The Greene County Guardian, April 18, 1957

^ T H E J j REEN E COUNTY GUAflDIAN A«tI18- 19571 by the way in BowersviUe Mrs. LUCY WHITE Dinner guests Sunday of Mr and Mrs. Gilbert Ream were Dr. and Mrs. A. B. Ream and sons, Chuck and Jim, Me- chanicsburg, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Larkin, Columbus, Mr. John Larkin and Mr. and Mrs. David Larkin and son of G r e e n f i e l d and Mrs. Guy Conklin, Xenia. Mr. Ve r n o n Horney and father, Ma ywo od Horney, spent Sunday afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. Robert Horney of Springfield. Mrs. Roy Vernard and son Carroll spent the weekend wi t h Re v . and Mrs. John Minsker and d a u g h t e r of Portsmouth. Sunday dinner guests, of Mr. andMrs. Esta White were Mr. and Mrs. Pe r r y Leach and sons Laurence and Jeffrey of South Solon and Mrs. Bertha, Ross and Ar t hur L e a c h of Dayton. The WSCS of the Methodist Chu r c h met in the church basement Wednesday e v e ­ ning. They had as special g u e s t s , six l a d i e s of the WSCS of Cedarville and the Ruth Circle of Bowersville. Ho s t e s s e s were Miss Mary Binegar, Mrs. Minnie Dun­ lap and Mrs. Georgia Booth- by. Mrs. La von B o c k had charge of the program and Mrs. F l o r e n c e Haines the devotions. The F.F. A. B a n q u e t of Jefferson Twp. was held Fri­ day e v e n i n g at the High) School auditorium with 150 guests a t t e n d i n g . Bonnie He i n z was chosen F. F.A. queen and r e c e i v e d the: •crown from last year's queen, Rae Alexander. For the pro­ gram, Ed Pickering told of his trip to Israel and showed many interesting pictures of the country and people. ClubNews Mrs. Audra Hollingsworth is on the s i c k list. She is staying this week with her' son and da ugh t e r -in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Don Hollings­ worth and daughter. A c a n t a t a , "Cross and Crown, " will be presented at the Methodist Chirch Fri­ day evening at 8 p. m. The Patternettes Sr. h e l d \ / Sunrise services will be held at 6:30 a.m, Easter Sunday at the Paintersville Church Breakfast will be served at 7 a.m. QUALITY GASOLINE SO ILS^L j-^ / Lubrication Accesories h'ires-Batteries Washing Monday evening. April 22, will be the quarterly confer­ ence meeting and will be at the Paintersville Church at 7:30’p. m. Gumm{ Brodds SERVICE STATION State 72 at Selma Pike Published every Thursday of the year at 3 S. Limestonej St., Jamestown, Ohio, by The Guardian Publishing Co. fames I. Gatten, Publisher. National advertising representative, Weekly Newspaper Representatives and the Ohio Newspaper Services, Inc 198 S. High S t ., Cqlumbus, Ohio. Subscription ratnsf’By mail in Greene County, $4.00 pet year; for other areal, $4.50 per year; for members of armec forces, $4.00 per yfear. Entered as second class matter under the Act of March 3, lflia^^^^ iM lfi^ llteyo jyffJ^ayan ienown^h lo s Authorized Distributor purest fuel you can buy! ikelgas— World's finest fuel and Appliances available exclusively at Sm ithV F a rm & H om e C e n te r Jamestown Phone OR 5=8511 their second meeting April 11 at the home of Mrs. Ervin Harrison. The meeting was called to order by the president.and. a discussion oh an honor club and a trip to Dayton to see the show, "Ten Command­ ments, " went into process. Marlene C o x was elected assistant safety leader. . Eleven members were pre­ sent with two visitois, Mrs. D e l b e r t Green and'Miss Jo Ann Miller. Games and r e f r e s hmen t s were p r e s e n t e d after the meeting by Joy Green, Kath­ erine Foster, Cheryl Ewing and Ruth Ann Mitchell. The next meeting will be held April 25 at the home of Mrs. Ervin Harrison at 7:30. R e f r e shm e nts are to be g i v e n by Wanda Fulk and Margaret Brown. The S lic -C h ic -C h e c k e rs held their s e c o n d meeting April 2 at the home of Bonnie and Sue Heinz.. The roll call was answered by each girl naming her pro - ject. The project books were passed out. Three new members were taken into the club. They are Peggy Liming, Arlene Bradds officers and advisors are ex ­ pected to attend the Greene County 4-H officers and ad­ visors training conference to be held Wednesday evening. who are m e m b e r s of the planning committee are Paul S t a f f o r d , chairman, Mrs. Floyd Liming, Mrs. Donald Brannum and Mr. Fred Van- Tress. of the club were all the mo- at the T e c u m s eh Grade there and Joyce Walters. S c h o o l l o c a t e d on Ol d The next meeting will be Springfield Pike, h e l d on Ap r i l 16, at 1:30 This meeting was originally p.m. at the home of Diane scheduled for Xenia Central Lewis, HiKh. A p p r o x i m a tely 400 4-H 4-H Club Council members lim Broderick SEPTIC SYSTEM Attention Fanners BULLDOZING TOP-SOIL Contracting For Sweet Colm Acreage FILL DIRT sand GRAVEL Phone Jamestown Wilmington OR 5-7891 or 5201 Collect Free Estimates lamestown Canning Co. Jamestom C.T. Vandervort OR 5-8371 (Vaiie ofautomobiles W e w T o d a y \ The FORD SKYLINER —world’s only Hide-Away hardtop Once in a long, long while a car comes along that people remember and talk about for years after its introduction. The first model “A” Ford teas such a car... The first Ford V-S was such a car . . . The first Ford Thtnulerhird was such a car. Today Ford Division is proud to an­ nounce still another car that many say is destined to become the most famous Ford of all: The Skyliner —world’s only hide-away hardtop. If you plan to buy a new Ford, or al­ ready own one, the fact that Ford cre­ ated this car is important to you. For all the exhaustive research, planning and testing that went into the Skyliner is evidence of the engineering skill you get in every Ford model. The Ford SKYLINER. the only all-steel hide-away hardtop, is a car for history. This is an old dream of Detroit, a dream of two generations of motorists. And today Ford has made that dream come true-pin steel. But the story behind this dream is a story of men who refused to accept “no” for an answer. In the Ford tradition they kept striving toward the goal long after others had given up the chase. .To understand this Ford spirit you must go back to 1908. That was the year when many Detroiters smiled smugly as Henry Ford announced, “We will build a motor car for the great multitude . . . so low in price that no man making a good salary will be unable to own one.” And they did. Today, nearly a half century later, Ford continues to cause the “experts” to change their tune. When you see this all-steel hardtop that retracts into a con­ vertible, you'll be seeing a car that many said would never be mass-produced. But Ford did it. It was December 1956 —after eigh years of research, planning, experiment ing and testing—when Ford unveiled thi masterpiece . . . unveiled it amid all th pomp and splendor of the New Yor Automobile Show. ’ And now this history-making car, thi prototype of a whole future generatio of cars, is ready for your own person, inspection in the showrooms of man Ford Dealers. Plan to see it soon. And ask your Deal* to show you the exciting advances in a models of the new Ford line for ’57. 1. It’s an all-steel hardtop with sleek Victoria styling ... 2. Touch a button and presto! It's a sun-loving convertible1 RAMBO-YODER FORD 9 N. Limestone S t Jaamtown, Ohio OR 5-8821 L

RkJQdWJsaXNoZXIy MTM4ODY=