Chillicothe Gazette from Chillicothe, Ohio (2024)

2-Chillienthe 0. Gazette Wednesday, May 81, 1967 Bombs Dropped 4 Miles From Center of Hanoi SAIGON (AP) U.S. Navy jets from the carrier Hanco*ck flew through a hail of missiles and antiaircraft fire today to bomb two fuel dumps less than four miles from the center of Haiphong. The daylight raid on the dumps just across the Kua Kam River was the closest attack to either Hanoi or Haiphong in more than a week. There had been reports from Washington that U.S.

raids on the immediate areas of North Vietnam's two major cities were being suspended temporarily while U.S. planes concentrated on less well defended targets. Heavy ground fighting was reported in South Vietnam Tuesday and today. U.S. Marines were fighting near the demilitarized zone, troops of the 1st Cavalry, Airmobile, Division had a rough fight south of Da Nang, and South Vietnamese forces reported they killed 106 Communists, also south of Da Nang, and 41 Viet Cong in a battle 85 miles southwest of Saigon.

U.S. headquarters reported three U.S. planes lost in the past 24 hours, two over North Vietnam, and a helicopter shot down and destroyed in South Vietnam. This raised the total losses to 564 combat planes in the war against North Vietnam and 181 in South Vietnam. One Navy pilot was missing and one Marine pilot was killed.

The Navy said the Haiphong raid hit the Loi Dong and Cong My petroleum dumps. Loi Dong, a major facility, had been bombed three times previously, East, West (Continued from Page One) considering formation of a naval task force to escort ships through the Strait of Tiran into the gulf, where Israel's chief oil importing port of Elath is located. A British Foreign Office spokesman in London stressed, however, that Britain and other Western powers are still concentrating on a search for a diplomatic settlement. Informants said a naval escort would not necessarily mean the use of force but might make Egyptian President Gamal Abdel Nasser think twice about trying a to turn back shipping to Elath. The British aircraft carrier Hermes, two frigates and five minesweepers of the Royal Navy were reported in the vicinity of Aden, at the southern entrance to the Red Sea.

British newspapers have reported that two U.S. destroyers also are in the Red Sea area, in addition to powerful units of the 6th Fleet and the Royal Navy that are expected to rendezvous soon in the eastern Mediterranean. Nasser tightened the squeeze on Israel another notch Tuesday, signing a mutual defense pact in Cairo with his old enemy King Hussein of Jordan. Nasser posed smilingly with the Jordanian monarch whom he had denounced less than al month ago as an agent of American intelligence. The two leaders called each other "brothers" and pledged to combine their military forces against Israel in a five-year renewable pact.

world will be astonished today when it hears of this agreement," Nasser said after the signing. This is proof that Arabs forget their differences at serious times." said Nasser. "Israel, the United States and Britain must realize that we are determined to preserve our rights i in There was no immediate reaction from the U.S. government, the Jordanian ment's chief financial support and its chief source of arms. There was speculation in Cairo that Saudi Arabian King Faisal, Nasser's arch Arab foe, would stop in Cairo on his way home from Europe to pledge solidarity.

-Faisal has already said Nasser's confrontation with Israel "is a battle in which all Arabs should join." Fire Runs 11:34 p.m. Monday False alarm to David Graves residence, 229 S. Mulberry phoned in by unknown person. CHEER THE SHUT-IN WITH FLOWERS from Simon's Flowers DIAL 772-7196 or 773-4988 18 East Second St. Obituaries Mrs.

Cecile Knapp Mrs. Cecile Knapp, 77, of 437 Chestnut died at 6:05 p.m. Monday at Chillicothe Hospital following an extended illness. Born on Aug. 30, 1889, in Ross County, she was the daughter of Joseph and Jemima Timmons Cleary.

On Aug. 7, 1907 she was married to Clyde W. Knapp who died Sept. 11, 1966. She is survived by three daughters, Mrs.

Charles S. (Josephine) Miller, 19 Huron Mrs. Richard P. (Juanita) Miller, 770 Ashley and Mrs. William A.

(Mary) Dimity, 245 Caldwell three grandchildren and two great grandchildren. She was predeceased by la sister and a brother. Mrs. Knapp was a member of the Order of Eastern Star, Walnut Street Methodist Church, its Martha Mary Circle, and a charter member of its WSCS. The Rev.

Glenn Copeland and the Rev. Glenn Robinson will officiate at the service which will be at 2 p.m. Thursday at the Ware Funeral Home. Burial will be in Brown Chapel tery. Friends may call after 6 p.m.

Wednesday at the funeral home where Eastern Star services will be held at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday. Mrs. Marjorie F. Trego Mrs.

Marjorie Florence Trego, 49, of 217 N. Sugar died at 6:15 a.m. Wednesday at Chillicothe Hospital following an extended illness. She was a retired sales clerk. Mrs.

Trego was born on Nov. 24, 1917 in Ross County to Floyd and who Mary survive McDaniels Zickafoose, in Circleville. July 12, 1939 she was married to Vernon E. Trego. Surviving are a daughter, Miss Joyce Trego, two sons, Ronald and David, all at home, three sisters, Mrs.

Glenn (Helen) Hartaugh of Circleville, Mrs. Hobart (Merle) Kellough of Route 7. and Mrs. Buford (Eliz-, abeth) Newberry of Haines City, and four brothers, James of Chillicothe, Charles of Columbus and Milton and Paul of Circleville. She was predeceased by a brother, Lewis.

Mrs. Trego was a member of the Navy Mothers Club. Service will be held at 10 a.m. Saturday at the Ware Funeral Home Rev. Charles Lusher officiating.

Burial will be in Twin Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home after 4 p.m. Friday. Willard D. Brown COLUMBUS Willard D.

Brown, 61, 512 E. Rich died He Tuesday at Grant Hospital. a foreman at the Columwas bus Bolt Works. Surviving are two brothers, Forrest and Edward Brown, a sister, Mrs. Earl Anderson, a niece, Mrs.

Robert Branscom, all of Chillicothe, and several other nieces and nephews. Friends may call after 7 p.m. Wednesday at the 0. R. Woodyard Co.

Chapel, 1346 S. High where service will be held at 10:30 a.m. Friday. The Rev. William L.

Snider will officiate and interment will be in Green Lawn Cemetery, Willard N. Patton Willard Norman Patton, of 204 Scioto died at 4:25 a.m. Wednesday at Chillicothe Hospital after being seriously ill for a week. A former B. and O.

Railroad brakeman, Mr. Patton retired 1961 from Commercial Motor Freight. He was born on Jan. 19, 1908 in Hamden to Joseph W. and Nellie Cunningham Patton.

On June 12, 1937 he was married to Dorothy Downs who survives. Also surviving are two sons, James E. and Steven both lat home, and a sister, brother, Mrs. Richard Bertha Egan, a E. Patton, both of Chillicothe.

He was predeceased by a son, Willard. Mr. Patton was a member of the Loyal Order of Moose and the Fraternal Order of Eagles, Aerie 600. The funeral will be at 10:30 a.m. Friday at the Ware Funeral Home with the Rev.

F. Allyn Walker officiating. Burial will be in Greenlawn Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home after 4 p.m. Thursday.

RENT A Brand New Wurlitzer PIANO Choice of Any Model or Finish only a month WITH OPTION TO BUY WURLITZER SUMMERS MUSICAL Son EVERY THING 27 N. Paint St. Dial 772-5826 Rain-Stalled Auto Race Is Resumed in Sunshine Leigh Beaver Tom but the raid on Cong My was the first. Both consist of fuel tanks, river piers and some buildings and other facilities. Returning pilots reported black smoke billowing from both targets.

The Navy made no mention of any planes lost on the Haiphong raid. North Vietnam also got a deluge of 1.7 million leaflets re- Residence, Garage Are Burglarized Marvin Hammond, Route 8, reported to the sheriff's department Monday that someone had burglarized his home while he was away. Taken, deputies said, were a power saw, portable TV, two 22- caliber rifles, a 22-caliber pistol, man's wrist watch and $1.50 in cash. Entrance was gained by forcing a window. Police investigated a burglary at Ratcliff Motor Sales at Main and Bridge Streets Wednesday.

Officers said $10 to $15 in coins were taken from a soft drink machine. Entrance was gained to the building through a rear door. Police Use (Continued from Page One) conduct charges, with Buddhist chants, tinkling finger cymbals and occasional shouts of "police brutality." Another group organized "bond to raise bail money for their friends. The outburst occurred in the homestead in the East Village, New York's counterpart to San Francisco's Haight-Ashbury district. The neighborhood, until recently composed mainly of Eastern European immigrants, has drawn much of the city's authentic Bohemian population away from the high rents of Greenwich Village.

There were indications today that the city would investigate the incident after an official who watched the brawl said it have been averted by a more tactful approach" on the part of a parks department employe. Wilbert Tatum, a community relations officer serving as "night owl mayor" in a program that has city officials available through the night to handle complaints from resi-6 dents, said he would file a complete report to Mayor John Lindsay. In San Bernardino, meanwhile, a hippy love-in went off without violence, as a bearded youth told a crowd of several hundred, "Man we're here, and there's love everywhere and that's what counts." Court Notes DIVORCES SOUGHT BUTCHER Clyde, Hirn vs. Norma Route 8. Charges neglect and wilful absence; asks divorce.

DUNN Carl 999 Akron Vs. Marsha Cleveland. Charges neglect, cruelty and wilful absence; asks divorce. KIMBERLIN Norman Route 3, VS. Patsy Haas Trailer Court.

Charges neglect and cruelty; asks divorce, custody of two minor children, entire interest in real estate, household goods and furnish- 17 printing the statement May by 16 U.S. Senate critics of American policy in Vietnam. The statement warned the Communists that despite internal criticism of U.S. war policies, America will not quit the war without an honorable settlement. U.S.

headquarters reported ground battles continuing CHS Seniors 'Snake Dance' Downtown Some 150 noisy, but orderly Chillicothe High School seniors converged on the downtown area Wednesday morning. The graduating teeners brought many a store a and office worker to windows and doors as they chain-danced in front of the courthouse and sang their class songs and alma mater. After a brief stay on the courthouse steps, they chaindanced east on Main Street and then, as a group, walked and north on Mulberry Street, west on Water and back to the courthouse. The group, rapidly diminishing in size, retired to Yoctangee Park where several remained to play baseball. The romp apparently cli-.

maxed a round of all-night parties. Police watched the paraders but did not interfere with their fun. Alexandria Has Urban Renewal Plan WASHINGTON The auction of a lot in Alexandria, on July 13, 1749, touched off one of the Commonwealth's first urban development programs. An assistant surveyor named George Washington, who'd turnled 17 on his birthday the previous Feb. 22, helped lay out the streets of the new port on the Potomac River.

Modern Alexandria has many handsome vestiges of its colonlial past. Now, ten acres in the downtown business district of the first President's hometown, have been earmarked for urban renewal. The first stage of the project affects a two-block area near City Hall. Here will rise new office buildings, a shopping cenand a spacious tree-shaded plaza with underground parking facilties for some 500 automobiles. Similarly, Alexandria has amplans to turn its industrial waterfront into a parklike setting.

The city hopes to get property rights to a three-milelong strip of land along the Potomac. Unsightly structures such as oil storage tanks, World War I torpedo factory, land a rendering plant would be replaced by pedestrian promenades and a visitor's center. Private builders have joined the renewal effort. New colonlial-style townhouses near waterfront take the place of former lumberyard. So far, Alexandria has sisted the building of highrise apartments in historic Old Town.

Most city fathers feel that "the disposable income an area devoted to deluxe luxury townhouses will be higher than that of an area devoted to standard quality Marriage Licenses New Citizens CAPUTO-FURNEY Frank P. Caputo, 23, Long Island. N.Y., student, and Jo Anne Fur23, of 590 Linn St. The Rev. Frederick Matchinski.

CHESTER-POTTS Larry R. Chester, 22, Hallsville, Mead, and Linda L. Potts, 17, Londonderry, Route 1. The Rev. Forrest Dilly.

DUNCAN-HALL Donald A. Duncan, 24, Route 2, foreman, and Norma J. Hall, 27, of 184 (Caldwell Alcoa employe. The Rev. Forrest Dilly.

RICKEY BONDURANT Gale C. Rickey, 19, Route U.S. Air Force, and Bondurant, 18, Ro Bondurant, 18, Route 5, student. The Rev. Henry Oliver.

SENFF FRANCIS Byron E. Senff 22, of 1 Fruit Hill U.S. Air Force, and Sybil Francis. 20, of 898 Madison at home. The Rt.

Rev. Msgr. Juilus Klinec. CHILLICOTHE GAZETTE Entered at the U. S.

Post Office at Chillicothe, Ohio, as second class Mail. Published by Chillicothe Newspapers, Inc. at 50 West Main Street, Chillicothe, Ohio. Everywhere by carrier 55c per week. $28.60 per year.

Mail able in advance, within 50 miles of Chillicothe $16.00 a year. where in Ohio $19.00 per year. Outside the State of Ohio $23.00 a year. Telephone 773-2111. Leigh Beaver Tom, 69, of 3543 Alberta Columbus, died Monday at his home.

He is survived by his Edna two sons, Richard L. and Ray both of Columbus; two daughters, Mrs. Samuel (Ellen) Morgan, Elyria, and Mrs. Ronald (Doris) Mauller, Reynoldsburg; two brothers, Clyde Batavia, and Charles Berlin Heights; 15 grandchild. children and one great grandService will be at 2:30 p.m.

Thursday at Schoedinger HillChapel, 3030 W. Broad Columbus. Burial will be in Sunset Cemetery, Galloway. Mrs. Charles G.

Shook Mrs. Marjorie L. Shook, 48, of 204 N. Sugar died at 2:30 a.m. Wednesday at Chillicothe Hospital after an illness of sevmonths.

She was born on July 24, 1918, in Graceham, to Harry G. and Flora Shindledecker MornCeme-lingstar. On July 4, 1936, she was married to Charles G. Shook who survives. Also surviving are a son, Charles F.

of Chillicothe; three grandchildren; four sisters, Mrs. Bertie Miller of Graceham, Lillian F. Dayhoff and Mrs. Miller of Thurmont, and Mrs. Ethel Miller of Indianapolis, and four brothers, Carli Morningstar of Outville, Charles J.

and John A. Morningstar of Thurmont, and William L. Morningstar of Baltimore, Md. She was a member of Trinity Methodist Church and Sciotos Helpers Lodge 258. Service will be held at 11 a.m.

Saturday at the Fawcett-Oliver Funeral Home with the Rev. Edward S. Wones officiating. Burial will be in Betzer Cemetery at Carroll. Friends may call after 4 p.m.

Friday at the funeral home where Scioto Helpers Lodge will conduct services at 7:30 p.m. Friday. Charlotte I. Wingo Charlotte Irene Wingo, 25, of Xenia, a former Chillicothe resident, died at 11:35 a.m. Sunday at Miami Valley Hospital, Dayton.

She was born on Dec. 17, 1941. Surviving are her mother, Elizabeth of Frankfort, a son, Bryan, at home, and several uncles and aunts of Chillicothe. She had been a member of the Zion Baptist Church here where service will be held at p.m. Thursday The Rev.

old Wingo will officiate and burial will be in Greenlawn Cemetery under direction of the Winfrey Funeral Home of Xenia. Friends may call at the church from 11 a.m. Thursday until time of the service. Mrs. Mabel A.

Stout Mrs. Mabel A. Stout, 60, of Kingston, Route 1, died at 10:30 p.m. Monday in the emergency, room at Chillicothe Hospital. She was the widow of Rudolph Stout who died in 1944.

Born Oct. 6, 1906, at Whisler, Mrs. Stout was the daughter of Thomas and Mary Parkison Huffman. Surviving are two brothers, Carson Huffman of Whisler and Harry Huffman of Adelphi, and a sister, Mrs. Nellie Nicklaus of Columbus.

Service will be held at 10:30 a.m. Saturday at the Defenbaugh Funeral Home in Circle-. ville Wayne Wardwell officiating. Burial will be in Prairie View Cemetery at Whisler. Friends may call the funeral home after 7 p.m.

Thursday. Mrs. Mary Reisinger WAVERLY Mrs. Mary L. Reisinger, 8 82, of 301 S.

East died at 9:45 p.m. Tuesday at the Pike County Hospital after an extended illness. For the last 13 years she has made her BULLETIN INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. (AP) A three car smash slowed the 51st 500-mile auto race today shortly after Parnelli Jones had temporarily surrendered the lead to A. J.

Foyt for a pit stop. Carl Williams spun on the northeast turn and hit the car of Bob Veith, knocking Veith into the wall. Jerry Grant, coming home with a daughter, Mrs. Ernest (Goldie) Cox. Mrs.

Reisinger was born in Pike County on Aug. 5, 1884 to George and Catherine Steinhauer Blaum. She was married to Seward Reisinger who died Oct. 18, 1954. Surviving in addition to Mrs.

Cox are two other daughters, Mrs. Verna Gallimore West Jefferson and Mrs. Jennie Gallimore of London, three sons, Lloyd of North Lewisburg, Clarof Springfield and Randall of London, 12 grandchildren, 27 great grandchildren and a sister, Miss Elizabeth Blaum of Chillicothe. She was predeceased by a daughter, Annie, who died in infancy, three brothers, two sisters and a grandchild. She was a member of the Meadow Run EUB Church.

The body has been taken to Mechanicsburg where ments and the service will be under the direction of the Skilliams Funeral Home. Earl Martin Sheets GREENFIELD Earl Martin Sheets, 53, of Cynthiana died at 1:05 p.m. Monday at the Veterans Administration Hospital in Dayton. He was born on April 8, 1914 in Chillicothe to Martin and Flora Belle Smith Sheets. A driver, Mr.

Sheets was a veteran of World War II and a member of Amvets. Surviving are his wife, the former Ethel E. Kinnison, son, Earl Robert Sheets of Chillicothe, four daughters, Ronda Doreen, at home, Mrs. Shirley Ann Strotridge, Miss Ethel Mae Sheets and Mrs. Sue Ann Gale, all of Chillicothe, 13 grandchildren, a sister, Mrs.

Ruth Angell of Concord, a brother, John Sheets of Sandusky, two half brothers, Charles Weldon of Sandusky and Roxie Coon of Circleville, and two stepbrothClinton Botenhouse of Sandusky and Lawrence Botenhouse of Chillicothe. Service will be held at 2 p.m. Thursday at the Sunny Side Chapel at Humboldt. The Rev. Paul Marhoover of Waverly will officiate and interment will be in Greenfield Cemetery.

Friends may call at the AndersonStrueve Funeral Home here after 3 pm. Wednesday. Mrs. Delmar Robinett Mrs. Virginia Louise Robinett, 48, of 205 W.

Main Crothersville, died at 9:30 a.m. Tuesday at the Methodist Hospital, Louisville, after a coronary attack. She was born on March 22, 1919 in Chillicothe to Forrest E. and Mary Katherine Coyle Hendrickson. On Dec.

17, 1938 she was married to Delmar B. Robinett who survives. Also surviving are her mother, a son, Delmar B. Robinett at home, and a brother, Richard C. Hendrickson, Pleasant Valley.

A member of the Bridge Street Church of Christ, Mrs. Robinett was employed by the H. O. Camfields Manufacturing Company of Seymour, Ind. The funeral will be at 1 p.m.

Friday at the Ware Funeral Home with Norman Ramp officiating. Burial will be in Greenlawn Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home after 4 THE US MAIL MAIL BOX Clarksburg Garden Club, 8 p.m. Thursday at the home of Mrs. Sherman Furniss, Clarksburg.

Chillicothe Optimist Club will hold an auction on Friday, June 9th at the Ross County Fairgrounds. Donations of saleable articles are being accepted now. For pick-up of items call 772-0213 or 774-9939. Proceeds for Optimists boys' work. The above announcements courtesy of fawcett-oliver FUNERAL DIRECTORS Ambulance Service 77 E.

Fifth St. Dial 773-5431 behind, ran into the infield tot up miss the wreckage. INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. (AP) Rain, which halted the 51st 500- mile auto race after 45 miles Tuesday, was replaced by sunshine today as the 32 bright surviving cars took off again at 10:00 a.m. DT in single file, led by Parnelli Jones in his bright red, sizzling fast turbine.

p.m. Thursday. Arrangements in 1 Indiana were by the Buchanan Funeral Home of Austin. Lawrence D. Adams Lawrence D.

Adams, Beaver, Route 1, BEAVERJackson County, died unexpect-19th edly from an apparent heart attack at 4:30 a.m. Tuesday at his residence. Mr. Adams, an electrical engineer, was a native of Wichita, He had resided at his farm home here since 1954 when he came to the Goodyear Atomic Corporation plant. Later, he became associated with the West End Electrical Contractors of Portsmouth.

He is survived by his wife, Eena, two daughters, Mrs. Karen Garrison and Mrs. Maureen Mitchell, and a granddaughter, Jennifer Mitchell, bus. The funeral will be at 2 p.m. Thursday at the Hammerstein Funeral Home here with the Rev.

Earl Bender officiating. Burial will be in Salem Cemetery, Jackson County. Friends may call at the funeral home after 4 p.m. Be Good or Walk That's the Answer One of the major objections to family outings on holidays and weekends is the wrangling of children in the back seat of the family car. Memorial Day Chillicothe police learned of a cure for the problem.

Officers were dispatched to stop an automobile whose driver was believed to have abandoned three children in Hillsboro. When stopped on Western Avenue, the man and wife explained "'The children were fighting and we put them out to walk They returned and picked up the children later, Auto Crash Claims Former Envoy's Wife HARLECH, Wales (AP) Lady Harlech, 45. wife of Lord Harlech, former British ambassador to Washington was killed Tuesday in an auto crash. Lord Harlech, Sir David OrmsbyGore, was ambassador to the United States during the Kennedy administration. He now is president of the British Board of Film Censors.

They maintained position for a parade and a pace lap. The temperature of 60 degrees, unseasonably cool, was ideal for the engines, especially for the aircraft power plant in Jones' car. Possibly 100,000 fans, well bundled up, were in the stands. An early forecast indicating rain by noon was changed. The late prediction was that the rain was expected to hold off until mid-afternoon.

After charging from sixth to first place Tuesday, Jones was left in control of the parade and pace laps today as lead car. Nobody could try to pass him until he hit the starting line on the first official lap of the day, the lap of the race. Lloyd Ruby of Wichita Falls, a favorite whose engine burned a piston Tuesday, replaced George Snider in the latter's Mongoose Ford as the race resumed. Jones hit the starting line following the pace lap at 10:59 a.m. It was Jones, Dan Gurney and A.

J. Foyt up front after the first lap with Mario Andretti coming up fast but six laps behind with a leftover handicap. Poland Estate Million Florence Poland who named a number of Catholic religious organizations as beneficiaries in her will has left a 767.26 estate. The inventory, and appraisal filed in Probate Court shows the bulk of it $1,368,728.21 is in stocks and securities. of Among Mead stocks are 4,731 shares Common, valued at 5,142 shares of Lone Star Gas, valued at $105,251.60, and 1,616 shares of Procter and Gamble Common, valued at $133,320.

There is $171,915.67 in real estate which includes 2,422 acres in Richland Township, Vinton County, valued at a $35,000 17-45ths interest in 40 N. Paint and her $18,000 residence at 69 W. Second St. The estate also shows 732.38 in accounts and debts receivable and $16 in money. Under the will which was filed earlier, St.

Peter's Roman Catholic Church is to receive $110.000 with $2,000 to go to the Summit Country Day School of the Sisters of Notre Dame deNamur, Gifts of $1.000 each are go to St. Xavier's of Patna, India. Milford Novitiate and Milford Retreat House, both at Milford. The Sacred Heart Convent of Clifton, Cincinnati, is to receive $10,000 with Bishop Flaget High School and St. Peter's Catholic School to receive $5,000 each.

Mrs. Olive C. Weaver, an emand friend, whose name was omitted from an earlier aron the will, is to receive $10,000. Attorney for the estate is William C. Boulger.

At Chillicothe Hospital NEWLUN Girl, 8 pounds, ounces, 9:24 a.m. Saturday to Mr. and Mrs. Don R. Newlun (Kay Reichelderfer), 745 Jefferson Ave.

PATTERSON-Girl, 7 pounds, ounces, 9:43 p.m. Monday to Mr. and Mrs. Dane R. Patterson (Carolyn Oyer), Route 1.

RHOADES Boy, 7 pounds, ounces, 1:56 a.m. Tuesday to Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Rhoades (Irene Nace), Kingston, Route 2.

SEYMOUR Boy, 3 pounds, es, 7:27 p.m. Monday tc Mr. and Mrs. Wayne A. Seymour (Donna Shoemaker), Frankfort, Route 1.

Live Flowers or Artificial Wreaths Urns Concrete or Pottery HUSTON'S 3 Miles South on Rte. 23 $549 $429 $30 a mo. $25 a mo. $375 $20 a mo. $275 $15 a mo.

Engagement $150 0 $10 a mo. Then your thoughts are, no doubt, on the diamond that will tell the world about it. You leave nothing to chance when you make your selection here for every gem has passed rigid specifications for clarity, color and cut. Regardless of size, you are assured of quality. We are proud enough of our diamonds to show them under a gem microscope.

E.M. Smith Jeweler DIAMOND SPECIALIST CENTRAL CENTER Hours: 10 to 9 Daily.

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