Friday, January 27, 1954 TTTE SEMI-WEEKLY MADISON COUNTY DEMOCRAT, LONDON, OHIO Fagfr Seveif BIG MAN AND LITTLE MAN GANG UP Prize Whiners Young Lady Wears Former Resident Resaca Farmer Is Of Plain City Injured In Fall In Talent Show Costume Made Of William Overturf, residing near t’he Jive Bombers, a combo Dies January 23 Resaca, suffered a broken jhip made up of Pern Howard Jr., with Natural Gas John B. McCune, age 78, died when he fell last Thursday at his a tenor sax, Tom Denman, piano of complications, Monday, January home. He was taken to Memorial and vocals, and Richard Parks on An eye-catching natural gas out­ 23, in the Marshall Rest Home, Hospital in Marysville following S, Paugh j 1 6 2 the drums, came through as one fit is being worn these days by a 1330 Bryden Road, Columbus, tby accident. London Loses In Alexander 0 0 0 of the five winners, Thursday eve­ young lady who represents the Ohio, after an illness of six years, ning, in the 1956 Citizen WLW-C Ohio Fuel Gas Company. Totals 31 Talent Search, held in Marysville. Mr. McCune was the son of 8 70 The “costume” is something new Henry and Sally McCune, de­ Plain City Gaine Mechanicsburg ...... 10 1<) 30 54 Similar contests are being held and different. And it is proving to Northeastern ...... 22 46 56 throughout central Ohio from ceased. Henry McCune was a London became the 16th 70 be a dramatic way of illustrating harness maker some forty years which will be chosen a final win­ the many important ways natural straight victimi of the Plain City Marysville B F •J* ner. ago at the Howland Hardware Scotties here Tuesday night as Simpson,! 5 gas fits into our modern way ©£ Store in Plain City. 6 16 Billy Scott of the, "Meetin Time life. \ the visitors defeated the Red Park.f 5 3 13 Mr. McCune attended Plain Raiders 79 to 46 General opinion Nicol.fr 9 5 23 At Moores,” TV program was the Miss Jane Magruder, a represen­ City High School and was mar­ Bad it that the Scotties “didn’t Bradley ,g 4 4 12 emcee for this stage contest. tative of the Information Depart­ ried to Fay O’Harsi, of Plain Really turn on” the heat, but the Lowe.g 7 Young Howard, 16, is the son of ment of Ohio Fuel, appears for City. They moved to Columbus 1 15 Mr. and Mrs. Pern Howard Sr. and score is felt by others to be a true Hagl’k’r.g L 2 4 speaking engagements attired from from Plain City and Mr. McCune indication of the ability of the a junior at Plain City High School. hat to shoes in clothing made from was employed there by the Penn­ Tom Denman. 16, is the son of Mr. two teams. Leading the visitors Totals 31 21 83 natural gas. sylvania Railroad for many years. AUCTION m scoring was Miller with 26, and Mrs. Charles Denman, and is per outfit is a visible example Surviving are 2 daughters, Mrs. followed by Smith with and Hilliards B F t a sophomore in the local school, to audiences of the vital role nat­ Rhea Roberts of Columbus and Hext Consignment Sale ©f 19 i Fox.f while Richard Parks, 17, is the son Freeman and Maynard with 13 6 2 14 ural gas plays in industry the Mrs. Helen Huffines of Lancaster, -arm Machinery and Miscei- Dougherty.f 0 2 of Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Parks of each. For London, highman was 2 subject of Miss Magruder’s newest Ohio: 4 grandchildren; 3 great­ .’c-neotr, Equipment at Lon­ Kramer,c 1 3 5 Marysville and a senior in High talk. Reynolds with 16 followed by grandchildren and 1 sister, Mrs. don. Ohio, 4 At. 42). Dillion with 13. London’s record R. Hall.g 8 2 18 School at Marysville. The sandy-haired Owensboro, E. A. Croasmun of Columbus. Love.g r - • now stands at three wins, nine 2 1 5 The Plain City boys have been Ky., native may excite the interest Funeral services were held losses for the season. M. Hall.f 2 4 8 of some members of the fair sex Wednesday at 2 p.m., at the Jay Wed., Feb. 1, 1956 Bellisari.g playing together for the past year Plain City B F 0 1 1 and about two months ago they simply because she is paid to talk. D. Ferguson Funeral Home with 11 O’clock But the “natural gas outfit" caus­ Williams 1 2 4 Iowa’s six-foot-seven Bill Logan, leg extended, scored 21 points were joined by Parks. As was Rev. D. Merle Hill officiating. In­ Farmers - Deafen, bring any­ Freeman 4 5 13 Totals 19 15 53 at Lafayette in Hawkeye’s 67-63 victory over Purdue Jan. 23 -but shown Thursday evening, this trio es even more widespread notice. terment in Forest Grove Cem­ Smith 7 5 19 Marysville ...... 14 39 58 83 he didn’t have a chance on this play. Purdue’s six-foot-six Lamar Her hat, dress, purse, stockings, etery. thing you wish to sell, now Lundy, left, and five-foot-seven Joe Campbell battle him for the , is proving itself to be be one of the Miller 10 . 6 26 Hilliards ...... 14 25.42 53 best jazz combinations around. The shoes, scarf, coat—and even her or u$ed. and tie him up. (AP Wirephoto) luggage—have been made using Maynard 5 3 13 auditorium really rocked with the When St the table, remember G. Harold Flax, Haynes 0 2 2 Redleg Threat In original “baH" was a dead duck stamping of feet when the trio gas either as a raw material or in that we never repent of having Wilson 0 2 2 sewn into a. leather bag. The ILO Classifies played, “Burn That Candle”, end processing. eaten or drunk too little. London, Ohio - Phone 777 Yantis 9 0 0 Pennant Ra ce? duck’s head was allowed to stick "Rockin” with Tom doing the Miss Magruder’s dress, in fash­ «—Thomas Jefferson out, and two other handles were, 60,000 Jobs vocals. ionable black with wide collar, is Tntab» ...... 27 25 79 K Manager Birdie Tebbetts will attached. made from a combination of wool GENEVA — Every known occu­ Other winners Thursday at and orlon. The latter is one of the T be in his third season as man­ Lonifoh B F ager of the Cincinnati Redlegs Pato’s object is to throw the pation in the world will be classi­ Marysville were, Patty Jobe, 12, new “miracle fibers” produced by Reynolds 7 2 16 duck into a basketlike net at each fied by the International Labour vocalist; Jim Tarleton, 18, and petro-chemistry, the science of Byerly when the 1956 season gets undeis 1 0 2 way. The intelligent, articulate end of a -sized field about Organization in time for the 1960 Linda Fowler, 15, harmonizing; turning gas, oil or coal products PUBLIC AUCTION Di 11 ion 3 7 13 230 yards and 90 yards wide. The population census if its present John Lowe, 14, a bass vocalist; and into usable items for modern liv­ Tebbetts, • a former American As f am quitting farming t wfff self 2 West of South Baker 2 2 6 League*catcher, moved the Red- catch is that each player holding classification program is complet­ Leon Chandler, 15, a magician. ing. Hume 1 0 2 the ball must “offer” it at all ed as planned. These five talented acts will ap­ The soft, fur-like hat and coat Charleston, 1 mile North of Route 42 on old Clifton Road, 1 legs up into fifth place in his Carter 0 1 freshman season as skipper times, holding the pato at arm’s For some years now the ILO, as pear on the Citizen WLW-C live are made of a combination of orlon Minner 1 2 4 (1954) as the Queen City nine length so that opposing placers the organization mainly concerned telecast, Sunday, January 29. at 2 and dynel, another fabric derived Friday, February 3,1856 Gibson 1 0 2 can grasp it. with labor problems, has been try­ p.m. when one act will be selected from natural gas. The shoes and made their best showing since 1 O’CLOCK 1947 with a 74-80 mark. He again ing to get agreement between to compete against other single matching handbag are made of Totals ...... 16 14 46 With hard riders and swift, countries on the basic methods of performers for the grand prize. , still another petro-chemical pro­ 21 HEAD OF CATTLE brought the club home in fifth sure ponies this can lead to what 14 Cows with Calves; 3 Cows to freshen soon; bred Heifer; 3 Plain City ...... 37 39 58 79 place in 1955, winning 75 and occupational classification. The eventual winner in the year's duct-vinyl plastic. Miss Magrud­ Yearling Heifers. a sports wirter has described as Some countries have indexed as talent search will go to New York er’s hose, of course, are nylon, one London ...... 13 27 38 46 losing 79, the first time since “a combination of , ice FARM MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT 1944 that a Cincinnati team won many as 60,000 different job de­ City as a guest of the Columbus of the first and best-known syn­ Co-op E 3 tractor and cultivator; John Deere B tractor and cul­ West Jefferson hod no game , polo, dueling and going scriptions which fall under various Citizen, with all expenses paid, and thetic fibers. tivators; Case 2-B 14” plow; LHC. 2-B 14” plow; J. D. 2-B 12” as many as 75 games. His 1956 over Niagara Falls with nothing scheduled. Other, box scores in edition could provide consider* groups, each designated by a code will appear on its Spring Theatre Miss Magruder is one of the plow; Co-op 7’ disc; 8 ft. drag; Dunham cultipacker; rotary hoej the area were: but water wings.” number. Party March 18 to 24. Also includ­ most-traveled of Ohio Fuel person­ Co-op single row picker; I.H.C. 7’ disc; I.H.C. drill; Case 2-R planter^ able trouble in the 1956 National ed will be a paid appearance on Mechanicsburg • F T League pennant race. The dead duck has long since An important objective of the nel. A rigorous schedule keeps her 1950 A.C. combine, P.T.O.; Co-op mower: hammer mill; seed clean* Rodgers 4 ’ 4 12 classification is to provide a com­ the Steve Allen variety show, ’To­ almost constantly on the move. er; wagon; trailer with stock rack; power shelter; hand shelter; been replaced by an official ball night,” She presents her talks to service many other small items. Brooder house. 700 bu. Oats. Hixon 7 5 19 with six leather handles. Safety mon framework for presenting and Love ■” J 3 5 'Pato' - comparing national occupational clubs, schools, and church groups. TERMS - CASH rules are rigidly enforced. But data on an international basis. Entomologists and plant breed­ As a result, thousands of people Hiltibran 1 3 5 the game retains enough action Wibright 0 0 0 On Ho rseback For It could then be applied to other ers have teamed two control meth­ from all walks of life get a better to excite the most jaded specta­ types of data, such as employment ods—late fall planting and resist­ picture of gas company operations, FRANK WAI NIG, Owner Cl i grow 0 0 0 tor. Picker i 0 2 Latin America movements, analyses of w’ages and ant wheats—to hold the Hessian and the tremendous contributions Harold Flax - Joe Gordon - Auctioneers Keeler o 0 0 statistics of occupational accidents fly in check. made by the gas industry to mod­ Castle 2 7 11 Washington -- For 65 years and diseases. —Hollis Burke Frissell ern living. basketball has fascinated North Plain City Votes r Totals 16 22 54 Americans, but the organization pf a “pato” league in Amusement Tax Northeastern^ B F T introduces e new twist. The Ar­ Snauffer 2 0 4 gentines play their basketball on D. Paugh 9 2 20 . Be ite-EiwH Dill 8 0 6 Originated by the Indians and Fisher 5 0 10 enthusiastically adopted by the At the last council meeting McKenzie 4 16 hard-riding guachos of the parn-r members of the Plain City coun­ Miller 1 4 2 pas, the game of pato has been cil voted unanimously to put the Stoops t 0 2 called the roughest of them all, amusement tax back into effect Finchum e 0 0 says the National Geographic So­ here, as of January 1st, 1956. The Dixon 8 0 4 ciety. amusement tax had been recinded Tipton 1 2 4 Pato means duck 1n Spanish. in 1954 for a period of one year. Phone forTH E BIG M Grove 0 0 0 The name is an apt one, for the This according to the records was only a trial period and it automatically became effective MORE CENTENARIANS again at the end of the designat­ ed period. However. Council and 1900 Mayor Loomis agreed that they would put it into effect at the 40,000 FOR beginning of the year and forget ARE EXPECTED 20 MILLION about those back months. TO REACH this week and hear BAB/ES^ORH 100 TRS. OtD. The tax will amount to ap­ proximately 3 per cent which will be added to the admission prices of all amusements, such as shows, basketball games, races of all kinds etc. It will be collected TODAY from patrons of the Plain City Fair next summer. This is no new ' 80,000 FOR tax Mayor Loomis explained, but our special offer! AW EXPECTED 20 MILLION merely the renewal of one which TO REACH BABIES BORN has been on the books here for joo m. oto. many years. It was pointed out that since the l^'mill levy for operating expenses was defeated An AP NowWaawia* Pictoflroph]| at the last, general election the town is without the necessary funds to carry on in the police and maintenance department. Council also passed a resolution to place a 2 mill levy on the AUCTION SALE ballot at the May ©lection. It is ' We are holding a closing out sale of our Dairy Cattle at the their belief that people who de­ ^freyer farm 7 miles Northwest of Mt. Sterling, 12 miles South of sire better police protection and London, 3 miles North of Chenowith Corners on the Junk road, /z the comforts of town life should mile East of Yankeetown Pike. be willing to stand a fair por­ tion of the added expense. They point out that the town has been Tuesday, January 31,1956 trying to operate on less money beginning at one o’clock in the past year than they have ever had in the past. At a time DAIRY CATTLE 6 registered Holstein cows 2 to 6 years old was fresh in early like this when tvages and the winter and now giving heavy flow milk: 1 reg. Holstein 5 years old cost of living has risen tremen­ giving good flow milk to freshen in May; 1 reg. Holstein 10 years dously people should cooperate Old giving 5 gai. milk per day and to freshen in May. These cows and be willing to give the town are Pabst line of breeding. 1 registered Holstein bull 3 years old officials more money for general fired by Pabst Burke Dell. operation. Police and maintenance 4 grade Holstein cows 3 to 5 years old, recently fresh; 1 Hol- help deserves more money, the Stein cow 4 years old to freshen first of Feb.; 5 Holstein cows 3 Mayor believes. PRICES START LOWER THAN 30% OF to 5 years old giving heavy flow of milk and to freshen in June and Just pick up the phone and call us —weTI hurry July; 2 Guernsey cows 4 and 9 years old to freshen in Feb.; 2 Ayr­ ALL MODELS IN THE LOW-PRICE FIELD* shire cows 4 years old. to freshen in March; 1 Ayrshire cow 10 years * <>ld to freshen in Feb.: 1 Guernsey cow 5 years old recently fresh; right out with THE BIG M. While you drive it, F 2 Holstein yearling heifers not bred; 1 yearling Holstein heifer eli­ gible to register. appraise your car —and by the fl mo you come This herd has been on D.H.I.A; test since 1951 and records will we’ll be given on day of sale. This is a high producing herd. All but 5 buys the Mercury Medalist: are calf-hood vaccinated. Adult cattle Bang tested and health papers back, we*ll have a special trade-in offer that can’t be Optional aaufoman*, acces*orie», Hate and local lasat. if ar, furnished. additional. Price* may vary dkjhtty in adjoining common •Bo»ed on companion of manufacturer!* iugg^tled fist O' factory You are welcome to inspect these cows before day of salt. topped —especially if your car is less than 5 years old. retail pricai, using Msreuty Modohst 6-posienuer sBcfon HAY — 500 bales alfalfa hay in bam. ■> 1 set Stewart clippers with sheep head. tW7 TERMS — GASH » Lunch to be served

‘ ' ^7— BYRON G. SMITH The big buy is THE BIG MERCURY and Don't min tin big television bit. "The ED SULLIVAN SHOW". Sunday evening, 8:00 to 9:00. Station WBNS, Channel 10. JAMES B. WEYER Earl Neff - Clerk THE LONDON AUTO SALES INC. Sale conducted by Bumgarner Auction Service Washington C. H., - Phone 43753 129 South Main Street London, Ohio