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Chillicothe Gazette from Chillicothe, Ohio • 18

Location:
Chillicothe, Ohio
Issue Date:
Page:
18
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

18-Chilltesthe (00.) Gazette Monday, June 28, 1954 HYDO Columne Good News For Brittons: Mr. ceived a batch of good news last cuperate from illnesses at their Their granddaughter, Betty honors and also received the senior Brotherhood Award at the William S. Baer private co-ed school in Baltimore, where lives with her parents, Mr. she. Leroy Heine.

The Brotherhood certificate, which carried a cash award, specifices: "Given for kindness, love and happiness shown to the pupils in school." Betty, who expects to study art, is well known here, as she visits annually at the home of her grandparents and is planning to be with them again in August. She couldn't have received an award which would have pleased them more. The other item of good news: Their son-in-law, Larry H. Williams has been promoted to supervisor for the Syracuse, N. offices of Mr.

Williams and his wife, the former Betty Britton, and their son, Larry, 8, and daughter, Linda, 4, who now live in Albany, N. plan to move to Syracuse, on July 1. Incidentally, friends of Mr. Britton, retired passenger engineer, will be glad to know that he is able to be about after being bedfast for many months. "We're both thankful for being able to be out again," says- Mrs.

Britton, who suffered an attack of shingles more than nine weeks ago. -O- IN THE MAIL Postcard signed Katherine Kern, Mae Calhoon and Madeleine Kenz has this to say: Two teachers and the secretary from Mt. Logan School are touring the Southwest. We have been seeing 10 to 15 Ohio cars everyday. Saw this beautiful window yesterday took a conducted tour through Hill Mrs.

John Howsmon and baby son, Williamsport, Route Mrs. Robert Dunn, and baby girl, Waverly, Route Mrs. John MeTurner and baby son, Jackson, Route 1: Mrs. Charles M. Hayward and baby girl, 2 Huron Mrs.

Richard Houghland and baby girl, 85 N. Sugar; Mrs. Kenneth Muldoon and baby son, 745 E. Fourth; Mrs. Don Detillion, 603 Earl Anderson Madison; Walter Highland, 25 W.

Fourth; Mrs. Harold, J. Frick, Kokomo, Mrs. Anthony Brezne, Piketon; Mrs. A.

S. A. Jackson, Piketon; Mrs. Harold Donahue, Waverly, Route 2. -0-- FIRST GRANDCHILD NAMED Mr.

and Mrs. D. W. Hickman (Ada Ruth Wiseman), Jackson, Route 3, have named their daughter, born Friday, June 11, Sharon Kay. First grandchild of Mr.

and Mrs. D. W. Hickman, Jackson, Route 3, and Mr. and Mrs.

L. W. Wiseman, Richmond Dale, Sharon Kay weighed 9 pounds, ounces, upon her arriv alat Oak Hill Hospital. --0 REMOVALS By Herlihy: Harold R. Armbrust from 502 Arch to 771 Ohio: Robert L.

Jenk from 615 Cherokee to 20 Mead Bell's Hill; Mrs. Lou Bierley from 62 W. Main to 523 Allen. By Ward: Friday, Rea Gregg Getz from 182 W. Water to Barton Cook Addition (East End); Howard Oney from 619 Glencroft to Andersonville.

Saturday, G. Stout from Columbus to 525 McKellar. CHEER 'EM UP Condition of Mrs. Frank Carroll, Clarksburg, is reported "fair" at the Miller Rest Home, 65 W. Fifth where she has been a patient for several weeks after suffering a fractured hip in a fall.

Mrs. A. C. Skinner, Clarksburg, a surgical patient at University Hospital, Columbus, is getting along satisfactorily. Her daughter, Mrs.

Mary McGhee, is with her. Undergoing treatment at University Hospital, Columbus, is Mrs. Iva Voss, Clarksburg. Mrs. Lawrence Manson, (Dolores Daily), Londonderry, Route 1, who underwent surgery on Friday at Chillicothe Hospital, is reported getting along satisfactorily, by her mother, Mrs.

Edwin Daily, and Mrs. James P. Britton reweek to cheer them as they rehome, 221 E. Second St. Heine, 17, was graduated with Hollywood and the Planetarium also attended Art Linkletter's "House Party." Now in Bakersfield on our return trip." The postcard depicts "The Last Supper" window a re-creation in stained glass of Leonardo Vinci's immortal painting at Forest Lawn Memorial Park.

HOSPITAL NOTES Patients treated on Sunday for minor injuries at Chillicothe Hospital: Betty Setzer, 8, of 287 S. Mulberry, laceration of right eyebrow, suffered in fall; Nicholette Kelly, 2, Kingston, bitten by dog on upper lip at Rocky Fork Lake; Mrs. Drucilla Gothe, Columbus, removal of bug from ear, Mrs. Louise Thornton, 334 Riverside Waverly, laceration of thumb, cut on thermos bottle. Mrs.

Thornton was treated Monday morning. Patients admitted to the hospital during the weekend: Mrs. Maude Blazer, Frankfort, Route 1, medical; Dr. Ranald M. Wolfe, 412 Belleview, VA Hospital physician, medical; Mrs.

Richard Deacon, Waverly, Route 2, medical; Mrs. Blanche McAfee, 828 E. Main, medical; John Foltz, 579 E. Main, medical; Franklin Wilfong. Waverly and Marsha Hatfield, 180 Madeira, both tonsillectomies, discharged; Mrs.

Henry M. Stanley, Bainbridge medical; John McHarg, 371 Madeira, medical; Ray Fannin, Route 2, medical; Bertha Barlow, 81 S. Brownell, surgical. Patients discharged from the hospital during the weekend: Mrs. Alton Hatcher, 59 Shawnee; Master Norman Gremillion, Hughes Trailer city: Mrs.

Harry Sommers and baby son, of Patton By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS High Low Akron, cloudy 77 50 Atlanta, cloudy 100 77 Bismarck, cloudy 91 63 Boston, cloudy 84 59 Buffalo, cloudy 70 57 Chicago, cloudy 79 59 Cincinnati, cloudy 90 53 Cleveland, cloudy 76 58 Columbus, clear 85 54 Dayton, cloudy 86 52 Denver, clear 87 57 Detroit, cloudy 76 56 Indianapolis, cloudy 89 56 Los Angeles, clear 76 60 Louisville, cloudy 96 61 Miami, clear 89 77 St. Paul, clear 79 66 New Orleans, clear 82 73 New York, cloudy 86 61 Pittsburgh, cloudy 75 53 Tampa, clear 91 76 Tucson, clear 99 71 Washington, D. cloudy 89 62 Weather Elsewhere W. Water St. Mrs.

Daily's husband, Western Southern Insurance agent, who underwent surgery last March, is recuperating at his home. -0- TRY-OUTS DATED Try-outs for "Spooks," a hilarious mystery-mellodrama to be staged in August by the Lake White Little Theater, will be held at 8 p.m. Thursday at "The Barn" overlooking Lake White. -0- AT AIR FORCE BASE Two Chillicothe students, John A. Chandler, Route 2, and John H.

Zickafoos, 34 N. High were among the 197 Air Force cadets, who reported last week at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Dayton, for a four-week summer encampment. The cadets represent 20 colleges. They were welcomed Gen. E.

W. Rawlings, commander, Air Materiel Command, and Col. Frank N. Graves, deputy commander, Wright-Patterson AFB. During the encampment, the cadets will receive indoctrination in the operation of an Air Force Base with the accent on flying.

Each will be given flights in C-45 airplanes and will have an opportunity to handle the controls as a co-pilot. Some of the MONDAY STORE HOURS Ebenhack and son Tuesday 12:30 to Thru 9:00 P. Saturday M. 9:00 A. M.

to 5:30 P. M. Falterini Group "Sta-Out" Never Rust Furniture Psychology Comes to Aid of Business Make Do AP Newsfeatures EMPTY PAINT CANS under the feet ofa ladder will spread weight to keep the ends from sinking into soft earth. The Home magazine says the cans act like snowshoes and cut the danger of ladder shifting while you're on it. cadets will attend the Eglin Fire Power Demonstration at Eglin AFB.

to see the potential assault powers of the present Air Force, according to a PIO dis patch. -O- ATTEND WORKSHOP Donna Bouser, Frankfort, was among 130 Ohio high school students who attended the weeklong Summer Music Festival and Workshop which closed Sunday at Ohio State University. Donna was among the student -musicians who participated in the Festival chorus orchestra and band concert on Sunday. Now an eletcronic "brain" can "fly" unbuilt airplanes. The brain will tell engineers in advance whether the aeronautical design of a new plane is sound.

If faulty, checked by the brain until the best design has been obtained. OUTDOOR COMFORT TO HELP YOU CATCH ALL THE THIS SUMMER Buzu Yes, there are no cushions on this day-in day-out, year 'round furniture group by SALTERINI. That means no bothersome pads or pillows to take in at the first SEE OUR sign of a sprinkle. It also means an end to out-of-season storage problemsWINDOW STA-OUT stays out! Furthermore, STA-OUT excels in the important comfort deDISPLAY partment: its luxurious ease is "built the result of contour shaping the panded metal mesh seat and back. Cool, has its own "air conditioning system." The thousands of open spaces in the mesh permit free circulation of air-your STA- furniture will stay cooll Two tables, lily pad shaped, that nest together to be used and son WROUGHT IRON NEST OF TABLES Ebenhack Distinctive Home Furnishings Since 1893 as that extra table for ash trays or summer cool drinks.

144-150 E. Main St. Chillicothe, Ohio NEST $9.95 Southern Ohio's Most Interesting Home Furnishings Store M. NEW YORK (P Psychologists are probing deeper today into the methods and notions of businessmen. And there may be some changes made.

Increasingly called in since the war as a consultant by business, the psychologist for some time has been studying the reactions of potential buyers to a company's product. Now, and sometimes with the aid of the psychiatrist, he's peering into the subconscious minds of both customers and businessmen. He's coming up with new idea what really makes customers tick, whether they know it or not, and on how to handle workers, and on how to hire the wright person and promote the better man. Gadgets makers, for example, are being cautioned against their long time practice of telling a woman that their products can do her job many times better than she can. The woman may say she likes the idea, but subconsciously she resents it.

"Gives her an inferiority complex," say the psychologists. "'She rejects ads that imply she's no longer of any importance around the house and that her place can he taken by a gadget." Can This Be? By SAM DAWSON The idea that a woman buys clothes, cosmetics and perfume just to catch a man is getting a second look from the ad managers, too. Psychologists--according to a Chicago advertising agency, Weiss Geller-say what she's really after is the chance to admire herself in a mirror and get envious stares from other women. Corporations and government agencies are getting increasingly obsessed by psychology. News events are immediately fly-specked for their "psychological effect" upon the consumer, the dabbler in manager of the retail purchasing as "Public psychology," for example, is widely credited with having kept this year's slowdown in business activity from snowballing into A sharp recession.

Going from the general to the particular, M. J. Rathbone, president of Jersey Standard Oil, advises "studying customers as people, in addition to at them as sources of income." His company has a standing advisory committee on human relations. Jersey once sent social scientists to one of its island plants to record the shop talk of employes and their wives. Then psychologists at a leading university studied the recordings and told Jersey Standard what was really on their workers' minds.

"Knowing what employes really want is half the Rathbone says. "Once management knew, it could take proper action, and morale on the island improved noticeably." Personality Tests Personnel managers of many companies are letting psychologists draft formulae designed to show just what personality traits fit a job applicant for a particular type of work. They claim their personality tests show accurately how different applicants will perform after they're trained. The same method is used by some corporations in deciding what worker is likely to make the best foreman, and so on the scale to junior executive. up Probing of the consumer's subconscious buying instincts by psychologists, social scientists and psychiatrists has led the Chicago agency to question if some of the time-worn advertising come ons don't repel more customers than they attract.

Female authorities in radio and TV commercials, for example, are resented by other women--reminds them of a "nagging mother," and anyway listeners always suspect "women who know too much." Watch that subconscious mind of yours--some businessman is probably probing it. KENDALL CO, GENERAL CONTRACTORS 32 SHAWNEE DRIVE Phone 3-0957 STOP and SEE Our Large Selection Of Fine Quality UNFINISHED FURNITURE PLACIER'S "The Paint Store On Paint St." SCHACHNES AIR www CONDITIONED Summer Savings Canine SIMPLICITY! FROCKS only 2.98 A Everyone Recognizes The BEST FITTING Western Cowgirl DENIMS SANFORIZED 8 oz. Blue Denim. Copper Riveted and Double Stitched. 2 Curved front pockets and 2 back pockets.

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About Chillicothe Gazette Archive

Pages Available:
760,526
Years Available:
1892-2024