Chillicothe Gazette from Chillicothe, Ohio (2024)

PAGE TWO CHILLICOTHE Many Cases Dropped as Court Opens With the opening of the October term of court, Monday, when the grand jury went into session, Judge Howard Goldsberry called the docket and dismissed or ordered off the docket quite a number of cases. Such disposition was made in the following cases, with the names of the parties first and the kind of action, second: John P. Phillips against Carl H. Enderlin, executor of the estate of Richard Enderlin, deceased, money; Howard W. Richardson against Kizzie Richardson, divorce: Willa Jean Newsome against Elmer James Newsome, divorce Thelma Hall against Homer Hall, divorce Edith Stewart against Fred Stewart, divorce Willie Ray Wagner against Karl Wagner, divorce Carl Driapsa against Evelyn Routt alias Evelyn Marie -Driapsa, divorce; Harold Bryant against Bessie Kingery, divorce Joan Tackett Harlin Tackett, alimony; Robert against Mary K.

Minnix, divorce Zella E. Smith, against Charles Nathan Smith, divorce Evelyn D. Farley against Lloyd W. Farley, divorce Mapel Moss against Marvin Moss, divorce Anna Mae Ault against Wayne Ault, divorce etc. William G.

Coppel, an individdal doing business under the name and style of The Valley Loan against Emmitt Kuhn and Mary A. Kuhn, money, $371.96, with interest; Velma Willis against Arthur C. Willis, divorce Elizabeth M. Johnson against Leroy F. Johnson, divorce Icy Baxla against WilMam Baxla, alimony Franklin Moody against Hattie Moody, divorce Arevena S.

Salyers against Jerry Salyers, divorce Robert LaRue Etling against Margaret Evelyn Etling, divorce Margaret Ahlen against ArAhlen, divorce Juanita M. Beeler against Frank Beeler, divorce; Paul Seifert against Jean B. Seifert, divorce Talva Ward against Vernon Ward, divorce Crosby Hice Jr. -against Anna Mae Hice, divorce Cleopha A. Good against Baymond R.

Good, divorce Bernard Maxwell O'Brien a against Vivian O'Brien, divorce Sylvia Barnhart, a minor, against Edward Barnhart, divorce and Richard against Madge M. Shanton, a minor, di-vorce etc. GRANDMOTHER'S DAY COLUMBUS, 0., Oct. 3 (P Frank J. Lausche today proclaimed Sunday, October 8, as "Grandmother's Day" in Ohio.

celebrated Connecticut Yanwkee is accompanied at the piano by Clyde Du Pont. Teddy Powell and his Orchestra provide the background music for dancing. There is a $1 cover charge for this engagement only. Two shows nightly, 9:30 and 11:30 P. M.

Dinner music, 6:45 till 8:15 P. M. (No entertainment tax). Dancing from 9 P. M.

to 1 A. M. Gentleman songster, RUDY VAL. LEE, is off on a spree, currently singing songs both nostalgic and modern in the Ionian Room of the Deshier-Wallick Hotel, Columbus. He will charm you with ballads as "The Vagabond and "The Stein Song." Obituaries and Funerals Ora Beekman LATHAM-Service will be held at 2 p.

m. Thursday from the Morgantown church for Ora Beekman, 60, Spargursville, Route 1, who died at 11:40 a. m. Monday 'in Mt. Vernon Sanatorium following a year's illness.

He was born in Latham on Aug. 4, 1890, the son of Charles and Dulcina West Beekman, and was a member of the Western Local school board and of Waverly Eagles. Survivors include the wife, the former Bessie Satterfield; three daughters, Miss Ruth Beekman, Bainbridge, Route 1, Mrs. Orla Ramsey, Piketon, Route 1, and Miss Betty Beekman, at home; four sons, Crawford, at home, Robert and Chester, both of Spargursville, Route 1, and Merle, Wakefield; two brothers, Merle Beekman, Grove, and Carey Beekman, Latham; a sister, Mrs. L.

H. McCoy, New Holland, and six grandchildren. The Rev. Harvey C. Elliott will officiate, and burial will be in cemetery by the Howe Cardinee, Friends may -call at the residence after 6 p.

m. Tuesday. Alonzo Flora Service will be held at 10 a. m. Thursday from the Murray funeral home, Greenfield, for Alonzo Flora, 86, who died unexpectedly at 12:30 p.

m. Monday in the Pearl Rooks rest home, Washington C. H. He was born near Bourneville on June 6, 1864, the son of Zenith and Sarah Bennett Flora. In 1883, he married Alice Ellison who died in 1941.

Surviving are a son, Alonzo Detroit; five daughters, Mrs. Edna Nevin, Bainbridge, Route Mrs. Effie Smethers, Columbus; Mrs. Myrta Guldimond, Galesburg, Mrs. Edith Butler, Wells, and Mrs.

Laura Houpt, Houston, two brothers, Willard of Somerford, and Homer, Springfield, and a sister, Mrs. J. L. Strouse, Lyndon, Route 1. The Rev.

L. R. Wilson will be the minister, and burial will be in the York Center cemetery, Union county. Friends may call at the Murray funeral home after 7:30 p. m.

Tuesday. Mrs. Warren Jenkins Service was held Monday from Given chapel, Pike county for Mrs. Dora May Jenkins, 64, wife of Warren Jenkins. She died Saturday morning at her home in Sabina, following a brief illness.

The family had resided in Ross and Pickaway counties for many years, moving to Sabina only last spring. Mrs. Jenkins was the daughter of Royal and Tabitha Murphy Murray, and was born in Gallia county on Aug. 20, 1886. She was married on Aug.

20, 1904. Surviving, in addition to the husband, are a daughter, Mrs. Walter Oesterle, Ross county; three sons, Clyde, Ross county, Lloyd, Sabina, and Floyd, Washington C. a brother, John Murray, Columbus, 11 grandchildren and two great-grandchildren. Burial was in the Given chapel cemetery by the C.

E. Hill funeral home, Williamsport. Mrs. Anne J. Kengle Mrs.

Anne J. Kengle, 87, former local resident, died Sept. 20 in the Kiser nursing home, Mt. Lake Park, where she had lived for three years. She had resided in Cumberland, in her youth, but came to this city after her marriage to George C.

Kengle, who died in 1918. She then returned to Cumberland to make her home. Mrs. Kengle was the daughter of Michael and Anna Mullan Fallon. Surviving are a son, Paul F.

Kengle, this city; two daughters, Mrs. Martin J. Flynn, Cumberland, and Mrs. Ray Warren, Columbus, and ten grandchildren. TURKEY DINNER Sunday, October 8 11 to 2 p.m.

QUINN CHAPEL CHURCH Donation $1.25 MRS. KIZZIE CALAWAY, Chairman For Reservations Dial 6812. When You're Having Guests BRING THEM OUT TO GOLD KEY! Let Our Hospitality Make It Easier For You! Steaks Chicken Chops Seafoods ENTERTAINMENT Dining Room Bar 5 p. m. 11 a.

m. GOLD KEY Miles South on Rte. 23-Dial 15-622 for Reservations. Terminal Units Many At Cleveland By Change Hands Rotary CLEVELAND, Oct. 3 (P).

-Control of some $30,000,000 worth of Cleveland buildings including the tallest tower outside of New York City has been acquired by a group of New Englanders. Lawrence E. Green of Boston, Cleveland Pneumatic Tool Co. board chairman, announced he and associates of the Sixty Trust in Boston had gained control. The buildings are the 700-foot tall terminal tower, the 1,000 room Hotel Cleveland, a garage and three office buildings, the Republic, Midland and Guild Hall.

They were built by the late O. P. and M. J. Van Swearingen when they had control of a number of railroads.

Investors here estimated the price at around $7,800,000. Not included in the deal is the Higbee Co. department store and the railroad terminal. Trucks (Continued from Page One) song, 50 air miles north of Parallel 38. The South Koreans had Allied air support on a swiftly ing bomb line and standby naval gun support alongside their east coast drive.

Allied air observers flew 15 miles north of Kosong without sighting the enemy anywhere. The Reds were reported running toward Wonsan, 60 road miles north of Kansong, under reported orders to make a last ditch stand there on the Sea of Japan coast. Boyle said about 60 American Army men were with the South Koreans as advisers. But the Americans were under new orders, Boyle said, not to discuss the drive into Red Korea with war correspondents. South Korean officers, under no such restrictions, talked freely.

A spokesman for Gen. MacArthur had described the border crossing situation as delicate politically. Red China is reported to have thousands of veteran troops massed in Manchuria across the Yalu river from Red Korea. Communist China leaders have made threatening talk but no march of Red China soldiers into North Korea has been reported from authentic sources. Gen.

MacArthur's headquarters broke its silence on the crossing of the Parallel 38 border by the South Koreans Sunday. His Tuesday afternoon war summary said without elaboration that South Korean Third Division troops had advanced to Tongcho. Tongeho is a village 13 miles north of the border on the Sea of Japan shore. An Allied 10th Corps spokesman in Korea, however, said spearheads of the Third Division had moved beyond captured Kansong against little opposition. Kansong is about 33 miles north of the border and within 60 road miles of Wonsan.

This is the oil refinery port where Red prisoners have said the North Koreans are hastily massing troops for an all-out defense stand. Another South Korean division, the Capital, had moved at least 15 miles north of 38 Tuesday morning. It was advancing on a road a few miles inland. MacArthur's Tuesday summary did not mention the Capital Division as being north of the border. Behind this all-South Korean force of at least 20,000 troops, the republic's Sixth Division captured Chunchon, seven miles south of the border in the center of the peninsula.

The Sixth moved on north toward 38. Reds Are Silent Red Koreans were silent for the third straight day on the border crossing and MacArthur's Sunday ultimatum calling on them to surrender or be stroyed. Lt. Gen. George E.

Stratemeyer said Allied planes in the course of the war that began June 25 have destroyed or damaged more than 1,000 Red tanks, thousands of vehicles, 376 bridges and 152 enemy planes. He added: In close support of ground troops, Allied warplanes attacked more than 10,000 North Korean troops. The cost was 52 airmen killed. 56 wounded, 65 missing and 139 planes destroyed. MacArthur's headquarters said Allied patrols were thrust out around Seoul in a 10-mile are on all sides.

An enemy brigade remnant estimated at 2,000 men was still fighting in the capital area. OUT OF QUARANTINE Dr. R. E. Bower, Ross county health commissioner announced Tuesday the release of Caroline Sue Brown, 7, daughter of Mr.

and Mrs. Clarence Brown of 295 South Hickory street, from scarlet fever quarantine. ELECT Donald E. Whitsel ROSS COUNTY AUDITOR -Pol. Adv.

5 News of the Markets CHICAGO GRAIN (Open) Mar. May WHEAT! Ded 2.20 fuly 2.18. CORN Dec. 1.48: Mar. 1.32; May 1.53 July 1.54 OATS: Dec.

May RYE Dec. SOYBEANS: May Jan. 2.42-41 Mar, 2 LARD: Nov 12.92, Dec. 13.62; Mar. 13.70.

NEW YOORK STOCKS American Tel cate, American Can Tobacco Anaconda Copper Armco Steel 411 Atch 5 135 Atlantic Refining Baldwin Locomotive las Baltimore Ohio Bethlehem Steel 50 Chesspeake Ohio 31 Chryler Corp 80 Columbia Gas Curtiss DuPont Firestone General Electrie General Foods Goodrich Goodyear Johns-Manville Kroner Co. 631k Corp 281 Montgomery Ward National Biscult National Cash Register 42 N. Y. Central Norfolk Western 50 North American Co. Penn R.

R. 104. Procter Gamble 68 Radio Corp, 191 Republic Steel Sears Roebuck Sinelair Oil Socony-Vacuum Oil Ind Standard Oil 85 Union Carbide U. 8. Steel Westinghouse Electric 34 Woolworth NOON SALES 1,230,000.

CINCINNATI LIVESTOCK HOGS not fully established: early sales barrows and gilts 10-35 lower than Monday's average: sows about steady: good and choice 180-250 Th bulk 20.10; talking 19.15 down on Tate sales: good and choice sows bulking 17.50-18.50: few lightweights 18.75 an dabove: extreme heavies 17.25. CATTLE 550: calves 300: slow: grain cattle very scarce; in best demand: generally steady: selective trading: 583 tb baby beeves 28 25: medium 1.140 lb steers 27.00; common and medium grassy steers and heifers ly lightweights 21.00-26.00: canner and cutter cows 10.00-18.50: bulk 15.00 un: common and medium beef cows 19- 20.50: common and medium light bulls 20.00-23.00; few medium and good 23.50- 24.00: cutter common offerings down to 17.50: vealers steady: stond and choice 31 00-36 00: common and medium 21- 30.00: culla down to 15.00 SHEEP 300: slaughter lambs stow: weak undertone: other classes scarce, about steadv: one small lot choice 93 1b lambs 28.50% good and choice mainly 37.80-28.00: common to good 22.00-26.50: odd slaughter ewes, common to choice 7.00-12.00. CHICAGO LIVESTOCK SALABLE HOGS 12.000: slow: early market fully 25 lower but most sales butchers 25-50 lower: closed dull and mostly 50 lower all weights: sows fully 25 lower: top 20.15 sparingly: most good and choice 200-280 th 19.50-20.00: most 170-200 11 18.75-19.75; other weights scared; good and choice 400 1b and under 400-500 1b and yearlings a 29.50-32.50: few loads 17.25-18 28: 500-600 16 16.50-17.50; estimated holdover 1,000 SALABLE CATTLE 6.500 Salable calves 500: yearlings and choice steers fully steady; other steers slow, about steady: heafers steady to 25 lower: other classes steady to weak; load choice to prime 1.198 15 ted steers 33.50: bulk stood and choice fed steers 32.60-33.00: medium to low-good grades 35.50-29.25 common down to 22.50: good and choice belters 28.50-30.75: choice steers and heifers mixed 31 50; medium to low- heifers 25.00-28.25; beef cows 19.00-23.001 canners and cutters 15.00-18.75: few light canners 13.00- 14.50: most medium and good sausage bulls 23.75-36.00 medium to choice vealers SALABLE SHEEP 1.500: all classes steady: good to choice native lambs 27.00-28.00; load lot top 28.00; small sorted lots 28.25; good to choice yearlings deck lamb-weight offerings at latter price: slaughter ewes 12.30-14.00; odd small lots 14.50 and better. PITTSBURGH LIVESTOCK SALABLE CATTLE 125, market slow. Steers good to choice 28.50-30.50.

medium to good 25.50-27.50, common to medium 22.50-25.50; heifers Rood to choice 23 medium to good 20.50-24.90. common to medium 18.50- 20.00; COWS good to choice meto good canners and cutters bulls good to choice DANCING Tonight and All Week with TOMMY THOMPSON'S LITTLE BAND By popular request we are returning this orchestra, which you all enjoyed so much. Direct from the Do-Do Playhouse in Cincinnati. ENTERTAINMENT ALL EVENING. DELICIOUS DINNERS STEAKS CHOPS CHICKEN George McCandless Mixologist All Legal Beverages No Cover No Minimum Steak House Rte.

23 South Dial 15-111 NEWS Crushed Presidency, Told With one exception, the 32 men who have occupied the White House found the presidency a lonely, crushing, disillusioning position. This was the statement of James Metzenbaum, Cleveland, candidate of the Ohio supreme court, who spoke to the Rotary club following luncheon at the Warner hotel, Monday noon, on the topic, "The President Pays Dear for the White Mr. Metzenbaum, a practicing attorney for 40 years, three-term state senator and an authority on zoning, is preparing a book on the subject the presidency. Jefferson Unbent The exception, he said, was Thomas Jefferson. "Although he had to sell his cherished library to Congress and actually had to borrow funds to pay what he owed, lest some political foe might have him jailed as he left the White House, he walked out unbent, equally fearless and uncommonly loved." Three Presidents have been cut down by assassins' bullets--Lincoln, Garfield and McKinley, Four presidents- William Henry Harrison, Gen.

Zachary Taylor, Warren G. Harding and Franklin Delano Roosevelt died before their terms had ended. Broken by Failure Daniel Webster, Clay, James G. Blaine, Horace Greeley, Stephen Douglass, William Jennings Bryan fruitlessly spent much of their lives in the hope of capturing that coveted position, their chief reward having been grief, frustration, bitterness and dejection. Mr.

Metzenbaum was introduced by Charles H. McCarthy and the response was by President William Nolan. Jack Diehl, high school Rotarlan for September, introduced Jerry Parker, the high school Rotarian for October. Tom Boulger and Jerry Ratcliff were guests of Mr. McCarthy and visiting Rotarians were George McGuffey of Jackson and Ralph Kemmerer of Sylva, N.

C. New Citizens STEWART Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Stewart, 527 Carver boulevard, Toledo, are announcing the birth of a son, Gerald Alan, at 1:20 a. Monday, Oct.

2, at Mercy hospital in that city. Word of the new arrival, who weighed pounds, was received by Mrs. David Oliver, 77 East Fifth street. Mrs. Stewart is the former Virginia Hollingsworth of Chillicothe.

SPARKS- and Mrs. George Sparks (Roseanna Dean), 137 East Logan street, Circleville, are the parents of a 7-pound daughter, born at 12:55 a. m. Monday, Oct. 2, at Berger hospital.

The newcomer, who has been named Darla Jean, is the granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Dean, East Main street, and Mr. and Mrs. Elva Sparks, cleville, Route 4.

SAMPSON-Mr. and Mrs. Roy Sampson, Adena, and Mr. and Mrs. Edward Davis, North Poplar street, are the grandparents of a daughter born at 11:10 p.

m. Sunday, Oct. 1, to Mr. and Mrs. James R.

Sampson (Ruth Davis), South Charleston. The infant weighed 7 pounds, two ounces, upon her arrival at Springfield City hospital. She has been named Judith Ellen. MARRIAGE LICENSES RICHARDSON-NOLAN: John R. Richardson, 23, car repairman, Dennison, and Marjorie A.

Nolan, 29, caseworker, 190 Vine street. KERR-BRUMBACK: Walter D. Kerr, 26, painter, 71 Parsons, Detroit, and Betty Tom Brumback, 24, cashier, 30 East Fourth street; the Rev. Harold Weir. OAKES-FREY: Clarence Glen Oakes, 40, painter, 140 West Sixth street, and Edna May Frey, 43, at home, High street, city; the Rev.

Mr. Barnhart. BOLEN-RADEKIN: Roger Eugene Bolen, 21, New York Central railroad employe, Dexter, and Betty Lou Radekin, 21, secretary, Masonic Temple; the Rev. Edward B. Fischer.

ROSE-TACKETT: John Rose, 18, farmer, Route 5, and Marie Tackett, 17, at home, Route 5. Tonight Only ROYAL "House By the River" THEATRE and MAT. and 30cl "Davy Crockett, EVE. and 35cl Indian Scout" Crest Productions, present CLAUDETTE ROBERT GEORGE COLBERT YOUNG BRENT BRIDE FOR SALE and ELLISON Colorado Ranger RUSSELL HAYDEN 15 1b 150. 00.

27-30. 180-200 100, market 15 220-250 20.75• 18 to medium 23.50-25.50, common 21.00 active SALABLE HOGS 180-180 21.00, 20.75-21 200-220 00. 250-300 It 19.50-20.90. 106-150 roughs SALABLE market active. SHEEP to choice medium ewes 7.00- Good good 22.50-23.50.

CALVES market 11.00. hers SALABLE medium 27.00-29.00. steady, commons culls and CINCINNATE PRODUCE S. Included. U.

EGGS. cases mer graded. A large dim large large current grades, extra pale POULTRY, 32-40, brotlers and fryers. comreceipts amall mercially grown. 30-32, heavy broilers hens 22- and fryers, farm run, 35-30; roosters 18-18: licht 11-10, old toma young hens 30-42.

young keys, 15 65: 19 15 prints 20-30 BUTTER. 1 prints 65 prints 66. BUTTERFAT 551 POTATOES 1.50-3.80. READ THE CLASSIFIED ADS SIMONS FLOWERS 18 E. Second Dial 27-196 Del Ar Auto Theatre DELANO AVE.

CHILLICOTHE, ONIO Tonight and Wednes. M-6-M'S WESTERN AMBUSH STAMPING Robert TAYLOR JOHN HODIAK ARLENE DAHL DON TAYLOR JEAN HAGEN JOHN McINTIRE ROBERTS Screen Play ay MARSWERITE SHORT Reset de Directed the DE SAM SURE W000 by ARMAND DEUTSCH Produced by Short News Cartoon Show Times 7:00 and 9:00 Admission 50c Children Under 12 Free With Parents Follow Mill Street Moonlight Auto DRIVE IN SHOWS NIGHTLY MOON A East Main St. at Renick TONIGHT and WED. TO THE STABLE" Starring LORETTA YOUNG Added Cartoon and March of Time. Free Pony Rides For Children Under 12.

Gates Open at 6:00 Features 7 and 9 Admission 50c Children Under 12 FREE With Parent. 2. THE COST OF A BABY SITTER Orch R. envelope SODA. Order TUESDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1950 A daughter, Mrs.

Fred Messel, predeceased her, Burial was in Saints Peter and Paul cemetery in Cumberland. Mrs. Joseph Nevin HUMBOLDT Service was held at 2 p. m. Monday from the H.

D. Smith funeral home, Bainbridge, for Mrs. Joseph Nevin. The Rev. Harold Jeffers officiated, and burial was in the Bainbridge cemetery, Mrs.

John Robson, Mrs. Robert Sams and Mrs. Louis Kerns sang, accompanied by Mrs. Virginia Wrights. Pallbearers were Frank Chambliss, Jay co*konougher, William Riley and William Henson.

Infant Nichols Graveside service was held at 1:30 p. m. Saturday in Greenlawn cemetery for the infant son of Harold Mildred Smith Nichols, North Mulberry street. The child died at birth on Friday. Burial was by Ware's.

Ogan Funeral Service for Arthur Ogan was held at 2 p. m. Monday in the Church of Christ at Circleville. The Rev. James Bennett officiated and burial was in Mt.

Pleasant cemetery under direction of L. E. Hill funeral home at Kingston. Singers were Florence Clark, Ren and Marie Mumaw and Murl Lane. Accompanist was Mary Donahue.

Pallbearers were Cross by Hice, George Profft, Ernest and Harley Rinehart, John Monce and Harold McKee. Riehle Service Service for Alfred Daniel Riehle, fatally injured early Monday in a traffic accident at Main and High streets, will be held at 2:30 p. m. Wednesday from the North High Street Church of Christ in Christian Union. The Rev.

B. Dixon will officiate, and burial will be in Greenlawn cemetery by the Ware funeral home. Friends may call after 6 p. m. Tuesday at the Rufus Riehle dence in Anderson Station.

Sheets Funeral Service for Charles Sheets Jr. was held at 2 p. m. Monday from the Three Locks church, with burial in the church cemetery by the Ware funeral home. The Rev.

Ben Ward officiated. Miss Esther Allison and Miss Evelyn Allison sang, accompanied by Miss Mary Turner. Pallbearers were David, Robert and Kenneth Sheets, Richard Bell, Vern Lancaster and Donald Cydrus. Bucks Still Good Team, Says Nelson Ohio State has a potentially great football team, despite the defeat by Southern Methodist, Rodger Nelson, Columbus, told Chillicothe Kiwanis club following lunch at the Warner hotel Tuesday noon. Most impressive, in the opinion of the sports editor of the Ohio State Journal, are the quarterbacks of the Buckeyes, Janowicz and Curcillo.

Pass Defense Weak Mr. Nelson said Ohio State looked weak in pass defense against Southern Methodist, but declared that the Bucks' will meet no team in the midwest that passes like Southern Methodists' Fred Benners. Mr. Nelson's appearance was arranged in observance of National Newspaper Week. He arrived too late for lunch, having air, then auto, from Baltimore, since morning.

He was there with the Columbus Red Birds who are playing Baltimore in the "Little World Ser- Chandler Praised Mr. Nelson was introduced by Tom Boulger, program chairman. The response was made by President Dr. G. E.

Gardner, who also took note of Newspaper Week to thank G. A. Chandler, Gazette editor, for his publicity efforts in behalf of the club. Ben Segal and the boys' and girls' committee also were complimented for arranging the Kids' Day picnic for the schoolboy patrol Sept. 23.

Guests included: Gerald Radcliffe, with William Stanhope; Ellsworth Shriver, with Lee Barnhart; Frank Beeler, Portsmouth Kiwanian; and George Holzapfel, guest of the club. WAVERLY MAN FINED Charged with reckless driving Henry Spradlin, 43, Waverly, was fined $15 and costs in municipal court Tuesday. He was arrested by the state patrol Sunday. We Invite You To See Our New Pottery Helen C. Rieder Florist 38 South Paint St.

Dial 6266. Public Party ST. PETER'S Wednesday, Oct. 3 8:00 p. m.

You May Be Very Fortunate Dron in and. To secure have a talk helpful infor. with as: mation about our service. WARE Funeral. Sewice We're here to answer your questions SHERMAN ENDS TONITE ELEANOR PARKER PATRICIA NEAL RUTH ROMAN.

"THREE SECRETS" Wednes. and Thurs. AND, KILLERS ARE MY CLIENTS!" George RAFT Ella RAINES Pat O' BRIEN in a Dangerous Profession Also Travel News Novelty PROSPERITY CLUB WED. and THURS. 150 MAJESTIC DIAL 7416 NOW SHOWING SUNSET BOULEVARD SUNSET BEVE.

Paved with and Hopes High Broken Dreams! Hollywoods STREET OF WILLIAM HOLDEN GLORIA SWANSON ERICH VON STROREIM Plus Latest News STARTS THURS. THE LAWLESS Macdonald CAREY: Gait RUSSELL HARTMAN THEATRE, COLUMBUS ONE WEEK COM. OCT. 16 MATINEES WED. A SAT.

"Musical comedy at its glittering best." -LIT KISS ME, KATE" with FRANCES McCANN ROBERT WRIGHT BENNY BAKER MARC PLATT BETTY GEORGE Music and Lyrics bf COLE PORTER by SAM end BELLA SPEWACK MAIL ORDERS NOW With remittance and addressed stamped retarn Orel. 1.15. and 1.11 asl 2.90; Second Balzeng reserved or sold Eves. MaD, and prices Include NOTICE TO OUR PATRONS Kiss Me, Kate will be a sell-out. Med once, and it Be Suzzest at alternate F..

Chillicothe Gazette from Chillicothe, Ohio (2024)
Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Golda Nolan II

Last Updated:

Views: 6166

Rating: 4.8 / 5 (78 voted)

Reviews: 93% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Golda Nolan II

Birthday: 1998-05-14

Address: Suite 369 9754 Roberts Pines, West Benitaburgh, NM 69180-7958

Phone: +522993866487

Job: Sales Executive

Hobby: Worldbuilding, Shopping, Quilting, Cooking, Homebrewing, Leather crafting, Pet

Introduction: My name is Golda Nolan II, I am a thoughtful, clever, cute, jolly, brave, powerful, splendid person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.