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U- 'lilt llolb

._,nel, P--111Jddleport, 0., 1burocll1; f"eOniUY 20, IMI

T~

Ame:ic: !cr Chrlet -::tf!er-

h.r; to be tllkea at the Mldine..
..,... Flrot BlpUst ChUI"&lt;hSundo&gt;-

':f~! !..'!n!OO..~{iuri.nt!'meetings

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the ci.rclea ol the
H. San-born Ml &amp;aiotary Society Tuesday

night.

Members were reminded Ullt
the lll.Utllted ctn1rch &amp;a.]lal300
and thlt the o«erlrw ~· underwrite many American a.p...
tisb in miuion lielda, includllw

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urban ghettos and rural areas.
Natlonal goal ror the Amerit:a
Cor Christ oReritl8 Is $750,000.

Girls Black/White

Hush Puppy

Saddle Oxfords

Discontinuecl Styles

8-D W;dths

N· M·W'
(Ooly 13 poh)

Girls Wht. Ked

OXFORDS
Many narrow widths

12.11

pr . or

New Spri111 Special

17 Pairs Beige
Patent

Brown Robin Hood

Romper HI Shoes
Sizo ..S D 8. E

1 Group
Miss America
Sline. Buy For
Next Fall
AA &amp; B S
Widths

Missy Mates
Size BIH2

Rer. 5.99

5 Pr.
Childrens

Oxfords
Size 4-6

sa.oo

White

Infant Hi Top
Br Robin Hood

llot
Scattered
Styles an.d Sizes
Only$

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wa1 aulated in

in11 at

"'Chrlll.

The state b.xt! is $37,000.
WVE JOY CIRCLE
Plans "ere announced Cor the
Anllther rood box wiU be preWorld Day ol P.-.yer services
pared
tor the Dr. Fraflk Curry
on March 7 at the church. Mrs.
tamill'
In India, the Love Joy
Richard Owen will be the leader
Circle
decided.
During the meet.
ror the service spoosored by
ing
held
at
the
hmle ol M r s.
Church Women United on the
theme, " Growing Together In Manning Kloes, it was voted to
give $4 to the milk program at
Christ. "
Members were also reminded the Micklleport s chool.
Additional money ror the schol·
to start world~ on layettes ror
arshlp
fund ror a Btpdstgirl was
tht~ Women's Conference to be
contributed
and plana were made
held i.n June at Granville. Pro-.
vl.ding layettes i s an annual mis- to send a birthday gift to Vernon
s ion project ror the conference. Brooks, a hc:me mlsslorary, and
to a sllut-in.
DORCAS L"1RCLE
Mra. Kloes opened Olemeetlrv
Meeting at the home of Mrs.
with
devotions using "Keys .. as
Tony Fowler, Dorcas Circle
members discus sed needs of the her theme. The love gift. dediMeigs County ChiJdren's Home cation was by Mrs. Frances
ard decided on a shower of tow- Bearhs. The hostess served retreshments.
els and wash cloths. The items
are to be taken to church Sunttay
ELECT A CIRCLE
morrti~
Dr.
and
Mrs. Frank Curry and
It was decided that the nen
their
daughter,
Patricia, serving
meetlfl8 will be held at the home
aa
missionaries
in lndil, wUI be
of Mrs. Arlan Ki118, ah:l that Mrs.
sent
birthday
gifts by the Elertll
Milton Hood will present de~
Circle.
tions for the Sanborn Society in
Mrs. Willis Althony, chairMarch. Thanks were extended to
man,
presided at the meeting at
the class by Mrs. Grace Hysell
the
home
ot Mrs. Harold Chase.
Cor birthday and hoUda.y rememMrs.
Anthony
read "Heroiam••
brances.
The program teatured a skit an:l Mrs. Charles Edwards gave
entitled "Lire to the Word." The devotions entitled "The Open
costumed parts were taken by Door. " The love gift dedication
Mrs. Charle s Simons, Mrs. was by Mra. Paul Smart.
Mrs. Ted Riley, Jr.,presented
Bert BotUmer aJXI Mrs. Fowler.
Mrs. John McNeil opened the the program prepared by Mrs.
meeting with scripture, medita-- Charles Bennett. "Plus or Min.
tion and a prayer. The love gift us" was the topic. A salad course
dedication was given by M r s. was served to the 16 members
aiXI one guest, Barbara Anthony.
Charles White.

1.00

Make Elber~-'elds In Pomerov
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Your Shopping Center!

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vocal diet by Mrl!l, Harry Clark
and Mrs. Gerald Pullins, and a
solo by tbe Rev. William Airsoo.
Mrs. Raymond Cole gave a
report of the recent "Trieeting of
the Meigs County Council of Par.
ents and Teachers. The sixth
grade wm the attendance bamer.
Refreshments were served by

Morris, and Mrs. Harry Swa:rU .
Past presidents ol both the
"Ideal Scrapbooks" were preBedford and the Salisbury P.T.A. sented to each ol the ps.st presi·
units were hcmored during the dents attencHng by Mrs. Ken·
program presented by Mrs. Ed. nedy•
ward Keme$. Present Cor tile
Included on the program was
meeting were Mrs. Maxine Arn- a talk by Mrs. Homer Holter who Mrs. Geoltrey WU son and Mrs.
old, Mrs. Hugll Bearhs, Mrs.. also showed slides taken on her Kennedy, fourth grade mothers.
Opha Octutt, Mrs. James wm. trip last summer to the llol}o
The blue and gold P.T.A. col.
Mrs, Wllilam Ohllopr, all o1 Land and Eur"'O*
ore wer&amp; c:.rrled out in tbe table
the Salisbury unit; ond Mrs. VlrThe Rag ceremony by Junior decoraUons. A cake decorated in
1111 King, Mrs. Roland Eastman, Girl Scout 'C'roop 100 apened the blue and white was served with
and Mri. Doyle Sargent, past meeting. The Rev. Eugene GUI )lUnch ond coffee. Gold napklno
presidents of the tormer Bed· led
and
a were used.
ford unit.
Not present for the observ.
ance were Mrs. WOllam Bar~
tela. Mrs. George starcber, Mrs.
I
Mrs.

Bad-

FRIDAY
FOOD SALE~ Frida¥, beginning 10 L m. at Cross Store,
Raclnei homemade vegetable
am noodle swp, baked goods;
opcmsored by Letart Folio Methodlat wscs.
TIDRD FRIDAY Club, Friday,
7:30 p.m. at the borne of Mrs,
Mabel W ol te.
SATURDAY
GEORGE WASIDNGTON Birthday - r Saturday beglnnl~

4:3Cl p.m. at Syracuae Elemen..
tary School, aponsored by Ladies
Auxiliary, Syracuse Fire Depart-

ment.
UIGH SCHOOL DANCE Part,y,

Melgo Junior High
·School auditorium In PM'Ieroy,
8 to II p.m. The Jays wlli emcee. 0pe_!l to the public.
CHD.I SUPPER, belllnnlng 4
p.m. sarun~oy 1n Ma._ .c buDdIDg at Cheoter oponsoredby Chester Youth Orplllzatlon.
Slblrday,

SUNDAY

NATIVITY DEANERY, Catholie Women's Club, quarter)J
meetl~ a1 s~
Parish
In Nelooovllle, 2 p.m. Sunday.
MONDAY
TENT 95, Daughters ot Union
Veterans, 7:30 p. m. ~at
D. A. V. Hall

Andre"•

TRAINED AS GUERRILLA
Arillj' Private
Robert M. NeweU, 23, soo or
Mrs. Aha M. Newell, Reule 1,
eOIJt)leted nine weeks of. advanced l'*'lry training Jan. Z4 It
Ft. Polk, La., lllo laat week In
guerrilla warfare exerciees.
CIIESIURE -

THE

MEIGS IIIEA TIE

FABRIC

TONIGHT, FEBRUARY 20

SHOP

ZIG-lAG
IIWINQ MACHINE
WiTHCAIEI

992-2214
11$.W. SECOND
.· 'fOIEROY

--------·

'JbltQJIIIMMfMMbutlonholll, . . . .

.................... I lull. . . . . . . . - -

NOT OPEN
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
FEBRUARY 21 - 22

"'WILL PENNY"

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FLOO~
• GENERAL ELECTRIC LIGHT BULBS IN THE HOUSEWARES DEPT.
• NEW SHIPMENT OF WAGNER MAGNALITE COOKWARE IN THE
HOUSEWARES DEPT.
SALE OF STEREO RECORD ALBUMS FOR $1.29 IN THE MUSIC

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VALLEY FORGE, PA - GEN. HAROLD K. JOHNSON, a ourYl\'111" ot the llotaia "DoolltMaro:b"o!WorldWar D ond former Arillj'
dlle! or llalr, wu llll!ed lllo rec!jllont Friday of F r - Fwndatioa'a hi8heot lloaor.
Jdl.n:ac:m, 57, a retired tour-stu general, will recehe the George
Wtobii!IIIOO Award and 1 $5,000 ehoek S&amp;turda,y at Volley Forp Mil-

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PL., durillg a ceremOQY hl"ld annually on

Burs
SWEATERS ValuaiD $7.t5

Voluu to$14.95

SWEATERS

'

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1 Lot Lodl01

COATS
1 Lot L0 dloo

Jl(UTS

Yo1uoo to $25

sa.oo
ss.oo·

Thls c:olumn wlllbeoneofthoae
dllllng with several activities in
tho Meigs ioeel School Dlatrl&lt;~
Our tnserviee meetlrwa today
- t h e atldents a little tbneofl
thia atlernooJL Meedrwa were
conduded onphllo&amp;OPh1"reviaJ.on,
pupU behaviorarxtdiacl»llne, rec:J..
eraJ program!l for the future,
readi!W In !irodeo 1~. ond pr""
posed revlsl0111 In the high achool
curriculum. We tee1 that the ~
ue ot such st\I'J.y conunltttea ta
greot and quire II0!1h the little
lel&lt;hltV time lllot Ia loa~

s2o
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BIJILOING PROGRESS
The tempo of
at
the high o&lt;hool lias pleked ..,
notJ""'bly during the laat
Two large pours olcqncretehave
been made. 1llelnotallatlooollbe
buD~ tool m U, ...Oemle
wll8 hal otartld ond II IIIOVIIIB
ollq at a sood pace. H~
ductl ore beltV plac-.od In ~
lower leve!o. ~ h!&gt; bo,n oil
111o ml4dlo I:Of'tlotl,ot tho

&lt;OIIItrllctlon

"'"lt.

sa.oo

S1.08

·"' w

1'188 10)

trw construction. It Ia Iaraer in
actuallt;)' than it seemed to be on
poper. I think yoo will lind thl&amp;
io be true when you see It al10.
Tho reglotrallc!&gt; or
Cor hi&amp;fl schooJ courua nextJMI'
is beiqr campleted. We realize
that it JD1¥ be necessary to make
aome c:h~Dges after lttdenta
leorn tlielr rracles for the n&lt;Ontl
semester but we have to pq;h
ahead with thla now.
'Jbere will also be aorDe poaolble revlsloo clue to It!)' eurrleular ..,..,., but the)' wlllllo ot
, a atoel'll Mturo. We do IIOed to
...,_ t11o llolle lnl1111111tlon that
l'tllaritlon produce&amp;. '11111 tallo
us ·I!DW inaiU' •-1111 wlllllo Ilktr• .."l.t COlli' BtL Fnm 1hla we
....,.... ~ lni!IY ·elaiiOiwlll
be needed aid who will teaeh
tllon. I truot that, II 7t1t ha'" a
hl&amp;lloehool otudeal, he or obe hao
· dl10t11Md fub!re plana with :rcML
II IIIIa haa not liken plaoo yet,
7'"' oertalaly ,ohould dlscu11 It

·-nto

tho )illifora; ipidl/ll .ar&lt;hlte~ ~~lft!\JOII' t!lo . . - illlllho
"'' will tr7 lo .... J!I!IIIifW"il'ad. t
ai'Wf ml I ..........

• ·' thowbM4&gt;.loolillwiilill!•lluM- •ta••ln ·bothottheiurllllilliao.

''

Committee to
Appoint New

Meigs Coroner

In OhiD.

"· liiiJilotrati.W'·clmeoa '!"!Jio,if&gt;. ,we ha'" )loci~• ......,...In
....... .-Aro~l,~"'*"~·~ · !lie Jualor J!lcli oolloOIIhli - ·
, ule'h ...~ "'!W.•·~ by Ttllt-l!tli ~\l¥tf~leiill,..tood .

Re1. $1.50 SJ.08 pr.

lnvttatlon to last night's meettog to dlseuas how schOOl work

the committee was a letter the

.......-

......... ._..u-1 .......
C&lt;louiiJ -wblda hal
- M =I· "
elation.
lr 8
ond whleh tile - -

wortiG'
The .or. -- . ,· ldJoar'lool . . . .
.an•Jed Jdnt a.t "All dtlzrn

I ""' pointed out that - .

aeveraJ prlneipals were called
to attendtheyindlcated they would
do 10.
It was Oeeided by Lhe group
to hOld the omct citizens meeting in the bend area or the coun.
()' and the next Jn the lower

mull - k togotiiOC ,.. till ....
. - o1 countr
Sehools, n iiDd ~ •au. crt,.
111 we ore ll8hllnl-la-.
than the Ol'le we Jult e a m •
through.•·

lnere&amp;llnc ...._ . . _ . .
qui. . . . oold
Ill
low30o.~e..... temperature chen&amp;e; cblnee ~
occasioorU rabt in tbe welt JOTlion late In
day.

tile

TEN CENTS.

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1969

of Regents, an:l police braced
By United Prell bternatioml
tbree tllousaPd demonstra- ror possible further violence.
Reagan earller 1 n c e n s e d
UJrs, many ehantiJV "We want
Relpn • . • get 'em. • • kill studeri. radicals and nonstudent
'em." ran wild at the University members ot Berkeley's tuppie
ot California's Berkeley campus community by declarifw the
Thursday, overturniftl pollee campus in a stale ot "extreme
National Guard
vans, stoning law omcers and emergency. "
hurling back tear gas cannis~rs troops were rq,ortec:l ready to
police threw to disperse thbl. move on campus at Reagan's
Gov. Ronald Reagan was to order.
Thursday.
in Sacramento,
arrha· today for the second·' aNI'
coneluding sessiOn ot the Reagan de clared 01 we're up
University of Cllifornia Board against guerrilla wartare" and
coowlalned the unl""ralt;y hod

The Meigs County Republican
Exeeutlve &lt;OIIIIIIIttee will meet
Friday, Feb. 28 to Cllllsider the
awoJntment of a successor to
fill the unexpired term of late
Coroner Henry Ewing, Chair.
man Leslie Fultz said Thurs-

. ,, ' bl!lldl• · - tho llil!b¥ ~... ..... :.

SOCIS

ci,pala were issued a spedal

Another point brooolll out by

not llll.tehed state autllorl.ttes in

eopq wltb the disorder.
Ellmhw.te Them
.. When you're engaged in
guerrUla warfare, you eliminate
them by firing the faculty
invblved
and e xp e Ill ng
students," Reagan said. He
authorized unlimited uae of the
state Highwa.y Patrol.
The uproar was the moat
vi~ent
since a cOIJition of
minority students declared a
strike on the 2B.O()()..student
campus a morth ago. The

demonstrators screamed tor
Reagan, smashed wlrxlows with
rocks and shouted obscenities at
University Hall, where the
regents were meeting.
A canister ot tear gas,
authorities said, was thrown at
police. Police retaliated with a
lll¥Je barrage ot tear gas. The
demonstrators tossed back the
canisters, overturned two pl.dcbwagons and pelted the pursuilll:

otncera with rocks. bottles and

eana.

11J GEORGE HARGRAVES, S!GJ~ I am &lt;0111tantly BUl]lrloed by Its or 1..- llll' grlqllng is that It don't get much publicii;Y but this
Meigs Local School Dittric:t
actual sin 11 it takes torm dur- provides an oplt(Jrtulit)&gt; to more pr&lt;JKI'am Ia one oc the most im-

Sllort Shirts
Mtns

wUneJsed."'

High School Construction Quickens

BLOUSES

llot

$4 00
$ OO
5

Ivy Laague
Pormonont p,.n, Vol, to $9.00

LEVIS RtJ.$4.98
1 Group Mens

$27.50

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~ ddzena? Thil was at¥)ther
en .mple ol ignoring the ei.Uzeoa
and the rehiring ol &amp;nlth ""'
the bfge.st railroad I bave ever

Speaking of Schools--No. 79

S4.00

WHITE SHIRT$ ~15.~ 50
1 Group lteias Maraua
Rea. $3.50

1 Group Colored

(Contlllled on

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drtvera - with the committee
ll,)'ing aU letters or eriUdam
were welcome.
II hu been announced prior
to the meeting that school prln.

lngnoattendontothewllheo

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

JERUSALEM - A POWERFUL EXPLOSION WENT oil In the
meat BeCtion or a jammed saprmarket in dmnrtcJrtn Jerusalem iod~J, kllliJW two persons and inJUI"ina another 2G. Most~ the euualttea were women. Four Ullited Nationa omcerrr~ were injured.
Police also tound a lxmb oear the Britiah COD!ulate in another
sectlco of the elty, but IJWll&amp;8ll to place It In a vac:ant lot before It day.
eJPloded harmlessly. Police declined to speculate oa who planted
b: wu not disclosed who will
tbe bcnbs. Tbey eame just three da7• abr Arab terrorists shot ~ be the applicant or appUcants tor
Ul Jaraell El Al jetUDer at Zurich. Switzerlud.
tbe office held by the late Mr.
·---1 ,A· •
Ewing lor a period ol almost
Maulve eWdenoe of llo .....,. ONen.IIW
35 yOIJ"s until hlo death last MooSAIGON - .'nil!: V. S. COMNANDEII
"' IN vumiAII, Gl&amp; cre~a~&gt;- day o!ternoon.
tan W. Abrams, said today there was umasaive evldeoce" that the
A provision ot the law re ..
Ccarununlsta woUld launeh a new o«enatve. Gen. Abnma said, how- quires that the ol!ice of eoronor, he did not thlnk there would be a ma.Jor attack on Sllgoo, a1- ner be ftlled Ill' a phyolclan. Tho
thou!lh he said the diY mlghl be obelletl.
late Mr. Ewing was one ol tl&gt;e
"There is mauive evidence that there wW be an olfeDilve, lalt tbreenon-iJb1alclancoroaera

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$ 00

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AJI)le Grove dU.Zen ln favor elf
!llpl. &amp;nltb ond berotlng tbe bus

coiled · - to speak, there ...
mt me in ihe audlw.w. One oorn.mlttee rnember stated, ·~
eondemn the pr1nclpa.la, rw Clll
read between the linea, thtr:f were
atnld to .attend. ..

Deooled To 1M lntere.t. Of'lM Meigo-MOMJII Area

FLAG PRI!SI!NTED - Mrs. Gonld Wildermuth, rltllt. Ill
behalf or P0010roy Drew Webster Post No. 39 Auxiliary, prelonted 1 new !lag to Senior Girl Seort Tr&lt;q&gt; No. 198 thls
wMk. Left to right are Mre. Frank Power&amp;, trot:v leederi
Carel Hargraves, Becky Triplett, Debbie Hunnell, Ju:ly McKrqlrt, Mal")' POII"IOII, Debbie Lalley ond Mrs. Wildermuth.
- Sentinel Photo.

AU these values •••

Yaluoo to $5.95

A letter wu read trom one

Nell~ol ..... ....

lllo _ o r .... ,

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Two lciUed in downtDUln }erUMJlem

llot

ble would occur - Wb7 waa
&amp;Jpt. &amp;nlth rehlrotl at t h a t
meetlne ond then the . - . , . abruptly adjourned, the boar&lt;! PO.Y-

to-

However, whellllrinclpllt were

Mount Opposition
To Gov. Reagan

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WMn albd If the drivers bad
theN rules before, one driver
utiWered, 11 never."

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be

made up.

Berkeley Demonstrators 1 ·ear Up
Police Vans, Stone Law Officers

MIDDLEPORT

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out n!lol ot - r to live

made them think there wa1 11!11)inj: &amp;u l:oi trooble7 The cttt::~~
ettendiDI had 00 lnk11ncthat trou-

m!a.sed cl1rin&amp; ltrlke waa to

tad.,.. ......

VOL XXI , NO. 212

CLOTHIERS

Val. to $19.95

.-..too

but drlvera 1w:1 received since
_ . , _ ot the otrlke, -

the lut bolrd
-olllelaii'IWbat

Weather

Waahlrwton'• birthday.

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Elberfelds In Pomeroy

l La11e Group Popular Brand

15c

Tho . - . , . wao "'JJOIIOl with
a pra,rer by Bob AUbright, mem·
ber "'the &lt;OIIIIIIIttee and the ....
lion waa prealc:led mer by Ray
Thornton. chairman. A report
or. the financial committee was
given and donatbl1 were received to heJp defray expenses.

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pEP~~TME~lJ~-~E~-~-~~~~----------------- 1
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BE THRifTY!
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II SAVE ALL OF YOUR SALESLIPS FROM II

lLAOTNCOTRSDUROYVolu01 to $9.00
P
Sizes 29 to AI

pr.

ae~Ushed.

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DRESS HATS Voluo• to $15.95

Vol~•• to

tem. A dlKUnlon WIIB held on
the variOUI way&amp; th11 C!OU.Id be

The poorelt people In t h e
world are the Plntllal, diiCOY·
ered In 1957 Uvlng In the northern Territory ~ Australia with·
out any lnrorile and subsisting
oa water rrom eump hole. and
eating rata.

itary Academy, Wayne,

DRESS SOCIS

-····- .,

lllo - - ond 1--rd
!h:lbe, Pt. Pl:e~..S, waa elected at another member to t h e
committee to inture ftve mem ber• pniOIII at Ill tlmea.
Ed Grime&amp; aid, (you) "think
we're ftlek with tJda adm1nlatraUon (aehool) for lour yeoro,
but we're not - we have tldna•
we can go to eou.rt with OOii, but
can't be revealed at tbia meet.
inll be&lt;auoo we 110Uld be l!lrlng
out our ammuntdOD,"
Crimea 1Jent oa to alk, ·~
were lllo state ond CIIY pollee

polltlea" In the sehool IJI-

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1 LOT - STETSON &amp; CHAMPS

(Technlc:oi&lt;H")

lllarlton HeltOt!-J,.nU.cl&lt;ott
"ARIZONA BVSHWACKERS''
ITecllnlc:olor)
Howard Keei-Y....,.DeCorlo
SHOW STARTS 7 P. M.

·~

Now You Know

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1 LOT MENS

1 Laree Group
PANTS

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One point ltreloed by t h e
«NNII1ll.ttee ... the UeJ.e&amp;ldng up

members - of Intimidation by the
board, ol school prlnclpolo stay.

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JACKETS

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Mrt. Am McCoJ ot. C r a b
Creok woo named ..........,. o!

u.. mo.-tlng.

m

DRESSES
• SPECIAL PURCHASE AND SALE OF WOMENS LANSING SWEATERS - •
SALE OF MENS AND BOYS COATS AND JACKETS
I
• r.tENS BIG YANK UNIFORMS AT SALE PRICES
I
GLIDDEN PAINT SALE IN THE HOUSEWARES DEPARTMENT
• CUSTOM MADE DRAPERY SALE ON THE 2ND FLOOR
I
SALE OF ROOM SIZE RUGS ON THE 2ND FLOOR
SEE THE NEW SPRING LINE OF BUSTER BROWN WEAR FOR TOTS,
BOYS AND GIRLS ON THE MAIN FLOOR.
1
·THE SPRING LINE OF KAYSER GLOVES ON THE MAIN FLOOR
• BOW-AGE AND KATE GREENAWAY DRESSES FOR GIRLS. ALL
1·
SIZES. TERRIFIC SELECTION
1
• ANOTHER SHIPMENT OF KIMBALL PIANOS ON SALE IN THE MUSIC
DEPARTMENT
1
• SALE OF METAL KITCHEN CABINETS AND WARDROBES ON THE I
2ND FLOOR
I
ANOTHER BIG SHIPMENT OF MAGIC CHEF GAS DRYERS AND
ELECTRIC RANGES
• SALE OF 5, 7 AND 9 PC. DINETTE SETS ON THE 2ND AND 3RD
:

I
I

eauae at rear, were IOUIIded

may be more trqlle than 1 o m e
lh!nk.
Tltl1 beeame apparent 'Illlrsday n1111t 1n the or
the Ma1011 Cowey courthouaeata
meeting ollllo Ma.... Coou11J Citiz en~
('~..rnfttN A ~ltv
crowd attalded.
Hints of threat• to come
by the board to lU drlvera, and
by the committee to the board

JJ·
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1r--------------- -------------------··-·-·----··········-~.

~;ou;u::::::::::::

-~--

inll awo,y lro!n the moetlnl be-

Board and ttl tehool tua dri\l"ere

I=
~-

---------------------------------------• THIS WEEK END IE ARE HAVING OUR SPRING SALE OF WOIIENS

I1

I
Salisbury PTA Past Presidents Recognized 1
Recognitioo ol past presidents ford, Mrs. Glen Ta,ylor, Mrs.
ldgbllgbted the Theoda&gt; night Vern WeD, Mrs. HUber Qdvey,
Founder's Da.y observance of Mrs. George Carper, Mn. G1y

WALTmiS
PI". PLEASANT - The peaee
between iho lliuun Cwnio SWool
BY MAXINE

:

WEARING APPAREL FOR YOUR FAMILY AND FURNISHINGS FOR
YOUR HOME . OPEN BOTH FRIDAY AND SATURDAY NIGHTS UNTIL
9. USE OUR FREE PARKING LOT ACROSS FROM THE 2ND STREET
ENTRANCE .

l

IN CHARLEsTON
NEW HAVEN - Mro. David
Fields, Jr. , State Secretary Cor
the West Virginia Woman's Mia·
sionary Society, attended an executive committee meeting at the
Main Street Church of God tn
Charleston.

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··-·-

Citizens Committee Hints of More School Controvm:sy

Ii------------------------~~--------1
,
I
•

1be Trlnll7 Ullltod Churdo

The eandleUibt breUfaat -..s
sened at &amp;lbles cxwered with
white dolhll ond - e d
with Cl'OSIH IW'rounded by fern
and Oowers,
CbalrmU ol the ,pet hour oiJ.
tenanc:e wu Mrs. B1ll Perrin.
II bepn with I mocllo,y or recorded Clllet musJc by Mrs. Ben
Neutzllng. Welcome was exteftd..
ed too Mrs. Mary Kautz, (Oilld
president, and the aerlpture was
reed relip)Dsively. Mrs. Perrin
had the eall to WOrlhip preceding a prayer in unl1011., mdgr'(q)
singing ol. "Beneath the Cross o1.
Jesus." Scripture read by Mrs.
Kautz was Luke Z3, 32-43.
"Lord Remember Me"' was
the meditaUon topic by Mrs. Perrin. Using the scene ot. the erosa
as the baala for her commerts.
Mrs. Perrin pointed to the two
thieves, the me with an aware·
ness o( hiS Sin, the other BCCUS·
~ Christ, to empbaslze forgiveness for sins. To cmclude
she quoted Christ "Today thou
shalt be with me In paradise...
A recorded vocal selectlon,
'"Were You There When They
Cruclfled My Lord.. by Mra.
Marvin Burt preceded a quiet
time of sUent prlcyer for peace
ln the world and peace of heart at
this Lenten time.

•
Hour~&lt;OflOieoioo.~ :;~ ~

Nra. PerriD cond- wllh Boplllt or llld- Foreot .Run lltjltllt Cllur&lt;h. Foro :
..., prayer from ~ Frtn'"• or dleport, """'- Qlu.reh or eot Run Vllltod ,.._~~~, MJ; ;
Aulll IIIII nod 1 poem '"' Lonl. Chrllt, l'l&gt;morol" Vllltod Molh&lt;&gt;- DOr..Uie Vllltod Metllodlllt onol,
a.trehoo . . . , . . . - w o r e dllt, Pomeroy Boptlll, Grace lllo hoot dlurcb..

;ad QUiet hDbr Wecb!ed!,y mM'ftoo

the Salisbury P.T.A.

Sizes are broken

•J

Mr!-.

.......

~--in!~•
doleo Me!p C&lt;louiiJ &lt;blreh-

aerriqr nfreahmetU carrylne
M the Wa~hlJwl,oa DIY theme
by ber diQefrter, Mra. Kina, Attenr:lina be1lde1 thole oam.ed were
Mra. Beulah White, Mra. Petri
Hotrman, Mra. Nan Divis, ancl
Mro. E. I. Hugheo.

-- - ······· .,._ ... ·-·· -·--· ...

• ••

81 Attend Lenten Breakfast and Quiet

Baptist Circles Meet on Tuesday

·· · ~- ....

'l

..W '~Jfi~l!""'i"",~
lo!!
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•

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,. 0.. IDplt reyoi) !W ~
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nNrlymeettheedu&lt;atlonolneeds
of the atudents lnvol ved. It is our
inte.aion to eondnue this pro-

·-llnl

p-am rext year. We wlll very
lOOft be
to oeleellllo
atudenta who should be In theie
clauea.
Next year's elsJtth grade
claues in these two areas will
be modo .., Jarply ol thOoe 111&gt;dontl who have been In them In
tho IOYOnlh p-atio. There will be
some lddlUons andl 101118 deleUDillt but most wUl corKI~We.
1:- •-nt• whowiUbeln•xt
year's aeveath ,rlldeaecelented
and temedlal ....... will be
oeloclod .., t11o lloolo ot post 1&lt;-

•oowii.......,•IanlardlifedliO•t

ecoree, reslilts of lblllt;J ~ltirw.
ml '-&lt;hor ..-ndtltloil, WI
Willa~ 1o do thlolnlllo1011&lt;11 way poa.W. ml,.. eortalaly do not' wailt ...-o!!ll clio' ' whet
euoainll with our ..,harii
11
dtalr ncam.na 'J' GD WM!~:tf'an
lntlhldual 1tulleiltl.kthl!1olthl.a
ld!d &lt;llllltllfWiy ..:Oal!eli U..'liu•• lor Oluectt• 11!1)~ Your
c_.uto~ 1!1\IMrlf!llllll!lll
-IV-~
Ill 11110 ......
Wo havo ...~ unlla.ot ..,.....
edui:IIIOII ~
IDII!I!'\IIo,
' ' . &gt; '
trld. 'Jbeoo ..- clu.., . 1...

vol'!

Oft~ -~?'~."~~tTbey

.. ~;-

'

·."~.:

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'l'j.

portant ones 'll'e have in operatiOIL The etudenta eDrolled In
these proerams are those "ho
have hid or would have some diffteult;y in the nplar clasaroam.
Special education classes give
them lllo ~IIY to tP"OII lnl
develop at their own rate and to
lind a greater meaaure ol suecell than ttte,. would otherwise.
A ehlld deouveo an _...,.IY

tor hi&amp;Jplaeaa. Without

t:hl.nce
for acme auceeas in1ehoal, there
Is little protlolm fur 111 _ .
IIIIIIY to be ~- Studonll In
U.se claaaea can be aueceutul
alii tho,y Wlllo ~. mony lor
the arat tllne 1n lo!ll
of
eJPiliinc:e in aehaol. I can't
oye.._.,.llae t11o nlue of IIIIa
,....,... ond lllo !te&lt;eniQ&gt; for
ltavlnl It llmctlon e!!eedveb' ml
dovelqJ •• !IOIIIIod. I will kelp
)'CIII loformed I I to tho dlfectlotl
thlo ......,.... wiD llo llldae.
The ealmna has wand8red a
lUIIe bit toldlht IIIIo ......._ arou. It lo my . _ that I ha..
tcuchotl upco 1111110thlrc thai lo
ot l!!lanot .to II then aro
•ublecta thol 7tlt ........ like to
ltavo cllacuoaid In future .,.
ti.M, Jleuo ..U. me U!d 1 will
til,, 8&gt;)' bolt to ....,.;. JOU!' re&amp;

1-•

.....

Real estate taxes, already the subject ol. IIUIDU'OUI ...,.....,...
in Meigs eouncy, DIB.Y take ardher turn lor the worse.
Whether the real estate tu slttatlon woraena will dlpea:l 'IHJII
the outcome ot a public hearirw at 9 a. m. Monla.y, March 24. lD C.

lumbus.
Proposed uneDdmeot.s to real estate tax reguladoaa will lie
alnd. The heorlng will be before the -..! of Taj! ~ Ill till
Ohio Departments bulldiag. Interested _periOU IDitl be beard
n.e ameOOments concern recent decl.aioaa ~ tlw: Ohio
Court whleh has reol!lrmed Iii oorller lmerpnololkl! ol tho Ia -

120 Attend
Father-Son
Banquet
Fathers. sons and "ad&lt;1)ted
sol18"' - 120 in number - dined
Thursday evening at the annual
banqoot of Pomeroy Lodge 164
F&amp;AM, prepared by ladies of
Chlprer 186, O.E. S.
Following dinner, the Oagpresentation was by Ohio Valley Commanr:lery Knights Templar and
Fred Blaettnar, P. M.; the inv~
cation was by Rev. WUbur Perrin,
and Worshipful Master HartweU
Curd welcomed the assembl,y.
Theodore T. Reed. Jr., past
district deputy grand master, in·
traduced Ben Evans or Jackson,
paat grand master of the Grand
Lodge ot Ohio F&amp;AM. who presented 50 year lapel emblems to
Frank ll Johnston and Clarence
Massor, and 25 year lapel pins
to WOllam G. Seyfried, George A.
Meirilart, Benjamin F. Turner,

s..n-...

~
ond-iNUdltVo.must
llo set
~-value."
The ·court may baYe.
the. staie·-··-~~~­
iOr aiaiilt~Ma&amp; "bstanaia
property tax assessments statewide.

The "true value in money" of reel prcperty Ia the uCIU'l'em
market value" of the property involved and is the price at wtdeh
property would change hands on the ~ market between buyer llll
aeUer.
The Board ot ~x Appeals sets a percem.p of the ,.true val•
in money" fi.gure Upon which rhe propertY OWD81' pays tue&amp;.
According to the Ohio Chamber of Commerce, this perceatap
tram county to county has ranged from 29.59 per cent to 44.16 per

cent.
an:l George D. Massar.
Cecil E. Barnes of Akron's
JOppa. Lodge 666 F&amp;AM, entertained the group with color slides
and detalls of Japanese life and
culture, eJI(lerienced as a resident engineer for many years.
The evening conclllied with a

circle of friendship. The pictures
show (top) 25 - year - member
George Massar, left; h.is lather,
50-year.member Llarence Massari SO·year hoooree Frank H.
Johnston, and past grand master
Ben Evans. right. The 25-year
honorees, Benjamin F. Turner.
WU11am G. Seyfried, center, and
George A. Meinhart, right, take
their bows in the smaller picture.

,'M
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•
• .•!•.-.v:•.• ·&gt;. :·:~ ·!:!;..-.;-:•:•:!:•:..:::.:·::::::.:-:•:••.
Dr. Alphus Christensen. President oC Rio
Grande College, said kda;y apparent ~spread reports ot
"tiring&amp;" of one or more professors here because ot pacifist
activities are groundless.
'The reporta, he suggested, grew out ot a report published
a week 880 by the Hlftington Herald Dispatch - retracted the
next lssue- ttw.ta ••political science major" had been suspei'Jd.
ed for certain activities on the occasion of the appearance 10
~~ qo of Marine recruiters at the college.
'Tbe recruiters had me ot their best and biggest da,ys of
business. and there was an orderly exPression ot opinion q,...
posing their activities.'• He added, "11\ere was no trouble,
and no hllitructor or professor has been su59ended."
He further lndJeated the reports may have originated ln
the llll:t that one lllatru&lt;:ll&gt;r hao ..-.nc:ecl his reollftatlon. ond
another Mt been intormed his contract will not be renewed.
"Theae events bid uothl-.w: to do with the recruitment
do,y. Tho,y ~n all the time In all eolleges," he laid.
•

RIO GRANDE -

Residents Make ·Tape
Middleport vlllageollldaltlllll
relldentl near the llfJ'IIf landfill
......, In Salllllucy loWnoblp ..,. Mlddlepon vlllqe wore making lllpeo 101" teleri•
.... 1~1 Frldo,r ll10n!lnjr.
Reaidenta rtH:r the d u m p
whleh woo _...t Jan. I hove
been .......""""' to JIUbll&lt; otfldall the lluDj&gt; ilpan-

Several representatives d. the
Ohio Dep"OI"tmimt ol Health have
vJsited the dump as a result
ol complalnlo. However, It 11
reported thai apparently there
an no Violatlona there. II Ia
reported that buralng Ia .....
mlttod until JWt I ond that some
burninll In cle&amp;l&amp;nalod ..ctl....
1tlli be permitted .... alter July

Meigs County property owners p.,- on a 40 per cent basis o1 the
true value as set by appraisal firms which each six yean - lDier
Ohio law - reappraise real estate in the county.
The board baaed its call for heari('lgll upon indicetloa by the
Stt&gt;reme Court that the percentage should be uniform thr~ 1be
state, whi ch is an extension of the ••wnform rule" dletiQp noted
above.
Proposed rules to be considered pro\'ide for s.everal9«ceatqe points, ranging from a low of 38, to the high of 42. The _pereea&amp;age decided ~ by the Board will be lhe ooo to be In effect tbrou81&gt;out the entire state.
If the board should go for the lower figure, 38 per eent of tbe
real value of real estate, then Meigs Countians would beneJ!t b)' two
per cent. However, should the higher Qgure be adopted, then tuu:
would increase.

MEIGS COUNTY AUDITOR GORDON CALDWEll urges llolp
residents to atteh:l the March 24 hee.rilw an!l voice their ~lnioDs •
the tax percentages.
THE 01-00 CHAMBER OF COMMERCE in a recent taatiCil :r.searcll bulletin asked 1C the Supreme Cwrt in its dedsioas tndlc:~ted
that the &amp;.rd of Tax ,&amp;4:1pe&amp;1s shwld require liUII.Ial rNOPralaala
In every county.
Reappraisals are costly. The recent one C'OI'DPieted iD Melp
County ran to $59,600 Not a paltry sum, to be sure.

Blamed for 3 Wrecks
POINT PLEASANT - T h e
road between the AwaJ.acbian

Power Co. o«tces oo Jefferson
Bldv. and Gallipolis. Ferry
might have been mistaken for a
sector of the Battle oC t l1 e
llllgo Thlrstloy night.
And ohorlfl's deportment til-

ricers have charpd Wa,yne S.
Clark. 47, 1-bmUngton, as cause
"' It ell.
Clark was tahtl into eusto4,v
•t 11 p.m. alter apparently:
Slrlklng a vehlele, while
enroote !lOUth, at the Appeladllan POwer ~ 011 Jotrer..., Blvd. driven ey Gary Wayne
· Atldn:aon, 20 1 Pl. Plea1811t.
- 111tt1na a vohl de at S a I t
Creek CO Rl. Z, a ln!cl&lt; llriY·

w.

"'Gal-

Jer.,.
Brodlo,y
lipolis, Ohio, ......... Ill' Char... Planf8 ot GalllpoUa Ji'ony.
- lllttlnc • ln!cl&lt; - .. by

. . by

ed at $900 to tbe vehlcleslnvolY ... .
ed. Mrs. AtldDaon, a
ln her husband'• ear, eompaq..
ed of a knee bruf.H.
Three &lt;harps ol h l t loclged oplnlt Clork WO!rl .....

pu._...

plemented !v" a !ourlh- llol•r ..
lt or not - of intmdaatlna.

MRS. LAWHEAD JNJVRID
Word has hoeo l'eeohodby Mr.
Alfred Elberfeld that !do 11...:.
IIHI,, Mol")' B. Laflhood. {a
1 patient In Momorlal Hooplt.l
in florida. She Wu tabllthon
aller ou!lle..U. ' !racturod .._
Peraons

wlobllw

ID -

.,.._

do .. io _ . . . lloopJI.
... ArUI!IIIOO ~. .... SOl'-

· - Fiorl4a.

Bu_,v,._

ACCEPTING CONTIIM;'I'S

The

Flrt!Joio

pa..- lo!I&lt;.CIIPUDI_.,_~
1107 N-~ 60, Pt. Plealllt
ai Gelllpolle FO!T)' !there he - - ol u,. dlltlliil
Rutlanl. ..,. ...
tltln. 'l1lo,y ..... - - ViJ,. I.
by a &lt;llllol lliiiVIlM
Middleport •• the only Melp Wll lloi1Ped ond ..... oounl;y ond olllclt!la
Pl"!!eltlria buralna at tbe ntii CouniY &lt;OIIl!tlunlt;J to open ........ grwp of Irate dtitons ond hold .Wo to s,!Onl ~ ~
dlulq! •• well •• other
ol tho aparlllocl.

phaao• !Ill

Aunp ond )Urellaoed land
for that lluDj&gt; last year •

Rood,--

WIW oateer1 arrived.
· ~ damlge ""' eatlmat-

ContoT ID ·Quler, . . . . . - !tun . . _ - _ , .
j
f

�. .. .

... ..

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--· · ~' --

_....

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in the t.:ablnet, clkl nothlll$1: to

I"

Washington
White Paper

BERRfS WORLD

•

n

J

lt)IMI.,. HlA. k

~

"You might have had a best seller 011 your hands-if you
lookrd like Jocqueline Susonn!"

BY WILLIAM S. WHITE
WM;UINGTON President
Nixon and his old rival, Gov.
Nelson Rockefeller or New York,
have now made a mutual accommodation that requires the surrender of neither . If there Is,
in the old saying. still no love
lost between them, tllen at least
there is no anger len.
The President has tendered,
and the Governor has accepted,
an appointment to lead a series
of dlplomatic misslona to Latin
·' merica that will associate
Rockefellt=r with the new Administration, to a point and on an
in-and-out basis, but will stiD
leave him not only a fl'ile agent
politically but also free, ir he
should choose, to speak out against that Admini.stration in the
fulure.
The arran~ement, in short, is
at once a tidy disposition from
Mr . Nixon's point or view or
what many Republicans call "the
Hock.y problem'' and a public
manifestation or Rockefeller's independent status within the He-

NIXon--Rockefeller Acromnwdation Suits

Need&amp; of Both in C-OP PP.Cki.ng Orthr

p.tbllcan part;y,
It la emphaalt;ed by the Rockefeller people that he is n o t
going southward slmpl,y for the
exercise; for what they call only
'"window-dresslng."' It is equally
clear from the Nixon side that
the Q:n&gt;emor's role wtu not be
to undercut tbe regular &amp;ate
Department• s established function ln pollcy-maklng sooth of the

VIETNAM: POT, ROT AND
SUDDEN DEATH
Oear Helen:
.. The jungle smells oC rot and
p...

Overhead, the
shooting's
hot·· - "
There's a guy in my hootch
(that's Vietnamese for Marine
housing unit} who has one ambition. lie's going to write one
thousand poems before he gets
and Mrs. Helen Leifheit had the
rotated or buried. We put 'em
prayer. Thoughts on love were
to music up in the front lines.
given by the members in reHelps to pass the time between
spoose to roll call .
Mrs. J. Edward Foster is \lis- shells and ambushes. Above is
A oorrtribut:i.on was made to iting in Lh•onia, Mich. with her how one of them starts.
the Crowl family in t\!rica ror son and daughler -in.iaw, Mr. and
Since l've been home on leave
their missionary work . Members Mrs. Joe Foster. Slle was ta~en I've heard a lotofargumentabout
signed round - robin card s for there over the weekend by Mr. "pot on the campus." I want to
shut-Ins.
and Mrs. Thorne Cottrill and tell you people over here "smokMrs. Well and Mrs. Robert daughters, Judy, Jill and Joan. ing" will be a lot more wideWoods served refreshments to
Recent guest or Mr. and Mrs . spread when aU the Servicemen
those named and Mrs. Conrad Albert Pettit was their son , Wil - come home, because more than
Ohlinger. Mrs. Osborne receiv - l lam, of Fort Wa.yne, Ind.
half of them where ltle fighting
ed a birthday gift from t;er se Mr. and Mrs. Fred Mesher is nastiest (at least) are heads.
cret pal .
and Mrs. Virginia Myers of Gam- The)" don't get much beer on
bier , Ohio, were recent visitors the front lines, arxl unhappily,
of Mrs. Lydia stewart while in other recreation is somewhat
Pomeroy to see their uncle, Roy limited, so they turn to mariKaspar, a patient at Veterans juana which is cheap ($10 Am~
Memorial Hospital. Mr. Kaspar erican for 300 "J's" - joints),
Is scheduled ror surgery Moo-

Group Elects Mrs. Bowers
President of the EYangeline
Missionary Societ)· of the Pomeroy (.."'hurch of Christ for 1969
ls Mrs. EJwood Bowers.
New officers were elected at
Tuesday night's meeting of the
society held at the church and
presided over by Mrs. Orville
Well, outgoing president.
Otber officers elected were
Mrs. Louis Oaborne, vice president; Mrs. Denver Kappie, secretary-treasurer, and Mrs. Clyde
Andrews, fiower tund.
~votions from I Kings 3, 428, were given b,y Mrs. Osborne

Kin Club is
Entertained
Mrs. Annlce Ohlinger entertained members ot the Kin Oub
at her home in Middleport recently.
Mra. Harry Davis presided
at the business meeting with Mrs.
Ohllnger contriOO.ting to t h e
funcL Gemes were play' !,.;lllh prlfe• . beln&amp; lion . by
1. aye cilfford, Mrs. Ethf'l
Cliflord, and Mrs. Garnet Harbrecht. Mrs. Ellen Thersbach
won the traveling prize given
by Mrs. lAicUle Vaughan.
Mrs. Ohlinger served cherry
delight and coffee. Favors were
washelathswi.th crocheted edges.
Next meeting will be at the home
&lt;J( Mrs. Vaughan. Attending besides those named were Mrs.
Ruth Wippel, Mrs. &amp;asa.'l Warner,
Mra. Florence Windou, and Joyce
Ebersbaeh. Mrs. Ruby Vaughan,
graJKklaughter rA Mrs. Ohlinger, and her dwghter, Beth, were
guests.

HURRY IN···
FOR WASHINGTON'S
BIRTHDAY SHOE
CLEARANCE!

THE SHOE BOX
WHERE SHOES ARE
SENSIBLE PRICED
Middl,eport, 0.

Heart Candy Boxes
Given as Favors

day.

Small boxes o! heart candy
were given as favors for t h e
Valentine party s~.aged by Mrs.
Roscoe Wise, Mrs. Dallas Blevins, Mrs. Everette Grant and
Mrs. Roscoe Fife for the Middleport :hird grade or Mrs. L.
W. McComas.
The
rnothers .,~Jened· ife
cream, deCOr~ cookies, &amp;nd
chocolate milk. The children
were also given caJXbr bars and
Mrs. John Vroman provided a
treat. Mrs. Sally Walters, also
a room mother, contributed to
the part;y .

room

Blue and Gold
Dote Announced
The amual blue and gold banquet ror Middleport Cub Scout
Pack 245 will be held Thursday
at 6 p.m. at the American Legion hall in Middleport.
The planned potluck dinner will
be a family affair. Those attending are aaked to take their own
table service. ~eaker will be
Tom Cassell, scoutmaster of
Troop 245.
Middleport boys interested in
becoming a cub are asked to con.
tact either Norman Yeauger, cubmaster, or John Fultz.Doys must
be either in the third grade or
between Ule ages of eight and 10.

WITCHCRAFT

WON'T
WORK

busines~.

To~e5

For Queen

Announced

Therapy Events

Are Reportecj__

Held in Greenfield
Mr. and Mrs. James R. Titlu1

-~(';~~:~oy11tomas

I CO
8vt WE Will!

Candidates

Joe Stanley is a surgical palient at University Hospital in
Cohunbus. His room number is
613.
Russell Little of the Rulland
Road is confined to Holzer Hospital. He is reportedly improv ing following a heart attack Saturday morning.
Ji!Ur(es Birchfield, 14-n~ar..old
PT. PLEASANT- The Q.leen
son or Mr. and Mrs. Howard Candidates ror the '•Miss SpringBirchfield, is recuperating rrom time" Beauty contest in t h e
chest injuries received while March 20 annual Spring Style
weight lifting at school.
~w have been announced.
Candidates and their sponsors
are Miss Jodi Athey representing Fisher's Department store;
Miss Rh~ __Bailey represent~~ -BlggsDeoarlment~re; Miss
Connie Com~ representing G.
C. Murphy Company; Miss Bren~
Reports oo the m(lllf.hly therada Hartley representing Rardin's
py parties at the Southeastern
~ Center; Miss Nancy TomOhio Mental Health Center, Athlinson representing Heck's; Miss
ens, werl'l given during a meetLois Thmer representing t h e
ing of the ilomebuilders Class
Pitchford House; and Miss Karol the Middleport Church of
en
Null representing 0. J. MorChrist Tuesday night.
rison•s.
Mrs. Norman Yeaugcr, presi The young ladies wt.U be judg.
dent, announced that the next par.
ed on poise, beauty, contklct, and
ry wiJI be held Mar. 11, that the
how tlley answer one question
Loyal Women's Class of t h e
which will be submitted by the
church has donated washcloths,
merchants and the girls will draw
and that Mrs . Carl Roach has givthe questions from a hat. Candien stamped envelopes for each
dates will appear during the show
patient.
Members ortheelasswereask- in casual clothes, a formal and a
swim suit.
ed to contribute toothbrushes and
The style Show will be held in
paste. Wendell Gerlach opened
the meeting with prayer. Her. Ule high school auditorium beginman Kincaid led ln a Bible study ning at 7:30 p.m. Admission is
on the third chapter or Mat- 50 cents Cor adults and 25 cents
for children wbo must be acthew. Refreshments were served by Mr. and Mrs. Kincaid, Mr. companied by a11 adult
Dene Wagner of radio Y t aand Mrs. Lewis Long, and Mr.
tion
WJEH will serve as narraand Mrs. Osby Martin. Jerrrey
tor
and
Miss Judy l.athey the
Nash was a guest.
1968 "Misa springtime" will be·
stow the honors on this year's
{f.leen.

Get-Acquainted Teo

on
your

are tricky

but our yeori ')f ex·
Pt-nenu ha11e provided us
woth ol! the m11gic formulas .
Avo1d loti a nd trouble . let
BLOCK brew "J P your lox re
turn!

TAX
BOTH
flDERAL
AND

s

STATE

!!m

and Mor1.cll,

were honored along
with their daughter • Mrs. Nancy Lynn Karnes, at a get - acquainted tea held &amp;mday at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. William
Karnes, Greenfield,
~c.
E-5 George Gil more
Karnes, husband of the former
Nancy Titus, (lew up from Fort
Berming, Ga. for the affair, returning there lateJ for additional training. AppjoxJmately 100
guests attended the tea.

FINISHING
•

A,..,id't largest T..: Servic• with Over 3000 OHices

304 POMEROY,
EAST OHIO
MAIN
Sot..rday -

a.,.. to 5 p.m.

SAME DAY
SERVICE
In At 9 - Out At 5

lto•l•son's
Cleaners
216 r. 2oul. ,._.-.y
90 Mill St.

lchll• ort

bridge their _profound ditfr-renccs. It only tllrther rubbed Utem
up, and to each man's Josa.
Mr. NlxCIII hu avoided setting
up the condltlona ol a atrnUar
dillleult¥, and II I&gt; ..,Ito likely
tnlt Doth he .and Hoekefeiier Wiii
be the better oft' Cor it In the
end. There l1, moreover, another and an Important aspect
to this buliness.
Rockefeller's missions w II I
give him a certain added stature 1n the G.O.P. at the expense
ot his special rival, Mayor John
Llnd18J ot New York Cit,)'. It
io public notice that fhoulh the
Go\'emor is not Indeed on ''the
team" 1n Washington, he hal at
all events a place ol prestige
not too far removed from it.

WILL MANAGE
OAKLAND, Calif, (UP0- Roy
Sievers, who hit 293 homers
during a 15-year major league
career, will manage t.he Burlington (IoWa) farm club or the
Oakland A's in the Class A
Midwest League this year.

Rio Grande.
What It all means in the end
Ia that a pact ol mutual coexiatence, or live and let live. has
been 10 drawn up between Rich~
ard Nixon and Nel11011 Rockefeller aa not to bind eithar to a per~
manent ot'tlelal relatlonahip and
as to reflect ooiy a quite temp:n-a.ry poUdcal auocl.a.tion.
The wa,y It has all been done Ia

available, and the brass loOks
the other way, maybe because
they smoke, too.
A low estimate is that 65 percent of some units blow "J's"
regularly. Why not? The Cong
live oo the stuff, and it's easier
to fight 'em when you're high
too. Ir you need a blg shot or
courage, drlnk a certain brard
of spot remover and blow poL
Maybe that's what Charlie does
before a big ortensive. You go
wild, It takes ten guys to hold
these "a~r-heads" down. \'ou
forgel about being scared. I don't
know what it does to your body,
but personally I wouldn't recr- m~
merd it.
Some of the guys say they'll
quit marijuana when they come
back to the States, OOt I bet a lot
of them keep on, and that means
trouble, because the} '11 get busted at home. Afew are so psychedout they probably can't quit.
By lhe time you print this.
Helen, I'll be back in De Nang,
and maybe ru have had my head
blown orr in the big Tet orrensi ve Charlie pulls every year.
Know why halt or us may not sur~
vive thls bloody surge. Helen'?
.Because the Cong hop '-" on
drugs for about a week berorehand, and then nothing &lt;:an stop
them - not even bullets.
U marijuana makes risking
death a little easier, Servicemen figure, "Why not'?" but what
happens when they bring lhe habit
horne with them'? - HEADED
BACK
Dear Headed Back:
I wish I couldanswerthatqueslion. r checkedyourletteragainst
the reports ot several other
'Nam veterans. II appears fright~
eningly true.
Nol only do Servicemen return
home with a tasle for pot, but
they're bringing back strains of
venereal diseases which are resis tam to treatment. Anyway you
figure, It's a miserable, dirty(
nasty, horrifying and perhaps
useless war! _ H.
This column is dedicated to
family living, so if you're having
kid trouble or just plain trouble,
Jet Helen Help YOU! She will
also welcome your own amualng
experiences. Address Helen Bottel in care or this newspaper.

SONGF EST ANNOUNCED
POINT PLEASANT - A gos.
pel songlest will be held 8mday,
Feb. 23, at the Chureh of Christ
in Christian Union located at
206 Main Street with the H e v.
James E. Slaughter pastor. Featured singers will be the Baaaa
fo"amily and the Tingler Family
0( Portsmouth, 0., the Roush

both an illuJtratkln of the PreJ..
Jdent•a undeniable professional
political sldll and ol Rockeleller'a clear Intention not to be
perSODal.l,y submerged as onl,y
another member ol. '"tile team.'•
Conalderlng the long unealline88
ol. relaUona between Richard Nixon and Nel1011 Rockefeller - it
oot. in fact, at Umea the existence ot somethhlg little short
ot a "feud" - "tile dea1 makes a
good seal of sense.
NotwtthstarKling much excited
speculaUon to the contrary. Mr.
Nlxon ne\ler really meant Rockefeller to be in his Cabinet and
Rockefeller never really meant
to be there, though he mQ ror

a time have been vquely and haJrattraeted to Ute proapecL
To be a Presldendal emissary
on special auignment II on e
thing; to be a Presidefttlal
dante ol the intimacy ot Cabinet status 11 quite another. What
the President has done Pout the
problem is to solve It obliquely, whereas President John F.
Kennedy, racing a •lmllar dilemma with his own old rival,
the late Adlai bvenson, soo.ght
to meet it more nearly frontally and found cause for regret.
Mr. Kennedy told this columftlst ln private, before and atter his nomlnation in 1960, tllat
he would never appoint stevenlOll to his Cabinet; and thJs he
never did. Mr. Kermedy d I d
feel, however, that Si.P"t:.laon
muat have a place bot:h or permanence and ot high p.~blic vial~
blllty, and the upshot was his selection to be head or the United
~tes Mission to the United Na-

conn.

Slow.

The Meigs Marauders, certain
underdogs In the et.aa A Sec-

•••••••••••••••
:
When You
:
:
•

:
•
:

Want To E1press
Sympathy
Let Flowers
Do It For
You . . . .

:
•
:
•
:

: Dudley's Flerlst :

!•

....

By United Preu lntertatlontl
E08t
w L PeL GB
BaJtinwre •. , 47 17 .734
Philadelphia 41 21 .661 5
New York .... 44 23.657 ~ ,
Boston ••••• 37 25 .597 9
Cindrmatl .... 34 31 .523 131 ~
Detroit , ..... 26 40 .396 22
Milwaukee, .. 19 45 .297 28
West
WLPctGB
Loa ~eles . . 43 22 . 662
Atlantl • . ..• 41 27 . 601 31-t':
san Fran. •••. 32 34 .48&amp; 11.~
San Diego ••• • 27 37 .419 15'~
ChlciOO ••... 25 40 .385 18
Seattle ..... 24 42.364 19'h
Phoenix •••. 14 50 • 219 21!1h
Thursday's Results
san Fran. 128 San Diego 118
Atlanta 97 Detroit 87
Baltimore 134 Phoenix 121
Only games scheduled.

•
•••••••••••••••

tions.
Mr. and Mrs. George Hackett, Sr. are home from a several weeks' vacat1011. atFL M,yer,
Fla. with their son and daughterin-law, Mr. and Mrs. Michael
Hacketl, and lamlly.
Mr. and Mrs. Romie Walburn
of Riverdale, Md. were recent
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond
Walburn, Also spending a week
here recently with the Raymond
Walbums were their daughter,
Mrs. David (Mary) Taylor, and
daughter Crystal Dawn of Canton. Mrs. Walbum vlsited several days this pa.at week in Beverly with another son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Dennis
Walburn and children.
Diane and Nancy Hickeraon or
Marietta are hilre visiting Mr.
and Mrs. Wendell Gerlach and
family. Their parents, Mr, and
Mrs. Slerman Hickerson, wlil
come &amp;mday for the girl a.
Recent visitors of Miss Bess
Sanborn and Mrs. Mabel Sanborn were the latter's son and
daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
Jerry Barry, and Mr. and Mra.
Fred Cain and daughter, all of

t

It was Cor President Kerutedy a persistently unhappy choice.

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

:

ffifj)ffi
SCORES

For he and Sevensa,t oould
er humanly mesh, and the

~;:~~:~;r~~.::~~e~~::l

bassador,
Ueat ol skepticism toward
ol the KeMedy foreign • policy
deilsiona.
As was the ease within t h
Rep.~bllcan party between Mr.
Nixon and Governor Rockefeller,
Stevenaoo and John Kenned:nve,re
simply Inevitable adwersaries,
both Ideologically and persooal-1
J.y. President Kenn~Mb-' s deelsl011.
to bring .!levenam actually
his Adm.lniatraUon, even it not

I
Hunt
No Further

THE DAILY SENTINEL

You'll bag
real bargains
in the I ant Ads

DEV011:D TO lN l'EREn OF
MDG"-NUON AREA
IIJCitAIIOS. OWEN, "-!BUiltii!:R
~hest«

1"uMidll, F..dilor

hill IliNd di•IJ IICepl S.~~TheOhlo
c...,.,.n,r, IIU IHdaftlo St.,
P&lt;~mertlj-, Ohl&lt;&gt;, 15719. Bu~lneu Oflk• I " VAlle~ ..,..1 ~1.,.

99:WU6, t:&lt;llt&lt;&gt;rll.l Phl&gt;l&gt;l '.KI2-21S7.
~rood &lt;~••• pe•lqe Jllidld r .....I"D)', Ohio.
!';oUoral 111 .. r11o11111 J"\"l)re-U"" lkltllo&gt;IIII-Giolllllfler. lno., l! ~Cloor Ull Sl., New Y&lt;lrl
Clcy, Nett ~ork.

Froa • cat to • ho~e, the
beat b11ya are alway• (ound
in cl .. aified.

Sllloocrlptm ra111o: Oeli-...NNL b)' oarrl•r

........... lJaWe 45 AIII.IJIIf IIMk; 0011 J ...r I•
adw""* •• LI-e Dl.lb !&gt;•ntl,.l otnre, IPJ.to. Sh
"'"""'"· 111.7U. Tbr• monuu, ~.11$. 14' M&lt;tor
llololll llilerl Cllrf ... ...-vi .. ••U.W.r 0.,.
_ . , ILIO. ._. -.u: Oroo r-s .n.oo Slo
llllllllha
TllrM __., M.OO.!IIAonrlptlaa
llldllla ~ Ttoan.&amp;nd...

Mr. and Mrs. Thurman Car~
sey and ramily of Brad;)ury were
!imday guests of tds mother,
Mrs. Ruth Carsey, and Mr. and
Mrs. Walter Grass ot Waverly.
Mro. Oa!oy ·131ng io X'P!~
ly improving although she re-.
mains a _patient at Meigs General Hospital.
Min Ka.y Ault In nurses trainIng at Marietta, spent the weekend here with her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. WIUiam Ault.
Mrs. Robert Duckworth under~
went surgery Tuesda,y at Holzer
... Hospital.
Mrs. Ph.Yllta lhd1a.ll, employed at Jack's Dairy Bar, Middleport, is confined to her home
with the Ou.
S.Sgt. Edward McComas, called home by the death or his
grandmother, Mrs. J. E. MeComas, left from California
1bursda)' for his base at Oldnawa. Since leavina here Sgt.
McComas has been in Crete,
Neb. with his wife and children.

WIUT IS EASY
EASY IS THE "WOW"
BIG 16 LB. CAPACITY WASHER &amp; "DRYER.
COMPLETE FLEXIBILITY WITH LIFETIME
SERVICEABILITY!

.,

.. •;·•;

EASY

GOLDEN GUARANTBI
10 YEAII Jl'IIINIII• pllln
on 1111 hii'J dtdJ bllnom111r..
Now &amp;ly Offen "thl Cl'!ilrt~l pwcl ElF'

a.

• run 1o.year

protection p1on .,
tnnsmlssion of the 1utomltic mtr..
E.., will replacennoml~mporto"­
a.t .. retut110d 111 a. outtoorllocl

dlol11 or dlllrlllulcw ond lotold 1M In -111..- __ ..,..,..

By United Press International
East
W
L Pet. GB
Miami • . . 30 25 .545
~lmesota • . 30 27 . 526 1
1oolora ••••• 31 30 .508 2
Kentuclcy •••• 27 27 . 500 '})h
New York •.. 16 38 .296 l~h
West
W L PCT. GB
Oakland • • • • 44 10 . 815
Denver •....• 34 23 .596 Ulh
New Orleans .. 29 29 .500 17
Dallas .••••• 25 29 .463 19
Los Angelos .• 24 32 • 429 21
Houston . , •• 17 37 .315 27
Thurad1¥'a Results
Minnesota US New York 113
Oakland 119 Dallas 109
Only games scheduled
Friday's Games
Indiana at Dallas
Minnesota at Miami
Only games scheduled.

By United Press International
Class AA Secttonal Tournaments
At Youngstown
East Palootlne .~o Y.,....wwn
' WUAOn 48 '
'
St;nltller s 36 Youngatown Chhney
33
AI Bedford
91aker Heights 43 Bedford 42
Cleve. John F. Kenn~ 76 Twinsburg 50
At Berea
Lakewood 74 Rocky River 65
Fa.inliew 61 Olmsted Falla 56
At Cleveland
Cleve. ~ Joseph 67 WickUffe

38
Kenskln 68 WWOUifii&gt;Y South 58
At Lorain
Lorain 57 El.Yrla Catholic 46
At Cloverlear
Wadsworth 51 Wooster 41
At Canton

Marlingtoo 79 Canloo Aquinas

42
Cadol1 South 77 Oakwood 61

At Columbus
BuckOYe Valley 50 llamUton Twp.
C a n ad a balsam comes
from the balsam fir In the
eastern United States and
from true firs in the western

United States.

,.WIE SERVICE WHAT WI SEll"

RIDENOUR RADIO &amp; TV.
CHESTER, 0.

985-3308

··wh.-n l..ert,.- ... u, a .. umn1it
n-lin•• it nally a. 11 llummh n-lin,:!"

Purdue is
Favored
To Win

HANDBAGS
AND
1/3 OFF
Many Styles &amp; Colors

MIDDLEPORT
STORE

You Can Get The

SE

ICE

You Want From Harry Miller
Wt'vt IMa
Do111 It For
28 YHrs..

34
Upper Arlington 102 Lakewood 40
Worthington 53 Columbus Bistl.
Ready 52
Columbus Mar. - Franklin 63
Northland 57
At Ashtabula
Painesville Riverside 62
Ashtabula Harbor 42
Painesville Harvey 78
Ashtabula Edgewood 62
Class A Sectional Tournaments
At New Philadelphia
Garaway 60 Malvern 28
Hiland 77 Dover &amp;. Joseph 58
At Youngstown
Jack11011 Milton 71 Leetonia 63
Usbon 69 Lowellville 42

HOMELITE CHAIN SAWS

YAIDS AND YARDS OF
FABRICS TO
CHOOSE FROM
McCalla and Simplicity
Potterna
Whit• S.wlng Machine•

ON THE T IN MIDDLEPORT

THE

XL's
NOW AT YOUR AUTHORIZED HDMELITE DEALER

ADMIRAL &amp; PHILCO TV's' .ON -SALEII

AssodatH ·Radio &amp; TV.
.

HARRY 'MILLER
.
.

"The commissioner has broad powers to take action in
the interest of baseball. But it's not so much a matter of
power as leadership. The question is how much leadership
he brings to the job."
Thls is a big year for unknowns from Maryland. He even
resembles that other newcomer to household parlance,
Spiro Agnew, except that his nose isn't as bulbous. With
his rimless spectacles, he looks more like an amiable Del
Webb (former owner of the Yankees) .
"l"m Harvey Rabbit whom you can•t see but you know
he's there."
But he exudes confidence and a certain aggression that
makes you think he didn't take the $100,000 job as commissioner for just the announced one-year period of time .
"This pro tem thing is to bridge a period of restructur·
·ing. I think there has to be an in-depth study of the game.
We need a system that is more efficient and -responsivf!
to needs."
He is also eager to convey the image or baseball a~&gt;
dynamic and forceful. On the Monday of the big storm
in New York, he was up at 6 o'clock in the morning to go
to Boston because Joe Reichler, baseball's publicity man,
thought it would be good for him to be there. He took a
cab through drifts and swirls 20 miles to the Newark air·
port at 8 a.m . _He waited out a plane until 2:30 p.m. for the
r~ndezvous wtt~ the Boston press. He made a big impresSion on them, Just as he has on almost every media man
with whom he has come in contact. He's not worried about
being fired, like his predecessor.
"You have to make aUot.Mnces for removal of any leader
bu due process."
He baa a nry amiable way of dutkiDI que1tions about
lhe deRnltlon of hit dulles aa commlsolo10r.
"I'm poing to be hard-pressed to give you a precise an.
swer. Very jew of these thing:J are clear·cut."
But he's pragmatic about the exten~ of hls authority.
"The job of Baseball commissioner," says Bowie Kuhn.
'"still holds as much legal authority as it did during the
Ume of Judge Landis. All the words I can utter are absolutely naught until you see the performance."
Fair enough, Commissioner.

SUPPLY

•••

•• HOME LITE _____ _
SEE THE NEW

COMPLETE SERVICE
OF ALL HOMELITE

CHAIIIIAWS
PLUS THE COMPLETE STOCK
OF ALL
PARTS &amp;ACCESSORIES!

NOW IS THE TIME, TO DO
YOUR INSIDE PAINTINGI

Easiest
Way to

Sectl~&gt;

011

saturdo&gt;"

Warren Local (&amp;.10) will oppoe.e
Logan (7-10) at 7 p. m. and second-seeded Marietta (12-6} will
battle Belpre (6-12) at 8:30p.m.

agreed to meet with the federal

mediator but Frali&lt; Bro!m,
reglona.l director at the Federal
Media.UOI'I and CmclU.at1on Service said, "It is nry rare for
an invited party In a labor
dlsPJ.te to decline an invitation
from the federaJ mediator.''
Brown invited the owners and
players to meet with him and
mediator Kenneth Moffett on
Monday.

Meanwhile, in t h e spring
training camps in Florida and
Arizona, the players' boycott of
the workouts was only a partial
success as veteran players
contlrued to report for cktty.
But Marvin Miller, executive
director of the players• associa~
don, said, "1be overwhelming
mplnrJty
or the established
ph ~ ··ra are suwortfng their
poh, y of not signing contracts
until an agreement is reached."
Commenting on the players
who have signed, he/ said, "h
has been the position of the
player's association not to exert
any pressure on the pia,yers
regarding the no slgnlng policy.
Rather, the matter has been
left to each player for his
incii vldual decision. Some, due to
personal obligatiooe or pressures, have signed contracts."
Mi.ller said he would make his
new proposal at a meeting
today with John Gaherin, the
spokesman for the owners, "in
view of the (act that the
owners' last proposal has been
rejected by the phcyer representatives by a 24-{1 vote.''
The owners latest offer was a
boost in a year1y contribution to
the pension fund to $5.3 million.
The owners currently pay $4.1 a-ycar.
It won't be an ofrlcial strike
until March I because that•s the
day all the players are required
to be in camp but the pitchers
and catcher s traditionally report
early.

College Scores
By United Press International

Temple 93 Manhattan 68
Wake Forest 52 No Car st.
Cllattanooga 66 Oglethorpe 53
Xavier (0.) 121 Samrord 70
Fairmont &amp;. 67 West Liberty
W. Va. St. 109 Bluefield st.
Kings Point 90 C. W. Post 70
Clarion 88 Grove Cit;y 75
Geneva 83 CaiHomia (Pa.) 75
Thiel 70 Wash &amp; Jerterson 54
Indiana (Pa.) 71 St. VIncent
Westminster 82 Gettysburg SO
Ohio Nrthrn 94 Cntrl Mich

..

985·3308

Rlo Grande 106 Cumberland
Hofstra 89 Catholic U. 711
Northeastern 65 Boston U. 64
TUfts 67 MIT 64
K,y. St. 81 Tennessee A&amp;l 70
N~eDame 98 NYU~
Drake 120 Wichita 94
BuffaJo 92 Baltimore 82
Massachusetts 61 NavY 57
Del. 85 Franklbt &amp; Marshall
Corp.~s Christi 77 Bishop 64
Bryant 83 Bentley 74
Sam Houston 102 E. Texas
Howard Payne 81 Texas A&amp;l
S.F. Austin 110 McMurry 92
Southwest Texas 65 S.li Ross
Houston 95 Lamar Tech 71
Elmhurst 76 Carthage 71
Lew:ls 80 st. Leo 78
Marquette 65 Denver 61
Arbona 77 Mexico 75
Arizma st. 87 Wyoming 79

.,

"f., .

CHESTER, 0.

60
77

56
93
92

Lovelier

Rio Redmen Jolt Indians
BY DICK moNAS
The)' say the Udrd time Ia the
charm. Well, It was Ttursday
night ror the Rio Grande ColleK¥
Redmen who did overythlrw just
rlght and slipped a 106-92 defeat
on Ule CUmberland College Indians at Williamsburg, Ky., Ln
the aemi-llna.la or tbe Kentucky
Intercollegiate AthleUc Conference Tourrament.
caarn Art Lanham's Redmen
are now 11-10 tor the aason and
are headiDg tor BarbouravUle,
Ky., •here Saturdl,y nieht they
will m... the Unloo College llulldogs lor tho ehomploaahlj) olthe
KIAC Tournament.
Twice this season the Cumberland College Indians, wimers of

Lo~al

Bowling

TUESDAY MORNING GLORIES
Won Lost
No. 3 . . . . . . . • • • . 126
Gibbs Grocery . . • . 10 8
Lou's Ashland • • . . . • . 9 9
Grueser Insurance . . . . 9 9
Shammy's • • • . • . •. 8 10
WMPO , . • • . . . . .... 6 12
High Series Ind., Chris Speirs,
504; High Ind. Game - Chris
Spears, 182. High Team Series,
No. 3, 2283; Hlgh Team Game,
No. 3, 816,

tho regular KIAC ,....., hod
defeated Rio Grande. At WUIiomlburg, the loolorui """ 11~
97 aot at Gallipolis, Cumberland
waa the victor 104-99.
The Union BulJdogs defea~
the Redmen twice this aeaiOfl.
At GaWpolis, Union odged Rio
91--89 and at Barbourvllle, Ky.,
the Bulldogs won 107-84. Union
derea~
Bere~ ~lep 96-66
Tuesday night while Rio Grande
was takbw caowbellsville 98-86
and last night Union pined the
tilw.la qtpoaite Rio Grande by
knocking ofJ Pikeville, 90.75.
11 was quite a disappointment
Cor CIDDberland's Coach or the
Year John Renfro whose I!XIians
were down rrom the start as the
Redmen rolled out to 53-42 half·
time lead..
The Redmen ne-ver trailed in
the ball game as they swarmed
all over the Indians in the early
minutes of the seccnl half to
pick up a 76-61 lead. Then Rio
Grande led 94-81 and with about
three minutes to go It was Rio
Grande 100-82.
Big Bob Mabry, 6-51/2 junior
pi votman, was high for Rio
Grande with 34 points. Jim Marshall, 6-2 sophomore, was next
with 27 and Roger BenUey, 6--3
freshman, had 22. Mike Harris,

MONDAY MIXED LEAGUE
February 17, 1969
STANDINGS- No. 1,34points;
No. 2, 34; No. 6, 32; No. 4, 29;
No. 5, 22; No. 3, 17,
Team High Series - No. 4,
1906; Team High Game - No. 4,
763; High Ind. Series - V. Wippel, 572 aoo J, Boyles, 481; High
lrd. Game- W, BoyerandChaa.
Boyles, 202 and Brenda Boyer,
214.
EARLY SUNDAY MIXED
STANDINGS - Team 6, 44pta;
Team 3, 34; Team 5, 30; Team 1,
30; Team 2, 28; Team 4, 2.
High Team Series - Team 5,
2177; Team 1, 2054; Team 6,
2037.
High Team Game - Team 5,
737-737; Team 6, 735; Team I,
727.
High Ind . Series - Men: W.
Gilkey, 569; P. Corey, 539; B.
Reynolds, 537. Women: M. Voss,
489; M. Searls, 465; C. Davidson. 455.
High Ind. Game - Men: B.
Reynolds, 213; C. Boyles, 200;
W. Gilkey, 198; Women: M. Voss,
197; M. Searls, 179;C. Davidson,
179; l. Gilkey, 157.

Lewis Repair Sf'rvice
WEHRLI SIGNED

Sf. LOUIS (UPD- The St.
Louis Cardinals of the National
Football League tlave signed
Roger Wehrli, whO led the
nation's .lJWlt returners last
season at the University of
Missouri.
Wehrli waa signed to a threeyear contract, but no terms
were diseloaed.

BEND BOWLING LEAGUE
ST-\NDINGS - P001eroy Gun
Club, 42 points; The Top Cats,
38; The Big C's, 38; Pomeroy Golf
Course, 28; Dutton Drugs, 24; The
lOO's, 22.
High Team Series - The Big
C's, 2470; Pomeroy Gun Club,
2407; Dutton Drugs. 2332. Hl.gtl
Team Game - The Big C'a, 883;
The Big C's, 859; Pomeroy Gun
Chili, 858.
High Ind. Series - F. Brace.
538; J. Bacon, 5Z7; J. Welker.
520. High Ind. Game - F. Brace,
207; B. Bowen, 205; J. Welker,
202.

~lnglleld

94
63

63

•HEATING
•PLUMBING
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I

-FOR-

lEWIS
REPAIR SERVIa
.
!!Y 2·UH
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~r

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• Accurate pushbutton con trols. Easy to see, reach.
• Easy-set timer automati aally etarta, stops cooking in
spacious lighted oven.
• Clock and minute timer-

30"

At Portsmouth
Minford 58 New Bostoo 57
Pprtsmouth East 75 Manchester 44
At New Cmcord
West Muskingum 56 Guernsey
Madison 57
New Concord Glem 49 Z a n e
Trace 44

'349

$379

Model J439
40"

Model J333

Local 60 Greenlord

54
57

6-1 .............. hod 10.
Whlle he only •cored six poilU,
Hury Hatrst.QD, 6-4 freshman
from Columbua East, .,..n. C8 a
goo:! exhibition ol ballhawldng
am rebounding. Hairatoa and
Bentley whose outside ahootirc
kept the Indians off bllance with
17 points in the first t.J.(, looked
good botll on offense and derense.
Big gun ror the lm:lians waa Bob
~. 6-5 junior, who had 24
points. Ray Cox, 6--4 junior, 1..:1
14. Lee Bishop, &amp;.6 junior, finished with 11. Fred Aoneaa, 5-11
junior, had 19 and Jerry Hodgea,
$-9 sophomore, scored 18polnta.
No statistics were kepUor Cumberland, but the Indians, according to rtparts. shot somewhere
in the 1011' 40 per cenL Cumberland made 17 of 23 at the Une.
For one of their best nighta of
the season, the Redmenhit58per
cent making 47 o( 81 !rom the
field and 12 or 24 at the llne.
RIO GRANDE (106) - Mar·
shaD 12-3-27; Jordan ()..1.. 1;
Mabry 16--Z-34; Baker 2-1-.5; Bentley 10--2-22; Hairston 3--0-Ei; Ball
O..l-1; Harris 4--2-10. Tolals, 47·
81 - 12-24 - 106.
CUMBERLAND (92) - Lo~
10-4-24; Cox 5-4-14; Bishop 4-311; Anness 8-3-19; Hodges 9--018; Cupp 2-2-6. Total s 38- 1692.

Scores

PRESENTED AWARD
NEW YORK (UPJ)- Bill Toomey of Laguna Beach, Calif.,
was presented with the 1968
Athlete or the Year Award from
the
Amerlean Broadcastlng
Company Thursday. The 30year-old Toomey won the
Olympic decathlon at Mexico
Clt.y.

P·7

Model J426
40"

399P.7 5 249~~;­

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MIDDLEPORT, 0.

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RoODlS
Ohio Valley Plu•W..-IIIIflll
Edward Baer, Owner

23Z E. 2nd

.

.-:

49

( )

RIDENOUR SUPPLY
.
.

nlgll~

Be Made By Players

Newspaper Enterprise Assn.

AND COUNT ON US FOR

We Service All Appliances
- Install Alltellnas
.
.

'""""' (7-lll.
Meig.s, dereated b)' the Buckeyes ot Coach Bob Sheskey in

at a 13.6 polds per game clip in
the Southeastern Ohio J..eque.
In ather games or the Albli1JI

New Proposals May

014DERMAN

XL-101 &amp; XL-10l I

In Our Shop!
In Your Home!-~

COich Carl Wolfe's Marauders, 3-14 in regular season games
lor the 196&amp;.69 campaign, will
battle the Buckeyes of Atheru;
Countl' beginning at 8:30 p. m.
The first match ol the sectionals, scheduled to get underwl¥ at
7 p. m., will feature tq.-seeded
Athens (15-2) battling New Lex-

beth Southeaatern Ohio Athletic
NEW YORK (UPJ)- The maLeague games this seaaon, wW
have a starting team ccxnpoaed ot Jor league players, after agreetwo seniors and three sopho- ing to meet with a federal
mediator Monday ln an attempt
mores.
Coach WoUe announced 6-3Joe to ~e their pension fund
Myers, a aenlor. w1l.l open~ at dispute with the owners, said
the center, position. Sclphomorea they woold make a ''new
Jeri' Tyo ard Bill Henaler will be proposal" today for the owners'
CIUCAGO (UPD - Purdue's at the forwards, ard Dennis Ault, consideration.
The owners llaven't yet
a senior, arK! Sophomore Bobby
magic number ls three.
Any combination or Boilermaker wins or Ohlo State losses
adding to three would give
Purdue at least a tie for the Big
Ten basketball title [or the first
time since 1940.
Purdue was a heavy tavori~
to reduce the magic number
this Sal,Urday when it plays
Northwestern on the Boilerma·
ker coukt in one or five
conference garnet~ affecting a
NEW YORK-tNEAl - At his first official introduction
race from which most of the to the media- as the people of newspapers , television and
glunor has disappeared.
radio are now called-Bowie Kuhn fittingly wore cuff links
Purdue took care or the with a baseball mounted against an all-star motif .
championship contest, spurting
They were given to him by Gen. William Eckert. his
to a.n 8-1 Blg Ten record so t'ar predecessor in the job of commissioner of Baseball t the
for a two game lead on the war, Bowie says Baseball it should be spelled with a capital
second-place Buckeyes. 6-3 in ··s 'L "At the last World Series, I believe." ' mused Bowie.
Bowie Kuhn (boo·te k'yewn) didn't use cue cards to help
the league, with five games
get
him through an Interview. He had no aides hovering
remaining. Strangely the two top
around
111a head to extricate him from tough questions,
teams must race the same five
wondering U be'd bumble an answer.
clubs the rest of the way,
Bowie has no trouble with interrogation . He's a lawyer
Northwestern, ln:liana, Iowa,
by
training and vocation. and legalese is a part of his
Michigan and MiChigan State.
personality.
Each also will play three home
"We've got to find wa11s to make baseball a more ejfi·
,games aOO two on the road.
cient and productive operation. Out of 1t aU should come
Ohio State defen:ls ita runner.. a mechanism for running the game."
up. spot at home against Iowa In
Bowie's official associatlon with baseball dates back to
the afternoon television game, 1950 when his law firm started representing the National
while Michigan and illinois League. and for one period of 18 months during the liti·
match their share to third place galion over moving the Milwaukee franchise to Atlanta .
on
the
Ullni
court. The he devoted 90 per cent of his time to baseball .
Wolverines tripped filinols Feb.
"I took this job because l felt a deep sense of obliga·
tion and affectiotl to baseball, because I grew up as a ku:i
11 at Michigan 92-87,
The remaining two conCerence loving baseball."
games match Ml chlgan State at
He Is tall and uprlgbt (&amp;.5) and wears subdued bankers'
Wisconsin
and
hxUana
at blue• and grays wt.tb striped ties. Tbe batr Is fashionably
Mione~, . the
latter sera~ low on the nape of his ,_.eek1 a frizzly gray. and there's also
involving two o( the tour teamS" predominant gray In IUs Sideburns, which are ample but
who share last place, or wouldn't offend the neighboraln suburban Ridgewood, N.J.
seventh, with 3--6 league re- He already has the grasp of authority-be whispered to
an aide, and seronda later a Scotch and soda appeared.
corda.
Bowie didn't have to make the trip to the bar.

A NEW BREED OF

..•

'

tion.

Family. McDaniel Trip. Gospel.
ettes and others. The sing will
begin at 2 p.m. and the publle is
Invited to attend.

tional Tournament at Albany, go
up agalnst Nelsonvllle-York in
the aecom game ol tonight' s ac-

MURRAY

High
School Scores

"-21.

''

Werr1 will slart at prda.
Meigs was beaten oniy :)"7-~1:
by lhe Buckeyes in the last clash
between the two schools ln mid-JarM.ary. l'hll Ennis, G-1 fonrard,
paced the Athens Countians in
thl.l match and is overall the
lead!~ Buckeye point-getter this
season with a 15.8 league average.

"2-!US

99Z.Z031i

Pom•or
•,

�(

,,

•

..

•

'

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1111

Doib" Stnllotl,

PCMIIOn&gt;)'•Middlcl&gt;ort. 0., Prldoy, Felln.oory2I,Ii

·class Meets
•

••The Mirtcle ot .\mrrica:•
! petrt~ t~med prtJ4::ram tw
: ),Irs. Earl Ntla;ht.. highlighted a

meetin£ or ('Jail 12 ol neath
l 'nlted MethOdist Church Wednesday night.
.-\ re-ading on Americanism bs
Mrs. ~~ with back~ music at the plano by Mrs. C. M.
Henneey q:lehed the program .
Patriotic seledions from sev eral authors were included along
with a skit on the signing o1 the
the Declaration of Independence
by Mrs. James Jh,iden and Mrs.
Alma Miller, portra,ying Thornas Jefferson and his wife. A pi ano solo, "God Bless America" by Mrs. Hermesy condud...
ed the progl'am.
Mrs. L. W. McComas opened the meeting with a prayer
calling attention to the Lenten
season. Devotions by Mrs. C.

FLOWERS
FOR ALL OCCASIONS .

son' wtth some kind of' dally devotion.
Thank you notea frOm several
shut-ins thanking the group r o r
valentine cookie trays were read.
The class was also thanked for
food prepared Cor the McComa s family at the death of Mrs .
J. E. McComas. It was noted
that Mrs. Knight will be hostess chairman for the March meet-

Ll&lt;~l"o 'ilwcll~•ry of Drew Webster Post 39, American
Legion, presented a lllg to the Mlddloport·Pomeroy SOnlor Girl
Scout Troop 198 Wodneodoy nllllt
Mrs. Gerald Wildermuth, AmericarDsm chairman 1br the aux..
Uiary, presented the flag to carol Hargraves, patrol leader, ..q
with a pamphlet on dieplaylrw tt.
In her presentatloa
Mrs. Wildermuth read • poem
entitled '"I Am Your Flag", aDd two aricles, "U'a Just A Pleee ot
Ckth" and ''You Bet
A Flag Wavern. She llso ccmmeated on
the Pledge or Allegiance.
Meeting at the bome of Mra. Frat* Powers, leader, lhe ti'Cq)
appointed Becky TriPlett 11 a reprooentiiiYO to the junior ~board.
She will serve alOIW with Debbie Laney, aoother member of the
troop, who h curreutly a tnember ot the a..rd.
Punch aJXI cookies w.re served at the conclusion of the meetlrw

int:.
A salad course was serv£'d by
Mrs. James Criswell, Mra. John
Ketchka, Mrs. llcmesy with Mrs.
c. 0. Fisher as a contributing
hostess. Mrs. McComas presided at the coffee service.

SUPPER ATBNiHAN
A aoup supper has been planned £or March 22 at the Bashan
Fire Department headQuarters
by the Ladies Auxiliary. A special meeting of the auxiliary
was held recently to make plans

Pomeroy Flower Shop
Pomtror

MRS. MILLARD V.1\N METER

1

1
1

1

I
I

Re-Location Sale!!

ALL MERCHANDISE REDUCED

MIDDLEPORTTROOPI85

ing Day event Sunday. It was decided to give a contribution to the

•

Julie! Low Friendship Fund. The Drummer Girls Patrol will provide
refreshments for the next meeting.
Mrs. Wallace Powers and Mrs. Fred Gibbs, Jr. met with tfle
girls. Trina Gibbs was a guest. Members attending were Nancy Bus-

•

POMEROY, 0.

•----------------------------

thony,

•

K _eepsa.k e•
TIIIADIT10NAL

W[D0 1NG "lNG.

SUN DAY

• · ·.~· •

·· •

•

Highlights from a book or es-

J

Task," by Henry Steel C o mmager, were given by Mrs. Galen Brown at Wednesday's meeting of the Middleport Literary
Club held at the home o£ Mrs.
James Euler.
Mrs. Brown prefaced her review of selected essays by a his-

try . Comrnager emphasized that
the ruWre is America's arena.

2 P.M. 10 4 P.M. •

II you're not at home when your Vol·
•
untaer calls ... Enclose your con·
tribution in the envelope lett by your
. . Heart Fund Volunteer and place in

· W

or

eventual purchase
his book
collection or 6,000 volumes tor

824
.ooo.
Accomplishments
of Jane Ad·
ams, first woman to win the Nobel Peace Prize, also were reviewed by Mrs. Brown. She told
or Miss Adams• trip to E)Jrope
where instead of visiting museums and art shows. 111he went
to ractories and slums. Upon her
return to Chicago, Miss Adams
acquired an old mansion which
she converted into a community club, a refuge ror the sick,
tired, disC(MJ.raged and lonely.
Sle became a crusader for so-

cial justice.

His book described incidents of
the Civil War , Colonial society
and the heroes or early America.
The reviewer used two of Cornmager's ess~s to point up tlle
culmination or the se&amp;rch for a
usable task- "Jef£erson and the
Book Burners," and "Jane Ad-

Mrs. Thereon Johnson presld~
ed at the meeting. It was announced that the Marett :; meet~
ing wtll be held at 7:30 p.m.
at tbe home or Mrs. Arthur
Strauss.
Guests were Miss F r l e d a
Faehnle, Miss Hallle Zerkle,

ams o£ the Hall House."
Mrs. Brown told of the congressional librarY" in Washington, D. C. organized under Jefferson's auspices, which went up

Mrs. Everette Davis, Miss Alice FAller, Mrs. Hattie Smith,
and Mrs. Gomer Lewis.

ln flames in 1814, and of

Jefler~

son's offer to give his peri!IOnal library to Congress and the

Fourteen members responded
to roll call wtth a current newspaper quote. Goods macle by the
blind of ohio were dtapla¥ed ror
sale. Mrs. Euler served canCb.

Consolidation Discussed
Edith Wakely, Marietta, disCOnsolidatioo of tbe Chester
trict
deputy, spoke brlefiy on
and TUppers Plains Councils o£
the
consolidation.
llle announced
the Daughters of America to oc~
the
rally
to
be
held
at Mariettacur April 1 at Chester ns dis·
cussed when Chester ·CouncU 323 on May 8 and a practice ror the
met
i.t the hall. rally which has been set ror
April 13 at the Chester Lodge
hall.
Guests at the meeting belic:lea
Mrs . Wakely ·were tnah Swan,

SA EUPIO

50%
DURING BAKERS
SALE
THIS WEEK ONLY

BAIER FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, 0.
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

•
•

Commager Essays •
I

.......

Tuppers Plains, Nettle Ha,yes,
Edna Reibel, and Margaret Setclenabel, Pomeroy.
Esther Ridenour, tn~ncllor,
opened the meeting in rituallallc
form. Sadie Trussell and Mary

lla,yes were reported 10. Dla
Batley Is confined to a Florida
hospital and Margaret McLain
is home from the hospital. A
valentine from Dorothy Lawson,
a member residing in Columbus,
was received by the lodge.
Get-well cards were signed by
the members for M.ra. Bailey
and Mrs. Trussell. The IO()d-of~
the-order committee amounced
a grab bog sale to be held at the

next meeting and memberl were
asked to take a grab bag worth

25 cents.
Refreshments were served by
the kitchen committee to the
guests and 24 members
attending.
,..
.

the mail

•
'

'

•

•

.

MIDDLEPORT CAMPAIGN CONDUCTED
BY

THE

BUSINESS &amp; PROFESSIONIAL
WOMENS CLUB

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Apollo 8

ftewt..t Pint

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THE

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Natala w-·· nq. Curti•
8, "NIBI and 0. SeroIMIII." Robert Wtlbller

11:30 -

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K&amp; C JEWELERS
POMEROY NATIONAL BANK
CROW'S STEAK HOUSE
MEIGS EQUIPMENT CO.
POMEROY BEN FRANKLIN
DOWNING-CHILDS INSURANCE
OHIO VALLEY BAKING CO.
POMEROY PASTRY SHOP
THE FABRIC SHOP
CITIZEN'S NATIONAL BANK
KEITH GOBLE FORD INC. ·
MEIGS GENERAL HOSPITAL
POMEROY FLOWER SHOP
COCA COLA BOTTLING CO.
·GOESSLEI'S JEYIELRY STORE
FARMER'S BANK

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LOU'S ASHLAND SERVICE
ZERKLE TRUCKING CO.
MARTIN FUNERAL HOME
OHIO POWER COMPANY
DAVIS-WARNER INSURANCE
R. H. RAWUNGS &amp; SONS
EBERSBACH HARDWARE
SWISHER &amp; LOHSE DRUGS
KARt &amp; VAN ZANDT
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tory of the author, a lecturer and
writer who for 20 years was &amp;.
pro£essor of history at Harvard.
Sle noted that Commager said
America was the rtrst coontry
to rebel against its mother coun.

CHOICE OF THE LOVELIEST BRIDES

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kirk,. Amy Hamm, Mary Krawsczyn, Sonya Ohlinger, Joan Blevins,
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says, "The Search for a Usable

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ror eJCI)enses at spring camp.
I themFinal
plans were made ror participation ln the International Think~
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T.V. SERVICE
~~~~S;ER~V~I~C;E~M~AH~A~G=E~R=H=A~R:O~LD~W~A=LK=E~R=---.1

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ANTENNAS
AND
ACCESSORIES

992-7242

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TilE CADETTE CAMPOREE AT camp Sandy Bend near ElizaI beth, w. v ...... May ts.Is was discussed at . . . cent meeu.,. or
I Girl Scout Troop 185 at the Middleport Heath United Methodist
I Church. camp stamps were distributed to the girls who are saving

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POMEROY TROOP 61
PREPARNG FOR INTERNATIONAL Thinklng))oytobeobscned
Sunday £rom 2 to 4 p. m. at the Middleport Elementary School audl~
tori urn, girls oi Troop 61 practiced an IOOian game, Kabotta, which
the)' will teach at the observance.
Several
the girls started on new embroider,. projects while
others continued smocking. The trO® met Wednesday at the home
of Mrs. Don Thomas, leader, with Mrs. Pat Duffy, co-leader, also at..
tending.

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Weekly Guide To Better TV Viewing
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NEXT OOOR TO STIFFLERS!

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Mr. l1ld Mra. Earl - . Ll·

Fold and Plaoo Near Your TeleviMion Set for Convcn

MIDDLEPORT TROOP 39
A BOWUNG PARTY WAS HEW by Trcq&gt; 29 Tlllrodl3 nl&amp;bt
at the Pomeroy Bowlq Lanes. Mrs. L R. Neal, leader. Mrs. U.r~
old Thomas, Mrs. Dwight Haley, Mrs. Jack PhUlips and Mrs. f'ran..
ces Ora,- provided transportation tor 16 girls who bowled at apectal
rates.
Included in the gi'OI.t) "ere Janet Lee Neal, Teresa 'I'homas,
VickY Newell, Jud,y Owen. Barbara Fultz, Mary Boggs, Vicki Kelb,
Julie Hamm, Martha McNeal, Kathy Haley, Cindy Triplett, Cindy
Demoskey, Cindy HindJr, Jackie Dray, ft4JrU Fraser, andi Lirdl Ger~

Middleport Fire Department will
hold a soup supper :itnda,y at 6
p .m. at the hall for firemen,
auxiliary members and their
families. Those attending are to
take their own table service.

WE ARE MOVING

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to those named aM Judy McKnight. Debbie Hunnell and Mary PearSOI'I.

The Women's AuxiHar)' of the

(IR NIGHT M9-29S1

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procrun.
rm

~UP SUPPER PLAN~ED

992-2039

w. M•ln

t'. lfUibs related l.o the Christlan eharacleriatin ol Wa&amp;hlngton ud Lincoln. Members wore
urged to observe the Lenten Je&amp;-

for the supper.

We wire fiowen evf"rywhere

H, Chlli1P01', Thomu E. Cordle, PLEASANT VALLEY HOSI'fi'AL
Mrl. Ernest J. Edwardl, Mill
ADMITTED: Mn. Earl - Hester J. Elldn•~ Chrilklpber D. ll't, Lolut; Dmd Smllh, R e d
Famin, Tem L, Farley, Mra. llauM; Mrl. Art111r Hlul-·
llelen Fen, 9tt.nton Fellure, Jule un, Re,yuold.turl; Mrl, t:arroli
M. Gelat, Mrl. Paul L. Goo&lt;l- C..lllo,dll;. Plea-.
DrsCiiXRGPD: Mri. Hermon
man, Clarence E. Grover, HowHolzer Medlea&amp; Cen:er, Ftnt
Birth
ard
0.
Klrb7,
Mro,
WUII&amp;m
P.
Ave, Vloltlng houn 2-l 111&lt;1 7-8
Mrs. June• E. Mori"CM', PL
- · Leon; ~ Byuo, Pl.
p.m. Parenti only on ~lc Pleaoant. 5:01 p.m. Thuro. Malllek, JoiD H. MDier, Frlllk Pleaaant; Lawreoce Rayburn, Pt:.
Peoples. CUitord Pierce, Mra. PleaiUit; Georp Bl.tn, ft.
Ward.
cii.Y.
Jame1
S. Qdek, Mrl, Roy H. PINAIII.
Admi~aion1
DlleharPI
Hlrlho: Mr. ll1d Mro. Uneoln
Publication &lt;( odmlollono 11
Diana Albaulh, Mro. Ama S. Ziegler, Mra. Robert E. Jack.
Bulb. GalllpoUI FII'Q, a aGD;
lllllllldlahntiOII.
,._... 1111111 6arthor - ·
Mro. Alloo --~

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O., Frldo.Y, FobruarY 31, 1961
day pn.yer and Bible otulb', 7:30

Directory for
lL
h
enurc es·

~~~~=~:::::.~::;~,~~·;:~=~~~::~~~
111E ALFRED METHODIST 9:30 1o m,; WOl'lhip

CHUROI- Pearl A. Cas'to.paa~
tor. SUnday School at 9:30, Llo,:t
Dlllirwer. s~,pt. Worsh.lp service
at 10:4$ a. m. wltll die Rev. ca..
to. Wednesday evening prayer

10:30 a. m.. Youth ,and Junior
ywth service, 6:45 p. m. Eventng worship, 7:30. Prayer and
praise, Wednesday, 7:30

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SUTTON UNITED MET!I().
DIST CIIVRCH - W. 1ll1a Jl..
Ch~-1'!• ~·tor. SUDdl.y School.
tO:SO a. m.; Won~ aerYlee,

~ ;-hm": and

IGurtll

CHESTER CHURCH
THE
NAZARENE
Rev, OF
Herllori
Gnte, pastor. Wor~ ~ce,
11 a. m. and 7:30 p. m., Swda7.
SUIIIa.J School, 9:30 a. m. Riehard Barton. &amp;c&gt;t. Cl\lrles Btl-

Sunday mor"q 01'
eaCh week.

evemne

~

Ue,

Slulday

Scl1oo1 -

Slulday

School, 1:30 L m.; Mor'niDJ WOI'•
lb1p. 10:'0 a. m.; ~ evenillC' aenlce, 7; Pra.)'er m.t1111
WodlltodN'o 7 P. m.

ST. J~ Llri'iti!;.KM - iiri·

Eoaolo pas!Or. Wonohlp, S:IJ4J
...... _
... 1&gt;1' SuniiiQ'SdtGDI.
ST. P AVL LtrrHERAN - BrJ.
•• EDge1, ...tor. SUndol' S&lt;:-.
In

il:t5 L

m.~

Worahlp, 10:10 a..m.

SYRACUlE UNITED llfi'HO.
DIST - Rev. Paul A. Stllera,
pastor. Sal'lla)' School, I:SilL m.,
Ban Qu18811berry, SIC&gt;~ Moralna:

SEVENT!! DAY ADVENTISTPCJD10r07, Mulberry Hta. Rood,
aorth ot VetenDiii Memorial Hospital. PhiUp Gagor, pootor. SoJ&gt;.
bath School, saturday, 2 p. m.; worship, 10:30 a. m.. ftrst lllkl
Wonhip, 3:15 p. m.; Youlh Fel- tllint Sundays eaeh month. EYelmnhlp aDd Adult Bible Stud.J, nilll e•nseUsttc service, 7:30
p. m., second aDd fourth Suoda1•·
Wednesday, 7:30 p. m.
CARMEL UNITED METHO.
FIRST UNITED PREl&gt;BYTERIAN CHURCH - Middleport, DJST CHURCH - Rev, Paul A.
Guest minister. James Buchanoo Seller., pastor. Sundll' School,
.... &amp;Inlay School SIP- SuaJa,y 9t30 L m.; Wayae Roulb, ScJt.
School, 9;30 a. m.j WorlhW serv. Mornirc worsldp. 10:30 a. m.,
tee, 10:30 L m.; OHU practice ..-and ro..rthSWidayooloaeh
......._ Evening ••••pllodc aor7:30 p. m. Wedne8CII&gt;.
ASBURY UNITED METHODIST vlce, 8 p. m. 81Cond and d!lrd
- Syracuse. Rev. Wendell Slut. SuniiY each month.
ENTERI'RISE UNITED METHler, pastor. SundiJt School, 10
ODIST
- Rev. Wlillllm Alraon,
a. m.; carroll Norris,~ worpastor.
Ralph ~ncer, ~~ Elship service, 11 L DLi MYF, 6
p. m. sw.lly; Prayer meeting. don Weeks, asst. Worship senices, 9:30 L m.: SUna7 Sehool,
Wednesday, 8 p. m.
PCMEROY CHURCH OF THE 10:30 L m.; Ywth Fellawahlp,
NAZARENE - Corner Uniooand 6:30 p. m. WedoeMJ: Choir,
Mulberry. Rev. Clyde V. Hender- 6:15 p. m.; Bible study, 7:30.
CHURCH OF CHRIST - Midson, pastor. Suo:lay School, 9:30
a. m.; Raymond Walburri, ~t. dleport, 5th and Main. Jack
Morning worship, 10:30 a. m.; Scites, supt. Bible School, 9:30
Evening Service, 7:30 p. m. Mid- a. m. i Morning worship, 10:30 a.
m. i Evening won hip, 7:30 p, m.;
Week service, Wednesday, 7:30
Pr'Bl'er
service, Wednesday, 7 p.
p, m.
FOREST RUN UNITED METH- m., Rev. Raulin Moyer, pastor.
CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE
ODIST -· Rev. Weniell G. StutMlddloporL
Rsv. Audry Milller, pastor. Worship service, 9

UNITED FAITH CHURCH sell, aaaiatants..,t.Prayermeet..
Nease Settlement - Robert E. ing, Wednesday, 7:30 P. m.
Smith, Sr., pastor. Sw&gt;layS&lt;:hool
HARRISONVILLE PRESBYCHRISTIAN SCIENCE Services Sq&gt;t., Roy JOOnsOI'L. Su11:11.Y School TERlAN - Mrs. Norma Lee,
9:30 a. m.; WorshiD service, Sunday School Sqlerlntendent.
at 315 Main SL, Pt. Pleasam,
10:30 a. m. aOO 7:30 p. m. each Sunday- School, 9:30 L m. SunSu.nda.Ys, 11 a. m. i Wednesdays,
Sunda.v. Yooth meeting 1100 choir day service, 8 p. m., the Rev.
8 p. m. All welcome.
practice, 6:30 p. m. each Sunday. . Max Donahue or Mlddleport.
LOTTRIDGE UNITED METHKENO CHURCH OF CHRISTJEHOVAH'S WITNESSES, LorODIST - Worship, firsta.rxt third
Norman Mccain. Slwt. Services ry Carnahan. pre&amp;iding mlnlaSunliYs or each month, 10:45 a.
weekly at 9:30" L m. Preaching, ter. Sundly: Bible lecture, 9:30
m.; secon:l and fourth SUndays, first and third SundaY of month a. m.; Watch Tower study, 10:30
7,30 p. m. SUnday School, 9:45
by Charles Russell, 9:30 Lm.
a. m.;; Wednesday: Blble study,
L m. Christian Endeavor, third
THE BRADFORD CHURCH OF 7 p.m. Thursday: Minlstry school
Saturday of each month
CHRIST - Charles Russell, pas- at 7 p. m. Service meeting ai
LAUREL CLIFF FREE METHtor. Richard Gi1key, S~t. Stm- 8 p.m.
ODIST - Sunday School, 9:30 a.
day School, 9:30 a.m.; Morning
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST
m.; Morning-worship,10:10L m.; worship, 10:30 a. m.; Ewning - Miller St. - Everson Week·
Evening worship, 7:30p. m.;Wedworship, 7 p.m. Wednesday Bible ley, pastor, .Bible study classes,
nesday, Christian Youth CrusadStudy, 7:30 p. m .
Surday, 10 a. m. Worship and
ers, 6:30 p. m. ; Prayer meetirw,
REORGANIZED CHURCH OF preaching, 10:55 L m.; Sunday
7:30 p. m. Thursday, choir prac- JESUS CHRIST OF LATTER DAY evenlq: service, 7:30. Bible study
tice, 7 p. m. R Eugene Gill, SAINTS- Portland-Racine Road. classes, Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.
pastor; Phil Wi se, SI.C)t.
Sunday School, 9:30a.m.; MornGRACE EPL"iCOPAL - E.
DEXTER CHl RCH OF CHRIST
ing worship, 10:30 a. m.; Sunday Main Street, Pomeroy. Church
- Ronnie Rus sell, pastor. Norevening s~rvice at 7 p. m. Wed- School, 10:30 a. m. each Sunman C. WUI, s ~l Surrlay Schoo]
9:30 L m.; Worship service, nesday evening prayer service day. Third Sunday of each month
10:30 a. m. Christian Erdeavor at 7:30 Pastor, Elder C. W. no morniflli: service. Holy comSunday evening.
ProffitL
munion, 7:30 p. m.
RACINE FIRST CHURCH OF
THE BRADBURY CHURCH OF
SOUTH
BETHEL UNITED
THE NAZARENE- Sunday School CHRlST- Mr . Ted Cadwallader, METHODIST- Worship, sec01xl a. M.i SUnday School, 10 a. m. er, pastor. Lester TQlor, s.t.
9l30 a. m.i Morning Worship, pastor. Jerry Van Inwagen, Su~ and fourth Sunday, 10:30 a.m.; Mrs. Fred Nease, Supt.
Sunday School, 9:30 L m.; Morn10:30 Lm.; Evetting Worship, day School SL~JerintcOOent. Sun-- first and third SWldays, 7:30
TilE MINERSVILLE UNITED ing Worship 10:30 a. m.; Junior
7:30 p. m. Wednesday, Sunday day School, 9:30 a. m.: Morning p , m. Sunday School, 9:30 a.. m.
METHODiST Rev. Wendell Soclocy, 6:30 p. m.; NYPS, 6'15
School Superinterdenl, Pauline worship, 10:30 a. m.; Evening Youth Fellowship, 6 p. m. each
Stutler, pastor. Sunday School, p, m. SUnday Ewngeliatlc mee~
McOintock. Pastor, Rev. Morris service, 7 p. m. Wednesday, Sunday at ~pers Plains United 9 a. m.; Kenneth Wl.ggins, &amp;Itt. lng, 7:30 p. m. Prayer meeting,
M. Wolfe.
Prayer service, 7:30 p. m.
Methodist Church.
Wednesday, 7:30 p. m.
Worship service, 10 L m.
TUPPERS PLAINS UNITED
GRAHAM UNITED METHOCHESTER CHURCH OF GOD
THE SALVATION ARMY- E.,.
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF TilE
METHODIST- Morning Worship DIST CHUHCH- Preaching, 9:30 - The Rev. Chester Bryant, pasvoy
Ray S. Wining, o111cer In
NAZARENE - Rev. A. E. Miller
9:30 L m. at former EUB build- a. m., first aOO secmxl Surxlays tor. Sunday School, 9:30 a. m.;
charge.
SUnday, 10 a. m., Holipastor. Bob Moore, Sunday School
ing. Expanded Sunday School ses- of each month: third and fourth Worship service, 11 a.m.; EveSupt. Sunday School claue s ror ness m9etlng;; 10:30 L m. SUnsion for nursery to grade six chil- SWKiays each month, worship ning "or ship, 7:30 p. m. Prayer
all ages, 9:30 a. m.; Morning day School Yoong People'e Ledren at former Methodist aru1ex service at 7:30 p. m. Wednesday servi{:e, Tuesday, 7:30 p, m.
worship, 10:30 a. m.; NYPS Sun- gion, 7 p, m.i Salvation meeting,
at 9:30 L m., Mrs. James Stout, evenings at 7:30, Prayer aoo Youth seniei!, Thursday, 7:30 p.
day, 6:30 p. m.; Evangelistic 7:30 p. m.; Thursday, 1 to 3 p.
children's superintendent. Sun- Bible Study.
m. Monthly sings, first Saturday service, Sunday, 7:30p.m.; Mid· m., Ladies Home League; 7 p.m.
day (,'hurch School, adults aOO
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION or each. month.
Week Prayer meeting Wednesday Prep classes.
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRIST- 7:30 p. m. MissiorBry Meeting
youth, 10:30 a. m.; Junior High, - Raid Knobs , Portlard- Bashan
MT. MORIAH BAPTIST- MidSenior High and Young Adults Road. Rev. E. J. Griffith, pastor. IAN CHURCH - James Smith,
secoo:l Wednesday of each month dleport, corner of Fourth and
meet in formerMethodistChurch Sunda,y School, 9:30a.m.; Roger pastor. Robert Paulsen, Sunday
Main Sl Robert Jackson. pastor.
at 7:30 p. m,
for Sund~ Chureh School. Boyd Wilfred, SUpt. SUnday worship School ~t. Morning service,
Sunday
School, 9:30 a. m.: MornMASON BAPTIST CHAPEL Hackney, youth superintendent; service, 7:30p. m. Prayer meet- 9:30 a. m.; Sunda.Y School, 10:45 The Rev. Harold Cunningham, irw worship, 10:30 a. m., Arnold
Post high school and senior adults ing, Tuesday, 7:30 p. m., Milford a. m i Youth meeting, 6:45 p.m.
pastor. Otarles Lambert, Sunday Richards, Su,pt.
meet in rormerEUBbuilding, Ho- Frederick, class leader. Youth
SILVER RUN FREE WILL S..::hooJ Supt. Corner Second am
RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST bart Vineyard, supt. Adult Bible Fellowship, Friday, 7:30 p.m. BAPTIST- Rev. C&amp;tdill Atkins,
Rev.
Samuel J. Jackson, pastor.
Pomeroy sts., Mason, W. Va.;
Class party, last Monday each Ernest Deeter, leader; Roger pastor, Richard Fink, Sunday
Sunday School, 9:45 L m.; Wor- Prayer ser.vice. 9:30 a. rn.j Sunmodh. Youth Fellowship each Wilfred, Jr., president.
School S~rinterdent. Surda,y
'
ship service, 11. Wednesday eve- day School, 10 a.m.; Mrs. GerS~, 8 p.m. in former MethMASON ASSEMBLY CHURCH School, 10 L m.i Worship, 7:30
trainiOB union, 7; llnter
otl* building. District youth raJ-. OF GOD .;.. Second St., ·Ma·~ ·.:-P· jlr!nyer meeting, Thursday, ning,
ice,
service, 7:45.
,.. · ·
IY -first Monday of each month. W. Va. Sunday School, 10 'a.m. 7:30p.m. Choir practice, Tues-ion,
first and second Sundays at
THE ROCK SPRINGS UNITED
LETART UNITED METHO. Morning woi'ship, 11 a. m. Evan- day, 7 P· m.
METHODIST - C. J. Lemley, 5:30 p, m.; Mrs. Mary Woods,
DJST CHURCH - First and sec- gelistic service, 7:30 p. m. Bible
POMEROY C H U R C H OF
pastor, Harold Wackston, Chl.ll'cfl president.
OOd Stm:la,ys, preaching at8p.m.; Study am prayer service, Wed- CHRIST- Robert H. Wood, pas-- school supt. Morning "orship,
HYSELL RUN FREE ME11ll).
Third and fourth Sundays, ~ nesda.y, 7:30 p. m. Chester Ten- tor. Sunday Bible stldy, 9:30 L
DIST
-Rev. Cecil J. Wise, pas9:30 L m.; Church ScOOol, 10:15
day School, 10 a. m., Worship nant., pastor. Phone 773-5133.
m.; MorningWorship,10:30a.m.;
a. m.; Evening worship, 7:30: tor. Sulday School, 9:30 a. m.;
service at 11 a. m.; Tuesday
CARLETON CHURCH - Kings- Youth meeting, 6:30p.m.; EveMYF Sunday, 6:30 p. m. Prayer Morning Worship, 10:30; Eveevenings at 8 p. m., Prayer and burg Road. Sunday School, 9:30 ning worship, 7:30. Mid-Week
meeting and Bible Study, Wednes- ning worship, 7:30 p. m.; \'oung
Bible study.
a. m., Ralph Carl, supt. Worship service, Wednesday, 7:30 p. m.
day, 7:30 p. m. Admini1tntive Peqlle's Service, 6:45 p. m.;
RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE service, 10:30 a. m. aOO 7:30 p. Junior choir practice, Friday,
Council meeting, first Monday of Prayer meeting, Thursday, 1:30
NAZARENE - Rev. Uoyd D. m. alternately. Prayer meeting, 4 p, m..
p.m.
each month, 7:30 p. m.
Grimm, Jr., pastor. Sunday Wednesday, 7:30 p. m. Rev. Jay
LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN MIDDLEPORT FIRST BAPEDEN UNITED BRE111REN IN
Sehool, 9:30a.m.; MornJ.ni wor- Stiles, pastor.
LangsvUie Village. Rev. Robert
TISTCharlea W. Simons,paaCHRLST - Elden R. Blake, pasship, 10:30 L m.; Youngpoople's
OLD DEXTER CONt.-ttEGA· Eugene Musser, pastor. Worship
tor.
Robert
Rlchard11011, Sonlay
tor. Sunday School, 10 a. m.;
service, 6:45 p. m.; Evangelistic TIONAL CHURCH - Rev. Wil- service, 10:30 a. m.; Glenna
Winnie Holsinger, supt. Morning School Supl. Sunday Chur&lt;:h
services, 7:30 p. m. Wednesday lard Dutcher, pastor. Mrs. Wor- Fetty, Sunday School.~t. Sunday sermon, 11 a. m.; Evening serv- School, 9:15 a. m.; Mornlrw worevening service, 7:30p.m.
ley Francis, Sunday School Supt. School, 9:30 a. m.; Sunday ewice Christian Endeawr, 7:30 p, ship, 10:15 a. m. Sni'Jday Bible
HEATII UNITED METHODIST SWxlay Schoo, 9:30 a. m. Church ning service, 7:30 p. m. Midm. , Mrs. Lyda Chevalier, presi- study tloor, 7:30p.m. Sundly 4:30
CHURCH, Middleport - Max E.
services first and third Sunday week service, Wednesday, 7:30
dent. Song servke a.nd sermon. p. m., game time [or youth. WtODorehue, minister; James Brew- followlng Sunday School. Second p. m.
8:20. Mid-Week prayer meeting neaday evening prayer service,
irwton, Sunday School si.C)erin- and fourth Saturday evenings,
RACINE F1RST BAPTIST wedneaday. 7:30 p. m.. Mrs. 7:30 p. m.
terdeot. Church School, 9:30 a. 7:30 p. m., church services. Charles Norris, pastor. Sunday
m.; Morning worship, 10:30 a.
UNITED
FAITH
CHURCH School, 9:30a.m.; Morning wor- Muie Holzinger. class leader.
BIBLE BAPTisT TEMPLE m.; Youth meeti~, Sunday, 6 p, - Nease
Settlement. Sunday ship, 10:45 a. m. Sunday evenirw
Minersville, 0,, Church services
m. Choir rehearsal Wednesda,y, School Superintedent, Ro)' John- worship, 7:30 p. m.; Wednesday
each Friday evening, 7:30 p.m.
7 p.m. choir director, Ben Phil- son. Youth meeting, 6:30, Sun- evening Bible study, 7:30 p. m.
Pastor Ken Derri~ of Ravson. Prayer service, Wednesday, day.
BETHLEHEM
BAPTIST enswood Second Baptist Church.
By Unlte&lt;l Preas Jnternadona1
8 p.m.
SYRACUSE FIRST UNITED Great Ben:l, Charles Norris, pasBible Study each Wednesday at
Today Is Friday, Feb. 21, the
BETHANY UNITED METHO- PRF...&lt;iBYTERJAN - Rev. Linson tor. Worship service, 9:30a.m.:
7~30 p. m.
52nd day ol 1969 will! 313 tD
DIST CHURCH - Rev. Paul A. Stebbins, pastor, Sunday School, SuMa.y School, 10:30 L m.
POMEROY LOWER UGHT [ollow.
Sellers, pastor. Morning worship 9:30a.m.; Worship service, 10..
MORNING
STAR
UN1TED
The moon 11 between ita new
CHURCH - HarrisonvUle Road.
9:30 L m.; Sunday School, 10:30 :30 a.m.; Bible study and prayer METHODIST CHURCH - Rev.
phase and !lr at quartor.
Rev. Ito)' Taylor, pastor; WUL m. Blythe Theiss, supt. Youth service, Wednesday, 7:30 p. m. William Airson, pastor: John
The
morning
Jtars are
liam Reeves, Sunday School ~L
FeUa.rship, 6:30 p. m.
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST lhle, Supl; Roy Van Meter, Asst.
Mercury, Mara and Jupiter.
sunday School, 9:30 a. m.; WorTHE RUTLAND COMMUNITY
George Skinner, Sunday School Supt. Sun:lay School, 9:45 a. m.;
The evening stars are Ve1111
ship service, 10:30 a. m.; E~
CHURCH - Rev. Amos Tillis,
Superintendent. Sunday School, Morning Worship, 10:45 L m.;
ning worship, 7:30 p. D'Li Prayer and Solum.
pastor. Sunday School, 9:30a.m.; 9:30 a. m.; Morning worship, Prayer meeting, 7:30 p.m.
On 11111 day In hlolory:
and praise service, Thursday,
Lee Burnem, supt.Worshipserv- 10:30; BYF, 6p. m. BtbleStldy, Thursday, Fred E. Smith, layIn 1878 the New Haven, Cm:n.
7:30
p.
m.
tee, 11 a. m. Wednesday prayer Wednesday, 7 p. m,; choir prac- leader. Youth Fellowship, 7:30
WESLEY AN UNITED METHI). telopl&gt;me compsny publlohed
meeting, 7:30 p. m. SuOOay night tice, Wednesdly, 8:30p.m.
p. m. Stmday.
die Orot directory ol Ito ldnd,
worship, 7:30.
MT. UNION Baptist - Rev. CeMT.
HERMON
UNITED DIST CHURCH, Racine - W.
Ustlns: 50 subscrlberl.
Dale McClurg, pastor. Sunda7
THE DANVILLE WF.."iLEY AN
c il Cox, pastor. Sunday School BRETHREN IN CHRIST - Rev.
In 1885 after 37 yeara 0[
School, 9:30 a. m.; Worship servCHURCH- Charles Dozer, passuperintedent, l:::a.rl Starkey,Sun- Menzel Smith, pastor. SWlday
conllltruction, the Washtn&amp;toa
ice,
10:30
a.
m.;
Bible
Study,
tor; Adra Swick, SwKiay School
day School, 9:45 a. m.; Sunday School, 9:30a.m.; Russell SpenMonument was dedicated.
Wednesday, 7:30 p, m.;U.M. Y.F.
St.perintendent. Sunday School,
evening worship, 7:30; Wednes- cer, s~t.: Alfred Wolfe, assistIn 1950 Hungary 1011tencecl
.......
ant. Morning Sermon. 11 a. m., 7 p. m. each Sunday; Junior choir
American ll.i.U.SilDID Roo.rt
evening sermon, 7:30p, m., alter- practice, Wednesday, 3:15 p. m.;
Vogeler
to 15 year a in prt1011 on
Senior
Choir
practice,
Thursday,
nating each Sunday, ClaaB mee~
charges
or esplonage. Vogeler
7:30
p.
m.;
Wesleyan
service
I r&gt;&lt; 11 a. m. alternatl ng Sundl)'
aerved
17
month• and wu
Gulld,
fourth
Monday
each
month
mornings. Davkl Holter, das•
relosoed
1n
April
or 1951.
leader. Christian Erdeavor, 7:30 at 7:30 p. Dl.i Happy Huadera
In
19115
Black
Muollm loader
p. m. every other Surday eve-- class meeting, fourth Frida,)' ol
ning, Juanita Spencer, president. ead! month, 6 p. m.; WSCS, aee- Malcom X was lalally lhot In
Prayer meeting, 7:30p.m. every oPd Friday each month, 7,30 New York Cft1,
A tltoulilll lor the da,v:
Wednesday. Board meeting, 7:30 p. m. i Official lkud, aeccnl
WeDdell
WUkle once said, u()lr
Monday
each
month,
7:30
p.
m.
p. m., first Monday or month.
PORTLAND UNITED METHI). ..,.oroJ&amp;niQ- lo not1101110thlng tD
POMEROY TRlNITY UNITED
DJST
CHURCH - W. Dale Me- bo horded but oometblni ID bo
CHURCH OF CHRIST - Rev. W.
ClUI'J,
pastor. Sulllay School, used.''
H. Perrin, pastor. Patrick D.
•
9:30
a.
m.;
Worship service. 7:30
Wood, oupt. Sumay School, 9:1~
February
lnaugurateo
the
a.m.; Worship, 10:25a. m. Youth p. m.; omclll Board, ttrlt sun- kite flying IOIIOD, a lime We
Choir rehearsal, Monday, 6:30 day each month, 8:30 p. m.
OAK GROVE UNITED METH().
p. m. Mrs. Marvin Burt, 4lrec..
DIST
CHVRCH - W. Dole Metor. Senior choir rehearsal, 7:30
ClUJJ,
paator. Suncll)' Scbool,
p. m. 1buradaJ, Mn. P au 1
Nease, director. Thurlldl¥, all 10:30 a. m.; Worablp Hrvi.C$,
day, Buay Bee quiltilw party tn 9:30 a. m., 'llrat and thtr4 SuJt..
days each month.
_
church aoclal room.
would obaorve daily If we
THE
RUTLAND
METHODIST
THE RUTLAND CHURCH OF
took our wl!e'o remarb to
CHRIST - EiJPne Unde~4J::Jd, CHURCH - Rev, C. J, Lomloy, heart.
from
ChUrch School, 8:30 1o
pastor; V, H. Braley, al~Jt,; Sunnl.;
Worahtp
service. 10:80 a.m.
·People who never tnGke
day School, 9:30 L m.; ComZION
CHURCH
OF
CHRIST
miltoJCe.s
mUBt get cwfuUJI
munion and worlhlp service,
416 Main
bored
urith
d o I n g of&gt;.
Pomeroy
Harrlaoovllle
Read..
10:30 a. m.; Prl)'er meetlrw:,
Pt.
oolutelr
nothing.
John
Webster,
pa11tor,
Ray
Ll~
Thuradl:y, 7:30 p. m.

services at 7:4S p. m.

I

p, ...

GtT THill'
THE CHESTER METHODIST
CHARGE - Rev. Patti A. CO•
to, paatnr. CHESTER:. Worahlp
t L m.; ~ School, 10 L m.;
llrL Wald -.r, Sq&gt;l. FLATW()()I)S: Ch.arch School, Suncla)o,
11 L m., John Ball)', S\l)t. WCII'"'
lhiJ&gt; aervtee o.ltu~~oteo will! Altr.d aad Flatwood1. S.n:lcea

Today's
Almanac

• •

DIAMONDS All
fOil~ll .
RING SETS
CREDIT

'39. 95
Credit Jewelers

pa-.

• • •

What can you lift?

IF~ 601' IJo4IJ' fHS 9UFF!.
FIG~ \tlUI'ORWHQ.Il&amp;N'lOO

DANGERSOME THING
PNIPH F.ROIII
M-1

BaT""' N"'!.&amp;.&gt;

BA8't'~

WON111S Fi&lt;RM--

~~
t ·U

God has • woy of ...chias spiricul uadu ~p
pll)'lical facu.
.
Tom used to hove uoublo llftml lois •ocller'o obopo
piacbac-aot .., .....t
nac ...u...... face ila'c t:riwaph---it'• coafidbee.
Gi...-m a few wee~ Tam will lM liftiq: evea
.,.;1hu.
.
The fine tiee you cry to lift tomeGae'• lnude.,
it'• aa awkwarcl dort. Until you dltcover that phytical development and spiritual 1rowth w411rk the ume

'-

._Yier

......,..

•!

•

Qaly practice maku one a friend, a helper, a part•
aer to othen in their 11:rovbla •.• and, iacideatally,
better able to hear J01U' owa.
ETUY Suaclay daat open ch.urclt.d.oor is •• iaYit:a·
don to ,_ to ditcovor who&lt; .-.It to bo lifted • , • oad

l'

howboRtobep.

OI"HER CliA.RACT!iR

·. &lt;f.

C~IVE!

\ I

Loo¥. like

I done

ScriJtlltO"ft MI«Ud

Exodus
4(), 1-38

Numbers
9,15-23

crel!lted a
monster!

tlY A.....W.• Sill .. $oNly

Numben Numbers
Acts
1],16-30 12,1-16 7,17-44

Wltll the hl:ve it wW, in aome measure, roster m::1 help auatain that which 11 pod tn funlb.
aad commurdt;, ure, this reatureiaspooaoredbythe business ftrms and orpolzatlms whole namea

appear bel....

HEINER'S BAKERY
IJJT -· BOT I

BAKERS OF GOOD BREAD
HUNTINGTON, W. VA.

.

'. '

'

'IIICO.JGI1T 1ltE

.

~

MIIJCMAN
LEFT THE

· HO&amp;PI1~L

GOEGLEIN READY-MIX CO.
MIDDlEPORT

PHONE 992-3281

TINY'S FOODLAND
MJDDLEPORT,O.

1%~

LYONS
MARKET
.
.
"MEMBER OF THE BIG 3"
GENERAL MERCHANDISE
TVPPEIJS PLAINS
Pll 667-3280

BOGGS EQUIPMENT
SALES_- ALLIS CHALMBERS- SERVICE
FARM- JNilVSTR1AL- LAWN - GARDEN
TUPPERS PLAINS
Pll 667-3115

R. H. RAWLINGS SONS CO.

OHIO VALLEY BAKING CO.

,OHIO'S OLDEST DODGE DEALER
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

_BAKERS OF HOLSUM BREAD
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

.

·:

Lincoln - Mercury - Comet - EncJI&amp;h Fard ·

••.,

59~601

MIDDLEPORT, OJUO.

85 N. COURT ST.

LEIVING COAL COMPANY
PRODUCERS AND DISTRIBUTORS
OF HIGH GRADE COAL
WEST COLUMBIA, W. VA.

WILUS ANTHONY

. ..
~

.•~

RACINE FUL-VALU MARKET

CROW'S STEAK HOUSE

REXALL DRUGS
WE FILL ALL DOCTOR'S PRESCRIPI10NS
992-2955
POtmllOY, .0,..
~CE

BEN FRANKLIN STORE
POMEROY

EBERSBACH HARDWARE CO.
EVERYTHING IN HARDWARE
POIIEIIOY, 0.

RIDENOUR SUPPLY
FVRNITVRE AND APPLIAN&lt;.'ES
PIIONE JNI6-3308
CHESTER, 0,

oartrl...

~
'•i'

ablo

f. !word

or rapier
5. Shine
6. Bueball

I J II
tHEPoRI
l I II I
'

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:f

31. Bard'a
"ever''

.

01

~

M. Tt:Hurlum

4i
~

ll)'lllbol
• H .. Wortblllall

r1

3T. Symbolic

~

hone

Uncle

l

::::.~

--

.tOQpto...........- .

. ma,rt.llrat•

JR.I'BOQBIVJUCK

! n·.Mirror

.
DAJLll' ,ClBl'I"'.'QqVOTJ!1- Hore't ltoW to - · ' '

,' 4S. Kmed ·

.

,

·. A l' 1' D 1o B .t .t X il'
to lo ·oN 0 I' ll 1o lo •O W
Oooiollt!r ~I.V """""' ri&gt;r '!ftOI'ler. Ill wa-pi· .t .. .. · for the ihNe ~ e, X tor t11,it t~ O'e,. etc. Bintle Jetter1, ..,o.-~
lellllh """ ,..,.,- "' llle ...,.,,... all •1111&amp;
;.

·

-..•' ..,_. &lt;11!1u..tho eo4o !OIItn .,. dllfona~
--r".

Vo.lloy

()

("-we.. I . . . .,

,.,.

,...

1

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S2 Conan'

~

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:=ro:-:::i:-:~
....:c'*='"=SUUII==•:::u=·~·~·~l t xr:I r r r J
...,.. -.a . . .
,......,.• I........ ......
.... - •••, ,._.,....aoc..,....

rSYJD!

be'flln

21. Hallrman·•
halter
Jl. Old women
!O.AII...t

~

IN POMEIIOY OVER 80 YEARS

. IIII)DLEPOiiT

.•

~

TAKE SOMEONE Wl'l11YOO TO CHVI!Cll

lllfll. SECOND

homo

2. W.hup
3. Butt

22. A newlnk

~

NEW YORK CLOTHING HOUSE

WALLAa, JEWB.JR
BVLOVA WATCIIJ!S. SALES. SERVICE

DOWN

~quare, to

for• four ordinafJ woNt.

~ - 24. Unbellev'·

CHURCH AND OFF1CE SUPPUESGIF'I$
992-28fl
MIDDlEPORT, 0.

, . J.

member
19. Bad·

1. Penetrated
aawlth
'

.

Uaoeramble thae(our Jumb1ea,

one letter to aeh

aymbol

',.;

MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

Cn!W

or pork
:w. Knot lace
21. Germanium

~:·

KENTUCKY FRIED CIUCKEN .
POMEROY, OHIO

11IE STORE WITH A HAR'a
RACINE, OHIO

48. .Arabian
chieftain

worker
19. IAmb, beef

·:••

I

8. Whole

p....,
11'. Inhabitant
ot a town
18.Mu.

~

ATilENS RD.
POMEROY, 0. 992-6098
A FRIENDLY PLACE TO BVY

FAMILY RECREA110N
SWIMMING

18. 8hell

-

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IIIDDLEPORT

45. Finlabea

f ipl'et
12. Fragruce
13. Silly
14. VItality
10. - -

~

Ize

5. Gratlnf

_,=

ltflliwt
r:&gt;lt ~-tloat
=~!
\.Y ~~®
M¥11 ,
j
¥14' i i -

11, Colon-

individual

amount
· 10. CrMOeDt·

~~

992-2550

.U. AIIOClal

oWliOS8
1. Clothlq

~ ~

PLUMBING AND HEATING
240 LINCOLN ST.

DAILY CROSSWORD

~
•
'~-

ATHENS, 0.

ARNOLD'S SOHIO SERVIa

ROYAL OAK PARK

A1'1'END THE CIIVBCH OF YOUR

::•'

RAY RIGGS, INC.

MARK V STORE

·~~ ·

,.

II· ...

.•. ...

,

.

~-

~.''. •j·

•

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iM{ ', !1!1- ~

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'

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Fell'

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LPCQaSP . XBV

FVarc. Jo&amp; ·a F

BFCPV

RWV Q.

FP88QWI
UPB ·U8P ·.-

- IRPMJ~8J

J:.::rw~:z;,-r:o.l A BABY Iii GOD'S OPINI~
.

·

IILD GO ON.-c.\RL 8ANDJiuRG

(C 1~. Kill• r.:.turu i.Yndkate, lae. )

,

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eur 1\l!i DtJ.V
IS SIR

...•,

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a - n. DIU)'

Seatl:•l, Pom.ei'O)'..MJddleport, , o., 1-"rktaJ,

F'ebruu7 21. tNt
l'AllHOLL READ\
trode that also brought TOft)'
TAMP A, Fla. (lJPO - Cl.,_ CIGnl1110r ll'&lt;lm Atlanta in e&lt;·

trirratl Reda manaaer Dave Sri..
Ull, his CC*hlng '\taft, ml one
member or la.t year'a teem reiiV-_...ai

Thur :~ ·

LEAD WINNERS

the Reds, said he f'IS
" reed)' to play ball ... He c&amp;me
to
Reds last year in 't h e
with

Fla.

(tJ PO-

ner

ol

Gene Uttler, wi.,_
last week"s Phoenix
Open, leads golf money wimers
ror 1969 with earnings &lt;i
$48,028. Jack Nicklaus 11 second

FARMERS!

?

REPAIR NOW!
Allis-Chalmers Parts &amp; Service
SPECIAL PRI CES UNTIL APRIL 1
STOCK
UP NOW!

BALER TWINE

'69 Promises Fireworks
On Prayer ·Bon in Schools

DEADLINE$
5 p .l'lt. Dey Bel•• PtA&gt;IIc.tian

lr DAVID POLING

Wonde)" Deedli• t •·•·
c .neatletleM &amp; Corrections .
Will be ICCiptecl ""'II f O.M. for

Fulton-Thompson
Tractor Sales
Spring Ave.

Pomeroy

MF 135

It would be hard lo discover a more controversial or
explosive issue than prayer and Bible reading in the pub·
lie schools. And if we read the signs or the times, we will
not have to look for another debate topic for 191111. Prayer
and Bible reading are again the secret words of dissent
and disagreement.
The Religious News Service tieports that the city of
Clairton. Pa., has approved, through the nine·member
school baard, a course for students In the public schools
called "'Bible Reading and Prayer." OffiCials of the board
state it is in response to the almost unanimous demands of

the students and their parents. The high school frlncipal at
Clairton (pop. :lll,OOO) said the idea came out o discussion
with students in the Problems of Democracy class-&lt;:ertainly the right spot in the school curriculum to lntrodoce
it!

In many parts of the South and Midwest, it has been
business or, in this instance, religion as usual. In large
urban areas where a pluralisUc reU,gious culture is no
longer dominated by Protestant pressures, the Supreme
Court ruling of 1964 has guaranteed a sectarian truce. Not
only have denomiaatlonal. exercises been rare but &amp;eboolsponsored baccalaureate services at graduatlon time are
entirely in the «&gt;-operative hands of local churches.
Yet regional yearnings, and district cusloms prevail.

Hundreds of hl&amp;h schools all along the "pluralistic" eastem seaboard continue to sponsor Christmas concerts of
sacred and secular music. And the birthday of Martin
Luther King Jr. was observed by thousands of students
in February, complete with hymn sin~ing , prayers and
reading from his books as well as selections of scriptureall in a public school setting.
But these mixed patterns of religious observance and
devotional "courses' are not the main fuel behind the explosive debate of 1969. Much controversy, with new arguments and old, will be evident when Sen . Everett Dirksen,
R -IlL , presses (or a constitutional amendment providing
for the freedom of religious exercises in public schools .

Kelly to Report Progress

-

ltD

FEEDS &amp; CONCENTRATES

PROFIT- PROVEN

MILK REPLACER
CONTAINS __________ _
milk products and
high-quality animal
fat for feeding values
to equal whole milk

Ohio Valley Industries
PHONE992-2161
MJNERMLLE, 0.

RT. 124

CUE NO. lt.JI08. Younb CIII'AIII&amp;
MCL'UUII1 ul Dan IJiane, (IUII'dll.ll

Ul• ...,... ud ._... of DIUlo

lei
Lfil

Fran.tlln
Sbuit,

Shan. ~

and

HermM1'o

alBIOI'II.

C .\S! NO. UI.GI8. Seco&lt;oud 1Ud ... wal

Act.'UUA&amp; of

Oua~D

Albert

1lm1Ul.

L.

ol U.. per.c,n ... d Ntlt.e

of PeaJ'Ue S\uWMU'J',
l&gt;llt.ent Penoa.

aa

l..eoll!l ·

CAD NO. 10.1180. *Ill Carhtn
.«count of II. )f . &lt;.:rvaa, G111.rdlan
ol \be ...,"*"' ·lad .tate ol O.CWp
H. t."T.,.. , Mil lncolllPCCent Peh'On.
CASE NO. It-- J'll1lt IDd PIMI
A.c:coun.t ot Reymond L. a . . .u .
~Wt of UuJ ..tat. of ..,..
.,.. CIC~Yellnd R.u-u, dee. . aed.
CAU HO. tt.a. l'\nl IIDd FIDal
Aoouu.nt of WlWam J:. SUwen. Ad·
~ of Ule ...... ol NeW.
CIIIJ'. deeeued .
CAD NO. 18.131. ftm aDd nul

Aceount .. r 87bll Ebet~Heb , D•
culr1a of liM &amp;.tala of Goldie M.
Rice , Dlocilued .
cAa NO. tt.aM. nu"' Oanwat

Aecount Ol Rlc!lultd J . C~,
U\ludiaa ol the pt~r,QD .1114 -..e
o1 orvtue 8 . Cbue. m tacompet.

eat . . - .

Vnh!.. exrepUo.u ani ftled UlenW,

aee...U wiU tt. for ~
twruR elM! Court on Ute :MUI day ot
Mueb. lll!ll!li, at wbl.eb ua. Aid ae-

..,id

aa,,_d or .

AnJ' . .raoo lnWNIUd IDQ' file
--.rttkn exceptlona to uld aeeouma
01' to RU~tten pertalntDI to U.. ....
&lt;:utlon of the tnllt, not kiM Ulan
ftYI diYI prior to 11M daWI lA lol'

hearina.
IOHN C. aACON

Why Not Place Your Order Now At
Mulberry Ave.

Ph. 992-2115

ills
Pomeroy

•

•

"

-·--~---

•

'

•

'

'

____, ....-.- .- . -

...-~·--~

•

'

~

'

.

-~-· · ~--

__ _. ....

·-· ··.------· ·-

_

~···-

ACTINCI P•GaATI JUMI
Mll.l COUNTY. OMIO

a-at -lt.o

Real Estate For Sale

HOIST ETTER
REALTY
GEO. ROIIS'I'E'I'tm,

RAT£S
far Want lui S.nlce
per Word o,. l,..lftlan

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Mini,.u"' Cha•t•

"••"f.
""'7,· ••.,. 4M'
four oil r,. nyl....

n..4e,
775• 4 lf!tlt. 11*-11•

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12 ClntS P" word thr11 CO,.ICI,I•
''"'' intllt'tlo....
II cent• pot' Word ai• co~tll~tvtivl

Ill ...

h'lurlllont .
25 P'f eont Dileo"'"' on po id ode

and eds poid •oll'llhi~t 10 doy1 .
CARD OF THANKS &amp; OBITUARY
$1 .50 t..- SO ...ord mi..OIII\1111 . £o .
oll41tiollol •ord 2c .
BLIND ADS
Ad41tlonel 15c Char.. por -.4nr•
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8 :30 o .m. to 5 :00 p . on. Doily
la30 0. 111 . to 12 :00 Noon Soturdoy

2." ...... '••

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,.••,., ..... &amp; Allll

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fvllr

lt.,_.,,....,

'''• .. or,., • ..

I111Ut .. •

MCORI!'S

12-i . . ......
b

Notice
SHOTGUN MATCH, P..utland
Gun Club SUnday stsrting at
I p.m.
M6-31e

SEE NEIGLER Bulldlnl Supply for bui1&lt;llnw your borne,
J..oJw Ume loan available.
J-lil-tle
TAX Service dally escept SUnday 9 to 5. ~
by appointment. Mn. Steven
'Wanda' Eblin, Rt. 2, Pomeroy. Laurel Cllff Road.

~It

I'OMIROY

e:. Main

606

Pomeror, 0.

.

ForS.le

Yes, We Ha•• Them
HOME LITE

DIRECT DRIVE
CHAIN SAliS

Sl40.50
POMEROY

1JON'T LET "'1!1 cleanlnfl bore
yoo. Lei Wipe Out wan cleaner ~o It for yoo. Rent a wall
w-. $1. Bater Furniture.
1-!Nic

Monr Mod•l•

As low as • •

~oek
.

W. Cor ..y,
Mgr.

992-2181
Op•n Til 6 Dailr

FOUR ROOM HOUSE with
bath. Main Sl Rutlsnd, phone
712-.

. ,..,

1-INIIte

WILL DO sewing at home zippen, pockets, pegging.
alterations,

ete.

Mrs. Freddie Thabet. Maoon.
Phone 773-5651.
4-3&amp;-tf•

EAGLES CLUB
STEAl DINNER

VACANCY lor two eldeely pie. Prefer private paid pa-

tients. Phone Mason, 7'11-5115.

;wa

Memb•rs and Families

Ml)ftp

Adulto $1.25
Children 75c

500 BALES sec01&gt;1 cutting hay.

a-

11!67 FOR1l plctup. Phone
ter 1115-3924.
~-~p

J-iJI.31c

rtl PL.Tio!Otml 4-&lt;loor sedan,
power steering, aulomatic
transmissloo, · radio, l!llra

good oondltlon, $1.800. .PIIOIIe
74U511.
Z-2Ntc

For Sale

IJ.C.IIe

Elmer Eckles. Star Route. P&lt;71'ATOES, Phone 8IWIM
Craigsville. W. Va. 211205.
a - Prolfllt, Partland.
2-21·:!tp
10.11-Ue

--ANTIQUES, dtsboo. fwnltaro,
ell-,

old pllm».
cloclal, mlle. Lee
RudloOI, u• Legion Ten-.
2-16-IJip

........

W1ntecl
ANTIQUES, ltlrnlture,

dllbea,
Mn. lllnmd
Cedi, 100 w. llalD St., IIIJ'14tfr.
m~~oeu._.

For Sale or Trlde

1115 CIIIMIOLET ~ w...
door hard top,
au~&lt;~mat~e,
JIOINI' steertnc and bnbl.
CallltiHifT.
1-a.llc

m

Forbnt

UNFI/RNJliHED llrp five
room ~- Arnold Bn&gt;-

lbln, Ill E. llalD St., ~
ro)'. Pballe
1-7-Uc:

liM!..

FURNillHED and llllfllndlbed
apartlllentll. C1011 1o odlooL
Pbone Ill MM.
111-IJ.UI!

~

.....

J..U-tlc

- -.-.....I
.........

66

.......-;:::

.

\

i

:

I

~ · -·-·-

l&lt;nallost H-r Core.

BLAEnNARS

S.l7«e

--IIIX ROOM llaale, balb, IGnD~amm1

a., sr..

ty. 11 Co*

II.,
l'1lllae IIWIIl

Busi111111 Services

CAm.E

llnledlnc

Service. Pllane Parbr 18122111 Pomeroy or 61'1~1 Coolvllle caD ststiau.
J..l._..,

_...

l'amerOJ-

aild

-

l-1&amp;41c

BUDGET PRICE famlture '"'
our tblrd Door budget lbop.
BASS FIDDLE, !Hize, mollotl-

Baker Fumiture, Middleport.

11-tfc

!l!io.

your

Business Services
'IWO FAMILY lllmflt baulo,
5 ..,.... and bath upolain, I CIGAIIETI'E nndlnll !NtMJw
...... and beth downltain,
and -.Ice. ABC EDieq:ill-.
gu tunraee. In Detls Pro4b:e
Masaa, \t. Va. Pbollo '1'1U$41.
blodL 4\0 Oole 91., - . , ,
H-Ue
~ IVJ-1515.
1-9-lltp
RADIO and 'IV repair, boule
!IIIII) zro ZAG sewing machine;
calli, and Installed.
...,.._.. of fl.ll per
Jalm
llarrilon,
Phone
manth or pay balance of.-.
...

1-111-«e

.....

1112-•.

J..IUic

:.t~l:

&amp;&amp;tlrttt ,,...... ......
_, Hl4ll C.VMY
~-; 3-7 ate

$895

Country Sedan Sta. Wagon . VB . Auto . trans . P o wer steering

NOW

Buick

Was
$1795

Firebird 2 dr. Hard Top. 350 cu . in . HO with 4 sp . sh ift.
Full operating Consul. Shows good core .

NOW

.6 6

Buick

Just
Arrived

$1,695

Pontiac
Pontiac

$1,495

Chrysler

White with blue int., V..S motor, auto. trans ., power
bra_k es, power steering, radio, w/ s/ w tires, factory
air-conditioning, 1 owner, new Olds trade.

2 DOOR, HARDTOP
AUTO. TRANS., P.S.
P.B. RADIO &amp; HEATER

65 01~ 88's .........•.••.• Your Choice $1495
CHOICE {)F 2. 1-4 Dr. Green finish with ;roon inOur

Salesmen
II' ould Be
Delighted To
Talk To You

$195

R. H.
Rawlings
Sons
Co.
'
MIDDLEPORT, D.

63 Pontiac
~:.~";"~
$595
114. tNns.

61 Pontiac
..iW:.1\rT. $195

63 Dlds 88

:..tt.. $495"

OPEN "EVENINGS

KARl &amp; VAN ZANR
992·5342

GIIAC FINANCING

Dally 5:30 A.M .
7:00 P.M. 7:00 to 7:00

POMEROY

1962 FORD COUNTRY

3 Se~t W~on, V8 engine, automatic trans . Power
,. ateenr.u and brGkes, good tires, radio and heater.

Rlfne ~ charged

Larry

eel on probation for three years
and James Gibbs, found llUil~ by
&amp; )ley of aSNUlt and battery.

floor shift,

woo given two yoora

)mlba-.

..

10 per cent of the nation's
toocls.

vi&lt;O waa srllllled JucJipnent 1n lbo
._..., of~ wllb 1111..... 11 and

def-··

·JAotor Co. ·&lt;@)

. ..

colla, b"Oin tbe
feriOII D. Holley, Jr._ aftd

Ice HollO¥•

....

Jet-

Jan.

•·

its · native . IW&gt;Iiat,

wben

planted IIi tile IIOillhern.lleli\iIJihere ·lt"la the futelt-lfOW•
lill timber Pln.e In the warltl.

Q--Whol plor had lht

. .

New York olate· prOduces

••stsnee ot Holley•• Texaeo Ser-

CHEVROLET ····'·················+··········-··············$695
11963
m_pa1a 4 dr: Loco:l 1 owner car, ' V8 engine, pow.,..
gl1de, radio and heater, good tires blue finish

·,..

"Fhilllln." ..

q...:.whicia .. lh•

""'v .....

tpngesl """ of&lt;mr slloto 011

ilriHIIIi®r7
·. A-"Lifo with. Father"
with 1,213 porr-IIIICtll.
.

.

'

•

''

with eo.

tetlng withautbreaklng, wasplae.

.~!~!!~,~.v.!~~i· ·i· ~;;;~~·;· ~~;·: ·s~j;~;···s;~;;···
;,;;,'J~~
1p·eed,

'..
And In the end; through
the long ages of our quell
. ror light, It wiu be (ountl
. lhll.·iruth ·ts atUI -·mlllltler
~n-lbe'iwprd .....:aen_DOu;.

las MaoArthur.

PT. PLEASANT - Ordera
aiiOOd by the elr&lt;ult court and
lllter&lt;&gt;d In the olrlce of the circuli clerk Included two probadoo orders and one default judgment.

The plllntlfr, Credit Bureau,

.. .

992-9974

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

buc.ket seota, good tu.-s, 6 cyl ., 3
racho. Popular Model, special price.

&lt;my l!ll&gt;r&lt;.-Jificah 4:3.

218 E. Moln

2 SIGNS
OF
QUALITY

64 Olds. 88 Station Waeon ............... $1295
White with red vinyl interior, V..S motor, auto. trans.,
power brakes, power steerin~, radio, tinted glass,
w/ s/w tires, 1 owner, new Olds trade.

Christian• to

set

"''I'""""'

sociates.
UFTING
Salt has an exhlleratiJl&amp; a real
UFTING
The Chrlltlall
may t.ve a lifting effect oo tolka
and communities.

ger in his car, 11. R. Adame,
Pt. Pleasant, complained ~ back
pains.

Up-Tight Nixon Gone;
Color Him Relaxed Now
ly NOEL GROVE

-or.

WASHINGTON - (NEA)-

The exchange went something like this, except that
the name of the reporter Is
changed:

..Good morning, Mr.
Nixon."
"Oh, good morning,
James. (pause) Are you go-

ing upstairs?''

"Yes, J'm going upstairs."

room asking people to iden-

tify themselves so he could
pare the group down to size.

As ltlentifications began,

six men left without explana·

tlon.

J.n astronomy , magnitude
is the measure of the brightness of a star or of any Juminous body in the heavens .

(Uncomfortable pause.)

TRUTH
Salt stands for TRUTH. which
ts as essential to lite as vitamins to health.
Jrx!lana are never civilized unless first chrlstianlzed. Darwin
visited the iat.RI of Terra del
Fue&amp;Q, IPd was sure these ladians were the "misstqg: link..,
A few years later he retw'Ded to
filll them completely chllized.
He discovered the cause Ia
chri1tlan missionaries who had
introduced them to Christ and as
a result Duwin Sl.l'ported the
London Missionary Society whieb
had furnished this partictdar

of worker s..

CONCLUSION
··I . . . . . ojlod ..... In the~
diVisions or the se11t100 namely: STANDARDS, ASSOCIATES,
LIFTS, TRUTH. This message is
ror all believers. We are his witnesses. We are to channel this
power an:l bring His KlfW!om to
earth. Jl we are not salt to some:one, should we -not question the
authenticity of our discipleship?

•

•

-

Buy
Now and
SAVE
Up To

$100

BUY
YOUR

ON ALL
MODELS

63'

MOiiLE HOME
NOW
TOTALLY ELECTRIC
2 &amp; 3 BEDROOM MODELS
Now Avoilablo

For As Low As

$4995

Complei,;

Tri-Coullfy
. .llea.n
2013 Ent•rn An,
Galli,.lla

N. W. COMPTON, 0. D.

"Well, I'm going upstairs,
too."

(Longer pause, and then

OPTOMETRIST

Nixon's elevator arrives.)
"Well . . . see you up-

m-.1re KOORS 9:30 TO 1%, 2 TO 5 (CLOSE AT NOON ON
THURS.) - EAST CO\)RT ST.• POMEROY

stairs."

··Whether such an awk.ward

exchange would happen with
Nixon the President is open
to discussion. Certalnly in
his public appearances the
consensus is that he comes
off much more genUine and
relued than Dick Nix'"'
private citizen, or Nixon u,e
candidate.

rallied again end again tD help

them?

gr~

NEA Staff Correspondent

right, b~ck to work!" EveeyIf ·· th~re ·'is· a ·new · Nttbft · l»ne laughed.
..... · -··
odist WSCS.
many observers here an!
'"God, he thinks he's Art
THIRD FRIDAY Club, Friday,
thinking, the ima~e was Linkletter!'' exclaimed a
7:30 p.m. at the home of Mrs.
born after the campaign, not newsman present, in mixed
Mabel Wotre.
before or during.
puzzlement and admiration.
They marvel at the little And, mie:ht one add, a sense
SAT URDAY
hwnaoistic traits surfacing of relief~
GEORGE WASHINGTON Bir tfr.
in the White House that were
• • •
day supper Saturday beginning
buried in stiff smiles and
EVERY NEWCOMER to
4:30 p.m. at Syracuse Eleme•
mechanical words and ges- government in a change o1
tary School. sponsored by Ladies
tures before the new Presi- adn1inistrations must won.
Auxiliary, Syracuse Fire Depart,..
dent took office. Off-the·-cuff der at somt~ time about the
ment.
Nixon jokes are becoming effectiveness of s e c u r i t y
standard rare .
measures. Especially when
HIGH SCHOOL DANCE Party,
Has "making it" relaxed confronted by the bureauc·
Saturday, Meigs Junior High
him that much and thawed racy of thousands of nameSchool auditorium in PDIJieray,
the programed exterior of less but seemingly busy and
8 to 11 p.m. The Ja,ys will emNixon , the care I u 1 cam- functional faces.
cee. Open to the publlc.
paigner? Or does he partly
The new administration
mi~ht
be reminded of the ex.
CHILI SUPPER beginning 4·'~"• s .uccumb to tempta;Uon,
smce response to presiden- pertence of Lincoln Gordon
•
tial humor is so automatic of L7ndon Johnson days
p.m. Saturday in MMonlc buUd·
ing at Cheater sponsored by Ches- as to make Bob Hope green who m his early career aS
ter Youth Organization.
with envy?
assistant secretary for LatinAmerican affairs called an
SUNDAY
Richard Nixon, veteran
interdepartmental meeting
NATIVITY DEANERY , cathoobservers say, has never
to review relations south o1
lie Women's Club
quarterly
shown much dexterity- for
the border. It was his first
meeting at St. Arvirews Parish
~a~ual small talk with non.
·call
for such a gathering
,
mbmates, whether they be
ln Nelsonvllle, 2 p.m. Sunday.
reporters or outstretched
which usually includes toP
regional desk men from
MONDAY
hands on the campaign trail.
Slate Department and a few
TENT 95. Daughters of Unioo A classic example occurred
people from Central IntelliVeterans, 7;30 p. m. Monday at one day in the Pierre Hotel
gence Agency, all capable of
in New York where Nixon
D. A. V. Hall.
had his headquarters In the
giving inside information on
the situation.
BETHEL 62, International Or~ interim between election and
der of Jobs Dauglllefs, 7:30 Man- inauguration.
Gordon was reportedly
surprised, however, to see
day night at the Pomeroy Masonic
The President-elect enthat a group of about 25 had
Temple.
countered a Washington poassembled
tor the meeting.
TUE!IJA y
litical reporter of "his ac·
Deciding
that
the number
LADIES AUXn.IARY, D r e " qualntance In the hotel lobby
was
a
bit
unwieldy,
he
Webster Post 39 , American I.e- as both of them were waiting
started ~olng around the
for their separate elevators.

Probations are
Made Official

aa

ASSOCIATES
salt is valueless Llllles1 it i1
ASS0&lt;.1ATED with the thlqJ to
be affected. It gives flavor to
food s, and preserves meata, ud
believers should al10 kelp tbe
thought and lalk or
they
joln to a clean, high level, gi¥iq: a :appy tone to lt. Bel,.•ers are desirable ao:l worth1 a ..

WASHINBTDN

glon, 1:30 Tue~ night at lhe
hall; Joe Struble tD speak on
Arnerieonlsm.

ta !.lk

habi l standard• that will re1Wt.
in building character.

Star Chief 4 dr. Sedan . Beautiful light blue originO'I finish .

66FordLTD4 Dr. H.T.................. $1695

V-8 motor, auto. trans., P.B., P .S., radio, tinted
glass, w/ s/w tires, white over green, with beige vinyl
int ., low mileag•, locally owned.

our

of shoulder pains, and a pasaen~

KANAUGA, OHIO

$1095 $995

VB, stand. trans., radio &amp; heater. A good buy!

Business Man's
Specials Every Day

SMITH AUTO SALES

Was

1958

66 Buick Wildcat 2 Dr. H.T.............. $1895

boast that they sot lhe ooclal
standards of a comml.llit.J'. lt i1

fer Chemtcal Company and was
struck In the rear by a car driv·
en by Roy Lee Baney or Ypsilanti, Mich. Crump complained

NOW

Pontiac

bers. wtwt an honorirw: prhl·
lege is ourol Some JO&lt;ioot11Glks

Inter secdon on Rt. 2 to lhe staufP.S It' s fa ctorv eQuipped w1th Ant1-F ree ze

Grand Price 2 dr. HardTop. Air Condit ia-.ed . Bucket seals
with full consul. Automati c. PS &amp; PB .

67 Olds F85 CluL Coupe ................ $1995

With busine!i s people
who know . . . . our
luncheons
win first
place. Try on enjoyable'
noon meal here soon
and you•ll agree.

avoid fi shtailing. And you can

NOW

64

h. 1r n, OL .:)'; IS the :ranl.Ucll
anu the peck are tor 111181UMftlt
People gnde doom tbelr dooda
rrom the habllo of dnrd&gt; -

When we cut our fir.wer • or ~
jure
the body in any way, all the
Two Complain of
throw-oft ol salt in perspl.rat.i.Oil
and other Wl.)'l frCMn our body
ceases. The iilt in our system
Injuries in Wreck
is called to the woumled place
PT. PLEASANT - The Sberltr Departmentlnvestiptedatwo- to avert blood poiaoning.
John B. Gouah leiJ bock lrto
vehicle -colUeioo Thursday at 4:·
drink
five times. bot at every
45 p .m. resulting in complaints
fall the faithltd layman who rtrst
f1 Injuries by two persons an d
led him to Otrist was at his
-roximateJ.y $350 properv
side to help him ~ again. And
damage.
The mishap occurred when a the last time he stayed up.
What about the backslider of
vehicle driven by Lorain Crump,
DUl' commUDiay? Have you and I
Rt. 2 Leon, had aiA&gt;pped at the

Was
$1195 $1,695

A USED CAR
THAT CAN BE

terior. 1-l Dr. Htp. Gold finish with gold interior.
Both power ~~uipped, both locally owned.

of rtgflteoueness. Christians are
IR:Ilspensible because they are
to know and follow right lines.
Our practices are the eatima~
trw unit of right actions• as gold

yo u co ntrol acc elerat io n-

and noodle soop, baked goods;
sPbnsored by' Letart Falls Meth-

65 Mustana 2 Dr. H.T.................. . $1095

JH.Ifc

problem with the· street sal t.
either _ Datsun 19 undercoated
at the factory.
Go! You slip into f1rst.. .
th en s econ d _ Da tsu n 's all -

FRIDAY
FOOD SALE, Friday, begin..
ning 10 a. m. at Cross Store,
Rac ine; homemade
vegetable

Six cyl., atCL trans., bronze metallic finish with matching vinyl bucket seats.

Follow that
Hunch ...
Order a Soup 'n
Sandwich lunch

proof fron t di SCS take hold .
stop you sure and easy_ No

STANDARDS
Believers set the STANDARDS

Grand Prix 2 dr . Hard Top . Another one owner new Pontiac
trade in. Reall y sharp.

$1,995 64

Wildcat 4 dr. Hard Top. Spotless burgandy with black vinyl
interior. This is o one owner sharp trode·in that we ca n
highly recommend . Fully equipped.

AI the 1irst traff ic light
there's slush . Datsun's w ater -

••ve are the salt ot theeartb.!'

sy nc hro mesh 4 ·speed helps

NOW

Pontiac ~~s $2,695

ca m roars and s ettle s to a
smooth 1dle

dispenslble people:

HOW

$2495 $2,295 65

68

Brrr! A freezing morning
Yo u sl ip in-t o yo ur Dats un
Pump the pedal. twea k the
c hoke , flip th e I QO itlo n .
Varo ooo m! The over head

Lumpy, pac ked snow b't'
the freeway ramp . Datsun '&amp;
sure -footed. fully mdepend ·
en t rear suspension takes o"'er.
Ya u rel a)(. The powerful
hea ter / defroster wath its quickworking fan has the interior
toasty. The windshield clear.
On to w ork. Past the huf fers and puffers. the sliders
and stallers.
You sm1le. You've got The
Bad Weat her Friend . Make
the Sound Move to Datsun .. .
The World 's Best S2000 Carl
As k you r Da t sun Dealer t o
prove 11!

Sports Wagon 9 pass . This is the popular 9 pass . Wagon
with sk.yroof. It's a one owner new Buick trade·in . Fully
equipped.

willl attadments.
eontwbtder and paint IJIIIIJ. AIR CONDITIONING Rarrtpratlon eervice. Jact'a RefrigRepaaesaad 'but guaranteotl
eration, New Haven. boDe
In 1IR condition. l'lly off
az.ll'lt.
• • tl'c
.,..... If dellnd.
Pbane . . . .
J..IUic"
READY - MIX eonereto delivered rlcbl to your proJect.
ONE HALE Beagle pap. ~
Fast and eBIJ'. Free lltl- ·
Ill-lift.
l-ll-4te
mates. Phone mat, Goeg·
lein Ready - Mil&lt; Co., ~
liD JI'ORD pctup, liOOd caadJ..
port, Oblo.
• • tl'c
tlaa, tlllO. IJaa BaD, ~
117--.
2-!Hip

trend&gt;- SIX ROOM house, bath, 50 x lf.O
er lo dig your nter line
loot lot. Gravel 1Dil, MlddJe.
dltdl. Henry Babr ..
port. Pllone 992-5538. 1-:11~
Roger Bahr - · %-7-30tp
.

per IIIOIIlll. Phone

Ford :::s

I 1 lie

er.....,....

iny flnillb, tuning acale G. D.
A. E., PIJ. Pllone Paul Sayre,

$1,595

tiNIII
.. 01da
CriU Bl . . .d

boocli:. We have a -

CaB - -

64

Was
Catalina Conv . Coupe. This is a superb condition one owner new Pontiac trade-in . You'll have to see it to appre·
ciate its condition .

:t;95

Custom LeSobre 4 dr. Sedan. Factory Air Conditioned.
Sparkling original gold finish with matching buckskin all
vinyl seat. Exceptional condition.
MOW

$1,795 65

~ Catalina 2 dr . Hard Top . Beautiful original turquoise fin•
;:i sh with matching interior . Power steering . Power brakes .
· Automatic trans .

Buick

·~~ ····

---

Ume

65

C. C. IIIWIFQIII)

Portland. 8~3-D~~, on Rt. 338,
MACHINES, I'Opalr
one mile bo1ow Ra..........S SEWING
tro.
Rent Furnllure
eJeetrlc ·
·fl. Baker
Qmlplny.
IM!rvlce, aU makel. WY J..
~1-ft~
l-17-4tc
2214. The Fabric Shop, Pam""'l'·
AulhoriJed Sillier i!alea
I!IIIII WAIBUT stereo, AM-FM PLANT $El'i1!111 with ""'ter
and Service. We Sharpen
- · Fair condttloo. Phone
..-, lour ~ cbqer.
llculon.
l##c
117-DIIO.
Ul~p
·A June pa,.nts of ...21 per
maat11, or pay balance of MEN'S WORK unlfonno and
fJOI. CaR tiiUIM.
1-IUtc
white painlerl unlfonno. Jelfer's Clothing Store, Rl. 33,
SAVE IIAVE SAVEl Save ywr
Pomt!I"O)'.
UJ.«e

yOur

Pontiac

~meroy

EUilC'I'ROWX ......., eleaa-

8011P'S ON the 1"111! !bat Ia, 10
cloan tbe 111101 with Blue 1.111-

IBWII,

-66

NOW

SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
Sanltallon, Stewart, Oblo,
1-12-Uc
MIX£D HAY, 10 cea11 a bale. Pbone • 1035.
Pbollo Ill 3131.
1-16-'111:
9POUTING, roofing and carpentry, new or remodellng, by
fi'OR A JOB ftD done feelln8,
eiOID carpets wllb Blue w.. eontraet ar hour. Clinton
Pierce. Pllone 992-2015.
tro. Rent aleetrle ·~
Z.lll&lt;llc.
fl. TIDJ'• Barplnland.

.-

Buick Just Arrived $1,795

LeSobre Custom 4 dr. Sedan . One local owner . Po·wer steer·
· ing . Power brakes . .Auto. trans . Extra sharp .

From lbo Lorco• Truck or
Bullli&gt;dr Ro&gt;la10r To Tho

PH. 99Z.2U3

Pontiac A/r~~d$1,395

Catalina 4 dr. Sedan. One loeal owner . Power steering.
Power brakes . Auto. trans . Shows excellent care . HOW

2-21-6tc

-*·

meot, 1M Malben'y Ave.

65

EXPERIENCED
Wilt« S.mce

NOW

NOW

Phone 992-6214.

Auto Seles

ONE OR TWO bedroom trailer.

IN POMEROY

CURTllll

Willard, Pbone - ·

Dinners To Go

Wanted To Buy

gear -down to help you stop.

BLAETTNAR'S

For sale or tske aver pay- LAMPS eiectrllled, coovenloal,
ments.
z.-.,
lamp porta, chimneys, abodes,
wirlnC. Lee fl!o!Wil, Ill Lei:OOD HAY, lint and .....,d
gloa Terrace.
1-l~lltp
cutting. 40 cenls bale. Romer

Sunday, Feb. 23
1:00-6:00 P.M.

Sunday beginning at '-1 at
the Forl&lt;ed Run Sportsman
Club. Everyone Is welcome.

rlsonville Road off Rt. 7.
J-19-stc

Complete Front-End
and Brake Service

WIND80R house treller.

fO • 12 feet; Pl1one IMII-J'Illl;

l~c

THERE WILL be a gun sboot

Ground

REGI'STERED Quarter Hone
Colt. Pllone 119J-S11113. l-7.0-6tp
HOUSE IN Tuppen Plains. I \0
acres, 7-room bouse, bam and
block garage on Route 7. CaD
Coolville 667-3'/94.
1-ZIJ.etp

Notice

Welcome

ddnll

has loal its .. vour wherewith
shall it be .ailed? It io thonct&gt;rorth good ror nothing but lObe
cast out, and to be trodden u•
der foot of merL"
Some people pit,y believen,
perhlps because t h e name,
"Christian," often is worn with
tear. Others have an air of patronage in their attitude toward
the church; a few would abolish
11 altogether.
But Je sus in the ten above
employs salt as a symbol to d&amp;clue his followers are an Ln..

to the

1

IN~

hemming,

Bv raul A. Sellers. Pastor
Syracuse United Methodlat ~
MaUhew 5: la... Ye are the
aaJt or lhe earth but 1r lhe Alt

55.55

ONLY 1,11.95

---

2-21-31&lt;

People Indispensable

WIMel All1n11ent

Bnbr
Insurance
I'OMEROY BUSINESS SECTION 'I'RAJLEll LOTII. Bob'a llolllll lfl1ll SCBULT hoalo trallor HI
Coart,
ll)oriCUIO,
Ohio
...
lltlte
- 7 room brick bulldlns. s,.
au 16 aero lot bact of Hart- AUTOMOBILE Insurance heel
RL 124, Pballe 111-81.
000 square reet at fioor space.
ean&lt;eDed? Loot tour operot..
.ll-llc ford. Lllte - · Llfed In '001')'
Bargain, $20,000.00.
m.. ..... Jrionnatlon, write or's license? CaD Jn.llll.
• IJ tlo
George Flelda, 13111 E. eSnl
ll
SYRACUSE- Modern3bedroom JIARIIONY apli..... St., &lt;ldcalo. Dl. 111811.
insulated home, one aoor plan.
and t rooma. bnlllled, l-lf.121c
walls, lloon, famllure. priNice lot with otnes, breeze-way, double garage. Asking
9Aie panq. OUI of allllaoda,
NOTIC:• Ofl APPOINTMINT
NI!lW lfl1ll ZIG ZAG lt'lllni
$20,000 oo.
J blocb from p__, poot
C...Ne..._
maehine in orlg1nai facllley l.,... .t ,.... • . Holfw.
.,.......
alike, . . . . frllm 10 Llll.
Moth;.. .. b.nbJ ,Sftll Ulal ~
cartm.
Automatic
zi1
1111
to
MIDDLEPORT - 30 rldlbrick,
u . WeaHr of Reeln.. OhW, lt.a1 tt.n
Ill • p.m.
"""
make buttaahole1, leW au 1Jt4. CIBit Qpo&amp;akd A4mbliatr1Ub. Of UM
20 rented. BAR D-1-U. Hot
of I'IUI R. Holte!' dlc..aed,
taaa, UIOIICJIII'8ID, make fancy t:ltal.e
low ur M•141 &lt;.want. Otllo.
water heat. Good investment. J10UB BOOM IUiulahod apartdellgnJ with jult tile twill of . l:ndlton ll'e ""'uintd t .. Ilk!: U:l•tt
nice return. Ideal far OOLple,
..,q~.. wHb .... ftductiii'J'
Wlddll
meat. ~
1-11-tlc
a single dial. Left iA lay·away · uKit •unt.bl.
OnJ.y .,0,000. 00
ltli...S tiUII Jlltb U1 at h"rto&amp;•Q'
and never ' - t uaed. Bal111011
TRREE-room fundJbetl IJM- duo only fl7 ... Ierma of ..,
..... c. U.CGell
ilELEN or VIRGIL TEAFORD
SYRACUSE 992-3325

The SemoneUe

EXPERT

SPECIAL
SNOW TIRE SALE

,,.,,tior~ .

..moe

till.ued '"'"" da:r to 4&amp;t UDUI tlullJ'

Run

llteorreet

LfGAL NOTICE

Construction work on a $263,000 building project was initlat.
ed at Green Acres in December.
New facllitl.es expected to be
ready for use this June include
a residential unit Cor 20 young
adu1t retardates, an admlnistra.
tlon building, and a sewage treat·
ment plant.
CUrrent enrollment at Green
Acres, including an off • Calt\JN8
day care center, Is 60. The fl ~
gure is expected to approach 90
when the new buildings are rea·

•

•

te e41t ..- •litct any otle fta-4 -"·
jecfla,.l. Tt• pvbii,.Mr will not
boa ,.. ,.... iltle f .. mor1 t ha n Ot\18

WANT ADS

('&lt;ount. will be coldllckored and eon -

Su

R!GULATIOHS
The P_.liet.r re1w••• tJ. riaht

..u.

ot

•

Business Services

Publication

PT. PLEASANT - Richard A.
Kelly, Administrator ot the new
11.1 CHEVROLET 10-lon pickup
Green Acres Regional Center, son, Cabell, Wayne, and. L i n·
coln
Counties
are
eligible
[Or
adPUBLIC
SALE
Friday.
Feb.
21.
truck; bill bed. Prl&lt;ed 10
Inc.. Lesage , w:iU be the guest
mission
to
the
regional
raciUty.
Goorge'o
Au&lt;tlon
.-Rul··
llelberl LawSon, Portland,
Speake, for the meeting Feb. 2.5
land, new and used merchan!l!io.
ot the Mason County Assoda·
I-21J1.3tp
dise. Conslgmnents welcome.
tlon for Retarded Children ln the
Open from 10 a.m. till aale
courthouse amex beginning at
lime for consignment.. Sale
7:30p.m.
starts
at 1 p.m.
J-IJI.3tp
Kelly will discuss the p r oPOODLE PUPPIES, AltC Tor
gress which has been made at
mlnlalure, m and up. llllld
Green Acres since his last ap- 1.. TMI MATTI:. oil IITTl.aMIINT
HelpW1nted
01"
llloCCOUNTI,
l'llO.ATI
COU•T
and gtOOIDing. ~
pearance here 10 months ago.
WAJT111!81 wuted. NO esperlMll.l COUNTY, OHIO
At that time, Green Acres had
.-..~ ..,..,unts alld vuu~nen of t~ lvl·
enee neoeoiiii"J. Nlgbts, 1:10 - ·
Ultlo
aamed ftd'll(llarMe baY• been
only one regional program un. ivwial
fllf'd In lhe Probate Court. ll..._p
1o 12. Apply at Blue Tal'lan.
derway - a sheltered workshop t:ueaty, Ohio, for -.PI'Vnl aad •'1-11-'llc NEED LIMESTONE lor JOIII'
tlemoent :
for retarded children.
drlteft)'1 We lundlll and
CA.J; NO. 1• .11115. tr'uwt abd W'laa.l
AeeOUIIt 01 F . W . Ponon , Jr., Ad·
Three programs are present.
doll\'ll'. Emmelt W. Sbnler,
mlnlltr•tur 61 UWo •tale of Clara
ly in operation, with i foorth, o!
Mone, dt!ce ... ed
Oaahct.,., Phone - - -

START THINKING ABOUT

....

.r

MUSIC EVERY Friday and Sa~
urday at Jack's Club on Bar·

dy for occupancy.
Retarded residents from Ma·

24-hour residential care, plan.
ned for June 1.

...
r

WANT AD
!!o!FO~~t.t, T!O~

D•)"

It is almost five years since the Supreme Court ruled
against the school prayers that had been written and adopted by the Board of Regents
w York State. You will
recall that the court insisted
t
state could not constitutionaUy enforce such a devotional ractice in the public schools.
Since that landmark decision, a lot of religious fireworks
have exploded in and out of publlc sc Is. In the fall of
1964. the Christian Herald invited its su ribers to expreBB
their feellngs on the place of prayer nd Bible reading In
the public schools. An avalanche of cards and lettersmore than 100,000-was received in
three.month period
with about 85 per cent in favor of me religious expres·
sian in school.
Although the Clairton school stem is proceeding with
the revival of reUgious "exerc · &amp;, " there has been no legal
opinion from state or
authorities-and no injunction
to date. Nationa , the r ng of the SUpreme Court was
received with very mixed patterns-almost up to the mood
or theological persuasions of local boards and school superintendents .

LET'S TRADE NOW 1

. .

Want Ads Brings Top Grade Results

chareit for rl£ttthandcr M ll t
P•P911·

!or the (l!ll:'ninr

of the dub's sprh-= '?-~~~
Relief pitcher ct.y l¥ron•
who has slened a new · ~tact

MIDWEST
SCOTCH

DAVID POLING

~

.
'

3 ROOMS
New Furniture
ONLY $'299
'

•.,..............
'

�. ·II- 'Dill DUb St Uall~ P.... W. . . . IWit 0.. Frklt;r, ~ 21, lHI

Isaac Barnhart
Dies Thursday

Cost-of
.. Livinll..... Escalator
For Teachers iS Proposed
COLIJIOIUS (UPO Sen. AlaociiUOD whteh np't!ICIDb
KleMa~ J. Malone,-, R-Ct~ more than 88,000 teachera ln the
notl, lnlrodllcod a bW In t11o slate.
General Aaacmhl,y T!!ur~ to
A total oC 10 billa Wl"e iiJtro..
provllte a COIHI·llvi!W escala- duced In tho legiolotun T!!urotor in teacher retirement bene- da,y before the IINJDbb' ....
Ria.
jourDid for the weekead.
Yalone;y'a bill would provide
S..L HOWOI'd- C. Cook, it-Te&gt;automatic increases tn retire- ledo, IJUL&lt;Iuced lour of the
ment, 'isabillty and survivors' five Senate b1lls.
benetits granted under the state
Cook's bills would:
Teachers' Retirement System
- Sot a $1 fee for ftnanclal
reports on fixtw-e s uo:lel' the
oroorun.
1lle escalator would attempt unifonn cunmercia.l code.
to ~ retired teachoers Crom
- Provide for an increase ln
losing benefits to inflation.
fees charged by county recordAn increase would go into ef· ers.
feet when the federal cost-of-Make a filing omcer ot a
liviq: index went ~ by 3 per firancial statement liable for
cent or more and remained at errors by himself or his deputhe level for three months.
ties.
Maloney's biU has gained the
-Perm it boards ot education
li UIII)Ort of the Ohio Education to contract for cafeteria ser-

CORRECTION
OF OUR THURS. WASHINGTON BIRTHDAY
SALE AD:

ALL-WEATHER COATS
THE CORRECT PRICE IS1

Values to

22.50 ....................... 15.00

DOWNIE -GROSS
MAIII ST.

POMEROY

Our Wothlngton•s Birthday Sale Ad,
This Item Should Have Read:

I

II

REGULAR 14.98 to 16.98 ................. 6.00

New York Oothl111 House

'

!

MAIH ST.

POMEROY

HOW LIKE
THE MAN!
Both the Washington
Monument' and the man
it honors have long
been admirable
examples of strength,
simplicity, dignity and
lasting greatness! To
once again pay special
homage to our great
general and first
President, this bank
will conduct no
business on

WASHINGTON'S
BIRTHDAY
saturday, February 22

EROY
NATIONAL BANK

RUTLANI

~POMEROY
Servin1 Mei1s County for

over 96 years

13ANI&lt;

.Member Federal Reserve System
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

All Accounts Insured Up To $15,000.00

I

In the House. nve bills were
introduced.
Rep. Alan E. Norrlo, R.-Weot-ervWe. 1,ponaored a bill to lOW'•
er the requirements tor policemen and flremen to retire.

Ulder Norris' measure.

po..

Uce and Oremen could retire at
the erll ot ~ yean ot aervtce,
with no minimum age requirement. The bill also would reduce trun tive years to three
the base amourt on which retirrme!K benefits were based.
Rep.. Olester T. Cruze, It.
Cincinoati, also Introduced a
policeman's bilJ tn the House.
Cruze's bill would permit pollee
"'to enter a hQutse wi1hout knocki~ U the omcers had a warrant to search it and permission from tfle judge who is-sued the warrant.
Other House bills introduced
ThtU"sday would:
- Establish rules for the retirement or Judges.
-Increase from f,100 to $200
a year the m.u:imum compensation of union cemetery trustees.
- Permit increases ill pa,y lor
township trustees.

For Southern
RACINE -

Af.Ol'OI)rlatioos to-

taling $519,.374.41 were approv.
ed for operation or Southern Local School District In 1969 by
the board of education ln a reg-

ular session Thursday nf.ght.
The breakdown of the a_wropriations include administration, $23,223; instruction, $312, 750; auxiliary agencies, $32,728; operatioo of schools, $21, 963; special services, $100; auppliefi, $37,120; contract a.nd open
order service, $18,188.40; equipment replacement, $7,146; fixed expenses, $58,506; capital outlay, $17,250, and materials for

maintenance, $6,400.
Also appropriated was $39,.
467 for operation ot the schOol
lunch programs and $38,188 in
bond retirement fUnds.

The board also approved a
prq&gt;Osal to increase the wage&amp;
of cooks and janitors to comply with the $1.30 per hour minlroom wage and voted to raise
bus driver's salaries $25 per
month.

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHTS 5 TO 7 PM

I

cepted and Theodore Hilldore was
awointed assistant .ianitor at the
Syracuse elementary school to
work four hours per day.
Attending were a.pt. WUIIam
Hughes, Clerk Joan Wolfe, Board
Members Howard Ervin. preiJident; Robert Harden. viee-presldenl; Harey Hill, Oils McCilnlock and Dorotlly Benu, and a
mmber of interested citizens
of the district.

VETERANS IIIEMORIAL
HOSPITAL
Admissions- Timothy Fields,
dleport; Niles Christopbersoa,
Racine; Donna Jean Roolh, Mason; Paul Forbes, MlnersvUle;
WUllam Swain, Long Bottom;
Charles Soott, Mlddleporl.
Discharges - Everett Bates
•
James &amp;tlder, Joan Wolfe. Harold Norlon, Clara Garland, Cor.
win Custer.
MEIGS GENERAL HOSPrr AL
Adminlons - None.
Discharges - None.

Pro-

..-.u,.

charged with dt.ordorly OODIIuct, roiii.U,. arrest and 111Molt and
blttery on a pollee olllcer.
~
...
uiiiP demand11 a•nn SenaeabreliWr lDcluded auspeulon of the
polleemoo IIIWIIved, c.-tim of a ci.UIOD review bnonl to Invest!pte pollee brutoi!Q&lt; chorgoo and relllOYal !'ran olllce of Safe~ Dlrector Fred SlmODr.
~
•
•
0 rornpaawn, no potU!twe with youth
COLUMBUS - GOV. JAKES A. RHODES SAID 'lllur~ all
membero of tho state Boord of Ed-tlon are college oducllod with
oo coorc&gt;aosloa or potl-e for worklne With YOUIIII people. Rhodea
spoke lo 800 delegates of tht Ohio AF!AlO Logiolatlve conlerooce

tero, lolrL Moclto Umton, PerryovUio, ond Mro. Nollie KaJ..
lles, Brl~;. tour brother.. Lod,
Ft. '4ero, Flo. I Clorenee or J.o.
gon; Ben, Stewart; and Elzo.

Brice.
Funeral aervtcea will be Sundo,y at 2 p. m. at the White~
aeral H&lt;llle at Coolville with t11o
Rev. ft"l' l!ooe olllclaU"'- Burial
wW be In tho Staooart Cemetery.
Friends mo,y call at the funeral

quate

trainiae

are needed for continued lndu1trial progress in Ohio.

RECEIPTS UP
Retail sales tax receipU In
~iga Councy for t~ two week
period ending Feb. 17, this year,
were I.Ul over 60 per cent .over
the corresponding two week per..
iod t.st year, John D. Herbert,
state treasurer, reports. Receipts for the two week period
thio year lolaled $16,921.28 compared to $10,555.94 m 1968.

DRIVER KILLED
VAN WERT, Ohio (U PI) John E. Bates, 43, Payne, Ohio,
was killed Friday when his automobUe colltded with a truck on
U. S. 224 near here.

Early Roush Named

lllcldl_.t

_....,.

or

tons

""'"" -Cllorleo
- a ca11
.. t b e
Scott Ia tba
B-..,
- 'l'llur-..,
-A nol-'.._,._._
......
- - · - - I f f.

LGrando (Baa) llllgilt, 711, 11t.
I, Nlddl_.t. cllocl,
tba ""'"" UriYed IDOl ell- ........... In lololp Geaenl ·~pltol fQIIooit,. a 1G111J m .....
Mr. MJDt wao ...,..., at lilt

'l'llur.

-

34 Pt,G~S

H - Rallrood Yonla Car 1$
Tho f'l&gt;merv7 Fire ~ ..,_ 1Nl"l, and and _ . . .
_.., 1 ..U lo DOOrtba- on OIIPie Ol'ebard fc111ow11w rflll
FIIIEMEII CALUD

u._._

He no a member &lt;1

Jlullldl·

487,

Dr. Ray R. Pickens Appointed Acting ~

d

In by bit
wife, !b'lvlo, In l&amp;a, and &amp;
.dauahter and a 1I1ter:
"'
ALTERNATE SERVICES
;
Tho United Methodist Church . Ho Ia aurvl...,.. by a 111p~
and tllo Trlnlcy United Church lluryl White, Cho-k, W. V&amp;;l
of Chrlot "W coaductSoonda)" Ll1&gt;- throe dotera, lolro. IIQincDl
ten service• ~ ttd.a &amp;. Bloaaer, Mlddltport.; MrL noyc~
da.Y 111 7 P. "'· and alternau,. Rumllold, lit. 1, lolldclltport. and
from tho United Metbodlot to Mro. Cborleo Buek, Rt. 4, PomTrlnlcy United each "ook. The
•1'01i two brother&amp;, a&amp;nDce,Rt.
0
rot oeo·vice ..w be held at the 1, Middleport, and Jolon, FairTrlnll;J United. The public lsi.,. boo-o, Ohio; 1 grllldom, Gar y
vited.
White, ar.d tk oecreat-cranddllldred.
Fllieral aervlceo WID b e BOOSTERS TO MEET
da.Y It 2 p. m. li'CIIII t11o Mlriln
Tho Mete• Band lloootero Will Funeral Home. TIW' I!n, Cboelel;
meet 11 8 P. m. !f&lt;nla.y at tho Lomloy will d!lclate. Burial will
of Melgo lfl&amp;lo &amp;hool be In lollleo Cemetery. FrieDl(

wu preceded

•
J

I

·- _L_.

last year.
Mr. Roush, who was employ.
eel by the U. S. C&lt;&gt;rpo al Engineers on locks and dams for
many years, was named to the
post at the regular monthly meetIng of the bnonllhls wook.

Middleport· Physician Chosen
Unanimously by Commission

/

/

~- -

Dr. RIJ Ralokln Pick-,
dolef &lt;1 -ctV..,.ant tlumrlallloliottal

POMI!ROY -

pootld~
.... oamocl
Ill
- ...,.......
- aaol pracUclnr
- ·acttnr
" " ',_",.,
-

-

!l&amp;lun:W ..........

~

tho -

"'

lololp
· -..
1be commloodooo
In oopoclal Mllkln -~~~
throe member• ani Clerk lllartboo ~·
prooent, voted ...tOIOiuoly 1o ~ Dr.
Plekooa lo llle poaltkoo pono1low .........
al tho lololp ~ R~leon ~•e

lafeterla

Comml-.

It's Sale Time
All Over The Store!
.t, '

~

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Fo!neral oorvlcoo I or

J:oholn

ME,GS fltEATRE
TONIGHT &amp; SATURDAY
FEBRUARY 21 - 22
"WILL PENNY••
(Technicolor)
Charlton Heston-JoanHaekett
'ARIZON A BUSHW ACKERS''
(Technicolor)
Howard Keel- Yvonne DeCarlo
SHOW STARTS 7 P, M,

Reading Program in
Pomeroy Reviewed
POMEROY - Barbool'l 11o1orboU81&gt;. ecmoultaFt for ~· reodlnr -am,
Wll at tho l'oiDenl1 El-..r Sdoool
n..r"""' for tn-aentce old lo gradoo ono
tloraU&amp;b throe.
The Pome.,. EleoroontorJ School lou a
jlllot -am In reodlnr being Ia t1oe Orlt three gradeo. ldaaa for ~oqorov.,_
111t111 oi lnootructloa IIIII btdlvldual neoclo
............and.
Poniots aaaloting In the .....una nn
lolro. Jolon Sobo, Mrs. Leo Crew, lolra. C.
J. 1'oar1011, Mrl. Soouoel Mo:KimO)', lolro.
1'1111 El~. ond Mr. and Mro. Goorp

SUN. - MON. - TUES.
FEB. 23 • 24 - 25

See
''BARBARELLA''
(do her thing)
Jane Fonda -John Phillip La
OLORCARTOONS:
Dellant Giani
See You Liter, Gladlalor
3 Ring Wing Ding
Home Sick Nudnic
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.

WriJiot. ;

· Toocbarl are Ju4Y Codner. DorotloJ Wood-

CROW'S

.. Jlioloort Monts. .

,J

, -1

lniAornod It · ~ Ho,.
In lloirlao dirlnB ltll3.$4 and _,od loll JII'I&lt;IICO It tba Jmes MemorIal Cllnle l!odlcllnr In Middleport.
The acttnr ....,q. ..,_,. -.oocl tllreo
Yeu'l ltlld niDe IDII1ths ill WW D a1 a Navy
flllltor ,not Ill tile Atlaotlc ani Allaflc Po.
OF. -

command•.

Dr. Pldmna hal one lOB, RQ, Jr., age
23, a senior at KentstateUatverah;y. Hl•parad.s. Mr. aad Mrs. Ray Plekena, Qo ., ~lldl

In Cllfliin.

•
'

publl"""porey uacontralcomml_,..anl
tor the JUt' BeVJD year a as a meatter ol
t11o Galllo CcounliY Boord &lt;I Blectlono.
FOI' :U yeors ba woo comoetod with the
lollrleUii -cturlng Co. ~ acrooa

.

'

SAMPLE PANEL- Joe Sisson, Pomeroy bricklayer, above,
Frktay bulk a UQie block and brick panel to be approved by
arehiteeta of the new cunprehensive Meigs High School buildlog. The parael, constnlcted near the actual building work. is a
guide for all future brick and block laying and must stand at

'''""oBmiN,

.

the site unttllfle schoal•s canpletion. Architects are expected
to consider IPJlrom of the panel this 1Wsdly. Brick and block
ll)'iOV should get wderwo,y In aboot 10 do,ys If wcalbor coadltiona permit, aecordi.D&amp; to Kenneth Thei•s. jab a~
fOJ" Karr Constructl.on CO., general eootractor.

,

'

·· '

Carr add he bad no doubt the demonltration was 14 coerclve." Some 50 stu~

'

denio faced poslllble dloclpllnaey action

loofore tllo Interim Joint Faculey..sludent
Dlacljllne I!Gord.
SWdilla from Oberlin and a lew other campaNs sat In front (1 the ltudeat
plaeement oMce at Peters Hall. allowtor the three Marines lo get only ao

far as Dean George Langeler's otnce.
Three students walked over dte bodles
the protesters to talk with the recruiters, but Langeler eventually decided to
ask Ute Marines to leave.

c.t

Computer's Dance
PT. PLEASANT - Pnlnt Ploaaont lfl&amp;lo
- · ore curreutly enpged In
CGupleo will be matched by a compltor
aceording to their llkoa ond dlallkoo. 'I'IWo
project lo being _.ODrocl by the Cltlzont
National ani Ill oompoter oorvlce center, Tho Ohio VallO)' Date Cooitrol, looc.
Tho porpooea altho program are:
- Tn allow all .-nto · d tile oeboal
an ~ lo how coonprtors are
-.tor • 111111'0 lmportont part al dally
life.

rio-

"' the -

the .... frtondl llu·

rekindled.
Eleven men and two trucks respoaded
to the llrot call at 2:36p.m. Frlda,y. Tba lire
otorted '"' prq&gt;erty of Marvin Baird. Wind
carried sparks and started 1 blaze OD Butl
E\'1111' Jam. Firemen returned to the stl--

Tour 'Down Under'

tlonot 51\m.
_.SClP of the Ore was about 1.5 miles
s~- of Rt. 7. Two and one--flllf acrea
were iitolved tn the tlre, lnclw:Ungtwolcrea
on Baird's prqM!rQ' 1111 a r.H-acre on Evana.
Grua, bruah ADd lap rekirdled 1t 12:30 a.m. Slturday aM six men and one truck
were dispatched to the area. Firemen returneel to t11o otetlon at 2:30 Lm. SOIUrday.
Tho ftre runo were the 16th and 17th
of tllo JOif for Gallipolis volunteer fire.
men. There were 10 nmr~ in Jamary.

Procram.
lolr. Miller

•18

SPBCIAL
WIRING ALLOWANCB

Ott A"--n1 lloc-k Range
:==~~=.U==Y=NO~W~~--~JfFU
fUl fiKKJI'OWt:.U 11H.Wfl!&gt;iUNlt

I• I

Ill'-"'

1857
Ga1lla
School. Roo ncolvocllolo B. s..
~ from Ohio Stole Unl•oraiQ&lt; Ia 196:1.
Ho roaldlo In Col.....,o, ond II morrlad

AcaoliniJ Hillh

to
111e 110r1n1r Bulb Fulka, ~=~"' Mr.
IIIII lolro. Jolul Bronunor, I
TloO)' 'bave -

....., FN&lt;I IIIII

- w i l l - tlooollo .. the
TloO)'

""'!'V"III!Io

,,

Aa-

Loa~..

.

lolrL WUIIIm ~ lolro •
~t and Mill ·(lrltlllh at.

PO_!IEI!OY -

.)'.-!

~

lolotlod ~~ """"""' "' • ..Ill Nol~\"""'odaJ'.
Dr: Cloil'h~ flaUGoo. bOI'IO oopodallat, Olilo
S:ate/ Unlvertlb'. IPikt an. ..Brood Man

PRICE$ START AS LOW AS 199.95 AND ·
EASY TERMS CAN BE ARRANGED
Ao&gt;
C 0 Ill-

...__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _....;;99.;;;2;,.;·2635:;:;:;__ _. _ _ _.;M::.;:iD::;:DLE:::,:PO::R.:,.T_ __,.
..
•'

'·

~

•
••
&gt;

'1;~~

:00

cr

GriM

·Ql-llilo, OloiO.

'

roat-.

two,_.-·

tloo - · wu lllr'll!
tim..,
·
• . "+···
VItally looterested In ollalrl 411 ll!i ~ ;:;

lllllll 1957 -

Mr. Co* f t l a tnlllta ttl u. ~ : .. ;.
111e loto Senator Tom .lnnes' lld• ·~ ;· ;

Oclal lot tllo ollob- til..,.,... ,';:
Memorial Clinic ond In ........ ·11r; -.: .&gt;~
R. Plckeioa lo Middleport. lolr.

Cocol a1J1i : &lt;0

waa act!•• In tllo .-m.- &lt;I t b a - · · · ·. ·
(caotlnood ... Po.-

IIOMI!R 11llWIN COOK

Zl

'

.:~

Students Tour Program ;&gt;
MDlDLEPORT - Ten MeJco Hlgb &amp;hool
student• joined Upward Bound yoothtrcrna
21koway area In a vlolllo Ohio Unlwrslcy
thio weekend. They reviewed collop plans
and fortheGIIIIng UpwoniBwed suorunor pro.
grams.

varlecy ollearnl... cultunl aal ro.....U- . .
activities. Year-rouadcounaeW18l•~ · '
bJ tbroo 11111dlll® ....,.elora
dlotrlctl within file 28 comt,y roalon. ·
:·
The \.liWUd
far&amp;•IM•·.
ern Ohio l1
f'..lllltJ : ·

wloo_._,: ·

On t11o agenda wos a meetlov with nloe · - ~ &lt;I
former Upward llaond sbodenta ,_ attondlow loCe of -lcloo. The ~
Ohio UnlvorsiQ&lt;. The..-.... attended tlloOhlo boo boon folded
tba Ollke
t'ni-..ralcy • hlaroball UnlveroiQ&lt; lotokellall nollllc OppGhonlty and Ia
pme.
Sooldoeaotvoo Ohio. All~~.- llor

ilor...,.

Adkolo.

Junlors heard plana for next 1ummer'a
The ......
l)pwonlllound currtcolum ond oonloro io tho
· Aoll.
eltoo,
Dr, A. P. smttb, •atorlnarloa d A-., ......, received help 011 collcae edml11i&lt;111 will the Fob. l'/ ... . alii! ·llnaoclal aid q~~&lt;Jatlons. Tllo tVwonl
IDI ''!IoriO Health . lollnllemont" u hla Bouod lll'Q&amp;i'IDl Ia olmt.! at motiVOIIiiW hlall
Iaiiie. IIIII Dr. wW tatl!oia to &lt;IPOIIIi, ,li!hGoll otutonta ~w alolll~. lout nn Marth 6 uolai "Foodlng "' Prototil,.
not planned 1o eulltlu thoilr IIIIUcallill,
~ and Vltomlna 1o Your Horae" u
lo aUOill a colleae or 1111\-..rll~. A ol,.....eok
blo klplc.
-ram • - • llle ollodonta loa
~"

els
Fur.
n
lture
OPEN FRI. &amp;SAT. NIGHTS

,

•~ Stiho(.I a~

lot loavln&amp; for

1$....

. Ftll *Ill

'Ihree Auea4 First

M!Mieport

qo...,

tied

Six Month Study

mas seaac:n Following durcb serric.sthl•
Oowera, pnwldocl by Mr. Cook. _ . ella- •
1rlbutod 1o slout4o. ~ re~t, portleularly clorlng the 1oollday - - 1lorGol(lo
the y-.a. received nmombroncos by
Bono Ia Middleport 111 Oct. 5, 1887. bawu.
the .... "' tho late lolr. and lolro. l!oiWIII.
Cook. He morrloclllle fomoer Vb-alld&amp; 11UII,
pneeded 1o1m In deatll
!toe wao tho dluShter d tho late a.. IIIII
lolrs. R. F. Blohop. The Rev. lolr. 81....
............ "' Hoatb United aour.a .
at t11o time al the marrtaae d bla ........
ter lo Mr. Cook.
·
Mr. Cook wu uoooclatod Willi bla - .
Edwin Cook. 1n a o....,r, aoeo1 •
,_.
--.on-.a.SecorodA..,,Iot~ ·
port, for a number nl yeoro. II 1117, llit
ond hlo father purcbllocl tho ~ WlloQaale Grocery. II became 1bo IWp GNooey Co., and wu - - b y ...... Cede

GALLIPOLIS - Vol...-r firomeo bot.
1 stubborn brush fire Friday aftemooo
on ShoestriqJ Ridge and then returned to the
area shortly alter mldnlglot when tho lolaze

Fred Milkr W"ms

In 11.1 -amt. H e - ly to noomer&lt;llll clurch pro,le&lt;U. lolr. Ccooll
held orod ollleo at tllo clur&lt;ti llorau8lo tile
years, and for over eo years wu a ......_
ber ot the church chOir. Ho 10rnd nn llle
atnclal bnonl d tile clloJ-dl for IIIIIQll ,.ro.
Hio lalt maJor project for tile ehordo 11'11
In 19115- he bad ..... shrubbery - planted about tho exterior d tho ~
Anauall,y ba ceuM the clurcb 10 lot dee·
orated Willi poloooettlas clorlng 11oe Chrla-

the~

FRI1ll B. )(ILLER

tba -11)''1 1968 lntornoUcwoal .,...,_

Automatic Electric Range

IUs dacllcadm lo lleatlo United Cl&gt;orch b.-1 -ltrllod loll llrOII8 laltll

To Put Out Friday

foUr
- 1,200
-In·
lonatoly
thooeloctod
UM to from
1o11o part..

Slide-out oven wall panels that sponge clean right at
the range • Two High-speed 2700 Watt surface units •
Oven Timing Clock•Stay-up surface units with removable trim rings and drip pans • Infinite-Heat surface
unit controls • Famous Calrod 8 Recipe-Heat units •
Timed appliance outlet•Tilt-away bake and broil units.

CouJob'.

Fire Proves Hard

tba

lntormallon for llle
d what llle oom-

BY BOB HOEFLICH
MIDDLEPORT Homer Edwin Cook,
81, prominent Middleport real- ond a
buslooesomon more than 40 yoara, cllocl early Saturdo,y at V._an1 Memorial Hooop!tol,
tndlng a llnprlllll Wne11.
Mr. Cook, who rolldocl at 390 North
Third Ave., waa kdown for hla deep Inter~
ellt In comnonley alfalro and for loll phD·
anthroplc actlvltleo In Middleport and Meta•

Shoestring Ridge

for a compoter daoco lo be

hold on March 7.

Pormlto _......" lo wmk, wlih tho

(UPl)- Oberlin;:

from sdoool.

·

Collect Data for

getl061ing -

01o1o

0,.

lllthll'll B. IMIIiro CJLoel &lt;I
·. (~ iool Poco 2)

lara,

w-.. • eo.,

Model RC646-H

And Toko Em Homo
992-5432

:f;

J)lial

GALLIPOLIS - Fred B. lo!Wor, am d
lolr. and lolro. Lowla Claude loiWor, 532
!lo&lt;m&lt;l Ave., baa - . oeloctod by hil om.
piQJor, Price
1o mil
Aollralla for alx montloa. Ho Ia ~

Removable oven wall panels, coated ·with DuPont Teflon•

. . . first with the features women want most

Order By Phon•

;.:I .

.... tf'Oao,..ti\Y 1n 1953. He a1., ...,.
Ill - - - Hillh clorlng tile 1946-49 -

Horn

llfOIII"•·
• ~. "-"" Vtnl!oJa Reibel, Noap JOU!ar
Aoo4 lhlnk "'
lllfolria alid Moe Y&lt;lolic, IIIII llle prlndpal -wuimakel
~

SANDWICH

c:
.,-•

!rGm the KlrkeiVI.IIe, Mo. COl-

It'. ._

bi4.""""

al Cholblro. Ho Wlil educated In the pololie aehoolo . ql AdciiiiOII Townlhlp, Gallla
A~ J1111o Sdoool and Billa &amp;ollnou
Ccollfl'l. lie lroarrieo! Gladys ~rlock al
11unt1ng1on, w. va., m Juo. 31, 1917.
He ,.., o rnemloer &lt;I the Me-• Lodae
at Cbelblro, havlnr received hio 50:~ear
pin elcht yaaro ago. Ho 10118 was Interest.
od In politico, falth6oll,y serving the Re·

Population or the New
York metropolitan area is
more than 11,350,000.

~­

=~ c~

..

Homer Cook, Churchman,
_, . --.. . ' .
~~~~~licifti&gt;.Jtiee. 2t. t.-.;'r ~~~ . ~..~ - . · {aii~·~~=~=;
..., Jr
IOIId ~
Rotlweb . ~m!lni
~ ~e, Gl~fi)oio&gt;,' cJaioato~ah:. ·~"::-:.!:':"':~.;::; Businessman, Dies Satm•da'V
Mr.;
'J

LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature in Pomeroy• a
downtown business district at
11:30 a.m. today was 38 degrees
under sunny skies.

.....1......
_._, ..., ......
..................

oner

PlckoaJ, ..., 44, gra.-ollod !rGm Wlllainl

Jlllle!d.

10m-.

'he Fabulous

t

•

·

&lt;"•llljiolloo) will lot ·belli at lo!Wer'a ~
Homo at 2 p.m., lolooclll'·
lolr. Jlolb&amp;&lt;lb died alooul 3 .p.m., Friday II
tba
lolodlcol C - «&lt; Flroot A.... , tho Ohio River from his holoie, oopd later
wbora ba bold ~ a
~ Folo. ~~. .Will "!!'DDWod ~ t1oo JIYaer c,.... RJwor
a.J, c. J. ~. ~iir~ - · eoqu,y· loeot.ed porttally on hla clo1141oood
cllot Clul'eb at JIU!Iand, wlll,)oo ~~ill &lt;I llf!II!OIIId _,. Cbelblre. In aarllor yean
tho
8olrlal ll'lll bf\11&gt; -~ IIIli . Ill
~eel In the United Stotoo

Hoi••

• •j '~·

-4-J ()

H1a1o So:llool In 1942, roceiYed loll BS !rGm
t1oo unJ..roiQ&lt; ot !llmeOGto In 1946 and

clfle

ctaaunc:e7 E. Ruth&amp;tJII, 71, Addleon, CRt. 1,

area.

of

~uactlnc_...,.·

permaiM!IIt IUCCIIIOl'.

GALLIPOLIS -

+'
~1 ' )

r·

"'
tloo ·vloo
-·
and Ollllcutnd
Robert
Clark,
pnalani BaiJ&gt;hwith
W.
ouro, momloor, Ia tho ~ d Dr.

"--n•"
Theiss Heads Chauncey Rothgeb, Ch.eshire,
NFO Chapter Gallia (;OP Leader, is Dead
DR. R. R. PICKENS

· -I

for tho o111&lt;1e at ,....,.. bo the 1914
primarY.
Korr pnoddocl over tba oopodol ooeulaa

,_,

pUCID- tor the peraw nt qpolatnumt, aecordlns lo
Boord Pntldaot
Charleo R. Korr, lfr«.,'O\ llepjoiiCIII, Pl&lt;keno

,,

ron

The poat d &lt;CIIIIIIJ - r woo left ...
eaoot upon the doollo of Honey Eorlnl Ioiii
Moado,y. 'l1lo late Mr. Ewli!r. d tile
Iaiii three-' ....................... Ia OWo,
hao oorvel In tho pool for almost 3.1 y-1.
Loollo Fultz, 'cbalrman &lt;I t11o GOP aoc.Uvo ....-_ aald Tlouraclay tho tomember ciooounbl... d tllo Rep.,llcan per.
Q&lt; will meet FrldoJ, Feb. Z8, ID ~ a
Dr. Plekoaa II •_.:1-0!l!loiiOII
. oliO lo be 111 ap-

Be Thrifty-Save All of Your S.lesllps

PRICE TEN CENtS

~V~O~L~-~IV~N~0~- ~4~-----------------~~~··~~~·~~·~~~~~~rl~-- --------------~SU~N~D~A~Y~.~F~EBR~U~A~R~Y~2~3~.~1969~~-----------------~~~·~·~~~~~

·'l!

AntoriCIIii Lqloa Poat

FIVE SECTIONS

------~-- -- --------~~~----~-----------------------------------------------

FRIDAY and SATURDAY NIGHTS
UNTIL 9

Early Roush, semi - retired
Letart township farmer, has been
appointed lo the board ot trustees filling the vacancy eroated by the death &lt;I Harey ADen

•tmts

•"!'j..

llemlnj!woy llid:
worl4 Ia a Ono place ond""""
f1&amp;hUnc for. 11
-

Scott w, bold ..Ueo! t11o 1101111L
llowo••, Scott wu MUac !mJo:h

...,. Natloaal -'111urld01n1Jht
Wbore. a porkocl car OWIIell by DoYld Goodiiln bad CIIQ!Iotftn.lollaor daonagooa were ll!eurrocl.

-·-···- -"'-- ... --·

...

Thoughts

._ d

Shop At EIMrfelds In Pomeroy

Township Trustee

..

---------~- -·--~ -----·- -~· ··~---------

wnndoMight

llan pep pills Thursday after
rwnerous raids In the Tijuana

veuatile
anywhere" TV. Solid blaiP.
just on.r: rectir1er tube. 9• picture.
n~eae.ured diaji:onally; 40 eq . in .
Workl with hou5e current ur battery
... e\·en plu~e into rar riAartolle
li~hr.r:r . • Try one out
for ai~ today.

. MIDDLEPORT, 0.

-~ ~---··

marUJ_ana and ntne mU-

EKort - Mot(lrole'~

WIRII.IIADIO &amp; TV.

....

MARLJUANA BURNED
Mexico (UPI)
Muiean authorities burned 11

" 111h

111 SIUI STill "TilE AIIIIQlll" TV

-·

TIJUANA

Home

MOIOAOLA•
/ESCORT

--

;;home~iiatiiteriiinooniiiiiilisaii.~iiiiii'iiiiiilll••n•Middl••opor••~------•...,.iiiiiliicaiiilliili1Ytlmiiiiiiiiie.iir.illlilll- :

here."Tbe 1tate Board ol Education ia the one which determines the 1
school CtwJI'se a youth Ia going totake." ROOde&amp; said. ·-They have determioed he will take a general eourae. A general course leads to
ootldov except IIIIOlq)lo.vmeot." Rhodeo opoke later In 1romoo and
told an industrial -.wredatioo baiQiet tlat both research ard ad&amp;o

•

Take along an Escort.

-•t

POUCE GUAIIDEI&gt; MAYOR M. E. SolliOPbre,_.
talay •• tba niUit &lt;ltllreata ba rocel...,.. r.IIOirior a mardi em CJQ&lt;
Roll ..-.u.r by 150 demoaotratora
allqocl p&lt;ilco
bruta!IQ&lt;. The domonotratora wallled 1D moue fran N~-QU111er1 to Senaenf» eaner'• oftlce to proteat police treatment of Dr.
William Allealllll Dr. WUIIam
both NOJII'OOO.
- - r 1!181 wltll o cleloptlm of the morchera, but reJectocl all ft-.. demudo lnuod by u-, Ho IDatoed agreocllo e_.
dlte ao l....,odplloo Into tho chorpa Allen had le¥illocl at three
pollee otftcers who arneted him at a dc:Mut&amp;Mn reataurut. He wu land; a grea~ two alaCOLIJYBUS -

STEAl
HOUSE

The

In Melli COUilf¥. lolr, lied OIIIIOd a n i . . - afllrmln
TCJiniObliiiD Atbanl Countt
60 ,.ro. He iiiiUD!ombordtho
Botllony
Churcll.
Ho wu alooprec-ln d•th
by tooo oono, a dalllhtor, tbrao
brotbon, IIIII a diller.
SuniVOl'l lael!.de his wife,
Zora Ludwick lllmhart; I 100.
Carlloa, Rt. %, GOQ'o.Ulo; agrondson, Robert Barmort, Columbuo;
one ~uabter, Dnrlo, Rut.-

DECLINf.S Am

-

wnuam

The resignatioo of
Long as a bus driver was ac-

Going to bed?

d tllo late lAY-

II ani Jomle Cramlotani wu bol1! ID Ollw Tulmllllp

A.-s.

New Haven; James WUson, Mid-

A FULL
SERVICE

w.....

1.. a br!Of
He 11'11 tba -

vi...
Otbor Soaate l&lt;tiCOI 'lllurodQ
lncl- c:oollrmalloa al live
QPOinlmento ~ GoY. Jomoo

Is Approved

MDI'S

,I

..- - . . •••-.
......,...
H..... tal In Porlla"olluq -

Appropriation

CORRECTION!

.

U.C :Darm...i. N, M. _;,~ ...
~"
.....,•• I -~~
~ ,.,.._, died
__ .....,_
-·-at st. J - -

Tho

.....

·

oJt•• ""

how

•-r

_...c*"i..llr::.i

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