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Wilmington News-Journal from Wilmington, Ohio • 2

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Wilmington, Ohio
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1 1 Talbot Tells Of European Experiences Daily News- Journal Tuesday, Oct. 29, 1957 Wilmington Ohio Mainly About People Johnny Robert Thompson, son of Mrs. Wayne C. Thompson, Wilmington Route 5, is recovering from influenza. The Rev.

Samuel N. Keys, 1 rector of St. Anthony's Episcopal Church, entered Miami Valley Hospital, Dayton, today for observation and treatment. Mr. and Mrs.

M. Montgomery and daughter, Miss Madge, moved Oct. 21 from their residence at 511 N. Walnut St. to the home bought by them at 378 Florence Ave.

Revival services are being held each evening beginning at 7:30 p. m. at Sabina House of Prayer with the Rev. Charles Thompson of Washington C. H.

as special speaker. The Rev. Glenn Williams is pastor of the church. Special music will be offered at each of the services to continue through Nov. 10.

The revival at the New Burling. ton Church of the Nazarene, which started Oct. 27, was closed Sunday because of illness. The revival, which was to have extended to Nov. 3, will be discontinued until further notice.

The Rev. C. E. Toney of Liberty, is the evangelist. Miss Rita Richardson who has been treated for an eye infection in St.

Anthony Hospital, Columbus, since Oct. 22, returned to her home Saturday and is showing provement. Miss Richardson has returned to her classes in Wilmington high school but will continue the eye treatments at St. Anthony's for sometime. Louis Mayer, Movie Mogul, Dies at 72 million dollars for its construction yep, podnersChrysler has an all- new luxury car in a lower-priced field for '58! LOWER THAN MY TUMMY! see it here Nov.

1st PATTON MOTORS Your friendly DODGE-PLYMOUTH-CHRYSLER dealer. 121 E. Main St. Phone 2518 HOLLYWOOD Louis B. Mayer, the motion picture giant who won box office supremacy with torrent of talent and tug at the heartstrings, died today of severe anemia brought on by acute leukemia.

He was Mayer, one of the architects of the colossus known MetroGoldwyn-Mayer, had been undergoing treatment at the UCLA Medical Center for weeks. One of his picture making credos was that every movie should have term that meant sentiment, Some of his critics said the thing Mayer called "heart" was If Mayer's productions sometimes called inartistic, they were seldom called unsuccessful. His films were among the biggest moneymakers in history. A few examples are the Andy Hardy series, with Mickey Rooney; the Dr. Kildare series, with Lionel Barrymore; "Mrs.

Miniver," with Greer Garson, and "Boom Town," with Clark Gable. He entered the fledgling movie industry as an exhibitor in Massachusetts in 1907. He came to Hollywood in 1917 and from 1924 to 1951 was executive in charge of production at Metro GoldwynMayer Studio. When Irving Thalberg died in 1936, Mayer took over direct control of production. His talent discoverer of stars brought under the MGM banner the greatest galaxy in film history.

About one mile above George Washington Bridge in New York City is the Cloisters, the medieval branch of the Metropolitan Museum of Art. It was given by the Rockefeller family who paid Rev. 0. L. Hull Dies at Home Former Pastor Here Has Heart Ailment The Rev.

0. L. Hull, 76, pastor of the First Christian Church here from 1937 to 1947, died at his home near Hillsboro Monday at 7:20 p. m. following a six weeks illness resulting from a heart attack.

He had retained his membership in the church in Wilmington where he had been prominent also in civic activities. While he had been retired for some time, he was an interim pastor of the Church of Christ, Chillicothe, and dedicated the new church there Sept. 8. The Rev. Hull had had pastorates of the Churches of the Disciples of Christ in Ashland; Kansas City, Anderson, New York City; Cleveland and Barberton.

was a member of the Wilmington Rotary Club and was active in Red Cross work at the time of his pastorate here. He was a member of the Knights Templar, Commandery of Mansfield. He was one of the organizers of the state Ministerial Association of the Disciples of Christ. THE REV. HULL was born Feb.

13, 1881 in Mansfield, the son of John C. and Sarah Leppo Hull. He was graduated from Hiram College at Hiram, took his master's degree from Columbia University and his doctor of divinity from Union Theological Seminary, New York City. June 15, 1911 he was married to Myrtle Patterson who survives. Others surviving are two daughtersn Mrs.

V. Marlin Smith of Hampton, and Mrs. Denver Stacy of Xenia, a teacher in junior high school; son, Dr. Robert Hull, dean of the school of fine arts at Texas Christian University, Ft. Worth.

Funeral services will be held Thursday afternoon at the Wappner Funeral Home, Mansfield, in charge of the Rev. Herman M. Patton, pastor of the Wilmington First Christian Church, and burial will be in the Mansifeld cemetery. The body will lie in state at the K. K.

Davis Funeral Home, Lynchburg, all day and evening Wednesday and friends may call there, at any time that day. Toledo Teamsters Pull Out of AFL TOLEDO Teamsters Joint Council 44 Monday withdrew from the city and state AFL. President Lawrence Steinberg the Toledo Teamsters, with 15,000 members in five locals, had no alternative after Thursday's suspension of the International union by the AFL CIO Executive Council. The Toledo council was believed to be the first in the nation to suspend itself from state and local AFL bodies. State Shares Motor Vehicle License Fund COLUMBUS UP) State Auditor James A.

Rhodes today reported distribution of million in motor vehicle license money to counties, cities and villages. He said it was the final distribution of 1956 auto tag funds. An advance distribution of 1957. cense tag money will be made next month, he reported. Seventeen of the 33 presidents of the United States visited Newport, R.

I. while holding office. Clinton Memorial Hospital News ADMISSIONS: Mrs. Mont Naylor, Leesburg, Monday, surgical. Neal Flint, 10 months, son of Mr.

and Mrs. Thomas Flint, Clarksville, Monday, medical. Mrs. James Smith, Blanchester, Monday, surgical. Judith Powell, 11, daughter of Mr.

and Mrs. Charles Powell, New Vienna, medical. Barry Bagford, 4, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Bagford, Clarksville, Monday, medical.

Robert Wagner, Goshen, Monday, medical. Mrs. Frances Chaney, Lynchburg, Monday, medical. Mrs. Granville Inwood, 198 N.

High Monday, medical. Mrs. Gwynn Shelton, Clarksville, Monday, medical. Ray Hammon, 499 E. Locust Monday, surgical.

Mrs. William Huffman, New Vienna, Monday, surgical. Mrs. Eugene Trenary, Blanchester, today, surgical. BIRTHS: A daughter to Mr.

and Mrs. Roger Achor, New Vienna, Monday at 11:15 a weighing pounds, ounces. A son to Mr and Mrs. George Shoemaker, Wilmington Route 2, today at 6:02 a. weighing 6 pounds, 5 ounces.

DISMISSALS: Francis Hosier, Clarksville, Monday, after medical treatment since Oct. 13. Mrs. Douglas Hudnell, 188 Linden Monday, after medical treatment since Thursday. Dana Keith Gossett, Hillsboro, born Oct.

12, dismissed Monday. Blessed Events Born- to Mr. and Mrs. Frank Broerman at Good Samaritan HosOct. pital, Dayton, a son, Fred Joseph, 5, weighing six pounds, 11 ounces.

Mrs. Broerman is the former Marlene Fisher, of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Fisher, Blanchester. Dior Last Rites Carefully Staged PARIS Funeral services.

were held today for Christian Dior in a church scented with lily of the valley and filled with invited guests seated as carefully as for fashion showing. Thousands packed the Church of Ste. Honore d'Eylau, and thousands more filled the sidewalks for blocks outside. Dior, 52, died last Thursday. Inside the fashionable church young seamstresses from the Dior house filled the front pews on the left.

The Dior mannequins, all in black, were in the center and France's other famous designers were on the right. Dr. Frank Oelerich Optometrist 118 West Main Street Blanchester Phone 2511 Office Hours: 9:30 A. M. to 4:00 P.

M. Closed all day Wednesday AUCTION COMPLETE CLOSE-OUT SALE HENSON'S I. G. A. STORE LEESBURG, OHIO Thursday, October 31, 1957 Beginning at 10:00 A.

M. (MORNING- (MORNING-AFTERNOON-EVENING EVENING SALES) LOCATED- On Main Street in Leesburg, Ohio, $5,000.00 STOCK OF GROCERIES Beginning promptly at 10:00 A. M. the entire contents of HENSON'S I. C.

A. STORE sells to the highest bidder, Groceries will be sold in the morning and afternoon sales; fixtures and equipment sell at 7:00 P. M. GROCERIES including complete line of everything that you would expect to find in a large super market. All fresh, clean merchandise.

To be sold in piecemeal and quantity lots. Make your plans to attend this big sale. Bargains for everyone. FIXTURES EQUIPMENT SELL AT 7:00 p. m.

McCray double duty, meat case, complete with compressor, like new; McCray 12-ft. vegetable case, with compressor; McCray 8-ft. frozen food cabinet; McCray 9-ft: frozen food cabinet; meat double duty 8-ft. dairy case; Lingo 7-ft. dry case: Toledo saw with 1-HP motor; Hobart meat grinder; Hobart, Model 200, steak maker; two U.

S. meat slicers; Toledo meat scale: two walk-in boxes, 6x8 and 6x6; Dayton produce scale; National Cash register, electric, departmentalized, cost $1,800.00 new; safe; Smith-Corona adding machine; tape machines; desk; fans; ten self carts: sign; transformers for front window lights; check-out counter; quantity of center shelving and wall shelving; Farquar forced air oil furnace; meat table; sink; butchering tools; and numerous other items. Most of the above described equipment is only two years old and is in excellent condition. TERMS- CASH HENSON'S I. G.

A. STORE RUSSELL L. HENSON, OWNER Leesburg, Ohio Store Phone: 4861 Office Phone: 4701 Sale Conducted By REAL ESTATE BAILEY-MURPHY AUCTIONEERS BROKERS APPRAISER! SINCE PHONES EAST LOCUS' ST W. ASTON CHIC NIGHT 7085 Deaths and Funerals John Milton John Milton, 88, E. Nelson Jamestown, died Monday at 6:15 p.

his residence. Born July 1869 in Belmont county, he was married Jan. 6, 1926 to Nina Bass who died in 1954. Surviving are nieces and nephews, Clifford Bass of Wilmington, Booker Bass of Xenia, Mrs. Rose Acthion and Mrs.

Marie Scott, Wilmington, and Mrs. Susann Ross, Dayton; brother-in-law, Reginald Bass of Wilmington and a sister-in-law, Mrs. Bertha Bass of Jamestown. Funeral services will be held Thursday at 2 p. m.

at Powers Funeral Home, Jamestown, and burial will be in Jamestown cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home Wednesday afternoon and evening. Raymond Weller Raymond Weller, 60, 3533 Evansville Dayton, native of Wilmington, died Monday at 3:20 a. m. at his residence following an illness of two weeks.

A self- employed carpenter for the past eight years, he was a of the Jamestown area previously. He has lived in Dayton the past 15 years but was a member of the Wilmington Friends Church. Surviving are the wife, Velma Weller; a daughter, Mrs. Ruth Huffman of Dayton; a ter, Mrs. Rebecca Jenks step Xenia; a son, Lewis Weller of Dayton; a brother, Oscar Weller of Urbana, and six grandchildren.

Funeral services will be held Thursday at 10 m. at the Tobias Funeral Home, 648 Watervliet Dayton, in charge of the Rev. Carl B. Eschbach and burial will be in Bellbrook cemetery. Friends may 3 to 5 and 7 -to 9 p.

m. Wednesday. Mrs. Cleo Levina Bean Funeral services for Mrs. Cleo Levina Bean, 89, who died Satur.

day in her Highland Route 1 residence, were held at 2 p. m. today at the Highland Methodist Church. A correspondent for the NewsJournal for many years, Mrs. Bean had been ill for several months.

She was born in Clinton county May 5, 1868, the daughter of George H. Benlehr and Anna Bowermaster Benlehr. Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. Capitola Ridgeway and Mrs. Elizabeth Waddell, Highland; two sons, George F.

Bean, Columbus, and Fred Bean, Highland; two sisters, May Fleming, Decatur, Ind. and Mrs. Grace Duffey, Urbana; four brothers, the Rev. Charles Benlehr, California, George Benlehr, Lancaster, Fred Benlehr, Wilmington and Earl Benlehr, 10 grandchildren and 11 great grandchildren. She was a member of Highland Methodist Church, chapter 57, Order of Eastern Star, a Leesburg a and Royal Neighbors.

The Rev. C. S. Thompson officiated burial was in Lees Creek cemetery. Patterson Funeral Hillsboro, was in charge of arrangements.

ROY P. BENNETT -Funeral services for Roy P. Bennett, who died Friday morning, were held Monday afternoon at the Marsh Funeral Home. The Rev. Herman M.

Patton of the First Christian Church read the Scripture, offered prayer and delivered the sermon. Favorite hymns were played by organ recordings. Pallbearers were James and Frederick Bennett, D. M. and William Fife, Franklin Thatcher and Maxwell Murphy.

Burial was in Sugar cemetery. Bloodhounds Join In California Hunt For Deaf-Mute, 3 REDDING, Calif. Bloodhounds today joined hundreds of persons looking for a 3-year-old girl who can't hear or answer their cries. She's a deaf-mute: Barefooted and wearing teeshirt and blue jeans, Sarah Ann Dobbs, accompanied by two pups, apparently wandered away from her home in rough brush country a mile north of Redding. The area is honeycombed with abandoned mine shafts and open pits where men once sought gold.

When James Dobbs, miner, and his wife missed their daughter about 5 p. m. Monday they called Sheriff John Balma. One of the pups returned to the Dobbs house about midnight. The other still is missing.

The Union of South Africa comprised of a surface area of 472,685 square miles, or times the size of Texas. The little penny can be mighty! The cost of food may be up -but the cost of cooking has remained low. A meal for four persons can be cooked on your gas range for just one penny's worth of natural gas! The Dayton Power and Light Company CAP To See Films On Air Force Academy Civil Air Patrol will meet at the Clinton County Air. Force Base theater Wednesday at 7:30 p. m.

to see two films, "Class of 59," on the U. S. Air Force Academy and color film on survival which ties in with training at the academy. Any persons needing transportation may call 5652, Lt. Wendell Jackson, public relations head, announced.

The "Class of '59" shows facts and training of the cadets at the Colorado academy. Cadets are nominated by congressmen from their states and this year there will be 6,000 nominations of which 448 will be selected for the academy. The age for admittance is 17 to 21. Lt. Jackson noted the class of 1958 now had 18 vacancies.

In the academy class of 1961 there are 26 cadets who were formerly in CAP, Lt. Jackson pointed out that through training in CAP youths become familiar with aviation terminology, military drill and discipline. He said that Have better auto insurance with FAMILY AUTO POLICY Take advantage of this added protection. LIEURANCE INSURANCE SERVICE 230 S. South St.

Phone 2442 Weather MRS. ETHEL R. HAYES Temperature for 24 hours ending 8 a. m. sunset Monday, maximum Lowest during night minimum HENCE 10 a.

m. 12 Noon 1 p. m. 50 Precipitation None Character of day Clear Wind at 1 p. m.

Southeast Dayton Attorney Describes Freedom Of Speech in England Thomas Talbot, son-in-law of P. H. Vandervort and prominent Dayton attorney, addressed the Wilmington Rotary Club at its noon meeting at the General Denver Ho. tel Monday. rules for staying young," were given by the speaker as "no fried food, avoid running and don't look back, something might be gaining on you." He told some of his experiences while in Europe last summer with his family.

He attended the American Bar Association Convention in London, toured England and some countries on the continent. Speaking of the contrast between America and England and two treatment of Communism he told of being at Marble Arch in London. This is where absolute freedom of speech is permitted of the soapbox variety. The speakers are given police protection, guaranteed their freedom of expression and may discuss any subject they desire. TALBOT LISTENED to one of the orators extoll on the "virtues of communism" giving the type of talk which he said would not have been permitted in the United States.

He explained that the crowd is permitted to interrupt the speaker to ask questions and may heckle him. Talbot was interested in what would happen since he did not agree with the message of the speaker and did not feel that most of the listeners did. He said one nattily dressed Englishman took care of the situation very well after he had listened as long as he cared to by a direct question to the speaker which was perfect The crowd suddenly -began to dis. band and within minutes the speaker had no listeners. Talbot said this convinced him that we should "practice freedom of speech.

He also suggested for happier life that we "not take self too seriously." His trip made him appreciate the entire world and its people through the many kindnesses shown him and his family and made him realize that we, in the United States, are the "most fortunate people in the he said. Howard Barns and Roger Warren, Junior Rotarians from Wilmington high school, expressed their appreciation of having been guests of the club for the past month. George Warner, Cincinnati, guest. Visiting Rotarians included: Berman Ross, Lebanon; U. P.

Christoffel and Jack Gorman, Hillsboro; Walter H. Seifert and Clarence Cooper, Washington C. H. and Amos Smith, Clearwater, Fla. READ THE CLASSIFIED ADS Daily Market: NEW EAR CORN $1.12 Courtesy BOBB BROS.

533 Belmont Ave. Wilmington Phone 7231 CAP is to be represented in Operation Deep Freeze III, U. S. Antarctic expedition, by two cadets, one from Nebraska and one from Washington. They were chosen from among 36,000 and will be at McMurdo Sound for four months.

Now Many Wear FALSE TEETH With Little Worry talk, laugh or sneeze without fear of insecure false teeth dropping, slipping or wobbling. FASTEETH holds plates Armer and more comfortably. This pleasant powder has no gummy, Cause gooey, pasty taste or feeling, Doesn't nausea. It's alkaline (non -acid). Checks "plate odor" (denture breath).

Get FASTENTH any drug counter. X-Ray and Gas B. Jordan Dentist W. Main St. Blanchester Phone 2071 Beautify Your Home With A Blacktop Drive The Clinton Asphalt Paving Co.

805 E. Columbus Wilmirgton Phone 2076 Ron Gordon, Pres. Earl Hall, Sec' Movies Are Your Best Entertainment Chareres Theatre Tonite-Last Times The Pajama wilmington. O. BROS.

Game EVENINGS Continuous AT 6:45 Saturday P. M. Doris Day And Sunday From 1 P. M. FEATURES AT P.

M. Tomorrow and Thursday A PERSONAL GUARANTEE This is the Funniest Picture of 1957 You will howl with laughter from the opening title to the final scene, as you see Hollywood, Television, and the advertising industry lamYou pooned on the screen by experts, will even see TV commercials and enjoy and Intermission -You will discover the COMEDY find of the year. Tony Randall, and you will tell your friends, NOT TO MISS IT. SINCERELY BILL REISINGER, MANAGER JAYNE MANSFIELD Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter? COLOR by DE LUXE CINEMASCOPE TONY RANDALL BETSY DRAKE JOAN BLONDELL. en Sunday at the Murphy REAL BATTLE FOR THE BULGES! SPECIAL: NOTE OPERATION THE NEW MAD MRS.

BALL BING CROSBY (Kathy Grant) JED HARRIS JACK LEM -Stars InERNIE ROVAKS- KATI ARTIER "OPERATION MAD BALL".

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About Wilmington News-Journal Archive

Pages Available:
447,143
Years Available:
1879-2019