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                  <text>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•

�I - 11oo Poll)' Sontl-',

u....,_ · P..._, 0., F.... 19, 1909
3 -

"What's a Few Billion, More or Less,
to Keep You Dry?"

•'

t

BERRfS WORLD

The Dally Senlinrl, Mlddlepon -Pomeroy, o., 1-eb. 19, 1969

AA Ratings

Bl':'e Devils Pull Away to 68-54 Victory

{VPO - 11lo
n.,..COLUMBU'i
UnltedPrelslaten.U...
A.A.

~~l:C'@J£&amp;Jif.8i§®~~~~~;:;.';';'~;"O::::O:":":":·~:·:::·:=:=:::::::::·:::·:·:::::·:·~x::·~:.;:·

BY JACK O'BRIAN
NEW YORK - Tbs Concord
Hotel CID't - - wlO' Brll·

lue Bardot"a hulband Qmther
Sl.chs doe•n't anawer its letter&amp;
••.. The Automat OJIP)IIIte t b e
Lu.
I. 45th St. Alot Ollfce

third tart attacll; be'U dlo Ul
Ull\lbn-aJ. death (Dot lhot), WJJI•
ua1 for Vllo'o ~ 1rsdfllcll
~ IIUI1I&gt;illl' .••• And watc:b lbe

Jy Cld.CIIO miJIIqwlreu Mart
Emeey .old ber racetrack 11oldlnp for ...... $2&amp;,000,000.
hDOJ Berman'o retusal to
reiDO'Ve hiJ. "toilet" IDd worN
there would be a Jackle-Ari wed- .....-. cm-tna lWI
ding now aaya "Watch for anoth- at tbe Amerlcana'a RQyaJ B o x
er big Onaasl1 atory."
bnlllllrt &lt;IINJJI&gt;royal frooll.on'o
What's with lbe piii)'Wript NeD Hotels' Pres. Bob TlldJ •••• cat..
Simona? •••• And the ex • BoNo" erinll Valente, the new RoJallka:
KennecU banpr-ons the Bill Van- star, aM a real ltar, bu a perder. Heuvela ? •.••• JeaoStefnVan- formance any tute1U1 ahowbf.1
den Heuv&amp;l will write a book IIIII&gt;OIIte from ehlldnn to oeto.
about Bobby KeMedy, '"T h e genarlalll will J)Ooltlvel,y odon;
Trabl,.. Uling tbe N. .Y.-to - lhe'a the mosttalentedall......wncl
Wash~ .~tal traln ·'ar t!"le femllllne -...aloerlnlbe-ld.
clevlce for an appreciative meThe sifted YOWIIl oomle Rl&lt;ble
morial; Pete Hammll'l her co- Pr.Yor ,...(dies lbe pipllatloa In
autllor •••• The girl with Pldl June .... Althea GibiMIIl will try
SI.Jvers was a lookallke I o r pro t.emia qain ••.• Prlnceaa
ballerina Marta Tallchlef but lt Margaret JaW u0Uver" Witb
wasn't Maria; but Ws a marve- Lord Tmy and reCurned with her
lous compliment to the unkrmm kids to enthuse a second ume,
SilYers• date.
even aa did this commoner and
Gangland chief Vito Genovese his childre~ It's tbertlnest ftlm
Ml!l lung cancer ln jail, plus tbe musical ln years .... Kathleen

-t

Tbings would be so much simpler if this
were an cither/or world-if peoP.le were

always either all good or all evil, either
.all right or all wrong, either all wise or
all stupid.

The impression e m e r g 1 n g from the

Pueblo hearin~s is that there is no one
villain respons1ble for the loss of the ship,
and perbaps no villain at all.
Based on past experience, the Navy was
not acting from deliberate stupidity in
having

"on call" rescue forces that emted

on paper only.
According to Rear Adm. FrankL. John·
SOD, who commanded U.S. naval forces in
Japau at the time of the Pueblo seizure,
1' •PI ~ were made ol th&amp;. coasts of
Rid CIGIIB, Ru&amp;ila and'Ndrlb,Korea dutiilg

hill te..-e.""' While ~~ '*f'been numer.
oli! actO of!haraslilleiit ill U.S. ships by

the Russians and Chinese, tbe Nortb
Koreans bad never bothered them.
ApparenUy, an unwritten law of this
particular espionage game makes it per~
mis_,slble to make things as miserable as
possible for your opponent, but not cricket
to employ outright violence. Until NorUt
Korea changed the rules, that is.
Anyway, said J-son, he had li!Ue or
no authority to take rescue actioo.
As for the Pueblo being armed with
only two .50 caliber machine gUIUI, Cmdr.
Charles R. Clark, former skfpper of the
USS Banner, sister spy ship of the Pueblo,
testified tbat he did not want even these
aboard his ship. He fel1they were not only
useless but provocative.

Still tmex.plairted, of course, is why the
Pueblo was not provided with the where·
withal to enable her crew to destroy the
ship's electronic gear and . other secret
cargo. Common sense would seem to dictate that not just enemy attack but any
number of chance events, such as being
blown aground on a hostile shore, might
make such action necessary.
No one is being done proud by the
revelations coming from the Pueblo inqulry. But while the Navy brass are busy
passing the buck among themselves , the
man in the street fervently hopes that
someone in the Pentagon has learned and
is applying the lessons that have been
tau~ht by the sorry incident.
In retrospect. the lneiden't underllnes how ift.
lin!tely numbered are the opportunities that
chance cOinbtned with the heat of passion trip
the trigger on a new world wide confiagraUon
that could make war 1 and war 2 resemble bands
of urcbina snapping ott popguns at each other.
Also retrospectively, there is strong evi~
dence to believe that North Korea wanted to do
enctly lllat, tllat is, eml!roll the United States
011 anotber Pacific front which would - in ooe
great stroke - cripple our efl'ort in Vietnam,
further sap our economy, and block accommodations between thia nuclear power and the
other great nuclear power, Russia. And North
Korea was ready to pounce on South Korea in
the hope ot erasing from ltl horizon that symbol
ol auccessful lree enterprise which is a perpetual indictment ol the communist tyranny.

U.S. Still Cold To Cuba Accord
The agreement reached wltb Cuba to ·
allow the passeogers of hijacked·airliners
to dapart the same day they make their
UIIICbeduled lancllnss iD Havana and iD the
same plane tbat brings them should
greatly reduce the lnconvenlence . uperl·
enced by hapless bljackeel and the ex·
sullered by tbe atrUnes.
Ullfortunately, it is not likely to do much
toward the solution of the problem of the
hijacb tbemselves, which bave occurred
at about au every-other-day !requeacy oo
far iD 19118.
A fm1ber agreement, suggested by
aome, to provide for e:rtradltlon of hiJackers would certainly discourase the
practice, but It i&lt; doubtful wbether Ibis
tlnd of agreement would be desirable, if
ottalnable. The United States would not
want to place Itself iD the posillon of being
obligated to return Cubans who cominancleer tbe1r country's planes to fiy to free.
clom, althougb there bso only been one
ouch Incident, one Involving the theft of a
erop.&lt;luallng plane.
·
For tbe same nuon, many riaUons view
PfOIJQiala of an interoatlonal convention
lD this area as unwisely infringing on the
rl&amp;bt of polltlcal asylum. Thus the hijack
&lt;1r skyjack problem remains a problem.
However, there are otber thaws In the
tbat bu chilled U.S..CUbau relations

for the past 10 years, of which the limited
and Informal agreement on hljackings is
onlycme.
Hints from Havana su ~~ a readiness
for some kind of norm8
tion of diplomatic and trade relations· with the United
States. Just as there may have been 10me
propaganda value when the hljacklngs
first began but they bsve now passed the
poillt of diminishing returns, so Castro's
bate-the-Yankees policy may be reaching
tbe end of Its usefulness.
Strangely enough, cme of the couotries
working behind the scenes 10 promote this
normalization is the Soviet Union, which
finds the economic burden of politically
maverick Cuba an increaslngly unprofit·
able albatross arouod Its neck.
Americans who want no truck with Communist Cuba need not tske alarm. Tbe
rosd to any such accommodation would be
a long one, wltb many large obstacles In
the way, including, to name but three, tbe
matters of the U.S. base at Guantanamo,
of indemnity for e:Kproprlated U.S. prop..erty, of tbe professed aim of Castro to ex·
port revolution to LaUn America.
Moreover, there is no indication that the
bearded one is really ~repared to start
down tbat rosd, and he IS stlll very much
in charge of Cuba.

The Value of Calamities
Deatb," aome wag once IBid, "Is
nature's DJ of telllng you to slow down."
· To be oure, nature deall In cataclysmic
10

- -· But neither a bear! attack nor
aa eanbciu•!re occurs out of the blue, uo·
c&amp;lllld. Jlalla are the end results of a long
ltrlq of eauset and efeets, though we, in
our limited bowledJe, may see only the
IDal d«t.
We linow that the body does not wear out
all ol a auddell. We know the earth will
not. either, ·~lie our fonclness for the
kfDd of ~ ftct.loo tbat cootempl&amp;tes
sllddea ......... of the IUD Of l'UII4W8Y
utorGidl .. .a:tlle lllre. Nature II patient
aad
flolrly. It lias many waya of
telllnc • to ....,.. .....,.~ If,., bUt bave the
wladoln to ..... the ......
'nil wambi&amp;J are JICit alwaya so opectsc·

....a

ular as a DonOra, Pa., ..death smog" or a
hideous, olly lido rolllng a g a 1 n s I tbe
beaches of a Santa Barbara. Tbe consequences of the . pollution, poisoning and
deopollation of the eartb usually creep up
on us slowly. We become accustomed to
foul atr, foul wilier and a landaCIIpe olen·
sive to tbe eyes, aceepting II as the price
of progres• and coollnulng it In the name
of development.
TboUJ)I the residents of Santa Barbara
wW disagree, we can be thankful for wbat
bsppened there thil month-but only U It
awakeno us to the fact tbat man's abase
of his environment Is occutrlllc every·
where In dif(orent wayo and at dlferent
rales, and only If It serves to spur us to do
somolhlng about It before nature does, In·
deed, teach us the ftllallesson.

YirtaoMt

FJdridge
boby

In JuiJ .... Comet
HaeMU'I I 0 n

Bc:lbb1

n

Carl7lo'•

O«UUUd

b)'

ts lbe a.tJ.
Ume Ealt Coast Jld 01 labor
osauttstor llmoJ Korobok ....
Ju&lt;ll' llarloDd'l brlnd MW lJn..
dlssatero bars have bar
dedded to bani out Ia Loodon. while.
Chie realtor JaDetltan.on1Da ...
sd a c:elebr.- at Goldie's Now
York lfter flDal1ztos a f250,000
dssl - sold on eatate In st.
Naarten'a Vlrgln lalaa, to Hen-1
1'1 and Crlstlos Ford; jult doWn
lbe sobtroplcal J11ke from .....
toto lbo alao ~sd to u-N. Y.
maltre-d' C l - H!lllp ....
'lbll
Welt
lldea lol
"My_ptlteftb
and"'''
.ktn'l
u""-a""
strikesDutc:b
IIUIIIY of
tl!O Qulek-l&gt;ored._
___
___
_ _wil•
__
__
_ _ __,.
_ _ _...I
11

'"the oext Aclpdeo.n

Naghtmares at all levels of society:

Problem insolvable on past experiena!

with a
BY Wll.LIAM S. WHITE
For lbe dllomma ~ tits WD· violence. It Is far dlll'erent from
WASHINGTON - The agony of problem 10 DBBI'ly insoluble on PIS ''dlmoalfrltkn" wbl.ch in 14crlme Ia the streeta." For tl:d1
the universities Ms become in- all past experlenee.
maa.r lnstaaces hal become in II episodic, seattersd, larpj.y
Never before, too, have eol- lad. a revolll!lclnary uiiSIIlt up. lncllvlmallzecl, and Is at a 1 1
comparably more than a crW.
for education and even for "law Iege admlnl.sb'atorlbeeo so wide- m the fabric ~ a free IIOdetv,
conunltled usualb' by peo.
and ordern in the ordinary mean ~ ly frilbleDed . and 80 widelY In·
pie who m!gbt be - - to
ha•
been
moved
up
to
In
ing ~ that term. It has beoome elfeetual In malJdaln!ng o eli- this OOUII!r)', Latin America and eommlt lt.
a ni8hlmare without example lor mate in whicb elementaryrea.aon some ports of Latin ~ have - 'lbe polllleal lmpll-., ~
public omclals at every level, can survive and the learningpro- long kDown the "studeDt" out- aU this are eadlesa. Already,
not excluding that political aer- cef!S can be carried Cl1 with even brsak, wbleh has nothing - . . a polllleal onuoteur, n..ald Reaie wtdch 1&amp; the White House. a minlmal clvlllt;y. This is said,
ever to do with authentic stuNever before have all those parenthetically, on the authordent concerns or even wltb educharged orltb some ~IY of maJn. ity of confidenttal conver~a:Uoos
held by this columnist with some eatlmltself.
tainJng public order - from the
The American C81DJIUMS 1 W'Ipollee station through the court- ol the most dlstlngulsbed, aod
W
lately, had DDt known t be
house to the Governor's man- most Ubsral, unlverolt;v preol.
real
'finllenee ~ thlo phenome.
sion and so on up to Washing- dents In the United States.
Thor ....,. It now, witll all
l1s w I I d 1 y unrealizable "da·
mands," such as tbe '"demaDccs"
at Duke Un1vers1t;y for a biDet retoatatement ~ all Nearoes
IIIRsd oot for undenied aeadem.
le. fallurs IIJid on end f!( ' n y
grading qlllem for Negro stu.
O~errated
dents. They at lalt that
!be
prolestoro
dellborately
~­
By BRUCE IIOSSAT
fer ultimatums that c:ould net•
er be mol aad Indeed are deliberately deeflned 10 as1o be lmWASHINGTON (NEAl
J)OSifble
to meet.
An able political figure (not an offiee-holder) who has
What tbo1 de DDt lo oow
had some identity with education in his state was beard
to complain not long ago about what he considers the
to with thlo, wbfdt Ia de·
decline of rational thought in America.
scribed by . .on the IIIOBt psr.
mlasive of ecklators u 111 frraHe was expressing dismay over the violence and the
shouting matches which, though lnvartsbly the work of a
tlonal" and b)' more oopbllllcatsmall student minority,· have tended to disrupt and even
sd obasrvers for It !rub'
engulf many of the nation's colleges and universities these
II
a -.('nnnnml~sd aad
dsys.
Ilboral-lasctst attack . _ lbe
I£ his complaint is valid in any considerable 1.11easure,
moat senaklve ~ all "-!CID
it puts us at a curious turn. For never in our history have
lnstltutloao ll1d lbe ooe - ·
we placed so high a value upon getting an educallon, and
tloa 1 - Ofldllllsd to meet never before have so many millions iD tbe young populace,
Ienoe. !'.o!&gt;lnll Is mads so dllllaided beavily by government dollars, made 11 to high
oult b)' lbe spoelal nsture ~
school and coUege.
thla
!bruit.
H is common to say that the young people of today are
the best-Informed in history, that they put tbeir eldero to
Tbs molntenan&lt;e 01 public
shame in the volume and diversity of the things they lmow.
lr PHIL PASTOitET
peaee 11, of eourae, essent:ia1J1 a
Yet there is something grossly wrong with this picture.
local respmud.blllf¥ ID tbia Dl.•
The early gardener gets
Witb the support of President Nlson, HEW Secretary
tkln, but lbe unlverlltjo lo lradl.
the cbutce tools available for
Robert Finch chose as his new education commissioner
II~ In, but DDt It, the loeal
borrowing In the nelgbbor·
Dr. James Allen, former New York state comml11iODer,
communlt;y. T01111 rllnlb' melbos
hood.
specifically to upgrade the quality of elementary and
•
with _ . , and In 1117 ..... the
secondary education in this country.
The most auolul !hillg
averap local &amp;dice force Is in
Tboul!h exceptions exist, tbat quality is deem&lt;!d-in study
to talct fo&lt; o cold il ,..,..
every sense iMdell"lfe to tb1l
after sfudy-to be pltlfully low In the core elites of Amerimw
else'• odtnce.
klod ~ ehall-.
ca's great urban areas from coast to coast. lo some
• • •
Whell local autborib' predict.
studies, even the average quality of education" provided In
.Someone just called to tell
suburbau schools Is badly faulted .
sbb' falls, it Is up to tits
us tbat February will be
Governor
It
tbs
lllatebouse.
lie
Here enter eoatndlctltm and lroay. If tile........,. over
fJUed wltb frantic celebraqaallly Is only halfway Juollfted, bow are so muy ya11111
ean slllld In lbe NotlCWMl Giard,
tloDI of Fro • e D Potato
people beeom1D1 10 "weD-IIformed?" 'l'brouCit tele~Iolta?
and so on. Bat when he doea,
There are probably many answers to the evident &lt;oo·
the proteltora, whoM esMntlal
tradiction. Obviously, some schools are very good; more
''haog.qf' II lbelr halrsd for
people are attending them, and more are stsying In the
tndltloosl valuoo, lnlllaldly &amp;!Ischool system longer. Obviously, too, television aDd other
psa! to ooe of tllose valuao, lbet
means of mass communication have iDdeed. advueed
~ loeal oelf - IIOV&amp;rDIIIOftl a n d
~!featly a young person's cbances for acquiring IDforma·
llontb. On looii!Dg out the
Uon.
.
polldna- lroalcall7, tboy
WbldOw,
we aee a eouple
But there lo also heavy evidence that the bsatc ~·
onllst lbe
01ll'f'llnel,y
In
.
cotiep
l;O
leorn
but
tomatoes
paaslag by wllo
Uon about the stste of young people's knowledge Is beiDg
alao
look
real coo~ ettber
rea&lt;]y In tltsse ctrewnllonceo to
quite extravagantly overstated In COUDtless instances.
way
you
tske
tbe remark.
loin aplnot "the Invader•" and
A year ago, forelJDI affairs opeclalist Georl(8 Kennan
''the plp.,.
wrote a magazine pfece asoaulllng student radlcab, who
Tum the oilier clle•k
often gain some sympathy well beyond .their owu small
At the top of 1be acale, t h e
G1ld
vou'll t1lck voun•lf
numbers from faculty members and less m11llaDI students.
Fsdsral autbollb' Is, ~ .,......,
tclth tile ....., agciitl.
'!be outpouring of written response to that piece, some
all but powerle11 altL;aAI11r of It favorable but much more unfavorable, so stsggered
but II Ia oo W11 mads lmmllno
Kennan that he llnaUy declded to compose a reply, In a
tllsrsb)' trom lbe llollllcol .......
book called "Democracy and tbe studeat Left," whleh ran
~s. For plbUC . ....at
QUICK QUIZ
five Umes the length of hls first pleee.
lbese d l - • lo 1101 ...,._.
Printed In !be newer work are many of the student and
sd with or locol llnoo and
teacher res1&gt;0111es he drew lD early 1888. Some are tbnught·
boundarteo and Ia Qlllte - ·
fuland well-reason&lt;'&lt;!. Yet all too many, sad to say, simply
underscore the charges he laid on the rebels In the flrlt
sd by lbe rsslll1
tbd llllther Governor• no r
place.
Pre.-s ars reslb' n-Il·
RaUonalthoul!ht sbowed Itself rarely. MeniAl confusion
ble for wllat
111 aay
wao rampant. Many crltical nilpolldalits were elllJOCially
. . _•• No ......
lllactiCII,
outraged tbat Kennan dared to
tbay miabt dO a
utile studying at school.
bonvar •alld, m,o ..... IPOd.
The veey rsspoet~ .
They - • " " to reranl 11ae lllllvenUy 1n1 u io p1ue
ftrlllem to dtmlute, i l l - de~ tr a..atrr, . . . !Mit
bsld b)' ordlnu7 poaple for ''lllll&gt;1s ... malaly .....yolea) llallfai .... ,... ..... pioOIItal
er •u~atloD" CM~.MI
•.UO. alld other ~-life mnements apbiil llle ntslde
ll1d """' '""\"'\&lt;,
unlweroltlsl Kennan not onlY challenged this toncept of the unlvar·
lilt• of
aad lrf......
alty, willie coneeding Its need to !reep UD wltb the t1mea
'
.
and relate Itself deeply and ecmtlnuOully to till! outside·
world. but be charged tbs teopondtol[ .-,bell wltb ·mil• ·
eoncelviD(i democracy, overratbtg the ulillty of Jmpetiellce,
overrating tbelr own competence and Imowlodco, I&amp;Mrboa
wbule aspects of IUe (natur,, f&lt;1r 0118), talselv juillfyllli!
disobedience In the name of lbelr all1JOWer!Ul tndivtdual
consciences.

ton -

been

lbo.....,....ttobo
b)' C)' ColeiiiiD'I firm

....~
... 'lbe . ...,. Proaldentlal &amp;die
JFK and LBJ -

Pt" PTS
H
2
5
6
11
2
21
I
13
2
2
2
0
0
O
3
0
2
1
I
0
2
0
0
3
0
68
23

FGA·M I'TM·A
5-6
Pr01oe • . . • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . S-2
2-3
Salas .••• , ....•.•.•.•.......... 8-5
1-1
Spencer •....•••...••. , , .•• , •..• 19-9
3-4
Matthew a • . . . . , , • • . , • • . . • , • • • • 3--t
5--6
PaLII.ey ••••••••••••• , ••• , • , ••• 2-1
0.1
Smith . • • ••....••.. ·. , •• , , . ...• , 1-o
~
Fenderbotch , , •.••..•. , , , , , , • , ..• ()...()
~
Henry . , .•.....•.......•.•.•••. 13-3

Gontlo bopatHsa - Deorle at lllo Colo Clrl)'le Is
dlsPo11os 11or ~taloat:tllree

.... -

GALLIPOUS

PLAYER

Cleanr. • ·

Nihilistic, European styk ·uprisings

Crisis of the
Universities
Let Navy Heed Pueblo lesson

furdUva
peeto a

!nlramunJC&lt;&gt;ooNootra-- Ernest nell Elb:tbetb A I a r
verinJ. ...-cywloleat .•.• Lovo. Jolar&lt;b 1.

lbuttered •••• Pb11 Foster•• exwile .loon COUIIIed out lbe coun1
lhe'a married to •••• Same IOUl'ee
that told ua weeki before that

EDITORIALS

CIMYer, wife ol BJaek mW.taDt

10 tor1ured

holds lbe govemorobfp ~
California lorao!Jo - . . bls
pndeeeaJOr could DDt '"clean
up" wbst was bQsd • otssiiQ'
mess It Berkeley. Where one
governorship QD be lost 10 CB.D
-

andamtllor- lllldao,
- . · ~ CCiul&lt;l ....
bo • Pre-ey. 'l'llllls tllo lut
-

meuure 01 the 1118htmare.

Buah . . . •.• , ... , •...••..•... , •• o-o
Hamilton . . . . .......•...•••...•. ~
Gilmore • . .. , .•••.•••.. . .•....•. 0-0
Orr •.....•••......•••...•...••• 1..0

1-2
~
~

Alberti • . • • • • • . • • • • • • • • • • • . • . • • • • 1-0

TOT AU

3-0

59-24

20.28

MEIGS
PLAYER
FGA·M I'TM·A RB PI' PTS
Robinson • .. ................ :;.o
4-5
3
4
4
Tyo •••••..•••••••••.••.•• 0..0
0-1
s
2
o
Ault • • • . . •••••...•••••••• 15-6
1·2
8
2
13
Ptfyers •••.•.•••• , ••••..•••• 8-4
8-11
11
1
16
R. ~• ...,. • • •••••••.••••.•• 8-4
4-4
6
4
12
Waltero .............•...... 3-2
:1-7
4
I
7
B. Werry •••..•...••...•••.. 2-0
2-4
0
I
2
Hensler ••.................. 0..0
0-0
1
o
o
Smith ••.......••......•...• 1·0
TOTAI.'!
42-16

I
39

o.&lt;J

22-34

3
18

0

into U)'thlrlg retembllng an ldVIII't.age during the tecond. per·
lod. The lead wu juggled back
and fourU1 unUI Galltpoills' Jack
Matthews, a S-9 guard, scored
seconds before the end of t h e
quarter and gave the visitors a
25-23 ..UUme lead.

Gallipolis, orlth sharpshootlrw
5-11 senior Tommy ~oeer stepping into the "take charge" role,
began buildirw: up a lead over
C~ch Carl Wolfe's c~gersaathe
third period progressed and the
Marauders were out ol it.
Spencer finished the game the
leading polli-getter orlth 21. He
hit lOW' field goals in a row lor
the Blue Devils at one point in
the third quarter.

Time to

CHOP

DOWN

Tuesday's High Sclwol Scores

Your

cat tie • WOII.-nui Woshtng·
10il"s ~ - ~stnt. Toke •'

tG 11loc!k. l'tWjilt make sure
yOU '9'1 ,...., loti~- dtdoc·

Class A at Bellevue
By United Press International
Athens 72 Jackson 49
Vermilion 62 Fostoria 61 (ot)
Gallipolis 68 Meigs 54
Class AA at Sandusk;y
Ironton 86 Logon 72
Norwalk 65 Fremont Ross 50
Class A at Wlllard
Class Aft at Galion
Upper Sarlluaky 19 Bucyrus 48 Collins Western Reserve 91
Class A at Tiffin
Norwalk St. Paul 60
Atuca 63 Old Fort 57
Class AA at MansDeld
Class AP at cantoo
Marion llardlnt! 77 Shelby 41
Class A at Swanton
Massillon 70 Canton Glenwood 62
Pettisville 58 Delta 48
Lewia~e 66 Fairless 83
Class A at AnthOOY Wayne
Class AA at Nonralk
N~eon 53 Genoa 4.2
Saf!dilsky 83 Edison 40
Class AA at Rossford
Bowling Green 57 Eastwood 45
Class AA at Akron
l.oulonvUle
64 Highland 58
CINCINNATI (IJPO - Vince
A at Wooster
Class
Costello. veteran linebacker
Hillsdale 73 DO)'lestown 70 (ot)
with the Clevelarr:l Browns and
Waynesdale 66 Rittman 45
New York Giants, is dle newest member ot the Cincinnati
Benpls coaching atafL
Paul Brown, Berwals head
ooach and general manager,
IIOUilCsd Tuesday he hod
signed Costello as his linebecker coach.

ETAX
s

BOTH

FEDERAL
AND

STATE

lion. Ste fht office in your
~ghborhood

todov.

H··cn~crco.
Americ•'s Lerge.. Tax Service with Over 3000 OHices

304 POMEROY,
EAST otiiO
IAAIN
Saturday.- 9 a.m. to

P·"'·

Nelsonville - York HighSchool,
still the smallest school enrollmert-wl&amp;e in the SoLit:heastern
Ohio Athletic Le.gue despite lts
recent consolidation, is considerirw: dropping out ol the SEOAL
- but as has been the case in
previous cases, much c01181deration wW be given the matter
before any action is taken.
••we"re going to take a long
look at tbe matter," Richard
Hubbard, president ol the Nelsonvill•York Board of Educs·
tion, noted. "We don't want to
rush into it and make a decls--

Iion

which we would regret later," be added.
A public meeting will be held
Thlll'aday at 7 p. m. at the high
school cafeteria at which time
members of the school bc:Md,ldtlmlnlatntora, the coachlll&amp;" atatr
and members ol tbe school's
boolter aroup wW discuss the
subject. Nodeclslonwillbemade
by the bosnl st the Thurlday

I

-lido·

• • •

meetl.rw.,

HlilbOrd noted that themeetlrw
11 cpen to the plti.Jc, and. will be
used prbnariJ.y to determine the
feolllll ol Ills peapleUYirw In tho
district '"' the mstter.
Nelaon\'ille was a charter
member or the SEOAL, or. otthe
oldelt hiP schoollesguss In tbs
otate (o.-pnlzsd In 192Gl; miNe!·
aoavUI..York, formed laot year
by eonaolidstl'"' lrltb the York
diltriet, has
inamn·
ber ~ tbo loop.
An lnvitad'"' baa been extend-

*

35

•

.

CJIUt 27(: to 4&amp;C ~ tltt Estlm•tecfFed. Ex.
T•• rec::owel)' tclePendlnl on tin) •nd ,...

lrHdltble tire of ttt. ume 1lie

• You act tha ••m• famou1 ro•d·aripptnx
type tre1d deal1n lhal come• on our new
c:ar "Power Cuhli:Jn" polye•ter wrd !lret

• Free

b-•r.r

c:ond-

mounllns

• Plc:k your 1lu now and Go Goodyear

-·-

11IE DAILY
SEN11NEL
TO INTEIIRIT CW

a11'.- '

oborteemla«•-- - ·

.. .

abo•••

SCORES
By United Press International
East
w L Pet. GB
Miami . • • • 29 2S .537
Mimesota •.. 29 27 .518 1
Kentucky ...• 27 26 .509 11/2
Indiana ••.•. 31 3ll ,5()8 IY,
New York .•. 16 37 . 3()2 12'h
West
W L Pet. GB
Oakland ..... 43 10 .811
Denver ..•.. 34 23 .596 11
New Orleans .. 28 29 .491 17
Dallas ...... 25 27 ,481 17%
Los ~les • , 23 32 .418 21
Houston .•••. 17 36 .321 26
Tuesday' .s Results
Irdiana 140 Minnesota 133
Oakland 118 Denver 116
Only games scheduled
Wednesda.y's Games

~O'IED

IIICHUD I. OII'Krf, 1't31LIIliZ&amp;
Clr!MMr..........W.~

College Scores
United Press International
East
Army 45 lona 33
c.w. Poet 611 stooy o.- GO
Rutgers 76 :9Jcknell 70
Muhlenberg 65 Del. Val 64
Thiel 82 John Carrol 78
Ind. (Ps.) 85 Grove Cit;y 65
Edinboro 112 Clarion 78
Brandeis 97 Cout Guard 83
Assumption 90 Fairfield 75
Boston St. 79 Fitchburg 69
Plymouth St. 91 Gorham 71
By

!be:c/odl·:

~

..........

.......... """*"'
.................-.....,...
T'-'"'~
t Jl~:qt 411181., Nil. YM
..... D.jll..... -

....,~
... ~
"-'... • ,IW i
'

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

_ _...... ..

•:aa..nrw

.
; .
1/

·.

~

~MI. ........... O..

b 0.. . . Jll ..

. ..._....

lrlw..._-.~T~

..;

earrtw

Ofll"' ID.M. Nit

'

st.

Athens rallied to defeat Jackson 72-49 (that'srlght)atJackson
Tuesday night, thus c~letir.,
the 1968-69 Southeastern 0 h 1 o
League campaign with a perfect
14-0 mark.
Jackson started offlikeahouse
afire, grabbing a 20-9 tl.rst period lead. Athens reduced the Ironmen's lead to six points - 31-.25
by intermission.
After three periods. the Bulldogs climbed on t(l) by one point
- 43-42. Then it happened, Jackson fell apart, am Athens contil'bed to roll. The viaitors out·
scored JHS 29-7 in the ftra.l stan-

...

ketball campaign. Charter members oi the latter grot~) are Belpre, Warren Local, Federal·
Hocking am Vinton County.
The old Nehonvtlle dietrlct
was for }'ears one oi the smallest
in the league, and since Middleport consolidated with Pomeroy
alii Rutlam to form Melp, the
school bas been the small.est.
The matter of dr&lt;VJ)!JW out ol
the SEOAL has been discussed
before at Nelsonville. but after
consideration, the decision t.s
been made to remain In the
league which results in conth...
tioa of ratural riWries amorw:
old foes, most notably Athens &amp;Ill

Jackson .••••.. 20 31 42 t9
ATHENS (72) - Wickerham
10-7-21; Wagner 4-2--10; Handley
2--2-6; Swart :;..S-19; Noel 3--0-6;
Jooes 1-0-2; Goodwin 1~2; S.
Riggle 0.1·L Totals 26-20-72.
JACKSON (49)- CoBby 1-4-6;
Mapes 2-2-6; Rice 5-1-11; Green
9-1-19; Osborne 1-o-2; Mossbarger I-1)..2; Nelaon 1--0-2; Orbaush
0·1·1. Totals 20-9-49.
Reserves: Athens 60 Jackson 36.
Siena 73 WUiiaml 62
Gannoo 60 Akron 50
Montclr St. 101 Paterson ~ 64
Hofstra 71 Adelphi 74
61 Allegheny 50
Geneva 86 Slippery Rock 72
VUlanova 69 Providence 62
E. Cam. St. 103 Nid!ola 72
Hartford 80 RPI 71
So. Caro. St. 88 Tuakegee 72

VMI

9()

E. Csro. 97 Citadel 68

Boston eon. 72 Grgtn O&gt;cJ 66
(ot)
Mori!IID St. 98 llorrard U. 81

Ga. Tech 84 Florida St. 76

...

Baltimore .•. 45
Phllede4&gt;hla •• 41
New York •..• 44
Boston •••.•• 37

CindnnaU ...• 33
Detroit ••.... 25
Milwaukee ... 19
West

L Pet.
17 •726
20 .672

Atlonto . . . . . •o
San Fran. . . . 30
Sin Diego • . . . 27

Chlcogo •.... 25
Seattle .....• 24
Phoenix ••••. H
Tuesday's

3lh

22 .667
2$ .597
31 .516
39 .319
45 .297

3

8
13
21
27

Teams

Poh1ta

1. CoiL Eaol (38) (17-0

43ll

2. Csn. MeKinley(3){17-lJ2tll
3. Llrns Bath (18-0)
251
.. Tol. Libbey (2) (16-1) 247
5. _ . . _ {111-0) •
6. ZaneovUie (1) (111-IJ
7. Ham'ton Gut. 14-2)
8. Ssllduslcy (1&amp;.2)
9. Colo. South (14-2)

170

1611
1f4
1ZO
9()

10. East Llvafl&gt;OOI (111-1)

w

Los Arweles .. 43

GB

orda in r-rentheai1:

L
21
27
34
36

~h

62
Second 10: 11. Ila¥ton Rotb
&amp;6; 12. _Eu~!l!__37t_ 13.. Clew.
Jt..in Mama 35; 14. Marlon

13
15%

Harding 3();
15. CIDelmsti
Purcell and Ashland 25 each;

Pet.

.672
.597
.469
.429
40 .385
41 .369
49 .222
Results

GB

IB'/2
19

2Wh

Bostm 116 Phoenix 110
Atlanta 124 Cincinnlti 123
Los Angeles 113 New York 109
San Fran 121 Detroit 114
Philo. 125 San Diego 113
Seattle 114 Chic1go 113
Only games scheduled

17. Sylvsnls 2ii 18. Melle
Heights 18; 19, Clnctrm.UOak
Hills llr'ld Bellevue 15 each.

WHO?
If You Read The Sentinel
•..•• You Know!

Only games scheduled.

Mabry And

WHAT?

Marshall On

.,'

(

i

You Read The
. .... You Know!

lI

Dream Team

''

..'

Jim Marshall, ~2 sophomore,
am big Bob Mabry, 6-5';, junior
center, of the Rio GraOOe ~-­
lege Redmen were named to'·\:he
All-conference Team ol the Kentucky Intercollegiate
Athletic
Conference foe the 1968-ti9 buketbaU season.
Selections ol the All-KIAC
team were announced bere Tues.
day nipt by Jack Thompoon,
KIAC Commissioner, at the Rio
Gnnge - C&amp;mpbellsville KIAC
Tournament game.
Coach John Renfro oC the Cumberland College, whose CUmberland lhtians woo the KIAC race
in a whirlwind ftnish, was named
.. Ct».ch ol the Year" in the KIAC.
Others -.med to the All~AC
Team were:
lkt.t Long, 6-5 junior, and Ray
Cox, 6-4 junior, both ol Cumberlandj Paul Andrews, &amp;--4 junior,
~m Ken Meibers. 6-8 junior. Union; Walt Sweatt, ~1 junior,
Campbellsville; Doug lAyne, 6-4
junior, Berea; Ralph Good, 5-11
serdor, Pikeville; and Larcy Har·
rls, ~ freshman, Oaldaad City.

.'
'

WHEN?

Southwest

Texas 81 Rice 80
Texas Tech 59 Arkanaas 57

'

.

.

.

__

If You Read The Sentlnei
•..•. You Know!

_, _
.''
·.

Peru St. 90 Simpaon 85
Torra Wes. 92 01. Coli 81
Lakelsod 95 Oomlnlean 840
Wostmar 95 Dana 84

Texas A&amp;M 86 Barlor 71

'i
1iJ '

If You Read The Sentinel
..... You Know!

WHY?
If You Read The
..... You Know!

TCU 87 SMU 84
West Texas 93 N. Max. St. 91

Wake Forest 100 Clem1011 84

MI....., at
Purdus 96 Indiana 9~
Olinoil 71 Ohio St. 57
W-g 95 Ottrbn 78
Marooette 67 Xavlar (O) 54
Mleblpn St. 78 Torra 60
Anderooo 102 Wlmgtn 94
Ind. Con. 94 Frllllkllll 85
Trl..'lt. 86 Manch- 79
Judson 79 Rockford 59
Western m. 851Aru 77
North Park 84 North COIIL 611
Marykrloll 95 Triton 92

.
'

St. Louis 94 North Tex. 9~ (ot)

ANTHONY

LGpn.

The SEOAL wxlerwen: several
· cha!Wes in membership in ita
early years, between 1925 lid
1937, but the lesgus remained
unchanged In memberlhjp unUI
the Melao conaolldatlon Ia 1966
lelt the league one team ahort.
Irootoo. wa1 aceepted 11 a membor in December of that year, but
didn't ofllcially join lbe leagoe
untl.l Nov. ·u. 1967, beeauae ot
achedullns conflicts.

Geo. Wash. 86

CatboUc U. 82 Caniaius 81
Miami (Fla.) 95 Tampa 79

Plumbing-Heating
Your D•penclabl1
D••ler For

PLUMBING
AND

~

HEATING

••

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""'-WY:!-2550

Only:
NOW APPEARING

lullr

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AT
HOTEL MARTIN
. EXCEPT SUNDAY

P"!!RRJ, 0... 45\'tll. lm•u O:tllu ,..._
tU.IJH, Ult.W . . ....,., •.,,
..._
. ,...fllll.t.._,.,QIIk

.

ed to Nelsonvtlle-York to jolnthe
Tri -Valley Conference, which
waa formed this year an:l began
ccnpetiUon with the current bas-

w

Wednesday's Games
Los ~les at Baltimore
New
PhlladelphLa ••
Frsncisco

dogs. Box score:
Athens . , • • . •.• 9 25 43 72

Jackson, Miss.
Kentucky •t Miami
Only games scheduled

By United Press IIUnatlona.l
Eaal

Perfect SEO
:11
k York at Clncinnatl
1r~ar
s.n
League
Detroit at Seattle

NICHTLY- THRU MARCH 1

'*'..... illlll . . . .u•. . -.. ,.01111
VlllkiJ I"'MM..,..
...
~

Athens Has

Jackson finished second .six
games behind the champion Bull-

Dalla&amp; at Los ~les
Houston vs. New Orleans at

Nelsonville-York May
Drop Out Of SEO

• •

_ .....-

&amp;IB-&amp;

1. cbeynet St
102
8. Central St (l:h5)
88
NEW YORK (IJPl) The
9. Puget Sound (I) Cll-1)
85
CHAMPAIGN, Dl. (UP0fouls during the contest, IS !rJ
U n It e d Press International 10. S.F. Austin (19-3)
81
The
Champaign
bubble
virtually
the second half.
lllla.ll eollege basketball ratings 11. Aieom A.&amp;M. (0
54
burst
Ohio
state
Buckeye
hopes
Dave Sorenson ns the only
with tlrat place votes and won- 12. Gannon
46
0( overtaking Big Ten leader Buckeye who could mount an
lost records In parentheses 13. Howard Payne (2)
45
attack against the nlini. He
(llth week),
14. So Dakota St.
27 Purdue.
The Buckeyes dropped a 73...57 ended with 25 points.
Team
Plolnts 15. Ogelthorpe
24
I. Asbland (14)(;!1.1)
275 16. Amerlc:an lnt
20 game to DHnol s Tu.esda.y night
0.!11 Coach Fred Taylor sa2. Ky. Wealeyan (6) (18-4) 271 17. Eastern New Mex (1) , 17 hen~, whlcb combined with a
Purdue
win
over
Indiana,
put
luted
the Dlinols squad.
3. Nov La Vp (3) (17-5)
198 18. (tie) Linfield Depauw 11
OSU two lull games behind tlle
..
They
took the play com4. Falrnmt St (3)
164 20 . \de)
in
lhe
conference
Bollerrnakera
pletely away rrom us and we
5. S. W. Louisiana
Indiana
race.
Pur&amp;l.e
is
8-1
over
loop
didn't
react to their pressure,'"
Missouri
foes, to Ohio State's 6-3.
he said. .. We had only lour ofThe final score did not indi- fensive rebounds Jn the game.
cate the closeness ot' the game Several ol their players played
OPEN
up to the last five minutes when real well, but nobody did that
OSU tra.iled by lour points. The well lor us."
TODAY
Buckeyes, however, were forced
The Buckeyes edged down to
into committing 24 personal a 14-5 overall aeason record.

Gettillt JW' income foil figured

Overall, he hit 9 ol19att.empts
Meigs hit on 16 of t2 at:teJI¥)ts
from the fteld and three ot four lram the field roc a 38 per cent
triea at the tree throw 11ne. average wblle GatUpnUa sank 24
A.oother GABS 1t1rtei", Henry of 59 trlea lor 40 per cenL
Salaa, 5-9 r-rd, helped build
The Marsudero J)Ullsd - . 39
the mue DevUs' third _period leld reboulxls cc.rpnd to 31 by
by ainking three straight D.eld GARS. Jeff Tyo. a l.Urw Magoslo,
rat.der scorer, did not attempt a
Silas alkl Jim Henry finished fteld goal though he played the
with 11 points each and MIUhews enUre game•
concluded bia performance ln
dOlble figures with 13.
Senior 6-3 Joe M,yers topped
The Blue Imps, coming lrom
the Marallder scoring with tour nine points behlOO, scored a ha.rdol eight field goal attempts ud earned 38-27 victory over Meigs'
8 ot 11 charity tosses lor 16 reserves in the prel1minuy conpoints.
test. Bruce WUson was h1gb for
Ault followed with 13 on !lix of the winners with 16 whUe Mickey
15 from the floor and one of two Chllds and Chip Haggert.y each
at the foul line and Haggerty sank got nine to lead the hosts.
four ol eight trun the field am
By quarters ·
four or four at the loul stripe (or Gallipolis • . . .• .•. 9 25 41 611
12.
Meigs , .••. ": ..• 11 23 30 54

B~ckeyes All But

BARBS

auuest

Neither club could pull aw-a.y

Eliminated, 73-5 7

''"..z&gt;

College Ratings

slow~Xt-c:lown meeting when t h e
score was tied or changed hands
18 times.
Meigs, in fact, was on top most
ot the first eight minutes and took
a 11-9 edge at the close or the
opening stanza on a l.a,y....,by senior Rich naggerty just as the
buzzer sounded.
Dennis Ault, another senior,
was the anchor lor Meigs tn the
first quarter as be connected lor

the ftnt 6 Marauder points.

54

~~.::::::::::::~:::::::::=:::::~~:::::::::::-::::::·:·:·:·:::•:::::::~~=9.~:·;;;;::::::::~:;~.:-:;x:~

BRUCE BIDSSAT

Student Rebels' Wisdom,
·Competence

~

The Metga Maraw:len stayed
close to their SEOAL neighbor a,
the Galliplis Blue Dev:l.b, lor
more than two quarter~ but ran
out ol ps to end up ina 68--54 deleat in the flnal regular season
game lor botl'l teams Tuesday
evening at Rutland.
Coach Duke Bur siX!' II B 1 u e
Devils had their hands tun in the
first and second periods of the

al Ohio htp tthoal Clast
ba:ketbl!.l ~!!.:!::. With !!!'!t
place \'CMI and WGMott rec-

. ,':30 TIL Z A.M. ,

s!•t• ,_ i.:O.Itw ....ois et' tloo

':o_,.,~...••ls4 . , . _ - l • r
r.~
""'to ... it.. ..... -~~~~· ...........
lllHil••· . . . ••

~this

.

C..,, of Arosrlco,

• Accurate pu1hbutton con·
trois. Eo.,. to - l'OICh

• Easy-.. t timer automatically lllarla, . . .,.,:.,.;.,. ia

opaciouo llablod ..... '
.
• Clodt IIIII mimalo tm..

MIJ333
30"
P-7

&amp;I

53·7·9·.
·'

. 1

�•

J

Pftu. rs ~··~•s
CaJcudar
Prm·cs Hand,·
'
For Au o~·t,rsca~ Gl

.

~~-.

Georce Dallas iJ a

sill!i~ ali)CI'tntend!.!nt this w~k - literall} .

~

He 1f11S one ol the two Ollio !!chool .guperint.endents atbmding the
convention at Atlantic Cit} this wee!&lt; selected for the singil{l:
cbQit, 1'\lrl) s~rlntendelts from ea~·n state make w the chorus.
Georp received the invitltion from the head. of the Washington, D.
.C., •t:!hOols who happens to be the national convention c hairman lhis
~-

Fon•t• s n11 . stat!Q~Wt.l i11 Thailand
ror a year. wrott- asking us .to st"-nd him a calendar. lit
said ther.P were none available ove .. there. Did you ever
stop to think how lOnely it would be so many mUes awar.
from home without a calendar to mark off the days Until
time to come bacli lo the "Good Old U.S.A.!'? You can bet
we sent one by return mail. tPoUy's not.e--J think one of

.~ir

those new metal watCh bahd cal~ndara would be a great

f-.

A POST-CHRISTM.o\5 PARTY took place a week ago at the home
Ot Mrs. Thome Cottrill, Sr. or Logan. She de~·ed the holiday ~
aerw.nce until her son, M. Sgt. Thome, Jr., got back from Vietnam.
Sgt. and Mrs. Cottrill, the former Ann Foster, aOO their tour
daughters, Jane, Jill, J...:ly and Joan, were joined for the celebration
at the Cottrill hame by Mrs. J. Edward Foster, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph
Thoroe, Sr., Mr. and Mrs. Joe Thorne, Jr. and children, Minersville,
Dallas Jerrell of Apple Grove, and Mr. alXI Mrs. Glen PauJin, Lan-caster. It was a nice af[Jir.
rORMER MIDDLEPORT RESIDENT CLARENCE Lacey is back
on his job with the Bets,y Ross Baking Co. after having been away
lor eye surgery. The Laceys moved to Ashland, Ky., two years ago
when the Ohio Valley Baking Co. went with Betsy Ross.
Ruth Arm and Kathy were Middleport visitors over the weekerxt.
Ruth Arm, a senior this year, was the guest of Connie Bachner, and
Mtthy spent the weekend with Edie Haptonstall Zirkle e.nd husband
Michael.

MRS. FANNIE MeN AMEE of Middleport will mark liP her 94th
birthday come MondaJ-'1 aiJ;'I has already gotten her first congratulatory card. The sender? President Richard M. Nixon.
FOR THOSE WHO HAVE ASKED, and others who will want to
know ••• Dr. Raymoo:l Boice is a patient at University Hospital in
Columbus. His room nwnber is 135.
BERNARD LYONS L&lt;; THE SECOND SON of Mr. and Mrs. John
Lyons to tlnd his niche at Pontiac Motors. Bernard started employ~
ment there Monday and for the present, anyway, is living with his
brother and sister~in-law, Tommy and Esther.

3 Officers Installed
•
Three DeW otn.oers were installed during a meeting ofTheodoru1 Councll 17, Daughters of
Amerlca, Monday night at the
IOOF hall.
Installed by Margaret Seidenabel, . depUty state councilor,
W6re Lottie Cohen, inside ~rentinel: Della Stahl, 18 IIi o 'ir· ~fi
trustee, and Glen Swat:zel', 12
momb.lnll&amp;ee.

, Piana for the amual rally

to

be' 'held at the American Legion
hall in Marietta on May 8 were
am;tounced. A practlce for the
ralb' baa been scl!.e&lt;N.led for
AfriJ 13 at Chester. ft wU1 be
pnocoded by a depuzy meeting.
'l1le meeting ..,.ned In rltualill&amp;(c form with Mrs. Cohen, coundlor pro tem. Reported lll were

Mrs. Edna Reibel was won by
Mrs. Nettie Hayes. A valentine
party washeldduringthe concludlng social hour. Cookies, cotree
and sandwiches were served. Vatentines from a decorated box
were distributed by Mrs. Etta
Lemley and Mrs. Hayes.
HAVE SUNDAY GUESTS
Mr. and Mrs. Leroy Wyant
d Pomeroy had as &amp;mday din ner guests Mr. and Mrs, Kenneth Wyant, Kim and Tim, ot
Logan; Mrs, James Haning,
James, Jea, MJke and Chris ot
Albany, and Mr. and Mrs. Nor· man Wood, KeMeth, &amp;le and Ron nie, ol Pomeroy.

Ben ~cer, transferred from
We are dealing with 25
Veterana Memorial to Holzer million of our own people
for surgery; Edna Stlles, surgi- with a special history, cui·
cal pa.Uert It Veterans Memor- ture and range of problems.
lal; hulband ~ Mrs. Ruby Erb, Jt can hardly be doubted
pollont at Meigs General: t he that the study of black men
in America is a legitimate
mother of Mrs. Caddie Wickham,
and urgent academic en·
W ·at her Gallipolis home; and deavor.
Harold Le~, In critical con- - Harvard VHiversity, an.
dit:lcm at the Clnclmati Veter1wuncing it plam to estab... Holpit.U,
lish a degree program i11
The prbe package donated by
American Negro studles.

........ TIS EASY?
EASY IS THE "WOW" ··
BIG 16 LB. CAPACITY WASHER &amp; DRYER

""'' 110,.

''''"'''""'"'Polly's Problem""''"'c •

m ""'
. DEAR POLLY -A neighbor's child needs hand

therapy and is interested in making place mats or
hot dish pads from cigarette packages. He has
accumulated many of these wrappers in the f:iopes
that some kind person will be able to give him the
directions for making these.-MRS. F. E. S.

DEAR READERS--This Is ...any a'""" one to me bull
am aure If there is"a way you Imaginative people wDI have
II ••d send directions for Ibis youncoter.-POLLY
DEAR POLLY-I worked
in a pet shop for th(ee
years and w a n t to tell
Mrs. J. T. that all we used
to clean the fish tanks was
just pI a in (not iodized)
table salt. RJnse well to
make sure no salt remains
in tht3 tank . The column is
"must" reading every day.

-MRS. L. W. S.
DEAR POLLY and Mrs.
J. T.-We were told at the
shop where we bought our tropical fish to use plain nylon
netting .to rub the inside of the tank. It works wonders for

water lines plus algae that form on the inside of the t~nk.
Do NOT use soap or detergent- DOROTHY

'

Plans for lUling the overseas
white cross quota due tn April
were made durlpfl a recent meeting of the Pomeroy Society of
the American Baptist Women held
at the home of Mrs. William ~r­
idan, Jr.
Mrs. Orval WUes, chairman,
read an acknowledgement of re·
ceipt of the overland white cross
quota from the Campbell Christian Center. Sle ~ a division or world niliSloos·convention to be held at Rio Gr~de on

Feb. 28.
World Day of Prayer services sponsored by Church Women United was annmmced IJy Mrs.
Edward Foster for March 7 at
the Naomi Baptist Church in Pomeroy. Sle said the program theme
will be "Growing Together with
Christ." AJso annoWlced at the
meeting was the Rio Grange Association trustees meeting to be
held on Feb. 22.
An Invitation from the Trinity United Church of Christ invited members of the Pomeroy
Society to a Lenten breakfast
and quiet hour held this morning.
The love gift offering was tak.
en and dedicated by Mrs. Elmer
Wickham. Mrs. Oliver Michael,
president, noted that the toplc for
program material Cor 1969-71
is ''Put Love Into Deeds and
Make It Real. 1'
The Lord's Prayer in unison
opened the meeting. Devr' ·

REEDSVILLE -

Wash &amp; Rinse

tomperat.,. FL EXI8 I L1 TY
Exclwtiv• .Spiralotor and

SPIRA · · FILTER. PO'celain fini•h inside &amp; out·

s;de for L·IFETIME SER·
VICEABILlTY.

Say Goodbye to ironing .
AUTOMATIC TERMINATION CYCLE . Safety start
up, front lint filler, uclu·
sive no press cycle. Thre,
drying temperatures;.

PRICE
~$.:..:;:.::.:.-.1 DARE NOT
PRINT
IT!

RADIO &amp; TV.

ed lD the cutle tibHtla f u n d

·~e

Rose Thomas, Mrs. NeU Wilson

and Mrs. Lillian Pickens. The
next meeting, will be at the Pickens home.

'

I~

tic Flbrolla
L ••-

uua, _
'!'...., ., ·· a{ the~"

:· '..-., " i.~
~ 11
1 IM ..aa _

for tho rou~ ~:~ ~~~· .:,;;J
'lmiCii. Gue~WlU be r

t1 _~.~ ~
Alh..,-1 :tQunif Slllop 1116,
partment otlleera, ~
llonal - . 1 dl&gt;ltdon
Arreo . -~!lall
CommlU.J
aiWr .,...., Mrs.

j

oi

NeicU C&amp;rsey,

ltrt.

Mrs. K,tlqp, cl!o&lt;:oralfllg; M i' •· Hunbel.' and Mrs. -..11, placemont; •Mrs. Fei'I)O ct&gt;eeiMI&gt;rew,
Mra. !GooJtj Mrs. Mollft7, Mrl.
Rhoda Hac~ Mrs. Myrtle Wat.
ker, teA; Catherine Weloh and
Mrl. Tho....,., g(fto; Marie Boyd
and Mrs. Eunl.e Brinker I now~
el'ls; ~s. Walker, auest chair·
man, and Mrs. Martin, public ..

PAIIAY

OLE:O A·RGARINE ..... ~~

G W •s Con duc Ru/es .Note' d

John.
ln tribute to deceased and 01

I

members. the class repeated the
23rd P8alm •.. Valentine verse•
were given In reiJ&gt;(Jnae to roll
call. Plana were completed clar1ng the meeting pnalded wer by
Mrs. Allen Eichinger tor aerving the Moore-Arnold wedding
reeeptloo Saturday afternoon.
The valentine moti( was car~
ried out in tM refreahmentuer ..
ved by Mrs. Eddie Smllb.

;~~. tlaa~ ~lc

FREE DELIVERY-CONVENIENT 'TERMS

.

ll

IRAn

YELYEETA

2ll
CTN.
•••••••••••••••••••••••

~s.

MR. ALLEN HEROLD
WILL BE AT
306 N. 2nd Awe.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
ON

nd;IY, Feb. 20, 1969
FROM
9 A.M. to 12 Noon

To repair and ser\'ice
hearing aids.

Bott•rlel and •upplies for
all make• for sale

HAM

tHANK YOU

.;{

HAM ROAST•• !•.ase

NO. 2 CAN

.., ft/
'

,.,

..

BONELESS

...,.

.

......

~~

DUBUQUE All BEEF

O,RANGE DRINK ....
· - IITS

.

QTS.

25 Ll

•

DOG FOOD....•.........~. ••
FOODLAND OR.PRIDE

'·

9112 LINOLEUM RUGS.--.- .... -- ...........$4.58
SOFA BEDS •..••• ·...••.••.•.•••••••••••••$48.00
RECLINER CHAIRS .......... --.- ... -.. -- .$39.00

······:·······
. ··~w-oo
....... ...........
. .00 -

QUARTER HA

'

YfAGNEIS

,

SLICES.'~·

CENTER

Sat. 910 9

'

SEVERAL RADIOS
CARPET REMNANTS
50"127" PICTURES, REG. $14.95.. .... SALE $7.48
OTTOMAMS
(Good Choice of Colors) Rea. $19.95 .. _.• SALE $9.98
ENGLANDER TENSION EASE 4/6 BOX SPRINGS
(Discontinued covers) Rea. $89.95 ......... _.$44.98 .
l6160 DOOR MIRROR, REG. $8.95. _.... SALE $4.48
AMERICAN MADE BURGESS
.
2 CELL FLASHLIGijTS, REG. $1.19 ...... SALE 59c
FLOOR LAMPS, REG. $19:95.. ......... SALE $9.98
SEVERAL OTHER ITEMS IN OUR BUDGET SHOP
TAGGED AT% PRICE

PLATFORM
BUNK BEDS
TWIN SIZE
2 PC.
3 PC!
SMALL
BUNK
POLY
MATCHING

GRAPE
JEL.
L
lau.
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1"

·112 PRICE

BUDGET SHOP(specialsJ

BELTONE
Hearing Aid
Service Center

CENTER

CHE·
R
RY
PIE
FILLING
.'

.

was asSJ'i:eif
EIIe n
Couch, Mrs. Harry Bailey, and
Mrs. Lorain Sterrett. The emphasis and p.~rpose of the material was to assist the mem ~
bers in discovering the meaning of true patriotism and in an
awareness of some of the pitfalls leading to guilt by association.
Mrs. Cook used an article
from the Missions magazJne entitled "April in Washington." ~e
also quoted (rom parables or
"Peanuts, •• the cartoon by Charles Schultz.
Guests were Mrs. William
Knight and Mrs. Olan Genheimer. Mrs. Michael and Mrs.
Sheridan sened rerreshments
prayer by Mrs. Cook.

w;ll

.

ARSHMALLOWS.... !!'~.

OPEN
Thw.9to5
Fri. 9 to 9

"By the Company He kee1ps"

HEROLD

DAn

DAn

Builders" u!iing the theme

MR.

~I
'

Baker Furniture's ;

.

LB.

CRACKERS....................~

WIENERS ••••••••• ~'!~~~~- 63 ~
TENDERBEST
GROUND CHUCK•••• !~·.6 9~
STORCKS BREAD

..... .-~ ...... i .su~oo ··

••••.••.•••..••·JW~OO

·····~· -· ··;

. Heariq Aid Centt!l' ,

FRESH FRYING

CHICKEN BREASTS ___ ll._ 55e
21~

30 oz.
ctns•

,.

' ··~ 'y ~ :~.
•••
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. $48.111!
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0

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~;

••••••••••••

'

IDAHO (BLUE GOOSE)

BAKING

POTATO(S

"

IV
0

EMPEROR FANCY

RED
G PES

...

~

FAIRMONT

be

problem Beltone i •

CHICKEN LEGS·------~~4Se

FRENCH
~ FRIES •••••••••••_.

LAMPS •••••••.,. ••~; 49c·
.............. ~ .....~ •. $3.00
AND

FRESH FRYING

FRESH FROZEN

BAKE
and
BREAK •••••••••••

glad to give you a free
hearing test with the
latest BeltoAe Electro11ic

If hearing h your

1••

COTTAG·E C.HEESE............

••••••.•• ••• $49.00

"

Lhe weaver.

Relreshments were ser\'ed to
the above a~ Mrs. Sav,Uia Bar~
nett, Mrs. Dorotha Riebel, Mrs.

II

day, Feb. 27.
Mr1. Doris

re.(JOl'tod ~ Mro, J. M,'
Slandrlfl. doportloo, ciwrman, when M • I 1 s ......W partnerlhlp&lt;l1alt'n!M. odCoollt;y salon 710, El&amp;bt and For- vlood tbll Mellil ~ SaJ.on
~
...· • ~~fiiiii='"•""'•
- .....
,-_!" ....
.=;, w
..a;•,
-•A 0
- - _. •••"" _,J.I . . . - . ...
llll• ···· rt,:..t
.....
1.1y ID ,unw
ut u ..... ...,.t: --- &lt;l"".: . - ·
Maodoy niGhlatiiiOhomeatMra. u,e lllato.
EUe•SearlJ. ·
LeUerl ~eommendatlonfor
h &amp;s also re,POrted that $150 , aei'Vfce in eyltle Ubrqlll aiid tu·
hal beei1 H1ll to ·the C7111&lt; Fl. ber&lt;:ulolla were rocelved fm1l.
broola Cllapter In C&lt;olumbuo uti- , Hete\t Beall, depal1menl &lt;1'lld
der whose auSpices tteatment 11 welfare chairman. A letter was
received ~the Melp ~eye- al10 re&lt;elved from Richard Bluetic fibrosis dlildren. MDst ol. the stten, exeeutive vice presJ.deat
remainder a{ the money collect- at the Nadopal Jewloh ~opltol
ed In the cOUIII)' remalnoherefor In Denver, &lt;mgr$lallnlllie samedical neceasltles ~ chlldren · Ion on work wllh ·the hotpUal.
with u,e dl... oe.
Mrs. Julia H,y,.ll, pouvlor
.!lx Easter baskets have been member, IUJIXMUleed the mid ordered lor cystic llbrolla lam- winter pouvlor to be held at the
lllos and a $5 donatloo ,.., made ·Nell Hwoe, Ml&lt;rch 2. Tho meetat tho meeting to u,e National 1ng will commence at 9 a.m.
Jewish HOspital orchealra, Den- and there will be a 12:30 p.m.
ver.
; tuncheoo with guesta to include
Mrs. Thomloo alao reported the national Auxiliary Leglm
thai birthday cards with dimes preoldelll, Mr•. A. B. HamUI,
sent to the Denver Hospital In the nadonal welfare ehalrman,
Jar~.~ary cost $12.34. Valentines
Mrs. ·D arlene Collins of. Marion,
at a cost of $10.68 were sent to Ind.; and the national sd1olaru,e Denver holpllal and to a locat cystlcllbrosts tamlly.
•
•
I
In service activities, f o u r
Selections from George Washpartners assisted the Meigs lngton's 101 nales for conduct
County TUbereulosls and Healtb rren~ Included in a pro8fam preAssociation and the Meigs Coon- sentlMI by Mrs. Clara Thomas
cy Health Do~ In t h e at Monday nlgbt's meeting of
tubercular skin testing pro- the J,O.F. Class of the United
gram in the schools. Giving a- Methodist Chlrch.
bout 35 hours were Mrs. FranNames of women and their
~8 Humei, Mrs. Gladys Mow- meanings were related by Mrs.
ery, Mrs. harl Knapp, and Mrs. Thomas who was aliSO devotiona1 leader Cor the meedng. h
Mary Martin.
Plana were made to have a used .. Love'" as her theme and
read the fourlb duopter of I

"The Christian ~itaph.'"
A gift was presented to Mrs.
Aten ~ain, who is moving next
week to Avon Park, Fla. M r s.
Slain has been an active mem~
ber of the society tor many
years.

Reeds-

period consisted oCpra,yers, song
and the "Celebration Reading"
by the members. A Bible quiz
was cordu(lted.
A guest missionary, Miss Vesta Wyncoop, from the Orlental
Missionary Sociecy, showed
slides of her trip to Haiti.
The business session was co~
ducted by tl'Je president, Mrs.
Mamie Buckley, when a contri~
: bution w85 approved for "The
Settlement Hopse" In Columbus
and a get-well card l'IS signed
for Mrs. Freeland Norris. Rug
rags were brought to be taken to

df.t _,,....

for lli'7an Marshlll oft h1J 71h birtn.

bfl'llldl3

by Mrs. Michael included scrip-

Missionary is
'
The

..q .rala-

ture from Micah 6 and a poem,

ville W.S.C. S. met recently at ·
the home or Mrs. Vivian Hum~
phrey with Mrs. Nancy Buckley
as co-hostess. The devotional

Complete

$463.88

Overland Quota
Will be Filled

WSCS Speaker
.

'ar

noom-

gift for a service- man stationed overseas .!
As --soon as either of our two sons in the service has a
•.
A tanner executive head of Northwestern Local (RutlaOO), and
NEW
address I order name and address labels for them
a · Mtiw ot Pc:meroy, George is executive head of the district at St.
,
and
divide these among the family who wi5h tc write to
rarts. Ria wife i.s the Conner Kitty Bachtel of Middleport.
the boys . I send some to the boys in serYice as well as
. . His undergraduate major at Denison was In music - trumpet
~;orne of our own with our name and address .-RUTH
lind voice - and his master, or course, was in education administration. George was band director at former Middleport High School
before movl..ng to the RuUard administrative post.

IGif.l

dr!Ve.;.ln MOigo CowiiY. II wao

Br POLLY CRAMER '
OE.6.R !-'4JL-l Y-O~tr

•

A

LB.

'{rtt•

·.•-

�The Daily SentiDel, Middleport ~ Pomei"O)', 0., Feb. 19, 1969

S -

.... na AMERI~ANS

Valentine Parties Given

Trv Crabmeat Custard Pie

REEDSVILLE Valentine
parties were held at Ri \'el'VI.ew
Sehool on Frlcltoy arternoon, Fob.
14 with Roommothers In charge
of games, an exchanp of valen-tlnet1 and refreshments hlgfl-

NU. Food Editor
The combined protein in 3
eggs 1 cup oi Swis~o \J,€€X

and 2cups of milk added to 1
can of crabmeat produces a
hefty meatless dish for any
family .

llahllrw OICh.
Roommothers ao:l teachers of
the school are Mra. Olive Osburn. teacher, Mrs. Sue Hay.
rrtan, Mrs. Maralene Kimes, am
Mrs. Frances Holsinger, room
mothers; Mrs. Pauline Myers,
teal;! her, (Mrs. WUma Robinson
substitute teacher) Mrs. Marilyn
Hannum, Mrs. Thelma SmJth,

That's why this Cr&gt;ibmeat
Custard Pie is perfect for
those who follow meatles s
days durlng Lent, or for
those who simply enjoy sea-

food dishes.
CRABMEAT
CUSTARD PIE
1 eaa (7 ~ 01.) crabmeat

...... ~ unbake&lt;l pie shell

cblves

cartilage, Spread crabme~t
evenly over bottom of p1e
shell. Combine eggs, chives
and salt. Stir che("Se into

WEDNE.g)AY

BOSWORTH COUNCIL 46, R.
ond S.M., Wodnesd.,., 7:30 p.
m. at Pomeroy Masonic Tem.Ple.
WEEKEND REVIVAL, Langsville Chllrch beginning Wcdnes~
day, Feb. 19, conthluing through

Feb. 23; services nightly at 7:~
30, with Evangelist Lawrence
Conger, Jr, the speaker: spe eial
singing . .E".-eryone welcome.
MIDDLEPORT Literary Club,
home ot Mrs. James E u l e r,
WedneSday, Feb. 19, at 2 p.m.;
Mrs. Galen Brown to review
"The Search lor a Usable Past. ••
CLASS 12, Heath United Methodist Church, B p.m. Wednesdco-:
Mrs. c. F. Hibba, devotional leader; Mrs. Earl Knight, program
chairman; Mrs. James Criswell,
Mrs. John Ketehka, Mrs. C. O.
Fisher, and Mrs. C. M. Hennesy, hostesses.
SACRED HEART Parish, Pomeroy, Rosary and stations of the
cioss service, 7 p.m. Ash Wed~
nesclay.

and Mrs. Ruth Ann Balderson.
room mothersi Mrs. Carolyn
Franz, teacher, Mrs. Betty :SU..
ct.nan, Mra. Marpret Brown.
and Mrs. Orva Jeat1Holter,room
mothers; Mr. David Chadwell,
telcher, Mrs. Delores Frankand
Mrs. Maxine Whitehead, room
mothersj Fred V. Rice, teacher,
Mrs. Mary Alice Blse, Mra.
Ellzabetl&gt; Smith and Mro. c....
nie Reed, room mothen, am
Mrs. Grace Weber, t.eachei', Mrs.
Martha Orr, Mrs. Ven11o Marcinko, and Mrs. Vivian Humphrey,
room m&lt;Jthers.

Racine Social Events

with hlcb-Duted edge
3 ee&amp;l, bealeo allghtly
1 lableopooa ebopped

Crabmeat cu&lt;:.tarcl pie is delicious .
scalded milk; mix well and
pour slowly into beaten eggs.
stirring constantly . Pour into
pie shell . Bake in hot oven
( 400 degrees) abou~ 30 to 35
minutes or until knife in-

serted in center of custard
comes out clean. Let stand
10 minutes before cutting
into wedges . Six. servings .

Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. Visiting hours 2-4 and 7--8
p.m. Parents only on Pediatrics
Ward.
Admissions
Publication of admissions is
suspended until further notice.
Birthl!l
Mrs. Jam'es C. Bernbeck, Rio
Grande, daugllter, 9:24 a.m.
Tuesday.
Discharges
Mrs. Larry A. Barr and lnfant son, Mrs. Jackie E. Beaver and infll.lrt daughter, M r s.
James Gordm and inCant t w 1 n
daugflters, Mrs, Gerald G. Simp-

BY MRS. FRANCIS MORRIS
Mrs. Helen Simpson was hostess recently at her home for
the Esther Circle of the Baptist
Missionary
Society meeti~.
Mrs. Ethel Smitfl, chairman. opened the meeting with de\'otions,
using "Faith" for a topic. Mrl!l.
Smith also conducted the business session. Prayer for the
special mitisionaries was given
by Mrs. Marie Roush, A program
by Mrs. Edna Pickens followed.
Tr(butes to Lincoln and Washington were included In her program. The hymn, "I'll Go Where

Mr. and Mrs. W. Lee Roush,

Gallipolis Routt\ 2, are a.nnounc~
ing the birth ot. a daughter, Cheryl
Adina, Feb. 5 at the Holzer MedIcal Center.
Graml,parents are Mrs. Joseph
R, Jobnson, · Pomeroy, and Mr.
and Mrs. Allen Roush of Mid~
d1eport. Great-grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Everett Lambert
ol Pomeroy; Mrs. Nora Johnson,
Columbus, and M.rs. Jessie Slssoo, Pomeroy. Mr. and M r s.
Roush also have a son, Rodney
Dean.

SYRACUSE THIRD Wednesday
Homemakers Club, 10 a.m . Wedllllda.r at the home of Mn, Irene
Parker; subject, "Know Y o u r
Colmty Government;" there will
be a speaker. Potluck dlmer at
noon; members to bring table
service; roll eall-word, .. heart.••
The Almanac
By United Pres~ International
TlllliiiDAY
Today is Wednesday, Feb. 19,
MAGNOLIA TEMPLE, I'Ythlan
Sister&amp;, 7:30 p.m. Thursday, D, the 5oth day of 1969 with 315 to
A. V. Hall; members urged to follow.
The moon Is between its new
attend.
TWll..IGHT GARDEN Club, 7:- phase and first quarter.
The
morning stars
are
30 Thursday night, home of Mrs.
Mercury,
Mars
and
Jupiter.
PhU Williamson; Miss E I s i e
The evening stars are Venus
Hart assisting hosteu.
and Saturn.
ROCK SPRINGS Better Health
On thll1 day in history:
Club, Thursday, 1:15 p.m., home
In 1922 F.c:l Wynn df. vaudeville
o( Mrs. Harold Blackston; Mrs.
and musical comedy f a m e
Hugh Bearhs, the program; Mn.
became the first big name in
Maxine Arnold the contest.
TWIN CITY ~rinettes, Thurs- show business 00&gt; sign for a
regular radio program.
day, 7:30 p.m., at Columbus and
Southen1 Ohio Electric Co. ~

HELP YOURSELF
TO ABIG SLICE Of

SAVII&amp;SI

ADMITTED - David Farr,
Mineral Wells, W. Va.; Walter
Grinstead, New Haven; Lawrence
Jordan, ?t. Pleasant; William
Mash, Buffalo; William J. Raw~
son, PL Pleasant; Mrs. Joseph
Forbus, P1. Pleasant.; Mrs. William s, Billups. Pt. Pleasant;
Lawrence Rayburn, Pt Pleas~
ant; Mrs. Wade Randolph, pt,
Pleuant.
DISCHARGED
Marjorie
Bowen, Pl. Pleasant; Mrs. Ellen
Johnson, Mason; Mrs . .June Cas~
seU, Gallipolis Ferry; Mrs. Iva
Brumfield, HogseU; Lester Jef·
fers, Reynoldsburg; .ldln Halley,
Leon; Lou Wroten. Glenwood;
Janet C-asto, Mason: TammyWal~
lace, Gallipolis Ferry; Melanie
Rollins, Pt. Pleasant.

PT. PLEASANT -

MUlard

Highway distances in
Cuba are measured from a
24-&lt;!arat diamond set in the
noor of the Capitol in Havana .

~gal.

crt.

•****• •

*
*

..

u:

fou~r tt:.t "·

3 ROOMS
New Furniture

)

.

r

$299

$30.00 ........... ..
C...lllt ,.,..

.

MASON

i

FUIJIITUIE CO.

IWoiC. w.

;~

t
-f.:
..f:__i.
.
-~:

"?,_
,_

ili
~l~
:~ :

AT

;~:

:-:

I Hogg &amp; Zuspan
ili:

I

Materials Co.

~ 773·5554

MASON, W. VA.

~,X~~~~~~--~~~~~~-.~~

3Je

J

I

.SUNSHINE HI HO

CRACKERS
lb. box

~!l..~~~ii.:
~J;celeratt,Jrtl_.: as will
or spe'cUlc paru ot

bjldY ,JUch

To

CARROTS
pkv. 1oe

RADISHES
pkv. 10e

lb.

Llolt
Quoolftln

bav

NO STAMPS- NO GIMMICKS- NO GAMES

Price-Choppin' Buys

ROBIN
HOOD

The best
treatment is .diQ. a careful

No.

search fot: the c"untive al·
ler~en and avoldiil&amp; ..j_t ..when

It •I found. Aller all. c the

5 53e
larae
jar

29~

BLUE BONNETT

ZESTEE
WAFFLE

SYRUP

4'6· · .39·./bonlo

DUBUQUE

CANNED
HAMS

2.79

"

OLEO
·4· -.,k,l.
1-1~- $.

WIENERS
zo ct.

'*•·

&amp;9e

I
•

I

'

I

MESCAFE \MSTAIIT .

COffll
·-.s

,., 1.29

. ·, 12 •••

nervous tension could be a
result. rather than a cause,
of your asthma.

Q-1 am a woman, 80, and
1 have eczema. W-hat causes

~

I

FRENCH CITY
BEST QUALITY

wo:ral;lon. .

..

a

•-~sthma
• Q-Are
t

hay fever and

inheriled?

A-J

predl•posHJI&gt;a

(hese ,allerglc

to

About 95 per c:ent ol the- p;aa
used by gaa compall,)" atttomcn
Is Jl.lrchased outside the state.
During the summer, gas trans.
ported to 0;1i0 thrOUi,,'h long •
di.slance pipelines from IM! Sooth.,est Is stored In the 1f underg~ stora;te fields - natur.
al rock formations tbousands ol
feet undergrwnd that onee held

jar

SAME DAY
SERVICE
In At 9 - Out At 5

.•

,.

\I

~ &lt;i'·"'·~·-·

CERTIFIED OIL COMPANY

Robinson's
Cle1ners
116 E. 2nd, P-•foy

538 W. MAIN
POMEROY, 0.
Every gallon sold with a moner back parantee

90 Mill St. Mldcil• - '

HI-C

BY
KRAFT

.'

5TH and PEARL STS .. RACINE

"'The Stor• With 4 Hart"
Right r•nrv•d to limit q11,antities

We accept Feci. Food Stamps

Prices Effective

SA

MORE-

FEB. 20-21-22

Open Mon. thru Sat.

Plenty Of
Free Parking!

FRUIT DRINKS ,
PINEAPPLE - GR11PEFRUIT
AND GRAPE

.f

9 to 9
CLOSED SUNDAY

*

46 oz. can

WITH OUR

PRODUCE VALVES!
Medium Yellow

Ful- Jl;u,u\
Buys!

MRS. TUCKER'S

ONIONS

SHORTENING

3 ~-~ 19e

BUTTERMILK
BISCUITS

Golden Ripe Choice

BANANAS. ____ 7 1•• 1.00

Q-Every Juae. as soon as

the roses bloom, I start to
~neeze and my eyes water.

FROZEN RUY'

My mother says that if I

HUNT'S

were allergic to roses, I
would have these symptoms
{illny time of the year ll I w:~s
Dear these flowers. What do
you, think?
A-I( you are seultlve to
roses, you would sneeze any
tlme yot. Inhaled rose pol·
len. Your llergy may be
caused by t
Uen of some
other plant tti l blooms at
the same time f year as
roses.

MAGIC BLEACH

TOMATO

CATSUP

BAKERY BUY!

CUBE

HOLSUM
BUNS

STEAK
pkg.

10

99~

SCOTT

don't ·help. He quit eating

ens and drlulng ·mill&lt; but

MILK

Decorated·

·

\

lb.

2 '*•·

roll

'

.

Our Own Fresh Made
. _ and Packqed

BRE·AD
•'··~

•k•

Butch's Own Recipe

SUM
!
~

Our Owl

~big

Assortid .
Colors.

A

25~

PORK
SAUSAGE

lOWE

- that·didn't· ~elp either. He ls

8

Pkc.

14 liZ: bot.

Q-My hulba:Dd, J.f, has
hives. The pills he is 'taking

neutra . substance on one "·
s~J and ptlnter's' Ink on an- , ,
otJier.·· ~ . ,,

~

Glllu Plastic

GROUND
3 -~-:· ~~··

~

'

·Sficed Bolog na •••.••••..~vI 99 Sliced
·,· Ends••
Ohio Vislloy

,._

JOY DOG FOOD
, (CHIINK$1

25-lb

-~ ''

boo

·"--"-_;••.;; • ' .... ,

,,
•

•· ·

,.
''

. 1;

't.

i

d 'lfdl ' ta'UIIt joint'
-u:*t:

9

9

*
NO Costly Gimmicks!

29

quart

· !iims
~~~~
· of,~~-~f'¥~~~iy~t
hay f~t· or •811Hma
·

SUPER ETHYL

REGULAR GAS

FINISHING

·•11-1 illlve been iiliiiDl lwo
t.,bots \ 1 month for eaghl
Years:JOr my allergy to rag.
Wftd. (l&lt;jllJd till! ShotS COUse
itt.e ' .{j)l1•j~,J_"t: ~ins in !flY
jiliQ~~ . . ' ..

ilui

GIVE US A TRYI

SH

diseases. is Inherited in som~ cases.

·:PJtrisi''-

~ H. f)t

day 1,

•••••• AND PRICES
CHOPPED DOWN LOW
EVERY DAY FOR YOUI

SALAD
DRESSING

it? How can I get rid olll? · a prln~r. -~ ""' Ink ile
A-ne oiler 10 11 lhat ·halldle.-cauae his hives? ·
cause eczema are usually
A-Ve1, especially II his
Check our
(pods. especially milk, eggs
hives clears up over the
~
lind wiles I; drugs, eope- weekend wilen he is away
Good Valu Buys!
Clally •ulfonamldes. vitamin
from tile shop. Your doctOr
.
preparations, liver ••tract ~uld ci""~ the mailer ·. by
~·s Grade
·iind CliO! tar prodocto: or m~klnf Plllc~·, ~-•111 -with a '··
..
.skin Co,n'-ct with v•rtous
:fflbrlcs or chemIc Jt.l s. It
often requires lh~ serv,l_ces
~r skilled "aller~l•\ or der,IJJatologlst to . n~_ the cause
·bUt once this Is round, comf1eie relief is 'possible.

lOia'lt.ics; Weaver, In .AIIhland,
nichland and Knm: Ccu1ties;
L~urcl , in Hocking County; BenIand and Richland &lt;..:ounUes; Pa- ton, in llockJrtJ: and Vinton Coun-vonla, in Ashland and Richland ties; llolmu, in llolmca t:ountr;
WC!IIinJtoo, in Lorain and MeWe5t Germany is ooJy just dina Counties; Wayne, In Wayne,
begiMirtg to develop a model. Ashland and llolmc.s Counties;
The l lnited states haa a quarter Medina, In Medina tounty; Mc:mockl similar to that u!;Od by t\rtb.lr, in Vinton Count,y; l.orthe British government's De- afn. in Lorain County; Cbernpsrlm•nt ot E&lt;onomi c Develop- scy, in {iuernrey, Musklngum
ment whi ch works out .such and Coshocto:. t.:ounties; K:tox,
Lhlngs as the rate of growth of in Knox County, and Zane, in
earnings, producti"'e poteiaial, Muskingum County.
Eight of the new welts will be
exports, and pressure of dedrilled
in Pa-..unia storage Field,
mand. The Central Planning
Bureau of the Netherlands fi11e will be in Lucas, lour in
government has one ot the most Wea-ver, two eacll In Benton,
sophisticated models ror deter~ McArthur· and Wa,.yne, and one
each in Laurel and Wellington.
ml~ng go~ernmert policy . .
Simulation Ia fast becomuw a The exact location or the other
neeesslt.Y in many fields. Its IU well:; will be deWrmined later this year.
luture potential is enormous.
4

call¥ located throughout the state.
they are at Luo::as, In Ar;~J­

SALAD BOWL

•
-':~eacly tile line ii',....,lnil~.' ,

Its South AJnertcan service and
as a rel!lult . e~cts to make
dramatic changes soon. Previously similar modelling tedlniquel!i were laboriously applied
by hind but the mathematics
were too complex for shipping
staff to harx:lle. !\ow the
computer model can do the job,
and take mall) more factors
into account.
Governments are among the
biggest users or simulation,

age fields... whlclt are str01tcgi

the coldesl wm~
1"be ~ of PI \hll4. c-.
about !',"::; per ecrtt. ol be lil.kcn out al .wrap: areu •
1JJe W'S UMCI b)' gu t:otnpan)" cokl wimer da,ys, or stored ila
eU•tomer• come'j rrom Ullder - Woill'm summer dll.)'a, depends
grQUnd sk.lrage.
largely on the number .cJ c,. ..
Tln rl11g tbe turrent winter, .as pacil r '&gt;I' o:tu ra ;~4.! Wl.llll.
muc:h as 1,G3tl,7' 10~1.10fJ 0 .6 biiH:.._' "11.. Clair 11 m~ ror
Jlon) cubic: feet of MaS ha&amp; been CoJumbia Gal In (AJJipolll, and
withdrawn from these storage Torn C:.:asseJI is m&amp;nafP' In NWfields in a single da,y .
dleport.J\.uncmJ.

native

l.er

UICE GEORGE WASHINGTON WE'RE FIRST

regular use of
to date has been
witfl flight trainers. GrouOO
vehicle simulators for cars,
buses. trains aOO tanks are also
produced, as are simulators for
radar systems, nuclear reactors
and power stations. Great use is
made or simulation in space
programs..
The newest and most fascinating use of simulation, howe11er,
is the simulated model system,
in moat cases a mathemalical
model. Its advantages are a
dramatic saving or e:q&gt;ense and
Ume. as well as being able to
lorecast matters that would not
normally be possible. The
general object is to see !low
systems will operate in practice
without actually becoming involved in the risk, experJse and
time Involved in physically
doing them on trW aOO error
basis.
Ul!le Being Made
An example is the use being
made on "company simulation"'
by the Moore McCormack
Shipping Line which operates
between the United States,
America and
Africa, South
Europe. They have a computer
model that simulates not only
voyages, but an en_tire neet in
simulation

12 •••• 1.00

fact,~ r 1.

uting

lb.
baa

object.
The most

lr WAYNE G. BRANDSTADT, M.D.

my nerves? What is the best
treatment?
A-Although most cases
of asthma are caused by in·
. .ling pollens or house dust
or by eating foods to which
you ar~ sensitivf!, heredity
and en'iotional stress are
now beJJeved to be contrib-

I

usually
having ectll"lmlctrlc
mGdels or macro-economic modela designed to work out
government economic planoing
and straleg)
Eastern EW'opean countries
such as Hungary, Czechoalova~
kia Bulgaria and the Soviet
t:nion are leading In this field
and make extensl ve use 01 tt.

Pillsbury E~~:tra Lite

feel weak. Could It be /rom

Jllll

complete
appral sal of the
company's operations- or those
or itl!l rivals- before making
decisions.
So rar simulated models have
dealt only with sed.lons of a
countr;y's economy but it i1
conceiv.able that eventually the
whole economy or a country wW
be planned by simulation so
that the perfect economy may
be- created. Japan is said to be
developing a model with this

Avoiding Allergen
Best Asthma Treatment
Q-1 have asthma that
causes me to wheeze and

19e
BEANS••••• r.an 29e
29e
2\1
19e
---------~ can

and 26 otber gas eom..,Ues l.n
Ohio. I~ Ohio fo'ucl and Columbia c.... of Ol!to are part or
the Columbia Gas !t'ttem, .,c,
All or the work will be done
in Ohio Fuel'a 14 exi.ting sior-

Total cost or the work wlll be
$1,G:J!J,:JUO.
Ohio Fuel supplies rt;~lural gas
to Columbia Gas o1 Ohio, Jnc.,

COCTOAIS MAILBAG

2 lb.

Price-Pleasing Specials

the
the

as the hearl.
Future Fascinating
Th~-t. luture of simW.ation
prwrlpy is a fascinating
prosptCt. In the world of
commerce
we are moving
towards
the
feasibility
of
cOII'\PUie&amp;
being completely
simulated; directors Will press
a "sin:aulator button" on the
boardroom table to give a

Rlllll

WITH US
BEFORE YOU BUY
• FRAMING LUMBER
• SHEATHING LUMBER
• PLYWOODS - ALL KINDS
• PANELING- SEVERAL DESIGNS
• PAINT - NEW SPRING LINE
• PLASTER BOARD AND ROOFING
• FULL LINE PRE-FINISHED MOULDING

\

Rfllnld

RED

Simulttlon may be defined as
the creation of an exact
comp.uter!zed replica of a piece
of equipment which is then used
for training purposes. The word
can also be awlied to the
creaUori ~a simulated "Model"
that l&amp; prOgrammed into a
c~ter to determipe anawers
to a permutation ol questions
and. situations.
When a simulated m~~ctline ls
used it saves COPslderable
expense. Ttlere is no danger
element and maneuvers that
would normally be impractical
can be carried out with ease.
Simulated Model
With a simulated model
pl-.ogram a host of groblems
which would normally take
years to work out can be
answered in a very short space
or time.
Hospitils may use simulation
for the treatment of patients
suflering from neryous and
m~ntal illnesses and the patients may be simulated back to
normality. In the medical field,
the United States and Sweden
lead, with Britain third, and
Jli&gt;4n on1f Ju•t ~nning.
Currently -medical Jlmulation
is limited to hospital procedures
-how to improve ·' ..work Oow,
training programs, and. cardioifaphical work. But the luture
lfQlds ma~zy interesting pros~
dects. nealth rofecasts could
t\!11 a person the exact dme he
or she would die ~ years
before it was due· til hawen.
functions ol Ole human body
!flight be ~ollated to rorm a

I

CROSS SONS:.

NOW I
-:-:-

I

LONDON- We are moving
towards the- dll.) when sophi s ticated forms of "slmulaUon"
will dominate our sQ(.·ial envir-

1 onmenc

*
*

new •tora~ wells drilled and
;4 existing wells re&lt;.'Onditioned.

l

day n1lht las been poofpoood Kula Deal ODd llel• K I a r,
health ebllrmeo.
wtU Fob. Z'l.

ONLY

!'

Simulated Environment Expected
I To Dominate Much Future L "';V a.;ng

--

BIS

SATURDAY

:$:

.-lor

loy, v1..._-; !be Wood,
teerMa.rJ; Vlekle ~aer.
treuurv; Ruth .,... l'tei'Mdl:ll
leader; CbrlltJ Stult1, DIWI
MEETING POSTPONED
rti&gt;Orler;
llreol Slulltoy IIIII CO.·
A meeUng of the TwillJht Garden Club announced lor ThUrJo. ol Cba1t, A!et;y c:ba1r-. IIIII

WASHINGTON'S _.
BIRTHDAY
WITH

SHOWBOAT

~

II.

~. _....llldtnt; -

Wood, Tunr&amp; aad Chrll-

59~

Mabel Wolle.

as president of th~ United
states. If a vice-president
s~.~eeeeds to the presidency
and serves two years or less
ot the unexpired term , he
may still be elected to two
terms as president. If he has
served more than two years
!,_,. unesr,ired term, he
may lk. ~ •ftC ed for only one

-

Armour's 16oz.

1-

'

Dwina tbl bu.a... mu"ftl
Atlendlal were Beonl a n'd cilloor1 wen
t ht
Bnad&amp; liiii!IIO', Klllllelh, !be, eom1ntr •-- 'lbor.l'ftt Jqodo

.

\\ork ia now under way tln a
$1. G million Ohio Fuel Gas &lt;:o.
procram to expand and impn.n'e
underground natural gu storage
fa cUlties in Ohio in 1969, It was
annCJ.mced today. There wUI be 35

•

wu..

lb. box

Milk

FRIDAY
THIRD FRIDAY Club, Friday,
7:30 p.m. at the home of Mrs.

How It's Poulble
A man can serve 10 ycil rs

-eh

by .tile advi!ID&lt;'• 1 nd
Jean Wood, and JUbe SllnlEQ".

VIOLATOR SENTENCED
Luther Greenlee, Jr., 18, Pl.
Pleasant, appeared in Mason
County Circuit Court Tuesday for
violation Of probation and was
sentenced to the Forestry Camp
at Davis, W. Va. for a period o!
one year.

l

tine lor tile ...._
8lcut.
Relreatunenb' ~ llndwl.cbe..
1be Dlllt Mt J'lq wU1 be It
cooldea and pmch were an-eel the homll ol. Pamela
Clll

The Uail) ~ntinel, Middlt.'J)OI'I • I'Oin4:1"0)', Cl..., 1-'eb.. HI, 191~1

-

Columbia Ga,s Expanding Storage SJ~V$, tem

ao..l;&gt;j~

V lllanl.r; - ·
BMI, Hoi• Kine. VI- t.or.
t.tilii'r, ~~ a.., RiiG fll~
•a, Pomolo WU.. IIIII - ·
Lindo Chua IIIII Mrl- 11o11J

Tho
HI Club mel
neanilJ al u.l ._. at Ill odv:l.iiin-i,. Oi,i', a.-.4 l.:ii. iiwifloilt
Wood, tor a ValoDlno - Each meri&gt;Or -..,t a •al..,_

**
*••

head.

SUNDAY
NATIVITY DEMTHY , Catho-lic Women's Club, Quarterly
meeting at St. Andrewl!l Parish
in Nei:Bonville, 2 p.m. Sunday.

attended a meeting ill Columbus.
They were accmnpaoied by his
mother, Mrs, Lavinia Simpson
who wilJ visit lncleOnitely with
Mrs. SYbil Miles, a post operaa
t1 ve patient.
Mr. and Mrs. Chester Simpson
spent. 1 weekea:l with Mr. am
Mrs. Brian Simpson at Woodsfield. They were accompaDied
by Mrs. HUda Hart who \'blted
Mr. Charles Kuhl anddauallterat
Hannibal and visited Mrs. Kuhl
at a Wheeling hospital.
Mr. 111:1 Mrs. Floyd Chipman
and daughters, Shelly and Kim~
berly, ol Columbus were Sunday
visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Gordon
West and lamUy.
Mrs. Dale Hart of Florida is
spen:Ung two weeks with her per.
ents, Mr. and Mrs. Edison Brace
and Mr. and Mrs. Linley Hart.
Mr, and Mrs. Leonard Lewis of
canton spent a weekend. with Mr.

lf---¥- CELEBRATE

•

MEIGS COUNTY Democrats
Thursday, 7:30 p.m., at Pomeroy headqUBrters; executive com~
mitt.ee to conduct public session
to reorganize and plan months

GEORGE WASJUNGTON Birthday supper Saturday beginning
4:30 p.m. at Syracuse Elementary Sehool, sponsored by Ladies
Auxiliary, Syracuse 1-"i re DepartmenL
HIGH SCHOOL DANCE Party,
Saturday, Meigs .Junior High
School aadltorium in Pomeroy,
8 to ll p.m. The Jays will em·
cee. Open to the publi c.
CHILI SUPPER, beginning 4
p.m . · Saturday in Ma ;;onic bulld·
lng at Chester sponsored by Ches~
ter Youth Organization .

~~

-~

\I

CRACKERS

clal roorn

I

entertolnmerit wiD be

You Want Me to Go'" a00the23rd
Psalm in unison closed the meeting. During the social hour refreshments were served by the
hostess who used the valentine
tlleme in table decorations to
Ethel Smith, Edna Pickens, Marie Roush, GrettaSimpson, Frances Wilcoxen, Ura Morris and
Dorothy Badgley, a guesL
Mr. Otto Bradford has returned
home after a long stay in Veterans Hospital, Cincinnati.
Mrs. Ann Coe fell recently alkl
broke her wrisL
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Simpson and Mrs. George Neigler.

PLEASANT\' t'\LLEY UOSPITAL
(February 19, 1968)

Being Announced

S~&gt;eclal

presented.

Snowville Club Party Held.

NABISCO SAL TINE

son and Infant daugllter, Doris
Ann Heaver, Mrs. &lt;..:harles W,
Bloss, Kenneth L. Burchett, Mrs.
J. Carey Cox, Willard G r a n t,
Gregory L. Jotmson, Everett R.
King, Mn. Charles W. K u h n,
Joseph E. McCulgan, Mrs. Ray·
mood G. McManaway, Mrs. H.
Donald Peck, Russell E. Roach,
Mrs. Da-vid D. Rwsh, John A.
"Rupe, Michael W. Saxon, M r s.
Will 9-loemaker, Brenda L,
Smeltzer, Ersel B. Wilcoxen,
Mrs. Her-shel Clark, Terel&gt;B D.
Daniels, Mrs. Hollis Wood, and
D. Hollis Wood.

Daughter's Birth

BANQVET TO DE HEIJl
Tho 011&gt; 11&lt;w11 alii Wlbofoo
ol Pack 2t8 wUI hold tbalr
omuol Blue ond Gold banquit
S..i.w-..J.i.1, F..t.. !2, iii.aa·Uol U
6 p.IIL at the Pomeroy Elementar)" School on MIAberr)" Ave.
The event will be potluck,
with each scouter's tamib
tumishlnR: a covered dl11h ~!!!!
iUI own table service.

At Riverview Elementary

"
1y GAYNOR MADDOX

10 lea1pooa ult
1 cup ( ~.. lb.) shredded
Swiss cheese
! cupt mUk, acalded
Drain and flake crabmeat,
removing any remaining

»":&gt;:-..~;&lt;;».::::~~

�.. --------·-··· .... . . . . - -· . ......- ............. . .
.......... - .... _... ... ... . .. .. _ . ... . ... ........ - ' ...... .

--- -

..

.....

Jl- The Dalb semlnel, Jllkklleport -l•omcro), o .. Feb. 19, 1969

--

. --

.

our

~

..... , "•

HB3ol, Norris, extends time
ror setting smaU claims trial
date. Vote: 86~.
HB20, Schinnerer, permits
Clevela.lld &amp;ate Un1vers11;y to
aCQUire Cleveland ~ Marshall
Law Schoo~ Vote: 87-8.
j!Uis lntroducecl
· HB}-66, Goddard, authorizes
land transfer In ChernNY
County kl correct an error.
HB167, Christiansen, changes
per diem allowance to municipal ccurt judges from $15 to

THURSDAy -FRIDAY -SATURDAY

•

nts.
BRACH'S

$30.

CHOCOLATE
COVERED

-

.. oz.
HAIKARA

Reg. 1.89

VO·S

SHAMPOO

EXTRA
LARGE

~

SCOPE

lmt68, ChrisUansen, provides
for return ot remainder or a
security deposit to deposit or
after claim settled.
HB169, Murdock, provides lor
promotion of pollee cadeta to
JNitrolman status without ctvU
service examinations.
HB170, Chrlstlanlen, provides
ror group hospitalization ror
health district employes.
HB171,
Knight,
increases
coun1y appropriation limit for
"eampsn and '"PPsts" tD observe Memorial Day.
HB172, Gocldard, creates Belpre Municipal Court.
HB173, Reichel, revises statute regarding establlshmeirt of
branch banks.
HB174, Cruze, makes oral
charge of police brutality slander per se of the JXtlice oftleer.

box

CHERRIE

t(\

•

AFTER SHAVE

c

-•
•

CREST

laroi
Film
99
107____ •
3

nch

44~

RETAIL VALUE $1.50

108---- •

•.

WA.\1UNGTON (UPD -

.•

.---...
-•-

ICI
SHAVE

~

•

..

....
~

. ,•• 1 ..

you have been, more proresAI.on..
ally ·eompetent, or with a record ~ greater achievement than
yours," Nixon's letter s~._
Bllss'a action comes just a
1!1(1111\ after he had alinlflod hi•
Intention to 1110)' In the Job, Nixon had wele'Jmed Bllss•s announcement at the time.

'l•,u.,,~ , '" ~~,. ­

,,_, ., ....

DA niME. 15's .....69C

ly

co TAC

IEWBOII ·30's ..1.34
OVEIIIGHT • 1Z's . 69C
......
I

c

·IO's

I

I

'
I
I

l
'

I

i'
I

Reg. 49e-60's
Reg.

Cotton Swabs

CUTE X

Poli$h
Remover

PEN

22~

~

this sleeping Nebraska rarm town
Tuesday, kllllng at least eight
persons and injuring soore11.
Authorides said the d e a t h
count might rtae to 10. At least
a dozen persona were admitted to
Crete Municipal and about two
dozen more were treated and
releaaed.
At least 500 persons w e r e
evacuated !rom their homes a1
poUcemen and National &lt;AulrdiJmen wearlng gal mask1 made a
house to houa seareb tor more
victims. The Nebr11k1 Highway
Patrol set up barricadea a n d
sealed otr the town of. 3,500 from
the outside world ..
Officials of the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad In
ChicagO said a 120-car rretr;ht

SOUTH BEND, Ind. (UPO The president of the Unnrslty
of N~re Dame Tuesda.Y served
notice on students and raculty
tl'lat a new "in&amp;tlnt action!' poltc,y will be obserwd in the future
to suspend, e,.pellandarrestper·
sons lnterft~rhnormal ~
eratioP or the school •nd t h e
rll:hta ot other a.
Obvlouol)l ocUIII! In re8p0111e
to an tneiMnt 10 d:ay1 ago In
which four per1001 were iDJured
when law enrorcem.,a authorlu~. ~eidd a contnbuil tUm
1111 duhed wllh o 1111,.. ~ onll'l' -~~~·· the Rev. Theodore

'-tit

Oru~s

tire Sensibly Priced

Mf.t&gt;PLE~
Ot-:110 .
&lt;

11. Heoburlll outllriod a ..

•

,,

' kllitill"

.,t

polle~ , he said he hoped

.woull .-ver -hive • be

Demands
Dropped

Denwcrats to Reorganize

Family Farm not entirely loot cawe

HAWTUORNE, NEV. - GROUND PARTIES, some on skis or
snowshoes, battled rain •OO heavY snow today searchiDB for a DC3
airliner which vanished with 35 persons on a ,.gamblers flight." 1be
twin--engl ne plane, similar to the C47 which served as one of the
workhorses or World War D, disappeared In a snow storm shortly
after take-off from Hawthorne Airport at 4:06 a. m. Tuesday.
The plane, carrying 32 passengers and a crew or three, was
operated by Mineral County Airlines, which aleo conducts business
as HawttJorne Nevada Airlines. Most of the passengers were on the
return leg of a Oight thlt carries Southern california customers to a
Hawthorne casino on an overnight $10 excursion plan which includes
air rare, dinner and cocktails.

Hflavieot bombardment rained on enemy
SAIGON - U, S. B52S DROPPED THEIR HEAVIEST bombardment of the year on Communist positions in Laos duriJl!: the 24-hour
Allied holiday c-ease--fire, Informed U. S. sources reported today.
The one-day cease--fire, called in observance or Vietnamese lwar
new year, halted Allied military operations in South VIetnam. But
sources said at least 30 B52s dropped more than 900 tons of explosives on the Ho Chi Minh CommwDst supply trail Lhat runs through
Laos.
Another 300 to 400 U. S. fighter-bombers attacked targets in
Laos during the truc-e, the sources said. American air raids on Laos
have inten10ified substantially since the United States stopped bomi&gt;ing North Vietnam Nov. L

Tf"70

W

~

U ld

Add School Af"d

For Counseling Work

CO LUMBUS - Sen. Oakley
Collins, (R. Ironton) chairman
meet Thursday night at 7:30 p. mlttees covering a wide. varte- of the Senate Education Comm. In their Pomeroy headquar- t..Y of interests and acttviUes. mittce co-sponsored a bill in
tera ~ partlclpat;e 1n reor~ .. t. lt I_s expected~Ptere will be vol- th' l~slature this week aimed
expected pro.. ~ at providing state finandal supzatlon aeti\liUes Wi:tlt--the execb· unteer.a,.to wor
10 committees.
.
in
tlve committee 1n a public aes- jects or the
slon The meeting wlil be preChairman Crisp said, -'Any- portd fo~ thguJdaghncel2programs
' Sen,
rou Clara
· E. WeJs.
sided· over by Jack W. Crisp, one, young or old' who has ever gra
Be esand
chairman, Plans for the months voted Democratic, has a stake
nbo
R-D..........
id t h e
In U.l 5
ting .,
e rn,
&lt;v '·""•
sa
ahead also wlll be made.
mee '
measure would include guidance
Recent changes in the size and
COWlselors in the calculations
structure of the executive committee will be explained and com- ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;.
menta wlll be solicited. ProposCINCINNATI (UP0 - Six ed new by-laws will be presentyear-old
Christine Corhn, Cined for approval.
cinnati's
first heart transplant
A feature of the by-laws is
patient, enjoyed her first fUll
day in a private room at Chll·
dren's Hospital here Tuesday
By United Press International
after being taken orr the inIsraeli leaders conferred intensJve care list,
tensively toda,y how tD respond
Doctors decided, in view of to Tuesday's Arab terrorist ather continued steadY progress,
tack on an El AI jetliner in
to move the little girl from the Zurich, Switzerland. U. S. Seccardiac intensive care unit to retary - General Thant pleaded
a private room.
with the Israelis not to retalitrain from Denver derailed at

Retaliation

Is Studied

IIHd,

current burniDC luues of our h•ve or will be asaumed not be
society." But, he said, ''ntional members of the communit,y a!'kl
persua.slon10 Is the acceptable wUl be charged with trea.-asing
me,thod.
and dilturbi118 the peace on priIn the event "'anyone or any vate pi'OJI'I:r~ and· treated •c"gl'Olt'" substitute• rorce, "'be it cordhtR to the law.
violent or non--violent," they will
be glven "1$ minute• of meclita- Judgement Action
lion to ce•ae aqcl desist.•• he said
l",'
in a letter tofaculb' and students.
Court
"They wUl be told that they
.
'
are, by the:lr acUona, 10t111 coun..
A confeolod judgment action
ter to the Overwhelming con.vic·
a petition ror divoree hive
tlons of thla comniunltyaa to what been fliod In Moll!• Counly C&lt;llllIa proper htt~e ... . ~r H¥.S• mon Plel.i Court.
bur&amp;b comiiOIOCL ,·~u they do not
Tho judgment ocUon by Generwllhln U..t tline 'period ceaoe lrd ol American Crodltioslc8t563.45
deol•ll· t!le&gt; ·Will be a•ke!I fQr fl'om Gt!'l' Grlfllth; ilro 1, Long
their ldentl\)' cordi.
Bottom. ROlle Woll,. R1. •1, Shade,
···ThOM wtio~ProduCe thesewui elllrg!JII! sroso oe8JeCI ol dut;y
... IU!I"'ndod
tl!la CIIII!DlUJ&gt;o 1111
lor cuatm,y olomllloF

Fi.led wlth

ara

aw.

Israel's foreign minister, Abba Eban condemned the raid as
"a despicable act of terrorism"
encouraged by lenient world opln~
ion toward previous Arab guerrilla acts.
In Amman, Jordanian spokesmen said Israeli and Jordanian
troops battJed for 25 minutes
in the northern Jordan Valley
this morning. The Jordanians
BUIJered no casualties, but utt
is believed enemy forces suffered some," the splkellllen
said.
In Jerusalem, 11rgent meetings of brael•a Defense SecurIty and Commercial Aviation Security commlttece were expected. The ncond committee was
formed after Arab terrorists shot
up another El AI airliner at
Athens Dec. Z6.

"1be judgment regardl~ the
of normal univerSity
operations or the viol•tlon of the
rights of' other members or the
communi!)' wlll bo made by the
dean or students," the letter

for state financial aid to schools.
..Despite tl'le importance of
professional guidaJl(:e for to.
day's YOUI\Ksters, local school
districts IJlUit bear tbe tull .fi·
nanclal oost or thls service,"
said Collins, who noted that even
though the state does not cur rently help pay for counselors,
it does require local schools to
have guidance counselors.
The measure, supported by the
Ohio
Education Association,
would include guidanL'C counselors in the School Foundation Program on the basis ol one COlDI·
selor ror each 400 students ln
jwtior and senior high schools.

School Halls
Are Patrolled

In Columbus
COLUMr3US (U Pfl - Plain clothes police officers continued patrolling highways at Eastmoor High School today after
two bombings were reported at
the East Side high school.
OOicials said the bornbs, constructed from copper tubing,
caused no injuries and little dam age.
Spokesmen for the school system said they had no plans to
close Eastmoor, although several small fires in waste baskets
a1so were reported.
Police said school of'fic-ial&amp;
delayed reporting or several
wa!-tepaper basket fires for "two
or three days" last week. School
officials declined comment.
FOOD SALE PLANNED
The WSCS of the Letart Falls
United Methodist Church wilJ
have a rood sale at tross' Store
in Racine beginning at 10 a. m.
Frida)'. There will be homemade
noodles, baked goods and vcge ..
table soup.
MARRIAGE APPLICATION
Bryan Yonker, 21, Rt. 1 Letart lab worker, and Linda John20, Rt. 1, Racine, beautician.

son:

Continent, Not Ocean
The Antarctic Ocean no
longer appears on maps _because, with our expandmg
knowledge of the world, we
have learned that the Antarctic is a continent. not an
ocean .

Obscene Literature Sales
Can't Be Stopped in Ohio
COLUMBUS (UPD - Three
veteran police officers told a
House committee Thesday Ohio's
laws covering sale of obscene
literature were not s t r o n g
enwgh, They agreed more emphasis oo defining what was CJb..
scene and pornograpblc was necessary ln order to stop sale or
the literature to juveniles.
But, they adcled no matter how
strong the law was m the &amp;m~
Ject, production or such llteralllre woold not be halted. The 0{.
ricers testified at the first hear·
ing on a blll covering sale ol
OOseene Uterature in Cillo.
"It should go one step farther," said Columbus c a p t.
Robert Ta,ylor. ''We've b e e n
too darn permissive in our SOclet,y for too long.,. Lt. George
Trammell of the Cleveland Pollee Department's juvenile de.
tail, aald DI"e:&amp;ent laws s I o w
down sale or obscene litenture
lf they are enloreed.

Sponsor of the measure, Rep.
Robert A. Manning, R-Ai&lt;ron. said
he was convinced it was a proper legialatlve exercise to cover
the touchy area.
However, Manning said he was
"opposed to telling a~ltB what
they can see · or read." He said
bls bill was aimed at llmlting or
ending the sale of obscene lit-erature to juveniles.

The House Judiciary Committee Tuesday also bold hearings
on a prapoaal to give the state
Hlgbwa.y Patrol power to help
local and countY olficials in riots
and civil disorders.
Under the bill prq&gt;Osecl by Rep.
Alan E. Norris, R·Westerville,
the patrol could be sent tn a city
or county to help cp.rell trouble
when asked by the COWtty ~­
ciaJs, Present state law limits
patrol Wty in disorders to pro.
tectloD rA state--owned or operated!li'OJ)erty,

impendi~

said.
Father Hesburgh said studeats
who refuae to obe.Y "'ceaae and
desist" orders D\'e mlnutes after receiviJW suspension ralftc•
tlon will be IJII)elled and the law
wUI deol &lt;Willi them •• JIOn-ltu- .
dents.

I

••kina

next week.

Gambler&amp;' flight lmt in De.ert

•
Meigs County Democrats will the creat•on of 10 ~tanding co~ -

Crete at 6:30 a.m. CST and l'lit
two Burlington tank cars fUied
with ammonia which were park.
VETERANS MEMORIAL
HOSPITAL
ed on a siding.
Anl'lydrous ammonia is used as
Admissions - Mildred White,
rerWizer. It is generally Injected Gallipolis; Keitba Whitlatch,
Into the ground but Its fumes can Pomeroy; William Geplw1, Mabe lethal when they are released son; Harold Norton, Pomeroy;
In the air in sufficient concen- Allsha Bissell, Middleport,
tratian.
Dlsrr ar~es Frances LuiThe tumes spread over the kart, . uy11&lt;t RusselL
weat side or Crete, located 30
MYSI'EUY NOTE
mlles IOUthwelt of Nebraska•s
A
groop
met In Middleport
eapitsl cley of Llnooln, while
Thesda.Y
night
to discuss ideas
many of the Inhabitants w e r e
which
might
affect
the fUture of
sleeping.
several
Meigs
Coontians.
FurA Natlmal guard detachment
ther
details
will
be amounced
was sent to Cr.e te and at leut
later.
eight volunteer fire departments
rrom nearby communities lent MEIGS GENERAL HOSPITAL
help. However, not all or the work- ~ Admissions - Grace K u h n,
ers were able to enter tlle area TUppers Plains; Dell FU:e, Midbecause they did not have t h ;e dleport.
Discharges - None.
proper type of gas maska.

COLUM.&gt;US (UP0 - The Columbus Municipal Employe&amp; Ur.loo hao dropped Its demanda for
a $25 a week acroa&amp;-the--board
pay lncreases and has given eit;y
negotiators three substitutes.
Jom Kel\Y, district director of
Local 1632, AmerlcanFederaliDI!
0{ !late, Cooney and Municipal
Employea, said the new demands
were a eoat 0( living adjustment
which would Increase JNQ" by about 17 ceats an hour, reclasaltfcaUon upward of job categories
and a complete study of plijl" inequities based on salaries earned by city workers elsewhere 1n

WASHINGTON- TilE fAMILY fARM, WRITIENotrbyacme as
a lost cause, still domin.te11 Amerieanagrlculture,aneconornist said
Tuesday. It problbly will contiooe to doaoalthough growing numbers
ol larmers may set 14&gt; corporations to (MD their t'anns, the Aarl·
culture Department economist, M. L. Upchurch, sai.d.
Upchurch said the 47-state figures showed about 11,000 !arms
owned by corporations. This compared with a natlon.l total of some
3 miiHon t'arm ~ and a total of about 1 million .. commercia)" farms
wilh armual sales of $10,000 or more.
Obio.
The 11,000 farm corporations included about 7,500 family rorDeJM;y Service Olrector John
poratlons, 1,300 owned by individuals, arxl 2,200 others. Sixty per E. Jones said the demands would
cent of the corporations were engaged only in farming.
be studied and an answer given

HEART DEATH RATE DECLINES

.....

ARM:I

111t0KI

DINER

Al\

....
......,_

II &amp;lAIII

••

·- ·••

INilWI

WIDlH OF J.IIIIIIOWSIIOIU.lU fW:L,
Atlvt IWOIITAict Of THUl 011·
t:Aill.lS C:.lU$11 QF otAlH

BRUSH FmE DOUSEll

T H e MlddlO(&gt;Ol'l omerpncy
~q~~ad

an•wOl'Od a

~lllalhiTur­

key Run IJ'OO near Chellhlre TIIH-

fltber . ~ ....... said ~·· unl•
tn.,.
daf ·ennl1111 to ..,t oot a bnsll
-•IIY "teioc!dlld lhi. ~d- Ill' •• not undersiordhwwhettll!o chUd, hoa fllod for divorce J~ fiN-1 It· wa1 out before the de·
" ley 0{ proteol ... rfPf'(I!W"tho ·tcinlmunlt;y Is. TlloH wlio clo 'not Larry Well, al1o Rt. 1, Sh&amp;de.
Parlmenl ~rrl11od, mwover.
.
~
'
.

.

'

-···;•r.,•

WASHINGTON - A DELEGATION OF Amerlcan lr'lilans called
Tuesday ror Indian control ol tl\t:lir schools, ct.rrJng that educatlm
under the Bureau ol lrJJian Atfalrs was the re8p(Nllibillty of ''a b11nd'l
of ha~ieked Uncle Tomahawks."
The criticism berore a Sem.te subcommittee on Indian edueation
headed by Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D--Masa., coincided with • White
Ilouse announcement that President Nixon was conslderirw a major
overhaul of the bureaLL

Notre Dame Will Use Instant Action

l'htre

USE OUR LARGE FREE PARKING LOT

CRETE, Neb. (UPD - Deadanhydrous ammonia fumes

seeping rrom two ama~hed railroad tank ears spread through

RETAIL
VALUE $1.59

BALL POINT

i1Bt76, Thorpe, Pl"''Vlde• tor
an accounting by an executorfor adminlstntor of an estate.
•
I
HB177,
Paulo, authorizes
boards ol education to hold
branch registrations before prJ.
mary elections,
HB178, Poda, excludes boat,
travel, house tral~er11 from
COWlty vehicle tax,
HB 179, S. fllghoa, permits
bond issues to be sold to acQJlre or e(Jlip tacllWes for
mentaJI,y retarded.
SENATE
Bill Passed
Ami-m 1, 11lorpe,- corrects errors in Ohio Revised Code.
STROKE VICTIM at the
Emergency. Vote: 32..0. Vote
age of 4, Deaaa Kal. Howell,
on bill, 32..0,
oow 7, is this years o«ietal
BUts lnlro&lt;hced
Eaoter Seal Child. After
SBU2, Armstrong. provides
aoft'ering paralysis which
hospitalization and other mediler&amp; her a n a b I e to stand,
cal benefits ror coun1iY emwalk or talk, Donna Kay
ployes.
reeelved treatmeat at the
Easter Seal RehahWiatlon
SB113, Weisenborn, provides
Ceater In TaUahao.... Fla.
ror the preservation or natural
Her 1peech defect ba1 been
areas or unusual sclentiftc or
corrected
and sbe ia recoveducational significance.
erlD( uae of the aftected
SB114, Maloney, amends the
band and leg.
code to set guidelines ror budget commissions in determining
a municipall1y'a need and to
give municipalities 5 per cent.
of any increase In sales tax receipts.
SB115, Mottl, call• for in"Heart Research - Uoor to
crease from $3,000 to $5,000 the
value of an estate that c-an be Tomorrow" will be the topic
distrib.lted without administra- of Dr. Robert Hamlln, associate professor at Ohio State Unition.
SB116, Leedy, makes It Ulegal versity, when he addresses a
to have more than one quart public meeting at 8 p.m. Thursor liquor in ' possession when day in the Meigs High School
not Jllrchased rrom the state Auditoriwn ln Middleport.
Dr. Hamlln is currently workDepartment of Uquor Cootrol.
ing
on two heart research proSBu7, Leedy, permits adult
jects
under the sponsorship of
Ol'ltoana and servicemen to
the Central Ohio Heart Associ·
brlns up to oae quart of liquor
into the state tor personal use ation.
Wring a 30--day period.
His appearance here was arauthorizes
the
G
ranged by Dr. narold Brown.
SB 11 8, ray,
new form or amending Senate 1969 'Heart Fund chairman.
There is no admission charge
bUis
.
for the Thursday night event.

Seeping Fumes Kill 8
I
In
Quiet
Crete,
Neb.
I

DAniME ·lO's .. .

49e
BIC "Cllc"

oc1 h!!!l;~,IJIIOofthemoatreapect­
od Jllttji *"'js In history.
,
'4Jn our parcy's six score
yO.-a, we have never had a
ehairmao more dedicated than

-

p

Ret·

Ray C
'
Bllsa Is restgning as Republican
National Chairman, effective in
rnld..J\prtl, the White Hou &amp;e said
Tuesday.
mt .. told President Nixon ln
a letter that he wUl JUbmlt his
resignation to the Republican National Committee at a meeting In
Washl.ngton next month.
Nixon expressed his "great
periWWLI regret" ln a ''Dear
Ray••. letter to Bliss and prals·

•

Reg. 98t

Playing Cards
~

GOT~neomnJa.nd

••

22~

Reg. 5.35

. ONLY-----------

PEN

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

Vnrle Tomahawktl run Indian lldwobo

At Meigs High

Top Post in

igarette
Lighters

Reg. 2.75]

PAPER MA

.

,l.lrt.l'¥li:all

Heart is Topic

Bliss Quits

TOOTH PASTE

~

~-

_ ___

,_JU!¥-&amp;,

for written naj!~a ~ hearlng
on objections to -tewer Improvements tn be sent to OOJec-tors.

HOUSE
Bills Passed

Q-TIPS

-· . ........ _____ ,. ......

X·

eral A uembly.

384's

..

.

J~

COLUMBUS (UPI; .-\ g!:."!::e
at actlvlty Tuelday ln the Gon-

REGULAR 1. 98
FAMILY CHEST

·-

....

[ Legislature at a Glance ~
,........ .......
..

0

~

~

.. .

···- -

11 - The D•tly SenUnel, Middleport - PomerOJ, 0., Feb. 19, 1969
~~·o·c;c::·~~~~.::~~~=::.-:~:~=-=·=·=~= -:-:-:-:·:·:::~::::::·~;:::::·.·:·:-:·:•:·:·:·:-:-:-!:.-:;_:;:

it'S

MOUTH
WASH

~--··.-------.

~

~

AT•• •

"'

Molsiwe research proerarns lin.ce 1950 IIDTe resulted in an
over-oil iedu~tion ol 18.4 por .c..t in the death rote from
hurt dilloses below the age ol 65. The programs oro
linonce&lt;l i.y both Ia• and voluntary funds, iocluding more
thdn $145 !Willion roisad by Heart Fund droves.

All indications _polnt to the
current Congress being that of
a ''Reform Congress."
With a new administration in
the White House and new men
leading most or the OOpartmentA
and bureaus or the Federal Government, a welcome spirit or
re~aluation and re-assessment
has come to Washington.
The wave or reform started
with the recent announcement
by the Postmaster General that •
hereafter postmasters and rural mail carriers will be appointed on the basis or Civil
Service examination instead or
political patronage.
In late January I introduced,
along with a number of my col·
leagues, a Congressional Reform
Bill to modernize and tighten
up many of the legislative pro.
cedures and practices or t h e
Congress. Important items in
this bill are greater public access to cornmltteehearings, closing loopholes in the Federal Lobbying Aet, providing for the use
ot automatic data processing
equipment and permitting live
television and radio coverage
of many Congressional hearings.
Many or ue here on the Hill are
optimistic that the present elimate or Congress Ia conducive
to the passage or this long flY·
erdue measure.
Perhaps or paramount interest to 10th District cltizena Ia
the matter of tax rerorm . Tuesday of this week hearings began

which promloe lo bo tho comprebenaive ime!dlpttona lato the tax QuestiOn tn reCIIII

yean. Tu exempt !«aM.,..._,
tax on the unrelaled buatn.u
income of dlurcbea, eta aad

socletiea, the taqtfon ot llllnlle
persons, and the ta
&lt;t municipal - . will the agenda or the WQ"I • n d
Means Commltt:M heb'lnl•· For
the PQit few years, an ol. ...
have heard about the mUIJaa..
aires who PlY no income ta.
the allegedly o u - 1 prollto
of some industriea, UJe enormous lnfhaence ol fcJundatiGna.
etc. , and we have heard enouadt
loose talk about "tax reform"
to flil volumes. Now at lonllut
there wiLl be an OJIIIIOl"'Wdt) to
reexamine our tax structure to
amend many or the IMquiU.I
which exht.
Anotller area of can&amp;iderable
concern to Southeastern 0 h 1 o
residents 16 the draft. Here, too,
the President and the Def81118
Department are worldne ha-d an
reforming the Seleedve Servlee

tz-•--

~stem. There Ia a veJ'1

auod

posslbllity that the t1me may nut
be too rar aw13 wben a voJun ..
leer army ma,y replace the pre...
ent system or eonacrlpdoll.
The re--e:xam1natlon and reform
spirit in Wash:ingtoo toucbu aa
nearly every facet of American
life. The.. efforts I antldpote
will result in a much more efflc:lent and practical uu of our tu
dollar.

Retardation Board
Elects 3 New Officers
OO'teers were elected Monday dltional buo traooportatlon, IIIII
the needs at teachers and aa-alotsma.
Elected were Mrs. Grace WebNext year the boord will bo
er, chairman; Mrs. Barbara Shu- re&lt;odred lo malntalD dalller, vice chairman, and Mrs. room• for studeota lnltead of
Helen Williams, secretary,
me. which bas been operated
Meeting in the office of t h e for the palit two years. There
county commissioners, the group are 13 students a~1it ooe
discussed plans for the n e x t room. The state r~l" that
school year including an addi- classes must be limited to el&amp;lrt
tional classroom, possibly ad- students.
The 13 students also are in a
wider age range than Is a~
RIVER NEWS
table by the state.
Teacher of tbe school, M r a.
GAUGES GaUipolls, 12.3 Julla Webb, has resignod etrecand 15.6 running 12 feet of roll- tive Feb. 28. his belugreplac.
ers; Pl. Pleasant, 24.61; Pome- ed for the remainder ot the year
roy - Mason, 2 4.17; Hin ton, I . 57 by Mro. Hllda Collins ~ l'llmfalling; Kanawha Falls, 4.58 rail- eroy who baa served as 111biU·
ing; Charleston, 18.06 railing, tute for the clan. Assiltant to
London, Marmet, and Wlnfleld, the teacher is Miss Jane 1boJD.
are on the sill.
as or near Rutland.
BOAT MOVEMENTS:
Attending the meeting we r ·e
GALLIPOLIS LOCKS - Sol- Mrs. Weber, Edward Kemoob',
vay down 7:10 p.m.; Mark Eas- Mrs. Iris Carr. Mrs. WUilama,
tin down 8:25p.m.; H. E. Bowles Mrs. !iluler and Mrs. No r a
down 8:55p.m.; Franklin Pierce :R:.:I::.:ce:.:·_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _
down 10:15 p.m.; Queen Clt;y up OAK tnLL HOSPITAL NEWS
11 p.m.; James R, Hines up 12:Births _ Mr. and Mrs. Char50 a.m.; John Ladd Dean down les T. O'Leary, ~· TraDer
2:20 a.m.; J, S. Lewis up 3:50 Court. Jackson, llllfl, Charlu
a.m.
Randall, Feb. 4; Mr. and MriiKANAWHA RIVER - Lon-,
Arttrur D. Baker, Rl. 1 BeaY.-,
Semet up 3:55 p.m.; Fort Dearson, Todd Daniel, Feb. 5i Yr.
bam down 6:15 a.m.; Marmet,
and Mrs. Douglas M. Looa. R1.
Jenny A. Greer~ down 12:15 a.m.;
Chrllllapbor
OUachita down 3:15 a.m.; Win- 4 Oak Hlll, g,awn, Feb. 6; Mr. md llrl.
neld, Beaver down 2:20 p.m.;
Forest Dwight Balioo, Rt. 1 Ook
Oleander down 2:25 p.m.; Elf ..
Hill, daughter, Greta Eve, Fob.
sha Woods up 2:55p.m.; National
6; Mr. and Mrs. Paul L. 9n1D,
up 5:30p.m.; Ironworker up 8:15
Rt. 5 Jaekam. daughter. Tw.
p.m.; w. H. hver, Jr. down 8:esa Ellen, Feb. 7; Mr. and Mra.
55 p.m.; John Fox up 3 a.m.;
Luther Herdman down 3:15a.m.; WUllam 0. Del.oo&amp;. Coa1toD, Douglas Ebgene, Feb. 9; Mr.
Jeffersoo up 5 a.m.
and Mn. James Mark Rl&amp;IIIJ.
omo RIVER - Lock t3, John Rt I, Beaver, - Mleblol 'lW5,
Pushak down 6:40 a.m.; lock
Feb. 9; Mr. IIIII MrJ. WDbur L.
14, Foremost up 2:40p.m.; PegArt:lalr, Rt. f JackJon. dluabCw.
gy Downey up t:35 p.m.; Jeff- Macy Elleo, Feb. 9,
boat up 10:05 p.m.; Lock 15, ExPresent Patients - . . _ .
press down 4:35a.m.; St. Marys
Brisker and Jolw1 ~ Ook
down 5:05 a.m.; William Pitt Hill; Alma Phillips, Dorio .....,.
down 6:20 a.m.; Lock 16, John
ror Aged, Oak lWl; E1IDor ~ .
J, Rowe down 2:20 a.m.; John way, JackaoD; Hattie Y.....
Ladd Dean up 4:30 a.m.; LDck Wheelersllurg; Dorio R-. .....,
17, S. M. Jenks up 1:15 a.m.;
·Sell, and Jomlntto WhiC.,
Andrew P. Calhoun up 2:50 a.m.;
11011; Edward . . . Rt. 2 QllFl&gt;lly R, up 3:25a.m.; Horry Dyllcothe; CharlOJ ~HI'. COol•'
er up 5:50 a.m.; Jlm Murphy ton; Loren Rllv. a.&amp;YW; &amp;rdown 6:45 a.m.;BellevUle Locka., ma SioR&gt;, RL 2 Cllllll-; llottlk
Miss Lucky up 10:40 p.m.; ~ 0
Jae~ ·lltillort Ei•:
Ranger up 2:05 a.m.; lock 21. vln, Rt. 1 Jocl&lt;M*; ~. Jlll~ '\
Poplar down 12:05 a.m.; Lock IIDpr, Jaekoon; ~
23, Duncan Bruee down 3:35 a. Rt.. t Oak Hill• lAtelUtl ,&amp;II&amp;
m.; Racine Locka, Robert E.
tng, Wellaton; Goro!MM
down 4:40 a.m.; Greenup Locka, Jack1011; Jellllle Y - ; O·alt -. ·
' \ . '
Vallu Transporter up 8:50 p.
HUI: EvoQII E. Koull,
m.; Rod Bird down mlm~Rlrt; ElBellle . - . . . . - · - ·:
M - Louisvllle down 12:50 a.m.; and
&amp;tor.
Philip ~ down 2:341 a.m.; RaPatlonto R-ood venswood up, 3;20 a.m.; Meldahl Stewart, Evellll
Locks, George T. Price up 4:55 Mlller,
p.m.; Valvollne 1J1t 8:2$ p. m.; J - E.
Marlon Hogstead down 1:341 a.m.; ~ lloMII
R, H. Bo1110rtl! down 2:20a.m.; Rolle lilceort.J,
Ellene G. down 3:15 a.m.; Buck chell,
. ..
Freeman down 3:15a.m.; Joseph
E. Walker down 4:a5 a.m.; ~e
Clld&lt; Uld Seat O'Toole up 4:40
a.m;; Albert F. lloldlm down 6:- 511erllllll,
. -~~~~~
30 o,m.

nil!ht by the Meigs County Board
or Mental Retardation •

l

J

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/

11 .:. Tilt Da117~, )llddl_. • p....,ro:r, 0. , fob. It, 1969

Jaycee Conference Brought Here

'
tr. PLP.ASA:NTDlltlrt•

EnJ ' N Ball ~) ..... Oaunll'o hal fatlodoced a bill In the
W. V!.. ~··~ tMt ~ld
IIIUmiso tbe!lecrilar7oflo do'relop • 111m ...... till PD'·

'

!IT. P!ZJ..S,.J4T - 'I'h- loell In Pol" PlooaUt It U. Pleu- . ani oliO of the Nati«&lt;ll _.a
Reaort whletl b ex- were In att.6D&amp;tanct- b'- tNawork-.... J.,.... - 1110 bid 1D holcl
-..1 til aunct over 300 J03· ahq) to oxplala ' - t h e _ .
lilt~ ......l'ly - · ceea trca ~ .the. etate. la COIIIuc:ted 011 tbeae levela.
n. bid n•awudedduriltlthe Dwirw atate J~cee butir.aa
qUI.rierb' conference over t..t coo:lucted at the conference, state
wMkend at the Holiday Inn in P r esident Dick Dayton, received
Princeton. w. va. Attendirw the a telegram trcm the NatiOMl
three dly seuion from the local flee president urging Dayton to
~ were Mr. 1111 Mrs. Jlm seek ttte otftce ot National vice

.. Potat

- · · and
.....,.,.......
.. votorala eleetlm

poae o/ lnlllrlleilaK - -

Officers

Named by

Jr. Oub
Fr, PLEASANT - The IO&lt;al
Junior Woman'l Club elected. new
GtDeers for the coming year
Tuolld&amp;y night

They are Mrs. John Wiseman.
pre•ident; Mrs. RaymCild G. Musgrave, vice president; Mrs. Jim·
1111 Joe Wedge, corre1ponding
secretary; Mrs. Leland Henry,
recording secretary; and M r s.

Taylor 1 Chuck Utterback. SOnya
Call director ot local J 1,ycette s,
am
NeaL

cOilferenee with the local dele.

pre sident which Dlytoo accepted
and the state Jaycees voted to 1\CJ"port Da.yton cor the nationalpoat.,
consideril18 it an hOODr for Wert
Virginia to have a 111ti0111l eancltdate.

gates particlpating in the beauty
pageui. workshop as the gr&lt;ql
sponsored a pageant last year
and plan to make thi.s an aMual

The conference at PrinceUm
was att.end:ed by over 225 pers0111.
Jim Taylor is presldent of the
local organization arll Chuck Ut-

project. Representati vts from
the State- Jaycee Beauty Pageant

terba.ck is a state director of the
local Jaycees.

Sam

Several workshops on Jaycee
projects were held during the

mm

Tbe
would lnlllnlct precinct workers In tbe handling
o/ their work and provide voters wi1b information on how to
cast their baUotl, whether b)'
maeh!De or by hand.
Thla rum, Ball lta'ted, would
~ made available to eacb COIJJI.
I)' In tho ota1e for tl1e OOOillly
court ID · - beforeeaeb e16c:Uoa. The rum a110 wculd be a-

vailable to aerviee organizations. civic groupl, cluba and
school a.

)Ia..

ClloiiQ' CGurt _ , . 1lllbt

·
rorioedprojodll&gt;,u..Ill bo
oubm(ttod 1D tho

Fodorel A - "-tor 1110
- - and wldelllng of tho

for u

.,......, ofapaolaiIORDOI b'Om iHi,iii iD iiii.oot, The .148,t541 llod alroo«r
been ~ bJ' 1110 FAA, loot
duo 1D tl1e fact thai Ibe

lla- Coun1;y Alrlfrlp.

DAUGIITER BORN
PI'. PLEASA!fr - S-ElL and

•

po..-

lOOK FOl THI

CHOPS ON TOP

'Ull LOIH HALf
LOOl FOl Tt-11
CHOPS ON TOP

We think there should be seven.
Noi
five or tU.
'
r
·•·
·•
With A&amp;P's seven-rib portion, you get more of the select meat.
How can you tell bow many ribs you're getting?
It's easy.
With your fingers, you can feel and count
the rib bones in the package.

"

BONELESS
'
.

Dust and Ashes

LARGE

100'5

ID'l'.

RatroiiUnenlaworeoen'odat
the ..,.W.IIInn by Cedlla and'
David Smith, The elub'l leader
loMro.

Cedi-.

Pancake Mix

lb.

Jlc

Semi....... "-:.::. ....
Fl'llh H..:6ft
Fmll Pork lllut "~ .1.. 45C
....1.. Pwklllt ..... .

=..:. .

••
tb••

,......... .......
~

RIB ST
•••••••~ 97~
.
lb.. . .
RIB ROAST•••••••••••••• a7~
CHOPPED SIRLOIN lb. 79~
lb 39~
SAUSAGE •••••••••••••••
-.

\

-· _'•tl,

,...,.~ ....

..,1,

. .,

.,

'

Ocean Perc• Fillets • •5.':i.'1"
Fia• Portio11 C.::.::" • 2.t.lt
Halibat Steaks • • • • • ...7t
Clam Cakes • • ..=~~... It
Shrimp Cakes • ~·~... It
Fish Cakes • • ..=~~. . 4t
Bread.. Shri11p : . • •2.t. 'F'

SUGAR • • • 5 ,:i J8c
Wo+h tt.h ea.., on and • $5.00
or

Braunsweiger
lb.

$1
00
3

,11
1:

'iJ

EVERY DAY LOW PRICES
SCOT LAD PRODUCTS

39~'
.)

;·

doz.

SHOPPER'S SPECIAL!

Lunc:h
lb.

MRS. FILBERT'S

57~

MARGARINE

WISCONCIN AGBI

Why Pay More?
WECIALI- MARVEL

Wi•4ow Washer-~ 3'== 1

5 00

SPlCIALI- STOCK.UP - loLrd ..

Pilla••ry Bi•uits • . 4:: 4t
""liRAND

Eva,oraW Milk • . • l::!llc

AI"• OWN

Ei1•t 0' Clock coFFEE •
. &amp;EllER'S STRAINED

•••, ,... . . . . .

• ·::

JANE PARKER V-'WE$1

5t

~11t

llo. .•a IIJ

Sharp Cheese

Encyclopedia

SAVE IOclliAARVEL VANILLA BUTTERSCOTCH

of Cookery

VII. 1 lln11 4

Ice c:........

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eta.

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Tlltlll YN DMrr, Pit Flll!il . .. . . •::-1..

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1111111111 ..... Crllllllfl . ' . ' ' ' ' . ' ..:,: ...
Hlfii.Ox ....... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . :-..
F•IIJ lnw•l• Mix uw.~r ...... r::-11•

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Plll•••rr Tir.nen m.=: ...... :-...
'1:",..
PlriiMII WI.. 11rrJ . . . . . . . . . . . . '1:' ...
, .. . . . . . . . .. . . . .

0

pint

1/2
carton

ADAMS BREAD ·

J

16 oz. loaves

1.00

'

'

'.1

'

••••••••••

.
s
LARGE GOLDEN
91CARROT •••••••••••••••••• "
·UI" NEW .GROP 5 ballb. 491-"
GRAPEFR
· . . . . . . . ..........
bch.

.

'

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

.•

SATURDAY ONLY ON
GEORGE'S BIRTHDA ¥!

'

JANI,AUIA

lOW ON SALE
IT liP

••1.

11~

Scot Lad Ice Milk•••••••••••••••••••••••••
Eye Awake •••••••••••••••••••2 ,... 59C
Scot Lad Pizza••••••••••••• ~ ....... s-r~~~ 43~
Booth Ocean Perch &amp; Cod ••••••••• 2 · 79C
VANILLA, CHfiiCOLATE, LEMON

Chicken Noodle Soup 6 ""' Sl.OO
Vegetable Soup•••••• 8 .... Sl.OO ..
Kidney Beans•••••••• 7 ~. SJ.OO
Pork &amp; Beans••••••• 8 ~~. Sl.OO ,,..
Sw. Potatoes •••••••• 3 ~:;.'~ Sl.OO
Apple Sauce •••• ~····S .... Sl.OO
Tomatoes ••••••••••• 5 .... Sl.OO
Root Beer &amp; Cola ••••••••• ::.~·· ICK
Salad Dressing•••••••••• !'.!; 49~
Detergent, giant••••••••• :;. 59~
'

CHICKEN-BEEF
TURlEY· TUNA

, '~------------------------_.,

•

:1

'

TissuE

+roll
pecb

ANN PAGE ELIOW IIAACARONI OR THIN

purcha•. I PI" "'dorner
Vollcl thru Fob. 22nd. in
Columbus Unit A&amp;P's

moN

R.C. COLA

2

,,

FAMILY SCOTT

3

23

OR

l!'""'

LUNCH SPECIAL!

=
=

Bathl'oom

TUNA

OUR HOME MADE

Len t en Values'

::

ii;~gh;iii Sauce~~~;- 9~
lpaghelll R-\-;: .. a~~sgc:

A61' PUU CAHI

e e e e ••••• e

' -'I

BIG BUYS on A&amp;P Groceries!

$100
3

"

box

e e •• e e e

Coc:a-Cola

can

· ~

Talks oo their 4..H

the eldl hao f'/5.671n Ua treaa-

Bi•cuit MiJC

Van Camp's

·C.

1-lb.
pk9•·

10 ••• ,.
eontolnor

Corn Muffin Ml x

F.... FI'Jer Brellll • • ... ac

Egg Noodles

only

•

Lip , • •

Special This Weeki- Ann Page

f
''
!

,•••,.,,,., " _,_,,,,,.•« ..·,.·.·.·:&lt;&lt;~.·.&lt;·.·.&lt;·.······· · · •· •••· •· ••· · ·· · · ••· •· ·· · • · • · ,. .

Cream Ftlled

......
Perk.,.=
.......
F.... FI'JII'
a.Uc

·doL49~

14 •• •

h &amp; Ga"t.

Regular 89&lt;

1'1-esh l'lyen

Seedless Grapefnb • • • 5 ... 41"

HOOert Rickard aerved refreohmenta to el&amp;ht members.

Carlon, preol.
- . prealdod during the bual••• meetfna. Tbe trea1urer,
D11111J. C'"'-lllnd. · amounced that

IRLOIN

CUT-UP

WHm 01 riNK- LAI.I 16'1

by 9aarc11 8Dd Jo James. M r s.

Mila -•riJI

c~~:~~»

•

NONI PIICID
NI.HIIl

..rk C
.•.nc
Frail s,.. Rilla •• •.. He

Temple 01'aages

Tbe club hal voU&gt;d to attend
ellu'cb on March 19 to hear speetal dosing for young people by
two ministers wbo call tbemtelves ''Dust and Alhes ... Tbe;y
aloe a8reod 1D collect for the
1*rt FuDd "" liJnday, Feb. 23.
Talka and demonstrations m
how to bem a towel were given

-·

•
•
lu.- QIIAlTWD LOIN
. . . . tt.IICHOPI •

CO"RIGHT e 1M7, THE CUIIAT ATLANT1C • PACinG TIA CO.. INC.

CII!IDn Climber 4..H Club will m e e t
Moreb 6 at the United Metllodl.lt cturch annex h e r e.

Pwm,.v Burris was in charge of
_ . . , ualsted by CeeUia

g~~·

Fresh Fruits and Yegetdb'les!

When :you think about it, shouldn't A&amp;P be your store?

~LIFTON- Tbe

_._

•

Beef Roast.

Next time you're buying a Pork Loin Rib Portion, check it.
U you can't count one, two, three, four, five,
liz, seven n"be, you're missing select meat.
You're not getting the best value for your meat dollar.

We think that caring hlre this about fair portions
baa helped make A~ America's largest meat retailer.

CIDib' FJIII- pve demon-

Cll•••
Park CU,s

lb. . . .

lb.

.:r.:s . .

Yo 5 Sha Poo ................. ; ...98e
w••
79e
Cepac:o I•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
~t
Crest Tooth Paste ••••••••••••••~~:i~~ 75e
~:!•'

1s ••• Botti•. ROlJ. 1.89

I
.
!!,,!I!~t.,.~!!,f~!,,!,~!!,~,;;:::,~,:):!;;,~;t,.;";,:::, ~, , ; ~;,~,;g!):;!2
59e l
White Handkerc:hie s ••••••••• iij:
f,
59
e
We e
••.•....•..•........• 39/t
Peanut Clusters ••••••••••••••••••••
I
1
0
1'f
Jiffy

ONI riiCI

Pork . , .
Pork
,o';~ • •

-

HEALTH &amp;BEAUTY AIDS

••

•I · I' .

..-·-

.;

SPECIAL PRICE-CHOPPERS!

Mouth

"

c ...........

Bonel• Beill•c a.t . ... 7Sc
Frail lro1.. Ch1ck • • ,.. Jlc
B11f Ox 'ralls :U, • •... Uc

Seven-Rib Pork lAin Portions are just one example
of the full value.AAPmeatsoft'er.

projeetl: a n d demonstration&amp;
- e str• the Happy Go
Ludo' t-Il Club o1 Muon met
reeent:b' at tbe Chrllt u n 1 t e d
Clwr&lt;h. Ceellla Smltll
and Cboryl Buma pve talkl and
Jlld.y Burrla, David Smltll and

•

lb.

Loin En• Park Rout • ••. &amp;Sc
"'" '" ""'
u..
Pork Loll
Pork Loll
Whole Pork Loi1 • • • 1•• &amp;Sc
Frull Pork Hocks • • •,..49c

for this Ia tentatively set for
Jareh 22.

MASJN -

....lbitod by low!
Coupon Valid T1wu Fob. 22iHI. In
AI Columbuo u.~ Air Storot.
O.o ...,,.. rodaomod with 110 pwcholo
IE.copt -

No Nubbin•

PT. PLEASANT - The Mason

Given to Oub

WITH PURCHASE OF $10.00 •

FULL 7-RIB END

4-H Leaders

Demonstrations

USDA

Invited.

Pork Loin Roast

Given by

Will he Heard

,,

Long!!

dt!•••

BIG BUYS on "Super-Right" Meats!

Tele-lecture

The 4-H leaders recognition
c1Q was discussed and the date

eeat bua dr!Yera - · · til lllllle
up the 1thool -'&lt; tiiQ' mluod,
Prladpalo of all
eo u at y
aeboola haYO been luuod a elal lnvltatlon lo bo preaent at
the ..Uod oeaalcn. All eooal)'
lm«e- In the
sdlool probiODia are eordlaib'

Extra Plaid Stamps

red••"'*'

''"ow
"b

ot government, religions

PJ'&lt;)8l'alll.

Special
Values
All Week

eonunla-··

SUPER-RIGHT QUALITY •• FRESH

and dresa.
Attired in a native drua, she
al10 carried a purse made In her
native land. The program was
followed by a question aDd anJlfer period.

leaders attended tbla regular 4--H meeting. Olber topics
that were discussed were lnltl.adon program which was well atteoded, the lrternattonal F a r m
Youth Exdtangeprogramwaadlseuased and the leaders voted to
contribute $2 per club ror this

-..-·Law-

............
r t11ee Gerlac:h, Jr., pre..-;
Clorenee - . . )Yedtll
and L. W, Get!T, Count;J Clertr,
who " " " •• Meretu'J to the

Catchup Plan to be Explained

""""'*•

~cane----------~

Ipplnes, describing its cuatmns,

~

.. t b e a l - -

The FAA adYiiod 1110 locel
eourt Ia JIIIOW'l' thai till Inereooe -14 qol bo anntod.
T'haa the court took action to
tailor tho project to tho $148,-

latter Than Double Stamps!

auest speaker, on the topic ol
bor oatlve homeland, tbe PltU-

· presentatiOn by Miss R e i t a
MarkJ and Glem Snyder, State
4..H ~1m Leaders.
Mr. · !tlfder talked on !he national 4~ club activities with
Mlas Marks presentation dealIng wltll the 4-11 program In West
v~rs~n~a. Each had a series o!
slides to accompany their talk.
Some 6S leaders and junior

-

The - · would allow for 1110
"""'03' to be - - from the Mrs. Jon c. Cell of ~
pre- S,2DO feet lo t,OOO ft. Air Foree Ba•, RlntiDUI, Dl •• _
and wldooled rrom the eurnnt ... ..-elnl tile blrlll of their
80 ft. to 75 feet.
rtrll o:lllld, a
Feb. 10
Lut Ncwemblr the e o u n t 7
at t11e Air Foree · Tilt
Fr, PLEASANr - The Macourt took action and awllecl
""" C&lt;Jwa.y Cltbeu Committee
-puunda.arrl&gt;al
.........
kJur OUDeea aDil baa lao ea11ec1 a ~ INOIIng
boenramodMir)'.......,.lla- 'nurodo,y 7:30 p.m. al the .,.,....
President Franklin D. Roo- temal ~are Mr. and t;y eourtbouoe wltb the main Iasevelt touched off a contro- Mra. L, W, o/ Pe m- up fOI' dlltUaalnn to be 1o
versy over the Supreme b!Ue, N.C., and potemalpud- explain 1o tho ponnta 1o&gt;w tho
Court by proposing the addl·
are Mr. and Mn. II. T.
tlon of six new associate jus- Call of 912 VIand Street, PL teachers plan tor tho . - . ,
...,.. abaent cm1as the retices to the court.
Pleoaaat.

jE:.:cept items @'ohibitH by e.w)
I
Coupon Yol;d Thou Fob. 22od. In
j ;
All Columbus Unit AlP St..._
One c.oupon
wH-h "ch $20 purd'IMt

ehairman, reported oo progress

Coun1;y 4-11 Leaders Asaoclation
.. - . , was ~ Tbur•·
daJ, Feb. 19, with a tele~eeture

blcls for tho aupl,n 1.10 and ....,...., till re_.. opa-JIIIi. .U.i. Wi ~ 1iiiiiJ wiiiU ....~~tluii..
...... with tho lonll bid ...
A - . , !he rQIIII1 -

WITH PURCHASE OF $20.00 ~

Mrs. Allen Ehlssell, sQ"le show

form

Tilt

Extra Plaid Stamps

Mrs. Raymond G. Musgrave
reported the Mothers March
drive oettec:l (Iller $SOO and ex·
tended thanks to those who made
the drive pouJhle.

pl.aiiJing for the stYle 1how
achedlled tor March 20 at t h e
high sdloOI gym beginning at
7:30p.m.
D.r. Nonlta Bemadez, a mem~
ber o1 the professional sta1f at
LaJdn State Hospital, was the

l

PI". PJ.EASANT -

FOR WASHINGTON·s BIRTHDAY

,,

•

....

Mike hw. treasurer.

ut.

Application is Revised fo~ Airstrip Funds

lb.12e

SUPER MAllET-Open Dilly 9 to 9:30 Sun.
We ilccept Federal FOod Stompa
PHONE:l92~
. Tho

'·

\

..r
r

'I j

'

""'·1!
,.

' "'" 1

''

�··--

·

p

-

-

•••••

••••

·····--

- - -.

-

-~

-~---···---------

_.,._

----

..

.......

......

___

-· ·

O

O

-

·

··--··

OJ

J

o

••

.

,

• • • • - - - .. • - · -

- ·

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

- ---·---. --- ...

.. ·•· ....

- -

•••••

-.

.

_____ . . .

,,_ ..... -.

-

~

·

.

f"' . -

It - 1111 Doil1

-

•

'

'

..

-

Nlddl_.-t - PC~~~&gt;~~W, 0., Fob. 19, 1969

So-,

.;

'

I

A tn•rLE 'HOMEWORK' Watching. Want Ads .B rings Top Gfade· Results
I

WANf AD
S , .... O.y ' ;.,. Pwltticetlon
,..,.,.., ' 11111111 t ' ·"'·

c1 ,..etletl.,.. • c.,,.ct lon•

Will ~~ ec .. ptttl vMII 9 • ·"'· f ..
D•r ~ ,..llcotion

R!GUJ.ATIONS

Tlw P .. lif&gt;htr ,.,.,,.,, tt. right
-. Mit ., ,. ..et '"" .d• ••---' all&gt;·
.. cti..-el. Tlw , .. u.t.r will 1-.t
.. ,,,,.n,ible fet - • thoa ....,.
h~e.,...ec:t IM~i.,. .

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

2 SIGNS
OF
QQLITY

I..,OR,..TION
DEE!LINES

' • Wo,.t Ad S.rwln
5 Clfllll ,.. il•d CIIW iMOrti-

MOiti- Cw,. 75c
12 ...... per wOfd tt.ol CdMOCu •
tlwe IM«tienl .
11 Clntl ....,. Wlll'd 1i1 COftiiCvt i¥&lt;1
lnsertlol\l .
25 ,., unt Ditcount on poid ads
oM 141 peid with in 10 d111y1 .
CARD OF THANKS &amp; OBITUARY
S1 .SO for 50 word minirnu ... . Eo

..... l,l.nol word 2c .
&amp;LIND ,t,OS
AIINitl-1 25c Chargo IMI• ,t,d.,••·
tl••-nt .
OFFIC! HOURS
1 1311 o.lll . IO 5:00 , .... . Dally
t.SO • ·• · •• 12:00 Noon Mturdo )'

dortt blue finish. Cleon interior, like new ~w tire&amp;

'

VACANCY lor

two

elderly -

pie. Prefer private paid pa· Phalle Malon, '1'1!-1111.
lfl.l.llc

turquo11e f1n11h . L•ke new w-w fires . Power steering

and bro~es. V8 engine, autanotic trans . R&amp;H.

S.lNI&lt;

AUCTION SALE!

BRYANTS BUDGET SHOP
108 W. Main
Pom•roy
Fob. 20th &amp; Fob. 21st
Thursday &amp; Friday
10:00 A.M.

Duo to roi0C41tlwg &amp; .:hang•• In

our Uno of lltorchandlo• wo will
at altCIIonr
c:lothlng

••II

N-

(winter &amp; aununor steek)1 tultt,

2-19-31c

MUSIC EVERY Friday and Sa~
urdly al Jock'a Club on Har·
rtsonvllle Road off Rt. 7.
2-19-31c

PUBLIC SALE Friday, Feb. II .
Goo~¥•'• Auction lloulle, Rutland, new and used merebanalae. Conligmnenll welcome.
Open !rom 10 a.m. till oole
lime lor CDIIIIigmnenll. Sale
111arta at 7 p.m.
~111-31p

..,.,,.,,

.hlrts, pc~ftbl, socks, ·-~•.
Melli &amp; - - n • warS. &amp; dr1u
..... ,, otc:./· twa new detkl,
plch•r.o,
low•••
ftO¥oltleo,
pa,.r prodiHita, kitchen _,,,
paint, r.cotds, honlnt board•,
foltllng toltles, re1n0lnlng 1toc
of usacl fu"'ltvro, lnclucllnjll•·
lng " ' - 1ult., o.to b.d, d ntttte
••••• oil cook lfO&lt;rost 101 dry.,,
_,.,., •••her,
. Y. oett;
antlquo1,
to,. teat1 toblo,,
Hd1, IIICithlllleS, ltdl, lamps
-•" otond, rtoc.lnt choirs, and
ofhor lto1r1s too numerouo fo mon•
tton.
Sale Ce!Miucted By
ADAMS AUCTION SI!RVICE

RUTLAHO OHIO

Jim Adami &amp;

Ant

Auctl..,..,•

l,.wn,

Not ruponalltlo ' - occident•
Tor-., Celh on O.y of Salo

Bryants Bud1et Shop
101 W. Main
99Z...SB96

P-ray

2-16-Uip

--Wanted

ANTIQUES, !Umlture, d - .
mll&lt;eDIIIOOUo, Mra. Honnl
Cecll, 100
Mlln St., Pome~.
14-tle

·

FOR A JOB well done leellnt!,
clean carpets with Blue Lus·
Ire. Rent etec:trlc sbampooer
•1. Tiny's Bargalnland.
S.17-«e

SIX ROOM - . bath, former Leonard Rea, sr .. proper·
ly, II OM St.,
Phone 992-13M.

Pomeroy.

S.IU!c

ELECTROLUX v11&lt;1111111 cleaner cornJMete wittl attachments.
conlwinder. and paint apray.
Reponesaed but IJII&amp;r..teed
In Ute new condition. Pay off
S37.45 or tenns if desired.
PhiRIO lllll-:16115.
s-~~-«e

GOOD HAY AND S'RtAW. liOc:
bale, Paul Karr, OMI&amp;er,
Oblo.
2-lutc

....
heavy

~model
~. lml cbote,

lneb barrel

fllollwt.

laJ10

l.tiiM

nuolloo T•• . .

l,JU.SS
Motor Veblclo Ta&amp; . . . . • • • •
.......
~e-M17
.. .
1111.11
TOTAL LI.ABD..ITIII ..... IU.'III.ft

SCHSDIJLI' n

lliiCiilPTS AND JIIXPI\NDlTUUB
llalaDCO , ... l, . . .
O.nerll ha4 ..• .••
I .......
Motor V.aakla UciiiM
1U l'uncl
Ull.47
GIIOUae T.u Fuad .
at.»

, .

......uoe-o

- ...•. , t 1,411.11

GoDtnl Fund

Moler Vehlclt
Tax Fund
3,811.81
Guollao TU !'1md
- • . lUOCI.OO
ftoacl aa4 Brldp Fuad . • • •
J,'II'I'JIII
I'IID4 . . . . • • . . . .
ao.ot
TOTAL
.....
..,'bl.ll

c....urr

Total llMilpU
Gonenl l'lm4

Taa Fund
G...Uao TIIX .......
••
t.oad aftd Brtdp FuDd
co.e!M7 had ... ' . . . . . .
TOI'AL

• .. . .

U.neral Fu!MI

M111112

P'URNISIIilll and ~
afiiiiiD'!!IIl. Clolo to oebool.

SMITH AUTO SALI!S

!!Vni!IJ yeartlop .,.. mue
panlel; olio two due

---·-.
«AHAUGA, OHIO

ll-114fe - - - - - - -

to

Ioiii. -

·f~·

-

---·

.. . ,

J,lll.ll

lluollM Tu: hD4
Road sftd lh1d1e had
c.ow~e,.

10.IIl.U
3Mt.II

rue . . . . . . . . . .

TOTALS
..
8alaace Pte. ll.

-..

__
..
.........

-.m.4B

~

TIYrAL8

.•
IICIIl0)1JU;

......

•m:;.,.....,.
aas&amp;Pf8

BALANCL
.lANUAH.Y 1, 1 - . _ __ I . . ..11
RECDPTI
('..nenl ......
__
.. .,.,._
I t&lt;UII
Hoot lllll\e (01'011)
'hqiblo . .noaa~
J&gt;n~perty

.......

TU; (Ql'OII)

lAM.tT

1.'101.16

ltq!,K!f r - l t ..... . .

C'lrantll UotnH Feo1

and , _

(Q~

-. .

tlOM -

Adjualmonh and llefwllto
llrM
TOTAL I.IC&amp;lP'I'8 . . . _• • I uao.a
TOTAL BBGINNING
BALANCE PLUI
lts.ucu:n
RXCitlPTS
UPENDrn.IBE&amp;
TOTAL ZXPENDJ'l'(.1UBAt»t:IN1S'fiRATlVJI:
I l,aiiAI

c·•u

DEt:EMBDl :U. 111811

·roT AL BEGINNING
BALANCI: PLUS
RIECZIPTII

Bradlonl
5 1 tf"

1'0TAL sxPJtN'DI'n.JIUC&amp;-

JII8CJ:LLANIXJUI

. • • . I LTII.O'J

T J TAL EXPEND~

.~lR

CONDITION1Nr. Rofri•er atlon service . Jack's Refrt~­
eratlon. NFw Haven. hone
!82-2079.
4 e ife

RE"DV - MIX conC'rt&gt;te deltvel't'd ri~ht to your orolecl
f;~st and easv. Free estimates. Phone 992-3284. Goe2-

1eln Ready - Mix Co .. Miodl&lt;•port . Ohio.
a 30 tic
BUDGET PRICE lurnl1ure on
our third Door budoet shop.

Baker Furniture. Middlenort.
Olllo.
23-tfe
!lervtce. an

,,..,

UPI:NDlTIIliU

MACHINE~

..

Motor Vohtelo Ucease Tax I 3.811.1D
TOTAL lliiCII:lP'I"'I .. I 1.111.81

MAINTEN'A.NCII

SEWING

111.130.01

"""""""'

.. . .

..

'l'OTAL allCEIPfl

..

JOTAL BIIGINNINO
aA~PLU8

'l.t~.'tl

ll:l:P&amp;NDrrU'AD
dCIPPTS
TOTAL &amp;IPENDJ1'l}8.1:8Ml8(.'D.LANSOUI
t
TOTAL UPDWJTVIID-

, , I l.OU.U

YALUII

BLlETTNlR'S.

IIAI!IIT&amp;NANCI: . •

.• t

IMPROVDIENT

· · I ...,.. .

1.' 0TAL UPDID~

. ..

........~r.r ..... .
12-t • . MAIM

DJ'CPBD Sl, 1111

10'l.U.~

WMPO

ssaa

1 a.tiUI

Sale of ...-. ..
.. .. .. t
TOTAL B.::aP'I'S . . • • . . . . 1
'I'OTAL BIIOIHND'IG
BALANCII: PLUI
I
HSC&amp;IPTB ..
ExP&amp;NDmmD

Ssllri•

··

·•

bplo,..r'll ~

caatribllttOB

Repoln .. . .... ..... .. .. ..
()ttler Ell;penl• ..

TOTAL &amp;XPD'DmJUI:
BALANCE.

I

!!!-!!
-

Ye• IIIII

.,

Bdant\tl O.,t.taalllq

oec. :u.

tll8

.......

uta

115M

m .oe

r.b. ••

Footl&gt;all•o Cradle
Canton, Ohlo, is the cradle
of U.S. professional football .
The American Professional
F o o t b a II Association was
founded there in 1920, with
Jim Thorpe of the Canton
Bulldogs as its first presi·
dent.

ULLY

Service.

We

RETAIL VALUE

'2"

*1 01 EACH

.,

-

•

or .PAlE FOR HECK'S STORE

.,
·•

YOU!

-·

ZEBCO

MI-l GENUA&amp;. ILtCTIIC

N0.22to

MANICURE SET

ROD&amp;
REEL

29

COIIIIIlTIOI

ueAL. IIO'I'Ica

lat , .... c.. ~utin

• Smooth wide-r2111e drag
• COmplete w~h line

o 6' two-piece llber
&amp;ltst rod

WAIL
VALUE

-

111 ~ aollft.&amp; 't lld

..,. ,.,..""'..
ldl peUUO.

........ eo.
la 1M

~~.:-_..•.:"0.:
.tn111 lUll ..... D. CIMatb. •
,.;~•tn~~U
...... ,ena•lt7
_
..
-...,
.-. .....,.nu.a .. -.

Gallio and
Ma son Areo

·.

""'·' ' '

·,

~

As

........

--

afMr &amp;bl . . ..,

:.-.:o.n::·~

Entertained

o YACWMI OUT Dill',
S - U P IIAII
AND CLIANS Off UNT

CANS QUICKLY
&amp; AUTOMATICALLY

o UPTO 12 DAYS ON
IAtniY CHAIGI

CITATION MODEL 1101

JOHISOI
CITITIOI
SPII.CIST
REEL

Klno-alzed version of the
popular Johnson C•ntury
reel. Famous Johnaon
t .. tur•• lnclud• SelectoDisl draiJ ac:tlon, dual
lntl-r•verae, Com•• with

awhopplng&amp;10ft. of 10·
tb. 'tilt lint I

TOW
TRUCK &amp; CAR

=...........- •.
Ul'

AIILE lATTEIIY
OPIIAtiD

••J.H
..

'.,. '

', (

GENERAL !LICIIIIC

BABY FOOD WARMER

DISH

LOADS 01' PIE·

111;111; liiJIIJiliJilltto

SCHOOL EXCITEMENT HOURS &amp;
HOURSOFRJN

Barrymore, the actor,
as the "Great

CHOICE

$137

ANT ADS the only way to

RETAIL YAWl

TRILENE 100 YD. SPOOL

:; W ,

IDIAL NO. 1411

KElt PLUNK

• SUC110N IOTTOM AVOIDS JPIUS

MV-2 GENIRAL ELECTIIIC

PORTABLE VACUUM
• UGHTWEIGHi' AND
EFFICIENT
• FOR HOME 011

' OFFICE
• IT WILL IE THE

77

e COMPIITILY tMMHSIILIIN WATIR
• SAFE DITACHAIII COlD
o IASY· To.IIIACH SECTIONS HaP
IAIY t.IAIIN HLf fiEDIIIG
' .,

99

~

WIST lEND
NO. 9301

30CUP

PERC

eMAWANIId. .

, . GENERAL GIC III.C

TING .PAD
• WASH,AME

. 0UrH

COYIR

• SMEAl

SELECTIONS

•WETI'IOOF

i

IN~ &gt;CaVIl

.I

COffHAfTIMPIIAI'IIIB

3-29-tfc

mAIL . '
YAWl .;'\
~&lt;·

,,'
'

...
.. ..

R-9-tfc

.

I!ADIO and TV renalr. and antenna• 1Mta11ed.
John HarriiOII, Phone 11ft.
:lim.
12-8-lfc

..n..

:~,

~= $.789
IIUI

HTAI.
VALUE

•39.18

. .,_. ·i

lO"TEFLON

SKILLET

.?

Insurance

AUTOMOBILE JnB~ beeo
.,...,.TiedT Last your operator's license? CaD llft.M.

..

I II lla

-'.-.

...'
Rentifll, hirin1. selllnl or swapplnJ7
Want Ads are the answer. In no time at all you'll
experience the result11Qwer ol a Want Ad. In
u paper, Want Ads reach people el many IllS
and needs. Plata your ad today. Call992·2156.
We're here to help you write fO!If ad!

THE DAILY SENTINEL
-·

'
{
J

••

'

..

"

PIRTY

Sharoen

·.;

FISHING LINE

'2.19

ENT!

CTGARET'J'E vendlnr machine!!
and ....Ire. ABC Etlternrl•es.
Maoon. W. Va. Phone 'm-1543.

•

,

;;:;.:r'":..:::S
:·.:rbeO:
burial oi

Informed As

eC~,IICHAIOf.

48

- . o.....- . - ._ Ill lMH ..... &amp;oedo Mew CUdt.

•

• AU metJI constructioM

• OPENS ALL STAND&lt;U

WAX

Me

l-11; I &amp; N

reoalr

•••.,_..,..,

••

CHECK tHE ADDRESSES AT BOnOM

CAN OPENER

CREAM

IOMM C. lACON
........ PNIIIte , ....

.. .

BUY, SELL,

1•·7
.

IITAIL VALUE $4.10

__

,

f'....J"1vaa&amp;~~.

Well

'·

IUNDAt

IIUAIIUTY AND
DUU.IIUTY

"A·ept"ng
Me1"gs · '· .... -·
'-~
.... uu.....,~. '"'· ..

RIM of lid.
..
.. -.. I ptl' eat
Date ot nnll Mot.
T-l~'n
lUI~ 1110t., 11M1.00 ddl, . . . l·llo
lti, 1 tt • and t •• I~

9P.M.
.

.

IC.ll GENERAL ELECTRIC

2284. The P'abrlc Sboo. Pomeroy. Authorlud SlllfeT Sale&lt;
and

10PS tN PIIIFOIMANCE,

HTAIL VALUE

P01D01QJ

makes. WY t.

Scl83oro.

USED 1Y IXICU11VIS

SALISMIN, AND OTHIU
1!11t0SI JOBS D!MAND

....

BLAEntiAIS
PIL 99i-2141

7:50 A.M.
12 NOON
3 P.M.
AND
4; 30 P.M
,

-·

... .. . l~to
' "'"'!! i . taa.oo

n.

THIS IS TH! fAMOUS
ClOSS PBI WHICH IIi

AT

m.oo

TOWNSHIP naTBONDS AND Jt01'III
Purchl• N.. 'l'nlclr
New._... Durtal

r.r...

LOCAL REPORtS
DAILY

111.111

........

D&amp;CPBD 11. 1.. . . . I
'fOTAL EXPBNDI'J'UBI:8
P'LV8 BALANCE
DPJCD(11BR II IIIII . .
I
;;c,n;b1JiJ&amp; A-Y

Llrlt• T' ;ocll w

Bullct»sar Rw''*" To
!llllllot H -

NEWS
presnts

.. I 1,""-M

. 1

From tho

INFORMAnON

I IMT. .

PLU8 BALANCII
ciiCDIUB 31, Ull!l • .
&lt;.IMETKBY FUND

POMIROY

·LADDER

1:110.11

~0

;

WAIL VALUE

PEl

sn.-

::::::::::=::!

GRAND 1'0!.A.L
UPitNDrnnu:IO-

.Oo\0 AND BJUDCS
FUND

6FOOT
WoOD

EIPEIIENCED

Molt ,.,uJet IIHI ...........
Ll"'l ... tiUIII.., . . . . . . . . .. .
Pullr ~Nell. hilt ~ • .,.,

MCOIIE'S

4 \

IN

lft.U

au:&amp;IPTS

GENERAL ruND

Locol aowl'IIDIUd
nt.trlbuUOn . . • •

.·•

1r_.,on . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

.IANUAI.Y I, lllel .

CABH BALANCI:o
AND EXP~ BY FUND

......
,_..
...,.,...

'l,ftT.M

(Q~

'

•fr•

IETAL

OHLY$11.95

a-1 Bltate

BALANCK,

J'aDd ..••. . •.•.

-.., ....,.,

.IANUAltY 1, . . .

IU,TII.ft

c.......,

Complete F111nt·End
and Brake Snlce

..

A.C;
- AUtOLITE
.
. '
OR. CHAMPION
CHOICE

69

C:•
·Needs· ·•

Plu1 2.1t ,..,_I '••

R&amp;C&amp;IPI"'
G11noral Properi.J' Tu-

BALANCI:,

• MADE OF lUST RESISTING

•

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

&gt;1!ND
BALANCL

r:e~anl hnd
..
I IAIIUII
MGtor v~ UotDM
TU hiKI
.. .
OuollM TU ....... .... . .
I.TM.f4
Head sad Brldl'• J'\aA4 •

....,.;.._ j_..,.._ __ _
, ..

. .. .

I GI.MM

~

u

CORVAIR. t - · 'fll molar,
lour DOW 11m. Aulunldc. G.
A. Deem.
s.IUtc

e,,u.n

Ut,'rii.D

.. .

_..,.,lta.-

Motor V•bklai
Tax FlUid

s-..
II,. . .

'

GALVANIZED SHEET METAL
MADE TO lAST FOI YEARS OF SERVICE

5PEQAL

••. ' 11:1,80. .

OCMr

lll-.tl

JlcJiol' Vllldca. ~

Ill
Gecqe

Arnold a.....
~~~on, 111 I. J111D St., Ponte~- PlmM M-M. s-7.Ue

"s'src••

•

ANI) 6 ~SSO"'"ED lllADIS

1106 E. Maio P-oy, 0.

ROAD

SPARK PLUGS .

•-

"••NJ •••• &amp; Alltl
Ho.--y tlutf,• ._....
.... full , , .., .... .

ill.(CI( &amp;

JIGSAW T:~rA•U
.. ·

ss.ss

SHOW TIRE SALE
... tlAUI

.

'

If().

.

UPEIT
WIMtl Aile••••

.

'-:=
lt:t.DIIIM

BALANCE,
I ANUARY 1, ltel - . - . . I J,013.tT

ftaclne. Ohio

........
I fo'MI.M

MOTOR VBIIJCI..S LlCWMI&amp;
TAX rtl-ND

C. C. BRADFORD
AllcnONEER
Complete Servl«
Pbone 14t-Ja1

• ttiiJ'.ft

IVIOIAllY OF CABil ~

SPOUTING, roofing and ear~ c~~".:ir:s.~
· """'"Y new or remodeltng by ~~ GDERAL I11ND -_-:·... 1' 1.31t.a
t-•- '
,'
BALANCE,
contract or hour. Clmton
oiiCBMBn :st. 1111 • . a t,'-10.a
Pierce. Phone 992-2015.
T~:t~ ~~~ITUUS
-

111.aut

m. 21, tMa, OR
'

-GUARANTEEDPHONE 992·2094

• ......

lddp

IDlL Racine. Pllone 1118 1111.

n..

....,..n

O.aual . . . .
Jl.uad •

........

..

. llt.ftl.ft
ll,'lll.ft

1'0TAL AS8CI'8 · ·
LL\IIlLlTtlli

36 1lJCbet bJ&amp;II, 1110 ~Debes
tong, 75 lncbea wide, paneled
Interior, inolde IIIII outside lll!rta. IOld and willie;

IJIOI'IIIIIIIII.

iilu434.

x-euw

S.IHic

Forlant

Pllone

SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Ml11er
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio
Phone &amp;a-3035.
2-12-tle

. I ....

~-··· ­IU.,...ft

MOU1'I'I'AINEI!lR truck eover.

For Salt or Tr8Cie

-

2-1&amp;-12tl!'

CURTISS CA'ITLE Breeding
Service. Pllone Parker lllll2264 Pomeroy or 647·3251 CoolviDe call station.
S.14-30tc

2-16-71&lt;:

T'II'O FAioi!LY BRICK boule. !1163 FORD pickup, good condl~ rooms and bath upotaln. 5
lion, $2011. Don BeU, Pltolle
l'OOilll and bath downltaln.
247-ISM.
S.lutp
gao tumace. in Davis Produce
block. Ill Cole St., l'oonemy, 1160 OLDS, power oteerlng ond
power brakes. Call 9112-:1!111.
Phalle 1192-2516.
U-Uip
S.IUip

lilt CIIIMI!itET Impala twodoor bord .top, 11'1 autmnatlc.
,.... at.1nc and bnkel.
C111 ..,_,
14-tfc

UNI'URIIIIIIID

gion Terrace.

MIXED HAY, 30 cents a bale.

SAVE SAVE SAVEl Saft JOtll'
lawn, yoor Orne and your
back. We luive I ..,. treocber to dig )'001' water Une
dltdt Henry Babr - - or ONE 1\fALE Beai!le pup. l'l1one
Roger Bahr !111W1151. S.7-30t!&gt; 1113-J!'I!I.
S.11-41c

*·

e!eclrlfled, .....,..Ions,
tamp parts. chlmneya, shadeo,
wtrtng. Lee Jludlllll, 101 Le-

BUICK
POHTIAC
GMC "{RUCKS
POMEROY

Three -.oms, !Ike .....
15.0lltl, 810 South ll'ourtil St.,
Middleport. Pbone 11112-1012.
S.l4-4l&gt;e

-m.

Business Services
LAMPS

- - - --

1!189 WAlNUT stereo, AM-P'M MIXED hay IIIII timothy. Ph.
119U110.
S.l~
WAl'I'IIEliiS w..ted. NO _.tradio, tour opeed """-·
.u...ne paymenli! ol .... per
-.:!IIUJ. Nllbta, 1:30
to II. Apply at Blue Tartan.
lllOillll. or pay balance of 116'1 BARON 12 • 10 loot mobile home wttll a • 10 a'lfllinis-~'lk
$101. CB11 11111-MSS.
2-18-«e

AN'nQUP.S. dllbeo, lilrllltln,
dJlDo e~blnetl, old pbon&lt;&gt;....... clocila, mlac. Lee
1• Lq1on Terrace.

GEO. HOBSTETI'ER, Braker
RACINE RURAL - 7 room
frame, bath, basement, carport, large lot. $83011.00
MIDDLEPORT - 8 room frame,
bath, basement, garage, nice
comer lot. $14,000.00
114 ACRES - 8 room frame, I~
baths, basement, 2 barnS, sec·
ond house rented. $20.000.011
HELEN or VIRGIL TENFORD
SYRACUSE
liZ A!&lt;
2-111-3tc

BLAETTNARS

Pbone -

c.ua....uros-

TOT A.L8

HOBSTETTER
REALTY

.........

.

l

,__ =-=: :ur::·..~~ ...
Real Estate For Sale

2-18-Gtc

Help Wanted

lanted To Buy

--

FOUR ROOM HOUSE wtlll
ba1h, Main St. Rutland, pbone

For Sale

S.l7-«e

---

IICIIIDIJUI

Net hDdl OA Do,.tt

IJON 'T LET wall cleaninC bore
you. Let Wipe Out wall cleaner io II lor you. Reo! a waD
washer, $1. Baker Fumiture .

OPEH EVES. 8:00 P.M.
POMEROY, OHIO

fl. Bater Jl'llrnlture Company.

,......, c...

tAeU.,. ud

For Sale

Pumeroy Motor Co.
For Rent

'lllt.MK M, IOIINITON

DtPOIIUtrJ Blkt •

1965 PLYMOUTH .................................................. $895
Val.. ont 4 Or., 6 cyl. , automati c trans ., good tires ,
rad1o and heater, grey finish .

coots, t love1, ca_ps,

TI1ERE WILL be a gun shoot
Sunday brciMing at noon al
i1&gt;e Fom.l Run Sportsman
Clm. Eller,.... IS weiCIIIDI!.

.,... ......,. ••• 1HI
llllewtaa I'QOri to

. Mgr.
992·2181
Open Ttl 6 Daily

---

Mn. Freddie '111abet. Ma11011,
Phone TIS-5851.
1-!11-tlr

....

DtctMIIU 11_,, 1...

IALitiUIY TOWMitffP
COUNTY Ofl Mil. .
p , o. . .,... •. o. . .

Jack W. Carsey,

TRAILER LOTS. Bob's Mobile 19119 ZIG ZAG sewing maeblne;
assume payments &lt;If fl.la per
Court, Syracuse, Ohio on Slate
!MIIIh
or pay balance &lt;If $53.
I Willi to tllank eacb one who
Rt. 124, ~ IINIIIL
sent cards and flowers to me
Call 9112-2836.
t-l~tc
1-11-U.
during my slay In tile hOSpital Allo the nurses and HARMONY sparlments - S IIIQI SCHULT h...., trailer set
otaff for their klndneso; also
on ~ acre lot bad&lt; of Hartand ' rooms, bnlshed, new
ford. Like new. Lived In very
Dr. Pickens and Dr . Telle.
waUs, floors, furnlture, prilillie.
For inlormatlon, write
Mrs. Wiley Burton
vate parking. Out ol an Roods,
2-lt-ltp
George Fields, 13118 E. ll3rd
3 blocila hm Pomeroy pool
st., llllellf!O nt. 60S19.
ol!lce, m-1312 !rom 10 a.m.
S.16-12tt
WE WISH to express our sinto 6 p.m.
t-I-tle
...., tbanU and gratitude to
cur 111811}' !riendl and neigh- FOOR ROOM !umlshed apart- NEW 11168 ZIG ZAG sewing
macblne In original ladmy
bors for their kindnesses, ment. Pbone 99Z--1851. :1-11-Uc
carton.
Automatic zig zag to
sympathy canis. food and nomake buttomoles, sew on iJut.
rat offerings extended to us THREE-room furnlsbed aporltoos, monogram. make fancy
ciurlD8 the death &lt;If our dear menl, 134 Mulben'y Avo.
hUJband and father, Fremont
designs with juol !be twill of
Pbone 99!-MIIO.
2-IB.tlc
a slnl!le dial. Lei! in lay-away
H. stevens. We wish to ex·
and never been UliOII. Balance
tend special lha'*" to Rev .
For Sale
Frank Cbeeoebrew for his
dUe only tl7 or terms of f1
...-.aollng words, Ml'll. Elbel POODLE PUPPIES, AKC ~y
per monltl. !'bone - 2-16-6tc
Cbapman ille orpnlsl, and mlnlature. f/5 and up. stad
service and groomins. ! " the Martin funeral Home.
II I tie
Ml'll. Fremont Stevens
65 Pontiac .•.... $1395
and Family.
2-19-1!1&gt;
Cotallno 4 dr . Sodon . One local
NEED LIMESTONE fw your
OWMr . P ower Jt"ring . Power
driveway! We !Umlsll lind
broke• . Auto. tron1. Shawl ox·
Notice
ctlltnt core . Ju1t orriYod ,
deliver. Emmett W. Simler.
. 11BE N!liGLER Bulldiq SupContractlnfl, !'bone !IIWIII.
PI1 for bulldlnc J9W' home,
1J.»&gt;fc
66
Buick ....... •$1795
Lona time - available.
lo$obro Cu1tom 4 dr . Sodan .
2-IS-Uc POTATOES, Phone 1Ua4
On• local ownor. Pawor IIMring .
Power brok••· Auto. tron1 . Edro
ctar.uce Promtt, Portland.
•harp . Jult orrlved .
INCOME TAX Service claiJy ex·
111-16-tle
cepl SUnday 9 to 5. Evtnlnp
66
Pontiac •... . . .t1795
by appointment. Mrs. l!l8veD SOUP'S ON the rug lbat Ia. ao
Catalina 2 dr . Hard To, . '5eoutl• '
fut original turqu~i.i flnlth with ·.
·wanda' Eblin. Rt. z, Plillle- ctemf 'lli&amp; ipot with Blue "'"' rnatchl"'il
intoriar. Po-• et.oring .
roy. Laur&lt;l Cliff Road. · ·
Power brak11 . Automatic tran1.
Ire. Rent etectrl&lt; sluunpooer
WILL DO oewlng 11 home zippers,
pockets, pegging.
hemming, alterations, etc.

,., ...... y.., . . . . .

S140• s·o
......,.,.
POMERO_Y bel e:=t UM

C.rd Of Thanks

1-18-30tc

011 TOWJIIMIPI

Many Mad•t•
As low as • •

196S POHTIAC ···········································--·--$1695
Safari Station Wagon, local 1 owner car, white over

au ..... matic 1 power steerinG and brakes. Radio.

Business . Services

PINANCIAL ......,.

DIRECT DRIV_E
CHAIN SAWS

1966 OOOGE CORONET Ll01lttd Edition.•.. - ......$1695
4 Doo~. B~a~tiful .interior trim, ~lk. vinyl roof with

UTES

LEGAL NOTICE .

Yes, We Ha•• TO.
. HOMELITE ,

I

•EASY CLEAN

~NO SCOUR

'

�·-· .. ··-·-·--····· . .

~--

.. ···--·· · .... ·- ·-----'*"--·------· ........ -- ... -. -

FIDDLE Dee oee ·-

l; CCIJLllfii'T ~DONe
IT WllHOUf
PAW'S HI:LP

LAST
MONDAY
thru

SATURDAY

IDYS'
WESTERN
.lEANS .

INDOOR-OUTDOOR

10A.M.
9 P.M.

To

CARPET
SIZE ' "''xll W
o 100% POlYPIOPLENE
MIIACll FABRIC
o STAIN, MILDEW, WEATHER
RISlSTANT
o EM80SSED RUUU WAfflE lACK
o A nJFTED RUG THAT WEARS
EXTRA lONG INSIDE THAT
CAN IE USED OUTSIDE
SOUDS I TWEEDS

SUNDAY

1 To 7
CHECK THE ADDRESSES AT BOTTOM
OF PAGE FOR HECK'S STORE
NEAREST YOU!

o REINFORCED ,u
POINTS Of 5T11ESS
o SWING POCKETS

$

• SIZES
8 TO 16

J for$500

HECK'S REO. $27.11

GIRLS'

LADIES'
COTTON
HOUSE
DRESSES

5-T·R·E·T..C-H

BELL

MEN'S

SHIRTS

MEN'S
SHORT SlEEVE

SPORT SHIRTS
• REG. COllAR
o WASH AND WEAR
COTTON
o ASSORTED SOUDS
&amp; PRINTS

• SHORT
SLEEVE

S. M. L.

SLACKS

• 100% NYlON TRICOT

SIZES 7 TO 14

• NEVER NEEDS IRONING
• REG, COLLAR
• 2 POCKETS
• WHITE, BLUE,
MINT, MAIZE
SIZE
14 TO 17

ASSOmD
COlORS

$ 44

• ASSORTED
PRINTS

800!

• SIZES 8 TO 18
AND 14 \2 TO 241&gt;

ALSO GIRLS' PRINT

WASHABLE COTTON
DRESSES.

BELL SLACKS
$144

ll

$

PRINTS, STEP. IN COAT

• FLORAL PRINTS

LADIES'

LADIES'
KNIT TOPS

LADIES'
PERMA PRESS

IY HElEN HARPER
• Short SIHve
• Crew &amp; V-N.ck

PAJAMAS

SLACKS

and Slrlpes

• 'r' •

.

• FORTREL AND

• Solid Colors
• Si:l:n-S.M.L

• SIZE 7 TQ 14

COTTON BLEND

o SHORT SlEEVE

lONG liGS

• BLACK, BLUE,

e PINK, BlUE,

GREEN

MINT, MAIZE

LADIES'

SIZES

TWIG, CORAL

\

32

WINDBREAKER

SIZES

TO

JACKETS

ROLL SLEEVE

COTTON KNIT

SHIRTS

SHIRTS

8 TO 18

40

• Perma·Preu
and Nylon
• Zip-Up Front

o STRIPES

$ 48

$ 48

• Solid Colon
• Slz•t-S.M.L.

PRINTS
CHECKS

SIZES
32

ALIA-SELTZER
25's

WITH IRON
100'•

48c

$228

69(

$3.69

RETAIL
VALUE

98c

.

.........- ...
,.,

lfor

I

sse

RETAIL
VALUE
$1.05

66e

11.5 OL

PRELL
LIQUID
SHAMPOO

RETAIL
VALUE

mAll
VALUE

•100

$JSS

I TO 6X

gge

I OZ.

70Z. BAN

BANROLL·ON
DEODDRAIT

SPlAY IEOIOIAIT

RETAIL VALUI

79c

$1.49

CHAPEnE
LIP.aALM

c
IITAL VA1UI

4h

T~IS

ONE WILL 1.\AI&lt;:E
Yl&gt;. !&gt;. HANDSOME
CI.UCK I&gt;.N' GET VA

78e

'
RETAIL VALUE

sse

EACH

PLENTY OF FREE PAilliiNG

COLOIS
liDS

Slro41a14

TOOTHPASTE

CREAM OR R0U.-0N

,

e TurtloN.

PEPSODENT

DESERT FLOWER
DEODORANT

------·
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·--..

T"""'•

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Sollcl I
Foncy

6.75 OZ. FAMI.Y SIZE

RETAIL
VALUE

RETAIL VALUE

VAIQitiSH
TABLETS
60's

o-.~~~~~~Od·r!iJ

·- 77e
• Scoopo

TO
38

CHOCKS VIT

GIRLS'

II

lrll

$R/wintJ..

POINT PLEASANT, Second Street

EXTRA DRY
LOTIO I

Near End Of Shadle

1

owree' ..u~•
IN fTAI.V.

I CIIIID

16 OL

A WII*Crut qno«r#N

mAll VAlUE $1.49

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21 - 'l1lo Doily Soltinol, Mlddleo&lt;Jrt • Pomorvy, 0., t '.O. U, 1969

Business Today

Namath. Stands
To Get Millions

Tisha and Hubby
Tangle With UFOs

RANCHO LA COSTA, CoiiL
(UPD - Quarterboek Joe Nao
math, the New York Jets'
super hero of the Sc.ver Bowl,
hl.a 1n enjoyable money prob-lem. It's figuring how to keep
aa much of the loot and make
the most of the business otlers
r"w.ling in aince the Jet!!' ~
slble dream victory Over Balti~
more.
'"It has been fantastic," said
Tad Dowd, advisor ancl friend
ol Namatfl, during the Ameri~
can Airlinel Astrojet Golf Classic here. ••Joe atands to make
three to n\'e million dollars
over the nert five years."
Dowd, a short, pleasant ret..
101¥ with mod manners and
clothes, ticked oCI on his lingers the buSiOess ofters and
plans "'Broadway Joe" is con-

ly DICK KLEINER
NEA Hollrwood Corrupondoot
HOLLYWOOD INEA I
We can now say something deriniti_v e ~bout ~he flying

saucer people-they have good taste m g1rls . T1sha Sterling says they 're after her.
Tisha is a lovely little bloode, Ann_ Sou~,rn' s daughter .
who is one of the slars of '' The Experiment on CBS Play·
house Jo'eb. 25. It 's probably the best part she has had so far .
BLII an even better part is her real life battle with the
saucer people. She and her husband , Lal Baul!l, have gone
UFO 't Unidentified Flying Object) hunting ou~ m the desert.

near Joshua Tree, several times . And the•r search has
often been rewarded. she says.
Once they saw a large circle of
ship , for that wa:s what it

li~hts-;-on the ground. The
must have been , s~ says, was

about 35 feet across . The lights pulsated. d1mmed and
brightened.
.
They climbed up a n~arby hi~l £or a better look , passmg,
as they climbed. a high tension pol_e. When they c~r:ne
back down again , the pole had vamshed- but the wu es
were still there .

si.dering.
The most ambitioos project is

a national fast food franchise
operation
called '"Broadway
Joe's.. which has had a test
run in Miami. Both 1 sitdown
and take-out restalll'l.nt, it features a sandwich called ••foot·
ball hero." To make certain
everyone knows it's 1 Namath
operation a lighted likeness of
Joe throwing a football revolves
over the restaurant.
Going PubUc
Dowd said the operation will
go public In about a month with
the sale of 200,000 shares, and
"We're getting bids for franchises from all over Ute couq..
try, especially (rom pro foot-baU pla)'ers. Joe is chairman
o( the board and wiU hold a

·Their big black shepherd dtg was In a trance in the back
seat of their car-eyts open, but not moviag. They began
drlvlDg away. but aomethln&amp;: took control of tbelr car. Lal
eoaldn't work the brake•, the accelerator. the steerinr:
wheel-yet the car zoomed down the mountain, ner:otlatlnc
all the rurvfs, at 45 mUe1 per hour.
" For 18 miles, ''Tisha claims, ''they had control of our car .
1 don't know where they were taking us , but Lal strugg~ed
and eventually got control back. I know they were trymg
to contact us, but we were just too frightened to go along
with them ."
Tisha's acting career is hardly that exciting, yet it's
coming along . She isn't the most ambitious thing around.
"I don't want to stay in tbis business very lol'!g," she
says. ··t want to do a few things I'm proud of, then go
somewhere else tu live- maybe Europe. I want to help
people. I'd love to go to Biafra now and help them, but 1
can't with a husband and a baby."
And the folks in the saucers might not like it, either.

big chunk or the stock, making
him on paper an instant mi.l-

Director Andre DeToth has been around movies for more
than 35 years. And he says that today's movie audience is
the best the business has ever had .
"The 16-to-29-year-olds who make up the bulk of the
audience." he says, "are intel1igent and eager to be entertained. But they won't go for 'nothing' pictures- they have
to have films with story and a substance."
DeToth's latest is "Play Dirty," with Mlchael Caine. It
is, he believes, "an honest antiwar picture."
"But it doesn't have a message," he sayS. "I leave the
messages to Western Union-they're good at messages."
'It waa abot ln Almeria, Spain, one ef the bu1Je•t movie
toeaCMII In t•e world. When "Play Dirty" was there, It
was ene of eight movies being 1hot at the 11ame time In the
tame place.
DeToth who used to work exclusively in Hollywood, now
Hnds himSelf operating all over the world in the search for
what he calls "geographical honesty."
"The public demands it," he says . "You can't fool them
toda)' as we used to do. We'd use the same set and dress It
dlfft!renU)' and call it Hong Kong one day and - Paris lhe

LOS ANGELES (UPO- Valer-

"But today's public has been there, been everywhere .

Milllons of Americans go to Europe every year. You can't
fool them. You have to show things truthfully."
ACTING MANAGER
year--old vice president in
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. charge of minor league opera(IJPI}-Johnny Johrulon, the 47- tions for
the
New York

fONIGHT AND TIIURSD AY
FEBRUARY 19 • 2()
NOT OPEN
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
FEBRUARY 21 • 22
"WILL PENNY"
(Technicolor)
Charlton Heston -Joan Hackett
"ARIZ ON A BUSIIW ACKEI\S'.'
(Technicolor)
Howard Keei-YvonneDeC&amp;rlo
SHOW STARTS 7 P. M.

Yankees, Tuesday was named
acting general manager until
Lee MacPhail recuperates from
a mUd heart attack auffered
~nday.

MAKFS DEBUT
NEW
YORK (UP!)- Richmond Flowers, UniversU;y of
Tennessee Clanker back and
outstanding hurdler, will make
his 1969 indoor track debut
Friday in the U.S. Olympic

Invitational

track

meet

testified at the murder trial of
Sirhan
Sirhan today that she
saw him extend his arm and
shoot Sen. Robert F. Kennedy.
Mrs. Schulte, Z2, was the
mysterious girl in the polkl. dot
·dreiiS who had figured prominently in the investigation but
who had nothing to do with the
shooting except to be a witness.
The attractive girl, who today
wore a white dress with a red
and blue scarf, had been head
of Kennedy's campaign head,..
quarters in Goleta snd had gone
to the Ambassador Hotel that
night for the victory celebration. She was on crutches at the
time as a result of a skiing
accident.
The girl's testimony was
interrupted after she had been
on the stand less than 10
minutes,
Slf)erior Court Judge Herbert
V. Walker called a recess when
a sheriff's deput,y in the
courtroom whispered to hlm
that he heard a clocking noise
which seemed to entaMte from
his desk.
The courtroom was cleared
b)' Judge Walker and a rew
minutes later trial was resumed
when it wu found the telephone
on the deputy's desk had a
lluttering relay as a result of 1
test by the utUity comparu-.
It was indicative of the
tenseness of the trlal that the
slighted suspicion there was an
electronic listening or recording
device could lead the judge to
hurriedly eJilDty the courtroom.
Min Schulte had brought to
court t.he dress she wore that
nlaht and she held it lt&gt; so the
jury could see it. It was a lime
green with yellow polka dots
and the girl smiled brightly as

a

next.

MEIGS IHEATIE

at

Madison SJ.!are Garden it was
announced Tuesday.

she displayed it.

k
K _eepea._e•
HI ... OITIOI&lt;I ... L

WII:OOINGI IIING.

SPRING~
ANGEL TRUDS
ARE HEREI
THE SHOE BOX
WHERE SHOES ARE ·
SENSIBLE PRICED
Mlddloport, 0.

,

"We've tried to anai)'1e Joe's
qpeal," said Dolrd, ·-a n d
we'w come to the conclusion
that he"a with it &amp;I f'ar Al!l the
YOWW crowd is eoneerned. He'll
sort ot an antihero. He
alouehes, drease11 mod, teUs it
like it is at all times. He'll
quick and never loses hls
cool."
Joe apoOfeotly ha~
11omethlne that appeals to the
YOUIII set. especially the girla,
alwl)'s a business Qset. At the
recent
New
York ~
Show three girls .lll.inted when
Joe IMde aa appearance. Since
!he Super - 1 victory his fan
man runs from 200 to 600 letters per day. And 15,000 persons, most or them teens,
showed up at New York City
Hill to cheer Joe and hil teammates when tbey returned !rom
the Sl(ter Bowl victory, six
times more than turned out for
the three astronauts.

in 1961, Philip ~ringer onc1

Draws The Crowds
E
lhougll all !he big
names or football and baseball
are gathered at La Costa for
the tourney, it's. Joe who draws

,.n

tile crowds, lives out the most
autographs and awii¥Js the
most heads when he walks
through the lobby.
That's why airlines have offered him long term cootracts
to do radio and televlsioo commercials, why clothing concerns ofier stock and royallties
Cor Joe's endorsement, why
Braniff paid him almost $20,000
for a 20 second commercial and
Schick gave him an eBtimated
$15,000 for shaving his beard.
It's also why the "bachelors
three" restaurant bar Joe and
two partners operate in N e "
York is an ·-in" place Utese
days,
"Our big problem," s a i d

In her brief testimony, she

said

she had never known
Sirhan at anY time aOO had not
talked to him 011 the night of
tile shooting.
In testimony Monday. massl ve pro football tackle Roosevelt Grier told of how he beat
back people trying to tear
Sirhan apart momentll alter the
slaying.

Throo Day ·S.Io!

News, Notes
Mrs. D. H. Robeson left Tuesday fur 1 few days visit with her
sister, Mrs. Ruth Lawry alli
ramlly or Chi &lt;:ago,
Charles arrJ Sandra McGhee
and Peggy Daile}' of Columbus
were weekend villltors of Mr.
and Mra. 0\arle,y Smith and Jo.
dinner gue&amp;ta of Mr.
and Mrs. a.arley Smith and Jo
were Sandn McGhee, PE181)' [)a1..
ley Ord Charles MeGbee of eo.
lumbus, Mr. and MrL Doyle
K...,p and Kall, Kevin 101 Char·
les of Langsville.
Mr. and Mrs. ll&lt;lbort MwllhY
have named their new daughter,
Debra Sue. Grandjlorenta are Mr.
and Mr•. J. R. MUJPI!y,
Mr. aDd Mrs. Robert Reeves
of Pcmeroy were SuDy vtailora
of his pareat&amp;, Mr. ant Mrs.
Jaa"lles Reeves and lJnda.
Mr. am Mrs. Richard Jetter•
and Valorte of Coalton were week
end vltltora of Mr. and Mrs. Joe
Ha!field and Mr. Campbell.
Mr. and Mn Earl Wineo of
Columbus were weekend YiJitorl
of her parenta, Mr. and M r 1.
George Warner, Richard Bid
Gordon.

T•ermtl SoCks
Sins 10 to 13. Cu•hioned lining,
toe and heel.

12.95
13.95
14.95
16.50
17.50
19.50

DRESSES .. , ............... SALE
DRESSES .................. SALE
DRESSES .................. SALE
DRESSES •••••••••••••••••• SAlE
DRESSES .................. SALE
DRESSES .................. SALE

11.00
12.00
13.00
15.00
16.00
18.00

Special Purchase
an• Salt

Womens Lansing
Knit Sweaters
Clrdigan Sweaten (Coat styles
and Slipovor ot.Yiesl. WHITE AND
COLORS. ALL SIZES.

12.95 SWEATERS............................................ SALE 8.00
1G.95 SWEATERS. ........................................... SALE 8.00
8.95 SWEATERS....................................- ...... SALE 6.00
7.95 SWEATERS....... _.................................. SALE 5.00
US SWEATERS............................................ SALE 4.00
US SWEATERS............................................SALE 3.00

SPECIALS-DRAPERY DEPT.
-~-----------------------$1.69 ALL PURPOSE THROW RUG
Multi 5trl,.., Was .... la. 2.. " wide, &lt;IS"' l•na .... . ... 5ALE $1.lt

-------------------------CLEAN·UP SALE! WOOL DRESS MATERIAL
-------------------------49c-18" CLING
Atl vln)'l1tfck-ltn plastic,,,.,

... ••••• ,,,5ALE 39c )'4.

-------------------------~
49c-45" PRINTED OUTING
.

Good Hlaetllaft pattam• ••• , ,.,, . .. , , POR THI5 5.\LE !fc ,d.

-------------------------RUG SAMPLES
-------------------------$1.39 SPORTSWEAR FABRIC

lmportanl - · whlle General
Manap:r Emile Francl1 re·

COileh thJ'oU&amp;b the
romainder of · !he National
Hockey Uaaue season.
malnl

II

reinf«ct~~d

Blthroom Si:1l"
Copocltr 300 lbt. COfl'lfortabla
wid• ttanu Mtlf.• IE•sr hi
tead dial. All eol de:eor.ted,
•oty to claan vlnJI - ' ·
Gold ''im, JIICk•up hGft.ll•·

Sale 3 ..... I. 00

SAIGON

Permanent Press

Work
Uniforms
SALE

8.60

a
suit

Palts ••••4.80

Shlrts ••• 3.80

Altlfidtl FliWtrs

RCA. Chlldrens
1U5 C~k Radios

Colorful, realistic l.ooking Polyethylene flowers and foliage.

Solid State chGUit. Allfomol•
lc uwolr.• to music", Full
hodl" sound fra111 3W'
tpaoW. Automatic Yolu.,..
control. Whil• th•y lott.

50S Polyester, 505 Cetton. 45" wldo. $olld•. plalcl•, strt,..

SALE $1.00 rd.

-------------------------Just Rec.ived. SIMPLICITY HOME CATALOG
-------------------------$1.00 THROW AWAY BAGS
S..loct your ,.ttern• at t.-a. In Dropory Dept•• , •• ,,,. ,JOe Copy

l'ot •II V•cu111111 Cfea-•~"''""'""""''''•••••SALI 79c pk ..

-------------------------. Sale-AUTOMATIL~L!E,TRIC BLMf(ETS
--------------cu---------··r... llllloo.l,!!. :.!~1! ,.,..SJI~9.'!., to ott ..two.
-------------------------"New Diana" COLONIAL AREA RUGS
,•...
Yo v•• to S3.99 ........................ POR THIS SALE Sl.lf

T Wul• brclided r~ with hond hooll•tl C.ntor fiDral •viii, ovol
1ho,.. Fringad •II OJCKind. Ravanlbl•. Go~, ,,..,., ru1t, •111o,

37"
J ts
•
·' '...... 2,"
...... 5.95
·
6.95
27" •• 47" ••••••

• 5f" ...... l.tS
tsf.t5-JS"
.••- ·r· • 7t" ••••• 1195
•

Mens Work Jackets

Zlp')er tr&lt;n «tal ot¥1e wl!h three pocketo. 100 Percent e&lt;Jt,.
1011 twW, reci ll)'loa qullllinlnJ. Grey -»ark Olin • ~ruce
GreeJL Size• 36 to 50.

6.00
BE THRIFTY! SAVE AU. OF

Marine• control

of !he 30.mlle loog A
Sahau Valley !hal fumelo
Communist troops and materiel
;from -Laos to the Da Nang area.
The month old (lleratlon so
far has ldlled 844 Communlats,
most at them In the past week,
and cost the Marines 70 dead
and 312 lOOUnded. The eampalgn, Operation Dewey Con.
ym, Is the largest tn recent
months and appeared to be the
most IIUccessful.
UPI
correspondent Davld
Lamb who has accompanied the
Marines on the sweep aaid the

battalloo commander~
!rom Vlrllfnla hod urged lholr
three

aweltering troops up one mountain alter another, leaving
onlper s behind to prole&lt;:! !heir
t:lanks. They were plunging tnto
'conununlst defenses in bunker-

15.00

ELBERFELD$ SALE OF GLIDDEN PAINTS
lnoido and Outoldo Palnll and Enomol\
7.95 Gallon• Spree! S.tln................ _________ ...... S.Io 6.00
2.45 Quarto $prod S.tht.................................... S.Io 2.00
3.15 Quorto
Sprod Lotox S.ml Glon Enomoi.. .................. S.Io 2.30
Plastic flarenameL.---····-----····-·· ..·······Quarts 2.00
Plaotlc Florono•oL................................... Gallon 7.00
Craftsman Outside
·
Whlto Houoo Point, Gallono ....- ...................... S.Io 4.00
Spred Lu.tre S..i Glass Enamel, Quarts...... S.Ie 1.50
Sprod Luotro Sotnl Glon Enomol, Gallono .... S.I! A.OO
Gloss White Four Heur EnameL.---·---:·..... _SIIe 1.30

Anniversary Sale Set
Pomeroy Motor Compaoy, In

amlversary with !be firm, Ia anaounelng a special amtver1a17

SEE THE NEW ARRIVALS
MENS SHORT SLEEVE SPORT SHIRTS
Small (14-lt'h ), medium (15-IS'h ), large (lll-18'h ), extra
larse (17-l'l'h J and extra, extra large (111-111\1 ), Allare permaneea preu. Smartly 11Q'led in Jolid eolon, 1trlpe1 and
cbeckl. You,._ want to see these new Sprtne and Summer
shirts arriving dOlly, Bey !hom oowl

--r.
.mille

Robert A. Barrow, 47, of Sl.
Francisville, La. '"Tht\Y're on
!he ground with their rille
companieJ, They're cool heads
and they've dlspla,yed as many
heroics as any man In the

ootftt"

One battallm. eommander, Lt
Col. George Laine Jr., ~
Virllinla Beaeh, Vo., radii*!
Ba.rrow that his Marines 11 have
eaushl the spirit of !he thing"
as they clawed and scratched

their way up Tiger Mountain, a
peak soaring 3, 700 fest above
the door of the A .!ilau Valleythe only peak in the area with a

name.

On Rio Honor RoD

KDIIIrt became maoapr
the early 80s later od-

Fwr Malp Count;y &amp;!udonlo ot

llio Gronde

With BriM• •nd Strorton anelno ... crel•, autom.tlc Chait•, rowln(
,,.,,..,, A terrific bur· For thl• Wa.._ EM
.....

Ot

.,

oble ot !he - p r o p I - .
tloo.
One of !he .....,..,.. dde!

· ·...~
Wider
Mr.
Kaliht
COIIW!otod
in loto

1888 with !he !lnllllllll II( the nero

TRADE IN YOUR BLACK AND WHITE TELEVISIOH
SET ON A MEW 1969 RCA COLDII SET
.
'
Viol! !he Muolc Dopartmoot on the 2nlllloor. Soo the exoeiiOIII
•election or RCA COlor TV nta Ia )'llUI' lavorito at;Jlo ond
trade in 1""" old TV. Yoo'll like the ftnoperlormanceJIII '
-., rlcb\ auocl - · of an RCA COlor TV Sot.

eon...,

have been

:::' _:.-:;::;~=.::.

bCJdlo' llnlahlag dopt~!'t~Mmoavall­

Saltl 20 i1ch Ltwn Mowers

counties.
Meanwhile, Jack E. Farrington, necutive director otOVH~
said appUeatlona Cor a total (1
II ,_ projeelo lllld for the con-

Four Mel@ll Pupils

viiiCOdtopzeA major Jllrl of !be """'J!'J!Y' 1
growth Ia rolleciA!cl in the line
modem oervlee and porto and

Ta.,.. on Solo Now ht Flocw. Ble taloctlon lnclcull"l doll•, f!IIHI,
Fi•h• Ptlc• 1oyt c••t tfuclr.1, cook Hf•t. lront, 1k..... Tonllo
rinlotures, WIIMI:O. Rv~• Hot Whaol1, f"otato Haod and mony,
1110ny ot'- ter• tftot tlor• on'1 girl• 1111•. Haw It 1 pad thM to hr
top. Stop In oM ••a how much you con 1ova clurlne this 1olo.
.

On S.le In eur Heu1ewores Dept. . ...,.

lale.
A. R, Kni(!ill, prealdent of the
Eaot Mala Sl. buolneoo, has oaided &amp;lady growth of !he comolnoe he became aaoodwltll It 011 Feb. 20, 1929 as a

Mr.

s.le of Teys

.

to.bmker battle.
"There is none t1 this
nonsenae with Ioney conunand
polta out here," sa1d Col.

tinuance ol three others, would
prol&gt;abiJ' be submllled tolbe Ohio
Olllco or Appalacldl lor lllndlng
by the COinmisslon oa or about
March IS. Theoe projecta will
Involve about $15 mlllloo, he
laid.

reoosnllioo ofita~-nl'o40!b

loc!•Uoa on Eut MaJn
Meigs Junior

a.,

HiRh - ·

near

c~JJ_1f,

THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 20. 1969

0

· .:....&gt;-~

Peace

To be named to the roll a stu.
dent must recoi&gt;e - . . . . a 3.
and a 3.5 average ror tbeJll'eeedID.ti Nlll8111or. The Molos indudol Jolul G. a.u.y, Fomeroy; Jacct~eUne Gilkey, Pomeroy; KalheriM A. HW, Radn.,
and WUHam A, YOUIIII, i'lrmeroy.

P ARlS (tJPJ) - Tbe Ullit.ed stAtes ·called today for a return to .
the 1954 Geneva agreements which erlled the French llldochira War
and Wd there must be a mutual de-escalaUcm of the Vietnam War il
there ia to be peace.
U. S. Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge said the de-escalation was
''an lhsolutely essential first step.'' And heln1)atientb' rejected once
again the Communist demand the Americana pull out of Vietnam, UJloconditionally, as a first step.
Backed by South Vletnlmese chief delegate Pham Dang Lam,
Lodge accused the Cc:mmunists of hampering the progress of the
conference by tailing to make oooerete proposals while insisting on
demarlls they knew were ura.teptable.
"The United &amp;ates believes ftrat step for the creation of
that the es~;~ential elements or
CCXldittoos in Widell the political
the 1954 accords. whlclt we have problema ean be resolved."
all said we support aa the basis
Lodge said, _uyour side and
for a future lettlement, proyide our side aeerya to agree that
common ground on which to build
military ~ssuea and partieularl,y
!he &amp;!ructure of _ ... in Viet- !he CJ!O&amp;tion or withdrawal ol
IJ&amp;Il\,"' Lodge sald.
mlUtary force• are rl. key tm..
1be Geneva agreements were PJrtance to an overall settle-a set ~ documents which ended ment.
the French colonial war in Indo·-The withdrawal fJf forces.
china. The United States, wldeh however, like other ismtell Indid not sign tbem, nevertheless, volved in this negotiation is not
supported their provisions.
a subject which shouldbeadvancLodge urged tbe Communist
ed in terms of unconditional dedelegates to discuss with the aJ- mands. Rather it is a matter for
lie&amp; such key pt'OVisions of the serious discussion leading to
accords as the eatabllshrnent of agreement on mutual action,"
a Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) Lodge said.
along the 17th parallel, the disTurning a dear ear to the alen,gagement of opposing military lied appeals, Viet Cong del egaforces, the cessatim of hostUi- tion chief Tran Buu Kiem and
Ues, the non4ntervention by the
North VIetnamese chief ne£QtlaSouth and the North in ooe an- tor Xuan Thuy repeated all over

IN
ottlle
en ~ Amerlea Olapter IDd Advisor Everett
dlaeu11 t
!be $&lt;1115 promlosory note !hoy signed Wednesday toc al...,
through the Junior Jackson Production Credit AsaodatiGD to
into a feeder pig raisirw partnership with Harold Erie- ·
1

student and chapter member. The chapter, aaltJ eud

the partnership, provides half of the feed arl!l makes a.U..
1 $500 stall and porch wdt {below) that members built. Ert ..rtne provides !he labor and hall of the leed eosla. 1l1o part,.
nersh.lp eJI)ecta to raise 150plgaperyear. Left to rt,:ht. abaft,
are Mr. Holcomb, Glen Crisp, chlpter ,president; lan7Bizoc:b..
field, treasurer; Terry Jarrell, SeD.tinel; Om Hayes, student
advisor, and Dan CotterUl, vice .President. '!be lcau na cloaed
c1uriqJ Natloaol FFA Wook, Feb. !l; .. 22. - Son11aa1 Pbo1o.

~~ !t),le):!lal~·~"'"· ~ ~·""':',''l~
impartial
internatlGoal polli:lng
of the qreement8:
eondition.
On the Comrnun:J.st inaistence
The Communists were expected to reject any plan tOr res:tor-

m a U.S. military pullout Lodge
&amp;aid the Hanoi and VIet Cong
negotiators 44obvious]y recognize
that the soluUon or military lsIRHIII ill an absolutely euential

1ng the DMZ since that would

cut ott the main &amp;u,pply ol weapons and manpower to their fore.
es in Soutb Vietnam.

".:;(.~;.:.'::'$-;.p;;r.o;.w.~~~~?i&amp;

MASON HONORED - Walter L. Vaughan (ceDter) WAB IJm..
ored at the Masonic Temple Wednesday evening when Elmore
Williams, Wellston, right, GraRJ Corxluctor ot Council arxl Inspector of the Sixth Arch, Royal &amp; Select Masters, Gnnd
Council ol Ohio, presented a IIIJelplncommemorati~ 50 years
membershJ.-. in Bosworth Council 46, R&amp;SM. Danny S. Zirkle,
lett. is pnsentmasterofPcmeroy's Bosworth Council. VaiJihan
baa been previously honored with lapel insignia for his 50
years MIIOillc membership In Pcmeroy Lodge 164 F&amp;AM, and
50 years membership in Pcmeroy Chapter 80, Royal Arch Ma10111. The Com1eU wao opened lollowing Masooic services by
Pmneroy I..odp 164forthelateCoronerHenryEwing, a 42 ,year
member or Pcmeroy Lodse.

A doe deer was struck and
killed on Route 33, one-temh
or a mile south oC the Bear·
wallow Ridge Road Wednes-day at 8:30 p. m., when it ran
onto the highway in front of a
car driven by Cbde M. Bax-ter, 51, Albany. The Meigs
County sherilf"s dfl)artment
aald there was medium dam..
to Ute left tronttenderlnd
door of the Baxter vehicle,

Nixon Wants
Wide Contact

WASI!INGrON (IJPI) - in a
dramatic break with tradition,
President Nixon plans to meet
next week with !he ordinary
men and trOmen ol Britain,
Germany, 1taJy and France as
well as rqyalty, presidents,
prime ministers aDd ehancel~
tors.
Disclosing Ibis Wedllesdoy
AJlll ~lem
rdsht. authoritative IIOW'ces said
!lJ~ ~VJlJ
that the President "Is con~
WASHINGTON
(IJ Pl)- c:erned'" that his 40 to 50 hours
De!enoe Secrelar)' Melvin R. ot dlseuatkl1s with the heads d.
state• and KOVernmenta by their
:=-d:ro:!':.o
very Dl1ure "might be lesa than
'~ &amp; a IOphisUcated new tully dimensional ...
MASON - A 13-y-d girl tar&gt; sbth groder,IDiciaugllteror ADM (antlballlslie mlosUe)
He plans, therefore, to meet
iwaa admitted to the Holzer~ Mr. and Mrs. F. R. Carsey, Jr., system."
wltb writers, commentators,
'1cal c..tor Hoopllal Wednesday wao olruek by a car whlle ...
Laird, telltll)ing before !he c r I t I c &amp;, businessmen, trade
ni&amp;ht lor!roatmentorlnlurleolho tempting to cross SecOfld.St. aft. Senate Foreicn Relatiooo Com- leaders, &amp;!udenta and
sustained wbea atruck by an auto- · er leaving a meeting oi G 1 r 1 mlttee, said that because of the othera at closed tea and coffee
mobile ot 7•10 p. m.
Seoul Troop No. 187althe United potential threat !rom Red China sellllms in l&lt;&gt;ndOII, Ibm, Rome
Mary Coroey, Ma- elem01&gt;- Methodist ChurcO.
and Ruoala, he wwld be remiss
Mal')', with her molherotlhe in ldl mtlel to (rl'O(ec! !he
time or the incident, wos hll by notional oecurit¥ If he c:ommltan oulooloblle alleged to have ted hlmoelf op1ns1 deplqyment
beeD operated by Uoyd llllmollll of !he U.S. Son!inal ADM
F"ue
Brunoon, 31, 570 PeuJ.&amp;, MidThe Rutland, Pomeroy and Midothert pine ln the aame dlree.- dleport.
ll)'lltem.The ox=~aw&amp;~
·-~--. aystem as
dlt9011
4n dCIIII1menta were on
Uon. The.Y held hands for the
llntao011, it Ms reported, . - dooloecl dllrln&amp; the Jobri""'
12D milo drive to keep tholr Ullled in his ear after the i:q»aet administratlm. waa deJigned ·eo !he scene of a bruah ftre al 2•14
around !he bloek bul than re1/. Ill. Wednooday ,_.. tho HOlt·
clalrslram o~
provide a '"thin'' ADM defense,
In Ralelch Mr. Slmonrocrte,.. luriiOd to !be accldollt • ...,., loraoll opins! the lhreot of a •nl Nal&gt;le ' - e an ~..U Run.
1l1o lrljuretllfrl rou rushed to
tilt cor, and !he lllmily l1oeded
Troo . _•• threotonoclb,vlhe lire
limited Chinese mlulle -ok. ...... lllldamapd.
home, arrbtna: in Poauu.w about Golllpoll.t by FO(IIe- 1l1o Mlddl
...____
Laird laid, u be hao be!ore,,
midnqhl ......_,, 1'lie !oro do¥• Janco. She oum.'ed 0 bc1untcl
epor! ....,..
a).
!he ChiDeN
hod aoiemed lllilo · an etoraicy. left ~ llllurioo to bot rlahl --·•• ...
• -·-~~
~
call
ati:Ol'
p.m.
loa. a ·Jai:eratloo 'olili Cor&gt; ~ •q~ • 1&lt;111 ••-........,;,.,. WednooiiiQ to tho WWiam Wwio
Iuliano and ..,...~ oljM beldjo', tal ballittllc mlullo (Jt;BM) ~~~~

G. l, 13, u• b
lr

nrJ y

car

aae

Soviets Push

=

~:

Three Dllpartments

Family Defeats Plague of Troubles

Fight Brush

-

a

w-•

''~ '"' Nordlliocaoil -

and Paris.
He has instructed !he U.S.
Embassies In these e.pltai1 to
send out lnvilaliono to INti: ·liD ·
10 and IS people will
represent a fair eroa~H~ect&amp;aa or
their eountryrnen, tho _.._
laid.
Crowded Sehealle
The only capital In Nlxm will DOl bave ••etUzen chats" 11 ~
&amp;pporenlly be......
II( .. .
tTOWded nature of hll IC!IU'dtik

!here.
!lgnil!CIIItly, !he ..,_,...
plbli&lt; _... p i - .... ,a;.
Pr.,.._ Ia In !be ....
~· factory In Weot Boi'll!l
where tbooaanda ~ SWIM

to-

emp!Qyeeo an expe&lt;led
him.
n.ro wiD be PlltUe '
~· 104 llillabH, ..

.

arrival

prind&amp;lall1
at airpooto

protocol

calls rur

CQUJ'OI,

ollldal rreleomoa

rollo pooled ' $2,600 PI'"II'IJ

81!:1RUT (V"" ~ ...._ .........

' ,........... ..;,."' inon M~"';;d
n. tm»onturo'l•l'!li!*•'i :II ·~ for, f.oroel -~!"1 pd dillr
....... ....,.... ~ ..• ; llirolli• .. jlpl&gt;ll~ dllpbiJ Ia IIIIa.
-

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

......~w:~..

';· . '!iMd'l~ .

.

arri•

rtiiiiN
Ill' 1111

Private Ialka wllllltt

ol Nixon••
with &amp;trope'&amp;
IDI-lhBUih spo•Hnr
only ~erl will
11118ro.•
:':;.~ m"'nl'

111111 1

211-ar 10,
1111111 ..u.G Ill _to
•·.
- , .,.._
_ . ""'"
. '-· .
.,.-,
_,..
of -

lltll

,;;e ·' f _,,

U - • " and liT ll75 ..nil wben .1 tin~~ M?bllfL
·
,
~••-- ltaVo GUt JO to 10 millllea ''lllat
lkil!dllw
laid tldi11Ct1!11b1J......., -·'d ~!he •~ m-.. "
from .. itoc:fl'lcal.' Gollil. , . ,_ • v~~=
'CIIIer
Rlchorcll
Ohlloltr 1u llllod ~ ~ · ~w- _.,
lire no out' wlian lllllcll!lorlmonl
hiWkiP chlrlil. . . . . . . . . . /
li'!VEN EXECIJTDl
Doluao roai ~ ·
A ......maut,lholl'uonCit;J

Jll:iO'I. Ill................. ···-~· ' IAIIer•UC. - - . Radio

,,

'

Hanoi's Demand
Is Brushed Off

llno•llll!lf!

FOR THIS WEEK END

$13.95 TWIN $1%1 .............................. S4LI SII.QQ
114.95 PULL SIU, SINGLI COMTRot. ••••••••••• S4LI$12.GQ

116.95 fULL SIZE, DUAL CONTIOL ............. SALI $14.00

b,v

'.

De-Escalation, or

COLUMBUS- A $196,S71!ed- awarded to The Ohlo Valley al Commi111Dn in Waohlng!on.
arallfP'ant to provide for the con- Health Servieea FoondaUon,.Inc., The gronl will provide for !he
of a pllllllling _.-am Alhalo, Ohio.
extonalon or !he piamlng proin ....,.clian with tho (IJ1lll0aed
Albert G, GUe1, dlreetorolthe gram lhrOUSh April 30, 19611,
f41;11B,U2 Multl.c.unt;y Health 8lato ~~~~~ o1 Urban Af. GUn laid.
. . . . ._
¢ole'~ 1n _....MI'&gt;r .-coo~ ~~~ of'llle ·· .,., extenoion aranrwailhiil£.
~ CGU1111e1, hu !P'11111b.v !he A!Jpolschian l!egloo. ed to • 90-clay portocl to colncido
~~m,':;$z:::x:~~~mm;:::;:;::::x:=*:~:·:r.~~:;::::=:~:~::::AA:~.::t.~ with Demonstration and Health
proJecta in aeven other states
WASHINGTON (UPO - The ~ent or Houalng and
whleh termlnote Aprll 30, he
Urban Deval~ent Wednesday announced 1 ntle1 of bn
laid.
· ,rant~ Ud program.' reservations.
The funds are being uHd for
They Included:
the employment of a stan to reL&lt;ntn, Ohio. program reservation a,pproved for 39 low
oearch health J)t&lt;&gt;blems and to
rent home11.
determine
ba.lfc health needs 1n
Athens, Ohio, $101,895 grant Increase Cor the South Green
the
area.
1b11
effort Is eoncen.
projeet.
!rated
in
the
counties
of Athena,
Ytu~gatown, Ohio, ts'13,000 to help buDd new sewertacillHocking, Meigs, Gallia, Jackties.
lOll, Lawrence and Vinton. A preWUlard, Ohio, fi1,039,000 to build a water system.
vious
study revealed that the
warren Couli:y, Ohio, $700,000 to help extend the present
&amp;horta&amp;o
of pl!ysldans, denlisto,
water distribution system and build a new treatment plant.
nurses
and
a lack of adequate
Dayton, Ohlo, $54,068 increa1e to auist inthepurchase ot
health service center&amp; had reachdeveloped land for prlrk. and recreation purposes.
ed
a critical stage in these seveu
w.=:;c:::;::::=::::=:=:-Y..W.~~W:~~:::::s;:x::::::~:::::X:::

Salol J-t 7 Ta 5.11

1/2 Price

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

SEO Health Project Wins
$186,571 Planning Grant

All Sizes - Pants 29 to 42 waist and extra ilzes 44 to 50
In your correct length. And all atns shlrtJ lflh to 17 and
extra sizes 171!) to 20 in your correct sleeve length. 50
Percent Fonrel Polyester and 50 Pfltl'cent Cctton soil release finish, Wack Olive .. ~ruce Green - Olarcoal Grey
and KhakL

Sale!

(UP!)- u.s.

throe oolonals !rom
Virllinla killod lOS North Vie!Damese toldler• today ln a serlea
ol 118Vfl&amp;tl close quarter battle•
atop !be IIIIII&amp;IDed mountain•
domlnatlng 1he CommunJits' A
Valley s....,ly route !rom
Laos.
The Marlne11 loat nine men
kllleci lllld 17 ........... W"hffn they clawed their WI¥ up
!he mountains in 100 degree
heat and louolrt !he North
Vietnamese Who died raOler
than surrender their mountain
guns. The Leathernecks captured two, killlq !he auncrewo.
Some of the battle11 were
Iough! wi!hin two miles of !he
Laotian border and It was clear
the Marines had won a strong
toellold in !he campaign to win
led

Little !Aia!peraturec...,...l.ott '
20a.Falr.uhi!H!!U.. FridoJ,
Ofllble _
tor~t (p t,L,.;

. Devoted To The lntere.t. Of The Mejg.-MIUDII Area

Marines Win

SALE I
Big Yank

Weather

at y

Lodge: Mutual

6.95

G... Hlectto ... 271136, ..• , •• , , , , , ",, , , ••• , , •• , •• , SALE 12.00

THURSDAY-FRIDAY-SATURDAY SALE
ADDrriONAL REST
NEW YORK (UP!)- The New
York Rulgero Tuoidq deddod
to ilvo alline Coach Bemlo
-'Boom ''Boom" Gdr1CI1 an
addl!looal root from handiiD.ti
tho Warn Ord amouncod he
wwld wvrk oooullno and other

$8.95 Hoalthotnotor ·

MENS INSULATED

S.C"/60". lendad end unbonded, G..d oalec:"" ""U.LI $2-00 Jtl.

Wolfpen

e

Nita Jones wrote .. Green With
· Envy_ Purple With Pa11ton, White
With 1\qJer, Scarlet Witb Fever,
What Were You Doing In Her
Arm1 l.Aat Night muea," believed history's longest song
title.

VOL XXI NO. 211

HWldredB of .., ~ring dresses - Your ftii'IOrite makesFor our 3 day S&amp;le at substanUal savlrws. Sizes Cor all
Petite sizes, regular stzea. Junior slze1, haU sizes and
extra sizea. On S&amp;le - For our 3 day aale onl.)',

•

Now You Know

Dr...._

Polka Dot Girl Says
She Saw Sirhan Shoot
ia Schulte, a long tressed blonde

3-Day Sale
·woMENS
DRESSES

aceordlns to Dowd.

lionaire.''
Two lawyers, James Walsh
and Mike Bite, check all angles before Namath makes a
move. Sonny Werblin, former
president of MCA and the Jets,
advises Joe on all movie and
entertairunent offers. Bob Hqte, Dowd, "is not to mow too
Lee Marvin, Universal a n d fasl It all has to be organized
Twentieth Century - Fox have with maximum attentioo paid
made Joe .. solid movie offers," to tax shelters aiXI growth.''

• • •

Washington's Birthday Sales Friday and Saturday

HI '

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