tile Univer-Mty of Mis."issippi by 
Gov. Rush Banielt. 
One year ago — 'J’he U.N. Gen­ 
eral AhM'mbly o|K*ned its 21st 
session witii a call for construc­ 
tive negoiiatmii." winch would 
lead to an hunorable peace in 
Vietnam 


You're 


Telling Me 


B r w illiam KUI 
Central Presa Writer 


An all girl proie.ssional 
hall team i.s being organizi 
a 
Uleveland 
theatrical 
) 
who’.s confiiii.iit 
they’ll 
I 
popular attraction. At that 
girl gricletii*;-, 'should do 
j 
g«MKl at the gate 
And wi 
mean pri'tty' 


'Hie orgaiii/ei- 
the 
levcn 
will 
n e 
raz/le (j 
lilay" 
exclusively, 
We 
know about Un* razzle but 
sure .should dn7rl# » __any 
spectators. 


Peppermint Oil Offers Trip' 
The Circleville Herald, Wed. Sept. 20, 1907 
Circleville. Ohio 


A new drug called “68” hit the Amer­ 
ican market some weeks ago and caus­ 
ed a momentary uproar in hippy cir­ 
cles. It was alleged to give a shorter 
but wilder hallucinatory “trip” than 
LSD. 
Lest week the U. S- Food and Drug 
Administration examined the drug and 
concluded that it was nothing but con­ 
centrated peppermint oil. 
The only 
thing it will do is eventually rot the 
user’s teeth, “I have a feeling that 
there are going to be a lot more of 
these fake drugs coming along,” said 
an FDA official. 
Inasmuch as LSD is a colorless and 


odorless drug, no doubt many users 
have been tripped up by fake LSD. 
Some people have wild imaginations 
if they’re told they’re taking a drug 
like LSD, they might actually exper­ 
ience hallucinations. 
In tests given at several universities 
a number of years ago, some students 
were given coffee to drink before they 
went to bed but were told it was a non­ 
caffeine drink. Others were given a 
non-caffeine drink, but were told it was 
coffee. 
More students who took the real cof­ 
fee got a good night’s sleep than did 
those who mistakenly thought their 
non-caffeine drink was coffee. 


Laff-A-Day 


The Brain Needs Workouts 


“The brain is like a miracle,” lec­ 
tured the old-time schoolmasters to 
their pupils. “A muscle becomes flab­ 
by if it is not exercised, and if you don’t 
think and use your brain, you will not 
have much of a one left.” 
In recent years, most theorizing on 
the subject has discountd the notion 
that the brain can be compared to 
a physical muscle that must be exer­ 
cised to be kept in shape. But now sci­ 
entists at the University of California 
declare that, from their studies of rats 


and mice, animals subjected 
to the 
most mental stimuli actually exper­ 
ience a temporary enlargement of the 
brain and a change in important brain 
ingredients that might be permanent. 
These findings suggest, then, that the 
old-time schoolmasters were right. The 
question may not be scientifically set­ 
tled for some time, but until then the 
best advice probably is to think. There 
was never any scientific evidence that 
it did any harm. And for some it would 
be a novel experience. 


«?-2 0 
kine Fn MM 
Hi*. 1**7. W*rU n«M. 
“Why don’t you just get the TV fixed?” 


Try and Stop Me 


By BENNETT CERF 


'Peace Poster' City 


Latest word from New York City — 
“Fun City” — is that subway riders 
soon will be able to read posters op­ 
posing the Vietnam war. 
The left-wing Students for a Demo­ 
cratic Society, rebuffed by the Transit 
Authority, went to court and got a rul­ 


ing that such posters must be accepted 
as ads. 
Posters can only be refused for dis­ 
play if they present a serious and im­ 
mediate threat to the safe and efficient 
operation of the subways, 
Federal 
Judge Dudley B. Bonsai ruled. 


The Business World 


By JOHN CUNNIFF 


NEW YORK (AP) — Walter 
W 
Heller retired in 1964 as 
chairman 
of 
the 
Presidents 
Council of Economic Advisers 
but his advice has continued to 
flow as if he had an open con 
duit to W allington. 
From Minneapolis, where he 
is a professor and a banker, 
Heller has continued to influ­ 
ence public matters, bringing 
some fame to his bank and 
school and it is assumed, wis­ 
dom to those who listen to bis 
advice. 
In the opinion of some New 
Frontiersmen, at least, Heller 
has a legitimate claim to the 
status of oracle, for he was 
chief economist when the Ken­ 
nedy administration challenged 
some conventional views on tax­ 
es. 
In the early years of this 
decade Heller recommended a 
tax cut although the budget was 
glowing red, the economy was 
already fairly prosperous and a 
conflict in Vietnam was burning 
up more and more money. 
Heller believed then that the 
economy w-as capable of still 
more capacity if freed (rom the 
rein of restrictive taxes. As a 
result, taxes in 1964 and 1965 
were cut by about $20 billion. 
As forecast, the demand for 
goods rose, production expand* 
ed, and more rather than less 
tax revenue poured in. The tax 
base had grown. 
This was not unique, for taxes 
had been cut several times be­ 
fore to spur an economy capa* 
hie of nonmfl*»tionsrv expan- 
sino. But for various reasons the 
1964 tax cut was tile most dra­ 
matic use of the concept. 
Unfortunately, 
Heller 
could 
not spur his own economy. He 
resigned in 1964. chimin? that 
in order t * advise the federal 
government on finances he had 
to borrow $16,000 in three years 
to feed his family. 
This week Heller, the man 
who cut taxes, came out with 
some strong words in favor of 
raising taxes. 
In his role as economist with 


The Herald 


A Galvm Newspaper 
P. F. RODF.NFELS 
PubU»her 


the National City Bank he urged 
that: ‘ If Congress fails to enact 
the 
surtax, 
brisk 
expansion 
threatens to turn into gallop­ 
ing advances that would make a 
3 per cent rise in the consumer 
price index the very least we 
could expect in 1968.” 
‘‘If Congress prudently passes 
the IO per cent surtax, it will 
sharply improve 1968 prospects 
by: 
“—Bringing the expansion of 
demand back to a sustainable 
rate; 
“—Opening up enough breath­ 
ing space tor monetary policy to 
operate effectively 
without 
a 
drastic new credit squeeze; 
“—Providing 
more 
elbow 
room 
for 
the 
most 
urgent 
domestic problems.” 
Heller has held some of these 
views on the present economy 
for many months. Even before 
the Johnson administration sug­ 
gested a surtax last January, 
Heller had been recommending 
the same thing. 
Heller is saying, in effect, that 


to attempt to spur more output 
from 
the 
present 
economy 
might produce only inflation in­ 
stead. 
Nevertheless, 
he 
feels, 
the 
federal government needs a sur­ 
tax to fight “the good fight 
against inflation 
and ghettos, 
side by side with war in Viet­ 
nam.” 
He concedes that Congress 
may look at events differently, 
but 
he 
ignored 
the 
vastly 
changed political climate when 
he observes: 
“One wonders why Congress, 
which had the gumption to en­ 
act some $15 billion of tax in­ 
creases in 1950-1951 to finance 
the Kbrean conflict, should now 
balk at a much more modest in- 
crease.” 
These then are some of the ar­ 
guments for a tax increase by 
the man who built a big reputa­ 
tion on a big tax cut—who per* 
haps helped 
to 
produce 
the 
boom now forecast, a boom the 
administration feels can become 
inflated and perhaps burst. 


O 
LD LADY ABERNATHY hadn’t seen her young grand­ 
son since his christening and when she heard he was 
being sent up to her country place to spend his ninth birth­ 
day with her, she was so 
delighted she put five 
dollars in the collection 
plate 
that 
Sunday 
at 
church. 
The Sunday after her 
grandson went back home 
she put in ten dollars. 
* 
• 
* 
The fabulous success of 
that anemic-looking Eng­ 
lish model Twiggy has been 
the cause of much talk in 
the fashion world. One less 
successful American model 
in a Seventh Avenue dress 
house 
was overheard la­ 
menting, “I once looked ex­ 
actly like her—but with my rotten luck, I was only nine years 
old at the time.” 
* 
* 
* 
A teacher in Beverly Hills asked her class, “If a person was 
bom in 1940, how old would that person be today?” One know­ 
ing lad piped up, “You’ve left something out, Teacher. Is it a 
man or a woman?” 
* 
* 
* 
KAMP I S KITTUPS: 
From Rutgers: 
Miniskirted Miss to Disapproving Grandmother: “When you 
were a girl, granny, did you not also set your cap for the right 
man V* 
D. G.: “Yes, I did—but not my knee cap.” 
From Oberlin: 
“Ho'*- come your uncle dusts off his plate before 
every- meal? 
“Force of habit. He used 
to be a baseball umpire.*’ 
1957, by Bennett Cerf. Distributed by King Features Sy ndicate 


Speaking of Your Health 


By Lester L. Coleman, M.D. 


Views on Television 


By CYNTHIA LOWRY 
AP Television-Radio Writer 


Ft 
L. D A V IS 
Editor 
A daily newspaper consolidating 
the Circleville Herald and the Dally 
Union Herald. 
Entered aa second cia aa matter 
at the Cir Bernie Poet Office under 
the act of March 3. 1879 Second 
clat* pottage paid at Circleville. 
Ohio 
Puhliahed every afternoon except 
Sunday at the Herald Building 210 
North Court Street. Circleville, (kilo 
by the Circleville Publishing Com­ 
pany. 


St BSC KIP I ION 
PRICKS 


By carrier In Circleville 30c per 
week. By mail in Pickaway Coun­ 
ty. HS 
per 
year. 
Elsewhere 
in 
Ohio, |!4 per year. Outside Ohio, 
SIS 
Mail rates apply only where 
carrier service ta not available. 
Tele phones 
Hi i h i net* 474-3131 
News 474-3133 
Postmaster: Send form 379 to: 
Box 440. Circleville. Ohio. 43113. 
National Advertising Hepresents. 
live. 


AMERICAN NEWSPAPER 
REPRESENTATIVES, INC. 
AUanta — Chicago — Detroit 
Los Angeles — New York 


NEW YORK (APi - Jack 
Webb, 
an actor who neither 
icings nor dances but dues have 
a television series on NBC, was 
a 
guest 
on 
Tuesday night’s 
“Jerry I^ewis Show,” also on 
NBO. 
So what did he do? He was in 
a little sketch satirizing his pro- 
-ram. “Dragnet.” 
David Hedison an actor who 
reither sings nor dances but 
does have a television series on 
ABC, was a guest on Tuesday 
night’ 
“Hollywood 
Palace,” 
also on ABC 
So what did be do? He was in 
a 
little sketch which satirized 
his program, ‘‘Voyage to the 
Bottom of the Sea.” 
Television usually runs into 
its stormiest weather when it at­ 
tempts satire, but always seem 
to find television—from 
enter­ 
tainment programs to commer­ 
cials—its best and easiest tar­ 
get. But by now it has become 
almost a ritual to use TV stars 
to kid their own product. 
It was, as a matter of fact, 
about time somebody poked a 
little fun at “Voyage to Hie Bot­ 
tom of the Sea” and its mon- 
sterof-the-week. 
“Hollywood 
Palace’s” monster, Rock Man, 
was not really more ridiculous 
than some presented seriously 
in the adventure series. 
Milton Eerie was host on the 
“Palace” variety show, moved 
this season to a new night and 
time split. The program, essen* 
tially a vaudeville show, has its 
own style and is in no way a 
carbon of the Ed Sullivan hour. 
Lena Horne, who sang two 
songs, was given a glittering 
background, and one production 
number with Neile Adams danc­ 
ing with the chorus boys bad 
polish and class. 
* 


NBC’s “I Dream of Jeannie” 
introduced 
a 
new 
character 
Tuesday, Jeannie’s sister-Bar- 
Bara Eden in a black wig-who 
is a mean, selfish genie, unlike 
Barbara Eden’s 
good 
blonde 
genie. 
The series now is in its third 
season, suggesting that it must 
have a devoted following. But it 
is hard to get involved in the 
program since all the humor is 
pegged on special effects and 
camera tricks. 
It is not terri­ 
bly funny, for instance, to see a 
young astronaut puzzling his su 
lienor officer when in a twin­ 
kling of a genie’s eye,his clothes 
are magically changed. 
“Password” after six years 
disappeared this week on CBS 
and in its place has come “Love 
is a Many Splendored Thing.” 
based on a novel. It is the story 
of a Eurasian girt coming to the 
United States and meeting her 
father’s 
American 
family. 
It 
will take more exposure than a 
couple of days to find out if it 
has anything more to offer than 
the rest of the afternoon soap 
operas. 
But 
“Password,” 
a 
bright and literate game that in 
vol veil the audience, undoubted­ 
ly will be missed by many view­ 
ers. 
Art Stark, for years tile pro­ 
ducer of Johnny Carson’s televi­ 
sion shows including “The To­ 
night Show” is the new produc­ 
er of ABC’s “Good Company.” 
John Aaron quit the new series 
after a disagreement with Da­ 
vid Susskind, the executive pro­ 
ducer, over the proposed injec­ 
tion of controversial issues in 
the 
celebrity 
interview 
pro­ 
gram. 


Some 50 million bad checks 
are written each year. 


Is there any way to correct 
unusually large ears that stick 
out from the head? 
The outer ear is made up of 
cartilege. It is for this reason 
that no amount of pressure ex­ 
erted on it can possibly alter 
its shape. The ear will jump 
back to its former position. 
Plastic surgery is the only 
way to change the size and the 
appearance of the ears. Any oth­ 
er technique with special hor­ 
mone 
creams 
and 
adhesives 
cannot possibly solve the prob­ 
lem. 
The techniques 
for 
plastic 
surgery of the ears have ad­ 
vanced considerably in the last 
two decades. It is now almost 
always possible to predict 
ac­ 
curately the eventual outcome 
of the surgery. 
Psychological aspects of large 
ears must be stressed, especial­ 
ly in boys 
who cannot cover 
their ears with long hair. As I 
said this. 
I forgot completely 
that long hair is no longer the 
private property of girls. It is 
hoped that the young mod will 
eventually 
outgrow 
the 
long 
hair that may hide large floppy 
ears that might cause him em­ 
barrassment. 
The operation is remarkably 
painless and safe. It is usually 
performed under local anesthe­ 
sia and requires only a short 
period of time for complete re­ 
covery. 
Finding a plastic surgeon who 
is particularly interested in the 
problem 
of 
congenital 
“lop 
ears” depends upon the advice 
of one’s own personal physician. 
He knows the training and ca­ 
pabilities of the men at local 
hospitals. 
The advantages of a plastic 
repair of 
protruding 
ears 
is 
great ami should be done before 
the child is made aware of his 
deformity. 


Why is loud 
in a 
hospital 
tasteless and unappetizing? 
It is hardly fair to expect 
gourmet cooking in hospitals. I 
know of 
no 
large 
institution 
that can possibly do mass cook­ 
ing with wine sauces and choc 
olate souffles. 
A good hospital is not in com­ 
petition with Maxim’s ut Paris, 
Chauveron in New York or the 
Pump Room in Chicago. I don’t 
believe that anyone ever enters 
a hospital for the social self 
indulgence of exquisite cuisine. 
Food served in hospitals to- 


% 
According to Boyle 


By JAMES F. DONAHUE (For Hal Boyle) 


HOSTON (AP) — Supermar- 
kets have become so big and 
crowded that many have es­ 
tablished 
oneway 
traffic 
in 
their aisles. This can cause tre­ 
mendous 
problems, 
especially 
lor unwarry males who are un­ 
familiar with supermarkets any­ 
way. 
Like for Ted Lumpke who was 
39 when his wife got sick and he 
had to go to a supermarket for 
the first time. As soon as he got 
his grocery push eart he made a 
wrong turn down a one-way 
aisle 
Women 
began 
shouting 
at 
him: “One way, one way” and 
giving him dirty looks as they 
steered their push carts past 
him. 
The 
store 
manager 
came 
rushing down the aisle waving 
his arms. “You can’t push your 
push cart east on this aisle,” he 
said. “This is a west aisle.” 
“Where 
are 
the 
eggs?” 
Lumpke asked. 
“Row G, Section A, Shelf 3, 
eggs, beans and bacon,” the 
manager said. 
Lumpke barked out and went 
to How G but it was one way 
west at his end and he wanted 
to go east. He went around the 
store and came to Row G at its 
other end and there he saw a 
sign saying Row G was one way 
east. 
That is impossible, Lumpke 
thought, because if Row G were 
one way east at the west end 
and one way west at the east 


end, then nobody could get into 
Row G. 
Lumpke found the store man­ 
ager. “There’s something wrong 
with the signs on Row G,“ he 
said. “They’re west at the east 
end and east at the west end.” 
“That’s impossible,” the man­ 
ager said. 
“Come 
and look,” 
Lumpke 
said. 
The manager came, looked 
and saw the signs. 
“It means nobody can get into 
Row G,“ Lumpke said. “And 
what’s worse, it means anybody 
who might be in Row G right 
now can’t get out ” 
The manager thought about it. 
“Yes,” he said. “But, of course, 
that’s 
impossible,” 
and 
he 
walked away. 
So Lumpke threw caution to 
the wind and pushed his push 
cart in violation of the west sign 
east on Row G. 
The shelves were almost bare 
and covered with dust. There 
was dust on the floor and foot 
prints, and grass had grown up 
in places between the broken li­ 
noleum.. 
The sign mixup must have oc­ 
curred 
months 
ago, 
Lumpke 
thought, even years. 
He pushed his cart over the 
cracked 
floor 
between 
the 
stripped and dirty shelves, the 
thrill of the explorer in his 
heart. He found the starved, 
emaciated woman against an 
empty carton of beans. 
“Thank 
God,” 
she 
said. 


“They’ve fixed the signs. I’m 
the lone survivor of a shopping 
party trapped in I'.Kit when the 
signs were mixed up. I’ve been 
existing on eggs, bacon and 
beans for six years.” 
“But the signs haven’t been 
changed,” Lumpke said. 
The woman’s thin, cracked 
face turned white “But how did 
you get in?” she asked. 
“I went east at the west end,” 
Lumpke said, and the woman 
could only look at him in won­ 
der. 
“Come 
with 
me,” Lumpke 
said. He helped the poor woman 
to the west end of the aisle 
where they met the store man­ 
ager. 
“Here,” the 
manager said, 
“you can’t come out. This is the 
west end of Row G, an east 
aisle.” 
“But if we can’t come out by 
going west at the east end or 
east at the west end,” Lumpke 
said, “then we shall have to 
stay here forever.” 
“I can’t help that,” the man­ 
ager said. 
“Without a chaperon?” Lump­ 
ke asked indignantly “In a su­ 
permarket. the last bastion of 
middle-class morality?” 
The manager, r e a l i z i n g 
I umpke had appealed to a high­ 
er law. let them out. “The pure 
of heart always win in a super­ 
market,” Lumpke said. 
“I hope you plan to pay for 
the eggs, bacon and beans,” the 
manager told the woman. 
Big and Little Switches 


By JOHN CHAMBERLAIN 
ROME — If Europe is having 
trouble adjusting itself to the 
America of Lyndon Johnson, 
it can perhaps best be explain­ 
ed by reference to what Broad­ 
way calls the switcheroo. It is 
complicated, however, by the 
fact that there have been two 
switches, a big one and a little 
one. 
The big switch is that Amer­ 
ica, which was the decisive ele­ 
ment 
in 
World 
War 
II, the 
rehabilitator of nations under 
the Marshall Plan, the bold im­ 
proviser of the Berlin airlift, 
and the originator of the com­ 
puter revolution, can’t lick a 
ragtag and bobtail Asiatic jun- 


day has as a prime 
objective 
nourishment, 
palatably served 
in pleasant surroundings. All of 
this is related to the major ob­ 
jectives of a hospital—to treat 
medical and surgical problems 
with the greatest facility and 
greatest care and to help pa­ 
tients make the most rapid re­ 
covery. 
When patients who have been 
very ill, or have had recent sur­ 
gery, begin to complain about 
the food, they are almost ready 
to be discharged from the bos 
pital. It is an excellent sign of 
recovery when the 
complaints 
pour in about the 
“tasteless” 
food and the cold coffee. 
When the patient is well on 
the way to recovery, 
and the 
hospital food does not complete­ 
ly satisfy his appetite for sub­ 
tle cooking, food can be brought 
from home or 
even 
directly 
from a fine restaurant. 
If paitent loses sight of the 
real contribution being made to 
him by the medical, nursing 
and administrative staff of the 
hospital then he indeed 
over­ 
looks their significant contribu­ 
tion to his recovery. 


Children and adults need a 
nourshing breakfast. 


Mothers Hands on Plow 
NEW DELHI (AP) — Women 
in rural India are going to learn 
the latest scientific agricultural 
methods. 
The southern state of Madras 
has led the way by starting a 
one-week course training about 
80 women at a time in better 
farming methods. 
Mrs. 
S a r o j i n i 
Varadap- 
pan, chairman of the Madras 
State social welfare board, who 
is conducting the course, said it 
was time women took up the 
challenge 
of 
India’s 
chronic 
foodgrain deficiency. 
“The hand that rocks the cra­ 
dle rules the world, and it is 
time our hands are put to the 
plough,” she said. 


Scanning 


Editions 
Of the Past 


37 YEARS AGU 
SEPT. 1930 
Gov. Franklin I). Roosevelt, 
New York, joined liberals and 
came out for the repeal of the 
Eighteenth Amendment. He ad­ 
vocated 
a 
new 
amendment 
granting each state the right to 
sell 
intoxicants 
through 
a 
state agency, while preserving 
Federal 
protection for states 
that were dry. 


Election of officers for the up­ 
per 
classes 
of 
Circleville. 
High School were held. Named 
to the president offices were 
Seniors, Robert Rooney; Jun­ 
iors, 
Albert Hoffman; 
Sopho­ 
mores, Paul Wallace. 


Enrollment 
of city 
schools, 
high and elementary, was 1535, 
Due to the large increase 
in 
high school enrollment, 
Miss 
Marian Hitler had been secured 
by the Board of Education 
to 
teach the overflow of students. 
Miss Hitler, a local girl, 
was 
an honor graduate, valedictor­ 
ian of her class, and scholastic­ 
ally honored at college being 
the w inner of a Phi Beta Kappa 
Key. She taught business arith­ 
metic. English and Social civics. 


Candidates 
for cheerleading 
were Doris Peters, Jane Hitler, 
Robert Rooney, Robert Wilson, 
Ray Davis, Katherine 
Brown, 
Charlotte Caskey, Edward Phg- 
bus, Gaylord Rose, James Drum 
and Dudley Wills. 


T w o Pickaway County homes 
were quarantined for infantile 
paralysis in a two-day period. 


Among the 
biggest 
ovens 
known to man are kilns for fir­ 
ing ceramic tile V S. cera inu­ 
tile makers use kilns that meas­ 
ure more than IOO feet long and 
have temperatures exceeding 2,- 
000 degrees. Ceramic tiles are 
carefully stacked on specially 
made long trains that travel 
through the oven tunnels at al­ 
most imperceptible rates, some­ 
times taking more than 48 hours 
to make the trip. 


Ted Lewis, who had been re­ 
cuperating at his brother Leon’s 
home in New Jersey since 
a 
narrow escape from drowning 
on the liner “Paris” returning 
from Europe*, arrived in Circle­ 
ville from New York for a brief 
visit with his mother. Mrs. B 
Friedman. 


The 
Cliftona 
Theater 
wras 
showing the all talking feature 
“Sweet Mania”, . . 


The heaviest rain of the year 
fell - a recorded 1,35 inches, 
the most rain that had ever fal­ 
len in Pickaway County at any 
one time during the summer. 
As a result of tile rain, 
the 
thermometer tumbled to 73 de 
grees. 


gle outfit called the Vietcong. 
It pours in half a million men 
supported by a couple of billion 
dollars a month, but for all its 
alleged might it can't handle an 
old man like Ho Chi Minh and 
his collection of brushfire stra­ 
tegists. De Gaulle insults this 
America, and LBJ doesn’t even 
retort by murmuring Dien Bien 
Phu. Europeans may not con­ 
sciously analyze the strange sit 
uation in terms of a categorical 
expectancy, 
or 
a 
historical 
cliche, that has suddenly been 
overturned. Yet this is surely at 
the bottom of the note of con­ 
tempt that comes ino Eurpean 
talk abut America. 
The little switch has been pro 
vided by Israel, which has 
a 
population that is just about a 
fourth of that of New York City 
For the two thousand years of 
the Diaspora, or Jewish scat­ 
tering, Europe has thought of 
the Jews as merchants and mon­ 
ey-changers and bankrollers for 
indignent sovereigns. Now the 
Jews, as Israelis, have taken on 
the attributes of Richard the* 
Lionhearted. They have used 
tanks like a Patton or a Guder- 
ian, and aircraft like a Marshal 
Tedder or a Hap Arnold. Though 
they were supposed to be incur­ 
ably urban, they became a na­ 
tion of farmers, and then a na­ 
tion of soldiers on top of that. 
The 
reality 
of 
the Israeli 
switch was not expected in the 
chancellories of the West when 
Nasser was rattling his rockets 
last May. When the Italian Fan- 
fani suggested that Israel sure­ 
ly wouldn’t want to risk bring­ 
ing on an atomic holocaust by 
hasty action, he was firmly told 
that if he was worried about 
World War III he had better 
speak to the Arabs. TTie Israe­ 
lis were going to open the Gulf 
of Aqaba, and that was that. 
Fanfani was wrong in believing 
that Israel’s commitment to ac­ 
tion was a fake, and when the 
dread day of battle came in 
Sinai it did not magnify into 
World War III. 
So now, when the Israeli dip­ 
lomats tell their opposite num­ 
bers in the West and at the UN 
that 
they 
won’t 
make peace 
with anyone 
save the 
Arabs 
face to-face (“Tliey know our 
telephone number”), it behooves 
the 
Fanfanis 
and 
the 
Dean 
Rusks 
to 
listen. 
The Arabs 
might do well to listen, too. 
The Israeli peace proposition 
is conciliatory enough. For rec­ 
ognition of the right to live, and 
to use the Suez Canal, the Israe­ 
li victors Would return the east 
bank of Suez to the Egyptians 
along with the Sinai oil wells. 
Israel would want to keep some 
key spots in Sinai that are need­ 
ed to guarantee access to the 
Gulf of Aqaba port of Eilat and 
protection against a future Arab 
mobilization. After beating the 
Arabs on the field of battle, this 
would seem fair. But the |*>int 
is that, having accomplished a 
world-shaking switch 
iii their 
public image, tie* Israelis aren't 
likely to be euchered out 
Of 
what they consider to be mini­ 
mal geographic security. 
As might have been written in 
Ecclesiastes, there is a time to 
turn things over to a committee 
and a time to act on one’s own. 
The Israelis sense that the time 
to act on your own is when you 
hold the cards. Why should they 
let LBJ or Harold Wilson play 
their hand? 
But the Americans, who have 
held high cards of their own 
ever since 1945, have a des­ 
perate yearning to turn their 


game over to a committee that 
has no clear objectives beyond 
an inchoate desire for peace. 
No wonder we have lost the 
world’s respect because of our 
incredible switcheroo. 
As it might also be written 
in Ecclesiastes, there is not only 
a time to switch but also a time 
to switch back. One hopes that 
when the tale of our time is 
told, it will not be recorded that 
the America of LBJ couldn’t tell 
the difference between three 
aces and a pair of threes. 


T O D A Y 


In History 


Today is Wednesday, Sept. 21 
the 263rd day of 1967. There ar. 
102 days left in the year. 
Today’s highlight in history: 
On this date in 1946, Presiden 
Harry Truman asked Secretary 
of Commerce Henry Wallace fo 
his 
resignation following 
j 
speech Wallace made criticizini 
U.S. policy toward Russia. 
On this date: 
In 1797, the American Frigate 
Old Ironsides was launched a 
tile Boston Navy Yard. 
In 1850, Congress voted to bai 
the slave trade in the District o 
Columbia. 
In 1873, 
the panic of 187 
reached a climax when the Nev 
York Stock Exchange closed it 
doors. 
In 1881, Vice President Cheste 
A. Arthur took the oath of offic. 
as 21st President following th. 
death of President James Gar 
field. 
In 1938, a hurricane swept ove 
Long Island, New Jersey an< 
New England, taking an esti 
mated 682 lives. 
In 1963, President John F 
Kennedy a d d r e st the U.N 
General Assembly and propose* 
a joint American-Russian exped 
ition to the moon. 
Ten years ago — Gov. Ona 
Fauhus of Arkansas obeyed i 
federal court order and with 
drew National Guard troops wh< 
had been barring Negro stu 
dents 
from 
entering 
Centra 
High School in Little Rock. 
Five years ago—James Mere 
dith was kept from enrolling a 
the University of Mississippi b] 
Gov. Ross Barnett. 
On** year ago — ’Hie U.N. Gen 
eral Assembly o|>ened its 21s 
session with a call for construe 
tive negotiations which wouU 
lead to an honorable peace ii 
Vietnam. 


You're 


Telling Me 


By William Rift 
Central Pre*® Writer 


An all girl professional 
ball team is being organize 
a 
Cleveland 
theatrical 
i 
who’s confident 
they’H 
Ii 
popular attraction. At that 
girl gridettes should do p 
good at the gate. And we 
mean pretty! 


Tile organizer says t 
’leven 
will 
use 
razzl 
plays 
exclusively. 
w< 
know about tile razzle I 
sure should dazzle—am 
spectators. 


. *J 


A A U W Assists 


First Grade 


Test Program 


Wo me n 's Pa g e 
The Circlev ille Hera ld, Wed. Sept. 20, 19 6 7 
C irc le v ille , O hio 


Sev eral members o f the Cir-1 DAC L u n ch e o n Me e t 
i lev Hic Branch o f the Anteri'! 


en in co o p eratio n with ti u u ™r !ls He ld in Gra n ville 
elev a te Bo a rd o f Educa tio n, a s- 
Mrs. Clarence McAbee, Mrs. 
W. A. Tho mas, Mrs. Martin W. 
Cro mley . Mrs. T. Lelto y Cro m 
This is the fo u rth y ear fo r tile ley 
and 
Mrs- 
Hewitt 


histed first grad e teachers with 
a testing p ro gram co nd u cted in 
the city scho o ls. 


p ro ject head ed by Mrs. Dale C. I Cro ml°y 3,1 o f lhis v icinity at 
Ed ward s, ed u catio n area rep re­ 
sentativ e. 
Members p articip ating were: 
Mrs. William My ers, Mrs. Ro b­ 
ert Beet and Mrs. James Bachr 
at So u th Co u rt St. scho o l; Mrs. 
Richard Fisher, Mrs. Nicho las 
A p o stasis 
and 
Miss 
Elissa 
Ev ans at tile Atwater Scho o l, 
and Mrs. Haro ld Whitfield 
at 
Nicho las Driv e. 


Celebrations 
Fete Birthday 


The ho me o f Mr. and Mrs. 
Cly d u s Leist, 629 S. Scio to St., 
was the setting fo r two cele­ 
bratio ns ho no ring the birthd ay 
o f Mr. Leist. 
At no o n o il Satu rd ay Mr. and 
Mrs. Ho ward Leist o f Co lu mbu s, 
Mrs. 
Katherine 
Go o d man 
o f 
Amand a; Mr. au d Mrs. Cly d e 
J. Leist, and 
Mr. 
and 
Mrs. 
Bernard 
Wo lf 
o f 
Circlev ille, 
child ren o f the Leist’s, were at 
the ho me fo r a p arty . 
A carry -in d inner feted 
the 
birthd ay o n Su nd ay with the fo l­ 
lo wing attend ing, Mr. and Mrs. 
Jo hn Lind and child ren Jo hn, 
Daniel, Dav id and Debbie; Mrs. 
Mae Watso n, 
Mr. and 
Mrs. 
Ro nald Watso n and so n Ro nald ; 
Elmer Bu chwalter and 
Mrs. 
Marv ine Sty ers, all o f Co lu m­ 
bu s. 
Mr. and Mrs. Do nald Watso n, 
and child ren Kathy and Usa; 
Mr. 
and 
Mrs. 
Lo land 
Wat­ 
so n and child ren Annette and 
Christine: Mr. and Mrs. Jerry 
Dav is and d au ghter Ap ril; Mrs 
Glad y s Cu p p and Mrs. Flo rence 
Co ngrev e, all o f Circlev ille. 


Ca le n d a r 


tend ed the lu ncheo n meeting o f 
Old Trails Chap ter, Dau ghters 
o f the American Co lo nists, re­ 
cently , at Granv ille Inn. There 
were 28 
members 
and 
fiv e 
gu ests p resent. 
Mrs. Jo hn F. Ney , Regent, 
o p ened the bu siness sessio n, fo l­ 
lo wed by the Pled ge o f Allegi­ 
ance to the flag. 
Mrs. Warren Griffiths, Natio n­ 
al Defense Chairman, sp o ke at 
the hap ep nings aro u nd the Pan­ 
ama Canal. 
Mrs. Clarence Ro wles, p ro ­ 
gram chairman, intro d u ced the 
gu est sp eaker, Dr. Carl Ober- 
d o rfer, who narrated and sho w- 


Emmett Chapel 


W SCS Names 


Committees 


Dinner Party 


Held Sunday 


n Whaley Home 


A 
d inner ho no ring Warrant 
Officer and Mrs. Ito y Whaley 
and d au ghter, Ko na Ly nn, was 
held Su nd ay in the ho me 
o f 
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth So wers, 
and child ren Denny and Penny , 
139 Hay ward Av e. 
Attend ing were Mr. and Mrs. 
Lewis Whaley , Jo y ce, Michele 
and Lo ri Ann; Mr. and 
Mrs. 
Geo rge Whaley , Do nna, Ellen 
and Debby ; Mr. and Mrs. Pearl 
Whaley , Larry , Bo b, Patrick, 
Stev ie and Vicki; Mr. and Mrs. 
Haro ld Ed ward s, Him and Ter 
ri; Mrs. Ola Whaley , Mr. 
and 
Mrs. Dwight Whaley o f McKees 
p o rt, Pa.; Miss Co nnie Skinner 
and Ro nnie Kenned y . 
Afterno o n gu ests were Ju nio r 
Starkey , Danny Stu mp and Ric­ 
ky Kenned y . 
WO and 
Mrs. Whaley and 
d au ghter are retu rning to Fo rt 
Carso n, Co lo . Wed nesd ay where 
he will be d ep o rting to Vietnam. 
Mrs. Whaley and d au ghter will 
make their ho me at Fo rt Car­ 
so n. 


WEDNESDAY 
NEWCOMERS 
.CLUB, 
.7 :30 
p . rn. in basement o f St. Jo s­ 
ep h’s Catho lic Chu rch. 
THURSDAY 
AAUW 
D R A M A 
STUDY 
Gro u p , 8 p .m. in ho me o f Mrs. 
James Baehr, Ro u te 4. 
TBPA, 8 P.M. IN HOME OF 
Mrs. Dale Lanman, Ro u te 3. 
BERGER 
HOSPITAL GUILD 
30, 8 p .m. in ho me o f Mrs. 
Harrv Wright, Ro u te I. 
PONTIOUS 
EUB 
CHURCH 
co mbined classes 2 p .m. in 
ho me o f Mrs. Katherine Go o d ­ 
man, Ro u te 2. Amand a. 
FOE AUXILIARY. 8 P. M. IN 
Aerie Ho me. 
MAJORS TEMPLE, PYTHIAN 
Sisters 8 p in. in K o f P lo d ge 
ha U. 
FRIDAY 
PICKAWAY 
COUNTY WCTU 
Co nv entio n 10:30 a m. at Fiv e 
Po ints Metho d ist Chu rch, 
BERGER 
HOSPITAL GUILD 
4 5, 8 p .m. in ho me o f Mrs. 
Archer Stewart, Ashv ille. 
MONDAY 
W O M A N ’ S 
REPUBLICAN 
Clu b 12 no o n at EUB Chu rch 
serv ice center, 310 E. Main St 


Co mmittees were named d u r­ 
ing the recent meeting o f 
Em­ 
mett Chap el WSCS in tile ho me 
o f Mrs. Do nald Hansfo rd with 
Mrs. William Hild enbrand as as­ 
sistant ho stess. 
Mrs. Hild enbrand , p resid ent, 
o p ened the meeting with p ray ­ 
er. Mrs. Samu el Dearth was in 
charge o f d ev o tio ns, she 
read 
scrip tu re and a read ing called 
“Weap o ns o f Wise” and 
co n­ 
clu d ed with p ray er. 
Rep o rts were mad e o f calls to 
sick members by sev eral 
o f 
tho se p resent 
Co rresp o nd ence 
was 
read 
fro m Miss Mary Ru th Talbert 
and the Ho o d famd y . A thank­ 
y o u no te was read fro m Martha 
Hansfo rd . 
Anno u ncement was mad e that 
Mrs. Fo ster Jenne will attend a 
“ Retreat” to be held in Octo ­ 
ber. 
Mrs. Dav id Du mm rep o rted 
o n “ New Life Missio n” meet­ 
ing she attend ed Sep t. 6, at 
Lancaster. 
The gro u p will sell cand y 
agam this y ear. Sp ace has been 
reserv ed the Emmett Chap el 
Chu rch to hav e a fo o d bo o th 
a t 
tile Pu mp kin Sho w. 
New co mmittees fo r the y ear 
are: way s and means general 
chairman, Mrs. Harry Wright; 
Mrs. Kenneth Shep lcr, Mrs. Ro ­ 
bert Llo y d , Mrs. Philip Wilso n, 
Mrs. Ro bert Bell and Mrs. Mar­ 
v in Du mm. 
Sto ck sale co mmittee wo men 
are Mrs. Ro bert Bau er, Mrs. 
Janet Wilso n, Mrs. Stev e Drew 
and Mrs. Au stin Wilso n. 
Refreshments were serv ed by 
the ho stesses at the clo se o f the 
meeting. 
The nex t meeting will be held 
in the ho me o f Mrs. 
Ro bert 
Yo u ng, Ro u te I. 


o d slid es o f the p eo p le and cu s­ 
to ms in Ind ia. 
Dr. Oberdo rfer, a nativ e o f 
Fa irfield co unty and no w asso ­ 
ciate pa sto r o f St. Pau l’s Lu th 
cran Chu rch in Lancaster, sp ent 
43 y ears as a missio nary in In­ 
d ia. He enro lled at Cap ital Uni 
v ersity in Co lu mbu s to stu d y fo r 
the ministry , grad u ating in 1916, 
and fro m the Seminary in 1919. 
In 19 20 he and his wife and two 
mo nth o ld d au ghter sailed fo r 
Ind ia. 
Dr. Oberd o rfer sp o ke o f In­ 
d ia in general. The co u ntry is 
o ne-third the size o f the United 
States and has a p o p u latio n o f 
abo u t 5 00 millio n. He sp o ke o f 
the ru ral life and his wo rk in 
the so u thern p art o f the co u n­ 
try , no t far fro m the city o f 
Mad ras. 
One o f tile main cro p s o f Ind ia 
is rice. 'Hie cro p is read y fo r 
harv est in Febru ary . The rainy 
seaso n is u su ally fro m Octo ber 
to March. Dr. Oberd o rfer said 
that it was no t u nu su al to see a 
team o f o x en and a tracto r p lo w' 
mg in the same field . 
_ _ 
He sho wed slid es o f tile wo rn- Q f 
O U I I Cl 
3 8 
en at wo rk grind ing grain and 
transp lanting 
rice p lants. 
He 
to ld o f the bo ard ing scho o ls and 
stated that teachers salaries 
were 15 to 20 d o llars a mo nth. 
This is co mp arable o f the mid ­ 
d le class inco me. 
In clo sing, the sp eaker re­ 
marked that many p eo p le o f 
America hav e no id ea ho w o ther 
p eo p le liv e and d o no t kno w 
ho w thankfu l and blessed we 
sho u ld be. 
The meeting was clo sed by 
the chap lain with p ray er. Ho st­ 
esses were Mrs. Ro bert K. Po x , 
Mrs. Jo hn L. Graham, Mrs. 
Vera Silbau gh, Mrs. Ro bert D. 
Hansberger, Mrs. Charles Hen­ 
d erso n and Mrs. Jo sep h Berco l. 
Gu ests attend ing were Mrs. 
Mu rray Main, Delaware; Mrs. 
Hickle, Califo rnia, and M r s. 
Ma bel B. Ou tcau lt o f New Jer­ 
sey . 


Dra m a Stu d y Gro u p 


M e e tin g Sla te d 


I>ra in a Stu d y Gro u p o f Amer­ 
ican Assn. o f Univ ersity Wo m­ 
en will meet 8 p .m. in the ho me 
o f Mrs. James Baehr, Ro u te 4. 
3’hc gro u p will d iscu ss Wil­ 
liam 
Saro y an’s 
sho rt 
p lay 
“Co ming Thro u gh the Ry e,” 


S K T Y I 


w 
o 
m 
e n 
i t 
onyy-. • 
& 
* V U N D A S C O T T , ( X 
u s m 


Slides Shown 


During Meet 


SANDRA SII ELLI IA MM ER 
Local Girl 


Graduate of 


Nurses' School 


Miss Sand ra Kay e Shellham- 
mer, d au ghter o f Mrs. William 
B o o k o u t, 57 6 Sp ringho llo w 
Ro ad , 
grad u ated fro m 
Grant 
Ho sp ital Scho o l o f Nu rsing 
o n 
Frid ay , Sep t 15 
Miss Shellhammer is a grad ­ 
u ate o f Circlev ille High Scho o l. 
She p resently has jo ined the 
nu rsing staff at Grant Ho sp ital. 


Att 


W C T U Co n ve n tio n 


Berger Ho sp ital Gu ild 38 held Sch e d u le d Frid a y 
its Sep tember meeting at the 
ho me o f Mrs. Ro d Shasteen, 310 
E. Franklin St., with Mrs. Lar­ 
ry Le rn ley as co -ho stess. 
Mrs. Ro bert Smith was gu est 
sp eaker fo r the ev ening. She 
gav e a rep o rt and sho wed slid es 
o f the ho sp ital ship Ho p e and 
also sho wed slid es taken o v er- 


The annu al Pickaway Co u nty 
Wo men’s Christian Temp erance 
Unio n co nv entio n will be 
held 
at 
Fiv e 
Po ints 
Metho d ist 
Chu rch Frid ay , beginning 10:30 
a.m. 


seas. 
Mrs. Carl Lind sey was a gu est 
fo r the 
ev ening. 
Mrs. 
Stev e 
Cherringto n was welco med as a 
new member. 
A d essert co u rse was serv ed 
by the ho stesses at the clo se o f 
the meeting. 
The nex t sessio n will be in the 
ho me o f Mrs. Bo nnie Recto r, 
1020 Su nshine St., 8 p . rn. Oct. 4, 
and will inclu d e a p ro d u cts p ar­ 
ty . 


Pe rso n a ls 


Mr. and Mrs. Thu ney Sheets 
and so n Terry o f Ro u te 3, Mt. 
Sterling, sp ent last week v isit­ 
ing Ex p o ’6 7 in Canad a. 


Happy 
Anniver s ar y 


Memo ra ble y ea rs o f lo v e a nd ha ppiness deserv e a 
memo ra ble g ift. Wha t better cho ice tha n a fine 
g em to shine mea ning fully fo r the rest o f her da y s. 
Perha ps a la rg er dia mo nd is in o rder, reflecting 
the a ffluency o f la ter y ea rs. (She ma y like 
her o rig ina l dia mo nd remo unted in a sentimenta l 
penda nt.) Pea rls, her fa v o rite co lo red sto ne, 
fine g o ld jewelry —a ll a re ex cellent cho ices to ma ke 
this nex t a nniv ersa ry o ne to remember. Co me in 
so o n a nd let o s help y ew in y o ur selectio n. 
Our membership in the America n Gem So ciety 
ie y o ur a ssura nce o f qua lity a nd serv ice. 


M LM btR AMI HK. AM LAM SO C * TY 


Y O U CAN D E P E N D ON- 


A carry -in d inner will he held 
at 12 no o n. 
Mrs. H. H. 
Bro wn, 
state 
WCTU p resid ent, will be sp eak­ 
er fo r the afterno o n sessio n. 
Perso ns 
interested 
in 
the 
wo rk o f WCTU are inv ited to at­ 
tend this meeting. 


USE THE CLASSIFIEDS 


asfew 
Here’s ho w to ma ke y o ur ho me 
hair set last lo nger. Use a spra y - 
aml-wait ro u tine. Remo v e the 
ro llers fro m y o u r hair 
a nd sweep 
it lightly with hair spra y , ho ld­ 
ing the can 12 to 14 inches a wa y . 
Wait half an ho u r befo re co mb­ 
ing o u t. Yo u r hair will no t o nly 
hav e mo re bo d y 
set, but will la sfc 
lo nger. 
* 
* 
* 
Clean y o u r cera mic tile this 
easy way ! Ju st 
mix two pa rts ef 
liq u id d etergent and 
three pa rts 
o f ho u seho ld v inegar. Dip 
a n o ld 
to o thbru sh into this so lutio n a nd 
scru b the tile, esp ecially the put­ 
ty between the blo cks. 
* 
* 
* 
lf late winter skin dry ness 
’.agu es y o u , co mbine gly cerin 
and so ft water, ad v ises The 
Lind say Co mp any , makers 
o f the 
au to matic ho me water so fteners. 
It has the same effect as co mmer­ 
cial gly cerin with ro se wa ter* 
keep ing y o u r hand s 
smo o th a nd 
y o u ng. 
* 
* 
* 
That gamy flav o r o f v eniso n 
co nies fro m the fat. If y o u wa nt 
mild meat, remo v e this na tura l 
fat and su bstitu te baco n o r suet 
befo re co o king. There’s 10 need 
fo r lo ng-time marinating, either, 
fo r mo st v eniso n, co ntrary 
to 
belief. It u su ally co mp ares 
to 
beef in q u ality , so p rep are 
it in 
the same way s. Bro il o r ro a st 
v eniso n steaks a nd cho p s witho ut 
any p reliminaries, fo r insta nce. 
* * * 
Let d o wn the hems o f sma ll 
clo thes befo re la undering them 
at the end o f a sea so n, so tha t 
y o u can lengthen them with no 
tell-tale so il line a lo ng the o ld 
crease nex t y ear. 
L26 2 


Yo ur Lo ca l Lindsa y Dea ler Is 
Do ug herty ’s, 147 W. Ma in St. 


lJLjl J U j k 
j 
. 


s h a r f f V - 


this is the final week of our fabulous 


Coat Trade-In Event, the golden op­ 


portunity to receive $1 0-$20-$30 for 


your old coat towards any new ladies' 


length winter 
cont in our collection. 


a s sho w n 


$ 


e n n e u f 


I • > . 
r i n n r r n I A I I T V 
™ 
A L W A Y S F IR S T Q U A L IT Y 


STORE HOURS: 
Mo nda y thru Thursda y 
9 :05 to 5 :23 
Frida y 9 :05 to 8:3 5 
Sa turda y 9 :05 to 5 :25 


Penn- Prest’ Big M ac 
work clothes for smooth, 
on- the- j ob 
performance! 
3 .9 8 SHIRT 
4.9 8 PA N T S 


These Penn- Prest cotton/polyester twill work shirts 


and pants welcome the roughest duty cmd never 
need iro ning ! Just wash, tumble dry and weor. in 
so lid colors. 


Penn- Prest polyester/cotton twill j acket with a lin­ 
ing of nylon taffeta quilted to bonded Dacron* 


polyester fiberfill. Provides warmth without weight. 
6 .9 8 
U N LIN ED JACKET of Penn- Prest polyester/cotton 
twill, zip front style with two front pockets. Lots 


of colors. 
4. BK 


p f : n n /V tV s . v y - 
msmi 
a * i '# At a # * 
’•WMW* AUSU MMP 


Fashionable - - - Barefoot Comfort 


o th e r s: 
$40 lo $19 0 


COBBERS 


Blo ck's IImv c Yo ur Size a nd Fa v o rite 


Co lo rs — Sizes 4 *2 lo 12 


Widths S, N, M, k W 


Foot Comfort Is Our Business 
BLOCK'S 


Mink or beaver trim crest 


this single breasted style 


in classic simplicity 


v i l 


Sharff's will give you 


for your old winter coat 


regardless of condition to­ 


ward purchase of any ladies' 


full length winter coat. 


/ 


J 


M ink or beaver trim crest 


this single breasted style 


in classic simplicity 


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


Free Storage ti! Od. I 


Sharifs will give you 


for your old winter coat 


regardless of condition to­ 


ward purchase of any ladies' 


full length winter coat. 


These Penn-PresLcotton/polyester twin work shirts 
and pants welcome the roughest duty and never 
need ironing! Just wash, tumble dry and weor. In 
•olid colors. 


Peen-Prest polyester/cotton twill jacket Wirt) a lin­ 
ing of nylon taffeta quilted to bonded Dacron* 
polyester fiberfill. Provides warmth without weight. 
6.98 
UNLINED JACKET of Penn*Prest polyester/cotton 
twill, zip front style with two front pockets. Lots 
of colors. 
4.98 


P K N N / 7 Z & W 
numi j*u JVA. * a mum, 


*w M t* mma M»e» 


- T 
O 
co®* 
charta 


Foot Comfort Is Our Business 
BLOCK’S 


A A U W Assists 
First Grade 


Test Program 


Several members of the Cir­ 
cleville branch of the Amen* 
can Assn. of University Wom­ 
en in cooperation with the Cir­ 
cleville board of Education, as­ 
sisted first yradc teachers with 
a testing program conducted in 
the city schools. 


This is bu* fourth year for tile 
project headed by Mrs. Dale C. 
Edwards, education area repre­ 
sentative. 


Members participating were: 
Mrs. William Myers, Mrs. Rob 
crt Feet and Mrs. Jam es Baehr 
at South Court St. school; Mrs. 
Richard Fisher, Mrs. Nicholas 
Apostalakis 
and 
Miss 
Elissa 
Evans at tile Atwater School, 
and Mrs. Harold Whitfield 
at 
Nicholas Drive. 


Women's Page 
The Circleville Herald, Wed. Sept. 20, 1907 
Circleville, Ohio 
DAC Luncheon Meet 
Is Held in Granville 


Celebrations 


Fete Birthday 


The home of Mr. and Mrs. 
Clydus Leist, 629 S. Scioto St., 
was the setting for two cele­ 
brations honoring the birthday 
of Mr. Leist. 


At noon on Saturday Mr. and 
Mrs. Howard Leist of Columbus, 
Mrs. 
Katherine 
Goodman 
of 
Amanda; Mr. and Mrs. Clyde 
J. Leist, and 
Mr. 
and 
Mrs. 
Bernard 
Wolf 
of 
Circleville, 
children of the Leist s, were at 
the home for a party. 
A carry-in dinner feted 
the 
birthday on Sunday with the fol­ 
lowing attending, Mr. and Mrs. 
John Lind and children John, 
Daniel, David and Debbie; Mrs. 
Mae Watson. 
Mr. and 
Mrs. 
Ronald Watson and son Ronald; 
Elmer 
Buchwalter 
and 
Mrs. 
Marvine Styers, all of Colum­ 
bus. 
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Watson, 
and children Kathy and U sa; 
Mr. 
and 
Mrs. 
Loland 
Wat­ 
son and children Annette and 
Christine; Mr. and Mrs. Jerry 
Da via and daughter April; Mrs. 
Gladys Cupp and Mrs. Florence 
Congreve, all of Circleville. 


Calendar 


Mrs. Clarence McAbce, Mrs. 
W. A. Thomas, Mrs. Martin W. 
Cromley. Mrs T. LeRoy Crom- 
ley 
and 
Mrs. 
LeRoy 
Hewitt 
Cromley all of this vicinity at­ 
tended the luncheon meeting of 
Old Trails Chapter, Daughters 
of the American Colonists, re­ 
cently. at Granville Inn. There 
were 28 
members 
and 
five 
guests present. 
Mrs. John F. Ney, Regent, 
opened the business session, fol­ 
lowed by the Fledge of Allegi­ 
ance to the flag. 
Mrs. Warren Griffiths, Nation­ 
al Defense Chairman, spoke at 
the hapcpnings around the Pan­ 
ama Canal. 
Mrs. Clarence Rowles, pro­ 
gram chairman, introduced the 
guest speaker, Dr. Carl Ober­ 
dorfer, who narrated and show- 


WEDNESDAY 
NEWCOMERS 
.CLUB, 
.7 30 
p. rn. in basement of St. Jos­ 
eph’s Catholic Church. 
THURSDAY 
AAUW 
D R A M A 
STUDY 
Group, 8 p.m. in home of Mrs. 
Jam es Baehr, Route 4. 
TBPA, 8 P.M. IN HOME OF 
Mrs. Dale Lanman, Route 3. 
BERGER 
HOSPITAL GUILD 
30, 8 p.m. in home of Mrs. 
Harrv Wright, Route I. 
PONTIOUS 
EUB 
CHURCH 
combined classes 2 p.m. in 
home of Mrs. Katherine Good­ 
man. Route 2, Amanda. 
FOE AUXILIARY, 8 P. M. IN 
Aerie Home. 
MAJORS TEMPLE. PYTHIAN 
Sisters 8 pm . in K of P lodge j 
haU. 
FRIDAY 
PICKAWAY 
COUNTY WCTU j 
Convention 10:30 a m. at Five 
Points Methodist Church. 
BERGER 
HOSPITAL GUILD 
45, 8 p.m. in home of Mrs. 
Archer Stewart, Ashville. 
MONDAY 
W O M A N ’ S 
REPUBLICAN | 
Club 12 noon at EUB Church 
service center, 310 E Main St 


Emmett Chapel 


W SCS Names 


Committees 


Committees were named dur­ 
ing the recent meeting of 
E m ­ 
mett Chapel WSCS in the home 
of Mrs. Donald Hansford with 
Mrs. William Hildenbrand as as­ 
sistant hostess. 
Mrs. Hildenbrand, president, 
opened the meeting with pray­ 
er. Mrs. Samuel Dearth was in 
charge of devotions, she 
read 
scripture and a reading called 
“ Weapons of Wise” and 
con­ 
cluded with prayer. 
Reports were made of calls to 
sick members by several 
of 
those present 
Correspondence 
was 
read 
from Miss Mary Ruth Talbert 
and the Hood family. A thank­ 
you note was read from Martha 
Hansford. 
Announcement was made that 
Mrs. Foster Jenne will attend a 
“ Retreat” to be held in Octo­ 
ber. 
Mrs. David Dumm reported 
on “ New Life Mission” meet­ 
ing she 
attended 
Sept. 
6, at 
Lancaster. 
The 
group 
will 
sell 
candy 
again this year. Space has been 
reserved the 
Emmett Chapel 
Church to have a food booth at 
the Pumpkin Show. 
New committees for the year 
are: ways and means general 
chairman. Mrs. Harry Wright; 
Mrs. Kenneth Shepler, Mrs. Ro­ 
bert Lloyd, Mrs. Philip Wilson, 
Mrs. Robert Bell and Mrs. Mar­ 
vin Dumm. 
Stock sale committee women 
are Mrs. Robert Bauer, Mrs. 
Janet Wilson, Mrs. Steve Drew 
and Mrs. Austin Wilson. 
Refreshments were served by 
the hostesses at the close of the 
meeting 
The next meeting will be held 
rn the home 
of Mrs. 
Robert 
Young, Route I. 


Personals 


Mr. and Mrs. Thuney Sheets 
and son Terry of Route 3, Mt. 
Sterling, spent last week visit­ 
ing Expo ’67 in Canada 


Dinner Party 


Held Sunday 


In Whaley Home 


A 
dinner honoring Warrant 
Officer and Mrs. 
Roy Whaley 
and daughter, Bona Lynn, was 
held Sunday in the home 
of 
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Sowers, 
and children Denny and Penny, 
133 Hayward Ave. 
Attending were Mr. and Mrs. 
Lewis Whaley, Joyce, Miehelc 
and Lori Ann; Mr. and 
Mrs. 
George Whaley, 
Donna, 
Ellen 
and Debbv; Mr. and Mrs. Pearl 
Whaley, larry , Bob, Patrick, 
Stevie and Vicki; Mr. and Mrs. 
Harold Edwards, Him and Ter­ 
ri; Mrs, Ola Whaley, Mr. 
and 
Mrs. Dwight Whaley of McKees­ 
port, Pa.; Miss Connie Skinner 
and Ronnie Kennedy. 
Afternoon guests were Junior 
Starkey, Danny Stump and Ric­ 
ky Kennedy. 
WO and 
Mrs. 
Whaley 
and 
daughter are returning to Fort 
Carson, Colo. Wednesday where 
he will be deporting to Vietnam. 
Mrs. Whaley and daughter will 
make their home at Fort Car­ 
son. 


Drama Study Group 
Meeting Slated 


Drama Study Group of Amer­ 
ican Assn. of University Wom­ 
en will meet 8 p m in the home 
of Mrs. James Baehr, Route 4. 
The group will discuss Wil­ 
liam 
Saroyan’s 
short 
play 
“ Corning Through the Rye.” 


cd slides of the people and cus­ 
toms in India. 
Dr. Oberdorfer, a native of 
Fairfield county and now asso­ 
ciate pastor of St. Paul’s Luth­ 
eran Church in Lancaster, spent 
43 years as a missionary in In­ 
dia. He enrolled at Capital Uni 
versity in Columbus to study for 
the ministry, graduating in 1916, 
and from the Seminary in 1919. 
In 1920 he and his wife and two 
month old daughter sailed for 
India. 
Dr. Oberdorfer spoke of In 
dia in general. The country is 
one-third the .size of the United 
States and has a population of 
about 500 million. He spoke of 
the rural life and his work in 
the southern part of the coun 
try, not far from the city of 
Madras. 
One of Uie main crops of India 
is rice. The crop is ready for 
harvest in February. The rainy 
season is usually from October 
to March. Dr. Oberdorfer said 
that it was not unusual to see a 
team of oxen and a tractor plow 
mg in the same field. 
He showed slides of tile wom­ 
en at work grinding grain and 
transplanting 
rice plants. 
He 
Berber Hospital Guild 38 held Scheduled Friday 
told of the boarding schools and its September meeting at the 
stated 
that 
teachers 
salaries home of Mrs. Rod Shasteen. 310 
were 15 to 20 dollars a month, i E. Franklin St., with Mrs. Lar- 
This is comparable of the mid-1 ry Lemlcy as co-hostess. 


m 
f o r * 
-women 
g a 
©nj*.. 


r n * 


Slides Shown 


During Meet 


Of Guild 38 


SANDRA SHELLHAMMER 
Lo cal Girl 


Graduate of 


Nurses' School 


Miss Sandra Kaye Shellham- 
mer, daughter of Mrs. William 
B o o k o u t, 
576 Springhollow 
Road, 
graduated from 
Grant 


I Hospital School of Nursing 
on 
Friday, Sept 15 
Miss Shellham mer is a grad 
uate of Circleville High School. 
She presently has joined 
the 
nursing staff at Grant Hospital. 


W CTU Convention 


die class income. 
In closing, 
the 
speaker re­ 
marked that many people of 
America have no idea how other 
people live and do not know 
how thankful and blessed we 
should be. 
The meeting was closed by 
the chaplain with prayer. Host­ 
esses were Mrs. Robert K. Fox, 
Mrs. John L. 
Graham, 
Mrs. 
Vera Silbaugh, Mrs. Robert D. 
Hansberger, Mrs. Charles Hen­ 
derson and Mrs. Joseph Bercol. 
Guests attending were Mrs. 
Murray Main, Delaware; Mrs. 
Hickle, California, and M r s. 
Mabel B. Outcault of New Jer­ 
sey. 


Mrs. Robert Smith was guest 
speaker for the evening. She 
gave a report and showed slides 
of the hospital ship Hope and 
also showed slides taken over­ 
seas. 
Mrs. Carl Lindsey was a guest 
for the 
evening. 
Mrs. 
Steve 
Cherrington was welcomed as a 
new member. 
A dessert course was served 
by the hostesses at the close of 
the meeting. 
The uext session will be in the 
home of Mrs. Bonnie Rector, 
1020 Sunshine St., 8 p. rn. Oct. 4, 
and will include a products par­ 
ty. 


The annual Pickaway County 
Women’s Christian Temperance 
Union convention will be 
held 
at 
Five 
Points 
Methodist 
Church Friday, beginning 10:30 
a.m. 
A earryin dinner will be held 
at 12 noon. 
Mrs. H. H. 
Brown, 
state 
WCTU president, will be speak­ 
er for the afternoon session. 
Persons 
interested 
in 
the 
work of WCTU are invited to at­ 
tend this meeting. 


USE THE CLASSIFIEDS 


Here’s how to make your home 
hair set last longer. Use a spray- 
and-wait routine. Remove the 
rollers from your hair and iweep 
it lightly with hair spray, bolo­ 
ing the can 12 to 14 inches away. 
Wait half an hour before comb­ 
ing out. Your hair will not only 
have more body set, but will last 
longer. 
• 
a 
* 
Clean your ceramic tile this 
easy way! Just mix two parts e f 
liquid detergent and three parts 
of household vinegar. Dip an old 
toothbrush into this solution and 
scrub the tile, especially the put­ 
ty between the blocks. 
• 
• 
* 
If late winter skin dryness 
iag-ues you, combine glycerin 
and soft water, advises The 
Lindsay Company, makers of the 
automatic home water softeners. 
Jt has the same effect as commer­ 
cial glycerin with rose water, 
keeping your hands smooth and 
young. 
* 
* 
• 
That gamy flavor of venison 
comes from the fat. If you want 
mild meat, remove this natural 
fat and substitute bacon or suet 
before cooking. There’s 
10 need 
for long-time marinating, either, 
for most venison, contrary to 
belief. It usually compares to 
beef in quality, so prepare it in 
the same ways. Broil or roast 
venison steaks and chops without 
any preliminaries, for instance. 
* 
* 
* 
Let down the hems of smell 
clothes before laundering them 
at the end of a season, so that 
you can lengthen them with no 
tell-tale soil line along the old 
crease next year. 
L262 


Your Local Lindsay Dealer is 
Dougherty’s, 147 W. Main St. 


e 
n 
n 
e 
i f f 
LiiAwe P in er r n I A I I T V 
™ 
ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY 


STORE HOURS: 
Monday thru Thursday 
9:05 to 5:25 
Friday 9:05 to 8:55 
Saturday 9:05 to 5:25 


Fashionable — 
Barefoot Comfort 


as shown 


Anniversary 


Memorable years of love and happiness deserve a 
memorable gift What better choice than a fine 
gem to shine meaningfully for the rest of her days. 
Perhaps a larger diamond is in order, reflecting 
the affluency of Later years. (She may like 
her original diamond remounted in a sentimental 
pendant) Pearls, her favorite colored Acne, 
fine gold jewelry—aH are excellent choices to m ete 
this next anniversary one to remember. Come in 
soon and let os hdp yen in your selection. 
Our membership in the American Gem Society 
is your assurance of quality and service. 


Mi M eta AMbWCAK OLM SOCIETY 


YOU CAN D EPEND ON— 


Penn-Prest® Big Mac* 
vork clothes for smooth, 
on-the-job 
performance! 
3.98 SHIRT 
4.98 PANTS 
California 
COBBERS 
Block’s Have Your Size and Favorite 


Colors — Sizes 4’z to 12 


W id th s S. N , M* & W 


this is the final week of our fabulous 


Coat Trade-In Event, the golden op­ 


portunity to receive $10-$20-$30 for 


your old coat towards any new ladies' 


length winter coat in our collection. 


Special Unit 


Helps Speed 


SS Benefits 


The Circlev ille Herald, Wed. Sept. 2 0, 19 6 7 
Circlev ille, Ohio 


Today in Washington 


'Christian 


Admits Guilt 


In Murders 


CYCLOS* GOMIS AS \ FASTBACK — Mercury Cy clo ne fo r 19 68 co nies in two spo rty fast­ 
back models with squared-off 
rear design, distinctive g rille and a standard 3 02 -cubic-imIi V-8 en­ 
gine. The Cy clone also comes in two door hardtop with formal 
ro o f desig n. The Cy clo ne can be 
seen al Hon Thompson Mercury . 
US. Editor Tells 
Of Talk With Ho 


Says Surtax 


Could Hurt 


Subdivisions 


By IHF ASSOCIATED PRESS out when he laid down oil the 
WASHINGTON IAP) — The I floor. Six dem onstrators 
were 
Army is prepared to map 
out arrested Monday . 
The demon 
specific plans of action with Na- G a tors sa> their aim is to dis­ 


ks to deal with hoarinuartpr*. 
handle 
the work crush caused! civil disorders in the 
nation’s 
by the 
medicare program is cities, a top m ilitary spokesman 
Meanwhile 
about 60 
women life imprisonment after 
plead- 
helping 
to 
speed 
way ward declares. 
y nd 
children matched 
them jug 
guilty to second - 
degree 
checks 
to Social Security de- ..|t 
th„ 
ot s<dves a8*inst a lone member of | m urder in ihe arson deaths of 
; the Senate Finance Committee. 
They demanded the Senate re- 


CHICAGO (A P)—A special de­ 
partm ent set up to help the So . . ,--------- ,---------— —...................- , 
, 
. 
elal 
Security 
Administration tional Guard units to deal with n,|> 
10 °lM’ra,,o ns o f 1,10 draft 


Farm Science Show On 
COLUMBUS, 
Ohio 
(AP) 
I More than $4 million 
in farming 
equipment 
went 
on 
display 
Tuesdaj at Ute opening of the 
annual Ohio State Farm Science 
Review. 
The program, with co ntinuing 
p , p l.BI AMn 
farm demonstrations 
at Ohio 
CLEVELAND (Al ’ 
- 
Mis 
University ’s 
Don 
Sco tt 
Mary 
Bell Hath man, described 
Field, continues through 
Thurs- 
as a ‘'good Christian woman” 
J day . 
by her attorney , faces possible 


"It look the experiences 
this summer, culminating in the 
The Critical Cases Unit was j involvement of federal troops in 
pendents. 


established in Jan uary in the 
Midwest Regional Pay ment Cen 
ter which certifies checks for 
four million Social Security re 
cipients 
in 
Illinois, 
Indiana, 
Michigan. Wisconsin and Ohio. 
Harry R. Shandelson, social 
insurance adm inistrator for the 
region, said today . “ The unit 
originally was a tem porary one 
that handled the problems ive 
had during the medicare crush. 
Now we think it will he perm a­ 
nent.” 


Detroit, to bring full realization 
that we were faced with new- di­ 
mensions in civil disturban ces.” 
Gen. Ralph E. Names Jr., Army 
vice chief of staff, told the an 
nual meeting of the National 
Guard Association. 
He said the Army and the 
Guard should work closely to 
prearran ge possible joint action 
in all likely target cities includ­ 
ing preparation of maps and ae­ 
rial 
p h o t o g r a p h s ; 
pre­ 
assignment of sectors of respon 


vise amendments of a House- 
passed 
Social 
Security 
bill 
which call for a tougher ap 
proach to 
state 
welfare 
pro­ 
grams receiving federal aid. 


Shandelson said the CIU in* nihility ; 
tho 
relationships 
be­ 


live persons last Jan . 15. 
The 36-y ear old Sunday school 
teacher had bern charged orig­ 
inally with five counts of first- 
degree murder and five of first- 
degree murder in the preptcra- 
tion of arson. She was permitt- 
The women, angered because cd to plead guilty Tuesday to 
more senators were not present two counts of second - degree 
to hear their case, turned their m urder 
appearance into a sit-in. 
Asst 
Cuy ahosa County Pr0 
They said Chairman Russell secutor Leo Spellancy said tho 
B. Long, D La., broke his gavel question of intent was the ma* 
when he abruptly hanged the jor 
factor 
in 
reducing 
the 
session to a halt. They stay ed charges. The other counts were 
three hours after Long called dropped on 
his 
recommenda 
the recess and left only when tion. 
vestigates all cases or com- tween troops and police; specif I 
pollce throatened Diem j 
Mrs. II atam an s attorney , Nor- 
plaints of nonpay ment that are ic rules of engagement: e o m ! " ,in arrest 
not explained through routine rnand 
and 
control 
arran ge 
Editor.-- Note 
William 
C. and, through an interpreter, 
Ka es 
v I, to r 
o f 
the 
Miami 
v 
i 
Tx- 
. 
ATLANTIC CITY, N.J . (AP) 
tiaggs, 
coact 
oi 
inc 
.Miami tren ch and Vietnamese. 
- 
o k 
* 
t 
, 
News, visited North Vietnam 
mono » -o ^ 
if * n, 
“~ ^eP- 
Robert 
Tatt 
Jr. 
said 
last winter with Harry S Ash- 
asked ii talks Tuesday night that 
President 
more, executive vice president C0ldd really begin if the bomb- Johnson's proposed IO per cent 
of the Center for the Study of- m£ were concluded. And twice surtax 
could bankrupt 
state 
Democratic Institutions and a 
sa‘d 
could begin if and local governments unless 
former prize-winning newspaper 
bombing stopped. they share in the revenues, 
editor. In the following article, 
I'he 
Communist leader, 
in 
The Ohio Republican suggest- 
Baggs reveals for the first time volved in tile nationalism of his ed that any federal tax increase 
details of a conversation he and country for almost half a centu- include a provision allowing a 
Ashmore had with Ho Chi Minh, r>% said that we and all Ameri- j certain portion of the new reve- 
president of North Vietnam. 
cans 
should 
raalize that his nues to he distributed directly 
country had been at war for 25 to state and local governments. 
By WILLIAM C. BAGGS 
y ears, against the Japanese and 
“ This should be done without 
Editor of the Miami News 
the French and the Americans, strings of direction,” he added. 
MIAMI, Fla 
(AP) - Word ?.nd tho>’ would never surren der 
Taf^ ^ a speech to 
Na. j 
came in the afternoon that Ho lhc,r independence after so long tjonai Association of Life Under- 
Chi Minh wished to see us. 
a struggle. 
writers convention, called the 
His office is in the fray ed ele- 
Moreover, he continued, com- tax proposal “the most import- 
ganee of the palace which once mg back to tile subject of peace aik decision to be made by Con- 
accommodated 
the 
governors talks, he had no conditions for gress 
during 
the 
c o m i n g 
when France ruled this neigh- sucb talks except an end to tile m onths.” 
borhood of Southeast Asia, 
bombing. The meeting could be 
“ An increase rn federal in* I 
The old gentleman wras cer- private or public, he said, and come taxes is bound to put a 
tainiy prompt. We were ushered n° agenda was necessary -. 
very tight squeeze upon state 
into a rather small room, decor- 
Ho referred to the bombings and local governments, not only 
ted only with a single paint- all through the conversation. He as to the possibilities of obtain- 
mg—of a brownish eagle—and admitted 
the 
bombings 
hurt ing needed additional revenue, 
we had not seated ourselves North Vietnam but pointed out but also in maintaining their 
when he came in, walking in a that the bombings did not 
un- current tax levies,” he said. 
misture 
of 
a 
stride 
and 
a reasonably ham per the military I 
------------------------ 
bonace. 
ability of the country 
By bouncing a powerful beam 
After a few minutes of social 
Dark had crawled over Hanoi of light off an orbiting satellite,; 
coo\ersntion, Ho Chi Minh asked when we left the palace. We had I scientists 
hope 
to 
pinpoint 
if we could talk 
among our-; talked ^wo hours, and the next I places on earth within inches. 
selves. 
It was this suggestion evening Ho sent a minister to Some present calculations are 
that the talks should be prix ate see us and make certain we had 
which could not perm it a report- an accurate record of what he 
mg of the conversation until had said. The minister seemed 
now. Recent disclosures of the anxious that Ho’s views not be 
virtal parts of the talk have re-; misinterpreted, in the slightest 
moved the prohibition 
degree, in the report of the talk 
Ashmore and I emphasized to 
our government 
our host that we could talk, but 
I 
_ _ _ 
- 
we pointed out that any thing he 
said in the conversation would 
be reported to our government 
We stressed that we did not re­ 
present the United States but 
were pledged to report the con­ 
versation in detail to Washing­ 
ton He nodded 
There was no possibility of 
peace talks, he said, until the 
bombing 
of 
North 
Vietnam 
stopped 
And, tapping his fin­ 
gers together, he said no new 
American troops should be in­ 
troduced into Vietnam during 
any peace talks 
Well then, we asked, could 
talks begin if the United States 
.stopped the bombing? 
He 
measured 
the 
question 
with much care, and said: “ You 
are a businessman and I am a 
businessman, and I want to see 
the goods before the price is es­ 
tablished.” 
During this portion of the con- 
xersation. Ho sr>oke in English 


in 
delay s. 
All instances of check delay s 
in the five states are reported 
to district offices, 
which, 
in 
turn, notify the pay ment cen­ 
ter. 


W ant Ads 
474-3131 


man S. Minor, said his client 
7 * 
set fire 
the apartm ent at 
Capita! Footnotes 
8340 Buckey e Road because her 
Tile State 
Department 
say s husband 
had 
been 
seeing 
a 
North Korean pilots “ may be woman who lived there, 
fly ing 
in 
combat 
missions” 
Sentenced 
was deferred 
by 
against American planes over Common 
Pleas 
Court 
Judge 
North Vietnam. 
John V. 
Corrigan 
pending a 
The 
House, 
acting 
under probation report. 
and welfare mothers in a Senate | emergency 
procedures, 
has 
----------------------------------------- 
hearing chamber. 
passed a bill to extend 
for a will 
mount 
a 
fullscale 
cam 
A sit-in bv opponents of the J ea!^ *ntcrest ra te ceilings on paign for Sen. Robert F. Kenne- 
Vietnam w ar in the offices of ”an * and savings and loan time dv, D-N.Y., in the New Hamp- 
the Selective Service resulted in deP°slts- 
shire 
Democratic presidential 
the 
arrests of three persons 
Charles O. Porter, a former I prim ary unless Kennedy “ short 
Tuesday . One y outh was carried Oregon congressman, say s he circuits our efforts.” 


ments; and local storing of vital 
supplies. 
WASHINGTON (AP) — Two 
sets of protesters have staged 
noisy demonstrations in federal 
offices—draft protester at Se­ 
lective 
Service 
headquarter 


Looking For: 


rn Wallpaper 


• Halite! 


Sanltas 


Matching Fabrics 


See 


Mrs. Robert Dumm 


Looking For: 


rn Inlaid Lino leum 


• Viny l Inlaid 


• Fo rmica 


Ceramic 


See 


Mr. Robert Dumm 


115 Wilso n Av e. — 4 74 -5 139 


believed to err by 2,000 feet or 
more. 


In July and August, the slopes 
of Japan ’s Mt. Fuji are crowded 
with as many as 18,000 hikers a 
day . 
Out lo o k m&idt 
will show you why 


’6 8 Buick. Now we’re 
talking your language 


We changed the Skylark from 
front to rear, we gave it a whole 
new look, simply because 
we believe you want a car like 
this. In other words, we’re 
talking your language. 


We thought you’d like to have a 
little easier time parking. So 
we shortened the wheelbase of 
the two-door Skylark down 
to 112 inches. 


The new 230 -hp., V-8 engine 
runs on regular gas. If s standard on all 
Skylark Custom models. 


We also refused to limit your choices. Skylark 
Custom comes in four models, 15 colors 
and 32 trim combinations. So talk to the man 
who talks your language, your Buick dealer. 


All Buicks have a full line of General M otors 
safety features as standard equipment. 
For example, side marker lights and 
energy-absorbing steering column. 


Wouldn’t you really rather have a Buick? 


H U S K Y 7 50 


NO LONG UST OF (X IHAS TO HUY 


a l l ­ 
a n cl 
O n e p ric e i n c l u de * 
« * * r I f n n h m i xs i on 
d ifferen tia l, 
six 
fo rw ard 
s p e e d s , p o w e r • ta k e - o ff 
d riv e, fender*, seat cushio n 
•n d m any o ther featu res. 
VV hen 
y o u buy a 
Bo lens 
Husky . y o u re buy ing a 
com 
pleb , fully -equipped tracto r 
A Husky po wers o v er twenty - 
fiv e different lawn an d g arden 
attachments and serv e* as a 
co mplete and convenient sy s­ 
tem fo r y ear 'ro und y ard care 
B e fo r e y o u buy any co m - 
->act tracto r, try a Bolen* 
lu sk y first. T hen co m pare! 
Power 


Equipment 


Center 
tLSCfl 
IWC 


Other*1 


Behind the g leaming , po rcelain 
cabinet y o u'll find a patented 
inner unit th a t m akes super 
flo o r heat po ssible. Lo o k at the 
big blo wer wheel that driv es 
the air thro ug h a battery o 
4 
inner heat tubes that set rig ht 
in the heart o f the tire! Stag ier 
do esn't wait fo r the heat ta 
co me o u t . . . it g o es rig ht in a fter 
it, then forces it o v er y our flo o r! 
Co me in and see fo r y ourself 
hy Sieg ler (J a ttea l* 4J u tla b to a ll 


12 6 5 N, Co urt St. 


O N L Y B IE G L E R O IV E S Y O U M O R E A t m 
H O T T E R H E A T O V E R Y O U R F L O O R S 


KOCHHEISER 
HARDWARE 


11.*! W. M ain S t. 


The ’68 Buicks are at your Buick-Opel dealer’s now. He’s ready to talk your language. 


« VC'LOM- C OMI S \s \ FASTBAC K — Mercury Cyclone for l!»t>8 comes in two sporty fast- 
batk models with squared-off rear design, distinctive grille and a standard 302-ctibic-imIi V-8 en­ 
gine the ( \done also conies in two door hardtop with formal roof design. The Cyclone can be 
seen at Hon Thompson Mercury. 
U.S. Editor Tells 
Of Talk With Ho 


Says Surtax 


Could Hurt 


Subdivisions 


Special Unit 


Helps Speed 


SS Benefits 


The Circleville Herald, Wed. Sept. 20, 1967 
Circleville, Ohio 


T o day in Washington 


My IHF \8SOCIATED PRESS out when 
WASHINGTON (AP) - 
The floor. Six 
lit* laid down on the 
demonstrators were 


Kdjioti* Note 
William 
C. 
Baggs, editor of the 
Miami 
News, visited North Vietnam 
last winter with Harry S. Ash­ 
more. executive vice president 
of the Center for the* Study of- 
Democratic Institutions and a 
former prize winning newspaper 
editor In the following article. 
B^ggs reveals for the first time 
details of a conversation he and 
Ashmore had with Ho Chi Minh, 
president of North Vietnam. 


By WILLIAM C. BAGGS 
Editor of the Miami News 
MIAMI, Fla 
(AP) — Word 
came in the afternoon that Ho 
Chi Minh wished to see us. 
His office is in the frayed ele­ 
gance of the palace which once 
accommodated 
the 
governors 
when France ruled this neigh­ 
borhood of Southeast Asia. 
The old gentleman was cer­ 
tainly prompt. We were ushered 
into a rather small room, decor- 
ted only with a single paint­ 
ing—of a brownish eagle—and 
we had not seated ourselves 
when he came in, walking in a 
misture of 
a 
stride 
and 
a 
bounce 
After a few minutes of social 
conversation, Ho Chi Minh asked 
if we could talk ‘ among our­ 
selves, 
that th 
which could not permit a report­ 
ing of the conversation until 
now Recent disclosures of the 
virtal parts of the talk have re­ 
moved the prohibition 
Ashmore and I emphasized to 
our host that we could talk, but 


and. through an interpreter 
French and Vietnamese. 
in 
ATLANTIC CITY. N J. (AP) 
— Rep. 
Robert Taft Jr. 
said 
Juice more we asked if talks Tuesday night that President 
could really begin if the bomb­ 
ing were concluded. And twice 
Ho said that talks could begin if 
the bombing stopped 
The Communist leader, 
in 
volved in tile nationalism of his 
country for almost half a centu­ 
ry, said that we and all Ameri­ 
cans should raalize that his 


Johnson's proposed IO per cent 
surtax 
could bankrupt 
state 
and local governments unless 
they share in the revenues. 
The Ohio Republican suggest | 
ed that any federal tax increase 
include a provision allowing a , 
certain portion of the new reve-1 
nues to be distributed directly 


CHICAGO (AP)—A special de­ 
partment set up to help the So­ 
cial 
Security 
Administration 
handle the work crush caused 
by the medicare program is 
helping 
to 
speed 
wayward declares 
checks to Social Security de­ 
pendents. 
The Critical Cases Unit was 
established in January in the 
Midwest Regional Payment Cen 
ter which certifies checks for 
four million Social Security re 
cipients 
in 
Illinois, 
Indiana, 
Michigan, Wisconsin and Ohio. 
Harry R. Shandelson, social 
insurance administrator for the 
region, said today, “The unit 
originally was a temporary one 
that handled the problems we 
had during the medicare crush. 
Now we think it will be perma­ 
nent.” 
Shandelson said the CIV in­ 
vestigates all cases or com­ 
plaints of nonpayment that are 
not explained through routine 
delays. 
All instances of check delays 
in the five states are reported 
to district offices, which, in 
turn, notify the payment cen­ 
ter. 


Army is prepared to map out 
.specific plans of action with Na 
tarnal Guard units to deal with 
civil disorders iii the nation's 
cities, a top military spokesman 


arrested Monday. 
The demon 
stentors say their aim is to dis­ 
rupt the operations of the draft 
headquarters. 
Meanwhile, about bt) women 
and 
children 
matched 
them 
se’ves against a lone member of 
the Senate Finance Committee. 
I They demanded the Senate re- 


'Christian' 


Admits Guilt 


In Murders 


CLEVELAND (AP) - Mrs 
Mary Bell Hath man, described 
as a “good Christian woman” 
by her attorney, faces possible 
life imprisonment after plead­ 
ing guilty to second - degree 


Farm Sciatica Show On 
COLUMBUS, 
Ohio 
(AP) 
More than $4 million in farming 
equipment 
went 
on 
display 
Tuesday at the opening of the 
annual Ohio State Farm Science 
Review'. 
The program, with continuing 
.farm demonstrations at Ohio 
State 
University’s 
Don 
Scott 
Field, continues through Thurs- 
; day. 


• it funk lh.- f.Y.w>ri,*n« Pv rn 
.---------«*-—•* - 
— 
murder in the arson deaths of 
this summer culminating in the ' 
Senate Finance Committee, five persons last Jan. la. 
this u 
, culminating in 
j 
demanded the Senate re- 
Thr *ifi.VMr.0id Sunday school 
involvement of federal troops in 
.t 
u . ~ 
,nc Jb year oui sunday scnooi 
Detroit, to bring full realization | ....__ ^ 
r T . 
. 
, teacher had been charged orig 
that we were faced with new di-! 
mensions in civil disturbances,” 
Gen. Ralph E. Naines Jr., Army 
vice chief of staff, told the an 
National 


country had been at war for 25 to state and local governments. 


Wont Ads 
474-3131 


nual meeting of tile 
Guard Association. 
He said the Army and the 
Guard should work closely to 
prearrange possible joint action 
in all likely target cities includ­ 
ing preparation of maps and ae­ 
rial 
p h o t o g r a p h s ; 
pre­ 
assignment of sectors of respon 
sibility; 
the relationships be-J 
tween troops and police; specif : 
ic rules of engagement; com-1 
mand 
and 
control 
arrange ! 
merits and local storing of vital 
supplies. 
WASHINGTON (AP) — Two 
sets of protesters have staged : 
noisy demonstrations in federal 
offices—draft protester at Se­ 
lective 
Service 
headquarter i 


Security 
bill jnayy 
fjve counts of first- 
a tougher 
ap degree murder and five of first- 
state 
welfare pro degree murder in the preptera- 
tion of arson. She was permitt­ 
ed to plead guilty Tuesday to 
degree 


passed 
Social 
which call for 
proach to 
grams receiving federal aid. 
The women, angered because 
more senators were not present two counts of second 
to hear their case, turned their murder, 
appearance into a sit-in. 
They said Chairman Russell 
B. Long, D La., broke his gavel 
when he abruptly hanged the 
session to a halt. They stayed 
three hours after Long cailed dropped 
the recess and left only when tion 
Capitol police threatened them 
with arrest. 


Asst. Cuyahoga County Pro 
secutor I,eo Spellanc.v said the 
question of intent was the ma­ 
jor 
factor 
in 
reducing 
the 
charges. The other counts were 
on his recommenda 


Capita! Footnotes 
The State Department says 
North Korean pilots “ may be 
flying 
in 
combat 
missions” 
against American planes over 
North Vietnam. 
The 
House, 
acting 
under 


years, against the Japanese and 
the French and the Americans, 
and they would never surrender 
their independence after so long 
a struggle. 
Moreover, he continued, com 
mg back to the subject of peace 


“This should be done without 
strings of direction,” he added. 
Taff, in a speech to the Na­ 
tional Association of Life Under­ 
writers convention, called the 
tax proposal “the most import­ 
ant decision to he made by Con 
gress 
during 
the c o m i n g 


and welfare mothers in a Senate emergency 
procedures, 
has 
hearing chamber. 
passed a bill to extend for a 
A sit-in bv opponents of th e ’; eay interest rate ceilings on 
Vietnam war in the offices of ‘)an't am* savings and loan time 
the Selective Service resulted in deposits. 
the arrests of three persons 
Charles O. Porter, a former 
J uesdav. One youth was carried 1 Oregon congressman, says he 


Mrs. Hathman s attorney, Nor­ 
man S. Minor, said his client 
set fire to the apartment at 
8340 Buckeye Road because her 
husband 
had 
been 
seeing 
a 
woman who lived there. 
Sentenced was deferred by 
Common 
Pleas 
Court 
Judge 
John V. Corrigan pending a 
probation report. 


will 
mount 
a 
fullscale 
cam 
paign for Sen. Robert F. Kenne­ 
dy, D-N.Y., in the New Hamp 
shire 
Democratic presidential 
primary unless Kennedy “short 
circuits our efforts.” 


Looking For: 


• Wallpaper 


Ualltex 


• Manilas 


• Matching Fabrica 


Sec 


Mrs. Robert Dumm 


Looking For: 


Inlaid Linoleum 


• Vinyl Inlaid 


Formica 


• Ceramic 


See 


Mr. Robert Dumm 


115 Wilson Ave. — 474-5131 


talks, he had no conditions for 
such talks except an end to the months. 
bombing. Hie meeting could be 
“ An increase in federal in- 
private or public, he said, and come taxes is bound to put a 
no agenda was necessary 
very tight squeeze upon state 
Ho referred to the bombings and local governments, not only 
all through the conversation He as to the possibilities of obtain- 
admitted 
the 
bombings 
hurt ing needed additional revenue, 
North Vietnam but pointed out hut also in maintaining their 
that the bombings did not 
un­ 
reasonably hamper the military 
ability of the country 
Dark had crawled over Hanoi 
when we left the palace. We had 
, talked two hours, and the next 
R was this suggestion evening Ho sent a minister to 
talks should he private see us an(j make certain we had 
an accurate record of what he 
had said. The minister seemed 
anxious that Ho’s views not be 
misinterpreted, in the slightest 
degree, in the report of the talk 
to our government. 


current tax levies,” he said. 


By bouncing a powerful beam 
of light off an orbiting satellite, 
scientists 
hope 
to 
pinpoint 
places on earth within inches. 
Some present calculations are 
believed to err by 2,000 feet or 
more 


In July and August, the slopes 
of Japan’s Mt. Fuji arc crowded 
with as many as 18,000 hikers a 
day. 


we pointed out that anything he 
said in the conversation would 
be reported to our government 
Wp stressed that we did not re­ 
present the United States but 
were pledged to report the con 
versation in detail to Washing 
ton. He nodded. 
There was no possibility of 
peace talks, he said, until the 
bombing 
of 
North 
Vietnam 
stopped 
And, tapping his fin­ 
gers together, he said no new 
American troops should be in­ 
troduced into Vietnam during 
any peace talks. 
W'ell then, we asked, could 
talks begin if the United States 
stopped the bombing? 
He 
measured 
the 
question 
witil much care, and said: “ You 
are a businessman and I am ai 
businessman, and I want to see 
the goods before the price is es­ 
tablished ” 
During this portion of the con­ 
versation, Ho spoke in English 


OM look /Milk 


’68 Buick. Now we’re 
talking your language. 


We changed the Skylark from 
front to rear, we gave it a whole 
new look, simply because 
we believe you want a car like 
this. In other words, we’re 
talking your language. 


We thought you’d like to have a 
little easier time parking. So 
we shortened the wheelbase of 
the two-door Skylark down 
to 112 inches. 


The new 230-hp., V-8 engine 
runs on regular gas. It’s standard on all 
Skylark Custom models. 


We also refused to limit your choices. Skylark 
Custom comes in four models, 15 colors 
and 32 trim combinations. So talk to the man 
who talks your language, your Buick dealer. 


All Buicks have a full line of General Motors 
safety features as standard equipment. 
For example, side marker lights and 
energy-absorbing steering column. 


Wouldn’t you really rather have a Buick? 


The ’68 Buicks are at your Buick-Opel dealer’s now. He’s ready to talk your language. 


©(OTM'if AUL 


113 W. Main St. 


H U SK Y 7 5 0 


NO m o UST OF I X I HAS TO BUY 


One price includes.- all. 
t r a n s m i s s i o n a n d 
differential, 
six 
fo rw ard 
s p e e d s , p o w e r - t a k e - o f f 
seat cushion 
and many o th er featu res. 
VVhen you buy a 
Bolens 
Husky, you’re buying a com­ 
plete. fully-equipped tractor 
A Husky powers over twenty 
five different lawn and garden 
attachm ents and serves as a 
complete and convenient syg- 
tem for year ’round yard care 
Before you buy any com- 
8 
act tractor, try a Bolens 
iusky firit. Then compare! 


Behind the gleaming, porcelain 
cabinet you’ll find a patented 
inner unit th a t m akes super 
floor heat possible. Look at the 
big blower wheel that drives 
the air through a battery of 
inner heat tubes that set right 
in the heart of the fare! Siegier 
doesn’t wait for the heat to 
come o u t . . . it goes right in after 
U. then forces it over your floor! 
Come in and see for yourself 
why Siegier O u l h e a k t - O u all 


other9! 


O N L Y S IE G L E R G IV E S Y O U M O R E A N D 
H O T T E R H E A T O V E R Y O U R F L O O R S 


KOCHHEISER 
HARDWARE 


A 


fl f * ,%i 
IP 
Wmk, 
Tile Circleville Hera ld, Wed. Sept. 2 0, 19 6 7 
C irclev ille, Ohio 


'Just a Joke' Barry Says 


Of Remarks on Convention 


WASHINGTON ( AP) 
Harry j 
Scott said, “The tragedy for 
Goldwater, who is something of 0,,r s'f*c> was ttiat LBJ took th* 
an electronics ex p ert, say s his 


(OVhRS, SCOOP APHI D TO MUSTANG — Ford Motor Comp any announces the unv eiling of the 1968 Mustang with full wheel 
cov ers and a new, sin uated air scoop . Op tional features include a high p erform alice 427-cubic inch engine. The Mustang and 
other Ford motor p roducts can be seen at Kenny Hannan Ford, 


San Francisco 


In Throes of 


Subway Work 


Lausche's Foe 
To Be Named 


talk about cutting broadcast ca­ 
bles al th* 
19 64 Rep ublican Na­ 
tional Conv ention was just a 
joke. 
Goldwater told a national tele­ 
vision audience Monday night 
his backers at the convention in 
San 
Francisco 
marked 
ev ery 
broadcast cable in the Cow Pa­ 
lace loft so ‘ if any body got a lit 
tie 
too 
obnox ious 
to 
our— 
us—they could alway s hav e ca 
hie trouble.” 
Tuesday in Phoenix , An/. . , 
the 
forget GOP p residential candi­ 
date said he really Had just 
joked, ‘‘Why not?” when one of 
his hackers remarked on the 
p ossibility of cutting 
network 
cables. 


batteries out of Barry ’s bullhorn 
in 1964 ” 
Scott told an interv iewer that 
worse than the technological 
sabotage 
was the 
intellectual 
sabotage 
Barry 
committed 
against Rep ublicans and o ther 
v oters.” 


Business Briefs 


Charles 
McCray 
has 
been j 
named the new 
manager of 
Piekaway Crop .Service, rep lae- 
RECEIVES AWARD 
ing Linden Gibson who resign­ 
ed recently to resume farming. 
McCray , 
his wife 
and 
four 
children live 
in 
the 
Ashville 
area. He has been a farmer for 
the p ast 2 0 y ears and is an ac- 
Goldwater also said Monday tiv e member of sev eral farm 


By L E O N A R D M I L L IM A N 
SAN 
FRANCISCO 
(AP) 
- 
Two mechanical moles are bur 
rowing quietly under 
Mission seat Democratic Sen. Fran k J. 


COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP;-—The [declined comment later on his 
state 
Rep ublican organization p olitical p lans. 
is ex p ected to wait until some | 
Andrews’ list of p rosp ectiv e 
time in December before de 
eiding which candidate it will Lausche included Congressman 
back in the coming battle to un- Robert Taft .lr 
of Cincinnati; 


Street for San Francisco’s first 
subway . 
auschc. 
Lt. Gov. John W. Brown, and 
In a news conference Tues- Secretary 
of 
State 
Ted 
W. 
From the clay s of horse-drawn clay after a meeting of the Re- Brown, 
street cars, 
San 
Franciscans p ublic State Central and Ex ecu 
- 1 
He said he had not y et talked 
hav e trav eled on the surface— tive Committee, Chairman Jo h n j to some other p rosp ects such as 
ex cep t for tunnels through Twin, S. Andrews named a half dozen former Congressman Oliv er P. 
Peaks. It s been by cable car, likely candidates for the job. 
Bolton of Mentor, and Albert 
streetcar, trackless trolley or 
Andrews said the committee Pay ne, Sp ringfield industrialist 
bus, linking with ferry boats or members generally fav ored Gov. w-ho announced for senator on 
bridges. 
James A. Rhodes for Ohio ‘‘fa- his owrn. 
Subway tubes, scheduled for v erite son” at the 1968 nation- 
Two other p ossible candidates 
comp letion iii 1969, will be p art ai conv ention, and added that were being mentioned for the 
of the 75 miles of the $l-billion “ I anticip ate that the gov ernor race—State 
Rep s. 
Albert 
H. 
San Francisco Bay Area Rap id will not run for the U. S. Sen- Sealy Jr. of Day ton and Char 


AOP Suit Questions 
Validity of Law 


COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)— rho 0j 
conv ention, “ You m ig ht I organizations 
Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea recall Sen. Hugh Scott got up 
Well acquainted with Smith- 
Co. (A.& P. Stores) has asked once with a 
bullhorn 
and 
it Douglass p roducts, he has at- i 
Common Pleas Court here to didn’t work. The batteries wer | tended all of t h e 'Smith-Doug- 
rulo as unconstitutional a law on’t in it ” 
lass sales and agronomy schools 
under which it was cited for 
Scott, a Pennsy lv ania Rep ub* i for the p ast three y ears. He has 
v iolating 
state 
liquor 
regula- jjcan who sup p orted then-Gov. j op erated an ex tensiv e custom 
*‘ons- 
William VV. Scranton of Pennsy l-! ap p lication business and will be 
r r m ~_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 
1 
A. & P. obtained Tuesday a v ania against Goldwater for the 1 of v aluable assistance to farm I 
temp orary restraining order p re ’ non,motion, said Tuesday , T e n s rn the area. 
I 
v enting State Liquor Director nev er had a bullhorn in my j 
---------------- ----------- 
Donald D. Cook and the Ohio hand at the convention. 
“His 
■ ■ 
T L 
Liquor Control Commission from memory 
of 
which 
p rank 
he 
USO 
IHG 
holding a hearing on the cita- p lay ed on whom is much the 


( lair Wo*m1, 1120 Atwater Ave,, Is shown 
here receiv ing a sp ecial award from the Central Ohio Breed­ 
ing Assn. div ing its a n n ul i technicians conference in Columbus 
VVikhI was recognized for the high concep tion rate he maintain­ 
ed during the y ear. 


Atty . Gen 
William B. Sax be; 


tion stemming from the chain’s same as his 
“ Bonus Bingo” game. 
Camp aign .” 
memory of the 


Transit 
District. 
The 
sy stem ate—he wants to be the state’s 
will tie three counties together best gov ernor.” 
with 75 miles of subw ay , sur- I 
Rhodes, who has frequently 
face, elev ated and underwater lauded Lausche after failing to 
high-sp eed rail lines. 
It includes five miles of twin 
aud four-borc tubes under San 
Francisco. 
The first of 18 tunneling m a­ 
chines 
and 
shields 
that 
will 
op erate under San Francisco’s 
streets began boring in mid- 
July . 
Its 9 3-ton twin was lowered in 
Sep tember 
to 
the 
mud- 
sp lattered 
bottom of a 
four- 
story 
hole 
that 
marks 
their 
starting p oint at 15th and Mis- 


unseat him as gov ernor in 1954, 
Banker Admits 


Manipulating 


Ohio Stock 


les Fry of Sp ringfield, but were 
not in the list rep orted by An­ 
drews, although the chairman 
said two unnamed state rep re­ 
sentativ es wrere p ossibilities. 


Frigidaire Plants 


To Resume Work 


I 
DAYTON, Ohio (AP)—A full 
p roduction 
force 
is 
ex p ected 
back on the job by Friday at 
General 
Motors 
Corp .’s 
two 
! Frigidaire p lants here following 
ratification of a new contract 
NEW YORK (AP) — Arthur Tuesday , 
sion streets. It will trail a safe Keller, 53, of Highland Park, 
Members of Local 8 01, Inter- 
150 feet behind its comp anion as NI., 
former 
p resident of the I national 
Union 
of 
Electrical 
they cut mile- long twmbores to First National Bank of Lincoln- Workers 
(IU D , 
voted 
unani- 


8 th and Market streets near the, wood, IU., p leaded guilty in Fed- p iously to accep t the new con 
Civic Center. 
oral Court Tuesday to one count tract Tuesday and began re- 
Tho ro st of tho Sa n F ra ncisco of an indictment charging ma n- Turning to work on a staggered 
tunneling will I* carri c do utun 
inflation of stock in Hercules schedule basis. 
der eight other contracts 
No c,aIion 
Products, 
Inc. on the 
About 
12 . 0 0 0 members of the 
other has begun. Some are still American Stock Ex change. 
j local struck Sep t. 6 when the 
to be let. Stations, all to be built 
Keller p leaded innocent to 13 union s contract ex p ired Agree- 
other counts, including consp ir­ 
acy with 15 others who were in­ 
dicted here Aug. 23 by a federal 


by cut and cov er op erations, in­ 
v olv e still other contracts. 
The machine help s—from its n .. 
, . 
solid steel boring front to its !" 1*!? 
Jll1r^ J. 
erector arms 
in back 
which 
swing steel lining into p lace. 
The face of the machine is an 
18 foot circular shield. It has 
three 
hy draulically 
actuated 
doors, each fitted with sp ecial 
dirt-cutting teeth. The wheel is 


Also p leading guilty were two 
Chicagoans and a New York 
broker. 
The charges were denied by 
five other defendants, and two 
more were to p lead Thursday 
and four others Oct. 5. 
The gov ernment alleged that 


inent on a new contract — of 
which details hav e not been re­ 
leased—was reached Monday . 


turned by 20 hy draulic motors thc defendants artific.Uy r.Ucd j ard Woodcock, vice p re 
p roducing 1,500 
horscp ower.lt ,he p rice of 
sto ck in the Galion, of the union, as say ing 
hy dra ulic jacks. 
........................... 


LIAW Picks Nex t Target 
MANSFIELD, Ohio (AP) 
— 
Chry sler will be the United Auto 
Workers’ nex t bargaining target 
after the current strike against 
Ford is settled, the Mansfield 
News Journal rep orted Tuesday . 
The newsp ap er quoted Leon 
sident 
that 
after Chry sler and Ford, major 
issues to Ik* settled with Gen 
Ohio, firm which makes hy drau 
Ev ery 30 inches tile machine J ic hoists and dump truck bod 
stop s. Its erector arms then go jcs 
The gov ernment charged; eral Motors are “ p roblems in 
to work. They swing into p lace a that the p rice was hiked from the non - working agreement 
p rotectiv e steel liner, div ided 
7 5 a share to $14.50 during 
I area.” 
into 
n i x 
seg ments. 
Men bolt m,. transactions, it non is list 
these into p lace. Grout is p oured etj at gt.h 
mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm 
back of tile liner to seal out the 
water. 
Keller 
p leaded 
guilty to 
a 
count accusing him of taking 
Then 
the 
machine 
again 
p art 
iii transactions creating 
mov es forward, the hy draulic 
“ actual and ap p arent 
activ e 
jacks p ushing from the newly 
j trading” 
and raising the p rice 
installed liner. 
Muck p ours through the rear including th* 
of the tunnel machine head onto 
a conv ey or belt, into little rail 
cars which are hauled to the 
op en hole and lifted to the sur­ 
face to be dump ed. 


ot stock “ tor the p urp ose of 
p urchase of such 
securities by others.” 
T he gov ernment charged that 
die manip ulation occurred be 
tween July 1965 and March 1964. 
One of those p leading innocent 
was Irv ing Projansky . 60, board 
Iron objects sunk at sea ev en -j chairman of the First National 
of Lincolnwood. 
Asst U.S. Atty . Paul It, Grand 
said on Aug 
23 that the p rice 
Hike scheme began with Projan 
make an ex act cop y of the van- sky , who was both board chair­ 
man at the bank and a director 
of Hercules Galion, and Keller. 


FRIER 
SERV 


tu&lly n mule t.» nothingness. If 
sea animals hav e secreted a 
sturdy lime shell around the ob­ 
ject, howev er, archeologist* can 


(shed original by p ouring p las­ 
ter in the old. 


Ratzafratz! Missed out? There’s more. Look 
for FURNITURE DEALERS in the YELLOW PAGES. 
Where y o ur fingers do the walking. 


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FKEK ESTIMATES 
T. K. BRUNNER 
& SON,JEWELERS 


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Handsome Contemp orary cabinet in durable 
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CE19 E—Big, laimly -size 227 sq. In. color 
TV rectangular p icture. Contemp orary 
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SC 147K—Ap artment size Early American 
W . 
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EM Sterco/FM/AM Radio. Air Susp ension 
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NOW* 


$4 99.95 


CFI OW—Contemp orary Custom Co lo r TV. 
Big 29 5 sq. in. rectangular p icture tube. Wuk 
nut veneers and select solids. 


No w tha t we ha v e a il the new Sy lv a nia mo dels fo r ’6 8 , we ca n’t 
very well 
ex pect y o u to pa y a s much fo r the *6 7’s. So y o u ca n buy a ny ’6 7 co lo r telev isio n, 
bla ck & white TV, co nso le stereo , ra dio , o r po rta ble stereo , fo r v ery 
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UNTIL FEB. 1968 


'Just a Joke' Barry Says 


O f Rem arks on Convention 


COVERS, SCOOP ADDEO TO MUSTANG — Ford Motor Company announces the unveiling of the 1908 Mustang with full wheel 
covers and a new, sinuated air scoop. Optional features include a high performance 427-cnbic inch engine. The Mustang and 
other Ford motor products can be seen at Kenny Hannan Ford. 


San Francisco 
In Throes of 
Subway Work 


Lausche's Foe 
To Be Named 


COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)—Tile declined comment later on his 
state Republican organization political plans. 


WASHINGTON (AIM 
Harry 
Coldwater, who is something ol 
an electronics expert, says his 
talk about cutting broadcast ca­ 
bles at the 1904 Republican Na­ 
tional Convention was just a 
joke. 
Gold water told a national tele­ 
vision audience Monday night i 
bis backers at the convention in i 
San Francisco marked 
every , 
broadcast cable in the Cow Pa ; 
lace lott so ‘ ii anybody got a lit 
tie 
too 
obnoxious 
to 
our— 
us- they could always have ca 
blo trouble.” 
Tuesday in Phoenix, Ari/.., the I 
fo rin t GOP presidential candi- 1 
date said he really had just 
joked, ‘‘Why not?” when one o f ; 
his backers remarked on th e ! 
possibility of cutting network 
cables. 
Coldwater also said Monday I 
i of 


Scott said, “The tragedy for j 
our side was that LR J took the 
batteries out of Barry’s bullhorn 
in 1964 ” 
Scott told an interviewer that 
"worse than the technological 
sabotage was the 
intellectual 
sabotage 
Barry 
committed 
against Republicans and other 
voters.” 


Business Briefs 


Charles 
McCray 
has 
been 
named the new 
manager of 
Pickaway Crop Service, replac­ 
ing Linden Gibson who resign­ 
ed recently to resume farming. 
McCray, his wife 
and four 
children live 
in 
the 
Ashville 
arca. He has been a farmer for 
the past 20 years and is an ac- 


By LEONARD MILLIMAN 
SAN 
FRANCISCO (AP) — 
Two mechanical moles arc bur­ 
rowing quietly under Mission 
Street for San Francisco’s first 
subway. 


prospective 
Andrews’ list of 
GOP opponents lo go against j | (.mf)orary restraining order pre 
Lauschc included Congressman 
Robert Taft dr of Cincinnati; 
Atty. Gen 
William B. Saxbe; 
Lt. Gov. John W. Brown, and 
Secretary 
of 
Stale 
Ted 
W. 
Brown. 
He said he had not yet talked 
to some other prospects such as 


is expected to wait until some 
time in December before de­ 
ciding which candidate it will 
hack in the coming battle to un­ 
seat Democratic Sen. Frank J. 
Lauschc. 
In a news conference Tues- 
From the days of horse-drawn day after a meeting of the Re- 
street ears, San Franciscans public State Central and Fxecu- 
have traveled on the surface— tive Committee, Chairman John 
except for tunnels through Twin 
S. Andrews named a half dozen,former Congressman Oliver P. 
Peaks. It s been by cable car, ; likely candidates for 
the job. 
Bolton of Mentor, and Albert 
streetcar, trackless trolley or Andrews said the 
committee (Payne, Springfield industrialist 
bus, linking with ferry boats or 
members generally favored Gov. J 
who announced for senator on 
bridges. 
James A. Rhodes for Ohio “ fa-' his own. 
Subway tubes, scheduled for verite son” at the 1968 nation-> 
Two other possible candidates 
completion iii 1969, will be part a1 convention, and added th a t! were being mentioned for the 
of the 75 miles of the Si-billion * I anticipate that the governor race—State 
Reps. 
Albert 
H. 
San Francisco Bay Area Rapid will not run for the U. S. Sen- Sealy Jr. of Dayton and Char 
Transit 
District. The system ate—he wants to be the state’s les Fry of Springfield, but were 
will tie three counties together best governor.” 
with 75 miles of subway, sur-1 
Rhodes, who has frequently 
face, elevated and underwater lauded Lausche after failing to 


ACrP Suit Questions 
Validity of Law 
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)—The 
Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea recall Sen. Hugh Scott got up 
Co. (A.& P. Stores) has asked j once w ith a bullhorn and it 
Common Pleas Court here to didn’t work. The batteries wer 
rule as unconstitutional a law en't in it ” 
under which it was cited for 
Scott, a Pennsylvania Repub- 
violating 
state 
liquor 
regula- j qcan wh0 
tions. 
William W 
A. Sc P. obtained Tuesday a vania against Coldwater for the 
nomination, said Tuesday, "I ers in the area. 
venting State Liquor Director never had a bullhorn in m 
y 
----------------------- 
Donald D. Cook and the Ohio hand at the convention. “His 
■■ 
«>• 
Liquor Control Commission from memory of 
which 
prank 
he 
USG I HG 
holding a hearing on the cita- played on whom is much the 


RECEIVES AWARD — < lair Wood, 1120 Atwater Ave., h shown 
here receiving a special award from the Central OMo Breed­ 
ing Assn. daring its annu li technicians conference in Columbus 
Wood was recognized for the high conception rate he maintain­ 
ed during the year. 


tive member of several farm 
the convention, “You might [ organizations. 
Well acquainted with Smith- 
Douglass products, he has at­ 
tended all of the Smith-Doug- 
lass sales and agronomy schools 
for the past three years. He has 
supported then-Gov. 
I operated an extensive custom 
Scranton of Pennsyl- application business and will be 
of valuable assistance to farm- 


tion stemming from the chain’s ! same as his 


I 
Bonus Bingo” game. 
'campaign.” 
memory of the 
Classifieds 


Bottled under authority of The Coca Cola Company by 
SCIOTO COCA (OLA BOTTLING CO. 
“Coca Cola” and “Coke” are registered trade marks of the 
Coca Cola Company 


high-speed rail lines. 
It includes five miles of twin 
and four-bore tubes under Sau 
Francisco. 
The first of 18 tunneling ma­ 
chines 
and shields that 
will 
operate under San Francisco’s 
streets began boring in mid- 
July. 
Its 93-ton twin was lowered in 
September 
to 
the 
mud- 
splattered bottom of a 
four- 
story 
hole that marks 
their 
starting point at 15th and Mis­ 
sion streets. It will nail a safe 
150 feet behind its companion as 


unseat him as governor in 1954, 
Banker Admits 
Manipulating 


Ohio Stock 


not in the list reported by An­ 
drews, although the chairman 
said two unnamed state repre­ 
sentatives were possibilities. 


Frigidaire Plants 


To Resume Work 


| 
DAYTON, Ohio (AP)—A full 
production 
force 
is 
expected 
back on the job by Friday at 
General 
Motors 
Corp.’s 
two 
J Frigidaire plants here following 
ratification of a new contract 
NEW YORK (AP) — Arthur Tuesday. 
Keller, 53. of Highland Park, 
Members of Local 801, Inter- 
JIL, former 
president of the national 
Union 
of 
Electrical 
they eut mile- long twinbores to First National Bank of Lincoln- Workers (IU D , 
voted unani* 
8th and Market streets near the wood, 111., pleaded guilty in Fed* j niouslv to accept the new con­ 
ceal Court Tuesday to one count tract 
Tuesday and began re- 
of an indictment charging man- turning to work on a staggered 
ipulation of stock in Hercules {schedule basis. 
Products, Inc. on the 
About 12.000 members of the 
American Stock Exchange. 
local struck Sept. 6 when the 
Keller pleaded innocent to 13 unions contract expired Agree- 
other counts, including conspir- went °n a new- contract — of 
acy with 15 others who were in-! which details have not been re­ 
dieted here Aug. 23 by a federal 
grand jury. 
Also pleading guilty were two 
Chicagoans and a New York 
broker. 
The charges were denied by 
five other defendants, and two 
more were to plead Thursday I Ford is settled, the Mansfield 
and four others Get 5. 
News Journal reported Tuesday. 
’The government alleged that 
The newspaocr quoted Leon- 
the defendants artificaUy raised ard Woodcock, vice president 
orsepower.lt the price of stock in the Galion, ol the union, as saying that 
hydraulic jacks. 
Ohio, firm which makes hydrau-1 after Chrysler and Ford, major 
Every 30 inches tile machine jjc hoists and dump truck bod- issues to be settled with Gen 
stops. Its erector arms then go jcs 
The government charged oral Motors arc “ problems in 
to work. They swing into place a j that the price was hiked from the non - working agreement 
protective steel liner, divided so.75 a share to $14.50 during I area.” 
the transactions. It now is l i s t - 
- 
ed at 6*4. 
Keller pleaded 
guilty lo a 
count accusing him of taking 
nart in 
transactions creating 
"actual 
and 
apparent 
active 
trading” and raising the price 


Civic Center. 
The rest of the San Francisco 
tunneling will be earned out un­ 
der eight other contracts. No f,a*10t} 
other has begun. Some are still 
to be let. Stations, all to be built 
by eut and cover operations, in­ 
volve still other contracts. 
The machine helps—from its 
solid steel boring front to its 
erector arms in back which 
swing steel lining into place. 
The face of the machine is an 
18 foot circular shield. It has 
three 
hydraulically 
actuated 
doors, each fitted with special 
dirt-cutting teeth. The wheel is 
turned by 20 hydraulic motors 
producing 1,500 


leased—was reached Monday. 


LIAW Picks Next Target 
MANSFIELD, Ohio (AIM 
— 
Chrysler will be the United Auto 
Workers’ next bargaining target 
after the current strike against 


into six segments. 
Men 
holt 
these into place. Grout is poured 
back of the liner to seal out tile 
water. 
Then 
the 
machine 
again 
moves forward, the hydraulic 
jacks pushing from the newly 
installed liner. 
Muck pours through the rear 
of the tunnel machine head onto 
a conveyor belt, into little rail 
cars which are hauled to the 
open hole and lifted to the sur­ 
face to be dumped. 


of stock “ tor the purpose of 
including the purchase of such 
securities by others.” 
The government charged that 
the manipulation occurred be­ 
tween July 1965 and March 1966. 
Ore of those pleading innocent 


FRIENDLY 
SERVICE 


—--------------------- 
v\as Irving Pro.iansky, 60. board 
Iron objects sunk at sea even-j chairman of the First National 
tually corrode to nothingness. If of Lincolnwood, 
sea animals have secreted a 
Asst U.S. Atty. 
Paul R. Grand 
sturdy lime shell around the ob- said on Aug 23 that the price 
ject, however, archeologist® can hike scheme began with Projan- 
make an exact copy of the van- sky, who was both board chair 
ished original by pouring plas- man at Hie ban!: and a director 
tor in the old. 
of Hercules Galion, and Keller. 


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sell you last spring 
for a lot less. 


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The Circleville Herald, Wed. Sept. 20, 1967 
7 
C ircleville, Ohio 


FREE ESTIMATES 
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& SON,JEWELERS 


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UNTIL FEB. 1968 


' Ratzafratz! Missed out? There’s more. Look 
' 
for FURNITURE DEALERS tn the YELLOW PAGES. 
Where your fingers do the walking. 


# 
Now' that we have all the new Sylvania models for ’68, we can t very well 
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Episcopal Pica Big IO Probe Clears OSU O f Illegal Ticket Sales 


To Aid Negroes 
Gains Support 


SEATTLE (AP) — A swelling; 
lineu p o f religio u s leaders ac I 
mss the natio n to day hacked an 
Ep isco p al leader’s ap p eal that 
all faiths div ert mo ney to Ne- ! 
ero ded gro u p s wo rking to im- 
j ro v e the lot of their raee. 
Messages of su p p o rt p o u red in 
f’-oin 
v a r i o u s 
Pro testant, 
Ro ­ 
il an Catho lic and Jewish o ffi­ 
cials. 
Hailing the p lan, Dr. Arthu r 
S. Flemming, p resident of the 
Natio nal Cou ncil of Chu rches, 
said the interdeno minatio nal o r 
anizatio n fav o red reallo catio n 
of Chu rch fu nds to help “ v ic­ 
tims of discriminatio n” win ju s­ 
tice. 
The p resident of the American 
Jewish 
Co mmittee, 
Mo rris 
Ii. 
Ab rams of New Yo rk, said it 
also stoo d b ehind the call for “ a 
majo r co o p erativ e u ndertaking” 
to aid the p o o r in their stru ggle 
tor ‘ b asic hu man rights.” 
Catho lic 
Bisho p 
Jam es 
P. 
Shanno n of St 
Pau l Minneap lis 
sent his endo rsement of the p lan 
“ for b ro ader ecu menical 
re­ 
sp o nse” to the crisis in slu ms 
of American cities. 
The 
reactio n 
came 
in 
re­ 
sp o nse to a p lea b y Ep isco p al 
Presiding Ratio n Jo hn E. Hines 
tor a “ fu ll-scale mo b ilizatio n” 
of religio u s reso u rces to u nder­ 
write effo rts of Negro co mmu ni- 
ty -actio n gro u p s, 
To star tthe p ro cess, his o wn 
• hu rcb 's go v erning co nv entio n 
here is co nsidering a p ro p o sal 
for shifting S3 millio n annu ally 
fro m u su al chu rch p ro grams to 
b ack 
u rb an 
p ro jects 
for 
Negro es, 
Meanwhile, 
b isho p s 
Mo nday 
swep t aside o b jectio ns to the 
seating o f a no nco nfo rmist co l­ 
leagu e, the Rt. Rev , Jam es A. 
Pike. 
The 
actio n 
“ sho wed 
a 
p ro gressiv e 
o p enness 
on 
the 
p art of the b isho p s,” said Bish­ 
o p Iv o l I. Cu rtis o f Seattle. 
It also gav e a p o ssib le clu e to 
the mo o d of the Chu rch in act­ 
ing on a p ending do cu ment that 
wou ld stro ngly u p ho ld freedo m 
of do ctrinal inq u iry , and call fo r 
changes 
in 
cano ns 
v irtu ally 
b lo cking heresy trials. 
Bisho p Pike was named last 
y ear 
in 
a 
heresy 
case, 
no w 
b o gged do wn in co mp licatio ns. 
As the b icameral go v erning, 
co ngress fo r 3.5 millio n Ep isco -J 
p alians 
went 
into 
its 
seco nd 
wo rking 
day , 
the 
Uy clergy j 
Ho u se o f Deputies to o k up an­ 
o ther 
liberalizing 
measure-—to 
allo w the seating o f wo men. 
Predicting 
appro v al 
o f 
the 
measure, 
which 
has 
been 
argu ed 
at 
co nv entio ns 
fo r 
a 
q u arter century , Mrs. Seato n G. 
Bailey , of Griffin, Ga., president 
of 
Ep isco p al 
Chu rch Wo men, 
said: 
If the dep u ties do no t v o te to 
seat wo men this time they will 
no t b e representing the senti­ 
ment o f their dio ceses.” 
Mo st of the Chu rch's SP U.S. 
dio ceses hav e o p ened their co n­ 
v entio ns to wo men. 
The seating of Bisho p Pike 
Mo nday b y a v o te o f 81 to 30 in 
the Ho u se of Bisho p s, fo llo wed a 
flu rry o f deb ate. 


Two Trucks Hit 


By Sniper Fire 


GREENVILLE, Ohio (A P)— 
Ano ther sho o o ting incident in­ 
v o lv ing 
steel-hau ling 
tru cks 
was 
rep o rted 
to day , 
b y 
two 
tru ckers who said they were 
the targets of snip ers alo ng a 
highway so u th oi here. 
The Darke Co u nty Sheriff's Of­ 
fice said the tru ckers, driv ing 
fo r the Miami Transp o rt Co. of 
Newp o rt, Kv ., 
ref>orted 
their 
tru cks were fired o n fro m a 
p assing ear o n Ohio 127 . Fiv e 
sho ts were fired, they said, and 
sev eral hit the tru cks. One tire 
was p u nctu red. 
'Hie tru ckers were no t iht. 
'Hie ear was describ ed as a 
whip - sp o rts ear, the sheriff’s 
o ffice said, with two men in it 
The 
tru ckers 
resu med 
their 
trip to Co ldwater, (jJiio, after re 
tarting tile incident. 


COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP) — An tho r athletic eligib ility last May 
inv estig atio n b y the Big IO into 22. 
handling o f co mp limentary foot 
Rein had co mp leted his v ar- | 
hall tickets has ap p arently clear- sity p lay in fo o tb all b u l was 
ed Ohio State o f any o fficial b arred 
fro m 
NCAA b aseb all 
inv o lv ement in 
u nau tho rized champ io nship p lay after he ad 
sale b y p lay ers, b u t tu rned u p knitted 
selling 
fo otb all 
tickets 


, traffic in the tickets ----- - witho u t 
« <* *•■« * * * l 
a m o ng,.. 
. 
, 
the amo u nt receiv ed 
athletes at co nference scho o ls. 
gjg 
rules 
The inv estigatio n was lau neh- 


-a v io latio n 


ed earlier in 
the 
Jo hn D. Dewey , assistant to 
y ear after the Big IO co mmissio ner, sp ent 
so me u nau tho rized sales b y for- i sev eral day s in the Co lu mb u s 
mer OSU v arsity athletes were area this su m m er interv iewing 
disclo sed. 
p ast and p resent athletes, co ach- 
Richard C. Larkins, OSU di 
athletic and ticket dep art- 
recto r o f athletics, said the in 
nient o fficials, 
v estig atio n, which also inclu ded 
Resu lts o f the 
inv estigatio n 
a pro be o f p o ssib le criminal ac- were co ntained in a memo fro m 
tiv ities b y the FRI, was “ p u r- Co mmissio ner William Reed to 
su ed as tho ro ug hly as any thing all co nference athletic directo rs 
I hav e ev er seen.” 
and facu lty rep resentativ es. 
Unless 
so me 
new 
ev idence 
“ The co mmissio ner, in his in­ 
co mes to light, no p enalty is 
anticipated b ey o nd OSU’s su s­ 
pensio n of fo o tb all-b aseb all p lay ­ 
er Ro b ert “ Bo ” Rein fro m fu r- 


v estigatio n, 
and 
the 
FBI 
all 
tried to do an ex tremely tho r­ 
o u gh 
jo b ,” 
said 
Larkins. 
“ I 
do n’t mind admitting I lost a 


lot of sleep o v er this, b u t fro m 
the start we were as anx io u s as 
any o ne to hav e the m atter re­ 
so lv ed and the air cleared.” 
Asked if Reed’s letter ex o ner­ 
ated tile u niv ersity of b lame in 
the matter. Larkins rep lied, “ I 
do n't think that Is the p ro p er 
wo rd. . . it was ail admo nitio n 
in o ne sense, b u t certainly not 
a whitewash. 
It reco gnizes a 
traffic in tickets amo ng athletes 
al co nference scho o ls, it ti Iso 
reco gnizes Ohio State’s attemp t 
to clean u p its p ro b lems b y a 
new sy stem o f distrib u tio n of 
co mp limentary tickets to ath­ 
letes. 
The new sy stem was ado p ted 
b y OSU b efo re the Big IO b e­ 
gan its inv estigatio n. 
Athletes at OSU are no w re­ 
q u ired to designate in adv ance 
who will he u sing their co mp li­ 
mentary tickets to each game 
and the ticket o ffices handles 
the actu al distrib u tio n thro u gh 


1 its “ will call” windo w. This pre­ 
v ents any sale of tile tickets b y 
tho athletes. 


Awaits Sentencing 
COLUMBUS, 
Ohio 
(A P) 
— 
Ari ie 
Anderso n, 
25, 
Williams­ 
p o rt, will b e sentenced Friday 
fo r the slay ing last March ll 
ol Jam es Cap p aru cci, a gro cer 
sho t du ring a ro b b ery . 
A criminal co u rt ju ry retu rn 
od 
a 
gu ilty 
v erdict 
Mo nday 
night against Anderso n, charg­ 
ed with first * degree mu rder. 
The ju ry reco mmended mercy . 


The seaho rse co mb ines an ex ­ 
tra-o rdinary v ariety 
of chare- 
teristics: 
head 
like 
a 
ho rse, 
mo nkey tail, p o u ch like a kan­ 
garo o , ex ternal skeleto n like an 
■— 
insect and two ey es that eau 
look in different directio ns at CORVETTE HAS MAKO SHARK STY! E — Chev ro let Co rv ette fo r IMW has chang ed 
to a rev o - 
the sam e time. Seaho rses can lutio nary new co ape ro o f desig n with remo v able panels. The 
Mako 
Shark b red Co rv ette has 
also change co lo r like a chame- lo ng er and lo wer aero dy namic lines. The Co rv ette and o ther Chev ro let pro ducts 
can 
ho seen at 
leo n. 
Harden’s Chev ro let. 


NOTICE 


( heck the pump Many 
statio ns hav e increased 
g as 
p rices. 
Certified 
will sav e y o u up to Sc 
a g allo n o n Ethy l. 


Certified Oil 
Company 


I OJO b. I o ui t 
Ro ute 23 No rth 


8 
The Circlev ille Herald, Wed. Sept. 20, 19 07 
Circleville, Ohio 


PLAY BONUS BINGO 
YOU CAN WIN UP TO 
$1 ,0 0 0 C A S H 


C U P OK C O P Y — No purchoio noco*»«ry. Simply pick up your pm# slip ond q«m* book 
your locol AAP Food Star# — or roquotf tom# by sanding a talf-addrassad, stampad 
aovalopa to P.O. Bol # 291. Columbus. Ohio 43216. (N O STORE VISIT REQ UIRED). 


W E W O N - S O C A N Y O U ! 


Josephine Williams 
$100 
Marie Jones 
Mrs. JeaneRe Lucked Mrs. Rose Cress 
$75.00 
$75.00 
$75.00 


Try "Super-Right" Meats for Tender-Juicy Goodness! 


Baked Foods! 


POTATO CHIPS 


JANE 
1-lb. 
P 
f t 
c 
PARKER 
box 


Cherry Pie 
. 
. 
. 
. 
'**58£ 
Sandwich Bread 
. 


as 
ii 
CNI 


Pound Cake £ & . 
. 5? 39e 
Cake Donuts . . . 
. 2 -4 9' 


Pork Loin Roast FUHliJ" . ,, 59= 
Pork Loin Roast FUL„LAL“N. * 69= 
Pork Butt ,£££, . . 
«,.59= 
Pork Chops S S S 
• * 
Pork Roast nB$y’g H'c 
- 39= 
Spare Ribs C°T ” . . » 6 9 C 
Pork Loin Roast 
59= 
Fresh Ham JSSSfLSi • «- 59= 
Fresh Ham 
JKJ 
. . ». 69« 


FANCY PLUMS 


CALIFORNIA «■ 29 


TASTY APPLES 


4 
- 5 
9 
* 


JO N A T H O N 
OR G R IM ES 
G O L D IN 


ROSSET BAKING 
POTATOES 


2 0 - 8 9 ' 


Sweet Cider 
. 
. 
. 
. 
C 89' 


Peanut Butter 
rag" 
. 
. T 69' 


Kidney Beans paagne 
. 
Q 
MOO 
J Cana 


Salad D r e s s i n g ^ . 


Spaghetti (Z . . . 
. 2 ^ 4 5 ' 


Grape Jam 
. . . 
. 3 £79' 


SULTANA— FROZEN 
FRENCH FRIES 


YELLOW.WHITE DEVIL'S FOOD 
DUFFS CAKE MIXES 


DUFFS 
FROSTING MIXES 


DUFFS—ILUEBERRY 
PANCAKE MIXES «*- 


JIFFY BUTTERMILK 
BISCUIT MIX 
•** 


JIFFY CORN OR HONEY DATE 
MUFFIN MIX 


AMERI CAN b e a u t y 
NAVY BEANS 
“2T 


AMERICAN BEAUTY 
PORK & BEANS 1 * - 
v _ _ _ 


t 


G IW FROZEN CHEESE 
PIZZA PIES 


C H A R M IN — 60 COUNT 
PAPER NAPKINS 


DAW N FRESH— M U SH RO O M 
STEAK SAUCE 
*^- 


DO U M AK— BOZ. 
MARSHMALLOWS 


BUTTERFIELD 
POTATO STIXS 


CHO COLATE— S'/v OZ. 
HERSHEY SYRUP 


4 DELICIOUS FLAVORS 
HI C DRINKS 


FOUR SEASONS 
TABLE SALT 
/ 
SWEET PEAS 


IONA 
rn 
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m 
BRAND 
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FULL 7-RIB END 
PORK 
ROAST- ■ 


YELLOW ONIONS 
5 ii 39* 
NEW CABBAGE 
9 ci 


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iK 
HEADS m * . 


Here now... 


Hilda William* 
Frank Nettle* 
Helen Addison 
$1,000 
$100 
$100 


YOU! 


Mr*. Jeme* Lore 
$100 


The result 


A fish dinner that tastes like the bsh is fresh-co o ked. 


It sho uld. Because it is. 


One impo rtant tip. 


Be sure the o v en is really pre-heated to 400* F. 


Art o ur Cap’n Jo hn’s Fro zen Fish Dinners a g o o d reaso n fo r sho pping AEP? 


They ’re o ne o f many . 


COPYRIGHT t 196*. TMI G *IA T ATLANTIC * PAClflC TIA CO . NUC S * 


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W E W O N - S O C A N 


Because y o u co o k the bsh. 


It takes no lo ng er than heating pre-co o ked fro zen fish...o nly 20 minutes. 


Yo u see, we’re so rt o f fanatics abo ut fresh fish flav o r. 


So we refuse to pre co o k the fish. 


Here’s what we do : 


We dip the fillet in milk batter. 


Breed it To p it with butter. 


We blanch the peas. 


Partly co o k the po tato es. 


So ev ery thing ’s do ne at o nce (rn o nly 20 minutes) 


when y o u co o k it. 


CA P’N JOHN'S FROZEN 
Perch Dinners . . 2 -99c 
Fish Sticks cWa £ ? H 
Z 
59 
Cod Fillets CAF7Ji°HN . 
*49= 


ALL G O O D 
Sliced Bacon . . 
69' 
Smoked Pork Butts kmhLs ,»89= 
Meat Pies VSfiJJf . 
. 5,..99= 


ROUND BONE OR 
Boneless Chuck roast »> 79= 
Boneless Stewing Beef . 
79= 
Young Turkeys .TV WF . n>39= 


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A&P Blended Juice . 3 '“ I 89= 
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89= 
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55-ox. 
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Carnival Roundies 
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PM- 29 c 


39= 
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5 bt,69= 
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Episcopal Plea 


To Aid Negroes 


Gains Support 


SEATTLE < A P ) — A swelling 
lineup of religious leaders ac 
mss the nation today backed an 
Episcopal leader’s appeal that 
all faiths divert money to Ne* 
2ruled groups working to im- 


I rove the lot of their race. 
Messages of support ooured in 
N m 
various 
Protestant, 
Ro­ 
il an Catholic and Jewish offi­ 
cials. 
Hailing the plan, Dr. Arthur 
S. Flemming, president of the 
National Council of Churches, 
said the interdenominational or- 
,sanitation favored reallocation 
of Church funds to help “ vic­ 
tims of discrimination” win jus­ 
tice. 
The president of the American 
Jewish 
Committee. 
Morris I). 
Abrams of New York, said it 
also stood behind the call for “ a 
major cooperative undertaking” 
to aid the poor in their struggle 
tor ‘ basic human rights.’’ 
Catholic 
Bishoo 
Jam es 
P. 
shannon of St 
Paul Minneaplis 
sent his endorsement of the plan 
“ for broader ecumenical re­ 
sponse’’ to the crisis in slums 
of American cities. 
The 
reaction 
came 
in 
re­ 
sponse to a plea by Euiscopal 
Presiding Ri*hoo John E. Hines 
tor a “ full-scale mobilization” 
cif religious resources to under­ 
write efforts of Negro communi- 
tv-action groups, 
To star ttha process, his own 
church's governing convention 
here is considering a proposal 
for shifting S3 million annually 
from usual church programs to 
back 
urban 
projects 
for 
Negroes. 
Meanwhile, 
bishops 
Monday 
swept aside objections to the 
seating of a nonconformist col­ 
league, the Bt. Rev. Jam es A. 
Pike. 


The 
action 
“ showed 
a 
progressive 
openness 
on 
the 
part of the bishops.” said Bish­ 
op Ivol I. Curtis of Seattle. 
It also gave a possible clue to 
the mood of the Church in act­ 
ing on a pending document that 
would strongly uphold freedom 
of doctrinal inquiry, and call for 
changes 
in 
canons 
virtually 
blocking heresy trials. 
Bishop Pike was named last 
year 
in 
a 
heresy case, 
now 
bogged down in complications. 
As the bicam eral governing' 
congress for 3.5 million Episco-1 
palians 
went 
into 
its 
second 
working 
day, 
the 
lay-clergy I 
House of Deputies took 
up an­ 
other 
liberalizing 
measure—to 
allow tho seating of women. 
Predicting 
approval 
of 
the 
measure. 
which 
has 
been 
argued 
at 
conventions 
for 
a 
quarter c e ro o n , Mrs. Seaton G, 
Bailey, of Griffin. Ga., president 
of 
Episcopal 
Church 
Women, 
said: 
If the deputies do not vote to 
seat women this time they will 
not be representing the senti­ 
ment of their dioceses.” 
Most of th# Church's Si* U.S. 
dioceses have opened their con­ 
ventions to women. 
The 
seating of Bishop Pike 
Monday by a vote of 81 to 30 in 
the House of Bishops, followed a 
flurry of debate. 


Big IO Probe Clears OSU Of Illegal Ticket Sales 


COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - An 
investigation by the Big IO into 
handling of complimentary foot 
ball tickets has apparently clear­ 
ed Ohio State of any official 
involvement 
in 
unauthorized 
sale by players, but turned up 
a traffic in the tickets among 
athletes at conference schools. 
The investigation was launch­ 
ed earlier in the year after 
some unauthorized sales by for­ 
mer OSU varsity athletes were 
disclosed. 
Richard C. Larkin*, OSU iii 
rector of athletics, said the in­ 
vestigation, which also included 
a probe of possible criminal ac 
tivities by the FBI, was “ pur­ 
sued as thoroughly as anything 
I have ever seen.” 
Unless 
some 
new 
evidence 
comes to light, no penalty is 
anticipated beyond OSU’s sus­ 
pension of football-baseball play­ 
er Robert “ Bo” Rein from fur­ 


ther athletic eligibility last May 


22. 
Rein had completed his var 
sity play in football but was 
barred 
from 
NCAA baseball 
championship play after he ad 
nutted 
selling 
football 
tickets 
without reporting the sales and 
the amount received—a violation 
of Big lo rules 
John D. Dewey, assistant to 
the Big IO commissioner, spent 
several days in the Columbus 
area this sum m er interviewing 
past and present athletes, coach­ 
es, athletic and ticket depart­ 
ment officials. 
Results of the 
investigation 
were contained in a memo from 
Commissioner William Reed to 
all conference athletic directors 
and faculty representatives. 
“ The commissioner, in his in 
vestigation, 
and 
the 
FBI 
all 
tried to do an extremely thor­ 
ough 
job,” 
said 
Larkins. 
“ I 
don’t mind admitting I lost a 


I lot of sleep over this, but from 
i the start we were as anxious as 
I anyone to have the m atter re­ 
solved and the air cleared.” 
Asked if Reed’s letter exoner­ 
ated the university of blame in 
the matter, Larkins replied, "I 
don't think that Is the proper 
word. . . it was an admonition 
in one sense, but certainly not 
a whitewash. It recognizes a 
traffic in tickets among athletes 
at conference schools; it also 
recognizes Ohio State’s attempt 
to clean up its problems by a 
new system of distribution of 
complimentary tickets to ath­ 
letes. 
The new system was adopted 
by OSU before the Big IO be­ 
gan its investigation. 
Athletes at OSU are now re ­ 
quired to designate in advance 
who will be using their compli- 
j mentarv tickets to each game 
and the ticket offices handles 
the actual distribution through 


I its “ will call’’ window, This pre­ 
vents any sale of Hie tickets by 
the athletes. 


Aw aits Sentencing 
COLUMBUS, 
Ohio 
(AP) 
- 
Arlie Anderson, 25, 
Williams­ 
port, will be sentenced Friday 
for the slaying last March ll 
I of Jam es Capparucci, a grocer 
shot during a robbery. 
A criminal court jury return 
cd 
a 
guilty 
verdict 
Monday 
night against Anderson, ch arg ­ 
ed with first • degree murder. 
rho jury recommended mercy. 


The Circleville Herald, Wed. Sept. 20, 1907 
Circleville, Ohio 


The seahorse combines an ex­ 
tra-ordinary variety 
of chare- 
teristics: 
head 
like 
a 
horse, 
monkey tail, pouch like a kan­ 
garoo, external skeleton like an 
I insect and two eyes that can 
look in different directions at 
! the sam e time. Seahorses can 
CORVETTE HAS MAKO SHARK STY! E — Chevrolet Corvette for lim has changed to a r«vo- 
lutionary new coupe roof design with removable panels. The Mako Shark bred ( orvette has 
also change color like a chame- 
longer and lower aerodynamic lines. The Corvette and other Chevrolet products can be seen at 
leon. 
Harden’s Chevrolet. 


Two Trucks Hit 


By Sniper Fire 


GREENVILLE, Ohio (A P)— 
Another shoootmg incident in­ 
volving 
steel-hauling 
trucks 
was 
reported 
today, 
by 
two 
truckers who said they were 
the targets of snipers along a 
high Wray south ol here. 
The Darke County Sheriff’s Of­ 
fice said the truckers, driving 
for the Miami Transport Co. of 
Newport, Kv., 
reported 
their 
trucks were fired on from a 
pi--.sing ear on Ohio 127. Five 
.shots were fired, they said, and 
several hit the trucks. One tire 
was punctured. 
The truckers were not iht. 
The car was described as a 
white sports car, the sheriff’s 
office said, with two men in it. 
The truckers resumed their 
trip to Coldwater, (Jhio, after re­ 
porting the incident. 


NOTICE 


(heck the pump. Many 
stations have increased 
gas 
prices. 
Certified 
will save you up to 5c 
a gallon on I lliyl. 


Certified Oil 


Company 


IMO S. (ourt 
Route 23 North 


WE W O N - SO C A N YOU! 


Hilda Williams 
$1,000 
Frank Nettles 
H O O 
Helen Addison 
H O O 
Mrs. Jamas Lora 
H O O 


PLAY BONUS BINGO 
Y O U C A N W IN U P T O 
*1,000 CASH 


C l i # O f C O P Y — N o purchase iM K M itr y . Sim ply pick up you r prise slip and gem e beek 
a t y o w Ieee! A I P Peed Store — or request terne by ten din g e le tf-e d d re n e d , (ta m p e d 
envelope to P .O . l e i # 2 9 1 , C o lu m b a ., O h io 4 3 2 14 . ( N O S T O R E V IS IT R E Q U I R E D ) . 


WE W O N - SO C A N YOU! 


Josephine Williams 
$100 
Maria Jonas 
S7S.00 
Mrs. Jeenette Lucked 
$75.00 
Mrs. Rosa Crass 
$75.00 


Because you cook the hah. 


It takes no longer than heating pre-cooked frozen hah...only 20 minute*. 


You aae, we're tort of fanatics about fresh fish flavor. 


So we refute to pre-cook the fish. 


Hare's what we do: 


We dip the Aliet in milk batter. 


Bread it Top it with butter. 


We blanch the peas. 


Partly cook the potatoes. 


So everything’s done at once (rn only 20 minutes) 


when you cook it 


The result 


A fish dinner that tastes like the fish is fresh-cooked. 


It should. Because it is. 


One important tip. 


Be sure the oven is really pre-heated to 400* F. 


Are our Cap'n John's Frozen Fish Dinners a good reason for shopping AAP? 


They’re one of many. 


COevRlCHT t 1944 THI G R O T AUANTIC A PACIFIC TIA CO I 


Try "S u p e r-R ig h t" M e a ts fo r T en d er-Ju icy G oodness! 


FULL 7-RIB END 
PORK I 
ROAST-1 


Pork Loin Roast 
Pork Chops 


F U L L R I * 
H A L F 


C E N T E R 
R IB C U T S 
• 
Pork Loin Roast L O I N E N D 
0 I k . 59* 


■ I.. 59* 
» 85c 
Pork Loin Roast FUlHL. Lr 
. * 69* 
Pork Roast 
Fresh Ham 


F R E S H P I C N I C 
S T Y L E 


W H O L E O R 
S H A N K H A L F 
*.39* 


ii, 59* 


Pork Butt| 
Spare Ribs 
Frosh Horn 


stuns 
o n .O A S T 
a 
i 


C O U N T R Y 


S T Y L E 
• 


BUTT 


H A L F 
• 


n> 59* 


■ lb (>9c 


CQe 
■ ib O l r 


CAP’N JO H N S FROZEN 
Perch Dinners . .2-99* 


ALL GOOD 


Fish Sticks 
Cod Fillets 
59 
*4 9 * 


Sliced Bacon . 
Smoked Pork Butts 
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« 



i 
HARDEN CHEVROLET COMPANY 


MMM. 


I'll.' Circ lev ille Herald, Wed. Sept. 
2 0 , 
l!)(>7 
9 
Clic lv v illt'. Ohio 
au sterity 
go verno r 
p ro gram 
when 
Hie hi the hest shap e they v e ever 
to o k 
o ffice 
in 
1063. been 
in .” 
Running Ohio's Gov e rnme nt 
Cos ts $ 10 Million Ea c h Da y 


B> KUBEK I F,. >111.1.KH 
cau se 
o l 
a 
co nstitu tio nal 
re 
('01.1 MUUS, Ohio ( A P -The 'ju iren ien l 
w ill acco u nt fo r 
co st o f ru nning Chio s go vern 
$1.19 billio n . 
men! has so ared 
lo almo st lo u r n o taries will he tap p ed fo r 
limes what it was 15 years 
ago . 
$861 m illio n , cap ital 
imp ro ve* 
The 
hill 
is 
abo u t 
$10 
m illio n m alts w ill eo st $101.9 m illio n , 
each day 
bo nd 
retirem en t 
$275 m illio n , 
The state's finance directo r and $555 m illio n will be diatribe 
blames 
in flatio n 
fo r the rise u ted to lo cal go vernments. , 
And, 
he 
p o ints 
o u t that Ohio 
"T his may so u nd big- and it 
mu st 
sp end 
mo ney 
lo 
make is," 
Krabach 
admits. 
* We're 
mo ney. 
here to p ro vide services and no t 
“ Go vernment i*- a big bu sh 
ju st to distribu te wealth, as p er* 
ness and 
a co mp etitive 
o ne. ' hap s 
the 
federal 
go vern ment 
said Finance D irecto r Bicho rd is ” 
I.. Krabach. 
Demo crats q u estio n Krabach s 
An 
Asso ciated 
Press su rvey o bservatio ns. 
They 
say 
Go v. 
sho wed thai ap p ro p riatio ns fo r 
lames A, Rho des w ill go do wn 
(he 
195153 bienniu m were $1.5 in histo n as "o ne o f the great* 
billio n , co mp ared with the* $14 est sp ending go verno rs iii Ohio 
billio n sp ent in the two years histo ry.” 
which ended last .Iu n0 30, 
Krabach defends Ohio 's sp end* 
The I%7 -69 bu dget calls fo r mg 
by 
exp lain in g 
that 
Ohio 


states which has no t 
had 
lo 
raise taxes in the last s ix years 
to p ay fo r ru n nin g go vernment 
o p eratio ns. ‘‘ Illin o is raised lav 
es $760 m illio n a year, C alifo r­ 
nia $900 m illio n , ju st to name 
a co u p le.” he said 
Krabach, architect o f Rho des’ 


no ted thai o nly abo u t seven p er 
cent o f the cu rren t bu dget is 
allo cated fo r ru n nin g state o f 
liees 
and 
dep artmen ts. 
"The 
figu re was ll p er cent when we 
t ame into o ffice*,” he said. 


Ile 
attribu ted 
Rho des’ 
big 
sa n din g 
o n 
cap ital 
imp ro ve 
mo nth 
abo u t $1 billio n is co m 
p leted, p lanned, o r u nder way 
i to “ years o f neglect. The state 
had 
no 
cap ital 
imp ro vemen t 
p ro gram at all ” 
The finance chiel said five 
years ago bu ildin gs were “ fall 
mg ap art ’ at state u n iversities 
j and "ro o fs co ming o ff o u r ho s­ 
p itals. Ou r ho sp itals to day are 


He called Rho des’ allo catio ns 
lo r higher edu catio n 
abo u t $227 
m illio n in tim cu rren t bienniu m 
--"the 
mo st 
p u t 
into tin* co l 
leges since the state wa*> created 
in 1803.” 
O fficials o f the last 
Demo 
cratic 
adm in istratio n 
see 
no t 
su ch a ro sy p ictu re o l Rho des’ 
sp ending ixdicies. They co ntinu e 
to deny a Krabach claim that 
the adm in istratio n in herited an 
$83 m illio n deficit fro m Demo 
crats in 1963. 
"A 
m yth,’’ 
said 
.lames 
lf. 
Malo o n, finance directo r du rin g 
the 
adm in istratio n 
fro m 
1959 
1963 o f Dem o cratic Go v 
Mich 


sp ending mo re than $5.1-3 bil­ 
lio n 
Reco rds sho w 
sp ending has 
go ne u p each year since 1950 
In 1950, Ohio sp ent .s7«*2 m il­ 
lio n 
The to tal cracked the $1 
billio n m ark with $1.2 billio n in 
fiscal 1955. The first $2 billio n 
year was 1966. 
The staggering figu res can be 
"m isleadin g,” 
Krabach 
p o ints 
o u t. 
The 
to tals 
inclu de 
self 
su staining ro tary fu nds su ch as 
liq u o r, highway safety and o ther 
fu nds o u tside the general rev 
enu e fu nd. 
In the bu dget fo r the 1967*69 I 
bienniu m, 
sp ending 
fro m 
the 
general fu nd w ill to tal 52.04 bil­ 
lio n. A dditio n ally, highway p u r 
p o se fu nds—kep t sep arately be* 
j 


mu st co mp ete with o ther states 
to exp and its eco no my. 
Mo re 
revenu e mu st co me in to avo id 
increasing taxes, he said. 
"The mo re in du stry yo u have, 
the mo re wo rkers yo u have and 
therefo re yo u get mo re taxp ay* 
o rs.” the directo r said. 
Ile said a recent $300 m illio n 
tax increase vo ted by the legis 
latu re was “ no t needed” to fi­ 
nance 
go vernment 
o p eratio ns. 
It was earm arked 
fo r edu ca­ 
tio n. 
“ We had a balanced bu dget,” 
Krabach said, “ lf the legislatu re 
had no t enacted the scho o l ta x­ 
es, go vernment in Ohio wo u ld 
have go ne right alo ng.” 
Krabach said Ohio is 
"the 
o nly 
state” 
amo ng 
in du strial 


Dramatic ! 
Dis tinc tiv e! 
Daringly new! 


ae! V. DiSalle. 
Thai claim was 
and 
is 
a simp le 
fabricatio n ,” j 
Malo o n said 
asserting 1he Di- 
Salle adm in istratio n redu ced the 
■date debt $M4 5 m illio n 
Malo o n no ted that the fo u r 
fo ld increase i m sp ending o ccu rr 
cd du rin g the adm in istratio n o l 
lo u r go verno rs bu l that o nly o ne, 
DiSalle, 
‘gained the rep u tatio n 
o l he*ng a sp ender. 


“ The 
reco rd, o n 
the o ther 
hand 
sho ws thai o f the fo u r, 
the o ne so kno wn was in fact 
the o ne who se bu dgets sho wed 
the lo west rate o f increase ” 
Malo o n said the first DiSalle 
bu dget 
reflected 
an 
increase 
fro m the p revio u s two years o f 
3 2 p er cent and the seco nd an 


j# *!# . - M f 
H 
p 
* 


increase o f 6.9 p er cent. 


“ Even 
tho u gh 
the 
Rho des 


bu dgetary 
p o licies 
have 
been 
labeled 
‘au stere’ 
they 
sho w 
a 
resu mp tio n 
o f 
accelerated 
gro wth 
in 
to tal 
exp enditu res. 
Thu s, the ap p ro p riatio ns fo r the 
first Rho des’ bu dget were $245 
m illio n o r 11.5 p er cent abo ve 
the seco nd DiSalle bu dget 
The 
seco nd Rho des bu dget was em 
bo died in ap p ro p riatio ns sho w 
mg the largest do llar increase 
in the histo ry o l the state—an 
increase o f $652 
m illio n 
o ver 
his first bu dget 
an increase o f 
27.6 |H*r cen t,” Malo o n said. 
He also hit at “ the adm in is­ 
tra tio n ’s p o licy o f deficit fin an c­ 
in g” thro u gh the $1 billio n in 


bo nd issu es approv ed by v oter* 
since Rho des took offic e. 


Malo o n estimated its c os t for 
the 
1965-67 
bienniu m 
al 
$196 
m illio n 
and 
said 
he 
was 
in ­ 
trigu ed by "va st deficit Im an f- 
mfi du rin g this tim e o f p ro sp er 
ity .” 
Krabach 
m ain tain s, 
o n 
the 
o ther hand, that the bo nd isstifs 
affo rd the state an o p p o rtu n ity 
lo meet vital co nstru ctio n needs 
without mo re taxes 
and 
thai 
they rep resent a so u nd ap p ro ach 
i becau se they can he p aid o ff 
with 
revenu e 
resu ltin g 
fro m 
j Ohio ’s eco no mic gro wth. 


To m o rro w ; H ie co st of edu ca­ 
tio n. 


Chev y ll Nov a 


A RAY OF SUNSHINE tells acro ss fo o tso re Negro co median 
Dick Grego ry I white hat) as he walk s w ith o p en ho u sing 
marchers in Milwau kee. 


Corv ette Sting Ray 


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'68s Top Secrets are here 


The 1968 Chevrolets are the very essence of modem 
design. Every line, every curve is in close harmony. 
M’s a smooth, uncluttered look with roof lines com­ 
patible with body lines, grilles and bumpers that blend 
gracefully into long, rounded fenders. Clean, flowing, 
beautiful in their simplicity, these 68 Chevrolets are 
rich and advanced in styling beyond any you've ever 
seen. 


A MORE SILENT RIDE 
And for 1968, we’ve gone to every length to give you 
more peace and quiet inside. The most sophisticated 
computers have been used to strategically place body 
mounts and successfully isolate noise and vibration. 
Shock absorbers have been improved. The wheel 
stance on many models is wider for greater smooth­ 
ness. Exhaust systems have been redesigned to make 
them whisper-quiet. Even the clocks tick more softly. 
A sound car is a silent car. The ’68 Chevrolets are the 
most silent, highest quality cars we’ve ever built. 


BETTER PERFORMANCE 
There are new engines, a bigger standard Six and V8. 


There’s a new 250-hp V8 you can order that runs on 
regular fuel. Many new engine components increase 
dependability and keep your new Chevrolet running 
stronger. There s a new rear axle ratio you can add 
for greater economy. On most engines equipped with 
automatic transmissions, there s a special heater for 
the carburetor which gives you more efficient per­ 
formance in cold weather. And with every engine, you 
get the new GM exhaust emission control. 


UNIQUE ASTRO VENTILATION 
There’s a whole new idea in ventilation, called Astro 
Ventilation, for Camaro, Corvette and the elegant 
Caprice Coupe. It’s also available on many other 
models. By opening two new vent-ports on the instru­ 
ment panel, you bring in outside air that can be 
directed where you want it. This way, you can leave 
your windows rolled up and add still more to your 
peace and quiet. 


PROVED SAFETY FEATURES 
You get the proved GM-developed energy absorbing 
steering column, folding front seat back latches, dual 


master cylinder brake system with warning light, pkft 
many more new features. Among them: energy absorb­ 
ing front seat backs, and safety armrests that shield 
the door handles. 
MUCH MORE THAT’S NEW 
There are new roof lines, some formal and graceful, 
others sporty and quick. There are new instrument 
panels, richly designed and all controls within easy 
reach. There are new interiors, new vinyls, new fab­ 
rics, new colors. There are models with Hide-A-Way 
windshield wipers and headlights that disappear be­ 
hind grilles. There are new side marker lamps, new 
recessed taillights. There s even a new ignition alarm 
buzzer that reminds you not to walk away and leave 
your keys in the car. 
These are the newest, the most different, the most 
dramatically changed Chevrolets ever. And they’re at 
your Chevrolet dealer s now. You’ll thoroughly enjoy 
slipping behind the wheel, experiencing the smooth 
new handling and library-quiet ride and, more than 
anything, seeing and feeling the even greater quality 
built into every new Chevrolet for 1968. 
Be smart! Be sure! Buy now at your Chevrolet dealer’s. 


CHEVROLET 


There’s more quality and value built into Chevrolets than ever before, m aking every new 1968 model an even better buy! 
HARDEN CHEVROLET COMPANY 


( IIH LEV ll.LE. OHIO 


T h e Circleville Herald, Wed. Sept. 20, 1907 
Ct! r ItiVllle Ohm 
Running Ohio’s Government 
Costs $10 Million Each Day 


Bv R O B O T I . .MILLER 
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP>~-Thc 
cost of running Ohio s govern­ 
ment has soared lo almost four 
times what ii was 15 years ago. 
The hill is about $10 million 
each day 
The state's finance director 
blames inflation tor the rise 
And, he points out that Ohio 
must 
spend money 
to 
make 
money. 
“ Government i'* a big bush 
ness and a competitive one,” 
said Finance Director Richard 
L. Krabach 
An Associated Press .survey 
showed that appropriations for 
the 195153 biennium were SI.5 
billion, compared with the St ! 
billion spent in the two years 
which ended last .Ion' 
The IWV it!* budget calls tor 
spending more than $51-3 bil­ 
lion. 
Records show 
spending has 
gone up each year since IWO 
In 195!.', Ohio spent .s7«*2 mil­ 
lion 
The total cracked the $1 
billion mark with $1.2 billion in 
fiscal 1955. The first $2 billion 
year was 1966. 
The staggering figures tan be 
“ misleading,” 
Krabach 
jHiints 
out. 
The 
totals 
include 
self 
sustaining rotary funds such as 
liquor, highway safetv and other 
funds outside the general rev 
enue fund. 
In the budget for the 1967-69 
biennium, 
spending 
troin 
thr 
general fund will total $2.04 bil­ 
lion. Additionally, highway pur 
pose funds—kept separately be- 


Krabach, architect of Rhodes’ 


cause of 
a 
constitutional re . states which has not 
had 
to 
qutrenienl 
will account for! raise taxes in the last six years 
$1.19 billion. 
I to pay for running government 
Rotaries will he tapped 
for joperations. "Illinois raised tav 
.-HIU 
million 
capital 
improve* Ug $760 million a year, Ualifor- 
ments will cost S 101.0 million, pie $900 million, just to name 
bond 
retirement 
>175 
million, J a couple,” he said 
and $555 million will he distrib­ 
uted to local governments. . 
1 


“ This may sound big- and it 
is,” 
Krabach 
admits. 
“ We’re 
here to provide services and not 
,11st to distribute wealth, as per­ 
haps 
the 
federal 
government 
is ” 
Democrats question Krabach s 
observations 
They 
say 
Gov. 
tames A. Rhodes will go down 
in history as “ one of the great­ 
est spending governor* in Ohio 
history." 
Krabach defends Ohio’s spend 
iilg 
by 
explaining 
that 
Ohio 
must compete with other states 
to expand its economy. 
More 
revenue must come in to avoid 
increasing taxes, ne said. 
“ The more industry you have, i 
the more workers you have and 
therefore you get more taxpay­ 
ers.” the director said. 
He said a recent $30U million 
tax increase voted by the legis­ 
lature was “ not needed” to fi 
nance 
government 
operations. 
It was earmarked for educa­ 
tion. 
“ V\e had a balanced budget,” 
Krabach said. "If the legislature 
had not enacted the school tax­ 
es, government in Ohio would 
have gone right along.” 
Krabach said Ohio is “ the; 
only 
state" 
among 
industrial 


program 
when 
the 1 in the la st shape they vc ever 
took 
office 
in 
1963. been in.” 
He called Rhodes’ allocations 
for higher education- about $327 
million in the current biennium 
—“ the most put into the col 
leges since the state was created 
in 1803.” 
Officials of the last 
Demo 
cratic 
administration see 
not 
such a rosy picture oi Rhodes’ 
spending policies. They continue 
to deny a Krabach claim that 
the administration inherited an 
$83 million deficit from Demo 
erat* in 1963. 
“ A myth,” said James ll 
Maloon, finance director during 
the administration from 
1959 
11963 of Democratic Gov 
Midi 


austerity 
governor 
noted that only about seven per 
cent of the current budget Is 
allocated 
lor running state of 
dees 
and 
departments. 
"The 
ligure was ll per cent when we 
came into office.” In- said 
I 
He 
attributed 
Rhodes' 
big, 


j spending 
on capital improve 
merits 
about Si billion is com­ 
pleted, planned, 01 under way 
lo “ years of neglect. The state 
had 
no 
capital 
improvement 


J program 
at a ll” 
The finance chiel said 
five 
years ago buildings were "fall 
tug apart’ at state universities 
1 and “ roofs coming off our hot 
pitals. Our hospitals today are 


ad V. DiSalle. ‘That claim was 
and is a simple fabrication,” 
Maloon said. asserting tile Dc 
Salle administration reduced the 
state debt $84.5 million 
Maloon noted th it the four 
fold increase iii spending occulT 
cd during the administration of 
lour governors tint that only one, 
DiSalle, “ gained the reputation 
of being a spender 
“ The record 
on the other 
hand, shows thai of the four, 
the one so known was in fact 
the one whose budgets showed 
the lowest rate of increase.’ 
Maloon said the first DiSalle 
budget 
reflected 
an 
increase 
from the previous two years of 
3 2 per cent arid the second an 


Dramatic! 
Distinctive! 
Daringly new 


increase ol 6.9 per cent. 
“ Even 
though 
the 
Rhodes 
budgetary 
policies 
have been 
labeled 
‘austere’ 
they 
show 
a 
resumption 
of 
accelerated 
growth 
in 
total 
expenditures. 
Thus. the appropriations for tim 
first Rhodes’ budget were $243 
million or 11.5 per cent above 
the second DiSalle budget 
The 
second Rhodes budget was em 
oodied in appropriations show 
mg the largest dollar increase 
in the history of the state—-an 
increase of $652 million over 
his first budget 
an increase of 
27.6 fw-r cent.” Maloon said. 
He also hit at "the adminis­ 
tration’s policy ol deficit financ­ 
ing” through the $l billion in 


bond issues approved by voter* 
since Rhodes took office. 
Maloon estimated its coat for 
the 
196567 biennium 
at $496 
million and said 
he was 
trigued by “ vast deficit final 
mg during the; time of prosper 
! ity.” 
Krabach maintains, oil til* 
I other hand, that the boud issufs 
afford the state an opportunity 
to meet vital construction needs 
J without more 
taxes 
and 
that 
I they represent a sound approach 
; because they can he paid off 
j with 
revenue 
resulting 
from 
Ohio s economic growth. 


Tomorrow: The cost of educe* 
lion. 


A RAY OF SUNSHINE falls across footsore Negro comedian 
Dick Gregory (while hat) as he walks with open housing; 
marchers in Milwaukee. 


Dutch Boy: M ore years to the gallon 


CIRCLEVILLE 
SUPER DUPER 


12 8 0 N. COURT ST., CIRCLEVILLE, OHIO 


Qu an tity Rig h ts Reserv ed 


SUPER DUPER 
BUN S 


12 Sandwich or IO Wiener Per Pkg. 


GLAZED 
DON UTS 


doz. 5 9 


P k g . 
Fa. 


• Orange • Grape • Pineapple-Grapefruit 
WAGNERS 
DRINKS 


QI. 
Bo ttles 


Designer Pattern 
KLEENEX 
TOWELS 


Jumbo 
Ro ll 


ARMOUR 


TREE! 


BEEF SIEW 


CORN BEEF HASH 


VIENNA SAUSAGE 


CHILI WITH BEANS 


PARD DOG FOOD 


12-uz. 49c 


2 4-0 *. 49c 


18-01. 39c 


. 
2 
47c 


. . . . I5 '/4-o z. 29c 


8 ‘clr- $1 .0 0 


OI Ii VALUE 
RTENING 


OUR VALUE 


i ni e'ei.ei) apricots 
4 


N 
0 
. 2 '/ 2 
$ 
1 
. 
O 
O 
CANS 
| 


Sp u d 
Flakes 


Camp fire Min iatu re 
Marshmallows 


3 -o z. p k g . 


... IOV2-0 2. p k g . 


10c 


19c 


HEI) & WHITE 
CHUNK, SLICED o r CRUSHED 


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CANS 


Appian Way 


Regular 
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12 Vj> -o z. 
Pkg s. 


MARTHA WHITE 


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• ELAPSTAX 
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MIX 


Reg . 
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Marmet ti 
SLAW 
2 4-o z. 
DRESSIN G . 
J” 


Carnation 


Instant 
BREAKFAST 


6 o f Yo u r Fav o rite Flav o rs 


FRESHLIKE Vegetables 
No . 30 6 
Ca ns 
• Garden Peas 


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• Cream or Whole Corn 
• Fresh Style Green Beans 


• Wh o le Green Bea ns 
• Lima Bea ns ............ 


• Crinkle Sliced Ca rro ts 
• Spina ch 


• Crinkle 
Sliced Beets 


4 ,„r $1.00 


6 fo r $1.00 


I 
to r $1 . 0 0 


Kraft 
Miracle Whip 


32 -o z. 


Ja r 


S U N S P U N 
OLEO 


1 -lb. 
Pkg *. 


\ VALUABLE COUPON I 


Good Only at Circleville Super Duper 
SUPER HUPLR 


CREAM 


Ha lf 
Ga llo n 
ea 


• 
• 


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Good Only at Circleville Super Dupei 
INSTANT 
FOLGERS 
COFFEE . 


10-0 1. 
Ja r 
ca 


• 
• 


Limit I J a r Flen se With Oth er Purcha se* 
Ex clu siv e o f Cig arettes 
Co n d Wed . Sep t. 2 0th th ru Sat. Sep t. 2 3 rd 


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SUPER DUPER 


1280 N. COURT ST., CIRCLEVILLE, OHIO 


Quantity Rights Reserved 


SUPER DUPER 
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GLAZED 
DONUTS 


doz. 5 9 


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Ka. 


• Orange • Grape • Pineapple-Grapefruit 
WAGNERS 
DRINKS 


Qt. 
Bottles 


Designer Pattern 
KLEENEX 
TOWELS 


Jumbo 
Roll 


ARMOUR 


TREET . . . . . . . . 


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CHILI WITH BEANS 


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i2-oz. 49c 


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2 .VGZ. 


.. 15' 2-o z . 


15*?-oz. 
cans 


OUR VALUE 
SHORTENING 


lb 


OUR VALUE 


„ S n 
APRICOTS 


NO. 2V2 
$ 
CANS 
O O 


Spud 
Flakes 


Campfire Miniature 
Marshmallows 


3-oz. pkg. 


... . lOVz-oz. pkg. 


10c 


19c 


RED & WHITE 
CHUNK, SLICED or CRUSHED 


NO 2 
CANS 


Appian Way 


Regular 
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1212-o z . 
Pkgs. 


MARTHA WHITE 


• BIX MIX 
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MIX 


Reg. 
Pkg. 


Marzetti 
SLAW 


DRESSING . 


Carnation 


Instant 
BREAKFAST 


6 of Your Favorite Flavors 


FRESHLIKE Vegetables 
No. 306 
Cans 
• Garden Peas 


• Peas & Carrots 
• Cut Green Beans 


• Cream or Whole Corn 
• Fresh Style Green Beans 


• Whole Green Beans 
A 
• Lima Beans 
for $100 


Crinkle Sliced Carrots L 
( I AA 
Spinach 
□ for V I - UU 


• Crinkle 
Sliced Beets 
for 


Kraft 
Miracle Whip 


32-oz. 


Jar 


S U N S P U N 
OLKO 


1-lb. 
Pkgs. 


SUPER DUPER 


CREAM 


Half 
Gallon 
• 
• 
• 


ea 


& VALUABLE COUPON . f l g 


Good Only at Circleville Super Duper 
INSTANT 
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COFFEE 


10-OK. 
Jar 
ea 


• 
• 
• 


Limit I J a r Please With Other Purchases 
Exclusive of Cigarettes 
(>ood Wed. Sept. 20th thru Sat. Sept. 23rd 


J f % 
• SSW ‘tv 
h . 
. I# 


BE SURE TO CHECK OUR 
EVERYDAY LOW PRICES! 


Priers Effectiv e Sep t. 2 0 to Sep t. 2 3 rd 


Qu an tity Hig h ts Reserv ed 


Hickory Smoked 


Fully Cooked 


l 
l 
i 
l 
l 
I 
B l A w L A . ▼ ES 


Less than 3 l bs. . . . l b. 53c 
L b . 


V? 
Y/A 
Bo n eless Cu b ed 


PORK 


CUTLET 


V///// 
Bo n eless Bo sto n Bu tt 
C 
PORK 


Old Fash io n ed 


lb 
C 
JUMBO 


v 
t 
a 
a 
ROAST 
lb 
FRANKS 
■ 
a 
a 
a 
s COD o r PERCH 
Lb. 4 5 ' 


>.b w v u b M 
» '•» » u iU ib 'a a i4M m 
'///tit 


U.S. NO. I JONATHAN OR GRIMES GOLDEN I U.S. NO. I WHITE ALL PURPOSE 
APPLES.4 


ib . 
Ba g 
Potatoes 1 0 


lb . 
Ba g 
n i» /i:\ l o o o sl 


SUPER DUPER FROZEN 
m 
STRAWBERRIES.. 4 


10 -o z. 
Pkg s. 


BANQUET — QUICK & EASY — 8 VARIETIES 
BIRDSEYE 


<)-OZ. 
Pkg s. 
BOIL’N 
BAGS . . . . 


RED & WHITE 
LEMONADE 


Pt. 


ti-OZ. 
Can s 


BIRDSEYE 


• TINY TATERS 
• FA N O I RIES 
• HASH BROWNS 
• COTTAGE FRIES 
POTATO PUFFS 


Reg . 
■*k g » . 


8 -o x . 
pkg s. 


Green Gian t 


Frozen Vegetables 


• Nib lets Co rn • Med . Sweet Peas 
• Sp in ach with Bu tter Sau ce 
• Sp in ach with Cream Sau ce 
• Sliced Green Bean s 


Ev a l u a b l e c o u p o n .£ 


Go o d On ly a t Circleville S u p er Du p er 
OLD VIRGINIA 
JELLIES.. .3 


8-o z. 
Jars 


Fu ll 
Sh an k 
Ha lf 


Hickory Smoked - Fully Cooked 
HIAM 


Lb. 5 5 
L h . 7 9 


Fresh 
Cabbage.. 


Delicious Baked 
Acorn 
Squash.. 


u. S. No . I 
Ru sset 
Fresh 


Ev a l u a b l e c o u p o n ii 


Go o d On ly a t Circleville S u p er Du p er 


DELTA 


BE SURE TO CHECK OUR 
EVERYDAY LOW PRICES! 


Prices Effective Sept. 20 to Sept. 23rd 


Quantity Hights Reserved 


Hickory Smoked 
Fully Cooked 


Less than 3 lbs. . . . lb. 53c Lb 


Boneless Cubed 
PORK 
CUTLET 


Boneless Boston Butt 
C 
PORK 


Old Fashioned 


lb 
ROAST 
l 
i 
l 
t 
C 
JUMBO 
lb 1 FRANKS 
a 
a 
• 
a 
X COD or PERCH 
Lb. 4 5 


'///M i 


U.S. NO. I JONATHAN OR GRIMES GOLDEN I U.S. NO. I WHITE ALL PURPOSE 
A P P L E S . 4 a 49° I Potatoes IO a 


F R O Z E N F O O D S 


SUPER DUPER 
Strawberries .. 4 


10-oz. 
Pkgs. 


BANQUET — QUICK & EASY — 8 VARIETIES 
BIRDSEYE 
BOIL’N 
BAGS . 


RED & WHITE 


ti-oz. 
Pkgs. 


LEMONADE 


ti-oz. 
Cans 


BIRDSEYE 


• TINY TATERS 
• FANCI FRIES 
• HASH BROWNS 
• COTTAGE FRIES 
POTATO PUFFS 


l i p ? ® ! - " 


Reg. 
Pkgs. 


8-oz. 
pkgs. 


Green Giant 


Frozen Vegetables 


• Niblets Corn • Med. Sweet Peas 
• Spinach with Butter Sauce 
• Spinach with Cream Sauce 
• Sliced Green Beans 


10-oz. 


Pkg. 


VALUABLE COUPON 
a 


HAM 


Full 
Shank 
Half 


Hickory Smoked - Fully Cooked 
HAM 
Butt 
Center 
End 
Slices 


u ,. 55c 
Lh. 7 9 c 


Fresh 
Cabbage.. 


Delicious Baked 
Acorn 
Squash.. 


Lb. 


U. S. No. I 
Russet 
Fresh 


L 
B 


Good Only at Circleville Super Duper 
OLD VIRGINIA 
JOIE 


8-oz. 
_ _ 
Jars 


Limit Three With Other Purchases 
Exclusive of Cigarettes 


Good Wed. Sept. 20th thru Sat. Sept. 23rd 


I S ? 


A VALUABLE COUPON i 


Good Only at Circleville Super Duper 
DELTA 
G & l W 
SUGAR 


At SUPER DUPER You’ll Find the LOWEST SHELF PRICES. . . 


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Wha t Did 
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You 
P rice 
Pa y? 


Contadina Tomato P a ste 
12-oz. j 27c 


Del Monte stew ed Tom a toes 
303 27c 


Hunts Cheese Tom a to Sa uce 
8-oz. 
l 
i 
l 
t 


HUNTS 
TOMATO 
0 7 c 
PASTE 
. 
- 


L i b b y Tom a to Ju ic e 
4b-oz. 32c 


Campbell S Tom a to Ju ic e 
4b-oz. 33c 


HUntS Catsup 
14-oz. 2-43c 


Sniders ca tsu p 
h -o*. 2-43c 


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Sunsweet pr.™ ^ 
43c 


MOttS Applesauce 
300 2-43c 


Del Monte Apricot Halves 
303 33c 


Dole Crushed Pineapple 
No. 2 33c 


Dole Chunk Pinea pple 
45c 


0 C 6 d n S p r a y c ra n b e rry Sa uce 
300 2-51 c 


COLD 
POWER 


Gia nt 
Siz e 76 
c 


Crisco Oil 
97c 


Duz 
1.35 


Kraft 


NATIONAL BRAND U LM 


O il/Vinega r Dressing 
3-oz. 


Our 
Eve ryda y 
Price 


32c 


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Pa y? 


CRISCO 
OIL. . . 


2 4 -oz . 
btl. 4 8 
c 


Wishbone 


Mazola 


Wesson 


Oil 


Oil 


Ita lia n Sa la d Dressing lb-oz. 


48-oz. 


38-oz. 


Kraft Cooking Oil 
32-oz. 


Planters 


Charmin 


Peanut Oil 
24-oz 


Toilet Tissue 
Reg. Roll 


59c 


99c 


77c 


65c 


59c 


4-35c 


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Del Monte Catsup 


Heinz Ketchup 


2U-oz. 


20-oz. 


O u i 
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Price 


27c 


33c 


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Pa y? 


Hi-C 


Catsup 


Ora nge D unk 


Del Monte Fruit Drink: 


12-oz. 


4b-oz, 


40-oz 


Tang Orange Drink 


Realemon “ Unsweetened 


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ib-oz. 


4(i-oz. 


27c 


29c 


79c 


35c 


35c 


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' 
32c 


P e l S N apt ha Instant 
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Chant 
U H L 


Bold 
32c 


Palmolive 
55c 


Bonus 
B e 2-69c 


Ivory Snow 
Stir 
Giant 
U I V 


Fab 
K e g ., 
3 2 C 


Dreff 
Giant 3 I C 


Krait 
~ 
yuurt 4 7 C 


Heilmans 
41c 


Wishbone 
t v 
nag 8-oz. 


Marzettl Ita lia n Dressing 
h, u . 32c 


Our 
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, 


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Eve ryda y 
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'iSoUe 
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Hull 2 
" 2 
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Bowlene 
35-oz. 43c 


Sani Flush 
. 
39c 


Drano 
33c 


Sno Bol 
Pin. Ut 


COmet Cle..w e, 
- i1 
22c 


PU FFS FACIAL 
TISSUE s 2: 2’T 


Ajax 
15c 


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l 
i 
t 


At SUPER DUPER You’ll Find the LOWEST SHELF PRICES... 


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Contadina Tomato Paste 


u 
r-— 
C^l 


01 
M 


O d Monte stewed Tomatoes 
a®! 27c 


H U n t S Cheese Tomato Sauce 
«... 2-27c 


Libby Tomato Juice 
4b-oz. 


Campbell's Tomato Juice 


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46-oz. 


14-oz. 


Sniders Catsup 
i 4-OZ. 


32c 


33c 


2-43c 


2-43c 


our 
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Sunsweel p .- j.™ 
Qt.; 43c 


M O H S Applesauce 
3oo 2'43c 


D d M O n t e Apricot Halveis 
303 33c 


D o l e Crushed Pineapple 
No. 2' 3 3 c ! 


D o l e Chunk Pineapple 
J 45c 


Ocean Spray 
Sauce 
30o 2 - 5 1 C 


COLD 
POWER 
76c 


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48-oz. s 
9 / C 


Duz 
King | ,35 


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Our 
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Wishbone 


Mazola 


Wesson 


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Italian Salad Dressing 16-oz. 


48-oz. 


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38-oz. 


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Reg. Roll 


59c 


99c 


77c 


65c 


59c 


4-35c 


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Del Monte c .« P 
2U-oa 
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_ 


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20-01 
33c 


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Hi-C Orange Dunk 


12-oz. 


4ti-oz. 


Del Monte Fruit Drinks 
40-oz. 


27c 


29c 


T a n g orange L)nnk 
i8 oz 79c 


Realemon “ Unsweetened 
- 
M 
r 
lo-oz. 
JfJX t 


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4b-oz. 35c 


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teg. 


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82c 


32c 


55c 


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Bonus 
2-69c 


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81c 


Fab 
Reg. 32c 


Dreft 
81c 


K r a f t Miracle Whip 
Quart 47c 


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Pint 41c 


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Marzettl Italian Dressing 
8-oz. 32c 


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White Cloud 
T 


TEM 
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Price 


issue 
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u 
co 


M 
I 
iO 


Sani Flush 
34-oz. 39c 


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i2-uz. 33c 


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Pint 
2 7 C 


COmet Cleanser 
21, / 22c 


PUFFS FACIAL 
TISSUE ■" 2:2 V 


AjaX Cleanser 
15c 


Vanish 
2u-<)z. j 27c 


EVERYDAY of the WEEK on Nationally Known BRAND ITEMS 


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SCOtt Toilet Tissue Asst. 
Reg Roll 4-37c 


N B O Shredded Wheat 
15 Ll-oz. 
36c 


KELLOGGS 


C O R N 


F L A K E S . 


1 2 -o z. 
Pk g. 


Wheaties 
B-:j 32c 


Corn 
9-oz. | 
3 t C 


Total 
8-oz. i 33c 


Ralston wh..t ch.x 
15-oz. 


Ralstona*. 
9-oz. 35c 


I 
I 


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V e g A l l Mixed Vegetables 
203 2-37c 


Butterfield Diced potatoes 
3 0 02-29c 


Freshlike spinach 
3 0 02-37c 


Silver FleeCe sauerkraut 
303 2-33c! 


Seaside Butter Beans 
300 2-29c 


.... 
Peter Pan smooth 
2 8-oz. 79c 


Skippy Chm * 
37c 


• 


S k i P P Y Creamy 
i8-oz. 53c 


Big Top 
85c 


J || Creamy 
12-oz. 
37c 


Krema 
69c 


NATIONAL lilt ANT) IT IM 


Alpo Horsemeat Dog Food 


Rival 


Our 
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Price 
Fay? 


Dog Food 


25Vz-oz. 


•lb. 


Puss N'Boots 


Puss N' Boots 


9 Lives 


Cat Food (Meat) 15 ^-oz. 


Cat Food (Fish) 15^-oz. 


Tuna Cat Food 
12-oz. 


2-55c 


13c 


15c 


13c 


25c 


THOROBRED 


D O G 


F O O D 
1 5 -o z. 
■ 
■ 
c 


PURINA 


D O G 


C H O W 


Folgers 


5-lb. 
Bag 
■ 
■ 
c 


Coffee 
2-lb. 


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I OSt Honeycomb 
9-oz. I 4 3 c' 


FRES HLIKE 


C U T 


G R E E N B E A N S 
9 
1 
C 
C „ 
I 


Post 


i bzI 
I 
cN 
1^0OO 
0 


Post 
9 ^ 1 42c 


Kelloggs 
K 
w. i-o-i. 142c 


Kelloggs > > < > 
li’oi.; 33c 


Freshlike Whole Green Beans 
27c 


Ff65hllke Whole Kernel Corn 
Me 2-41 c 


Freshllke G reen Lim a Benin 
sucj 31C I 


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SmUCker Peanut butler Smooth 
1 2-oz. 43c 


SmUCker Cherry Je lly 
iU-oz. 29c 


SmUCker strawberry Je lly 
IU-oz. 33c 


SmUCker Black Raspberry Pres. 
1 2-oz. 55c 


SmUCker strawberry Preserves 
1 2-oz. 39c 


Gaines Burgers 
2 1 Rack 89c 


Hunt Club Burger B ls 
69c 


Purilld Puppy Chow 
5-lb. 87c 


Gravy Train Dug chunks 
uwb. 1.29 


D A SH 


D O G 


F O O D 
1-lb. 


■ 
■ 


S ave Uvervtlav 
of th e Week 
ut S u p er d u p er 


GOLD MEDAL 
FLOUR 
56° 


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Chase & Sanborne 
79c 


Sanka 
87c 
Maxwell House 
1.29 
Chase & Sanborne ■>... 
90c 
Gold Medal . 
1.12 
Pillsbury 
56c 
Pillsbury 
1.12 


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SCOtt Toilet Tissue Asst. 
Keg Roll 4-37c 


N B O Shredded Wheat 
15‘ i-oz. 36c 


KELLOGGS 
CORN 
FLAKES 


12-oz. 
Pkg. 


■ 
■ 
c 


Wheaties c« 
i2-oZ: 32c 


Com k , 
9-oz. 31C 


Total 
8-oz. 1 33c 


^ [(llS t O n Wheat Chex 
I Vit 
15-oz. 


Ralston r^o chex 
9-oz. 35c 


I 
i 


NATIONAL BRAND ITEM 
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Pay? 
VCO All Mixed Vegetables 
303 2 -3 7 c 


Butterfield« 
. . . 
aoo 12-29c 


Freshlike spinach 
30012-37 c 


Silver Fleece a * . * ™ 
* 
2-33c 


Seaside Butter Beans 
3oo 2-29c 


Peter Pan 
28-oz. I 79c 


Skippy chwik 
12 -oz. 
3 7 c 


Skippy c ™ - , 
t8-oz. 3 3 c 


Big Top 
28-oz. ^ 3 3 c 


Jlf Creamy 
12 -oz. 1 3 7 c 


Krema 
24-oz. 69c 


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You 
P a y ? 
Al DO Horsemeat Dog Food 
25!/z«oz. 2-55c 


RlVal Bog Food 
1-lb. 13c 


■ USS N BOOtS Gat Food (Meat) 15*/2-oz. 15c 


PUSS N BOOtS Cathood (Fish) lS^-oz. 13c 


9 LlVeS Tuna Cat Food 
12-oz. 25c 


THOKOBRED 
DOG 
FOOD . . . 


O 
e n 
CM 


PURINA 
DOG 
CHOW . . 
* 
66* 


Folgers Cot fee 
2-lb. 


NATIONAL BRAND ITEM 
Our 
Everyday 
Price 


What Did 


You 
P ay? 


P O S t Honeycomb 
9-oz. 43c 


F R ES H L IK E 
CUT 
I c 
GREEN BEANS c“ L 


P O S t Toasties 
12-oz. 28c 


Post Tens 
9‘2-oz. 42c 


K e llO Q Q S special K 
IO^o z. 42c 


K e l lO g g S RR'e Krispies 
10-uz. 33c 


Freshlike Whole Green Beans 
306 27c 


9 


F rGSh I lice Whole Kernel Corn 
306 2-41 c 


FreShllke Green Lim a Beans 
300 31c 


NATIONAL BRAND ITEM 
Our 
What Did 
Everyday | 
You 
Price 
Pay? 
SmUCker p e a n u t B u t t e r S m o o t h 


uno 
NJ 
T 
N 


Slacker C h e r r y J e l l y 
lO-oz. j 
2 
9 
c 


SmUCker s t r a w b e r r y J e l l y 
lo -o z. j 3 3 c 


SmUCker B l a c k R a s p b e r r y P r e s . « « 55c 


S 
l a 
c 
k 
e 
r 
s t r a w b e r r y P r e s e r v e s 
.*» 39c 


Gaines B u r g e r s 
21 
h i d 89c 


Hunt Club B u r g e r B l s 
M b . 69c 


....... | 
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. 
..r, ... 
Purina p u p p y c h o w 
sib 87c 


Gravy Train * , a*. 
ion 1.29 


Save Everyday 
iii* Hie Week 
at .Super Duper 


GOLD MEDAL 
FLOUR 
56° 


NATIONAL BRAND ITEM 
O ar 
What Did 
Everyday 
Yoo 
Price 
P a y ? 
Chase & Sanborne 
.■.b. 179c i 


Sanka 
1 87c 
Maxwell House ■»«.« c..« — 1.29 j 
Chase & Sanborne....... 
90c i 
Gold Medal 
* > . . 
| 
| 2 


Pillsbury 
w 56c 


Pillsbury 
■ M b.) 
1 
, 1 
2 


R.C.A. VICTOR PORTABLE 


I J i ^ S 
Manufacture List Price $79.93 
# £ >?** I 


jy £ § 
n-Mtabte 
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SC TOO 
m\ 


I f l 
THIS 
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^ 
§ g j ! 
I 
Deluxe Tone 
j o ^ l 


l l B 
Comn-l 
tO L P ° N 
Save $26.95 
^ S s j 


14 
The Circleville Herald, Wed. Sept. ‘JO, 19 67 Ohio GOP Ey e s 
Circlev ille. Ohio 


By A b ig a il Van Buren 
Dear Abby: 


Don Jua n, 7 3, Ha s Ey e for Be a uty 


OLDS 4 - 4 - 2 RESTYLED FOR 1968 — Oldsmobile^ hi^li performance 4-4-2 bas been completely restyled for 1968 which includes 
a forced-air induction system dual exhaust cutouts and a deck lid paint stripe. The Olds line can be seen al Clit ton Motor Sales. 


Bids Ope ne d On Ma jor Roa d Jobs 


COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)—The 
state 
Highway 
Department 
opened bids Tuesday on 
pro­ 
jects estimated to cost 
more 
than $17 million. 
The major projects included: 
SUMMITT — Paving and con­ 
structing nine bridges on 5.02 
miles of Interstate 271; appar­ 
ent low bid Harry Miller ex­ 
cavating Co., Suffield, $7.816,5U7. 
State estimate $9,126,000. 
TRUM B U L L -Paving and con­ 
structing seven bridges on Ohio 
5; apparent low bidder John F. 
Casey Co., Pittsburgh, Pa., $5,* 
392,903; state estimate $6,980,- 


000;This project includes nearly 
four miles of the Warren outer, 
hell north of the city between ; 
Ohio 45 and existing Ohio 5. 
FRANKLIN—Adding of two 
additional traffic lanes to Inlcr- 


Bc e r Dre gs Blos s om 
LONDON (AP) — Bartender 
Charles 
Farrow 
threw 
some i 
beer barrel dregs into his gar­ 
den. 
then 
two 
months 
la te r' 
found 
a 
flowering 
hops vine 
growing on the spot. Hops is a : 
basic beer ingredient 
He said, I 
“There must have been some 
live hon seeds in the dregs.” 


state 71 
iii Columbus; apaprent 
low bid joint venture of com-j 
plete General Construction Co., i 
Concrete Construction, Inc., and 
Marble Cliff Quarries Co., Co­ 
lumbus, $2,137,688; 
state esti­ 
mate $2,113,000. 
COLUMBIANA — P a vi n g , 
bridge construction on U.S. 30; 
apparent low bid A. P. O Haro 
Co., Youngstown, $252,867; state 
estimate $237,000. 
RICHLAND — Paving 1.99 
miles of Ohio 97; apparent low- 
hid Walter Jones Construction 
Co., Wooster, $406,323; state es­ 
timate $523,000. 


Pe rs is te nt Fe llow, Joe 
POCATELLO, Idaho (AP) — 
Joe Barber, a senior at Idaho 
State U n i v e r s i t y , recently 
camped four nights in the court­ 
house parking lot so he could 
get auto license plate No. I for 
tho fourth straight year. 


Jus t W ha t You Ne e d! 
PORTLAND, 
Ore. 
(AP) 
— 
Among the items advertised lor 
sale by the federal government 
in 
eastern 
Oregon 
was 
a 
134-passenger 
bus, 
without any 
. seats. 


Migrating whistling swans fly 
so high and fast that they are 
almost 
invisible 
from 
the 
i ground. 


DEAR ABBY: I arn an old 
lady of 71, and every time I 
visit a certain friend of mine 
her husband goes into raptures 
over what beautiful legs I have. 
Everyone says I have nice 
legs for an old lady, and now 
that I have been wearing my 
skirts a little shorter, I suppose 
they are more eonspicious, but 
all that talk from Milton about 
my legs is very embarrassing. 
Not only that, but he is a 
camera 
nut, 
and 
is 
always 
wanting to take pictures of my 
legs. 
I know he reads your column, 
so will you please tell Milton 
to act his age. He is 73 and 
still looking. 
NICE LEGS 
DEAR LEGS: Don t be too 
rough on your elderly friend. 
If you’re truly embarrassed, the 
1 next time you visit your friend, 
make your skirt longer or your 
visit shorter. 
DEAR 
ABBY: 
I 
have 
a 
problem no one has been able 
I to solv e and I hate myself for 
' it. 
I ain a sleeper. I just can’t 
seem to get up in the morning. 
I have tried taking afternoon 
naps, thinking I needed more 
sleep, but that hasn't helped. 
, I have a wonderful husband who 
gets the children up, sees that 


I they’re properly dressed, makes 
sure they eat a good breakfast, 
and get to school on time. He 
even looks after our little 2 


- year 
old until I get up. 
Abby, I really want to get 
up in the morning like a wife 
should, but I can't seem to do 
it. No one can wake me up! 
I can sleep thru anything. 
I’ve 
been 
to 
all 
kinds 
of 
doctors, 
both 
mental 
and 
physical, 
and 
they 
have 
all 
turned me loose saying there 
is nothing wrong with me and 
they can’t help me. lf you or 
any of your readers have 
any 
suggestions, I’d be so thankful. 
SLEEPYHEAD 
DEAR SLEEPYHEAD: lf “ all 
kinds o f doctors” 
hav e been 
unable to help y o u, learn to 
liv e with y o ur pro blem and do n't 
feel guilty. Yo u’re lucky y o u 
weren’t 
sleeping 
when 
that 
wo nderful 
husband 
o f 
y o urs 
came kno cking at y o ur do o r. • 
Dear Abby: People are alway s 
asking me, “ Where did you buy 
those shoes? Or that dress? Aud 
how much did you pay for it?” 
I never know how to get out 
of telling them, so I go ahead 
and answer their questions as 
tho I were on a witness stand. 
I suppose I could say, “ It’s 
none of your business,” but I 
i haven’t got the nerve, so I find 
myself telling lots of things I 
really don’t want to tell. 
Have you a solution for my 
problem? I’m sure many others 


Se na te Pros pe c ts 


COLUMBUS, 
Ohio 
(AIM 
Chairman John Andrews kicked 
off a list of possible Republican 
candidates for Democratic U.S. 
Sen. Frank J 
Lausche’s seat 
Tuesday but without including 
Gov. James A. Rhodes. 
Andrews listed Congressman 
Robert 
Taft 
Jr., 
Cincinnati; 
Atty. Gen. William B. Saxbe; 
Ll. Gov. John 
W. Brown and 
Secretary 
of 
State 
Ted 
W. 
Brown. 
He said Rhodes was tile ap­ 
parent choice for Ohio "favorite 
Son” of members of tile Repub­ 
lican State and Executive Com­ 
mittee meeting here Tuesday. 


Oil Da ma ge As s e s s e d 
PARIS (AP) — The French 
Foreign Ministry estimates that 
oil leaking from the wrecked 
tanker Torrey Canyon caused 
$8.2-million 
damage 
to 
the 
French coast last spring. 


Pic k a wa y 


Gra nge 


scio n) 
Kenneth 
Beach was 
elected 
master of the Scioto Grange lot 
1968 
Other 
officers 
elected 
are 
Ernest Bidwell, overseer; Myr 
tie 
Beers, 
lecturer; 
Donna 
Heavers, steward; Orban Burch- 
well, assistant steward: Emery 
Marshall, gatekeeper: Virginia 
Little, 
chaplin; S. E. 
Beers, 
treasurer; Doris Beach secre­ 
tary; Mary Hastings, ceres; Jos 
ephine 
D o u nt z , 
pomona: 
Alma Hudson, flora: Margaret 
Burchwell, lady assistant stew 
a rd; Donald Kessler, executive 
committee member; and Kale 
Bidwell, pianist. 
Hie 
o fficers 
will serve re­ 
freshments at the next meeting 
8 p. rn. Thursday. 


would like to know the answer. 
TIMID 
DEAR TIMID: 
One o f the 
g reatest misco nceptio ns o f all 
time is the no tio n that o ne must 
answer 
a 
questio n 
simply 
because it has been asked. So me 
questio ns are do wnrig ht rude 
and presumptuo us. (Ex ample, 
“ Ho w much did y o u pay fo r 
it? ” ) iii which ease die reply ■ 
sho uld be, “ I wo uld rather no t 
j 
say .” And the same applies to j 
any o ther questio n o ne do es no t 
wish to answer. 


ALL 
WEATHER 
BANKING 


The SAVINGS AUTO 


Ba nk 
Member EDIC 


WEEK END 
PRICE 
BUSTERS 


Coupons Good Thru Sat,. Sept. Jd 


And the "inside story'’ for 1968 starts with the biggest, 
smoothest v-8 engine 
ever put into a production motor car. 


Shown a DOV# Is th# Fleetwood Eldorado, the world's finest personal can below, the popular Hardtop Sedan deVllle. 
Cadillac Motor Car Division 


Brilliant n o w a ty lin g • D r a m a tic n o w interi­ 
o rs • T o ta lly now in s tr u m e n t p a n e l • C o n ­ 


c e a l e d w i n d s h i e l d w i p e r s • I m p r o v e d 


v a ria b le ra tio p o w e r s te e rin g • N e w d is c 


b ra k e s a v a ila b le • W id e c h o ic e o f e le v e n 


e x c itin g new body s ty le s 
Now, e nte r a ne w e ra of luxury c a r p e r ­ 
fo rm a nce. L udiilai 's ne w 47 2 V-8 lias th e 
g re a te st torque, or us a b le p o w e r, of a ny 
p a s s e n g e r c a r e n g i ne a n d Ute ne w e s t 
c o m b ina tio n of e ng ine c o m p o ne nt s s inc e 
C a dilla c p io ne e r e d th e v h lilly th ree y e a rs 


i i ii. M W iOtjd CADILLAC 


a g o . Y ou w ill no tic e a hr ii h unt I m p r o ve ­ 
m e nt in p a s s i ng p e r fo rm a nc e thai in no 
w a y c o m p r o m i s e s (he re se rve of stre ng th 
tor C a dilla c ’s us ua l p o w e r c o nve nie nc e s . 
Y ou will a ls o Lh- im p r e s s e d wiili its 
a m a z ing quie t —s o r e m a rk a b le thai o nly 
its r e s p o ns i ve ne s s r e m inds y o u ti un a 
g reat ne w e ng ine lies u nde r the h o o d. 
C adillac for 11*08 p ro vide s, in a dditio n, its 
w e ll p ro vex! triple b ra k ing s y s te m with 
tinne d dr u m s to de live r s m o o th , straight 
s to p p ing p o w e r. F rom dis c b ra k e s art 


JU 
DW ON DISPLAY A I YOUM 


a va ila b le for th o s e w h o p re fe r th e further 
re fine m e nt iii tin a dva nc e d disc a nd drum 
c o m b ina tio n, a nti th is y e a r they're s t a nd­ 
a rd o n e ldo ra do . Y ou m a y a ls o c h o o s e a 
greatly im p ro ve d air c o nditio ning s y s te m 
that m o ve s m o re air m o re quietly. 
W h e th e r y o ur p re f e r e nc e is tor o ne of 
the m o re traditional m o de l s — 
or th e c la s s ic b e a u t y OI t h e 
e ldo r a do — c o m e in s o o n a nd 
d i st f iver ne w e le g a nc e a nd e x ­ 
c ite m e nt rn luxury m o to ring ! 


LD CADILLAC DL ALC KS. 


CLIFTON MOTOR SALES, INC 


i:i‘)5 S. CO UHT ST HK ET — Cli te LIA ICLK OHIO 


if 
Ii 


I f j z * 
l?3s» 
SS 
bs 
I >35* 
l»5=5 


!:-r< ”C'S 
bs 
i>S» 
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r n 
CLIP THIS COUPON 


DISPOSABLE VACUUM 


CLEANER BAGS 


Fits — Ho o v er 


Westing ho use 


G.E., Electro lux 


Kenmo re 


WTI H 


THIS 


COLFOX 2 
f or 9 9 


37c each 


Hegularly Scil at 7!k 


II ?<#5 
I t e r 


I K S * 
'-lot 
I m 
1 *3 3lag 
J '.♦Sn i 
Walnut anti 
„ 
I 
Purchased on 
I 
M a 
p 
l 
e 
Finish 
Sip 
i>3» 


CUP THIS COUPON 


END TABLE — STEI* TABLE 


COCKTAIL TABLE SALE! 


R egear $10.96 


When 


Lay -Away 
8 
SO.8 2 
« St 


G. C. MURPHY CO. 


Open Every 


Saturday 


Kriday & 


Nig hts 


Circleville, Ohio 
Until 8:50 l*.iY| 


R.C.A. VICTOR PORTABLE 


Manufacture List Price $79.95 


Detuc liable 


Speakers 


Deluxe Tune 


(outre! 


WI I Ii 


THIS 


t u t PON 


14 
The Circleville Herald, Wed. Sept. 20, 1907 [Ohio GOP Eyes 
Circleville, Ohio 


By Abigail Van Buren 
Dear Abby: 


Don Juan, 73, Has Eye for Beauty 


DEAR ABBY: I am an old 
lady of 71, and every time I 
visit a certain friend of mine 
lier husband goes into raptures 
over what beautiful legs I have. 
Everyone says I have nice 
legs for an old lady, and now' 
that I have been wearing my 
skirts a little shorter, I suppose 
they are more conspicuous, but 
all that talk from Milton about 
my legs is very embarrassing. 
Not only that, but he is a 
camera 
nut, 
and 
is 
always 
wanting to take pictures of my 


OLDS 4 * 4 - 2 RESTYLED FOR 1968 — Oldsmobile’* high performance 4-4-2 has been completely 
a forced air induction system dual exhaust cutouts and a deck lid paint stripe. The Olds line can 


Bids Opened On Major Road Jobs 


COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)—The 
state 
Highway 
Department 
opened bids Tuesday on 
pro­ 
jects estimated to cost 
more 
than $17 million. 
The major projects included. 
SUMMITT — Pacing anil con­ 
structing nine bridges on 5.02 
miles of Interstate 272; appar­ 
ent low bid Harry Miller ex­ 
cavating Co., Suffield, $7,816,507. 
State estimate $9,126,000. 
TRUM B U L L -Paving and con­ 
structing seven bridges on Ohio 
5; apparent low bidder John F. 
Casey Co., Pittsburgh, Pa.. $5,- 
392,903; state estimate $6,980,- 


000;This project includes nearly 
four miles of the Warren outer 
bclt north of the city between 
Ohio 45 and existing Ohio 5. 
FRANKLIN—Adding of two 
additional traffic lanes to Inter- 


Beer Dregs Blossom 
LONDON (AP) — Bartender 
Charles 
Farrow 
threw 
some 
beer barrel dregs into his gar­ 
den. 
then 
two 
months 
later 
found 
a 
flowering 
hops \ inc 
growing on the spot. lions is a 
basic beer ingredient 
He said, 
“There must have been some 
live hop seeds in the dregs.” 


stale 71 in Columbus; apaprent 
low bid joint venture of com­ 
plete General Construction Co., 
Concrete Construction, Inc., and 
Marble Clift Quarries Co., Co­ 
lumbus, S2,137,68vS; state esti­ 
mate $2,113,000 
Co l u m b ia n a - p a \ i n g, 
bridge construction on U.S. 30; 
apparent low bid A. P. O’Haro 
Co., Youngstown, $252,867; state 
estimate $237,000. 
RICHLAND — Paving i.99 
miles of Ohio 97; apparent low 
hid Walter Jones Construction 
Co., Wooster, $406,323; state es­ 
timate $523,CKH). 


restyled for 1968 which includes 
be seen at Clifton Motor Sales. 


Persistent Fellow, Joe 
POCATELLO, Idaho (AP) — 
Joe Barber, a senior at Idaho 
State U n i v e r s e y, recently : 
J camped four nights in the court­ 
house parking lot so he could 
vet auto license plate No. I for 
the fourth straight year. 


Just W hot You Need! j 
PORTLAND, 
Ore. 
(AP) 
— 
Among the items advertised for 
sale by the federal government 
in 
eastern 
Oregon 
was 
a 
! 34-passenger bus 
without any 
, seats. 


I 


Migrating w'histling swans fly 
so high and fast that they arc 
almost 
invisible 
from 
the 
ground. 


know he reads your column, 
so will you please tell Milton 
to act his age. He is 73 and 
still looking. 
NICE LEGS 
DEAK LEGS: Don t be too 
rough on your elderly friend. 
If you’re truly embarrassed, the 
next time you visit your friend, 
make your skirt longer or your 
visit shorter. 
DEAR 
ABBY 
I 
have 
a 
problem no one has been able 
to solve and I hate myself for 
it. 
I ani a sleeper. I just can’t 
seem to get up in the morning. 
I have tried taking afternoon 
naps, thinking I needed more 
sleep, but that hasn t helped. 
I have a wonderful husband who 
gets the children up, sees that 
they’re properly dressed, makes 
sure they eat a good breakfast, 
and get to school on time. He 
even looks after our little 21 


- year 
old until I get up. 
Abby, I really want to get 
up in the morning like a wife 
should, but I can’t seem to do 
it. No one can wake me up! 
I can sleet) thru anything. 
Eve 
been 
to 
all 
kinds 
of 
doctors, 
both 
mental 
and 
physical, 
and 
they 
have 
ail 
turned me loose saying there 
is nothing wrong with me and 
they can’t help me. If you or 
any of your readers have 
any 
suggestions, I d be so thankful. 
SLEEPYHEAD; 
DEAK SLEEPYHEAD: If “all 
kinds of doctors” have been 
unable to help you, learn to 
live with your problem and don’t 
feel guilty. You’re lucky yon 
weren’t 
sleeping 
when 
that 
wonderful 
husband 
of 
yours 
came knocking at your door. • 
Dear Abby: People are always 
asking me, “ Where did you buy 
those shoes? Or that dress? And 
how much did you pay for it?” 
I never know how to get out 
of telling them, so I go ahead 
and answer their questions as 
tho I were on a witness stand. 
I suppose I could say, “ It’s 
none of your business.” but I 
haven’t got the nerve, so I find 
myself telling lots of things I 
really don’t want to tell. 
Have you a solution for my 
problem? I ’m sure many others 


Senate Prospects 


COLUMBUS, 
Ohio 
(AP) — 
Chairman John Andrews kicked 
off a list of possible Republican 
candidates for Democratic U.S. 
Sen. Frank J 
Lausehe’s seat 
Tuesday but without including 
Gov. James A. Rhodes. 
Andrews listed Congressman 
Robert 
Taft 
Jr., 
Cincinnati; 
Atty. Gen. William B. Saxbe; 
Ll. Gov. John W. Brown and 
Secretary 
of 
State 
Ted 
W. 
Brown 
He said Rhodes was tile ap­ 
parent choice for Ohio “ favorite 
Son” of members of the Repub­ 
lican State and Exexutive Com­ 
mittee meeting here Tuesday. 


Oil Damage Assessed 
PARIS (AP) — The French 
Foreign Ministry estimates that 
oil leaking from the wrecked 
tanker Torrey Canyon caused 
$8.2- million 
damage 
to 
the 
French coast last spring. 


would like to know the answer. 
TIMID 
DEAR TIMID: One of the 
greatest misconceptions of all 
time is the notion that one must 
answer 
a 
question 
simply 
because it has been asked. Some 
questions are downright rude 
and presumptuous. (Example, 
“How much did you pay for 
it?” ) in which case the reply 
should be, “I would rather not 
say.” And the same applies to 
any other question one does not 
wish to answer. 


Pickaw ay 
Grange 


SCIUTO 
Kenneth Beach was elected 
master of the Scioto Grange for 
1988 
Other 
officers 
elected 
are 
Ernest Bidvvell, overseer; Myr­ 
tle 
Beers, 
lecturer:! 
Donna 
Beaver*, steward; Orban Burch- 
well, assistant steward; Emery 
Marshall 
gatekeeper: Virginia 
Little, 
chaplin; S. F. 
Beers, 
treasurer; Doris Beach secre­ 
tary; Mary Hastings, ceres: Jos 
ephine 
D o u n t z , 
pomona; 
Alma Hudson, flora; Margaret 
Burehwell, lady assistant stew­ 
ard; Donald Kessler, executive 
committee member; and Rate 
Bidwell, pianist. 
TYie 
officers 
will 
serve re­ 
freshments at the next meeting 
8 p. in. Thursday. 


ALL 
WEATHER 
BANKING 


The SAVINGS AUTO 


Bank 
Member FDIC 


SHO mr «oov« Is trts Westwood t i dor* OO, th* world’s Roast personal car, below, tbs copular Hardtop Sedan dcVllls. Cadillac Motor Car Division 


RC MIRLSTf VMIIX? I T tli 


WEEK END 
PRICE 
BUSTERS 


Coupons Good Thru Sat,. Sept. 23 


And the "inside story-’ for 1968 starts with the biggest, 
smoothest V-8 engine 
ever put into a production motor car. 


Brilliant n o w stylin g • D ra m a tic n e w interi­ 


o r s • Totally n e w instru m ent panel • C o n ­ 


c e a le d w i n d s h i e l d w i p e r s • Im p r o v e d 


variable ratio p o w e r steering • N e w disc 


b rake s available • W id e choice of eleven 


exciting n e w body styles. 
Now, < titer a n e w e ra of lu x u ry c a r |x:r- 
fo rm a nee. C a d illa c 's n e w 4 7 J V-8 h a s th e 
g re a te st torque, or u s a b le p o w e r, of a n y 
p a s s e n g e r c a r e n g i n e a n d t h e n e w e s t 
c o m b in a tio n o f e n g in e c o m p o n e n t s s in c e 
C a d illa c p io n e e r e d the v a fifty th re e y e a rs 


a g o . Y ou w ill flutier a b r illia n t i m p r o v e ­ 
m e n t in p a s s i n g p e r fo rm a n c e that in n o 
w a y c o m p r o m i s e s d ie re s e rv e of s tre n g th 
for C a d illa c s u s u a l j>ower c o n v e n ie n c e s . 
Y ou will a ls o br- Im p r e s s e d w ith its 
.itH azing q u i e t —s o r e m a r k a b le thai o n ly 
its r e s p o n s i v e n e s s r e m in d s y o u that a 
g re a t n e w e n g in e lie s u n d e r th e h o o d 
C adillac for 1008 p ro v id e s, in ad d itio n , its 
w e ll p ro v e d triple b ra k in g s y s te m w ith 
tin n e d d r u m s to d e liv e r s m o o th , straight 
s to p p in g flower. Front d is c b r a k e s arc 


a v a ila b le for those- w h o p re fe r th e further 
re fin e m e n t of a n a d v a n c e d d is c a n d d r u m 
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W h e th e r yo u r p r e f e r e n c e is foi o n e of 
the m o re trad itio n al m o d e l s — 
or th e c la s s ic b e a u t y of t h e 
1.1 d o r a d o —c o m e in s o o n a n d 
dis* o v e r n e w e U -g a n e e a n d e x ­ 
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When 


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Circleville, Ohio 


Open Every Friday & 


Saturday Nights 


Until 8:50 P.M. 


Wid e-Tracking ! 


So tth R Bonntvill#, Brougham, Grand Pnx, Executive, Ventura, Catalina, GTO, Le Mans, Tempest and Five Firebirds at your Pontiac dealer's 
P«M'M Mol#* O*. t M 


The C ircleville Herald, Wed. Sept. 20, 19(57 
15 
CtrclavUI*. Ohio 
Refugee Problem 
Grows in Mid-East 


B E IR U T, Lebanon (AIM — A and imposed on friends to find 


problem of humanity 
Uiat has sleeping room. For weeks and 
gone on nearly 20 years-what j months, the trek continued and 


it is still going on. 


Years of hate and fear, fos 


Mrs. 
Derby hlews 


Georgia Sweet — 86 9-246 2 


STYLING CHA NGES HIGHLIGHT L I MANS — Pontiac Motor Division's 1968 l.emans series 
features the most extensive styling changes, engineering improvements and built-in safely fea­ 
tures since its introduction seven years ago. The Lemons series, 
which includes the hardtop 
coupe pictured above, consists of a two-door sports coupe, four-door hardtop and a convertible. 
They ca# be seen at Christopher Pontiac. 
Shooting Incident Marks 
j 
Steel Truckers' Strike 


PITTSBU R G H (ATM—A man i lence marked strike that began 
Steel companies say they are 
was shot in the stomach today almost a month ago and spread beginning to feel the pinch from 
in the latest outbreak of vio 
east from Gary. Ind. 
j lhe strike. Many have cut steel 
lence in a wildcat strike by in- 
Meanwhile, Jones * Laughlin production and some have tried 
dependent 
steel 
truckers 
that steel Corp. in Cleveland sought to 
divert 
steel 
shipments 
to 
has tied up steel shipments in an 
injunction 
from 
Common raji 
Pleas 
Court 
to 
bar 
truckers 
Irom 
picketing 
its Cleveland 
works. 
The suit filed Tuosdav 


to do about the Palestine rcfu 
gees-—is growing in the wake of 
the Middle East war 


It started when the old Brit­ 
ish-mandated territory oi Pales­ 
tine was partitioned to form a 
Jewish homeland, now Isrcal ll 
reached a climax in the Arab 
Israeli war of 1948, when many 
\rabs were uprooted from their 
homes. 
There 
were 
slightly 
fewer 
than a million 
refugees 
then. 


tercd by Arab ndcrs, are the 


propelling force for many. 
UN RW A 
must 
gather 
the 
tribe in 
its separate refugees 


and carry or. with its mission ol 


feeding, educating and nursing. 
Some 300,Odd are living tmder 


Israeli occupation on th* 
west 


bank 
of 
the 
Jordan. 
About 


was 


five states. 


State police said the victim 
was one of a group of pickets 
gathered at tbc Bree/.cwood in 
terchange of the Pennsylvania similar to those filed earlier by 
Turnpike. 
Republic Steel Corp and U S. 
Thev said a man pulled up in Steel 
Corp., 
who 
have 
been 
a truck, fired a shot from a granted injunctions against pick- 
small caliber gun, 
then sped ; ding. 
away. Police said he was taken 
Judge Rov F. McMahon, who 
into custody by Maryland State granted 
the 
injunctions, 
will 
Police at Hagerstown. Md. They bold a hearing on the Jones & 


The owner drivers are asking 
for 
a 
hike 
in 
their 
percent­ 
age for hauling steel and im­ 
proved fringe benefits. 


declined to elaborate. 
The victim. Dale M. Younkin, 
37, of Somerset, 
Pa., was in 
satisfactory condition at Bedford 


Laughlin request Friday. 
The strikers, steel haulers who 
own their rigs, say they won’t 
go hack to work until ncgotia- 


Haircut Fuss Ends; 


Youth in Class 


S P R IN G F IE L D , 
Ohio (A P ) 
Bald, 17-year-old Joseph Apone, 
a junior at Springfield North 
High School, went back to his 
classes Tuesday after a period 
of suspension over hair difficult 


Some have found a life of their 
kjo.ooo registered refugees and 
own, 
but o t h e r s have mul- perhaps 100,000 so far unregis 
tiplied—there are grandchildren tercd arc* 
on 
the east 
hard 
of the original refugees who are 40 0 ,0 0 0 in the Gaza 
Strip 
and 
refugees now. And their number 
1 5 0 ,0 0 0 
in Syria. Other refugees, 
grow in the war last June, so jn Lebanon, were untouched b\ 
that 
today 
1,317,000 
are 
re 
the war. 
gistcred with the United Nations 
__________________ 


?NRWAnd WorkS Ai?cncy’ 
01 Uigh Court Accepts 


in June mor* than I m.uuo Ar- Jemison Murder Case 
abs crossed the 
Jordan 
River 
CO LUM BUS, Ohio (A P-—The 
into the Hashemite Kingdom of Ohio Supreme Court took under 
Jordan. 
They 
were joined by advisement Tuesday the first* 
perhaps 
100.000 more 
unregis- degree murder ease of Richard 
tercd 
refugees. 
Palestinians H. 
Jemison 
111 the 
\lav 
1%;> 
with settled homes and jobs on slaying of his wife and a drug 
the w’est bank of the 
Jordan, store operator, John Lyman, 
now occupied by Israel. 
Some 
The loth District Court of Ap 
Tied to the Gaza Strip, others to 1 ;,<>als 
reversed 
bis 
conviction 
Syria 
and ordered a new trial. Frank- 
They drifted into the desert, lin County Prosecutor C 
How- 
moved into towns and villages 
ard Johnson is appealing the 
They doubled up with relatives reversal. 


Folks around here* arc* quite 


pleased that Mr and Mrs. liar 


ry White “ Whitie” have reopen­ 
ed Ihcur market. Serious illness 
of thc*ir daughter 
necessitated 
an extended vacation trip 


Congratulations to Reverend 
and Mrs. Maurer on lhe birth 
ol a daughter on Sept 9 


Mrs. Eddie Lewis was guest 
of honor Sunday afternoon at a 
baby 
shower 
given 
by 
Mrs. 
Jack Hughes at her home here. 
Mrs. Hughes was assisted 
by 
Mrs Pete McPherson and Mrs. 
Jim McPherson. Other guests 
were 
Mrs. 
Herb 
Southward, 
Mrs 
Dick 
McPherson, 
Mrs 
Nelle Nairhan, Mrs. Troy Mr 
Pherson, Mrs. Bertha Graham. 
Mrs 
Joyce 
McPherson, 
and 
Mrs Robert Imbodcn 


2 Youths on Probation 


CINCINNATI (AP)--Two stu 
| dents arrested last March 6 on 
charges of possessing marijuana 
for sale have been placed on 
had as dinner guests Mr. 
and three years' probation. 
Mrs Harold Taynor and family 
Common Pleas Judge Gilbert 
of Lafayette, Ohio 
Bettman 
imposed 
probation 
Tuesday on Jeffrey Alan Ber­ 
liner, 18. and Richard Gordon 
Sunday visitors of 
Mr. 
and Newhauser, 19, both of Cincin- 
Mrs. Archie Sweet were 
Mr. nati The youth’s pleaded guilty 
and Mrs Oscar Kinney of Gib- earlior this summer, 


sonburg, Ohio. 


Lisa Hughes 
celebrated 
her 
10th birthday on Sept. 12, Tom 
Mussel man has a birthday on 
Sept. 20, 
and Gwynneth 
Bau- i 
han a birthday Sept. 21. 


Use The 
Classifieds 


Thursday visitors al the home 
of Mrs 
Helen 
Arledge 
were 
Mr and Mrs. Dean Davies 
of 
Canton. 


Then on Sunday Mrs. Arledge 


te 
111 
SOFT 
WATER 


Dougherty 
117 V\ 
M 
S I 
26:17 


v ,\u W 
i| 
Y < * 
The 


I 
€ 


& 


urtuu oiunc ^ 
0 0! 
14(1 W. Main St. 


CIRCLE 
BUFFET 


Circleville’s Only 
Complete Cafeteria! 


O PEN IN G 


MONDAY S E P T. 25 


In the N ew 
BINGMANS 
DRUG STORE 
140 VV. Main St. 


Countv Memorial Hospital. H e 1'!!?™8 get 
NNaL . l ° mect ties with school authorities 
,a s .he latest victim in a vio 
A t ! 
Apone*. troubles beg.n 


How Weather 


Looks Today 


members of the Teamsters Un 
ion and get paid under a na­ 
tional 
agreement. 
They 
better terms. 
Representatives of the owner- 
drivers met at Cleveland Tues­ 
day and said any contract talks 
must include the drivers’ reprc 


last 
week when his pre school hair- 
want cut was <let'lared too long by 
Principal Robert Lynch. After a 
second trip to the barber, Lynch 
contended still more hair would 
have to come off. 


Finally, after a third haircut. 


OHIO WEA THER SUMMA RY 
CO LUM BUS, Ohio (A P',—Offi- 


sentatives, the Teamsters and Apone 
appeared 
at 
school 
a 
“ other interested parties ’ and wee^ a8 ° vv*th what the priuci- 
guarantee that “ every man in- 
considered 
an 
acceptable 
considered 
an 
cial Weather Bureau summary | volved will be returned to work co>fhire. But then on the follow- 
ol Ohio’s weather: 
without loss of seniority or other 
(^av- Apone appeared again 
Cloudy skies 
and 
generally reprisals.” 
—bald this time, 
dry weather was the rule in 
They 
said 
they 
represented 
The youth was sus|»cnded via 
Ohio Tuesday night, with the strikers in Ohio. Pennsylvania,! a 
letter to his parents from 


; Pontiac announces the 
g reat American sp ort for ’68 


exception being showers at Find­ 
lay well before daybreak today. 
Temperatures early this mom 
ing registered in the 60s. Read- 


fndiana and Michigan. A Team- school officials, until there was 
sters spokesman told the strik- some hair growth evident. In 
ers in Michigan they could meet tbe following week, the youth’s 
today 
with 
acting 
Teamsters hair grew to what school offi- 
ings included Toledo and Cin 
President Frank Fitzsimmons if cia,s decided was acceptable, 
cinnati 64, Cleveland 68. Colum- ^iey g0 back to work and stop and be was permitted to return 
bus 63 and Marietta (H>. 
picketing the steel mills. 
la classes today. 
A cold front through eastern 
jn addition to picketing the 
School officials had told the 
South Dakota, eastern Nebraska steel mills, the strikers have sta- 
youth's 
mother, 
Mrs. 
Roaa 
and central Kansas this morn 
tioncd themselvefeat interchang- Apone Peck, that “ we require 
mg has begun to advance east- 
es 
of superhighway, 
retau- no uniform standard of dress, 
ward. The front is scheduled to rant, truck stops, the top of hut we do insist that our stu- 
arrive in Ohio Thursday. Until steep hills and truck fuel stops dents do not call undesirable at- 
the arrival of the cold front, jn an effort to stop steel ship- tention to forms of exaggerat* 
Ohio can look forward to scat- ntents by truck. 
ed styles or hairdos.” 
tered showers and thundershow-1------------------------------- — — 
— — 
ers today, tonight and Thursday. ! 
Temperatures were expected to 
reach the 80s today, then lower 
into the 60s tonight. On Thurs­ 
day high readings should be in 
the 70s and lower 80s. 
C EN TR A L OHIO—Chance of 
scattered showers or thunder­ 
showers late this afternoon or 
tonight, low mid 60s. Thursday 
cloudy and mild with chance of 
showers, high in upper 70s. 
SO UTH EAST OHIO — Cloudy, 
continued warm and humid with 
chance of showers or thunder* 
showers tonight and Thursday. 
l*ow tonight mid 60s. high Thurs­ 
day near 80. 
OHIO FIVE-DA Y FORECAST 
Temperatures will bo below 
normal Thursday through Mon­ 
day, with highes in the 60s and 
low 70s and lows averaging 45 
to 50. Showers ThursdgdP will 
be accompanied by cooler wea­ 
ther. Saturday will be warmer, 
with 
cool 
weather 
and 
more 
.-.howers again early next week 
Rainfall will average .27 inch 
to 5 inch. 


Cussins & Fearn 


Wide-Tracking has never been farther removed from just 


plain ordinary driving. One look at our stylish '68 Pontiacs 


should tell you that. One ride will convince you! 


Our sporty new Tempests and Le Mans aie new from the 


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Disappearing windshield wipers on all GTOs and Le Mans. 


Even wider Wide-Track. And you can choose from two new 


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Our fabulous GTO boasts the neatest engineering innova­ 


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It's the same lustrous color as the cai. But it won't chip, fade 


or corrode. And you won't believe what this bumper does 


until you see it with your own eyes! . 


Naturally, our new Bonnevilles. Grand Prixs, Catalinas. 


Executives and Venturas won't take a back seat to anyone! 


Especially with their bold new integral bumper-grilles that 


are nearly twice as strong as before. There's also new 


Wide-Track ride Improved handling Smoother engines. And 


more new features for your protection, like a buzzer that 


warns you when you foiget your ignition key. 


Isn't it about time you decided to give up plain ordinary 


driving? Don't fritter away another hour. See your Pontiao 


dealer today and start Wide-Tracking! 


J J J J 
CHECK 
OUR PRICES 


TIRES 
BATTERIES 
BRAKE WORK 
SHOCKS 
MUFFLERS 


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In Town 


TOWN TIRE SALES 


474-4215 


UK E . Franklin 


M o Th e r s ! 


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b U U U 
PORTRAIT 
O f YOUR CHILD 


HUS Me 
KANDUNO 
CHAIGfc 


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Friday & Saturday 


Sept. 22 & 23 


PHOTOGRAPHIRS HOURS DAILY 
10 AM • 1 f(R, 1 PM • S W 
AND TILL 8:0 0 P.M. FRIDA Y NIGHTS 


SELECT FROM SEVERAL POSES 
• BABIES & CHILDREN OF ALL AGES 
• PORTRAITS DELIVERED IN STORE 


129 W. MAIN ST. 
CHRISTOPHER PONTIAC 


520 E. MAIN ST. — (T ill L E V IL L E , OHIO 


R u n * Pn« M ra tcp Co p* 


The Circleville Herald, Wed. Sept. 20, 1067 
15 
Circleville, Ohio 
Refugee Problem 


Grows in Mid-East 


Derby News 


Mrs. Georgia Sweet — 869-2462 


Folks around hon* arr quite 


pleased that Mr. and Mrs. liar 


ry White "W hitie” have reopen­ 
ed their market Serious illness 
of their daughter 
necessitated 
an extended vacation trip 


STYLING CHANGES HIGHLIGHT LEMANS — Pontiac Motor Division’s 1968 Lemans series 
features the most extensive styling changes, engineering improvements and built in safety fea­ 
tures since its introduction seven years ago. The Lemans series, which includes the hardtop 
coupe pictured above, consists of a two-door shirts l oupe, four door hardtop and a con\ertible. 
They cap be seen at Christopher Pontiac. 


Shooting Incident Marks 


Steel Truckers' Strike 


BEIRUT, Lebanon (AIM — A and imposed on friends to find 


problem of humanity 
that has sleeping room. For weens and 
gone on nearly 20 yaara-w hat | months, the trek continued and 
lo .lo about tho Palestine reft*! j( „ s, m 
m 
, gees—is growing in the wake of 
, . 
. 
the Middle East war 
! 
Ye* r ' uf haU' and lea1'- ,m 


I 
It Marted when the old Brit- ler<" l,v 
A r a h 
» " 
"" 
ish-mandated territory of Pales 
propelling force lur many 


line was partitioned to form a 
UNKWA 
musi 
gather 
the ,{«,■!< Hughes at her home here 
Jewish homeland, now Isreal It tribe in 
its .separate 
refugees 
Mrs. Hughes was assisted 
by 
leached a climax in the Amb 
carry or with lls mission of 
Mrs Pete McPherson and Mrs 
Israeli war of LMS, when many 
i.iine'itinH 
mil nur 
,,,m 'McPherson. 
Other 
guest 
Arabs were uprooted Irom their 
feeding «. 11 . t 
I. ai 
- 
wl.ri. 
M r, 
n ,.r,, 
southward 
homes. 
Some 3U0.OOH ar.- bs md imder Mrs 
|)j(.k 
M,.,.hers„ n 
M r, 


There 
were 
slightly 
fewer Israeli occupation on tie 
west 
>ja irfian. M r 
Troy 
Mc 
than a million 
refugees 
then, j bank 
of 
the 
Jordan 
About Pherson 
Mrs 
Bertha Graham 
Some have found a life of their 430.000 registered refugees and Mrs 
Joyce 
McPherson, 
aiel 
own, 
but o t h e r s have moi* perhaps KH).OOO 
so far unregis 
Mrs 
Robert Imboden 
ttplied—there are grandchildren ie red are 
on 
the east 
haul 
of the original refugees who are 400,000 in the Ga zn 
Strip 
and 
refugees now. And their number 150,OOO in Syria 
other refugees. 
grow in the war last June, so jn Lebanon, were untouched by 
that ‘ today 
1,317,000 
are 
res the war 
gistered with the United Nations' 
_________ 
___ 
Relief and Works Aj-cncv, 
or High Court Accepts 


Congratulations to 
Reverend! and 
(,s,'ar smrcy ol Gill- 
and Mrs. Maurer on the birth 
sonburg, Ohio. 
ut a (laughter on Sept 9 
-------- 


Lisa Hughes 
celebrated 
her 
M r*. Eddie Lewis was guest 
loth birthday on Sept. 12; Tom 
of honor Sunday afternoon at a 
Musselman has a birthday on 
baby 
shower 
given 
by 
Mrs. 
Sept. 20, 
and 
Gwynneth 
Kau- 
hail a birthday Sept. 21. 


2 Youths on Probation 


CINCINNATI (A P )--Two xtu 


dents arrested last March 0 on 
charges of possessing marijuana 
for sale have been placed on 
had as dinner guests Mr. 
and 
years’ probation 


Mrs 
Harold Taynor and family! 
Common Pleas Judge Gilbert 
of Lafayette, Ohio. 
Bouillon 
imposed 
probation 
Tuesday on Jeffrey Alan Ber 
liner, 18. and Richard Gordon 
and Newhauaer, 19, both of Cinctn- 
Mr 
nati The youth's pleaded guilty 
earlier this summer. 


Sunday visitors of 
Mr. 


Mrs 
Archie Sweet were 


Use The 
Classifieds 


Thursday visitors at the home 
of Mrs 
Helen 
Arledge 
were 
Mr and Mrs 
Dean Davies 
of 
Canton. 


Then on Sunday Mrs. Arledge 


The 
J T CIRCLE 
BUFFET 


PITTSBURGH 'A P )—A man lienee marked strike that hogan 
Steel companies say they are ( 
UNRWA. 


In June more than I M,OOO Ar 
Jamison Murder Case 
was shot in the stomach today almost a month ago and spread beginning to feel the pinch from t aj>s crosscd the 
Jordan 
River 
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AF (—The 


I11 
. 
i 
, ? ! u ° 
V,° CUst from C’ary Ind’ 
the strike. Many have cut steel, into the Hashemite Kingdom of Ohio Supreme Court took under 
(,u e i 
1 
V * 'ia * * l. 6 
y n4 
M' . awhile, Jones vt Laughlin production and some have tried Jordan. 
They 
were joined by advisement Tuesday 
the first- 
dependent 
steel 
ti in k( is 
that steel Corp. in Cleveland sought (0 
divert 
steel 
.shipments 
to; perhaps 
100,000 more 
unregis- degree murder case ut Richard 
has tied up steel shipments in an 
injunction 
from 
Common ran 
tered 
refugees, 
Palestinians H. 
Jemison 
in the 
\!av 
1%> 


ne s 
Pleas 
Court 
to 
liar 
truckers 
owner drivers are asking with settled homes and jobs on slaying of his wife and a drug 
the west bank of the 
Jordan, store operator, John Lyman 
its 
Cleveland 
State police said the victim Irom 
picketing 
was one of a group of pickets works, 
gathered at the Bree/.cwood in 
The suit filed Tuesday 
terchange of the Pennsylvania 
Turnpike. 


They said a man pulled up in 
a truck, fired a shot from a 
small caliber gun, 
then sped 
away. Police said he was taken 


was 
similar to tliose filed earlier by 
Republic Steel Corp 
and U 
S. 
Steel 
Corp., 
who 
have 
been 
granted injunctions against pick­ 
eting. 
Judge Rov F. McMahon, who 


for 
a 
hike 
in 
their 
percent 
age for hauling steel and im I now occupied by Israel. 
Some 
The loth District Court of Ap 
proved fringe benefits. 


Haircut Fuss Ends; 


Youth in Class 


into custody by Maryland State Kranled 
the 
injunctions, 
will 
S P R IN G FIE LD 
Ohio (AP) 
Police at Hagerstown. Md. They hold a hearing on the Jones & 
Ba,d 
joseph A pone, 
declined to elaborate. 


The victim, Dale M. Younkin, 
37, of Somerset, 
Pa , wa* in 
satisfactory condition at Bedford 
County Memorial Hospital. He 
was the latest victim in a vio- 


How Weather 


Looks 


Laughlin 
request Friday 
a junior at Springfield North 


fled to the Gaza Strip, others to '.^ a ls 
reversed 
Ins 
conviction 
Syria. 
and ordered a new trial. Frank- 
They drifted into the desert, tin County Prosecutor C 
How- 
moved into towns and villages 
ard Johnson is appealing the 
They doubled up with relatives reversal. 


ted 
in 
SOFT WATER 


Dougherty 
in 
\\ 
M 
St 
hi 
IT I 21197 


K 
% 


C irc le v ille ’s O n ly 
C om plete C a fe te ria ' 


O P E N IN G 
M O N D A Y SU P T . 25 


In the N e w 
BINGMANS 
DRUG STORE 


140 W. M ain St. A 


Today 


OHIO W EATHER SUM MARY 
COLUMBUS, Ohio (A P I—Offi­ 
cial Weather Bureau summary 
of Ohio’s weather: 
Cloudy skies 
and 
generally! reprisals 
dry 
weather was the 
rule in! 
They 
said 
they 


Th* strikers. steel haulers who Hj h S(.hoo| 
w |) , b>(.k 
„ 
own their rig*, nay they won t 
Tuesd, v 
M 
go bark to work until negot.a- o( su 
, lon over halr djfflt,u|. 
ions get 
under way lo meet 
w, (h schoo| au(hor„ it5 
their 
complaints. 
They 
are 
. 
members of the Teamsters Un- 
A f " ® * 
bf * * * l , * * l 
ion and get paid under a na I wcek whe" h,ls P f™ *" ® 1 hair 
tional 
agreement. 
They 
want * “» was, (1l,eldarcd, to‘> k>" ! b* 
bettor terms 
Principal Robert I.ynch. After a 


Representatives of the owner- sec?nd^ 
P ‘?11'ho 
Lyn<;5 
drivers met at Cleveland Tues- ®ont* nded stlli ' " f * haIr “ ° uU 
day and said any contract talks 
aw’ 
0 comc °" - 
must include the drivers’ repro 
Finally, alter a third haircut, 
sentatives, the Teamsters and AP00* 
appeared 
at 
school 
a 
’’other interested parties” and week aS« with what the priuci- 
guarantee that "everv man in- 
considered an 
acceptable 
voiced will be returned to work coiffure H«t then on the follow- 
without loss of seniority or other ,nj; (*a-v* AP°ne appeared again 
bald this time. 


The youth was suspended via 


4% 
; Pontiac announces the 
great American sport for ’68 


represented 


TOWN TIRE SALES 
474-4215 
118 E . F ranklin 


Cussins & Fearn 


Ohio 
Tuesday night, with the .strikers in Ohio. P e n n s y l v a n ia , 
a 
letter to his 
parents from 
exception being showers at Find- indiana and Michigan. A Team- school officials, until there was 
lay well before daybreak today. sters spokesman told the strik- some hair growth evident. In 
Temperatures early this mom 
t.rs jn Michigan they could meet the following week, the youth’s 
ing registered in the 60s. Read- today 
with 
acting 
Teamsters hair grew to what school offi 
ings included Toledo and Cin 
President Frank Fitzsimmons if cia Is decided 
was 
acceptable, 
cinnati 64. Cleveland 68. Colum- they go back to work and stop and he was permitted to return 
bus 63 and Marietta 66. 
nieketing the steel mills. 
k) classes today. 
A cold front through eastern 
|n addition to picketing the 
School officials had told the 
South Dakota, eastern Nebraska ,tcel mills, the strikers have sta 
youth's 
mother, 
Mrs. 
Ro m 
and central Kansas this morn- turned them s e lv e s t interchang- Apone Peck, that “ we require 
mg has begun to advance east-j es 
of 
superhighway, 
retau- no uniform standard of dress, 
ward. The front is scheduled to rant. 
truck 
stops, the top of but we do insist that our stu- 
arrive in Ohio Thursday. Until steep hills and truck fuel stops dents do not call undesirable at­ 
tire arrival of the cold front, in an effort to stop steel ship- tention to forms of exaggerat­ 
o 
r can look forward to scat- ments by truck. 
I ed styles or hairdos.” 
tered showers and thundershow-1 ------- —— *..........- 
- 
- — .......- ......... 
— 
ers today, tonight and Thursday.! 
Temperatures were expected to 
reach the 80s today, then lower 
into the 60s tonight. On Thurs­ 
day high readings should be in 
the 70s and lower 80s. 
CENTRAL OHIO—Chance of 
scattered 
showers or thunder 
showers late this afternoon or 
tonight, low mid 60s 
Thursday 
cloudy and mild with chance of 
showers, high in upper 70s. 
SOUTHEAST OHIO — Cloudy, 
continued warm and humid with 
chance of showers or thunder­ 
showers tonight and Thursday, 
l^ow tonight mid 60s, high Thurs­ 
day near 80. 
OHIO F IV E DAY FORECAST 
Temperatures will be below 
normal Thursday through Mon­ 
day, with highes in the 60s and 
low 70s and lows averaging 45 
to 50. 
Showers Thursdj(F will 
be accompanied by cooler wea­ 
ther. Saturday will be warmer, 
with 
cool 
weather 
and 
more 
.showers again early next week 
Rainfall w ill average .25 inch 
to 5 inch. 


j J J J 
CHECK 
OUR PRICES 


TIRES 
BATTERIES 
BRAKE WORK 
SHOCKS 
MUFFLERS 


Best 
Tire Deal 
In Town 


Wide-Tracking has never been farther removed from just 


plain ordinary driving. One look at our stylish '68 Pontiacs 


should tell you that. One ride w ill convince you! 


Our sporty new Tempests and Le Mans aie new from the 


wheels up. There s a new 175-hp Overhead Cam Six New 


sports car feel Smoother ride. Superior stability and response. 


Disappearing windshield wipers on all GTOs and Le Mans. 


Even wider Wide-Track. And you can choose from two new 


regular- or premium-gas 350 cu. in V-8s' 


Our fabulous GTO boasts the neatest engineering innova­ 


tion of the year—an exclusive revolutionaiy new bumper. 


It s the same lustrous color as the car. But it w o n t chip, fade 


or corrode And you won t believe what this bumper does 


until you see it w ith your own eyes! . 


Naturally, our new Bonnevilles. Grand Prixs. Catalpas. 


Executives and Venturas won t take a back seat to anyone! 


Especially w ith their bold new integral bumper-grilles that 


are nearly twice as strong as before. There s also new 


Wide-Track ride Improved handling Smoother engines. And 


more new features for your protection, like a buzzer that 
warns you when you foiget your ignition key. 


Isn't it about time you decided to give up plain ordinary 


driving? Don't fritter away another hour. See your Pontiac 


dealer today and start Wide-Tracking! 


MflkERs! 
Gidxt 


MANDLI MO 


11x14 WALL 
PORTRAIT 
es vow CHUB 


2 Days Only 


Friday & Saturday 


Sept. 22 & 23 


PHOTOOIAPMWS NOWS DART: I t AM « I WA; S PM • S NI 


AND T U X 8:00 P.M. FR ID A Y NIGHTS 


SELECT FROM SEVERAL POSES 
• BABIES & CHILDREN OF ALL AGES 
• PORTRAITS DELIVERED IN STORE 


129 W. MAIN ST. 


Ste tho Bonneville. Brougham, Grand Prix, Executive, Ventura, Catalina, GTO, Le Mans, Tempest and Five Firebirds at your Pontiac dealer's 


Pi 


CHRISTOPHER PONTIAC 


520 K. MAIN ST. — CIKUL KVIIXU, O H IO 


MAB* 0* IM l u t i s t * 
nt M Mott* O', « « 


b c m 
m 


■/ 


£ ' ’ Ilk ! Al 
IL 
v rn 


* 


SI p m Al A HNI I 


TA BIG 


STORE 
11 
N. Court St. — C ircleville 


iiA im r 
° P en U a il> 9 A M - 10 9 P M - 
HOURS* 
Closed Sundays 
Q U A N T IT Y R IG H T S R E S E R V E D ! 


Hunt’s Catsup 


Hickory Flavored 


Food Club 


Vegetable 


I O V 2 - 0Z . Can 


14-oz. Btl. 


Elna Cut Green Beans 


Navy Beans 


Contadina Tomato Sauce 


No. 303 Can 


1-lb. Bai* 


8 oz. Can 


C ream y W hite O r 
Fudge, ti1,* oz. Pkg. 


Y’o. 300 Can 


13 oz. Can 


Washington Cake Mix i'S T iS 


Washington Frosting Mix 


Betty Brite Baking Cups 
85 Ct. Pkg. 


American Beauty Tomato Juice N 


Hl-C Fruit Drinks 


a 


Keg. 49c — Cholm ondley’s (**Chiim leys ’ ) 


English Mullin Loaf 
V t i,,»r 


Keg. 79c — Serve W ith F a vo rite F ru it 


Hew England Pound Cake 
,,u,„ 59c 


Keg. 49c — Tem pting And Delicious 


Glazed Donuts 
,.k„. 
.. 43c 


SAVE BIG! SAVE EVEN MORE AT BIG BEAR 
WITH THESE EVERYDAY LOW PRICES! 


Gold Medal All Purpose Flour 
5 u>. ■la s 55C 
Bold Laundry Detergent i,.. Off G ian t I’ ktj. 
65C 


Nestles Quik 
2 u. ( an U C 
Ivory Liquid Detergent 
G iant Btl. 
56C 


Jello Gelatin 
« 
Pkg. 2/39c 
Scotties Facial Tissues 
2(1(1 Ct. Bkg. 
2 4 C 


Ralston Dog Chows 
25 lb. ,Jas $2.69 
Charmin Toilet Tissue 
4 Roll Bkg'. 
3 5C 


Clorox Liquid Bleach 
G-.. a ti. 52c 
Scott Jumbo Towels 2t o tf 
Ju m b o Bo ll 31C 


Dole Pineapple Juice 


Elna Spaghetti 


! 
Iii Tom ato Sauce 


12 oz. Can 


No. 300 Can 


Elna Pork & Beans J aid Pinto 
No. 300 Can 


Valley Gem White Hominy 


$ 


Faygo Soft Drinks 


Dawn Fresh Brown Gravy 


Dawn Fresh Steak Sauce 


Durkee Black Pepper 


No. 2‘z Can 


Reg u lar Or Lo Cal. 
IO oz. B tl. 


53/i oz. Can 


Mushroom 


33i oz. Can 


1-oz. ( an 


Kraft Mustard Sa,ad ,,r ,1,,rscra,'ih,, 


Food Club White Vinegar 


Jiffy Pie Crust 


Martha White Corn Muffin Mix 7-2 «z. i*k« 


Martha White Bix Mix ° r F,ap 


6 oz. J a r 


Pint Btl. 


9 oz. Pks 


Nabisco Cookies 


Charmin Napkins 


Baby Soft Toilet Tissue 


2 oz. Pkg. 


60 Ct. Pkg. 


2 Roll Pkg. 20c 
P e r Roll 


P a s try Shoppe 


O' * 


Baked F re s h D a ily 


Good So Many Ways! 
Rich's Coffee Rich 


8-oz. Pkg. 


Save 
25c! 


W ith 


Valuable 
Coupon 
At Right 


IG BEAR SAVE CASH COUPON 


o r 
A l l 
With This Coupon 
UH 
Ami Pu rch ase Of On e 


I rozen — ( hovulate Or White — 
$ ‘1 .7 5 Or $1 .1 5 Size 
BETTY BROWN BIRTHDAY CAKE 


I oupon (mod Th ru Sat., S ep t. 2A, l% 7 
Limit Out* ( oupon Per ('uvtomer 


t o x i — 
. — 
:------- p 


Chocolate Or Sfrawberry 
Borden's Sundae Cups 


Heat And Eat 


Top Frost Wattles 


Individual Size — With Cheese 


G & W Pizza 


.W IZ. 
Pkg. 


I oz. 
Pk; 


2 * 2 OZ. P k g . 


Crinkle Cut — Ready To Heat 


Dartmouth French Fries 
9 oz. Pkg. 


Y o u r ( boite O f F l a v o r 
Elsie Borden's Ice Cream 


H a l f 


( (alloo 79c 


I K O Z I N I O O I! 


bisco 
itilz Crackers 


12-oz. Pkg. 39c 


Strained 
Gerber Baby Food 3 j-< 28c 


'Mi Choy 
Chow Mein Noodles 2 “ 
41c 


Dur k ee 
Ground Cinnamon 


I ' N-OZ. 
( ill! 49c 


Du r k e e 
W a t e r Sul lener 
Ground Nutmeg 


D u r k e e 
Whole Cloves 


I 1 K-OZ. 


F a il 


I oz, Pkg. 


43c 


23c 


Calgon 
l ib. Pkg. 


Pittstonrj 
Your Choice 


Layer Cake Mixes 
19-oz. P k g 


36c 


34c 


tears Fomotti 


Hunt’s Catsup 


i^rsi 


STORE 
HHH N. Court St. — Circleville 


11 a i i n r 
° P en DaiIv 9 A M to 9 r M* 
HOURS: 
Closed Sundae 
QUANTITY RIGHTS R ESERVED! 


Food Club 


Vegetable 


1 0 '/a -o z . C an 


Sale! 


Hickory Flavored 


14-oz. BU. 


Elna Cut Green Beans 


Navy Beans 


Contadina Tomato Sauce 


No. 303 Can 


1-lb. Bai: 


8 oz. Can 


Washington Cake Mix v" ' ° " s,ite’ 
” 
Devils Food 83i oz. Pkg. 


!„ 
Creamy White Or 
Fudge, ti1* oz. Pkg. 


SAVE BIG! SAVE EVEN MORE AT BIG BEAR 
WITH THESE EVERYDAY LOW PRICES! 


Gold Medal All Purpose Flour 
5 u, 
Rag 5 5 c 
Bold Laundry Detergent i«c Off Giant I’kg. 
6 5 C 


Nestles Quik 
2 u. 
Can U C 
Ivory Liquid Detergent 
Giant Btl. 
5 6 C 


Jello Gelatin 
« 
,.kg. 2/39c 
Scotties Facial Tissues 
2(Mt Ct. Bkg. 
2 4 C 


Ralston Dog Chows 
25 
Bai $2.69 
Charmin Toilet Tissue 
4 Bull Bkg. 35C 


Clorox Liquid Bleach 
Gai..x.i. 52c 
Scott Jumbo Towels 2. on 
.liunbu It.<11 
3 1 C 


Dole Pineapple Juice 


Elna Spaghetti 
! 
In Tomato Sauce 


12 oz. C an 


No. 300 Can 


Elna Pork & Beans 
G,“ ' 
And Pinto 
No. 300 Can 


Washington Frosting Mix 


Betty Brite Baking Cups 


American Beauty Tomato Juice N 


Hl-C Fruit Drinks 


85 Ct. Pkg. 


to. 300 Can 


12 oz. Can 


Valley Gem White Hominy 


Faygo Soft Drinks lu 


Dawn Fresh Brown Gravy 


Dawn Fresh Steak Sauce 


Durkee Black Pepper 


No. 2 xi Can 


gular Or Lo Cal. 
IO oz. Btl. 


5Ti oz. Can 


.Mushroom 
5-fi oz. Can 


1-oz. Can 


Kraft Mustard Sul °r Horseradish 


Food Club White Vinegar 


Jiffy Pie Crust 


Martha White Corn Muftin Mix T<* „* i*uK 


Martha White Bix Mix °r rlap 


6 oz. Jar 


Pint Btl. 


9 oz. Pkg. 


Nabisco Cookies 


Charmin Napkins 


Baby Soft Toilet Tissue 


2 oz. Pkg. 


60 Ct. Pkg. 


2 Roll Pkg. 20c 
Per Roll 


Baked Fresh D a i l y 


o n d l e y ’s ( “ C h u m l c y s 
) 


Loaf 
i«. it,. Loaf 39c 


With Favorite Fruit 


Pound Cake 
KBt.b 59c 


pting And Delicious 


pug. oi i2 43c 


IG BEAR S A V E C A S H C O U P O N 


I C - A II 
With This Coupon 
^ J v V II 
And Purchase tit One 


I rozen — I hot nlate Or White — 
$2.75 Or $2.25 Size 
BETTY BROWN BIRTHDAY CAKE 


oupon Fond Thru Sat., Sept. 22, 1!M»7 
Limit One Coupon Per Custom er 


Good So Many Ways! 
Rich's Coffee Rich 
H-oz. P k g . 


I KOZI N I OOH 
I 
r m 


Chocolate Or Strawberry 
Borden's Sundae Cups 


Heat And Eat 


Top Frost Wattles 
5 ... eu 


Individual Size — With Cheese 


G & W Pizza 
2‘,j ox. i*k, 


Crinkle Cut — Ready To Heat 


Dartmouth French Fries 
9 oz. P k g . 


Your Cholee Of Flavors 
Elsie Borden's Ice Cream 


Half 
Gallon 79c 


thisco 
lilz Crackers 
12-oz. Pkg. 39c 


Trained 
berber Baby Food 3 j- 28c 


J a 
C h e t if 


Chow Mein Noodles 2 - ‘ 41c 


Durkee 
Ground Cinnamon 


I * K*0/ , 
( an 49c 


Durkee 
Ground Nutmeg 


Durkee 
Whole Cloves 
l o/. P k g . 


Big Bear's ^ 
IO 


t 


Close Out Sale!!! 


Gay 90's Hand Decorated Dinnerware 
4-pc Place Setting 


Wh ile Su p p ly Lu sts! 
Qu an tities Limited ! 


With Each $5 .0 0 Pu rch ase 
Only 29 
c 


tngnsn ityie 
Spare Ribs 


B eef-V eal-Pork 
Meat Loaf Mix 


Center Cut 
Tenderloin End 
lenier u h 
" " I f t p 
Rib Pork Chops 
*. /a Sliced Pork 


Loin Quarters 
lh. 


C l 
STORE 
HOURS: 


1 1 80 N. Co u rt St. — Circlev ille 
Op en Daily 9 A.M. to 9 P.M. 
Clo sed Su n d ay s 
QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED! 
AUTUMN POKKHHN SALE 
Loin Half 
Rib Half 


Sliced 
lh. 73c 
Sliced 
lb. 63c 


Bulk, Polish Style 
Superior Smoked Sausage 


9 Varieties 
Serv- Mor Lunch Meat 
Mb. Vacuum 


Save Buckeye Stamps 


Red eem Th em Fo r Th e Fin est 
Prem iu m s in America! 
Iii Fact Ov er I),333 Items Fro m Wh ich To Ch o o se! 


NEW CAR SHOW 


A L L N E W 6 8 C A R S 
ON DISPLAY 
AT BIG BEAR PARKING LOT 


THURSDAY SEPT. H ST 


Circlev ille New Car Dealers In v ite Yo u r In sp ectio n 


100% Go o d Ei'ting ! 
Ea sy To Prepa re 
Fresh & Tender Broccoli 
Fresh Cauliflower 
New Crop! Large Solid While Heads 


Daniel Boone Popcorn 
ll All Peps Everytime! 
While Or Yellow 


2 9 


3 9 


29c |ts’55c 


Large Bunch 


Head 


IST ” 


Philadelphia Cream Cheese 


Pillsbury Flaky Biscuits 


3 oz. Pkg . 


Keg ula r Dr Buttermilk 
Hea dy To Ha ke 


I o z. I’kg . 


Imperial Margarine 
M b . Ctn 


Heinz Strained Baby Food 3 Jars 28 


Pillshury 
in stan t Co ffee 
Nutty Brownies 
23*4 -o z, Pk g .59c Maxwell House 
I0*o z, J a r $1.43 


Co lleg e In n 
Beef Broth 
1 334 -0 1 . Can 


D o g F o o d 
Swift's "Pard" 
Ll1 -o z. Can 


21c 


17c 


Pillsb u ry 
Flour 
3-lb . Bai 55c 


Stock Up And Save At Big Bear!!! 


Big Bear's E= IO 


Close Out Sale!!! 


Gay 90's Hand Decorated Dinnerware 
4-pc Place Setting 


While Sup|)l> Lasts! 
Quantities Limited! 


With Each $5.0(1 Purchase 
Only 
c 


English Style 
Spare Ribs 
lb. 
c 


Beef-Veal-Pork 
Meat Loaf Mix 
l b . 
c 


Center Cut 
Rib Pork Chops 


Tenderloin End 


n BJI 
i t 1/% TV 
■ n tw 
f f KUi i a i 
It na 
p 
h 
i 
M IM I! 
IM IIH Ids 


lb 


I cnuci i urn tnu 
79c Sliced Pork 


Loin Quarters 
lb. 


C l 
STORE 
H 
HOURS: 


11H0 N. Court S t.— Circleville 
Open Daily 9 A.M. to 9 P.M. 
Closed Sundays 
QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED! 
AUTUMN PORK UHN SALE 
Loin Half 
Rib Half 


Sliced 
lh. 73c 


Bulk, Polish Style 
Superior Smoked Sausage 


9 Varieties 
Serv-Mor Lunch Meat 


Save Buckeye Stamps 


Redeem Them For The Finest 
Premium s in America! 
Iii Fact Over 3,333 Items From Which To Choose! 


100% Good Eating! 
Easy To Prepare 
Fresh & Tender Broccoli 
Fresh Cauliflower 
New Crop! Large Solid White Heads 
Daniel Boone Popcorn 11 *"Pcps EmyM 
While Or Yellow 


2-lb Bag 


2 9 


3 9 . 


2 9 c 
• 5 5 c 


Large Bunch 


Head 


r ^ 
► 
' 
. . 
- j - > .- * * * - 


■ * 
• 
•<* J ,, 


Philadelphia Cream Cheese 
Pillsbury 
Biscuits 


3 oz. Pkg. 


Regular Or Buttermilk 
Ready To Bake 


I ox. Pkg. 


Imperial Margarine 
Mb. Ctn 


Heinz Strained Baby Food 3 Jar* 28 


P ills b u r y 
Instant Coffee 


Nutty Brownies 
2334-os. Pkg. 59c 
Maxwell House 
10-of. Jar $1.43 


College Inn 


Beef Broth 


Dog Food 


Swift's "Pard" 


13:,4-o z . Can 


13Yi*os* Can 


21c 


17c 


Pillsbury 


Flour 
5-lb. Bag 55c 


Stock Up And Save At Big Bear!!! 


f 


Hope Reminisces 


By BOB THOMAS 
AP Mo v ie-Telev isio n Writer 


The Circlev ille Herald. Wed. Sept. 20, 19(17 
C irclev ille, Ohio 


Five Points News 


By Mrs. Froncis Furniss 


HOLLYWOOD (AP) — Hob 
Hope com merit.s on his 30 y ears 
with NBO: 
“ When I started with the net­ 
work. 
General 
Sa rn off 
was 
down in tile basement supply ing 
the {tower with a hand genera­ 
tor. Why , in those day s he was 1 
still using the enlisted men’s 
washroom. ” 
The sage of North Holly wood 
doesn’t 
like 
to 
reminisce— 
“ that's one of my laws.” But he 
had to pause for a backward 
kick as he passed the three- 
decade mark with one network. 
All right, so he did do a radio 
show iii 1936. But it wasn’t until 
1937 tha t he came to Holly wood 
a nd became NBC’s boy . 
Hope recalled: 
“ I arriv ed on Sept. 7, 1937, to 
make 'The Big Broadcast.’ My 
show was still coming from the 
Ea st, so I had to cut in a fiv e- 
minute spot from Holly wood. On 
a Friday I was play ing golf with 
John Swallow, 
who was the 
head of NBG here, and 
I asked 
him how big an audience I 
would hav e for the show. 
“ He to o k a lo ng lo o k a t me 
a nd sa id, ‘Yo u need a n a udi­ 
ence?’ I to ld him I co uldn’t pla y 
jo kes to a n empty studio , a nd so 
he ca me up with a so lutio n. Ed­ 
g a r Berg en wa s o n befo re me 
a nd his 
Cha se 
a nd 
Sa nbo rn 
sho w' wa s v ery po pula r. 
“ Swa llo w sa id x v hen the a udi­ 
ence ca me o ut o f the Berg en 
sho w, he wo uld ha v e ro pes up 
to lea d 
them 
rig ht into 
my 
studio . 
“ So tha t’s wha t ha ppened. As 
they sta rted wa lking in, I sho ut­ 
ed, ‘Co me rig ht in, fo lks, a nd 
sit do wn. I’m g o ing to do 
a 
little sho w fo r y o u, but I do n’t 
ha v e time to ex pla in it. J ust 
la ug h no w a nd fig ure it o ut 
la ter.’ So I pla y ed to a ha lf-filled 
ho use—o nly 
a 
few dissidents 
wa lked o ut.” 
Ho pe cited a no ther memo ra ble 
sho w- o n “ Ho lly w’o o d Pa ra de” 
with Dick Po well. 
“ It w’a s during a flo o d a nd the 
electricity ha d g o ne o ut,” he 
sa id. “ The studio w’a s lig hted 
with 
a ux ilia ry 
po wer 
so 
it 
lo o ked like Bela Lug o si’s liv ing 
ro o m. Obv io usly the a udience 
wa sn’t g o ing to be v ery re­ 
spo nsiv e 
to 
my 
g a g s; 
they 
didn’t kno w whether they ’d g o 
ho me a nd find a n empty lo t o r a 
new swimming po o l in the ba ck 
-y a rd. 
“ So I to ld my a g ent, J immy 
Sa phicr to go out fro nt a nd 
la ug h it up. Well, he did, but it 
wa s a n a g ent’s la ug h, lo a ded 
with ice. After the first three 
g a g s I decided it wa s a lo sing 
ba ttle, a nd I turned a ro und a nd 
pla y ed to the 50 g uy s in Al 
Go o dma n’s 
o rchestra . 
They 
la ug hted it up fine.” 
Ho pe 
o ften 
chuckles 
when 
peo ple tell him ho w ca lm he a p­ 
pea rs in ev ery situa tio n. 
“ Calm, hugh? Let me tell y ou 
so mething ,” he rema rked. “On 
tho se early shows I was so ner- i 
v o us 
I hummed 
after 
ev ery 
punch line. They thought some- 
* thing was wrong w ith the mi- 
j 
crophone until they discov ered I 
wa s humming. 
Another 
time 
they had to caution me because j 
I wa s kicking the microphone 


Toastmaster Club 


Has Fall Meeting 


The first fall meeting of the 
: Circlev ille 
Toastmaster 
Dub 
.was held Thursday at the L and 
X Bestauraunt 
President 
Bob 
Rustin 
con 
ducted 
the 
business 
meeting 
during which plans were dis­ 
cussed concerning a radio pro­ 
gram to be held later this y ear 
Other business discussed was 
a special meeting to be held 
Sept. 30, 
with the 
Circlev ille 
Club acting a 
host 
to 
nine 
area clubs. A humorous speech 
contest will be held during the 
meeting. Circlev ille’* entry 
is 
The wiv es of mem- 
been inv ited to this 


after ev ery joke.” 
Hope will appear his usual 
suav e self as he strolls on stage 
for his NBG .special tonight. The 
show mark his 18th y ear in 
telev ision, and hell hav e his 
heav iest schedule 
of 
comedy 
shows— nine in all, including 
the Christmas show from y ou- 
k now -where. 
Why has he stay ed with NBG 
so long? 
“I’v e lov ed ev ery dollar of 
it.” 


There were 66 present at the 
Fiv e Points Methodist Sunday 
School Sunday morning. Wor­ 
ship serv ice 
followed. The of­ 
ficial board met at the church 
Monday ev ening. Plans are be­ 
ing completed for the New Life 
Mission with a week of Ev angel­ 
istic serv ices to be held Oct. 22 
to 27th. 


The Monroe Township Adv is­ 
ory Council met Wednesday ev e­ 
ning in 
the home of Mr. and 


Mrs 
William 
Dav is for their 
September meeting. The topic, 
“A Dy namic Water Program for 
Ohio" was read and discussed. 
Election of officers was held 
with the following results: chair- 


I man, Elliot? Jones; v ice chair­ 
man, Howard Tallman; discus­ 
sion leader. Dale Stubbs; sec­ 
retary , I.aura Long; and legis­ 
la tiv e agent and farm bureau 
lady , Mr. and Mrs. Clark Den­ 
nis. 
At the close of the meeting re­ 
freshments were serv ed to Mr. 


and Mrs. Fiber Jones. Mr and 
Mrs. 
Francis Furniss, 
M i s s 
I aura Luny , Mr and Mrs. Clark 
Dennis, 
Mr. 
and 
Mrs. How­ 
ard Tallman, 
Mr. and M r s. 
Dav is, Mr. 
Dale Stubbs, 
Mr. 


OHIO (’ASH Git AIN 
COLI MUUS, 
Ohio 
(AP) 
— 
Ohio Dept. of Agr! cash grain 
prices: 
No 
2 red 
wheat 
un­ 
changed to ! higher 1.30-1.Ha, 
mostly 
1.30*1.32; 
No 2 y ellow 
corn unchanged 1.0 ! 1.09 per bu, 
'mostly I.OTI 07: No 2 oats un­ 
changed 66-75, mostly ti8 - 75; 
No I soy beans unchanged to I 
I higher 2.50-2.58, mostly 2.50 * 
2.56. 


1 
A United States silv er dollar 
contains, at 1967 prices, about 
$1.31 worth of silv er. 


and Mrs 
Paul Kax and Joy ce. 
Jimmy and Jeff Dav is. The Oc­ 
tober meeting will 1h> held in the 
home of Mr. and 
Mrs 
Dale 
Stubbs. 


Mr. and Mrs. Francis Furniss 
and 
Miss 
Laura 
Long 
and 
Harold-Furniss were Thursday 
dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. 
Gene It. Donohoe of near Wash­ 
ington C. ll. Harold and Gene 
attended the Swine Agronomy 
at South Charleston iii the aft 
cr noon. 


Mrs. 
Edna 
McPherson 
and 
Mrs. Florence Sonners of Mt. 
Sterling were dinner guests of 
Dav id 
Morrow 
of Jeffersonv ille 
Mr. and Mrs. 
and daughter 
on Wednesday 


Mrs. Walter Dav is of Harris­ 


burg and 
Mrs 
it abel 
Brown 
and daughter Mrs. King of Co 
lumbus 
were 
Saturday 
after 
noon guests of Mr. and Mrs, 
Harry A Dick. 


Mr and Mrs. Francis Kumiss 
and son Harold anil Miss Laura 
Long, Mr. and Mrs. John Long 
of near East Ringgold and Mi­ 
ami Mrs. Glenn Straley of West 
Jefferson were Sunday dinner 
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Cecil 
(iav er of near London. 


Mr. ami Mrs. Fred Compton 
of Mt, Sterling were Sunday ev e­ 
ning guests of Mr. and Mrs. 
William Riley and family . 


Mr. and Mrs. William Parker 
and daughters Peggy and Pat­ 
ty of Worthington were Satur­ 
day ev ening guests of Mr. and 


Mrs Slut Ion 
Xmb'i aiu and Mr. 
and IM 1 » 
Joe Rohm t . ot near 
Lindon were Bidi Sunday din­ 
ner guests 


Mr 
ami 
M r s 
F., L. Sheets 
were Sunday guests of Mr am! 
Mrs I aw rem e Ll.si on in Circle* 
V ille . 


Mrs 
Josie Drake ut Atlanta 
and 
Mrs 
Donald 
Miller 
of 
Amanda 
were Tuesday after­ 
noon guest.s of Mr. and Mrs. 
Clark McCalfcrt> 


The Fix e Points WC’ITJ will he 
hostess Friday to the Pickaway 
County WC I't! Conv ention at the 
Fix e Points Methodist Church 
at 10:3(1 ii. in. A cov ered dish 
dinner at the noon hour x v ith 
Mrs Harold Brown, state presi­ 
dent x v iii be guest speaker. 


SJH ch inner of the 
s 
Stev e 
Complier, 
on “ Moon Glow.” 
bes presented were 
Dav e Schneider 


Bill Gary . 
hers hax e 
outing. 
Formal 
ev ening xx 
who spoke 
(Jiber spec 
by Bob Ogden, 
and Tom Matesky , 
How-ard Snook w-as toastmas­ 
ter for the ev ening, with Bi l l 
Kirkpatrick as table topicmas- 
ter. The Table Topic 'trophy 
was presented to Ken Smith. 
Nex t regular meeting of the 
group will he Sept 28 All mom 
liers are urged to bring a guest. 


LSE THE CLASSIFIEDS 


Thrills, Spills, 
Chills-Play 


rom) 


2 nd “Old Fashioned Country Fair Sale” 


SA V E 


S A V E 


Lowfat 
w 
Campbell’s 
TOMATO SOUP 


H Nu 
Milk or 
Liquid Detergent 
Homogenized Milk 


(8c O FF 


Label) 
Kroger price 
means lower 
price thanks 
to Kroger 
volume. 
vTgal. 


carton 


- M i l k 
Bo.* 
*> n*l 
TOMATO 
•ev e 


Bar Soap 
Limit 6 cans 
refill*/ 39c 
Cottage Cheese 
hare 


Price effectiv e 
thru Sept. 23. 1967 
at Circlev ille 
Kroger Store 


Kroger Grade A 
LARGE EGGS 


Kleenex 
TOWELS 


Country Club 
IC E C R E A M 


(AH 
Flavors) 
White, Pink 


Yellow, A qua 


& Designer 
72-gal. 
carton 


t 
Kroger kl Omni 
Black Pepper ... 
59 c 
Oelsey Tissue .. 


HEINZ “ Great American” SOUPS 


• Tomato with Vegetable 
• Vegetable with Broth 
• Chicken with Dumplings 
• Vegetable with Beef 
• Chicken Rice, 
• Cream of Mushroom 


Goocf Things from the Dairy 


1 5 -o z . 
cans 


Mat*. 
Pork & B e a n s...... 


Gravy Trair* 25c OH Lab*! 
Dog F o o d ................ Nl€ 


Chaf-loy-Ar-Daa 
Pizza with Cheese . 
D* Variant) 
Kroger G e la t in ..... 
Cev adilla 
Tomato Paste ....... 


7 
$1 
ra n* 
j 


‘ 2 . 2 9 


89 c 
T 


5 ~ ~ 
‘ I 


2 
15H-0* 
pkg*. 


J-us. 
pkg. 


Kroq tr Vat Pack or Spotlight 
Bean Coffee .... 


Mom# Prida 
Sp ray Starch .. 
Robin Hood 
Flour .............. 
Contadino 
Tom ato Sauce .. 
C ontact ilia 
Tomato Paste 


a ib. 
else 


l i m . 


OH With 
Coupon At 
Right 
2 0 e 


3 9 * 


1 . 9 9 


1 0 ^ 9 9 * 


r 
12-0/. 
C I 
•J 
cans 
Y I 


26-lb. C 
beg 
* 


8- 0* . 


Good Luck 
MARGARINE 


c 


3c off lobel 


A nnarican 
Kraft Singles 
. 
, 


K ronor St o rt C ut 
Swiss Cheese 
. 
Pilltbury 
Sno Flake Rolls 
, 
Filii bury 
Cinnamon Rolls 
. 


K rogor Stor# C ut 
A A 
r 
<Medium ,b U | | t 
Frankenmuth Cheese 
0 5 


99 
2 
11-n. D Q * 
Pkg*. U U 
- 69c 
• 
a 


C - 
*1 
i f tubes 
‘ 5 ■ ’ I 
J tube. 


For Fresh Pleasant Breath 


LIS T ER IA 


ANTISEPTIC 


2 0-oz. 
btl. 


Tooth pat** 
Maclean's 
• 
• 
• 
a 


• 
a 
a 
a 
a 
Vanquish 
With Gan lath 
P o lid e n t.............. 
Johnson & Johnson 
Baby Shampoo 


Family 
Tub* 


Wa 
ML 


Aqua Velva 


a 
a 
a 


a 
a 
a 
• 


■I Lr id t 
a la e 


7-us. 
IM I 


in t 
bU. 


Fresh From O u r Ovens 


Kroger 
BUTTERMILK BREAD 
4 
17.-lh. S 
Us. 
” 


K ro fa r S iicad C innam o n or 
Dutch Apple Loaf 
. 
Krogar Glatad or 
Yeast Raised Donuts 
Krogar Ragular or 
Honey Grahams 
. 
Country Oran 
Vanilla Wafers 
. 
. 
Country Oran (17 Vanftiai) 
Soft Cookies 
. 
. 


IVC*. 
pkg. 


*-lb . 
bus 


I IV, 'Ut ' 
bus 


Fast Frosen Favorites 


Kroger Crinkle Cwt 
POTATOES 
3 
Mb. S i 
n o 
t 
Rfagar 


Vegetables J & X w S . 
lib 
Pkg. 4 9 * 
Morton 
Pie Shells 
. 
. 
. 
Q IM I 
o 
1 
. 
Stanton 


Dinners 
. 
. . 
O ll us 
Im Pk(* 
I 
. 
Sara La# 


HO I I I farkarhouia) 
• 
a 
0 pkn 
I 
. 
Krogar 
Onion Rings 
. 
. 
Q 7-UU 
0 « **• 
’ I . 


Aa* 


Hope Reminisces 


By BOB THOMAS 


AP Movie-Television Writer 


The Circleville Herald, Wed. Sept. 20. 1967 
Circleville. Ohio 


Five Points News 


By Mrs. Froncis Furniss 


HOLLYWOOD IMP) — Bob 
Hope comments on his 30 years 
will) NBC: 
“ When I .started with the net­ 
work. 
General 
Sarnoff 
was 
down in the basement supplying 
the power with a hand genera­ 
tor. Why, in those days he was 
still using the enlisted men s 
washroom.” 
The sage of North Hollywood 
doesn't 
like 
to 
reminisce— 
"that’s one of my laws." But he 
had to pause for a backward 
look as he passed the three- 
deeade mark with one network. 
All right, so he did do a radio 
show in 1936. But it wasn't until 
1937 that he came to Hollywood 
and became NBC’s boy. 
Hope recalled: 
"I arrived on Sept. 7, 1937, to 
make ‘The Big Broadcast.’ My 
show was still coming from the 
East, so I had to cut in a five- 
minute spot from Hollywood. On 
a Friday I was playing golf with 
John Swallow, 
who 
was 
the 
head of NBG here, and I asked 
him how big an audience I 
would have for the show. 
"He took a long look at me 
and said, ‘You need an audi­ 
ence?’ I told him I couldn t play 
jokes to an empty studio, and so 
he came up with a solution. Ed­ 
gar Bergen was on before me 
and 
his 
Chase 
and 
Sanborn 
show' was very popular. 
"Swallow said when the audi­ 
ence came out of the Bergen 
show, he would have ropes up 
to lead 
them 
right 
into 
my 
studio. 
"So that’s what happened. As 
they started walking in, I shout­ 
ed, ‘Come right in. folks, and 
sit down. I'm going to do a 
little show for you, but I don’t 
have time to explain it. Just 
laugh now and figure it out 
later.' So I played to a half-filled 
house—only 
a 
few 
dissidents 
walked out.” 
Hope cited another memorable 
show on ‘‘Hollywood Parade” 
with Dick Powell. 
"It wras during a flood and the 
electricity had gone out,” he 
said. "The studio was lighted 
with 
auxiliary 
power 
so 
it 
looked like Bela Lugosi's living 
room. Obviously the audience 
wasn't going to be very re­ 
sponsive 
to 
my 
gags; 
they 
didn’t know whether they’d go 
home and find an empty lot or a 
new swimming pool in the back 
yard. 
‘‘So I told my agent, Jimmy 
Saphier to go out front and 
laugh it up. Well, he did, but it 
was an agent’s laugh, loaded 
with ice. After the first three 
gags I decided it was a losing 
battle, and I turned around and 
played to the 50 guys in Al 
Goodman's 
orchestra. 
They 
laughted it up fine.” 
Hope 
often 
chuckles 
when 
people tell him how calm he ap­ 
pears in every situation. 
‘‘Calm. hugh? Let me tell you 
something,” he remarked. “On 
those early shows I was so ner­ 
vous 
I 
hummed 
after every 
punch line. They thought some­ 
thing was wrong with the mi- j 
crophone until they discovered I 
was 
humming. 
Another time 
they had to caution me because 
I was kicking the microphone 


Toastmaster Club 


Has Fall Meeting 


The first fall meeting of the I 
Circleville 
Toastmaster 
Club 
. was held Thursday at the L and 
X Restauraunt 
President 
Bob 
Rustin 
con­ 
ducted 
the 
business 
rr.eetm ; 
during which plans were dis­ 
cussed concerning a radio pro­ 
gram to be held later this year. 
Other business discussed was 
a special meeting to be held 
Sept. 30. 
with the 
Circleville 
Club acting a 
host 
to 
nine 
area clubs. A humorous speech 
contest will be held during the 
meeting. Circleville’* entry* 
»> 
Bill Gary. The wives of mem­ 
bers have been invited to this 
cutins. 
Formal speech inner of the 
evening was 
Steve 
Complier, I 
who spoke on "Moon Glow." 
Other sj>eeches presented were 
by Bob Ogden, Dave Schneider 
and Tom Matesky. 
Howard Snook was toastmas ! 
ter for the evening, with B i l l 
Kirkpatrick as table topic mas 
ter. The Table Topic Trophy 
w-as presented to Ken Smith. 
Next regular meeting of the 
group will he Sept 28. All mem 
f»ers are urged to bring a guest 


USE THE CLASSIFIEDS 


Why Pay More 


Reg. 31.9c 


Ethyl 34.9c 


Fat the saving* in 
your own pocket. 
Certified Oil 
Company 


1030 S. Coart 
Route 23 North 


after every joke.” 
Hope will appear his usual 
suave self as he strolls on stage 
for his NBG special tonight. The 
show mark his 18th year in 
television, and he ll have his 
heaviest 
schedule 
of comedy 
shows— nine in all. including 
the Christmas show from you- 
know -where. 
Why has he stayed with NBC 
so long? 
"I’ve loved every dollar of 
it.” 


There were 66 present at the 
Five Points Methodist Sunday 
School Sunday 
morning. Wor­ 
ship service 
followed 
The of­ 
ficial board met at the church 
Monday evening. Plans are be­ 
ing completed for the New Life 
Mission with a week of Evangel­ 
istic services to be held Oct. 22 
to 27th. 


The Monroe Township Advis­ 
ory Council met Wednesday eve­ 
ning in 
the home of Mr. and 


Mrs 
William 
Davis for their 
September meeting. The topic. 
"A Dynamic Water Program for 
Ohio" was read and discussed. 
Election of officers was held 
with the following results: chair­ 
man, Elbee Jones; vice chair­ 
man, Howard Tahitian; discus­ 
sion leader, Dale Stubbs: sec­ 
retary, Laura Long; and legis­ 
lative agent and farm bureau 
lady, Mr. and Mrs. Clark Den­ 
nis. 
At the close ut the meeting re­ 
freshments were served to Mr. 


and Mrs. Elbee Jones, Mr. and 
Mrs. 
Francis 
Furniss. 
M i s s 
• aura Loin, Mr. and Mrs. Clark 
Dennis, 
Mr 
and 
Mrs. How­ 
ard Ta ll man, 
Mr. and M r s. 
Davis, Mr. 
Dale Stubbs, 
Mr. 


OHIO CASH GRAIN 
COLI MUUS, 
Ohio 
(AP) 
— 
Ohio Dept, of Agri cash grain 
prices: 
No ?. red 
wheat 
un­ 
changed to ! higher LS0-1.U5. 
mostly 
1.30-1.32; 
No 2 yellow 
corn unchanged 1.02 1.09 per bu. 
mostly LOH 07: No 2 oats un­ 
changed 66-75, mostly 68 - 7a; 
No 1 soybeans unchanged to I 


J higher 2.50-2.58. mostly 2.50 • 
| 2.56. 


1 
A United States silver dollar 
contains, at 1967 prices, about 
$1.31 worth of silver. 


and Mrs. Paul Ray aud Joyce, 
Jimmy and Jeff Davis. I'he De 
tuber meeting will lie held in the 
home of Mr. and 
Mrs 
Dale 
Stubbs. 


Mr. and Mrs. Francis Furniss 
and 
Miss 
Laura 
Long 
and 
Harold-Furniss were Thursday 
dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. 
Gene R. Donohoe of near Wash­ 
ington C. IL Harold and Gene 
attended the Swine Agronomy 
at South Charleston iii the aft 
ernoon. 


Mrs. 
Edna 
McPherson 
and 
Mrs. Florence Sonnets of Mt. 
Sterling were dinner guests of 
Mr. and Mrs. 
David 
Morrow 
and daughter of Jeffersonville 
on Wednesday. 


Mrs. Walter Davis of Harris­ 


burg and Mrs 
it abel 
Brown 
and daughter Mrs. King of Co 
Iambus 
were Saturday 
altei 
noon 
g u e s t s of Mr. and Mrs 
Harry A Dick. 


Mi and Mrs. Francis Kumiss 
and son Harold and Miss Laura 
Long. Mr. and Mrs. John Long 
of near East Ringgold and Mi­ 
ami Mrs. Glenn Stralcy of West 
Jefferson were Sunday dinner 
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Cecil 
Haver of near London. 


Mr. and Mrs. Fred Compton 
of Mt Sterling were Sunday eve 
ning guests of Mr. and Mrs. 
William Riley and family. 


Mr. and Mrs. William Parker 
and daughters Peggy and Pat­ 
ty of Worthington were Satur­ 
day evening guests of Mr. and 


Mrs Shirley Amlet son anil Mr. 
ami Mrs 
Joe Itobeits ol near 
Lindon were their Sunday din­ 
ner guests 


Mr 
ami Mrs 
Iv L. Sheet* 
were Sunday guests of Mr. and 
Mrs Lawrence Liston in Circle­ 
ville 


Mrs 
Jo s ie Drake ol Atlanta 
and 
Mrs 
Donald 
Miller 
of 
Amanda 
were Tuesday after­ 
noon 
gue sts of Mr. and Mrs. 
Clark MeCaflerty. 


The Five Points WOTU will he 
hostess Friday to the Pickaway 
County VVC I U Convention at the 
Five 
Points 
Methodist Church 
at 10:30 a. rn. A covered dish 
dinner at the noon hour with 
Mrs. Harold Brown, state presi­ 
dent will lie guest speaker. 


• I 


THE 
FRIENDLY 
FOLKS 
Thrills, Spills, 
Chills - Play 


ae 
w in u p to W O 
C A SH 


2ni“O ld Fashioned Country Fair Sale” 


W * HEINZ -Great A ttn e n " S O U R 


l*-OS 
CAIMI 


25-lb 
• Tomato with Vegetable 
9 Vegetable with Broth 
9 Chicken with Dumplings 
• Vegetable with Beef 
9 Chicken Rice, 
9 Cream of Mushroom 


Good Things from the Dairy 


mfA 


I i BOA RINI 


Good luck 
MARGARINE 


c 


1 5 -02. 
cans 


H o rn 
Pork & B e an s...... 


G r a v y Tf»i« 25« O W l« b « ! 
Dog F o o d ............... hH 
<_*>•* #• , * • 
P in a with Cheese . 
* pk‘* 
( l l V « rieiH ) 
3~os 
Kroger G e la tin 
pUf 
Contadino 
■ Chm. 
r * 
Tomato P a ste 
O 
I 


$1 
*2.29 
2*?89e 
7‘ 


Kroq«r Vee Pack or S p o tlg h t 
5-lb. 
Bean Coffee ........ •I*B 20* 
15-os. 


ow was 
C ou p on A t 
ti*!* 
Homo Prido 
Spray Starch ............. 
Robin Hood 
25-lb. 
# 
Flour .................... 
* 
Contadino 
a aa Sos 
Tomato Sa u ce 
I U (mn* mw 
Contact ina 


39s 
1.99 


too. •«, 
20c OFF 
**•.-« 
ai 
3-lb cap K R O G ER 
Vac Fee C o Wa# ar 3-lb. 
Spotlight la p p C a ffa * 
O-a two*. m> la*-*** 
v#' 9 
j#t 
s«fpt u tin 


Circleville Kroger 
Tomato Paste 
5 
P i o / . 
tu n * 
$1 


3c aff label 
4 


1-lb. 
pkg*. 


Armorican 
Kraft Singles . , 


Kronor Stoup C ut 
Swiss Cheese 
. 
Rubbery 
Silo Flake Rolls 
. 
Filii bury 
Cinnamon Rolls 
. 


Kroger Store C ot 
A 
A 
. 
Frankenmuth Cheese“ 
,b 69 


99 
2 


1 2 - o s 
Q 
Q 
C 
pkg, 9 9 


- 69e 
a a 


* 1 
lu b e. 
| 


. 
I 


For Fresh Pleasant Breath 


LIS TER IA 


ANTISEPTIC 


20-oz. 
btl. 85 


Teelfcpet+e 
Maclean’s 
e 
a 
a 
a 


Vanquish 
. , 
With fr.o I.Hi 
Polident . . 


Jo h n ,o n * J o b "ie* 
Baby Shampoo 


Aqua Velva 
. 


F a m ily 
Tuba 


aaa 
btl. 


toot 
alar 


b tl. 


4 o s 
bU. 


65‘ 
45' 
69' 
69' 
49' 


j a g * U p 


Kroger 
BUTTERMILK BREAD 
S 
4 
l l/4-lb. S I 
Its. 
I 


K r o f a r S b c a d C in n a m o n or 
Dutch Apple Loaf 
. 


K ro g .r G la ia d or 
Yeast Raised Donuts 


K r o g . r R e g u la r or 
Honey Grahams 


C o u n try O v e n 
Vanilla Wafers 
. 
. 


C o u n t ry O v e n ( I ? V e n e tia ,) 
Soft Cookies 
. 
. 3 


lib . 
loaf 


15-ct. 
pkf. 


2-lb. 
boa 


139* ira. 
boa 


12-oi. 
pkg*. 


29' 
39' 
59' 
29' 


’I 


Past Prosen Favorites 


F P r n c H F m W o 
I 
P Q !* * ! OWW 
< 


Kroger Crinkle Cwt 


K ref ar 
Vegetables t2LcZ'J£. 


M o r io n 


POTATOES 


3 
2-lb. $ I 
Pkgs. 
| 


s 49* 


3 
IM l 
$ 1 
Phi* 
I . 
2 


12-os 
Pfcn- 
| a 


3 7 V.-es 
$ 1 
Pkf* 
I . 


, 
3 * ^ 
*1 . 


Pie Shells 


Soon,on 
Dinners 
* 
C h ick en i 
• 
k 
Sara Lea 
Rolls Perfcerheuie) 
Kroger 
Onion Rings 


The Circleville Herald, Wed. Sept, I'd l%7 
CJr<’l# vilrt, (Huh 


Kingston News Report 


By M rs. Ruth A n n H o lb ro o k 


Phone 6 4 2 5 6 6 2 


9 tirjues, furniture, arni oilier mis­ 
cellaneous items at her home, 
— I Saturday, Sept. 23 at I p. rn , 
as she is moving into a smaller 
home. 


Mr. and Mrs. Roger L. De 
tillion are residing on Mulberry 
Street, Kingston. 


Mr. and Mrs. Harry Holy a rd, 
Kingston, are the parents of a 
7-pound 
9-ounee 
girl 
born 
at 
Chillicothe Hospital Monday. 


Hospital Guild 13 met at the 
home of Mrs. Mary Ellen Car­ 
per for their September meet­ 
ing. The members discussed the 
money they had made on their 
recent bake sale. This was the 
first bake sa le held by the guild. 


Two new members were wel­ 
comed into the guild. 
They 
were: Mrs. May Strusbaug and 
Mrs. Ruth Zwayer. The remain­ 
der ol the meeting was spent by 
the members playing bingo. The 
nex t month’s meeting 
will be 
held at the home of Mrs. (holey 
Parsons. 


Mrs. J 
ton, will 
P. Gardner, 
have a sale 
Kings* 
of an* 


Mr 
and Mrs. Dana Zeigcr, 
Route 2, Kingston, have a son 
and 
daughter 
in 
college this 
fall. Their son, Dennis, is a jun 
ior in business administration at 
Ohio 
University and his sister, 
Sandra, is a senior, majoring in 
English, also at Ohio Univer­ 
sity 


Tom Taylor, son of Mr. 
and 
Mrs. J oseph Taylor, 435 Main 
Street, Kingston, is a freshman 


civil engineering student at Ohio 
University, Chillicothe 


Miss Connie Smith, Route 2, 
Kingston is attending the Colum­ 
bus Business University where 
she is enrolled in the private 
, 
* i 
1 
I 
secretarial course. 
. 


Miss J ohnda Ti. Scott, daugh­ 
ter of Mr. and Mrs. J ohn F. i 
Scott, Route 2, Kingston, has! 
enrolled 
iii 
Ohio 
University, 
Chillicothe, as a freshman maj­ 
oring in elementary education 


The Kingston Methodist Worn 
a ns’ Society of Christian Serv­ 
ice 
met 
Wednesday 
at 
the 
church. The program theme of 
the meeting was “ Study of Re­ 
ligions of the World” . The pro­ 
gram was presented by Mrs. 


W. W. King and Mrs. Ray Sun 
derland. rho society made plans 
for a bake sale, proceeds to go 
toward furnishings for the com­ 
munity room windows 


Ladies 
Aux iliary, 
Unit 
291, j 
Kingston American Legion, held 
its first meeting of the fall sea- 
son Tuesday night with 
Mrs. 1 
Paul Miller presiding. 


'1’be Women s Association of i 
the 
Presbyterian Church held 
its first meeting of the season j 
at the home of Mrs. Paul Ank-1 
rom. 
_— ,— 


Weekend guests of Mr. and , 
Mrs. Virgil Holbrook and fa m­ 
ily were their daughter and son- j 
inla w, Mr. and Mrs. Edward 


Davis and son, of Fort W a yne,! 
Ind. 


Study Group 4 of the Ross 
County Farm Bureau 
held 
a 
meeting at the home of Mr. and 
Mrs. Fred Dean. 


Miss Margaret Thomas, a for-; 
mer correspondent for the Cir 
cleviIle Herald was honored at 
a 
covered dish 
dinner at the | 
Kingston Methodist Church be-! 
fore 
she 
left 
for 
Cincinnati,1 
where she will reside 
at 
the i 
Methodist Home, 5343 Hamilton 
Ave. College 
Hill, 
Cincinnati, 
Ohio, 45225. 


Use The 
Classifieds 


Bo ys a nd Girls 
IN SERVICE 


Major Richard E. Porter, son 
of Mrs. Pearl M. Porter, 577 
Springhollow Drive, is on duty 
at Tuy Hoa AB, Vietnam. 
Maj. Porter, an UC-130 Her­ 
cules pilot, is a member of the 
Aerospace Rescue and Recov­ 
ery Service in support of 
the 
Pacific Air Forces. 
Before his arrival in Vietnam, 
he was assigned to the 48th 
Aerospace Rescue and Recov­ 
ery 
Squadron 
at 
Eglin AFB, 
Fla. 


[ 
T 
o 
o 
o 
t 
o 
i 


R«v. Stephan Mothy* 
Ina M. Behrend* 
Ethal H oat ar 
W INS $100 
W INS $25 
W INS $25 
Luc HU Jara** 
Su* Curry 
Ruth J. Young 
W INS HOO 
W INS $25 
W INS $25 
John B. Dinaido 
Mr*. William R. Wright 
Wayna Ovarturf 
W INS HOO 
W INS $25 
W INS $25 
Lilli* M. Ro bart* 
Chart** W a, Lynch 
Mr*. William Ship* 
W INS $100 
W INS $25 
W INS $25 
Mr*. Marl* Mill** 
Mr* Halon Unary 
leonard McFerren 
W INS $100 
W INS $25 
W INS $25 
Mr*. Rob*r# Carney 
Mr*. Joseph He'minslti 
Marion Howl ay 
W INS $100 
W INS $25 
W INS $25 
Donald L L*wi* 
Mr*. Batty Anna Mayar 
Lo** Budatich 
W IN S $100 
W INS $25 
W INS $25 
Baffy Lofton 
Gana Sachra*# 
Robart A. Moas 
W IN S $100 
W INS $25 
W INS $25 
Earl T. Laud* 
Dolorat McDonald 
Anita La# Iqnaw 
W INS $100 
W INS $25 
W INS $25 


600 EXTRA 


Top Value Stamps 


Witt! Items listed (clo w 


Take this strip to your friendly Kroger 


Store for your additional T o p V a l u e 


Stamps. Check items you buy for C ash ­ 


ier to total. 


Coupons ex pirn Saturday. Sept. 23, 1967 


Kroner far* 
V an illa U ltr a * # 
-el » eta. 
K ra g e r 
Bagged Rain 


mn i 
wa 
■ ro g er Saltiaa* 
•aa »?* I » 
B rag er S aitw ti 


" □ 
= 


“ 
O 


50 
50 
IOO 


IOO 
IOO 
ttaoutta K it 
town in Met mw 


m a n d a la P a r t 
t r a i l S a a d 


Stim-U-Ftaat 
Item 
•<* i Mn* 
I ad d i a C h ip p e d 
■aa#. T a rt a r. H a 
a r C a ra a d Baa# 
ar** I I * alf! rn 
I to* alf* 
■ r a g a * 
la a c h a a a Mea* 


’’i o 


□ « 


Tenderay 


Chuck 


Ste ak 


Tenderay 


Sho ulde r 


Swiss Ste ak 


5 9 ?. 


Pork 
Steaks 


Boneless 
Pork 
Rotisserie 
Roast 


Semi 
Boneless 
Fre sh 
Hams 


5 9 : 6 9 °. 7 9 


C 


lb. 


Bonelet* 
Fresh Hams 
. 
Moundview 
Wieners 
. 
. 


M o u n d v ie w 
Bologna 
. . 


O ld S m o te H o u te 
Braunschweiger 


S u g e rd a le 
Smokies 
. 


H I G 
W h it in g 


• n*. 


Seafood Special% from around the W orld! 


l i t s S k e ta 
E l 
P e e le d S h r im p ___________ 
* 9 9 c 


IT 89 c 
Frai Share 
S h r im p C r e o l e 
....... aa* 4 9 c 
Frat Shera 
C o d F ille t s ................................ 
* 3 9 c 
V*. l>Mi» it 
F ish S t ic k s .................................. *7: 3 9 c 


F i t ! Shore 
/ 9 ‘ 
H a d d o c k S t e a k s 
IS; 9 9 c 


b ro id en Rip e 
BANANAS . 3 39 


J oneth« n 
APPLES . . ~ 49 


Ribier 
GRAPES 


WHY 
Only Kroger hot SETTLE FOR LESS? 
a 
low price policy 
pluI Top Valeo StampI 


ro u t MvoRiri ITW | 
big. 
VAlOt 
a bog ta 
aa teas 
MIAO * st*ouiotas 
Shampoo 
Ma* 
Jar 
SPB 
$ 100 


Alk* Saltier 
ava 
63* 
47c 


Jargaa* La ti aa at*-aa. 
aaa 
65* 
$9 * 


•ATS* 
Atpiria 
ta** 
99* 
lh * 


at&uuta 
Tampa* 
aaa 
st st 
S ill 


BIGUUtft 
Rat*! 
ava 
s i n 
S|4S 


VICKS 
V apa -ah 
I Aaa 
ha* 
55* 
49* 


A aa cia 
MV* 
SIU 
93* 


A0OFN 
Heir Spray 
ta* 
$ 1*0 
$ 101 


I a Ho ria 
MV* 
SI if 
99* 


(FICK biguuu 
Vhampaa 
Aaa 
aal 
*1 
83* 


Vataliaa 
aaa 
la* 
9 9 * 
35* 


CtlSt 
Teat* fa*ta 
UM* 
asea 
9 9 * 
53* 


USTtBiNi 
Aatuapttc 
I*-aa 
aal 
9 9 * 
79* 


FOUR FA FO it TI IT IMI MG, I a FOG** 
raids 
$ 107 
FIGHT GUAFO 
Ina 
Deodar**# 
aa* 
$ 14f 
_____ ! 
VITALIS 
I aa 
How Toad* 
ae. 


an 
©bv 


89* 


/UST wOMOtCHM 
IHC 
HOH Spray 
aaa 
9 * 
66* 


MINKIN 
la* 
Ski* irater 
ie 
SI IO 
81* 


TOM 
a** 
Heal* farm*a*at na* 
*2®° 
S] lf 


sum 
Ka# ** 
era 
48* 
37« 


fan 
Aaa 
Spray Daadaraa# aaa 
*1 
90* 


cats* 
itaar 
To**h Ta*# * 
Ma 
9 9 * 
b l* 


wi a i am* 
Goa 
Laatric Shoo* 
ae 
T9 * 
63* 


FIGHT Go ABO 
lea 
Daadaraa* 
aaa 
*1 
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TOP I, 


r 
n 
( k r o n e r 


Porter, 
a 
1950 graduate of 
Pickaway Twp. High School, re­ 
ceived a B F-A. degree in 19lt 
from Ohio University. He was 
commissioned upon completion 
of the AFROTC program. 
His wife, Betty, is the daugh­ 
ter of Millard F. Watt, Cincin­ 
nati. 


Airman Larry D. Baird, son 
of Mr. and 
Mrs. 
Robert 
If. 
Baird, Route I, has been select­ 
ed 
for 
technical 
training 
at 
Lowry AFB, Colo, as a U. S. 
Air Force supply specialist. 
Baird recently completed bas­ 
ic training at 
Amarillo 
AFB, 
Tex . His new school is part of 
the 
Air 
Training 
Command 
which conducts hundreds of spe­ 
cialized courses to provide tech­ 
nically trained personnel for the 
aerospace force. 
OOO 
AIRMAN Baird, a 1963 grad­ 
uate of Logan Elm High School, 
attended Ohio University. 


Seaman 
Recruit 
J a m es 
R. 
Wilson, USN, son of Mr. and 
Mrs. Reed V. Wilson, Route I, 
is undergoing nine weeks of ba s­ 
ic training at the Naval Train­ 
ing Center, San Diego, Calif. 
Ile Is receiving instructions in 
Naval customs, courtesies and 
organizations, 
ordinance 
and 
gunnery, seamanship, damage 
control, 
first 
aid, 
swimming 
and survival, shipboard drills 
and sentry duty. 


DAVID D. Cain, son of Mr 
and Mrs. J ohn S. Cain, 478 Half 
Ave., was appointed to the rank 
of warrant officer recently while 
serving with the school brigade, 
U. S. Army 
Ordnance 
Center 
and School at Aberdeen Proving 
Ground, Md. 
Army warrants are awarded 
on a corroetitive basis to meet 
the demand for qualified men 
to serve in highly technical po­ 
sitions. * 
WO Cain, assigned to Head­ 
quarters Company of the bri­ 
g a de’s 
2nd 
Battalion, entered 
the Army in Nov. 1953. He has 
previously served in Europe. 
His wife, Lucia, Is with him 
at 
Aberdeen Proving Ground, 
Md. 


Technical Sgt. George B. Cus­ 
ter, son of Mr. and Mrs. Mar­ 
vin B. Custer, Ashville, is on 
duty at Bien Hoa AB, Vietnam. 
Sgt. Custer, an air traffic con­ 
troller, is a member of the Air 
Force Communications Service 
in supoprt of the Pacific A i r 
Forces. Before his arrival in 
Southeast Asia, he was a ssig n­ 
ed to 
Clinton 
County 
AFB, 
Ohio. 
OOO 


THE serg e-nt is a graduate 
of Ashville High School. 


Jerry W. Cole, son of Mr. and 
Mrs. Hubert W. Cole, Route I, 
StoutsVille, was promoted 
to 
Army specialist four Aug. 31 In 
Vietnam, where he is serving 
with the 520th Transportation 
Battalion. 
Spec. 
Cole, 
an 
electronics 
technician assigned to the ba t­ 
talion’s 
335th 
Signal 
Detach­ 
ment, entered the Army In J uly 
1966, completed his ba sic train­ 
ing at Ft. Benning, Ga., and was 
last stationed at Ft. Monmouth, 
N. J . He arrived oversea s in 
May of this year. 


The 20-year-old soldier I* a 
1965 graduate of Amanda Clea r 
creek High School, Amanda. 
His wife, Sharon, lives at 228 
Logan St., Circleville. 


Seaman Apprentice Terry L. 
Moss, USN, 
son of Mr. and 
Mrs. Charles N. Moss, Route I, 
is in the Gulf of Tonkin off the 
coast of North Vietnam as a 
crewm ember aboard the attack 
aircraft carrier USS Cora Sea. 
This is the third cruise to the 
combat 
zone 
for 
the 973-foot 
carrier since 1965 when planes 
from its flight deck flew the 
first air strikes against North 
Vietnam. 


Soft Rap First Time 
SAN DIEGO, Calif. (A P ) — A 
person 
arrested 
for the 
first 
tim e on a drunk charge will be 
placed in jail for a few houri, 
then released without appearing 
in court, posting bail or being 
fined, say Police Chief W eiley 
Sharp and 
Robert 
Fitch, city 
prosecutor. They la y it ii strict 
ly “ a time and money saving 
nrocedure for tile city and coun­ 
ty.’* 


Florida’* 
citrus 
tree* never 
defoliate. Blossoms, fruit and 
glossy green lea ves often appear 
at the same time. 


FU LL 
BANKING 
SERVICE 


Aft 


The SAVINGS Bank 


AND AUTO BANK 


Member EDIC 


« 


The Cirelevilli 
Herald. Wed. Sept. 20, 
19 
Lifclevilrr. fJhlo 


Kingston News Report 


By Mrs. Ruth Ann Holbrook 
Phone 642 5662 


tjellies, furniture, and other mis­ 
cellaneous items at her home, 
Saturday, Sept. 23 at 1 p. rn., j 
as she is moving into a smaller 
home. 


Mr 
and Mrs. Roger I, 
De 
tillion are residing on Mulberry 
Street, Kingston. 


Mr. anti Mrs. Harry Bolyard, 
Kingston, are the parents of a 
7-pound 
flounce 
girl 
born 
at 
Chillicothe Hospital Monday. 


Hospital Guild 13 met at the 
home of Mrs. Mary Ellen Car­ 
per for their September meet­ 
ing. The members discussed the 
money they had made on their 
recent bake sale. This was th e ! 
first bake sale held by the guild. 


i'wo new members were wel 
corned into the guild. 
They 
were: Mrs. May Strusbaug and 
Mrs. Ruth Zwayer. The remain­ 
der ol the meeting was spent by 
the members playing bingo. The 
next month’s meeting 
will be 
held at the home ol Mrs. (holey 
Parsons. 


Mrs. J. P. Gardner, Kings­ 
ton, will have a sale of an- 


Mr 
and Mrs. Dana Zeiger, 
Route 2 
Kingston, have a son 
and daughter 
in college this 
fall. Their son, Dennis, is a jun­ 
ior in business administration at 
Ohio 
University and his sister, 
Sandra, is a senior, majoring in 
English, also at Ohio Univer­ 
sity. 


Tom Taylor, son of Mr. 
and 
Mrs. Joseph Taylor, 455 Main 
Street, Kingston, is a freshman 


civil engineering student at Ohio j 
University, Chillicothe 


Miss Connie Smith, Route 2, 
Kingston is attending the Colum­ 
bus Business University where 
she is enrolled in the private1 
secretarial course, 
r— 
.. 


Miss Johnda I,. Scott, (laugh- i 
ter of Mr. and Mrs. John F. 
Scott, Route 2, Kingston, h a s ! 
enrolled 
in 
Ohio 
University,! 
Chillicothe, as a freshman m aj­ 
oring in elementary education 


The Kingston Methodist Worn * 
ans’ Society of Christian Serv- j 
ice 
met 
Wednesday 
at 
the 
church. The program theme of 
the meeting was “ Study of Re­ 
ligions of the World” . The pro­ 
gram was presented by Mrs. 


W. W, King and Mrs. Ray Sun 
derland. The society made plans 
for a bake sale, proceeds to go 
toward furnishings for the com­ 
munity room windows. 


Ladies 
Auxiliary, 
Unit 291, 
Kingston American Legion, held 
its first meeting of the fall sea­ 
son Tuesday night with Mrs. 
Paul Miller presiding. 


The Women’s Association of 
the Presbyterian Church held 
its first meeting of the season 
at the home of Mrs. Paul Ank- 
rom 


Weekend guests of Mr. and 
Mrs. Virgil Holbrook and fam­ 
ily were their daughter and son- 
in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Edward 


Davis and son, of Fort W'ayne, 
Ind. 


Study Group 4 of the Ross 
County Farm Bureau 
held 
a 
meeting at the home of Mr. and 
Mrs. Fred Dean. 
Boys and Girls 
IN SERVICE 
Miss Margaret Thomas, a for-; 
mer correspondent for the Cir­ 
cleville Herald was honored at I 
a covered-dish dinner at the j 
Kingston Methodist Church be­ 
fore 
she 
left 
for 
Cincinnati, 
where she will reside 
at the I 
Methodist Home, 5343 Hamilton! 
Ave. College 
Hill, 
Cincinnati,; 
Ohio, 45225. 


Use The 
Classifieds 


Major Richard E. Porter, son 
of Mrs. Pearl M. Porter, 577 
Springhollow Drive, is on duty 
at Tuy Hoa AB, Vietnam. 
Maj, Porter, an HC-130 Her­ 
cules pilot, is a member of the 
Aerospace Rescue and Recov­ 
ery Service in support of 
the 
Pacific Air Forces. 
Before his arrival in Vietnam, 
he was assigned to the 48th 
Aerospace Rescue and Recov­ 
ery Squadron 
at 
Eglin AFB, 
Fla. 


Quantity Righto Ratarvad 
Copyright lf67 
Tho Kroqor Co. 


Kroger Lovin’-cared-for-fresh 


R ev 
S te p h e n M e t h y l 
M e M . B e h re n d * 
E th e l H e a te r 
W IN S H O O 
W I N S $ 2 $ 
W I N S $ 2 * 


L u c ille J a n i x 
S ue C u r r y 
R u th J . Y o u n y 
W IN S $ 1 0 0 
W I N S $ 2 1 
W I N S $ 2$ 


J o h n B. D in e id o 
M n W illia m R. W r ig h t 
W a y n e O v e r tu re 
W IN S $ 1 0 0 
W I N S $ 2 S 
W I N S $ 2 5 


L illie M . R o b e r t! 
C h e r ie ! W e . L y n c h 
M rs . W illia m S hi pa 
W IN S $ 1 0 0 
W I N S $ 2 5 
W I N S $ 2 $ 


M n . M e r le M ille r 
t a n 
H e le n B e e ry 
L e o n # rd M c F e n c e 
W IN S $ 1 0 0 
W IN S $ 2 S 
W I N S $ 2 S 


M n . R o b e rt C a rn e y 
M n . J o ie o h H e 'm i n k 
M a r io n H a w le y 
W I N S $ 1 0 0 
W I N S $ 2 S 
W I N S $ 2 f 


D o n a ld L . L e w is 
M n B e tty A n n e M a y e r 
L e k B u d e tic h 
W I N S $ 1 0 0 
W IN S $ 2 $ 
W IN S $ 2 $ 


I e t t y L o fto n 
G e n e S ec b re s t 
R o b e rt A . M eas 
W I N S $ 1 0 0 
W IN S $ 2 $ 
W I N S * 2 S 


E a rl T . L e w k 
D o lo re s M c D o n a ld 
A n ita L e e iq n e w 
W IN S $ 1 0 0 
W I N S $ 2 $ 
W IN S $ 2 S 
J 


Breasts . » 59* 


Legs & 
Thighs . ii, 49* 


Wings . i* 25c 


Backs ft 
Necks . ib IO* 


(Whole) 


Plump, juicy 
young fryers 
specially bred 
and fed fo have 
finer flavor and 
more tender 
meat than any 
you ever ate! 


600 EXTRA 


Top Value Stamps 


With Items listed Balow 


Take this strip to your friendly Kroger 


Store for your additional T o p V a l u e 


Stamps. Check items you buy for C ash ­ 


ier to total. 


Coupons expire Saturday, Sept. 23, l f 67 


Tenderay Boneless 
BOSTON ROLL 
CUT UP TRAY PAK 
st 
st 


Krtftr P in 
V caille Kitrwt 


It f f t S Rtlli 


I »•«. I . 
■ r o v e r S alt***« 
asg 
l ip 
Kroner Saltiest 


□ « 


□ = 
o 


□ = 


50 
50 
IOO 


IOO 


•*** SHM •» were 
O leoO ele ro rS 


Stun-U Rte at 


IOO 


MOUM# M il 


laMif Chipped 
Beef. Tart ay, Ha 
ar Car are taal 
•Mb I i m bbM rn 
I t m 
.>«. 
trover 
IeveSave Mea* 
•in. 


□ « 


IS. 
Tenderay 


im o iM T i 
Chuck 


Steak 
SMOKED 
PICNICS 
C 


Boneless 
Pork 
Rotisserie 
Roast 


Semi 
Boneless 
Fresh 
Hams 


lb. 


B onelet! 
Fresh Hams . 
Moundview 
Wieners 
. . 
Moundviear 
Bologna 
. . 


Old Smoke House 
Braunschweiger 


Suyardalo 
Smokies ’X ' • 


Seafood S p ec ia ls from a ro un d the W o r ld ! 


• 
rn . 8 9 * 
Frat Skate i-Z 
Peeled Shrim p............ 
* 99c 


M b 
A A . 
H 
a t 
PU. 99c 
whiting _____________ tr 89c 


Ves-Shere 
£ 49c 
Shrimp Creole • •te e « » M o e » e e e t iMkfl-, 49c 


**- 
V et Uhs. . 


Mike 
^'N ets................- 
*39c 
f l j l - 
(l««tal« 
Fish Sticks .......................39c 
V e t Shire lib«<3*4 
a ib. fir 
Haddock Steaks ............ UT 99c 


lh. 


Golden Ripe 
BANANAS . 3 39 


Jette than 
APPLES . . a 49 


R i b i e r 
GRAPES . .3-39 


California 
HEAD LETTUCE 


rn, 
. -***.»•*»> « 
sunrise 
F R E S H 


WHY SETTLE FOR LESS? 
Only Kroger hat a low price policy plus Top Volo* Stamps 


la rge 
heads 


tope 


'sloes 


l V» 
C a lifo rn ia 
Strawberries 
79c 


rn 


ro u t M t r o R i r f 
( T I M 
S IA 
VASU! 
s t o a t s 
M IC U 


M IAO I SHOULD! RS 
S h a m p o o 
W e e 
Aw 
$1Jf 
$100 


A lh o S o ltt o r 
w e 
t t * 
47* 


J e r b o a * L e H o e 


I * 
rn 


65* 
59* 


SA T it 
A sp i r ia 
M V * 
99* 


* 
R n 
I 


S H U LA R 
T e m p o s 
ROO 
$ 
i * f 
B 
p 
7 


I ID U LAR 
R a te s 
W I 
Bf BJ 
$ p s 


H C M 
V a p o w e 
U 
n 
DW 
55c 
49* 


A n o c ie 
woe 
f p 
s 
93* 


a d o r n 
H o w S p r a y 
f e n 
ll so 
Bpi 


B u ffo H o 
ta re 
Bpt 
99* 


I M C * RIAULAR 
S h a m p o o 
A o n 
MA 
*1 
83* 


V a s e lin e 
fe n . 
DW 
19* 
35* 


CRISI 
T o o tb R o lf e 
I SA I . 
•uhe 
SS* 
53* 


U S TtR lN f 
A o t iie p H c 
M o n 
MA 
91* 
79* 


root R S V O R fT I (T IM 
R ia 
VALU! 
( • O C ! * 
R U C H 


• 'A N T AU ARO 
Vee. 
D s o d o r a a f 
san 
B p t 
$10t 


VITALIS 
Vee. 
H a w T o o ts 
MA 
B p) 
89* 


JUST W O N M R M 
U -e e 
H o ts S p r a y 
o w 
f»* 
66* 


M iN N lN 
V e e 
UM B r a c e r 
usl 
B l IO 
81* 


TONI 
Beg 
tt^sui^s R e r a s a e e o t 
usee 
Bt00 
l i l t 


SURW 
R o ta s 
a ru 
It* 
37* 


cam 
A a a 
S p r a y O o a d a r a a t 
e n 
*1 
90* 


CSfJT 
Olun ay 
T o o th R a s fo 
s u e 
IS* 
67* 


w t iu A w l 
Vee. 
L o c t r k S h o e # 
MA 
I * 
43* 


Rf AHT AU ARO 
V e e 
O o o d o r o a t 
<*e 
*1 
69* 


sKf We 


r 
n 


F’orter, a 1950 gr.du ate ‘ti 
Pickaway Twp, High School, re­ 
ceived a B F A. degree in I flit 
from Ohio University, He was 
commissioned upon completion 
of the AFROTC program. 
His wife, Betty, is the daugh­ 
ter of Millard F. Watt, Cincin­ 
nati. 


Airman Larry I). Baird, son 
of Mr. and 
Mrs. 
Robert 
II. 
Baird, Route I, has been select­ 
ed 
for 
technical 
training 
at 
Lowry AFB, Colo, as a U. S. 
Air Force supply specialist. 
Baird recently completed bas­ 
ic training at Amarillo AFB, 
Tex. His new school is part of 
the 
Air 
Training 
Command 
which conducts hundreds of spe­ 
cialized courses to provide tech­ 
nically trained personnel for the 
aerospace force. 
OOO 
AIRMAN Baird, a 1963 grad­ 
uate of Logan Elm High School, 
attended Ohio University. 


Seaman 
Recruit 
Jam es 
R 
Wilson, USN, son of Mr. and 
Mrs. Reed V. Wilson, Route I, 
is undergoing nine weeks of bas* 
ic training at the Naval T rain­ 
ing Center, San Diego, Calif. 
Ile is receiving instructions In 
Naval customs, courtesies and 
organizations, 
ordinance 
and 
gunnery, seam anship, dam age 
control, 
first 
aid, 
swimming 
and survival, shipboard drills 
and sentry doty. 


DAVID D. Cain, son of Mr 
and Mrs. John S. Cain, 473 Half 
Ave., was appointed to the rank 
of w arrant officer recently while 
serving with the school brigade, 
U. S. Army 
Ordnance 
Center 
and School at Aberdeen Proving 
Ground, Md. 
Army w arrants are awarded 
on a corrnetitive basis to meet 
the demand for qualified men 
to serve in highly technical po­ 
sitions. • 
WO Cain, assigned to H ead­ 
quarters Company of fire bri­ 
gade’s 
2nd 
Battalion, entered 
the Army in Nov. 1953 He has 
previously served in Europe. 
His wife, Luela, Is with him 
at 
Aberdeen Proving Ground, 
Md. 


Technical Sgt. George B. Cus­ 
ter, son of Mr. and Mrs. Mar­ 
vin B. Custer, Ashville, is on 
duty at Bien Hoa AB, Vietnam. 
Sgt. Custer, an air traffic con­ 
troller, is a m em ber of the Air 
Force Communications Service 
in supoprt of the Pacific A I r 
Forces. Before his arrival in 
Southeast Asia, he was assign­ 
ed to 
Clinton 
County 
AFB. 
Ohio. 
OOO 
THE serge-nt is a graduate 
of Ashville High School. 


Jerry W. Cole, son of Mr. and 
Mrs. Hubert W, Cole, Route I, 
Stoutsville, was promoted 
to 
Army specialist four Aug. 31 in 
Vietnam, where he is serving 
with the 520th Transportation 
Battalion. 
Spec. 
Cole, 
an 
electronics 
technician assigned to the bat­ 
talion’s 
335th 
Signal 
Detach­ 
ment, entered the Army In July 
1966. completed his basic train­ 
ing at Ft. Benning, Ga., and was 
last stationed at Ft. Monmouth. 
N. J. He arrived overseas in 
May of this year. 


The 20-year-old soldier la a 
1905 graduate of Amanda C lear 
creek High School, Amanda. 
His wife, Sharon, lives at 228 
Logan St., Circleville. 


Seaman Apprentice Terry L. 
Moss, USN, 
son of Mr. and 
Mrs. Charles N. Moss, Route I, 
is in the Gulf of Tonkin off the 
coast of North Vietnam as a 
crewm em ber aboard the attack 
aircraft carrier USS Cora Sea. 
This is the third cruise to the 
combat 
zone 
for the 973-foot 
carrier since 1965 when planes 
from its flight deck flew the 
first air strikes against North 
Vietnam. 


Soft Rap First Time 
SAN DIEGO, Calif. (API — A 
person 
arrested for the first 
tim e on a drunk charge will be 
placed in jail for a few hours, 
then released without appearing 
in court, posting bail or being 
fined, say Police Chief We*ley 
Sharp and Robert Fitch, city 
prosecutor. They say it is strict 
Iv “ a time and money saving 
procedure for Hie city and coun 
ty.” 


Florida’s 
citrus 
trees never 
defoliate. Blossoms, fruit and 
glossy green leaves often appear 
at the same time. 


FULL 
BANKING 
SERVICE 


At 


The SAVINGS Bank 


AND AUTO BANK 
Member PMC 


« 


2 « 
T I 


ifs 


ie C itril V ille H erald , W ed. Sept. HD. HMV 


(.'ti Cl* v IIH ', 
I H ilo 
Key Gr/cf Tilts 


Sch edu led 
Tor 


Cou n ty Teams 


Cross Country jGrid Forecaster Predicts 


Meet Won by College Leaders To W in 
CHS Harriers 


Oscar, Royals 
Tar Apart' 


Over Contract 


'IIH*'' 
I Ii 
• K o > 
ft M IU , 
titling 
far 
Piokavv.r 
t mats 
Schools Frid<e 
T.ogan Filii aint lo t's \ alley 
I (illide an the N iking field i i a 
renewal of a traditional rivuiiv, 
Westfall lit»>tv I Hutto iii a till 
that may well decide the mil- 
cpmc of the Scioto V alley ( on* 
fum ier, although three of the 
grid trains will not have played 
a Prague game. 


ilot it Logan 
Kim and Teays 
Va Hey w ill lie seeking their 
i i i 
it i d \' iii • « I t lie season Friday 
Tile \ livings li ne tost to two 
strong class .\ \ teams. Colum­ 
bus Walnut Kidge, alit!, and Cir 
clos die. UY I!. 


'Pile Cirelev ilk 
cross country team won 
angular meet with Teays V al­ 
ley and Westfall staged at Up 
per 
Lansdowne. 
Holt 
Course 
Tuesday. 


Darrell drown paced Circle- 
vide by winning the meet 
in 
11:20 
The 
Tigers 
points, West! ill, to 
Valley at. Low score wins in a 
cross country meet. 


NKW VO RK (A P ) - Newest 
addition to the dress of a foot­ 
ball forecaster is a chest protec- 
lligh School (or 


That is to help keep the but­ 
tons from living off one s vest 
localise 
of an 
opening 
week 
with a 26 5 record for .Hat). May 
there he more of them through 
the season: 
Notre Dame over California: 
scored 
24 The way some people talk you 
md Teays j would think 
that quarterback 
Perry Hanratty and end Jim 
Seymour were the only two foot 


Alabama met 
Florida State: winter thai cost it is roaching 
The 
Crimson 
Tide’s 
defense 
stuff. 
supposedly is so strong it will 
Michigan State over Houston' 
need only a field goal for Coach 
'de 
Spartans 
will 
win 
hat 
Bear Bryant s team to pick up Warren McVea will give them a 
another victory. 
workout 
Penn State over Navy: Jack 
Georgia 
over 
Mississippi 
Curry 
and 
Ped 
Kwalick give stalc:. Georgia’s entire starting 
oaekiield 


PIN BRIEFS 


C IR C L E I) EA N ES 


Ladies' Matinee 
High individual, single— M ar­ 
garet Knox, 2<H> High individu­ 
al, series—Margaret Knox, 450. 
High team, single— Yates Mo­ 
tor, i m High team, series— Da- 


CINCINNATI ( A P ) —The dead­ 
lock 
between 
the 
Cincinnati 
Royals and their biggest star 
continued today and Oscar Rob- ley s Market, 1,841. 
orison admitted he and the Na- 
---------------- 
tional 
Basketball 
Yssociation 
Duffy 
Daugherty’s 
Michigan 
club remained “ far apart’’ on State football teams were un 
his salary tor the 11*67-66 
sea- 
beaten the past two seasons. 


iiass re 


The 
Bravos 
have 
lost 
to Downing, 
fourth; 
Gerald 
Mc- 
Amanda Clearcroek. 410. and Gain. sixth; Mike Yates, tenth; 
to N e w Leinxglon SI. A loysia, ^ Ankrom, 13th; Craig Dres 
4214. In the latter tilt they led 


Roger Cmneanx led the Vik 
ball players on the Notre Dame 
ing runners, Blushing second, team. The truth is, 
there 
are 
while a tilth place finish by Jim several others. 
Cell paced the Mustangs. 
| 
Texas over Southern Califor- 
Olher runners lor Circleville uia: 
'Hie 
Longhorns 
have 
a 
were Mel Smith, tliird; 
Mark horde of young running bucks 
plus 
Bid 
Bradley 
at quarter­ 
back. The Trojans’ No. I field 


Penn State the East’s best pair ,,iiLlNlu'ul 
returns intact. 
Mis 
, 
_________________ 
of ends Navy counters with Rob I stssippt State relying heavily on 
sophomores. 
I hr 
Bin 
O, 
who 
si orts 
o 
spokesman said 
if we 
^01 
Purdue over Texas A&M: The -ood one-fourth ot the Royals 
lawsuits on our hands.” 
I Boilermakers have their power* points, confirmed tuesday night, 
General Manager Pepper Wil 
.!* 
1 
' a l . u. j ful defen sive platoon back and he 
is 
asking 
tor 
more 
than SOIl „j tho Royals issued a state 
mans won, .><-14, las, year hut cjajm 
(hcir 
npw quarterback, $100,000. Estimates of hi 
sala -1 lluMlt blaming 
Brown for the 
Bitt has unproved. 
viiJce Encelbrecht. 
is 
l a s t e r , rv for last season ranged from breakdown. Brown 


'Pay lur. all-Mast 
un 
ceil er a w a r ago. 


lenied this 
later 
told 
a 


ll 12 at halftime. 
* » * 
Beulah Fall 
Meet Starts 


Saturday 


GRO VE C IT Y - Beulah Park s 
fad 
meeting begins Saturday 
and runs 25 days through Oct. 
21. A total of $63,200 will he of- 


bach, 
14th; 
Steve 
McGinnis, 
16th, Kandy Metier, 20th; Billy 
Thomas, 22nd. 
The next cross country meet 
for Circleville# is Thursday at 
the 
Pickaway 
County 
Fair­ 
grounds. Washington C. H. is 
slated to provide the competi­ 
tion. Chuck Hill is the coach of 
the Tiger Cross Country tream. 


Using a four iron, Spires loft­ 
ed the ball into the hole on the 
155 yard second hole at PCC. 
He was 
playing with 
Frank 
Gans at the time. Also witnes­ 
sing the shot were Luther Fer­ 
rell and Clarence Curry. 
Spires also holds the course 
record 
at 
Pickaway 
Country 
Club. 


I M O TH 
is 
the 
dcfenduig 
champion of Hie SVC. Last week 
tile Shermans led ad the way 
iii handing Paint Valley a 40- 
12 defeat which did not 
count 
in tile league standings. 


I uioto 
held 
a 
commanding 
edge in the statistic department 
in that gallic, rolling up 25 first 
downs compared to 12 for Paint 
Valley. Quarterback Dave Juen- 
ger connected on seven of 16 
passes, including two fbf touch­ 
downs. 


An explosive ball 
club, 
the 
fered 
in stakes and features Shermans scored on a 63 yard 
and the overnight purse distri- i gallop by John Davis, a 48 yard 
bution will be an all-time high. 
Headlining the opening card 
will be the $3,000 Inaugural Han­ 
dicap. This will be followed by 
the Railbird Ray Handicap, at 
a mile and 70 yards 
on 
the 
turf Sept. 30; the City of Colum­ 
bus Handicap, six furlongs, $10.- 
000 added on Oct. 7; the 23rd 
running of the Ohio Champion 
ship, $10,000 added at a mile 
and a sixteenth on Oct 14 
and 
the $15,000 added. All American 
Handicap, mile and an eighth 
on October 21. 
Also on closing day the B e u ­ 
lah Park Special 
at 
a 
mile 
and a sixteenth will be run for 
the sixth time for a purse of 
$4,000 Each Wednesday of the 
meeting there will be a series 
of four marathon races, dis­ 
tances starting at a mile and a 
quarter and concluding with a 
test at two miles and 70 yards. 
One of the strongest jockey 
colonies in recent years will be the Boston Red Sox 
on hand Paul 
Ward 
who 
has j im Lonborg 
(20 
- 8 ) of the 
won more than 500 
races at Red 
Sox 
has 226 strikeouts. 
Beulah heads the list which in-j Sam McDowell (13-13), who will 
eludes Carlos Marquez, top rid-1 gf) 
for 
the 
Indians, 
has 
218 
er at the Cincinnati Turf Club whiffs 
meet it River Downs and Wet-1 
JUit waat 
w in-. Mc. 


ton bol tel , 
who lee 
.ill the jock- u (n, e|, said Tuesday night after competing rn the race 
eys at Miles Park 
Others well dl(. 
Indlans 
had 
beaten 
______________ 


n0W!N ly C“ 
_ 
Patrons Washington SenaU)r!,. 2 - 0 
to 
climb into sixth place. ” 1 don’t 
care about the Red Sox 
I just 
want to win for myscl.” 
Boston is one of lour teams 
in tile torrid race for the perm 
ant. 


Sonny Siebert pitched his first 
shutout of the season in beat­ 
ing the Senators and lowered his 
earned run 
average 
to 
2.23. 
best among the Indians, start 
mg pitchers 
The victory was 
his ninth in 20 decisions. 


“ Pm getting in the groove.” 
said Siebert, who missed sever­ 
al turns in midseason boca use 
spells. “ I wish tho §ea- 
s just starting This is 
to tart 
a 


general, 
Toby 
Page, 
was 
severely shaken up lost week­ 
end and may not be at his best. 


Engelbrecht, 
Miami 
over 
Northwestern: stronger and a better thrower 1675,000 to $95,boo 
| all(j 
Robertson 
Hie Hurricanes have added an j than Bob Griese. 
Roberton became 
a holdout i newsman: 
offense to go with their potent 
Georgia 
Tech 
over 
Vander- officially Tuesday for the second 
“ I intend to get in touch with 
defense OI the past 
It is cen- ijjit; Two brand new coaches in year in a row and his attorney. Pepper. Nothing was ever clos­ 
t e r ! around Jim Cox. end: Bill this one bllt pm pacc at Van. J. 
W. 
Brown, said he would cd to him to begin with 
I re 
Miller, quarterback, and Jerry cU'rbilt didn t inherit any horses “ sign 
a 
contract 
with 
some- Mooted tilt' one offer they made 
; while Bud Carson at Tech did. 
body” --perhaps the Indianapolis me 
A counter • proposal was 
The Big The Huskies got all tin kinks Pacers <>! 
the new American made to them. They’ve reject 
Ten team seeks to redeem its out of their system in last Satur 
Basketball 
Association 
Pacers eel that. This is where we stand 
prestige alter tho scandal of last , d a y ’ s encounter with Nebraska, iofficials declined comment, but right now,” 


Daanen, a flanker 


Illinois over Florida 


Spires Hits 
Hole-in-One 


Rick Spires, a former pro at 
the Pickaway County Club. shot 
pass play, a 44 yard pass play. : Die first hole in one of his life 
and a 90 yard kick-off return bv 
la-sl Friday. 
.Archie Harris. 
New coach Jim Long inherit­ 
ed 14 lettermen from Jim Van- 
DeGriff* s u n d e f e a t e d 1966 
squad 
T h e y include D a v e 
Brantley, a 3-year varsity mem­ 
ber. Mike Borland. Denny Mc­ 
Afee. 
Tom 
B ro w n 
and Mike 
Hoffner. who have lettered in 
two previous seasons 
AL Strikeout 
Kings To Duel 


C L E V E L A N D ( A P ) — The 
American 
League’s 
top 
two 
strikeout artists are scheduled 
to oppose 
each 
other 
tonight 
when the 
Cleveland 
Indians, 
open a two-game series with 


are Jesus Rosello, Sidney Soh 
wartz. Bob Wolbrecht. Norman 
Cartwright, 
Phil 
Borgemenke, 
BlLI Clinch, C E 
Bi afford and 
G P R 
M K. Essig who led the train­ 
ers at the spring meeting 
and 
Larry Beavers, No I condition 
er last fall, are among the 300 
trainers on the scene, with more 
than 900 horses in the barn area 
Beulah wid run ten-race pro­ 
grams on Saturdays, starting at 
1:30 p.m. and on weekdays the 
start will be made at 2:15 p rn 
In addition to the daily double, 
there wiU be quinella wagering 
on the last race each afternoon 


lies Loft Wins 


Young Bird Race 


The first 150 mile young bird 
race from Leington, Ky . was 
won by the 
lies 
Loft 
with a 
speed 
of 1086 2813 yards per 
minute 
.Second place went to 
Stan 
Crosby with a speed of 1083.- 
8073 yards 
per 
minute 
while 
John Gragin’s loft was third iii 
1077.4125 yards per muiute. 
Fourth place was won by Vir 
gil Russell in 
1076.3296 yards 
per minute 
The lies Loft won the nonuna 
tion bird and loft derby. There 
were nine lofts and 91 
birds 


F i r e s t o n e 
D1C-100 
NEW TREADS 


h m d s rn sen d tm badm 
4 F0R ^4949 


.ZZ' 
a m r 
SIZ E 
PCC Men's 
Golf League 
Ends Season 


Identical 
35s by Bud 
Hr 
and Maynard Eaton paced 
Hon in the Men s Golf I ca. 
finale 
at 
Pickaway 
Coon 
Club Tuesday 
Team No 4 won last 
rn 
with 16*2 points. The team a 
won the third round with a lf 
of 10J v points 
Low net resulted in a d* 
lock with Lou Marcy and J, 
Sc udey carding 34' 
A playoff is scheduled Sun* 
between Teams No 
2 
No 
and No. 6 to determine the v 
ner of tile league. The lea 
banquet is slated Monday . 
A chipping and putting i 


tebt will be held in connect 
with the banquet 
Complete 
results of the ti 
round of the golf league are 
No 4, HO1*; No. I, 106 
2 99. No 8, 96L ; No. ft, 96 
3, 9 4 * N o . 5, 92; No. T, 81 
An 
ABCD tournament 
been scheduled at the POT 
urday. 


me 
way 
>iu 
uke 


Mox Alvia provided the only 
run Siebert needed with his 20th 
horner of the 
season 
in 
the 
fourth inning. AU is now has 68 
runs batted in, his career high 
for one season 
The Indians got their other 
run in the fifth inning when Vie 
Davabilo led off with a double, 
stole third and scored on Richie 
Scheimblum s 
sacrifice 
fly 
to 
center field. 
Siebert gave up seven hits, 
struck 
out 
lour 
batters 
and 
UH 
Phi 
Orb 


s t o c k 


Whitewalls or 
Blackwells 


PWs 3 K is STC Fed. excise tax. sail 
tar an d trade rn tm att you r cat. 
FIRESTONE 
STORE 


IIH VY. M aili SI. 


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til 9 :9 0 


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and AUTO Bank 


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1968 THUNDERBIRD 2-Door Landau 


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Startin g 
PRIDAY 


1968 MUSTANG 2 + 2 


We Will Be Open T il 9 P.M., 


Friday and Saturday 


For Your Viewing Convenience 


. . . Stop and See Us . . . 


September 22nd 


KENNY HANNAN FORD INC. 


386 N. Court St. 
474-3138 


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Key Grid Tilts 
Scheduled ror 
County Teams 


•Key f » *t!i. I Mill' s >" 
! i 1! 
«t|i I UK 
for 
I’ic'viiu .< 
v Him \ 
Kfrhoob Friday 
* Logan I Im ."*<1 l>.o > ' Mirv 
collide on tile lik in g field i i «i 
renewal «f « traditional iii ail>. 
Vfesll.ill hosts I nioto ill a tilt 
that m at well decide the out* 
cpnir of the M into N .d'ey 4 on 
fe m u r , although three of the 
grid team s will in t have played 
a 'league game. 


Beulah Fall 


Meet Starts 
# 
Saturday 


GRO\ E C m - Beulah Park s 
fall 
meeting 
begins 
Saturday 
and runs 25 da>s through Oct. 
21 
A total of $63,200 will he of 
fered 
in 
stakes 
and 
features 
and the overnight purse distrt 
bution will be an all-tim e high 


Headlining the opening card 
w'lll be the $3,000 Inaugural Han­ 
dicap. This will be followed by 
the Railbird Ray Handicap, at 
a mile and 70 yards 
on 
the 
turf Sept 30; the City of Colum­ 
bus Handicap, six furlongs, $10,- 
OOO added on Oct. 7; the 23rd 
running of the Ohio Champion 
ship, $10,000 added a* 
a mile 
and a sixteenth on Ort 14 
and 
the $15,000 added. All Am erican 
Handicap, mile and an eights 
on October 21. 


Also on closing day the B eau­ 
ish Park Special 
a’ 
a 
mile 
and a sixteenth will be run for 
the sixth tim e for a purse of 
$4,000 
Each W ednesday of the 
m eeting there will he a series 
of four 
marathon 
races 
d - 
tances .starting at a rn? e and a 
quarter and concluding with a 
test at two m iles and 70 yards 
One of the 
strongest 
joekey 
colonies in recent years will be 
on hand 
Paul 
Ward who 
has 
won more than 500 races at 
Beulah heads the list which in 
eludes Carlos Marquez, top rid 
er at the Cincinnati Turf Club 
meet at River Downs and W es­ 
ton Soiree, who led all the jock­ 
eys at Miles Park Others well 
known to Central Ohio patrons 
are Jesus Roselio, Sidney Sch­ 
warts. Bob Wolbrecht, \o n n a n 
Cartwright, 
Phil 
Borgem cnke. 
Bill Clinch, ( 
E 
Bi afford and 
G P Ryan 
MJC. Essig who led the train 
ers at the spring m eeting 
and 
Larry Beavers No. I condition­ 
er last fall, arc among the 300 
trainers on the scene with more 
than OOO horses in the ham area 
Beulah will run ten-race pro 
gram s on Saturdays, starting at 
1:30 p m. and on weekdays the 
start will be made at 2:15 p rn 
In addition to the daily double 
there will be quinella w ager n. 
on the last race each afternoon 


.loin Logan Lim and 
Pe ays 
\ 
hey vv ill lie seek mg their in 
Hi ii v' rn 
• ! the season I* rid ay 
Tho \ i iv iii v b vc tosi to two 
stroll 
class A \ team s. Colum ­ 
bo-. Walnut Ridge. 56-6, and Cir 
dev die. 27-6, 


Hic 
Bravas 
have 
lost 
to 
Amanda Clearereek. 410. and 
to New Leinxgton St. Aloysius, 
42-14 
In the latter tilt they led 
it 12 at halftim e. 
• • * 


I MOTO 
is 
the 
dcfenduig 
cham pion of the SVC. Last week 
tin 
Sherm ans led all the way 
in handing Paint V alley a 40- 
12 defeat which did not 
count 
in the lea*. ue standings 


I nioto 
held 
a 
com m anding 
edge in the statistic departm ent 
in that gam e, rolling up 25 first 
downs com pared to 12 lur Paint 
V alley. Quarterback D ave Juen- 
gcr connected on seven of 16 
passes, including tw o fog touch­ 
downs. 


An explosive ball 
club, 
the 
Sherm ans scored on a 63 yard 
gallop by John D avis, a 48 yard 
pass play. a 44 yard pass play, 
and a 90 yard kick-off return by 
Archie H a m s. 


New coach Jim Long inherit­ 
ed 14 letterm en from Jim Van- 
D e G n ffs u n d e f e a t e d 1966 
squad 
T h e y include D a v e 
Brantley, a 3-J oar varsity m em ­ 
ber 
Mike Borland, Denny Mc­ 
Afee 
Tom 
Brown 
and Mike 
Hof flier, who have lettered in 
two previous seasons 


Cross Country 


Meet Won by 


CHS Harriers 


'Pile C ircleville 
High School 
cross country team won ii tri- 
insular m eet with T eays V al­ 
ley and W estfall staged at Up­ 
per 
Lansdowne 
Golf 
Course 
Tuesday 


Darrell Brown paced C ircle­ 
ville by winning the m eet in 
ti 2<> 
The 
Tigers 
scored 
24 
points, West! ill, 
to and Teays 
Valley 34. Low score wins in a 
cross country m eet. 


Roger (T eu icaiis led the Vik 
ing 
runners, 
finishing 
second, 
w h i l e a tilth place fin is h by Jim 
Lell paced the M ustangs. 
other runners for Circleville 
were Mel Sm ith, third; 
Mark 
Downing, 
fourth; 
G erald 
Me­ 
t a in, sixth; Mike Y ates, tenth; 
Ty Ankrom, 13th; Craig Dres- 
baeh, 
14th; 
Steve 
McGinnis, 
16th; Randy VV i ller, 20th; Billy 
Phomas, 22nd. 
The next eros.- country m eet 
for Circleville^ is Thursday at 
the 
Pickaw ay 
County 
F air­ 
grounds. W ashington C. H. is 
slated to provide the com peti­ 
tion Chuck Hill is the coach of 
the Tiger Cross Country tream . 


Grid Forecaster Predicts 
$ 
College Leaders To Win 


NEW VORK (A P ) - 
Newest 
addition to the dress of a foot­ 
ball forecaster is a cheth protec­ 
tor 
'that is to help keep Hie twit 
tons from living off o n e s vest 
because 
of 
an opening week 
with a 26 5 record for .840. May 
there be more of them through 
the season: 
Notre Dame over California 
f ile w ay som e people talk you 
would 
think 
that 
quarterback 
Perry 
Hanratty and 
end 
Jim 
hey mour w ere the only two foot 
ball players on the Noire Dame 
team . The truth is, 
there 
are 
several others. 
T exas over Southern Califor­ 
nia; 
The 
Longhorns 
have 
a 
horde of young running backs 
plus 
Bill 
Bradley 
at quarter­ 
back. The Trojans’ No. I field 
general, 
Toby 
P a g e, 
was 
severely 
shaken up last w eek­ 
end and m ay not be at his best. 


Alabama over Florida State: 
The 
Crimson 
Tide's 
defense 
supposedly is so strong it will 
need only a field goal for Conch 
Bear Bey ant s team to 1 irk up 
another \ ictory 


Penn Stall' over Navy 
Jack 
(Tiny 
and 
Ted 
Kwalick 
give 
Penn state the E ast’s best pair 
of ends Navy counters with Rob 
Taylor, all East as a nnss re 
eeiver a year ago. 


UCLA over Pitt 
The Califor­ 
nians won. 57-14, last year but 
Pitt has improved. 


Miami 
over 
Northwestern 
The Hurricanes have added an 
offense to go with their potent 
defense of the past 
It i-> cen­ 
tered around Jim Cox, end: Bill 
Miller, quarterback, and Jerry 
D aanen, a flanker. 


Illinois over Florida: The Big 
Ten team seeks to redeem its 
prestige alter the scandal of last 


w inier that cost it is coaching 
staff. 
.Michigan Stall' over Houston 
the 
Spartans 
w ill 
^ iii 
bat 
W arren M cVea will give them a 
workout 
Georgia 
over 
M ississippi 
Ntate: G eorgia’s entire .starting 
backfield, 
returns 
intact. 
M is­ 
sissippi State relying heavily on 
sophom ores. 
Purdue over T exas A&M: The 
B oilerm akers have their power­ 
ful defensive platoon back and 
claim 
their 
new 
quarterback, 
d ike 
Engelbrecht, 
is 
laster, 
stronger and a 'letter thrower 
than Bol) G riese 
Georgia 
Tech 
over 
Vander­ 
bilt: Two brand new coaches in 
this one but IMH P ace at Van 
derbilt didn t inherit any horses 
v\ hile Bud Carson at Tech did. 
The Huskies got all tht 
kinks 
out of their system in last Satur­ 
d ay’s encounter with N ebraska. 


Oscar, Royals 


'Far Apart' 


Over Contract 


CINCINNATI ( AP >— the dead 
lock 
between 
the 
Cincinnati 
Royals and their biggest 
star 
continued today and Oscar Rob­ 
ertson admitted he and the Na­ 
tional 
Basketball 
\ssociation 


PIN BRIEFS 


CIRCLE D LANES 


L adies’ Matinee 
High individual, single— Mar­ 
garet Knox, 200. High individu­ 
al, se ries- M argaret Knox, lad. 
High team , Miigle—Y ates Mo­ 
tor, 699. High learn, series—Da 
lev’s M arket, 1.841. 


who 
scores 
a 
ot the R oyals’ 
night 
than 
gala- 
from 


club rem ained T a r aaart 
on 
his salary for the l%7-(>.! sea­ 
son 


i 
The 
Big 
< h 
good one-fourth 
points, confirm ed tuesday 
Iii' 
is 
asking 
fur 
more 
SlOO.OOd, Estim ates of hi 
ry for last season ranged 
$75,000 to $95,000 
Robe non 
becam e 
a 
holdout 
I officially Tuesday for the second 
I year in a row and his attorney, 
J. 
VV. 
Brown, 
said 
he would 
“sign 
a 
contract 
with 
some- 
body’’-’perhaps the Indianapolis 
P acers of 
the 
new 
American 
Basketball 
Association. 
Pacers 
officials declined com m ent, but 


Duffy 
D augherty’s 
M ichigan 
Stale football team s w ere nu 
beaten the past two seasons. 


a spokesm an said “ if we got 
lawsuits on our hands ’ 
G eneral M anager Pepper Wii 
son of the R oyals issued a state 
m ent 
blam ing 
Brown 
for the 
breakdown. 
Brown denied this 
and 
Robertson 
later 
told 
a 
new sin an 
"I intend to get in touch with 
Pepper. Nothing w as ever clos­ 
ed to him to begin with. I re 
icoted the one offer they m ade 
me 
A counter * proposal w as 
made to them . T hey’ve reject­ 
ed that. This is where w e stand 
right now.” 


Spires Hits 


Hole-in-One 


Rick Spires, a form er pro at 
the P ickaw ay County Club, shot 
the first hole in one of his life 
last Friday. 
U sing a four iron. Spires lo ft-! 
ed the ball into the hole on the 
155 yard second hole at PCC. 
He w as 
playing with 
Frank 
Gans at the tim e. Also w itnes­ 
sing the shot w ere Luther F er­ 
rell and C larence Curry. 
Spires also holds the course I 
record 
at 
Pickaw ay 
C ountry; 
Club. 


PCC Men's 


Golf League 


Ends Season 


Identical 
35s 
by 
Bud 
lint? 
and Maynard Eaton paced ai ­ 
tion in the Men s Golf le a g u e 
finale 
at 
Pickaway 
Country 
Club Tuesday 
learn .No 4 w«>n la-’ 
night 
with 16 
points. The ie u n also 
won the third round with a total 
of IO1-.* points 
Low net resulted in 
J d< ad 
lock with Lou Marcy and Jack 
S m iley carding 34- 
A playoff is scheduled Nunda> 
between Teatm No 
2 
No 
1 
and No. 6 to determ ine tm v in­ 
ner of the league 
Thr 
!« jgu< 
banquet is slated Monday. 
A chipping and putting con 
test will be held in c onnection 
with the banquet 
Complete 
result* of <he third 
round of the golf league are 
No 
4 
HO1*; No 
1, 106; No 
2. 99. No. 8, 96 .; No. 6, 96: No 
3, 94i »; No. 5, 92; No. T, t l L 
An 
ABCD tournament 
ha^ 
been scheduled at the PCC Sat­ 
urday. 


AL Strikeout 


Kings To Duel 


CLEVELAND ( AP) - The 
A m erican 
L eague’s 
top 
two 
'trikeout artists are scheduled 
to oppose 
each 
other 
tonight 
when the 
Cleveland 
Indians 
open a 
tw o-gam e series with 
the Boston Red Sox 


Jim Lonborg (20 • 8) of the 
Red 
Sox 
has 
226 
strikeouts 
Sam M cDowell (13-13), who will 
go 
for 
the 
Indians, 
has 
218 
whiffs. 


“ I just want to win, ’ 
Mc­ 
Dowell said Tuesday night after 
the 
Indians 
had 
beaten 
the 
W ashington Senators, 2 - 0. to 
clim b into sixth place. “ I don’t 
care about the Red Sox 
I just 
want lo win for m yscl.*’ 


Boston is one of four team s 
in the torrid race for the perm 
ant. 


Sonny Siebert pitched his first 
shutout of the season 
in 
beat­ 
ing the Senators and lowered his 
earned run 
average 
to 
2.23, 
best among the Indians, start 
mg pitchers 
The victory was 
his ninth in 20 decisions 


I’m getting in the g r o o v e ” 
said Siebert, who missed sever 
rf 
(urn- in midsea>on because 
of dizzy spells. “I wish tho tea- 
see 
was just starting TTiis is 
I he 
w ay 
y 1 u 
like 
to tart 
a 
season ” 
Vlox Alvia provided the only 
run Siebert needed with his 20th 
homer of the 
season 
in 
the 
fourth inning. AK is now has 68 
runs batted in, his career high 
for out* season 
IV Indian1 got their other 
run rn the fifth inning when Vie 
D a talillo led off with a double. 
stole third and scored on Richie 
ScheimbJum s sacrifice fly to 
center field 
Siebert gave up seven hits. 
struck 
out 
lour 
batters 
and 
walked one 
The loser was 
Phil Ortega 
(9 HD 


lies Loft Wins 


Young Bird Race 


The first 150 m ile young bird 
race from Lem gton, Ky . was 
won by the 
lies 
Loft 
with a * 
speed 
of 1086 2813 yards 
per 
m inute 
Second place went to 
Stan 
Crosby with a 
speed of 1083.-1 
8073 yards 
per 
minute 
while 
John Gragin s loft w as third in 
1077.4125 yards per rn mute. 
Fourth place was won by Vir 
gil 
Russell 
in 
1076.3296 yards 
per minute. 
The lies Loft won the n o m i n a - 1 
ti on bird and loft derby 
There 
w ere nine 
lofts 
and 
91 
birds 
com peting in the race. 


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586 N. Court St. 
INC. 


474-3138 


Unita s Shows 


He #s Sound 


As Ev e r 


The Circlev ille Hera ld, Wed. Sept. 20 , L‘*'7 
Circle v ille , Oh io 


N EW 
YOUK 
(AJO 
- 
The 
Atlanta 
Kame 
was something 
special to John Unitas. A year 
ago he came out of Atlanta with 
a damaged right shoulder that 
threatened to end his career 
The rest of tile season wa* an 
agony of pain and Interceptions 
because John couldn't put the 
speed on his short passes in 
tight situations. 


Unita tried something differ­ 
ent 
this 
year. 
In 
preseason 
camp of the Baltimore Colts he 
babied his 
arm, 
warming 
up 
only once a day and cutting 
down on the number of passes 
he 
threw. 
In 
the 
preseason 
games he saw limited action. 
Last Sunday was opening day 
in the National Football League. 
Unitas 
and 
the 
Colts 
faeed 
Atlanta at Memorial Stadium. 
They were asking the question: 
Is Unitas sound? 
The veteran quarterback pro­ 
vided the answer by completing 
22 of 32 passes for two touch­ 
downs and 401 yards, his very 
first 400-plus game in 12 years 
of pro ball, 
“ I think this was John’s all- 
time 
best 
passing 
perform­ 
ance,” said Coach Don Shula of 
the Colts. 
“ John throws 
the 
ball sore 
arm and all, just as well as he 
always 
did,” 
commented 
ex- 
teammatc Alex Hawkins, now 
an Atlanta flanker. “ You have 
when you consider he doesn’t 
have a running back going for 
his pass but we still couldn't 
stop him.” 
With testimonials 
like 
that, 
the Associated Press couldn't go 
wrong 
in naming Unitas the 
N F L Offensive Player of the 
Week. 
Unitas hit Tom Matte over tile 
middle on the first 1967 play 
from scrimmage for an 88-yard 
touchdown pass. Later he threw 
a 55-yard TD pass to Jim m y O ft 
and completed four .straight for 
51 yards in a clinching fourth 
quarter TD drive in a 38-31 vic­ 
tory. 


Cin cy Pounces 


On Atlan ta Errors 


A TLANTA (A P )—The Cinein- 1 ed on a fly ball anc, scored on 
natl Reds pounced on some At- Clote Boyer’s sacritfeo to tic 
lanta errors Tuesday night to the game, l l, in He 
fourth, 
beat the Braves, 3 1, in th eir, TTic Reds took the lead again 
continuing 
quest 
for 
second in the eighth. 
place money. 
John Bench opener ibis rally 
Every one of the Reds’ runs with a single, went to second 
followed an Atlanta miscue, and on a |)aS8ed ball am: scored on 
Phil Nickro improved his earn­ 
ed run average quite a bit al­ 
though suffering his ninth loss 
in 20 decisions. 
The Reds got their first run 
in 
the 
opening 
inning. 
After 
their first threat was ended by 
a 
double 
play, 
Vada 
Pinson 
singled, stole second, took third 
on 
a 
wild 
pitch 
and 
scored 
when Lee May reached second 
base on Angel Hermoso’s bad 
throw. 
Henry Aaron doubled, advanc­ 


e r FRANK WATSON 
9m *n d Pre## Sp o rt* W riter 
QUIST IONS 
1—Wha t tea m la Lo a MI- 
•ba el# with? 
2—-lim Turner la a pitching 
« meh fo r the Ya nkees. True o r 
fa la e? 
*—Jim Heg a a la rn bullpen 
•o a eh fo r the Ya nkeea . True o r 
fa lse? 
ROOHR? 
NEXT 
Y a n k e e fan # 
will see h im a s 
& f i r s t b o se 
co ach . Fo r 1 7 
y ears, 
th o u g h , 
h e was o n e o f 
th e b e s t s o u t h ­ 
p aws in t h e h i s - 
t o r y o f t h e 
B r o n x Bo mb - 


'M UJ- 1 
•OTUJ,—Z 
■*TioD wouinnqi 
NO JOJ JTJfapt feo3 pjskj—I 
•(pjOji X9PHM 
A str (betted by Co ntro l Pro — 


Guy Ya te s Wins 


Scioto Fina le 


C O LUM BUS, 
Ohio 
(A P ) 
Guy 
Yates won the $2,500 trot 
Tuesday night, touring the mile* 
and-a-half in 3:12 3-5 as Scioto 
Downs wound up its 1967 meet­ 
ing. 
Owned by 
M acJay 
Stables 
of Portsmouth, Guy Yates paid 
$3.60, $2.60 and $2.20. 
The 8-3 combination of Miss 
Chris Scotch and Adiana Han­ 
over returned $27 in the daily 
double. 
Attendance for the year total­ 
ed 523,746, beating the record 
mark of 485,760 set last year. 


Mus k ie -Tige r 


Cla s h Looms 


At Title Bout 


CO LUM BUS, Ohio (A P )—Two 
of Ohio’s best small college foot­ 
ball teams — Muskingum and 
Wittenberg—plunge into a cruci­ 
al clash Saturday in their 1967 
inaugurals. 
The Fighting Muskies and tile 
Tigers 
from 
Springfield 
play 
each other in a night skirmish 
at New Concord. 
McConagha 
Stadium 
should 
have its 5,000 seats filled when 
these two Ohio Conference gi­ 
ants come to grips with a possi­ 
ble OC title hanging in the bal­ 
ance. 
The game pits one of foot­ 
ball’s renowned strategists—W it­ 
tenberg’s Bill Edwards—against 
a new Muskingum coach. 
Ed Sherman has relinquished 
his 
head 
coaching 
duties 
to 
Bob Stokes to devote full time 
to his post as Muskingum athlet­ 
ic director. Edwards, who serv­ 
es in both capacities, has a 
life-time winning percentage of 
.778. 
Sherman 
quit 
coaching 
with a .776 mark. 
These two grid powers met 
last in 1960 with the Muskies 
scoring a 36-0 victory. Musking­ 
um holds an 8-7 edge in the ser­ 
ies that began back in 1907. 
Wittenberg, 
under Edwards’ 
guidance, copped four consecu­ 
tive 
OC 
championships 
from 
1961 through 1964. Muskingum 
took the honors in 1965 and 
again last year with a perfect 
9-0 slate. 
The only blot on Sherman’s 
record last year was a 34-7 past­ 
ing by Tennessee State in the 
Grantiand Rice Bowl. 
The Tigers finished 8-1 a year 
ago, losing only by a 14-7 count 
to former conference member 
Akron. 


Leo Cardenas’ single to center. 
Cardenas scored an insurance 
run on Tommy Hein*’ sacrifice 
fly one out later a fter Boyer’s 
two-base 
error 
in fielding 
a 
bouncing 
line 
drivi 
by 
Pete 
Rose. 
Gary Nolan 
gave up 
three 
hits before he was Ifted for a 
pinch hitter in the tighth inn­ 
ing. Ted Abernathy picked up 
his 26th save of the season in 
preserving the rookie righthan­ 
der’s 14th victory agdnst seven 
defeats. 
The two teams comMete their 
series tonight with MU Pappas, 
15-11, due to oppose Jin BriUon, 
1-1. 


Armbro Indigo 


De la wa re Winne r 


D E L A W A RE , Ohio (A P ) 
Armbro 
Indigo, 
daughter 
of J 
Rosemary 
Frost, 
captured 
Thursday’s filly pace for 2 
year-olds, 
a 
preliminary 
feat­ 
ure 
at 
tile 
Delaware County 
Fairgrounds to Thursday’s Lit 
tie Brown Jug. 


Armbro Indigo scored a 31* 
length victory over Twist Along 
in the first heat, 
winning in 
2:04 1-5. 


In the second heat, driver Joe 
O’Brien coaxed Armbro Indigo 
to a I Mi - length victory over 
Carolina Rhythm. Time for the 
second heat was 2:04 3-5. 


OU's Co n ley Gets IABA Sui"9 E,,!* 
' 
N EW 
YOUK 
( AP) — 
Leon 


tty IHI.I. Iii KO 
TIPS FROM THE TO P... 


Y O U CAN U S L A S A F E T Y 
P IN EYE FOR A F IS H IN G 
ROD GUIDE IN A N E M E R ­ 
GENCY. CUT OFF THE CATCH, 
END AND TAPE TO R O D . 


OK Prie s ts ' 


Re tire me rt 


At Age 75 


C LE V E LA N D (A P ) — Bishop 
Clarence G. Issenmani of the 
eight-county Cleveland Catholic 
Diocese has approved legislation 
which includes manditory re­ 
tirement of priests at ige 75. 


About 28 priests, mos; of them 
pastors of parishes, wll be af­ 
fected by the retirement plan, 
which goes into cffec. Jan. I. 
The retirement ruing and a 
new salary schedule br priests 
were revealed by Bislop Issen- 
mann Tuesday beton the 40- 
member Senate of Prists. The 
senate, working in an advisory 
capacity, originally tad made 
the recommendations. 


Under the bishop’s plan, re­ 
tirement is optional st age 65, 
advisable at 70 and nandatory 
at 75. The optional md advis­ 
able provisions requin the bis- 
op’s permission. 
Salaries 
of pastors will be 
raised to $250 a mtfith from 
the present $150, retnactive to 
Sept. I. 
Assistant pastors, cho have 
received $100 a monU, will be 
paid on a sliding scae, from a 
base of $150 a monti from or­ 
dination until complete! of their 
fifth year, to 
$250 after 
$25 
years. 


Ame rica s Cup Be gins 


G U A D A LA JA RA , 
M e x i c o 
(A P ) — William Campbell of 
Huntington, 
W.Va., heads the 
U.S. team that will play against 
Canada 
and 
Mexico 
in 
the 
Am erica’s 
Cup 
amateur 
golf 
tourney here Get. 7-8. 


The other U.S. 
team 
mem­ 
bers, as announced by the Mexi­ 
can Golf Association Tuesday, 
are Donald Allen of Rochester, 
N.Y., Robert Dickson of McAles­ 
ter, Okla., Marvin Giles, Lynch­ 
burg, 
Va., 
and 
A. 
Downing 
Gray, Pensacola, Fla. Dr. Ed ­ 
gar Updegraff of Tucson Ariz., 
will be the nonplaying captain. 


TR Y F IS H IN G FOR L A R G E - 
M O U T H B A S S IN EARLY 
M O R N IN G AND E V E N IN G 
FO R B E S T R E S U L T S . HL 
L IK E S LILY PA D S A N D 
W E ED Y P O IN T S . 


TEST YOUR HOOKS FOK 
S H A R P N E S S . USE A W H I TE­ 
STON! TO S H A RP ! N TH E M 
AND YOU M A Y NOT L OSE 
SO M A N Y F ISH ./ x . 


S 


L o o p Reco g n itio n 


COLUM BUS, 
Ohio 
( AP ) * — 
Dick Conley, Ohio University’s 
speedy halfback, and Western 
Michigan's Rolf Stroll! a line­ 
backer, were designated Tues­ 
d a y as the Mid American Con­ 
ferences players of the1 week. 
As back ol the week, the 5- 
fnot*IO, 
IMO pound 
Conley 
was 
recognized for his performance 
Saturday when the Bobcats tx*al 
Toledo 20-14. Conley, a junior, 
came through with a 48-yard 
run in O U’s winning drive and 


Rock, attorney for the New Je r ­ 
sey Americans ol the American 
Basketball 
Association, 
said 
Tuesday the club has started 
legal action lo make 6-foot-tO Le 
Roy Ellis play for tile ABA club 
instead of the Baltimore Bullets 
in the older National Basketball 
Association. 


IF YOU NEED M ORE WEIGHT 
ON TH E LINE, NIP A S P L IT 
SHOT ON THE BEN D O! THE 
HOOK. 


Matt Snell has gained 1,003 
yards catching passes and 2,355 
yards on rushes during his three 
season with the New York Jets. 
Read The Classified Ads 


was the team s big ground gain 
I cr. 
The 219 pound Strout, a sixr 
foot senior, recovered a turn big* 
that led to a key field goal in 
Western’s 24 
14 decision over 
Miami, 
------- 
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Ba s e ba ll Sta ndouts 
By TH E ASSO CIATED P RE S S 
PITC H IN G — Dave Boswell, 
Twins, limited Kansas City to 
two hits and struck out eight in 
an 8-2 victory that kept Min­ 
nesota in a tie for first place in 
the American League pennant 
race. 
BATTIN G 
— 
Manny 
Mot*, 
Pirates, led off a six-run ninth- 
inning explosion with 
pinch-hit j 
single and capepd tile rally with 
a two-run single as Pittsburgh 
overtook Houston 11-7. 


La nds Re cord Tuna 


SOUTH 
KINGSTO W N, 
R I. 
(A P ) — 
A 922 pound 
bluefin 
tuna, believed to be tile largest 
ever caught in 
Rhode Island 
waters, was brought into Snug 
Harbor Tuesday by Dr. James 
M. Muckley of Canton, Ohio. Dr. 
Muckley said he fought the big 
fish for three hours, IO minutes 
before boating it south of Block 
Island. 


3 Cha rge d with Ars on 
N EW A RK , Ohio (A P ) — Three 
men were bound over 
to 
the 
Licking 
County 
Grand 
Ju ry 
Tuesday on arson 
charges 
in 
connection with a $65,000 fire 
at nearby Buckeye Lake iii July. 
The three, William Bush, 21, 
Buckeye Lake; Jam es M. Tal­ 
bott. 
18, 
and 
Edward 
Paul 
Smith, 
18, both of Columbus, 
were charged as a result of a 
fire 
which 
destroyed 
a 
boat 
dock and dance hall. 


Specicl 
This 
Week 
Plain 
Dresses 


114 S. C o u rt hi. 


Cincinnati rookie pitcher Gary 
Nolan turned in one of his most 
impressive 
victories 
on July 
4 when he beat the St. Louis 
Cardinals 1*0. He gave up three 
hits, walked only two. 


No Nagging 
Backache Means a 
Good Night' s Sleep 


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Here's a car that'll spoil 
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Unitas Shows 
He's Sound 
As Ever 


NEW 
YOUK 
(AP) 
- The 
Atlanta 
game 
wax something 
special to John Unitas, A year 
ago he came out of Atlanta with 
a dam aged right shoulder that 
threatened to end his career. 
The rest of the season was an 
agony of pain and interception* 
because John couldn’t put the 
speed on his short passes in 
tight Bituations. 
Unita tried something differ­ 
ent 
this 
year. 
In 
preseason 
cam p of the Baltimore Colts he 
babied his 
arm , warming 
up 
only once a day and cutting 
down on tile number of passes 
he threw. 
In 
the preseason 
gam es he saw limited action. 
Last Sunday was opening day 
in the National Football League. 
Unites 
and 
the 
Colts 
faced 
Atlanta at Memorial Stadium. 
They were asking the question: 
Is Unitas sound? 
The veteran quarterback pro­ 
vided the answer by completing 
22 of 32 passes for two touch­ 
downs and 401 yards, his very 
first 400-plus game in 12 years 
of pro ball. 
“ I think this w a s J o h n ’s all- 
time 
best 
p a s s i n g 
perform ­ 
ance,” said Coach Don Shula of 
the Colts. 
‘‘John throws the ball sore 
arm and all, just as well as he 
always 
did,” 
commented 
ex­ 
teammate Alex Hawkins, now 
an Atlanta flanker. "You have 
when you consider he doesn’t 
have a running back going for 
bis pass but we still couldn't 
stop him .” 
With testimonials 
like 
that, 
the Associated Press couldn’t go 
wrong in naming Unitas the 
NFL Offensive Player of the 
Week. 
Unitas hit Tom Matte over the 
middle on the first 1967 play 
from scrim m age for an 88-yard 
touchdown pass. Later he threw 
a 55-yard TD pass to Jim m y On* 
and completed four straight for 
51 yards in a clinching fourth 
quarter TD drive in a 38-31 vic­ 
tory. 


Tile C ircleville Herald, Wed. Sept. 20, 1SC7 
21 
Circleville, Ohio 
Cincy Pounces 


I- 
1 
On Atlanta Errors 


ATLANTA (A P)—The Cnicin-1 cd on a fly ball anc cored on 
natl Reds pounced on some At-«Ck’te Boyer’s sacrilce to tic 
lantu errors Tuesday night to the game, Ll, in tie 
fourth, 
heat the Braves, 3 1, in their Hie Reds took the lead again 
continuing 
quest 
place money. 
for 
second 
in the eighth. 
John Bench opener this rally 
Every one of the Reds’ runs wilh a 8ink,ie( went ^ second 
followed an Atlanta miscue, and on a pag8ed ball anc scored on 
Phil Niekro improved his earn 
Leo Cardenas’ single to center. 
od run average quite a bit a1- Cardenas scored an insurance 
though suffering his ninth loss run on Tommy nolo*’ sacrifice 
in 20 decisions. 
fly one out later after Boyer’s 
The Reds got their first run two.ba»e error 
in fielding 
a 
in 
the 
opening inning. 
After j bouncing 
line drivi 
by 
Pete 
their first threat was ended by flose 


Gary Nolan gave up 
a 
double 
play, 
Vada 
Pinson 
■singled, stole second, took third 
^ ,'lf tV d for 
wild 
pitch 
and scored 


By HANK WATSON 
BBo^ml Prom Sportw Wittor 
QtHSTtOMS 
1— W h at team la Lev M i- 
SBMis wife? 
2—Jim Turner la a pitching 
Meek far Ike Yankees. Trae or 


BOONK? 


I JIN* Hegaa la I 
••ach for tke Yankees. Tree' ar 


NEXT 
Y ank ee fans 
will see him aa 
a f i r s t bam 
coach. For 27 
years, 
though. 
ha was ane af 
the beat south* 
paws in the his­ 
to ry of the 
Bronx Botnb- 


•WU1—t 
•otuj.— J 
w o wouinma 
M B JO? JtopPi T*o2 piajjf— x 
-(PJOJ 
:mqooH) 
Aah-feats* bp Control Prom 


on 
a 
when Lee May reached second 
ba.se on Angel Hermoso’s bad 
throw. 
Henry Aaron doubled, advanc- 


Muskie-Tiger 
Clash Looms 
At Title Bout 


COLUMBUS, Ohio (A P )-T w o 
of Ohio’s best small college foot­ 
ball team s — Muskingum and 
Wittenberg—plunge into a cruci­ 
al clash Saturday in their 1967 
inaugurals. 
The Fighting Muskies and the 
Tigers from 
Springfield play 
each other in a night skirmish 
at New Concord. 
McConagha 
Stadium 
should 
have its 5,000 seats filled when 
these two Ohio Conference gi­ 
ants come to grips with a possi­ 
ble OC title hanging in the bal­ 
ance. 
The game pits one of foot 
ball’s renowned strategists—Wit­ 
tenberg’s Bill Edwards—against 
a new Muskingum coach. 
Ed Sherman has relinquished 
his head 
coaching duties to 
Bob Stokes to devote full time 
to his post as Muskingum athlet­ 
ic director. Edwards, who serv­ 
es in both capacities, has a 
life-time winning percentage of 
.778. 
Sherman 
quit 
coaching 
with a .776 mark. 
These two grid powers met 
last in 1960 with the Muskies 
scoring a 36*0 victory. Musking­ 
um holds an 8-7 edge in the ser­ 
ies that began back in 1907. 
Wittenberg, under Edw ards’ 
guidance, copped four consecu­ 
tive OC 
championships from 
1961 through 1964. Muskingum 
took the honors in 1965 and 
again last year with a perfect 
9-0 slate. 
The only blot on Sherm an’s 
record last year was a 34-7 past­ 
ing by Tennessee State in the 
Grantiand Rice Bowl. 
The Tigers finished 8-1 a year 
ago, losing only by a 14-7 count 
to former conference member 
Akron. 


three 
a 
pinch hitter in the eighth inn­ 
ing. Ted Abernathy picked up 
his 26th save of the season in 
preserving the rookie righthan­ 
der’s 14th victory agdnst seven 
defeats. 
The two teams compete their 
series tonight with Mit Pappas, 
15-11, due to oppose Jin Britton, 
l l . 


Guy Yates Wins 


Scioto Finale 


COLUMBUS, 
Ohio 
(A P) 
Guy Yates won the $2,500 trot 
Tuesday night, touring the mile- 
end-a-half in 3:12 3-5 as Scioto 
Downs wound up its 1967 m eet­ 
ing. 
Owned by 
M acJay 
Stables 
of Portsmouth, Guy Yates paid 
$3.60, $2.60 and $2.20. 
The 8-3 combination of Miss 
Chris Scotch and Adiana Han­ 
over returned $27 in the daily 
double. 
Attendance for the year total­ 
ed 523,746, beating the record 
m ark of 485,760 set last year. 


Lands Record Tuna 
SOUTH 
KINGSTOWN, 
R I. 
(AP) — A 922 pound bluefin 
tuna, believed to be the largest 
ever caught in Rhode Island 
w aters, was brought into Snug 
Harbor Tuesday by Dr. Jam es 
M. Muekley of Canton, Ohio. Dr. 
Muckley said he fought the big 
fish for three hours. IO minutes 
before boating it south of Block 
Island. 


Armbro Indigo 


Delaware Winner 


DELAWARE, Ohio (AP) 
Armbro 
Indigo, 
daughter 
of 
Rosemary 
Frost, 
captured 
Thursday’s filly pace for 2 
year-olds, a 
preliminary feat 
ure at the 
Delaware County 
Fairgrounds to Thursday’* Lit 
tie Brown Jug. 
Armbro Indigo scorer! a J 1 * 
length victory over Twist Along 
in the first heat, winning in 
2:04 1-5. 
In the second heat, driver J<* 
O’Brien coaxed Armbro indigo 
to a m - length victory over 
Carolina Rhythm. Time for the 
second heat was 2:04 3-5, 


dur^fbh&ampfire 
OU's Conley Gets ABA Suin9 Em* 
NI',VV 
VORK (AP) 
- Leon 


By BIM. BERO 
TIPS FROM THE TOP. 


Y O U C A N U S E A SAFETY 
P IN E Y L FOR A F IS H IN G 
R O D G U ID E IN A N E M E R ­ 
G E N C Y . C U T OFF TH E CATCH 
E N D A N D T A P E TO R O D 


OK Priests' 
Retiremert 
At Age 75 


CLEVELAND (AP) — Bishop 
Clarence G. Issenmam of the 
eight-county Cleveland Catholic 
Diocese has approved legislation 
which includes manditory re­ 
tirem ent of priests at ige 75. 
About 28 priests, m os of them 
pastors of parishes, w-U be af­ 
fected by the retirem mt plan, 
which goes into cffec. Jan. I. 
The retirem ent ruliig and a 
new salary schedule hr priests 
were revealed by Bistop Issen* 
rn a on Tuesday beton the 40- 
m em ber Senate of P rists. The 
senate, working in an advisory 
capacity, originally hid made 
the recommendation* 
Under the bishop’s plan, re­ 
tirem ent is optional st age 65, 
advisable at 70 and naviatory 
at 75. The optional md advis­ 
able provisions requin the bis- 
op’s permission. 
Salaries of pastors will be 
raised to $250 a maith from 
the present $150, retnactive to 
Sept. I. 
Assistant pastors, vivo have 
received $100 a monk; will be 
paid on a sliding scae, from a 
base of $150 a monti from or­ 
dination until com plete of their 
fifth year, to $250 after 
$25 
years. 


Americas Cup Begins 
GUADALAJARA, 
M e x i c o 
(AP) — William Campbell of 
Huntington, W.Va., heads the 
U.S. team that will play against 
Canada 
and 
Mexico 
in 
the 
America’s 
Cup 
am ateur 
golf 
tourney here Oct. 7-8. 
The other U.S. team m em ­ 
bers, as announced by the Mexi­ 
can Golf Association Tuesday, 
are Donald Allen of Rochester, 
N.Y., Robert Dickson of Mcales- i 
ter, Okla., Marvin Giles, Lynch­ 
burg, 
Va., 
and 
A. 
Downing 
Gray, Pensacola, Fla. Dr. Ed­ 
gar Updegraff of Tucson Ari/., 
will be the nonplaying captain. 


T R V F IS H IN G I O R L A R G E ” 
M O U T H B A S S IN E A R L Y 
M O R N IN G A N D E V E N IN G 
F O R B E S T R E S U L T S . HL 
L IK E S LILY P A D S A N D 
W E E D Y P O IN T S . 


T E S T Y O U R H O O K S F O K 
S H A R P N E S S . USL A WHET­ 
ST O N E TO SHARP! N THEM 
A N D YOU MAY NOT L O S E 
S O M A N Y F I S H ./^ 


Loop Recognition 


COLUMBUS, Ohio 
(AP)* 
Dick (Tinley, Ohio University's 
speedy halfback, and Western 
Michigan's Rolf Strout a line­ 
backer. were designated Tues­ 
d a y as the Mid-American Con­ 
ference’s players of the week. 
As back of inc week, the 5- 
(flOtTO, 
180 pound Conley was 
recognized for his performance 
Saturday when the Bobcats beat 
Toledo 20 14. Conley, a junior, 
came through with a 48-yard 
run in OU’s winning drive ami 


Rock, attorney for the New J e r­ 
sey Americans of the American 
Basketball 
Association, 
said 
Tuesday the club has started 
legal action to make 6-foot-lO Le 
Roy Ellis play for toe ABA club 
instead of the Baltimore Bullets 
in the older National Basketball 
Association. 
* 


was the team s big ground gain 
cr. 
The 210 pound Strout, a slx^ 
foot senior, recovered a fumbler 
thai led to a key field goal in 
Western’s 24 
14 decision over 
Miami. 


IF YOU NEED MORE WEIGHT 
O N THE LINE, NIP A SPLIT 
SHOT ON THE BEND Of THE 
H O O K . 


Baseball Standouts 
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 
PITCHING — Dave Boswell, 
Twins, limited Kansas City to 
two hits and struck out eight in 
an 8-2 victory that kept Min­ 
nesota in a tie for first place in 
the American League pennant 
race. 
BATTING 
— 
Manny 
Mota, 
Pirates, led off a six-run ninth- 
inning explosion with pinch-hit 
single and capepd the rally with 
a two-run single as Pittsburgh 
overtook Houston 11-7. 


3 Charged with Arson 
NEWARK. Ohio (AP) — Three 
men were bound over 
to 
the 
Licking 
County 
Grand 
Jury 
Tuesday on arson 
charges 
in 
connection with a $65,000 fire 
at nearby Buckeye Lake in July. 
Tile three, William Bush. 21, 
Buckeye Lake; Jam es M. Tal­ 
bott. 
18, 
and 
Edward 
Paul 
Smith, 18, both of Columbus, 
were charged as a result of a 
fire which 
destroyed 
a 
boat 
dock and dance hall. 


Cincinnati rookie pitcher Gary 
Nolan turned in one of his most 
impressive 
victories 
on July 
4 when he beat the St. Louis 
Cardinals 1-0. He gave up three 
hits, walked only two. 


No Nagging 
Backache Means a 
Good Night’s Sleep 


Nagging backache, headache aud mu** 
ciliar ached and paios may cum** on wit h 
over-exertion, em otional upsets, or 
everyday (tress and strain. If this nag- 
nine backache, with restless, dloti.lees 
nights, is wtaring you out. making you 
miserable and irritable, don't wait, try 
poan’s PHH - an analge tic, a pain re- 
liever. Doan's palo-rtlleving action on 
nagging backache is often the answer. 
lift Du»n § IMllrt — not a habit-forming 
drug but a well-known standard rem- 
ady used euoceesfully by 
for 
over 70 yean. Bee lf they donit bring 
yon the same welecme rallef. f or con- 


w 
s b o o h Bhw* buy 
#ue“ 


Save ^1 
on a bucket or 
barrel of Kentucky Flied Chicken 


Tear out the 
valuable coupon 
inside October 3rd 
issue of 


I 
0 
4 
I Iv 
■ jXLw X J I V 


on sale now. 


We fix Sunday dinner seven days a veek 


COLONEL SANDERS' RECIPE 
Ktntudty fried Chiel 
OLLIE’S TAKE HOM! 


N . C o u rt a t Wilson 


Matt Snell has gained 1,003 I 
yards catching passes and 2,355 
yards on rushes during his three 
season with the New York Jets. I 
Read The Classified Ads 


save now - 


On Matching Box Spring 


and Mattress.......... 
2 For Price of I 


TRADITION HOUSE 


111 VV. M ain — 474-4000 


O O 


'S S M ONACO 


The super-plush Dodge every year, and 
especially for 1968. Heres a car that’ll spoil 
.you for everything else. With V8 power— 
the slickest, smoothest automatic transmission 
you’ve ever said "go ” to—and every luxury 
touch a car this big and this good-looking 
should have. And yet, Its price is a pleasant 
surprise. 


’68 POLARA 


A whole lot of car for a lot less money than you’d 
think. It's big, its powerful, ifs luxurious. And ifs 
priced in the same league with Impala and 
Galaxie 500. Hard to believe? Well,.then 
Come in, and let’s talk figures. Proving 
what a wonderful bargain Polara 
offers you is one of the thing! 
we like to do best. 


The compact that doesn’t look like a compact 
O r ride like one. Or act like one. Or cramp 
your style like one. Here’s a compact that*# 
oil car. With lots of go and lots of room. 
With a V8 under the hood if that’s what yotl’G 
like. And Dart comes in a wide range of 
body styles. So no matter what style is your 
style, we have it. Come in and take a look. 


AUTHOMIZSO DODO! DIALERS ^ C H R Y S L E R 
M0!0hS COAfOMAnM 


J A k O 
f 
Another all-new one from Dodge for *68. Coronet, featuring a fuff lineup 
I 
of freshly styled models, including on addition to t^e linei a sharp new 
coupe. Like all other Dodges for ’68, Coronet is sure to give you a good case of Dodge Fever. The only place to 
cure it is at your nearby Dodge 
Boys’ Come on in. 


EDSTROM MOTORS 


ioO 15. M aili St. 
474-355U 


Sea AFL Football Sundays on NBG. Check your local listings for exact time and channer. 


i 
i 


Cla ssifie d s 
Phone 
474-31 Kl 
Per w ord for I insertion 
... 
Be 
(M inim um charg e $1 CKI) 
P er word for 3 insertions .. 
12c 
(M inim um IO w ords) 
P e r w ords for 6 insertions 
18r 
(M inim um IO w ords) 
P er w ord 24 insertions 
... 
50c 1 
(4 w eeks) 
(M inim um lo w ords) 
ABOVE RATES BASED ON CON­ 
SECUTIVE DAYS 
C lassified w ord Ads will be accept­ 
ed until 4 p m . prev ious day for 
publication the following day. The 
publisher reserv es the rig ht to edit 
or re je c t any classified adv ertising 
copy. 
E rro r in A dv ertising 
should 
be 
repo rted 
im m ediately. 
The C irclev ille H erald will not be 
responsible for m ore than one In­ 
co rre ct insertion. 


6. M ale H e lp W a n t e d 
1 3 . A p a r t m e n t s fo r R e n t 2 1 . R eal 
E s t a t e - T r a d e 
2 4 . M is c . fo r S ale 


DRAFTSMAN — FEE PAID 
National 4A Company . Plenty of 
room to grow. Mechanical. $52- 
7200. Call for interv iew. 
Bob Parry 
Call 654-5323 
SNELLING & SNELLING 
109 S. Columbus St., Lancaster 


7 A . H e lp W a n t e d G e n . 


3 . L o st a n d F o u n d 


FOUND a t The H erald office. I pair 
ladies sunglasses, and 
I 
set 
of 
GMG auto keys. 


LOST — L arge G erm an Shepherd 
dog. Light brow n. 3 m iles North 
of Circlev ille. 
$2o 
rew ard, aliv e. 
474-3532. 


YOU need mone.\, We need help. 
Boyd Durn. 124, Tarlton. 


CAB D RIV ERS. Apply al cab s ta ­ 
tion 
on 
L ancaster 
Pike 
O r 
call 
474-7122 for appointm ent. 


BANDH \ P P ) Ii Persona! 
National 
C om pany will giv e hourly ra te plus 
bonus to learn pleasant easy tele­ 
phone sales from your hom e Com ­ 
plete train in g prov ided 
Call L an­ 
caster. collect 653-219 5 . 5 p m 
to 
9 p. 
rn. 
T hursday 
and 
F rid ay 
nights 


9 . S it u a t io n s W a n te d 


4 . B u s in e s s S e r v ic e 


SIGN painting and designing, free 
sketching. L ester Lingo 474-59 25. 


W ATER 
Softener s a l t S t e e l * 
Produce Com pany. 


TER M ITE S — g u aran teed control. 
C ontact your 
reliable 
K ochhciser 
H ardw are. 474-5338. 


T R E E trim m ing, rem ov ing, spra y­ 
ing, firewood, and roof repair. L in­ 
coln Isaac. Phone 474-7272 


SE PT IC lank and sew er cleaning. 
Serv ice anyw here, anytim e. L i n ­ 
coln Isaac. Phone 474-7272. 


W ell drilling. 
Indiv idual 
— 


W ANTED ride to Colum bus dow n­ 
town W orking 8 to 5 Call 474-569 4 


WILL baby sit for sm all children in 
my hom e. 474-79 57. 


WILL DO house cleaning. Call after 
5 p. rn. 474-5185. 


W. G. STEW ART - 
gu aran teed 
w ater, 
co n tracto r. 474-3217. 


W ELL D RILLIN G — Joe C hristy— 
A m anda 9 69 -3132 — 8 mile* eaat 
on U. S. 22. 


IK ES Septic tank ana sew er clean ­ 
ing 
serv ice. 
Phone 
474*4566 
or 
474-6336 


BABY SITTING, and ironings, light 
housekeeping A nytim e. Inquire 420 
John Street. 


WOULD like ride to Colum bus in the 
area of Long and High. Leav ing 
Circlev ille at 7 and Colum bus at 5. 
Call M rs. C arl S. M ader, 474-3774 
after 6 p. rn. 


IO. A u t o m o b ile s fo r S a le 


LARGE 3 room a partm e n t, u psta irs 
D ow ntow n. 
U nfurnished, 
Adults 
$63. 474-3201; 
174-588H 


1 4 . H o u s e s fo r 
R e n t 


4 
ROOMS. 
9 83-4375 
217 
W 
Corwin, 
$40 


IO ROOM m odern house, no pets, 
inquire first house N orth of P ra irie 
L anes Bowling Alley 


At Your Serv ice: 
Mrs. J eanne Bach, 474 4134 
Mrs. Paul McGinnis, 474 3760 
J ames W. Ford, 474-458 1 
E. R. Bennett, Realtor 
127Vi E. Main St. 
474-2197 


8 FOOT H ydroplane 
474-4353. 
Be si 
O ffer 


22 
The C irclev ille H e r a l d , Wed. Sept. 20, 19 07 
Circlev ille, Ohio 


SHALLOW well pum p 'a H P and 40 
gallon tank Will 
sell together o r 
se pa ra te 474-2585 
Da ily Te le v is ion Sc he dule 


1 5. S le e p in g 
R o o m s 


FU R N ISH ED room in m odem hom e. 
Call 474-2303. 


SL E EPIN G room 
for 
lady'. 
Share 
house priv ileges. 
W rite 
Box 
49 3 
C c-o The H erald. 


Circle ville Re a lty 
AU Ty pes of Real Estate 
Insurance 
Office Phone — 474-3795 
Residence — 474-5722 
Farms—City Property —Loans 
*52 W. Main St. 


| M 
y 
r a | 
W ate i 
Sy stems 


1 7 . W a n t e d t o R e n t 


A PPR O X IM A TELY 30 x 50 co m m er­ 
cial building. 
220 
v olts 
electric. 
Bay door 13 ft. high. Call 474-2600 


T H R E E bedroom hom e, w ith dining 
a re a , g arag e, north-end pre fe rre d 
Dupont em ployee 
474-7511. E xte n ­ 
sion 107 or 474-3111 extension 373. 


1 8 . H o u s e s fo r S ale 


K E L L E R S T.V. S a lts and Serv ice. 
Serv ice 
rn Hie C irclev ille 
Stouts­ 
v ille, T arlton area. 474-4649 . 


CARY Blev ins tree trim m ing, roof­ 
ing and chim ney work W ork g u a r­ 
anteed. F ree estim ate. 474-7863 and 
474-2079 . 


54 PACKARD, Like new, new ba t­ 
tery. 474-6442 


Bl PLYM OUTH. Uke new . 141 N orth 
Pickaw ay, call after 5. 


ONE ow ner 19 62 Com et Custom E x­ 
cellent condition. Com plete engine 
ov erhaul. Call 9 83-5442. 


64 CORVETTE Stingray, autom atic 
transm ission. M ust sell. leav ing for 
serv ice. 126 D unm ore Road. 


7 ROOM house for sale, tw o car 
g arage. % acre co rn er lot. Phone 
M r. 
or 
Mrs. 
N elson 
P urdue. 
474-79 67 
Stoutsv ille, 
Ohio a fte r 6 
p. rn. 


FOR SALE b.v ow ner. M odern 
3 
bedroom *home on I acre ground at 
1225 
S. 
Court. 
Call 
474-3655 
for 
appointm ent to see pro perty 


ONE floor plan ra n ch style hom e 
for sale by ow ner in quiet n orthend 
location 
Newly d ecorated. P riced 
under $18,000 C all 474-669 1 


FOR the best in trash and rubbish 
hauling. R esidential and C om m er­ 
cial — Call L a rry’s Refuse H aulers 
4 7 4 - 6 1 7 4 . 
____________ 


NORMAN W elding Serv ice 
S truc­ 
tu ral steel, pipe and general re ­ 
pair Will do by contract or by the 
hour 
C onscienious certified w eld­ 
e r. 474-39 85 
1310 South Pickaw ay. 


CUSTOM Slaughtering. Processing, 
curing, 
sm oking. 
Looker 
ren tal; 
choice beef by side or qu arter; 
quality pork; bank ra te financing. 
C irclev ille 
F a st 
Freeze, 
Edison 
Av e. 474-2701. 


For Your New and 
Used Car Needs See 
Wes Edstrom Motors 
150 E. Main St. 
Open Mon., Wed , Fri., 
til 9 


For 
TOP VALUE 
Used Cars 
See: 
Ya te s Mo to r Co . 
1220 S. Court 


IKE'S 


•ptic Tank and Sewer Cleaning 
» rv ice. All Work Guaranteed 
> be sure, call . . . 
4 7 4 -4 566 


1 2 . T r aile r s 


OW NER to sell D a ye ar old 3 bed­ 
room . 
14 x 24 
attached 
g arag e, 
ll 
x 
16 Pa bo. 
Wood 
windows, 
brick front. L ocated in Cooke 
& 
C rites Addition, South Bloom field. 
$16,800 full price. Call 9 83-5442 


BY O W N ER - Jefferso n AddiUon — 
I story. 3 bedroom hom e C arpet­ 
ed, L shape liv ing room , ceram ic 
in bath 
and kitchen. A lum inum 
sto rm s 
and shu tters. 
concrete 
driv e, 2 c a r g a rag e, full basem en t, 
’.I 
a cre lot, 
back ya rd 
fenced. 
P riced 
right. 
Will 
help 
fin an ce. 
474-739 6 


Oil Central Furnace 
Clarksburg. O. Liv ing room, din­ 
ing room, kitchen, 2 bedrooms, 
utilty room, part basement, oil 
central furnace, storms, screens, 
garage, storage building, clean, 
remodeled one floor plan on 
a nice comer lot. Should G.I. 
with nothing down. Vacant. 
George C. Barnes, 
Realtor 


Nick Stonerock.Associate 
474-5275 


W. D. HEISKELL & SON 
Realtors 
City and Farm Sales 
and Financing 
129V4 W. Main -— Circlev ille 
474-6137 
Residence — 474-7144 
Williamsport — 98 6-2751 


H a tfie ld Re a lty 
103 E. MAIN ST. 


Phone Office — 474-6294 
or 474-6562 
Residence — 4,4-5719 


Larry and Ruth McFadden 
474-3995 


Dwight L. Grubb — 474-4941 
Marjorie Spalding, Saleslady 
474-5204 
Id e a l Lo ca tio n 


3 bedroom home, ex ceptionally 
nice kitchen, dining room, liv ing 
room and nice enclosed porch. 
Full basement. Completely re­ 
modeled and priced to sell. 


For Farm A Suburban Homes 
Koc hhe is e r Hardware 
113 W. Main St. 


Vacuum cleaner, Kirby . Runs 
Uke new. Has attachments in­ 
cluding polisher to wax floors 
and 
shampooer 
for 
carpets. 
Must sacrifice. Make just 8 pay ­ 
ments of $4.00 a month. Phone 
474-3733. 


Wednesday 


(C) Denotes Color Telecasts 


4:00— (4) Mate!) Game C 
i IO) Secret Storm, ser­ 
ial 
4:25— (4) News 
— 
C 
4:30— (4) Gilligau’s Island—C 
(IO) Mov ie — “ Manfish” 
1956 
5:00— (4) Perry Mason 
(6) Mister Ed 
5:30— (6) Superman 


2 4 . M is c . fo r S ale 


M U S T S E L L 
I!*f»7 BSA, 650 
Good condition 
126 
1965 Singer sewing m idline in 
Kor,“ 
beautiful walnut consolette, used 
... 
MODfcl ag inch M aple ste re o 
v ery little. Fully equipped to c a ll 474-4622. 
zig-zag, monogram, applique and; 
--—77------ 
r 
make many fancy designs. $35.00 J!,,d 
3 "’“ 
s 
cash or 9 pay ments of $4.50 mo. 
GAS RANGE; electric re frig e rato r. 
2 door, top freezer. 474-3767 


E V A N S 
/ 
R E A L T Y 


J OHN A. EVANS, Realtor 
HO W. Main St. — 4/4 4266 


MIDDLE -STATES HOMES 
Write for free illustrations & m- 
formatio about our programs of 
custom built NEW HOMES and 
Vacation Resort NEV- 
HOMES 
with appliances, carpeting, etc. 
Mortgage Funds av ailable ev ery 
where. The $400 down pay ment 
can be paid in small progress 
pay ments. 
Monthly 
pay ments 
$6.41 for ev ery $1000 borrowed. 
Nice 
locations 
accepted 
any ­ 
where. Cost of the lot or land 
y ou select will be paid from the 
Mortgage Proceeds. Satisfaction 
assured. 
Write 
M I D D L E 
STATES HOMES, Box No. 24036, 
Columbus, Ohio 43224. 


Phone 474-3733 


Electrolux sweeper runs 


like 
new, 
uses 
paper 


bags. 
For quick sale. 


$10.00. Phone 474 3/33. 


SINGER 


Zig Zag equipped, sewing ma­ 
chine. 
Buttonholes, 
scallops, 
monograms, fancy designs au­ 
tomatically . $36.00 due. Terms 
arranged. 1-221 9*’S7 


Berkline and Stratolounger re­ 
cliners and rocker recliners in 
assorted fabric and v iny l. $8 9.95 
& up. 


MASON FURNITURE 
121-125 North Court 
Phone 474-3296 


K IR B Y - K IR B Y 


19 67 TRIU M PH B onnev ille T 120 R 
m otorcycle. 
716 E ast Ohio Street 
a fter I p. in. 


4 NEW w hitew all tires. HOO x 15. 
tubeless. List price $212. Will seU 
for $125 . 474-6442. 


GIBSON 
E lectric 
G uitar 
$19 9 .00. 
G ibson 
A m plifier 
included a t no 
additional charge. The Cole Music 
C om pany, 
17 
South 
Paint, 
C hilli­ 
cothe. O Call 773-7344. 


BANK RUN G rav el 
Fill D irt - 
Loaded or deliv ered G rav el S creen­ 
ed — Fine for driv ew ays, lanes, 
etc. screen ed coarse for m udholes, 
fUls. 
eh 
Clean G rav el 
for Con­ 
c rete 
Raleigh 
Spradlin, 
474-4127 


Vacuum cleaner — Lots of suc­ 


tion, original $165.00. Assume 
. 


$54.00 
balance. 
$5 8 0 
month. 2 7 . P e ts 


1-221 928 7 


LEFT ON LAY A WAY 
1967 DIAL-O-MATIC 


R E PO SSESSED 
— Console 
m odel 
stereo-radio com bination with m any 
deluxe features. E xtern al speaker 
jack s. 
4 speed 
turntable, v ernier 
tuning, etc. Full balance due only 
$88 44 or 
pay’ts. 
of 
$7.00 
per 
m onth. Call 474-5180 


2 6. W a n t e d to B u y 


FEA T H E R B E D S 
w anted 
also old | 
guns, dishes, w atches and antiques. 
W rite Ja m es St. 
John. 
Box 
454. j 
G reenfield. Indiana. Giv e location. 
Will call soon. 


5 :4 5 — (6) 
5:55— (IO ) 


6:00— (4) 


(6) 
6:2 5 — (IO ) 


6:30- t4) 


(IO ) 
7 :00- (4) 
(IO ) 


7 :30- (4) 
(6) 
(IO ) 
8 :30— (6) 


(IO ) 


9 OO— (4) 
(6) 


(IO ) 
9 :30—(IO ) 
10:00— (4) 


(IO) 


i: % . (4 ) 


(6) 
(IO ) 


11:30— (4) 
(6) 
( IO) 


1:00- (4) 


Local News — C 
The J udge - drama 


e 
News. 
W e a t h e r , 
Sports — C 
Merv Griffin 
Weather, M a r k e t 
Report — C 
News — Huntley • 
Brinkley — C 
News — Cronkite—C 
Twilight Zone 
News, W e a t h e r , 
Sports — C 
The Virginian — C 
Custer — C 
Lost in Space — C 
Second KH) Years— 
C 
Bev erly Hillbillies 
Bob Hope - C 
Mov ie 
- “ The Gar­ 
ment J ungle" —19 5/ 
Green Acres 
He aud She — C 
Run For Your Life 


— C 
Dundee 
and 
T Ii e ; 
Culhane — C 
News, 
W e a t h e r , 
Sports — C 
Local News 
News, Weather and 
Sports — C 
J ohnny Carson — C 
J oey Bishop — C 
Mov ie — “ The Sea 
Chase” — 1955—C 
This Week — Local 
News 


Thurs day 


(C) Denotes Color Telecasts 


4:00— (4) Match Game—C 


(IO) 
4:25— (4) 
4:30— (4) 
( IO) 


SJM)— (4) 
( 6) M 
5 :3 0 — (4) 
(6) 
5:45— (6) 
5:55— (IO) 
6:00— (4) 


( 6) 
6:25— (I O) 


6:30— (4) 


(IO ) 
7:00— (4) 
(I O) 


7:30— (4) 
( 6) 
(IO) 
8 :00— ( 6 ) 
8 :30— (4) 
( 6) 
9 :00— ( 6) 
(IO) 


9 :30— (4) 
(6) 
10:00— (4) 
( 6) 
10:30— (6) 
11:00— (4) 


( 6) 
(IO ) 


11:30- (4) 
(IO) 


( 6) 


Secret Storm 
News — C 
Gilligan’s Island ~C 
Mov ie 
- 
“ Battle of 
Rogue 
Riv er’ —19 34 
- C 
Perry Mason 
ister Ed 
Leav e It to Beav er 
Superm an 
Local News 
In The Know—C 
News, Weather and 
Sports — C 
Merv Griffin 
Weather, Market re­ 
port—C 
Huntley - Brinkley, 
news — C 
News — Cronkite—C 
Twilight Zone 
News, W eather 
Sports 
Dame] Boone — C 
Batman — C 
Cimarron Strip — C 
Flying Nun — C 
Ironside — C 
Bewitched — C 
That Girl — C 
Mov ie — “ The Fugi­ 
tiv e Kind” — 19 59 
Dragnet ’67 — C 
Peyton Place — C 
Dean Martin — C 
Good Company — C 
Race to Riches—C 
N e w s , 
Weather, 
Sports 
Local News 
N e w s , 
Weather, 
Sports — C 
J ohnny Carson — C 
Mov ie — “ Night of 
the Q uarter Moon” 
-19 59 
J oey Bishop — C 


FOR SA LE: AKC reg istered m inia­ 
ture D achshund puppies. 474-2446. 


Bobc at Outlook Promis ing, 


But He s s Radiate s Gloom 


THE A & W T railer P ark has spaces 
for ren t. 


TR A ILER 
space 
to r rent. 
Pav ed 
d riv es and soft w ater. 474-409 5. 


R. E. 
Fe a th e rin g h a m 
A uctioneer — Realtor 
Auction Serv ice — Will buy or 
sell on commission. 
A shv iU e, O hio --9 8 3 -3 0 5 1 
Au to In su ra n ce 
lf your ra te s hav e gone up you 
m ay 
sav e 
im po rtan t 
dollar* 
by 
s a itw j . . , 
M. B. Grie st 
IM E 
M ain 
Phone 474-6284 
NATIONW IDE INSURANCE CO 
Home Office, Colum bus. Ohio 


FOR SALE— 19 63 D etroiter. 3 bed- 
IO 
At 
Vi e s 
Pizza 
1021-1023 South Court 


FOR 
SALE. 
19 65. 
16' 2 
ft 
trav el 
trad e r. 
E lectric 
refrig e rato r 
and 
w ater 
heater. 
Sleeps 
4. 
$109 6 
474-5454. 


ELSEA 
Mobile 
Village, 
for 
sale, 
double wide 20 x 50, 19 63 D etroiter, 
3 bedroom s, a ir conditioning, n a t­ 
ural 
gas. 
I'a 
baths, 
located 
on 
large lot in 
Mobile Home 
P ark 
474-2834 after 5:30 


1 3 . A p a r t m e n t s fo r R e n t 


1 9 . F arm s fo r S ale 


LIST your fa rm s w ith G eorge C. 
B arnes. 
R ealtor. 


LIST 
your 
fa rm s 
with 
John 
M. 
B rinker R ealty. Call C harles Nev il, 
I 
S alesm an, 474-39 41. 


HANING'S INC. 


Plumbing — Heating 
Roofing — Sheet Metal 
Pumps and Repair 
158 W. Main St. 
Call Dale Conkle 
Phone 474-4651 


For Any 
Blacktop Re pal’’ Needs 
Call 
CELLAR LUMBER 
766 S. Pickaway St. 
474-69 48 


Ja ck's 
Re fu se Ha u lin g 
Light hauling of any ty pe. Rest 
dentist and Commercial. 
Charles Brown 
305 VV 
Mound - G R \ 3641 


24 MIND l h DRV CLEANING 
We ll drycleun a big 
8 Iii load for you in 
oui 
bngidatre 
Dry 
(Cleaner tor 'inly — 
$2.00 
HADCLir FE 
CLEANERS 
# 
215 E Main St 


4 ROOMS furnished at 203 M ound 
Street 
Call a fter 6 
474 2365 


HALF of new double 
3 bedroom s, 
unfurnished. 
357 
E dw ards 
Road 
Call collect L ancaster. 654-3372 


I KF U R N Is H hU 
I 
i nom 
a pa rt­ 
m ent. U pstairs. Close to downtown 
area 474-379 5. 


NEW, 
2 bedroom 
a partm e n t with 
basem ent 
Im m ediate 
possession. 
$100 
per 
m onth 
E 
R 
B ennett, 
R ealtor. 474-219 7 


54 ACRES — 8 
room 
house with j 
bath, I barn, garage 
Some fru it I 
tree s 
ll m iles E ast of Ctrclev iUe. I 
call 474-7610. 


2 0 . 
L o ts fo r S ale 


N O RTH EN D location M arshall sub­ 
div ision. 474-4622 


LOT 
for 
sale. 
South 
Bloomfield, 
474-6877 aft*! 6 p 
ITI 


2 2 . B u s. O p p o r t u n it ie s 


SPARE TIME INCOME 


Refilling and collecting money 
from NEW TYPE high quality 
com operated dispensers in this 
area. No selling. To qualify y ou 
must hav e car, references, $600 
to $2,9(K) cash Sev en to twelv e 
hours weekly can net ex cellent 
monthly income. More full time. 
For personal 
interv iew 
write 
W I N D S O R 
DISTRIBUTING 
COMPANY, 6 N. BALPII AVE. 
PITTSBURGH, PA. 
15202. In­ 
clude phone number 


2 3 . F in a n c ia l 


Sewing machine. Built in attach 
ments. 2lG ZAG, buttonhole, de­ 
signs etc. Walnut console. As­ 
sume 
balance. 
$66.00. 
$6.25 
month. 1-221-928 7. 


2 9 . G a r .-P r o d u c e - S e e d s 


A PPLES. 
$1 25 
bushel 
and 
up. 
Also m elons. 
G aylord 
Phillips. 
3 
m iles W est of A m anda, tu rn N orth 
off U. S. 22 at D utch 
H o l l o w 
Auto P a rts, 500 ft. 


( . o o d 
A 
i a 
r 


New tires priced as low 
$10.75 plus tax . 
MACS 


474-3153 


3 0 . L iv e s to c k 


as 


P ure bred m eat type black Poland 
China 
B oars 
R ichard 
Selm er 
474-3472 


SEVEN registered, yearling Colum ­ 
bia ram : 
$70 each. P ure Colum bia 
ram lam bs ready f n light serv ice 
Not registered, 
$50 
each. 
N o t 
shown on Sunday. C hester B. Als- 
pa ch. Phone 837-7368, Canal Win­ 
chester, Ohio. 


3 2 . P u b lic S a le 


2 1 . R e al E s t a t e - T r a d e 


HOMES 
W* 
Sa* our seiaetioo fe im** our 
of new and used ■ w a y « r#und| 
ho w ls for ta le . ^ C irc le v ille 
A n d c e l l u s t o 
sell your present 
home. 
A D K I N S REALTY CO. 


474-2061 


IN T E R E S T E D in purchasing sha re s 
of pe rm a n en t capital stock of Scio­ 
to Building & Loan Co. of C ircle­ 
v ille, Ohio. Any num ber of sha res, 
all replies will be kept strictly con­ 
fidential. R eply to Box 452 B The 
H erald 


l l . A u to R e p air S e r v ic e 


ZS A Z S A GABOR s ay s - 
SAVE MON EY at A AM CO 


WORLD'S LARGEST AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION 
S P E C IA L IS T S ! 


(Ll Cl US I Vt WTM U M M 
LIFETIME GUARANTEE 
A e t parti and labor on all M M M 
c us tom re built trans mis s ions and 
torque c onv e rte rs as long as you own 
y our own e ar and s e rv ic e it annually 
at a mode s t s e rv ic e c harge at atry af 
the 3 00 AAMC0 shops c oas t to c oas t 
The re e m no othe r guarante e s Ilk * 
this one . 
OMIT M M M HAS I * 
wo Mown ooww 
8 17 Eastern Av e. 
Chillicothe, Ohio 
Phone 775-6700 
Open. Mon. thru 111. H to 8 
Saturday S to 


2 1 . Re al Es tate -Tra de 


S. Ins truc tions 


PIANO ie 
v arsity C 
cie Ville 
474 7730 


HIGH SCHOOL AT HOME 
Fmush High School al home rn 
your hpart* time \uth the 
LARGES! AND OLDEST 
HOME STUDY HIGH SCHOOL 
VV rile lot* Free Booklet— 
TeUa How 
APPROVED I OR 
VETERANS TRAINING 
AMERICAN SCHOOL 
DEPT. CV-y 
4 E. Long St. 
Coloni buts, Oil lo 4 
Name 
. . . . . . . 
. . . . . . 
A d d re s s 
.. 
.............. 
City 
.......... .. . 
. 
. . . . . . . 


6 . Male He lp Wa nte d 


KE FIR ED m en for light labor and 
som e sale* w ork 
Apply in person 
J 
i> Good e N ut aery . betw een 
5 
p in and 6p m 


USL I UL CLASSI I-1 LOS 


Re a l Esta te fo r Sa le 


In Williamsport 
4 bedroom one floor plan home 
Paneled 
family room, Utility room. Two baths 
Built in kitchen with 
electric ov en and range. LoU of cabinet space. Hot water 
gas 
fired heat 
Attached two car garage Only two years old 
Priced 
right and ready to mov e into 


Inv estment property in Grov e City 
AU brick 
4 unit apart­ 
ment. AU rented and showing a good return 


Located in the North End One floor plan home. Has two car 
attached garage 
Full basement One and 'a baths 3 bedrooms. 
Corner lot Atwater School district. 


North ( ourl SI 
I wo story frame 
4 rooms on ground floor 
Iwo rooms up 
Bath and ta. New gas F A 
furnace 
Attached 
garage. Check with us for details on this one 


South Edge of Williamsport One floor plan home, J bedrooms 
and bath 
Dining room, City water Natural gas Could be made 
real nice Priced under $10, (MXI Ut). 


See us for Hie home of tomorrow 
All electric. Gold Medallion 
i 
' bedroom homes Quality built and priced right. Logan 
Elm Village 


Cu rtis W. Hix Re a lto r 


228 ^ N Court St — 4/4-5130, 474 2433 


ORREN STOUT 
474-*,214 
W. L CLARK 
474 


2 4 . Mis c . for Sale 


GOOD used 12 Cu. ft. G en eral Elec- I 
trio refrig erato r. $30 
474-69 9 7 


FOR 


• Building lots it acreage 
• Home rentals 
• Furniture storage 


Contact 


Ch e ste r Blu e 


474 4600 — 474 5265 


School Jackets—Award Sweaters 
Bullard Tables—J able Tennis 
Bowling Shirts and Blouses 
Brunswick Balls, Bag., & Shoes 


Trophies of AU Kind 


Scioto Valley Bowling Serv ice 


274 E. Long St. 
Columbus, Ohio 
or Call 
Cla rk M a rtin 


474 6154 — Alter 6:30 P M 
USED 
FURNITURE 


Alway s a large selection 
ot good used furniture. 


Buy where y our money 
goes further. 


New and Used Furniture 
FORD'S 
155 W Main 


Small Fngine Serv ice 
Briggs & Straw n 
Lawson, Tecumseh, 
J acobsen Grav ely , 
Homelite 


A U C T I O N 


Re a l Esta te — Fa rm Ma ch in e ry 


Three Tractors — Self-Propelled Combine — Truck 
Sa tu rd a y Octo b e r 28, 1 9 67 


Beginning at 11:00 A M. 
LOCATED: On the premises on the New Holland-Clarksburg 
Pike, one mUe south of its intersection with U. S. Route 22 
(said intersection being the first road east of New Holland going 
south). 


REAL ESTATE 
(Sells at 2:00 P M ) 


406 9 6 Acres rn two parcels east of and adjacent to New’ Holland, 
Pickaway County, Ohio, known as the Withgott Farm in Pick 
away County. Ohio, aud are being sold through a partition pro­ 
ceeding. in Case No. 24820 in the Court of Common Pleas of 
Pickaway County, Ohio. The two parcels are separated from 
each other by the New Holland-Clarksburg Road along which 
they hav e a common frontage and will be offered separately and 
then together for the best price. They must sell for more than 
2/3 of the appraised v alue, 10% on day of sale and balance on 
confirmation of sale and deliv ery of deed. The first parcel 
consists of 19 2.1 acres in Perry Township along the N**w Holland 
Clarksburg Pike and generally northeast of the same and bound 
cd on the north by the Pennsylv ania 
Railroad, appraised at 
$105.655 00 and being 'lYact No. I in the petition for partition 
The second parcel consists of 214.86 acres. 84 of which is situated 
in New Holland, the balance in Perry Township; between the 
Egypt Pike on the west thereof and the New Holland Clarksburg 
Pike on the northeast thereof, appraised at $123,544.30 and de­ 
scribed as Tract No. 2 and T ract No 3. ami Tract No 4 in the 
petition for partition. 


FARM MACHINERY 
(Sells at HMX) A M.) 


19 62 Massey Harris (35) 8-foot self-propelled combine (good)* 
19 65 Massey Ferguson 135. L P. 637 hours; 19 61 Massey F e r­ 
guson 85 (diesel) power steering, L P . adjustable wheels, 19 00 
hours, heat houser; 1961 Oliv er 880 (diesel) L.P. good rubber; 
3 point hitch for Oliv er; heat houser for Oliv er; Massey F er­ 
guson 4 row rear type cultiv ators (good); Allis Chalmers 4-row 
rear type cultiv ators (good); John Deere plow 3x14” , 3 point; 
AC. plow 3x14 , 3 point, Massey Harris plow 3x14” , 3 point; 
John Deere 10-foot whee] disc; IO fool double disc; John Deere 
cuJtipacker ll foot; 19 65 John Deere 49 4 corn planter with her­ 
bicide attachment; John Deere 17-7 drill on rubber; Nev / Idea 
/•foot pull type tractor mower (like new); MLC, side deliv ery 
rake on rubber; John Deere 14-T P TM), haler (good); bale mov er 
.'.Moot (new); Freem an ILI) loader with bucket & blade; John 
Deere 
“ N 
tractor spreader on rubber 
P T O . ; 
Ford 5-foot 
•otary cutter. Oliv er 2-row corn picker (model 4); John Deere 
trow rotary hoe; 32 foot elev ator; 3 flat beds for wagons; Con 
internal post hole digger; Speedy 9 row weed sprayer; Smiley 
bag, 12-foot, two wheel trailer; Ford back blade; New Holland 
rom sheller 
4 sets of tractor wheel weights; two 
10x 14 hog 
tioxe.s: I Smiley 16 hole feeder; one 20 hole wooden hog feeder; 
one metal feeder; 1 feed boxes on runners; 2 sum m er nog foun 
la,ILS 
2 tractor seeders PTM) ; 50 steel mists (good); 2 pump 
jacks, 2’ i ll P gas motor; three hydraulic cylinders; miscellan 
ecus tools, forks; shov els; and other items too numerous to men 
lion 


COLUMBUS. Ohio (A P)—Ohio 
Univ ersity has a key football 
v ictory in the bank and impo­ 
tent Marshall as its next foe. 
But Bobcat Coach Bill Hess 
isn’t ready to break into a big 
grin. 
In 
fact, 
he’s 
unhappy 
about a lot of things. 
Ohio nipped Toledo 20-14 last 
Saturday in the grid inaugural 
for both schools when tailback 
Dick Conley scored in the final 
fiv e minutes. 
“ I was not pleased with our 
showing. Both our offensiv e and 
defensiv e units cam e through 
when they had to but I expect 
more 
from 
our offense 
with 
more hard work.” Hess said. 
And 
after hearing assistant 
coach Cliff HeffeLfinger’s scout­ 
ing report on Marshall. Hess 
noted: 
“ We must try to polish up 
and eliminate our mistakes and 
we better be ready to play a 
tough 
opponent 
Saturday be­ 
cause 
I 
believ e 
that’s 
what 
Marshall will be." 
The Thundering Herd collaps­ 
ed after holding a 6-0 halftime 
adv antage and took a 30-6 lick­ 
ing at the hands of Morehead, 
Ky., the Ohio Valley Conference 
king. 
In other MAC action. West­ 
ern Michigan topped Miami 24 
14 
in 
a 
battle 
between 
last 
year’s co champs before a rec­ 
ord league crowd of 22MMK), and 
Buffalo walloped Kent State, 30 
6. 
Hess said he was surprised 
by 
the 
Kent and 
Marshall 
scores but not particularly by 
the Western v ictory. 
Mess noted that fumbles and 
other costly errors kept Mar* 
shall in hot water against the 
Kentuckians. 
Two things on tile agenda 
this week will be better pass 
protection for quarterback Clev e 
Bryant and more work for die 
secondary against passes. 
“ I was unhappy with our in 
ability to stop Toledo on the 


third and long situation,” Hess 
said. 
On the brighter side, he said 
he was not displeased with the 
play of his sophomores and sin­ 
gled 
out 
Bobby 
Jackson, 
a 
Portsmouth senior, who starred 
defensiv ely. 
Jackson picked off a pass in 
the second quarter and sped 27 
yards 
to 
a 
touchdown thats 
described 
as 
one 
of 
the big 
plays of the gam e 
Ail tile other MAC team s play 
outside the league this week 
Bowling Green opens at home 
against the Quantico Marines. 
Kent plays host to Northern Il­ 
linois, Miami v isits Tuiane, To­ 
ledo goes to Xav ier and West 
era Michigan journeys to Arkan­ 
sas State. 


IN I III 
PROO IT E ( OUK I OI 
PIC KAWAY COUNTY, OHIO 
L ym an E. E ngland. Ad­ 
m in istra to r With the Will 
A nnexed of the E state of 
Anna M ae T em ple, deceased, 
PlainU ff, 
-v s.- 
M ount of P raise Bible 
CoUege, also known as the 
C irclev ille Bible CoUege, « 
corporation, et a1 . 
D efendants. 
CASE NO. i2« 09 
NOTICE O F PU BLIC SALE 
In the pu rsu an ce of the o rd er of 
the 
P ro bate 
C ourt of 
Pickaw ay. 
County, I will offer for sale a t pub­ 
lic auction on the 23rd d ay of O c­ 
tober. 19 67, at 2:00 o’clock P 
M . 
at the door of the C ourt House the 
following d escribed real e sta te ; 
S ituated in the Courtly of Pickaw ay, 
in the State of Ohio, and in the City 
of C irclev ille, bounded and d e sc rib­ 
ed as follows: 
I^ot 
N um ber 
Fifteen H undred and 
sixty-fiv e 
<15651 
in 
the 
H alf and 
H effn er’s A ddition to the said City 
of C irclev ille, Ohio. 
P rio r Utle referen ce : 
D eed 
Book 
131, page 219 , 
Said prem ises located a t 456 E ast 
Ohio S treet. Clrclev tU e, Ohm. 
Said prem ise s appraised a t $4,500 
and m ust be sold for not less than 
tw o-thirds of said appraised v alue 
and the te rm s of sale a re ; IO per 
cent on day of sale and balance in 
cash w ithin thirty day*. 
L ym an E. E ngland. Ad­ 
m in istra to r With the WlU 
A nnexed of the E state of 
A nna Mae T em ple, d e ­ 
ceased. 
R ichard W Penn, A ttorney 
114*a N orth C ourt Street 
C irclev ille. Ohio 43113 
Sept. 20. 27; Oct. 4, ll. 18 


CROSSWORD PUZZLE 


TRUCK 
1958 Dodge truck, two ton, with hydraulic dump, gram it 
racks. 
block 


NOTE; Due to lack of small items, plan to attend on time 
I EH MS: Cash for personal property. Inspection inv ited Lunch 
will bi serv ed 


Richard W, Penn, Attorney 
1J4U North Court Street, Circlev ille, Ohio 
John E Ross, Hubert Watson and John Stewart of Ross Auction Co, 
C o n t r a c t o r s & i n d u s t r i a l WaJ» hjngton C\ H , Ohio 
w u s u i d i and A social** Auctioneers of Personal Property 
Supply Company 
Corner Route 22 it 56 West 
Circlev ille, Ohio 
474r7553 
SOB JOHNSON, Owner 
------- 


MARGARET WITHGOTT 
New Holland, Ohio 


W alison Leifct, Auctioneer of Real Estate 
Circlev ille, Ohio 


ACROSS 
I. Green 
stone 
5. Melv ille 
oh at acier 
9 Foreboding’ 
IO Desert 
11. Subsided 
12. Afloat 
14. Homes 
16. Pronoun 
17. Com pa ap 
point 
15. Antlered 
animal 
21. Cry of 
ps*p 
22 J og 
25. Becomed 
brittle 
27 Plead 
29 . Arachnid 
31. Greet 
34. Hawaiian 
bird 
36. Grit 
37. Senorita’^ 
affirmativ e 
38 Prtar’a 
title 
40 Specimen 
43. Clv U 
wrongs 
46 Unite of 
weight 
in India 
47. Two-toed 
sloth 
48 D.Lsh 
49 Indefinite 
amount 
50, DifpatrJi 
DOWN 
I Middleman 
& Larga 
Nwting 
dfcck 


3. Legal 
19. Before 
docu­ 
20. Wealthy 
ment 
23. Kimono 
4. Finished 
adjunct 
5. Moslem 
24. Spread# 
title 
grass 
6. By what 
to dry 
means 7 
26. Tibetan 
7. Arabian 
sheep 
gar­ 
28 Main 
ments 
29. Ten­ 
8 . Church 
der 
official 
30. Spongy 
IL Land of 
32. Ait 
Kipling 
33. False­ 
13. Cute, 
hood# 
aa wood 
36. Apix nni- 
15. Dis- 
ments 
cnm- 
39. Cartoon­ 
matefl 
ist 


41. Bor­ 
rowing 
animal 
42 Scheme 
4!. Sandy's 
headgear 
45. Woo 


P 


I 
Z 
s 
A 


i 


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fe 
I 
A 


9 
IO 
V a 
ll 


% 


i i 
1 4 


14 
is 


% 


IO 


IT 


/ . . 
i6 
N 
l o 


% 
2* "I 


ZZ 
2% 
2 4 
zs 
2b 


J% 
ZI 
th 


24 
b o 
% 
El 
52 
SS 


44 
% 


4S 
4b P % 


4 7 


b t 
b i 
4 0 
41 
42 


45 
A i 
AS 


• 


4b 


% 


47 
/ / 
A t 


4 4 
i 


%o 


I 4 .0 


C la s s ifie d s 
6- Male H#|p wanted 


Thorn* 
474-JI iii 
Per word for I insertion 
. .. 
Be 
(M inimum charge $1 OO) 
Per word for 3 Insertion!. 
.. 
12c 
(M inimum IO words) 
Per words for 6 Insertions 
18c 
(M inimum IO words) 
Per word 34 Insertions 
... 
SOC 1 
(4 weeks) 
(M inimum IO words) 
ABOVE RATES BASED ON CON­ 
SECUTIVE DAYS 
Classified word Ads will be accept­ 
ed until ♦ p. rn. previous day for 
publication the following day. The 
publisher reserves the right to edit 
or reject any classified advertising 
copy. 
Error In Advertising 
•houid 
be 
reported 
im m ediately. 
The Circleville Herald will not be 
responsible for more than one in- i 
correct insertion. 


3. Lost and Found 


DRAFTSMAN - FEE PAID. 
National 4A Company. Plenty of 
room to grow. Mechanical. $52- 
7200 Call for interview. 
Bob Parry 
Cal! 654-5323 
SNELLING Sc SNELLING 
109 S. Columbus St., Lancaster 


13. Apartments for Rant 


7A. Help Wonted Gen. 


YOU need money, We need help. 
Boyd Durn, 124. Tarlton. 


FOUND at The Herald office. I pair 
ladies sunglasses, and 
I 
set 
of 
GMC auto keys. 


LOST — 
Large German Shepherd 
dog. Light brown 
3 m iles North 
of Circleville. 
$2o 
reward, alive. 
474-3538. 


4. Business Service 


SIGN painting and d eign in g, free 
sketching. Lester Lingo 474-5925. 


WATER 
Softener s a l t . S t a e l e 
Produce Company 


CAB DRIVERS, Apply a) cab st a 
bon 
on 
Lancaster 
Pike 
Or 
call 
474-7122 for appointment. 


HANDICAPPED Persons’ 
National 
Company will give hourly rate plus 
bonus to learn pleasant easy tele 
phone soles from your home Com­ 
plete training provided 
Call Lan­ 
caster. collect 653-2195. J p. rn 
to 
9 p. 
rn. 
Thursday 
and 
Friday 
nights 


9. Situotions Wanted 


WANTED ride to Columbus down­ 
town Working 8 to 5 Call 474-5694 


WILL baby sit for sm all children in 
my home. 474-7957. 


TERM ITES — guaranteed control. 
Contact your 
reliable 
Kochheiser 
Hardware. 474-5338. 


TREE trim m ing, removing, spray­ 
ing, firewood, and roof repair. l i n ­ 
coln Isaac. Phone 474-7272 


SEPTIC lank and sewer cleaning 
. . . 
. 
_ 
- 
.service anywhere 
anytime. L t n- ( I U . A u t o m o b i l e s t o r 9 0 1 0 
coin Isaac. Phone 474-7272. 


WILL DO house cleaning. Call after 
5 p. rn. 474-5185. 


BABY SITTING, and ironings, light 
housekeeping. Anytime. Inquire 420 
John Street. 


WOULD like ride to Columbus in the 
area of Long and High 
Leaving 
Circleville at 7 and Columbus at 5. 
Call Mrs 
Carl S 
Mader. 474-3774 
after 6 p. rn. 


LARGE 3 room apartm ent, upstairs 
Downtown 
Unfurnished, 
Adults 
$65. 474-3201; 474-5886 


14. Houses for Rent 


4 
ROOMS. 
217 
W 
Corwin. 
$40 
983-4375 


IO ROOM m odern house, no pets. 
Inquire first house North of Prairie 
Lanes Bowling Alley 


15. Sleeping Rooms 


FURNISHED room rn m odem hom e 
Call 474-2303 


SLEEPING 
room 
for 
lady. 
Share 
house privileges. 
Write 
Box 
493 
C c-o The Herald. 


21. Reel Estate - Trode 24. Misc. for Sale 


17. Wanted to Rent 


APPROXIMATELY 30 x 50 com m er­ 
cial building. 
220 
volts 
electric. 
Bay door 13 ft. high. Call 474-2600 


THREE bedroom home, with dining 
area, ga rage, north-end preferred 
Dupont em ployee 
474-7511, E xten­ 
sion 107 or 474-3111 extension 373. 


18. Houses for Sale 


7 ROOM house for sale, two car 
garage. *a acre corner Jot. Phone 
Mr. 
or 
Mrs 
Nelson 
Purdue. 
474-7967 
Stoutsville, 
Ohio after 
6 
p. rn. 


W. G. STEWART — Well drilling, 
guaranteed 
water 
Individual —• 
contractor. 474-3217. 


54 PACKARD, Uke new, new 
bat­ 
tery, 474 6442 


WELL DRILLING — Joe Christy— 
Amanda 969-3132 — 8 m iles east 
on U. S. 22. 


61 PLYMOUTH. Uke new 
Pickaway, call after 5. 
441 North 


IKES Septic tank ana sewer clean­ 
ing 
service. 
Phone 
474-4566 
or 
474-6336. 


KELLER’S T.V. S alts and Service. 
Service 
in 
the Circleville 
Stouts­ 
ville, Tarlton area. 474-4649. 


CARY Blevins tree trim m ing, roof­ 
ing and chimney work Work guar­ 
anteed. Free estim ate. 474-7863 and 
474-2079. 


FOR the best in trash and rubbish 
hsuling 
Residential and Com m er­ 
cial — Call Larry’s Refuse Haulers 
474-6174.________ 
____ 
______ 


NORMAN Welding Service 
Struc 
tural steel, pipe and general re­ 
pair Will do by contract or by the 
hour 
Conscienious certified w eld­ 
er. 474-3965 
1310 South Pickaway 


ONE owner 1962 Comet Custom E x­ 
cellent condition. Complete engine 
overhaul. Call 983-5442 


64 CORVETTE Stingray, autom atic 
transm ission Must sell, leaving for 
service. 126 Dunmore Road. 


For Your Nev/ and 
Used Car Needs See 


W c s E d s t r o m M o t o r s 
150 E. Main St. 
Open Mon., Wed , Fri., 
til 9 


FOR 
SALE by owner. 
Modern 
3 
bedroom fhom e on I acre ground at 
1225 
S. 
Court 
Call 
474-3655 
for 
appointment to sec property 


At Your Service: 
Mrs. Jeanne Bach. 474-4134 
Mrs. Paul McGinnis, 474 3760 
James W. Ford, 474-4581 
E. R. Bennett, Realtor 
127Va E. Main St. 
474-2197 


Circleville Realty 
Ail Types of Real Estate 
Insurance 
Office Phone — 474-3795 
Residence — 474-5722 
Farms—-City Property—Loans 
i52 W. Main St. 


w . d. heiskell' & T on 
Realtors 
City and Farm Sales 
and Financing 
129V* W. Main — Circleville 
474-6137 
Residence — 474-7144 
Williamsport — 986-2751 


8 FOOT Hydroplane 
Best 
Offer 
474*485$ 
_________ 


SHALLOW well pump 'a HP and 40 
gallon tank Will 
sell together or 
.separate 474-2585 


22 
The Circleville H e r a ld , Wed. Sept. 20, 1967 
Circleville, Ohio 


Waler 
Systems 


Daily Television Schedule 


ONE floor plan ranch style home 
for sale by ow’ner in quiet northeaid 
location 
N ew ly decorated. Priced 
under $18,000 Call 474-6601 


OWNER to sell 11a year old 3 bed­ 
room. 
14 x 
24 
attached 
garage, 
ll 
x 
16 
Patio. 
Wood 
windows. 
brick front. Located in Cooke 
& 
Crites Addition, South Bloomfield. 
$16,800 fuU price. Call 983-5442 


- I 


For 
TOP VALUE 
Used Cars 
See: 
CUSTOM Slaughtering. Processing, 


choice beef°*byS side or quarter ii Yates Motor Co. 
Vvinh r&tp financing 
quality pork, bank rate financing 
Circleville 
Fast 
Freeze, 
Edison 
Ave 474-2701. 
IKE'S 


Septic Tank and Sewer Cleaning 
Service. All Work Guaranteed 
To be sure, call . . . 
474-4566 


R . E. 
Featheringham 
Auctioneer — Realtor 
Auction Service — Will buy or 
sell on commission. 
Ashville, Ohio - 983-3051 


1220 S. Court 


12. Trailers 


THE A 4 W Trailer Park has spaces 
for rent. 


TRAILER 
space 
tor rent. 
Paved 
drives and soft water. 474-4095 


Auto Insurance 
Ii your rate* have gone up you 
m ay 
save 
important 
dollars 
by 
*t*l“ *>g • • • 
M. B. Griest 
159 E 
Main 
Phone 474-6284 
NATIONWIDE INSURANCE CO 
Home Office, Columbus. Ohio 


FOR SALE—1963 Detroiter. 3 bed 
rooms. 54 x IO 
At V ic’s Pizza 
1021-1023 South Court. 


FOR 
SALE, 
1965 
16’* 
ft 
travel 
trailer 
E lectric 
refrigerator 
and 
water 
heater. 
Sleeps 
4. 
$1096 
474-5454. 


BY OWNER — Jefferson Addition — 
I story, 3 bedroom hom e Carpet­ 
ed, L shape living room, ceram ic 
in bath 
and 
kitchen. 
Alum inum 
storm s 
and 
shutters, 
concrete 
drive, 2 car garage, full basem ent, 
acre lot. 
back 
yard 
fenced. 
Priced 
right. 
Will 
help finance. 
474-7396 


O i l 
C e n t r a l 
F u r n a c e 
Clarksburg. O. Living room, din­ 
ing room, kitchen, 2 bedrooms, 
utilty room, part basement, oil 
central furnace, storms, screens, 
garage, storage building, clean, 
remodeled one floor plan on 
a nice corner lot. Should G.I. 
with nothing down. Vacant. 


G e o r g e C . 
B a r n e s , 


R e a l t o r 


Nick Stonerock,Associate 
474-5275 


19. Farms for Sale 


LIST your farm s with George C. 
Barnes. 
Realtor. 


LIST 
your 
farm s 
with 
John 
M 
Brinker Realty. Call Charles Nevtl, 
Salesm an, 474-3941. 


Hatfield Realty 
103 E. MAIN ST. 


Phone Office — 474-6294 
or 474-6562 
Residence — 4.4-5719 


Larry and Ruth McFaddeu 
474-3995 


Dwight L. Grubb — 474-4941 
Marjorie Spalding, Saleslady 
474-5204 
Ideal Location 


3 bedroom home, exceptionally 
nice kitchen, dining room, living 
room and nice enclosed porch. 
Full basement. Completely re­ 
modeled and priced to sell. 


E 
V 
A 
N 
s 


A— ^ 
I U a i r \ 


JOHN A. EVANS. Realtor 
HO W. Main St. — 474 4266 


For Farm A Suburban Homes 
Kochheiser Hardware 
113 W Main St. 


Vacuum cleaner, Kirby. Runs 
like new. Has attachments in­ 
cluding polisher to wax floors 
and 
shampooer 
for 
carpets. | 
Must sacrifice. Make just 8 pay- j 
menus of $4.00 a month. Phone 
474-3733. 
j 
MUST SELL 
1965 Singer sewing machine rn 
beautiful walnut consolette, used 
very little 
Fully equipped to 
zig-zag, monogram, applique and 
make many fancy designs. $35 OO 
cash or 9 payments of $4 50 mo. i 
Phone 474 3733. 


W 
e d n e s d a y 


(C) Denotes Color Telecasts 


4:00— (4) Match Game—C 
vlO) Secret Storm, ser­ 
ial 
4:25— (4) News 
- C 
4:30— (4) Gilligan’s Island—C 
(IO) Movie — “ Maidish” 
1956 
5:00— (4) Perry Mason 
(6) Mister Ed 
5:30— (6) Superman 


45— (6) 
55—(IO) 


24. Misc. for Sale 


MIDDLE STATES HOMES 
Write for free illustrations A rn- 
formalin about our programs of 
custom built NEW HOMES and 
Vacation Resort NEV' HOMES 
with appliances, carpeting, etc. 
Mortgage Funds available every 
where. The $400 down payment 
can be paid in small progress 
payments. 
Monthly 
payments 
$6.41 for every $1000 borrowed. 
Nice 
locations 
accepted 
any­ 
where. Cost of the lot or land 
you select will be paid from the 
Mortgage Proceeds. Satisfaction 
assured 
Write 
M I D D L E 
STATES HOMES, Box No. 24036, 
Columbus, Ohio 43224. 


Electrolux sweeper runs 


like 
new', 
uses 
paper 


bags. 
For quick sale 


$10.00. Phone 474 3I33. 


SINGER 


Zig Zag equipped, sewing ma­ 
chine. 
Buttonholes, 
scallops, 
monograms, fancy designs au­ 
tomatically. $36.00 due. Terms 
arranged. 1-221-9287. 
___ 


BerkJine and Stratolounger re­ 
cliners and rocker recliners in 
assorted fabric and vinyl. $89.95 
A up. 


MASON FURNITURE 
121-125 North Court 
Phone 474-3296 


1957 HSA, 650 
(iood rendition 
126 
Dunmore Road. 


67 MOD t i , 86 inch Maple Stereo. 
Call 474-4622 


21" COLOR com bination, 3 m onths 
old Call 474-4822 


GAS RANGE; electric refrigerator. 
2 door, top freezer. 474-3767. 


1967 TRIUMPH Bonneville T 120 R 
m otorcycle 
716 East Ohio Street 
after I p 
in. 


4 NEW whitewall tires, 900 x 
15. 
tubeless. List price $212. Will seLl 
for $125. 474-6442 


6:00— (4) 


(6 ) 
6:25—(IO) 


6:30- (4) 


(IO ) 
7:00— (4) 
(IO ) 


7:30- (4) 
(6 ) 
(IO) 
8:30— (6) 


(IO ) 


9 OO— ( 4 1 
(6 ) 


GIBSON 
Electric 
Guitar 
$199.00. 
Gibson 
Am plifier 
included at 
no 
additional charge. The Cole Music 
Company, 
17 
South 
Paint, 
Chilli­ 
cothe, O. Call 773-7344. 


b a n k RUN G ravel 
m i Dirt - 
Loaded or delivered Gravel Screen­ 
ed — Fine for drivew ays, lanes, 
etc. Screened coarse for m udholes, 
fills, 
eti 
Clean Gravel for Con­ 
crete 
Raleigh 
Spradlin, 
474-4127 


i; 


i i 


GO) 
:30—(IO) 
:00— (4) 


(IO ) 


OO - (4) 


(6 ) 
(IO) 


30- (4) 
(6 ) 
(IO ) 


ELSEA 
Mobile 
Village, 
for 
sale, 
double wide 20 x 50. 1963 Detroiter, 
3 bedrooms, air conditioning, nat­ 
ural 
gas. 
IG 
baths, 
located 
on 
large lot In 
Mobile Home 
Park 
474-2834 after 5:30 


54 ACRES 
8 
room 
house with 
bath, 
I bam . garage 
Some fruit j 
trees 
ll m iles L ast of CircleviUe. I 
call 474-7610. 


20. Lots for Sale 


NORTHEND location Marshall sub­ 
division. 474-4622 


HANING'S INC. 


Plumbing — Heating 
Roofing — Sheet Metal 
Pumps and Repair 
158 VV. Main St. 
Call Dale Conkle 


P h o n e 4 7 4 - 4 6 5 1 


13. Apartments for Rent 


4 ROOMS furnished at 203 Mound 
Street 
Call after 6 
474 2365 


HALF of new double 
3 bedrooms, 
unfurnished 
357 
Edwards 
Road 
Call collect Lancaster. 654 3372 


UNFURNISHED, 
I 
room 
apart­ 
ment. Upstairs. Close to downtown 
area 474-3795. 


NEW, 2 bedroom 
apartm ent with 
basem ent 
Im m ediate 
possession. 
$100 
per 
month. 
E 
R 
Bennett. 
Realtor. 474-2197 


LOT 
for 
sale, 
South 
474-6877 after 6 p 
rn. 
Bloomfield, 


22. Bus. Opportunities 


SPARE TIME INCOME 


Refilling and collecting money 
from NEW TYPE high quality 
coin operated dispensers in this 
area. No selling To qualify you 
must have car, references, $600 
to $2,900 cash. Seven to twelve 
hours weekly can net excellent 
monthly income. More full time. 
For personal 
interview 
write 
W I N D S O R 
DISTRIBUTING 
COMPANY, 6 N. BALPII AVE. 
PITTSBURGH. PA 
15202. In- 
elude phone number 


23. Financial 


KIRBY - KIRBY 


Vacuum cleaner — Lots of suc­ 


tion, original $165.00. Assume 


$54.00 
balance. 
$5 80 
month. 


I 1-221 9287. 


LEFT ON LAY AWAY 
1967 DIAL-O-MATIC 


Sewing machine. Built in attach­ 
ments. ZIG ZAG, buttonhole, de­ 
signs etc. Walnut console. As­ 
sume 
balance. 
$66 00. 
$6.25 
month. 1-221-9287. 


REPOSSESSED 
— Console 
model 
stereo-radio combmation with m any 
deluxe features. External speaker 
jacks. 
4 speed turntable, vernier 
tuning, etc. Full balance due only 
$88 44 or 
pay’ts. 
of 
$7 00 
per 
month 
Call 474-5180 


26. Wonted to Buy 


FEATHERBEDS 
wanted 
also old 
guns, dishes, watches and antiques. 
Write Jam es St. John. 
Box 
454. 
Greenfield. Indiana. Give location. 
W’ill call soon. 


1:00- (4) 


Local News — C 
'The Judge - drama 
e 
News, W e a t h e r , 
Sports — C 
Merv Griffin 
Weather, M a r k e t 
Report — C 
News - Huntley • 
Brinkley — C 
News — Cronkite—C 
Twilight Zone 
News, W e a t h e r , 
Sports — C 
The Virginian — C 
Custer — C 
Lost in Space — C 
Second KHI Years— 
C 
Beverly Hillbillies 
Bob Hope - 
C 
Movie 
“ The Gar­ 
ment Jungle” —1957 
Green Acres 
He and She — C 
Run For Your Life 
—C 
Dundee 
and 
I h e 
Culhane — C 
News, W e a t h e r , 
Sports — C 
Local News 
News, Weather and 
Sports — C 
Johnny Carson — C 
Joey Bishop — C 
Movie — “The Sea 
Chase” — 1955—C 
This Week — Local 
Newg 


Thursday 


(C) Denotes Color Telecasts 


4:00— (4) Match Game—C 


(IO) Secret Storm 
4:25— (4) News — C 
4:30— (4) Gilligiin’s Island ~C 
(IO) Movie — “ Battle of 
Rogue 
R iver'—1954 
- C 
5.00— (4) Perry Mason 
(6) Mister Ed 
5:30— (4) Leave It to Beaver 
(6) Superman 
5:45— (6) Local News 
5:55—(IO) In The Know—C 
6:00— (4) News, Weather and 
Sports — C 
(6) Merv Griffin 
6:25—(IO) Weather, Market re­ 
port—C 
6:30— (4) Huntley * Brinkley, 
news — C 
(lo) News — Cronkite—C 
7 OO— (4) Twilight Zone 
(IO) News, Weather 
Sports 
7 30 
(4) Daniel Boone — C 
16) Batman — C 
(IO) Cimarron Strip — C 
8;oo— (6) Flying Nun — C 
8:30— (4) Ironside — C 
(6) Bewitched — C 
9:00— (6) That Girl — C 
(IO) Movie — “The Fugi­ 
tive Kind” — 1959 
9:30— (4) Dragnet '67 — C 
(6) Peyton Place — C 
10.00— (4) Dean Martin — C 
(6) Good Company — C 
10 30— (6) Race to Riches—C 
11:00— (4) N e w s, 
Weather, 
Sports 
(6) Local News 
(IO) N e w s , 
Weather, 
Sports — C 
11 30— (4) Johnny Carson — C 
GO) Movie — “ Night of 
the Quarter Moon” 
—1959 
(6) Joey Bishop — C 


Bobcat Outlook Promising, 


But Hess Radiates Gloom 


27. Pets 


FOR SA L E : AKC registered m inia­ 
ture Dachshund puppies. 474-2446 


29. Gor.-Produce-Seeds 


APPLES. 
$1 25 
bushel 
and 
up. 
Also melons. 
Gaylord 
Phillips. 
3 
m iles West of Amanda, turn North 
off U 
S 
22 at Dutch H o l l o w 
Auto Parts. 500 ft. 


(.O O I* r*Vl Af! 
30. Livestock 


New tires priced as 
$10.75 plus tax. 
low as 


Pure bred m eat type black Poland 
China 
Boars 
Richard 
Selm er, 
474-3472 


M A C ’S 


474-3153 


SEVEN registered, vearhng Colum­ 
bia ram* $70 each Pure Columbia 
ram lam bs ready for light service 
Not 
registered. 
$50 
each 
N o t 
shown on Sunday. Chester B. Als- 
pach. 
Phone 837-7368. Canal Win­ 
chester, Ohio. 


32. Public Sole 


21. Reel Estate-Trode 


H O M E S 
Wa 
SM our selection 
tree rn eur 
of new and used 
wey around J 
h om es for t e le . 
lCircleville 
A nd c a l l u s to 
sell your present 
home. 
A D K I N S R E A L T Y CO. 


474-2061 


INTERESTED in purchasing shares 
of perm anent capital stock of Scio­ 
to Building & Loan Co. of C ircle­ 
ville, Ohio. Any number of shares. 
all replies will be kept strictly con­ 
fidential. Reply to Box 452 B The 
Herald 


24. Misc. for Sale 


GOOD used 12 Cu ft General E lec­ 
tric refrigerator 
$30 
474-6997 


11. Auto Repair Service 


For Any 
Blacktop Repair Needs 
Call 
CELLAR LUM BER 
766 S. Pickaway St. 
474-6943 
Jack's 
Refuse Hauling 
Light hauling of any type. Resi 
dentiai and Commercial. 
Charles Brown 
305 W Mound - GR 4-3641 


$4 MIND I E DRV CLEANING 
^*7^ VV ell dryclean a tug 
8 Iii load lot vou id 
oui 
Frigidaire Dry 
kf- < U .mer lot only — 
$2.06 
RADCLIFF it 
CLEANERS 
215 E Main St 


5* Instructions 


PIANO lessons given by Ohio Uni­ 
versity Graduate and former Cir.* 
i-Jevtlle 
Tedihei 
Call 
474 7730 


HIGH SCHOOL AT HOME 
Finish High School al home rn 
your spare time with the 
LARGEST AND OLDEST 
HOME STUDY HIGH SCHOOL 
Write for Free Booklet— 
Tells How 
APPROVED POR 
VETERANS TRAINING 
AMERICAN SCHOOL 
DEPT. CV 9 
4 E. Long St. 
Columbus, Ohm 43215 
Name 
... . 
........................... 
Address 
..................................... 
City 
............................................... 


6. Male Help Wanted 


RETIRED m an for light labor and 
vome tale* work 
Apply in perron 
J 
5 
Goode N ursery, between 
8 
p rn 
and * p rn 


USE THE CLASSIFIEDS ~ 


I ZSA ZSA GABOR sa y s - 1 
SAVE MONEY at AAMCO 
...i„ umpi AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION 
■ SP E C IA L IS T S !! 


d elu sive WI TM AA MC# 
LIFETIME GUARANTEE 
Nm parti and labor on all 
custom rebuilt transmissions and 
torque converters as tong as you ova 
your earn car and service it enouaity 
at a modest service charge at any at 
the 300 AAMC0 shops coast to coast 
There aw bo other guarantees Uke 
tots one. 
OMIT AAMCO NAS M 
M MONEY DOWN 
817 Eastern Ave, 
Chillicothe, Ohio 
Phone 775-8700 
O pen. M on. thru I ii. 
Saturdat S to ; 


•Touring 
* Roadtest 
•I Day Service 
AASY TY MAS 


21. Real Estate-Trode 


Real Estate for Sale 


In Williamsport 
4 bedroom one floor plan home 
Paneled 
family room. Utility room. Two baths 
Built in kitchen with 
electric oven and range. Lots of cabinet space. Hot water gas 
fired heat Attached two car garage Only two years old Priced 
right and ready to move into. 


investment property in Grove City 
AU brick 
4 unit apart­ 
ment. AU rented and showing a good return 


Located in the North End. One floor plan home Has two car 
attached garage Full basement. One and ’2 baths 3 bedrooms. 
Corner lot. Atwater School district. 


North Court St Two story frame 4 rooms on ground floor 
Two rooms up Bath and 'a. New gas F A furnace 
Attached 
garage. Check with us for details on this one. 


South Edge of Williamsport. One floor plan home, J bedrooms 
and bath Dining room. City water. Natural gas. Could be made 
real nice. Priced under $10,000.00. 


Sec us for the home of tomorrow AU electric, (told Medallion 
4 bedroom homes. Quality built and priced right. Logan 
Elm Village. 


Curtis W. Hix Realtor 


228^2 N Court St. — 474-5130, 474-2433 
ORPEN STOUT 
474-2214 
W- E- CLARK 
474-4200 


FOR 


• Building lots A acreage 
• Home rentals 
• Furniture storage 


Contact 
Chester Blue 


474 4600 — 474 5265 


School Jackets—Award Sweaters 
BUhard Tables—’Iable Tennis 
Bowling Shirts and Blouses 
Brunswick Balls, Bag.* & Shoes 
Trophies of AU Kind 
Scioto Valley Bowling Service 
274 E. Long St. 
Columbus, Ohio 
or Call 
Clark Martin 


474 6154 — After 6:30 P M 
USED 
FURNITURE 


Always a large selection 
ot good used furniture. 


Buy where your money 
goes turther. 


New and Used Furniture 
FORD'S 
155 W Main 


Small Engine Service 
Briggs & Stratton 
Lawson, Tecumseh, 
Jacobsen Gravely, 
Homelite 


Contractors Sc Industrial 
Supply Company 
Corner Route 22 & 56 West 
CircleviUe, Ohio 
474-7553 
Bub JOHNSON. Owner 


A U C T I O N 


Real Estate — Farm Machinery 


Three Tractors — Self Propelled Combine — Truck 
Saturday October 28, 1967 


Beginning at ll OO A M 
LOCATED: On the premises on the New HoUand-Clarksburg 
Pike, one inUe south of its intersection with U. S. Route 22 
(said intersection being the first road east of New Holland going 
south). 


REAL ESTATE 
(Sells at 2:00 P MD 
4% 96 Acres in two parcels east of and adjacent to New Holland, 
Pickaway County, Ohio, known as the Withgott Farm in Pick 
away County. Ohio. and are being sold through a partition pro­ 
ceeding, in Case No. 24820 in the Court of Common Pleas of 
Pickaway County, Ohio. The two parcets are separated from 
each other by the New Holland-Clarksburg Road along which 
they have a common frontage and will be offered separately and 
then together for the best price They must sell for more than 
2/3 of the appraised value, 10r- on clay of sale and balance on 
confirmation of sale and delivery of deed. The first parcel 
consists of 192.1 acres in Perry Township along the N*’w Holland 
Clarksburg Pike and generally northeast of the same and bound 
ed on the north by the Pennsylvania Railroad, appraised at 
$105,655 OO and being Tract No. I in the petition for partition 
The second parcel consists of 214 86 acres. 84 of which is situated 
in New Holland, the balance in Perry Township; between the 
Egypt Pike on the west thereof and the New Holland Clarksburg 
Pike on the northeast thereof, appraised at $123,514.30 and de­ 
scribed as Tract No. 2 and Tract No 3 and Tract No 4 in the 
petition for partition. 


FARM MACHINERY 
< Sells at ll OO A M ) 
1962 Massey Harris (35) 8-foot self-propelled combine (good): 
1965 Massey Ferguson 135. L F. 637 hours; 1961 Massey Fer­ 
guson 85 (diesel) power steering. L.P. adjustable wheels, 1900 
hours, heat houser; 1961 Oliver 880 (diesel) L.P good rubber; 
3 point hitch for 
Oliver; heat houser for Oliver; Massey Fer­ 
guson 4-row rear 
type cultivators (good); Allis Chalmers 4-row 
rear type* cultivators (good); John Deere 
plow 3x14”, 3 point; 
AC. plow 3x14”. 
3 point. Massey Hams plow 3x14”, 3 point; 
John Deere 10-foot wheel ruse; IO foot double disc; John Deere 
cultipacker ll foot; 1965 John Deere 494 corn planter with her­ 
bicide attachment; John Deere 17 7 drill on rubber; New Idea 
7-foot pull type tractor mower (like new); MLC. side delivery 
rake on rubber; John Deere 14-T P T O. baler (good); bale mover 
22 foot (new); Freeman ll I) loader with bucket & blade; John 
Deere “N” tractor spreader on rubber P T O .; Ford 5-foot 
otary cutter, Oliver 2-row corn picker (model 4); John Deere 
i row rotary hoe; 32 foot elevator; 3 flat beds for wagons; Con­ 
tinental post hole digger; Speedy 9 row weed sprayer; Smiley 
irag, 12-foot; two wheel trailer; F’ord back blade; New Holljnd 
corn sheller 
4 sets of tractor wheel weights; two 10x14 hog 
boxes 
] Smiley 16 hole feeder; one 20 hole wooden hog feeder; 
one metal feeder. 4 feed boxes on runners; 2 summer hog foun-1 
la,rhs* ? tractor seeders P T O .; 50 steel posts (good); 2 pump 
jacks, T i H P gas motor; three hydraulic cylinders; miscellan­ 
eous tools, forks; .shovels, and other items too numerous to men 
lion, 


TRUCK 
19->8 Dodge truck, two ton, with hydraulic dump, grain A stock 
racks. 
NOTE; Due to lack of small items, plan to attend on time. 
TERMS: Cash for personal property. Inspection invited Lunch 
will be served 


Richard W. Penn, Attorney 
1J4U North Court Street, Circleville. Ohio 
John E Rosa, Hubert Watson and John Stewart of Ross Auction Co. 
Washington C. H., Ohio 
and Associates Auctioneers of Personal Property 
MARGARET WITHGOTT 
New Holland, Ohio 


Wiliison Lust, Auctioneer of Real Estate 
Circleville, Ohio 
f 
I 


COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP)—Ohio 
University has a key football 
; victory in the bank and impo­ 
tent Marshall as its next foe. 
But Bobcat Coach Bill Hess 
isn t ready to break into a big 
grin 
In 
fact, he's unhappy 
about a lot of things. 
Ohio nipped Toledo 20-14 last 
Saturday in the grid inaugural 
for both schools when tailback 
Dick Conley scored in the final 
five minutes. 
“ I was not pleased with our 
showing. Both our offensive and 
defensive units came through 
when they had to but I expect 
more from our offense with 
more hard work.” Hess said. 
And after hearing assistant 
coach Cliff Heffelfinger’s scout­ 
ing report on Marshall, Hess 
noted: 
“ We must try to polish up 
and eliminate our mistakes and 
we better be ready to play a 
tough 
opponent 
Saturday be­ 
cause 
I 
believe 
that’s 
what 
Marshall will lie.” 
The Thundering Herd collaps­ 
ed after holding a 6 0 halftime 
advantage and took a 30 6 lick­ 
ing at the hands of Morehead, 
Ky., the Ohio Valley Conference 
king 
In other MAC action. West­ 
ern Michigan topped Miami 24-1 
14 in a 
battle between la s t. 
year's co-champs before a rec­ 
ord league crowd of 22,000. and 
Buffalo walloped Kent State, 30- 
6. 
Hess said he was surprised 
by 
the 
Kent and 
Marshall 
scores but not particularly by 
tho Western victory. 
Hess noted that fumbles and 
other costly errors kept Mar­ 
shall in hot water against the 
Kentuckians. 
Two things on tile agenda 
this week will be better pass 
protection for quarterback Cleve 
Bryant and more work for the 
secondary against passes. 
“ I was unhappy with our in 
ability to stop Toledo on the 


third and long situation,” Hess 
said. 
On the brighter side, he said 
he was not displeased with the 
play of his sophomores and sin­ 
gled 
out 
Bobby 
Jackson, 
a 
Portsmouth senior, who starred 
defensively. 
Jackson picked off a pass m 
the second quarter and sped 27 
yards 
to 
a 
touchdown thats 
described as one of the big 
plays of the game 
All the other MAC teams play 
outside the league this we«k 
Bowling Green opens at home 
against the Quantico Marines. 
Kent plays host to Northern Il­ 
linois, Miami visits Tulane, To­ 
ledo goes to Xavier and West 
em Michigan journeys to Arkan­ 
sas State. 


IN TMK PROBATE COURT OF 
PIC KABAY COUNTY, OHIO 
Lym an E. England. Ad­ 
m inistrator With the Will 
Annexed of the Estate of 
Anna Mae Temple, deceased, 
Plamuff. 
-vs- 
Mount of Praise Bible 
CoUege. alto known as the 
Circleville Bible CoUege, « 
corporation, et a1 . 
Defendants. 
CASE NO J2609 
NOTICE 0 6 PUBLIC SALE 
In the pursuance of the order of 
the 
Probate Court of 
Pteknway. 
County. I will offer for sale at pub­ 
lic auction on the 23rd day of Oc­ 
tober. 1967, at 2 IHI o’clock P 
M . 
at the door of the Court House the 
following described real estate: 
Situated in the County of Pickaw ay. 
in the State of Ohio, and in the City 
of C ircleville, bounded and describ­ 
ed as follows: 
Lot Number Fifteen Hundred and 
sixty-five 
115651 
in 
the 
Half and 
H effner’s Addition to the said City 
of Circleville. Ohio. 
Prior Utle reference: 
Deed 
Book 
131, page 219 
Said prem ises located at 456 East 
Ohio Street, CircleviUe 
Ohio. 
Said prem ises appraised at $4,500 
and m ust be sold for not less than 
two-thirds of said appraised value 
and the term s of sale are: lo per 
cent on day of sale and balance in 
cash within thirty day*. 
Lyman E 
England. Ad 
nunistrator With the WtU 
Annexed of the E state of 
Anna Mae Tem ple, de 
ceased. 
Richard W Penn. Attorney 
114*2 North Court Street 
C ircleville. Ohio 43113 
Sept. 20. 27; Oct. 4. ll. 18 


CROSSWORD PUZZLE 


A C R O SE 
L Green. 
stone 
5. Melville 
oh ar acier 
9. Foreboding' 
IO Desert 
11. Subsided 
12. Afloat 
14. Homes 
16. Pronoun 
17. Com (vaaa 
point 
15. Antlered 
animal 
21. Cry of 
P*4P 
22 J oft 
25. Becomes 
brittle 
27. Plead 
29. A rat hind 
31. Greet 
34. Hawaiian 
bird 
35. Grit 
37. Senorita’® 
affirmative 
38. Friar’s 
title 
40 Specimen 
43. Civil 
wrongs 
46 Units of 
weight 
ut India 
47. Two-toed 
aloid 
48 Dish 
49 Indefinite 
amount 
50. Dispatch 
DOWN 
I M iddlem an 
2. Large 
reading 
d ick 


3. Legal 
docu­ 
ment 
4. Finished 
5. Moslem 
title 
6 By what 
mean;; ? 
7. Arabian 
gar­ 
ments 
8. Church 
official 
It. Land of 
Kiplmg 
13. Cuts, 
as wood 
15. Dis- 
cnm- 
inatco 


19. Before 
20. Wealthy 
23. Kimono 
adj uaU. 
24. Spreads 
grass 
to dry 
26. Tibetan 
sheep 
28 Main 
29. Ten­ 
der 
30. Spongy 
32. Ait 
33. False­ 
hoods 
36. Appmn$. 
ments 
39. Cartoon­ 
ist 


a 
g o g o 
4 
□ J j l d U 
Id aSilQ Q 


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ii. Bur­ 
rowing 
animal 
42. Scheme 
41. Sandy's 
headgear 
45. W oo 


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The Ci relev i He Herald, Wed. Sept. 20, 11)07 
C irclev ille. Ohio 
f 


23 
Dr. Kilda rc 
ZJ 
ALs Twins, Red Sox Hold Ground 


ANU ÍHL LANDLADY ) 
( Li AID SOME SNOOPY DETECTIVE. 
\ 
' \M<CMW OUR APARTMENT. AND 
TOOK A SCARP— >1 


HOW SHOULD X 
< YOU MEAN I BOUGHT AND PAID 
KNOW? BESIDES, IT 
\ FOR IT - BUT EVERY TIME X WANT 
TO USE IT - IT 'S 
DECORATING- 
WAS YOUR PROPERTY. 
THE SILK MAROON 


By Ken Bald 


FIND OUT WHAT \ I FIND TRACES O f 
TH05 E STREAKS 
MW3 Nf SlUM ARSE 
ON THE SCARF J NATE ,11 TOP THAT 
AR E. DOC? 
HELP YOU ANY 


By DICK COUCH 
Associated Dress Sports Writer 
Dav e Boswell an d Earl Wilson 
took a short walk on the wild 
side. 
Boswell fou n d his way 
back to Easy Street hu t Wilson 
ran in to a dead en d. 
Boswell ov ercame a sev ere 
backache 
an d 
early 
con trol 
problems Tu esday 
n ight 
an d 
fin ished with a brillian t two-hit 
ler as the Min n esota Twin s held 
a share of the American Leagu e 
lead by pou n din g Kan sas City 8- 
a.» 
'Hie v ictory kept the Twin s 
tied for first place with the Bos­ 
ton Red Sox , who scored the 
win n in g ru n on a bases-loaded 
wild pitch by Wilson , Detroit's 
21-game win n er, du rin g a three- 
ru n 
n in th-in n in g 
spu rt that 
caged the Tigers, 4-2. 
Detroit fell in to the fou rth 
spot in the hectic stretch race, 
on e game behin d the leaders 
an d on e-half len gth back of the 
Chicago White Sox , who blan ked 
Californ ia 3-0 on Joe Horlen ’s 
six -hitter. 
Baltimore shu t ou t the New 
York Yan kees 3-0 an d Clev elan d 
zipped Washin gton 2-0 in other 
AL games. 
In Nation al Leagu e play , St. 
L o u i s’ 
ru n away 
pen n an t 
win n ers n ipped Philadelphia 1*0, 
San Fran cisco down ed Chicago 
€>-2. Cin cin n ati topped Atlan ta 3- 
1, Pittsbu rgh ou tslu gged Hou s­ 
ton 11-7 an d New York bou n ced 
Los An geles 6 -3. 
Boswell, a ran gy , 22-y ear old 
fireballer, breezed to his 14th 
v ictory after bein g hu rt by fiv e 
walks, two wild pitches an d a 
hit batsman in the first fou r in ­ 
n in gs. He stru ck ou t eight an d 
retired 16 of the last 17 batters 
he faced. 
The 
Min n esota 
righthan der 
said his wildn ess was du e, in 
part, to a sore back. “I decided 
I’d hav e to ben d more an d get 
the ball low in spite of the 
pain ,” he said. 
The Twin s, breakin g ou t of a 
week-lon g hittin g slu mp, tagged 
Jim Nash for fou r ru n s in the 
early in n in gs, then stru ck for 


The Results 


lou r u n earn ed ru n s in the sev ­ 
en th after Sal Ban do’s error 
open ed the gates. 
“Now it’s all u p to u s,’ Man ­ 
ager Cal Erm er said. “We hav e 
eight of the la st 10 at home an d 
ou r pitchin g rotation is straigh­ 
ten ed ou t. If the good Lord’s 
willin g, we’ll win it.” 
“There’s n o poin t in worry in g 
abou t the other teams,” added 
Allison . “You can ’t play the 
scoreboard.” 
The Itcd Sox were down 2-1 on 


the scoreboard at Detroit when 
Jerry Adair reached sou thpaw 
Mickey Lolich for a leadoff sin ­ 
gle in the n in th. Carl Yastrzem- 
ski drew a walk an d George 
Scott tied the score with a sin gle 
to cen ter. 
I/)lich, who had allowed on ly 
fou r hits while strikin g ou t 13 
throu gh the eighth, then was 
replaced by Wilson , makin g his 
first relief appearan ce of the 
y ear. 
After Reggie Smith sacrificed, 
McCormick Proves 
Value to Giants 


To day ’s 
Baseball 
Hy THE ASSOCIATE» PRESS 
Natio nal League 
W. L 
v St. Lo uis 
San Francisco 82 88 


Pet. 
G.B, 
.68 2 — 
.547 13 
.539 14 
.536 14», à 
.513 
18 
.500 20 
.49 0 21 «/a 
.450 27 » ., 
.•111 33'* 
.38 0 38 


Cincinnati 
8 2 7 0 
Chicago 
. 82 
7 1 
Pliiladelphia 
7 7 7 3 
Pittsburgh 
.. 
7 6 7 6 
Atlanta 
. . 
7 4 7 7 
Lo g Angeles 
68 83 
Ho usto n 
. . 62 
89 
New Ro rk 
57 9 3 
x -Clinched pennant 
Tuesday ’s Results 
San Francisco 6. Chicago 2 
Cincinnati 3, Atlanta 1 
New Yo rk 6, Lo s Angeles 3 
St. Lo uis 1, Philadelphia O 
Pittsburgh 11, Ho usto n 7 
To day ’s Games 
liOS Angeles at New Yo rk, N 
St. Lo uis at Philadelphia, N 
San Francisco at Chicago 
Cincinnati at Atlanta, N 
Pittsburgh at Ho usto n, N 
Thursday ’s Games 
Atlanta at St. Lo uis, N 
OrUy game scheduled 


American League 


Bo sto n 
... 
Minneso ta 
Chicago 
.. 
Detro it 
Califo rnia 
Clev eland 
Washingto n 
Baltimo re 
New Yo rk 
Kansas City 


Pet. 
.566 
.566 
.562 
.559 
.520 
.47 1 
.467 
.460 
.431 


G.B. 


!i 
1 
7 
14* j 
15 
16 
20 
.39 3 26 


W. 
I. 
8 6 
66 
86 
66 
86 67 
85 67 
7 8 7 2 
7 2 
81 
7 0 80 
69 81 
« 6 
8 6 
59 91-u li - 
Minneso ta tt, Kansas City 2 
Clev eland 2, Washingto n 0 
Baltimo re 3. New Yo rk 0 
Bo sto n 4, Detro it 2 
Chicago 3. Califo rnia 0 
To day ’s Games 
Clucago at Califo rnia, N 
Kansas City at Minneso ta 
New Yo rk at Detro it, N 
Bo sto n at Clev eland, N 
Baltimo re 
at 
Washingto n, 
2, 
twi-night 
Thursday ’s Games 
Kansas City at Minneso ta 
Bo sto n at Clev eland, N 
Baltimo re at Washingto n, N 
Only gam es scheduled 
n \ II li i g ^ \ i i 
By v irtue o f an Ex ecutio n Issued 
by the Circlev ille Municipal Co urt 
o f Circlev ille Ohio , I will o ffer at 
Public Sale, o n Friday the 29 th day 
o f September 
19 67 , 
at 
10 o ’clo ck 
A. M.. at J o e Mo ats Mo to r Sales o n 
the 
Lancaster 
Pike 
in 
said city 
the fo llo wing Pro perty , Go o ds, and 
Chattels, to -wit: 
1. 19 59 Cadillac 
Seriul No , 59 K 116844 
lit* v ied upo n and 
taken 
as the 
pro perty of 
Jerry 
Sho walter 
o n 
such ex ecutio n ip fav o r o f Thu Sec­ 
o nd Natio nal Hank, 
Richard M. Lamb, Bailiff 
Sept. 19 , 20, 21 


By HAL BOCK 
Associated Press Sports Writer 
The St. Lou is Cardin als are 
champion s 
of 
the 
Nation al 
Leagu e bu t the con solation prize 
for reclamation project of the 
y ear goes io Mike McCormick 
of the San Fran cisco Gian ts. 
McCormick 
became 
the 
leagu e’s first 20-game win n er 
Tu esday when the Gian ts rallied 
for fiv e n in th-in n in g ru n s an d a 
6 -2 v ictory ov er the Chicago 
Cu bs. 
Jack 
Hiatt’s 
two-ru n 
pin ch 
dou ble key ed San Fran cisco’s 
n in th-in n in g u prisin g an d helped 
McCormick reach the 20-v ictory 
mark for the first time. 
Elsewhere 
in 
the 
Nation al 
Leagu e 
Tu esday , 
New 
York 
dropped Los An geles 6 -3, St. 
Lou is blan ked Philadelphia 1-0, 
Cin cin n ati trimmed Atlan ta 3-1 
an d Pittsbu rgh rallied for an 11- 
7 v ictory ov er Hou ston . 
In 
the 
hectic 
American 
Leagu e, Boston rallied for a 4-2 
v ictory ov er Detroit, Min n esota 
ripped Kan sas City 8*2, Clev e 
lan d blan ked Washin gton 2-0, 
Baltimore shu t ou t New York 3 
0 an d Chicago sty mied Califor 
n ia 3-0. 
It took 11 y ears an d three 
trades before McCormick fin al 
ly paid off on the in v estmen t the 
Gian ts made on him back in 
1056 when they sign ed him as a 
17 -y ear old bon u s baby . 
He was traded to Baltimore in 
19 6 3 an d to Washin gton in 19 6 5 
before retu rn in g to San Fran cis 
co in an u n heralded three-play 
or swap last win ter. He’s been 
an y thin g bu t u n heralded for the 
Gian ts thou gh. 
“ Breaks,” he said, “ that’s the 
big thin g in this game. 1 can 
look back an d hon estly say I 
pitched as well in 19 6 0 an d 1961 
! as I did this y ear. Bu t 1 won 15 
: on e y ear an d 13 an other.” 
He got the breaks Tu esday . 
Trailin g 2-1 again st Fergu son 
Jen kin s after eight in n in gs, Mc- 
1 Cormick departed for a pin ch 
hitter as the Gian ts rallied in 
the n in th. He wras the pitcher of 
record when the ru n s scored 
an d thu s receiv ed credit for the 
I v ictory . 
Jim Dav en port’s pin ch sin gle 
drov e in the Gian ts’ ty in g ru n 
an d after Hiatt’s hit broke the 
deadlock, 
sin gles 
by 
Ollie 
Brown an d Jim Hart drov e in 
two more ru n s. 
Rookie Bob Heise dou bled two 
ru n s across an d then scored a 
the tie-breaker on Tommy Da­ 
v is’ hit as the Mets rallied for 


three ru n s in the fifth in n in g 
an d wen t on to defeat Los An ­ 
geles. 
Les 
Rohr, 
an other 
rookie, 
wen t six in n in gs to gain the v ic­ 
tory an d helped the Mets tie on e 
record an d break an other. He 
was their 54th play er this sea­ 
son -m ost ev er for a NL clu b— 
an d the 27 th pitcher —-ity in g a 
major leagu e mark. 
Dick Hu ghes won his 15th for 
the champion Cardin als, ou t- 
pitchin g Jim Ru n n in g with a 
fiv e-hitter. 
Ed Spiezio’s first- 
in n in g sin gle scored Bobby To- 
lan wth the game’s on ly ru n . 
Bu n n in g, 16*14, stru ck ou t sev ­ 
en , raisin g his leagu e- leadin g 
total to 234. 
Leo Carden as drov e in the tie- 
hreakin g ru n with an eighth-in ­ 
n in g sin gle an d then scored an 
in su ran ce 
ru n 
on 
Tommy 
Helms’ sacrifice fly as the Reds 
tagged the Brav es with their 
fifth straight loss. 
Man n y Mota deliv ered a pair 
of hits in a six -ru n n in th in n in g 
that carried the Pirates past 
Hou ston . Mota started the rally 
with a pin ch sin gle an d cli­ 
max ed it with a two-ru n hit. 
R o o k i e 
Bob 
Robertson 
whacked a two-ru n homer lor 
Pittsbu rgh 
an d 
pitcher 
Bob 
Moose u n loaded a two-ru n tri­ 
ple. Aaron Poin ter drov e in two 
ru n s for the Astros on a sin gle 
an d a dou ble. 


Wilson walked pin ch hitter Dal­ 
ton Jon es in ten tion ally , fillin g 
the bases. The Detroit ace then 
wild pitched the go-ahead ru n 
home an d the Red Sox added an 
in su ran ce tally on Ru ss Gib 
son ’s sacrifice fly . 
Jim Northru p s two-ru n horn 
er in the six th had giv en th< 
Tigers their on e-ru n edge. 
“ Beau tifu l, 
beau tifu l,” 
ex 
claimed Man ager Dick Williams 
after 
the 
Red 
Sox ’ 
secon d 
straight 
comeback 
v ictory 
“This team doesn ’t qu it.” 
Horlen stran ded Jim Fregosi 
after the Californ ia shortstop 
tripled with on e ou t in the first 
in n in g, then limited the An gels 
to fiv e sin gles on the way to his 
fifth shu tou t an d 18th v ictory of 
the y ear. 
The slim right-han der, who 
key ed the Sox ’ stretch driv e 
with a n o-hitter again st Detroit 
10 day s ago, also sin gled to 
tou ch off a three-ru n flu rry in 
the six th again st loser Jim Mc- 
Glothlin . Tom McCraw’s triple 
an d sin gles by Tommie Agee 
an d Ken Boy er deliv ered the 
ru n s an d Horlen made them 
stan d u p. 


L_ 
Blondic 


Scioto Results 


Three NFL Backs 


Each Topped 100 


Mark Last Week 


NEW YORK (AP) — Three 
ru n n in g backs each gain ed more 
than 100 y ards last Su n day on 
the Nation al Football Leagu e’s 
i open in g day bu t the big su rprise 
had to be Bill (Please Don ’t Call 
! Me Willie) Asbu ry of the Pitts- 
j bu rg Steelers. 
John n y 
Rolan d, 
the 
1906 
rookie of, the y ear, rau for 124 
y ards at SL Lou is in a losin g 
cau se. Dan Reev es, a key man 
j on Dallas’ champs of the East a 
y ear ago, 'gain ed 
114 y ards. 
I That was ex pected, 
i 
Asbu ry , su pposed to be play ­ 
in g secon d tiddle to Earl Gros 
KMi it i ’8 - u i 
tib the Steeten 
ri mbled foi 
By v irtue o f an Ex ecutio n Issued 
, 107 y ards on 12 carries, scored 
by the CirckmU« Municipal Co urt o f two tou chdown s an d av eraged 
Circlev ille. Ohio . I will o ffer at Huh- 
v .irii« lw,r narrv 
lie Sale, o n Friday the 29 day of ; °*w y aru S per carry . 
September 1967, at in o 'clo ck A M.. When Gros su ffered a kn ee 
t J o e Mo at» Mo to r Sales o n the 
j |n ju ry jn train in g, Asbu ry got 
back his old startin g job. He 
doesn ’t figu re on giv in g it u p. 
John 
Un itas 
of 
Baltimore 
leads the qu arterbacks in the 
first weekly NFL statistics after 
throwin g for 401 y ards, a career 
high, in Baltimore’s open er with 
j 
Atlan ta. 


Lancaster Pike in » aid City the fol­ 
low in g ProiHrity, Gimx Is, a n d C h a t ­ 
tels, to -wit: 
1. 19 63 Mercury Auto mo bile 
Mo nterey Tudo r 
.Serial No 3W03Y53318 4 
Lev ied 
upo n 
and 
taken u s the 
pro perty o f No el E, Wright o n such 
ex ecutio n In fav o r o f The Seco nd 
Natio nal Bunk. 
Richard M. I .a mb, Bailiff 
fcept. 19 . 20. 21 


Shiner Picked 


To Back Up 


Ryan Sunday 


CLEVELAND (AP) - Clev e­ 
lan d Brown s Coach Blan ton Col­ 
lier say s if he has to u se a 
backu p qu arterback again st the 
Detroit Lion s Su n day the call 
probably will go to Dick Shin er 
first. 
“ Bu t I might play a hu n ch 
an d go the other way ,” Collier 
said at a press lu n cheon Tu es­ 
day . 
No. 
1 
qu arterback 
Fran k 
Ry an wen t 
in to 
the Borwn s’ 
open er again st Dallas last Su n ­ 
day with a sprain ed right an kle 
an d came ou r with 
sprain ed 
left an kle an d a jammed in dex 
fin ger as well. The Brown s, u n ­ 
able to get their grou n d game 
mov in g, lost 21-14. 
Collier n oted that Shin er has 
fou r y ears’ ex perien ce in the Na­ 
tion al football Leagu e an d said, 
“I might go on that basis.” 
Bu t he 
observ ed 
that 
Gary 
Lan e “ is in a better position 
to kn ow the calls.” 
Shin er 
was 
acqu ired 
when 
the Brown s traded Jim Nin ow* 
ski to Washin gton early in the 
train in g season Lan e is a sec- 
on d y ear man with the Borwn s. 
Con cern in g the loss to Dallas, 
Collier said the Cowboy s didn ’t 
ston Clev ehn d’s ru n n in g offen se. 
“ We stopped ou r owr. grou n d 
game by i>oor ex ecu tion ,” he 
said. 
The coach cited on e ex ample 
when on e missed bloek stopped 
a sweep by Leroy Kelly an d 
“disru pted 
on e 
en tire 
game. 
We lost eon fiden ee in the play 
n n d didn ’t ru n it an y more.” 
Dallas held the Brown s to 
min u s liv e y ards ru shin g. 
Becau se of the letdown in the 
ru n n in g game. Collier said, Ry an 
was forf**» d to the passin g at­ 
tack “too soon .” 


TUESDAY’S RESULTS 
First Race 
Tret 
$7 00 
Miss Chris So ’t 12.8 0 5.60 3 80 
Demo n Belle 
4.20 
3 20 
Snappy Hano v er 
3.4,, 
lim e: 2:08 4-5. Also started — 
Lady Berry . Grav Dream. Val- 
lley 
Air, 
Amish 
Key , 
Miss 
Sto rm. Co nfusio n. 
Seco nd Race 
Pace 
$7 00 
Adina 
Hano v er 
5.00 3,20 
3 00 
Brav e Dell 
n .30 
6.00 
Turbulent Way 
4 00 
Time: 2:07 . 
Also 
started 
— 
Test Mile, Chief To m To m, Go - 
ing Sto rm, Mel K. Abbe 
Ov er 
Berry . Susan W. 
DAILY 
DOUBLE—$27 .00 
Third Race 
Tro t 
$7 00 
Irish Duke 
28 .00 13.40 6 .89 
Majo r Ro y al 
7 .00 
4.8 0 
Ko al Cla v 
3 40 
Time: 
2:12. Also 
started 
— 
Trusty 
Princess, 
Dickie Beau. 
Iv anto o , True Ey e. Candy Sue. 
Easterlite Lind. 
Fo urth Race 
Tro t 
$7 00 
Spinner 
10.60 
4.8 0 3.20 
J ack By rd 
17 .60 
8 .00 
Muriel Vo 
3.20 
Time: 2:09 3-5. Also started — 
Irish So n, Meado w DA, O’Dell 
Bo y , Co nnie J o , Co untess Ro y al. 
Adio s Tuck. 
Fifth Race 
Pace 
$#o o 
Vlte Vo lo 
14.80 
6.60 4.8 0 
Nelley Diamo nd 
4.40 4.00 
Chief Success 
7 .00 
Time: 2:00. 
Also 
started 
— 
Dix ie 
Cry stal, 
Lacy 
Queen 
Frisco Key . C. W. Hal, Gene K. 
Abbe, Adio Keith. 
Six th Race 
Pace 
$1.400 
C. E .’s Sammy 
8 .00 5.00 3.60 
Sidney M 
5.8 0 4.40 
Adio s J o hn 
4.00 
Time: 2:05 2-5 Also started — 
Mister Q., To p Shelp, Irish Wil, 
Oakland 
Trav eler, 
Biiiy Am­ 
bro se, Wido wer’s Baby . 
Sev enth Race 
Pace 
$1,200 
Ruth’s Lad 
7 .20 4.60 3.60 
Higgins 
4 40 
3.20 
Speedy Chief 
3.40 
Time: 2:03 2-5. Also started — 
Po key 
Baby , Meado w 
Dean, 
Co uncel B., Carja B. 
Eighth Rare 
Tro t 
$2 ,5 0 0 
Guy Yates 
3.60 2.60 2 20 
Fro sty Tip 
3.40 2.60 
Duke's Linda 
2.8 0 
Time: 3:12 3-5. Also started — 
Miss Ruby Direct, Lucky Star. 
Miss April A. 
Ninth Race 
Pace 
$100 
Hi Luzetta 
12.80 8 J t 8 SB 
Shelly Dale 
11.60 7 .00 
Irish Teddy 
4.00 
Time: 2:05 3-5. Also started — 
Co untess Cash, Gay Leo , Vinita, 
Ace way Captain, Dike Lee, Me­ 
tro po lis. 
QUINELLA—$8 1.30 


Use The 
Classifieds 


We' re 
OPEN 


7 A.M. to 11 P.M. 


7 Days A Week 
TOPS 


Coin-Op laundry 


Kro ner Sho pping Center 


“EUREKA PRINCESS” 


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.9 5 


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i2!> W. Main St. 


OFFI CES 
FOR RENT or LEASE 


5 Ro o ms — Gro und Flo o r — Steam Heat 
Air Co nditio ning — Parking Av ailable 
Av ailable Octo ber 15th 
Reaso nable Rate 


liti K, Main St. •— Circlev ille, U. 
Call N ili) W. HARDI N — 47 1-31C» 


Rip Kirby 


Donald Duck 
M 
by W alt Disney 


Y -in r g m ore A 
* / 
O R L E S S W HAT / (O H .'i'E A H ? 
) W E HAVE IN 
] 
M IN D F O R YOU Y 
V---- 


Beetle Bailey 
by Mort Walker 


Flash Gordon 


fi*.-±àÉÀ 


by Dan Barry 


Brick Bradford 
by Paul Norris 


Mr. Abernathy 
by Jones Or Ridqewoy 


SI GH. . . GUESS 
LOSI NG MY 0 1 D 
I MUST B f - V 
DCHARM. 
I 


The Circleville Herald, Wed. Sept. 20, 1967 
Circleville. Ohio 
23 
Dr. Kildare 
By Ken Bald 
AL's Twins, Red S ox Hold Ground 


By DICK COUCH 
Associated Press Sports Writer 
Dove Boswell and Earl Wilson 
took a short walk on the wild 
side. Boswell found 
his way 
hack to Easy Street hut Wilson 
ran into a dead end. 
Boswell overcame n severe 
backache 
and 
early 
control 
problems 
Tuesday 
night 
and 
finished with a brilliant two-hit 
ter as the Minnesota Twins held 
a share of the American League 
lead by pounding Kansas City 8- 


Tile victory kept the Twins 
tied for first place with the Bos­ 
ton Bed Sox, who scored the 
winning run on a bases loaded 
wild pitch by Wilson, Detroit's 
21-game winner, during a three- 
run 
ninth-inning 
spurt that 
caged the Tigers, 4-2. 
Detroit fell into the fourth j 
spot in the hectic stretch race, 
one game behind the leaders 
and one half length back of the 
Chicago White Sox, who blanked 
California 3-0 on Joe Horlen’s 
six-hitter. 
Baltimore shut out the New 
York Yankees 3-0 and Cleveland 
zipped Washington 2-0 in other 
AL games. 
In National League play, St. 
L o u i s * 
runaway 
pennant 
winners nipped Philadelphia I O, 
San Francisco downed Chicago 
€-2, Cincinnati topped Atlanta 3* 
I, Pittsburgh outsluggeri Hous­ 
ton H-7 and New York bounced 
Los Angeles 6-3. 
Boswell, a rangy, 22-ycar-old 
fireballer, breefed to his 14th 
victory after being hurt bv five 
walks, two wiki pitches and a 
hit batsman in the first four in­ 
nings. He struck out eight and 
retired IC of the last 17 batters 
he faced. 
The 
Minnesota 
right-hander 
said his wildness was due, in 
part, to a sore back. “I decided 
I’d have to bend more and get 
the ball low in spite of the 
pain,*’ he said. 
The Twins, breaking out of a 
week-long hitting slump, tagged 
Jim Nash for four runs in the 
early innings, then struck for 


lour unearned runs in tile sev­ 
enth after Sal Bando’s error 
opened the gates, 
“Now it's all up to us,’ Man 
ager Cal Ermer said, “We have 
eight of the last IO at home and 
our pitching rotation is straigh­ 
tened out. If tho good Lord’s 
willing, we’ll win it.” 
“There s no point in worrying 
about the other teams,” added 
Allison. “You can’t play the 
scoreboard.” 
The Bed Sox were down 2-1 on 


the scoreboard at Detroit when 
Jerry Adair reached southpaw 
Mickey Lolich for a leadoff sin­ 
gle in the ninth. Carl Ytstrzem- 
ski drew a walk and George 
Scott lied the score with a single 
to center. 
I/olich, who had allowed only 
four hits while striking out 13 
through the eighth, then was 
replaced by Wilson, making his 
first relief appearance of the 
year. 
After Boggle Smith sacrificed, 
McCormick Proves 
Value to Giants 


The Results 


Today's 
U ssr ball 
fly TUE ASSOCIATED 
FUESS 
National League 
H 
L. 
Pet. 
G.B. 
vSt. Louis 
96 56 
.6.12 — 
San Francisco 82 68 
.547 13 
Cincinnati 
82 70 
.539 14 
Chicago 
. 
82 71 
.538 14»i 
Philadelphia 
77 73 
.513 18 
Pittsburgh 
.. 
76 76 
. 500 20 
Atlanta 
. , 
74 77 
.490 21 
Los A ngeles 
on 83 
.450 27^ 
Houston 
. . 
62 89 
.411 33 *>4 
N ew Rork 
57 93 
380 38 
x*Clir>ched pennant 
T uesday’s Results 
sa n F rancisco 6, Chicago 2 
cin cinnati 3, Atlanta I 
N ew York 6, Los A ngeles 3 
St. Louis I. Philadelphia 0 
Pittsburgh l l, Houston 7 
Today’s G am es 
I .os A ngeles at New York. N 
.St. Louis at Philadelphia, N 
San Francisco at Chicago 
Cincinnati at AUa-Ha. N 
Pittsburgh at Houston, N 
Thursday’s Game*. 
Atlanta at St. Louis, N 
OnJy gam e scheduled 


A m erican League 
Pet. 
.566 
.566 
.set 
.SM 
,520 
.471 
467 
.rn 
.434 


1^ 
I 
7 
14* a 
IS 
IG 
2«> 
.393 26 


W. L 
I lostart 
> ■ • ., 
86 66 
M innesota ... 86 
66 
Chicago 
. . . . . 
RH 67 
Detroit 
........... 
85 67 
California .. 
78 
72 
Cleveland 
72 
81 
W ashington 
70 80 
I la Hi rn ore 
m Bl 
N ew York 
66 86 
K ansas City 
59 91 
Tuesday’s Results 
M innesota 8. K ansas City 2 
Cleveland 2, 
W ashington 0 
Baltim ore 3, N ew York 0 
Boston 4. D etroit 2 
Chicago 3. California 0 
Today's G am es 
Chicago at California. N 
K ansas City at M innesota 
N ew York at Detroit, N 
Boston at Cleveland, N 
Baltim ore 
at 
W ashington, 
twi-night 
th u rsd a y s G am es 
K ansas City at Minnesota 
Boston at C leveland. N 
Baltim ore at W ashington, N 
Only gam es scheduled 


G B . 


BA ILIFF’S SALK 
By virtue of an ExecuUon Issued 
by the C ircleville M unicipal Court 
of C ircleville Ohio. I will offer at 
Public Sole, on Friday the 29th day 
of 
.September 
1967, 
at 
IO o’clock | 
A. M., at Joe M oats Motor Sales on 
the 
Lancaster 
Pike 
in 
said 
city 
the follow ing Property, Goods, and 
Chattels. to*vvit: 
I. 1959 C adillac 
Serial No. 59 K 116844 
le v ie d 
upon 
and 
taken 
as the 
property of 
Jerry 
Shov, alter 
tm 
such execution ip favor of The Sec­ 
ond National Bunk 
Richard VI Lamb, Bailiff 
Sept. 19. 20, 21 


BAILIFF'S SALE 
By virtue of an Execution Issued 
by the C tntyviU e M unicipal Court of 
Circleville. Ohio, I will offer at Pub­ 
lic Sale, on Friday the 29 day of 
Septem ber !t*67, at lo o'clock A M , 
at Joe M eaU Motor Sales on the 
Lancaster Pike In said City the fol­ 
low ing Property, Goods, and Chat­ 
tels, to> u lt: 
I. 1963 M ercury Automobile 
M onterey Tudor 
Serial No 3W63Y533184 
lie vied 
upon 
and 
taken 
as the 
property of N oel E. Wright on such 
execution In favor of The Second 
National Bank. 
Richard M. Lam b, Bailiff 
Sept. 19, 20, 21 


By HAL BOCK 
Associated Press Sports Writer 
Tlic SI. Louis Cardinals are 
champions 
of 
the 
National 
League but the consolation prize 
for reclamation project of the 
year goes lo Mike McCormick 
of the San Francisco Giants. 
McCormick 
became 
the 
league’s first 20-game winner 
Tuesday when the Giants rallied 
for five ninth-inning runs and a 
6-2 victory over the Chicago 
Cubs. 
Jack Hiatt’s 
two-run pinch 
double keyed San Francisco’s 
ninth-inning uprising and helped 
McCormick reach the 20-victory 
mark for the first time. 
Elsewhere 
in 
the 
National 
League 
Tuesday, 
New 
York 
dropped Los Angeles 6-3, St. 
Louis blanked Philadelphia I O, 
Cincinnati trimmed Atlanta 3-1 
and Pittsburgh rallied for an 11- 
7 victory over Houston. 
In 
the 
hectic 
American 
League, Boston rallied for a 4*2 
victory over Detroit, Minnesota 
ripped Kansas City 8-2, Cleve­ 
land blanked Washington 2-0, 
Baltimore shut out New York 3- 
0 and Chicago stymied Califor­ 
nia 3-0. 
It took ll years and three 
trades before McCormick final­ 
ly paid off on the investment the 
Giants made on him back in 
1956 when they signed him as a 
17-year-old bonus baby. 
He was traded to Baltimore in 
1963 and to Washington in 1965 
before returning to San Francis­ 
co in an unheralded three-play­ 
er swap last winter. He’s been 
anything but unheralded for the 
Giants though. 
“ Breaks,” he said, “ that’s the 
big thing in this game. I can 
look back and honestly say I 
pitched as well in 1960 and 1961 
as I did this year. But I won 15 
one year and 13 another.” 
He got the breaks Tuesday. 
Trailing 2-1 against Ferguson 
Jenkins after eight innings, Mc­ 
Cormick departed for a pinch 
hitter as 
the Giants rallied in 
the ninth. He was the pitcher of 
record when the runs scored 
and thus received credit for the 
victory. 
Jim Davenport’s pinch single 
drove in the Giants* tying run 
and after Hiatt’s hit broke the 
, deadlock, 
singles 
by 
Ollie 
1 Brown and Jim Hart drove in 
two more runs. 
Bookie Bob Heise doubled two 
runs across and then scored a 
the tie breaker on Tommy Da- 
I vis’ hit as the Mets rallied for 


Three NFL Bocks 


Each Topped IOO 


Mark Last Week 


NEW YORK (AP) — Three 
running backs each gained more 
than IOO yards last Sunday on 
the National Football League’s 
opening day but the big surprise 
had to be Bill (Please Don’t Call 
Me Willie) Asbury of the Pitts­ 
burg Steelers. 
Johnny 
Boland, 
die 
1966 
rookie of, the J ear, ran for 124 
yards at SL Louis in a losing 
cause. Dan Beeves, a key man 
on Dallas’ champs of the East a 
year ago, gained 
114 yards. 
That was expected. 
Asbury-, supposed to be play- 


three runs in the fifth inning 
and went on to defeat Los An­ 
geles. 
Lea 
Bohr, 
another 
rookie, 
went six innings to gain the vic­ 
tory and helped the Mots tie one 
record and break another. He 
was their 54th player this sea­ 
son-m ost ever for a NL club— 
and the 27th pitcher —tying a 
major league mark. 
Dick Hughes won his 15th for 
the champion Cardinals, out- 
pitching Jim Bunning with a 
five-hitter. 
Ed Spiezio’s first- 
inning single scored Bobby To- 
lan w-th the game’s only run. 
Bunning, 1614, struck out sev­ 
en. raising his league- leading 
total to 234. 
I ak) Cardenas drove in the tie- 
breaking run with an eighth-in­ 
ning single and then scored an 
insurance 
run 
on 
Tommy 
Helms’ sacrifice fly as the Reds 
tagged the Braves with their 
fifth straight loss. 
Manny Mota delivered a pair 
of hits in a six-run ninth inning 
that carried the Pirates past 
Houston. Mota started the rally 
with a pinch single and cli­ 
maxed it with a two-run hit. 
R o o k i e 
Bob 
Robertson 
whacked a two-run homer for 
Pittsburgh 
and 
pitcher 
Bob 
Moose unloaded a two-run tri­ 
ple. Aaron Pointer drove in two 
runs for the Astros on a single 
and a double. 


Wilson walked pinch hitter Dal­ 
ton Jones intentionally, filling 
the bases. The Detroit ace then 
wild-pitched the go-ahead run 
home and the Red Sox added an 
insurance tally on Buss Gib 
son’s sacrifice Bv. 
Jim Northrup’s two-run hom­ 
er in the sixth had given the 
Tigers their one-run edge. 
“ Beautiful, 
beautiful,” 
ex 
claimed Manager Dick Williams 
after 
the 
Red 
Sox’ 
.second 
straight 
comeback 
victory 
“This team doesn’t quit.” 
Horlen stranded Jim Fregosi 
after the California shortstop 
tripled with one out in the first 
inning, then limited the Angels 
to five singles on the way to his 
fifth shutout and 18th victory of 
the year. 
The slim right-hander, who 
keyed the Sox’ stretch drive 
with a no-hitter against Detroit 
IO days ago, also singled to 
touch off a threo-run flurry in 
the sixth against loser Jim Mc- 
Glothlin. Tom McCraw’s triple 
and singles by Tommie Agee 
and Ken Boyer delivered the 
runs and Horlen made them 
stand up. 


Scioto Results 


Shaler Picked 
To Back Up 
Ryan Sunday 


CLEVELAND (AP) - 
Cleve- 
land Browns Coach Blanton Col­ 
lier says if he has to use a 
backup quarterback against the 
Detroit Lions Sunday the call 
probably will go to Dick Shiner 
first. 
“ But I might play a hunch 
and go the other way,” Collier 
said at a press luncheon Tues 
day. 
No. 
I 
quarterback 
Frank 
Ryan went 
into 
the Borwns’ 
opener against Dallas last Sun­ 
day with a sprained right ankle 
and came our with 
sprained 
left ankle and a jammed index 
finger as well. The Browns, un­ 
able to get their ground game 
moving, lost 21-14. 
Collier noted that Shiner has 
four years’ experience in the Na­ 
tional football League and said, 
“ I might go on that basis.” 
But he 
observed 
that 
Gary 
Lane “ is in a better position 
to know the calls ” 
Shiner 
was 
acquired when 
the Browns traded Jim Ninow- 
ski to Washington early in the 
training season Lane is a sec­ 
ond year man with the Borwns. 
Conceniing the loss to Dallas, 
Collier said the Cowboys didn’t 
stoo Clevpbnd’s running offense. 
“We stopped our own ground 
game by ijoor execution,” he 
said. 
The coach cited one example 
when one missed block stopped 
a sweep by Leroy Kelly and 
“disrupted 
one 
entire 
game. 
We lost confidence in tilt* play 
nnd didn’t run it anymore.” 
j lug second fiddle to Earl G ros! 
Dallas held the Browns to 


I wtih the Steelers, rambled f o r ! minus five yards rushing. 
107 yards on 12 carries, scored 
Because of tile letdown in the 
two touchdowns and averaged running game. Collier said, Ryan 
8.9 yards i>er carry. 
"a s foro*d to the patting at- 
When Gros suffered a 
k n ee (tack “ too soon.” 
injury in training, Asbury got 


T U E SD A Y ^ RESULTS 
First R ace 
Trot 
$ 7 0 0 
M iss Chris Sc-’t 12.80 5.60 3 80 
Dem on B elle 
4.20 
3 20 
Snappy H anover 
3.40 
Tim e: 2:08 4-5. Also started — 
L*dy Berry, G ray Dream , Val- 
Hey 
Air. 
Amish 
Key, 
M iss 
Storm. Confusion. 
Second Race 
Pace 
$700 
Adi na 
H anover 
5.00 
3.20 
3.00 
Brave D ell 
u .ju 6.00 
Turbulent Way 
4 no 
Tim e: 
2:07. 
Also 
started 
— 
T est M ile, Chief Tom Tom, Go­ 
ing Storm, Mel K. Abbe, Over 
Berry. Susan W. 
DAILY 
DOUBLE—$27.00 
Third Race 
Trot 
$700 
Irish Duke 
28.00 13.40 
6 UM 
Major Royal 
7.00 4.80 
Koal Clay 
3 40 
Tim e: 
2:12. 
Also 
started 
— 
Trusty 
P rincess, 
D ickie 
Beau, 
Ivantoo, True E ye, Candy Sue 
EasterU te Lind. 
Fourth Race 
Trot 
$700 
Spinner 
10.60 
4.80 
3.20 
Jack Bvrd 
17.6O 8 on 
Muriel Vo 
3.20 
Tim e: 2:09 3-5. Also started — 
Irish Son, M eadow DA, O’Dell 
Boy, Connie Jo, Countess Roy; UL 
Adios Tuck. 
Fifth Race 
P ace 
shoo 
V ile Volo 
14.80 6.60 4.80 
N elley Diam ond 
4.40 4.00 
Chief Success 
7,00 
Tim e: 
2:08. 
Also 
started 
— 
D ixie 
Crystal, 
L acy 
Queen, 
Frisco K ey, C. W. Hal, Gene K, 
Abbe, Adio Keith. 
Sixth R ace 
Pace 
$1,400 
C. E .’s Sam m y 
8.00 5.00 
3.60 
Sidney M 
5.80 4.40 
Adios John 
4.00 
Tim e: 2:05 2-5 A bo started 
M ister Q., Top Shelp, Irish WU, 
Oakland 
Traveler, 
Billy 
A m ­ 
brose, W idower’s Baby. 
Seventh R ace 
P ace 
$1,200 
Ruth s Lad 
7.20 4.60 3.60 
H iggins 
4.40 3.20 
Speedy Chief 
3.40 
Tim e: 2:03 2-5. A lso started — 
Pokey 
Baby, 
M eadow 
D ean, 
Councel B., Carja B. 
Eighth Race 
Trot 
$2,500 
Guy Y ates 
3.60 2.60 
2.20 
Frosty Tip 
3.40 2.60 
D uke's Linda 
2.80 
Tim e: 3:12 3-5. Also started — 
M iss Ruby D irect, Lucky Star, 
M iss April A. 
Ninth Race 
P ace 
Simi 
Hi Luzetta 
12.80 5.80 
5.20 
Shelly D ale 
11.60 7.00 
Irish Teddy 
4.00 
Tim e: 2:05 3-5. Also started — 
Countess Cash, Gay Leo, Vinita, 
A cew ay Captain, Dike Lee, M e­ 
tropolis. 
QUINELLA—fftl.30 


hack his old starting job. He 
doesn’t figure on giving it up. 
John 
Unitas 
of 
Baltimore 
leads the quarterbacks in the 
first weekly NFL statistics after 
throwing for 4(il yards, a career 
high, in Baltimore’s opener with 
Atlanta. 


Use The 
Classifieds 


We're 


7 A.M. lo It P.M. 


7 Days A Week 
TOPS 


Coin-Op Laundry 


Kroner Shopping Center 


“EUREKA PRINCESS” 


Vacuum Cleaner With 


All A ttachm ents 
$39 95 


(2-3482) 


CUSSINS & FEARN 


121) W* Main St. 


OFFICES 
FOR RENT or LEASE 
5 Rooms — Ground Floor — Steam Heat 
Air Conditioning — Parking Available 
Available October 15th 
Reasonable Rate 


lift E . Main St. — C ircleville, O. 
Call N E D W. H A R DEN — 474-3142 


Berger 


Treats 8 


Emergencies 


'hr Circlev ille Herald, Wed. Sept. 20, IOO 
Circlev ille, Oh io 
U.S. Can Afford Missiles 


WASHINGTON 'A P) — 
H ie I proposed IO poi* cent surcharg e I would be initiated with the So- 


New Minister pon-Am Workers Defy Court 
At Northridge 
WASHINGTON 
(A P) 
— 
A Wort! Airway s g ot oft to ail urn1- 
Church 


g ov ernment already has enoug h; on income tax es. 
Hig ht persons, all inv olv ed in 
I money alloted to beg in deploy * 
Gov ernment sources estimate 
non-v ehicular 
accidents, 
were ment of the $5 billion missile de- that lip to $7 00 million is av ail 
g iv en emerg ency treatment and 
tVnse sy stem outlined this week 
I able to the Pentag on to beg in 
released 
by 
Berg er 
Hospital 
by Secretary of Defense Robert 
j the prog ram during the current 
Tuesday . 
s. McNamara. 
fiscal y ear. 
J eff Bullock, 2, sou 
of 
Mr. 
nut officials said tile decision I 
to submitting his budg et to 
and Mrs. Gary 
Bullock, Com- 
will probably add about $1 bib Cong ress last J anuary for this . mig ht be required 
when a deei- 
mercinl Point, fell down 
the 
lion 
to the budg et 
President iiscnl >ea r, President J ohnson sion is 
made, J ohnson said, the 
basement steps at the home of 
J ohnson will send to Cong ress ! rescn cd $37 5 million for possi* J budg et called for $37 5 million 
his g randparents, lacerating his 
nex t J anuary for the fiscal y ear tile production of Nike-X. 
scalp. 
which beg ins J uly I, 1003. 
* 
Iii' 
at the time, howev er, 
Garnet Ev aus, GO, Veteran’s 
The Nike-X defense sy stem is ! l*,a* 110 a( t'on uou^ *>c ^a^en 


v iot Union on limiting missile 
deploy ment. 
“ In the ev ent these discus­ 
sions 
prov e 
unsuccessful,” 
J ohnson said, “ we will reconsid­ 
er our deploy ment decision." 
To 
prov ide for 
action that 


Apartments, fell on a 
cement scheduled to be built ov er fiv e 
sidewalk causing contusions to | rears to ward off any low-scale 
her rig ht hand. 
I nuclear attack by Red China in 
Martin Hall, fi, son 
of Mr. the 19 7 0s. 
and Mrs. J esse Hall, 
Route I, 
For the current fiscal y ear, 
fell on a fence and receiv ed 
a howev er, the big defense ilcei- 
Inceration under his left arm. 
sion will hav e no effect on the 
Rodney List, 17 months, son i budg et which the administration 
of Mr. and Mrs. J oe List, 1265 is already under heav y pressure 
N. Court St., fell ag ainst a g ear- to cut. 


im mediately to deploy a missile 
defense 
and 
said 
discussions 


for production of missiles. Offi­ 
cials said sev eral hundred m il­ 
lion more is av ailable to the 
Pentag on 
from 
its 
research* 
funds. 


Clerk Chases Holdup Man; 


'Just Too Much/ He Says 


shift in 
a 
car lacerating his 
rig ht ey elid. 
Theresa Tatman, 13, daug h­ 
ter of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Tat- 
man, Tarlton, injured her rig ht 
ankle when she fell in the y ard 
at home. 
Robert Smith, ll, son of Mr. 
and Mrs. J esse Smith, 214 E. 
Mill St., injured his rig ht ankle 
during football practice. 
Charles Holland Sr., 15, Route 
I, hit his head on a 
furnace 
pipe 
at home 
lacerating 
his 
scalp. 
Ray mond Dav is. 2, 
son of 
Mr. and Mrs. 
Charles 
Dav is, 
Route 2, injured tile third fin­ 
g er of his rig ht hand in a door. 


Some members oi Cong ress 
hav e demanded cuts in nondc- 


CINCINNAT1 (A P) - When 
tho holdup man ordered Sam 
Penley , a part time clerk at the 
tense spending as the price f o r I Marion 
Carry 
Out, 
into 
the 
adoption of President J ohnson’s freezer and then kicked bim, it 
--------------------------------------- 
1 was just too much. 
“ That made me mad. So I 
picked lip a beer bottle and hit 
him in the back,” Penley re­ 
counted to police later, after the 
end of a wild Tuesday after­ 
noon chase in which tliree cars 
were wrecked and Gerald Allen 
Thomas 23, Houston, Tex ., was 
booked on a number of traffic 
charg es. 
Police Lt. Russell Poland said 


4 Initiated 


By BPO Elks | 


The 
Circlev ille 
BPO 
Elks 
Lodg e initiated a cla ss of four 
candidates Tuesday . 
New members of the lodg e I 
are 
Asa 
Elsea , 
9 54 
Circle i 
Driv e; Terry Roof, 9 54 S. Pick­ 
away St.; Georg e McCoy , 9 7 5 
Ly nwood Av e.; 
Dean 
McFad*1, 
den, 123 Parkv iew Av e. 
Tile initiation was conducted 
by Robert Duffer, ea x lter 
rul­ 
er, and his corps of officers. 
The 
meeting was also 
the 
first v isitation of South Central > 


Dam Worker 


Critically 


Injured 


l^arry E. Conley of West Ports­ 
mouth 
was 
critically injured 
Monday morning at the Deer- 
creek Dam project. The 24 y ear 
old, operating an earth mov er, 
was pinned beneath the machin­ 
ery when it toppled ov er an em ­ 
bankment. 
After emerg ency treatment at i6 , Gallipolis; Oct. 18, Mary s- 
the Fay ette Memorial Hospital, v ille; Oct. 23, Log an; Oct. 25, 
Washing ton C. H., he was trans- Portsmouth; Nov . 2, New Le- 
ferred to Univ ersity Hospital in ing ton; Nov . 8 , Lancaster, Nov . 
Columbus. 
• -- 


Berger 
Hospital News 


the bandit fled from the West­ 
wood area store with Slot) after 
firing one shot. Penley followed 
and when the robber jumped 
into a car, he followed in his 
own. 
Tile g etaway ear hit two oth­ 
er v ehicles and crashed into a 
tree. The robber and a compan­ 
ion jumped out and fled as 20 
police cruisers conv erg ed in the 
area. Sev eral more shots were 
fired, but no one wras hit. 
Lt. Poland said Thomas was 
captured 
hiding 
behind 
some 
bushes. He said the Tex an scuf­ 
fled with the arresting officers 
and suffered a head injury . A 
policeman also suffered a head 
laceration. 
The other man remained at 
larg e. 


REV. PHIL WILLIAMS 


Phil Williams, 130 Pinckney 
St., has been appointed minis­ 
ter of the Northridg e Church of 
Christ, Northridg e Road. He be­ 
g an his ministry at the church 
Aug . 27 . 


Williams, a naitv e of Colum­ 
bus, serv ed for three y ea rs as 
minister 
of 
the 
Millcreek 
Church of Christ. He g raduated 
from the Cincinnati Bible Sem ­ 
inary in J une 19GG with a Bach­ 
elor of Arts deg ree. 


strike by members of the Broth 
erhood 
of Railway and Airline 
Clerks ag a inst Pan 
American 


Firemen Attend 


Training Session 


Circlev ille Fire Chief Bernard 
Wolfe and three members of 
the department attended a train­ 
ing 
seminar 
held 
Monday at 
Day ton Fire Training Academy 
by Mack Truck Corporation. 
Circlev ille^ new I .(MR) g allon 
per minute pumper, is present­ 
ly on the production line and is 
scheduled for deliv ery Dee. 19 
by the Mack Corporation, Chiel 
Wolfe as informed. 
William O’Hara, a factory en­ 
g ineer, serv ed as instructor to 
g iv e adv anced ex perience in or,- 
crating and maintenance of fire 
pumps and apparatus. 
In addition to Wolfe, Lt. Glen 
J ones, Lf. Mike Brown and Fire­ 
man Martin 
Garner 
attended 
the session. 


Transit Authority Eyed 
TOLEDO, Ohio (A P )—A To- 
ledo-Lucas County Transit Au­ 
thority to be financed by v oter 
approv ed funds was called for 
Tuesday by W. Wallace Brown, 
head of the Community Trac­ 
tion Co. 
Community Traction, Toledo’s 
sole bus company , has contend- 
itself with rev enues from fare 
His wife, Linda, is a nativ e of j box es. City Council has been 


v on, sputtering start early to­ 
day . 
A 
federal 
judg e 
in 
New 
York declared Hie strike illeg al 


J and another, in Honolulu, 
or­ 
dered 
strikers 
there 
back to 
| work. 
About 
25(» 
Pan 
American 
g round 
serv ice 
employ es 
in 
Honolulu 
beg an 
walking 
off 
their jobs nearly six hours be­ 
fore the 12:01 a.m. EDT dead­ 
line. 
But J udg e C. Nis Tav ares of 
U.S. District Court in Honolulu 
g ranted an airline request and 
ordered the strikers to return to 
work. 
The 7 ,000 clerks, ticket writ­ 
ers and carg o men represented 
by the union struck in other 
areas 
also. But some 
local 
unions v oted to respect the tem ­ 
porary restraining order issued 
Tuesday 
afternoon 
by 
J udg e 
Fredericg Van 
Pet Bry an 
of 
U.S. District Court in New York 
City . 
Spokesmen for the airline said 
a fig hts were arriv ing and de­ 
parting on schedule and super­ 
v isory personnel were substitut­ 
ing for those employ es not 
on 
the job. 
Picket-lines were reported at 
Pan American’s administration 
building in Miami, at an office 
in New York in Honolulu and at 
the south g ate of Cape Kennedy 
in Forida. 


The union struck aller cla im ­ 
ing Pan A m e r i c a n refused to re­ 
spect 
a 
National 
Mediation 
Board oilier requiring a start on 
neg otiations for a new contract. 
Union members lune been work­ 
ing 
without 
a 
contract 
since 
March IG. 
The airline said ii 
did in*, 
hav e to start neg otiations until 
the board decides which of two 
unions is the leg al representa­ 
tiv e of the workers. 
The Independent Brotherhood 
of Teamsters bas been attempt­ 
ing to replace 
tho AFL-CIO 
clerk’s union. 
The board has set aside the 
results of two elections between 
the competing u n io ns in the past 
y ear and has not set a date for a 
third. 


CRT THI PACTS PHK, Sh o v ..n 8 How 
Simpl# I, U To Trull Your Homo Your- 


••lf With Arab U Do-lt. De ll Now AiW 


Proven! Thautondi O f Delian In Dom- 


l y T traiit*,. 
J IMS 
PAY & SAVE 
400 N. Coml 


ADMISSIONS 
Harold Gibson. Route 2, Wit- j 
District lodg es by Leo Morg an, j liamsport, surg ical 
407 E. Franklin St., district de­ 
puty g rand ealted ruler. 
As the direct representativ e 
of the g rand eax lted ruler 
of 
the BPO Elks, Robert E. Bon­ 
ey of Las Cruces, N. M., Mor­ 
g an must conduct inspections of 
all 14 Lodg es in the district. 
His v isitation schedule is: 
Sept. 27 , Athens; Oct. 2, Chil­ 
licothe; Oct. ll, Columbus; Oct. 


Henry Doy le Valentine, Route 
2,Amanda, surg ical 
Eug ene 
Garrett, 
Route 
I, 
King ston, medical 
Robert Green, Route 2, medi­ 
cal 
Robert 
Fannin, 
Route 
I, 
Frankfort, medical 
Kim Martin, daug hter of Mr. 
and Mrs. 
Porter 
Route 3, medical 
DISMISSALS 
; as bus driv er and mechanic. 
Mrs. Clinton Danner and son, I 
A new policy g ranting each | 
Route 4 
certificated 
employ e 
a 
max i- 
. 
- 
. 
, --------- Mrs. Floy d J enkins and son, mum of two day s personal lea v e 
He is listed as still ^ Ironton; Nov . 21, Newark; J Route I, Wiliamsport 
a y ear was adopted. The board 
in the recov ery room following Nov . 22, J ackson, Dec. 5, Nel- j 
Mrs. Cly de L. Balzer and son, also approv ed ex tra-duty assig n- 
surg ery on the 18 th. but in satis- 
son Ville. 
Route 3 
ments for school personnel. 
factory co n d itio n .________________ Following 
the 
meeting , 
a 
Mrs. Fred Redman, Route 4 
------------------------------ 
lunch was serv ed by the house 
Mrs. Melv in Leasure, 324 S. 
In Denmark, Danish pastry - is 
USE THE CLASSIFIEDS 
committee. 
Washing ton St. 
called Vienna bread. 


Minimum Teacher 


Salary Adopted 


By Laurelville 


The 
new 
minimum salary 
schedules enacted by leg isla tiv e 
action hav e been adopted by 
the Laurelv ille School Board. 
Action was taken at the Sep- 
Martin J r., i tember meeting of the board. 
The board hired Ray mond Rice 


Birming ham, Mich. She major 
ed in music at CBS. 
A family 
fellowship 
super 
was sonsored Thursday ev en­ 
ing by the Ladies Missionary 
Society 
to 
oficially 
welcome 
; Mr. 
and Mrs. Williams. There 
I were 63 attending . 
Special song s were sung 
by 
I Mr. and Mrs. Don Easier. Mrs. 
Martha Wig g ins, and 
Mr. and 
Mrs. Bill Venrick, of Lancaster. 
! Mr. Venrick also led the g roup 
in sing ing . 
At the conclusion of the sup­ 
per, the Williams were g iv en a 
surprise food show-er. 


study ing a proposal to buy or 
lea se it. 


WINDOW GLASS 


WINDSHIELDS 


GORDON’S 
GLASS 
201 H . Main — 474 563 1 


STOP I N AND SEE US 
For 
• Sundaes 
Ice Cream 
Floats 
Sandwiches 
Banana Splits 
ADAMS DAIRY ISLE 
202 Lancaster Pike 
The Building with the Green and White Stripes 


Today millions 
of people ate 
getting yajng ideas. 
I he ob 'youngmobiles1 
fort Oldsmobile 


w w C v rtn i S: 
B'j young in lh * w ay 
it look* , yo u n g in Hie 
w ay if acts And 
yow'lf find the to m e 
yo u n g ideal in a l 3 I 
yoonflm obile* " from 
Oldsmobile. 


N e w Perform ance 
H e re s an Oldsm obile 
fKof performs young, 
rides young, feels 
young, there's greater 
economy from a 
brand- new generation 
of Pockets. Choice of 
a 350- cw- in Rocket 
V.8 or 2 5 0 - C ID Sit 


I l etting Sty **, 
Here's on Oldsmobile 
contem porary style cmd 
smart new interiors. Two 
coupes, pius a bucket- ieot 
convertible. All with louvered 
hood, hid ea w a y wipers. 


Sporty Features; 
Here s on O ld s you 
con practically design 
yourself. Young it up 
with a stick- shift, center 
comole, dual exhausts, 
Bally Sport Suspension. X 
Pius oH die new G M 
J 
safety features. 
.are here. 


RISCH DRUG STORE 


As Near as Your Phone 474-6011 — Free Delivery 


1^u6A£fi&, Steven 
M A K E S T H E D I F F E R E N C E 
9 O ^ 


There are lots of thing* 
that are important in com­ 
pounding a prescription. 
Fresh drugs, up-to-the- 
minute equipment...but 
the big factor that mokes 
the world of difference it 
the Pharmacist who knows 
his profession and knows 
it well. 


Your health is safest in 
practiced hands like ours. 


C A N D I E S 


Delicious* 
Russell 
Stov er 


candies are famous ev ery ­ 


where 
for 
their 
superb 


quality and freshness 


they ’re 
deliv ered 
to 
us 


fresh ev ery week. 


KEG. $4.9 5 — IO COUNT 
Contac Capsules 
3 
S T .95 


KEG. $1.39 
Playtex Gloves 
Plus Free Ex tra 
Rig ht Hand Glov t 
98 


See them. Drive them. 
At your Oldsmobile Dealers. 


CLIFTO N M O TO R SALES, INC., CIRCLEVILLE, OHIO 


39 0 COUNT 
5 HOLE 
Filler P a p e r.....................4 9 


SI.IMI VAI.t i : — SIIAEFFEIt 
" 
Cartridge Pens .............. 4 9 


KEG. SH.9 .5 
Playtex N u rse r.............. 
.95 


WOMEN S SHEEK 
Seamless Hose 
• 
• 
• 
• 2 ",ir 99 
RISCH DRUG STORE 


1274 N. Court St. 
Plenty of Free Parking 
474-6011 
T 


Berger 


Treats 8 


Emergencies 


Hight persons, all involved in 
non-vehicular 
accidents, 
were 
*4iven emergency treatm ent and 
released 
by 
Berger 
Hospital 
Tuesday. 
Jeff Bullock, 2. son 
of 
Mr. 
and Airs. Gary Bullock, Com­ 
mercial Point, fell down 
the 
basement steps at the home of 
his grandparents, lacerating his 
scalp. 
Garnet I ivy us, GO, Veteran's 
Apartments, fell on a cement 
sidewalk causing contusions to 
her right hand. 
Alartin Hall, 6, son of Mr. 
and Airs. Jesse Hall, Route I, 
fell on a fence and received 
a 
laceration under his left arm. 
Rodney List, 17 months, son 
of Air. and Mrs. Joe List, 1265 
N. Court St., fell against a gear­ 
shift in a 
car lacerating his 
right eyelid. 
Theresa Ta tm an, 13. daugh­ 
ter of Air. and Mrs. Arthur Tat- 
man, Tarlton, injured her right 
ankle when she fell in the yard 
at home. 
Robert Smith, ll, son of Mr. 
and Mrs. Jesse Smith, 214 E. 
Mill St., injured his right ankle 
during football practice. 
Charles Holland Sr., 15, Route 
I, hit his head on a 
furnace 
pipe 
at home 
lacerating 
his 
scalp. 
Raymond Davis. 2, son of 
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Davis, 
Route 2, injured the third fin­ 
ger of his right hand in a door. 


24 
The Circleville Herald, Wed. Sept. 20, 1967 
Circleville, Ohio 
U.S. Can Afford Missiles 
New Minister Pap.Am Workers Defy Court 
At Northridge 
WASHINGTON 
(AIM 
A Wind Airways got off to an unc- 


Dam Worker 


Critically 


Injured 


I>arry E. Conley of West Ports­ 
mouth 
was 
critically injured 
Monday morning at the Deer- 
creek Dam project. Tile 24 year 
old, operating an earth mover, 
was pinned beneath the machin­ 
ery when it toppled over an em ­ 
bankment. 
After emergency treatm ent at 
the Fayette Memorial Hospital, 
Washington C. H., he was trans­ 
ferred to University Hospital in 
Columbus. He is listed as still 
in the recovery room following 
surgery on the 18th. but in satis­ 
factory condition. 


USE THE CLASSIFIEDS 


WASHINGTON MMM - 
Tile 
government already has enough 
money alloted to begin deploy­ 
ment of the S5 billion missile de­ 
fense sn stem outlined this week I 
In Secretary of Defense Robert j 
S. McNamara. 
Blit officials said Ute decision ! 
will probably add about Si bib J 
lion to the 
budget 
President 
Johnson will send to Congress 
next January for Hie fiscal year j 
which begins July I. 10(58. 
The Nike*X defense system is j 
scheduled to be built over five I 
years to ward off any low-scale 
nuclear attack by Red China in j 
the 1970s. 
For the current fiscal year, j 
however, the big defense d cci-; 
-don will have no effect on die 
budget which the administration 
is already under heavy pressure 
to cut. 
Some members of Congress 
have demanded cuts in nonde-! 
tense spending as the price for 
adoption of President Johnson’s 1 


4 Initiated 


By BPO Elks I 


The 
Circleville 
BPO 
Elks 
Lodge initiated a class of four 
candidates Tuesday. 
New members of the lodge 
are 
Asa 
Elsea. 
954 
Circle 
Drive; Terry Roof. 954 S. Pick-1 
away St.; George McCoy, 975 
Lynwood Ave.; 
Dean 
Alc Fad-: 
den, 123 Parkview Ave. 
Tile initiation was conducted 
by Robert Huffcr, eaxlter nil- j 
er, and his corps of officers. 
The meeting was also 
the 
first visitation of South Central i 
District lodges by Leo Morgan, 
407 E. Franklin St., district de- 
puty grand ealted niler. 
As the direct representative 
of the grand eaxlted ruler 
of 
the BPO Elks, Robert E. Bon­ 
ey of Las Cruces, N. Al., Mor­ 
gan must conduct inspections of 
all 14 lodges in the district. 
His visitation schedule is: 
Sept. 27, Athens; Oct. 2, Chil­ 
licothe; Oct. ll, Columbus; Oct. 
16, Gallipolis; Oct. 18, Marys* 
Ville; Oct. 23, Logan; Oct. 25, 
Portsmouth; Nov. 2, New- Le- 
ington; Nov. 8. Lancaster, Nov. 
16, Ironton; Nov. 21, Newark; 
Nov. 22, Jackson. Dec. 5, Nel­ 
sonville. 
Following 
the 
meeting, 
a 
lunch was served by the house 
committee. 


proposed IO per cent surcharge | 
on income taxes. 
Government sources estim ate 
that up to $700 million is avail 
able to the Pentagon to begin 
the program during the current 
fiscal year. 
In submitting his budget to 
Congress last January for this 
fiscal year, President Johnson 
reserved $375 million for possi-1 
hie production of Nike-X. 
lie said at die time, however, 
that no action would be taken 
immediately to deploy a missile 
defense 
and 
said 
discussions 


would be initiated with the So­ 
viet Union on limiting missile 
deployment. 
“ Iii the event these discus­ 
sions 
prove 
unsuccessful,” 
Johnson said, ‘‘we will reconsid­ 
er our deployment decision.” 
To provide for 
action that 
might be required when a deci­ 
sion is made, Johnson said, the 
budget called for $375 million 
for production of missiles. Offi­ 
cials said several hundred mil­ 
lion more is available to the 
Pentagon 
from 
its 
research- 
funds. 


Clerk Chases Holdup Man; 


'Just Too Much/ He Says 


Church 


strike by members of the Broth 
erhood of Railway and Airline 
Clerks against Pan 
American 


«aH—8 


CINCINNATI (API — When 
tho holdup man ordered Sam 
Penley, a part time clerk at the 
Marion 
Carry 
Out, 
into 
the 
freezer and then kicked him. it 
was just too much. 
“That made me mad. So I 
picked up a beer bottle and hit 
him iii the back,” Penley re­ 
counted to police later, after the 
end of a wild Tuesday after­ 
noon chase in which tnree cars 
were wrecked and Gerald Allen 
Thomas 23, Houston, Tex., was 
booked on a number of traffic 
charges. 
Police Lf. Russell Poland said 


Berger 
Hospital News 


[the bandit fled from the West* 


I wood arca store with SKH) after 
firing one shot. Penley followed 
and when the robber jumped 
into a car, he followed in his 
own. 
Tile getaway car hit two oth­ 
er \ chicles and crashed into a 
tree. The robber and a compan­ 
ion jumped out and fled as 20 
police cruisers converged in the 
area. Several more shots were 
fired, but no one was hit. 
Lt. Poland said Thomas was 
captured hiding behind some 
hushes. Ile said the Texan scuf­ 
fled with tile arresting officers 
and suffered a head injury. A 
policeman also suffered a head 
laceration. 
The other man remained at 
large. 


Firemen Attend 
Training Session 


Circleville Fire Chief Bernard 
Wolfe and three m em bers of 
the departm ent attended a train­ 
ing 
sem inar held 
Monday at 
Dayton Fire Training Academy 
by Mack Truck Corporation. 
Circleville’s new I,OOO gallon 
per minute pumper, is present­ 
ly on the production line and is 
scheduled for delivery Dec. 19 j 
by the Mack Corporation, (Thief 
Wolfe as informed. 
William O’Hara, a factory en­ 
gineer, served as instructor to 
give advanced experience in op­ 
erating and maintenance of fire 
pumps and apparatus. 
In addition to Wolfe, Lt. Glen 
REV. PIHL WILLIAMS 
Jones. Lt. Mike Brown and Fire­ 
man Martin 
G arner 
attended 
Phil Williams, 130 Pinckney j the session. 
St., has been appointed minis- j 
_ 
_ 
_ 
_ 
_ 
_ 
_ 
_ 
_ 
_ 
_ 
_ 
_ 
_ 
_ 
_ 
_ 
_ 
Authority Eyed 


von, sputtering start early to­ 
day. 
A 
federal 
judge 
iii 
New 
York declared the strike illegal 
and another, in Honolulu, 
or­ 
dered strikers there back to 
work. 
About 
250 
Pan 
American 


The union struck alter claim ­ 
ing Pan A m erican refused to re­ 
spect 
a 
National 
Mediation 
Board order requiring a start on 
negotiations tor a new contrail. 
Union members have been work 
big 
without a contract 
since 
Alarch lo. 
The airline said ii did IHA 
. I have to start negotiations until 
ground 
service 
employes 
i i i ) 
| m . m 
, (|(1(.j(|(,s 
„ 
l l i c h 
two 
Honolulu 
honan walking 
off 
( 
js lh(, 
represent!! 
their jolts nearly six hours be-1 
' 
h(l Hortl,,.s. 
fore the 12:01 a.m. EDT dead­ 
line. 
But Judge C. Nis Tavares of 
U.S. District Court in Honolulu 
granted an airline request and 


The Independent Brotherhood 
of Team sters has l>een attem pt­ 
ing to replace 
the AI- L-CIO 
clerk’s union. 
The boa rd has set aside the 
ordered the strikers to return to resup s 0f two elections between 
the eoni|H‘ting unions in the past 
year and has not set a date for a 
third. 


gait his ministry at the church 
Aug. 27. 
Williams, a naitve of Colum­ 
bus, served for three years as 
m inister 
of 
the 
Millcreek 
Church of Christ. Ile graduated 
from the Cincinnati Bible Sem­ 
inary in June 1966 with a Bach­ 
elor of Arts degree. 


TOLEDO, Ohio (A P)—A To 
ledo-Lucas County Transit Au­ 
thority to he financed by voter 
approved funds was called for 
Tuesday by W. Wallace Brown, 
head of the Community Trac­ 
tion Co. 
Community Traction, Toledo’s 
sole bus company, has contend- 
itself with revenues from fare 


work. 
The 7,000 clerks, ticket writ­ 
ers and cargo men represented 
by the union struck iii other 
areas 
also. But some 
local 
unions voted to respect the tem ­ 
porary restraining order issued 
Tuesday 
afternoon 
by 
Judge 
Fredericg Van Pet Bryan of 
U.S. District Court in New York 
City. 
Spokesmen for the airline said ; 
a fights were arriving and de­ 
parting on schedule and super­ 
visory personnel were substitut­ 
ing for those employes not 
on 
the job. 
Picket-lines were reported at 
Pan Am erican’s administration 
building in Miami, at an office 
in New York in Honolulu and at 
the south gate of Cape Kennedy 
in Forida. 


O H THI TACTS TM I. Shawms Haw 
Simp'# It la To Trawl Your Ham* Vaua- 
aatf WIH, Arab U-Oa-H. Do ll Haw Amd 
Travail T h o u e d , O I Delian In Dam­ 
es* ly Ta-miia#. 
JIMS 
PAY & SAVE 
KIO N. Court 


His wife, Linda, is a native of j boxes. City Council has been 


ADMISSIONS 
Harold Gibson. Route 2, Wil­ 
liamsport. surgical 
Henry Doyle Valentine, Route 
2,Amanda, surgical 
Eugene 
G arrett, 
Route 
I, 
Kingston, medical 
Robert Green, Route 2, medi­ 
cal 
Robert 
Fannin, 
Route 
I, 
Frankfort, medical 
Kim Martin, daughter of M r. 
and Mrs. Porter Martin Jr., 
Route 3, medical 
DISMISSALS 
Mrs. Clinton Danner and son, 
Route 4 
Mrs. Floyd Jenkins aud son, 
Route I, Wiliam sport 
Mrs. Clyde L. Balzer and son, 
Route 3 
Mrs. Fred Redman, Route 4 
Mrs. Melvin Ix>asure, 324 S. 
Washington St. 


Minimum Teacher 
Salary Adopted 
By Laurelville 


The 
new 
minimum salary 
! schedules enacted by legislative 
action have been adopted by 
the Laurelville School Board. 
Action was taken at the Sop- 
tem ber meeting of the board. 
The board hired Raymond Rice 
as bus driver and mechanic. 
A new- policy granting each 
certificated employe 
a 
m axi­ 
mum of two days personal leave 
a year was adopted. The board 
also approved extra-duty assign­ 
ments for school personnel. 


Birmingham, Mich. She m ajor 
cd in music at CBS. 
I 
A family 
fellowship 
super 
I was sonsored Thursday even­ 
ing by the Ladies Missionary 
Society 
to 
oficially 
welcome | 
Mr. 
and Mrs. Williams. There 


I were 63 attending. 
Special songs were sung 
by 
I Mr. and Mrs. Don Kasler, Mrs. ( 
Martha Wiggins, and 
Mr. and 
Mrs. Bill Venrick, of Lancaster. 
Mr. Venrick also led the group 
in singing. 
At the conclusion of the sup­ 
per, the Williams were given a 
surprise food shower. 


studying a 
lease it. 
proposal to buy or 


WINDOW GLASS 
WINDSHIELDS 


GORDON’S 
GLASS 
201 W. Main - 474 5631 


STOP IN AND SEE US 


F o r 
Cones 
• Sundaes 
• Bulk Ice Cream 
• Floats 
• Sandwiches 
• Banana Splits 
ADAMS DAIRY ISLE 
202 Lancaster Pike 
The Building with the Green and White Stripes 


In Denmark, Danish pastry is 
called Vienna bread. 


"belay mitons 
of people are 
_ getting young ideas. 
The 68 Noungmobiles’ 
Ion Oldsmobile 


I a tiring Sly** 
I M * m w C w t i S: 
H e r e ‘» on O ld sm o b ile wife 
V s y o u n g in The w a y 
co n te m p o ra ry style cmd 
it looks, y o u n g in the 
sm art new inferiors. Tw o 
w a y it acts. A n d 
y o u ’N find the som e 
coupes, plus a buck cf-se of 
convertible. All with lo uve re d 
yo u n g id e a s in a l 3 1 
h ood , h id e a w a y w ipers, 
“ yo u n gm o b ile s’* from 
a ate here. 


O ld sm o b ile . 


N ew ferferm o n ce 


S p o rty Featu re s: 
H e r e s o n O ld s you 
co n p ra ctically d e sign 
H e r e s a n O ld sm o b ile 
yourself. Y o u n g it up 
fhot perform s yo u n g, 
with a stick-shift, center 
rid es yo un g, feels 
console, d u a l exhausts, 
young. T he re’s g re a t er 
R a lly S p o rt Suspension, 
econom y from a 
Plus oil the n ew G M 
b ra n d -n e w g e n e ratio n 
sa fe ty features. 
o f Rockets. C h o ice o f 
a 350-cw -in. Rocket 
V -B or 2 5 0 - C ID S i* 


RISCH DRU6 STORE 


As Near as Your Phone 474-6011 — Free Delivery 


Steven 
•MAKES THE DIFFERENCE’ 


T h e r e a r e l o t s o f t h i n g s 


t h a t o r e i m p o r t a n t in c o m - 


p o u n d i n g a p r e s c r i p t i o n . 


F r e s h d r u g s , u p - t o - t h e - 


m i n u t e e q u i p m e n t . . . b u t 


t h e b i g f a c t o r t h a t m o k e s 


t h e w o r l d o f d i f f e r e n c e i t 


♦he P h a r m a c i s t w h o k n o w s 


h i s p r o f e s s i o n a n d k n o w s 
it w e l l . 


Y o u r h e a l t h i s s o f e s t in 


p r a c t i c e d h a n d s l i k e o u r s . 


C A N D I E S 


Delicious 
Russell 
Stover 


candies are famous every­ 


where 
for 
their 
superb 


quality and freshness . . . 


they’re 
delivered 
to 
us 


fresh every week. 


K E G . $4.93 — IO C O U N T 
Contac C apsules............$3 95 


KEG. $1.39 
Playtex Gloves 
Plus Free Extra 
Right Hand Glove 
• 
• 98 


See them. Drive them. 
At your Oldsmobile Dealers. 


CLIFTON MOTOR SALES, INC., CIRCLEVILLE, OHIO 


3 0 0 C O U N T — 5 H 
O 
U 
: 
Filler Paper...................49 


SI .IMI VALUE — SHAEFFER 
Cartridge Pens .............49 


KEG. $8.95 
Playtex Nurser 
• 
• 
• 
• 
• 6 
S A .95 


WOMEN S SHEEK 
Seamless Hose 
• 
• 
• 
• 
pair 9 
9 
RISCH DRUG STORE 


1274 N. Court St. 
Plenty of Free Parking 
474-6011