<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="16839" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/16839?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-09T17:04:28+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="49988">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/7bac7620d14a9789063860ba05f70057.pdf</src>
      <authentication>012fe02d87602483ed48e23f1a14459f</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="53764">
                  <text>¥,...._.

- '!Ill. Dolb' ~.
,

I

(),, J""'

"

I

-~.
~.....
,·\··

~.1MII
.
'

·

&lt;

.

~ ...u~ · ~

,t

,,:~~eng
.
rag&lt;!~ fJ.o n-

•

lr~· .6

Old . Si,lk \StCH:k~. .
,. M•ke· Nice 'Fiowen' ,.

tF THE MONTH SALE

' •t .

'

-~

.I

EROY. .-

N~

~o(f19 e.
ction Held
[2'
~...n~~.J"~~~*re~::,;,n:\c · · · 1·n"' 1-.~- ~.gr.·
•

•'

ly. POLLY CIAMEl

o1

omtera

and . .

v•-·

'

J.qoos

Deaconesses,

Mi&amp;s

Phlllla

choir dlree10r.

Joachim, Mrs. Robert llaggerty,

, Church Class

Tri-County
Radio Club

Meeting at

Plans Party

Wippel Home

SYRACUSE - AValentine par·
ty was planned when the Tri -C~Jt&amp;

Mrs. Aten Shaln, who plana
to move to Flori.di next month
ty Citizens Band Radio Club met to be near her daughter, waspreat their headquarters recently. oented a gift """n the One-WonPresident Richard Grinstead One Cluo of the ·Pomeroy Flrot
presided. Reports weregivenal'lt
BaPJ,at Churcb met Thursda1
accepted and several projects ni&amp;!1t at the home cl Mr. a n d
dh;cussed.
Mrs. Dale Wippel.
, A door prize of hml painted
Mra. T, T. Slelton WB.I CO·
pillow cases was awud.ed to Don hostess tor the meeting which
Manual.
was presided over by Mrs. Aud·
For the next meeting oo· Feb. rey YolUI.g. The teacher• athought
13 each member isaskedtobring given by Mrs. Joseph COOk waa
a eonlic \la.lentlne, sandwiches, endUed t"The Soggy Caken and
chips or cookies. Soft drinks will waa taken from Guideposts.
be served by the club.
Devodooo by Mro. Cook InRefreshments were served to eluded a poem, "'Ibe New Year,"
Y.r. and Mrs. Richard Grin-. and a reading ..Recipe for the
stead, New Haven; Mr. and Mrs, New Year We Can All Wllh
Junior Holsinger, Brad and Paul, For." S.e concluded with pray.
,Terry Reiber and Dan Manual. or.
Racine, and Mr. and Mrs. ~
A A1ad courH wat aenred
Ju Hemsley, David Lipscomb, by tile hosts to those named and
Richard Duckworth and Agnes
Mrs. J. Edward Foster, Mrs.
White, local.
-..,. Lee Batley, Mr. ond Mrs.
L. P~ Sterrett, Mr. and Mra.
George -.or, Mro. E II e n
Couch, and Mrs. Elmer Wick-

'

l

MEIGS THEATR£

TONIGHT &amp; 11illRSDAY
JANUARY 29-.'10
NOT OPEN

ham.

Jolly Pal Gift

--------.1
Jaa. Stewart

+

Henry Fooda

SHOW STARTS 7 P. M.

·• .e ,wla:e•

running ooe way ate crln
altfll~l tile
otliet.. way. It Is Important lbat the c ·
~1&gt;1! used
in making the P4!ta~ aacl)eaY,ts of tho . fto~. Form 11110
strand of this wtte Into a (ll!tal-tllapecl 'ljlOI) "troril one to
two Inches In height. . Wrap the o&amp;d of tb~cwlre llgbiJY at
lhe base of the loop, lo!avlilg a Utile elltra ~t lhe•tna&lt;
The nylons first will be ,stripped 9f
anll then dyed
green for the leaves and OilY otl)e'r deslrod ~on for the
petals. To shade the petals, some ~an be! left Iii 'lhe dye
longer than other pieces. Cut the d~.njlons ~ lhreeIIICh squareS and Slreleh tight OVOf lhe shapeci. , Cilllklecl
wire frames . Secure the four sides of the pylon ,sQuare by
wrappln~ a strand of straight wire closely arouncttbf ~

A jolly pal e:lft exchange was
bold durin&amp; Monday nil!bt'sm..tlng cl the Jolly Blmch Sewing
PerCiub held at the home or Mro.
ry Mlteh. Co.boatesslor the
IIIOOtlns ""' Mrs. Orla Smith.
Mrs. WUUam RobiOa. waa ,.._
W at hOme. Mr1. Alma
Miller "'"' tile door prize. A

'

.~

l!ftl.;, . .,._,_ P. .~•.
• · - - · '""

....•

,

·

c

clal) 'oom.
MJ:a. Phij.lp ~-rt,
preoide... Ill"'
tho illmer attendoil
berll It '
dedded

~

.

DEAR GIRLS-Marlba L. wrote to oay lll!ll ller Jdib
tebool eeoaomie1 class made aueb Dowen bat' did aot dip
tllem. None of our answers menUoned doiDg lldJ. Martba

, thougbt lllol Irene co~ld dip them Ia paroUill. 1 JuMi ..
paraffill llut did melt the slob of a wblle ealldle, dipped
a Rower In that. It 11 now •.Uf and more shaded Jooklq
lbaa before. I feel lure molted paraffin ·woald glvo them
an eve• elearer look.-POLLY

Problem_ _ _ __

DEAR POLLY-Could you or some of the girls tell

me how I can safely ship a cake overseas? 1 want to
. send one to my cousin in Korea.-DONNA
·,
-

DEAR POLLY- A long thin percolator brush is marvelous for cleaning the edges of men's shirts along the button
hole and button edges . The
lint puUs out w h e n the
brush is inserted and it
works like a charm. Also,
may be used on children's
clothes and ladies ' paja·
mos.-DOROTHY
DEAR POLLY - Mollie
can remove the scratcht!S
from the sole plate on her
iron by buffing with a fine

eri

·

beds at

.- 01'

1

Mrs. ~I Goeglaln, euotodlan
of ......ernalla; Keme_th WUoox, promoter fA Onance; and
Mrs. Ella Smith, promoter or
hOspitality.
During the meeting
ed by Kathy King, honored queen,
lniUatlm wu oet for Feb. 10
with a practice to bo held pre-

-ct.

ceding Ulet,

des!Srl ooune ·'iiU served by
the hostesses. Others attending
were Mrs. E. L.' Hughes, Mrs.
Herman Balley, Mrs. WU.lil
Grueser, Mn. Helen Reynolds,
Mro, Jamea Jividen, Mro. Betty Cline, ond Mrs. J... Gilkey.

.,lan,

for the 1969 grand session to be

held at Oblo University In Atheu. Guests were Mra. Naomi
Kin&amp; Mr•. Sylvia Mldkllf, ond
Dale Slvith, excellent h I g h
priest cll'l&gt;meroy Chapter, Royal Atch-1.

Surprise Party

Seventh Birthday

hlime.~

tuea.)

lile .... Mrs,
ljlp(lin~ to the

Celebration Held
A Mickey MlliiH motif In a
blue and gold color seheme was

llliiCI In deeo{atlons for a party
honoring Tracey Lee Jefter1 m
her - - l&gt;ii1IIcla1 annlver.
aary. 'lbe party . . . held at the

Jeftero home ln~oe. Gomeo
were pla,red with prize• being
won by liteoe l!lorim.
Tonia Alit
'
lloud7 Armld, Michael
.... BrmdaAib.
Oilier -lltl at the party ...re
Sonia All!, Mac Amberger,Arnold, T11111111 na.ts, Jimmie
Joe Jofferl, ond Pet!ID' , Sue
Noltlor. Unable to allend but
IOIIIilnl a 11ft wao Sorah Kay
llcCcly.

.

SYRACUSE- A IIUJ1&gt;riH par.
waa held 1lle evening of January 24, honoring Mro. Ada Slack
on her 62ndblrlhdl1. Gomes were
played with prize• lllllnll6 Eleanor Bohram, Aplea Wldte ond
Margaret C«trrll. Tho door
prize wu ...., by Bruce Colo-

w

trW.
Aller Mro. Slack opened her
1118111' lovel,y g l f t o , of I"" cream, coke ond Iced tea
were
by the oo.tueea,
her cl!w&amp;lrter, Kaillryn John-

""ed

.... MflalllldJon.

Olbef•

elotlptacl feathon arouad tho
neck cl tho b - · male.

.·MENS·WORK bUNGARHS
•

Bar tacked' at all strain point a. Now Ia a geod tl.~·· 'for you fo· la~r,~y a pair. or.Jwo

ling rMd "The Tin Call,., uTwo
Ladies on 1 Train," aQ:t nThe
Acornu from the Sunshine magazine, and. the pra.yer for the New
Year wu given by ~~· Owen.
Games were played with ,Prltes betrw: wpn by Mrs. OWen. Mrs.
Meinhart, Mrs. Nathan Bigs,
Mrs. Betty . Spencer, 11'111 Mrs.
Harold Lemley,

CHOOSE FROII ACRALANS, NYLONS ANO
MANY OTHERS IN SHADES TO HARMONIZE
WITH ANY HOME!

RRY TO
•

Ingels Furniture
MIDDlEPORT·

9n-2635 .

. · tJeEIII FRIDAUID~TUfiDAY NIGHTS

Right now ie the time to step lively md
diiiCOver how 118Vings CIID really be
a family allair. Styles, eizea
galore for Mom, Dad, sieter
and brother. ColD#' see.

STILL LOT$ Of,8IG

-

of

these fin.e work dungarees.

FINAL CLEAN·UP SALE

SALE!

Mens ••• Boys ·-

Mens Sw11ttrs

. Jackets"'

Slipovers an( Cardig~n.s. FJnal
Cleoronc:e for thi&amp; sale. Sizes small

~edi'!ni, large cand extra large.

It wi II pay you to sfop In the mens

'

and boy1 deportment 1st floor. A big

16.95 SWEATERS •••• SALE 10,00
oelectlon '..of pqpular stylod l•c•otl
dt final c:lean-up tale pri~es ,- Well
14.95 SWEATERS., •.SALE 8.00
known brands. Excellent ·selection of
12.95 S~EATERS ... \SALE ,1;00
si~es. You can really •ave durl*'f
10.95
..•. SALE 6.50
thlt lpt!Cial Clean-up SGio.
·
6.00
70 Pairs Bows 3.50 and 3.95
WEDNESDAY
NATIONAL FARMERS Orp~&gt;o
lzatlon, 8 p.m. Wednesday at
Southern Local High School, Ra-

JEANS . AND
' . SlACICS

Slaeo

6

to

•

,

Apother ~lpment! ,

•

,

lins liiiulaied
10o' Viscose royon ' in pastel and
decorator calcirt. Skid proof back

Insulated all over. . C~shicined. lining ~
Reinforced toe and heel. Size• 10~
to - 13.·
•
·

machine washab,le. ·
0

LOlli Top Insulated
SOCKS ............. 2 pairs 1.110
Sllort Top Insulated
SO.CKS ............. 3pairs U9

. .·

Creek-Easlara pme; chill, yep~

~ s-~~3'as·

,

sd.ioJ-

EASTERN II1GII
Band
dance tollowlng the Ea*"'~·
1111' Creek bukehll pme Frlliof, 9:30 p.m. to 12 rnidnlald
ot Eutem lllib lUIIItorium. 'lbil
Jeyo wiD emcee.
~LEPORT . WCTU, 7:30
Friday ni&amp;!1t at tile Middl~
Firat U n I t e d Pretb.rter1an
Cburch.
SATUIIDAY
IUGH SCHOQI.. ...... "With
tile Jayo" l!olardlf, 8to 11 p.m&gt;
at llle llelp lllib Scioool - torlum In~,_.

t t

..,........ ~ ..... 4.89
•••••••••••••

. 2"PC.' ~IVING ROOII
:~
2 PC. L.IVI,.G ROOII SUifES ...... , .. :·.. ; .... : ....... .
PC. LIVING ROOUUifEL"...' .';........ -.'~ .... , .....
..
' ,;; .
~-

•

•

~

·j

·· ~····t•··
~ t··········~•
~1,/" '{ ·'' ·;

..'

.'

.

_,

.'

'f

'

.

··~ ·····
·.,·······-·
. ·~···
'
··'
.'

-.-

'

•• ,••• J .............. .

RACJN1! ci!APrEit 1U, lir·
dtr of tllo , . _ , , - · 7:30

.

,,•.

.

I

Account Story by Banker
117 BOB HOEFLICH
youns - l e should koow on
ovar zoo 11e1p lllib s.bool cbeeklns ac~ Including 111e
atudentl the poot two ha.. advanlaleo cl "'ch accoonto, bow
learned bow to prt ill the lboY are _.ci. depoaltlng to
bank, bow to 1ake It out, ond bow the account, "Oirltlng ond endorato keep track or · b\ltb tranaoc- 1n11 ebecks .,.. reconciling bank
tiona.
'l'hoY had to skip a eauroe on
bow to keep more In than lboY
1ake out (1ibere, oil where, Ia
that CM bol!ll tlulht'IJ.
llfrl. ~~ulhler .
·" " the fllalora¥ National Bank,
... parllelpaled ill • 1M'
or te..,.ch ·IIIIIIOrtoken by the
0111o Bonkero• AIMdallontolhll
· ,_lleld . tr piblle lnformatljlll 011
ehf&gt;ddnll aCOIIIIIII II)IIIIIIPIIlenl,
· .was the lnatrul!lor ill all the
' IOIIIIool.
Mr1. Grtllltb'o ~· biiVt emphuizod "flftlrYcloifacto" wllleb

a..-.

..

.,. . ,..
..

\'.

u
. ''

, ,,, ,
·
, '
'

··-·-~· ·· ··· ·
•

~

'

I I
•

.

·j'

...•...

···~·; .'··········

0 I I j, I

'

'

..
.-•o '1
. '..

I

'

o •
' I_

0

o

en tin

.· ·j ·;.· .
;li$~

'~~e·-:r..'~r"'·

•,• }

i' • ~J ,•

•••••

stu--

COIDIIIel'dal claoau er 50
- · lion _ . . . .... by
lira. Grtlllth Ia ochoduled for
ot11er - • - .
lira. Grlllltll baa laiulft part
ill a yoar'l reiiOOI'eb mthls pro.
llfllll with the Ohio Boakera AoIICidllfOI! for the develllpmeni of
a ~ &lt;bart .,.. manual uledln

tho clasoroom lnatrucUon.

"""'llali'"'

~

.

~

':

feel-

.

AI a member ol the ado
Bankers AtiOdadon Women's
Ad:ivitle1 COmmittee, Mrs. Gritfllb Ia a part of a basle testing
ataae of the PI'OifiDI wlllch Is
_.u,d to be ......... - wide baoll nat year.'
"Since checks are used to banclla over 90 por&lt;Ont cl all DIOOI!If
tranasetlmsln the United !!loiU,
lhll Ia tho rea11011 for the lmptaneo ol oiUdying cllecklngae-

.

cation -

of

.... -

Ohio, thll -

-

(Colllbalod on -

-

..

10)

Cloudy ond much cooler to- ·
nl&amp;lrt. oeeoalonal ra1n cr dria-

•f·

~-'o
.-1- .- . ~

zle, mainly In out portion, xln lower !Oo - . Coolar Fri-

";&lt; '[&gt;

r

-"

day, .11'1113 eiDudy.

..oc;. 0

\9

,.,.., "o

-~'n J")

¢

:;.: ~
,;&gt; ,;&gt; 0

o&lt;~&gt;.&gt;·O

TEN CENTS

":::: ·1. r
0

•

JANICE ROBERTS
Janice Laulae Roberti, dal·
&amp;Iller cl Mro. Freda llolaln·
pr, RoodsvWo, bas bael\named 1969 Betlf Ctocker Homemaker cl Tomorrow for Eutern lllib Sebool oo tho boal1of
her ...... In a written - lodp and atU11ldeteotonhlim~

~ 11•11!'
~ Jlr•.
··""""
·t . Jli.teeta·
~-

DwwJ Ju.r
mont hal

WASIIINGTON
(IJPI)- The aurlu Is delisnod to bring
Congreoslooal taxwrlters laid Into the Treaiiiii'Y $1 bllUon In
~rl&lt;
loda¥ for what Ito Draty-.
Rep. Jo1m W. BJrnel,· .»'Ia.,
could ba the Oral major
aenli&gt;r
Republican oo the lex·
overhaul of Income tax laws in
15. yearo. The rasults mi8ht wrlllllg eonunl-. In a - b
dose loophOles for mlltlonatreo, - o d for the New York
lll!hten the lex load for averqe stale Bar A.-latloa'a Tu
AmeriCIDI- ond perbapl heali Section, aaJd rolorm iqlolatlon
elf extsnllloo of the 10 per cent shOUld ba pailed "by thlo
surcharge.
CGngress."
uA review and reform o( tbe
Cbatrman WUbur D. Millo, DArk., aald the House Wa,ya ond (to.} oocle Ia · · - · . B;yraeo
Ileana t'&lt;&gt;mmlttee will launch
tax rerorm hearinp Feb. 18 by

maker of TomorroW.

aaJd. He - - &lt;:oocres•
shOUld simplify lex forms ond
eliminate abuses wher&lt;i&gt;,y 155
persons ~ more than
$200,000 paid oo toxeolaat year.
Discusalnl: this group, Jaclud·
tog 21 people who earned over
$1 million, Byrnes aaJd "No
matter by what device, no
matter how laudable 1be nature
c:l the dedu.etlm or exelulion
Ulet produces this reoult, the
fa~ remains that there ll no

D
t
:e~~.:.bl~..:::.~ .c r..re
es rovs
.J '
V. •

President Nixon baa aot yot

=~· Ia~ ::::.:-,:

modO her elillblefor

alllte """' nallooal 4d!"lar·
lhipl.h~l"'hal.beenl~
od a specially deslsi&gt;od llliTOf
charm from General Mills,
SJOIIOOT cl the BeU;y Crocker
Search for 1he American Home·

WI,J's illd t'&lt;&gt;nulllttao
asked Prestdeut l4ndon B.
Jo1U11oD to - . I t lex. rerorm
_..

1

~~ by Dec. 3 1, 1968·
JohniiOII
not submit
legislation.
1M: did
turned
over TreaiUl'J

to Ntx..
011l.uns said he did not expect
all-encompassing tax reform
uad.l possibly 19 .
·
70
Numerous coogressmen sai.d
closing lex loopholea could bring
EID9Uib revenue tD prevent an
extension ot the surtax 1liben

Department BUII8stionl

Smith Put
In Pen ·£or
1-20 years

oe:tbe"w......

)lstllleallon for "tlleoe lndloldlals bel.al DOil-ti.Jpi1KI. H
Mills aald the COIIIIIIlltee aloo
will eonlider &lt;hlngao that
would help middle ln._.
tupayera. For example 1 tbe
panel will ~ iDto tho PlllaJI&gt;II!q
of raising the 10 JOr
coat - - . for tho 57 JOr
emt of all Amerleaao ..
DOt Itemize lbelr ~
olbor tox-e•l'l'llt

-cal ....

...rmonta.

U
_.~orne,

...

•- --~~.-·oiliq$1:.~:\~

· Thlo mJ&amp;IIt be ealtod the''week ...... liM
.O.ibeN
that wao" for the Richard ond the pholle had 111..,.ntb" lleonlell unfoi'UDto' .....C ~
Roger Weaver families of Mid-- otrthe hook.
enced by theWeawrfhlillestbll.
dleport.
The gr&lt;IIC&gt; then rushed to tho week.
M. 12:10 L m. today the bome Earl Knight home nearby, am.
On Monday. two cars owned by
ot Mr. am. Mrs. Richard Weaver the tire department was ealled Roger Weaver ,parked oo Third
at the corner or Olive and Beech from tbere. Mr. Weaver is serv.. Ave. were demolished w II en
Sts. was canpletely gutted by irv in the Merchart Marine.
struck by a tu:l cab.
fire. The tam11y- Mrs. Weaver,
Losses in the fire - undeter~
Haggerty said there ia laDe
a aoo and a daughter - esciped mined origin - were setatabout
in the fire wearing only their $15,000.
night dothing.
Mrs. Weaver am her children
The aon. Philip, sleeping down are with her son, Roger, who restair&amp; was awakened by 11111oko sides on Third ATe. In Mlcldl1&gt;about midnigJrt.. He called his port. The Weaver children were
mother and sister, SUsan, sleep- even without clothing to wear to
1~ upstairs. Mrs. Weaver at- school ThursdaJ.

tempted to call the nre departmeri. before leaving the house.
U!Wible to c&lt;mplete the call.
she attempted to phooe llr. and
Bruce E. Smith, 25, charged
cowdl,If &amp;be Ald.
with otabblngwlthlntenttowound,
Mrs. Robert llaggercy who live
across tho street, and who own
Complete - · - ... sl&gt;- was aO.iieoeed to 1-20 'IM'J In
1&amp;11. Grlfllth by Georae llar- the Ohio state Pe-ntlary Wedthe house. By this time, the lire
eravea, ~ of the nesda,y by COmmon Pleas Judge
was completely out of hand, and
lleica Dlltrlet, 'l'hOmllo Kelb' John C. Bacon.
'
a,pparelltly Mrs. Weaver threw
aDd Harold Slu.er. BUldance cQUIIoo
Smith, eon!ealed tobaving
down the telephone ond ohe and
selors, and all Cllher teachers otobbod ~~ Seyler, 28, Pomher children llod llc&lt;m the house.
Involved In aebedUIIni the duo- eroy. ln the back four Umes witt~
They awakeued the Haggerty
esaoanolher otepln_..,. a bunlillll knife early ~
P ARlS (IJPO - u. S. chief !omlly, but the Jlas8ertya eoulcl
lludontl for lbelr future feSJOII· mOl"lllng, went before Judge ne&amp;Qtlator Henry cabot Lodge to- not Wop._ the nre~nt
olbWUu.
Bacoa on an ifttonnationalttdavlt day called for a mutual with- either, be(:ause they are on the
commenting "" the clusroom alter wahlllll annd ond petit ~al of North Vietlulese ond
_,-~eoce, Mra. Grtlllth said,
Jury rights.
Amertean troq&gt;o from S&lt;Mb Vlot''l,.b&amp;Vo been lmpresled with !Ito
Foftnerb' of Racine, and more rw.meH as a flnt step toward
lnlanlt obown i!y tho MeiP lllib reeently of Parkersburl. Smith peace.
- - . FurthermOre, the stu- was token before Judge Bacon by
Lodge, ~ It the oocond
.bael&gt; -latol:r P1'00001111ng A1torno7 Bernard V, aeaatoo of the Vleu.m peace
drooled, woll-croomocl, courto- Fults ond Sherllf Robert c. llart- talkl, reJected the "one-aided
ou.l lnd frlenclb'."
eilbach. SmithatlbbaciSoylerSuD- view ol history" ond "una~
I'' . I.'
dli about 1 L m. at ar near the . eel pJWrallUes" put forward
•
pnnnloes of !Ito Main 1lloet cafo by tho North Vietlmneoe and
.., East llaiJ&gt;.SI. In Puneroy. Viet COng delepliono at SaturUD
.
Smith, marr1ed. to 5eyler's 1»- day' a~ session.
wife, then went to Shertfl Hart.uwe can review enlles1ly the
In a letter to Lucille Smbh,
enbach ond aurrOIIIIereiL
e'IOIIII cl the poat and why they !Ito 19118 MeiP ~ Heart
oecurrlld .,.. '"' would~ F11D11 ~ the Cenlral Oblo
be aa fir ljllrt at the end ao at Heart A I - cl Coluniluo
tho betlmlni." he aald.
hoi _.a,lalad Melp Caunt;r
.
"Let u..-. tutead. turn our U.. tor· Mfflrw a _. CI!II1P'11h ID·
to. tho IIIIUre muat come NEW oRLEANS (Ul'Q - Tho be ...._. to bring an ani to· tho
1'bo 0118 ..... Hoar! F)md
jurJ tbet wjll try ~ · L," S..W llallliiW Ud to bring IIO'CO to ~ ,Ueeodod all preoo ~a. of con!IJIIrlll&amp; to mur- iila peop1a of v-."
vionl IDcomo for tho
=~ Prl!r to emerq' ~ Jlotel 001!"'1• Tilt . iela• Fllnd sur"'~' .t""• · .!ar. c .... .~ • 01. : MO.Uc, ~ - the French J'OI'• jiOIIIIOI!Ito. -ploU3,600;1t
~ '~•:,..
nlltrf'• ~ .
· !II ,.,_ lbare'' &lt;an
El""'" ,.jr tho
Juror•
had
Conf'11"""
COIII.er ond !lie alte .
101 ,. fDr aach - ) ;
~! llild t12h o - of'tlii ' I*"' tall&lt;s, Lodp told
'
~
~
JOIIl'llallato he -lnlkriu'ao
Tho
that meae BUra expires June 30.

FIrSt Step
p roposed
By Lodg
. e

insurance oo the tw~trame
home which wu JUU8d by tbe
blaze, anti there i1 belleved kJ
be some insunnce on fbrDlJb..
lngs. The house had been recently remodeled. Middleport
firemen were at the scene Ultll
3:30 L m.

Str~ing

sta- Drivers to

United Press lnlernaliollal
Seven Iaraeli planes toda,y
bOmbed Iraqi ~·
In eastern Jordea, Baghdad
radio aald.
Iraqi arWiery bll one Iaraell
plane wtdch was ''seen soina
_ , In !lames,. the Iraqi
broadc&amp;llt said. II salcl the 10,000 man Iraqi forces In Jordan suffered DO losses.

1il

Be Heard
PI'. PLEASANT -

A special

meeting cl the . . _ COooli;l'

hal called tor Frldof ..ea~a~ot 7:10

Board cl -

"*-"·''""'·Won
~-Board members .-odthelr
Praise
Handicapped nodee•
the m ethc Wldln
Ilia
bus driven
are ID t lll•l r
da,y o f - ._. • will
vor ....oppmg" Are Topic of . el&amp;blb
be board at 1hll speclal-llklo,
alq with mombato or Ilia Woat
Conference
F d Reeord
Vlrslala - - AIIOd-

Nighttime

Depository

Jury Nearly Complete

·

to-

'=.:-=-=-..;;;,
•

I 0 I

.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1( • •

·Mrs.
-·
Grll!lth hao opoken belore five 10111or ooUeae prepora..
toq eleaoea - a total of 124
plua two special•·
cation ciao... of ao . , _ ....

RAJN.SWOLLEN MAUMEE RIVER Iii Narthweot
Ohio--~- ·.., In ae-•~' areas.todo,!', relletiDellood . - .
~til~-~ to Henry, LQ~allllll Wood ~ea.
· The lint Ice juD ,.., at NllliO!ean. a eOIIIJDunlty or 8, '139 Ia
Hnry ~. ·It , 1M r l - to \.2
the 10 foot 00011
olll&amp;li ond eaullci tile
or 24 llunlllos. The Jam It mp..
broke' lti Wliel: todaY ond Wiler• In 1lle ~ty· ......

.

........, 111&amp;111 at ltuoD!c T...,.
pie;~-· ~ ot
lll*let 2$ lira. "/ll!leo Wolfe
.will be • pot,
'
.
.
·:

.

lfoodaHU
ie:E .01':1 THE

.,
''

, Eloetrlo ~.''

.

. . . . _ .., ,, , , . 1.. :• • • • • ' ~ • • • • • • • • • •

VARIETY SIIOW, 8 ~~om. Sat..

.ofASON -

• t

~············3.19

. .,••.1,~ ]n ··-:SUiT6Si
~_liu~· on th·· a,~;
: . ,, ,, &lt;;-,....... .•'; ;,'. ,, ·

-red; Plblk - - Ad·
ml011lon 75 conto par....

&amp;lug AunoUileC!CI ·

t

26.50 TABLE LAMPS..........IALE 23.89 . ; .. :'~~5 TABLE ~AMP$_.___..SALI1G.89 .
24.95 TABLE LAMPL,.....SALE'~U9 ' ,- &lt; l];f$ TA!!LE LAMPL-~..~LE 9.19
, :10.95 TABLE LAMPL-~ .. SALE 1'1.H· 1 '•' 10-95 '1)\BLE LAMPS-.-~.-SAL! 8~89.'
16.95 TABLE LAMPL...... SALI 14.89
·_US"T!ULE· LAMPS-·---~IlE 6.119
15.115 TABLE LAMPS.......... SALE 13.89 ,
-~.fS.t~iJ,l! LAMPL:..._SALE . '
IU~ T.ABLE LAMPL----~.L,I 12.89
6:9~,:T~LIE L~P'----~SALE
13.95 TABLE L~PS......... $ALE .11M
, ·~.95 t,;BLE LAM~L.....~!;~ ·

toble - · bot aandwlellea, ....
Ida ond deuarla; III)QDIOl'ed .lll&gt;

-c

.

tIt I t

Sale I tah~t ·L1unps

Eait..

ern Hi8ll School, precediJI&amp; K.l'•

rub!Giil.

0 I

It wm reach these Ame c:onetua10111 ond wW permit ua to Bubmit 0111'- otfer to the sharehOidora
of Columbuo and ,c;c.rthern Ohio

very much Ia the public tnternt
Ia ahared by the Governor of
Ohio, the Public Utilltlteo c.mmlaalon Of Ohio, tho Mayor of
; Coluulbuo aod load8rs of tho CO.

stu~nrs .GJ:V"eli :-cliiickirtg.

'

1 95-Z4"x34"
·
.1.69
U5-27" x45" ............. '.39
3 95-24"165"
,. ...

tll&amp;t 1lle prqH&gt;oed aell\doWoo II ~ty to review the record,

oach (privata ...._. ..,. -

LlllYerlldel). tf
"To - " " !Ito ldlld &lt;t ....

Congress Shapes Bill
To Lighten Tax Loads

of $1,150,000 per :rear on con-. lumbua eunmunlty who hive 10
sumation ot the acquisition, ud atatld tn written a1atementl
with additional rate reduetionl which are Plrt of· the · record.
In the futl.ln amountirw' to aevuu Is equally clear tram the
era! mWioo dallara per year. record that the propooedaequl,li·
uu would benenttheatockhold- tlon Bhoold notrestiltinaeydetriora by providing them with oul&gt;- ment whatever to Tho Clnclllall
stand.al appreciation In the mar-- Gas &amp; Electric C'A:lqlany or n.
kel value of their otoek. ·And II ~ P"""r and 1J&amp;bt C&lt;mwould beneftt the area served pany. the intervenor• lD the Jn&amp;t..

by providing It wltlnn unlimited tor, and Indeed w~d prov!Aie...amount of high quality, ec&lt;110111ic portunlllet for ..mllleDtlallleaoelectric ,.rvlee bacltod by the fits to the euotomers oleacbof
!ull reiOUl"CO! af the AEP oyo- theoe -nles.
tom."
"We are hopo!ul that, wiHintho
Cook lllrther Bald, "OUr view COmlnilsloo Itself hao had a !ull

"*

deato. - · !Ito job cl pOOl
--"la.looblclar

Weather

THURSDP. Y. JANUARY 30. 1969

AEP Disappointed
Over SEC's Ruling
Donald C. Cook. presldebt ot
American Electric Power eorp..
·l&amp;ld Wedneldly. •-we are. of
cour1e, ereatb' disawolnted In
the lliiiiQUI1Coment that tile SEC
s~ff If recommeiKiinl dliiiPproval o! our prepoaod aequloition. of the c~on stock of the
Columbus. and ~n 0 h I o
Electric C&lt;Jmpall)'.
"'We are eoovincod - and we
bellew the record fuUy demoDotrates-thotOIII'pr...,.al-.ld
nat only lie ~ for American
Electric l&gt;qwer ~but that
It would aloo lie good for tho cuetomera and the shareholders af
Col~tus . anc1 SCM:bern Ohio
Eiedrlc ~• .,.. for the
area It ser"''' It would benellt
tho euojmler&amp; by P~ tiJom

ecmcatlon, ..,,

&lt;~&gt;,.,

VOL. XXL NO. 196
--------~~~----------------------------------------------~--------~--~-----------------------------

_ _..rjtji~~}1M.r-.,.;t)o0

Ther111al Socks

United Presbyterian Church;
Mrs. J, E. Harley will Install
new ottlcera. ·
WOMEN'S GUILD, WedneadlYt
7:30 p.m. at Trinit~· U n i t, d
Church of Christ, Pcxneroy; 0£.
ficer1 to be instilled; Rev. BW
Perrin conduetl.ng med.ltatlona.
FRIDAY
MIDDLEPORT WCTU, 7i30 p.
m. FridaY alllle MlddleportFitlt
United Presbyterian Cbureb;
..... ArnOld lllebard8, - all08der.
SOUP :IiPPER, S..7p.m.,

a..- n--.'7

2·••00

18. All ,....anent ,.....

While tile• laat.

cine, lunchroom~ TOO'I COnrad
as speakeri all hUrested per. sons and members welcom~ Rerreslunenta following ·meeting.
11illRSDAY
WOl\IEN'S Ass6ciATION, 7:30
Thur~ night, Mlcidieport First

......,, ot
llall, Janl"" ......_
ond Mil- Sebool . . - , ~ or
elrod Plar&lt;e, Tonuny, Cl!eryl ond Chester ~ · Ala 11'11&gt; ar
COIIIIIIIIplq wiD_ . 'IIOIIa! .-....
TerryJoiUIIIOI.

Sbol

,~1

·f·
'
t'• ' ·•
All slzos 29 to 44, and extra large olzei 46 to •54; Pull cut. Triple otitched 'i oaml.
'

MONDAY

LAST BIG WEEK
SAVE S2 10$4 PER SQ. YD.

.''

y....ua.,\c.-

1,._

~

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

..,.. · - .not be ..........
... u l«ttll¥1 ...........
Dr. L.
llal tlnlvorllb' Pl'flldlol. ...
of !Ito Oldo ...........

IIIDatt.
,
"1'bo board of r_.to 1hlnks
It Ill time to give atlaiUon
to ~cal edu.-_ Teelllleal eolleatlon Ia a
j1rOgraD1 cl bl.&amp;bOr .Wcatlon. It
il 8
TaM tbat hal been Dew
,..
tbls state.••

'

Another Big S/lpment!

Mrs. Meinhart waa won b)r Mrs.
Martha Chllda. Mrs. Ben Neutz•

-~~~-

.., -'cal

Devoted To The lntere8U OJ The MeigB-Mruon .4nu

'

.

1100 · - ·

a y

Tho ndl " • ohOre bird Ulet.
pta Ito ..... 11'0111 tho fr1U of

celebrated h&amp;r weddllvbnheraacy on Dec. 23, wq a PQtm entitled, jt11te w~ Aft..tY~r­
a1U'7,"' by Mra. Meinhart.
Tho tnvollng prize donated by

~were Jean

trlao.....

Now Jou Know

toe.
··'
An ll'l,jury auf(ered._ by Mrs.
Dilvld ·Fanner and the Ulne•• of.
· Mro. Honeo McEihlbDO,)' wori
rwortecl; The ......, ,.ng "lfjpPY Blrthclly" to Mrs. Bertie
Watts aad Mrs. Farmer. Dedicated to Mrs. Karl owen. w}lO

Band Booslars.

Given Mrs ..Slack

'

'

Bethel Council Officers

sonic Temple.
Paul Darnell, grand o u t e r
guard or 111e lnt!rnadonal Order
r1 Jobs Daughtera in Ohio, and aaooclate guarc11an or Bethel 62,
served as the lnltalllng officer.
He was usllted by Mro. Elsie
Smith, guard cl Bethol 62, """
oerved " lnlllelllng marshall,

'lbll lo !Ito ·arll'
ele ond dell-,- ..... - _ A
report on weiora will f!&gt;llotr.
'lbil j11"0Yiau1 ·riplrt ..,.erod

~ ~II Lot •

DEAR POLLY-Odd foam-backed table place mats work
well under small scatter rugs, especially the reversible
ones. I use one 'Under a small braided rug.-MABY R.

Cotmcll members wereinstall. ond Mra. Be86le klog, the Ined when Bethol 82, Jntomallooal stalling recorder,
Installed were Mrs, Emma K.
Order of Jobs Daughters, met
~ nillrt at the Pomeroy Ma•. ClatwqrtbJ, direetor of mullei

-1 --

-1.

emery ctot11. I did mine
and it is as smooth as new.-LOTI'IE

Installation Held Monday

Yido an ......,.. wllleb wiD
Could Be Firat
1!'4leaton beliOYe that Ohio help 111111 ooiulim1 to lho bUic
... In tho pooltkln t o - No. JII'CII&gt;Iems ''Whidl plu- all
1 1n an llelds, ineio&gt;dlnc ........
11111''"....
"· ....... lroDipJrlallon.
lloa, If It 111111 the 'lbil pre..np!aa _ . . . to
to - " " llle lnatrucUon.
Ohio hu an _ , . baled balp -~ Ws Ia
primlrllJ oo tho bUic ....,._ ado, Aldlll ..,,, t• more ltMe

od&gt;ledll are dl...oled u illllllaloro will - lhom In eomlna

w'

bad--

T - c : o l - . ... .
JIIIO&amp;IIWti!'JIGOiloo... . . . .

•&lt;We do oat ban-llo&gt; . _
"1'bo ..,....u.. bodJ Mltldiu "tho to
dot
lho
~"
..,.
;Oblo
Uul·
a-a
....
will not de !Ito job."
to _hu
_to
_
....,.. ba_s.
-diJ
Prelldonl
v~
R.
"WtthGat iiiUdom tee incnaMI,
Need Tedldcal Sebool1
.• lob to
.._a .., tho _... AIAan. "AIId we All!&gt;lller
kel' to oolvlng odohive to 111111 .-:; miWal mon do!'
eotlllllaJ
W•
Is . - emphalio
Alden
..,.
lho
lob
Ill
to
'
p
rua 1ear to an tho pp.

-

lbree arileleo by SlafobOU•
lleporter Rlcltard WhMiar, !Ito

1-• ,

' 911
Htaii•Od

'

(EDft'OR'S NOTE: Tile 108th
a--a! Aooembll' faces a erloll
oa lhreO. frools thll 'IM'· Tu••· e6ieldoD snct waltanl ue
a11 demadlll ln.desllldesbla,uve oUonlfan. Iii a 1or1eo er

~~~;,.,-:,·~~""'~! '

-

petals, fasten them together aroUI)d the center Willi gr"n
fiorlsl'a tape to form a complete Dower. Make leaves the

~·

Education ·

'

.

,. .

-

made centers at a variety store. After making nve'ot more

.
1

...

1;; :... •

l

no;,ro

fabr1&lt; from the tne of a s\oeklng or you may buy ready-

~ Polly's

·1~-ir
1

·_., •ill;-~~~ Ill~; · 4. ':.·
. A -~·dlo~ ell- pnicod:- ,
odi• ni~ otlbt otOft:Oall OJ,

seve_ral times. To m~e the center of a flow~r:, cover witb ,

same w,y ..,-MRS. L. H. L.

o

.

~olor

Annouaced were tentatiVe

Exchange is Held
FRIDAY &amp; St TUI!DAY
JAN. 31· fEB. 1
"'TRACK OF THUNDER"
(Technleolor)
T'"" Kirk • 11ay sttlcklyn
. AND
"'FIRECREEK''
(Technleolor)

OUR f!)LL~~I want.l6 .1eU I~ bcW I uaed tq'mue' ..

1'1u1 llap4oo,UU, N.r •L
Rlcltard Karr, Mrs. r.dward 1Wl.
Mr~

or orpnlzatlano
l l l e - - UCt, Mrt. Rernwl ~1.,} Mra.
....cl U1e Middleport EYare1t Boclller, ond lira. lll&lt;h·
.
U n I t o d l'reobytorlon ant~-·
Tbe IIIW ll\lndo,y ll&lt;hOOI olll·
Mmdi.Ynliht.
the moetlne. moci- HJ:"B are Lewis Sauer, tuperln..
·by the Rev. Frank E, tendentt Mrs. wanaee0 aulst~. Jr. of Athent, there was
ant -rlnlendent; Mla1 Noney
a _potlack ._r attondocl by 55 Bu ......., llbr~ Mrl. n..,.
_.,.,, or the consregatlon ond fonotoll, planlot; Mrll. IJlllan
pm. Mra. Dwlsht Wallace was St:teft, asliltanti Mra. RLlls8U
chairman at the cllmer. The oftt- L&gt;on•. ouperbrteoclenl cl the
eert are u toUowa:
!ll"lmBrY department, ond Mro.
Elders, Richard Owens, Rus. BacbDer, auistant.
Pr1mary tei.chers are Mrs.
aall I.Y&lt;&gt;n•. James &amp;tlllvan, Robar! llagger1;r, Paul lla,plonstaU, Bactmer, Mr1. Am ~• •.and
JoiUI Full%, Mrll. George Ander- Mro. Rl&lt;hord Vaushan. Mro. Eel·8011. Mr1, Wallace and Mrs. E. ward Crooko Is "chairman of the
0, Towkobary.
oradlo roll d..,...-ntond Mro.
DeaCOil!, Carl Horky, Be1ilel Lyons, Mra. Harley, · and Mra.
Colelpan, Vincent Dabo, Marcus Marcua Chambers are home de·
Chambers, and Leland Brown. parlment "'perlniAmdento. Mro.
Trustees, Robert Hagger"Q", Ru"el'
Ia chairman or
. Hubert Ta,ylor, Richard Sauer, tho ,.uth ""-bnent.
Dwigbt Wallace, Carl H or k y,
Mrs. SUe« was re • elected
Lewis Sauer, Don Lowery, Mra. elllrch organlot, with Mrs. llaj&gt;J. E. Harley, aftd Mrs. Leland too.ltall oamed her aaslatant.
Broom.
Mro. ~ Downing Ia oenlor

•

' •

•tn

•
lO

•
m

....

•.

• .

...,.,,.J.i·;iJ;;;

· or • ~ IIleY are
I;:::;~·~:,
to .u.mt~ .• Ill"!~
''

••ltin ...

.u

~-=..

-

p.m .

~

da,y ........... - wbo

llqlroved odueotional service•
for hallllcapped chlldren are ex..
pei:ted to rollaw the Southeastern
Ohio Conference oo Excopllonal
Children held at Burr Oak Lodge
In Glouster allendod by three
llelp C&lt;~onY ochoolllllminiotra-

-en,

ws Tueldly throulh today.

o..rat ••~treetopln"'a"W""'
nelda:r •a tbat IIUblk aW 1 1M
had - - the Ia aaJ1 Ilia

-lal - -

wllldl - -

!Ito~""" olrheroblll-

a*la&amp; ...... !Ito "• .... Tualdv, ·lilt Superintendent
c1 s.hools; tlto-blld-lada,- .
. G - lllqraves, Sitler!"' laC lt·Wollld- u _
.. .
'
t _ . or tho lloiBB 1.oea1 School on F........, 1L
"
Pl.-e;;.U.ollll ·
District, .... Jolla Rlobel, ~or­
Robert

llolp COunty

.

l-cl~tsral.oeaiS4:hOol
. bistrlct, In the souiona.

--11&gt;-.*"

Tho - · rulldlld. Ulllier drWorl

• federal~ Ia aWOI'Idqrooa-

.600.
lim for ~
tllo 1$68 ~: ••.latralll!'• .,. tile ~
.;,.._,, ~!
Ilia

ond Caum;y School ....
vice P e r - AIIOd-

lho
Ilia

to """""' . ·'!'"I.
dill-. ltioul,lt'

'

�Face

in the Window
'
3 - .Tho Dall¥ Sonllnel, p,...roy.Mlddloport, 0. , Thurldo,y, Ja.....,. 30, 1969

....

Kyger Creek At Eastern

• Tilt aelf-lmmol!ltion of Jan Palaell, tile
Zl-~-old studeat who eet blm.,.lf afln

to protest the Ruuian oceupalkln of 1111
country, .toucbed the eommoa btart of
ClechoelovalllaruJ u nolllluc baa done
. . _ the Nazi masaacre at IJcllte.
Fortunately, jl did not set ••the violent
~ wblcb were feared aad .w bldl
would oaly bave resulted in a worseniDI
of eondtllona In !bat country. But Palacb'a
name baa goae into the natioo's book of
martm aad It Ia certain lhat It will be
Invoked apln and again In the future a1
t1111 people struggles to free Itself of the

oppressor• a yoke.
By contrast, few Americans remember

the lacldentl, much less the names, of
thoae iD our own country who torebed
themaelveo to death a couple of years ago
in protest against the Vietnam war. One
lgl!lted blmself In froat of the Pentagon,
another near the U .N. building In New
York, atl. .st one other elsewhere.
This doe~ not mean !bat Americans are
possessed /of fewer bumealtaiiBn instincts
than . the Czechs or Slovaks iJt art_ as
inured to human suffering as the Vi~
namese, who originated this modern form
of political protest
It means that what may be in one situa-

tion and at one time a symbolic act of
great courage that inspires and unifies
may be an act of the most pitiable foollsb·
ness in another.
The people of Czechoslovakia are one
lri their desire to be free men in a free
eountry, to be masters of their own
national destiny. The death of Palach was
an intenset, focalized emotional event that
dramatized the sorrow and yearnings of

BY JACK O'BRIAN
NEW YORK- New Bdwy. pro... cor Don Saxon wolld Uke John..,. Car11011 to star in hil nwlleal
based .on Jlmmy Walker; sorry,
ba's nothing Uke the late great
Nlibt Ma1or ••. n.unbaose de-

The Forger's Patsy.
The man who prides b.bnseU on h1a
Illegible signature may feel Important.
but he is also dear to the runty fiurt of
the professional check forger.
According to Paul A. Osborn, head of a
New York firm that specializes In the examination of questionable documents, the
easiest kind of signature to forge is the
jagged executive scrawl. The hardest is
one that contains at least two full names
and is written freely, yet legibly.
Platt Rodgers Spencer would agree.
(And if you never heard of that DBID.e, it
only shows on what evil days the art of
penmanship has fallen In America.)

pollia got col4 at Barwhile she algned auto-

marYelouB

Breath Hold1ng Common,

every song and we Wiab lhe'd

you dlcm't.,.

~ay N~! ~.~e~ ![~~t."!~~ .. h.::·::;;. ~rl=
·tf WA'tNE G· · IRAHD~f.

Breath holding. associated
witb crying, is so common in
lniBnts !bat it no longer
causes much concern in
either physician or parent
even though the child he·
comes blue in the face and
momentarily loses conscious·
ness. Such episodes require
no special trealment and
usually diaappear before the
child is five years old.
Parents do, however, become alarmed when during
breath holding a child has
convulsive movements. A
reeent study has shown that
these attacks are not related
to or forenmners Of epilepsy.
II does appear, tbou~h, !bat
breath holding runs m families and may he hereditary.
In one group of breath holders, the face became
blanched itslead of parple.

These children were found
to he anemic and the breath
holding episodes became less
frequent when -the anemia
was treated.

Q di:l; gronddaqbter, 8,
has
ctilty talking. The
doctor says she has aphasia.
What causes this? Can anything be done to help her?
A-,Difli&lt;ulty Ia talkinl
may be · due to aphasia
caused by a developmental
defect in the brain or it may
he due to psychological reasoDB. Speech therapy is helpful in some children. The re-

M.D~ ..:.:·

suits depend on the cause
and degree of the underlyIng defect.

Q-We have a so•, 7, who
talked normally as a 2-year·
old, then s I o p p e d talking
completely at 2% . A diagnosis of aphasia was m ad e .
Later an electroeacepbalogram showed petit mal epilepsy. He is taking Dilantin.

He attends an aphasic class
at a special school and is in
second grade. He st1ll makes
no effort to speak but has
not had any· petit mal at·
lacks for over a year. Would
the Dilantln affect his abil·
ity to talk?
A-It It hnporllut for your
doctor or a neurologist to
determine the cause of your
son's a p basi a. · Dilantin is
highly recommended lor the
control of epilepsy and Ia not
the cause of the aphasia.
Q-My Hilootb..,ld so~~cbas
had a loose cough slace
birth. He Is gaining weillht

and doing well. Our doclor
says be has a loose voice
box and should outgrow Ibis
condition by the time he is
one. What do you tblnk?
A-A loooe eoup with a
crowing or rattling sound is
often due to a flabby epiglot·

tis. In sueh cases, t h e s e
symptoms gradually disappear by about one year of
age, as your doctor predicted.

j ..ln

H..,·

-a
_,.....,_..,e_

The game of the year, the blg Creek, the Eagles dcwned the
one that wnt decide the Southern Bobcats 59-43. That was Kyger

~

obe ..,.

rette or

''IAf• ....... ~ clptwo." 10 tM:r "c u t

DAVID POLING

Nixon's Call to All for
..,Spiri_tug.J .~en~g.!,le"~ . ·'

II

" whleb be's superb .... No( tbe
· standard prett;y«-y hero, either;

11011 of endearingly boatel¥ ....
Stanley and Livingston
meet In Yookera: tbe,y're two
parallel otreeta a block apart
•••• Veteran I!OIII!Imllh Harry
Fenster kmwingly ealla his new
publillblng linn "Bouse ol Mfr.

-..-wiD

acles."
Roger Moore, star of the Britloh TV serle1 C. dand1) "T h e

Solnt," blo tlanceo andtbelr
two cblldreo (they don't ..,.e
wbo lmowa It) on a Bahamas vacatlm .... Ava Gardner play•
0mar !lwif'a mother in the new
"Mafarllng" bul ell the eet they
..._ together nllbiiY .••• John
Wayne' a three f11ma ••Green Berete, n "Rio LGbo'' and "Mil~
l1oa Dollar KldnBpiq'' are expected 10 pq him $5,000,000.
Tbat old anti - American bore
poet Eora pves a !U&gt;·
·lie reeltal In Loadoo nm mcmth
.... One N. Y. llqUiter won the
Yule prlu: aut a"''l' with a fS,.
000 mink eoat ll'om a famed
5th Ave. store .... Folk ..._
liliiD Reed Ube was 20 year1
abeld ol tho current folk-&lt;raze)
'bowed out ol Ra;y Bolpr'l
a.mmer"' m••lltaJ,

·-eome

-s-s . . . .

'
--lor•rldo•...,.u_so_He .

the 1111'' (drive up snd Main llreol) • .Of .........WJ.
boQy them, and It ...
back to 1111 real l!lrl Prett;j ........JI&gt;ocly It mak10 YOUTII ASKm FOR rr, care Ing ............ and-..e;rouiiiXIw
ol Bolao Help US! thla DewiiiJO· It abe ba1 tba ....,.. fJIIllt up.
por.
Then lbe doem't the ""
8IQ' more, 10 ~ eoe• on to
BUM JOKER NEmS
BUM'S RUSH
-.obody oloe'o "" frleo4,
Dear Bolao:
Sbe . . . . two-taced ....
.O...iww ID8Qs the boya tldak
I ...'t - - - · • 110- It Is their IJirlo wbo are moon
lng an.
I aut OIJIIIII!'ld lut moolh, and ind jealouo. """ ....... pi her
yelltenlay 1111' t1ance me . ell our hacks? - ANTI-FLIRT
ASSOCIATION.
to a real nice place for aer. I IJtll be was buttering DoOr AFA:,
Try being kind to M!BS Flirt
me up to tell me bad news.
becau80 be said be was aeolng and olio .11113' stop &amp;Oftli1ll a married womm. Then he said for your oll&amp;lrto. 'lblo pi wolld
we were never M1IB8II5d. and uk- ms1re a better frlead !baD _ .
ed me 1ww It feota 10 be play- 1111'·- H.
ed
a sucker. I felt au&lt;h pain Dear Bolao:
Could . ;you pleaA onea apln
I couldntt even cry.
slve
uo the name ci the ....,Q'
Than about an hour altar be
where
you can get loreilln pen
me home be caUed up and
pals?- INTERESTED
said he waa iult ~alng me It ,.. all a Ue and be really Dear lntere-:
Jt 7W are betweea the apa
loved me. OUr engagement wa1
ol
12 and 19, ,..... ......
atiU on.
age,
adllren
and
ootllltr)'
pret..
I &lt;eally do love lllm - I
erence,
together
witb
35
ceata
THINK. But If he plays his kind
ot game now what will he do af- for eaehponpal to WORLD PEN
PALS, World Allalra Center, .Unter marriage? - B. K.
lveral1;v
ol Minnesota, - - . .
Dear B:
lla,
Mlm.,
55455. You will 110011
I wolilll't wolt around 10 Ond
receive
the
foreign nama, • litout. 1bat cruel stnak mlglrt
worsen with llllllTiago. - H. tle Jllll.trla!d - - coiled
The Sliver Lining, and a M·
Dear Holen:
There's a gir1 in town who gostlob llheot lor letter writ.
Isn't haWY tmless she's tak- lng.
Good Juckl - H.
hlll awe¥ ·aomebo&lt;IY'a boy friend.
FOR YOUR FREE COPY OF
This Is bow Mise Flirt oper.
atea: The minute she hears you ..TWENTY RULES FOR MA.TURUke IOIIleOIIe, she's right there rrY,•' SEND A Sl'AMPED SELF..
Uke a laecb, avon If you Im- ADDRESSID ENVELOPE TO
ply atrongly abe llhould get loll. HELEN BOITEL, CARE OF THIS
Next she stands on street cor- NEWSPAPEII.
nera and !lbao 111'1 boy drlveo

:::

"PrOIJI\iot; ~l'I:GIIdllw'(,

by

Valley Athletic Conference cham- Creek's t:M1I,)' SVAC loss. Ealtpionship, will be played Frlcloy ern's onl.v loss was to Hannan
night at Eastern whlm the Kyger Trace, at Mercerville, 53-52,
Creek Bobcats ta~e with t h e
Elgie a,
Caach Din Wright's Eagles are
currently leadlrw: the SV AC with
an 8-l record and Coach J o h n
Sang's Bobcats are second with

'tf'il Leave1 Are FalllDg"

aa111or AUon Sbarmaa loft the
Dlgbt .........
.... u the morning- biUd.

desceadad, booked • Jet
10 tba ~ and ba..i't been
heard !rom Iince.

By DAVID POLING
An important mood was established by the religious aspects of the Nixon inauguration. In Washington, the most
secular of our American cities, a note of searching concern
and spiritual renewal was present in the first moments of
the new administration.
For one thing, a lar@:e ecumenical prayer service ~as
held prior to the swearmg-ln ceremonies. Throughout the
city, posters were on display ln store windows and building
and hotel lobbies, showing praying hands with the wordo;
·
Thanksgiving, blessing, rededication, guidance.
Ia the eeumenical prayer- service, Dr. NorQUilll Vineent
Peale read a Call for Spiritual Renewal which incladed the
following;
"We oaU upoa our fellow cltlzena to eumfae their OWII
Uveo and to re-evaluate the prlaclpleo and,r.odlca of lhek
lnotit•tloa1 that W1 may become a perio of oplrllaal and
moral renewaJ."
Such statements are not casually phr&amp;Sell when olered
in the settlnl of the advent of a new poUtlcal administration. I re•d this paragraph several times and I ~
how powerful and cutting it can he when fairly and honeslly
applled to all of our institutions, their principles and practices.
Edueallon, for lnstauce, is getting the vlhratloo treatment these days from students hot for iniprovement. Thla
Is flne but when the heat is turned on for the saka of conllict and the entertainment value derived, .It CCIUe&amp; to be
helpful or honest. In some instances, like SaD Francisco
and Swarthmore, Pa., we have had natural tensions turned
luto Irrational and Inhumane explosions . The suffering and
shame at these two centers far exceeded tba grleWUICel
proclaimed. It is time to "re-eumlne their own Uvea" If
these participants are to be counted as genulna cltlzens.
Ou the other ...,., tho leadera of echlealfe.ol reUJI(ou,
and polllleal 1)'11em1 (lnelndlu' Seleetlve ~~ are ..
. . - I ...,,er If IIley dllnk that we 1Hil bavo . , . . _
.aaua1, wllll aeltlaer .euewal uor ref- ao , Ioiii 11 ...
11"8ple are praylac. Ill llle Ufo of Cbrlal, pnJtr a1wQII
Preeetled acllou ud In die otr..geal niomeltlt of llle faiOt.
lui, WI hal .... tnt.
.
And people are looking at the institution-far a hundred
years or more. In the middle of the last cimtury, ·that
profeasloaul American watcher, Aleiia de Tooquevllle,

u

said:
"I am tempted to believe that what we caD riecaoart
lnstltutlebs ar&amp; often no more then Institutions to which we '
have grown accastomed. In matters of •oc:W constiiUIIoa.
the field o( posalbllllles lA much more exteoslve !hail Jllllll
Uving. In thelt various societies are ready .to lmagiM."
Of
tile 1ut11w11oa1 ready lor overbaal
It mere ripe llwt oar wufare ~ldM . • • diU lire
lllwe wllll every other ooelety that ever ~ ...,...
IIIHI
uffarmJ. We have 1pe11l ~ ._ . HWn
·. . . 1 of llveo tbat cllda't helene t. u1. U ~the llope and (lt'ayer uet oaly of Amerfcaaa btll . . . , _
elM aro.lld llle ctohe that "" have flldeed ..... H a
J!ltiCI of lplrilaal renewal thai wtU ble•o aU JPaJdda!(.
President NIXon blgbllghted the yearninl for peace Ill
1111 ftrst addreu. Let us
Join In tllil new hope &amp;nd hlah
re1olve.
·
.

..a,,....,..,.,

an

C:::.

au

,.,.,
.. .,

. ,

Kyger Creek has a Bll811t edge

on otrense while Eastern has a
decided advantage on delenae. In
nine games, Eastern has scored
566 poirts, an average ol 62.8

the Eagles. IC the)' win U, they'U
be the 1968-69 champions. 1\yger
Creek haa one game lett. u Kyger Creek defeats Eastern, the
Bobcatl wlllr still have to get by
the North Galli&amp; Pirates on Feb.
7 to Ollt'n sole possession ot the

title.
In

the':J' tlrst meetlllJ:, at Kyger

College Scores

game and Kyger Creek has al-

SV AC S"l' ANDINGS
($II AC Only)

TEAM
W L P
Eastern . • . . .8 I 568
Kyger Creek . . 7 1 548
Hannan Trace. ,5 4 555
SouUmestern •• 4 5 592
North Gallla • . I 7 442
Southern . . . . 1 8 425

Tot.ala

College Basketball Resultl
By Unlled Preas lntornstlnnal

TIMELY
AUOIEB

RAY CROMLEY

Able Kissinger Hairspring
Of Nixon's Forfi!ign Policy

It could become epidemic
throulb peer prelllllfO from
claaamiltes.
-Dr.
F. Yolle•, d~
rector of lhe Nailonal' .
I "' til u le for lft11ta!
·,
Health, . e:epreooHIQ 0011.

stanr.v

By lAY CROMLEY
·NEA Washington Corrospondont
WASHINGTON (NEA)
In a very quiet way, Henry Kissinger Will exert a VBry
heavy Influence oo the course of U .S. foreiiD poUey In ,the
yeora just ahead.
·
This will not be becauoe Kilsinger will push his persoaul
concepts of what that policy should be. For It Is understood by President Nixon and by Kilslnger, by mutual
a~reement and lempetament, !bat, unlike Walt Roatow
who held the White House foreign affairs role unlll re·
cently, Kissinger will ooly assemllle and present the facts
and the optioos-uot propose solutions.
Bal K l 1 1 5otreogtb
'•
Ueo Ia hfl ability w manbl
facta aad II
when old erlterll do Dot apply to lilt
ool1lloa of aew
ma. ·
•
·
He hal a therougb knowledge ol ~ and a aease of
mowing when historical solutions are pertinent. He lA
boW. knq)li!,.DO'IV, for hi( bo9k,;'Nuclear Wul!llVB .flllll.fo~elgtl ·Pilllc!f.'" tlut lliemlt sa)" he "WiU ~ ,rememtierOd fo,,
blallook, 'A Wl&gt;rld Reltored: CastlerUih, Metternlch and'
the ReatoratioJl of l!eace, 1812-Z:Z."
•
At the age of 20, as a private In the U.S. Anny In World
War II, Kissinger decided that what he needed was a
knowledge· of facts on lntm~ational affairs. He baa spent
the 2% decades slace then rell)edylng that deOciency.
lliJ lpends say tba1 he has accumulated In these 25
years a most unusual amount of Information to apply to
almost any given situation abroad.
Kilslnger has what llllsoclates say Ia a lantaallc ability
to concentrate on the apeclflc problem at hand. Just as It
was said of Dr. Robert C. Seamans Jr., as deputy admlnlatrator .of the National Aeronautics and Space Administra-

tion, tha~he"lit up" whenever he came across a new· sci·
entiflc
· er:~, however small, so it1s said of Kilslnger
in the flel 8 of history and foreign affairs.
.
8o peat It hfl coueeatralloaJ II fael, thai Kloalu&amp;er may
come lat. a _ , and see ODIJ tho penoa wllll whom he
oau ..,..... a . . . dltcovery Ill hfl reoeareh. Be may dla1
- · e~~ae by mea he bowa wen wllllllll lliellll tbom.
ClHe frkud1 oa -~ ooeallou, have been lntGwJt to ily:
uaeary, I'm here, ...,. J:OU tee aeT" MoreoYer, lie II Uy
ud Ml aodalllo II tile fllllally aeeepletl- ol lito .....
All tllil has led ~e men to can him "arrogant." l!ut
those .Who know hlm waD are IntenselY loyal.
What It likely to have the greatest effect on Nlxoo is
!bat Kil=er
ts bound by an w:eedingly hip eet of poraOIIal
es, an attlhale the new Pre1~t finds very
penuaslve.
· set of principles It c~ With a ·dogged
penlatence !bat In the past bas left hlm and his facts In
eommaad ·of a sltuaUon alter those who dlaagreed have
grown ellhausted and abandoned the field. He will not he
worn down.

cern CIOOUt """ of 1114ri- , ·
jua1lll and other drug• bv
children 8 to 12 (IOIIt"l old. .

There's one ·nloe lhlnl
about driving a lniu. No
one's gouaa .p ut ~ llJil at

your head and say Havana."
-E. B. Selover, rnotonn.m
·on the ,..., hlgh-ipeed
Jfetroliner bii1Dtt11 N&lt;V1
York and WaihinQtan.

;.,

Many who say thlt oun Ia
a government of ltW. aild
not of men faD .to reallle
that ilo law It aelf-oparatlve,
but must be e a act e·d, In·
.
terpreted, app\l_~d, "!ld ' ·''''""·''-'
., · forced by m!'\1._,, ... ,
-Stll. Karl "· 'Mtlildl, R·
S.D.
'· ~&lt; ~·i-·

I would be lmmeaoe!y dlf.
appointed II tha .lfDited
States, a oatlou u rich aa
thlt, did uot want to be pait
of such a great adventure
. . The reuona we are not
so\ving t,he proble~ oil
earth It becluae we don't
want to. Tho ipaee program
It costing only m-teutba of
oae P.er ceat .of the grosa natlooa!Jiroduct.
·

'"'Ill
b or of CiA, on
oocrOCfl, -11r IGCI&lt; of It, 1r1 •

,

gooommlllt.

W L P OP
Kyger Creek •. 10 4 913 784

Kyger Creek 57 Wahama 49

THIS WEEK'S SCHEDULE
FRIDAY:
Kyger Creek at Eastern

st. 66

Woot
Weber st. 92 West TOXllll st 76

Highlanders win, Southwestern
will tie Hannarr. Trace for thl.rd

Clnlshlng third or tied for third.
Haman Trace Is third with a
5-4 record and Southwestern is
fourth at 4--5.
If Coach PaulDW.on'aWlldcats

place.
Overall, the WUdcata are s..6
and the Hllhlanden are 7.6. In
their tlrst meeti~. Southwestern won 71-62.

741
772

879
825
1010

North Gallia 85 Southwestern 70

North Gallla at Southern

Southwestern at

Haman Trace

SATURDAY:

Southern at Union Furnace
North Gallla at Miller

TEAM OFFENSE
TEAM
G Te
Kyger Creek, • .8 54~

Boxing Tourney Will

513

North Gallla . . . 8 532

Southwestern . .. 9 606

'
\

WilL your car atop in tim!?
Cant in ••• let Ul check your

brU.e1. We're equiDDed to
adjuat .nd ,epeir i:liem if
necnury. Bxpert, low-c:olt
•ervlce.

LAarl

Miami • . . • , • 20 23 . 465

''0~

State area.
There are 700 seats anllable
and tickela coot $1.50 ringside
and $1 general admloal&lt;ln. Ticketa will go on sale at 6 o'clock

Among theseteamsareWbitea-

vUle A.C., Seth A.C. Homestead

C.; 2. Roy Meade, 110, Beach

P.A. Boyo A.C., Cbarlestoo A. C.,
Marmet A.C., liliiXIDgtoo Mod·
ern Press, Stubenville F .O.P.,
Moundsville Don £ Gene'• Chili,
UnloniOwn, Pl •• A.C., Crab Qr.
chard Odd A.C., Corning, Ohlu
A.C., Sluth Charleoton F,M.C.,
and the hOst team, Beach A. C. of
llidweU, Ohio, The winning figbt.
ers or this tournament will advance I&lt;&gt; the Natklnal Regional
Golden Gloves ftnals which will
be held b1 the amttngton Memorial Field Houee dur.lng the

A. C. vs. Mike Kittle, 110, Whitesville A.C.; 3. Terry Santanlo,
108, Seth A. C. vs. David Keens,
109, Seth A.C.; 4. Danny Bowles,
118, Homestead, Pa. vs. Mlkt
Sauls, 117, Whitesville A.C. ; 5.
Damy Newman, 128, Beach A.
C. VI , otis Dot11011, 122, SetJl A.
C.; 8. George Bryant, 127 Beach
A. C. va. Brammer, 128, Seth A.
C.; 7, Hairston Jackson, 135,
Seth A.C. va. Jimmy llall, 136.
Whitesville A.C. ; 8. Mike .!i!aver, 137, Beach A.C. vs. Dicky
Pritt, 135, WhlteiJVille A,C.; 9.

Thirteen teams are entered
in

this year• s tournament.

mooth

or February.

57 .o Ing sponsored by Beach A. C., the
66.4 Golden Gloves committee Is dl67.3 roetod by Joe Barsotti. Robert
69.1 Evans, Winston 91eets, Malcolm

Southern . . • .. .9 622
ALL GAMES
Jack11011., and Franklin Beach.
TEAM OFFENSE
Head referee ia ~Partlow~ The
TEAM
G Tl' AVG. Judpo are George POpe, MalSouthweotern . .13 903 68.t colm Jackson, Winston Sleets,
Hannan Trace, , 14 913 65.3 Wayne Hairston, umouncer,
Kyger Creek . . . 14 913 65.3 JohMy Protax.
North Gallla . . . 12 701 58.5
This 11 a non-profit organj:zaEastern . . .• •. 14 815 58.2 tlon and proftta from the event
bthern . • . • . 14 668
47.7 helps to train and see that the
TEAM DEFENSE
TEAM
G TP AVG.
Eastern • , . • , , 14 741 52.9
Haman Trace .. 14 772 55.2
Kyger Crook ... 14 784 56.0
Soothwostern., .13 879 61.6
OVERALL STANDINGS
North Gellla • ' .12 825 68.9 TEAM
W L PTS OP
Southern • . • . .14 1010 72.2 Athens .. . .... II 2 849 680
TOP 10 SCORERS SV AC ONLY Jackson •••.• . 8 5 818 690
Player, Team
G TP AVG. W.Uol&lt;ln . .. . .. 7 5 843 768
Bradbury, KC • • .8 190 23.6 Gallipolis .. .... 7 6 863 809
Carter, SW • • •• •9 196 21.7 Ironton ...... .. 6 7 758 816
Dsalela, HT •. • . 9 182 20.2 Lopn ........ 6 8 865 944
Walker, sw . . . , ,9 156 17,3 Nels.-York .. .. . 5 8 ?31 862
Greenlee, NG. . .. 8 134 18.6 Melgo .. .. .... I II 576 766
Diddle, SO. • • . .. 9 148 16.4
5\laWdlng, KC, , . ,8 118 14.6
TOP OFFENSIVE TEAMS
Garneo, NG•••••7 101 IU TEAM
PTS (G) AVG,
R. Karr, E •. . .. .9 120 13.3 W.Ust&lt;&gt;n ........ 843 12 70.3
Jeflero, HT. . . . .9 117 12.9 Gallipolis ••• , •. 863 13 66,4
TOP 10 SCORERS ALL GAMES Athens .. • • • • • • • 849 13 65. 3
Player, Team
G TP AVG. Jack1011 •..•• , , • 818 13 62.9
Carter, !WI • • ••• .13 311 23.7 Lopn ......... 865 14 61.8
Daniela, HT••... 14 330 23.6
Bradbury, KC .. , ,14 285 20,3
TOP DEFENSIVE TEAMS
Walker, SW • • ••• 13 231 17.8 TEAM
PTS G AVG.
Greenlee, NG..•• 12 167 17.1 Athens ••••••••• 680 13 52.3
Diddle, SO, ... . •14 228 16.1 Jackson ........ 690 13 53.1
Garnea, NG•••.. II 167 15.1 Galllpol!o, . . .... 809 13 62.2
liP"Idlng, KC. , .14 193 13.7 Melp • . • • • • .. • 766 12 113. 8
R. Karr, E. .••• 14 199 13.5 W.UtiiOil ....... 768 12 64.0
Jeffers, liT• . .•• 14 171 12.3
SOUTHEASTERN omo
ATHLETIC LEAGUE

PbUI Flaher, 147, Beach A. C.
VI. Rex Massey, 147, Seth A.C.;
10. Chuck Hill, 146, Beach A. C.
vs. Melvin Cacey, 141 Whitesville A.C.; 11. Terry Kuhn, 151,
Whitesville A. C. vs. Bemy Tol lervar, 161, Crab Orchard; 12.
Mfke Canaday, 148, Beach A. C.
va. James Moye, 147, Crab Qr.

chard; 13. Danny Foster, 152,
WhitesvUle va. Unknown; 14. Bobby Lawaon, 160, Beach A. C. va.
Roger Edens, 154, Chas. Boy"s
A.C. ; 15. Bobby Ousley, 160,
Jackson, Ohio vs. Dennis Workman, 162, WhltesvUle A.C.; 16.
Jimmy Baker. 117, Crab Orchard
Odd vs. ·'Mlke ·· BarcUm, 119,
Beach A.C.; 17. Andy Canaday,
137, Crab Orchard Ockl vs. E.
Rowel, 137, Beach A. C.; 18. Gene
Canaday, 172, Beach A. C. vs.
Gary Hodge, 170, Whitesville A.

c.

(VARSITY)

TEAM
W.
Atbeos ....... 10 0
W.Ual&lt;ln ...... 6 4
Jackaon ...... 6 4
J..oean ........ 5 5

I. P OP
693 516
120 651
m 538
621 658

Ironton • • • • • • • • 5 5 584

608

Galllpol!o ...... 4 6 637 612
Nelo.·York •••• t 6 1148 647
MeJca , , ••••• 0 10 459 657
(RESERVES)

TEAM
Ath&amp;DII

WLPOP
I

• ·•••••

9 1 471 358

- · ...... 8
Galllpolto ..... 6
Nolo.·York .... 5
WeUslon., ... 4
Lopn ........ 4
Melp ........ 3
JaekaOn, •••• .-.1

2
t
5
6
6
7
9

418
432
422
452
425
3S7
330

335
t51
t22
471

m

4011
417

Kitchen. lrn.
Zim'man, Win.
Henry, Glps.
Spencer, Glps.
Ennis, N-Y

Only games scheduled
Thursday's Games
Miami at New Qrleans
New York at Denver
lrdla.. at oaklard
Only games scheduled

no. aot cold eu• for
dlllllel' t"

SOUND TRACK
NEW YORK (UP!)- Pitcher
Demy McLain ol the world
champion Detroit Tlgero pla,ys
sound track orgao music for the
Frlcloy premier of a documentary on the 19&amp;8 baseball seaaoo
which features five no-bitters,
Jim " Catfish" llmter' s perfect
game and Ron Hansen'• unaaalstod lrtplo pl., .
The fUm is sponsored by

OU, Kent, Wittenberg
Chalk Up Court Wins
By United Press International
The Tigers of Wittenberg
needed more than just growl to
win Wednesda,y night. It took
the claws of Larry Baker in
overtime.

The
among

Tigers, ranked 16th
smau coJlege teams,

.446

Lopn • • . • • , , 242-579 . 418
Jackson • . .• . . 242.583 . 415

Gallipolis •••..• 24:1-612 .397
NelsonvUI&amp;-York 202-510 ,396
Ironton • , , •• , 217-593 .366
llolgs •••• • .• 160 515 .311
FREE THROW PERCENT AGE
TEAM
Fgm-Fta Pet.
WeUal&lt;ln. , •. , •• 196-281 .698
Galllpolla •••••• 151-217 ,696
Athena •••••••• 149-230 •648
Ironton , • • • • • , 150-235 •638
Nels.-York ••••• 144-234 .615
Lopn •••••••• 137·230 .596

Canlxln; Ohio Unlveralty dec!lloned Western Mlchlpn ?11-68
at Athens; YoungstowD downed

Ohio University picked up its
Downard, Wells.
Ennis, Nels-York
Smith, Gal'polis
Johnston, Logan

79-102
39-51
32-42
33-45

REBOUNDS
NAME
NO. G
Kitchen,. Ironton 148 10
Rice, Jackson
135 10
Spencer, Glps.
115 10
Henry, Glps.
111 10
Roach, Ironton
Ill 10

•775
• 765
•762
• 733

Glouster at Alexander
OTHERS

Federal-Hocking at Vtrton Co.
Kyger Creek at Eastern
Melgo •••••• , • 139-ZII .513 Miller at New Lex. St. AI.
Park. So. at Pt. Pleasant
REBOUNDS
North Gallia at Southern

TEAM
NO. G AVG. Starr-Wosblogtoo at Hunt. Local
Galllpolio ••••••• 412 10 41.2 Wabamo at Wlrt
lrontoo .••• . - •• 400 10 40.0
Lopn . . . . . . . . 388 10 38.8
Jockson ••••••• 376 10 37.6
WeUol&lt;ln • , •••• 367 10 36.7
AlbeiU ' • ,' •••• 354 10 35.4
Melgs ••••••• . 344 10 34.4
Nels.-York • , •• 331 10 32,8

Amon&amp; the
other
small
scOOols tapped were tJn,. Alcorn

Arkanaa1 AM&amp;N, Texas

Sootharn and Tuskegee. Tullke-

Larry

added

Smith

10

the

t,otektleld, IIO.her pa.sf:l reeeiver
In Seymour and a good tight
end In Bob Klein.
The ~- Bowl champion
New York Jets aleo helped
themselves by getting Dave
Foley to plug their offensive

''

-ato

We hawaii-the
ANY SIZE USTED

.00 .... .....

2$

(der&gt;enllllni" nn siqt

•

......, 0...,141 ' ·" ' " (l.,t~ Ullld!
t.:3ut4 (7.DOJ:l41 7.35115 (I!L.:.an51 e.SO'cu
&amp;11114 (L10;114J L«~~n
1.110xn

KEM·

IARG!ll
SIZES ...

2 retrudabl•lN'•

26

··JOUI-

2tor 1

GOODYEAR NEW TREADS
,...,_ ........ ~ budietj

WALL PAINT
-

~

Pf~. EJ. luper tlt.

FOR

IN SUPER

__

'" flollllld....,

..

• , • 11M1 Jlllt 01t COil

•r••••
_., ruab •••

WE NOW HAVE EQUIPMENT TO STUD
NEW end RECAP!t!D TIRES THAT HAVE
THE HOLES INSERTED IN THEM.

.i
,,

:~

I .'

Basten Wav to

[•

LoveUer .Roome

h. Hdwe. &amp;
leather Supply

T111styour

AVG.
14.8
16.0
16.2
16.8
17.6
17,8
18.0
19.7

taken

SERVICE

tU

MOVC

was

2-Hour
DRY QEANIIG

13.5
11 .5
11.1
11.1

Nelsonville-York at Jackson
Meigs at Wellston

J!Duny

Termes~ee

or

AVG,

THIS WEEK'S SCHEDULE:
FRIDAY
SEOAL
Lopn at Athens
Ironton at Gallipolis

llouston;

fullback to
Weatherford,

gee and Alcorn each had five
pla.yers picked oo the second tackle spot.
Three bukotball piayars.
day ,
fourth Mid - American CmferGeorge
Thompson of ~.
the 442 players taken, 247
ence win in six outings and also were choaen for oflense and 195 Steve Howell ol Ohio Stele and
held league scoring leader Gene tor defense. Rwll1Dg back• Kenay Spain ol Houston wore
Ford to 11 p;~ints. Ford entered were moat In demands with 70 drafted almg with burdler
the game averaging 24 potnt. rt them taken besides O.J. Willie Davenplrt of Southern
a game.
Universltv.
Simpson, tba No. I pick.
Gerald McKee and Greg McThe players picked from
Divitt led the Bobo:ata with 20 Notre Dame Wednesday were
points apiece. OU Is 9-7 overall. Bob Gla.dleux,
Eric Norrl.
The Broncos dJ.'qlped to 2-4 1n Belden, Jobo Lavin and Tom
the loop and 5-11 overall.
~- The B1x players picked b1
Kent State trilled 31-26 at the first HYen rounds Tuesday
halftime, but caaned 63 were George K1UU, Jbn Seycent ol Ito field goals In tba · mour, Terry llanratt;y. Bob
second halt to overcome Toledo Kuchenherg, Jim Wlacgardner
(UPON REQUESn
and even Its MAC record at 3-3. and Ed Tuck.
Our Usual Good Clunlftl
Bn1ee Burden"• two free
The oecond day of actlm
throws with three aeoonds to
lllltOG0!4 when
draftod
play put tba game out ol reach Jameo Harvey ol Virginia Tech
after the Rockets came wftbin
and Plrlladolphla Bill
me point, 70-69. Iklrdon led the Ho]lbs. the All-America lineGolden Ftasheo with 21 points.
Toledo, led by Bob Miller and
Steve Mix wltb 20 points each,
is 3-7. Both clubs are 91 over-

Geneva (Pa.) 73-61 at Beaver
Falls, Pa., and Kent state overcame Toledo 72-69 at Toledo.
Bob Moore led row1:h-ranked
small college power Central
state 10 Its 11th win b1 14

Jackson ••••••• 141-238 .592

PERSONAL FOULS
TEAM
NO. G
NelL-York • • • 148 10
160 10
GaillpoUa •
JICkion • • • • 162 10
lrodorl • • • • 168 10
Atbeu • , • • 1711 10
Lopn • • • • • 178 10
Melp • • • • • 160 10
Wallal&lt;ln • • • • 197 10

one

were forced into overt!me 59-59
when Heidelberg's Ted Cashen
dropped in a free throw witi'L 34
seconds to p~.
The extra session,. however,
was all Wittenberg. now 12-1.
The Tigers outscored Heldelbel·g 18-9 to seeure their se\1'enth straight Ohio Conference
win, 77-68. The game was
played at Tlffbl.
In other games: cmrtrii state
romped over Wilmington 73-47
at Wilberforce; Akron downed
Hiram 58..55 at Akron; Marietta
defeated Ohio Wesleyan fll~S at
Delaware; Findlay slipped by
CaptW 8~1 at Findlay; Ma- all .
lone outscored Walsh 95-84 at

with 14 poblts.

61 38 172 17.2
7t 25 167 16.7
84 38 166 16.6
62 40 164 16.4
Myers, Meigs 50 47 147 14.7
47 48 142 14.2
Flck, N·Y
FIELD GOAL PERCENTAGE
TEAM
Fgm-Fp Pet
Wellston .. • • • •. 262-559 •469

and

Tuesday for a total of elsht.
Small SchooloTIIPiled
A&amp;M,

games. Moore scored 19 points,
15 in the first hal£. WUmfngton
(6-8) was paced b.Y Mike Gregg

72 28 172 17,2

Athens , • • •• , , 272-610

Denver 131 Indiana 128

Tennessee

enl,

rounds

GB

Dallas 120 New York 105

IIIIDI

aomeo

Wedneldo,y wore Rlcbard Plcli-

Minneapolis, Minn.

West

Denver • • • • • 27 19 • 587 11 Lf.!
New Orleans • • 22 24 .478 16lh

lltgNamel

bla

Other

lnveaters Diversified Services,

New York .• . • 12 33 .267 14
W. I. Pet.
Oakland , •• •• 36 5 . 878

backer from Tau A&amp;M.

..t.fenelve back, to
AtlantA; Charley Jarvia, Artro'
fllilback, to Son Diaeo; Edit
Dame.
Sb: NcKre Dame player. were Hargett, Texao A&amp;ll quarter.
picked In the llrat seven rounds back to New Orleans and
Tuelda,y and five more were Buster O'Brltll, Richmond quargrabbed in the ftnal 10 rwnda terback, to Deaver.
The three teams that aeemed
Wodlleldo.Y for the total of 11.
to
help themselves the most In
~rprloingly enough, the !Mms
the
draft were Buffalo, Pitbypused CoiiiY O'Brleo but
Dlltas 4ld oelect Bob Belden, 181ourgh and Loa Angeles.
llulhlo could he the IIIOit
who was never better than third
atrlng quarterback lor the Irish. Improved club with OOth 8mp.
Grambling, which baa sent son and BUI EnYart. PitUburgll
strengthened
on
both
more pla,yBrs to the pros than was
defense
and
aftense
with
Joe
any other school but Notre
Greene,
HanrattY
and
Warren
Dame, again was a prime
source ot talent tor the pros. Bankston. Los Angeles now
Seven players from Grambling seems ready to make a stronger
nre drafted iD th6 final 10 challenge at Baltimore with

5

Wednesday's Reoults

righters at this area are properly sent to other Golden Gloves
Boxing tournaments and the Trl·

1-U

Pet. GB
• 578
. 543 J'h
. 510 3

KeDtucky 113 Houston 108

at the door.
Below is tonight's schedule l. Max Stumbo, 109, Beach A,C ,
VI. Bobby Sprouse, 111, Seth A.

Trophies will be given to tho
AVG. champion and rumer-up In each
88.4 division, both oovlco and open
Southwestern. . .9 592 65.7 classes a n d sportsmanahiD
Eastern • . . , ,9 566 62.8 award, champion oi clwnploos
Hannan 1'race , , , 9 555
61.6 In both dlviaiona, novice and
North Gallla . . . 8 442 55.2 open.
Swthern •.. .. 9 425 47.2
There will be six team awards,
TEAM DEFENSE
first. &amp;eoond and third place tro.
TEAM
G TP AVG. phlea to novice and open team
Eastern . . • , . 9 · 441 49.0 champioos.
K,ypr Creek . .8 414 51.6
This year's tournament is be-

Hannan Trace. , .9

Eaat
W. I.
Mlmooo&lt;a • • 26 19
Kenlllcky . • . • 25 21
lllllara • • •. .• 25 24

Dallas . • •• .•. 18 23 ,439 18
Howr.ton •• , •• , 13 30 ,302 24

Begin This Evening

NEW YORK (UPI)-The pro
!Mms sooured the
amaller achoola 1n aearch ol
Wlknown talont Wedneldo.Y but
the 1969 draft ended the
club• aWl. 1IOWICI 1111 taking the
most players from thelr top
resen'oir d. talent Notre

By United Presa Inter•tlonal

Loa Angeles .. . 21 24 , 467 17

SEO STATISTICS

qtl

llie loll.
·
-William . Bor!lda, fonnor

TEAM

Rider 66 Drexel 52
Cosll Guard ?4 Wellleyan 67
Blb1011 !Of Lowell Tech 72
st. Boosveuture 79 Canlsluo 61
Monmouth 91 Yeshiva 58
YOUlltllloWD ?3 Geneva 61
Edinboro 87 Alliance 73
Lehlib 61 Albright 65
Bootoa CoD 80 Northeaotern 69
loputh
TOIUl. St. 113 Alabama St. 81
lletbodlat 70 Gromllboro 61
E. Tom. 90 Applachlan st. 64
111gb Point 95. Qlllford 79 .
Sl!epberd 110 TOWBO!l 104
GIOIIVtilo 79 Coaeord 7 4
CUmberland 88 muefleld st. 83
Midlreat
Kent st. 72 Toledo 69
Ohio u. 78 Weatern Mich. 68
North Central 61 MIIIDdn 57
DePoow 122 Ball st. 99
North Park 112 Aurora 82
Grand Valley 68 Aqulnu 63
Detroit Col 107 Detroit Tech 79
Calvin 68 Alma 63
Mel&lt;,

win Southwestern will have tt.
settle for fourth plac:e hl the
SVAC. If Coach lloyd M,Jera'

Friday ts SOuthwestern at Hannan Trace with thfl wlnDer either

Ing,

ALL GAMES

Muhltmers: 111 Haverford 73

-Dr. arold C. Urev, cMm111 and Nobd Priie 'lilllreate, sGirinll "" IIApporll
lho Awllq ·moon progrom,
.... thoUgh ~ , j:qtniOt be
~~~·d
oclnlijlc

Tbe U.S. govemmellt It
PJOh&amp;b!y the only sieve In
lhe world that Jeab lhroDJih

26 26 3128

Ea,t&lt;rn . , •• , 9 5 815
Hannan Trace. 8 6 913
Southwestern •.7 6 903
North Gall!a . ,3 9 701
Southern . , .. 1 13 668
THIS WEEK'S RESULTS

Southwest

per game.
Another 1....,.-tant SV AC tilt

OP
The 1969 Soothern Ohio Golden
441 Gloves Boxing tournament will
414 get underway I&lt;Jnlght at 7:30 b1
513
the Rio Grande Collep Commu606 nll;y llall. . .
532
A total or 19 bouts are ached622 Wed ror the flrat night, with all
3128 novice class fighters perform-

Eaat
Ge!Qolllorg 80 NaV)' 71
Mootcll,lr St. 73 Newark st. 56
Waaner 97 WUkes 74
POnn st. 64 Syra...., 58
Malsaelueettl73 Fordham60
Manhattan 58 Hall 52
Cbeyney St: 12 W. a. ester 67

&amp;ow Mex. 86 Now

lowed 414, an averqe o( $L6

SCORES

per game wllUe Kyger Creek

a 7-1 record. In all games, Els~ scored 548 tn eight games, an
ern la 9-5 and Kyger Creek Is average of 68,4 per game, Ondefenae, Eastern has given lCl 441
IH
It's the laat SV AC contest for points, a low average of 49.0 per

lor

start.
Jarry Orbach told Washingsrapbo.
Janlo Young ol the new !11m "'" News critic Tom il&lt;mell¥
"Loving" Ia a roek-ege version no one much knew he had a
o1 the old all eat stars: ohowed up 1011ae or humor when he starat the Wes1port, c.m., Joeatloo red In 'fCvnlval," in the glumlttlption at uTonigtrt" hosts: for the movie - with ber own hero role, unUJ mce in ChiCariJCIJ: cool and dilltallt; Pur: rock....U . . - .... lt'o called eago after h1l puppeteer scene
warm and diltant; Steve AU"": .,A More Perfect Union'' •.•• he 1IIrew back the tinY curtain
dodisWit ., •• Al1RYI the JaclY, 01'- We 11JPP018 Barbra Stralsand to asoert he alooe bad era liar Ucla Albaaase let her bas 110111e other way of tdngjng Ing theiiiBIIl' amuslnnuppetvolees and It sot a huge hand; Tom
uked, uWben 'Carnival' tried
THE WELL CHILD®
out In Waohlngton didn't revt....
•
era realize you were worldngthe
puppets?'' Je....,. replied, ''No,

betta'•

YOUTH ASKDl FOR rfl
Thill collnna 11 tar JUIIIIII 1100ple, their )II'QbiOIDI and p i urea, their lroubl~ and 1111.
Aa with lba rell ol
llolp
UBI, It w o l - )lugba b u t
- ' t dodp •
'JIOIIIcm
with • brusf&gt;.ol!.

Six Irish Players
Selected In Draft

&amp;00&amp;

League Crown At Stake

Palach: Czecll Freedom Torch
on entire peaple.
Ia Alnerleoilnthe laaue of Vietnam hal
been and con des to be a matter. of Intel·
1ectua1 debate, whene the ordinary penon ·
debotes It at all The moral · queotlona
surrounding It, which have affected some
to the point ol killing themselves ~r break·
ing the law In attempts to arouse the
oalloa's coasclence, are simply ncii that
clear-cut aad black-and-white to the ;Yist
majority.
That is why there bas been ao'' Jan
Palaeb in Amerlea. And It Ia to he hoPed
the~ wtU he no more in Czechoslovakia.
AI he aald on his deathbed. "My act has
fulftlled Its purpose." But that act could
he nullified, its parpose blunted, should
more young Czechs follow 'biB eumple,
even as the gasoline suicides ol a series
of mooks in V I e t n a Ill solved notblng,
achieved nothing .

·

'

You'll Like Our ~vice .

GOODifEAII

'·

RIZER OIL CO.
PHONE 992-2101

POMEROY. 0.
'

~.

-•
'

heat to

CITY ICE AND FUEL CO.

-••

!•

TEXACO

-•

�f - '!1lt Dallf Slotinol, P-l'Of·Midill~

'

o.. Thorodl1, J.....,. 3G, 1111

'

Million Volt Transmission Project
Planned by AEP and Swedish Firm
The AmerlClUI Electric Pow- electrical O&lt;Jiipment. 0 h 1 o
or !Q'atem and ASEA or Swe- Bran. Of Man.afteld, Ohio, Ia a
den have embarked on a joint leading mallllfacturer or inoula·
relel.l'eh program to determine tloa and hardware. Both !Irma
the teehniea.J. and economic reas- have a long history o1. contrlbJfbUlb' of a-e transmission at J. tlooo to the pl..,..ring or hilh·
mllltoo volts and 800\re. T h e
study would also seek to develop

erating companies or AEP Sys-

voltage transmissJon systems.
Tho multl.stage proJect wl11
span a period of eight to 10
years and will represent an inveltment or RlOX'e than $8 ~ million by the partlelpotlag COIDfliUIleo. Each oucceo&lt;llng stage would
depend on the succesi'J or t h e

tem.

previous.

Ohio Brass Company will play
an Important role in the project,
carrying out major phases of
the study at ita new Frank B.
Black Research Center at Wadsworth, Ohio. Wlder AEP supervision.

First stage or the attu1;y lo to
obtain fundamental knowledge or
tne nature of the ultra-high volt-

the new generation of ecp.~ipment
that will be required to make

such

ultra~lgh

voltage a prac-

tical reality, Appalachian Pow-

er Comp.ny is one

of

seven op-

The privately financed reBearch and development project

was announcod Wednesda,yinNew
York by Donald C. Cook, president of American Electric Power, and Roger A. Black, chairman ai Ohio Brass, and in Vasteras, Sweden by Curt Nicolin,
president of ASEA.
AEP, the nation's largest investor-owned producer ot electric energy, in 1953 was the
first uWit;y to employ 345,000volt transmission and will be
the first to utilize 765,000 volts
Wilen it energizes a line at that
voltage level 1n about t w o
months. ASEA (Allmanna 8\renlb Elektrlska Aktiebol-) is a
maJor mamfacturer Cl heavy

IBis ~unhold odors
lastantly
One drop per room eim twenty-

four hour odor control. There •e
UO dro'" in the

'-'·oz.

bottle, 111
ldtquate supply ror
m1ny month or

sprln1-time fresh-

""·$158

ages whicll will be essential to development of major equipment
ttems and the design or trans~
mission systems, lines and substations to operate at UHV lev~
els. This stage is expected to
last two years.
Later stases would include the
design and erection of an ecp.d.p.
ment test station on the AEP ~~ ­
tern at Lakeville, Ind., near South
Bend, and a transmission test
line at the Ohio Brass research
center. The Lakeville station
would include high..power, highvoltage ASEA transformers fed
from AEP"s existing transmission network, enabling tests to
be conducted at system voltages
up to 2,265, 000 volts.
According to Cook, transmissloo voltages well above the
present exua-hlgh~voltage range
or 345,000 to 765,000 volts will
be required 'to meet the steadily
increasing demand for electric
power. He pointed out that AEP's
studies in planning its new 765,000 ~ volt network showed that
these lines would transmit power at half the cost of 345,000volt lines, despite an average
transmission distance of only
200 miles.
"Stl.ll higher voltages w il I
bring even greater savings in
Investment and operating costs,

holping to keep 111e oost or elec-

tric service to the lowest p:tsstble leveJ,., Cook saJd. Further, he noted, the lncreaatng
Importance of the reliablll\Y or
bulk power aupply - In direct
relation to lhe enormous · load
laaoaaea intlclpated In tho fu.
"Pl:,p-.e,.tho. il!l¢-

He a&lt;Ued thai, !rom tho VHV
ltudle1, engineers alao expect
ID gain fnCormatioo !bat will be

Ten Homes In Need Of

PAINTING•••••
Home owners

in the Mairs • Gallia

area wi II be eiven an opportunity of having

the new Vydel, the rleid, All Vinyl Homesldilll,.
material applied to their homes at a very low
cost. It will be of special interest to home
owners who are led up with canstam paint·
ine and other maintenance casts. The new
MIRACLE SIDING developed by Monsanto
Chemical Corporation and B. F. Goodricll,
two of the most trusted names in the cheml·
cal industry. After 20 years of testine and
research it is especially recommendod for use

sient voltage• that will be en~
ecuntered Ia UHV .,.sterna. Olb·
er critical areas lnelude 1M effect ol. contamination on UHV

765,000-¥olt ll,YitemS,
Tho awroac:h that will be taken 11 somewhat difl'ereut from
other UHV re~earch oow under
way, the AEP prelddent ex~
plalnocl. "Our joint project will
determine, at the outset, the
theoretical limit for ,power !lYS·
tern voltages - the ex:llltence
ol. such a Umit can be foreseen - and a,gainst this backgroond, to settle 011 the highest
practical voltage. This new research complements other re~
search projects now under way .'"
Chairman Black of Ohio Brass
said that one of the most criti-

transmission llne performance
and dovelCIPilont or

ha.......,.will·'
oonllaurationa

C&lt;JOChctor
that
operate at acceptable corona levels.
President Nieolin of ASEA ~
that a large amount d. research
and develapm.ent must be done
to develop UHV transformers,
reactors, switchgear, surge limiting devices, and meuurlng, aonlllng and -rol ecplpment. This work will be performed in ASEA's research liboratories, inclllding the recently onlaroed higllo¥oltage
tory at Ludvika, Sweden.

cal areas of study Is ~e abUity

critical areas ot service such as
law enforcement, vitally needed
capital imprOYements, and the
demands ol p.Jblic employees for
salary increases.
Additional buts regardiq reverues !or local sovernment are
yet to be introduced. After a
careful analysis of all bills, the
association will strongly support
legislatioo that will provide adThe budgetary deficlencyofthe ditional revenue for local gov~
sooeral fund in practically every ernment and be ln the best Inter~
county in Ohio is the result olin- est of both the general public
Laurence Dumford, president
of the County Commissioners'
Association of Ohio, Wedpesday
amOlDlced that the Executive
Committee of the state association in regular scheduled meetins Jan. 22, reaffirmed its position that county goverrunent in
particular, and local government
in general, are faced. with a
grave financial crisis for 1969.

creased mandated

responsiblli~

ties, additional demands tor services by the public and increased costs of goverrunental oper.
ations We to l.nflatlon.
The COWlty commissioners fA
Ohio are deeply concerned over
their inabU!I;y to ad....atel.Y lUnd

News, Notes

Hobnob with

RIVERVIEW GARDEN CLUB
The Riverview Garden Club

. wMra,_ ""w~~etiP!W:.Jil• honw !If"'
s. .arren ckefts for tfleir
January meeting with Mrs. R.
E. Williams and Mrs. L y 1 e
Balderson serving as hostesses. Devotion topic was •'F o u r
Roads•• given by Mrs. R. L.
Larkins, followed with prayer.
The roll call was answered by
members naming bird&amp; whJeh
they have fed this winter. Thl1
included a variety of birds. Plan•
were made to stage a Valentine
.PUt3' for the children at tbe
count;y home next month.
A thank you note was read rrom
the Slufbeaatern Ohio Mental
Health Center for the club members cont.rtl:lltion for the pa~
t1enta during the hollda.va. Mra.
James Ruth Is a new member
In the Gordon Club. A get..weU
note was sent to Mrs. Donald
lqen, The program was condu &lt;ted by Mrs. Erneot Whitehead. Mrs_ Whitehead presented an arUcle on house plantl.
She gave idea1 oo dis,P].aylng
our house plants. Mrs. Walter
Brown read an article on Winter J.'Jowerlng Bugonias (nam.
lng the variettes and care ot
begonlaa).
Retreahmenta were served
during the social hour to Mrs.
Walter Brown, Mrs. Carl Buek-

COLUMBt' ; Easter Seal
children from thrOUihout the
state will have a special treat on
hand when they attend the Annual Easter S e a I Campaign
''Klck..OU"' meeting of the Ohio
SocieQ" for Crippled Children and
Adults, Inc., &amp;mday, March 2
at the g.,eraton Hotel 1n Columbus.
Robert Keeshan, creator of
the "Captain Kangaroo" character which has received world
acclaJm, will be the special guest
or tho Ohio Soclet;y during U!e
day'l eventl.
.. ~n Kangaroo" will join
Easter Seal Chairman Herbert
E. Evana and State Fund RaisIng Chairman AnthoiiY VIvo or
Youngstown, In welcoming the
chlldrou who will be lnlr&lt;Qicecl
in a morning program f~atur­
ins the "Easter Seal starlet&amp;."
Each chUd representing their
respective eounty socleQ' will
have a commemorative photolll"IPh taken with tile Coptola
and will be honored at tile ope.
cial luncheon for volunteers, par.
enta and interested trlendl.
Area Easter Seal chairmen
and Teen Queena will also parle,y, Mrs. Harlla Frank, Mrs.
ticipate, withotherspeclalgueats
Herman Grossnickle, Mrs. R. L.
on hand to sl!llute the 89 Easter
Larkins, Mra. Ronald Osborne,
Soa1 alflliated units Ia Ohio.
Mrs. Donald Putman, Mr1, Den-

recently introduced to the f)mllc. 11 carries a

6.

lifetime guarantee in writlnr and provides 1001
insulation, both summer and winter, thereby
lowering the cost of air conditioniiJI and heat·

AND SEE
THE TRULY GlUT

ing. The new product can be used over every

Philco-Ford

type of home includinr frame, asbestos, stuc·
co, brick; etc. Many different decorator colors

COLOR TV.

are available. Home owners who act now will
receive special decorative work at 110 addi·

FOR THE• FINEST IN
BABY HEAlTH NEEDS

background

of the

Re~istration
-v.•••.•_-: ":"'
,.;

~,,,_ ,

Q~~·. .

.-,o

IRITE:

• SOIICI SUit. SilfYI S)'tttm - no
lubn to burn oulln b slplttcll\llnt: circuits

......

THE DAILY SENTINEL
lOX 1000
PO•ROY, OHIO

-eo~..

·-

Picture Tube

• Pllflco Trlftlformtt~
"CoW Pilot" Cool Chauil

....""'.

$328

MIDDLEPORT. 0.

'

'

'

.

ANTHONY IQPri'Ai.121iD

Mid-Winter
Meeting
.. .

Aux.iliary Easter Ba.sket

Planned·Jh Columbus

Pro;ect Starts feb. 5th

-

..

-1.
err...-•.., ...,..
be---la

for baby's cbmfort and well·
being ... Visit our pharmacy
today I

11 ....... I • . . . . -

llarle Rlar, l'IIYWs

Adrleme ~
I(J1a HudiOII, Urada LAvemdar,

lfor7

•

WCTA CIRCLE
' llf&lt;rll'ltl 'at the homo of Mrs.

OPEN DAILY

a,oo AM to 1o,oo PM
S.ndoy 10,30 AM
to 12:30 PM ••d .

5,00

to

9:00 PM

Wayne Swisher, Harold Lohae and Kennrih Mc\..UI•
Iough are your friendly phannaclatl at Swiah., and
Lohse Rexall Druv•· They have low preacrlptlon

areno.
There were 190personsatte00ing the rally with the Laurel
Cliff Free Methodist Church, 62
present, wtnni~ the atterQance
banner. The percentage banner
went to the Danville Wesleyan
Church which had 20 out of 23
members present fDf' the rally,
Music for the event was provided. by the Smith ramuy of
Rutland and by the lamily of
the Rev. Mr. Minsher.
The next rally will be Mar. 25
al the Rutland Church of the Nazarene with Dr. H. H. Hei'Kiershot,
district SIV8rinten:lent ot West
Virginia, Church of the Nazarene,
speaking.

prices and prompt service ud discount drug price•
seven days a wHit. Let ua aerve you for all your
prescription and drug need1.

Allthooll',· ~ Clrele
m.inbero nw1e pi&amp;Datorromom-

dorotd

~- endtwoiOI"Yi...
_.tor VaionliDo'o o.,..llwao
'ilio VOted 1D COIItribute .4 to
U. acbool milk -am I or
. . , .·clllldHn rmd to ..........

...,.PliDtr
to \110toFl'llllk
eur.,.
mlaolcll.., taml11 In ............

-r

lloa&lt;jOq,.F.......,.
Ccllductlq tho ..uac lor
,.. ~Jro, WUlio ~ wlio mMtlna.
Mro, Fred lllbl&gt;o
""" rl poem, UGod'l - · meetlna •Iiiii •• I..ooldna ForfP.'II&amp;." A deJHri courH Rl
' , . td.
ward'' u her dovotioaal lhemo.
A .,._U card 1IU ailbed for
Dalq B1nr. rmd
~;
DORCAS CmCLE
Mra. 1'claJ Fowler, proJeet: .... read !rom Mlaa Emma lllitCllairinaD, reported ... pliiiUI lor - · tor • bOiidiJ 11ft ' to. reDiembor . . . . - · Refreabmontawreeon.... the .Dorcas Clrclo mot at od.

,...

Ru~tland Garden

--tile

1tllank,..-

Club
.f rofect is Planned
~·

Third Thursday

Ing

Club Elects

DOl'

Items b" tilt Gerr1 Home
. rmd noecb' lluaillel wlll be
made at tilt Febnlary r)laot•
ill of the W"'!'"n'J MlolicJo.
...,. SocioU" of tho ~Clllf
Free Metllodlat CllurO). ·
Meetitll at tho cburill recentlf, the 1"!1"1 pt.....d the
....-1&lt; oeasloa ID be held il the
poraonaae a11rti'ltl at lO:aG,L
m. Lunchwlll bo oened. I!Oadlrw reports were shw and
plans were llllde! tor a reading
c-at to bo&amp;lri tllla ......,
Mra. Katby Pulllna preMIIted
the p....,..m tor.lbe 10 ......

boro and two~~~-.._

Parsonage Fund
Given Donation
By Star Class

K.Q' Selm.ildar; 13 J8U'I 1
llarpnt Cotlrlll, Genevieve

- - and Craig Cotlrlll: 12
)'Uri, Pearl Mdlrldo: 10 yearo,

New Officers

Fraakle Mumaw; 9 yean, Debbie llanleft; s rear•. Bruce CotCIIP8I'EII- ThoThlrd'l'hora· trill, and 1 . . . year pia, bar
day Clllb held Ita Jamar)' meet. and dlpl.... to Mayme
lag ..-at11 at the home of Mrs. Holmeo.
Chloris Gaul, lllmner Boa4
FllliD&amp; tilt pdpit lblda.v' waa
New olllcor~ aleelal were, loll' 1 - Kermit Waltllol of
PH~ Mrs. b
liQman; I'OIIIero)', .... to the 1mpltallza"rico-t&gt;reoid1111, Mro. J - em. of.tile pulor, lllll. Llnaoll
DOlly; HCretar)'-treuurer, Mra. H. Sellblna. loll' Leadar L e o
Jonlce YOUill, and ..wo report. ~ of I'OIIIero)' wlll _.,. It'
er, Mrs. Martqn RobfDioD.
palplt SUnday, F&lt;!b. Z. bdoo&gt;"
Three new member&amp; welcom- ScbooJ Ia At 9:30 LDL, fDUowed
ed were Mra. Jeaa VlaoYard, with worablp oenleo at 10:30.
Mro. Linda Fltc:h end Mrl. Bar·
ben l'lroler.
RorillkraJ were cll..,..aaod Ia

edto50_.1-.

REDUCED
• ... $9.00

present were Mra. Emma Burna,
Mra. Mary Allc:e Blae, Mra. IJor.
otha Riebel, Mro. Dorothy Hall,
end Mro. Nell WU1011. Game
prlzta were awarded to Dorotlla lllobe1 and Mary Allee Blae,
with llorotl!,y Hall wlnolng tho
door prize, Tho aext meeting
will be at the homo or Mro.
Jlorollla Riebel. Memboro plon
to oat '"'t at tho Nlljl0ll11t BeJ.

.,,
R'f.

Room , •• Nothllll
Like lt.

Du..*f't'Fttltstf

~-·~ ~.o.i'-

commen:ially.

59 N. 2nd A.-..

992&gt;5560

by Mro. While.

MIDDLIPOIT, 0.

YOU
CAN COUNT
US AT

nus to sso.oo.

R"t. $11.00 M $22.00

&amp; SHOULDERS

SHA
Rae. 1.85

FAMOUS BRANO!

DENTO
CREME

$
SALE

Rlf. 79c

MENS SUITS
MENS

C..oup 2-549.95-SIOO

SPOU SHim

COIDUROYS

Re1. $4.110 1o Sll.IIO

!l.fo... ........... 1411

BR~NDS

DRESS SHim
1/3 OfF

m S5QDD

:.~&amp;;

u•r OF 10n
WEAl IEDUCED

.............. s2"

:tfD ..............

DRESS &amp; CASUAL HATS

'3•

RtducJ&lt;I Re1. $5.110 1o 116.110
1o

S1196

~~r:.:~,.. ..401

FAMOUS BRANDS IN

LADIES WEAR
REDUCED . TOUP
.

'

.

SA~E 0~

•COATS
•I~QU$.ES
•SWEATERS e SIIRJS,

•

T

52~

MENS LEVI'S

1/.li. ... ... 14•
:l:t .............. '5"

MEN' SPORT COATS

$2J3 ands4.00

Decorate Each

...

SWEATERS
REDUCED

$11.96 •• $33.26

• HOlt Sch- &amp; Man • Griffor,
• Bolar,y '!110' • Palm Beach
REDUCED 201 TO 33-1/3\

REDUCED

MENS

SUIUIIAN COATS

- Mra. L, Balder1011

The Douglas fir Is consld·

$211.!50

2D%-33V,%

PH thlo .......

ered our most valuable tree

fo

Values up to 6.95

Fresh Flow•s To

Mra. Sbaron I.AJucko, Mro. Barbera TrlirP and Mro. Alma Pool-

-

HESS SLACKS

ALL
DRASTICALLY
REDUCEDII

lnst11t Sprl•t'l

Aller ~-..-. ....
lreahmento were eot'\'ed by the
holleaa to the above' rmd Mra.
Caro1.YII TrlirP, Mrl. NID While,

' ..

TOPCOATS AND
ALL WEATHER
COATS REDUCED

FALL AND WINTER

the by-laws, rmd duaa _ . raia-

meellni: will bo
~- ·~..81 .'¥~; .~­

MlNS

WOMEN&lt;; &lt;;HOt CLt=AR.L.\NCt.

Mrl, Pearl MeBrldo and Elea.

Tho F.......,.

MENS

HURRY!!!

tile......-.

1lecoiYina I lf,yoar bar ......

LOVE JOY'CmCLE

at il .....a.. ....,.., JOf Circle
held at the homo of 11r1. FAllBiker.
at the meotlag wao
. • JOir of - · lor • llMOb" 1 Preaented
.
from
Mro. eur.,. Ia
cbll4.
willch l h_
e - t_
he' ' .l in. Chorlel ~....... pit, lorllloa&lt;
_·
11fiiU-ICI deYotbiJ VllnC "OUr
lli~~q~~, Our Wortc!' l1 ber Momboro,.....ubdtotakolood

.~

Edltll 1'1 0 0 d,
IIIII tiltao .,.ata,

Doom - · Darren Bolin, ....
SYRACVSB - Bora _ . •· Tina Pler&lt;e, Mabel Plckena ....
for porlect . - . ... a contrll\utlng holleu.
&amp;mda;r at tilt Firat lJDited Pretr·
bylDrian Church with Margaret
Cotlrlll, Cieri&lt; .of Seaatoa, mak-

...

The Rev. John Minsher,pastor
ot the Wesleyan Church at Nelsonville, was .speaker Tuesday
night when a Meigs Holiness As·
soctat:lon rally was held at the
Middleport Church of the Naz-

S39&amp;

La-.

Dorio Friolld

REG. $29.95 lo $75.00

derson.
Tho February meeting will be
at the home of Mrs. OSborne.
LADIES AUXILIARY

Slaall,

.,. Grueoer,

SAVE 201 JO 33 113%

Warren Pickens, Mrs. R. E.
WUIIama and Mra. L,yle Bal-

he IIKPOQ.

J..... - · Ada lladr,. Thel-

Sought Here

head, Mrs. Gene WUaon, Mrs.

will

~

!irl"fla Zwllllnc. Pea1

Attend Rally

S2 400

i!Ox

tiro. Pierce, Clara t..onler,

u co-hostesa. Tbedoor)JI'l&amp;ew&amp;J

ver Weber, Mrs. Ern eat White-

ftJ*I••

'l'be bolte~ Acne• Wblte, ser~
..., - - - lD Mrt. Hall,

Coopera lion

occur.

~

ubd tro brlalr 1 val-.

190 Persons

FAMOUS

.

names in our selection of items

You'll find only the besl·known

Boyd, Jessie Hoover. RJ1her
Roush, Mrs. Edward D, Blakeman and lnlant daulbter, Mrs.
Richard E. Erwin .... infant '"'"•
Mrs. MW'ord J. Frederick and
infant daughter, Mrs. BUJ L. Wiley and Infant daughter.

1-S49.9S.$125

-· ""*

Mz;C f ...U. . . . . . . .allr-

Four pbyolelus -~
among the ,,..,.... a( U.,
Declorallor! of Indepe...._
-Josiah llaJ&gt;tlett, ...ubew
Lyman Hill llJid
doro,
m. Thornton,
Benjllmill Rub. Oliver Woi·
Ult, ~IOlor 992~659.
eott, allb...., t r a In e d in
'lbe meetinl will lit l'el&gt;. mecll~ ••• .• juriot-

E. WUI, James W. Wilson. Mrs.
Edward L, WOC)(I)urn, N e I 11 e

c.,.u,

...........
.........
.
..,..
·~
~·-h·- of ..._ _ _ . .

n. bo-1 --wlll .... lor 21, to, 75 -

'"I

As a continuing effort to insure timely lepl registration of
y~ men on tlleir 18th blrthdlu',
the local drart board is requestirv
the cooperat:loo of school officials, armory commanders and
youth agencies in publicizing
dran registration requirements,
according to Mrs. Otis Kt'IOA),
chairman of Local Board No. 83,
Meigs Coonty.
Many young men Corget to resi ster on their 1 Sth birtl:day aoo
thereby ,lay themselves liable to
being declared delinquents and
scheduled for priority induction,
accordi"B to Mrs. KiqJp.
Registration must be accom·
pUshed within five days trom
18th birthday at the registrant's
local board or one nearest to the
area in which he is located.
Members or reserve and National Guard units are required
to register for the draft. Only
persons on active duty in the
Armed Forces are not required to
register until they are separated
from the Armed Forces.
Full infonnation on registration requirements f1111 be obtained at the local t:K.rd office,
' Bldg., Pomeroy,
Masonic TeJII)le
All registrants ar21 required to
keep thair looa1 boards fnfonned
ot changes of address and other
changes in ~cational, occt.,ational or marital status as they

___

WU11a till 1 1. MM 5 14l ....
- - II ""All I io '!f'-

.....,... II lD laolal I -illlch.

Mrs. Jack R. Welker, Chester

ess to the Ladles AuxWary for
tbeir JIUJ.Iaey meeting. Memben

see your home without any obllption what·
soever. All types of financina are available.

History of India
-Given to Circles

'

'

. . . . . Tllo 25 will
"' for _ . Olld am.
diQ' Sebool
AD - .
iUar)' .....-. ... toldac ....

Mrs. Thelma Eagle waa host-

tional cost. An appoinbnent will be made to

•

z.

(PBL) on ~. February
Broadcast over NET's natl.on~
wide network o( public televiaion
atatioo!l, the 90-minute program,
"Generation of Pawns: The Urban Scbool Crisis," will be seen
regionally on WOUB.TV, Channel 20, Athens, at 8 p.m.
The focus of the re,POrt is
New York City which his the
costliest and Largest urban public -school system 1D the United
!btea. It has been called both
the most advanced and the least

SEE OUR PHARMACISTS

'··

Get Story

failure or attempts to deaegre~
gale school&amp; ln the nation's ghettoes, the program documents the
struggle for local community control of the schoola. Molt educators agree that the fight wUI be
repeated in urban centersacrosa
the country within the next couple of years.
PBL takes the viewer inside
New York City's Board or EOJ.
cation as It wrestles with problems that have touched orr mas~
stve school &amp;trikes, boycott&amp; and
violence. The camera records
the Board's struggles as it tries
to draft a decentralization bUI.
To make the program PBL
Producer Greg Jackson gained
entry into closed meetings of
the city's Board of Education
and filmed a troubled tfro ~ day,
30-hour marathon sessJon of the
Board gathered In a secluded rnatel outside tile cUy,

Reedsville

,\.

PBL Goes
Inside to

Against tho

ing of the Executive Conunittee
that the permissive taxes have
not proved to be a satisfactory
answer to the fUnding of mandated leglalation.

Starlets Will

Holzer Medical Center, Firat
Ava. Visiting hours 2-f and 7..8
Publication of admissions SUI~
p.m. Parents only on Pediatrics pended UDti.J further notice.
Ward.
No Blrtlla W-oda7
Di1ch&amp;rps
Kimberly S. Bam&lt;U, Mra. &amp;-a.
kine E. B l - . Mro. Emma D.
Brl&amp;ht, Mra. Floaale L. Burdet!Al,
Mra. Flora M. Camplleld, Mro.
Burl E. Cook, Mrs. Bertha M.
Craf&amp; Mrs. Bernard I .. Craw~
lord, Georp L. CUndllf, Rooald
L. Duncan, Ralph L. Fisher,
Lawrence R. Hall, Dale Marr,
Elmer Mart, Mrs. N. Santord
Merrill, Mra. Lewis ft. Milstead,
Televlalon'&amp; rlrat exam1aat1oo Mrs. Rose A. Patrick, Mrs.
d. the contuaion and failure of James L. Pickens, Vernon L,
the nation'• blg~it;y school a.va- lluo,.ll, Mra. Lllllao/ibuler, Ra,y
tems will be presented by the H. stmms, Mrs. Ervin 0, TolliPublic Broadcast Laboratory ver. Mrs. Burnie 0. Watlon,

effective.

and the county.
Dwnf'ord said it was the feel-

in West Virginia and Ohio climate and was

---

labora-

Ohio Financial Crises
Serious Says Dumford

liiiliien lin UIIV irantiills-

WANTEDI

or air to wib8tand the hllll1 traa-

benelldal to the 34.5,000. and

.. "'f•·' ..._

sicm, "sinee no other facU~
will be able to do the job,"'

.

1- 'l1oo llolb'"-1, -r'Ol'.Mijldltporf, ~·· ,.,...,, Jlllo...,· ~

'

33V~Ofo
.. :

• SUIJS
·•DRESSES

AIRID ROLL-ON

·. Deodoralt
SA~E72.
'

_.;

,,

POWDER
.
· let.l.07

71~

!

Llstedne,
., ·.. :$, '
R~.75c
\'

F..oh Milk Shako

Rea. 79c

52

MUSTEROLE
Ree.us

8·3'$·
',.j-i

.

•'

' ·,

,

~I

�•

.
~

t.-,... DIQr an·•• ,_ •..., ~ Q., 'J'IIMI'.,, lrprey·IQ,

A'ftl\uJ ~tiDg of
(hufth Is Held

. [,HOSPITAl:. ,.EWS

j

PLEASANT vALLEY IIOSPJTAL

a.-

•*

First Yeilr Oub
Members

ADMITIED
- Mro. Roy
$mi.,_ Aj&gt;plo Grove; "lbo. Arthur

' PlEASANT - M r
PT.
l\llrUoo

10 Meet

PT, PLEAS.U.'I' - A n The
~ Rd&gt;erlobur&amp;.
'
&lt;oaP-'-~orC!u"lot
DISCHARGED _ Mro. n-1 lion moetllll lor lint y•r HI
~ Olurdl W&amp;l held so... Jcaa, Oteater; llrl. Audra Jef- . Club member• wlll be held Tll.u'adQ 1D ll!edhn'chpvlsb ftlllolrJne loro, Pamoi'O)'; Cathorlno Hud- dll)' e..enlni 11 tbl ..,. Jr. HJab
SehooJ beCIM&gt;illl II 7 P. m.
• ~ lllOr1liJio •orllhlp 10rYI&lt;e
dloaton, lllddloport; Wlllllm
Till• eWIII ...,...II or brief
at 11 L IIi.
0
Four vestry members were Komocb'. ~.on~~-. ·' Mn, eeremooy to bolter ll&lt;qlldllt HI
eleeted durinr: the butlness aea.. Daalel Childers, Pt. Pleaaant; memberl with 1M f.H praput.l~
1lon to aerve on a rotattrw~eis. Vera Morrison, Pt.. Pleasant; Parents and leader• ere al10 lDElectec2 were: Mrs. GaO Ft:irvs. l\lro. llqjer Nibert, Pt. Pl•llllt. vlted to join tllelr )'GOIJiplero In
BIRTH - Mr. and Mrs. Ro.Y attendance at tbe meetiJW.
Milton L. MUter. Howard Priee
&gt; PT. PU::ASANT -

IIIII Nlll l\llnton.
Flraneial reports were given
of the various ctlurch departmenta and the budget for 1969
for Christ Church Parish was

Smith,

~pie

Grove,

~

,-.

'

son.

The aerolite In the Vienna
presented andapprowd. The Rev.
Museum,
Austria, Is the
Clllford E. Shane prealded dur-- smallest known meteorite. It
Ing the bualness session.
weighs five grains.

wu.,,

7 - n1e Daily Sentinel. Pomeroy..Middleport, 0. , Thursday, Ji:nuary 30, 1969
L

.Auxiliary Plans for
Jubilee
Celebration
--...

cllalrmon ot

tho Rod Cl'&lt;lla Wator Slftll'
CclmmiU.OO, IIU. ~

plansr...a-moottilcot
her """"'· 1 1 0 3 Driw1 011 Feb. ltb. at 8 p. m.
to boillllorm~ plano lor
Uda year•a water ut.ty proII"IID
Cc&gt;uty,
Mro. WOO)' asked tlllt all
mambera or bUretted ~­
,... -nd In order to 101 011
theprosrAmo.

In-

Cyllenlellel
CybeJ'l!tllcl Ia the sc:iellee
and couirol or cotDJIIunleallon proceuea ID both aliimall and m~~ehiDea. The

-~~-~

Sportswriter Gran II a n d .

a

word was Introduced and
popl!larlzed by N orb er I

Rice nomed the bactfleld of
the famed Notre Dame fool·
ball team of tho early 19llls
the Four Horsemen.

WeiDer, the mathematician,

ID l!NS.

;;: Participation in the American by pledgea can be made in memI'Jion Golden Jubilee obaerv· ory or a deceased member or the
..ce on Aarch 17 was planned lamUy.
Both Hunnell and Caoel reportTuesday night's meeting otthe
tacues Auxiliary of Drew We)). ed on the midwinter conference
$.. Poot 39.
held over the "eeke!W in Colum!:'Following a repOrt by Paul ea._.. bu.s. Legion and auxiliary memI on plans fOr the 50th annher- bers were urged to visit hosplt.ry birthday party, ac.:.nmlttee llllz«&lt; veterans as a part of their
C Mrs. Ben Neutzllng, l\lro. DOn rehabUltation work. Areport was
Jbnnell and Mrs. Catherine given on the speaker at the c00o
Welsh was named to work with ference. born and reared in Hun~ QOit re_presentatlves on de- gary, and his lmpreulons and
opinions on communism and the
of the obBervance.
- · Cascl reported that Columbus democratic form of government.
Noting plans for Memorlal Day
:lra,yor M. E. Sensenbremer will
the speaker following the 6 p. services, Hunnell requested that
ll. dinner. He noted that the may- the auxiliary serve a dirmer lor
If's appearance here wUJ be one aU those who participate. He said
If two such outside Columbus in that department officers here two
years ago lor the Memorial DB)'
:Jarch, the other being in
services were conwllmentary
IJIL
about
the program and clirmer
:;, easel askedtheauxlllarymem-rs to take l:tle lead in preparing served at that time. Tile t w o
:0:1 serving the chicken dinner, legionaires displayed the new
.hasiztng that preparations American Legion emblem light.
:lillould be made lor at l01st 200.
Casci reported that Mrs. Rich2b addition to the Columbua may.. ard (~1) Davis ot Jackson, a
tr, other dignitaries tobeinvtted former member of the auxiliary
is a patient at Holzer Hoslptal,
~lude department :and di1trict
::pmcers of the legion and auxlll- Room 383,
Mrs. Ellen Couch presided at
l_ry, and local oUlcials.
- Don Hunnel, Drew Webster the meeting. Holiday child wei·
lost commander, presented l:tle tare and rehabllitatlon projects
with a certitlcate lor the gift were reported during the session.
I); Glllo lor the Yanks Who Glove. Mrs. Leonard Jewell, child weireported that the Post E~er­ tare chainnan. nported that she
»ett~ Service has been sched- had distributed $25 at Clu"lstmas
~d lor Feb. 17 and 0110ke of a time, with the money going for
l'llalllel gro..,i111 of pictures ll1d toys, food and blankets.
It was reported by Mrs. Casci,
to be completed prior to
rehibilitation chairman, that the
I time.
: Hwmel also said that the p-ost unit contributed at the Chillicothe
~s to secure pictures ol the Veterans Hospital Christmas
llllree Pomei'O)' boys killed during party 71 pounds of candy costing
11M&gt; Vletnom erlslo lor display at $67; a cake, $4;. twent,y~ozen
De hall during the service.
cookies, $9.50; and chewing gum,
: He gave a report on the buUd- $1.50.
t!W tund, notj.ng several sl.z.eable Mrs. Vedo Davis .-.! thatthe
Nlatlons, and ora system wher• junior auxillary members sert 35
Chrlsllnas cards, mint cups, 200
name tags, and three scrapbooks
to the children o!theDenverJew·
Ish Hospital during the holiday

.

-a

mts

..

can..

IN

read from Mrs. Kemetll Braun
lor assistance In tile recent Red
Cross l\md drive.
Mrs. Gerald WUdermuth reported that I Jlag will be
prese.ud to the newly orgMized
scout troop next Wednesday night.
It wa&amp; decided to have the post
flags cleaned prior to the birthday party and Mn. Gladys Cum·
mings was appoht.ed to handle
this.

Membership has reached 127,
Mrs. Wildennuthreported.ltwas
noted by Mrs. KeMeth Harris
that flowers or cards had been
sent to Mrs. Olive Weber, Mrs.
Thomas Crow 1 Mrs. Carrie Meinhart, and Mrs, Marie Custer.
On ways . al)d means, Mrs.
Hurmell said all the pecans hue
been sold and that $83 was the
profit on the sale. She also a•
nounced that a silent auction will
be held at the February meeting.
Mrs. Jewell showed a film,
"Decades · of Service for Children" for the program. It pointed
up that 75,000,000 children or
veterans in the United States to-

Six Persons Receive Baptism
A valentine .P1J1Y was plaamed the Homobulldoro CIUI or the
for Feb. 11 &amp;;t the ScUJ~eastern Middleport Clurch ot Cbrllll
Ohio Menlll Health c-. b)" Tuolda¥ night 11 the home or
Mr. and Mrl. Kenneth McElhindly, under 18 years of age, are
in need ot assistance from l:tle
American
Legion"11
SO,OOO

trained volunteer workera in
chUd weliare. Veterans' children, lt was reported, received
aid from ttle Legion as early as
1926.
Noted in the .ftlm were contributions to the American Heart
Alsoclatton or $50,000 In 1951i to
the National Association lor Me•
tal Health or $25,000 in 1956. The
Legion remains active in the narcotics program adopted ln 1951
and has as a motto, "A square
deal for evef)' child.''
The processional and presentation of the t1ag by Mrs. Cummings, sergeantatarmsandMrs.
Hunnell and Janice Couch, a jun-.
ior auxiliary member, color

bearers,

opened

ny.

During the JII04!I!ng an offerlog wa1 ta1cen lor e11to to be pn~­
oented al the part,y. Mr1. Nor·
man Yeauger eonduc:tectthemeetiog lollowi!J8 a pr&lt;Qo"er by l\leEIhlnny. A report was given on
tmprovementa to the rurser;v at
graee before refreshments aen.
the church.
Md.lbinn,y,
A c:tillcuaslon on Matthew 2 ed by Mr. and
waa conducted by the Rev. Rau- the Rev. and Mrs. Moyer, and
lln Moyer and Max. Sle1ru1 gave Mr. lnd Mro. Edward Evans •.

otto" Bailey.

J~Win Clark lol.n£
"SI:mebody cares 1-'or Yc.~ ...
Wa..o.ta El)lin read terlpture, Ac:ta
2:37..f7, and the Rev. Eugene

CLEARANCE THROUGHOUT
THE STORE . .. JUST TO
MENTION A FEW ...

- - - - -·Mr•.

DRIVE IN FOR
"OIL CHANGE
• LUBRICATION
• FILTER

I

T.V. Stomp•
On All

Val••• to 39c ARTIFICIAL FLOWERS. ..... oa. only 9c
Aoooth•or Group FRUITS &amp; FLOWERS.................. 3c
1.00 Group LADIES GLOYES ..................pair 44&lt;
2.99 Ladio• KNIT SHELLS...................... oa. 2.33
2.25 Girl• 7 to 14 KNIT SHELLS............... 1.66

Purchatet.

R.g. 1.-49 Apothocary jar Hard Condy .. 18 oz. only 99c

Reg. 99c 28 oz. bog

I

And

BRACH'S HARD CANOY .................................. only 66&lt;
Rog. 1.99 Monkoe COSTUMES.......................... only 44&lt;
Rog. 59&lt; Pill•bury
GORILLA MILK (Complete broakla•t) .................... 44&lt;

FREEl
SET OF EIGHT
GLASSES

the rileeting.

A prayer for peace by Mrs. Iva
Powell, chaplain. coaC1uded iL
Refreshments were served by
Mrs. Leona Smith and Mrs. Hennesy, assisted by Mrs. Hazel
Eichinger and Mrs. Marie Custer. The valentine motif was carried out in the table decorations
provided by tile junior auxiliary
members.

A blptlsmal aervice was con-ducted lor slx peraons by the
Laurel curf Jo' n!e Methodiat
Church Sunday lfter110011 et the
Middleport Olurch ol Chriat.
Baptized were lAwrence Eblin, Blrbora Eblin, Cllllord Icenhower, Helen leenhower, aar-.
ence Curtis and Bob But.on.
"My hitb Looks lP to Thee'"
and " Constantly Abktlrw" opened
the service with prayer by Dor-

Gill had pra,yer•
Thett was t,r~ a.Jnglq: o(i•O
Jt.awJ Olf" and .. 'T1• So Sweet
to Truat in .Jesus'" with PI'IJ'•r
by mu Dolley to eanclude tne
bll)dsmal servlct:.

Perm. Pr•u

SHIRT .......................................... now 2.66
MAN:'f OTHER SPECIALS THROUGHOUT THE STORIE

They're Lovely

Shop Early &amp; Take Advantage

Ol

Our Prices!

SALE NOW IN PROGRESS
See Our Complete line of Valentines, Candy, Etc.
OPEN FRI.&amp;. SAT . NICtf'rf'riL 9:00

BEN,FRANKLIN~

LOU'S

ASHLAND SERVICE
279 W. MAIN

9'12·3535

POMEROY, 0.

PHONE

202 EAST MAIN ST .
POMEROY, OHIO

=mt

:be

-·
rea

'

GRAVES PIANO AND ORGAN COMPANY OF COLUMBUS, OHIO, THE NATIONS LARGEST BALDWIN DEALEi. ·1s NOW HOLDING
ITS SEMI-ANNUAL SALE IN GALLIPOLIS WITH TREMENDOUS SAYINGS TO BE PASSED ON .TO YOU. TWO TRUCK LOADS .OF
NEW AND USED PIANOS AND ORGANS WILL BE ASSEMBLED AT 504 SECOND AVENUE, THE FORMER DEXUR HEATING
COMPANY FOR THIS GIGANTI~ l~J"J"'..
,fl·r,d
".: '·~ h , . .
.
~ ~ .., , : ,:_ ·:'·· :·, · ·.. · ,,, -" "' i,.

CHEC THESE SPECIALS F'OR .,FANTASTlC .SAVINGS

••

.,
~

seeaon.
~
~

•
; FOR ALL INTERIOR
~~!I!~CES ...

Jill"-"::~.' DRY WALL, CON·

.,;iCRET£. BRICK, WOOD, WALL
:BOARD, OR PREVIOUSLY
::" PAINTED METAl

....•

--

with V•ngwrd's

SPINET ORGAN
Beautiful cherry flnlah,
sold new for over

$1750
Sole• Spocial

·SPINET
.ORGAN

Troded in on new and
ICH"ger organ, very good
condition.

Solo Price

Made especially for Lll.
Corrys OLir name. Will

••II for $799.
lntrocluctory

Offer

CAMPBELL ,
·STUDIO
Excellent

condition.

Troded In on Boldwin
'"" Grand P iono.

1·

SPINET
ORGAN
A Baldwin trade-In

~- DEKOR
•·
LATEX FLAT
•

.SPIN··n ·

WALL FINISH
'ft11 1111 ... DttDf IIIUfU lntlnl
:.. hiiiJ 11td txtended economy,
tram b•m•nt to 1ttlc, b.uuae
:'!of Ita \_'UIIIUity of 1dlptln1 to

=

PIANO
.
..
)

11. .

than I yeor old. SOld
'

-

.;;

"!''·MIIIW'

· 501.,. S,.Ciol ,
~

.,...nt

lnttrlor urftm.

:::Avlfl1blt ,11 "wllltt nd J01110US
.
~llllllllt •••

yoaro old.

~
... pi.

$3.29
~ qt. $1.07
s.Ehershach

'

Solo Spoclol

,•••,.

ALL EW BALDWIN ·PIAN

REG. 89c

AN
A
CIN._~~
-----------------~~--57~
REG.l:69 VICKS ..
YAPORU &amp;. _________________ ~':~.1. 04
WE FILL ALL
PRESCRIPTIONS

ence.

~

SPINET
PIANO

Civil Defense material re-ceived by Mrs. Couch was dis-played. Mrs. J. Ill. Thornton, leglsladve ehalrman, reported that
she has secured the Meigs County veterans service officer to
speak in February. Also to speak
at the meetlngwlllbeJoeStruble.
The midwinter conference to
be held Feb. 28 11111 March 1 at
the Nell House in Columbus was
annoonced. Mrs. Arthur B. lllfl.
en. national president, will be
one of the speakers at the confer..

Other -ken lnd dlot!J&gt;.
gulahed guests will be Mrs. Edward Vllum. department president; Mrs. Wm. Gill, national vice
president of the Central Dlvi11ion;
Donald Lukens. a naUoml AmerIcan Legioo oUlcer; Mrs. GarI W.
Zeller, Oldo"spllltnatlonalpres-ldent, and Mrs. James E. Warner,
naUonll executl ve committee.

.......

Others on the distlrwulslled
guest list lor the conterence locloxle Ropr l\IU111011, department
commander; Mrs. Franklin Beaverson. junior activities chairman; Mrs. Lester Nlmon, division legislative chairman; Mrs•
1lor8ld L. Alchholz, chapeau depertemental 8 et 40, and Donald
M. AwwWer. grand chef de gare,
40 lnd
Reid at the meetlrw: wu an lrJ...
vitaUon for members to attelll a
dinner hoftori111Mrs, Edward Sollot, &lt;llllkllte lor deportment
treasurer. The dlnnerwWbegiven by tile CllllonunltoiCie..llnd
durirw the convention.
A letter of lt)SlretlaUon was

s.

F,.n~~ -City Sltinlitao

·HAMS WIENERS .·
d . • •~

...

66e

..,.
\ . + .r,~&lt;'•.

H.EAD(HEESE

.,~lb.
"

&lt;•• Are NOt-Open on suidaJs)

,'

··

SALE LOCAYIOI

fii!FOIJIEIIUTEIS
PLU·NG·&amp;·H IA-i:
.
.

..

89~

·1.19

�, ' - 'nlolloiiJ - - . . _ ,.........._., o., -....-,,.~a...,- ao, 110

· ,·':~ A LITTLE 'HOMEWORK' Watching Want Ads Brings Top Grade Results
•ANT AD
IM,Oib.TION

I

p.-.

DI:AOLIMIS
hr a.-.. P_.tlc•~

NOTICE

......,,o...u-••·•·
c..c.u.......
.. c...-......

• • ~ .... , . , IHttil ' .... for

; IIGULATIONS
Tt.o r..Uat. """''' the rltht

ads -.......

DIRECT DRIVE
CHAIN SAWS
Many Modo!•
As low •• • •

·

elllectteM~Io. Tt.. p'*llshor will
Mt . . ,.,~1ll1lo IOf 111oro th.•

RAT!S
flor Want Ad S.rvlto
5 •-•• P" W..-d ,,.. lqlfl'1llon

$140• 50

POMrROY
w:c;,.~y,

iock

BILLS DUE FEBRUARY 6TH CAN NOI' BE
PAID AT THIS AGENCY.

.... l11c..,_t Insertion,

·ausiness Services

HOMELITE

COLLECTING AGENCY FOR COLUMBIA GAS
OF OHIO - HAS BEEN ESTABLISHED AT
RIDENOUR SUPPLY, CHESTER.

"-" M ll'vbllcatfoft

....... ., ,.,.ct ony

Yes. We Haw• Th..

MlnhMIIII Char&amp;• 75c

Mgr.

SPI!CIAL
SHOW TIRE SALE

992-2181
Opon Til 6 Daily

"-T.
...... ...!uty,
r"' .utn
,._. . . , ........

''"II cents
'"''"''"''
... _. ...... pw Wonl ol• conaor:utl•o

For Sale

,...,

$1.50 ..... 50. word 1!1lnhnv111, Eo.
DCidltl-al -12c .
ILIND ADS
..ddltlon~:~l 2Sc: Chci"IJ' per Advor-

rl•-•"'· OFFICE

Notice

HOURS
1130 Ioiii• to 5t00 p.m. Daily

Card Of Th.nb
WE WlSH to express our sincere thanks and gratitude to
aH friends and neighbors for
the kindness and sympathy
shown us during the Ulnen

/..

'.

For Sale

INCOME TAX Service dally ••· WELL KEf'!' .carpeta " ' - lbe
cept SUnday 9 ro 5. Evenlnll"
reoulta of ...,war Blue Luatre
by appointment. Jlfn. Sleven
spot cleaning. Rent eledrlc
'Wanda' Eblin, Rt. 2, PomeBarcab&gt;roy. Laurel Cllll Road.
laad.
1.:1-«e

1--.:

-···-·fl.,..

EARLY AMERICAN a1ereo cunsole will! AM-FIM radio with
Wpeed tntennts: m-.
This aet JtiU In warranty.
Take ...,. payments of $6.44
or pay $1011.16. CaD 11112-2836.
1-2Utc

----

KENMORE eleclrlc clolbeo dry·
or $35, five piece dlnelte. f1S.

1'7 HONDA, IIIII !lerambler, Pb.
YARN SHOP now open, rear of
Pbone -.em.
Wllbovllle 6410 lal. 1-JII.IIp
Mason
Drive
ln.
EnroR
for
and death of our beloved m~
knitting classes. For details, NEilD LIMESTONE f&lt;lr )'0111' ANTIQUES, dlsbes, furniture,
ther, Mrs. Osa Boggess, of
Phone T73-ii3119.
I·~P
drii1W8JT We rumJah and mlscellsneous. Call 949-3111Ci.
Syraf:llse. Special thanks ~
deliver. Emmet! W. Shuler,
Dr. Ridgway and staH at VetCIIINCHlLIJA pels. Call 11112Colrtracllng, Pbone ~.
erans Memorial Hospital, the SPOuTING. ROOF'!NG AND
mo.
1·30-&amp;tc
CARPENTRY, now or remodRev . A. E. Miller for his coneling. con\ract or hourly, ,- _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ~·
__
soling words , singers of the
POLAROID camera, model ZIO.
Clinton Pi.,..., Syracuse,
Church of the Nazarene, HenOnly used once. If interested,
Ohio.
1-- p
WARM·UP SALE
ry Ewing Funeral Home for
caHIIII'l-8«!0.
I~
GLOVI!S
their efficient service; also
For everyone........ from 25c
tbe Ladles Auxiliary and
1967 - 12 x 60 rt. mobile home,
Help
Wanted
CAPS
....................!.oa 49c
Greer's Market for the food:
Mono
Pl•n..el
tbr&lt;e bedrooms. Phone 1192to all the people for tbeir WOMAN lor general housekeepSHIRTS __ ......... from 1.99
Ing;
live
in
or
oot.
Call
tiD20t:i.
l-31).6tc
lovely cards and floral offerH•••d
7288
or
217-23112.
1..1~
ings, and to everyone that
SWEAT SHIRTS .........:1.99
helped in any way. God bless
Real Est•te For Sale
SALESMAN. $18,0011 Is not too
yoo all
Brrants
Budret
Shop
much for man over to wttb
Tile Boggess Family
t:ar to take shott auto trips
1-30-lle
near Pomeroy. Air mall1 K..
G. Pate, Pres., Texas Refir&gt;. .
PCI!'ATOES,
Phone
10-2151
Notice
•ry ~. , llol 711, Fort
a...... Prollltt, Portland. GEO. IIOII81'f:1TER. -.r
JITNEY SUPPER at the Sa·
Worth, Texas 76101. 1·211-41p
1..16-llc RACINE RURAL - 5 r0001s,
creel Heart Church auditorbath, furnace, 3 porches, garIum, Mull&gt;erry Ave., ~
age, cellar, arxt Iota of panel111111 PONTIAC GTO, 400 cubic
eroy, Saturday, Fell. I. !rOm Employment Wanted
!~ $7,000.00.
WILL
DO
daytime
babyllltlng
Inch, 4 speed transmlalon, ex4 lo 7 p.m., S]lODSOI'ed by tile
POMEROY7roombrlck,both,
in Reedsville area. Pbone 171&lt;ellent &lt;.'lllllfltion. Phone
c . W. C. The publle 11 Invited.
wall
to
wall
earpe~ Base6311.
1-JII.IIp
:Mil after I p.m.
1-IS-Ife
I-2U!i

1--

ANTIQUES, furniture, dlahel.
m'Jcellaneous. Mrs. .Howud
., .. ·CecU. 1110 W. Main St., Pomeroy.
1.a.tfe

For Sale or Trade

Cre41tol"ll

....

four moutu.
Dated.

tht.

•ld

floiu.claey

2&gt;1th dl)'

of

within

c ........,.

"'~·

.........

.................... IlL,
II F..

•sr

Wanted To Bur

r~.

Phone tiDl#«e

HOME with large yard or acre- P!LI!lC'I1WLUX • ......, cleaner
WIU. DO sewing at home age. Preferably on Route 7 becomplete with attadlments,
zippers,
pocket•. pegging.
tween Pomeroy and GalllDolis.
&lt;Ord winder and paint apray.
hemming, a1teration!l. etc.
992-3165 after 5 p. m.
llepooseBaed but guaranteed

can

1..1lh'ltc

In uu """ CODdllioo. Pay off
balance al 137.41 or tenns If

Fort.nt
VACANCY lor two elderly peodealred, I'IIOIIe - ·
1-a.tlc
FURNISHED
and unfumlabed
ple. Prefer private paid paapartments. ct.ao to JCbool.
lleull. Phone M111011, '173-5111.
Pilooe II!IWUt.
10.11-Ue 1000 BALES of 11"011 bay, lint
I~
IIIII """""" cuttlnp, 41 coola
'l'IIAILII:R
LOTS,
Bob's
Mobile
a
bale. Homer Willard. Pbooe
liiiJSIC EVIilRY Friday and
Court, Syrac1111, Ohio em State 911U350.
I.._
Saturday, Jack's Club on HarRt.
12f,
Pbone
1191-81.
rlaonvUie Rood off Rt. 7.
1-li.UC REPOSSP&amp;IEII

l-2t-3tc

--PIANO TUNING and repairing;

ezperienced and locally recommended. Cali before 9 a.m.

1192-55011.

JI'URNISHED two bedroom
apartment, furnace beat. Middleport, Phone _ . _
I...Uc

1·-P

N011CE
PUBLIC SALE. Saturday, Feb.
I, 12 noon, Mnln St., Syracuse: Selling houaebold 11"011•
ol M:s. Susie Wood oonslstlnt!
of kitchen cabinet, breat!Bst
set, Phil-co electric stove,
Phil&lt;o refrigerator, utility
tables, dining room !luite, two
coffee tables, secretary writ·
ing desk, severa1 end tables,

two bedroom

table lamps,

suites, two stands, two cots,
two iron beds complete, toO·
away ·beet complete, two May·

tag washers, one Uving room
suite, gas stoves, chest of
drawers, one wardrobe, other
items too numfflMJS to men·
lion. Sale conducted by Adams Auction Service, Rutland, auction..,... Jim Adams
and Bill Brown. Not respon·
slble for accidents.

1--

~

Machine with round In
loftily watnut ...,inel. l!lqulppod to zill .... buttonbnlas,
blllld llem, ele. Pay olf balance of •uo or terms. Guaranteed. Phone tiD-2685.
1-1~-~~~e

FOtiR ROOM fundsbed ~
ment. AU ulllitleo paid. Pbone
-.~UM.

I...U. II'VRMSHED sb:-room boule,
bath,- hot ...... - . ....

TIIAILI!lR, Bruwn'a TraDer
·Part, Mlnwlvllle. Pllone . .

-·

Sewinc

1-

alnll; -ly remodeled home,
llrp pard!, [arge- FOrd;

2116 Beeeb

Sl.,

Middleport,

- · Pllone - · 1-1~-~~~e
!119 ZIG ZAG -mg macldne.
'11111 maddne matee bulronForS.Ie
bol•, dams, emb. Tab over
POODLE PUPPIES, AKC Toy
pajimllllo of •.08 per moatll
mlnlalule. m and up. Slud
...
pay $16.111. Try It In )'0111'
oemc. aad 8J'OOID[ng. PbaDe
IIHtG.
11 I trc
bame. Call - - · 1-1~-~~~e
AKC Golden llelrleoer puJI(IIM, 41 LB. SHOATS, l'llooe U?2101.
1-~tc
Ul Alb 81., lllddleporL IMII.
JI.D.IIe
. MIXED HAY and llmolhy. Joe
IT'S INEliPENSIVB 10 e1ea Wlpple. Pbone IIIIU410.
nap 11111 upbolltery will! Blue
1-:19-«p
Luotro. Rent .._., .....
pooer $1. Bater l'lmlltanl.

'•
•

and ONE fACT ·IS •••

I.
2. S,.re(ll wtth won• MOP end

........... p,. ...,. ,.,.. . . .
ssft -•• ts
car -"Ins

-It•

S. A.._.llt on lfuty
~f ..........................ll

to 6
Sat ............ _______________ 9 to 7
S.A.......................... ll to 6

Short Fences
ATLANTA-(NEA)-11 the
Atlanta Braves i ocr ease
their home run production
this season, management
can take a bow .
President Willjam Bar·
tholomay has ordered the
fences moved in 10 teet.
"The move will increase the

home run J?Oienlial of an
teams playmg here," be
says, "and will add to the .
excitement of playing base11aiJ·_ifl :.4-llan~':
' •

BIG

Spedall

C. C. BRADFORD

our
. used car

creal• are
.

THEBEIT IN TIJWNI
DON1 BE SHORT-CHANGED
SEE

Co~
$595

1964 VOLKSWAGEN

2 Dr., Good tina, """' extn good. Neeclo point lillliOIIoh.
....

· ·Ito.~

.....

'

:•'

$695
mo:lel, bucket

1963
CHEVY
II
Conwrdble,
owner

ear~ ~r Sj)or1

local 1

IMta, good Urea, 6 cyL, 3 &amp;peed, door lhl.ft. radlQ.
lar Model ATA - Great price.

Pctn~­

Complete flenloe

1963 CHEVROLEt- Th)• w.k $695

llacine. Oldo

1uqJo1a 4 !lr, lG&lt;oll- car. Y8 e1181no, .POWorglklo, ..,..
diD &amp; boater, J10oc1 lire a, bl.. f1Dioh.

--

AUcnONEER

Crltt Brallfft

I I tfe

1964 CHEVROLET

AIR CONDlTIONING Refrigeration service. Jack'• RelrlgeraUoa, New Haven. bODe

Winter
Retreads
ALL SIZES
2 $22·00

4 • lie

1182-2079.

READY - MIX concreto dallv·
ered rlgbt lo your pnjoel.
Fast BDd easy, Jl'ne eotl-

malell. Phone 11112-31114, Goea·
Iein Ready •
port, Oblo.

MIJ;

Ca., Middle8 ., lie

tor

BUDGET PRICE fundturo em
our third Door budpt lbop.
Bater Famllule, Middleport,
011111.
IS-lie

MACHINBS, repair used to describe the arl of
Jerv!ce, all mHel. WY I- piloting a c r a f I through
Z214, Tbe Fobrlc lbop, P- space.
eroy. Alllborllod SIDpr Seles
and Servlee. We llbarpeD

~.

a..trc

$900

Bel Air 4 door', vs Eng._ std. trana.,~all _ormer; ·ueeUeii"
.,...,.. Urea, eleu illterior, rldlo. 'l'urquaiM lal1h.

$895

1965 PLYMOUTH

V.tiaDt" Dr., 6 c1i,, automattc trana.,IIOOdtlrea1 ndlo and
heater, grey flnlth.

Plus Recappable Tire

Astfogation is the term

SEWING

GENERAL
TIRE SALES

1966 CHEVROLET

$1795
Le••

IQIUl cpL, local aner car, -. car tndHa.
tbU
23,000 mlle11, w-w dn11, like nBWi 318 VI ftllne, 3 apeed

and-.

mao, trona. VIIQ&gt;l Interior, -lnloh, ndlo
Do1wai oquljimlllll. Oae ol tho c-at 116 modela In ea1tern OhiO.

miS WEEKS SPECIAL
TO FIT MOST Co\iiS

CIGARETTE vl!lldlq m"""'and III!I'VIee. ABC -prllaJ,

BALL JOINTS
$4.99 UP

Muon, W.Va. Pbooe 'I'IUMI.
U.Uc

TIE ROD
- S ,21
ENDS... .. .....

2 "'

HADJO BDd. TV repair, boule
"""'·
and · IDslalled.
Jolin lfarrllom,
Phone
..
-.
1U4Ic

1966 PONTIAC

$1895

-.ute eoa.. lG&lt;ol-- ..,-, -

w... tlreo, 1111V1

lrlm with bucket - · • ......... radio, P.S. liid P.B.,IIIIo.
trial., dark blue f1atoh with wldte .,.... tq). A reo! o11uv1e.

TRUCK BUYERS ••• CHECK THIS ONE

1966 c•evroltt 1/2 Toa

Panel

SKYLINE &amp; RICHARDSON
MOBILE HOMES
luy This Month and We' II

MAKE YOUR .
FIRST PAYMENT

IF YOU ARE BETWEEN THE AGE OF 9-16
YEARS AND WANT TO EARN SPENDING MON·

FOR YOU!
SKYLIHE &amp; RICHARDSOH

EY AFTER SCliOOL HOURS PHONE 992-2156

MOBILE HOME$ STILL

\'

Pomonl)'

99~43

Try Our New
AUTOMATIC CAR WASH

75~
1.-.111 Iii ,.rk.d c•r

Beat The Sprin&amp; Rush To

Full Price

OHIO

t)

1100

VS engine, automatic trana., power storing and
bralc•a, rctdio, heater, tpOtlight. ~ike new tires.

VISIT YOUR PAVORIT!
SALESMAN AT

eroy

r Co.

, Y011 Cltemllet Deal•

Open Evenl"s Til 8

SMITH AUTO SALI!S
KAMAUG~,

PH.

(N•t A Drl•o-Thr•)

Business Services

1-I'Utc

n::,~FOR_K_A-TI_E_cR_o_._._________,

BLAEnNAIS

MASON CAR WASH

WINTER

HELP WANTED

I

-t-Core.

AUantie. S11 warsblpa put
IDto port at San FranelJCo
Atri'OMOBILI!l JDnranee ban and a like number at New
--'ledl Loot 111111' opor&amp; York. It was considered :a
friendly gesture.
'or'a UeenseT Call tiD--.

J-.30; M; J-13 Me

......
couen'Y·
-··
,...• ......
Lei~~~
..

Ml6 E. Mol• Pooioroy, 0.

Insurance

.;Jmua1"7

M ftll tiFUllll f'UAI COUif

Tru&lt;l• or
BuiN!- - - To Tho

land Parter, Pomeroy reold""Co or 11'7-3111 OaolFleet'o VIall
vllle call llatloD, wflbee llollIn 1863, two RWisian fleets
dly GJ:Miinlll. Dai1J IIMce unexpeetedly appeared in
with llmlled SUnday ..... American waters, one in the
IJ.alllc Pacific and the other In the

IOHN C. •ACON
Actlftl ,.....,. , . . . .
.. hkl

· -·
-·J.artt•

From the

CIIRT1SS TICCIINICIAN, Le-

an II"Bfluired. 1o me tlleb"

wltb

-......::

llviiMIS S1rvlclt

l:ouat,y. Ohio.

&gt;

Tappan gu
1108.

POIIIIlO't

AP'P'OINTMINT'
. Cue No. JO.GSS
lat.t.. .. Carrol I. Dent, DMHIM
Notice ill hereblt liven that Bo·
nela June DIIH1 of hU&amp;!Ut, Route
I , Melp County, Ohio, baa bod dub'
•Jt~ Adm1Di.~Wabtt or Ule S.
tlll.ti ol Carrol E. Da,.t
doc ..afld.,
hiM of RutlaDd ToWDib1J!, ~
t.lalma

.--.....
.
...
. jl

llllllltlrStrYict

...."' •••• &amp; Allfl

NOTte• Of'

REPOSSESSED Klrl&gt;y vaeuum E N!iT MAIN - Location for buscleaner In excellent condition.
iness, Now has 3 story brick
Has all cleaning attachments
building. Only ~.ooo.oo
... illcladlng bulkr and clemCillller.
FARMS NEEDED
:,
Sells oew for over $100. Pay
IIELEN or VIRGIL TEAFORD
off I pajiumtls at $11.10 moutbSVRACUSE
lfWIII
ly. Pbone 1192-1685.
1-lll«e
l~lh'ltc

111115 CHEVROLET Impala two.
door hard top, 127 aufomalle, BOOKCASE, bed and drellller,
Jleering and bnbo: ' matdted plecel, electric fire
can -~.
14tfe
place, lop and lllldlnllll;

Pop &amp; Jan-Ho Rock

Mn. Freddie Thabet, MaloD,
Phone 773-56SI.
4-39-lfr

-GUARANTEEDPHONE 992-2094

IU W. MAIM

ment, fireplace, hot water heat.
Only ~00 .00.

Wanted
~~·

M.•t ,.,t.l• oln1 ..........
Lllltl'-41 ....... ... ••• ,.t•e.
Fullr lt"'•-.4...... , ~ • lilt

, ,MCORE'S

m

THE RAVENS
AT
HOTEL MARTIN
FRIDAY, JAN. 31
9:30 PM Til ZAM

S5e55

fire-.,.. .. ,, , ,

HOBSTETTER
REALTY

DANCE

OHLY 118.95

Plua 2..1t ,.._.fT••

WIIITE LEGHORN bena, 50
...... Plloae Cheoler - ·

25 ,_, conr D~ICount on IH'Icl Ha
Od ada paid wltftln 10 doyo.
CAID Of' THANKS &amp; OBITUARY

I1!0 '·"'~to 12r00 N~n Sotvr~y

...., au......

71b 4 White S.._.la

12 coltts ,... woul th,.o conloc•

EIPIIIENCED

AIJD UIJil!.: Ek:H MID
EVER!' 01£ OF 1ll0st
I'Rtll'lt£MS AAE. SEtTLED
lU &lt;XM'/14\.f: 10 $!!FfERI

. 1 HOPE 'TH&amp; IWRLD
AP!RECIATES IUIIIT I\.-1 ·
tx)Jt.JG, I

•

�•

•

r,
~ Q.alb
'

.. -

-not! p~VWiepnn. ()., Til.......,., J-., :11, 116f

'
WW~!"t~·
&gt; ..
0

New Bill Would Beef Up
Civil Rights Com·mission
COUJMBUS

(UP~

iudaJ,

Soao. Calvin C.

Jcmooo,

DClnclmatl, and M. Morrlo Jaekll&lt;llt, D.Cievelllld, oald their leglalatlon would strengthen and
expand powers of the Ohio Civil
Riglrts Commission.
,
The oenators oald theT loll
more mQN!O' should be Ktven to
the Clvll Rlglrts Conunlssloo to
operate, but they were ·~ 00tlmistlc about get1lng more

money.''
"Flrst t h i n g s flnt," sald
Jomson Wednesda)'. "Without
tbe laws, money can do no

III&gt;Od.
uwe feel that the matter of

discrlmlnatlon In housing, publie acconunodatlons and emplosment has been bettered
with the Civil Rlg!tts commtsslon, but

~.ere

to be done.

WASHINGTON

Is a lot more

AdmJts p ue bl0
1 ~avv
.J
17'
Abandoned to .n.oreans

Tbe legislation would cover
CORONADO, Calif. (UPI).......
elgh.t specific areas, 1""'16-Uoe The skipper of the USS Pueblo's
tram addit1ona1 inttiatory lnves- sister intelligence ship, the

tlgative powers to including sin- Banner, was testifying and
gle and double family dwellings Cmclr.
Lloyd M. Bucher's
in the civil rights coverage.
eivlllan attorney asked him:
A total of 16 bills were intro·
"After what has happened. do
duced ln the House Wednes- you aometimes feel that there
but tor the grace or God, go 1,
d.,-.
Included were two bills aim- when 1 see Pete Bucher?''
ed at basically the same goal.
u. cmdr. Charles Clark, who
They would establish the of~ took the BanDer successtully m.
.ftce of a public defender. One many missions ott the Chinese
would put the o«tee at a state Communist, North Korean ancl
level while the other would Rua·' · n .............. before the
•
.... ........D...
open it at a county level.
Pueblo was captured, would not
Both bUll were Introduced by answer the question.
Clark' a teslilnon)' Wednesdsy

concluded another dramatic day
·

Education

of

In wtdch the commander
oaval forces operating from
Japan admitted tbere were
(Continued from l'a8e 1)
neither
Navy ships or planes or
very dramaUcally in investAir
Foree
craft in a po&amp;IUon to
menta for students," Yoctatm
come
to
the
aid of the Pueblo In
oays.
time when it was attacked ott
Educators and administrators
••· - - - of North
~alike feel the 108th General As- ·~ ~·
The hearing toda.y goes Into
oembly hao the ~zy to
put Ohio In the lorelroot or the cloHd sessi~ with Lt. Stephen
nation educatiooally. They SAT. Harris. an intel.l1genee officer
generally, that more money in aboard the Pueblo who had a

v-··

state...,pporled Instruction will
pave the W"'f,
Alsot they add that broadened
instruction will help solve the
·welfare problema of tbe IJtate
b,y reductna the d_....,cy on
Pr, PLEASANT - At the anhandruts lrom the local, state nual organbatlonal meeting of
Olld federal goVernments.
the Board or Trustees of PleaS·
ant VallOT Hospital, G. A. Rial
was elected prealdent, Charles
lAMam, Vice Preoldelil, Charleo J, H,yer, Secrelar)' Uld Jack
TONIGHT, JANUARY 30
Fndh, Treaourer. Member• of
the Exe&lt;utlve Cornml- are G.
NOT OPEN
A. BliP, Charles J. H,yer, Dr.
Jack Buxton Uld Carl Adler.
Members also elected to the
FRIDAY &amp; St TURDAY
board for a three year term ue
JAN. s1 - rna 1
T. R. Friar, Paul Childers, H.
"TRACK OF THUNDER"
A. Jolmaon, Jameallall Uld Char(Technicolor)
lea Lanham.
TOIII Kirk • Ray Stricklyn
Tbe hospital Is In the process
AND
of completlna a $1,356,1100 addi''FlRECREEK..
tion and tw.r new doctor a bave
(Technioolor)
been added to tile stall within the
Jas. Stewart + HeiU'y Fonda
put 18 IIIClllths with spedallzy
SHOW STARTS 7P. M.
medical training that Includes

ern 11d YkMreat l'aJWe• tbia
10&amp;r Ilion In 1968, tho Acriculture ~ predlcta,
otfleial• said a turWJ" ol

COUJMBUS (IJPI)-Ttn ~
~
A.

19 Western states last fall

aosdsy b,y lbe Oblo - · TWo
ot the _ . ......... Ullocl ......

MEIGS THEATRE

virtually autonomous oonunand,
of .-.
h·~·'ed

as one
u~~~:~
sc II;IUW
witnesses. After today' a session
the hearing will be recessed

until

bccouae

Monday

Bucher

was said to be exhausted and
-~~ under In

the court itself Snu"'l:l'l.l
paperwork.
Rear Adm. Frank L. John8011
BBld hi&amp; sta1l' ccota.cted the 5th
Air Force and was told It would
two hours more before
planes could reach the •ceDe.
The aircraft carrier Enterprise
was 600 miles aWIJ' and her

be

planes out of rBDD. The treaty
with Japan forbade sending
land-baaed planes.
Clark said he felt the Pueblo

ohould oever have been armed

with two .50 caliber machine
ps which were completel.Y
lnade(lua.te.

said 8 decision
whether to send planes or
wanhips to aid the Pueblo was
In any event a ....~'"" 1 " senaitlve
'""'""
politica1 decision" wh.lch could
be made at no lower level than
the commander-in-cltief for the
Pacltic.

Johnson

Cardiology, Anesthesiology and
General SUrgery.
This Is ln addition to the active stall that Includes general

.surgery, general pracdce and
Obstetrics Uld GymcoiOIIY.

·Handi·capped

plred - · ""'thl ............
elalltw--~
Plvt of tilt ~-·- were
RepJbU...., the ·live

earlier a survey rourd more
than 14 million urea with
"JignUlcant" infestattoo.a ot

Democl'ola.

eight or more grasshcgMtrs

COLUMBUS (Upl) - There
were . . . - Yltltoro to the
Geaoral AaoeuDiy Woclllosdsy.
Larpet cc•••npri ol acbool

_...,....yanL

President

sludaotf ....

WASHINGTON (Up!)- Prtol-

dent Nllron, oont1nu1ng to .,..._

u.s.

centrale 00
Ioreiio poUcy,
will go abroad 110011, probably to
- • Initially with NATO COWl·
I."Uiu.er
tries. He also has made it clear
that Secretary of Stale William
P Ro
will be his chlet for -

ants, am experienced sLVtrfn.
tendents, ideas a1111 procedures
were presented which will help
to improve educational services
for tendleapped chlldren ln local
districts.
A planning session was being

gers

el':t!~:O==~atlonsdirec­
to H rbert G Klein toldagroup
r e
w'edn .. l. .. "I--'d
o1 newsmen
e.......,:
expect, depending on world
events, that he would go abroad
iD the next few mooths . .,
Kl In sa.ld be thought Nbon

"lAI.I

.:OUt:

want to meet with heads

~countries involved intheNortb
Atlantl
Tr t;y
OrganizaUon
c
ea
(NATO) before corudderlng any
trip to Russia.
Several weeks before hll ln~
ation Nixon told newsmen
augur

••• ~ ... ~.

' 111

held b,y Oelecled administratorS
and
consultants today. Thisgrq
laid the groundwork lor estal&gt;-

MAI&lt;E ELJE~FELD$ IN POMEROY YOUR SHOPPING CENTER. WE ARE
OPEtll BOTH F~IDAYAND SATURDAY NIGHTS UNTIL 9. BIG SELECTION~
IN EVERY DEPARTJIENT - FURNITURE - FLOOR COVERINGS
FURNISHINGS- DRAPERIES FOR YOUR HOME~ND WEARING APPAREL
FOR YOU~ FAMILY • .

SALE PRICES

In

at his tran!l on ·~wu -rs
New York that '"you can expect
that oolng the Orst six months,
we will be traveling quite a bit.
I want to get to know the leaders
of other naUoos and I want them
to get to knaw me.,

White House Press Secretary
Ronald Ziegler said no travel
plano hsd been set, although be

Confirmed there ·has been diacusslon among White House IJtatf
members (11 WQrking foreigntra ·
vellnto Nlxoo'.ll schedule.

from troaton

that tho Cclmmunlot delegttiOOII
wUI enter Into the bockotaae
bar,.._ning after the two sides

have rellized they cannot
achieve a breakthrough in the
well publicized pleMrY aesaicm.
American olllclalo today d&amp;nled widespread French radio
am:! news911.er, reports that

oeoqulcentemtal.
The Senate pa81od the resolution Tuesdsy ""' seal It to
the llouoe Wednesdsy, where It
.... approved unantmoualy b,y

52.15 2

DRESS
$5.00

COLUMBUS (Upl) - A but
was Introduced In the Ohio
llouH Wedneoday b,y Rep. M,yrl

Just Received

Special Group Young Mon• 5.95 Slacko.......... Sala 3.00
Mono 7.95 Bl~nkat Llnool Tw;ll Zlppor Jachh .... 5.00
Mon• 4.95 L•nv SlaO¥o Sport Shlrto...............--.... 3.50
Boy• 2.95 Long Sloovo Sport ShlrtL............... - .• 2.00
Mon• 3.95 Long Sloovo Sport Shlrto:....................... 2.60
Spociol Purchan Mon• Flonnol Wo.. Shirtl .......... 3.95
Salol Boy• 3.95 ••• 3.50 Orou Slocko............ - ..-2.00
Mo01 5.95 Cavolry Twill or Corduroy Work Panh 4.00
Final Cl .. n Up Solo Prlcos All Boys Swoaton

Another ShiPlfrt

1Hc01 A~to'1Jtlc .
Electric Blankets

Values to $6.50

colors.

Special Value! Young Mens Banlon Crew Socks._. 69c

to eatablllh a special, tree lleense tag for disabled veterans
In Ohio.
The bW ~ r.,..tre the
state to eotablllh a taa marked
"DV" to ropreoent the dloabled

veteran1.

Special S.ltl Twl1 W Sets
Smooth lilp Serla Innerspring -Mattreu and- matohlng Box sprb&gt;go - In your choice ol Maple,
Walnut or Plaotic beadhoard with oteellrame.

Solo

•

SJQ•D!

Turtle &amp; Mode Turtle Mec:h

Corduroy Slaclts .

;.;.1!
:M

Yaluo• to U.OO Sale $2.50
Valun to $5.95 Salo $3.50

Slim and R.,ular
Yaluos Ia $7.50 Salo $4.50

Sale! Flrescreens ·•· Andirons - Loa Cradles
Gas Lop and Fire Sets
· · Black, Black and Brass
. and ~diterranean Ha,orool Silver.

JUST
ARRIVEDI.
I

La11e shlpme"' of Marvel

0

Metal Wardrobes, Utility
Cabinets. Chinas and
Base Cabinets at Janu-

•J Sale Prices.

•

Special Purchase!

Special Sale!

VETERANS 14EMORIAL
HOSPITAL
ADMISSIONS - Th&lt;rnaa Fauber, Albany; Harald Sauer, RD,

Flanntl Back
Table CoJfrs
52' by 52 .Inches .... 1.39
~~ by 70 Inches, ... ua

../ '

Middleport; C. R. Jorden, RutClarence '1'_.4 New Haven;
Leah Swill, Mldilleport, Oaa Me&gt;o
CUDI. Rutland.
DISCHARGES Gertrude
[)$e, Martha Selrls,J 0 I I I e
Price,~ Jdtnobn,-r&amp;
Bwoch, Allco Clloe, Clara ~
'

'

is from our resular sloe~

o.
.

~-

mUI•'

&gt;J····

·- ·

The current ~sse built '4'
over Allied demands to dlsCuu
first the restoration ot the
DemWtarized Zone (lll\IZ), the
mutual pullout of troops frolil
the South and the exchange ot
prisoners. Rejecting tlatly the
Allied negotiating sheet, the
Communists
are demanding

with ita JnODeY 8lld. its time.
The anllwero tO thase queot1m1 • - clearl,y lhatxuemean11v1 of a
DI-ce.
. .

'
Big aeltcUcm
ol new Pllleruo

new COlora. P~actlcal

-

W.:

~ and every ooe an extra

1190d'llue.
'

'' '

'q

I

SALEsLIPS FROM
-

~

""

I

dU!Ic:ttlt quelllan- whOre
did lbe tlmo 10 Uld- did we
do with II? Thil II a queolkln
wllb nol deplb Uld the IIIIWOr
Ill It lelia Ul we art , .
Wlln ..,. l!Vea.
At the end of oach lllllllb a
lcllool dlilrlcl
1110 look
lllck to 800 It hao diu

volved.
It seems to be that way with
public

lnolltutlooa,

such

as

.a.

..n

lblnp Uld not-eo-good lllil&gt;go MJpeneot Too otten you hear only

-

granted.

!IIYen to the good thlngo. In tlllo
column 1 1111empt to point out as
1118111 piOII thlnp aa I can. I

1969 that oor over 3,1100 studenio 011c1 125 professional stall
membero 1l1lrt ~ In t h e

are pnl1;y much taken ftn

lbout the not.-so.sood ones, Fre1 think 1 caa report honestly
quenlly, Utile real . - to to ;you that ,mmg Jani!OI')' of

feel

that

t1t1a

Is

'

er,. oy·.

-

....

B uch er
AKRON (IJPJ) - Sal. Stephen M. Young. D-Ohlo, today
Indicated the commander ol the
captured
lntolligonce
shlp
Pueblo Mlllld be called
belore the Senate Armed

u.s.s.

Forces Committee.
Young, a member or the

commt-,

dueted In our .llehools. There is
a lot of oolse made ,about the

not - 110 - . ~: Little !• .W

oozy lair

Iince constant battle or education to
bad thlnaa teem to be report.. puib boek the clouda or ignor.
ed vel'1 "'lckly In a COOIIIIUD- anco In order to permit the ounll;y b,y particular parents, lltl· oblne · of _1\!ll'!lfnl to !&gt;real&lt;
denll ill' teadiers 1Vbo are In- tbr&lt;iulb. MaQ1 thouolllda of
miles were oafe!Y vaveled b,y

oor
buosea durlna JII&amp;IU'j',
-·-~s and thou-~- of 1&amp;1
:_.~~
mealo _::-served
~w··-·
w
our - .
lfDat of our otudenta learned
to rtilid .,_,., to write betler,
end ' to do malloemalica belter
· .; ) ·· .
:
durlna JtiiiUU7. Most of our
N"~it( ~
arm,r
teachoro hsd a pleaoant protes( -~TON - DESPI'IF. WHAT COULD BE FORMIDABLE slonal relallooshlpwiththelrotu~ . Pi:ealdelil Nlmn hal - n prellmlnaey steps toward dents, with other teacbera. Uld
~Jill Glo: .draft with an all-volunteer tlfiiiY, as soon ao Vietnam with tile ldmlnlllratlon. Moll ot
~ I• ''auboltt~lf reduced." e&lt;qresa probably woUld have our sledento COIIIllctedthernaelvW~a,..~ of the 4rafl. The 'currentSelectlve Service 88 well in clasaes. Most of them
..... .lrialo1n1:
came to school ...,....., and
. ~ cONHoal- i1eariJ11a In 1187, the Pentaaoo opJI!IIocl · were mllme. llfDst olthem tried
fl an illl..yoJ.,..teor Arl!l¥. clalmi!V, It waalmpra&lt;li&lt;al . hard to learn as much u the1
coat '10 bWkla to $15 bllllon to boost military wapa could.
1M, :pc,jlit of.allrilliiDI -&gt;&amp;h men on a areer basis.
I could lilt IIWIY other areu
·111 whi(ll l could uae the IIIIJo&lt;·
itn ........ to ducrlbo t b o
i&gt;o,d~ end piOII actMtloa CCIII-

lotllard.I/Olullleer

Our c:ook c -·~learning.
s, our "'llOIIU!oUIIl.ll, and
our bu8 drl
.......
·
vera are """.&amp;.Ufi to ckJ
a good job lor ;you, the pile.
The administration 1' expend.
lng Ito ellorto to P&lt;OWce an lmproved total educational program,
So, ,mmg Jlllltlai')' of 1969,
the Melp Local SChool Dislrlct ""' buOT at the lmj&gt;ort&amp;l)t
tasks that haYe been !IIYen to
ll Without too much nolae or
fuos anolloer mooth of amcalion baa gone Into .the - · ·
Now "" start a nell -....-·
~· and
durlna It IIIOlll of the _ . e ill •
volvocl In oor dlltrlct will be
lr7lna to move abeod apln juol
81
did In January. So lime
aues b,y Olld ._,.u,y ._.,..,
mont comeo,
Jlllllar)' of 1969 lo """'' The
OIIJICilimd1;y for your child to
learn with the hours In tile ochool
daTI ol tllla month will aover
l'elunl. We . _ he 1188!1,'thom
well. If JtOt, be will havallluse
the school hour• of Februuy,
1969 twice aa eiflcisotl,y •• he
would have diu -...too.

u..r

Wotl't,.. discuss tllla wllh the
In ,....,. 11111111 Uld 811•
courqe ldm or her to uoe the

·-

t1mo well.

aald Cmdr. Uoyd

completed, the commitbold ''IIIDraulb bear lnp or the eat1re Plleblo lnct-

"'"slimed

tee would

Buchtr lhould be
about "surrendering hU sbJp Ill
lour boors wbeo he didn't even
defend tbe sldp. n
Yomg said, as aocrt as a
Naval lniJiiry Into the capture
of the aioqJ b,y North Korea II

deht. ..

pla,;::-:::-ringlng blast oent &amp;
&amp;nl' cloud mu-"......... ·tiYOr

-lll!ll!!i .....

Welbfnltm orer till ·• • ltd!:
""' apllt, """"

afao

w ..

lbe admlnlatnollai!! IIi
North Vlelbameae _...,. olor-

lnc

'l'hul'sdsy'a

...ror- -

U.S. B52 bomblca were «wr:'=

Inc to .......

North Vfeljl.....

-"""·""'

~
they
_ , laerea"n81Jirrtllled
over the contlmdng reu••wJ ...
..... flllhl•.
LOolp
- ..........
IIIII' - ·
bad
beendenied
larplad

1ut

Norll\ -

clenled tbat

!1ctot0i!, _.

tbe recoeiNII'I..,.

fllllldo -

ol North Vlalnom

the ~

-

.... to -

Pretddaot

Dwight D, Uld 111o
W-lllledS.,ofPip .......
waa to the late Jolm F. KM-

YCllllg aaJd lbe Pueblo Inci- neob'.
dent wao huJnlllallng to fwOhln'a IODior al•
mer Prealdert l&lt;)'lldat B. J - predicted I ..... In Vietllllll . . the IJ2 """ ,lllne lncl- nam b,y lbe end of the nar. 11t1
aald be felt mmo 200,1100 U.S.
_ , . . . _ , I n - v-m

3 Burned
Sen·ously
In Blast
tank oc cbemlcals
at
the Union Carbide plastics

il addlllcin tD

Story to be Checked
would
Juno.

~

In

"""""' -

YCllllg and Sea. WUUam B.
SUbe, R • Cillo, wee here to.
do,y tD pi lint - 011
Pft)bl611la

urt.an

._.u
cJ,to

In

from
the cltlea.
- · ol the - ·
U larger

MARIETTA, Ohio GJPD
Three men remained in serious

Time marches on.

Ito

Tomorrow February of1969 will -

miraclei!J.

Yoo may leel that it's .,..n a bad w1ater - weatherwlae thai Is
-but actually, C&lt;liD,PU"ed to the j'sood old days, .. it's 10 far been a
mlldooe.
It was exactly 70 ~· 110 1bat tbe ~turea In Meigs
c00111y really hltbottAin. lnP~.erw&lt;llll'ingtho - k or Feb. 9, 1899,
throuilh Feb. 11, lbe llti;;zlll"""a .....,... lroJm - boiOw zero to

. · ··.,
. --·1·

-2 ··~··-,· ·' _- . -

·.·

j'

~ - ·,,

•

'

'

The %1 below was offteially rec01_, on 1 govenunent therm&lt;llleter. H&lt;M'ever, Rdtlabd etme ill w'Uh a report of 40 below aad
Pagedte bid a 32. Tbese lOlls were recorded on Feb. 10.
A newopaper account of the cu1d weather period In 1899 stated:
Jured.
In serious condltlm at ...... __
"This Js the coldest weather ever recurded in dtia comuy, as
ietta Memorial HOIIPilal were 1ar 11 We bear of a man who lard 1 IIOiglobor say when he
Jdtn J. Malloy, 45, Parkers- was a bqy tlat it wu down to26 below right here ln Pomeroy, Twenburg, W. Ya.; Deon Wlthom, ty is about the extreme, however.
27, Marleua, and Herman Ham.,The aufferlng in Metes CouiiQ', pDil'llly speeldng, was not so
brick, 35, Marietta.
severe as It ... been wheo •careely halt so cold. The air was dry
Charlos W, carman. person- and shon&gt;, all the moisture lavi!V been lrozen out oil~ The hea'VY
nel d)Jector for the plant, said
exceosive heat had been detect- snow ·ma the grumcJ am bulldlrw:s was a Godsend. h pn the whel1 a
ed In tha tam just before the cmnlartable co~ac IDd made the houses much warmer than they
biOwov and men opraylng the would haw othurirlae beea. n
There were 15 laches of snow on the groulid during the week.
tank with water to lower Its
So, you 100, Baby, It's really DOl cold outolde,
temperature wore lniured.
He oald a cbeml-'
-ctlon
·BASKETBAlL FANS SHOULD-~·- m~•s ~· ~~.
In the ..
. o··'
"""sed
the
heat
•••of·
- hal
~
·~ "' b,y
~dOT, Feb. 15, when a speclal evening
play
been set..,
the
and the blih ' pre11ure which Racine 111gb School Alumni Aaooelatlon.
l'll&gt;lured tile tank, opewlng tile
At 1 p, m. In the hlglo ochool, Mb Uld olxth graders of Racine
molten cloemlcalo. There wao will meet flllio Uld olxth I!Rders of Syracuoe. Immediately followtnr
no ftre, be •ald.
this event, Solltloern District Coaclles Bob Aaioley, Rusa Haq&gt;er,
Couseofthapreuureboolld-11&gt; Jim Adame, Junior Wolle, Larr)'Wollellldl&gt;ulneWol!e,willmeet
""" DOt detel'1llinedl Carman an alumni team .,_.... of Jack - e k , Romdo Salser, Alron
aald there was m estimate of Wolle, Dlek Teylcr, Tom Wolle, Dick YOIIJIIL •Pearuta" Wickline,
d.._s.
Vic Wolle, Dennie lW1 Uld Doo Weese.
Carman oald all prnduc:tion .·
Admllllon wW be 50 centa lor adulll Uld 25 cento lor obllents.
units but the daml&amp;edlhad Proceocla? They'll 10 to the alumnlallliOCiatlon ocholarolo!p fund.
reoumed normal • - b,y
late 'l'hul'sdsy,
LOCAL RELATIVES OF MR. ANDMRS.ErnestJoluoaon,lormerIn lair condition II lllarletta ly ol llldilliPort ~ Cheahlre, recehod ..,"""'""'"Ill W-sdsy.
HoOPIIal were Ernest BrownMr. lid lira. J - are cmftned to CDido...cJark Roolleld, 48, Porkersburi. W, Vs.; pllal In Parilm'lburr. W, Vs., lid have been a1nee Jan. 11. That was
Ranlall Halper, 23, lltlpre; the dOT lbey wai'e ...,.....,. b,y carlloo nwmlde wtd1e vloltiJie their
Charles Tomotall, 40, Belpre, oon lid
llfr. Uld Mro. -Joluoaon, Uld daugloter,
WIUiam Nutter, 41, Parkers- - e , 1n Belpre.
burg, W. Vs., and Arlhur R.
IIGoald ' died of car11oo IIIOIIOXIde ~'Wo Mra. Jolonsoo Uld
(~1&gt;1011 ' " ' - 6)
- · (ContiDtoed 00 Pap 6)

g-

.....,..NI&gt;Ia,.,

Dumping
Problems
Canvassed
Problema Involved In eolab-

l!lllllni

and

opentlng • .......,._

11111111111 cbnp were b,y a ateorlng comml- Wednesdsy,

~sed of - · of the
-era! -~ proaldent&amp; of boarda of -.hlp trua'leea end

CouaO' Commit-

Clark, lbe COOIIII-ln alii- of the Cclun1;y Health
llaparimont.

No--.. . .

readoedllld

II ,., agnod .a nother IJiei!llae
willbeholdiiOOII.
-....la-toComm l a - Clark, were~
Coltrlll, Sc:lplo Twp.; c. O.Flaber Olld Jolll Zerkle, lllddli!IGJt;
Rutlaad ~ Ell Doi&gt;l-. liar.... Wood, -ord; IIQJ r-~
. _ Twp.;
cod&lt;, Olive Twp.; ChariN
Hll, a.uter Twp.j JDJM ..
Un, Columbia Twp.; DQ:Id
blent•, pnaldent of lbe Caltll1
AsooclallCil of ToMIIIIIp .,.,....
toes; Dmald WWIIma, ......
...... proteclor; Ma7qr Cl!to'les
Lepr, I'Umer&lt;IJ; 'lbtlllitlft
lord, ~ Tllp.; D_,lil-.,

o.....,....
i
ww.
s.n ";, .,

sell and Oreri Weart,
Twp.; Olear lWmiDaD&gt;, ~
Tllp.; llarmall ~ - - o f
~ ..... ""'Beulah . . . . .
beaJih dollarlmenl edmlal-· .
alololaat.

:::::t-:::~~~~~ , ,!ii!Blll~!!a.~~~~~.,

·Ferment • '•.

Money Needetltto ,

In Welfare

Finance/....,.t
Progra~"·

'

'

~

'I

Geolrll A~ would proWblWI
. ~ to .,.. Gor. J -(

$

52 by 90 inches .... 2.49
60 Inches ro111d.. .. 2.49

•

DULl&amp;
llii!'S
WASIUNGTON CIJPrj - Allen
w. Dullea, 75, . llll'll)er director
of the Central · IIMUiael!&lt;e Aa·
Olley, died late W....sdsy nlaflt
IJoath waa attributed to &lt;C&gt;IIPll•
&lt;ttlOill lnRijiiiA and p.....

tho

Department.

Ends Saturday

...

j

2nd Floor Furniture

,,

' '

1

Now ol Solo Prlcoo

creuu.... ,

landl Walter HendrtekJ, Ract.ne;

SUITS AND SPORT COATS
all name brands REDUCED 20 to 5K
Men's Dress Slacks, year rOIIIII weiaht "Reduc&amp;d"
lien's Dress Gloves, lined and 11111ined Yz Price

.,\:

·l.Oea,l Sehaol District
~ - · .._ JOIIUOr,y of

a,
..,..-, IIIII lr7 to !Iaure
,
Otil Wbel'e au the ·
Wt ·llJo alk oaraeiVel a much

··-D'' •-• •----';...,

For The
Infant, Toddler, Boys
and Girls···
Thru 12

of Schools-•NO. 76

oozy.

reJected U.S. pr&lt;JpONla that the
- · 1n v-.n,
cooference 4lsc:u:..• tbe nltora- -llalted
the AlliN only plodpol to
an eerly PartJclpatlon lor the tlon of the Demilitarized Zoao, . . -... a l a - - t h e
Viet Cong In a coalltlon cabln&lt;K IJ&gt;MZ) the exchanp of prllo- Camn1111llta eealed tloolr ac·
In SllaoiL
ners, and the "~ ~ra-­
The Allies tooiAT held low- wal" or North Vtetnamose ""'
Laolllo had aaJd In hll
level working .11esslona to start Allied lr&lt;q&gt;o,
Jll"fPred atatemeat ecnt•'"'na
pre_partna tor next week"a
The lalt poJat, howe¥er, alio the al!tr that lbe kOO' to a
meeting. A diS&lt;ret&gt;IJlCY 11&gt;- generated a split In lbe Allied ,PNCiful
IIOlutim waa "to
peared to have _.-ed In the ranks.
arfllllliO the llllllllal witiMirawal
position of the American Uld
A apoke81111D for tile South of all external lorceo lrCllll
South VIetnamese delegatlooo Vtetnamose delegation aald that South v-.n, Uld that lnon the withdrawal of troops tho SaJp ...ermneat .... volveo the withdrawal of North
!run the IOUih.
ollcklng b,y the Manila agree- Vtetnamoae military Uld aul&gt;Following 'l'lluroday•o Parla moot hanunered out by former verafve forces to Nor1h Vietmeetln&amp; wtdch Cll UD111 Prtoldent 4-ndon B. Jolmaoo nom. Aa that ~. the
aller nltbl!all, LOolp llllliiUI1Ced &amp;lid lbe beacll or the olheJ' wltiMirawal of Allied lorcea will
the COII&gt;Jnlmlol olde had eountrlea ftgbtlnK lllu&gt;galde the oonunenee."

~w;J.~
~I dlllrlel'tl~.,. c~lo, and al"!' -lbt!1P"'l!! , 8bo&lt;!LU,. - ·. . . ...~~Puii·--MlW·'"~,
.
.
o
·"'
,
.
lli!!Jilo·of''"'r c:ilolif&gt;'Y, Tho ~hi'\~!~ -and
· ma.it&gt;rlzy :ot our ol!tllaD!o a~ ~uads lrCllll at •-at throe
i_ _ ..._
.
•
1Vllll did . _ . In the Mod&amp;• lliii are not-ao...taflt are thea&amp;
tea&lt;htr
..... llhead
.. ~ ~
8
· ::"t·· ~ - · • ""'I'IUokln I.oeal SChool District In Jan. IIIII pin all the attentlotl. Tbo
art prea._
lOWDa IIOar tllls OIDo River city
., .. ..Jill':llllla, MWJIIll to bllabce tiii'Y of 1969? Well, both pld 1111np _ tile good thlnaa :'~ teawi::;,the lmjJorlant ol17,000. Thirteen men were ID1

THE NIXON ADMINISTRATION haa cut olf

BARGAINS

,TEN CENT~

prlllrit,y for political queotiOI!Iln
tho - . - hQI)I of achlovinll

Go
_,_. o. d Things Hannened
in J.,-anuary
:.a:d:.::
;:;:o:~:
T r
t
•
e~ploded
·*"*

~~

Reduced tor Quiet Clearance
Sport Knit Shirts
Permanent Press

~
. · J,..;•,......,
...,~

It 'Qiorae Jlatlraves, s..L

Jaew-egate

/3tol/2 OFF

ropolO prQiect b,y loanlqr 1 Pllllll&gt; ·after aootOOr broke down. Shown on 1110 job abuve are, lorepOIDIII, Reid Will, kDeellns; Albert Martin, Pomeroy wator BII&gt;Orintendent, In bole, Uld Harold
a.., Nlddltport maintenance supervilor. standlu&amp; at left, and Joe Martin, Pomeroy water
o~ee. - -Photo.

H. Sloemaker, D-Bournevtne,

school aid money to ftve school districts in the South, telUng them
they could have Ute funds, on a retroactl.\19 bui1 only if they de•BRregate within 60 days.
Secretary oC Health, Edueatlon an:l Welfare Robert H. FiDch
said the action was taken, eflec:tlve midnight Wednesday, be~se
'"all or the alternatives -have been e:xhausted" to plD com»llance
with the 1964 Ctvn Rights Act.

Slit

'lt~UING IN TilE
- A -liDO llnalt Cll Weal Ifill&gt;&amp;. Ia Pt111er01 hal bcea ....,.
1111 liiiiJ'I~ lor 1l1llar cJoslarlmenl -kers. The break, which reduced preosure In Pomeroy
aad Nlddl...,.-1, .... I!Jall,y i - nnn'ocla1 alterDooa after three &lt;taT• or digging thrOIJIIh IKJO.mlx
blickQ oG Ml1o-St. Ml6tleport water department employctes gave Pomeroy an aaslat oo the

IT,M;. ond double bod •izoo.l

The Kiddie Shop

allriiCI

Allied and Communist officials
held a private meeting in the
ftnal paris or Thursdsy'o 7'h
hour marathon seuion, the
second. weekly meeting ot the
BJPI,nded Vietnam talks.
The next session of the
conference wUI tlke place
Thursdsy,
lnlormarts said thlt if an
agreement oo such secret talks
would be atruck with the
Commwti at aide the latter
would be represented by Hanoi

voice vote.

to 31,181ldlled and 196,825 woonded.

~

peace agreement on VIetnam.
Ameftcan delegates un4er
chlel - " t o r HOIII')' Cabot
Lodge
wore described b,y
infonnants as OOtrw conftdent

.'

deaths in the Vietnam War had passed the 31,000 mark. Spokesmen
said 190 Americans were killed and 1.277 wounded in f1gbt1ng during
the week ending Jan. 25. The losses pushed total U. S. c.....tties

.11, _...

FRIDAY, JANUARY 31.. 1969

PARIS (UPJ).. Allied dlploo
mata oald Ieday they erpect
North VIetnam and tho Viet
Ca1g ·t o agree to aecret o:uotacta
1000 to break t.tt the C1U'tent
deodlock over bow to - " t e

COLUMBUS (IJ~ The OlolD
House conC\U'red Wednesdll,;r a
Senate resolution loolloo'lnl the
Univeralzy of Cincinnati on Ita

House District seat. Miss Vall~ resll!lled two weeks ago
to be appointed state oenator.

..........,.

---...~-;...-~

Loun(er&amp; and Recliners. Vinyl
and Cloth Upholstering. Visit
our 3rcl Floor Furniture Dept.

(ConthNed lrom Page I)

W ASIIINGTON -

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

111811 SChool.

ter House Democrats IWNVed
his _ . , . _ SUI.
Wilkowski succeeded Marlgene Vallqu- In the 79th

.

/

I

COLUMBUS (Up!) - Artlwr
Wilkllwsld, 40, Toledo, an attorney, was sworn in as a
member r1 the otdo Houle of
Repre..,.,wives Wednesdsy af-

en tin

Secret Bargaining

t~~~~tt?t~~~f~?tt/?:~~f~~~~rr~~~~rr~~r~=~=~:~=~=~=~=~=~=~:~~rr~~ft~=~~~=~=ft~~~t?~=~=

to

•

A SPECIAL GROUP OF CHAlliS
FROM BERKL!ME HAS JUST
ARRIVED.
Swivel Rockett - Rock.O·

News ..• in Briefs
Ultimatum given

. 1

ON CHA·IRS

Oiber Ylaltors Included: Sevoath gradero lrom Van BUren
Junior 111811 Sebool, Kttlerln8;
some sodaJ. lbdlea student•
from Cllnlm · Junior' ll1g!t
School, Columbus, and 30 stu-

,,

•

' ~.
--· XXI NO. f97
..

I

SPORT
Values

~ -~

f • .Tlf

~;

'.

"
•

1

,,

oto---

Abroad

·

lrom lbe ninth

•

grade clvi&lt;l cla11 at Emor8UI
Junior ll1g!t SChool Ill Lakewood. There were 50 of the

Will Go

(Conlimoed lrcxn Page I)

53.65 2 for l7JO
SALE $5o00
. JACUTS, CAR COATS, TOP COATS
tnd All WEATHER COATS

Allllerclrandist

- · wen 0C11111rmoc1 Wed-

,..,.,
at t~oiah
110'J•
J
ISRAEL TODAY ACCEPTED AMERICAN ad!i&lt;o apiust &amp;trlkllalolng acooperadveprogrom!or 1ng back at lraq lor the trial Uld hanging of alleaod Jewlah spleo.
Pediatric a, Internal Mecliclne and exceptional children in Mbhroe, · 1n Jenasalem, Foreign Mfnister Abbe Ebln aaid tbe "'farelal" trills
Noble and Washington counties. 80 on despite worldwide protests. ''But this C«Ultt')' must do nothIng to provide lraql rulers with excu.,~ to inJure !hOm (,Jews) In
HONORABLE ~ON
1raq,
Glen Crisp, Meigs, received
The Nixon adminlstration earlier advised Israel .,.mat venhonorable mertlon ln Woclllosday geance blows which migbt wOrsen the M1dl:lle East crista t~:ttweeD
nlgtJt'o District 14 FFA public Arabs ard Jews and poulbly lead to I nuclear power eOnO.ict..
apeaklng contest at Marietta.
Also, In Wasloington, the State Department aald Wednesdsy thall&gt;ro
Americans, oD e~neer Paul T. Bail m1 hla wife, Elizabeth, both
45, formerly o1 Houston have been arrested without bein&amp; told the
MEIGS GENERAL HOSPITAL
ctoaraes In Bqbdad.
ADMISSIONS - Clarence Al&gt;Tbe ~rature I n - n
derson. Racine.
Pcmel'O)' at 11 L DL Thursday ~~
DISCHARGES - Marl' WeavTbe ~ly bJmn alng 0(
with Ught nin tailing. "as 55 deer, James Stover.
the
C~ch of God at Cheater
greet.
will be tield at 7:30 p.m. SotunlaT.
&amp;
The I.W.ocl group of the
8YOillng
WtiJ be the Adami Trio to
from Raceland, Ky,, a ,.Blue
........ siJie of 1li&gt;IPOi
foo SS.DD
atnaera. Tho Roo. CheiiDr
Br:rant, pallor, an Invitation to lbe pd&gt;lle.

. DOWNIE-GROSS
·: CLEAIWKE SALE
SWEATERS
Sweaters, $7.50 Values

b7 eo.........

lhowed fewer t:Mn 9.5mW1on
acre.a ot rangelaDd were. lnleoted olgniiiCIU!Il.Y. One yeer

Biggs Elected President

1 Group Yz Price
Boy's Turtle Neck

Briefo, News

o

Cover Eight Areas

THE OLE GROUND HOG
WILL COME OUT TO
STAY WHEN HE SEES
THE FINE BARGAINS
AT

(UPJ) -

ably wW have leso t.....,.o
with griuhOCIP81"1 ron Weat-

ClevelaDd, w~ al!erocl a
wort: Geor&amp;e E. Mu- bW tn tile lblae wtdch ~d
tics, ~.Fairview Pork; CorHoo slY• otate unlveroltlea more
E, DaY!_, R-lraiiiOII; Robert pnwer In dealing with campuo
E. Levitt, R.C..-; Robert A, dloordera, bulldlntr aelzuna, Uld
lolamlng, 11-Akron, Uld Cbester dl11"111J11ve aeta.
The bW proridecl that lilY
T. Cruze, R.Cinclmatl.
student Involved In dlaordero
Better Legal Aid
Primary ooneern of the spon- c:ould be ouopended !rom schoQI
- s ..., to provide better lepl 011c1 denied admloslon to UJY
aid to lndlgeal periiOII&amp;-- odllta other state UDJ.verllt;y.
In the Senate Wednesdsy, olx
and jUYeolles.
A stato public derender, with bills were int:rolllced.. Ten gub-plftl'S to cverate in all 88 omatorial 8111101-enla were
counties, woold be paid $24,960 oonftrmed and three reaolutloos
amual17, whUe a countoY de- adoplocl.
Both bouees of the Cieneral
fender, either elected or appointed, would be paid the Aasembly were to hold morning
same as comrt;y prosecutors.
sessions toda¥, then adjourn unRep. George V. Volnovlch, R- til MoodsT evening. •

~T

Legislative

'

Fanlhira anrJ ranehet• pi'CJb..

An omnl- the oame live _ . , . . . They

but dYil rbdrta bill """ to be
- c e d In the Oblo -

hhH

••

to
&amp;l' .....a' II that
GmfJar

Whlte

tooit

IQI ~ ·,·.• -

orer the .._~

. . . --- ..
t~~~~~~~. .,;.-a

-lnllffect~ b7~~. -:.

~:....... llr .... •/ l'liiklooiL
'
Wild ""

the

'

':'Ow.

·Ill·

DlraciDr llaaYor
'' ,'•'

\

I i\o

-

•.

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="695">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11095">
                <text>01. January</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="53766">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="53765">
              <text>January 30, 1969</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
