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Chillicothe Gazette from Chillicothe, Ohio • 23
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Chillicothe Gazette from Chillicothe, Ohio • 23

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Chillicothe, Ohio
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a Houses For WILL modern furnished home months privilege of Rent. buying. $100 per plus utilities Phone 3-4175, THREE BEDROOM from acre. 20 minutes A-plant. E.

Posey, Alma. 83 Farms and Land For Sale SMALL FARM. 15 acres. 5 room house. furnace, bath, cistern and well.

Good building, school bus and mail route. 11 miles west. Trade or sell. Phone 16-2335. D.

HEISKELL, Realtor REISKELL. Realtor Williamsport, 0. 27 Res 84 Houses For Sale CITY PROPERTY Good room frame, one story. East End 5,800.0) Room Modern with baths. Park Street 5.800.00 5 Room House with City gas, needs 12000, repair 6.850.001 Modern with storm doors and New.

4 a Room Modern with gas furnace windows 7.500.04 lot 60 x150' 7.500.00 Good 3 Bedroom two story frame with gas 8.000.00 Exceptionally Good 5 Room modern home with gas furnace and built in kitchen. Close to Mt. Logan school 8,750.00 Good 4 Room Modern with gas furnace large garage 10.000.00 Good Room Modern: with coal stoker furnace, storm and windows fireplace, hard wood floors, unfinished attic. garage. Approximately 12 years old 11.000.00 Bedroom Modern with gas furnace garage 11.000.00 New 4 room modern home with gas forced air heat, unfinished attic 11,800.00 FARM 111 ACRES, mostly woods.

$3.000 771 Acres. 25 acres tillable, 20 acres woods. 20 acres pasture. 5 room house Has 3 wells and located 6 miles from Waverly, Ohio. 14 miles from A-plant Only 8.000.00 28 ACRES West off of 50.

$2.000.00 ROOM MODERN HOME with one twenty acres. 5 miles from Chillicothe quick possession. ACRES with good 5 room house. 3 acres of alfalfa hay, barn, hen house and outbuildings 6.250.00 135 ACRES with two houses. barn, fruit cellar, chicken house, corn crib.

6 Acres of No. 2 coal. or can be divided into one 80 acre farm and 55 Acre farm. Reasonably priced at $12.500.00 Will trade for business on Federal Highway. 1.28 ACRES.

with good 3 bedroom, one story home, four miles 5,800.00 1 ACRE with 6 room story frame house with plenty of water 1,750.00 1.34 ACRES with an 8 room double. rooms on each side, renting for $65 per month. ideal for home and in come. Route 50 East. 6,850.00 H.

C. JUNK REAL ESTATE BROKER RM. 3. CITIZENS BANK BLDG. 319 Piatt Ave.

Dial 2-0152 Barton Cook Inc. It vou are one of those people that can't find your dream home let us build it for you. We specialize in repairing. painting and building. Call or Come Down and See DON HARDIN, Realtor Water Phs.

4-2029 or 2-8254 SAVE $1000. Modern 5 room ranch type home. Full basement. hard wood floors, two baths, gas furnace, hot water. Choice lot.

North Fork Villate. Phone 3-0815. 7. ROOM HOUSE One floor plan with 2 extra lots. Completely remodeled.

Will sacrifice. Best offer takes. Phone 2-7018 after 7 p.m., before 7:30 a.m. 135 COTTAGE LANE One year old two bedroom home, larze living room, lovely kitchen, utility room, hardwood floors, plastered walls, venetian blinds, copper water lines. gas furnace, lot 60x145.

$10.500. Available in about two weeks. Shown by appointment. I also have one more lot on Cottage Lane. Many plans, look them over.

Let me give you estimate on a house of your choice. WALTER KENNARD. Builder 130 Cottage Lane Phone 4-1639 New National Homes Now under construction. Quick possession. We arrange financing.

K. C. Dillon Builder. Ph. 3-4377 THREE ROOMS WITH BATH Full basement and garage.

East end. SIX ROOMS with bath. North Mulberry St. $6.000. SEVEN ROOM MODERN, double garage.

South Hickory TWO BEDROOMS modern, extra lot. Eastern Ave. FOUR ROOMS and large lot. Three miles North. $4500.

ROOM modern, acre, miles South. TWO and ACRES. 5 room modern house and 6 room house, miles East. 52 ACRES. 5 ROOM HOUSE.

Barn. poultry house, 10 acres in alfalfa, 11 miles out on blacktop road. $7500. 18 ACRES. 4 room house, new garage.

Wash house. 8 miles out ONE ACRE, 5 room house. shower. commode, lavatory. 9 miles south 6.000 80 ACRES, 5 room house, 13 miles out.

6.0000 ACRES. ROOM HOUSE. 14 miles out. 2.000. A.

H. Conaway, Realtor 584 R. Second St, Ph. 3-5596 90 Auction Sale SWEETIE PIE By Nadine Seltzer Copr. 1955 by.

NEA Service, Ine. SEt 5.20 "Mom buys my shoes too large because my feet are growing! I guess she expects hers to shrink 'cause she buys her shoes too small!" 84 Houses For Sale 3 BEDROOM HOME IN FRANKFORT This home has 7 rooms. basement. bath, coal furnace, venetian blinds. sink and cabinets.

electric. water and sewer, shrubbery on paved street. $9.000 Call or See LLOYD LEEDOM, Realtor 30 N. Chillicothe. Ohio Phones 2-0876 Drop in and look over our fine selection of city and rural homes.

BY OWNER- -Modern 5 room ranch type home. basement, hardwood floors, tile bath, gas furnace. hot water heater. Choice lot. Completely redecorated.

See at North Fork Village Owner being transfered. Phone 2-4268. LOVELY WEST END HOME Modern. 3 bedrooms. living room, dining room, kitchen, bath, full basement, garage, hardwood floors, furnace, automatic water heater, wall to wall carpeting, venetian blinds.

storm windows. screens, wood burning fireplace, fenced in back yard, shade trees, Worthington School, bus lines. shopping facilities. By owner. Dial 3-5844.

rage Phone 2-7151. 96 Auction Sale LIST Your Home For Sale With CHAS. C. EVANS REALTOR Second Ph. 2-6456 BUYING A HOME? We're old hands at making The First National Bank k' of Chillicothe Real Estate Loans LLOYD LEEDOM, Realtor 30 N.

Paint St. Chillicothe, 0. Phones 2-0876 and 2-5612 HOME LOANS Attractive Rates Liberal Terma -Prompt ServiceMUTUAL SAVINGS ASSN 24 Second Dial 3-3486 $1800.00 DOWN 6 room. full basement, corner lot. close to school.

One the best. $14,500.00 DON HARDIN, Realtor 825 E. Water 4-2029 or 2-8254 MODERN 4 BEDROOM HOME at 22 E. Seventh Street. for quick sale.

Also many other good buys in city. GILBERT HURST, Broker Off. 220 Elm St. Phone 4-4208 Town Country Homes Orville Brown, Broker BAINBRIDGE, OHIO FOR SALE SIX ROOM HOUSE Completely modern. Basement and furnace.

Garage, 26x24. Possession soon. M. A. FLESHER CANKFORT, O.

Ph. 16-2844 SELL A OR TRADE-5 rooms and bath. Front and back porches. suble EXECUTOR'S SALE OF REAL ESTATE As executor of the estate of Robert K. McDill, deceased, I will sell the following real estate at public auction at the front door of courthouse, Chillicothe, Ohio Saturday, June 18th, 1955 At 10 O'clock A.

M. Consisting of 116 acres of land in Scioto Township, Ross County, Ohio and known as the McDill Farm. Situated five miles west of Chillicothe on the Polk Hollow Road. Was formerly famous for its vineyard and orchards. Appraised at $4,525.00.

Must be sold for not less than two-thirds appraisement. Terms: day of sale, balance on delivery of deed. ISAAC S. McDILL, Executor R. G.

Patterson, Auctioneer. Paul W. Hertenstein, Attorney. PUBLIC SALE As I am moving into smaller quarters I will sell the following at my residence located approximately 11 miles West of Chillicothe 2 miles off of Route 50 on the Black Run Road. SATURDAY, MAY 28, 1955 Beginning at 1:00 O'clock 3 piece living room suite, 3 dressers-one with marble top, several stands, straight chairs and rockers, dining table, kitchen cabinet, breakfast table and 4 chairs, buffet, bed (complete), Maytag washer, ironing board.

Estate bottle gas range. Norge fuel oil heater, Kirby electric sweeper, two-9x12 wool rugs, throw rugs, 1 single bed (complete), clocks, lamps, dishes, cooking utensils, garden plow, stepladder, weed sprayer, wheelbarrow, 275 gal. fuel oil tank, small hand tools, approximately 20 chickens and many other useful items. TERMS: Cash day of sale. JOHN W.

REASTER Jim Patterson, Auctioneer. Newman Donahue, Clerks, Commencements (Continued Current, Frank Davis, Ray Davis, Marcella Detillion, James Gatten, Lowell Graves, Patricia Lou Gray, Leona Hahn, Ronald Harper, Kay Hibbler, Fran Johnson, Harold Kight, Helen Kight, May Kight, Peggy Knisley, Richard Langland, Billy Lee, Cleo MeCorkle, James McCormick, Mary Lou McKee, John Meeker, Ralph Mercer, Jack Miller, Marlene Moats, Evelyn Montgomery, Franklin Montgomery, Ruthie Peecher, Ruth Ann Vernon Snyder, Lowell Sparks, Charles Stevens, Kay Stevens, Nancy Stmubo, Joyce Tackett, Donald Thompson, Shirley Walter, Robert Wiles, Mary Sue Wiseman, Melvin Wood, Patricia Ann Wood. Deroy Youree. Medal awards were made as follows: Valedictory, Virginia Ratcliff, who also received the Readers Digest award, with Mr. Stultz making the presentation, and the English award, with the presentation by John Knecht; salutatory, Mary Lost McKee, presentation Mr.

Stultz. and the History award presented by Lillian Bauer: Citizenship, Richard Langland, presented by Charles F. Wagner; Vocational Agriculture, John Meeker, presenter by George Hamrick; 1 Home Economics, Kay Stevens, presented by Gladys De Vault; Industrial Arts, Franklin Montgomery, pre. sented by Thomas Helms, a and he also received a year's scholarship, in any school of his choosing, from Delta Sigma Kappa sorority: Band, Instrumental and vocal, to Linda Queen, presented by Robert Newman; Athletics, Fran Johnson and Lamar Riley, presented by Richard Davisson: Commercial, Leona Hahn, and Southeastern Publications, to Kay Hibbler, both awards presented by Wanda Ward. Kingston Commencement "Free public education is the greatest contribution of the age," graduates of the Kingston High School were told by Dr.

H. I. Von Haden of Miami University He pointed out that in this age, with all its gadgets, the advances of science, and the tensions that go with these free public education done society than any other element for personal, community. national development. The speaker was presented by Supt.

E. L. Wiley, who later presented special awards to graduates. The order of the Kingston program: Processional, Miss Patricia Howe: invocation, the Rev. James Bartlett, pastor of the Kingston Presbyterian Church; Girls' Chorus, "Holy Is Thy Lord." under the direction of Miss Howe; address by Dr.

Von Haden; chorus, "Praise Ye The Father': presentation of awards by Supt. Wiley, presentation of diplomas, Wayne DeLong, president of the Kingston Board of Education; benediction, by the Rev. Mr. Bartlett, and then recessional. Kingston graduates receiving diplomas: Robert Lee Beavers, Ruth Ann Brooks, Carole Lee Canter, Howard Nelson Carper, Loretta Chaffin, Beverly Donahue Congrove, Barbara Kay Francis.

Diane Williams Janes, Janis Jende, Fred Arnold Jones, Wanda Lou Linton, Nancy Jo Paxton, Beverly Rhoades, Robert Eugene Shoemaker, Leonard Spencer Valentine and Mary Special awards: Valedictorian, co-winners of medals, John Jende and Ruth Ann Brooks; salutatorian, Nancy Joe Paxton: and a special four-year scholarship to John Jende, the gift of Ohio University, Counter Offer Readied by Ford DETROIT P- -The Ford Motor Co. was reported ready. today to offer a counter proposal to the CIO United Auto Workers demand for a guaranteed annual, wage. There was no the expected counter proposal contained. Ford has said repeatedly that it has maintained an open mind on the year-round wage proposal since bargaining talks started April 12.

General Motors Corp. also has maintained it has had an open mind on the issue since the GM talks began April 7. Youth for Christ In Saturday Rally Ross County Youth for Christ will hear a talk by the Rev. Carl Butterbaugh of Portsmouth, formor Chillicothe resident, during rally at the First EUB Church at 7:45 p.m. Saturday.

A girls' gospel trio to accompany him here. Robert Page will be the master of ceremonies. An extract made from bay leaves is used by barbers, according to the Encyclopedia Britannica. 90 Auction Sale 84 Houses For Sale Put That Old Mouldy Money To Work Double in the Duplex the DON HARDIN, Realtor $25 F. Water 4-2029 or 2-8254 BUILDING.

WELL LOCATED. Yielding high income. From rentals, from repair garage, and apartments. Gross FOUR ROOM BRICK HOUSE on Brownell, Bath, floor furnace. gas log fireplace.

Newly painted. $6,000 How About A G.I. Loan? 136 S. Walnut St. Dial 3-4447 Eve.

NEW BRICK HOUSE centrally located Living room, entrance hall. dining room. two bed rooms and kitchen. tile bath with lavenette. Woodburning fireplace.

china built-in book cases. closet. Large closets with sliding doors. Decorated plastered walls, Plenty, cabinets. in kitchen.

Basement laundry tubs. shower and toilet. automatic water heater. Deluxe gas furnace Garage 24x14, drive-in Patio and fenced yard. flood ht and two sion 147 East Water Street.

bed. yard Nice lights. size lot. planted Immediate and posses. Yard M.

G. DICKEY, Realtor DON KEAR REAL ESTATE BROKER 5 WEST SECOND ST PH. 4-2610 or 4-6343 ROOMS. Bath. 1 acre.

Near $3,800 2 ROOMS. Large lot. Rozelle Creek Road. $1,600 ROOMS. 6 acres.

Rozelle Creek Road. $3,500 G. P. TURPEN, Realtor 2 Carlisle Bldg. -Dial 4-4946 Residence-4-4949 R.

G. PATTERSON AUCTIONEER REALTOR 22 W. Water St. Ph. 4-7157 ROOM HOUSE, one acre.

One mile from Unioto School. Inquire William Breakfield. Pleasant Valley or Cavalier Roller Rink. ROOM HOUSE. 5 acres, some fruit trees.

Located miles from Richmond Dale on Lynn Hill. Phone 2-3057. ROBERT, a JUENGER. ticket to the Scioto Majestic Theater, Call at the Gazette office. KINGSTON For by ownerduplex.

2 baths. 7 Oak St Phone 12-2482. FLANNAGAN BLDG. CONTRATCING CO. 610 PIATT AVE.

PHONE 3-4190 187 E. 2ND 52 198 $8,000 CHAS. Z. ALEXANDER Phone 2-5876 PAGE North Fork BOYER, Realtor Village Route 50 West Ph 8-3650 Largest Real Estate Organization in South-Central Ohio Forest Beck-5-5392 Jim Hartranft-2-9478 3-4228 Burton Price-4-2890 after 3:30 p.m. Herbert (Trim) Weaver-4-4855 Eugene Dresbach -Kingston 12-2901 William C.

Broce-4-2302 DONALD H. WATT REALTOR Phone 4-1615 LIST WITH METRO REALTY 521 Arch St. Ph. 2-0012 Pleasant Valley -Homes For Sale Homes Built to Specifications ROBERT PECK PHONE 2-3157 Homes for Sale and Rent Carlyle Estates at Waverly 85 Lots For Sale 2 MOST DESIRABLE adjoining building lots for sale. 80x490 each.

Cliffside Drive, Belleview Heights. Dia 2-5106 or 2-7580. RESTRICTED building sites. one mile North of Veteran's Hospital, on 277. Approximately 97' 208'.

Dial 2-3179. 86 Business Opportunities RESTAURANT FOR RENT. Fully equipped. Phone 4-7896. DIAL 3-2111 For a Quick-Action Gazette Want Ad 90 Auction Sale Closing Out Sale of Household Goods Will discontinue housekeeping and sell the following at auction 8 miles North of Chillicothe, one mile North of Kinnikinnick on Route.

159. Saturday, May 28 at 1:00 P.M. 4 beds complete, 4 rugs 9x12, Congoleum rug 9x12. dresser, 2 wash stands, 2 rockers, 15 dining chairs, davenette, sideboard. 3 stands, Morris chair, 2 occasional chairs, 2 coal heaters, medicine cabinet, kitchen cabinet, old dish cupboard, cook stove, dining table, old base rocker, dishes, cooking utensils, pictures, 6 old calender plates, etc.

CHARLES W. BAILEY R. G. Patterson, Auctioneer, Phone 4-7157. Alfred Immell, Clerk.

Thursday, May 26, 1955 Chillicothe ((0.) (Gazette-23 STORY OF MARTHA WAYNE BY WILSON SCRUGGS CAROL! DR. ROGERS SAYS MRS. HE'LL BE RIGHT GREACEN- OVER, IT'S CAROL GOL-LEE. SOMETHING TERRIBLE HAS HAPPENED! Henry Fonda Just Detests Interviews HOLLYWOOD (P) Most of the Hollywood press corps would agree that Henry Fonda is an excellent actor, A fine fellow and lousy interview. Fonda himself would be the first to, admit the latter.

Like many Broadway-trained actors, he does not go along with Hollywood's conception of publicity, Unlike other actors, he resists conforming to the system. He expressed his ideas with unusual frankness during a break in rehearsals for "Petrified Forest," which he is performing with Humphrey Bogart and Lauren Bacall Tornadoes (Continued from Page One) wire criss-crossed the streets. Cars parked in the streets were smashed by falling brick walls. Rain accompanied the twister and continued pour down after it had passed. Udall occupied an area of about three fourths of a mile square.

Police, civil defense workers highway patrolmen from nearby" areas converged on the to aid the injured and search for dead still in wrecked buildings. Refugee centers were set up at nearby The school at nearby Mulvane was turned into a temporary hospital for the injured. Others, were taken to Mulvane homes. Two hospitals at Winfield reported at least 10 of the injured were in critical condition and approximately 30 in serious condition. The tornadoes hit 10 Oklahoma towns killing at least 19 persons.

Lightning claimed two lives. with telephone communications wiped out, amateur short wave radio, operators broadcast appeals help which brought ambulances, doctors, nurses, firemen and rescue units from numerous surrounding towns. Cries of the injured could be heard in the darkness by rescue workers, who swarmed quickly over the wreckage of demolished homes. Bulldozers Clear Paths Bulldozers were used to clear the streets of uprocted trees and other debris to make way for ambulances. bread trucks and other commercial vehicles which were pressed into service to speed the injured to hospitals.

As Blackwell's two hospitals filled rapidly, the injured were rushed to Ponca City, Pawhuska and Medford. A temporary morgue was established at the National Guard armory and the members of the local guard unit patrolled the stricken area. Some of the injured were treated in churches, which set up emergency first aid stations. Out-of-town policemen, here for a convention of northern Oklahoma and southern Kansas peace officers, joined local authorities in the rescue work, as did civil defense units and first aid teams rushed here from as far as Wichita, Kan. One of the first reporters to reach the scene said the entire northeast section of the town, about 10 miles north of Oklahoma City, was a mass of twisted wreckage that looked as if a gigantic bomb had struck it.

Worst Sisce 1947 It was the worst tornado to strike Oklahoma since the devastating Woodward storm of 1947 which took 106 lives. It also was Blackwell's second storm of the day. A 70-mile-anhour wind unroofed warehouses, shattered store windows, tore down wires and uprooted trees in this same area before noon. At the same time a twister damaged homes and buildings at Braman, 10 miles to the north, and a bolt of lightning killed 48-yearold Frank Kohler, an oil worker, least of Blackwell. Curtis Holden.

17-year-old Ripley high school boy, was electrocuted when he came in contact with a high-voltage wire knocked to the ground by lightning. Five persons were injured when tornado struck a ranch 20 miles northeast of Shamrock, and blew away a number of buildings. Another twister swirled to the ground at Sweetwater, near the Texas border, killing Mr. and Mrs. Chester Tidwell and critically injuring their 10-year-old son.

In rapid succession. tornadoes then ripped into Erick, Shattuck, Mayfield, Camargo, Leedey, Taloga, Cheyenne Deer Creek and Strong City, doing extensive damlage. Residents of those western Oklahoma towns reached their cellars in time to escape death or injury. BONNER BOUND OVER James Bonner, 41, of 720 Adams was bound over to the grand jury after being given a hearing in Municipal Court Tuesday on three charges of issuing checks with insufficient funds. His bond was set at $1,000 on leach of the three charges.

next Monday over NBC. The play has been done before on TV, but the cast ubviously places it in the "spectacular" classification. "When I first Broadway," he related "I turned down the offers to go to Hollywood. They wanted me to come out at $75 al week or so, "They offered me big money to do the film version of 'Farmer Takes a so I came out. "Because I was so fascinated by it all, I went along with the publicity routine.

But one interview changed all that. "I came into the publicity department and met a fan magazine writer, a large woman who set her notebooks on a table and said, 'Now my story is called "The Love Life of Henry "I was taken aback, but I tried to answer her questions. Finally, was SO appalled that I said, 'I'm sorry, I can't go on with the interview' and I fled. "This made the writer so angry that she made up her own story and printed under my by-line!" he Fonda was under contract to Walter Wanger at the time, and the producer agreed with his views about fan publicity. The actor has not done any since.

"It seems to me that it appeals to the lowest segment of the movie he observed. "They are the people who crowd around you for autographs, not because they want your signature but because others are doing it. "Often you are with other people and try to explain that you can't stop because if you sign one you have to sign them all. Then they start insulting you and using profanity who do you think you 'we made you what you "Well, if they made me what I am. I'd just as soon quit." Iron Ore DULUTH CHICAGO: from SUPERIOR ONTARIO.

Labrador Plans harbor Lake Calumet development Sag channel program 182 million L. Superior Quebec? Sault QUEBEC Ste. Marie Montreal L. Huron 1 million Ottawa TORONTO dollar terminal MILWAUKEE 4.7 million dollar harbor Welland Ontario improvement Canal Michigan L. Erie 2.3 dollar BUFFALO million harbor CHICAGO L.

Erie deeping project Plans to construct docks, transit sheds, TOLEDO grain elevators, 20.6 million 20.6 million Plans new docks York Atlantic two railroad yards dollar docking dollar general and bulk cargo Ocean 6.5 million facility cargo harbor terminals, 5 million facility NEWSMAN GETTING READY FOR THE SEAWAY- Millions will be invested in the Great Lakes area 1n preparation for the completion of the St. Lawrence Seaway, scheduled for 1959. Newsmap spots some of the cities which plan harbor improvements to accommodate the large -going vessels. Erie, and Manitowoc, not yet come up with any specife plans. Federal channel improvements amounting to 109 million dollars are planned on the upper Great Lakes.

Inset shows Lake Calumet, Chicago, which is made a mooring basin where freight can be transferred to ocean freighters from Mississippi widened. barges coming up through the Des Plaines River and the Cal-Sag channel, which will be It is estimated that when completed the seaway will equal the Panama Canal in shipping tonnage, Girl (Continued from Page One) ing treatment for first, second and third degree burns over the major part of her Home on 10-Day Visit Saturday, Lovona Sue was permitted to go home, but only for 10 days. Wednesday afternoon she went back for a check of the bandages that cover her body from shoulders to knees. Next Tuesday she will return to the hospital for further skin grafts in an attempt to return her burned body to normal. Lovona Sue spends most of her time in a wheelchair, on loan from the Joseph Hoffman Post of the American Legion.

Her hair is in two braids, tied together with a pretty ribbon. She has several new pajamas, gifts of the nurses who attend-. ed her needs at the hospital. Over her p-js she wears a flowered housecoat as she lies in the reclining wheelchair and talks with her little brothers and sisters. Except for a small spot on her left arm, there is no evidence of the near-tragedy on her face and hands.

But her eyes reflect the suffering she has endured. It is almost a constant job for the family to keep Lovona Sue's mind off her misery, A few small toys, the happy chatter of her brothers and sisters and the amusing antics of her daddy help her to forget. Her mother to be at her side almost constantly. Most of the load of looking after the needs of the rest of the family has fallen to Lovona Sue's grandmother, the oldest sister, Mary, and to daddy, Besides parents and Lovona Sue, family consists the of Mary Ann, 11; Patricia, Shirley May, Homer, 3, and Frankie, PAYS BY WAIVER James E. McGowan, 25, of Piketon, signed a waiver and paid a fine of $5 and costs in Municipal Court Tuesday evening, when atrested by the state patrol for a stop-sign violation at the junction of Routes 35 and 50 east.

MOTORIST POSTS BOND Robert L. Lenroot, 27, Athens, posted a $15 bond to appear in Municipal Court Saturday for a hearing on without an operator's license. He was arrested earlv Wednesday by Deputy Sheriff John Corcoran on East Second Street. Used in manufacture of porcelain and china, all the primary kaolin produced in United States comes from North CaroIlina. Vaccine (Continued from Page One) ahead today, the health service reported there were 246 new cases of polio last week.

This compares with 206 in preceding week and an average of 126 for the corresponding week in the years 1950-54 inclusive. The weekly summary said 31 paralytic cases shad been reported among parents and brothers and persons who had been (inoculated with Salk vaccine. A spokesman said that in most instances when a household con tact of an inoculated persons developed the disease the person who had been given the vaccine did not. The summary said the total of 246 new cases last week "is not unusual for this time of year, except that many cases are occurring in the Northern states where the season usually begins later." Last week's new cases brought the year's total to 2,050, compared with 2,450 in the similar 1954 period. For the "disease yer." which starts about April 1, when incidence is at its lowest, the corrected total is 986 for 1955 and 897 for 1954.

Valentine was the second manufacturer to voice objections to the new vaccine standards publicly. Homer C. Fritsch, executive vice president of Parke, Davis Detroit, said after Wednesday's meeting: "The tentative specifations as given out were not entirely satisfactory. There are a lot of points that need to be cleared up before they become minimum standards." Parke, Davis and Eli Lilly Indianapolis. are the only firms whose product has been recleared after inspection of their plants and processes by teams from the Public Health Service.

Results have not yet been announced of similar inspections at Wyeth, Marietta, and Pitman-Moore Co. Zionsville, Ind. The other two vaccine makers are Sharp still Dohme, Philadelphia, to be inspected, and Cutter Laboratories of Berkeley, whose product was withdrawn last month after a number of vaccinated children developed polio. Scheele said release of any fur. ther vaccine from any of the six manufacturers will await recommendations of the special panel including Dr.

Jonas E. Salk of the University of Pittsburgh, developer of the vaccine, and six other medical experts. This group was named to "recaction on all lots of vaccine already produced but not yet released and all lots of the vaccine which will be produced in the future." Ross Auto (Continued from Page One) operates in activities of the Ross County Safety Council. It also endeavors to promote travel in the picturesque and historic RossHighland County area. Mr.

Barnhart termed this particularly important to local businessmen, and pointed out the organization's success in having articles printed in the Ohio Motorist, a magazine with general circulation among motor club members in Ohio. City Auditor David Wehb's article, "Trailing the Moundbuilders," received nation-wide circulation and recent articles by Floyd A. Brown on the ArBenz and Logan automobiles, and one by Dard Hunter Jr. on Adena have publicized Chillicothe and drawn tourists here. progressive automobile club, Mr.

Barnhart contends, is as important to the progress of a community as is a good Chamber of Commerce or outstanding service clubs, "For: in the field of protecting the motorist in travel and in the field of safety, the automobile club performs as much of a service and a purpose as do these other organizations in their respective fields," he contends. In recognition of the milestone which Mr. Morgan marked for the local AAA, he was the club's also received one AAA's luncheon guest Wednesday, and gold 50th anniversary emblems and a novel plastic letter case on which his initials are mounted. Alamo, Pharr, and San Juan, three Texas towns, are so close together they are connected by sidewalks and use the same high school No-Scrub Way To Gleaming Floors Everybody has heard of the housewife who kept her kitchen floor so clean you could eat off it. We never met her.

But we know how she did it. She did it the hard way--on her hands and -with a scrubbrush. Today, you can keep your linoleum or asphalt tile immaculate with only a fraction as much effort. Just apply Glaxo, the wonderful floor coating. Its waterclear finish seals out dirt so well you can clean it in flash.

Glaxo eliminates waxing, and you put it on only about twice a year. SCHACHNE'S Downstairs.

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Pages Available:
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Years Available:
1892-2024