<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="16855" 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/16855?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-07T10:15:41+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="50004">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/6f3705286dff2bca307ef6568f160265.pdf</src>
      <authentication>ebd3c29fe2aaac55607d0aca386fb3f7</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="53812">
                  <text>1 _

RACING FOR REHAB/LIT AT/ON

WASJIINGTON
(UP0Three of President Nixon's tap
eccamlc advisers were called
befOI'e a eongreuinnal oommit..
tee to:ll.f to explain how the
admlni1tration plans to deal

Looera have a chanee to

beeome winners in a

unique program at
Ohlo'o Manollekl Refor-

matory comblnlnl' race
can and rehabilitation.

wtth

Inmates ln an automo-

rebuilt racer whieh every
weekend in seuon heads
through the galeo for a
nearby dirt track to com•
pole against the beat

wheelmen the area can
put up. Throe go along
as the pit crew-ad always return. Some 100
men have gone through

the course, most going
on to oul8ide jobs as
mechanics. None have
had to return for a re-

BEHIND THE WHEEL lor a race, the mao beblad the
Mansfield, Ohio, Reformatory's combloatlon of raeiDg-~
and rehabilitation 11 Sgt. Jerry Campbell, instrueter of
the automotive class.

azines'' are dying off in epidemic proportions. Teens un aware of once Important "College Humor" as a national
yetdh publication. Many universities, colleges and high
. schools have published their own ''In" humor magazines
and newspapers with heady emphasis on local people and
subject matter. These, too , are drying up. Some blame
lack of advertiser interest and riBing costs as principal
reason for the general demise. Closer to the truttl
Is the basic problem of editorial appeal. Tun- and college -age humor Is tough to
pull off In print. Much of
It hJ automatically off-

i '

ed 1 dlvOI'ee trom Marcia Hf.wk.
1be delendaal w.. reotonld lto
her malden name or Moreilj P.•tor. A ault for divorce llled by

One divorce has been ll!'UIIad,
dlamlaaod, and 811
• . . - on 1 cognovit note lllod
In Meigs County common plea&amp;

.-..r

court.
'The aetlon on the note was
ror $2,982.32 ftlod by Brookline Sovlnga &amp; Trulll Compony,

Pltlsbur~

against Alma - ·
RD 1, Portlaud, Dogelle Carpon.

ter and Elizabeth Carpenter, also
RD I, Portland.
Larry M. Hawk, charglnglfOSI
neglect of &lt;llty, has been award-

• '

tournament team.
Reeelving a trophy ror the

the Kyger Creek cheerleaders:

Grimm, Mary Kall, P a m
Moore, Billy Jo Clark, Coonlo
stl!llam, and Dream• Henson.
Here are the top five aeorers of the toornament:
Player
FG ST TP AVG.
Carter, SW.
18 12 48 24.0
&amp;I.e

Greenlee, NG

13 9 35 17.1

DfS Board

wm

at

Mozart composed his ftrst
soratas during an European concert tour at the age of six.

at it.

VOL. XXI . NO. 209

The boord of dlre&lt;tors of the
Meigs County -f()ollars for

Walker
Stout

Scholars" Foundation wlll meet

Beman
Morpn

18

12 48
12 8 32
10 6 26
5 10 20
6
0 12
51 36 138

Meigs High School building Ia Totals
HANNAN TRACE
Middleport to begin Ill program
D. Daniels
13 7 33
lor 1969.
8 28
10
Members of the board are June Jeffers
8 0 16
Lee, Gary Parsons, KaUe Crow, Chapman
4 0 8
Fred Morrow, Ted Reed, George Wells
4 0 8
Hargraves, Harold Sauer, Hor- -mery
1 7
3
ace Karr, Vernon Weber, WU- Slason
2 0 4
Uam Perrin, Jack Welsh, Mrs. Barry
S.
Daniels
1 0 2
0. B. Stou~ Robert Wingett and
Totals
46 17 1011
Tom Kelly, cbalrman.

HOSPITAL
Admissions Saturday - Addie
Bartoo, !Utcine; Holly Friend, Sy.
racuse; Lowell Cremeans, Coolvtue; Albert Guinther. Middleport.
Discharges Satur~ - David
Icenhower, Edith Klein, Ada John~
8011 1 Clara Bull, William Searles, Jerry Alexander, Raymond
Jewell.
Admtsslms &amp;lnda,y - Eric
Boegli, Mason; Thurman MartiD, ~racuse.
Billy
Discharges &amp;mda)'

.........

FAST·IlASY

-

No riMlnl • No tltdrk:ill'
No ......, ..... liO lift
tNDOORS - OUTDOORS

BAKER

Long-Service Masons
HIGH RISE for tbe birdspurple martlao, Ia lhts eue
-II a dllilaltdsltbtll festVe
ol Grl(tovUio, 10. Tloe eommaalty baa bec!ome a cea~
ter ol lalereat Ia lbe laoed·
eattnc msrtla 11d publlobeo
a anlqae aew.,aper, ,.Tbe
Purple Marl Ia Capital
New1," read by bird. watch~
era across tbe IIDd..
Some people I a u g h at

ghost stories, but they also
do most of their ;-eading in
the daytime.
.,

• • •

The first thing to
with e r in this year's
garden wiU be ambition.

Will Be Honored Here
Ben R. Evans, past grand mas-

ter ot Free and Accepted Masons of Ohio. will join members
and guests of Pomeroy Lodge
No. 164, F&amp;AM, In hooorlng a
number or veteran brethren at
the annual father and son ban&lt;JlOt

this Thuroday at 6:30 p.m.
Mr. Evans, a ~11-known Jackson countian, wDI present 50 yoar lapel pino to Frank H. Johll·
ston, Clarence A. Massar a n d
Charles Theron Russell. Evans
will be lntro&lt;llcod by RIFt Wor shipful Brother Theodore T.
Reed, Jr., 33rd degree Mason,
and p&amp;.st district deputy grand
master or the 12th Masonic Dis~
trlct.
Evans also wUl award 25-:rear

Death ot Mr, Ewing, who had
been admitted to the hospital lao!
Wedne sda.y, was attributed to con~
gestive heart tallure.
Born MaY 16, 1904, he wao the

lapel pins to Sidney L. Grueser, George D. Massar, George
A. Meinhart, William G. Sol!'·
fried, Everett A. Tracy a n d

1011

Benjamin F. Turner.
The dinner, to be served In
the Pomeroy Masonic temple,
will be prepared and served by
the ladies of Pomeroy Chapter
No. 186. Order of Eastern Star.
EntertaJnment will be provid~
ed by Brother Cecil E. Barnes,
Joppa Lodge No. 66, F &amp;AM or
Akron, who will show siides taken by him in Japan.

BEN R. EVANS

The entertainment will close Curd Invites all master Masons
with a "circle of friendship"' and their sons or ~ted 10111
led by Brother Theo L. Smtth, ID attend. Tickets may be pur.
past master.
chased from officers ol PomeWorstdplul Marter Hartwell roy Lodge or at the door.

k
Qulc en

Furniture
Middleport

of the late Benjamin H. and

Allee Downie Ewing. The deceased became Meigs County coroner In 1934 following the July
20th death ol his lather, and had
served in that capacity ever
alnce.
Mr. Ewing, believed ID be one
of the last three non.physiclan
coroners in Ohio, was elected
ln November ot 1968 to a new
rour..year term of otnce and be1!311 serving It In Jamary of this
year. He was Deputy Coroner wtder his lather several years.
Mr' Ewing had become one or
Meigs County's largest property
owners, speclall'llng in commercial real estate.
He built and owned several
Pomeroy buainess locations Including the Ewing Funeral Chap-

each locaL

'

Just try shielding your
far.!e with the telly when

taking a Sunday afternoon
nap, and you'll go right baek
to this paper.

Guerrilltu alrilte al delta lxue

Bridge

Themselves in

Work re!IUmed t.oda)' - at a
speeded up pace - on tho $12
million Ohio River bridge be~
tween Kanauga and HonderiOO,
w. Va., following a 12-day dela,y
as a reouit or a Jurisdictional
labor diopute.
Ed Goza, project I1UUlllger ror
the A1 Johnson Construction Co.,
Minneapolls, Minn., told t h e
Tribune and SentineJ thh morning that construction work Ia
'DOW 1n
go ahead."
Goza said, "In order to make
up lor lost ttrne. we will work
20 hours a daY. two 10-bour
shiftl daily, seven daya a week."
At that, Goza oald It will oWl

ruu

I

SAIGON - FlRING MACIUNE GUNS AND ROCKET grenade&amp;,
communist guerrillas smashed over barbed wire and into a South
Vietnamese ouq,ost .in the Mekong Delta and mauled Its 10 ~man gar~ be hard to make up approximateri.oan, military spokesmen oald tor:ioy. U.S. hellcopt.,r gunshiJ&gt;o ly two mondls of loa! limo dUe
whirled to the rescue, killing 12 of the hundreds ol att.acken. The to three atrllro5 and collapae of
a coffer dam.
rest of the guerrillas fled.
The Jurisdictional dlopute came
The defenders suffered six men killed, seven men wounded and
about
when Local 543 of Con28 missing. The batUe erupted Monday night 50 miles southwest of
struction
and General Labor Un~
S&amp;1gon at a base set \II the days ago to convince delta residents to
too,
}!lrnn·
too, objected to work
1wing away from the Communists.
ualgned to pOe-drivers. T h e
strike bel!311 Thuroday, Feb. 13.
Pletuure yru:/111 10011 in Red pori
HONG KONG - THREE PLEASURE YACHTS opparentiy seized by Cmununilt OliM bobbed at anchor today in 1 mainland 0\i..
neat harbor near Macao, spotted by ce»;stal sailors. Peking maintained alficl&amp;l sUence on the fate of the 15 persons aboard, including four Americans.
Authorities in Hong Kong have slid they were convinced the
yachts had been IDtercepted by Red Chinese ~s while eruiairw
tr-om Hong Kong to Macao. Diplomats from several countries said
atteJI't)ts were betrw made to persuade Petdng to admit capturing
the yachts and agree to return them, with their paaaengers. to Hong
Kong. They reported uno posidve response" to their queries.

Soviellapreod injl.uruJe into Peru

• llpeclal cool-down c.,. for
l'ennanent Preas fabrlca
• 4 C)'l)les, 2 speea
• New Super SURGILATOR"
agitator
• 5 waler lamp, 2 water IM
telectiOM

,.... dryer

• No-Iron care for Permanent
Press labrlcs
• 5 cycles. 3 settings lor heat
selecllon
o TUMBLE PRESS• control
• Super-fast drying system
• Eaay-to-clean lint screen

U~. PERU ~ THE SOVIET UNiON eJIIIanded lulnlluonceln
SOUth America today through a tnde agreement with Peru•a new
mWtary regime. Peruvilm Foreign Minister Edgardo Mercado Jaraaln said the accord, signed Monday. ended his country"slq econ-om~c reliance on the United States. until now Pen's blgest t;r..s..

ing partner.
The pact slgl'lll.s 11the openirc or. new commercial (rort" and
u&amp;he end ot an era in which our trade was chameled in only one dl•
rection.:' Mercado said.

Franldin IChooi bad to IIOI'IIIal
CQLIJliBUS -

ATTENDANCE AT TROUBLED Frlllklln JW~Ior

e~ to rotum to 11101' IIOrfnalloda.Y lolloW·
~ . 'pi,lhl betwe.. ~ ol oduealltllt rt!J)reaen-

HIP Seheol was
'

Dependable Quality-Continuous Servlc..Senslble Credit
Shop Monday thru Thursday, t:30 to 5:00, Friday •ild
Saturday 9:30 to 9:00.

ELBERFELDS IN POMERO,Y
\

lnll 1 moeiJrw
tatl VOl and t lfooP df j~~$1~1.

Cllfl&gt;nl 'I),..., eommuniiJ relation illroctor here, -

18 ~

or Mlyor Ill. E. SOIIIeabreMOr With the - · and oald he lhougllt
uiCIIle ..... ,~·~' t.d bella IN!da.
' .

· 11Mo.meedrw·• • ·held aftsr · - 2'T.I. of Fnnldla'a · ~
w~re oblol!l- ~Gm· !ICi!oo/ ·Mpn~~ay. P&amp;rew or the oludentl...iomftd
IG kelp iholr) llll4tep homo Ulltll "oalo condiUono" retumed.IO the
ocllool. Loot W~ !lfitllfbeDcel bro1!e wt when school ofll.
clalo removed a camoeiOr Pf(lt!ltll' wllh sllltlont.t.
.(Cmt- 1111 Pogo 8)

..

•

AWOLs Tum

looplwl~

WAS~GTON - CONGRESS TOOK ITS F1RST mG step In 15
years todly. toward overhauling the federal tax system by tocusing
on tax..exeowt m·ganizations, The House Ways alll Means Committee
opened the O.rst phase of hs tax~reform hearing~slnto alleged loopholes and lbuses that give preferential tax treatment to many Amerlcalll, mostly in high income brackets.
Nearly 50 witnesses signed \It to testify on tax...exempt foundations. This wtll take at least two weeks. Witnesses Include Ford
Foundation President McGeorge Bundy- a former top White House
aide under Presidents Kemedy and Johnson - and officials of other
large foundations such 11 the Carnegie and Rockefeller Foundations.
The leacl-otr witness was to be Rep. Wright Patman. I)..TeL,
who has been investigating the 32,000 foundations which PA¥ no tax~
es for more than a dozen years as chairman of another special subcommittee. .. I'd like to see all these loc:vholes plugged \It,'' Patman said before the hearings got underwsy. He was readJ' to testify a .. btU a day" could be passed by Cqress to close loopholes
and insure everyone pays his tax uwr share."

•
I

William Henry Ewing, promi.
nent Pomeroy businessman a n d
Meigs Count;y cormer for nearly
35 yaars, died Munday at 3:15
p.m. at the Holzer Medical Center Hoopllal In GaDipolls. He
was 64 years ot age.

e

'liM ......

and uaed for ...,.180 of

,".d::Utian;! m.atteJ'; lnclcdcd:

- The

viU-- - ··

ed to share die ~

- - the

loote!

ed and the Mei.IUI'e1

. , . . . • ._

~ !!II!! !'e!!'-"! ted ttwa ~
Conllrlletlon
Comj&gt;enJ of llkAr·
- The Parking committeewaa
........
1ked to lfudy whether Olllome tlllr II wllllal to should be made a ooe - .....,.. 1110111 to drive JIIIIDI at 1llo tom of U.c:oin HID, 1111 Ia ~
'he third reading ol Ordl- lble to tbo ...........

uent.

...

.

- . , "' llu&lt;lfthe iandllll&lt;llmp x 20 11. molal buu;H\ .:0
·
problem Ia plamod by the health board ol public offalr~
log,
donated
to
the
vU
,.:;.C·
department m Feb. 26. He aoked membera ol ot~UDCU for 101~ eonatruetloa llrm, will &gt;.
goot.lono on ways &lt;t ooivlng the ad CHI the lot adiacel . :·
dump tnue now conti'Oirt1ng the water plant on East k •:'
\

~

~ No. S88

reaardlna

Attending

t he

wer&lt;'

~ ~,pr.

c.-a.

tng of dlaabled motor ve. Clerk J1110 Wal""' oed
a on stree&amp;a or private prop- men FWtz., Franklin Rizer. 1lriMI:

in the village HI IIJPI'OV·

~.,

.
enttri
,.t

, ,.

; :

r

Collin• and RQr - ·

Weather

-

Variable cl~sa and Utde~
c~

In temperatllre todi.J. t&amp;nlght and WodnoldaJ&lt;. HIP _ ,
from the lower 30s to ihllower
40s a!XI lows tonieht in the ZO..

TEN CENTS

TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1969

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

W"'f'W' facing up to las

Coach Rudy Shively's North with 11. John Garnes, 6-lsenior,
Gallia Pir-ates downed the Kyger hod 10.
Reese paced Kyger Creek with
Creek Bobcats 57-43 saturday
night at Mercerville tor conso- 16 points and Chuck Bradbury,
lation honors in the 46th annual 6-3 senior scoring ace of the
Gallia County Basketball Tourna- Bobcats, had nine. Eail 'I'hoolment at Hannan Trace H i g h as, 6-1 senior, had 10.
The Pirates had 63 rebourds
School.
with
Greenlee getting 23, Garne1
The win lert the Pirates with
16,
and
Morris and Dave Clark,
a 7-11 season's record including
6..0
senior,
each had eight.
the tournament. It was the fourth
Kyger
Creek
had 38 rebounds.
consecutive loss for Coa.ch John
Reese
had
12
and
Bradbury had
Sang's Bobcats who Onlshed with
a 10-3 reconi Including the tour~ nine. , The Bobcats had 12 turnovers and 13 personal fouls and
oament.
The Bobcats led briefly in the the Pirates had 22 turnovers aid
first period which ended 16-14 13 personals.
The Pirates hit 21 of 58 trun
with the Pirates ahead. Kyger
Creek also led on three occas-- the field for 38.3 per cent and
ions late in the first half which made 15 or 27 at the Um for55.5
•
f&lt;&gt;UIII North Gallla lead!"" 26-25. per cent.
Kyger Creek cormected on 16
Kyger Creek'slastleadwas27~
or
67 (rom the field ror 23.8 per
26 when Tom Reese, 6-1 senior,
hit a jumper with 7:34 lett 1n the cent and had 11 of.18 at the line
ltlird period. Bob Smith, 5-9 for 61.1 per cent.
NORTH GALLIA (57&gt;- Gree"'
junior, tied it 27-27 with a free
lee
&amp;-2-14; Smith J-.5..11; Garnes
throw and then Ron Greenlee,
4-2..10;
Clark 1-0-2; Morrill 76-2 senior, made it 29-27. The
Pirates piled ""a l().point lead, 6--20. Totals, 21-58, 15-27, 57.
K~GER CREEK (43)- Reese
41-31, with 1:10 to go and led
S..-t-16;
Thmnas 5-0-10; Bradbury
41--35 at the end ot the third
3-.1-9;
Spaulding
2-2-6; Rothgeb
period.
0-1-1;
Buckley
0-1-1.
Totals 16The Pirates raced to a 12polnt lead, 47-35 with 6:36 left. 67, 11-18, 43.
The Bobcats cut it to six points, North Gallla . . • 16 26 41 57
49-43, with 2:30 to go. North Gal~ Kyger Creek • , . 14 25 35 43
lla scored eight points in the last
2:23 for the victory.
Ron Morris, 5-U senior, led
DEMANDS BALLOTS
North Gallia with 20 points.
PIITSBURGH (UPO - EmU
Greenlee had 14. Smith finished
Narick, candidate for president
o( the United Steelworkers ol
America OSW), demanded ~
day that each union district send
htm a cowtt or the ballots la

-r

communlt¥.

Henry Ewing, Undertaker, Dies Monday···,

Daniels. tiT
Walker, SW
Reeae, KC
Here are the

13 7 33 16.1
12 8 32 16.0
11 9 31 15.1
team records:
W L TP OP
Southwestern
2 0 138 113
Hannan Trace
1 1 1011 115
Nortll Gallla
1 I 110 lOt
Kyger Creek
0 2 108 133
Totals
4 4 465 465
Here are the teams' scoring:
SOUTHWESTERN

prove law ertoreement. Chief ~
PuU.::e JW W~r r"'Nl·iW •.::tfvlty at the flrlll ........ 0( the
group In Marl- lui - k.
Mayor . _ oald

Devoted To 11ae lntereda Of11ae Meigi·MOMm Area

.spring coat had better
not let his wife catch him

Pirates Take Third

VE'l'ERANS MEMORIAL

plot

The fellow who admires

.

TEEN TRAVEL BAN: Pressure being applied to state
and federal ontclals to close Mexican border to travel bv
minors. Proposals aimed at slowing d4Jwn nareotlrs trailrit; ask that teens be prevented from entering Mexico
unlr:ss accBmpanled by parents "or other responsible
adults."

n.

•

Now You Know

.something nice in a

Carter

Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at the

r.w-cha.M ut • -40 x 40

!rom Jobn Sau\lliJIO, along Butterrut Ave., to be uaed as a
sewerage system lift lltatfao:.
Council, In oU1or &amp;ctiYIIY, ap.
- e d portlclpotlon 0( the village in the Southeastern 0 h I o
Co\llcU or Govemmenta whid'l
II being eotablllllecl by 12 ooun.
tiea to leek federal fUnds to 1m-

'

FG FT TP

Meet on Tuesday

lollowed b,y action 1-.,g ID the

\

Gla&lt;lys McHaflle aplnot •Jomeo
L Mcllaflie hal been dlsmlll.,.j, with pre)ldloo, on 8PPJic:a'
Uoo of the pialntill.

Editor, rreen Magazine

GONORRHEA NOW EPIDEMIC : 1.4 million cases last
year: 378.500 OVI!T number notf!d in 1962. The figures are
based on a 7Uitionwide survey of more than 1.30,000 phusi·
dans. The actual incidence is much higher.

Joe McDaniel.

Court Grants One Divorce

-By Robert Macleod

one "(armer's daughter'' era Is really gaposJs of the highest magnitude. MeanwhUe, ethnic and racial pre11are
~roup&amp; kePp trying to hush the rree whlsperln~~:, wheeling
.. u11dergrouod ... Here Is a large part or the answer to humor
In p""h1:. Free speech shouldn't be "Intimidated" In the
humor department any more than in/on political matters.
Small wonder humor magazines rold . They don't print If
"like It Is ... Teens or all race and color carry on their own
whisperings and laugh as raueously and cruelly as tbetr
parents and grandparents before them. Repression anyone?

FEB. 19 • 20
NOT OPEN

Patman' • bll!, tt eweared.
would be rar stricter than OIWI/
the admlalstraUon pi&amp;os ID sellli
to ~11 later thla week. l

tell whelher or not the tbe·
ory Involved bas proved to
be a pled piper efrort
measured on the scale of
"like It really Is, man."

•r.Ued

WEDNESDA~ &amp; THURSDA~

Wrlllltt Patmln, chairman of
the House BlnkitW and &lt;..."\\I'Tency Commltlee llid he ww,ld
Introduce &amp; bUI to nmlt tho
UbiJik boldlftl C(IIIJUO"' idea-

America. Trial by time will

preu. Some psychologists claim that sex and aggression
are both exprened more directly than ever before on a
••tfR it It right here" basis. No need, they say, to have U
out In joke·eartoon form. Hurry, though, to add
t at yo•ng people today do have a senae or humor about
their world generally etneludlng polities), but the one-to-

SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.

tc be ot.Lr.i.nud Uriore biOs oo
build Pomeroy'a sewerage system and treatment plant can be
invited, Ma,yor Charles Legar
told town councU Monday nigllt.
Two routine ordinances per~
taining to the sewage system were
oftered by Council Presldent Les1ie Fultz, The mayor said adver~
Uaements for bids to buUd the

O(iir&amp;te

ay item will be publlahed ltrlrt er s and dr aln• in tbe uwerage
on March 3.
system area. Bodl wer• ii&amp;JPl'O¥·
It wu pointed cut that a rate ed In rtrlt reactlne•.
ordinance wlll have to be ap..
FUltz oed Mayor Lepr pointproved before contracts ou the ed out that approval ol -the
system can be awarded.
ordinances 11 necesaary to satOne or the ordinallces pre-- iety requlnm..ts of the Ecob·
ed by Fultz related to eJnl).oy.. omlc Development Admlnlolra·
ment o! a superintendent or sew- tlon which hao granted ~.erage, and the other to reeula- 800 to the project.
tion or the uae ol p.~blte sewReading ot tile ordinances was

Wotk··oll ·· · , ,,. __

limits In a school endorsed
publication. Sex Is much
more of an open maUer
against the pornography
and near pornography In
many national publications
a n d l h e "underground"

oi rruDI tv

Onl.y a few easements remain

both bank and buliMII CCIIl..
pltxet.

teachers are the students
and the students are the
~eachers. P a r e a t s arc
lumped with tllose belnJ' In·
doetrlnated with "social
reality" by the young pro·
test people. This Is the
party Jlne of the student·
activist segment of youn~

LAST LAUGH THAT Hl1RTS: So called " humor mag-

and any "restricted" expression pales In Its Impact

IIDll ~

that allowa U.

Bidding on Pomeroy Sewerage Will Begin on March 3

REVERSAL OF TEACHER ROLE : "Social studealo"
pilchlng the premloe tbat
in matters of protest, the

THI NATIONAl RIPOIIT ON WHAJ'S HAI'fJININO

Frank Stmtn, .Raquel Welch
CQWRCARTOONS:
I Want My MUIIU!I&gt;
Talk,y hocum
Felli With Dudes
Bi&amp; Game Haunt

Keith Carter, 6-0 senior, and
Jimmie Dale Walker. 5-10 sen~
lor, or the champion Southwest¥
ern Highlanders were named to
the Ove - man All - Tournament
Team Saturday night at the 46th
amual Gallla County Basketball
Tournament at Hannan Trace
High School.
The other three members of
the All-Tournament Team were:
Dave Daniels, 6-~ senior of the
runnerup Haruwl 'har.e Wildcats;
Ron Greenlee, 6-2 senior, third
piaw North Gallia Pirates; and
Tom Reese, 6.1 senior c1 the
last place K,yger Creek Bobcats.
Tournament managers, Deamll
M. Murdock, Local &amp;Jporlntendent and Wllfrod L. Dingess,
~ Trace High Principal,
presented the trophies to the
first and second place winners,
the game ball to the third place
team and to members of the all-

CHRYSLEit MINI t.Vl1'H MAXI MILL? Chrysler is mir·
mg mini size with maxi power. Success with tiLe ''Swinger"
r a Dart witll 340-cubic-inch. four·barrel carburetor engme J
helped corporate officials make the decision to go full
speed ahead 011 a "smaller car ." Next year's Dodge and
Plymouth sports cars will be designed to take a 400-cubici nch engine. tops in the field.

Youth Beat

"LADY IN CEMENT"

related

Best Cheerleading Grwp were

NEA's

TONIGHT &amp;. TUESDAY
FEB. 17- 18

and

1n app~h

for ID II'&gt; In lorblddin&amp; blnki
ani buatne11 to merp.

All• Tournament Team Named

fresher course.

MEIGS THEATIE

inftatioo

problems.
Paul W. McCracken, chal.rman of Nixon's Council ol
Ecooomic Advtaera, aM two of
his colleagues were to be the
nr.st witnesses in •even daya of
hearings by the Searte-House
Economic Committee.
The investigation or the •tate
of the economy was one ol
sever1l major matters facirw
conuess as it came blck to
work today from an extelded
Llncdn's Birthday recess. In
another corner of the business
realm, it appeared Congreu
and the administration might
run headon in conflict over how

tive me-chanica ~~:lass Instructed by Sgt. Jerry
Campbell are partnera In
the operation of the
"High Wallo Special," a

; - ~~
ON TilE OUTSIDE for a race, Mansfield Inmates servIce lhe ••High Wall Special." The car lo powered by a
4%'7-eubh~ ..DCh eoglne donated by Ford.

.

"'&gt; .., •.,!"

Congress Wan~ Answers

111o Doll)' Som~Del, p...,_,-M,.U..,.,.-1, 0 ., ~. Fo1&gt;nJ0rY 17, IIHI9

'

.

'

··. ,. . .•A

~

CAR BURNS UP
A car owned by Ronald Spirea
was deotroyod by lire afternoon on old Route 33 aear
the Clark . rarm. Pomeroy fire-men answered the alarm. Later
Monlay, the department was call~
ed to the area near the Perry
Riggs home, FlMwoods, to asslat the Chester Fire Department to fight a brush nre.

Lt's a

J'\.T
1 ~ew

CORONADO, Call~ (UPOWhen Lt. Edward R. Murpby
Jr. went to Ollleer Clllllkl•ll
S.-, tho Navy llid an
Amorlean priiOIIIII' or war niuot
teD tho ~ only hla .....,,
ranh .... Hrill nl.ll'lbllr.
Whon llurpby llrOH lor the
nlth limo !rom 1 Korua Jail
ftilor olkk with hlo own blood,
he had lolmed IIOIIWihllttil olae;
when people hurt you badly
eiiOU[Jh they eon t111ko 1011 talk.
Murpby, 31, Monday told .a
Na&gt;Y court .ot lnqull')' lmo lha
c..,UUOo or the US$ PIIOiblo
aftsr two vlciGOI belli!WI by
Nortll Korean soldloro· he &amp;an a
l'al11 coo!esoloo lha 1117 ohlp
had baru4od 111to Norlll -Koreolt
wltefL
llurpby, tbe .P_.i execo-

IIIIi

,,

.•.'

'

Two persons were bel~ h.eld
in Meigs Count,y Jail toda,y on
charges of being AWOL from the
armed rorces. Both men wtllrully surrendered themselves
here.
Marvin Allen OUer, 164 Pearl
St. , Middleport, reported to the
Middleport policedepartmentald
Floyd A. Reynolds, 22, ol 238
Second SL, Pomeroy, surrendered to Sherilr Robert C. Hartenbach's Dept.
The sherut said an afftdavit
chl.rgi.. brealdJW am entering
has been fUed agains~ James
Games, Pomeroy, in the b.trg.
lory or the Ada HIU'j10r home.
Garnes was arrested alii posted

-

pie by their ftrst names, and was
.. called by them.
Wlliiam Henry Ewing was a
member of Pomeroy Masonic
Store bulldlnga In Pomeroy, Gat· Lodge No. 164, F &amp;AM, Chaptor
No, 80, Royal Arch Maaons; Bosllpolll and Pl. Pleasant_
worth
Council No. 46, Royal and
Mr. Ewing also was chairman
Select
MaSOJis; ado Valley COmof the conatructlon comml- of
mandery
No. 24, Aladdin Temple
Veterana Memorial Hospital
whUe a member of the hospit. 9lr1ne Club of Columbus, the Ancient Accepted Seottl.sh R 1 t e
al's board of trustees.
The hospital project was, in Valley ol Columbus, and of the
Mr. EwinJfs own words, uthe Pllmeroy Eastorn Star chapter.
MaiJOilic services will be held
building project or which I'm
Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. at the
most proud •.,
Effin&amp; as a young man, worked as a shoe shine boy In downtown Pomeroy and later was
employod at the freight depot
express office on West Main St.
Later, he attended the Cincinnati College of Embalming (in
1924 and 1925) following whkh
he started In the undertaking
buslne•s with his father .
COLUMBUS (UP0- A week
In his later years, as h i •
alter 500 welfare marchers
·terms as corooer mounted, he spent a day in the statehouse
came to love Ute "game of pol- rotunda, the House of Repreitics" as it related to his Plb~ sentad ves took initial action to
lie office. Home1pun, plain, of- review all aspects ol welfare In
ten seen riding a modest motor - Ohio.
bike on lnspectlon tours of whatThe House adopted by an 88-0
ever butldi.n,g project he had go- vote and sent to the Senate a
Ing, he callod thousands or peo- joint resolution to create a leg.

Ewing Funeral Home.
&amp;trv:lving are his wUe, Beulah; one son, Ben H., Pomeroy;
three sisters, Janet Gatkte, Pontiac, Mich., and Mrs. Mary Buck
and Mrs. Helen Norris, both of
Pomeroy, and a raunberofnlecea
and nephews.
Funersl services w I l I be
Thursday at 2 p.m. at the EwIng Chapel with Rov. WUbur Perrin omciating. Burial will be Ia
the Beech Grove Cemetery.

resolution, we will show our
commitment and concern to
dealing with the very basic
problems."
But, Democnts were not sileli: on the move Monday night
Rep. Phale D. Hale, D-Columbus, was successful in get.
ling an amendmer.t tacked onto
the resolution. Hale ealled for

The resolution., which would
create a 12--man House~ Semte
stllly committee, woukl requ1n
tho gr..., ID report ID the lOath
General Assembly, not neceas.arUy during this session.
Representatives also palled
their second but of the session

the resolution grew
''out ol a deep sense of frustra.
tion., on Ule part or welfare re-

to get the amen:lment lnchlled.
Rep. Anthoey J. Russo, D-

before

el which he and his rather coo.structed between Mulberry Ave.
and Mechanic Sl. In 1927. Ewing
aloo built and owned the Kroger

Friends mQ" eall at the funeral
bome anytlme.

GOP Leadership Backing
Action in Welfare Field

1....--..-..llq .......

Monday nigh~

By a vote of 83--2, the HouM
ll- PBIBad and to the ~~~
!li- "" temadw approaches and solu- a bUI providing Ia&lt;
dl-ltlm
House Speaker Charles F, tions to Ute problems.
of ab&amp;moned and junked ,..
Kurfess, R-Bowling Green, left
Last Tuesday, Hale was de-- hides.
the chair to speak in support of feated in the House Welfare
The bill was debated on tbe
Committee when he attempted aoor ror nearly hall an hour,

· ·'b"e.-r. ·· -~ · P!l:"'.."...
.Ch·_,a. ··m
•
Op posing
t~~~~d
Retail T.ax
cipiente,

The Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce voted Monday to oppose
the proposed gross retail tax
propollod by Gov. Rhodes "hlch
will be considered by this ses~
sion of the state legislature.
A re!Olutlon wtll be prepared to that ecrect and forwarded
ID appropriate stale o!llclals,
lneluding Rep. Ralph Welker.
The tax in questlm, which rematna ID be apellod out In detall by the governor, or his legIslative leaders, would expand
vocatkoal etlleaUon in Ohio.
Fred Morrow, who preatded in
the abaence of President W 11liam Grueaer, reported on a.n

administrators, tax-

payers and legislators.
"Growing To Disgust"
"This frustration in some
areas Is growing to disgust,"
he said.. "By adoption of this

several

ameDdmenta

were decided and the vote on
Cievelarxl, House assistant mi~ the bill was takerL
oorit:y leader, supported the
The House adopted two other
resolution, but urged immediate resolutions Monday and t.d 10
reports.
bills introduced.
"Let's do the job now. in -Jrls
Three of the bW&amp; covered
session of the legisllture," Rus- election law changes, two with
so said.
health departments, and ODe
urged adopdoo ol .. My Ohio'•
as the offlcial state 8QII&amp;.
In the Senate, two reBGiutlona
were adopted, five gubenatorial appointments confirmed, and
six bills introduced.

New Post

Colors
Ordered

Spring must truly be just around the corner - Ole Dairy Queen
at
Ule
root of the Pomeroy- Mason bridge has reoperM.!d after being
IndUstrial comml- meeting of
the Soulheastom Ohio Reslonal closed for the winter.
New post colors have been orCouneU he attended recently.
MRS. DOROTHY JOHNSTON, ELECTION bo6rd clerk, reports dered and may arri Ye in tl.llle
Posalble
purchase
of
n
e
w
Heart Fund
Christmas decorations in 1969 no wiltl:lrawals by Pcmeroy candidates for nomh•tion in the May for the annual birthday obser"foprimaries.
ance of Drew Webster Post 31,
al10 was disaassed.
Since
no
one
withdrew
there
will
be
seven
Republicans
seeking
American Legim, on Mareh 18
Attending were Robert Jacobs,
Haort Fund Radio Day from
oomination
ror
four
councU
seats
aoo
two
Democrats
seek
the
nomat t h e PomeroY Elemntary
WMPO has been amounced for Tom Cassell, Richard Chambers,
School
Jaek Caney, Beulah Jooes, Rob- inaUon of treasurer.
Tuesday, Feb. 25.
Since there are no Republican of the Mei.gs Count;y Heart Asert Wtngett. and Morrow.
This was announced MoadiJ
Jim Mees am Michael Kay'
candidates
for
treasurer,
either
sociation
ia
Dr.
Harold
Brown.
night
when the post met wl1b
announcers, wlll head the proMrs. Pb.YWs Hennessy or Mrs.
Conunalller D o n Hurmel in
Ject ill cooperotloo with the 1&lt;&gt;E-ll SQUAD CALLED
!lillie Sooll!by, Domocrots,
ALTHOUGH
HENRY EWING charge.
eal Heart Fand Drive headod by
T h e Middleport E-R squad
Paul Caaci, first vlt:e eom-Dr. Horold Brown. Maeo and went to the Ruasell Eblin h&lt;me -ronlly will be oervlng In lhtr had been in falling health f o r
treasurer's post apparently,
several
months,
his
death
came
maider,
reporttd oo plans lor
Kay wUi be anlslad ill' Mro. in the Cheshire area at 7:38 p.
u
a
shock
to
many
Monday.
the
observance.
Acctptad •• a
Marpret NOUIIIIIl and llrOO tal- m. Monday from where Mn.
FROM 6 TO 8 THIS evening,
Undoobtedly, Henry was bien- new member waa Frank ft)rtber.
ent will be presented througbout Thelma Eblin was rento¥ed to
or from 1 to 3 and 6 to 8 p.m. od wllh a homespun type ol hu- George Kaufl was accepted b,y
the day as doMtion pledps are Holzer Medical Center as a~
tomorrow, you can have a tree mor which long will be remem- transfer.
made at the station by phone. leal patlon~
tuberculosis skin test at t b e berod. He """ Melp County CorReported hespllalizod ...,..
oner.
and
enjoyed
a
popularity
Lincoln
RusSell at Veteran~
"II.
Meigs Junior HlgbSchoollnPom.
with voters which encllred over Memorial and Grover Erb at
eri;..e
health cards
a apan of more than 30 years. Meigs General. Elu G~
Uw o!!lcer, . also · told the cau.ct lor American mllltary an.vtlme thlo year are being ur- Certafnb" his was one ol the was named cllrectorofreeN&amp;UCII
Korellll what
they
know men, laid down In the t9SOa lied to tal&lt;e advanla&amp;v or the top records in lenath ol 111rv- for the PQit and wW 1m1111 W.a .
alreadjl- that the 1'1!oblo had 4urlnll the oootrOYOroy over 1ree service. ' " - plomlas to lee.
own cunmittee.
beeo s._.. Ia eap..,_
"bralnwaahlnc'' or U.S. prlao- work Ia lood bootl)~ at the Meqa
Brancldng out from his tu~
A report ·waa. etven oa a n.
. The 1orma1 court or 1i1qu1ry - • In the War.
Cotlnq Fair ID . a t ....., tal&lt;e neral home buoineu lniD com- cent record hop _ , _
by 1 board of ftw odmlralo lDto
that 1001 llop - · [Iaiii . . merelal real estate 10111e years post a n d C&lt;:INMader
the Pueblo's e~~ture Jlft. 23,
u1 think the Ulllerbrlnl the ne01afiU'7 health carda at bedt, tho ellcked
•
1968, cmttouad todlJ with principal mutt be maiiUined- thlo time.
lor Mr. Ewllll!, holdlap maklrw proJect&amp; - .
teatlmOI\Y by two mon Pueblo lOYall¥ . to ono'o COUIIIey,"
have P&lt;JWIL
llefreahmellta '"'" ...,.;i
olllcoro.
11111'111&gt;1' l&amp;icl. "Howevar, lhe
AND MEIGS COUNTY will obAs blo ..-ro will
:rou, Elu Gi1mGro
Bob V~·-~
otate ol the art hu ciwtpd 11411\'e Heart Sunda)' thlo com- Honry llkad 10 keep up with .
Murphy wao tho 1-.r Iince the &lt;edt wu wrtu.n. lq Sluldl1 from 2 to 4 p.m. tho llmol and llhed tbiDII ..,.,
willie" .lor the third phase or What we haYe lo • Vciun!Aiero will be mavtng !rom
-·"
.,... - to
- .._.....
q IDtho Puolllo laqull')', dMil.. with P.IYcholoslcal warllore enviJ'OI&gt;o door-to11oor tllrw(l&gt;ont tho ooun- to
volved
In HI
lll'O.ltell
tho conduct ot tho 82 ofll..ro menl. I lhll* the Coda ot " to «iila&lt;t llmd&amp; On '111elda1 · oed -~~ lila pr_.u.a
and mon durlnc their ulll&lt;inlha Conduct ~·· noiiPJII¥ woll In · a do~- radio IJl'VIl'IDI alao
oil CI!PIIvi!J In Norlh g...., ouch . aa tnviranmelll. ''
will be held OYtr WMllO ., ral• ad . . . . . . botil tbo• proJocto.
Other phano hevo t1ea11 wllh
01 Bucher'• ourrendet of tbo - · · Pll'ltlll and lbelr He tile ~ tho detlilo ahlp'i lhloa~ and .a,~un. Pueblo, Murphy said II ho had children whe have under- tall, tho I n - ollm·
.• Noar lhe \!&lt;incluoion ol hlo been --mine the veoMI ido helrl -illfY are _.lad to
teolilnoov, llurphJ Wll ukacl ieclaiOII Woold Mft baeD be pre!19!1fid on the air. lleadYe1, Melcl·
will Dlln
blo .,Pinion of tbo ~ ot "eaHiaiaUJ the oama."
lng tldo ·
Wive on bdlal! llenryEwilla.
,

Mees, Kay Heading

Day

Game says L L lUUrph'Y

nOecnns

t.._ -

IOU

__ _
---,.........

........ ..._...

1-•

Cao.aiJ

IIIII

�:

~;;_

oiO

!

I

-- ---·· - - •*·•·--·

-..---~·'

~-

-· -·--·-··- ··---

....

···---·--~

3 - The Daily SeRUnel, Pomei'O)'-Nlddleport, 0" Tile-, Felinaey 18, 1969

BID811AT

"Why .Don't You Get Rid of That Tromp?"

EDITORIALS

~

It's not a little education that is a dangerous thing but the vast amount ~f ignorance left untouched by the educataon.
The reason so many coUege students
nowadays are critical of the free enterprise system is because tlley don 't understand it, says a professor , Dr. Ge rald Warren , a DePauw University economist.

ren is this : " They don 't understand the

terdependence that has to orcur in order
to feed , clothe and house millions of people at the level that now exists in America.
They don't know how productive force s
are genera ted . "
They have little concept , he adds, of the
n e ce s s a r y " production. distributlon ,
transportation and aH the auxiliary serv ices that. have to underwrite the mass
production of soap Oakes, breakfast foods
and automobiles.' '
The problem, he claims. is due mainly
to no exposure or inadequate exposure to
economics courses in high school, com pounded by insufficient exposure in college. Only S per cent of aU college graduates nationally ever have a c o u r s e in
economics.
It is against Ibis background that De-

Pauw is planning a six-week summer
program for high school economics teach·

ers, to be financed by the U.S. Office of
Education as part of the recently enacted
EdliCation Professions Development Act.
In a meaty program, 30 teachers will get
a heavy dose of economic data on what
makes a modern, market-oriented economy run, field trips to businesses and industry and instruction in bow to teach
economics.

Thirty teachers is a beginning in one
state but it leaves a substantial amount
of tg;;orance untouched- ignorance that iB
shared not only by young people but allo
by theh panmts , who are oft.en as uncrit·
ically defensive idbout the American &amp;yl·
tem as their children are uninfonnedly
dissatisfied with it.

power elements. Barely more than half a dozen men are

A Cleveland, Ohio, judge is doing his bit
to promote traffic safety . Municipal Court
Judge Lloyd 0 . Brown is not only penal-

town."

A-Steroid• (an abbrevia-

tion or corticosteroids) are

drugs of the cortisone group.
They are helpful when given
to carefully selected persons
with allergies - chiefly severe Qsthmaties in whom
the cause cannot be found or
in whom other methode: of
treatment have failed, The

side effects IJJClude moon·
face, obesity, growth of hair
on the face, weakening of the
vertebrae and peptic ulcers .

to

Q--1 have had an allergy
the u1traviolet rays of the

sun for si"&lt; years. A sunscreen preparation helps me
but I wonder whether using
an artificial sweetener could
have caused my allergy?
A-The caklum cyelamut.e
present in some sweeteners
may cause an allergy to sunlight when used in large
amounts . Discontinuing the
use of the sweetener cures
this type of allergy .
Q-1 have an allergy to
wheat. flow does one get it?
What fOods should I avoid?

A-Food allergies usually
have their roots in infancy.

gested state. In the blood it
set~ up an immune reaction
sirnHar to that used to com -

bat an infection. When the
same food is eaten again , an
attack of astbma or hives
usually results.
With modern food process·
in~ an allergic person is
often at a disadvantage be~
cause he doesn't a 1 w a y s
know what he is eating. You.
for example, should avoid
not only all wheat breads,
crackers and pastries but
also such coffee substitutes
as Post urn and OVal tine,
malted milk, beer, ale and
gin . There is Qften some
wheat flour in breads made
of rice, potato or soy flours
as well as corn, bran and rye
breads unless you make
them at home from known
ingredients.
Before eating any cereal
or commercial salad dressing
or candy, read the list of ingredients on the label. You
must avold commercial sherbets, ice creams, custards
and pudding mixes as well as
Swiss steak, chili con carne,
meat balls, meat loaf, cro·
quettes , Accent, Zest, cream
soups and bouillon cubes .

edition.
Beautilul Marie Louise Carazza weds ManurM Bernardo April
19; Marie's dad Is the courtly
Vincent, headwaiter at Louise's
E. 58th st. spot, oor favorite
nelghborhood restaurant inN. Y.
Favorite targets oC nightclub
comics these days depend on the
cl\Y, InN, Y. Mayor Lindsa,y geto
the barbs, in Vegasit'sDean Martin's drlnldng with the men separated from the sycophants by the
brave lads who swing oo Sinatra

and Howard Hughes, In Florida

kee ballteam Pres. Mike Burke
calmed ltis hippie-hairdo somewhat while he was so prominent·
Iy mentioned for the baseball
commissionership ·•-· But the
greatest baseball czar of them
all, Kenesaw Mountain Landis,
had the hippiest hair-mess in
tonsorial history, 40 years ahead oC the current wild-hairs.

WORLD ALMANAC
FACTS

YOUTH ASKED FOR

rr

Ia that It 001111 so mueh lo eall
This column is for young peo- me long distance, but he might

ple, their problems . and pleasures, their troubles and run. As
with the rest of Helen Help US!,
it welcomes laughs but won't
dodge a serious question with a
brush - ofl'. Send your teenage
questions to YOUTH ASKED FOR
IT, care oi Helen Help USJ this
newspaper.

LETTER TO PARENTS
CONSIDERING DIVORCE
Dear Helen:
This is an open letter to aU
parents think~ . ~ . dlyo_rce_...
Please think 188til\. es~d.q.JI1 U:.

Housatonic River, rising in
the Berkshire&amp; and flowing
through Connecticut into
Long Jsland Sound, is the
site of little trade or trans-

portation, The World Almanac says. Yet the river is
of inestimable value . Removed but not remote from
New York and Boston, it is
the refuge or many, espe·
cially artists and writers.
who draw from the Housatonic not only recreation
but re-creation .

that

day·

For a while both my parenta
tried to compete for my affections, but then the court gave me
to my Mom and my Dad slowly
faded from my lite, Nowadays
I only see him once or twice a
year and then only if I call and
ask if I can vlsiL His exeuae

WASHING I DN NDTEBDDK

Brickbats Force Bird-Bee
Education to Fly Low
By NOEL GROVE
NEA Staff Correspo•de•t

mines lives with the teenage run-

aways who find shelter in JudBOII
Memorial Church in Greenwich

VUiace .... At the Act I restaur-

ant, "'Up Tight" star Raymond
st. Jac(Jles arrived in a floor
lengtll maxi-eoat .... The newish
male yen for longish leather
OYercoat makes 'em an look like
bad Hungarian spies.
Fr·ank Gagliano's City Scene
play clle Mar. 13 at the Theatre
de Lys could start a brand new
trend - oot a single nllde scene,

WASHINGTON- INEA) Sex may be in the big leagues where coverage (and
uncoverage) is concerned in
today's media, but there's
evidence it still hasn't replaced baseball e~s the national pastime .
This theory is advanced
under the formula of public
acceptance. And, according
to a report by the National
S c h o o l Public Relations
Assn ., you can still Learn to
bal and field a grounder at
the schoolhouse but when it
comes to learning about the
bi rds ::~nd bees, the odds are
against you .
Sex education in pub I i c
schools continues to be the
target or intensified attacks
across the country , says the
association in "Education
U.S.A." The move to cur·
ricularize frank and accurate discussion of a subjecl

that has long been the chasm
in the generation gap began

within the past decade. Liberal sexologists got the sub·
ject into the classroom and
the textbooks and felt con·
fident they had emancipated

education, but they had underestimated the power e~f
parent pressure groups.
Within the past six months,

Education U.S.A. reports,
sex education p r o g r a m a
have llecome the center or
bitter controversies through-

out thE- country. Sever a I

citles have been forced to
scuttle or postpone sex education programs, including

Phoenix, Albuquerque, Par·
slfpany, N.J., La Grange,
II ., Salt Lake City and areas

derlul gran&lt;lporenls helped
me when Mom started to date.
Uoually moa! kids are loll w111t
baby litters, or no one.
A child needl -

flll'enlo

to glve them lave. There'• pride

in saying u)dy Mom,,. and"~

Dad. h 1bere~s a little ahame ill
the word .,step, when It comes
before Mother or F~ -'! ~­
"Fve never forgiven lilY par.
enta, and 1 can't. Pve often wm·
dered Why my Dad eouidn't bave
loved me enough to make up for
the other woman, or why Mom
waan't good eDWih to tult hlm.

don't just hate each other.
Seven years ~ m.v folks Bel&gt;arated on the day or IllY birthday part;)'. It was becauae ol another woman. and she ia now D1¥
stepmother. h'• nice enough And I sometimes blame myself,
but Pll never forget the hurt of for If 1 had been the boy my lath·
you

The narrow 148-mile-Jong

at least write a lvtter. I can
only assume he 1 1 got a new life
without me, and l"m not wanted.
I was Iueky In havinll two wm-

in Oklahoma, Washington,
Minnesota and New York.
And in California, the New

Left isn't the only group putting heat on the seats of
learning. The state board of
education has ordered an in~
vestigation or all sex pro-grams in the public schools,
sparked by letters and calls
from discontented paren'bi.
Sex education bas become
a court case in three California ci:ties- San Mateo, SUn
Luis Obispo and sacramen~
to _ Parents filing suit have

charged the boards with Invasion of privacy.
Pressure c o m e s from
s m a II but well-organized
groups, many with ties to ex·
treme right-wing political or·
ganizations, say the school

PR people. John Birch Society President Robert Welch
has already said sex educa·
lion is part of a Communist

plot to destroy the morall of
youth and to keep them obsessed with sex.

Some of the groups fight·

ing the sex classes are P~

pie Against Unconstitutional
Sex Education IP AU S E),
Sanity on Sex ( SOS), and
Mother• for Moral Stability
&lt;MOMS).
·
With s.ooh genius for the
homeapun acronym, it's a
wonder no group bas yet

come up with a name Uke
Association of People Pro·
testing Libertarian Ethics,
Portlcularly In Edooatlon.
You know, APPLE PIE.

er wanted, he might have stayed
with us.

Twice I've tried to got oven
with my rolks but 1 only hurt
myself and .;,.. actiolll dlm.'t
have Ute same effect on 11telr
lives as the divorce had em mine.
Now I'm very eorry ror what 1
did, but there are no worda 110
tell them, jult as there are no

NEW YORK (UPD -

lost records
(11th week):
Team a

~::!~:' """rm IIOIT,Y about the
rm starting a new life In Ap.
rll I'll be married to a
wonderful man. But the wedding
will be awkward beeauae my
grandfather Ia giving me awo,y.
I just can't choose betww.n _.
Dad and my Step-Dad,
A cblld's life is never normal
after a diYorce. Pleue, parenta.
atop ancl look at ;10111' children
before you leave them. No one

can

replace you! -

S.B.H,

(STOP BROKEN HONES)
Dear Helen:

rm pngnant am am 11111m1
to marey the father of my ~
Ibis sununer after the ballY Is
born,

1('1 (

can have a nlee wed-

••C" and I do? -

LEFT - OUT

FRIEND
Dear Frlerld:
Why not oplco up ;10111' alpha.
bet IOUP with '"D" aud u11r two friends wwld be to
you and ''c-' u "B" lt to

"A.''

Confu1in', ta•t lt, reader•?

-H.

QUICK QUIZ
Q-Whert II the oldell
Chriltian church in the

1001

3, No. Carollna (19-2)
4. Davidoon (20-2)
5. LaSalle (20-0
. 6. Kentucky (17-3)

7, st.John's (NY) (18-3)
8. Purdue (14-4)
9. Villanova (17--4)
10. Duquesne (16-2)
11, So Carolina (17-3)
12, Tulss (18-4)

tJ.
14.
15,
16,
17.

New Mexico (1S-1)

10

Wyoming (15-6)

10

20

11

7
7

up to three
hours dally - begins this week
[Or John Tannehill, 16, o( Middleport in preparation for the World
Table Tennis Tournament ln Mutralning -

nich, Germany April 20-27,
Satuniay and )lJnda,y the Meigs
High Junior, U, S. ranked No, 1
ln Boya17 and Under, and one of
the U. S. Men's 4-member team
in tbe world pla,yotra, was in
Cleveland where he won both the
men•s ainglea and men's doubles
eventa In the Lake Erie Open.
The relantng Ohio men's sla-

Unl\&gt;eral\Y ovel'llllelmed Loyola
d Cbleago 103-$2 ai Alhllnl;
Cleveland State downed WJU'IIO
State (Mich.) at Detroit 71-69;
&amp;. Bonaventure defeated Kent
State 8l.SS at Oealn, N. Y,,
Blulll&lt;&gt;n dedalooed FlndlOY at
Bluffton 81..&amp;1, and Wllberforce
hosted a 72-&amp;3 win over Northwood InstiMe (Ind.),

Bobcatt Down Loyola
The Bobcats had to weather

two Loyola rallies to take tbeir

13th

win

In 21

points.

•

Ohio Unlversi\Y held

a ss.so

lntermlasion edge alter skirting
a rirst haU rally and held on
to win de-.pu.e a se~r rebound by the Cbtcaao team.
Kent State was the easy vic~
tim of st. Bonaventure aa big
Bob Lanier reeled oft 28 points

an airpl&lt;lt"'

ern Open_ title a week earlier
when he defeated Tannehill In
three close games In the men's
seml~al event, and DellSWeeJ'..
is, 22, ol Grand Rapids, three
games to one, in the finals.

U.e Is undefeated by U, S.
players In three years or com-

""'"U

Q-How
of ...,h
animal did Noah take with
him aboard the Ark7
A-AccordiDI to !be Boot
of Geaull, the Lord commanded Noah to lake seven
pain of uch "clooa" animal
and one pair of each "un-

with a 123-111 tri&lt;Qh aver the

College Scores

clean" animal.

By United Press lnternatioMl

BERRfS WORLD

I

I

Ohio U. !OJ Loyola (Ill.) 92
Kansss St. 69 Oklahoma 59
N~ro 83 LIU 75
Western Ky. 90 Tem. Tech 54
Maine 84 Conn- 70

Kentucky 85 Georgia 77
Notre Dame 94 Butler 90
Florida 65 Tei'UI, 63

Duke 100 VIrginia 81
W, Vir. 86 Richmond 78
Iowa st. 76 Nlsoourl 74 (ocJ .
SL Bnvntr 81 Kent St. 83
sou_ Mlos, 82 Centnry 78
Auburn 58 Alabama $3

Wyoming 78 Air Force 60
Colorldo, 73 Okla. st. 66
Tulane 79\Chlcqo 70
Colo. 1St. •70 Utah st. 60
Okll. Cltio 112 DeRver 100
Bdgprt 90 CCNY IS

runnerq. Atlantl Hawks Mon-

dO&gt; night.
In the second hill of the NBA
doubleheader at BalUmore, the

Cln&lt;tmatl IlD¥11• knoc:kocl orr
the Elatem Dtvlalm leadlrw
Bulleto 117-112, This rewced

u

"8,

1

'

I

Bill

Star Games .ia addition to more
than 2600 National League

Monday

when

they

rejected a proposal for a threeman arbitr-ation board and then
made their new money offer.
John Gaherin, chiel negotiator
lor the owners, said the ne•
money would increase the tlubs'
rontrlbutlon to $&gt;,3-mllllon.
Marvin MUJer, executive
director of the players association, Aid he will take the
proposal before the players •
executive committee but •Ul
advise the players not to accept

unless the penaion luue Is
resolved but the extent of the
boycott is not yet clear. Not a
shwle regular reported to the
Chicago White Sox" camp In
Sarasota, Fla., Monday but
General Manager Jtm Fannlne
of tho Montreal ~ &amp;aid 11
players have Indicated they will

Seeking Ohio
Cage Crowns

tonight.
Ninth-ranked 5an:lusiQ sooght
its 16th stralght win against
Edison in Class AA warfare at
Norwalk.
Tenth-rated A power Collins
Western Reserve {aced ~orwalk

&amp;rn&amp;

SCORES

By United Press International
East
W L Pel GB
Miami . .. .• 29 25 ,537
s' Paw· al Wlllard.
Mtnneaota . . . 29 26 ,527 'h
East On Threshold
Kentucky • •• . 27 26 .509 11/2
Tamehiil's next tournament
Columbus East1 on the thresh- Indiana • , , •. 30 30 .soo 2
will be the Ohio Open 1n Cleveold
of clinching its third c~ New York • . .. 16 37 .302 12112
land late In March. He will proWest
ceed to New York Cit,y April 12 secutive UPI Class AJo championship,
Js
ldle
until
Feb.
24th
W L Pet. GB
where the U. S. team wi II gather
and compete 1n tne Long Island when it faces winless Rt'emlin Oakland,, , , .42 10 . 808
Open. train there through April at the Columbus Fairgrounds Denver , •. . , 34 22 .607 10
New Orleans•. 28 29 .491 IGii~
17, ancl fly to Munich April 18. Coliseum.
The
Tigers,
under
Coa
ch
Bob
Dallas
.. .••. 25 27 .481 17
He has agreed to stage a proHart.
have
extended
their
winLos Angeles . . 23 32 .418 20lh
feaslonal exhibition in New Albany, Ohio, wltll Dal Joon Lee in ning streak to 41 games. They Uouston . _ •• 17 36 .321 ZSlh
Monday•s Results
mid-March. Ohio, with Lee No. need eight more victories to annex
their
second
straight
tourOakland
149 Houston 122
1 and Tamehill No. 2 on its
ney
tltJe.
Los
Ang.
107 New Orleans 104
three-man team, won the nationColumbus
East
turned
back
(Only
games
scheduled)
al team championships last NoHamilton
Garfield
64-60
In
last
Tuesday's Games
vember in Detroit.
year's finals.
Oakland at Denver
Likewise. top-ranked Class A Minnesota at Indiana
power Strasburg wHl be well
(only game&amp; scheduled)
rested for its initial tourney
test.
place New York to 2112 games.
Strasburg faces the TuscaraFlynn Roblnaon ocored 43 was Valley-Dennisoo St. Mary
points as Mllwaukee dropped winner Feb, 2S at New Phllaw

performance r:ecorU far 11011
hold its 20th Amlversary !ilow cattle, EYerylillll - - Ill
and sale March I in the Junior bee! cattle will lOUD rr- IIIII
The Ohio Herefor-d Assn. wtu

W L Pet. CB
Baltimore . . • 45 17 .n&amp;
New York. • , ,44 21 '671 , /,
Philadelphia , .40 20 ,667 4
Boston ' " " 36 25 .590 B'h

Fair Beef Arena at the Ohio Ex- program.
positions Center, Columbus.
The AaiOdatloit'l llmUil 'llllew
The lugest consignment In quet 8Dd tnOOtlnl wW Ill Mil
years will mark theamiveraary. m Fr~Qy' Pmlne. Feb. 21. Ill
The 50 animals oonsigned in - Stouffer• Univerltf;y tin • .,.._

Detroit. .• • • 25 38 ,397 21Jh
Milwaukee , , , 19 45 .297 '1:1

most ready for &amp;ervice into any will bel1n at 1 p..m.. folie ...

Cincinnati , , ,33 30 ,524 !2'/,
West
W L
Los

Pet.

GB

31 .591
'1:1 ,59t 4lh
31 , 161 13
35 .435 14lh
39 ,391 l~h

FlL, and General Mln~ger Spee Seattle .• _ •. 23 41 . 359 191.12
Richardson of the Hooston Phoenix ..••• 14 48 •226 21'h
Astros said fa't has signed 29 ol
Monday's Results

814 Squads

Two of the United Press International's Top Ten A/1 ard A
clubs hit the tournament trail

Eoat

Angeles , .42
Atlanta , , , , ,39
San Fran. , , , 29
San Diogo. , .. 27
report et West Palm Beach, Chicago, . , , 25

the 50 players on the Houston
Roster.
Gaherln said tlle addition of
the $200,000 proposed by the
clubawners could be used
effectively to increase pension
benefits, disabllity, widows'
benefits. life insuran~;e and
health care beDeflts. He said
players' pension fund
the
"already
is unequalled In
professiOIBl sports or elsewhere."
"Dim Prospects"
Miller said the "dim prospects lor 1 rapid settlement wiU
probably lead to the elimination
COLUMHUS (UPD - In the oC any meaningful spring
course of a feverish month of training this year•• and added,
activity, 806 of the 814 l1ass AI' "the 1969 baseball season is in
and Oass A teams which start- jeopardy." The players have
ed tournament play won't be threatened
to
carry
lheir
around at the finlsll,
boycott into the regular season
By the time March 21 rolls if an agreement is not reached.
around, there will be only four
In Tampa 1 Fla., Clncinnali
Class AA and four A teams still Reds' General Manager Bog
In the rumlng for the state Howsam spoke tor most of the
championship.
owners . when he said the
The fina.ls are set for March players "'musl reallze there is a
21~22 here at Sl John Arena.
stopping point in their deAlthough tournament play be- mands. ''
gan m a limited basis last
weekend, it hits full stride thi s

week.

By United Press lrUrnational

elude approximately 25 bullo, tangy River rood. A traclal-

p_..

pll"ebred or commercW herd by dte barQIC at 1:30.
and 25 heUers suitable for re- ed speakerforGieevenlnaliC...
placement heifers or for excel - Wiese, Mam1nc. i:Jn., eutiZIQr_
lent FF A or 4-H projects this vice-president ol the ~
year. Breeders lrom 0 h 1 o, Hereford Aund•tlon8Ddla.~
Michigan, Indiana, and Kentuc- inent breeder of HereiDrd -...
ky have oonsisgned animals.
Ue.
Judging the morning show,
starting at 9:30 a.m. with Dr.
Pardoned Plrlle
Randall Redel, Ohio state Univer Jean Lalfite the pirate
sity. The sal e will start at 1

p.m., with the auctioneer, Em- aided in the successfui deof New Orleans in,1115
erson Marting, Washlngtoo Court fense
and received a presidenUal
House, presiding.
pardon ror his past crimes.
A new innovation thi6 year
is tile Ohio Hereford Assn. 1 coTHE DAILY SENTINEL
sponsoring a clinic with 0 h i o
Of.VOTEDTO INTEIUf OF

Milwaukee 123 AUanta 111
CinciMati 117 Baltimore 112
(Only games scheduled)
Tuesda)''S Games
P hoenix at Boston
Atlanta vs. Cin at Cleve
Los Angeles at New York
Philadelphia at San Diego
Detroit at San Francisco
Chicago at Seattle
(Only games scheduled)

afternoon oC Friday, Feb. 28,

starting at 1 p.m. in the Junior
F 'a ir BeeC A:enaon the State Fair-

Deal

Later Thi• Week
WASHINGTON (UPD -

The

JUCH.UW

:0. QWEN, pt;at.IIHU

Ctw11..-~~

i' ....l o~&gt;W•bu.,..,._~ ... T'-~

\ 'alky l&gt;...,.,. llilll eom.an,, llt ....,..,.~a.,
1'.....,1"0! . IIIII&lt;&gt;, tl759. S.IIMII Ollie~ , . _
!1'02- ~ ~~~. Edltarlal Pllolle t9~ 151'.
'ito&lt;OOI'Id , ............ paki.P-..,,OIY&amp;
"'-llor.l •hoenl• 11111 .., ....
~Ul.C.lt.gher, Inc., ll F.ut fbi St..,""- y ...
UIJ'. N~• York.
'&gt;UI!Krlpttoa ..re.: Dell.,.l"'lll · flo' eiU'tler

- u.. .,...._

grounds,

May a.....,

~A&amp;EA

State University and the Amer ican Hereford Association, on the

Art Lintoo, o( the American
Hereford Assn., Department ot
Research, will be the featured
speaker, foDowed by a grading
aession with calves, and a work-

oCficial unveiling of Hall of shop session on the keeping of
Famer Ted Williams as tbe
Washington Senators' new manager is expected to take place
Wednesday or Thursday after
attorneys work out the financial
details o( a deal which also wlll
make the former slugger a part
owner of the club.
Williams, who batted . 406 in

....... .allaW.~ 45-.-~ - - · ·

.cl"411&lt;t &amp;I tho ilall) fcntlJiel (llflcoa. . . .. Sill
~_.. .,

Ill. 1ll. Tlwee ..-llo, N.ll. 1tr ...._.

.......,., t4,u. T'llrft....,..MM.s.tur;
p r l .. lndldn

~

Loa Angelea. The Bucks pulled
away mldwOY through the final

quarter after holding a 96-85
lead at the start of the session.
Jim Davia led Atllnts with 31

QUIK'nEASY

you can install your

I

1941 and compiled a lifetime
.3-14 average during his career

I

ADJUSTABLE WALL UNITS

with the Boston Red Sox, is
eJQ&gt;ected to sign a contract
calling for $100,000 a year in
addition to obtajning stock
worth around $900,000.
The ofler was made by
Robert Short, who purchased
the Senators in Jamary for a
reported $9-million.
The Senators have ttnished in
the American League's Second
Division for 22 consecutive
seasons and were last in 1968,
••

delphia.
Granville, rated No. 4 in the
Class A poll. is the onb' team
to have faced tournament competitian. The Aces beat New ~\]­

up to

ballY 57-50 last SatunlOY .nd
points.
meet Olentall!lY SaturciOY at
Boltlmore jumped off to a 33- Westerville.
21 first quarter !Old against the
Royota and led most or the way
until CIRClnnatl moved In front REACHES AGREEMENT
for }IOOd with 4:30 left In the
NEW YORK (UPO- Tho New
York Tlmea Monday announced
Robertson paced tbe

BaltimOre. which had ita four.

Frlgh Dckon 76 Rider 7Q
Rhode Island 71 Brown 63
st. Anslm'.i 85 Mrnnck 70
Emerson 80 Andover 1nst. 70
New llamD. Coli 99 Nat.

game wlnnlJW

~treak

it had reached an a&amp;reemeli: to
purchase Golf Dl.gest lnc, 1

The purchaae price was $3

stopped, million

pluo

an

addltl~

was led by Earl MOIV'oe's 30 payment or as much as $1
paint..
million cootlngent LPOD Golf
No other games were played Dipst's profits durtne the nert
MOIII!a7 nigh~
three years.

Hawthorne 87

Blul!lon 81 Flndla,y 61
Cleve, st. 7t
Sl. 69
Alfred 77 ill111ur 75 (ocJ
East. Ky. 91 Austin Peoy 82
Gustavus 83 Angaburg 70
SW Mo. st. 77 SE Mo. 63
Cont. Mo. st. 85 Rolla 7Q
UCLA 53 Wash. 44

w..,..

- - - - -- - - -

THE
DOWNING-CHILDS
AGENCY

!

1

INSURANCE

CHOICE OF 2. 1-4 Dr, Groon finish with gr••• in·
,.,lor. 1-2 Dr. Hlp. Gold liriioh with gal&lt;! interior,
· BOth power equipped, both locolly owned.

~ REAL ESTATtMUTUAL FUNDS

.

;.:dlt &amp;¥Aft lANDT801'01 ~I·S

"You'li Lite·~~~~-- Jklll-".

- -

I

'

,M·~· ~I·'

...,.,,

'*"·

•,

OVER 100 YEA~$ OF SERVICE

. ' 992·2342

1

Tlratl StMW

""

the Hawks -l'h lengths behind

I

l!oootoo ....~ ~ IJTMr H~ .o;i ........I 0..
.....~ tl. 50. 8J' . .u: 0111 ,...- IJII.III lib

Royal ottaek with 26 polma ll1d
Tom Van Arodale acklecl 23. publishera or Golf Digest.

Baltimore's lead over secon:t.

65-0ids 88's ••••••••••••••• Y011 Choice $1495
'

but ''8~· ~· DOt

"C'·

CINCINNATI (UPO -

Jackowski, who wrvtred in
three World Series an:l four All-

Ose~~r

\

1MB

like her. We all 110 over to ·sea
her toatller a1 we .... o ·n e
ear betWeen us. "A" buill an
to '-B" and tlll.t make• .
mad, oa he takes off, 8Dd Pm

ML Umpire

players

Hardening Of Poeitiooa
'I1le aD.rarenl hardening in lhe
postUons of both sides came as
the advance guards ol playen
bepn to arrive at various
spring training sites. Few ..me
players are expected to report

__ ................. ___

-----

g

Q

- - - - - - - - __ _ .. lf.CIMRl"'
'1"'11 ..... Ill 1111. . . . . tel......... ..._.., Dloto ·-•IC ~ t - N......... Apoll 10. lilt.

.

A" c11M1111't like me or "C." a.

prefer•

Retires As

game.

lbrGUgh

~·A''

Jackowski

Koreru~

By United Preas ln!A&gt;I'JIIdonal
Division cellar. Abwt the only
The MUwaukee Bucks haven't thing they still have going lor
had much tun during their ftrst them is a chance for the last
season In the National Basket- laiJ8h at the contenders.
ball Association.
Milwaukee threw a .PI.Ir of
They have the secoo:l worst jokers at the Western DIYlslon
record among the league's 14 to start oil the week, upsettl~
teams and they're flnnly first pltce Los AI'Welu on
entrenched in the Eastern Sunday an! following that "'

Dear Holen,
1 bave a IJirl lrlond I'D call
.,A,. and two boJ b'lend8 ru .can
C." · I like

•il•

uert a spring trainine boycott
b&gt; acklirc $200,000 to the $1·
million players pension fund
was referred to the players by
their anociation'8 executive
director today with a rec:omw
meRiation to vote "no."
The owners len the next.
move in the dlspute ~ to the

ll

Bucks Upset Atlanta Hawks By 123-111

jirat launched jT(IfTI tltt deck
of a ship!
A~n Nov. 14, 1910. The
llrlt take-off was made by
Eugene Ely at Hampton
Rold1, Va.

the 1111'11 yNr, but I HOPE I'm
Wl'OOIIl - H.

11

'naai'D .... hinl •
_.., ..-ir of
!"

who leads drills, isometrics, calistllenics,
the U. S. World team, now of and footwork and stroking drilla.
Cleveland, did oot compete ln Ogimura concklcted clinics for
tlle Lake Erie Open. He 11 re- top American players last sumcoverilig (rom lq cramps mer in Columbus, Grand Rapids,
whlcb _nel!!'ly c.,.t hlon t~ Eut-- and LOS Aqelea. "·

mer South

pt foraial .. Somebow I doobt tbere'l enough real

"B,. aad

·"Oh. oil!

Games during a 17-year major
league career, retired Monday
because
of an eye ailment and
Cleveland state guard Mike
was
replaced
by Dave Davidson
Campbell stole a pall and conoC
the
Eastern
League.
verted It Into a basket In the
"Bill was unJversaUy respectlast seconds for the win over
Wayne ~te. The halttlme score ed by managers, coaches and
was tied up 37-all, but Cleve- players." said NL President
land (10-13) waa down 62.,';2 with Warren Giles in making the
eight minutes left. The Ohioans announcement. "Umpires of his
Blulll&lt;&gt;n led all the way to experience and caliber are
pick up Its fifth Mid-Ohio Con- Impossible to replace,' •
Jackowski, 54, was purchased
ference win ln eliht: outings and
by
the National League from
eighth In 18 overall. Jim Langthe
American Association on
halo paced Bluffton with 25
Aug.
18, 1952. An Army veteran
points. Findla,y, led by Frank
M.lnnig•s 22 points, is 1-7 and o£ World War n, during which
he directed the athletic pro8-IS.
gram at Ft. Devens, Mass. ,
Jackowski started his career as
an
umpire in 1946 in the Class D
Errlclent Calculator
Blue Ridge League.
One of the most efCicient
Jackowski also wnpired ln the
calculating devices ever in Class c Florida International
venL!d , and the forerunner
of today's computer, is the
League and the ClaSI B Interabacus, which has been
State League. He llves in North
used throughout the world
Walpole, N.l-l, where he was
for over 2:,000 years.
born in 1915.

mer atate champion John ~en­
World team members are concer, 28, of Colwnbus, t h r e e ditioning themselves for t h e
atralgh~ an! teamed with Tom world tol.lrney Jn a CQUree preMorgan, a state-ranked deten. scribed by world-lamous coach
sive player (chopper) of Cleve- and former world champion lchland. to win the doobles.
aro Oglmura or Tokyo, Japan. Jt
Dal Joon Lee, 28, the for- Includes dally running, shadow

tbolli!l"

love here lo earr.Y you

:.::··- ---=

Gerald

games,

McKee paced the attack with 20

g}es cbamploo, he delested for- petition,

shape by then, ond I
on\)'
orange blolsomo 8Dd a van Jlilnl.
lied vlrllnifll. I'm wiDIIUI to do
wltbaut them, but I want to be a

1 yoo care about eacb other
man)' ..,. BDdfor-

15
12

Heavy

ru

ond the baby,

New Mex St (21-2)
Loolsville (16-3)
Ohio State (I 8-4)
Dllnols (14-4)
(tie)

NEW YORK ( UPO- The major league clubow-necs' olter to

Mondo¥ night action, &lt;»00

Grind Begins for World Tourney

problem Is tiJat my molller
an! 1oture -.fn.lal&lt; are
making plana wllhaut •••u•ultlatl
my wlobes. They say I can'tbave
a white formal ""'" or a btc
weckllng, Why not?
be 1n SOod

ditUI7

350
298
246
184
179
156
ISS
84
54
32
30
27

19, (tiel
Columbia (17-3)
Kansas (18-4)

ding,
l(y

real bride. - MOTHER A NO
BRIDE-TO.JIE
DNr M IOid BTB:
Wbat ldDd of molller would
brand her child Ulealtlmate simply to have a btc, fornlal wed·

Points

2, Santa Clara (21-0)

world7
A-The oldest Is Qal'at es
S.llhige In eaotem Syria,
dating from A.D. 232.
Q-When

In parertheses

I. UCLA (35) (lll-0)

:,:;.

What a lot of 11m - lol
l like "A" too, but if I 1D to
see her without bringing "B"
o10111, she gets mad. What should

In

Tho
United Press International ma- for, the Boonles. Kent State (1).
jor college basketball ratings 9) was led by Tom Laaodlch
with first place votes and won- with 15 polnto.

best prospects now would seem to reside In
the force' and originality of his Ideal, and the degree of
success he can bring to the musical chairs Urban Affairs
subcommittee which, on a borrowing basis, uniquely employs key cabinet members almost as adjunct. to the
White House staff.
The White House establishment has developed, of course,
not througb the caprice of portlcular president. but through
their need for more information close at hand, for more
sharply honed Instrument. of decision-making, for a com~ but sure-Bring engine to stir tbe glacial bureauracy
·
mto real action.
Even as scholars like Peter Drucker are saying that government II falling the action test, Richard Nixon Ia relying
more heavily than any predecessor on his own stall as the
big prod. As suggeoted, cablaet chiefs In shifting groups
are being used as allles In this driving process, rather than
as leaders apart,
In the foreign field, predictably, tbe President has had to
signal again and again that Secretary of State William
Rogers, bla old friend, was not being thrust aside for Kissinger, the In-bouse adviser.
No 10111lble viewer of WI preoldeiN!y eould ln)a,lne
Nlsoa ever would let the lmpreodoa Cetl bed lhlt Ro\~
II liOl No, I, Nevertheless, Klsobtcer'o aellvltleo obow
1o be a hanl-aosed player who dkllllt come to Wao•btctoa
jlsll to lola In • theory DOW and thea, . ·
Named early, be picked what one astute outaider calls a
"hil!h·powered" staff, bigger than any Inside foreign affairs
staff before, weU-struclured toward de8nlle goals, not the
~=~t..,:'!l
~~). p~nnlng funcl!/"1, .\~ !9. th~ . "
This planlllng grotip may aot supersede 'pll!ilners In State,
Defense aad elsewhere. But it is plainly a strong rival.
Planlllng, reviewing, funneling Information and advising,
Kissinger Ia glvlnl( many key men at State the 611, how·
ever comfortable Rogers may be with presideatlal reassurances. The Nlxon·Klsalager dismantling of a supposedly
potent state poUcy-maldng body, the Senior lnlerdepartmenlal Group, hao not helped their nerves.
So, everywhere the White House "generalists" are hard
at it, aU trying 1o be generals and take the power and
statuo cllnglajt thereto. Some have made It others still
struggle uphill.

left watching .. A.. and "B" ••••

By United Pl'esa lntemadonal
Ohio State went Into the
.stretch tonight at Dllnola with a
6-2 Big Ten record and hopes
of pulUng the title out or UJe
next six games.
The Buckeyes' latt six game•
f1 the seaaon are with cont'erence foeti . Iowa, Norttnrestern.
Michigan State, Indiana an!
Michigan foUow. Ohio state
trails Purdue by one game ln
the Bil Ten baWe.
Sixteen other games were on
tap tonight, including the Marq.Jette at Xavier contest, Ohio
Wesleyan at 'Aahland, BaldwtnWaJlaee at Detroit, Mulldngum
at Capital, Wittenberg at Otterbein and Urbana at Michigan
Christian.

College Ratings

Moynih~'s

tt•s the weather and Jackie Glea-

son.
.,Peace" composer AI C a r-

!

some doubt.

CJDCTDRIS MAILBAG

-- Ste~oids 'Are Helpfui
To Selected Asthmatics

I

Ua....,, INuble-sbooter1 drafter of blbo lito lela! form; Dr.
Artbar Barao, close aavlser, cblef e~pedlter and framer of
demellle pnlfomo; Dr. Henry Kl18la1er, major forelp
policy adviser; Bryce Horlow, adviser and llaloon to CoaJHU; Ja•• SeiH, lop political aide.
Whether Dr. Daniel P. Moynihan, chief of the Urban
Affairs Council, alia belongs in this power cluater caanot
yet be determined for certain. He is deeply entwined In
White Houae processes, but It will take more time to show
what his leverage Is.
Writers Raymond Price and Patrick Buchanan likewise
are men of influence whose full weight in the White House
setting Is still to be gauged.
Moynihan signed on with a great potential for power
through a wide sweep In urban matters. The late Interposing of Burns, with his good link to Nixon and his test of
everything by the economic filter, cast that potenllal in

The Mortuary , Embalmers and Allied
Funeral Service Employees Union has be-come an affiliate of the Seafarers International Union .
It's not suc h an odd link-up as it sounds ,
says United Transportation Union News ,
reporting the event. After all . the M, E &amp;
AFSEU are the boys who ferry people
across the River Styx.

I

I

men have taken the largest pieces so far :
· Robert Haldema•. eblef of .tall', emee ma11111er, appoilltrnentl IHJ'etary; JohD Ebrllebmaa Haltltman't mala rt·

Seafarers All

Liz.a Mlnnelli's due for a brief
ho!lpital stay .. .. N. Y_ graffito :
"Free Commander Bucher" ....
Beach society (avorites this sea ~ Haven't rWl into one character
son •. • . Rest of the year LUy who thinks that star-crossed comlives in exotic Ft. Dodge, Ia. mander deserves p.mishment ···... .. Lily's son Is a photog in And the Navy brass is bruited
Vietnam for Walter Cronkite' s about a s virtual bullies .... Girls
TV show .•.. In Vegas for h t s have a rough time becoming jock••.• BW hadtenout-of-townguests '1\Yhere Eagles Dare" premiere, eys in the good old U.S. A. but ln
to house for the week a! the post- Clint Eastwood pressed a hotel England gals bent on becoming
ponement .. .. Henny Youngman elevator button and when his bus drivers are getting the same
arrived at the Camelot via snow- floor lit, sighed alood, ••That's male pJtdown .... They couldn't
plow .... Driver recognized Hlm.- the first time my nwnber'soome be any nastier than N. Y. bus
drivers.
Bellman Peter Birko at the Hotel New Yorker sure loves his
34th St. neilbborhood: he•s liv...
· ~ ed across ·.r.e:itriet fi-001-th€-' ·
'· llotel for 30 years .... Comedienne Jadin Wmg, entertaining at
Irene Kuo's Lichee Tree chow
meinerie during tile Chinese New
Year (Year of the Rooster) fes By WAYNE G. BRANDSTADT, M.D.
tinl, is the widow of 9\ubert
producer Edward Duryea DowQ - W b a t are steroldo? If an infant is given food he
ling .... TV clown Rmee Taylor
Why are they given for aller· is not yet able to digest, it
and her actor..playwrigbt husband
gy? What undesirable side may be absort-ed into hi_s
Joe Bologna expect the heir any
blood in an incompletely dielfeets do they have?

I

been a plgeon·holer of men.
on a stall where big chunks of power are at slake, these

izing speeders , he ' s rewarding them- if
they are found wearing seat belts at the
time of the violation.
Cleveland police have begun noting on
traffic citations when seat belts are in use.
A heavy-footed salesman was the first
beneficiary or the new policy.
The judge flned him $20 and costs for
speeding on the city 's -shoreway , but suspended $5 of the fine because he had his
seat belt buckled .
This is one city where it pays to wear
your seat belt, in more ways than one.

up since 1 hit

\i

Jnvolved.
The "generalist" tiUe Nixon applied to so many of l)ls
appointees during the early shape-up in New York Is fading. It was never more than a device to give him a chance
to see who ftt where. The President, aides say, always has

Seat Belts Pay Off

ny and the latter paid for his
pickup with a few jokes ('•Take
my wife - please!")
Lily Damlta's One of the Palm

I

WASHINGTON &lt;NEAl
Not yet Into Ito second month, President Nixon's White
House stall already can be clearly scanned for Its real

Rock (The CBS Bldg,) says Yan.

BY JACK O'BRIAN
Silly Kirkland
who did her nude thing tn t h e
usweet Eros" stage pla,y will go
starkers again in the .. Coming
Apart" Cilm •••• The big storm
postponed the wedding of Tom
Harrington, son of society (anCl
Dick Nixon's) bandleader B Ill
Harringtoo, and Ann Hoffman

~I

NEA Washington Cormponde•t

four-tetter word, or one homosexual . •.• The boys at Black

NEW YORK -

)i

ly IIUCE II OSSAT

The students' main hang-up, says War-

tre~endous amount of interaction and in-

'

6 Emerge as the 'Powers'
On the White House Staff

The Mountains Of Ignorance

\

&amp;beats Romp;
OSU at Illinois

20th Show, Sale Will
Offer Fifty Animals

Pension Issue
Is Unresolved

AII-Sa.n@

SWITCH to a modem flameless electric range
if you are presently using an old fashioned
flame -type stove. When you do, you earn up to
a 25-doliar ($25.00) range wiring allowance.
LOOK for a ran1e wiring allowance coupon

with your electric service stetement. Toke II
to you! olt!,tric applianc;e dealer today.

SIGN your coupon and fill in the required in·
formation . Your wiring allowance i.,recteeM.

able through

April -~.

1969.

CHOOSE a fiameless electric r•n1e with a
self-cleaning oven. Sat the cleaning controls
and I~ oven will clean itself .. . automatically
... electrically . .. lor l~s than ten cents and
no effort from you.

COLUMBUS ANO SOUTHERN OHrO ELECTRIC COMPANY

illiiliiiiia;;;;;·111
• lllllliili..
IDiiiDijliLE.PORT, OHIC ·
'·•

I

'·

-:-&lt;1
......
-~·

�'

. ,.. Dallr

'~

•

sssSJ ....

POIMI'QJ-V1ddlepcrt. 0.,

n.ICIQ, F'tlbrw.rl' 11, tNt

POLI..rs POINI'BIIS

Verdict of
Innocent
Returned
PT. PLEASANT - A verdict
ol lnnoc:ent was relllrned after
IIIOI'e ihln \ wo hour. dellberatlon b)' a petit jury MoOOay In
11&amp;..., Cawrty Circuit Court In
the trial crtmlnal case, West
Vlrllnl&amp; VI. E4wanl Lee SlmJ&gt;klnl, 28, Pt. Plee.sant, on a
chlrae or eontrlbullng to tile de''-""" or a t6~ear-&lt;&gt;ld o h 1 o

Het• Helpful Hints

In Methodist Service

Are Aid to Semiblliid
ly POLLY CRAMEl

PT." PLEASANT - Nine poroona won bopdzed In the Bello-

DEAR POLLY- While caring for a partially bliDd~
I learned some things which are a big helD : Serve rei~Ur
food on plain white dishes. It shows up betfer lild tliil ••ml~
blind often confuse the pattern on china wllb lbt fOOt!. Ule
a deep. dark bowl lor food lllte cereal that caUl for mJlJt
and the person can add the mlllt as It shows on the lldea
or the bowl. A dark rug at the bottom of Ugbt stairs (or

mood United - • clwch
bopdllr)- ~ - - b)'
Rev. Cbarlea FJ"Um before a
ot membero or hie dlurch,
Helil&gt;ta United llfathodlll Clllrch.
Tho MrYieo featured a IIIU day
II the nonb IKoln llreol church ·
which aleo entoro o WIQ' ~ actlvll;r thlo week.
Win-One el. . s members lhar-

light at the bottom c£ dark stairs) is an aid in knowiD.i that
the bottom has been reached . I thought it m!gbt !Qlereat
you to know that one of your faithful readers, and learners.

- liZ--'

is a lady of 85-never too cld to learn. In fact, this friend
as: ked why I did not double-space this letter .-ROSA LEE

ilrl.

ed In a potluck dlmer, ldllbliJy
IQ'le, In the dmreh dining room
Moaday at 6:30 p.m.

••Polly's Problem,------.

Tuoeday nlaht. llell!bto ymth
wiU be hoot 1o the 11&gt;1nt Pleaoant Dlllrlet Ymlh Fellowship
II 7:80p.m. Weclneeclay ovenln&amp;
the prayer and Bible lbldy SI'OU.PB
will meet at 7:30p.m. ThoTbureday IDOl'lllns Bible aludy hour haa
dla....Unued, It waumoomced amdly. Tho Friday afternoon

DEAR POLLY - Is it true that culling paper dulls
pinking shears ? If so, how can they be resharpened?
- MRS. T. MeN.

Tbe state' a case was present-

ed by Pro~ec:utlng Attorney Mike
!llaw wtille the de!enae was pretented by Attorney Donald Klng-

DEAR POLLY- When knitting a sweater or dress, after

11')'.

A total ot seven witnesses testified during the d.,- with t h e
State witneooea beinG Mrs. Marte Smith, Dejlllty Sberill Robert Ubi, Dejlllty Sherill Millard
Halstead, State Police Trooper
R. E. O'Dell aod Beverl,y Smith.

Teltilyin.e for the defense were
Muon County Shodfl Troy Huffman and Mrs. Bernice Hayes.
At the dose of Monday's trial, Judge James Lee Thompson
tUaD'llaaed the petit jury !or this
term ot court, stating that all
otber ce.aes schecktled ror this
wook hid been dlspoeed or either
bt aettl~&amp;ment out ol courtorcont!Juonce.
Jutora aenlng Monda,y were
John c. Mayes, Laura AM Flowen, Foreat Nibert, Rhoda F.
llall, Eleanor Gill, Dreama Aelkor, Darrell 0. Slone, Byrd PatteriOD, Eleanor E. McCOmb,
M&amp;rYin Bennett, Sr. , Rcae H.
Llaoomb aod Lucy L. Culleo.

Melp

Property

Mason Area
News, Notes

Nine Baptized Sunday

"

each piece is finished I
place it under the cushions

on my sora. It is nicely flattened and out or the way
until I finish the entire ~ar­
ment . I hit on this tdea

pradlee for children 13 years
old and )'&lt;lURger will be held at
the church at 4 p.m., Mra. Beverly casto directing.
MOOlbers were asked to remember the February 24 birthday
or Mro. w. H. (cam.) Cbase,
wiU be 82 on that dote. Members of the Parkersburg Senant's Quartet will tina in t h e
March 9 evening service.

whiJe knitting a dress and
did not want to carry
around the first finished
plece which was the entire

front. - DOTIE
DEAR POLLY- I want to
"'"'
!eli Debbie that the way I
have lint-free glasses is to lightly starch m.y dish towels
and then iron them . This also improves the lcoks of the
towels when you have them on the towel rack and they
dry quicker Cor t.he next use.-IRENE

Rev. Frum also reported on
his two day visit to the Eastern Region _,~~ng or Civil Air
Patrol chaplains at Andrews Air

DEAR POLLY- I want to tell Debbie. who has trouble
with lint left on her glasses after drying, that 1 have been
keeping house 29 years and have foWld that using paper
towels leaves glasses, silverware, mirrors, windows-almost anylhing-sparkUng and lint-free.-ESTHER

Foree Base, near Washington,

D. C., il&gt;toputweek. ROY.Frum
II &lt;hlll&gt;laln ~the local CAPunlt.
A .....,, Dirt or the blt&gt;tlsmal hrvio» ~ Involved

three - · of· ..,. family,
all bopdzed at the ....., lime
b)' the poalor. They were Jameo
and Morjorle Co,peioart a n d
James, Jr. Other1 bopdzed Included Mrs. Ra,y ~) 'l'hornlal, Mho Lori Harrla, Mlaa Rox·
...... Cottrill, Harvey Blaine aftll
Tommy and David Groer.
Reconlly, perfect attenclance

and lalthtul attendance pins were
presented by church school superintendent, 'l'homu BallO)'.
Faithful hooorees, who missed
one .!lladl,y, were Irene Newlon,

~~~-··Roxanne~
and Earl c.nrod. Perfect elteod-

Jloog

ance awards tncluded two for 21
years each to Fl~d Cole and
stewart MeDormltt; VIrgil Luttcn 17 yeara; Russell Newlon 14
yeare; Raleigh Roo.sh 13; Janis
~ch 12; F;lolao Roosh 6; aod

Tommy Conrad and Davis Greer
2 each.

Hol..r Medical Centor, Flrll
AYO. Vlaltlow hour&amp; %-4 and 7-8
p.m. Parents cnl7 on Pediatrics
Ward,

Admlaalons
Publlc:ation of .admhalona is
suaperded unUl further notlee.
lllrtha
Mrs. James 0. Miller, GalIJI)Olis, son, 2:42 p.m. MorrJa.y;
Mra. ·,J'ame• L. steele, Jaetuon,
son, 2:54p.m. Monday.
Dlacharcea

vancn N. Lambert, Ramoo R.
llolnprner, John D. canterbury,
NUs C. ChrlsloJI&gt;herson, Mrs.
Charles W. Eeds, Ookley W.

Mr!. Ke-meth St!!!ley, Ma!O!I.
la recqHtradQI fr&lt;m betrt sur.
PLEASANT
HOSPITAL &amp;el'l' at tho Holoor HOI))IIal.
Mill Bomle Staat&amp;, Letart,
ADMITTED: Mrs. L M. Johr&gt;soo, Pl. Ploosant; Mre. Ruth has a~:cepced a JIC)JiUan •• ward
C.~tsell, OOllpolla Fercy; Ran- clerk In tho Pedlatrlco Dept. at
dall Ml,-ea, Aahton; Mra. 11leo- Holzer H011&gt;ltaL
doro Nibert, Gallipolis; Mri.
Sgt. and Mro. 11ey1&gt;.
oldo
and
Keith
wW
leave
on
Herman stme, Leon: Clarence
TuolldaJ'
for
their
lane
In
Eau
Emrick, P1. Pleaa&amp;rtj ~aries
Lund, PL Plea~nt; Mrs. Gl~ GaiUo, Florida.
Mra. Ra,y Proftltt wiU lolw
Escue, Charlestonj Edward Dun1..,, Pl. Pleasant; Mrs. 'l'homao on Thureday for a visit with her
Jones, Cheshlrej Mrs. Daisy da\llhter and s~ln.law, Dr, and
Bonecutter, Gallipolis Ferry; An- Mre. Robert IKtBrtde ari1 family
drew Wamsley, Pt. Pleallnti at South Band, JJidlant.
Mrs. Horner Newell, Pt. Pleasart; Mrs. George Horak. PomeHAVE YOU HEARD?
roy, 0.
DISCHARGES: Aodrew MccallllteT, Cllftord Shane, Frank
Murray, Mrs. Harry Flowers,

Fisher, Raymond A Folden, Mrs.
Alene Head, Mrs. Remer D.
Lowe, Jr.,, Miss Karen L. McFarland, Mrs. Jacl_t B. Peter- Mrs. Jchn Kaleel, ~8. Michael
son, Kimberly LeGrande, Gary Wamsley, RossWinebrenner,~
Turner, Mrs. Richard E. El- na Lltchneld, Larry B&amp;iles, Mrs.
liott and infant daughter, Mrs. Hiram Potter, Blanche Arm·
Delmar G. Hawley and htt.nt strong, Laura Bane, Mrs. Dar·
daughter, Mrs. Sidney L Smith reU Herdman, Sarah McClinand infant daughter, Mrs. Larry tock, Mrs. Bll11e Shafl'er aM
daughter, Apple Grove.
D, Stewart and infant son.
BIRTH: Mr. and Mrs. James
Jones, Pt. Pleasant, 1 son.

TO PLAN REUNION
PT. PLEASANT - An organFOUR ARRESTS MADE
izational meeting for the pur·
PT. PLEASANT - Four ar- pose of plaMing a class reunion
rests were recorded at the ooun- of the 1959 graduating claaa or
ty jail during the weeken:L Paul Pcint. Pleasant will be held on
Allen Booecutter, 21, PL Pleas· Thursday, February 27 at 7:30
ant; Roger GaO Wamsley, 21, Pt. p.DL at the Tu-Erdie--Wei :ManPleasant; Wort:IJ.y F. Leach, 20, or. All members of the class
PL Pleasant; Herman Holcomb, are urged to atterxl this meet..
19, Ft. Pleaaant, each charged lng. The reunion is tentatively
with intoxication.
scheduled for this summer,

Bait•'s Radio
Auction

Wool. 1:45 _A.M •.
WMP0-1390

On your dial
&amp;...,.

r.

''

CNilh

Now Many Wear

FALSE TEETH
WI.. More Comfort
To overcome d.lacomfort wben
dentures aUp. slld.e or looeen, JUit
aprtnt.le a uttle PASTDTH on JOUf
plates. FAB'l'UI H holds d.enturea
f!.rmer. You t~at better, tee! more
comfo.rtabltl. PABTBB'I111ll alkaline
- won't 110\U". Halpa cbtlck plate odor.
DenturM that flt .:e euenU.l to

"abl••-

L.,.,,

,,.,, -

.......... --Ste,....
Cla1..... , - • Wall ' 1 u~t ~~

C.rtl Talllea
Stoela - RacU" T•,• ll:toeonlafa Plll-• - Lewn
fttl'llltu,. -

c::ela, Olive.
Lloyd E. 'Ibomas, dec., to

Ethel Ulomaa, Cor. AfL for
Trana., Rutland.
Ethel Thomas to Ohio Power
CO., 94.14 A., Rudari:L
Okel' Boa• Sr, Lucy M. Boggs
to Gene Congo, Hazel Congo,
Parte!._ l.ebtoon.
GUbert E. Mcllode, Mable McDide, Mary Louise Ours, Gere
ald E. Ours, Evelyn Watts, David Watts, Eroestine Manderbaeb, Harold Manderbach, Alice
B. Mlddletwart. RusseU Middl~
swart, Altc:e M. Mldclleswart,
Gladys M. Mustard, Chester H.
Mustard. Ernest B. Staley, Jane

L Staley, John R Rosenbalm,
Mary Alice Rosenbllm, Frank
fL Allen, SUe M. Allen tc Mclloaculh co., 941-h A., Lebanon.

McCoy Services
Being Held Today
PT', PLEASANT - Funeral
Hnice for Mrs. Louisa McCoy,
to, ~ Arbuckle, Mason County,
WUI be held todey 2 p.m . at the
Warner United Methodist COOrch

.t Elmwood with burial to follow
in die church cemetery.
Mrs. MeCoy Is sunived by a
daushter, Mrs. Lola Ferrell,
Dunbar; lour sons, Luther ot
Glendale, Pa.; Ray 0( Leon; Irs
Ylri ()( Charleoton, and tile Rev.
lloY McCoy or Ripley; a step.
doulhter, Mrs. Ora Jividen ol
Elmwood; a step-aon, CJa.ytan
JleCo:y or Pemberville, 0 h l o;
three listers, Mrs. Louis Hart ..
le,y,
bwa; Mrs. Harriett
Ilea, ~ Pemberville, and Mrs.
Liddle C&amp;lto, Ripl~y; two brother•, Nath&amp;D Sayre of Tlp1on, and
Bon lllir• ol ElmWOOd; 12 Rrandehl,klr... 11 .....t-crandchlldroo
and ..,. ueot.«reat-crandchild.

'11,._,

t;r...Ha; the roilwow car in

wlaii:lo 1M ormutic• """
~

9to

Nov. II, 1918,

rn,:aerwd?
l'o~
. ·· ·- waa housed In
tbii.
· del lnvalidea in
~.,.

I'UII ·

11127. when It
~~to a 1pe&lt;lal
lheiUIJ Ji Compeigne wooda.

m'

•

....

Shalf - TOJ Chaata

hab-

The~t•a

· a f.w cl tha ,.._,

we ha.,. soltl

OR

lhe Ralllo Auctton,

healtb. ~w- dentl.at; recularlJ.
at all d.rutJ counten.

Get PAS

Ten Students Tapped

'

)

TIJE!DAY
WOMEN'S Auxiliary, VeterIRI Memorial Hospl.tal, 7:30- p.
m. 1\leeclay, hollllltal cafeteria;
film on the heart to be ahowni
refreshments served.
SALISBURY P. T.A., 7:30 Theaday night, program b)' Mrs . Homer Holter; Girl SOOut TrOop
100, opening ceremon,y, foorth
rrade parents to llei'V8 refreshments.
BIG
BEND Nlilibborhood
Meeting, Girl Scout Council, 9:30 a.m. Colwmus and Soulhem
Ol&gt;lo Electric Co.
GROUP 11, WOMEN'S Aaeoclailon, 7:30p.m., homo of Mra;
Betsy Hork;yi devod.ona, M r a.
Dwight Wallace; bookltud,y, Mrs.
Ethel l.owel')'"
SOUTHERN ATHLETIC Boostera, Tuesday, 7:30, high school
In Racine; Onal plans for sports
banquet to be mode.
PAST

PRESIDENTS, Ladles

•Auxiliary, Drew Webster Poll
39, . American Legion, Tuesday
6 p.m. potluek cllmer II t h e
home !#. Mrs. Ben Neutzling;
Mardi Gras obaervanc:e; members to eome in costume.
WEDNESJAY
BOSWORTH COUNCIL 46, R.
and S.M., Wedoeeday, 7:30 p.
m. at Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
WEll&lt;ENO REVIV AL 1 Langsville Church bqlnnlng Wednos.day, Feb. 19, contlllllng through
feb. 23; services nightly at 7:30, with Etangelllt Lawrence
Conger, Jr. the speaker; speelal

MIDDLEPORT Literaey Club,
home of Mrs. James E u J e r,
Wodneeday, Feb. 19, el 2 p.m .;

By Wahama Society
dent, spoke on character; Cheryl
Bumgardner, secretary, spoke
on Scholarshlpi Lln:ta Weaver,
treas urer, spoke on Leadership
an:l the vice president, Sharon
Roach, spoke on service.
Senior members tapped the
new members as Cheryl Burna
played, "C I l m b Every M(IUDoo
tatn." As new members were
led across the Ooor of the gymnasium, Dickie Ord announced
their names.
,,&lt;7Y:..UOW ·rose• .w~ pre.eDted
by Marilyn Gibbs and Solly Yooger to each member and Becky
Roush alkl Cindy FQg).esong presented each a callll6. A !rleiJI..
staW circle compoaed of old aM
new member&amp; wu then formed.
Mr. Michael E. Wlalen, Assistant Princi»&amp;l, lead in tbe caB:Ilellgtrt membership pledge.
The ceremOII,)' was concluded
with prayer by Gary nelda.
The cld memben of the Na·
tional Honor Soc:le1y are Ch8ryl
Bumgardner, Glry Burd.eUe, Jle..
becca Burris, Gary Fields, c:,a..
thy Haggerty, Pauletta Rendoli&gt;h.
Danny Rizer, Sharon Roach,
Drean\1 Stephens, susan WatFor
kins and: Urda Weaver, seniors,
LETART, W, Va. - Mi 111 and Ol.ecy I Burns, Cmla FosJ.eBernita Staats, Letart. W. Va., oong. MarUyn Gll&gt;bs, Dick On!,
celebrated her 16th birthdl,y 01 Pam Roush, Rebecca Roush and
Friday evening with a pajama Salb Yeager, j~ors.
party at her home. Nine friends
attended. The group played recorda. Refreshments were senHOST f AMJLY DINNER
ad.
MASO)Il - Mr. and Mra. AlAttending were Bea-nita 1 n d
bert Swalzel with a
Beeky Gilmore, !ilerrl Hartley, family dinner on ~. at 111e1r
Joyce Rou•h. Vlrglola Shrimp..
homo In Mason. Allencllni - •
lin, Barbara Stanley, BonnleOrd,
Set. Kenneth and Mra. R~
Peny Durbin, COanle zu- aod aon, Keith ~ Eou Gallle,
and 91aron Bussell. Bemlta is Florida; Mr. and Mro. Larl')'
the dauehter ~ Mr. and Mro. Luckeydoo, POint Pleaunt.; Mr.
Harry staata.
and Mrs. Alva L.ueke)-doo, r.,.
tart, W. Va.; Mr. and Mro. Rovna King and 1011, Curti1, New
Ha•en; Mr. and Mro. Carroll
Shim, Allaa and LoweU, ' - ' ,
w. Va.; Mrs. R. C, King, llendereon; Tonuey Ewln&amp; CIIJI, Nel100 Reynolds eod Norman, Ma-

Mrs. Gal.. Brown to review
wlbe Seirch for a Usable Past."
CLASS 12, Heath United Mefb.
odlll Church, 8 p.m. Wednesday;

Mrs. C.f.Hlbbs,dovotlooelleader; Mrs~ Earl Knight, program
chairman; Mrs. James Criswell,
Mrs. Jobn Ketehka, Mrs. C. o.

Fisher, and Mrs. C. M. H en~

neay, hostesses.
SACRED HEART Perish, Pomeroy, Ro&amp;al')' aod Stallona ol the

Croaa service, 7 p.m. Ash Wednesday.
SYII~USE

TIIJBD WednelldaJ'

Pajama Party Held

Miss Staats

ROCK SPRINGS Better Hoelth
Club, 'l'hureday, 1:15 p.m., home

Hart aulallng hostess~
~ MrL

A celebration at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Blaine Mllhoon
on Saturday eventrw cbserved the
birthday or Blaine.
Mrs. Edith Osborne visited
with Mrs. Alice Dcdson on Sun-day.
Jim Perry and !amlly of HUton, W. VL, were dinner gueats
of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ben
Perry over 4 recent weekend.
Mr. and Mrs. cash Bohr and
daugtttera, Christine and
dace, and a friend, Gary Dunkin,
ancl Mrs. Mart'-. Chllda, all of
Middleport, were dimer guests
of Mr. and Mrs. Maynard Bahr.
The birthday of CaMa.ce was
celebrated.
Mn. MacHarrahfeUalDbrcke
her hlp recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Blaine MUhoan,
Elaine, 1'Uil' 1Jid Mikel, WUI!am
Mllholn and Gletuii.Milhoa:nwere
r;ueate of Mr. and Mra.

can.

••per

w.

E. Nllholn of P"""'I'Of on
5urllt1 OVOnlll8- Tho feb. lOth

b l - ol wuuam MU.._n wn

-.....

U,. and Mra. Haroot Eut.on

ASK TO WEb
PT. PLEASANT - Two . ...,_
plea have made appllcatlont fm
lllOITiaso li&lt;OD&amp;el In the al!lce
~ the coun1;y clark. They " o r o

Jamea William Hlalnbt&gt;lham. 28,
Grlmma l..andlaB. and !ldrle;y

Kay RobineUe, 20, Pt. Plea.a.
llw&gt;lle)d Pratt.
ff, Charlellx&gt;n, andDilumGwim
Clonch, 16, Pt. ~.

ant.

and -

Gypsum ~polil
The gypsum · deposit at
White Sands, N,¥_·1.occurred
when such dep0ma in the
surrounding mounW!na were
carried by rivera IIIiA! lake
which origin,.Uy covered the
area. The lake gradually
and three 10111
recenlly with

- r n Ohio Electric Co. eoctal

room.

SATURDAY
CHILI SUPPER. betiinnl»a 4
p.m. Sotllrday In Muonle buDdIns II Cboster sponsored b)' Ches-

ter Youth Orpnlzatlon.

CHRIS BRDlER MOVED
Chrla E. Brlder, tormerly of
Pomeroy. aod mperlnlaldeot 0(
the local foundry fm 21 years, bos
beeD a patient at the Yat~...
Haven Hoapltal for 3\2 weeka.
He haa moved to the New
Haven Convalescent Hospital, 50
Mead
New Haven, Cmn.
0651L

Virginia Dade
bought a new hat

a.,

' .

.,,.,.,,,~

Auxiliary unlta or the Racine,
Middleport and Pomeroy Posta
or the Atnerlcao Leeloo aod Jun.
lor wrxlllary members of the
MlddiOport poat a - In a
~P the Service ror God and

. . .. . .. .

,

Country progrem preaeoted by
Feeney-Bennett Poll128, Thur&amp;·
day night at the MlddlOport Firat
United Pn&gt;sb7terlan Church.
Aioo atteodlll8" tho aervleo In
the IJ'OUP were member• ol Mid-

dillpUri Girl Sr.:uui Troup 3&amp;, T".-..,
Rev. Nyle Bcmlon, droplsln at
the GoUipoUa Slate lnstlmte.
spoke an the Arnorlcao Legion's
Pl'O(!nU!I of Service to God aod
Counlry with emphaels on the na-

tion's return to religious prtn.
clple,.

Dee Hartinger was orpnlll
with Lewis Sauer leading group
singing. following advancement
of the colors by the legion mem -

The newly organized Pcmeroy C&amp;dette 'froo.P 52 has selected

Australia as the country lt will re_present at "International 11rlnking Dt.y" Sunday afternoon at the Middleport Elementary School.
At a recent meedng of the troop at the United Methodist Church,
tr(Jq) l!lponsor, plans were made tor the gr(q) to serve A~:~stralian
Jacka, a finger food.
It was dedded that Karen Baity will make an Australian tlag,
wear a naU ve costume with a banner, and serve as speaker for the
grOlfj. The .d.ag of Australia will be made by Peggy O'Brien who will
carry a rabbit replica. Melanie Burt's part wUl be to make the !den-.
tlfication banner. At the event she will carry a stuffed koala bear.
The map or Australia wUI be carried by Gerri Rought and Ingrid
Hawley will present the flag.
New cadettes attending the organizational meeting were Melanie Burt, Karen Baity, Ingrid Hawley, and Peggy O'Brie~ G~ s ts
from the junior tr«q» were Carol Lewis and Mary Weyers miller.
Mrs. JOin Weyersmiller is the leader, Mrs. Robert Lewis, the assistant leader, and Mrs. C. E. Hawley, a member of the troop C'Olll·
mlttee.
The patrol leader is Miss Burt and the name cf the patrol is
"The Kid Kadettes." A report en a ctivities in the junior troop were
given by Carol and Mary.
ReQuirements foi' membership in the cadette troop are as follows: 12 to 14 years of age, in the seventh, eighth or ninth grade.
Membership dues are $1 and girls must attend four meetings arxl
subscribe to the scout laws and promise to be taken Into the troop.

bers, the Rev. Raullln Moyer
gave prayer. Walter Bunce spoke
011 theobservanceandapeclalmualc by the Mount Moriah Choir
Included • 'How Great 'Thoo Art.~
Mrs. Helen Harper waa planlst.
The benedicdm was by tbe
Rev . Charles Slmons, and tapa
by Steve Miller aod John Lohae
preceded the retirement of the
colors. Albert Roulh, commander of Feeney-Bemett Post. participated In tile MrYice wbleh had
been plarmed by John Fultz,
Bunce, Charles Byer, M a r c u s
Chambers, and Ernie Barnhart.

. ~·

..

Advantaas ol the Se~Op ­ dent.
iii)i'tw'11t,y S.."tool were CO.!t!t-d
Mm-rl• tlb~enfld that atudenb
are put ln clauea acCJOr"dinn to
b)' Robert Morrla, - l o r o l
Mr. and Mra. I.AJuls Berpr the program In the ....,. Local their ability, rather thin their
~

Columbwo

Friday I!IIOsla
~ Mlso Lucretia a,nhelmer and
Mill Ada Gebhelmer. Mr. Berger is • former putor lA the
Pomeroy u n 1 t e d Methodlal
Cburch,
Mr. eod "Mra. R.L.~m
or Columbus apetrt the here with her motber, Mrs. W.
A. Morgan.
Mr. and Mra. Bob Hoetllch
and Jayne were &amp;1nda,y guests
ol. Mrs. Hoerueh's parent a, Mr.
and Mrs. Howard Nicholson, Athrntre

ens.

Mrs. sam Bolin and Mrs. Edith
Burrows ot AUiens were S1nda,y
gueats ol Mrs . Welby Whaley.
Mr. and Mra. William Nelaoo
returned Michael Mourning to
his home in Columbus over the
weekend. Michael had spent a
week here with his grandmother,
Mrs. Golda Mourning, Mlcldloport, Pat story, atudent at Ohio
state University, c8me home With
his parents ror a brief visit,

Program for Troop
Mrs. Hilah Urban of Zanes vUie has been the guest or ller
aunt, Mrs. James Arnold. .!ile
came especially to be with her
son, Jim, a student at Rio Grande
College, who underwent a recent appendectomy at Holzer Hos-

.•

Story of Saturday School Told

Patrolman Gives

pital.
Mr. and Mrs. John Grover of
Bucyrus were weekend guests
of his mother, Mrs. Edith BurMIDDLEPORT TROOP 174
ton. They also visited t h e i r
A VALENTINE HEART MAN holding a r.ign "Welcome Brow- daughter, a student at Ohlc Uninies" greeted members or Middleport Scout Troop 87 upon their versity, Athens.
Mrs. Forrest Bachtel and Miss
arrival at Heath Methodist Church for a party hosted bJ Brownies
Carol Bachtel returned 9Jnday
ol Troop 174.
About 40 attended the party which was held in the church base- from a several days' visit in St.
ment. Valentine hearts with suckers attached were suspended from Paris with Mr. and Mrs. George
the celling and at ·the concluslon cf the party given to the guests as Dallas and children.
Mr. and Mrs. John Lyons and
favors.
A pink and red color scheme was carried out In the refresh- chUdren, John and Charlotte,
ments prepared and served by Mrs. Robert Byer, Mr s. Fred Hoff- have moved !rom Middleport into
man, and Mrs. Ronald McDade. Mrs. Bernard Fultz, leader, was as- their new home at Mason, W. Va.
Mrs . Elizabeth Parsons of
sisted wlth the party by Mrs. Bobby Payne. Mrs. Eugene Murray,
Charleston, W.Va. was the weekleader cr the guest troop, also attended.
Following the flag ceremony, the host t r oop taught the visiting end guest of her son~ln.Jaw and
girls a clrcle dance called ••shoo fb'. '' ~ sheets were distribut- daughter, Mr. aod Mrs. Richard
ed by Troq) 87 for 1 song session and a rolk dane~. "Jenny Crack Vaughan, and family .
Mrs. Nina Bland returned to
Cern" and circle games were enjoyed by the girls.
Akron Samrday alter spendinG

Ptl. James E. ~eets of the
GalllpoUs Post State Patrol Dctachmonl explained aod demoostrated fundamentals of first aid
to members of Racine Boy Scoot
Troop No. 241 Monda3' eveninG.
Attend:lng were Scoots David
Theiss, Barry Theiss, Glerm
Simpson, Glem Roush, James
McClain, Mike McClain, Darrell Roush, Kevin Wolfe, Larry WUeoxen, Ramie Jolmsm,
Bobby Johnaon, Robert Johoaon,
Scoutmaster Harry Cleland aod
Asst. Scoutmaster Charles McClain.
::::::~*:~~~Y..-.YQ.30.:im::~:·

A get-acquainted coffee hoor
and bake ule Will be held Sunday at the Sacred Heart Catholic: Parish following both morning Masse&amp;.
Coffee, rolls and donuts will
be served by the Catholicwom en•s Guild in conjunction with
the bake sale.

S.hool Dlotrlct,ll Mooday nlcht'o
meellng~the Nlddi-'P.T.A.
Morrto - pr!nclptl ol Pomeroy el.,._,.,. achool - a tUm on procedurea and teachIns technl..,.a ueed In the Saturday program. He aald lhll the
school ia In Ita filii&gt; week
bot lllet It II not too late to onroll. Tho Importance or an ade'llale reading baekgrwnollor the
elementary student was stressed
b)' Morris who emphasized tllat
the Setunlay school clfer6 Individual Instruction for the atu-

'87th Birthday is

be pre.....,otlloro--

lns. lnllalted at .lllo Aloftl in.g, and aMI.,.; tMir NJplf•
dve dutlea • 1he Mil •n&amp;ID&amp;

-dro-

age or IJ"ade level, and tat
llwuthe student~eher ratio II 10 table - · - ,.. 1M
to 1. He commented m the naa- tral bulldii!B bao Jlllt. !rim
graded syatem in the elemen- .... Tho - ' • ...
tarr ·•ehool and Ollpoaalbleu~ein given b)' the Rev. Cbulel ..,_
the Meigs school a. He &amp;110 dbs ons ~ the PomarOI Flrtt .....
cusaed the percentage d. students 1111 Church. Tho J&gt;ledp&gt; W.. ltd
.leaving the rounty for emploY- by Cedelte Girl Soolrl r.._ 185
ment, after having been educat. whose leaders 81'11 Mra.
Powers and Mro. Fred ~.
ed with local money.
The spring district conference
Bob Fisher, to hlo ......
wa1 discussed during the bus- lar employment, waa unat:ate io
inen meeting presided over by attend. He ,.._ to have atrtn a
Richard Vaughan. The conference p.._.... 00 Orol ald.
Dod'• )lllght wa&amp;obHrVod, 111111
wiU be held at the Middleport
school oo April 26 aod all 12 fathers count1n1 twice Ia lh o
unlto or the Meigs CoUnty Coun- room count. Mrs. L. W. liecil of Parents and Teachers wW Comas and Mro. Boo
be partlclpatlng In arrangements. third grade&amp; dod for the .........
Mrs. Newman Burdette, who Greeter1 were room mctCbln
reported on the spring coofer- ~ the filii&gt; Rrade. Thlr&lt;l .....
ence, Mrs. Roscoe Wise, Mrs. mothers terved refrelhmlnta.
Lowell Beaver, and Mrs. Rich ard Owen were appointed to handie arrangements ror the lunch·

c-

wan..ae.

Pbll-•

Observed Saturday
The 67th birthday of liar ry
Wehrung, Pomeroy, was observed SaU!rdOY eveninG at • !amily
gathering In the home ol Mr.
and Mrs. Harlan Wehi'Wl8.
Attending were Mra. Delphln
Wehrung and Mrs. Auguat Newhooser, Canton; Mr. and Mrs.
Marvin ~r and son, Brian, Fairborn; Edwin Wehrungand
son, Dennis, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
Spencer, Mrs. Ernest Rea, and
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Werry and
daugbter, Debra, all of Pomeroy.

Valentine Party is

r-----------,
SHIRT

eon.
It was decided that the P.T. A,
wUI purchase the meat but the
remainder of food will be solicited.
Mrs, Owen was elected by the
executive committee to serve
oo the nominating committee for
the 1969-70 officers. Elected during the meeting last night were
Mrs. Beaver and Mrs. Kenneth
Cale. The slate or offl cers will

FINISHING
SAME DAY
SERVICE
In At9 - Out At5

Ro~ln111'1

Cl1111r1

Given on Saturday
Beth Theiss was hostess of
a valentine party Saturday night
at the RD 1, Racine home of
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Roger Theiss.
Guests were Billy Beegle, Rick
Proffitt, Jeff Harris, Kenny ~u­
ler, Candy HOOack, Pam Cod-

For a family treat
That's pure delight,
Drive 'em to the
Dairy Valley tonight!

•••

Open lOti! II

ner, Buddy Pyles, Rita Salser,
Gary Norrls, Micki W c J r e,
Bob Diddle, Nancy Ours. Becky
Protrltt, Mark Beegle and Randy Roberta.

Mon. Thru Thun.
10 Til 12-Frl. ond Sat.

•

•

•

Head this way fo.r a tempting: freezer -'fresh
cone, sundae, malt or shake . Be sure to try our

delicious take-home packs. too!

REACTIVATES PLAYERS
SEATTLE (UPO- The SeatUe
S~erSonics
of the Natiooal
Basketball Association Monday
reactivated Rod Thorn and
Dorie Murrey wllile placing
rookie Plummer Lott on wai vera.

Try Our Delicious Sandwiches

DAIRY VALLEY
9'12-2556
AT THE END OF POMEROY BRIDGE

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

Junior.,.Cboir is Honored

{
t
b
C Women
Portland Meet

PORTLAND - ucolors a n d
You" was the program topic presented by Elva Dailey and Kathleen Ward to members of Portland Great Bend Homemakers
club recently at the home or
Shirley Johnaon.
Jean Sayre led devotlons which
Included scrlpb.lre, .. Thoughts
for the Day," and a reading by
Sdrley Johnson, .. An Indian
Prayer."
A short business meeting was
·conducted by the president, Mrs.
Johnaon, when secretary a n d
treuurer reports were read by
Elva Dalley aod Opal Diddle was
appointed a COWlcU member.
'lbe group planned to vlalt the
fenton Glaas Co. at WlUiams·
town, W, Va., March 19.
During 111e afternoon prouam
Kathleen Ward read quota:Uona
b)' George Waehlngton aod Abraham Lincoln; Jean Sa.vre read a
_poem, ..What II a Valentlne," and
lhlth lbersbach read, uWhy a
Valentine."'
A pnlu~ dhmer was served
at noon by the hostess to those
named above and Jean Schuler,
Carmen Hall, and C.rol)'D Pric:e.

~~~ ·

.

1.

Blolne Mllhotn. .
Frlendo bert roclilved word ot
the death of E&lt;h!Jnl, Wh.lto or
llarletta. He waaa 6Jrmer-uotdint 0( Ball!ln.
"
'
-Gio,.. S. Milholn

and son.

Mrs. Lewis Sauer, Mrs. Jack
Satterfield, and Mrs. Jud,y Crooks
spent Wednesday in ColumWs.

Pop.Option
now at
Ford Dealers

The United States has
maintained a naval station
at Guantanamo B~y , Cuba,
since 1903.

.,..,
S.V. on special Falrtane ttarc1top1t
with popular options. " " " " • Vtnykowred roof • DuBI racing minot~
• Accent p&amp;n 11ripe • Del.,.e wtiMI ccwers
• Whltewana • Full carpeting

CITY ICE AND FUEL CO.

..,_ on special Muatenga with
pOpular optlona....... -

-., I

• HOod .., 1C00P • ' Spec._ E18 whlttwltla

• Du.l ,{aulng mlrrbrt • AcC1nt stripe
•

~CCMI'I

'

TEXACO

,.

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

'·

C!:~ER Cfllfi'ANY

ot Jac- rillled

Mrs. H. E. Fruth and Miss
Kathryn Fruth or Point Pleasant, W. Va. were 1imda.Y din·
ner guests or Mr. and Mrs. Walter Crooks.
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Gibbons
will return thi1 evening from Clnchmati where they have spent the
past two weeks with Kit and Julte Carson, children lA Mr. and
Mrs. Nolan Carson who have
been vacationing,
Mrs. Flizabeth Thomas retumed to her home In RlpiOY Samrda..Y after a aeveral days' visit
with Mr. and Mrs. Dan Thomas

to

with the money she saved on her flamelesa electric dryer
Virginia Dade of Louisville, Ohio compared; "I shopped both kinds of dryers and with the features
I wanted the electric model was about $36 less ... enough to buy a new hat with money left over.
I feel I cot it as a bonus." Model for model, llameless electric dryers offer more for less 'money.
Average operating cost? About $1 a month. Move UP to a fllimeless electric clothes dryer. See your
appliance dealer ... then go shopping for that special hat.

Mrs. Billy Tolbert, Mrs. Randy Baker, and Mrs. Horace Abbott. Games were conducted by
the Junior leoders, Sharon Wilson, Debbie Triplett, and Beverlee Houdashe1t, assisted by
Patty Glaze, the accompanist.
Valentine cookies, candy a n d
pop were sened.
Attending were Christi Hess,
Vicki Abbett, Jody Tolbert, David and Rayarma Cole, Penny
and Arnold Jolmson, Redl.na
Pratt, Tim and Eric Scites, Ran&lt;b' and Tro&lt;b' Roach, Kathy and
Angela Baker, Teresa &amp;!.ider,
Coutte Moodispaugh, Martha Me~
Neal, Mary Boggs, Cln&lt;b' Triplett, Vlcl&lt;y Maoley, and Janie
Van Meter.
The chOir presented a large
valentine to Mrs. Scltes. An anthem was presented by the group
at the &amp;lnday night Installation
servlc:e for deacons and elders.

.N.f.k...

Trust

'

.

lir. and Mr

program; Mrs.

Maxine Arnold the COldest.
TWIN ClrY librlnell8s, Thursday, 7:30 p.m., at Columbus and

a

evaporated.

Harold Blackaton; Mrs.

IIUih Bearhs, the

Keno Ridge

am.

'

llomeJriOkers Club, 10 a.m. Wednoeda,r at the homo ol Mra.Jreno
A valeuttne party feting mernH he1d Saturday afternoon at t h e Pearl Reynolds.
Miss Mabel Hysell underwent
Parker; IUbject, uKnow Y o u r bera ol the jwrl.or choir of the church.
surgery
Monday at Holzer HosMrs. Kenneth Seltes, direc~v Govonunent;" there will M!ddl8J)Ol't Church of Christ was
pital
where
she has been a pabe a aperoker. !'VIIuch dlmer at
tor, was assisted with the retient
Cor
more
than a week.
noon; members to bring table
U
0 freshments by Mrs. cer1 Roach,

aervic:e; roll call word, uhearL"
THURSJA&gt;
MAGilOLIA TEMPLE, Pythlon
Staters, 7:30 p.m. ThUrsday, D.
A. V. Hall; members urged to
elteod.
TWILIGHT GARDEN Club, 7:30 TburlldaJ' nl&amp;b~ home of Mrs,
Plrll WWiamaon; Mlao E l s l e

News Notes

.

God and Country Program Given

Bln&amp;lni. Evel')'ooe weloome.

MASON - Four seniors and
six juniors ir:ducted imo the Wahama High School National Honor Society Friday, Feb. 14 at a
Leonard L. Lentz, Allee Lentz morni111 assembly were Penny
tc ~il L. stac:y, 87 A., Salem. Burris, John Johnston, Jenny
Frank Townsend. carrie Town- Thompson and Larry Carpenselll to Oris A. Roush, Dorothy ter' all seniors, and Mike
Roush, Orton w. Roush, Dixie ThOIJ'I)son, Reger Keefer, VIckie
Kate: Rwsh, 33.~ A., Salem. Young and Angela Fields, Ruth
Winnie a. Chase, dec., to Ber- Rosanna Roush and Gail Miller,
nice Tucker, Cert. of Trans., juniors.
Chelttr. Leblnon, Olive.
As me~bers of the society
liionienla No. 15105 tnUnS} -,.marched •nto the gym lhe Pjano ·
~rs Plains, Chester Water selection. .. Exodus" was pla,yed
Dlst..
by Cheryl Burns. Danny Rizer
led
tho Pledge ot AUeglance to
Francis E. Morris, Ura D.
Morris to Racine Gaa &amp; Service the Flag, and ''The Master's
Touch," was read by Pam Roush.
Co., IHrl¥, Sutton.
Mrs. Mary E. C..,ohart, ctr..,Edwin S. Cozart, Ollie Mae
ter
advisor, opl.tned dle N&amp;·
Court, to Rac:lne Gas &amp; Service
ti_. Honor Society and gave
ca., a-war, Sutton.
Fred A. Codle, Audrey G. ca- scm~e of Its history. She introdlo to Racine Gas &amp; Service Co., duced the omeers who explained the four qualities a student
R-way, SUttoa..
Cl7de E. Lawrence tc Phyllia must have to be chosen a memM. Ritchie, Fred E. Ritchie, Par- ber. Paulett&amp; Rlndol_ph, presl-

Transfers

prlc-..·

'

.....

I

OhiO ,ia ·FQrd Country. See
&gt;~,

. ..

• '··~.'

.JfMth ~~ ··~· IIC·; .., s.th Till,. St., .......t

'·

'

•

-

.

•

•

,,
.'

• 1'

,.

.....
"

'

•

�•

r

-r•••• ~

&lt;'"

"

'

,.

"

•

"

.

UH--

A LITTLE 'HOMEWORK' Watching Want Ads Brings 1'op Grade Results
WANT AD
INFORMATION
DEADLINES

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

2 SIGNS

SIt·"" - Oe~r Bole~,. PuDi icot ion

Of .

lllond11r O.ollt; ,.. 9 ' ·""·

CoiiCellolionl &amp; Correct oonl
Will too ecceptH uftl ll 9 • ·""· ,.,.
Doy of P..,bllo::llll ion

QUALITY

REGULATIONS

mat• c trans . Power steering. R&amp;H .

®

Pomeroy Motor Co.
OPEN EVES. 8:00 P.M.
POMEROY, OHIO

OFFICE HOUR S

For Rent

IN LOVING .!_llemory or Frieda
Bates, who passed away four
years ago ; wife of Everett,
mother of four sons and six
daughters.
When we had followed her
two by two,
And lowered her down there,
wite-re she lies:
There is nothing left for us

$140.• 50
POMEROY

Jock W. Corny,

992-2181
Open TU 6 Dally

service and jlrOOming. Pboue
11 s If•

1192-5443.

cornet.

HOIST ETTER
REALTY

dllhes.
mfsee1Janeou11. Mrs. Howard
Cecil. 100 W. Main St., "".
1-15-tfc

, For S.le or Trade

Sanitation,

Stewart,

_ Pbone -

·

Ohio,

J-12-tfc

SPOUTING, roofing and

carpentry, new or remodeling, by
contract or hour. Clinton
Pierce. Phone 992-2015.
S.111-6tc.
C. C. BRADFORD

AucnONEER

Sent..
14Nm

Complete

5

DAliUN/2

---•.-rm

----

SAVE SAVE- SAVEl Save your
lawn, your Ume and your
back. We have a new trendier to dig your water

line

MOUNTAINEER lruck cover.
311 in&lt;hes blgh, 100 Inches
long. 75 inches wide, paneled
wood interlor, inside and IM•ide lights, gold and willte;
aiBo Winchester model 12
heavy weiiibt, full choke, 30
indJ barrel •hotsun. Geo'll'!
Hill. Racine. Phone 911H311.
2-18-31c

TWO FAMJLY BRICK house.
5 rooms and batb upstairs. 5
roomJJ and bath downstairs,
ga• IUI'IIace. In Davis Produce CORVAIR, ~ door, '63 motor.
block. 4\1 Cole St.. Pomeroy,
four new tires. Automatic. G.
Pbone 1192-2585.
z.t.l:ltp
A. Deem.
1-16-31&lt;:

1,_ CHEVROLET Impala twodoor 11.,-d top, 327 automatic.
power 11etr1nc and brakes. 19641 ZIG ZAG sewing machine;
aosume payments of f'I.IB per
Call IIIU6fl.
1-28-tfc
month or pay balance of $53.
Call 11112-283e.
1-IIIA!c

SPO'M'ED yearlings and mare
ponies; also two marea due

,._

to foaL Phone 99U451.

For lent .

wltb belli, ONE YEAR old CoiUe dog, aloo
one English Shepllenl puppy.
In Hartford. Call fiD.Ir/0 alter I p.m.
S.1wtc N. G. Rosi, Minersville,
Pbone ift.6710.
S.IS.ste
UNFiliiNISIIED large
room apartment. Arnold B,... 1161 SCHULT house lrail~t
on \1 ..,.. lot boclc of
then, Ill 1!:. Main Sl., lord. Like new. lJved In ve
l&lt;lf. P!:one ID-:1148. 2-7·11&lt;
llttlo. For Jnlonnation, wr11e
c-ge Fields, 13118 E. ll3td
n :ttNISHED ond unfumtsbad
81., Cldcolo- Ill. Mil.
Cloae to , ..
·
oportmeritll.
PliooJe
IIJ.MJf.
_
S.IS.I2tc

J1'0IJR ROOM -

n..

I .

·'

Moal ,....,., ,,...
LI•IW _..., .. ••• ,...._

1

.......... .

,.,,.,u., f.,....... hlh

'-""·fl

MCORI'S

IJ.f • . MA..

I .iiSA'D.n:
A.IJ
SLMMAlV OF CASH BALANCa,

~

... 1.

"-110Y

Busl111t1 Services
LAMPS eleetrllled, oonvem-,
lamp ports, cbiiiUIO}'I, obades,

wlrlnK.

Lee

JludJolll, ,. Lo-

&amp;lon Terrace.

S.1S.IJip

CATTLE Jlreedlns
SeMee. Phone Parbr Ili-

CUimSS

UM Pomeroy or 1411-3211 Cool"
Yille .eall olatlon.
1-14·-

WIDTE PLAINS, N.Y . (UP!)
- Hosplt.l olfict.ls Sl.kl Monday
that Lee MacPhail, tile 51-year.
old general m111111ger ol the New
York Yankee&amp;, waa "doing
nice))'" in hi1 ntcovery from 1
minor het.rt attack 11uffered
Sundoy nlghL

COMPLETES STAFF
PITTSBURGH (UPO - Chuck
Noll,

hqd

coach

of the
Plttllburgh steelen, completed

his coochlng sial! M-, by
selecttrw Bob Fcy, an aal\lltant
with the AtlaDtl Falcons. and
Max Coley, an a11i1tant at the
Unlwrslty of Oregon as pert of
his severHnan team.

Car

Needs-·Complete Front-End
and Brake Service ·

Ml6 I. Malo P001oroy, 0.

ICHJI)UI..I:

BI:CIIPTS AND tuPafDJT\1U8

Bahnce Jan. 1, • •
Genf'nl - . .
• 1.1111.11
Bnnd Retirement
ll,OII.BO

LaPChroom

lJII.fOI'DI

CS,...,_.,
l,tal.&amp;'!l

•. _

8\;lppli..

SChool

N.D.K.A . nuo Ul . • . .
N.D.I .A. Tllle V
11:.!1. &amp;.11.. TIU. V . .
TOTAL
General
Bond Rour.ment

To OoD.Oral
TOTAL TRANSFERS

N.D.J:.A. TIU. Ill .
N .D .E. A. Title V

LUNCHROOM

UJI,IIII.a

DICCDfBEB Sl, IMI

II:.S.E.A. TIU. I ..
r: .S.E.A. TlUe II
TOTAL

• • .13
7.103.00

....._

. . ..11
I.TU.I.

...........

Total Rer:elp._
IBM.I• .N
OeMrlll
ll ,'ril .l:ll
Bt)nd ReUre•olll
Lunckoom
.. .•
l,MB.e3
Unlfurm SCbool Supplle•
l.ltoM
,'I: D.E.A. nuo m
8,W7.24
1'\.0.E.A. Tille V

........

II!:.S.&amp; .A . Tlollo

...-...

I

I.TG.l.
18811.JTO.U

KS.E.A. Tille li
TOTAL

llcaenl

Mlll,tol . l3
3t.IP.:III

~end aouroment

Lunchroom . .

..

3TM .tcl

Uniform School Su.ppllu
1.$38.83
N.D ..I.A. Tltlo Ill
811 .33
N.D .E. A. Title V
8,084.31
I' .S.I:.A . Title I
to.DT .10
I!:.S.E.A. TILle II
1,808.12
TOTAL . . . • .
te48.'791.M
Balance Dec . 31, 11118
O.nerll
I 14,'JO'I' .40
Bond Retirement
:a.J31.:Q
Lun chroom
..
14o,.4l'f.ll5)
N D.E.A. Titlo U1 .
1711.11
N.D.E.A. Tltle V
ol02". 93
E S.E'.A . Tille I
2,629.10
t:.S.E.A. Title 1J
(113 .131
TOTAL ..
.
I 3S.fob.T2
SCHEDULE A·lll
CASH BALANCE, RECEIPTS AND
EXPENDITURES BY J'\1ND
GENERAL FUND:
BALANCE.
JANUARY 1, UNIII . .
I O,BIIO.IO
ilF.CE!PTS-REVE.&gt;;TJE
General ProP"rtJ' TuRf'al Etlate 10~
t Tl.III8All
TIDJ!blc PenoDII
PropertJ' Taw. ICroao
n.m.n
• ·•oundatlon J'llnd

.........
I,J'l),OO

l,lliO.OO
I,I:IIIUO

hn4
O!t AND '!'OT .U.
i.'iDI!:8TEDNES9

I ,.. . ..to

I Sll.llll .ts

t

IANUARY I , llllll .. ..
'IUtANSFDli:
To General
TOTAL &amp;XPKNDITURBI
UNIFORM SCHOOL
SUPPLIES VUND . •
N.D.E.A. Tille liJ Fund:
IJaeludo Appalaebil)
BJt.t.ANCI.
JA:O.UARY 1, 1... . .
'IF.CEIPTS--TRANSFIER5
Gaeral Fund
•. ,
TOTAL TRANSFERS
'fOTAL JliiCE1PT8
tliB'CEJPTS PLUS

Rite

1.518-13

..............

Southam .......

I

I,SII.Q

I

l.NI.D

TaANSFJ!RS)

I

l'ft.ll

I
t

111.13

:n, 11111!1

School Dt.trlr:rt
......... l.oe'al
School DIMitri

YN, ll

t.lM .If

I

1100.00

rOTAL
.. .. .
otE : ll.IP'I'fi..-TRAN'If'Dii
Gsnenl
... .

I

101.00

I

'1'.-.oo

"fOTAL TlA.NIIFD.I
TO'I'A..LRECEIP'nl
fRilCi:IPTS PLUS

I

'1',311:.00

TRANSFD81

GuidAIIctl

c-uor

I UI,OOO.OO
I 11.000.01
18
.. • . I 1,1111-..13
1.UO.OO
.. 1 :a,all.b

~~~~:1~~:.!!1Svi_a_

:1.110

•

1,118'1' .24

I

IM.OO

•

l,lln ..M

•

1.130.al

o-.u
U3UOI.&amp;3

_
.......
.......... .....

.......
,_...
.....
...
.......
.......
.....
.....
..,..
........
.....
........ .
U,IIIO.OO

A· I._I

....•••
•••••••• ••
...• ..
......••
I llt,ftl.tl

A-.11

....

A~

... .............. ..

1,(110.00

..,..,..,

B&lt;

......
......

8 -10

w

4'1'1.01

,_.....
I,GOI.H

.........
,_

111\IAOl.U

I 40.111'1'.Ill

.......

• 14,10J.60

I to.IIT.IO

I 21.13U8

.........
.......
.··-·......
t ot:tAtiii.TD

I D.ll•. M

.---

I

1.31'1'.01
1.111.'11

--'-"-' ' ..

-

..

l,,tt,ll

· ~ ••, . .11

·- ~

I tt.'HIUI

I \ fJ.IS,'m

• 11,000.00

u,aauo
S,ID.'I'l

__..

-........

1 :suee.11 o-o-·_-

..

Lunchot

l'odlnl SllbddJI-JIWI. . ·
TOTAL •llC&amp;IPT8-

IHCOJII ... . ....
RKCJJPTS-TRAHII'UI
Oneral J'UDd ..
TOTAL RIIC&amp;fPTS-

TilANinaa ...... .

ucavn

1\1fAL
CINCOIII AND

TBANIFDII

..

... .

-

.. .. .. .... .
· OUM-r-l.llllellroom
»iu~IJI_.. .

A.IIITI

.

..

I 10.100.00
Jai.OOO.Gfl

IINAil-'1'1

ICIIEDUI..C A-V

ICBOOL DSB'I' BOND8 .AND NOTIB

OU&amp;Itllldt. . J'aa. I, 1. .
I . . . . . . licnltMIII &amp;ural

tUI

f'tr.M';

AND
4:30 P.M.
Keeping Meigs
Gallia and
Mason Area
Informed As
Well As
Entertained

.c

were busin8u visitors in Colum- nlgbt and Sunda)' with her parbus on sa~.
ents, Mr. and Mrs. William CulMary Maase~y, who lsinnurses well, and other relatives here.
tnlnlqr ochool In ~rl~ld,
Lewis Smith, who has been
Ohio, IPent 1 weekend with hflr transferred to employment in the
parallla, Mr. and Mrs. Bradford Clncimatl area, !!Pent a weekend
Ma811ey and lamlly.
here with his family.
Glen Turner II II(Jiff at hill home
Mr. am Mra. Arthur Crabtree
here aller belli&amp; c:onllned 10 the and Mr. and Mrs. Mendal Jordan
Meigs General Hoepltalln POIIl-- and Walter were guest&amp; onSI.tur·
eroy for several day1.
day evenlrw at the hc:ftle of Mr.
Mr. and Mrs. David Wiseman and Mrs, Reed Jetrera.
am children of Rutland. were reGnnt Johnson, son ot Mr. lnd
cett Sunday JUIItl of hit grand:- Mn. Gay Johnson. who was seriparerts, Mr. and. Mrl. EarlStar- outl)' W with diabetes and c~
ke¥·
tined to Children's Hospital in
Walter Jordan, member of the Columbu&amp;. Ia now at home and
C a - Bqyo4-11Ciub-nded attellding classes. He Is · much
a meetlrw ol lhe Ma.IB• COUnty improved tollowing treatment.
Junior Fair Boon1 oo 1buraday

DAILY CROSSWORD
DOWK
lli.Apox

...

.,....

...._._.. DM!tlll You . . .
Ru.nl
Dlm1d
• • . • • • ......
Local
Dtotnet

So\lthorrr.
l'lmd
.. ..
.. .. '
- ··
lehoal
'IOT'AL DP&amp;NDI'tUAal· 1 . . . . . . !!n .. tlwr~
lobool

' ..... .CoiUII!Iii!s.
There wen.20 pnlltllt at s.m..
1101' School oil Fob. lith.'
t

;_ . l

10. Spulotl
:rlftr

,.....

1. Southam
coaat.l-

If.. Bi.Wil·

laUon
' · ProaouD
5. Marrow

bird

place

_,

1-6. Unman·

-.......
...-

IT. Cbeeker
ti.OoU

llCC•IOfY
II. Able'a

ILPerform
U , Qown.'a

..........

weapon

p.....
atwood
•. lllxcla-

.......

1. Noab't
eldttt .._
8. Bhtpworma
t. Touch end
to end
11.~

15. Ruullh

rtver

D.Hud

OU~

...

-

... Pub lip
18. Natiw of

t.ettAir

40. Rain.

rr ....

28. l'ort

-·

aa.tenta

SO. llcmow
II. ONik

0

mea111n

M. Prtabtft

•2. NetpltOr
of Quo.

II.CO'Vtnd,.

u wtth

uphalt

'"· Uke

0 I

J l

~nw~;,~E~~v:jt=:~~~
Now
-·d"'
....
_
I I "' ,_

partner

....-

.......
.
,
.
.
.
.
.
.
-.
__;~·~-=-~-=--·_.JI t XI I lA [ I I )
.......
,.
• . I'
lholllrJIII!!e - · •

~~:::::~~:::::==~

so.court

31. Cloll to
31. Implemmt
at. Health

Ll

101

(,....."

..-.
ST. 8lloO

T11'i..,..

Jt. Oltbo

oct.... of

'

e':lllo

MiUII: Nlliill
~IIODMMAIIIII··· Mbfft
,·
'
.

A•••m ,......,., .. _..,.,....

_a_~

.

bellini
U . JAkeBW
otftooo

n . Partot•
churcb

u. A:fiOl

-

n. Fitl4a

48. Wtteot

..........

·-.'

41. Molt

D.t.P.Y ()aYIP'I'(M

Wut A.d•

•ark
nadenl

, ,-' I

- ~992·2156
•

'

'

'

.
. .'

BEliN

AU. THIRSTY!

28. 12do&amp;en
zt. J'.dlet, u

•'

~"'5

10. A.reu
Jl. Ctn·
.......

p inon.'

Results
Like Magic
when you
BUY 01 SEll
with a
CLASSIFIED AD

.TROOP

ON A HIKE AN' WE'RE

u. Error'•

Edna Fauber, an:l Dean Wooten,
BQO of Mr. and Mn. And.eraon
Woolen, were lii10III lhe groq&gt;
INtn Malis ~ Who weN In-

Edith Qurs
wtth ,-lief 1uat;,

1. Pip
1. Jouttr'a

12. Crolby
"li. ID that

Jimmie Fauber, 1100 of Mrs.

Mr. and Mr1. Frank Hudaon
and TOllY ol . Raclno; Mr. a1111
Mrs. Eupno Hudll&lt;(ll, Mr. and
Mrs. hlb.Y Plckeni and fainlly
of Rac!no •R,D,, Mr, and 111-o.
warreoi. Rooe, Edltb and P_..,
·local, and Mra. Dorio WDillGand
chUclr,._al Colum~o.

l.Brldp

I . CoDadnua
lO. llull

n!Bht.

I J,Ul.GO 'I'O'I'AL ............... . ll*.lli.M

. ' . tl,tltl.lil.ll

Al8a'l .

kho.tl Dl.trlet . . . . I 11.100.00
t'O'I'AL .SOINJiDIO
ICNU!era Loee1
ald.ANC&amp; PLUI
t JUII,.tl
IC'hoOl Dlltr1tf.
UC.IIPft ...
ttate: Akll aa-iUnNDITUIU
raeiHtiM
. , , . ....
nkooG&amp;AHD TOTAL
.
«;oolll-8alanot altd
.. . .
TNOXITWNIU • . . . L~tiM.M
.
,, 1 U...
New lNU• Du11a1 Y...- otho.._,1n011ol
O.nn.l PuU . , , , . . . . . I JI.OOOAII
II!IIM
ORAND
'I'O'l'AL
u d w.... ... ...... .
M,C.a ' IND~BTEDNUI
f iiMO. .

.........
_.l .. ..........
....... ... ,.........

'

L.---------..1

recentb'.

or

I UIUO

~'

7:50 A.M.
1): IIJlON .. .,.

eM, for observation and treat-ment.
ducted into the armed service
Mr. and Mro. Mendal Jordan in Columbus last week.
and Walter and. Mr. ud M r 1.
Mr. and Mra. AHred Rice and
Dwalno Jordan, Bryan alll1 Keith, sons, Columbus, spent saturday

- - NaW lndebtodniA
IN-.11
1VI'.U. UAIILITlf.S
1111.113.11
I M.iteUD ncaa oa DII'JCIDICY

'£11ul.pmentl

TOTAL

1 lABILri'IU:
Am»U&amp;I Puable . . .
1,o4eAII 'IJQnd lndobl•dniH

•,

Mrs. Mary McCOmas at He~
bardavllle. She waa a former l.;
cal resident and her sons, Lee
McComas, Middleport, alll1 Uoyd
McCOina1, Llttle Hocldng, well
known teachers, were reared in :
thi11 CIDIIlunlb'.
Mrs. Rob Turner hal been a
patier&amp; at Sheltering Arms Hos-pital but ba1 been released tollowltw treatment. She Is at home
after opendltw a lew claya with
her son and dauchter-in-law, Mr.
•11if""lirs. Leland Turner and
dau&amp;flter; Albai\V.
Murl Calaway is confined to
ShelteriiiK Anno Hoopllal, AIJ&gt;. ·

Jane tnarun, a student at Rio
Grande CoUqe, IIINtM i weekend
with tho Robert Leo lamlly a1111
Ralph Lee.
Mary Circle vteited her lister, Hittle Powell, at Portland,

a •.tw.-a

AT

... Carmel News

• 11,711.M

J'odlrol

LOCAL REPORtS
DAILY

I II.II'Uf

• 11,1. . .

. . 1 (S.IIM-•1

presents

carpenter.
Several ' rran thll CQIPm~ attended funeral services for

:-: ::
I G.o5UD

INFORM AnON
NEWS

were Preston Hamon and sons,
Mark and Steven. Athens, and Mr.
and Mra. Dale Dye, local.
Arthur Crabtree, whoispastor
at the Mineral United Methodist
Church attended a layspeaker
seminar at Rising Houae in Lancllster on Sunday afternoon.
Mra. Martha Mays ofStrasburg
Ia 1pe..:ling sometime here with
her parents, Mr. alii Mrs. Ney

tal.IZII-U

.. I ID,'Nl.M

Pomero1

WMPO

Mrs. Rex Cheodle and !omlly

.. I M.IM.'I'4
• M.lM-'1'4
·:

PH. 99:i-ZH3

Mr. ancl Mra. Carl Greenlees
attencled the funeral of his uncle,
Ad Anderson, at Marietta.
Villiton at the homeofMr. and

.......

....

BLAEnNARS

News, Notes

I 1'.11t.OO

TOTAl, BEOINNING
BALANCI- PLUS
RECEIPT!!
t:XP&amp;'o/DITUII.BI

!JO\.U!

1111.33

I

Refwnd

TruCk or

&gt;inaUest HMW Con.

C..arpenter

•us

1,110.111

t:aordlnator-Titl• V
OSU Oul4aacl .Joumol

w...

Bullcbzer lfadle'O" To T._

181 .33

I

..,,......

........

From the

l,t«&lt; . :t.:~

271.12

BALAI'fCE,
JANUARY I, lNI . .

1.?1

1111.13

I

DJ:CEIIBD 11. 1188
N.D.E. A. Tltla V FUND:

IHIIttr Strwlct '

School Dlelrtel
4.11
OO:II•al had .. .. .. . .. .. . . .. . . .
D1te of J'ID..al llal.

TOTAL UP&amp;:NDITtJilBI
PLUS JIALANtt

EXPERIENCED

.11,1131.13

School llUtrtet.

Nll.33

I

IN POMEROY

of Int.

hvU..na aaral

TOTAL liEGINNINO
BALA.N'Cl&amp; PLUS
RECEIPTS . .
I
!.XPBNDIT\JftA
FAueatlon•l rnth!r:lt.l•
t
TOTAL J:XP'.INDmiRI!a I
Tftr AL EXPENDITVRBS
INCLUDING
TRANSFERS
1

ua.:M

- ..

~al

h&lt;Wlloo
G'tAND TOTAL
INl)D'J'Drgss

BALANC~

BLAETTNAR'S

4 411 ,1.11.11

St;ole Aid C....,._m

SUI'PLIES }' UND:

DEC~BER

..

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

SoUtbeftll

UNirQBM 8CHOOL

BALANCJ:,

..

llalaaee OUt.taDIUq Doc. 11, U111
&amp;outh•m Jlun.l
School Dtnrlct
I I.OOO.OD

I 1t.folT.5m

PLUS BALANCE

I.LILtl
11.000.00

Clent~~rlll

TOTAL .xi'ENDmiRDFUND ,.
BALANCI,
DJ:C&amp;MBD 31, lllll
TOTAL EXPENDITUJI.ES

31.831.1!10

LUJ\Chroom

I
I

:nt.JI
l.lM.sl
1.131.151
I 31,800.:!12

to.'I'N-011

s•;.:,.::. c1~~ .....

TRANSFEU:

'l'o\111 ........

Gene Yoat of Racine, Meigs County, Ohio, has l&gt;oen duly oppolnled
executor of the estate of Lubert
G; Theiss, deceased, late of
Portllnd, Meiga Cour¢l', Ohio.
Creditora are required to rue
their claims with said fiduciary
wl thin four months.
Dates this 4th day of February, L96'J.
joon C. Bacon
Acting Probate Judge
of said Count,y
Feb. 11, Feb. 18, Feb. 25
"DOING NICELY"

,....., ..... ,...
-GUARANTEEDPHONE 992-2094

..-..w..

1'0-

ditch. Henry Bahr or
Ruger Bahr 985-3958. 2-7-!0tp

Wanted

I &amp;l,olll.llll
I '1.110.1:1

p.:

ANTIQUES. fumllure,

OHLYII8.95

Out of

S5.55

~~......

I 311i.C1J.'nl

""' 2.19 , ..... , ' · ·

NIUOnaJ Bana . , .
TOTAL DEP:lsrt'OaY
BALANCES
.•
Uutstandlnl Warraats,

···k·

ANTIQUES, diaheo, furniture,
cltlna cabinets, old phcJao.
graplu!. clocks, misc. Lee
RudlaiU, lOB Lollon Terrace.
S.IIH21p

II p 'I ,..,,.,.,

715•14 ......

Whttls

..... AIIt••••t

"•·"'
to.- r. '"r.· ..... .., .......

CA8H .-D:ONCJLlATION
TOTAL FUND
IIILLA.NCES ,

DoeomMr :n, 11181

SEE NEIGLER Building Supclae. OMo
ply for building your home,
Bradford
NEED LIMESTONE lor your
Long lime loan anllable.
I I tic
SMITH AUTO SALES
drlveway7 We !umlsb and
2-18-lfc
UNAUGA, OHIO
deliver. Emmett W. Shuler,
Am CONDmONING Relrlger.
Contracting, Pbone eus.3243.
INCOME TAX Service dally n ation service. Jack's Refrig1~• MIXED HAY, 30 rents a bale.
cepl SUnday 9 to 5. Evenings
eration, New Haven. hone
Phone 992-3336.
2-IS.71e
by appointment Mn. Steven POOATOES,
IIIIZ-!0711.
~ 8 tic
Phone 84S.2154
'Wanda' Eblin, Rt. 2, Pome·
FOR A JOB well done feeling,
Clarence l'nlffitt, Portland.
roy. Laurel Cliff Rood.
clean carpets with Blue Lus - READY - MlX concrete deliv10.16-tfc
1-19-iiOtc
ered right 10 your project.
tre. Rent electric sbampooer
Fast and easy. P'ree el!l·
$1. Tiny's Bargainland.
ON the rug lhal Is. so
WJltL DO ·sewing ~ home. - SOUP'S
males. Phone ~3284. ~­
2-l?.ftc
clean the spot with J!lue Luiilooers.
pockets. ·poggm&amp;.
leln Ready - Mll Co., Mi~
Ire.' ltenl electric shal!lllOO"r
temming. altl~rations, etc.
port, Obto.
I 30 tic
fl. Baker FllmJture Company. SIX ROOM hooae, bath. formMn. Freddie Thabet. Mason.
er Leonard Hess, Sr.. proper·
2-17-!ltc
Phone n3 5&lt;151.
4-,n.tr,.
ly, II Oat Sl., Pomerey. BUDGET PRICE lumlture on
our third floor budget shop.
Phone ·
2-16-ftc
VACANCY for two elderly poo. 11161 WALNUT stereo. AM-FM
Baker
Fumllure, Middleport.
radio, lour speed changer.
pie. Pn!fer private paid po·
Olllo.
....,
Aaaume payments of $8.25 per ELECTIIOWX vacuum cleanlleall. Pbone Mason, 773-$115.
er complele wllll atlaelunenta.
month, or pay balance of
10.J.Ifc
MACHINES, repair
flO!. CaR f!l2.1831. 2-18-Gtc &lt;Ordwinder and paint spray. SEWING
service,
all
makes, WY 1Repossessed but 8Uaranteed
TV SERVICE. Service IDIIIOI(el',
22111.
The
F
abrle
Shop, l'lmlin like condition. Pay off
Harokl Walker. You buy from
eroy. Authorized Singer Sales
137.t5 or tenns If desired.
,. we wOI lab care ol II.
and
Servlee. We Shlrpen
AUCTION SALE!
Phone 11112-2115.
2-1Uic
Humphrey'a TV. Pbone 11112Sc1110rs.
a.a.ue
BRYANTS BUDGET SHOP
7112.
S.IJ.8to
108 W. Main
Pom•roy r.OOD HAY AND STRAW, 50c
· Fob. 20th &amp; Fob. 21.1
bale, Paul Karr, Chester, CIGARETTE vending mac1dneB
Thuraclay
&amp;
Friday
and ..rvice. ABC Entorprlleo,
Lost
Ohio.
2-1:1-ftc
10,00 A.M.
Mason, W.Va. Phone ma4S.
INto to felocotlng &amp; chan. .• In
1\FAN'S black biUfold in Pomeoyr line of 111orchandl10 we will
1-Mc
MIXED hay and timothy. Ph.
roy Slturdll evenirw. Phone
oell at ayctlon: Now clothing
J-14-ltp
(wlntor &amp; IYift-r ltock) 1 tulta,
99:1-1410.
'lfs.IIIS.
2-18-ltc
cooto, glo._,, co_po, d,.,,,,,
RADIO and TV .epalr, ......
ohlrlt, pants, sock., swoater 1 ,
calla, •nd antennat Installed.
1967 BARON 12 x 60 loot moaono &amp; -.ono -~~ &amp; dr1u
Help Wanted
Jolin
Harrison, Phone 11112....... ltc.· """ . . .
bile home wllll S • 10 awning.
plctu,.,,
fta,.ers,
aa ... oltloo:
WAJTRJ!Z!S wonted. No expert.
1111.
JU.tle
popor pr0411uctt, kitchen -•••
'Ibree bedrooms, like new,
...,. ......ary. Nlgbll, 3:30
lnt, Hrcor4a, lronlnv boat-da
$5.000, 810 South Fourth St.,
aiding totllea, 1'11111111lnln! atoc'
to 12. Apply al Blue Tartan.
of 1111d f'""''"'~'~• ln~;:l..,d "! 11..,.
Mid&lt;Deport. Phone _II9MDI2.
Insurance
:1-18-71&lt;
lng
1111lt., aDfO bod. d nofta
S.lutc AUTOMOBILE lnanrance ben
11t1, Oil coek lfOYOitiGI dryer,
•• ,...., _,...,,,
'v. llh;
.....ned? Loot your opera~
ontlquos, · lo.,. soot1 tohloo
MANAGER for Sarah CovenlrJ
ONE
MALE
Beagle
pup.
Pl!one
or's lleense? ean .....
ha4s, "'!Itt"'"••• tloto, lo ...
Corp., would like foUr ladles
woth ahlnll, nrckln1 chalr1, an4
848-247ii.
2-IM!c
I II Ill!
other lte1111 too nu-rou• to '"'""
for part time work. Excellenl
tlon.
pay, and career advancement.
Sale CDnduchld &amp;y
!953 FORD pickup, flOOd oondl·
ADAM$ AUCTION SERVICE
Phone 8112-2717.
2-16-31&lt;:
LEGAL NOTICE
RUTLAND OHIO
lion, $200. Don Bell, Pbone
Jl• Ad...,, &amp; 6111 Brown,
NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT
247-!m.
S.!ll-6tp
Auctl-oeta
WOMAN to work In motel.
Case No. ZQ016
Not •••POIIIIIillo for accldonh
Tannt, c..h Dn Dar of Solo
2-111Atc
Pbone 11112-5111.
19110 OLDS. pow&lt;r steering and Estate of LIJbert G. Tbelss, DeBryants Budget Shop
ceased.
power brakes. Call 1192-2Sli5.
Notlce i1 hereby given that
101 W. Main
Po-ray
Wanted To Buy
S.lll-3tp
992-5196

r.

SNOW TIRE SAL I

........ llvcef...
IK:HaJUlA A-1

'IOTAL-CLICRK·
TREASUBU'I
BALANC&amp; . .

GEO. IIOBSTETI'EII, RACINE RURAL - 1 room

UPERT

SPEOAL

.,lOAN 11. WOUI
CtHtl. , . . . _ _, ....

BAJ.,.ANCIS:
' h• lat.:llll! . . . _

miniature, $75 and up. Stud

Notice

bo

DECEIIBIER 31, 1 IJEI&gt;osJTOR¥

purl. larlfe lot. f8300.00
MIDDLEPORT - 8 room frame,
·rnAILER LOTS. Bob's Mobile NEW 111611 ZIG ZAG sewina
beth, basement, garage, nke
Court, Syracuse, Ohio on State
machine in origioaJ. factory
comer lot. $1~.0110.011
Rl. 124, Pbone 99J.2151.
carton. Automatic zig zag to 1M ACRES - 8 room frame, I \1
8-11-tlc
make buttonholes, sew on but..
baths, basement. 2 barns, sec-tons, monogram, make fancy
ond house rented. $20,000.011
HARMONY apartments - !
designs with just !be twist of lfflLEN or VIRGU. TENFORD
and 4 rooms. furnl!hed, new
a slngle dial. Left in Jay-away SVRAWSE
....
walls, floorS. furniture. prland never been used. Balance
:1-16-31&lt;:
''ate parking. Out of aU fJood11,
due only 147 ..- terms of fl
l blocks from Pomeroy pool
per month. Phone 992-2615.
Business Services .
office, tf2.5392 from JO a.m.
2-18-61&lt;
to 8 p.m.
2--4-tfc
SEPTIC lankB cleaned. MIUer

10 do
But to hide it aU from our FOUR ROOM !urnl!hed aparlment. Phone 991-3658. 2-ll·tfc
tearful eyes.
So we softly and tenderly
THRE~room furnished apartspread between
ment, 134 Mulben"y Avt'.
Our face and the face our
Phone 992-59911.
2-18-tfc
lcve regrets,
A coverill(, woven of leafy
green and spotted violela.
ForS•I•
Sadly missed by Everell
POODLE
PUPPIES, AKC Toy
and cltildren.
2-18-11&lt;

IOUTNUN LOCAL tcNOOL
DIITRICT
COUM'fY OP MIJI.I
P.O• .-....-.. . . . . _, Ohtl
o.t. , _ . , .. 1Nt
I r.-.ortlf,- U.. fallowJnl report to

Mgr.

frame, balll, basement. car·

For Sale

PWiul Yew ......

Dace 1 lnr 1111, 1HI

OLDS CUTLASS F85 ....................... .......... S995
(1964
P~- Vinyl interior. Buckel not . ¥8 engine. Auto·

A44litionol 2!c Cho• 1• por Ad"""

In Memory

IOA1t0 OP: IOUCATION
hr

A• low •• • •

Clean interior, good w.w. tires . R&amp;H .

BLIND ADS

8 :30 om . to S :OO P ·"' D111 i lr
l tlO 0 . 111 to 12 :00 Noon Soturdo~

PI•ANCIAL 11.-otn OP 1'MI

Many Models

1964 FORD GALAXIE........................ .................. $995
500 H.T. Cpe. VB engine, automatic . Wh ite finish.

S cOnfl por

We~• d , ,.. in•••t oon
MiftiiiiYIII Cho•IO 75c
12 c on11 por wo•d thrto contecuth•o intort iont .
111!1 conh per Word , ;., conto cu"" •
hlt ..tionl .
2S po• co nf DiHo~nt on pe~ od ods
oltd od1 po od ,..;thon 10 doy1 .
CARD OF THANK ~ &amp; OBITUAAY
$1 SO foo SO wo•d m•nill'lum . Eo
. .ditlonol word 2c

DIRECT DRIVE
CHAIN SAWS

.

UT ES
F 11r W11 nt Ad S.. .. ou

Business Services

HOME LITE

19~ CHfVELLE MALIBU .................................. $995
4 oar. Local 1 owner car, 6 cyl. engine, powerglide
!Tans. Turquoise over white finish. Spotless dean interiOt . R&amp;H .

T ... PIA!IIthe-r ••••'"'' tho •itht
._ Hot Of ro jeel' o~ty o•'- d••-d ....
.. cl io,..! . TM puillitiw• will ,...,
. ... rotpontible j.., ""'' ' thon ,,..
l..c:.,roc t iM Ott i on.

LEGAL NOTICE

Yes, We Have Thftl

FIFTV
ceNTS

I WOUl.C 'IE LIKE TO
BW A LEETI.E
P.S,LUMEV?

'

.

.

.;

..

'

~- &lt;·,
-~'.

·;. ~/

,t·r; !i,,•

.

.

;,

' ...

••.J

.-,.
'(,'

~

...

.. .. ,·.' .. ~

-~~ -

_

.

.

••

.

.

..

.

..

-~ ·.

:;

.... ..

'

�om... "'

Ohio Bell Sued for $1 Million
COLUMBUS (\)PI) - GoniM
Ncwel, who was lllliiUCct~llfulb'
.ought several yeara ago In the
New Orleans lnvestigatioo oC an
allepd ccnsplracy to kill Presi·
dent John F. KeMedy, tued a
•• million suit Mon.ily against
the Ot'tio Bell Telephone Co. for
alleged wireteppl~ of his
phooe.
The suit nled in Franklin
Counb' Coounon Pleas Court

said

Novel's

telephone was
tapped by the cOJllj)aQ)' between
Nov. 30, 1968, and Jail. :lS, 1969,
when he had it removed.
The petition did not say what

Myrtle Frost
Dies Sunday
Myrtle Worthen Frost, 92, tup...
peTS Plains, a lile-long resident
~ Meigs County, died 5lmda.Y evening in Columbus fo1lowin.g a long
Ulness,
9Je was the daughter of t h e
late Nathan and Henrietta S:ewart Worthen, and "'':'as born at
Long Bottom. 9-le was a mem -

ber of the Tuppers Plains Pres-

byterian Church.

the purpoae waa for the - .
Novel ud hJa attorney, stephen

..........

J. Takac•• were unnailable for

Henry

Baker; a daughter, Caryl M.
Matlack, and a brother. !ilrvivtng are two daughters, M r s.
George V. Thomas, Worthington,
and Mrs. John Torrence, Columbus; seven grandchildren, and
11 great-grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held
Wednesday at 2 p.m. at the White
Funeral Home at TUppers Plainl!l
with the Rev. Ray Rose o«iciating. Burial will be ln1he Church
at Christ Cemetery at Success.
Friends may call at Ule funeral

1be suit asked one dollar u

cc:npenaatory ctamqes, $999,999
as exemplary or punl.tlw damages, and attorney and court
costs.
The aUeged wiretapping, the

"LADY IN CEMENT"
Frank Sinatra, HaqueI Welch

COWRCARTOONS:

I Want My MllliUDJI
Tali&lt;yhocwn

Feud With Dude!i
Big Game flaunt

SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.
WEDNESOAY &amp; THURSIJAY
FEB. 19-20
NOT OPEN

..w

lllltr.ment,

mental

~sh

aDd anxiety, interfering with Ida r1gbt to be socure in hta priw.te affairs aDd.
causing him to avoid ualns said

Stake Flapjack Title

OLNEY. England (UP0 - Sliva Winstanley, a 17-year-old s}l:oe
ractory worker, today won the
English leg or the annUli Shrove
Tuesday Pancake Race with Liberal, Kan., dipping a fiapjack

down the course in .one mil'.l.lte,
rour and one--fifth seconds des·
pite a last-minute snowcail.
Olney,
Liberal, Kan.

between

England,

and

The Olne.)' women run at 5:55
a.m. EST and the Liberal
racers go sewn hours later. A

transatlantic telephone c a 11
matches scores lo f'io::l the
winner.

Olney has won 10 of the 19
past races with Liberal.
Each town has a 415-yard
course. Each entrant must Oip
her pancake three times during
the run.
"The perfect pancake has got

Defeat Logan 23-19
The Southern Hlgh School
Girls' Basketball Team retained
it:B record of only 011e loss by
defeating Logan there Saturday.
It waa only the second losl!l ror
Logan, putting them In a two..wa,y
tie with Gallipolis for second
place in the ieague.
After leading tile whole game,
the Southern girls won 23 to 19.

Each contestant must flip her

pancake at least three times
and have enough of the batter
left at the end to pass !or a

AT OUR

Bank Services

Dr. fleming
Is Improving

tlmo.
Dr. FlemiDg, with assistance,
was up and walking Monday according to Dr. Vallee.

The faculty of Ea:rtern H i g h

FREE CUSTOMER PARKING

,.alional
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

Veterans Memorial Hospital
authorized to use a portion of
the children's home barn ror
storage space, by the Meigs
County board of commissioners
in regular session Monday.
The board also heard Jed Webster, Pomeroy police chief. report on a council of govermnent
on law enforcement session he,
Commissioner Ralph W. Ours
and Sheriff Robert C. Hartenbach attended in Marietta last
week.

Trial ReM:heduled
To Begin March 5

Harlem Sian Match

ISN'T IT ABOUT TillE YOU TRADED IN
YOUR OLD CAR FOR A NEW ONE? KEEP
THE COST OF A NEW CAR DOWN BY
USING A BANK FINANCE PLAN. APPLY
FOR A LOAN TODAY.

eastern Ohio have been invited
to attel'll Rio GraOOe College
Feb. 25, for a Southeastern Ohio

It was agreed to advertise for
Dr. Fleming was admitted to
aggregate which is to be used
the Holzer Medical Center e.vby the highway departmelt.
ly Friday morning as a result
Attending were Commissionof vascular problems.
ers
Charles R. Karr, Sr., board
Dr. Vallee said Dr. Fleming
president;
Robert Clark, Mr.
would remain in the 1"\ospital • 'at
Ours and Clerk Martha Chamleast another week," and that he
will be off cllty for a period or hers.

Easrorn Faculty in

Auto111oble loans

Seventeen coun!J' a n d city
school s~erintendents of South--

Scllool ..W play again~;t the !lorlem All-stars basketball team
on the high school court beginning at 8 o'clock toolght.
Proceedfi of the event will go
to the school athletic rund. Faculty members expected to pla,y
are Dan Wright, Bob Ord, Gary
ParBOils. Chuck Taylor, Larry
Ritchie, Larry Heines, D a v e
&lt;lladwell and Lester Mamel.

SPRING~
STYLES
AND COLORS
ARRIVING DAILY.
THE SHOE lOX
WHERE SHOES ARE
SENSIBLE PRICED
Middleport, 0.

The first degree murder trial

WIUiam Frederick Wyant, anooonced earlier to begin March 3
In Meigs County ccmunon pleas
court, has been rescheWied to

0(

start March 5 at 9 a.m.
91erlrf Robert A. Hartenbach
said he has been advloed 0( the
date change by the court and Is
in the process ol notifying the
75 members of Ule speeial jury
venire.

RIVF-R NEws

c:orreO(&gt;JIIdent

llovld

the LaoUan border had become
a major batu e !or control of the
region and that not one Inch of
ground has come easlly.

$1999

• siiiGttJt.butioa elmloum
• ..rtktel 1ofltnli surface

Grll.la pancake&amp;, fries two or more foods at once.

all automatically . . .

PEARL WELKER, left, and Barbera Betzing, rlgllt, create
• colorful umbrella. holder al!l Ann RUII8 looka on at a sorority
work session.

juot oet lhe heat control dial! Double cooled with
scratch reliatant Teflon. 10 you can use your fa'YCII'-

*TUUNI It D~'t 1M

Flea Market!
54!!

S3!!

"Trig" 2" qt. whittling
lea kettle by W eat
hu triqger-act!on opout
lor
pourlnq, filling.

Wide rima, tapered

Bona

copper bottom.

While many of ua have been

Sbllnl111 Steel
MIXING 80WL SET

· - to IPOIId the i:old ......
ter emllnp ,IIIII by our tlrema ·t!lll Sorority ha.. -

aideo for evwy band·
mixing lelk.

. . ·.• .

News ... in Briefs
from Page 1)

No bad boy probkm in OhW-Rhodeo
CLEVELAND - OHIO DOES NOT HAVE A PROBLEM with bad
boys but "with basically good boyswhoarecaught in bad situations,'"
according to Gov. James A. Rhodes.
The governor 811id 90 per cent of the problems that lead to
youthful delinquency could be attributed to illldequacles of the ed~
catimal system, failure o1 public welfare problems and poor hous·
Jng. •'We are goir11 to do tverything Jn our power to help all of the
young people Ot Ohio," Rhodes said Monday at the dedication or the
$2.5 mUlloo CU)'I'- Hilla Boya School at nearby WarrenovUle
Heights.

Hanel!

·I!Zeo- 3~; I" aad%

.\PriL
'.•.Whaf.o a Ilea market'/ Thai' a.•

•dYoly .... tor

l!lrbertl BetaiiiL prealdent o!
~

ca..da and northern Ohio.
Tbe sorortt.Y•s fteamarketwtu
offer a wide "Yariet;y oC article a,
if curreut prusrea• continJea.
The group haa purchaoed a
quutlty of antiques which area.
irw: refini1hed and rel(lholatered
lor the morkot. lnoddltlon.....,..
bera are brlnglna lde~rs to ea.eh
session and erplalni!W how dlltereDI and IIIIP~ articles tor
the home can be ereated.
The artlade lalenll olall mlllllbora wiD be u-tiUghly tealed
before sprtrv, when tho merchandise Is olfored lor &amp;lie.

24!!

Br,wa from 9 to 18 cupo
au!Omatlcolly, OJK! keepa
II bot automatlco1ly, too.
Sparldlng alee), lnaide

IIIKI out for euy c:lean·

lng and lonq ·luiWCJ
bNuty. Brewo a cup-aminute.

section near here.

ready, ataya on ID ,..
mind you U'a kaeplng

voeatl4naJ

agrlcaliUre a I uc1on11 In Malga Hl&amp;h School will
lolll Future Farmers ol ADlerlea member• lhrouihoul t h e
nadan '·In actlvldaa. to to&lt;us ot- ·
tentloft on lbo ~oo ol asrloulture
Natlllllai FF A

C. Clark continued $25,000 bond
and the ca•e wu turned over
to tile grand jury.

ronmNG UP SOliE ollho 'lll'lovtobeoll'ond at the -orlb llellmarbtla Sabra lforrle:amtni a novel bottle. an antique picture frame and a Jllrl)er maehe angeL.

to ten the natlonlo olmplo. They
oeok to IDtorm the public o1 the
lmpo&gt;rtance lhey place upot1 tbo
vall 0111&gt;011un1Ues In American

eonquer the boUle ol starvatlm
halfway around the globe or even
Increase (JI'(IItal&gt;lllty ol farm.
log or ranehlna:, be nmst n.rst
C~XQ~er himself." said E-ierett
Holcomb, vocational qrfculture
teacher and FF A sdvlsor.

Acrl...tlunl.

FFA mambors lind ... . _
Ill lhllr role os YG111111 puluero
WEi!K, Fob. ts-:2.
In dovaloplng a more proapoor.
''FFA ""an oppOrtunity tor OUI agriculture lhei..W bettor
youtll" lathlsy-4, FFA WEEK oene a IP"OIIIng ~ .. and
lhemo. The mes..P"fhal ll&gt;"se an ln.,....lngly complex 1110rld.
"""" qrfculfurllll ar0 trylq
"llofore 111 H A member WI

do1liN

-v.

"HCOJKI helpinga'• aerviDg·hot.

Be Thrifty! Save all of your salesllps from

would "open the door" to federal funds for work oo developing those areas of the state
which would lend themselves

»-

w.iohlnalon'.a

~=~j~~;~~
--"

,

.

1

,,(,

¥
F;::iiA9 ,,utilll~~·~e.,'
~

' .-~·

...., ,..,_._
. llr. ,liloutt..

. Kellluclo' ~ C&lt;!lle11 111

•

for the maoter ol arlo -ee.
Next IIICOIIh, Mr. and Mra.
!1A1u1 and lhllr three son a, Gres·
ocy, ~and Mark, wlll.-e
to Clnelnaad Where Mr. Stort
has accepted a call to becoma
miDlster Ot tho MI. Wash!JpJo
Cborc:ll o1 Cllrlsl. Tbo clureb Ia
located tn the W.lt ~
area of Clndmotl IIIII • f113,000 addltkm IOihepre-clllrch
lira. 8tDrt Ill tho

...,

&lt;:;,, • '·'
-)

,.,.

,...

,. , !.

L

.·~·····

!)!:aiiUco . -

J!ltiDUtiB.

'?'~ ..... , :;,' inoo.i~"""" ' '·'·' ~

•

,•. '

.·~·

·~·I·"""· I'.·'.

,',",I'

''

,·,),··
.

:'...:~
"

li'i.,...,. .....,..

,',wiilri~llt'~~-.i~.jorlo

lor-._

than four assil!ltants to prepare
county tax DlltPSi and IDeiUdt
sherlfr s department&amp; wlthill U.
present program of state iii
lor Juvenile police bureaao.
The Senste bill wOOIId lbDII.
the time within which liM....
ment.s and actions m..,. be
taken Cor collection and recov-ery of municipal lnccxne tuu.
The bill is an emerpmey m•..
ure, which means It would a..
ecme law shortly after .,......
by the leololature and •laDbll
by the governor.

MRS. MEllA WERNER 81"0UT

a~ ct 11-underway.

Llqooraw~

Kenton Tnce Highwl.)'" 11\ow
c:ounc;y engineers to Mft man

douallla' ot.

&lt;111P lhoolotlf ....MLIIela .p r e - ...... Q(the~torlbo-·
,We~.,., ,... dlo- mba&amp;\ Mck~; illrictbr Ot~!(ie · rUiadoo. r.rtllfDtliln, MldO!lloi'
~at . nat1oto. llr. w.r-Jiarllelpated
• lo ~·· 8CF 011 lilt Wtlt4n ~i Re.....h. . liOII'
jif_,_ · ¥1'1 h · "'"' 111t' ~ · B1Ji1e ~ Ia the . ...-,t• 1:11' , ..., . _ 01
'. : , inil St.iilltlo
tlloM*tollr.SI(ioit.'
·,

,' -tho

....llt~· .!l'"y." "-"!RIV•

blrhir,t IDd · ~l')'bueJiiest.
· him livid hi l.'llibiW tho paa

Aa......,

"'*

stout Orda•ne
• d

Kj&gt;.,..,

cal and moe-cal ........ Ia
the Oblo Revised Code.
Amorw the ~ billa Jnin&gt;.
duced In the Geooral
Tuesday were:

aolino

Robin Mor-

Grindstaff,

Cola Truck in
Highway Flip

W10110S!Dut, whooeWifelatho
former Meda JIDI Werner ct
l!rad&gt;urr, waa ordaJnod Into tho
111111!1117 altho Cburch ct Cbrlot
Ill M.,irille,
Feb, IS.
Mr. and lira. lliGul wilD Ia!"·
merl,y l!yid a1 w.-, Olllo,
whore a.f woro,•pr! In tho

ber for coocurreace. Tbe biD
would make mllllll" onmmotl-

Leedy, R - Wooswr, auautild

s...te

row, Jane Johnson and Annette
Warner.

J •-

ed version of a HOUle bDI . . .
sent it back co tbe lower m...

making It Ulopl to have The House bills would author- than one quart 0( liquor Illize merger o! Clevelald-Mar- session when. it wu DOt purahall Law School with Cl.e~ chased .rrc.n the sta18. and ,..
laM State University, whUe tbe t1tw the limit at me quart fll
see(JQJ: would pr-ovide a loopr llqoor &amp;om out of llate In a 1M-'
waiting date in sman claims do&gt;' period.
courts before an action could be
- CreadCOI of a lllllltclpool
cOIQjlloted.
court Ia Belpre.
1110 ~lllarsball.o!IJ . ;-~too
bUI pa80ed by an 87-8 wto, to be
lequire .., Olllllf
while the small claims courta laeilldes tor mOIIIIIII ~
bill wa1 given an 86--0 nod. Both
A ""*I ol 14 bUI1 ..... .
bills were sent tel· the Senate duced in the HOUH, ami .......
for consideration.
In the s...te.
The Se•te passed an ame!dToday, the Houae wat to
on three billa and the Seaate
on one.
The HOUBe bills W&lt;IUid deoJco.
nate Ohio 72 as the "SiJDoD

Linda

Q~'VIJ.e

througll the 30.mlle~- A Valley and llolrs Into Hue.

passed two biUo and dle

cl.aso Frida¥ nigh~ Presiding
.Pri.nceases at the dance were

Jf4

wbl'*

Laos, .....

-Two liquor law " ' - • Ill
the Senote. Son. Jaa.a K.

crowned Valentine queen at a
dance sponsored by the senior

WAYNE srotJT

o1

Assembly Tuesday. the House

BIIENDA MICHAEL
MI&amp;S BRENDA MICHAEL, a
HDior at SouUlern Hlsh School
In Racine and daughter o! Mr.
and MrL Gerald Micbael. was

Rtv.

aut

one.

·-sblp

••

to

natural preservation.
''We're rapidly losilll maoy
natural a r e a s," she said,
.. Somethlns must be done at
this session."
Bills Passed
ln other actl&lt;m in the General

tar-•-

Elberfeld$ In Po111eroy

mtora

m. •

Bigger Tax Split to
Counties Proposed

II&gt;_..

Ohio Medicaid Costs $90 Million

,perched . . . Htahwa¥
prime l n l l l - ......

While B52a uoed the Zt _ .
allied truee to Ill ~
the Commualllll aoed It to....,.
small arms tire.
lhoullllllda of troop&amp; lbo Ill!
0.0 Marine unit .... reported Nug area, poaing a D11W laNI&amp;
so eiOH to the border it was to the &lt;tty.

I was pointed out, "'lbe FF A
prarldes a place to tadld, ere.
ate, and ellic&gt;Y the buolnen ol
llle. FF Aprovides an atmoopbere
lor members to learn, to do,
to earn, and to serve."

MAKEUP OF FFA
·~ere ts an urgent caUing
Membership In the FFA Ia
lor H A members to gra.p the made up ol
ol vocationopportuollleo available In agrl. al agrleallure In hi8h school.
culture," he said.
Orgrmization actl.viUes a r a
designed to help develop rural
and aood c:ltlzllllblp
and to - - · t o better acblevement In lhllr sludf
COLUMBUS (UPO- The ted- availlble to Scrt,pps - Howard nuhliiW . homes,
ambulance and work toward succesatul ea ..
eral - state macllcald .............
- · 1&gt;.1' Ohio Wallare aacvlceo and to drug llrms. h tabllolunenl In
and oth.
-~-n~-.
.......,.
1
eoats about t90 mlWon a year uuvvtor Denver L Wblte, the said the Gray Drug Chain. er qrl.WIInesa oecUpatlons.
In Olllo, Scrljlpa - HDirard article said.
which tilled 80;4V9 presc•iptlons
The Meigs FFA Chapter haa
newiPIIQ;Itl'l!l reportlld to11v in a
The flsurea revaaled that 37 for 10,024 perSOill at a total 49 member&amp;. Jta oftlcera are
c~ article.
. dentists received $10,000 or coal lJI $315,588.20, received Glon Crisp, president; Don Cot'111e articlt- ,.Ud 12,122 1111¥111- moro In 1988 witil alno rocelv- nearly - e the PII.YIIIent lo terlll, 'vlce.presldeol; Rod Walclano and denlbll 11J1f11cl!lllod 1'11 IIJ&amp;II $40,000 each.
Ita neareot tolllllOIItor.
ker, oecnlarl'; Larry Birchlast y - Ia the PnitP'aln., &lt;It
ThO Jliw:ea aloo rmiaied that
"We have seriously ·eM!- 11 1• trea.....,r. Torrr Jarrall
--• -•• to ,..,,_.
88 · ~-1. dOctA&gt;ro and ........_
· '
'
modi '"'_
.......,,,,&gt;..,._ le'I(IO&lt;I the bOis olabout30doc- -e"'
. . t , ond Mark Bropn, reThe lafpll oum jjald to . t paths otclf• recolvedmarellal\ tors lnthe ' lllot slx ' m-s," porter.,
deotlol - r iliO ~ lb · .10,1100 durl'll 19118, tho articlo alld. Dr. Thoma• C. P'"""IW
The aatlnnal FF A orpnlzatlon
1888 was $101,11'1$ !lidch wont~ , Ald. \
,
.
who ocreens lbo major medical hal~ 450,000 momOr. Doollld F. lil.tere. ol ·~
. ~·- ~clo ,,aald bla bUlL
bors, 1i11119,000 lneai dltptaro
l.umlloa.
,
~· wont to hOspltalo,
''We haW. referred lhe billa 1n lhe 110 llaleall!'f Plltrlo Hl"'The ~ &amp;aid RIYiore wu
'
f
of oniJ - .d~ to Ida llate
. The nok ct Goorae Wllihlntl,,.ro~ -~~
bolt11!" · ton• a ~ lo each
,
.
.
cOQle\~ ·· ~···' hii y.r ~ the' oipMnace'' Ol Na...
Ho ,
I'OSI'Pf'FIC~TOF..c~
said. ' . ·
'·· tlnnal .W:A WEE~\. AI~·~
Duo~~· i\&gt;- . ~.
"We .tlil,. ,wo have· &amp;"!Oide4 · ua~~r '.....a!llzed u a lj8vpl!l.
lllot
l&amp;tl.a: , ~lillt¥/1~·~ '' oomi cOI ·Ihii Randali ol ~ ~WarGoDoraiand-ftrat
~ '"'
..m.., city Gr otatei' l&gt;aoiuoe ··wo did not '""""': '" Pre~
flrat

f[llli;)OOnt. Mollla,y to secOfld.de..

Court Jlllge T(llll

bomb loads ol the year.
111 toda¥' • r!l!htlng one North
Vietnamese soldier lashed hiJn..
self to a tree limb and dropped
a grenade onto a Marine patrol
beoeath him. Three Leather·
neckS were wounded but their
buctU.es ldlled the attacker with

The Marines reported American losses rdnce the operation
began ao 61 killed and 295
wounded Including live kUied
.... 20 wounded
The Marines drive bas been
helped by B52 strike• Into
Conununlat held areu o! Laos.
Informed sources said today tbe
852s took sdvantago of the 24-

Vo-Ag Students Marking FFA Week
qlow1 when coffee'•

Municipal

chlpter, said Ilea markets

otror a pot pourrl ot artlcloo lor
die. The sales are popular in

5

mountain bases.

Event Set

. •-~....i&amp;A:;.~" • ...._,

quart

DINNER PARTY
PERCOLATOR

concrete abuttment at an inter..

gree mwder in the fatJJ, shootIng ol her huabml, q&amp;rk, 48,
at their home near WestervUle
Friday.

work.

tq with an eye IOiiard opriJ1iThe pol ol the lcq houn of

18-cup Sblinlau Steel

MOTORIST KILLED
NEW CARIJSLE, Ohio CUPO
- Richard Dick. 4:7. New carlisle. was killed late Monday
when his pickup truck struck a

PLEADS INNOCENT
DELEW ARE. Ohio (IJP0 Mra. Boonie BaUey, 33, pleaded

Mu o..&amp;~ter o1 Bela Sig-

' ..... C(ilolt.loa.

LUmrtoua ataiDI- alae!
glomorouo yelao practl·
col 1o clean! Br-• 6 lo
9 cupo with automatic
euo. Sorv•llte In booe

•

hour allied Tet truce ln Vietnam drawing macblne.... tiro " to hit Laos wttll the heaviest Laos. Its member• _ . .

All Sports

sld'a, amblll0111 membon o1 XI

Glll1iul

Middleport.
DISCHARGED - Nooe.

JEANE MORGAN begins work on rejuvenatioo ot an antique
mJrror to be otrered at the Xi Gamma Mu Sorority's spriJW:
lie&amp; ma:rkeL

PICTURES AND REPORT
BY BOB HOEFIJCH

Sbllnlell Still
TEA KETTLE

.

The Communists tied snipers
to trees on suidde missions,
tl&gt;ey booby trapped discarded
8(J.Iipment, set t:rlp wires across
trail.&amp; to detonate mines and
removed all unit identificadon
from their dead. But they were
identified as North Vietnamese.
The Marines set oul lhree
COLUMBUS CUPO- A bUI to
weeks ago to clear large tunnel more of the state sales
Communist units out of the A tax collectiODB back to l(Jcal
9tau Valley which stretches governments was introduced
roueh.IY westward rrom the Da Tuesday in the Ohio Senate.
Nang area to the border ol
Sen. Michael J. Maloney. RLaoa. It is a principal inllltra- Cincinnati. introduced the legiJtion route for Red wd.tl laUon which also would revamp
threatening the coastal plains.
. pyramiding problems of t h e
Today'&amp; lighting raised to 739 county budget ctmmlnion.
the number of Communista
Accordi.Jw to Maloney's blll,
kllled In the operation, nick- the state would retnrn to local
named Dewey Canyon, Most ol governments for distributioo 5
the casualties were inflicted In per cent o! the collections
the past five days as mtdsum- above the present level State
law now aDows only a $24 million anaual return of the receipts.
Maloney's bill would WJe the
$24 million as a floor rather
tJan ceilinl in the return.
'file biD ... s .. OOII(p'owth of
a ..........-. Leo!iaa~ Son81U 8obr, _ atllleUC 'dtrectM tee eoinmf.ulori studY edtruiutat Ohio -er•lll', ..w be lhe tee on COUllly budget q&gt;eraguest speaker at the All ~ ttona. Maloney chaired the com-o
Jlan&lt;olet at Southern lliih Scbool mlttee.
Stat&amp;-Local E1rort
March 4.
The SOuthern Athletic BoostMaloney estimated provisions
ers, meetinB Tuesday evening, ol his bill would help the local
....... cod the b - will be goveriU1lenls w h t c h helped
...,ed at 6:30 p.m. In tile high themselves - as the govern.
achool auditorium. Tickets may ments used sources a.U.ble to
be puchased from the coaches them, more state money would
at s..rthem and from any mem- become available u a result.
ber o! the !&lt;&gt;«ball and basketAlso introduced in the Senate
ball &amp;q.~ads at a cost or $1.50 Tuesdl,y was a bill to preserve
each.
natural areas o! ''unllSual sci()ftt(!8ra elected were B1lly entific or educational signinHlll, pre11dent; Ed Wagner, vice cance."
president; Dorothy SmiUl, secreSen. Clara E. Weisenborn, Rtary, and Mae Gueltlg, treasurer. Dayton, ofCered the measure to
It waa also announced t h a t establish a 10-member natural
tickets tor tbo bancpet must b' resources council to heJ.p the
parcliued by Mondoy, Feb. 24. state Natural Retources DeThe next resular meeting ol the partment develop acenic &amp;reae
boosters is March 17 at 7:~ in the state.
p.m.
Sen. W&amp;isenborn said her bW

TEFLON*-COATED
GRIDDLE 'N SERVER

ite metal spatula!

O· '

slloveolllromlhefos-ohrouded

UP!

keeps party 1nacka warm -

{-)

mer heat enabled tbe troops to

Lamb, with the Marine units,

J

GAUGES - Gallipolis, 11.9
ing in Southeastern Ohio with
and 15.5 runnirw 12 teet o! roll·
graduating seniors at Rio Grande
en; Pt. Pleasant. 24.18; Pome-College. Throughout the day, the
roy-Mason. 20. 70; Hinton, 1.34
s~rhtendents will Interview
!alling; Kanawha Falls. 4. 40 tallseniors and hold small groqJ
lr:w:i Charleston, 18.,18 falling.
seminars with students who plan
London. Marmet, an:l Wlnfl.eld,
to enter the teaching proCession.
are on the sill.
For coun!J' and city st.perinBOAT MOVEMENTS:
teOOents who have not ...tsited
GALLIPOLIS LOCKS - Jane
Rio Grande College recently, the
T. down 6:25 p.m.; Queen City
Recruitment Day will provide an
down 7:0S p,m.j Andrew P. Calopportunity for them to see re- houn up 9:25 p.m. i Albert F.
cent develq:~mentt U. the college.
Holden down 1:05 LDL; Eli.sha
Woods ltl 2:45 a.m.i Buck Freeman down 3:20 a.m.; Miaa Lucky
Service Announced
up 4:10 a.m.; Altoo Zephyr \II
Funeral services for PCc. Dan .. 4:25 a . m.; Mark Eastin up 5:45
ny Joe Dodd, 24, who was killed a.m.; Diane Bosworth down 6:20
In action In VIetnam, wiU be held Lin.
KANAWHA RIVER - London,
Thursday at 2 p.m. at the FogleOleander
t.p 7:15p.m.; Marmet,
song Funeral Home with the Rev.
Morris
Harvey
down 2:10 p.m.;
Martl.n Berisford and Rev, Paul
Fortney olficlating. Burial will Solvay down 10 p.m.; Beaver
be In tile Kirkland Memorial Gar- down 2· a.m.; Winfield, lnmror..
ker up 9:25 p.m.; Fort Deardens.
born
down 1:05 Lm.; Ouachita
Friends m8)' call at the funerup
4:40
a.m.; Polly R. down
al home anytime after 4 p.m.
today. Military rites wlll be con- 7:45a.m.
OlnO RIVER - Lock 14, WOducted at the graveside.
llam PUt 141 2:25 Doftloi ORCO
up 7130 p.m.; All~ up 8:25
p.m.; st. Marys tt)5 a.m.; DunDIVORCE ASKED
A petition Cor divorce has been can Bruce down 7:15a.m.; Lock
riled in Meigs Count¥ common 15, Beckjord tel 5:15 a.m.;Peace
pleas court by Nellie L. 1bom- UP 6:55 a.m.; Foremost up 5:55
as, Racine, against Josiah W. a.m.; Lock 17, Jefferson up 5:10
Thomas, RD 3, New Matamoras, p.m.; Jetfbolt up 4:55a.m.; Peg.
gy Downey up 5:20 a.m.; Red
charging gross neglect al dut,y.
No minor children are Involv- Bird down 6:15 a.m..; Bellev11le
Locks, Jdm IAdd Dean down 6:ed.
45 a.m.; Franklin Pierce down
7:05 a.m.; Lock 21, James L.
VISITS GRANDMOTHER
George Ginther, studentatOhlo HamiltOil LW 5:40a.m.; Lock 22,
&amp;.ate University, speirt: the past Philip ~orn down 4 a.m.; Lock
weekend with his grandmother, 23, Elgercllff up 1:45 a.m.; S.
M. Jenks up 6 a.m.; Racine
Mrs. Rose Ginther.
Locka., National down 1:20 a.m.;
Greerq~ Locks, Elaine G. up
STUDENTS STRANDED
DAYTON, Ohio (UP0 - The 4:10p.m.; Walter Hougland down
St. John Transportation Co. to- 7:55p.m.; Jesse Brent dOII'n 11:·
day suspended school bus oper- 40 p.m.; Harry Dyer lCJ 2:20 L
ation ani more than 6,000 school m.; Meldahl Locka, ValvoUne
children in this area had to Ond down 3:25 p.m.; steel Clipper
other ways or getting to class. dOWD 6:40 p.m.; J. S. Lewis \II
10 p.m.; Jamet R. H~s lV 11:55
p.m.; JOOn Fox_. 12:35 a.m.;
MEIGS GENERAL HOSPITAL
ADMITIED - Mabel S..an, City ot St. Louis down 5:20a.m.;
Langaville; Marcia Harrisoo, Invader down 6:35a.m.

' '

(~..,ed

L

p 0
...:. l' .

SAIGON CUPD-- U.S. lll&amp;rlnes

said the Marine PIBh toward

Recruitment Day Planned

TEN CENTS

.·\ v .

dueled CommwUst arU.llerymen
acrou 1tle Laotian border today
and !ought Inch by Inch through

100 - degree lunole heat to the
edp d the A lihau Valley , They
ldlled 196 North Viebtamese
IOldien and diacovered the
Kl'aves ol 185 others.

AMERICAN DESERTERS In Swedeo are ftndlng llle far from home Ill a llraage
country I&amp; not tbe beaveo they had aapposed. A leader of tbe Amerlcao Dnerien
Committe. Ia Stockholm said maay of them are depreaaed over lbelr oelf·lmpotod
edle and are longing to return bome. Of •bout M Amerleaa deaertera, 105 have
been graoted asylum In Sweden.

Hospital Will
Use Barn Area

condition.

LOOK

$10!!

Recruitment Day, according to
bonafide flapjack.
Dr.
Edward Wallen, chainnan,
Mrs. Gladys "Dilly" Dllllngdivision
of educatioo aOO psyham, one of the greats in
flapjack running, will be in her chology.
Purpose ot the event, accordusual large white apron and
ing to Dr, Wallen. is to give sufull-length dress,
DUly, a 77-yearodd grand- perintendents sn opportwlit;y to
mother, has been in each or the discuss the advanUlges or teachpast 19 races. Known more for
her sportsmanship than speed,
DUb rull! a yard or two at the
start then relaxes Into a walk,
waving her skillet to all her
neighbors along the course.

Dr. Gerald Vallee, Holzer Med~
leal Center apeclallst, interna1
medicine, announced today that
The feminine Tornadoes, coach- Dr. Arthur R, Fleming. specialed by Mls1 Connie Williams, are lit, obstetrles..gy~WCQlogy at the
In a two-way tie with Athena for Holzer Medical Center, is imtlrst place In lite league.
proving and is now ln g o o d

TAKE A CLOSER

black a.cc:enta.

According to a S~year-old

tradition behind the Olney race,
each contestant must dress in
apron and kerchier aOO look as
though she had just rushed
from
her
kitchen midway
through breakfasL

'

A Shan Valley Control

eup• of

deUciOill
coftee, outomotic:ally.o Pol·
lahed aluminum. wttb

to be like rubber," said Olne)'
runner Mandy Marchant, 17•
"thick enough, solid enough and
tough enough to stay in one
piece."
Olney is banking heavily on
Mary Dix, 17, to successfully
derend the title she won last
year. 1m the 1968 race Mary
woo in 68 secoOOs.
The winner gets to keep the
troph.y- an inscribed silver skillet- !or a year.

36

t

with little ...,... 'lfiiiiU'f) rtz•
cwtr thl . . . . . . . . ~ ..
cia¥. HID• IDOioir_lho . . .
30s to tho tOt, .... IDnlllllt rnoo&amp;b" llllbo :IGa.

. , ~·
r,

.,,,

e~au~t Jlfllll ._ .

F
.
B
Mar1nes ~ ~ 0J. . 1ng or

Makeo pariy-qlvlng ....,.
ierl Br.,.a 12. 18, 24. 30

or

A few

Of The Meigo-Maoon Area
WEDNESDAY FEBRUARY 19. 1069

heard by unknown parties."'

Skillets Ready, flip Away!
OLNEY,
England (UPI)Flapjack flippers from miniskirted teeJH.gers to a 77-yearold grandmother greased their
skillets for today'&amp; 20th anrual
Shrove Tuesda.y Pancake Race

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

instrument ·to avoid beirw over-

AUTOMATIC
PARTY PERK

____ ........,._

entir.

Devoled To The lnlereJltll

VOL. XXI NO 210

12 to 38 cup

Feminine Tornadoes
TONIGHT ONLY
FEB. 18

w........

ot

suit said, "interfered with hh;

borne anytime.

MEIGS THEATRE

cCIIlVersations

and disturbed his lawful use

at

The woN carnival derbes
from a Latin expreselon meaning '"farewell to fiesh"- a ref·
eorence to the Lenten faat which
follows the annual Shrove Tue ...
da,y fete, best known ln the United htes as "Mardi Gras."

thereby caualns h 1 m extreme

She was also preceded in
Jeath by her husband,

privati~ 1elephone

•

Now You Know

LOCAL TEMPS
OHICES TO CLOSE
'!be tanpooraun In PomeroY' 1
tbo Melli COUnll'
bollnlso dlltrict at 11:30 a.m. Courthauoa ..W be clooed all
todl,y wa1 t2 dqreea, UDCiar IUR-- day Sotunll.r In oblenance ol
IU' lkle1.
Walhinaton'• Birthday,

7 Fined
By Mayor ,·
s.v... defOIKionta ..... . '
an&lt;llhree ~~forf-._...: :
1\le&amp;da¥ nlgt!t Ill tho .til, ·.
Mlddl.,.-t Na.rar c. 0. ~;

.'

er.

.

.

Fined $1JS aad .!llill;
given three lily jail I d'JUI,l i
were Weldon Frye. M, t .~

w. Va., a a d - D. Wt
ton, 52, Gollll&gt;ol1o, ebdlDelbert L. Enoch, 27, Parkers- od with cll1Yina whDe _ , .
burg, W. VL, Coca Cola truck
'
driver, escoped iJUury when hla od.
OUiera
aned
.
1
L"
truek owrturned Tuel!lday after..
Smith, 29, C!llD. ............
noon on Rt. 7, one andft-- and Jamea
'If, ·.._
miles north oflhe Ga11ia. Me1p
10n,$18and .................
COIIIIy line.
lnll; Lester c. ,__ 111, ...
The State Hllltway Patrol sold
. . . _ laft 111m, ,11tlaiEmch,-noriii,WIIoup COIIt1;
8taart T. ar.wet,27,.JIII...
on olow movl'll tralllc . - ,
di--'o
$18 I I I I I and IIIPilod hlo bniooo. Hlo truck
ODd llanlll M.;~.
went olllhe right olde olthohlah- dl_.t.
mt~~~~ u,...••.•:'~
way,atrucka...,...nll&amp;lllovor- $181111
'
turned onto ltarlght !do, In the
. . . . . - laao at

E.

uam..

~~J:Sol:L188F.&lt;f
'!be boiiMin&amp; "' . _ ...
.teas will be obsorved wllb
Alb Wednoadl;r oanlcaa to be
held lhll """""' altho Pamerqy Trhdty IJJIIted Church "'
a.not at 7:30 p,m. Rev. wn.
bar Ia tho tnlnlllar.
'Rio •potill,o II&lt;lilvltad.

~~:::::-«&gt;.~=~
,,

'

' .,

.

.

all J.
~

..,.,.Hit•

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="696">
    <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="11096">
                <text>02. February</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="53814">
            <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="53813">
              <text>February 18, 1969</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1129">
      <name>ewing</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="862">
      <name>frost</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="216">
      <name>mccoy</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="6875">
      <name>worthen</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
